{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0413504":{"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":"2022-04-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1938-01-07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0413504\/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":" -\nTrail Wallops Lethbridge, 4 - 0\nin Kootenay Loop Game\n\u2014Page Two   \u2022\nVOLUME 86\nFIVE CENT8 PER COPY\nCoal Miners\nAttempt to Blast\nto Hurtle Down on\nTrolley Car Loose\nHomes Is a Failure\n20-TON CAR HELD\nBYUBLESATTOP\nOF HILL DESPITE\nHUGE EXPLOSION\nDynamite Apparently\nUsed in Plot at\nHamilton\nHOUSE WINDOWS\nARE BLOWN OUT\nHAMILTON, Ont. Jan. 6 (CP)\n\u2014A terrific explosion rocked Weit\nHamilton tonight and police said\nan attempt apparently had been\nmade to send a 20-ton railway\ncar toppling down an Inclined\ntrack upon houiet nettling at the\nbottom of the 600-foot stretch of\nrailway.\nThe heavy trolley ear, held at\nthe top of the Incline by cables,\nwas shifted six Inches, police said.\nThree lines of cable remained Intact after the blast and prevented the ear from plunging down\nthe track.\nPolice said they believed an unknown person or persons had placed\nseveral sticks of dynamite between\nthe car and the railway platform at\nthe top of the incline at a time when\nno one was near, attached a long\nfuse and then returned to set off\nthe explosive.\nj The railway is known as the\nJames street Incline. It has not operated for several years and today was\nlisted for sale for tax arrears of\n$2406. Since it ceased operations,\none trolley car has been at the bottom ot the Incline and another at\nthe topv ..';_,    - ,\u201e.*__:\u2014\ntop ot the incline were blown out\nby the force of the blast. Boards\nwere torn away and west end homes\nfor a distance of several blocks were\nrocked. Had the car broken loose,\nit would have fallen directly upon\nseveral homes at the bottom ot the\nhill.\nSeeking Another\nTerm In Rossland\nJOHN E. GORDON\nMayor of Rossland, who is offering for reelection in the Golden\nCity.\nPLAN TO GRADE\nGARNET WHEAT\nSEPARATELY UP\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 6 (CP)-Gar-\nnet wheat will be eliminated from\nthe higher northern spring wheat\nclassifications and graded separately, according to a proposal soon\nto go before parliament The move\nlikely will aid the sale of the popular western variety, said E. B.\nRamsay, chief commissioner of the\nboard of grain commissioners, tonight in Winnipeg.\nGarnet is a different variety and\nshould not be listed with other\nnorthern grades, Mr. Ramsay believes. The proposal means a new\ngrade S C.W. Garnet will be set up,\nin addition to the present 1 and 2\nC.W. Garnet.\nSpokane Marriage\nLicence for Pair\nFrom Golden City\nSPOKANE, Jan. 6 (CP)-A marriage licence was issued here today\nto Wayne Hawk, 22, and Helen\nStandlnger, 23, both of Rossland,\nB. C.\nFernie Coal Mines\nInspector Is Moved\nVICTORIA, Jan. 8 (CP)- Inspector John MacDonald, inspector in\nthe coal mines division at Fernie,\nhas been transferred to Nanaimo,\nit was learned today at the legislative buildings. The Fernie inspectorate has not yet been filled.\nNORTH VANCOUVER. B.C, Jan.\n8 (CP)\u2014A verdict of accidental\naeath was returned by a coroner's\njury, investigating the death of\nThomas Moran, quarry worker who\nwas killed Monday when crushed between two trucks at nearby\nDeep Cove.\nNAZI SALUTE FOR\nKIWANIS OFFICER\nSweeney to Speak to\nTrades and Labor\nCouncil\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 6 (CP)-Leo\nSweeney, service club president\nwhose asserted remarks on social\nlegislation brought \"strong resentment\" from the Vancouver, New\nWestminster and District Trades\nand Labor council, said today bis\noffer to address the.labor body had\nbeen accepted.\nThe retiring president ot tho Ki-\nwanis club made the announcement\nat a meeting of that organization.\nHe did not say what would be the\nnature of his address to the Trades\nand Labor council.\nSweeney, who assertedly advocated a modified Nazi policy for\nCanada in an address to another\nservice club last Monday, was greeted with Nazi salutes and shouts of.\n\"Heil Sweeney\" when he' attended\nthe Kiwanis club meeting today.\nThe demonstration, planned as a\nstunt by a group of members,\nbrought applause.\nFlin Flon Only Place\nin World for Beer on\nCredit, He Declares\nREGINA, Jan. 6 (CP)\u2014 Ability\nto buy beer on credit at Flin Flon\nwas given today by Prospector L.\nA. Moore as irrefutable evidence of\nfavorable conditions prevailing in\nthe northern Manitoba mining town.\n\"I have not heard of any other\nplace in the world where you can\ndo this,\" said Mr. Moore, here on a\nvisit.\n\"The whole outlook of the people is different, everything is on a\nhigher tone because of absence of\nuncertainty and unemployment and\na feeling of security prevails,\" he\nsaid.\n10 FACTUMS ARE\nFILED FOR ALTA.\nHEARING BEFORE\nSUPREME COURT\nB. C. Factum Says the\nProvince Has No\nSubmission\nNEWSPAPERS BACK\nUP FEDERAL STAND\nOTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CP)\u2014With\n10 factums on file the supreme\ncourt's record In preparation for\nthe Alberta constitutional reference Is complete tonight. Factums\nwere filed today on behalf of Canadian dally and weakly news\npaper associations and the chartered banks.\nEarlier four factums were filed\nfor the Alberta government two\nfor the Dominion government, one\nfor the British Columbia government and one for the dally and\nweekly newspapers of Alberta.\nBritish Columbia was the only\nprovince outside of Alberta to notice the dispute between the Dominion and Alberta governments\nover the power of the federal government to disallow provincial legislation, the power .of the lieutenant-governor to reserve provincial\nlegislation and the vdidity of three\nAlberta bills relating to bank taxation of credit and newspapers.\nBritish Columbia will take no\npart in the dispute. Its factum simply states the attorney-general of\nthat province has no submission to\nmake.\nBoth the bank and newspaper factums support tho Dominion government's contention the three Alberta bills are unconstitutional.-The\nbanks confined their submission to\nthe credit and taxation measures\nand the newspapers to the bill affecting them.\nThe credit regulation act expressly states it does not apply to banks\nbut the bank factum claims it seeks\nto establish provincial control over\ncredit transactions which are necessarily incidental to banking and\nthat banking is under the exclusive\njurisdiction of the federal parliament\nObject of Mercy\nFlight Is Too III\nto Be \"Taken Out\"\nSYDNEY, N.S, Jan. 6 (CP)-At-\ntended by a doctor after a mercy\nflight, a resident of isolated northern Cape Breton was fighting for her\nlife tonight\u2014too sick to be flown\nto hospital.\nAviator Bob Smuck and Dr. Phil\nMagonet of North Sydney returned\nfrom a flight to Bay St. Lawrence,\non the northern tip of the island,\nto report Mrs. Joseph McNeil too\nill to be moved.\nThe 26-year-old woman gave birth\nto a baby 11 days ago and complication set in. Dr. Magonet attended\nher today and left medicine for her,\nbut said she could not be moved\nand his presence would be of po\nadditional value In her struggle.\nU.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR STEPS\nINTO DISPUTE OF SEATTLE'S PORT\nSEATTLE, Jan. 6 (AP) \u2014 The department ot labor stepped Into the\noort tie-up situation here today,\nless than 24 hours after the port\nwas \"closed,\" and Conciliator Ernest P. Marsh said he hoped to bring\nboth the waterfront employers group\nand the Longshoremens and Warehousemen's Union together in an\nearly conference.\nMarsh had a two-hour hearing\nwith the union executive committee\ntills forenoon. Matt Median, district\nsecretary of the union, said \"he\nheard our side of the dispute.\"\nMarsh then arranged an afternoon\nconference with the Seattle Waterfront Employers association, following which, he said, he would ask\na Joint meeting of the executive\ncommittees of both sides.\nThe threat ot severe losses to the\nport through the diversion of cargoes to other ports was voiced by\nM. G. Ringenberg, manager ot the\nwaterfront employers,\nChild Born on Street\nCar Forgotten While\nMother Is Cared for\nST, LOUIS, Jan. 6 (AP) - Mrs.\nGeraldine Worth, 18-year-old expectant mother who started to the\ncity hospital by street car today,\narrived there five minutes after\nher new-born child had reached\nthe hospital.\nA baby was born on the street\ncar, but the passengers were so\noccupied ministering to the mother\nthey failed to notice the child. Mrs.\nWorth was taken from the car by\na policeman who called an ambulance.\nThe street car proceeded on its\nway. A tew blocks tarther, a woman\npassenger discovered the child, lying on the floor. The car was, stopped and an ambulance was' summoned. It brought the baby to the\nhospital before the mother arrived\nthere.\nB. C. \"Listens in\" on\nAlta. Court Hearing\nVICTORIA, Jan. 6 (CP)-Alan\nMabLean, departmental solicitor tor\nAttorney-general Wismer, left last\nnight for Ottawa, where he will\nhold a watching brief for British\nColumbia on the validity hearings ot\nthe Alberta bank and press legislation before tthe supreme court,\n\"We are not submitting any arguments in the matter,\" said the attorney-general today, \"but we believe\nthe questions involved are of such\nimportance that we should have a\nrepresentative to listen to the case.\"\nThree Doukhobor\nMen Are Charged\nRobbery, Assault\nPreliminary hearing of three Barabanoff brothers of Krestova, Pete,\nJim and John, opened before John\nCartmel, stipendiary magistrate, in\nprovincial police court Thursday on\ncharges ot robbery with violence.\nIt will continue today.\nTwo witnesses were on the stand,\nJohn Rezno, Wesko miner who\ncharged the three former prairie\nDoukhobors with beating him up\nand robbing him of $70 at Shore-\nacres on Christmas night; and Pete\nKozak, companion of Rezno.\nConstable G. S. Blaney conducted the prosecution.\nVan Zeeland lo\nSee Chamberlain\nLONDON, Jan. \u00ab (CP-Havts)--\nFormerJ*ejnl_r,Paul. van Zeeland the\no*pWftfffl fcrflvW here'TWay lor\"\nconversations with British statesmen regarding toe study of world\neconomic conditions he undertook\nat the request ot the Paris and London governments.\nHe was to see Prime Minister\nChamberlain tomorrow morning.\nThe prime minister returned to London this afternoon from Welstpool,\nwhere he spent part pf the holiday\nseason as guest of the Earl of Fowls.\nThe prime ministsejr temporarily\ntook charge ot the foreign office in\nthe absence in the south of France\nof Foreign Secretary Eden.\nVan Zeeland said on his arrival\nhe planned to make no press statements in' view of the confidential\nnature of his discussions.\nKey Man in Robinson\nCase Is Clerk in an\nEgyptian Consulate\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (AP)-The\nintriguing mystery of \"Mr. and Mrs.\nDonald L. Robinson\" and the fraudulently obtained passports they carried when they vanished in Moscow\nlast month deepened today with assertion by federal agents that a key\nman in the case was a clerk in the\nEgyptian consulate here.\nHe was identified by the agents as\nArron Sharfin, Russian-born resident of the Bronx, and as the mysterious \"Mr. D.\" who helped obtain\nthe passports of the Robinsons and\nof Adolph Arnold Rubens thrbugh\nthe office of Tammany county clerk\nAlbert Marinelli April 3, 1836.\nFamed Schooner\nGrounds, Has a Leak\nGLOUCESTER, Mass.. Jan. 6 (AP)\n\u2014The famed Gloucester fishing\nschooner Gertrude L. Thebaud was\ndamaged early today when she\nsprang a leak after grounding olt\nher dock. She will have to be repaired before taking to sea again.\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 6 (CP)-Mr.\nand Mrs. A. H. Davis of Vancouver\nannounced today the engagement of\ntheir only daughter, Marguerite\nMillicent to Herbert Vincent Kevis\nson of Mr. and Mrs. Kevis of Port\nAlberni, B.C. The wedding will take\nplace here Jan. 11.\nBrother of Arthur\nPitchford, Nelson\nDies at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 6 (CP)-Fu-\nneral services will be held here Saturday for James Davis Pitchford,\n62, who died in hospital here today.\nA resident of Vancouver 30 years,\nhe was a retired postmaster at a\nresidential substation.\nA brother, Arthur, lives In Nelson, B.C.\n10 REPLY BOARD\nPROTEST CUTTING\nPREFERENCE OH\nCANADIAN APPLE\nGovernment Leaders\nPledge Consider\nNelson View\nTRADE TREATIES\nTO BE DEBATED\nKootenay representations protesting against reduction of the\nImperial preference on Canadian\napples and. against elimination of\ndump duty; protection on United\nStates fruit exports to Canada,\nhave gone Into many governmental hands. This was evident at\na meeting of the ceunoll of the\nNelson board of trade Thursday\nwhen W. G. C. Lanskall, secretary, read replies to Nelson representations which' followed In\nmany respects the protests of the\nOkanagan. The protests were registered when It was Intimated\nBrltlsh-Amerlean-Canadlan nago.\ntlant might Iff act the preference\nand the dump duty.\nW. McL. Clark, secretary, of the\nCanadian chamber of commerce,\nstated the Canadian Horticultural\ncouncil was active in guarding the\nInterests of growers and added that\nthe minister of trade and commerce had expressed willingness to\nreceive representations from business men.\n\"OMINOUS\" SILENCE\nPremier Pattullo wrote that the\ngovernment was considering the\nquestion carefully; and Hon. Dr.\nK. C. MacDonald, minister of agriculture, stated bi\u00ab department was\ntaking it up.\nHon. Grote Stirling, M.P. for Yale,\ncomplimented the B. C. Fruit\nGrowers' association on the-excellent work it was doing in outlining the dangers of interfering with\nthe-pre.ference\/'ahd dump, duty .and \u25a0\nasserted it was an \"ominous thing\nthat the government hat made no\nstatement to allay our fears.\"\nFrom the office of Premier King,\ntame the assurance that the government would carefully consider representations.\nRt Hon. R. B. Bennett, leader of\nthe Opposition, wrote that his views\non the Imperial preference were already known. The more he understood the situation, the more firmly convinced was he that any\nchanges shquld be opposed, Mr.\nBennet wrote.\nIMPORTANT SUBJECT\nW. K. Esllng, M.P, for Kootenay\nWest, stated Conservatives would\nstrongly oppose interference with\nthe Empire agreements and added\nthat the subject would be one of\nthe most important under consideration at the coming session of the\nfederal House.\nHon. J. G. Gardiner, minister of\nagriculture, wrote that the Nelson\nletter had been referred to A. M.\nShaw, director of marketing.\nThanks for the expression of this\ndistricts views were expressed by\nHon. J. L. Ilsley, minister of national revenue; and the assurance\nthat these views would be given\ncareful consideration was received\nfrom Hon. Ian Mackenzie, minister\nof national defence.\n34Wounded,60JailedWhen\nPolice Battle 200 Strikers\nKINGSTON. Jamaica, Jan. 6 (CP\nCable)\u2014Armed police patrolled a St.\nThomas parish sugar estate tonight\nafter a day ot clashes with strlnking\nplantation workers in which 34 were\nwounded and 60 jailed.\n' Most serious disturbance occurred\nbetween a group of officers and\nabout 200 strikers. The latter, armed\nwith machetes, marched to the gate\nof the plantation owned by Hon. R.\nEhrenstein and refused to disperse\nwhen ordered. Majority ot the casualties came when the police charged.\nThe trouble, simmering for several days, broke out yesterday when\n1400 laborers, many armed with\nmachetes or clubs, interrupted Ehrenstein as he sought to pacify them\nand forced him to leave the district\nunder protection of an armed guard\nThe strikers also chased Alexander Bustamante, whom they termed\na \"traitor\" to their cause, from the\nplantaton. Bustamante is a former\nJamaica labor leader.\nThe strikers, who seek two shillings a ton for cut cane Instead of\nthe 10 pence halfpenny they now\nreceive, then picketed all roads\nleading to the estate and turned\nback all trucks and carts bringing\ncane to the factory.\nSALMO HAN HEIR\nTO A HALF OF BIG\nSPOKANE ESTATE\nR. E. Witter Named in\nWill; Shares on the\nDeath of Widow\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 6 (CP)-Rus-\nsell E. Witter of Salmo, B. C, is\nbeneficiary of half the residuary estate of his father, Clyde E. Witter,\nit was shown in a will filed In supreme court today for ancillary probate.\nWitter died in Spokane last August, leaving a net estate of $94,000,\nHis wife, Margaret A. Witter of\nSpokane, receives a life interest On\nher death the estate is shared equally by Russell Witter and daughter,\nKatherine Witter Keathe of Spokane.\nDrake's Drum Is\nSaved From Fife\nPLYMOUTH, Jan. 6 (AP)-The\nfamous \"Drake's Drum\", which superstition says rolls whenever danger threatens England, was saved\ntoday when tire consumed timbered Buckland Abbey, once the residence of Sir Francis Drake, naval\nhero of Elizabethan days.\n\"Drake's Drum\" was used to\nsound the warning of the Spanish\nArmada's approach to' English\nshores in 1599. It-has been heard\nseveral times since, according to\nthe legend.\nThe last time was after the great\nwar when it was aboard the battleship Royal Oak. Sailors said they\nheard the strange, inexplicable rumbling during a tense period of waiting before the German fleet came\ninto sight to surrender at Scapa\nFlow.\nU.S. REOPENS NANKING EMBASSY,\nJAPANESE DRIVE DEEPER IN CHINA\nSHANGHAI, Jan. 7 (Friday).\n(AP)\u2014Japanese forces estimated\nthat 60,000 well-equipped men were\nreported today thrusting from the\nnorth and south at the Lunghal\nrailroad.\nControl of that important main\neast-west trunkline would open the\nway for a Japanese drive into the\ninterior and against China's provisional capital, Hankow, on the\nYangtze river in the interior of Ho-\npeh province.\nThirty planes, possibly forerunners ot a land assault on Hankow,\nyesterday heavily bombed airfields\nat Hankow and Wuchang, across the\nriver.. Fifty Chinese non-combatants were killed or wounded.\nOther developments included reopening of the United States em:\nbassy at Nanking, fallen capital of\nthe Chinese National government,\nand issuance of a statement by the\nJapanese government that China\nhad shown \"increasing evidence\" of\nan intention to seek peace.\nTwo United States consuls took\ncharge of the embassy, closed before\nNanking fell to the Japanese Dec. 13.\nUnion Typographers Refuse $9.50\nfor V\/i Hour High) Shift; Papers\nin Portland May Have lo Suspend\nPORTLAND, Jan. 6 (AP)-News-\npaper typographers by a vote described as overyhelming authorized\ntheir executive council today to call,\nat its discretion, a strike of composing room employees ot Portlands' three daily newspapers.\nThe action followed weeks ot\nnegotiation between representatives\nof the International Typographical\nunion and the managements ot the\nnewspapers.\nIn a Joint statement, publishers ot\nthe three newspapers, the Oregon-\nIan, Oregon Journal and News-Telegram, asserted the unions had declared arbitration after both sides\nhad been unable  to agree upon\nwages and hours. It said in part:\n\"If the union persists in its re-\nfusual to arbitrate and in its determination to strike, the three\nPortland newspapers will be compelled to suspend publication. Executives thereof state that they cannot surernder the principle of arbitration,\"\nThe newspaper statement said the\nunion asked $9 for a 7-hour day\nshift and $9.50 for a 7-hour night\nshift. The present scale is $8.65 for\na Vk hour day shift and (9.05 for\na 7V. hour night shift. The newspapers offered $9 for a 7% hour\nday shift and $9.50 for a 7 V. hour\nnight shift.\nChild Unwittingly\nHelps Men to Rob\nHer Dad's Hotel\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 8 (CP) -The\nfive-year-old daughter of H. Iwasaki\nproprietor of the Empress holtel,\nwas the unsuspecting accomplice ot\ntwo men who robbed her father of\n$100 today. While Iwasaki was asleep\nthe men induced the child to get\nthe keys to the office, then they entered and took the cash box,\nPolice said the pair had occupied\na room in the hotel for several days.\nAerial Outlet to\nCoast From Peace\nRiver Area Soon\nEDMONTON, Jan. 6 (CP)\u2014\/eace\nriver area will have an aerial outlet to the Pacific coast, Edmonton\nwill be linked with Vancouver with\nair services through Fort St. Johnh,\nand the coast city will have air connection with Yukon when a new\nVancouver air service, announced today, is inaugurated in mid-January.\nOrganized by R. L. \"Ginger\" Coote,\nwell-known business man and flier\nof Vancouver, with cooperation ot\nGrant McConachie, United Air\nTransport president here, the weekly\nair service will link Vancouver to\nthe Edmonton-Whitehorse mail route\nat Fort St, John. Schedules will be\narranged to connect with the northbound flights from Edmonton on\nMondays and with the southbound\nflights from Whltehorse Saturdays.\nProspectors Contact\n\"Civilization\" Again\nCOCHRANE, Ont., Jan. 6 (CD-\nEight prospectors staking claims in\nthe barren lands about 600 miles\nnorth of here where James bay meets\nHudson bay at Cape Jones were\nback in touch with civilization today, it was understood here.\nNews of the men, who were flown\ninto the district last summer, came\nwhen Henry Norrlngton, Toronto,\narrived at East Main, Hudson's Bay\ncompany post.\nBest Fighters in\nSpain Are Canucks\nCommanderSlales\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (CP)-The\nAmerican commander ot the Abraham Lincoln battalion of the Spanish government forces today described Canadian troops as the \"best\nfighters\" in the International brigade, now locked in battle with the\ninsurgents around snow-girt Teruel\nCaptain Bans Amlie, who returned to the- United States January 1\nfor a speaking tour, said be believed\nCecil Smith of Toronto, recently returned to command of the Macken-\nzie-Papineau battalion after a long\nstretch in hospital, would be leading the Canadian shock-troops in the\nintense Teruel offensive.\nAbout 1000 Canadian volunteers\nare fighting the Spanish government's cause, according to Amjie, a\nbrother of United States Congressman Thomas Amlie pf Wisconsin.\nHe estimated the number ot Canadians killed in action at less than\n100.\nAlta. to Seek Removal\nof Parts of Ottawa's\nFactum,   in   Hearing\nOTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CP)-Alberta\nwill attempt to have large sections\nof the Dominion government factum\nstruck out when the Canadian supreme court reference on Alberta\nlegislation opens here Monday.\nCbl. O. M. Biggar, chief counsel\nfor Alberta,, today filed a notice ot\nintention to ask the court lor direction on parts of the Dominion factum which he claims are irrelevant\nto the issue.\nThe sections to which objection Is\ntaken deal with the general Social\nCredit program of the Alberta government and include quotations\nfrom the writings of Major C. H.\nDouglas, founder of Social Credit.\nThey were included in the Dominion factum in an attempt to show\nthat the three bills referred to the\ncourt form part of a. general illegal\nscheme to establish a new social\norder in Alberta.\nBUT SUSPENSION\nPOSSIBLE IF HO\nHEADWAY MADE\nIH HEGOTIATIOHS\nTo Meet Operators lr>\nLate February for\/ '\nDiscussions\nMOVE INCLUDES\nCROW DISTRICT\nCALGARY, Jan. 6 (CP)-Rep.\nresentatlves of District 18, United\nMini Workers of America, will\nmaintain a non-suspenilon ef op.\norations policy when they meet\nwith mine operator* late In Feb.\nruary to negotiate for Increases of\nwages on expiration of existing\ncontracts.\nDelegates reached this decision\nat the special wage convention\nhere today. The delegate! represent 6600 miners In Alberta and\nBritish Columbia, Including the\nCrow district\nIn announcing: wage Increase*\nwould be sought, Robert LIvett,\ndistrict president, said:\n\"The policy committee has been\ngiven authority to adopt lawful\nmeasures to consummate as agree\"\nment on the basis ot an, Increase in\npresent scales that will be set forth\nin presentations to mine operators,\n\"We hope to bring about the desired agreement with no cessation\not operationsibut we hayo the lib*\nerty it negotiations break oft to\nsuspend operations it we so desire.\"\nSince 1925 the union has bad individual contracts with the operators. The Operators' association was I\ndisbanded that year.\nMost contracts terminate March Sll\nor may be cancelled by 30 days' no'\ntlce.\nPIRATE SLAYER j\nFREED OF GUILT\nLOS ANGELES, fan. 6 <AP)-J_\nfederal grand jury today freed Robert Home, 27, and George Spernak,\n19, of guilt in their confessed parts\nin ending the piratical career ot\n\"Mad Jack\" Morgan, after five days\nof terror aboard the luxurious yacht\nAafje.\nMorgan, who had chartered the)\nyacht last December 20 for an announced two-day pleasure trip t<>\nCatalina island, was declared by\nthe survivors to have killed the owner, Dwight Faulding, Santa Barbara\nhotel man, the first night out,\nAfter five days of terror in which\nthe seven remaining passengers said\nthey were in constant fear of their\nlives, Home said, he felled Morgan\nwith a marlinspike and with Spern-\nak's aid, tossed him overboard tar\nWest Mexican waters.\nRowell Commission\nat Victoria March 2\nVICTORIA, Jan. 6 (CP) \u2014 Th*)1\nRowell Commission on Dominion-\nprovincial relations will sit in Vic\u00bb\u00bb\ntoria March 2, instead of March 14\nas planned, Premier Pattullo *\u00bb\u00bb\u2022\nadvised today,\nThe premier said the final plans\nfor presentation of the provincial\nbrief had not been made. Senator\nJ. W. De B. Farris, K. C, is to bs\nchief counsel tor the province and\nit is expected both the premier and\nAttorney-General Gordon Wismer\nwill appear.\nRECOVER $2000 8TOLEN GOODS\nMONTREAL, Jan. 6 (CPr - In\nsimultaneous raids on rooming\nhouses, a half-dozen police Officers\narrested four men today and recovered $2000 worth of goods allegedly\nstolen during the past three months.\nTaken to headquarters were Eugene\nPoquette, Sylvester Petronzifl and\nLucien Labranche, all to be arraigned on charges of theft. The fourth\nman, Alphonse Houle, will be charged with receiving.\nFerguson Sisters From Kamloops\nMake Life Tough for a Reporter\nHe's \"Very Tired, Been Kissed Twice'' ancl FV\n\"Lost Two Pencils\" in Interview With\nYoung Travellers at Montreal\nMONTREAL, Jan. 6 (CP)-The\nFerguson sisters are in town from\nKamloops, B.C., and the event is\nproving a pretty exhausting assignment for the reporters.\nBig and good-antured Geoff Hew-\nelcke went down to see them at the\nstation today and then came back\nsomewhat dishevelled to report in\nthe Star:\n\"I am very tired. I've been kissed\ntwice. I lost two pencils.\" (He used\nthem as bribes to get hi! Interview).\n\"My bowler hat has a dint in it.\"\n(It happened to get in the way ot\na book thrown by a Ferguson- sister). \"And you'd be tired too,\" Mr.\nHewelcke added plaintively, \"After\nhalf an hour in the company of the\nMisses June and Ruth Ferguson.\"\n' June and Ruth are the daughters\not Harry Ferguson in Kamloops,\nand the year's youngest unaccompanied long-distance travellers.\nThey're bound for Liverpool, England, by way of Saint John, N.B.,\nand a liner to visit \"Auntie Alice.\"\nBut that didn't Impress the sisters much today, June, \"halt-past\nsix years old,\" as she put it, was\nmore interested in the newly-discovered fact that one and one make.\ntwo.\nThe reporter pulled out his notebook and jotted down the equation.\nJune like that. \"One and one is\ntwo,\" she repeated, just so he'd get\nit right. He said he had it \"One\nand one is two,\" she dictated again,\nfirmly and loudly, and watched to\nsee that it went into the book.\nRuth was asked it she had any\nstatement. She said, \"Unh.\" Jean\nspoke up for heri \"One and one is\ntwo.\"\n\"But I have that already,\" Hewelcke protested.\n\"Aw, nuts,\" June said. \"Besides\", she added thoughtfully, \"I\ndon't know about talking to reporters anyway. I might get Into\nthe papers back home and then\nmother wouldn't like It. People\nmight go 'Blah-Blah-Blah'.\"\ni_.^-_i-->-gH\n,A,\n^^^llttl.B\n\u2014 \u25a0-. .- .:.'\n PAGE TWO\nAnderson and Groutage Hold a\nJoin! Debate Trail Mayoralty;\nMaking Up Deficit Main Issue\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 6\u2014Candidates\n.lor the various civic offices, who\nwill stand for election January 13,\naddressed a meeting of the Trail\n\"Ratepayers' association in the city\nball auditorium here tonight.\nActing Mayor J. R. Anderson, who\ndeclared ,he had no platform, said\nhe had not had any ambition to\nrun for the mayoralty, but since he\n.had carried on. following the death\nof the late Mayor Bruno Lerose, he\nconsidered it a duty. itots could be\ndone with the money available, he\n'said.