{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412497":{"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":"2022-04-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1937-01-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412497\/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":" Hu&e Volume on Toronto's\nMining Stock List\n\u2014Pa\u00a3e Nine\n\u00bblumi u\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nicM\nChicago Hockey Chief Hopes\nHave All U. S. Team\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\n3LUMBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, JAN. 26, 1937.\nNUMBER 241\nCINCINNATI   biw-JKING   WATER   UNFIT\nHINKS SLAVERY\nN (OAST \"HOME\nOR FRIENDLESS\"\n.7-year-old Man Has\nNot Been Outside\nin 26 Years\nC. POLICEMAN\nTELLS AT PROBE\nWork 5 a.m., 10 p.m.\n(now Nothing of the\n\/Outside World\"\nBURNABY, B.C., Jin. 25 (CP)\n.'British Columbia police officer\n\u2022day told \u2022 royal commission investigating the Home for the\n'rlendless hli Inspection of the In-\ntltutlon convinced him \"the days\nf slavery ire not over.\"\nCorporal Richard Dunn made\nhe statement before H. I. Bird,\nippolnted by the provincial government last Monday to Inveitl-\nlate the Homo, an Institution oper-\nited In Burnaby municipality be-\nween Vancouver and New West-\nnlnster and at Summerland in the\nirtirlor.\nCorporal Dunn visited the premies occupied by tho Home hire\nNovember 17 last, accompanied by\nnipector Forbes Crulckihanks of\nho provincial police ind Dr. W.\nSager, Burmby health officer.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nBAN IN EFFECT\nAT TRAIL\nAmusement Centres,\nLower School Grades\nClose\nTtWIL, B.C., Jan. 25-A bin has\nbien placed m (II public meeting!, Ind all places of amusement\nare to hi doted, reported Qr. W.\nL, Gayton, city medical health\nofficer, it a meeting of the city\ncouncil hero Monday night. Tho\nlower gradei In public school wore\nctoied ind unior grides placed\nUnder dally supervision.\nDr. Gayton explained then\nmeasures wen of 1 preventive\nnature and not emergency.\nVictoria Reporter\nto Be Announcer\nfor Vancouver CRCV\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 25 <CP).-\nVilliam Herbert, reporter on the\n'ietorla Daily Colonist, has been\nhosen as one of three new announcers for radio station CRCV. it\nannounced here today. \"The\nIther appointees are Don Wilson\n|nd Jack Peach, Vancouver.\n.Starting February 17 the station\nWill be on the air from 8 i.m. to\nI p.m. and 4 p.m. to 10:45 p.m.\nC.N.R. BONDS TO\nBE OFFERED ON\nTHURSDAY\nI OTTAWA, Jan. 25 (CP).-An Issue\n$35,500,000   Canadian   National\nJail ways Dominion guaranteed\nI to be offered throughout Can-\nThursday waa announced to-\n|ight by Hon. C. A. Dunning, min-\n\u25a0of finance. The Issue ia to retire government for  ad-\nmade within the past year\nline riilwiy compaauiy for redemp-\nion of funded debt which matured\nwas called tor redemption.\n|The new issue will coftsist ot $15,-\n9,000 In 2Vj per cent seven-year\nlonds due February 1, 1944, and\n9,000,000 3 per cent 15-year bonds\nlue February 1, 1952. The seven-\nlee- bonds will be non-callable and\nlie 15-year bonds will be callable\n|t -xr on or after February 1, 1948.\nhe price of the seven-year bonds\n\"9,125 and interest to yield 2.09\n\u00abr cent and of the 15-year bonds\n19.50 and interest 3.04 per cent.\nCold Forecast Today as Snow\nBrings Relief to the\nSLADER IS CHAIRMAN OF NELSON\nPUBLIC WORKS;SHARPISA6AIN\nFINANCE HEAD, LINDSAY POWER\n, , .4,\nMorey Gas Chairman;\nLibrary Board Is\nReappointed\n100 DIE IN MINE\nBLAST IN CHILE\nANTOFAGASTA, Chile, Jin.\n25 (AP).\u2014Two foreign engineers\nperished today along with in\nestimated 100 worker! when an\nexplosion of two cars of blasting\npowder tor* through the Chi-\nqulcimitl copper mines, largest\nIn South A hi erica.\nR. Cowplind, in American, ind\n\u25a0 German named F. Ruf, died In\nthe blast which ripped through\nthe workings.\nThe casualties Included in estimated 100 workmen Injured.\nThe mlhei were dimiged tori-\nouily.\nThe disaster, wont In recent\nChilean history, occurred when\nfive workmen and \u2022 foreman\nwere loading cars with I mechanics! hoist Tho exact cause wm\nnot determined.\n' The blast wis heird for miles\n\u25a0round. Tho mining community\nof 15,000 was thrown Into pinlc.\niMIGRATION BILL\nADVANCES\nLONDON, Jan. 25 (CP Cable)-\n|ir Patrick Hannon (Conservative,\nHrmingham) today stated in the\nouse ot commons there was a genii feeling in Canada the United\n(dom desired to throw respons-\njlllty for migration on Canada.\n\u25a0 Sir Patrick attended the land sclement convention at Saskatoon last\nummer and spoke today during de-\njte after the dominions secretiry,\n\" icolm MacDonald, moved second\niding of the Empire .Settlement\n( which would authorise the gov-\nrtment to expend on assisted ml-\natlon plana 75 per cent of the rost\n' compared with 50 per cent at\nlatent. Second reading carried 193\n\"\" after \u2022 libor amendment was\nrtad.\nStork Derby Case\nin Appeal Court\nFight Verdict Millar\nWill Valid\nTORONTO, JAN.\u00ab <C$*-Tfit admonition in 'the Bible, \"Be fruitful\nand replenish the eirth,\" was addressed to men. not to women, Mr.\nJustice W. R. Riddell declared today\nduring hearing of two appeals in\nconnection with the Millar will\n\"stork derby\".\nThe appeals were against Mr. Justice W. F.. Mlddleton's Judgment that\nCharles Vance Millar's will was valid, but the $500,000 bequest was not\nto be shared by mothers with illegitimate children.\n\"The race is revolting to decency\nand common sense,\" declared I. F.\nHellmuth, K.C, pleading for next-\nto-kin that the clause inaugurating\nthe \"baby race\" be invalidated as\nbeing against the common good.\n\"The children are handicapped from\nthe start. They are mentally, morally and physically deficient.\n\"The Millar will bequest was a\ngift to a mother not to children, and\na mother of illegitimate children is\nas much a mother as one of legitimate children,\" he argued, attacking\nMr. Justice Middleton's judgment\nmothers of illegitimate children\ncould not share In the \"prize\".\nMr. Justice Riddell said the question In this case was to decide whether \"a child in the scientific sense\nis a child in the legal sense.\"\nJohn R. Cartwright, K.C. counsel\nfor Pauline Mae Clarke, red-haired\nmother who appealed the decision\nillegitimate children should not\nshare under the will, suggested the\nentire cue be sent back to Mr. Jus-\ntic Middleton before being considered by the court of appeal. \"The presiding Judge should decide what\nmothers are entitled to benefit under the will,\" said Cartwright.\nSUBSIDY PLANNED\nFOR PACIFIC\nSHIPPING\nLONDON, Jan. 25 (CP Cable)\u2014It\nis understood here the cabinet has\nagreed in principle to a subsidy for\nBritish shipping in the Pacific. But\nit will be stipulated the British\nmerchant fleet plying that ocean be\nmodernized and that the Dominions\nconcerned cooperate in financing the\nplan, it is believed.\nA. K.LOYDAT\nOTTAWA MEtT\nOTTAWA, Jan. 25 (CP). \u2014 The\nfederal apple maggot committee\nheld a meeting here today attended\nby representatives of the fruit industry from all parts of Canada who\nreported destruction caused by the\nmaggots had been kept within reasonable limits due to control methods introduced by the committee.\nDr. Arthur Gibson, Dominion entomologist, presided over today's\nmeeting.\nOthers present Included: W. H.\nRobertson, provincial horticulturist,\nVictoria, ind A. K. Loyd, president\nB.C. Fruit Growers' association,\nKelowna, B.C.\nRITCHIE CHAIRMAN\nSTREET RAILWAY\nStibbs Heads Parks\nand Cemeteries\nCommittee\nStanding committees of Nelson\ncity council for 1937, as appointed\nby Mayor J. P. Morgan, the chairman being named first in each case,\nare:\nFl nance \u2014Aldermen R. W.\nSharp, H. B. Lindsay ind P. G.\nMorey.\nFire, water and light\u2014Aldermen\nH. B. Lindsay, A. G. Ritchie ind\nT. W. Slider.\nPublic works\u2014AIdtrmsn T, W.\nSlider, N. C. Stibbs and A. G.\nRitchie.\nStrait nllway\u2014Aldermen A. G.\nRitchie, H. B. Lindsay ind P. G.\nMorey,\nParks and cemeteries-Aldermen N .C. Stibbs, T. W. Slader and\nr. w. tent.\nGil dipartment\u2014Aldermen P.\nG. Morey, N. C. Stibbs ind R. W.\nSharp.\nRepresentative on JCooteniy Lake\nGeneral hoipltal bOaVd\u2014Mayor J.\nF; Morgan.\nFl-e wa-deiit-AWwinaTO A. O.\nRitchie and R. W. Sharp.\nLIBRARY BOARD\n\u00a7. P. Daweon, C. W. Tyler and\nPercy Craven, retiring members of\nthe municipal library, board, were\nreappointed.\nAnother resolution appointed the\nentire council as a court of revision\nto deal with assessment appeals.\nJAPANESE PRINCE\nTO MAKE A STATE\nVISIT TO CANADA\nTOKYO, Jan. 25 (CP)-Prince Ya-\nsuhito Chichlbu, brother of the\nMikado, and Princess Chichlbu will\nmake a state visit to Canada on their\nway to the coronation in London.\nOfficial announcement was made\ntoday their -imperial highnesses\nwould again visit the Dominion,\nwhich they toured several years\nago shortly after their marriage.\nThe invitation was extended by\nCanada. The royal party will arrive at Vancouver March 29, proceeding by special train to Ottawa\nfor a two-day visit.\nFrom the Canadian capital they\nwill go to New York, sailing on the\nliner Queen Mary for England\nApril 7.\nCLAIM GABLE\nTHE FATHER OF\nWINNIPEG GIRL\nFilm Star Lodges Complaint\nAgainst Three for\nConspiracy\nLOS ANGELES, Jan. 23 (AP)-A\nfederal complaint was issued here\ntoday against a woman and two men\ncharging they conspired to obtain\nmoney from Clark Gable on thc\nclaim the screen star was the father\nof the woman's 13-year-old daughter.\nThose named were Mrs. Violet\nWells Norton of Winnipeg, Man., and\nnow said to be In Los Angeles; Jack\nL. Smith, local private detective, and\nFrank Kienan, Winnipeg rooming\nhouse keeper.   \u25a0\n\"I never.heard of Mrs. Norton,\"\nsaid Gable. \"This woman apparently\nis suffering from some kind of delusion, but I am sick and tired of\nbeing pestered by her.\"\nThe complaint, filasd by United\nStates Attorney Pierson Hall, charged the three entered into a \"scheme\nin substance that the defendants\nshould claim that one Gwendoline\nNorton was the daughter of Clark\nGable and should demand from said\nClark Gable money for her support.\"\nHARGRAVE QUITS\nEDMONTON\nTechnical Adviser to\nSocial Credit Body\n\"Gives Up\"\nEDMONTON, Jan. 25 (CP)-John\nHargrave, leader of the Social Cred\nIt party of the United Kingdom, and\nPremier William Aberhart, leader of\nthe first Social Credit government\nin the world, came to the parting of\nthe ways today.\nHargrave, who was technical id-\nviser to the Social Credit planning\ncomfnittee which Premier Aberhart\nappointed December IB, suddenly\nleft Edmonton today. In a statement\nto the press, he said he took this\nstep \"because I regretfully find rny-\nsett unable to coperate further with\nMr. Aberhart and his cabinet.\"\nThe Alberta premier declined to\ncomment on Hargrove's sudden departure .and other cabinet ministers\nwere equally reticent.\nHargrave left here for Calgary,\nwhere was expected to catch a train\nfor the east.\nThe Hargrave statement, delivered\nto the press after his departure from\nthe city, said in part: \"I still feel the\nfirst Social Credit government In the\nworld is not yet publicly committed\nto the principles of Social Credit. I\nstill feel that it lacks technical\nknowledge, and that, as a consequence, it has, over the past 16\nmonths, groped its way like a man\nstumbling along on a pitch black\nnight.\"\nUrges More Plants\nLike Trail's\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 25 (CP)-Dc-\nvelopment of British Columbia's\nbasic mining industry to increase\nthe province's potential horsepower\nand make possible the establishment\nof Industries similar to the great\nsynthetic fertilizer plant at Trail,\nwas urged today by Dr. Harry V.\nWarren of the University of British\nColumbia in a speech before a service club.\n\"Industries go to the country that\nlias the fuel,\" Dr. Warren said.\nHe said Germany, importing many\nraw materials, was enabled to successfully treat them because of her\nfive million potential horsepower.\nBritish Columbia's horsepower, he\nsaid, was estimated to be between\nfour and a half and five and a half\nmillion, waiting to be developed.\n6-INCH CARPET\nOF SNOW OVER\nCITY ENVIRONS\nLow Temperature Is\nEight Above Zero\nin Nelson\nPLOWS STALLED IN\nSPOKANE COUNTY\nCranbrook and Grand\nForks Still Have\nSub-zero\nBreaking the back of the long cold\nspell, at least temporarily, a moderately heavy snowfall yesterday\nin Nelson and district kept the temperature at the highest minimum in\nweeks and left the city under a six-\ninch blanket of fresh snow by nightfall.\nOvernight Sunday-Monday, snow\nto the extent of one and a half-\ninches was recorded and from 8 a.m.\nto 4:30 p.m. yesterday another four\ninches piled up on the streets as the\nresult of the day-long precipitation.\nThere was no let-up, and no sign of\nono, throughout the evening.\nThe minimum temperature was\neight above zero, offering welcome\nrelief from the extended sub-zero\nweather, and the maximum was 17\nabove. These temperatures were for\nthe 24 hours ending at 5 p.m. and\nunofficial recordings Indicated even\nmilder weather after dark.\nThl forecast for 12 hours from\n5 a.m. today In Nelson ind district,\nissued from the government meteorological bureau at Victoria, promises \"freih nofthwort. wlndi,\npartly cloudy ind colder, with occasional mow,\"\n(Continued on Page Tan)\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\n(By Canadian Press)\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nslocks lower.\nToronto mines\u2014Lower.\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat up Vs to iy*\ncents.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver higher; other\nmetals lower.\nNew York\u2014Bar sliver, lead.and\nzinc unchanged; export copper\nlower.\nNew York\u2014Cotton and coffee unchanged; rubber and sugar higher.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar down\n1-32 to 99 15-16.\nU.S. AND BRITAIN\nIN TRADE PACT?\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 25 (API-\nHigh officials of the United States\nand Great Britain announced today\nthe two governments virtually had\nagreed to negotiate a reciprocal\ntrade agreement.\nCordell Hull, United States secretary of state, and Walter Runci-\nman, president of the British board\nof trade, indicated actual negotiations for improved commercial relations might begin in the near future.\nRunclman spent the week-end at\nthe White House as guest of President Roosevelt.\n65,000 Homeless in the\nCity; $7,000,000 Loss in\nDisaster; Convicts Riot\n1230,000 Homeless in\nLouisville; Martial\nLaw Rules\n17 DROWN AS BVS PLUNGES\nINTO FLORIDA EVERGLADES\n13 Passengers, Driver and Porter Escape In Worlt\nTragedy in Transportation History of Stat*\nMIAMI, Fla., Jan. 25 (AP).\u2014An express bus plunged from the\nTamaiml Trail today carrying 17 of its 30 passengers, many of\nthem northern tourists, to death by drowning in the Everglades.\nThe big vehicle overturned and rolled into a 12-foot deep canal\nwhich parallels the lonely highway across the southern end of\nthe peninsula. It waa the worst tragedy in the transportation\nhistory of the state.\nBesides the 13 passengers who escaped, the driver and a negro\nporter were saved.\nThe passengers were trapped In their seats as the bus sank in\nthe stream, where Seminoles pole their dugouts and hunt for alligators. Only a corner of the roof remained above the water.\nThe driver, Bill Hammond, 23, of Tampa, who escaped with\nslight cuts, said he though the steering gear broke.\n\"I was driving at i moderate rate ot speed when something\nhappened,\" he recounted at a hospital. \"Either the steering gear\nbroke or the right front wheel collapsed.\n\"For 30 or 40 yards I was able to hold the bus on the highway\nand then it swerved to one side and the next I knew we were In the\ncanal.\n\"The porter and I broke the glass and crawled out. When I\ngot out of the water, passing motorists had stopped. I thought\nwe should go into the canal and break the windows in an effort\nto get people out but the motorists thought air might still be in the\nbus and people might still be alive.\"\nIt took divers with helmets to extricate the bodies later.\nU. S. HUNTERS FIND THEMSELVES\nCHARGED FOR COST OF A SEARCH\nPLANE AFTER TRIP IN B. C. WILDS\nFERGUS FALLS, Minn., Jan. 25\n(CP).-Dr. H. H. Liebold of Parkers\nPrairie; Minn., went hunting in the\nwilda of British Columbia last fall.\nHe got what he called the \"greatest\nshock\" of the trip today.\nIt was i bill for $1003 from the\nCanadian government. The amount\nwas claimed for \"tearching service\"\nprovided by, the British Columbia\ngovernment' when Dr.vLiebold'6\nparty got snowbound in the Bockiw\nand was feared lost.\n\"SLIGHTLY IN ERROR\"\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 23 (CP).-Dr.\nH. H.' Liebold of Parker's Prairie,\nMinn., didn't get a bill for \"searching service\" from the Canadian1 government\u2014and It wasn't for $1003 but\nfor $209.67\u2014Frank Butler, British\nColumbia game department inspector, said today.\nThe bill was submitted by the\nprovincial game board, ind covered\nexpenses of a search' party organ\nir.od lo find five United States big\ngame hunters believed lost in the\nsnow-bound Rockies In northern\nBritish Columbia.\nWhen police reports indicated the\nmen might be having -trouble pavi\ngating the mountain -trails in deep\ndrifts of snow, relatives in'ihe\nUnited States Wen contacted,' and\nasked If their would guarantee expenses of a search plane,' Butler aal A\nWithout exception,' the'relatives\nagreed to pay. Total expenses of the\ntrip amount to $1048\u2014divided five\nways.\nIt wasn't Dr. Liebold who received\nthe bill, Buller said. It Was Mrs.\nLiebold who had guaranteed to back\nexpenses incurred in the search\nflight.\n30,000,000 TO\nVOTE IN INDIA\nLONDON, Jan. 25 (CP Cable)-\nThirty million electors\u2014of whom\n5,000,000 are women\u2014will shortly\nvote in British India on the first\nstage of responsible government It's\na form of responsible government\nrigorously bound about by limitfhg\nsafeguards, but it's a beginning.\nIt's the beginning of the great\nscheme to create a United States of\nIndia.\nPolling dates vary from province\nto province. All elections will be\nover by the end of February. More\nthan 5000 candidates are already In\nthe running for 1585 seats in the assemblies and 260 seats in the councils.\nRossland Alderman Sees Mines\nas Potential Source of Water\n8UB8IDY FOR SOUTH\nAFRICA SERVICE\nOTTAWA, Jan. 25 (CP)-A contract has been awarded the North\nPacific Shipping company of Vancouver by the department of trade\nand commerce for a subsidized service between Vancouver and South\nAfrica, it was announced tonight.\nThis will take the' place of the service, provided under subsidy of the\nSilver Java Pacific Steamship company, which relinquished the contract this month. The subsidy is $7000\ni month.\nVisitors Banned\nTrail Hospital\nTRAIL, D.C., Jin. 26\u2014As \u2022 preventive measure igalnst Increasing mild Influenia ind colds that\nappear to be spreading in the city,\nTrail-Tadanac hospital will be\nclosed to visitors until further notice, according to in order Issued\nby Dr, J. L. Gayton, city medlcil\nhealth officer, Monday.\nSeveral cases of pneumonia have\ndeveloped In the city recently and\nSunday several pneumonia patients were removed to Trail-Tail-\nanac hoipltal.\nCHILD NOT TO TESTIFY\nTORONTO, Jan. 25 (CP)-Mr.\nJustice G. F. McFirland ruled today\n11-yeir-old Robert Sivlnk would\nnot be obliged to testify at Ihe trill\nof his father, charged with the murder of his wife. \"Hello. Daddy,\"\ncried the youth u he rushed to the\nprisoner's dock when hit father was\nled in by policemen. Guardi had to\ndrag the boy away from his father.\nPhillip Gallie to Get\nTests and Filtration\nFigures\nROSSLAND, B.C., Jan. 25-The\nquestion of securing a large water\nsupply for Rossland was the major\ntopic of discussion at the city council meeting Monday evening. Alderman Phillip Gallie pointed out that\nIf the best means of filtration could\nbe determined Rossland had a large\nbody of water right at her door.\nThere are more than 22 miles of tunnels, shafts and slopes filled with\nwater which, if it could be properly\nfiltered, would provide at least 500,-\n000 gallons of water every 24 hours\nwhich would more than supply all\nthe needs of the south belt, Mayor\nJohn Gordon asked Alderman Gallic to secure tests of the water from\nthe mine workings, ascertain the\ncost of a filtration plant ind report\n\u2022t the next meeting.\nMayor Gordon appointed the following committees:\n(Continued on Paoe Two)\nCommissioners\nAre Reappointed\nResidential Rate for\nElectricity for\nCivic Centre\nC. D. Blackwood and L. H. Choquette, retiring member! of the\ncivic centre commlulon, wire reappointed   by   the  city   council\nMonday night, proposal of Alderman H. B. Llndiiy, iieonded by\nAlderman N. C. Stlbbi, thit com-\nmlisloners   be   named   by   ballot\nInstead of being ippolnted, waa\ndefeatid whin only thiw two al-\ndermin supported It\nAldermen R. W. Sharp and T. W.\nSlader commented that Mr. Black-\nwood and Mr. Choquette were the\ntwo  short-term  members  of the\ncommission and that they had contributed through the difficult first\nyear of the commission's existence.\nThe council confirmed a recommendation of the committee of the\nwhole council of 19$ that the residential rate for electricity apply at\nthe civic centre.\n\u00bbaa1a-.-)W-ma-,\u00bbIS-a-f \u25a0>\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb **\u2022-) 9WW99\nWEST KOOTENAY\nHOCKEY\nSMOKE EATERS 11, CANUCK8 3.\n,    (At Trail)\n... inMUmlilisn\nLEPROSY CASE AT\nVANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 25 (CP).-The\nfirst leprosy case discovered here in\nseveral years was reported today to\nthe civic social services committee\nby Health Officer J. W. Mcintosh.\nThe patient, a Chinese who developed the infection shortly after\nhis hand was injured, will be sent\nby special boat to the leper colony\nat Williams Head, Dr. Mcintosh said.\nCOAST PIONEER DIES\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Jan.\n25 (CP).-Willlam Wolfenden, 93, a\npioneer resident of New Westminster who arrived in British Columbia on the first transcontinental\nCanidian Pacific railway train in\n1886, died Sunday. Funeral services\nwill be held here Wednesday afternoon.\nWOULD REFUSE LICENCES\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 25 (CP)-Re-\neommendatlons ot a special committee that licence applications of tbe\nNational Sports club, Brunswick\nclub and the Lumbermen's Social\nclub be refused were confirmed today by the civic properties, licences\nand claims committee.\nNO BAN ON TRAPS\nFOR FISHING\nOTTAWA, Jan. 25 (CP)-Whlle\nthe government will continue its\npresent policy of limiting the issue\nof trap-fishing licences to the waters\nsouth of Vancouver Island it is not\nprepared to put a complete stop to\nthis method of fishing.\nHon. J. E. Midland, minister ot\nfisheries, stated this in the house of\ncommons today as he opposed a res\nolution sponsored by A, W- Neill\n(Ind. Comox-Alberni), to cease issuing trip fishing licences. Although opposed to the idea, Mr. Mi\nchaud said he hid no objection to\nan Inquiry by the fisheries committee and Mr. Nelll Withdrew his\nmotion on the understanding the\nmatter would go before the committee.\nThe debate brought most of the\nPacific coast members to their feet,\nthe majority of them favoring I '-.\nNeill's resolution. Supporting the\nminister and favoring trap fishing\nwas Hon. S. F. Tolmie (Cons., Victoria) while Hon. H. H. Stevens (Re-\nconstructionist, Kootenay-East)\nthought hasty decision to ban the\ntraps should not be taken.\nSEEKS  TO  8TOP\nSLANDER ON RADIO\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 25 (CP)-Mr.\nJustice Manson in supreme court today said he will do all In his power\nto stop the radio to be used for common abuse and Intimated the aid\nof the British Columbia legislature\nmay be sought -to protect persons\nfrom radio slanders. His lordship\ndeclared however that the observation had no particular reference to\nthe radio slander case before him,\nthat of Blrt Showier vs Tom Mac-\nInnes, as he reserved judgment.\n\u2014\u2014_.\nMONTREAL, Jin. 25 (CP)-After\ni conference today, officials of\nJohns-Manvllle Company, Limited,\nannounced here no immediate settlement was expected in a strike\nwhich tied up the company's mine\nand plant at Asbestos. Que. F. A.\nWilliams, Johns-Manvllle general\nmanager, and W. Shoemaker, asbestos plant manager, discussed\nplans for negotiation with 1200 employees seeking a minimum wage\naal. af 111- c*ntc an hour.\n'\nn^^B--M\nTHOUSANDS FLEE\nIN WIDE AREAS\nThree-fourths of One\nTown in Ohio Is\nUnder Water\nBy The Associated Press\nLouisville\u2014The flooded city wai\nplaced undir martial law by Gov.\nA. B. Chandler. Many ef thl 230,-\n000 homeless were III. General\nevacuation urged. Power cut off.\nCincinnati\u2014City Manager Dyk-\nstra named \"disaster dictator\" of\ncity. Drinking water polluted. Riling Ohio spread across 28 square\nmiles. Fire and flood losses mount\nto $7,000,0000, Homeless number\n65,000.\nPortwtouth, Ohio\u2014Red Crou\n\u2022rnnged removal of 6000 of 25,000\nrefugees to Columbus by train.\nTiiree-fourthj of town under\nwater.\nCharleston, Mo.\u2014Government engineers blasted two openings in\nNew Madrid-Bird's Point floodway,\nallowing Mississippi to pour over\n131,000 acres of flood basin, in effort to alow the sharp rise upstreai r.\nFrankfort, Ky..\u2014 At least 12\nrioting convicts reported killed in\nflood-bound state reformatory.\nEvacuation of prison begun.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nTRAIL REDUCES\nNew Minimum Labor\n\u25a0\u25a0    Waaeof$4\nSet\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 25-Salary Increases for city employee! In the\nform ot reductions an previous\nwege cuts were decided upon by\nthe city council at the suggestion\nof Alderman H. Bell at a meeting\nhere Monday night.\nSalary cuts of 20 per cant and 10\npar cent were lifted, to be replaced\nby cuts of 10 per cent and five per\ncent.\nLabor wages were set it a minimum of $4 dally.\nOFFICER HURT\nSAVING A BOY\nFROM BOBSLED\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 25   (CP)   -\nSpecial Police Constable C. Tuley.\nsuffered painful leg Injuries today\nwhen he rescued a small boy from\nthe path of a speeding bobsled.\nNoticing the youngster directly in\nthe path of the careening sled, Tuley\ndashed onto the roadway and pushed the boy out of the way and was\nhimself struck in the lew by the\nsleigh.\nWILLIAM BROWN KILLED\nKAMLOOPS, B.C., Jan. 25 (CP)-\nWilliam Brown of Celista, east of\nhere on Shuswap lake, was accidentally killed Friday morning when a\ngun he was cleaning discharged, according to information reaching the\nBritish Columbia police officers here\ntoday.\nNELSON   8 17\nVictoria     38 40\nNanalmo _   34 42\nVancouver    32 44\nKEtnloops         6 28\nPrince George     4* :6\nEstevan Point    36 42\nPrince Rupert     28 34\nAtlin       4 20\nDawson    14* 6\nSeattle     34 42\nPortland       32 44\nSan Francisco    34 48\nSpokane     6 28\nLos Angeles    40 60\nPenticton    10 -\nVernon       11 23\nGrand Forks     8' 18\nKislo    12 -\nCranbrook       V 22\nCalgary     14\" 4*\nEdmonton     18* 4'\nSwift Current    26* 4\"\nPrince Albert     44' 2*\nSaskatoon     40' 15\"\nQu'Appelle     36' 10\"\nWlnnipeg       24* 14\"\nlloose jaw    30* 14*\n\u2022\u2014Below rero.\nForecasts: Nelson and vicinity\u2014\nFresh northeast winds, partly\ncloudy and colder with occasional\n mmmmmmm\n*WPW*P^P!P*\u00ab\nPAGE TWO-\nJUNIOR HOCKEY\nPLAYERS SIGN\nUP FOR CARDS\nFollowing Monday evening's practice of the Nelson junior rep hockey\nj team at which 13 of the 15 picked\nI players were on the Ice, officials\nof the Nelson Amateur Hockey .association 'had the various players\nfill out C.A.H.A. registration forms\n' which have to be in the hands of\nthe secretary of the British Columbia branch by February 1.\nFifteen players will be registered,\n1 ntmely George Bishop, Ernie Elliott.\nSid Horswill, Jack Whitfield, Bert\n1 McEwan, Jack McCracken, Howard\nCampbell, \"Rabbit\" Mayo, Johnny\nSchule, Chuck French, Dick Wallace, Jack Taylor, Freddie Romano,\n. Don. Beattie, Brian Gore.\nAnother  practice of the Junior\n; reps will be held at 6 p.m. on Friday. The intermediate team which\nwill enter the Intermediate play-\ndowns will be lined up today or tomorrow.\nMORE ABOUT\nSLAVERY\n(Continued From Page One)\nLONG HOURS\nCorporal Dunn testified Interviews\nwith inmates of the Home 'made him\nfeel sure\", they are worked like\nslaves from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m .and\nthat it is questionable If their food\nis adequate.\nWitness described Interviews with\nthe inmates, and said that in his\nopinion   Mrs.   Crouch,   (Mrs.   L,\nASTHMA\nHigh powered advertisers keep\npeople trying their \"relief\" remedies, but we get more and more\nof such cases as the merits of\n\"Davit Asthma Remedy No. 7895\"\nbecome known. $3.50 at any drug\nstore.   Davit, New Westminster.\nCrouch, in charge of the Home) was\nIn the building and was instructing\nthe inmates what to say when they\nwere questioned.\"\n\"Three of the women returned to\nthe room after we were through\nwith the examination and reiterated\ntheir statements they loved the\nHome and did not want to leave,\" he\n\u25a0aid.