{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0407385":{"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":"1940-02-19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0407385\/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":" W.{. \u25a0\nKimberley Carries Off 13 Out of\n24 Trophies in Ski Tourney\n' Page Three\n*,    VOLUME\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nrfiuvTivurAi-\nLIBRARY\nIfckotff)\n3^fiM\n*4mm\\f)!**?rr*\n353\nMany Points Curl for Putnam\nTrophy; McEwan Wins\nPage Two\nBRITI8H COLUMBIA, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, FEB. 19, 1940.\nNUMBER 260\nDIPLOMATS WAR OVER \"HELL-SHIP\" SEIZURE\nANGRY NAZIS\nOfficials, Papers\nBrand British as\n\"Law-Breakers\"\nBoarding of Prison Ship United Germany'as\nNo Other War Occurrence Declare Nazis;\nOld Slogan \"Gott Strafe England\" Heard\nly LOUIS P. LOCHNER \u2014 Anoclated Pren Staff Writer\nBERLIN, Feb! 18 (AP).\u2014Burning with indignation,\nGerman officials today promised to settle scores with Great\nBritain over the Altmark incident and said the Royal Navy's\nboarding of the prison ship In Norwegian waters had united\nGermany as no other occurrence of the war.\nThe slogan of 1914-18 \"Gott strafe England,\" was\nrepeated by German sjjokesmen who applied such epithets as\n\"criminals\" and \"law-break-?*'\ners\" to the British Government\nfor ordering the destroyer Cos-\ntack to seize more than 300\nBritish prisoners from the Alt-\nmark In neutral waters.\nOn\u00ab apokeaman said \"Only an ln-\nlolently dumb Englishman could\nhave Invented\" the theory, advanced In London, that a ship with war\nprisoners must be interned ii lt\nventures in the waters of a neutral\nnation. \"England herself in practice\nhu again and again shown she\napplies the very opposite principle,\" he said.\nRepeating claims that the Altmark\nwu unarmed, he said \"the Altmark\neue further shows what may be\nexpected by neutrals within reach\nof British naval forces.\" .   ,\n\" \"*jCfiviiirtflrals shoW'b* alive to\nthe tact England hai no respect\nwhatever for the law of nations or\nfor Uw comity of peoples when her\nInterests are affected, this spokesman said.\nAs for the German controversy\nwith Norway over the happening,\nauthorized sources said this was a\nmatter for the most careful study\nand negotiation.\nNo official Norwegian reply has\nbeen made to the German protest\ncharging Norway with inadequate\nprotection of the Altmark and demanding reparation.\nTht Oslo Government sent an\nofficial communication repeating\nthe official version of the incident\nwas released to the Norwegian\npress Saturday.\nGerman authorities pointed to\nKorway's observation to the effect\nthat she had to bow to Britain's\nsuperior force.\nOslo dispatches said the Altmark,\ngrounded during her dramatic conflict with the British destroyer, remained on the rocks and there were\nno signs of her getting free.\nAuthorities said that several\nmembers of the Altmark's crew\nwere In grave condition. Funeral\nservicer for the five killed Friday\nnight will be held tomorrow at\nGjeasingfjord.\nIn conjunction with comment on\nthe Altmark. authorities disclosed\nthe German Government told Norway Fe-b. 14 that the steamship\nDetford, Thomas Walton, and Care-\nfiglia could not have been sunk by\nGerman submarines In Norwegian\nwaters as the British charged.\nGermany claimed there were no\nGerman submarines ln Norway's\nwaters when the \u00abl\\ips went down\nlast December.\nDark hints olnvtnga on Britain\nwere published by the Nail pren.\n\"The crime in G)e\u00bbslngf]ord\npresents us with an entirely new\nstate of affairs ln war policy and\nwar technique, the effects ot\nwhich cannot now be forseen in\nthe slightest degree,\" raged Adolf\nHitler's own newspaper Voelki-\nscher Beobachter.\n\"If old idiots and tiny criminal\nminds were not at the helm in\nEngland, then they would know\nthat National Socialist Greater Ger-\nmany has the habit of striking back.\n\"They would know that the tragedy has filled the entire Germaa\npeople *with a single determination;\nWe will present an accounting!\"\nThe Lokal Anzeiger described the\nIncident as \"a declaration of war\non neutrals\"\nNorway's protest demanding thai\nBritain surrender the British seamen-prisoners removed from the\nAltmark was read with satisfaction\nhere.\nCutlasses Gleam, Bayonets Flash\nas British Tars Board Nazi Ship\nLONDON, Feb. 1\u00bb (CP)\u2014From\nBallon abawrd the destroyer Coi-\nMck, and pritontrs aboard the\nQarman ship Altmark who raach-\n\u2022d deck In tht early stages ef\ntht hand-to-hand battle Friday,\nnewsmen were abla tonight to\nfill In dttalli In tht vivid, yet\nmatter-of-fact Admiralty conv\nmunlquet which told tht story\nof another gnat chapter In British naval history.\nIt wu a story of expert manoeuvring In lce-filfed water which sent\nthe 12,000-ton prison-ship aground\nIn the dead end Fjord Then thrills\nsuch as one expects only in cinema\n\u2014grappling irons, used to bring thc\ndestroyer alongside and a boarding\nparty leaping en the deck of the\nAltmark, one officer making a neal\neight-toot jump.\nThen hand-to-hand fighting,\ngleaming cutlasses, flashing bay-\nonets. pistol shots, and surprised\nGerman crewmen Jumping over\nthe aide of their vessel, rushing\nacross icy stretches, shooting\nback at the British tars.\nAnd through the cold crisp air\ntht shouU of grim fighting men\nmingling wilh Ihe cheers of ragged\nprisoners, pouring cut on deck lo\nDre\"the the air of freedom again.\nCONDITIONS \"AWFUL\"\nPrisoners arriving In London tonight told of \"'awful\" living condition! beneath the battened batches\nof the  Nari  \"hell ship.\"\nA threat of further humiliation\nawaiting lhe men upon their arrival\nIn Germany caused them to attempt\nto mutiny, it was related.\nA young seaman from the A.ahlea,\na victim of the scuttled German\npocket battleship Admiral Graf\nSpee, said the attack  on  the Alt-\nmark Friday night by the British\ndestroyer Cossack Just saved the\nprisoners from a \"terrible fate.\"\nHe said-\n\"We were to have been landed\nat Hamburg on Saturday night\nand marched through the streets\non parade. We would have been\nJust like slaves dragged in procession for the crowds to Jeer al.\nThe Nazis threatened us with this\nseveral times. It was the thing\nwe dreaded mast of all from the\nmoment we were told.\"\nAnother Aslea seaman continued\nthe story:\n'Then in the last two days things\ngot so bad a few of us tried to stage\na mutiny and make a dash for il.\n\"We thought if the 300 ot us\ncould have got above decks wr\ncould easily have got control of\nthe ship The Germans soon go!\nwind of it, however, and that finished our chances of a breakaway\nWe wera put on nothing but bread\nand water for the last two days\nwe were aboard.\"\nAlbert Williams of London said\nhe wu imprisoned in a small compartment with 43 others.\n\"It was a filthy place with no\nfreih air.\" he said \"The Germain\nmade us as mtaerable as pcwlblr.\nWe lived mostly on black bread\nand lea without milk or sugar\"\nAll prisooers had unflattering\nwords for the Allmark's commander. Captain Dau.\n\"A pig and a roller,\" wai the\nway Captain A. H Br wn. Commanders of the HunLsman, one ol\nIhe Graf Spec's victims, described\nhim.\nSaid Capl. W B Starr, skipper\nof Ihe Talrca until that ship fell\nlo the Graf Spee: \"The rantaln of\nlhe Altmark wu a real Prussian\nand hated Hrllaln and the British\"\n10 SETTLE SCORES\nGERMANS FAIL TO\nPINCH OFF\nOUTPOST\nPARIS, Feb. IB (AP) .-German troops attempted again today to pinch oft a French outpost In the strategic Moselle\nRiver sector near Luxembourg,\nbut the High Command reported\nlaconically the effort \"failed\nentirely.\"\nFrench artillery shelled German laborers working on fortifications in an effort to interrupt\nconstruction.\nJ NAZI VESSELS\nACCOUNTED FOR\nBY ROYAL NAVY\nThree  Neutral Ships,\nOne British Are\nVictims\nGERMAN VESSEL\nMOREA CAPTURED\nBritish Wings Over Suez\nA firltlah scouting plane Is pictured flying over\nthe strategic Suez Canal, where a hugt army of\nAnzacs landed to reinforce the Allied army in the\nNear Eaat The Anzace army, reported to number\n30,000 troops, wu transported on the 10,000-mile\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP). -\nThree German vessels were accounted for during the weekend\nby the Royal navy, one driven\nashore on Norway's rugged coast,\na second scuttled by its crew \"in\nGerman fuhion.\" as the Admiralty put it and the third captured today by warships with an\nimportant cargo of manganese\naboard and taken to a West cowt\nport.\nThree neutral ships and one\nBritish were victims either of\nmlnet or torpedoes.\nFirst German vessel to be accounted for wat the 12,000-ton prison-ship the Altmark. boarded ny a\nparty from the destroyer Co'sack\nIn a Norwegian fjord, which liberated more than 300 British prisoners aboard\nWhile this was happening the\nGerman tanker Baldur passed by\noutside territorial waters, and an\nAdmiralty communique briefly said\nthat \"it was summoned to stop by\nthe destroyer Ivanhoe. Commander\nP. H. Hadow, Royal navy, and\nthereupon scuttled herself in German fashion.\"\nThe captured ship was the 3000-1\nIon   German   ship   Morea   whois U.,.,    Rlr-w-U    nf   '\u25a0stnck\ncrew, \"sick of waiting\" in a Spanish   nUge    DIOCK.   OT   OTOCK\nGoes to Bank of\nJourney with the greatest of secrecy and without\nthe loss of a single ship. The troops were landed at\nSuez, shown on map. Below the plane may be seen\na section of the canal. The monument is the Gebel-\nMariam memorial, commemorating the successful\ndefence of the canal against Turkish attacks in 1915.\nFresh Finnish Troops Thrown\nInto Path of Russian Machine\nBRITAIN TAKES\nOVER HOLDINGS\nOF U. S. STOCKS\nSpa\nport, decided to dash (or home\nwith their cargo of manganese ore,\nwas captured and brought into a\nWest coast harbor by a British\nwarship today.\nApparently no attempt was made\nby the seamen to scuttle the vessel. .Seven German officers and 23\nmen landed and were sent to an\nInternment camp.\nTwo Swedish vessels. \\he Liana,\n104*8 tons, and Canned. 152-fl tons,\nsank in the North Sea today. Further details were not known immediately.\nEngland\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP) .--Gr.eat\nBritain's drive for dollars to pay\nher war bills today brought a\ntreasury order reauiring British\nowners of 60 selectea United\nStates securities to turn them over\nto the Bank of England at current prices.'\nThe   order   will   make   the  bank\nThe 3656-ton British ship Baron! owners of a huge block of United\nAllsa went down in the North Sea i States stocks.  Total  value of  the\n-Saturday   after an  explosion.   Her. securities was not made known\ncaptain, G   R* Logan, and an Arab;\nfireman died in an open boat after]\nbeing  pulled   from  the  water  but \u25a0 toreian holdings\nBritons were required at the beginning  of   war   to  register   their\n34 other crew members were rescued txy a naval tarlcr which\nbrought them to an Eait coast port\nThe Netherlands freighter Ame-\nland. 4537 tons, struck a mine in i\nthe Norlh set and sank today. Her'\ncrew, several of them slightly Injured, was picked up by another\nNetherlands   merchantman,\nFire Destroys C. N. R.\nStores Building\nPORT MANN, B. C. Feb. IB (CP\n-Fire   today   destroyed   a  building\nThe treasury order said Its purpose wss \"to ensure the realization\nof securities in American markets\nshall be orderly and lhat lhe total\nvolume of sales from the United\nKingdom . . . should continue at\nabout the average volume of recent\nmonths.\"\nFurther orders \"may be made\nfrom time to time\" requiring the\ntransfer of other securities, lt was\n'\u2022'd ,. .\nThe 60 listed today were said to\nbe only a small proportion of all\nthe securitlet available from British\nNew Line of Resistance Strengthened as Lull\nin Red Offensive Takes Place; Russian\nBombers Again Active\nBy THOMAS F. HAWKINS\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nHELSINGFORS, Feb. 18 (AP).-Finland threw fresh troops into the\npath of the Russian Juggernaut op the Karelian Isthmus today, strengthening a new line of resistance as the Red army attempted lo consolidate\nrecent gains and struck again at areas*far behind the front with its air\narmadas.\nShrieking sirens, which sent residents of Helaingfors scurrying to\ncover twice during the day, signalled a renewal oaf widespread air raids\nin which Soviet bombers killed several score persons in Southern and\ncentral Finland Saturday, Twenty-four Russian planes were officially\nreported downed.\nPosters, appeared in the streets of\nIhe capital ordering all men belonging lo the ycond class ot the\nyears 1897 lo 1919\u2014heretofore exempt\u2014to report immediately for examinations to determine their fitness for military service\nThe Finnish High Commands\nnightly communique reported a les\nsening of the steady pressure pn\nthe West flank of the Mannerheim\nLine.\nThe necessity of bringing up\nfresh men, supplies and munitions\nwas believed by military men re-\nresponsible for the lull in the Russian offensive.\nNortheast of Lake Ladoga, however, the Finns said they had repelled Russian assaults,' capturing\nseveral strong points in counterattacks a-nd killing approximately\n570 of the enemy.\nMOSCOW, Feb. 19 (Mondly) \u25a0\n(AP). \u2014 Tha fortified area and\nvillage of Muola In the centra of\nthe Karelian Isthmus on the Mannerheim Line hava been occupied\nby the Rui-^an army and the\nenemy \"keeps retreating\", the Len.\nIngrad communique said today.\nNorway Fails in\nDuty as Neutral\nIs British Feeling\nDemand Explanations on Why Prisoners on\nAltmark Were Not Discovered in Search;\nNorway Protests British Violation\nGERMANY SENDS PROTEST TO NORWAY\nBy J.  F. SANDERSON  \u2014 Canadian  Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP Cable).\u2014A three-way diplomatic battle broke loose tonight over the Royal Navy's spectacular rescue of 300 to 400 British seamen who had been\nimprisoned for months in the stinking, verminous hold of\nthe \"Hell Ship\" Altmark, prison ship and auxiliary for Germany's scuttled pocket battleship, the Admiral Graf Spee.\nThe British public toasted the exploits of the cutlass-\nwielding boarding party from the destroyer Cossack. The men\nthey brought back home from***\nsaid Britain felt the Norwegian Government \"had failed in their duty\nas a neutral\" in the Altmark case.\nLord Halifax was declared to hava\nasked the Norwegian Minister, Erik\nColban:\n1. \"ln view of the known character of the Altmark.\" whether she\nwas searched and if so what waj\nfound?\n2. If Norwegian authorities had\nfound the British prisoners aboard\nwhat action would they have taken?\n3. Precisely why did Norway apj\nparently consider the Altmark as\nan innocent merchantman when\nshe had been used as a prison ship\nfor some time?\n4. If it was considered a merchantman, why were Norwegian warships with her?\nThese questions were asked because the Britsh Government considers the whole Atymark incident\nIrregular on Ihe part of Norway.\nLord Halifax asked Colban to\napply to his Government for answers. Meanwhile consideration will\nbe given to Norway's protest which\nIs a strictly legal complaint.\nNorwegian waters lingered in\nhospital beds or ate their first\nmeal of weeks in their homes.\nMeanwhile diplomatic leaders of three nations went into\naction with these results.\n1. Britain has demanded explanations from Norway on how it was\npossible that the presence of the\nprisoners was not discovered in the\nNorwegian search of the vessel, and\nsuggested the Altmark be interned.\n2. Norway protested to Britain\nigamst violation of 'her territorial\nwaters.\n3. Germany has protested to Norway for allowing the British Navy\nto intercept the Altmark.\nAs books of International Law\nwere thumbed in three capitals,\nthe public all over Britain rejoiced that thc Graf Spee prisoners are home safely after a hand-\nto-hand fight with guns and cutlasses reminiscent of the days of\nDrake and Nelson.\nThe oreign Office in a statement\nCouncil, Davies\nView Conditions\nal Power Plant\nPeru of the City of Nelson Power\nPlant and dam where necessary\nrepairs are to be made were seen\nby Mayor N. C. Stibbs. members of\nthe City Council, and E. Davies ot\nVictoria, Water Comptroller, when\nthe   p!\n,ptro]\nlant\nSaturday\nthey   visited\nmorning.\nWork on the repairs is to be completed by March 15 and work is\nwell under way.\nAmong other repairs that must\nbe made is the filling in of a large\nnumber of fissures in thc rocks in,\nlhe forebay The North side of the\nforebay rock wall will have to be\ncement lined lo prevent seepage\nof water beneath the rock wall to j\nPrisoners Released in Daring\nBoarding Attack by Britishers\nThe   prices   were\n-   sterling equivalents, at the current | bond of concrete joining the dam\nhousing all Ihe stores required by | officisl  exchange  rate,  of current i t0 the rocks at the entrance to the\nCanadian    Nalional   Railways    fnr i doll.-ar unces. forebay   must  be   taken   out   and | Salmenkalta'between iJike Vunsk\nIheir   British   Columbia   lines   and;    Typical prices were Allied Chemi-, replaced with freih concrete as the  and   Jaurapaan,\"   the   communique\ncaused damage estimated by Com- ] n]   Bnti   Dye   common,    \u00a343-17-4   present   material   Is   cracked   con-   declared,\n\"Our   troops   reached   the   River\nNO ROOM FOR SHIP\nWORKERS, VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, Feb IB (CP). - Ca-\nnadiaru and other residenti in the\nUnited Statei nr in other Prnvinc-rj\nihould lave themselves the ptppn.tr\nof coming to British Columbia In\nan effort to find work nn ihip\nconstruction here, Hon. G S. Pearson Mid, is employment offices\nhavt rotten of til trades needed\nfor tht work\nLeary on Sick Lilt\nVICTORIA. Feb Id (CP).-Three\nmember* of the Provincial cabinet\nwere reported convalescent today.!\nafter a siege of minor ailments no',\nregarded by Iheir nhysician' a<\nserious Premier Pattullo underwent\nt minor operation successfully\nHon. C S. Leary was confined tn\nhis home for a brief rest Hon John,\nHart mastered a mild attack of in-\nfluenta. between cabinet meetings'\non Tuesday and Friday.\npany officials at $100,000 I (\"$175 4R>; Du1 Pont de Nemoun com\nGasoline,    acetclyne    tank*    tnd : mons. \u00a345-^4-6\" '$182Mt: and Swift\nother lnflamtble materials stored in ' &     Company     common,     \u00a35-14-1\nthe 30 by  100  foot .shed  formed a1 ($22 82.\nblare which could be seen for miles      A    statement    from    a    reliable\nIn the surrounding country-side source said thst In no case do the\nsecurities form a large proportion\nof the total outstanding from any\none concern\nearly thU morning.\nSKe e^JL.\nWeal\nk\n\u00a3\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0aa\n^i\nMin.\nMax\nNEUSON ....-\t\n...    32\n37\nVictoria    \t\n.     43\n40\nVancouver\t\n....    4(1\n50\nKamloops   \t\n....    JI\n11\nPrince George \t\nII\nr\nEstevan  Point \t\n...   43\nM\nPrince Rupert .   ...   .\nM\n47\nLangara\t\n....   41\nII\nAllln         \t\n8\n27\nD'wson\t\n...     7*\n4\nSeattle        \t\n...     M\nN\nPortland             \t\n41\nVI\nSan Francisco  _\t\n...    37\nH\nM\nVI\nPenticton \t\n34\n\u2014\nVernon            \t\n.    33\n\u2014\nTrend Forks\t\nS3\n1!\nCranbrook\n..    31\nJI\n:*tgary          \t\n15\n10\nEdmonton         \t\n14\nn\nSwift Current\nIB\n.\".\n\u2022tfoote Jaw       \t\n\u00ab\n14\nPrince   Albert   \t\n21\n2.1\nWinnipeg              \t\nI*\n24\n'\u2014Below   xern.\nInterdict Placed on\nAngry Parishioners\nbv U.S. Archbishop\nCLEVELAND. Feb. IB (AP). -\nArchbishop Joseph Schrembs placed\nangrv parishioners of Holy Redeemer Catholic Church under tn\ninterdict today after they turned\nback W poll be men seeking to escort\na church official and new putor to\nthe Rectory. Seven men were arrested and charged with disturbing\nthe peace.\nUnder the Archbishop's order, the\nparis> members cannot receive the\nttrramenta of the church until they\nhave done pennance. The Interdict\nli the flril In the history of the\n1 Cleveland diocese.\nToday's Incident followed by 1\nweek similar action on the part of\nparishioners who oppose the ap-\npointment by Archbishop Schrembs\nnf Rev Vincent Canuo. ODM, to\nsucceed the late Rev. Martin Com-\npngno, OHM They seek tn have\nnamed Rev Louis 7,edde. ODM.\nFather Campagno's assistant for seven yetr*.\nsiderably,\nAn accumulttlon of sand and\ngravel that has washed dowr Into\nthe forebay will be removed, sn\nexcavation six or seven feet deep\nwill be made at the West end, and\nsluice fttt installed  to prevent\nThe'Russians claimed the capture\nof 313 defensive fortifications in\nfighting Saturday and Sunday.\nThe communique reported Red\nnrmy troops had occupied thc station of Somme, on the coastal railway five miles South of  Finland'\nfurther accumulation. A large po\u00bb j second City, Viborg. and the town :\nUon of the dam must be replaced , nf Johannes and the station nf Mak*\nwhtrt backwash from the water\ngoing over the dam has worked it\nloose. That part will be strength\nened with concrete.\nsalahtl on the coastal railway thi\nreaching the Western coast on the\nGulf   of  Finland  North   of   Bjorke\nIsland.\nGerman Freighter\nRostock Captured\nLONDON. Feb. 18 (CPL-The\nQtrmtn frtlgMtr Roitock, 2M2\ntons, has bttn captured end\nbrought Into port, It wai reported\nunofficially here tonight. The Rostock wat one of six German ves-\netlt which on Ftbrutry 13 were\nreported to have left Vigo, Spain,\nIn tn effort to retch Germany.\nNEW EQUIPMENT IS\nPUNNED FOR CNR.\nMONTREAL. Feb. 18 (CP) -\nTenderi for approximately |1.,VX).-\n000 worth of new equipmrni have\nbeen called for by Canadian Nn*\ntlonal Railways, tt was announced\ntonight. The company will place\norders for 100 ballast can. 25 bag\nAlderman Acquitted\nof War Act Charges\nCALGARY, Feb, 18 (CP).-Al-\nderman Patrick Lenihan waj acquitted of two charges under the\nWar Measures Act at Criminal\nCourt Saturday, After deliberating\ntwo and a half hours, the Jury of\nsix men found him not guilty of\nmaking statements at a meeting\nDec. 3, 1939, intended or likely to\ncause disaffection to his Majesty\nor prejudice recruiting or discipline of his Majeity'j forces.\nLONDON, Feb. IB (CP.-Cable)\n\u2014The Admiralty Saturday nignt\nissued a second communique enlarging on details given in a communique earlier in the day which\nfirst told of the daring release of\nBritish prisoners from the 12,000-\nton German ship.\nThis communique charged the\nAltmark was armed with \"two\npompoms and four machine-guns\"\nand disclosed German seamen\nopened fire from a hillock on\nshore which they reached by\ndashing across the ice after clambering over the ship's stern.\nThe naval account of the'boarding blamed the grounding of the\nAltmark largely on her efforts to\nbreak free from the ice of Norway'-s\nGjessingfjord despite British commands, and on an attempt to ram\nthe British destroyer Cossack as\nshe pulled alongside.\nThe Cossack answered by flinging grappling irons aboard the Alt-\nmark and boarding her.\n\"Firing then broke out on both\nsides and J. J. F. Smith, gunner in\ncharge of one of the boarding parties, was severely wounded,\" tht\ncommunique said.\nThe British boarding party\nclimbed up to the bridge and thrust\nthe Captain of We Altmark from\ncontrol nf the ship,\n\"The British prisoners were found\nlocked in shell rooms and store\nrooms and in an empty oil tank,\n\"Wile   theie  captivei  were  being   releaied   a   number   of   German armed guards, put on boa'di\nby  the  Graf 8pee,  escaped  over!\nthe itern of the ihip and  making 1\ntheir way acroii the  Ice  reached |\nan eminence on ihore from which\nthey opened fire with rifles.\n\"The fire was returned by tht\nBritish and two Germans who were\nscrambling across the ice to join\nthose alrradv on j.hnre were hit\n\"At the same time another German fell in the water amidst tha\nbroken ire. Two of the Cossack'l officers plunged overboard and saved\nhim\nDISCOVER  ARMS\n\"It was discovered that the Alt-\nmark was armed with two pom\npoms fanti-aircraft guns) and four\nmachine guns.\n\"One of the officers stated that\nshe had twice been visited while\nin Norwegian waters but had not\nbeen searched. This would explain\nthe fact that 300 British prisoner!\non board who were clamoring for\nrelease were not noticed.\"\nBritons, jubilant over the spectacular release of the Altmark't\nprisoners, pave those of them able\nto return to their homes a hero'i\nwelcome. In Liverpool, where several lived, the seamen were escorted to their bunting-draped\nhomes by cheering throngs.\nA total of 314 of the seamen wert\nadmitted to two Edinburgh hospitals after landing at Iz-ith and about\nhalf of them were released later.\nThey wore said to be ln \"pretty\nfair shape.\"\nBritain's complaint to Norway.\nlodged Saturday but only disposed today, added that the British Government felt justified In\n\"pressing\" for the Norwegian internment of thc Altmark.\nThe official attitude was said to\nbe that Britain had acted \"like a\npolicrman in entering a house without a warrant when he knows t\ncrime is being committed.\"\nLOGGER KILLED, ALBERNI\nVICTORIA, Feb IR (CP) W, J,\nJackson of Vancouver, at work nt\ncamp one r f the Albcrni-Paclfic\nLumber Company, near Alberni,\ndied today after injuries received\nwhen  he  was struck   by   a   falling\ngage ctn and  five  mail  and  ex-1 snag   in   logslng   operations,   the\npren cars.\nProvincial Police reported.\nOSLO. Feb 18 fAP)--The fate\nof the German prun ship Alt-\nmark, her more than 300 prisoners lost to a British boarding\nparty from the destroyer Cossack,\ntonight appeared lo depend on\nwhether she wss an armed vessel\nNorway was ex per ted to decide\nby that criterion whether to intern the Altmark as an armed\nvessel in war service or allow\nher to go free as an unarmed\ncommercial ship.\nBritish authorities charge she wa*\narmed with two pom-poms -multi\nbarrelled anti-aircraft gunsi and\nfour marhine gun* Germany rimmed the Altmark was unarmed\nThe ship's statu1; was further\nclouded bv unconfirmed reports\nshe flew the German service flat\nwhen she railed at Bergen lasl\nweek, thus being exempt from cus\nt< ms examination.\nTWO   MORE   DIE\nTwo more of the Altmark's crew\ndied of wounds inflicted by the\nBritish hnardi-ng party, raising to\nseven the number killed. Two\nothers were reported in grave condition,\nGjessingfjord reporti said the\nprison ship, gr- unded during her\ndrama tie encounter with the Cos-\nlark, still appeued firmly wedged\nwith ire forming rapidly ab* ut her,\nThe (Milv official statement to\nindicate Norway's attitude toward the ship's s'atui w - ':n a\nFiirerh last night by the f<'ie>gn\n1 nd r Secretary, .lens But!, who\nsaid foreign commercial vessels,\nand even warships, have tht\nru-tlil In ' iinv cent passage In\nneuti al lei rilonal waters when\nthrv submit to crrtain rules.\"\n .\n. : \u25a0     '!\nMOP   TWO\nMcEwen Rink of Nelson Wins Pulnam\nTrophy in \"Lillle Curling Bonspiel\"\n\u00bb' \" \u25a0\u2014      \u25a0 \u25a0'\nDefeats Rink Skipped\nby Andrew, Last\nYear Winner\nOVER 40 RINKS\nOF KOOTENAY\nA Nelaon rink skipped by J. J.\n(Mickey) MoBwen captured the\n'Frank Putnam Trophy In the \"Little\nBonspiel\" held annually by the Nelion Cutting Club for rlnki through\nthe' Kootenay-Boundary district.\nWell over 40 rinks cempeted in the\nbompiel which was held in Nelson\nover the weekend, beinp concluded\nexcept for the finals in the secondary and consolation events at\nmidnight Sunday.\nMcEwen's quartet, embracing\nhimself in the skip position. William Kline third, Ted Swanson second and W. S. Almstrom lead, completed Its sweep of the championship event in ihe final game with a\nNelson rink skipped by P. T. Andrews, who, captained last year's\nwinning team. Andrews' team was\ncompleted by J. G. McKay, Elias\nFisher and W. Moffatt.\nThis   was   the   third   year   this\n\u2022\u2022Little Bonspiel\" has been held, the\nT.  A.  Wallace  rink   winning   the\nPutnam Trophy in its first year of\n* competition.\nKinks skipped by T. R. Wilson\nend W. R. Dunwoody, both of Nelion, won their ways into the finals\nof the secondary event, the game to\nbe played next Sunday afternoon at\n1:19. The Wilson rink had to play\nllx consecutive games Sunday to\ngain the finals of this event.\nIn the consolation event which\nembraced those who were eliminated ia the first round of the secondary competition, the final game\nbetween the C. G. McMynn rink\nof Midway and the Sidney Haydon\nrink of \"Nelson was still polng on\nat midnight, McMynn holding a 3-1\nlead at the fourth end.\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\nPILLS 4\nNELION DAILY NIW8*. NILSON, B. C.-MONDAY MORNINQ, FIB. 11, 1940.\nFinnish Skater\nKilted\nDetailed results follow:\nPUTNAM CUP\nFirst round\u2014J, H. Allen, Nelioii,\nDeat F. Nadon, Creston; 0, 0. Dunn,\nGrand Forki, beat R. E. Horton,\nNelion*, R. Joyce, Creiton, beat T. A.\nWallace. Nelson; E. L. Vance, Nelson, beat F. Staplei, Creston; K.\nStephens, Rossland, beat J. B. Gray,\nNelson; J, H. Long, Nelaon, beat A.\nDickinson, Creston; P. T. Andrews,\nNelion, beat J. Campbell, Trail; A.\nR. Moore, Willow Point, bett G. K.\nBurns, NeUon.\nSecond round\u2014J. H. Allen, Nelson,\nbeat 0. C. Dunn, Grand Forks; O.\nW. Dill beat R. Joyce, Creiton; h\nL. Vance, Nelaon, beat R. Stephens,\nRossland; P. T. Andrews, Nelaon,\nbeat J. H. Long, Nelson; A. R. Moore.\nWillow Point, beat Mr. Levick,\nTrail; Martin Roblchaud, Nelson\nbeat H. Curtis, Creston; William\nMarr, Nelson, beat F. Buchan, Trail,\nC. H. Marshall, Nelson, beat Sam\nPatterson, Rossland; W. McLeary,\nTrail, beat Alfred Jeffs, Nelson;\nNorman Roecoe, Nelson, beat J. B\nStallwood, North Shore; Dr. H. H.\nMacKemle, Nelson, beat Sidney\nHaydon, Nelson; W. R. Dunwoody,\nNelson, beat F, D. Cummins, Nelson; John Teague, Nelion, beat T\nR. Wilson, Nelson; P. E. Pouii>. Nelson, beat Aid. A. G. Ritchie, Nel-\ns.n; H. W. Robertson, Nelson, beat\nRobert Foxall, Nelson; J. J. McEwen,\nNelson, beat John Dingwall, Nelson.\nThird round-G. W. Dill, Nelson, beat J. H. Allen, Nelson; P. t\nAndrews, Nelson, beat E. L. Vance,\nNelson; A. R. Moore, Willow Point,\nbeat Martin Roblchaud, Nelson;\nWilliam Marr, Nelson, beat C. H.\nMarshall, Nelson; W. McLeary, Trail,\nbeat Norm Roscoe, Nelson; W. R.\nDunwoody, Nelson, beat Dr. H. H.\nMacKenzie, Nelson; P. E. Poulin,\nNelson, beat John Teague, Nelson;\nJ. J. McEwen, Nelson, beat H. W.\nRobertson, Nelson.\nFourth round\u2014P. T. Andrews,\nNelson, beat G. W. Dill, Nelson; William Marr Nelson, beat A. R\nMoore, Willow Point; W. McLeary,\nTrail, beat W. R. Dunwoody, Nelson; J, J. McEwen, Nelson, beat P.\nE. Poulln,  Nelson.\nSemi-finals \u2014 P. T. Andrews, Nelson, beat William Marr, Nelson; J\nJ. McEwen, Nelson, beat W. McLeary, Trail.\nFinal\u2014J. J. McEwen. Nelson, beat\nP. T. Andrews, Nelson.\n8EC0NDARY\nFirst round: R. E. Horton, Nelson\nbeat F. Nadon, Rosslad; T. A. Wallace, Nelion, beat C. G, McMynn,\nMidway: J, B. Gray, Nelson, beat\nF. Staples, Creston; J. CampbaJl,\nTrail, beat A. Dickinson, Creston:\n\"Bud\" Greewood, Nelson, beat G.\nK. Burns, Nelson; H. Curtis, Creston,\nbeat Mr. Levick, Trail; F. Buchan,\n\\\\\nIf\nDr. David Cowen\nOf Spokane, Wash.\nWants to tell his Canadian friends here\nabout  his  new  radio program  evenings\nPeople and Places\nWith Captain Robin Flynn\nThis program tells you about the latest news from\nthe war front, and about the people and the places\nIn this news.\nCaptain Flynn went through the first World War in\nthe Imperial Forces; he has been a world traveller,\nand he is well qualified as a news analyst and\ncommentator.\nEvery Evening Monday Through Friday\n7:30 p.m., KGA, 1470 kc, Spokane.\nReported killed while leading\na patrol against the Russians ln\nthe Lake Ladoga lector, wai\nB1 r g e r Vasenlus, Finland'!\ngreatest speed skater, who placed second in both the 9000 and\n10,000 metre races at the last\nOlympic games. While not widely known over here, he is the\nfirst athlete who had attained a\nmeasure of International fame\nto have fallen defending hie\ncountry In the current conflict.\nTrail, beat Sam Patterson, Ron-\nland; Alfred Jeffs, Nelson, beat J.\nB. Stallwood, North Shore; F. D.\nCummins, Nelson, beat Sidney Haydon, Neleon; T. R. Wllion, Nelaon.\nbeat Aid. A. G. Ritchie. Nelaon.\nSecond l-ound: R. E. Horton, Nelaon\nbeat T. A. Wallace, Nelson; J. Campbell, Trail, beat J. B. Gray, Nelaon;\n\"Bud\" Greewood, Nelson, beat H.\nCurtis, Creston; Alfred Jeffs, Nelson, beat F. Buchan, Trail; T. R.\nWilson, Nelson, beat F. D. Cummlni,\nNelson; Robert Foxall, Nelson, beat\nJohn Dingwall, Nelson; 0. G, Dunn,\nGrand Forks, beat R. Joyce, Creiton; R. Stephens, Rossland, beat J. H.\nLong, Nelson.