\nANDERSON  FOR\nMORE WATER\n\"I feel we can find a solution to\n'our water question without a great\ndeal of expenditure,\" Mr. Anderson\ncontinued, \"evels have been taken\nand we have found that a new reservoir can be built from 300 to 400\nfeet higher than our highest one,\n.and as far as pressure Is concerned\nIn our city, our troubles will be\nover.\"\n\u25a0 The acting mayor reviewed work\nthat would have to be done by the\n.public works department, pointing\n\u2022out that the city was past the log-\ncribbing stage, and retaining walls\nwould have to be built of concrete\nOr stone. The river wall was completed almost to the end of the rink.\nGROUTAGE STRESSES\nECONOMY\n\"We, are facing a crisis we have\nnot faced for some time,\" asserted\nCOULD HARDLY\nCLOSE HANDS\nHad Rheumatism and Neuritis\n\"I lufered urerely\n| from Rheumatism and\n| Neuritis,\" writes Mr.\nW.J. Trier of Toronto.\n\"I could lisrdly walk\nupstair, or close my\nhinds. After liking Fruililives four days\ntho swelling left my hinds ind knees. I\ncould climb slain and ladder. 1 idriie in;\npoena suffering u I did to tike fruit-i-\nlires. Tho* give quick relief.\" Try this\nroil fruit juice, herb ind tonic prescription\nof a fimoui Cinidiin doctor. If you suiter,\nIhejr might clear up your case too. 25c\nind 50c.   No substitute.  At druggists.\nFRUITATOESS\nE. L. Groutage, former mayor, who\nis contesting the mayoralty with\nActing Mayor Anderson. \"At the end\nof last year there was a deficit of.\nover $10,000. When I went out of office the city had a surplus ot ?10,-\n000. My motto is to pay as you go\nand to keep out of debt. Whoever\nare on fhe council this year must\nrealize that the deficit must be taken\nout of this year's taxes, which means\nthat much less money to work with'.''\nMr. Groutage then asked Mr. Anderson what procedure he proposed\nto follow.\n\"New building in Trail during\n1637 was close to a half million dollars,\" replied Mr. Anderson, \"and\ntrip fire, water and light committee\nin order to make water connections\nto all these new houses, many of\nwhich were in inaccessible places,\noverspent itself, as did the board of\nworks in making roads and laying\nsewers. 1 don't propose to meet all\nthe deficit, but I feel with the increased revenue for these additional\nwater services I should be able to\nwipe off at least $10,000 of it. I expect the mill rate to be the same as\nlast year and propose to say 'No' to\nrequests which will not have been\nbudgetted for at the beginning ot\nthe year.\" \u2022\n\"If he will say 'No' this year he\nshould have said a lot of-'Noes\"last\nyear,\" rejoined Mr. Groutage. \"For\nthe city will be called on to do the\nsame kind of work as last year.\nTrail is still to grow. I am not in\nfavor of increasing taxation, .1 am\nconvinced that administration can\nbe worked otherwise. At the same\ntime assessments are plenty high\nenough, but if careful and economic\nadministration is maintained the\nnecessities can be taken care of\nwithout a deficit.\" .\n\"The city of Trail financially is\nbest oft in the Dominion of Canada,\" declared Mr. Anderson. \"The\ndeficit as caused by rapid growth ot\nthe city which we were unable to\nkeep up with.\"\nOTHER CANDIDATES HEARD\nTom Keid, candidate for school\nboard trustee, and T. O. Davis, William Thomson, Arnold Lauriente\nand 6. P. Westhaver, aldermamc\ncandidates, gave their views on civic\naffairs, their remarks resulting in\nmuch discussion on various topics,\nC. A. Newman, police commissioner, pointed out the need for more\nmen on the force, and stated that\nif more were added during the year\nhe would not hear much derogatory\ncomment.\ni- \"In III. Hsart of Spokane.\"\noi_4 across Ihe street from tha\nJK& Gr**t Northern, Union Parity cine and Auto-Inlcrurhan\nj\/r \\ Depots. Mrs. Harry Coeta,\nMgr,\nCLEAN FALSE TEETH-\nGET RID OF STAINS\nNew Eaty Way-No Brushing\nStera-KIeen, tn.tE.nir new discovery, removes blackest ittlns, tarnish, tartar Hk<\nmarie. Just put false teeth or bridges In s\nglass of water and add Stera-Kleen powder.\nNo messy brushing. Recommended by den-\nti stir\u2014approved by Good Housekeeping. At\n\u25a0ill druiftfifsts. Money back if not delighted\n(Advt.)\nHave You Read the Classified?\nGuide for Travellers,\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel.\nNelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :' EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-FR1DAY MORNING. JAN. 7, 1938,\nintermediate Hoop\nTeam Lining Up in\nTrail City League\nTRAIL, B. C. Jan. 6 ,\u2014 With a\nview.to picking an intermediate\nrepresentative basketball team the\nfollowing are practicing at Trail\nMemorial hall Monday nights frdm\n6 to 7 p.m.; Ed Groves, Clark Graham, Charles Wyatt, M. Burrows,\nLeslie Murdoch, C- Sammartino,\nHarold Coverdalc, D. Mandcvillo,\nM. Cusick, Marcus Smith, Geno Pa-\nolini, Ralph Temple, Nick Turik,\nJulius Agostlnelli and George Long.\nArnold Lauriente\nEnters Race for\nCouncil In Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 6\u2014Seventh to\nenter the aldermanic field is Arnold Lauriente, carpenter foreman\nfor the C. M. St S. Co., who announced his candidature this afternoon,\nMr. Lauriente has had many fellow workers and downtown businessmen urge him to run for office.\nHe was raised in Trail, has taken\nan active interest in all sports.\nHe received his education here and\nfor over 15 years has been employed by the smelter.\nMr. Lauriente is a member of\nCrlstoforo Colombo lodge.\n<c\nSaturday M .R. K.'s\nMeet Westerners\nA Bantam Hockey league game\nwill be played Saturday morning\nbetween the M. R. K. and Westerner teams, completing the first series of the schedule. The two teams\nhave adjacent practice periods in\nSaturday's schedule, and the two\nperiods will be \u2022 amalgamated to\npermit the game to be played,\nstarting at 9:40 a.m. The game was\noriginally scheduled for early last\nweek and was defaulted by the\nWesterners through failure to have\nenough players to carry on, but\nthe M. R. K.'s waived the default\nawarded them, and obtained a rescheduling.\nHAMILTON, Ont. (CP) - Police\nare on the lookout for an alleged\nJoker who circulated in the big\nstores and jabbed women clerks\nwith needles or pins\u2014\"just to see\nthem wince.\"\nV Fowle Old\nTrail Resident\nPasses Aged 14\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 8 -P. (Pat)\nFowle, 74 years, a resident of this\ndistrict since 1912, died Wednesday\nTrail-Tadanac hospital after a\nngthy illness,\nMr. Fowle was well known in\nTrail and Rossland, having been in\nbusiness as a barber in both cities\nuntil ill health forced his retirement.\nHe is survived by his wife in\nTrail.\nThe deceased was a charter member of Trail branch No. 50, B.P.O.E.,\nwhich will have charge of the funeral.\nFUNERAL 8ATURDAY\nBorn in London, Eng., May 17,\n1863, Mr. Fowle left for the U. S. A.\nwhen he was seven years old. In\n1912 he arrived in Rossland where\nhe set up his business, later coming\nto Trail where he made his home on\nPine avenue until his death.\nThe funeral will be held Saturday at 10:00 a.m., when requiem\nhigh mass will be celebrated In St.\nFrancis Xavier church, by Rev. C.\nJ. Clancy. Interment will be made\nin Mountain View cemetery.\nRangers Wallop\nBlack Hawks 4-1\nCHICAGO, Jan. 6 (CP)-Shaking\noff Chicago's Indian sign, New York\nRangers humbled the Black Hawks\n4-1 tonight for their first win of\nthe season over the third-place team\nof the National Hockey league's\nAmerican group,\nAs Dave Kerr, the league's leading goalie, kept kicking Hawk shots\nout from all angles, New York added\nto its lead in both of the final periods. Cecil Dillon scored in the\nsecond period after a pass from\nBabe Pratt, and In the closing frame,\nBryan Hextall banged home a goal,\nwith Keeling and Bobby Kirk setting the stage.\nPratt drew a 10-mlnute mil-\nconduct penalty In the third period for language that Referee\nClarence Campbell found objectionable,\nTRAIL BLANKS LETHBRIDGE 4-0 TO\nRUN WIN STREAK EIGHT IH ROW\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., Jan. \u00ab (CP)\n\u2014Trail Smoke Eaters ran their string\nof wins to eight when they applied\nthe whitewash to Lethbridge Maple\nLeafs to win 4-0 in a Kootenay Hockey league battle here tonight. Although Trail played shorthanded at\ntimes the Leafs were unable to take\nadvantage as they bucked a stout defence and airtight goalkeeping. Dick\nKowcinak notched two of the Trail\ngoals and Dave Duchak and Joe\nBenoit bagged one each. A capacity\ncrowd of close to 3600 was in attendance.\nLethbridge started off aggressively\nbut Duke Scodellaro outguessed\nthem whenever they got in close.\nDave Duchak opened the scoring on\na pass from John McCreedy to put\nTrail in the lead, Lethbridge was\nawarded a penalty shot when Mel\nSnowdon tripped a Leaf player, but\nLeafs failed to score. Kowcinak add.\ned another for Trail on a solo near\nthe end of the session.\nSnowdon and Tommy Johnston\nwere waved to the bench shortly after the start of the middle frame\nand Leafs put on the pressure but\nfailed to enter the scoring column.\nKowcinak got his second goal when\nthe Smoke Eaters were back at full\nstrength for the only tally of the\nperiod.\nTrail removed any lingering\ndoubts as to the outcome of the\ngame shortly after the start of the\nfinal stanza when Joe Benoit took a\npass from Bobbie Marshall and rifled\nit into the net.\nJimmie Mclndoe, Bob Kirkpatrick\nand Johnny Ursaki maile. many dangerous forays up the ice but failed\nto get one by the eagle-eyed Trail\nnet guardian.        I\nW. Barclay, Oldtimer\nFruitvale  Passes\nTRAIL, B:C. Jan. 8 \u2014 William\nGreen Barclay, 78, oldtimer of Fniit*\nvale, died at his home there today.\nHe leaves a wife and two boys,\nDuncan and Wilfred and one daughter, Mrs. Johnson of Fruitvale, arid\na brother in Calgary. Funeralstf-\nvlces will be held in Fwltvale P-\nurday. ''\/\u2022*_\u00bb'*'\nRED WINGS TIE\nNEW YORK, 1-1\nNEW YORK, Jan. 8 (CP)-De-\ntroit Red Wings went through their\nsecond straight National Hockey\nleague game without a defeat tonight by coming from behind to\ntie New York Americans 1-1 in\novertime.\nAfter a fast and hard-checking\nframe, the Detroitcrs knotted the\ncount at the,half way mark of the\nthird session through Larry Aurie,\nHe slammed a backhander into the\nAmerican cage following a tricky\npassing bout with Doug Young and\nMarty Barry.\nPolish Experts\nVisit C. M. & S.\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Jan. 6\u2014A party of\nengineers and metallurgists from the\nUnited States is visiting the Consolidated Mining & Smelting Company of Canada here. Included in\nthe party are E. Katowice, Poland;\nG. B. Lundeval, Calif., consulting\nengineer at Los Angeles and former\nmetallurgical manager for the Polish Giesche in Katowice, Poland,\nG. B. Lundeval, engineer of Stockton, Utah, who'also resided in Poland for many years; J. H. Bradford, engineer of Tooele, Utah, and\nJ. Ray Coulter, also of Tooele, who\nrecently returned from 12 years'\nresidence in Poland. Mr. Coulter,\nwho is a metallurgist, is accompanied\nby his wife.\nVICTORIA, Jan. 6 (CP)-Prem-\nier Pattullo said today that he proposed to confer with Dr. W. J. Knox,\npresident of the British Columbia\nLiberal party, and other officers\nwith a view to arranging for a\ngeneral convention sometime this\nyear.\nFISTS FLY AS\nMAROONS DRUB\nTORONTO LEAFS\nMONTREAL, Jan. 8 (CP)-In a\nflurry of goals and fists, Montreal\nMaroons drubbed the leaders of\ntheir National Hockey league division, Toronto Maple Leafs 6-3 tonight before 6000 Montrealers.\nRed Horner of Toronto and\nJimmy Ward of Maroons drew\nmajor and match penalties when\nthey fought In the first period and\nresumed their duelling on the\npenalty bench, Nearly every player on both teams wai Involved In\nthe battle that started when Horner bearded Run Bllnco but Horner and Ward were the only ones\nto draw sentences. Referee John-\npuffed face In breaking up the\nfeud.\nMacPherson on His\nWay to Cranbrook\nVICTORIA, Jan. 6 (CP)-Hon.\nF. M. MacPherson, British Columbia minister of mlnei, left Wednesday evening for a brief visit\nIn Cranbrook, his home riding.\nHe will be back at the end of the\nweek.\nCHARGE TO JURY IN\nSOLLOWAY CASE CHANGED\nTORONTO, Jan. 6 (CP)\u2014Isaac W.\nC. Solloway's trial for theft and receiving ended finally early tonight\nafter 34 court .sessions. A general\nsessions jury retired to consider its\nverdict. One of the longest ever held\nin Toronto, the trial concluded after\nJudge Daniel O'Connell recalled the\njury several hours after it had retired. In his altered instructions,\nJudge O'Connell told the jurymen\nthey must decide whether the former stock broker, whose company had\noffices across the country, was guilty\nor not of theft. Charges of receiving, \"knowing the money to have\nbeen obtained by fraud,\" were\nstruck out.\nKINGSTON, Ont., (CP) - T. V.\nLord ot the Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting company has been appointed head of the metallurgy staff of\nQueen's University.\nLebaron's Brown\nJade Leads Field\nin $1200 Feature\nLOS ANGELES, Jan. 6 (AP)-\nMovie Magnate William Lebaron's\nspeedy .filly, Brown Jade, breezed\nthrough the $1200 Huntington Beach\nsix-furlong feature race today, leaving a comparatively strong field\nbehind, to hit the wire in victory,\nBefore a week-day crowd of nearly 25,000, the 3-year-old drew into\nthe lead at the far.turn and drew\naway to win over L. B. Combs'\nWoodberry by four and a half\nlengths. Party Spirit, finishing\nstrong, was third.\nBrown Jade bid the short price of\n$4.20, $3 and $2.40. Woodberry paid\n$3.20 and $3.20 and Party Spirit\n$4.20,\nSEATTLE TRIMS\nPORTLAND, 6-2\nPORTLAND, Jan. 6 (CP)-Seattle\nfast stepping Seahawks trounced\nPortland Buckaroos 6-2 here tonight\nto march into a tie with Vancouver\nLions at the top of the Pacific Coast\nHockey league standings.\nRangers, Monarchs\nBattle to 2-2 Tie\nin English Hockey\nLONDON, Jan. 6 (CP Cable)-\nEarl's court Rangers and Wembley\nMonarchs failed to break their\nthird-place, tie In the National\nHockey league tonight when they\nplayed a 2-2 draw,\nBrighton Tigers moved into fourth\nplace over Wembley Lions by defeating Harringay Greyhounds 2-1,\nSid Wright of Cornwall scored both\nTiger goals and Dune Cheyne of\nWinnipeg got Greyhounds'!\nJoe Brown of Edmonton netted\nRangers' pair and Jimmy Haggar-\nty of Port Arthur, Ont., and Jack\nMilfor'd of Winnipeg scored for\nMonarchs.\nTrail Hockey Results\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 6 \u2014 Curly's\nCubs defeated Oddfellows 3-0 and\nCaledonians beat Knights of Pythias 11-1 in games of the city bantam\nhockey league; Young Liberals defeated Elks 6-1 and Colombos shut\nout Canadian Legion 3-0 in city\nmidget hockey league games at the\nTrail rink tonight.\nFOR BETTER\nFURNITURE\nVALUES\ns mSM\nTrail Curling Draw\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 6\u2014Trail Curling club draws for Friday's night's\nplay follow:.\n6:30\u2014A. E. Allison vs. A. E. Calvert; J. R. Craig vs. W. H. Baldrey:\nA. R. Buchan vs. W. F. Truswell; G.\nC. McKay vs. J. C. Campbell.\n8:30\u2014F. Strachan vs, J. P. Schofield; G. J. Kinnis vs. D. Downie; L.\nF. Tyson vs. C. Hoefer; W. G. Carrie\nvs. H. Currie.\nDominions Swamp\nSuperiors 10-2\nEDMONTON, Jan. 6 (CP) -\nEdmonton Dominions defeated\ntheir Intra-clty rivals Superiors\n10.2 here tonight In an Alberta\nSenior Six Hockey league game.\nThe win loft the second-place Dominions five polnti behind Calgary Rangers.\nTO RELIEVE CATARRHAL\nDEAFNESS AND HEAD\nNOISES\nIf you have Catarrhal Deafness or\nare hard of hearing or have head\nnoises go to your druggist and get 1\nounce of Parmint (double strength),\nand add to it Vi pint of hot water and\na little granulated sugar. Take one\ntablespoonful four times a day,\nThis will often bring quick relief\nfrom the distressing head noises.\nClogged nostrils should open,\nbreathing become easy and the mucus stop dropping Into the throat. It\nis easy to prepare, costs little and is\npleasant to take. Anyone who has\nCatarrhal Deafness or head noises\nshould give this prescription a trial.\n(Advt.)\nTomato Product\nI\nH. M. Coursey, Medicine Hat; D.\nMcLeod, Medicine Hat; P. W. Pym\nCranbrook; A. C. Young, New Den\nver; Arthur Lakes, Vancouver; Mrs.\nJ. P. Browne, R.R.I. Nelson.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietor!\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nFree-Parking NELSON, B.C, Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St. Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJA8.  E.  MADDEN,  Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled.\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn tho HEART ot tho City\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"     Newly Renovated Throughout\nDili-term Hotel A. paterson, mi a\n600 Seymour St,      Van:ouver, B.C,   Coleman, Alta., Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE nelson twice daily\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nT\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H,\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 6-^The annual\ninstallation of officers of the Ladies\nof the Royal Purple took place Wednesday evening in Elks hall. Mrs.\nW. Mortice was installing lady; and\nthe following were installed: Honored Royal Lady, Mrs. J. Reed; associate royal lady, Mrs. J. Kelly;\nloyal lady, Mrs. W. Morrice; lecturing lady, Mrs. A. Burwash; secretary, Mrs. C. Bradbury; treasurer,\nMrs. W. H. Hardlngton; conductress,\nMiss B. Georgetti; chaplain, Mrs. R.\nKerr; three-year trustee, Mrs. M.\nRobichaud; one-year trustee, Mrs. E.\nMatthews; inner guard, Mrs. W. C.\nWeir; outer guard, Mrs. K. Verzuh,\nAfter the meeting a supper was serv-\ned, during which the retiring officers were presented with tokens\nof appreciation for their work during the past year.\nMiss Edna Reid has had as her\nguest for the past few days her\nmother, Mrs. I. Reld, who returned\nto her home in Fauquier this morning.\nNomination of officers for 1938\ntook place Wednesday afternon,\nwhen the Arthur Chapman chapter\nI.O.D.E. met in Memorial hall. Tho\nelection of officers is slated for the\nFebruary meeting. Three members,\nMrs. F. E. Dockerlll, Mrs. G. J.\nKinnis and Mrs. T. H. Ollis were\nnominated   for   councillor,   their\nA Body Builder\nWHEN you feci\nout - of - sorts,\nwhen you've no\nappetite, or stomach Rives trouble,\nwith gas or. acid\nindigestion, why\nnot try Dr.\nPierce's Golden\nMedical Discovery? If you want\nto put on healthy flesh\u2014this is the tonic\nlor you. Reid wlist Mrs. Frsnk Lamothe,\n27 North St., St. Catherines, Ont,, ill. I\n\"I had no appetite, wits underweight, didn't\nsleep well ai night and after eating I suffered a good hit with acid indigestion and\ngas. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery\nsoon had me feeling better again. Mv appetite improved, my digestion was Better\nand t wss much stronger.\" It's a great\nblood tonic. Sold by druggists,\n(Advt.)\n8. ALLEN\nnames pre to be forwarded to the\nprovincial chapter, which will elect\none member. The Christmas parcels,\nwhich the chapter has distributed,\nwere acknowledged with thanks by\nall who received them, and the secretary was instructed to write and\nthank M. M. Goldstein for the\nwomen's coat he donated and which\nwas Included in one of the hampers. Three new members, Mrs. M. V.\nB. Newton, Mrs. Leslie Roberts and\nMrs. J. C. Alexander, were welcomed. After the business, Mrs. R.\nR. Burns, Mrs. W. E. Cowie, Mrs. C,\nS. Smythe and Mrs. Donald MacDonald served afternon tea. Those\npresent were Mrs. F. E. Dockerill,\nMrs. A. R. McCarthy, Mrs. H. P.\nKingwell, Mrs. J. Archie Millar,\nMrs. R. R. Burns, Mrs. G. J. Kinnis, Mrs. J. G. T. Ringwood, Mrs.\nLeslie Roberts, Mrs. T. H. Ollis, Mrs.\nJ. C. Alexander, Mrs. J. T. Newman,\nMrs. J. Dougan, Mrs. F. A, Newell,\nMrs. W. A. Curran, Mrs. Donald\nMacDonald, Mrs, W. J. Doughty,\nMrs. V. C. Huycke, Mrs. M. V. B,\nNewton, Mrs. C. W. Guillaume, Mrs.\nD. G. Bisset, Mrs. W. E. Newton,\nMrs. W. E. Mulliner, Mrs. G. J. Roots,\nMrs. D. B, Merry, Mrs. Will Harper,\nMrs. D. Southworth, Mrs. John Morris, Mrs. Leo Levey, Mrs. D. C. Irwin,\nMrs. C. S. Smythe, Mrs. W. E. Cowie,\nMrs. D. McLeod, Mrs. Otto Neider-\nmann and Mrs, R. H. Welton.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Holden have had\nas their guest for the Yuletide holidays the latter's mother, Mrs. J.\nHolden of Vancouver, who returned\nto her home Thursday morning.\nAfter spending the past few days\nin the city the guest of their son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. M. Keys, Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nKeys of Nakusp left Thursday\nmorning to spend the next couple\nof months visiting in Victoria.\nThe Ladies' Aid of the East Trail\nUnited church met In the church\nhall Thursday afternoon. After the\nbusiness meeting delicious refreshments were served by Mrs. S. T.\nCrowe and Mrs, A. M. Adle. The\nmembers in attendance were Mrs.\nT. F. Cullen, Mrs. G. Palmer, Mrs.\nI. Minion, Mrs. J. McNeil, Mrs. J. S.\nRoss and Mrs. W. Houston. .\nMix\nmmm\ni|;rf||\n\"L%wW,,rxsOO\u00ab***|\n, _mant4\nJ\/REE FRQH..\n|#lr\u00bbI||\n, AND  '\nfmia\n%\n\u2022M\nSlNtli;\nmiv\n::: wav ::::>\nwe s\u00ab\"5\n:'::.;W*Y ::::.\nl.lflllVs\nrotwo juiu \u25a0\n..is h\u00bbot\n1\/\nBFv5\u00abP\u00abP*W^'r*fM\n' Tomato\nCatchup\nDOUBLE your money BACK OfFEst.\nShould you not >g\u00bbo that UhW* thmA'Qmtlo P\ne Praia\" Tomato Pro-\nthat makes the difference\n\u2022 Serve Libbv'a TV.- .   -.\n^ee^ev^\/^^ P\u201educ(Ji ^ .f\n*\"We vour money hUuhtfttuttn we \"\"\"give you\nJW \u00ab . patented pS \u00a3\u00bb**W\u00abK\nwtamm-nch Juice of US     th?t SeDtiY \u00ab*\"\u00ab. the\n\u00a3\u2122g you tnat garliS fl *\u00bbfr*d tomatoes\n**\u2022\u00ab* tang *\u00ab\\w\u00a3\u00a3\u00a3\u00bb\u00bb- There i, a taste.\n, Try an \u00ab\u201e\u201e, of   * .\"\u00bb \u00bbPP\u00ab\u00abe on for more.\nsjpay i \"Gentlo Pnt_>, \u00bb\u201e_._*. _\n*~ -rocar ^I\"^ UM\u2122>- 'HATHA*, ONTA.,0\n, OaL.nZsr^'?X'H'(ussmihl.  u\nli \u201e!_,        '\"\"\"\"\"\"HAM,ONTARIO\n_^^^_______\u2122 8P-188B\n..,....!    '\t\n\t\n'\n WPIP^HWPUIHIIP,1 111*1\nASSOCIATED IS\nASKED PRESENT\nBOARD'S VIEWS\nRepresentation to the\nRowell Commission\nUrged by Nelson\nAssociated Board's of Trade of\nEastern British Columbia will be\nrequested by the Nelson board to\nseek interior representation before\nthe commission on Dominion-provincial relations by arranging a sitting of the commission in tha interior it possible, and by sending a\ndelegate to the Victoria hearing if\nthat is not possible.\nA letter received by the Nelson\nboard council Thursday from the\ncommission stated sittings were arranged by the provincial governments, and that representations in\nBritish Columbia would be presented at Victoria.\nDescribing the commission as\n\"one of the most important\u2014ever\nappointed,\" W. J. E. Biker felt that\nan outstanding interior man should\nrepresent the district in presenting\ndistrict views. If a sitting in the interior apuld not be arranged a representative should be sent to Victoria, \"if we are alive enough,\" he\naddeu.\nIt was suggested district boards\nshould propose S. G. Blaylock, vice-\npresident and general manager of\nthe Consolidated Mining & Smelting company, to make the representations.\nComplete facilities for the manufacture of counterfeit $10 bills were\ndiscovered recently in the prison\nat San Quentin, Cal.\nConfidence Biggest\nNeed - G. M. Head\nWASHINGTON, Jan. S (AP) -\nPresident William S. Knudsen of\nGeneral Motors, appearing before\nthe senate's special unemployment\ncommittee, said today his \"one\nhope\" for immediately stabilization of work was that \"people generally will feel a little more confident of the future.\"\nHe blamed it not on car prices but\non a view held by the \"average\nman\" that \"work Is going to be\nslack.\"\nEarl of Warwick\n\"loo Stiff\" for\nFilm Job; Loses\nHOLLYWOOD, Jan. 6 (AP) -\nThe Earl of Warwick, aspirant for\nfilm stardom, is going home to\nLondon next week without the\n$7604 he claimed Metro-Goldwyn-\nMayer studio owed him.\nThe earl lost his suit against the\nstudio yesterday.\nKnown as Michael Brooke on the\nscreen, the earl has appeared in\nfive pictures since his rift with\nM-G.M.. The studio brought him\nhere in 1936, under a six-month\ncontract at $705 a week, but gave\nhim no roles.\n\"He was 'too stiff \" Mayer testified.\nM-L50N DAILY MBW8, NELSOlt, B.OV-FHTOAY MOBNTNa, fun. r.  rem\nSEEK THIEVES\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 6 (CP)-City\npolice today sought thieves who\ntook machinery and equipment,\nvalued at $3,000 from an unused\nbuilding of the Asosciated Dairies\nLtd.\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n5:00 Song Sheet; 5:30 Topics of the\nDay; 5:45 Sam Slick; 6:00 Agriculture; 6:15 Bonjour Paris; Bonsoir,\nMontreal; 6:30 Backstage; 7:00 Canada, 1937; 7:45 Mineral Industry;\n8:00 News, Weather; 8:15 Ozzie Williams' Orch.; 8:30 Minstrel Gallery;\n9:00 Northern Messenger; 10:00 I\nCover the Waterfront; 10:15 News,\nWeather; 10:30 Sandy de Santis Orch.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW  KF1  KPO  KOMO\n690 620 640 680 1120\n5:15 Army Band; 5:30 Paul Martin's music; 6:00 John O'Brien Harmo-\nnieas Tommy Dorsey Och.; 7:00 First\nNighter, drama; 7:30 Jimmie Fiddler, gossip; 7:45 Dorothy Thompson;\n8:00 Amos 'n' Andy; 8:15 Uncle\nEzra; 8:30 Court of Human Relations, dr.; 9:00 Circus program; 9:30\nHappy Felton's orch.; 10:30 News;\n10:15-Orch\u2014Fred Nagle; Jack Winston; Joe Riechman; Bill Mozet,\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Orch. \u2014 Josef Hornik; Ed\nBwartout; Panchito's Orch.; 8:15\nLum St Abner; 8:30 Meet your Neighbor; 8:30 H. Busse' orch.; 9:00 William\nScotti; Henry Busse; Fletcher Henderson; Harry Lewis and Jimmy\nGr^er; 11:00 Charles Runyan, organist; 11:30 Last Minute News.\nCOLUMBIA  NETWORK\nKVI   KOIN   KNX   I'.SL   KOL\n670     940     1050    1130    1270\n5:00 Hammerstein's Music Hall:\n6:00 Hollywood   Hotel;   7:00   Song\nPaul Whiteman's orch.; 9:00, Orch.\u2014\nRichard   Hamber,   Buddy   Rogers,\nHenry King;   10:15  What  Would\nYou Do?;. 10:45 Jan Garber's orch.;\nI\nLISTEN.. ,,jM\nCANADA-I938VS\n.   IMPERIAL TOBACCO'S    ' Ja\nINSPIRING PROGRAM\nIk\n7 psHl. Pa S\u00bb T\u00ab\nCJAT\n11:00 Pasadena Civic Auditorium;\n11:30 Henry King's orch.\nMUTUAL DON LEE NETWORK\nKOL, Seattle, 1270 k, 236.1 m, 6000 w\n5:15 Charioteers; 6:15 The Phantom Pilot; 6:30 Sport; 6:45 News; 7:30\nLonge Ranger; 8:15 Art Godfrey; 8:30\nDon Isham; 9:00 Newspaper of the\nAir; 9:30 Richard Himber's orch.; 9:45\nLeo Reisman's orch.; 10:00 Dick Jur-\ngen's^rch.; 10:15 Bill Carson's orch.;\n10:30 Shep Field's orch.; 11:00 Vincent Lopez' orch.; 11:30 Frank Sor-\ntino's orch. .\n910 k\nTrail\nCJAT\n319.6 m\n1000 w\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:30 Requests; 8:00 Nelson Bulletin; 9:00\nSee CBC except: 9:30 Old Timer;\n10:15 Good Morning; 10:45 Melodic\npipes; 11:00 Backstage Wife; 11:15\nStella Dallas; 11:30 News; 11:45\nVariety Show; 12:00 Memory Lane;\n12:15 Spokane Welcomes; 12:30 Music Masters; 12:45 Campus Capers;\n2:00 Woman's Magazine; 4:00 Lavender and Lace; 4:15 Kootenay echoes;\n4j30 Times-presents; 4:45 Today's\nHits; 5:00 Theatre News; 5:15\nTalking drums; 5:30 Concert; 5:45\nBarnacle Bill; 8:00 Melody Time;\n8:15 Magic Island; 8:30 Cugat's\nMusic; 8:45 Home Folks Frolic.\n600 k CJOK 499.7 m\nVancouver 600 w\n5:00 Cookie Kids; 5:15 Uncle\nMickey's Club; 6:00 Concert hall:\n6:45 Sports; 7:15 Buccaneers; 7:30\nSkipper News; 7:45 Ronnie Matthews\n8:00 News Review; 8:15 Wally Peters; St. Nicholas' visits; 8:30 Sports;\n10:00 Ron Matthews; 10:30 News;\n10:45 Rhythm Wranglers; 11:45\nSlumber Hour. ,\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 v.\n5:45 Guest Night; 6:30 Red Head\nFamily; 6:45 Xylophone; 8:00 Shaw,\nK. C; 8:45 House of Peter Mac-\nGregor; 9:00 News; 9:45 Garden\nof Melody.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTRANSMISSION 6\nGSD 11.75 incs. (25.53 m.)\nGSC 9.58 mot, (31.32 m.)'\nG8B 9.51 mcs. (31.53 m.)\nFRIDAY\n6:15 p.m.\u2014Big Ben, Jane Vowles,\nsoprano; 6:35\u2014 B. B. C. Variety Orchestra; 7:15\u2014Next Week's Programs\n7:25\u2014News and Announcements; 7:45\n\u2014April Showers, play.\nASK YOUR GROCER FOR\nGOLD MEDAL\nMALT EXTRACT\nDARK, LIGHT, STOUTEX AND HOP FLAVOR\nHighest Quality\u2014The Best for Your Money\nB.C. Distributors: JAMES MARTIN & CO., VANCOUVER, B.C.\n\u00bb   j_-\"-\u00bb\u00bbs__\"\u00bbv     ..,!_-\u00bb   -__,\nDrumheller or\nGait Lump\nWEST\nTransfer\nFuel Specialists Since 1899\nBoard Trade to\nContinue Press\nFish Hatchery\nFear Appropriation of\n$25,000 May Go to\nthe Coast\nNelson board of trade will continue to follow up its request that\nno time be lost in reestablishing a\nsport fish hatchery at Nelson. At a\nluncheon meeting Thursday at the\nHume the board council heard a\nreview of what has been done, and\ndecided to continue to press for the\nhatchery, fearing that the rumored\nprovincial appropriation of $25,000\nfor fish culture might be expended\nentirely at the coast.