\n\"In each of these cases the women\nwere tearful and seemed afraid of\nsomething.\"\nAVERAGE 30 YEARS\nIN \"HOME\"     >\nTh women varied in age from 30\nto 60, and had spent an average of\nabout 30 years in the Home, he said.\nOne young man, now 27, entered the\nhome when he was a year old and\nhad never been outside.\nDr. Sager was called to the stand.\n\"I believe conditions in which they\n(the inmates) live are not cnndurive\nto normal life.\" the health officer\nsaid when asked by the commissioner what conclusion he had reached\nafter his visits to the institution.\n\"The Influence of the officials\nleaves them In a helpless state. I\nwat impressed by the fact none\nof them knew anything whatsoever about the outside world. The\nmajority were brought Into the\nhome at the age of 10 and brought\nup under a religious discipline\nwith no literature of any kind except the Bible, no radio and they\nworked from morning until night.\"\n\"SUBNORMAL\nINTELLIGENCE\"\nDr. Sager said he examined Inmates of the building and had decided all were of subnormal intelligence.\nRichard Bolton, Bumaby municipal treasurer, said Bumaby got title to the Home September 9, 1936\nat a tax sale. Arrears of taxes were\nthen $5467, he said.\nThe hearing, which opened today,\nwas adjourned until tomorrow.\nLater Commissioner Bird said he\nwould carry the investigation to\nSummerland.\nBRIAN GORE IS\nHEAD OF YOUNG\nPEOPLE'S ORDER\nBrian Gore was elected to head\nthe SL Saviour's Young People's\nsociety for the coming year at the\nannual meeting, the first meeting\nof the new year held in the Memorial hall Sunday evening. Other officers were elected as follows: Barbara Kingzett, vice-president; John\nHarding, secreatry-treasurer; and\nKathleen Gallaher and Claire Jewett,.group leaders.\nRev. J. G. Holmes was chosen as\nhonorary president.\nIt was decided that the mertiags\nof the group would be held on every\nalternate Friday throughout the\nyear, with the exception of the summer holiday months.\nPlans were laid for a corporale\ncommunion for the members at the\n11 a.m. service in St. Saviour's\nchurch on February 14.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, JAN. 2\u00ab, 1937.\nHOUSE PLAN IS MODERN\nThe lir6t cast-metal cooking ulen\nsils are believed to have been made\nin the fourteenth century.\nMore than a ton of dinosaur tracks\nwere stolen by aid of a compressed\nair drill, in Holyoke, Mass., recently.\nNew Train Service\nFAST \u2014COMFORTABLE\nNelson\u2014Trail\nDAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY\nLeave Nelson 7:45 a.m.; 10:05 a.m.; 6:30 p.m.\nLeave Trail 12:30 p.m. and 9:00 p.m.     \"\nSUNDAY SERVICE\nLeave Nelson 6:30 p.m.\nLeave Trail 9:00 p.m.\nSingle Fare $1.70; Regular Return $3.05\nWeek-end Return $2.15\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest In the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nTree Bus Service Geo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30c and UP\nLunches 40c to 50c Dinner 40c to (to\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787        NELSON, B.O. 422 VERNON ST.\nM.R.K. Midgets\nTip Over Gyros\nSpring Surprise When\nGet 3-2 Win Over\nHeavy Team\nPlaying a smart defensive game,\nand backed up by a great exhibition\nof goaltending by Norman May, the\nM.R.K. club's midget hockey team\nsprung the greatest surprise of the\nseason when they downed the\nhusky Gyros club 3-2 in a league\ngame played Saturday morning. The\nwin sent the M.R.K. boys into a\ntriple tie with the F.A.C. team and\nthe Gyros for second place in the\nlocal midget league.\nThe winners were ouUhot 31-13\nin the three periods, and during the\nentire game had only five good\nscoring chances, and they came very\nnear to scoring on all of them.\nOutweighed by a considerable margin, and being a much younger\nclub, the winners played the only\nkind of a game that could have resulted in victory for them, letting\ntheir opponents bring the play to\nthem and waiting for breaks.\nThe Gyros had the wide margin\nof play, but found May a stumbling\nblock until late In the third period,\nwhen the M.R.K. club was. leading\nby a 3-0 scbre. In their efforts to\nscore the losers forgot about their\ndefense, .with the result that Clay\nI ton received poor protection.\nWINNERS OUT8HOT\nIn the first period the M.R.K:\nclub was outshot 12-3, but at that\nthei M.RK. boys-were unluUcay!(in\nnot scoring one goal, when'young\nTommy Griffiths snared a .loose\npuck and passed ahead to Walter\nWood, Clayton making a great save\non a hard shot.\nJust after Gray returned to the\nIce, Wilfred Wood opend the scoring on Walter Wood's close-in. pass.\nJack Argyle was playing a great-\ngame all the way, and Just- before\nthe end ofthe period he scored the\nwinner's second goal, Griffith getting an assist\nPressing hi\\rd, to get into the\nscoring column, the Gyros gave\nBarney Prestly a break, and he sent\nhis club into a 3-0 la^ad after two\nminutes play. From then on the\nGyros threw caution to the winds,\nand the M.R.K. boys played a strong\ndefensive game to hold their lead.\nRoy Brown, Tommy Griffith and\nBilly Crossley showing some smart\nhockey. Shortly after Harold Tapaniia, who was the outstanding\nGyro players on the ice, scored on\nAlex Strudwick's assist, and two\nminutes later, Jim Dodding cut the\nlead to one goal, but the whistle\nTrail Receipis I\n7968 Tons for\nWeek Just Past\nTotal for 1$37 to\nDote Is 25,139\nTons of Ore\nReceipts ot ore ind concentrates\n\u25a0t Trail Smelter for the third week\nOf January.amounted to 7968 tons,\nof which 7800 tons represented the\ncompany's own production, while\n168 tpns wat of custom origin, as\ngiven In the current ore statement\nfrom the Consolidated Mining Si\nSmelting Company of Canada.\nFor the three weeks of 1987 to\ndate, the receipts were 28,189 tons,\nwet weight, made up of 24,537 tons\nfrom Consolidated properties, and\n802 tons from custom shippers.\nFollowing are the receipts in detail for the third week:\nCUSTOM ORE\nHighland-Bell, Beaverdell      48\nMorning Star, Slocan           2\nSpotted Horse, Porto Rico      6\n56\nCUSTOM CONCENTRATES\nWesko, Ymir              33\nYankee Girl, Ymir    38\nYmir, Ymir   41\n112\nWeek's custom receipts        168\nWeek's company receipts   7800\nWeek's total receipts   7968\nFINK'S\nJanuary\nClearance\nContinues\nit LIMITS\n409 Baker Street\nThe plan of this house is intended for the\nhome owner who wants to keep up with the times.\nThe exterior is extremely attractive, the living\nroom is large, and provides wonderful decorative\nopportunities.\nUpstairs are three bedrooms, each with an un\nusual amount of closet space, and all getting fresh\nair and light from two sides.\nAn attached garage is often desired as part of\na house plan, and this is supplied in this design,\nwhich will cost fromv$6000 to $6500 to build, according to building costs in your neighborhood.\nHUME\u2014W. H. Percival, R. S.\nFraser, Penticton; J. Ludgate, Parry\nSound; F. Avery, G. W. Wilson,\nVancouver; R. Steedman. Medicine\nHat; A. W. Williams, J. H. Hutton.\nJ. E. Moore, Calgary; H. F. Wilmot,\nJ. D. Bacon, Mrs. M. E. Drew, Gray\nCreek; Mrs. J. Stirling, Salmo; J.\nMacDonald, Cranbrook; H, E.\nMiard, Fernie.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"^ \"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE  ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\nended with  the  M.  R.  K.  team\nholding their one-goal lead.\nSummary\u2014first period\u2014no score,\npenalties, Alex Strudwicke.\nSecond. DBrlfld.\u2014CI) M&K. club.\nWilfred Wood, (Walter. Vibod) 7.16;\n(2) M.R.K. club, Argyle, (Griffiths)\n17.15; penalties, Gray, Tapaniia,\nTapaniia.\nThird  period\u2014(3)   M.R.K.  club,\nBarney Prestley, 2.56;  (4)  Gyros,\nTapaniia (A. Strudwicke), 4.17; (5)\nGyros, Doding, 6.11; no penalties.\nStops by goalies.\nNorman  May 12    7   10\nRobin Clayton 3    3    4\njimmy Ringrose and Russel\nFrench refreed the game.\nThe teams were:\nM.R.K. club\u2014Norman May, Wilfred Wood, Jack Argyle, Roy\nBrown, Robert Percival, Walter\nWood, Tommy Griffiths, Billy\nCrossley, Barney Prestley, James\nBrown, John Beattie, Walter Nis-\nbet.\nGyros\u2014 R obin Clayton. Alex\nStrudwicke, Allan Emmott, Jack\nGray, Bill McEwin, Roy Mann,\nJohnny Wade, Bill Myers, Jim\nDodding, Howard Paterson, Monty\nStrudwicke, Harry McKenzie, Harold Tapaniia.\nM.R.K. Bantams\nBeat Fairview\nWin by 5-2 to Keep\nUndefeated Up\nto Date\nThe M. R. K. Bantam hockey team\nkept their season's unbeaten record\nclean Saturday morning when they\ndefeated the F. A. C. Bantams 5-2\nin a league game. In three league\ngames the winners have' scored\nthree wins, and In an exhibition\ngame on the Christmas fund program they tied Scouts 3-3.\nVictor Graves, in goal for the\nM. R. K. club, has scored two shutouts in the two previous league\ngames, but his record was snapped\nwhen Walley Matheson scored the\nopening goal of the game for the\nF. A. C. team after five minutes\nplay in the opening period Saturday.\nThe Fairview boys tried hard all\nthe   way,   but   with   several   new\nplayers in their line-up, were up\nagainst a better conditioned club,\nalthough they showed improvement\nover previous games. George Ioanin,\ngoal. Mack Norris, Frank Christian\nend Walley Matheson were the\nstandouts for the losers, although\nall eight players worked overtime\nin an attempt to be the first team\nto lower the M, R. K. bantams colors.\nFAIRVIEW SCORES FIRST\nAfter Wally Matheson opened\nscoring for the Fairview team, Paul\nHielscher tied up the game after\n\"Knee Action\" Part of Shorter Skirt Program:\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking NELSON, B.C. Phona 234\nL\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon 8t. Phone 897\nH. WA88ICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully  Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot   and   Cold   Water\nIn the HEART ot the City\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nKELOWNA-McCULLOCH STAGE\nOpersted by Bob Stllllngfleet\nA Shortcut Between Okanagan. Kootenay and\nPrairie Points.\nDaily Service Connecting With East and Westbound\nKettle Valley Trains\nCOMFORTABLE HEATED STAGE\nPASSENGER-FREIGHT\u2014EXPRESS SERVICE\t\nBy LI8BETH\nThe good word from Paris is that skirts are\nreaching new highs\u2014that is, new highs for the last\nfew years. What womankind is worrying about is\nhow high is high this year? Prayers are being offered that it won't be as high as the years 1925-6-7.\nTha Tarpst.nl length in H rar 13 inrhaaaa fa-aaaaa Ih. flava'a-\nfor daytime skirts. A new rise is threatened\u2014about\nfive inches\u2014bringing the total to 18 inches from the\nfloor. This, as you can see by looking at the above\npictures, will expose the knee when milady is\nseated. In other words, knee action is seen likely\n;\" \"  '\"\u2022' '\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022- -' '\u2014' : *-^-\na fast solo rush.\nJack Whitehead gave the winners a one-goal lead after about\nseven minutes play in the second\nsession, Dunnett getting an assist,\nand Doug Winlaw sent the M. R. K.\nclub two up less than three minutes\nlater. Shortly before the end of the\nperiod Frank Christian cut the lead\nto one goal.\nIn the last period Winlaw scored\nanother and four minutes from the\nend John Dunnett scored the final\ngoal of the game to give the M. R.\nK. team a 5-2 win. Dunnett played\na strong game all the way, but the\nM. R. K. team's main strength lies\nin a strong all-round group of hard\nworking players.\nSummary \u2014 first period \u2014 (1)\nFairview A. C, Walley Matheson,\n(Christian) 5.11; (2) M.R.K. club,\nPaul Hielscher, 8.29; no penalties.\nSecond perlod-<3) M.R.K. club,\nJack Whitehead (John Dunnett)\n6.34; (4) M.R.K. club, Doug Winlaw,\n9.16; (5) Fairview A. C, Christian,\n16.27; no penalties.\nThird period-(6) M.R.K. club,\nWinlaw. 8.03; (7) M.R.K. club,\nDunnett, 15.46; no penalties.\nJimmy Ringrose was referee with\nAlfred Ball as judge of play.\nThe teams were:\nM.R.K. Bantams\u2014Victor Graves,\nWillie Wassick, David Slader, Bobby Graham, Doug Winlaw, Herb\nGuscott, Tommy Ratcliffe, Paul\nHielscher, Jack Whitehead, Bill\nHolland, John Dunnett, Ian Currie,\nAlex Allan.\nF. A. C. Bantams\u2014George Ioanin,\nClarence Heighton, Fred Brown,\nFrank Christian, Wally Matheson,\nMac Norris, Bob Leeming, John\nMilne.\nYmir Puck Team\nIn City Tonight\nMeet New Grand Club\nin One of Three\nPuck Battles\nThis eveninajs triple-header hockey program at the Civic Centre\narena will feature the Ymir inter,\nmediate team who will play the\nlocal New Grand Tigers at 8:30. In\nthe opening game of the program at\n7 the Nelson Transfer club will\nmeet the F.A.C. juveniles in a league\ngame, and immediately following\ntbe the Ymir vs Tigers game the\nundefeated Fairview juniors will\nplay the Hawks in a junior league\ngame.\nLittle Is known of the Ymir team,\nbut it is reported that they have a\nnumber of husky experienced players in their lineup that have made\na name for themselves elsewhere.\nSo much interest Is being taken in\nhockey in Ymir this season that a\nnew rink has been constructed with\nboards all the way around, and\nthrough the courtesy of the West\nKootenay Power Si Light Company,\nthe rink is well lighted for night\ngames.\nThe New Grand team will have\nall their regular players out for tbe\ngame, and in addition, have signed\nJack Whitfield, husky defenceman\nof the rep Junior team, to finish the\nseason with them. Whitfield will\nmake his first appearance of the\nseason with the Tigers tonight.\nThe Nelson Transfer boys have\nwon two games over the Fairview\njuveniles this season, but the Fair-\nview boys have shown considerable\nimprovement recently and tonight\nmay be the time to chalk up their\ninitial win of the season.\nIn the junior league game, the\nF.A.C. squad are favorites, but the\nHawks are showing better form in\nevery appearance, and their supporters are predicting that they will yet\nlower the colors of the Fairview and\nNew Grand teams. Several juveniles\nwill likely play for the Hawks this\nevening.\nWillow Pointers\nOpen Rink With\na Win and Loss\nFizzlers Lose to\nProcter, Beat\nBlewett\nWillow Point's hockey dub, the)\nSix-Mile Fizzlers, tasted victory and\ndefeat in two games played against\nvisiting teams on their newly con|\nstructed rink Sunday afternoon.\nIn  the  first game the  Prodi\nPuck-Chasers  handed the club\n2-1 defeat in a close fast game, I\nwhich both teams were held score-)\nless in the first canto.\nIn the second the Puck-Cbasen\nbroke lose and R. Heighton, crash-]\ning through the club defense, -at'\nthe first counter. R. Major also i\nProcter quickly followed with a*\\-|\nother tally.\nThe third opened with both tei\nbattling hard, the Procter boys\nhold their lead, and. the Willow\nPoint sextet to change defeat intt\nvictory. \u2022 Bob Thompson, forwarc\nFizzler, scored the club's only goall\nnear the close of the game. Theref\nwere not penalties throughout the]\ngame. I\nClarence Shannon refreed.\nPuck-Chasers\u2014J. Houston, goal\nHoward and Maurice Major, defense; R. Heighton,. A. McMullcn,\nJ. Hartridge, H. McKinnon, R. Le-\nforge and S. Shrievcs, forwards.\nFizzlers\u2014J. Harrigan, goal, M,\nHeddle and Ed Blunt, defense; W,\nPalmer, O. Borbal, K. Campbell,\nR. Thompson and Earnest Blunt,\nforwards.\nSECOND GAME\nHARD CHECKING\nIn. the second game the Fizzlers,\naided by the Procter team's defense,\nR. Heighton. and A. McMullen,\nchalked up a 8-5 victory over the\nKootenay Valley Dairy team, made\nup from players ot Nelson and\nBlewett. '\nHard checking marked this hard-\nfought game, and Referee J. Houston was forced to hand out time on\nthe fence to several players.\nE. Shannon, R. Thompson,. K.\nCampbell, C. Major and W. Palmer\nwere scorers for the Fizzlers, while\nStan Hill sank the rubber in the\nFizzlers net on three ocasslons,\nwhile W. Nemrava banged In the\ntwo other tallies for the Diary team.\nThe Dairy team composed of C.\nNemrava, goal, W. Nemrava and\nJ, Nemrava, defense, A, Hill, S.\nHill, W. Hill and Charles Shrteve,\nforwards.\nReturn matches have been arranged to take place between the\nthree teams in the future. It is\nhoped when the Willow Point club\nis better organized, it will be arranged for the Fizzlers to play\nagainst Nelson city league tveams.\nThe games Sunday were played\non the club's newly built rink on\nMrs. Heeney's ranch.\nMORE ABOUT\nROSSLANDWATER\n(Continued From Pane One)\nFinance and reliei \u2014 Aldermen\nWilliam Cunningham, R. J. Portman,\nW. G. Mara, P. J. Gallie.\nWater works and health\u2014Aldermen P. J. Gallie, James F. Cooper,\nWilliam Cunningham and John Wilmot.\nFire, water and light\u2014Aldermen\nJames F. Cooper, John Wilmot, R. J.\nP6rtman, W. G. Mai'a.\nFire wardens\u2014Aldermen J&hn Wilmot, T. J. Gallie.\nParks board \u2014 A. L. Johnson,\nJames Wright, Alderman William\nCunningham.\nAldermen Gallie, Cunningham ain4\nCooper were appointed a special\ncommittee with pQwer to investigate\nall branches of civic administration\nand to bring in any recommendation\nwhich they think would promote a\nmore businesslike administration.\nThis committee will also ascertain\nwhich departments are overstaffed\nor understaffed and make recommendations in accordance.\ning into town to compete with and\nundersell local tradesmen will be\nInvestigated by Aldermen W. Cunningham, R. J. Portman and Mayor\nGordon in cooperation with City\nSolictor R. J. Clegg.\nAlderman Cunningham brought\nup the lack of lights on Columbia\navenue and suggested that by cooperation with those in charge it\nmight be possible to have light from\nthe two lots in front of the Transportation garage, the four around\nthe Father Pat memorial and the\nthree on the Columbia avenue end\nof the swimming pool. This might\nmeet the situation until the council\nis in a better position to handle the\nproblem.\nThe Rossland Gyro club was\ngranted permission to operate a hot\ndog concession at the rink during\nthe skating season.\nThe anticipation revenue loan bylaw was reconsidered, finally adopt-\nted, sealed with the corporate seal\nand numbered 522.\nTRAVEL8 FAR FOR PARTY\nSTRASBOURG, France (CP) -\nYearning for the scenes of her\nchildhood, Mrs. Catherine Plug-\nhaupt travelled 6000 miles from\nLos Angeles to hold her 80th birthday ftarty here.\nBuy or Sell With a Want Ad.\nHitler Is Barred\nFrom Attending\nCoronation\nBy GEORGE HAMBLETON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Jan. 25 (CP Cablei-fl\nChancellor Hitler cannot come\nthe coronation. He is barred by k\ncurious convention. Invitations hai i\nalready gone from the British goi,\nernment to other governments i*f\nviting them to send representatives,\nBut it is understood that the invitation does not Include beads ol\nstates. Therefore, although Hitler as\nhead ot the German state can nominate the Germain representatives, he\ncannot nominate himself.\nIt all arises from an old custom.\nIt has never been the practice, it is\nstated, tor heads of states to be invited to the coronation, for if they'\nwere invited questions of preced*\nence would immediately arise. Still\nit is a custom which may give rise\nin these dictatorship days to .curious\nanomalies. Mussolini is \"capo da\ngovernoo.\" But is he the head of the\nItalian state? Is Stalin the head of\nstates in Soviet Russia? They sfts\nawkward bridges for the expert in\nprocedure to cross.\nNORWAY\nPINE\nSYRUP\nFeel Chilly -Start to Sneeze\nNose Starts to Run\nThan corn's the cold which, if not attended ti\nImmediately, shortly works down into the bronchia\ntubes, and the cough starts.\nOn tbe first sign of a cold or cough go to Ton\ndruggist's ud get a bottle of Dr. Wood's Horn;\nPine Syrup. ,\nYou will find it to be a prompt, pleasant, i\nliable and effectual remedy for your trouble.\nIt has been on the market for the past il yeai\nDon't eiperimeat with a substitute and bis a]\n -g^-\u2014\t\n NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, JAN. 26. 1937.\nWorking Wives\nAre Okayed in\nSchool Debate\nHouse \"B\" Team at\nHigh School Is\nWinner\n\"Resolved that there should be\nno descrimination against married\nwomen seeking employment,\" was\nthe subject for a debate, won by\nthe affirmative side, House \"B\" between two high school groups, House\n\"A\" and \"B\", in the Nelson high\nschool assembly hall Friday, afternoon.\nThe first speaker for the affirmative, Eva Hendrickson of House\n\"B\", made reference to women holding high positions in other countries,\ntaking as an example, Mrs. George\nBlack, M.P., for the Yukon, where\nmen are men, but are led by a woman,\nLena Rollick first speaker for the\nnegative, took as her theme \"Lottie poor husband with a business\nwife\", in which she pictured the\nhusband whose wife was the breadwinner of the family.\nSpeaking convincingly for the affirmative, Iris Johannson elaborated on the popular \"misapprehension\" that man is duty-bound to\nsupport his wife.\nSOCIALITE VS.\nWORKING GIRL\nBatty Holt, negative, in no uncertain terms dealt with the wrong\nof allowing well-to-do society girls\nto compete with unfortunate working girl, who is really in need of\nemployment.\nStating that a new type of woman was evolving in this modern\nage, who could hold her own in the\nbusiness world and should be allowed to show her worth, Georgina\nWllliscroft followed for the affirmative side. Miss Williscroft's efforts\nliiAp\nAs Lord Tweedsmuir Opened Canada's 18th Parliament\nWith all the usual pomp and ceremony, the second session of Canada's 18th parliament was\nlaunched at Ottawa by the governor-general, Lord\nTweedsmuir. At left the guard of honor is pictured drawn up in front of the main entrance to\nthc parliament buildings as Lord Tweedsmuir, in\nthe background, acknowledges their salute. His\nexcellency is shown again at the right as he took\nthe salute\u2014Picture courtesy of department of trade\nand commsrec, Ottawa.\nwere loudly applauded, especially\nby the fair section of the gathering.\nShowing a good command of the\nsubject, Carol Proudfoot gave an\namusing talk on the immutability\nof the husband, who still needs the\nlove and kindness of a home wife\nand the security of a stable home.\nThe rebuttal was ably carried by\nMiss Eva Henrickson.\nWhile the judges. Miss Gertrude\nHudson, James A. Fraser and Miss\nM. MacMillan, were making their\ndecision, the new school song, com-\nTHE\nEPIDEMIC\nIS   I\nhere;\nBEWARE of epidemics whose first symptoms are often\ncoughs, colds and fever. Stop the cough or cold at the\nonset with Buckley's Mixture, which first became famous\nIn 1918. Take Buckley's Cinnamated Capsules to relieve\ntht teverlshness, headache, and backache. Buckley's\nCinnamated Capsules contain Oil of Cinnamon, a powerful Internal germicide long used In Europe in combatting\nepidemics similar to the one now raging.\nBe prepaved. Get these two dependable, effective Buckley\nremedies TODAY.   Buckley Products arc sold everywhere.\n0V1R 9 MILLION BOTTLES SOID - A SINGLE SIP  TELLS  WHY\n\"UCKLEY\nMIXTURE\nREFUSE SUBSTITUTES\nposed by Paul Hooklngs, was played by the composer and sung by\nBrian Gore, Ken McBride, Bob Morris, Jim Allan, Bill Kapak, Gary\nBowell, Joe Gallicano and George\nRussell, and then by the whole-\ngathering. Paul was showered with\napplause and congratulations for his\nmasterpiece.\nPrevious to the debate a singsong was led by Mrs. J. T. Andrew:,\nwith Eric \"Swing\" Lindgren at the\npiano. This part of the program was\na \"howling success\".\nBEATTY PRAISES\nTHE SCOTS\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 25.\u2014Contributions of the Roving Scot to Canadian life and culture were extolled\nby Sir Edward Beatty, when he replied to the toast to Canada at the\nCaledonian society's Burns night\nbanquet here on Monday,\nTender sentiment and pawky wit;\ngenerous instincts and thrifty wisdom; endless courage and wise caution, were Scottish gifts not only\nto this dominion but to the commonwealth, he said, qualities as solid\nas the granite of Scotland itself,\nWith these tributes were combined others by a second noted\nvisitor from Montreal, Professor\nCyrus McMillan, who spoke on \"the\nimmortal memory\" at the dinner\npresided over by J. Gray Mundie,\nhead of the Winnipeg Caledonians.\nNorth American\nLife Business\nIncreased\nTORONTO, Jan. 25-In the North\nAmerican Life Assurance Company\nfinancial statement and directors'\nreport figures relating to the year's\nbusiness have been given.\nNew business for the year was\n$35,169,802, representing an increase\nof $507,269 over the previous year's\namount.\nTotal business in effect at the end\nof the year reached $211,194,004. The\nincrease for the year was $11,136,306\nor over 5Vi% of the amount in effect at the end of 1935 as computed\non the same basis.\nTotal income for the year was\n$11,210,773, being an Increase of\n$849,623, or over 8%. Premium income, which fortes the principal\npart of this total, increased to $7,978,-\n205 from $6,840,874.\nPayments under policies amounted to $4,967,180 during the year, or\na decrease of $219,691 as compared\nwith the amount for the previous\nyear.\nTotal reserves held in respect of\nassurance and annuity contracts are\nnow nearly $45,000,000.\n- PAGE THREE\n|^*lli^P*t (twqttitti.\nINCORPORATED   2?? MAY 1670.\nHOME FROCKS\nSmart attractive styles in women's print\ngingham home frocks. Styles on this group'\nto suit Matron or Miss. Cay colors and\nassorted patterns, checks, polka dots\nand many others. Sizes 14 to 52. QQ\nEach 03C\nJUST ARRIVED !!\u2014BED JACKETS\n36 only knit bed jackets in pink and blue only. Dainty\nstyles in fancy weaves of wool and cotton mixture. 4Q\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nExceptional values.\nSERVICE-WEIGHT HOSIERY\nOur leader in the heavier silk hosiery.\nFull-fashioned of pure silk. Service-\nweight for extra wear. In gunmetal, London mist, rifle, smoketcne, trotteur and\ntallleur brown. 8Vi to lOVi.     tt>1 AA\nSCOTCH FINGERING\nAn all wool 4-ply fingering that is excellent wearing.\nSuitable weight for socks and sweaters. In heather and\nplain shades.\n4-or. skein\t\n  \u2014Main   Floor  HBC\n32c\nFIRST QUALITY SLIP ON RUBBERS FOR ALL THEFAMILY\nMen's plain black, 6 to 11  $1.00       Women's brown rubber, cuban heels, 3 to 8 ... $1.25\nMen's red sole, rolled edge, 6 to 11  $1.25       Childreni' plain rubber, 4 to 8, IO'\/j    $ .50\nWomen's plain rubber, all heels. 3 to 8   j_jS        Children's. II to 2  $ .60\nBrush Wool Sweoters\nBrush wool sweaters with full zipper fronts in popular shades of\nblue, fawn and grey. The right\nweight for curling, skating and sport\nwear. Sizes 36 to 42.\nEach\t\nMEN'S WOOL WINDBREAKERS\nMen's all wool windbreakers with button fronts. In new\nplaid colors, slash bound pockets. Sizes 34 to 44.\nEach\t\n \u2014Main   Floor  HBC\n$3.79\nFLANNELETTE MILLENDS\n200 yards extra heavy quality striped\nflannelette, 37 inches wide. Regular\nvalue 45c yard. Millends.\nYard\t\n29c\nWINDOW BLINDS AT KEEN PRICES\nStandard quality with reliable rollers green or cream\nSizes36x71 95c   sEach36x.60:....79c\n \u2014Second Floor HBC\nEach\nON sale today, runreov cocri ai c on sale today-\nWEDNESDAY HBC GROCERY SPECIALS WEDNESDAY\nTHURSDAY 193 PHONES 194 FREE CITY DELIVERY THURSDAY\nTEA\u2014Fort Carry Per lb. 60.f\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Sliced or Crushed, 2's 2 tins 23<?\nCOMB HONEY\u2014Linden Per section 23\u00ab*\nMAYONNAISE\u2014Heinz  16-ox. jar .!:!<\u25a0\nLUMP SUGAR 2-lb. carton 19^\nSARDINES\u2014King Oscar 2 tint 25*\nREADY COOKED DINNERS\u2014C. & B. W\/i-ox. tin 27*\nFANCY CORN\u2014Del Maix 2 tint 25*\nBAKEASY  Mb. carton 18*\nPALMOLIVE SOAP 5 cakes 23*\nCP.R. Staffs Honor Secretary\n\u25a0\nGerms that live in the sea are\nmore sturdy and long-lived than\nthose that originate on land, judging by studies of bacteria on the\nPacific coast.\n0tv>mSmmmm\n...aaaa.ttaVM\"\"\"\";;\ntkank\ne trianR tym\n1 rot tnese records\n\u25a0%>*>*>\nTo our io,ooo\nPolicyholders:\nm\nDURING 1936 you expressed your confidence in this\nCompany by purchasing more Life Assurance than you did\neven in the record year of 1935. Furthermore, your co-operation has resulted in a notable increase in the number ol\nPolicyholders and the amount for which they are insured.\nThe Company's consistently satisfactory earning power,\ntogether with conservative valuation of assets and a\nsubstantial surplus, assure you of the maintenance of\na liberal dividend scale.\nAs the Company prospers, so do the Policyholders who\nare thc sole owners and who receive all profits. Wc\nlook forward to a continuation of the mutually helpful\nrelationships that have marked this Company's fifty-\nsix years of service to the insuring public. You will be\ninterested in a few of the outstanding results of the successful year your Company enjoyed in 1936:\nBusiness In Force ,M.n.,M,m. * ,\u201e\u25a0 $211,194,004\nAssets 54,845,907\nNew Business \u00ab..f.*.iw\u2122<x...\u00ab .   . 35,169,802\nTotal Income 11,210,773\nPayments to Policyholders . . 4,967,180\nSurplus Funds    .' 4,724,416\nNORTH AMERICAN UK\n'Tisasw\"\nA   MUTUAL    COMPANY\nR. E. CRERAR, C.L.U.,\nDIST.IICT   MANAOC* NELSON,   B. C.\nTht compute Annual Rtporl it hting ml te lath polityholdtr.\nAnj ptnon dttiring a ropy may mint il upon rtaunt.\njMyaWgaajaaaUf^LaaaaaaaaSaaa1\nPOOR SYRUP YIELD LIKELY\nBELLEVILLE, Ont. (CD-Farmers in this district are worried over\nprospects for poor maple syrup yield\nthis year. Warm weather brought\nthe sap up and it has been oozing\nfrom trees. Frost and snow arc\nneeded to save the situation.