{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0414485":{"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":"2022-06-02","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1939-02-18","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414485\/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":" t_n_\nTrail Blazers Defeat Kimberley\nDynamiters 5-3, Overtime\n\t\n\u25a0-\u25a0\n|pp.pi.|iW......iu\u2122\n'\"-\u25a0\u25a0\"'\u25a0\u2022 \"\"- \u2022  -\"\"-i\n!ilWW|W(i|ill|!i)\u00bb\u00bbJ. \"\nflttl\nProfit fakir\u00ae Retards New Yorlq}\nNickel'Smelters Gain\nPegs Eleven\nmttmSZ\nNEL80N. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-8ATURDAY MORNING, FEB. 18,1188,\nNUMBER 280\nU. S. Asks .     ianation\nAS PETER VERIGIN, DEAD DOUKHOTOR LEADER, AWAlfS BURIAL\nJohn Verlgln, grandson of Peter Verigln, Mrs. Evdokia Verlgln,\nthe dead leader's mother, and Mrs. Anna Verigin, his wife, sadly\n\u2022wait burial of Peter. \u2022,.-\u25a0>\/\nA familiar sight from the Nelson-Trall. highway, thetomb wherein\nPeter will lie beside his father, Peter Lordly, overlooks Brilliant.\nBC. MARKETING\nLEGISLATION IS\nFAVORED, ALU.\nEDMONTON, Feb. 17 - Enact-\nScnt of marketing legislation sim-\nir to that now in force in British\nColumbia will be urged upon the\nthree prairie provinces, It was decided here today at concluding sessions of the two-day livestock\nMarketing conference.\nThe Dominion government will\nbe urged to pass complimentary\nI acts covering marketing of western\nlivestock to give the proposed provincial acts the force of federal law,\nit was. decided unanimously by\nmore than \u25a0 100 stockmen from all\nI   parts of western Canada.\nA resolution urging that fanners\n\"be not handicapped in the future\nas they have been in the past seven\nor eight years by an unfavorable\nmonetary policy\" was passed by\ndelegates. Copies will be sent to\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King and\nFinance Minister C. A. Dunning.\nThe resolution asserted that \"practically all' prices of our farm products are set by the prices obtained\nby our exportable surpluses.\" It\nstates that exchange rate of the\npound sterling for the past eight\nyears has given Canada an unfavorable position in connection with exportable surpluses.\nCONTINUANCE OF\nWHEAT BOARD IS\nNEED, POOL SAYS\nREGINA, Feb. 17 (CP). - The\nSaskatchewan wheat pool believes\nthe wheat board ought to be continued for the coming year with a\nfixed minimum price as high as\nlast year, lt was stated here tonight\nby J. H. Wesson, president of the\npool.\nThe Saskatchewan pool took the\nview because of the world wheat\nemergency, Mr. Wesson said In commenting on announcement of Hon.\nJ. G. Gardiner, federal agricultural\nminister, of a new wheat marketing\npolicy.\nMr. Wesson said he agreed with\nMr. Gardiner that the present method of fixed prices was not equitable\nto all producers but there Is no\nmethod that can be devised that\nwould be entirely equitable.\nThe pool president expressed\nhope no definite steps would be\ntaken until the committee, appointed by Premier Bracken of Manitoba following the Winnipeg meeting on western economic prrAlems,\nhad laid the western case before the\nDominion government.\nOntario Mayor Gets\nThreat Oyer Rink\nKITCHENER, Ont, Feb. 17 (CP).\n\u2014Mayor Wes. McKeersIe said today he had received an anonymous\nnote threatening violence to him sind\nhis wife if he signs the bylaw for a\n$50,000 debenture issue to* .the construction of a skating rink here.\nThe letter was from \"a hard-working man whose house is going to be\nlisted for 1939 tax sale.\".\nfor Que. Insane\nQUEBEC, Feb. 17 (CP) \u2014 Aufh-\norities sought solution of refugee\nproblems tonight after a $1,000,000\nfire left shelter for little more than\none tenth of St. Michel L'Archange\nasylum's 3000 Insane patients.\nAid of the Dominion government\nwas preferred- soon after suspected\nincendiarism completed destruction\ntoday of most of the huge institution\nand it was believed the long, barred immigration sheds in Louise\nBasin here would be converted into\ntemporary headquarters.\nSome patients were taken home\nby relatives pending settlement of\nthe housing problem.\nSurrounded by flowers and pictures, the body of Peter Verlgln lies in Ma home at Brilliant awaiting burial\n' Synday afternoon.,\nTraMtionto Rule Over Every\nMove, Verigin Burial Sunday\nLast  Rites   Expected*\nto. Last Four to\nFive Hours\nThe body of a second Peter\nVerlgln will be laid at final rest\nSunday afternoon. Beside the\nbody of Peter Lordly, the father,\nwill be placed that ef his son\nand successor as spiritual leader\nof the Doukhobor Russian religious sect Peter Petrovlch. They\nMrtlj rest (n a tomb which-from Its\n- rocky emlpettoo overlooks BrlK,\n-Jtai>t.'hiiaaViMaiiU\u00bb.flt th* sect'lh\nthis country.\nLONG SERVICES\nThe last rites are expected to last\nfour to five hours, beginning with\nthe ritualistic removal of the body\nfrom the house where it has rested\nupon a bier since Tuesday, surrounded by flowers and pictures,\nwhile-6000 followers of the dead\nleader stood in turn before it to\npay. homage.\nTRADITION RULE8\nEvery move in, Sunday's ceremony will follow Doukhobor tradition\u2014carrying out the body; lifting the casket to the shoulders of\nthe 'pallbearers; a slow procession\nby road from his house to his tomb\nwith frequent changes of bearers\nalong the way, addresses at, the\ntomb, and finally the burial. The\nburial is expected to take plaoe between 4 and 5 o'clock,\nThroughout the ceremony numerous Doukhobor choirs will sing\nhymns and chant psalms.\nENDS LONG MOURNING\nThus will end'eight days of mourning for Peter Petrovlch Verigln.\nBut the obsequies will not be concluded until six weeks hence, when\na memorial service will be held. At\nthat time Peter's successor will be\nnamed. His son Peter in Russia, and\nhis grandson John, nOw at Brilliant\nare mentioned prominently for the\noffice..\nDuring Friday Doukhobors continued to congregate at Brilliant and\nneaby points, over 5000 of them paying personal homage at the bier\nand taking their turns with the\nchoirs which have sung almost without ,a break since. Peter's body arrived . at Brilliant Tuesday from\nSaskatoon, where he died a-week\nago today.\nRUTLAND AGAIN8T\nBEERBYTHEGtASS\nKELOWNA, B. C, Feb. 17 (CP>-\nResldents of nearby Rutland today\nvoted against sale of beer by the\nglass In a plebesclte that, returned\n307 against and 194 in favor.\nm\n$1,000,000 CIVIC WORKS SCHEME\nPENDING GRANTS, FOR VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 17 (CP). -\nA civic works program exceeding\n$1,000,000 was tentatively approved\ntoday by the city council pending\ngrants-in-aid anticipated from the\nfederal and provincial governments.\nThe scheme colls for expenditure of $850,000 on park and recreational development and $155,000 on\nsewer construction. Some 1500 married men now on relief would be\nemployed on the projects, receiving wages In cash for halftime\nwork.\nBy utilizing grants-in-aid announced at Ottawa recently by\nHon. Norman Rogers, federal labor,\nminister; diverting to the program\nsavings in relief costs ond appealing to the government* for a \"rehabilitation' grant of approximately $200,000, the council hopes to\nundertake the parks' scheme without touching civic finances.\nSewer construction would be fir\nnanced by diverting funds from\nvarious unexpended bylaw balances,\nwith labor costs borne equally by\nthe Dominion and provincial governments.\nThe ambitious program calls for:\n1\u2014Adoption of the $350,000 park\nand recreation development program formulated some time ago by\nthe parks board. This includes creation- of a 13-bole, 30-acre golf\ncourse in Stanley Park.\n2\u2014Development of a 28-acre\npark at the northeast' comer of\nFalse creek flats at a cost of $150,-\n000.\n3\u2014Construction of a full size golf\ncourse on a 128-acre tract mostly\ntax sale land, in the Colllngwood\ndistrict near Grandview highway\nand' boundary road. Cost would be\nabout $177,642.\n4\u2014The $144,000 school board requirements for improvement of\nschool grounds and playflelds In\nvarious parts of the city.\n5\u2014A sewer program to extend\nto undeveloped sectors In the city\nand stimulate home construction.\nEstimated cost is $100,000:\nThe council decided to abandon\ntemporarily projects which might\nbe financed by a federal two par\ncent self-liquidating loan, such lis\na civic auditorium, library and\nstadium.\nCanadian Oil for\nCanadian Companies\nIndustry Solution\nCALGARY, Feb. 17 (CP).,- The\nDominion government has not\ntreated Canada's oil industry on a\nnational basis, said Leon L. Plot-\nkins ot Calgary today.\nHe told the McGUllvi-.y Royal\ncommission, probing Alberta's oil\nIndustry, that the only sure remedy, __,\nof Alberta's oil. WJSgaSxMPJy'\nlaws making all oil companies in\nCanada use Canadian oil.\nThe Canadian market tor crude\nis being used by big United States\ncompanies as \"a part of the North\nAmerican trade picture without any\nconsideration for Canadians or Canada's oil fields,\" said Mr. Plot-\nkins, manager of a Calgary refinery.\nIf war broke Out tomorrow the\nStandard OU Company of: New\nJersey, through its subsidiaries in\nCanada, could demand a price ot\nfrom $3 to $4 a barrel for crude,\nhe claimed.\n\u25a0i.iy.ajr\nRADI00PERAT0R\nHELD MESSAGES\nTO LOST SOVIET\nHockey Playoffs\nSetup Arranged\nEDMONTON, Feb. 17 (CP). -\nHockeys' playoff schedule this season was announced today,by Prof.\nW. G. Hardy of Edmonton, president of the Canadian Amateur\nHockey association.\nEastern Canada's senior finalist\nwill be declared by April 3 and the\nwest's Allan cup representatives by\nApril 5 or ,7, Dr. Hardy said..\nThe eastern Junior finalist will\nbe known by April 5 or 7 and western Canada's winner by April 6 or\n8, he added.\n\"It has been arranged that 11 a\nQuebec or Ottawa and district club\nwins the senior eastern final, the\nAllan cup will be played in the\neast,\" the announcement said. \"Otherwise it wiU be played in the west\nThis will of course affect the venue\nof the Memorial cup games. If the\nAllan cup should come west then\nthe Junior final will be played in\nthe east.\"       .'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022        \u00bb\"'_,,'\nLocale of playdown games will\ndepend, the announcement stated,\n\"in part on the locale, of the branch\nchampions and in part on the places\nwhere in the Judgment of the C. A.\nH. A. the best financial returns can\nbe secured.\" ....-' ,\nDr. Hardy said the double referee\nsystem Of last season will be used\nin playdowns, but all referees are\nto be neutral. East western branch\nwill nominate their referee pref-\nCharlie Heckles at\nW. C. Fields' Banquet\n\u2022HOLLYWOOD. Feb. 17 (AP) -\nStories about Comedian W. C.\nFields \u2014 which he denied, even\nwhen they extolled him\u2014were recounted by numerous of his theatrij\ncal associates to a cheering crowd\nof 500 who gathered to pay him\nhonor last night\nOne fellow catne to heckle him.\nThe occasion was to observe the\nJuggler's 40th year as an entertainer.\n. The guest of honor was properly\nIndignant when Charlie McCarthy,\nastride partner Edgar Bergen's\nknee, announced he came Just for\nthe food and to be a nuisance.\n\"But\" protested Bergen, \"I have\ncome to pay my respects to this;\nphilosopher--\u2014\"\nCharlie interrupted with a well-\ntimed belch.\n\"I shall spend two or three minutes extolling Mr. Fields' merits,\"\ncontinued Bergen.\nCharlie, was unimpressed.\n\"Then.\" he squeaked, Tve got\nlime to go down to the bar. Seriously, though, Mr. Fields, I'm only,\nkidding\u2014but I do have a lot of\nfun hating you.\"\nAnti-Soviet   Intrigue\nEnters Mystery of\nLevaneffsky    ,\nMOSCOW, Feb. 17 (AP).\u2014Ele-\nments Of anti-Soviet Intrigue have\nbeen Injected Into the mystery of\nthe disappearance of Slglsmund\nLevaneffsky, famed Soviet pilot,\nIn a flight over the north pole In\nAugust, 1937.\nRadioman Voznesensky, chief of\nthe station at Tlkhaya bay In\nFranz Josef Land, has been Jailed\nIt was disclosed today, charged\nwith counter revolutionary activities.\nHe was accused specifically of\nwithholding or delaying radio\nmessages during Levaneffsky's attempted flight over the pole to\nthe United States and during, numerous air expeditions sent out In\nsearch of the air hero ahd his five\ncompanions.\nVoznesensky has not been specifically accused ot plotting Levaneff-\n\u25a0sky's death. The death of the missing aviators never has been actually established, although they were\ngiven up as lost officially after a\nsearch of the Arctic regions lasting\nto April, 1938.\n. Announcement Voznesensky was\nheld for trial did not explain whether he failed to relay some message\nfrom Levaneffsky which might have\nled to a successful rescue, or whether he withheld,messages to Levaneffsky designed to aid in navigation.\nVoznesensky's crowning offence,\naccording to the charges against him\nwas suppressing a radio message\nordering his dismissal and then a\nfew days later sending out a message reporting his own death.'\n- The radioman is pow In Jail, and\nthe maximum penalty for the charges against him is death.\nNEW YORK, Feb. 17 (AP). -\nVllhjalmur Stefansson, Manitoba-\nborn Arctic explorer, said tonight\nhe did not believe United States\nparticipation in the search for Slglsmund Levaneffsky, missing Soviet\nfiler, was \"hindered in any way\"\nby sabotage charged against a Rus-\nTRADE PACT AS\nCONTRIBUTOR TO\nPEACE ASSAILED\nBY DR. MANION\n1 y:' -.' t'      j\u25a0' - \u25a0\nBalance Is Largely\nAgainst Us. He\nContends\nFIGURES GIVEN IM\nEULER'S DEFENCE\nOTTAWA, Feb. 17 (CP)-Brush-\nIng aside as \"eyewash\" all arguments the new Canadian-United\nStates trade agreement was a\ncontribution to world peace, Hon.\nDr. Robert Manion, Conservative\nleader, today assailed the pact as\na bad bargain for Canada.\n\"In my opinion Its III effects will\nbe much greater than Its good\neffects,\" he declared as he resumed debate on the motion, calling for approval of the treaty, presented by prime Minister Mackenzie King Tuesday.\nTime alone, he admitted, would\nfully demonstrate the worth of\nthe treaty but he listed reasons\n' for which ha was opposed to It\n\"My contention is the balance\nis largely against us. The Empire\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nsian radio operator.\nTruck Contract\nCase Is Settled\nA settlement between parties, out\nof court, was the conclusion reached\nFriday in the civil suit between\nHenry Fisher, plaintiff, and F. R.\nRotter, of Salmo, defendant, after\nthe case had reached its fourth day\nbefore Judge W. A. Nisbet In the\ncount-\/ court. It was concerned with\ncarrying out of a contract under\nwhich Fisher lost ownership of a\ntruck.\nC. B. Garland represented Fisher\nand E. P, Dawson represented\nRotter.\nTelford Turns Down\nEmployment Scheme\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 17 (CP) -\nMayor Lyle Telford today turned\ndown a suggestion to establish a\nvoluntary youth employment service here by enlisting cooperation\nof Vancouver businessmen,\n\"It would mean a duplication of\nexisting services. The provincial\ngovernment maintains an employment service,\" Mayor Telford told\nRobert MacNIcol, secretary ot the\nCanadian Legion, who headed a delegation advocating the plan.\nMembers Leave\nHouse lor Vote\nin Alta. Session\nEDMONTON, Feb. 17 (CP).-\nUnlty of purpose within government ranks and' determination to\ncarry on and hot forsake Social\nCredit principles were asserted by\nPremier Aberhart in a noisy debate on the throue speech in the\nAlberta legislature today as two\nmembers withdrew rather than vote\non the speaker's ruling.\n\u2022 E. L\u00bb Gray, Liberal leader, challenged . remarks '.of Premier Aberhart'about \"old party line healers\"\noodt-awectlonof old.line party candidates and Mr. Speaker Dawson\nruled selection of candidates was a\nparty question and had nothing to\ndo with the assembly. On the division, the speaker's ruling was upheld 46 to 13.' _\nDeclaring they were not interested in party.squabbles,\" Charles\nCoekroft Stettler, and A. E. Mac-.\nLellan, Innlsfail, remained In the\nhouse after division bell but declined to vote. Both are Social Credit members who do not attend party\ncaucuses.\nThe speaker ruled they were obligated to vote, having remained\nin the house after the division bell\nhad rung. Rather than vote,-they\nwithdrew from the assembly at the\nrequest of the speaker. After the\nvote was announced and Premier\nAberhart had resumed his address,\nthey returned. ;   ' .\nThe prefter referred to his address as \"probably my maiden\nspeech.\" After Roy Taylor (S. C,\nPincher Creek) had spoken, the\ndebate was adjourned by J. 3.\nBowlen (Lib., Calgary) and the\nhouse adjourned until Monday.\nAlex Stewart's\nCondition Better\nCondition of Alex Stewart, chief\nof police, in Kootenay Lake General\nhospital suffering a heart ailment\nandi pneumonia, was described as\nsomewhat better, by his attending\nphysician, Dr. R. B. Shaw, Friday\nnight. Chief Stewart contracted\npneumonia a few days ago, but Dr.\nShaw said the pneumonia was\n\"starting to break up\" Friday night\nHe is still in a critical condition,\nhowever.\n$275,000 in Border\nPayments for Haitia\nPORT AU PRINCE, Haiti, Feb.\n17 (AP).\u2014The Dominican republic\ntoday paid the Haitian government\n$275,000 in a compromise settlement\nof all amounts due .under an accord for the payment of indemnity arising from the October, 1937,\nkilling of about 12,000 Haitians in\nDominican territory border clashes.\nMASSES FOR POPE\nMUNICH, FeW. 17 (AP). - A vast\ncongregation overflowed the Munich cathedral today when a requiem mass was celebrated tor\nPope Plus. XI. Among those who\nattended were about 100 members\nof former Bavarian aristocracy.\nMOSCOW, Feb. 17 (CP.-Havas)\n-a-In, the only Roman Catholic\nchurch now open in the Russian\ncapital, that ot Saint Louis des\nFrancais, a funeral service for the\nrepose of the soul of Pope Pius XL\nwas celebrated today.\nSHOWlAR\nII DUCE HOME IS\nLAID TO INSANE\nMAN IN REPORTS\nReports of Intention\nto Kill Mussolini\nDenied\nATTACKER TWICE\nIN INSTITUTIONS\nROME, Feb, 17 (AP). - Authorities tonight described as the\nunresponsible act of a madman\nthe shooting of a Fascist militiaman Tuesday' In the neighborhood of Premier Mussolini's Villa\nTorlonla on the Via Momentana.\nThe sheeting, which might have\npassed as a police Incident In another section of the city, led to\ndivergent rumors since It occurred In the vicinity of the premier's home.\nTwo communiques were issued\non the incident.\n\"The ministry (ot Popular Culture) declares the news about an\nand the second time at Rome. The\nlast time he was dismissed from\nan insane asylum was during the\nalleged attempt against the head of\nthe government to be false,\" said\nthe first. \"Rumors arose out of an\nincident caused by a madman who\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nAzana Demands\nPARIS, 'Feb. 17 ' (AP)-Manuel\nAzana, president of government\nSpain, who has pleaded the futility\nwas reported tonight to have demanded bis government make peace\non any terms.,\nAzana again conferred with Foreign Minister Julio Alvarez Del\nVayo and.was believed still trying to persuade him to abandon further defence of the one fourth of\nSpain the government still holds.\nInformed diplomatic quarters said\nboth Great Britain and France actively were pushing peace negotiations at General Franco's capital,\nBurgos.\nSenator Leon Berard, who has\nrepresented the French government\ninformally at Burgos, and Sir Robert Hodgson, British agent in Insurgent Spain, were said to plan\njoint conversations with representatives of General Franco beginning tomorrow night.\nAlberta Treasury\nSurplus $500,000\nEDMONTON, Feb. 17 (CP)-Re-\nporting an over-all cash surplus of\n$55,031.23 for the nine months ended pec. 31, 1038, the Interim financial report of the Alberta government today disclosed treasury\nbranch policy, whereby savings and\ncurrent accounts are provided in\nbranches of the provincial treasury\nthroughout the province, was Inaugurated last September. Non-negotiable transfer vouchers are issued through the branches to depositors and the vouchers ara used\nfor purchase of goods at stores having accounts at treasury branches.\nSummary of receipts and payments in the statement showed\ncash receipts of $16,804,902.86 with\ncash payments amounting to $13,-\n313,171.38 to leave a balance of\n$3,491,731.48. From' this was deducted $1,140,523.60 tor net unemployment relief payments to leave the\ncash surplus on income account\n$2,345,207.82.\nOCCUPATION OF\nHAINAN ISLAND\nHAS ATTENTION\nOF DEMOCRACIES\nDangerous   Situation\nBetween Japan and,\nRussia on Rights\nRENEWAL EFFORTS\nGETTING NOWHERE\nTOKYO, Feb. 17 (AP) \u2014 ThO\nUnited States again Joined France\nand Great Britain In parallel action In the far east today when\nAmbassador Joseph Grew asked\nfor an explanation of Japan's occupation of Hainan Island off the\nsouth China coast.\nA foreign office spokesman said\nForeign Minister Hachlro Arlt*\nreplied to Mr. Grew In the same\nmanner as he had to similar questions within a few days from the\nFrench and British ambassadors,\nCharles Arsene Henry and Sir\nRobert Cralgle. ;    .:\nHis rsply was that occupation\nof the Island, 780 miles west of the-';\nPhilippines, was \"Intended to\nstrengthen the Japanese blockade\nof the south China coast and la\nnot going beyond requirements of\nmilitary necessity.\".\nUnconfirmed reports said France\nwas unwilling to accept the Jap.\nanese reply.\nSpeculation arose as to whether\nJapan had notified Germany and\n(Continued on Page Two.)\nPERSECUTION OF\nCHRIST GAINING\nIN REICH, PAPER\nVATICAN CITY. Feb, 17  <CP '\nHavas). \u2014 With the sacred college '\npreparing to elect a successor to th\u00bb\nlate Pope Pius XI, prime defender\not   the   Roman   Catholic   church\nagainst Nazism, L'Osservatore Romano tonight charged \"the perse*,\n\"cutiptr\" 'of' Christ - waa increasing r\nthroughout the reich. -  I\nThe official- Vatican organ H\nprinted a militant pastoral letter by\nBgr.  Conrad Grober, Archbishop\nof Frelburg-lm-Breisgau,  assaUlnft.:\nNazi attacks on Catholicism ana\nChristianity.-   .\n\"On German soil,\" said Mgr.\nGrober, \"Christ is misunderstood',\nand- persecuted with increasing intensity. All respect toward Christ\nIs denied, on the pretext ot his\nIsraelite descent But he is really\nbeing rejected because they (the\nNazis) do not wish to recognize\nHis work of redemption.\"\nWheafiodylnds\nWork, Proposals\nLONDON, Feb. 17 (CP-Havas)\u2014\/\nThe preparatory International wheat\ncommittee today terminated threo-\nweeks' work in search of proposals\nto lay before the projected world\nwheat conference. The calling of tho\nparley will depend on reactions of\nthe various governments to the\ncommittee's finding's, reported to\nfavor export quotas rather than;\nacreage reduction as a solution for\nthe- wheat problem.\nThe committee was brought Into\nexistence by the wheat advisory\ncommittee. Ten nations were rep*\nresented on the smaller body, Canada, United States, Argentine, Au\u00bb>,\ntralia, Rumania, Hungary, Germany,\nFrance, Russia and the United King*\nMAINTENANCE OF ORDER, SAFETY OF\nSTATE SOUTH AFRICA BILLS OBJECT\nCAPE TOWN, Feb. 17 (CP Cable)\u2014\nThree bills \"for the maintenance .of\norder and the safety of the state\"\nwill be Introduced at the current\nsession of the South African parliament It Is learned.\nAccording to the political correspondent of the Rand Dally Mail ot\nJohannesburg, Prime Minister J. B.\nM. Hertzog has decided to Introduce\nthe bill, which principally will affect the press, secret societies and\nschool teachers.\nThe bills are being dratted and\nhave not yet been published.\nThe main measure would prohibit\npublication or public utterance of\n\"Insulting or slanderous attacks on\nheads of state\" regardless of whether they were South Africans. It\nwould Introduce the principle ot\ngroup libel \u2014 libel against associations or groups of people.\nIt would further prohibit disorder.\nlinens at public meetings, the utterance of untruths at such meetings and publication of those untruths. Organized boycotts would be\nprohibited\nThe second bill would be aimed\nat the \"Improper participation\" of\nteachers in party politics.\nThe third measure would be aimed particularly at secret societies\nand would make compulsory the\nregistration of societies, excepting\ncharitable and similar organizations.\nThe legislation is believed designed to enable the state to keep track\nof \"subversive activities of certain\nsubterranean organizations in the\nunion.\" '\u2022' \u2022 \u25a0\nASKS PREW ADVICE\nInsofar as the press ts concerned\nGeneral Hertzog Intends to obtain\nadvice of heads ot principal newspapers \"to arrive at the best means\nof achieving the objects envisaged\nby the proposed legislation and to\nensure as smooth a passage for the\nbills as possible.\"\nThe premier jwas reported from\nPretoria last night to have \"completely rejected a suggested basis\nof racial unity proposed by his son,\nDr. Albert Hertzog and a group ot\nyoung Intellectuals.\ndom.\nThe question of cultivated areas-\nigult\ntrol, price fixing, minimum price*.\nqu\nleir\nand their regulation, of export con*\non basis of quality in given ports,\nand the duration of the future agreement were all considered. Each,-\nquestion produced numerous corollaries.\nWeairn-gi;\nMln. Max.\nNelson    27     37-\nVlctoria   .... 34     48 I\nNanaimo  37      45\nVancouver _ \u2014 37     46\nKamloops     22     86 V\nPrince George  \u201e  32      44. i\nEstevan Point  \u201e 40      44\nPrince Rupert   36      44\nLangar,a    36     40\nAtlin     28      34\n\u25a0Dawson  6      14\nSeattle     30     34\nPortland   36     52\nSan Francisco   44     76\nSpokane  26     44\nLos Angeles   56     68\nPenticton  - - 20     \u2014.\nVernon  20     \u2014\nKelowna   20     22\nGrand Forks  4      22\nKaslo   19 ,  \u2014 i;\nCranbrook   22 '   42\nCalgary    -  38     48\nEdmonton     34     ,45.\nSwift Current   20      38 \u25a0\nMoose Jaw   12     32\nPrince Albert  4      40 \u2022\nSaskatoon     14     42\nQu'Aopelle     4      42 J\nWinnipeg   10'    32\n\u2022\u2014Below zero.\nForecast for Kootenay\u2014Fresh tt)\nstrong southerly  winds, becoming\nunsettled with showers, cooler tl\nnight\n- \/ .  . \u25a0.\u201e-......       , \u25a0\n PAQI TWOi.uni.sii.       i    '..,,..\u25a0\u25a0;\nif.-i\nBadminton Championships Get\nUnder Way; 15 Events Open;\ntoast Stars Get in Play Today\n6'Shea and Birch on\n\u2022 Way to Toronto See\nm   Action, Today\n?3 GAMES PLAYED;\nVISITORS TO PLAY\n.   First   Kootenay   Badminton\nI Championships, recognized as such\ni. by tha B. C. Badminton association, got away to a flying start at\nj the Clvlo Centre recreation hall\nI Friday night As fine as was the\nopening- ot the three-day event,\ntoday a galaxy of visiting stars\nware to burst forth on the shuttle\nfront to dim the keen competition\n; of the opening.\nO'SHEA, BIRCH HERE\n'First and foremost among the notables, whose presence makes this\ntops in competitive value in comparison to past district tournaments\nhero are Miss Vess O'Shea, Van-\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundstrand Adding Machines\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fisher Ltd.\n636 Ward 8t\u201e Phone N\nFOR\nFUEL\n' Williams Transfer\n(11 Ward St Phone 108\ncouver, who with Miss Margaret\nTaylor, Kelowna, holds the Dominion ladles' doubles crown; and Dick\nBirch, Vancouver, dethroned king\nof Dominion men's singllsts. Both\nwill sea action today.\nSpokane players, who yearly\nprovide stiff competition to local and district players, will also\nstart competition play.today.  -\nNelson players predominated the\nopening play Friday evening, hut a\nfew districts  players ot Creston,\nSalmo and Willow Point saw lltia|\naction,\nSS GAMES\nTwenty-three games, nine in handicap, nine in open, and five In\njunior events were played Friday\nevening, Play was yet to get under way In the men's open singles.\nJunior girls' singles and veterans'\ndoubles, an open event confined to\nmen over 40 years. Fifteen championship competitions are contained\non the tourney slate.\nThe representation was considerably less than the announced expectations, but still a large entry\nwas listed, Points represented by\nentries are Nelson, Trail, Willow\nPoint Kaslo, Cranbrook, Salmo,\nBonnington, South Slocan, Spokane\nand Vancouver.\nA gay atmosphere of genial\nsportsmanship pervaded courts,\nclub rooms and committee room\nas Nelson players and committeemen greeted the visitors as they\narrived. The Spokane contingent\narrived by train and car early In\nthe evening, while the eastbound\npassenger train ' brought many\nfrom Trail, Vancouver and other\nwestern points. Others were expected to arrive for play today.\n(Continued on  Page Nine.)\nNELSON DAILY NEWS,. NILSON, B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNING, FEB, 18,\nActs Five-Pinners\nWin Two Garnet in\nLadies'Loop, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 17 \u2014 Acea won\nthe first twogames and dropped\nthe third to Woolworth No. 1 team\nIn play of the Ladles' five-pin bowling league at Memorial hall alleys\nlast nighty ,\n' Teams and scores follow;\nACM\nM,Ford ..- I\n3. Mulrhead .\u2014\nD. EVahs .......\nI. Hall ;\t\nD, Swinburncll ._*.....\nSpOt- a. ......\nWcicTW6ifHN6T'l\nA., Spowart..,:\u2014\u00bb,-.\u201e\nF. Mawdsley .\t\n* Wilson -..\nI. Bailey \u201e.\t\nH. Mawd^ey .\u201e\t\nTotal .\u201e\t\n222\n102\n103\n198\n112\n97\n140\n131\n181\n89\n189\n97\n684 793 797\n204 120 164\n116 123 1(3\n141 1(4 1(6\n162 192 192\n181 1(0 199\n786   709   86Q\ndimJ^mcL\nNature's Marvelous Remedy\nRELIEVES QUICKLY AND EFFECTIVELY\nRheumatism, Sciatica, Arthritis, Neuritis, Nerve Disorders,\nLumbago, Insomnia, Skin Eruptions, Ulcers, Bolls, Eczema,\nBurns, Sores, Acne, Athlete's Foot\nIt you are suffering from any of the above ailments,\nwrite (without obligation) to\nTHE HEALTHTONIA COMPANY\n1013 ROBSON STREET. VANCOUVER, B.C.\nhy Have Dandruff 1\nHarris' HAIR TONIC\nRemoves Dandruff, relieves Itching Scalp and adds lustre\nand vitality to the hair.\nGet lt at your Beauty Parlor, Barber Shop or Drug Store\nCanadian Distributors\nB.C. Barber Supply & Sundries Limited\n64 Hastings St. Wast Vancouver, B. C.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel..Nelson, b. c.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. H. John,\nA. John, W. Hearn, Harold Frederick, Bill Willis, A. 0. Koch, W. G.\nNorrle-IiOewenthal, Vancouver; D.\nA. McDonald, Penticton; Mrs. H. A.\nMcKowan, Miss .Ruth McKowan, A.\nJ. Balment Miss A. Dezall, Cranbrook; John Taylor, New Denver;\nMls( Dorothy Calles, Miss Marjorie\nHamilton, Creston; Miss Irene Kell-\neher, Brilliant; 0. Sibley, R. Brough,\nA. Anderson, Medicine Hat; Miss\nAmy Rigg, Miss C. Cullen, Mr. and\nMrs. F. Greinough, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Throop, E. K. Barnes, Bill Wade,\nDell Jones, Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Pattullo, Mr. and Mrs. W. Williams,\nMr. and Mrs. C. P. Erwin, Miss\nConnie Kerr, Miss Sara Lee Williams, Miss H. motor, Miss Betty\nLarabee, Miss Gloria Stewart Miss\nRuth Barnes, A. E. Hopkins, Claude\nMaione, Dr. C. H. Kimball, Spokane.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR   VANCOUVER   HOME\"    Newly Renovated Through-\n*na ttm \u00ab tur _ ___. ___. \u25a0 out  Phones and  Elevator,\nuuiierin noi-ei a paterson. .ate ot\n(00 Seymour St, Vancouver, B.C.    