{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0407373":{"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":"2022-03-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1940-03-18","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0407373\/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":" \u25a0^\u2014\naE&an Shines in Americans Win;\nBoston and Chicago Win\nPage Seven\nHHOVINCIAL\nLIBRAHY\ni?lwllaiij2\nTrail Beats Nelson Leafs 3-1 to\nWin B. C. Championship\nPage Seven\nVOLUME  38\nHVf CENT'S PER COPY\nI COLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY MORNINQ, MARCH 18, 1940.\nNUMBER 284\nSCAPA FLOW BOMBED BY 14 NAZI RAIDERS\nMussolini, Hitler\nto Confer Today\nat Brenner Pass\n11 Duce and Count Ciano Secretly Leave Rome\nAfter Welles' Visit; Ribbentrop Reported\nto Have Arranged Talk\nWELLES  TO  MEET   POPE   PIUS  TODAY\nROME, March 17 (AP). \u2014 Premier Mussolini and\nAdolf Hitler will confer Monday morning at the Brenner Pass,\non the German-Italian border, it was officially announced here\ntonight.\nThe announcement said they would meet at the town\nof Brennero, the last Italian town on the border near the Pass.\nIn Berlin the German News Agency, D.N.B., said that\n\"the meeting long envisaged between Signor Mussolini and\nHerr Hitler was arranged during Herr von Ribbentrop's recent\nvisit to Rome.\" Reliable sources said that Von Ribbentrop\nwould accompany Hitler.\nPremier Mussolini left Rome suddenly early in the\nafternoon with the Italian Foreign Minister, Count Galeazzo\nCiano. His departure, after his talk with Sumner Welles,\n-\u2014* fUnited  States Undersecretary\nChamberlain Is\nFacing Challenge\non 71st Birthday\nLONDON, March 17 (CP) -\nPrime Minister Chamberlain will\nreach hia Tht birthday tomorrow\nwith hia wartime leadership subjected to its lirst serious challenge by the opposition.\nDuring tl* weekend he drafted\na comprehensive explanation of\nhis conduct of the war, to be delivered Tuesday in the House of\nCommons in reply to charges the\ngovernment hesitated until it was\ntoo late to give Finland the help\nahe needed to fight Soviet Russia,\nHe also faces a review of the\nwartime administration of the\nMinistry of Supply. (See \"Supply\", page 8).\nNevertheless, Mr. Chamberlain\nappean to be more firmly entrenched than ever in the position\nhe has held throughout the most\ncritical period in Europe since the\nlast war.\nThe reat\"n  for  this  lay  in  the | tn'ce'   with\ndesire of thc chief political parties j morning  to\nof State, Saturday raised considerable speculation whether\na peace move was involved in\nthe rendezvous of the Rome-\nBerlin axis partners.\nThe train bearing the Premier and\nhis Foreign Minister son-in-law\npulled out of Rome station at 1:30\np.m. but it was several hours before\nword leaked out of his departure or\nof his impending meeting with the\nGerman Fuehrer.\nObservers connected the Mussolini-Hitler meeting with the visit ol\nPresident Roosevelt's envoy and the\ncall Foreign Minister Von Ribbentrop of Germany paid to Rome last\nweekend conferring with both Mussolini and Pope Pius.\nIt was noted that since Welles is\nstaying in Rome until Tuesday Mua-\ntolirii would have time for a quick\nconsultation wilh Hitler and return\nto report results before the American leaves for home.\nSince then their Foreign Minis-\nters and other aides have exchanged\nfrequent visits.\nThe United States envoy had his\nsecond talk with Mussolini Saturday after a sflving through the warring capitals \u2014 Berlin. Paris and\nLondon \u2014 on a fact-finding tour\nfor President Roosevelt.\nWelles is scheduled for an audi-\nPopc Pius tomorrow\nwhich  most observers\nLADY TWEEDSMUIR\nSAYS FAREWELL\nTO CANADA\nOTTAWA, March 17 (CP).\u2014\nLady Tweedsmuir, who will\nleave shortly to return to her\nhome in England, tonight bade\nfarewell to the Canadian people\nand said \"I shall always be\nproud to count myself always as\na part of Canada, wherever I\nam.\"\nIn a message broadcast over\nthe Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, her Excellency said\nshe would leave Canada \"with\na warmth at my heart, and\ngratitude for the love you have\nshown to my husband and myself.\" She made reference to\nher two sons, Lieut. Alastair\nBuchan and Lieut. John Buchan, who succeeded to his father's title, who now are with the\nCanadian  forces.\nto ihow . united front In fight.r.g ' attach   great   importance    particu-\nthe war and in the description of , larly  .n the light of lhe Pontiffs\nMr   Chamberlain   by  hn one-*..me , peace effort*.\ncritic, Winston  Churchill, now  his i    Welles    learned    of    Mussolini.fl\nmost'important lieutenant: I plana to meet Hitler in his conver-\n..-.,    .   a.     ],j\u201er\u201e  sations   with   II   Duce   and   Count\n\"He li M obstlnata for victory   c^no\n\"Mr! ChTmberrirn\"oei hli quiet '    Most   diplomats  believed   Musio-\nconfident.  determined,  and   lint  and   Hitler  would  discuss  the\n* -Tpossibility of a move toward peace\nway,\napparently thinking neither of hli\ntoe  nor  retirement.\nNo one itands out a', the moment\nas a likelv successor, unless it is\nWinston Churchill. His future, like\nMr Chamberlain's, depends largely\non the course of lhe war.\nMr. Chamberlain has an uncanny\nability to ride out polecat storms\nHe hai ridden cut nne bin storm\nsince the war over lhe resignation\nof his War Minister. Leslie Hore-\nBelisha.\nHe hu rejected demands to appoint a Minister of Economici in\nthe war cabinet to organize and\ndirect all the nation'! economic re-\naourcei.\nMr. Chamberliin doei nt \u00bbrem\nto mind what anyone layi an hi'\nhim. At 71 he presses on along his\nown coune.\n,    hich would be made by II Duce if\nthe prospect seemed promising.\nWelles expected to know the re-\ni suit of the Hitler-Mussolini meeting before he sails for home on the\nliner  Conte  Di  Savoia  Wednesday\ni but a  reliable  source  said  he  did\nnot expect to delay his departure\nfor it.\nThe German Ambassador to Italy\n' Hans Georg-Viktor von Maekenseii,\nleft Rome today to meet  Hitler, a\ni German source said. This led \\o\nthe belief that hn sudden call at\nthe Foreign Office Saturday while\nWelles and Count Ciano were con-\nI (erring, had to do with the Hitler-\nMussolini meeting\n6) FEARED LOST\nIN OHIO MINING\nBLAST; IN HURT\nHope    Is    Dwindling\nFast Say Mine\nOfficials\n-ST. CLA1RSVILLE, 0., March\n17 (AP). \u2014 The number of unaccounted for in the Willow Grove\nmine disaster was placed at 69\ntoday. An official laid \"hope of\nreaching them alive li dwindling\nfast.\"\n\"After a careful check It appears 44 men are entombed In\nthe 22-West chamber and 25 others In adjacent works,\" reported\nW. H. McWilllam, Public Relations Counsel for the Hanna Coal\nCompany of Cleveland, owneri of\nthe mine.\nThe men were trapped by an\nexplosion Saturday. Four others\nwere killed and more than 1C0\ngassed or injured.\nThe company's General Manager,\nR. V. Clay, reported the men trap-\nj ped in \"22-West\" ware about three\nmile3 from the mine eitfranc*. The\n' other 25 were In scattered groups\n! nearby when the explosion struck.\n\"Hope of reaching them alive is\n| dwindling fast,\" Clay said.\n| John Richards, Mine Superlnten-\n! dent, and Howard Sanders, Tipple\n\u25a0 Foreman, died after breathing af-\n' terdamp gas in a daring attempt to\n' free their comrades. H. C. Kelly.\n1 member of a rescue crew, identified\nI the two other dead as John Marks,\ni a motorman, and Ralph Sutton.\n! The blast, described by Frank\n! Opatrny. 24-yoar-old rescued miner,\n< as coming \"with a big whoosh,\"\n| was   attributed, by   mine   workers\n\u25a0 either to gas or coal dust. Company\n[officials expressed belief it may\n: have   been   caused   when   miners'\n\u25a0 drills struck a pocket of an old gas\n; well.\nj Workmen entering the explosion\ni area today with masks and oxygen\ni tanks found wreckage much worse\n! tharf expected.\nj The mine is one of the Stale's\nI largest producers, turning out 4400\n: tons of coal daily. It employs about\n500 men, divided into three seven*\nj hour crews, who worked an underground area of about 1000\n, acres.\nFINNS TO GO TO\nMOSCOW TO FIX\nBORDER DETAILS\nAtmosphere \"Cold but\nCorrect\" at Peace\nParleys\nMOLOTOFF \"NOT\nAFRAID OF'ALLIES'*\nBy   MAX  HARRELSON\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nHELSINKI, March 17 (AP). -\nA Finnish Commission will (ly to\nMoscow Monday to Iron out details of the new borders imposed\non Finland under last Tuesday's\npeace treaty while t\\ home the\nnation tackles rehabilitation and\nthe building of new defences.\nDr. Juho K. Paasikivl, Minister\nWithout Portfolio, will head the\nCommission.     '\nAs he disclosed these plans and\nthe fact negotiations for a commercial treaty would begin soon, Dr.\nPaasikivi lifted slightly the curtain\nwhich has hidden the peace nego\ntiations in which he participated.\nHe said the Finnish delegation\nleft Helsinki secretly by automobile\na week ago last Wednesday and\nflew from Stockholm to Moscow.\nThere were five sessions in all and\nthe Finnish delegates were treated\nwell in an atmosphere \"cold but\ncorrect.\"\nStalin did not attend the meetings\nbut Premier Molotoff was present\nthroughout.\nPaasikivl uld tha Russians made\nno political demands on Finland\nand when Finnish dele-gates asked\nMolotoff of the reaction to offers\nof Allied aid to Finland he replied merely: \"We're not afraid\nof them.\"\nHavas News Agency quoted Paasikivi as saying Molotoff ironically\nreferred back across the centuries\nto Czar Peter the Great 18th century imperialist when the Finns suggested Russia should pay for the\nterritory ceded her under last\nweek's treaty.\n\"The present border is substantially that of the Nystad peace\ntreaty signed in 1721,\" Paasikivi\nsaid. 'I0n that occasion Veter'lhe\nGreat paid 2,000,000 thalers to Sweden for the territories ceded.\n\"We proposed that Russia should\nsimilarly pay us indemnity for these\nsame territories,\" Havas quoted\nPaasikivi as saying, \"Molotoff replied that we should write to Peter\nthe Great, and if he ordered the\npayment made, his instructions\nwould be obeyed.\"\nFinland Loses Heavily In Peace Pact\nNO&W\/ir ,\nWarship Struck]\nCivilian Is Killed;\nWomen Are Hurt\nUse of Incendiary Bombs Believed Indicate!\nRaid Aimed at Land Objectives as Well\nas Ships; First Land Raid\nR.A.F. ATTACKS NAZI  COASTAL SHIPSl\nLONDON, March 17 (CP). \u2014 The Royal Air Forct.j\nstriking back after a German air raid on Scapa Flow in which!\none British warship was acknowledged to have been damaged!\nby bombs, tonight attacked German patrol vessels off the!\nGerman coast.\nAn Air Ministry communique said simply * numbafl\nof vessels were attacked with bombs.\nBy ). F. SANDERSON \u2014 Canadian Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, March 17 (CP Cable). \u2014 Fourteen German*!\nraiders, aiming for the first time in the war at land as welll\nas sea objectives, attacked Britain's Scapa Flow anchorage itl\ndusk Saturday, damaging a warship, killing a civilian andl\ninjuring 14 persons, two of them women.\nThe man killed was the first air raid civilian casualty*)\nof the war.\nAn Admiralty communique stated that no military ob-l\njectives on land were hit, but five cottages were damaged. It|\nsaid that there had been seven  '\nBy the peace pact wilh Russia, Finland lost the whole ot the Karelian Isthmus, which includes the Mannerheim line. She also lost\nLake Ladoga and Hanko Peninsula will in the future be a Russian\nnaval base. In the North, Russia also gained wide concessions. Russian\ntro6ps will withdraw from Petsamo, but Russian goods must be allowed duty free entry across Finlanti to and from Norway. A Soviet\nrailway is also to be built across Finland linking the White Sea to the\nGulf of Bothnia. In addition strategic islands in the Gulf of Finland\nhave now become Russian property.\nNelsonKailress Is Found Unconscious\nAfter Drinking Disinfectant; Rallies\nShearer Air Head\nh   Commonwealth   Air   Trsmmf  War Finds MothCf-\nOTTAWA, March 17 iCPV -\nGroup Captain A H Shearer. Director nf Works And Huildmgj in\nthe Royal Canadian Air Force fnr\ntwo year*, hai been appointed to\nthe command of No 2 Training\nCommand with headquarter! in\nWinnipeg, Defence Minuter Norman\nRogen announced  tonight.\nThe  Winnipeg headquarter*  W*H\nhe responsible for all school*  and j\ndepot.1  established   under  the\nish   Common wealth   Air   Tr\nplan between the behead and the\nPacific coast.\nGroup Captain Shearer is *tfl. was '\nborn in Lindsay, Ont. and edu-\nratrd at the University of Manitoba\nHe learned to fly in Toronto and\nnerved Oversea* a* a pilot Foi\nlowing the war he returned to Can*\nada. Joined the Canad.an Air Force\nnn Its creation in 1920 and has held\nnumerous Important posts\nHe wa* Officer Commanding a*\nCsmp Borden. Ont , Ottawa Air\nStation and Jericho Reach, before\nbeing assigned to headquarters her-'\nas Diiector <\u00bbf Works and Building*\nCANADIAN  PILOT KILLED\nTORONTO March IT CI'i\nPilot Officer Albert C Mana'.on, 19\nof the R yal A:r Forre f -rrrer sin-\ndent at l'(M*e** Canada College here\nhas been killed on artive service\na message t-o-day to Toronto sn*\nrwiunred With hn parents the\nyouth left Canada for England two\nyean ag*\u00bb\nRANCHER SAYS WEALTHY\nRECLUSE   HIS   BROTHER\nKAMLOOPS. B C, March 17 -\n'CPi \u2014Thomas Dobb.e. rancher in\nthe nearby North Kamloops district, appeared at the Br'.'.ish Columbia Police office here to inquire\nmnccrning the death in Oakland,\nCalif. of a man he believes t\u25a0\u25a0\nhave   been   his   hr I'.her\nA dispatch from Oakland last\nnight said that Burton Dobbie, a\nseeming pauper, hnd died leaving\na bank account of $11,000 and a\nwill naming Thomas Dobbie of\nCbferdale, B C. as beneficiary\nHowever, no one of that name was\nfound   at   Cloverdale,\nPoliceman Dies,\nPrairie Shooting\nSHAUNAVON, Sask. March 11\n(CP) \u2014Sergeant A J Barker. 51-\nyear-old Royal Canadian Mounted\npoliceman, wis killed Saturday\nnight, victim of a mysterious shooting in a Shaunav n hotel,\nBarker's bodv was found on the\nfloor of thc hotel lobby. There was\napparently no witness to the shooting, which nccurred Just after Barker had descended thc hotel .stairs,\nNo official statement c uld be\nobtained from authorities about the\nshooting of Sergeant Barker, who\nwas <me of thc best liked officers\nof thr force.\nAccording to reports, a man. no**\nheld by police without charge, called Sergeant Barker Saturday evening to visit h.m at his rooms in\nthe Grand Hotel.\nSevere Fighting\non West Front\nPARIS, March 17 (AP).-Severe,\nlocalized fighting between French\nand German units continued for the\nsecond day today West of the\nVosges mountains.\nThe fighting started Saturday\nwhen Nazi scouting parties attacked outposts. Throughout the night\nand today detachments collided\nalong the same Western Front sector.\nRepulse of \"a rather large number\" oi German patrols which attacked French outposts West of\nthe Vosges Saturday night was reported today.\nReconnaissance planes were active on both sides of the Front.\nTwo Nazi planes were reported\nsighted over Northern and Western\nFrance\nSuffering from throat burns\ncaused by drinking a glass of dis- *\ninfeclant,' Miss Pauline Markin,\nwaitress. Ls under treatment in\nKootenav Lake General Hospital. \u25a0\nDr. F. M. Auld. who gave emer-]\ngency treatment when she was\nfound unconscious in her room\nearly Sunday morning, stated that\nshe was \"coming around nicely.\"\nbut that she complained of a burning pain in her throat. It wa\u00bb\nunderstood she had been in a depressed mood for some time.\nMrs. M. Sopow, with whom Miss'\nMarkin roomed, told police that\nthe young woman c?me to her\nroom about 4:30 am. Sunday and\ntold her she had taken a glass of\ndisinfectant. Police said Mrs Sopow\ntold them she though*. Miss Markin\nwas playing a practical joke and\ndid not believe her. The young\nwoman went to her own room\nAbout an hour afterward, worried\nMrs. Sopow went to ner room and\nfound her unconscious She called\nDr. Auld, who rushed the girl to\nhospital.\nPolice have as yet la'd no charge\nnaval casualties and it was be\n. eved these were included in\nthe total given of 11 injured.\nOne of the German plants was\nihot down in a hail of high explosive fire from gum on ships\nand aihore. Others were believed\ndamaged.\nThe fact that the German airmen\nused incendiary bombs, which they\nscattered   far and   wide   over  the\ncountryside, was taken a\u00bb an indication lhat the raid was timed a\nland objectives as well as against\nthe warships in the Scapa anchol-\n,,ge  Incendiary bombs are not usually   used   against   warships   since\nthev can neither penetrate the thick\narmor  nor set fire  to  their sleel\nhulls.   Observers   believed,   conse-.\nnuently. lhat the raid thus marked |\nthe beginning of a new phase of the\nmx month-old war against Germany |\nMost  of the  casualties  appar-1\nently were in the village of Bridge,\nof   Waith,   where    19    explosive\nbombs fell. Another 18 were uid\nto have been dropped In one spot\nover tha  Queen   Amoan  area  of j\nStennel\ncruisers Renown and Repulse weral\nbelieved to hava baen anchored!\nat Scapa Flow when \u2022 group of I\nGerman bombers suddenly raided!\nBritain's anchorage it Scapa Flow,|\nGerman filers declared tonight\nDescribing how the first Gernunl\nair attack of the war on British land!\nobjectives was carried out, thre\u00abJ\nyoung German fliers told The Toff\nelgn Press their raid \"went ott i\"\nschedule.\"\nThe German Command contmU\nitselt with a communique men).\nsaying   three  battleships  and  on\u00ab|\ncruiser   were   \"severely   damaged\"!\nand \"probable\" damage inflicted on|\ntwo other warships as well.\nNo Sacrifice loo\nGreat to Keep Up I\nRumanian Arm]\nBUCHAREST, March  17  (AP).\u2014I\nrt \u201e idmir.ltv said the high-angle Premier TaUrescu told Rumania to*\nJ!eo? wa\"hPi nt,airc?aft bat-May \"no ucriflc. is too frwVjS\n^s'Lhore and M.Air Force1, kcq,  theRumanian  army *gi\nU. S. Potrol Watches\nSteamer Southgate\nSAN JUAN, Puerto Rico, March\n117 lAF). \u2014 The 4862 ton British\nsteamship Southgate, which two\n1 weeks ago flashed a mysterious\nj distress signal, is still ,n waters near\n; Puerto Rico under constant surveil-\nI lance by the United States neutrality patrol, naval sources -said\nI today.\nThe theory is held in these quart-\nI ers that the Southgate, roving inside\nI the  so-called   \"neutrality\"  zone,  is\nsupplying British warships.\nNORWAY PROTESTS NAZIS\nOSLO. March 17 (AP)\u2014 Norway\nprotested  to Germany against the\nsinking of the Norwegian steamship Nidarholm oft Ireland Feb. ^t\n\"without examination and without\npermitting the ship's papers to De\ntaken into security.\" The protest\nasked that steps be taken against\nthe submarine commander and reserved the right to claim compensation.\nI\nLADY  DIES  IN  CRASH\nLETHBRIDGE, Alts., March 17\n(CP). \u2014 Accident which resulted in\nthe death of Mrs. Agnes Little, 55,\noccurred Saturday night, when the\ntaxi in which she was riding collided head on with a car driven\nby Mrs. I A- Sherrington, of Lethbridge, at the intersection of\nSeventh Street and Third Avenue\nSouth.\nDESERT PRIEST KILLED\nLONE PINE, Calif,, March 17\n(AP). \u2014 Monsignor John J. Crowley. 48, famous desert priest whose\nparish ranged over the United\nStates' highest peak nnd lowest\nvalley, \\i*as killed in an automobile\naccident today.\nin-l ow for Woman\nMONTREAL. March 17 (CPi A\nwar had in f\u00bbme \u00bbl-*ng before Mn\nErneit Fiubert of Montreal South\ndi-cverrd   *he   had   a   nv'.her-m\nA clipping from nn F-nglin'\np\u00abP*r Drought  the news  lhat  her\nrlippin\nr nroii\nti.tband.  oversea*  with   thr  C'a\ndian    Active   Service    Force,   had\nfound hii mother whom he had n..t\nseen or hea:d frnm in 30 years\nThe dipping rrUtM that Fan*\nhert. now ,1fl, left England with\nfriend* cf the family a* a child of\nseven snd tan away fmm home at\nnire  lo  ram  hn own  living\nDuring Fauherl'i wandering* his\nmother mo\\rd from her old h me\nind ren'arnrd after th* death of\nher huihard and FaiiberVi letters\nwrre  returned  to  him\nHf r*'im'*\"1 h,t tttrch when hr\nreturned to England with the ipx-p***\nand located his mother through thr\nB'd of thp Silvati\"i Armv ind po\nli<-e Sbp is row Mr\u00ab Brad>y and\nllvet m Lancashire,\nPriests Imprisoned\nin German Camps\nVATICAN CITY. March 17 (CPI\n- Imprisonment of 45 Polish. Orch\nand   Austrian   priests   m   German\nI concentration camps, has brrn re-\ni parted t\" Pope Pius, the Polish Lm*\n[ bassy  to thc  Holy See  announced\nyesterday.\nThe Pope rrrejved the report before   hu   conference   Inst   wwkend\nwith Forrign Minister von Rihben-\n: tmp nf Germany and the Embassy\nj believe*   the   pope   referred   t >   it\n,    August Cardinal  Hlond. Primate\n; of Poland,  in  another  report  says\nSoviet   aiithoritiei   in   Russian   oc-\n1 copied    Poland   have   discouraged\nthe  killing of  prieslj   in   favor  \u25a0 f\nn'oie .iuhtlr ami scientific methods\n'\nn.\u00abtilling atheism\nIn  the  place of violence  the\nSn-\n,-irt regime hn* confiscated church\npotjieMioni ;nd drnnved the clergy\ni of  its  revenue-;   Sid   by   side   with\necon- mie pressure ,ho Communist\n1 mithorittf* nrgamrri an intellectual\nI anti religion*    drive    rnnrrntralllig\nfpenal  attention on  children.\nBody of Third\n(ar Accident\nBody of Miss Helen Lentsman,\nnf Barons. Alta., one of three death\nvictims when an automobile plunged\nover the bank into the Columbia\nRiver near Brilliant, November 5,\n1033, was recovered on the South\nbunk of the Columbia Saturday,\nDetails of the discovery were not\nknown at B C. Police Headquarters\nin Nelson; and officers of the Castlegar detachment, pending instructions, were unable to give circumstances of the discovery. Finding\nof the body was reported to \"B\"\nDivisional Headquarters by Constable G   A. MeAndrew, Castlegar,\nA Coroner's Jury, to be named by\nCoroner Dr. H. H, MacKenzie, will\nprobably view the body, which was\nbrought to Nelson, today,\nAlfred Heath Sweeney, Castlegar hotel employee and driver of\nthe death car; Miss Clara Stewari\nof Vancouver, teacher at Brilliant;\nand Miss lentsman nf Barons. Alta .\nteacher at Ootlschenla No. 3 School,\nlost their lives in the accident;\nwhile Miss Beatrice French and\nMiss   Winnifred   Jardine.   both   of\nof November\nat Brilliant Found\nNelson and teachers In the Brilliant\narea, escaped with but minor\ninjuries.\nSweeney was found on the river\nbank and died en route to the Kootenay iJike 'General Hospital, and\nMiss French was flung out on to\nthe bank, only slightly Injured.\nThe other three all went into tbe\nriver in the car. only Miss Jardine\nbeing able to fight her way free\nand to safety. Miss Stewart's body\nwas found four hours after the\naccident floating at arm's length\nfrom the car, her coat caught in\ni door-hinge, while no trace of\nMiss I-entsman's body was found\nuntil Saturday, although a diligent\nsearch was made by police.\nSweeney had driven the four women teachers from Billiant, and was\nattempting to manoeuvre around a\nsharp corner to pick up a fifth\nteacher. Miss Wilma Milne, ill of\nwhom he planned to drive to the-r\nschools, when the accident occurred\nThe car was being backed tn manoeuvre around the bend when *t\nwent off the road, to plunge 150\nfeet into the fast, icy water.\nShip Toll Rises\nOver Weekend\nLONDON, March 17 (CP C*b>i\n-The 1093-ton British freighter\nRedhall was machine-gunned today\nby one plane, which the steamship\ndrove off with gunfire. Later, two\nbomber* swooped down upon the\ntrawlers Mirabelle, Avon-dee and\nBraconlea the leading plane dropped three b-ombs between the Avon-\ndee and Braconlea but failing to\nscore a hit.\nA Copenhagen dispatch said a\nGerman military pi ine crashed\nthis morning on the Northwes'ern\npart of the Island of Lolland. off\nthe Danish coast. The finding ol\ntwo parachutes near the plane,\nwhich was partly destroyed by fire.\nled to the belief the crew escaped\nafter setting the machme ablaze\nThe names of eight German prisoners from submarines was announced officially by Britain today\nand broadcast to Germany.\nThe British oll.er A'wyn. 350\ntons, ran aground on the Manx\nroast today. Twu crewmen were\nlost.\nThe 4M2-ton Yugoslav vessel\nSlava, was retorted to have gone\ndown during the weekend off the\nWelsh coast. One crewman wa* said\nto havt heen lost Cruse of the\nsinking was not given in the reports,\nThe 2248-ton Netherlands collier\nSint Annfaland struck a mine today\nand was sinking The crew was\nrescued hy another vessel\nn,K' \u201ea   tn  reoel  strength and to meet the 30.000,000,-\n\"\"Tn   which ^4  German 00O lei ,$165,000,000, annual budjtt.\nIn a broadcast following release of\nthe  atucK.\nbombers took part\nrerman   plan's   returned   to  at-  800 former pro- Nazi Iron Guardian\nck E,ifl' cast shipping today. The  from concentration camps, the Preii   A   F.  was said  to have tnter-1 mier aaid:\nrented four of the bombers, dam-        Weakness   Invites   threat\",   and\niTrit two with gunfire, one of_themfjIren^hjMp; them a^i^dutinej\nbadly 'hat\nturn home.\n*as unable to re-\nfor defence of our frontiers, no el-\nfort :s superfluous, no sacrifice too\n; great.\nHeinkel botnhen were reported Tatarescu appealed to each farmer\nto have attempted to reach the ,n ^ tw0 mpn*5 \u25a0acoiIc to make up\nFirth of Forth bridge Saturday f^r roservisls' absence in the army\nbut were beaten off by British ,n(j ca])ed on industrial laboren,\nfighters before they could come ^penally tho.se in the minea and\nwithin bombing distance. j nl fields, to double their efforts to\nr-i   .,  i\u201e.i. I  assure adequate reserves for the na-\nThe  raid  on  Scapa   Flow   \u00bb\"*\u25a0 j l:on  ln  evpn, \u201e, emergency.\n\u25a0I do not know what tomorrow\n11 bring,\" he said, \"but I believt\nwe can feel less disturbed than vt\nwere yesterday. I am convinced thl\nwas believed more than 100 bomb:\n..\u25a0ere   dropped    The    first   c\n.aiders appeared at twilight and\nwas pitch dark by the time the ra.o  grr\u201eer part \u201e, our  diKicuIties il\nwas o*.er 'now  behind  us.\"\nII was th- first air raid on Scapa\t\nFlow since last October 17 when the iAUT0 DEALERS PROTEST\nIron   Duke,  the  demilitarized  bat-. C4SOLINE   RATIONI\nHe.hn, used as a training ship, was \u25a0O.'OULir't   KAIIV\/m\nimaged. 1X1NDON, March* 17   (CPI - A\nOn February 21 Winston Church-' protest against gas* line ralionln|\nill First I\/ird of 'he Admiralty., and high motor vehicle taxes wu\ninid ihe House nf Commons tha* l sent to the Chancellor of the Ex-\n, .h. battieshm Roval Oak was i chequer. Sir John Simon, yesterday,\nunk bv a submarine in Scaoa Flow by . committee representing Grei,\nel rvinher 13 the navy had not Britain s principal automobile dell.\nhad the use of this, \"our best er, and associations. The commit'***!\nstrategic base\"\nASSELSTINE  SPEAKS\nAT KIMBERLEY TODAY\nVICTOniA, March 17 ICPI -\nThough offered free .spare and other\nconcession*. British Columbia will\nnot renew its exhibit at the San\nFrancisco exhibition this year, Hon\nW. J. Aasclstlne said today, on his\nreturn from an unannounced trip\nto California where he met tourist\nagencies.\nEntering the election campaign.\nthe Minister of Mines and Trsde\nwill speak on Monday at Kimberley; on Tuesdav at Ferine, and on\nWednesday al \\tirhel in Ibe interests  of  Liberal  candidates.\nNaval circles explained the pres-i\nPnre of warships there Saturday\nbv saving that although It had nul\nheen used as the mam Nor'h Sea\nfleet base Scapa Flow still had\nbeen available for use by warships\nas an anchorage.\nNaval sources added that Mr\nChurchill's statement was made\nIhree weeks ago. but declined to\nelaborate.\nThe civilian killed was James Is-\nhister 27. an Orkney County Council employee who lived at Bridge\nof Waith In Stennes I .and. on the\nIsland of Pomona, and near ih-\nStrnmness civil airdrome nf the Allied Airways of Aberdeen\nIshister was killed by a high rx-\nploiive    bomb    while    standing\nasked that taxes be cut in the nexl\nbudget.\nWeajtngfl\nUNTERMYEK   DIES\nPAI.M SPHINGS. Calif. Marrh\n(API.-Samuel Untermvei, \u00ab   N>\nYork Corporation lawyer and rn\nsnder for Jewish righ's. died at li\nWinter  home Saturday.\nNELSON\nVictoria\nVancfluver\nKamloops\nPrmoe George\nEstevan Point\nPrince Rupert\nLangara\nAtl.n\nDawson\n'i   Seattle\n:he doorwav of his cottage watcn- j Portland\nIng    the    tracer    bullets    darting   San Francisco\nthrough the semi-darkness and th.:   Spokane\nsudden flashes of anti-aircraft shells    Penticton\nThe same bomb Injured two of his   Vernon\nneighbors   a 50-year old shoemake\"*   Kr! mm\nand a JO-vear old engine driver Cranbrook\nAt least 50 high explosive bombs   Calgary\nfell near houses   farm buildings an.l   F.dn*. inton\non country roads in the Wes* main    Swift Current\nland   area   nf   Orkney   as   well   as   Moose Jaw\nscores   of   incendiarv   bombs  flstu^ fl ' Prince Albert\nse!    fire   to   haystacks   and   farm   Winnipeg\n  Water   level   a*   Nelson   SaturdlJ\nBERLIN. March   17  (APl.-Tha  noon--P3j foot ab-ve ;ero\n4* I0O.ton   Brltlilfl    battK  erulsae I     Water   level    a'    Nrlson   SundiJ\nMood   and   the   M.OOOton   battle noon-020 foot ibvve lero.\nMin\nMax\n31\nM\n\u25a01.'\na4\n:w\nM\n31\n52\n3*1\nM\n\u25a0Kl\n51\n3.1\n11\n311\n41\n19\n25\na'\n7\n40\nS7\n39\nSO\nli\n72\ni?\n55\n30\n\u2014\n3]\n\u2014\n31\n5B\n'.'.*,\n55\n21\n45\n23\n40\n21\n42\n.in\n44\nlfl\nfl7\n27\n32\n.\n mmmmmmmm\nmmmmmmmm\u2014\n\"\u2014\u2014\"-\n _-\nK*,F   TWO\n\u2014NELSON  DAILY NEWS, NELSON,  B.C.\u2014MONDAY MORNINQ, MARCH  18, 1940,\u2014\nASSMORE\nIVSSMORE, B. C.-R. Flynn vis-\nI Nakusp.\n|W. R. Perry has returned from\nrail. He was a guest of Mr. and\nIn. J. Henderson.\n|Mrs. W. Young was called to Ncl-\n|n by the sudden illness of Mr.\nYoung while visiting friendi. After\na few days In Kqotenay Lake\nHospital he was much Improved.\nThey   return0^   home  Thursday.\nJ. Watson of. Nelson ls a guest\nof Mr, and Mrs. W. Young.\nG. A. Forbes has returned from\nNelson after receiving treatment\nfor a broken rib.\nMrs. S. Reid of Slocan Park visited town.\nREFRESHING\nSATISFYING\n\u2022 Treat yourself dally to healthful,\ndelicious Wrijley's Spearmint Gum.\nThe chewing helps keep your teeth\nclean, blight and attractive, and\nthe long-lasting flavor helps keep\nyour breath pleasant. Chewing relieves tension and aids your digestion too. Enjoy it after every meal.\nGET SOME TODAY I\nWe Accept\nCanadian Money\nat Par\nDr. David Cowen\nJamieson  Bldg.\nSpokane,  Wash.\nSalvation Army\nOfficer Tells of\nAldershot Work\nHuts   in  Full   Swing;\nProvide Tea on\nRoute Marches\nWork of the Salvation Army with\nCanadian soldiers at Aldershot -s\ndescribed by Adjutant Basil Meak-\nlnfti, one of seven Salvation Army\nofficers with the troops, in a letter\nhome.\nHe said in part:\n\"I am fine myself although l\/!v\nall ou<r men I felt the cold very\nmuch upon arrival in England. \"Regarding our work ... We have been\nable to take certain large huts in\nnearly every camp where our\ntroops are and have equipped one\nroom as a 'quiet room' where there\nis free writing paper and envelopes\nalso papers and a free library. \"1\ngave out in one of these rooms last\nSunday no fewer than 2250 sheets\nof paper and 800 envelopes. We\nhave also fitted up and operate in\nthese same camps a much larger\nhut known as a recreation room\u2014\nthese are fitted up by ourselves\nwith a piano, a gramophone, radio,\nping pong tables, and many other\ngame\u00ab, plus two and three movies\na week provided by our own talkie\nmachines; these are a great feature\nwith the men.\nGOING  FULL SWING\n\"We are now going full sw'ing and\nour places are packed out nearly\nevery night of the week\u2014thus saving our men from drink gambling\nand other evils and also giving\nthem something to bring cheer and\ntake away homesickness and loneliness. We are also the welfare officers of our regiment and we deal\nwith many things such as inquiries\nfrom home, payment of allowances,\narranging billets when on holidays,\nor arranging for the boys to go\nout, when they have half days off,\nwith local people who invite them\nfor supper. Much personal work is\ndone also with the fellows and\nmany of their problems are unloaded upon us,\n\"We have also a number of mobile canteens ith this division and\nwith these we, by previous arrangement with the O.C.'s, meet\nthe men when on route marches\nand night exercises or out on rifle\nranges and provide them free of\ncharge with a cup oi tea and a\nbiscuit each. All our services are\nwithout one cent of charge to any\nman\u2014everything we do is paid for\nby good Canadian money . . ,\"\nRossland Social A\nGuide for Travellers\nDELEGATES FROM  EAST\nKOOTENAY TO TEACHERS'\nCONVENTION NAMED\nCRANBROOK. B.C. - The East\nKootenay District Council of the\nB. C. Teachers' Federation met in\nthe High School, Council members\npresent were: A, L. McPhee and\nLeon Rushcall of Fernie, Breen Melvin of Inverrnere-Athalmere, W.\nDuncan and W. Fish and Miss Gregg\nof Michel-Natal, John Lucan and J.\nMcArthur of Kimberley and Frank\nMoore and Allan Spragge of Cranbrook.\nMr. Fish gave a report to the\nmeeting, as geographical representative for East Kootenay on the\nmeeting of the B. C. Teachers' Federation executive at Vancouver during the Christmas holidays.\n| Further business included discussion of vital questions which will\narise at the annual B. C. Teachers'\nconvention at Vancouver during the\nEaster holidays. Chairman of the\nmeeting was Mr. Fish, and Secretary Mr, Duncan,\nCranbrook s delegates to the\nconvention will be Miss Simone\nBourgeois and Miss Margaret Campion, and also planning on attending arc Miss Patmore, Mr. Spragge\nand Mr. Hunter.\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS       EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, Si 50 Up\nROSSLAND, B. C, March 17 \u2014\nMuriel, elder daughter of Mrs.\nJames Heap and the late Jamee\nHeap ot Rossland, was united in\nmarriage with John Richard Ayres.\nelder son of Mr. and Mrs. John\nAyres, at a quiet wedding ceremony which took place in St.\nGeorge's Anglican Church Friday\nmorning, with Rev. D. S. Catchpole\nofficiating. Entering the church on\nthe arm of her brother-in-law. J B\nStewart of Trail, the bride looked\ncharming in a dove-rose frock, cut\non Princess lines, trimmed with\nniching and material-covered buttons. A small pill-box hat of deep\nviolet georgette, offset by a nose\nlength veil of the same shade and\nmatching flowers, and dainty patent\nleather shoes completed her outfit.\nShe carried a colonial bouquet of\npink roses and violets. Miss Marjory\nHeap, the bride's sister, was her\nonly attendant, choosing a smart\nteal blue dress with bustle back\neffect. Complementing her frock\nwas a model hat of raspberry colored strpw trimmed with varicolored, velvet bows. Matching accessories, and a colonial bouquet\nof pink roses and fern completed\nher ensemble. L. E- E- Hamilton was\nbest man A reception was held\nafter the ceremony, at the home\nof the bride's mother, with a few\nrelatives and close friends attending. Mrs. Heap received the guests\nattired in a navy alpaca jacket\nfrock with a matching straw sailor\nhat trimmed with cyclamen flowers.\nMrs. Ayres, the groom's mother, also\nassisted dressed in a bolero frock\nof navy polka dot flat crepe and a\nnavy and blue-heaven brimmed\nstyle hat with a contrasting flower\ntrim, Both Mrs. Ayres and Mrs,\nHeap wore corsages of pink roses\nand carnations. The rooms were\ndaintily decorated with daffodils\nand pink snapdragons, and a lovely\nthree-tier wedding cake was centred\non the bride's table. Mr. and Mrs.\nAyres left later for a honeymoon\nto be spent in the States and at\nCoast points. For her going-away\ncostume the bride wore an English\ntweed swagger coat in hyacinth\ntone, ovc a navy figured silk afternoon dress A smart black felt sailor\nhat and black accessories completed\nher ensemble.\nArchibald McCormick of Calgary,\nsound engineer for the Canadian\nRadio Equipment Company visited\nRossland Thursday, where he was\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. M,\nAnderson.\nArthur Daly has returned from a\nshort visit in Nelson as guest of\nhis brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand  Mrs. R.  E.  Crerar.\nGunner Oscar Vermiere of the\nlllth (Nelson) Field Battery, R.C.A.,\nis visiting his father, Bruce Vermiere, on leave from Edmonton.\nR. VV. Haggen and Miss Winnifred Haggen visited Nelson Saturday.\nGunner Raymond Hull of the\nFirst Search Light Regiment. R.C.A.,\nis visiting his mother, Mrs. Robert\nRankine.