\nMUMPS AT SUDBURY\nSUDBURY, Ont. (CP)\u2014A mumps\nepidemic which affected 1000 children has reached its peak and is\nabating. School classes since Christmas had been cut in half by,the\nmalady, health officials reported.\nOffice staffs of every division on the British\nColumbia district of the Canadian Pacific railway honored A. Frank LePage in Vancouver on the\neve of his marriage to Mary Ross Sinclair of Vancouver. Mr. LePage, who has been secretary to\nC A. Cotterell, assistant general manager of the\nC.P.R. for the past eight years, was made the recipient of many handsome presents on behalf of the\nvarious divisions. Photo shows the group of office\nworkers from the assistant general 'tnanager's and\nsuperintendent's staffs in Vancouver when C A.\nCotterell, on behalf of all who participated, made\nthe presentations to his popular secretary.   The\npresents included a chime mantel clock from the\nRevelstoke division; a Sheffield old English reproduction condelabra from the Kettle Valley division, Penticton; a set of Community silver from the\nVancouver staffs, and a Sheffield old English reproduction silver cake plate from superintendents\nof the various divisions, J. J. Horn, Revelstoke;\nW. J. McLean, Penticton; E. S. McCracken, Nelson\nand J. M. MacArthur, Vancouver. Another useful\npresent was the set of 14 pyrex dishes given to him\nby the office staffs of the Kootenay division, Nelson.\nFollowing their marriage in Vancouver, Mr,- and.\nMrs. LePage left for a honeymoon trip to California.\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n5:30 news, Vancouver, (B. C. Net);\n5:45 Musical Tapestry, Detroit; 6:0o\nMusic for Music's Sake, tenor, orch.,\nWinnipeg; 6:30 Music to Remember,\nHalifax; .:00 National Sing Song,\ncommunity singing; 7:30 Joe de\nCourcy's orch., Hamilton; 7:45 C. P.\nnews and weather, Toronto; 8:00\nC.BC. time signal, Ottawa; Old\nTime Frolic Saskatoon; 8:30 Au\nClair de la Lune, soloists, orch.. Edmonton; 9:00 Just Supposin', Winnipeg; 9'30 Organ Rhapsody by Allan\nCaron, Winnipeg; 10:00 Jean de Rim-\nanoczy trio, Vancouver; 10:30 News,\nVancouver,\nNBC-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ    KGW    KFI    KPO    KOMO\n590      620      640      680       920\n5:00 'Long About Sundown, dir\nLouis Ford; 5:30 Ralina Zarova,\nsoprano; 5:45 Tommy Harris, tenor,\nensem.; 6:00 Dinner concert, instrum,\ntrio; 6:30 Fred Astaire, Charles\nButterworth. Johnny Green's orch..\nguests; 7:30 Jimmie Fidler's Hollywood gossip: 7:45 C.H.B. house party,\ndrama, orchestra; 8:00 Amos 'n' Andy; 8:15 Sidewalk Interviews; 8:30\nLeo  Reisman's   orch.,   artists;   9:00\nerners; 9:00 Phil Ohman's orchestra; 9:30 The University explorer; 10:00 Bernie Cummin's orch.;\n10:30 Herb Saman's orch.; 11:00 Paul\nCarson, organist.\nCOLUMBIA NETWORK\nKVI KOIN KNX KSL KOL\n570 940 1050 1130 1270\n5:00 Hammerstein Music hall; 6:00\nAl Pearce's gang, KSL; 6:30 Jack\nOakie's college; 7:30 Strange As It\nSeems; 7:45 Male Chorus Parade;\n8:00 Poetic Melodies; 8:15 Renfrew\nof the Mounted, drama; 8:30 Vic\nYoung and his orchestda, comedian,\neccentric singer, Al Jolson, m.c;\n9:00 Al Pearce's gang, Larry Marsh's\norch.; 9:30 Alexander Woollcott, the\nTown Crier; 10:00 Orchestras: Larry\nLee; Tommy Tucker; Ted Fio-Uito;\nRay Herbeck; Ken Allen; 11:00\nSandman, organ.\n910 k CJAT 319,f m\nTrail\n10:30   Slumber   Hour,   E.T.;\nNews; 11:00 Eric Gee's orch.\n10:45\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n6:30 Lamplit hour; 7:00, CKUA\nprogram; 7:30 Cub reporters; 7:45\nSiesta; 8:00 The Right that Nailed;\n8:15 Band concert; 8:30 House of\nPeter McGregor; 8:45 Country\nChurch of Hollywood; 9:00 News;\n9:45 Garden of Melody.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH  EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nThe following frequencies will  be\nused: GSD 11.75 mcs. (25.53 m.j,\nGSC 9,58 mcs. (31.32 in.)\nGSB 9.51 mcs. (31.65 m.)\n6:00   Big  Ben.   \"World  Affairs,\"\ntalk.   6:16\u2014Organ   recitals.   6:45\u2014\n\"Butter Wouldn't Suit the Works.\"\nA   program   about   clocks.   7:15\u2014\n1000 w j Ballad concert by Gwladys Williams\n7:00 Devotional program;\nMusical ..lock; 8:\"0 Request\ngram; 8:30 C incert recordings; 9:00\nOrgan Me'xiies; 9:30 Old Timer;\n9:45 Hawaiian melodies; 10 What's\nNew?; 10:15 Man About Town;\n10:30 The Radic Chef- 10:45 Melodic\nPipes; 11:00 Home Sweet Horn-';\n11:30 Monitoi View  the News; 11:45\na;:l5 contralto and John Turner, tenor,\npro- 7:40\u2014News and announcements.\nDeath   Valley   Days,   drama;   9:30  Growln. Up; 12:00 Concert Melodies;\nGood Morning Tonight, vocal, orch\nestra; 10:00 News flashes, Sam\nHayes; 10:15 Eddie Fitzpatrick's\norch.; 10:30 Henry King's orch.; 11:00\nBart Woodyard's orch.; 11:30 Ran\nWilde's orch.\n\u2022NBC-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Paul Martin's music; 5:30\nMale vocal, piano duo; 6:00 Ben Bernie; 6:30 Husbands and Wives, open\nforum; 7:00 Concert band; 7:30\nBishop and the Gargoyle, mystery;\n8:00 March of Progress, KGO,\nJohnny Hamp's orch.; 8:15 Lum\nand Abner; 8:30 Log Cabin Bar-Z\nRanch, western stories, The West-\n12:10 Yogi Yorgesson, comedy, E.T.\n12:15 The Four M Ranch Boys;\n12:30 Musings; 1:00 Melodies of Today; 2:00 Concert hour; 2:30 True\nTale drama; 3:01 The Brown Family 3:30 Cecil and Srlly; 4 00 Light\nConcert Melodies; 5:1. Eb and Zeb,\nE.T.; 5:30 Sc- C.B.C. Network aix-\ncept: 5:45 Concert Melodies; 9:00\nHockey broadcast.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 600 w\n3:15 Cariboo Cowboys', 6:15 News\nflashes; 7:00 Stock quotations; 7:30\nLaddie Watkis, songs; 7:45 Sonny\nHudson; 8:30 Tales of Terror; 8:15\nRomance of Mines; 8:30 Symphony;\n10:00 Len Chamberlain's orchestra;\nLord\n15.24\nINTERNATIONAL\nParis 6:30 a.m. \u2014 Little\nFauntleroy. TPA-2, 19.6 m.,\nmeg.\nBerlin 3 p.m.\u2014Mona Lisa. Max\nvon Schillings' opera adapted to the\nmicrophone. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg.\nSchenectady 3:35 \u2014 Short wave\nmail bag. W2XAF, 31.4 m., 953 meg.\nBerlin 5:30\u2014Special concert: Orlando Barera, violin. DJD, 25.4 m\u201e\n11.77 meg.\nCaracas 6:15 \u2014 Venezuelan orch.\nYV2RC, 51.7 m., 5.8 meg.\nBoston 6:15\u2014Traditions ot Pan\nAmerican Republics. W1XAL, 49.6\nm., 6.04 meg.\nFIND ONE-LEGGED SEAGULL\nFORT ERIE, Ont. (CP)-Workers\nhere have found a new pet\u2014a one-\nlegged seagull. The bird can hop\nalong as well as the best of two-\nlegged birds, and visits bridge employees dally for food.\nConsumption ot fluid goats' milk\nin the United States is estimated at\nmore than 16,000,000 pounds daily\nduring thc summer.\nIs Given Birthday\nParty at Slocan\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C\u2014A surprise\nparty was held Tuesday night at\nthe home of Mrs. W. Lewis, the\noccasion being the 16th birthday\nof Miss Nancy Pagura. The evening\nwas spent in games. Refreshments\nwere served by the hostess. The'\ninvited guests included the guest\nof honor, Miss Pagura, Irene Terry,\nFlorence Terry, Irene Grant, Saraphine Baillargeon, Doris Pagura,\nCharles Hufty, George Forrest of\nAppledale, Earl Gibson, Albert Pagura, Jack Madden and the hostesses, Mr. and Mrs. W. Lewis.\nW.  I.  MEETS\nSlocan City Women's institute\nwas held Thursday afternoon at\nthe home of Mrs. T. McNeish with\na good attendance and the president, Mrs. Popoff, occupying the\nchair. The following officers were\nelected: president, Mrs. K. Popoff;\nvice-president, Mrs. W. E. Graham;\nsecretary-treasurer, Mrs. J. Terry.\nFifteen members Joined with a\nlikelihood of more being added later.\nRefreshments were served by the\nhostess, Mrs. McNeish, assisted by\nher daughter, Mrs. E. J. Leveque.\nMembers present were Mrs. K. Pop-\noff, Mrs. W. E. Graham, Mrs. J.\nTerry, Mrs. R. L. Reynolds, Mrs. 3.\nP. Sutherland, Mrs. R. R. Hanna,\nMrs. J. H. Pinchbeck, Mrs. E. Paterson, Mrs. J. McGuire, Mrs. J. Greenwood, Mrs. C. Russel, Miss C. Pur-\nney, Miss E. Carrie, Miss Beth Gaye,\nMrs. E. J. Leveque and Mrs. McNeish.\nWARNING\nINFLUENZA\nTO BE FOREWARNED IS TO BE FOREARMED\nWith the possibility of influenza again becoming epidemic in British Columbia, the Provincial Board of Health calls attention to the\nPeople are very much given to underrating the effect of this disease\nand to regard it more as a common cold.\nRemember, first, that it is very infectious, and you owe it to yourself\nand to your neighbors to do everything to avoid catching it; and\u2014\nSecondly, if you do catch It, that your duty to your neighbors is to\nprevent them from catching it from you.\nIt begins as a common cold, headache, pains in muscles, chills, feeling of cold in the head, soreness ot throat, fever.\nPERSONAL PRECAUTIONS\nThe germ of the disease is transmitted by:\u2014\n(1.) Droplets of spray from loud talking, coughing, and sneezing.\n(2.) Through drinking and eating out of utensils improperly cleansed.\n(3.) By direct contact.\nNote\u2014The mild cases are as dangerous for spreading as severe ones.\nMore even, because a man with a mild case comes in contact with a\ngreater number of people.\n(4.) The carrier plays a larger part in thc spreading of the disease\nthan is realized.  Therefore\nAVOID CROWDS\n(5.) There is no vaccine against Influenza.\nIf attacked by the disease, keep warm, send for the doctor, and keep\nthe other members of the family out of the room. If the children complain, keep them at home, and remember, if care is not taken, that the\nafter-effects of the disease are the cause of the deaths.\nIsolation of the Patient will prevent the Spread of the Disease.\nGENERAL RULES\n1. Avoid needless crowding; influefiza is a crowd disease.\n2. Smother your coughs and sneezes; others do not want thc germs\nwhich you would throw away.\n3. Your nose, not your mouth, was made to breathe through; get\nthe habit. ,      ,\n4. Remember the three C's: \"A -clean mouth, clean skin, and\nclean clothes.\" ........     ...      a.\n5. Open the windows, always at home at night; at the office when\npracticable. , , .     .   .  - \u201e\n6. Your fate may be in your own hands; wash your hands before\neating\n7. Don't use a napkin, towel, spoon, fork, glass, or cup which has\nbeen used by another person and not washed.\n-PROVINCIAL  BOARD OF HEALTH.\n\u00ab____\n____\n__\n mmmwsswmm\nmmmmmm^mmimmmmmm^mwmmmmm^\nPAOF FOUR-\nFIVE-MILE WATER SUPPLY IJ NOI\nENOUGH FOR NELSON IN SEVERE\nWEATHER POTTER TELLS COUNCIL\nlaalv\u00bb Ii Reserved      ^Suggests Should Have\n'   'fcAmyXD.,    1^ I\" LfJ-for\n'     \u25a0     'i        Times Stress\nPREPARES FOR\nCONSTRUCTION\nThe application of Adjutant D J.\nHammond of the Salvation Army for\nreservation of July 3 for the Army's\nannual tag day was granted by the\ncity council Monday night, with 'he\nproviso that no other tag day be\ngranted for that month.\nMAYOR'S VOTE\nIS INVOKED AT\nFIRST MEETING\nCouncil Splits Evenly\non Holding Weekly\nMeetings\nSplit vote decided by Mayor J P.\nMorgan ruled out at Monday night's\nfirst regular meeting of the city\ncouncil a motion to hove the council meet each week instead of every second Monday.\nAlderman R. W. Sharp, suggesting\nthere was considerable work ahead,\nproposed weekly meetings. Alderman N. C. Stibbs supported him.\nTo their assertion that many of\nthe 1938 meetings lasted until after\n11 o'clock, Mayor Morgan rep'ied\nthat this was largely because committees failed to meet. If they had\nheld meetings and discussed their\nbusiness there would have been\n\"nothing like the amount of work\"\nto be done by the council, he said,\nadding that there would be.\"roth-\nlag to do when you get here\" if the\ncouncil met each Monday.\nWhen Alderman A. G. Bite-hie\nmoved that meetings be held fort- j jn many caECS taps were still run\nnightly as formerly Aldermarf Sharp. mng and wouad have to bc kept run.\noffered an amendment calling for I ning to avoid freezingi for they\n\u2022weekly meetings. On the vote h- was werc ;n piaces improperly heated,\nsupported by Aldermen Stibbs and Thcro were a number of houses\nMorey, while opposing the amend-1 with plumbing in unheated parts of\nment were Aldermen Ritchie, Slad-, them or in lean-to additions.\nAt the present time, Mr. Potter\ntold the council, Nelson's consumption of water was probably as low\nas it had ever been at about 100 gallons per capita per day. This was\neasily 100 per cent better than tho\nbest previous and was unusually\nlow for an unmetered city.\nMayor J. p. Morgan did not believe Nelson would in the future suf \u2022\n~       ,   ,   ,   ,      , , i fer a similar lack of water as in\n\u00abian Gore, fart skating forward  m t f      d        d\nof the New Grand T.gers had the ^ weat \/ \"extraordinary\/'\nm^ortune to have his skates taken The ^ {mm*Aiz.\\e task was\nfrom the mens public dressing room t0 build thc reMrvo, thgn to .^\nat the Civic Centre arena Saturday | T)rove distribution and hter to look\nevening following the game betwesn, for , future f        -    h\nthe Tigers and the F.A.C. Juniors, | added\nIn a search for the skates, one cf Alderman T. W- Slader compli-\nths members of the team found a mented Ml, Pott,r on tne manner\npair of gloves belomrng to Gilbert in which hc met the recent emw.\nRowling, manager of tho club that; r-cncy\nwere taken by someone carl er in j ' \t\ntho evening, safely cached under\nstairway.\nNotice of motion of a bylaw\nauthorizing purchase of land for\nNelson's projected 5,000,000 gallon rsiervoir on the Heddle property ab.ve Mountain Station was\ngiven by Alderman H. B- Lindsay\nat Monday night's council meeting. The council \\\\t% been holding the land on an option, pending the Indorsation given tha $75,-\n000 bylaw by ratepayers at the\ncivic election.\nCity Engineer R. E- Potter Informed the council the new reservoir was \"pretty well planned\"\nand urged an early start on construction in order that It might :\nfinished by June 15 so as to be\nfilled in plenty of time for the\nseason of heavy demand. Clearing of the ground would start as\ncoon as possible he said, but it\nwould be necessary to wait until\nthe frost was out o' the ground to\ndo grading. |n the meantime purchase of materials could be carried out and the necessary bypass In the present Five-Mile lino\n{  could be installed.\nIt was Mr. Potter's opinion that\nFive-Mile creek did not contain sufficient water in severe cold we; Iher\nto supply the city's needs, and he\nexpressed the opinion that the\ncheapest and most practical manner of remedying the situation\nwould be to install a pump and use\nlake water in periods of stress.\nRESERVOIR RISI.IG\nConservation of w:.ter during the\npast \"few days was slowly bringing\nup the level of the reservoir. But\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B. C.-TUE8DAY MORNING, JAN. 26, 1M7,\nRadio Interference\nSurvey is Promised\nThat a survey of Nelson for radio\ninterference would be made aa icon\nas the only man available in British\nColumbia returned from a similar\nsurvey in the northern part of the\nprovince was promised In a letter\nreceived by the city council Monday\nnight from W. J. Bowerman, radio\ninspector, Vancouver.\nHOUSE \"A\" WINS\nIK HIGH SCHOOL\nHOOP CONTEST\nRallying in the last half after following in the rear for the greater\npart of the first and being one point\nbehind the House \"B\" team at half\ntime, the \"House A\" basketball team\nof the Nelson High school h-nded\ntheir opponents a 22-17 defeat, in an\ninter-house basketball game at the\nHigh school over the week-end.\nUpon winning the hard-fought\nmatch, House \"A\" regained their\nprestige lost in an inter-house debate Friday, when the opposing\nhouse took the honors for the affirmative side.\nThc game, although clean, was\nrough and fast, and referee Gordon\nBowell had his hands full keeping\nthe hoop artists in order.\nJoe Galllcano and George Russell\nplayed a great game for House \"A\"\nand Joe pushed the score up 10\npoints for the winners with his\nsnappy field work. Russell was another high scorer for the winners\nwith fix points.\nThe losing team was not without\nits stars, and Sid Horswill and G.\nni \"hop each rang up six points.\nScores and teams were as follows:\nHoure \"A\"\u2014George RusseU 6, Joe\nGallicano 10, Jim Allan 2, John\nDin-wMl 2. Ken McB-ide 2. Jerry\nWallace anr\" Reginald Th^nr-son.\nHouse \"B\"\u2014Sid Horsvll 6, George\nBishop 6, Brian Go'e 3, Howard\nJrffr,-ys ?. Arthur Bus'i.\nJim Riley was seore'ieeper.\n200 Burns Votaries Honor Memory\nof Scotland's Bard in Eagle Hall\nJ. R. McLennan Lauds Poet for His Humanity\nbut More for His Songs; Many Artists on Clan\nProgram; S. H. Smythe in the Chair\ner and Lindsay. His worship cast\nthe deciding vote against the amendment\nYoung Puck Star\nLoses His Outfit\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD.\nMrr Kraft Loses\nSecond Contest\nMrs. Andy \u25a0 Krpft's rink was lent\n'own to defeat in a game of the\n'aCd'ngham competition of the Nel-\n-on lady curlers, when Mrs. L. Mad-\ndin's rink won 11-2. Mrs. Kraft's\n-ink has only been defeated once\nlvferc in a game of this competition.\nTn the other games Mrs. W. Kline\nlest to Mrr. Alex Dingwall's rink\n7-14, while Mrs. George Cady de-\n'eated Mr,-. John Gansner in a\nhsrd-fought match, score 8-7.\nThis afternoon the final games In\n'his cemoetitlon will be curled. The\n-est of the month will be taken up\nwith scratch and challenge games.\nThis afternoon Mrs. T. A. Wallace's rink will play that of Mrs.\nAndy Kraft for top place in this\ncompetition. Mrs. George C3dy and\nMrs. W. Kline will meet In the\nconsolation matches.\nNEWSPAPER    ADVERTISING    IS\n\"POINT-\nOF-SIIOPPING\"\nADVERTISING\nOver 200 votarlei of Robert Bum*,\nincluding many citizens of other\ndescents than Scottish, gathering In\nEagle ball Monday night on tho\nI78th anniversary of ScotUnd's national bard, Joined In presenting\nNelson's tout to \"the poet of mankind,\" at the Burns Night banquet\nof Clan McLeary.\nFrom the heather to the haggis,\nand from the Selkirk grace to the\nlast number on the program, everything pertaining to the celebration\nwas redolent of .Scotia, and the same\n\u25a0Dpl'cd to the dance program that\n\"included the evening.\n| Clansman S, H. Smythe, who was\nI n the chair, welcomed the large\ncompany present to honor the memory of Burns, and expressed the\nhope that the rising generation\nwou'd emulate the poet's qualities\n-nd achievements.\nHAGGIS PIPED IN\nAfter Chaplain D. J. Robertson\nhad pronounced the Selkirk grace,\nPipers Peter Leslie and Jack Stout\nilped the haggis, born aloft by\nClansman Geordie Wallach, through\nthe hall up to the heed table, where\nTam-s Kay pddrc-sed It in Burns'\n'amiltnr and laudatory terms, and\n'aid Its ste-m'n\" Interior open with\n!he carving knife.\nThen the banque* proceeded, dozens of repl'cas of the first haggis\nwing served to the diners.\nSinging by the company of \"There\nWas a Led Was Born In Kyle,\" as\nmuni opened the formal program.\nJ. R. McL\u00bbnnrin then presented\nhe toast to \"The Immort.il Bard\"\nn an address that summed up the\n\u2022'Ppeiaiing reisons for the world's\nvorship of Burns' memory.\nREMINISCENT WIND\nAlluding to thc wind \"blowing\nwildly around the lums and homes\nof Nelson\" as he was making his\nnotes, provid'ng an atmosphere appropriate for a consideration of the\ngallant but troubled spirit who was\nushered Into this vale of tears by\niust such another January blast, Mr.\nMcLennan noted that despite the\n178 years that had passed since\nthen, each new generation growing\nup found ever increased pleasure\nin the lungs and lyrics of that noble\nmind. While It was regrettable that\nBurns could not have enjoyed In\nhis lifetime a little encouragement\nIn lieu Of some ot this posthumous\npraise, It was undoubtedly a fine\nthing for succeeding generations at\nthe start of the new year to come to\nrenewed contemplation of the man\nand poet who had so established\nh'msalf in the hearts of men.\nAddressing hlm-*lf more to the\nnewer votaries of Burns, and confessing that anyone who had heard\nthe late George E. Murray of Trail\non the Immortal Bard must approach his task with a sense of his\nown ab'llty to do that gallant memory fu'l justice, Mr. McLennan deprecated that form of talk regarding\nBurns that wai more than half\napology. \"Tho splendor of the legacy he has left us should surely\nprotect him from any such attitude,\"\n-aid the speaker, regarding those\nwho were forever digging into\nBurns' private life, and he suggested\nthe poet would have been quick to\nresent the \"almost Indecent searching\" Into his private affairs.\nMOULDS MEN'S\nTHOUOHTS\nCharacterizing Burns as surprisingly modern in his outlook, an outlook In advance of his time, Mr. McLennan pointed out how It had\nmoulded the ideas of his countrymen ever since. Hli view of the\nworth of the individual irrespective\nof walk or station, hli brotherhood\nof man, met a much more widespread and responsive reception in\nall democratic states today than\nwhen he wrote. He had a keen insight into the motives and weaknesses of his fellow men as well as\na quick recognition of their virtues,\nand like all great and compassionate hearts, he was a profound student of human nature and a severe\nand fearless critic of meanness,\nhypocricy and the baser qualities\nwhich played havoc with humanity.\nWhile he scourged these\" qualities\nwith a merciless pen, nowhere, said\nthe speaker, did the Scottish poet\nmake light of suffering, sincerity,\ntruth, or deep-feeling, but rather he\nreverenced and exalted them, and\nthat was why so much of his poetry\nwas haunting and satisfying, and\nwhy hii lyrics hod held the heart\nof the world with a hold that defied\nthe parsing of the yean.\nINTERPRETED HEART\nMen in the mass werc so Inarticulate, and when they found their\ndeepest thoughts, longings, hopes\nand fears expressed for them in the\ntrue language of poetry, they were\ngrateful and delighted. This, the\nrpeaker thought, was the secret of\nlhe veneration of Burnt\u2014the fact\nthat he was one of the finest exponents of the deepest feelingr. His\ncompassionate heart loved all wean.\nthings, and did not disdain to Immortalize even the trivial things.\nThe little mouse scurrying timorously before the plow, the daisy\nraising its gallant heed in the furrow, the old horse, the faihfut dog,\nall made their appeal to his large\nand loving heart.\nThen his love songs! \"There arc\nnone finer In any language, and\nthey will continue to awaken responsive echoes In millions of hearts\nlong after those now delighting In\nthem have passed on,\" the speaker\nremarked.\nLIVES AS SINGER\nAdmitting that while Bums was\nperhaps preeminently the poet of\nthe people, and while their wrongs\nand the cruelty that often oppressed\nthorn and the \"slings and arrows of\noutrageous fortune, the insolence of\noffice,\" to uis Shakespeare's expression, were often hli theme, Mr,\nMcLennan expressed the opinion that\nIt was not so much the rebel Burns\nwho had survived In the world'!\nheart, but the linger of songs, expressing in haunting and exquisite\nmelody the themes of happy love,\nthe Joys of home and children, the\nfireside epic, the dignify ot right\nliving and right thinking. It was\nBurns' songs, he suggested, that\nnlaced the Scottish bard among the\nImmortals, and would continue to\nmake him a messenger to thousands\nyet unborn.\nHow Burns would have delighted\nIn this beautiful Kootenay \"land of\nmountain and of flood,\" where, to\nquote hii words;\n\"The outstretching late, embosomed 'mong the Mill\nThey eye with wonder and amazement Bill.\"\nHow this far western land would\nhave appealed to Burns, exclaimed\nthe speaker \u2014 this western land\nwhere, thank goodness, still sur\nvived the feeling that \"the rank Is\nbut tho guinea stamp, a man's a man\nfor a' that.\" He could see the poet\nhobnobbing at Nelson's fine new\ncurling rink with \"Scotty\" Marr,\nTom Ledingham. Alick Ritchie, J. B.\nGray, and other good citizens of\nNelson, delighting them all with his\ngood fellowship and his ready wit\nand repartee. Carrying this thought\nthrough on a lighter vein, Mr. McLennan said he could even see \"J.B.\"\noffering Burns thc loan of a wee\nd'amond if he would Just write a\nbit of verse on his window.\nA UNIVERSAL PRAYER\nSo, as the birthday waxed and\nwaped, once more let his votaries\nthink kindly and gratefully of the\nmen and the singer who had left\nthem to rich a legator, the man who\nwas hi- own exacMng critic, the\nman of such truly deep religious\nfeeling that he could pen the prayer:\n\"O Thou unknown, Almighty\nCause\nOf all my hope and fear,\nIn Whose dread presence ere an\nhour\nPerhaps I must appear,\n\"If I have wandered in those paths\nOf life I ought to shun,\nAs something loudly in my breast\nRemonstrates 1 have done;\n\"Though know'st that Thou hai\nform'd me\nWith passions wild and strong;\nAnd listening to their witching\nvoice\nHas often led me wrong.\n\"Where human weakness has\ncome short\nOr Frailty stept aside,\nDo Thou, All-Good, for such Thou\nart,\nIn shades of darkness hide.\n\"Where with Intention I have\nerr'd,\nNo other plea I have\nBut Thou art good; and goodness\nstill.\nDel ghteth to forgive.\"\nThe eulogy of Burns was warmly\napplauded, and Chairman Smythe\nexpressed the hope that the Clan\nwould hoar Mr. McLennan again\non some future occasion.\nSongs by or about Burns featured\nthe remainder of the program, Adam\nCruickshank, accompanied by Mrs.\nA. A. Pagdin, rendering two tenor\nsolos, \"Star of Robbie Burns,\" and\n\"My Aln Folk\", while Miss Rose\nHartwlg, accompanied by Mn. Nelson Bill, sang with the utmost sweet\nness. \"Alton Water\" and \"Bonnie\nDoon\".\nAt this point the chairman added\nan unannounced number, calling\non Dr. D. W. McKay for an impromptu speech.\nDR. MoKAY GIVES\nROGERS'  GREETINGS\nCatching only the word \"McKay\"\nof the chau-man's remarks, Dr. Mc\nKay rose fluently to the occasion,\nfirst referring to L. V. Rogers, the\nspeaker a year ago, who had promised to be present this time also,\nbut was prevented by a very serious\nillness. Describing Mr. Rogers as\nnow much better, Dr. McKay told\nhow touched Mr. Rogers was on receiving flowers from the Clan, and\nhow he had instructed him to give\nthe Gen his regards and feaijita-\ntlons. He predicted Mr. Rogers' presence next time.\nDr, McKay then presented to the\ngathering his guest, Bill McKay,\ngoal keeper of the Nelson Maple\nLeafs, wno was wearing tire Kilt.\nHe explained that Mr. MeaCay has\nnow become a citizen of Ne'.son, but\nwas born in Ayrshire, very near the\nbirthplace of Burns, and almost on\nhis birthday too, arriving on January 21, while the poet was born\nJanuary 25.\nPROGRAM FOLLOWED\nBY DANCE\nThe balance of the program, entirely musical, ni.anf\u2022 a11 appaausc for\nevery number, with an encore for\nevery artist. A. A. Paguln renau-ed\nI \"Mary\", with \"Land o' the Leal\" ai\nencore; Miss Grace May, accompanied by her s.sta.r, Mrs. Win Manson,\nrendered \"Tbe Auld Hoose\", aim\n\/rltz Kreisler's \"The Old Refrain\";\nVictor Graves rendered \"Highland\nMary1' and \"John Grumlie\"; and\nMrs. C. W. Vyler fittingly conclude\nthe program with \"Where Hath Scotland Found Her Fame'\/\" and \"For\nthe Sake of Somebody\". Mrs. Pas-\ndin accompanied Mr. Pagdin, Mr.\nGraves, ahd Mrs. Tyler.\nIn announcing tbe conclusion of\nthe program, the chairman thani.ed\nthe artists tor their splendid services, and also the workers at the\ntables.\nThe tables were then cleared\naway, and dancing was the order\nto an early hour Tuesdiy morning,\nsquare dances of various kinds being the staple.\nHold Back $50 of\nContract Price on\nCivic Contra Work\nPayment of tht remainder ol the\ncontract price to Qeorge Leask tor\nalterations to provide a motion picture projection booth at the Civic\nCentre, with $90 held back until a\nnumber of minor Jobs were completed, wai authorized by the city\ncouncil Monday night.\nMF WILLIAMS\nSPEAKS TO THE\nTRAIL GYROS\nInternational Head\nCenters Talk on\n\"Friendship\"\nTRAIL, B. C-, J\u00abn. 25 \u2014 An Inspiring message on the growth and well-\nbeing of Gyro International was delivered to the members of Trail and\nRossland clubs when they gathered\nIn the Crown Point Sunday night\nani'. were addressed by Alfred H.\nWilliams of Calgary, Alta., international president of the International\nAssociation of Gyro clubs. Some 88\nwere In attendance.\nMr. Williams Is personally well\nknown in this district having been\nprominently Identified with the\nGyro movement since Its Inception\nIn western Can-da. He has had a\nprominent part in the growth ot\nthe movement in southeastern British Columbia.\nDuring the past seven months he\nhrs visited each of the 82 clubs\nwhich held membership at the time\nof his election to his high office.\nThree new clubs have been formed\nsince his installatio In areas which\nho had previously visited,\nMr. Williams' address centered\n-round principal object of Gyro\n\"Friendship\". While many clubs,\nparticularly in Canada and the western States, had adopted some form\nof community activity al an objective he urged that Gyro's fundamental of \"Friendship\" be not lost\nsight ot. He congratulated Rossland and Trail clubs on the progress\nthey were making and more particularly on the success which had so\nfar attended their laudable service\nwork In their respective communities.\nPrior to arriving In Trail ho had\ninstalled the officers ot K-.m'.oops\nand Kelowna clubs and had visited\nwith Grand Forki club.\nAt noon he wai guest of local\nGyros at an Informal luncheon.