Coleman. Alta. Proprietor\nHELP! HELP!\nHELP*\nFor only 25c you can get the HELP you need to get a\ni job\u2014Tell your story in full\u2014come in\u2014or send your\nadvertisement in with 25c and your story will be told\nfor six (6) days to a possible employer\u2014through the\nClassified Column.\nSITUATIONS WANTEP\n-     - -    PHONI 144\n' MORI? ABOUT\nJAPANESE\n(Continued From Page One)\nItaly, her anU-comintern pact partners, in advance of Hainan's occupation. The foreign office denied\nsuch action, but other authoritative\nsources said such notification was\nmade 10 days in advance.\nFIGHT OVER RIGHTS\nMeanwhile, a dangerous situation\nwas believed to be developing be.\ntween Japan and Soviet Russia over\nJapanese fishing rights in Soviet\nwaters, where an annual catch valued at (20,01)0,000 has formed a\nmajor source of Japan's food supplies and supported a huge canning\nIndustry.\nThe old agreement covering Japan's use of such rights expired Dec.\n3 and long negotiations for Its renewal have been fruitless.\nAs time for the fishing fleet's departure In April nears, Japanese\nnave asserted they Would continue\nto use Soviet waters regardless of\nRussian wishes.\nThe newspaper Asahi said the\nnext meeting between the Japanese\nambassador to Moscow, Shigenon\nTogo, and Foreign Commissar Maxim Litvlnoff would be Japan's \"final\neffort\" to reach an amicable solution of the matter.\nVancouver Wins\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 17 (CP). -\nVancouver Lions took a new lease\non life tonight and whipped the\nleague-leading Portland Buckaroos\n5-3 to advance to within one point\not the third-place Spokane Clippers\nin the Pacific Coast Hockey league.\nMcNab Remanded\nPerjury Count\nFERNIE, B.C. Feb. lt-Arralgned\non a perjury charge, Charles Hampton McNab of Waldo was remanded\nfor one week after'the evidence of\none witness was heard at a preliminary hearing here today.\nIN SPOKANE\nCtdmAlodt QhmiL\nOpahtmsinL dioisl\nRooms, double, $3 00 day\nApartments,     $4.00 day\nALL WITH BATH\n\u2022 Garage     o Dining Room\nWashington Stmt\nat Eighth Avenue '\nTrail Blazers Snatch a\n5-3 Win From Kimberley\nOvertime Hockey Battle\nSingle Penalty,\"  Homet  Campbell     saved.   .Christensen\n\u2022\u25a0------     - broke away ahead of the puck and\nfired a bullet shot which Campbell received on his leg pads.\nWilson, Ness and Redding broke\nin perfect formation but Wade and\nAnderson prevented the play clicking and Burgess dived out to snag\na loose puck. ,\nBoys Pull Up From\nBehind\nTRAIL, B. t, Feb. 17 - Hoodooed with a one goal deficit\nthrough two periods, Blazers tied\nthe score 3-3 80 seconds before\nfull tim*'add thrust In two goals\nIn overtime to win a well-attended asms of the West Kootenay\nHookey league here tonight\nAlthough there was much high*\nsticking, body cheeks were fair\nand hard and Bob Marshall of\nTrail received the only penalty of\nthe game In the seoond period.\nDynamiters provided the spark\nSrhich set off an exciting pace when\nhrls Sorenson scored on a rebound\nafter about live minutes of play.\nBurgess had no sooner pushed out\nKemp's shot when Sorensen smashed the rubber in over his head.\n-Bthe\nPlay continued in a splendid display of combination by both teams,\nForrest and Calles introducing some\nnew clever passing stunts which\n\"almost\" worked.\nAroused by the one marker deficit, Blazers, in a burst of speed,\nshattered the Kimberley defence\nand Wade shot Into an open net\ntrom Marshall as play was terribly\ndisorganized in front of the'Dynamiters' sanctum.\nWithin about a minute Blazers\nslipped behind when Wilson scored.\nAfter deflecting a shot from Ked-\nding's stick Burgess stood up, puzzled as to the puck's whereabouts,\nwhen Wilson, who had been behind\nthe net, sneaked around from behind and scored before Burgess saw\nthe rubber.\nPlay continued till the end of. the\nperiod with both clubs working in\nsmooth mechanical oraer.\n\"FIRE\" IN SECOND\nThere was new \"fire\" In the sec-\nonda canto as opponents clashed\nwith renewed vigor.\nWith malevolent glints In their\neyes Blazers attacked In that fash-\nIon that has won them such great\npopularity. All of the five men\nrushed at a terrific page. Anderson  dashed  the whole.distance\nBURGESS IS BRILLIANT\nThe rink vibrated with' the applause tendered Burgess who beat\nDynamiters time after time. The\nlittle blond goalie darted about like\na' young colt as he warded otf a\nseries of bullet shots trom close in.\nMarshall drew the only penalty of\nthe game for tripping. Redding\nas Wilson was passing to him when\nthe two were entering the Trail defending zone,\nDynamiters Immediately opened\nup and Brown, who had received\nthe disc' from. Burnett, rifled a\nmean shot from a sharp angle to\nbeat Burgess and set Kimberley\nahead 3-1.\nExactly 34 seconds later, Sammy\nCalles, who. had been outstanding\nall evening, zoomed through a sur-\nSrlsed team of Dynamiters to re.\nuce Dynamiters' margin to one\ngoal.\nOnly four minutes remained in\nthe.period and Campbell kicked\nout several shots in that time. The\nstanza ended with Dynamiters ahead\n3-2. A furious but clean battle raged\nas there was a desperate struggle\nio alter the score.\nBlazers were cheated ot a goal\nwhen Marshall fired at an open net\nJust as the puck reached the mouth.\nBrown breezed across 'in front oi\nthe net opening to push tne dick\nclear with his manly chest\nClarence Reddick received his\ncustomary \"applause\" from the\nTrail fans when he called two successive offsides with delayed\nblasts of the whistle and the volume was amplified when Referee\nWelykochy over-ruled a call for\na face-off at the Trail goal-line and\nfaced off the disk at the Trail\nblue-line.\nThe game continued in a deadlock with the puck bounding in\nevery direction as opposing sticks\nfiled at it at the same moment\nThe tension split when Blazers\nto drive from short range  but opened up the Simberley defence.\nFernie Juniors Even East Kootenay\nPlayoffs; Smother Kimberley 11-7\nFERNIE, B. C., Flashing a brilliant game, Fernie Juniors tied\nup the East Kootenay junior\nfinals wh<n they defeated Kimberley (Iks 11-7 In the second\ngame here' tonight, In a wide\nopen game. The third and deciding game will be played here\nSaturday night\nOpening with a rush, Burt and\nBaker In succession missed the\ngoal after being right on top. Serek\ntore in on the left and passed to\nBurt who opened the scoring after\na minute and a half of play. Fernie\ncontinued the pressure and hemmed\nKimberley in its own zone. Colvln\nbroke away and tied the Score\nwhen his hard drive caught the\nfar side of the net. Fernie came\nright back and Serek put Fernie\nahead when he combined with\nBurt. Simpson came through with\na sensational stop as he dived at\nAnderson's drive. Burt put Fernie\ntwo up as he drove home a loose\npuck. Singleton broke from his\ncheck but Simpson outguessed him.\nSerek broke in the clear but lost\nSeethe\nSan Francisco\nWorld's Fair\nthe puck on the sticky ice. Singleton sent a long drive Inches past\nthe post with Simpson completely\nbeaten. He never saw the puck.\nSerek and Burt again combined to\nput Fernie three up. Anderson\nmade a spectacular sprawling, save\nwhen Colvln broke through. Thomp--\nson and Leith broke away but\nLeith was offside. Buck Cacanagh\nwas Ih on ton of Anderson who\nsaved brilliantly.\nPLAY CL08ER\nIn the second period Serek broke\nfrom the face off and missed the\nopen net from 10 feet out Skilling\nwas chased for using his knee and\nKimberley scored twice on the\npower play, the first being scored\nby Livingstone on a pass from\nDowney and the second, Downey\nfrom Buck Cavanaugh. Play became more even with many close,\ncalls on both goals. Anderson was'\nplaying brilliantly In the Fernie\nnet. Kimberley tied up the game\nwhen Livingstone passed to Col-\nvin parked Just outside the crease.\nCairns put Fernie ahead 20 seconds\nlater when his shot beat Simpson.\nSerek was chased for slashing but\nthe Kimberley power play was\nheld at bey by fine forechecking\nand backchecking. Cavanaugh was\nchased for boarding and Fernie had\na two man advantage when Johnson\nwas penalized for holding. Burt\ngot his fourth goal of the night In\nthe resulting power play.\nROUGH AN' TOUGH\nThe third period opened with\na Kimberley attack. Anderson made\ntwo quick sprawling stops. Serek\nmissed a pass in front ot the wide\nopen goal. Baker scored on a rebound during a scrimmage and\nDowney broke through alone and\nbeat Anderson. Baker scored again\nGo the fail, sale, easy way,\nIn Ihe comfort ol Ihe train!\nIOW TRAIN FARES to Call-\niotnia make it possible for almost everyone In western Canada\nto visit the glamorous Golden\nGate International Exposition in\nSan Francisco, open February 18.\nHere the Orient and Occident\nmeet In palatial splendor. Here,\nR0UHDTRIP\nSan Francisco\nVia Spokane\nCoach       Tourist\n*44 M $49 M\nTourist fare  good  In\nTourist Pullmans, plus\nberth. 21-day   return\nlimit\ntoo, ate the World's two greatest\nbridges, the transpacific Clipper\nurban and the Gayway, 40\nthrilling acres of fun.    -\nEnjoy the luxuries of the fsst\ntrain ride to San Francisco. Steam\nheat, conditioned sir, deep seats,\nsumptuous berths, the world's\nsmoothest, safest highway\u2014steel\nrails. 10 snd 15 cent Tray Food\nService. Est when you're hungry;\nsleep when you're sleepy; rest-\nropms arc always st hand.\n\"ALL-EXPENSE\" TOUR\n$51.95\nVIA SPOKANE\n1 days la Its Fun-Lee. IncloiaM\nroundtrlpi.il Ian, good hottl, tails\nIrons .Bd to SUtlon, artmlnlon to\nFair, toor ol \u00bban Priocltco\u2014ov.ry-\nthins but snols I Similar 3, 4, 5 .ntt\nt-ttr touts. Ask your railroad ajont\nfor details. Anuras *o\u00bb hottl room\nand cartfm trip.\nSouthern Pacific\nSee yout local railroad agent, or write C. G. ALTON, \u00ab19 Howe St,\nVancouver, B.C or J. A. OHMANDY, 622 Pacific BIdg., Portland, Ore.\nfor Fernie as he Intercepted a Kimberley pass. Play which was wide\nopen was carried from end to end.\nThompson scored on a pass from\nJohnson. Cavanaugh made the\nscore 8-7 when he sank Leith's\npass. Play was becoming rough with\nheavy body checks being handed\nout Anderson got a clean break on\nCairns' pass and put Fernie two\nup. Fernle's tenth goaUiame on a\nbeautiful three way passing play\nby Cairns, Singleton and JohristoneJ\nwith the latter banging in the puck.\nPlay in the closing minutes was\nrough with five penalties being\nhanded out in the last four minutes\nof play. Burt closed the scoring on\na rebound Just before the bell.\nLineups were;\nKimberley \u2014 Simpson; Johnson,\nThompson, Livingstone, Colvln,\nSoretome, Downey, Leith, B. Cavanaugh, Graham, J. Cavanaugh.\nFernie \u2014 Anderson: Cairns, wil-\nstone, Anderson, Skilling, Singleton,\nDolynuk.\nReferees were Dub Mackie of\nKimberley and E. Peters of Fernie.\n11039. i\nengaged In a scrimmage in front ot\nCampbell and beat him when Forrest scored from short range on\nCowlands snappy pass.\n'The tielng goal came less than\ntwo minutes before _W_I_ ime and\nTrail supportera^ifMRolld with\nEngaging in overtime without a\nrest the teams continued the ter-\n\u2022\u2022\u2022>yfr.'Q\u00abP-IBnl\u00bbw\nIn the first^ minute. KemP\nst Burgess.\nthe goal p.\ni, as far as\n:ers Were\n. broke with clear Ice In\nua.... \u00ab*, Campbell outwitted him.\nBurgess stopped a shot trom Redding. Anderson fired wide ot the\nnet on two successive attacks.\nAnd then Trail took the lead. Les\nChristensen grabbed the puck at\ncentre, swung Into play with Marshall and as they breezed up the ice\nthe rubber travelled from Christensen to Marshall to gat around the\ndefence, back to Christensen and\nInto the hemp.\nJust to clinch tho win a little\nmore securely, Sammy Calles walloped In his second marker of\nthe' game, two seconds before the\nend of the ten minute overtime\nperiod'\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: 1, Kimberley, Sorensen, 5:28; 2, Trail, Wade (Marshall) 13:31;-3, Kimberley, Wilson\n(Redding) 14:58.\nSecond   period:   4,   Kimberley,\nBrown (Burnett) 18:15; S, Trail, Calles, 18:52,\nPenalties: Marshall.\nThird period:  8,  Trail, Forrest\n(Cowland) 18:40.\nOvertime:  7,  Trail,  Christensen\n(Marshall) 7:47; 8, Trail, Calles, 9:58.\nThe teams were:\nKimberley \u2014 Campbell, goal;\nBrown, Burnett and Corbett; Wilson, Ness and Redding; Kemp, Ann-\nstrong ahd Chris Sorensen; and\nStrong, forwards.\nTrail \u2014 Burgess, goal; Wade, Anderson and Norris,  defence; For-\nE Cowland qnd Calles: Appleton,\nand Marshall; and Christensen,\nWis.\nFrankie Brimsek\nRookie All-Slar\nNEW YORK, Feb. 17 (CP)-AUle\nRobertson sends word from Hot\nSprings, Ark., that Mrs. Ethel V.\nMars didn't waste the $200,000 she\nspent for 14 yearlings at last summer's Saratoga sales. . . . The Toronto jockey has finished 10 days\nof exercising them.... Ho is especially high on Gallahdlon, son of Sir\nGalahad III and Countess,\nMagistrate Albert Shadhadl of\nAtlantic City is a guy with a heart\nand Joe Garnett lightweight Negro\nhoxer, won't go back to Jill where\nhe trained for a fight that he did\nnot win ... Joe was in the jug\nfor 00 days for \"prowling\". ... Ho\nasked to be let out for a \"big light\ncomin' up\". . . . The magistrate let\nhim out on condition Joe stop prowling and win his tight ... Joe\ndrew with Jack Carter ot Philadelphia but put up such a good\nshow Shahadl figured he earned his\nfreedom.\nLester Patrick's selections for the\nall-star National Hockey league\nrookie team ot the year put Boston's Frankie Brlsek in goal. . . .\nJack Crawford of Boston and Wilt\nField ot New York Americans get\nthe defence berths. , . . And Roy\nConacher ot Boston, Roy Geise-\nbrecht of Detroit and Bill Summerhill of Canadiens make up the\nforward line.\nSpanish office\nraided, beliium\nBRUSSELS, Feb. 17 (AP)-Pollce\narmed-with a foreign office ejection\ndecree today broke into the Spanish consulate and arrested nine\nSpanish Insurgent sympathliers who\nhad seised the building in a swift\nnight raid.\nPolice said a former member ot\nthe consulate staff, named Contllo,\nhad led the raiders, who forced a\nsecretary to sign over the property\nto representatives of Insurgent General Franco.\nColor, Grace, Speed Mark the\nGyro Carnival; Figure Skaters\nSpokane, Nelson inline Show\nSplendid    Costumes;!\nSpeed to Burn\nin Races\nColor, grace and speed provided\na complete program for the fourth\nannual ice carnival of the Nelson\nGyro club, staged at the Civic Centre arena Friday night\nOne of the finest arrays of fancy\ndress costurnes which have been\nseen In Nelson In years emphasized\nthe color; an hour ot varied offerings by members ot the Spokane\nand Nelson figure skating clubs\nbrought home to 1500 persons the\nbeauty and grace of this ever-\nspreading art; and races produced\nspeed to burn, At the end of a program that lacked nothing for crowd\nentertainment a moccasin dance on\nthe Ice added to the night's fun.\nNelson Boys' band, directed by\nSpence J. Newell, bandmaster, made\nIt a musical evening as well, playing continuously for the opening\ncostume skaters' hour, continuing\nthe program while the ice was flooded for the figure skaters, and then\nplaying for the moccasin dance.\nAt the conclusion of the races J.\nB. Gray, Gyro vice-president presented the Kootenay Breweries cup\nto Audrey Emery and Bud Emery,\nwinners ot the mixed doubles mile\nrace for the second year. They won\nit in a thrill-packed event marked\nby speedy skating and plenty of\nspills in the pinches.\nAll Tired Out\nBefore Day Half 0\u00aber\nWomen who should be strong and\nhealthy become weak, run down and\nworn out, and are unable to attend\nto their household duties. They get\nsp in the morning dreading the\nday's work ahead of them.\nSome disease or constitutional disturbance luts ldft its mark in the\nform of shattered nerves, impoverished blood, and an exhausted condition of the entire system.\nWomen will Snd In Milhurn's\nHealth and Nerve Pills the remedy\nthey need to supply food for ths\nexhausted nerve force, and one that,\nwill help them back to sound, perfect\nhealth again.\nTha T. MUburo Oo.\nCOLORFUL COSTUMES\nOne of the most colorful and\noriginality - emphasizing displays\nNelson has seen in years marked\nthe opening hour, during which\ncostumed skaters occupied the ice.\nSpanish dons skated beside the\ninevitable hoboes, a living package\nof gum faced the competition of a\nskating bakery, sailors were impartial as they sksfted with Japan:\nese geisha girls, redskins, Mexican\nsenorltas and so on. Dutch, lads\nand lssses were prominent So were\nbrothers and sisters who borrowed\neach other's clothes. There was a\nsmart young jockey, a Swiss skier,\ncourt jesters,' a needle and thread\nand spool, Donald Duck, a smart\nyoung captain of the guards, a colorful Arab, an absent-minded professor lacking his trousers, a travelling lunch counter, a complete\nkitchen and dozens of others, representing all nations, all types, all\nages and most ot the superstitious\nand fairy stories, ancient and modem.\nThe participants ranged in age\nfrom a few years upward; some of\nthem so young as to be barely able\nto skate.\nThis year's costumes were smart,\noriginal and striking.\nCOSTUME PRIZEWINNERS\nPrizewinners were:\nLADIES:\nFancy dress \u2014 Miss Patricia Gallaher, Scotch lassie.\nMost original \u2014 Miss Mablc\nLittle, bakery.      ,    ,\nMen\nFancy dress \u2014 Gilbert Goucher,\nSpanish don.\nMost original \u2014 Linus Morrison,\nlunch  counter.\nGIRLS\nFancy dress \u2014 Glenna Lowes,\nCzecho-Sloyaklan peasant\nMost original \u2014 Lillian Hickey,\npackage ot gum.\nCOMIC\nMargaret Jane Mann, kitchen.,\nBOY8\nFancy dress \u2014 Robert Emory,\nspool and thimble.\nMost original \u2014 James Creech,\nLittle Boy Blue.\nCOMIC\nFred Stainton, the absent-minded\nprofessor.\nThe judges were A. B. Gilker,\nRotary club;  Mrs.  C.  W. Tyler,\nSoroptomist club; and J. B. Stark,\nKinsmen club.\nFIGURE SKATING\nGroups, quartettes, airs and soloists presented a fine skating program.\nThe \"Dance 14 Step\", Involved\neight skaters In pair dancing. The\nskaters were Miss Betty Laberee,\nWilliam Wade, Mr. and Mrs. Warren\nThroop, Miss Gloria Sherwood, Dr,\nC. Hale Kimble, Miss Mary Ruth\nBarnes, Hans Johnsen, Miss Hazel\nHller and Claude Maione.\nTwo other group numbers, \"Tango\" and \"Octette' 'also won the\napproval of the crowd.\nThe figure skating program opened with The Spokane club's profession, , Hans Johnsen, presenting\n\"Russian Gaueho\", a colorful number emulating upon skates the difficult toot work characteristic ot\nRussian dances, including the spectacular leaps. His orthodox solo emphasized a number ot the difficult\nspin and circle movements In centre\nice and on the outside circle, together with fast toot changing.\nHORNPIPE ON ICE _.\nThe night's novelty was \"The\nSailor Man\", by Mr. Johnsen\u2014the\nsailor's hornpipe on skates. It was\na smart bit of skating with the difficult foot work well done.\nDel Jones, young skater who won\nNelson spectators last year, scored\nagain In his speedy, graceful skating and his youthful showmanship.\nMr. Wade In another solo, emphasized speed and grace in the' execution of his figures.\nMiss Barnes' solo, combing a suggestion of modern dance steps with\nthe flowing grace of figure skating, was highly popular; and Miss\nLaberee's solo, in slower tempo than\nmost of the visitors' presentations,\nwas full of grace and beautifully\nneat The crowd liked it\nTiny Jacqueline Hesse of Nelson\npresented a solo in which school\nand acrobatic figures were featured.\nPAIR8 SCORE\n\"Rhythm on Ice\" wu the title ot\nthe pair number by Miss Sherwood\nand Mr., Throop. And the title was\na thoroughly descriptive choice for\ntheir smooth work together.\nOne of the outstanding presentations, combining excellent acrobatic\nwork with studied; teamed pair\nskating was the \"Double Bill and\nBetty\" by Mr. Wade and Miss Laberee.\nTwo silver medalists, winners ot\nNorth America's highest dancing\nhonors \u2014 Miss Barnes and Mr.\nThroop \u2014 scored In an unusual\nskating offering, a combination fox\ntrot. Their team work was remarkable.\nAnother pair offering was the\ndance novelty by Miss Hilar and\nDr. Kimble.\nThe duo by Miss Itabelle Young\nand Miss Claire Hughes of Nelson\nwas an interesting exhibition of\npair skating by two young ladles\nwho showed considerable promise.\n\"Wave Ballet\" was an attractive\noffering by Mrs. Throop, Miss Laberee, Miss Sherwood, and Miss\nBarnes. Wearing billowing blue,\nthese ladies won applause tor the\nbeautiful effects and tine team work\nIn their presentation.\nFLAT RACE8\nBOYS\nEighteen and under \u2014 Bud Emery, first; Victor DelPuppo, second.\nMidgets \u2014 Everett Kuhn, first;\nWalter Nisbet second.\nBantams - Bud Whitfield, first;\n\"Red\" Wassick, second.\nRELAYS\nJuveniles \u2014 Bud Emery, Victor\nDelPuppo, Everett Kuhn and Howard Breeze, first\nMidgets \u2014 Walter Nisbet, Tommy\nGriffiths, Joe Hilliard and Warren\nFerguson, first\nBantams - Bud Whitfield, Jack\nJarbeau,  Bud Hesse and Johnny\nMagllo, Panthers, first\nQIRLS\nEighteen and under \u2014 Audrey\nEmery, first; Jacqueline Hesse,\nsecond.\nSixteen and under \u2014 Lillian\nHickey, first; Jacqueline Hesse,\nsecond.\nFourteen  and under   \u2014   Ettle\nSmall, first; Verna Blackwell, second,\nOPEN EVENTS\nKeg race \u2014 Bud Brntrry, first;\nVictor Del Puppcsecond.\nMen's quarter mile \u2014 Bud Emery,\nfirst; Victor DelPuppo, second.\nLadles' quarter mile \u2014 Audrey\nEmery, first; Lillian Hickey, sec\nond.\nMen's mile \u2014 Victor DelPuppo,\nfirst; Walter Nisbet, second.\nObstacle race \u2014 Warren Ferguson, first; Tony De Guglielmo,\nsecond.\nMixed doubles, mile - Audrey\nEmery and Bud Emery, first; Warren Ferguson and Lillian Hickey,\nsecond.\nTHE WORLD'S FINEST\nCHESTERFIELDS\nFURNITURE \u2014 BIDDING\nPhone 653 ' 441 Baker I\nAMSTERDAM (CP). - Contract\nfor 20 British-built motor-torpedo\nboats for use in the North Sea and\nthe Dutch East Indies has been\nsigned by Dutch naval authorities.\nFuneral March\nHe Played Will\n,   Honor Bandsman\nROSSLAND, B.C., rob. 17\u2014In ap*\nEreciation of tha friendship, of too'\nite A. J. Hopper of Rossland, who\nwas accidentally killed in an ex-\nSoston at Tadanac Wednesday night.\nie Rossland city band under C. L.\nFriberg, bandmaster, will play In\na procession and at the funeral service Monday.\nThe deceased wu an ardent member ot the band and wu wall liked:\nby his fellows. He played the slide'\ntrombone.\nTho funeral march which the\nband will play, Is the one which tho\nband, Including tho late Mr. Hopper, wu recently practicing.\nAt the funeral service the band\nwill render \"Abide With Me\" and\n\"Nearer My God to Thee\". En route\nto the cemetery, the musicians will\nplay \"The Dead March in Saul\".\nScore 96 Wins\nTrainmen Whist\nWith a More of 06 Mrs. J. T.\nCrowe and Mrs. B. Tait won the\nfirst prizes at the whist drive held\nin the Canadian Legion hall Friday evening under the auspices of\nthe Ladies auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen. Mrs. 0.\nRenwick and Mrs. Thomas Cookson\nwon consolation honors with a score\nof 22. Percy Jeffery acted u muter\not ceremonies over the 20 tables in\nplay. Mrs. D. Laughton wu winner\not a chair prize. Tha refreshment\ncommittee consisted ot Mrs. H.\nStewart Mrs. W. R. Parker, Mrs.\nD. D. McLean, and Mrs. B. Percl-\nval.\nHOCKEY\nHERE and THERE\nMANITOBA JUNIOR\nKenora 6, Winnipeg Falcon-Rangers 2.\nBrandon 7, St. Boniface 0.\nF.lmwood 4, St. James 1.\nINTERCOLLEGIATE SR.\nMcGill 9, Queens' 4.\nN. O. H. A. 8R\u201e NICKEL BELT\nFrood 1, Crelghton 1.\n(Overtime tie\u2014second game best\nof five aeries, Frood win first).\nN. O. H. A. GOLD BELT SR.\nLake Shore 7, Toburn 3.\n(Lake Shore wins total-goals series ic-3 and title).\nO, H. A, SR., \"A' semi-finals\nToronto 5. Port Colborne 3.\n(Toronto wins best of three round\ntwo straight games).\nOshawa 5, St. Catharines 3.\n(Second game in best ot three.\nFirst was tie).\nO. H. A. JUNIOR \"A\"\nToronto Native Sons 4, Toronto\nMarlboros 2.\n(First game best-of-three series).\nALBERTA SENIOR\nColeman 8, Edmonton 3.\nExecutive to Line       |\nUp Yahk Activities\nAffecting Use Hall\nYAHK, B. C\u2014An executive com*.\nmlttee consisting of a represen- |\ntatlve of organization In the committee will be formed at Yahk to\ncooperate with the guarantors of\nthe new community hall In arranging activities ot the district affecting use ot the hall. Decision to form\nthe committee was made at a public meeting.\nFirst Aid\nTo Cold Sufferers\nThese Pictures Tell You What\nto Do for Amazingly Fast Relief f\nL To ease pah tut m> \/\ncomfort and reduta favar Jjf\nhtorA-phh\" -\/-W'*\nTablab \u2014 drink iK-V\naflats of water.\nRipsat In 2J\n\u25a0win.\n2. If throat Is uw\nIrom ooid, crush and\ndlssolrc 3 \"Aspirin\"\nTablets InViilaii of\nwata... piile.\nJust Bt Sure You Get\n\"Aspirin\" Tablet*. You WM\nFeel Better in a Hurry\nThe simple way pictured above\noften brings amn-ingly fast relief\nfrom discomfort ana sore throat\naccompanying colds.\nTry it Then\u2014set your doctor. Ha\nprobably will tell you to continue\nwith \"Aspirin\" because it acts so\nfast to relieve discomforts ot a oold.\nAnd to reduce few.\nThla simplo way, backed by scientific authority, has largely supplanted\nthe use of strong medicines -n easing\ncold symptoms. Perhaps the asiest,\nmost effective way yet discovered.\nDemand and Bet\n\"ASPIRIN\n ,mwmmB\u00bbWm^Kmmi**mmnmi*m9m\nWfSPPf^^XQ\nNELSON DAILY NEWS; NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, FEB, 18, 1989.\n-PAGE THREE\nATURDA\nIN THE \"BAY\"\n1.1\nBARGAI\nADVANCE SALE OF MEN'S\nNEW SPRING\nSALE\nOur expert buyers went out for better values, better\nstyles, and better tailoring, and here they are'.- Tweeds\nand worsteds in the new spring\nshades.   Men's and young  men's ft \u00abJ fv AC\nmodels. Buy now and save. v \u25a0 *fc      \"*\nSizes 35 to 44 . \u25a0 __S_g_.\nMEN'S CREAM RIB COMBINATIONS\nButton and buttOnless styles. Here's the garment for\nbetween season wearl Tailored from fine cotton yarns.\nLong sleeves and ankle length.\nSizes 36 to44\t\nFINE BROADCLOTH SHIRTS\nMen's fine brbadcloth shirts in all the new check and\nstripe patterns fused and soft-collar styles. Pre-shrunk\nand fast colors. (M ft A\nSizes 14to17V_. '...\u25a0ipl.UU.\nMEN'S FLANNELETTE PYJAMAS\nWarm and comfortable. A good quality flannelette\npyjamas, full eut.;Cpat has silk frogs, trousers (PI 1Q\nhave elastic-draw strings. Sizes 36 to 44. \u2014 d. I*!?\n$1.00\nSPECIALS FOR THE    \/\nWORKING MAN\nBIB OVERALLS  ._ $1.59\nHORSE HIDE MITTS\t\nWOOL WORK SOCKS, 4 PAIR\nHORSE HIDE GLOVES _\nWHIP CORD PANTS !_\n1.00\n.95\n1.00\n1.79\n\"SNOWHITE\" ELECTRIC WASHERS\n1 only quality Washer at a real bargain price. 3-vane\naluminum agitator. All moving parts in transmission\nmove in oil bath. Porcelain enamel tub and skirt in\nivory color. Direct drive. Wringer with 2\"\nrollers. Special price at\t\nTerms May Be Arranged\n$62.50\n\"Special\"\n\u2022Studio Lounges\nJust 3 of these Rest-\nmore \"Regal\" lounges.\nThe covers are of\nheavy corded tapestry\nwith 3 matching cushions. Quickly made into\na luxury bed.\nSpecial C9QQC\nprice .... yLDaJu\nWOOL\nCLEARANCE\nYour chance to knit that\nsuitvor odd sweater at a\nsaving! Shop early and get\n_our favorite color, Regular\nvalues to29f> an IC-,\nounce. To clear at oz, *'.\"?\nCEDARIZED WARDROBES\nYou can't afford to be without one at this price! These\nare, a very compact container for your clothes keeping\nthe'm free from dust or moths. Buy now and fll QQ\nsave! Each  ..\u25a0.,_ ' ..^l.OV\nPerfect All Silk\nCrepe Hose\nPopular shades, all sizes, your opportunity to stock up for spring. Every pair perfect, with panel heel and mock fashion\nmarks. Remember-*-lt's economy to buy\nseveral pair the same shade. Aflfi\nPer pair ,\u2022,**,\nSATURDAY ONLY!\n\"ALBION''FINGERING YARN\nGood heathers or plain shades in 1 oz. skeins. A _\nPer oz. a'v\nAbsorblne Jr.   98.\nPinktj.ims Compound 98^\nListerine    Antiseptic 79.\nFruitativcs    .'. 44\u00abf\nHot Water Bottles . 53.?\nDodd's Kidney Pills . 39<\nIpana Tooth Paste .. 43\u00a3\n' 2 for 80?\nPhilllppi Milk of\nMagnesia ..4$.\nCLEARANCE OF.\nKNITTED SUITS\n$3.98\nTo mike room for Spring merchandise we. are clearing\nthese suits at half price. Fine botany wools in two and\nthree piece styles, in several good shades for wearing\nright \",ow.\nRegular $12.95. ff\u00a3 J g-   Regular If7.95.\nHalf Price : \u00abpU.*iO   Half Price ....\nGAY SPRING HOUSE DRESSES\nBuy several of these and save! Good quality prints in\nan array of styles and colors. Smartly trimmed in organdy\nand braid. Sizes 34 to 42. Usually sold at 79<    CA\nLINGERIE AT A BARGAIN\nExceptional value In ladies rayon'lingerie. Ruh-proof\nfor extra wear. Cuff panties, bloomers and vests in\n.tearose and white. Sizes are small, medium and JQ-\nlarge. Priced at,  '....' \u25a0 HJt\nSpecial Value in Children's Snuggles\nCosy undies for the children. Vests and panties close-\nfitting in sngggie style of fine silk and wool. Tearose\nin sizes 22 to 30. Regular 59f. OQ-\nTo clear ..- \"M\nSKI BOOTS\nRegular $4.25. Men's,\nwomen's and boys' ski\nboots, at a real clearance price. A serviceable line of ski boots\nmade on Norwegian\nlasts. Steel shank,\nmetal sole protectors,\nwide flange   <PO Q*_\nheel  \u00abP\u00a3.\u00bbW\nPlease Note Sins\nMEN'S SlZES-7-8-8\nWOMEN'S  SIZES\u20143-4-5-7\nBOYS' SIZES-3-4-5\ntttan&$\nweORPORATED a59.MAY.l6ia\nGINGHAM \"MILLENDS\"\nSmall checks, medium checks. Beautiful plaids and\nnovelties. All 32\" by 36\" wide. Regular values\n251 to 350. Quantity limited. 1 n\nBargain, yard ' 11C\nFEATHER PILLOWS\nPurified chicken feathers. Covered with strong floral\nticking. Size 18\" by 27\". Regular value is 950. I7Q\nBargain, each   I \u00ab\/C\nTOWELS! TOWELS! TOWELS!\nBeautiful colors. Heavy quality and big sizes. Slightly\nsubstandard but such value! Ordinarily sold at OH*\n490, 590 and 690 each. Bargain, each OIt\nNEW RAYON DRAPERIES\nExceptional value here. 50\" wide in rich plain shades\nof rust; Wiulberryrv tapestry green or gold. A splendid\ndrapery for a dozen uses. *7A-\nBargain, yard ' vC\nKHUKHB\nkA>1A*AAA*A***>i<.*^\n\u25a0\t\n\"HOW THE WHOLE WORLD\nWENT ASTRAY ON A GREAT fi\nVITAL TRUTH\"\nSubject at Silica Hall, Sunday,\nFebruary 19, 7:30 p.m.\nWednesday, Feb. 22\n\"The Man Who Played Cod\"\n$1,000 for the missing text.\n*     Thursday, Feb.' 23\n\"Saved by Grace\"\n\u2022ALL INVITED\n&.     aPattaTfi\ninifeah GUiurrlt\nStanley and Silica Streets \u25a0\n, Rev. F. Hilliard. Minister\nFrank Wheeler, Organist and\nChoirmaster\nSunday Services;\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School. Temperance Lesson.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Father and Son service. All-Boy service. Boys'\nChoir Singing.\nAll fathers are urged to be present with all their sons.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Young People's Service, \"Light from other faiths,\n(2) Roman Catholicism.\"\nSong Service as usual at 7 p.m.\nMonday, 8 p.m. \u2014 Excelsior Club\nat Mrs. G. A. Talbot's, 524 Second St.\nWomen's Fellowship Group at\nBingham's.\nMen's Group at Frank Stuart's\noffice.\nAlso Youth Rally in Trinity\nUnited Church hall. See Advt.\nTuesday, 3 p.m.\u2014Monthly meeting of the United W. M. S. in\nSt. Paul's.\n8 p.m.\u2014Session Meeting.\nWednesday, 8 p.m.\u2014Y.P.S. withdrawn.\nFriday, 3 p.m.