\nMrs. Clara  Stocker returned  on\nFriday   to   her   home   at   Cascade\nafter visiting friends in Rossland for\nI ten days,\n|    Mr, and Mrs. George Cullen have\n, taken up residence in the home for-\n\u25a0 merly  occupied   by   Corporal   and\nMrs.   G.   R.   Lennox,   on   Le   Roi\nAvenue.\nMr. ar.d Mrs. Jack Reid are now\n! residing   in   the   former   residence\nof   Mr.   and   Mrs.   George   Cullen,\nj lower Lt Roi   Avenue.\nj     Mrs. J, F. Cooper entertained the\nj Rossland   members   of   the   Surop-\ntomist Club at her horns Wednesday\nj evening, when the ladies spent the\nI evening knitting for the Red Cross\nSociety.  Those   present   were   Mrs,\nIris Eustis, Mrs, Samuel Irvin. Mrs.\nJohn Woodford, Mrs. S  R. Davies.\nj Mrs.  M,  M,   Butorac,  Miss  Lillian\n; Johnston, and the hostess.\nPaddy Topliss returned Friday to\n: Sheep Creek after spending a week\nj here v.siting his mother, Mrs Milli-\n! cent Tcphss. Mr. Tooliss was un\nj leave suffering from an injured\nhand.\nEleven tables were in play at the\nC. C. F. whist drive, held st the\nI. O. O. F. Hall, Thursday evening.\nMakers of the high scores were Mra.\nCarl Olsen and Arthur Henry, and\nconsolations were awarded to Mra.\nKarl Wilde and Harry Holoboft\nAfter the supper, which was served\nin the upper hall, dancing concluded\nthe evening, with H. H. Metzgar\nacting as Master of Ceremonies.\nMembers on thtucommittee assisting\nwere Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Lins, Mr.\nand Mrs, Basil Littley and Mr. and\nMrs, L. T. Nimsick.\nThe closing banquet and presentation of prizes of the Rossland Ladies Curling Club was held in The\nclub room Saturday evening. Mrs.\nJ. H. Beley. former President, was\nguest of honor, making the presentations later in the evening. Prizes\npresented were to the following:\nArchibald Cup winners, Mrs. Robert\nDonaldson, Mrs. J. A. Wright, Mrs.\nL. T. Nimsick, Mrs. Beth McNeil;\nArchibald Cup, second prize, Mrs. A.\nE. Harrison, Mrs. Bruce Sommen,\nMrs. H. H Stinson, Mrs. E. Woima;\nDemotion competition, first prize,\nMrs. J. A. Wright, Mrs. L. T. Nimsick, Mrs. Beth McNeill, Mrs. Robert Donaldson; Demotion competition, second prize, Mrs. Edgar King,\nMrs. Robert Crawford, Mrs. R. D.\nGardiner, Mrs. Gus Spilker; Points\ncompetition, Mrs. Gus Spilker, first,\nMrs, E. Woima, second; Mrs. B. D.\nGardiner, third. Mrs. Harrison and\nMrs. Wright were made presentations by Mrs, Donaldson, the President, in appreciation for work and\ncooperation during the season.\nThuse present included Mrs. Robert\nDonaldson, Mrs. A E Harrison, Mrs,\nS. E. Wilson, Mrs. H. H. Stinson,\nMrs. J. A, Wright, Mrs. L. T. Nimsick, Mrs. Bruce Sommen, Mrs. Edgar King, Mrs. Beth McNeill. Mrs.\nE, Woima, Mrs. Robert Crawford,\nMrs. Gus Spilker, Mrs. J. H. Beley,\nand Miss Kay Lowdon.\nThe annual St. Patrick's Tea, held\nby members of the Ladies' Auxiliary\nto the Mater Misericordiae Hospital,\nat the Catholic Parish Hall Saturday evening, proved to be a delightful affair. Assisting artists in a\nvariety program given during the\nafternoon were Mrs. H. S. Fowler,\nviolinist, accompanied by H. Mellor-\nLangdale; Mrs. Albert Albo, contralto, accompanied by Mrs. J. D.\nMitchell; Mrs. A. C. Sutton, soprano, accompanied by Mrs. Sydney\nSimcock; Miss Ina Irvin, soprano,\naccompanied by Miss Yvonne Langdale; Miss Joyce Topliff, piano solo;\nLouis Parisotto, Trail, tenor, accompanied by H. Mellor-Langdale and\nMiss Yvonne Langdale and Miss\nJoyce Topliff, piano duets. Ladies in\ncharge of arrangements were Mrs.\nJ. H. Beiey, Mrs. E. E Turner, Mrs.\nGeorge Townsend, refreshments\ncommittee; Mrs. W. G. Mara, Mrs,\nJ. A. Butcher, urns; Mrs. W. M.\nAnderson, Mrs. Thomas Supple,\nMrs. E, E. Topliff. Mrs. L. J. Nicholson, Mrs. Barrett Lawrie, Mrs. L.\nG, Delmas, Mrs. J. R. Bryan, serviteurs; Mrs. L. A. Read, Mrs. J. N.\nCran, candy booth; Mrs. William\nCunningham, cashier. Mrs. C. A.\nHanson was winner of the door\nprize.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert McNish have\ntaken up residence on St. Paul\nStreet in the house formerly occupied by Mr, and Mrs. Fred Armstrong.   '\nSpecial Services\nfor Palm Sunday\nSp\u00abi\u00bbl observances and services\nIn both Catholic and Anglican\nchurches marked Palm Sunday, the\ncommemoration duy ot Christ* entry into Jerusalem on an asi to be\ncrowned King, in Nelson.\nThe ceremony of the Solemn\nBlessing ot the Palms was performed in the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate by Rev. John Cheevers\nand at the Church of the Blessed\nSacrament by Rev. G. Murphy. This\nwas followed by the distribution of\nthe Palms to the congregation and\nthe readings of the Accounts of\nthe Passicns from the Gospel according to St. Matthews, In the\nCathedral by Bishop Martin M.\nJohnson, and at the Fairview\nChurch by Rev. Father Murphy.\nStory of Christ's entry into Jerusalem was for the most part the\nsubject of sermons in the Anglican\nChurches, the Church of the Redeemer in Falrview and St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral. Rev. Archdeacon F. H. Graham conducted the\nmorning service at the Falrview\nChurch, while Rev. W. J. Silver-\nwood, Pastor, took the evening series, delivering a sermon, 'Throwing Stones.\" Special Palm Sunday\nservice was conducted at the Pro-\nCathedral by Rev. J. G. Holmes,\nPastor.\nHUME\u2014H.     Bicknell.     Brandon,   D  A  CampM! J  W. Currie. Cres-\nMan ; Mr, and Mr- H.rkncll, Hu\n\u2022sell, Man; C. J Wood. Ham:!;,\nOnt.;   W.   A.   McDonald.   Turon\nlor,: M Brand. Mr< J. Anderson, Mr,\nami Mrs I) MacDonald, L. St. Denis\nMr  and Mrs J. Morrison. M,.w M  T.\nOnt.: L. B. Crow, G W. H.cks. Kam- Kwing.   F.   G   Slanmnre   Trail*   I.\nloops. I!  C; 1)   P. Rowland, Winn:- S   Davidson. II   D\" Svoboda, E   J\npeg, Man;  J    H   Lews,  II   Steed- Cartuthers. A   T  W....d, K   S   Mc-\nman, H. N   Coursey   Medicine Hat; Corkcll,  II. (*, Johnson.  II   A. Ca-\nMr.  and   Mrs   A    II   Irv.nR.   .1    J, beldu,   Vancouver;   C   A    Yore.   I*\nVote for\nW. K. ESLING\nIN KOOTENAY WEST\nCRANBROOK FRESHMAN\nWINS FIRST LETTER\nIN HIGH SCHOOL SPORT\n,    CRANBROOK.    B.C.-lhe    first\nC.H.S. letter  for sporis  in  purple\nund gold was presented last week\nby  Bob Phillips.  President of the\nStudents   Council   to   a   freshman.\nDuke  Wheajon,   as  recognition  of\nIns work in hockey this season.\nI    The ceremony  was  preceded  by\ni an int rr house quiz, with Elizabeth\nj Spreull  asking  the  questions,  and\ni for House  A  Jack McFadden  and\n1 Marjorie Brondsdon, for House B\nCharles    Harrison    and    Beverley\nHaney, and for House C Bob Phillips and  Mary  Philpot answering\nthem. It resulted in u tie between\nI House B and House C.\n|     Further   presentatiens  of  purple\nand guid skull caps were made to\ni the six members of each house wno\nmade   efficient   rooters   at   inter-\nschool   games   during   the   teuoh\nMr. Hunter'.*; school orches'.n played during the program.\nGYPED\nFriend\u2014Did you get the estate\nsettled?\nLawyer\u2014Yes, but the heirs managed to grab part of it.\nPROCTER\nPROCTER, B. C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Mucha and daughter have returned after spending the Winter\nin Lardo.\nMrs. E. Lowerson of Canyon was\na guest at the Outlet Hotel.\nBill Ogden of the lllth (Nelson)\nField Battery, R.C.A., Is home on\nleave from Edmonton.\nfrank Putnam of Creston and\nDonald MacDonald of Trail were\nguests at the Outlet Hotel.\nMrs. W. Merrifield, Miss Edna\nJohnston, Miss Hazel Crosby, A.\nCrosby, Max Carne and Bert Crosby visited Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Mucha have as\nguest, the former's brother, Louie\nMucha.\nC. Ing of Cranbrook visited Procter.\nJimmie Croabie of the lllth (Nelson) Field Battery, R.C.A., is home\non leave from Edmonton.\nJ. Rtss Hinde visited Nelson.\nT. J. S. Ferguson of Nelson was\na guest at the Outlet Hotel,\nLUMBERTON\nLUMBERTON, B. C. - Mrs. J.\nDowney has returned from Spokane where she had been visiting\nfor two m-cnths,\nMr. and Mrs. Bud Piper of Spo\nkane accompanied by Miss Janet\nParent of Lumberton visited here.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Thompson of\nWardner, accompanied by Allan N.\nJones of Elko visited the E. Thompson family.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Carver and son,\nKenneth of Cranbrook visited Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Thompson.\nE. J. Dobson who has been on\nthe sick list for two weeks has returned to his work.\nMr, and Mrs. John and Mr. and\nMrs. Joe -Downey visited the L. J.\nDesharnais family at Cranbrcok.\nArt Hinton of Cranbrook visited\nhere.\nMiss Janet Parent and A. Hinton\nof Cranbrook visited here.\nMrs. J. Price and Mrs, V. Downey entertained in honor of Mrs.\nBud Piper of Spokane.\nMr, and Mrs. Joe Downey visited\nat Kimberley.\nBud and Dick Piper of Spokane\nvisited here.\nDawson Roland visited at Moyie\nlast weekend,\nR. Pelton of Cranbrook and H,\nPletcher of Galloway are visitors\nin town.\nWord has been received from Gib\nParent and Scotty Chalmers, with\nthe Canadian Active Service Force\nin England. Both men report they\nare enjoying life overseas.\nPORTLAND WINS  '\nPORTLAND, Ore., March 17 (CP>\n\u2014Portland Buckarooa lengthened\nthe Pacific Coast Hockey League\nplayoff aeries by defeating Vancouver Lions 6-3 here tonight in\nthe fourth game of a beat-of-aeven\nseries. It wai Portland's first victory ln the playoffs.\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C.-Mrs. E.\nAngrignon of New Denver and her\ndaughter Mrs. A. Greenlaw of Lardeau were weekend guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. Thomas McNeish\nMiss Nancy Pagura, who has\nbeen visiting friends In Nelson has\nreturned.\nThe home of Mr, and Mrs. J.\nBaillargeon was the scene. of a\nshower when Mrs. W.E. Wylls and\nMiss Irene Terry enetrtained in\nhonor of Miss Nancy Pagura, a\nbride-elect of this month. Games\nand contests were enjoyed, the winners being Miss Beth Gage, Misi\nNancy Pagura, Miss Mary Morrison, Miss Thelma Russell and\nMiss Ruby Wilson. Miss Pagura\nwas presented with a white and\npink basket from the Handle of\nwhich hung a white bell filled with\ngifts. Other guests were the Misses\nCecelia Warner, Annie Storgard,\nAdelina Nichols, Florence and Irene\nTerry, Mrs. V. Hrst and Mrs. W.E.\nWylls. Dainty refreshment! were\nserved.\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C.-A. McMillan of Sandon visited here en\nroute to his old home in Glengarry,\nOnt.\nW. E. Wylis haa left for Nelson.\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C.-Miss Irene\nGrant Is a patient in Slocan Community Hospital, New Denver.\nA. Y. Rae visited New Denver\nto see his wife, who Is a patient in\nhospital.\nW. E. Graham, Mr. and Mrs. T.\nMcNeish, Miss M. Morrison R. N.,\nand Pat Maguire visited New Drover.\nTrue Hicks visited New Denver\nMr. and Mrs. T. McNelih left\nfor Lardeau where they will be the\nguests of their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr, and Mrs. E. J. Leveque.\nSECOND  GROUP 111th\nMEN ARRIVE NELSON\nA second party of lllth (Nelson)\nField Battery members arrived In\nNelson from Edmonton Sunday on\nfurlough. At the station they were\ngreeted by relatives and by battery members who arrived a week\nago, and who were scheduled to\nleave Monday at 1:30 a.m. on their\nreturn trip.\nWar Outcome of\nCapitalistic System,\nHerridge Says Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C.-H. W. Herridge,\nCCF. candidate for Kootenay West\npresented his party's platform in\nthe Federal election campaign, supported by H. E. NeUon of New Den-\nver. W. I. Moseley of Nakusp was\nchairman. Mr. Herridge spoke of\nwar as an outcome of the capitalistic system. War industries ihould\nbe nationalized he said. He asked\nIf anything constructive had been\nproposed by either the Liberal or\nConservative party ln the preaent\ncampaign. The foundation of any\nmovement for the betterment of\nthe country must be built on integrity and fair mindedness. The character and industry of the CCF\nrepresentatives at Ottawa have\nbeen recognized, Mr. Herridge said,\nbut they must have the support\nof the mass of the people who are\nasking for fair play.\nMASQUERADE DANCE\nPLANNED AT APPLEDALE\nAPPLEDALE, B. C - At the\nmonthly meeting of the Progressive\nAssociation members present were\nMr and Mrs. J. Fordyce, Mr. and\nMrs. F. Brooks, Mrs. Trozzo, J, Moran, J. Brown, F. Day, G. Steele,\nand H. Wynne and a new member\nMiss A. Trozzo.\nA masquerade dance wil planned\nfor April. It was also decided to\ndecorate the notices. The committee for the masquerade aje Miss A.\nTrozzo, Mrs. F. Brocks, and J. Moran,\ncZadif TbrftofL\nHOSIERY\nCREPE, *\u00ab AA\nCHIFFON  ?*\u2022\u00ab*\u00ab\nLadiei' Wear        Burnt Block\nFRUITVALE\nFRUITVALE, B. C.-Mri. C. Vey-\nsey entertained at a children'i party\ncomplimenting her daughter Joyce\non her seventh birthday. Games and\ntinging were enjoyed followed by\ndainty refreshments the serving\ntable being centred with a birthday cake topped with seven pink\ncandles. Mrs. Thomas Grieve assisted in serving. Guestt were Alice\nGrieve, Lillian Cole, Bonny McGin-\nIs, Irene Wood, Doreen Fredericks,\nJoyce Dovey, Carol Maxwell, Eileen Endersby, Eileen Ransom, Marion Morrison, Barbara Grieve, Jimmie  Veysey and Freddie  Veysey.\nMrs. F. M. Barrett waa hostess\nto the ladies friendly club. Plans\nwere made for a court whiat to take\nplace next week at the home of\nMrs. T. Cole, Mrs. Grieve was the\nholder of the lucky ticket for the\ncontest. Supper was served by the\nhostess and Mrs. H. Mason assisted\nin serving.\nA. E. Bond of Kaslo was a guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Barrett.\nMr. and Mrs. G. A. Scott viiited Trail.\nMrs. J. B. Doig visited Trail.\nAPPLEDALE\nAPPLEDALE, B. C.-Mrs. H. Currie of Nelson spent a few days with\nMr. and Mrs. B. Lansdown.\nMiss  M.  Woyna  visited  Nelson.\nMrs. Claude Fordyce and baby of\nNelson are visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Fordyce.\nMrs. V. Sawtelle received word\nfrom her son Gunner W. (Bill)\nBridge of Edmonton that he was\nunited in marriage to Miss Ethel\nFielder March 2 In St. Marks in\nEdmonton.\nSHEEP CREEK\nSHEEP CREEK, B. C\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. V. McDowell visited  Nelson.\nMiss Grace Tonkin and little\nJohn Tonkin are here to spend\nEaster with Mr. and Mrs. J. Tonkin\nand son.\nA. McDougall visited Nelson.\nMOTHERS FEEL SAFER\nOne Mother writes: \"With a famity of chiMrm\noomUotly gtttini scratches, turn, or bruises,\nI hava prored Mecca an iaraluable healer. I\ncauuot praiae it too biahly. I keep a Un nf\nMecca upstairs and another downitein.\"     61\nMECCA OINTMENT\nBACKACHE\nOFTEN WARNING\nB.rkich. raij be the hit tip ,1 Ki4\u00bbj\ntriable. When your back ichn, look li\njoin kiflhap. Don'l (ail la bad Ail in*\ninr-kiilooimportmt. Tik\u00bb prompt Ktwi\nI. (ontfl Bitkicbf, of ill t.uif. itl llio nr.l\n\u25a0ip ol Birkitbo Urn conM-ntl; lo Md'l\nKjAhj PiiU- loc i.\u00ab bill \u2022 emtssry lb.\nbrorito rtwdj hi Kidnej i&Mta.       107\nDodd $ Kidney Pills\nKASLO Social...\nand thi\nStanford, Spokane; Mrs Ambler.\nEdmonton. A II Snbv. II Tewks-\nbury. W, Shaw. I. Roijcr'.fl, Cilc.irv\nMr.  and   Mrs,   II   (\"hi\u25a0men.-on,   Ur\nKill*.nr. IVnlielon; Mm K. Streit\nKa-m, .1 j streit. Stieep Creek\nM: and Mr- It E. Walton, Mr\n.i!i*l   Mr.-    W   Crone.  Waneta.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR   VANCOUVER   HOME\"\nDuff erin Hotel\n900 Seymour St.\nNewly   renovated  throughout.   Phonei   and   elevator.\nA    PATTERSON,   late   ot\nVancouver. B. C.    Coleman, Alia. Proprietor.\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen  in  SPOKANE  you  Will  Enjoy Stayinj  ar  tht\nHotel VOLNEY N?rS*\nEVERY   COURTESY   SHOWN   OUR  CANADIAN   GUESTS\n410  Rivenide\nAvenue\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014FREIGHT LINES\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM    M    MclVOH.   Piop\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nAbolition of\nRadio Licence Fees\nMr, Esling has consistently worked for the\nbenefit of radio listeners His successful\nefforts to curb the power of the Performing Rights Society and to bring down\nthe prices of Radio Sets in Canada through\nhis attacks on the patent rights monopoly.\nare well known, not only in Kootenay, but\nm Canada as a whole. He has worked for\nimproved radio reception, for better radio\nprograms and for reduced costs to radio\nlisteners. As a friend of the radio listener\nhe supports Dr. R. | Manion's National\nGovernment policy of\nAbolishing Licence Fees\nLISTENERS IN THE UNITED STATES PAY NO\nLICENCE   FEE.   WHY   SHOULD  CANADIANS?\nIn   drfc-mirr   hi   th.i.if*   nhservmg   Holy   Work\nno  public   meet in(W   will   br  held   this   week.\nVOTE for ESLING\nThe People's Candidate\nPublished by thf Wen! Knotrnay Cnrufrvtllvf Association.\nKASLO. B. C.-The Executive\nCommittee of the I.O.D.E, met at\nthe home of the Regent to plan activities to be presented to the next\nregular meeting,\nA, R. Barrow of Johnsons Landing visiter.  Kaslo.\nMr. and Mrs. E. H. Latham, J. R.\nTinkess, James Speirs and C, W.\nWebster were in Nelson for the Libera! meeting.\nMr. and Mrs, A, B. Robertson\nhave as guest thcir son James, of\nNew Westminster.\nMayoi F. E Archer has returned\nfrom a visit to Seattle and Vancouver.\nW. J Murphy is a patient in Victorian Hospital.\nR E Green, Fred McGibbon and\nA. L. McPhee attended the Esling\nmeeting in Ainsworth.\nGreat Northern Ry.\nLow Round Trip\nEASTER\nFARES\nIntermediate  Clan to\nVANCOUVER\nVICTORIA\n\u00bb16\n(Canadian funds accepted at par\non fares between Canadian\npoints)\nTickets on  sale  March  21   to  25\ninclusive, final return limit leave\ndestination March 26.\nLow fares also in effect between\nall Great Northern Railway point*\nin British Columbia, (Special sale\ndales and limits for teachers and\nstudents )\nFor details see\nE.  G.  WESTBY\nCity Ticket  Office\n387 Baker 8t.     Ph. 57\n] H. A. Newcomen of Meadow\nCreek visited town.\nI Mrs, Leona Lockard has as guest\n. Mrs. A. E Bond of Mirror LaKe.\ni Mrs. W. H- Driver has returned\n; from a visit to Washington and B. C.\n1 Coast points, She represented the\n; local Red Cross Branch at the con-\nj vention  in  Vancouver.\nMiss Neta Munn was hostess to\n! friends in compliment to her guest,\n! Mrs, J. M Kirk, on her birthday.\nBridge was followed by dainty refreshments. The guests were Mrs.\nJames Beatie, Mrs. A- B. Robertson, Mrs. V. L. Trail, Mrs. William\nEnglish. Mrs. D. J. Barclay and Mrs,\nE, H. Latham.\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Mrs. F. Watts of\nRiondel was a city visitor.\nWalter Tozer of Nelson, formerly\nof Kaslo, visited town.\nMrs, H. A Newcomen was in\ntown to meet her sister, Miss A.\nOlson. They left for the former's\nhome in Meadow Creek,\nM, K. Bennett of Howser visited\ntown.\nF. V. Webber of Nelson spent the\nweekend with his family.\nPeter Colgan is a patient in Victorian Hospital.\nMrs. A W. Bavington is a patient\nin Victorian Hospital.\nMrs, Graham-Browne of Riondel\nwas a city visitor.\nT. B. Hanson and John E. Lash-\nbiook of Spokane are In town,\nMrs. H, T. Hartin is convalescing\nat her home after having been a\npatient in Victorian Hospital.\nMrs. S. S. Fowler of Riondel spent\nSaturday in town.\nMr. and Mrs, William Bowman of\nJohnson's Landing visited town.\nMiss A. Hodges, who has been a\npatient in Victorian Hospital, is\nconvalescing ac her home.\nMrs. W, L. Billings, assisted by\nher daughter, Mrs. J. R. Tinkess and\nMrs. E. A, Hendricks, entertained\nat the first of a scries of small bridge\nparties sponsored by the 54th Battalion Chapter LODE. Mrs. Arms\nwon thr prize, The players were\nMesdames D. J, Barclay, F. 5.\nChandler, Percy AmaE, E. H. I*a-\nthain, G. S, Baker, John Paterson,\nMrs, Hendricks and Miss Sybil\nKydd.\nExamination for Inspector of\nSteam-Boilers and Machinery\nCompetitive examinations for Inspector of Steam-Boilers and\nMachinery will be held ai the Office of the Chief Inspector of\nBoilers in the Workmen's Compensation and I-abour Building,\n411 Dunsmuir Street, Vancouver, B.C., commencing April 1st,\n1940, at 10 A.M.\nApplication forms and further Information may be obtained\nfrom the Chief Inspector at the above address.\nRailroad Man Never Starts Hii Rod Without\nBuckley's Mixture as Protection Against\nCOUGHS, COLDS\nWhrn railroad men who are expoied to nun, mow,\nand bitter freeting cold depend on Buckley's Mixture you would be wise to follow their example.\nMr. E. Harrold, Moo\u00bbe Jaw, -Saik., iayi: \"I (md\nBuckiey'i Mixture tbe finest cough remedy I have\n\u2022ver used, and never go out on the road without\na bottle in my grip for protection agaimt cold*.\"\nBuckiey'i Mixture ii a time-teited. proven remedy\nused in thousand* of Canadian KonAi whenever\ncoughi, coldi, grippe, bronchitis, etc., are trouble-\neome. It catei the cough almoit initenily, turni\ntough phlegm into eauly expelled fluid, Mothtt\nthe air ducts, correal over-acidity. Don't experiment\u2014Buy Buckiey'i.\nOVER 10 MILLION BOTTLES SOLDI    1\/\nRUCKLEY'C\nW      MIXTURE        W\n\u25a0 e:   \u25a0 : \u2022 - t- '\u25a0\"\u25a0 ...'\nmedal\nIMPKOVIO\nFORMULA\n\u00bbi KM INI    .\niwirriHs thi\nSTOMACH\nEFFICIENT\nSPEEDY\nMOVING SERVICE\nAt a Reasonable Price!\nPHONE 33\nWest Transfer Co.\nf .i\u00abMi.hr,i |\u201e  ir,*ii\n *.^ffW>?^>^^P^VPfi ijipiii iiiixiuiiu-'i^iii^puMJWfWwniJMi.'iMai.'w\t\nTODAYS News Pictures\n-NELSON DAILY NIW8, NELSON, B.C.--MONDAY MORNINQ, MARCH U. 1M0.--\nPAdr   THRIi\nPresident Roosevelt's Emissary at No. 10 Downing Street Heads Rossland\nJunior Board\nSumner Welles. United States Under-Secretary\n\u2022f State and emissary for President Roosevelt, is\npictured In tliis radio photo as he called at No. 10\nDowning St., to confer with British officials. Pictured left to right are: Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax, Mr'. Welles. Prime Minister Chamberlain and\nU. S. Ambassador Joseph Kennedy.\nR. C. A. F. Plane Crashes In U. S.\nL. J. Nicholson, new elected\nPresident of the Junior Section,\nRossland Board of Trade.* Mr.\nNicholson was one of the original\nmembers of the Junior Section.\nAiding Britain\nUnited Statei officials decided It was not necessary to intern Pilot Officer A. E. Cannon and\nLeading Aircraftsman J. Duguid of the R. C A. F.\nwho made a forced landing near Alexandria Bay,\nN. Y., after losing their bearings and running short\nof fuel. The plane in which they were flying, above,\nwas badly damaged in the forced landing but neither of its occupants suffered more than a shaking up.\nAppointed to\nTrenton\nAssassinated In London\nA cousin of President Roosevelt\ndoes her bit for England in the\ncurrent conflict. She is Mrs. Fellows-Gordon, of Knockespoch,\nAberdeenshire, and is pictured at\nthe wheel of the St. Pancras emergency ambulance which she\ndrives. In addition to being a\ncousin the President is also htr\ngodfather.\n\"Wizard* Wears\nWell\nSIR MICHAEL O'DWYER\nLORD ZETLAND\nStationed at Jericho air station\nin Vancouver since last Summer,\nSquadron Leader F. J. Mawdes-\nley has been named to Uke command of the R.C.A.F. school of\nadministration to be opened at\nTrenton in the near future.\nSir Michael O'Dwyer. former Lieutenant Governor of the Punjab,\nwas shot dead at a meeting of the Indian Association by an Indian\ngunman. Lord Zetland, Secretary of State for India, was wounded as\nwere Sir Louis Dan% and Lord Lamington at the meeting which was\nheld in London.\nAn enthusiastic farmer himself,\nDav;d Lloyd George, England's\nPrime Minister during the last\nwar, ;* pictured as the guest of\nhonor at the remit luncheon of\nIhe National Dc'ence Public Interest commit'ee in I md >n. H\"\nspoke nri f'-od pr'>.i:ir!:nn a I'd\n\u25a0agriculture in ther relation to\nnational defence.\nR.A.F. Plane Comes to the Rescue\nAmerican Scrap for British\nArmaments\nThe British freighter Sea Venture was attacked and sunk by a\nNazi U-boat, which [led as an It A. K casta! patrol plane appeared\nnn the seme A****- lhe plain* approached the submarine look one las'\n\u00bbh-\u00bbi which took rfferl, top Thf It A F plane Mn->d bv thr crew\nof lhe Sn Wiilure un'il ;i dmre lifeboat ram\" mil lo bring the tn-\nnien aafelv tn land.\nMost Oil Storage Drums In Nelson\nHomes Are Nol Correctly Installed\nand Equipped Chief McDonald Finds\n\u2666\nINFORMATION OF ENEMY\nWAR VESSELS TO BE\nREWARDED BY BRITAIN\nLONDON, March 17 (CP)\u2014Britain will pay rewards up to \u00a310Q0\n($4450) for \"accurate Information\"\nleading to the capture or destruction of an enemy war vessel. Other\nrewards offered to \"non service\npersonnel afloat or shore\" including\n\u00a350 for the movements of enemy\nwar vessels, including minelayers,\n\u00a35 for the position of mines, and\n\u00a31 for the first report.\nRoosevelt Gives\nPeace Program\nWASHINGTON, March 17 (AP)-\nPrwident Roosevelt in an international broadcast from the White\nHouse declared yesterday that the\nworld -seeks \"a moral basis for\npeace,\" and no peace can last \"if\nthe fruit of it is oppression, or starvation, or cruelty, or human life\ndominated by armed campS.\"\nJoining Queen Wilhelmina of\nHolland in a radio program in connection with a Christian foreign\nservice convocation in New York,\nMr. Roosevelt asserted also real\npeace could not be achieved if it\n\u25a0failed to recognize brotherhood.\n\"It can not be a Bound peace if\nsmall nations must live in fear of\npowerful neighbors,\" he said. \"It\ncan net be a moral peace if freedom\nfrom invasion  is sold for  tribute.\nSpeaking from the Netherlands,\nQueen Wilhelmina told the conva-\ncaticn that the cardinal need of the\nworld today is a \"radical\" spiritual\nrenewal in the life of every individual.\n\"This alone can be the fruitful\nsource from which flows the necessary strength for realization of\npractical and constructive achievements without which the world of\ntoday will go to ruin,\" the Queen\nsaid. \"At the same time I avail\nmyself of this 'opportunity to express my sincere opinion that such\na radical renewal can only be\nachieved if we return directly to\nto the very source of Christianity\nthc new testament, which invites\nand calls every man, none excepted,\nin order to \"find there the truth\nwe need.\"\nNazi Envoy Colls\nas Welles Confers\nWith Count Ciano\nROME, March 17 (AP)\u2014German\nAmbassador Hans-Ge-org Von Mac-\nkensen made a surprise visit to the\nItalian foreign riff ice yesterday\nwhile Sumner Welles and Foreign\nMinister Ciano were conferring.\nThe German Ambassador's call\nled to belief he might have taken\nan urgent message he wanted delivered to Count Ciano before thc\nForeign Minister ended his conference with President Roosevelt's\n\"fact-finder.\"\nGerman sources said, however,\nthat he did not join the discussions.\nVon Mackensen remained at the\nforeign office only 15 minutes. The\nAmerican Under-Secretary of State\naccompanied by the United States\nAmbassador, William Phillips, left\nCount Ciano after an hour's talk.\nMr. Welles later paid a 45-min-\nute call on King Victor Emmanuel.\nPope Phis will give him audience\nMon dav.\nPROF. LONDON HEADS\nAIR TRAINING SCHOOL\nOTTAWA, March 17 fCPi-Prof.\nThomas R. Loudon cf the Department of Civil Engineering in the\nfaculty of applied science and engineering of the University of Toronto, has been appointed to command the school of aeronautical\nengineering of the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan at\nMontreal. Defence Minister Rogers\nannounced  vesterdav\nP- f   Loudon will\" have the rank\nof squadron  leader.\nThe school will be opened\nMarch 18 and will be located in\nthe building formerly occupied\nby No. 118 C<*\u00bbta! Arlillerv Cooperated Squadron at 4895 De\nBullion Stieet.\nCourses extending over a period\nf nix month*! will provide for the\ninstruction of % officers, who will\nbe posted to various training\nschools and depots throughout the\ncountry mi completion \u2022 f their stay\nin Montreal. Trie instruction, administrate r and maintenance staff\nwill total -50. of whom 10 will be\nofficers, 28 airmen and 12 civilians.\nMost Burners Pass on\nInspection but Few\nDrums Satisfy\nStorage drums for oil-burning\nranges and healers in Nelson homes\nare for the most part incorrectly\ninstalled and incorrectly equipped,\nFire Chief G. A. McDonald stated\nFriday. Regulations under the Field\nMarshal Act fix definite methods of\ninstalling both oil-burners and the\nstorage drums, and while inspections carried out by the Chief have\nshown the burners for the most part\nto be correctly installed, only a few\ndrums are stored properly.\nIncorrectly installed drums constitute a serious fire hazard, Chief\nMcDonald said, because often oil\nleaked from them. If a drum was\nnot properly equipped witli a pump\nand vent, as required by the regulations, it would act as a bomb should\nit become heated in atfU'e.\nThe regulations require that storage drums be installed on the lowest floor of a building and that they\nbe equipped with a hump and a\nthree-quarter inch vent. The vent\npipe must lead to the outside and\nend in a return bend 12 feet above\nthe ground, the mouth of which\nmust be at elast three feet from the\nnearest window. The purpose of the\nvent is to release pressure built up\nby heat.\nMAY GIVE TROUBLE\nIf burners and drums are properly installed, the Fire Chief stated, there is absolutely no .danger\nfrom them and they will give fine\nservice. However they are \"apt to\ngive plenty of grief\" if they tire\nimproperly set up. AH oil burner\nequipment must be of a type approved by the Fire Marshal, and\nmust be installed by a qualified\nperson. No equipment should be Installed without a written permit,\nand the name and qualifications of\nthe person doing the work should\nbe filed with the proper officer.\nOnly oil especially graded for use\nin burners may be used under the\nAct regulations. Often householders\nexperience difficulty with their\nburners because the wrong grade\nof oil is used, he said. Diesel fuel\nand crank case oil are both unsatisfactory in range and heater type\nburners, and must not be used in\nthese, owever, oil suppliers are prohibited by law from providing\nother than the correct grade of oil\nCHURCHILL APPOINTMENT\nEARLIER WOULD HAVE\nSAVED ROYAL OAK\nMANCHESTER, March 17 tCP)\n\u2014Sir Archibald Sinclair. Liberal\nleader, in a speech here yesterday\nsaid that if Winston Churchill had\nbeen First Lord of thc Admiralty\n\"a few mounts earlier when we\nwere loudly demanding it. that fine\nship the Royal Oak and her gallant\ncrew would never have been lost\nin ScapH Flow.'\nRecalling that Mr. Churchill and\nAnthony Eden. Dominions Secretary, were only admitted to the\nGovernment on thc day war was\ndeclared,\" Sir Archibald said: \"Six\nmonths of Mr. Churchill before\nthe war would have been six nails\nin Hitler's coffin. But he was not\na yes-man. so they would not have\nhim until they were forced to have\nhim.'1\nrrrrs\niji LNCfflWffp\u00abSATgO_a*?LMAY-, 1670.\nHBC GROCERY BARGAINS\nOn Salt Todiy, Tueiday and Wedneiday\n193   Phonti   194\nLUX TOILET SOAP: 4 cakes   22**\nCREAM OF WHEAT: Per carton  23t>\nOVALTINE: 8 ox. tint, each   58***\nWOODBURY'S FACIAL SOAP: 4 cakes  25***\nJOHNSONS FLOOR WAX: li. tin  59-J\nAS  ADVERTISED   IN  McCALL'S   MAGAZINE\nFormer Kootenay\nEngineer Passes\nAway in England\nThomas I'anson, formerly Chief\nEngineer for the C.P.R. boats on\nthe Kootenay and Arrow Lakes,\ndied at Southpurt, England, of\npneumonia.\nIn a letter to Capt. Walter Wright\nof Nakusp Miss Lillian I'anson, his\ndaughter, tells of his death and of\nthe death of his youngest daughter,\nEna, two weeks previously. The\ndaughter also died of pneumonia.\nMr. I'anson was superannuated\nabout five years ago, his last service having been on the Steamer\nMinto on the Arrow Lakes. He\nwent home to England following\nhi* superannuation.\nSurviving are Mrs. I'anson, three\ndaughters and a son. The son is in\nthe British army.\nVANCOUVER, March 17 (CP)--\nWilliam Robertson, 65, died in hospital Saturday from injuries suffered when he was knocked down by\nan automobile in Dunbar District,\nFeb. 29.\nCHINESE ROBBED\nVANCOUVER, March 17 (CP)-\nFour men, one armed, held up SinJ\nLee, Chinese, in his downtown com\nfectionery store last night and es-|\ncaped   with  $8.\nWOOD WORKING\nMILL WORK\nExpert workmanship at reasonable)\nprices\nKootenay Sash & Door Worki!\n301 Ward 8t. Opp. City Halll\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS and ALTERATIONS!\n8. C. Plumbing b Heating Co.l\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundstrand Adding Machinal\nOFFICE 8UPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Flshor Ud.\n538 Ward St Phona 99\n1 GO PRETTY NEAR\nIRAZY WITH DRIVER'\/\n(ACHES ..Jo Im\nqrateful for the oukk\nrelief I oet from\nSloan's\no\nThe arrnrri Hriliah frelililer llarb\u00bbrl*m in \u25a0 Ivwn l..\u00ab,|.,B ,,\u25a0,\u201e,,\nir*fln at Miami ba slir prepare lo run tltr Haunllp' .>f vihniar.ii'-. a-M\n1'iajnfilr miopj In Finland Tli- \u00bb.*rap will l-v-mii- Minx of \u00bbai |.ii\nHnlain    if 'h' llarb\u00bbrl*>r* (els through\n(\"i\nBALTIC STATES RESOLVE\nTO STAY OUT OF CONFLICT\nrOPBNHAGEN. Marrh 17 (APi\nThr Foreign Ministers of Lithuania, Latvia and Fst'itua issued a\nrommuniqui- yrstriday nl Uie con-\nrln.flion of a Ihrrr-dfl.v meeting al\nH'Ht. Ijitvian capital, rmphaflizmR\n\u25a0the firm resolution of the Baltic\nState.s to s'ay ogUide ot aimed conflicts * ace rditig to advices re-\nceived  herr\nFORMER BOEING AIRCRAFT\nOFFICIAL SHOOTS SELF\nSEATTLF. March 17 i APi Coroner otto Mlttlestadt said Charles\nN Moiileith, ,0. former vice.president and ch*ef enuineei* for the\nBoeini; Airriaft Co*,,,,,,-,   ,!,  ! and\nkilled  I elf   ;   i-    Ik* ii   \"in  Fi,-\n'lay   ii.k it\nCIGARETTE BUTT THOUCHT\nTO BLAME FOR HOTEL FIRE\nTORONTO, March 17 UTi- Fire\nmarshals im e.stnalois have decided thai a cigarette holt dropped\nn fie diiMi-j; roo.n of the Avon-\nnve Hotel caused tiie (ne rhal\nearly Frtd.v look three lues Th'\ndining room ai nig.it was used as\na hevrage rom\nCANDHI ADVISES COUNCIL\nOF CONGRESS ON POLICY\nRAMGARH. India, March 17\n'IT\" *B*ne\u00ab!h n H-antlng $un, Mn.\nhand-a K Gandhi yesterday (cr\nfivp hunt! idvurri ihr Innrr ('. un-\nnl nf Ihr All-Indtn National Cnn-\ntrr*r, ,-,,, p,,|ir>* (;*,i,r!!ii mdicAlrd\nIm    uiI'Mimi   pf   nddi \"**ing    l'.*n-\nfirre,%  iht  unit  in  nn  aniphi'lKn're\nl\\rr*   WW   v-r-K.\nTEN LOST AS SWEDISH\nSHIP WRECKED ON ROCKS\nRISOR, Norway, March 17 <CP) \u2014\nTen men jVst their lives yesterday\nwhen thf-1316-ton Swedish steain-\n>hip 0?man was wrecked in a storm\non rocks outside Risor harbor, on\nNorway's Southeastern c ast. Nine\nmen were rescued by a Norwegian\ndestroyer.\nOufciftfMforr\nSTIFFNESS, SORENESS, A04IS-\nPAIN5 FROM BRUISES, BUMPS,\nSTRAINS ond CHEST COLDS\nNo Rubbing Required\nJUST PAT IT ON\nDriving Is no child's play. Take tha\nwheel of a bus, truck, transport or car\nfor hours on end and you'll know how\nmuscles can play out. Arms, legs,\nshoulders and back generally feel it\nmost. But Sloan's gently patted over\nthe weary muscles brings quick relief.\nFatigue poisons in the tissues art\npenerajly the causp of the troubl^.\nThe actioo of Sloan's stimulates the\ncirculation and so helps the blood\ncarry off these poisons. And that it\nwhy quick relief follows.\nThere are many things thit we do\nwhile at work or at play, which may\nstrain muscles or tire them so that they\nsoon ache exasperatingly. When thii\noccurs, Sloan's is the sensible treatment. Better keep a bottle of this fine\nInn nun i in the house. lip\nSLOAN '$!*\"*\nINIMENT\nHELPS     NATURE     HEAL     FASTER!\nMtMyfoC^\nGYPROC\nFIREPROOF\nWALLBOARD\nLight enough to be easily handled \u2014sturdy and tough to provide t permanent job \u2014Gyproc is the ideal material for walls and ceilings. The large\nsheets of pre-cast fireproof gypsum reach from floor to ceiling. Just a few\nsheets nailed in place and the job is done.\nAnd Gyproc gives you oil thete advantage,:\n\u2022 FIREPROOF-therefore safe\n\u2022 PERMANENT AND DURABLE - therefore economical\n\u2022 WILL NOT CRACK, WARP, SHRINK OR SWELL\n\u2022 INVISIBLE JOINTS \u2014 panel strips oro unneconary   .\n\u2022 SMOOTH, DUST-FREE SURFACES---easy to keep clean\n\u2022 TAKES ANY TYPE OF  DECORATION - no monotony\n\u2022 THE LIGHTEST WEIGHT gypsum  wallboard  made In\nCanada\nttvptvc is sold tiers\/where its Canada. Sre\nlour local dealer in iMmber and\nBuilders' Supplies.\nWrite So oat rMa.il hcanct, toe ho. Orpeot tatkto,\nOCT GENUINE GYPROC\nhmeittty tt fl**** two way, I\nI. look lor th* ntme\nGYPROC on the back ol\nrvfry shert.\n7. took for the Green\nStrip* on both side edge*.\nAccept no substitutes\n4\u00bbY|\u00bbMMII.  