\nGown From Corcfs|QQ(|Q-{ (Ji*.g--\nTAKE CARE OF\nSEVERE COLDSl\nIllness Brief and\n\"in Main Not\nSevere\"\nPNEUMONIA\nMAY FOLLOW1\nVictims Should Stay\nInside; Absentees\nSchools Fewer\nMorris Finance\nHead of Nelson\nSchool Trustees\nCommitteei ot the Nelion school\nboard as struck Monday night before the trustee-, went into committee to deal with 1937 estimates were\nas follows:\nFinance\u2014Trustees R. B. Morris, F.\nT. Griffith, David Rees and E. P.\nDawson.\nProperty\u2014Trusteei W. E. Colos, R.\nB. Morris, F. T. Griffith and A. A,\nPerrier.\nManagement \u2014 Chairman Leslie\nCraufurd and Truste:s W. E. O'les,\nE. P, Dawson, A. A. Perrier and\nDavid Rees.\nM\n\u25a0\u25bc:\n?*\u25a0;\nfill\n\u25a0\nrde entirely of silk cords form\ning long fringes, this all-whlto eve\nnln\" dress by Jean Patou of Paris\nis worn with jewels of diamonds\nand rubies. It is one of the most\nstriking creations to come from the\nfashion centre.\nAll Bit 12 of\n102 \"FreezeiFs\"\n\u25a0\nAre Thawed Out\nOut of 102 \"freezeups\" In Nelson\nhouses during the recent severe cold\nspell, all but 12 were thawed out\nby city men up to Monday night,\nC'ty Engineer R. E. Potter informed the city round. The crew had\nworked S~tur:'ay afternoon and\nSunday with the electrical equio-\nment to restore service as qu'ckly\nas possible.\nThe city reservoir was half full,\nand water pressure generally was\nbetter throughout the city.\nAlderman P. O. Morey expressed\nthanki to Mr. Potter for getting wa-\n'.er up to Hoover street.\nCautioning residents to take oare\nof colds, Medloal Health Officer\nDr. F. M. Auld In a report received\nby the city council Monday night\nstated:\n\"During the past week or 10 days |\nnumerous cases of Illness have occurred, having the characteristics of |\nan acute cold with fever and gastric (\ndisturbance in lome cases. The illness in the main is not severa and j\nruns a brief course. It is important to remain  indoors from the ,\nearly signs of onset in order to avoid I\ncomplications; and for the same reason those attacked should not re- J\nsume  their  ordinary  duties until ]\nfully recovered. Lack of these precautions may easily be followed by j\nserious complications, of which per*\nhaps, the  chief and most serious\nwould be pneumonia,\nSCHOOLS SUFFER\n\"School attendance Is being seriously interfered with; some pupils j\nbeing excluded because of symptoms\nof illness, and others are being kept\nat home as a precautionary measure.\nThe school nursing lervice has been\nstrengthened and the health of the\npupils is being supervised with all\npossible thoroughness.\n\"Chicken pox has almost disappeared; only five cases having occurred during the past four weeks.\n\"A few cases of measles have occurred but it is not anticipated that\na large outbreak is likely since the\nnumerous cases of last year have\nImmunised a large portion ot those\nwho would otherwise be susceptible.\"\nSUMMARY OF DISEASES\nThe statistical summery of reportable cases for the period follow:\nMumps   1\nChicken pox           5\nErysipelas (one from outside city) 3\nPneumonia  2\nMeaeles  3\nAt a ichool board meeting, alio\nheld Monday night, It was reported by Miss Kathleen Gordon,\nschool nurse, that the number of\nabienteei at Central had dropped\nfrom 128 Friday to 112 Monday;\nand at Hume lohool from 103 to\n102. Mill Mary Madden wai temporarily at the Hume ai ichool\nnurse to relieve Miss Gordon while\nthe apparently fast-spreading colds\namong the children continued.\nTRAIL CURLING\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. M-Reiulta ot\ni Trail Curling club game* tonight\nwere:\n, PATRON'S CUP\n1   Dave Forreit 8, Donald MacDonald 6.\nR. C. McGerrigle 8, A. R. Buchan 6.\nJack Campbell 8, W. F. Truswell 8.\nW. G. Carrie 4, W. F. Doubt 2.\nTRAIL COUNCIL\nBRIEFS\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 25\u2014A letter was\nreceived at the city council meeting Monday night from Crescent\nCar shows asking for a six-day licence for a Trail showing, C;ty\nClerk W. E. B. Monypenny was instructed to inferm the show people\na licence would be $100 daily for six\ndays.\nA request by Trail musicians that\na licence be placed on bodies of travelling musicians visiting Trail, was\nplaced on the table for future discussion.\nThe Gino-Sneclter land purchasing and James Leckie bylaws each\nreceived three readings. The anticipation revenue loan bylaw was finally adopted.\nWater applications from the Italo-\nCanadese society and Joe Giralamo\nwere referred to the water and light\ncommittee and the city engineer.\nApplication of Mike Lypchuk was\ngranted.\ni Correspond-nee was received from\nP. J. Perkip \u00bb\u25a0-leasing a desire to\npurchase lots on Binns street, and\nwes filed.\nC.'lv Engineer S. S. McDiarmid\nsubm.lted tenders on trucks. The\ncouncil will take up this matter at\na later meeting.\nLetters of appreciation to Reeve\nE. M. Stiles of Tadanac and to the\nWest Kootenay Power & Liaht company, thanking them for assistance\nwith the thawing machine, were\nauthorized.\nDR. WEIR QUOTES BURNS, REPLY\nTOASHANADA\" TRAIL BANQUET\nArrowhead  Baby\nBorn in Car in\na Blizxard\nREVELS'.OKE, B.C., Jan. 25 -\n(CP).\u2014The itork was faster than\nIhe automobile in a race against\ntime here today\u2014so Mr. and Mrs.\nClifford Comcou of Arrowhead, B.C.,\nere the parents of a baby girl born\nIn a car.\nMr. and Mrs. Comeau set out from\nArrowhead in a blinding blizzard\n^arly today. At Sidmouth, the Columbia river ferry had to be chopped free of rapidly forming ice before taking them across.\nAt 12-mile ferry another delay\noccurred, and the stork caught up.\nWonders What Would\nHave Happened If\nCame to Canada\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 25-Hon. Dr\nG. M. Weir, provincial secretary and\nminister of health and education,\nastounded his audience when he\nquoted at length from Burns' works\nas he reolied Monday night to the\ntoast to Canada at the Trail Caledonian society's banquet commemorating the birth ot Robert Burns,\nScotland's Immortal poet. The ban-1\nquet was held at the K.P, hall. 1\nHe gave a brief resume of Burns'\nworks and expressed great joy in\nhaving read them. He dwelt on what\nmight have happened if Burns, as he\noriginally planned, had come to Canada. However, there was a great\nScottish influence in the Dominion,\nhe said, so great that his worm\nthrough this influence had been perpetuated.\nThe toast \"The Immortal Memory'' was given by William Ramsay.\nOther speakers were Alex Balfour,\npresident of the society and chairman; Mayor Bruno Lerose, Wil'Iam\nForrest, Alex Ewing, and R. R.\nBurns M.P.P.\nContributing to the program were\nH. A. MacLaren, George Bromley,\nDavid Smart, John Alexander, J.\nFerguson and Piper C. McKay.\nTrajl Canucks Snowed Under by\nSmoke Eaters in 11-3 Trail Game\nAway\n*-\nFrom 3-0 Start\nin First to Boost\nScore Averages\nTRAIL. B. C, Jan. 25 \u2014 While a\nheavy white blanket fell on the | Smoke Eaters, Cronie, 17:i\nroof rt the Tr.il rink tonight, under-\nnaii it Trail Cnucks were snowed i der by Smo!:e Eaters to the extent of 11 goals to 3 in the second\nmeeting meeting of these teams in\nthe West Kootenay Hockey league,\nlt was fairly close hockey in the\nshuk) :53; 2, Smoke Eaters, Haight\n(Cronie) 3:59; 3, Smoke Eaters, Andreashuk (Dame) 19:07.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nSecond period\u20144, Smoke Eaters,\nAndreashuk (Cronie) 15:50; 5,\nA; 8, Canucks, Marshall (Kinnear, Benoit)\n18:12; 7, Smoke Eaters, Hughes\niBrenncn, Smith) 19:52.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nThird period\u20148, Smoke Eaters,\nCronie (Andreashuk) 6:26; 9, Smoke\nEaters, Haight  (Cronie)   10:00;   10,\nopening stanza, though Smoke Eat-1 Smoke Eaters, Andreashuk (Cronie)\ners  scored  three limes,  but  al   r \"    \"\u2014-'-    -----   \"\nthat play was wide open and the\nSmoke Eaters had innumerably\nmore opportunities to score than\nthey made use of. Alt Dupuis in\nCanucks' net was busy through the\ngame and although he let 11 get by,\nhe held off combination attack after\nattack.\nLaven was a hard nut to crack\nand as well wai exceptionally lucity,\nthe d'sk skidding across the mouth\nof the net fractions from the goal\nline as he lay prostrate on the ice\nwatching.\n8UMMARY\nFirst period\u20141, Dame  (Andrea-\n11:17; 11, Smoke Eaters, Brennan\n(Smith, Hughes) 11:35; 12, Smoke\nEaters, Cronie, (Andreashuk) 14:00;\n13, Canucks, Wade (Benoit, Kinnear) 16:08; 14, Canucks, Wads\n(Benoit, Kinnear) 17:08\nPenalties\u2014Jordan.\nTeams:\nCanucks \u2014 Dupuis; Parkhurst,\nThompson and Kendall; Wnde, Pet-\nros'cy and Kaleta, Kinnear, Benoit\nand Marshall, Scodellaro,\nSmoke Eaters \u2014 Lnven; Jordan,\nHaight and Snowden; Cronie, Andreashuk and Dame, Smith, Brennan and Hughes.\nReferee\u2014\"Curley\" Wheatley. f\n pupii... i     mm*\nALIEY TALKS\nIRTHODONTURE\nTO ROTARIANS\nFood, Disease, and\nPosture Mould\nthe Jaw\n10WS CASTS AND\nMASKS OF FACES\nVAany Ways Used to\nCorrect Faulty\nDentition\ni. fascinating talk on the new\nhodont science that has to do\nth correcting wrong teeth condi-\nns so as to give people properly\nmldcd jaws and properly aligned\nlural teeth, was given before the\ntary club Monday by Dr. G. A. C\nalley, who spoke on a program\nranged by W. J. Waters.\n\u00bb.NY THINGS\n'FECT GROWTH\nDr. Walley first spoke on the\ndlly growth process, on the min\nal elements necessary both for\nB bony frame and for various\ngans, on the part played by vita-\nins, found in certain raw foods, on\na functions of the numerous\nands\u2014endocrine, pituitary, thy \u25a0\nId, parathyroid, and adrenals \u2014\nid showed that any abnormality\n* gland was accompanied by\nodification of the body in some\nftlcular.\nBeside all these sources of influ-\nice on growth and development,\nseases also sometimes had pro-\nund effects.\nSo far as the dentition was con-\nirned, local diseases might modify,\nId the associated organs, such as\nngue, lips and cheeks might influ-\nice the moulding of the jaw. Hab-\nI might play a part in shaping the\nructures concerned. The habit of\nting the tongue might interpose\nl Interval between the upper ond\niwer sets of teeth, making an\nipen bite\"; tight lips and cheeks\n1th dimples drawn in tightly might\ni\u00bbke the jaws narrow, and posture\nmid also be reflected, the lower\niw falling if one slumped forward,\nbile lt was in normal position if\nne stood erect. For a child to\nabltually rest chin or cheek on\nie hand or arm might bring about\nCollapse of the arch, A child might\nBt an  obstrusive  lower jaw  by\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n&, PILLS\nIk   N.^CHAtK'\n*.N.cht ..HrU*'\n\"in rnaO\n(OU CAN THROW CARDS\nIN HIS FACE\nONCE TOO OFTEN\nWHEN you have those aarful\ncramps: when your nerves\nan Bali on edge\u2014don't take It out\non tlie man you love.\nYour husband can't possibly\nknow how you feel for the simple\nreason that he Is a man.\nA tbrea>quaart*r wife may be\nno wife at all If she nags her bus-\nbaud seven days out of every\nmonth.\nFor three generations one woman\nhas told mother bow to go \"smiling through\" with Lydla B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It\nhelps Nature tone up the system,\nthus lessening the discomforts from\nthe functional disorders which\nwomen must endure In the three\nordeals of life: 1. Turning from\ngirlhood to womanhood. 2. Preparing for motherhood. 3. Approaching \"middle age.\"\nDon't be a three-quarter wife,\ntake LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S\nVEGETABLE COMPOUND and\nCo \"Smiling Through.\"\nclosing the lower wt outside thl\nupper.\nTEMPORARY TEETH\nIMPORTANT\nTemporary teeth were often regarded as unimportant, but the fact\nremained that if tht- were lost several yean before they were due to\nbe expelled, there would be pressure\none way or another on the new\nteeth, and a definite deformity was\nalmost certain; for in-taUice, prognathous or projecting teeth.\nThe speaker said it was aid In\nthe dental profession that 90 per\ncent of people were affected with\nsome deformity of the teeth, large or\nsmall, and that 20 to 40 per cant\nof people definitely needed treatment. Of those needing treatment.\n40 per cent had dental arches that\nwere too narrow. The lower set determined the upper, as the upper\ntook form over the lower.\nCASTS AND MASKS SHOWN\nDr. Walley showed a large number ot casta of dental structures,\nand also several masks he had made\nof the faces of boys illustrating\nvarious types of dental deformity.\nand showed how such deforms)\nstructures modified the face. In one\nInstance a young woman used to\nbite on one side, probably owing\nto having had decayed teeth on thc\nother, and she was only saved from\nhaving a permanent croas-blte by\n-ecelving orthodont treatment\nVarious stages that right be expected to follov bad denti'.'on in the\nch!ld were ramed, includ'ng almost\ninevitable pyorrhea and finally, extractions.\nMnTHOD-s OF CORRECTION\nCorrection of the faults were a\nmatter of using appliances to give\npressure in the right directions, to\ntake advantage of the growth process. Wire Bprings, elastics, and other\napnliances were used.\nExercises could also be prescribed.\nfor the proper che-ing, correction\nof the lips, correction of the swat\nlowing habit, and stretching. The\nactual correction of the faults would\nb'-e place during the growth spurts.\nDr. Walley's ad.lress was voted\n'nteresting and valuable, and Mr.\nWaters expressed the thanks of\nth- club to him.\nPresident R. E. Potter was In tht\nchair.\nMrs. Simpson Is\nAdvised Hollo\nReturn lo Eng.\nDetectives Fear Acts\nof \"Cranks\" If She\nDoes\nCANNES, France, Jan. tt <CP).-\nMrs. Wallis Warfield Simpson hat\nbeen advised by Seotl-nd Yard detectives who guarded her during\nher first weeks at Cannes not to\nreturn to England.\nThere Is no possibility of a popular demonstration egi><n*t her\u2014they\nwere thinking only ot cranks, they\nsa'd.\nThe views they expressed were\ntheir own and not the official stand\nof Scotland Yard.\nThe detectives said that to many\npeople In Great B-itain Mrr. Simpson was a symbol rather than an\n'nd'vldual.\nRe-entment of a certain part of\nthe British population was shown\n'n the abuse letters which came to\nher at Cannes, before and after the\n-bd'eation of Edward VIII.\nThe Scotland Yard detective\ncharged especially with Mrs. Simpson's safety was James Evans, a\ntall, wiry member of the special\ndivision for guarding the Royal\nfamily and prominent visitors.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NKaflN. i.C-TUESDAY MORNING, MN. M. INT.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nIB*\nFive Fined for\nLack Carrier's\nLicence Trucks\nFive prosecutions for operating\nprivate freight vehicles without carrier's licences, each resulting In a\nfine, were instituted by the highway\npatrol department of the motor\nbranch during the past week.\nAt Nelson Monday Max Baskin\nand William' F. Schultz appeared\nbefore Stipendiary Magistrate John\nCartmel and pleaded guilty to operating freight vehicles \"without being the holder of a subsisting carrier's licence.\" Each was fined tlO\nand costs with the alternative of\nfive days In jail on pleading guilty\nLin Sing pleaded guilty before\nMagistrate R. A. D. West, and Fred\nEremenko and Mike Hlookoff\npleaded guilty before Justice of the\nPeace Joseph Speakman on three\nsimilar charges at Castlegar. Each\nwas fined $10 and costs.\nPRODUCTION  INCREA8ED\nHALIFAX, (CP)-Nova Scotia's\nproduction of creamery butter in\nOctober as reported by 29 creameries and one creamery estimated,\nwas 432,087 pounds, compared with\n385,516 pounds for October 1935\u2014\nan increase of 12 per cent, according\nto the Nova Scotia department of\nagriculture.\nB1\nLACKHEADS\nDon't squeeze blackheads \u2014\ndissolve them. Get two ounces of\nperoxine powder from any drug\nstore and rub with hot, wet cloth\nbriskly over the blackheads. They\nsimply dissolve and disappear by\nthis safe and sure method.   (Advt.)\n\u2022st Colds\n...Distressing symptoms\nrelieved by rubbing on\nvisjii\nNow   WHITE-STAINLESS\nBUY NOW\nfor Future Use\nAND SAVE\non Better Quality\nFOOTWEAR\nYou'll find by shopping at our\ngreat stock reducing sale that\nyou'll save many dollars on\nFootwear for the whole family.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaden In Footfathion\nPrices Unhanged\nal Local Market\nDried Fruits Retire;\nPumokins Are on\nSale Again\nFew changes were made in the\nproduce list at the Vernon street\nmarket Saturday. Dried plums and\ndried apples had disappeared from\nthe stalls, while pumpkins at IS and\n55 cents each put In their reappearance. There were no price changes.\nBusiness was reported fair by the\nvendors, and at times brisk rushes\nof trade were enjoyed.\nQuotations follow:\nPRUIT8\nJonathan apples, box  $115\nNorthern Spv apnles, box 1.25\nDelicious apples, 8 lbs    .25\nbox   1.50\nOntario apples, box   100\nRome Beauty apnles, box  1.0*)\nGreening apples, box    .60\nVEGETABLES\nTurnips, 8 lbs. \t\nOnions, 8 lbs. \t\nCarrots, 9 lbs. \t\nLeeks, bunch -\t\nPickling cabbage,.\t\nGarlic, lb. ....\nCabbage, head 5c, 10c and ,\nParsley, bunch  ,\t\nPotatoes, 10 and 11 lbs,\t\nPotatoes,  sack    -\nBeets, 7 lbs.\nArtichokes, 4 lbs.\t\nHothouse tomatoes, lb..\nSage, bunch  \t\nMint, bunch\t\nParsnips, 7 lbs. \t\nSquash, lb.  \t\nGreen onions, 3 bunches\nSwiss chard        \t\nHorseradish, lb\t\nPumpkins, ea. - 15 and .35\nMEATS\nBeet lb.\nVeal, lb.\n    JS\n    2*\n .25\n    .08\n. .15 and .20\n    JO\n.15\n.05\n.25\n2.25\n.25\n.25\n.15\n.05\n.05\n.25\n.03\n.10\n.10\n.15\nLamb, lb.....\t\nBacon, lb. _ \t\nRabbit, lb\t\nSpring chicken, lb.\nLiver, lb.\n  .05 to .JO\n M to .20\n 10 to 2i\n  .25 to .30\n    .25\n    .25\n .12\n    .08\n.10 and .15\n 15\n.20 to .25\n. .15 to   .18\n.10 to .15\n 10\nThis column Is conducted by Mrs M A. Vlgneux All news of a\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nItems, marriages, etc, will appear in this column. Telephone Mra.\nVlgneux at her home, 519 Silica street\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. Wasson, Mill\nstreet, had as their week-end guests\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Willis of Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. H. Montgomery of the Ymir\nConsolidated mine at Ymir visited\ntown yesterday.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nHenry Lindblad was in the city\nfrom the Kootenay Belle mine yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. G. Dunkerly, Nelson avenue\nFairview. has as her guest her\nmother, Mrs. M. Leadbeater, and her\ngrandmother, Mrs. M. Robertson, of\nTrail.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJohn Charles of the Cjueen mine\nvisited Nelson at the week-end.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nE. E. Guille of Kimberley, who\nwas attending the bonspiel at Trail,\nvisited in Nelson en route home.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nH. H. Perkins of the Center Star\nmill visited town during the weekend.\n\u2022 *  *\nMn. P G. Morey, Hoover street,\nentertained members of St. Saviour's Church Helpers Bridge club\nye-terday when those playing were\nMrs. J. G. Bunyan, Mrs. Harold\nLakes, Mrs. W. M. Walker, Mrs.\nLeslie Craufurd, Mrs. James O'Shea.\nMrs. E. C. Wragge, Mrs. J. Cartmel\nand Mrs. Morey.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Gertrude Milne of Shore-\nacres visited her parents over the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. H. Langston left last night\nfor her home at Canyon after visiting over the week-end at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Guy Browell,\nBaker street\/\naa    \u00ab    \u00bb\nJohn Westeln of the Queen mine\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nA shopper in the city yesteniay\nfrom the Kootenay Belle mine was\nMr. Taylor.\n, ,  ,\nJ. J. Malone of Princeton, who\nspent a few days ih Nelson, left\non Sunday for Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nThe First Presbyterian church\nparlor was a busy scene Friday\nwhen the Ladles' Aid held a tea\nand bake sale. The president, Mrs.\nW. T. Choate, and Mrs. J. M. Ritchie received the guests. Tea arrangements were under the convener-\nship of the young people of the\ncongregation Including Mrs. W.\nManson and Mrs. W. Jeffs. Mrs. Pat\nAitken, Mrs. Schook, Miss Grace\nMay, Mrs. Gilbert Johnston, Mrs.\nKelly, Mrs. H. H. Currle and Mrs\nA. Wallach had charge of the bake\ntable. Miss Grace May acted as\ncashier. The, tea table decoration\nconsisted of spike candles embedded\nin a variety of greenery.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAustin Moen of the Queen mine\nvisited his home here during the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss N. McRobb of Creston visited Nelson ove* the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nPaul Bratlng, formerly of Kaslo,\nwho spent several months holidaying In California and coast cities,\nIs a guest of Mr. and Mrs. F. Berea-\nford, Baker 6treet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJohn Weaver arrived by motor\nfrom Oliver Sunday and Is a guest\nof his mother, Mrs. L. G. Weaver,\nCarbonate street.\n.   .   .\nMiss E. Blair of Canyon City was\na week-end vi.-itor in town.\n\u2022 \u2022    aa\nJames Graham of Trail Is a city\nvisitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. D. R. Robertson of\nTrail were week-end guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. Gerald Dunkerly, Fair-\nview.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. F. H. Abey of Kaslo\nvisited town over the    eek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nO. Carrlngton of Salmo spent the\nweek-end In Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. Weatherhead.\nFairview, had as their week-end\nguests Mr. and Mrs. Glen Messlnger\nof Canyon City, who returned last\nnight.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nG. W. Ward of Valllcan spent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Bud Rose of New\nDenver were in the city at the weekend, the former en route to the\nOkanagan direct.\n\u2022 aa    *\nJohn McGowan of Trail Is a city\nvisitor.\n\u2022 \u2022    aa\nU. F. Innls of Robson spent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Guy Browell had as\ntheir guest Mr. Browell's niece, Miss\nJune Browell ot Canyon City.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nWeek-end visitors in town included Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Ham of\nSilverton.\n\u2022 aa     *\nA. W. Thorn -on was in Nelson\nfrom Kimberley ov.-r the week-end.\n\u2022 aa    t\nPeter Nelson of New Dc.ver was\na city visitor yesterday.\nDripping,   lb.   \t\nSausageplb. \t\nBologna, lb.\t\nChicken, lb _.\nFowl, lb.\nSausage meat    ...\nHead cheese, lb. ..\nEQQS\nSmall pullet eggs, doi,    .35\n2 doz.     .65\nGrade A-large, doz   45\n2 doz.     M\nGrade A-medium, doz. _ _   .40\n2doz 75\nDAIRY PRODUCTS\nButter, lb \u2014 .85 and .25\nCream, pint   _   JO\nCurds, lb       .10\nCottage cheese, lb.  10\nPrime cheese, lb.   _   .35\nGoat cheese, lb. ... .25 and .35\nNew cheese, lb.   _   .20\nWhipping cream, V4 pint _   .20\nCream cheese, lb    .25\nPOT PLANTS\nJerusalem cherry  100\nAsparagus fern  100\nMaidenhair fern     .40\nMertylc    - 50\nMISCELLANEOUS\nPreserved fruit, quart .40\nJam, pint \u2014   .30\nMarmalade, pint      .25\nBlrchbark calendars  15\nEQGS\nSmall pullets eggs, doz 30\nGrade A-large, doz 40\nGrade A-medlum, doz _..      .36\nCushions       50-1.00\nCrochet rugs   50-1.00\nWoll hooked rugs  5.00\nIs Fined Failing\nReport Accident\nFailure to report a motor vehicle\naccident cost Arthur Thompson a\nfine of $10 and (7.45 costs when he\nappeared before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel Monday.\nIt was charged that he failed to\nreport within 48 hours a motor\nvehicle accident on the Nelson-Ymlr\nroad In which damage of more than\n$21 occurred and In which Mrs.\nNellie Innes ot Valllcan was in-1\nJured.  He pleaded guilty.\nGreenwood Beats\n6. Forks by 10-5\nGREENWOOD, B. C. - The first\ngame for the Boundary Hockey cup\nwas played at Greenwood between\nGrand Forks Comets and Greenwood Shamrocks. Although a number of goals were scored on each\nside, it was by no means a free\nand easy game.\nGreenwood, winning 10-5, played\nexcellent team-wotk and Grand\nForks, despite the fact three of\ntheir stars were absent, made a\nsplendid fight\nMiss Irene Inglls spent the weekend at her home in Beaverdell.\nMri. Mickey McKay was a tea\nhostess Saturday.\nThere is much excitement around\ntown In anticipation of the annual\nbonspiel beginning Tuesday. Quite a\nnumber of rinks from distant points\nhave entered and competition promises to be keen.\nMr. and Mrs. Glen Manly accompanied by Mrs. M. McKay were\nvisitors to Grand Forks.\nGreenwood is quite a busy center\nthese days with four trucks hauling\nore to the McArthur mill from\nPhoenix and several trucks hauling\nconcentraters to Danville, Wash., to\nbe shpped to Tacoma.\nVal McDonald, who Is attending\nGrand Forks high school, spent the\nweek-end at his home here.\nM. J. Scott of Grand Forks waa\na visitor in town.\nMrs. W. C. Wilson was received\nSaturday for the first time since\nher marriage. Brightly colored mums\ndecorated the spacious living room,\nwhere the hostess attired in a\ncharming afternoon frock of jade\ngreen silk crepe received the many\nguests. Mrs. A. Satir and Mrs. Walters, mother of the hostess, presided at the urns, while Mrs. Gene\nMcGilllvray, Miss McArthur, Miss\nLindbergh assisted  in  serving.\nTunic Is Useful\nGIVEN NOVEL NAME\nHAMILTON, Ont. (CP)-Carollne\nKnight, 10 months old, was found on\na doorstep on Caroline street late\nat night, April 15. Unknown, she\nwas named from the street and\nfrom the time of day by officials of\nthe Infanta' Home here.\nAnne Shirley, screen actress, says\na tunic is the most useful part of a\nperson's wardrobe. It can be worn\nwith a short skirt for Informal occasions, says she, and with a long\none for formal wear. Anne's tunic\nis of m:tal cloth In black, gold and\nflame. It buttons down the front\nand flares below the hips. Her\nskirt is black crepe.\nTry Salada Orange Pekoe Blend\nViMR\nTEA\nSmart Beach\nBeauty\nAnn Sothern's beach suit consists\nof paj:mas ot white waterproofed\ncrepe, with halter top of Chinese\nprint In which blue predominates.\nThe white cape has a lapel collar\nfaced with the print.\nC0NDEMN8 WOMEN DRINKING\nWORCESTER, South Africa (CP)\n\u2014Colored women are being destroyed by the drink evil and if present\nconditions continue another six\nyears, Europeans here will no longer\nhave capable black servants, a native woman leader told the town\ncouncil.\n\u2022 PAGE FIVE\n40,000 SOLDIERS, SAILORS AND\nAIRMEN OF EMPIRE TO LINE THE\nROUTE OF (0R0NATI0N PARADE\nBuildings to Be Floodlit; State Coach 176\nYears Old, Being Renovated; Official\nProgram Available by April 23\nBy I. NORMAN SMITH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Jan. 28, (CP)\u2014The\nImmensity of the coronation preparations Is staggering. Each day\nbrings a new scheme, a new problem. And each day brings May 12\ncloser. Londoners are beginning to\nwonder what they're In for.\nThe scope of the plans Is boundless. There have been countless\nannouncements.\nSummarized, the more recent\nones look like this: Sixty thousand soldiers, sailors and airmen\nfrom all over the empire to line\ntht route. They'll be camped In\neight London parks, free of the\npublic. Colonial and dominion\ntroops will be quartered In central\nbarracks so they can go sightseeing.\nTwenty-five special trains will\nbring Scottish visitors, 35 from the\nMidlands, 22 from Lancashire and\nYorkshire and two from North\nWales. Underground trains will run\nnight and day with special exits\nbeing built. Great liners will moor\nin the Thames, packed in the funnels for two weeks.\nHistoric edifices and principal\ngovernment buildings will be floodlit and private and commerckil\nhouse are preparing suitable lighting features. The London Associated\nElectricity Undertakings will make\nno charge for installation of supplementary points during the coronation period, and electricity on public buildings is to be provided free.\nThe State coach is which the King\nand Queen will drive to Westminster abbey is being re-guilded and\nrenovated. It Is 176 years old, in\ngood running order. This will be\nthe first time it has been completely\nre-guilded.\nThe 32-page official program,\nmore than 500,000 of which have\nalready been ordered, Is to be completed in time to.be mailed to all\nparts of the empire. They'll cost\n50 cents, may be available April 23,\nand will Include portraits, description of the coronation service, an\nIntroduction by tha Archbishop of\nCanterbury and a coronation ode\nby John Masefield, the poet laureate.\nHon. G. M. Weir Is\nlo Talk Health\nInsurance Here\nHon. G. M. Weir, minister of education to the provincial government,\nwill address a public meeting In\nGelinas hall Wednesday evening.\nHa will speak on the new British\nColumbia Health Insurance act, and\non educational affairs.\nThe meeting will be at 8:30, following a Nelson board of trade banquet which the minister is to address.\nR. Smillie will be chairman of the\npublic meeting.\nRECIPES\nMENUS\nand\nHINTS\nBy\nMrs.\nMary\nMorton\nGood\nHousekeeping\nMENU HINT\nCheese and Rice Souffle\nMolded Tomato Salad\nButtered Cauliflower\nSteamed  Suet Pudding\nTea or Coffee\nThey say you can't fall with the\ncheese and rice souffle.   It os fool\nproof.   It is a nice substitute from\nthe usual meat and potatoes, too.\nIn the suet pudding I have generally found using one-half cup molasses  and  one-half  cup  sugar   is\npreferable to all molasses.   This Is\nmy own individual preference, however.