\u2014World-wide Women's Day of Prayer at Bethel\nTabernacle, for all churches.\n8pm.- Adult Bible Study\nGroup at the manse.\n8 jp.m.\u2014C.G.I.T. \u2014 Mother 8nd\nDaughter social. Special .speaker, Miss Florence Bridgman.\nj Portsmouth Naval\nPost Head Named\nLONDON, Feb. 17 (CP Cable)-\nI Admiral Sir William James today\n] was appointed to, the important\nI post of commander in chief at Ports-\nImouth. He succeeds Admiral or the\n\u25a0 Fleet the Earl of Cork and Orrery.\nI.'he change is effective June 30.\nffiutljrratt QUjurrlj\nStanley and Silica Streets\nRev. V. L. Meyer, Pastor\n8:43 a.m.\u2014Service In German.\n10:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Service in English.\n'Let Us tome to the Throne of\nGrace,\"\n7:30 pjn.\u2014Service In English.\n\"How Jesus Proves the Truth of\nthe Christian Religion\".'\nWednesday, Feb. 22, 7:30 p.m.\u2014\nLenten Service in English.  .\nA Cordial Welcome to All\ntat\nPastor Rev. G. M. Ward\nRev. J. A. MacRae of Edmonton will preach morning and evening.\nJapanese Occupy\nTerritory Without\nNotifying British\nHONG KONG, Feb. 17 (CP-Havas)\u2014Japanese forces today occupied\nthe Nanptao peninsula, three miles\nfrom Kowloon leased, territory, adjacent to Hong Kong, without prior\nnotification to the British authorities. The British authorities had\nSreviously been assured they would\ne notified in advance of any military moves in the vicinity of British territory,\nifrfottg Mri\n(Eliurr!)\nJosephine and Silica Streets\nRev. J. A. Donnell, Minister\nMr. C. C. Halleran, Choirmaster.\nChurch School at 10 a.m.\nPublic Worship at 11 a.m. and\n7:30 p.m.\nSermon Subjects:\nMorning, \"Lent\"\n.Evening, \"Obeying the Vision\".\nMorning anthem, \"Judge Me 0\nGod\", Mendelssohn.\nEvening anthem, \"Comfort O\nLord\", Crotch.\nIn the morning a trio, \"God\nShall Wipe Away All Tears\",\nField, by MesdameB Townsend,\nCampbell and Brown.\nInterdenominational. Youth Rally on Monday at 8 p.m. in Trinity\nChurch Hall. All young people\ncordially invited.\nThe regular meeting of the,\nUnited W.M.S. in St Paul's\nSchoolroom Tuesday at 3 p.m.\nAdult Bible Class In Trinity\nChurch Parlor on Wednesday at\n8 p.m.\nThe World Day of Prayer will\nbe observed in Bethel Tabernacle, Baker Street, on Friday at\n3 p.m.\nfirst flUittrrlf of\nQHjriat &mnttat\n209 BAKER STREET\nA Branch of The Mother Church,\nThe  First Church of phrist\nScientist  In  Boston,   Mass.\nSunday School 8:45 n.m.\nSunday Service 11 n.m.\nSubject Lesson-Sermon\n\"MIND\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 pjn.\nFREE READING ROOM IN\nCHURCH  BUILDINQ-\nAll Cordially Welcome\nTRUCK TURNS OVER\nAND DEPOSITS MAN\nIN PENNSYLVANIA\nLANCASTER, Pa., Feb. 17 (AP)\n\u2014Sydney Napp's accident started\nin Maryland\u2014and ended In Pennsylvania.\nSeated In the cab of his truck,\nhe approached the Pennsylvania\nstate line. The truck skidded, then\nbegan rolling over. Three rolls put\nit in Pennsylvania.\nNapp came out of it with a bump\non hla head\u2014from a horseshoe car-\nrled in the cab for good luck.\nMet Reduction of\n$4440 Assessment,\nNelson Revision\nCourt Completes It?\nDeliberations With\n13 Reductions\nSIX VALUES TO\nSTAND AS LISTED\n. A net reduction of $4440 was made\nin the City of Nelson assessment\nroll during the deliberations of the\ncity's court of revision which concluded dealing with the 1939 appeals at a session in the city hall\nFriday morning. Mayor N. C. Stibbs,\nAlderman A. G. Ritchie and Alderman George Benwell comprised the\ncourt.\nTwenty-four appeals were heard.\nIn 13 instances assessments were\nreduced, mostly on Improvements;\nand in six instances it was decided\nthe assessments should stand, these\nappeals being dismissed.     \u25a0\nThree changes affecting the school\ndistrict, since the property was outside the city limits but within the\nschool district, were made.\nOne exemption, the property being owned by the city, was recorded, mid in one case a change in the\nname of the assessed owners was\napproved.\nTWO ARE RAISED\nAssessed value of improvements\non the property of A. K. Olsen,\nUnion street, was raised from $600\nto $1500, the owner's suggestion.\nAnother revision resulting In an\nincrease was based on the appeal\nof J. Horan, Richards street, who\nclaimed there \\0ere no improvements on.Lot.8 of his property, tind\nthat he had erected a house to the\nvalue of $150 on Lot 6. The assessment for Lot 6 improvements was\nwiped out, and $150 added for the\nhouse.\nThe city's own appeal, for exemption ot assessment on land and\nimprovements upon Lot 7, Block 7,\nThird street, was allowed, the property being owned by the city.\nChange of the assessed owners\nof Lot 6, Block 12, Baker street,\nfrom Robert Beston and Mary Beaton to Marie Papazian, was approved.\n8IX ASSESSMENTS\nTO STAND\nThose whose appeals were dismissed, the assessments being confirmed as set out, were:.\nE. \"W. Widdowson, who claimed\nassessment on improvement, $300,\non Lot 3, Block 7, Hoover street,\nwas too high.\n' R. H. Provis, who claimed assessments of $230 on land and $1009\non Improvements, Lot 18, Block 60,\nBeasley street, were too high. .'\nMrs. A\u201e B. Radcliffa, who claimed assessments on Improvements on\nLots 15, 17 and 16, Block 7, Victoria\nstreet, were too high. She also claimed the assessment on Lot 6, Block\n7, Latimer street land and Improvements were too high, but the city\n_\nfound this property was outside\nthe city.\nJ. D. Anderson, who claimed assessments of $375 on land and $1700\non improvements, Lots 24 to 30,\nBlock 12, Slocan street, were too\nhigh.\nW. J. E. Biker and W. Lazareff,\nwho claimed assessments on Lots\n19, 20 and 21, $3300, were too high.\nMrs. Annie Barker, who claimed\nassessments of $670 on land and\n$2300 on improvements, Lots 16 and\nhalf of 15, Block 70, Vernon street,\nwere too high.\nREDUCTIONS FOR 13\nReductions made were as follows:\nR; D. Barnes and Mary I. Barnes,\nassessment of $6000 on improvements\non Lots 17 and 18, Block 41, Latimer\nstreet reduced to $5800.\nPeter Johnson, assessment on improvements on Lot 18, Block 26,\nSixth street, reduced to $50.\nArchibald Campbell, assessment\nof land in Lots 19 and 30, Block 27,\nCarbonate street, reduced from $300\nto $200 for each lot\nF. J. Fbster and Annie Foster,\nassessment on improvements on Lot\n9, Block 52, Richards street, wiped\naa Improvements renewed.\nElizabeth Gibbon, administratrix,\nassessment on improvements on Lots\n21 to 24, Block 14, Silica street, reduced from $3000 to $2000.\nKnut Johnson and Helen Johnson, assessment on improvements on\nLots 10 and 11, Block 12, Union\nstreet, reduced from $1280 to $800.\nJacob Kosiancic, assessment improvements on Lots 8 to 11, Block\n7, Third street, reduced from $300\nto $200.\nRobert Phillips, assessment on\nImprovements on Lots 13 to 16, Block\n25, Gore street, reduced from $1800\nto $1000.\n13. L. Hedley, assessment on Improvements on Lots 5 and 6, Block\n36, Carbonate street reduced from\n$2700 to $2500.\nEthel Smith, assessment on improvements on Lot 3, Block 11,\nwiped out in reaponse to claim no\nimprovements on lot \u2022\nRoss Fleming, assessment on improvements on two lots, Nelson avenue, wiped out since the improvements, a shed, had been torn down.\n8CHOOL DISTRICT\nA school district appeal from W.\nPevercll covering assessments of\n$50 each on land and improvements\non part of Bloc,k ^7, top of Kootenay street were too high, was ordered to conform with the provincial figures.\nAnother school district change reduced the assessment on land, Lots\n9 to 14, Block 15, top of Park street\nffom $600 to $500, and improvements frota $600 to $500, to conform, with provincial figures.\nThe claim of Albert J. Fletcher\ncovering Lot 13, Block 37, Mill\nstreet that improvements of $1500\nshould be shown on Block N, instead of Lot 13, was recognized by\nthe court.\nURGE STATE FINANCED\nINDUSTRIES IN SASK.\nREGINA, Feb. 17 (CP)-Estab-\nllihment of small state financed\nindustries to operate as self-liquidating projects was urged in the\nSaskatchewan legislature by O. W.\nValleau, (C, C. F.-Melfort) as a\nsolution Id the unemployment problem now existing.\nSale of goods manufactured will\nprovide the finances with which\nto pay the wages.\nd-\n75th Anniversary\nOf Subs Marked\nNEW YORK, Feb. 17 (AP)-The\nsubmarine, generally regarded as\na development of modern times,\nreached today the 75th anniversary\nof its Initial use as a successful\nweapon in warfare.\nThe actual use of undersea boats\nin wartime dates back to the American revolution and David Bush-\nnell's experiment with \"the Tartle\"\nbut 'it was the United States civil\nwar which saw the submarine prove\nits worth as a threat to shipping.\nThe Housatonlc, a 20-gun warship of the-U. S. navy, was the\nvictim of that first attacK. The vessel that made it was the Hunley.\nThe Hunley was about 35 feet\nlong, shaped like a cigar and built\nto boiler plate with a system of\nair and water tanks that faintly\nforetold the intricate diving mechanism of the modern submarines.\nNamed for her inventor, she was\nDeath of Woman 60,\nBelieved Accident\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 17 (CP). -\nPolice said today they believed the\ndeath of Mrs. Ellen Haris, 60, whose\nbody was found in the waters of\nFalse Creek Monday, was purely\naccidental.\nThe statement was Issued after detectives questioned two men who\nthey said were seen with Mrs\/Harris the day of her disappearance.\nPLANES CAUSE COWS\nTO LOSE WEIGHT\nHELENA, Mont, Feb. 17 (AP)\u2014\nAirman, spare that beef.\nA bill in the Montana legislature\nwouH prohibit pilots from handling planes \"in such a manner as to\nfrighten livestock,\"\nSenator Robinson charged plane-\nincited stampedes \"have often seriously affect the market value\" of\ncattle by causing the animals to\nlose weight... \u25a0\u25a0'\nGLO-COAL\nDrumheller's   BEST\nThis is positively\ntha best coal wa\nhava aver handled\nTry a ton today\nand you Will ba\nCONVINCED\nSTOVE, Ton\u2014$9.00\nLUMP, Ton.... $10.50\nPHONE 701 TODAY\nFair view\nFuel Co.\nbuilt In Mobile, Ala., and transported to Charleston on two flat\ncan for operations against the union fleet that was throttling the\nlife from the busy port of Charleston, S. C, on one of the Confederacy's main trade arteries.\nA crankshaft extended the length\nof the craft and a rod 10 feet long\nprotruded from her nose. On the\nend ot the rod was a sleeve arrangement into which the torpedo\nfitted, and armed with bagged\nteeth. In operation, the submarine\ndrove these teeth into the side of\nan unwary ship, then backed to a\nsafe distance where a yank on a\ncord would trip a trigger and fire\nthe torpedo'\nOn the night of Feb. 17,1844, with\neight men aboard, the Hunley slipped across Charleston harbor, slid\nclose In under the hull of the Hous-\natonic and sunk her spear deep\ninto the vessel's side.\nThen she backed off and Lieutenant Dixon, the commander, pulled\nthe trigger cord. In a few minutes\nthe Housatonic plunged to the bottom and, through some last misfortune, the Hunley was caught\nbeneath the stricken union Ship.\nNone of those aboard ever came\nback.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nPORTLAND\u2014Dr. Clarence True\nWilson, 66, Internationally known\nprohibitionist and Methodist, church\ntemperance board founder.\nLONDON\u2014Sir William Thomas\nCox, D. S. O., royal artillery in\ngreat war.\nHAMILTON, Ont-W. E. Fhln,\n75, chairman, of Canadian Dredge\nand Dock Company.\nPARIS-Gilbert White, Amerl-\ncan artist noted internationally\nas a painter, White was an active\nand colorful member of the Amer-,\nican colony in Paris.\nNEW YORK\u2014John E. Young, 67,;\ncharacter actor who once appeared'\nwith Lillian Russell. j\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS \u2014INSTALLATIONS\nPhona 181\nI. C. Plumbing fir Heating Co.\nSYMPTOMS!\nHeadaches\nIndigestion\nSleeplessness\nIrritability\nTired fcollnga\nGloomy spell*\nPains In back\nWeakness of vllal\norgans\nFor New Pep and\n.   Energy use\nWhat utter discouragement comes to the man\nor woman who has a collapse of the nerves.\nBodily and mentally weakened and depressed,\nthe future looks black and hope is well nigh lost\nNervous exhaustion is a deficiency disease..\nThe nerves are failing to get proper nourishment.\nThere ts lacking in the blood certain ingredient,*\nwhich the nervous system must have and which\nare supplied by Dr. Chase's Nerve Food in the\nform of vitamin Bl and such minerals as iron\nwhich are equally necessary fer the restoration\not the blood and the nerves.\nWhether caused by worry, anxiety and overwork or as the result of debilitating disease the\ntreatment required to regain strength and vigor\nand health is the same. The nerves must be\nfed back to health. There is no quick way, so\nyou must expect to use Dr, Chase's Nerve Food\nregularly and persistently until tully restored.\nIt will not be long until you find that you are\nsleeping better, have a better appetite and digest\nyour food property. The Sunshine of health\nwill again cheer you up and give you new hope\nand confidence to renew with vigor the battle of\nlife. Every day will count so why not get\nstarted today with Dr. Chase's Nerve Food.\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food\nCONTAINS  VITAMIN   Bl\nMHMH\n PaiPlsBPH\nPAGE   FOUR\nNILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNINO, FEB, U, 1Mt.\nPIONEER MOTHER STILL ttVES\u25a0'\u25a0T0:^8C^^A]\u00ae\u25a0.'<??\u25a0 S^YEs^RS'AGO\nMrs. Macintosh Tells Interesting\nStories ol Eariy Ufe In Winni\nS0ome Remedies...\neview of Ills\nIn Lincoln's Day\nI By LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nI There was no doctor at Lincoln's\nBirth, the only attendant being a\nMrs. Enlow. Warm water, warm\n(Coverings and a hot lire in the cabin were the only precautions used\nto safeguard this precious lite in its\n\u2022early hours.\nI When Lincoln was nine years old,\n(his mother, Nancy Hanks Lincoln,\n(died \u2014 probably from using milk\nprom cows which led on white\nfinakeroot. Today her life could\npave been saved by the proper administration of carbohydrates, but\n;in those days nothing of the nature\nfof the disease was known.\nA HEALTHY LIFE\nI During most of his life Lincoln\nrtvas physically healthy in spite of\nmis lanky and somewhat unfavorable build. In 1833 he suffered a\ncondition of mental depression. As\nis well known, he did not appear on\n.he day first set for his marriage,\niwhlch in the light of future events\n'was not quite as queer as it appeared at the moment-\n. His attacks of melancholia, which\n\/persisted on and off for some time,\nhave been ascribed to chronic constipation from which he suffered\nall his life, and which would be\nnatural in a man of his physique.\nLike all other human beings, of\ncourse, Lincoln had many minor\nailments tn the course of his life,\nand it is with a fellow feeling that\nwe notice some of his drug store\nbills; in 1858 he bought ten cents'\nworth of adhesive plaster; in 1850\nbe bought twenty-five cents' worth\nof Brown's mixture and cough\ncandy; In 1859 he bought a bottle\nof Dead Shot which was used as a\nsure cure for bedbugs.\nCURING HIS EXHAUSTION\nAfter one of the Douglas debates\nhe fell into an acute state of cx-\nhausion and was treated at the\nQuincy House, Quincy, Illinois. At\nthat time the proprietor of the\nQuincy House was George P. Floyd\nand Mrs. Floyd was asked to attend the sick orator. She took one\nlook at him and said that he needed a \"rum sweat,\" at which Lincoln\n' said he never drank a'drop in his\nlife. But Mrs. Floyd assured him\nthat the rum was -for external use\nonly. He was stripped and seated on\na cane-bottomed chair and Covered with blankets. Then a pan. of\nNew England rum was lighted and\nplaced under the chair. This, started profuse prespiration, and broke\nUp nis malady.\nYears later Mr. Floyd visited at\nthe White House. Lincoln recognized him and said, \"I believe your\nwife saved my life when I was in\nQuincy in 1858. Yes, I have taken\n,that rum sweat that she prescribed\n;for me many times and I have prescribed it for some of my friends.\nIt has always been a dead shot.\"\n,    QUESTIONS  AND  ANSWERS\n; G. B.; \"Will you kindly advise\nwhether honey Is safe for a diabetic to eat in any quantity, or is it\nns harmful as sugar to one?\"\nAnswer*\u2014Honey contains almost\nas much sugar as plain sugar itself\nland should not be used by a diathetic any more than sugar should,\nj If your doctor allows you to use\n(honey, he probably has reasons for\n\u25a0doing so, but in 100 grams of honey,\n\"there are over 75 grams of sugar.\nIB. M.: \"I am taking hydrochloric\n(acid. Please tell me what is the\nflight amount.\" ,\n1 Answer\u2014Ten drops in a half\nglass of water of the dilute acid.\nI M. T.! \"Our child received diph-\nitherin immunization when she was\n'3 years old. She is now 7tt years.\njLast fall she was given the Schick\n{test and pronounced o. .k.   Should\n!she have another test every year or\nis that one sufficient?\"\nAnswe^-The Schick test should\nhe given about every five years until the patient Is 15 years old. The\n(general idea is that diphtheria immunization once established, lasts\nten or fifteen years at least\nF. C.t \"I do like very much margarine salad dressing. It contains\n-vinegar, spices and different ingredients. I was told if I ate a lot\n|of that dressing it would affect my\nblood; that it would thin It out. Is\nthis true?\"\nAnswer-No.\nGIRLS WITH\n\\W\\lij,\nPEP\nh\nII you an peppy and full of fan, men will\nInvite you to danas and partiw.\nBOT If you are cross, llftlw and tlrefl,\nen won't be interested. Men don't Uka\nquiet\" cirlF. When thty to to partita they\nwant girb along who are full of pep.\nBo In cue you need a food (antral system\ntonic, remember for 3 generation! one\naraman hai told another how io go \"\u00abmi])njj\nthru\" with Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable\nI Compound. It helps build op more physical\nresistance and thus aids In giving you more\n.and lessens distress from female luno\nwtJm disorders.\nYou'll find PiQkhanVa Compound WELL\nWORTH TRYINGI\nSodat * \u2022.\nBALFOUR\nBALFOUR B. C-Mrs. 3. Sherman arrived home Wednesday morning.\nMrs. G. Conrad and Ruth were\nin the city Monday.\nCaptain Hartrldge Was a Nelson\nshopper Thursday.\nA. N. Noakes was In Nelson on\nThursday.\nThe Young Peoples met Tuesday\nevening at Mr. Abbotis for play\npractice.\nUnderstanding.,.\nMental Health of\nChild Depends on\nSchool Progress\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nI want to tell you of the round-\ntable on \"Mental Health and Education,\" put on by the Section on\nEducation at the recent annual\nmeeting, at Richmond, Va., of the\nAmerican Association for the .Advancement of Science.\nWe had only two formal papers,\neach limited to seven minutes, but\nthe session was two hours in length.\nPractically all present made informal contributions. I wish you\nmight have been there to jaruci-\npate.\nThese two brief papers were, I\nbelieve, by the two outstanding authorities in the field of mental\nhealth and education\u2014Dr, W. Carson Ryan of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and president of the National\nProgressive Education association,\nand Prof. Percival M. Symonds, of\nTeachers college, Columbia university. Respectively, they have\nwritten the best books in the field:\nMental Health through Education\n(Ryan), Mental Health of the School\nChild (Symonds). I hope you read\nthese books, and try to help save\nsome of our children from the human scrap heap.\nDr. Ryan turned our attention to\nthe need of friendliness in the classroom, stressing, as I have been for\nyears in this column, though in\nmore forceful language than mine,\nthe importance of a sympathetic,\nunderstanding and considerate attitude of the teacher toward the\nchild. Dr. Symonds, on the basis of\nhis researches, reminded us that the\nteacher becomes a kind of substitute\nparent and that how well the child\nadapts himself at school depends on\nthe way he is treated at home.\nThe discussion naturally led to\nconsideration of ways and means of\nbridging the gulf between the home\nand school and the need of more\nfriendliness between teacher and\nparent, to the end that parent-child\nrelationships Within the family\nmight help further pupil-teacher relationships and vice-versa.\nIt seems to me significant that\nscientific leaders in. education should\ncentre their attention on mental\nhealth; also that* local, state and\nnational institutes and conventions\nof teachers are giving increased\ntime to this subject, -\nTraining...\nMust Be Willing\nTo Study To Be a\nBeauty Operator\nThis is the time of the year for\nmid-season graduations, and we receive many letters ^siting for advice about vocational training, especially the course in beauty.-.\nFor the benefit of the thousands\nof young persons who are contemplating such training, we can assure\nyou it is a very good and profitable\nprofession, provided you become an\nexpert. It really takes hard work\nto master the profession, and to\nqualify for a good position, a girl\nmust nave unusual ability. The untidy, careless operator will not get\nbeyond the cheap shops, and she\nwill work hard without the satisfaction of a good salary. So, try to\nmake the most of every moment\nduring your training and lt will\nenable you to be known as one of\nthe best.\nSome shop owners tell us there\nare too many operators, but what\nthey mean is there are too many\nwho are not expert, and therefore\nnot reliable.\nYou will not like to study the\nanatomy and may feel lt Is a waste\nof time for a beauty specialist, but\nit is the only way you will ever\nbecome familiar with the benefits of\nthe facial massage, and the need of\nsanitation.\nThere are a number of antiseptics\nused In a beauty shop and they are\nsubject to change as newer methods are found. Carbolic acid was\nonce the popular one, but now Is\nseldom used. Formaldehyde is usually the principal ingerdient in the\ncabinet sterilizers, and may be used\nto keep the combs and brushes sanitary. Alcohol may be used full\nAdolescent...,\nFriends ol Both Sexes Necessary to\nNormal Development ol Young Girl\nly sensitive, shy little creature had\n-jjp      ..-. .1. .____\nWithin the year I had a letter\nfrom a man who signed himself a\nPerplexed Parent He wrote that\nhis little daughter was eating her\nheart out over something1 which neither he nor his wife :ould discover. She was bright, led her class,\nwas a promising pianist, yet each\nday she came home from school\npracticed her music lesson and retired to her room svhere she stayed until called to dinner; and frequently came down with red eyes.\nShe had gradually, separated from\nher crowd ot girls, he explained,\nbecause they were more precocious\nthan she. They were interested in\nboyt and she was not; they Went\nto dancing class and she did not.\nConsequently, more and more she\nwas being thrown on her own resources for entertainment and could\nnot work it out\nThe thing that distressed .him\nand frightened him was'the change\nwhich was taking place in her disposition. She used to be a gentle\nsweet spirited little creature with\na Joyous nature and now she wss\nturning sour, critical, cynical at\nwar with herself and her own parents. He realized she was an adolescent and would Work out of it\nbut his wife was making herself\n111 with worry over the child. What\ncould account for the metamorphosis? What could be done?\nPoor perplexed parental There\nwas nothing they wouldn't have\ndone for their darling but they had\nmissed her cues, muffed the ball,\nspilled the beans and now they had\nto scramble to undo the damage\nwhich in their innocence and ignorance had been done. The high-\n herself Inadequate to meet boys\nas her Mends were meeting them\nand so she had pretended she was\nnot amused. She'd withdraw from\nthe race because she couldn't keep\nUP, and sorry for herself, disappointed, frustrated she was eating\nher heart out In solitude and sniping at anyone who intruded updn\nher solitude.\nWhat could be dona? Why, the\nparents could make an intelligent plan to help the child find\nKer place With new friends it the\nold ones had outdistanced her.\nThey could, with Infinite patience\ndraw her out of her room on\nany pretext that would divert\nher and lead her Into new avenues of interest They could replace some ot the hard study and\npractice with lessons in tennis,\ndancing, swimming, skating and\nriding.\nThey should make their home\nhospitable to the friends and see\nthat there are amusements Inside\nand outside for the youngsters to\nenjoy. I know of several timid\nmaidens rescued from oblivion by\ngame tables put up by their patents for the express purpose of\nbaiting boys and girls. I know one\ngirl who skated her way into popularity and another who turned\nmermaid and caught the eyes and\ninterest of the boys by her expert\nswimming. ' '\nGirl and boy playmates; that's the\nanswer, and there would be fewer perplexed parents if all would\nlearn it.\nCAROLINE  CHATFIELD.\nMoney...\nHow He Spends\nGives Insight\nInto Character\nDEAR MISS CHATFIELD:\nI'm 21, have a swell Job, can\npay my own way, so I' not a gold-\ndigger. Four months ago I met a boy\nwho seemed to measure up pretty\nwell to my requirements and I liked\nhim so much that I have done my\nfull part arranging card games and\nother amusements for our dates.\nI've been patient but in four months\nhe has never spent a cent on me.\nHe's stingy. When other people are\naround he makes embarrassing remarks about the cost pf every little\nthing. One enjoyable evening occasionally would make such a difference! Any suggestion as to how\nI can get him up out of my chair\nwould be appreciated.\nLOUISE.\nANSWER: Just call a halt Louise;\nthere's nothing else you can do. And\ndon't be afraid of losing him. A\nboy friend so stingy that he won't\nbuy his girl a dinner or an evening's entertainment wouldn't be a\nhowling success as a husband.'He\nstrength, but all the others are\nmade In solution. The amounts are\nas required or a one per cent, solution.\nThis may not sound interesting,\nbut you must learn your measurements well or you will be lost when\nyou are asked to make up solutions.\nBlack Magic Glamor\nBy ALICE ALOBN\nFor slrenlsh appeal, nothing can beat a black velvet hat, especially when It casta becoming and mysterious shadows over the face.\nJoan Crawford knows thit and io .the model depicted Is one of her\npets, It features a high crown and wide brim. Per an added touch of\nglamour It le worn ovtr Instead of under a veil misting her forehead\nSchlaparelll started the Vogue with her \"ma\u00abk\" hate\/Introduced te\naccompany her harlequin costumes, particularly the \"patched\"\ncocktail tallleur,\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 17 (CP).-R\u00ab-'\ncollections of Elmwood (suburb)\nin 1683 when ducks were plentiful\nenough to attract hunters;  whin\nSoldeyes and catfish tilled the Red\n:iver; when Indians camped in\ntepees and came to Her shack tor\nsomething to eat, are told by Mrs.\nMcintosh ot Hart avenue.\nThe business college and post office stand on property where they\nbuilt the first hit house in that\npart ot Elmwood. Mrs. Mcintosh\nwas the tint white woman thereabouts; her neighbors were Indians\nand half-breeds, says Lillian Gibbons In the Tribune.\nMts. Mcintosh reminiscing said \"I\nwas all alone (on one occasion)\nbaking when I looked up to see\nthree big bronzed Indians sitting\non a.log In my yard. I was really\nvery frightened, because one of my\nsmall lads was out playing somewhere\u2014and Indians did take children In those days. But I took the\nbiscuits out ot the oven, smiled as\nthough I was as happy aa a queen,\nand took out a pan of them to the\nIndians. They ate and grinned and\nwent away.\"        ' v  i\nLast summer Mrs. Mcintosh entertained a sister from Dunoon,\nScotland, who she hadn't seen tor\n64 years. 'She was 79 and I am 83.\nKnbw her? Surely I'd have known\nher anywherel\"\nMrs. Mcintosh describes coming\nto Winnipeg in the spring ot '82\nwhen tht rivets were swollen in\nflood and piles ot iron kept the old '.\nLouise bridge from floating away.\nShe was bringing her four small\nsons\u2014the eldest only six\u2014from Gajt,\nOnt, to Carberry where her hut*'\nband had come a tew months betore to settle. \"He built us a log\nhouse,   unchinked,   if  you   know\nwhat that means,\" smiled the 88*\nyear-old woman. .\"We had nothffijf\nto put In it Because we lost all\nour household goods coming west\n\"We had brought powder and\nshot, matches and coal oil because\nwe thought we wouldn't be able to\nbuy anything' here. It -exploded.\nThat was the end of Our furniture\nand bedding, a whole car load ot\nthings. I waited three days in the.\nImmigration shed with my tout\nboys\u2014the shelter was about a quarter of a mile from* the station and I\nhad'to take turns carrying the two.*\nsmallest children\u2014for the goods to\narrive. When I found Out what had\nhappened I was too numbed to i\ncry, I never slept in a real bed tot\na year alter that\"\nThe supplies purchased in On*.\ntarlo had included one year's grocer,\nles. \"All  that the explosion left ,\nwas four bundles^-some hams, oat*,\nmeal and salt and flour.\"\nwould expect you to lit in the dark\nto cut down the' light bill, and bathe\nIn an inch of water to reduce thi\nwater bill.\nThen drop a gentle hint that lt't\nabout time for a movie or something and If he doesn't take it you'll\nknow for sure that he Can't bear\nthe pain of parting with two-bits.\nNow I say its a shame for a nice\ngirl to dedicate her livlngroom to\na professional seat warmer who\nwears out her patience as well at\nher chairs.\nYou can sometimes see a man's\nheart in his eyes, read his mond\nin what he says, or doesn't but\nif you want a real closeup on his\ncharacter, a peep into his soul, note\nhow he manipulates thi purse\nstrings.\nMy husband insists on calling his\nboss' secretary by her first name\nand it bums me up. He rings her\non the phone and speaks to her as\nlt she were ah old pal; same thing\nwhen she has occasion to call him.\nI tell him it isn't dignified and that\nhe should have more respect for me\nand her than to be so familiar. Am\nI right?\nFAITH.\nANSWER:,Faith, this is a new day.\nAnybody that puts a handle before a name dates himself a back\nnumber. The 1939 model son-in-law\ncalls his wife's mother Jane. His\nJ lite calls her mother and father\nack and Jill and the young people\ndon't even bother to give last names\nwhen they introduce one another.\nThen be a good sport and don't\nmake a mountain out ot a molehill.\n,If your first protest didn't register, the second won't and if you\npursue the subject your husband\nwill dub you a nagger. Nagging,\nyou know, it a crime punishable\nwith divorce.\nSerial Story ... ...   ,....\nDEATH AT THE MANOR\nBy M. E. CORN!\nIt's Creamier, smoother...\nand better!\nBecause there's over\nhalf a cup of FRESH\nfull cream milk in\nevery five cent bar I\nFRY-CADBURY LTD. MONTREAL\nifi      - ' ii\n3\ndUntL foJL\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nCream of Mushroom Soup\nHot Buttered Toast\nGrapefruit and Avocado Salad\nCelery Olives Hot Rolls\nJam Cake Coffee\n.CREAM OF MUSHROOM SOUP\nOne pint mushrooms, three cups\nmilk, two -tablespoons butter, one\ntablespoon flour, and salt and pepper to taste are needed. Prepare\nmushrooms, stems and aU, and cut\nIn small pieces; fry covered In one\ntablespoon butter until tender,\nwhile you make the other part of\nthe soup.