\nA letter from Frank Putnam, M.\nP. P. for Nelson-Creston, stated he\nhad the assurance of the attorney-\ngeneral and game board that the\nhatchery would be continued.\nW. K, Esling. M. P., in another\nletter sketched what had been done\nsince it was first learned the Nelson\nhatchery was to be closed, and stated that sport fish culture had been\nmade a provincial responsibility. At\nhis request Dr. Frak Paterson, Conservative leader in British Columbia,\nhad asked for information as to\nwhat was being done. Dr. Paterson\nwas told a hatchery in Nelson was\nintended, but was being held up for\nlack of a site and because the game\nboard was not assured of an adequate water supply of even temperature. The attorney-general would\nmake*the final decision, Mr. Esling\nconcluded. ,\nASKS CONFER\nC. F. McHardy suggested the game\nboard be. asked to send a representative to Nelson to discuss the\nwhole Station with the city council, which had offered a site and cooperation in reestablishing a hatchery, and with the board of trade.\nRecalling the institution of the $1\nfishing licence fee to finance rearing and feeding ponds for sport\nfish, C. D. Blackwood said he was\nassured at the time that as money\nbecame available after serving the\ncoast, ponds would be established\nin the interior, \"but that was as far\nas it went.\" He feared that if the\nboard allowed the subject to be forgotten, the interior would receive\nnone of the $25,000 appropriation for\nsport fish culture .\nPlot is Novel Bul\nNew Play Is Flop\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (SP)-'The\nGreatest Show on Earth', opened\nhere last night and proved to he\nanything but that\nThe idea was novel. The actors\nplay the parts of circus animals who\nlong to escape to the wilds of nature. The cast was able and conscientious\u2014from Edgar Stehil, who\nplays the snake,\"up to John Alexander, who is,Rajah the elephant.\nHowever, the writing of Vincent Diffey and Irene Alexander\nwas considered by the drama critics to have been inadequate.\nThe story concerns the plotting\nof the snake to affect a cage-break.\nAlthough the lions destest wanton\nkilling, they agree to his plan to\nkill the keeper. After brief freedom\ntwo of the animals are. in turn killed.\nPACE THREE\nCheck These\nDRESS  VALUES\nPRICED TO CLEAR\nSeldom do better Dresses go at such a low price. So \"cash in\"\non this sale of Dresses. Buy two for what you ordinarily pay for\none. Shop now and save.\nREGULAR $6.95 DRESSES\nDresses for every day time occasion and a few longer Sunday-\nnite Dresses. In trimly tailored wools, crepes and\nsilk crepes\t\n$2.95\nREGULAR TO $12.95 DRESSES\nTailored and dressy.\u2014An exciting group of trim sheers, dressy\ncrepes, satins and taffetas. Both afternoon and evening styles.\nPriced for quick clearance. &P QC\nRegular to $12.95 tJlJtl\/D\nNo C. O. D.'i, Exchanges or Approvals\nSENSATIONAL TOWEL VALUE\n15 dozen English striped towels. Specially bought for this\nyearly event. Handy household size. 1A\nEach ' *\"C\nIRISH LINEN GLASS TOWELS\n15 dozen offered at a big reduction for this sale. Borders typed\nin red, green or blue. Good size and quality. |A\nEach    \"C\nLINEN TOWELLING\n' pure linen roller towelling. Colored\n13c\nWOMEN'S DRESS SHOES\nSave substantially on fine footwear, and choose from a\nwide range of patterns. All wanted styles in black, brown\nties, pumps, and silver or\ngeld eyening sandals with\nflattie heels. Good size\nrange.\nSALE\nPRICE .\nHBC WEEK END\nGROCERY BARGAINS\nON SALE TODAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY\n19. Phones 194 Free City Delivery\nBACON\u2014Swift's  Premium, sliced; per lb..\nBUTTER\u2014Hudsonla i\nFirst Grade; 3 lbs,\nCODFISH-Acadla,\nboneless; 2-lb. box .\nCOFFEE\u2014'Country\nClub, fresh; per lb.\nTEA\u2014Choice Ceylon,\nregular 75c; per lb.\nCOCOA\u2014Cowan's Per- >%f.A\nfaction; 1-lb. tin *\u00b0r\nBUTTER WAFERS\u2014   \u25a0yyA\nCrax; large carton *JV\nROLLED OATS-Mel-\nograln; large pkg\t\nHEALTH BRAN-Mel-\n3M\n$1.10\nm\n39*\nograln; pkg.\nFLOUR-E\"\n-Ellison's\nBest; 49-lb. sk\t\n80UP\u2014Aylmer Tomato, Vegetable or Oyster;\n3 tlna  .'.\t\n23*\n$2.39\no, Veg-\n25*\n20*\n20*\n28*\n37*.\nTABLE  FIG8\u20148myr.\nna; 1-lb. pkg\t\nCUT  MACARONI\u2014\n3 lb\t\nPEANUT BUTTER-\nMcColl'i, 2'i; per tin .\nTOMATO JUICE- f%A\nLlbby's, 10\/j-o..; 4 tint *J*\nFLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT \u2014\nSmith's, 13-oz. tins;\n2 tlna\t\nPEAS\u2014Broder's Beit, t*1A\nsite 3,-17-or. tins; 2 tins *\/r\nCORN\u2014Aylmer Gold- ynA\nen Bantam, 2's; 2 tins.. \u2022fsW\u00bb\nTUNA FI8H\u2014Solid or 1M\nFlaked, i\/4'i; 3 tins *Jr\nTOILET TISSUE-       <yyA\nPurex; 3 large rolls **r\nSOAP-Fcls Naptha;\n3 cakes \t\n80AP FLAKES- ilM\nMaple Loaf; E-lb. eart. \u00b0-\u00bbr\n25*\nborder. Can be made into tea towels.\nClearance price, yard\nJNCO\u00abK)\u00abATS6 trf MAY IS70,\nORANGES\u2014\n8weet and Juicy!\nPrice\t\n8'\u00ab\u20142 doz.\n43*\n176'i\u2014Dor,\n33*\nPRUNES\u2014Sunsweet;\n2-lb. carton\t\n27*\nBANKER WHO CAUSED\nFALL OF PREMIER OF\nBELGIAN DIES IN JAIL\nBRU8SEL8, Jan. 6 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014Julius Barmat, Belgian banker\nwhose name figured prominently\nIn charges of financial Irregularities which led to the resignation\nof Premier Paul Van Zeeland and\nhla cabinet, died today In the\nprison at Forest. He had been\nextradited from Holland and Imprisoned for alleged financial\nfraud.\nArrested After\nLong Drawn Chose\nHAMILTON, Ont.', Jan. 6 (CP)\u2014\nA trial that criss-crossed over half\na continent for the past five months\nended today when Herman H.\nGrimm, Carthage, N.C., deputy\nsherrif .of Moore county, faced\nRobert Svendsen, at police headquarters here and told him he was\nwanted on charges of murder and\nrobbery.\nThe charge rose from the slaying\nAug. 6 of J. E. Carraway, 55, a\ntourist hotel proprietor near Pine-\nhurst, N.C., in August,\nSenators Hope lo Have a Voice in\nSelection Hew Supreme Court Judge\nWA8HINTON, Jan. \u00ab (AP)-\nThe United States House of Representatives judiciary committee\nvelt today he choose Representative Sumner (D-Tex.) chairman\nof the committee, to succed Associate Justice Georgo Sutherland\nwho decided yesterday to retire\nJan. 18,\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 6 (AP)-\nSenators commenting on the retirement from the United States\nsupreme court of Justice George\nSutherland emphasized two points\ntoday:\n1. President Roosevelt's nominee\nto fill the vacancy will be subjected to careful senatorial scrutiny.\n2. The prospect of a definite \"lib-\nral\" majority on the court shoved\nfar into the background any possibility of reviving the president's\njudiciary reorganization bill.\nSenator Bridges (R-N.H.) already has proposed senate hearings be required on supreme court\nnominations, and was expected to\nseek approval of such a rule before\na nomination Is submitted.\nSenator Copeland (D-N.Y.), who\nfirst asserted Justice Hugo L. Black\nhad been a Ku Klux Klansman, said\nany nominee would be \"closely\nscrutinized.\"\nSpeculation over a successor to\nthe 75-year-old Justice Sutherland,\nwho asked to step down from the\nbench Jan. 18 because of his age,\nfound most senators in agreement\na \"liberal\" would be propsed. Four\npresent justices\u2014Brandeis, Stone,\nCardozo and Black\u2014have been so\nclassified by administration officials.\nThis, senators argued, a majority\nof the court could be expected to\nfavor Roosevelt legislation, nullifying any further demand of administration leaders for a change in\nthe judicial set-up.\nMany names were mentioned in\nspeculation over candidate to succeed Justice Sutherland. Heading\nthe list was solicitor general, Stanley Reed, prominently mentioned\nfor the vacancy to ytikn Justice\nBlack was named last summer.\nWork on $1,000,000 Montreal\nShrineGoeson;Honor Humble Priest\nMONTREAL, Jan. 6 (CP)-A\nthin little man slipped peacefully\ninto death a year ago today. Mount\nRoyal's snows have vanished and\ncome again since *he \"mircle man\nof the mountain\" died on a bleak\nJanuary day, but the changing\nmonths have done little to slow\nthe patient work Brother Andre\nbegan in life.\nUp the long hillside to the $1,-\n000,000 shrine he built to St. Joseph,\nthe pilgrims st'll trudge. Physical\nBLACKHEADS\nBlackheads simply dissolve and disappear by this one simple, sale and sure\nmethod. Get two ounces of peroxine\npowder from any drug store, sprinkle\nIt on a hot, wet cloth, rub ihe face\ngently\u2014every blackhead will be gone.\nHave a Hollywood complexion.\n(Advt.)\ncripples and those seeking mental\nsurcease still look, beyond the\ngrave, for help from the friar they\ndeemed a worker of miracles in his\nlifetime of humility.\nAnd the shrine erected out of the\ncontributions of grateful visitors\nto Brother Andre still grows. Before he died, he wanted to see the\nmonument to his patron saint finished. The ailment that had reduced his diet to bread and water\nmuch of his late years took him off\nbefore he realized this ambition,\nhis greatest earthly wish.\nBut a year after his death the\nwork is nearing an end. A great\ndome now rears itself from the body\nof the shrine, overlooking Montreal.\nIt is the biggest of its kind in North\nAmerica. Inside, more work goes\non.\nSpecial services commenorating\nthe anniversary of its builder's\ndeath are being celebrated today.\nBoard Booklet\nIs Commended\nCommendation of the booklet,\n\"Nelson and the Kootenay,\" was\nreceived Thursday by the board of\ntrade council from three wide separated points,\nA. T. Garland of Kaslo expressed\nappreciation of the \"fine publicity\ngiven Kaslo and district.\"\nG. E. Stephen of the traffic department, Canadian Pacific railway, Montreal, described the booklet as \"well-prepared\" and the photos as excellent, and felt it \"should\ndo much for the district.\"\nFrom the chamber of commerce\nof Cheyenne, Wyo\u201e came a letter\nstating the book was \"an excellent\nbit of publicity,\" one of the finest\nand best-prepared to reach that\nchamber. \"You have one of Nature's\nbeauty spots,\" the letter added.\nPAYS FOR NEWSPAPER\nSTOLEN TEN YEARS AGO\nToronto newspaper placed a five-\ncent piece in its \"conscience fund\"\ntoday. The nickel was enclosed in\na letter from a man who said he\ntook a paper from a street-corner\nbox. 10 years ago and did not\npay for it. The man said he since\nhad been troubled continually\nabout the petty theft.\nSHOT TO DEATH\nNASHVILLE, Tenn., Jan. 6 (AP)\n\u2014Rudy Evans, 36, was shot to death\nby one of three men 1 miles north\not here last night five hours after\nthree men killed a postoffice messenger and escaped with $25,000\nat Guthrie, Ky.\nWindsors May\nBuy Calif. Estate\nSAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 6 (AP)\n\u2014The San Francisco Examiner\nsaid today agents of the Duke of\nWindsor have been negotiating to\nlease the 50-acre San Francisco\npeninsula estate of Leon F. Douglas,\nnoted Inventor.\nUnless long and carefully guarded negotiations suddenly collapse,\nsaid the paper, the former king will\nbring his duchess to California to\nlive when the couple visits the\nUnited States.\nMembers of the Douglas family\nsaid they understood negotiations\nwere under way but knew of no\ndetails.\nSLICHT EARTHQUAKE IS\nRECORDED AT VICTORIA\nSeixmograph at the Dominion\nmeteorological observatory here today recorded a \"very slight\" earthquake at 5:10 a,m.\nDODDS\nKIDMEY\nk PILLS -\ni \\^?JmeN,''j\n\u00bb.V.,cHt   \u201e\u201efU^   ,\u00bb .1\n^T^S2\nH*w HUDSON Terrapfane   \u2022   AW HUDSON J\/V  \u2022  Hew HUDSON Miqhf\n117-INCH W.B... 96 AND 101 H, P. 128-IN. W. B... 101 AND 107 H. P. WITH SIX STAR MOTOR 122 AND 1.9-INCH W. B... 122 H. P.\n3  BRILLIANT NEW CARS\nBUILT TO EXCEL IN STYLE, PERFORMANCE, LONG LIFE\nHere are three greater new Hudsons : ; : Hudson Terraplane,\nHudson Six and Hudson Eight;;; magnificently styled for 1938.\nThey ride and drive with the smooth brilliance found only in\nrecognized performance champions.\nThey stand up amazingly well as shown by official figures on\nresale value, the accepted measure of the long life built into a car,\nwhich any Hudson dealer can show you. They cost little to run;;;\nand come to you, for 1938 at prices starting down close to the lowest.\nThey are cars that cost you less for what you get than any others\nin the world. Meet Hudson . ; . then drive a Hudson. Discover\nCanada's No. 1 value cars.\nHUDSON MOTORS OP CANADA\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\nBAKER 8T. Phone 117\nTHE SMEDLEY GARAGE CO., NELSON, B. C.\nLIMITED,   TILBURY,  ONTARIO\nNelson) Limited\nNELSON, B.C.\n\"Olive with\nmi's GREATEST DRIVING FEATURE\nHUDSON'S SELECTIVE\nAUTOMATIC SHIFT TRANSMISSION\nIN in 4th YEAR... GREATER THAN EVER\nBUTORAC MOTORS LTD., TRAIL, B. C.\n\t\n\u2022Ms*-- U a ..-'..^\u25a0\u25a0^a.^. '\n\t\n^^^^\n ^W'^\"\nSWrT\nPAGE FOUR \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, JAN. 7, 1938.\nSalts Vital . .\u25a0\u25a0..\nHealthful Sane Diet Now Being Adopted\nBy Wise Women Who Would Safely Reduce\nCRITICIZES   TASTES   OF   MOVIE   STARS\nHollywood Expert Says Best Dressed\nWomen Are Those of limited Means\nBy GLADYS GLAD\nSome years ago, when the. craze\nfor slenderness first origftiated,\nwomen went slightly daffy on the\nsubject: Boudoirs became gymnasiums over night. Kitchen rolling\npins became; fat reducers. Females\nbecame hunger-strikers. Appetities\nbecame forgotten desires. And as a\nresult, a good many women became\nunattractive shadows of their former selves.\n\u25a0 Today women have a much saner\nattitude toward reducing. When the\naverage girl becomes unattractively\noverweight, she has the same urge\nto reduce, but she also has sense\nenough to go about the thing sanely,\nto choose a reducing diet that Is well\nbalanced. She realizes that she can't\noverwork and overstuff her stomach\nwith all manner of foods and still\nretain her natural loveliness. Yet a\ngood many women seem to forget\nthat the daily diet not only affects\nthe contours of the figure, but also\ninfluences the hair, skin, nails,\neyes.and other features. '\nMILK G1VE8\nCALCIUM\nAll physical beauty, you know, is\nbasically dependent upon good\nhealth; one must know how to eat\nproperly. That's why we. beauty\nculturists harp so much on the value\nof a well-balanced daily diet. We\nknow just how important proper\n, eating is to health and beauty.\nIn the course of my career as a\nbeauty culturist I have found that\nwhile, most women consume sufficient of the animal.and vegetable\nfoods to maintain good health, they\nare likely to neglect the mineral\nrequirements of their bodies. And\npeople, like plants, cannot thrive\nwithout sufficient of the mineral\nsalts;\nThe mineral salts are essential In\nthe diet because they are necessary\nto. keep the body running smoothly.\nCalcium and phosphorous are the\nelements that give strength and solidity to' the bones and teeth. And\niron helps the blood transport oxygen all over, the body. It is iron\nthat jives color to your red blood\ncorpuscles and; indirectly, a becoming 'pinkness to your cheeks ahd\nlips. .\nMilk is the chief source of calcium. And every person, regardless\nof age,or sex, should consume at\nleast a pint of milk a day for the\nprotective mineral elements that it\ncontains! Most adults have the idea\nthat milk is only a baby's food, but\ndietitians insist that it is every bit\nas important for adults as it is for\nchildren.\nMINERAL SALT8 VITAL\nIron, another important mineral\nsalt, is supplied chiefly by eggs,\nspinach, raisins, milk, cabbage, celery and like vegetables. And any girl\nwhs wants to keep her pretty red\ncheeks, her lustrous hair and her\ntfim silhouette should see to it that\nher daily diet contains sufficient of\nthese foods to keep her blood pure\nand her body strong and healthy.\nIn addition to eating properly,\nhowever, the girl who wants to have\n.      .     JUNE W1LKINS\nHealthy and shapely\na perfect body must not'tieglect her\nexercises,-,That does not mean,-of\ncourse,.that she must practice boring\ncalisthenics every day.- But;she\nshould get a fair amount of exercise daily,' even if it. is provided\nmerely by ' walking. For exercise\nstimulates the circulation, and. helps\nto promote health and loveliness.\nHADLING GLASS\nAlways use a dry cloth in handling hot glass cooking. utensils, If\na damp cloth is used the glass is\nlikely to crack. When a glass dish\nboils dry, allow it to cool before\nsoaking it and then use warm\u2014not\nhot\u2014water and a cleansing powder,\nFOR THE SERIAL\nSec Page Eight\noHMl fok.\nMouMioivsiL\nBy  MRS.  MARY  MORTON\nMenu Hint\nStuffed Liver Rolls\nBaked Potatoes    Buttered Carrots\nCabbage and Apple Salad\nAll-Bran Fudge Squares\nTea or Coffee\nLiver is an excellent meat for\nthe whole family. Pork and Lamb\nlivers, too, are not as expensive as\ncalf's liver, and so this stuffed liver\nroll is an economical dish. The bran\nfudge squares are very good, and\ndon't forget to file the recipe.\nToday's Recipes\nSTUFFED LIVER ROLLS -One\npound pork or lamb liver, cut in\nthin slices, one tablespoon grated\nonion, one tablespoon bacon drip-\ni pings, two cups bread crumbs, water\nto moisten, bacon slices, salt and\n- pepper- Pour hot water over the\nliver and simmer for five minutes. Drain. Brown onion in bacon drippings. Add bread crumbs\nand water to moisten. Roll pieces of\nliver   around   bread   dressing  and\nITCH\n... STOPPED IN A MINUTE ...\nAre you tormented with the Itchlni torture! ol\nenema, ruhet, athlete's loot, eruptions, or other\n. Ikln afflictions?  For quick and happy relief,\nme cooling, antiseptic, liquid D. D. D.\ncrlrrtlon.   Its gentle olli soothe the IrH.\nI ildn.\nt\u00abted t\nClear, greaseleM and stainless\u2014\ndries last.   Stops the most Intense Itching\nInstantly.  A .15c trial bottle, at drug stores,\nlit- -    '    '\nproves It\u2014or money back,\n30\n(Advt)\nwrap with a slice of bacon. Fasten\nwith toothpicks. Season. Place in a\ncasserole, add one-half cup water,\ncover and cool in a moderate oven\n(350 degrees F.) for 30 minutes. Remove cover for the last 15 minutes\nto brown the bacon.\nALL-BRAN FUDGE SQUARES\n\u2014Four suares unsweetened chocolate, one-third cup butter, two eggs,\none cup sugar, one-half cup flour,\none-half cup all-bran, one-half cup\nnut meats, one teaspoon vanilla extract. Melt chocolate over hot water\nand add butter to it. Beat eggs well,\nadd sugar and continue beating until light and fluffy. Add melted\nchocolate and butter. Stir in flour,\nall-bran, nut meats and vanilla.\nBake in moderate oven (375 degrees\nF.) for about 20, minutes. This\namount make 16 pieces about two-\ninches square baked in an eight by\neight-inch pan.\nOrange Date Cake \u2022\nOne and one-half cups sugar, one\ncup shortening, three cups flour,\none and- one-half teaspoons soda,\none teaspoon baking powder, one\nteaspoon salt, one and one-half cups\nsour milk, one cup dates, chopped;\none whole orange. Cream shortening (butter or vegetable shortening) end sugar together. Mix flour\nbaking powder, soda and salt and\nadd alternately with south milk.\nAdd dates, mix well and add whole\norange, put through food cHopper,\nlasL Serve topped with whipped\ncream.\nwROYAL\n<\u25a0>   FLOUR\n2,000,000 Sick .\nFresh Air Best\nCommon (old\nBy LOGAN CLENDEN1NG, M. D.\nTHIS WEEK about two million\npeople in North America will'belaid oft for a while by an'attack\nof cold. Next week a larger number, and this will increase until\nabout the last week in February,\nwhen about 10 million adults will\nbe reported on the sick list from\ncolds..\nIt is easily the commonest human ailment in this climate. Everybody has some advice about what\nto do to prevent colds and this advice is extremely contradictory,\nranging from a form of diet to\navoidance of drafts, and vaccines.\nLet us examine the facta and see if\nthere is any logical method of dealing with the situation.\nThe first conspicuous thing to notice is the seasonal Incidence. There\nare such things as summer colds,\nand, of course, you can have a cold\nat any time of the y.ear, but the tremendous incidence at one Certain\nperiod must mean something.\n.But the question of exposure to\ncold air is not the only element' in\nthe situation. Ventilation is just as\nimportant; of, more Important. The\nstate of the air in American homes\nand public buildings in the winter\ntime is. enough to make more than\nthe twenty million or more who will\nbe victims of the common cold 'ill;\nI was in a theatre last night and\nSharp Instruments ..\nGuard Babies\nAgainst Perils\nof the Home\nBy GARRY C. MYIRS, PH. D.\nI pick up my paper and read:\n\"Lawrence Funk, I two \u25a0 year - old\nbaby son of William and Mary\nFunk, is fighting for his life today\nat City hospital.\n\"Yesterday afternoon his mother\nleft him alone in a room to take a\nnap. He opened a dresser drawer\nand found some poison pills, which\nhe nibbled before his mother discovered what had happened.\"\nWhile the mother should not\nhove had the poison there, she also\nshould have trained this tot to stay\nin bed when put there. It can easily\nbe done. Because of the lack of\nsuch training, there are not a few\ntragedies.\nIn the same paper I read:\n\"Two-year-old.Daniel Sbper waa\nfound drowned in a lily pond in\nthe rear of the home of a neighbor.\"\nAnd in another paper, this:.\n\"Shirley Sotoff, 15 months old,\nwas dead today of a second-degree\nburn suffered a week ago when she\nfell into a pail of scalding water\non the floor ot her home,\n\"The child's mother said she had\nIntended to scrub.the floor, and\nthe accident occurred when her attention was dstracted elsewhere\nmomentarily;\" \"        '.'\u25a0'\nSuch news items as these one\nmay read daily. They ought to stir\nus to greater vigilance with young\nchildren. They might happen in\nany home.\nPOINTED INSTRUMENTS\nDANGEROU8\nSome children lost an eye or\ntheir life from sharp: or pointed instruments. Even a clothespin Or\nlead pencil can be a tool ot death\nor serious injury to the young child,\nespecially if he should run with lt\nin his mouth. Why give the preschool child n lend pencil? Give\nhim kindergarten crayons that have\nno wood on them. Anyway these\nmake n heavier mark.' \u2022\/ \u25a0 \u2022\u2022-\nWe could make the.home safer\nfrom all hazards to the young child\nif'we disciplined ourselves better\nin right habits. We need, therefore,\nto be just as careful while he is\naway or asleep as when he is right\nwith us. If we want to make sure\nwe will not expose the baby to cutting instruments, medicines or.hot\nliquids, we must exerotse-the habit\nof being careful about such, hazards\nwhen he is not around. We heed\nto exercise our habits for his safety\nin his absence as well as in. his\npresence. Therefore, if you are\nworking In the kitchen while the\nbaby is not there, you will be just\nas vigilant about possible perils to\nhim as if he were there. Why?-In\norder to exercise the habit of carefulness so it will be depenable\nwhen needed.\nPOEMS THAT LIVE\nFAITH\nBetter trust all and be decevied, '\nAnd weep that trust and that deceiving,\nThan doubt one heart that, if believed,\nHad blessed one's life with true\nbelieving,\nOh, in this mocking world, too-fast\nThe doubting fled o'ertakes our\nyouth;\nBetter be cheated to the last.\nThan lose the blessed hope of truth.\n\u2014Frances Anne Kemble.\nLove your enemies, do good to\nthem which hate you.\u2014St Luke\n6:27.\nBusiness Conditions\nReflected in Women's\nSkirts, Soys McNoir\nPITTSBURGH, Jan. 6 (AP) -\nColorful William N. McNair, jester\nof Pitsburgh politics, advanced a\n\"new\" theory today about economics \u2014 that the ups and downs of\nbusiness follow the length of women's skirts.\nThe man who as mayor fiddled\non amateur programs and rode a\nsteer In downtown \"Golden Tri;\nangle,\" says he's through with politics ,\n; \"I'm not going to run again. It\ncosts. $25 now to run for, a public\noffice in Pennsylvania. Thi state's\nobtaining money under false pretences \u2014 it's not worth $25 to hold\nany office in the state.\"\n\"I've got a new theory about\nbusiness cycles. \u2022 I was reading a\nbook, from my grandfather's library the other night, printed in\n1838, that said the depressions of\n1837 was caused by women's skirts.\n\"During periods of inflation,\nwomen's skirts keep going up, but\nwhen women go back to long skirts,\nwe have another depression,\" he\nsaid.        .   .\nstepped out between the acts to get\na breath pi fresh air. When I returned inside the lobby I felt that it\nwould be Impossible for any human\nbeing to remain in such an atmosphere for ten minutes. Yet I stayed\nan hour, and by the end of the hour\nI had acclimated myself to it so that\nI did not notice how bad It was. It\nis not oniy.the heat, but also the\ndryness,and lack of air.movement.\nAll of these combine \"to dry the\nmucous membrane of the throat\nand nose and,reduce the resisting\npowers of those mucous membranes\nso that when the germ of the common cold comes along, it gains entrance to the body easily,\nLET FRESH AIR IN HOME\n. So. the' first step in preventing\nyour .winter cold is to let.some\nfresh air into:your home and the\nplace where you work. One of the\nreasons for the heat of the American home is tluydiscrepancy in the\nclothing'of the two sexes. Our\nwomen wear thin dresses, and the\nmen are dressed indoors\" in woolen\nclothes of a heaviness that makes\nthem as warmly clad indoors as the\nwomen are out. The, home is heated to suit the.women. But the dryness affects the nasal mucous membrane of both jexes, thus the women catch cold just as easily as the\nmen.\nNot Offhand\nHelps In Making\nVisitor Pleased\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nMy recent column on the \"seven\ndeadly sins\" In business elicited a\nreply from one interested young\nwoman who says that if it is not\ncorrect to say, \"Pleased to meet\nyou,\" when you are introduced to\na stranger, what should you say?\nWell, as I said in that same article, I wOuld a great deal rather\nhave a person to whom I am introduced say, \"Pleased to meet you,\"\nthan give me an icy stare and a\ncold \"howdy do.\" It is the spirit\nthat counts with me more than tho\nwords.\nThe correct greeting, according\nto the \"best authorities\" is, I believe, to repeat the person's name\n(there is a catch to this one,.because I very seldom hear the name)\nor to say, \"How do you do.\"\nPersonally I hate the person who\nkeeps me standing not knowing\nwhat to do or where to look while\nhe or she looks me over and announces in the firm voice of one\nwho seeks information and will not\nbe denied: \"What is 'the name?\" or,\n\"I didn't catch the name.\" You can\nbe cordial at the moment and check\non the name later, if circumstances\nallow. That would be my way of\nsolving that little problem. A\nfriendly attitude that makes the\nstranger feel.that he is a person\nworthy of your interest and that\nyou consider it a real privilege to\nmeet him, is my choice in an introduction.\nTo mean anything, good manners\nmust come from the heart. Every\nwoman thrills to the man who\nsays pretty things, and who, when\nhe meets her, bows from the waist\nand gallantly kisses her harid, but\nthat same man may surreptitiously\nkick his wife when the meal is not\nready on time and have a temper\ntantrum when the baby cries,\nWhile the \"tough guy\" who refers\nto his wife as \"the Old Woman\" or\nthe \"ball and chain\", may be the\nideal husband and father. Mind, I\ndon't advocate this way of referring\nto the Life Partner.\n\u2022  \u2022  \u2022\nOf course bad manners do not\nIndicate that a person is sincere and\ngood. But I'd rather have a rough\nSALLYS SALLIES\nMany a small boy's elder sister be-\ncomes his younger sister when he grows\nSB.\ngreeting that was hearty than a polished one that didn't mean a thing.\nThe ideal is the gracious demeanor\nthat means the owner is sincere\nand thoughtful of every one with\nwhom he comes in contact.\n-   *   \u2022 ' *\nBlue Eyed Irene's lettir.about her\nerring husband seems to have\naroused a good deal of sympathy.\nThis letter of advice to, has just\ncome: ,'\u25a0, <\n\"Dear Miss Lee: I have been\nreading of Blue Eyed Irene. This\nis the way I feel about thp'je conditions: When we have worked and\nhelped through, our married life\nand have dorle everything a wife\ncould do to help along, ahd the\nmate isn't what he should be, we\nmust remember that it Is not our\nfault.\n\"About the car Irene helped pay\nfor, that is hard to. take. But the\ncar will not last forever, and they\nmay not have money to buy another. Irene should never, let the\nnew wife's driving the car bother\nher. If her husband went with this\nwoman while he was still married\nto Irene, well, that kind never end\ntheir days together.