\nCHEFSE- AND RICE SOUFFLE.\n\u2014One and one-half cups cooked\nrice, one and one-halt cups white\nsauce, three eggs, one-righth teaspoon baking soda, one and one-\nfourth cups American cheese (put\nthrough food chopper), salt, paprika. Season white sauce highly with\npaprika, then add cheese; stir constantly until melted; turn into rice.\nBeat egg yolk, stir in cheese mex-\nture, and then fold in whites beaten\nstiff. Put mixture into well-oiled\nbaking dish, set in pan of hot water\nand bake in moderate oven (350\ndegrees F) for about 30 minutes.\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nSTEAMED SUET PUDDING.-\nOne cup molasses, one cup milk,\nthree cups flour, one cup raisins,'\nseeded, one cup suet, chopped fine;\none teaspoon soda. Add suet and\nraisins lo flour and mix thoroughly.\nDissolve soda in little hot water,\nadd to milk. Pour milk and molasses into dry ingredients and stir\nwell. Grease mold, pour batter into\nmold, cover tightly and steam three\nhours. For sauce, cream one cup\nbutter and two cups sugar and a\nbeaten egg, add a wine glass of\nfruit juice or flavor with your favorite flavoring. Scald in double\nboiler, stirring constantly. Turn\npudding onto platter, slice and serve j\nwith sauce.\nPattullo May Not\nGo to Coronation\nVICTORIA, Jan. 28 (CP).-WhUe\nno definite arrangements have been\nmade one way or another, it now\nappears unlikely that British Columbia will bt represented at the\ncoronation of King George VI by\nIts premier, Informed provincial\nsources said today.\nAccording to the understanding\nhere, formal Invitations to the coronation will not bt issued to provincial premiers. Such invitations\nare tantamount to a royal command\nto attend and this Is not the desire\nof the King. However, the province has been advised that seats will\nbe reserved in Westminster Abbey\nfor premiers of the provinces who\nwish to be present.\n\"EVERY WOMAN\nFACES THIS QUESTION\nHow do I look to other people?\nSo many women risk their beauty\nby neglect of constipation. It often\ncauses loss of pep, (allow skins,\ndull eyes, poor complexions.\nYet common constipation can be\nended so easily. Just eat two table-\nspoonfuls of Kellogg's AU^Bran\nwith milk or fruits every day. three\ntimes daily in severe cases. This delicious ready-to-eat cereal supplies\nthe \"bulk\" needed to exercise the\nsystem\u2014and vitamin B to help tone\nup the intestinal tract.\nWithin the body, ALb-BHAN absorbs more than twice Its weight in\nwater, gently sponging out the intestines. It never causes the artificial action of pills and drugs, that\noften prove Ineffective.\nKellogg's AU\/-BSAN, you see, is\na food\u2014not a medicine. It relievea\ncommon constipation the way Nature intended\u2014\u00abo its results are safe.\nBuy it at your grocer's. Made and\nguarantied by Kellogg in London.\n(Advt.)\nTODAY1\nPIJ'H\n.aUtaAk CAM.\nMlNffllir\n1 cup Rogers' Golden Syrup\n3 eggs\n1 tablespoon melted butter\nNutmeg\n1 lemon\nAdd the syrup, lemon Juice, grated\nrind, nutmeg and melted but-\nto the three well beaten\n:.   Bake in baked pastry\nshell until done.\nFrom\nEast to West...\nOf the Southern Interior of British Columbia come pictures and stories\u2014The twain\nshall meet in the best yet, 36 page\nPictorial Edition\nOF THE\nNelson Daily News\nSaturday, |anuarv 30th\nOrder Copies in Advance to Send to Your Relatives and Friends\n\u2014\t\n\t\n\t\n nptpwwwfppspiiinpi\nMGESIX-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B. C.-TUESDAY MORNING, JAN. 26, 1937,\nSMamt Saihj Netua\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most interesting Newspapc\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthc NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British \u2022\u25a0 Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All bepartments.\n\u2014I\t\nMember   of   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe    Canadian    Press    Leased    Wire    News    Service.\nTUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1937.\nTHE ESLING HOUSING PLAN\nNelson's new city council will no doubt give consideration to the suggestion which was made recently by W.\nK. Esling, M.P. for Kootenay West, with regard to financing new construction of homes.\nThe matter is one of first importance. Nelson, in common with many other cities, is lacking in adequate housing\naccommodation. Ask any real estate man, and he will tell\nof the difficulties in finding houses available for rent, or,\nfor that matter, for purchase.\nAll this is a good sign. It indicates the substantial\ngrowth of the community, which is due chiefly to improvements in mining, industrial and other activities in\nthe surrounding district. There is every reason for supposing that the present housing shortage will become more\nacute, rather than less acute. Nelson has never been overbuilt.\nThe Dominion government has taken two courses of\naction designed to provide for easy financing of construction of new homes, and for repairs and improvements to\nexisting property. The two schemes should not be confused.\nFor the housing scheme the federal government passed a\nbill providing for loans up to $10,000,000 by the government, plus an additional $40,000,000 by financial institutions such as insurance and trust companies. This scheme\nis a good one, but it has proved unworkable insofar as the\nsmall cities are concerned. No trust company feels that it\ncan afford at the 5 per cent rate of interest called for to\ngo to the expense of maintaining valuers, appraisers, collectors and all the rest of it in more than a few of the large\ncities in which such organizations are already established,\nThus, in British Columbia, no loans have been made as far\nas is known excepting in Vancouver.\nThe plan for financing improvements is dealt with\nthrough the banks, with federal government backing. It is\nworking out well and will become even more popular when\nthe spring building season commences.\nMr. Esling has evidently been giving a good deal of\nthought to the housing question. He sees that the present\nfederal government scheme for housing loans is not working out insofar as the smaller cities are concerned.\nHe therefore suggests that cities, such as Nelson,\nwhich are in strong financial position, should go to the\nlarge lending bodies, such as the insurance companies, and\nborrow money from them at 3 per cent, for the specific\npurpose of providing for housing loans. Then the cities\ncould relend at 5 per cent and cover their expenses by the\ndifference of 2 per cent. The plan would appear to be entirely feasible and, where carried out, it should result in\na lot of new construction.\nSuch new construction would solve the housing problem, but it would also provide much work directly for carpenters, plumbers, electricians, concrete workers, laborers,\netc., as well as for those engaged in the lumber, cement,\nmetalware and scores of other industries which supply materials required in home construction.\nIn the case of Nelson, the city might either arrange\nfor such a loan from one of the big insurance companies,\nsuch money to be used only for new home construction, or\nit might lend up to some definite limit out of its current\nrevenue. Possibly in this way, though expenses would\nhave to be considered, it might net a better rate than it\ncan net on other investments.\nThe Esling plan certainly looks attractive and should\nreceive a thorough canvassing as to its application to cities\nin Kootenay where there are unfilled housing needs.\nBETWEEN\n*\u2666\nA TEAR FOR THE ONION\nFew of the chief intellectual developments in the United States pass\nentirely unnoticed among the more\nthoughtful sections of the British\npublic, remarks the Christian .Science Monitor. It is therefore only\nnatural that the reported establishment in Kalamazoo, Michigan, of the\nOnion Anti-Defamation society\nshould have provoked considerable\ncomment in those London circles\nwhich keep themselves abreast of\nthe main trends of modern thought,\nRobert Louis Stevenson, one commentator recalls, maintained that\nthe onion ranks with the truffle and\nthe nectarine In the chief place of\nhonor amongst the world's fruit.\"\nOn the, other side of the Atlantic,\nOliver Wendell Holmes called it \"a\ncommunicative and companionable\nvegetable, with a real genius for\nsoup,\" and Herodotus says that the\nPyramids were built on it, Moreover, to \"know one's onions\" is proverbially a sign of wisdom.\nWith such authoritative opinion\nactive in its behalf, the onion may\nwonder at the anxiety which the\nKalamazoo society feels for it.\n\u2022   *   *\nSHE MISSED THE CHEERS\nImperious Princess Elizabeth, 10-\nyear-old heiress to the British throne\nhas to be curbed every now and\nagain.\nOne day she was with Queen\nMary in one of the larger stores of\nLondon. Every so often the little girl\nwould plead: \"Grandma, please\nhurry.\" Finally Queen Mary asked\nwhy the child was in such a rush.\nElizabeth replied: \"There are lots of\npeople waiting outside to cheer me!\"\nAghast at such a reply, Queen Mary\nacted like the sensible person she\nis and had the child sent home\nthrough a back door.\n\"aunt het\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nBASEBALL IN ENGLAND\nA British sports writer, reviewing the sporting events\nof 1936 in and around London, sees the possibility of baseball becoming a serious rival over there to cricket. He\nrefers to a major baseball league formed there nearly two\nyears ago, and to a famous game played last summer between the Catford Saints and the Harringay team. The\nstart of the game is referred to as the \"pitch-off,\" and it\nis interesting to note that the players included two university graduates, a champion wrestler, a champion swimmer, a boxer, and several farmers and students.\nThe writer's prediction that baseball will rapidly gain\nin popularity in England may be fully justified. But\nthose who left the old land for this country a generation\nor so ago may have some doubt. To them it will seem that\nthere are three prejudices to be overcome before baseball\nbecomes really popular in England.\nOne of these is the fact that baseball is the national\nsummer game of the United States. Of course blood is\nthicker than water and all that, and British and United\nStates statesmen are never more eloquent than when\napostrophizing. Anglo-American friendship, hands-across-\nthe-sea, and the common bond of language and tradition.\nBul those who lived in England thirty years ago can still\nhear the Englishman saying, \"But it's from America, isn't\n; it?'' He could impart a lot of pity into that question \u2014\n\u25a0 thirty years ago.\nThe second difficulty is the \"uniform\" which baseball\nplayers appear to be obliged to wear. It is, without doubt,\nthe least attractive costume ever devised for a field game.\nThe average Britisher still has some regard for aesthetic\nconsiderations, as witness the' doggedness with which he\nwill defend natural beauty or denounce an outlandish statue. Could he come to tolerate those baseball uniforms?\nThe third trouble is the British attitude toward an\n10 YEARS AGO   I\nProm Nelsen Dally News Files\n\u2022> *\nJanuary 26, 1927\n.  Mrs. J. H. Thorn of Appledale is\na guest at the Savoy.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. W. Ryans of Silver-\nton are visiting in town.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJ. Foy of Procter is at the New\nGrand.\n\u2022 .   \u2022  >\nW. 0. Miller, former division superintendent, has left Nelson for the\ncoast.\naa    \u2022    \u2022\nMr. aind Mrs. T. E. Higginbotham\nhave returned from a visit to Calgary.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThe Fairview juniors swamped\nthe high school hockey sextet 6-2\nin a fast, clean exhibition at the\nrink yesterday. The teams were:\nFairview\u2014G. Hancock, goal; R.\nSt. Denis and A. Ringrose, defense;\nH. Chapman, W. Lauritz, H. Roth-\nery and Ed Water, forwards. High\nschool\u2014R. Renwick, goal; J. MacDonald, H. Farenholtz, S. Genest,\ndefense; F. Farenholtz, Carl and\nCecil Ramsden, R. McLeod and P.\nMcLean, forwards.\n.   .   *\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs. 0. S. Newell\nof Salmo on January 24, a son.\n\u2022 *    aa\nPlans for the new nurses' home to\nbe built at a cost estimated at $30,\n000 have been completed by Alex\nCarrie, Nelson architect, and will\nbe submitted to the public works\ndepartment at Victoria. If they are\nsatisfactory, tenders on the new\nproject will be in order.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nPOLITICAL PROPAGANDA\n(By *\u2022 t.\nA PASSED OUT HAND\nThe other evening I played\nin a duplicate game, with Donald\nMacKay, who sat North at the\ntable where West dealt the hand\nshown below. Only North and\nSouth were vulnerable. Messrs,\nJ. K. Fraser and C. S. Fettretch\nwere our opponents. At nearly all\ntables the hand was passed out, as\nno player has a really sound opening call.\nA A Q 10 6\nf 82\n4Q542\n*KJ7\nN.\nM\ns.\n4.J5\n?AQ,3\n+ J 10 8 7\n\u2666 9\u00ab*\n474 a2\nf K J 10 \u00bb\n75\n\u2666 K\n*<-\n20 YEARS AGO\nFrom Nelson Dally News Files\n1917\n\"I don't know anything more\naggravatin' than to be quarrelin' at\na man after you go to bed at night\nand hear him start snorin'.\"\nDUCK HUNTERS HAVE KICK\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP) -\nDuck hunters are complaining that\npersons working at night by flashlight are scaring the ducks away\nfrom Rice Lake and the Otonobec\nriver, spoiling the sport.\nJanuary 26,\nThe Grand challenge and the\nTrail cup competitions in the bonspiel were played to a finish today, and in both, the winners were\nNelson men. Guthrie winning the\nformer   trophy   and   Hodgson   the\nlatter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. T. Laurie of Castlegar has forwarded the Daily News $11.25, the\nproceeds of a dance held there for\nthe Red Cross society,\n* .   .\nCapt. Hamilton, medical officer\nfor the Kootenay battalion at the\nfront, is on bis way home after\nhaving been injured by a motor\nlorry, according to word received\nby Mrs. John Hamilton of Nelson.\nCapt. Laurie went through the battles of the Somme without a scratch\nand was injured after the battalion\nwent Into rest billets.\n\u00bb    a,   *\nLONDON\u2014Over 300 were killed\nin an explosion of a munitions factory of East London January 19.\nWhat formerly was the site of the\nfactory is described as a Nhole\nhundred yards across and 80 feet\ndeep, with masses of iron, earth'and\nwreckage covering an area of over\nsix acres around its edges.\n\u00bb   .   *\nSTRATHROY, Ont.-The largest\nfire in several years wiped out several stores, in the Queen's hotel\nblock here causing damage estimated at $60,000.\n\/>K98\nAAS6S\n4A10068\nAs often is the case in duplicate,\na few bidders thought the hand\nsheuld not be passed out. It was\ninteresting to note the few variations from a neutral score. One\nSouth player made an opening bid\nof 1-Club. West overcalled with\n1-Heart and North bid 1-Spade.\nWhen East jumped into 4-Hearts,\nSouth bid 4-Spades. That yeilded\ntop score.\nThe opening lead was the K of\nhearts. That ended trick taking\nfor the defenders. Seeing the lone\nheart in dummy, East shifted to a\nclub lead. Declarer's K captured\nWest's Q. Dummy ruffed declarer's last heart. Four rounds of\nwinning trumps were taken, picking up all opposing spades. Then\nthe remaining four club tricks\nwere run. On the last two of these\ndeclarer let go two diamonds.\nDummy's Ace of diamonds was\nled. Il caught East's bare K. Declarers Q of diamonds completed\nfor him the small slam made, but\nwhich could not be bid,\nBy guessing which way to play\nclubs to pick up the five missing\ntrumps, South could have made\n5-Odd. He must have lost a single\nheart. Having exhausted trumps\nhe could have run off four spade\ntricks. On the last of these declarer would have discarded one of\nhis diamonds. The Ace of dia\nmonds would then have caught\nEast's singletin K. After that\ndummy's Q would have won the\neleventh trick, but one diamond\ntrick still had to be given West,\nClubs were decidedly inferior to\nspades as trumps.\nOne East player, third hand,\ndecided that fourth hand doubtless\nwould bid, so East put in a semi-\npsychic call of 1-Heart. South\novercalled with 2-Clubs. West went\n2-Hearts. North bid 2-Sapdes, -East\ndecided to risk 3-Hearts, South\nthen bid 3-Spades, but when West\nventured 4-Hearts, both defenders\nThere are approximately 615,000\nacres of orange ann grapefruit-bearing trees in the United States, and\n127,000 acres of trees not yet of\nbearing age.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letters to the editor must be signed with the name of the\nwriter.  A nom de plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines in typewritten copy should be double spaced.\nRESERVOIR POOR\nSUBSTITUTE FOR\nWATER SITUATION\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014On January 14 you kindly\nprinted an expression of my views\nregarding the proposed expenditure\non waterworks improvements in the\ncity of Nelson and on that date the\ntaxpayers voted by a large majority\nin favor of an expenditure of $75,000\non the system thereby showing their\nearnest desire for improvement of\nexisting conditions.\nThe present water situation has\ngiven emphasis to what I tried to\nconvey in my previous letter, the\ndesirability of expending that part\nof the total amount raised by bylaw\nnot required for necessary improve\nment to the distribution system in\nobtaining other sources of supply\nrather than in building an artificial\nreservoir on our present system. I\nhave been informed on good authority that the hydraulic engineer on\nwhose advice the reservoir proposed\nwas adopted did not have the possibility of an additional source of\nsupply brought to his attention, and\nhad this been done, his recommendation would probably have been\nquite different.\nIs it to much to hope that our\nnew council will not give this feature of our water problem serious\nconsideration before making an expenditure of $41,000 on a reservoir\nwhich surely Is a poor substitute\nfor an additional and dual source of\nsupply.\n-REGISTERED   PROPERTY\nOWNER    \u25a0\numpire, and toward an opposing team or player. The British will never get the full flavor of baseball as long as they\ngreet an umpire's decision with a remark, \"Oh, no, sir;\"\nor a fumble on the part of the home team pitcher with,\n\"Hard luck, sir;\" or a hit by an opposing batter with\n\"Well played, sir.\"\nBut, of course, the Englishman may have changed a\nbit in the last thirty years.\nCompared with having the deal\npass out, the heart bidder lost\npoints, as he lost two .tricks in\nspades, one trick in diamonds and\ntwo tricks in clubs, .puUing him\ndown two tricks. As compared\nwith allowing North to play game\nat spades, this East player did well.\n\u00bb-\n,   30 YEARS AGO   I\nI From Nelson Dally News Flies I\nJanuary 26, 1907\nJ. Y. Cockle of Kaslo addressed\nthe meeting of the B. C. Fruit\nGrowers association in Nelson on\nthe subject of injurious and beneficial insects.\nPARIS. Jan. 23-The cold Weather\nthat hit eastern Europe extended\nwestward to France and the mecury\nhas reached a low of 17 degrees below zero. The river Seine and the\nlakes in the parks have been frozen\nand Parisians are enjoying the unusual sport of outdoor skating.\nIn his flamboyant autobiography,\n-Mem Kampf\" (My Struggle), Herr\nHitler says, 'Through smart and\ncontinuous application of propaganda, a people can be made to\nbelieve, that Heaven is hell, and\nvice versa, that the most miserable\nexistence Is a paradise.\" In later\neditions this passage has been deleted as being too pointedly offensive to the German people. The Herr\nReichs-fuhrer (an apter title would\nbe Zwietrachtsschurer, formenter\nof discord) means of course political\npropaganda, \"that modern hocus-\npocus by which conscience sjid\nreason are lulled to sleep so that\nthe forces of rampant violence may\nswarm Into bludgeoning reality.'\nWherever this method is employed\nin that way, one does well to be\non one's guard. According to\nold saying, \"Good ale needs no\nbush,' that is to draw attention to\nthe inn where really good ale Is\noffered for sale. In like manner, I\nthe truth stands in no need of\npropaganda in order to make its\nown way amongst those whom it\nconcerns. I am fully convinced, as\nthe result of my reading of human\nhistory, that sooner or later the\ntruth always does prevail, and it\nalways will, Behind all propaganda,\nespecially propaganda that is dictatorial, despotic, jealous of its own\nauthority, one may suspect the intention to deceive, and deep down\nbeneath all the clamour and glamour, the poison of egostistical purpose and self-seeking.\nPolitical propaganda is nearly\nalways inspired by the dual motives\n\u2014(1) the desire to conceal unwelcome truth, or divert attention\nfrom it, and (2) the ladling out of\ndoses, often big doses, of falsehood,\ngenerally spiced with flattery of\nthose to whom it is administered.\nIt is also to be remembered that a\ngreat deal of so-called social propaganda is at bottom, nothing else\nbut political propaganda. If we may\nbelieve newspaper reports of the\ntime, Mr. Aberhart, soon after assuming the premiership of Alberta,\ntold the University club ot Ottawa,\nthat each year 4,000,000 gallons of\nmilk are poured down the sewers,\nwhilst children are crying for\nfood. \"Who is your authority for\nthat, Mr. Aberhart?\" he was asked,\n\"The dean of Canterbury,\" he replied, \"But did the dean mean down\nEnglish sewers or Canadian?\" \"Well,\nreally, I do not know,\" confessed\nthe premier of Alberta. There are\nnot a few propagandists of the\nAberhart tyije going up and down\nthe world seeking whom they may\nmislead. Most of them travel a narrow path and avoid looking to\nthe right or left, lest their eyes\nfall upon what they don't wish to\nsee.\nAs regards' Hitler's dictum, it requires little reflection to preceive\nthat propaganda engineered by him\ncovers a diversity of meanings and\nobjects, especially when you throw\nupon it the lurid light of his public\nactions and policies. One thing is\ncertainly implicate in it. Der Fuhrer\narrogates to himself the sole right\nto formulate public opinion in\nGermany, if there is such a thing\nthere, and the ability to mold it\nfor what he interprets as the welfare of the German people, 67\nmillions of them. In his own estimation, his wisdom is superior to the\nwisdom and innate sagacity of them\nall. He suffers no contradictory or\nantagonistic opinion to exist for a\nsingle instant beside his own. To\ngive utterance to views at variance\nwith those of Adolf Hitler Is to\nexpose oneself to a term In a forced\nlabor camp, or to punishment even\nmore drastic. In a new penal code\npromulgated in November 1938, one\nclause runs to the effect, that assaults on German honor, especially\nverbal attacks on Herr Hitler, are\nto be punished by a term of imprisonment with hard labor.\nHitler alone by simple proclamation determines the internal policies of the reich (empire), and\nshapes its relations with other\ncountries. He has virtually abolished\nparliamentary government. The\nreichstag is nothing more than a\nrubber stamp, called together at\nrare intervals merely to confirm,\nat command, the fuhrer's sovereign\nBealby)\nedicts. For the just and impartial\nadministration of the law which is\nthe practice in all free, democratic,\nself-governing countries, he substitutes the autocratic authority of\nhis own arbitrary will. Indeed, for\ndemocratic government of the\npeople by the people for the people,\nhe has publicly and purposely expressed his withering contempt.\nThe aim and object of his policy\nis to make his countrymen virtually\nslaves of his despotic will, only of\nas regards physical services, but\nwholly so as regards the higher\nfunctions of mental energy and\nwill-power. It is slavery of the spirit more than slavery of brawn and\nmuscle, and consequently more\ncorroding, more degrading. He\ntreats the people as though they\nwere careless children, ignorant\nand stupid, who cannot be trusted\nto walk across the road without\ngrandmotherly guidance. Freedom\nof opinion, of speech, of religion,\nof the press, of public meeting, as\nwell as other normal liberties of\nthe free, democratic citizen, are\nrigidly forbidden and uncompromisingly suppressed. In order to\nstamp out these freedoms, the\nFuhrer sticks at nothing, as was\ndemonstrated on June 30, 1934, in\nthe case of General von Roehme\nand General von Schleicher, who\nwere assassinated without pretence\nof a trial on suspicion of setting up\nopposition to Hitler's rule.\nThe following tidbit of popular\nwit indicates what is thought of\nthe character of Hitler's rule. An\nunemployed man, anaemic-looking\nand manifestly hungry, stopped at\na street-corner to take up another\nnotch in his belt. \"You, what are\nyou doing there?\" cried a Nazi\nmilitiaman arrogantly. \"Nothing,\nworthy sir. I am only having my\nbreakfast.\"\nHitler, addressing some half-a-\nmillion Bavarian peasant farmers\non the 4th of October, last, said.\n\"If ever in Germany the harvest\nyield drops as much as 20 per cent,\nit will spell catastrophe for the\nnation. People cannot be allowed\nto determine for themselves either\nwhat their wages shall be or what\nprices they shall receive for their\nproducts. You as peasants must not\nsay, \"We will go on strike, we will\nnot deliver any more milk in the\ntowns.\" You must not say, \"What\ndo we care about the town-dwellers? What are they to us?\" Nor\nmust the workers say, \"What do\nwe care about other classes of\npeople We care only about ourselves.\" Already the German people\nare being rationed as in war-time\nfor butter, bacon, fats and lard,\nand the restaurants are borbidden\n\u2014oh! that blessed word\u2014verboten!\n\u2014to serve more than two or three\nkinds of food at one meal, so that\nwaste may be avoided. Cannon and i\ntanks, air-planes and battle-ships\nare much more important than food\nfor the people. It is not without\nsignificance, that the average income per head of population dropped in Germany from $296 in 1929\nto $212.50 in 1931.\nALPHABETICAL\nIMPRESSIONS\nOF NELSON\nTO A\nPRAIRIE VISITOR\nBy M. HARNSON MANEY\nof La Fleche, Sask.\nX FOR X-CEPT\nExcept you read about Nelson, yl\nwill not have read about the pretfc\nest little city in British Columbia*\nExcept you come in person to N|\nson, you will not have gotten\ninspiration  of its -setting, nor j\nlieve half the story you may ha|\nheard or read.\nExcept you live in Nelson you \\\nnot have reaped many benefits!\nbe derived from its wonderful\ncation,  its  moderate  climate\ndiversified interest\nLive in Nelson!\nCalifornia raises about 3000\nof dates in a year.\nF0R MINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall mining and other\ncamp buildings. They\nare strong, water-\nproof, light and very\neasy to handle.\nDistrict Distributors\nWood, Vallanco\nHardware Co., Ltd.,\n\"BUILD B. C. PAYROLLS\"\nWhen\nLogic\nChooses\nIt's when you take thought st\nlogic makes compariMn th\nPacific Milk proves up. Whe\nthe milk has been packed in yc\nthink of the labor; note how fi\nthe milk goes; coujit the actui\ndays each case lasts, observe tt\nactual value meal by meal eac\ncase gives; the comparison conu\nbefore you. You prefer Pacifl\nYou can't nelp it. It's logic\nchoice.\nPacific Milk'\nIrradiated of Course\nAttention!\nReaders\nA local B. C. board has been appointed for the Ymir Mine company\nat the annual meeting in London,\nconsisting of S. C. Fowler, M.E.,\nchairman; R. S. Lennie, barrister;\nand B. A. Isaac of the Nelson Iron\nWorks.\nThe following is the line up of\nthe Nelson hockey team that will\nmeet Rossland in a match tomorrow;\nH. Bishop, goal; R. Sharp, point;\nL. Steel, cover; E. Bishop, rover;\nA. Bishop, center; J. Thompson, left\nwing and M. Clunis, right wing.\n\u2022   *   *\nRich free*milling gold ore has\nbeen shipped from the Kootenay\nBelle property near Salmo that average about $110.83 a ton. The owners are Messrs. Bennet, Billings\nand Drummond of Nelson, who recently bonded their holding to a\nSpokane party of mining men,\nervice\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nSCRAPBOOK\n\"Have you found out that nature\nis always talking to you. especially\nwhen you are alone, though she\nhas not thc gift of articulate\nspeech?\"\u2014Emerson.\n.   \"Nothing   is   more\nsilence,\"\u2014Menander.\nuseful   than\n\"If people would confine their\ntalks to subjects that are profitable, that which St. John informs\nus took place once in heaven, would\nhappen very frequently on earth-\nsilence for the space of half an\nhour.\"\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\n\"Better far the silent tongue, but\nthe eloquent deed.\"\u2014S. Smiles.\nClassified\nor\nNelson Dally News\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Ceo. McManm\nAND THE 0*ay y-XJR <-aOU9N tHOW-\nDER* FOUND OUT THOT EACH TIME\nNOU HAD A TOOTH PUl_l_ED-THE\nDENTIST (SAVE YOU A DRINK- HE\nCAME HOME WITHOUT A TOOTH-\nWAS YOUR AUNT'S FACE RED.-\nSOWAS HIS NOSE-\n=,WHEN TH' \u00a9IS DEPARTfaAENTa=**c*1\nSTORE J--UT AN ELEVATOR IN-\n...\n ijmiKiu.i-n.il i.\n1 ' Ul '-\u2014\n\"WPUi\nWi^PW-.'ipiPP'i|ll\u00bb'L.W^|Ui\n101\nI   \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0     i \u25a0 i i \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0a\nHOPES TO OUST\nCANADIANS OUT\nOF (HI. HOCKEY\nCHICAGO, Ja:i, 25 (AP)-Unl-ed\nStates boys will be fighting all of\nChicago's National league battles\nwithin the next two years, the man\nwho pays the bills of tl.e city's present NHL team said tonight.