\nThird round: T. R. Wilson, beat\nRobert Foxall, Nelson; R. Stephens, Rossland, beat 0. G. Dunn,\nGrand Forks; J. H. Allen, Nelson,\nbeat E. L. Vance, Nelson: C. H. Marshall, Nelaon, beat Martin Robichaud, Nelson; Norman Roscoe, Nelson, beat Dr. H. H. MacKenzie, Nelson; H. W. Robertson, Nelson, beat\nJohn Teagte, Nelson; \"Bud\" Greenwood, Nelson, beat Alfred Jeffs,\nNelson; R. E. Horton, Nelson, beat\nJ. Campbell, Trail.\nFourth round: G. W. Dill, Nelson,\nbeat A. R. Moore, Willow Point; W.\nR. Dunwoody, Nelson, beat P. E.\nPoulln, Nelson; Norman Roscoe,\nNelson, beat H. W. Robertson, Nelson; J. H. Allen. Nelson, beat C. H.\nMarshall, Nelson; T. R. Wilson, Nelson, beat R. Stephens, Rossland;\n\"Bud\" Greenwood, Nelson, beat R.\nE. Horton, Nelson.\nFifth round: William Marr, Nelson, beat W. McLeary, Trail; W, R.\nDunwoody, Nelson, beat G. W. Dill,\nNelson; Norman Roecoe, Nelson, beat\nJ H. Allen, Nelson; T. R. Wilson.\nNelson beat \"Bud\" Greenwood, Nelson.\nSemi-finals: W. R. Dunwoody.\nNelson, beat William Marr, Nelson;\nT. R. Wilson, Nelson, beat Norman\nRoscoe, Nelson.\nFinal\u2014to be played next Sunday.\nCONSOLATION\nFirst round: F. Staples, Creston,\nbeat John Dingwall, Nelson; Don\nAldis, Salmo, beat F. Nadon. Creston; C. G. McMyn, Midway, beat A.\nDickinson, Creston; G. K. Burns,\nNelson, beat Mr, Levick, Trail.\nSecond round: F. Staplea, CriSs-\nton, beat Don Aldis, Salmo, C. G.\nMcMynn, Midway, beat G. K. Burns,\nNelson; Sam Patterson, Rossland,\nbeat Aid. A. G. Ritchie, Nelson; Sidney Haydon, Nelson, beat J. B. Stall-\nwood, Nelson.\nSemi-finals\u2014Sidney Haxdon. Nelson, beat Sam Patterson, Rossland.\nC, G. McMynn. Midway.\nFinal: Yet to come.\nRelief Wins 2nd\nStraight Hockey\nFrom Salmo learn\nSALMO, B. C, \u2014 Dutch Singer's\nRelief Hockey teem ihowed the\nSalmo Hockey Club Friday night\nat the Salmo rink their 8-3 win on\nTuesday at the Second Relief, wai\nno accident, by again defeating\nSalmo, thli time 9-0. In both gamei\n\"Pro\" Dingwall, the Relief's goalie,\nstopped many shots that seemed Impossible.\nThe first string of the Relief\nwent strong ln both gamei. Tueiday night Sadao marked four goals\nwhile Friday Balcom received three.\nJack Kelly was the outstanding\nplayer for Salmo In both gamei,\ngetting two of the three goab that\nSalmo scored Tuesday night.\nIn the third period Esche was\ngiven a penalty shot but failed to\nbeat Dingwall.\nWith exactly five minutei left\nIn the third period, E. Gibbon and\nNorman Elliott started swinging of\nflats, both receiving major penalties, extending for the rest ot the\ngame.\nIt was a fast game of hockey,\nconsidering the Ice wai very loft.\n8UMMARY\nFirst period \u2014 1 Second Relief,\nBergstrom, 8:55.\nPenalty \u2014 Sadao.\nSecond period 2 \u2014 Second Relief,\nBalcolm (Sadao) :28; 3 Second Relief, Balcolm (Sadao)  10:24.\nPenalty \u2014 Bergetrom.\nThird period \u2014 4 Second Relief,\nBalcolm, 2:11; 9 8econd Relief,\nRlckard  (Mills)   14:47.\nPenalties \u2014 Bonneville, E. Gibbon (9), Elliott (9).\nLineups were:\nRelief Arlington \u2014 Dingwall;\nSinger, Erickson, Gustation and\nElliott, defense; Bergstrom, Sadao,\nBalcolm, Hambly, Mills and Rick-\nard, forwarda.\nSalmo \u2014 Best, goal: Esche and E.\nGibbon, defeme; R. Gibbon, Hicks,\nBonneville, DeJong, Kelly and Bain\nforwarda.\nReferees \u2014 Richardson, MacCal-\nlum. Timekeeper \u2014 G. R. Framp-\nton. Scorer \u2014 L. G. Molr.\nYoung Rosslander\nCarl, aon  of Mr. and Mra.\nGeorge Schley of Rossland.\n\u2014Daily News Photo.\nj Fink's Sale |\nNazis Claim Nol\nBoundloLondon\nmen)!    HALT yearly clearance\nONLY A FEW\nMORE DAYS\nWESTMINSTER, England (CP>.-\nWest minster City Council developed a very ingenious lamp-shading system for blacked-out street\nlights, but it's so expensive other\nmunicipalities  are  not adopting  it.\nFarm Prices Musi\nGo Up-Manion\nBy CARL REINKE\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nREGINA, Feb. IB (CP)-Prkes\nof farm produce must be increased\nroughly 40 per cent to bring them\ninto line with other prices and\nprovide farmers with a just deal.\nConservative Leader Manion said\nhere Saturday.\n\"We must aim to put prices for\nthe farmers on a parity with\nother prices,\" he said as he outlined the Conservative Party's\nagricultural program \u2014 and its\nwheat policy in particular\u2014in a\nbroadcast to Saskatchewan.\nThe Conservative Leader ln an\nafternoon address at Moose Jaw,\ncentre of a district hard hit by\ndrought during the past decade,\nalso discussed farm problems and\nproposed a parliamentary study c*\ncrop insurance as a practical way\nof protecting the farmer from crop\nfailure. He attacked the Liberal\nGovernment for failure to protect\nthe wool producer.\nIn his broadcast from Regina, Dr.\nManion said one of the first steps\nin the practical marketing policy\nhit national government would take\nwould be an effort to arrange a\nwheat deal with Britain at a price\nfair to both parties.\n\"During the last war the price\nof wheat went to $3 a bushel,\" he\nsaid. 'For less than half of that\nprice, an agreement for the duration of the war might have been\nmade, satisfactory to the farmer\nand very profitable In the long\nrun to Great Britain,\"\n$73 Contributed\n111th Auxiliary\nSunday Concert\nConcert lovers contributed $73.37\nSunday night when the Women's\nAuxiliary to the 111th (Nelion)\nField Battery sponsored a program\nat the Civic Centre. Ven. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham, Chairman, stated the purpose wai to\nraise funds for soldiers' comforts,\nto assist their families and to \"do\nour bit\".\nIt was a splendid program\nthroughout. The selections were:\n\"Credo\" and \"Minuet\", Nelion Symphony Orchestra conducted by\nRosi Fleming; \"Dear Land ot\nHome\" and \"The Blue Danube\",\nSt. Paul's Boys' Choir, conducted\nby Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson; 'The Tall\nTrees\", and \"Llebestraum\", solos.\nMiss Annie Busk, accompanied by\nMrs. C. W. Tyler; \"Rhapsody in B\nMinor\" and \"Prelude\", piano solos,\nMrs. A. S. Aitken; \"0 Dry Those\nTears\", solo, W. J. Coleman, accompanied by F, E. Wheeler; \"I\nWonder\" and \"Cuddle Doon\", monologues, Miss Mae MacFarlane;\n\"Open the Gates of the Temple\"\nand \"Congo Lullaby\", 60los, Syd\nHorswill, accompanied by Mrs. Ferguson; \"Blue Bells of Sootland\"\nand \"Early One Morning\", songs,\nHappy Crew Quartctt, Miss Roberta Paterson, Miss Bcda Moen,\nTed Baker and Arthur Stringer,\naccompanied by Mrs. C. W. Tyler.\nMrs. Koski Dies\nin Ihe Hospital\nMrs. Hanna Koskl died ln her\nforty-eighth year at the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital Saturday\nmorning following an illness of a\nweek.\nMrs. Koskl was born ln Finland,\nand came to Canada 29 years ago,\narriving in Nelson 12 years later\nShe leaves a son. Voitto (Dempsey) Koski. of Nelson.\nMBaflT), Fab. II (APl-The'\nGerman Ntwi Agency taturday\nIssued a claim ta tho affect Germany no longer li bound to res\npoet tv London U-boat a0r\u00ab-\nment regarding tha Brltlih armed\nmerchantmen \u2014 moaning such\n\u25a0hips would bt subject to linking without warning.\nCommenting on the announce,\nment of Winston Churchill, Britain'! First Lord of tha Admiralty,\nthat evonr British commercial ship\nin the North Sea soon wpuld be\narmed,-the agency aaid.\n\"The German command of naval\nwarfare, above all U-boat com*\nmandera and German filers, thereby know that within a ihort tlaa**\nthey will no longer meet any Enc\nllah merchant ihip, large or small\nwhich Is not armed and thereby\nmade  Into a warship.\n\"The U-boat agreement, which\nEngland hai broken by arming Its\ncommercial ihlpi, permits U-boat\ncommanders to link enemy merchantmen in ao far ai they resist\nexamination.\n\"Since it la not to be assumed\nthat the English are mounting\ncannon on their merchantmen In\norder to shoot at seala, theie cafi-\nnon aerve to offer armed resistance to the German navy in\nsearching ships and thereby make\nthe stipulations of international\nlaw here concerned Inactive.\"\nThe London U-boat agreement,\nsigned by most world powen, stipulates no submarine shall attack a\nmerchant ihip without tint placing thc ship's crew, passengers and\npapers in a safe place. Lifeboats\nin the open tea are not considered\na \"lafe place.\"\nUrges Revision\nof Defence Acl\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 18 CP)-Cen-\nsorship regulations enforced by ihe\npresent government practically deprive Canadians of the right to\nopen their mouths, J. S. Woodj-\nworth, Cooperative Commonwealth\nFederation Leader, declared here\nSaturday.\nIn his opening address of the\ncurrent general election campaign, Mr. Woodsworth urged the\npeople of Canada to insist the\ncountry be run by parliament\nand not by orders-in-council.\nMr. Woodsworth demanded Immediate revision of the Defence of\nCanada Regulations, which, he said,\ndid away with the Magna Charta.\nHe claimed that Prime Minuter\nMackenzie King had said he was\nwilling to have their revision considered at the next session ot parliament but asked why the Prime\nMinister found it necessary to wait\nfor a session of Parliament,\nThe CCF. leader, member of\nparliament for Winnipeg North\nCentre, said that since the regulations were not enacted oy parliament but proclaimed by the Liberal\nGovernment, that same government\ncould revise them by proclamation\ntomorrow. The government should\nrevise them before the March 26\nelection.\nBuy Now \u2014 The Season's\nGreatest Bargains\n\u25a0   . PHONE\n73\nLADIES' WEAR\nBURNS     \u25a0\nBLOCK\narJ\nJames Wilkinson, Pioneer Nelson\nManufacturer, Passes al 12 Years\nA resident of Nelion for 40 yean,\nan 1 until hli retirement toon after\nthe war an active figure in thl\nbusiness of community life of Nelion, James H. Wilkinson died Sunday . at hli residence, 615 Cedar\nStreet He would have been 82\nyean of age in another month.\nBorn In Oxford County, Ontario,\nJamei Henry Wilkinson spent hit\nearly business life in Ingenoll.\nHe came direct to Nelion ln 1900,\nand in ocmpany.with A. W Nagle\nand J. W. Holmes founded tho Kootenay Wire Works, a local Industry\nthat ls still in exlitence. After a\nfew yean Mr. Holmes wai bought\nout by the amain ing partners, and\nMr. Wilkinson and Mr. Nagle conducted It Jointly until iome yean\nafter the war, when Mr. Wilkinson sold his Interest to Mr. Nagle,\nand retired from business.\nFor many yean Mr. Wilkimon\nand his firm were associated with\nthe Board of Trade, and he waa a\nB. C. PIONEER DIES\nVICTORIA, Feb. 18 (CP) .-Arthur\nEdward Waterhouse. pioneer and\nfirst Mayor of Port Alberni on the\nWest coast of Vancouver Island,\ndied here Saturday. He was 71.\nTrail Smoke Eaters Beat Gonzaga\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTE1S\nHume Hotel Nelson,B.C.\nGEORGE  BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS      EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME - K. Martin, Sam Patter-, R.   Brough.   Medicine   Hat;   J.   R.\nion. Robert Anderson. Rosslnnd; L.   Milne, Winnipeg.\n8.  Davidson.   N    Boyd,  Vancouver;'\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR  VANCOUVER HOME\" Nswly  r,\u201e0vltld  through-\nY%\u00ab*CCAaM-Z\u00ab-\u00ab     aUfjfeAjaal   out-   Phones and   elevator.\nUimerin Hotel A patterson. -....-\nWO Seymour 8t.       Vincouver, B. C.    Coleman, Alta., Proprietor.\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014FREIGHT LINES\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.\u2014Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nM. H. MclVOR. Prop.\nTroil\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nSPOKANE, Wash., Feb. 18 (CP).\n\u2014Trail Smoke Eaters spoiled Gonzaga University Bulldogs' last home\nstand of the West Kootenay Hockey\nLeague season tonight by defeating\nthe College team 4-2 before 3030\nfans,\nAb Cronie, Joe Benoit, Mike\nBuckna and George Appleton scored\nthe Smokie goals. George Safian\nand Jack Hunt were the Spokane\nmarksmen.\nTrail: Scodellaro; Buckna, Haight;\nCrpnie, Dame, Benoit. Subs: Johnston, Brennen, Appleton, Wade and\nMartel; Christensen.\nGonzaga; Burgess; Emery, Murphy; Lindsay, Pettigrew, Shumskl.\nSubs: Steeves, Polley, Thomson, Safian, Gardner, Hunt, Moffat.\nReferee:  Curley  Wheatley, Trail.\nFirst period: 1, Trail, Cronie\n(Dame)   10:08.\nPenalties: Hunt (major), Haight\n(major), Buckna, Dame.\nSecond period: 2, Gonzaga, Safian\n(Emery) 6:01; 3, Trail, Benou\n(Haight) 7:33; 4, Trail, Buckna\n(Brennen) 9:19: 5, Gonzaga, Hunt,\n(Gardner)   19:17,\nPenalties: Gardner 2, Murphy\n(misconduct), Johnston, Polley (major). Johnston (major), Buckna and\nMurphy.\nThird period: 8, Trail, Appleton\n(Martel)  19:00.\nPenalties: Haight\nWARDNER\nWARDNER, B. C.-G. Carlson\nvLsited  Cranbrook.\nMrs. Chester, of Coa! Creek is\nvisiting * her daughter, Mrs. H.\nThompson.\nW. Whiting, B. Hill, W. Reid. A.\nWilliams of Cranbrook were visitors\nhere,\nMiss Belle Maltmaji of Michel\nvisited  here.\nMiss Colligc, of Bull River visited\nhere.\nMrs. Dillon and Ernie, of Bull\nRiver visited here,\nMrs, Flodin, of Bull River, visited\nMrs.  Olson.\nA whist drive and dance was held\nhere Friday. Prizes were won by\nMrs. L. Flesberg and G. Moberg.\nMiss Louise Moberg has returned  from Elko.\nMrs. F. Thompson entertained at\ntea when guests were, Mrs, J. Law-\nson, Mrs. L. Flesberg, Mrs. C Hamrin, Mrs, G. Renick and Mrs. B.\nEmbree.\nF. Wellander of Jaffray visited\nhere.\nMrs. F. Anderson and Lenard\nwere visitors to Jaffray.\nMr. Olson of Jaffray visited P.\nKey an de way.\nA. Cairns of Canal Flats, visited\nhere.\nor\nChaos Says Wells\nNEW YORK, Feb. 18 (CP). -\nWorld collectivism or chaoa and de\ngeneration are pictured by H. G\nWells\u2014historia, noveltit and por-\ntrayer ol things to come\u2014aa the\nonly alternative! facing civilization\nafter the present war. In tact, the\nwar is merely \"a itupld conflict\nupon secondary issuee, which is delaying and preventing an over-due\nworld adjustment.\"\nMr. Wells\u2014now 74 yean old-\nhas his say in \"The New World\nOrder.\" a book to be released to\nmorrow by United Statei publish\ners following publication in Great\nBritain*.\nH. G. has many hard things to\nsay about the British \"ruling classes'\nand sees some good\u2014but not much\n\u2014in Nazi-ism and Fascism which\ni will undoubtedly give headline\n. writers a chance to play up the wav\n! he lays it on the English. But Wells'\nquarrel is not with any nation or\n; any class; It is with the whole soci.il\n, order. His conclusion Is that \"we\n; have to collectivize the world as one\nsystem with practically everyone\nI playing a reasonably satisfying part\nin it.\" And \"we have to devise a\ncollectivization lhat neither degrades\n| nor enslaves.\" For Wells, \"all roads\n; lead to socialism or social\nl dissolution.\"\n45 DAY LIMIT\nFEB. 17 to MAR. 2\nFrom    NELSON and return\nCoach \u2022Touriit     t Standard\n$55,25 $67.40 $79.55\n56.05 68.35 80.70\n59.70 72.90 86.05\n73.15    89.30 105.45\nTO\u2014\nTORONTO!\nOTTAWA | \"\nMONTREAL\nQUEBEC     -\nHALIFAX    -\n'Oood In Tourist Sleep**\u2122 on payment of regular berth faro,\ntdooil In Standard Sleepers on payment of regular berth fare\nSTOPOVERS ALLOWED AT ANY POINT WITHIN RETURN LIMIT\nChildren, r, years and under 12, hnlf fare. Correspondingly low\nfares (rom all Western stations, also to other points ln Eastern\nCaoada.\nALSO LOW FARES FROM\nEASTERN CANADA TO WE8TERN CANADA POINTS\nFull information from any Agent. W1-40F\n\\tjt,u\\ n \u00ab;   f.nfATKi    -FN A L'n     IVITIU 1\nVICOROUS GOVERNMENT     ! _ ^\u201e\u201e,      '   ,\nCOULD CET SOCIAL BOSWELL\nLEGISLATION\u2014MANION\nREGrNA, Feb, 18 (CP). - A\nvigorous, aggressive Government,\nprepared to give National leadership, could obtain the cooperation\nof the Provinces to introduce needed social legislation, without waiting to iron ojit all the constitutional obstacles in the British North\nAmerica Act, Conservative Leader\nManion said at a meeting here on\nSaturday  night.\nContinuing his Western campaign\ntour, he claimed the present Government had used the B N. A- Act\nas a pretext for its failure to institute unemployment insurance and\nother social services.\nIf substantial constitutional\nchanges wore recommended by the\nreport of thc Royal Commission on\nDominion-Provincial Relations however, hc would call a round-table\nconference of the leaders of all\nparties, both Federal and Provincial\n\"to discuss in a most amicable way\nthe recommended changes.\"\nBOSWELL, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs, C,\nChaub and H. Boyd viiited Mrs.\nBoyd, a patient in Creston Valley\nHospital. Mr. Boyd stayed over in\nCreston fcr a day.\nMrs. A. Mackie, who broke her\nleg some time ago, and went to\nhave part of the cast removed it\nCreston.\nMrs. Wyllya Van Koughnett hss\nreturned to Nelson, where she was\ncalled to see her son, Roy, who was\ninjured while logging near Pass-\nmore, He is a patient In Kootenay\nLake  General   Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs, P. L. Sullivan visited  Nebon.\n6LACKMORE IS NEW\nDEMOCRACY   NOMINEE\nLETHBRIDGE. Alta.. Feb. 18 -\n(CP) \u2014John H. Blackmore, recent\nj Social Credit leader in the House\n| of Common*, and three other per*\nj sons were selected as New Democracy nominees for Lethbridge constituency In the March 26 Dominion\ngeneral election.\nThe Social Credit Advisory Committee will meet here Feb. 28 to decide whether Mr. Blackmore, Kirk-\nham L, Lee of Cardston, P. C Plupps\nof CardMnn nr Joseph r Home of\nBarnwell will be the riding's candidate.\nINDEPENDENTS TO\nMEET IN ALBERTA\nEDMONTON. Feb. 18 (CP). -\nI More than 30 prospective lndepen-\n\u2022 dent candidates in the Alberta\n1 general election are to convene in\ni Hed Deer Feb. 22. lt was announced\nj here tonight. Campaign problems\nI and platform suggestions arc to be\ndiscussed.\nDIES WHEN MISTAKES\nCYANIDE FOR WATER\nREGINA, Fob. 18 (CP). - Mistaking a cyanide solution for drinking water brought death to Anton\nBenegert, 40-year-old Regina workman Saturday night.\nLONDON (CP). - A band of\n| Poles. 60 men nnd 20 women, strand-\n1 ed In England have gone back to\n! school as a first step to rahablll-\ni tation. They were crew members of\nI a Polish liner which returned from\na Soulh American cruise last Fall.\nsupporter of community objectives,\nbut hia greatejt community Inter-\neat waa ln connection with gardening, and he waa a director for many\nyears of the Nelson Agricultural\nand Industrial Society, and was one\nof the founders of tbe Nalaon Improvement Association, which later\nbecame the Horticultural Society.\nHe was also a patron of iport. During hla active yean he waa actively\nassociated with Trinity Church.\nSome 12 years ago Mr. Wilkinson suffered a stroke, and after\nthat he lqfl hla home but Infrequently.\nOn March 11, 1935, Mr. and Mra.\n\"Wilkinson celebrated their golden\nwedding.\nMr. Wilkinson la survived by hla\nwife; by two daughters, Mrs. J. H.\nLawrence and Mrs. Roy Sharp, both\nof Nelson; and by a granddaughter,\nDawn Sharp.\nThe funeral haa been set for\nTuesday.\nKIMBERLEY MAN\nDIES IN PLUNGE\nVICTORIA, Feb. IB (CP). -\nMatt Pelto, employed by the Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany at Kimberley, fell to\nhis death yesterday when he lost\nhis footing and plunged 150 feet\nwhile at work near Kimberley.\nHe leaves a widow and two children, Provincial Police were advised. Inquest will be held tomorrow, after Investigation of thc\nfatality.\nFront Captures\nClaimed by Nazis\nBERLIN. Feb. 18 (AP). - The\nGerman High Command today\nclaimed capture of \"numerous\" prisoners on the Western Front and said\none British plane hud been downed\nover the North Sea.\nThe communique said:\n\"In a shock troop engagement\nWest of Merrlg, numerous prisoners\nwere brought in.\n, \"As already specially announced,\n32 French, neutral and British ships\ntotalling 128,17-4 tons were sunk by\nGerman sea forces between February 11 and February 17.\n\"Again yesterday a Mesaerschmitt\n(German plane) and a Bristol Blenheim (British) fought over the North\nSea. The British plane was brought\ndown.\"\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP). - Thc\nAir Minister today acknowledged\none Royal Air Force plane failed\nto return from a scouting fllgnt\nand said \"it ts assumed\" that was\nthe plane which a German communique reported had been\ndowned in a North Sea engage\nment Saturday.\nRepublicans Urge\nCut in Spending\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (AP)-\nA 20-per cent reduction In spending\nby the United States Government\nwas suggested tonight by the Republican Party Program Committee in outlining a broad let of\nprinciples which may form a bails\nfor the party's platform In next\nNovember's presidential elections.\nAi to foreign policy, tha report jaid; \"We must keep a tight\nrein on our emotions and, with\nreason ln the driver's sea'., con-\nilder only what will molt surely\nprotect tha lecurity and welhrc\nof the American people and make\nus a helpful rather than Hindering factor ln the struggle for\nworld peace and world prosperity\nwhen the fever of the areaent\nconflict subsides. . . .\n\"There are special reasons, rooted in our domestic lituation, why\nwe should keep out of the present\nwar In Europe. But we shall kotp\ncut not by neutrality legislation\nhowever thorough-going, but only\nas the people wills that we keep\nout and as national leadership rei-\nolut-ely seeks to calm the temper\nand hold in balance the Judgment\nof the public mind. . . .\n\"Although for the time being it\nmay seem a futile gesture, the\nUnited States should reaffirm, as\nrccasions arise, its : jherenee to\nIhe Diinciplcs of decent International behavior, the maintenance\nand progressive development of International law and the sanctity of\ntreaties.\"\nSnow Falls, Alberta\nCALGARY, Feb. 18 (CP).'- A\nfresh fall of snow commencing overnight at many points and at 8 am\nin Calgary, blanketed Southern Alberta Sunday and was continuing\nSunday evening, causing fears thai\nsome highways might be blockeu\nby Monday morning.\nWith four inches of snow recorded\nIn Calgary at 8 pm, and three\nInches at Lethbridge. T. C. A. officials said continuance of the storm\nmight cause cancellation of Alberta\nAir Line schedules.\nROOSEVELT INSPECTS\nPANAMA CANAL ZONE\nBALBOA, Canal Zone, Feb. 18\nI (AP). \u2014 President Rooievelt made\nan inspection tour across the heavily fortified Panama Canal rone today and sailed into the Pacific\nOcean toward an undisclosed destination\nWOOD WORKING\nMILL WORK\nExpert workmanship at reasonable\nprices\nKootenay Sath & Door Works\nMl Ward 8t Opp. City Hall\nSTIFFNESS, SORENESS,\nPAINS from BRUISES,\ntUMPS, STRAINS, or\nCHEST COLDS.\nNo Rukbrnj- R.qvlr.J-\nJUST PAT ON SLOAN'S\n\u2022 COAL\n\u2022 WOOD\n\u2022 Phone 33\nTht Bait In Fuel if All Tlmi\nWest Transfer Co.\nEstablished in  1899\n--\u2014M^-.\n TODAY'S News Pictures\n-NKLSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C\u2014MONDAY MORNINO, Fll. 1\u00bb, 1M\u00bba*\n\"Dee\" Desjardins Is Queen of Kootenay Zone SM Tournament\nKimberley Skiers Carry\nOff Major Honors First\nKootenay Zone Ski Meet\nuniors Make Almost'\nClean Sweep in\nTheir Classes\nCROWD THRILLS TO\nEXPERT  JUMPING\nSKI TOURNAMENT STANDINQ\nlit 2nd 3rd\nKimberley\t\nNelaon     -r-\nRosaland     \t\nTrail  \u00ab\t\nS     4      3\n2      1      i\n-      2      2\nComely queens of the ski trails are shown here following the ceremony In the Eagle Hell Saturday night when Svea Pearson. Kimberley Ski\nQueen crowned \"Dee\" Desjardins ol Nelson Queen of the Kootenay zone ski tournament. On Miss Desjardins left are Naida Perrier and Edna\nSteed, her attendants. Miss Pearson is at her right.\nFirst Kootenay lone akl tournament staged over the weekend it\nNelson in one of the poorest skiing\nWinters ln many years in this district, overcame all the obstacles of\nrain, mist and heavy anow and became an outstanding success. And\nwith the tournament the first large\nscale ski migration of the district,\nsimilar to the much publicized ski\ntraina of East, was also a success.\nWhile Nelson Ski Club was host lor\nthe first zone tournament, Kimberley Ski Club stepped out as the first\nclub to organize their travelling on\na large scale, for they had a special\ncoach attached to the Canadian Pacific Railway trains for a party of\n35 to 40, many of them juniors, who\nwon their transportation in a recent\ntournament at Kimberley. Trail and\nRossland competitors and spectators\ntravelled by car and bus.\nKIMBERLEY'S DAY\nIt was Kimberley's tournament,\nfor when the trophies were awarded\nat the banquet closing the two-day\nski festival, the East Kootenay club\ncarried off 13 out of 24 trophies and\nprizes, including six of eight first\nplaces. Nelson skiers won six trophies and prizes, Rossland four and\nTrail one.\nBut Klmberley'i triumph was even\nmore imposing than the statistics\nrevealed, for club entrants won\nthree out of five major events and\nin the Junior events took all the\nfirsts, all the seconds and two of\nthe thirds.\nTo complete the story Kimberley\nskiers were the sufferers in the only\ntwo accidents of the tournament.\nRay Woodman, a Junior, suffered a\nsprained ankle when he essayed a\njump Sunday afternoon; and Miss\nHelen Meyers broke three bones in\nher right hand in a fall on the slalom course. Miss Meyers after her\nfall was sliding rapidly toward a\nlarge tree when Jack Buchanan of\nSpokane, formerly of Nelson, flung\nhimself in her path and stopped her.\nRace and slalom events were held\nat the Nelson Ski Club course at\nthe Nelson Golf and Country Club\nSaturday afternoon and Sunday\nmorning; while Jumping was staged\nat a new hill about two miles from\nNelson along the Ymir road. Heavy,\nwet snow handicapped skiers In all\nevents, but it had no effect on Hie\nkeen competition between the\ncompetitors.\nQUEEN 18 CROWNED\nA monster dance at the Eagle\nHall Saturday night was featured\nby the crowning of Miss \"Dee\" Desjardins of Nelson as Tournament Ski\nQueen, with Miss Svea Pearson,\nKimberley Ski Club Queen, officiating. At the banquet at the Cathedral Hall which terminated the\ntournament Queen \"Dee\" presented\ntrophies to winners.\nFor spectators the feature of the\ntournament was the Jumping, and\nthey thrilled to this spectacular sport\nas A and B Class Jumpers soared\nin succession from the takeoff and\ndown the face of the steep hill.\nThere were many spills.\nLongest jump of the day was 132\nfeet, this being made by All Johansson of Kimberley. after he had\njumped 142 and 139 feet In competition. Best jumps in B Class were\nby Bill Anderson of Nelson and\nBjorne Edwards of Kimberley, each\n128 feet.\nThe hill was declared too dangerous for C Class Jumpers, and\ntheir event was cancelled, but three\nof them tried the Jump. The (irst\nwas Ray Woodman of Kimberley,\nwhose jump was short, causing him\nto spill badly, and injure himself.\nThe others were Frank Kennedy and\nJohnny Clark of Nelson, who made\nneat jumps of about 100 feet.\nBLACKBURN. Eng. (CP)- For\nthe third month in succession, a\nmiddle-aged man called at Blackburn Infirmary to leave a check\nThe first month the amount was\n\u00a313 10s IS59S5I, for the Mlowing\ntwo it was  \u00a350  l\u00bb222>\nJUMPING\nA Clus-\nAU Johansson, K\nDenny McKay, N\nTrygve Nora, R\nRoy MacKay, N ..\nArt Orodzski, N ..\nB Class-\nBill Anderson, N\nWes Psrker, R ....\nBjorne, Edwards,\nMorten Johnson,\nNels Matsoh, T ..\nVie DelPuppo, N\nBob Brown, N\t\nTOURNAMENT\nRESULTS\n1st 2nd Points\nJump Jump\n.. 142 139   122.83\n.. 130 128   118.24\n... 112 112   110.92\n  131 129   106.20\n.... 132 133   101.35\n.'. 118   128 141.36\n  110   101 133.28\nK 128   117 131.30\nR 110   119 126.32\n79 99,92\n95\n102   108\n102   108\n|h-^*yo\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb6\nMAY;\u00abQ?Q-,,1\nII B C Grocery BARGAINS\nOna Salt Today, Tueiday and Wedneiday\n193   Phonei   1*4\n25*\nMILK: Cherub,\nTall tint, 3 for.\nPORK A BEANS: Aylmer, tfgjt\nV oz. tlni, 2 tlni  *Jr\nSAUSAGES: Campfire,\nVa, tin \t\n22<\nCORN; Aylmer, Golden     *29*M\nBantam, 16 oz., 2 for m'aJr\nJEWEL SHORTENING:     ?->A\n1 Ib. cartoni, 2 for \u2022wS\\m\n1   large   RINSO;  2   LIFEBUOY\n80AP:\nAll for  _.\n30*\nTOMATO SOUP: Campbell's, 3 tins  25*\nCOCOMALT: l's. tin  53<\nFELS-NAPTHA SOAP: 3 bars  23*\nCRISCO: I Ib. tins  23*\nCREAM OF WHEAT: Pk*-*-; 23***>\nAa Advertised In McCall'a Magazine\n97.00\n97.00\nSENIOR SLALOMS\nMen's\u2014AU Johansson, Kimberley,\n3\u00ab.4, 32.5\u201468.9; Sam Warmington,\nKimberley, 37.8, 34.3-72.1; Trygve\nNora, Rossland, 41.2, 42.2\u201483.4; Nels\nMatson, Trail, 48.3, 42.7-91; Otto\nScribe, Kimberley, 4\u00ab.3, 47.2-93.5;\nTony StDenis, Trail, 48.2, 47.4-93.6;\nFred McKim, Kimberley, 48, 48.8-\n96.8; Bob Smith, Rossland, 51.9; 45.4\n\u201497.8; Fred Thompson, Rossland,\n517, 48.2\u201499.9; Ray Hunt, Nelson,\n50 6, 53\u2014103.6; Harold Fox, Rossland, 51.4, 52.3\u2014103.7; Bill Stiles,\nTrail, 50, 55\u2014105; Bob Brown, Nelson, 51.1, 77-128.1.\nOther competitors, eliminated on\nfirst run or disqualified\u2014Gilbert\nPage, Trail, 59.9; Paul Jones, Trail,\n56.1; George Page, Rossland, 65.8;\nBob Mulligan, Kimberley, 58.2; Dan\nMcKay, Nelson, 55.4; Jack Nicholson,\nTrail, 54.4; Morten Johnson, Rossland, 52.9; Ron Waters, Nelson, 66.7;\nPete Galpen, Kimberley, 88.\nLadies'\u2014Helen Sutherland, Kimberley, 37, 35.1\u201472.1; Elsa Johnson,\nTrail, 34.4, 42.7\u201477.1; Dee Desjardins, Nelson, 50, 32.5\u201482.5; Eileen\nMacDonald, Rossland, 37.2, 47.8\u201485;\nDorothy Van, Rossland, 47, 41-88;\nJean Wilson, Trail, 41, 51-92; Edna\nSteed, Nelson, 46.2, 53.2\u201498.4.\n\u25a0Others eliminated on first run or\ndisqualified\u2014Irene Cummings, Kimberley, 56.7; Joan Hudson, Trail,\n54.9; Ella Desjardins. Nelson, 49.1,\n48.2\u201497.3; Naida Perrier, Nelson,\n67.8.\nDOWNHILL   RACE\nLadies' downhill\u2014Dee Desjardins,\nNelson, 32.2; Eileen McDonald,\nRosBland, 40.3; Helen Sutherland,\nKimberley, 45.31; Eileen Berg, Rossland. 51,8; Elsa Johnson, Trail, 52.2;\nKay Nisbet, Nelson, 55; Ella Desjardins, Nelson, 59.3; Naida Perrier,\nNelson, 1:04.1; Irene Cummings,\nKimberley, 1:04.2; Jean Wilson,\nRossland, 1:06; 11, Joan Hudson,\nTrail, 1:07.6; Edna Steed, Nelson,\n1:10; Jean Paterson, Nelson, 1:11.4.\nJUNIOft EVENTS\nBoys' slalom\u2014George Chessham,\nKimberley, 36-37 4\u201473.4; Jack Collins. Kimberley. 36.1, 39.9\u201476; Terry\nGower, Kimberley, 39 8, 38-77.8:\nDonald Cook, Trail, 43, 39.6\u201482.6;\nJoe Francis, NeUon, 43, 43.5\u201485.5;\nNello Melatini, Trail. 51.4, 49 3\u2014\n100.7; Donald Brown, Nelson, 1:16.6,\n1:57.7-3:13.6.\nBoys' cross country race\u2014Clarence\nLittler, Kimberley. 5:47; Fred Kiles,\nKimberley, 5:54; Allan Deschamps,\nNelson. 6:04; Bill Watson, Kimberley, 6:46; Bob McDonald, Nelson,\n6:53.\nGirls' cross country race\u2014Phyllis\nCollins, Kimberley, 5:09; Isobel\nBentley, Kimberley, 6:26; Sigrid\nHolmgren, Nelson, 7:03; Irene Bentley, Kimberley, 7:06; Doreen Ambrose, Nelson, 7:32; Mary Singleton,\nNelson, 7:57.\nTOURNAMENT OFFICIALS\u2014\nOfficials for the tournament were:\nJunior slalom setters\u2014Sam Warmington,   Kimberley;    Dan   McKay,\nNelson.\nSenior ilalom letters\u2014Bob Green,\nKimberley; Lloyd Williams, Trail.\nTimers\u2014Phil Hoskins, Nelson; Bob\nSmith and Harry DeLong, Rossland.\nI    Starters\u2014J. G. M.^Lock and Mai-\ntin Varseveld.\nI    Judges of jumping\u2014Sam Warmington,   Kimberley;   Harry   Hulls,\n! Nelson.\nMeasuring\u2014Phil Hoskins, Ray\nHunt and Monte Montgomery,\nNelson.\n'We'll Come Back'\nSkiers Assert al\n(losing Banquet\nMiss Desjardins Given\nTrophy of Nelson\nClub\nThat the first Kootenay zone\ntournament\u2014staged at Nelson over\nthe weekend\u2014was a success to be\nindelibly recorded was the assertion\nof a series of speakers when the\nNelson Ski Club was host to skiers\not Trail, Rossland, Kimberley and\nNelson at a banquet at the Cathedral\nHall Sunday evenig. Martin Varseveld, President, was in the chair.\nFeature of the banquet was the\npresentation of trophies by Miss\n\"Dee\" Desjardins, Tournament\nQueen. The queen was herself a\nprizewinner, having won the\nladles' downhill race and placed\nthird ln the ladies' slalom; and in\naddition to these prizes she received\nthe seasonal award for the best lady\nskier of the Nelson Club, the second time she has won it.\nAnother highlight was the warm\ntribute paid to Danny McKay, Nelson, organizer of the tournament.\nHe was lauded by speakers of each\nof the communities represented for\nhis work.\nMany   were  the  pledges:   \"We'll\nbe back again\".\nSpeakers included Lloyd Williams,\nPresident, Miss Peggy McCallum,\nSecretary, and Tony StDenis, Past\nPresident, Trail Ski Club; Harold\nFox, President, and Harry DeLong,\nSecretary, Rossland Ski Club; Otto\nSkribe. President, and Bob Green,\nSecretary, Kimberley Ski Club; Pat\nFowler, Organizer and Secretary,\nSheep Creek Ski Club; Jack Buchanan; Miss Helen Meyers, Kimberley; Danhy McKay, Nelson; Sebastian Flegal, Kimberley; and each\nof the prizewinners.