\nMelt the other tablespoon of butter, add flour, and when blended\nsmoothly add milk slowly, stirring\nall the while until smooth and\nslightly thickened. Add mushrooms,\nboil up and season to taste. A dash\nof unsweetened whipped cream on\nton of each bowl or cup of soup\ngives lt an added touch. *\u2022\nThis amount will serve four persons if you serve in bowls, or six\nWhen bouillon cups are used. The\nsoup may be made in the double\nboiler or at least kept hot over hot\nwater when it is done.\nIt's not a bit too soon to give a\nthought to Lenten dishes. The good\ncook can make meatless dishes as\ndelightful and satisfying as any,\nwhile the Indifferent unimaginative cook can offer only a procession pf dull egg dishes or soggy\nspaghetti. The good cook adds spices\nand savory herbs to pep up her recipes, and balances pastes, cheese,\neggs and fish with delightful salads.\nThe recipes offered today are\nespecially selected with emphasis on\nLent but they should find a welcome place right through the yetr.\nSHIRRED EQQ with ASPARAGUS\nFour large slices of bread, pepper,\nsalt, four eggs, three cups creamed\nasparagus snd one-quarter teaspoon\nchili powder are needed. Trim the\nbreed in circular shape. Toast and\nbutter.\nBreak the eggs, preserving the\nyolk in a buttered baking dish for\nfive minutes. Place an egg on each\ntoast round. Pile creamed asparagus on top and garnish with chili\npowder and grated American cheese.\nServe at once.\nGOOD  LUNCHEON   DISH\nMOLDED EQQ NOODLES\ni With creamta e|ga is another good\nlunch or supper dish. OH* package\nwide egg noodles, three tablespoons\nflour, one teaspoon onion salt, four\nto six eggs, one teaspoon salt two\ncups milk, four tablespoons butter,\none-quarter teaspoon pepper and\none tablespoon fine herbs or savory\nwill serve six. ,\nCook noodles in boiling salted\nwater until tender. Drain and put\nin well-greased top of double boiler. Let stand over hot water Until\nHeeded. Hard cook the eggs. Melt\nbutter, stir In flour and seasonings\nahd, when well-blended, add the\nmilk slowly. Stir over low fire until\nthick and smooth. Cut hard-boiled\neggs in quarters. Unmold egg noodles in centre of hot platter. Arrange sauce around noodles and arrange eggs on sauce. Serve Immediately.\n T \\\nMARINATED PRIED PISH\nTwo pounds fliet fish cut in individual portions, one cup stock,\ntwo tablespoons onion salt, four\npeppercorns, one tablespoon chopped onion, one teaspoon chopped\nparsley, two tablespoons lemon\njuice, one-half clove of garlic\n(crushed), one-eighth teaspoon nutmeg, one crushed bay leaf, teaspoon\nsalt and tour tablespoons olive oil.\nDRESSING\nTo make the dressing: Mix together the oil, Onion, salt, lemon Juice,\nbay leaf, garlic, peppercorns and\nsalt Dip the fish in ths mixture\nand then place in bowl and cover\nwith the rest of mixture, Marinate\nfor three hours. Lift out fish, drain\nand dry.\nStrain tha sauce. Fry fish in butter or other shortening, drain and\ncool on brown paper. Mix the dressing with the stock and heat, adding\nonion and parsley. Cool and serve\nover fish.\nPOTATO CAKES\nThli recipe calls for three cupt\npated raw potatoes, one and one-\nhalt teaspoons flour, teaspoon salt\nred pepper, two well-beaten eggs,\none-eighth teaspoon baking powder\nand one-half teaspoon nutmeg.\nPee) potatoes and soak In cold\nwater several hours before grating.\nDrain thoroughly and add the beat\nen eggs, mixing in lightly. Stir In\nthe nutmeg, salt and the baking\npowder, Make small pancakes serve\nhot with sour cream garnished with\nred pepptr.\n\u2022 CHAPtER THIRTY\nThe closest wat at one end of the\nroom, and a mess it was if ever\nI saw one. Clothes, shoes and hats\nlooked as It they had been waded\ninto tight balls and thrown haphazardly into the shallow recess. It\ntook\" me a good five minutes to sort\nthe shoes trom the rest ot the stuff,\nbut I did manage to extract tout\npairs ot well-worn walking brogues',\na pair of house slippers and a pair\nof satin evening pumps from the\ndebris. I sat down the figures in\nMac's notebook, rammed the shoet\nback where I had found them, and\nhurried on to the next room.\nThis time I. found myself In a\ncloset more to my liking. If I had\nnot been as nervous as a cat- I\ncould have spent some time in admiration and envy of the rows and\nrows of lovely frocks and gowns\nand suits that hung neatly from\ntheir padded hangers. As it was, I\nhandled them fleetlngly and turned\nmy attention to scouting for footwear,\nIn one corner of the closet of the\nsecond room Btood a tall wicker\ncabinet It housed so many pairs\nof shoes'I could hardly believe my\neyes. Thirty pairs, I counted, and\nevery one of litem practically nfWl\nSome of them were not even soiled\non the bottoml Lucky girl, I\nthought, and wondered if this were\nDaphne's room.\nAlthough Mac's Instructions had\ncalled for the investigation of closets only, I could not resist a hasty\nglance around the room, and here,\nover to the dressing table and the\nwriting desk. On the blotter of the\nlatter I discovered a letter.\nIt really was not a letter, Just an\nunsigned note that lay open for\neveryone to read. The handwriting\nwas bold and masculine. Shamelessly I read it:\nDear Daphne:\nMeet me at ten o'clock at\nthe linden tree. Tonight.\nThat Was all, and so tar as I\ncould see there was not even an\nenvelope. Of course there was a\nchalice that it did not mean a\nthing. The note was not dated; the\nappointment might have been for\nan evening past. But I had a hunch\nthat lt Was nothing of the kind.\nThe paper was creased once\nthrough the middle, and the crease\nlooked new and fresh, If you know\nwha( I mean. Right then and there\nI made my decision, wise or foolish. Come ten o'clock and there\nwould be a third party to that date,\nand it would not be Mac Mclntyre!\nLittle Elsie, in person, was going\nto carry on at the linden treel Then\nWe would see who had a brain or\ntwo in her head!\nWell, I had wasted ten minutes\nplaying Sherlock Holmes, so I\nwrote Daphne's name after my\ncount,of the shoes and went on\nabtut my business.\nThe third room's closet proved to\nbe of masculine content. A powerful, though not unpleasant, odor ot\nantiseptic rushed out to greet me\nwhen I opened the door. The odor\ncame from a rumpled smock that\nhung by its collar io the back of\nthe door. Mr. Horace's room, I deduced, feeling very professional Indeed; And Mr. Horace owned ten\npairs ot shoes, neatly polished and\nneatly arranged on a shelf below\nhis suits and coats.\nSo far I had not discovered anything sensationally startling. Just\nshoes ahd more shoes and one\nbrief note of undecided importance.\nWhat Mac hoped to gain by my\nsearch was beyond me.\nI hesitated a long time before entering the next apartment. Mac\nhad not said anything about skipping this particular room, and so,\nWith my heart In my mouth, I went\nInside. The shades were tightly\ndrawn. I did my duty in double\ntime and not until i was safely In\nthe corridor did I permit myself so\nmuch as a. tremble. Not that I believe in ghosts and such! But nevertheless the atmosphere of Mrs.\nHorace's bedroim hid been a trifle too unearthly to suit my taste.\nI hed now reached the head of\nthe front stairs leading upward to\nthe third story. I made up my mind\nto visit the servants' ((barters before tackling the remainder of those\non the second floor.\nThe stair, though, slightly narrower and darker, wu a duplicate\npf that which ran from the first to\nthe second story. I had reached; I\nthink, the third or fourth step of\nthe lower section when' I heard a\nsound that stopped me. Someone\nWat coming down trom above \u2014\ntomeone whose thoes squeaked!\nAn eternity passed before the\nowner of those shoes came into\ntight. With my eyes ponj*lii|Jrom\nmy head. I waited, i do not know\nwhat11 expected to tee\u2014iBhie sort\nof firo-eating monster, I guess\u2014\nand I burst into helpless, hysterical laughter as a pair of razor-\ncreased trousers followed .by an\nImmaculate gray waistcoat emerged from the,gloom.\n\"Beg pardon, nusiP The monster paused beside me. It had a\nsquare, anxious face from which\nblue eyes peered worriedly, into\nmine.\n\"Ohl Ohl\" I could not stop laughing. \u2022\n\"It there anything wrong, miss?\"\nI shook my head. With my hand\nto my mouth, I stlffled my mirth.\nI took a deen breath. \"Thought of\nsomething funny!\" I gasped'idiotically.\n\"Indeed, miss?\" The blue eyes\nblinked in tudden alarm; the razor-\ncreased trousers edged distantly\ntrom me. Why\u2014the mtln thought I\n|.was. silly. I swallowed convulsively. The comers .of my mouth\nswitched once or tyloe before I\nmanaged to regain complete control of myself.\nI said coquettishly: \"i haven't\nseen you around before.\"\n\"No?\"  He  regarded  me uncertainly.\n\"Do you Belong, in, the house?\"\n\"Not exactly, miss. I Valet one of\nthe gentlemen _uests.\n\"Do you?\" i smiled ravlshingly,\nand sidled closer to him. Strangely, this seemed to increase his\nfright; he moved as tar as possible\nfrom me. \"Mr. Jeffries, perhaps?\"\n\"Count Onlni, miss.\" -\n\"Oh, the foreign gentleman!\" I\nwas properly impressed. \"Fancy\nvaleting royalty!\"\nFor The first time my monster\ntrailed. \"Royalty, if you'll excuse\nme, mist, Is not all its cracked up\nto be.\"\nNo?\" I eyed him reproachfully.\nYou don't mean itl The count looks\never to generous\"\n\"Humph!\" The valet snorted. Evidently I had touched a sore spot.\n'\u25a0Generous When it pleases him to\nbe, miss, and that's a fact    .\nI made sympathetic noises \"I\nsupposed gentlemen treated their\nvalets as ladies treat their maids\u2014\nyou know\u2014give them things, like\nclothes and shoe*\u2014''\n\"Not until they tfe all wore out\nmitt. That's why I was bowled\nover, so to speak, when he handed\nme a brand-new pair of shoes this\nmorning\u2014\"\n\"ShoesI\"\n\"Yes, miss.\" He glanced at his\nfeet \"A perfect fit too. I can't understand lt!\"\n\"Well!\" It wai all I could do to\nhold my voice to the casual note.\n\"They do iqueak a little\u2014I daresay\nyou notice that?\"\n\"Annbylng, miss?\" .\n\"Oh, nothing to  speak  of\u2014-but\nyou know how gentlemen are! If\nyour count is one with nerves\u2014\"\n\"He has a  nasty  temper,\" the\nvalet admitted. \"Likely as not the\nsqueak bothered him\u2014but a bit of\ngrease on the soles will fix that.\"\n\"Really?   WeU,  I must be getting on.\"\n\"Must you, miss?\" He sounded\nregretful.\nI nodded. \"I have my work to\ndo.\"\n\"Will I see you again, miss?\"\n\"Probably;   I'll   be   around.\"   I\nsmiled my Sweetest.\n\"What's your name, by the wayr\"\nI added as ah afterthought\n\"Ludwig, miss. And yours?\"\n\"Elsie.\"\n\"My mother's name was Elsie.\"\nhe said mournfully, and my lips\nbegan to twitch again.\n\"So long, Ludwig,\" I said, and\nran down the itairs. At the landing I glanced backward. Ludwig\nwas staring after me, grinning fatuously. I had made a conquest!\nImpulsively I blew him a kiss.\nPoor Ludwig! He would not be loving me Ions! Not after Mac Mclntyre got hold of Him!\nIn the-., housekeeper's dining\nroom Mac and Phil were In the act\nOf rising from the table. They looked smug and well fed. I hated them!\nI nabbed a roll from the table\nand gnawed furiously.\n\"Easy, girl!\" cautioned Mac. \"Remember your figure.\" I tcorned\nto reply; my month was too full!\nThe defective patted hit protruding stomach. \"Best meal I ever ate,\nElsie. Too bad your doctor put you\non a diet!\"\n\"There are other things In life\nbesides food!\" I retorted complacently. \"Shoes, for example!\"\n\"Sheet?\" He registered mild astonishment. \"Shoes?\",\n\"Yes, ihoes. Squeaky shoes!\"\n\"Eh? You found them?\"\n\"O,cou\u00bb..\",w,d.lr,lv.ndbl,\nAuxiliary Natal\nEagles Celebrates\n10th Anniversary\n' NATAL, B. C. - The tenth anni-\nvenary of the Ladles auxiliary ot\nthe Natal Fraternal Order of Eagles\nNo. 1804 was commemorated at the\nLegion hall at Michel ebruary 11\nin,a banquet and social. Some 60\nmemben, hoth listers and brothers,\nsat down tea well spread banquet.\nThe toast was said by Sister Mrs.\nJ. Mitchell, president which was\nretpohdM by J. Parks, vice-president ot the Michel Eagle lodge.\nImmediately after the banquet a\nsocial wat held, this Included bingo,\n.whist-drive and carpet-ball. Refreshments were servtd. The music\nfor dancing was supplied by C. Koz-\nler, accordionist, and Mrs. D. Thcw-\nlis, pianist Selections trom a community song sheet were well ertjoy-\ned. The four lady winners during\nthe whist were Mrs. McGinnis, Mrs.\nJ. Mitchell, Mrs. D. Thewlii and\nMrs. W. Thomas, while the four men\nwinners were Jock Mitchell, S.\nHughes, John Mitchell and W. Doot-\nson.\nVancouver Woman Asks\nSpouse Presumed Doad\nVANCOUVER. Feb. 17 (CP) -\nA petition by Mrs. Minnie Springett\nof Vancouver, asking tor an order\nEresuming the death of her hus-\nand, William Springett four years\nago in Melbourne, Atislrallia, today was before the supreme court\nMrs. Springett said her husband\nwould be 46 if living but she has\nnot seen or heard from him since\nshe took up residence In Canada\nnearly 12 years ago after visiting\nher parents in Edmonton. He was\nto have Joined her the same year,\nshe said.\nBRISTOL, England (CP)-Firat\nwoman to hold the post in the Devon and Somerset Hunt, Miss B. K.\nAbbott has been appointed joint\nMaster of Staghounds.\nInto another roll. \"When I detect,\ngentlemen, I detect.\n\"Well!\" And the admiration tn\nhis voice wai io gratifying that I\nfound my ill humor vanishing.\n\"Where are they?\" he demanded\neagerly.\n\"At the present moment they repose upon the feat- ot one Ludwig,\nvalet to Count Orslni.\"\n\"Orslntl\" he exclaimed, and I\nknew I had rung the bell. Whatever he had been expecting, It was\nnot thli. \"You're dead certain?\"\n\"Deadl With my own ears I\nheard them; with my own eyes 1\nsaw them. The count presented\nthem to Ludwig this morning.\"\n\"So! And let that be a lesson to\nyou, Mclntyre,\" he said ruefully.\nIt never pays to form theories In\nmurder cases!\" < .\n\"I\u2014\" I began when Mrs. Greely\ncame Into the room.\n\"The police have returned.'t. she\nsaid, and we returned to the library.\n(To Be Continued)\nSocial...\nBULL RIVER\nBULL RIVER, B. C. \u2014< Mr. and\nMrs. A. Damstrom have returned,\nfrom Jaffray. , '-'\nJ. Martlnoi of Wardner wat a\nvisitor here.\nMr. Battenby and H. Brett of Ah*\nerfeldle were visitors here.\nJack Zaharo of Kelowna lt a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. R. Graf.\nMr. Kalina of Aberfeldie is a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. Peterson.\nHoward Johnson left for his homt\nin Reglna Wednesday.\nJohn Evenwn visited Jaffray.\nArvid Damstrom has left for\nJaffray.\nMisses Marjorie and Isobel Douglas, Otcar Durval and Bob Charles;\nattended the Junior Red Cross at'\nWardner. ,\nMrs. Dillon and ions, Ernie and,\nPete, Mrs. J. Flodin, Bob Charles\nand Oscar Durval motored to Fort\nSteele.\nMiss I. Maltman visited her par* J\nents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Maltman in\nFernie last week-end.\nLouli Savorle was a patient in\nthe Cranbrook hospital.\nMrs. Savorie wai a Cranbrook\nvisitor.\nJim Ross visited Cranbrook Tuesday.\nBULL RIVER, B.C.-Mr. Rankin\nand A. Laidlaw of Cranbrook wart f\nvisitors hert.\nMiss I. Maltman visited friends\nin Kimberley. ,,  . i\nRalph Snow bt Aberfeldi spent\nthe week-end in Fernie.\nMrs. Moan held a quilting bee. j\nThose who attended were Mrs. DUm\nlon, Mri. Ron Mrs. Flodin, Mrs. I\nJ. Ross, Miss Mary Dow, and Mist J\nI. Maltman. Tea was served.\nMiss Vera Dawson of Fort Steele J\nis a guest of Mrs. C. Dillon.\nMisses Isobel and Marjorie Douglas,   Bob   Charles,- Vera   Dawson, I\nFred Graf and Peter Dillon motor*!\ned to Wardner.\nOscar Dorval left for Golden.'\nMn. A. T. Damstrom entertained I\nMrs. J. Flodin .and son, Willie, Mario I\nCostanzo and A. Damstrom.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Eimer and daugh* 1\nter, Vergina\/ and Mary Dow, were\n\u25a0 guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gunner Pet* [\nerson.\nMr. and Mrs. A. McDonald, Mr.I\nand Mrs. V. Costanzo and Claude |\nMcDonald motored to Galloway.\nR. Graf and son, Vern, Mr. Negari I\nand Bob Charles motored to Cran*\nbrook.: ;,\nBIARRITZ (CP)-Marklng th\u00ab 1\n50th anniversary of Queen Victor*,!\nla's first sojourn lh this South f\nFrance resort a inonument to her ]\nMajesty will be unveiled here April 13. \u00bb\u00bb\n^Babi\/sCold\nHelp end It quicker\nWithout \"dosing\".\nCHECK YOURSELF\nFOR THESE COMMON SIGNS OF\nACID INDIGESTION\n1      D Heartburn\n\u25a1 \"Add\" Headaeh*.\nI      D Nausea\n(J Sour Stomach Ufa\n1-    nNoAppe\u00bb\u00bb-\u00bb\nQ \"Oat\"           Wt\n!         \u25a1 Tired Peeling In Morning         JJH\nH      \u25a1 \"logglneM1\ni                             <lli\nIf You have any of these Symptoms\u2014and suspect Acid\nIndigestion as the Cause \u2014Lost No Time in \"Alkaliting\" I\nthe Quick Easy \"Phillips'\" Way '\nDon't be alarmed if- you get a tow\n\"tcore\" on the above symptoms \u25a0>-\nand suspect over-acidity at the cause.\nFor now there it a way to relieve\n\"add indigestion\"\u2014with almost incredible speed\u2014a way that is simple\nto do \u2014and costs but a few pennies.\nWhat you do it take 2 teaipoonfuls\nof Phillips' Milk of Magnesia 30\nminutes after meals. OR - take 2\nPhillips' Milk ot Magnesia Tablets,\nthe exact equivalent.\nResults ate amazing. Often you get\nPHILLIPS' fAilk of Magnesia?\nT\nrelief in a few mlnutet. Nausea and upset distress disappear. It produces nO\ngas to embarrass yottandolfendothers.\n*Try it\u2014.bull be glad you did. Get\na bottle of liquid 1'hillips' Mil* of\nMagnesia for home use and a box of\nPhillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablet! to\ncarry with you. But - see that any\nbox or bottle you accept it clearly\nmarked \"PHiUips\"'\nMilk of Magnesia.\n ,\u2014,\u2014, _\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELION. B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNING, FEB. 18, 1959,\n9&\\\nThe Last\nDAY\nOFOURANNUAL\nHigh-grade footwear for Men\n\u2022nd Women offered at low\n.\"clean-up\" prices! All styles!\n\u2022 Patents! Suedes! Calfs!\n'\u00ab Platforms and High Heels!\n\u2022 Draped and Laced-In\nTypes!\n\u2022 Shoes for Sport and\nDress!\n\u2022 Wing Tip and Plain Toes!\n\u2022 Black and Brown Included!\n.ANDREW\n&COMPANY\n.\"Leaders in Footfashion\"\nGREENFORD, England (CP). \u2014\nForeman of a glass-making crew,\n8. Martindale was crushed to death\nunder 18 tons of sand when he fell\nIn a mixer.\nx&ss&ssi&iSKsssMMmss&smix\nPRINTED SILK DRESSES\nSizes 14 tb 20, 34 to 44. <!JQ AC\n\"Weed at *OO.VO\nlilady's Fashion\n449\nBaker\nShoppe\nPhone\n874\n\u00ab$5*\ntsessss&t&xssst\nWASHING MACHINES\nREPAIRED\nFull line of repairs and wringer\nrolls in stock. Prompt and ef-\n[ \/ fident work guaranteed. Free\nestimates given.\nBEATTY BROS. LTD.\n1  NELSON FACTORY BRANCH\nfhone 91 321 Baker St\nShow Thai Democracies Belter Than\nDictatorships, Urges Miss Johnston\nVisitor Speaks on British Foreign Affairs to\nCanadian Club\ning in turn with isolation, alliances,\nregional pacta, and collective security. In arriving at a definite-policy,\nshe said that the people should first\nconsider what they would light for:\nself-defence, the empire, civil and\nreligious liberties, and against un-\ne-ovoked aggression. She emphases ltot tEere, were always exceptions, as in the case of Britain\nrespecting Czecho-Slovakia. She\nsaid Chamberlain's policy In that\nmatter was right      '\nThe speaker highly praised the\nactions of Prime .Minister Cham-\nreblaln during the recent crisis. The\ntime would come, however, that it\nwould be necessary to combat the\nthreat of dictatorship! and when\nthat time came, she hoped that the\npeople would have the actual issue\nand cause clear in their minds in\norder that all would pull together.\nThis would be the only way that\ncivilization could be saved.\nUrging British people to spread\nthe wUl that keeps the Britlih Km;\nplre together, and to show unsettled\nnations such as there are In Europe\nthat democracies could be far more\nefficient than dictatorship!. MlasjW*\nIce C. Johnston, M.A., gave a highly\nenlightening address on current\nworld attain and British torelp\npolicy when ahe spoke on \"The\nBritish Point ot View on Foreign\nAffairs\" to tthe Nelson Canadian\nclub in the Canadian Legion hall\nThursday evening. Miss Johnston,\nwhose home Is in Scotland, Is on her\nfirst Canadian visit and la making\na tour across the country speaking\nto Canadian clubs.\nThe speaker stated that British\ncountries had become so used to parliamentary government, that was\ngenerally smooth - running, that,\nwhen settling the affairs of other\ncountries, the British were usually\nwont to overlook the various kinds\nof difficulties that those other countries were under. Under the British system the party In power presented bills and the opposition offered amendments and thus British nations had continuity of government, Miss Johnston said.\nLEAGUE EXPtCTED\nTOO MUCH\nAfter the Great war had ended,\nthe League of Nations had demanded the highest ideals and good government within the countries with\nwhich the members dealt Thl\u00bb'\u00b0J\ncourse was wrong, for different\nsentiments existed in each of these\noppressed countries. Miss Johnston\nmentioned her visit to Belgrade,\ncapital of Yugoslavia, at which the\nroyal family lived apart from the\ncity in closely-guarded palaces for\nthey had dangers lurking all around\nthem,\nCanadians and Americans lived so\nclosely and harmoniously together\nthat they could not realize the suspicion that existed in countries in\nwhich there was always a tense atmosphere.\nIn speaking of the recent crisis\nInvolving Germany and Czechoslovakia regarding the Sudeten\nGermans, Miss Johnston stated that\nthe Sudetens were greatly annoyed\nby the silly Czech attitude towards\nall Germans, the speaker relating\nseveral hostile relationships. Tho\nSudetens had grounds for complaint\nwhich Hitler, however, had exaggerated. Nevertheless the Czechs\ntreated the racial minorities better than several other European\ncountries did.\nGERMAN YOUTH REGIMENTED\nMiss Johnston gave a vivid account ot the program mapped out by\nthe German government for German youth. To visitors, however,\nGerman officials attempted to give\nthe good side only of their program,\nin order to spread their ideas. There\nwas too much. discipline, and the\nyoung Germans were not given a\nchance to think for themselves. In\nEngland and other British countries, a great deal of freedom was\ngiven to teachers, and In this way\nchildren did not grow up on a\ngiven pattern. Through presentations of a variety ot opinion the\nBritish could learn that would be\nthe right course\n\"We believe that natural leaders\nwill come to the fore ot their own\naccord,\" stated Miss Johnston. \"In\nGermany those mott physically fit\nreceive special courses by officials\nwith the Knowledge that soon they\nwill become leaders themselves.\nHowever, there ii a great need, and\nwe shall feel it in years to come,\nthat England should have more opportunity of physical development\nand technical education.\"\nIt was surprising, said the speaker, the way some people who knew\nso little tried to comment on world\naffairs. In a book entitled \"Inside\nEurope\", which was written In a\nbiased manner and also had Incorrect facts, \u2022 people gained these\nideas and thought they knew everything about current events. It was\nnecessary to read many books to le-\ncure the right Information concerning foreign affairs. Once a government was in power, the speaker\nadvocated support ot it and every\nfive years the people had an opportunity then to say whether they\nwanted lt any more.\nThen Miss Johnston spoke on policies which might be most suitable\nfor Britain, mentioning and deal-\nButcherteria News\nNELSON'S PREMIER MEAT MARKET\nSATURDAY ond MONDAY\nBREAKFAST\nBACON: Sliced\n,.,30c\nPOT ROASTS- f fLA\nVery beat, Ib *\">\"\nROLLED LAMB _I\\A\n8HOULDERS-Lb \"*T\nROLLED LEG VEAL        _\u00a3A\nROASTS-Lb  *+*\nROLLED SHOULDER       _I\\A\nVEAL ROASTS-Lb,  ****\nROLLED PRIME _\u00a3A\nRIB8-Lb  ***\nECCS: Grids A      OA\nlarge, per doi. ... Ovv\nLESS and LOINS of\nMUTTON-Lb\t\n25*\nBOILING\nFOWL: Lb. .\nROASTING\nCHICKS: Lb.\n20c\n24c\nBOILING BEEF\u2014\n3 Ibs\t\n8AUERKRAUT\u2014\n3 Ibi\t\n2M\nLARD IN BULK\u2014 21\u00abJ\nVEAL STEAKS- \u2022___*,\n2 lbs   .\u00ab*\nPORK 8TEAK8\u2014 AQA\nSIRLOIN STEAKS- _f_Ut\n2lba _ -W\nMINCED STEAK- <*__.\n2 lbs \u201e. \u2022\u2022**\nMUTTON CHOPS\u2014 \u25a0#__.\n2 ibs.  Wr\nHAMBURGER- _A_.\nLb  *\"r\nPURE PORK SAUSAGE-22|*\nBEEF and PORK %AA\n8AU8AGE-Lb  **M*\n8PARERIBS- aa_l\n2 Ib \u201e  3Jt\nBABY STILTON\nCHEESE: Each ..\n45c\nTHIRD GRADE\nBUTTER-4 Ibs.\nm\nBUTTER: First\nGrade, 3 Ibi.\n89c\nAYRSHIRE BACON-\nLb \t\n. 3M\nSPOKANE COTTAGE       ynA\n0HEE8E-Lb.  a*\"T\nVANCOUVER MUSH-       AQA\nROOMS-Lb.\nFRESH OYSTERS- *MA\nPint  Mr\nJELLIED VEAL\u2014.\nLb\t\nm\nmm\nPHONES 527*528\n...\nFREE DELIVERY\n\t\nIt would have been disastrous tt\nwar had been declared last September lor most people did not\nknow actually what was going on.\nShe felt that war would come at\na distant time as result of freedom\nof thought being suppressed In such\ncountries as Germany.\nMrs. A. T. Horswlll, who presided, welcomed Mn, A, R. McLean\nand Mrs. G. B. Alexander, formerly\not the Penticton and Revelstoke\nclubs respectively, to the Nelson organization, Mrs. L. S. Bradley briefly thanked Mlaa Johnston tor her\ntine address on a timely subject\nMiss Roberta Robertson and Miss\nBeda Moen, who were guest artists,\nrendered two beautiful pieces In\nvocal duet form, Accompanied by\nMrs. C. W. Tyler on the jlano, the\ngirls sang Rathbone's \"God Sends\nthe Night\" and McDermid's \"If I\nKnew You and You .Knew Me.\"\nMrs. G. A. C. Walley played for\nthe singing of \"0 Canada\" and \"The\nKing\".\nSyrian Cabinet\nThreat lo Resign\nDAMASCUS, Syria, Feb. 17 (AP)\n\u2014The Syrian cabinet was reported\nto have decided to resign today as\nthe quarrel between the mandated\nstate ind the French government\nover Syrian Independence assumed\nserious proportions.\nThe government's decision to resign was said to have been made\nwhen the French high commissioner informed Premier Jamil Mardam\nBey that France had rejected a\nSyrian request for Immediate control of key state services.\nSome observers in Damascus feared the situation might flare into\nopen revolt against France. There\nwere disquieting reports that unofficial German and Italian aid\nhad been promised to Syrian nationalists if they took up arms.\nThe quarrel revolves about\nFrance's refusal to ratify the treaty\nof Sept 0, 1936, changing Syria\nfrom a mandated state to an Independent nation.\nFrench officials were said to feel\nthey must hold on to the strategic\narea at the eastern end of the Mediterranean at all costs as a base of\noperations in case ot war.\nHints Witness\nDenies Attempt\nDestroy Informer\nNEW. YORK, Feb. 17 (AP) -\nMagistrate Hulon Capshaw, a defence witness In the retrial\nof James Hines, Tammany district leader, on lottery-conspiracy\ncharges, today denied he had sought\nto destroy a \"stool pigeon\" whose\ninformation to police had Jeojard-\nized the operations of the $20,-\n000,000-a-year Dutch \u2022 Schultz policy lottery racket.\n\"Did you want this police \u25a0 Informant murdered?\" demanded\nDistrict Attorney Thomas Dewey.\nThe witness replied \"no\" after\nHines' attorney had moved vainly\nfor a mistrial.\nDewey's question was based On\nMagistrate Ca'pshaw's dismissal of\npolicy charges against \"Lulu\" Ros-\nenkranz, a Schultz bodyguard, arrested in 1933 after he had allegedly tossed a bundle containing thousands of policy slips from an automobile pursued by police.\nA \"stool pldgeon, it had been\nbrought out in the court hearing\nbefore Magistrate Capshaw, had informed police Rozenkranz was carrying policy slips.\n\"You asked the police officers\nwho arrested Rosekrantz why they\ndidn't subpoena their informant,\"\nDewey said. \"Don't you know police\ndon't bring their sources of Information into court!\"\n\"No, I don't,\" Capshaw replied.\n\"Isn't it a fact\" demanded Dewey, \"that the reason you wanted'this\ninformation brought into court was\nso that you could nave him destroyed because he was endangering the\nDutch Schultz policy banks?\"\nCapshaw cried out a denial.\nDewey then Injected the word\n\"murder\" into the fast-quickening\ncourtrom drama.\nThe chief defence counsel, Lloyd\nPaul Stryker, jumped to his feet\nand aiked Judge Charles Nott for\na mistrial\u2014nis eighth such request\nin Hines' second trial.\nStryker declared the \"murder\"\nquestion wai highly inflammatory\nand prejudicial.\nJudge Nott denied the motion, directing Capshaw to answer the\nquestion.\n\"No,\" the witness, said.\nCapshaw Insisted his only intention-in seeking to bring the \"stool\nSlgeon\" into court was to get all the\nlets.\nNegro 'Mikado' Cast\nto Play Broadway\nCHICAGO, Feb. 17 (AP). - The\nall-negro cast of the Federal Theatre project swing veslbn ot \"The\nMikado\" hu trucked its way to\nprivate employment.\nTwo Chicago producers decided\nto lift the 100 actors and actresses\ntrom the relief rolls and put them\non Broadway,\nANY SIZE ORDER WILL BE\nGREATLY APPRECIATED\n'\u25a0'   HILLYARD'8\nFairway Grocery\nPhone m      ,  Vie Crawford, Mgr.\nBy MRS. M, J. VIGNEUX\n'\u2022 Thuraday .slterneon, Mrs. R.\nC. Elliott entertained at a delightful tea at her home on Vernon\nstreet when she waa assisted by\nMrs. Gray Lawrence, who presided\nat the dainty tea table covered by\na Venice lace cloth centered by daffodils. Mrs. W. A. Hotson and Mrs.\nVincent Fink assisted by serving.\n\u2022 W. Hendrickson is. ta town\nfrom the Relief Arlington mine.\n\u2022 Miss A- E. (Toots) Houston,\nCentral \u25a0 apartments, has as her\nguest her nephew, Master Jack Bell\nof Park Siding, who will spend the\nweekend in Nelson,   .\n\u2022 Rev. Sullivan of Slocan Missions was In the city Thursday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. H. II. Home of\nSouth Slocan visited town yesterday.\ne Captain and Mrs. P. Hartrldge\nwere in the city from Balfour,\ne Mr. and Mrs. Lane ot Sheep\nCreek spent yesterday in Nelson. .\n\u2022 Shoppers in town yesterday\nincluded Mr .and Mrs. J. E. Riley\nof Bonnington.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. H. Stringer entertained the members of St. Saviour's\nW.A. at tea In the Memorial-hall\nThursday  afternoon,  when   those\n8resent were MVs. J. G. Holmes,\nIrs. F.  H.  Graham,  Miss H.   E.\nBloomer, Mrs. W. Calbick, Mrs. C.\nE. A. Simonds, Mrs. J. Draper, Mrs.\nF. H. Hewis, Mrs. E. M. Long and\nMrs. Leigh.\n\u2022 Mrs. G. G. Fair was ta town\nfrom Salmo yesterday.\ne J. Leduc ot the post office\nstaff has left to Visit his parents\nin Armstrong.\n\u2022 A most enjoyable evening was\nrnt at the home ot Mr. and Mrs.\nEmery, Josephine street, Wednesday night when a number of\nfriends surprised their daughter,\nMiss Audrey Emery, in honor of her\n18th birthday. The first part of the\nevening was spent in games and\ncontests, prizes being awarded to\nMiss Marjorie Todd, Wilbur Bentz\nand Roy Mann, after which dancing\nwas indulged in. Refreshments were\nserved from a prettily-decorated\ntable centered with red candles and\nvalentine favors, Mrs. J. A. Donnell\nand Mrs. L. M. Varner presiding.