\n\"The public will respect Irene\nmore than the second wife, knowing she was a true wife. No one\nrespects a home breaker. A good\nname, a clean heart will always be\nrespected, and that means something. I. E. A. S.\"\nNEW YORK (CP) - When Orry\nKelly, Hollywood dress designer,\ngets a certain annuity paid up and\nfeels Independent about things, he\nis going to write a book naming\nthe world's worst-dressed women.\nThe work will be called \"Women\nI Have Undressed,\" Kelly confided\nduring a recent visit here. He seemed more than a little exasperated at\nHollywood vagaries but then, he ex-\nplaineB, he'd just finished supplying an actress with 28 changes of\ndress for a single pjcture.\n'Look at that girl there,\" said\nKelly, pointing out a young woman\nin a swanky restaurant. \"She is a\nwell-known screen player. Yet she\nwill never be well dressed. Look\nat that hat.\"\nThe hat he referred to resembled\na large black biscuit, surmounted by\na cone, spangled, and with a coarse\nveil pendant.\n\"She might just as well have, worn\nan aviator's beacon light, for what\nshe really wanted to do was attract attention.\" Kelly observed. \"A\nhat should never be mad, daring,\nexciting or amusing.\"\n\"The best dressed women are\nthose of limited means,\" the designer said. Woman who have too much\nmoney could buy so many clothes\nthey sometimes wore garish things\n\"just for a gag.\" Here is his advice\nto women who have limited funds,\nyet wish to dress-modishly:\n\"Wear subdued colors. Buy fewer\ndresses, but get better fabrics. Pay\nmore for accessories than for dresses. Purchase clothing to bring out\nyour coloring. Be sure you buy good\nshoes. You do not need a great\nnumber of hats.\"\nHe explained that if a woman has\nonly funds for one fur she should\nnever buy a red fox cape. It would\nbe too prominent and people would\nsay: \"Here comes Mamie in that\nred fox again.\"\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Queen Mary\nwears a pair ot the new tianspar-\nent goloshes at open air functions\nand the oiled silk coats and umbrellas are popular here these talny\ndays.\nThe water must be toiling\nWaKm a crockery tea-pot\nPut in one tea$poonful^N> of tea\ni foreach person and one \"for the pot'\nSS-AddfresKBOILINGwate.'\n5teep 5 minutes \u00ae and serve.\nOnly Fine Quality gives Fine Flavour\nSA1ADA\nTEA\nIVORY NOW AT LOWEST PRICE EVER... Don't miss\nthis chance to try NEW WAY TO HAND BEAUTY\nthat's thrilling thousands!\nWhat a marvelous money-saving opportunity! Just think! Only It for\nLarge Size Ivory Soap when you buy another large Ivory for 10?\u2014a new\nlow price. You get two large cakes for 1U. Take advantage of this offer\ntoday\u2014and prove to yourself the beauty magic of this simple new hand\ntreatment that's thrilling thousands;\nIn one short week you cansee that rough,\ndry, scratchy.feeling replaced by thrilling\nnew velvet-eoftness, hands looking far\nwhiter than before.\nSee the hands pictured to the left!\nWashing dishes this new way\u2014with pure,\ngentle Ivory Soap\u2014can make the same\nimprovement in your hands.\nYou see, Nature is constantly renewing\nyour skin. Underneath the skin you see is\nsmooth, soft skin which can be yours for\nall the world to see\u2014if you protect it. So\ndon't coarsen this new skin by washing\ndishes with harsh, drying washday soaps.\nUse pure, gentle Ivory Soap instead.\nIvory suds actually feel soothing\u2014they\nallow Nature's own beauty-giving oils to\nfeed your skin as they did when you were\na baby. And Nature will keep your hands\nsmooth and soft and lovely,\nNo other soap is like Ivory. The only\nsoap bo pure that doctors recommend it\nfor a baby's sensitive skin, yet economical enough for washing dishes. No other\nsoaps, not even many castiles, are so un.\nchangingly pure, so snowy-white I\nIvory is actually a fine, white, unper-\nfumed toilet soap\u2014that costs bo little\nyou can afford to use it in the, dishpan.\nAmazingly economical! It costs you less\nthan strong soap chipB and powders\u2014\nactually less than Ha day to use Large Size\nIvory for all your dishwashing. This giant\ncake lasts and lastsl\nGet Ivory for dishes today. Keep hands\nsmooth and young. And remember this:\nEspecially in cold weather your hands\nneed Ivory's protection. Ivory now at new\nlow price... a real money-saver.\nIVORY SOAP .SS, HURRY TO YOUR STORE WHILE SUPPLY LASTS!\n, . :,<:,    . \u25a0'   _\n' ,,;: '\n___________________\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, JAN. 7, 1938.\nRev. John A. Black, who spent 42\nyears as a Presbyterian and United\nchurch minister, died at Dumbarton,\nOnt. He was a native of Warkworth.\nFifty pounds of candy from Lady\nTweedsmulr were distributed to Indian children at the King-clear reservation near Frederlcton.\nCo. J. J. M. Mackinnon, 78, a pioneer resident of Vancouver and important figure in the mining world\nfor more than 40 years, is dead.\nBUY\u2014SAVE\u2014AT OUR GREAT\nJanuary Clearance Sale\nLOOK AT THESE Vi PRICE VALUES\nMillinery at Half Price\n\u2022 FUR FELTS Reg- $2.95, now $j.49\nwr. wBTe Reg\u00ab $3-95'now $' '95\n\u2022 VELVETS Re\u00ab# $4j95| now $2.95\nt   VELOURS Reg. $5.95, now $3.95\nEDITH K CARROTHERS\nAnnabie Block     (Opposite the Capitol Theatre)   Nelson, B. C.   Phone 970\nPrice Effective Friday,\nSaturday and Monday\n)an. 7-8-10.\nSAFEWAY\nAyltner Tomato, Vegetable\n6-oi.\n4 Tins 19c\nPEARS-Lynn. Vajlsy\nM;.squat tin      \t\nPLUM8\u2014Aylmer, 2V,\nsquat tin .!.:.\t\nARRICOT8-_'s\nsquat tin\t\nPINEAPPLE JUICE- \u00bb*A\n. tins ........'...,.'. \u25a0' \"**\nMARMALADE-\nG.L.O.;.Mb. Jar...\nmammmmmm\n3K\nJAM\niss Pure Api\n4 IK tin 51C\nEmpress Pure Apricot\nORANGES\n\u2022\nSweet Mandarine, m gk\\g.\nFresh shipment, _fl.lv\nPer box  '\u2022\u25a0\u2022mmW\nBANANAS\u2014 3 Lbs. 19\u00ab*\nOXO CUBES\u2014Large tin  221\nTEA\u2014Maximum   Lb. 46t*\nCORN FLAKES\u2014Kelloggi \u00bb2 pk:i. 17\u00abt\nCOFFEE\u2014Chase & Sanborn  Lb. tin 37e>\nHONEY\u2014Pure, B.C  3 lb. tin 54\u00ab?\nBEANS\u2014Small navy 3 lbs. 19\u00ab*\nSEA FOODS\nPINK SALMON-\/..;\n2 tint\t\nTUNA FISH-lVi;\n2 tins\t\nSOCKEYE SALMON- irjA\ni\/.'i; tin  *lr\nKIPPER SNACKS-\n3 tins \t\nHADDIE-Brunswick,    IMA\n1's!  tin  **\u00bb\"\nm\nm\nHighway\nCOFFEE\n2 lbs. Coffee and 1 Glass\nTumbler\nau for 49c\nSHORTENING\n4 lbs. Snowflake  49*\n2\"\u00bb-.... 25*\nCHEESEr-Mild Ontario Lb. 22\u00ab)\nEGGS\u2014 Local, A-medium 2 doz. 69*\nPEANUT BUTTER\u20144'$ Tin 49*\nBAKING POWDER\u2014Blue Ribbon, l'i .. Tin 22*\nPOSTUM 4 ox. tin 25*\nCHESTNUTS 2 lbs. 19*\nTAPIOCA OR 8AG0-\n2 lbs. \t\n80UP MIX-\n2 lbs\t\nAPRICOTS-Fancy\nDry; 2 lbs.\t\nm\n35*\nVeal Loaf\nClark's, i\/,'s\nTin 13C\nCANDY\nChoice assortment, Creams, Chocolates, jellies\nlibs. %\u20acmc\n3\u00bb9'\nOut of town customers may send their orders with confidence to\n8AFWAY. Freight prepaid on ail orders $10.00 or over.\nMEAT DEPARTMENT\n PHONE 865 OR 866\t\nBREAKFAST\n23c\nBACON\nLb\t\nSALT PORK |OWLS 1 J\nSMALL PORK\nSAUSAGE, Lb\n20c\nSAUSAGE, 2 Lbs.\nTURKEYS,\nLb\t\nCHOICE POLISH\nSAUSAGE, Lb. .\n25c\n23c\n19c\nGEORGE WADY IS SUPERANUATED\nAFTER 3S YEARS WIRE SERVICE\nISHONOREDWIIH REMEMBRANCES\nWith-88%-Ion* years of C.P.K.\ntelegraph service climaxed, superannuation gifts in his bags, and a\nlast longing look at Nelson, George\nWady, with Mrs. Wady, left Thursday morning to spend the rest of\nhis life at his birthplace in Warwickshire, England.\nReaching nearly two score years\nservice December 31, Mr. Wady was\nsuperannuated and presented by\nhis fellow workmen, officers of\nKootenay division, with a white\ngold set of initialed cuff links. Linemen and communication department men gave him a lovely case\nof pipes.\nSTARTED IN WINNIPEG\nMr: Wady started his career In\nthe telegraph department \u2022 of the\nCP.R. as a yourtg man of 22 on\nconstruction work In Winnipeg in\n1899 . Since then much of the history of telegraph communication\nlines across Canada has been credited to his ingenuity. Wires from\nWinnipeg to Vancouver have been\nstrung under his direction.\nCHARGE OF KOOTENAY\nLAKE WIRE8\nIn 1931, when the link of the\nCP.R. line'around Kootenay lake\nwas built, Mr. Wady was in charge\nof erection of the telegrapli wires\nalong the track. Last sunmmer when\nthe line.from Crowsnest to Midway was constructed, to be used\nfor the carrier service, he was in\ncharge of the work.\nIn British Columbia for 12 years,\nhe was inspector of telegraphs at\nRcvelptoke, before coming to Nelson in the summer of 1986. He has\nbeen Inspector here since. Before\nbecoming an inspector of telegraphs, he was a lineman and general foreman.\nMRS. WARY' PRESENTED\nMrs. Wady, who has been Interested In church and musical circles\nsince her arrival In Nelson, was a\nmember of St. Saviour's choir, director of the boy's choir, and a\nmember of the Music Lover's club.\nShe was also active in many of\nthe church organisations. As a\nparting gift, the choir of St\nSaviour's presented her with a\nbeautiful colored picture of the\nInterior of the church. At the home\nof Mrs. Gordon Allen, Ward street,\nWednesday afternoon, Mrs. Wady\nwas. presented by members of the\nMusic Lover's club with two pictures of Nelson.\nIn an Interview Wednesday aft-\nernpon Mr. Wady stated:\n\"For many, many reasons we are\nsorry to leave Nelson. We have\nmade many friends, and have had\none of the most enjoyable times of\nour lives. We are truly sorry, to\nleave\"\nBefore sailing January 28 on the\nSteamer Montclare from St. John\nfor Liverpool, Mr. and Mrs. Wady\nwill make . several stops across\nCanada.\nPAGE   FIVt\nHiggins, Mn. West\nReelected Wardens\nof Boswell Church\nAfter Evensong on Sunday, the\nannual meeting of the Boswell Anglican church-was held, with .Rev.\nC Harvey presiding.\nMrs. D. V. West and 3. H. Hlg^n-\nwere reelected'as church wardens. ,\nSeveral of those present expressed\ntheir Intention .of attending the annual parish meeting < at Crawford\nBay later In the month.\nAPPLY FOR MOVIE\nWORK FOR THEIR\nUNBORN BABIES\nHOLLVWOCiD, Jan. 8 <AP)-\nThirty-one prospective mothers had\napplied to. a motion, picture-studio\nhere today for a film parUor their\nunborn babies.'\nThe studio announced recently it\nwould\"1 need an infant but a few\ndays did for the part of the French\ndauphin, Louis Charles, in its forth-\ncoming'.picture, \"Marie Antoinette,\"\nin which Norma1 Shearer plays the\ntitle role. \u201e\u2022\u25a0:' ,   \u2022.\nYmir Miners Union\nSelects Bennett\nas Medical Officer\nDr. C. M. Bennett of Nelson, was\nelected, medical doctor of the Miners' association at Ymir, in a.ballot\not the. membership' that concluded\nTueday night.'. His contract will be\nfor two years. He will be the first\ncontract medical officer of the association-\nKNEES WENT STIFF\nIN HIS SLEEP\nAgony to Move Them\nWhen He Awoke\n\"For three years,\" writes tins\nCity man, \"I suffered with pains\nacross the lower part of my back.\nIn the morning, I awoke with\nknees so stiff that it was agony to\nmove them. Special treatment\nwould make the pain a little easier\n-but that was all. Then a friend\nrecommended Kruschen, which my\ndoctor said I might take. I began\nwilh about a coffee-spoonful first\nIhing in the morning. To-my surprise I found my rheumatic aches\nand pains disappearing. I kept on\nwith Kruschen, and although I am\nmore than middle-aged, I have been\ntree from pain for two years, and\nable to go to my office every day.\"\n-A.W,-,\nUhiiunatlCi conditions, are often\nthe''result of an excess of uric acid\nin the body.. Two of the ingredients\nof Kruschen Salts\" have the power\nof dissolving uric acid . crystals.\nOther ingredients assist nature tu\nexpel the dissolved crystals through\nthe natural channels. (Advt.)\nCustomers are requested to\nkindly .telephone orders Friday to ensure prompt delivery.\nm\nPEAS AND CARROTS fiA\n17-oz. tins; 2, for  **T\nPEA8\u2014Aylmer 2's,\n2'i tall; tin\t\nTOMATO JUICE\u2014 inA\nLlbby's, 10\/2-oa. 3 tins *3fV\nPORK AND BEANS\u2014 -ynA\n16-m. tint; 4 tins -\"**\n8PINACH-Aylmer2'H_i*|\u00bb\n2 for :..'. iir\nTomatoes\nChoice Quality, 2\/s-lb.tlni\n3 far\" 33c\nSOAPS-CLEANERS\nCASTILE SOAP\u2014        <%*A\n10 bars  *\u2022\u00bb>\nGLO-COAT\u2014Quarts;    QQA\nCLEAN8ER-Old QA\nDutch; tin  9*\nPOLI8H\u2014O'Cedar;        in A\nbottle   *Wt\nBLEACH-Eurcka;        f%A\nbottle \u2022**\u00bb>\nLux Flakes\nLarge Packets\nEach 21C\n<\u25a0_\u25a0_\u25a0_\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n80DA8\u2014Premium;\npkt\t\nGRAHAM WAFERS- \u2022%\\A\nLb. |,kt \"t*\nOATS\u2014Robin Hood,\nChina; pkt\t\nM\nm\n1 pkg. Bran Flakes, 1 pkg.\nGrape-Nuts Flakes, and 1\nMickey Mouse Book\u2014\nAll for 22C\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Miss Jean Burns, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs, John Burns, who received her registered nurse certification from a Denver, Colo., hospital\nin November, and who spent a few\ndays with her parents, leaves today,\nfor Kimberley to be a guest for a\nfew days of Mr. and Mrsi Garnet\nBlaine while visiting her brother,\nJack Burns. Miss Burns will be^ac-\ncompanied by Miss Helen Denison,\nCarbonate street, who will be a guest\nof her brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. Blaine for a few weeks.\n\u2022 Miss Ruth Heath, who visited\nher mother, Mrs. Mi H.-Heath at\nKaslo, has returned.to resume her\nstudies at business college..\n.'\u2022 J. Cowan has returned from\nVancouver, where'he visited'his.par-\nents over the holidays.\n\u2022 J, Stirling of Salmo, spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 Mrs. K. Higgs, Victoria street,\nhas as her guest, Miss Margaret\nHembling, R^ N.\";\" of Vernon.\n\u25a0. \u2022 Mr..,and Mrs. Bolton-H. Pearson; 502 Brst 'Street Fairview,, had\nas their guest the clatter's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. George Hunter-Gardener of Nakusp, who plan: to return today.,\n\u2022\u2022\u25a0' Mr. and Mrs.W.S.\" Ellis of the\nReno mine,, wero. Nelson visitors\nWednesday evening, attending the\nhockey match. .\n\u00bb J. Noxon of Perry Siding, visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers In.the city yesterday included Mrs. Little of Slocan\nCity.\n\u2022 Miss Lorna Speirs has returned from Kaslo to resume her studies at business college.. '\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs.T. E.' Peters and\nMiss Peters of Gray Creek, were\nNelson visitors' yesterday.\n\u2022 Joseph Binish of Slocan City\nspent yesterday in town.    '\n\u2022 J. Smith of Ainsworth, visited\nNelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Recent shoppers in town included F. Thompson of New Denver. '     . ,\n\u2022 Hon. Basil Aylmer of Queen s\nBay, was a city visitor yesterday.\n\u2022'. T. Stird was in town from\nSalmo Wednesday.\n\u2022. Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Witter of\nthe Queen mine-attended the hockey meeting here Wednesday night.\n\u2022 Mrs. Melby of Silverton.'.who\nspent a couple, of days* in the city,\nreturned home yesterday.\n*W\u00a3B\u00a35TJAMis\n\u2022 J. Hunter of Thrums, was a\nvisitor in town yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Viola Loews, of Salmo,\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 W.W. Ward of Vallican, was a\ncity visitor yesterday!\n\u2022 D. J. McKenzie of Procter,\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022Charles   Wanstall; of   Salmo,\nvisited,town yesterday.\"   .\n\u2022 H. F. Wilmot of Gray Creek,\nspent yesterday in town.\n\u2022\" J. Summers of the Kootenay\nBelle mine, was a city shopper Wednesday.\n\u2022 Miss Mary Shutty of Kaslo,\nhas returned to Nelson Mo resume\nher studies at business college.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. E.Nelson of\nYmir, visited Nelson Wednesday.\n\u2022 Mrs..K. Popqff of Slocan City,\nwas a city visitor, yesterday.,\n\u2022 A. M. Ham,\" mining man of Sil-\nverton, was In tpwn yesterday \"and\nleft via the C. P. R. for .Chicago. '\n\u2022'. T.'D. Edgar of Vallican, spent\nyesterday in.Nelson shopping.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded Mrs, J, P. Bournes of Procter. \u2022\n\u2022 N. Johnson of Spokane, visited town Wednesday.\n\u00bb Leonard Clark of Gray Creek,\nspent yesterday in Nelson..:He was\naccompanied by his daughter, Margaret, -who hBS. returned to Nelson\nto resume, her studies at St. Joseph's\nacademy. and by. his son, Hugh,, who\nleft on the' morning train yesterday for Vancouver, to attend Vancouver college.\n\u00bb Mr. arid Mrs. F. E. W. Smith,\nmarried in Vancouver Christmas\nweek, have arrived in Nelson, and\ntaken, up residence at 509 Carbonate street.\n\u2022 Miss Betty Pope\" of the Oka-\nnagan, who visited friends In Rossland over, the holidays, has returned\nto resume her course at business\ncollege. ..    \u25a0\n\u2022 William Winstanley of Crescent Bay, spent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Miss Jean Robertson, 507 Carbonate street, has taken up residence at 706 Victoria street.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Balding of Betford,\nspent Wednesday in the city.\n\u2022 William John McLean, CP.R.\nconductor, has returned to Grand\nForks, after spending the holidays\nat the home of his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Hugh J. McLean, 404 Latimer\nstreet.\" \u201e\n\u2022 M.T. Benthlen of Gray Creek,\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Maclnnes\nof Ymir, attended the hockey match\nin Nelson Wednesday.\n\u2022 David Johnson has returned\nfrom Nakusp to resume his course\nat business college.\n\u2022 W. R. Kwansie of Trail, was in\nthe city en route to visit Kimberley.\n\u2022 Mrs. Graves of Ymir, is a guest\nof her son-in-law and daughter. Mr.\nand Mrs. Herbert Harrop, Fairview\nR. 1R. Grocery\nEffective Friday, Saturday and Monday\nPhone 161\nTOMATO JUICE-Llb-\nby>, lO'\/.-oi.; 3 tins\t\nPORK AND BEANS\u2014\nLlbby's, Ige., 21-ox.; 2 tins\n19c\n23c\nFRUITS and VEGETABLES\nCRANBERRIES- OAp\nBRAZIL NUTS-To clear; A j\u00bb _\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nSOAP\u2014Castile, floating; AC.\n10 bar.  \u202260t\nTOILET SOAP\u2014Coleo;\n. 5 bars\t\n16c\nCOCOA\u2014Cowan's;\n!\/_-lb. tin\t\nPEAS\u2014Marrowfats;\n2 pkgi\t\n15c\n23c\nFLOUR\u2014Slashed; No.\n1 Hard Wheat; 4$ lbs.\n$2.23\n2 lbs.\nORANGES\u2014Good ilie, new shipment; while they last, 1 Op\nper dox.. \u25a0'  X-.'L\/\nGRAPES\u2014\n2 lbs.\t\nGRAPES\u2014Concord;\n4-lb. basket\t\nGRAPEFRUIT-Large;     n^P\n25c\n45c\nCHOCOLATE MALTED\nMILK-Borden's;  lb. tin\n35c\n25c\n10c\n23c\nSPUDS- $1QO\n100-lb. sack \u00bbJ>1\u00ab\u00ab7V\nAPPLES\u2014Delicious;        ORa\nI lbs ....'-  UO\\.\nLETTUCE\u2014Largel\n2 for\t\nCARROTS\u2014\nBunch \u2014\nCELERY-\n2 lbs. \t\nSEE OUR WINDOWS \"R_ MANY MORE SPECIALS. FREIGHT\nPAID ON ALL ORDERS $10 OR OVER. FREE DELIVER)\n) :\nDIFFERENT\nBECAUSE BAKED!\n\u2022 Some so-called 'baked' beans are only steamed or boiled.\nHeinz Beans are actually baked\u2014 in real ovens. They're\ngolden-brown and mealy, tender and digestible. They're\nwhole beans, flavoured to the heart with delicious sauces\nand sweet bacon pork, 4 kinds\u2014< 1) With pork and tomato -\nsauce. (2) In Tomato sauce, without pork. (3) Boston\nStyle\u2014with pork and molasses sauce. (4) Kidney Beans\nwith special sugar sauce. _.-._-_.\n, .        HEINZ\ntplke*^ OVEN\nBAKED\nBEANS\n\u25a0 <-B\nVI\n,a THE SAW\n^^^ f \u00ab,.nv a horn*\nshaker and *e WieUl.\n\"K^'r0mal!U.Boti>fP\n,epatablecomP\u00abeaWfahundred\n\" Cerent ^f *y V *?*\n' kmd.olsauce-M^    ofpecU-\ntheboneddovvn^ ^\nthat *ve heart        \u201eup goes \u00bb\nHeir* ^^dropisadrop\no{ftavour-*f' \u201e \u201e Heu\u00ab\n\u00ab** T \u201eu ^atchnis\u00bb*f\nMheteacn\u00abl\u00b0l \u2014\u2014a*\n|,VN...H_|N\u00bb\n\"t IN C\u00bbN\u00bb'\nLT'DE I\n\/. WK IIICAN4\u00ab\\\ny W\u00ab cooked mtV-\n\/ \u00abI1L\u00a30AltlNAOtY!V\nPlHtlN? CO.MWtHSl\n' lOqo'JTQ ;\nV\npNZ]\n, \u2122   STBAINEO   _ ,\n|VEGETABLE!\nSOUP\n-With circ'ms *nd\n; vtAsr Exifi*--\"\nljSfVAltiEWS _ .\nV.lKKWlMUMM    \/\nIMwiwiawwiiwI\n..TOMATO,,\nMOTHER!\nSAVE HOURS\nEVERY DAY\n\u2022 To buy, sort, cook and strain\nvegetables and fruit for baby was\nonce a real burden. But now Heins\nStrained Foods\u201412 kinds\u2014offer\nevery needed variety, with uniformity in quality and flavour.,\nThey're ready to heat and serve.\nNo finer quality exists. And'\nHeinz Strathed Foods\nare safe. Try them\nmother, and watch your\nbaby thrive.\nH. J. Heini Compiny has prep-red \u2022 complete\n*nd interesting book on infant feeding entitled\n\"WhatShtlll FndMy Bsbyl\"Thiebookiaob-\ntamable by sending three Heirm Strained Poods *;|\nlabels, any variety, with your name and address '\nlo H. J. Heiiu Company. Toronto.        , j\nHEINZ\nSTRAINED FOODS!\n\u2022.,  .\n\t\n\t\n**&^^^\nmmM\n_-_-_\u25a0\n \u25a0PRfPS.\nWSiPi\nPAGE SIX\nJJrinon lailtj Nema\nEstablished April 22, 1802.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED.\n216  Baku  Street,    Nelson,    British  Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers  ot  tha  Audit  Bureau  ot  Circulations  and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nFRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1938\nA CIVIC AUDITORIUM VANCOUVER\nSUN OBJECTIVE\nOne of the objectives of the Vancouver Sun for 1938\nis a civic auditorium for Vancouver, and it places such a facility at the head of 15 material facilities or material betterments that it advocates.\nNelson's unique civic centre no doubt inspired this\nparticular objective of the Sun, as it has inspired advocacy\nof similar facilities all over Canada, and south of the line,\nin the state of Washington at least. In British Columbia it\nmay fairly be credited with inspiring the artificial rink just\nbuilt by the city of Vernon, and doubtless other centres will\nbe heard from, judging by reports.\nThe Vancouver Sun to the extent of a full editorial page\ncolumn makes a statement of its principles and objectives,\nlocal and national, social and political. The editorial, up to\nthe point where it departs from the civic field, is as follows,\nunder a head, \"Definition of Purpose\".\nJust as the navigating officer on a ship takes frequent\nobservations and plots out a definite course for his vessel\nto follow, so, is it necessary, from time to time, for newspapers as well as governments and individuals to examine\ntheir policies and programs and set down in clear and\nunderstandable form a definition of their purpose.\nThus, at the beginning of the New Year of 1938, The\nVancouver Sun seizes the occasion to present to its readers\nthose aims which it enthusiastically espouses and those\nmovements to which it lends warm aid.\nIn civic affairs, The Vancouver Sun endorses the program of a City Manager Plan with a larger City Council,\nas prevails through the British Empire and Europe.\nWe stand for the extension of gardens and the beautifi-\ncation of the city.\nWe urge with utmost emphasis the construction in logical sequence of:\nA Civic Auditorium.\nA new Library.\nA larger Art Gallery.\nAn Aquarium.\nAdequate Zoological Gardens.\nWe stand for the preservation, development and ex-\n' ploitation for tourist purposes of the historical, archeolo-\ngical features of this district such as the Great Fraser\nMidden at Marpole.\nWe believe that the development of a greater and\nconstant tourist consciousness is essential to the well-being\nof Vancouver.\nWe urge an improvement in street surfacing, in the\nwater and sewer system, in street lighting and in street\nand house numbering.\nWe stand for the constant improvement in the type of\nmen who are elevated to civic office.\nWe favor a new Smoke Bylaw, drastic action on the\nrats that infest our city and the enforcement of the Boulevard Bylaw.\nWe favor more public parks, trees and flowers and\nstatues of our public men and women, including an heroic-\nsized figure of Captain George Vancouver at some point\noverlooking the harbor as a trade mark for the City of\nVancouver just as the Statue of Liberty is the trade mark\nof the City of New York.\nWe stand for rigid traffic law enforcement with the\nconstant employment of plainclothes traffic officers, elimination of left hand turns, modern traffic lights, tests\nfor drivers, pedestrian subways at school crossings and\nliberal street widening.\nWe urge a new town planning survey to decide the\nfuture of False Creek and to determine the nature of essential new bridges across the Creek,\nWe propose the establishment in Vancouver of a diagnostic clinic so that the thousands of health-seekers who\nannually go abroad to Rochester, Portland, and California\nmay find the same medical Rervice at home under the organized cooperation of those Vancouver physicians who are\nrecognized as world leaders in their branches of medicine\nand surgery.\nWHEN THEY \"WADED\" THE CLYDE\nIn view of its Empire Exhibition next summer, Glasgow, industrial pride of Scotland, is receiving a great deal\nof attention. As one of the chief ports for sea-borne trade,\nGlasgow is known throughout the world. Ships built on the\nClyde are found in all navigable waters, and on the liners\npassengers soon discover that the official speech is well\nbur-r-ed. The Scot follows his masterpieces to the open\nsea.\nThis is the Glasgow of today. But what of the long\nago? There is where the really interesting story lies, and it\nis not told in port shipping statistics. The Journal of Commerce and Shipping Telegraph has been looking backward\nregarding Glasgow and its shipping development and finds\nthat only a century ago the Clyde at low water could be\nwaded across. But it was a good salmon stream. Centuries\nago the Molindar river seemed more attractive to settlers\nthan the Clyde. \"Today the Clyde is navigable for the\nlargest vessels, and the old Molindar, covered over, has\nbecome a sewer.''\nThe, Clyde used to \"meander through the city.\" Now\nits high-Water depth is forty-four feet. In 1812 a small\nsteamer, and foresighted and determined Scots saw the\npossibilities of a port. In 1858 the nroject was entrusted to\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.Cr-FRIDAY MORNING, JAN. 7. 1938.\nOVER THE TOP, 1937!\nIndustrial Strikes\nBy J. T.  BEALBY\n2\u2014UNITED STATES\n(Continued)\nIn several very important particulars the trade unions of the\nUnited States stand on a different\nfooting from trade unions in Britain. In the first place, until some\n15 years ago. organized labor in\nAmerica did not embrace more than\n10 per cent of the total laoor force\nof the country- Nor is the number\nvery much greater today. For example, in New York state, in a\ncertain year recently, there were\n15,000 registered electrical workers;\nbut of that number less than 4000,\nor 27 per cent, belonged to the\nElectrical Workers' union. Similarly in other artisan crafts. The explanation is that each American\nunion constitutes itself a sort of\nexclusive and privileged association, controlled and led (as in Soviet Russia) by a small minority\nor oligarchy of self-appointed leaders, men of forceful character and\noverweening ambition, holding\nthemselves responsible to nobody.\nAdmission of new members to these\nunions is generally conditional upon\nthe purchase of a ticket of membership at prices ranging from $25 to\n$100. Men pay these exactions in the\nnope of thereby gaining security in\ntheir jobs; but, as I will indicate\npresently, the security is illusory.\nRecently Henry Ford asked the\nworkers in his employ, \"Why should\nyou pay an outsider for (he privi\nlege of working in our factories?\nOr why should you go on paying\nyear after year for the continuance\nof your jobs? You know as well as\nI do. that we give you voluntarily,\nand progressively as we are in a\nposition to afford it, higher wages\nthan any union would or could ever\ndream of demanding. What have\nyou to gain by joining a union? As\nlong as you possess the strength and\nskill for your job, and are willing\nto work, your wage will not be cut.\nWhen you are no longer able to do\njustice to your tasks, you have an\nadequate provision to fall back\nupon, a pension earned by your\nown-energy and thrift, not squeezed out of your fellow-men or out of\nyour own pockets under the name\nof relief, or old-age pensins, or\nwhat .not. I am trying to show you\nthe folly of putting vour necks into\nan iron collar from which you will\nnever get free again. It will take\nthose who have gone out on strike,\nand have thereby won small increases of pay, five years or more\nto make up the losses it has cost\nthem to get it.\"\nIn some of the New York building unions as much as $1000 is stated\nto have been paid to get a footing\namong these elite of labor leaders.\nThey are of course people who have\na finer appreciation of \"bossing\"\ntheir more credulous fello\\vs than\nthey have of personal work. Obviously, such aspirants for easy jobs\nEXCUSE IT, PLEASE!\n^>lA,a, .\nAviator Henpeck attributed his success m breaking the endur-J\n, ance record to his wife.