\nLONDON (CP) - White costs\nprovided by their thoughtful mistress identified two Scotty dogs loat\nin a London blackout. Trude and\nDopey, bolonging to Joan Kemp-\nWelch London actress, were found\nafter four hours' search.\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS snd ALTERATIONS\nB. C. Plumbing fir Heating Co.\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSunditrand Adding Machine!\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fisher Ltd.\n536 Ward St. Phona H\nSketched from ffoltllientl moid\nIMPROVED FORMULA\n-ALKALINE-SWEETENS\nTHI STOMACH\nPraises Bnckleij's Mixture for\nGRIPPY COUGHS\nAND COLDS\nRead what Mr. H. Hughes, Little Bras D'Or,\nN.S., hu to My about Buckiey'i Mixture:\n\"Soma weeks ago I had grippe and wai too\nlick to get up or take anything but cold water.\nI tried icveral remedies without any benefit.\nAt lait I tried Buckiey'i Mixture and after a\nfew dom could eat tomething and continued\nto improve every day. I cannot praise your\nMixture too much.\"\nWa hare thouiandi of limilar unsolicited\nteitimoniali on file, telling how quickly\nBuckUy's Miiture itopi the cough, lofteni\nphlegm, eatei breathing, clean the head, help!\nrid lufferen of coughs and coldi. Don'l\nexperiment. Buy Buckley'*.\nOVER 10 MILLION BOTTLES SOLDI\nRUCKLEY'C\nmm      MIXTURE       *tj\nBOSWELL WHIST CETS\n$7, CRESTON HOSPITAL\n1     BOSWELL.   B.C.-Mr    and   Mrs,\n| Kenneth  Wallace entertained  at a\n.progressive   whist   in   aid   of   the\nI Creston Hospital. Five tables weic\ni in play.\ni Prizes were won by Mr, and Mrs\njS. J. Cummings, Miss E. H-lirfay-\n; Smith. Eric Bambridge and J. Wil-\n1 son, Thc prizes were donated by\nMrs. J. Karpowich. The sum of\n$7.50 was realized for the hospital\nRossland Royals Beat Trail Sheiks\nby Overtime Penalty Toss lor Title\n\u2022Irene Ciiiimings. Knnberlry,\nvho entered thr ladies' slalom\nnd downhill events,\nSam Warmington. Kimberley. one of Kimbeiley's Irading skiers, who\nww .if con (I In Johansson in the men's slalom.\nPreviously   Get    Into\nOvertime Last\nMoment\nROSSLAND,   R.   C,   Feb    18\u2014A\ngame that paced even to the last\nsplit second, went into overtime,\nand hung on two penally ihoti\nthrown after the last whittle wn\nblown, kept Rossi and and Trail fans\nstanding up in sheer excitement as\nthe Rossland Rivals defeated the\nTrail Sheiks M-M. and won the\nWest Kootenay busk ft ball championship bv o tol-al-rmt-pf-twn garni\".*-.\ncunt of ft-5-M. The Sheiks heat\nthe Royal* Wednesday 34M.\nScore at half time was IR for\nRossland and 17 for the visitors\nI-atei with five seconds lo g\". the\nscore standing M-60, Al Simm of\nRouland Atpped in a field ball,\nlanding the play Into overtime\n\"Juit what you s\u00abe ln ihowi, but\nnever dream might come true\", said\nJot McDonell. Rouland coach, des-\ncrlblng   thc   grand   finale   of   the\ngame, th* gral.  and  penalty  sh^tsl\nwhich   brought   Rowland   into   the'\nlead. Six  seconds before the overtime perird closed, the Sheiks had\na  three-goal  lead,  the sore. 64-61. ;\nwhen Al Simm of Rossland capped j\na night nf superb performance by\nflipping in another field |cl). Tense \\\nwith excitement and clwe checking1\nhis man, Gino Pagnan grabbed\nSimm's arm. giving the Royals two\nfoul  throws.\nDIDN'T   KNOW   LAST\nPOINT  NEEDED\n\"Slmm thought we lu\u00abt needed\none more point,\" aaid McDon-jU.\n\"He set the ball down for i minute, and then made a perfect thro*.\nnot even touching the ho^ip. Bob\nCraig had his sweater over his eyes.\nhe Just daren't look. Then Simm,\nthinking the game was over, casually flipped the ball again, and it\nmust have rolled around thi' basket\n10 turtrs before it dr pped\nthrough'\"\nF-ach team played six men continuously Trail players were Rob\nKirby. 16. Dill Ktrarhsn. 2. Gum\nPagnan. 4; Nirh Tvirick. 4. Rill Tur-\nick. ?; and J Burrows. 2, Alec\nBremner and Bob Sambrrnk were\nstrlpt>ed, but were not called into\nplay\nThe Royal team wis manned by\nJack Neil. 8, Jack Rosa, 6, Ross\nSaundry. 4, Al Simm. 10; Ernie\nCarkner. 2. and Bb Scott. 5 Len\nWilson. Bob Martello. Craig Rosi\nand \"Slim\" Perronn were in uniform, but remained on the side-\nlinos\nGame official* wrre John Gidln-\nski. referee: Joe Balano, umpire.\nBrvin Matthews and Carl Railhe,\nsrorekeepers, and John Melville,\ntimakreper,\n*        \/\nWHAT\nCOMFORT!\nNo more eyeitrain (of Dodl\nHe'i found lhat a 100 wott\nEdiion Maida Lamp ll grand\n(or reading, ll glvei lott\noi light yet colli only 20**!.\nBetter Lifht...\nBetter Sifiht\nEDISON, MAZDA\nLamps\nMADI IN CANADA\nCANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC\nCO.\nLIMITID\nW! CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK Of\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS IN ALL SIZES\nNelson Electric Co.\nS74 Baker St. Phon* 260 Nelion. B.C.\n Mine Road.. A PAGE ABOUT KOOTENAYS \u2666\u2666 Modern Farm\nBuilding a Mine Road - Lemon (reek\n'Dozer Opens Road to Marmion & Maryland\nHow a road wu built through mountain foreit to the Marmion\nSt Maryland Mines, Lemon Creek, la demonstrated in the photos following\u2014Pictures courtesy G. P. Holm, Rossland,\n-\nTrail and Kaslo Cousins\nTrail-Rossland Member and Wife\nFarm and Family\nScenes From the\nKosiancic Farm,\nCrescent Valley\nA prize   cow at the Kosiancic\nBros, farm, Crescent Valley.\nDavid Goodenough of Kaslo, aged seven monthi when this picture\nwai taken, and his cousin, Eric John Simonson nf Trail, five years old,\nenjoy the Summer sun at the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. H. Goodenough of Kaslo.\nR. R. Burna, of Trail, M.L.A., for RosslamJ-Trall, and Mn, Burni.\n\u2014Dally Newa Photo.\nBucking through below the Black Prince Summit T. Potter il\ntt th* control!, A bulldozer li a powerful argument when dealing\nwith boulders.\nIntroduction fo British Columbia . .    Homeward Hound... Venison Steaks\nat Paterson to Come\nThe farm milkhouie. The youngster! with the tricycle are Hwya\nGraham and Johnny Kosiancic.\nErnie Kraft \"piloting\" a bulldozer, and moving substantial quan\ntitles of dirt, near Crusader Creek.\nAn Invitation to tourists, and an Introduction to British Columbia, is this stretch of road Northward from the Canadian customs port\nof Paterson. It leads from the International Boundary to Rossland,\nTrail and Kootenay-Boundary polnti.\nReady to itart for their homes In Nelson, tha deer they ihot on\nthe hills above Crawford Bay brought down to ihore, and J. J. McEwen, Ted Swenson and M. Montgomery. TJie deer was an eipeclally\nfine one.\nChristina Lab?\u2014Scenic Jewel of the Boundary\nThe road is open! From left to right: 0. P. Holm, Hager Renwick,\nErnie Kraft and W. Johnaon,\nMr. and Mn. Joe Koaianclc and family; and Mr. and Mrs. V. J.\nKosiancic and family.\n%\n1: :\ni\n, ^**.\nA Government crew gradei th* road and puts in culverts. Alex\nEwing of Slocan City, ln charge of the work, ls at the extreme right\nOne of the scenic Jewels of the Boundary, and     tlna   Lake,   pictured   above.   It   is   near   Grand\na Summer resort of growing popularity, is Chrii-      Forks.\nNew root house on the Kosiancic Bros, farm, above, Is 128 feel\nlong by 30 feet wide. Joe Kosiancic and ion are pictured at the upper\ndoorway,\nWatching the Soldiers Leave\nNew Customs Office at Paterson\nAt the bunkhouse of the Marmion 8a Maryland Mine*, Tiger Creek.\nThe group, left to right, Includes G. P. Holm, of Rosslnnd. Lloyd\nMcAdam of Trail. W. Johnson of Fcssland, M. R. M.ire and son Wilfred\nof Trail\nNew Barn at Rossland\nLeave it to the young fellows to find a point of vantage when anything is going on. These young fellows climbed on a fence at the\nC. P. R. station. Nelson, to see over the heads of the crowd when Ihe\n109th iTrail-Rossland) and lllth (NeUon) Field Batteries left the Kootenays shortly after mobilization. The 109th is now In England, and\nthe lllth Is at Edmonton.\n\"Come-a-ft i y i yippee-y ippceay \"\nNew Denver Is Looking Vp\nA 1939 addition to Federal Government buildings in the Kootenayi\nwai a new customs office at Paterson, Canadian port on the Trail-\nRossland-Northport-Spokane Highway,\nSalmo Builds Addition to School\n\u25a0\n\u25a0>.;f**       *~J*HI\n.\u2022\u00ab\u25a0>'         siWi*u\nI                       \"*'     a****>\nT \u25a0 - i . i          \u25a0*\n\u25a0\u25a0PM\nThe $2000 barn built hv Robert I'Ecluse. on Uie* Columbia Kootenay Road, one of Rowland! larger 1939 buildings.-Photo courtesy\nRoasland Miner.\nAlong thc main itreet of New Denver, a Slocan town that is looking to the future wilh grealer hopes as a result of recent mining\nactivity, headlined by deep development of the Molly Hughes mine.\nNew Denver and District subscribed $19,000 lo Canada'! War Loan.\nIncreasing school population nt Salmo made necessary tn 1959 an\naddition to the school lo provide rooms for High School puplli and for\na library. Addition -10 feet long by 20 tret wide, pictured above, was\nbuilt.\u2014rhoto courtesy M. C. Donaldson.\nJoining In the parade when a rodeo crew mide a visit to Nelson\nwere A. S. (Pall Ailken, left well known In hockey circle*,\nand C. F McHardy, nglii, bueinosi man. One of the rodeo crew behind leads a number of hones.\u2014Photo by John de Jong.\n --\n\u2022\u2014\"\"\n\u25a0\n\t\n_\u2014,\u2014_\nmma\n-NELSON DAILY NEWI, NELSON. B.C.-MONDAY MORNINQ. FEB. U, 1940.-\n'RECISE ROMANS RESPONSIBLE FEBRUARY HIT AND MISS 29s\nR. Andrew\nfor\nGOOD SHOES\ni. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in  Footfashion\nest Coffee in\nondon, B.C. (lub\nBy HAROLD FAIR\nONDON, Feb. 18 (CP)-Any\nladian soldier will proclaim that\nabout the best cup of coffee\nUjndon can be obtained in the\n;ish   Columbia    Services   Club.\nunless you're a soldier, there\not much chance of enjoying the\n>v made from Indian coffee.\nPirst all-Canadian canteen and\nj-spitality centre, it was estab-\nshed by W. A. McAdam, Brit-\nh Columbia  Agent-General,  in\ne to welcome the first mem*\nirs of the C.A.S.F. on leave. It\nstaffed by voluntary workers\ncm the Canadian Women's Club\nider direction of Mrs. E. C. Mc-\neod, wife of the London man-\nr of a Canadian bank,\nrom its December opening until\n.-January, the canteen served\n1 meals, all at rock-bottom\n:es. The big rush came during\n\u25a0islmas leave and 5023 meals\n'6 provided from Dec. 22 to\n.9.\nlrcady there is an institution\nthe canteen\u2014\"Mother Towers\"\n.he troops call the superintend-\nMrs, A. N. P. Towers\u2014a jolly\nttish woman appointed by the\nI.C.A. If a lad suffers from a\ni, she has a drawer full of\nledics. If he's a bit homesick, she\nduces a big mug of coffee and\ns to cheer him.\nMcAdam obtained his gov-\nment's permission to equip 2000\nare feet of floor space in Brit-\nColumbia house for use of Brit-\nColumbians and other Canadian\n)ps. Facilities include an offic-\nlounge and a card room, a rec-\ntion rcom for N.C.O.'s and men.\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M.J. VIGNEUX\nSPRING DRESSES\new   shipment   of   Halt   Size\n'omen's Dresses. 18'j to 24',i.\niiik d. ^ctMoihsAL\nik Blk.\nPhone 970\njotenay Valley Dairy\nQUART OF MILK A DAY\nFOR EACH CHILD\n. PINT OF MILK A DAY\nFOR  EACH   ADULT\n\u2666 \u2666\u00bb*+--\u2666\u2666\u2666-.+\u2014\u2666\u2022\u00bb-\u2666-\nNEW   SPRING   PRINT\n\u2022++\nHOUSEFROCKS\nAll sizes.\n3ETTY ANN SHOP\n.Capitol Theatre       Phone 10-17 i end visitors ln Nelson\n\u2022 Friday afternoon Mrs. William\nTaylor and Mrs. R. W. Dawson\nwere joint hostesses at a smart tea\nat the home on Hoover Street ol\nthe latter. Honors at thc lace-cov\nered table, centred by a bouquet of\nSpring blossoms in various shades,\nwere divided between Mrs* W. R.\nGrubbe and Mrs. George Horsteau\nMrs. D. StDenis Invited the guests\nto the team room. Others assisting\nas serviteurs included Mrs. H. R.\nTownsend, Mrs. A. T. Godfrey, Mrs.\nJ. 13. Stark, Mrs. Harold Lakes, Mrs.\nC. H. Hamilton, Mrs, Horace Whil-\naker and Mrs. A. E. Cobus. The invited guests inclxled Mrs. N. R.\nJennejohn, Mrs. Jack McDonald,\nMrs. T. Johnstone, Mrs. Sydney A.\nMaddocks, Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon,\nMrs. M. J. Vigneux, Mrs. Charles\nKclman, Mrs. Wilfrid Laishley, Mrs.\nJ. R. McLennan, Mrs. Reginald\nStratton, Mrs. L. M. Varner, Mis\nRoy Temple, Mrs. G. A. C. Wallcy.\nMrs. P. F. Payne, Mrs. H. L. McBride, Mrs. Paul Lincoln, Mrs. V. C.\nOwen, Mrs. A. McD. Noxon, Mrs.\nS. P. McMordie, Mrs. J. McDonald,\nSr., Mrs. W. A. Nisbet, Miss Kay\nNisbet, Mrs. R. A. Peebles. Mrs.\nJames McGregor, Mrs. Donald Mcleod, Mrs. Lawrence McPhail, Mrs.\nE. A. Mann, Miss Mary Madden,\nMrs. T D. Rosling. Mrs. S. T. Oldham, Mrs. E. C. Wragge, Mrs. W. J.\nWaters. Mrs. I. G. Nelson, Mrs. D.\nTye, Mrs. Robert Watson, Mrs. H.\nM. Whimster, Mrs. Schwengers,\nMrs. G. Wallach, Mrs. W. O. Rose,\nMrs. W J. Sturgeon, Mrs. L. V.\nRogers. Mrs. E, S. Planta, Mrs. Main\nW. Purser, Mrs. Bruce Sutherland,\nMrs. N. Murphy, Mrs' N. E. Morrison, Mrs. P. G. Morey, Mrs. T. J.\nMontgomery, Mrs. Mona Meagher,\nMiss Frances Lincoln, Mrs. P. C.\nRichards. Miss Connie Smith, Mrs.\nHume Lethbridge, Mrs. Gray Lawrence, Mrs. J. G. M. Lock, Mrs. R.\nA. Lees. Mrs. G. McKay, Mrs. C.\nW. Appleyard, Miss Cora Barrat,\nMrs. Bryan Barker, Mrs. Lee Bates,\nMrs. D. G. Beatty, Mrs. C. M. Bennett, Mrs. L. L. Boomer, Mrs. L. E.\nBorden, Mrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. L.\nH. Choquette, Mrs W. K. Clark, Mrs.\nA. J. Collinson. Mrs. L. A. Creech.\nMrs. Douglas Chamberlain, Mrs. D.\nCummins. Mrs. C. V. Gagnon, Mrs.\nO. G. Gallaher, Mrs. T. H. Glover,\nMrs. W. T. Fotheringham, Mrs.\nJames Fraser, Mrs. Janet Coates,\nMrs. A. G. Cuthbert. Mrs G. K.\nBurns, Mrs. L. S. Bradley, Mrs. J. G.\nBennett. Mrs, S. Brown, Mrs. G.\nW. Davis. Mrs. Don Deacon, Mrs.\nA. J. Dunnett, Miss Doreen Dunnett, Mrs. E. P. Dawson, Mrs. E.\nE L. Dewdney, Mrs. Reginald Dill,\nMrs. A. W. Davis. Mrs. W. W. Ferguson, Mrs. Vincent Fink, Mrs. J. P.\nFink, Mrs. George Fleury, Mrs. A.\nW. Idiens, Miss Mildred Irvine, Mrs.\nJ. Huxtable, Mrs. G. A. Hunter,\nMrs. C. R. Hickman, Miss Connie\nHickman, Mrs. Harry Harrison. Mrs.\nA. T. Horswill, Mrs. J. G. Holmes,\nMrs. J A. Gilker, Miss Jean Gilker,\nMrs. Jack Grey, Mrs. H B. Gore,\nMrs G. S. Godfrey, Mrs. Kerby\nGrenfell, Mrs. Fred H. Graham, Mrs\nJ B Gray, Mrs. W. K. Gunn. Miss\nHelen Douglas, Mrs. Harry Burn!,\nMiss Enid Etter. Miss Vera B. Eidt\nand Mrs. T. H. Bourque.\n\u2022 Walter Tattrie of the Relief\nArlington mine visited Nelson on\nSaturday.\n\u2022 Irwin Butcher of Winlaw visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. C. S Price of Procter\nspent Saturday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Earl Reed of\nErie visited the City Saturday.\nMr. and*Mrs. F. Crooks of the\nRelief Arlington mine were week-\n\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2014+\u2014\u2666\u2666\nSEND FLOWERS\nFor All Occasions\n\\Aac's Greenhouses\nelcphone Night and Day\u2014910\n\u2022+\u25a0\u2014\u00bb\u2022\u00bb-\u00bb\u2014ft\u2014\u2666\u2666\u00bb-+-\u2666*\u2666-++\nSPRING SUITS\n>w styles, tweeds and worsted\n\"ashion First Shop\nBaker St. Nelson, B. C.\n-\u2666\u2666\u2666-4\u2014\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2014++\u2014\u2666\u2666\u2666*+-\u2666\nG. A. Begg of Trail visited Nelson at thc weekend.\n\u2022 W. Kinahan of Trail visited the\nKinahan home, Silica Street, on the\nweekend.\n\u2022 A Rosten of the Relief Arlington mine, Erie, visited Nelson on\nSaturday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Linville,\nFairview, had as weekend guest\ntheir son. Richard Linville of thc\nGold  Belt mine.\n\u2022 Mrs G. P. Smuk of Creston\nvisited Nelson at the weekend.\n\u2022 A, Nelson of the Relief Arlington mine visited his family m\ntown on the weekend.\n\u2022 Captain H. McCarthy of Sunshine Ray visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Leonard Walton and infant daughter left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital yesterday for their\nhome 324 Nelson Avenue,\nFairview.\n\u2022 Col. E. Mallandaine of Creston\nvisited in  town.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. F. Peters, who has\nbeen a guest of Mr. and Mrs. H H\nCurrie, Baker Slreet, left Saturday for her home at Appledale.\n\u2022 It. F. Wilmot of Gray Creek\nshopped in the City.\n\u2022 F. Dewar, insurance man of\nSpokane, is a City visitor.\n\u2022 E, Davis of Victoria, Wal'r\nComptroller, was a weekend visitor\nm Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. A Ballantyne, 414\nSilica  Street, entertained  members\n;    j   '    j-     i \u2022        oi I \"' No. 4 Circle of SI. Paul's Churrr,\nUaays raSlUOrt OllOppc I Thursday, when those present were\nBaker St. Phono 874 I Mrs, E. J Ronton, Mrs David\n -,  'Laughton. Mrs. ODonnell, Mrs.  D\nD. McLean, Mrs. A, Woods, Mrs.\nG. B Russell, Mrs. Hart, Mrs. Smith,\nMrs. W. M. Myers. Mrs. H. Stewart\nand Mrs. Thomas McMillan.\n\u2022 Mrs. H. L. Butchard of New\nDenver visited Nelson at the\nweekend.\n\u2022 , Miss LUa Melby of Sheep\nCreek spent Saturday In town.\n\u2022 M. O, Burneskl of the Rellel\nArlington mine was a weekend City\nvisitor.\n\u2022 E. Barrington was ln town\nfrom the Relief Arllngtdn mine on\nSaturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. George Rcnnison of\nTrail has been the guest of Mrs.\nJohn C. Waldie, 319 Cedar Street,\nfor the past few days.\nStyling . . . \u2022\nShape the Hair to\nContour ol Head\nBy DONNA GRACE\nWoman's crowning glory can be a\nthing of beauty, and a luxuriant\ngrowth of hair will always be one\nof the most desirable beauty attributes. Poets are inspired by golden\nor raven tres-ses, and haid stylists\nrevel in the sheer joy of fashioning\nsuch hair.\nWhile we may admire a full,\nheavy growth, we must known Just\nwhen it reaches the too-much stage.\nHair, to be smart, must outline the\nnatural contour of the head; when\nthis symmetry is lost it means thinning, and shaping is then in order.\nDuring recent years some stylists\nwere a bit too eager to cut away\neverything but barely enough to do\nthe \"up\" styling. These smart styles\nwere flattering to some, but we believe the majority, especially the\nyounger set, looked more attrative\nwith natural growth.\nThere will be scientific shaping\nand some thinning done for the\ncoming season but no extremely\nshort haircuts. Mature women and\nall those with gray hair are inclined to wear the back hair very\nshort. With a few exceptions, it is\nbetter for them to have the hair\nup ott the neck, but this thinning\nand cutting must be done by an expert.\nThere should be no suggestion of\nshingling and when the hair is cutl\naway it must be done so a soft,\ngraceful wave is possible. All coarse\nhair presents a problem for any\nbut the expert stylist. He knows\njust how to do this smart shaping so\nthe ends may be trained to fit close\nto the back and never show a tendency to bristle out in straight,\ncoarse ends. Razors or sharp scissors are employed to shape deftly\nunderneath, leaving enough to make\na smooth wave at the hairline.\nHair shaped in this manner can\nbe arranged at home between visit*\nto the salon. But when the shaping\nis not correct it will be impossible\nto keep the neckline smart after the\nwave is combed out.\nWhen the head size Is Inclined to\nbe large, the long bob should not be\ncurled high. It -should be either\nworn straight or in flat, tractable\nwaves, with all the fulness quite\nlow.\nThe beauty of the long bob will\ndepend on the quality of the hair.\nEven though the line and styling are\ncorrect, so much of the hair is in\nevidence, it will always have to be\ngleaming and well brushed.\nWhen  hair is brushed  regularly.\nWHIST TO AID RED\nCROSS, SUNSHINE BAY\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C.-A progressive whist drive was held at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. W. Don-\nald-Bon to raise funds for the Red\nCross. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stevenson, Mrs. J. Sewell and A. Donaldson won prizes. Captain J. Ferguson\nwon a contest prize.\nDuring refreshments quiz questions were exchanged.\nDates. .>.\nDoes Modern Girl\nNeed Encouraging\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nMy helpful correspondent who\nwished me to write some words of\nencouragement to young gals who\nare afraid of matrimony should\nhave a look at thc letters that come\nto this department from the anxious\nyoung things who can't catch dates,\nor can't hold the interest of first\ndates, or can't get their regular\ndates up to the point of proposing.\nThe young gals I see and henr\nabout have little else on thcil\nminds than the lookout for dates\u2014\nwhich is the first beginning of the\nsearch for mates. And the oldte*\nones and those who can no longer\nqualify as young gals are just *r\navid for the sound and sight i|'\nthe prince on the charger.\n'Every one of these young gfals\nstarts out with the idea of dating\nsome big, bright football star with\na letter on his sweater and a\nswagger commensurate with his,\nstardom. They soon compromise and\naccept a date with anything that\nwears pants, so long as they ire\nlong pants.\nThe oldei gal who has marriage\non her mind dreams of a mate why\nI* healthy, wealthy, wise, to the\nmanor born and covered all over\nwith college degrees. But it doesn't\ntake her long to swap that dream\nfor a flesh and blood boy friend\nwho quit high school to go to wepk,\na boy friend who has just enough\neducation to get by and less money.\nWhile it may be true that the\ncarefree young things dread the\nexpense and care of a family and\ndeplore the domestic tragedies\naround them that are building up\nfor divorce, not one in a million\nhongs back from matrimony because of fear, or because somebody else has failed. Asking me, I\nsay that the average gal puts out\nher antennae at an early teen age,\npicks un whatever she can in the\nway of a dafe and later accents\nwhat's offered in the way of a\nmarriage prospect \u2014 accepts it and\nsays grace over it for a little while\nat least.\nIt's not my impression that thc\nmodern gal needs encouragement\nto go out and seek a mate, nor\nthat she needs any lectures on the\nsubject of marriage \u2014 best career\nfor a woman. Just let her catch a\nglimpse of a date and she's after it\u2014\nif you know what I mean.\nLeap Year Is Headache to Cupid\nas Well as Financial Interests\nThirty days hath September,\nApril, June and November,\nAll the rest have thirty-one\nExcept February alone, which\nHath but twenty-eight, in fine,\nTill Leap Year gives it twenty-\nnine.\nIt was Julius Caesar who thought\nup a calendar so cock-eyed that\nmillions of folks today must memorize such ditties to figure when\nthey'll get their next pay check.\nCaesar made February an undersized Dopey that is always getting\nout of step, and 1940 Is one of the\nyears in which it is out of step.\nSome people will get an added day\nof pay this month, but others\u2014those\nwho are paid by the month\u2014 will\nwork an extra day without pay.\n(February would jump Into the\n30-day clars if lhe revised calendar\nproposed by the World Calendar\nAssociation were adopted. The necessary extra day in Leap Year is\nfitted in after June 30 in the Association's Calendar, and is called\nLeap Year\u2014a universal holiday.\nHut February, as the second month\nin a quarter, would have 30 days,\nalong with all other months except\nJanuary, April, July and October,\nwhich are allotted 31,)\nAs it is now, on the putting-out\nside, a corporation on a weekly basis with a $10,000,000 annual payroll may have to set aside the extra $4(1,000 for Feb. 29.\nPerhaps folks should be glad to\nput un with February, even marvel\nthat the calendar is as orderly a\u00ab it\nis. Before Julius, time-keeping was\npretty haphazard.\nNOT ALWAYS THU8\nCaesar's astronomer, in 46 B. C,\nfound the solar year was 365Va days\nlong. So Caesar decreed that everv\nfourth year be 366 days long and\nthe rest 365. He wanted a year with\nBy The Associated Pren\n12 months\u2014Including one July, is\nnamed for himself\u2014but the number\n12 didn't divide evenly Into 365.\nSo he staggered the months.\nHe gave the odd monthi (January, March, July, September, and\nNovember) 31 days each, and the\neven montha 30. But that totalled\n3*86\u2014one too many. It was then that\nFebruary got the axe. He gave It\n29 days for normal years, 30 days\nin Leap Year.\nThat calendar went along nicely\nuntil Julius' nephew, Augustus,\ncame along and wanted to name a\nmonth for himself. He decided that\nhis month, August, should have as\nmany days as Julius'. So he borrowed that day from February,\nleaving it 28 In normal years, so he\ncould hike August up to 31 days.\nThen to prevent three 31-day\nmonths from falling In a row, he\nchanged September and November\nto 30-day months, October and December to 31 days,\nWELL, NOT EXACTLY\nThus the calendar stands today\u2014\nexcept that Leap Year does not actually fall every four years. In the\n16th century the more precise astronomers of Pope Gregory XIII\nfound that the earth made its normal journey around the sun 11\nminutes and 14 seconds faster than\n3651\/4 days.\nThis meant that the universal\n1 clock was losing three days in\nevery 400 years. Gregory promptly\ndropped 10 days from the calendar\n(between Oct. 5 and Oct. 15) to\nmake up for lost time.\nTo prevent future losses he reduced the number of Leap Years\nfollowing in a 400-year-period from\n100 to 97, by making the last Leap\nYear o.' each century a common\nyear\u2014except where the number of\nthe century is divisible by four.\nThus 1800 A. D. and 1900 were not\nLeap Years, but 2000 will be.\nAUXILIARY DISCUSSES\nEASTER BALL AT NAKUSP\nNAKUSP. R. C, \u2014 At the hospital auxiliary meeting. Mrs. Waiter Maxwell was in the chair, 16\nmembers present. Discussion was\nheld on an Easier Ball ar.d arrangements were  made to  hold  a card\nSrmdsL & Out!\nOF NELSON HIGH SCHOOL\nBy JOHN   HOLLAND\nof an average man, Bertie spoke\nof \"chemically produced this,\" and\n\"chemically produced that,\" and\nproved that everything you do is\neither the result of some chemical\nprocess, or is actually one itself.\nRATTLE8NAKE CUTLETS\nWilla McClement came next, and\nreally hit upon a gruesome topic\nfor discussion in that of \"Rattlesnake Meat and Whipped Cream.\"\nThis dainty little dish is one produced by a firm in the United\nStates, lt seems that the occupation of hunting and marketing rattlesnakes is a very profitable one,\nif not as common as most. Willa described the hunting of these appetizing little dishes, the disposal ol\nall the various products oi snake-\nvivisection, and ended up with the\nrecipe for one of the most enjoyable\nways to serve such tasty morsels.\nThe final speaker of the afternoon was Allan Emmott, speaking\non the \"Democracizing of Democracy.\" His speech was slightly rem-\nniscent of a political campaign, but\nthe main theme was that the students of today are potentially the\nleaders of tomorrow and as such\nshould familiarize themselves with\nThe first of a series of four programs was presented in the High\nSchool    auditorium    Fridav    when\none speaker from each of the four , democratic Gov*\nHouses was heard. Altogether there I *ymX statements\nare  16 speakers to be heard, (our |       k d   h    applaU!<. 0( ,he  audi\nfrom each  House,  and from  these I c\ni are chosen   the finalists, who  will\nparty at the home of Mrs. Lolling!] appcar on a special program for lhe\nin March Afternoon tea was_ser\\\u00bb*d   purn0Sc of choosing the winner. In-1 SELF-DELUDED\ntroduced by Chairman Peggy Dun- I Some ot our alumnl are apparent-\nnett. the speakers were Allan Env I , under the impres5ion that I am\nmoit and Peggy Spa 1, Seniors, and longer wriling thij column. but\nBertie Auld and Willa McClements\nJuniors.\nence,   and   the   whole   thin\ninterspersed with humor.\ng   was\nby Mrs. H. L. Millar and Mrs. A\nWalton, hostesses.\nVALEr-JTlNtTTEA, NAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C. \u2014 A successful\nValentine tea was held in B. Jones; WHEN  IT  RAINED  ICE\nstore under auspices of the Angli-\ncan Church Guild. The tables were     The* f.rst   speaker   was   Pe\u00aby\nan added polish may be effected by I decorated with Valentine favors of  gpajl.  an-t^sne^spoKe ^.m  .An  i\u00ab\nan aaaeu ponsn may oe enecieo oy   aecairaiea won  v.,\u2122,,it '\u00bb'\u00bb>\"'   B,.7,;r-i \u25a0\u2022 p^ov ricarnhed in detail\nstroking with silk, Hollywood stars j which Mrs. C.H.Gardner and Mrs; Bl.zzar      Peggy described      detail\nreally   spectacular   blizzard    in\nthey will be disappointed to know\nthat this i*. not the case. Possibly\nthey have overlooked the more recent columns because of their size,\nor perhaps they just don't look\nvery hard any more. In the last\nedition of the Hi-Ways, the High\nSchool paper, a letter was printed i\nfi\/dnMoL\nNew cotton print\nwash frocks for\n1940 are here.\nCay, colorful, and\nyouthful frocks\nin a wide selection of becoming\nstyles. You will\nwant to stock up\nwith several from\nthis big collection.\nPRINTELLA\nFROCKS\nThe Guaranteed\nGarment\n$1.98\nand\n$2.98\nman\nTlunt\n\u00a7\nPhone 200\nBaker St.\nin no uncertain terms that such disrespect for my elders was by no\nmeans a matter for levity.\nCRANBROOK RESIDENTS\nWARNED ROADS MAY\nBE IN BAD SHAPE\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-The Department of Public Works here as issued\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSr, B. C. - Joe Parent,\nJr., Jack Harris and A. Grom of\nHalcyon visited  town.\nMr. and Mrs, J. Hall of Arrow\nPark visited Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. Marshall and baby\ndaughter visited Arrow Park.\nM. Grummett and C. Graham of\n---   - -    - a,    a a i vi. unmmo     ana l.. Liranam or\nrequest that out of town people   Rovrlstoke wrrc irl Nak      s(,vcral\n\u2022n  r Pnpn-H  nn   h urn wav-.  fnr  wpc ir.      \u25a0 .... \u201e .  _      ,\".\nwho depend on highways for secur\ning supplies, and busine.ss people\nplanning to do any heavy hauling\ndo so bj soon as possible, since it\nmay be necessary to close roads to\nall traffic during the Spring breakup.\nAn extraordinarily light snowfall\nfor the season may result in heaving of road surfaces, which will\ncause serious damage if traffic is\nallowed to continue over them.\nGREENWOOD\nGREENWOOD, B. C.-Mis-s Alice\nClark of Brown Creek visited Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Clark.\nJesse Puddy and daughter D-elln\nreturned after a few days in Grand\nForks.\nEric Dodd returned after several\ndays at Grand  Forks.\nMrs. J. Acres of Penticton is visiting her son and daughter-in-law,\nMr.  and Mrs.  Jack  Acres.\nBill Walmsley of Farron is spending a few days at his home here.\nMiss   Myrtle   Graham   of   Kettle\nValley\nbender.\ndays holding Court of Revision.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Buergui and Mn,\nH. Maxwell visited Nelson.\nLUDFORD, England (CP) \u2014 The\nlarge windows in the parish church'\nof this Lincolnshire village made\na blackout for evening services\nimpossible, so now worshippers all\ncarry candles with individual\nhoods.\nTry \"4X\"\nOLD ENGLISH\nMEAL BREAD\nvisited    Mrs.   J.   Kuppcn- I p|)one DM\nCLEARANCE\nAfternoon Dresses\n?3.05\nGINGHAM SHOPPE\nOpp. Daily News\nMR. CAFFElrSEmRVES IS BLIE-PErSClLLEI)\ndepend on this .silk finish, to bring I S.J.ckson were in charge. The bake. -^^  j( 3-,uMy  nmcd  k(.   For   5.atmg ihat lhe 3y,tera 0f pnnting\nsome time the town was completely   tne school news in a paper of its\nout the natural sheen. Thereafter ! table was in charge of Mrs. George\nthe brilliantine spray will be all. Gill. Flowers donated by Mrs. F\none   needs   for  well-groomed   hair.  Jupp were sold.\nOn Jki CWl\ntACIO AND APPLIANCE\nSERVICE\nBison Electric Co.\nI Baker St. Phone 260\nNEW SPRING\nMILLINERY\n10:30 a.m.\u2014The Cavalcade of Drama series heard at this time Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, is attracting greater interest than ever\nwith its latest dramatic offering\u2014\"Mary, Queen of Scots\"\u2014a brilliantly\nenacted adaptation of the tragic life of this famous Queen.\n5:30 p.m.\u2014Another in the program series \"With the Troops in England\" will be aired direct from London. A rebroadcast of this half-hour\nnetwork feature will be given at 11:15 PST.\n8:15 p.m.\u2014The Library Program will again be heard with Miss M N\nHinks at the microphone. Her discussion of authors and their outstanding\nworks will be continued on tonight's broadcast over CKLN'.\nisolated, but communication by ra-I own \\s a vast improvement over i\nj d:o was established later. The ch-, \u25a0*1he old system of writing it in the!\nI max of the speech wa.s the mention | ]oca| newspaper.