\nMrs. Emery was assisted In serving by Mrs. M. McRae. The Invited\nguests were Miss Jean Gibson, Miss\nGeorgina Williscroft Miss Jeannette\nV.'lnlaw, Miss Romatae Bentz, Miss\nMarjorie Todd, Miss Peggy Dunne tt\nMiss Iris Johannson, Miss Isobel\nMcRae, Miss Joan Broughton, Miss\nDoreen Long, Miss Murielle Whimster, Miss Audrey Emery, Colin\nBaker, Ross Armstrong, Jack Gray\nBobbie Andrew, George Russell\nHoward Campbell, Bill McEwan,\nNeil Russell, Wilbur Bentz, Kenneth McBride, John Huyck, George\nBishop, Roy Mann, and Bud Emery.\ne Mr. and Mrs. J. Buck ot Salmo spent yesterday In the city.\ne Mrs. B. B. Stallwood Nelson\navenue, Fairview, recently entertained members of' the Church ot\nthe Redeemer service club at her\nhome' when those present included\nMrs. W. J. Silverwood. Mrs. Cecil\nLambert Mrs. T. A. Carew, Mrs.\nReeve Harper, Mrs. T. Curtis, Mrs.\nN. Collett Mrs. J. P. Horswlll, Miss\nEva Massey, Mrs. L. Milburn, Mrs.\nAlex Tullock, Mrs. Clarence Ward\nand Miss Mary Shardelow. \u25a0'\n\u2022 Mr. and \u25a0 Mrs McPhee and\nbaby left for their home in Ymir\nafter visiting Mrs, M\u00abPhee's parents, Baker street\ne Samue. Bentley of Perry Siding visited town Thursday.\ne George PorteoUs and daughter\nof Queens Bay spent yesterday in\nNelson.\n\u2022 Mr. 'and Mrs. C. Nord and\nchild were In the city from Ymir\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in town Thursday\nincluded Mrs. H. Hawkins of Bonnington.\n\u2022 Mrs. V. McDowell of Salmo\nspent yesterday ta the city.\n\u2022 Shoppers in Nelson Included\nMrs. J. Jerome of Blewitt.\n\u2022 Mrs. Ferguson and daughters\nof Sunshine Bay visited Nelson\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Percy Dietrich is in town\nfrom the Relief Arlington.\n\u2022 Visitors in Nelson included\nJames Nicholson of Sheep Creek.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. D. Spiers, Elwyn street,\nis visiting relatives and friends at\nCreston.\nRossland Social..\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B. C.-A delightful\nValentine Tea sponsored by the\nCatholic Women's league held in the\nParish hall Tuesday afternoon. The\ntea table was covered with a lovely\necru lace cloth and centered with a\nsilver basket of red carnations,\nflanked by tall red tapers ta silver\nholders. Dainty Valentine dollies\nin the shape of hearts were placed\nat the individual tea tables. Mrs.\nW. G. Mara poured, while Mrs. J.\nMilligan as general convenor was\nassisted ta serving by Mrs. G. Dyson, Mrs. Corrado, Mrs. Fourt, Mrs:\nCamozzl, Mrs. Bryan, and Mrs. F.\nLavaratto. Mrs. Rose Albo, vocilist\nsoloist rendered several selections\nduring the afternoon, accompanied\nby Mrs. S. Simcock at the piano and\nMr. Hobson on the violin.\nThe floor lamp, whose net proceeds will be given ta aid of the\nnew wing of the Mater Misericordiae hospital, was won by H. Beck,\nKnights of Columbus lodge sponsored one of the outstanding social\nfunctions of the season, when they\nheld their annual Valentine ball\nin the Knights of Pythias hall, Tuesday evening. Balloons, streamers,\nconfetti and paper hats added an\nair of festivity to the occasion, while\ndainty fans were given as favors\nto the ladies. Proceeds will be\ngiven in aid of the new wing of\nthe hospital.\nGilbert Jorgenson has returned\nfrom a holiday spent in the prairie\nprovinces.\nRev. D. S, Catchpole returned\nThursday from Penticton, where\nhe spent several days on business.\nRoland Stead' who attended tSe\nfuneral of his father, the late Walter Stead, returned Wednesday, to\nhis home in Vancouver.\nGeoffrey Woodhams is spending a\nweeks' holiday with friends and\nrelatives in Victoria and Vancouver.\nBritain Tightens\nGuard on Warship\nBuilding Secrets\nLONDON, Feb. 17 (AP)-The\nadmiralty, it was disclosed today,\nhas tightened Its safeguards on secrets of the greatest peacetime warship program in history following\npublication in Germany of details\nof Britain's new battleship, the\nKing George V.\nA' government spokesman indicated little concern was felt concerning these particular details, given recently in the German \"pock-\netbook of war fleets.\" But Geoffrey\nShakespeare, financial secretary of\nthe admiralty, told a qUestlonaire\nin the house of commons Wednesday the admiralty would \"take\nsuch steps as are , practicable to\nascertain whether any unauthorized\nleakage occurred.\nMr. Shakespeare said much of\nthe information published in Germany was Inaccurate.\nThe King George V., first.British capital ship to be launched in\n14 years, is scheduled to slide down\nth eways at Newcastle Feb. 21 with\nKing George VI presidlg at the\nceremony.   ,\nThe King George V. is of 35,000\ntons. A s&tership, the Prince of\nWales, is nearing the launching\nstage, and the Anson, Jellicoo and\nBeatty are under construction. The\nLion and Temeraire, according to\nJane's fighting ships, authoritatively naval annual, are to be laid\ndown early this year and probably\nwill be about 40,000 tons.\nDemocrats Hope\nF.D.R. Will Smooth\nParty Difficulties\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 17 (AP) -\nWorried about the possibilities of\na split ta their ranks before the\n1940 presidential elections, several\nDemocratic senators said today they\nhoped President Roosevelt would\nbid for party peace when he returns to the United States next\nmonth from his Caribbean cruise.\nOne anti-administration democrat suggested the President might\ngo far toward healing party wounds\nif he would have a series of heart-\nto-heart talks with senators who\nhave opposed some of his measures\nbut who desire party peace.\nDemocratic leaders in the house\nalso have been concerned over\nparty difference. A subcommittee\nof the democratic congressional\ncampaign committee has drawn up\na questionnaire which it will send\nto party house members and defeated democratic candidates asking what can be done to prevent\nparty losses ta 1940.\nHitler Warning to\nReckless Drivers\nBERLIN. Feb. 17 (AP)-Chan-\ncellor Hitler today branded reckless driving a \"crime against the\nnation. The state is determined to\nexterminate without mercy all road\ngangsters, highway bandits, car\nstealers and murderers.\"\nHe said in the past six years\nthere had been as many killed by\ncars ta Germany as were killed In\nthe Franco-Prussian war In 1870-71,\nadding that \"this is an untenable\nsituation.\"\n; He spoke at Germany's auto show.\nAustin Campaign for\nMoral Rearmament\nTurns to Soccerites\nLONDON, Feb. 17 (CP Cable)-\nH. W. (Bunny) Austin's campaign\nfor \"moral rearmament\" Is being\ncarried to England's football crowds.\nWhere Arsenal and Chelsea meet\nSaturday at Highbury in the feature\natraction of the English Football\nleague the huge crowd will hear a\nbroadcast by the famous tennis\nplayer.\nAustin's appeal will be backed\nup by Capt. George Eyston, holder\nof the world's land speed record and\nLen Harvey, popular English boxer.\nIn the opinion of the Davis cup\nstar world unrest is caused by selfishness and to combat this he Is\ncalling for the strengthening of\nmoral principles.\nUNLESS WHEAT PROBLEM\nSOLVED FARMERS TO BE\nREDUCED TO PEASANTRY\nMOOSE JAW, Feb. 17 (CP) -\nUnless the wheat distribution problem is solved enabling farmers to\nmarket their grain at a profitable\nrate, status of western Canada\nfarmers will be that of peasantry,\nsaid J. H. Wesson, president of the\nSaskatchewan wheat pool.\nRotarians Will\nHelp Boy Scouts\nWith Badge Work\nRotary club memben will assist\nBoy Scouts ot Nelson with their\nproficiency badge work, lt waa decided .at a meeting at the home of\nR. I It. Brown, Scoutmaster, when\nAlderman C. W. Tyler, Westman\nMotion and Dr. F. P. Sparks of the\nRotary club Boy's Welfare committee met the Scout and Cub leaders.\nFirst ciass will open next Wednesday night at the Nelson Business\nCollege, when Constable C. W.\nHouse of the provincial police will\ninstruct the boys ta photography.\nThe course will take one night a\nweek for four or five weeks. Constable House Is coaching the boys\nta conjunction with the Rotary club.\nSuch subjects as photography,\npublic health and pathftadtag, etc.,\nwill be handled with all the Scout\ntroops in the city as one unit and\ninstruction ta such badges as musician, tatetpreter, etc., will be given\nindividually.\nThere are 52 proficiency, badges\nta Scout work, and it Is suggested\nby the leaders that parents be present with their boys'next Wednesday to help the boys choose in\nwhich subjects they wish instruction.\nThose present besides the three\nRotarians were Commissioner J. M.\nDronsfield; H. F. Wallace, representing the Nelson District Boy\nScout association; and Scoutmaster\nL. P. Walton, R. R, Brown, Vic\nHoward, and James Cornfield, and\nCubmaster D. L. Ure, W. J. Leigh,\nSid Wade and Joe Doyle.\nGUARD DIRECTOR'S\nHOME AFTER GETS\nKIDNAP    THREATS\nBEVERLY HILLS, Calif., Feb. 17\n(AP)\u2014The home of Norman Taurog\nnoted director of child motion pictures, was under guard today because of a telephoned threat to kidnap his daughter, six-year-old Pat\nTaurog, police Chief Charles Blair\ndisclosed.\nBlair added that Taurog was inclined to consider the threat light\nbut Mrs. Taurog was reported on\nthe verge of collapse.\nBy the end of this year, New York\ncity will have 12,000 traffic signals.\nLADIES - GIRLS\nLEARN THE MOVER METHOD\nOF BEAUTY CULTURE\nA PLEASANT, PROFITABLE\nPROFESSION FOR GIRLS\nLearn under recognized Moler\nmaster   instructors.   To   learn\nmore, enroll now with the Moler\nschool that gets best results.\nTrain by same Moler .System as\ntaught to thousands of most successful   hairdresslng   graduates\nworking in New York, Chicago,\nHollywood,   Paris   and   world's\nlargest cities. Write us before\njoining any school. Practical, expert training guaranteed.\nThe University of Beauty\nCulture'\nMoler Hairdresslng\nSchool\nEnroll now. Reasonable rates.\n303 West Hastings St.\nVANCOUVER, B, C.\nB. Gooch, Manager All Moler\nB. C. Schools.\nDONT FORGET THAT\nANNIVERSARY\nSEND FLOWERS\nKootenay Flower Shop\nJ. H. Coventry, Prop.\n364 Baker St. Phone 962,\n\u00ab3\u00abiK$tt3S*\u00ab$'3al.*4*\u00bb&$&3\u00ab$$'$&\nEXCLUSIVE LINE OF\nLADIES' WEAR\ngditk CL CahJwtiwaL\n6(9 Ward St. Phone 070\nRADIO OWNERS\nSave now, Improve reception and\ntone as much as 30 per cent by\nfactory method and an oscilloscope.\nYour radio picked up and thoroughly overhauled at lowest prices.\nNelson Electric Co.\n374 Baker St. Phone 260\n.1 iliilllliiiiiiiilllllillllllllllllllllillllliilililililllllllllliilllllilllllllllllilllllllllli\nIntroducing\nSpJwq. SfykL\nBIEGE FOX JIGGER\nWell made in smart new style\nALASKA SABLE JIGGER\nAs popular as ever\nBROADTAIL BOLEROS\nBecher Broadtail for quality\nMUSKRAT COATS: Reg. $165 now $145\nMUSKRAT COATS: Reg. $120 now $100\nBEAVER COAT: Reg. $295 now $215\nSILVER FOXES\n$30       $40       $50      $75\nAll furs have Increased 20% so buy now and save!\nMalcolm's Furs\n659 Baker St. Nebcin Phone 960\nAiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiliiiiiiiiliii\nr it\n-PAGE PIVI\nOamA0$%)ti0nA\nSPECIAL'\nCLEARING\nPRICES\nOn These Useful\nSmallwares\nPull Skein Embroidery, Crystal and\nArtsyl Rope, 3 for ;    5f\nPrincess Pat Hair nets, each    8ff\n27\" and 36\" shoe laces, pair   9.\nMending Wool Plaits .'    8.\nBobby Pins and Hair Pins, all makes and sizes ..   5?\nBias Tape, (6 yards)   10?\n,'\/\u25a0 in elastic in white ; 10?\nSafety Pins, all sizes   G?\nBUTTERICK  PATTERNS   IN  STOCK\nfarmanlffunt (f\nPHONE 200\nBAKER ST.\nCanadian Flyer Is\nKilled in Crash\nOXFORD, Eng., Feb. 17 CP Cable\n\u2014Flying officer Carleton Allenby\nRoss of Halifax, N. S., waa killed\nlast n'gl>t when a Royal Air Force\nplane he was piloting crashed in a\nlieldi near Brampton, Oxfordshire,\nRoss was attached to the R. A.\nF. training base at Brlze Norton,\nOxfordshire. He entered the R. A.\nF. under the Royal Canadian Air\nForce's trained pilot scheme.\nKootenay Valley Dairy\nA QUART OF MILK A DAY\nFOR EACH CHILD\nA PINT OF MILK A DAY\nFOR EAQH ADULT\nROYAI, VISIT TO S.A.\nNOT TILL FUTURE DATE\nCAPE TOWN, S.A., Feb. 17 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014The question of a visit by\nthe King and Queen to this country\n\"as soon as it might be found convenient for them\" was raised In the\nhouse of commons at question time\ntoday.\n\"This is not an appropriate time \u2022\nto  raise  such  a  question,\"  said\nPrime Minister J. B. M. Hertzog\nIn replying to a questioner who\nhad asked.\nIF YOUR WATCH\nNEEDS REPAIRING\nSend It in by Parcel Post\nIt will receive our prompt attention\ndtcuwsy'A tywsdlsM\n487 Baker St        Nelson, B, C.\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAY ond MONDAY - Feb. 18*20\nPURITY OATS: Pkg  16?\nCOFFEE: Blue Ribbon, i Ibt, .... 75?\nSHREDDED WHEAT: Pkg.  lis?\nRED PLUMS: 2 tint  251\nLIQUID VENEER: 60c bottle    49?\nCOCOANUT: Long shreds, Ib 25?\nGRAHAM WAFERS: Manning's, pkg 19?\nPORK AND BEANS: Helm, large tin   20?\nCUSTARD POWDER: Empress, 2 pkgs.  17?\nCLOTHES PEGS: (Spring), pkg. of 3 doz 13?\nPEANUT BUTTER: No. 2 tins  \u00bb9?\nCHOCOLATE BUDS: Lb.  25?\nSWEET JUICY ORANGES\n36fior-59c 24\u00abor-59c 24fior-75c\n8PINACH-\n2 Ibs -\nPINEAPPLE-\nEaoh .. *\t\nNEW CABBAGE\u2014\nLb.\t\nCELERY-\nLb \u2014\nGRAPEFRUIT-\n7 for\t\n50.\n10.\nORAPEFRUIT-\n6 for .....\nLETTUCE-Large,\n2 for\t\nCARROTS, BEETS-        _QA\n3 bunehes  \"Wr\nOLD CABBAGE-\nLb\t\nTURNIP8, CARROTS-    \u2022*_*_\u00ab\n8 Ib \u2022**\u2022\n29*\n4(\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235\nFREE DELIVERY\n1    '!   .     V\nbi BRADLEY'S \u00a3\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying .for Saturday and Monday\nSpecial Tender Beef\nT-Bone Roasts: Ib. .. 30?\nT-Bont Steaks: Ib. .. 30?\nRound Bone Roast: Ib. 15,?\nRolled Rib Roast: Ib. . 25?\nBeef Oven Roast: Ib. . 18?\nJuicy Round Steaks: Ib. 22?\nLogs Real Lamb: Ib. ..30?\nLamb Loin Roast: Ib. . 30?\nLamb Chops: Ib 23?\nLamb Stewing: 2 Ibs. . 27?\nVeal Steaks: 2 Ibs. . 35?\nVeal Fillet Roast: Ib. .28?\nVeal Rump Roast: Ib.. 20?\nPork Steaks: 2 Ibt. .49?\nPork Oven Roast: Ib. . 24?\nPork Leg Roast: Ib. . 28?\n*ork Spareribs: Fresh,\n2 Ibs 38?\nroung Chicken: Ib. .28*\nGood Fowl: lb.' .... 25?\nBreakfast Bacon:\nFresh sliced, Ib. .. 30?\nOysters: Fresh pint jar 55?\nCreamery Butter\nFirst Grade: 3 Ibs. .. 89?\nThird Grade: 2 Ibs. .. 51?\nEggs: Fresh A large,\n2 dozen  ........ 03?\nCash Specials\nVeal Oven Roast: Ib. 17*\nBrisket Boil: 3 Ibs. .25?\nHamburger: Good,\nIb 10?\nRolled Beef Pot Roast:\nlb.  17?\nBreakfast Sausage:\n2 Ibs 28?\nPure Lard: 2 Ibs. . 23?\nTenderiied Picnics:\nIb 20f\nTenderized Cottage\nRolls: Ib 25\nNippy Ontario Choc o:\nIb  28c-\nPork Liver: 2 Ibs. .25?\nWhitefish: New stock,\nlb. 13?\nCod: Fresh, Ib. ... 22?\n PAGs*    \u00abIA<\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING. FEB. 18, 1939.\n\u2014-\nERIC'S   MOTOR  SERVICE  UNDER\nNEW FIRM TAKES OVER FORMER\nCAPITOL MOTORS LOCATION\nA new automobile firm officially opens its doors for business in\nNelson today -*\u2022 Sowerby-Cuthbert Limited. In the new firm J. Eric\nSowerby, operator of Eric's Motor Service for several years, is jolped\nby Gordon G. Cuthbert, formerly with the Begg Motor company of\nVancouver. They have taken over the Capitol Garage, which will be\nknown as Red Star Motors.\nmm\n;\nTEXACO\nTAKES PLEASURE IN\nAnnouncing\nTHE APPOINTMENT OF\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT Limited\nAS NEW OPERATORS OF RED STAR MOTORS\nThe Texas Co. of Canada, Ltd.\nDISTRIBUTORS OF TEXACO PETROLEUM PRODUCTS\nm\n\u2014\n=\nm\nIM\nSowerby-Cuthbert Limited has the agency\nfor Podge and DeSoto cars and Dodge commercial vehicles, and in addition to these will\nhandle used cars and trucks. A well-eqijipped\nmachine shop and parts department are features of the garage setup, being designed to\nprovide all-round service!\nTHE PRINCIPALS\nMr. Sowerby has been in the garage business since 1920, at Calgary and Cranbrook\nbefore coming to Nelson In 1924. From that\ntime until 1933 he was with the Nelson Transfer, and then opened his own shop on Josephine street. In 1935 he opened a new shop at\n295 Baker street.\nWide experience in all branches of the\nauto business has been gained by Mr. Cuthbert since he started in the business at Winnipeg in 1921 with Consolidated Motors. He\njoined the Begg Motor Company at Vancouver\nin the spring of 1926 and from Jhat time on\nworked in all departments. For the past two\nyears he has been wholesale representative,\nworking out of Kelowna.\nTHE STAFF\nFrank McClements is a member <?f the\nsales department. He takes to Sowerby-Cuthbert a wealth of sales'experience and extensive\nknowledge of the Kootenay district and its\nresidents. Mr. McClements has been associated with a number of well known firms in\nTrail and Nelson, having been engaged in the\nbusiness since 1924. A former resident of Nelson, he went to Trail for several years and\nreturned to Nelson in 1932.\nThomas Sowerby, chief mechanic, has\nbeen in the business for 15 years, gaining\nextensive experience with, the Nelson Transfer, then with Woodward's Limited at Vancouver, and for the past five years with Eric's\nMotor Service.\nCompleting the staff are T. G. Jones, bookkeeper; A. J. Hesse and George Davis,\nmechanics.\nCare and Treatment of\n, Youthful Offenders\nAddress given by Hon'. Cordon S. Winner, K.C..\nAttorney-General of British Columbia, before the Washington State Legislature at Olympia, Wash., Feb. 8.\nMy friends:   .*\nDuring tht past quarter pf a century I have paid many Visits to this\ngreat state of Washington. I look\nback With pleasurable memories to\nthe many courtesies and kindnesses\nI have received from its citizens\u2014\nmany of them I am proud to treasure among my most intimate\nfriends. We In British Columbia d\u00ab\nnot look upon the United States and\nparticularly Washington state as a\nforeign country In the ordinary\nsense at all, but as a friendly neighbor whose manner of living, whose\nconcept ot justice and humanity\ncoincides with our own\u2014and whose\ninterest In the preservation of world\npeace and in progressive measures\nfor- the advancement under the\ndemocratic system, of aims and\nIdeals common to both peoples,\nwould tend to unite us even had we\nnot In the case of a great number\nof our citizens the blood of a common ancestry flowing through our\nveins.\nIt is not a surprise therefore, but\nnothing has given me more pleasure\nthan to learn of the reception your\ncitizens are giving the legislation\nproposed by Senator Reardon. for\nthe rehabilitation of youth. I am\nproud and happy to have been requested to address you in this great\nstate In relation to the experience\nof your northern neighbor, British\nColumbia, In this connection.\nPREVAILING SYSTEM\nARCHAIC\nIt is my, opinion .that the prevailing system of treatment of youthful offenders, certainly in Canada,\nand I beltev also largely In these\nUnited States, has been archaic, a\nrelic of medieval time*:\u2014failing ,to\nreform the criminal, failing to protect society. I say this with all respect for the many fine capable men\nwe have in charge of our jails. I\nmake no attack on these men. It is\nthe system that I attack.\nIf you will consult your prison\nrecords you will find thit 80 to 90\nper cent of your young offenders\nare the product of broken homes-\nmany are orphans, and many in even\nworse cases as a result of unfortunate home environment and conditions.\nMost ot then) faced the world untrained, alone, and with no kind and\ncapable father or mother to give assistance, and advice. Through the\ninfluence of bad companions or\nthrough stress of economic conditions the first wrong step is taken.\nMany young men face under our\nlaw\u2014ana11 believe also under yours\n\u2014a compulsory prison sentence in\nrelation to, for example, the theft of\nan automobile perhaps taken for a\njoy-ride.\nIn any event, sooner or later the\nInevitable happens, and the boy is\nsentenced to a term in prison. He\nis taken out to a jail, given a prison\nuniform, sometimes a number.\nEventually a cell door clangs behind him.\nDOOR CLANGS\nIt is my firm conviction that that\nmetallic sound not only marks the\nbeginning of the sentence of the\ncourt, but it marks the ending in\na great many cases of the chance of\nthat, boy ever becoming a'useful\nmember of society.\nMany of you have a high spirited\nboy. All of you know aomethini ot\nyouthful character and characteristics. You can understand the reaction ot normal youth to this treatment '\nThe boy feels that he has lost\ncaste, that he ahd his family have\nbeen degraded.\nHe mingles, more or less, according to the rules of the prison, with\nhardened criminals.\nEventually in many cases, he\ncomes to the conclusion that there\nis no future for him In decent society. On his release he often gets\ninto the class of recidivists. He is\na repeater, sometimes organizing\ngangs from his boyhood friends.\nYou see him before your courts\nagain and again, under more and\nmore serious charges \u2014 Durglary,\nhold-up, murder; an outlaw\u2014a desperate criminal at 25 or less. Some\nOf the DUlingers, the Baby-face Nelsons and other desperate criminals\nof your country and ours were once\njust as decent boys as our own.\nOur system of punishment for\ncrime as such has tailed of Its purpose, the prevention of crime and\nreform of the criminal.\nNEW DEAL IN\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nHere is the history of the new\ndeal in British Columbia..\nIn British Columbia a group ot\nlegislators and public Spirited citizens hive been studying this prob'\nlem for some years. The conclusion was reached, With which I am\nsure every father and mother will\nagree, that fundamentally and ofig'\nlnally there are no bad boys.\nDeficient mentality, environment,\nlack of parental Care and control,\neconomic conditions are In the majority of cases the cause of juvenile\ndelinquency.\nWould the young offender respond\nto kindly yet firm treatment? From\nmy experience with young men over\nmany years, both in private life\nand In defending and prosecuting in\nour courts, I always nad the firm\nconvlcition that he would. .\nThe government had an old building and 34 acres of land adjacent\nto Vancouver. It had been a wonderful old mansion, structure, and\nthe grounds had been allowed to\nrun wild. This Was the site selected\ntor our experiment.\nAngus McLeod. a brawny high'\nland Scotsman, was a guard at Oakalla prison farm. He had given years\nto the study of young criminals.\nHe was endeavoring, and with\nsome measure of success, to segregate a group of the young men and\ngive them encouragement and assistance with the object of reforming\nthem.\nHe had boundless faith tn boys.\nTo this tall Scot must go a measure\nof appreciation for the new deal\nfor youthful offenders In British\nColumbia\u2014for his untiring effort* in\nthe old prison, and his firm convic-\nOWERBY-CUTHBERT, Limited\nSEE AND DRIVE A NEW DODGE OR DESOTO TODAY!\nOPEN NEW SHOWROOMS\nAND GARAGE FOR\nDODGE - DE SOTO\nCARS AND DODGE TRUCKS\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT ore pleased to be able\nto announce to the motorists of Nelson and\nvicinity, that they are opening a spacious and\ncompletely modern garage and showroom at\nVernon at Ward Streets today, opposite the\nHume Hotel on Saturday, February 18th.\nThese new premises will permit us to rentier still finer service\nto Dodge and DeSoto owners in this area.\nStorage facilities are so large that we are now in a position\nto offer indoor, heated storage to our customers at nominal\nrental rates.\nYou are cordially invited to come and inspect our new garage,\nshowrooms and storage facilities\u2014and to see .the new 1939\nDodge and DeSoto cars on display.\nWhy not come in during our Crand Opening? We want to\nmake your acquaintance.\nOur old friends and customers ara especially urged to come in\non th* opening day.\nHitler Opens Auto\nShow; Appoints New I\nChief; Von Schell\nBERLIN,' Feb. 17 (APJ-Chan- ,\ncellor Hitler today opened. Germany's auto show with appointment,,\not a new chief of the motorcar la*\ndustry and a declaration that raw I\nmaterials previously imported St* .'\n\"no longer necessary\" to Germany.\nHe announced appointment of\nCol. Adolf Von Schell as the new.'\nauto fuehrer with full powers to\ncarry out regulations affecting the\nIndustry to satisfy the demand of\nmillions of Germans for automobiles.\n\"Under our four-year plan raw j\nmaterials have been produced in-\ndependently of foreign sources,\"\nsaid Hitler. \"This has led to new\ninventions of tremendous, In some\ncases revolutionary, import. So\nmuch so that raw materials we used\nto import from abroad, no longer\nare necessary to us even lt they are\nunrestrictedly at our disposal.\"\nDr. Robert AHmers, chief of the*'\nmotors section of the German industries department, said produc*'\ntion of synthetic benzine has risen\nto 17,000 tons and added all Ger*.;\nman passenger cars this year will\nbe equipped with \"buna\"\u2014syhthet* I\nic rubber tires.\nSoviet Russia is obtaining a good\ndeal of scrap, iron' through its efforts to salvage ships that hava\nsunk in Russian waters.\nThe beautiful new DODGE and distinctively-\nstyled DE SOTO Motor Cars are on display now\nat our new showrooms for your closest personal\nInspection, Come in and see them. We will be\nglad to show you the great new features DODGE\nand DE SOTO have for you for 1939.\nCome ta-See the new Handy-Control gearshift\nwhich clears the front compartment floor .. . th*\nnew \"Safety Signal\" speedometer that warni you\nof your speed In night driving, and the many other\nnew and exciting feature) offered by DODGE\nand DESOTO for 19391    ,\nTake a trial drive. That's all DODGE and DE\nSOTO asks. Then you be the judge) You'll thrill\nto the beauty, power, performance and unusual\ncomfort of these two great cars I Why not drop in\n\u2014right away?\nSHOWROOMS AND GARAGE\nVERNON ST. AT WARD    PHONE 75\n\u2014-\n. .:.',i: _____!_>\u201e\n I\t\ntion that the plan would succeed,\nwere bound to have its effect on\nthe committee's deliberations.\nJU8T ONE  MORE\nCHANCE\nOne day in December, 1937, our\ngroup met 100 young prisoners in\nthe prison Chapel at Oakalla. Wa.\ntold them of our plan to take a selected few to a new sort of institution where there would be no ban\nor'cells, ho prison uniforms\u2014where\nthey would be given an opportunity\nto learn a trade and fit themselves\n(or a decent manhood in decent society. Just one more chance!\nfor a decent manhood in decent\nsociety Just ONE MORE CHANCEI\nI wish those who scoff at what'\nthey call molly-coddling crlmin*,\nals could have seen the look on\nthe faces of those lads in that little\nChapel that day. I can't describe\nit, but lt brought a lump to my\nthroat.\nWe talked to those boys, most of\nthem as fine looking chaps as our\nown boys. We put them on their\nhonor not to escape. We told them,\nthe future treatment' ol thousands'\nof other boys might depend on\ntheir .actions\u2014that the success of\nthe plan lay with themselves.\nTwo days before Christmas, 23\nof the boys along with Angus Mc-;\nLeod and a guard and cook were\/\nmoved to the building I referred\nto. There was nothing to keep them\nthere. Not a lock or bar\u2014not even\na fence. There were no prisoh uni-!\nforms. Nothing to identify them\nas prisoners.\nNot one boy tried to escape. Not\none boy was untrue to his trust.\nThink that over when jjou begin to\nlose faith in the youth of today\nCareful selection has been made\nof those permitted to enter the In*\nstltution. We have available the\nserylces of a psychiatrist, a physician, a social service worker, ahd'\na group of citizens.\nThe physical and mental make-Up\nof the boys and their background\nis carefully scrutinized. On the:\nwhole, is there a reasonable chance\nto rehabilitate them? That is the\ntest. Our magistrates and judges\ncooperate to the full.\nA TRANSFORMATION\nSince its incorporation, SO youths\nljave graduated from this institution. Most of them are employed\nand are making good. We have not a\nhad a single case of return to\nlife o{ crime.\nI could read you dozens of letters'\nfrom mothers and the boys themselves that would clutch at your\nheart-strings when they tell of tha\nchange in outlook, the new hope\nand the joy and gladness In the'\nparents' hearts.\nThe buildings and grounds have,\nbeen made a thing of beauty by\nthe efforts ot the boys themselves,\nassisted by carpenter instructors.I\nThis plan could not succeed with'*\nout the support and cooperation of\nthe citizens as well. Our business\nmen have responded magnificently.\nMembers of board of trade, service\nclubs and, many others are doing\nwonderful work.\nLeaders in  business  are giving,\ntheir time to evening lectures, as* \/\nsifting the  regular  instructors  in\nfitting the boys for a useful oc*'\ncuoatlon on their release.\nWhen they are released, through\na committee of business men an\neffort is made to secure employment for the particular occupation\nto which the graduating student\n(we do not use the word prisoner\nin relation to these boys) is fitted.\nWe ask one of a group of active\nsupporting citizens to act more or\nless as a Big Brother to one graduate; to advise him, to encourage\nhim, and to give him a little of\n'.hat kindly consideration and treatment the lack of which causes his\ndownfall In so many instances. And\nhow nobly are they responding!     .\nCitizens gf Washington, this plan |\nIs a success. From a cold-blooded\n'tandpolnt   you   will  save   many ,\nhousands  of  dollars  in   property\nnd reduction In your prison populations In the future.\nThe greatest asset any nation\ncan have Is a good citizen;\u2014you\nmay create them out of potential\ncriminals.\nSAVE FROM BONDAGE\nAbove all, you are saving human\nsouls from the ahopeless bondage ot\na criminal career.\nIf your great stale enters upoa\nI list: plan, I know it wili succeed.\nI foresee, through the publicity\nprovided, by your Influential and\nwidely read newspapers ahd your\npeople, other slates and countries\nfollowing your lead. What a vision\nof the future! JUST ONE MORE\nCHANCE for thousands 6f young\nfd'oiVi throughout this great lartd.\nAna when the members of this\nsenate, no matter how able or of\nwhat .fame, are otherwise forgot*\nten, this great humane statute will\nieep their memory green in the\nminds of thousands of mothers and\nothers.\nCitizens,   remember   your   own\nyouthful days. Get behind this plan.\nGive your boys an opportunity to '\nretrieve themselves from their first\nblunder Into crime!\n <\u00a33a\nDODGE & DE\nFEATURES I\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELION, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNINO, FEB. 1$, 1939.\nium BOILER STOLEN | J, w. Thurston visited police head-  cover thieves had stolen it\nactio rBTTiwr MDMIT  1\u00ab\u00abrtert *> *et a 1*\u2122\",or the \u25a0* W foment\nAFTER GETTING PSRMIT J, \u00bb hai_.ton boiler. \u2014 j*\u2014fe*-\nRICHMOND, Va. F\u00ab*. 17 (AP)-1   He returned to his home to die-1 Bargains In the \"Want Ads\"\nfrom\nToday\n**\ni   \"j   frii   I1'1 -- ' 'm \"n  i.\nto\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nNELSON'S DODGE AND\nDESOTO DEALERS\nFOR A SUCCESSFUL FUTURE\nIN THEIR NEW LOCATION\n.   t\nGeneral Securities Ltd.\nAutomobile Financing and Insurance\n744 W. HASTINGS ST. VANCOUVER, B. C.\nTO Offer\n1939 MODELS\nNEW MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY\nAT SOWERBY-CUTHBERT LTD.\nSome of the outstanding features*\nfor the 1989 Dodge Custom series\nare:\nA complete naw body, restyled\nIn the airflow r^annor and mounted\non a new frame with ,'ndependent-\nly sprung front wheels.