\nthe Clyde Navigation Trust, which went to work with a\nwill. The Clyde was adapted for ship-building \"more by\nthe labor of mankind than the efforts of nature,\" but all\nnatural obstacles were overcome, and today the river has a\ndock system that is among the finest in the world,\nThis has been a great thing for Scotland and Scotland's trade. The Clyde Navigation Trust has been aggressive and resourceful in securing business for the port, and\nan effective influence in the development of Empire trade.\nThe Clyde shipbuilding industry is an enduring monument\nto Scottish vision and the Scot's ability to handle great\nand difficult enterprises\u2014which is more or less evident\nin other parts of the world also.\nat other people's expense are not\nbona fide laboring men.\nLEGAL 8TATUS\nOF UNIONS\nIn Britain all trade unions have\nbeen fully legalized since 1875. They\nmust however be registered and\nmust publish a statement ot receipts\nand disbursements at least once a\nyear. They enjoy the right of collective bargaining and of peaceful,\npersuasive picketing. They are responsible In the law courts for\nbreach ot contract and for any\ndamages they cause- In the United\nStates, on the contrary, the tendency of legislation, especially since\nthe beginning of this present century, has been to tie the employer\nhand and foot and to free labor\nfrom every kind of regulation and\nrestraint, except what they impose\nupon themselves. The leaders of the\naccredited trade unions frame rules\nand regulations for the rank and\nfile of the union and administer\nthem entirely at their own whim\nand humor, and the workers enjoy\nno manner of protection or redress.\nThis was admitted publicly by no\nless an authority than Samuel Gom-\npers, for 40 years president of the\nAmerican Federation of Labor,\n(A.F.L.) before a public inquiry\nheld in New York in 1922. In addition to local levies, they also levy\ndues from each member of a union\nmonthly, $1 in the case of the Committee for Industrial Organization\n(C.I.O) and two cents in the case\nof the A.F.L.; although under the\ncircumstances this amounts to raising taxes without the consent or au.\nthorization of the elected representatives of the people, Gompers\nsaid in effect, \"I admit there are\nseveral abuses among the building trades unions of New York,\nthat are oppressive to this public, to\nthe employer, and to the members\nof the unions; but, though I deplore them, I protest against any intervention by the courts, or the\nlaw, or by legislation. The only\nredress for the abuses complained\nof that I would sanction would lie\nin the general evolution of the\nlabor movement and its eventual\nenlightenment. \"Consonant with this\nattitude and these views the leaders of the United Mine Workers in\none year fined 4031 of their members an aggregate of $387,205, equivalent to an average fine of $98\nfor each individual. Further, they\nexpelled 2841 members from their\nunion, and thus shut them out from\nemployment in businesses in which\nunion labor was employed. Understand me correctly; this was not\ndone by any capitalistic employer;\nit was done by the men's own leaders. No information was vouchsafed\nas to what the offense of the cul-\nSrits was, or what manner of trial,\nany, they were subjected to! This\nmakes the American labor leaders virtually arbitrary dictators,\ntreating the workers as they are\ntreated by Messrs. Hitler, Mussolini, and Stalin. Those leaders declare strikes when and where they\nplease without accounting to anybody, either to workers or to boards\nof control. If in a body of employees there Is a majority of only one\nunionist, then the minority of non-\nunionists are compelled by law to\nsubmit to the dictation of the unionist majority\u2014of one; but if the\nunionists are in a minority, their\nunion may bargain ndependently\nfor them, irrespective of anything\nthe ndn-unlonist majority may do.\nNo employer may dismiss a unionist employe^ for any cause whatsoever, not even for incompetency,\nand the law forbids him to refuse to hire a man because he\nbelongs to a union. In short the\nlabor laws of the last five years\ndefine scrupulously the obligations\nof the capitalist employer, but nowhere utter One word about the\nemployer's rights; on the other hand\nthose selfsame laws stress abundantly tho rights of labour, but Ignore completely all mention of any\nobligations on their part, Furthermore, the law gives the workers\na sort of permanent lien and monopoly of their jobs; it says, that\neven though the employees go out\non strike, they still remain employes of the business concern they\nhave been working for.\nWhen quite recently, the Chrysler\nAutomobile company asked for a\ntemporary Injunction to remove \"sit-\ndown\" strikers from tho company's\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nFAULTY CARD READING\n. BOMB otherwise fair players\nfind fault with their partner's\n{leads, declaring they cannot be\nread. In many auch cases, the reason they are not wad Is a lack of\ncard reading ability. So the one\nwho finds fault during the post\nmortem may be himself the one\nwho Is to blame for the trouble\nthat develops.\nA K 10 0.8\n\u2022 32\n4) 10 9 3 2\n*J8J\n\u2666 J 64\n\u00ab a 10 7 5\n\u2666 AKQ.\n\u2666 964\nN.\n$\u25a0 \u00ab'i\n\u2666 Q52\n\u2666 J74\n\u2666 will\nAA73\nV J 9 S 4,\n\u2666 865'\n\u2666 AKQ\n(Dealer: South. Both sides vulnerable.)\nAfter South's opening bid of V\nNo Trump, North jumped to 3-No\nTrumps and West's opening lead\nwas the spade 8. On this dummy\nplayed the 4, East the Q and\n.South the A.\nWith three tricks In diamonds,\nand three In clubs, as well as two\nsure apade tricks, So.uth attempted to set up a heart trick.\nEast won the first lead of'that suit\nand returned a spade to West's K.\nBail' criticized West lot no.\nleading the spade 10, contending\nthat the lead ot the 8 was difficult\nfor him to- read. West's retort was\nthat If the 8 was a fourth best\nlead, South held only one higher\nthan If and East should not have\nplayed the Q. If the 8 had been\nthe top ot a worthless short suit,\nSouth would than have held tha\nA-K-10-8, In which case he would\nundoubtedly Have bid. that suit\nrather than no trump on tha first\nround of bidding.\nIf East allows the tpada 8 to\nride, the contract la set, as the\nopponents get three spades and\ntwo hearts Instead of the two\nspades to which they were limited\nby the play of the Q.\nTomorrow's Frobleo\n\u2666 10 9 8 6 4\nVAK\n\u2666 8643\n\u2666 76\n4 None\nVQ83\n\u2666 Q J 10 9\n75\n\u2666 AKQJ\nN.\ns.\nA A 7532\n\u00ab 10 9 6 5\n4\n\u2666 None\n\u2666 642\n\u2666 KQJ\n\u00bbJ72\n\u2666 AK3\n\u2666 10983\n(Dealer: North. East-West vol-\nA third round of the suit was won nersble.)\nwith dummy's J, and the contract j   What Is the correct bidding on\nmado with ease. I this deal?\nLooking Backward\u2666..\nTEN YEARS AGO\nJanuary 7, 1929\nAlec and Kenneth Attree have returned to Queen's Bay from the\nKettle Valley.-Miss Jean Kelder-\nman of Rossland, Is visiting her\ngrandparents, Mrs. A. M. Kelderman\nat Trail.\u2014J. J. Binns of Kaslo, Is a\nTrail visitor.\u2014Albert Wallach was\ninstalled as chief of Clan McLeary.\n\u2014Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Hamilton and\ndaughter, Miss Violet Hamilton, who\nleft Nelson some time ago, and have\nbeen visiting in New York, plan to\nleave on the Adriatic on a Mediterranean cruise.\u2014C. S. Leary, M. P.,\nP. for Kaslo-Slocan, left for. his\nhome at Nakusp after a stay in\nNelson and Spokane.\u2014R. J. Hewitt\nleaves this morning for the East\nKootenay.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nJanuary 7,1918\nM, R. McQuarrie has announced\nhimself as a mayoralty candidate.\u2014\nMrs. E. W. Dawney and daughter.\nSerena, of Rossland, were visitors to\nNelson\u2014H. H. Johnstone of Rossland, left for Paulson.\u2014Pte. Charles\nMontague Johnson has been killed\nin action. He had been recommended for the Military Medal\u2014 Arthur\npremises, it was refused to them,\nbecause the effect of it would be\nto transfer the Chrysler property\nfrom the strikers who \"sat In possession of it and give It back to the\nowners, although the strikers freely\nadmitted, that they had seized the\nproperty by force and threats of\na hold-up in fact. Labor's consistent\npolicy has been to clamp down every possible kind of restraint upon\nthe capitalist employer, and to secure for itself every kind of exemption from interference, control and\nresponsibility (Wagner Act). The\nresult is, that\u00bba contented body ot\nemployees is obnoxious \u2014 a thorn\nin the side, to tha autocratic dictators of U. S. labor. These gentlemen\nare in point of actual fact not labor\nleaders at all: they are political\ndemagogues of a kind most mischievous and most hurtful to Ihe\ncommunity in which they claim citi-\ngenship.\n(To Be Continued)\nMERCHANDISING FRUIT\nThere is something badly lacking\nin the merchandising methods of\nhandling fruit. Prosaic cuts of beef,\nveal and mutton are frequently described in newspaper advertisements by a string of appetizing adjectives, such as \"juicy,\" \"tender,\"\n\"delicious\" and so on, but few advertisements go into such raptures\nover various frutis, which are'much\nmore entitled to such tooth-watering description.\nFor instance, not how little is\nmentioned of the delectable qualities of the Winter Nelis pear. It\nwants something like this, instead\nof the usual bald \"Winter Nelis\npears, 3 lbs, for 25c\":\n\"LUSCIOUS PEARS IN\nDECEMBER!\nWinter Nelis at their best, homely outside by 0 my! how good\ninside; luscious, sugary, tender\nand brimming with juice, a\nfeast for the gods. Take some\nhome and you 11 soon be b\u00bbck\nfor more, Priced reasonably at\nthree pounds for          25c.\"\nHow about similar customer-appeal advertising for other delicious\nfruits in their season? \u2014 Kelowna\nCourier.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"It's noble for a man to die\nfor others, but I didn't set anything noble In Jim's workln'\nhimself to death to buy gasoline and cosmetics,\"\nLakes, jr., now with the Americaii\narmy at Camp Lewis, Wash., is assistant to the personnel officer on\nthe general staff.\u2014Charles Lelghton,\nfireman of.the C. P. R. at Midway,\nhas been transferred to Revelstoke.\n-Mrs. S. C. Dill of Wtnlaw, who n\"f,\"had been dropped!\nhas been visiting Mrs. John Strachan\nreturned to her home.\nIl Questions tt\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader ot\nthe Nelson Daily News, In no\ncase will the name ot the person\nisking the question be published.\nH. N.. South Slocan\u2014On reading an\narticle about Chinchillas In the\nToronto Star Weekly, we became\ninterested in knowing whether\nthere were any farms in Canada\nand would like to know the addresses of the nearest farms. Could\nyou kindly give us this information?\nChinchilla fur farming in Canada has not been a success. There\nwere 34M ot the animals on fur\nfarms in 1928, only 239 in 1981, only\ntwo in 1935 and none on the official\nrecords now.\nV. H.. Nelson \u2014 Was thara any\nclause in the Canadian entry papers of the Doukhobors which pre-\nvents their being deported?\nNo, but they have exactly the\nsame rights to British Justice as any\nother   immigrants   and   have  the\nsame obligations to obey the law.\nThey have a categoric exemption\nfrom military service, but this privi.\nlege is Ihe same as that possessed\ngenerally by conscientious objectors\nto bearing arms.\nJ. D. B., Cranbrook \u2014 Please allow\nme to correct an error in reply to\nthe following question asked by\nW. F. Nelson\u2014Do Roman Catho-\nlie schools in Nelson or any other part of the province receive\nstate, provincial or local aid? Your\nreply appears to be \"No.\" For your\ninformation the Roman Catholic\nschool in Fernie receives from the\ngeneral taxes collected $1000 per\nyear. This amount has been paid\nfor years according to the auditors report ot that City.\nThanks. J. D. B\u201e we had understood that this special grant In Fer-\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\n(Jan. 7, 1908.)\nJohn Keith Reid, a former resident of Nelson, committed suicide\nin London.\u2014F. J. Watson-Taylor\nleaves .today for Liverpool\u2014The\narmatures for the street cars ar-\narrived today.\u2014Contractors John\nBurns is putting in a motor to\ndrive the machinery in his shop\non Carbonate street.\u2014S. R. Tyler\nof Silverton is in town\u2014J. D.\nMoore of Kaslo is in the city.\u2014Born,\nto Mr. and Mrs. Fred Marsden,\nHall street, January 7, a son\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. S. S. Chandler of Kaslo\nare visitors in the city\u2014R. C. Taylor of Nine-Mile and A. F. Davis of\nThirteen-Mile are Nelson visitors.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nI8MS VS. DEMOCRACY\nThe Russian system and the German system work along similar\nlines. If you displease the government you get your head cut off or\nSet shot. The method is different;\nle effect is the same. Fascists and\nCommunists might introduce the\nsame sort of thing into Canada if\nthey got the chance. Canadian Communists applaud what Russia does.,\nCanadian Fascists approve of Germany and Italy. Our pwn idea is\nthat we would not exchange one-\ntenth of the British system and\nBritish justice for all the benefits\nthese same Communists and Fascists\nclaim they have to offer human so-\nciety.\u2014Hegina Leader-Post.\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 fcr publication If desired,\nLines in typewritten copy should be double spaced.\nTrail Businessmen     .\nEfficient, Give Good\nService, Not Cunning\nTo the Editor,\nSir,\u2014May I be permitted to s\u00bby a\nfew words in reply to Mr, Harris'\nlatest and most remarkable produc\ntion in the form of an open letter\nto Mr, Blaylock, general.manager\nof the C. M. St S. Company. First\nof all let me tell Mr. Harris that I\ncannot say, like him, that I do not\nknow Trail personally. For the past\ntwenty-three years my leading business interests have been centred\nin the City of Trail and no statement could be wider of the actual\nfacts than the following:\n\"Business in Trail city is a higgledy-piggledy me\u00bbs where each individual and business grabs for its\nown interest; where a few strong\nand cunning ones grtb a great deal,\nbut the majority struggle along on\nthe verge of bankruptcy and starvation.\"\nNow, Mr- Harris, I have known\nTrail for nearly a quarter of a century and I have yet to meet a citizen\nof Trail\u2014I do not speak of transient job hunujri\u2014I have yet to meet\na bona fide citizen of Trail who was\nlacked the means of getting a meal\nwhen he desired to eat. I know of\nno business in the whole city that is\nhovering on the verge of bankruptcy\nI know of many strong and efficient\nbusiness men in Trail, but I havo\nyet to meet a cunning one. I have\nspent thousands of dollars In Trail\nin the past year \u00bbnd have never\nfailed to get good service and good\nvalue for my money. I can even give\ntwo or three Instances where, in\norder to msintaln a well deserved\nreputation' Trail business men have\nserved me at a loss. I can name offhand more than a score of prominent business men who place their\nreputation for 6qutre dealing and\nefficient service far above all\nthought of pecuniary gsin. I, Mr.\nHarris, am a very ordinary man. For\na quarter of a century the bulk of\nmy Income has come from Trail. I\nhave never known starvation, am\nseveral thousand dollars above the\nzero mark of bankruptcy and am\nnot cunning. Moreover the people\nwith whim I di business generally\ncompliment me on the satisfactory\nnature'of the service rendered.\nWithout any desire to be personal\nmay I tell Mr. Harris, th\u00bbt I was\nborn and tailed on a farm. I sm conversant with farming operations as\ncarried on around Trail and New\nDenver. I have even been on Mr.\nHarris' own firm and talked to him\nin hl6 own home, and \"Me Judice\"\nMr. Harris has nothing on Trail\nfarmers in point of efficiency and\ngood service, and Mr- Harris sets t\nvery high standard. Indeed.\nToo gladly - too willingly do I\nadd my \"Amen\" to the tribute of\npraise Mr. Harris bestows on the\nefficiency, (good Management, good\njudgment, good sound common sense\nhumanity and justice, thst have always characterised the management\not the C. M. St 3. Company. I know,\npersonally many of the foremost\namong the C. M. St S. employees.\nThere are many brilliant men among\nthem, but as usual in a large corporation of this kind others, not\nquite so brilliant as their position\nas leaders in one of the first business corporations of Canada would\nlead one to expect. I also know\npersonally not a few of the leading I\nbusiness men of Trail. When 1 compare these two classes of men I\ncannot see that the lawyers, doctors, teachers, merchants and hide- -\npendent business men of Trail are\nat all inferior in ability, intelligence,\nefficiency and. honesty to those\nwho are making Trail famous by efficient and satisfactory work as employees of the C. M- & B. Company.\nThe C. M- It S. management is\ngood beyond all praise\u2014I will not\nsay flawless\u2014We who for several\ndecades have seen It operate at close\nrange have even imagined we have\nseen spots on the sun. Some of us\nfear we have all grown a trifle Over\nconfident and wonder sometimes if\nwe ire all really earning the money\nwe get as employees or\u2014as Mr. Harris would put, 11\u2014as parasites of\nthe smelter. No city, no country, no\nindustry can long hope to enjoy a\ngolden tide of wealth unless it give\nfull and equal return therefor. The\ntide of wealth flowing into a city\ncan be no greater than the tide of\nwealth flowing out of it. Even Trail\nis no exception to the rule.\nMr. Harris' letter is really an\nargument for socialism. I think I\nhave Succeeded in showing that, like\nall arguments for this impossible\nand idle dream\u2014Mr. Harris' argument ii based on.a pitiable misconception of the actual facts.\n\"CITIZEN.\"\nTrail, B. C,\nJan. 1. 1938.\nHave You Some\nUsed\nSKATES\ni\na\nWhy Not Turn\nThem Into Cash?\nA\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 8 times SOe net\nTwo  (2)  lines once 20c net\nPHONE  144 '\nNelson Daily News\n^--.afct-^-^-^i.jj^.-\t\n_-_-_-_>_\u00ab_^_H\n WW\nmm\n\u00ab5\u00abP\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nLEADERS MEET IN\nSATURDAY GAME\n\u25a0' GLASGOW, Jan. 6 (CP cable) -\nContenders for leadership of the\nScottish football league, Hearts and\nCeltic, meet Saturday in a battle\nthat may go a long way toward\ndeciding the championship for the\ncurrent season. If Hearts win the\ntitle lt will be their first since 1897.\ni As the teams stand the Edinburgh)\noutfit has a one-point lead over\nCeltic, but the latter has a game in\nhand. Rangers and Falkirk, their\nnearest rivals, are bracketed with\n30 points, six less than Hearts.\nThe clash at Tyncastle park, Edinburgh, will mark the second meeting ot the clubs during the present\ncampaign. At Glasgow In September the Celts emerged victorious\n2-1. Last year in the Scottish capital Celtics won by the only goal\nol the game.\nSmarting under reverses inflicted\nby Celtic and Patrick Thistle during the New Year's holiday, Rangers\nentertain Ayr United at Ibrox park.\nIn ordinary circumstances the\nmatch would be regarded as a setup for rangers, but with the light\nblues' defence pierced six times in\ntwo days and Ayr United fighting\nto avoid relegation, the results may\nsurprise the experts.\nFalkirk visit Arbroath but will\nfind points hard to obtain. Arbroath\nhas a strong band ot supporters.\nWhen the team tied with Patrick\nThistle in mid-week the crowd included a large number who struck\nwork rather than miss the match.\nMost Arbroath factories closed at\nnoon but this was not general and\nin some plants where a holiday was\nrefused employees laid down their\ntools.\nSCOTCH CURLERS\nAGAIN DEFEATED\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., Jan. 6 (CP)\nNew Brunswick rinks came through\nwith victories in all four Strath-\ncona cup matches with the touring\nScottish curlers here today, doubling the count on the visitors with\nthree one-sided wins and one 17-16\ndecision. Total count gave New\nBrunswick 92 points, and the visitors 46.\nAmerican Association\nAdopts the Dead Ball\n' COLUMBUS, 0., Jan. 6 (AP) \u2014\nGeorge Trautman, president of the\nAmerican association, announced today the eight-club \"AA\" loop had\ncast its lot with the National Baseball league for 1938 and had adopted a less lively ball.\nThe Nationa league adopted the\nnew bal, whie the American circuit\nhas decoided to retain the \"rabbit\nball.\"\n\"I   GUESS  I  WAS\nFIRED\"   SAYS\nCLANCY\nTORONTO, Jan. 6 (CP)-Klng\nClancy, whose reign as coach\nof Montreal Maroons ended December 30, clarified today the atmosphere Burroundlng his departure from the club.\nThe King said: \"I didn't resign. I guess 1 was fired.\"\nHere to visit his mother before\nleaving on a holiday trip to Florida, the veteran hockey star refused to discuss further his relations with the Maroons or any\nother National league club.\nHe added: \"I don't know where\nI stand in hockey and I'm Just\ntaking things easy. I have no\nplans. The Montreal incident is\n'closed.\"\nAmerican Wins\nChess Tourney\nHASTINGS, Sussex, Jan. 6 (AP)\n\u2014Samuel Resheysky of the United\nStates won first'prize in the international chess masters tournament\nhere today with a score of 7-2.\nC. H. 0. Alexander of England\nand Paul Keres of Estonia tied for\nsecond place with scores of n-2%.\nTied for fourth and fifth places\nwere Reuben Fine of the United\nStates and S. Flohr ot Czechoslovakia, whose scores were 6-3.\nSummaries for the ninth round:\nT. H. Tylor, England, drew with\nA. R. Thomas, England, in 18 moves.\nKeres drew with Reshevsky in\n21 moves.\nV. Mikenas, Latvia, lost to Alexander in 25 moves.\nW. A. Rairhurst, England, drew\nwith Sir George Thomas, England,\nin 34 moves.\nFine drew with Flohr in 23 moves.\n(Adjourned game \u2014seventh\nround) Mikenas defeated Flohr in\n55 moves.\nAustralia to Take\nPart in Davis Cup\nMELBOURNE, Jan, 6 (AP)\u2014 The\nAustralian lawn tennis association\ntoday decided to challenge for the\nDavis cup this year in the North\nAmerican zone.\nSome officials, .at the meeting,\nincluding Norman Brookes, former Davis cup player, favored dropping out of the international tennis\ncompetition for one year in order\nto give the players a rest from globe\ntrotting. The majority, however,\nthought the young players should\nbe given further experience.\nFIGHTS\nBy Tha Associated Press\nORANGE, N.J. - Tony Galento,\n218, Orange, knocked out Charley\nMassera, 185, Pittsburgh (3).\nNEW YORK - Vittorio Venturi,\n148, Italy, outpointed Frankie Blair,\n148, Camden, N.J. (10).\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NIL80N, B,C.-FRIDAY MORNINQ, JAN. T. WIS.\nSPORTING NEWS\n64 SOCCER HAMS\nIN WEEKEND WAR\nFOR ENGLISH CUP\nLONDON, Jan. 6 (CP Cable)-\nLeague warfare will be forgotten\ntemporarily at the week-end when\n62 representatives of the football\nleague and two less prominent\nteams battle in the third round ot\nthe English cup competition.\nAll first and second division clubs\nenter the great contest for the first\ntime together with 11 southern section, third division squads and seven\nfrom the northern circuit, survivors\nof the first two rounds. The two\nminor leaguers are Yeovil and Pet-\ntere of the southern league and\nScarborough of the Midland league.\nThe draw proved kind to first\ndivision teams, 14 of the 22 being\npitted against competitors of inferior status. Most third league squads\nhave hard battles ahead while Yeovil and Scarborough will have to\nachieve giant-killing roles if they\nare to play in the fourth round. The\nSomersetshire.outfit is drawn away\nto Manchester United while Scarborough entertains Luton Town.\nManchester and Luton are strong\nsecond division elevels.\nArsenal, already established favorite in the cup race, is host to\nBolton Wanderers, another major\nleague club which eliminated the\ngunners in the first round of the\ncup back in 1912. Arsenal has never\nbeaten Bolton in a cup-tie but is expected to do so Saturday. Ted Drake\ndashing centre-forward, will return\nto the Gunners' linup for the tussle.\nOn paper, Sunderland, the cup-\nholder, appears to have an easy\nbattle against Watford. But the famous Northern club is leaving nothing to chance for its home game at\nRoker Park. Watford is one of the\nseason's strongest contenders for\npromotion from the third division\nand will provide tough opposition.\nNo Basis for the\nReinstatement of\nOwens, A.A.U. Says\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (AP) \u2014 At\nheadquarters of the United States\nAmateur Athletic union, it was said\ntoday there apeared to be no basis\nfor reinstating Jesse Owens, triple\nchampion at the 1936 Olympic\ngames, as an amateur.\nAlthough Daniel Ferris, executive secretary-treasurer of the A. A.\nU. declined to be quoted, it was\npointed out no athlete, coming under A. A. U. Jurisdiction, who knowingly had committed a professional\nact, ever had been reinstated.\nfioMland. SpoAt  Spot\nByM.iW.\nROSSLAND, Jan. 6 \u2014 Jack Hanson ot Rossland, who has been with\nthe Vancouver Lions since last Sunday, but as yet has not signed a\ncontract, was granted permission to\nappear with them in an exhibition\ngame against the Spokane Clippers,\nwhen the two clubs meet January\n6 at Vernon, the occasion being the\ngrand opening of Vernon's ice palace ... As Frank Patrick, Lions'\nmentor asked A. H. Jetferd of Vancouver, past president B.C.A-H.A.,\nwho in turn made a long distance\ncall to President A. W. McDonald,\nTrail, if such an arrangement were\npossible, it appears that Mr. Patrick is rather reluctant In signing\nJackie to a contract and depriving\nhim of his amateur status without\nfirst seeing him in action against\na club in the league in which the\nLions play . .. Should Hanson not\nstick, he would be welcomed with\nopen arms by the Rossland Miners,\nwho at present are sadly in need\nof a right winger to go with Smith\nand Walker ... Ed Walters, president, Rossland Miner hockey club,\nstated, on giving Hanson a send-off,\nthat he sure would like to see Jackie\nback, and my hunch is that he'll\nbe patrolling the right boards for\nRossland Miners before long ...\nVERNON \"GOING BIG\"\nIt will cost Vernon a neat sum\nto bring In the two professional\nclubs, but you may be sure that\nthose hockey-hungry fans will enjoy every minute of play, and talk\nabout it for days after ... It would\nbe no surprise to me if they went\nout for hockey laurels In a big way\nnext winter.\nWith a few new laces on the\nteam, \"Renovator\" Morin and his\nMiners stepped out in no uncertain maner, and kept Coleman\nCanadians slate clean with no wins;.\nshowing that fight, determination,\nharmony and a little hockey brains\nare the essentials of a winning team\n\u25a0... Coleman apeared to have the\nsame trouble that Lethbridge had\n\u2014 they had nice stick-handlers and\nmade some good passing plays, but\nseemed to lack t' at extra bit of\nenergy or spark that Rossland was\nable to show. Rossland Miners\nlooked plently good the last two\nperiods with LaCree, Cowland, For-\nsey, Smith and Andy Walker working exceptionally hard. Maurise\nWilliams was 'hot', any that went\nby were well earned . . . Most con-\nspicious absentee was Len Wade,\nwho, with Rusty Wynn, formed as\nstrong a defence as there is in the\nleague, and unless Casey Jones\nimproves enough to take his place\nI'm afraid the \"Rajah\" will have a\nworry on his hands ... or am I\nwrong?\nBENTLY, DELI8LE 8TILL\nNotice that a new set of Bent-\nleys ire carrying the colors of the\nDrumheller Miners this year. Hailing from Delisle, Sask,, where their\nparents still reside, the Bontley\nname is as well known In Southern\nAlberta as the name \"Jack Benny\"\nis to us . . . Some years ago two\nolder brothers and Jack Leswick,\nwho turned \"pro\" in mldseason,\nwere the terro line of the southern\nloop. Jack and Roy Bentley played\nin Drumheller for two or three\nseasons, then returning to Saskatchewan and playing in different\nparts ot the province. This year\nthere are three younger brothers\nplaying lor Drumheller. In all there\nare six hockey players in the family, and speaking from experience\nlt is more or less a rule around\nthose parts that Bentley-Deslisle\nand hockey should be identified as\none and the same thing.\nMarch 7 to 12 Set\nfor Empress Golf\nVICTORIA, Jan. 6 \u2014 March 7 to\n12 is the week set lor the tenth annual Empress winter golf tournament. Qualifying rounds lor the Sir\nEdward Beatty handicap trophy,\nand the Victoria Chamber ot Commerce open trophy, will be played\u2014\n18 holes\u2014over Royal Colwood, one\nol the continent's finest and most\npicturesque courses.