l.illH- and A hllMSl MM'\n( ,ltl,itl,l, I milted\n\\ \\SnH  \\ I li     l  \\ll.\\K\\\nfl\\ III      *fl1i>M Itl \\l\n \t\nKGt mim\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-MONDAY MORNINQ, MARCH II, 19W.\u2014\nT EFFECT DO EASTER BONNETS HAVE ON LEAP YEAR?\nJhduranee .. .\nfives Nol Happy\nUnless First in\nHusband's Life\n' By CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nPresumably the millennium must\n>me before some men comprehend\nie fact that the minute they show\nreference for their families over\nlelr wives they have kissed peace\nK>dbye and laid up trouble for\nlemselves that knows no end. Not\nEliding a brief for jealous, possess-\ne wives but simply saying that\nhen a man marries a woman and\nromiaes to put her before all oth-\nrs in his life, it's a scurvy trick\n>r him to step over her head and\nulgn his property or his insurance\n\u00bb members of his clan.\nIt's one of those affairs in which\noth thc money and the principle\n[ the thing are important. No doubt\nlere are many circumstances under\nMch a husband has to come to the\nid of his clan and deny himself\n> do it. Naturally his wife must\nlare the deprivations that are entiled. Usually she will do it with\namile if he has had propoc con-\nderation for her and has asked\n\u00abr cooperation. But when he treats\nar as a minor, makes his plans and\nHiounccs his decisions \u2014 that's\nnother matter. He has set her back\nid unless she's wise as a ser-\nent, harmless as a dove and sweet\nl an angel she'll pay him back.\near Miss Chatfield:\nNot long ago I married a man\n'ho seemed to care for me. A few\ntonths later his father died leaving\n3 him and his brothers and sisters\nUlte a nice property. Right away\ne signed his part over to them.\now I have always thought a wife\nline first with her husband. But\nOt mr. We live in a rented house\nid I have a poor prospect of hav-\nig a home of my own ns my hus-\nand's salary is not large. If any-\nling were to happen to him I\nf-OUld have nothing. I am disap-\nointed and disgusted and hoping\nOU can advise me what to do.\nSECOND FIDDLE.\nAnswer: Sister, nothing sets a\nroman back like finding that her\nusband prefers his family before\nW. Almost worse than another\nroman in the ease, isn't it? and far\nlore hopeless. So the advice is just\nlis: What can't be cured must be\nndured and there are several ways\n[ enduring. One a tight-lipped sul-\n\\n silence; another a tongue lash-\ntg attack, another, a sweet ac-\naptance of a bitter fact with a firm\neterminatirtn to change your bus-\nind's attitude toward you.\nYou can sulk and make ywur hus-\nand nnd yourself unhappy. You\nin lash him and make him angry\nut beyond venting your spleen\nou will have accomplished noth-\nlg; for you can't get back the\nroperty. In view of this fact I\nrould recommend the third plan:\nmt you forget about the injustice.\ninjustice it is, and accept the dc-\niSion with a firm determination to\ndn the thing you thought you had:\nlift place with your husband.\nTORONTO ARTIST WINS\nPRIZE\nNEW YORK. March 17 (CP* -\ntfiuwth K Forbes, Toronto artist,\nr\u00abi awarded Ihr Thomas R. Troct-flr\nrize tor one ot lhe two het-t por-\nraits at the 114th annua! cxhibj-\nlon of the National Academy of\n\u25baesign which opened here Thurs-\n*y.\nW.I. SENDS IN RIO\nCROSS SEWING, APPLEDALE\nAPPLEDALE, B. C.-The Women's Institute meeting for March\nwas held at the home of Mrs. A.\nWat60n. Thc February sewing for\nthe Red Cross was finished ana sent\nto Slocan City for shipment.\nMrs. J. Fordyce was elected auditor. Those attending were Mrs.\nCant, Mrs. Lansdown, Mrs.,J. Fordyce, Mrs. Peters, Mrs. Sawtelle,\nMrs. J. Downey of Perry Siding,\nand Mrs. A. Watson. Refreshments\nwere served by Mra. A. Watson.\nAlertness . . .\nTraits lo Make an\nExcellent Mother\nBy  GARRY  C.   MYERS,  Ph.D.\nThe mother who wrote the following letter has my admiration\nand I wrote her so:\n\"Dear Dr. Myers: I have two\nchildren, four and six. What I\nwould like to know is, am I suppressing them? A friend who does\nnot believe in disciplining children\nsays my children will want lo get\naway from me when they have\ngrown older.\n\"My one object is to see that they\nare healthy . . . The older one was\ntrained from infancy to go to bed\nat six, but now, since going to\nschool, she is in bed at 7:30 every\nnight. She does not object to going\nto bed. She knows that her meals\nere served on time and must eat\nwhat is served or go hungry (she\nnever goes hungry.) We never punish her for telling thc truth no matter what the damage, but explain\nto her why it is wrong. She is only\npunished after she has been told\nof some wrong act she must not\nrepeat.\nTHEIR ONLY DUTIE8\n\"The children have all the freedom they want during the day, The\nonly duties they have are these:\nClothes must be hung up when indoors; hands must be washed before meals: teeth cleaned every day\nand they must go to bed at the same\ntime in the evening. . . .\n\"I feet that my children are not\nafraid of me, but they have learned\nthat I mean what I say. We do not\nmake any promises we do not intend to keep.\n\"They are encouraged to ask anything and my husband and I do our\nbest to explain so it is clear. . . .\n\"I hope that when these children\nreach the age of 12 or so and want\nto go out, they will go with their\neyes open, not wondering what boys\nare like or what some girls do. The\nolder child plays with boys as well\nas girls and brings one or a dozen\nchildren in to play; it is her home\nand for her friends.\n\"About five years ago I realized\nthat r was doing everything for my\nolder child but to breathe for her\nand derided it was not good for her.\nSo i got a reliable friend to stay\nwith her in the evening while she\nslept, and I started night school. My\nhusband inined me, and although\nwe are taking different courses, we\nenjoy it very much. Even with the\ntwo children, I still manage to attend four evenings a week. I think\nit does me a world of good as I get\naway from them. Being with them\nall day is grand, but once they are\nin bed for the night I can assure\nyou I fee! better mentally as I become interested in my school work\nand it is an agreeable change.\"\nSUSPECTSRELEASED\nVANCOUVER, March\" 17 fCP)-\nTwo suspects, one a juvenile, arrested Thursday by two city police constables investigating Ihe\nslaying of Dennis Nash, tobacco\nsalesman last Dec. 12, were released Saturday after questioning.\nCRANBROOK Social...\nCRANBROOK. B.C.-Mrs. J D\n\u25a0urner of Kamloop.**-.. Provincfjl\nTeaident of the Canadian Daugh-\nHfl League was a guest of Mrs\nI J. Caldwell. She was guest of\noner a! a tea given by the LA. to\nhe B. of R T. of winch .'he is past\n'residNit. The tra table w.is ccn-\nred with a silver basket of daffo-\nils and the hostess was nssis'.cd in\nerving by  Mrs,  R.  Leonard.\nTransfenrd from Vancouver to\nIranbrnok on the despairing staff\nf Tran?-Canada Airlines to replace\nAlfred Sheffield was Goufrcy\nPood.\nBill Hughe? of the Department of\nVani-port staff at the airpir*. has\none to the range station M Cres-\nent Valley f(,r three week.1*..\nMr*--    Mitchell   of   Brisco   visited\nIplain and Mrs. Jock Palmer.\nMiss Nancy Revans spent several\n*ys at Chapman Camp\nMr.   and   Mr.s.   W.   Burton   arid\ndaughter Rhea returned to Cranbrook after several weeks in California.\nConstable and Mrs. Malcolm Macdonald have moved to a house on\nArmstrong Avenue, above Kains\nStreet, formerly occupied by Mr,\nand  Mrs,  Richard  Larsit'.\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-Mr. and\nMrs. L. A. Colledge had as guests\nMr, and Mrs. N. Liversidge of\nVancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. K, D. Mackay have\nreturned from a visit in Toronto,\nHamilton and  Chesley,\nMrs. J. D, Brackett entertained on\ntwo occasions. The first was a\nluncheon bridge at which the prizewinners were Mrs. Reg Turner and\nMrs. W. H. Wilson. Thc second was\na dessert bridge, when prize-win-\nner.**. were Mrs. D. W, Dow and Mrs.\nEric MacKinnon. Decorations for\nthe parties were bouquets of daffodil.\nTO TOWN\n\\ a *\nGood Shoes...\nFool Discomfort\nShows on Face\nBy  DONNA  GRACE\nToday' phase of our Spring reconditioning program will be in the\ninterest of foot comfort. Poor feet,\nthey have so much responsibility\nand need more pampering than\nthey ever receive. Certainly they\nrebel, but it's only when we feel\ndiscomfort that we do much about\nfoot care. In the interest of our face\nwe must keep the feet comfortable,\nas every twinge will be recorded\non the facial exprouion.\nWe believe in warm root baths\nwith a great deal of thick creamy,\nsoap lather. The soap is soothing\nto the Inflamed surface and will\nhelp to remove callouses and all\nrough surfaces. A small brush will\nfacilitate the smoothing and cleansing process. * \u25a0\nAfter the soaking, rinse, then\nsoak in an epsom salt solution. Thi.*;\nalso relieves the hot swollen feeling. Follow these baths with a cool\nshower, dry thoroughly and let the\nfeet rest a while without shoes.\nWhile resting, they may be massaged with any cooling lotion or\na menthol foot lotion. Pat with\ndusting powder and lie on the\ncouch wilh a pillow or two under\nthe feet and none under the head.\nCover enough for warmth and doze\na while to let the feet revel in their\nrelief.\nFortunately for all of us, styles\nin shoes are changing so one may\nwear a smart dress shoe with ease.\nHigh spiked heels will soon be rele-\n?:ated to the limbo of other funny\nashions. A medium high heel is\nsmart, but there is no foot beauty\nin the teetering stilts we once\nthought so appealing. There are\nmany smart, inexpensive shoes\namong the comfortable styles,\nFit the feet with good shoes and\nit will not only mean foot comfort\nbut economy as well. One pair of\nperfectly fitted shoes will outwear\na number of the cheap, poorly made\nones. Have enough on hand so they\nmay be changed every day. This too.\nis economy as the shoes will not\nlose shape and the change is good\nfor the feet.\nSelect shoes and stockings with\nenough length so the toes will not\nbe cramped. There will be less\ndanger of runs if the stockings are\nlong enough to fasten without too\nmuch strain.\nKeep the nails filed flat across\nthe top and not too long. Keep thc\nfeet amooth with cream and lotions.\nAn emery board will remove the\nrough spots. The dryness resulting\nfrom cool weather may be relieved\nwith the same lotion you use on the\nhands. Just smooth it on after drying and rub gently so that there will\nbe no dampness. Powder should be\nused generously before putting on\nstockings, removing thc excess with\ntissue.\nExercise the feet every day. A\nquick method for good results Is to\nrun about the house on the toes,\nthen on the outside of thc foot, and\non the Inside edge.\nNAKUSP DRAMA CLUB TO\nENTER NELSON FESTIVAL\nNAKUSP, B. C\u2014A meeting of\nthe Nakusp Dramatic Club was\nheld at the home of Miss B. White.\nMrs. P. Young was in the chair.\nConsiderable discussion centred on\narrangement for the play which is\nto be entered ln the Drama Festival\nat Nelson.\nMrs. Young reported on a reading of plays received from the Extension Department of University\nof British Columbia. Plans for an\nevening presentation of a series of\none-act plays in Nakusp was discussed and it was decided to do\nthis late in April. Mrs. W. H. White\nserved tea assisted by Miss White\nand Mrs. A. Stanley.\nMRS. MclNTYRE HEADS\nSHEEP CREEK AUXILIARY\nSHEEP CREEK, B. C.-The Red\nCross Auxiliary met in the Service\nClub Hell. One consignment of finished work has been sent to headquarters and another lot is about\nready for shipment.\nOn the resignation of Mrs. Reger,\nPresident, due to departure, Mrs.\n0. G. Mclntyre as Vice-President\nwas automatically promoted to the\nPresidency. A vote of thanks was\ntendered Mrs. Reger for her work.\nFinal plans were made for a\nbridge tea.\nSURPRISE PARTY IS\nCIVEN APPLEDALE LADY\nAPPLEDALE, B. C.-A surprise\nparty was held at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Fordyce celebrating the\nbirthday of Mrs. J. iFordyce. Chinese Checkers, monopoly and card\ngames were enjoyed. Refreshments\nwere served by Mrs. J. Fordyce and\nMrs. Sawtelle.\nThose who attended were Mr. and\nMrs. Sawtelle, Mrs. Shaw, Mr. and\nMrs. F. Brooks, Mrs. Claude Fordyce of Nelson, Miss W. Bridge. H.\nWynne, G. Steele, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Fordyce and granddaughter Joan\nof Trail.\nSerial Story\nBy Alma Sioux Scarberry\nParadise Is Here\nFAST MOVING. VARIED.\nENTERTAINING-\nAN ENTIRELY DIFFERENT\nHOME MAKING PROGRAM\nX\n(bu CANADIAN COOKERY\nCHAPTER 32\nCholly had been on the air only\na week when Pee Wee Tyler, having flown home for a weekend from\nthe private school she attended in\nNew York, saw her picture in the\nChicago Globe.\nStartled, she read the caption:\n\"The air waves welcomed this\nnew beauty. Chollv O'Neil, pianist,\nthis week. MUs' O'Neil, red-headed,\nblue-eyed Irish charmer, will sel]\nsyrup. Another sure fire bet for\ntelevision. She hails from Indiana U.\"\nSyrup! That could mean only one\nthing. The Hayworths were sponsoring her. Fiiiously, Pee Wee\nthrew the pap\/1 away and got up.\nIf Dove had gone so far as to put\nhis red-head on the air on her own\nprogram, it looked seriovft. She had\nflown home more to see Dove Hayworth than anyone else, She wanted to bring things to an issue.\nMrs. Hayworth was as anxious\nas the Tylers for her only son and\nNatalie to marry. The plump dowager positively fawned over her,\nThe Hayworths hadn't the social\nbackground of the Tyler clan, but\nthey had a lot more money, In fact,\nthe Tylers were having a terrific\nstruggle to keep up their end socially.\nIt would be absolutely necessary\nfor Natalie to marry wealth or\nthey would be penniless in a few\nyears, That had been made very\nclear to the debutante daughter,\nNatalie called Mr.s. Hayworth and\ngot hersel: invited to tea that afternoon. The Hayworths were in their\npenthouse in town for the Winter\nmonths Mrs. Hayworth greeted Pec\nWee with warm affection.\n\"Darling!\" She kiased the cool\ncheek of the young girl. \"I never\nwould have forgiven you if you had\ncome home for the weekend and\n.hadn't dropped in to see an old\n\"lady.\"\n\"Old lady!\" scoffed Natalie, as a\nbutler assisted her with her mink\ncoat. \"You positively look shamefully young. You know you do!''\nMrs. Hayworth, with an arm\naround Natalie, led her to a chair\nbeside thc open fire in the library.\n\"It's cozier in here\" She sal\ndown beside the tea table \"And we\ncan have a nice little talk.\"\n\"Isn't Dove home?'' Natalie asked, with just the proper touch or\ndisappointment in ner voice,\n\"No.\" Mrs. Hayworth poured a\ncup of tea and handed it to Pee\nWee. \"I've been phoning all over\nfor the rascal. He'll be terribly disappointed. But I'll have him phone\nyou at home as soon as hc comes in.\nNatalie sighed.\n\"Oh, he probably won't get in. T\nhear he's been very busy socially.\"\n\"Oh. yes,\" Mrs. Hayworth smiled,\n\"but it doesn't mean anything. He's\nJust marking time till you're\nthrough  school.\"\nShe said it teasingly. but Natalie\nwas wise enough to know she was\nsupposed  to take it seriously.\n\"From what I've heard\"\u2014 NaUUie\ngave her hostess a sad little smile I\n\u2014\"he hasn't much time to think of\npoor little me. Out of sight, out of\nmind.\"\nMm. Hayworth looked at her\nquestioning])-.\n\"What hnve you heard, Natalie?\"\n\"Oh. I mustn't gossip.\"\nStraightening in her chair. Mrs,\nHayworth encouraged her with:   \u2022 \\\n\"Oh. now that isn't gossiping,\ndear. Surely you know how we feel\nabout you Come, dear, let's bf*\nfrank. What is it you've heard?\nNothing very serious, I'm sine.\"\nNatalie began uncertainly:\n\"I\u2014well. I giies-* you know how\nI feel about Dover. He\u2014he's such\nan old friend. I've been worried\nabout him since last Fall, One night\nhe brOugh* a red-headed actress on\nthe yacht\u2014to  his birthday party.\"\n\"A red-headed actress'\" Mrs. Hay-\nworth's brown eyes opened In\nshocked surprise, \"why Natalie! Tell\nme  more  about   It\"\n\"She  wa*  a   piano  player  In   \u00ab\nmusic store.\" Natalie went on, hesi-\nitating properly for effect. \"A crude\nperson if I've ever seen one. But\npretty in the way some of those\nordinary girls are. She made a terrific play for Dove and he seemed\nto sort of fall for her,\"\n\"What do you mean, fall for her?\"\nMrs. Hayworth's face was troubled\n\"He took her home instead of me.\nOf course I was terribly embarrassed.\"\n'The idea!\" Mrs. Hayworth shook\nher white head violently. \"These\nboys! I do try to understand. But\nwhen ther*? are so many nice, pretty\ngirls in their own class to associate with. T don't see why they have\nto pick girls up from just any place\nana go out with them.\"\nNatalie smiled tolerantly.\n\"Oh, well, I guess men are all\npretty much alike, I didn't think\nmuch about it until I saw the paper\ntoday. I thought probably Dove\nwould just take her home and that\nwould be thc last of it\"\n\"The paper9\" Mrs. Hayworth sat\nup alarmed. \"What do you mean?\"\nNatalie said apologetically:\n\"Oh, dear, I didn't mean to worry\nyou. But you know your ncw morning radio program?\"\n\"Yes. I've been listening. I think\nit's very nice\u2014\"\nNatalie broke in.\n\"Well, I'm sure you won't when\nyou find out who thc pianist is,\nIt's that same girl!\"\n\"Oh!\" Mrs. Hayworth's mouth\nformed a shocked ova!. \"Oh! I see,''\n\"Please\" Pee Wee implored hastily, \"don't let Dave know I told\nyou, Mrs. Hayw#rth, I guess I\nshouldn't have. But I'm afraid I'm\na little jealous.\" She laughed uncertainly.\n\"And well you might be!\" The\nolder woman sat her cup down with\na clatter. \"I'll certainly look into\nthis. I'm so grateful to you for telling me. Natalie\"\nNatalie seemed almost tearful.\n\"I feci terrible because I did tell\nvou. But I just don't like lo sec\nDove get mixed up wilh anyone\nlike that. I felt certain his father\ndidn't knew who the girl was, or hc\nwouldn't have let her go on the air\nfor him.\"\n\"I should say not!\" Mrs Hayworth snorted indignantly. \"Why.\nhe just made Dover director of\nradio for the company a few days\nago. I was so proud that my son\nwas taking an interest in the business.\"\nPee Wee said unhappily;\n\"I hope this girl isn't going to\ncause you a lot of trouble. That\nthere won't be a lawsuit or something, if you don't want her on\nyour program.\"\nMrs. H;.yworth hadn't thought of\nthat.\n\"Oh. wouldn't it be terrible If the\ndid cause a lot of trouble! And the\npapers printed il! Well, there'll br\nsome way we can got r.d Of her\nI'll see U> that.\u2022 We've never had a\nscandal in this family, and I don'l\npropose to have one now!''\nNatalie left a little later, very\nmuch pleased with herself At least\nshe felt she had paid Charlotte\nO'Neil in full for wetting the best\ni\u00bbf her on the Welri, p .she knew\nMrs. Hayworth. she would move\nthe earth before she'd stand for a\ngirl in whom her son was interested going up the radio ladder at lhc\nexpense of the Hayworth company\nMrs. Hayworth spent an* hour on\nthe telephone trying to rrnrh both\nher husband and her son. She went\ntu bed with one of her nervoui\nheadaches leaving word that if\neither of ner men folk ratne home\nthey wer,'1 to call hrr immediately\nIt was Dover's father who Arrived shortly after dinner and received his wife's command Unsuspectingly, he knocked on the door\nof her boudoir and entered, wins-\ntling. It had been a good day and\nhe had ei-ded it with a successful\ngame of chess at his club, Bul fa-\nther Hayworth's happuios was to\nbe short lived\n(To  Be Continued)\nGlands..\nGuard Against\nMumps In Spring\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING,  M. 0.\nThe great infectious dUeaie o(\nSpring is mumps. Although it is\nwith ut always, it is particularly\nlikely to break out in the Spring\nmonths.\nIt haa several peculiarities. It is\none of the most contagious diseases\nthat we have. It* immunity does\nnot last forever or, In plain words,\nyou may have several attacks during your life. The person who has\nmumps ls contagious for longer\nthan a person with any other contagious diseaae. And last, but not\nleast, It ia generally regarded aa a\n}okc when, as a matter of fact, it\nshould be taken seriously.\nIt Is an inflammation of glands.\nOf course, the glands most prominently affected are the salivary\nglands\u2014the parotid glands located\naround the upper part of the jaw\nnear the ear. But the reproductive\nglands are ttto affected. Thia is\nwhat makes it serious because the\nconsequences may last for life.\nHOW IT IS SPREAD\nSince the infection is localized in\nthe parotid glands, it is natural\nthat infection to others occurs from\ncough droplets and, in a household\nof children, from the indiscriminate\ncommon use of the same handkerchief or towel. It is almost impds-\n.sible, once mumps is started in a\nhousehold, to keep others from being infected.\nIn the army camp where I was\nstationed during our last war, we\nhad wards for all the infectious diseases. Sometimes the measles wards\nand scarlet fever wards and chickenpox wards would be entirely\nempty. But we always had mumps.\nWhenever a new draft of troops\ncame along, we got a couple of\nmumps wards ready because we\nknew they would soon be filled.\nThe first symptoms is pain around\nthe ear, so that the child is thought\nto have an earache. But if lemon\nor orange Juice taken in the mouth\ncauses pain, it is likely to be\nmumps.\nThe swelling increases from the\nthird to the sixth day, at which\ntime the face takes on the comic\nappearance which has made the disease to be considered as a joke.\nThe impwrUnt thing to stress ln\ntreatment is the prevention of the\ninvolvement of the reproductive\nglands; for this, rest in Bed is imperative, several days in young\nchildren or even a week in children\nat the age of adolescence, from U\nto 20.\nAside from rest in bed, the less\ntreatment given the better An ice\npack or cold compress, or'hot compress, whichever is the more comfortable, may alleviate the discomfort of the swelling of thc salivary\nglands. In putting a cold compress\non, remember that the place you\nwant to hit is up around the ears,\nso run the cloth from below the\njaw, over the top of the head, not\naround the back of the neck. Do Che\nsame with thc ice pack or hot water\nbag.\nLenten   Reducing   Diet  for   Sunday\u2014Rcp*;at  Thursday's   Diet\nDIET   OR   MONDAY\nBe   gluttonous   for   righteousness,\nnot meat.\"\nBreakfast: Fruit, cereal, coffee\nwith teaspoonful of cream and one\nlump of sugar.\nLunch: Oxtail soup or vegetable\nsoup: one slice toast, unbuttered;\nblack coffee or tea with lemon.\nDinner: Celery and olives; one\ncup cooked okra. one slice bread\nwith butter, or bun; tablespoonful spoonbread, coffee with cream\nand one lump of sugar.\nDay's calories\u2014750\nQUESTIONS   AND   ANSWERS\nR.H.W.:  \"What  is  the  effect  nt\nthe excessive use of tobacco on the\nhealth of a N-year-old man? I have\nbeen ohewlng tobacco for 35 years\nand am seldom without it during\nmy waking hours.\"\nAnswer\u2014I do not believe that it\nhas ever b\u00abn proved that tobacco\ncauses any organic disease in the\nbody, but undoubtedly it has a bad\nfunctional effect on the secretions\not the stomach and of the movements of the intestine and on the\ndigestive syitem generally. It may\nalso have a bad effect on the eye&\nIf any high blood pressure it present, it raises that slightly and will\nbring on attacks of pain in the\nheart. From your description your\nuse of it is undoubtedly excessive.\nAs a further piece of \"advice, It is a\nhabit that according to my experience, Is very easy to stop.\nI. M G.: \"Is it injurous to a\nyoung person to sleep with someone quite old? I have haard that\nduring sleep an older person will\nsap the young one's strength.\"\nAnswer\u2014There Is no harm in the\nsuperstitious sense of sapping the\nyounger one's strength. That is a\nsurvival of witchcraft. Snoring, bad\nbreath restlessness and cola feet\nmay be some of the reasonable physical consequences of this situation\nthat might make a person feel tired\nin the morning, as you say you are.\nCRESTON RED CROSS\nFILLS VACANCIES ON\nEXECUTIVE, CAMMITTEE\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 At the March\nmeeting of Creston Branch of the\nCanadian Red Cross Mrs. Allan J.\nGilroy, President, was in charge.\nFor the Work Committee Mrs. H.\nK. Legg reported the first shipment reached Vancouver and there\nwas a complimentary letter from\nheadquarters. It is expected a second shipment will be going forward soon.\nThe Society's first effort to raise\nfunds will be a dance at Park Pavilion In April. Mrs. R. M. Telford was named General Chairman.\nDue to moving to Chilliwack of\nMrs. R. J. Forbes there were vacancies to fill on the Executive\nand the Work Committee. Mrs.\nA. S. Partington will fill the vacancy on the former, and Mrs. R.\nM. Telford will be the newcomer\nto the Work Committee.\nA tea cloth donated by Miss Ambrose was won by Mrs. Partington.\nNAKUSP AID POSTPONES\nITS QUILTING BEES\nNAKUSP, B. C- At the March\nmeeting of the United Church Ladies' Aid, the Secretary, Mrs. M. Ion,\nwas hostess. A grant for current\nexpenses was voted to the Church\nBoard. It was decided to postpone\nlhe Quilting Bees until warmer\nweather.\nThe hostess was assisted in serving tea by Mrs. G. P. Horsley, Ten\nmembers were present and Rev.\nand Mrs. C. Thompson were visitors.\nDATES SET FOR RURAL\nSCHOOL AT ROBSON\nROBSON, B. C.-Mr. Edwards of\nthe University Extension staff of\nthe U.BC. was in Robson .jrganiz-\ning for a Rural Occupational School\nto be held in Robson, dates tentatively set for March 25 to April 8\nA committee, chosen fp?m the Institutes a yd the school board, was\nselected to carry on. They are Mrs\nR, T Waldie. Mrs. W. R Campbell.\n0. B. Ballard, G. M. Miller and\nL. M. Quance.\nMOTHER AND 7 CHILDREN\nBURNED TO DEATH\nHEBIR SPRINGS, Ark.. March\n17 AP)\u2014A young mother and seven\nof her ten children burned to death\nearly yesterday when their farm\nhome wss destroyed by fire.\nOtis Allen, father et the family,\nand his brother-in-law, P. R. Treas,\n4tt. were burned seriously in their\nefforts to control the flames and\nt were removed to hospital for treat-\n' ment Three older sons of the Allen's escaped injury.\ndUntLJjffL\noHoilMWWoQA.\nBy  BET8Y  NEWMAN\nStatistics Show Marriage Licence\nFigures Drop During Dizzy Hat Era\nTODAY'S   MENU\nBaked   Stuffed   Blucfish\nBaked Potatoes\nStewed Tomatoes\nChopped Cabbage Salad\nPeach Meringue\nCoffee\nBAKED   STUFFED   BLUEFI8H\nHub fish with salt inside and out\nMake stuffing with three cups *f\nsoft bread crumb*, one small onion,\nminced, cooked in three tablespooni\nbutler until soft. Season with salt\nI and pepper,\n:    Pack   into  body  cavity   Sew tip\nj fish. Bake in hot oven 20 minutes\ni per  pound.\nPEACH MERINGUE\nCut two pieces of sponge cake,\nI    .ibout   two   and  one-half   inches\nsquare and  one-half  inch   thick,\nj    and place on dessert plates that\nI    will .stand  heat,\nPut one-half slewed peach or\npeal\" on top of each piece of caKe.\nthen cover peach with meringue\nmade of one egg while, heiiten\nstiff with one iablcsp on sugar\ni Put in slow oven lung enough\ni<> brown the meringue and serve\nhot.\nBEEF  STEAK   PIE\nT-a o [xunids round steak, one\n' and cue-half cups sliced onion, ono.\nfourth cup fnt. two trun-pomu salt,\nI one-eighth teaspoon Worcestershire\ni m.uit, three tablespoons chopped\n1 paisley, two tablespoons flour, two\nand one-half cups water, two cups\n| diced, raw potatoes, one recipe all\nI bran  paitry\n1 Cut meal into ont-inch cubes,\nadd onion and brown in fat. Stir\nin seasonings. parsley and flour;\nmix well. Add waler slowly, stirring constantly.\nAdd potatoes, cover and mmmrr\nfor \u00abbout -30 m Inn Irs Pour into\ngreaied eight and one-ha If-med\ncasserole. Cover with pastry r-lied\none-fourth-inch thick. Prick wttii\nfork to show wedge-shaped pieces.\nHake in 4,V) degree F. oven about\nW minute*.\nBy ADELAIDE KERR\n(Anoclated  Prcti  Fashion  Writer)\nNEW YORK, March 17 (AP) \u2014\nHata affect masculine hearts, proposals and the marriage rate, says\none of America's leading hat designers. So give special thought to\nyour Leap Year Easter bonnet, for\nit may help you to get your man.\n\"A young man matrimonially inclined can be attracted by a pretty\nhat,\" says Howard Hodge, milliner\nexpert. \"But he can be frightened\naway by a flighty cra^y one that\nveers off at a dizzy angle. Reason:\nhe is apt to think the girl Is as\ndizzy as her hats and not the one\nto found the best home and happiness. When hats are extreme and\neccentric, fewer men propose.\n(For your information, mesde-\nmotssellcs, statistics don't quarrel\nwith him, In New York, the year\nafter the crazy-hat epidemic, the\nmarriage rate fell several per cent.\nSo did it the year after the Empress\nEugenfb episode\u2014though a few other thingK, like the depression, may\nhave had something to do with it,\ntoo.)\nFor your further information,\nthese are the things I have learned\nmen like in hats: Brims (both\nlarge and small), color (not too\nloud), flowers, simplicity and  de\nsigns that make a becoming frame\nfor your face.\nTo complete your education,\nthese are the things designers have\ndone in Leap Year's Easter bonnets:\nBiggest news is in brims. Those\nthat have made the latest splash\nand are most talked of right now\nstand off the face, but there are\nstill a number that pitch forward\nover the eye.\nAnother important piece of Spring\nhflt news concerns big roll-brimmed\nfelt chapeaux with wide sides and\nfairly shallow backs and fronts.\nSome of these roll back from thc\nface, others up on each side.\nColor Is a news note in the 1940\nEaster chapeaux. Navy blue and\nblack beta are splashed with scarlet\nor apple green, white hats (numerous) are touched with navy blue.\nThere are also a number of colored hats\u2014dusty pinks, misty blues,\nsoft yellows and greens\u2014and some\nplaid taffeta sailors.\nFlowers, fruit and bird wings,\nliberally used, add to the vogue for\ncolor. Toques are covered with\npastel flowers, white blossoms or\nred .currants and misted with a\ncolorful veil film. Wings trim sailors or nest in flower toques.\nAll in all, the new Easter bonnet* are chapeaux to which the\nmen might well propose.\nSelecting New\nAsparagus Plants\nSOIL\nLEVEL\n6-INCHES\n8 INCHES\nCftOWM\nPlanting asparagus crowns\nBy DEAN  HALLIDAY\nWhen purchasing asparagus for\nplanting purposes, select strong two-\nyear-old crowns. Mary Washington is an excellent variety and is\nrust-resi\u00abtant. A ncw asparagus\nnamed Paradise, is also a rust-resistant variety and is a heavy producer. Do not permit the crowns to\ndry out before planting, for if they\ndo they are almost certain to die.\nAs shown in thc accompanying\nGarden-Graph, the planting bed\nshould be two inches higher m thc\ncentre than on the sides, in order\nthat the crowns, when planted will\nbe well above the roots. The long,\nthnng-lik(\u00bb roots should be spread\nnut when plan ted aa illustrated.\nThe crowns should be set some six\ninches   below   the   surface   soil.\nCover the crowns with only two to\nthree inches of soil at first; fill up\nthe trench with soil as the plant's\nshoot's grow upwards. This gradual\nfilling in of tho trench with soil ii\ndone to keep the roots of the asparagus from being smothered before\nthe plant is well established.\nThe plants should be set from 12\nto 18 inches apart along the row.\nThe rows should be three feet\napart Stalks should not be cut\nfrom the plant during the first year,\nand only a few from it during the\nsecond year. Full harvesting can\nbegin the third year after planting.\nAUXILIARY GIRLS OF\nNAKUSP DISPLAY WORK\nNAKUSP, B. C.-A display of the\nwork accomplished by the girls*\nauxiliary of St, Mark's Church during Winter, was shown to the mothers and friends of the members at\nan affair held in the Parish Hall.\nHotkaps\nHOTKAPS are waxed\npaper conea, easily .set out\nover seed or growing\nplants. A \"miniature Hothouse.\"\nWrite for full information\nand descriptive catalogue.\nSMITH, DAVIDSON b\nWRIGHT, LTD.\nVancouver, B. C.\nEXIT MR. caffeine-nerves:\nJOt: I've got to quit this job, Jim\u2014it's got my nerves\nsll ihot- they're so had 1 can't sleep ^nd I've been\nsuffering a lot from indigestion lately.\nMR. CAFFEINE-NERVES:\nAttaboy! let tbe\nwife go out to work\nfor a tbangtt\nPASTRY\nOne fourth cup bran and one-\nhalf cups flour,, one half tcasporr\nsalt, one fourth cup shortening,\nabout four tablespoons cold water,\nRoll   bran   until   fine;     combine\nwith flour and salt. Cut in shor\nenmg. Add water, a little at a tim\nuntil dough is nr ist enntiRh to hoi\ntogether. Roll out on lightly-floured board.\nLAMB   AND   VEGETABLES\nOne and one half pounds boned '\nshoulder of lamb, one clove minced I\ngarlic, one and one half cups sliced |\nanions, three tablespoons butter ur\nbacon fat, one and one half tea- j\nspoons salt, one eighth teasp-^n\nblack pepper, two cups boiling water, one and one half cups each\ngreen bean* and celery, both cut\nin one inch slices: one cup cHih\nsauce, two tablrsp ons flour and\nthree cups cooked nee.\nCube lamb and then saute with\ngarlic and onions in fat until it is\nbrowned Add salt, pepper and\nwater. Cover tightly and sunnier\nslowly fnr one hour Add beans and\nrelery and more watrr if necessary\nCover and simmer for 4.ri minutes\nlonger. Add chili sauce Rub fUuir\nand small am- unt of cold water tu\na smooth paste. Add to meat mixture and cook for five minutes longer, Serve over hot steamed nee\nBANANA   BUTTERSCOTCH   PIE\nThree fourths nip firmly paektii\nbrown sugar, five tub Spoons \"(\nflour, one half tewpoi.n salt, iv.-\ncups milk, two egg yolk.*:, (slighten\nbea torn, two tablespoons butter, hit\nhalf teaspoon vanilla extract, three\nnpr, sliced bananas, and one baked\nnine-inch pie shell, Mix toft ther\nsugar, flour and salt in top of d u- i\nbir boiler\nAdd milk slowly, mixing thor- |\noughly. Cook 10 minutes longer. [\nitlrrlng now and th\u00abi Stir small '\namount of hot mixture into egg,\nyolks, then pur back into remain\ning hot mixture, while beating vig- [\norously Cook one minute longer \u25a0\nRemove from bent mnl altei na.c ,\nlayers of filling and banana in p <\u25a0\nshell Top wilh meringue oi sweet-,\np-nrd rreem. i\nMH CAFFEINE-NERVES: JIM: Maybe it's that coffee you're always drinking, Joe\nLook'out! \u2014 Here \u2014giving you caffeine nerves.  Why don't you try\ntomes tbe old fatb- Postum for awhile! You'll see a big difference!\neriy advltet\nWfc Vou were tight, Jim\u2014I switched to Postum for\na monili and feci like a new man\u2014no more caffeine\nnerval for mc! I'm Kicking to Postum!\n\u2022 Many pniplc can safely drink tea and coffee.\nMany others \u2014 and .ill children \u2014 should never\ndrink ihrm. If you arc one ol these, try Pdstum'i\nSO-Aty lest. Buy Postum and drink it instead of\nlea anil coffer for our month. Then, if you do\nnot frtl better, return the container top to\nGeneral FixkJi, I imited, Cohourg, Ontario, and\nwe'll gladly refund lull purthasc price, plus\npostage, Pmtum is delicious, economical, easy\nio prepare, and rontaini no caffeine.\nPOSTUM\nMR. CAFFEINE-NERVES:\nC, <x n g w a y I \u2014\nPes turn always\n(bases me I\nr;n\n \u2014\n\t\n35^\n\u2014NELSON  DAILY  NEWS, NELSON,  B. C.-MONDAY MORNING,  MARCH 11, 1940.\t\nThw eShosiL\nat dwOiQtvh\nYou'll find a grand collection of Spring \"firsts\".\nEvery new style in all the\nnew popular colors and\ncombinations.   Come   in.\nI. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders  in  Footfashion\nScout Apple Day\nSales Gross $160\nNelson Boy -Scouts apple day tag\nSaturday was a definite success and,\nt was estimated by Treasurer Harney F. Wallace, netted between\n(160 and $170 (or the Scout gen-\n\u25a0ral purpose fund. The gross re-\n:eipt of the apple sales was $230.\n160 TAGGERS\nOver 160 Scouts and Cubs, representing four City Scout Troops\nind five Cub Packs, conducted a\nCity-wide sales campaign Satur-\niay. Taggers were stationed at every\n:orner on Baker Street and a house-\no-house canvass was conducted\n'rom Fairview to Rosemont. Ex-\nictly 44*00 apples were disposed of.\nGordon Pickard of the Second\nNelson Troop carried off first prize\nthe decorated bicycle contest,\nleid in conjunction with the apple\nag. Other pri7e winners in order\nvere John Worthington. Nelson\n^ycle and Outdoor Club; John\niradley, Second Nelson Troop; John\n\"orbett, Second Nelson Troop. Bicycles of Fred Moffatt. Third Nelion Troop; and Robert Moffatt, Third\nNelson Troop, were adjudged fifth\nInd sixth, but prizes were not\niwarded fnr these.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs presented the\nlash awards, donated by prominent\n-felsonites, congratulating each hike\n)wner in turn for his showing, Thc\nfudges were Mayor Stibbs, J M.