\" The writers prais-\nof the fact 'hat Peggy's father had ccj n,e pap(.r very highly and then\nto crawl all the way home, and ' sjgnr(i themselves as the \"Loud\nafter the uproar had died down, | Mouths.\" This name is apparently\nPeg hastened to mention the fact a resuit of a column I wrote in the\nthat this was due to the conditions j (;,-st (rw months of the school\nof the streets, and nothing else vear m which I mentioned that\nOther interesting details were the 5everal of the \"Big Noises\" had left\nfact that trees and houses were school. For the most part this state-\nromple'.ely sheathed in ice. and ; men. was received in the spirit in\nthat in the flood that followed the; which it was given, but several of\nthaw, one valjey was completely | inc ox-students took exception to\nsubmerged, driving out all the in-. the title, and said so in as many\nhabitants, and devastating all the words. I even received threats of\nproperty in the area. dire bodily harm in payment for my\nSpeaker No, 2 was Bertie Auld. j inexcusable audacity. During the\nwho outlined the part played by Christmas holidays I was fortunate\nchemis'.rv in the life of the modern enough to meet all the characters\nman. Describing a day in  the life1 .-oncerned personally, and was told\nEDITOR: (to reporter) Never knew it to fail\n\u2014 my nerves as jumpy as a kangaroo and\nalong comes the biggest story of thc year!\nMR. CAFTtlHE NERVTS:\nNouonder you're\njittery\u2014tbe uiy\nthey uork you!\nREPORTER: Sounds like you've got a case of\ncaffeine-nerves\u2014too much tea or coffee!\nWhy not switch to l'ostum for a while?\nMONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1940\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\nPro-\nlon't Dose\"\nA Nasty\nCHEST COLD\nw\n1\n'\n4\n^\n>i,r*\n\u2022)\nef'\nA\nkelleve Misery This Qulck-\nlActing EXTERNAL Way\nL^on't burden a child's delicate\nItomach with stronjj Internal nwli-\npine*-;. I\\i what thouMrxls of modern\nothers do . . . relieve the misery\nbf a cold quick\u2014without internal\npning \u2014 tin* Vicks ViipoKub wav. It\npringi romfortinjl relief right where\n|hcm1d ciiiMr-A misery. And it's such\n\\ simple and c.xsy treatment;\nAt hrdtlme, m \u00bb.\u25a0\u25a0> a a jr c Vlckd\nVdpoRub ovrr throat, rhent md\nback. Right ftw\u00bby, VnpoRub ri>tx\nIn work t'i rellf-ve the mlwry of\nthr mid two ways Rt once-two\nDIHECT WAYS.\nFirst, VapoRub arts on the skin,\nstimulating like a warming poultice.\nSecond, il Rives off the soothing,\nmrduiiiiil vapours of seven different\nrelief-giving medication*\u2014vapours\nthat are carried with every breath\ndirect to the irritated air passages.\nAnd here's what this poultice-nnd-\nvapour action docs.\nIt dean the air pasaagca, loosens\nphlegm, checks tne tendency to\ncough, relieves irritation, and eases\nsoreness of the cheat muscles. Tills\ncomforting action continues hour\nafter hour and Invites healing, restful slrep. Often by morning, most\nof thc misery of thc cold is gone.\nPROVED IN CLINtCft-VaPoRuh\nhas bfrri proved In otw of \\\\\\t largest\nwrirs of clinical tests ever made on\ncolds\u2014and proved in daily use In\nmillions of homes. .So Profit by\nthis 1'Roor\u2014Know What You'ab\nI'sini; Tt) Rklibve Colds Misery.\nYou'll Im- glad vou\ndiscovered die relief\nVapoRub brings.\nWICKS\n\" tin\u2014O Canada\n1 03\u2014Toast and Coffee Club\n8:(IO\u2014The News\nB: 1 r>\u2014 Sinners and Songs\n6:3(1\u2014Wayne Van Dyne\nR:\u00abf>-Rakov'.a Orchejtrl\n9:00\u2014The Hallndeer\nfa:lV-Merry Music\n9:30 \u2014 11.   C   Schools  Broadcast\n10:00\u2014Musical Roundup  (CKI.N1\n10.3O\u2014Cavalcade of Drama 'CKLNi\n10 4S-Rochester Civic  Orch.\nll:0O\u2014Mademoiselle au Tiano\nllilV-Songs For You\n11:30\u2014United  Slates  Navy   Band\nAFTERNOON\n12 Oh-l.unrheon Music (CKLN)\n1:00\u2014The News\n1:15\u2014'Socks for the Trwps\"\u2014tils\n1 30\u2014Club Matinea\nltS-RPC   News\n2 l.t-Chuck Fnster'j Orch (CKLNi\n2.30\u2014Sonps by Simon,\n2:4rV\u2014< 'lrasina  Stocks\n3 00\u2014Miniature Mu.aicile\n3 JO\u2014Gordon Glftord\n3:43\u2014 Lucio's Ensemble\n400\u2014\"Between Ourselves\"\n4IS\u2014The Music Maker,\n4 30\u2014Freddy   Fisher's   Schnlrkle-\nfritjers\n4:4*>\u2014 \u2022HoofprlnU,\" talk by A. D\nKeen\n5 00\u2014 Half    ft    Half    Programme\n(CKLN)\n5.30-Wlth the Troors In England\nEVENINC\nDOO-Conrert Master (CKLN)\nft .IIV-March Time (CKLNI\nB4.s-Voc,l llnrmoniej (CKLN)\n7 00- Little Old Hollywood\n7.30\u2014This C\u00ab\u00ab\u00abda-talk by Arthur\nI'helo,\n7:45\u2014 Luigi Romanelh's orch\n8 00-Th? News\n11:15\u2014Municipal   Library\ngramme (CKLN)\n8 30\u2014Songs  of Empire\n9:00\u2014Imm.irt.il  Music\n9:30\u2014 Generally Speaking\n9 45\u2014Chuck   Foster's  orch\nI 10:00\u2014Orgr.ii  Rec;tal\ni 10*3O-In  lhe Gwd Old Davs\n11*1X1\u2014Thp News\n11:15\u2014Rebroadcasl \"With the Troops\nin England\"\n11*30\u2014Paul Carson\n12:00\u2014God Save The King\noKoiUMviviiA\nBy  BETSY  NEWMAN\nC|AT \u2014TRAIL\nMORNINC\n\"OO-Brrnkfnst  Club\n8i5-Home Folks Frolic\nB:ri0-S|jr  i.(   Ihr   Week\n9:15\u2014Smilin'   Jark\n11:0(1\u2014Woman's Journal\n11.30\u2014Tommy Dorsey's Orch\nAFTERNOON\n1 30\u2014Todnv's Must\n3:45\u2014In Town Tonight\n4:30\u2014Theitre News\nEVENINC\n12 no-Sign Off\nOther periods\u2014CBC Programmes\nTODAY'S   MENU\nCold Roast Meat\nScalloped Potatoes\nButtered  Broccoli\nPickled Pineapple Slices\nCelery\nCake  with  Chocolate Fudge  kin\nTea  ur Coffee\nt shape. Thin with heavy cream to\nproper spreading consistency.\nU.S. NETS' BEST\nflOn-Radio Theslrr  (CKS*\nfUO-Aler TrmpW-m  (NBC-Red)\n7 M-ninndie   iCBS)\nBOO\u2014 Plriisurp Time   (NHC-Red)\nR 30-Mnde-l Minstrels  tcnsi\n9,no\u2014Th\u00ab Adventure* of ShcrlocK\nHolmes (NBC-Red.\npM-IUaUl-nrnpllnusr (NBC-Red!'('nnk   tn   Ihr  very\nID no-Tut il Sullivan's News 1CMS1   2M tlegrrps  F\nPICKLED   PINEAPPLE   SLICES\nCombine nne cup of ihe .syrup\nfrom cmnt'd pineapple\ntine-fourth nip brown 5vi\u00abar. nne-\nh ilf *ra\u00ab-po'iii whn.p rl ives, two\np,*vr<: of *v-,ok nnnamini anrl one-\nf.iurih cup milk vinegar. II: .or In\nboiling  point.\nAdd pi (flit slices nf pineapple,\nWhen tin,]ing remove from neal\ntnd Ir! pineapple remain in syrup\novrr night if pnwible May be\nsealed in sterilized jars while hoi,\nCHOCOLATE FUDGE ICING\nTwo ounce.* bitter chocolalp (two\nsquires), one-half cup water, <me\nnnd one-half cups sugar, one tablespoon butter, one-fourth tea-spoon\ncream of tartar, few grams salt, one-\nhalf trasp.-n vanilla, two tablespoons\nthick cream.\nCut   chocolate  into pmall   pieces\nBAKED   FISH\nFiih should be cooked in a hot\noven to seal in Juices, but should not\nbe nver-conk<al. Rub fish with salt\ninside and our Stuff, if desired, and\nsew up, Place piece of cooking\nparchment in pan. Usual time is 10\nminutes per pound up to four\ns with Pni\"ids, then five minutes per\n! pound.\nCODFI8H   STEAKS  WITH\nMUSHROOM   SAUCE\nPut six small or three large steal**\n1 in oiled baking dish. Chop one small\n1 onion and four ounces mushrooms.\nCook   in   six   tablespoons   water\nand   three   tablespoons   butter   for\n: three   minutes.   Add   three   table-\n! spoons   flour  and   two  cups   milk,\nWhen  boiling,  dust  with salt and\n! pepper.   Pour   over  fish.   Dust   top\nI with paprika.  Bake about 25 min-\nI utes In moderate oven until fish is\n| tender,\nCODFISH STEAKS\n|    CVd O'Leekii is made with codfish\nsteaks   and   leeks   Clean,   split   six\nsplit\nPiorn\nPut  m saucepan  with water.  Heat | leeks In half, lengthwise   Place\nIf-get her   until  chocolate   L*   melted\nbottom nf greased baking dish.\nBrut to blend thoroughly. S::r in j Place six small codfish steaks on\nsugar, butter and cream of tartar,  ton of leeks,\noft   ball   stage, I     Siix   tablespoon   flour   with   two\ni cups   milk.   Season   with   salt   and\n10.10-Churk  Foster's Orrh. (NU(J       Remove from heal and let stand I pepper, Pour over fish. Milk should\nRrd> | undisturbed until lukewarm  Sprin- \\ just   ever   fish.   Hot   with   butter,\nPaul Carson, Organist iNBC* \u25a0 kle sail and vanilla over the (uirfaep ' and   sprinkle   with   paprika.   Bake\nBlue)     *>\nanil brat until mixture will hold its   in  a  moderate  oven.\n PAQK SIX\n{fclamt laUtj Nmx\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelion, Brltlah Columbia.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AI>D\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.\nMONDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1940.\nPRIME MINISTER KING CONTRIBUTES\nTOWARD \"UNITY\"\nOne of Prime Minister King's contributions to the\n\"National Unity\" he says is the issue in the election he has\nforced, is to seek to evoke in sections that might be apprehensive, the fear of conscription under Dr. Manion's\n\"National Government,\" and the fear of disfranchisement\nof alien nationalities. Giving lip service to the idea of unity,\nhe is promoting division by appeals to those least interested in a maximum effort in the war.\nOn this move of Prime Minister King, the Ottawa\nJournal makes the following clarifying comment:\nOne particular passage in Prime Minister King's election \"keynote\" speech of Wednesday night should be noted\nby all who would understand what thought governs Mr.\nKing's war policy\u2014plus what thought governs his strategy\nin this war election.\nHere is the passage:\n\"Least of all was it (national unity) brought about by\npledges to ... . form a so-called 'national' government\nthat might enforce conscription or disfranchise many\nclasses of Canadian citizens. The memories of those experiences in the last war are still bitter in the minds of the\nCanadian people.\"\nTo whom\u2014to what groups\u2014is Mr. King here appealing? When he trots out the bogey of conscription, and when\nhe goes back 23 years to dig up the old War Time Elections\nAct, what has he in mind? Has he in mind national unity\u2014\nor has he in mind (1) the votes of certain people in Quebec,\nand (2) the votes of the foreign-born populations of Alberta and Saskatchewan?\nThe answer seems clear.\nHere is the Prime Minister of Canada submitting his\nwar record to the country, asking the country to examine\nit, to say whether it wishes to continue him in office. Here\nis the Prime Minister of Canada supposedly (and professedly) appealing for national unity\u2014yet misusing his\nopportunity by a none too subtle appeal to racial prejudices.\nNo one in Canada is talking about conscription; it is\nnot an issue. No one in Canada is talking about disfranchising anybody; it is not an issue. Yet Mr. King, directing\nhis talk straight at Quebec, intimates his opponents might\n\"enforce conscription\"; and then, directing his talk this\ntime straight at Saskatchewan, raises the spectre of disfranchisement\u2014disfranchisement of \"many classes of Canadian citizens.\" \"The memories of those experiences in\nthe last war,\" he declares, \"are still bitter in the minds of\nthe Canadian people.\" Which we should say is appalling\nnonsense,\nIf Mr. King's speech really sounded the \"keynote\" of\nhis party's position in this election\u2014and Mr. Rogers' statement at Kingston suggests that it did\u2014then something is\nraised that goes far deeper than the mere war record of\nthe Government. Raised is the issue whether the Government wants to wage war as most Canadians would have\nwar waged, or whether it is to be waged with an eye on the\nprejudices and fears of certain minorities\u2014minorities that\nhave votes.\nJail yowiAQlfr\nONE-MINUTE   TEST\n1. What arc the moon's perigee\ntnd apogee''\n2. What is the tallest manmade\nstructure in the world1\n3. Who was tnc running mate of\nJames M. Cox when he was a\npresidential nominee1 in what year\ndid   they  run1\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nIt is only an error of judgment\nto make a mistake, but it argues\nan infirmity nf character to adhere to it when discovered. The\nChinese say, \"The glory i.s not in\nnever falline. hut in rising every\ntime you fall,\"\u2014Bovee,\nHINTS ON ETIQUETTE\nIt is not good manner, to mo-1. ''Bill knows a lot, but you can tell\nnopnliM the conversation when in a ']* never went to school. If a man\npartv. Give the other members of don t let his w;fe boss him, hc didn't\nthe group a chance to air ther fiPt 'rained by havin' women school\nviews. .teachers.\"\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN        i\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nThe stars favor the person whose\nbirthday is today Business will\nprosper, but he nr she is advised\nto check nny tendency toward extravagance or over-generosity. The\nrhild birn on th;- date will usually\nbe very successful in every respect,\nA cheerful, if restless and volatile,\nnature will be his or hers, and a\nhappv life and great popularity are\nprophesied\nONE-MINUTE   TEST   ANSWERS   j\n1. Thp monn ii raid tn be in perigee when it is nrares! to earth: in,\napuvr when it is farthest from\nearth\n2. Thr Km?-* re State bu M.ng, in\n-New   York   (Vv.\n3. Franklin I). Roosevelt, in 1920 '\nWAR - 25 Years\nAgo Today\nBy Ths Canadian Pren\nFeb. 19. 1915\u2014British and French\nfleets under Vice-Admiral Carden\nbombarded forts at the entrance to\nthe Dardanelles. Britain announced\nuse of neutral flags by merchant\nships would be resorted to only to\navoid capture.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nLttttra m\u00aby bt publlihtd ovtr \u2022 nom do plumo, but tht totutl\nnamt of thl wrlttr mult bt glvtn to tht editor at evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymoua letters go In tha waite paper baiket\n\u00ab\u00abW*W\u00bb*W\u00abWi!\nFishermen's Wharf\nto Attract Tourists\nIs the Limit-R.B.W.\nTo the Editor of the\nNelson Daily News:\nSir: The province very seiuibly\ncriticizes a certain alderman {or\nwanting to build the Fishermen's\nWharf at Vancouver as an attraction\nfor tourists and says the proper reason for building lt ls for the use of\nfishermen.\nWhat a great thing lt would be If\nthat paper and all papers and people would constantly take that\nview in the matter of tourist attractions. For us that paper says\nfurther tourists do not go to another country to see attractions prepared for them, but to see something\ndifferent to what they see at home.\nI- it not more sensible to build\nwharves and roads and other public\nworks needed by our own people\nthan to build them to suit foreign\ners. People don't go to another country to feel at home.\nIt seems decidedly cheap and undignified for each country to do all\nit can to attract visitors ot make\nmoney out of them. And the advertising of it must to a great extent\ndefeat its own purpose and put\nvisitors on guard against spending\ntheir money.\nPeople talk as If money spent by\ntourist*; was a free gift. Yet the\nsame people would tell visitors they\nhad received value for their money.\nAfter all the chief Item on which\nthey spend money is gasoline which\nis Imported from the United States.\nBy all means welcome tourists\nin the spirit of friendliness and have\ninformation they need available.\nBut they will be more, interested\nin what we are doing for ourselves\nthan in what we do for them to get\ntheir money.\nA fishermen's wharf to catch tourists is the limit.\nR. B. W. i\nTrail, B.C., Feb. 17, 1940\n\"I wonder If you'd mind running the train out very slowly? I've\ngot to kiss them all good-by.\"\u2014Humorist.\nCONTRACT\nSerial Story . . ,\nBy Alma Sioux Scarberry\nParadise Is Here\nLONDON (CP)--Thr magistrate\nwith thr gentle voice nnd the mien\nnf a prnfessnr\"\u2014Sir Rnllo Graham-\nfamplu'll-has retired fmm the\nDench aftrr a record period 127\nvearsi of administering Bow Street\njustice.\nLOOKING BACKWARD\n10 YEAR9 AGO\nFrom   Dally  Newa of Feh,  II,  1130\nSchool expen.aea in 1930 at Trsil i\nhas been estimated al $*)7,fiia4 \u2014 '\nThe ice carnival staged by Hotar-1\niani. Oyros and Aasocia'e'd Tana-\ndun Travellers n\u00bbllM HUGH. \u2014 ]\nFugene Nndr.iu nf N\u00ablva*av spent\nvesterdl\" In Nelson - A! a special\nmeeting last nigh! the Nelson .armor\nhocVev pbyers rtrntc'eci against the 1\n\u2022 ward of the K\"***-trn\u00bbv title lo Trail\nJS YEARS\nAGO\nFrom  Da'ly\nNews  o\nt   Feb.\n19\n1919!\nS\n,1.   Rent\n>r    K.i*\ni   hota\nni\nin. is;\na  N\n!snn   vn\nitor   -T\nia>   fira\n1\nnil..,\nmv\nmill '.'\u25a0\n'\u25a0\u25a0ac*  '\nr  Ihe\nf-\nn'   in\nF i*\n'-   !S   ll\n'.\"\u2022\n*i h'\n(\nrrr'd\nK   .\n* I'.'V    0\n:  ,i*h\nM  ri\n-  G 1\nR Thompson hss been elected as\nPresident of the Trail Pniillv Association - Born at the Kootensv\nI.ikr Maternity Hospital to Mr. and\nMrs P. W Liversidge. a son.\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom Dally Tribune of Feb. 19. 1900\nThe c P R station at Denver\nr.inyon wis rompleta-Iv destroyed\nlast night bv fire of unknown origin. -- Frank II Wallev will likely\nhe appointed clerk in Ihe Nelson\nLand Registry Office - F R\nStewart has arrived tn assume the\nmanagement nf the T R. Stewart\nCompany - Dr frank Fwing may\nh.lIM i new hospital in Nelson to\nlrcomoda'e n-aticr,!s among work-\npirn en lhe Balfour railroad ex'.en-\nSYNOPSIS\nThe characters:\nRomany Haile, who wants to be\na radio star.\nCholly O'Neil, her pal, who plays\nin a music store.\nBrent Nelson, successful young\nannouncer.\nMyra Noyes, famous radio star,\nengaged to Brent.\nTerry O'Rourke, who has a weakness for Cholly and for liquor.\nBaxter Tree, a continuity writer\nwithout a Job,\nYesterday: Myra berates Brent\nfor the attention he has been showing Romany.\nCHAPTER EIGHT\nROMANY waited impatiently\nwhile Brent went down to the program board room to find out if nil\njudgment of her audition had been\nvindicated. He came back beaming.\n'They're so charmed with your\ndulcet tones, they want me to bring\nyou down to see if you lcok as good\nas you sound,\" he told Romany,\ngrinning  expansively.\nNine men rose as one when Romany entered the board room. She\nwas first presented to the president of Interstate. Tyrone Moore,\nthen to the head of the artists bureau, Marvin Yanning.\nDistributing charming smiles as\nimpartially as possible, Romany,\nNelson observed with pride,, was\npoised as a veteran in the face of\nthe compliments heaped upon her.\nIf she hadn't possessed one whit of\ntalent. Brent knew, her looks alone\nwould have sufficiently impressed\nthe board that they would have\npassed her for a trial at Interstate.\nLoring Hickox was most lavish in\nhis compliments.\n\"You must come In and see me\nas soon as possible. Miss Haile,\" he\ntold her heartily. \"I'm sure we can\ndo a lot for you, You're a natural\nfor television.\"\n\"on't pay any attention to him.\"\nBrent grinned, \"He's just lookins\nfor his ten per cent. He talks that\nway to all thc girls.\"\nAfter a few moments the crowd\nbroke up, and Romany leaned\nagainst the fire place to catch her\nbreath.\n\"Whew!\" She fanned her flushed\nface with her hand. \"This is so sudden! I hope it really means something.\"\n\"We'll see.\" Brent smiled. \"And\nnow how about coming downstairs\nfor a cocktail? I've just an hour\nbefore I go on the air,\"\n\"And I've just an hour before I\nhave a dinner date.'\" Romany told\nhim.\"\n\"I thought you were going to\ndinner with me!\" Brent looked disappointed,\n\"I didn't say so.\" Romany smiled.\n\"But ask me again sometime. I'm\nmeeting Baxter Tree at 5:30.\"\n\"He's not the steady, by any\nchance,\" Nelson inquired. \"Or isn't\nit any of my business?\"\n\"No,\" Romany shook her head.\n\"Just one of the boys I knew at Indiana U. Bax is grand! He wrote\nthe material I used for my audition, and coached me for hours today. I'm afraid I'd have been sunk\nwith-.ut him.\"\n'That was darn good stuff,\"\nBrent said generously. \"The guy\nknows his radio But I particularly\nlike his taste in women.\nRomany felt it was a good opportunity to mention Myra Noyrs.\nSo she said as they stepped off i'.ie\nelevator in the lobby:\n\"I understand you're engaged to\nMyra  Noyes\"\nBrent hesitated, and she saw his\nfare flush.\n\"Or.\" she added quickly, \"isn't It\nany of my business*\"\n\"Turn about i.s fair play.\" Brent\nsaid uncomfortably. \"You're entitled to an answer nf course. Lets\nwait until we get a scat in the cocktail   lounge.\"\nWhen they had both ordered a\ndry Martini, Brent leaned his elbows on the table.\n\"Now. I suppose I'll have to answer that qestion of yours\"\n\"Not if it is embarrassing to you.\nWe'll Just forget it.\"\n, \"It\u2014wouldn't be embarrassing if\nI didn't feel myself faTling so hard\nfor you I don't like lo think cf an \/\u25a0\nthing else.\" Brent took a sip of ice\nwater\n\"Now. now,\" Romany chided\n! \"We won't go Into thai.'\nBrent sighed\n\"All right, wr wont Not \u00bbo soon\nanyway Yes, I am engaged tn\nMyra Noyes. I have been for four\nmonths. It's \u2014 Just one of those\nthings a man gets into when he\ncomes to the place where he feels\nIt's time to marry.\"\nBrent stopped. Romany could\nthink of nothing appropriate to\nsay Then he rontinued:\n\"I've never felt I'd ever fall really in love Not the kind of love my\nfather had for mv mother Mavbe\nI was mistaken. Myra Is clever, attractive I thought she was a good\n[ sport who would more or less go\nher own way and let me do the\nsame. And so-well, there vou have\nIL\"\nRomany shook  her head\n\"It dopant make sense to me\nBul I don'l pretend lo understand\nI vou men If you don't mind. I'm go-\n, ing lo tell you 1 think it's unfair\nof a man 1*1 become engaged lo a\n[ pill when he doesn't really love her\nWomen are loo easily hurt\"\n\"Are they* ' Brent smiled rrooK-\n|erllv l'n afraid you roiilrin'i (|iiil-\npul Myra In Ihe alars of gills who\ngo In for the sentimental stuff mar-\nriage was associated with back in\ngrandma's day.\"\n\"How do you know?\" Romany\nchallenged him. \"Maybe she's Jusl\nbeing the sort of girl she thinks\nyou want her to be.\"\n\"God forbid,\" Brent said fervently, raising the cocktail the\nwaiter had just placed in front o!\nhim. \"She isn't being the sort of\ngirl I want her to be.\"\n\"Maybe,\" Romany defended her\nsex, \"you're not measuring up to\nher standards, either. Did you ever\nthink of that?\"\n\"Say!\" Brent finished his cocktail\nin a gulp. \"Are you lecturing me?\"\nRomany smiled, but her eyes\nwere serious.\n\"No, Brent, I'm not even advising you. Because I don't know\nenough about those things. I've\nnever been married and I've never\nbeen in love. But 1 just know\nwomen are not always what they\nseem on the surface.'\n\"Are you?\" Ho leaned toward\nher, his eyes warm with admiration. \"Because if you are, Heaven\nhelp my poor old heart!\"\n\"You're being very silly.\" Romany sipped her cocktail, \"And if\nyou don't stop, I won't come up to\nInterstate and make you famous for\ndiscovering me. I'll sign up with\nI^ollyood.\"\n\"Just a minute before you throw\nme too far off the track with your\nclever feminine trick of evasion,\nby dear. Are you so disappointed\nin me that you won't see me any\nmore? I want to know where I\nstand.\"\nRomany was taken aback. She\nhesitated, coloring slightly. Then\nshe said frankly:\n\"I shouldn't see you. But I probably will. Since you are really responsible fnr all that has happened\nto me in radio in the last couple\nof days. You'll have to Just consider me a good friend and not--\ntry to make love to me.\"\n\"Oh,   darling.\"   Brent   said  very\nlow, \"look at yourself in the mirror\nj beside you ond you'll see how impossible that would be.\"\n\"You heard what I said.\" Romany was firm. \"Don't you think this\nis a beautiful room'' Who did the\npaintings on the ceiling?\"\n\"That reminds me.\" Nelson\ndropped the matter for thc time being. \"You'll have to join the Ameri-\n! ran Federation of Radio Artists.\nYou can't open your mouth to say\n\u2022boo' on the air without Joining\nAlra.\"\n\"What do I have to do?\" Romany\nhesitated, her heart sinking with\nfear that it would cost more money\nthan she had.\nBrent looked at his watch.\n\"Finish your cocktail and we'll\nrun there now. It's on the second\nfloor. We've just time before closing. If you haven't the cash, they'll\ntake a check. Tf you haven't your\ncheck book. I'll take care of it fo:\nyou.\"\n\"No, thanks.\" Romany shook her\nhead quickly. \"I probably have\nenough with me.\"\nWhen she had paid .her Afra dues.\nRomany was down to five dollars she had upon arriving in Chicago. If it hadn't been for Haller's\nDesserts, she would have been frantic trying to raise the money, Sh?\nsaid a little prayer that the wheels\nat Interstate would begin turning\nverv suddenly in her favor.\nAt dinner, in a modest little table\nd'hote restaurant nn Randolph\nStreet. Baxter Tree took a tabloid\nfrom his pocket and handed it to\nRomany, smiling.\n\"Look at Tanner Yeoman's radio\ncolumn.\" He pointed to a small circled paragraph.\nRomany gasped. In bold black\ntype she' read, with a mixture of\nemotions:\n\"Seen at landau's dining last\nevening: Brent Nelson, announcer,\nwith a stunning brunette. Inquiry\nrevealed she is Romany Haile, heiress to H.irlowc farm implements\nmillions. Niece of wealthy 'Cissie'\nHarlowe, widow of the implement\nking In Chi to enter upon a radio\ncareer. Swell bet for television \"\nRomany exnloded: \"How did that\nget in there*\"\nBax chuckled.\n'That's what you get for stepping out with famous announcers\nin Aunt Cissir's furs! But don'l let\nit worry ynu That kind of publicity\nwon't do you any harm. If thev\nthing you're an heiress, they'll fall\nall over ynu Nnhoiy'll see you eating in this Joint with me. And I\nwon't  tell \"\n(To Be Continued!\nPROTECT YOUR PaUlTNER\nWHILE THE declarer la running off a string of set-up tricks,\nyou should see that he probably la\ntrying to strip the hands down ao\nthat he may try for a squeeze or\nlead-throwing end-play. Even If\nyour own hand seems almost\nworthless, you may be able to protect your partner by means of\nyour discards, Indicating to him\nwhat he should hold and what he\nahould throw away. Otherwise he\nmay prove helpless prey to the declarer's scheme.\n4 None\nVJ8T8B\n\u2666KJ842\n+ K93\n4) 10 7 M\n\u00ab Q 10 4 2\n*\u00bb A 10\n4A8\nay A K Q0\n8\n<f AK93\n\u2666 QS\n*J in\n\u00abJ\u00ab2\nf None\na)9 763\n4Q76B41\nDtaier: West. North-South vulnerable.)\nWest North Eaat South\nPass Pats 11> Pass\nSt) Pass      4 NT      Pass\n5 t-> Pass     6 s)\nWest's Jump raise having shown\nthat he had a hand practically as\ngood as an opening bid, East was\nready for a small slam as soon as\nhis partner's response to the\nBlackwood 4-No Trumps bid\nshowed possession of two aces.\nAfter South led the club 5 to the\ndummy's A, East rattled off three\nBy Shepard Barclay\nhigh trumps, four hearts, a fourth\nspade to the 10, then led tht club\n8 from dummy. North, who had\nretained two cards In each minor,\ntook with his club K, then had his\nchoice between giving the declarer\na ruff-and-dlscard by means ot a\nclub return and building two diamond tricks for East by leading\nfrom his honors. So East lost only\nthe one club trick and madt his\ncontract.\nSouth might have prevented\nNorth's trouble. On the hearts, he\ncould have discarded first his club\n\u00ab, then his club 4, as a high-low\nto tell his partner to unblock the\nsuit. Had North then tossed\naway hla club K, the end-play\nwould have been prevented. South\ncould have won the club trick\nlater, then led through the diamond A toward North's K.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\n* A.93\nVKQS4\n\u2666 A9\u00ab5\n+ K7\n-V.\n1\n4QS64\n\u00a51)832\n\u2666 K 10 7\n+ 104\n\u2666 J\nf A 10\n+ Q842\nAQ J 9 8-\n62\n4 K 10 7 5 2\n<*\u00bbJ7 6\n\u2666 J 3\n\u2666 ASS\nDealer: South. Neither side vulnerable.)\nWith sound bidding, play and\ndefense, what should be tht result\nof this deal?\n-Olstrlbutad by Klnf Features Syndicate, Inc.\nRELIGIOUS EDUCATIONAL\nSECRETARY AT NAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C. - Mlas Anne\nfountain of Vancouver, Travelling\nSecretary of tbe Rellgioua 'Educational Council of B. C. was a guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Bill while\n'   Nakusp.\nMiss Fountain gave aeveral addresses to the Young People of the\nchurch. She met the Explorer group\nand she spoke to the C. G. I. T.\nShe also met the Sunday School\nteachers and outlined the new\nmethod of Sunday School work.\nCanadian Fliers\nKnow the North\nBy FRANK  FLAHERTY\nCanadian Prett Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, (CP). \u2014 Trom Port\nBurwell to Nottingham Island the\nchilly waters and rocky shores of\nHudson Strait are known to aome\nof the key men ln the Royal Canadian Air Force. Wing Commander\nThomas' A. Lawrence and the officers who served under him on the\nHudson Strait expedition of 1927\nknow flying and navigating conditions there from personal experience.\nHudson Strait ts the Northern\nwster approach to the heart of central Canada, the entrance to Hudson\nBay. In the unlikely event that hostile ships should seek to enter it in\nthe few months of the year when\nit is free from Ice the experience\nand information gained in 14 months\nexploration flying there 12 years\nago would be of real assistance to\nCanada's defence forces.\nArmed with a sound knowledge of\nthis and other coastal areas of Canada Wing Commander Lawrence is\nnow director of Plans and Operations for the Royal Canadian Air\nForce. That means his duties include\nthe planning and supervision of\nCanada's home defence against air\nattack as well as air operations in\nCanada apart from training.\nThe Hudson Strait expedition la\nIhe highlight of Lawrence's 22-year\ncareer in the Air Force. Its purpose\nwas to study ice. weather and gen'\neral navigating conditions prior to\nthe opening of the Hudson Bay\nroute to traffic, following completion of the Hudson Bay Railway to\nChurchill.\nThrough lhe strait each Summer\nnow pass the freighters which\ncarry western wheat from Churchill to the markets of Europe. On\nthe Information gathered during\nthe 1927 survey, mainly from thc\nair, were based Instructions to ships\nusing the route. The relative safety\nof shipping in the strait ls due in\npart to the application of the data\ngathered by the expedition.\n,,.\nll Questions 1]\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names  ol\npersons asking questions will not\nbe  published.\nJ F\u201e Nelson\u2014Where would on'.'\nwrite to in England to get a song I\ncopyrighted?\nIn Great Britain registration is,\nnot necessary and does not confer]\ncopyright, which subsists in a work ;\ndirectly it is made (whether written by hand, printed, photographed\/\netc.) British copyright also covers,\nworks written by foreigners while,\nin British territory and works written by British subjects in foreign!\nterritory. With exceptions, the au-.\nthor or maker of a work is automatically the first owner of\ncopyright.\nS. H, S, Nelson\u2014Who wrote'\n\"Abide  With  Me\"?\nJohn Keble.\nA. L-, Trail\u2014What are the working\nhours of employees in butcher\nshops \"for clerks or meat cutters?1\nUnder the Hours of Work Act, the j\nhours of labor are restricted to \u25a0\nnine hours daily, and not more than\n48 hours a week.\nJ. D, Nelson\u2014What is the official'\nlanguage of thc Irish Free State? |\nGaelic is the official language.\nC. H\u201e Slocan Park-Where was Sir;\nHarry Lauder born?\nSir Harry Lauder (family name\nMcLennan) was born at Portobello,\nScotland. August 4,  1870.\nWelsh Boy Singer\nThrills Artists\nCARDIFF, Wales, Feb. 17 (CP)\n\u2014Welsh musical circles have had\ntheir pulses speeded by a 10-year-\nold schoolboy who can sing within\ntwo notes of the top of the piano\nkeyboard.\nJohn Charles Harris, son of a\nshipbroker. sings 10 notes above\nhigh C, three notes above Hollywood's Susannah Foster and eight\nabove famous Gracie Fields' E.\nR. Walker Robson, chairman of\nthe London Musical Festival said\nof John: \"The boy should be displayed so that all may see and hear\nthis phenomenal achievement. I\nwould suggest the heads of our\ngreat musical institutions be given\nthe opportunity of hearing him.\"\nGracie Fields, nn hearing of him,\nsaid: \"He's cither a blooming miracle or a blooming freak.\"\nNEW DENVER MISS\nENTERTAINS AT TEA\nNEW DENVER. B, C.-Miis Violet Gunn entertained friends at ten.\nTwo contffU were played with\nMiM Flora Routes and Miss Greta\nSinclair. Miss Roate.s, Mist Dacey\nBrown**, Mi** Annie Kennett and\nMiss Browne  winning\n1    Invited   huoIn   wer**   the   Misses\n' Rose' Zadra,  Annie  Kennett. Greta\nSinclair. Dacey Browne, Annie Mr-\n| Kean. Flora Ron les, Florence Pic-\nard. Sybil Bailey, Rea'nre Bolivar,\nMiriam Boates, Willa Alvwin, Vera\nButlin. Effc Shannon, Helen Tar-\nron, Florence Mw, Irene Kennedy\nnnd Mr* Arthur Jeffrey.\nDnintv   refreshment*!   were  serv*\nI cd by the hoitesj assisted by Mm\nI Irene Kennedy\nFinds Generals\nArtists Dodgers\nOTTAWA. Feb. 18 (CP)- Take\nit from Miss EM.B. Warren, an expert at trailing general.*; from here\nio there, army officials are no.ie\ntoo keen on posing for portraits.