\nStarting by announcing his club,\nthe Black Hawks, will become Chicago \"Yankees\" next season, Major\nFrederic McLaughlin, stirred by\nthe team's poor showing this season,\nmade known plans for throwing off\n\u2022the traditional Canadian Influence\nover the ice game as it is played In\nChicago,\nBy the time the 1938-39 season\nrolls around, McLaughlin said, there\nwill be only native-born Americans\non the Yankee battlefroni.\nThese puckchasinc Yankees will\nbe developed in a \"hockey factory\"\nalready in operation, to displace the\nCanadian born and trained players\nwho now dominate thc club, he added.\n\"IMPROBABLE\", 8AY8\nPATRICK\nNEW YORK, Jan. 23 (CP)-Un-\ntil male babies of the United States\nadopt the Canadian habit of cutting\ntheir teeth on a hockey stick, Lester Patrick doesn't believe Major\nFrederic McLaughlin of Chicago\nwill have much success in organizing a native American team capable\nof conducting National league warfare.\nTh* New York \"Napoleon\" of the\n.Ice game and the chieftain of New\nYork Rangers said tonight he believed the announced plan of the\nChicago Black Hawks boss \"highly\ncommendable.\" But, he added hurriedly, \"I also think it is highly improbable he can carry it out.\"\nN.H.L. STATISTICS\nOfficial Standing:\nCanadian Division\nP W L DF A P\nCanadiens  28 16   9   3 79 60 35\nMontreal  30 10 13   7 61 68 27\nToronto   27 11 14   2 68 69 24\n\u25a0Americans     28   8 18   4 64 85 20\nU.S. Division\nDetroit   29 17   7   5 75 57 39\nRangers  28 13 10   5 68 56 31\nBoston    27 13 10   4 71 69 30\nChicago   29   7 18   6 42 64 20\nScoring leaders:\nCanadian Dlvlilon\n(P'\u2014Penalties in Minutes)\nG   A   P   P'\nSchriner, Amns   12   16   28   15\nGagnon, Cdns  13   13   26   12\nH. Jackson, Tor   12   13   25    8\nChapman,  Amns\nJoliath,   Cdns   \t\nGracie, Mtl  '....   6\nWard, Mtl  12\nCarr, Mns   12\nApps, Tor     8\nRobinson, Mtl 11\nMorenz, Cdns     4   14   18\nDrillon, Tor \t\nWiseman, Amns\nAnderson, Amns     7\nBlake, Cdns     7\nCain, Mtl     7\nDesilets, Cdns     6\nSiebert, Cdns     5   10   15   28\nMaynes, Cdns     3   12   15   20\nMetz, Tor     8\nLepine, Cdns     7\nMantha, Cdns    6\nKHGOT\n%hdrlem:hder\n%i\\\u00bb 51a Instructor\nMethod of applying\u2014fint In dabi,\nthen smooth out with ball of thl\nhand.\n6   17   23 14\n12   10   22 22\n16   22 14\n9   21 28\n9   21 12\n11   19 8\n7   18 13\n12\n17 0\n17 10\n16 18\n15 4\n15 12\n15 13\n8    9\n23-APPLICATION   OF   SKI   WAX\nThe first step is to thoroughly\nrub down the running surface of\nthe ski with fine steel wool. This\nis particularly necessary with new\nskis to rembvi the varnish or\nshellac, applied by the manufacturers, if this is not done, the ski\nwax will not impregnate the wood.\nWax should be applied whenever\npossible indoors in a moderate temperature and the skis should be\nthoroughly dry,\nBASE WAX-If a solid or semisolid base was is to be used, it can\nbe applied first In small dabs over\nthe running surface and well up\nto the points. It is then spread out\nand rubbed in with a ski cork or\npiece of leather until the whole\nsurface is covered with an even\nlayer. It may be rubbed both ways\nfrom to to heel and the reverse\nand rubbing should continue until\nno lumps or dabs of wax remain\nand the surface is smooth.\nRUNNING WAX-Determine.the\nsnow conditions and select the\nproper wax as outlined in the last\narticle. Semi-solid wax is applied\nin dabs and a solid wax is rubbed\non over the ski surface. The wax\nis then thoroughly distributed in an\neven layer by stroking firmly with\nski cork or leather from toe to heel\nof the ski. Generally speaking, it\nis not advisable to rub in running\nwax from toe to heel although with\nsome waxes this is permissable.\nIf ski cork or leather is .not\navailable the ball of the hand may\nbe used to rub in and to smoothen\nthe wax as shown in the illustration.\nNext\u2014Carrying ikls\n14   17\n13   13\n13\nConacher, Mtl     3   10   13\nStewart, Bost-Amn 8    4   12   11\nNorthcott, Mtl  6    6   12   14\nTrottier, Mtl   7    4   11   25\nThorns, Tor   6    4   10   14\nMarker, Mtl   5    4    9   12\nDavidson, Tor  4    5    9   22\nHorner, Tor   3    5    8   64\nAmerican Division a\nAurie, Det   17   12   29    9\nBarry, Det  8   19   27    6\nLewis, Det   12   10   22   10\nN. Colville, Rngr  9   12   21   31\nCowley, Bost   9   12   21    0\nDillon, Rngrs    \u25a0 13    6   19    6\nGetliffe, Bost   9    9   18   28\nPatrick, Rngrs     5   12   17   18\nWatson, Rngrs  5   12   17   12\nSands, Bost  10\nGoodfellow, Dot  5\nSorrell Det   4\nKeeling. Rngrs   12\nHowe. Det   9\nThompson, Chi  5\nShibicky, Rngrs   8\nBruneteau, Det  7\nClapper, Bost,.  6\nPettinger, Det   5\nGottselig, Chi   4\n\u2022Boucher, Rngrs   3\nBrydson, Chi\nBeattie, Bost ...\nM. Colville, Rngrs\nMarch, Chi   .\nGoldsworthy, Bost\nSmith, Bost \t\nSeibert, Chi\n15\n10 15 33\n10 14 4\n1 13 10\n4 13 8\n8 13 28\n4 12 24\n5 12 16\n6 12 14\n7 12 9\n8 12 6\n9 12 5\n11 16\n11 16\n11 6\n9 1\n9 2\n8 30\n40\nEmery Rescues\nPanthers From\nLooming Defeat\nTurns Tide to Check\nFairview Midgets\nRunaway Game\nOn the short end of a surprising\n6-2 score at the end of the second\nperiod, the -Panther midgets appeared headed for their first loss of\nthe season, but with Bud Emery\nhurriedly summoned into thc lineup, the game took a different complexion, with the Panthers scoring\neight goals In the last session, while\nthe Fairview boys were only able\nto add one more to their total, the\nPanthers taking this third consecutive league win by a 10-7 score.\nEmery is the standout player ot\nthe three wins for the Panthers,\nhas scored 13 goals, and assisted on\nsix others, and has also shown up\nwell in two appearances with the\nPanther juveniles. While still within\nthe midget age limit, he is well capable of holding his own in faster\ncompany, and will no doubt leave\nthe midget ranks in the near future.\nTommy Cookson played a great\ngame in goal for thc Fairview team\nin the first two periods, but let a\nfew soft ones slip by in the wild\nthird period scoring spree, which\nsaw nine goals scored. Elmer Gel-\nBowling - Badminton - .Soccer - Hockey - Basketball - Wrestlmg - Boxing\nVeteran on tha let\n\u00a3folU0\nPAOE SEVEN.\nRugby - .Soccer - Curling - Skiing - Horse Racing\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C\u2014TUESftAY MORNING. JAN. tt, 1937.\n-PAGE SEVEN\nSHUT-OUT OVER\nF.A.C. BOOSTS\nPANTHER JUVES\nFive-goal Win Puts\nLead on Transfer\nto Six Points\nHolding the play Inside their opponents area the greater part of\nthe game, the Panther Juveniles\nhanded the F.A.C. juvenile team a\n5-0 trouncing Saturday evening to\nincrease their lead over the second\nplace Nelson Transfer team to tix\nin the Nelson juvenile hockey\nleague. The Panthers have won five\nstraight games, while the Nelson\nTransfer boys have won two and\nlost the same number. The F.A.C.\nteam ia at the bottom of the league\nwith five losses.\nEMERY READY BUT NOT USED\nBud Emery, leading scorer ot the\nPanther midgets, who has played\ntwo games with the Panther juvenile club, was in the Panther's box\nand in uniform during tha first and\nsecond periods, but was not used.\nSeveral midget players at the game,\nand some officials, declared that\nhis presence in 'the playing box In\nuniform constitutes his third game\nwith the juvenile league, and therefore bars him from further participation in midget ranks.\nThe F.A.C. players tried hard all\nthe way Saturday evening, but\nwere up against a much superior\nteam, and were outplayed most of\nthe way except for a few breakaways, only coming close to scoring\non a couple of occasions.\nOn their present form the Panthers, who are now being handled\nfrom the box by Stewle Paterson,\nare one of the strongest juvenile\nteams ever got together in Nelsort,\narid have several players In their\nranks who are great prospects.\nTWO PLAYERS HURT\nIN GAME\nTwo players received injuries in\nthe game. Horace Lapotate, husky\ndefenceman of the Fairview team,\ninjured his knee badly, and he may\nbe out of the game for the rest of\nthe season. Art Guscott, Panther\nforward, injured his head in thc\nlast period, but will be in uniform\nwithin a week, it is expected, although in bed Sunday.\nPlaying the entire 60 minutes on\ndefense, Victor Delpuppo and Roy\nBreeze played a smart game, and\nScott In goal had a few tbots to\nhandle. All the Panthers played\nwell, with Ray Burgess, Bob Rotter\nand Bill McCracken starring for the\nlosers. Only great goal tending by\nMcCracken saved the Fairview club\nfor a worse defeat\nSummary\u2014tost period\u2014(1) Pothers, Hooker, 3.11; (2) Panthers,\nBreeze, 7.52; (3) Panthers, Niven,\n(Younger) 17.13; penalties, Hooker\nand Rotter.\nSecond period \u2014 (4) Panthers,\nNiven, 3.48; penalties, Breeze.\nThird period \u2014 (5) Panthers,\nBreeze, 9.16; penalties, Breeze,\nThe teams were:\nPanthers\u2014Eslie Scott, Ken Vere,\nRoy Breeze, Victor Delpuppo, Keith\nYounger, Leslie Trainer, Frank\nSwerydo, Art Guscott, Jim Niven,\nAlbert Hooker.\nF.A.C\u2014Bill McCracken, Bob Andrews. Bob Rotter, Jerry Wallace,\nJoe Marapodi, Charlie Lindsay, Ray\nBurgess, Eddie Jacques, Floyd\nWaterer.\nTommy Bishop refereed.\ninas scored three goals for the winners.\nBert Ramsden was the scoring star\nof the game, with four goals for\nthe Fairview team.\nJack Morrison received a major\npenalty for hitting the judge of\nplay.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period:\n(1) Fairview, Ramsden; (2) Fair-\nview, Ramsden (Milne); (3) Fair-\nview, Art Matheson; (4) Panthers,\nFred Parks.\nNo penalties.\nSecond period:\n(5) Fairview. Milne; (6) Ramsden\n(Anderson); (7) Panthers, Gelinas\n(Cornftld); (8) Fairview, Maloney\n(Matheson.\nPenalties\u2014J. Morrison (5), Milne\n(2).\nThird period:\n(9) Panthers, Emery; (10) Panthers, Emery; (11) Fairview, Ramsden; '12) Panthers, Emery; (13)\nGelinas, (Emery); (14) Panthers,\nGelinas; (15) Panthers, Ball; (HI\nPanthers, Morrison (Gelinas); (17)\nPanthers, H. Breeze (Emery).\nTeams were:\nPanthers: Doug Blals, Jack Morrison, Leo McKinnon, Ted Cornfield, AH Ball, Dean Sheppard, H.\nBreeze, Elmer Gelinas, Fred Parks,\nStuart Mcintosh.\nF.A.C. Midgets: Tommy Cookson,\nJack Morgan, George Milne, Art\nMatheson, Cecil Maloney, Bert\nRamsden, Emmett Anderson, Reg\nNewel], G. Smith, Marvin Mclntyre,\nD. George,\nJimmy Ringrose refereed the game\nand Linus Morrison was Judge ot\nplay.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nrna->M,i iioird or,bv the Gov*rnm\u00abnt _ fif. J!iitoh_\u00a3oJun\"biaJ\nGigantic Lake Mead, the result\nof Boulder Dam, has no more effect\non the climate In its vicinity than a\npitcher of water would have in air-\nconditlonlng an auditorium, according to officials ot the U.S. bureau of\nreclamation,\nBOWLING THEM OVER\nBy MORT LINDSIV <\nA.B.C, Star and Instructor and\nCentral Press Canadian WrtUr\nWhile it Is true that the strike\nball la more Important to your\n\u2022core than the spare ball, lt Is\nalto true that spare bowling tails\ntor mote cart and science. And\nobviously, the bowler who would\ncompile a respectable score must\nbe able to get spares aa well at\nstrikes.\nOne of tha problems la shifting\nyour spot on the alley to meat a\nparticular spire. Some spares, df\ncourse, may be attacked just aa it\nyou were rolling for a strike. That\nIs whan the pins left standing arc\nIn the centra ot the alley.\nTRICKY COMBINATIONS\nBut when the combination la 4\nand 7, for instance; or 8 and 10,\non the right side of the allay; or\n9 and 10, on the right aide in tha\nback row\u2014or tiny other of a huh-\ndred and one different combinations, then you must do some figuring.\nThe average bowler, going for a\nstrike, finds his spot some six to\n10 Inches in bom tha right tide\nof the alley at the foul line. Now,\nwe'll say, the 4 and 7 bint are\nleft standing In a difficult spare.\nThe chances are that the bowler\nwill now move hit tppt to the\nright side as far as possible on the\nfoul line to gat the best possible\nangle for the straight hill that he\nrolls acron tha alley.\nIt the pint left standing are at\nthe extreme right of the alley, I'd\nadvise the average right-hand\nbowler to move his spot over about\nhalf way on tha foul Una and again\nattack with a straight ball.\nOne thing you should note tn\nspare bowling lt the row or rows\nin which the remaining pins are\nstanding. It they are in the back\nrow, you must allow for more distance than if the spare it tha 2\nor the 3.\nI have found many bowlers too\nambitious for their own good in\nspare bowling. They try almost\nImpossible combinations with the\nresult that they get no pin whatever.   When you have a 4-6 \"rail-\nRobert Somerville, above, who\nakipped a rink which Included his\nthree -ons in the B.C. bonspiel at\nTrail, is a veteran ot curling with\n42 years at the game. Here he it\nseen delivering a rock during the\n'aplel.\nJack Dempsey studies 4-8-7 split, and Mart Llndsey (RIGHT)\ntells him how to attack It.\ntoad\" or a 7-9 \"railroad,\" for ln-\nttance, be content with one pin,\nbecause lt you try too hard to\nget both, the chances are you'll\nlota the pin you should get.\nLUCK PLAYS PART\nI have always maintained that\nluck it an Important factor in\nbowling, but sometimes luck plays\ntunny tricks.' Only a tew days\nago, I came down to my last ball\nwith a perfect game of 300 in sight.\nOn that last ball I'll twear I scored\na perfect hit In the \"one-three\"\npocket.   But only nine pins drop\nped. The 4 pin trembled a bit but\nwould hot fall, leaving me with a\ntcore of 299-\nLuck mutt be with the bowler\nIn a 300 game, juat at luck mutt\nbe with a baseball pitcher when\nhe scores a no-hit shut-out. In\n30 years of bowling I have rolled\n16 300-games and two of those\ncame in the same week, tha first\nin New York on a Tuesday, the\nsecond In Buffalo on Friday, It\nwat about two years after that\nbefore I rolled my next perfect\ngame.\nFairview Beats\nNew Grand 5-4\nin Junior Game\nLosers Hove Most of\nPlay in Last Two\nPeriods\nOutplayed in most of the second\n. and third Jierlodt, the F.A.C. Junior\nhockey squad scored.the odd goal\nin nine to increase their lead in the\nNelson junior hockey league to four\npoints, by noting out of the second\nplace New Grand Hotel Tigen S-4\nin a closely contested game played\nat the civic arena Saturday evening.\nThe losers, who lost to the Fair-\nview team 7-2 about 10 days ago,\nplayed a much improved game Saturday, and on the run of the play,\ndeserved at least a tie, but as garnet\nare won on goals, the Fairview club\nboys copped the honors, with the\ntwo Fairview coachet vastly relieved when the final whistle ended\nthe game with their team't lead\nstill intact.\nBOTH GOALIES GOOD\nGeorge Bishop, In the winners'\ncoal, was a standout for the F.A.C.\nteam, as he repeatedly stopped\nclose-in shots from the New Grand,\nplayers. In the last two periods the\nTigers had nearly a 2-1 edge In\nshots on goal, the count being 21-11.\nAlthough he was beaten Mr five\nscores, Sam Pasacreta, in the losers'\ngoal, played a stronger game than\nin his last two appearances, and\nhad tough luck on at least two of\nthe shots that beat htm.\nIn the last game between these\ntwo strong Junior squads, the Fair-\nview wing men weti rajpeatedly\nbreaking In on their opponent!'\ngoal, but on Saturday evening, the\nNew Grand players watched their\nchecks much better, and the fair-\nview boys got very few open breaks.\nBoth teams handed out tome terrific body checking, and they were\nallowed to get away with too much\nrough stuff by Referee Stewle\nPiterion, who handled the game\nalone, and the players ot both\nsquads took advantage ot the leniency to get In several Jabbing affrays, with both clubs at fault; Officials of the Tigert objected to\nJack McCracken's alleged holding\ntactics.\nTJhe mott Improved player on the\ntwo clubs was Gary Bowell, who\ndisplayed some of tha mott effective body checking teen In local\nJunior hockey circles for a,long\ntime. Russell alto showed up strong\non tbe loser's defence. Chuck French\nof the winners, and Bert McEwan\nled in scoring with two goals each.\nFreddy Romano was credited with\ntwo assists.\nRight after the face off, there was\na pile-up ia front of the Fairview\ngoal as George Bishop saved fro*\nTaylor arid then stopped Beattie's\nrebound. Howard Campbell made\nPasacreta step lively on two hard\nshots from wing. Taylor laid down\na close-in pass to Beattie, but it\nwas blocked by McCreight.\nFRENCH OPENS SCORING\nAt S.31, Chuck French opened the\nscoring, when he went down the\nwing and Pasacreta was busy\nwatching the uncovered Mayo on\nthe other wing, French getting the\nshot away as he received a stiff\nbody check.\nIn lata than two and a half minutes the Tigers had taken the lead.\nRussell laid a pass down to Romano,\nbut the disk went into the corner.\nRomano dashed after it and passed\nout to McEwan, who tied the game\nup at 0.23. A minute and a half\nlater, McEwan scored his second\ngoal, on Bowcll's rebound.\nThe Fairview players had four\nmen up for a considerable time, but\nno scoring resulted until eight seconds from the end of the period,\nWhen Shule banged Mayo's rebound\npast Pasacreta, who had made a\nnice save fro* Mayo.\nGeorge Bishop was playing a\ngreat game in the Fairview net to\nrob McEwan and Romano ot goals.\nChuck French sent the Fairview\nteam Into the lead at 7.23 when he\nsent Hughes' pass from the back\nboards into the net.\nTaylor got away fast and Bishop\nsaved a hot one, and then blocked\nBeattie's attempt to bang in the\nrebound. A few seconds later French\ncame back fast to rob Romano, who\nhad got away on a breakaway.\n* At 13:45 Pasacreta stopped a shot\n'afcom the wing, and with the disc\nlying close to the goal line, got his\nhand on it just as Morris banged\nlt into the net. &mo discussion\ntook place over the goal, but no\nofficial protest was made. It took\nthe New Grand players just over a\nminute to get the goal back, Stirzaker scoring with a hard shot from\ninside the blue line.\nSCORE TIED\nThree and a half minutes later\nthe New* Grand team tied the score\nWith Gore beating Bishop on Roni-\nano's pass.\nAt the start of the third period.\nMayo get away on one of the tew\ntimet he waa left uncovered, bul\nPasacreta came out to make a great\nsave. McCreight stopped Joe Galllcano, and Bishop had a close call\non Romano's close-In shot.\nJack McCracken scored the winning goal at 5:16, he went down\nthe Wing and sent the disk into\nthe corter of the net. A Rustajll-to*\nGore play nearly tied up the game\nseconds later.\nCarl Gallicano made his first\nappearance of the season at this\ntime, and came close to beating\nBishop wl)h a [lip shot from the\nblue line. Mayo sent In a long shot\nSat nearly got put Pasacreta, Stan\norris loat nit stick in center Ice,\nand got two minutes tor holding the\npuck. Although the Tigers set a\nfast pace no scoring resulted lrom\nthe break.\nThree minuter, from the end ot the\ngame Cote gave Romano a neat\npass, that just missed the latter's\nstick with Bishop apparently at hit\nmercy.\nFirst period\u2014\n(1) Fairview, French, 5:31,\n(2) New Grand, McEwan (Romano) 6:23.\n(3) New Grand, McEwan, (Bowell) 7:59.\n(4) Fairview, Shule, (Mayo) 19:58.\nPenalties\u2014Russell.\nSecond period\u2014\n(5) Fairview, French, (Hughes),\n7:23.\n(6) Fairview, Morrlt, 13:45.\n(7) New Grand, Stirzaker, 14:49.\n(8) New Grand, Gore (Romano)\n18:26.\nPenalties\u2014McCracken.\nX9) Fairview, McCracken, 5:16,\nPenalties\u2014Morris.\nF.A.C. Juniors \u2014 George Bishop,\nBenny McCreight, Jack McCracken,\nFrank Jones, Howard Campbell,\n\"Rabbit\" Mayo, Chuck French, Pat\nHughes, Stan Morrt, Fred Gravet,\nJohnny Shule.\nNew Grand Hotel Tigers \u2014 Sam\nPasacreta, Gordon Stirzaker, Sid\nHorswill, Gary Bowell, George Russell, Joe Galllcano, Jack Taylor,\nDon Beattie, Freddy Romano, Brian\nGore, Bert McEwan, Carl Gallicano.\nStcwie Paterson, refereed.\nStops by periods-\nGeorge Bishop  7   11   10\u201428\nSam Pasacreta  9    5    6\u201410\nGlazebrook and\nNaber Bowling\nTeams Winners\nMixed Tourney Held\non the Legion\nAlleys\nR. J. Glazebrook's team defeated\nthat ot J. Hamson, 1070-1028, and R.\nMaber's team that ot J. Allan, 986-\n956, in games of the mixed bowling\ntourney ot the Legion bowlers Saturday night.\nIn the first game R. J. Glazebrook\nwaa high Individual scorer with a\n165-polnt single, while J. Hamson,\nskip of the opposing team, with 321\npoints was high aggregate scorer.\nJ. Allen took the high scoring honors tor a single game and also was\nhigh aggregate scorer with a 167-\npolnt single and a total of 333 points\nin the second set of garnet.\nTeams and scores were as follows:\nJ, HAMSON\nMn. R. B. Smith     74    58-132\nJ. Teague  152   148-300\nJ. Whltetlde 126   189-265\nJ. Hamton - 159   182-321\nTotal 1028\nR. J. GLAZEBROOK\nMra. Annable  157  118-278\nW. Wood!   188    90-228\nJ.  Annable   117   156-272\nR. Glazebrook \u201e... 165   132-297\nTotal  1070\nJ. ALLEN\nMra. Sowerby \u201e 110   132-242\nR. Little..    75    90-165\nF. glmmt     88   128-216\nJ. Allen ....;  167   166-333\nTotal     958\nd   MABER\nMri. Whltetlde  138   128-261\nJ. Beatty    92   104-194\nJ. Mulholland  135   133-258\nR. Maber  1*6   145-271\nTotal ,   986\nROULSTON OF RED\nWINGS BREAKS\nA LEG\nDETROIT, Jan. 25 (CP)-Orville\nRoulston, defenceman with Detroit\nRed Wings ot the National Hockey\nleague suffered a fractured leg in a\ngame with Montreal Maroons here\nlast night, X-rayt at hospital revealed today. Roulston will be lost to\nthe Wingt for the balance of the\nseason.\nThe Toronto boy was injured In\nthe last play of the game as he\ncrashed into the boards after taking\na shot on goal.\nSKI JUMPERS\nHOPING GIVE\nSHOW SUNDAY\nIf Snow Continues to\nFall Will Be Able\nto Use Hills\nWith mow filing fairly heavily,\nhopes ot Nelson ski jumpers are as\nhigh as their Jump takeoffs. So far\nthis season tha boys have been able\nto make a few jumps on the Fnir-\nview ill. At the time ot the previous heavy tnowfill the Jump of\nFoeter't ranch, Ymir road, was not\ncomplete, and while considerable\nwork wat accomplished there was\nnot sufficient snow to permit \"s\nuse. At the Fairview hill mild weather took off a large part of he\nsnow on the jumping hill and made\nit unsafe.\nMonday's mow led to hopes that\nthere would be sufficient fall by\nthe end of the week to make jumping good on each ot these hills, rnd\nin that event it was planned to\ngive an exhibition at the Fairview\njump.\nTrail Basket\nTeams May Be\nHere Friday\nElephants Talked of\nand Also Ladies\nAggregation\nWith considerable Interest now\nbeing taken tn the hoop game in\nNelson basketball officials are endeavoring to line up inter-city\ngarnet for Friday evening, and present indications are that the Trail\nrep Elephants, 1935-36 provincial\nsenior B. mens title-holders, will\nplay in Nelson along with a Trail\nladles team Friday.\nLocal league games will be played\nWednesday evening and also possibly on Saturday.\nFor Wednesday's local league program, the Candy Box Maple Leafs\narc scheduled to meet the Gelinaa\nRed Sox, and in a senior men's game\nthe B.C. Telephones will play the\nHornett. The latter club Is an intermediate team stepping up into senior company through lack of competition, but lt another Intermediate\nteam can be lined up, they will\npossibly drop out of the senior\nleague, although they can, be depended to make a strong showing.\nIn tenior ranks.\nTRAIL CURLING\nDRAWS\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 25\u2014Draws for\ncurling at Trail Curling club sheets\nTuesday night fellow:\nPATRON'S COMPETITION\n6:30 P.M.\nSheet 1-H, A, McLaren vs W. E.\nNewton.\nSheet 2\u2014A. G. Harvey vs W.\nBrady.\nSheet aV-W. P. Somerville vs W.\nH. Baldrey.\nSheet 4\u2014A. Provost vs H. Wood-\nburn.\n8:30 P.M.\nSheet 1\u2014W. McLeary vs R. C.\nCrowe.\nSheet 2\u2014J. H. Craig vs J. H.\nYoung.\nSheet 3\u2014Wtoner J. A. Wadsworth\nP. R. McDonald vs winner G. McKay\nDr. W. A. Coghlin.\nSheet 4\u2014Winner A. J. McDonell-\nB\".' J. Walsh vs winner J. W. Welr-\nJ. H. Leckie.\nFairview juniors\nMay Play Hockey\nin Silverton Rink\nIf arrangements can be made for\nthe game, the undefeated Fairview\njunior hockey team will travel to\nSilverton next Saturday, January\n30, to play the Silverton hockey club.\nLittle is known ot the Silverton\nline-up, but in the put they have al\nways presented a fast club.\nREGINA, Jan. 25 (CP)\u2014Prepara\ntlons are being made for a record-\nbreaking entry list in the annual\nbonspiel of the Saskatchewan Curling association, opening draw Wednesday, with an expected 170 rinks\nin attendance. Thirty-three sheets\nof ice will be In play, 24 of these\nunder the roof of the Caledonian i\nclub. Thli club claims to have the\nlargest rink In tha world. 1\n\u2022For the coolest, moat comfortable thavea you\never hid, shave the Gillette Way. Use Blue\nGillette blades in your Gillette Raior. Tney-re\nmade tor each other. Designed by the tame\nengineers, ind tailored to the same specifications,\nthis pair provides shaving comfort that II match-\nleu. Buy a package of Blue Gillette bladea today.\nHwGiUetteHades\nPrecision-made for tht Gilletti Rasor\n10\/er50<\ned by the Liquor Control Bbaftd or by the Govt, of British Columbia\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\nMOI \u00abIOHT-\n\u2022 1 TaflMPPWfpilMljp^\nNIl^ON DAILY NHW8. NgUON. B.C\u2014TUE8DAY MORNING1, JAN. 2S, 1M7. . in    \u25a0\nmp.-|in.ur.a,jL-lllll MMIM\nfBLOODHOUNDSM\n&kr  ffy. WALTER  S. MASTERMAN   fflW\nI   lfl\u2014>\u25a0 ^y' OTWMaaaTaaaaaaaaa*aa\u00bbTa\u00bbnaaa.i\u00ab\u00bb^aaaKaa,Taaia a\"*g.\nCHAPTER 38\nColindale gazed furtively out of\ndie window at Grinfold, where a\nbusy scene was going on, for this\nwas market day. Stalls covered the\ncobbled square, and further off pens\nwere filling up with sheep and\ncattle. Farmers and their wives\nwere busy doing their bit of shopping, and the place presented a\npeaceful aspect far removed from\nthe crime-stained Abbey.\nLady Severinge, who had called\nhim from London to meet her here\nto d|scuss the disapperance of her\nchildren with their governess,\nqueried petulantly, too, why the\ndetective had not found her husband's murderer.\n\"I should have thought that\nJames was the most likely.\" he\nsaid vindictively. \"They always\nsay that one has to look for someone who stands to gain by a crime,\nand he's feathered his nest all\nright.\"\n\"Do.,you really think that, Eric,\nor is it merely jealousy?\" Hilda\nasked,\n\"What about that bell ringing\nin the middle of the night?\" Eric\nexclaimed. \"I'd have gone to see\nabout It, but you wouldn't let me.\nOf course, it was Sir Henry ringing, and James answered it-\nJames who knew he was coming in\nfor a fortune and had every reason\nto get rid of the old man, hoping\nthat the blame would rest on us.\nSurely you can see that. Why did\nhe stay on? Why is he there now?\"\nColindale   was   becoming   excited\nattefMjBpM.a'\nwith his own tale, and Hilda's eyes\nopened with horror.\n\"Why don't you tell this 'to the\ndetective?\" she asked.\n\"It's only since I left,and have\nhid time for thinking .that I\nworked this out. Tne affair took\nus all on the hip, and things moved\nso rapidly that I didn't grasp the\nmeaning,\"\n\"You'll tell Mr. Selden?\"\n\"What evidence have I got?\" he\nasked crossly. \"And tell me another thing. What had Sir Henry\nand James been to each other In\nthe past?\"\n\"Whatever do you mean?\"\n\"You are not a fool, Hilda,\" he\nsaid rudely. \"You surely kna\u00bbw\nthat James was no more a butler\nthan I was\u2014he ran the whole\nshow, and that oily manner of his\nwas all put on. They had been together for years before Sir Henry's\nfather died.\"\n\"Then, Eric, Isn't that all the\nmore reason why I should leave?\nDon't you care about my safety?\"\n\"I don't think there is likely to\nbe any danger to you,\" he said\nroughly. \"Why should there be?\nYou haven't got anything to leave\nto James, and he could kick you\nout at any time if he wanted to.'\n\"Eric, that's not very nicely expressed. I was going to suggest\nlhat we shorten the time, and that\nwe should get married. That\nwould give you the right to protect me and to live at the Abbey,\nas the children would be your\nslop-daughters.\"\n\"A nice scandal there would be,\"\nhe    sneered.    \"At.    prrsenl.    only\nFliers Plan Gold Hunt in Arctic Circle\n^plaott Sathj $ms\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspaper   Association\nTE'LEPHONI 144\nPrivate Ixehan-e oonnaotlng to\n,   all  Departments\nIN MEMORIUM\nSupscription Raffs\nShi|l\u00ab cow         $   .05\nBy catrnar per week __     M\nBy carrier.per year __   13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas per month 60c,\nthree months $180, six months,\n$3.00. one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, coe month 75c six months,\n$4.00. one year $7.50.\nForeign: countries, other than\nU. a same ea above plus any\nextra postage.\nPERSONAL\nHIGHEST CLASS RUBBER\ngoods. Our quality and service\nwill amaze you. 27 latex for $100.\nGoods shipped same day as ordered. Packed plain. Free catalogue for men or women on request Imperial Distributor!, 152\nBurrows Ave., Winnipeg, Man.\n (4512)\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCEI NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorators and other\nstimulants. One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents paid.\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co.