\nLee Steil, Seattle's stylish shot-\nmaker, defends the double title\nhandicap and open trophies, which\nhe won last year at the seaside Oak\nBay club. The other defending\nchampion is Mrs, Alex Watson, of\nthe Oak Bay club, Victoria, who\nwon the Sir Edward Beatty cup last\nyear.       \\\nHORSES NOMINATED\nFOR CRAND NATIONAL\nLONDON, Jan. 6 (AP)-\u00abeventy;\nnlne horses were nominated today\nfor the Grandr National steeplechase\nat Aintree March 25.\nThis represented an increase of\n19 compared with the nominations\nfor the 1937 race, won by Lloyd\nThomas' Royal Mail.\nRoyal Mail, Colleen, Puckabelle\nand Ego, the first four' to finish last\nyear, and Fencraik, sixth among\nthe seven finishers, were nominated\nbut missing were the names of Rey-\nnoldstown, winner of 1935 and 1936,\nand the popuar Golden Miller, 1934\nvictor.\nDavey Jones, who lost the 1936\nrace when he ran out at the last\nfence while leading, also was among\nthe nominees.\nAPOSTOLI AND\nSTEELE TONIGHT\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (AP)- Tomorrow night's 12-round non-title\nfight in Madison Square Garden\nbetween Freddie Steele, middleweight champion, and Fred Apostoli ot San Francisco, his foremost\nchallenger, may pave the way for an\noutdoor meeting between the pair\nnext summer with Steeles jealousl'y-\nguarded title on the line.\nEven though the championship is\nnot involved and Apostoli would\nnot be recognized if he wins, the\nfight is shaping up as the most important middleweight clash of the\nindoor season,\nN.H.L. STANDINGS\nCANADIAN 8ECTION\nW L D   F   A Pts\nToronto       10  6  5  72  57 25\nAmericans  ....   10  8  4  48  41 24\nCanadiens   ....    8   6   6   54   50 22\nMontreal        7 13   1   32  51 15\nUNITED STATE8 8ECTION\nBoston '     14   5   2   51   40 30\nRangers       11   7   3   59   39 25\nChicago        6 11   3  35  49 15\nDetroit        4 14  4  34  61 12\nTorontoite's Rock\nLad Is Nominee for\nFamed Steeplechase\nTORONTO, Jan. 6 (CP)-H. R.\nBain, prominent Toronto race horse\nowner, never has won a first-ranking stake race in Canada, but he\nhopes this year to do something\nno Canadian owner ever has done\n\u2014win the Grand National, the\nworld's most famous steeplechase.\nHis eight-year-old Rock Lad was\namong 78 horses nominated today\nfor the big race next March 25. The\nhorse has been in training in England since December, 1936, in care\nof Trainer Frank Furlong, who rode\nReynoldstown to victory in the 1936\nGrand National. Furlong may ride\nRock Lad this year.\nJeff ro to Defend\nTitle Against the\nEscobar in February\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (AP) -Arrangements were made today for\nHarry Jeffra of Baltimore, to defend his world bantamweight title\nagainst Sixto Escobar, the former\nchampion, in a 15-round fight at\nSan Juan, Puerto Rico, February 19\nor 20.\nSONJA HAS THE\nRETORT DEADLY\nDETROIT, Jan. 6 (CP)\u2014Blond\nand dimpled Sonja Henio just\nturned on the full voltage ot bar\njustly-tamed dimples today when\nasked to comment on Mirabel\nVinson's criticism of her skating\nas \"too formalized.\" Miss Vinson,\nNorth American amateur figure\nskating champion, laid Sonja\nlacked lilt and swing.\n\"What is lilt and swing?\" asked\nNorway's gift to Hollywood. \"MIbs\nVinson,\" she added innocently,\n\"was one ol my competitors at\nthe last Olympics. She placed\neighth.\"\nVERNON SPORTS\nCENTRE OPENED\nVERNON, B. C, Jan. 6 (CP) -\nThe new $50,000 sports arena In this\nOkanagan centre was baptized with\nflashing skates tonight as two Pacific Coast league hockey teams\nmoved in to help the citizens celebrate opening ot the big structure,\nVancouver Lions and the Spokane\nClippers met in an exhibition tilt to\nheadline the inaugural program.\nBuilt by authority ol the Vernon\ncity council, the concrete building\nhas a seating capacity of over 3000.\nHon. K. C. MacDonald, British Columbia minister of agriculture, arrived from Victoria today to represent the provincial government at\nthe operflng ceremonies. Grote\nStirling, M. P., lor Yale, also was\non hand. From surrounding municipalities sports fans arrived by automobile and buses.\nHOCKEY\nBy the Canadian Press\nINTERNATIONAL\nINTERCOLLEGIATE\nMcGill 13, Dartmouth 1.\nHarvard 5, University of Montreal- 1,\nUniversity of Toronto 6, Princeton 4.\nQueen's 3, Yale 2 (overtime).\nINTERNATIONAL\nAMATEUR\nDuluth 4, Port Arthur 3.\nEASTERN U.S.\nAtlantic City 4, Bronx Tigers 2.\nALBERTA 8ENI0R SIX\nDominions 10, Superiors 2,\nMANITOBA JUNIOR\nWinnipeg Monarchs 2, Portage la\nPrairie 2 (overtime).\nOWENS RETIRES\nCHICAGO. Jan. 6 (AP)-Clarence\n(Brick) Owens, for 22 years an umpire in the American baseball\nleague, was placed on the voluntarily retired list today, Henry Edwards\nmanager of the league's service\nbureau announced. Poor health was\nannounced as the reason.\n11       PAGE SEVEN\nCANADIAN TEAM\nHAS FIRST LAND\nWORKOUT, SUVA\nBowlers   for   Empire\nGames Beat Home\nCiub\nSUVA, Fiji Islands. Jan. 7 (Friday) (CP cable) \u2014 The Canadian\nteam to the British Empire games\nin Australia sailed away from Suva\ntoday, an exhibition win lor their\nlawn bowlers under their belts.\nThe four Vancouver bowlers, Bob\nGray, John Fleming, Ab Held and\nDick Adam scored a close one-\npoint win over a Suva team. Gray\ncaptained them.\nMost activities ot the 76 athel-\netes, who sailed from Vancouver\nDec. 22 on the R. M. S- Aorango,\nwere carried out overnight under\nelectric lights. Excessive heat fore-'\nbade day-time athletic efforts.\nThose with cameras, however, de-\nlied the blazing sun to take pictures of the tropical scenery and\nbushy-haired natives.\nThe Suva sports club took the\nboys and girls on motor tours.\nMembers of the swimming team\ngave an exhibition in a beautiful\noutdoor pool.\nMarathoners and cyclists worked\nout at 4:30 this morning, and the\ntrack squad went through a freshener, their lirst on land since tho\nstop at Honolulu Dec. 29. Boxers,\nwrestlers and oarsmen did some\nroadwork.\nM. M. \"Bobby\" Robinson ol Burlington, Ont,, the team's general\nmanager, reported \"all well\" among\nthe athletes.\nThe Orangl will arrive in New\nZealand on Monday and there will\nbe an extensive work-out at Auckland.\nRobinson described the Suva\nsports club officials as \"most kind.\"\nPIRATES ON BLOCK\nPITTSBURGH, Jan. 6 (AP)-Bill\nBenswanger, president of Pittsburgh\nPirates, put his baseball prima donnas on the trading block today with\nthe calm remark he was ready to\ndeal \"star for star\" with any club\nin the National league.\n\"We want new faces,\" the Pirate\nboss declared. \"Mind you, we don't\nwant to give away one of our stars\nlike the Waners or Vaughan or Suhr\nfor two or three secondary players. But we are ready and eager to\nmake a deal with any club that\nwill give us men of calibre equal\nto those we lose.\"\nVON CRAMM WINS\nMELBOURNE, Australia, Jan. 6\n(AP)\u2014Baron Gottfried Von Cramm\nof Germany beat John Bromwich of\nAustralia, 6-2, 7-5, today. Gene\nMako of the United States defeated\nHeinrich Henkel of Germany, 3-6,\n6-0, 6-0.\nSTOP!\nOUR\nFIRST\nLISTEN!\nANNIVERSARY\nSPECIAL\nThis Means Something to You in Exceptional Values\u2014You CanH Afford to Overlook These!\nINSPECT THEM\n1931 FORD\nLight Delivey\n$225\nEASY\nTERMS\nJUDGE FOR YOURSELF\n1930 Chevorlet\nSedan  \u2022   \u2022   \u2022  \u2022\n$175j\nIM7\nFord Coupe\n6 ply Tires\u2014Radio\nLow Mileage\n1937\nFord Tudor\nHeater\nDefroster\n1936\nFORD\nCOUPE\n1936 DODGE Panel\nJ2JJjgwni hakiiij:\n'DOWN PAYMENT\nReasonable Down Payments\n1935 FORD TUDOR\n\u2022COM. AA WILL handle down payment\n>PlUU.UU PERFECT RUBBER \u2014 PERFECT CAR\n1933\nFORD\nLight\nDelivery\nI Easy\n1936\nFORD\n2 Ton\nTruck\n1936\nFORD\nDeluxe\nTudor\nTerms \u2022\u2014 To Fit Any Poeketbook\nWE PUT OUR CARS IN\nSHAPE AND\nGUARANTEE THEM\n> QUEEN CITY MOTORS *\nSALES \u00abA -LIMITED- \u2022\u00ab\u25a0\u00bb SERVICE\nPHONE 43\nNtLSON AND DISTRICT FORD DEALERS\n519 JOSEPHINE ST.\nWE GUARANTEE OUR\nPURCHASERS 100c\nVALUE ON THE $1.00\nNELSON, B. G.\n \u2022WW**'! u     '\nmm*\nPAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, JAN- 7, 1938.\nMany of These Ads Offer Just the Bargains That You WanfrDon't Miss Them\nFrench Premier Ads to Force Capital\nand labor, Both Belligerent, lo Get\nTogether and End Industrial War\nPARIS, Jan. 6 (AP) \u2014 Premier\nCamille Chautemps, declaring the\ngovernment cannot permit labor\nconflicts to continue, today called\non workers and employers to meet\nwith him to draft new accords \"for\nsocial peace.\"\nA communique containing the\npremier's call was issued shortly\nafter the general confederation of\nlabor had accused employers of bad\nfaith and announced it would demand the government and leaders\nof the People's Front \u2014 the bloc of\nleft wing parties supporting the\ncabinet \u2014 whip the employers Into\nline.\n\"During the past few weeks labor\nconflicts have been resumed with\nan intensity unknown for a long\ntime,\" said the premier. \"The sociai\nsituation thus created is dangerous\nfor the prosperity and security of\nFrance.\n\"It is impossible that it should\ncontinue. The government can not\nallow it.\n\"Works' and employers' organizations have thrown the responsibility on each other. There have been\naccusations of refusal to respect arbitration and the liberty of the\nworking man on one side and on\nthe other side systematic agitation\nand violation of laws.\"\nThe strike crisis which has confronted France since mid-December, became intensified as workers\nin the Goodrich Rubber company\nplant rejected Chautemps suggestion for a voluntary end to their\nthree-week strike and the general\nconfederation of labor called for a\nshowdown on a national scale.\nThe confederation announced \"irr\nview of the fighting spirit which\nanimates French employers\" it had\ndecided to take up the whole question of strikes with the government\nand to demand an extraordinary\nmeeting of the national committee\nof the People's Front.\nBURLINGTON, Ont. (CP)-Pow-\ner was cut off and dark rooms darkened when hydro was cut off four\nhours following the crash of a motorist, into a hydro pole, snapping\nit off at the ground.\nSerial Story . . .\nPeacock Feathers\nBy TEMPLE BAILEY\nCHAPTER 31\nMy remembrance of the rest of\nmat night of the ball is of an excitement which drove me on and on\nmadly. I danced with one gorl af\\er\nanother, girls in pink and girls in\nblue and girls in green, girls in silver gowns and gowns of gold, but\nfor all I cared for any of them their\n(aces might have been blank masks\niwhich made them all alike. Their\niwords were a meaningless jumble,\ntheir cOquetry was a thing to be met\n(with a mechanical show of gallantry.\nIt was only the dances with Mimi\nIwhich counted\u2014the ones I had stolen from Andy!\nOh, the youth of it, and the\ntriumph. I gloried in Andy's black\nlooks\u2014in the knowledge that it\n,was I who could play on the keys\nof Mimi's nature. What was he with\nail of his money? It was not he\n(who drew Mimi, butl\u2014Jerry Chandler, country boy and son of a-parson 1\nAt supper, Olga's planning had\nplaced me at the debutants' table,\n\u2022with Mimi opposite me. My blood\nran wildly, I found myself the gayest of the gay, making a ringing\nspeech when toasts were drunk,\nwinning tumultuous applause.\nLighted by that inner fire, I drew\nthe eyes of people who did not\nknow me. My cheeks were red\nand my eyes bright because of\nMimi. I had no vanity, no conceit\nof myself\u2014this was my hour, the\nhour she had given me\u2014there was\nthe hope, too, in my heart, that\nthere were many other hours in\nthe future which we would share\ntogether.\nThe supreme moment came at\nlast when Olga and Mimi and I\nmet in the old library\u2014a picture\nto carry through the, years that\nfollowed \u2014 Mimi's beauty, Olga's\nopulent loveliness, my own ecstatic youth.\nThe library had been untouched\nsince the Senator's death, and retained much of the dignity which\nthe rest of the house had lost.\nOver the mantel was a portrait ol\nMimi's grandmother. This had not\nbeen taken down when Olga had\ncome to reign as mistress. The\nportrait had been painted when\nthe Senator's first wife was a\nbride\u2014it had everything that Olga\nlacked, the delicate poise, the distinction, the pride of bearing.\nYet, there was about Olga a certain attractice reposefulness as she\nsat by the heavy table, with the\nlight from a massive copper dome\ntailing upon her, setting the diamonds which she wore in her hair\nablaze.   .\nShe plunged at once into the thing\nshe had to say, \"I asked you\nto come, Mimi, because I have\nsomething important to talk over\nWith you and Jerry.\"\nMimi's smile was charming. \"It\nsounds delightfully interesting,\nOlga.\"\n\"I think it will be.\" Then in a\ncrisp and business-like manner Olga stated the case; for a long time\nshe had been thinking she would\nlike to do what she was sure her\nhusband would have been glad to\nhave her do. She had money\nenough and to spare, it would be\n-perfectly possible for her to share\nit without any hardship to herself.\nShe ended this preamble with, \"I\nwant you to have some of it, Mimi.\"\nI was aware of Mimi's complete\namazement. \"Do you mean that\nyou are giving me a part of grandfather's money?\"\n\"Yes.\"\n\"But\u2014how dear of you, Olga.\"\nI wish I could make you see her\nas I saw her then, leaning a little\ntowards Olga ,her bare arms as\nwhite as milk against the dark\nwood of the table, her eyes lighted.\n\"Are you giving Lion his share,\ntoo?\" she asked.\n\"No.\"\nMimi was frankly puzzled, \"Why\nshould I have it if he doesn't?\"\nOlga flushed. \"It is enough, isn't\nIt, if I give it to one of you? I like\nyou better than I do the rest, Mimi.\nAnd I want you to marry Jerry.\"\nI saw Mimi's hands open and shut\nIn a tense movement.    \"What has\n' my marrying Jerry to do with it?\"\n\"I am giving it to you to make\nyour marriage with him possible.\"\n\"And it isn't to be mine, unless\nI marry him?\"\n\"No.\"\nIn the dead silence which followed I knew that the thing was\n\u25a0v,ii\u201e   f'u-\u2014ni,..,-.,   I,],,,,(,,,,,,,    Mimi'B\npride\u2014the two would no more mix\nthan oil and water.\nMimi turned towards me\u2014\"Did\nyou know this, Jerry?\"\n\"Yes.\"\n\"And you were\u2014willing?\"\n\"Not at first. But there didn't\nseem to be any other way out.\"\nShe stood up. \"Oh,\" she said,\n\"did you think this was a way out?\nThat I should take, as a gift from\nOlga, that which belongs to me\u2014\nthe money that grandfather meant\nme to have \u2014 so that you might\nlive on it?\"\nScorn in every line of her, in her\nstormy eyes, in her high held\nhead. So might some small duchess far back in her family line\nhave arraigned a lout who had insulted her.\nBut I had my pride, too. \"You\ncan take that back,\" I said, \"you\nknow it isn't true. I don't want\nOlga's money. I don't want anybody's money. I want you. I'd\nwant you if I had to live in an\nattic for the rest of my lite.\"\nShe was white. \"Oh, I wish\nyou'd stop talking of attics\u2014I hate\nthen) .    And I meant what  I\nsaid. I won't take anything\nback \"\nWe faced each other, stormy eye\nmeeting stormy eye.   \"This is the\nend then \" I told her. \"No man\ncould stand a thing like that and\nkeep his self-respect.\"\nShe flung up her hand in a gesture of disdain. \"It should have\nbeen the end long ago,\" and before we could speak or try to stop\nher, she swept her radiant presence from the room and left it\ndark.\nNeither Olga nor I spoke for\nseveral moments. Then Olga said\ngloomily, \"Well, we've made a mess\nof it. But I must say that I tried\nto do my best for both of you.\"\nI could see that she was hurt,\nthrown back upon herself, and I\nwas sorry. \"You have been more\nthan kind, Olga,\" I said, \"I must\nseem to you ungrateful, but I'm\nnot.\"\n\"All that I can say is that you\nare both very foolish, Jerry. Such\na chance may not come your way\nagain . . .\" She rose and stood by\nthe table, \"you mustn't think that\nthis will make any difference in\nmy feeling for you . . . And as I\ntold you, I'll be glad to let you\nhave some money any time you\nneed it.\"\n\"I couldn't take it. Thanks just\nthe same.\"\n\"But what will you do?\"\n\"My father wants me at home\nfor Christmas-\"\n\"And after that?\"\n\"God knows.\"\nShe had to leave me then and\ngo back to her guests. I stayed\nin the library alone. My hopes\nwere shattered, my dreams gone.\nAfter a long time I realized that\nOlga's guests were departing. From\nbehind the curtain of one of the\nlong windows I watched them go.\nThere was a tunnel of striped canvas covering the steps and terrace. The figures which emerged\nfrom the end ot the tunnel were\nvisible only for a fleeting moment\nbefore they stepped into their waiting motors. I had thus a glimpse\nof Mimi and Andy bending above\nher. The night shine on her russet hair\u2014and they drove away together.\nThe next day I started back to\nmy old home. It snowed all the\nafternoon, and through the night,\nand the flakes, falling steadily,\nseemed to bury my dead hopes.\nMy father met me at the station, his little mare hitched to a\nsmall sleigh. As we rode along,\nthe jingle of the bells made a\ncheerful accompaniment to our\nconversation.\nBut I was not cheerful. My\nmood was melancholy. I at once\npoured my story into my father's\nsympathetic ears.   \"I've lost her.\"\n\"You,can't be sure of that, Jerry.\"\n\"I am sure.\"\n\"Youth is always final. It may\nbe only the first act. Tomorrow\nthe curtain may go up, and you'll\nsee the rest of the play.\"\nIn spite of my pessimism, I found\nmyself warmed by a faint hope. He\nwas so wise, so steadfast, I was\nsoothed and sus^ined by the\nstrength that was in him.\nI tried to tell him how I felt.\nHis response had a touch of deep\nemotion. \"I am glad you came to\nme, my boy.   I can't tell you how\nI  hovd  micfi_d  vnn.\"    And  I  kni>w.\neven as he said it, that what he\nhad missed was not merely my\nphysical presence, but the spiritual\ncommunion, the meeting ot mind\nand soul and heart.\nWe came to the little house at\ndusk, and the lights shone out in a\nblur ot orange against the snowy\nbackground. As we entered the\nlittle sitting room, I was aware ot\nAunt Mary's taste in the changes\nwhich had been made. There was\nthe twinkie of old brasses in front\nOf the open fire, a Paisley shawl\nthrown over the couch gave a\ntouch of mellow color, there were\nholly berries in a dull green vase,\ntwo comfortable black cats were\nsilhouetted against the blaze.\nThe table was spread in the sitting room, because the new heat-\nting plant had not yet been installed, and the dining room was\ntoo cold. My grandmother sat in\nmy mother's place, and my father\nsaid his simple grace. Aunt Mary\nwas opposite me, and surveyed me\nwith a beaming countenance.\n(To Be Continued)\nSuffer Shortage\nof Bad Weather\nAir Instruments\nLONDON, Jan. \u00ab (CP) - The\ndeath yesterday of a Royal Air\nForce flier, acting Pilot Officer H.\nG. Clitheroe of Toronto, provoked\nsome frank speaking last night by\nAir Marshal Sir William Mitchel at\nIhe Royal United Service institution.\nThe year 1937, Sir William declared, saw 93 R.AF. crashes with\n156 deaths \u2014 the highest year\nsince the war. There were also 29\ncivil aircraft crashes in the United\nKingdom, with 45 killed.\nThe officer admitted that pilots\nfrequently were obliged to fly\nhigh-speed machines before they\nwere experienced and that the\nR.A.F. suffered from a shortage oi\nbad weather instruments.\nHowever, he declared the incidence of accidents was not alarming when it was considered the\nR.A.F. more than doubled its flying mileage in 1937 compared with\n1935 and that hundreds of the newest machines continually were entering service. Home defence\nstrength had been more than\ntrebled.\nReplying to a question as to why\nR.A.F. pilots were not taught bad\nweather flying, Sir William said\nthe problem had been given much\nthought but that conditions for flying ,were not bad in this country\nand there was a shortage of the\nnecessary instruments and navigation adjuncts for night and fog flying and it was a question of \"getting production to keep pace with\nthe demand.\"\nTo Modify Profits\nLevy On Companies\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 6 (AP) -\nA house of representatives tax subcommittee completed today its plan\nfor modifying the undistributed\nprofits levy in the United States by\nagreeing to retain substantially the\npresent tax rat esfor some 500 to\npresent tax rates for some 500 to\naccording to Chairman Vinson (D.,\nKy.), for avoiding high individual\nincome taxes.\nHe said about 200,000 corporations\nhave taxable incomes, and approximately 199,000 of them would get\nthe benefits of a remodeling of the\nundistributed  profits  tax  section.\nAMERICAN PUBLISHERS\nPROTEST TO HEPBURN?\nTORONTO, Jan, 6 (CP) \u2014 A\ndelegation of United States newspaper publishers visited Premier\nMitchel Hepburn today to protest,\nit was believed, a reported plan of\n'Ontario and Quebec to control\nnewsprint production and thus\nmaintain present prices.\n\"Just nine anonymous newspapermen paying a friendly visit,\" was\nthe way Col. Frank Konx, publisher of the Chicago News, described\nthe delegation.\nARAB TO DIE FOR\nCARRYING CARTRIDGES\nJERUSALEM, Jan. 6 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014A court martial today condemned to death a 19-year-old Arab\narrested while transporting a sackful of cartridges through the streets.\nHE KNOWS ENGLISH\nHAMILTON, Ont., Jan. 6 (CP)\n\u2014A Russian demonstrated in\nnaturalization court here today\nhis knowledge of current English\nidiom.\nConducting a test, Judge J. T.\nBoles asked: \"What does your\nmother say about conditions in\nRussia?\"\n\"Not so hot,\" was the reply.\nThe judge recommended that\nthe application for citizenship be\ngranted.\n2Mamt latig Nmus\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE  144   .\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy .\n.05\n.25\n13.00\nBy carrier per week\nBy carrier per year\nBy mail in Cartada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months y1.80; six months\ny3.00; one year 56.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a LiM\n(Minimum 2 lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion   $ .22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions     .88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion    .33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions    1.32\n' 2 lines. 1 month 2.86\n3 lines. 1 month 4.29\nFor   advertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculate On\n'the above basis\nBox  numbers  lie extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nBIRTHS\nLEWIS \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. W. W.\nLewis, of Trail, January 2, a son^\n~~',BEALBY \u2014 ToMr. and Mrs.\"Leslie Bealby, Three-Mile, at Kootenay Lake General hospital, January\n6, a son.  '\nLIPSACK \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Lipsack, Latimer street, at\nKootenay Lake General hospital,\nJanuary 5. a son.\nSANDERS \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nHarry Sanders, Longbeach, at Kootenay Lake General hospital, January 1, a son,\nMOLANDER \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Molander, Salmo, at Kootenay Lake General hospital, January\n4, a daughter. \t\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED 1ST AID MAN WITH IN-\ndustrial Certificate, to work under ground. Ymir Consolidated\nGold Mine Ltd., Ymir.        (4381)\nFARM HELP WANTED. GOOD\nmilker. $10 per Month. J. McColm,\nRoss Spur P. O, B. C.       (4382)\nEXPERIENCED GIRL FOR GEN-\neral housework. No other need\napply. 312 Silica St. (4384)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERNCD.   GIRL,   24,   WANTS\nClrkng. or Cafe wk. Ph. 588R2.\n(4380)\nWant to Sell Something?\n- Phone\n144\nPERSONAL\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubbers. Send $1.00 tor 16\n' unexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 tor\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co., 18 Hastings St..\nW. Vancouver. (4328)\nWANTED\nSMALL PLATFORM SCALES, AP-\nply Hume Hotel or Phone 787.\n(4373)\nPOULTRY. SUPPLIES, ETC,\n35 LEGHORN PULLETS, LAYING,\n$1.25 each or $42.50 lot. J. B. Doig,\nFruitvale, B. C. (43110)\nFOR SALE\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company Ltd\n250 Prior St,      \"Vancouver. BC\n(4325)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED 1 YR.'OLD AYRSHIRE  ROOM AND BOARD NEAR THE\nbull. Box 4364, Daily News. (4364)     schools. Phone 397L. (4299)\nPIPE TUBES  FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock tor immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St,\nVancouver, B.C\n(4326)\nFEEDING MOLASSES, TEN GAL-\nlon kegs; Oilcake Meal; Flax Meal;\nMono-Calcium Phosphate; Sol-\nMin; Rock Salt; Salt Bricks. The\nBrackman-Ker Millg. Co., Ltd.\n(4396)\n1, 1936, 7-TUBE WESTINGHOUSE\ncabinet radio, A-l condition. Less\nbatteries $35. J. B. Doig, Fruitvale.\n(4362)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd.. Nelson, B. C.        (4327)\nFOR SALE BEEF BY THE QUART-\ner, J. Graham, Perry Siding.\n(4363)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms tor rent.   Annabie Blnr-k\n(4331)\n2 ROOMS IN GOOD RESIDENCE,\nsuitable light housekeeping, partly furnished if required. Apply\nAppleyard. (4371)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\n5 ROOM BUNGALOW IN NELSON\nfor going concern, farm, Harrop\ndistrict. Ap. Box 4312, Daily News.\n(4312)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS,\nETC., FOR SALE\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write tor full information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources, C.P.R, Calgary. Alta\n(4324)\nRANCH COMPRISING 300 ACRES\nwith stock and equipment. Good\nfences and buildings. Two creeks\nand some standing timber. Also 80\nacres grazing land, including lake\nadjoining 300 acres. Good fences.\nNo reasonable offer refused. Gar-\nbutt & Allan, Bull River, B. C.\n(4227)\nUNFURNISHED,   FULL   CEMENT\nbasemt,, furnace, elec. range. Close\nto high schs. H. Harding, Ph. 110.\n(4397)\nLT. HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS, 918\nKootenay Street. (No children.)\n(4095)\nSEE KERR APTS FIRST\n(4329)\nFOR STORAGE OR WAREHOUSE,\n900 ft. floor space. 301 Ward St.\n(4369)\n2 ROOM FURN. HSKPG. SUITE.\nPhone 853X, 511 Carbonate St.\n(4393)\nAPARTMENTS.   ADULTS   ONLY.\n.AMoJIigJt St.. Ph. 835Y._(4367)\n7-ROOM HOUSE. APPLY TO D.\nMaglio, Phone 808L. (4212)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\nE, W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B.C. (4332)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 428\nFaU Street, Nelson, B. C. P. O.\nBox No  726  Representing ship-\nper's interest, Trail, B. C.   (433?)\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND,\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representative for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.   (4334)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk\n(4335)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Experience Ph. 969 Gilker Bk, Nelson\n(4336)\nCorsets\nSpencer corsets. Sample sale. M W.\nMitchell, 370 Baker St., Ph. 668.\n(4337)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK Fruitvale. B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(4338)\nH. D. DAWSON\n912 Kootenay St. Nelson, B C.\n(4339)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert   Mortician     Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(4340)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (4330)\nFOR RENT -FURNISHED SUITE,\n507 Silica. Ph. 440-X. (4276)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n2 TEAMS LOGGING HORSES 3300\nand 3400 lbs. Box 4298 Daily News.\n(4298)\nDecrease in Domestic Demand Is\nBiggest Direct Unemployment Cause\nJERSEY COW, BRED 3rd CALF.\nMilking. $55, J. B. Doig, Fruitvale.\n(4361)\nOTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CP) - A report on phases of employment conditions in Canadian industry prepared through cooperation of nearly 10,000 employers was released\ntoday by the national employment\ncommission.\nDecrease in domestic demartd was\nthe salient cause of decreased employment from 1929 to 1936 among\nthe firms that reported decreases.\nIncreased use of alternative pro\nducts was the next contributing\ncause to unemployment. Others\nwere decrease in export demand,\nintroduction of new machinery and\nchanges to a new line of product\nor activity.\nHon. Charles Pascoe Ayre, M.B.E.\nformer member of the legislative\ncouncil of Newfoundland, and president of.the firm of Ayre and Sons,\nSt. John's, Nfld., is dead. He was 74\nyears of age.\nHORSE ABOUT 1400. GOOD WOR-\nker. About 8 years old. Mrs. B. M.\nBalding Blewitt. (4277)\nYOUNG FRESH COW, A GOOD\nmilker $55 Pieters Dairy Ph. 434X3\n(4323)\nAUTOMOTIVE\n1930 CHEVROLET SEDAN\nIn good condition. \u2022\n$100\nWILL  HANDLE\nBUTORAC MOTORS\n1225 PINE AVE.