\nisfield, C, D. Pearson and R. R.\njjrown.\nThe judging and presentation of\nirlzes took place in front of The\n\u2022ielson Daily News building. Baker\nstreet, following which the cvclis'.s\n\u00bbraded up and down Raker Street.\nSalmo Shufflers Grab Honors First\nWest Kootenay High Schools Tourney\n*  \u25a0'\u25a0W*'*****.**'***^^\n4 Repeat Wins From\nKootenay Junior\nPlay\nlames Progresses\nat .Mayo Hospital\nR D. Barnes ot Nelson *ho ex-\\\nfleeted to leave Mayo's hospital.\nlast week fl*:ll remain in Rochester]\nfor a duly check-up at the Clinic.\nuntil the doctors find him well\nfcnough to discharge He was operated on for duodenal ulcer.\n7ilson to Face Charge\nFalse Pretences Today\nJ William Wilson, arrested bv Con-1\n\u25a0table R. R. Home Saturday niRht. \u2022\nmfr'lW appear in Ci'.y Poire Cmir\",!\npit morning tn fare a charge of ob-\nblning mnnfl'y under false pretences\nJ Wilson, allegedly, passed a false'\n\u25a0heck a', the Kootenay Flower Shop I\nWith three of the five titles going to Salmo's shuttle talent, Eddie\nHearn being a triple winner, the\nfirst annual West Kootenay High\nSchools Badminton Championships\nwere successfully run off at the\nCivic Centre Saturday, over 60 players representing 10 schools and\ncentres in the district taking part.\nThe tournament was even more\nsuccessful than was hoped for. The\nbrand of play was exceptionally\nhigh, especially -in the semi-finals\nand finals, when the competitors\nclosely approached senJor calibre.\n\"The only thing I was sorry about\nwas the fact that we were unable\nto give prizes to the runners-up\nthis first year, for they were really\ndeserving of special consideration,*'\nstated President Denis Crowther as\nthe tournament neared its conclusion. He was very optimistic over\nthe school championships for future\nyears.\nTRIPLE WIN\nThe performance of the crack\nSalmo stars, Eddie Hearn and Merlin (Nicky) John, just about stole\nthe show, as between them they repealed their doubles win of the\nKootenay Badminton Championships in the junior division the\nprevious weekend, while Hearn\ntook the singles and teamed up with\nEster Hamberg to waltz off with\nthe mixed doubles title.\nHearn took five of the lop tournament players into camp during his\ntrek to the singles title, beating Eddie McGregor of Bonnington, Jimmy\nEccles of St. Joseph's Academy, Bob\nCollinson, Ron Rutherglen and Stuart Macintosh of the Nelson High\nSchool in straight sets Thc hard-\nsmashing, curly-headed racquet\nwielder took the junior title in the\nKootenay tourney a week ago, and\nagain he held quite an edge over\nhis opponents, cleverly working his\nopponents into position so he could\nring up points on timely smashes.\nOn the -defensive side, he was seldom caught oft guard, recovering\nnicely during every exchange.\nThese four Salmo youngsters,\nHearn, Jnhn, Miss Hamberg and Naomi Lindstrom, showed lots of promise for the future as top-flight\nsenior players. The two 15-year-old\ngirls are newcomers to the game,\ntheir combined experience amounting to only about eight months, bul\nthey were hard to dispose of, fighting their way to the semi-finals of\nthe girls' doubles, while Miss Lindstrom and John went to the semis\nof ihe mixed doubles before bowing out in three sets to their f<*llow-\ntownsmen, Hearn and Miss Hamberg. who went on to take the title.\nJohn was knocked out in the semis\nof the singles, and Naomi Lindstrom\ngave Eleanor Simpson, the champion, a fight in the second round.\nGIRLS' SINGLES\nTHRILLING\nTwo Nelson High girls gave spec-\ntators a 'hrill in the final of Uie\nsingles, before Eleanor Simpson\ntook an 11-9. 11-8 decision from\nEvelyn Hammer. Bolh girls were\nvery tired after a full day of gruelling play, but they gave a great exhibition. Miss Simpson, the Kootenay junior girls' champion, didn't\ndrop a set as she faced four opp*jn-\nents. Altogether she played a total\nof 22 sets during the day.\nMurielle Whimiter and Evelyn\nHammer, who took the Koottnay\nGirls' doublet junior championship, again were topi among the\nglrli, taking the title in a final\nmatch with Neena McClement and\nWilla McClement\u2014an ill-Nelion\nfinal. The play of the McClement\nliite-i wai a feature of tha tournament, theie glrli displaying\ngreat badminton to gain the fl-\nnali, where they gave the winners\na grand tight.\nAn interesting angle to the tour-\nnament was woven around Stuart\nMacintosh's  three-set  victory  over\nNicky\" John  in thc singles sem\n15-10, 15-4; Eddie Hearn beat Eddie\nMcGregor 15-1, 15-7.\nSecond Round \u2014 Allan Beat\nHenry Johnson 15-4, 15-8; Macintosh\nbeat Hlookoff 15-7, 15-2* Hearn beat\nEccles 15-3. 15-4; John beat Gagnon\n15-6, 15-5; Rutherglen beat Cro&j-\nlcy 15-6. 15-4; McLennan beat Burge\n12-15, 15-11, 15-9; Collinson beat\nMcDonald 15-12, 6-15, 15-8; Uchacz\nbeat Whitehead 18-17, 15-12.\nThird round \u2014 Hearn beat Collinson 15-4. 15-8; John beat Uchacz\n15-12, 15-11; Rutherglen beat McLennan 15-5, 17-14; Macintosh beat\nAllan  15-8,  15-11.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Hearn beat Rutherglen 15-1, 15-2; Macintosh beat\nJohn 13-15, 15-2, 15-11.\nFinal \u2014 Hearn beat Macintosh\n15-8, 15-2.\nBOYS' DOUBLES\nFirst round \u2014 Eddie Hearn and\nMerlin John beat Dave Fairbank\nand Dick Attree 15-7, 15-4; Gordon\nAllan and Ron Rutherglen beat\nJohn Durnett and Jerry Jerram\n15-4, 15-12. Ralph Johnson and Bob\nEbdon beat Louis Gagnon and Louis\nColetti 15-7. 15-5; Paul Hlookoff ani\nDelbert Smiley beat Ian Carne and\nMike Sokolowski 15-1, 15-3; Bob\nCollinson and Martin McLennan\nbeat Jimmy Eccles and Henry Choquette 15-10, 15-9; Colin McDonald\nand Graeme Tindale beat Bill Cross-\nley and Walter Uchacz 9-15, 15-3,\n15-12; Willie Vulcano and Jack\nWhitehead beat Henry Johnson and\nCleland Taylor 15-2, 15-6; Stuart\nMacintosh and Roy Mann beat\nBill Burge and Bob Fraser 13-10,\n15-11.\nSecond round \u2014 Hearn and John\nbeat Allan and Rutherglen 15-5,\n15-6; Johnson and Elsdon beat\nHlookoff and Smiley 15-10 10-15,\n15-7; McDonald and Tindale beat\nCollinson and McLennan 15-8, 6-15,\n17-14; Macintosh and Mann beat\nVulcano and Whitehead 15-6, 15-2.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Hearn and John\nbeat Johnson and Elsdon 15-2, 15-3;\nMacintosh and Mann beat McDonald\nand Tindale 15-12, 15-4.\nFinal \u2014 Hearn and John beat\nMacintosh and Mann 15-11, 15-4.\nGIRLS' SINGLES\nFirst round \u2014 Naomi Lindstrom\nbeat Joan Coates 11-4, 11-8; Edna\nHeighton beat Leatrice Smiley 11-2,\n11-2; Ncrma Wood beat Phyllis\nThompson 11-7, 4-11, 12-9; Lily Edwards beat Joan Ferguson 10-12,\n11-8, 11-8; Susan Berry beat Ester\nHamberg 14-12, 11-2; Willa McClement beat Molly Kirkpatrick\n11-1, 11-1; Bessie McLeod beat Barbara Bird 11-5, 11-6; Winnie Ridge\nbeat Peggy Coates 11-0, 11-4; Margaret Daivson beat Robina Day\n11-0, 11-2; Betty Dronsfield beat\nDorotry James 11-5, 11-2; Margery\nFraser boat Mary McLeod 11-2,\n11-5; Neena McClement beat Murielle Whimster 11-2, 11-8; Evelyn\nHammer beat Lorraine Carew 11-4,\n11-3.\nSecond round \u2014 Eleanor Simpson beat Naomi Lindstrom 11-5.\n11-6; Dorothy Todd beat Gwen\nMacrone 311, 13-10, 11-5; Miss Dawson beat Miss Ridge 11-4, 11-3; Miss\nBerry beat Miss Edwards 11-0, 9-11,\n11-2; Miss Hammer beat Neena\nMcClement 11-4, 11-4; Willa McClement beat Beuie McLeod 11-3,\n11-2; Miss Fraser beat Miss Dronsfield 11-6, 11-1; Miss Heighton beat\nMiss Wood 11-3, 11-4.\nThird round \u2014 Miss Simpson beat\nMiss Heighton 11-7, 11-4; Miss Daw.\nson beat Miss Fraser 11-7, 4-11, 11-7\nMiss Hammer beat Miss Todd 11-5,\n11-4; Miss Berry beat Willa McClement 11-8, 11-7.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Miss Simpson beat\nMiss Berry 11-4, 11-8; Miss Hammer\nbeat Miss Dawson 11-3, 11-3.\nFinal \u2014 Miss Simpson beat Misi\nHammer 11-9,  11-8.\nGIRLS'  DOUBLES\nFirst round-Willa McClement\nand Neena McClement beat Eleanor Simpson and Dorothy Todd 15-\n9, 13-18. 15-7; Margery Fraser and\nLorraine Carew beat Barbara\nSerres and Edna Johnson 15-7, 15-5;\nNaomi Lindstrom and Ester Hamberg beat Robina Day and Norma\nWood 15-12, 15-10; Bessie McLeod\nand Mary McLeod beat Peggy\nCoates and Molly Kirkpatrick 15-11.\n15-10; Winnie Ridge and Margaret\nDawson beat Jean Coates and Phy'\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. V1GNEUX\n\u2022 Mra. L. W. Bates, Stanley\nStreet, entertained Friday evening\nin compliment to Mrs. H. M. Bates\not Rossland, who is her guest. Those\ninvited Included Mrs. William Taylor, Mra, C. D. Pearson, Mrs. F. J.\nMiller, Mrs. E. E. Linville, Mrs. J.\nRich, Mrs. E. T. Stromstead, Mrs.\nJ. Eric Sowerby, Mrs. R. A. Horswill and Mrs. M. F. Clarke.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. Burkenshaw, who\nteaches at Erie, visited Nelson at\nthe weekend.\nt Mrs. F. E. Laing, Mrs. H. J.\nMcLean, Mrs. H. Stewart of Nelson and Mrs. M. V. Ryckman of\nTrail leave today for Penticton to attend the Initiation of the Deputy\nGrand Officer, Mrs. M. K. Firth of\nFort William, as delegates from Kinney Lodge of the L. A. to the B\nof R. T.\n\u2022 A. Major of Procter visited\nNelson Saturday.\n\u2022 B. J. Watson of the Relief\nArlington mine visited town on\nSaturday.\n\u2022 R. Hind, Principal of Procter\nschool, visited Nelson at the weekend.\n\u2022 James Robertson, who has\nbeen a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital since Thursday,\nhas recovered sufficiently to return\nto his home, 220 Silica Street.\n\u2022 Rex Towgood and Mr. Cullen\nof Trail attended the hockey match\nSaturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. H. Walker, Baker\nStreet, had as weekend guests her\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. George Walker and another\nson, Victor, all of Trail.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. D. Kerr and daughter\nIrene, of Longbeach, spent Saturday\nin the City.\n\u2022 Mrs. C. B, Sharp and Beatrice\nof Bonnington visited town on\nSaturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. M. Weir of Trail visited Nelson.\n\u2022 Miss Ella Baker of Bonnington spent Saturday in Nelson.\n\u2022 T. Vaill, who has been a guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Weatherhead,\nFourth Street, Fairview, has returned to Winsted, Conn. Mrs. Vaill.\nivho accompanied her husband to\nNelson, is remaining a few more\nweek with her parents.\n\u2022 John Christian of Ymir spent\nSaturday in town.\n\u2022 Members of Kinney Lodge of\nthe L. A. to B. of R. T. leaving\ntoday via C. P. R. for Penticton\nthis morning to attend the initiation\nand visit of the Deputy Grand Lodge\nOfficer, Mrs. M.'K. Firth of Fort\nWilliam, are Mrs. Arthur Oliver.\nMrs. J. Bellamy, Mrs. W. Percival\nand Mrs. Charles Beltner.\n\u2022 Miss Joyce Johnstone of New\nDenver was a weekend City visitor.\n\u2022 Mrs. Cobb of South Slocan\nshopped in Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Swan Lundgren and infant son left Kootenay Lake General Hospital Saturday for their\nhome in Ymir.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. Beavis of\nSirdar were weekend visitors in\nthe City.\n\u2022 M. K. Bennett of Howser visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Johnstone\nof Sheep Creek visited town on\nSaturday.'\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Lupton of\nVendura, Sask., who have been\nvisiting their brother-in-law arid\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Thorpe,\nFairview also spending three months\nin Fruitvale with their son, Edward\nLupton, left yesterday to visit in\nVancouver and Victoria.\n\u2022 Barney Browne of New Denver visited Nelson at the weekend\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Ferguson\nfinals Tliat marked the fourth tune ] lis Thompson  15-4,  15-3;  Lily  Ed\nthat they had met in tourney play.| wards   and   Dorothy   James   beat\nand made it two victories for each\nIn the Kootenay junior championships a \\fl*eek ago. three sets gavfl*\nJ-flhn a triumph over Macintosh in\nthe quarter-finals.\nMY   BUSINESS   IS\n| Helping People S.iv* Money\nFrank A. Stuart\nlAbirdien Block Phone ito\nNEW SPRING STOCK\nHOUSEDRESSES\nAND APRONS\nINGHAM SHOPPE\nin- PV, Opp   Duly News\nSpecial Daffodils\n25* Doirn\n(\"ASH and CARRY\nMac's Greenhouses\n| Telephone  N:|M  sri  Day\u201491*1\nCOMPETITORS\nTh*    trams    of    thf\nschool follow:\nSouth Slocan \u2014 Barbara Bird\nMargaret Dawson, Lily E d w a r d i\nDorothy James, Gwen Macrone\nWinnifred Ridge. Bob Elsdon\nRalph Johnson, Colin McDonald\nEddie McGregor, Marvin Mclntyre\nand Graeme Tindale.\nProcter\u2014S mm   Berry.1 Ednn\nJoan Ferguson and Betty Drons\nfield 6-15, 15-8, 15-8; Susan Berry\nand Edith Johnson boat Gwen\nMacrone and Barbara Bird 15-5,\nt 15-2.\nSecond round\u2014Misses McClement\ni beat Miss Fraser and Miss Carew\ncompeting, 15.7i 15.4; Miss Lindstrom and Miss\nHamberg beat Misses McLeod 15-6,\n15-13; Miss Ridge and Miss Dawson\nbeat Miss F.dwards and Miss James\n15-6. 15-6; Miss Whimster and Miss\nHammer beat Miss. Berry and Miss\nHeighten   18-14.   15-12.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Misses McClement\nbeat Mns Lindstrom and Miss Hamberg 15-2. 15-13; Miss Whimster and\n, Heighton.   Edith   Johnson.   Barbara ; Miss Hammer beat Miss Ridge and\nSPRING HATS\niTh'v'ri*  > \u2014urt aid bright  w.'h\nf! \u25a0**-:.< and veils\nj BETTY ANN SHOP\n|pp   r\u00bbr'>'nl Theatre     Thne  1047\n\u2666 \u2666-*\u2022\u2666 -\u2666\u2022\u2022 \u2666\u00ab\u2014>-+-*\u00ab  \u2022  m. ay am 4\nRADIO AND APPLIANCE\nSERVICE\nkelson Electric Co.\n]74 Baker St. Phont im)\n-\u2666-\u2022\u2022\u2022-\u2666\u2666-\u2022 \u2022\u2022-s*\"*\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb-+4\nPullover Sweaters\nfew shtpm#*lt   AH , ie,  tol   co',-\nots   Long a- I stfl'flflt slrffl rfl\n\"ashitm hirst Simp\nll HiV'i  5' Nell >n. D   ('\nSfl-rres. lan Carne, Henry J'lhnsol\n1 Mike SokoloAvski and Cleland\n' Taylor.\nQueen's Ray\u2014Dick Attree.\nCraflflfnrd   Ray-Margery   Fraser.\nRill ttiizae and Rob Fraser.\nSalmo- Ester Hamberg. Naomi\nLindstrom. F.ddie Ileum and Merlin\nJohn\np    Harrop- Da\\*e Fairbank\nNelson HiKb-Lorraine C a r e flv.\nEvelyn Hammer, Neena McClement,\nWilla McClement. Eleanor Simpson,\nDoro'hy Todd. Murielle Whimster.\n* Iratrice Smilev, Phyllis Thompson,\nGordon Allan,' Dob Collinson. Stuart Macintosh. Roy Mann, Martin\nMcLennan and Ron Ruthernlen.\nNelson Junior High-Bettv Drons-\nfield Robina Day. John Dunnett\nJoan Frrfiis-n. Norma Wood. Walter\nCcha-r, Willie Vulcano, Pill Cross-\nley, Mary Mcleod, Bessie McLeod\nand Jerry Jerram.\nSI   Josenn'1 A< aderny \u2014 Pr|(v   Ti\nCoates,  Molly   Kirkpatrick,  Oenrg*\nHenry Chofjuette, Jlmm:\nGagnon\nColetl\nFuries and\nREBULTI\nDet*.led  remits folltm\nBOY8* SINGLES\nFrfl' r und Merlin John bflaat\nC,\u00bbor|. Coletti l.V\u00bb I.V2, I.om,\nGijnon beat rlelinrl Tavlor 15-3.\nIV7. Walter Crhacr beat Dave Fair-\nbank IS 11, 7-15. 15 \u00ab. Jack Whitehead bea' Mike Sokoloiarikl 10-19.\n15 12. 15-9 Cordon Allan beat John\nDunn\u00bb*t 1H-I7, IV\u00ab, Hrnrv John-\n>*n neat Dirk Attree 15 12. 15-2,\nStuart Marlntoah beat Willie Vulcan > on rtefaul'. Paul Hlookoff brat\nJerrr Jerram 15-4. 15 7. Ron Rutherglen beat Ralph Johnaon 15-4,\nIS 4 Bill Croulrr brat Mob Fraaer\nIS 12 IS 4 Martin McLennan beat\nGraeme Tindale 15 II IS .1. Hill\nHu-ee bea' Henri* Chot|iiette 15-5\n15 5 II >h C 'Unison beat la*, Carne\nIS s IS 0 (*fll ii McD.nald beat\nPeihec Smile*.* IS .1 415 IS 13;\nJimmy   Eicl\u00abj   bftl   B?l>   EldsJon\nMiss Dawson 15-7, 15-5.\nFinal\u2014MIm Whlmater and Mill\nHammer beat Mltwi McClement\n1510, 15-8.\nMIXED   DOUBLES\nFirst round \u2014 Eddie Hearn and\nEster Hamberg beat Robina Dav\nand Willie Vulcano 15-4, 15-2:\nStuart Macintosh and Murielle\nWhimster beat John Dunnett and\nJoan Ferguson 15-12, 18-17; Mike\nSokolowskl and Edna Heighton\nheat Bob Fraser and Leatrice\nSmiley 15-13, 17-14; Ron Rutherglen and Dorothy Todd beat Walter\nUrhaci and Miry McLeod 15-4.\n13-7, Graeme Tindale and Gwen\nMacrone beat Jerrv Jerram and\nBetty Dronsfield 15-2. 15-5; Merlin\nJohn and Naomi Lindstrom belt\nHenry Johnson and Rarb.-ui\nSerres 15-4. 15-4; George Coletti\nand Peggy Coates beat Cleland\nand Edith Johnson 15-7\n15-8; Martin MrU-nnan and Willa\nMcClement beat Jimmv Eccles and\nMolly Kirkpatrick l-i-t). 15-12; Bob\nCollinson and Neena McCleme-il\nbeat Bill Croulrv and Bessie Mc\nL'od 15-8. IS.3, Daie Fairbank ami\nLorraine Carew beat Rov Mann and\nF.velvn Hammer 16-17. 15-2, 17-16,\nGordon Allan and Eleanor Simpson\nbeat F.ddie McGregor and Lily Ed.\nwirdi 15-2, 15-13; Colin McDonald\nand Winnie Ridge beat Bob Elidon\nand Barbara Bird 15-8. 15-10; Del-\nhert Smiley and Dorothy James\nbeat Jack Whitehead and Norma\nWood 15-11. 15-5; Ralph Johnson\nand Margaret Dawson beal Loula\nGagnon and Je*n Coatea, 15-6\n13-15,   15 10\nSerond round\u2014Hearn and Miss\nHamberg heat Dick Altree and\nPhyllii Thflimpflon 13-7. 15-7; Macintosh >nd Miss Whimster beat\nSokolowskl - and Mis* Heiglilou\nIS 5 IS 7. Itullierglen and Mns\nTodd beat Tindale and Mill Macrone 15-5, 15- 1Q. John and Mm\nLindslrom beal Coletti and Peggy\nanil daughter Bobby ot Ymir were\nCily visitors Saturday.\n\u2022 J. Gillies o[ South Slocan visited. Nelson Saturday.\na Mrs. William Young was in\ntown Saturday, returning that evening with Mr. Young, who has been\na patient in Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. V. Ryckman of Trail\nwas a weekend visitor in tbe city.\n\u00bb F. Lovestrom waa in town\nfrom Ymir Saturday.\n\u2022 Miss Elizabeth Giegerich, who\nattended the funeral of her father,\nHenry Giegerich, in Kaalo Wednesday, was in town Saturday enroute\nto Vancouver, where she teaches in\na high school.\na Mrs. C. Healey of Willow Point\nspent Saturday in the city.\na Miss Virginia McMillan of\nSheep Creek shopped in Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Felly and\nfamily leave by motor this morning\nto make their home in Vancouver.\nPrior to their departure Mr. and\nMrs. Felty were the honor guests\nat several gatherings.\n\u2022 Miss iorna Lytle of Crawford\nBay visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. D. McLean, Mrs. H.\nProut, Mrs. W. J. Robertson and\nMrs. R. B. Laughton are among\nmembers of Kinney Lodge of the\nL, A. to B. uf R. T\u201e to leave this\nmorning for Penticton to attend the\nofficial visit of the Deputy Grand\nLodge Officer.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. Bennet was in town\nfrom South Slocan Saturday.\n\u2022 T. D. Edgar ot Vallican shopped in the city.\n\u2022 Mrs. William Johnston and\nbaby daughter have left Kootenay\nLake General Hospital for their\nhome on Hall Mines Road.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Adams of\nSheep Creek spent Saturday in the\ncity.\n\u2022 Miss Kay Streit of Kaslo visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Byron SheeLs was in the cily\nfrom Trail Saturday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. K. E. Walton of\nWaneta attended the hockey match\nSaturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Daniel McDonald of Trail\ni< a cily visitor.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Venables,\n311 Observatory Street, have taken\nup residence at 1202 Front Street.\n\u2022 M, Potz was in town from Kokanee  Saturday.\n\u2022 J. Labelle of Creston, pioneer\nresident of Kaslo, visited Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs, Robert Haggart of Trail\nwas a weekend guest of Miss May\nHaggart and Miss Eleanor Haggart,\nMill Street.\n\u2022 Miss Jean Downie of Trail\nvisited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. B. Stark, Carbonate\nStreet, who spent a couple of weeks\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W\nM. Vance, in Kelowna, returned last\nnight.\n\u2022 Mrs. H. Exter of Kaslo and\nher daughter, Mrs. W. Wadson of\nSouth Slocan, spent Saturday in\nNelson.\n\u2022 W. Mclaughlin of Salmo visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Ernest Webber and small\ndaughter left Kootenay Lake* General Hospital fur their home in\nSalmo. v\nI \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Warren Crow\nof Waneta attended the hockey\nI match Saturday night.\n\u2022 Cecil Gnmwood was in town\nfrom Trail Saturday.\nI \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. \\V. J. Dunn of\nKaslo spent Saturday in the city.\n\u2022 Miss Rose Kapak arrived Saturday night to spend a week with\naer parents. Mr. and Mrs. P. Kapak.\nVernon Street Miss Kapak is tak-\nI ing a course in nursing education at\nI University   of   Washington.\nEsling Appeals lo Electors on\n15 Year Record in Trail Speech\nCoates 15-4, 15-1; Collinson and\nNeena McClement beat McLennan\nand Willa McClement 15-10, 15-11;\nBurge and Miss Fraser beat Fair-\nbank and Miss Carew 10-15, 18-14,\n17-16; Allan and Miss Simpson beat\nMcDonald and Miss Ridge 15-8,\n15-11; Johnson and Miss Dawson\nbeat Smiley and Miss James 6-15,\n15-12, 18-14.\nThird round \u2014 John and Miss\nLindstrom beat Rutherglen and\nMiss Todd 15-9, 10-15, 15-10; Burge\nand Miss Fraser beat Collinson and\nNeena McClement 15-12, 15-1; Allan\nand Miss Simpson beat Johnson and\nMlss Dawson 15-6, 15-3; Hearn and\nMiss Hamberg beat Macintosh and\nMiss Whimster 14-17, 15-11. 15-4.\nSemi-finals \u2014 Allan and Mis*\nSimpson beat Burge and Miss Fraser 15-2. 8-15, 15-7; Hearn and\nMiss Hamberg beat John and Mm\nLindstrom 15-9, 10-15, 15-10.\nFinal\u2014Hearn and -Min Hamberg boat Allan and Mlu Simp-\nton  15-9, 15-8.\nNELSON GYROS TO ATTEND\nINSTALLATION AT TRAIL\nA contingent of Nelson Gyro Club\nmembers plan to journey to Trail\nTuesday evening fnr the annual installation of officers of the Trail |\nClub, D, D. Townsend is in charge of\narrangements for the Lakeside\nrepresentation.\nSeveral Trail Gyros attended the\nNelson installation last week.\nSWEDISH NOVELIST DIES\nSTOCKHOLM, March 17 (CP-\nHavas) \u2014Selma Lager lof, Swedish\nn veli.st and first womBn to win\nlhe Nobel Prize for Literature, died\nat her estate in Northern Sweden\nyesterday following a crrebral hem-\norrhage suffered when she learned\nof the Soviet-Finnish peace. She\nwas 81.\nGrass Fire Lit by\nChildren Handled\nby Fire Department\nChildren playing with matches\nwere responsible for a grass and\nbush fire in a vacant lot nn the\ncorner of Sixth Street and Gordon\nRoad,   which   was   quelled  by   the\nI Nelson Fife Department late Sunday afternoon. Two children, aged\n| about six and seven, were spe,-[\nlighting fires, winch became uncontrollable and quickly spread into i,\nl sizeable blaze, on the lot,\nSubstance Theme\nof Church Study\n\"Substance'\" was the subject of\nthe Lesson-Sermon in all Churches\nof Christ, \u2022Scientist, on Sunday.\nTne Golden Text was: \"'Holy.\nholy, holy, Lord God Almighty.\nwhich was, and is, and is to come\"\niRcv. 4: 8i.\nAmong the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was thc\nfollowing from the Bible: \"Let all\nthe earth fear the Lnrd: let all the\ninhabitants of the world stand in\nawe of him. For he spake, and it\nwas done; he commanded, and it\nstood fast\" (Psalms 33: 8, 9i.\nThe Lesson-Sermon also included\nthe following passage from the\nChristian Science textbook. \"Science\nand Health With Key to thc Scriptures'' by Mary Baker Eddy: \"Substance is that which is eternal and\nincapable of discord and decay.\nTruth, Life and Ltfve are suhstanre.\na.i the Scriptures use this word in\nHebrews: The substance of things\nhoped for. the evidence of things\nnot seen.'\"\nTRAIL. B. C, Mareh 16 - W.\nK. Esling, Member of Parliament\nfor Kootenay West for 15 years, concluded his campaign for reelection\nto thn Federal House ,as National\nGovernment candidate, at a meeting held ln the Knighta of Pythias\nHall Saturday night.\n\"In deference to Easter Week.\"\nMr. Esling said, \"I thought it well\nto let people give attention to those\nthings which prevail during Easter\nWeek.\"\n\"I am appealing to you,\" he continued, \"simply on the hope that I\nhave gained your confidence on\nthe past 15 years. There ls nothing\nI want for myself. I want to be\nthe member for Kootenay West\nbecause I love the work. I derive\na satisfaction from giving service to\nall in lhe constituency regardless\nof their political complexion. If you\nfeel that I have given my best, may\nI ask you to so indicate when you\nmark your ballot on March 26.\"\nMr. Esling opened his address by\nexpressing pride in the assistance\nin his campaign that came to him\nfrom the younger men In Nelson,\nthree Trail men received the hearty\napproval of the audience, and he\nwas pleased to have with him on\nthe platform C. B. Garland and\nStanley Penney from NeUon and\nTrail.\nThe real issue before the electors\nwas the conduct of the war, Mr.\nEsling said. Mr. King brought on an\nelection unexpectedly, without holding a session of Parliament which\nhe had promised. The election had\ncome at an inopportune time and\nthe candidates had had to make\nthe best of it.\nGiving the picture of the instance\nwhich brought about the election.\nMr. Esling pointed dut that Hon.\nR. J. Manion assured the Prime\nMinister of cooperation, saying that\nwith the outbreak of war there was\nno time for profiteering, partisanship and patronage, the one endeavor of the Government being to\ngive the best in them in the administration of war activities.\nCHARGES  PROVEN\nThen there -came charges, Mr.\nEsling continued, charges printed in\nresponsible Ontario publications.\nThey were specific charges, proven\ncharges\nMr. King had promised there\nwould bo no election without first\na session of Parliament. In the Ontario Legislature there arose a want\nof confidence vote for the reason\nthat \\\\a million bushels of wheat\nhad been sold to Kusiia Mr. King\ntook exception to the situation ana\nsaid it was sufficient for him to\nappeal to the people of the Dominion to determine whether the\ncountry at large had confidence in\nhis war administration.\nMr. King had said he called Parliament because he had promised\nnot to hbve another election until\nhe had done so.\nDISSOLUTION UNNECESSARY\nMr. Esling contended that there\nwas no need to dissolve Parliament\nafter three hours. He 'elt that the\nKing government expected all sorts\nof questions from the Opposition\nregarding war contracts, expenditures and the personnel of commissions.\n\"It was only right that the people\nshould know the answers.\" Mr. tiling asserted. \"When Parliament\nwas dissolved it was conceded that\n'.he objec'. was to avoid the questioning or. specific charges.\"\nMr. Eihng stated that the order\npaper, which every member alwaya\nreceived prior lo sessions, was not\neven printed. He claimed that there\nwere iome 19 specific charges by\nOntario pspers. One was regarding\nthe contract for war materials\nawarded to an insurance firm of\nthree men who had bid only one\ncent below the lowest figure submitted by an established industrial\nfirm,\nRepeating that the whole Iisue on\nMarch 26 would be the conduct of\nthe war Mr. Eiling berated the un-\nbusinesslike administration of the\nKing Government.\nDEPENDENTS\nIn his opinion, there wai no difference in the meaning of the word\n\"dependent\" between wife and widowed mother. Many men who supported their widowed mothers were\nassured bj the recruiting officers\nthat they need not be concerned\nabout Iheir dependents. A inldier\nwas to receive $1.30 a day, and $35\na month for his dependent.\n\"It ii more than six months since\nthe war was declared,\" Mr. Eiling\nstressed, \"yet no fewer than 20 widowed mothers have yet to receive\nthe first dollar of their allowance,\"\nMr, Esling stated that \"today\" he\nhad received information that a wi-\ndowed mother was to receive $20\ninstead of $35.\nThe ridiculousness of the war administration of the King Government waa revealed In a reply Mr.\nEsling received from Ottawa. The\nletter staled that as in the case of\none widowed mother her son had\ncontributed to her $110 for six\nmonths previous to hia time of enlistment, so if she were to receive\n$20 a month for six months she\nwould receive $10 more than she did\nprior to her son's enlistment,\n\"I wilder.\" asked Mr. Esling, \"how\nany man could have the audacity\nto place his signature to a letter\nlike thai! It's a perfect case of unbusinesslike administration and that\ncharge Is levied In general.\"\nVETERANS\nMISTREATEO\nThe Kootenay West candidate also\npointed out that veterans of the\nprevious war were not properly\ncared for. It was necessary to'show\nthat a disability had been recorded\non a hospital or doctor's report, and\nthat the disability was actually due\nto army life, before a pension could\nbe obtained. The speaker argued\nthat the fact a man went through\nthe ordeal took at least 10 years off\nhis life.\n\"However,\" he said, \"it has been\na great setisfactlon lo me to give\nattention to these matters,\"\nA KNOWN RECORD\n\"Everyone in the Kootenays\nknows the record of Mr. Esling,\"\nsaid J. L. Jestley, President of the\nTrail Conservative Association, who\npresided, in closing the meeting.\n\"Particularly,\" he continued, \"his\nrecord of effectiveness at Ottawa.\nBruce Hutchinson said Esling was\nthe most highly esteemed member\nin the House of Commons and the\nmost effective country member in\nit.\"\nA free dance was given after the\nmeeting.\n\u2014 oag* mvt\nUmbrellas\nOil  Silks and Plaid  in  new\ndesigns.\n$1.96  ,o  $3.95\nPhone 200\nBaker St.\nCreston Hospital\nApproves Advance\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Directors of\nCreston Valley Hospital Association\nat the March meeting named Chairmen of the 1940 standing committees\nas follows: House, Mrs. Charles\nMurrell; Grounds, Donald K. Archibald; Finance, S. A. Speers.\nMr. Archibald reported several\nimprovements at the grounds, including a stone wall the full length\nof the lot along thc driveway on\nthe North side.\nIn line with agreement reached at\nthe recent West Kootenay Hospi- i\ntals Association regional confer- I\nence at Nelson the Directors approved of an advance in rates as'\naffecting children, under certain j\ncircumstances, of 50 cents per day. |\nThe new schedule is effective May .1 i\nFor the Erickson Ladies' Hospital!\nAuxiliary Mrs. H. Langston re-1\nported that organization would dc-\n[ray the cost of material and labor j\nof making the case room soundproof. The past month was rather\nslack. The Secretary. H. A. Powell, I\nreported 329 hospital days, There j\nwere seven births and no deaths |\nrecorded; 46 patients were regislercd. ]\nThanks were extended Bud An- i\ndrews of thc West Kootenay Power i\nk Light Company, Ltd., staff, for'\na donation of an instrument steril- ]\nizer, which he had manufactured!\nout of waste material at thc com- !\npany's work room. It has been given *\na trvout and works splendidly.\nD.\" K. Archibald, C. F. Hayes air! ;\nS. A. Speers were named to in '\nvestigate the cost of installing an\nimproved buzzer and fire alarm .\nsystem.\nNelson Legion\nWar Fund Drive\nOversubscribed\nA total of $35.75 over the original\nquota of $500 has been reached by\nthe Nelson Branch of lhe Canadian\nLegion in its drive for the fund o(\nCanadian Legion War Services Inc..\nH. E. Thain, Secretary-Manager,\nsaid  Saturday.\nMr. Thain said \"while donations\nto the fund will at all times be\ngladly accepted and forwarded to\nheadquarters, yet a deadline naturally was set on the period allowed\nfor the Dominion wide drive for\nthe initial half million dollars. As\nis new common knowledge, this\namount has been over-donated, the\npublic throughout Canada having\nresponded generously to the appeal.\n\"Nelson is able to report a total\nof $535 75 against the tjuota of $500\nset. Nelson and district residents\nhave, entirely cf their own free\nwill, enabled us to more than secure our objective without recourse\nto individual canvass or coercion\nof any kind.\"\nSirdar Pioneer\nWorker Buried\nCRESTON, B. C. - Many residents of Sirdar were at Creston on\nThursday, for the funeral of Frank\nParento of that town, who was severely hurt while clearing the C.\nP. R. track West of that town of a\nmud slide that came down on February 29.\nInjured in the head he was rushed\nto Creston Hospital where he remained unconscious for two or\nthree days, end was taken to Vancouver  where he died March 9.\nFollowing an inquest, which necessitated a number of follow workmen going to the Coast, the body was\nshipped home and the funeral Iook\nplace from Holy Cross Church.\nCreston Thursday, Father Fitzgerald\nofficiating.\nInterment was in Creston Cemetery.   Pallbearers  were   Sim  Lombardo,  Carlo Lavazelli.  Pete Lombardo  and  Jim  Pascuzzo.\nbardo and Jis Pascuzzo.\nHe is survived by his wife and\nfamily. He resided at Sirdar for 35\nyears.\nFincvwofk and Bake\nTables are Popular,\nPythian  Siiter Tea\nWhen Pythian Sisters held an Fas\nter tea and bake sale at the K. P\nHall Friday Mrs. D. Heddle and\nMrs. C. R. McLanders had charg-;\nof the fancy work table and Mis\nW, T. Calbeck and Mrs. Rowe of thc\nbake table. Both tables were well\npatronized.\nAfternoon tea was supervised by\nMrs. Peter Zubick and those serving were Mrs. Richard Drew, Mr-j i\nJ. C Robison. Mrs. F.ric Ramsden.\nMrs. A Matissa. Mrs J. S. Edwards\nand Miss Josephine Riley,\nMr j. Percy Perdue waj general\nconvener.\nDaffodils were effectively used\nin table decoration,\nAT ITS BEST\nRaw and Pasteurized\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nPHONE  118\nNEW COATS\nIn Boucle and all-wool materials\nColors dusky rose, heaven blue.\nbeige, black and navy. Sizes 14 to 4*4.\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\n449 Baker St. Phone 874\n\u25ba \u2666- + -\u2666\u2666\u25a0\u2666- + -;\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-\u2666\u25a0\u00bb\u2666,\n'      ASK FOR 4X\nDr, Jackson's\nRoman Meal Bread\n\u00bb\u2666\u2666-+-\u2666\u2666\nBride discovers \"top-speed\" suds that wash clothes whiter\nWaits for Spring\nto Hunt Bones\nOLINDA, Ont. March 17 <CP>--\nC ha les Jeffrey. 65-year-old Mersea\nT wnship farmer, can hardly wait\nfor the Spring -so that he can start\nIhe work of exhuming the bones of j\na prfhutorls animel he believes are\nburied a fool below tho soil surface\n100 yards from his home here.\nThe corn-grower said that the\nfirst tooth was discovered nearly\nfive yean ago hy Iwo Mennonite'\nhired men ln-cin-g a field. Tha next'\nSummer hu children, playing in i\nthe same spot, unearthed a second I\ntooth.\nLast year a third tooth and long j\nribs were found on the farm The I\ncontinued discoveries indicated that |\nthere may be an entire body nf\nsome nrehiit- rical animal near his .\nhome lias Jeffrey interested, especially ar visitors from Detroit, Toronto, Windsor, Ottawa and even\nFlorida have visited his farm with\noffers for the bones.\nJeffrey's farm came into pr m-\nInencc nn two previous occasions,\npart of a meteor being found there\nand   a   petrified   frog   having\ndiscovered on lhe land as well\nDuke of Hamilton,\nPremier Peer, Dies\nLONDON. March 17 (CP)- The\nDuke nf Hamilton, 78. Premier Peer\nof Scotland, died  vesterdav\nII* was the l-lth Duke \u25a0 f Hamilton and the 10th Duke of Brandon\nHnd holder of the Earldom of Angus created in 1389. He was head\nof the House of Douglas and herid-\nitary keeper of  Holyio d  Palace.\nBefore surreeding In the dukedom in 18P5 hr was a lieutenant in\nthe Royal Navy. His herrdilary\nhonors now fnll tn his s\"ii. Squadron trader the Maraueu of Douglas and Clvdesdal*. M P.\nWith the death of the Duke of\nHamilton, Scotland lost both her\nPrrmier Peer and her Premier Earl\nin eight days. Lord Crawford and\nBalcarres having died March 8\nThe ncw Duke, Conservative M P,\nfor East Renfrewshire since 19,10,\nis now serving wilh the Royal Air\nForce in France He is married to\nIjidy Eluabfth Percv, sister of lhe\nDuke - f Noi Itiutnberland He is one\nof the fines! amateur tx>xers in the\ncountry, and participated In the\nmrmorahle air expedition over\nMount Everest\nThe fsmilv of the Duke of Hamilton and Hiandnn li * ne of lhe\nproudest of the realm, r'\u00bbmhimng\nlhe blood of Ihe Ha mil tons nnd the\nDouglases\n \u2014.\t\n\t\nrnuc  niA\nNflaim latlij N^ma\nE\u00bbt\u00abbU\u00bbhed April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266   Baker   Street,   NeUon.   British   Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nMONDAY. MARCH 18, 1940.\nTHE MACHINE AND THE JOB\nIs the machine age in which we live running us plump\non the rocks, as so many tell us? Are we purchasing a new\nstandard of enjoynlent and convenience at the cost of displacing labor?\nIn a recent issue of the Spokane Spokesman-Review is\na letter from a resident of that city, which emphatically answers in the negative. The correspondent, D. L. Thompson,\nsays:\n\"Those who believe that machinery has been responsible for unemployment are simply being fooled by deceptive surface appearances just as were their ancestors who\nbelieved th.it the World was flat, simply because it looked\nflat. They see a great clam being built by the use of machinery and they immediately jump at the conclusion that man\npower is being displaced.