\n4201\nTwo flying gold prospectors who plan to take-off for a midwinter\nflight inside the Arctic circle are Charles Gropstis and Corey C. Brayton,\nJr., of Oakland, Calif., aviators. The two men will stake their lives\nagainst the odds of finding riches amid the snowy wastes of tbe north.\nTheir scroplane will be the Bellanca Skyrocket, formerly owned'by\nWallace Beery, motion picture star. Gropstis will fly the aeroplane\nnorth from Oakland to Prince George, with Brayton as co-pilot. At Prince\nGeorge, Brayton will return to Oakland, while the pilot will be Joined\nby another aviator who will continue the remaining distance. Their\nnorthern base will be about 120 miles east of Dawson City, and they hope\nito locate veins or ore through study of earth faults\u2014Central Press Canadian Photo.\nIn loving memory of Roy L. Bradshaw, who passed away one year\nago, January 28, 1938.\nOne year bu passed since that sad\nday\nThe one we loved was called way;\nGod took him home: It was His will,\nBut in our hearts he liveth still.\nSadly missed by all the family.\n(4(H)\nBIRTHS\nJEFFERY\u2014Bom to Mr. and Mrs.\nA. T. Jeffery at Trail-Tadanac\nhospital January 23, a son. Mrs.\nJeffery was formerly Miss Win-\nship of Nelson.\nHELP WANTED\nON POULTRY FARM, STEADY\nall round farm hand. Must handle\nteam, milk 3 cows. $15 month and\nfound, year round. Full particulars to J. H. Dolman, Nakusp.\n(4559)\nLEGHORNS\nUnsexed Pullet Chicks\n$ 12 per   100 $ 26 per 100\n$110 per 1000 (125 pec 500\nROCKS AND REDS\n( 14 per   100 $ 28 per 100\n$130 per 1000 $135 per 500\nLIGHT SUSSEX\n$ IS per   100 $ 32 per 100\n\u25a0Government approved. Blood-tested\nstock. It will pay you to see our\nillustrated booklet. Write now. It's\nfree.\nRUMP Si SENDALL LTD.\nLangley Prairie, B.C.\n(4287)\nEXPERIENCED GIRL FOR HOUSE\nwork.  W.  A.  Duncan,  Waneta,\n(4585)\nWANTED\nWANTED-ENGINEER'S TRANSIT\ncomplete with vertical circle and\ntripod. City Engineer's Office,\nNelson. (4505)\nWANTED - COMPLETE SET OF\nsecond hand carpenter tools. Cash\noffer. Write Box 790, Nelson.\n(4587)\nJames and the lawyer know\nanything about our affairs, but\nyou'd set every tongue wagging,\nand very likely cause suspicion\u2014\nyou know what a village is. A\njealous husband can be dangerous-\u2014\" He stopped abruptly,\nand an ugly look came to his face,\n\"I'll have a talk with James. . .,\nNo, Hilda, it would never do for us\nto get married yet. It's just because you are scared, but if you\nlike, I'll come down and look into\nthings., You see, that fellow Reid\nbeing laid up will give me an ex'\ncuse to visit the estate while he's\nill.\"\n\"I'm so glad. You'll come back\nwith me today?\"\n\"No, I can't very well do that\u2014\nI've got some engagements I can't\ncut, and, besides, it would look\nfishy it I turned up at once.\"\nA tortured smile came to Hilda's\nfi^ce. \"Eric,..are you playing the\ngame? You told me you were going to visit some friends in Scotland What are you doing in London?\"\nHe forced a smile, and, took\nHilda's ' htad. \"Jealous, little girl?\nAs a anatter of fact, you are quite\non. the wrong track., I have to see\nMrs. Thornton tonight. She's\ncoming up to look for a new situation. You needn't be jealous of\nher, but she wrote me a wild letter\n\u2014I believe she was trying to to-.\nplicate me in the murder\u2014and I'm\ngoing to find out if she can tell me\nanything about James. She may\nhave valuable information\u2014she\nwould sell.\"\nHilda knew Colindale only too\nwell. A flash of intuition came to\nher with crushing force. She drew\nher hand away and stood up,\nfaring the man.\n\"Eric! Don't tell me that you\nhave sunk so low as to contemplate blackmail\u2014you and that\nwretched woman together.\"\n\"Whatever put that absurd\nthought in your head?\"\n\"You are going to attempt to\nblackmail James, to get money\nfrom him in order to keep your\nmouths shut about what you think\nyou know.\"\n\"If you think that,\" he said indifferently, \"it's a wonder you want\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD. 924 Edgewood\nAve. (4599)\nWhat? Sideburns for Clark Gable!\nto marry me.\"\n\"Erie,\" she cried passionately,\n\"I'm all alone now. I've made a\nhell of my life\u2014the children hate\nm*\u2014I deceived my husband, and it\nyou are going to dessert me I shall\nmake an end of it\"\n\"Now you are getting hysterical.\nHilda,\" be said, with a note of\nalarm in his voice. \"I've told you\nI will come down to the Abbey\nsoon. Isn't that enough? You\nmust give me time. You can say\nthat you wrote to me asking me\nto come and see about the estate,'\nHe ordered lunch, and with food\nand drink, for she had touched\nnothing that day, her poise was\npartially restored.\nColindale laid himself out to be\nkind, a- he could when he liked,\nand discussed the future when this\ndark cloud. should have passed\naway. He exercised the same fascination over, her weak mind as he\nhad done so' fatally in the past,\nand she almost persuaded herself\nthat he was the strong, clean man\nwho had only erred through love\nof her, something that woman will\nalways condone.\nWith a brighter outlook, and in\nhis company, she felt calmer, and\nthey spent the afternoon gaily\nenough, walking round the market\nand amusing themselves with the\nvarious games at a fair that had\nbeen set up. .She saw him off at\nthe station and it was late when\nshe caught the bus back to Evenden\nTired, she reached the gloomy\nAbbey,\n\"Mr, Selden, the detective, i:\nhere, you ladyship,\" James an\nnounced when he had unfastened\nthe great door and admitted Lady\nSeveringe. \"He has been waiting\nto see you.\"\n\"I am very glad,\" she said truth'\nfully, \"a^nd how is Mr. Reid?\"\n\"Still in bed, m'lady, and with a\nhigh fever, but the doctor thinks\nthat it is shock and the injection\nhe gave him.\"\n\"There is no news, I suppose?\"\nShe asked the question drearily\nknowing  that James would have\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\n^Ep\n\"CHICKS\nWHICH\nGIVE\nRESULTS\"\nBABY CHICKS AND SEXED PUL-\nlet Chicks. White Leghorns exclusively. All breeding stock on\nour farm mated to pedigreed\nmales. Government approved and\nblood tested. Price list on request.\nPlace orders early to insure date\npreferred. M. H. Ruttledge, Der-\nreen Poultry Farm, Sardis, BC.\n(4492)\nDOCS\nREGISTERED CHESAPEAKE*;\nSpringer Spaniels; Airedales; for\nwork or exhibition. Whatshan\n.Kennels, Needles. (4507)\nWIREHAIRED TERRIER PUPPIES.\nRegistered stock. Males $16. Hr\nHarding, Nelson. (4547)\nHOUSES FOR SALE\nWILL SACRIFICE MY 7 ROOM\nbungalow for cash. What offers?\nJ. R Ramsden. (4540)\nELECTRICAL\nHOIST MOTORS\nWound rotor motors in slock\nfrom 10 h.p. to 250 h.p. at various speeds.   Enquire\u2014\nCROSSMAN MACHINERY COMPANY. LIMITED\n50 Alexander St., Vancouver, B.C.\n(4336)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nARE RENTED TO\nPAYING ROOMERS\nHomes having spare rooms to\nrent are getting an extra income. They keep the spare\nrooms rented by advertising\nthem through the NELSON\nDAILY NEWS Classified Advertising Columns.\nPHONE 144\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED GIRL WANTS\nwork of any kind, immediately.\nMiss J. M. Anderson, Bonnington\nFalls, B.C. (4596)\nFARM LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SA!<\non  easy  terms  In   Alberta  audi\nSaskatchewan. Write for full In-J\nformation to 908 Dept. of Natural)\nResources.   C.P.R.   Calgary, Alta\n(4337)1\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAssayers\nE W. W1DDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson. B.C. (4343)\nGRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chasntst. 618\nBaker street Nelson, B.C P O\nBox No, 726. Representing Shippers interest at Trail, B.C.    (4344)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent.   Annable Block.\n(4341)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (4342)\nFOR SALE\nWe carry largest stock reconditioned\npipe and fittings suitable for all\npurposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yard\n220 St. E. Vancouver, B.C. (4338)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd.\n250 Prior St. Vancouver. B.C.\n(4339)\nFOR .SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo, Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (4340)\nPACIFIC CAFE. TERMS REASON-\nable. J. Lew, Box 487, Greenwood.\n(4558)\nj FOR SALE\u2014MALE PERSIAN CAT.\n1    Phone 94. (4601)\nYOU TOO CAN SAVE AT THE\nARK .STORE. (4325)\ntold her at once if the children had\nbeen found. The butler shook his\nhead.\n\"Dinner is ready when you wish\nfor it, and I ventured to lay for\ntwo, thinking you might care to\nhave Mr. Selden with you to talk\nover matters.\"\n\"That is very thoughtful of you,\nJames. I shall have to talk over\nthings with you shortly \u2014 this\nquestion of the children. You see,\nit makes my position here rather\nambiguous.\"\n\"I hope most sincerely that you\nwill not worry utauiit that, m'lady.\nI can asMiifa you that as long as I\nam ha'io il. will be my pleasure and\na privilege to cuiitinue to look\nafln your interests, which I know\nwas  my   lale masters intentions.\"\nAnd this was the man, Hilda\nthought bitterley. iliat Eric was\naccusing of murder,\nSelden's presence reassured her.\nShe was' genuinely glad to have\nhim in the house and his open,\npleasant face had a soothing effect\non her jaded nerves. Lady Severinge felt that here was a man who\ncould be trusted, and whose judgment was sound. She found that\nhe was a man of wide reading and\nculture and could talk well. He\nstudiously avoided any mention of\nthe dark business in which he was\nengaged, and confined himself to\ntalk of a general nature.\nWhen James had left them, for\nhe had Insisted on waiting upon\nthem   himself,   she  fetched  cigars\nFUEL\nFIR and\nTAMARACK\nWilliams Transfer\n609 Ward St.      Phone 106\n(4574)\nfor Selden from a cupboard in the\noak panelling and lighted a cigarel\nherself.\n\"And now that we are alone,\nMr. Selden. can you throw any light\non this business at all?\"\n\"I was going to ask you the same\nquestion, Lady Severinge,\" he said\ngravely. \"Please don't think I want\nto probe into your private life or\ntake up the past, but I am sure\nthat you can help me if you care\nto.\"\n\"In what way?\" Her hand\nshook as she spoke, and a frightened look came to her eyes.\nSelden smiled at her, and shook\nhis head. \"That is not much use,\"\nhe said. \"It is either confidence,\nsincerely given and respected by\nme, or it is useless to talk.\"\n(To B\u00ab Continued)\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(4345)\nChiropractors\nJ. R. McMillan, d. c, palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk., Nelson\n(4346)\nW. J. BROCK  D.C. 13 Years'\nExperience. Gilker, Blk, Nelson.\n(4311)\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES, The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766. \u2022   P.O. Box 1063\n(4347)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH. D. DAWSON Nelson, B.C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(4348)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B.C\".\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n.    (4349)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 215. AU kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays St etc. Phone 215\nMrs, Hagarty, Box 29. (43501\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert. Mortician.      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(4351)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD,\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\nBaker St. (4352)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance. Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware, Baker St. (4353)\nC. D, BLACKWOOD, Insurance' of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(4354)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 508 Ward St.\n' (4355)\nJ. E. ANNABLE, REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance. Annable Blk\n(4356)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin, Ph. 70.   (4357)\nCHAS F. McHARDY. INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Ph. 135. (4358)\nMAKE IT A DAILY\nHABIT\u2014READINC\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes ot Metal Work. Lethal\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grlnd*r\ning.  Motor   Rewinding.   Acetylene!\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street 1\n(4359)1\nNotaries\nD.    J.    R6BERTSON,    n6tArV|\nPublic. 305 Victoria St., Nelsoii.l\n'  (1360)1\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-I\nor, list ot wanted inventions and!\nfull information sent free. Thai\nRamsay Company. World Patent!\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St, Ottawa.!\n(4381)r\nPhotography\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-!\ned, any size, 25c.. Reprints, eight!\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints. Val-I\nuable coupon. \"Better prints atl\nlower cost.\" KRYSTAL PHOTOS,!\nWilkie, Sask. (4362) |\nSanitariums\nLOIS BRANDON\nPRIVATE SANITARIUM\nWOMEN ONLY\nE1216 Newark  Ave.  Phone Lake-\nview 2870, SPOKANE, WASR\n(4363)\nDR. ALDRICH, SPOKANE, WASH.\nHeart, Stomach, Kidney, Bladder\nDiseases treated. X-ray work.\n(4364)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY^\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker st.\n(4365)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY. .SELL  & EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.\n(4366),\nNICE RANGE, DRESSER, HEAT-\ners, etc., at MRS. RADCLIFFE'S.\n(4367)\nWatch Repairing\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\nWatchmaker and Jeweller\nRutledge block, Baker St, Nelson.\n\"When   Sutherland   repairs   youf\nwatch it is on time all the time.\"\n(4368)\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE Work:\nguaranteed.   P. Boyle, Vernon'St.\n(4369)\nAdvertising Rates\nIlea Line\nMinimum Z Lines\n2 lines, once $ .22\n3 lines, once ~   ,33\n4 lines, once      ,44\n2 lines, 6 times 88\n3 lines, 6 times \u2014 1-32\n4 lines, 6 times _.... 1.76\n2 lines, 1 month -,. 2.86 '\n3 lines, 1 month - 4;29\n4 lines, 1 month 6.72\nnil above less 10% for prompt\npayment.\nBox numbers 11c extra (less 10%\nlor cash). This covers any number\nof insertions.\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Cus Edson\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover J\nDEAIt-EST TILLIE...\n3 t  CANT KBSf- H\/ LOME FOftNCO A\nmcKtr AWl^W*-B*^M*V8*ft'MMOTBNTlTl\u00abOTO\nSPEAK Or LflMB,BuT 1MB OCCIDEO To v*llJlTe THIS L\u00a3T-\n*-\u00bb-adieu 111 VIEVU OF RECEMT OBSJVUOPMBMTS\t\nWtwtr#i\u00bbvy QAftuMe\/ftju must kn-jvu vaMATB\/sit\nH*vS HAPPBNW>,0* \\*JlU.HAPf-SM\/TvX\u00ab LOVfi fS\nTH*   CNUy\n*THIM*\u00bb VMCXCTH )     ,W,-, \u2022*)\nVIHILE IW    Nl-'   AXSl I\nUFB\nClark Gable, growing sideburns for his newest role, aids.Carole\nLombard by lighting her cigarette. The camera taught them In an off-\nguard moment at a Hollywood function. Clark has been linked romantically with Carole recently.\u2014Central Press Canadian photo.\n.^_..__\n \t\nI\nofi\n(PORT OF GOLD\nIULLION LOWER\nTAWA, Jan. 25 (CP). - Cane's export of gold bullion, other\ni money, during December was\n|ued at $4,084,560 compared with\n\"9,000 in December, 1935, the Do-\nlion bureau of statistics reported\nay. All of last month's export\nit to the United States,\nixport of raw gold was worth\n5,307 against $297,754 a year ago.\nI United States received $628,962\n:th, Belgium $8470 and $7875 went\njermany. .\nliver bullion exported in De-\nlber was valued at $316,503 corned with $2,362,843 in December,\n5. Of this amount $225,261 went\nthe United Kingdom, $48,586 to\ntish India and $42,656 to (he\nited States.\nRAIL BONDS LOSE\nfew YORK, Jan. 25 (AP)-Rail-\nd bonds were swept lower in the\nid market today as floodwaters\neatened abandonment of routes\nough the affected areas. Balti-\nre & Ohio 4V4s lost lVj to 76 and\ni 5s \"A\" dropped 2 to 91'A. Mis-\niri Pacific 5s \"F\" broke 2Va to\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Jin. 25 (CP). -\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nLISTED: Mig Miss 650, Bralorne\n653, Br Con 1500, BRX 6100, Cariboo 1000, Dentonia 3200, Gold Belt\n15,835, Island Mt 1600, Koot Beile\n200, Mak Siccar 1800, Minto 8150,\nMorn Star 3500, Pioneer 240, Premier B 28,500, Premier Gold 1800,\nQuatsino 500, Reeves M 5560, Reno\n600, Salmon 7500, Sheep Creek 3700,\nSilbak Premier 700, Taylor Br 1000,\nVidette 1000, Wayside 2800.\nCURB: Bayview 19,000, Beaver S\n2000, B. C. Nickel 5900, Bluebird\n1000, Can Rand 1000, Congress 8500,\nCottonbelt 1000, Dictator 3000, Dun-,\nwell 1000, Fawn 1000, Fairview 7727,!\nFederal 8000, Geo Riv 2700, Golconda\n1000, Gold Mount 24,900, Grandv'ew\n2350, Grange 13,000, Grull Wlhk 20,\nNEL80N DAILY NEW8, NELSON. B.C\u2014TUE8DAY MORNING, JAN, 21, 1937,\nMining and Market News\nSELLING HITS\nMONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Jan. 25 (CP) \u2014Onlv\nselected issues survived the se'img\npressure which took the stock market list to generally lower levels\ntoday.\nSmelters was down 1H to 76 and\nNoranda to 76, off Vi. Hollinger and\nNickel surrendered V\u00ab each. Cock\nshutt Plow dipped % at 15%.\n000, Haida 7000, He'ley Amal 47,000,'    Montreal   Power   rose   to   35\"B.\nHedley Sterl 17,000 Hoitte 2500, In-  up ,\/4- *\ndependence 2700, Indian 2000, Kcot | General Steel Wares pushed to\nFlo 4000, Lakeview 2000, Lucky Jim a new level for several years at\n13,000, Marmot M 75,500. Meridian 16H, up a point. Steel of Canada\nMorton W 10,500, Nicola 11,- lost 1V4 at 82 and Gurd H at 11.\n4000,\n500, Noble Five 31,500, Pend Oreille\n1920, Pilot 4000, Quesnelle Q 4900,\nReliance 2000, Relief Arl 1800, Reward 90,500, Rufus Arg 15,000, Silvercrest 44,000, Silversmith 24,000,\nSnowflake 21,000, Taylor Wind 1000,\nUnited Emp 310,000, Viking 16,000,\nWesko 4300, Whitewater 4500.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nid Brew     12'\/,\nI Telephone  160%\nizilian          21%\nI Power A   373\/i\nlid Prod   64\nlada Bronze  58%\nI Car Fdy     20%\nlada Cement   1574\n> Cement Pfd  107\nII Celanese  26%\na Ind Al A     8%\nII Ind Al B ,     7%\na Pac Rail   15%\nnada Steamers     3%\nckshutt   16\nBM& S  76\nm Bridge  55%\nminion Text  77\nyden Paper  15\nI St Wares  16\naa Gurd   _ 11\nrailton Br   16%\nperial Tobacco   14\n.Nickel        63*1\nissey Harris      8%\n:Coll Front  13%\nmtreal Power  35%\n.t Steel Car  55%\nNational Brew  .,    41\nOgilvie     270\nPower  Corp     27%\nQuebec          22%\nShawinigan      31\nBank of Montreal found a new hiph\nfor some years at 240, a gain of four\npoints. Industrial acceptance tacked\non iy4 at 38%.\nDow-Jones Averages\nLow\nClose  Change\n135.02\n185.82\u2014off 1.07\n55.07\n55.25\u2014off   .81\n30.30\n38.43\u2014off   .54\n\t\n105.21\u2014ott   .35\nHigh\n30   industrials     186.97\n20 rails     55.93\n20 utilities    36.96\n40 bonds      \t\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Jan.  25  (CP)-Silver futures closed steady today,\n3 to 5 points lower.  Sales: 9 January contracts.\nOpen       High       Low Close\nJanuary      44.70B       44.75       44.70 44.65B\nSMELTERS LOSES\nTORONTO, Jan. 25 (CP).-There\nwere no wide price swings on the\nToronto- industrial list today and the\neffect of the day's adjustments was\na minor decline in the general level.\nVolume was 52,000 shares.\nFord \"A\" sagged %. Abitibi com-\n16% . m1.n was down % to 9 and the pre\n61\nSouth Can Power\t\nSteel of Can  81     ferred had a loss of 2 points at 52.\nCUFTB8 Smelters closed a point lower and\nB C Pack       18     Nickel registered a loss of %. Impe-\nBrew & Dist  8%  rial, McColl and Pantepec held gains\nB A Oil          25   j of % to %. Walkers common was up\nCanada Dredge   44% I a fraction.\nCanada Malting   36% I   Issues showing gains of % to %\nCanada Wineries   3% included General Steel Wares, Can-\nDominion Stores   11% ada Bread, and Bruck Silk. Hamil-\nFord Canada A  27% Hon Bridge and Mercury Mills pre-\nImperial Oil  21% ferred advanced 3 points each.\nIntl Petrol        35%\nMitchell Robt     27\nPrice Bros        38\nPage Hersey     99\nBANKS\nCanada   38%\nCanadien   154\nCommerce    204\nMontreal  238\nNova Scotia  330\nRoyal   224\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nsted Bid\nP Con 50\nnal O 08%\ng Miss  63\nalorne      8.75\nAsk\nIt Dom\nidge R Con\nR X Gold \t\niriboo Gold ...\n& E Corp .....\nast Brew\t\nmmonwealth\nntonia \t\nild Belt \t\nirgal O\t\nmie O\t\nter Coal \t\n. Mount      1.15\n>ot Belle  80\nik Siccar\t\ncD Seg Ex\t\ncLeod O (new)\ninto Gold\t\nodel O \t\norn Star \t\noneer Gold      6.30\nemier Gold      4.15\n.27\n.05%\n.09%\n1.72\n3,65\n13,00\n.45\n.14\n.20\n.25\n3 95\n.21\n.06%\n.33%\n.72\n.02\n.65\n.64\n8.85\n.28\n,08\n.10\n1.75\n3.70\n13.15\n.14%\n.22\n.27\n4.00\n1.20\n.83\n.07\n.34\n.75\n.03\n.68\n.03%\n6.40\n420\nGeo Copper        \u2014\nGeo River 03%\nGlacier Creek       .01%\nGolconda   12\nGold Mount  35\nGrandview  13\nGrange    02%\nGrull Wihksne 16\nemier Border ..\n.03%\n.03%\ntatsino \t\n.04%\n.04%\nmo Gold \t\n1.17\n\u2014\nseves MacD \t\n.90\n.92\nilmon Gold\t\n.10%\n.11\n.64\n.65\nIbak Prem \t\n3.50\nKsoner \t\n.46\n.50\nlylor Bridge\t\n.  .08\n\u2014\ninalta   \t\n.15\n17\nidette Gold ..\n-T\n,95\n.05%\n.06\nURB\n\u2014\n.04\n.19%\n.21\nisoclated 0 \t\n\u2014\n.40\n.13\n.13%\n.01\n.01%\nlaver Sil \t\n.02%\n.03\nueblrd  \t\n\u2014\n04\nC Nickel\t\n.27\n29\n% Mount\t\n.12\n.14\nilmont O\t\n.83\n.86\nipital Estate\t\n790\n800\ningress Gold\t\n.11\n\u2014\nj-rk Prov \t\n.01\n.01%\njtton Belt \t\n\u2014\n.04\nrows Nest \t\n.06%\n.08%\nalhousie M \t\n.01\n.01%\n\u25a0alhousie 0 \t\n2.80\n2.83\n\u25a0evenlsh     \t\n.19\n.20\n\u25a0ictator Gold \t\n.03%\n.04\nBunwell  \t\n.04%\n.05\n\u25a0ast r-reti\n.23\n.24\n\u25a0airview Amal\t\n.12\n.13\nlawn   \t\n\u2014\n.60\nlederal Gold \t\n.04%\n.05\n\u25a0rtehold \t\n.21%\n.22\nHaida Gold  01\nHedley Amal 49\nHedley Sterl  09%\nHlghwood Sarcee ..     .31%\nHome Gold  03\nIndian M    02%\nIndependence   02%\nKoot Flor  02%\nKoot King  01\nLakeview   01\nLowery Pete       \u2014\nLucky Jim .\u201e 08\nMadison O  10\nMar Jon  18\nMercury    33%\nMeridian        \u2014\nMerland    23\nMcGillivray Coal ..      .19\nMid-West 17\nMill City 30\nMorton Woolsey 03\nMarmot  01%\nNicola    12\nNoble Five  10\nNordon O 37\nOJtalta O Com     1.52\nPacalta 0          .21%\nPend Oreille      3.45\nPilot Gold\nPorter Idaho .\nQuesnelle Q ...\nRanchmen's \t\nReliance Gold\nRelief Arl \t\nReward \t\n.05%\n.10\n,15%\n.00\n.03%\n.32\n.10\nRoyalite       49.25\nRufus Arg        .03%\nRuth Hope  04\nSilvercrest  08%\nSilversmith    04%\nSnowflake    01%\nSouthwest Pet  85\nStandard SU 45\nSunloch           \u2014\nTaylor Wind  10\nU D L     1.05\nUnited Empire 02%\nUnited O 32%\nViking Gold 04%\nVnlcan 0     1.50\nWaterloo  02\nWaverley Tang       .03%\nWelington          \u2014\nWesko   33\nWhitewater    20\nI Ymir Yank G 35\n.60\n.04\n.13\n.35\n.14\n.02%\n.01%\n.49%\n.10\n.33\n.03%\n.02%\n.02%\n.02%\n.01%\n.01%\n.59\n.08%\n.10%\n.20\n.35\n.04%\n.25\n.20\n.20\n.33\n.03%\n,13\n.10%\n.38\n1.53\n22\n3.50\n.05%\n.10%\n.16\n.94\n.04\n,33\n.10%\n49.50\n.04\n.05\n.09\n.04%\n.01%\n,90\n.40\n.02%\n.33\n04%\n1,52\n.02%\n.02%\n.07%\n.34\n.21\n.37\nC. P, R. EARNING8 UP\nMONTREAL, Jan. 25 (CP).-In-\ncrease of $203,000 was reported today in Canadian Pacific railway\nearnings of $2,371,000 for week ending Jan. 21, compared with $2,168.-\n000 for the corresponding week last\nyear.\nFormer B. C. Deputy\nFinance Minister Is\nDead at the Coast\nVICTORIA, Jan, 25 (CP)\u2014Ernest Dimery Johnson, former deputy\nminister of finance in the British\nColumbia government, died late last\nnight in hospital here, He was 59\nyears old.\nBorn in Cheltenham, England, Mr.\nJohnson, came to British Columbia\nearly in the century and settled in\nPrince Rupert where he achieved an\noutstanding record in municipal service. He came to Victoria in 1919\nas deputy minister of finance.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Jan. 25 (AP)-Cop-\np?r barely steady; electrolytic spot\nand future 13.00; export 12.40-47%.\nTin easy; spot and nearby 50.12%-\n25; future 49.95-50.12%.\nLead steady; spot New York 6-\n6.05; East St. Louis 5.85.\nZinc quiet; East St. Louis spot and\nfuture 6.00.\nIron steady; No. 2, f.o.b. Eastern\nPennsylvania 22.00; Buifalo 21.00;\nAlabama 17.00; Aluminum 19.00-\n22.00.\nAntimony, spot 14.25.\nQuicksilver 93.00-95.00.\nPlatinum 58.00.\nWolframite 15-15.50.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nAt London closing: Copper, standard spot \u00a351 5s; future \u00a351 7s 6d.\nElectrolytic, spot bid \u00a356; asked\n\u00a357.\nTin, spot \u00a3226; future \u00a3226 15s.\nLead, spot \u00a326 lis 3d; future \u00a326\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAl Chem\nAm Can  113\nAm For Pow .. 14%\nAm Mac Si Fdy 23%\nAm Smel Si Ref  95%\nAm Tel  185%\nAm Tob     99\nAnaconda    54%\nAtchison     75\nAuburn Motors 32%\nAviation Corp ..    8%\nBaldwin      9%\nBait & Ohio    22%\nBendix Av     27%\nBeth Steel    79%\nCanada Dry   30%\nCan Pacific    15%\nCerro de Pasco 68%\nChes & -Ohio .     66%\nChrysler   122%\nCon Gas N. Y. ..   48\nCorn Prods     ..   70%\nC Wright pfd ....    7%\nDupont   174%\nEast Kodak\t\nEl Power it Lt.\nErie \t\nFord English\nFord of Canada\nFirst Nat Stores\nFreeport  Texas\nGen Electric\nGen Foods.\nGen Motors ...\nGoodrich \t\nGranby 11%\nGreat Nor pfd ,,   42%\nGreat West Sug\nHecker Prods\nHowe Sound\nHudson   Motors\nInter Nickel\nLow\n112%\n14\n23%\n94%\n183\nClose\n235%\n112%\n14\n23%\n94%\n184%\n53%\n53%\n74%\n74%\n31%\n31%\n8%\n8%\n9%\n9%\n22\n22%\n27%\n27%\n77%\n78%\n30%\n30%\n15%\n15%\n08\",\n68%\n23%\n15%\n49%\n29%\n63%\n43%\n67%\n32\",\n37%\n15%\n71%\n21%\n63 %\n121\n47%\n69%\n7%\n174\n22%\n15\n40\n28%\n-82\n42%\n66 Vi\n32%\n10%\n42%\n37%\n15%\n70%\n20%\n63%\n121\n48\n70\n7%\n174%\n170%\n22%\n15\n7%\n28\n49\n28%\n62\n43\n66%\n32%\n103,\n42%\n37%\n15%\n70%\n21\n63%\n13\n59%\n28%\n23%\n47%\n56%\n23%\n13%\n42%\n11%\nInter Tel Si Tel\nKenn Copper .\nKresge S S . .\nKroegger Groce\nMack Truck . ..\nMilwaukee pfd\nMont Ward ....\nNat Dairy Prods\nN Power Si Lt\nN. Y. Central\nPacific Gas & El\nPack Motors ....\nPenn R R        42%\nPhillips Pete     .\nPure Oil\t\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand\nSafeway   Stores\nShell Un .........\nS Cal Edison   . .\nSouth Pacific .\nSlan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of N. J.\nStew Warner .\nStuebaker \t\nTexas Corp\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTimken Roll .\nUnder Type .  ..\nalln Carbide\nUn  Oil  of Cal\nUn Aircraft \t\nUn Pacific ....  .\nU. S. Pipe \t\nU. S. Rubber . .   53\nU. S. Steel     . .   88%\nVanadium Steel   31\nWarner Bros.   .   15%\nWest Elec    165\nWest Un       82%\nWoolworth     64%\n52%\n23%\n11%\n8%\n20%\n42%\n28%\n30%\n48\",\n46%\n71%\n19%\n16%\n52%\n40%\n72\n93%\n105%\n28\n31 %\n130%\n12%\n58%\n28\n22%\n46%\n58\n23%\n13 Vi\n41%\n11\n41%\n52%\n22%\n11%\n8%\n25%\n42%\n28%\n30%\n47%\n45%\n70%\n18%\n16%\n51%\n411%\n71\n93\n104%\n25%\n30%\n130\n52%\n86%\n30%\n15%\n163%\n81\n64\n12%\n58%\n28\n22%\n46%\n3%\n56%\n23%\n13 Vs\n41%\n37\n11\n42%\n52%\n22%\n11%\n8%\n25%\n42%\n28%\n30\",\n47%\n46%\n70%\n18%\n16%\n52%\n40%\n72\n93\n105%\n25%\n30%\n130\n67\n52%\n87\n30%\n15%\n164%\n81\n64%\n1936 Good Year\nfor Imperial\nToronto Stock Quotations\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL, BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphates \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertilizers\nProducers and Refiners of\nTadanac Brand Meta's\nCOLD SILVER\nELECTROLYTIC\nLEAD ZINC CADMIUM BISMUTH\nAldermac   1.59\nBankfield      174\nBase Metals 27\nBig Miss  64\nBobjo 22%\nBralorne     8 90\nBRX  09%\nBut Aiikerite     11.50\nCan Malartic     2.02\nCariboo Gold       160\nCastle Treth      160\nCentral Man 18\nCentral Pat     4.30\nChibougamou     2 22\nCoast Copper     6.25\nConiagas        3.40\nConiaurum      2.00\nCons MatS    76.00\nDome  ,.       49 87\nDom Exploration 08%\nEldorado        2.48\nFalconbridge       11.50\nGod's Lake 90\nGold Belt 20\nGranada    37%\nHardrock       2.90\nHollinger     15,00\nHowey        64\nHudson Bay    34,25\nInter Nickel     63.50\nJ M Con     46\nKirkland L       1 27\nLake Maron 07%\nLakeshore       57.00\nLittle Long Lac     825\nMacassa      7 50\nMadsen Red Lake      1,48\nMalrobic    03%\nMcLeod Cock     4,05\nMclntyre  .    40.87\nMcK-RLGold     1.85\nMcVittleGr      22\nMcWatter Gold  98\nMining Corp     3.65\nNipissig  n     3.10\nParkhill  22\nPaymaster        1.13\nPend Oreille     3.40\nPickle Crow     8.80\nPioneer        -     6.40\nPremier Osld         4.25\nRed Like Gold Shore     1.25\nSan Antonio      2.20\nSheep Creek 65\nSher Gordon     3.05\nSiscoe        6.15\nSmelter G  10\nStadacona       1,44\nSt Anthony 30\nSlid Basin ,.     5.80\nSullivan      2,10\nSylvanite      4.40\nTeck Hughes      5,60\nI'oburn      4.15\nTowagamac     1.47\nTreadwell   60\nVentures        2.90\nWaite Amulet     3.40\nWayside              .06\nWhite Eagle ' 04\nWright Hargreaves     7.90\nOILS\nAjax  56\nB A Oil    25.00\nC & E Corp      3.65\nChem Research       1.29\nDalhousie      2.70\nHome 3.95\nImperial     21.87\nInter Pete     35.62\nMerland  23\nNordon  37\nRoyalite      48.75\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatly Bros            19\nBell Telephone   161\nBrazilian    21%\nBrew & Dist      8%\nCanada Bread     9%\nCan Car & Fdy    20%\nCanada Cement    15%\nCanada Dredge     44\nCanada  Malting      35%\nCan Pac Rail     15%\nCons Smelters     78\nDominion Bridge    55%\nDominion Stores     10%\nDist Seagrams    26%\nFord Canada A    27%\nGoodyear Tire     86\nHiram Walker     48%\nLoblaw A           23%\nMassey Harris     9%\nSteel of Canada\t\nTORONTO, J,jn. 25\u2014As shown at\nthe annual meeting in Toronto, the\nyear 1936 was one of real achievement and progress for the Imperial\nLife Assurance Company. Insurance\nin force increased to over $281,000,-\n000. The number of policies surrendered during the year was gratifying-\nly less than for several years past,\nwhich indicates improvement in\ngeneral conditions.