\nThe gearshift lever la now on the\nsteering column giving front seat\npassengers an unobstructed floor\nand making lt convenient for the\ndriver to get out of the car on, the\ncurb side.\nIn the new Dodge Independent\nroad vibra-\nfront wheel springing,\ntion is leveled out by rust-prooreu\ncoll springs of tough and resilient\nAmola steel. Each wheel is free to\nmove up or down in conformity\nwith the road surface, Independent\nof the opposite wheel.\nThe V-type windshield also Is ot\nentirely new design. It Is wider and\nhigher. The long wiper arms-rthere\nare two of them\u2014are electrically\noperated at constant speed, regardless of engine speed.\nThe old-time slam has been taken\nout of the doors by equipping them\nwith new-style rotary, self-tightening locks.\nIn keeping with other features\nof streamlining, the head lamps of\nthe new Dodge Custom are recessed\nin the forward curves of the front\nfenders, flush with the surface. The\narrangement results In everal advantages; one of these is that the\ndriving lights, being 13 Inches farther apart, lllumlnuate the entire\nwidth of the road; another advantage Is that the lamps are closer to\nthe ground where they give safer\nroad Illumination in hazy or foggy\nweather.\n. The most Intriguing feature ot\nthe Instrument panel Is the Dodge\n\"Safety Signal\" speedometer. Tor\nspeeds up to 30 miles an hour, the\ncolor of an \"eye\" In the needle head\nis green; from 30 to 50 miles an\nhour the color of the \"eye\" changes\nto amber, for speeds above 60 miles\nthe \"eye\" becomes red.\nThe Influence of airplane design\n\u25a0\u25a0  .-\"     I       ',      '     i\nIs very evident in the new DeSoto\nmodels.\nThe smooth flowing contours ot\nDeSoto's new streamliiie styling\nsweep bade In one unbroken line\nfrom the gleaming, chromium radiator grille to a completely concealed\nluggage locker In the rear.\nNew \"Handy Control\" gear shift,\na simpler easier way to shift gears;\nmounted right on the steering column, leaving the front compartment floor free of all oKstructlons.\nDeSoto's new Dual Power Transmission now brings all of the advantages of overdrive and in .addition the driver can Instantly drop\nback Into conventional 'ear at any\nspeed by simply pushing the accelerator pedal to the floor.\nNew non-slam doors with rotary\ndoor looks which close with finger*\ntip pressure;\nNew rain-trap in tho cowl ventilator which permits driving in rain\nwith cowl vent open; also facilitates installation .of new fresh-air\nattachment available on heaters.\nLuxurious interior styling with\nall new hardware, beautiful oriental\nwalnut finish, and rich fabric upholstery.\nA new Innovation with both this\nyear's Dodge Custom and DeSoto\nDeluxe series Is the addition of a\nfour passenger all-purpose coupe.\nSTRATFORD, England (CP)-A\nCzech lion-tamer and German horse-\ntrainer from a circus, summoned\nafter a tight, were advised by the\nmagistrate to forget the international situation and keep in mind\nthey had to work and live together.\n-PAOESEVEN\nCONGRATULATIONS\nAND BEST WISHES TO\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT\nLimited\nOn the Occasion of\nTheir GRAND Opening\nMAY THEY ENJOY EVERY SUCCESS\nRAMP BODY and\nFENDER WORKS\nA. FARENHOLTZ L. SKINNER\n550 Josephine St., Phono 195\nCongratulations to Sowerby & Cuthbert\nBEST WISHES FOR THEIR SUCCESS\nMotorists!\u2014Specify These Leading Automotive Products\nRAYBESTOS\nBrake Lining\nWILLARD\nBatteries\ntfotte\nTIRES\nMackenzie, White & Dunsmuir Limited\nNELSON BRANCH\n\"THE AUTOMOTIVE HOUSE COMPLETE\"\n318 VERNON ST.\nIN LARGER, MORE UP-TO-DATE QUARTERS\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT LIMITED OFFERS YOU\nA COMPLETE AUTOMOBILE SERVICE\nOUR UP-TO-DATE\nREPAIR SHOP\nis under the direct supervision of Mr. Eric\nSowerby, who has attained a fine record\nthroughout Nelson and District for his\nwork in this respect. Our equipment is up\nto 1939 standards and you may be assured that when your car is placed in our\nshop it will be repaired an,d put in first-\nclass running order at a minimum of cost\nand time.\nOur parts department is well stocked with\nDodge-DeSoto Genuine Parts and Factory\nEngineered Dodge-DeSoto Accessories, a\nfeature thot enables us to do repair work\nwithout the necessity of sending for parts.\nO TIRE REPAIRS\nt WASHING\nt POLISHING\nO BODY AND FENDER\nREPAIRS\nO DUCO PAINTING\nHOW IS YOUR LUCK?\nBe One of the\n\"LUCKY 13\"\nat Sowerby'Cuthbert's Free Drawing\nFrom February 18th to April 8th inclusive we will give\no FREE TICKET with the purchase of every $1.50 worth\nof Gas, Oil, Accessories, Labor, excluding Motor Vehicles\nHold Your Tickets and You May Participate in the Following Prizes:\n1st\u2014$100 TRANSFERABLE CREDIT\nON A NEW DODGE OR DeSOTO CAR\n2nd\u2014$40 Credit on Gas, Oil or Lubrication\n3rd\u2014$15 Credit on Gas, Oil or Lubrication\nFourth to thirteenth prize winners will receive a pair of complimentary tickets to\nthe Nelson Capitol Theatre\nDRAWING SATURDAY, APRIL 8th AT THE CAPITOL THEATRE\nEmployee, of Sowerby-Cuthbert and their Immediate families are excluded from this drawing.\nSALES DEPT.\nOur Sales Department comes under the\nsupervision of Mr. Gordon Cuthbert, ably\n\u2022assisted by Frank McClements. If you\nare in the market for a new or used Automobile we are sure that w6 can be of\nservice to you at Sowerby-Cuthbert. Our\nstock of Red Seal guaranteed Cars means\nthat we can sell you a used car that we\nguarantee will give you absolute satisfaction.\nXACO\nUlfOCATION\nSOWERBY-CUTHBERT LTD.\nRED STAR MOTORS\nJ. E. SOWERBY G.G. CUTHBERT\nREGISTERED TEXACO REST ROOMS\nTEXACO Marfak Is different from ordinary chassis lubricants. The difference is In the rich, heavy-bodied oil\nwith which Marfak is made. Marfak won't wash out on\nwet roads, nor melt out on hot days, nor wear out in\nbumpy going. It lasts TWICE as long'. . ~. gives full\nlubrication the full distance. Because Marfak is different, your car's peKormance is different and better,\nwhen Marfak'd. It runs quieter, rides easier, steers\neasier, and there is less wear-and-tear,\nwith a resultant higher allowance\nwhen you trade It In. Marfak lubrication pays dividends. So drive in to\nSowerby-Cuthbert's today and say...\n\"Marfak My Car!\"\nVernon\nStreet\natWard\n************\n ;. .4.\n Ntfiam lattg\ni-'i\nEstablished April 22, 190}\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n266  Baker  Street,  Nelson, British   Columbia.\nii ' \u25a0 ,\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments\ni ' i       i   '    ii  i     .,\n'     MEMBER'OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF .CIRCULATIONS\n1\nSATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1989.\n\u2022a\n; NEW ENGLAND SEA-WAYS\nFOR BATTLESHIPS\nDredging operations on the coast of Maine and of\nMassachusetts, apparently close to or in the Bay of Fundy,\nmay be part of a defence plan, though ostensibly for the\nbenefit of the fishing fleets, John Pillsbury, Canadian\nPress correspondent at Boston, thinks.\nArmy engineers are quietly developing anchorages\nand channels along the New England'coast, but they would\nbe the last to admit that they were strengthening national\ndefence.\nThe fact that the work is in charge of army engineers\nhas no significance, however, as they give their supervision\nto all public works of the United States government. For\ninstance, every government power dam, every federal\nreclamation project, every plan for flood control, every\ntunnel, canal, or channel, is their work. Through that\nmethod of operation, the United States government has a\ngreat corps of engineers always in active practice, and\nready for anything from building a Panama Canal\u2014remember General Goethals?\u2014to operating the Civilian Conservation Corps or C. C. C. plan of relief.\nSo, whatever the object behind the constant dredging\nnoted by Mr. Pillsbury, the anchorage at Corea, Me., not\nfar from New Brunswick, and at Scituate on the \"South\nShore\" of Massachusetts, are described by army engineers\nas \"harbors of refuge\" for fishing vessels and yachts.\nThere is no mention that anchorages for fishermen\nmight turn out to be convenient for destroyers and submarines, or that the 40-foot channel just dug to the Navy\n[Yard here is deep enough for a battleship!\nNew England is a bastion pointing toward Europe.\nJust as every transatlantic flyer from Lindbergh to Corri-\ngan went by way of Newfoundland, skirting or flying over\nthe Maritimes, vessels also find the shortest crossing by\nthe Great Circle route. The chances are that any invasion\nfrom Europe would hit this section first. From the point\nof view of national defence, New England is an outpost on\nthe Atlantic.\nBoston is the northernmost battleship port on the Atlantic coast of the United States. A defending American\nfleet would find Portland and Portsmouth valuable, as they\nwould enable the refitting and refueling of smaller vessels\nwithout cluttering up Boston Harbor, but the base of operations inevitably would be established here.\nWhen these things are understood, the meaning of the\ndredging along the coast becomes clearer. Battleships burn\noil for fuel. In the light of this the digging of 30-foot\nchannels to oil terminals at Quincy and at Chelsea, in Boston\nHarbor, begins to make more sense.\nThose who think in terms of defending New England\nfrom battleships and planes say that there are five things\nthe government can do to make the United States more\nsecure!\n1. Build fixed seacoast harbor defences at the principal ports.\n2. Add strong anti-aircraft defences,\n3. Have an' effective Atlantic fleet.\n\u25a0 4. Have a New England arm of the national air force.\n5. Establish' a small, motorized mobile army, readily\navailable, on the spot.- \u2022        ''.\n\u2022 Apparently, the first of these lines of defence is now\nbeing developed.\nV* Questions ??\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers Is open to any reader of\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will the name of tho person\nasking the question be published.\nW.J.L., Shoreacres \u2014 What to do\nwith a tight milking cow to make\nher easier to milk?\nThis trouble is generally caused\nby   too  strong  sphincter  muscles\nsurrounding the teats. Some cases\nanswer to the use of the teat-plug,\nmade of lead or hard rubber, which\nis kept in from.one milking to another. This is used until the muscles\nare relaxed. Where this treatment\nis   not   sufficient,   the   sphincter\nmuscles must, be cut through by\nmeans of an instrument called a\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nTo\nBritish\nColumbia Mm\nPacific Milk has its home here\nand getting and giving the benefits of \"residing\" in British Columbia, it. grows yearly in public\nfavor. Our climate, water and\npasture make it a belter milk.\nThese it gets. Payroll and profit.\nThese it gives. Its farmer-owner'' grateful, hope it gives\nbP> 'o Bitish Columbia all that\nBritish Columbia has so generously given to Pacific Milk.\nbistoury, and the teat-plug kept in\nuntil the wound heals.\nF.A., Trail\u2014How can scratches be\ntaken out of a varnished floor?\nA varnished floor if not too badly worn, may be renovated by rubbing the scratches with a rag dipped\nin linseed oil. If the scratches are\ntoo deep for such treatment, they\nmay be sand-papered out and a\nnew coat of varnish brushed over\nthem. If the floor is badly worn,\nthe best way is to remove as much\nof the varnish as possible and apply\na fresh coat.\n\"Sunshine\", Castlegar\u2014What is the\ncubic .content or the size of a\nbin required to hold a top of the\naverage lump coal?\nOne   cubic   foot   holding   fifty\npounds of coal, would take forty\ncubic feet for a ton. One way of\nbuilding this would be two by five\nby four feet.\nB.P., Nelson\u2014Does the print on\nnewspapers keep moths away?\nThere is no foundation for this\nbelief. Any firm wrapping paper\nor several .thickness of newspaper\nwill serve. The Important thing is\nto have garments clean, freed from\nmoths, and carefully wrapped so\nMilk\nPacific\nIrradiated of Course\n\u25a0\u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nPERHAPS\nthe vital spots of your\nhome\u2014the plumbing and\nheating- require attention.\nA timfcly check-up now\nmay save damage and annoyance.\nOur wide experience enables us to make an intelligent survey\u2014and the\ncost is nominal.\nPHONE  666\nKootenay Plumbing\n& Heating Co., ltd.\n397 Biker Street\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNINO. FEB. 18, 193*.\nfontMcL\nShepard Barclay\nTells How to Bid\n; and Play\nTHREE SUITS TO AVOID\nWHEN THE DECLARER had\nbid two suits and hit partner another, those an usually three suits\nto avoid when selecting your opening lead against a slam from a more\nor len worthless hand. It you lead\nthe dummy'i ault, you an likely to\nhelp sot it up early for discards.\nIt you lead cither of the declarer'\",\nyou may put an honor of your partner's under the hammer. You ara\ngenerally better off in thli spot to\nlead the unhid suit, especially If\nyour partner had bid it, regardless\nof whether or not the declarer or\nhli partner later made a cue-bid of\ntt indicating a probable blank.\n\u25a0'   a'K9     '  \u25a0!\u25a0'\nA'10\nA A Q 10 0 7 6 3\n*Q5\nA 104\nV K 9 8 \u00ab\n82\n\u2666 75 3\nft) At) 104\n\u2666 Q84\n* K852\nA AJ87632\nA A K 0 6 2\n4 None\n(Dealor: West Neither aide vulnerable.) y\nEut opened third-hand on thla\ndeal with 1-Heart, South bid 1-\nSpade, West passed, North bid 2-\nClubs, South 3-Diomonds, then\nWait 3-Hearts, making lt perfectly\ndear that he had a too fit but a\ngenerally bad hand, since he had\npassed on hli first; chance to help\nthe suit North next called 4-Clubi,\nEast passed, and the very aggressive, bidder In the South now saw s\nchance to try for a top score In tne\nduplicate In which they were playing. He made a cue-bid of 4-Hcarta.\nNorth thereupon made a preference bid between South's suits,\n4-Spades, and South went to 6-\nSpades. Weat fell for South'! stratagem. Deciding that South wai\nprobably void of hearts, he fumbled\naround among the other suits and\nthen decided upon the diamond 7.\nAa a Consequence South made a\ngrand slam. Tha diamond J brought\nthe Q and A. A spade to the K waa\nfollowed by tho club A, discarding\nthe heart 5, and the rest of the\ntricks were trumps and diamonds.\nIf there had been some other suit\nwhich neither North nor South had\nbid, West might have beet) justified\nIn being frightened away from\nheart! by the cue-bid, but not when\nevery other lead seemed bad anyway, from the bidding.\n.   .   \u2022   \u2022\nMonday's Problem\nA K 10 0\nft K0 0 8 3\n\u2666 \u00bb .\n+ KJ72\nATI At\nft None\n. 8768\n48\nA A95\nst AQB\n\u00bb A . J82\n4> 2\n\u2666 8 848\n.  9 8 3\nt.  10 7 4\n\u2666 A K Q J 10\n4. 10\n(Dealer: North. North-South vulnerable.)\nWhat bidding would you recommend on thla  monstrous misfit\ndeal?\nCwjiitbt im, 1* Bat ft*** SjaSatt, 1st.\nLooking Backward...\nTEN YEARS ACJO\n(From Daily News of Feb. 18,1029).\nA snow storm, following the intense cold wave, has tied up all\ncommunications in northern and\nmiddle Europe; HO vessels are frozen in the harbbr at Danzig.\u2014Admiral\nSir Francis Bridgeman, 82, died in a\nNassau, Bahamas, hotel. \u2014 Fire,\nsweeping part of the business section of Salmon Arm, caused damage\namounting to $25,000\u2014Home oil well\nNo. 1 at Vancouver is now producing\n600 barrels of 74 gravity naptha\ndaily\u2014Trail, Smoke Eaters came\nfrom behind on Gustafson's goal to\ntie Rossland Miners 1-1 at Rossland\nlast night, Eldred Jewell scoring\nRossland's goal.\u2014Mrs. P. Hardy of\nCastlegar was a Nelson visitor. \u2014\nTrail basketballers defeated the\nhome Kimberley squad 45-20 to\nwin the Kootenay title.\nTWENTY-FIVE YEAR8 AGO\nFrom Daily News of Feb. 18, 1914.\nHon. Price Ellison stated at Victoria yesterday that the government would sanction more loans\nsoon in order to continue development Work throughout the province.\n\u2014The Monarch Oil company announced that it would drill 11 wells\nin the vicinity of Olds, Alberta \u2014\nTwo   men   were   killed  and   two\nothers were reported missing foi\nlowing an explosion of a mixing\nplant of a powder company at\nBlalrsvllle, Pa.\u2014J. W. Whitely of\nVancouver was elected grand master of the Grand Black Chapter of\nBritish Columbia here last night.\u2014\nW. J. Green of Kaslo arrived in Nelson last night for a short business\nvisit\u2014Albert I, Belgian king, suffered a broken arm yesterday when\nhe fell from his horse at Brussels.\nFORTY YEAR8 AGO\n(From Daily Miner of Feb. 18,1899).\nMiss Bessie Livingstone of Boston\ncommenced two weeks of cooking\ncourses for Nelson ladies yesterday\n\u2014West Kootenay Power & Light\ncompany is looking for an opening\nto serve electricity for Nelson since\nthe city plant has been giving poor\nservice.\u2014Final official count 'for\nNelson riding elections recently\nshowed J. Fred Hume defeating A.\nS. Farwell by 505 votes to 323. \u2014\nHall Mines smelter will hereafter\nreceive all ore shipped from the\nQueen Bess, amounting to 320 tons\na month, instead of the Everett\nsmelter. \u2014 The Pacific-American\nPacking company, capitalized at\n$5,000,000, have practically acquired\nall the fish traps in Puget Sound.\u2014\nImmediate ore in sight in the Noble\nFive big hit is valued at $200,000.\n:5S\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abaW\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abS5S\u00abS\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abS$S\nficuwAamcL\ntftWSWSWS\nAn Eye for an Eye\nPeople think ot building codes as\na charcteristlcally modern innovation. Actually they go back thousands of years before .the Christian\nera. I am Indebted to the United\nStates bureau of standards for the\ntranslation of certain sections of\nthe code of King Hammurabi of\nBabylon who, in controlling the\nquality of the construction in the\nterritory within his jurisdiction,\nused methods which were characterized by directness and, I have no\ndoubt, effectiveness. For example,\nsection 229 reads;\n\"If a builder has built a house\nfor a man and his work is not strong\nAUNT HET\nBV ROBERT QUILLBtf\n\"I reckon Pa Is right. It is kind\no' hard to tell what kind o' hat\nis in style and what ain't when\nthey're all' different : and nobody\nknows which is the standard.\"\nthat there Is no possibility of moths\ncrawling in. Clothes moths will not\neat into paper to attack clothing.\nA.D.N.,   Nelson-What   Is   black\nfrost?\nBlack frost Is frost or cold so\nIntense as to blacken vegetation.\nP.D.. Trail\u2014What does the word\njui-jitsu mean?\nThe Japanese spelling is jujutsu.\nJu means soft\u2014probably because\nno weapons are used, and jutsu\nmeans art.\nACTIVE IN...\nKOOTENAY LIFE\nCapt. P. Hartrldge of Balfour\n. . . president of the Balfour\nFarmers' Institute and'ehairman\nof the agricultural committee\nof the Nelson board of trade\n. . . keenly interested In the\nprogress of the Kootenay district.\nFOR'\nMINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels art suitable for\nall mining and other\ncamp buildings They\nare strong waterproof,\nlight and very easy to\nhandle.\nDistrict Distributors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n___\nand if the house he has built falls\nin and kills the householder, that\nbuilder shall be slain.   .\nOther clauses provide a similar\npenalty for the child or the slave\nof the builder In the event of the\nsame accident happening to the\nhouseholder's child or slave.\nSince that time building codes\nhave, regrettably perhaps, become\nmuch less picturesque\u2014A. F. Gill,\nin \"The National Building Code,\"\nNational Research Council, Ottawa.\n\"High Pressure\"\nThis capitalizing of Mr. Kclghtley\nfor advertisement purposes reminds\n.me ot a story in Jesse Rainsford\nSprague's book, \"High Pressure\".\nAn advertising agency principal\nwas canvassing a board of directors. Occasion .arose when he was\ncalled on to assert his probity. From\nhis pocket he drew a much-worn\ncopy of a small, leather-bound book.\nHe said that his mother plus this\nbook had set his character for life.\nSeeing that he was talking to a\ngroup of religious men, his dramatic showmanship had Its Intended\neffect.\nThe following day a local bookseller told one of the directors ot a\nsingular sales transaction: a stranger had asked for a second-hand\nNew Testament Unable to get what\nhe wanted he bought a worn copy\not an Isaac Pitman shorthand text\nbookl\u2014\"Klrkwbod Speaking,\" In\nMarketing, Toronto. >   <\nMl\n$sesii^#&&S6qessmtoS0K9X&\nJsial ynwi&jrffc\nOne-Minute Test        a\n1. Which ta the lowest point In\nNorth America?\n2. What is the derivation of the\nword \"Fascism\"?-\n3. What Is wampum?\nToday's Horoscope\nThe year to come will be a mixed\none for those whose birthday la\ntoday. It la best for them to avoid\nsudden changes. Good fortune will\ncome through unexpected happenings and windfalls. A child born\ntoday will have a happy lite. He\nwill be Imaginative, artistic, ingenious, and naturally, with these qualities, impressionable. He or she will\nbe exceedingly successful and popular. GoOd fortune will attend him.\nHoroscope for Sunday\nYour business affairs will occupy\nyou almost exclusively during the\nyear beginning with today, if it is\nyour natal day. It will be a year of\nSrosperity, with a possible gain\ntrough an Inheritance. A lively\nsense of humor will be enjoyed by\nthe child born today. He will also.\nbe artistic; and' very quick-witted.\nOne-Minute Teat Answers\n1. Death Valley, California, which\nts 276 feet below Bea level. . -\n2. It comes from the Latin word\n\"fasces,\" a bundle of rods with an\nax In the middle, carried as a badge\nof authority by certain officials.    .\n3. Shell money, formerly used by\nAmerican Indians,.\nBOSTON, (CP) - Speaking to\nthe Boston League of Women Voters Mrs. J. H. Kimball, member ot\na commission probing the civil service, said no state In the union\ncould match Massachusetts for \u2022\n\"typical politicians with their hati\non and cigars In their mouths all\nthe time.\"\nfi\nor\nTHE FACE AT THE WINDOW\nBy W. BOYCE MORGAN\nBarrie had to admit that his talk\nwith Grace DalUnger had produced\nnothing of apparent value. He went\nback tovthe academy, but instead\nof going to his room, he went to\nthe basement; and after talking\npersuasively to'the janitor for a\nmoment or two\/ he was admitted\nto the laundry.\nWhen he emerged a half hour\nlater, his face wore a triumphant\nexpression. He walked upstairs with\nsomething bulky concealed under,\nhis coat, and went to the little\nroom which Mrs. Rady, the housekeeper, used as an office. There\nhe had a long talk with the housekeeper, and when he emerged, he\nwas no longer carrying the bulky\nobject.\nDeciding that he wanted to know\nGrace Dallinger better, he went to\nthe lake with his skates the next\nafternoon, but he did not see her.\nHeTeturned the next two afternoons, and was finally rewarded\nby finding Grace skating with\nSnorter Parkinson.\nBarrie took a number of idle turns\non the ice, and then skated up to\nthe couple.\n\"Hi, Grace,\" he said with a grin,\nignoring Snorter. \"How about your\npromise to skate with me?\" . '\nGrace looked doubtfully at Snorter, who was glaring at Barrie.\nSnorter's face still bore some evidence of his fight with Jack, and\nit was apparent that he had no\nfriendly feeling for Jack's roommate.\nSnorter gripped the girl's arm and\nstarted to move away. \"Grace is\nbusy,\" he growled at Barrie. \"Are\nyou blind?\"\nBarry immediately took a stroke\nand fell into step beside them.\n\"Sure she's busy\u2014for the time being,\" he retorted. \"But she won't\nwant to skate with you all afternoon, with guys like me around.\"\nBarrie was being purposely impudent and he watched Snorter\nnarrowly. He saw the other boy's\nface flame with anger.\n\"Nobody asked you'to be around,\"\nhe cried. \"Now get out!\"\n\"Oh, don't get touchy, Snorter,\"\nAN8WERS TO LA8T WEEK'S\nPUZZLES\n1, Crossword Puzzle Solution.\niias imam\niOiS\ni H BBS m _\nHE m H0\n. mwam\n. SHE!\n2. LOVE - live - life - lift -\nGIFT.\nDART \u2014 dare \u2014 pare \u2014 pore\n\u2014 pose \u2014 ROSE.\n3. Valiant, valuable, valorous, and\nvalidity.\n4. If you would be my valentine\nAll the world would seem divine.\n5. Course, coarse.\nBarrie said, grinning provoklnglyO\nat the larger boy. \"Anyway, I'm\nasking Grace, and not you. She can\nanswer   for   herself,   can't   you,\nGrace?\"\nHe turned to the girl. Her eyes\nwere on him, and she seemed on\nthe point ot accepting his invitation\nwhen Snorter gripped her arm even\nmore tightly.\n'You're coming with me, Grace,\"\nhe commanded. \"I want to talk to\nyou.\"\nWith that, he swung Grace about\nand half pulled her over the Ice.\nBarrie made a low bow as Grace\nlooked back apologetically, but he\nnoticed that she went with Snorter\nwithout a protest.\n\"Well,\" Barrie mused to himself.\n\"He certainly knows how to handle\nhit, I think I understand that setup a little better now.\"\nThat night, Jack visited Kay at\nher school again, and when he returned he woke Barrie.\n\"I was talking to Miss Vane tonight,\" he told him. \"She's getting\nimpatient about this ghost business,\nand wants to know if you are having any success in trying to solve\nthe mystery. She wants to call In\nthe police.\"\n\"Oh, she does?\" said Barrie sleepily. \"Guess she doesn't think much\not my sleuthing abilities.\"\n\"Well, you really don't seem to\nhave got very far,\" said Jack\ndoubtfully.\n\"You mean I haven't told anyone how far I have got,\" Barrie retorted. \"The fact is, I'm just about\nready to tell who is responsible for\nthat whole business. When' does\nKay have her next exam?\"\n\"She has an English quiz the dav\nafter tomorrow. She'll be studying\nfor It tomorrow night.\"\nThen the ghost with the horrible\nface is liable to be on hand,\" said\nBarrie. \"Do ?ou think you could fix\nit up with Miss Vane so that you\nand I could hide in Kay's room\nwhile she's studying tomorrow\nnight?\"\n\"Why, I guess maybe I could.\"\n'Try it. And it's important that\nnone of the other girls know about\nit. Maybe we can catch Mr. Ghost\nin the act. Or should I say Miss\nGhost?\"\nBarrie snickered at the puzzled\nlook on Jack's face. Then he .turned over to go back to sleep.\n(To Be Continued)\nMatches Reappear\nin Folder When\nMagician Wishes\nBy THOMAS THE MAGICIAN\nWe haven't had a match trick\nfor several weeks, so here's a bit\nof \"match-lc\" to add to your collection.\nEFFECT; The entertainer shows\na package of ordinary paper\nmatches, the variety so popular\nnow with advertisers. He opens the\ncover and tears out all of the\nmatches therein, replacing the\ncover. He then throws the paper\nof matches on the table and asks\nsomeone in the audience to pronounce some magic words.over the\npackage. After this is done, the\nmagician opens the paper again,\nand lo-and-behold, it is once again\nfull of matches.\nEXPLANATION: Most ol this\nvariety of matches are manufac\ntured with four rows of paper\nmatches in each folder. To prepare\nfor this clever bit of, deception\nseparate the first, two rows from\nthe rear two, and leave a gap In\nbetween.\nNow, when you're ready to do the\ntrick, open the paper and act as\nif you are turning back the flap,\nbut really insert it between the\ntwo layers. Now show the matches,\ntear off the front two rows, and\nslide the flaip back over the two\nrows of stumps. Of course the cover\nhas hidden the two back rows of\nmatches, and when the magic\nwords have been pronounced and\nthe paper opened again, there are\ntwo more rows ol matches. They\nhave seemingly appeared instantly,\nand the paper is full once again!\nBy the way, have you sent in\nyour trick yet? If .you haven't,\nwrite out the explanation to some\nsmall effect which you have seen\nperformed, and which has not appeared in this column. Give a full\nexplanation of how it is worked,\nand your name and address. Mail\nit to me in care of this paper, and\nif I select it to be published In the\nfuture, you will receive a book of\nmagicand a. personally autographed\npicture of myself.\nBut do it now! Don't wait until\nthe books are all gone. I'll be'looking for your letter this week.\nThe Kitchenette\nBy   AUNT  PEGGY     .   I\nWould you like to give somebody\na grand  birthday present?  Why\nnot make a big box of delicious\ncandy?\nFRUIT FUDGE\n3 cups sugar\n1 tablespoon cocoa\n1*A cups milk\n2 tablespoons corn syrup\nI tablespoon butter\n1-8 cup raisins\n% cup cut figs\nV* cup coconut\n1 cup nut meats\nBlend sugar and cocoa In pan. I\nAdd milk, syrup, and butter. Cook\ngently, without stirring, until a]\nsoft ball is formed, 238 degrees F. j\nRemove from stove and  cbol to ]\nroom temperature. Add the restS\nthe   Ingredients   and   stir   untl\nthick and creamy. Pour Into\nand cut when cool.\nHAVE SOME AIR!\nTake a deep breath. Now take another!\nDoesn't that feel good?\nBreathing Is the most Important work of\nthe human body. If we stop breathing for a\nvery, very short time, we die. eYt so marvel-\nously are our bodies made that we go right\nahead breathing, hour after hour and day after\nday, without ever thinking about it.\nGood air. is more important to us than anything else in the world. If your supply of air\nhas ever been cut off for a few seconds, you\nrealize this very quickly. And If you have\never had to breathe impure air for a long time,\nyou know how bad lt makes you feel.\nSince air, and good air, is so important, we should see that our\nbodies get lots of it. Be outdoors as much as you can, throughout the year. Sleep with your windows open. Breathe deeply, so\nthat your lungs get an ample supply of this wonderful, life-sustaining substance. \u2014The Editor.\nRIDDLES\n1. Why don't they take faro I\na policeman on a trolley car?\n2. What is the most bashful I'\nIn the world?\n3. When does an Irish potato\nchange its nationality?\n4. What is nothing?\n5. What will go up the chlmn .\ndown, or down the chimney dow\nbut it won't go up the chimney t\nor down the chimney up?\nMONEYMAKERS\nBy Irma Hegel\nEXPERT DARNER\nDorothy lives across the street\nfrom a typical business women'e\napartment house. That is, the young\nwomen who reside In the tall brick\nstructure work during the day and\nare often In no mood to darn j a\nheap of stockings when they return to their quarters at night\nIn every business woman's mall\nbox, Dorothy placed a neat hand-\nlettered card that read as follows:\nDOROTHY MARTIN WILL DO\nYOUR HOSIERY MENDING\nWORK CALLED FOR AND\nDELIVERED L,\n39c to Mc a bundle.    Phone 5-3433\nThere was no response to thi\ncards. Dorothy used her telephone.\nThe young women she could not\nFor Centuries Sailors Have Told\nTales of Monsters of the Deep\nBy  Samuel   Hudson\nSea monsters are probably the\nmost bashful creatures that ever\nexisted. So skittish are they that a\ndistinguished Dutch zoologist, when\nrecording the appearances of 187\nof the elusive whoppers, seriously\nwarned his readers:\n\"As these animals are very shy,\nit is not advisable to approach\nthem with a steamboat.\"\nThat was in 1892\u2014but even then\nsea monsters were old stuff. The\nfirst mention of them is in anci-.it\nlegends. The Greek Pliny tells of\na monster 120 feet long that gave\nRegulus and his army a stiff battle.