\nTRAIL. BC.\n(4264)\n' AMBULANCE,\nA modernly euipped, warm and\ncomfortable CADILLAC Ambulance\nIs at your service day and night.\nPhone 95, Nelson, B. C.\nDAVIS FUNERAL SERVICE\n(4280)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n347 Baker St., Phone 68.     (4341)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.   Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99\n(4342)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St.\n(4343)\nSEE  D.  L,  KERR,  AGENT  FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(4344)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance,  Annabie Blk\n(4345)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\n-   Real Estate. Phone 135.      (4346)\nR. W DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St Phone 197\n(4347?\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nMUTUAL BENEFIT HEALTH -I\nACCIDENT ASSOCIATION. Best\not Its kind procurable, Stuart &\nWarburton. 577 Baker St., Nelson.\nPhone 973. (4348)\nMachinists\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593      324 Vernon Street\n(4349)\nR E. STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop Ph,\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (4350)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt: Mine Mchnry. &\nequipt. rails, steels, piping, sheet\niron, etc. Steam coals. Phone 980,\nBox 668, Nelson. (4351)\nNotaries\nD.   J.   ROBERTSON,     NOTARY\nPublic, Nelson, Phone 157L. (4352)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list ot wanted Inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St, Ottawa.\n(4353)\nPhotography\nREALLY PERSONAL CHRISTMAS\nGreeting Cards from your own\nsnapshots; Ten cards, Including\nenvelopes $1.00. Send negative\nand 10c for sample. Krystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask. (4354)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St.\n(4355);\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,  SELL &  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc   The Ark Store.\n(4356)\nTypewriters\nI. R. KITTO, Cleaning, Repairing.\nAgt Royal Typewriter. Ph. 964.\n(4357)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch It Is on time all the time.\n345, Baker St, Nelson.       (4358)\nBoost for the Kootenay District - It Pays\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\nHA-HA-T&U ARE J\n\/   ' ' .'\"       ' \\\nARE YOU QUITE SURE \\[\nDIDNT INVITE VDU OUT\nTO DINE'COME TOTHINK\nOF IT-1 COULDN'T TAKE\nVOU OUT TO DINE-AS I\nLEFT MY PURSE HOME\nAND THERE WAS NO\nUSE BRINGING IT AS I\nDIDN'T HAVE ANY\nMONEY IN IT-\nYOU'D BETTER\nTALK TO DAD-\nMAY BE VOU\nHAD AN\nAPPOINTMENT\nWITH HIM-\nSAY- DON'T VOU\nTHINK I  SEE\nENOUSH OF YOU\nAT THE OFFICE-\nWITHOUT ASKIN'\n,YOU TO CALL\nON ME AT NIGHT?\nHOWA8:>Uf?D-HOW\nCAN I TELL WHAT\nYOU THINK? AND\nBESIDES,! NEVER\nGAVE IT A THOUQHT-\nI WAS THINKINS\nOF EATING\t\n?\n3\nC\n\u25a0Bam:\n....,.,.-.\n.        \u25a0\u25a0\t\n. ..,,,,.,,^..^,..^,,^\n WHEAT FUTURES\nUP AT WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 8 (CP)- Good\ngeneral buying pushed wheat futures more than four cents higher on\n-Winnipeg grain exchange today, Despite profit-taking and spreading operations,'final values were 3%-4V\u00ab\ncents higher, May at $1.28y,, July\ntWA and October 98K-K- '\n. Trading was active, spurred by\nsharply higher stock prices, steady\nUpturn at Chicago and anticipated\n\u2022large export trade on any market\nrecessions. Canadian wheat export\ntales were placed at 200,000 bushels.\nLiverpool closed Id to %d lower,\n.reflecting Weakness of North American markets yesterday. October\nfuture which came on the board\ntoday opened as high as $1.02 but\neased below the 99 cent mark.\nA small business came out in\n'cash wheat with premiums for Nos.\n1 and 2 northern above the May future easing 1-1% cents. Trades were\nreported for No. 1 aT 24 cents over\nMay and No. 2 at 16 cents premium.\nCoarse grains moved higher in\nsympathy with wheat. Domestic buy.\ning of oats and barley led to an ac\nUce session.\nMetal Markets\n$27000r000 Rise in\nFederal Deposit?\nOTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CP) - The\nBank of Canada Issued its report\nfor the week ended January 5,\nshowing a rise of more than $2,000.-,\n000 in Dominion government deposits and a drop of more than $3,-\n000,000 in those of chartered banks.\nHoldings of sterling and United\nStates dollars dropped more than\n$4,000,000. Dominion and provincial\ngovernment short-term securities\nwere up more than $1,500,000 other government securities almost unchanged.\nThe ratio of net reserve to notes\nLONDON, Jan, .6 (AP)-Closlng:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a340 17s 6d;\nfuture Ml 2s 0d, both off It 3d:\nelectrolytic spot, bid \u00a345, off 5s\nasked \u00a340( up 5s,\nTin spot M85 53, off tl 5s; future \u00a3114 13s, off .. 1 10s.\nBids; Lead spot \u00a315 18s 9d, up\n2s 6d; future \u00a319 2s 6d, up 3s 9d.\nZinc spot \u00a314 18s 9d, future \u00a315 3s\n9d, both off 2s (Id.\nBar gold declined y* penny to\n139s 8V4d. (Sterling prive equivalent to $34.93.)\nBar silver 19 7-16d, off tt.\nNEW YORK - Copper steady;\nelectrolytic spot and future 10.25-11;\nexport 10.27.\nTin barely steady; spot 41,75; future 41.87%.\nLead steady; New York spot 4.75-\n80; East St. Louis 4.80.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis spot\nand future 5,\nBar silver 44%, unchanged.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Spot: Copper, electrolytic, 11.70; tin 44.25; lead 4.80;\nzinc 4.60; antimony 16.00 per 100\npounds f.o.b Montreal, five-ton\nlots'.\nBar gold in London down four\ncents at $34.93 an ounce in Canadian funds; 139s 8%d in British.\nThe fixed $35 Washington price\namounted to $35 in Canadian.\nSilver futures closed easier today, 25-85 points off. Sale: One\nMarch contract.\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nMarch        43.10B 43.10 43.10 42.90B\n r- N-U80N OAILY'NBWS, NELSON, B.Cv-FfllDAY MORNING. JAN. 7, 1938.\nMarket and Mining News\nTORONTO ACTIVE;\nBASE METALS UP\nPAGE   NINE\nNational Revenue Up $60,000,000\nIn Customs, Excise and Income Tax\nOTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CP)-National\nrevenue figures released today show\nthat net collections from customs,\nexcise and income tax for the nine-\nmonth period, April 1 to Dec. 31,\n1937, were $359,315,270. This compares with $298,159,815 collected\nduring the corresponding period of\n1936, a net gain of $61,159,455.\nCustoms-excise revenue which\ntotalled $251,928,416, an increase of\n$45,268,762, was made up as follows:\nCustoms duties $73,320,740, increase\n$11,720,375; excise taxes $136,343,681,\nincrease  $27,712,242;  excise  duties\nWINNIPEG GRAIN.\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 6 (CP)-Close:\nWHEAT-\n129* 12414 128y4\n12iy, 116\\4 120%\n102       98       98V4\n$41,749,167, Increase $5,884,468; sundry collections $608,484, increase\n$71,677.\nIncome tax revenue climbed to\n$107,390,833 for the first nine\nmonths of this fiscal year, a net\ngain of $15,790,692 over the same\nperiod of 1036.       ,\nToronto was well in the lead with\n$36,608,758, increase $5,687,231; Montreal second with $28,763,133, increase $4,501,328; London third with\n$9,304,061, increase $1,175,424; and\nVancouver fourth with $6,150,749,\nincrease $2,070,520.\n125\n. 116V4\n102\nWoolworth Sales\nat All Time High\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (AP) - F.\nW. Woolworth Co., international\nchain store concern, announced today its sales for December and all\n1937 broke all previous monthly .and\nyearly records for volume.\nDecember sales amounted to $47,-\n181,651, against $45,505,958 in 1936,\nan increase of 3.7 per cent. Sales\nfor the 12 months totalled $304,-\n775,189 against $290,378,407, a gain\nof 4.9 per cent.\nDividends\n _.~ \u2014 Toburn Mines Limited, 2 cents\nand deposit liabilities was 52.53 per  plus one cent.\ncent compared with 53.31 the week |    George Weston, preferred, 1% per\nbefore. cent.\nMay  .\nJuly\nOct.\nOATS-\nMay 49%\nJuly 46%\nBARLEY-\nMay 63V4\nJuly 63\nFLAX-\nMay        176%\nRYE-\nMay   .   .   82%\nJuly 82%\nCash Prices:\nWheat \u2014 No.\n152%; No.\nChicago Wheal al\nNew Season Peak\n50%\niVk\n65%\n63\n49%\n63%\n61%\n49%\n46%\n64%\n61%\n177%   176%'  177%\n85%\n85%\n82%\n87%\n84\n83%\nSO Industrials\n20 rails   \t\n20 utUties  ....\n40 bonds  \t\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh       Low\n  129.23      125.38\n29.54\n20.78\n30.59\n21.48\nClose Change\n128.97\u2014up 4.31\n30.58-up 1.41\n21.43-up .50\n92.57-up   .38\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAldermac Copper        .52\n\u2022Alexandria  Gold   02%\nAmm  Gold          -21\nAnglo-Huronian      3.70\nArntfield   Gold  21\nAstoria Rouyn Mines  04\nAztec Mining Co 07\nBagamac Rouyn \u201e 23\nBankfield Gold  69\nBase Metals Mining ....i 33\nBeattie Gold Mines      1.41\nBidgood Kirkland  31\nBobjo Mines Ltd  10%\nBralorne Mines     8.85\nBrett Trethewey 07%\nBuffalo Ankerlte     15.00\nBunker Hill Extension 19%\nCanadian Malartic           1.03\nCariboo Gold Quart.      1.70\nCentral Patricia       2.36\nChibougamau         32\nChromium M & S\t\nCoast Copper\t\nConiagas Mines\t\nConiaurum Mines .\nConsolidated M Si S\nDarkwater   \t\nDome Mines Ltd\t\nDorval-Siscoe Gold ..\nEast Malartic      1.23\nEldorado Gold \u2022     2.48\nFalconbridge   Nickel        6.00\nFederal Kirkland 12\nFrancoeur Gold   \"\nGillies  Lake\t\nGod's Lake Gold \t\nGold Belt\t\nGranada Gold Mines\nGrandoro Mines  \t\nGunnar Geld Mines ..\nHard Rock Gold .....\nHarker Gold\n\u202246\n2.45\n1.75\n1.52\n60.75\n.13\n54.00\n.17\n.47\n.13%\n.53\n.29\n.05%\n.08%\n.75\n1.30\n11%\nHollinger     13;>\u00b0\n.28\n25.00\n.13\n5.45\n5.10\n1.45\n.34\n.02%\n.14\nI\nHowey Gold\nHudson Bay M & S\nInternational. Nickel     48.35\nJ.-M. Consolidated 14\nJack Waite   43\nJacola  Gold   19\nKerr-Addison        1.95\nKirkland Lake     1.39\nLake Shore Mines    52.35\nLamaque Contact        .04%\nLapa Cadillac 40\nLeltch Gold   oa\nLebel Oro Mines\t\nLittle Long Lac\t\nMacassa Mines\t\nMacLeod Cockshutt.......\nMadsen Red Lake Gold\nManitoba St Eastern ....\nMandy  \t\nMclntyre-Porcuplne    40.90\nMcKenzie Red Lake     103\nMcVlttle-Graham  14%\nMcWatters Gold  32\nMining Corp      2.09\nMinto Gold  03\nMoneta Porcupine      2.35\nMorrls-Kirkland  16\nNipissing Mining       2.00\nNoranda    56.00\nNormetal  94\nO'Brien Gold      5.45\nOmega Gold  40%\nPamour Porcupine      4.05\nPaulore M 16\nPaymaster Cons  64\nPend Oreille     2.32\nPerron Gold      1.09\nPickle Crow Gold     5.10\nPioneer Gold      3.15\nPremier Gold      2.07\nPowell Rouyn Gold      1.92\nPreston East Dome      1.12\n.   Quebec Gold      435\nRed Lake Gold Shore  20\nReeves MacDonald 53\nReno Gold Mines       .02%\nRoche Long Lac 11%\nSan Antonio Gold      1.40\nShawkey Gold       22\nSheep Creek Gold  94\nSherritt Gordon     1.45\nSiscoe Gold     3.30\nSmelters   Gold         1.07\nSladen  Malartic       1.07\nStadacona Rouyn  36\nSt. Anthony  _      .13\nSudbury Basin      3.50\nSullivan Consolidated      1.00\nSylvanite     3.15\nTeck-Hughes Gold     6.60\nToburn Gold Mines     2.50\nTowagmac       .56\nVentures Limited -    7.00\nWaite Amulet _    1.77\nWhitewater        06%\nWright Hargreaves       7.70\nYmir Yankee Girl 28\nOILS\nAjax        24\nA P Consolidated       .36\nBritish American Oil    20.75\nBritish Dominion ..    14\nBrown'Oil 66\nCalmont      60\nCalgary St Edmonton     2.95\nChem Research 37\nCommonwealth  43\nDalhousie    65\nEastcrest    14%\nFoundation ...... 18\nFoothills    70\nHighwood  19\nHome          1.36\nImperial     18.10\nInter Petroleum     29.75\nLowery Pete      20\nMcColl Frontenac     11.00\nMerland 07\nModel  37\nMonarch Roy 17\nNordon       .13\nOkalta        2.23\nPacalta  14\nPantepec   \u201e     6.00\nRoyalite  :.   45.50\nSouthwest Pete 65\nTexas Canadian      1.30\nUnited   23%\nVulcan           1.20\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  Power       2%\nBeatty Bros-    14%\nBell   Telephone     164\n1 hard and No. 1\n\u201eU1, .\u201e\u201e,  2 nor. 143%; No.\n3 nor. 125%; No. 4 nor. 115%; No. 5\n100%; No, 6, 91%; No. 1 garnet\n127%; No. 2 garnet 124%; No. 1\ndurum 91%; No. 1 A.R.W. 111%;\nNo. 4 special 111%; No. 5 special\n96%; No. 6 special 87%; track 150%;\nscreenings $5 per ton.\nOats \u2014 No. 2 C.W. 54%; No. 3\nCW. and ex. 1 feed 48%; No. 1\nfeed 45%; No. 2 feed 42%; No.\n3 feed 39%; track 49%.\nBarley \u2014 Malting grades: 6-and\n2-row ex. 3 C.W. 63. Others: No.\n3 C.W. 61; No. 4 CW. 60; No, 5 C.W.\n59; No. 6 C.W. 58; track 63.\nFlax - No. 1 C.W. and track\n175%; No. 2 C.W. 171%; No. 3 C.W.\n150%; No. 4 C.W. 145%.\nRye - No. 2 CW. 82.\nVancouver Unlisted\nBid     Ask\nBayonne 10\nColumbia Oil        \u2014\nDurango        -06\nEuphrates        \u2014\nRoyal Can  15\nCHICAGO, Jan. 6 (AP) \u2014 Five-\ncent jumps to new season peak\nprice records for wheat at Winnipeg hoisted the Chicago wheat market 3% cents a bushel maximum today.\nReports Canada may soon have to\nimport United States wheat in\nquantity owing to scantiness of\nsupplies available were current.\nAt the close, Chocago wheat futures were 2 to 3 cents above yesterday's finish, May 96%-%, July\n89'\/s-90, corn % off to % up, May\n62%-%, July 61%-%, and oats %-\n% advanced.\nWHEAT-\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nMay       93       96%    93\nJuly       87%    90%    87%\nSept    86%    89       86%\nWorld Exchanges\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (AP) - The\nFrench franc finished with a loss\nof .00 1-16 of a cent at 3.39 5-16\nand the British pound fell 5-16 of\na cent to $4.99%. The guilder dropped .03 ot a cent and the belga\n.00% of a' cent. The Swiss franc\ngained .00% of a cent. The Canadian\ndollar was off 1-64 of a cent at\n99 31-32.\nClosing rates Great Britain in\ndollars, others in cents: Great Britain demand 4.99%; cables 4.99%;\n60-day bills 4.99%; France demand\n3.39 5-16; cables 3.39 5-16; Italy\ndemand 5.26%; cables 5.26%.\nDemands \u2014 Belgium 16.95; Germany free 40.28, registered 21.55,\ntravel 25.75; Holland 55.66; Norway\n25.11; Sweden 25,77; Denmark 22.31;\nFinland 2.22; Switzerland 23.15%;\nPortugal 4.55%; Greece .92%; Poland 19.01; Czechoslovakia 3.51%;\nJugoslavia 2.35; Austria 18.92N;\nHungary 19.90; Rumanian .75; Argentine 33.35N; Brazil (free) 5.35N;\nRokyo 29.13; Shanghai 29.65; Hongkong 31.33; Mexico City ?7.80; Montreal in New York 99.96%; New\nYork in Montreal 100.03%.\n(N-Nominal).\nWould Amend B.N.A Actio Allow\nControl of Agricultural Product.\n96%\n88%\n88%\n.12%\n.08\n.04\n.17%\nWorst Sales Drop\nin History but\nGrowth in Spring\nWASHINGTON, ,Jan. 6 (AP) -\nWilliam S. Knudsen, president of\nGeneral Motors Corp., told a special\nUnited States senate unemployment\ncommittee today his company experienced the severest sales drop\nin history during November and\nDecember, making a layoff of men\nessential. \u25a0\nGeneral Motors laid off 30,0000\nmen Jan. 1.\nTaking a quick look at the future, however, the automobile\nbuilder told the committee he hoped\nfor an upturn in business by spring.\nMARKETS AT\nAGLANCE\nBy The Canadian'Press\nToronto, Montreal and New York:\nStocks sharply higher.\nWinnipeg:  Wheat  3%,4%\nhigher.\nToronto:  Bacon hogs\nsteady at 8.50.\nLondon:  Bar sliver  and\" other\nmetals lower.\n. New York: Silver and other metals unchanged.\nMontreal: Silver lower.\nNew York: Cotton and Rubber\nhigher; coffee and sugar steady.\nNew York: Canadian dollar down\n1-64 to 99 31-32.\nTORONTO, Jan. 6 (CP)-Toron-\nto's market spiritedly moved to\nhigher levels today, led \u25a0 by base\nmetals. Golds were spotty and at the\nclose were about even with the\nprevious close.\nVolume reached 1,032,000 shares,\nheaviest since Dec. 6,\nInternational Nickel stepped up\nto 48% and closed at 48% for a net\ngain of 2%. < Consolidated Mining\n& Smelting advanced 2% to 61%,\nNoranda a point to 56 and Hudson\nBay 1% to 25%. Ventures was holding a price of $7 at the close, up 35\ncents while Coast Copper added 50\ncents,\nGains in the base metals, despite lower London prices were interpreted as reflecting the U. S. rearmament outlook.\nRail. Head Rally\non New York list\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 6 (CP)- A\nproposal that the British North America act be amended to give provincial legislatures exclusive powers in connection with the marketing of agricultural products, contained in a proposed brief to the\nRowell Commission on Dominion-\nprovincial relations, was read by\nW. E. Haskins, chairman of the British Columbia Tree Fruit board, Ke-\nlowan, to the annual meeting of the\nBritish Columbia chamber of agri\nculture here today. *\nThe proposal in full stated:\n\"The British Columbia North America act should be amended to give\nprovincial legislatures exclusive\npowers in connection with the marketing of agricultural products\nwithin the respective provinces, leaving the general regulation of trade\nand commerce to the Dominion government where it affects Canada as\na whole arid in matters of export and\nimport.\"\nRail Bonds Advance\non New York Market\nWith Loan Assured\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (AP)-^Sec-\nondary rail bonds surged upward\n1 to 9 points or more today on assurances by Chairman Jones of the\nReconstruction Finance Corporation the government agency would\nlend a needed $8,233,000 to the hard-\npressed Baltimore and Ohio rail\nroad.\nAmong foroigns, French, Italian\nand Japanese issues slipped 1 to 2\nor more. United States governments\nwere 8-32s higher to 3-32s lower.\ncents\noff  truck\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED; Bid\nA P Con 35\u00ab\nAmal Oil  ~     \u25a0<\"\nAnglo Canadian ....    158\nAztec Min Co      M\nBig  Missouri    48\nBrit Dom OH 1J\nBralorne         6.95\nBrew St Dist      5.50\nBridge Riv Con 03%\nC St E Corp      3.05\nCalmont Oil  -61^\n1.70\n13.00\n.41%\n.49\n.11\n.19\n.29\n.18\n.20\n1.35\nCariboo Gold\nCoast Brew   \t\nCom'wealth Oil\nDavies Pete \t\nDentonia     \t\nFirestone Pete .\nGold Belt Mines\nFoundation Pete\nHargall  \t\nFour Star Pete .\nHome Oil \t\n\u25a0Inter Coal  21\nIsland Mount  70\nKoot Belle   f\nMak Siccar  01%\nMcDoug Seg Ex 27\nMinto  S*\nModel  Oil   38\nMonarch Roy  18%\nPioneer Gold      315\nPrairie Roy  34\nPremier Gold     2.06\nPremier Border 01%\nQuatsino 03%\nRel Arlington  }5\nAsk\n.07%\n9.00\n.04\n3.10\n.63\n1.73'\n13.50\n.42%\n.12\n.31\nBrazilian T L St P     12%   Re\u2122 Gold    \t\nBrewers St Distillers     5%  Reeves MacD ....\nBrewing   Corp         1%  Sally   \t\nBrewing Corp pfd     15%  Salmon Gold ...\nB C Power 'A'    31%  Sheep Creek \t\nB C Power 'B'     4%  Silbak-Premier\nBuilding Products    47%  Spooner Oil\t\nBurt F N    21%  Taylor B Riv ...\nCan Bakeries 'A'      3     Vanalta Ltd\t\nCan Bakeries pfd    42     Vldette    \t\nCanada Bread Co     3%  Wellington Oil .\nCan Bud Malting      8     Wesko\nCan Car & Fdy     10%  West Flank\nCan  Cement       10%  Ymir Yank Girl ..\nCan Cement pfd  a.. 100     CURB:\nCan   Dredge       33%  Anaconda\nCan  Malting     34%  Associated Oil.\nCan Pac Rly     7%  Baltac Qil ,\nCan Ind Ale 'A'      4\nCan Ind Ale 'B'      3%\nCan Wineries       3\nCarnation   pfd      98\nCons Bakeries     14%\nCosmos    20%\nDominion  Bridge    31V*\nDominion   Stores        6%\nDom Tar St Chem      7%\nD Tar & Chem pfd     78\nDistillers  Seagrams      15%\nFanny Farmer    21\nFord of Canada 'A'     16%\nGen Steel Wares      7%\nGoodyear   Tire      72\nGypsum L & A      7%\nHarding Carpet      3%\nHarpilton Bridge      7\nHamilton Bridge pfd    57\nHinde Dauche    16\nHiram Walker    42%\nIntl. Milling pfd     98\nImperial  Tobacco      13%\nLoblaw 'A'   23%\nLoblaw   'B'       21%\nMaple Leaf Milling      2%\nMassey Harris      7\nMontreal Power    29%\nMoore   Corp    _ 31%\nNat. Steel Car    36\nOnt. Steel Prods     12\nOnt. Silk Net      6\nPage Hersey     90\nPower Corp     14\nPressed   Metals       17%\nSteel of Can    67\nStandard Paving     2%\n.57\n.45\n.07\n.97\n2.05\n.17\n.04%\n.07%\n.13\n.06\n.08%\n.31%\n.26%\n.13%\n.08\n1.40\n.75\n1.00\n.02\n.28\n.03%\n.42\n.20\n3.25\n2.09\n.02\n.04%\n.60\n.52\n.10\n.07%\n1.00\n2.20\nBeaver Silver _      .00%\nBluebird    '. 00%\nB C Nickel  10%\nB R Mount        \u2014\nCapital Estates     2.75\nCongress    02%\nCrows Nest new 05%\nDalhousie Oils 65\nDunwell Min  04%\nEast Crest Oil 14\nFairview Amal 05%\nFederal Gold  01%\nFreehold Oil  08\nGeo Copper  38\nGeo Enterprise 01%\nGeo River 00%\nGolconda    06\nGold Mountain 02%\nGrandview     iOVi\nGrull-Wihksne   ....      .07%\nHaida      M*\nHighwood Sarcee ..      .19\nHome  Gold   01%\nIndian Mines  02%\nKoot Florence       .01%\njOI\n.10%\n.04%\n.74\n.05\n.05%\n.08%\n.03%\n.01\n.14%\n.10%\n.34\n.27\n.14\n.07%\nLakeview Mine 00%\nLowery Pete 23\nLucky Jim  \u00b03V\u00bb\nMadison   Oil    08%\nMar Jon Oil  10\nMercury   Qil         '18$\nMeridian new      .00%\nMetaline M St M       -54\nMcGillivray    19\nNicola    \u00b05\nNoble Five 03%\nNordon Oil 12\nOkalta com      2.21\nPacalta     13%\nPend Oreille      2.35\nPorter Idaho 03%\nPilot Gold 02\nQuesnelle Q       -05%\nReward Min \t\nRoyalite Oil\t\nRufus Argenta\t\nRuth Hope\t\nSilver Crest \t\nSouthwest Pete ...\nUnited Distillers .\nUnited iOl \t\nVulcan Oil \t\nWaverly T new .\nWellington Mines\nWhitewater   \t\n44.50\n.02%\n.02\n.03\n.65\n1.00\n.24\n1.18\n.00%\n.03\n.06\n.10%\n.07\n.01%\n.03\n.01%\n.01%\n.03%\n.09\n.12\n.20\n.07\n.04\n2.23\n.14\n2,40\n.04\n.02%\n.07\n.06%\n.03\n.04%\n1.24\n.01\n.03%\n.07\nSeek London Money\nfor Turkish Mines\nANKARA. Jan. 6 (CP Havas)-\nA group of Turkish financial experts\nwill leave for London in the near\nfuture to arrange for British participation in Turkish industrial mining schemes.\nToronto Heads Drop\nin Bank Clearings\n(By the Canadian Press)\nWith Toronto showing the largest\ndrop, Canadian Bank clearing, declined more -than  $26,000,000  this\nweek from the corresponding period ot 1937. Turnover totalled $358,-\n430. ,..''.. . . . .\nDespite a decrease of more than\n$22 000,000, Toronto retained top\nposition with its $121,042,188. Win-\nImportant recessions were suffered\nby Vancouver, Halifax and Saint\nJohn. ,.\nOnly cities to gain more than\n$1000,000 were Montreal and Windsor. Hamilton and Sherbrooke reported improved figures.\nMINISTER OF TRADE .\nTO VISIT EDMONTON\nVICTORIA, Jan. (CP)\u2014Premier\nPattullo announced today that Hon.\nW. J. Asscltine, minister of trade\nand industry, will go to Edmonton\nto discuss trade matters with Premier Aberhardt of Alberta Jan. 10.\nNEW YORK, Jan. 6 (AP) \u2014 The\nlong-dormant rails puffed the stock\nmarket' into a rally today that\nlifted many leaders one to four\npoints and a few much more.\nProfit realizing was in evidence\nat the finish and extreme advances\nwere shaded in many case on the\nfinal lap.\nTouching off the recovery sprint,\nbrokers said, was the friendly gesture of the administration in which\nthe Reconstruction Finance corporation, with the later provisional approval of the I.C.C., agreed to. lend\nthe Baltimore & Ohio more than\n$8,000,000 to ptill to road out of a\nhole.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 issues was up 1.8 points at 45.8,\nthe best day's showing since November 27. Transfers totalled 1,209,-\n840 shares compared with 1,150,840\nWednesday.\nProminent share gainers included Southern Pacific 19%; Great\nNorthern 22%; Baltimore & Ohio\n9%; U.S. Steel 59Ys, Bethlehem\n3%, General Motors 33%; U.S. Rubber, 26, J. I. Case 91, Westinghouse\n104%, and Standard Oil of N. J. 50%.\nThe automotive group pushed\nforward despite the statement of\nPresident Knudsen of General Motors the recent sales drop was the\nmost severe in the company's history.\nVancouver Higher\nMetal Shares Head\nMontreal's Gains\nMONTREAL,   Jan.   6   (CP)   \u2014\nMuch-favored metal shares headed   '\na general stock market upswing today.\nHeavy buying coincided with\nWall street advances. Gains of more\nthan two points were notched for\nNickel at 48%, Smelters at 61%\nand Noranda at 56%. Utilities,\nalong with oils, ruled steady.\nDemand for rail equipments inspired the general climb.\nPapers found support and fractional improvements came out for\nBathurst,  Price  Brothers  and  St.\nLawrence Corp. while Steel of Canada lost a point, United Steel, Do-\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 6 (CP)\u2014Pri- minion Steel B, Dominion Tar and\nces in all sections moved higher on Gypsum posted sizeable advances,\nVancouver stock exchange today in\nincreased trading. Golds and base\nmetals led the parade with several\nsubstantial gains as transactions totalled 245,765 shares.\nBralorne gold and Premier were\nactive, the former trading 3125\nshares to gain 5 at 8.85 while the\nlatter gained 9 H 3.06. Pioneer advanced 10 at 3.15, Big Missouri 7\nat 48 and Sheep Creek 4 at 97. Cariboo Gold Quartz was up a cent\nat 1.70 and Minto firmed a fraction\nat 3%. ,     .\nPend Oreille led base metal gains\nto close up 23 at 2.35. Lucky Jim\ntransacted 25,900 shares and gameo\n% at 3% whila Grandview with a\nturnover of 28,TJ00 shares added 2%\nat 10%. Reeves MacDonald was up\n8 at 45, Relief Arlington 2 at 18, B.\nC. Nickel 1 at 10% and Nicola a fraction at 5.\nCalgary St Edmonton oil advanced\n11 at 3.05, Royalite 50 at $44.50 and\nOkalta 6 at 2.21. Anglo Canadian\nadded 8 at 1.58, West Flank 4% at\n31% and other leading issues were\nfrom fractions to four cents higher.\nFord Production\nTotals 1,314,369\nUnits Past Year\nDETROIT, Jan. 6 (AP) \u2014 The\nFord Motor company announced today its 1937 world production totalled 1,314,369 units, of which 1,027,-\n701 were produced and assembled in\nthe United States.\nThe companys' world production\nin 1936 was .1,194.800 cars and trucks\nincluding 1,079,591 in the United\nStates.\nAircraft Company\nShowing Improves\nTORONTO, Jan. 6 (CP) \u2014 Net\nprofits of de Havilland Aircraft of\nCanada Ltd., in the year ended\nSept. 30, 1937, were $338, after\nchargin loss of bonds sold and income tax, compared with $1651 in\nthe preceding year. Deficit carried\nforward was reduced to $25,261.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Jan. 6 (CP) \u2014 Receipts today cattle 142; calves 23;\nhogs 165; no sheep.\nCattle trade slow; prices steady;\ngood butcher steers $4.50; common\nto medium 3-4; good heifers 3.75-4;\ngood cows. 2.75:3-15; good to choice\nveal calves 4.50-5.50; good stacker\nsteers 3.50,\nNo hog sales; Wednesday's prices\nselects 8.35; bacon 7.75; butchers\n7-25,\nOils Steady on\nCalgary Market\nCALGARY, Jan. 6 (CP)-Better\ntone prevailed in the oil share division of the Calgary stock exchange\ntoday with prices steady to slightly higher.\nEast Crest, a long neglected stock,\nwas active, gaining 2% at 15. Calmont was 3 higher at 81; A. P. Con.\nsteady at 35% and Davies Pete unchanged at 50. Firestone advanced\n3 to 20. Foundation was fractionally lower at 18% and Home lost\n5 at 1.35. Prairie was 3% higher at\n25%.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Jan. 6 (CP)-Brlt-\nish and foreign exchange closed\nsteady today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso,  .2936.\nAustria, schilling, .1894.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3131.\nFrance, franc, \u00a30339.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9996.\nCzechoslovakia, crown, .0351.   \"\nIndia, rupee, .3780.\nJapan, yen, .2914.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0239.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4,9746..\nSwitzerland, franc, .2316.\n(Compiled by.the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Jan. 6 (AP) - Unsatisfactory unemployment figures\nannounced late yesterday and the\novernight setback in all Street depressed prices in the stock market\nhere. Industrial stocks remained\nquiet with motors and heavy industries selling- off. Transatlantic\nsecurities declined and the home\nrail and gilt edged groups were also\neasier. Rubber issues and oils were\nquiet. Closing; Brazilian $12%;C P.\nR. $7%; Int Nickel $46%; U.S. Steel\n$57%; Brit Am Tob 108s l%d; H. B.\nC. 25s 9d; Woolworth 69s 1% d.\nBonds:\nBrit 2% per cent Consols \u00a374\n13-16; 3% per cent War Loan \u00a3102;\nBritish Funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3113.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Jan.  6   (CP)  -\nCash wheat:\nStraight     Tough\nNo. 1 hard     148%      136%\n\u00bb\u00bb   1   nnr     148,       146%\n140%      138%\n122%      120\n    113%      110%\nNo. 5 wheat\nNo. 6 wheat..\n104%      102\n94%       92\n     84%       82\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAm Can    \u2122\nAm For Pow ....    4%\nAm Smelt St He   51%\nAm Tel   \"9V4\nAm Tob  :..   69%\nAnaconda     33%\nAv Corp      4%\nBaldwin     8%\nBait & Ohio ....    