\nThe Imperial Life paid to living\npolicyholders during 1936 a total of\n$4,700,000 and to beneficiaries under\ndeath claims oyer $2,200,000 was\npaid, making a total of over $6,900,-\n000. Dividends to policyholders during the year amounted to over $900,-\n000.\nThe total assels of the company\nalso showed substantial increase and\nnow stand at $79,100,000. Accumulated surplus funds have risen to\n$4,871,000.\nCANADA DOLLAR GAINS\nNEW YORK, Jan. 25 (AP).-Majority of foreign currencies, were a\ntrifle higher in terms of the United States dollar today. The British\npound sterling gained % of a cent\nto 4.90%, French francs were .00%\nof a cent higher, at 4.66%; Canadian\ndollars advanced 1-32 of a cent, to\n99 15-16 and the Japanese yen was\nup .02 of a cent.\nWINNIPEG PRICES\nARE HIGHER\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 23 (CP)-Wheat\nprices ruled higher on the Winnipeg\ngrain exchange today as floods In\nthe United States attracted attention on world commodity markets.\nValues closed VI % cents advanced, May at $1.22, July $1.18%\nand October $1.07%, With little incentive to sell apparent, 250,000-\nbushel export sales sufficed to take\ncare of light offerings.\nA factor in Winnipeg's firmness\nwere l%d gains at a Liverpool,\nwhere trade reports stressed possible\ndanger to winter wheat as the result\nof flood waters.\nCash grains were quiet. Coarse\ngrains prices moved 70 with wheat.\nCHICAGO GAIHS\nCHICAGO, Jan. 25 (API-Responsive to Ohio Valley crop damage\nreports and to surprising maintenance of Argentine asking prices,\nwheat prices advanced here today.\nIt was pointed out that in recent\nyears the winter wheat crop of the\nState of Ohio has alone amounted\nto about 10 per cent of the total for\nthe country.\nWheat closed %-% higher, corn\n% off to % up, oats %-l% advance,\nand rye showing 1%-1% bug.\nC. N. R. REVENUES UP\nMONTREAL, Jan. 25 (CP).-Increase of $372,154 was reported today in Canadian National Railways\ngross revenues of $3,295,352 for the\nweek ending Jan. 21 as compared\nwith $2,923,198 for the corresponding period last year.\nU. 8. DOLLAR OFF\nMONTREAL, Jan. 25 (CP). -\nPound sterling advanced 9-16 cent\nto $4.91 7-32 on Montreal foreign\nexchanges today. The French franc\nat 4.67 cents remained unchanged.\nThe United States dollar at 1-16\npremium declined 1-32.\nSubmits Plan for\nWheat Selling\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 25 (CP).-The\ntrend of wheat prices would determine the point where the Canadian\nwheat board would become operative and pay a minimum price to\nall producers said Dr. Harald S.\nPatton, International grain authority, In detailing his proposals tor\nthe Canadian grain trade to the\nTurgeon royal grain commission today.\nThe government-assisted wheat\npool proposed by Dr. Patton and the\nopen market and futures method\nof trading would operate until low\nprices brought about \"emergency\nconditions\" and then the wheat\nboard would step in with its minimum price, said Dr. Patton.\nNEW YORK SLIPS\nNEW YORK, Jan. 25 (AP). -\nStocks faltered in today's market\nas serious flood damage in the midwest tended to depress buying sentiment.\nWhile offerings were light and\nlosses, except in a few instances,\nwere comparatively small, the list\nshowed a declining drift at the close,\nThe day's transfers totalled 2,-\n217,710 shares compared with 2,686,-\n150 last Friday, \"it was the smallest\nturnover for a 5-hour session since\nJanuary 6.\n-PAOE NINE\nHUGE VOLUME IN\nTORONTO MINES\nTORONTO, Jan. 25 (CP)-Volume passed the 3,000,000 mark today\nin the Toronto mining section for the\nfirst time since Aug. 13. Golds registered a new price level for recent\nyears, but a late tapering off resulted in a small net loss. Miscellaneous mines index was down more\nthan a point.\nLittle Long Lac closed at 8.2S up\n25 cents to a new high and Sladen\ngained 28 cents to 2.38, also a new\nhigh. Omega advanced 22 cents to\n1.10, its record price. Sylvanite was\nup 15 cents to 4.40 after touching\n4.50, a new high.\nNarrow gains were boarded for\nLake Shore, Mclntyre and Tobum.\nIssues closing 5 to 10 cents down\nwere Wright Hargreaves, Teck\nHughes, Premier, Pioneer, Hard\nRock and Central Patricia. Siscoe\nlost 15 cents.\nOils Demand al\nVancouver Heavy\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 25 (CP). -\nHeavy demand continued in the oil\ngroup on the Vancouver stock exchange today, the majority of issues\nclosing with gains. Golds and Base\nMetals were firm. Transactions totalled 1,492,228 shares.\nDalhousie headed the gains up 30\nat 2.80, Calgary Si Edmonton added\n15 at 3.65 and Okalta 7,*t 1.52. Vulcan advanced 4 at 1.50, Calmont 8\nat 83 and Spooner 8 at 46.\nOther rises were recorded In Commonwealth up 2 at 43, Pacalta 3%\nat 21%, Lowery Petroleum 4 at 59,\nUnited 1% at 32% and Southwest\nPetroleum 3 at 85. Nordon was down\n2 at 37, Home 5 at 3.95 and Hargal\nat 25.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG. Jan. 25 (CP) .-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High\nLow\nClose\nMay         121%   122%\n121\n122\nJuly         117%   118%\n117%\n118%\nOct.         106%   107%\n106%\n107%\nOATS:\nMay          54       55%\n54\n55%\nJuly          51%     52%\n51%\n52%\nBARLEY:\nMay          81        82%\n80%\n82%\nJuly          70%     72%\n70%\n72%\nFLAX:\nMay         167%   168%\n167%\n168%\nJuly     ...   -       -\n\u2014\n167%\nRYE:\nMay         105      107%\n104%\n107%\nJuly .       100%   103%\n100%\n103%\nOct       89%    89%\n89%\n89%\nBAR GOLD UP\nMONTREAL, Jan, 25 (CP).-Bar\ngold in London up one cent at $34 80\nan ounce in Canadian funds; 141s\n9%d in British. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $35,02 In\nCanadian.\nHow to Make MONEY\nin GOLD STOCKS\nBookl.l ulllng Kawse Itltd. \u00bbk\u00ab- M toy.\nfioav long to hold.  S\u00abl laj ikoal hl\u00ab\u00ab(axl\nh buying mil a.lnlid saining Hocks,\nWRITE FOR COPY\nH.B. BAIN 4 COMPANY LTD.\ntain BIdg,    Bay St.\nSIR E NbTH\nPOLICYHOLDERS and friends will be glad to learn that in the year\njust closed the Company further augmented its strong position and made\ngratifying progress. Evidence of the rapid and well balanced growth\nwhich The Imperial Life has experienced is furnished by the following\ntable which gives the record of the Company at ten year intervals.\ni\nPremium and\nReserve! for\nTotal\nAssurances\nYear\nInterest Income\nPolicyholders\na\\ssets\nin Force\n1906\t\n...$   855,077.81\n$ 2,461,836.00\n$ 3,332,882.88\n$ 19,254,932.00\n1916\t\n...   2,659,418.05\n10,021,809.07\n12,974,417.02\n55,084,130.00\n1926\t\n... 10,041,402.27\n33,552,129.00\n40,124,051.68\n218,230,511.00\n1936\t\n... 13,155,617.33\n65,162,244.00\n79,100,808.66\n281,579,244.00\nSOME HIGHLIGHTS FROM 1936 RESULTS\nASSURANCES IN FORCE increased to over $281,000,000.00. The amount of assurances\nsurrendered was greatly decreased\u2014a gratifying indication of improved business conditions.\nBENEFITS PAID to living policyholders $4,706,198.92; to beneficiaries under death\nclaims $2,233,239.61; a total of $6,939,438.53.\nTOTAL ASSETS increased by $3,937,215.43 to $79,100,808.66. These assets show\nconsiderable appreciation in value during the year and are carried in the Company's books\nat an amount substantially less than their actual market value.\nNET SURPLUS EARNINGS in the year $2,251,944.00.\nACCUMULATED SURPLUS FUNDS increased by $712,346.60 to $4,871,498.32 after\ncalculating assurance and annuity liabilities at an amount some $800,000.00 greater than\nGovernment requirements, setting aside a contingency reserve fund of $1,000,000.00 and\npaying out dividends to policyholders in the year of over $900,000.00.\nA compltte copy of our Annual Report will ie mailed to you ott request.\nTHE IMPERIAL LIFE\nASSURANCE CO. OF CANADA\nFOUNDED 1897 HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO\nBranches and Agents in all important centres\n \u2014\n\u2014\nmmtmmmmmjmmmmW\nPAGE TEn-\nNEL80N DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C.\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, JAN. 26. 1(17.\n'MOST ENJOYABLE WEEK'DECLARE\nVANCOUVER CURLERS OF THE BIG\nBONSPIEL CONCLUDED AT TRAIL\nBelieve Kootenays Are\nDeveloping Some\nGreat Curlers\nBy ART JOY\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 25\u2014A group of\nVancouver curlers who remained in\nthe city until the conclusion of the\n42nd annual British Columbia curling association left the city Sunday morning and during their travel\nin a special coach from Trail to\nCastlegar, were accompanied by a\nrepresentative of the Nelson Daily\nNews.\nParting words about the city, its\npeople, curlers, the hospitality enjoyed and like remarks follow.\nS. S. Crowe, president of the Vancouver Curling club for the current\nterm  commented:\n\"The 42nd annual bonspiel was a\nwonderful success and it gave me\u2014\nand I am sure I speak the same for\nmy colleagues\u2014the most enjoyable\nweek of my life. I have previously\nenjoyed good curling and all the\ngood fellowship that goes hand in\nhand with it; but I never found it\nquite so necessary to loosen up as\nI did on this occasion. Vancouver\ncurlers, with boastful pride, were\nparticularly successful; and \"damn-\nedably\" lucky.\nKOOTENAIAN8 GOOD\n\"The Kootenays are developing excellent curlers and we now assume\nthe attitude to 'hold what we have',\nwe must maintain and improve our\nstandard of curling.\"\nCommenting upon curling within\nthe province generally, Mr. Crowe\nemphasized that the potential success of the association's annual\nbonspiel was dependent upon assistance rendered by larger clubs to the\nsmaller and more obscure organizations.\n\"For the sake of competition alone\nthis expedient service must be administered'', he continued.\nLEEK IS ADAMANT\n\"Walter Leek, president of the\nCanadian Pacific Exhibition association is one of our most enthusiastic\nexponents of curling and has been\nprominent in encouraging outside\nclubs to attend the annual provincial 'spiel. Mr. Leek is one of those\nVancouver men who realizes the\nmutual benefits of bringing into\ncloser hairmony thc coast cities and\nthe interior.\nMr. Crowe is of the opinion that\nabout 80 per cent of all curlers in\nVancouver live within one distict of\nthe city. That means an eight mile\ndrive to the forum to curl. His idea\nto cope with the situation is to have\ndivisional curling rinks.\nHATS OFF TO TRAIL\nMr. Crowe paid particular tribute to A. M. Chesser, president,\nand G. F. Reimann, secretary-treasurer of tlie B.C. association for their\nmultitudinous considerations. Every\nVancouver curler was emphatic in\nhis praise of the sportsmanship and\nhospitality of Trail citizens.\nRoily David, who copped the\nBritish Consols trophy, felt that approximately 2800 curlers had at\nsome time belonged to the Vancouver club and considered it a\nmarvelous thing if all could be organized into divisional curling clubs\nreferring to Mr. Crowe's comment\nabout the Vancouver situation.\nGeorge W. Norgan, vice-president\nof the Vancouver Curling club and\nchairman of the Pacific Coast bon\nspiel, which is being run off at Van\ncouver February 15 to 20, inclusively\nsaid:\n\"I am vitally interested in curling\nas a game of sport out of which\nthere is a great deal of fascination\nto be gotten. With such a thought\nas this in mind, I might add that it\nis this feeling which predominates\nin our Vancouver club that will\ninevitably make Vancouver a mecca\nfor just such affairs. This feeling\nalso is in outstanding evidence in\nTrail. It is the force which makes\npossible such sports.\n\"The good sportsmanship and fel\nlowship achieved from the game\nitself and that grand hospitality\nwhich usually prevails, assists in\nimpeding a stagnant condition\nwhich otherwise would establish\nitself too soon. By the way, we\nexpect some Trailites at our 'spiel.\"\nLIKES NELSON CENTRE\nMr. Norgan expressed vital Interest in Nelson's civic centre and the\nwish to inspect it at some future\ndate.\nCURLING  CAPERS\nDid Ossie Shore sleep neck up\nin a bath tub during his stay in\nTrail? . . . Roily David wished to\nknow . . . Surely it couldn't have\nbeen Dad Bowyer who headed the\nlast roundup . . . outstanding expression was\u2014\"if we had got down\nto business\u2014\" ... reply was\u2014\"there\nwas no business\" . . . Dad Tinling\nplayed in Macdonald Brier competitions at Vancouver, in 1921 in fact,\nbefore a crowd of 8000 people . . .\ndidn't fizz on him in the least . . .\nnot all curlers are good golfers but\nsome are very good scullers . . .\nBill Wood was in a crew comprising\nGeorge A. McKay, Colin Finlayson\nand Archie Black, which took part\nin the Olympic games at Amsterdam. The crew took second place,\nlosing to Third Trinity, Cambridge.\nEngland. Switzerland was third and\nFrance fourth (just in case you have\nforgotten) ... we have it on the\nbest authority that \"Mac\" Braden\nmade 91 draws to the button with\nan outurn and one with an lntuni\nto win . . . J. B. Gray was the butt\nof many a grand jesture . . . Dave\nGarnham finally had to ask: \"if all\nScotsmen were in Trail and Nelson?\" ... it was suggested that if\nthere were many J.B.s in Vancouver\nthere would be sufficient good\ngood Scotsmen . . . George Norgan.\nArchie Black, Roily David and Vic\nBrown may comprise the team to\nrepresent B.C. in the Macdonald\nBrier competition at Toronto . . .\nbut two more probably will go\nalong . . . Ossie Shore as trainer\nand a mascot collie pup nicknamed\nby Dad Whalen, \"Castlegar\" . . .\nDad Bowyer revealed the fascination which has held him to curling\nfor 40 odd years ... we quote him:\n\"Fascination is not the word. Curling is an honest clean sport and a\ngentleman's game. There should be\ngreater encouragement given to\nyounger men in order that the game\nwill always be preserved\" . . .\nOssie Shore drew to the button\nwith: \"Porter, some ice please for\nour bucket of blood\" ... A. J. Cal-\nderhcad accomplishing manifold\nduties excellently and at the same\ntime dispensing with friendly pleasantries . . . nomination for No. 1\ntenor\u2014Dave Garnham . . . baritone,\nBob Scobie ... for same No. 1 host,\nGeorge Nogan ... for No. 1 philosopher, Dad Whalen. . . for No, 1\ntaking it all with a smile, Dad Bowyer .... No. 1 humorist, the two\nporters . . . and last but surejy not\nleast, No. 1 fixer, Ossie Shore, accompanying the party was Pipe\nMajor Sandy Drysdale, winner of\nseveral piping events in Nelson and\nTrail ... he piped, he peiped, and\nhe piped\u2014and droned or drowned\nout the stirring strains with the\ngreatest of ease . . . cheerio Vancouver curlers . . . hope you have\nas good a time at Rossland next year.\nCude Tucks Puck Under Him So Schriner Misses a Goal\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 655     610 Kootenay 8L\nBarnett Looks\nfor a Rematch\nWith Stanford\nSeeking revenge, and to prove to\nhis Ymir and Nelson followers that\nReferee Bill Freno was wrong in\nstopping his bout with Roxy Stanford in the sixth round, thereby giving Stanford a technical K.O.,\nGeorge Barnett is working like n\ntrojan at Ymir for his engagement\nwith Lawrence Selinger Saturday\nnight. He wants to go into the ring\nwith Stanford again soon.\nBarnett and Stanford put up a\ngrand battle, with Stanford leading\nas the bout neared its end. He\nfloored Barnett for a count of four.\nWhen the Ymir boy got to his feet\nagain at four, failing to wait out\nthe count, and appeared dazed,\nFreno awarded the bout to Stanford. The crowd didn't like the decision.\nHOOP GAMES ON\nTAP, WEDNESDAY\nThe Candy Box Maple Leafs and\nthe Gelinas Red Sox girls basketball\nclubs will play a league game at\nthe Civic Recreation hall on Wednesday evening starting at 8. Immediately following the girls game\nthe B. C. Telephone club and thc\nHornets will meet In a senior men's\nleague game.\nBoth the girls club's have drop-\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST - RUBY RING, BROKEN\nshank, valued as keepsake   Return Box 48' 3 Daily Newr. Reward\n(4803)\n'QUAKE FELT\nHILO, Hawaii, Jan. 25 (AP)\u2014A\nsharp earthquake was felt in the\nKono district of Hawaii island at\n7:30 last night (1 a.m., Monday EST).\nVolcanologist Thomas A. Jaggar\nsaid it originated in the Maunaloa\nVolcano.\nThe mouth of the Canadiens' goal is filled with\narms, legs, and waving hockey sticks, as hard-\nworked Goalie Wilf Cude of Montreal Canadiens\nbreaks up an attack launched at his sanctuary by the\nNew York Americans during a game at Madison\nSquare Garden.   Schriner of the Amerks, led this\nattack, and he and Goalie Cude are snuggled up\ntogether on the ice at the,net. The visitors from\nMontreal were too much for the New Yorkers, the\ngame ending with the final score reading: Canadiens 4, Americans 2.\u2014Central Press Canadian\nphoto.\nMORE ABOUT\nWEATHER\n(Continued From Page One)\nAlthough the snow was general\nthroughout the Kootenays and Okanagan, Cranbrook and Grand Forks\nstill experienced sub-zero temperatures, with a minimum of eight below at Grand Forks, and seven below at Cranbrook.\nPLOWS 8TALL.ED IN\nSPOKANE COUNTY\nSPOKANE, Wash., Jan. 25 (AP)\n\u2014Snow conditions grew so bad in\nrural Spokane county today that\nsnowplows were stalled and their\noperators sought refiifje for the\nnight at farmhouses-\nCounty Engineer Ted Ingelssaid\nhe might have to send out a hand\nshovel crew to free the plows tomorrow. The .plows were stuck\nafter a wind whipped loose new\nsnow in to close freshly cleared\nroads.\nSOUTH WELCOMES BREAK\nLOS ANGELES, Jan. 25 (AP)-\nA forecast of continued moderate\ntemperatures camo opportunately\ntonight for citrus fruit growers faced with shortage of orchard heater\nfuel, which already,is a probable\n$10,000,000 item in losses from January freezes estimated as high as\n$60,000,000.\nTonight's forecast anticipated temperatures about the same as last\nnight, of which the lowest reported\nwas 35 degrees. Little additional damage was believed to have occurred.\nForecasters said a new \"cold\nfront\" was hovering over Alaska regions and might move on here.\nPORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 25 (AP)\u2014\nA drenching rain scattered the last\nremnants of snow in Portland today and brought cheer to health\nworkers who regarded it as their\ngreatest ally in combatting the recent outbreak of \"flu\".\nOnly 57 new cases were registered\nofficially here today. The death list\nin the current wave was augmented\nby three. Pneumonia has resulted\nfatally to 21 persons in the past\nweek,\nThat influenza is still prevalent\nwas attested to by figures showing\nonly 40,000 children registered for\nthe winter school term, compared\nwith 47,500 a year ago.\nSPOKANE, Jan. 25 (AP)\u2014City\nfiremen are taking their own water\nto fires they answer these days.\nHundreds of hydrants have been\nfrozen in the unprecedented 20-day\ncold snap that saw temperatures go\nas low as 20 below zero. Fire Chief\nWilliam Payne commandeered two\n1500-gallon tank trucks, which respond to alarms in the Hillyard and\nManito sections of the city.\nA temperature of 28 degrees above\nzero, at 2 p.m., warmest since Jan.\n4, indicated thc sub-zero wave may\nbe passing.\nMORE ABOUT\nILL FLOODS\n(Continued From Page One)\nEvansville, Ind.\u2014Relief army of\n10.000 moves to evacuate residents\nof all Ohio river territory. One-third\nof city submerged. All southern\ncounties under martial law.\nMemphis\u2014Hundreds flee swelling\nstreams in south. Several towns isolated.\nFRANKFORT, Ky, Jan. 25 (API-\nWhispered reports of fatal shootings\nand riots in the flood-swept Kentucky state penitentiary came tonight from national guardsmen and\nconvicts evacuating the century-old\nprison. The last of the convicts were\nevacuated tonight.\nOne national guard officer, helping to remove the 2900 prisoners,\nsaid at least a dozen convicts were\ndead.\n\"I don't know how many were\nkilled,\" said another guardsman.\n\"There's been a lot of them.'1\nThe guard officers said there had\nbeen sporadic shooting since last\nFriday to break the convicts' incessant chanting.\nThe reports could not be confirmed officially. \u2022\nFOR SALE\u2014McClary electric range\nand Westlnghouse refrigerator.\n-Phone 718X. (4602)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nSubscriptions taken for any magazines at Wait's News Depot. (4306)\nMIGHTIEST FLOOD EVER\nCINCINNATI, Jin. 25  (AP).\u2014\nThe mightiest flood In the Minis*\nsippl river's turbulent history wat\npredicted tonight The swollen\nOhio, already it unprecedented\nlevels, continued to rise along the\n950-mlle stretch of valley from\nPittsburgh to Cairo, 111.\nThe known dead had risen\nabove 100; the fate of mahy others was in grave doubt.\nLt. Col. Eugene Reybold, district\nchief of army engineers at Memphis, Issued this grave warning:\n\"A super flood Is on the wly\n(on the Mississippi). There will\nbe 55 feet In Memphis before the\nwater now in tight from the Ohio\nmoves out.\" Me predicted water\nwould go 10 feet above any recorded stage.\nMore than half a million Ohio\nvalley residents were homeless.\nSuch great cities at Cincinnati\nand Louisville\u2014and many lesser\nones\u2014were paralyzed. Some, Including Evansvllle, Ind., were being evacuated as fast as pottible.\nBUNGALOW IS ATTRACTIVE\n7 to 11     TONIGHT    7 to 11\nTriple Header HOCKEY\n7 p.m.\u2014Transfer vi. Fairview Juveniles.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Ymir vs. New Grand juniors.\n10:00 p.m.\u2014Hawks vs. Fairview Juniors\nWest End Vernon Street Door Open at 6:45\nAdmission: Adults 25<* Children 10c*\nPUBLIC MEETING\nWednesday, January 27, Gelinas' Hall at- 8:30 p.m.\nHON. DR. G. M. WEIR\nProvincial  Minister of Education\nWill Speak on the New Health Insurance Act and\nEducational matters\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\nLeather Jackets\u2014Sport and plain\nbacks. JACK BOYCE. (4572)\nped decisions to the Aces club, In\ntheir Initial starts.\nThe Maple Leafs have lost the\nservices ot Phyllis Wallace who is\nunable to get away from work in\ntime to play in 'he evenings. But\nin last . riday's game against the\nCruton Motors team, Pauline Stangherlin, showed some of tbe form ex-\npc-Jed of her and club officials bop\nfor the same showing on Wednesday, Eva Hendrickaon, Edna Gormley, and Hazel Spiers, three of e\nyounger members of the Maple\nLeafs made a strong showing against\nCreston, and they will probably benefit from the experience,\nRosa Stewart, who scored 21 points\nin a single game last season, is the\nmainstay of the Red Sox club, and\nthe Maple Leafs will have to watch\nher closely,\nThe Red Sox have an ad vant' te\nin weight and reach, and are somewhat older than their opponents,\nwho have seven players out of ten\nregistered, 16 years and under.\nWednesdays lineups will be:\nGelinas Red Sox.\u2014Rosa Stewart,\nKay McDougall, Edna Jarbeau, Agnes Stewart, Mary McDougall, Dot\nJarbeau, Sybil McLean, Elvera McAdam.\naCandy Box Maple Leafs\u2014Pauline\nStangherlin, Dot Campbell, Beatrice\nMathews, Lillian Hickey, Hazel\nSpiers, Iris Johansson, Doreen\nLong, Edna GormL-y Deanie Wallace and Eva Hendrickson.\nBob Paterson and Jim Cherrington will likely referee the girls game.\nSee the latest in Pyrex percolators\nand dripolators at Hipperson's.\n(4556)\nYOUR PORTRAIT-A wonderful\nsentiment for Valentine's. Phone 46\n-THE VOGUE. (4394)\nCLASSIFIED ADS.\nAlways on the job, month in and\nmonth out. Use them\u2014It pays!\nIF YOU WANT A HOME\nCOOKED MEAL COME TO GREN-\nFELL'S  CAFE. (4561)\nSt. Saviour's Church Annual Vestry meeting. Wednesday, Jan. 27. 8\np.m. Memorial Hall. (4597)\nLost before Christmas\u2014Red plaid\noil silk umbrella. Kindly return to\nEleanor Seamon, Kerr Appts. (4600)\nCOURSE OF FREE MINING LECTURES  TO   BE   HELD   IN   CITY\nHALL FEBRUARY 2nd. at S P.M,\n(4594)\nWomen's Canadian Club, Hume\nHotel Thursday, January 28, 6:30\nSpeaker: Major Gladstone Murray,\ngeneral manager Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. All Rotarians,\nGyros and Kinsmen cordially invited\n7:30 (4604)\nST. PAUL'S CONGREGATION\nPlease take notice\u2014On account\nof the large number of the congregation desiring to be present at the\nmeeting to be addressed by Hon. G.\nM. Weir, jnlnlster of education, It\nhas been decided to postpone the\nannual meeting from January 27\nto February 3. (4605)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSeverln Olsen\u2014Passed away Saturday. Body rests at Somers Funeral\nHome; where service.will be held\nThursday at 1:30, Rev. Earl Lindgren officiating. .  (4606)\nThe Highways of the District\nhave never been in better shape.\nOur coaches are comfortably\nheated, equipped with storm windows and reclining seats.\nGREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nNelson Depot \u2014 205 Baker St.\n(4304)\nCIVIC\nTHEATRE\nCIVIC CENTRE BUILDING\nTWO FEATURE\nATTRACTIONS\nTONIGHT, TUESDAY AND\nWEDNESDAY\nMatinee Wednesday at 2 p.m\nEvenings at 7 p.m. and\n8:30 p.m.\nDOUCLASS   MONTGOMERY\nADRIENNE AMES\nEVELYN VENABLE\nin\n\"Harmony\nLane\"\nBased on the  Life of\n8TEPHEN  COLLINS FOSTER\nM\nSecretary\"\nFeaturing\nEdward Everett Horton\nThis unusually attractive lype of English\nbungalow may contain either five or six rooms,\naccording to your needs. Both interior plans are\ngiven. The larger plan contains living room, dining room, kitchen, breakfast nook and three bedrooms. Tlie smaller only two bedrooms. The\nhouse has a look of compactness and is arranged\nfor convenient living. Thc smaller plan contains\n25,200 cubic feet of space; the larger one, 30,200 cubic\nfeet. Size of main building in the six-room plan is\n37 by 46 feet; size over all, 41 feet 6 inches by 47\nfeet. The five-room contains, main building, 37\nfeet by 35 feet; size over all, 41 feet 6 inches by 36\nfeet.\nEVENINC   PRICES\nAdults 301, Children 15<\nWEDNESDAY MATINEE\nAdults 25*, Children 10*\nArrow\nCross-Tone\nShirts\nAn early Spring showing.\nSee these really new smart\nShirts by Arrow. Cross*\nTone weaves in three collar styles with distinctive\nneckwear to match.\nShirts $2.00\nTies $1.00\nEMORY'C\n*^      Limited       *-*\nCranbrook Lady\nCurlers Beaten\non Nelson Ice\nVisitors Come Off Ice\non Short End of\n24-15 Score\nNelson Ladies' Curling club\nhanded the rinks of the invading\nCranbrook ladies a 24-15 defeat in\nthe inter-city event at the Nelson\nrink Monday afternoon.\nThree games were played, the\nNelson rinks winning two and losing one.\nIn the two games curled at 1 p.m.\nMiss Isabelle Frame's Cranbrook\nrink met defeat at the hands of\nMrs. George Cady's. The score was\n3-12. In the second game Miss\nFrame's rink lost to Mrs. Tom\nBishops, by another high score, 3-10.\nIn the game at 3 p.m. the invaders\nrang up their only victory when\nMrs. Charles Cook defeated Mrs. T.\nA. Wallace 9-2.\nAfter the curling supper was\nserved at a long table in the club\nroom. Mrs. Charles Norris convened\nthe entertainment committee, assisted by Miss Grace Laughton, Mrs.\nT. A. Wallace, Mrs. John Gansner,\nMrs. T. W. Ledingham and Mrs. H.\nM. Whimster.\nNew Grand Puck\nTeam Hopes loi\nGame at Creslo\nWhile in Nelson last week-end\ncouple of Creston Junior hockey <\nthusiasts got in touch with ottlcl\nof the local New Grand Tigers hoi\ney club, endeavoring to arrange\ngame in Nelson for the Creston ;\nniors in the near future.\nAs the New Grand club Is report\nto be willing to play the Crest\nboys it is likely that the game <\nbe arranged to be payed on i\nweek-end in the near future,\nThe New Grand club also ho*\nto arrange games with New Deny\nKaslo and Rossland teams, and 1\nnot given up hopes of playing\nSpokane some time next month,\nRadio Manager's\nVisit to Trail\nPostponed a Do\nTRAIL,   B.C.,   Jan.  2J-Visit\nTrail of Major W. E. Gladstone\nray, general manager of the I.\ndian Broadcasting corporation, __\nbeen postponed 24 hours and lnstei\nof being here Wednesday he wl\nspend Thursday in the city.\nBuy or Sell With a Want As\n-Ml\ni Can\nMAKES GENEROUS DONATION\nLONDON (CP)-Lord Wakefield\nhas sent a check for $150,000 to the\nCouncil of the Tower Hill Improvements Scheme, bringing his donation to the fund up to $250,000.\nJ.A.C. Laughtoi\nOptometrist\nSuits 205 Medical Arts Bid\nSENIOR LEAGUE\nHOCKEY GAME\nThursday Night, January 28th\nNELSON vs. TRAIL CANUCKS\nReserved Seats Now on Sale at\nOffice of Nelson Civic Centre.\u201460c\nCeneral Admission:   Adults 40; Children 25c\niSMSSSKK&KSSSA^M\n&&$&S&&tS!>S&&#SS$S}&)9!SS&&S$SSS&SS&Xr!i\nRalph Bellamy -\nDavid Holt\nKatherine Locke\n-Andy Clyde\n\"STRAIGHT FROM\nTHE SHOULDER\"\nNEW LOW ADMISSION PRICE8\nEVENINGS\u2014Adults: Balcony 25c; Orchestra 35r.\nChildren 15c.\nMATINEES\u2014Adults 25c; Children 10c\n'A\/^-a^\/V^Vs\/aAY^W>\u00bby*\u00bbi^*-i->>>\u00bb^\n\u00ab*\u00bbM\u00bb5\u00ab<*\u00ab*\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbf*-*i^\u00abl\u00ab*s*ASSi^\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_1937_01_26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0412497","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"}]}}