\nAristotle wrote of sea monsters\u2014\nand Grecian urns have been found\nwith sea serpents sculptured on\nthema\nIn 1555 a Scandinavian archbishop wrote that \"navigators of all\nsorts in Norwegian waters agree\nthat a sea serpent 200 feet thick\nlives in the caves and rocks of\nthe sea coast about Bergen. He\nleaves his aquatic lair in clear summer nights, and going ashore, devours calves, lambs, and' hogs. At\nother times he goes seaward, and\nfeeds on lobsters, octopuses, and\ncrabs. He has, commonly, hair hanging from his neck a cubit long,\nsharp scales, and Is black, and he\nhas flaming, shining eyes.\" Magnus gives an illustration which\nshows a sea-serpent seizing a sailor from the deck of a ship. (This\none evidently wasn't as bashful as\nsome of the others!)\nANOTHER MONSTER  '\nThe next appearance of note is\nthat of the \u25a0 Pontoppidan Monster.\nPontoppidan, famous old Bishop\nof Bergen, who was at first skeptical of the monster's existence,\nlater became convinced. He cites\nthe case of Captain de Ferry who\nshot a monster in August, 1746, but\nlost it when the creature dove.\n'The head of the snake, which it\nheld more than 2 feet above the\nsurface of the water, resembled .hat\nof a horse. It was of a grayish color, and the mouth was quite black\nand very large.. It had .'ilaql: ;ycs,\nand a long white mane that hung\ndown from the neck to the surface\nof tbfe water.\"\nOne of the most famous of sea\nmonsters was the serpent sighted\nby her Majesty's Ship Daedalus,\nin October, 1838, while cruising\nfrom the Cape of Good Hope to St.\nHelena. According totCaptain Mo\nQuhae, the creature \"passed rapidly, but so close under our lee quarters that had lt been a man of my\nacquaintance, I should easily have\nrecognized his features with the\nnaked eye; and it did not, either\nin approaching the ship or after it\nhad passed our wake, deviate in the\nslightest degree from its course,\nwhich it held on at the pace of\nfrom 12 to 15 miles per hour, apparently on some determined purpose. Its color was brown and yellowish-white about the thrift. It\nhad no fins, but something like the\nmane of a horse, dr rather a bunch\nof sejt-we**'., washed about 'fs\nbnck.\"\nThe ship Pauline, from Shields\nto, Zanzibar, in 1875 sew three large\nsperm whales, one ot which was\ngripped around the body by two\nturns of what appeared to be a\nhuge Berpent. The monster whirled Its victim round and round for\nabout fifteen minutes, then suddenly dragged the whale to the j bot\ntom, head first.\nTHE LOCH NESS MON8TER\nUndoubtedly the most renowned\nmonster of recent years was the\nLoch Ness Serpent. \"Nessy,\" who\ncrashed the froht pages in 1932, was\npossibly the only sea monster ever\nto obtain official recognition. On\nDecember 8, 1932, Sir Godfrey Collins, Secretary of State for Scotland, authorized Inverness police\nto warn residents and visitors that\nthe creature, if sighted, \"must not\non any pretext be molested, shot\nor \u25a0 t'rr posd.\"\n\"n \u25a0\u25a0-' * H *\u2022\u2022 c 'f v's warn-\nh v..  \u25a0   ' l\n(;.. <;d for, ic y's c . .uie, .'he\n.\\ew York Zookigical Park was\nwilling to give $25,000 if the Serpent was delivered (1) alive, (2)\nhealthy, (3) at least 40 feet long.\nIn London,' a circus operator did\neven better with an offer of $100,-\n000 (also subject to a few condi-\nreach by telephone, she called upon,\nShe secured one mending, then\ntwo. More followed. Finally Dorothy had enough bundles to keep\nher fully occupied in her spar*\ntime.\nExtra pay was plentiful. And\nthere was additional work\u2014lace\nripped on an evening dress \u2014 a\nsweater with a moth hole\u2014a skirt\ntorn in the hem.\nDorothy enjoys her work. While\nshe mends, she listens to radio\nconcerts and speeches. That rounds\nout her education, ahe claims. Anil\nshe earns enough to make the sidS\nline venture decidedly worthwhil*\nRIDDLE ANSWERS\n1. They can't get (a) nickel out\nof (a) copper. 2 A clock. It keep\nits hands over its face all day am\nnight 3. When it becomes Frencl\nfried. 4. A footless stocking with;\nout any leg. 5. An umbrella.\ntions).\nIn all, over 100 persons including!\nmany of unimpeachable integrity,\ncaught a glimpse of the Loch Ness\nwill-o-the-wisp during the four or I\nfive years following its original\ndiscovery. But we naven't heard\nmuch of it recently.\nOf the many .theories which hav*\nbeen brought forward to account tor\nthe most famous What-Is-It of our\ncentury, these are probably thai\nones heard most often:\n(1) It's a fake, perhaps made of\nrubber, and designed to draw visitors to the lake.\n(2) It's a bunch ot weeds. Many\nof the monsters sighted at sea hav*\nturned out to be in this class.\n(3) It's a snake, Land snakes\n(even cobras and anacondas) hav*\nbeen seen many miles from land.\n(4) It's a seal (Nature Magazine).\n(5) It's a squid (W. Beebe). Some\ncuttlefish have been captured which\nmeasured over 60 feet.\n(6) There really Is some unusual\ncreature in the Loch\u2014perhaps a\nmodified descendant of some prehistoric animal.\nTake your pick. But before you\nscoff at the last theory, read the\narticle on Sea Serpents in the Encyclopedia Brlttanica. This reliable\nsource says:\n\"It would appear that, while with\nvery few exceptions ail the so*\ncalled sea serpents can be explained\nby reference to some well-known\n.\u25a0minis' or natural object, there ll\nstill a residuum sufficient to prevent modern zoologists from deny*\n'\"a\"     h>   n\\*\"'M,)ta'     V    a-Ti\"1   SUCh\n\/ 'i'i o .' \u25a0.,' v u m s as ['!.\u00ab\nlas c the Idsa that there may bl\nsuch a thing as a sea monster remember that giant cuttlefishes over\n80 feet long have been living In\nthe ocean for ages, yet only about\n1860 did actual capture prove thelt\nexistence.\n m^mmmmmw.\nm.\n* i\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNINO, FEB. 18, 1939.\n-PAGE NINE\nPICARD HALFWAY LEADER IN NEW\nORLEANS TOURNEY; DUDLEY DR0P5\nBy KENNETH GREGORY\nI NEW QRLEANS, Feb. .7 C>VP>-\nOut ot a general assault on par, tall\nHenry 0. Flcatd, the imooth-ltrok'\n'\u00abr trom Hershey, Pa., emerg\u00bb4 today as leader after 38 holes ol the\nf 10,000 Crescent City open goit\ntournament. ...''   y\nI Plcard, after an opening round\npar 72, stroked around the windswept City park course In 69 blows\nOn the second day for a half-way\ntotal of 141 and a one-stroke lead.\n\u25a0 No less than 15 of .he touring\nsalaried players gave pai a beating.\n\u2022But the feature bit ot sharpshootlng\ntithe from clubs of Harry Kettle-\nbladt, a slim young pro from Fram-\ningham, Mass., who e ualled' the\ncourse record with a great 67. .\nNettlebladt put on a 35-32 exhibition, which added to S first-\nround 76, advanced him Into a tie\nat 143 with Ralph Guldahl of Mad.\nIson, N. J\u201e the national open chain\npon for fourth place In the halfway standings. Guldahl added a\none-under-par 71 to his owning\n72. .  '  \u2022\"       \\    '\u25a0\nDeadlocked for second place were\nJimmy Thomson, slugger from\nShawnee-on-Delaware, Pa., and\nChandler .Harper of Portsmouth, V*\nThomson reeled off a 68 today, foUr\nunder par, while the youthful Harper had a 69. Their totals were 142.\nBig Ed Dudley o( Philadelphia,\nPa., who took the first-round lead\nwith a two-under-par 70, got away\nto a bad start today and never settled down. He finished with a four-\nover par 76 and dropped into a tie\nfor eleventh position at 146 with\nJohnny Revolts of Evanston, 111.\nZell Eaton, a young professional\nfrom Oklahoma City, Okla., wis\neven with the par card at 144 and\nalone In sixth place.\nBracketed In seventh place with\nSlammln' Sammy Snead of White\nSulphur Springs, W. Va., with 145's\nwere Lloyd Mangrum of Los Angeles and W. A. Stackhouso of Se-\nguln, Texas, toth of whom matched\npar and Harold (Jug) McSpaden of\nWinchester, Mass., who with Snead\nlid a one-under 71.\nKimberley and Nelson (lash on\nTwo Hockey Fronts Here Tonight\nThey Carry a Torch In Nelson Ladles!'Basketball\n8 CANADIANS MAY COME HOME AS\nSTREATHAM HOCKEY CLUB EXPELLED\n|wl-\nijneet\nMidget   Title   Game1\nat 7; Seniors\nMeet 9:15\n. Kimberley and Nelson clash on\niwo .hockey fronts tonight, at the\nNelson Civic Centre Arena, when\n-both senior and midget honors will\n|be at stake. Kimberley Dynamiters,\n'ho top the Kootenay league, wili\nleet the Nelson Maple Leafs, at\nIB: 15, in their second last meeting\nI of the regular league season.\nI   At 7 o'clock kimberley midget\n\u25a0\u2022reps,',' champions of East Koote-\n\u25a0nay,   will, meet   Nelson  .midge?\n[.\"reps,\" champions of West Koote-\n[ nay, In the first game of a two.\nI but-of-three series for the Bruce\nRitchie   Memorial   cup,' and   the\nhonor of representing the Kootcna.\nIn the Cromle cup play for the\n8 a title.\nIn the senior game, which will\nte laced off at Oris at the conclusion of the midget clash, the Nelion Maple Leafs will take the. Ice\nwith the hope and sincere intention to take the T.N.T. squad for\n\u2022ne first time this season.\nHAVE OPPONENT'S NUMBER\n\u25a0 ' The Nelsopltes figure they have\nKimberley's number now after the\ntrip into the East Kootenay a\nCouple of weeks ago. By playing\nnt Kimberley's own game of lore-\n'Checking, and breaking up the opposition rushes usually before they\nhad fairly begun, the Leafs tied at\none goal apiece in the last game\nIn' the last period, but Kimberley\n\u25a0 won it with a goal .secured in the\ndying moments after blistering offensive plays In which they had\nli man advantage.\nAll of Nelson's forwards' boast\nits of speed, and should be able\ni tie Kimberley up lt they play a\nTechecking game. Coach Ty Cul-\nrcported last night that all his\nlyers were in good condition,\nth the exception of Jess Seaby,\nhas been suffering from a\nit attack of the flu. He would\n\u25a0 announce exactly how; they\nwajuld line up, but said that those\nin uniform would be Seaby, Bick-\nBjU, Atwell, J. Smith; Duckworth,\nUpatrlck, Carr, N. Smith, Ham-\nond, Euerby, and Shannon.\nThe Nelson midgets and the Klm-\nerlcy midgets will take the ice at\n. o'clock so that the Ice can be swept\n\u2022nd reflooded in time ior the senior\nI go at 0:15. The venue of this midget game, which had been more or\nlees In the air at the last moment,\n\u2022wa decided Friday afternoon by a\ntossed coin which confirmed the original plans of the trustees of the\nBruce Ritchie Memorial cup.\nI.TWO FINE\n1 MIDGET SQUADS\nj   The Kimberley boys will arrive\nlin Nelson this afternoon, and Will\nI be billeted by different, members\nIfcnd officials ot the Nelson club.\nSmiling Harry Brown, who coaches\nthese youngsters states he has a fine\nbunch of boys, and one or two are\nplenty big. This series is a two-oiit-\nof-three, and the second game is\nslated for Monday evening and the\nadvance tickets' are going like hot\ncakes. ' \u25a0\nThe fine display that the Nelson\nsquad put on when taking the\nTrail Midget Smokies into camp\n10-2 and 104 In the last games of\nthe West Kootenay playoffs is the\ntalk of the town, very few hockey\nfans were aware of the splendid\ncalibre of hockey the locals could\ndish up, but those two games were\nreally a treat, and the fans .'can\nhardly wait until they are served\nanother dish of the same variety.\nCoach Walter Walt will be making another change or two in the\nlineup tor tonight's battle. Delmer\nFerg will be in the cage, as it's his\nturn this game. Joe Hilliard will\nbe on defence in place of Don Gibbon, who was injured in the last\nTrail game. The rest of the team\nwill be Ioanin, Hornett, Huyck,\nTapanlla, Hefeo, Prestley, Winlaw,\nSmith and Rldenour, with Jim Ritchie, the other goalie, on reserve.\nIt ts understood the NelsOn Hockey club will hand Some of the\nclub's share of tonight's gate to the\nNelson Arnateur Hockey association, in connection with the participation of the midgets.\nBy JACK BRAYLEY\" *\nLONDON, Feb. 17 (CP.-Cable)\n\u2014light Canadian members of the\nStreatham Hotkey olub tonight\nMd' virtually decided to return\nto Canada after the club waa ex-\nBilled from the National league\ny the  British   Ice  Hockey as-\n' soclation.\nThese eight were suspended as\nIndividuals. Bill Woodward, defenceman  from  Kitchener, Ont,\nwas banned until the end of the\n1940-41 season for starting a free-\nfor-all fight In a game Wednesday against Wembley Monarchs.\nSuspensions until the end ot 1939-\n40 season were meted out to Goalie\nLouis St. Denis and Wlngman Gordon Day, both of Ottawa. Five others suspended tor the balance of\nthe current season were Jules Blals\nof Vlctorlaville, Que, BUI Moran\nof Ottawa, Skipper Bean, Llstowel,\nOnt., John Mahaffey of Montreal\nand Don Tomalty of Montreal.\nTHREE ELIGIBLE\nStill eligible tor play in British\nhockey are Henry Hayes, Montreal,\nBobby Beaton of New Glasgow, N,\nS, and Charlie' Turner of Hamilton, Ont\n. W. A. Warman, managing director of Streatham club, said In a\nstatement the attitude of the B. I.\nH. A. \"amazed\" him. He recalled\nStreatham waa ready to pull from\nthe league on Wednesday, but the\nassociation \"showed determination\nand anxiety to persuade us to withdraw our resignation.\n\"We agreed to do \u00abo for the sake\not the future of hockey of which\nStreatham is the only remaining\npioneer club in this country.The B.\nI. H. A. reversed the situation by\nexpelling Streatham from the league\nbecause ot incidents In the match\nthat night where the players were\nunder abnormal tension. It isn't only\nthe club that is being penalized, but\nalso our crowds at loyal supporters.\"\nStreatham announced Its withdrawal from the league last Monday In protest against suspension\nof three players by the B. I. H.\nA. The three, who played In a\nleague game after having been\ndeclared on the suspended list for\nrough play, were St, Denis, Day\nand Blals.      '\nThey ure,\nJaft te tight, Lillian Hickey, Edna Jarbeau, Louise Colettl, Kay'MaoDougall, Rom Stewart, Jane Ventble and Dorothy Jarbeau.\n***\u2022'\u00bb\u00bb im \u00bbh'\u00ab Red Sox eagette squad, entrant In Nelson Ladles' Basketball league, are shown above, snapped Just before they\n-'    *,..,_ _-._._..\u201e_. ......,iM hail.\na.\u2014,-.-.,-- ., U, HM'sm n\u00ab..nas*,- -m..-^,- ,\nSeven lasses that make up the Red Sex eagette squad, entrant In Nelaon Ladles' Basketball leagu.,\t\ntook the floor for another league encounter at the Nelson Clvle Centre recreation hall.\nMORE ABOUT\nBADMINTON\n(Continued From Pago Two)\nson, beat B. Buerge and P. Hlook-\n4 Nelson, 15-.11, 16-9.\nOpening day\nHANDICAP EV\nNelson Ladies to\nCurl in Bonspiel\nAl Rossland Today\nFour rinks of the Nelson Ladles'\nCurling club board a bus this\nmorning for Rossland, where they\nwill trundle rocks in the Rossland\ninvitation curling competition at\nthe Rossland Curling rink. They\nplan to leave at 7:00 o'clock.\nTeams, with' skips mentioned\nfirst, making the trip, are: \u2022\nMrs. William Kline. Mrs. J. C.\nHooker, Mrs. N. C. Stibbs and Mrs.\nJ. H. Argyle; Mrs. H. M. Whimster,\nMiss Grace Laughton, Miss Annie\nSmith and Mrs. W. K. Blair; Mrs.\nS. N. May, Mrs. T. S. Homersham,\nMiss Jean Dingwall and Mrs. Nelson\nColville; Mrs. John Gansner, Mrs.\nEric Sowerby, Mrs. A. Long and\nMrs. R. Heddle.\nMrs. Kraft's Rink\nWinner, Esling.\nCurling Trophy\nCurlers of Mrs. Andy Kraft's\nrink Frtday afternoon became holders of the Esling trophy, when they\nwon their seventh straight game in\na round robin spiel at the Nelson\nLadies' Curling club. They won\ntheir seventh game from Mrs. Alex\nDingwall's rink, 13-5.- The trophy\nwas put up for competition by W. K.\nFailing, M. P. for Kootenay West,\nlast year.\nOther results Friday were Mrs.\nH. M. Whirtster 10. Mrs. T. A. Wai-\nlace 7; Mrs. John Gansner 13, Mrs.\nB. Whitehead 5.\nPlay will continue Monday for\npoints prizes and second prize. The\ndraw Is:\nMrs. Whlmster vs. Mrs. Dingwall,\nend Mrs. Lou Maddin vs. Qransnor,\nKing George Receives\nCanadian Minister'\nLONDON, Feb. 17 (CP Havas)-\nThe king today received in audience Lieut-Colonel G. P. Vanier,\nthe new Canadian minister to\nFrance.\n. results were:\n\u201e    ..VBNTS.    .\nMixed doubles handicap (second\nround)\u2014J. P. McDonald and Mrs.\nMcDonald, Creston, beat'N. Ashley\nand Mrs. Doug Male, 15-10, 15-5;\nMonty Morley and Miss J. Wood,\nNelson, beat L. Howarth and Miss\nL. Bennett, Nelson, 15-13,15-11; William Brown and Miss A, McDonald.\nNelson, beat J. RosJ Fleming and\nMrs. K. McCannel, Nelson,: IM,\n15-10.\nLadies' doubles (first round) \u2022-\nMrs. Frank Wells and Miss Priscllh.\nGelinas, Nelson, beat Mrs. Harold\nLakes and Mrs. K. McCannel, Nelson, 8-15,, 15-7, 15-7; Miss C. Carrie\nand Mrs. M. Morley, Nelson, beat\nMrs.  Charles  Blunt ^ ami Miss J.\nOil, aNClSUll,   iit-ia,  ita-cr.\nDraw for today follows:   \u2022\n\u00b0'00 a,\"*!\u2014\nA. Hopkins vs. (not decided): J.\nCorbyn vs. (not decided); A. Milin\nD. Barry, Miss I. Kerr vs. (not decided), Miss S. Williams vs. (not\ndecided), Miss J. P. McDonald vs.\nMiss Thclma Bird, Miss M. Smith\nvs. Miss R, Palmar. '.\n9:30 a.m.\u2014\nMrs. W. Williams and Miss Irene'\nKerr vs. Miss L. Bennett and Mrs.\nC. A. Larson, Miss C. McDonald and\nMrs. Douglas Male vs. Mrs, H.\nFredericks and Miss A. Bigg, Mrs.\nF. Grocnough and Miss C. Cullen\nvs. MM A, T. Godfrey and Mrs.\nGeorge Simpson, F, Greenough anr\nMl.  -a..., , __\nW. Williams vs. D. Tye aneTA. ft\ni, A. Hopkins and F. Pattullo\nI. G. Chamberlain  and  W.\nGreen, Willow Point,. 16-8,\n15-3.\n12-15,\nMen's singles \u00bbi*\u00bb\u00bb\u00abfi,?'\nMcDonald, Creston, beat Don Barry Nelson, 15-9, 15-7; Stewart Mcintosh, Nelson, beat Frank Wells,\nNelson-15-5,15-2; J. ft Parker, Bonnington, beat Pete Pearce, lielion,\n15Udies''\u2022sihgles (MjBOnd 'Wjag-\nMto L. Wardale, Nelson beat Miss\nM. Hamilton, Creston. IH, \u00bb*\u00bb\u25a0\nMen's doubles (second rounds)-\nBill Ramsay and Harold Ch\u00bbpman,\nNelson, beat L. Howarth and R. s,\nChodoreoff. 21-7, 21-16: Ron Lowe\nand K. McCannel, Nelson, beat R.\nMcHallam and Bas 1 Mathews, Nel-\nwn 5-W, 15-9; H. H. Hinitt and\nF McDonald, Nelson, beat H. Chester and J. H. Corbyn, Nelson, 15-5,\n15-9.\n\u00b0 Mixed* doubles (first:round)-Hec*\ntor Mackenzie and Thelma Bird beat\nJ\/M. Morley and Mrs. Morley, Nel-\nson? 15-9, 15-12; A. T. Godfrey and\nMrs Godfrey, Nelson, beat Pete\n- '       \"J Miss J. Wood, Nelson,\nPYJAMAS\nby B.V.D., Tooke. Arrow\nJACK BOYCE\n114 Baker    Style Shop    Phone 180\nPearce and\n15-1, 15-8.\nSecond round\u2014Benny Monteleone\nand Miss Priscilla Gelinas, Nelson,\nbeat N. Ashley and Miss Molly Murray, Nelson, 15-7, 15-12; Les McEachern and Miss Edna Watts, Nelson, beat R. K. McFadden and Mrs.\nD. E. Mole, Nelson, 15-6. 15-9.   .\nLadles' singles\u2014Miss Fricllla Gelinas, Nelson, beat Miss Molly Murray, Nelson, 9-11, 11.8, 11-3.\ntidies' doubles (second round)\u2014\nMrs. Douglas Male and Miss Betty\nMcDonald, Nelson, beat Miss J\nGreen and Mrs, Charles -Blunt, Willow Point, 15-5,-15.7.\nJUNIOR EVENTS\"      ,\nMixed doubles (first round) \u2014\nStewart Mcintosh and Murielle\nWhimster, Nelson, beat C. MacDonald and Delia Whitfield, Nelson,\n15-4, 15-5; Bill Taylor and Miss\nEvelyn Hammer, Nelson, beat B.\nCollinson and Betty Benwell, Nelson. 15-5, 15-10.\nGirls' doubles (second round)\u2014\nMurielle Whlmster and Muriel\nSmith beat Evelyn Hammer and\nBetty Benwell, Nelton, 15-6,15-8.\nBoys' doubles (second round)\u2014\nB. Collinson- and Bud Emery, Nel-\nBRAKE REUNING\nWe have the proper machinery\nfor regrindlng brake shoes.\nShorty's Repair Shop\n\u25a0M.BAKER ST- NELSON B.C\n\" I f\n,e Covern\nColwmpii.      1\nArm Partially\nCleared of Ice\nThe mercury rose to 37 degrees\nFriday as snow continued to melt\n\u25a0steadily with the mild weather\nduring the day. The minimum temperature during the 24 hours ending at 5 p.m. stod at 21 degrees,\nthis figure being recorded the previous night. The sun shone for a\nshort time during the morning. The\nIce on the lake broke up rapidly\nyesterday with the aid pf'oreezy\nweather, clear water, showing all\nthe way across the West Arm at\nseveral points.\nPOX TO GIVE TALK\nU.B.C. CONVOCATION\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 17 (CP) -\nDr. William ShefwOod Fox,, president of, the University of Western\nOntario, will give the address at\nthe spring convocation of the University of British Columbia May 11\nthe university senate announced\ntoday.\nThe senate 'confirmed a special\ncongregation to be held March 17\nto confer an honorary degree on\nq6HrDor-qen\u00bbral   Utd   Twtnit-\nCobus,\nvs.   D.   _.    \u201e\t\nBrown, D. Batty and Mrs. L. Maurer\nvt. J: H. Corbyn and Mri. N. Morley. \u25a0\u2022\u25a0--.-\u2022\n10:00 a.m.\u2014\nM. Morley vs. E. Haley, H. L. Cole\nvs.  Wilfred  Hearn,   R.  Mann  vs.\nD. John, S. Mcintosh vs. Q. StUare,\nE. Hearn vs. B. Collinson, D. Taylor\nvs. Merlin John,\n10:30 a.m.\u2014\nMiss F. Greenough and Miss C.\nCullen vs. Miss Edna Watts aiid\nMiss P. Gelinas, Mr;. A. Carr and\nMiss J. Wood vs. Miss, J. King ond\nMrs. D. Gibbon, Mrs. F. Buckley\nand Mrs. V. C. Huyck vs. Mrs. H.\nLakes and Mrs. K. McCannel, Miss\nVess O'Shea and Molly Murray vs.\nMiss A. McDonald and Mrs, L.\nMaurer. Mrs. Ruth McKowan and\nMiss Kathleen Dazel) vs. (not decided), H. L. Coles vs, (not decided).\n11:00  a,m.\u2014\nW. Taylor and Miss M. Whlmster vs. E. Jones and Miss K. Detail,\nW. Willis and Miss C. Irwin vs not\ndecided, A. E. Cobus and Miss E.\nCarrie, vs Dr. F. Fergie and Mrs.\nC. Fergie, F. Wells and Mrs. F.\nWells vs C. Irwin and Miss A. Rigg,\nD. Male ahd Mrs. F. Pattullo vs tye\nand Miss Carl Larson, F. Greenough\nand Mrs.  H. Frederick vs S. R.\nChodorcoff.\n11:30 s.m.\u2014       .\nA. Hopkins vs K. McBride, D.\nBirch vs Ned Rhodes, Mrs. A. Carl\nvs Miss R. McDonald, F. Fergie vs\nW. Willis, Miss L. Carew vs Miss,\nKay Jones, Mrs. D. Gibbon vs Miss\nNina McClements.\n12:00 Noon-\nMiss C. Fergie vs Miss M. Whlmster, S. Pattullo and Miss C. Cullen,\nvs K. McCannell, and Miss Connie\nHickman, Roy Mann and Mill. M.\nSmith vi C. StClairc and Miss R.\nPalmer, R. Taylor and Miss B. Haylock vi J. E. Parker and Mn. F.\nBuckley, R. Thain a, d H. Elleson\nvs D. John and L. McLeod, J. Teague\nand Thelma Bird vs W. Hearn and\nMiss J. King.\n1:00 p.ma\u2014\nW. Williams and Mrs. W. Williams\nvs H. Chester and Mrs. K. J. Bereau,\nW. -Ramsay and Miss Isabel Dawson vs J. K. McBride and Miss S.\nL. Williams, L. McEachern, and\nMrs. Harold Lakes vs J. McLennan\nand Miss K. Jones; A. Hopkins and\nMrs. F. Greenough vs F. McDonald and Miss L. Wardale, F. Greenough and Mrs. H. Frederick vs S.\nR. Chodorcoff and partner, J. R\nFleming, and Mrs. K. McCannell vs\nE. Hill and Miss R. McKowan.\n1:30 p.m.\u2014\nN. John and E. Hearn vs (not\ndecided), E. Haley and Mrs. G.\nSimpson, vs John Morey and Miss\nB. McDonald, C. McDonald and G,\nTindalevs S. Mcintosh and F. Fergie, A. E. Cobus and D. Tye vs II.\nFredericks and W. Willis, G. Allen\nand W. Taylor vs C. StClalre and\nC. York, N. Rhodei and Mn. V. C.\nHuyck vs II. Chapman and Mils\nD. Dunnett,\n2:00 p.m.\u2014\n,R. Cornwall vs E. Hill, Mn. 3.\nBereau and Miss L. Wardale vs Miss\nM. Hamilton and Mn. 3. P. McDonald, D.  Birch snd Mill Veil\nStagehand Races\nthe Admiral Today\nMIAMI, FU., Feb. IT (AP) -The\nlong-awaited meeting of. War Admiral and Stagehand, not expected\nto take place until the $50,000 added\nWidener challenge cup March 4,\nbecame an immediate prospect today.\nBoth were entered overnight for\na seven-furlong handicap, the $1500\nFort Pierce pune, at Hialeah park\ntomorrow.\nStagehand gets Into the Fort\nPierce at 122 pounds, with top\nweight ot 126 assigned to Samuel D.\nRiddle's great campaigner.\nThe advance call-over listed the\nodds on War Admiral at 4 to 6 with\nStagehand at 8 to 5.\nSisler's Son on\nCardinal Rosier\nST. LOUIS, Feb. 17 (AP).-Peef.\nless George. Sisler'i son Dlck^ who\nbatted .58'7 in- prep school compett-\n33 in municipal league\nar, signed with the St.\ntion and .483\nLouis Cardinals today.\nTht 18-year-old youth, -who like\n\"Pop\", is at home on the pitcher's\nmound and at first base, will report to the Cardinals' training camp\nMarch 2; His usual position, however\nis third base, ana lie alto plays\nthe outfield.\nVice-President' Brench Rickey,\nwho obtained young Sisler's signature, launched the elder Slsler on\nhis spectacular career tn 1916. Rickey then was manager of the St.\nLouis Browns.\nYoung Slsler will begin his professional, baseball career only a few\ndays after his father. One of the\ngreatest hitters of all' time, wat\nelected to baseball's hall of fame.\n\"My name won't do: hlnj any\ngood,\" commented the elder Slsler\nwho, at 44, is still one of the busiest men In the gams as ihe \"Judge\nLandls\" of semi-pro baseball and\npresident of the. National Softball\nassociation.\nInterior Stars\nKelowna Victors\nKELOWNA, B.C., Feb. 17 (CP)-\nInterlor British Columbia stars captured all the major titles in the\ncentral British Columbia Badminton championshipi, which concluded here today, except the women's\ndoublet.\nThe latter title wat won by Eleanor- Young and Jocelyn Feate ol\nVancouver, who downed Margaret\nTaylor and Hazel Brown of Kelowna 15-5, 15-10.,'Illness of the Vancouver shuttle ace, Jack Muir, wai\ncited by some as the reason the\nmen's junior singlet, men's open,\nmen's doubles and mixed doubles\ntitles stayed at home.\nAllan France of Kelowna won the\njunior crown today In a match, postponed from Wednesday because\nof Mulr's illness. The scores were\n15-10, 15-13, France took the men's\nopen singlet,by default\nTo the fair Kelowna star and\nBritish Columbia titlist, Margaret\nTaylor, went the women'i titles after she defeated the highly rated\nEleanor Young ot Vancouver, 9-11,\n11-4, 11-2.\nMuir paired with Munro Fraser\not Kelowna in the doubles but his\nweakness proved a handicap and\nthe team lost to C. Fudge and Nick\nSolly of Summerland, 9-15, 15-7,\n15-8.\nMuir, teamed with Eleanor Young\nin the mixed affair, again experienced defeat when the team went\ndown to the Kelowna combination\not France and Hazel Brown, 6-15,\n17-15, 18-14.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Press\nRemember when\u2014\nMontreal Canadiens signed Goaler\nRoy Marchand to replace Georges\nVezlna, one ol hockey's all-time\ngreat goalkeepers, 16 yean ago today, after the \"Chicoutimi Cucumber\" was injured in a game against\nHamilton. Vezlna came back to add\nto his net-minding laurels until illness forced retirement Nov. 28,1925.\nHe died March 28, 1926.\nCanadiens Still\nin the Race but\nInjuries Mount\nMONTREAL. Feb. 17 (CP) -\nTheir ranks riddled by Injuries and\ntheir sources Ot fresh material barren, Montreal Canadiens refused to\ncall quits tonight and announced\nthey are still In the National Hockey\nleague rape.\nWhile hospital attendants kept t\nwatchful eye on the Habitants' No.\n1 defence combination, Babe Siebert\nand Walter Buswell, acting manager\nJules Dugal admitted Buswell Is\ncut for an lndefenlte period. He\ncrashed head-first into the boards In\nlast night's game against Boston\nand suffered a slight concussion.\nSiebert aggravated a back injury\n't kr \t\nExperts Watch\nHandicap Today\nLOS ANGELB3, Feb. 17 (CP).-\nSpccify, Heelfly and Llgaroti headed a field of 13 thoroughbreds\nnamed today to go postward in tha\n(10,000 added San Carlos handicap\nat Santa Anita park, tomorrow, a\nmile and one-sixteenth expected to\ndevelop a successor to the ailing\nSeabiscuit as top contender in the\ncoming $100,000 Santa Anita handicap,\nSpecify, A. A. Baronl's speedy\nfour-year-old, goes in carrying 11B\nSounds, one more than Alfred\nrwynne Vanderbllfs tricky port\nactor, Heelfly; Llgaroti drew top\nweight of 122 pounds.   ,\nwhlchcee from Vancouver, B. C,\nstables ol Major Austin Taylor, wilt\npick 122 pounds In the handicap.\nand won't know until tomorrow\nwhether he can play In week-end\ngames. Wingman Jimmy Ward joined Georges Mantha on the balance\nof the season with a dislocated\nshoulder. Mantha has a broken loot.\nBuswell, Siebert and Ward were\nthe major casualties from last\nnlght'a 5-1 licking.\n\"But we're not out yet,\" said Du-\nCHILD, 3, BURNED DEATH\nKIRKLAND LAKE, Ont, Feb. IT\n(CP)\u2014Michael Whlteduck H yetrs\not age, was burned to death and\nhli father suffered serious injuries\nin an attempt to save the child when\nlire razed their log cabin homt\nnear Federal early today.\nm^uon*:!?\n.smith M\u00bbHur\u00bbCTunina company\n\u2022msbuums ,tn    ten. \u00bb nmt\u00bb. one.\ngal. His team, with 12 more garnet\nto play, It five points behind the\nsixth-place Detroit Red Wings and\nsix behind Chicago.\nAsked about replacements, Dugal\nsaid there wouldn't be any \"Ior the\ntime being.\"\nThe girl's singles was an all-Kel-\n*ma battle with Alice Thompson\nWhlUis for the title,\nowna\ndowniui\n13-10, 1\nCanadian Girls\nDominate Race\nlake Placid, n.'V- Feb, n -\n(CP) \u2014 Canadian girt sklelrs today\ndominated the class \"B\" downhill\nrace, final event on the International Kate Smith Iki tournament\nfor women which opened here yesterday.\nIsabel Ryan of the Ottawa Ski\nclub wen, the race over the ley 1500-\nfoot Scott's Cobble course, covering\nthe coune In 23 seconds flat to\ntake the Individual crown and give\nher cliib the team title.\nAnita Rand of the Lake Placid\nSki club was a close tecond In 26.3\nand Betty Foamier of the Norland\nclub, Ottawa, was third in 26.4 seconds.\nThe field wai clotely bunched In\nthe tint 10 with later tlmea ranging above one minute. Thirteen girls\nfrom Canada finished today in the\nfirst half oi a field of 3.7.\nTest Match Today\nJOHANNESBURG, Feb. 17 (CP\nCable)\u2014England and South Africa\nmeet here tomorrow in the fourth\ncricket test match. The touring\nteam has an edge in the current\nfive-game series by virtue ol its\nvictory at Durban In the last contest Previous tests at Johannesburg\nand Cape Town ended In stalemates.\nSouth Afrlca'i selectors are making two changes Irom the team that\nlost at Durban by an innings and\n13 runs.'W. W. Wade. Natal wicket-\nkeeper, h being replaced by R. E.\n \u2014 Xrahivaal\nCronie Markers\nWin lor Smokies\nAROSA, Switzerland, Feb. 17\n(CP-Hkvas) \u2014 Two goals by Ab\nCronie in the second and third periods permitted the touring Trail\nSmoke Eaten to nose out the Arosa\nhockey sextet by a Mora ol 3-2 In\na nip-and-tuck match here today.\nAlter Dick Kowcinak had sent\nthe Canadians oil to a good start\nwith a goal In the first period, the\nSwiss team fought back and tied\nthe score early in the second.\nCronie's lint goal late in the\nperiod was equalized by the second\nand final Swiss score In the lirst\nfew minutes ol the third period.\nCronie's second goal a lew minutes\nbefore the final whistle sewed up\nthe match lor the Canadians.\nMELBOURNE, (CP), - A \u00a360,*\n000 ($220,200) extension ot the Flinders! Melbourne) nkyal_depot,ien-\n , anevaal player, and E. Q. Davies, Transvaal last\na      \"a    r-ffi\nGrieveson, young\nabllng expansion ot the Royal Australian Navy personnel by 800 recruits n year, nas.been announced.\n26 ouncE\nBOTTLE\nCO-OPERATIVE\nWINE GROWERS ASSOCIAIION\nOF SOOTH AFRICA\nThis idvsrtlwmint k not published\nOr displayed by the Liquor Control\nBotrd or by ths Govirnmeert ft\nBritish Columbia,\nTWO HIGH QUALITY\nbowler, gives way to E. S. Newsom\nfrom the same state.\nAlthough Wade did a line job behind the wickets in the earlier tests\nthe selectors are hoping his successor will prove a better batsman.\nGrieveson showed up well in a\ndrawn game between the Englishmen and a combined Transvaal\neleven lilt month. In the same\nmatch Newtom took three wickets\nfor 78 runt and Icored 41 not out\nWalter Hammond, Engllih captain, will not choose the team to\nrepresent the mother country until\ntoborrow. Alan Melville, Transvaal, will again captain the Spring'\nboks. '\u25a0''\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0>\t\nO'Shea vs Dr. Fergie Md Miss Kay\nGazell, J. R. Fleming and D. Male\nvi H. A. Parker Ahd W. Brown, L.