\n\"Of course, the answer is that neither the Grand Coulee\nnor the Shasta dam would have been built by hand labor\nas the cost would have been prohibitive. This being the\ncase, no jobs have been lost. The same applies to the building of the Panama Canal, the thousands of miles of modern\npaved highways, and to a large percentage of our mines.\n\"There are a great many low-grade minintr properties,\nas well as many deep mines, which are*now giving employment to many thousands of workers, which never would\nhave been worked, had it not been for labor-saving inventions, as it would have been too unprofitable. If the ore had\nto be mined by hand labor, the cost of it would be so high\nas to make its sale prohibitive.\n\"It therefore follows that, in this case, machinery has\nactually made work possible for many thousands of people\nwhere it otherwise would not exist.\n\"One of your contributors contends that the long railroad trains have caused unemployment. He, however, fails\nto tell us that for every railway worker laid off, two automobile truck drivers have been put to work. Their going to\nwork has made jobs for thousands of garage, tire, service\nstation and truck manufacturing workers.\nWhile it is true that there was some little decrease in\nthe manufacturing and farming end of industry between\n1870 and 1030, the increase in the distributing, service and\npersonal service fields, has more than made up for this loss\nand at no reduction in wages. The census records prove\nthis.\"\n i\t\nTHAT INEXPERIENCED MAN!\nWhen Government speakers profess to be apprehensive\nover the inexperience of Dr. Manion in statesmanship and\nhis lack of qualification for such an exalted post as the\nPrime Ministership of Canada, it is instructive to look at\nthe record.\nWhen Mackenzie King was writing his reports for the\nRockefeller Foundation, Dr. Manion was writing his book,\n\"A Surgeon in Arms,\" based on his war service, first with\nthe French, and then with the Canadians in France.\nMr. King, after three years in Parliament, during less\nthan 2V-> of which he held the ministry of labor, was without a seat in Parliament from 1011 till 1919, though twice\noffering the Country his services there. In the latter year,\nin consideration of his having been chosen his Party's\nLeader, the Borden Government enabled him to be returned\nat a special byelection unopposed.\nDr. Manion had a seat in Parliament, and helped frame\nlegislation both as a minister and as a front Opposition\nbencher, from his first election, in 1917, up to 1035, when\nhe lost his seat for the fiiM time. Returned again as Leader,\nin time for lhe 1030 session, he resumed his interrupted\nwork with new authority,\nIn taking office as Prime Minister, Mr. King had had\nfive years of Parliamentary service, about 2[-> as a very\njunior minister in the last years of the Laurier cabinet, and\ntwo years as Party Leader.\nAs Dr. Manion stands possibly on the threshold of\npower and a new responsibility, he has behind him an\nimpressive record of administrative service.\nMr. Meighen, when he formed his first cabinet, chose\nthe brilliant and hard-working young parliamentarian and\nsoldier for the task nf creating a whole new department,\nthat of Soldiers Civil Reestablishmcnt, and administering it.\nCreative jobs arc his meat. When Ontario put its new\nLiquor Act into effect in 1927. he was drafted for its Liquor\nControl Roard, and created the organization needed. When\nhe had completed this work, he resigned from that lucrative post after one year, to devote himself exclusively to\nhis parliamentary duties.\nIn the short-lived second Meighen Ailministration, he\nwas Postmaster (leneral. Today wc have Hon. Norman\nMcLarty, the recent Postmaster (leneral\u2014who is of such\nrecent appointment that the 1910 Parliamentary C.uide,\nrecently received is tbe first tn list him as a Minister\u2014\nand also Hon. (', G, Power, thc incumbent, telling thc\nCountry that Dr. Manion larks experience. Well, Dr. Manion had experience as a Postmaster (leneral just 10 years\nbefore Mr. McLarty entered Parliament, and tbe same\ninterval liefore Mr. Power bad a Cabinet office.\nAnother critic of Dr. Manion i.s lion. ('. D. Howe, Minister of Transport, the Minister who Rave himself such a\nfine testimonial over how proper all Ihe war contracts he\nawarded were. And we are (old that Mr. Howe is Minister\nof Transport, \"one of the most important portfolios of\nCanada's Government.\" Well, Dr. Manion held that ultra-\nimportant portfolio for five years, in thc Hennett Government, when it was still called \"Railways and Canals\" in-\nstead of \"Transport.\"\nOh, yes, Mackenzie King used to attend the League of\n-NELSON  DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNINQ, MARCH 18, 1940,\u2014\nSnapJthoii,\nof Canada's Statesmen\nThe only Prime Minljter tha\nProvince of Manitoba haa given to\nCanada ls Ontario-born Arthur\nMeighen, now Conservative leader\nin the Senate and unquestionably\none of the leading statesmen of his\nlime.\nThreo decades ago Mr Meighen\nmade his first speech in the House\nof Commons. As he finished Sir\nWilfrid Laurier turned to one of\nhis cabinet ministers and said, \"At\nlast Borden has found a man.\"\nSince that time Mr Meighen has\noccupied lhe most important political posts Canada has to offer. In\n1921 the Government he led went\ndown to defeat. In 1925 he narrowly\nmissed becoming Prime Minlter for\nthe second time and did fight his\nway back to a short-lived reign of\npower in 1926. That same year he\npassed from the active political picture for six years until he returned\nas a Senator, and the Conservative\nleader in the Upper House,\nHe was not born with a silver\nspoon in his mouth or with numerous political friends. At one time\nhe delivered milk for a living.\nWhile, in 1874, he was born ln\nAnderson, Perth County, Ontario,\nwas educated in St. Mary's High\nSchool and graduated from the University of Toronto \"in 1896, it was\nin Winnipeg that ho really began\nto practice law and it was Portage\nLa Prairie that adopted him as its\nfavorite son and sent him to the\nHous\u00bb of Commons as their representative in 1908.\nIn June, 1913, he was given thc\ncoveted post of Solicitor-General,\nwhich did not carry a seat In the\nHouse. Two years later he entered\nthe Borden cabinet. For the next\nfive years, the war years, he held\nmany important portfolios and earn-\nRT. HON. ARTHUR  MEIGHEN\ned an unsurpassed record as a\nlegislator. He put through the War\nMeasures Act. War Time Election\nAct and many other important\nmeasures. When Sir Robert Borden\nretired as Conservative leader in\n1920. Mr. Meighen became Prime\nMinister.\nWhen he retired to private business life six years later, he formed\nan investment trust company in\nToronto, which life agreed with\nhim so well that he addeo 25 pounds\nto his weight. While he was out ]\nof puolic life, he agreed to serve as\na rnember of the Ontario Hydro\nElectric Board, which he did for\nseveral years.\nLady: \"Why not have patience? The dog will live only another\nfour or five years at the most.\"\n\u2014Humoriit\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nLetters may be published over a nom d\u00ab plume, but the actual\nname of the writer mult be given to the editor as evidence of\ngood  faith, Anonymous letters go   In the waste paper  basket.\nMoney and Love of\nMoney Vary Greatly\nDeclares \"Citizen\"\nTo the Editor of   .\nThe Nelson Daily News:\nSir\u2014With reference to Mr. Wi-\ngen's article in the paper Thursday morning dealing with the economic and other troubles of -\"his old\nworld of ours.' A friendly challenge\nis issued to him to say where thc\nBible has at any time recorded\nthat 'Money is the root of all evil.'\nIf I remember aright, any sucn\nBiblical reference is to the love of\nmoney, which is altogether a different matter.\nCITIZEN.\nNelson, B. C,\nMarch 15, 1940.\nJsUlL yoWLtelfc\no \/*\/\/\"*'\/ *>^\/\/\/*>\/a\nW^AW^W ttt'tttjri1\nONE-MINUTE   TE8T\n1, What   is  the   second  book  of\n' the Pentateuch of the Bible?\n2, What ie the origin of the\nphrase \"ad lib,\" and what does it\nmean'1\nj    3. What are letters of marquee?\nWORD8 OF WISDOM\nLook well into thyself; there is a\n! source  of strength  which will al-\ni ways spring up if thou wilt always\nj look there.\u2014M. Antoninus.\nI \"\nHINTS ON  ETIQUETTE\nt    It is not considered good manners\nto smoke while dancing.\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nThose who have birthdays today \\\nare   fortunate,   for   their   prospects;\nfor the next 12 months are of the!\nbest, particularly for courtship nnd '\nmarriage. They will benefit through\n, women   and   elders.   A   child  born\n: nn this date will be sensitive, good\n[ naturrd and generous, but somewha'.\nrestless   and   extravagant,   If  born ,\nin  the latter part of the day. ex- j\nceptional   courage   and   original!\ntalent will be theirs.\nONE-MINUTE TE8T ANSWERS    I\n1. Exodus.\n2  It   comes   from   the   Latin   ad\nlibitum, meaning at will and means [\ni to use impromptu lines,\n3, Commissions authorizing prlva-\nj leers to prey on  the commerce of\nhostile nations,\nCCF. Sympathizer\n\"Must Be Prepared\nto Swallow Stalin\"\nTo The Editor of\nThe Nelson Daily News:\nSir\u2014T h e British Labor Party\nseems to have been effectually\ncured of ita affection for the Russian Government by the Soviets'\naggression against Finland and Poland, its wholesale \"purgings\" and\nits pro-German diplomacy.\nNot so the C. C. F. Mr. Herridge\nia reported as saying at Rossland\nthat we must suspend judgment,\nAny of us who may sympathize\nwith the C. C. F. social program\nmust be prepared to swallow Stalin,\nIf the C. C. F. extended the same\ntoleration and charity to its Canadian political opponents as it does\nto the Asiatic gangster Stalin, what\na wonderful world we should live\nin!\nBEWILDERED.\nBonnington Falls, B. C,\nMarch 16, 1940.\nCONTRACT\nFINDING A 8AFT MAJOR\nONE OF THB prime objectives\nof skillful bidding la to locate a\nsafe major suit for trumps, If\nyour side has one. Usually that\nmeans a suit In which your side\nholds a total of eight cards, or,\nconversely, one In which the op-\nnenta hold no more than five\ncards. When they have six, they\nwill be divided with tour or more\nIn one hand oftener than they will\nbe evenly split, so that you are\nthen In danger from one opponent's trump length. But five\ntrumps will generally find neither\nopponent holding more than three.\nSo your bidding tries to unearth\nsuch a suit, if possible.\nB\u2014a) 4 3 ]\n*\u00bb4 2\nA\u2014 4 42\nf 432\ne a j io j\n+ KQJ3\nL North\nSouth\nt North\nSouth\nJ. North\nSouth\n\u00bb. North\nSouth\n5. North\nSouth\n\u00ab. North\nSouth\n14)\n1*\nte\n2*\n1*\n>\u2666\n1\u00bb\n\u00bb\u2666\nt, A .1 10 2\n*KQ J 3\n2tf       3 NT\n3* 1\nit\n3 +\n3 +\nie\n3 +\nit\n3 +\n2\u00bb\n\u00bb\u2666\n3 \u00a5\n?\n3NT\n0\n*\u2666\n?\n3 \u25a0\u00a5\n\u00bb \u2666\n?\nYour final bid, holding In the\nSouth hand A or B, under the\nvarious bidding sequences given,\nyour opponents not bidding, ls dependent on an eight-card trump\nmajor suit being located, as preferable to a No Trump contract.\nBy Shepard Barclay\nSequence No. 1 Indicates only\ntwo four-card suits by your partner, hence no more than seven\ncards for your side in either major. S\u00bb with either A or B you\npass 3-No Trumps. No. 2 indicates\ntwo five-card suits by your partner. Hence you bid 4-Hearta with\nA and 4-Spades with B.\nSequence 3 reveals five hearts\nand four apades, so with A you\nbid 4-Hearts and with B you pass\n3-No Trumps. In fact, with A, you\nmay bid 4-Hearts as soon as you\nhear the 2-Spade bid Indicating\nhearts are five cards long. No. 4\nshows five spades and four hearts,\nso with A you bid 3-No Trumps\nand with B 4-Spades. No. 5 shows\nsix spades and four hearts, so you\nbid 4-Spades with either A or B.\nNo. 6 shows six hearts and four\nspades, so you bid 4-Hearts with\neither A or B.\na   a   ,\nTomorrow's Problem\n\u25a0***, A. Q 10\n\u00bbKQ7 8\n4753\n+ AK9\n\u2666 \u00bb\nf 10 4 3\n\u2666 AKQ J\n84\n*653\nN.\n49T84I\n2\n\u2666 \u2022\n(AJ842\nAKJ 8\nVA882\n\u2666 10 6 2\n+ Q107\n(Dealer: North. North-South\nvulnerable.)\nWhat Is the soundest bidding ot\nthis deair\nDlitrlbuted br Klnt Teattirta Syailtata, Im\nJ\u2014vv'v^^'\"55fi3fl3j5i55\u00a3jS5S5555555555\u00a3\nNazi Transport\nSecretary Resigns\nBERLIN, March 17 (CP-Havas)-\nResignation of Gustav Kocnigs,\nSecretary of State in the German\nTransport Ministry, was announced\nofficially yesterday. The German\nnews agency said the rejignation\nwas connected with \"changes ot an\ninternal nature and measures for\nreorganization of the Ministry of\nCommunications and Transport.\"\n(The Berlin correspondent of the\nSwiss newspaper Neue Zucrcher\nZeitung last week forecast the resignation of Dr, Julius IJorpmueller,\nGerman Transport Minister, as a\nresult of chaos in the German railway system since the war began.)\nKoenigs had been in thc Transport Ministry 19 years.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QU1LLEN\nJ? Questions ?J\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of\npersonj asking Questions will not\nbe  published.\n^se******-\nr*A**e***J\nWar\u201425 Years\nAgo Today\nBy The Canadian  Prwi\n,    March  18. 1015\u2014Allied Heft met |\nreverse at thr Dardanelles; British\nbattleships   Ocean   and   Irresistible I\n| and the Ilouvet of the French navy '\nI sunk -by   floating   mines.   German\ni airmen  dropped bombs  on  Calais\n! Russians resumed invasion of East\nPrussia\n\"My paper says they're about\nto unseat a legislator because\nof lyin' on the radio during his\ncampaign. If the idea spreads,\nwho's going to make our laws?\"\nLOOKING BACKWARD\nW. H. F., Camp Lister-What ts the\nderivation of the term sabotage.\nSabotage,is the term applied to\nthe wilful and underhanded destruction of machinery by worK-\nmen, The word is French, derived\nfrom sabot which means wooden\nshoe, from the fact that workmen\nin France, seeking to stop the increasing use of machines in place\nof men, threw their wooden shoes\nInto machinery to put it out of\norder. These shoes were called\nsabots.\nA. B., Nelson\u2014What is the difference between a total eclipse of\nthe sun and an annular eclipse'.'\nAnnual eclipse\u2014when the moon\nIs more distant than usual so that\naround its disk is a thin ring of\ntrue sunlight, unobscured. Total\neclipse\u2014when the moon is at the\ncritical distance where its shadow,\npassing over the earth, falls short\nof certain regfons (annular eclipe\nvisible) but touches others in between (totally visible).\nF. G\u201e Kaslo \u2014 What substance\n(chemical or drug) when placed\nin gasoline renders it non-\nexplosive''\nTwo volumes of tetrachloride\nadded to one volume of ordinary\nmotor gasoline will give a non-\ninflammable mixture, High test\ngasoline would require a larger\namount of tetrachloride.\nJ. M\u201e Trail\u2014When is the picking\nseason   in   California   for   cantaloupe,    pears,    peaches,    plums,\ngrapes and oranges?\nThe picking season in California\nfor   cantaloupe   is   from   April   to\nSeptember, the earliest season being\nin   the  Imperial   Valley;  for  pears\nfrom June to September; for peaches\nMay to October; prunes and plums\nfrom May to October; grapes from\nJune to January; oranges continue\nthroughout   the   year.  The  earliest\nsections   for   the  above  mentioned\nfruit are in the hot Interior valleys.\nC. B-, Nrlson\u2014How can hard sealing wax  be  removed from glass\ntubes and corks?\nDenatured alcohol is probably the\nbest solvent for sealing wax.\nSpring Begins at\n10:24 Wednesday\n,By W. G. C. LANSKAIL\nWednesday morning at 10:24 the\nsun reaches the Vernal Equinox and\nthis moment officially marks the\nbeginning of Spring.\nTo understand the causes of the\nchanges of the seasons one must\nvisualize two great circles on the\nCelestial Sphere; one the celestial\nequator which is the projection of\nthe earth's equator and is consequently everywhere 90 degrees from\nthe North Pole of the Heavens. The\nother great circle Is the apparent path of the sun through the\nstars, due to the annual revolution\nof the earth, and* this circle is called\nthe plane of the ecliptic. They are\nshown on most good star maps.\nThe earth's axis being inclined\n23 H degrees from perpendicular to\nthe plane of the ecliptic, it follows\nthat these great circles intersect at\ntwo points, one known as the Vernal Equinox, when the sun appears\ndirectly over the equator on its\njourney North to its extreme Northerly distance of 23*,j degrees; and\nthe other, six months later, when thc\nsun again crosses the equator on\nits journey South, heralding Autumn and the approach of Winter,\nIf the earth's axis were not so\ninclined from perpendicular, it is\nobvious that the two circles would\ncoincide; the sun would always be\nover the equator and there would\nbe no change of seasons.\nThe Vernal Equinox was for long\nin the constellation Aries and Ls\nstill termed \"the first point of\nAries\", but due to a slow gyratory\nmotion of the earth's axis around\nthe Pole of the ecliptic and a consequent motion ot the equinox\nWesterly along the ecliptic, the\nVernal Equinox has now moved\ninto the constellation Pisces. After\nanother 2000 years it will have\nmoved into Aquarius. The motion\nis very slow, only about 50 seconds of arc per year, so that after\nsome 25,800 years it will have\nmoved through all the signs of the\nZodiac, will be back through Aries\nand again into Pisces.\nThis slow motion of the equinoxes\nWesterly along the ecliptic is\nknown as \"the precession of the\nequinoxes\", as the equinoctial points\nprecede, or step forward, as though\nto meet the sun.\nThe period between two successive passages of the sun through the\nVernal   Equinox   is   known  as  the\nOn, Jim dbt\nMONDAY, MARCH  18,  1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7:00\u20140 Canada\n7:03\u2014Toast and Coffee Club\n8:0O-The Newi\n8:15\u2014Singeri and Songi\n8:30\u2014Wayne Van Dyne\n8:4S\u2014Rakov's Orcheitra\n9:00\u2014The Bailadeer\n8: IS\u2014Merry Music\n9:30\u2014Rhymei and* Rambling*\n10:00\u2014Musical Roundup (CKLN)\n10-.30\u2014Cavalcade of Drama <CKLN)\n10:45\u2014Mauriee Spltalny's Orch.\n11:00\u2014Mademoiselle au Piano\n11:15\u2014Holy Week Meditations\n11:30\u2014United  States Navy  Band\nAFTERNOON\n12:00-Luncheon Music (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014The News.\n1:15\u2014Election  Broadcast\n1:30\u2014Club Matinee\n1:45\u2014BBC   News\n2:15-Chuck Foster'i Orch (CKLN)\n2:30\u2014Songs by Slmone\n2:45\u2014Closing  Stocks\n3:00\u2014Miniature Muslcale\n3:30\u2014Gordon  Gilford\n3:45\u2014Lucio's Ensemble\n4:00-Talk\n4:15\u2014The .Music Makers\n4:30\u2014Rex'Maupin's Orchestra\n4:45-Talk\n5:00\u2014Half    tc    Half    Programme\n(CKLN)\n5:30\u2014With the Troops In England\nEVENINC\n6:00-Concert Master (CKLN)\n6:30-March Time (CKLNI\n6:45-Vocal Harmonies (CKLN)\n7:00\u2014Conservative Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Library Programme\n7:45\u2014Election Broadcast\n8:00\u2014Th3 News\n8:15\u2014Star Dust\n8:30\u2014Conservative  Broadcast\n9:00\u2014Immortal Music\n9:30\u2014Liberal Broadcast\niU;00\u2014Organ  Recital\n10:30\u2014In the Good Old Days\n11:00\u2014The News\n11:15\u2014 Rebroadcast \"With the Troopi\nin England\"\n11:30\u2014Paul Carson\n12:00\u2014God Save The King\nC|AT - TRAIL\nMORNING\n7:00-Breakfast Club\n8:15-Home Folks Frolic\n9:00\u2014Star of  the Week\n9:15\u2014Smilln'  Jack\n11:00\u2014Woman's Journal\n11:30\u2014Tommy Dorsey's Orch.\nAFTERNOON\n1:30\u2014Today's Music\n3:45\u2014In Town Tonight\n4:30\u2014Theatre News\n5:45\u2014 Headlines in the Past\nEVENINC\n12:00\u2014Sign Off\nOther ocriods-CBC Programme!\nU.S. NETS' BEST\n6:00\u2014Radio Theatre (CBS)\n6:30-Alee Templeton (NBC-Red)\n7:30\u2014Blondie (CBS)\n8:00\u2014Pleasure Time (NBC-Red)\n9:30-Ha*thorne House (NBC-Redl\nU):00\u2014Paul Sullivan's News (CB3I\n11:00\u2014Paul Carson, Organist (NBC\nBlue)\nTropical Year and Is about 20 minutes shorter than the Slderial Year,\nor year of the stars. As the Tropical\nYear governs our seasons It is the\nyear upon which our calendar is\nbased.\nSPANISH POLITICAL HEAD\nRELIEVED OF POST\nMADRID, March 17 (AP)\u2014General Augustin Munoz Grande, Secretary General of the Falange,\nSpain's only political party, and\nchief of the Falangist militia, has\nbeen relieved of his posts, it was\nanncunced Saturday. By virtue of\nhis party posts Munoz Grande had\na seat in the cabinet. Valentin Ga-\nlarza Morante was named as his\nsuccessor. No reason was given for\nthe change.\nESLING ADDRESSES\nROBSON MEETING\nROBSON. B. C.-The Conservative Association heard W. K, Esling of Rossland, candidate for thl\nKootenay West, C. F. McHardy, S\nPenny and C. B Garland all o]\nNels-rn. O. B. Ballard was chairman,\nMr. Esling pave an lnterestinj\ntalk dealing with the Conservative\nconvention in Nelson, a word picture of what brought on the election and the financial problems oi\ndependent widowed mothers of en**\nlisted men. Mr. Esling said the only\npromise hc had to make was t-c\ngive the people the best servic<\npossible.\nThe meeting closed with \"Got\nSave the King\" accompanied a\nthe piano by Mrs. O. B. Ballard.\nJohn G. Diefenbaker, K.C.\nLEADER OF THE NATIONAL CONSERVATIVE\nPARTY IN SASKATCHEWAN\nWU1 Speak Today\n1:15-1:30 P.N.\nOVER A NATIONAL NETWORK\nSubject:\nNATIONAL GOVERNMENT\nSTATION CKLN\nAND C.B.C. NETWORK\nGerry McGeer\nSPEAKS\nOver\nCANADIAN\nNETWORK\nIncluding Stations\nCKLN\n\u25a0 nd\nCJAT\nTonight\nat 9:30\nFORWARD With Mackenzie King\nLiberal Campaign Committee\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom Dally Newi of March lfl, 1930\nA puh];r market Is to be operated\nin thr Trail Kink this Summer. \u2014\nDefeating Saskatoon Quakers 3-1 for\nthe second straight pamr, Trail\nSmnke Eaters qualified to meet j\nPort Arthur in the Western senior!\nhoekry finals. -- H R. Lauriente\n\u25a0of Trail is a Nelson visitor, \u2014 Location of the new fish hatchery has\nbeen suggested in the basement of\nthe proposed civic \u25a0iiiditorium on j\nthe site nt Ihe old fair building.!\ndrstroved by  fire  last Summer.\n' 25 YEARS AGO\nFrom Dally Newi of March lfl, 1915\nJohn   Keen   was   chosen   as   the\nLiberal candidate for Kaslo\u2014Lome\nMeCandlish   has   returned   from   a\nvisit to Calgary. - Harold Lakes,\nSuperintendent of the Silver Hoard\nMine at Ainsworth. is a Nrlson\nvisitor - The mill at the Slocan\nStar mine at Sandon will commence\noperation*: April 1. 65 men to l)e\nemployed at thc min<? and mill.\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom Dally Tribune March 18, 1900\nMr. and Mrs William Wilson are\nback from spending the Winter in\nOntario. \u2014 Work nf rearranging\nnnd grad'ifg the yards at the C.P.R.\ndepot will commence in two weeks\n\u2014 R. T Lowery, Editor of the\nNew Denver Ledge, states that in\nMay he intends to publish his\npaper in Nelson instead of New-\nDenver. - - p. A. Paterson, Superintendent ol' Ihe Wakefield mine near\nSilverton, is a Nelson visitor.\n; Nations. Well, so did Dr. Manion. He headed the Canadian\n, delegation to the League of Nations in 1935, and also the\nI delegation\" to the Disarmament Conference of the same\ni  vear,\n\"Absolutely without experience,\" this constructive and\nveteran statesman, with three cabinet offices behind him\u2014\nso thc Government henchmen cry!\nSENATOR WILSON SPEAKS\nAT CHILLIWACK RALLY\nCHILLIWACK. March 17 <CP)-\nSenator Cairine Wilson Friday reviewed the work of the Dominion\nGovernment since the outbreak of\nwar in an address to a political\nrally here. She spoke on behalf of\nGeorge Cruickshanks, Liberal candidate In the Fraser Valley Riding\nFederal Election.\n\"Dr. R, .1, Manion asks us to vote\nfor a national government but I\ncan tell you that none of the leaders of the present government will\nbelong to the National Government\nheaded by Dr. Manion.\" Senator\nWilson told the meeting.\n\\\\\nCANADA'S WAR EFFORT\nHEAR\nBELIEVE 3 KILLED BY\nNAZIS AT BORDER\nLJUBLJANA, Yugoslavia, March\n17 tCP-Havas)\u2014Two Austrian refugees snd n Yugoslav priest were\nbelieved to have been slain by German Gestapo agents nn the Yugoslav-Reich border near Maribor on\nWednesday night,\nEarlier reports had said only one\nman was killed in the affray, which\noccurred when ., Nazi spy lured\nthe three men within rifle range\nof German territory,\nBrig.-Gen. J. A. CLARK, c.m.g\u201e dso.\nTONIGHT, 8:30, CKLN, Nelson\nAND BRITISH COLUMBIA RADIO NETWORK\nThe Call to Youth! Hear Miss Jean Mdeo\nDiscuss Manion's Youth Program . . . TONIGHT at 7\nCKLN, NELSON AND B. C. RADIO NETWORK\n  .\n \u2014\t\nb57\n-NEL80N DAILY NRW8, NILSON. B.C-MONOAY MORNIN8, MARCH 1\u00ab, 1M0^\nPAOI  SEVEN\nMOKE EATERS TAKE B. C HOCKEY TITLE\n*        *        *       * *        *        *\n|ake Savage Cup 3 Games\nOne With 3-1 Victory\nbver Nelson Maple Leafs\njrcome   Sneider's   First   Period   Goal   to]Hockey Heads Make\nit perfectly, Kilpatrick slipped Bill\nthe puck, and the Nelson right\nwinger drew Scodellaro out and\nbackhanded a shot into a corner of\nthe net.\n(Score Two in Second; Dame Clinches\nIt With Two Minutes Left\nQualifying to attempt their second quest of the Allan\nin three years and for the ninth time in the club's\nbry that Trail has represented British Columbia in Do-\nlon Senior Hockey playdowns, Trail Smoke Eaters cap-\nH the Savage Cup with a 3-1 victory over a batting crew\n|elson Maple Leafs Saturday before nearly 3000 fans, the\n1st crowd the Civic Arena has ever seen.\nWith that hard-fought-for-triumph, the Smokies took\nff\u00bbVest Kootenay Hockey League best of five final series\nI* games to one, just about a tough a series as there could\nFnd with fans jamming every available space, even finding\nage points on the girders, the senior hockey season in\nIon was wound up in one of the most thrilling panoramas\nlie ice game, one that the spectators will remember for a\nTtime to come. It was a thriller-diller from start to finish,\nIrnany salient parts of the game will be played over, by the\nIon fans in particular, well into the off-season. When the\nwhistle was blown andj\n(layers of both teams shook\nother's hands in centre\nthe crowd, comprising\nBlreds of Trail supporters,\ni up and cheered in tribute\nhe Provincial champions,\nin recognition of the game\nt put up by Rene Morin's\ns. who were truly great in\nat.\nT TE8T SATURDAY\nill's next obstacle will be the\nrta champions,  either Turner\ny Oilers or Calgary Stamped-\nfie interprovincial series open-\nit Trail Saturday night. Arid\nng from the Smokies' undc-\nd home ice record this season,\n'rairie pucksters are going to\ni for a tough time of it.\nwas   the  Cronie-Brn^it-Dame\nthat again paced the champ-\nattack, but it went to Jimmy\nIs. aggressive defenceman, who\ni first string right winger three\nI  ago,  to  get  the  credit for\nctttal winning goal. That came\nie final minute of thc second\nI id, a blazing shot from the\n1 boards that eluded Jess Seaby\nle Nelscn net. Each of the first\nters secured a point, Benoit's\n[Dame's being goals.\nlo drawing heaps of praise in\nIng the Smoke Eaters to the\nTie championship were Duke\nfcllaro, who gave a stellar per-\nlance in goal, and a newly-\nkned second forward unit,\nfees    being    made    necessary\nigh an ankle injury to Mickey\nnan, veteran, left winger. Mike\nna returned to the centre posi-\nfrom   defence,   and   he   was\n;ed by Luce Martel on lhe right\nand  Bobby  Marshall  on   the\nThey uncorked many smart\nIng plays and were a great j\nfe   of   trouble   to   the   Maple\nINT. AM. SERIES TO\nOPEN ON MARCH 19\nNEW HAVEN. Conn., March 17\n(AP)\u2014Officials of the Intcrnalional-\nAmerican Hockey League announced Saturday night that Indianapolis would play Providence in\nthc scries \"A\" playoffs March li)\nand 21. Providence will play at Indianapolis March 24 and if necessary a fourth game will be played\nMarch 26 in Indianapolis.\nThc scries \"C\" playoff games will\nstart at Springfield Match 19 and\nmove to the West, cities lo be determined as result**- become known.\nThe series \"B\" dates are undecided.\nI\nbut the   Maple  Leift weren't\nfclaioed by tbelr highly-touted\norient* In thii eerie*\u2014far from\nHEAVY DEFENCE WORK\nThe Nelson defence was handing\nout a lot of heavy bodying at the\nblue lines, particularly to Martel\non one occasion when he was .sandwiched hard, and to Benoit. Benoit,\nwho is slated to move up to the\nN.H.L. next year with Montreal\nCanadiens, was dumped hard several times, but Joe always came\nup smiling.\nL    ,, , , _ Somewhat    lackadaisical   work\n!v oner* or uug-ary siampea-.    b   th   Le8fs carl   \u25a0   th   second\nfa interprovincial series open-1    gJve the vigjk.rg thp opporlunity\nto tie it up, but it was a thrilling\nplay. Taking Cronies pass, Benoit. showing terrific driving\n.<;p.*d, Lore in on right wing and\nblasted the puck over the sprawling Seaby into the Nelson cage.\nShortly after, Scodellaro neatly\ndid the splits to kick out Bicknell's drive from Sneider, but on\nthe next play Johnny Smith and\nBuckna went off together fur\nroughing it.\nThe home fans set up an awful\nhowl when Mann's goal was called\nback when he skated in on lhe l^fi\nside to drive thc puck between\nScodellaro's pads into thc goal. But\nit was barely offside, Jakie being\nin just ahead of Buddy Hammond's\npass to him. Haight went off for\ndumping Hammond, and Nelson\nwas playing five men to four Scodellaro was peppered in great style\nthen, but he kept thc net clear.\nAfter bofh teams were back at\nfull strength Dame broke into the\nclear, but Hammond br.ught him\ndown in the Nelson zone and was\nwaved off, and Trail was given another penalty shot, the fifth such\nshot of the series, four of them\noccurring in the two Nelson games\nDame himself took that one, but the\nleague's leading scorer drilled it\nhigh and wide of the net.\nThe teams alternately made it\nhot  fur  the  goalies   for   a   period\nSaturday night they held their I Xl^ ifllToL^l 'Tr\n\u2022hare of the pliy, oarryin01 $\"   'md, ' h     n?-     (Sll   \"  *   I\n-   \u25a0-       \u25a0     ' -- * I Uie   t'ip  of   the   net,   followed   hv\nPresentations\nAfter Game\nThe instant the final bell rang\nto conclude the Nelson-Trail struggle for B> C, senior hockey supremacy, players < f both teams milled\naround centre ice to shake hands\nwith each other, the bitterness of\nthe four-game series being forgotten in favor of congratulations and\ncondolences, as the case might be.\nNext came the presentation of\nthe three trophies thc Strike Eaters captured, but the Smoke Eaters\nhad a hard time to break away\nfrom their supporters who invaded\nthe Ice to offer congratulations and\nlo make merry. Then after a couple\nof .sweet young things planted\nkisses on thc Cronie mouth, the\nveteran captain of the Smokies\ncame over to the officials' bench\nto accept the Daily News and McBride Cups which the Trail team\nwon fur leading the league during\nthe  regular schedule.\n\"They are a swell bunch of fellows, and the best team Nelson has\nhad  since\u2014well,\u2014since   I've   come\nto the Kootenays. They make trouble at limes, but after the games\nthey   are\u2014ah\u2014Just   ordinary   people.\" said Ab Cronie, H. M. Whimster, President of thc Nelson Club,\nsaid that the Uafs would be right\nbehind the Smokies till they take\nthe  Allan   Cup,  and  wished  them\nI every success. 0. H. Nelson. Trail\ni President, who also introduced by\nj Mr  Lowes, and he stated, \"It was\nI a  hard   fight   tonight,  and   Nelson\nshould be proud of its team.''\nHIGHEST HOCKEY HONOR\nI While the fans roared. A, W.\n| (Gus) McDonald, President of the\n: British Columbia Amateur Hockey\n! Association, presented to Cronie the\n| Savage Cup. \"the highest honor in\n; B C hockey, professional or ama*\n1 tcur.\"\nThe actual paid admission lift\nwaa 2733, or 305 gr<nter than the\nprevious rink record of 2428 two\ni yean ago in the final Nelaon-\nTrail  lacrosse playoff game. The\n' total revenue from the game hai\nbeen exceec*ed only twice\u2014In the\nKimberley-Prince Albert and the\nEdmonton-Nelson Interprovincial\ntjames when reserved seati were\npriced at a buck t crack. Actually Saturday night people were\nturned away at the door, reported\nManager Denis StDenlt.\nIf there was tn hsve been a fifth '\ngame in the series, it would have\n\u25a0 been played in Trail. That was de-\n' cided in the officials' dressing room\n, before the game, when Norman\ni Lowes tossed a silver dollar, and\n\\ Dave Buchanan. Trail relief goalie,\nI correctly called it \"heads\".\nImoit of  the  time  and   often\nScodellaro's_great block of a shot bv\nJ!?.9. ?- _edA0J. J!1-P?u*Lh-5lJLy 1 H\u00bb\u2122ond *ftBU*lMtWa Hne \\'ha\nblder on a sparkling comblna\ni effort, the Nelson team scor-\nIthe first goal of the game to\n1-0 at the end of the Initial\nIto In which they were good\npture for that margin.\nQUESTIONABLE GOALS\nfen,   not   helping   the   Leafian\nany, wa6 the fact that they\nbd   they  received   the   wron\nof   two   decisions   on   goaU I ;v\u00ab\"luW c,c>,rea\" i\"\ning that the winning goal by | ir\u00a3 $?{Z..?Lm^a*.\non a three-man break when Benoit\nbeat the gun and was offside, with\nonly Desreux back. Right after the\nfaceoff Seaby was great on Morns'\nhard sh t.\nJust  after   Haight  went   off  t*\u00bbr\nholding Sneider,  Carr came again\nwithin nn ace of scoring, but with\nonly thc Duke to beat he couldn't\ncontrol a rolling puck and it was\neventually cleared. Trail began  tu\nr   at   Seaby\n,s was several feet offside'and j after .^.Buckna testing him w th\nthey   themselves   scored   one   J serlc.s ot [\u00b0\u00bb*  Bh   s a,,d  Mar'\"\nafter that that wasn't counted, \\<r,,m close ran\u00abc-\nJoe Benoit allegedly caught j MORRIS SCORES\nuck inside thc goal and pulled\nquickly. However, after the\nwas all over, the Leafs were\nthere   to   say   that   the   best\n| won and to promise their full\nprt as the Smokies start their\nAllan Cup trek.\nY8 FAST\nin  thp  first period opened\nJfast clip, and was particularly\n: when Dame got two minutes\n!e cooler for tripping Carr at\nline-minute mark, The Lccfs\nn plenty of power, but Send-\nrcse to the occasion several\nto block dangerous rubber,\n[ especially brilliant on Sneid-\nflttempt from  Mann.  Just   as\nBOSTON WINS\nBOSTON, March 17 CCP).\u2014Bos-\nton Brums closed out the regular\nNational Hockey League schcu\/.lc\nby whipping Canadiens 7-2 tonight,\nscoring five goals in the third period after the tail-end Montrealers\nheld them even for two periods.\nFirst period: 1, Boston, Crawford\nfJackson, Dumart) 11:40: 2. Canadiens, Blake iYourri 14:57.\nPenalties: None.\nSecond period. 3, Canadien*. Mantha, :41; 4. Boston, Cam, 17:15\nPenalties: None, ,\nThird period: 5, Boston. Hamill\niWiseman) 8:15; ti. Boston. Conacher\n(Cowley) 12:32; 7, Boston. Schmidt\niClappcr) 12:54; fl. Boston. Dumart\niClapper. Bauer) 13:42; 9, Boston.\nHollett  'Jackson)   17 .r>3\nPenalties; Drouin 2, Crawford.\nHockey Standings\nThen in thc lait minute Jimmy\nMorrit drove in a long one from\nthe right bo.^rdi that hit 5\u00ababy\"J\npads, and then glanced in off hn\n\u2022tick. The Leafi argued that a\nman on the other wing wai offside but the goal itood. Right after that. Hammond feverishly in-\nsilted the puck had entered the\nTrail net In a wild scramble m\nfront of Soodellaro, declaring thai\nBonoit had caught it in the air\nintide the goal and pulled it out.\nThe refereei ruled otherwiie, and\nthe period wo\u00bb over two lecondi\nlater.\nTin*   third   pennd   was   vir'.uall>\nfl*. ntimjoiis   power  play   by   lhc\nno.,*,, ii\nRaiifi'is\nToronto\nC*h;,a\u00abn\nHi: :oil\nAmcricai*.'\nCanadirii.'\nReiulti of\nSATURDAY\nAmericans\nSUNDAY\n*i*oio,ro :\nDetroit   I\nCanadice.\nNATIONAL\nP W !, D\nw :*n 12 \u2022\u2022\n\u25a0lit 27 II in\n4K 25 17 fi\nIf, 2.1 19 6\n4H 111 2*8 fi\nW 15 29 4  to*\nli lfl 31 a    ISO\nveekend  game.\nwas getting ready to return. I Leafs in an effort In haul d  ...\nI It got away in the clear but j lead. Thev poured nn plentv \u2022!\nSmith skated up fist behind I power in thr first half of Un I\"\nand just na Ji* got readv to] noil, but after that they turd bad-\n, Smith lifted his stick with ly a< a result of th\" terrifically i 1\niwn, and losing his balance pace t!*c ham.