\nTwenty years after she painted\npictures of Canada's 1914-18 war\neff rt Miss Warren has come bark\nto Ottawa from England to retouch the canvases she gave to the\nFederal Government.\nShe told how difficult lt was in\nthose days of thc First Great War\nto catch up with a general and ot\ndays she spent in Westminster Abbey copying the stained glass pane\nbanked with Canada's colors. She\nmanaged to group several Canadian\nofficers in the foreground but few\nseemed to have time for posing.\n\"I certainly did a lot of running\narrund nfter generals in those days\nsh-r said   \"They  were  the  hardest\nof the < ffiecrs to find and I simply\nhad to have them in my painting.'\nIf I  couldn't find  them   in ramps,'\nI stalkrd them In London hotels dp-1\ntil I got them to let me sketch their\nfeatures,\"\nShe made her first trip to Canada Just after the last war to find;\nthe missing faces that would m,ikc\n1 her paintings an accurate pictorial\nrecord low, with the passage of I\n, time, they need refurbishing.\nSince that trip, this small, relir-\nI ing Englishwoman has crossed lh\u00bb\n! sea .18 times. When her canvases'\n1 nre finished here, sometime this\nSpring, she said she planned to re- '\nturn tn England to [oin her three\nolder sisttrs who are all artists, in\nwhatever war wnrk ls needed\nMiss Warren's two piintings first\nhung in Sir Robert U rden's nf-,\nfire. Then they hung fcr a time in j\nthe parliamentary reading room, j\nLater they went to McGill Univer- \u25a0\nsity ard for the past while thev '\nhave been packed \u2022\u25a0way tn *he\nha'rment of a gov-t-rnment build- i\nnig.\nSLOCAN PARK\nSLOCAN    PARK.    B.  C.-John\nHalishoff of Calgary Alta., is a gueM\nof Mr. and Mrs. John Poohachoff.\nMrs. Walter Lebedoff ot Thrums\nis a guest of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Eli Padowinhoff.\nBillic and Virginia Hooroskln of\nQueen's Bav are visiting-here.\nMrs. Stanley Reid visited Pass-\nmore.\nVisitors to Nelson included Mrs.\nO. Storbo. Richard Storbo. Mr. and\nMrs. James Johnson. Sam Conkin\nand son Bobbie, John Konkin and\nS. S. Plonidin.\nMrs. John Polonikoff has returned from Kootenay Lake General\nHospital.\nJohn Cheveldave of Trail U via-\niting here.\nMr. and Mrs. James Johnson and\nfamily are visiting at Murphy\nCreek.\nTwo weddings took place in Slocan Park during February. The contracting parties were Mike Verigin\nand Mlas Helen Kiniakinof. Brilliant and Alex Marlin and Miss\nFlorence Hadikin also ot Brilliant.\nVALENTINE BALL HELD\nBY NEW DENVER AID\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-The Valentine's Ball, sponsored by the Ladies' Hospital Aid at the Boaun Hall\nFebruary 14 was an outstanding success.\nThe hall was packed, a large number attending from Nakusp, Silver-\nton. Sandon and other points.\nThe hall was beautifully decorated with red and while streamers\ninterwoven with hundreds of red\nhearts and cupid with his darts.\nThe high light of the evening was\nthe supper waltz, when Dr. A. Francis and Miss L. Boyd, Matron of\nSlocan Community Hospital, took\nthe floor, and were given much\napplause Delicious sandwiches,\ncakes and individual sslards were\nserved J Tier was Master of Ceremonies. Committees included Mrs\nII F Nelson. Mrs. G. Palethorpe\nand Mrs H. Gunn, decorating; Mra.\nJ Taylor, refreshment, assisted by\n[other members: Mrs. G. Burkltf,\ni sales ticket; Miss Raise Zadra and\nJ. Tier, music. J. Burman attended\nI the door\nUlcers . . .\nThe Good Earth as\nUsed in Medicine\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\n\"The earth with the seal\"\u2014terra\nsigillata\u2014it was called in the old\ndays, because it was thought to be\nso valuable that its genuineness\nwas guaranteed.\nKaolin we call it now. It is a common constituent of many soils and is\nclassified as a silicious earth. It is\nfound in many rich deposits in the\nU. S. and rhe Orient. It is used in\npottery but has been a part of the\nphysician's armory for many centuries. It has a soothing and healing action on the intestines and has\nbeen used for many different kinds\nof intestinal complaints, from Asiatic cholera to our own colitis.\nI Its action is twofold on the inflamed intestine. It mechanically\ntakes up large numbers of bacteria\nand carries them off, dead or alive;\nsecond, it takes up poisons by absorption.\nSIMILAR PRODUCT\nIt is beat given with a similar\nproduct, aluminum hydroxide, because kaolin alone may settle out of\nsuspension and form a hard, claylike mass. Aluminum hydroxide\nhas greater colloidal activity than\nkaolin and settles out of suspension\nless readily. Thc two together form\na light viscid jell.\nThis jell can be used in a great\nmany disease conditions. On account of iU soothing properties it\nis used to paint the throat in tonsillitis and diphtheria. When the\nearthy mass comes away, great\nquantities of bacteria come with it.\nIt has a reversible chemical reaction and can act as a we-ak acid or\na weak base. This, along with its\n'astringent action, accounts fnr Its\ni favorable action in cases of ulcer of\n'the stomach.\nI USEFUL IN COLITI8\n! In colitis, and particularly colitis\n! where ulceration has occurred, it\nj finds its greatest field of usefulness,\n; It reduces pain and colic and, by\n! carrying off germs and poisons, aidi\n1 in building up the general health.\nj One patient gained 40 pounds of\n| weight within six weeks after the\n\u25a0 treatment was started. Mucous for*\n, matinn  is greatly  reduced.\nOther treatment is carried out at\nthe .-same time with these adminis-\n[trations.   In   ordiiu.y   colitis   it   is\nnot so necessary, but in the ulcerative type bed  rent Ls  enforced.  A\nbland but highly-nutritious diet,\n'consisting of pureed vegetables nnd\nground meat, eggs and cream, mast\n; be eaten for some time. Sedatives\n1 are often necessary.\nAttaching Wings\nto Imaginallo\nBy Garry Cleveland  Myeri, Ph\nThc great creative geniuaej\nthe world were fed in early chl\nhood on fiction, not fact. Tb\nimagination waa put on wings, i\nbound with chains. There were\n\"phllosophera ot education,\" wt\nthey were little children, to sell\nbaby's birthright (fairyland) lot\nmesa of pottage (realism).\nWithout the elves, brownies I\nfairlea, could there have beet\nBurns, Lamb, Coleridge, Dicke\nStevenson or Mllne?\nYou know how Stevenson, wh*\nmere baby listened for hours in\nhours as his nurse read to him W\ntales of tancy. We have lt !f\nMilne, in his recent autoblograp'\nthat he was read to from \"UD\nRemus\" and \"Pilgrim's Projre\nbefore the age of four.\n\" \"Uncle Remus\" was read ale\nto us by Papa, a chapter a night..\nPapa also read \"The Pilgrim's P\ngress\" to us. . . .\"\nDEBT TO MAGAZINE\nMilne tells us that his success\na writer for children he ofl\nchiefly to \"Aunt Judy's Magazln\nwhose pages presumably were I\nfilled with facta bpt with Jicti\nTo quote:\n\"I have mentioned \"Aunt Jut\nMagazine'M hope that she me\nsomething to some of my contemp\naries. for she meant Heaven to\nWe had all the bound volutl\nbut never knew, nor know n1\nwhether the component* were a\nin circulation. Was Mrs. Ew\nAunt Judy? Who were the ot\ncontributors? Any poor laun\nwhich I have won as a writer\nchildren I strip from my bt\nand distribute apologetically, 1\nby leaf, to those of them who bl\nremained unknown. To us the v\numes of \"Aunt Judy's Magazil\nwere friends as familiar and wi\nloved as were (in this more pnu\ncal age) the volumes of the \"CI\ndren's Encyclopaedia\" to my O\nchild. Aunt Judy was not pr\u00bbi\ncal. She entranced us, but ne'\ntold us how to make a tricycle.'\nDo you realize that in some\nthe outstanding universities of t\ncontinent, little children In\nnursery school and kindergar\nare given only facts and denied '\nfanciful; lhat parents are being ti\nto read oniy the real to their babl\nthat little children, under the gu\nof \"modern psychology\", are hi\ning their Imaginations gagged a\nchained?\nNO APPEAL TO FANCIE8\nHave you observed that modi\nschool books for young chilldren\nlonger appeal to the child's creat:\nfancies and that brownies, falri\nand animate animals have dis*\npeared from them?\nRemember this; No one yet 1\nproved conclusively that folk li\nand fairy tales that are not frig\nful are harmful to the personal\nof the child, if properly balaw\nwith social play and use of to(\nThe time when you child should\nfired with appeals to his imagh\ntion is before he enters school; a\nhe should not have to feed th\u00ab\nafter wholly on the fare of reall\n\u2014not if he Is going to be happl\nand learn most creatively.\nIf you desire to receive a selec\nlist of books from which to read\nthe baby and young child, write\nin rare of this paper, enclosini\nself-addressed envelope with\nthree-cent stamp on it.\nSOLVING  PARENT\nPROBLEMS\nQ: Should a parent ever apo\ngir.e to a child, say between thi\nand 20?\nA: Yes, indeed; and before t\nsun goes down on the wrong dc\nto the child.\nQ: What do you think of tl\ndancing for the timid child?\nA.: Not much, except for the ch\nwho larks normal balance or set\nof rhythm.\nMRS. LUND REELECTED\nSALMO W.I. PRESIDE--*\nSALMO, B.C.-The annual me\nIr.g of the Salmo and District V\nmen's Inslilute was held at\nhome of Mrs. D, C. Aldis. 1\ntreasurers report showed total\nceipts of the year were $W2, i\nbursements amounting to %i\nleaving a bal?nce of $a\u00a77.\nDonatirns were made to num\nous charities and many gifts sn\\\nto the sick. The monthly\nClinic proved helpful to n\nmothers of the district.\nMrs E Lund was reelected pr<\ndent and Mrs. I.. Johnstone to\nover the duties of Secretary-Trc\nTEA AND SALE PLANNED\nBY NAKUSP CHURCH A\nI NAKUSP. B. C. - The Unl'\nChurrh Indies Aid met at the ho\not Mrs E. J. Oxenham, with la*\nE. W  Hill In Ihe chair\nArr.ingrmenis were made to h\n,i silver  tea and b.ike sale at\nOxenham  home  the   last   week\nM.irch. Afternoon tea was served\nIhe   hostess,   assisted   by   Mrs.\nI Thompson\nSPRINC SICNS ARE\nSEEN AROUND BOSWELL\nBOSWELL, B.C \u2014Geese were observed flying North last week The\nPhoebe has been heurd -many times\nsince the beginning of the month,\nand a few robins appeared Snowdrops \u00abnd violetj are in blcom,\nWHIST DRIVE, NAKUSP\nNAKUSP. B, C -The whist drive\nheld in the K P. hill was n huge\nsuccess, 10 tables b<;in(t in piny. The\nhall wai deroraled bv the members\nof Ihe A Y. P. A. which sponsored\nthr drive Prizes were won bv Mis';\nOlive Chidwick, Mi.\u00ab.M\u00bbrinn' Bnnd,\nA Harrison and B Parkinson Refreshments were served.\nQUE8TION8 AND ANSWERS\nj M, L. \"I havf b'-en suffering from\n' duodenal ulcer fnr the pa.it two\ni years. Is ulcer curable by being in-\ni jerted with serum1 Will it ever\nI bother mc again, if aired?\"\n, Answer: Serum Ls not a recog-\ntnized treatment for ulcer. Ulcer is\nvery likely to return, no matter\nI how thoroughly it u apparently\nI cured.\nLENTEN  REDUCING  DIET\nFOR   SUNDAY\nBreakfast:   Fruit   in   season,   oat-\n.meal with cream, small helping OH\n! eggs, h.icon  and  toast; mffee with\nj sugar and  cream\nj Dinner: Clear soup, average help-\n'ing any meat, vegetables; one slice\nj bread and butter; mixed salad, one\ni dessert-spoonful of French dressing,\n[imall helping any dewert, roffee or\ntea,\nSnpner:   Cold    meat,   one   slice.\n\u25a0stewed In ma toe* or vegetable < from\nthe ran1: mid de.ssert. roffee or fea\nDay's ralones- 1-200 to 1-SOO.\nI Monday Diet \u2014  Repeat\nThuriday'i\nHove You a\nUsed\nBRID6F TABLE\n\u25a0\nWhy Not Turn It\nInto Cashr*\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (21 llnei tl timet Mo nel\nTwo (2) linei onct 20c n\u00ab*\nNelson Daily Newi\nPHONE 144\n -*-*\u25a0*-\niPORTS\nivenile Finals\nI Kootenay Start\ntore on Tuesday\nIm Kootenay final series, total\nll to count, ln midget and Juve-\nI hockey divisions will be play-\non Tuesday and Wednesday, ac-\nding to officials of the B. C.\nlateur Hockey Association, Sun-\n' night.\nn the midget section Trail will\ny at Kimberley and the Kim-\nley  Juveniles  come   to  Nelson\nthe two games. Ty Culley will\neree tha Nelson games.\n\"he Provincial juvenile finals\n1 be played at Vernon on the\nit and 28th in a total goal series,\n1 the midget final series will be\nged at either Trail or Kimberley,\nlending on which team wins the\notenay title.\nfrail Tigers, coached by Steve\nitovich, open defenct of their\nC. junior hockey title at home\ninday night agalnit the Vernon\naders, and the second game of\ntotal goal series will also be\nred in the Smelter City Friday\nnt. If Ice ls available the win-\nI will advance to the Provincial\nill at Fernie in a best of three\nlea, scheduled for February 24,\nand 27.\n\u2022he Kootenay Intermediate finals\n.1 be played at Kimberley on\nday and Saturday, a total goal\nlea. Rossland Rangers, who de-\nted Trail All-Stars, last year's\nimpions, in a sudden death game\nt week, will furnish Kimberley's\npal tion.\nominion Tennis\nfourney Unlikely\nJONTREAL, Feb. 18 (CP)\u2014Can-\nI'a tennis stars were faced today\nth prospects of a season when\nirnament display of their wares\n>bably will be greatly curtailed.\nWith the war causing cancellated of all Davli Cup play, one\nncentive producing good tour-\nleys has J-ecn lost The Canadian\n>wn Tennis Association express-\nsd doubt at its annual meeting\nlert Saturday whether the Do-\nnlnkn tourney would be held,\nDecision finally was deferred un-\n11 later in the year.\n\u2022\u25a0announcement of the decision Is\nbe made before May 1 to officials\ntie Civic Service Tennis Club\nQuebec, awarded the tourney If\nd.\n)n request of Charlei Leslie ol\nntreal that he be permitted to\nlgn as chairman of the Ranking\nmmittee. A. R. Porter of Monti wai named to the post during\ni meeting. Lieut-Col. W. A.\n-ele of Ottawa was reappointed\nId of the player development\nnmittee.\nI N. Watt of Montreal was retted President of the Association\nth Dr. E. W. Boak of Victoria as\niftern Vice-President and A. C.\niwell of Halifax Eastern Vice-\nealdent\nMany Strings Wins.\nHialeah Feature\nMIAMI, Fla., Fab. 18 (AP) -\nMany Strings, five,-year-old gelding owned by Leo J. Marks of Lexington Ky., won the 110,000 added\nMcLennan Memorial handicap at\nHialeah Park Saturday, beating 11\nother candidatei for thc Widener\nChallenge Cup before a crowd of\n19,031.\nWith Challcdon out of the -190,000\nadded Widener March 2, Many\nStrings became a itrong threat. He\ntrimmed Mn. Payne Whitney's\ngray coll, Day Off, by U4 lengths\nwith Joe W. Brown's Brown King\n\u25a0another half-length back.\nMany Strings ran the mile and a\nfurlong In 1:50 3-5 to earn 910.025\nfor his owner. In the mutuels he\npaid $13.60 for $2 to wii, $6.70\nto place and $4.70 to show.\nTORONTO EDGES\nOUT CANADIENS\nMONTREAL, Feb. 18 (CP). -\nToronto Maple Leafs scored a 2-1\nvictory tonight over Montreal Canadiens as the second largest crowd\nof the local National Hockey League\nseason \u2014 10,320 paid admissions \u2014\nlooked on.\nMajor penalties were handed out\nto Murph Chamberlain. Gus Marker,\nRed Goupille, Red Horner and Toe\nBlake. All but Chamberlain's ma\njor came in the third period when-;\nat one time, there were eight men\nln the penalty box.\nFirst period \u2014 1 Toronto, Kamp\nman (Langelle) 14*37.\nPenaltiei \u2014 Goupille. Chlsholm,\nKampman. Trudel, Young, Heron,\nDrouin, Chamberlain (major), and\nChurch.\nSecond period \u2014 No score\nPenalties \u2014 Goupille (2), Chamberlain.\nThird period - 2 Canadiens, Get'\nUffe (Trudel) 10:30; 3 Toronto, N\nMetz 11:48.\nPenalties \u2014 Marker and Goupille (majon); Davidson. Thompson (2), Horner and Blake (majors),\nStanowski,   Chlsholm,  Church.\n NELSON OAILY NIYVt, NILSON. i.C-MONDAY M0BNIN8. FIB. ft, 1MB..\nBIRCH, MISS DILANEY\nBADMINTON WINNERS\nMONTREAL, Feb. 18 (CP). -\nDick Birth, Montreal, formerly of\nVancouver, and Marlorie Delaney\not Quebec, Dominion men's and\nwomen's badminton champions respectively, ahowed they will be\npowerful contenders ln defence of\ntheir crowns thli vear when they\nwon the Provincial tingles cham-\nDionshlpe Saturday.\nPaired with Louise Turcot of\nQuebec, Birch won tha mixed\ndoubles crown while Miss Delaney\nand Miss Turcot won the women's\ndoubles.\nDYNAMITERS STAVE OFF LEAFS'\nLATE RALLIES TO WIN HOCKEY\nulch Bulldogs Win\nOrer Jr. Police at\nTrail by 6-1 Score\nrRAIL. B. C, Feb. 18-Gulch Bull-\nfs chalked up a B-l win over Ju-\nir Police in a hard-fought High\nhool junior hockey game, Satur-\nJohnny Kloster scored two for the\nnners with J. Turner accounting\n\u2022 the other four. Fred Doubt icor-\nthe only Junior Police goal.\nirnie Wins East\nCootenay Hoop Title\nin Beatina Kimberley\n(\"ERNIE, B. C. Feb. 18-Femle\nrtherns won the East Kootenay\n>r \"B\" basketball championship\nlen they defeated Kimberley\ningaroos 44-42 at Kimberley Fri-\ny in the second game of a home-\nd-away total-point series Fernie\nm the round 75-58. Thc locals\nw meet the winner of the Ross-\nid-Trall series (or the Kootenay\nle   and   the   Blaylock   Bowl.\nSTAMPEDERS WIN\nALGARY, Feb. 18 (CPl.-Cal-\nry Stampeders gav\u00ab An Rice-\nnea another shutout on Saturday\n(ht when they turned back the\ntiling Elks from Olds 3-0 in a\nme that was fast and pleasing al-\nough marred somewhat by a\nttdency towards roughness. A\nOWd of more than 4000 fans in\nctoria Arena saw Elks go down\nhting against a team that needed\nvictory to stay on top of the\nie  standings\nCABS RUN BBTTSR WITH\nAMALIE OIL\nihorty's Repair Shop\nT14 BAKER      NELSON. B. C!\nHockey Results\nSATURDAY\nNational League -\nToronto 3. Montreal Canadiens 1.\nInternational-American\nIndianapolis 2, Pittsburgh 2.\n(Overtime tie.)\nSyracuse 3, Springfield 2.\nProvidence 7. Philadelphia 2.\nHershey 2. Cleveland 5.\nAmerican   Auociatlon\nSt Louis 4, Tulsa 3.\nK- lis City 1, Omaha 7.\niast   .1 U. 8. Amateur\nWashington 4, River Vale 4.\n(Overtime tie.)\nBaltimore 4, Atlantic City 0.\n(Overtime.)\nManitoba Junior\nKenora 7. Portage La Prairie 3.\nThunder Bay Senior\nGeraldton II. Fort William 2.\nQuebec Senior\nCornwall 5, Ottawa 4.\nAlberta Intermediate Playdowns\nMedicine Hat 10, Lethbridge 3.\n(Medicine Hat won two-game series\n18-8.)\nB. C. Senior\nKimberley  7, Nelson  5.\nSaskatchewan Senior\nFlin Flon 6. Regina 4.\nRegina Abbott-Generals 9. Notre\nDame 3.\nIntercollegiate\nSaskatchewan 3, Alberta 3.\n(Tie.)\nAlberta Senior\nEdmonton 5, Turner Valley 1.\nCalgary 3. Olds 0.\nLethbridge 5. Drumheller 2.\nEdmonton Juvenile Final\nMaple Leafs 4, E. A. C. 2 (overtime).\n(First of best of three series).\n8UNDAY\nQuebec Senior\nMontreal Concordia 5. Quebec 8\nQuabec  Provincial  Senior\nQuebec 6. St Hyacinthe 3.\nSherbrooke 2. Verdun 6.\nEastern U- 8- Amateur\nNew York 6. Washington 4.\nInternational-American\nNew Haven 3, Cleveland 0.\nProvidence 3. Indianapolis 0\nSyracuse 7, Hershey 5.\nEaitern U. S. Amateur\nBaltimore 4. Atlantic City 2.\nSaskatchewan Senior\nFlin Flon 5, Regina 4.\nAmerican Auociatlon\nSt Louis 4, Wichita 1.\nAlberta Intermediate\nCalgary Wings 2, Gleichen  12.\niGleichen wins round 20-3'\nBellevue 4. Coleman 3.\n(Bellevue wins round 7-5)\nAlberta Junior\nBlairmore 2. Lethbridge 9 (Lethbridge wins round 11-4).\nMacleod 3. Coleman 3 ifirst game\ntotal-point series).\nCalgary Carnival\nHockey Winner\nBANFF. Alta., Feb. 18 (CP) -\nCleverness and experience offset\ny?uth and speed when Calgary\nTigers defeated Canmore Briquet-\nteers 3-2 here Saturday night to\nwin the Winter Carnival hockey\nchampionship. It was Tigers second\nstraigh victory in the series si\nthey defeated Banff by the same\nscore in a thrilling 20 minute overtime contest the previous night\nDETROIT BLANKS\nRANGERS 2 TOO\nDETROIT, Feb. 18 (CP). - A\npair of goals In the second half of\nthe third period gave Detroit Red\nWings a 2-0 victory over the leading New York Rangers in a National\nHockey League game tonight.\nThe contest last between the\nclubs during the regular campaign,\nproduced a free-for-all fight in the\nsecond period between Eddie Wares\nof Detroit and AH Pike of Rangers,\nOthers joined In and police finally\nbroke it up. Wares and Pike received major penalties.\nFirst period - No score.\nPenalties \u2014 None.\nSecond period - No score.\nPenalties - Watson (2), Stewart,\nWares (major), Pike (major)\nThird period \u2014 1 Detroit, Motter\n(Goodfellow, Wares) 12:26; 2 De\ntroit Bruneteau (Howe) 13:13,\nPenalty \u2014 Coulter.\nNelson Bantams\nBeat Trail 5-1\nA well-built young fellow who\ncarried a big No. 15 on hii broad\nback, Gordon McDonald, teaming\nup in a nifty combination with Len\nAppel, accounted for four goals aa\nthe Nelson Bantam Repe ran up a\n5-1 victory over the I. O. O. F. team,\nleaders of the Trail Bantam League,\nat the Civic Arena Saturday night\nin an exhibition curtain-raiser to\nthe Nelson-Trail juvenile playoff.\nThe home club's triumph was an\nimpressive one for they dominated\nthe play almost continuously over\ntheir much lighter opposition. McDonald scored three of his goals on\nassists from Appel, while thc other\nwas a rather brilliant individual effort when he split the Trail defence\nand cut loose a hard high drive that\nsailed past Spain into the Trail net\nThe game provided plenty of opportunity for Freddy Romano, Coach\nof the Nelson Club, to employ tactics\nalong the lines of Lester Patrick's\nNew York Rangers in killing off\npenalties. Nelson drew all but one\nof the eight minor penalties, but\nused them to its own advantage, immediately sending every man up to\nhem the opposition inside their own\nblue line. In the third period while\nLang was off. McDonald scored two\nof his goals in quick order while his\nteam was ganging the other end although shorthanded. In City League\nfilay, Romano directs the league-\neading Panther-Westerners.\nOutstanding performers for the\nvisitors was the line of the Koehle\nbrothers, Ron and Fred, and Kurk\nBroman, the latter scoring Trail's\nlone goal on a pass from his co-winger Fred. The little fellows played\nfine games from start to finish, and\nthe fans really aprpeciated them.\nRon Koehle, a redhead made a\ngreat scoring try on a penalty shot\nwhich he was given when Jackie\nPrestley, who scored the other Nelson goal, fouled him when he was\ngoing in the clear in the Nelson\nrone. Ron missed the corner by a\nnarrow margin on a good shot.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: 1, Nelson, McDonald\n(Appel)  1:00.\nPenalty: DeVito.\nSecond period: 2, Nelson, McDonald (Appel) :40; 3, Nelson. Prestley\n7:45; 4, Trail, Broman (Fred Koehle)\n11:30.\nPenalties: McDonald. Wassick,\nPrestley, Benwell, Breete.\nThird period: 5. Nelson, McDonald 5:10; 6, Nelson, McDonald (Appel) 6:01.\nPenalties: Lang, McDonald,\nTeams were:\nTrail: Gordon Spain; Bob DeVjto,\nRichard Ixmghery, J. Mlros and Don\nAshworth; Ronald Koehle. Fred\nKoehle and Kurk Broman; Eugene\nCatalano. Bert Brown and Murray\nNolan; Grant Parks.\nNelson: Reed Sahara and Jack\nMorris; Billy Benwell, Bruce Arne-\nson and John Lang; Len Appel, Gordon McDonald and Jack Breeze;\nRichie Wassick. Allan DcsChamp*\nand Jackie Prestley; Bobbie Rain,\nBilly Ludlow and Jimmy Ball; Howard Proctor and Stan Fisher.\nOfficials follow: Ernie Elliot and\nDick Hornett. referees; D. G. Cham-\nherlain, Jark Wood and A. N. Winlaw,  timekeepers.\nSalmon Arm Gains\nIntermediate Finals\nVERNON, B.C., Feb. 18 (CP) -\nSalmon Arm Acea entered the final\nround of the Okanagan Intermediate Hockey League Saturday night\nwhen they scored a 3-2 victory over\nArmstrong Leglonnairea In the final game of a best-of-thrcc semifinal series.\nThe Aces, who trailed through\nmost of the league schedule, will\nmeet Vernon Blue and Whites ln\nthe opening game of tha finals\nhere Monday night. In the semifinals, they lost the firit game to\nArmstrong 8-6, but won the second\n7-2.\nBill Neilson, out of the game for\nseveral weeks, will be baok on the\nVernon forward line when tomorrow nlght'a game gels underway.\nKimberley High\nHockey Winner\nrERNTE, B. C, Feb. 17\u2014Kimberley High School won the Dr. Green\ntrophy, emblematic of East Kootenay High School hdekey supremacy,\nwhen they trounced Fernie High\nSchool 8-2 in the second game of a\nhome and home aeries here Saturday. Kimberley took the round 13-7,\nthe two teams having played a 5-all\ntie at Kimberley Friday.\nFernie had won the challenge\ntrophy two weeks ago and lost it\nIn their firit defence. Hyatead of\nKimberley was Saturday's Individ\nual star with four goals. Lineups:\nKimberley\u2014Nevin, Coulter, Und\nlay, Leith, Ordway, Shaw, Sortome, Rice, Hyatead, Caldwell, Strll-\nchuck, James, Maraxoeco.\nFernie \u2014 Anderson, McNaugh<*pn,\nWaihburn, Mitchell, Stewart, Harbinson, Dolynuk, Harrington, Mar-\nasco, Dicken, Rosa.\nFlrat period: 1, Kimberley, Rice,\n2:33; 2, Kimberley, Jamei, 9:12; 3,\nFernie, Dicken (Ross) 10:24.\nPenalties*. Mitchell, Caldwell.\nSecond period: 4, Kimberley,\nShaw (Coulter) 9:30; 5, Kimberley,\nHystead (Rice) 10:00.\nPenalties: None.\nThird period: \u00ab, Kimberley, Hystead (Sortome) 5:20; 7, Kimberley,\nHystead (Sortome) 5:50; 8, Kimberley, Lindsay (Caldwell) 9:32; 9,\nFernie, Rote (Marasco) 15:42; 10,\nKimberley, Hystead (Rice) 19:25.\nPenalties: Washburn, Marasco,\nHyitead, Caldwell, Harrington and\nRoss.\nT.N.T.'s Defeat\nWixards ll-7in\nTrail High Hockey\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb 18-T.N.T\/i\ncontinu-M their winning way* in\nHigh School senior hot-key ts thfy\nturned in a 11-7 victory ovtr Wizard* .Saturday morning.\nAlec Klimovich scored t\\x and\nBrother Andy five for the winners,\nWizard*' kobij were ncorcd by Bob\nMclntfwh, with two, Jack Undcr-\nI wood counting once. Jim Mclyod\n| with three, and Mungy -Jones wilh\none.\nFenske Wins Mile\nNEW YORK. Feb. 18 (CP) -\nChuck Fenske ran his winning\nstreak to five straight Saturday\nnight In capturing the 27th running of the New York Athletic\nClub's Baxter mile in the fast time\nof four minutes 7.4 seconds before a\ncrowd of 15.000 at Madison Square\nGarden.\nLarry O'Connor. University of\nToronto hurdle star, was beaten\nin the final of 60-yard hurdles by\nAllan Tolmich of Detroit who\nhad to set a new indoor record of\n7.1 seconds to nose out the Canadian.\nTolmich cut l-10th of a second off\nhis own mark set in this meet In\n1936 and equalled in last year's\ngames  by O'Connor.\nIn the mile, Fenske put on a\nkilling sprint for the last three-\nquarters of a lap. The former University of Wisconsin star caught\nLou Zamperini in 40 yards of\nstraightaway and won- by three\nyards.\nGlenn Cunningham could do no\nbetter than fourth aa Fenske shaded him for third place.\nKamloops Skiers\nTurn Down Tourney\n' for Lack of Snow\nKAMLOOPS, B.C., Feb. 18 (CP)\n\u2014The mildest Winter in memory\nhas caused directors of Kamloops\nSki Club to refuse the 1940 provincial ski championships, scheduled to be held here next weekend.\nNof since 1890 when white shirtwaists and parasols were acceptable\nfeminine attire in February has\nKamloops had such a mild Winter\nSo far the minimum temperature\nhu been two degrees above icro.\nDecember's mean average temperature was 10 degrees higher than\nthe 42-year average.\nWhether the tournament will be\nstaged elsewhere Is up to the Vancouver ski executive.\nRevelstoke, last year's locale\nwhere the tournament was spoiled\nby too much snow, is suffering this\nyear frcm not enough, the snowfall approaching a 30-year minimum.\nHave 5-0 Lead Once,\nGo on to Win\nby 7-5\nKIMBERLEY, B. C\u201e Feb. IS -\nKimberley Dynamiters built' up a\n5-0 lead over the Invading Nelaon\nMaple Leafs in a West Kootenay\nHockey League game here Saturday\nnight and then staved off a iteady\noffemlve barrage thrown up by\nthe visitors in the lait period to\ntake a apeedy 7-B victory that\nkept their home Ice record against\nthe second-place Leafs unbeaten.\nThe Leafi play here again Monday\nIn the fourth meeting at Kimberley\nof the teams.\nThe Dynamiten completely dominated the play almost through the\nentirety of the firit two periods,\nmaking Jesse Seaby ln the Nelson\nnets an exceptionally busy young\nman in blocking T.N-T. rubber. He\nwas nothing snort of sensational\nduring those 40 minutes, despite\nthe fact that five goals went up on\nthe scoreboard before his team got\nita first The first period ended 2-0,\nand the second 5-1, and the Dynamiters had the Leafs penned up\nin their own zone nearly all that\nlime.\nLed by B\\iddy Hammond, the\nLeafs took over the play ln the last\nperiod as they ln turn displayed\nplenty of power that threatened to\nbring them up on an even basis\nwith the Dynamiters. But the homesters took advantage of breaks that\ncame their way to notch two more\ngoals to make the victory sure.\nHammond scored three of his team's\ntotal and he played a bang-up game\nall night.\nJack Corbett, Kimberley defence\nman, and Johnny smith, the bad\nman of the league, mixed it briefly\nln the third period to add some\nmore excitement to the game, Corbett drawing five minutes for being\nthe aggressor of the fracas. Smith\ngot a minor stretch of two minutes.\nLeafs played without the services of their playing coach, Len\nBicknell, who Is Buffering a charley\nhorse.\n8UMMARY\nFirst period \u2014 1 Kimberley, Chris\nSorenaon (Mackie) 12:05; 2 Kim,\nberley, Redding (Burnett) 14:10.\nPenalties \u2014 None.\nSecond period \u2014 3 Kimberley,\nWilson (Strong) 3:35; 4 Kimberley,\nWilson 7:15; 5 Kimberley, Burnett\n(Chris Sorenson, Forrest) 10:35; 6\nNelson, Hammond (Desreux)  17:00\nPenalties \u2014 Carr, Corbett.\nThird period \u2014 7 Nelson, Sneider\n(Mann) 7:10; 8 Nelson, Hammond\n(Sneider) 8:15; 9 Kimberley, Forrest (Strong) 11:40; 10 Nelson, Desreux (Algar) 12:00; 11 Kimberley,\nCalles (Forrest, Mackie) 18:05; 12\nNelson, Hammond (N. smith) 18:15,\nPenalties \u2014 Corbett (5), J. Smith\nLineups follow:\nNelson \u2014 Seaby; Desreux, N.\nSmith and J. Smith; Kilpatrick,\nSneider and Mann; Hammond, Carr\nand Algar.\nKimberley \u2014 Campbell; Corbett,\nBurnett and Almack; Wilson. Carl\nSorenson and Redding; Mackie,\nCalles and Forrest; Chris Sorenson\nand Strong.\nReferee \u2014 Clarence Reddick.\nF.A.C. Get 8-2 Win\nOver Panther Midgets\nThough putting up a hard fight\nall the way, Panther Midgets were\nunable to meet the scoring punch\nof the Fairview Midgets ln a Midget Hockey League game Saturday\nmorning, and lost 8-2. The Panthers\nhad only seven players, and the\nF.A.C.'s only eighi\nGordon Olson scored four of the\nFAC. goals, Lloyd Ridenour two,\nand Mac Norris and Jim Carr one\neach. Ridenour gave two assists,\nand Olson, Carr, Norris and Frank\nDoyle one each. Jack Steed netted\nthe first Panther goal In the first\nperiod, on a pass from Bud Whitfield, and Whitfield found the net\nin the third, with Jack Jarbeau\nassisting. John Bradley was net\nguardian for the F.A.C.'s, and\nGeorge Perdue for the Panthers.\nSlim Porter officiated with the\nwhistle, with H H. Dirrie recording and Harold Kennedy timing the\ngame.\nUniversities Tied\nin Western Hockey\n1 SASKATOON. Feb. 1*8 'CPi -\nAfter playing to \u25a0 3-3 lie Saturday\nafternoon here University of Alberta Golden Bears and tha- University of Saskatchewan Huskies\nremained tied f*-r top place in the\nWestern Canada Intel --Varsity Hockey League. Both teams hnve nine\npoints apiece while lhe Univeraity\nof Manitoba Bisons are far in the\nrear wilh two\n\u2022 KOOTENAY AMATEUR\nBOXING CHAMPIONSHIPS\nSPONSORED BY VANCOUVER SUN\nPreliminaries for B. C. Amiteur Championships. Eight winners elm right to\ncompete in finals at Vancouver.\nOver 30 entries, which will provide two\nexceptionally good cards. First official\nevent of its kind in Kootenay.\nCRESTON Pavilion, 8 P. M., Feb. 23 and 24\nADMISIION:\nRush,   10<\\ Ringside. 751\nFor reservation* apply\nT. C. WOOD, CRESTON, B. C.\nTRAIL CURLING\nDRAWS\nTRAIL, B. G, Feb, 18\u2014Trail Curling Club draws of the President'i\nCup Competftlon for Monday follow: 8:30 p.m.-F. J. Glover vs. F. J.\nPlester; Charles Hoefcr vi. David\nForreal; Donald MacDonald vj. David Balfour; W. F. Doubt vs Jack\nCampbell; 8:30 p.m.\u2014L. F. Tyson\n;vi. W. H. Baldrey; H. C. Caldlcott\n[vs. W. O. Oarrle: Andy Crlchton\nI va. Robert Somarville; J A. War's-\nworth vi. B. J, Walsh.\nLACKS' DRAW\nTRAIL. B C. Feb IH- Draws of\nHie ladies' Curling Club Laurnrr j\nCup competition for Mondav fullow:'\nMrs. C. C. Jones vs. Mrs. W. C. As. j\nton; Mrs. Carroll Kendall vs. Mrs I\nJ. A. Millar. Mrs W. .1. Wigitaf! vs\nMn Donald MacDonald.\nTrail High School\nCurling Results\nTRAIL. B. C, Feh. 1H\u2014 High\nSchool Curling games played Saturday m-'mig resulted as follows:\nD. Balfour B, J. Kilhurn 4. A Dodi-\nmc-ad 8. R 1^-peoe 7; P. Archibald\n8. D Twaddle 7; A Harvey (V D.\nMcDonald 2\nFerrell Victor in\nBall Golf Tourney\nTAMPA.  Fla..  Feb   18   (API  -\nWesley   Ferrell.   Brooklyn   Dodger\nSltcher, and defending champion,\nefeated Jark Rusaell. former Chicago Cubaa pitcher, in the finals of\nIhe fifth annual baseball g.ilf tournament t\/oday. 2 and   I.