9%\nBendix Av     13%\nBeth Steel    63%\nBorden    18V4\nCan Dry    15%\nCan Pac      7%\nCerro de Pasco  42%\nChrysler    53%\nCon  Gas  N Y   2.3%\nC Wright pfd ..    4%\nDupont  117\nEast Kodak 167\nFord Eng      5\nFord of Can ....  16\nFree Texas   23%\nGen Elec    43%\nGen Foods    31%\nGen Motors   33%\nGoodrich     16%\nGranby      4%\nGreat Nor pfd  23%\nLow\nE5%\n3%\n49\n147%\n08%\n32\n4%\n7%\n8%\n13%\n61%\n18\n14\n7%\n40%\n50\n22%\n4%\n112\n165\n5\n16\n23%\n42%\n31\n31%\n15%\n4%\n21%\nClose\n79    !\n4%\n51%!\n149%\n09%\n33%\n4'A\n8%\n9%\n13%\n63%\n18%\n15%\n7%\n42%\n53%\n23%\n4%\n116%\n167\n5\n16\n23%\n43%\n31\n33%\n16%\n4%\nHowe Sound\nHud Motors ....\nInter Nickel ....\nInter Tel & Tel\nKenn Cop ^  40%\nMack Truck \u201e.  21\nMont Ward    34\n48%\n9%\n48%\n6%\nNash Motors ...   11%\nN Y Central ...   18\nPack Motors ....    5\nPenn R R    22%\nPhillips Pete ....   42%\nRadio Corp     6%\nRem Rand    13%\nSafeway Stores   21%\nShell Un     17%\nS Cal Edison ....  23\nStan Oil of N J  50%\nTexas Corp     42%\nTexas Gulf Sul  29%\nTimken Roll ....  44%\nUnder'Type   64\nUn Aircraft     27\nUn Pac    85\nU S Rubber ...  26\nU S Steel     59%\nWarner Bros \u2022....    6%\nWest Elec  105\nWest Un  ,    26\nWoolworth  -   39%\n23% Yellow Truck; ..   10%\n45\n9%\n46%\n6%\n38%\n20\n32%\n10%\n16%\n4%\n21%\n40%\n6%\n12%\n21\n17\n22%\n48%\n40\n28\n43\n54\n20%\n84\n24%\n57%\n6%\n102\n25%\n37%\n9%\n48%\n9%\n48%\n2\n12 %\n6%\n9%\n164%\n12%\n32%\n4%\n47\n105\n11\n100\n18%\n2%\n35\n17\n107\n4%\n3%\n7%\n40%\n21\n34\n11%\n18\n5\n22%\n42%\n6%\n13%\n21%\n17%\n23\n50%\n42%\n29%\n44%\n54\n26%\n85\n28\n59%\n6%\n104T>\n26\n39%\n10%\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta. Pac. Grain \t\nAssoc. Brew, of Can. ...\nAssoc. Tel. St Tel\t\nBathurst P. & P. \"A\" ...\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian T. L. St P\t\nB.C. Power \"A\" \t\nB.C. Power \"B\" \t\nBuilding Products \t\nCan, Bronze \t\nCanada Cement \t\nCan. Cement Pfd \t\nCan. North Power \t\nCan Steamship \t\nCanadian Bronze ......\nCan. Celanese \t\nCan. Celanese Pfd \t\nCan. Ind. Ale. \"A\" \t\nCan. Ind. Ale. \"B\"-.:...-\nCan. Pacific illy..\t\nCockshutt Plow  \t\nCon. Min. & Smelting\nDistilers Seagrams .: ...:.    15%\nDominion Bridge   '\"\"\u25a0\nDominion Coal Pfd \t\nDom, Steel & Coal \"B\"\nDominion Textile \t\nDryden Paper \t\nFoundation C. of C\t\nGatineau Power \t\nGen. Steel Wares \t\nGatineau Pwr. Pfd\t\nHamilton Bridge \t\nHoward Smith Paper     14\nH. Smith Paper Pfd M\nImp. Tobacco or C. ..\nInter Nickel of Can ..\nLake of the Woods ....\nLake Sulphite \t\nMassey Harris\n45\n12%\n20%\n69\n61\n49\n....   59\n201\n209\n207\n300\n185\n245\nSt Law Paper pfd\nSouth Can Power .\nShawinigan W & P\nSteel of Can\t\nSteel of Can pfd\t\nWestern Grocers ..\nBANKS\nBank of Canada .....\nCanadicrine Nationale 160\nCommerce 175\nDominion ....\nImperial \t\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotia\nRoyal\t\nToronto \t\nCURB\nAbitibi P & P     2\nAbitibi 6 pfd     17%\n31%\n19\n16\n65\n7%\n13%\n8%\n7%\n77\n98\n13%\n48%\n16\n12%\n7\n11\n30\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMontreal L H St P\t\nNational Brew Ltd  39%\nNat Steel Car - 36%\nOgilvie Flour Mills  227%\nOgilvie Flour new  ...'\u25a0  29\nOntario Steel Prods     9%\nPower. Corp of Can  14\nQuebec Power  16%\nSt Lawrence Corp'     5%\nSt Law Corp pfd  16\n_______\n\t\nAcadia Sugar Refinery  2\nBeaufiarndis Corp   5%\nBathurst P & P   3%\nBrew St Dist Van,:  5%\nBrew Corp of Can   1%\nBrew Corp of Can pfd  16\nCan Malting Ltd   34%\nCan Marconi  IV*\nCan  Vickers    _ 6%\nCan  Wineries  2%\nCons Paper Corp   6%\nDom Stores   - 6\nDonnacona Paper A  6%\nDonnacona Paper B    5%\nFalrchild Aircraft  5%\nFord Motors A  16%\nFraser Co Ltd  13%\nImperial Oil   18\nInt Petroleum  29%\nInt Utilities A  8%\nInt Utilities B  .,75\nMcColl Frontenac   85%\nMacLaren P & P  16%\nMitchell Robert  _  13\nPage Hersey Tubes   89\nPower Corp pfd   98\nRoyalite Oil :.....  44%\nThrift Stores   35\nUnited Dist of Can :     1\nWalker Good St Worts  42%\nWalker Good pfd  18%\n\"^^^\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Jan. 6 (CP)-But-1\nter spot\u2014Que. grass regraded 30%-\n31. Sales: 200 boxes Que. grass re-\ngraded, 31.\nEggs spot\u2014Ont. A-large 25A.\nButter futures\u2014firmer, unchanged to % cent up; Jan. 30%-31.\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal: Pound 4.99 31-32;\nU. S. dollar 1.00 1-32; franc 3.39.\nAt New York; Pound 4.99 %; Canadian dollar .99 31-32; franc 3.39\n5-16.\nAt Paris: Pound 147.30 francs; U.\nS. dollar 29.47% francs; Canadian\ndollar 29.46% francs.\nIn gold: Pound 12s 2d; U. S. dollar 59.17c; Canadian dollar 59.17c.\nLONDON, Jan. 6 (AP) - A fur-\nther gain of 7-16 of a cent was made\nby the United States dollar in\nforeign exchange trading today. The\nunit closed $4.99 13-16 to the pound\ncompared with $5.00 1.16 quoted\nfor sterling in New York overnight.\nFrench francs ended 147.31 to\nthe pound against 147.28 yesterday.\nSynopsis of Land Adj\nPRE-EMPTIONS\nVACANT, unreserved, surveyed CrowHl\nlands may be pre-empted by Britistii '\nsubjects over 18 years of age, and by\naliens on declaring Intention to becoma'\nBritish subjects, conditional upon reaw\ndunce, occupation and Improvement. n\nFull Information concerning Pre-empwi\nlions Is given In Bulletin Ho. 1, Lands\nSeries, \"How to Pre-empt Land,\" copies offl\nWhich can be obtained free- ot charge by]\naddressing the Department of Lands, Vlc-1\ntorla, B.C.; Bureau of Provincial Inlorma*\ntion, Victoria, or any Government Agent*'\nRecords viU be granted covering only;\nland suitable for agricultural purpose*\nWithin reasonable distance of road, school\nand marketing facilities and which is nob]\ntlmberland, i.e., carrying over 6.000 boardF\nfeet per acre east, of the Coast Range andC\n1,000 feet per aero vest of that Range.\nApplications for pre-emptions are to be*\naddressed to the Land Commissioner of,\nthe Land Recording Division In which thai\nland applied for is situated, on printed,\nforma obtained from the Commisslone?. '(\nPre-emptions must be occupied for trrtj\nyears and Improvements made to value ofi\n910 per acre, including clearing and cultUt '\nrating at least five acres, before a Crown*\nGrant can bo received.\nPre-emptions currying part time COOdM\n.Ions of occupation are also granted, 1\nPURCHASE OR LEASK *f\nApplications are received for purchaitt\nof  vacant   and  unreserved  Crown lands.)\nnot   being   tlmberland,    tor   agricultural)\npurposes.    Minimum  price  of  flrst-olass*\n(arable) land is $5 per acre, and second*!\nclass    (grazing)    land,   $2.50   per   acre*.\n\u25a0 \"\u2014\"\u2014 is given In Bulletin\n\"Purchase and Leasv\nFurther information\nNo. 10, Land Series,\nof Crown Lands.\"\nAs a partial relief measure, reverted.)\nlands may be .acquired by purchase in tew\nequal instalments, with the first payments\nsuspended tor two years, provided taxes\nare paid when due and improvements arV,\nmade during-tho first two years of not\nless than 107* of the appraised value,       v\\\nMill, factory or industrial sites at\ntimber land, not exceeding 40 acres, may.\nbe purchased or leased, the conditions\nIncluding payment of stumpase.\nTJnsurveycd areas, not exceeding 29\nacres, may bo leased as homcsltes, condl-\ntlonat upon a dwelling being erected In\nthe first year, title bclns obtained aftet\nresidence and improvement conditions an\nfulfilled and land has been surveyed.\nPor   grazing   and   Industrial   purposni I\nareas   not   exceeding   040   acres   may  Xm\nleased by one person or a company. ,\nUnder the Grazing Act the Province la\ndivided into grazing districts and tha\nrange administered under grazing regulations amended from time to time to meet\nvarying conditions, Annual grazing per\u00bb\nmlts are issued based on certain monthly\nrates per head ol stock. Priority in grax-\ntng privileges Is given to resident stock\nowners. Stock-owners may form assocltH\ntlons for range management. Free oi\npartially free permits available for settler^\ntampers and       \" \" *\" **\" ****-\u25a0-'\nr)crmlt.,! avannDio -ur wtuvn\ntravellers, up to ten head.\nWe Offer:\nDominion of Canada Bonds\t\nProvince of British Columbia Bonds\nCity of Nelson Bonds ;.\u2022 \u25a0;..-.\nPrice\nto Yield\n3V4%\n,       5%\n4>\/4%\nA. M. Webb & Co., Ltd.\nPHONE 923\n HI   A   i-IHIUUp^PiPWHIIII\nPAGE TEN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, JAN, 7, 1938,\nCOLD\nin the Head!\nNyal Nasal Drops with Eph-\nedrine will quickly relieve.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nAttack Alberta\nBill as Menace\nlo News Service\nOTTAWA, Jan, 8 (CP)-Canadian\ndaily newspapers and their news-\ngathering association, The Canadian\n, Press which for that purpose operates leased telegraph wires across\nthe Dominion, constitute an interlocking and cooperative system\nwhich would be injured by any\nprovinvial or sectional regulations,\nis it submitted in a factum filed today with the supreme court of\nCanada for the Alberta reference on\nbehalf of the Canadian daily and\nweekly newspapers.\nThe newspapers associations contend the bill contemplates a drastic\ncensorship on the press and that\ncensorship of the press is and most\nlogically be a matter for the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal\npariament.\nROBT.NOLTE\nMASTER TAILOR\nClothes Made on the Premises\n(or the Man Who Caret\nNursee Gets Three\nMonths for Folse\nPretences Charge\nI After1, being remanded until\nThursday mbrnlng to receive sentence, following a hearing Wednesday morning, John Nursee was sentenced to three months with hard\nlabor In the provincial jail when\nhe appeared before William Brown,\npolice magistrate In city police court.\nNursee was charged with obtaining money under false pretences,\nwhen he made out a check for $10\npayable to William M. Rusnak,\ndrawn on the Bank of Montreal.\nWhen Rusnak attempted to cash the\ncheck, he found Nursee had no funds\nin the bank.\nDominion Bridge\nProfits $660,661\nMONTREAL, Jan. 6 (CP) - Increase of $569,049 was reported today by'Dominion Bridge company\nlimited in net profits of $680,661\nfor the year ended last Oct. 31, compared with $91,612 in the preceding fiscal year.\nNet profit, after providing for\ndepreciation, income and other taxes, was equal to $1.28 each on 513,-\n951 shares, against 18 cents a year\nago. Increase of $787,774 was shown\nin operating profits' of $1,074,793,\ncompared with $278,019.\nHot Water\nBottles\nGuaranteed for one year\nReg. $1.00 value\n69e\nFleury's\nPharmacy\n' Every Inch a Drug Store\nPhone 25     Medical Arts Blk.\nHE CHANCED HIS TIME\nEVANSTON, 111. Jan. 6 (API-\nPolice Chief William 0. Freeman\ncalled traffic squads into his office for a pep talk on how to arrest\nmotorists who have not purchased\ncity licenses of 1938._\n\"I have given them two days'\ngrace,\" he said. \"That is enough.\nGo out and arrest them.\"\nBut Freeman called off the drive\nwithin five minutes\u2014until we\nget   1938  licenses  for  the  squad\nAUCTION\n613 Carboiftte St.\n2 P. M.\nToday, |an. 7th.\nActing under instructions from\nthe owner, I will offer the following: Garden hose, ice box,\nnew Williams sewing machine,\nkitchen utensils, laundry basket,\nkitchen cabinet, Simplex white\nenamel combination gas ahd coal\nrange, gas water heater, coal\nscuttles, dining room suite, hall\nmirror, stand lamp, rockers, circulating heater, carpet, linoleum,\npictures, davenport, easy chairs,\nBrunswick gramophone, stove\npipe, centre tables, 2 single steel\nbeds and mattresses, 3 double\nsteel beds and mattresses, dressers, chiffoniers, etc., etc.\nTerms: G. HOR8TEAD,\nCash. Auctioneer.\nGoods on View Morning of. Sale\nNelson Civic Elections\n\u2022 FOR PROGRESS IN CIVIC AFFAIRS\n\u2022 FOR WISE EXPENDITURE OF MONEY ON IMPROVEMENTS.\n\u2022 FOR BUSINESS-LIKE AND COMMON SENSE ADMINISTRATION.\n0 FOR A FAIR DEAL FOR EVERYONE.\nVOTE for BENWELL\nfor Alderman\n1 have lived in Nelson for more than 25 yean. All my interests\nare here. I will appreciate the support which Is given to me.\nGEORGE M. BENWELL,\nCandidate for Alderman.\nKeep Old Man\ninter Out and\nthe Heat in\nBY INSULATING YOUR ATTIC WITH\nZonolite Dry Insulation\nThe Best by Test\nAbsolutely fireproof, vermin proof and impervious\nto water.\nCan Be Installed in an Afternoon by Any Handy Man.\nPRICE SI PER SQUARE FOOT\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nPrince Michael\nHad Tough Trip\nBUCHAREST, Rjimania, Jan. 6\n(AP) \u2014 Crown Prince Michael,\nsafe but badly frightened, landed\ntoday on Onstanza after transferring to the liner Dacla from\na crippled Rumanian destroyer\nduring a Black Sea blizzard.\nThe 18-year-old prince, on his\nway to Athens as Rumania's representative at the wedding o,\nCrown Prince Paul of Greece and\nPrincess Fredericks: Lulse of\nBrunswick, had shivered in freezing darkness for 36 hours before\nchanging Ships in the storm.\nMrs. R. T. Simpson\nGiven Thanks Badge\nby Cub Mothers\nA \"thanks badge\" presented to\nMrs, R. T. Simpson, Tuesday night\nprior to her departure for Cranbrook, was given' her by the members of the 1st Nelson Cubs and the\nCub Mothers in appreciation for\nthe work she had done in connection with the Cubs. Mrs. Simpson\nwas president of the Mothers' committee of the First Nelson Cub pack.\nABBEY HOME OF SIR\nFRANCES DRAKE BURNS\nPLYMOUTH, Devonshire, Jan. 6\n(AP) \u2014 Buckland Abbey, once the\nresidence of Sir Francis Drake, was\ndestroyed by fire today. Only a\nfew of its valuable art treasures\nand Elizabethan relics were saved.\nThe building was a monastery in\nthe 12th century.\nOfficers of B. C.\nAgriculture Body\nAll Are Reelected\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 6(CP)-AU\nofficers of the British Columbia\nchamber of agriculture were reelected at the annual meeting here\ntoday,\nThey Included: E. D. Barrow, Sar-\ndis, president; E. J. Chambers, Vernon, vice-president; H. N. Olfield,\nRoyal Oak, Vancouver Island,; William Harrison, Pritchard, and W.\nJ. Manson, Halzic. directors,\nDelegates at the meeting today\nwere welcomed by Mayor-George C.\nMiller. Hon. K. C. MacDonald, British Columbia minister of agriculture, scheduled to address the convention, was unable to attend,\nFrench- Canadians\nObserve Epiphany\nMontreal; Jan. 6<cp>-\nFrench-Canada paused in its weekday work today to observe the\nRoman Catholic feast of the Epiphany\u2014\"little Christmas.\" Much of\nthe business life was stilled. French\nnewspapers did not publish, and\nmost French-operated business establishments were closed. Special\nmasses were said. \u00bb\nJAPANESE REPUDIATE\nFIRE EATING ADMIRAL\nLOS ANGELES, Jan. 6 (AP) -\nException to the published statement of Admiral Nobumasa Suet-\nsugu that Japan believes in the\n\"liberation of the world's colored\nraces'.from the shackles of white\nsupremacy : was voiced here by\nIchiro Hatoyama, \u2022 leader of the\nconservative- Seiyukai party of\nJapan.\nm\nVICTORIA M.P. ILL\nVICTORIA, Jan., (CP)-Robert\nW. Mayhew, M.P.-elect for Victoria\nentered this Jubilee hospital last\nnight for treatment and his departure for Ottawa will be delayed several weeks.\nStart the New\nYear Right!\nDeal at the\nSTAR\nfor Price,\nQuality and\nService\nPHONE 10 OR II\nUPHILL DELIVERIES FAIRVIEW\n9 and 11 a.m. 2 and 4 p.m.      10 a.m. 3 p.m.\nWEEK-END SPECIALS\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nLIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE\nNew season's pack\u2014Stock up at these ipecial prices:\nIO'\/_ oi. tint, 4 for  25\u00ab?\nDozen     60s?\n14'A'oi. tins, 3 for  25t*\nDozen     950\n26 ox. tint, family sixe, 2 for 25f\nDoxpn  $1.45\nTOMATO SOUP\u2014Campbell's, 3 tins 25*\nSWIFTS PREMIUM SLICED BACK BACON\u2014\nVi lb. packages, 2 for .... 39\u00ab*\nECCS\u2014Strictly fresh, grade A, large, 2 doz. 790\nSWIFT'S BROOKFIELD FRESH PURE PORK SAUSAGES\u2014\nLb. package -  250\nKRAFT'S SPECIAL DINNER\u2014Macaroni and Crated\nCheese, (cooks in 9 minutes) packet 230\nWINDSOR SALT\u2014Iodized or plain, 2 cartons .... 150\nSUNSWEET, TENDERIZED PRUNES\u2014Large size,\n2 lb. carton    .:'... 290\nRoyal City Canned Goods Special\n2 large tins of Tomatoes; 2 tins Cut Green Beans; 1 tin\nGolden Corn; 1 tin No. 5 Peas;                  \"       7Q\n89c value for    13C\nAPRICOTS\u2014California, dried, 2 lbs 390\nLYNN VALLEY PEACHES\u20142's, 2 tins  390\nFAULTLESS CRUSHED PINEAPPLE\u20142 tins 230\nHOMADE SWEET MIXED PICKLES\u201427 ox. jar,\n(Whatvaluel)   250\nMAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE\u2014Lb. tin 390\nROBIN HOOD CHINA OATS\u2014Per packet 29c\nSPERRY'S SNOWFLAKE PASTRY FLOUR\u2014\n5 lb. sack  290\nPARD DOC AND CAT FOOD\u2014lb. tin, 2 for 290\nIQHNSON'S FLOOR WAX\u2014All kinds, per tin \u25a0 \u25a0.. 69*\nFRUIT AND VEGETABLES\nPOTATOES-Netted   Gems, ex- CELERY\u2014Green Utah type (new\noellent quality; Cl Of) and delicious) or White     11A\n10-lb. sack  9*\u00abrv Chula Vlrta; lb \"r\nTURNIPS\u2014Koslanclc;        <yi>A LETTUCE\u2014Large solid     23(J\n10 lbs.\n25*\nheads; 2 for .\nORANGES ORANGES\nNAVEL ORANGES\nPRICE NEVER LOWER\u2014QUALITY NEVER BETTER\nMEDIUM SIZE\u20142 dozen  350\n4 dozen  690\nLARGE SIZE\u20142 dozen 450\n4 dozen    890\nEXTRA LARGE SIZE\u2014Dozen 390\n2 dozen   750\natt   8PANISH  ONIONS\u2014       \u00ab*_\u00ab\nJr>  Large and mjldj 3 lbs *3>\nHUBBARD SQUASH\u2014\nImported;  lb  CARROT8, BEET8 AND\n___,_\u201e_. _'     TURNIP8; 2 bunches\t\nBANANA8- 2<_C  TOMATOES\u2014Fresh Max-\n3 lbs.  - .'..     \u25a0*r loan Field; lb\t\nCauliflower, Sprouts, Rhubarb, Green Onions,\nRadishes, Cucumbers\nm\n251\n*)CROCERY((*\nNegro Is Killed\nBy Mail Bandils\nGUTHRIE, Ky., Jan .6 (API-\nPolice kegt a sharp vigil along the\nKentucky-Tennessee border today\nfor three masked bandits who fatally machine-.gunned Arthur\nMimms, 62, Negro .postoffice messenger, wounded Police Chief C.\nM. Sherrod, and sped away with a\nmail bag containing 125,000, yesterday.\nSherrod, shot in both legs, was recovering today.\nMan Defeats Woman\nSchool Chairman\nWINNIPEG, Jan. t (CD-Defeating Mrs, Jessie MacLcnnan by the\nnarrow margin ot one vote, W, A,\nCuddy was elected chairman of the\nschool board.\nMrs. MacLeJlan, chairman last\nyear, was the first woman to hold\nthat office.\nDEATHS\n(By The Canadian Press)\nCALGARY \u2014 Dr. Thomas Batin\nHarries, 50, veterinary surgeon who\nsaw service from 1915 to 1918 in\nGreat War.\nBROCKVTLLE, Ont.\u2014George K.\nDewery, 72, Brockville town clerk\nfor 30 years.\nNEWTON, Mass.\u2014Arthur Alfred\nHolmar, 52, theatre producer, actor\nfor more than 1000 roles and native\nof London, Ont.\nOKOTOKS, Alta.-Alexander N.\nAllan, 75, pioneer rancher and farmer, saw service in the Kiel rebellion\nof 18S5.\nCatch 500 Whales\nWorth $100\n\u25a0   Each\nTOKYO, Jan. 6 (AP) \u2014 Three\nhundred, fishermen caught 500 of\n3000 10 to 15-foot whales, worth\n$100 eaoh, which swam Into the\nmouth of the Tone river near\nTokyo today.\nTO MASS U.S.\nPLANES, HAWAII\nSAN DIEGO, Calif., Jan. 6 (AP)\n\u2014Forty-two United States navy\npatrol and bombing planes will\ntransfer from San Diego to Hawaii\nthis year to make the air force\nat the crossroads of the Pacific\nthe strongest In history.\nIt will be the greatest long distance mass flight yet undertaken\nby the American navy.\n'Western Research\nProblems Receive\nMajor Attention'\nOTTAWA, Jan. 6 (CP) - Western Canada problems are far from\nbeing overlooked by the national\nresearch council, Major-Gen. A. G.\nL. McNaughton, president, said today.\n\"A large part of the attention of\nthe research council Is being given\nto western problems of necessity,\nbecause their problems are the most\nacute,\" he said.\nFear Japan May\nEqual U.S. Navy\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 6 (API-\nAdmiral William D Leahy said to-\ndap President Roosevelts forthcoming message on anval policy was\nmeant to be a call for basic expansion of the United States fleet\u2014\nthe fifth shopbuilding program undertaken since the Great War.\nWhile decrying talk^of'a \"naval\nrace,\" naval officials now contend\nis time to build lest this country be\nhopelessly outstripped by Great\nBritain and overtaken by Japan.\nthat \"a navy cannot be improvised\"\nin time of need.        \" \u2022 , ,\nFormer Nelsonite\nArrested at Coast\non Nakusp Charges\nH. TJ. Paterson, former Nelson\nresident, who was arrested at Vancouver by provincial police and\nbrought to Nelson, was taken to\nNakusp Thursday by Constable R.\nShiell to face false pretence charges\nbased on allegedly worthless checks.\nTO HOLD AUTOPSY\nIN CHILD FATALITY\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 6 (CP) -\nAn autopsy will be held on the\nbody of Hilda Johnson, 13, who\ndied in hospital Tuesday from injuries suffered New Year's eve. The\nchild ran Into the end of a circular\nsaw frame in the dark.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nROOMS OR ROOM AND BOARD.\nApply 1124 Front St. (4398)\nMyrrh\nFrankincense    and\nFrom King\non Epiphany\nLONDON, Jan. 6 (AP)-King\nGeorge's epiphany gifts \u2014 gold,\nfrankincense and myrrh in a\nscarlet-and-gold bag \u2014 were laid\ntoday on the altar in St. James'\npalace. Keeping the centuries-old\ncustom of the feast, of the epiphany, the King sent his representatives to hand over the gift at\nan historic ceremony.\nGot Funny With\nChecks, Lands in Jail\nSAN DIEGO, Cal., Jan. 6 (AP) -\nIt was Jimmie Young's oriental\nsense of humor that started him\nserving a one-year jail term today.\n\u2022Merchants were skeptical, Superior. Judge Griffin was told, when\nthe youthful Chinese tried to cash\nworthless checks signed with the\nname, \"about quick.\"\nSeveral months ago a Japanese\nwas convicted here of writing spurious checks over the signature, \"I\nNogotta.\" ,\nCHARGE PLOT\nTO KILL STALIN\nLONDON, Jan. 6 (CP-Havas) -\nThe Dally Mail today printed a |\ndispatch from Riga saying large\nnumbers of Soviet officers had been\narrested for plots to kill Joseph\nStalin and his chief assistant, Nlc-\nolai Yezhoff whd, as commissar\nfor Internal affairs, heads the political police.- \u2022\"\nBatley Now Senior\nBoOrd Delegate to\nJunior Board Trade\nE. A. Mann, who as vice-president of the Nelson board of trade\nhas represented the senior, orgeniza\ntion at meetings of the Nelson junior board during its first year of op\neration, has resigned this post. An.\nnouncement was made by W. B.\nBamford, president of the senior\nbody, at a luncheon meeting of its\ncouncil Thursday that G. E. Batley\nhad been named in his place.\nFRENCH SHIP AGROUND\nON FRANCO-HELD ISLE\n(AP)\u2014The 4,282-ton French freighter Guaruja wirelessed today lt was\naground at Las Palmes in the Canary Islands, which are held by\nSpanish insurgents.\nNAZI PRESS AGAINST\nBRITISH PLEA FOR JEWS\nBERLIN, Jan. 6 (CP-Havas) -\nNazi newspapers bristled today\nwith disapproval of the reminder\ngiven Rumania yesterday by Great\nBritain and France of the treaty\nof 1919, by which the Bucharest\ngovernment promised to respect\nthe rights of minorities.\nSALE OF MEN'S\nOvercoats\nAND\nTopcoats\n20$ off\nGet that new.coat you\npromised yourself last\nwinter. Save 20%'on any\nTopcoat or Overocat In\nthe store. ,.       .\";\u2022 -\n$37.50 Coats.... f 30.00\n$30.00 Coats.. ?24.00\n$25.00Coats ..-$20.00\nFMORY'S\n** Limited    W\nTORONTO, (CP) - A labor col-\nlege with classes starting January\n3 hat. been formed here for systematic education in the theory and\npractice of trade unionism and other workers' activities,   ,\nJ. A. C. Laughtop\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bid*\n4-ROOMED HOUSE WITH BATH-\nroom for rent. Fairview. Apply\nRamp-Body Works. (4388)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nWHI8T NEXT TUESDAY NIGHT,\nCATHEDRAL  HALL, 25c.     (4395)\nSecond   hand  fiction   book),  10c\neach. WAIT'S NEW8 DEPOT.\n(3850)\nELECTRIC HEATERS. 660 Watt,\n$2,49 each. Hlpperson Hdvyre,\n(4301)\nElectrical    Contracting     F,   H.\nSMITH, 313 Baker St. PHONE 666.\n(4366)\nPlay Binge tonight at the CIVIC\n10 Prizes.\n(4286)\nStibb's committee rooms open at\n417 Victoria street, In former Women's Institute rooms. Phone 600.\n(4322)\nBacon and eggs at the\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\n(4274)\nAll Pythian Sisters are requested\nto attend the funeral of our late\nSister Sutherland this Afternoon.\n(4394)\nNew 1938 NORGE Refrigerator. A\n. Bargain, $145. Easy terms.\nMcKAY i. STRETTON\n(4278)\nMORGAN'S COMMITTEE  ROOMS\nMedical Arts Building, Ward Street\nPHONE 19\n(4383)\nGuaranteed Radio Service by a\nTrained technician with up-to-date\nEquipment.\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\n(4318)\n\u2014 ROYAL   HOTEL -\n(Formerly Allen Hotel)\nALL ROOMS NEWLY DECORATED AND FURNISHED. RATES $1\nAND UP. ALSO SPECIAL WEEK-\nLY RATES. (4308)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBARCLAY \u2014 Passed away at his\nhome in Fruitvale, January 6, William Green Barclay, age 78. Funeral\nservices will be held in Fruitvale,\nSaturday, January 8 at 2 p.m., Rev.\nT. W. Reed. Clark's Funeral Chapel\nin charge. (4399)\nNELSON-NAKUSP\nDAILY SERVICE\nLv. Nelson 8 a.m.\nAr. Nakusp 12:35 p.m.\nLv. Nakusp 1:05 p.m.\nAr. Nelson 5:50 p.m.\nConnections at Nakusp for Arrow Park, Burton City, Fauiuier,\nNeedles and Edgewood on Mondays, Wednesday and Saturdays.\nGreyhound Lines\nARCTIC DRIFTERS IN\nDANGEROUS BLIZZARD\nTROMSOE, Norway, Jan. 6 (AP)\n\u2014 The Russian Arctic weather\ncampers reported today that a blizzard had driven their ice floe rapidly due south to 79 degress north\nlatitude.\nThis meant a drift of a full degree (about 69 miles) since Saturday. Experts expressed fear the floe\nmight be swept into the open sea\nwhere it could be broken to pieces\nbefore the men are taken off.\n\"PROPOSE AT NOON-\nHE .URGES STUDENTS\nFRANKLIN, Ind., Jan. 6 (AP)\u2014\nDr. W. G. Mather, Jr., head of\nthe Franklin college sociology department, told students they should\nnot \"pop the question or accept a\nproposal in the moonlight.\"      .\n\"Dp it in the glaring light of high\nnoon,\" Mather urged today. \"Using\none's head is difficult at any time,\nespecially in. the matter.of choosing\na life, partner. Love is by nature an\nemotional matter, and under strong\nemotional forces it is difficult to\nthink clearly.\" .\nCITY ACAIN FROSTY\nWITH SKY OVERCAST\nWith the sky. again overcast for\nthe greater, part, of the day, Thursday's temperatures, were much the\nsame as the previous day's at 23 and\n27 degrees, Wednesday's were 22\nand 28 degrees.\nYoung skaters reported the ice\nalong the lake front was beginning\nto crack slightly due to the fact that\nit was skated on before it was strong\nenough.\nWOULD SEVER G. B.\nRELATIONS WITH JAPAN\nLONDON, Jan. 6 (CP-Havas)-\nSeverance of relations with Japan\nwas urged today by John March-\nbanlf, general secretary of the national union of railwaymen.\nJEWISH OWNED SHIP\nBURNS IN PALESTINE\nHAIFA, Palestine, Jan. 6 (AP) \u2014\nFire yesterday destroyed the 2468\nton Palestine mail steamer Har\nCarmel at Constanza. The vessel\nwas one of two ships owned by\nthe only Jewish steamship company in Palestine.\n-YOUR OWN-\nCIVIC\nTEN PANTRY\nPRIZES\nVALUE $2.00\nCOMPLETE SHOWS 7 AND 8:20\nThe Stars of \"Ah Wilderness\"\nIN AN IMMORTAL STORY OR YOUTH  \u2022\nSINS of CHILDREN\nFrom the Novel \"IN HIS STEPS\"\nERIC LINDEN       CECILIA PARKER\nERIC LINDEN and CECILIA PARKER thrilled you with\ntheir unforgettable portrayals in \"AH, WILDERNESS!\"\n. . .They bring you again a dramatic revelation of the\nheart of youth . . . inspired by the best-selling book\nof all time.\nPlus Our Second Feature\nlOWAODi AlPtRSON\nTIX Riff Eat\nKHEADIOIO GRANDE\n\u00abSfe$\u00bb\u00abte$3#i>W&ft$^\nLOST AT SEA\nTACOMA, Wash. Jan. 6 (AP).\u2014\nH. E. Gwinn, Tacoma railroad telegrapher indicated today he may have\nbeen the last person to see Mr. and\nMrs. John Rossick of Seattle before\nthe disappearance of their homeward bound fishing boat more than\na month ago in the vicinity of Vancouver Island. \"Their boat was not\nin good condition,\" Gwinn said,\nLAUNCH CAMPAIGN\nACAINST JAPANESE\nPORT ELIZABETH, South Africa,\nJan. 6 (CP-Havas)\u2014Six hundred\nChinese launched an anti-Japanese\ncampaign here today with a parade\nthrough the streets.\nFACTORY BURNS\nAT SALMON ARM\nSALMON ARM, B.C., Jan 6 (CP)\n\u2014Damage estimated at $1,000 was\ncaused by fire which broke out in\nthe P. A. Ruth Cone factory here\nlast night.\nl .11\n3 TODAY AND\nSATURDAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 8:54\nFeature Starts at 2:43, 7:23, 9:37\n\u2014Added Shorti \u2014\nMICKEY MOUSE (Colored\u2014PLUTO'S QUINTS\nSPORT\u2014FUTURE STARS\nSCREEN SNAPSHOTS\nWorld Events in the Latest New* Gaiette\ni\u00ab^lAV,rtsferttaii'fe..,: . '.    ..,\n'\u2014-*\u00bb\u2014\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. 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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"}]}}