** had **t all (fan '\nit went for a nimble. To the , and lhe [cams of.cn sieni'd l*> he\nnpaniment of lusty booing by J little more than jus*. Ruing thl in: n\nrowd, Smith went off for two i the motion- ,11 lhe last few minutev\ntea and Trail was given a pen- i Thc Leafs kept sending every man\n,*hot, Jimmy Morris took it. up Trail retaliat.ng by fir'iucntlfl\ntit tired straight into Seahy's iciiu: the puck making dangerou,\nI breakaways, that several 'im*\nIniftv   ragging   exhibition   bv ! were  unfortunate not  to click\nHammond killed off most of      Dame   suffered   a   lough   bit a\n|cnally. but Seaby had lo kick j after 11 pretty foray into lhc N* l-o*i\nhot drive from  Ituckna fir   7011c, Bunny crashing int*> Ihe it-ml\n'er corner   One  of  the  most I p. si   After a short rist he was ba. .,\nly executed plays of Ihe sea-I in   Ihe  game   though   Hill  Sncidi.\nrodueed Ihe fust goal of Ihe , almost clicked with Jack Kilpntiul.\nNick   Smilh   fed   Kilpatrick ' and  then   ;.l  the  othei   n d  Scab;.\nuck at centre, thc centreman j ilid oul !., block Cr..ine when l;u*\nmoving   si, wiy   across   the | Smokie centre was 111 lhc ileal\nIne Ui allow Sneider to sea\nMa\nid   p'lio.i  t   \u25a0;-..,:\nbehind the defence. Timing\n[il and Condenser\nTESTERS\nIrty's Repair Shop\nktr tt. Nelion, 11   C\nWilh less Ihun three muiut*\nleft Haight got the gale foi nip\nping Kilpatnrk al the I'i i.l bin*\nhut al llle faceoff lh, irr. 1 1, 1\nstrength of Ihr learns he. an\neven when Kilpatrick w as cha \u25a0<\nfor tupping Dime il.ii.l*..! !!*.\nganifl. wilh barely two iiiinn*< - I\n(,* ,  \u00bbhon he broki   dom a  Nel...\nlliu k\nSenl.fl\nhi\nilly   blocked\nl.ral  I*\nIVnall 1-    11., .: 1    K Ipa'i .\nSi .p. hv goal i-\nScodrlUio Id  M  11) -.11\nScabs* II It    11 --.'fl\nT*a I- Scodellaro. Haight, M..rn<\nand Johnston, t'ronic, &ei\u201eul anil\nIbm.1. Bin kna Martel and Mars 1\n-ill.   Applet   11   and   I'.ll ifllcnsen\nNelson Sealn. Hirknell J Smith\nN   Smi'h and  lie.reus.  Hammond\nI .11;   at '1  A!gi 1,  K Ip.ilrirK. Secid-\ni ;   aril   Mann\nOfficial, flflerr *l *. lulliv ,i:*d\nCurlv W'rathl. i, trier,. I II\nWilf. 1* Dili: amhrrln 1 .l.iu*.'<\nS.'i\"drill ao,\" Have Hoehain'*\n'  no ,,,,,. ...   .\\     fn,      >   I   N..-.,   ,\nII g.ul   lodge.    I*   I      |i     ,.   ;  I.,\nJOHANSEN (IH\nAT SUN VALLEY\nSEATTLE. March 17 (AP).\u2014AW\nEn-gen of Sun Valley, Idaho, made\nleaps of 200 and 220* feet today to\ndominate lhe Uniled States four-\nway ski championships, at Snoqual-\nmic Ski Bowl before a crowd of\n3000.\nEngen's jumps gave him first\nplace in the 4-way jumping tournament and a point total of 391,43 for\nthc meet, which included slalom\n(won by Engen) downhill and crosscountry races earlier in the week.\nEngen placed third in the downhill\nand fourth in thc cross-country; bul\nhis victories in Iwo of the four\nevents put him far ahead of all\ncompetitors.\nIn a special jumping event to\ntest out the new \"A\" hill at the\nSki Bowl, Engen, National champion, earned another victory over\nnis arch-rival, Bcrger Tokle, Ncw\nYork although Toklc made lhc longest leap of the day, a 238-foot jump.\nEngen leaped 224 and 233 feet in\nthis competition \u2014 which had no\nbearing on the 4-way championship\n\u2014and earned 228.00 points.\nAlf Johannsen of Kimberley,\nplaced fifth, jumping 173 feet and\n181 feet for 207.70 points. He was\neleventh in the four-way combined\nchampionships with 321.08 points,\nand eleventh in the special event\nwith jumps of 193 feet and 190 feet\nfor 195.40 points.\nEGAN PICKS UP\nFOUR POINTS AS\nAMERICANS WIN\nKelowna Hoopers\nBeat Kimberley\nKELOWNA. B. C, March 17 <CPl\n\u2014Kelowna B.A. Oilers caplurcd the\nInterior intermediate \"A\" basketball title and the right to meet\nNanaimo Harvey-Murphy,-*, in the\nBritish Columbia championship series whrn they defeated Kimberley\nMcDougall Memorials 60-31 in a\nsudden death encounter here tonight.\nLineups:\nKimberlev: Scott (5), Lindsay <2>,\nZak 113), Kelly (3>. Brown (7),\nCaldwell (p. T. Caldwell. Total 31.\nKelowna: Roth (2), C. Toslenson\n(Ri. J. Tostenson (6), Handlen UO),\nBrydon (8), Barnett. Mills 14), Hen-\nderwn > 12'. James, Ward (12),\nTotal 60.\nNEW YORK. March 17 <CP).-\nPat Egan, a young Irishman replacing the injured Wilf Field on New\nYork Americans' defence, celebrated St. Patrick's day with a three-\ngoal outburst tonight as the Americans drubbed Toronto Maple Leafs\nB-2 in the last game of the regular\nNational Hockey\nLeague schedule.\nEgan, recalled from\nSpringfield Indians\nol the International-\nAmerican League\nalso got an assist on\nHooley Smith's goal.\nHe punched home\ntwo goals while lhe\nteams played four\nmen a side in the\nthird period aTler\nEddie Shore and Bob\nDavidson touched off a free-for-all.\nFirst period: 1. Americans, Carr\n(Chapman. Anderson) 3:06; 2, Toronlo,  Drillon   (Apps)   4:38.\nPenalties: None.\nSecond period: 3, Americans.\nSmith (Sorrel, Egan) 3:32; 4, Americans, Egan 17:04.\nPenalty: Egan.\nThird period: 5. Toronto, Drillon\n(Apps, McDonald* 11:16; fi. Americans, Egan 13:07; 7, Americans, Egan\n(Sorrell) 14:51.\nPenalties: Shore (major), Davidson (major), McDonald (major),\nConacher (major', Egan.\nMAPLE LEAFS UP\nTWO, HOOP SERIES\nVICTORIA, Mareh 17 (CP). -\nThcir lineup studded with stars who\nhave played with former Dominion--\nchampion teams, Vancouver Maple\nLeafs tonight held a stranglehold on\nthe British Columbia basketball\ntitle won last year by Victoria\nDominoes who went on to win thc\nCanadian championship.\nThe Vancouver squad defeated\nVictoria Arrows 46-38 here last night\nfor their second slrnight victory in\nthe best of five series. Third game\nwill be played in Vancouver next\nFriday night.\nFENSKE SETS MARK\nCHICAGO, March 17 (AP).-Bcl-\ntenng all existing records for the\nthree-quarter mile run, Charles\ni Chuck i Fenske of Wisconsin raced\nthe distance in 2:597 at thc Armour\nTech relays Saturday night to become the first man ever to run\nthat route under thc three-minute\nmark,\nFenske clipped 3.7 seconds off the\nlisted world's record of 3:034 set in\n1925 by Lloyd Hahn of Nebraska.\nLittle Change in\nLeague Stands\nLONDON. March 17 (CP Cable).\n\u2014There was little change in positions among championship contending teams as a result of soccer games\nplayed in the United Kingdom yesterday, Huddersfield Town ousted\nNewcastle United from thc lead in\nthe Northeastern group, but in\nother divisions pacemaking squads\nretained their advantage although\nseveral were defeated.\nHuddersfield scored Ihe only goal\nof the game against Hull while Newcastle went under at Bradford 2-1.\nIn the Northwest Bury went into\na clear lead by defeating Barrow\n5-2 and Preston Norlh End, who\npreviously shared the lop berth, losl\n3-2 at Oldham.\nIn South \"C\" group for London\nand Southern clubs, Tottenham Hotspurs slaved out in front through\na 2-1 verdict at Portsmouth. Crystal\nPalace and Watford, joint leaders\nin South \"D\", both had their colors\nlowered but retain a one-point advantage at the top of the league\nstanding. The Palace were beaten\n4-3 at home by Aldershot's soldier\nsquad and Walford went under ,r)-2\nat Reading.\nRangers   and   Falkirk.  Scotland's\ntop teams had lo be content with\ndivision of pom's. The light  blues\nplayed a 3-3 stalemate with Albion\n1 Rovers and Falkirk and Raith fought\n] to a 2-2 draw.\nNATIONALS TAKE\nAMERICAN STARS\nTAMPA, Fla., March 17 (AP).\u2014\nThe National Baseball League\nfinally licked the American\nLeague in an all-star game today.\nBefore a crowd of more than 13,-\n000, the Nationals won 2-1 and\nrealized some $20,000 for the Finnish  Relief Fund.\nDeadlocked 1-1 going Into the\nlast of the ninth inning after a\nsparkling exhibition of pitching,\nthe Nationals shoved across the\ndecidng run before a man was retired on two sharp singles and an\nerror by Hal Trosky, Cleveland\nIndian  first-baseman.\n.Al Lopez, Boston Bees' catcher\nand Tampa's only representative in\nthe major leagues, crossed thc rub-*\nber with the big run.\nAl opened the frame with a sharp\nsingle to centre off Bob Feller,\nCleveland's young fireballer. Terry\nMoore, St. Louis Cardinal, dumped\na bunt in front of the plate, which\nRollie Hemsley nabbed and pegged\nto first in plenty of time to retire\nthc runner.\nBut Trosky muffed it beautifully,\nand Lopez lore all the way to third\nbefore Bobby Doerr, the Americans' second baseman, recovered\nthe ball.\nPete Coscarart of Brooklyn then\ndelivered the pay-off punch. It was\na hard one through short stop that\nFrank Cro-setti tried for but couldn't\nquite spear.\nAmerican League     1   5   2\nNational League     2   fl   I\nRuffing, Ncwsom, Leonard, Feller\n(and  Dickey.   R,   Ferrell,   Hemsley;\n| Derringer, Higbe, Hamlin, Wallers,\nGumbcrt and Danning, Lopez.\nOILERS GAME UP\nAces, Rookies\nContinue Final\nSeries Tonight\nAces and Rookies will continue\ntheir struggle for -supremacy in the\nNelson Ladies Basketball League in\nthe third ot their best of five playoff series at 7 o'clock at the Civic\nCentre tonight. The two teams are\ntied with one victory each so far,\nthe Aces knotting the series Friday night with a 22-5 triumph. Two\nnights previously the Rookies had\nwon 15-8.\nThe fourth game of the series\nwill be played Thursday night,\nwhen the men will resume their\nbest of three series, the High Schools\nBlue Bombers at present leading\nthe Fairview Falcons 1-0 through\na thrilling 28-25 victory Friday.\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL\nLONDON, March 17'(CP Cable)\n\u2014Football games played in the Old\nCountry Saturday resulted as follows:\nSOUTH C\nArsenal 2, West Ham 3\nBrentford 5, Southampton 0\nFulham 2, Charlton 0\nMillwall 2, Chelsea 3\nPortsmouth 1, Tottenham 2\n8COTTISH WEST\nAlbion 3, Rangers 3\nClyde 1, Queen's Park I\nDumbarton   0.   Motherwell   1\nHamilton 2, Morton 2\nKilmarnock 1. Queen of S 3\nPartick 3, Airdrie 2\nSt. Mirren 2, Ayr 0\nThird Lanark 4, Celtic 2\nJOVIAL  JUDGE SCRATCHED]\nLONDON, March 17 'CP Cable).'\n\u2014J.   L.   Jarvis'   Jovfel   Judge   was i\nscratched from tiie Grand National\nSteeplechase  to  be run at  Aintrce\nApr.l 5\nNelson Juvenile Provincial Hockey\n(hamps Entertain Lethbridge lonighl\nSecond   Game   Series\nto Be Played\nTuesday\nClosing out the Nelson hockey\nseason in fine style, Nelson Juveniles, B. C. champions, will entertain\nihr Sou'hern Alberta champions\nfrom Lelhbridge in Uie first of a\ntwo-game scnei oprn:nn at the\nCivic Arena tonight nl 8 o'clock\n'Die -.econd game will be plaved on\nTuesday\nTo help res'.nre the edge\nKootenay ar.fi Provincial |>l\nthe NeNon tram was put thn\nworkout Saturday morning.\nthev complried their srnsntn'nal\nvictory over the Vernon Hydrophones over lw<> weeks nil\", .ill Ihr\nNelson playeri were kept m action in City League playoffs which\nwrrr wound up Saturday\nV::r f-hange has b-rn made in the\nnf    the\nayoffs,\nSince\nNelson lineup, Coach Walter Wail\nhaving recruiti d the services of\nErnie D'-fm. still nf Midge' age,\nwho lias been performing in lhe\nCity Juvenile League all Winter II\nhad been hoped li have Defeo play\nfnr the Midget Reps in the Provincial playoffs, hut just before the\nseries with Trail Young Smokies,\nwho eventually look the title. Defeo\nand I,hnd Ridenour, another nf\nIheir mam cogs, were laid low bv\nOld Man Flu and wrre kept out of\naction Defeo will centre the second\nstring\nTin-  lethbridge club\nhv train  this morning a\nby     ,\\V|-h\n!    CALGARY. March 17 (CP)-Tur-\ni ner Valley Oilers are in thc drivers\nI seat in thc best of five game Al-\nI bcrta Senior Hockey League c'nam-\nj pionship    playoff.    Elmer    Piper's\nI well-balanced and powerful sextet,\nby their 6-2 victory over Calgary\n; Stampeders at the arena Saturday\ni night, now have a lead of two vic-\n! tones to one and will be favored\nto grab off the title when the fourth\n| game is staged Monday night,\nPete   Atkinson   witli   two,   Doug\nMartinson.   \"Tiny\"   Craddock   and\nD ug Cairns were ihe goal scorers\nfor Oilers while Mike Patrick and\n, Cam Burke tallied for thc Cowboys.\nHockey Scores\nSATURDAY\nNational   League\nAmericans ti. Toronto 8,\nManitoba South  Division\nJunior Final\nKenora 4. Winnipeg Monarchs 1.\niFirst of best-of-three series).\nSaskatchewan Junior Final\nRegina Abbott-Generals 6, Saskatoon   Dodgers   2.\niRegina leads best-of-thrce scries\n1-01.\nWestern Canada  Intermediate\nSeml-flnal\nSwift Current fl. Treherne 1.\n'Swift Current   wins  best-of-five\nseries 3-0. one tied'.\nInternational-American\nProvidence 0, Springfield 8\nHershey   2,   Pittsburgh   3   (overtime i,\nSyracuse 3. Cleveland 1,\nNew Haven 5, Philadelphia 3.\nEastern U. S. Amateur\nRiver Dale 1. Atlantic City 4.\nThunder  Bay Senior Final\nPo't Arthur f>. Fort Frances 1.\nifr'*r-i of two-of-thrce series),\nSCOTTISH EAST\nAberdeen 3, Hearts 0\nAlloa 2, Dunfermline 3\nDundee U 1, St. Bernards 0\nHibernians 2. Arbroath 4\nKing's Park 3. Dundee 3\nRaith 2. Falkirk 2\nStenhousemuir 0, East Fife 2\nNORTHEAST\nBradford 2, Newcastle 1\nDarlington 4, Bradford C 4\nHartlepool 2, Leeds 1\nHuddcrsfieJd 1, Hull 0\nYork 3, Halifax 1\nEXHIBITION\nKent Eleven 2. F. A. Eleven 3\nPlymouth 9, United Services 1\nIRISH   LEAGUE\nDerry City 0, Coleraine 0\nCliftonville 2. Bangor 3\nGlentoran 3, Linfield 2\nBallymena 2. Glenavon 2\nArds 1, Distillery 4\nCeltic 0, Larne 0\nPortadown 7, Newry Town 0\nT.N.T\/s Take Trail\nHigh Hockey Title;\nBeat Wizards 7-3\nTRAIL. B. C. March 17-T.N.T.s\nturned in a 7-3 win over Wizards\nSaturday morning to take thc senior High School hockey title.\nIrvin Robinson, Andy Klimovich\nand Al Klimovich each scored twice\nfor the winners. Ait Wagner tallied\nonce.\nMaldwyn Jones scored two and\nFred Woods one for the Wizards.\nFreeman Furniture\nCompany\nThe House of Furniture Values\nEagle Blk.     Nelson     Phona 115\n\" Htltn wwled\nimarlneii; Ada\nwanted comfort\/\nI wanted value.\nThai's why wt\neach bought a  ti\nSprlng-A[rl\nlUMdtAM^Uie'lle**!\nBuy on Our\nEasy Payment Plan\nVERNON OUSTED\nBY LUSCAR BOYS\nVERNON. B. C. March 17 (CP).\n-Luscar Indians entered the Western Canada intermediate hockey\nfinals with a o-'.l victory over Vernon Bine and Whites in the third\ngame of a best-of-three semi-final\n;crie.s here last night\nLucsar,  Alberta  champions,  flwiU\nmeet Swift Current, Sask., Indians\nin  the   first  game of thc  best-of-\nthrec series for the Western Canada  title here Tuesday. Thursday\nand Saturday are the dates for the\nremaining games.\nFirst   period:   1.   Vernon,   Zemla\nKorenko)  2:08;  2.  Vernon,  Zemla\nWalmsley) 14:42; 3, Luscar. Kulyk\nIStene) 16:50.\nPenalties: None.\nSecond period: 4, Luscar. Onychuk\nStem*)  6:30; 5. Luscar. Belli, 8:57;\ni, Luscar, Onychuk iMrVcyi  17:10.\nPenalties:    Neilson    (2),    Zemla,\n\u25a0foldon   (2).\nThird   period:  7.   Vernon.   Zemla\nI (Neilsuii) 4:20; 8, Luscar, Newsome\n18:59.\nPenalties: McVey, Wiilnisley (misconduct).\nbilleted\ncnthunnsts\nT)ir Neb.\n1 oul Del\nHud y.m iv,\nIoanin deb*\nTap-imb .in\nDefeo .\\ \u25a0 '\nPrestlefl      a\n1 arrive\nwill he\nhockey\nn lineup *,*. ill be\no,-,|. goal; Fa en \" Kuhn\n.lack Young and (leorge\nin . Hud Smith. Harold\n\u25a0I Doug Winlnw Ernie\nM ;. I hr .in ii. Mi,-key\nid     Tommy    Griffith*.,\ni\\ led thr ur*. and th\nlhe   diflk    h \"nr     Sriondfl    Inti i\n.l.ik.r  Mum  : .id an    ;. ;,  i et  r\nf:,*nt .\u25a0[ '   m 1 *;* !  > hutriH \"V't\nSlar.e.'d *,:.* :\u25a0;\u2022\u25a0'. ::,   Ti   :'. B .al\nSUMMARY\n*\u2022' r,'. [.rri. it I Ni '....*** S::eul\nKilpn'r:. k    N   S:*i:'**i   IS IS\nI'en.il'iefl    IJ,.:.\u25a0,-   N   i n* l!i\nSee i*. I prri. (I -2 Tr..i!. lien,\n( io   \u201e-i  : :(, 1  Tia.l   M  ir:fl li'i\nI', initio. .1      Smilh.     Hi. k:\nAll-Star Hockey Lineups\nFollowing are the '..'thh and 27'h in ,i C.i*ia,l,an Pies. m*i:.s of Ni-\nnr.al  Hockev  League Ml-.flt.ir selecti *ns by  l;o,key  writers in  N   li   I.\ncit.e.fl  A c nsensufl will bt  prepared bite-\nBy  ANDY  O BRIEN-MONTREAL   STANDARD\nram !'...* '   \"i Alternate 'erun\nGOAL\nClap\nB ..<: in\nt'     ic\",r: * Ame: ciansi\nS   m .!* Ml    * i*i)\n111 ;i:   *l)   .* *:\nl)u::i,i:*     ll.\u00abV::l\nI'*,*'.: Patrick 'Hnngrr\nII.   DEFLNCL\nL.  DEFENCE\nCENTRE\nIt   WING\nL   WINO\nCOACH\nIt 1:   *B\nSflibfli*   iChi,\nc \u25a0*,!(. :i...v ii). *\n*; Col*..ih   ib*\nMr,Hon  <Tu.\nBlake  iCanad\nI.\nTl,onipo*ti iCIi.cigoi\nBy   X.  I   NARBONNE -MONTREAL   LE   DEVOIR\nAllriu.i'c learn\nKr;    .RAog.**..'\nCluppei    i Bosh n)\nr,   if. ' .> \u2022!>\u2022\u2022\u2022\nS. nm.ii' iIVs' * i\nII,a',11 .Hi- g. r\u00bbi\nlb, r ,(*.,\u25a0 ,.| ens'\nA;* It  u iB*slonl\nOOAl\nR, DEFENCE\nL. OFFENCE\nCENTRE\nR. WINI.\nI . WING\nf OACH\nBrimsek i\u00bbu\nCoulur \u25a0 Il.li:\nSe.hei* iC i ,\nAp,,. \u25a0 I...\nIlauel 1!\nhum.I*' '11\nl*.r..,,i   '11.111\nSUNDAY\nQuebec Senior \u00bb\nMontreal Rovals I. Verdun 0\niFiifl!  of best-of-five final).\nQuebec  Provincial  Senior\nl.neiune S, Sherbruoke 6\n.Fn.-'  ol besl-of-five final)\nNew Haven -I   Cleveland 3.\nPhiladelphia  fi.  Providence 2\nI'lHshnrgli I. Syracuse 3.\nInternational-American\nH.r.-li* v it. Indianapolis fi (over-\nE. U. S. A. H. L.\nBaltimore 3, Washington 2\nAuociatlon Playoffi\niFirst  game.-.\nS'   Paul 7. Minneapolis 0\nOmaha 3, SI   Louis (1.\nIX Wallops X Score\nof 39-21  Rossland\nROSSLAND. B. C. March 17-\nII*.use * A' gamed a secund win in\nI lie   liihininlia'.e   high   sell \u00bb>l   has-\n\u25a0ii'i': \"ii, l,i.-l wick, when\nCrade IK defeated Grade X. 30-21\nT* \u25a0 * g v. l'n \"A\" boy.*. Iwo straight\nii nv Tie* lineups wire as full.ms:\n(bade IX-Eiank Cor.zelti. Alb-\n'oit Mai l,i, llaud Wood. Alee Tin*\nnoi. Eugene Topliff, Egei Jensen\nFn i llaukaa..\n1,1 ole \\ .1 ok Leefl. till I Schlcv,\nHill Oitiltei, I,i Sai \u25a0\/\u2022nl. Noel (b.od-\nii'.R, Cieorge Staudingei.\nBlue Devils Win\nNorth Ontario Title\nSOUTH    PORCUPINE.   Out.\nCRESTON HOOPERS\nLOSE   IN   BONNERS\nFERRY INVASION\nCRESTON, B. C -Bonners Kerry.\nIda. men's and ladies' basketball\nteams defeated a mixed Wynndel-\nCreston ladies' squad and Wynndel men's learn in games at Bonners. Ferry Friday.\nThu experienced Bonners' quint\nhad to plav a! top bum lo win 12-7\nThe Wynndcl-Ciestcn aggregation\nwere D. R.bcrlson. I Hagen, I*\nJohnson. A. Crane, Y. LaBelle and\nE. LaBelle.\nWynndel men, however, were\noutclassed in all departments, taking a 42-2!) trimming, Wynndel\ntram was Allan Cooper. Fred Hagen. E. Backcn, E. Untitle, W. Mar-,\nkin ond D. Uri.\nBoth visiting teams were handled\nby Fred Martello, and Allan Speers\nof Creston was one of the referees.\nAfter the game Bonners were hosts\nat a dinner and dance. Thursday\nnight men's and ladies' teams from\nCrest' n will rnay a return engsg1'-\nment at Bonners. Friday nlght'i I\ngame was for Red Cross benefit.\nBlack Hawks Win\nCHICAGO. March 17 'Ar*.-Chicago Black Hawks ended their National Hockey League seaion toniiilit\nwith a 3-1 victnrv over Detroit Red\nWings before 11.813 spectators.\nDetroit failed to win a single\nflame from the fourth-place Hawk*\nin eight tries, Chicago won six and\nthe mher two ended in ties.\nFirst   periud:   1.   Detroit,\ntoau  iMotter. Howci   14:22.\nPenalties: None.\nSecond period: 2, Chicago.\nfAllen) 6:01: X Chicago, W\n(Allen, March) 13:12.\nPenalties: March. Stewart.\nThird period: 4, Chicago, Merge-\nshe nvr i Portland i lfl:.1*\nPenalties:   March,   Orlando,   una-\nBrun\nThorn*\nCarse\nHOOPERS HAVE BUSY\nWEEKEND   IN   EAST\nKOOTENAY PROGRAM\nCRANBROOK.   B.   C.   March   17,\niCP).\u2014Cranbrook hoop teams won'\ntwo games,  Kimberley   learns wun,\none, and Fernie won onr in  week- :\nend encounters in this district. The\nCranbrook   Royals   went   down   to\nKimberley   Clippers,   33-28:   Cranbrook Redwings won from Kiniber* '\n|py   SwmgcUes  ;i4-2fl;   Fernie   150':\nwun   from   Kimberley   Kangaroos\nHft-34;  Junior  Redwings  won  [rorr\nJunior   Swingettes   26-21.\nSam Brown's Team\nCaptures Playoff\nBerth, News Bowling\nSam Brown's No. 2s clinched thft\nthird of three playoff berths in the\nDaily News Bowling league play on\nGelinus Bowling Alleys Saturday\nafternoon when thev banded Bob\nJarctt's No. l's a two-one beating.\nThr- two whs gave the winneri\nfirst place in the third round bv two\npointa over Jack Reid's squad, but\nthey needed their spot to win one of\nthem\nRoth Brown's and Jarrett s teams\nwill now meet in the playoffs along\nwith Bill i;alhcan*\/s bowlers for\n11,.. league title\nScnres follow;\nNo. 1:\nB. C. Boxing Tourney\nOpen to All B. C. Men\nVANCOUVER. March 1\/ (CP).\n\u2014Brit lull Columbia imateur boxing championihipi which will be'\nhe'd at Vancouver March ;*) and\n30 haj been thrown open to a'l\nboxen  in the  Province.\nJ. Addinall, Secretary of the\nBritish Columbia Amateur Box* |\ning Allocation, laid thii declilon\nwai reached at a meeting of '\nrepresentative!   of   boxing   clubi.   ]\n3 FAVORITES FAIL\nWINDSOn. Eur, M.ileh 17 UT\nCablei\u2014Three favorite candidates\ntor   the  Grand   N.i ml   (ailed   to\ni   :   .1 Tii\u00ab.\nHand eap\ni*i   n   i:i   .in\nI,ow score\nIIS   M 124   Ml\n11. nrown\nIM IM) 148   44.1\nF. Turner\n114 lfin 170   444\nA. Gibbon\n11*1 Wi 152   4(11\nF.   T\/Min\n12.1   92 114   Mil\n11   Jarrett\nICfl  174 1R4   326\nT\"!,llfl\n7114 KH IKIa 2515\nNo. 2:\nHandicap\n41    14    44    132\nI.iw   score\n111    92 114   31U\nT Gnldsnuth\n11*S 1211 12B   :\u00abil\nV,  Davies\n1112  187 173   522\nli A  Daniinh\n132   94 138   JH4\n.1    Wallace\n129 124 124   377\nS.    Ill i\u00abi\nIfifl I'll  132   4R3\nT.ilnls\nB.35 B52 851 2553\nMlRll   ll.dlvidllH\ni    S   I1rmvn.   191.\n\u25a0Mnrrh  17  KTi    -  Kirkland  Uke J plICf     todnv\nHlue Dr- ils captured the Northeru\nOntario  Hockey  Assix'ialion  senior\nI'hampionslnp   by   defeating   Soulli\nPnirupine  Dome   t'orklrs,  5-2,  here i\nSaturdav night, qualifying to meet J nl   horse    Hed    Kieeman    f\nromnto Coodyears in the Allan Cup, third,  behind  Middleton   Hu\nthe     Burn ham\nleeches     three-mile     steepleehase,\nv\\iin   by   the  c mparfttive  out\/idci\nCarrt-aandorr, n 2i)-l shot\nW. U  Goodbodv'-s Grjnd Nntmn-\nbed\nbul\nHiRh nH\u00abieKate, 11   Jarrett. 52fi,\nScorer.\\   A   Bush.   V   Wallner.\nREMEMBER  WHEN?\nBy The Caniriinn  Pr-eil\nHi n*,( niber  when\nA Canadian record ot 24 >ears\n.tandinu (nr lhe 4(1 yard daflh was\nsir.as'ned a! llamillnn tour yean\nai;o ',,.! v when Sammy Richardson of Toronlo made the distance\nIII 4 . sec Mis 1-10 betler than\nHobby Kerr's 1912 mark\n|iliiflil,miis  ns   Ihcy   jwcpl   the  besl } Mrs   C\nof f,\\e finals in three fltraiRbt cumes    sk.n,   nw I\nTin*   all (Hit    si in-,   wilh   'I\"    both foil\noi .....riveai-   nn a lie ! of [ivi    Sii      Wai\nbasis *.*. ill oucn nl Tuiuiito March 20.   ' miii.\ne.s* lllackliawk and ll\"il\niv   |..i,l   Stnllindti\ni i'i I (Vlb . o.fl'i\"! bfl\nL'lulcot:.     Iinisiiei\nQUAKER STATE\nWhnlexale D.sti ibuloi.i\nAcme Automotive\nil l Baker Si  Supply Ph   10*10\n \u2022\u2014w\u2014\u2014\u2014\nPAGE   EIGHT\n1 ' ; ' rT~ '\t\n-NILION DAILY NSWI, NILION, B.O-MONDAY MORNINQ, MARCH 11, WO\t\n \u25a0--*\u00ab \u2014-\u25a0-\u25a0   \u25a0 imtm,\nSupply Minister Burgin Under Fire;\nDismissed Official Makes Charges\nLONDON, March 17 (CP Cable).\n\u2014A political storm arising out of\ncriticism of the Ministry ot Sflpply\nincreased sharply Saturday with a\ncharge by a dismissed ministry official that he had been \"sacrificed\"\nby Supply Minister Leslie Burgin.\nRobert Behar, one of three ministry officials dismissed March 5\n\u25a0without explanation, issued a statement charging that Mr. Burgin, \"embarrassed by attacks on his department and by questions in the House\nof Commons, sacrificed me in a miscalculated political manoeuvre.\"\n\"Mr. Burgin's action,\" charged\nBehar, \"was in violation of every\nprinciple of natural justice.\"\nBehar's brother David, one of the\nthree dismissed, yesterday demanded his (David's* \"rehabilitation\" or\na plain declaration of the reasons for\nhis dismissal. Mr. Burgin has refused to give these reasons to the\nHouse of Commons.\nThe matter was brought up again\nIn the House of Commons Friday\nby Herbert Morrison, Labor.\nThe Minister, Leslie Burgin, admitted during yesterday's debate\nthat an \"atmosphere of suspicion\"\nhad been created by the activities\nof \"unscrupulous individuals\" but\nsaid measures are being worked\nout which will make it a crime\nfor an individual to attempt to\nobtain commissions by giving the\nimpression he can influence civil\nservants or Government services.\nIn leading the attack on the Ministry, Mr. Morrison charged certain\ntiusinessmen claimed that through\ntheir influence on Government departments they could obtain orders for manufacturers in return for\nn commission. Amon>: these men he\ninentioned Captain V. R, Ullman,\nT.M.C.. who served in the first\n<ireat War with the Canadian Army,\n21st Battalion.\nCaptain Ullman, who lives on an\nHand at. Thames Ditton. had been\n\"very active\" in obtaining orders\nfind placing business in the Midlands area, the Labor Member\nrharged, He said he was informed\nCaptain Ullman had stated he had\ncnnsidurable influence with the Min-\ni;try of Supply, that he could g-*\u00bbt\n'inquiries\" whereas other persons\nrould not.\nDENIES CHARGES\nCaptain Ullman, speaking to newsmen, denied Mr. Morrison's charges.\n'T have consulted my solicitor regarding the matter,\" he said. \"I cannot imagine the sourer of Mr. Morrison's information. This is a terrific\nWow to me but 1 have nothing to\nfear. I have done nothing wrong,\nnothing whatever.\"\nOf Captain Ullman, who is Contract Manager for the Anglo-British\nElectric Company, Mr. Burgin said\nhe knew him as a man of undoubted\nintegrity. Captain Ullman had performed some service for the Ministry by bringing attention to matters not remotely connected with\nmatters the Members were discussing.\nThe Minister said Captain Ullman\nhad visited the Ministry two or three\ntimes since the outbreak of war but\nnot as an intermediary for any manufacturer nr firm. He had called on\nbehalf of a well-known'firm which\nhad been negotiating with the Ministry for a contract to supply trench\nmortar munitions wanted in considerable numbers.\nMr. Burgin said he phoned Woolwich arsenal and gave Captain Ullman his visiting card, authorizing\nhim to attend an exhibition of a\ntrench mortar bomb at Savoy Hill\nHouse, which houses the Ministry.\nThe Minister also telephoned the\nofficer in charge.\nHc had not seen Captain Ullman\nsince that date, Mr. Burgin declared.\nSo far as he knew, the contract for\ntrench mortar munitions did not go\nthrough with the firm in question.\nIf Captain Ullman had been engaged as an intermediary in the\nMidlands, as Mr. Morrison charged,\nclaiming to have influence with the\nMinistry, Captain Ullman had been\ndoing something improper, something not recognized by the Ministry. Captain Ullman had no influence with the Ministry whatever\nand no authonly to do what Mr.\nMorrison alleged.\nThe House would see how warily\nthe Ministry had to walk. Mr. Burgin did not want to have anything\nto do with anybody who was undesirable. He wanted to extend production in the greatest possible degree at the fastest possible rate,\nA member interjected: \"Why is It\nif the visiting card given Ullman\ngave him access to the exhibition it.\nshould say he should have access\nto the Ministry?\"\nMr. Burgin replied: \"I cannot tell.\nMy recollection is what I put on\nthe card was for the express purpose of securing what was very\ndesirable\u2014that Ullman should have\naccess to see an article of whicli we\nwere in need. I do not recollect the\nactual words. They were written in\nblue pencil on the back.\"\nMr. Morrison said: \"My information is that, the message on the back\nt'f the card is lhat he was to have\naccess to the Minister. The Minister\ni.s not quite clear of what he wrote\non the back of the card. May I put\nthis-that Ihe Ministers have certain spheres of action and officers\nof the Department have another.\n\"It is for officers of the Departments to carry out executive orders. Does Mr. Burgin not think\nit would be better if the gentleman is to have authority to visit a\ncertain place that he should do it\non an official document and not\na visiting card of a ministerial\nhead?\"\n\"Does not the Minister think it\nexceedingly dangerous that people\nwho may be engaged on business\nfor outside departments should be\nable to carry about a visiting card\nof a Minister?\" Mr. Morrison continued.\n\"I think T do,\" replied Mr. Burgin. \"1 think it is a great pity, but\nI was dealing with a man whom I\nhave known for a long time and\nwhom I believed to be in every way\nreputable and with whom I was\ndealing a.s a representative of Ins\nown  employers.\n\"Perhaps it was careless to have\ngiven him my visiting card.\n\"My idea was that the card should\nhave been handed, I think, to Major\nScruttnn, who was in charge of the\nexhibition at the end. Mr. Morrison\nhas debited to this man activities\nquite unknown to me and quite\nforeign to anything 1 know of him.\nI have known the man for a long\nperiod of years. I believe him to be\nof absolute and undoubted integrity.\"\nSell What You Don't Want Through The Classified Adi\nNelaon EaUtj ton\nTelephone 144\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per line per Insertion.\n44c per line per week <6 consecutive insertions for cost ol 4).\n$1.43 per line a month (26 times).\n(Minimum 2 lines per Insertion)\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of times.\nLEGAL NOTICE\n18c per line, first insertion and\n14c  each subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATES\nSituations Wanted  26c for any\nrequired   number  of   llnei  for\n\u25a0 Ix  dayi,  payable  In  advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy  $   .05\nBy carrier, per week       .25\nBy carrier, per year ...-    13.00\nBy Mail:\nOne month   _. $ .75\nThree months _..    2.00\nSix months    4.00\nOne year     8.00\nAbove rates apply in Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.0(1,\nsix months $8.00, one year $15.00.\nF.A.C. Midgets\nBeal All-Stars\nby 8-2 Margin\nF A C. Midgets demonstrated\ntheir all-round superiority Thursday night when they outscored [he\nMidget All-Star?. pn*ked (mm their\nrombuied M. R. K. and Panther\nhockey opponents, 8-2, m nn exhibition game. The League Champions and cup winners, undefeated\nfluid mined in either the I.rague\n.-cn-no ni th<* nip playoffs, fielded\ns full team of 14. tli\u00bb All-Slats be-\nin;; flhort .1 i* llplfl- of those picked\nhv (narli Fred Picmano. hut ficld-\ning in\nThe Fairviewites led all the way,\noAT*! scored their right goal* before\ntho All-Stars started finding the\neel. (lord\"*' Olson obtained two\nFAC, gnals, and John Bradley,\nLloyd Ridenour, Ja**k Gallicano.\n.lick Worthington. Frank Doyle,\nDun McKerns and Bob Noakes one\ncar!), Ridenour was also credited\nwith three a-.si.st.fl. and W\"rthing-\nI'ltt, Bradley, Frank Doyle and McKerns  with  one.  each\nIn ihe last period the All-Stars\nbegan tr* capitalize on thcir hard\nplay, and obtained t\\fl*o goals, Bill\nil\"llatid seorihg the first unassisted, aftrr which Bud Whitfield con-\nfl cited a  pass from Holland.\nThe All-Stars led in penalties,\nHugh Wallace and Holland each\nserving tun, and Bill McMordie\n\"lie For thr F A.C 's Ftank Doyle,\nRidenour and Bradley did penance\nDirk It-imrtt was Referee, with\n.lack Whitehead Judco of Play, lhe\nrecording bei'ig shaltil hy .Inn\nRllch <* ami Dalton Boomer, while\nDun Sun* kept lime. Teams were\nas  follows:\nF AC .[ Ueuslon. .1. Bradley, F\nDovie. J Carr. R. N.akes, .1, Wnrfi*-\nmgim, I\u201e Ridenour G. Olson. I)\nM.Ke.n-. .1 Milne. M Morns, ,1\nGallicano, W. Procter, C. Noakes.\nAll-Stars - 11 Fere .1 Maglio, H,\nWallare, W. Wassick. W Holland,\nP Hlelscher I Currie. W. McMbr-\nil,c. H   Whitfield, J. Jarbeau.\nFLYINC   INSTRUCTOR\nRELEASED ON BAIL\nMW  YORK, Man-h  17  lAl'i  -\n.1 *eph   R sniai in, living instructor\n\u00ab,,.. lo'ensro*  m\u201e $100 kill   flCflter.l.r,.\n\"\"   a    Mi\" lfl   as: anil    iharge   in\n'\u25a0 ni'-.*t:\"ii with hi: (  'al fmht v ill,\nI-c I       F: 'i T n all,ral\nI* \u25a0\u25a0     \\Ke\u201ei, Thursday.\nTh' rfl>niph:nt :gn,n.-t Rfl-.-mam1\nrvd he wilfullv * asraul'H Eitcn-\nNrg  v :>h   lh\"  phen\nPROPOSES SWEDISH CIVIL\nDEFENCE ORGANIZATION\nSTOCKHOLM M.iri*h 17 i CPUs*.. \u25a0' I, nil -General O G Ther-\ne *i ( 'if of the Swrdnh General\nS'.i'f |fl p. 'i d 'o Ihe Cute; nnirhl\ni'iiiI a i ,\\ ,1 defence ort.no\/ali \"i\n.1 i :' It..I her, I prevent the rn.\n| r,*, hi. | ;\u2022\u25a0' c p.fl i .lfllill t lfl \u2022-. behind\n:  '   I.':.      e ihr,   (.\u201e\u25a0   ,,   nllack\nI  * I. \u25a0 I\nDEATHS\nSARNIA. Onl. \u2014 Thomas A\nScharf. 39. former lineman wilh\nSarnia's Senior Ontario Rugby\nFootball Union Club.\nHAMILTON. Ont-Dr James Ro-\nberts, 63, medical health officer of\nHamilton.\nLONDON-C. E. Lawrence. 69,\naulhord. playwright and joint editor of tiie Queensburv Review,\nNEW YORK-Samurl Mundhiem,\n68. chairman of the board and a\ndirector of Ihe American Safety\nRazor Corporation. Brooklyn.\nEDMONTON-John D. Hunt. 80.\nformer clerk of the executive council and law clerk and for 22 years\na prominent member of the Alberta\ncivil .service until lie resigned in\n1935. Born al Southwold, Elgin\nCounty, Out , ho graduated from the\nUniversity of Manitoba in IR90 and\nIhree years later he was called to\nlhe   Manitoba Bar.\nFrench lo Accept\nCanadian Fliers\nToronto: March n icr> -\n'Word was received at the head-\nquarters of the Finnish war veterans' association that the French\nGovernment will accept Canadian\nfliers for service in the French\nAir Force, cither in a squadron or\nsingly.\nThe fliers had gathered here'preparing to go to Finland. There was\nno indication in the message whether Fianre would pay the cost of\ntransporting Ihe fliers lo France.\nSquadron Leader Stiff said the\nFinnish association would send \"ver\nthe squadrons of fliers and ground\ncrew men if sufficient contributions v ere received.\nCol Fr-srr Hunter, Ml. A . honorary commander of the Finnish\nwar veterans, is planning to (one\nthree squadrons ,,[ flirts The organization would tic unofficial nn-\nI'l formally accepted nil,, lhc\nFrench Air Force. About on Canadian fliers have applied and 31\nhave been  found eligible.\nRUSSIAN ATTACK WAS\nDISCRACE TO HUMANITY\nDURHAM, England, March 17\n1 if PI Russia s attack nn Finland\nI v a \"a disgrace |,i liumiinitv, let\ni alone i,, \u201e .. called Socialist state\"\n1 Sir Walter Citrine, General Serrc-\nI l.-ii*v of the Trades Union Cmigress\ntani in a : |,eecb here fleslerdav\nI     Without   iil.ahdi'iin.i:   n,   lhe inasl\nlh\"'l*  position   of   independence.'   he\naid. * the Trade Unions hnv>,i-nter-\ned ntn continuous consultati ,|i\nwilh the minister; and the govern-\noie.o depailments mi questions aliening th\" workers and thu. has\nresulted in definite safeguards\nagaucl  exploitation of vage earn-\nLABOR LEADER APPEALS\n18-YR. OLD JAIL SENTENCE\nSPRINCFIEl I). II!, March 17\n'AI'i William Bioff. West Coast\nmoti'ili picture Labor leader, ap.\nl'C'1'il in the Illinois Supienie courl\nl*'*l.i*. (mm Ihe appellate courl af.\nlirniati..n of In.* Ill \u2022. e;,r \u201el,| ,,,1\n.\"1 ten. \u25a0 (, , pandenn-\nBIRTHS\nANDERSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nOscar Anderson, Gyro Park Road,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospi-\n1al, March 15, 1940, a son.\t\nSTRAND \u2014 to Mr. and Mrs.\nHugh Strand, South Slocan, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, March\n15, 1940. a daughter.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for advertise*\nments under this classification\nto assist people seeking employment. Only 25c for one week\n(6 days) covers any number\nof required lines. Payable in\nadvance.\nYOUNG WOMAN QUALIFIED IN\ncosmetics and \"make up\" wants\nwork in drug store, also charge <jf\nwomen's health sales. Apply Box\nj220 Daily News.\t\nCAPABLE GIRL DESIRES WORK\nsuch as housework, hotel or cafe,\npood with children. Write to Box\n1267 Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED  YOUNG WOMAN\nwants housekeeping or housework\nany kind. Box 1218 Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED  YOUNG WOMAN\nwants    housework    immediately.\nPhone_743R3.\t\nYOUNG   GIRL   DESIRES   POSP\ntion, hotel wk. preferred. Ph. 337R\nTen Johns and\n\"Common Name\"\nRivals Tie)-3\nTen John.*!, heavily outweighed hy\ntheir opponent.-;, but packing plenty\nof speed nnd ability, and nine associated Bills, Jim.*;, Bobs and\nCharlies, largely defencemen, all\ndrawn from the regular lineups of\nthe thr<-e Midget Hockey League\nteams, battled fiercely to a 3-3 tie\nFriday afternoon in an hour's novelty Midget game. The lead alternated, but at the end of each period\ntho rival aggregations were all\nsquare. Bill Brown, M.R.K. Coach,\nhandled the Allies and Jack Argyle, the Johns\nLittle Chuck Noakes put the Allies in the lead early, but still more\ndiminutive Jack Prestley countered\nfor llie Johns, converting Gallicano' spa.ss. A ppnalty shot was called 'Mi lhe Johns' goaiie, Jark Whitehead, for tripping, but Red Wassick\nfailed to make the net.