\nBIRD TOURNEY MARCH\n21-24 AT SPOKANE\nSPOKANE. Feb 18 (AP). - the\nSpokane Badminton Club set Marrrf\n21 to 24 ai the dates for the annual\nInland Empire badminton tournament, which wu dominated lait\nyear by Seattle and Canadian players\nWhan you need a battery\nII'  Hire  It'i an\nEXIDE\nWholesale Distributors\nAcme  Automotive\n811 Baker       SUPPLY       Ph   1043\nFlyers Practically\nClinch Playoff Spot\nEDMONTON. Teb 18 iCP)-Ed-\nmonton Flyers made the laest of\ntheir scoring opportunities here\nlast night In defeat Turner Vsllev\nOilers S-l snd pnrtirally clinch lhe\nfourth playoff spot In the AlberU\nSenior Hockey League\nBoxers Suspended\nDETROIT. Feb. 18 (AP)-J* hn\nJ. Heltche, State Hoiaing Commissioner. Saturday suspended and\nfined K. O Morgan and Beamy\nOoldberg. principals In a boxing\nmatch itopped by the referee here\nlut Thursday night for lack of\naction Each fighter mual pay a\nfine of $380. Hettche ruled in retelling the piinara held up during\nthe Investigation.\nHetlcl Mid he did n.it believe\nthe fighl \u00bb*m \"dlshoneai\" bul de-\ndared it was an \"tintorttinsie ml*.\nmatch\"\nLETHBRIDGE WINS\nLETHBRIDGE. Alta., Feb. II\n(CP)\u2014Refusing to be ihaken from\ntht trail ot Alberta Senior Hockey\nLeanie leading Calgary Stampeders, Lethbridge Maple Leafs Saturday night whipped Drumheller\nMiners 5-2 ln a convincing display\nbefore 3000 fani. That win kept\nLeafi two points back of Stampeders, who nave played one mon\ngame.\nAt the tame time lt strengthened\nthe Lethbridge team's grip on aecond place ai Turner Valley dropped\na 5-1 decision at Edmonton. One\nmore win for Leafs, who have also\nplayed one less game than tha\nOilers, will cinch the aecond spot.\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL\nLONDON, Feb. 16 (CT-Cable)-\nSoccer gamei played ln the United\nKingdom Saturday resulted'aa follows:\nSouth  C\nBrentford 4, Weat Ham 3\nChelsea 5, Southampton 1\nMillwall 2, Fulham 0\nTottenham 2, Charlton 0\nSCOTTISH\nWeat\nAlbion 4, Partick 2.\nClyde 1, Ayr 1.\nHamilton 4. Dumbarton 1\nKilmarnock 3, Celtic 2.\nMorton 3. Third Lanark 2.\nQueen's.Park 1, SL Mirren 3.\nRangers 3, Alrdrie 1.\nEagt\nAlloa 3. East Fife 1.\nArbroath 3, Dundee 1.\nDundee U. 3, Hearts 2.\nDunfermline 2, St. Johstone 3.\nFalkirk 4. Stenhousemuir 1.\nHibernian 2, King's Park 1.\nSt. Bernards 3, Aberdeen 1.\n8outh \"D\"\nClapton I, Watford 1.\nCrystal Palace 4, Reading 1.\nSouthend 3, Norwich 0.\nSouthwest\nPlymouth 3, Swaniea 1.\nNorthweit\nOldham 8. Barrow 2.\nExhibition\nBlackpool 2, Bolton 1.\nManchester U. 6, Birmln-fham 2.\nNewcastle 4. Preston 1.\nManchester C. 3, Sheffield W. 1.\nBlack Hawks Tie\nNew York Amerks\nNEW YORK, Feb. 18 (CP).\u2014Chicago Black Hawks rallied for a goal\nin the third period tonight to tie\nNew York Americans 1-1 ln a National League game.\nThe result extended Chicago's undefeated streak to seven, of which\nfour were victories and three ties.\nFirst period: Scoring, none.\nPenalties: None.\nSecond period: 1. Americans, Armstrong (Field. Boll) 3:47.\nPenalty: Seibert.\nThird period: 2. Chicago, Thorns\n(Gtattselig. Dahlstrom)   13:40.\nPenalties: None.\nOvertime period: Scoring, none.\nPenalties: None.\nReid's Bowlers Win\nAgain, News Play\nContinuing their fast drive to a\nplayoff berth, Jack Reid's No. 4's,\nflops of thc first two rounds, took\ntheir second successive three-\nstraight victory in the third round\nwhen they took thc measure of the\nNo. 5's in Daily News Bowling\nLeague play on Gelinas Alleys Sat\nurday afternoon. In the third game\nof the Saturday match Reid'i team\nset up a new record for a game with\ntolal of 1017 pins, in which the lowest score by any membei waa 133.\nIn the second match of thc after\nnoon, the Press Room carried off a\nthree straight victory from the No. 1\nteam in a battle embracing the win\nners of the first two rounds. The\nlosing team waa minus the lervicea\nof one of their acea, Misi Queenie\nGerman, and after a bed first game\ntried their luck under the guidance\nof a new skip, Fred Leno, but they\nfailed to win a game.\nNO. 4\n1st 2nd 3rd   Tot.\nHandicap   87 57 57- 171\nJean Robertson 113 140 135-388\nEd Mathe*on ... 142 111 184- 437\nJack Turner ... 110 133 1\u00bb- 442\nDon Fleming     . 157 140 142\u2014 448\nChuck French .. 164 113 133\u2014 410\nJack Reid   119 112 187- 3M\nTotals   882 813 1017-2W4\nNO. 5\nHandicap    34 34 34-102\nLow score  110 111 133- 354\nRay Burgos .... 106 120 150- 378\nG. Heighton   118 118 95- .127\nJoe Boletti   128 138 120- 384\nC. D Pearson .... 117 I2J 154- .183\nBert Jardine   .   119 149 134- 402\nTotals 728   790   820-1148\nHigh  individual\u2014Turner  199.\nHigh aggregate\u2014Fleming 448\nNO. 3\nW. Brown. Jr. 149 153 14\u00ab- 448\nW  Brown Sr... . 97 99 99\u2014 295\nAlbart  Brown   . 180 171 120\u2014 451\nCere Ranvaden 1.11 158 191- 480\nTom Lennon . 112 148 147\u2014 405\nBill Gallicano 159 155 168- 482\nTotals      806 882 871-2581\nNO. 1\nHandicap   1.1 IS 13-39\nI\/rw score  97 M \u00bb\u2014 295\nBob Jarrett ..  133 137 141- 410\nArt C.ibbnn   .. 123 131 155- 428\nFrank Turner .. 108 1.11 136- .175\nHal Brown 112 115 1.12- 3M\nFred Ix*iu> III 158 125- 3M\nToUU m   824   822-2341\nHigh  individual\u2014Ramsden  191.\nHigh aggregate\u2014Galllcino 482.\nBasketball Tonight\nRookleia and Aces, bitter rivals of\nthe Nelson Udics' Baiketball\nleague, meet tonight In the opening\nlame of tonight's buketball card\nat the Civic Centre al 7 o'clock.\nBomben and Red Winga play a\nmen's game at 8. whili Hornets and\nFalcons, Ihe leading two teams In\nthe men's division, are scheduled\nat 9. A practice Is icheduled for the\nBomberetlM at 8:30.\nLONDON (CP)-Lord Waring,\nfor nearly 50 years head nf the furniture firm of Waring and Sons,\ndied al hla home here In his 80th\nyear He wu a yr-oJiUman and philanthropist. There la no heir to th*\nlille.\n1\nPAOf   IIVIN\nREEMAN & LEEmVF\nFurniture Co.   wW\nThe Houaa of Furniture Styles\nlifts Block        Baker St        Phone 115        Nelion\nF\nFebruary Sale\nFive Piece\nDinette Suite\nNatural finish. Combination china\ncabinet and buffet, extension table\nand four chairs. Upholstered in red\nFabricord. Reg. $75.00. Sale price\n$57.50\nGarcia-Armstrong\nBout Is Postponed\nLOS ANGELES, Tab. 18 (AP).\n\u2014The middleweight championship\nfight between Ceferino Garcia\nand HenrV Armstrong scheduled\nfor next Tuesday night waa postponed today until March 1.\nThe postponement resulted from\na boil on Garcla'i knee.\nSpecify Victor\nin San Carlos\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 18 <AP)-\nLeavlng the highly favored entry\nof Seablscuit and Kayak II, to trail\nin dismal defeat, A. A. Baroni'i\nSpecify triumphed in the $10,000\nadded San Carlos handicap.\nCompleting the picture of striking upset in form for the edification of 33,000 turf fans, two dark\nhorse contenders, Walter G. McCarthy's Lassator and the Valdina,\nfarm's Viscounty, roared in for second and third place money.\nCharles S. Howard's mighty Sea-\nbiscuit trailed in sixth and hii feared stablemate, Kayak II, ran eighth\nand out of the money for the firit\ntime in his career.\nSpecify won by a length and a\nquarter in time of 1:23 2-5.\nSpecify paid off across the board\nat $17.60, $12.80 and $9.60. Lasiator\npaid $18.20 and $9.20 and Viscounty\n$13 to show.\nHAT INTERMEDIATES\nSWEEP ALTA. SERIES\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta, Feb. 18\n(CPI\u2014Max Spotswood, formerly of\nOlds Elks Seniors, bagged four\ngoals Saturday as Medicine Hat\nChiefs swept the two-game total-\ngoal series against Lethbridge Intermediates 18-8 in Southern Alberta's playdowns Chiefs took the\nfirit game Friday 8-3 and Saturday'! 10-3.\nFive Trail Rinks\nOH lo Vancouver\nTRAIL, B. C, Tab. 18 - Five\nrinks of the Trail Curling Club left\nthe City by different means of\ntransportation Saturday mornnlg.\nfor Vancouver, where they will\nparticipate in the Pacific Coast\nBonspiel.\nCarrying Trail colors Into tha\nBritish Consols competition, the\nwinner of which represents th\u00ab\nProvince in the Dominon-wide MacDonald Brier Cup contest, ii tha\nR. C. McGerrigle rink, which include! Frank Strachan, third; Fred\nWendel, second; and Vic Ferguson,\nlead.\nThe other Trail rinks participating follow:\nP. F. Mclntyre, William Rae, William Vance and Luce Fortin.\nLeslie Wood. J. A. McAUliter.\nRobert Dockerill and Charlie Phillips.\nW. F. Doubt. A- H. Woolf, Allan\nRobb and C- A. Spatarl.\nDavid Balfour, William Stevenson. \"Brick\" Balfour and Gordon\nBalfour.\nSaskatchewan Wins   .\nCollegiate Annual\nEDMONTON, Feb. 18 (CP)-Tbe\nUniversity of Saskatchewan won\nthe annual \"assault at armi\" Intercollegiate competition with University of Alberta last night by a\nscore of 8-7, with the visitors tallying their victory margin in the\nfencing events.\nAlberta Jumped into a 5-1 lead\nat the end of the boxing card, led\n7-5 after the wrestling and then\nfailed to acore a point In fencing\nagainst Saskatchewan's three.\nBill Payne a*hd Lei Willox of Alberta won their boxing bouta\nagainst Mel Wright and Jim Mc-\nConnell, respectively, by technical\nknockouts to highlight the meet.\nREGISTER OGDEN Si\nRoll a cigarette with Ogden't\nFine Cut, touch a light to it\nand you'll  register \"real\"\nsmoking onjoymont. Ogden'i\nis a \"star\" cigarette tobacco\n\u2014 the (nature turn on the\nploasuro programme of wiso\nroll-your-ownors everywhoro.\nCM course Uioy chooso the\nbest papors, too \u2014 \"Vogue\"\nor \"Chantoclor\".\nOGDEN'S\nFINE   CUT\n*    \u25a0 'fAOKtllV    ASK FOU OGOfN . .   '\nmmmmmmm\n\u2014t.\n PAClr   IIQHT\nInvasion of Holland or Belgium\nIs Greatest Problem Facing Allies\nB,   SAM   ROBERTSON\nCanadian  Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP)- Thai\npoHlbllltly of Garmany violating\nthe neutrality of Holland, Belgium\nor both In an effort to strike a telling blow at Great Britain and to\nFrance is one of the major problems\nfacing the Allied command.\nSuch an Invasion could have disadvantages as weighty aa any advantages to be gained. For Instance,\nif the Nazis managed to overrun\nBelgium they would be in \u2022 position to turn the main Maginot defence and strike at the portion of\nthe French Frontier least strongly\nfortified. But such a move would\nadd more than 1,000,000 men- the\nfighting forces of the Low Coun-\ntrles-to the Allies' strength and\nextend the front of operations.\nA Nazi attack on the neighborly\nneutrals probably would cause the\nAllies to go to their rescue and\nthis would draw a portion of the\nBritish and French forces out of\ntheir defensive positions. But to\nthe distinct disadvantage of Germany, it would throw open a direct air route from the British Isles\nto Important industrial centre! of\nNorthwest Germany.\nThese areas are approachable by\nBritish bombers only by a Jong and\ncircuitous route.\nPerhaps the most Important gain\nthe Nazis could achieve by violating the Low Countries is that It\nwould provide advanced bases tor\nair attacks on Britain and sea bases\nfor submarines operating In \"Ihe\nNorth Sea and the channel.\nHowever, if the Nazis were unable to thrust through to the seaboard then the advantage likely\nwould be with the Allies. The Nazis\nthen would be more vulnerable to\nsea and air attacks launched from\nBritain.\nWhen the Germany of Kaiser\nWUhelm moved in 1914 Belgium\nwas taken completely by surprise.\nThe Belgian army was untrained\nand defences were badly out of\ndate. That ls definitely not the case\ntoday. Too, Belgium stood alone at\nthe outbreak of the First Great\nWar. Today her fortunes are linked with Holland\u2014and at their back,\nat the \"stand ready\", are the mobilized Allied foroffe of the British\nI Empire and France!\nI.O.D.E. Will Help\nCollect Books for\nCanadian Soldiers\nKokanee Chapter of the I.O.D.E.\nwill do ita share toward* collecting\n, quota of 6000 tooks for distribution to soldiers of the Canadian\nActive Service Force. No definite\nplans have yet beer, made as to how\nor  when  the  collections  will  be\n\"\"when collected the books will be\nshipped free of charge by the C.P.R.\nto Vancouver. There they' wffl be\ndistributed. It Is expected that a\nwide variety of literature will be\nCThetev.ncouver I.O.DX has already collected about 3000 books,\nSweden Leaves Way\nOpen for Supplies\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP)-Swed-\nen's barrier against passage of foreign troops to fight for harassed\nFinland still leaves the \u00abJ 0P\u00bb\nfor private supplies and volunteer\nfighters, diplomatic sources here\nyesterday. ,   \u201e    \u201e\nIn some quarters, Sweden s no\nto Finland's desperate appeal for\nhelp against Soviet Russia was con-\n\"derel to have left Great Britain\n\u2022and France as the only source ol\naid. Both already are sending quantities of munitions and planes.\nCRANBROOK MAN BECINS\nFIVE-MONTH TERM ON\n;OMMON ASSAULT COUNT\nAlexander McDonald, sentenced\nby Stipendiary Magistrate Jonn\nLeask of Cranbrook to serve five\nmonths in the Provincia Jail at\nNelson on a common assault charge,\nwas escorted to the jail to begin\nserving his sentence Saturday\nmorning. He chose \"lhe five months\nsentence in preference to paying\na f.n* of $100. He was escorted by\nConstable T. W. Glaholm cf the\nProvincial   Police.\nquebTc^tcTstudy-\nFARMING MEASURES\nQUEBEC, Feb. 18 'CPI- Steps\nto draw Quebecers back to thc land\nmaking farming a paying business,\nand measures to attract capital to\nthe fast-growing mining Industry\nare forecast by government sp-k-'S-\nmen for the Quebec Legislature\nse'-ion opening Feb. 20.\nQuebec's anti-Communist padlock law may get attention at the\nsession Repeal or modification has\nbeen suggested but there has been\nno official indication of what will\nbe done.\nREPUBLICANS  DEMAND\nTARIFF  INQUIRY\nWASHINGTON, Feb 18 (AP).-A\nspecial Congressional investigation\nof the entire field of tariffs and\nforeign trade was demanded hy Republican members of the United\nStates House of Representatives\nWavj and Means Committee.\nthu inquiry was proposed as an\nalternative to a three-year extension of the Reciprocal Trade Treatv\nprogram, which the administration\nnad requested.\nMAHARAJAH   DONATES TO\nROYAL   OAK   DEPENDENTS\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP) - The\nMaharajah of Gondal has plated\none lakh of rupees ($33,3751 at the\ndisposal of the Admiralty for dependents of the mm who Inst the*r\nlives when the battleship Roy*--]\nOak was sunk by a German submarine Oct. 14, It was disclosed tcday.\nMemorial Services\nHeld in Historic\nChurch, Tweedsmuir\nBy FRED  BACKHOUSE\nCanadian Pren Stqff Writer\nELSFIELD, England, Feb. 18 (CP\ncable)\u2014In the tiny 12th Century\nchurch of this Oxford village, the\nfriends of John Buchan gathered\nyesterday to pay tribute to his\nmemory.\nFor a score of years this has been\nthe family church of the Buchans\nof Elsfield Manor. From the ancient\noaken lectern the future Governor\nGeneral of Canada often read the\nlesson.\nRetainers from the village, who\nloved Mr. Buchan, the man who\nwas always Interested in their welfare, stood at the side of learned\nprofessors come to pay the homage of Oxford University to one\nor her most brilliant sons.\nMore than 200 mourners heard\nProfessor Muray, for many years\nRegius Professor of Greek at Oxford, deliver an eulogy of the late\nLord Tweedsmuir,\nThe new Lord Tweedsmuir, in\nthe uniform of Lieutenant' of the\nCanadian active service force, stood\nbeside Miss Anna Buchan, sister of\nthe late Governor General of Canada. Hon, William Buchan, another\nson, was with Hon. Mrs. Norman\nGrosvenor, Lady Tweedsmuir's mother.\nHon.   William   Huchan   read   a\nPassage from his father's copy of\n\u25a0unyan's   Pilgrim's  Progress.\nProfessor Murray, a friend of\nLord Tweedsmuir for nearly 50\nyears, quoted from a letter received\nfrom the Governor General just\nafter his death, in which he wrote:\n\"We are now realizing the importance of truths that have become platitudes and there may be\na   new   birth  -of democracy.\"\nAfter the service the congregation passed through the churchyard.\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-MONDAY MORNINQ, FEB. 19, 1940.-\nFormer Nelsonite\nU Appointed\nW. S. MacDonald, formerly oper-\nalor In the Vincouver yard office.\nhu taken over his new post aa agent\not the Canadian Pacific Railway at\nMission.\nMr. MacDonald\nhu been with the\nC. P. H. since 1909\nwhen he Joined at\nNelaon. He worked ai operator and\nagent at various\npoints ln the Kootenays until 1916,\nwhen he enlisted\nfor overseu service. On his return from the war\nhe went back to\nthe Nelson division but transferred to the Revelstoke division In 1920 and to the\nVancouver division ln 1921.\nPrize Court Says\nNazis Officially at\nWar With Egypt\nHAMBURQ, Feb. 18 (AP)-A\nGerman prize court announced\ntoday a decision which In effect\nmeans Germany Is officially In\na state of war with Egypt which\nbat a treaty of alllanoe with\nGreat Britain. Egypt broke off\nrelations with Germany last\nSept. 4 but did not declare war.\nThe court ordered seizures cf\ncargoes of lumber and telegraph\npoles in the Greek *steamships\nOmonla and Marietta Nomikos\nwhich were consigned to Alexandria, Egypt, but were halted en\nroute from Sweden. The vessels\nwere released to the Greek owners.\nCLAIMS COUNCIL PLACE\nOF INDIAN CHIEFS FOUND\nBELLA COOLA, Feb. 18 ICP) \u2014\nDiscovery of what appeared to be\nthe council place of Indian chiefs\nin early days was reported by Thor\nHeyerdahl. Globe trotting writer\nand scientist, and his wife.\nThe site is 15 miles up the Bella\nCoda River. A flight of stone steps\nleads up frcm the water's edgs to a\nsmall amphitheatre decorated with\nrock carvings. Heyerdahl believes\nthis site was the meeting place ef\nIndian chiefs on momentous occasions.\nCRANBROOK RED CROSS\nCOMPLETES 2nd SHIPMENT\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-The Cranbrook Red Cross Society have made\na second shipment with completed\ngoods to British Columbia headquarters at Vancouver,\nExtent of the activities of the women of the organization both locallv\nand in the rural centers is well\nshown by the fact that six hundred\npieces were included in the box.\nScout Committees\nAppointed for 1940\nCommittees for the 1940 season\nwere appointed at a meeting of the\nNelson District Boy Scout Association in the City Hall. C. D. Pearson occupied the chair. Leonard P.\nWalton was elected Secretary In\nplace of Westman Motion, who resigned.\nCommittees appointed, the first\nnamed in each case being chairman,  follow:\nFinanpe\u2014J. A. C. Laughton, William Buchanan, G. C. Chambers.\nCamp\u2014T. A. Carew, William\nBuchanan, G. C. Chambers, Ernest\nHunter.\nProperty \u2014 N. R. Freeman, Roy\nHood, E. K. Evans, J, A. C. Laughton.\nApple Day\u2014Donald L. Ure, General Chairman.\nPublicity\u2014S. P. Wade, C. D. Pearson.\nApples\u2014J. A   C. Laughton\nSales and Organization \u2014 R. B.\nMorris.\nFinance and Audit\u2014H. F. Wallace\nDecorated Bicycle\u2014J. M. Drons-\nfield, R. R. Brown.\nPREPARATIONS MADE\nFOR SOLDIERS' BALLOTS\nBy   SAM   ROBERTSON\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP Cable)-\nMachincry for taking the votes of\nthe overseas forces in Canada's lo-\nture battle of ballots went into action yesterday under the direction\nof Colonel J. T. C. Thompson, Special Returning Officer.\nHe has accepted tenders for 260\nballot boxes\u2014two or more may be\nneeded for the larger of the Dominion's 243 ridings\u2014and selected offices next door to Canada House\nDon't Miss The Big Bargains Offered Below\nNrhuut flail}! NruiH\nTelephone 144\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per Hue per Insertion.\n44c per line per week (8 consecutive Insertions for cost of 4).\n(1.43 per line a mouth (26 times)\n(Minimum 2 lines per insertion)\nBox numbers Uc extra. This\ncovers any number ot 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 25c for any\nrequired   number  of   lines  for\nsix  days,  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 \u201e    8.00\nAbove rates apply in Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and ln Canada where\nextra postage Is required, one\nmonth $1.50, three months $4.00.\nsix months $8.00, one year $15.00.\n\"Britain Expects\nAdditional Allies\"\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP)- Members of the war cabinet assured the\nnation that the Empire Is expecting\nvictory and the help of additional\nAllies.\nLord Chatfield, Minister for Coordination of Defense, told a Welsh\naudience at Cardiff, he believed the\nAllies would \"gather comrades as\nwe fight our way onward.\"\nSir Samuel Hoare, Lord Privy\nSeal, speaking at Nottingham, em-\nphasl;ed the economic aspects of\nthe war and asserted:\n\"Britain In war must become a\nmore equal society than in peace.\nWe must regulate our right to buy.\"\n\"If we do not maintain our export\ntrade we must lose the war,\" he\nwarned.\nLord Chatfield emphasized the\ngrowing might of Britain, saying\nthat \"we have-gained valuable time\nto build up our strength for attack and defence.\"\nGunner A. W. Manwill\nReturns to Edmonton\nGunner A. W. Manwill of the\nlllth (Nelson) Field Battery, who\nhas been home from Edmonton .n\nleave, visiting relatives and friends\nin Nelson and Crawford Bay, has\nreturned to Edmonton. Before enlisting he was the Tostmaster at\nCrawford Bay.\nSPECIAL POLICE TO\nHANDLE FOREICN CASES\nSHANGHAI. Feb. 18 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014C. S. Franklin. American Mayor\nof the Shanghai Municipal Council, and Fu Siao-En. Mayer of the\nJapanese-sponsored Shanghai special municipality last night signed\nan agreement creating a special\nShanghai police force to include\nforeign offirers who will handle all\ncases   involving   foreigners.\nBRITISH IMPORTS\nHICH FOR 10 YEARS\nLONDON, Feb   18  (CP)\u2014Brit-\n\u2022 in'l imporls in January exceeded \u00a3loo.nonnoo ($445.ooo.000i. tne\nHoard nf Trade reported yester- j\nday, reaching  the highest figure !\nfor lhat month In 10 years\nThe board listed imporls at\n\u00a3104 961.147 and exports at \u00a341.\n073,574\nCRANBROOK SCHOOL\nNURSE CIVES TALK\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-MIss Bertha\nJenkins, school nurse, was guest\nspcakrr at the meeting of Canadian\nDaughters in the Masonic Hall. She\ngave a general resume of public\nwork done in connection with Cranbrook schools so far, and the work\nshe planned to do.\nOHIO WOULD SUPPORT\nROOSEVELT THIRD TERM\nCOLUMBUS. O, Feb. 18 <AP).-\nOhio's Democratic central and executive committee members formally\ndeclared Saturday that the state's\ndelegation to the national convention should support President Roosevelt if he desired renomination.-\nThe meeting directed that if Mr,\nRoosevelt'eliminated himself as a\ncandidate, the delegation should\nsupport Senator Vic Donahey as the\nfirst choice \"favorite son\" and\nCharles Sawyer, national committeeman, as second choice.\nBRITISH BOMBERS\nCO TO AUSTRALIA\nMELBOURNE, Feb, 18 fCP-Reu-\nters)\u2014 Air Minister J. V, Fairbairn\nannounced yesterday that Great\nBritain has given Australia between 300 and 400 Fairey battle\nbombing planes and 400 Ans\"n\nreconnaissance planes to be used\nin  the  Empire training plan,\nMr. Fairbairn said consideration\nis being given to applications of\nPolish and Czech refugees seeking\nto join the Australian air force.\nBIRTHS\nCOOPER - To Mr. and Mra.\nWilliam Cooper, 923 Edgewood Avenue, at Kootenay Lake Genera!\nHospital, February 17, a ion.\nHELP WANTED\nEXPERIENCED GIRL FOR PART\ntime work. Care of children. Mar\nlat. Apply 024 Vernon Street\nEDUCATIONAL\nENGINEERS, MARINE, STATION-\nary prepared for exams, day, eve.\ncorrespondence. E. Hopkins, 407\nW, Hastings, Vancouver, B, C.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for advertisements under this clasaiftcation\nto assist people seeking employment. Only 25c for one week\n(6 days) covers any number\nof required lines. Payable in\nadvance\nCAMP COOK WANTS WORK, 20\nyears experience, West Coast and\nVancouver Island. Apply Box 713\nDaily News.\nEXP.   WOMAN  WANTS   H<5U\u00a7ff-\nkeeplng  or  look after  children.\nCan take full charge. State wages.\nBox 632 Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED   GIRL   W AH TS\nwork. Room 14, Victor Hotel.\nPERSONAL\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel, Opp. C. P. R, Depot\nLOOK \"DRESSED-UP\". GET PRIN\ncess Pat liquid Lip Tone Lipstick\ntoday. Mann, Rutherford Co, _\nCLARESH6lM~BUTTER 1st GRT3.\non bread ls delicious. Fresh. Di\nrect from Creamery.  Star Groc.\nSALVATION ARMV - IF VOU\nhave old clothing, footwear or fur-\nnitirretospare p 1 e aseJ-^usJIlllL\nA PORTRAIT BV McGREGOR IS\na Portrait of Distinction. Phone\n224, 577 Ward Street.\nHAVE VOU ANV ANTIQUES'!\nTop prices paid (or antiques at\nThe Home Furniture. 413 Hall St.\nFOR ANY SECOND HAND GOODS\nbe sure to see J. Chess, Secona\nHand Store, .Vernon Street.\nCHOQUETTE BROS. \"MOTHWS\nBread\" helps build healthier boys\nand girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry.\nANY SIZE ROLL FILM DEVEC-\noped and printed 25c. The most\nmodern Photo Finishing Plant in\nthe West. Established over 30 yrs.\nKrystal Photos, Wllkie, Sask.\nMEN'S SANITA'RV^RUBBTr\ngoods, send $1 for 12 samples tested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free Novelty price list. Princeton Distributors, Box 61, Princeton, B. C.\nAN\"0 F\"F ER TO\" EVERY IN\nventof, list of wanted inventions\nand full Information sent free. The\nRamsay Company, World PBtent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\nLICAL NOTICES\nDEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC\nWORKS\nThe Harrop-Longbeach Ferry wltl\nbe closed down February 19th, 20th\nand 21st for Installation of machinery. A rowboat service will oe\nmaintained at the ferry for the\ntransportation of passengers and the\nS. S. Nasookin will make one special trip from Proctor wharf to\nEraser's Landing each day leaving\nProctor wharf at 9 a.m.\nO. O. GALLAHER.\nAsst. Dist. Engr.\nNelson, B. C,\nFebruary 12th, 1940.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nBuilders' Hardware\n\"Yale\" Door, window and cabinet hardware, In many attractive designs and prices. Galvanised, corrugated and reinforcing Iron. Nails by the keg or\npound.\nNELSON SASH & DOOR\nCO., LTD.\n701 Front Street        Phone 292\nSAVE y2\nON\nDRUGGISTS SUNDRIES\nIf It's made of rubber, we have it.\nPrice list and Booklet \"Perfection\nin Protection\" free on request, in\nplain, sealed envelope.\nIMPERIAL IMPORTS\n(Western)\nP. O. Box 227       Vancouver, B. C.\nESLINC TO SPEAK AT\nBOSWELL WEDNESDAY\nBOSWELL, B. C. \u2014 A Conservative meeting is scheduled next\nWednesday.\nSpeakers will be W. K. Esling.\nM. P, Kootenay West; C. B. Garland\nand C. F. McHardy.\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US VOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St., Vancouver. B, C.\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\nfrom out-of-town residents given\nprompt attention\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and  Main St.\n Vancouver, B, C,\nFOR SALE, STORE FIXTURES;\nshow case, cash register, shelving, display fixtures, etc. Cheap\nfor quick disposal. Apply Box\n647 Dally News. _____\nNEARLY    NEW    ELECTROLUii\nVacuum Cleaner complete  Apply\n\u25a0   R C. Macklnnon. Crescent Valley\nALL  BEAUTY \"SHOP   EQUIP\"'-\nment. Box 951 Daily News.\nGOOD' WllilS\" PIANO   AND\nbench  $100.  Phone  467R.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nTRAILER FOR SALE OR RENT\nRoomy (14' 6\" by 6' 6\"), ideal living or batching quarters. \"Factory custom built\", with one double and one single bed. Apply\nBox 658 Dally News. _\nFOR SALE,  1929 NASH  4-DOOfi\nsedan.   Good   condition.   $65,\noffer. Phone Purser 796L.\nFOR SALE NASH COUPE, '29, $60.\nPhone 438L. Quick Sale. R. Ball\n1007, Fourth Street, Falrview,\nCITV AUTQ WRECKERS ARE\nnow situated at ISO Baker Street.\nPhone 447.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nFOR SALE - TO CLEAR UP THE\nestate of late P. J. Sheran we are\noffering one large rooming houje\nfurnished and fully modern at\n722 Baker St., Nelson, B. C. Ap\nply S, Smythe, Box 118, City.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908, Dept of Natural\nResources, C. P. R.. Calgary. Alta.\nFOR SALE NEW 5 ROOM FURN*\nlshed house and iy<i acres on North\nShore road. Very Cheap. Apply\n_ Box_7450_D_ally N**w*'*_\nFOR SALE 4CLEARED LOTSTt\nsacrifice on Houston St. Ph. 1059L\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES, ETC\n0\nThis year\u2014Raise\n\"The Chicks\n\u2022Which Give\nResults\"\nUnsexed Pullets\n100 ionn 100 500\n.... $13 $120   $27 $125\n, $120\n$15 $140\nLeghorns \t\nRock, Reds\nsnd N Hamps.\nU Sussex      $10 \u2014   wo \u2014\nPullet Chicks Guaranteed\n97% Accurate\nWrite tor oui special anniversary\nbook.\u2014Free on request\nKum&6Ser>(taU\nBox N, Laugley Prairie. B C\nHAMBLEY ELECTRIC CHICKS.\nTen free with each 100; five free\nwith each 50, with cash orders ny\nMarch 1. Leghorns, Rocks, Reds,\nWyandottea, Hampshires, Minor-\ncas, order now for March, April\nor May delivery and save 10 per\ncent. 32 page colored Catalogue\nFree. J. J. Hambley Hatcheries.\n809-2nd St. E .(Burns Bldg.), Calgary, Alta. Hatcheries at Winnipeg, Regina, Saskatoon, Brandon,\nPortage, Dauphin.\n10 FREE CHICKS \"PER 100 ADDED\nto all early orders with 25% deposit. Unsexed Leghorns $11.75.\nRocks, Reds, Hampshires $13.75\n97%   pullets   $21,   Leghorns   $25\n, per 100 March delivery. Write\nfor FREE catalogue and reduced\nrate on large orders. Alberta\nElectric Hatcheries. 2417E-1A St.\nS. E. Calgary, Alberta,\t\nBABY CHICKS, RHODfTSLANT)\nReds, bloodtested approved stock.\n$10 per 100. John Goodman. 1655\nGilley Ave., New  Westminster\nFOR SALE, f GELDINCT \"1320 LBS.\n1 mare 1400 lbs. 8 and 9 yrs. old\nwith nearly new logging harness.\nEd Clark, Creston, B. C.\nWRITE FOR SPRING CATALOG\".\nUseful information on poultry diseases. Anderson Feed Company,\nLtd., Calgary. Alberta.\nHORSES FOR SALE. V HEAD ONE\nwell matched big team. Reasonable\nprice. Fred Hlookoff, Robson, B.C.\nFOR SALE 150\" PULLETS. BEEN\nlaying 2 months. Also 3 milking\n_goats._Box 700_Daily News.\nJERSEY   COW,   DUE   2nd \"CALF\n_May,_good milker. Cowan, Kaslo.\nWNTD. HORSE, ABOUT 1100 LBS\".\nfor farm work J. Fink, Vallican,\nFOUR~WORK~ HORSES. \"APPLY\nEllison^Milllng Co. barn, Nelson.\nTOR SALE, JERSEY COW. FRESH\".\nSam Winarski, Appledale, B. C.\nPITS, CANARIES, BEES. ET\nA  SPRINGER  SPANIEL BRO\nbitch. R. S. Sears, Kamloops, 1\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTOI\nASSAYEI1S\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. PROV1NC1\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurg\nEngineer. Sampling A g e n t \u25a0\nTrail Smelter. 304-305 Joseph\nStreet, Nelson, R C.    \t\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOi\nProvincial Aaaayer and Chemist,\nFall Street. P. O. Box 9. Nels\nB. C. R e p r e se n 11 n g shlpp\nInterest at Trail, B C\t\nHAROLD S. ELMES\" 'r6SSLAI\nB C Provincial Asaaye-, Chem\nIndividual representative!\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nJ. R. MCMILLAN. D C, NEUI\ncalometer. X-ray. McCullock I\nDR WILBERT BROCK. D.\n542 Baker Street. Phone 989,\nCORSETIERES\nSPENCER CORSETS, MRS. V\nCampbell, 370 Baker St Ph. I\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYOf\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, I\nSurveyor and Engineer. Pho\n\"Beaver   Falls.\"\nH0ME8 FOR THE AGED\nCONDUCTED BY THE S1S T E\nof the Love of Jesus for eld<\nladies. The Priory Guest Hou*\nnew residence with every m\nern comfort. St. Anthony's Gl\nHouse, a lovely home with V\nmoderate rates. St. Raphael's W\nf o r invalids and convalesce\nSt. Jude's House of Rest for i\nerly couples. For prospectus IP\nMother Superior. 949 W. 2\nAvenue, Vancouver, B. C.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTA\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance\nevery description.Real Est Ph\nJ. E.'ANNABLE. REAL ESTX\nRentals. Insurance. Annable I\nCHAS\" F. McHARDY, INS'UHXS\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real\" Estate,\nsuranee, Rentals. Next Hipper\nHardware,  Baker St. Phone\nMACHINISTS\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nMODERN HEATED ROOMS. LOW\nWinter rates. Royal Ho_tel. Ph. 686\nFURNISHED   HOUSE  KEEPlNC\n_rcoms_for rent.  Annable  Block.\nNICELY F\"URN.T\"AND~2~ROOM\nsuites. 617 Ward Street. Ph. 940.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modem\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED SUITE\nfor rent. jaUrling Hotel.\nFURNISHED SUITE FOR RENT\".\nPhone 377-X.