\nJohn Dunnett, rapping in Jack\nfllarebau's pass, put the Johns out in\nfront in the second, but Bill Pruc^r\nsquared things for the Allien with\nan  unassisted  goal.\nIn the third the Johns fnrged\nahead again when Jack Worthington, in front of the goal, drove Ian\nCurrie'1! pass from the end bnard.'*\npast Goalie Rob Noakes, but Was-\nsiek equalized on Bill Holland's\npass From that point to the end\nIhe two \"common name\" teams held\neach other scoreless.\nJack Worthington was off twice\nfor the Johns, and Jarbeau, Prestley\nand John Bradley once each. Holland, of the Allies, was off twice,\nand Wassick and Boh Percival also\ndeenraked  the  penalty  bench.\nMac Norns referred, with Rick\nWassick and Bob Peacock Judging\nplay, while Coral Sahara. Gordon\nOlson and Reid Sahara officalcd at\nsorekepeing. and H. H. Currie kept\nth-*0 time. Teams were as follows:\nJohns - Jack Whitehead. John\nPradley, John Maglio, Jack Worthington, John Milne, Inn Currie,\nJark Gallicano, .John Dunnett, Jack\nJarbeau,  Jack   Preatlev.\nAllies - Hob Noakes, Bob Percival\nBill Proctor. Bill Holland. Red Was-\nsick. Bill McMordie. Chuck Noakes,\nJim Carr and Charlie Lipinski.\n400 NEWFOUNDLANDERS\nREGISTER THREE DAYS\nAFTER SERVICE APPEAL\nST JOHN'S. Nfld, March 17 fCF\nCable)- Four hundred Newfound\nlanders regist-cred for service in thf\nBritish Mercantile Marine will\nIfin-p days aftrr an Appeal fnr seamen was pnjtrd heir, is was an-\nPounced yesterday.\nBLOODHOUNDS TRACK\nCHILD TO CREEK\nOROFINO. Wain, Marrh IV * M'i\n- Bloodhounds brought (rum Le**\nL\u00abl\"n to assist in the all-night se\u00bbrrh\nlor three year-old Ronald West\nreached lh\" \"id \u201et Ihe trail at a\nbridge ri\"ar the lad s home and th,*\nchild's bofjy whs recofl-ered from\nOrnlmn Creek, halt a mile downstream.\nSEALJRS REPORT COOD KILL\nST JOHN'S. Nfld , March IT (CP\nfable)\u2014Sealers hunting in lhe k e\nHits North of Newfoundland rr\nported a good kill Saturday\nSince    th.*    .'\"a.\" n \u25a0 opened\nweekend, lh\" eight hhips have lak\nmi   m.tm   ivl-ls    High.|mer   i,   Hie\nIniopene, fl, ith :r,0O(l killnl\nHELP WANTID\nENERGETIC YOUNG MAN FOR\nsales-promotion work* In East Kootenays. Salary guaranteed. Prefer-\nably single. Photic Cranbrook, 2110.\nWANTED - WOMAN AS HOUSE\"-\nkeeper on dairy farm. Apply to\nBox 134a Dally News.\nAGENTS AND SALESMEN\nMEN - WOMEN! HERE'S WHAT\nyou've been waiting for! A\nsteady Income \u2014 financial security fur life \u2014 guaranteed you with\na Familex Agency of your own.\nInquire today without obligation.\nThe Familex-Products Company,\n5T0 St, Clement. Montreal.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P^R.Depot.\nANNUAL 2 FOR 1 SALE, APRIL\n\u25a0Ith, 5th, 6th. at Mann Rutherford\nCompany. 498  Baker St.  I'll. Bl,\nWE BUY AND EXCHANGE TOOLS,\ntrunks, and bags, men's suits in\ngd. condition. J. Chess, Vernon St.\nCLARESHOLM BUTTER 1st GRD\non bread is delicious. Fresh. Direct  from  Creamery.  Star Groc.\nSALVATION ARMY- IF YOU\nhave old clothing, footwear or furniture to spare please PI), us R1HL\nA~PORTRAlT BY McGREGOR .S\na Portrait of Distinction. Phone\n224, 577 Ward Street.\nHAVE YOU ANY A N T I Q U E SA\nTop prices paid for antiques at\nThe Home Furniture, 413 Hall St\nHOT CROSS BUNS -ORDER BY\nWed. to be sure of having them\ndelivered for breakfast on Good\nFriday.Ph. 258, Choquette Bros,\nMEN'S\" SANITARY RUBBER\ngoods, send $1 for 12 samples\nPlain wrapped. Tested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free Novelty price\nlist.   Princeton  Distributors,  Box\n_61,_Princeton, B. C.\nANY SIZE ROLL FILM DEVEL-\noped and printed 25c. The most\nmodern Photo Finishing Plant Hi\nthe West. Established over 30 yrs.\nKrysUl Photos, Wllkle, Sask.\nAN OFFER TO EVERY \"IN-\nventor. list of flvanted inventions\nand full information sent free. The\nRamsay Companv, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St,, Ottawa.\nMEN - REGAIN VITALITY. Vltl\"\nor, pep. Try Vitex, 25 tablets $1.00,\n60 tablets $2.00. Guaranteed. 21\npersonal rubber goods, $1.1X1. Free\nprice list of drug sundries. .1\nJensen^ Box 324 Vancouver, B. C\nBUY DlRECTBY MAIL AND SAVE\nPersonal Sanitary Supplies. Besi\nquality assortment 27 for $100\npostpaid under plain sealed cover j\nwith latest price list. Western Supply Agency, Box 667, Vancouver\nTWO\"FREE PROFESSIONAL SIL-\nvertone enlargements with every\nfilm developed and printed for\n25c, or with eight super-gloss re,\nprints for 25c. Personal skilled\nattention to every order. Cut Rate\nnuality would cost you more\nelsewhere. Cut Rate Photo Service. Department F2'.'. Box\n236. Regina. Saskatchewan.\nLECAL NOTICES\nAPPLICATION FOR WATER\nLICENCE\nWATER ACT 1939\n(Section 6)\nI, David Morris Wadds, of Kimberley, B. C, hereby apply to the\nComptroller of Water Rights for a\nlicence to divert nnd use water out\nol Inonoaklln Creek, wliicli flows\nSouth East and discharges into Arrow Lak os and give notice of my\napplication lo all persons affected\nThe point of diversion will be located within a radius nf 200 feet\nfrom north boundary of Lot 50,\nRegistered rian 915. of Lot 183A,\nKnotenay District. Thc quantity of\nwaler to be diverted is 15 cubic feet\nper second. The purpose for which\nthe water will be used is Power.\nThe land on which' the water will\nbe used is Lot 50, Registered Plan\n915 of Lot 183A, Kootenay District.\nA copy of ih is application was\nposted at the proposed point of d'\nversion and on the land where the\nwater is to be used on the, 26th day\nof February, 194Q, and two copies\nhave been filed wilh the Water\nRecorder at Nelson. Objections to\nthis application may be filed with\nthe said Water Recorder or with\nthe Comptroller of Water Rights,\nVictoria. B. C, within thirty days\nof the date of thc first publication\nof this Notice,\nD. M. WADDS.\nApplicant.\nThc date of thc first publication\nis March IB. 1940.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR QUICK SALE TWO STUCCO\nhouses at 411 Latimer Street.\nBuilt on lot and half and bringing in a revenue of $60 month.\nOne furnished and contains grand\npiano. Cash or terms. Apply E. M,\nConger, Kuot. Lake Gen. Hospital\nMUST SELL AT A SACRIFICE,\nfruit and poultry farm at Tarry's,\nB. C. 4.50 laying Pullets, all equipment\u2014paying concern, Would rent\nto reliable parly. Particulars,\nR^K. Wallace^ Thrums, B.^.\nTO CLEAR UP AN E^ATETTWO\nlarge fully modern apartment\nhouses furnished, at sacrifice priee\nwill be sold separately or together.\n__ Apply S. Smythe. Box 118, Nelson\nGOOD\" FARM LANDS FOR SALE\nnn easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908. Dept. of Natural\nResources. C. P. R., Calgary, Alta.\nFori s~ale~boardin\"g~h6use'\nbusiness at Trail. Good location\nGood   business.   Cheap   for   cash\n_ Phone 839L. Nelson.\nFOR SALE OR TRADE 33 ACRES\nnn main highway. Take car first\npayment.  Box 1248 Daily News.\nFARM, CARDEN b NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE, PURE BRED IRISH\nSetter Puppies, born February 1\nWill be ideal for this Fall's training. A. Sehwenk. Pentirton, B  t*\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\nI FOR SALE. KOFFEE KABIN OPP\nDailv News. Good business. Wrre\nor call 265 Baker St.. Nelson. B. C\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nfor sale 2 Cylinder 2 cycle\n14 H. P. Gray Marine Motor with\nclutch and propeller. Phone 370L\nVOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWS\nFARMERS, CHECK YOUR FARM\nimplements now and order early.\nWc carry Cockshutt, Frost and\nWood Farm Machinery and repairs Nelson & District Farmers'\nSupply Company, P. O. Box 6,\nNelson. B. C.yr Phone 174.\nFRUIT TREES, l'YR., 50c. CLIMB-\ning roses, grape vines, flowering\nshrubs, 3 for JI. Tree rnses, flow-\nTing cherry. Eugene Hammerer,\nTaghum. B- C.\nFOR \" SALE-SEED POTATOES\ngrown from certified seed. Green\nMountain and Warho, $2.00 sack\nApplejnn  Bros. R. R. 1, Nelson.\nFRUIT TREES,~ORNAMENTALS\nflowering shrubs. Climbers and\nsmall fruits, T. Roynon, Agent\nLayritz Nurseries, Nelson, B, C.\nGLADIOLI BULBS. MIXED FlTOW**\n(\u2022ring size $1.25 per 100, delivered\nThe Linden Nursery, Robson, B C\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nPING PONG TABLES\n5'x9'  with ilx collapsible  legs,\nfolds   up  like a  bridge   table.\n$13.50 each.\nCombination benches and ping\npong   table.  Can   be   used   for\nverandah  or lawn  benches, or\ntwo .separate tables.\n\u00a522.50 complete\nNELSON SASH & DOOR\nCO., LTD.\n701 Front Street Phone 292\nriPE, TUBES, FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Aver.ue and Main St.\n Vancouver, B. C.\nFC*R~SALE - ALL OR IN PART,\n4500 feet of 6-inch black wrought\niron pipe, excellent condition. Ap-\n_ Ply H. F. Lazier, 370 Baker. Ph.JM\nSPECIAL FOR 1 WEEK LONGER\n$1.50  oil   change  and   inspection\nfor $1. Beatty Service. Phone 91.\n2 SINGLEDISCS. 2 GANG PLOWS.\nAll   in   good   shape.   Apply   Joe\nJonther, Windsor hotel, Cranbrook\nNEXr\"LY~NEW  ELECTROLlfX\nVacuum Cleaner complete. Apply\nR. C. Mackinnon, Crescent Valley\nSELL CHEAP7CHESTFLrx RADIO\nkitchen set, stove, heater. Apply\n1013 Stanley Street.\nFOR SALE - ENGLISH PIANO,\n$30. Phone 530.\nAUTOMOTIVE,\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nFOR SALE - '35 DIAMOND T\nTruck with Hoist and convertible\nDump box. Good running order.\nVmir Transport Garage, Ymir, B.C.\nTIRES, GLASS, PARTS FOTTSlX\nears, trucks. City Auto Wreckers,\n_18q_Baker_Street, Phone_447.\nFOR SAL\u00a3 '31 PONTIAC\"SEDATT.\nGd. cond. Nick Berg. Slocan City.\nFOR SALE MODEL 'A' 1929 FORD\ncoupe. Cheap. 706, 6th St., Nelson.\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n_918 Powell St.. Vancouver, B. C\nSMALL BENCH POWER SAW.\nApply Box 1339 Daily News.\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nWANTED TO RENT SMALL FURN\nished house or apartment. Box\n1232 Daily News.\nFOR RENT - SIX ROOM HOUSE,\ngood garden. Apply after 5 p.m.,\n608 Innes Street.\nFOR RENT SML. FUR. HOUSE FOR\n_6 mths. from middle Apr. Ph. 870Y\nFOR RENT COTTAGE. N. SHORE\nclose to ferry Ph. 559R2 or Box 170\nSINGLE   HOUSE   KEEPING\nrooms for rent. Strathcona Hotel\nFURNISHED  HOUSE KEEPING\n_rooms^to rent. 711 Vernon Street.\nFURN. HSKP. ROOMS, PRIVATE\n_liome. 904 Stanley St. Ph. 158L.\nFURNISHED  HOUSE KEEPING\nrooms for rent, Annable Block.\nSUfrEH^!-RENfTTPFLY~TO\n261 Baker_Strcct. Phone 855X.__\nTERRACE 'APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nSUPPLIES, ETC.\n\"THE CHICKS  WHICH\nCIVE RESULTS\"\nOUR 20th\n\u2014e^Y^      ANNIVERSARY\nmZ      9\\ For 20 years we have\nKfS\/M ,'iijnvrd    thc    confl-\n^tagtfar     cienc      Western\n\u25a0*\u25a0*\u00bb \" Canada's Poultry-\nmen. Write for our 20th Anniversary\nBook and read why \"The Chirks\nWhich Give Results\" arc more in\ndemand each year.\nUnsexed   Pullets\nCluck prices:     100 1000   100 500\nLeghorns   $13 $120   $27 $125\nSuper Leghorns.. 15 140 30 145\nRocks, Reds,\nHamps     15   140    26   120\nPullets 97\"! accurate.\nA 16-page book \"Raising Chicks for\nProfit\" free lo customers, contains\nvaluable Information on brooding\nand raising chicks and tare and\nfeeding of poultry.\nRtomp&Sepdalj\nBox N       Langley Prairie, B. C.\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, teleph<\nThe Daily Newa. A \"Found\" i\nwil] be Inserted without colt\nyou. We will collect from 1\nowner.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL D1RECTC\nASSAYERS\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINI\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallui\nEngineer, Sampling Agent\nTrail Smelter. 304-305 Jose\nStreet,_Ne]son, B. C.\nGRENVILLE H. GRIWWSJ\nProvincial Assayer and Chemis\nFall Street. P. O. Box 9. Nl\nB. C. R e p r e se n 11 n g ihl|\ninterest at Trail, B. C.\nHAROLD S. ELMES. ROSSE\nB. C Provincial Assayer. Ch\nIndividual representatlv\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nFURNISHED HOUSE KEEPING\nrooms. K. W. C. Block. _\nTWO ROOM ~FURNrSHED~SUITE\nfor rent. Stirling Hotel.\nto~reW~^. furnTshed FIVE\nroom house. Phone 251.\nHAMBLEY ELECTRIC CHICKS-\nFrom Pure Bredto-lay Government Approved Slock. While Leghorns $11.75, Pullets $24. Barred\nRocks $13, Pullets $21.01). W. Wyandottes $15.00. Black Minorcas\n$13.50; Black Minorca Pullets\n$21.00. Prompt Delivery, F. O. U.\nCalgary Place your order direct\nor ask for 32-page Colored Catalogue. J. J. Hambley Hatcheries,\n809 Burns Bldg., Calgary, Alberla\nBABY CHICKS\nWHITE LEGHORNS, PER 100,\n$11.75, White Leghorn Pullels\n$25. Rocks, Reds and Hampshires.\n$13.75. Pullets $21. Leghorn cockerels $3. Heavy breed Cockerels\n$11. White WyandSttes, Bull\nOrpingtons, $15. Pullets 97% accuracy. Write for catalogue.\nPringle Electric Hatcheries, 223\n17th Ave. E\u201e Calgary, Alberta. _\nORDER VIGO-PEP CH* CKS THIS\nyear; you won't be disappointed\nHatched from selected flocks, govt,\ntested and app. Your assurance of\nstrong, healthy, bred-to-lay chicks.\nBe sure lo get our prices. Free\ncatalogue with special information. Our guarantee protects your\norder. Alberta Electric Hatcheries,\n2417N 1-A St. S. E.. Calgary, Alta.\nS. C. W. I, CHICKS DRECT\nfrom the only R. O. P. breeder in\nKootenays. (No Agents). Cert.\nPull. Free, top 2 grades only. No\nthird grade (Hat. App) No. eggs\nhatched from outside flocks.\nA. S. H. Deverson, Craw'ord Bay.\nA TTENTIOfTALLT POULT RYMEN!\nTo ensure lhe besMor your chicks,\nuse Canada Poultrymen chick-\nstarter mash, developing mash\nand laying mash, etc. Phone 171\nNelson k District Farmers' Supply\nCo. P. O. Box 6. Nelson, B. C.\nBABY\"CHICKS FROM VIGOROUS\nnew blood Leghorn breeding stock\nUnsexed $10. Pullets 197*:'.) $25\nper 100. Also Rocks and Reds $12\nper 100. Express prepaid, Appleby\nPoultry Farm,_Mission CUy, B. C.\nBABY^CHICKST'RHODE ISLAND\nReds, bloodtested approved sto.'K\n$10 .jer 100. John Goodman, 1655\nGilley_Ave\u201e New Westminster.\nGOATS FOR SALE THREE NAN-\nnies, milking. Two billies. Apply\nto E. S, Elliott or Ph. 326Y2.__\nFOR SALE 6 WEEKS OLD PIGS $\u00ab\neach. Cash with order. Apply\nGus Anderson, Salmo. B. C.\t\nWANTED HORSE. AROUND 1400.\nV. Hoskin, Balfour, B. C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM.  APPLY 918\nKootenay Street or Phone 713L.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. r. McMillan, d. c. ne\ncabmeter. X-ray, McCullocl\nDR.  WIL BERT BROCK. \"\n542 Baker Street. Phone 9\u00ab\nCORSETIERE8\nSPENCER CORSETS. MRS.\n_Campbell, 370 Baker St, PI\nENGINEERS AND SURVEY\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvali\nSurveyor and Engineer. Pi\n\"Beaver Falls.\"\nHOMES FOR THE AQE\nCONDUCTED BY THE S I S T\nof the Love of Jesus for e\nladies. The Priory Guest Ho\nnew residence with every\nern comfort. St. Anthony's\nHouse, a lovely home with\nmoderate rates. St. Raphael's\nfor invalids and convales\nSt. Jude's House of Rest fot\nerly couples. For prospectus\nMother Superior. 949 W.\nAvenue, Vancouver, B. C.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ES'\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insurer\n every description. Real Est. F\nJ. E. ANNABLE, REAL Eg?\n_ Rentals, Insurance. Annable\nCHAS. F. McHARDYriNSURA\nReal Estate. Phone_135.\t\nR.  W. DAWSON, Real Estate\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipp\n Hardware, Baker St Phone\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and el|\nwelding, motor rewindln\ncommercial refrigeration*\nPhone 593 324 Vernq\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVE\nForest Lawn Memorial Park\nprice list from Bronze Mem\nLtd.  Box  726. Vancouver,\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E.\nRegistered Patent Attorney,\nada and U. S. A. 703-2nd S\nCalgary. Advice free, confid*\nSASH   FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACT\nHardwood merchant 273 Bak\nSECOND HAND STORE!\nWE   BUY.   SELL   tc   EXCHA\n_ furmture, etc. Ark Store, Ph\nWATCH REPAIRING\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs\nwatch it is on time all the '\n345 Baker Street, Nelson. B.\nMOTHEG- Dies VOU\nREALLY   MEET\n, _   SPEAKEP     ,\nj BANKHEAD^J\n *\u2022**\u2022\n\t\n\t\n\t\n3St\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON   B.C-MONDAY MORNINQ, MARCH ffl, 1940.\u2014\nPAOF  NINE\nrennials Shown\nn (ily Market;\negelables Down\nh the Winter season drawing\n: to thc end, perennial plants\ni to make their appearance\n) City Market Saturday. R:sp-\ncanes at 40 cents a dozen,\nIng heart roots at 25 and 35\neach, and rhubarb roots at\nid 25 cents each, were sll on.\n'willows at 10 cents a bunch\ngladiola bulbs at 35 cents a\ni also entered thc market,\n'eral varieties of Winter root\nables such as cooking onicns,\nps and c.rrots dropped in\n, while Northern Spy and\nner apples also dropped.\nIng onions were 12 pounds in-\nol 10 trunds for 25 cents, car-\nvere 12 pounds for 25 cents in-\nbf three pounds for 10 cents,\nurnips were 12 pounds instead\npounds for 25 cents.\ntnern    Spy   apples   dropped\n85 to 75 cents a box while a\n'emainlng boxes of Wagoners\nicd from 85 to 50 cents a box.\nam   cheese   and   goat  cheese\ntemporarily  off the market.\nprices   and   the  general   run\nscellaneous articles remained\nnary,\nitations were:\n*\"1LE3\n,, lb HI\nLiver sausage, Ib       25\nPork   Sausage    Ib     .In\nSpring chlrken. Ib    311\nBreakfast sausage 2 lbs.    25\nChicken, lb 25 to   .30\nOAIRY   PRODUCE\nButter,  lb 30 to   .35\nCntiage Cheese. Ib.  10\nor 3 lbs   ,...r   .25\n... w   enpesp    lb  _    .111\nButtermilk, qt. 10\nGallon            -35\nPLANTS AND SHRUBS\nBegonias      Nl\nPrimulas  - 50\nDaffodils, plant     &-1\nLace ferns, \u00abach  JW\nGeraniums, plant  ~ 2U\nRaspbcnry  c:nes,  doz     .40\nBleeding heart roots, each .25 and .30\nRhubarb roots, each     15 to .25\nPussywillow, hunch 10\nGladiola bulbs, doz 35\nEGGS:\nGrade A large, doz 30\nGrade A medium, doz 21\nPullets,   doz.  i 2*\nSetting eggs, 15 for      $1\nDuck eggs, doz $1.00\nsh   Ib.\nige,   lb\nng onions\nts, 12 lbs.\n3 lbs.\nbunch\nry   bunch\nrhubarb, 3 lbs\nib\nlettuce, head\noes, sack ,\nlbs.\nflower, head\n:abbagc, head\ncabbage,  lb. .\nich, lb.\nnps   3  lbs\nbunch\nird pickles, pt.\nirt\ni   hunch\neach\nhrikes, 4 lbs. ...\nI bea u, t lbs.\nlps,   12   lbs.\nihes, bunch \t\n1 cabbage, 3 heads .\n  ,1b\n    .03\n12 lbs 25\n 10\n 10\n.   ..       .0-\n.0**\n 25\n. .     211\n 10\n$1.75 and 2.00\n.25\n.20\n.1\"\n.Ok\n\u2022in\nll*\nOil\n21}\n.33\n0*\n.25\n.25\n.25\n.25\n.ns\n,10\n,05 and\n.15 .20 and\nIT8\ntosh apples, box      .90 and    $1\n1 plums,  3  lbs. .25\nhern Spy apples, box     ..   .75\ner Banana apples, box ..     .35\nener apples, box         50\n:ious apples, box   $1-1'*\n7 lbs.  Vi\net apples, box  75\ni pears, 3 lbs 25\n1EILANEOUS\nn  nl     .2'\nyd. 75\ny work, a piece   -...    .35\nSauce, lb 20\n.   tin         50 i\nsrves,  qt. . .25 and   .35\n* Cider, quart   35\nrkraut.   Ib    10\nrkraut. 3 lbs     25\nI, ea $115 and $1 Or\nj, bottle .25\n?rh 3d and     .35\nie cakes, each  20 and   .30\nd,   loaf    15\nMining Issues\nResist Weakness\nTORONTO, March 17 (CP).-MM\nweakness marked the price tone in\nthc <inal sess'on of the week on Toronto Stock Exchange. Volume was\nlittle better than 100,000 shares.\nMining shares displayed more resistance to depressing influences\nthan industrials. Sleel, food, utility,\nbank and miscellaneous groups shared in the downward drift with losses\nlimited mainly to minor fractions.\nAircrafts also were a bit soft.\nLosses of 4 point were boarded by Algoma Steel, Dominion\nbridge. Canadian Car, Cub Aircraft\nand some of the utilities, including\nBrazilian and National Steel Car\nweakened V,. In the foods Lake ot\nthe Woods eased down 1. C. P. R.\n-hanged hands in sizeable volume\nwith thc price down the minimum\nfraction to 7^.\nSherritt and Steep Rock were the\nonly base metal issues trading in\nvolume of consequence and Sherritt\nheld at 98 while Steep Rock eased\n7 cents*. Moderate losses came out\nfor Waite-Amulet, Noranda and\nSmelters,\nWilh the gold share recessions\n'here were a number of compensating gains. Powell Rouyn, Kerr-Addison and Macleod-Cockshutt had\ngains to offset losses for Coniaurum.\nPickle Crow, Little Long Lac and\nSan Antonio.\nRoyalite was off 4 for broken\nlots, Calgary and Edmonton dropped\n2 cents and Anglo-Canadian weak-\n*ned a cent. Extension Oil at 24\n.as unchanged.\nTS\nlit. lb\t\n, lb \t\nlb,  \u201e \t\n:   lb.   \t\n. lb   ,   \t\nI liver, lb\n| iiver,  Ib   ...\nI Cheese, lb. .\nlb.\nIh\n|e ribs. lb.   ...\nlb\t\n 25 to\n_ .10 to\n.. .10 to\n- .12 to\n_   .18   to\n.15   to\nlixed Trend at\nVancouver (lose\nVANCOUVER., March 17 fCP)-\nTrading eased* off on the short\nsession of Vancouver Stock Exchange Saturday and prices closed\nwith a rnixed trend. Price changes\nwere small as transfers totalled\n7.101 shares,\nMinto Gold held the spotlight but\n:.pped a fraction to 4V4 after 23.700\nshares had changed hands. Hedley\nMascot at 47, Relief Arlington at\n7',-i and Dent:nia at 1, were all\n\u25a0 own fractions while Cariboo Gold\nQuartz at 2.50 and Pioneer at 2.20\n'-.eld unchanged.  Premier added 4\n0 Friday's closing bid at 1.30 and\nXooteney Belle gained 1 at 62.\nHome Oil dropped two cents to\n1 13 and okalta at 1.11 waj one cent\n>low the previous closing bid.\nOther leading issues were inactive.\nBase metals were quiet and un-\nringed.\nDOW  JONES AVERAGES\nHigh\nIdustrials     146.43\nIlls      29 fie\nItihtiM       24 07\nLow Close Change\n145,38 145.76 off     .77\n29 88 29 78 off     .2?\n24 00 24 02 off     .08\nTORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\nES\n' Premier Gold   \t\n....   126\n1 Mines \t\n fll\nPowell Rouvn Gold \t\n...   1.33\nrma.\"  Copper \t\n 25\nPreston K.iflt Dome \t\n....   2 02\nGold           \t\n024\nQuebec Gnld            \t\n 28\no-Tlur *nian\t\n....   2 35\nReeves MacDonald\t\n...     .20\nleid  Cold\n. ..     .074\nReno Gold Mines \t\n 35\nia Rouyn   Mines  ..\nr .                _\n....      024\n....   2 11\nRoche Lone; Lac \t\n....      01 *i\n' San Antonio Gold \t\n....   2 72\nmac Rouvn \t\n IX!\nShawkev Gold       \t\n O214\nfield Gold\n..     .184\nSheep Creek Gold  ....\n...    1 09\nMetals Mining\t\n....      15\n, Sherritt Gordon\t\n...     .95\nie G-ild Mines ..   \t\n...   1 on\nSladen  Malartic   -.._\n 44\nMd  Kirkland \t\n....      17\nSt. Anthonv .  ..\n....      13\nfll'souri  _.\n09':\nSudbu:v  Basin\n....   184\n> Mines \t\n. ..    .08\n1 Sullivan Consolidated\n.75\nTrethewey \t\n...      nil.\nTerk-Huehes  Gold\n...   3 70\nlo Ankerite\t\n.   6(15\nToburn Gold Mines \t\n160\ner H:M   Ex'cnsion  ..\n..      024\nTowagmac ....\n 21\ndian Mflbr'ir\t\n.fll\nVentures\n...   4 00\noo Gold   Quartz   ....\n...   2 41\nWaile Amulet\n....   5 50\ne-Tmthewey   \t\n65\nWright Hargreaves \t\n...   710\na] Patricia  \u201e.\nugarrau     \t\n2 10\n...     .12\n1 Ymir Yankee Girl \t\n.    .044\nOILS\nmbim  M. tc S.  ,    ..\n40\nAjax\n 16\nCoppe-\n..    1 K5\nBritish  American  \t\n... 22 75\nururr   Mine*        \t\n..    1 55\n. Chemical  Research     \t\n 31\n(lldated M tc S   .....\nMines\t\n43 ,V)\n. 23 75\nImperial\n14 60\nInter Petroleum     \t\n. . 22 .50\nkl-Siscoe   \t\n.      \"3\ni T.xas Canadian \t\n....   2.05\nMalartic \t\n300\nINDUSTRIALS\nIdo Gold          \t\ntn\n* Abitib*  Pewer A\n 140\nnbrldge   Nickel\n410\nR-ll Telephone\n.. 1674\n\u25a0al   Kirkland       \t\n03\nBrazilian T I. & P\t\n      9',i\noeur                   . . ..\n.     .4?\nRrew k Dist           \t\n      5\nI Lke\nM\nBrowing Corp\n..   I 95\nLake Gold \t\n.      50\nR C Prwer A \t\n..   294\nBel'                \t\n.      25'',\nR C Power R\t\n      24\nlorn Mines\t\n.      .04',\nBuilding   Products\n..    16\nar Gnld\n48\nCanada Bread\n      5\nRn'k Gold\t\n1 113\nCan Hud Millin\/? \t\n      4 4\n\u2022r Gold\n05'2\nCan Car tc Foundry \t\n...    13\nIte'\n13 40\nCan    Cement\n6',\ny Guid\n\u25a0ei'.\nCan D'idgc\n.    214\nin Ilav M tc S\n30OO\nCan   Milling\n....   37'i\nin! nm'   Nickel\n43 25\nCan P.'cif'C Railway\n7\nConsolidated\n02i,\nrar.  Ind  Alenbol  A\n      .1\nW\u00ab;ii*\n21\nCao   Wineries\n4\nAdd-on\n2 33\nCons  Bakeries  \t\n...    164\nand  I-ake       \t\n.    1 27\nCosmos\n..   29\nShore Mines .\n23 1*0\nD-iminlnn  Bridge  \t\n..   30\n1 Gold\n724\nDominion Stores      \t\n\u25a0     4\"',\nOro  Mines\n01',\nDnm Tu* k Chem \t\n. ...     7\nIxme Lac\nisa  Mine\n3 05\n\u20221 70\n.   .   24\nFannv  Faimer\n27\nKid CncVshull\n1 112\nFord nl ranada A\n21 Vi\n\u2022n Red Lake Gnld\n444\nGen Sleet Wales .\n104\n(\u00ab4\nGoodvear Tire\n814\njre-Piiretinme\n47 50\nGvpnun |, k A\n44\nnile Red fake\n1 2(1\nHamilton   Bridge\n74\n.tlf-Gnham\n01\nHiram  Wr.lk-r\n414\ntie-' Gold\n41\nInll  Metals\n.  11\n| Corporation\nI 02\nImoernl  Tobacco   .   ...\n154\na Porrunlne\n.on\nI.nblaw   \\\n264\n[\u25a0Klrkland\n054\nLoblm*   V\n25\nIng Mining\nI 27.\nKelv nrtni\n.     \u00bb4\ndi\n70 00\nMiple  !,.\u25a0\u25a0,( M'lllng   .\n5\nital\n50\nMassev   Harris\n5 4\ntr.  Gold\nl 35\nMontreal   Power\n304\n| Gold\n1*7\nMonm (*,\u201e,\n45-4\nr Par upinr\n1 7*1\nNal S' e\\ Cal\n614\n<te-  Con.\n35\nFaff**   P'-sev\n1064\nOreille\n1 7n\nP   ,v.\"   (Vrn\nin\n[Gnld\n1 12\n1*. \u25a0       i    M-lal,\n104\nCrow G 'Id\n:i 75\nS eel 0' C *1\n764\nir Gold\n.    2 22\nStandard Paving \t\n..   1.20\nLetter to Board\nUrges Buying of\nEmpire Products\nA letter from T. G. Togden,\nChairman of thc City of Toronto\nBoard of Trade, urging importers\nand merchants to promote the sale\nof Empire goods in Canada, has\nbeen received by W. G. C. Lanskail,\nSecretary of the Nelson Board of\nTrjde, Ccpies of the letters from\nthe British Empire Overseas Branch\nof the Board of Trade are being\nsent out to a number of the larger\nimporting and merchandising firms\nthroughout Canada, the chief importing and retail merchant associations and a number of the\nlarger boards and chambers.\nMr. Fogden's letter says:\n\"As you will observe, the purpose of these letters is to develop\na stronger tendency for importers\nand merchants to promote the sale\nof Empire goods in Canada.\n'This object Is consistent with thc\ninterests cf importers and retailers\nand at the s^me time such progress\nas can be made will be of direct and\nimportant assistance to thc Empire,\nparticularly Great Britain, in the\nprosecution of the war.\n\"Purchase and payment of Canadian supplies for food, war materials, etc., can only be arranged\nif the necessary credits and trade\nbalances continue to be made available.\nNEW MARKETS SOUGHT\n\"Deliveries may be slower and\ntraffic delayed, but thanks to the\niUyal Navy and the merchant service the sea lanes of Empire are\nstill open and British goods can\ncome to Canada. These difficulties\ncan be overcome in large measure\nby placing orders well in advance.\nThere has been a tendency for importers and merchants to look to\nnew markets and adopt an attitude cf 'too hard to get', regarding imporls from the Empire, Also\nthe average shopper is often misinformed on the availability of\nBritish goods, and we must overcome this altitude and do all in our\npower to maintain United King-\nd:m and Empire trade.\"\nA copy of a letter accompanying\nthis one, from a large retail establishment to the Toronto Board,\nsays:\n\"The United Kingdom Government, H. M. Trade Commissioners\nin Canada and representatives of\nthe Canadian Government have all\nemphasized the imperative necessity of maintaining our exports\nfrom Great Britain in order to\nmaintain their financial position\nand carry on the war. This is self-\nevident, and especially in view of\nthe enormous orders being placed\nin Canada by the United Kingdom\nGovernment.\n\"It behooves us, therefore, as importers to do everything within\nour power toward this end.\nBUYERS AND PUBLIC\nMISINFORMED\n\"Unfortunately the buying public\nas well as many importers are under thc impression that British\nmerchandise is no longer available,\nwhich is an entirely erroneous idea\nand is disproved by the large number of shipments that we ourselves,\nss well as others, have received\nsince the outbreak ct war.\n\"This false impression is prevalent in part because of our own\nsalespeople and others giving improper information to customers,\nwhen showing British merchandise,\nsuch as 'this is an English , . . and\nwe will not likely get any more\nof them' cr 'you should take advantage of these prices as these\nwere imported before the war and\nwe cannot get any more of them.'\n\"The facts are that there are\nscarcely any lines of merchandise\nthat we cannot secure from Great\nBritain although it must be admitted that there are difficulties\nsuch as long delivery dales, higher prices and shipping risks, but it\nshould be our responsibility to s.\narrange our purchases and by anticipating our needs, to have an adequate assortment at all times and lo\ndefinitely instruct all our salespeople to discontinue giving these\nivrong impressions and thus doing\nharm to the Allied cause.\n\"It is nothing but a sign of weakness on our part and an admission\nthat we are not smart enough to\novercome the prevailing dif.iculties.\n\"The same conditions apply, ol\ncourse, to other imports from\ncountries such as France, Belgium,\nSwitzerland and Holland.\"\nMETAL MARKETS\nMONTREAL, March 17 (CP)-\nBar gold In London was unchanged\nat 137.54 an ounce ln Canadian\nfunds; 168s in British, representing the Bank of England's buying\nprice. The fixed $35 Washington\nprice amounted to $38.50 in Canadian.\nSilver futures closed unchanged.\nBid: March 37.75.\nNEW YORK-Ccpper steady; electrolytic spot 11.50; exnort 11.65;\nTin steady; spot and forward\n47.124.\nLead steady; spot New York 5.25-\n5.30; East St. Louis 5.10.\nZinc stesdy; East St, Louis spot\nand forward 5.75.\nC.N.R. Workmen\nDispute Change\nOTTAWA. March 17 (CP) -The\nLabor Minister, Hon. Norman McLarty, yesterday nude known the\nfindings of a conciliation board\nwhich dealt with disputes between\nthe Canadian National Railways\nand its sleeping car conductors and\nporters in Ontario and Quebec and\nsleeping car porters operating out\nof Winnipeg,\nMr. Justice Louis Cousineau of\nMontreal was chairman of the\nBoard, the other two members were\nE. H. Crawford, of Winnipeg, nominated by the employees and F. C.\nDobell, of M-cntreal, nominated by\nthe company.\nThe dispute arose as a result of\nchanges made by the company in\nthe service, affecting th\u00ab assignment of conductors and porters on\nthe Montreal - Noranda, Ottawa-\nMontreal-Winnipeg and Winnipeg-\nFlin Flon-Regina runs.\nMr. Crawford argued that the\ncompany in making these changes,\nhad broken its agreement of 1927,\ninasmuch as there had been no consultation with employees as to the\ncrews required to operate the services. On the contrary, he stated,\nthe company merely notified the\nemployees that the new runs, with\nreduced personnel, were to become\neffective.\nMr. Crawford recommended that\nthe men affected by the company's\nchange in scheduled runs should\nbe reimbursed for the time lost,\nwhile agreeing with Mr. Crawford's\nargument, the chairman did not\nconcur in his recommendation save\nin the case of one sleeping car conductor whom he considered was entitled to certain compensation.\nThe Chairman agreed with Mr,\nDobell that the article of agreement\ngoverning the making of changes\nsuch as those causing the dispute\nshould be amended to make it clear\nthat the railway company has the\nright of decision in tnese matters.\nThe amended article, as suggested\nby him, would provide means by\nwhich employees could, under certain conditions, discuss the matter\nwith the company, or, if they considered themselves unfairly treated, appeal to C;N.R. Employees'\nBoard of Adjustment No. 2.\nWorkers in Textile\nIndustry Reservation\nAge Is Lowered\n|    LONDON, March 17 (CP)- The\n, British Textile Industry, which had\n; expressed fears of a possible shortage (f skilled snd semi-skilled la-\nj bor because of conscription, yesterday had its anxieties allayed by a\ngovernment   lowering   the   \"rcser-\n; vation age''  in  39  sections of the\n; textile and allied trades from 30 to\nI 25 years.\ni In a number of more specialized\nI textile tr;des, the Ministry \u25a0 f La-\nj bor lowered the reservation age\n| from 25 to 23 years.\nIn two categories of scrap metal\nworkers the age was lowered from\n30 to 25.\nThese amendments, the ministry\nsaid, are not retroactive in thcir effect and do not invclve the release of men in the forces or of\nthose who have already receive:!\nenlistment notices.\nNo. 6 Level of\nBayonne Mine Is\nBeing Extended\nNo. fi level drift of the Bayonne\nConsolidated Mines Ltd., is being\nextended on the new West orebody\nwith several hundred feet of ground\nstill to be drifted at this elevati n.\nMain work at the Bayonne ls centered on preparing stopes and getting ready for resumption of mil-\nFrench Minister\nKeeps Factories\non 24-Hour Day\nBy JOHN H. MARTIN\n(Associated Preit Stiff Writer)\nPARIS, March 17 <AP) - The\n\"little man with the big brain\"\ntrots into the Ministry of Munitions\nevery day, racing against Spring\nand the chance of a big Western\nFront offensive.\nHis hurried look comes from the\nfact that it costs $2,000 a minute\nto put a French infantry regiment\ninto attack, and he Is responsible\nfor keeping France's munitions factories at the 24-hour-a-day pace\nprcdu-cing the gunpowder and\nshells that make up much of that\n$2,000.\nIt is the same hurried look with\nwhich he crammed an 18-month\nrailroad construction Job into three\nmonths for the Allies' 1918 big\npush; and today Armament Minister Raoul Dautry, a dark little\n59-year-old bundle of energy, is\nstill rated as one of the best organizers on the scene.\nFrench leaders say he is getting\nresults despite years of labor\ntroubles, political bonfires which\nsapped industrial output and the\nshort time he has been at the job.\nMobilization placed 5,000,000 men\nin uniform at the beginning. Thousands of \"gunpewder women\"\nstepped into the places of men who\nleft munition factories.\nPremier Daladier gave Dautry\nhis big task in a cabinet shuffled\nshortly after the war began.\nIn the last war Dautry was in\ncharge of one district of the French\nstate railways and was promoted\nto take over thc job of adapting\nthe French netwerk in the Nord\ndepartment to the demands of the\nBritish army coming to France.\nNext came a big chance. Foch\nwanted a strategic railway built to\naid a huge Allied push in 1918,\nFoch asked the army engineers.\nTh-ey said it would take 18 months.\nFoch asked Dautry. \"I can do\nbetter than that,\" he said, and did.\nThe railway was ready in three\nmonths. Foch decorated the organizer at the front in July, 1918.\nAfter tho war Dautry look over\nthe job of rebuilding railways in\nwar-devasted areas. Then Premier\nTardieu made him director-general\nof the state railways. Trains ran\non time and wo.kers' efficiency\njumped to new levels.\nWinnipeg Wheat\nStronger al (lose\nWrNNIPE-3, March 7 (CP).-Late\nfirmness in United States markets\nbrought support to Winnipeg Grain\nExchange in thc final hour Saturday nnd wheat futures prices closed\n-Ha\u2014U higher. May was quoted at\n88%, July 89% and October 90?i.\nThe opening was the dullest ln\nmonths and for mast of thc session\ntrading wis too light to effect the\nsteady price trend.\nOnly a handful of traders appeared on the floor until near thc end i\nof the short day when local commission   house   purchases  came   in\nfollowing a rise at Chicago.\nExport sales in Canadian u-heat\nfor the last 24 hours were confined\nto odd cars for United Kingdom\nmillers, report said.\nCash grain traders displayed general interest in all top grades but\nprice spreads remained unchanged\nand only a small amount of No. 3\nNorthern changed hands.\nFr.ces recovered from early dir*s\nn the coarse grain futures pit and\ncb-*ed unchanged. Domes'..c sup-\np:l in barley was the main feature\not the trade.\nWINNIPEG CRAIN\nWINNIPEG,\nMarch\n17   (CP)   -\nGrain futures quotations:\nOpen\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nWHEAT-\nMty          88\n88%\n88\n88%\nJuly   ..      88Vi\nBt)',,\n99%\n89%\nOct.          90 if,\n!)1'\u00bb\n90%\n90%\nOATS-\nMay       38%\n38%\n3n\n38%\nJuly       36*4-\n37 V,\n38%\n37 V,\nOct.           34%\n34%\n34%\n34%\nBARLEY-\nMay      50%\n51%\n50%\n51%\nJuly      .    49'A\n49%\n49 V,\n49s i\nOct.       .   47 \"A\n47%\n47%\n47%\nFLAX-\nMay   .   . 208\n208%\n206%\n205%\nJuly   .     206\n206%\n204%\n204%\nOct.         197%\n107%\n196%\n196%\nRYE-\nMoy   ....    89'A\n70%\n69%\n70%\nJuly   ..      69%\n70%\n80%\n70%\nOct    70%\n\u2014\n\u2014\n70%\nCash prices:\nWhe\u00abt-No.\nhare\nand\ntrack\n86%;  No.   1  northern\n86%;\nNo.  2\nnorthern 84%; No. 3 northerr\n82%;\nNo. 4 northern\nVtl'i;\nNo. 5\n75%;\nNo. 6, 72%; feed 68%;\nNo. 1\ngarnet\n80%; No. 2 garnet 79%; No. 3 garnet\n78%; No. 1 durum 84'\/.; No. 4\nspecial 79%; No. 5 special 72%; No.\n6 special 70%; No. 1 mixed 74%;\nscreenings $3.50 per ton.\nOats-No. 2 c.w. and track 37%;\nEx. 3 c.w. 36%; No. 3 c.w. and Ex.\n1 feed 35; No. 1 feed 34; No. 2 feed\n32V,;; No. 3 feed 20%.\nBarley\u2014Malting grades: 6-row\nNos. 1 and 2 c.w. 50%; 2-row Nos.\n1 and 2 c.w. 51%; 6-row No. 3 c.w.\n49%. Others: No. 1 feed 4*8%; No. 2\nfeed 46%; No. 3 feed 45%; track\n50%.\nFlax\u2014No. 1 c.w. and track 203;\nNo. 2 c.w. 199; No. 3 c.w. 185*i;\nNo. 4 c.w. 180%.\nRye-No. 2 c.w. 68%.\nWeek's Building\nPermits Are $5220\nTen building permits totalling\n$5220 were issued at the City Engineer's office in the week 'ir!'1\"\nSaturday. It was the biggest total\nfor any week since the lust of C\\e\nyear.\nOne permit for $1500 was for a\nncw house, while another for $1500\nwas for interior work by the Union\nPacking Co. Ltd. in a building\nwhich will be its new premises.\nThe permits were issued to;\nUnion Packing Co. Ltd., to build\na cooler and freezer room in new\npremises, Front Street, $1500.\nJames Gordon, to finish a four-\nroom house, 2*4 by 28 feet, on High\nStreet, $500.\nMrs. George Renwick, to build a\nfour room house, 24 by 24 feet,\nSixth Street. $1500.\nJohn F. Towler, to build an open\nshed with no sides, off the Granite\nRoad, $75,\nT. II. Waters & Co. Ltd., to finish attic and build entry stairs, Victoria Street, $800; and to shingle\nroof near the C.P.R. yards, $125.\nH. Onensen, to finish inside and\noutside of house as improvement-!,\nFifth Street, $300.\nT. Hulls, to build a garage and\nfinish a bedroom. Silica Street, $350.\nJ. A. Maber, to shingle the side\nof a boose and construct a portion\nof a concrete foundation, 718 Park\nStreet, $60.\nH. Gagnon, to replace a 2 by 12\ninch jofct in the porch of the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate, Ward\nand Mill Street, $10.\nUnemployed Mechanic Turns Miner,\nTakes Over $100,000 From Midnight\nMine, Rossland Under Lease; Buys II\nROSSLAND, B. C. March 17\n\u2014A mine that was given up years\nago as a \"dud,\" but which last year\nproduced $100,000 (or a leaser over\nand nbove royalltles, has changed\nhands at Rossland. It Is thc Midnight, neighbor of the f?mous I.X.L.\nof th? early days. B. A. Lins. who\nobtained a lease on the Midnight\nand turned to raining when a\nchange of ownershln in a garage\nleft him unemployed, has purchased thc mine from Mrs Laura E.\nQllmour, widow of the late Thomas\nQllmour. Ore so rich that four sacks\nDroduced $12,000 was located by\nLins.\nOLD TIME MINE\nThe old mine, situated near the\nbase of Mount Roberts, lust a short\ndistance West from Rossland, has\nseen Its ups and downs, but today\nis the outstanding operation In the\nWest Koctenay as far as sensational values go.\nThe Midnight has been mined by\nnumerous individuals and syndicates since being discovered many\nyears ago. in fact being among the\nfirst locations in the Rossland\ncamp. Some of those operating the\nmine did fairly well, some have\nDasscd on but those remaining who\nhad explored its workings and\nsought its riches will regret that\nthey did not have the staying qualities or finances behind them to\ngive them the riches now being recovered from the old mine, but\nwho worked the mine nn the theory\nthat \"gold is where you find lt.\"\nB. A. Uns, better known among\nhis friends as \"Bert,\" went to Rossland about 10 years ago. from Vancouver, and was employed as a mechanic in a Rossland garage. Hc\nhad much to do with those following mining in that area, and when a\nChangs took place in the business\nwhere he was employed Mr. Lins\nbegan casting about for employment\nFORMER MECHANIC\nHc had heard of the vast riches\ntaken  from  the famous old I.X.L.\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\nMONTREAL, March 17 (CP). \u2014\nBritish and foreign exchange, nominal rates between banks only:\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .26562.\nFinland, finmark, i!194.\nFrance,  franc   023448.\nItaly, lire .0561\nJapan, yen .2609.\n(Compiled by thc Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nNEW YORK, March 17 (AP).\u2014\nThe British pound got a toe-hold\nin the foreign money market tiday\nand advanced briskly ln the first\nfull-fledged rally since new British\nexchange regulations were announced a week or so ago.\nSterling advanced 2*m cents In\nrelation to the United States dollar after a week's unrelenting pressure had chopped more than 13\ncents from the price.\nThe Canadian dollar shifted ahead\nwith sterling for a gain of ti cent.\nIn U. S. currency tho Dominion unit\nwas priced at 81*4 cents. Ottawa\nForeign Exchange Control Board\nrate 9.09-9-91 per cent discount. The\nFrench franc dipped .01Y, of a cent\nto 2.1 m cents.\nWhile the guilder and Swiss franc\nremained unchanged, the belga\nslipped  01 of a cent to 16 99\nClosing rates. Great Britain in\ndollar*;, others in cents:\nOfficial Canadian Control Board\nrates for U. S. dollars buying 10\nper cer.t premium, soiling 11 per\ncent premium, equivalent to discounts on Canadian dollars in Ncw\nYork of buying 9.91 per cent, selling 900 per cent.\nCanadian dollar in New York\nopen market 18*.2 per cent discount,\nor 81.87tt U. S. cents.\nGreat Britain, demand 3 72%.\ncables 3.73M.. 60 day bills 3.71'4, 90\ndav bills 3.1hYi.\nBelgium 16.99. Denmark 1933,\nFinland 1.75N, France 2.11*4, Germany 4O20N (benevolent 16 90),\nGreece .71, Hungary 17.65, Italy at\n505.  Netherlands 53.11.  Norway at\nmine, a neighbor of the Midnight, | 22.73, Portugal 3.50, Rumania .55N,\nQUOTATIONS ON WALL STREET\nOpen\nClose\nMontgomery Ward\n53\n524\nAmerican Can\n114\n114\nNash Motors\n64\n64\nAm Smell & Ref\n481J\n48'5\nNew York Central\n15\n144\n1 Amer Telephone\n172\n172\nPackard  M* tors   \t\n34\n34\nI American Tobacco .\n80\n874\nPenn R It\n214\n214\n1 Anaconda  .\n27 \",\n27*'h\nPhillips  Pete   . \t\n384\n38 4\n\u25a0 Baldwin      \t\n14(4\n14')\nPullman\n20\n26\n(BalL St Ohio      \t\n5\n4',\nRadio Corporation \t\n:>*4\n6\nBendix Aviation .\n31*4\n314\nRem Rjiid\niS\n94\nBeth Steel\n73',\n12',\nSafeway Stores\n51\n50\ni Canada Dry\t\nCanadian Pacific ...\n201,\n20\nShell Union\n104\nKl'i\n5H\n5-S,\nS Cal Edison     \t\n29S\n29 H\nChrvsler\n84 >i\n%\nStan Oil of N J\n43%\n43 4\nC Wright pfd \t\n9'.\nTexas Corporation\n444\n444\n, Dup<mt\n1844\n1844\nTexas Gulf Sul ...\n334\n33 4\nGeneral Electric .\n38\n38\nUnion \"Carbide\n84\n84 4\nGeneral F* ods ....\n41'.',\n47-**\nUnited Aircraft \t\n45\n44 4\nGeneral Motors\n53\n53\nU S Rubber \t\n344\n34r:i\nGoodrich\nI8H\n18-hi\nU S Steel\n55\n544\nGreat Nor pfd\n221*,\n22'.,\nWarner Brothers \t\ni\\\n34\nHowe Sound\n481,\n48\nWest Electric\n111\n110*4\nHudson  Motnrs\n5'.\noV,\nWest Union \t\n22V<\n22\nInter Tel & Tel\n4'.\n4-S\nWoolwcrth      \t\n414\n414\nKcnn Copper \t\n34',\n34 = ,\nSTC\nYellow Truck   \t\n164\n164\nMONTREAL\n>CK EXCHANGE\nINDUSTRIALS:\nShawnlgan W k P\n214\nAlta  Pac Grain\n24\nSt Lawrence Corp \t\n44\nAssoc Brew of Cfln\n184\nSt 1-aw Corp Pfd\n18\nBathurst P tc P A\n13\nSouth Can Power \t\n12\nCanadian Bronze\n41\nSteel of Can Pfd \t\n774\nCan  Bronze  Pfil\nCan Car tc Fdy Pfd\n106>i\n24\n554\nBANKS:\n34 \\\n170\nCan Cclanesi* Pfd\nCan North Power\n724',;\n17\n208\n216\nImperial   \t\nCan   Steamship\n6'k\nMontreal       \t\n202\nCan Steamship Pfd\n19',\nNova  Scotia   \t\n308\nCockshutt   Plow\n7>i\nRoyal\n180\nCon Mm tc Smelting\n43 Si\nToronto                 \t\n26114\nDominion Coal Pfd\n21\nCURB:\nDom Sleel k Coal 11\nI.'!1.\nAbitlbi   6   Pfd\n11'.\nDominion Textile\n89 4\nBathurst P k P 11\n34\nDryden Paper\n84\nHciuiliarnots Corp\n54\nFoundation C of C\n12V,\nBritish American Oil\n22\",\nGatineau Power\n144\nB   C   Packers\n174\nGatineau Power Pfd\n9.1\",\nCan   Marconi\nI 30\nGurd   Charles\n7\nCm Vickers\n6V\u00bb\nHoward Smith Paper\n204\nCons   Paper   Corp\n84\nII Smith Pacer Pid\n11)2\nFtirchlld Aircraft\nli',\nImneriftl   Oil\n14 4\nFraser  Co  Ltd\n164\nInter   Petroleum\n22 4\nInter Utilities  A\n94\nInter Nickel of Can\n43\nInter  Utilllles   H\n.VI\nLake of the Woods\n23' \u25a0\nl.iflkc   Sulphite\n3\nMcColl   Frontenac\nIf.\nMarLaren P k P\n204\nVntionil  Brew  Ltd\n37\nVrfoll Frnntrmr Pfd\n99'**.\nN'niioml  Urn*.'   Pld\n3 It\nMitch-It   Robt\n12\u00abk\n'*\":lv::*   Flour   new\n32\nRovalite   Oil              1\n37 4\nPi ir-   P,-Ofl\n111\nWalkrr Good k W\n42\nQuebec Power \t\nIS\nWalker  Good  Pfd  \t\nsoy-\nNo Major Outlay Yet\nin Kootenay Belle's\nOption Nearby Claims\nSPOKANE. Wash.-No immediate major outlay is involved in con- :\nnec'.ion with Kootenay Belle's op- '\nlion to purchase the adjoining\nGclden Belle claims, Sheep Creek,!\nB.C., it is reported. The option |\ngives Kootenay Belle the right to\nexplore in return lor moderate*\nmonthly  payment*.\nKodtenay Belle gets the right to\npurchase outright in two years i\nfivm May 1, 1-940, with the total I\nconsideration depending on the\ntime of payment.\nWork in Low Level\nDrift Continues at\nYmir Consolidated\nSrOKANE, Wash-While work is\ncontinuing in the low level drift at\nYmir Consolidated, Ymir, the company reports no commercial ore\nbody has as yet been located. The\ndrift is being advanced eight feet\ndaily and is under thc productive\nzone in the levels above.\nR. C. McCorkell will visit the\nproperty to decide further development policy.\nHe said all wages and current\naccounts have been paid to date,\ninterest on thc debenture issue has\nbeen paid and sinking fund installment met in advance. The mill\nhas been closed since last August\nbut accumulated cash from revenue\nAvas sufficient to cover the cost of\nthe present program.\nnnd he dreamed of what might be\ndone in the latter property.\nHe was industrious and not afraid\nof work, a six-footer ot the type\nthat could mine, and he approached\nthe owner of the Midnight, requesting a lease.\nHis reputation for hard work secured it for him and he is today\nreaping rewards so *.*ich that thc\nold mine may go down in historv\nas one of the richest producers\nany section in British Columbia.\nRESOURCEFUL\nLacking sufficient capital to secure machinery or employ the necessary men, Lins and his son\nset about to explore and make safe\nIhe workings, which had remained\nidle for some time. It was not long\nbefore he recovered sufficient ordinary ore to enable him to finance\nthe undertaking and secure other\nhelp.\nHe did Just this, and values began\n\u2022o bring him returns that enabled\nhim to secure an old discarded\nauto engine, which he. as an expert mechanic soon had in working\norder and doing service at the mine.\nProspects began to look brighter\nand at the end of the year 1938\nLins had taken from the old mine a\ntotal of 265 tons of ore which gave\nsmelter returns of 991 ozs. and 92\nozs. silver.\nRICH STRIKE\nOre values grew richer and richer until on a day in October, 1938,\nlust as  Lins was leaving  for his\nhome, one of the men Employed in\n| the mint- who was drilling a hole in\nI order to place a \"shot,\" came rush-\n1 ing  from  the mine tunnel like a\nmadman, waving his hands and crying  aloud  to such  an  extent that\nLins, a quiet, easy-going chap, began to think the workman had gone\ninsane or that an accident had happened to some part of the workings\nSo rich was the ore uncovered in\nthis section that Lins Could hardly\nbelieve his eyes,  gold\nSweden 23.83, Switzerland at 22.43,\nYugoslavia 2.35N.\nArgentina official 29 77. free at\n23.55. Brazil official 6.05. free 5.10;\nMexico 6.75N.\nJapan 2349, Hong Kong 23.18,\nShanghai 6.50.\nRates in spot cables unless otherwise indicated. N\u2014Nominal.\n'Wall SI. \"War\nStocks\" Decline\nKEW YORK, March 17 (AP).\u2014\nPeace rumors continued to permeate\nthe Wall Street atmosphere yesterday and, while these had no actual\nbasis, many so-called \"war babies\"\nadded 1 to more than 2 points to\nFriday's losses.\nCanadian Pacific, Dome Mines\nand Hiram Walker dipped fractions\nwhile Lake Shore Mines came back\nas much.\nStocks edging into new bottom\nterritory for 1940 included U, S.\nSteel, Sporry, U. S. Rubber and\nWestern Union.\nProminent on the offside the\ngreater part of the time were Bethlehem Steel, Douglas Aircraft. Boeing, Glenn Martin, Curtiss-Wright,\nDow Chemical, Union Carbide, American Tobacco B and Loft.\nMontreal Stocks Ease\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, March 17 (CP\u00bb. -\nSpot: Butter, Que 27^\u201428.\nEggs,  Eastern  A-large 25.\nButter futures: March 27*i\u201428;\nNov. 29Mi.\nMining Man, Formerly\nof Trail, Dies\nKELLOGG. Idaho, March 17 (AP)\n\u2014AuguV. L. Larson, 67, Chief Engineer and Mechanical Superintendent of the Bunker Hill Smelter\nin Kellogg, died Saturday.\nHe cime to Kelbgg as Bunker\nHill chief in 1618 from Trail. BC,\nwhere he held a similar position\nwith the Ccnsolidatrd Mining k\nSmelting Company He leaves his\nwidow, and a daughter, Mrs. Win-\nans Converse of New York City\nMONTREAL, March 17 (CP). -\nThe stock market trend continued\neasier in late dealings yesterday,\nAlgoma Steel. Asbestos, Dominion\nBrtdge and Foundation gave up narrow fractions. Price Brothers and\nBathurst were slightly lower and\nBrazilian, B. C. Power A and Mont-\nprotruding j rCfll Power boarded minor looses.\n,. places \"from the\"quartz the size Moderate declines appeared for\n\u00ab,f oeas. Four sicks sent to the Canadian Car, Dominion Steel and\ncmelter gave returns of $12,000. Coal B, Hollinger.International Pe-\n'  Work   progressed  in  this  as  vet I trcleum, Canada Steamships prefer-\nMassey-Harns    and    Ogilvie\nVANCOUVER STOCK EXCHANCE\nMINES:\nUiK   Missouri\nBralorne\nBridge Riv Con .\nCariboo Gold\nFairview Amsl\nFederal   Gold\nGolcondB    \t\nGold   Ilelt   .\nGrnndview\nGrull   Wlhksne   .\nHedley Mascot ...\nHome Gold\nIndian  Mines\nInter   Coal\nIsland  Mount\nKoot   Belle\nI.ucky  Jim\nMetaline Metals\nMcGillivray\nNicola M k M\nNoble   Five\nPac Nickel\nPend   Oreille   .\nPilot   Gold\nPinneer Gold\nPnrter Idaho\nPremier Border\nPremier   Gold\nPrivateer\nQuatsino\nRed  Hawk   Gold\nReeves MacD\nRelief   Ar!\n\u25a0 Ileno Gold\nRufus   Arg\nSallv   Mines\nSalmon Gold\nSheep Creek\nSilbak Premier .\nSilver  Crest\nSurf   Inlet\nTavlCr limine\nVidette Cnld\nWellington\nWhitewater\nYmir Yank  Girl\nOIL'S:\nAmalgamated\nAncconda   \t\nBid\n09it\n10.90\n.OUi\n2 4.1\n,0H(\n,0O\u00bb,\n.OS\n.25\n.14\n.021;\n.40\n.004\n.01\n.30\n61\n.01S\n.06\n.03 *i\nni>j\nOB\nI.M\n(Kl'i\n2.18\n.om\n01\n1 21\n61\n,.;*,.\n:n\nOT,\nm\\\n.051,\nra\ni on\n100\non\u00bbi\nin\n024\n.01\ntin,\nnt\\\nno't\n.03 li\nAsk\n.10\n10 90\n.02\n2.VI\n.01')\n.01\n,01\n.16\n.47\n100\n.01'i\n175\n2 20\n112\nM'i\n1 32\n.63\nlilt\nr,\nin\n04\nI III\n11\n054\nIH*,\n05\n,C8\n' Ancln   Can\nI A  P Con\nAssociated\nBallac\nBrit   Dom\nI Brown Corp\nI Calgary  k  Edm\nCalmont\nI Cnmoil\nCommonwealth\nDalhousie   .\nExtension\nFirestone   Pete\nFoothills\n| Foundation Pete\nFour Star Pete\nFreehold Cnrp\nHlghwood Saiccc .\nHome\nMadison\nMar Jon\nMclloug Seg\nMcUod\nMerrurv\nMid-West   Pele\nMill   City\nModel\nMonarch Roy\nNational   Pete\nOkalta   com\nPrairie Roy\nI Roval   Can\nRoval Crest Pete\nRovalite\nSpooner\nSouthwest Pete\n* United\nVulcan\nWest  Flank\nINDUSTRIALS:\n| R C Packer!\nB (* Power A\n1 Brew k  Hist\nCan    Par\nCanilal   F.st\nCoast    Brrw\nGrower.   Wine\nNr, n   Prods\nPar  Covin\nI United   Diflt\nIWstmtr   Por   \t\n.87\n:.\u25a0>\n,o?\n.014\n.15\n197\n.334\n.274\n.264\nat\n234\n\u2022J\n10\n02\n13\n142\n.01\n.02S\n.104\n.03\n06\n.024\n,12\nl\u00abi\n200\n.35\n.244\n.064\n.75\n.114\n2.4.1\n.02^\n07\n05\nuntouched area, where many men\nhad dreams of a fortune, but Fate\ndecreed that 1.1ns was to reap the\nrich reward which has since resulted.\nGOLD  ON  8TEEL\nExploring the find which -was\nconsidered unusually rich. Lins and\nI his men found the ore growing\n| richer and richer, so rich in fact\nI that when steel was withdrawn\ni from a hole where powder was to\ndo its work, gold came out with thc\n* dr.11 ('eel.\nA shipment of ore from this area\nI of about 400 pounds gave  returns\nof over $32,000, and is continuing.\nMr. Lins, in addition to the royal-j\n:ies paid during operations was en-\n\\bled to acquire the mine outright.\n! having taken over 1100.000 from Ihe\nold mine which had been given up\n1 years ago as a \"dud \"\nChicago Wheat Rallies\nI to Close With Gains\nCHICAGO. March 17 (AP).\u2014Renewed selling based on European\npeace talk carried wheat prices\ndownward momentarily yesterday\nbut the market rallied quickly, scoring an advance of almost two cents\nfrom the early lows and closing with\na net gain of about a cent.\nI Wheat closed 4-4 higher than\nvesterdav. May $1014-102. July\no1)1,- '<: corn 4 lower to 4 higher.\nMav 55-4-4, July 564; oats 4\n! .wn.\nred,\nFlour.\nInternational Nickel  improved\nslightly.\nCalgary Oils Gain\nCALGARY, March 17 (CP) -\nFractional gains were well sprinkled through the list of oil issues\non Calgary St ck Exchange today.\nTrading again, however, wss mostly\nconfined to penny issues. Transfers\n11.250 shares.\nSunset gained 4 to 314: Prairie\nRoy 4 to 1*4; McDougall Segur\n4 to 11, and Extension 4 to 244.\nCommoil in an odd-lot sale added\n4 to 28.\nDenmark Bonds Drop\nNEW YORK, March 17 (AP). \u2014\nDenmark 44s dropped nearly 2\npoints on the bond market yesterday. A mn-up of 10-32d point in\none U. S. issue contrasted with\ndeclines running to around 3-32d.\nTha Classified Will Sell Itl\nHAVE   YOUR   ELECTRIC   POWER\nOUTLET   PLATES\nCHROME PLATED\nI..CM.  Electroplating\nLaurlti Bldg. 704  Nelion Ave.\n-<wK.*iiWHmiN*nf.w.*\u2122nw!*i)(Br^^\n06\n14>,\n1 11\n.17\n0.1\n4.1\n06\nI'i\n03'\n\"IM\nI 40\nI Vi\nI 7*1\nP IU\n111\nI 14\n.174\n(19\n34 00\n.48\n07 4\n52\n03 V,\n18 25\n5 2.1\n7 35\n150\n1 M\n1 li\n15 23\nReading  thc\nEvery  Day\nHELPS TO KEEP BOREDOM AWAY'\n' L******i**)****3gw[*^^\ntf'Q-lS\n PAGE   TIN \u25a0   ' , '\u25a0'\nyaaanaataeteorr*emlatWe*ra^^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELION, \u25a0.Cr-MONDAY MORNINQ, MARCH 11, 1940.-\nTODAT TIL\nWEDNESDAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 9:00\nINfflSHEABirrO\nWOMEN\nTha Supremo Performance ef the\nBrilliant Star of\n\"PYCMALION\".\n\\^Mj,\n'\u25a0\u25a0 r-ii\n, ESL1E HOWARD\nv*'       w  a09**\ninTjJSJTfi;\n,HGWO M*\u00bb***|\n11 is*,:\nNICHT\n5-J, 35\u00a3\nI   Plus CARTOON, COMEDY, POPULAR SCIENCE, NEWS\nSAVE TIME AND MONEY WITH THRIFTICKETS\n1935 CHEV\nMaeter De Luxe Coupe.    fiAnt\nBargain     *?*\u00bb'\u25a0\u00bb\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker St.      Limited      Phone 119\nPRICED LOW FOR QUICK SALE\n' 4 ROOM HOUSE\n2 lots, garden, fruit trees, concrete\nbasement, one block from itreet\ncar, reduced from $1400 to $1000,\non easy terms. Act quickly.\nH. E. DILL        532 Ward St.\nFACIALS MANICURES\nSHAMPOOS     PERMANENIS\nHaip,h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327 Johnstone Blk.\nSmythe's\nU-Nccd-a-Garqle\nCleara up all Sore ThroaU\nAt Smythe's\nPreicrlptlon  Drugglit\nPHONE 1\n1935 FORD\nVt  TON   LIGHT   DELIVERY\n8mart  unit\u2014Smart  price.\n$445\nGood  tlrei\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nOpp. Poit Office and Hume Hotel\nHave You Read the Classified?\nT. H. Waters & Co.\nLimited\nBullderi and Contractori\nWINDOW CLASS\nAny size ox weight. #e deliver.\nWINDOWS REGLAZED\nPhone 156 Box 322\nHOME   MADE\nChile Con Carne\nGRENFELL'S CAFE\nNEW HATS\nFor  the   Man,   now   In\n.$2.25, |3.50, $5.00\nGodfreys' Limited\nCOOL NIGHTS CALL  FOR\nCOMFORTERS\nHava Them Filter Cleaned\nQotulla, (fl&awhA,\nPhone 1042\nFINANCIAL SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly Savlngi Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nBox fll     Hlppenon Blk.     Ph. 197\nW. W. Powell\nCompany, Limited\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nLumber Lath Shingles\nWHOLESALE AND RETAIL\nTelephona 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nIt is ready for use 30 minutes after mixing with water.\nA 5 - lb. package covers approximately 250-300 sq. ff.\n5-1 b. package\n75c\nAlso ALATINT\nA washable water mixed wall finish for interiors.\nIn seven standard tints.\n5-lb. package        $1.00\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nEASTER CARDS\nEASTER CANDY\nEASTER CIFTS\nEASTER NOVELTIES\nEASTER PARTY\nDECORATIONS\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug. Co.\nPHONE 81 NELSON, B. C.\nHarvey Rink Wins\nTrail High Spiel;\nDodimead T'other\nTRAIL, B. C, March 17\u2014A rink\nskipped by Allan Harvey won the\nprimary event in the high school\nbonspiel Saturday morning. Harvey\ntook the competition by defeating\nBob Lepsoe's quartet 11-1 in the\nfinal. Allen Dodimead's four won\nthe  prizes   in   the secondary.\nResults were as follows:\nPrimary Competition:\nRound 1\u2014Robert Lepsoe 6, ATlan\nDodimead 2; Jim Kilburn 5, Pat\nArchibald 4; Don McDonald 7, Dave\nBalfour 3; Allan Harvey 6, Don\nTwaddle 3.\nSemi-final; Bob Lepsoe 7, Jim\nKilburn 5; Allan Harvey 13, Don\nMcDonal  5.\nFinal: Allan Harvey 11, Bob Lepsoe 1.\nSecondary competition:\nRound 1\u2014Allan Dodimead 6, Pat\nArchibald 4; Dave Balfour 7, Don\nTwaddle 4.\nSemi-final\u2014Allan Dodimead 10,\nDave Balfour 1; Don McDonald 6,\nJim Kilburn 2.\nFinal\u2014Allan Dodimead 8, Don\nMcDonald ff.\nFinalists in the primary received\nmedals. Members of the winning\nrink in the secondary were given\ntie.\nHEWS OF THE DAY\nC. C. F. Committee Rooms, Silica\nStreet. Phone 277.\nREFRIGERATION 8ERVICE. PH,\n666, F. H. Smith, 351 Baker Street\nH.   Winch   meeting   Eagle   Hall,\ntonight at 8 p.m.\nFor  your   Easter  permanent\nPhone 386 VENUS BEAUTY SALON\nMeet your frienda tonight at the\nOdd Feilows Partner Whist Drive\nand Dance.\nEnjoy the open road on i C. C, M.\nBicycle. We have modeli for girls,\nboyi and men, alio dynamo lets,\nbelli, etc. at HIPPERSON'S.\nI. 0. D. E, wool, n'jw available,\nRooms open Tuesday -vnd Saturday,\n3 to 4:30 p.m.\nGIRLS ATTENTION \u2014 Meeting\nat Mn. E. Kane'i, 311 Kerr Apts.,\n7:30 tonight, Nelson Cycle &. Outdoor Club.\nPersons desirous and willing to\nassist Mr. Esling's Committee nn\nElection Day. March 26, by providing cars, please phone Mr. McHardy or 95.\nHOT CROSS BUNS \u2014 Order by\nWednesday to be sure of having\nthem delivered for breakfast on\nGood Friday. Phone 258. CHOQUETTE BROS.\nPERMANENTS \u2014Croqulgnole Marcelling.  Hair Cutting. LOOK  YOUR\nBEST   FOR   EASTER.\nMake your appointment now,\nROSE   BEAUTY  PARLOR\u2014Ph. 317\nHAVE YOU MADE UP YOUR\nPARTY FOR THE D. 0. K. K.\nANNUAL EASTER BALL? Easter\nMonday, Civic Centre. Margaret\nGraham's Orchestra. You can get\nyour tickets now from M a c o\nCleaners.  Admission 50c.\nWith a Liberal Government in\npower, will West Kootenay continue\nIn opposition? Get in line with the\nGovernment and watcli West Kootenay prosper, One Canada, One\nI-ender, One Purpose. Voir fnr Donald MacDonald. Liberal Candidate.\nNow Is the time to have a new permanent and a fresh, shining coiffure.\nTne RILLING KOOLERWAVE,\nwhich li machineleis, leaves your\nhair soft and gleaming, Phone 96,\nTHELMA'S BEAUTY SHOPPE\nImperial Bank Bldg.\nSPECIAL  NOTICE  TO\nCAR OWNERS\nInquire about our new\nAuto   Insurance  Policy\nbefore you insure vour car\nRELIANCE AGENCIES  LTD.\nPhnne 530 Baker, Street\nat HOOD'S\nCHOCOLATE\nMARSHMALLOW CAKE\nand  HOT CROSS  BUNS\nYour Home Bakery\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Naber\nPhone 655 510 Kootenay\nRossland Man\nChops His Foot\nROSSLAND, B. C, March 17-\nHarry Doualat suffered a bad gash\nto his right foot, requiring five\nstitches, Friday. The accident nap-\npened while he was chopping wood.\nEsling Is Man of\nAction, Service\nSay Supporters\nC.   B.   Garland,  Stan\nPenney Speak Trail\nMeeting\nTRAIL, B. a, March 16\u2014\"It la a\nfine thing when a man receives re\nnewed confidence of the electors of\nsuch a great district as the district\nof Kootenay West,\" -said C. B. Gar\nland of Nelson, speaking in sup*\nport of W. K. Esling at a meeting in\nK. P. Hall Saturday night.\n\"AU of us,\" he said, \"are searching, in these difficult days, for men\nin whom we can put our confidence.\nIf we had 245 of known ability and\nintegrity, with a desire for service\nand rendering of service such as Mr.\nEsling has given for the past 15\nyears, this would indeed be a\nglorious country.\nNELSON  BEHIND HIM\n\"The City of Nelson,\" Mr. Garland went on, \"has given him a\ngreater majority on each successive\noccasion he has come before the\nelectors, and I assure you that on\nMarch 26 next he will receive a\ngreater majority than ever before.\"\nMr. Garland stated that Mr. Esling's popularity was based on his\nsplendid service to the people of the\nRiding.\nThe speaker reviewed efforts of\nthe Conservative Party and what it\nhad done and endeavored to do for\nthe country. He showed how the\nfarmers benefitted from the Farmer\nCreditors Arrangement Act, and by\nthe Marketing Act of 1934, which\nregulated the prices of natural products produced by the farmer so that\nhe could sell at a fair price in Provinces outside of the Province in\nwhich it was grown.\nFARMER BACKBONE\nWhile Trail people might wonder\nwhy he had stressed this particular\nlegislation of the Bennett Government, Mr. Garland emphasized the\nfact, which the Bennett Government had realized, \"that the farmer\nand the producer are the backbone\nof the country.\"\nMr. Garland reviewed the social\nlegislation of the Bennett Government, sadly relating how no attempt\nwas made by the King Government\nwhen it came into power in 1936, to\nbring it into force.\nIn concluding Mr, Garland pointed\nout that the only promise that Mr.\nEsling ever had made was that he\nwould continue to do what he had\ndone for' so many years, and that\nwas, to give the people the best\nthat he had.\nESLING MAN OF ACTION\nFlaying the Mackenzie King Government for promising plenty and\nGiving nothing, Stanley Penny of\nNelson said Mr. Esling was a man\nof action. He was an active supporter of social legislation. He likened Mr. Esling unto a \"David\"\nbattling \"Goliath\".\n\"There is nothing too great for\nhim to tackle,\" he said,\nMr. Penny dwelt at some length\non the manner in which Mr. Esling\nhad battled against the Performing Rights Society, and won. How\nhis consistent and insistent work in\nconnection with the Patents Act had\nresulted in the prices of radios in\nCanada being reduced 25 per cent\nand the price of tubes, 40 per cent;\nand how he had brought about the\nincrease in the tax rate levied on\nmoney taken out of Canada by\nAmerican film companies, from two\nto five per cent, meaning an annual\nincrease of $150,000 to the Canadian\nTreasury.\nPROVIDED MONEY\n\"Usually,\" Mr, Penny said, \"candidates promise to spend money for\na Constituency. Mr, Esling has done\nthe unusual thing by providing the\ncountry with more money,\"\nThe speaker reviewed Mr. Esling's success in obtaining pensions\nfor returned soldiers, widowed\nmothers and soldiers' dependents.\n\"No matter what part of Mr. Esling's record you look to, you find\nnothing but achievement,\" he said,\n\"What we might consider as a petty\nthing is not petty to Mr. Esling. He\ngives as much attention to the little things as he does to the big\nthings.\"\nDon't Bellyache if You Vote for\nCapitalism Winch Tells Traililes\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e March 16\u2014K people were satisfied with the preaent\nsystem, Harold Winch, B. C. leader\nof the Cooperative Commonwealth\nFederation, advised them to vote\nLiberal or Conaervitlve or \"for cap-\nltaliam,\" when he addressed a meeting in the Elks' Hall, Saturday\nnight.\n\"But when they give you what\nyou asked for, don't bellyache after,\" he cautioned.\n\"If you think you are entitled to\nopportunity and self-expression, to\nthe privilege of developing our rich\nnatural resources, support the\nC. C. F.\"\nClaiming the C. C. F. system was\nBased on numanlty, not profits, he\nsaid lt placed confidence ln the\ncpuntry and the people, and employed Christianity In theory and\npractice. He said it was a workers'\nparty, neither dominated from without nor betrayed from within.\nWORKERS PAID\nLittle could be done now that\nCanada was involved in war, the\nspeaker said, stressing the point tfiat\nhis party was strongly opposed to it.\nHe claimed that the workers were\nbeing called on to contribute life\nand limb for capltalljU' benefits. In\nthe last war it waa the workers who\npaid, fought and died.\nPointing out that the party's patriotism was more than mere words,\nhe aaid it would talk and fight to\nestablish In Canada the meaning of\n\"the flag which floats over us.\"\nHe said the only man ln a position to talk of patrotlsm wu one\nwho had fought-in the lait war or\nwas of military age In the present\none. Neither Mr. McGeer nor Mr.\nMaitland qualified.\nMI88 GUTTERIDGE 8PEAK8\nWhile the C. C. F. party was opposed to conscription, Miss Helen\nR. Gutteridge of Vancouver, said,\nIU guiding principles were to render economic assistance to the Empire in war She agreed the war\nmust be brought to a successful conclusion, but argued that no one had\na ly right to send men overseas before the real objectives oi the war\nwere made known. ,\nPointing out that the war was a\nfight for democracy, she said democracy was a most abused word of lhe\nEnglish language.\nEarlier in the evening a short\nC. C. F. meeting was held in the Colombo Hall.\nPanthers Take\nJuvenile Game;\nF.A.C. the (up\nFairview Juveniles, Champions\nof the Juvenile Hockey League,\nadded to their honors Saturday\nforenoon the Juvenile Cup, which\nthey retain from last year by virtue\nof taking the two-game total-goals\nseries from the Panthers, though\nthey required some of their margin\nfrom Friday's victory to turn the\nfeat. Saturday ended use of the\nArena ice except for 'gate' matches,\nthus making impossible extension\ncf the series to the normal \"two\nout of three\".\nPanthers Juveniles, after being on\nthe short side 5-2 at one stage of\nthe fast game, went ahead from\nmid-game to score seven out of the\nlast nine goals, to hold the F.A.C.'s\ndown to a 9-7 win. As the F.A.C.'s,\nhowever, took Friday's contest 7-2,\nthey took the series by 14-11.\nIn Saturday's 70 minute game the\nPanthers had the lead three times\nand F.A.C.'s twice. Mickey Prestley knocked in the first goal, to\nstart the Panthers, but Ev Kuhn\nequalized for F.A.C.'s, and Bob Peacock put them ahead. Mickey tied\nit up again, and then Hal Tapanila\nrestored F.A.C.'s lead, for a 3-2 first\nperiod score.\nF.A.C.'s continued their drive Into the second period, with George\nMilne and Ernie Defeo getting two\ngoals, to increase the F.A.C. margin to three counters.\nThen goals by Bud Emery, Jack\nArgyle, and Jack Young tied up\nthe game again, for a 5-5 score at\nthe end of the second.\nPanthers took their second lead\nof the game in the third period, on\nEmery's goal, but the F.A.C.'s got\nthe lead back when Defeo and\nMilne both scored again. Three\nfinal gcals by Emery gave the\nPanthers their third lead, and the\ngame by 9-7.\nEmery was a strong factor in the\nPanthers' win, getting five goals\nand assisting on one. Mickey Prestley had two goals, Young a goal\nand two assists, Argyle a goal, and\nJim Riesterer an assist. No fewer\nthan nine Fairviewites shared in\nIheir team's points. Mllne and Defeo each got two goals, and Kuhn,\nPeacock and Tapanila one each,\nwhile Art Matheson, George Ioanin,\nWally Matheson and Bud Smith\neach got an assist.\nOnly  five penalties  were given,\nfour of them in the last period.\nEmery, Don Gibbon and Argyle\neach did a penance fcr the Panthers, and Art Matheson did two for\nF.A.C.'s.\nJakie Mann was Referee, with\nFrank Christian Judge of Play, H.\nH. Currie Scorekeeper, and A. N.\nWlnlaw Timekeeper.\nAndrew Carlson of\nRossland at Rest\nROSSLAND,  B.   C,  March 17*-\nLast rites for Andrew Carlson, who\ndied at the Mater Misericordiae\nHospital Wednesday, were held\nfrom St. Andrew's United Church\nSaturday afternoon. Rev. W. M.\nCameron officiated at the church\nand graveside, and interment wa.s\nmade in the Mountain View Cenv-\ntery. Pallbearers were S. Hansen\nof Trail, and Lars Hilstad, George\nHolsater, Charles Benson, Peter\nLarsen, and \"Scotty\" Jamieson.\nEggi, Cardi, Egg Dyei\nNoveltiea.\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 4\u00ab0\nPhone 34\nChimney Fire Calls\nRossland Brigade\nROSSLAND, B, C, March 17-\nRossland firemen were called out\nat about 12:30 Sunday noon to the\nstore owned by Horatio Cherrington, to a small chimney fire. The\nfire had apparently burned itself\nout by the time the fire truck arrived, and no damage was done.\nJ* A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nBreakfast\nIS ALWAYS\nCOOD AT\nThe PERCOLATOR\n'33 Chevrolet\nMASTER 8EDAN\nA-l condition. Price reasonable.\nSKY CHIEF AUTO\n206 Baker St   SERVICE   Phone 122\nSHEEP CREEK CRIB\nTOURNEY IS SUCCESS\nSHEEP CREEK, B, C.-A crib\ntournament sponsored by the Catholics and their Pastor, Rev. F. Lambert, C.S.S.R., proved a great success. Ten tables were in play, bridge\nbeing played also. Crib was won\nby O. E, Austin and Don Ackert, the\nbridge being won by Mr. Helmer-\nson and Mr. Boyer. Lunch under\nthe con ven ers hip of Mr. J. Leahy\nwas served.\nJuvenile Hockey\nCIVIC ARENA\nTonight and Tuesday\nNelson vs. Lethbridge\n8. C. Champion!\nSouth Alberts Champlom\nAdmission \u2014 25c and 10c\nDoorc Open at 7:15. Faceoff at 800 sharp.\nSee How Your Nelson Boys Compare\nWith Prairie Talent.\nWe have\nTHREE CASH BUYS\nFOR HOUSES CL08E IN\nWhat have you lo offer?\nRELIANCE   ACENCIES   LTD.\nPHONE 630 BAKER 8T.\nVIC\nSEE\nGRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all  your nredi In  plumbing    repairs,   alteration!,    and\nInstallation!.\nPh. 8IS 301 Victoria 81.\nAnd at a Moderate Cost of Only\n,\u2022 Square\nC Foot\nRossland \"High\"\nLoses Twice to\nTrail Redwings\nROSSLAND, B. C, March 17-\nTrall Redwings arc showing a clean\npair ot heels lo the Rossland High\nSchool basketball teams these days,\npiling two more virtories to their\ncredit during the past week.\nAt Trail Wednesday night, the\nReds took Rossland 32-21. Members\nof the Rossland team were Frank\nCizzetti, Allison Martin, David\nWood, Alec Turner. Eugene Topliff, Eger Jensen, Jack Leea and\nGeorge Staudinger.\nFriday the Redwings came to\nRossland to play the senior Jilgh\nschool team, and won with a 34-18\nscore. The Rossland lineup Included Joe Bielli, Ira Page, Henry\nFourt, Hans Johnson, Don Camozii,\nNorman Gallie, John Clark, George\nHoyte, Jack Cox and Jim Douglas.\n1929 Oldsmobile\n8EDAN. New paint. All new tlrei.\nPerfect condition. \u2022\nQueen City Motors\nPh. 43      Limited      561 Joaephlna\nLambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nKootenay No-Odor\nDry Cleaning Co.\nPhone 128\nFOR PROMPT SERVICE\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nEAST TRAIL LOTS\nWrite or call for maps and price\nlists. Monthly payment plan.\nRobertson  Realty  Co.,  Ltd.\n347 Baker St\nEverything You\nNeed for\nSpring\nNow at\nEMORY'S\nNEW FORSYTH SHIR'\nIdeal for the dressy daya\nEaster and Early Spring\n$2.00,   $2.50,   ?3.<\ni*\\&\nWOOL-SILK\nNECKWEAR\nJust what you have been la\ning for New amart ahadea I\ndesigns. Wrinkle-leu.\n$1.00, $1.50\nEMORY*\n**\u25a0*\"\u25a0'        LIMITED \"\nDRIVE CAREFULLY\nOne third of the automobile\ndents are caused by apeedltij\nadded safety Injure wit\nT. D. ROSLINC\n3 Royal Bank Bldg,       Phon\n\"Insure with Rosling and Si\nDrink It at\nEvery Meal\nSLABWOOD\n4 feet, Cord .......\n3 cordl   \u201e\n12 Inch, load ..._\nPhon*  163 or 434R\nModel \"A\" Fo:\nROADSTER. A-1  ihape. He\nantl-freeze and 19-10 llcerv\nBARGAIN\nKootenay Motor\n(Nelion) Ltd. Phont\nThe RED SHIELI\nWAR AND HOME SERVICE CAMPAIC\nMARCH 11 TO 20. BE CENEROUSI\nHELP US TO HELP THEM\nOur task is to comfort and to save. Support t\nNelson District Campaign and aid the Salvati\nArmy in-its great work here at home and with t\nCanadians in war service.\nBE GENEROUS!\nCIVIC\nTONIGHT\nAnd Tueiday\nComplete at 7:00-8:34\nHOUSEKEEPER!\n!&* *\nJOAN\nIMIPIE\nBENNETT* MENJOl\n-ADDED HIT-\nKONGA\"-The Wild Stallion\nWith FRED STONE - ROCHELLE  HUDSON\nL-\nBeautify your home for Spring by having your rugs thoroughly\ncleaned now. We will be pleased to give you an estimate on\nthe cost of doing your job.\nKootenay No - Odor Cleaners\nPhone  128\nNelion, B. C.\nThe Ideal\n\"In-Between-Seasons\" FUE\nGALT STOVE COAL, per ton _. $9.C\nand\nFir and Tamarac Wood, 12-in., rick $3.(\nNELSON TRANSFE\nCompany, Limited\n35-PHONES-3\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_1940_03_18","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0407373","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"}]}}