\nSEE KERR APARTMENTS^\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nBENNETTS LIl\/lTED\nMachine shop, acetylene and elec\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES\nForest Lawn Memorial Parki\nprice list from Bronze Memor\nLtd., Box  726, Vancouver, B,\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. L\nRegistered Patent Attorney, C\nada and U. S  A. 703-2nd St\nCalgary. Advice free, confident\nSASH   FACTORIES\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTO\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker\nSECOND   HAND  STORES\nWE   BUY,   SELL  k   EXCHAN\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph.\nWATCH REPAIRING\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs y\nwatch It Is on time all the til\n3-15 Baker Street Nelson. B.\nFOR WANT'AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\nSHIP OWNERS ORDERED\nTO PROTECT CREW\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP)- The\nAdmiralty announced yesterday all\nBritish ships must provide prj-\ntection against machine-gun attack\nfrom enemy aircraft for their crew '\nbefore leaving any port in the\nUnited Kingdom.\nShip owners were told they will\nbe advised from time to time on\nthe kind of protective equipment\nthat would be required.\nDO   BEAD WORE -\nMEW OBLEAUS   IS\nSUCH A HISTDBCAL\nt_ AMD POMAklTIC _\nH OLD    CITY -\u2022   f\nVIEUX CABOE - KNOWN AS\nTHE CBEUCH   QUACTED\nSTILL PBESEBVES TWS\nTBA.DITPOWS   AND   THE\nSETTINGS OP   THE\nEUTIS?E g&A OP THE\nU3UI6IAKJA PURCHASE\nAUSTRALIAN CHAMPION\nMAKES WALKINC  RECORD\nSYDNEY, Feb. 18 (CP-Reuters)\n\u2014A. J. Stubbs, Australian walking champion, Saturday won the\nNew South Wales mile championship in the world record time of\nsix minutes, 15 2-5 seconds, beating his own previous world\nrecord of six minutes, 18 2-10\nseconds.\n\/\u00bb *\\\nA MONO THE USTOee\nTBEASUOES OP THE\nVIEUX CABOE ABE\nT^E CABLDO WHEBE\nTHE LAND WAS TBAUS-\nCEBBEDPBOk* SPAIN\nTO POANCE AND TO\nTHE UNITED  STATES-\ncoMMOomgs, handled m\nLABGE *\/OLUME ABE.GBAIN-\nBANANAS- COPFEE- SUGAR-\nOBE - LUMBEB-CBEOSOTE\nOIL- ALCOHOL- CORDIALS\nAND CK3ABS-\nPABDOW ME - WOULD\nVOU MIND BEPEATN3\nTH' LAST PAST AGAIN'\nI WANT_TOBE SUBE\nI  HEARO YOU-CK3HT\u2014\nASSESSMENT FOREST\nFIRE DAMACES MARCH 4\nVANCOUVER. Feb 18 (CP). -\nA aeismcnt of damages in the forest\nf.re suit of Filk River Timber Company Limited, against Bloedel, Slew-\nart snd Welch Limited, originally\nael f*r Feh 26. has been fined for\nMarch 4, according lo a court house\nannouncement Saturday\nChurch to Confer\nOver Dog's Grave\nWEST WARWICK. R I. Feb IB\nf.'.Pi- Decision whelher a German | nrd' and\nshepherd d g will be permitted in\nremain buried in s satm-l.nid\nsleel box stop its late mistreii's\nraskel in Ihe remelerv of St. Phil\nTO PICK NOMINEES FOR\nU.S.  PRESIDENT JULY  15\nMIAMI. Fla. Feb. 18 (AP)-The\n11)40 Democratic National Convening will meet In Chicago beginning\nMonday. July 15, to nick nominees\nfor President and Vice-President\nof Ihe United Slates.\nDEATHS\nLONDON- Dr.    Elizabeth    Sloan\nChester. 62.  ono cf  Lcndnn'i  most\nbrill:.in t   women   physicians    who\nmade   nn   intensive   study  of  psychiatry\n[    HAHTKOFtn,    Conn - M     Lewin\nI HrwpK, 7B. orRaimpr nnd first prrsi-\n| dent  of  tlv  Standard  Fire  Insurance Cpmp.inv.\nMIAMI,  Wi   Charie* D   Noyej,\nHP,  publisher  nf the  Norwich   Rfr-\nresidenl   and   treasurer\nof the Bulletin Ompanv.\nLONDON - Robert   Smille.   81.\n?resident   cf  the   Scottuh   Min-rs'\nederation   and   a   former   Lib-or\nDIRPACK CONSERVATIVE\nFOR VANCOUVER EAST\nVANCOUVER, Feb. IR (CP) -\nW. W. Derpack, was chosen by t\nConservative nominating convention here la\/t night to o-ntest the\nVancouver-East seat in thc March\nFederal Election. He wai chosen\non the third ballot over three other\nnominees.\n\u2022 - \"-     -\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0      \u2022      ..... i  a,m i d ia uai        nam        H        1WI Miri\nlip's   Episcopal  Church.  Crnmptnn. | p\u00abrty member of Parli-vnent\nmust await a conference of church\nau'h< ntles\nThe dog was buried within the\nC' \"crated limit* of the cemetery\nt t a month ago In accordance\nu h a doathb-cd promise made tn\nMrs Jame! W. Hou*ton, a pan-.ii-\nioner, bv her htiibnmi I.i*t week t\n\u2022uroup of persons pposed lo the a.'t\nt\\:\\g up th? animal nrd trnr<sfer:rd\nts p'*T*fl.\"\u00ab tn 3 cemetery tlwd, but\nit v.v< re-'juri d a'. Mi. l[ru:.ton'i\ndi.c :icn,\nHALIFAX-Maor Hfnrv fl\nStalin, W*. veteran of the .South\nAfrican war and former Nova\nScntla manager of the Royal Trust\nCompany\nTORONTO - Charles Marshall\nClarke. 10. first Great War veteran\nnnd well known in mining circles\nOTTAWA -Mrs. Flnrette Vat*\nlirres de St Heal. Bll, daughter of\nthe late Gtistave Turcotte of Three\nRiven. One. one of the fa then\nuf Confederation.\nTWO BUILDINC PERMITS\nIN PAST WEEK TOTAL $90\nTwo building permits totalling\n| $90 were issued at the City Engin-\n' eer's office in the week ending Sai-\n\u25a0 urday.\nI Permits were issued to J, W\nGallagher fnr $4-0 to rebuild a\nI chimney at !V>7 Railway Street, and\nI to F. tro-xzo tm $50 to build a\nI sleeping porch at 208 Gore Street.\nMONTREAL LAWYER\nIS NEW MINISTER\nMONTREAL, Feb 18 (CPi-Ap-\n' pointment of F Philippe Brals, K\nC , prominent iMontreal lawyer, u\ngovernment leader in the I.egisla-\ntlva Cnnnril and Minister Without\nPortfolio, was annmnced Friday\nnight by Premier Adelard Godbout\nEXILED POLES TO FORM\nAIR FORCE IN FRANCE\nPARIS, Feb 1\u00bb (CP-Havasl The\nFrench Government yesterday signed sn agreement with the Polish\n(lovernmenl-in-exile. providing In\nfornaaiion of s Polish air force on\nFrench ternloiy.\n\/    ISN'T TMM* LIKE A WWihT\nj   (tAIM KUSUit) CajT TO EXCMAHtaE\n\/ A KIM*, i KANViNa FOR A SKIMPY\n)      IVtNlMfc DRESS THAT\n(   fWjBAiLY DlbMT BWN TAKE\nV    A La*aZY SILKaNCWA kALF AN\n^-^^-T^^HOUR TO 4WN-\n*i:\n\u00abtT \\\n^1\naMS>\nm\n-AND POU VMATT\nTo INBAH AT A *miNOl6\u00bb)\nTHAT SHE CLAIM* SHft  \/\nBOISN'T EVSN WANT\/\n'X    TO ATTa^\u00a9.'    f\nWCLL-*(0O MlfcaMT\nHAVE BfctN A FINt\nSlfcaMT AT etU\nHARRISON'S INAUtaURAL\nSJALL-rauT ITSeWfmrK\nTMl *rtxi WtRft\nPEN Sa\u00a3>**D OWHS\n\"THS RA<b\u00bbAAN\nem\n~  -\n ilson Rides Past Trail Juveniles\nto Two Straight Games in Playoffs\nAfter a 10-4 Saturday Victory Here\npets Kimberley Now\nin Koote-nay\ncinals'\nup again though, when Baru Dimock soloed amartly through the Nel-\n\u00abon team to draw out Jorgenion and\nbulge the hemp. So Nelaon came\nout of that penalty all even-steohen.\nSec-anda before the period closed,\nTha Klmbarlay JuVenllei will George Mllne backhanded a paw\nDPly tha next oppoaltlon for,from behind the \u00ab\u00ab\u2022 1\u00bb*\u201e\u2122\nliter WilViNelion Rap. In tha!Mickey Prejtey to put the NeUon\nMrtanay final* v\/Moh will be, team back Into the lead,\nayad thla weak In Nalaon aa th* j The sandwich session waa hot\nikealdara aUrt their lecond lejef ifrom the first drop of the puck.\n\u2022 Journey at tha end of which Trail tied uo the score after two\nt the Monarch Life Cup and the minutes of play when Billy Dimock\n\u25a0ovlnclal champlonihlp, Nelion I fired the puck as Jorgenson came\neompllihed Iti firit objective,! out to meet him. Nelson wa^ quick\na Wert Kootenay final, In two i to assume the lead again, however,\nlight with a nifty 10-4 victory i when Tapanila brought a red light\n*\u00bbr. Ab Cronle'i olub from Trail on a rather unusual play. From\ntha Clvle Arena Saturday night. | about 10 feet out on the left aide he\nla flnt game In Trail Thuriday; slid a slow one toward the Trail\n>nt to Nelion 5-4. i goal and skated after it, but the\nJarturday'i battle wai keenly pUck skidded oh Into the goal when\nught all the way, with tha final, the Trail netmlnder was seemingly\nrdlct by no maani aettled until' caught off guard. Emery put Nelson\nt Nelion boyi blaited three | two up for the flrat time in the\nall during a period of 34 aec-\nids midway through the lait\nrlod to thin anum* an unprintable 1-8 lead. They coaited\n>m then on, but the visitor, car-\nid on gamely to try to cut down\na margin.\nirl  Jorgenson played a  great\na in the Nelson nets, pulling off\nWing saves time and again. A\nother end the 10 goals aga nst\ne sammartino were no reflec-\non his play, for on nearly every\nof those plays he was almost\notten by his  defence,  and at\nm the forwards did not improve\nters much more when they failed\nackcheck consistently. But the\nion outfit was not to be stopped\nirday as they fired the puck\nind   in   series   after   series   ol\n\u2022kling combin-atlon drives.\nUT POWER PLAY '\nie crowning point of their com-\n[tion achievements came in sec-\nperiod when Honeyman of the\ntors.was serving a penalty. The\nion hockeyUts .displayed a pow-\nil\u00aby that ran to perfection, snap-\n[ fine passes all over the Trail\n1 during the course of which\nf limply stormed rubber at Sam-\n\u2022tlno Nelson failed to score with\npian advantage, but had made\nplay for Emery  to tally Just\nHoneyman was returning to the\nhe outstanding offensive players\nCronie's team, managed by thc\ny Louie Demore, were the Dim-\nbrothers, Barss and Billy. They\ntred the first and second strings\nlectlvely, and were ln the thick\nt at all times. Barss scored two\nli, while his younger brother\nrhed one and isjijed an assist.\nTognottl performed well on\ntnce.\nud Emery was the pick of a good\nion defence lineup, while plenty\nicoring power was to be found\n!\u00bbch unit of the main firing lines,\nig Winlaw piled up three goals\n^ two assists for five points, thc\nbest of the night. Bud Smith and\n\" >'     '\u25a0\u25a0.', , : ; ''   - \u2022'.* ;       * i\n'      in      i im,NH80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON   B. C.-MONDAY MORNINQ. FEB. II. 1940.-\n3&l\nseries, during which the Lakesiders\nalso had the distinction of never\nbeing behind, when he scored on a\nthree-way play with Wlnlaw and\nSmith Just as Honeyman of Trail\nreturned from a penalty stretch.\nBarss Dimock cut the margin when\nhe teamed up with Archie Anderson to beat Jorgenson cleanly.\nTrail was awarded a penalty\nshot which Bans Dimock took\nwhen Jorgenson, the' Nelson\ngoalie, threw the puck ahead after\ncatching lt. Baraa made a beautiful shot for the goalie's right\nside, glancing the puck In off the\npost about knee-high. However It\nwas discounted for lt .was ruled\nhe had crossed the penalty shot\nline by about IB Inches.\nMickey Prestley put NeUon two\ngoals In the lead again early In the\nthird in a scramble In front of the\nTrail net.\nJust after the teams entered the\ntwelfth minute of play ln the period,\nthe Nelson dynamite went into effect so quickly that it ataggered\nthe visitors. Three goals, two from*\nthe stick of Bud Smith and third\nfrom Winlaw, came within 34 seconds .and It blasted Trail's chances\nto virtual oblivion. Trail got one\nof them back 11 seconds after that\nthird goal of Nelson's when Edmunds scored from Billy Dimock,\nbut the damage was already done.\nWinlaw completed the scoring on a\npass from Tapanila in the last minute of play, after Emery had scored\na pretty ono two minutes earlier\nwith Art Matheson.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: 1, Nelson, Wlnlaw\n6:01; 2, Trail, Barss Dimock 6:48; 3,\nNelson, Milne  (Prestley)   19:47.\nPenalties: Emery, Ioanin.\nSecond period: 4, Trail, Bill Dimock (Honeyman) 2:03; 5, Nelson,\nTapanila 3:27; 6, Nelson, Emery\n(Winlaw-Smith) 8:45; 7, Trail, Barss\nDimock (Anderson) 9:18.\nPenalties: Honeyman, Emery,\nYoung.\nThird period: 8, Nelson, Prestley\nand George Ioanin; Bud Smith, Harold Tapanila and Doug Wlnlaw;\nMickey Prestley, Art Matheson and\nGeorge Mllne; Tommy Gtlfflths.\nOfficials were: Ty Culley and\nCurly Wheatley, referees; D. G.\nChamberlain, Jerry Thompson and\nA. N Wlnlaw, timekeepers; Ernie\nBeland (nl Don Twaddle, goal\njudgea.\nSkiers Exuberant\nas Queen Crowned\nAfter Big Parade\nLe<t by the Canadian Legion\nBogle Band and two decorated\ntrucks carrying Klmberley'i Ski\nQueen, Svca Pearson and her attendants, and Nelson's Queen, Dee\nDesJardini end her attendants, skiers of the Kootenays paraded the\nlength of Baker Street twice Saturday night in exuberant prelude to\nthe crowning of the queen ceie-\ninoiiy at a huge dance in Eagle Hall.\nShoutlqg and singing with all lhe\nrevelry of a group of youthful athletes, the skiers followed the band\nand trucks as citizens lined the\nsidewalks.\nWith a police escort, cars lined\nup behind the parade for over a\nblock as the parade went from\nHendryx Street to Kootenay Street\nand back to Hall Street before disbanding at the Eagle Hall. The\nBugle Band marched up the stairs\nand around the hall floor several\ntimes before the dance began.\nAs the dancers gathered at one\nend of the hall, Miss Pearson placed\na gold colored crown bearing crossed\nskis and the letters \"N. S. C.\" on\nMiss DesJardin's head. Miss Des-\nJardlns looked charming in her long\nwhite robe. Following her crowning,\nihe welcomed all the contestants\nto Nelson and wUhed them success\nln Sunday's events, In the Kootenay Ski Championships, finishing\nwith, that familiar cry of the ski\ntrails, \"Ski Hell\".\nMany of the danceri were ar\nrayed in their ski togs. It wai one\none the largest dances in the hall\nfor some time.\nWinnipeg Wheat\nGains Two Cents\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 18 (CP) .-Increased export demand of the past\ntwo days and a drastic reduction\nIn the Argentine crop estimate combined to boost wheat futurei prices\nnearly two cents higher in Saturday's abort session on Winnipeg\nGrain Exchange.\nQuotations at the close were up\n1H-1V4 cents. May 88%, July 88V4\u2014\n*,i and October 90 !i. <\nLight offering! confronted buyeri\nfrom the opening pell and prlcei\nrose steadily In the first half ot\nthe session, ,\nExport sales in wheat and flour\nwere reported at close to 1,000,000\nbushels* with the United Kingdom\nn$med ai the chief buyers. Friday's\nexport wa\u00bb estimated at 5,000,000\nbushels ol, Canadian wheat for United Kingdom and neutrals.\nA sensational revision in the probable wheat yield In the Argentine\nadded strength. The Government\nestimate placed production of the\n1940 crop at 110,000,000 bushels, a\nreduction cf 29,000,000 from the late\n1939 estimate.\nSale of 800,000 bushels of Durums\nfor shipment from Eastern Lake\nports at the opening of navigation\nfeatured cash grain trade. Some\ntransactions In No. 1, 2 and 3\nNcrthern and 1 and 2 Garnet were\nalso noted. Spreads were higher.\nRye rose more than 2 cents in the\ncoarse grains pit on short covering\nbut closed fractionally lower. Investment support in barley, flax and\noats gave the other grains a steady\ntrend.\nJeffs Curling\nDraw for Week\nDraw for thli week's play ln the\nJeffs Cup Competition ot the Nelson Curling Club follows:\nMONDAY;\n7 p.m.\u2014F. D. Cummins vs. A.\n\"Maih\u201eh.ai,iW^.L\u00b0a!f,a\"d\u201eaJl  \u00bb\u2022\u00bb   *   Nelson  'Smith   (Winlaw)\nM, and Harold Tapanila scored\ne and handed out two assists.\nttley and Matheson picked up\ni points apiece, Milne also had a\n\"he Juveniles went big-time with\nCulley and Curly Wheatley as\n(rees, and the latter had to step a\ntune in the fast interesting\nIon the kids put up.\nNLAW DAZZLES\nfirst goal of the game just\nsr six minutes of play came while\ntry was serving a penalty. Win-\n' broke away and on a dazzling\nJvldual rush he finally shook oft\ni checkers, calmly took a shot,\nI dashed in for the rebound which\nfired  in  as  Sammartino  came\n11:16; 10, Nelson, Winlaw (Matheson\nEmery) 11:40; 11, Nelson, Smith\n(Tapanila) 11:50; 12, Trail. Edmunds\n(Bill Dimock) 12:01; 13. Nelson.\nEmery (Matheson) 17*7; 14, Nelson,\nWinlaw (Tapanila) 19;29.\nPenalties: Prestley, Winlaw, Anderson, Emery.\nStops by goalies:\nSammartino     8   14   IS\u201437\nJorgenson     7   14   11\u201432\nTeams follow;\nTrail: Mike Sammartino; Lome\nTognotti. Archie Anderson, Angus\nMcDonald and Garth Barnes; Barss\nDimock, Alex Balano and Earl Dwyer; Bill Dimock; Alex Honeyman\nand Brick Edmunds; Alan Tognotti.\nNelson:    Earl    Jorgenson;    Jack\n, Forty-seven seconds it was tied * Young, Bud Emery, Everett Kuhn\nTORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\n.01\n.31\n.04 Va\n238\n|NII:\non Mines  \t\nBermac   Copper   \t\nGold \t\nIglo-Huronian\nbitfield Gold\noria Rouyn Mines .\nnor Gold\nemac Rouyn   \t\n[field Gold\nI Metals Mining   \t\n(ittle Gold Mines ...\nfood Klrkland    \t\n; Miisouri   .\njjo Minn        08\nilorne Mines     10 75\nfelt Trethewey     01\nHalo Ankerite           7.00\nnker Hill Extension 02\nilldlan Malartic      70\nHboo Gold Quartz        2 50\nIstle-Trethewey     68\nrntral Patricia          2 33\nI Premier Gold      1.25\n'Powell Rouyn Gold       1.28\nI Preston East Dome       2.05\nI Quebec Gold       .36\n| Reeves MacDonald     20\n09\n.19%\n21 3\n1.10\n09i\n\u25a0ibougamau\nIromlum M k S\t\nnt Copper\nplaurum Mines\nolldated HIS\nne Minei\nval-Siscoe\n.09%   Reno  Gold Mines   38\n02%! San Antonio Gold       2.3*\n230     Shawkcy Gold        02%\nSheep Creek Gold        1.14\nSherritt Gordon    \t\nSiscoe Gold       \t\nSladen   Malartic\n.13%.,St Anthony     \t\n\u25a0-[Sudbury Basin\nSullivan Consolidated\ni Sylvanite\nJTock-Hughes Gold          3 90\nToburn Gold Mines         1 70\nTuwagmac  23\n1 Ventures       4 05\nWaite   Amulet          5.75\nWright Hargreavei      7.70\nYmir Yankee Girl    0*4\nOILS:\n! Ajax  U\nBritish American        2310\n77\n48\n.14'j\nIBS\n87\n3 25\nHarvey, P. T. Andrews vs. J,\nMcEwen, Aid. Roy Sharpe vs. A. E\nMurphy, R. A. Peebles vs. E. C.\nHunt, T. A. Wallace vs. A. J.\nChoquette.\n9 p.m.-T. R. Wilson vs'. William\nKline, J. H Long vs. R. D. Hall,\nRobert Smillie vs. John Teague, J. G.\nBennett vs. J. A. Smith, Robert\nFoxall vs. W. R. Dunwoody.\nTUE6DAY:\n7 p.m.-P. E. Poulln vs. William\nMarr. M. J. Varseveld vs. F. R.\nPritchard. Martin Robichaud vs. C.\nE. Jorgenson, W. R. Dunwoody vs.\nJ. H. Allen, J. A. Smith vs. John\nTeague.\n9 p.m.\u2014R. E. Horton vs. E. C. Hunt,\nH. M, Whimster vs. F. A. Whitfield,\nH. W. Robertson vs. R. A. Peebles,\nC. H. Marshall vi. G. W. Dill, Dr.\nH. H. MacKenzie vs. A. G. Harvey.\nWEDNESDAY;\n7 p.m.\u2014S. P. Bostock vs. Aid. T.\nH. Waters, William Kline vs. E. E.\nL. Dewdney, H. M. Whimster vs.\nJ. H. Long, T. R. Wilson vs. R. D.\nWallace, J. P. McLaren vs. Aid. A.\nG. Ritchie.\n9 p.m.\u2014John Dingwall vs. Alfred\nJeffs. F. D. Cummins vs. Sidney\nHaydon, J. H. Allen vs. W. T. Fotheringham, A. J. Choquette vs. C. E.\nJorgenson, P. T. Andrews VI. Aid.\nRoy Sharpe.\nTHURSDAY;\n7 p.m.-F. A. Whitfield vs. R. D.\nHall. R. E. Horton vs. H. W. Robertson, Dr. H. H. MacKenzie vs.\nSidney Haydon. Robert Foxall vs.\nW. T. Fotheringham, J. B. Gray vs.\nA. B. Gilker.\n9 p.m.\u2014J. J. McEwen vs. A. E\nMurphy.\nFALKIRK LEADS\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (CP Coble) -\nFalkirk pulled ahead ln the race\nfor the champions\/lip of the Scottish Western Regional Soccer group\nby whipping Stenhousemulr 4-1\nSaturday. The victorious eleven es*\ntablished a two-point advantage of\nthe rival Hearts squad, defeated 3-2\nby Dundee United.\nThe League* saw other upsets.\nAberdeen bowed 3-1 to St. Bernards\nin Edinburgh and Dunfermline, before a home crowd, lost 3-2 to St,\nJohnstone. Rangers, pacemakers in\nthe Eastern section, won 3-1 from\nAirdreionians at Ibrox Park. The\nLight Blues with 27 points stretched\ntheir margin to fcur points over\nHamilton Academicals whe went\ninto second place over the Idle\nQueen of the South. The Accies\ndowned  Dumbarton 4-2.\nIn England's abbreviated card\nCrystal Palace went out in front\nin the New South \"D'p competition\nthrcugh a 4-1 victory over Reading\nin London. Plymouth Argyle drew\ninto a tie with Torquay and Swindon, leaders in the Southwest, defeating Swansea Town 8-1.\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\nMONTREAL Teb. lt (CP)'. -\nBritish and foreign exchange, nominal rates between banks only:\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .2731.\nFinland, flnmark. .0200.\nFrance, franc, .024891.\nIndia, rupee, .3389,\nItaly, lire, .0681.\nJapan, yen, 3KH.\n(Complied by the Royal Bank of\nCanada.) 'j\nClosing exchange rates: At Montreal; Pound, buying 4.43, idling\n4.47; U. S, dollar buying, 1.10, selling Mil franc 2.48 29-32;\nAt New York; Pound 398: Canadian dollar ,86%; franc 2.24Vi.\nNEW YORK - Leading foreign\ncurrencies were Irregular In relation to the United Stoles dollar. The\npound sterling closed at $306, up Vi\nCent from Friday.\nThe Netherlands guilder ended\nat 83.10, unchanged, and other neutral currencies moved along at an\neven rate. The French franc dipped\n.00% at 2.24U cents. ,\nThe Canadian dollar wai unchanged at a discount of 18% cents.\nOttawa Foreign Exchange Control\nBoard rate 9.09-9.91 per cent discount.\nCloilng rates, Great Britain in\ndollars, others In cents:\nOfficial Canadian Control Board\nbuying rate for U. S, dollari 110.00,\nselling rate 111.00. Open market\nrates .Montreal ln New York at\n86.50, New York ln Montreal at\n115.50, Great Britain, demand at\n3.95Vi, cablea 3.96, 60-day billl at\n3.94V4, 90-day bills 3.93. Belgium at\n16.82. Denmark 19.33, Finland 1.75N,\nFrance 2.34Vi. Germany 40.25N.\n(benevolent 17.00), Greece .73ViN,\nHungary 17.65N, Italy 6.05, Netherlands 53.10, Norway 22.73, Portugal\n3.69N,   Rumania  ,63N.  Sweden   at\n23.83, Switzerland 22,43, Yugoslavia\n2.35N, Argentina official 29.77, free\n23.50; Brazil official 6.05, free 5.10;\nMexico 16.75N, Japan 23.49, Hong\nKong 24.65, Shanghai 7.05.\nN\u2014Nominal.\nHockey Schedule\nSchedule for today's play of thc\nNelson Amateur Hockey Association follows:\nMONDAY:\n4:00-5:00 p.m.\u2014Bantam pool.\n5:00-6:00 p.m.\u2014M. R. K. vs. F. A.\nC. Midgets.\n6:00-7:00 p.m.\u2014Juvenile Reps\npractice.\nIRISH SOCCER\nBELFAST, Feb, 18 (CP Cables-\nIrish League Football matches played Saturday resulted as follows:\nGlenavon 3, Coleralne 0.\nLmfield 1, Bangor 1.\nBallymena 4, Distillery 0.\nGlentoran 6, Larne 2.\nCliftonville 2, Portadown 4.\nDerry City 0, Celtic 0.\nArds 1, Newry Town 1.\nCARDIFF SOCCER TEAM\nWINS FROM BARBARIANS\nCARDIFF. Wales, Feb. 18 (CP\nCable) \u2014In an English rugby Union\ngame played here yesterday Cardiff defeated Barbarians 16-8.\nSheep Creek and Reno\nUp Cent at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 18 (CP). \u2014\nPrices generally held unohonged on\nVancouver Stock Exchange Saturday. Trading was quiet and divided\nbetween oil and gold stocks as transfers totalled 32,050 shores.\nPrivateer Gold headed the list\nwith a turnover of 5200 shares and\ngained one cent at 60. Cariboo Gold\nQuartz added five cents to Friday's\nclosing bid at 2.55 while one-cent\ngains were posted In Sheep Creek\nat 1.13 and Reno at 37. Pioneer slipped 3 to 2.12 and other senior golds\nwere unchanged.\nHome Oil declined bIx cents to\n2.72. National Petroleum at 16% was\nup 1 from last closing bid and Extension at 25% was fractionally\nabove the previous closing bid.\nOther oils were unchanged to fractionally lower.\nBase metals were Inactive and\nunchanged.\nMontreal Stocki\nBrighten at Close\nMONTREAL. Feb. 18 (CP). -\nPrices displayed a buoyant trend ln\nlate trade on the stock market Saturday.\nFoundation, Building Products,\nConsolidated Smelters and Brazilian advanced fractions. Price Broth\ners, St. Lawrence Corporation pfd.\nand Bathurst tacked on minor addi\ntions.\nInternational Pete, Canada's\nSteamships, Gurd, Massey Harris\n! and Lake of the Woods were all\nup narrowly.\nSteel of Canada, St. Lawrence\nPaper pfd., Canadian Celanese and\nDistillers Seagrams had small losses,\nNew Cabbage and\nCauliflower Are\non City Markei\nCox Orange applet and red cabbage were off the stalls while new\ncabbage at eight cents a pound and\ncauliflower at 20 centi a head appeared at the City Market, Vernon\nStreet, Saturday. Celery dropped\nfrom 10 to nine cents a pound, cooking onions were 10 pounds instead\nof eight pounds tor 29 cents, and\nHubbard squash advanced from\nthree to five cento a pound. Wagoner applet were on at 88 centi i\nbox at the lost of the Cox Orange\napDles disappeared.\nCoffee cakes were 29 and 30 cents\neach, and rabbit sold at 29 and 30\ncents a pound. Egg prices remained\nthe same for two slzei while pullets\nwere down from 27 to 29 cents o\ndozen. Grade A large were 30 cents\nand Grade A medium 27 cents.\nDaffodils and lace fern plants appeared tor the first time this season.\nQuotations were:\nVEGETABLES\nCelery,   lb.    .09\nHorseradish, lb.    ,19\nCabbage,   lb  .   .03\nCooking onions, 10 lbs    .25\nCarrots, 3 lbs   10\nBeets, 3 lbs.      .10\nSage, bunch       \u201e     .05\nChicory, bunch  ___, 09\nLocal rhubarb, lb _   .15\nPumpkin, lb. *.   .03\nGarlic. Ib.   _       .20\nHead lettuce, head  10\nPotatoes, sack  $1.75 and 1.85\nCauliflower, head  20\nNew cabbage, lb 08\nHubbard squash, lb    .05\nParsnips,  3  lbs     .10\nBrussel sprouts, lb.     _0\n2 lbs.   for         .35\nLeeks,   bunch    \u2014   .05\nMustard pickles, each      M\n3 for    .10\nPumpkins, lb.\nLeekt.  bunch        .05\nKale,  ea.   15, 29 and   .25\nArtichokes,   Ib 10\nDried beans, 3 lbs   _9\nSwiss   chard,   lb 10\nTurnips, 10 lbs     .25\nFRU1T8\nMcintosh apples, box .... .90 ond\nDried plums, 3 lbi\t\nNorthern Spy opples, box \t\nWinter Banana apples, box ...\nWagener opples, box \t\nMISCELLANEOUS\nPickles. PL    \t\nRugs,  yd \t\nFancy work, o piece _____\nChili Sauce, lb.\t\nJams, tin\nAmer Can        115',\nAmer For Pow        1*-;\nAm Smelt Ji Ret      51\n.12\n.55\n.50\n180\n44 75\n26.50\n.03\nQUOTATIONS ON WALL STREET\nOpen Close , Inter Tel tc Tel  3%\n115'a  Kenn  Copper   XV,\nIH  Mont   Ward     541,\n50%  Nash Mot        7Vi\n171'a  N  Y  Central   17%\n90     Pack Mot  \u2014\n28 Va  Penn R R   22%\n15*.*  Phillips  Pete   _ 39%\n5%   Pullman         27H\n31%   Radio Corp   5S\n78%, Rem   Rand        10\n23V Safewav Sirs   50%\n20'21 Shell   Union     11%\n5    i S Cal Ed               29%\n39    | Stan Oil nf N J   44%\n85% I Texas   Corp         44\n55% I Texas  Gulf Sul   35\n171%\nBU\n29H\n15V*\n5%\n31%\n77%\n23 Vi\n20\n5\n89 Vi\nB9H\nLt Malartic         3 85\norado Gold  93\nEconbridge Nickel   _     4.35\n(Ural Kirkland\ntncoeur Gold\nflies Lake\nLake Gold\nIld Belt\nkndoro Mines .\n\u25a0nnar  Gold\nYd  Rock  Gnld\nfrker Gold\nDinger\nurey Gold\nIdson Day M k\nprnatinn.il   Nirkel\nConsolidated\n|k Waite    \t\nolo Oold   \t\n\u2022-Addison\nIkland Like\nS\n03'\n45\n.06\n.56\n26\n.051;\n551:\n1 13\nI I.V\n14.90\n.37\n3100\n4-1 50\n,02i;\n*.\".\n04\"\n2 45\n135\nkt Shore Mines         25 75\nItch Gold\nlei   Oro   Mines\nlie  Long  I~c\ncaisa   Mines\ntLeod  Cockshutt\nRed Uke\ne-Pnrcupli\nIntyre-Pnrcuplne\nKenzle Red I_ke\nimtlc-Graham\nTatters  Gold\n[ling Corporation\nJllta Porcupine\nfrll-Klrklaml\n\u25a0tiling Mining\nlands\n\u25a0metal\nIrien Gold\nTwo Gold\npour  Porcupine\nnanter Conn\nOreille\nfon  Gold\n(it Canw   Gold\nleer  Gold   \t\n.74\n.01V\n3 15\n4 55\n213\n45\n50 0O\n135\n.1(1\n48\n1 12\n.72\n08\n125\n73 23\n48\n149\n24\n1 D'l\n411\nI itn\nI 95\n380\n2.12\nChemical Research\nImperial\nInter Petroleum    \t\n, Texas   Canadian\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power A     ...\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian TL4P\nBrewers k Distillers\nI Brewing Corporation\nI B C Power A\nB C Power B\nBuilding Products\nCanada Bread    \t\n[ Can Dud Malting\nCan Car k Foundry .\n1 Can Cement\nCan Dredge\nCan Malting\nCan  Pacific  Railway\nCan Ind Alcohol A\nj Can   Wincrlea   \t\nCons Biktrlei    \t\nCosmos\nDominion Stores\nI Dom Tar k Chem   ..\n' Distillers Seagrams\n! Fanny Farmer\nFairtl of Canada A\nGen  Steel Warps\nI Goodyear Tire\nGypsum I, k A\nHamilton Bridge\nHinde  Dauclie\nHiram  Walker\nIntl   Metals\nImnr-rial Tobacco\nI Loblaw   A\nI\/.blaw   B\n' Kelvinnlor\nViplr Leaf Milling\nMa-as-v Harris\nMnntre.'l Power\nMnnre Coin\nNat Steel Car\nI Vafc Heriey \t\nPower  Corp\n| Prea-rd  Melals\n| Steel of Can\ni S,ar.dard Paving   \t\n4'I\nlaftO\n23 4ii\n99\nI 41\n169\nt\nl'a\n2\n28\n2%\n19%\n8\n4'.\nII\n7\n24%\n37',\n6%\n2\",\n4\n18\n29%\n5\n6%\n_}'.,\n27\n19'.\n10%\n89%\nI*.\n7\n19\n43\n13%\n19%\n27%\n28\nil',\n4',\n5'.\n, Amer Tel\nAmer Tob\nI Anaconda\nBaldwin\nBait k Ohio   ...\nBendix Avl \t\nI Beth Steel \t\n'. Borden\nCanada Dry \t\nCan Pacific   .\n, Cerro de Pasco\nI Chrysler\n1 Comm   Invest-     59%\nC Wright Pfd       10%\n, Dupont          184%\nEast Kodak     155%\ni General dec       39\nI General Foods     47%\nOineral Mot       93%\n[Goodrich       18%\nGranby        8\nGrt Nor Pfd         24\nI Howe   Sound        90\n'Hud Motors 6%\nInter  Nickel       37%\n10\n184%\n155%\n38\",\n47H\n53%\n18%\n8\n24\n90%\nTlmkcn Roller .    49%\nUnion Carbide\nUnion Oil of Cal\nUnited Air\nUnion   Pac   .\nU S Rubber \t\nU S Steel\nWarner   Bros   \t\nWest  Elec  \t\nWest   Union   \t\n6%  Woolworth\n37% I Yellow  TrVk\nB4%\n48\n94%\n37\n58%\n4\n113\n24%\n40%\n17%\n4\n36%\n94\n7%\n17\n3%\n2*'*<\n39%\n27%\n5%\n10\n.'a i\n11%\n29%\n44%\n44%\n39\n50%\nBt%\n16%\n4V.\n93'.\n37%\n58%\n4%\n113%\n24%\n40\n17%\nChicago Wheat\nPrices Fluctuate\nCHICAGO, Feb. 18 (AP).\u2014Wneat\nprices fluctuated nervously over a\ntwo cents range in Saturday's erratic market, winding up with net\nlosses of from small fractions to\nmore than a cent\nWheat closed unchanged to IH\ncents lower compared with Friday's\nfinish, May $102%.1.03, July Jl.00%-\n%; corn unchanged to % higher, Mav\n56%-H, July 57%; oats unchanged\nto   %  up. ,\nHome Oil Gains\nCALGARY, Feb. 18 (CP) - A\nfive-point gain to 2.75 by Home featured trading on Calgary stock exchange Saturday. Transfers 10,350\nshares.\nLethbridge advanced % to 1%.\nMonarch  Roy lost %  to 7%, and\nPreserves,  quart  .\t\nApple Cider, quart\nSauerkraut,   lb.   \t\nSauerkraut, 3 lbs. ....\nQuilts, ea _ $1.13 ond 11.69\nHoney,  bottle      -5\nPiei. each   .. .30 and     .35\nCoffee cakes, each  20 and   ,30\nBread,  loaf 15\nMEAT8\nRabbit, lb\t\nBeef, lb \t\nVeal, lb. _\t\nLamb, lb. \t\nPork, lb\t\nBeef liver, lb\t\nCalf liver, lb. \t\nHeed Cheese, lb.\t\nFowl,   lb \t\nFowl, lb _.\nSpare ribs, lb\t\nBologna,   lb.\t\ni.lver sausage, lb.   ..\nPork   Sausage,   lb.\nStirlng chicken, lb.\nBreakfast sausage 2\nChicken, lb.\t\nOAIRY   PRODUCE\nButter. lb-\nCottage Cheese, lb. .\nor 3 lbs. - \t\nGoat cheese, lb.\n.New  cheese.   Ib\nButtermilk, quart ..\nCream cheese, lb, _\nMETAL MARKETS\nMONTREAL, Feb. IS (CP)- Bar\ngold ln London was unchanged at\n$37.54 an ounce ln Canadian funds;\n168s ln Brltlih, representing the\nBank ot England's buying price.\nThe fixed Waohlngton price wai\n$36.80 in Canadian.\nSpot: Copper. Electrolytic, 12.50,\ntin 60%: lead 6.90; zinc 9.99; antimony 19.29.\nSilver futures closed unchanged\ntoday. Bid: Feb. 37.78.\nNEW YORK-Copper iteady; electrolytic spot 11.58; Export fas NY\n11.60.\nTin steady: spot and nearby 45.12\nVJ: forward 49.00.\nLead iteady; ipot New York 9-\n9.09 East St. Louis 4.89.\nZinc steady: East St. Louis spot\nand forward 5.50.\nRussian Oil\nEn Route to Nazis\nBUCHAREST, Feb. 18 (AP)-A\nRussion tanker arrived at Rumania's Block Sea port of Constanta\nSaturday bringing 2,000 tons of oil\nfrom the Soviet's Caucasian fields,\nconsigned to Germany.\nInformed sources Indicated this\nwas port ot a newly arranged water\ntransport system by which Germany Intends to get a steady flow\nof oil from Russian wells,\nThe shipment must be forwarded\nby rail through Rumania and Hungary. Alter the Spring the DanuDe\nwill be used.\nRussian oil from wells ot Baku,\non the Caspian sea, goes by pipe\nline to Batum, on the Black Sea.\nTrading Dull on\nToronlo Exchange\nTORONTO, Feb. 18 (CP). - The\nprice tone was firmer but trading\nwas dull on Toronto Exchange Saturday.\nCanadian Steamship preferred\nadded about a point. Maple Leaf and\nLake of the woods added tractions.\nFord A, Brazilian and Fleet Aircraft\nwere higher.\nSteep Rock closed around 2.55.\nSheritt firmed a tew.\nA gain of 5 ihowed for Home Oil\nto the 2.75 mork ond 5 for Foothills\nto 80. Okalta also weakened slightly.\nWINNIPEG CHAIN\nWTNNTPEG, Feb. 18 (CP).-Graln\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   Hi|Jh   Low   Close\n'- PAOE   NINS\nWall SI. Slocks\nin General Rally\nNEW YORK, Feb. \"18 (AP) .-Securities traders watched Increase\nbattle hostilities abroad Saturday\nwith a run-up of stock prices.\nGains of major tractions to two\npoints appeared all over the big .\nboard ln one of the most active\nSaturdays of the year. The short\nsession's transactions moved at a\nrote of about 400,000 shares.\nAlthough steels led the climb, it\nwas not essentially a \"war baby\"\nmarket, for shares of such pacificists concerns as a shirt maker, a\nsubway and a candy manufacturer\nhit their highest quotations in more\nthan a year.\nThe analysts who worried a few\nweeks ago when stock prices failed\nto rally in step with increased industrial activity were hard pressed\nto explain the sudden upturn In\nthe face of reports of now-decreased\nmanufacturing rates.\nMost widely accepted theory was\nthat the recently low level of quotations had been thoroughly tested\nby traders and proved a stable foundation upon which to calculate the\neffects of possible increases in trade\nresulting from wider European demands.\nThe 1939-40 record setters Included Cluett Peabody, Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit preferred, Loft and\nCleveland Graphite Bronze.\nMost Interesting of all was the\ngain ln B-M-T which in the last\nweek, has Jumped more than 13\npoints on indications that New York\nCity ls virtually assured of unifying\nits great transportation system after\n21 years of negotiations.\nAmong the session's best advances\nwere U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Republic, Youngstown, Westinghouse,\nInternational Nickel, Continental\nCan, Hall Printing Co., Du Pont\nU. S. Rubber, Johns-Manville and\nWestern Union.\nWHEAT;\nMay \t\nJuly   . .\nOct\t\nOATS:\nMay\t\nJuly\t\nOct\n87*%\n80%\nBARLEY:\n40%\n39%\n35%\n. .25 to .30\n. .10 to .25\n.10 to .28\n.12 to _8\n.18   to   _8\n 17\n _   X\n.13   to   -5\n    _0\n 25\n 18\n    _0\n    _5\n_0\n.30\n.25\nlb.'.\n.25 to   JO\n.32 to .35\n JO\n.25 and\n.'.',)\nJ5\n.10\n.10\n_5\nPLANTS\nBegonias      90\nPrimulas      ~0\nDaffodils, plant    63\nLace ferns, each  6C\nEGG9:\nGrade   large, dor\t\nGrade A medium, doz\t\nPullets,  doz. \t\nMay\nJuly ......\nOct\t\nFLAX:\nJuly\t\nOct \t\nFLAX:\nMay \t\nJuly\t\nOct\t\nRYE:\nMay\t\nJuly ......\nOct.\n54%\n53%\n51\n53%\n81\nfDfl\n194%\n191\n76%\n75%\n72\n80%\nra*\u201e\n00%\n41\n39%\n35%\n96 %\n53%\n51%\n53%\n51%\n77\n76%\n72%\n87%\n86%\n89%\n40%\n39%\n35%\n54%\n53%\n91\n53%\n51\n74%\n73%\n72\n88%\n89%\n90%\n40%\n39%\n35%\n54%\n53%\n51%\n53%\n51%\n19**\n194%\n191\n74%\n73%\n72%\nCASH PRICES\nWHEAT\u2014Nos. 1 hard, 1 Nor. and\ntrack 84%; No. 2 Nor. 82%; No. 3\nNor. 81%; No. 4 Nor. 78%; No. 5.\n71%: No. 6, 68%; feed 66%; No. 1\nGarnet 77%; No. 2 Garnet 76%; No.\n3 Garnet 74%; No, 1 Durum 77%;\nNo. 4 special 77%; No. 5 special\n68%; No. 6 special 68%: No. 1 mixed\n72%; screenings $3 per ton.\nOATS\u2014No. 2 C. W. and track\n40%: Ex. 3 C. W., No. 3 C. W. and\nEx. 1 feed 38%; No. 1 feed 35%; No.\n2 feed 34; No. 3 feed 31%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6-row\nNos. 1 and 2 C. W. 55%; 2-row Nos. 1\nand 2 C. W. 56%; 6-row No. 3 C. W.\n52%. Others: No. 1 feed 50%; No. 2\nfeed 49%; No. 3 feed 49%; track\n55%\n,    FLAX-No.   1   C.   W.  and  track\n192%; No. 2 C. W. 188%; No. 3 C. W.\n1176; No. 4 C. W. 171.\nj    RYE-No. 2 C. W. 71%.\nSheep Creek Gold\nWill Crosscut 750\nFeet in Ore Hill\nContinuing to advance the exploratory crosscut from Sheep\nCreek workings into Ore Hill\nground. Sheep Creek Gold Mines\nLtd., had about 750 feet of crcjs-\ncutting to do at begining ot this\nmonth to get under the two known\nveins outcropping on the surface.\nThe distance may be longer or\nshorter depending on thc dip of the\nveins. In the intervening distance\nthere is the possibility of encountering blind veins. On Sheep Creek\nground near the Ore Hill boundary a blind vein was encountered.\nWhere cut this vein showed high\nvalues across a narrow width and\nit is planned to explore it later.\nCanadian Mines\nHANDBOOK\n1940 Edition Just Issued\nCovers 5713 Canadian Mines\n$100 per Copy.\nNorthern Miner Press\nLimited\nTORONTO, CANADA\nSCANDINAVIANS OFF\nNEW YORK. Feb. 18 (API-Scandinavian bonds yesterday took a\nbeating. Off as much as 3 were Finland 8s, Estonian Republic 7s. Denmark 6s and 5%s. U. S, Governments\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL. Feb. 17 (CP)-Butter. Que. 26%\u2014%. Eggs, Eastern A-\nlarge 24.\nButter futures: Feb. 26-28%;\nMarch 26%-%.\nDeal With a\nResponsible\nCompany\nWe are liquidating surplus\nequipment for Hecla Mining\nCompany, Imperial Oil Company and Consolidated Gold\nAlluvials of BC.\nPIPE, RAIL and MACHINERY\nVancouver Sales ti\nAppraisals Ltd.\n846 Beach Avenue, Vancouver, B.C.\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAlta Pac Grain\nAssoc Brew of Can\nBathurst P Jr P A .\nCanadian   Bronr.e\nTan Bronia Ptd\nCan Car k Fdy Tfd\nCon Celoneie\nCan Celanese Ptd\nCan North Power\nCan Steamship\nMONTREAL STOCK EXCHANCE\nSt I_wrence Corp    ..    .\n2% | St  I-wr  Cnrp Pfd .\n17% i South Can Power\nSleel of Tan TM\nWestern Grocers\nBANKS:\nCommerce    \t\nDominion\n15\n49\n106%\n29\n33%\n125%\n17%\n7%\nCan Steamship Pfd         19\"*\nCockshutt Plow\nCnn Min ,-*.\u25a0 Smelting\nDominion Coal Pfd\nDom Steel 8i Coal B\nDominion Textile\nDryden Paper\nFoundation C of C\nGatineau   Tower\nGatineau  Power   Pfd\nGurd Charles\nHoward Smith Paper\nH Smith Paper Pfd\nImperial   Oil\nInter Petroleum\nInter Nickel \"I Can\n30% I t.nko nftBe Woods\n43    ! McColl   ftnntrnac\n64    i National Brew Ltd\n107      Nat  nrew Pfd\n10% ! Orllvle Fliur new\n11% | Price Br**s\n79    |n,ieher p,w*r\n140     Shawnlgan W tt P \t\nB\norp\nImperial\nMontreal\nNovn Scotia\nRoyal\nToronto\nCURB:\nAbitibi   6   Pfd\nBathurst P ia P\nHeauharnols  C\"\nBritish American Oil\nn C Packers\nCan Industries B\n10%   Cnn Marconi \t\n19%'Can   Vickers\n103    i Cons  Paper Corp\n14%   Fnlrrhlld   Aircraft\n23% | Fraser Co Ltd\n\"    Intrr   Ullllllra   A\nInter lllllltlm B\n1 ikr Sulphite\nMacl.nrcn P k V\nMrOill   F'ontenae Pfd\nMitchell    Tlnbt\nRovalile   Oil\nWa'krr Good k W\nWalker Good Pfd\nTi\n45     I\n21%\n14%\n90\n10\n14%\n15%'\n96%\n44% ;\n20% I\n351 v\nI3i\n1\u00ab>.\n21\n4',\n19%\n13%\n17!\n207\n217\n203\n31]\n183\n262%\n11%\n4\n5%\nIV.\n19\n2 31\n1%\n6%\n7%\n5%\n19\n10%\n50\n2%\n21%\n97%\n14%\n33\n43%\n.'U *.\nFirest:ne % lo 7%\nwere mostly untraded.\nDOW\nJONES\nAVERAGES\nHigh    Low    Close\nChange\n30 industrials \t\n     140.28    14843    148.72\nup    .52\n29 rails \t\n      3104     30 93     30.94\nup     08\n15 utilities \t\n      25.05     24,94     24 99\nup    .07\nVANCOUVER STI\nDCK EXCHANGE\nMINES\nBid\nAsk\nBritish  Dom  12\n.11%\nB:g  Missouri  .   ..\nM\n10\nBrown Corp             .15%\n17%\nBralorne   \t\n10.60\n10.75\nCal 4 Ed   ' 2 01\n2 05\nBridge   River   Con\n.01%\n\u2014\nCalmont    -      .29\n.30\nCariboo Gold  \t\n252\n2 55\nCommonwealth    28\n\u2014\nDentonia           \t\n.01%\n\u2014\nDavies Pete \u201e          25\n.28\nFairview   Amal   ...\n014ft\n.01%\nEast Crest  07\nFederal Gold    \t\n00%\n.00%\nExtension   _      .25\n26\nGeorge Copper \t\n.16\n\u2014\nFirestone Pete  ......       .07\nGolconda   .\n.04\n\u2014\nFcur Star Pete .          .10\n12\nOold  Belt \t\n29\n28%\nFreehold Corp .......       02\n02%\n.15\n17\nHargal          \t\n20\nGrull Wihksne ..\n03%\n.04\nHome      2 70\n2 73\nHedley Mascot \t\n51\n.55\nMadison .    02%\n.03\nHome Gold    \t\n00%\n.00%\nMar-Jon                ..       0.1\n.01%\nIndian Mines \t\nni\n.01%\nMcDougall Segur _       11%\n12%\nInternational   Coil\n\u2014\n.25\nMcLeod        07\n08\nIsland Mountain .\n100\nI 05\nMercury                    06%\n07%\nKootenav Belle ....\n69\n\u2014\nMid-West Pete ... .       02%\nLucky Jim \t\nm%\n01%\nMill  City  \t\n07%\nMinto Gold \t\n.01%\n.01%\nModel        24\n\u2014\nMcOillivrav    \t\n24\nMonar-h   Royal   . .        Ofl\n-\u25a0\nNicola M k M \t\n03\n03%\nOkalta  com  .              1 (18\n1 15\nNnble   Five   \t\n01%\n.01%\nOkalta pfd ...        .   24 50\n175\n185\nPacalta                           .05\n08%\nPilot  Gold\n00%\n--\nPrairie Rovalties ..       20\n21\nPioneer  Gold  _   ,\n2 10\n2 20\nItoval Canndian     .        lfl\n.18%\n1 Porter  Idaho   \t\n01%\n02\nRoyal Crest Pele ..       09%\n10\nPremier   Border   _\n00%\n01\nRovalite                  .   33 25\n\u2014\n1 30\n134\nSouth Fnd Pete    .\n05\nPrivateer   \t\nM\n--\nSouthwest Pete         40\n53\nQuatsino   \t\n.02%\n0.1%\nSunset       .\n33\nReeves Mac .\n20\nUnited        07\n07%\nRelief Arlington .\n.11%\n12\nVanalla              OS\n08\nReno G^ld\n.17\nVulcan                 50\n57\nRufus  Argenta .\n00%\n\u2014\nWeat  Flank                    04\n05\nS.illv Mines \t\n.06\nINDUSTRIALS\nSalmon  Gnld\n03\n03%\nBrew 8c Dlit              4 00\nSheen Creek\nSilbak Premier ....\n1 11\n1 14\nCapita]   F-alales   .        1 75\n200\n1.07\n109\nCoast   Brew                 1 2\u00ab\n1 .10\nSilvercres*    \t\nni*,\n01%\nNeon                             0 15\nSurf Inlet\n10\n\u2014\nPirlfir Corle                lfl1\nIS\nTavlor   Bridfe   \t\n01%\n\u2014\nWr#lnnnster Paper\n1323\nVidelle Gold\nWellington\nIM%\n01%\n06\nWesko Mines\non*\nnn*,\nHAVE   YOUR   ELECTRIC\nPOWER\nWhitewater\nOUTLET   PLATEI\nYml** Yankee Girl\nOILS\n03%\n\u25a004%\nCHROME PLATED\n00%\n00%\n^ np-onda\nam,\n91\n07\nL.C.M.  Electroplating\n\u2022\\ P Con\nIB\nLaurlti Bldg.     704 Nelion Avl\nBallac\t\nDIM\n\u2014\n*\n * ~\nWhat Do You Read\nBetween the Lines?\nBetween the lines of every advertisement\nyou see, you can imagine these words;\n\"Thousands ot people had to believe in\nthis product\u2014and buy it\u2014before it was\nready for advertising'\"\nThc fact that a product is advertised\nregularly means that a lot of people buv it\nregularly The fact that a storekeeper cr\nmanufacturer wil join his name w th it\nin public proves that hc thinks it is good,\nhonest value.\nTime was when the slogan. \"Let the buyer\nbeware.\" governed buying and selling Put\nadvertising h.is reversed that Todav it\nreads.  \"Let the seller beware'\nFor if his grols don't measure up he\nloses out to advertised product', that do1\nBuyers and Sellers Both Profit From\nNewspaper Advertising\n PAGE   TIN\nTODAY\nFeature\nat 2:34,\n7:24,\n9:28\nA SPECTACLE YOU\nWILL NEVER FORGET!\nA unforgettable film\n... NEVER BEFORE\nSHOWN...bring, to\nHI* again tha moat\npriceless moments ln\nCanadian history ...\nA UNITED CANADA\nHONORING IT'S\nKINO AND QUEEN!\nEXCLUSIVE\nCANADIAN GOVERNMENT\npictures or\nTHE\nROYAL\nVISIT\nThe COMPLETE STORY of\ntheir Majesties' Canadian visit\ntold in its ENTIRETY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-MONDAY MORNINQ. PCI. 11, 1940,\nAll for Low\n&&\/\nA PETE SMITH\nNOVELTY\nSTRANCER   THAN\nFICTION\nFOX NEWS\nKimberley Cons.\nName Executive;\nHear MacKinnon\nKIMBERLEY, B. ft. Feb. 18 -\nThursday night law the best turn\nout In ytars ot the Kimberley Conservative Association, due no doubt\nto pie confidence which the Conservative! of this Auociatlon have\nIn their candidate Dr. C E. L.\nMacKinnon, who is widely popular.\nVisiting speakers were the candidate, Dr. MacKinnon; Alan Graham of Cranbrook, and Lyle Jestley\nof Trail, who is campaign manager\nfor W^ K. Esling, Federal member\nfor West Kootenay. In an. enthusiastically received speech Dr. Mac-*\nKinnon reviewed nU association\nwith this district, and briefly outlined his views on the Federal pol\nitical* situation.\nSlection of officers resulted as\nows: Hon. Pres., Hon. R. J; Manlon; Hon. Vice-President, R. L.\nMaitland, K.C.; President, J. W\nBell; Vice-President, S. McL. Norton; Secretary-Treasurer, A. T.\nRichardson; and an executive committee consisting of T, J. Bride, F\nBilrrin, C. Swan, J. C. Hart, B. H.\nBentley, 0. N. Jacobson, C. W\nCrisford, C. D. Chisholm, A. D\nOakes and G. G. Hunter.\nFine  BUSINESS BLOCK for Sale\nTerms or cash. Ideal location\non Baker Street.\nPhone 980 for Particulars\nSTUART'S REAL ESTATE &\nINSURANCE OFFICE\nAberdeen Block     Nelson, B.C.\nDally   Deliveries\nI parts of tha city.\n'37 FORD\nLIGHT DELIVERY\nLooks and runs like new.\nSave on this one.\nQueen City Motors\nPh. 43       Limited      M1 Josephine\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needs in plumbing    repairs,   alterations,    and\nInstallations.\nPh. 815 301 Victoria St.\n'Canadian Legion War\nServices Ine' Fund\nTOTAL   RECEIPT9  BY   NELSON\nBRANCH    CANADIAN    LEGION\nTO FEB. 17, 1940\nH. II. Currie  S 2 00\nMrs   H.  H. Currie   200\nE. C.  Wragge  5 00\nJ. A.  Spencer    2 00\nCanadian Legion, Nelson ....- 3000\nB. A.   Smith   _..._ 100\nCrawford Bay Vets  SIX!\n\"J.W.\"  ..: _... 1.00\nHET  5.00\nL. H. Choquette _. 5.00\nMrs. H. E. Thain _ 200\nW. A.  Hotson  200\nJas. Mclvor  _ 5 00\nKokanee Chapter. I.O.D.E. - 2500\nA. J. Smith  _ .50\nM. E Harper  3.00\nS. J. Hillyard _ 5,00\nC. H. Hamilton  200\n\"PD.Q.\"  1,00\nNelson Women's Institute   25 00\nS. P. Boatock  _  2.00\nJ. R. Fnrd   3 00\nF. T. Griffiths   200\nTotal $155.50\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 18-The Women's Association and the Women's\nMissionary Society of Knox United Church entertained jointly at a\nValentine's tea and sale of* home\ncooking recently. The affair was\nheld In the Church Hall, and many\nguests were in attendance and were\nreceived by Mrs. M. W. Lees. Mrs.\nW. C. Mackenzie and Mrs. L. Crowe.\nDaffodils graced the individual tea\ntables. Those assisting were: Culinary arrangements, Mrs. G. A. Burton, Mrs. C. Fransen, Mrs. W. E\nWilson, and Mrs. F. Wilby; servi-\nteurs, Mrs. W. Barchard, Mrs. A.\nJohnston, Mrs. A. Grant, Mrs, W,\nH. McKay and Mrs. H. Clark; home-\ncooking stall, Mrs. R. Wellwood,\nMrs. M. Michaely, Mrs. J. Dwyer\nand Mrs. J. Currie. Mrs. W. H. Aston was in charge of the sale of\ntickets.\nKenneth Miles has returned from\nSpokane, where he spent a day\nor so.\nMr. and Mrs. R. R. Burns, Mllli-\ngan Avenue, have as their guest\nthe former's brother, F. M. Burns\nof Vancouver.\nSt. Francis Xavier Altar Society\nheld circle meetings Thursday afternoon. Red Cross work and articles for their next sale of work\nwere completed during the afternoon. Mrs. A. LePage was at home\nto the Central Circle, and 12 members were in attendance. Five members of the Nelson Avenue Circle\nmet at the home of Mrs. P. Laz-\nzarott. and Mrs. E. R. Matthews\nentertained 10 members of Riverside  Circle.  The  hostesses  served\nWANTED\nListings of City and Country properties for sale. We have prospective buyers. Your property may\nsuit them.\nH. E. DILL\nReal Estate and Insurance\n532 Ward SL Phone 180\nmmmmmmmmmuumtmmmmmmmmmmm\n'37 FIAT SEDAN\n40 miles per gallon\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker St      Limited     Phont 119\nFleury\n's Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nEnumeration in\nKootenay West\nClose lo 21,000\nTRAIL, B. C, reb. 1*8\u2014With reg:\nIstratlons ot 11,778 electors from III\nurban noils end.one advance poll to\nbe at Nelaon; and 1086 Oram 88 rural\npolls, there hive been registered\nto date 20,711 voters in Kootenay\nWest Electoral District, J. A. Wadsworth, Returning Officer announced\nSaturday, .    .\nTwo small rural polls hot yet\nheard trom are Howser md Poplar\nin the Lardeau District.\nAt the Federal election of 1935\nKootenay Wett hid only 15,507\nregistered voters.\nA poll constitutes not more, thai\n350 voters, polling divisions hav\ning more than thit number o'\nelectors enumerated being divided\ninto two or more polls.\nThe complete .list at polling divisions md the number ef registered\nvoters ln each, with the exception\nof Poplar and Howser, follow:\nFerguson        19\nTrout Lake    40\nGalenti Bay     33\nSend Us Your\nMAIL\nORDERS\nPROMPT EFFICIENT\nSERVICE\nCity Drug Co.\nPHONE 34 BOX 460\n8. ALLEN\ntea at the close of the meetings.\nMrs. E. Edwards, the former\nBeatrice Mathews, waa again complimented when Mrs. Andrew Weir,\nSr\u201e and Mrs. Howard Weir entertained at a delightful linen shower\nln her honor. A most enjoyable\nevening was passed at the home of\nMrs. A. Weir, Jr., Rossland Avenue,\nwhere cards were played, Miss\nMerle Weir winning first prize,\nMrs. S. Matthews second, and Mrs,\nAndrew Tough consolation. A large\nbasket, daintily trimmed In pink\nand white, and filled with many\nlovely gifts, was presented to the\nbride. The hostesses served delicious refreshments at the close of\nthe evening. Guests invited were\nMrs, S. Mathews, Mrs, B. Mathews,\nMrs. C, Weir, Mrs. B Bennett, Mrs.\nTough, Mrs. Hugh Weir, Mrs. R.\nMullaney, Mrs. Jack Weir, Mrs.\nLeonard Wilson, Miss Jessie Lau-\nghle, Miss Lena LePage, Miss Jean-\nette LePage, Miss Hazel and Miss\nMerle Weir and Miss Margaret\nMathews.\nMrs. L. Crowe, President, wss ir.\nthe chair Tuesday evening when\nthe Women's Association of Knox\nUniled Church held a business\nmeeting in the church parlors. It\nwas decided to hold the annual\nSpring sale on May 4. On Thursday afternoon the .Asscciation held\nits regular circle meetings, during\nwhich sewing for their sale was\ndone. Mrs. F. Wilby entertained\nCircle\" No. 1, and had as her guests\nMrs, G. A. Burton, Mrs. N. Kilpin,\nMrs. W. Spooner, Mrs. R. Leckett,\nMrs. G. Johnson, Mrs. C. Fransen,\nMrs. W. W. Dick. Mrs, C. Fraser,\nMrs. E. Swankie. Mrs, O. J, Wilson.\nMrs. C, Morrow and Mrs W. J.\nWagstaff. Circle No. 2 met at the\nhome cf Mrs. J. Forrest, members\nin attendance being Mrs, W. Barchard, Mrs. L. Crowe, Mrs H. O,\nHinch, Mrs. H. Clark, Mrs. G. Weir,\nMrs. A. Johnston, Mrs. W. Douglas, Mrs. T Brown, Mrs, R. R.\nBurns, Mrs. P. R. MsDonald, Mrs\nW, McKay. Mrs, F. B, Moran. Mrs\nD. Chalmers, Mrs. W. Forrest, Mrs\nW. Hamilton, Mrs. A. E. Haynes,\nMrs, R, Cook. Mrs. F. Graham and\nMrs. A. R. Buchan, Mrs, J. Dwyer\nwaj at home to Circle No. 3, her\nguests being Mrs. R. R. Wellw'od,\nMrs, D Henderson, Mrs. A. J. Ran-\ndell, Mrs. J. Currie, Mrs. E. L.\nBice, Mrs W, C. Astcn, Mrs. R B.\nDimock, Mrs. M. Carpenter, Mrs,\nM. W. Lees, Mrs. C. G. Coulter\nand Mrs P. Phillip.*!. Tea waa served.by the three hostesses at the\nclose of the afternoon's activities.\n\"Much lumber and useless stuff\"\nwas taught in Australian schools\nsaid Principal J. F. Hill to an \"old\nboy\" gathering to which the entire\naudience assented with a unanimous  \"Hear,  hear!\"\nChamber Commerce\nMeeting in Trail\nChanged to Mar. 9\nTRAIL, B. C.\/Feb. 18-The district regional meeting of the British\nColumbia Junior Chamber of Commerce will be held in Trail March 9\nInstead of March 2, Robert Foxall\nof Nelson, executive regional member, has advised the Trail Junior\nChamber.\nDelegates from Nelson, Cranbrook, Spokane, Rossland and Trail\nwill attend.\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-Mrs. M. J.\nNesmith and Mrs. A. W. Nesmith\nentertained the five Hundred Club.\nThose present were Mrs. H. H.\nPendry, Mrs. J. B. Smith, Mrs. E.\nKirkwood. Mrs. R. W. Crellin, Mrs.\nM. A. Cropp, Mrs. F. M. Campbell,\nMrs. L. R. Campbell, Mrs. E. Angrignon, Mrs. D. Shannon. Mrs. T. Avi-\nson, and Mrs. A. Greenlaw. Dainty\nrefreshments were served by Che\nhostesses.\nGeorge Stewart of Sandofi is a\npatient in Slocan Community Hospital, having undergone an operation for appendicitis.\nMrs. N. C. Tattrie and young son\nhave left for Nelson to reside.\nJ. Draper visited Nelson.\nMrs. M. Thompson is a patient in\nSlocan Community Hospital.\nMrs. A. Greenlaw of Lardo is.visiting her mother, Mrs. E. Angrignon.\nU. MacLean is a patient in Slocan\nCommunity Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Pendry of\nSheep Creek visited relatives in\ntown.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Hakeman and Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Rushton of Nakuso attended the Hospital Ball here.\nMr. Newton of Winraw is a patient in hospital.\nMrs. R. Islip of Nakusp visited\nin town.\nMr. and Mrs. J, Dolman and Mr.\nand Mrs. Hunter Gardner, Jr., attended Ihe Hospital Ball hero.\nMr. Smith of Appledale is a hospital patient.\nningtS. ..\nzan and a Romeo, Haywood S.\nKirby, Harvard student, ls\nshown perched in the branches\nof the tree where he threatens\nto stay until Miss Libby Esler,\nRadcliffc college freshman, gives\nhim \u2022 \"date. The tree\u2014and\nRomeo Kirtjy\u2014are located on\nCambridge common within plain\nsight of Llbby's dormitory.\nConservatives at\nTrail Open Monday\nTheir Headquarters\nTRAIL, B. C., Feb. 18\u2014Committee rooms of the Trail Conservative\nAssociation will open Monday In the\nbuilding adlolnlg the C. S. Williams\nClinic, 900 Block Helena Street.\nSALMO\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nSALMO, B.C.\u2014Miss Nancy Johnson entertained schoolmates at her\nhome on her ninth birthday.\nMrs. L. Garland of Nelson is visiting her brother .and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Herman Llndow.\nMrs. McEwing visited Nelson.\nRied Gardener of Nelson visited\ntown.\nStan Kitchenen left Monday for\nVancouver, where he will sail on\nthe S. S. Aorangl for Aukland, flew\nZealand. Mrs. Kitchener and\ndaughter Olive expect to follow ln\nabout six weeks.\nMr. A. Tols entertained at a\nValentine party in honor of ner\ndaughter Beverley's ninth birthday.\nThe first of a series of bridge\nparties, sponsored by the Ladles\nAid of the United Church, was held\nat the hemes of Mrs. G. G. Fair\nand Mrs C. A. Cawley, eight tables\nbeing in play. Prises went to Mrs.\nG. Waterstreet, G. T. Matthew, Mrs.\nC. A. Cawley and C. W. Llndow.\nLunch was served by the committee.\nMrs. W. H. Miller and daughters\nMona and Mary, and Joyce Bremner of Nelson visited Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Bremner.\nMrs. Ida Gray visited Nelson.\nMrs. J. Miller of Nelson visited\nMr. and Mrs. C. Scribner.\nDr. and Mrs. N- E. Morrison of\nNelson visited friends in town.\nNorth Upper Arrow Lake\nHalcyon   \t\nGerrard   \t\nPoplar    \t\nHowser\t\nMarblehead    ....\nNakusp North\nNakusp South .,\nBrouse    \t\nSummit Lake ...\nRosebery     \t\nLardeau    \t\nArgenti\nJohnson'a Landing   -\t\nRlondel\t\nShutty Bench   44\n20\nKaslo\nSandon and Cody ..\nNew Denver    _\nSilverton       _....\nBurton      _\nArrow Park   \t\nWest  Demars   \t\nE. Arrow Park \t\nGraham's Landing\nWatshan Lake \t\nNeedles  .\nFauquier    \t\nEdgewood      \t\nDeer Park    ...\nRenata ... v~\nSyrlnga  Creek  .....\nFruitvale\t\nSlocan City \t\nMirror Lake\t\nQueen's Bay    \t\nBalfour      \t\nHarrop-Longbeach\nCrescent Bay    \t\nWillow Point   \t\nPerry's       \t\nAppledale    ..  .-\nWinlaw-Lebahdo   .\nPassmore\nSlocan Park    \t\nSouth Slocan    \t\nCrescent Valley\nRobson   _\t\nTarry's     \t\nThrums    \t\nCastlegar\nSPRING\nSAMPLES\nThe new samples sre hei\nLet us make that new si\nto measure. Don't forg\nEaster Is early this ye,\nEmory's Ltd,\n\u2022The Man's Store\"\nKootenay No-Odor\nDry Cleaning Co.\nPhone 128\nFOR PROMPT BERVICi\nNEW COIFFURES\nA STYLE TO SUIT YOU\nHaig.li Tru-Art\nBEAUTY SALON\nPhone 327 Johnslone Blk\nFINANCIAL   SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly  Savings  Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded  Representative\nBox \u00ab1      Hlppenon Blk.     Ph. 197\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014..^_\nFOR RENT-3 ROOM FURNISHED\nsuite. Phone 855X.\n3    ROOM    FURNISHED    SUITE,\nMar. 1. K. W. C. Blk. Mrs Blalork\nFOR SALE, ONE ACRE GOOD\nland. Fruit trees, small fruits,\nwith 7-roomed modern hous**.\nPractically new. White plumbing.\nChicken houses for 500 chlckerio\nOnly eight minutes walk from\nBaker Street. Must sell, priced at\na sacrifice. Phone 980 for details\nor, write Box 718 Daily News\nVacant home. Phone 925R.\nFor Radio Service, Ph. 119,  O\nMcKIM, Tech., Peeblei, Motors.\nNOMAD MEETING TONIGHT\nAT 8 P.  M.\nREFRIGERATION SERVICE. PH.\nMt, F. H. Smith, 351 Baker Street.\njouI Is Subject\nScientist Church\n! \"Soul\" was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in the First Church of\n! Christ, Scientist, Sundiy.\nThe Golden Text was: \"I will set\nMy tabernacle among you: and My\nsoul shall not abhor you. And I will\nwalk among you, and will be your\nGod. and ye shall be My people\"\n(Leviticus 26: 11, 12).\n! Among the citations which com-\n, prised the Lesson-Sermon was the\n! following from the Bible: \"For the\nLord God is a sun and- shield: the\nLord will give grace and glory: no\ngood thing will He withhold from\nthem that walk uprightly\" (Psalms\n64:111.\nThe Lesson-Sermon also Included\nthe following passage from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\nand Health with Key to the Scriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy: \"Day\nmay decline and shadows fall, but\ndarkness flees when the earth has\nagain turned upon Its axis. The sun\nLa not affected by the revolution\nof the earth. So Science reveals Soul\nas God. untouched by sin and death\n\u2014as the central Life and Intelligence\naround which circle harmoniously\nall things in the systems of Mind.\"\nReliance Aqencies Ltd.\nHI! Dewdniy Ave.     Phont 214\nTRAIL,  B.C.\nWT. INSURE EVERYTHING\nAND   SAVE   YOU   MONEY\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nNOMAD DANCE, WED., FEB. 21,\nEAGLE HALL, MARGARET GRAHAM'S  ORCHESTRA.  ADM. 50c.\nLittle Thratre presenting penthouse plays to members and friends.\nSmall charge for refreshments, Canadian Legion. Thurs. Feb. 22, 8 p m\n    D.O.K.K. ANNUAL EA8TER BALL\n\"\"\"\"^mmmmmmmmmm'   CIVIC CENTRE EASTER MONDAV\n\"CnmhriAnr    fl-nek-ae\" Margaret Graham'i Orch.\nlamonage uornes  | ,,-,\u201e now*(or th, Blll ef ,\u201e, 8,\u201eon\n16\nNew .ipring lamplfi now being\n*hown.\nGodfreys' limited\n1936 FORD\nNew     nngi.\n$625\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelion) Ltd. Phont 117\nDELUXE    SEDAN\nnew tirei and\nhttttr\t\nBreakfast\nIS ALWAYS\nGOOD AT\nThe PERCOLATOR\nNelson Women's Libera] Association will meet at the hnme of Mrs.\nAlex Carrie, corner Josephine and\nSilica Streets, Tuesday at 8 p.m.\nBURGESS Batteries, Chromebllt\nfor longer itrvlce. 1000 hour A, B\nand C radio batteries, units and\nflnh|igh(a.  \u2014  HIPPERSON'S.\nKaslo Conservatives\nHeaded by R. E. Green\nKASLO, B. C, \u2014 At a Conservative Association meeting the following officers were elected unanimously:\nHonorary President, W. K. Esling. MP, Kootenay West; Honorary Vice-President, Hon, R. L\nMaitland. ML A; President, R. E\nGreen: Vice-President, s H. Green;\nSecretary-Treasurer, Fred McGib-\nbon; Executive, Committee. Georgi\nPalmer, Robert McDougall. J. C\nClarke. Joseph Mervyn, A. L. MacPhee of Kaslo. C. O, Bowker of\nMirror Lake and Thomai Taylor of\nShutty Bench.\n.95\nAlso   Model   M 60  with\nthe some head as on the\nSliavcmaMcr.\nPriced at   . .\n$8.95\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nSKATING SCHEDULE\nNILSON CIVIC ARENA\nWeek February 19th to 24th Inclusive\nADULTS\nMonday ind  Friday  Night*.  8  to  10.\nOENCRAL\nWedneiday Afternoon. 2 to 4.\nCHILDREN\nSaturday, 2 to 4 P.M.\nPARENT AND CHILDREN\nMonday ani Thursday Afternoon. 1:30 to 3.\nNOTE: Thirt will ht no further ohlldrtn'i anting on Tutiday\nCribbage Drive, Legion Hall Tomorrow iTueidayl night at S. Everv\nbody welcome. Admlnlon JSc. Sponsored hy Nelion Crlbbagt Club In\naid of Legion War 8trvlcti Fund.\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nKOSKI.   Htnna  -   Passed  away\n' Saturday   Body rests at Somers Funeral  Home where service will b**\nheld   today   at   2   p m.   Rev.   Earl\ni Lindgren officiating.\nBRITISH ARMY WINS\nSOCCER IN FRANCE\nLILLE. France. Feb. IS (CP). -\nFirst half goals by G. H. Stephen-\nJ son and T. Mercer, English forward\nI Internationals, enabled the British\narmy soccer team to defeat the\nFrench army eleven 2-1 here today Herman netted for the French\nclub.\n390\n54\n218\n138\n151\n.  N\n.   36\n.   62\n.   27\n,   74\n.   74\n61)\n157\n54\n73\n.   16\n. 515\n108\n.  36\n.   13\n.   63\n10B\n.   M\n. 207\n.   51\n.   5*8\n.   SS\n.   7\u00ab\n.   19\n. 389\n.   75\n121)\n.     9\n.    15\n. 317\nSheep Creek   .-    16\nWaneta       \u201e    21\nProcter      133\nWest Creston  _...\u201e    47\nBoswell     _    67\nGray Creek       53\nCrawford Bay _  122\nRoesland A   547\nB 380\nC 613\nD 310\nE 2111\nPaterson        18\nTadanac     374\nAnnable-Warfteld      742\nRobson W.I. Told\nAbout Red Cross\nROBSON, B. C.-The Robion\nWomen's Institute met at the home\not Mra. D. Gavrilik, Mrs. Robert\nWaldie, Vice-President, In the chair.\nK minutes' silence was observed in\nhonor of the lste Governor General\nIt was decided that the Robson\ngroup would adopt an English In-\nsti.ute as a pen and parcel friend\nfor the duration ot the war.\nThe financial statement given by\nthe Secretary, Mrs. W. R. Campbell,\nshowed a balance of $44.32.\nMrs. C. E. Tutt's committee report\nshowed that a consignment of Red\nCroes sewing and knitting had been\ndone during the last month ond\nplans were made for work just\nsent ln.\nThe '-Jsitlng committee was voted $3 to buy small gifts to take to\nthe sick.\nMlsa Ruth McDiarmld reported\nsent to the Queen Alexandra Solarium. '\nIt was decided to send a year'i\nCountry Woman of the World magazines to the Pouce Coupe Institute.\nMiss Phyllis Benson and Miss\nDiana Whellams played a piano\nduet entitled \"Flower Song.\"\nJamei Bryden of Trail gave <\ntalk on the Red Cross Organization.\nIts work during the last war and\nwhat they are doing* In this.\nMr. Bryden gave a general outline of tne Red Cross work since\nthe organization was started 80\nyears ago, In the North of Italy by\na Swiss traveler, Henry Dunant.\nThe Canadian Red Cross was started in 1894. but not Incorporated until 1909.\nThe Red Cross was a volunteer\norganization forming a link between\nthe volunteer workers at home and\nthe men at the front. It also exchanged prisoners of war and sent\nthem parcels of food and clothing,\nthla work is done through the international office in Geneva.\nThe Red Cross does not sell Its\nsupplies and its committees are volunteer workers.\nWhen Canada entered the present\nwar the Red Cross was able to notify the Government that It was\nready to fulfill its obligation and\nwas so well prepared at the time\nto be able to help in the Athenia\ndisaster.\nHostesses for the afternoon were\nMrs. C. E. Tutt, Mrs. H. E. Foxlee\nand Mrs. D. Gavrilik.\nGuests at the meeting were the\nspeaker and Misj Taylor of Cambridge, England, Miss Phyllis Benson and Miss Diana Whellams.\nTruckertl\u2014Let tu put on\nSIGNAL ARM\nSKY CHIEF AUl\n208 Baker SL  SERVICE  Phori\nBANISH YOUR\nWARDROBE WORRIER\nPHONE 1042\n^omtla. (jbuuWti\nS$*#masca\u00ab&MaeMMMavtiie\nTrail\nN\n343\n.490\n393\n. 448\n651\n. 282\n241\n. 737\n. 400\n. 332\n413\n337\n331\nDry Slab Wood]\n12\" $400; 16\" ?3.75\n4 Feet |3.00 Cord j\nPhone 163 or 434R1 [\nBUILD YOUR NEW DWELL*]\nunder the National Housing\nbefore labour and bulldlH\nmaterial prlcei rise. Coniij\nT. D. Rosling\n3 Royal Bank Bldg.        Phon|\nSTEAKS\nTENDER JUICY\nQrenfell's Cat\nT. H. WATERS & <\nLIMITED\nWe specialize in glass tor bll\nlngs.  automobiles,  boat! a]\nfurniture\nWINDOWS REQLAZED\nThe Classified Will Sail Itl\nDON'T COUCH -*- Use\nMother's Syrup\nOr WHITE PINE\nat\nSmythe's\nPreicrlptlon  Druggist Phona 1\nShaver's Bench  177\nCasino     \u201e _    42\nPark Siding         37\nErie    53\nRelief-Arlington _ 149\nHall Siding    29\nTaghum     183\nShirley         124\nEXPERT\nBODY AND FENDER REPAIRS\nPainting Welding\nSowerby-Curhbert Ltd.\nOpp- Postotllce and Hume Hotel\nI Lambert's\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nWhy Not join thl\nOther 565\nAnd Send Your\nFILMS\nBETTEP\nphoto!\nTRAIL, B. C.\n25c per Rol\nNelson A .\n.     B \t\nC\t\nD \t\nE ...,.\t\nr\t\nG\t\nH \t\nM \t\nN\t\nJ \t\nK _.\nL  _..\nNelson East \t\nYmlr   \t\nSalmo   \t\nReno-Sheep Creek\nPend d'Orellle\nColumbia Gardens\n801\n. 471\n214\n. 123\nS78\n. 707\n, 215\n. 455\n. 268\n. l'J7\n6117\nf.l\n148\n. IS\n. 268\n301\n435\n. 67\n.   33\nBURCLARY INSURANCE\nDoesn't cost much\u2014You may be\nneit.-We\" write IL\nRobertson   Realty  Co.,  Ltd.\n347 Biker SL\n5\u00ab*\u00abS>W*\u00bb***\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab5*W\u00bbM\u00bb\u00abSS\nTresh Dally\nHot Cross Buns\nHOOD'S\nYour Home Bakery\ntexeettiomtMt<imemm\u00bb)tvoe%*&i\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhona S6S S10 Keetanay\nPUNSRAL   NOTICI\nWILKINSON - Paued iwir at\nhla home, 613 Cedar Street, Sunday\nFebruary 111, James Henry Wilkinson In his B2nd year He leavei lo\nmourn his ln<ai his wife and two\ndaughlerl. Mrs J. H Ijiwrenre and\nMrs. Roy Sharp, and a granddaughter, Dawn Sharp, Funeral service will be held at Clark'i Funeral\nChapel Tuesday. Feh. 30. 3 p m Rev\nJ. A. Donnell officiating.\nJuvenile Hockey\nPlaydowns\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA\nTUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY NIGHTS\nNELSON vs. KIMBERLEY\nDoor Open it 7:30.\nAdmission: Adults Ota}.\nCame  tt  I.\nChildren Under 15, I'V\nxn\nCIVIC\n\u25a0i\nLAST\nTIMES\nAt 2:00-7:00-9:17\nPositively the Greatest Roadshow in Yea\nDirect from Hollywood \u2014\nFeaturing   itsri   from   hit\npictures   including\nBing Crosby's\n\"Tht Stsrmikor\"\nCompany of 20\u2014\n10 Feature Acts\nu\nON THE SCREEN\nWolf Call\"\nPrists. Evt. ...  !()<* I r.f\nMatinee 30< 10<\nMl \u00ab tllTriMM J\n\\\u00a7tagtJUvuc\/\n-STARTS TUESDAY-\nCricit  Fields I \u2122' Sensational\n'Shipyard Sally\"\nLOUIS vs. GODOI\nFight Pictures\nA Motor Checkup\nNOW\nwill save you money this summer\nFOR PERFECT SUMMER PROTECTION\nHAVE YOUR MOTOR CHECKED NOVV\nNelson Transfe)\nCompany, Limited\n35\u2014PHONES\u20143{\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_02_19","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0407385","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"}]}}