\nMcEachern  and  P. Graves  vs  J.\nTeague and tt. Stewart.\n2130 p.m.\u2014\nMn. C. Irwin and Min S. Williams vt. Mn. L. Maurer and Miss C.\nHickman, N. Ashley and 3. E. Park-,\ner vs N. Rhodei snd E. Haley, H.\nMcKenzie and Miss Bird vs Mor-\nley-Morley winner, vi E. S, Jonei\nand Miss K. Jones, Mist B. Haylock\nand Miss I. Dawson VI Mrs. F.\nBuckley and Mrs. V, C. Huyck,\nMcKow\u00bbn vt Carr winner v\u00bb Mlu\nElto and Evinrude\nOUTBOARD\nMOTORS\nPRICED\nFROM\n$55.00\nAND\n\u00bb' Iff\nFOR    FULL    PARTICULARS\nAND PRICES APPLY TO-\nA. LrCRAYLING-KaSio,B.c.\nAGENT FOR THI WEST KOOTENAY '*\nDISTILLED   AND  BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND\nBY   WILLIAM GRANT AND SONS LIMITED\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nCpMrpI Board or by th\u00ab Goverrtrnent of British Columbia\n _____\n*m\nPAGE   TEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNINO, PES. 11, IM.\n\u2022 Now h ^ T!Mt C^ Through^; a Want Adi\n\u2022\nWEEK-END RADIO\nSATURDAY\nMONTREAL, Feb. 18- Lord\nTweedsmuir, Governor-General of\nCanada, will be heard over the\nCBC nationwide , network today\nfrom 8:00 to 5:15 p. m., PST. His\nExcellency will address the Boy\nScouts of the Dominion at the annual banquet, to be given by the\nBoy Scout association of Montreal,\ncelebrating the 82nd birthday of\nLord Baden-Powell, Chief Scout\nof the World.\nThe banquet will be attended by\nHis Excellency, by Sir Edward\nBeatty and by the Scouts and) Patrol Leaders of the Montreal association.\nJA& dk&L Joday,\nP.M.\u2014\n5:00\u2014Tommy Rlggs and Betty Lou\n6:00\u2014Phil Baker, comedian\n6:30\u2014Mary Eastman, soprano, and\nBill Perry, tenor.\n7:00\u2014Hit Parade \u2014 Lanny Ross\n7:00\u2014Symphony  Orchestra\n8:00\u2014Joe E. Brown, comedian,\n8:00\u2014National Barn Dance\n8:30\u2014Johnny Presents\n9:00\u2014Professor Quiz.\n9:00\u2014Fred Waring's orch.\nNETWORKS AND STATIONS\nNBC-KFI, Los Angeles; KGA, KHQ\nSpokane: KGO, KFO, San\nKJR, Seattle: KOA, Denver\nFrancisco: KGW, Portland;\nCBS-KNX, Los Angeles; KSL. Salt\nLake City; KFPY, Spokane;\nKOIN, Portland\nDL A MBS\u2014KOL, Seattle; KFCR,\nSan Francisco,\nP.M.\u2014\n6:00 .\nCBS\u2014Sport Broadside\nNBC\u2014Herbie Kay's orch.\nNBC\u2014Tommy Riggs and Betty Lou\nMBS\u2014Jazz Nocturne\n6:30\nMBS\u2014Symphonic Strings ,\nNBC\u2014Carlos Molina's orch. <\nNBC\u2014Music by Cugat tS\nCBS\u2014Ray Bradford's orch.\nNBC\u2014Brenthouse, drama\n6:00\nNBC\u2014National Barn Dance\nCBS\u2014Honolulu Bound, Phil Baker\nNBC\u2014Dinner Date with Judy\nMBS\u2014Hawaii Calls\nNBC\u2014Yascha Borowsky's Trio.\n6:30\nCBS\u2014Saturday Night Serenade\nNBC\u2014Stars ot Tomorrow\n' NBC-Hall of Fun\nMBS\u2014Hollywood Whispers     ...\n6:46 J\u00bb\nDL\u2014Sons of the Pioneers     \u20ac'\n7:00\nCBS\u2014Hit Parade, Lanny Ross\nNBC Symphony Orch.\nDL\u2014Chlcco and his orch.\n7:15\nMBS\u2014Inside  of Sports Sam Baiter.\n7:30\nNBC\u2014Red Norvo's orch.\n\u25a0 MBS\u2014Larry Clinton's orch.\n7:46\nCBS\u2014Capital Opinions\n8:00\nNBC\u2014National Bam Dance\nCBS\u2014Joe E. Brown comedian\nMBS\u2014Yar Concert orch.\n8115\nMBS\u2014Jimmy Dorsey's orch.\n1:30\nCBS\u2014Johnny presents E. R. Johnstone's dramas\nNBC\u2014Lou Breese's orch.\n8:46 .\u00ab\nDL\u2014Jimmy Grier's orch.\n9:00\nCSS\u2014Professor Quiz, Bob Trout\nN3C-Chick Webb's orch.\nNBC\u2014Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians\nKBC-^Tropical Moods\nMBS-Glen Gray's orch.\nDL\u2014News\n0:30\nNBC\u2014Avalon Time with Red Foley\nNBC\u2014Freddy Martin's orch.\nCBS\u2014Harry Owen's orch.\nMSB\u2014Bob Crosby's orch.\nNBC\u2014Eddie Rogers' orch.\n10:00\nNBC\u2014Carlos Molina's orch.\nCBS\u2014Columbia Dances\nNBC\u2014Buddy Roger's orch.\nMBS\u2014Shep Fields' orch.\nNBC\u2014Dick Gardner's orch.\nCBS\u2014Herbie Holmes' orch.\n10:80\nNBC\u2014Emil Baffa's orch.\nCBS\u2014Bob Sherwood's orch.\nNBC\u2014Gary Nottingham's orch.\nDL\u2014Joe Reichmann's orch.\n11:00\nNBC\u2014Organ Concert\nCBS\u2014Pasadena Dance.\nNBC\u2014Herbie Kay's orch.\nNBC\u2014World on Parade\nMBS\u2014Skinnay Ennis' orch.\nCBC NETWORK\nCJCA        CJAT       CFAC       CBR\n. 730 910 930 1100\nP. M.\u2014\n4:00\u2014Personalities I have met\n4:30\u2014Book Review\n4:45\u2014Albert Pratz, violin\n6:00\u2014Boy Scout Program.\n5:15\u2014Scrub Oak Hollow\n5:30\u2014Golden Journeys\n6:00\u2014Hockey Broadcast\n7:30\u2014Symphony orchestra\n8:45\u2014News\n9:00-Old Time Frolic\n9:30\u2014Speaking of Sport\n9:45\u2014News and weather\n10:(XWerry Fuller's orch.\n10:30\u2014Mart Kenney'B orch.\nSUNDAY\nSunday^. fiuL\nP.M.\u2014\n00\u2014Philharmonic-Symphony Society of New York\n30-The World Is Yours.\n:00\u2014Metropolitan Opera Auditions\nof the Air\n;00-rSllver Theatre; Conrad Nagel,\n;30\u2014Gateway to Hollywood\n:0O\u2014Hollywood Playhouse\n00\u2014Bandwagon,   Gene   Krupa's\norchestra.\n:30\u2014Screen Actor's Guild\n:00\u2014Variety Show\n:00\u2014Sunday Evening Hour\n00\u2014Circle, Carole Lombard, etc.\n:30\u2014Jack Benny, Comedian\n00\u2014Ben Bernie's orch.\n:30\u2014One Man's Family\nP.M.\u2014\n12:00-\nCBS\u2014Philharmonic Symphony So*\n.   ciety ot New York\nNBO\u2014Sunday Drivers\nNBC-Band Concert\nMBS\u2014On a Sunday Afternoon\n18.30     .\ntaC\u2014Festival of Music'\nNBC-Vivian della Chiesa, sopr.\nNBC\u2014Our House. ,\n12:4iW .\nDL\u2014Tony Cabooch\nNBC\u2014Becker's chats about dogs\n1:00-   \u2022\nNBC\u2014Rangers' Serenade\nMBS^Harold Stokes' orch.\nNBC\u2014National Vespers  \u2022\nCBS\u2014Philharmonic Symphony\nNBS\u2014Radio Reporter\n1:30-\nNBC-The World Is Yours, Smithsonian Institute drama\nNBC\u2014Caravan; vocalists.\nMBS-Lutheran Hour\n2:00\u2014\nCBS-rGolden Afternoon\nNBC\u2014Metropolitan Opera Auditions\nof the Air\nNBC\u2014Sunday Afternoon In Rose-\ndale ,\nMBS\u2014Musical Steelmakers\n2:30--    . '\nNBC\u2014Viennese Ensemble\nDL\u2014Rabbi Magnin\nNBC\u2014Radio Travelogue\nNBC\u2014Pay checks preferred.\nCBS\u2014Problem Clinic\n2:46-\nNBC\u2014Charles Sears, tenor\nNBC\u2014Otto Clare's Music\nDL\u2014Elinor Remich Warren, pianist\nNBC\u2014Thumbnail drama.\n3:00-\nNBC-Cathollc Hour\nCBS\u2014The Silver Theatre, drama\nNBC\u2014New Friends of Music\nDL-Help Thy Neighbors\n3:30-\nCBS-Gateway to Hollywood\nNBC\u2014Prof. Pete's Puzzlewlts\nMBS\u2014Show of the Week\n4:00-\nCBS\u2014People's platform  '\nNBC-Out of the West \u25a0\u25a0\nNBC\u2014Hollywood Playhouse\nNBC\u2014Jack Benny, comedian\nMBS\u2014Bach Cantata\n4:30\u2014\nNBC\u2014Bandwagon, guest orch.\nNBC\u2014Paul Carson, organist\nNBC-Aloha Land\nCBS\u2014Screen Actors' Guild\nNBC\u2014Sunday Night at Seth Parkers\nDL\u2014Jim Walsh's orch.\n4:45-\nNBC\u2014World on Parade; News\nCBS\u2014Songs of Twilight\n6:00-\nCBS-Thls Is New York\nMBS\u2014American Forum of the Air\nNBC\u2014Edgar Bergen, Charley McCarthy, etc.\nNBC\u2014Cleveland Symphony orch.\nCOO-\nNBC\u2014Manhattan Merry-Go-Round\nCBS-^Sunday Evening Hour.\nNBC\u2014Hollywood Playhouse\nMBS-Old Fashioned Revival\n6:30-\nNBC\u2014Reader's Guide\nNBC\u2014American Album of Familiar\nMusic. \u2022\n6:46\u2014\nNBC\u2014Irene Rich, drama\nNBC\u2014Three Cheers\n7:00\u2014\nNBC-Circle, Carole Lombard, etc.\nNBC\u2014Maurice Spitalny's orch.\nCBS\u2014Melody and Madness, Robert\nBenchley\nMBS-Good Will Hour\n7:30\u2014\nNBC-Cheerio, Inspirational talk\nCBS-Life Without Regrets.\nCBS-H. V. Kaltenborn\n8:00\u2014\nNBC\u2014Johnny Messner*s orch.\nCBS\u2014Jack Denny's orch.\nNBC\u2014Walter Winchell\nNBC\u2014News\n8:15\u2014\nNBC\u2014Irene Rich, drama\nNBC\u2014Noble Sissies orch.\nDL-World Affairs.\n8:30\u2014\nNBC\u2014Jack Benny, comedian\nNBC\u2014Emil Baffa's orch.\nCBS\u2014Archie Bleyer's orch.\n9:00\u2014 _      -\nNBC-Sunday Night at Seth Parkers\nCBS\u2014Ben Bernie's orch.\nNBC\u2014Larry Clinton's orch.\nMBS\u2014Chick Webb's orch.\nDL\u2014News\n9:16\nDL\u2014Frank and Archie\n9:80-\nNBC\u2014One Man's Family\nNBC-Herbie Kay's orch.\nNBC\u2014Fletcher Henderson's orch.\nMBS\u2014Bob Crosby's orch,\nDL\u2014Voice of Prophecy.\n9:46-\nNBC-University Explorer\n10:00\u2014\nCBS\u2014Dick Aurandt's orch.\nNBC\u2014Charlie Agnew's orch.\nNBC\u2014Paul Martin's orch.\nMBS\u2014Tiny Hill's orch.\nNBC\u2014News Reporter\nDL\u2014Phil Harris' orch.\n10:15-\nNBC\u2014Bridge to Dreamland\nCBS\u2014A Song at. Evening\n10:30\u2014\nNBC\u2014Mike Riley's orch.\nNBC\u2014Paul Burton's orch.\nNBC\u2014Bridge to Dreamland\nMBS'-Jose Manzanares' orch.\nDL\u2014Jimmy Grier's orch.\n10:45\u2014\nCBS\u2014Maxine Sullivan, songs\n11:00\u2014\nNBC\u2014Gary Nottingham's orch.\nMBS\u2014Bob Crosby's orch.\nDI\/\u2014Carvel Craig's orch.\nNBC\u2014Chatles Runyan, organist\nNBC-World On Parade; News\nCBS-Clyde McCoy's orch.\nCBC NETWORK\nCJCA\n730\nCFCN       CJAT\n1030 910\nCBR\n1100\nP.M.\u2014\n4:00\u2014Jack Benny's company\n4:30-Melodlc strings\n5:00\u2014Don Ameche's company\n6:00\u2014Hart House String Quartet.\n6:30\u2014Lyric Trio\n7:00\u2014National forum\n7:30\u2014By the sea\n8:00\u2014News and weather\n8:15\u2014The Art Singer\n8:30\u2014Serenade for Strings\n9:00-Hugh Bancroft\n9:30\u2014Presenting.\n9:45\u2014News and weather\n10:00\u2014Romance of sacred song.\nMarket rasen, England, <cf>\n\u2014 Leonard Hyde combines plg-rals-\ning with his hairdresslng and tobacco business. Last year his turnover was 5000 pigs and he won the\nchampionship at Market Rasen fair\nrecently.\nNdsmt Batty Nm,\nMember of the Canadian Dally\n\\   Newspapers Association\ntelephbrie  144 '.\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Department!\nSubscription   Rates\nSingle copy ,\n: .05\n3*\n13.00\nBy carrier, par week\nBy carrier, par year.\nBy mail In Canada to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60s;\nthree months $1.80; six months\n$3.00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, ona month 75c; six''moriths\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUnited States, same aa above\nplus any extra postage.\nAdvertising Rates\nHeaUnp\n(Minimum 2 Lines)       '\n2 lines, Mr Insertion _\u2014 $.22\n2 lines. 6 consecutive\ninsertions           y '   \u25a0 .88\n(0 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per. insertion _\u2014 .33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive      \u25a0 > \u25a0\ninsertions      \u25a0 \u2022''     y 1.32\n2 lines, 1 month ,,  I    . 2.86\n3 lines, 1 month y ',  , -  \u25a0 4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\ntho abovo basis\nBox numbers 11o extra. This\ncovers any number of\ninsertions\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n109FOR PROMPT PAYMENT \\\n'SPECIAL.'LOW RATE\nSituations Wanted, 25b for any\nrequired   number of lines for\nsix days, payable In advanoe.\nHELP WANTED\nMAN FOR DAIRY FARM, $26 PER\nmonth. State, experience, nation-\nality, etc. Box 680 Kimberley, B..C\nEXP. GIRL OR WOMAN FOR\nhswk. Sip. out prfrd. State wages.\nBox 5189 Dally News.'\t\nGIRL, EXPERIENCED AS COOK.\nApply Box 5219 Daily News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nCHEF, 1st CLASS, ENGLISH,\nwould like position in Country\nHotel or Club, or would be willing to take full charge of kitchen,\ndining room, etc. Have good references. Clean, reliable and trustworthy. William Swain, General\nDelivery, Nelson, B. C,\nEXP. MIDDLE AGED WOMAN\nwants work as housekeeper. Will\nwork in or out of town. Box 5202\nDaily .News.\nEXPERIENCED WAITRESS DE-\nslres work. Apply Jane Tokarchuk\n1837 Fourth Are. Trail. Ph. 232R.\nEXP. MECHANIC, TRUCK AND\ntractor driver, willing, honest and\nreliable. Box 5147 Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED GIRL WANTS\nwork. Good with children, Sleep\nlri. Box 5146 Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED GIRL DESIRES\nhousework. Sleep in. Box 520f,\nDaily News.\t\nPERSONAL\nWANTED\nAgents at Interior points to handle\nlow-priced Bohemian Jewelry. All\nthe year round business. Not over\n$5.00 capital required.  Splendid\nline for experienced Xmas Card\nagents. Full particulars,.\nPACIFIC COAST TRADING CO.\n502 Pacific Coast Fire Bldg,\nVancouver, B. C.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nCommillee Seeks\nAdmittance of\nRefugees, Canada\nVICTORIA, Feb. 17 (CP)-The\nBritish Columbia government today\nmet a delegation of the provincial\nbranch of the Canadian national\nrefugee committee but at conclusion\nof the meeting Premier Pattullq issued no statement regardhjg the\nprovince's attitude toward Inviting\nEuropean refugees to the province.\nThe premier said the discussions\nwere of a preliminary nature.\nThe1 delegation, headed by Dr. W.\nG. Black, with Re;y. Dr. Gerald\nSwiizer and Rabbi Samuel Case,\nplaced two proposals before the\ncabinet:\n1. That the government make\nrepresentations to Ottawa to the\neffect that Canada should admit an\nappreciable number of refugees\nirom Europe, these refugees to be\nselected carefully on the basis of\nhealth, adaptability, general education, special training and suitability for Canadian conditions.\n2. That the government cooperate\nactively with the Dominion by help-,\ning to locate and establish those refugees who wish to settle in this\nprovince.\nThe committee argued that as a\nmember of the League of Nations\nCanada was morally obligated lo\nshare in tha* league's refugee work\nand was well able to do so with\nher wealth and potential resources,\nInfluenza Outbreak\n. Reported in Toronto\nTORONTO, Feb. 17 (CP)-Many\ncases of influenza were reported\nthroughout Ontario today but with\none exception it was not serious.\nInfluenza cases were reported to\nhave reached serious proportions\nat Kingston where one of the floors\nat the Ban Rlgh Hall, women's residence at Queen's University, has\nbeen converted into a temporary\nhospital because both the hotel\nDleu -and general hospitals are\nfilled.\nMiner Killed at\nSherritt Gordon\nSHERMDAN, Man. Feb. 17 (CP)\n\u2014 Dan Radmanovlch, 36, plunged\nto his death last night In the Sherritt Gordon mine here when a\nplatform upon which he and a partner, David. Imrie, were cutting\noverhead rock, collapsed and hurled him down a 80-degree Incline.\nHis partner suffered only minor\nscratches.\nB. C. Department of\nHealth to Broadcast\nVICTORIA, Feb. 17 (CP)-The\nBritish' Columbia department of\nhealth will give a two months series\nof \"health broadcasts\" over Victoria\nstation CFCT beginlng next week.\nEach Monday and Thursday morning at 10:30 o'clock 15 minute talks\nwill be,heard from various officials\nof the department. Subjects to be\ndiscussed Include all infectious diseases such'as tuberculosis, typhoid\nand diphtheria.\nPERSONAL\n(Continued)\n' [_ADD\"S, QIRLS\nLEARN THE MOLER METHOD\nOF BEAUTY CULTURE\nA PLEASANT, PROFITABLE  \u2022\nPROFESSION FOR GIRLS\nLearn  under  recognized  Moler\nmaster Instructors. To learn more,\nenroll now with the Moler school\nthat gets best results.\nTrain by same Moler System as\ntaught to thousands of most successful    hairdresslng    graduates\nworking in New York; Chicago,\nHollywood,   Paris .and   world's\nlargest cities. Write us before Joining any school, Practical, expert\ntraining guaranteed.\nThe University of Beauty Culture'\nMOLER HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOL\n. Enroll now. Reasonable rates.\n303 West Hastings St   .\nVANCOUVER, .. C.\nB. Gooch, Manager All Moler\nB.C. Schools.\nLARGEST ASSORTMENT OF SAN-\nitary Rubber Goods in Canada.\nSend ,25c for six sample Supreme\nBrand Latex. 8 page catalogue\nof Drug Sundries and Sex Books\nFREE on request. Adults only..\nSUPREME SPECIALTY CO.\nDept. N-D, 169 Yonge St., Toronto.\nHALOETTES (REGISTERED) OUR\nnew method of enlarging single\nfigures from groups. Unwanted\nbackgrounds removed. Write for\nlow prices on this work. Krystal\nPhotos, Wilkie, Sask.\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free, The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\nWANTED - ORIGINAL POEMS,\nsongs, for immediate consideration. Send poems to Columbian\nMusic.Publishers Ltd., Dept. C77,\nToronto. Ont.\nVANCOUVER FUR DRESSERS,\n151 W. Broadway, Vancouver, tan,\nmake up, clean, store furs every\ndescription. Write for particulars.\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or Jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00. (free catalogue) National\nImporters. Box 244. Edmonton,\nYOU CAN RUN A HOME KIN-\ndergarten with our help. Caha-\n' dian Kindergarten Institute, Win-\nnipeg, Manitoba.\t\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel Opp. C. P. R. depot\nFor Want Ad\nService\nPhone 144\nGarden and nursery\nproducts\nRELIABLE NURSERY STOCK\n.   .\u25a0\"    FRUIT TREES '\nWe have some of the best fruit\ntrees we have ever grown, this\nyear\u2014our cherry and prune trees\nbeing especially fine. \u2014 Hardy\ntrees for. top worklngon. We propagate only the all RED STRAINS,\nof Mcintosh Red, Jonathans,\nStayman's, Wlnesap, Rome Beauty\nand Delicious. \u25a0*-. Hardy ornamental trees and shrubs. Write for\nprices, they are lowest possible\nfor first class Stock.'\nThe Riverside Nurseries\nGrand Forks, B. C,\nFRUIT TREES,' EVERGREENS,\nJunipers, boxus, yews, cypress,\nhedge plants and flowering shrubs\nT. Roynon, Nelson agent, Layritz\nNurseries. '\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND APARTMENTS\nMARSDEN APTS.' UNDER NEW\nmanagement.  Furo.  or  unfurn.\n' rooms. Vernon St., Phone 853X,\nFIVE ROOM HOUSE WITH FUR-\nnace, garage. Ph. 806R after 4 p.m.\n5 ROOM FLAT FOR RENT ABOVE\nNelson Grocery 338 Baker, Ph. 89.\nCLEAN, BRIGHT ROOM WITH\ngood board. 704 Railway street.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent _______ Block.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modorn\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\t\nVACANT NOW, A 'FURNISHED\nsuite. Kerr Apartments.\nFURNISHED SUITES, 2 ROOM A\nsingle, Victor Hotel, Baker St\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\n-on easy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full In-\n, formation to 908 Dent of Natural\nResources, C. P. R\u201e Calgary, Alta.\nFOR SALE, THAT BEAUTIFUL\nhome beside the lake. No. 422\nMaple at Fairview Dlst, Nelson,\nB. C. Apply on the premises to\nW. R. Blanchard.\nSMALL HOUSE ON 2 LOTS 6th\nstreet south for Immediate sale.\nCash or termB. Apply 409 Sixth St.\nTENDERS WANTED\nNOTICE\nOffers will be received up to February 25th, 1939, for all building\nmaterials in the Glade School The\ncontract will require the building\nto be demolished within 30 days.\nFor .further particulars please Bee\nthe undersigned.,   .\n(Signed)    W. R. DUNWOODY,\n'        Official Trustee.\n' Nelson, B. C.\nWANTED  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron, any quantity. Tod prices\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B, C.\nWANTED 2nd HND. VERY SMALL\nEdger, 2 saws, for portable mill.\nDumont Galloway, B. C,\nOUTBOARD   OR   MARINE   MO-\ntor. 2d hd. Sam Holuboff Castlegar\nEDUCATIONAL\nBE READY FOR EXAMINATIONS\n\u2014We have helped hundreds to obtain positions as Letter Carries,\nPostal Clerks, Customs Examiners, Clerks and Stenographers,\netc. Free Booklet of information.\nM. C. C. Schools Ltd, Winnipeg.\nOldest In Canada.\n.To Finders\nIt you find a cat or dog, pocket-\nbook, Jewelry or fur, or any*\nthing else of value, telephone the\nDally News. A \"Found* Ad will\nbe inserted without cost to you.\nWe will collect from the owner.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY.\nSUPPLIES, DOCS, PETS, ETC.\nPpULTRYMEN\nThere may not be any difference\nin Chick prices, but there is a\nvast difference between prices\nand quality\u2014Provincial Quality\nChicks, Sexed Pullets (98 per cent\naccuracy) and Cockerels speak for\nthemselves. Bred up to a standard, not. down to a price. Beautifully Illustrated poultry book with\nprices mailed free. Many Chick\nCatalogues only cost lc to mail;\nours costs us 2c\u2014Nuff sed.\nOur Catalogue is like our Chicks,\nthey've got what it takes to make\nit and' tnem. Quality\u2014and so it's\nQuality in our Chicks. 10% discount or tree chicks on all early\norders. Now Hatching and Sexlng.\nProvincial Hatcheries,\n10633-lOlst St.       Edmonton, Alta.\n\"The Chicks Which\n' Cive Results\"\nARE TRUE TO THEIR NAME\nGet B.C. Chicks this\n?ear and see the dif-\nerence. Write now\nfor free book. \"The\nDoor to Success.\"\nPRICES:    LEGHORNS\nUnsexed     '        Pullets\n100    1000      '     100      500\n$13    $120 ' $27    $125\nROCKS, REDS and HAMPSHIRES\nUnsexed Pullets\n100    1000     .      100 \u25a0' 500\n$15    $140 . $26 ,  $120\nLIGHT SUSSEX   '\nUnsexed; Pullets\n100 , 1000 100      500\n$16    $150 $28    $130\nDon't Forget\u2014It's Results That\na    Goupt!\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nBox N, Langley Prairie, B. C.   .\nFOR SALE FRESH YOUNG AYR-\n, shire cow. proven milker, Cheyne,\n'   Erie, B. C.\nBOLIVAR  EMBRYO  EED\n\u2022   VITALIZED CHICKS\nPossess that extra SIZE A VIGOR\nwhich makes them.easier to raise\nand that extra BREEDING that\nmakes them more profitable.\nUnsexed    Pullets\n100   1000  100    500\nLeghorns ,  .... $13  $120  $27  $125\nNew Hampshlres\nRocks -Reds $15 $140 $26 $120\nBook of \"FACTS\" mailed on request\n. BOLIVAR HATCHERIES LTD.'\nPac. Hi-way, New Westminster, B. C.\nThere are more Bolivar chicks sold\nthan any strain In B. C.\nTHERE MUST BE A REAMN\nWRITE FOB 1939 CATALOG\nand Price List, which contains\ninformation On care of poultry.\nL. F. SOLLY, LAKEVIEW\nPOULTRY FARM,\nWESTHOLME, B. C.\nWhite Leghorns', Heavy Breeds\nand 1st Crosses.\nFor profit plan to get better\nchicks this year, direct from\na reliable Poultry breeder.\nCHICKS\u2014Try\nFuhr's Poultry Farm\nVERNON, B. C.\nFor S.C.W. Leghorn and Red-\nLeghorn first cross chix from\nblood-tested stock.  Write  for\nprice list\n(Continued in Next Column)\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY,\nSUPPLIES, DOCS, PETS, ETC.\n(Continued)\nWrite for our free .Illustrated booklet before buying BABY CHICKS.\nIt shows years of breeding by trap-\nnest and selection resulting in stock\nof the highest standards so necessary to the poultryman today.\nGenerations of known; breeding\nbehinfl    < -\n'\u2022'       BURNSIDE CHICKS\nLeghorns, Hampshires, Rocks, Reds,\nRed-Leghorn Cross. '\nFarm & Hatchery under R. O. P.\nInspection\nBURNSIDE POULTRY FARM\nA. E. Powell, Hammpnd, B, C.\nR. O. P. SIRED WHITE LEGHORN\nBaby Chicks and' Sexed' Pullet\nChicks. All breeding stock on\nour. own farm, mated to'R. O. P.\napproved males, Government approved, bloodtested, and certified\nfree from Pullorum disease. Price\nlist on request M H Ruttledge,\nDerreen Poultry Farm, Sardis, B.C.\nRHODE ISLAND RED BREEDING\n.  cockerels, R. O. P. ftr sale or as\npart payment for few pullets. R. I.\nor Rock F.H.'Chanter R.R.I Nelson\nCLIP THIS AD FOR FREE SAjM-\nple copy. Read of best breeders,\nhatcheries. Address Canada Poul-\ntryman. 618 Homer St, Vancouver\nR. I. RED CHICKS R. O.-P. SIRED.\nSexed pullets and cockerels 97 per\ncent guarantee. Catalogue and\nprices on request Arnould Breed'\ner Hatchery, Sardis, B. C,\nFOR SALE,-JERSEY HEIFER, DUE\nto f rshn Robertson, Silver King rd.\n3 COCKERELS, 1 YR. OLD. WHITE\nLeghorns, hl-grade stk. Ph. 188R3.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nFOR SALE 1931 DeSOTO, 6-CYL-\ninder, new paint job. Complete\nnew brake system, (Uwlre wheels.\nP. O. Box 270, Nelaon, B. C.\nFOR SALE\ngURNS LUMBER (jQOAh Q9fl\n'\u25a0Everything for the Builder\"\nWALLBOAHD SPECIALS\nVt.\" Fir Veneer; 4x8 sq. ft. \u201e. 6_i\n4\" Fir Veneer, 4x8, sq. ft .\u201e... 17Wj\n5 .ly for Cupboard Doors, etc\nW Insulating Lumber, sq. ft  8\u00abS\n4x6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 12\nGreen Tinted, 4x8, sq. ft -1\nWelterweight. 4x8, sq. ft ..-\u2022., 8'\nCell-U-Board, 4x8, sq, ft _,-_\u00a7\n\u25a0Write us for prices.\nPhone 53 - Nelson, B. ft*\nPIPE. TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n\u2022 1st Avenus and Main St\nVancouver, B. C.\nFOR SALE, GLASS SHOWCa^BS.\n1-5 ft 3-6 tt.,1-8 ft Also Librarf\nconsisting ot about two thousand\ncopies'fiction books, Knowledge.\netc. Scheers Ltd., Trail. B.C.\nOLD HICKORY SMOKED SALT,\nCoarse Salt' Fine Salt In 90*tj\nRock Salt; Salt \u2022 Licks, plain and\niodized; 50 lb. blocks. The Brack*\nman-Ker Millg. Co., Ltd,\nCASH OFFER WANTED FC-R A\ncredit note Kootenay Motors $120.\nFrank Norris, 1009 Stanley St\nPIPE AND FITTING\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd.\n250 Prior St.       Vancouver, B, C\nFOR SALE - B.ARRELS. KEG&\nSugar sacks, liners McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson. C C\nELECTRIC SINGER MACHINETi\nparlor chairs. 1 centre table. Apply\n522 Vernon St., Nelson.\nQUANTITY OF ALFALFA, FIRST\nand 2nd cut M. York, Creston, B.C.\nWORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA\nA-l con. Wshbl. covers. Ph. 5S1RI,\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE. NUMBER\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nC. R. HIGGENS, Bookkeeping, Accounts, Correspondence, Income\nTax Returns. No accounts too\nSmall. Reasonable. Phone. 980.\nAisayera\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents for\nTrail Smelter, 301-305 Josephine\nSt. Nelson, B. C,\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 420\nFall Street, Nelsop, B.\\ C. P. O.\nBox  No. \u25a0 9.  Representing  ship-\nper's interest, Trail, B. C.\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND,\nB. C,' Provincial Assayer, Chemist\nIndividual Representatives for\nshippers at Trail \u25a0 Smelter,\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray, McCuIlock Blk.\nDR. WILBERT BROCK. PALMER\nGraduate. X-ray. 16 years experience. 642 Baker St. Phone 969.\nCorsets\nSPENCER CORSETS, MRS. V. M\nCampbell, 370 Baker St. Ph. 668.\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B. C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\nH. D. DAWSON, Nelson.. RC\".\nEngineer A Surveyor\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St ' Phone 252\nCert. Mortician       Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\nInsuranco and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTK\n.Real Estate, Insurance, Rentals,\n347 Baker St Phone 68,\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance d\nevery description. Real Est. Ph. 98.\nSEE D.  L.  KERR,  AtjENT FOR\nWayane'sa Fire Ins. For better rate*.\nJ. E. ANNABLE, REAL ESTATE\nRentals. Insurance. Annable Blk.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE?\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real, Estate, IrK\nsurance, Rentals. Ne*l; HIppewoB\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.1\nMachinisti\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lai\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grind.\nIng... Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\n\u201e,  t Welding\nTelephone 393     324 Vernon\nStreet\nH. E. STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylen\u00bb\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Plv\n98.708-12. Vernon \u00a7t, Nelson.\nSaih Factory\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTOBxV\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker St\n, James E. Holliday now in chargsy\nSecond Hand Storai\nWE BUY, SELL & EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 631\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY; SELL.,\nExch, Rpr., Upholster. 413 Hall St.\nWatch Repairing\nWheh SUTHERLAND repairs yout\nwatch lt Is on time all the tlmt.\n345 Baker St, Nelson.   \u2022\n IcDonald Again\nIs President ol\nVeneer Company\nJ. A. McDonald was reelected\n;esldent of B. C. Veneer Works\nsalted at the annual meeting oi\nmreholders at the company's of-\nCei Thunday night. Other otfi-\nirs are: R. L. McBride vice-presi-\n!nt; W. G. Hutchins of Winnipeg,\n'.' B. Bamford, I. G. Nelson and\nP, Morgan, directors; George\nvorjetz, managing director. Mayor\n'. C. Stibbs la a director \"ex of-\nolo\", representing th*r city,\nMr. Dvorjetz, managing director.\nKted several good oroew^ were\nCHICAGO, Feb. 17 (AP).--auaker\nats company and subsidiaries reported today _\nIncome of $6,23'.\nafter  preferred\nments to $7.34 a share on common\nstock outstanding,  ond  compared\nMcD&NALD\nomlng In trom the eastern market\nnd as soon at weather and water\nsvcls permitted the retumptlon of\npcration of the mill, these would\ne tilled. Prospects generally for\n939 were better than for many\nears, he said. Cottonwood logs were\nwiving. ' -    '\nIt was reported no more payments\n\u00abed be-made on the Veneer Works\nonds, guaranteed by the city, un-\nII the final adjustment in 1942. In\nbe meantime interest on the invest-\nicnt In the sinking fund would add\nontiderable to the amount op hand\n9 redeem the bonds at maturity.\nDividend of 5 per cent had al-\neady been distributed to sharc-\nlolders.   '\nThe shareholders paid tribute In\n; resolution to the employees and\nlanagoment for their interest in\nie company and their efforts to\ndvance the well-being of the com-\nfay.      \t\nCHICAGO CLIMBS\nCHICAGO, Feb. 17 (AP).\u2014Moder*\n.te buying of wheat credited partly\n0 milling Interests following in-\nTeased flour business overnight\nlelped to lift prices as much as %\nent at times today.\nTrade remained quiet, however,\nnd the full advance could not be\nlowliest closed unchanged to %\ndgher compared with yeiterday,\ntoy 67%-68, July 68%-%; corn\n\u00a9changed to Vt lower, May 48'A\u2014\n\u25a0i, July MMi-y-i; oats %-% higher,\nCattle Trade Erratic\nOTTAWA, Feb. 17 (CB-MWgrt\napplies of cattle at Canadian war-\nets contributed to \"very erratic\"\nde during the past week, the\nnlnlon department of agriculture\nlid today in its weekly review.\n1 Early tops at Toronto on steers\nere $7.75. At Montreal some choice\nera made up $8. Winnipeg top\nBO,  Edmonton  SJ5,  Vancouver\nExport to the United States dur-\ng the week consisted ot 39 beef\nittle, 170 dairy and 886 calves.\nEarnings of Qupker\nOats Up From 1937\n\"with net earning\n1937, equal to $4.4\nof $4,187,046 in\na common'ware.\nWHEAT STRONG\nWINNIPEG, Fg. 17. (CP>,-Flrm-\nnest in outside markets and constructive interpretation Ot the Dominion government's announcement\nlast night that the minimum price\nfor wheat to farmers would be discontinued during the coming crop\nyear earned Winnipeg wheat futures\nprices to lean to thit upside throughout most of today's session. Final\nquotations were unchanged to ty\ncent higher, May at 62%, July 63H\nand October. 64. ,  .     \u2022;\u25a0\u2022'\u2022\nExport soles of Canadian wheat\nwere placed around 100,000 bushels.\nLiverpool closed Hd lower to ttd\nhigher,\nCancellation of the the minimum\nprice for wheat to Canadian farmers\nas announced lost night by Hon. J.\nG. Gardiner was regarded as a constructive measure by English traders.\nChicago prices moved near yesterday's close while Buenos Aires continued unchanged.\nInterest in cath .wheat and coarse\ngrains was at a minimum.\nYesterday's country marketings\ntotalled 87,000 bushels against 86,000\nbushels a year ago.\nSupport Asked for\nPoultry Exhibits\nCHILLIWACK, HC, Feb. 17\n(CP)\u2014The importance of British\nColumbia's exhibit at the World's\nPoultry Congrets to be held at\nCleveland, 0\u201e July 28 to Aug. 8,\nwas stressed before Chilllwack\npoultrymen by F. L, MONeiU, Vancouver member of the B.C. commission for the congress.\nAt a meeting here last night McNeill asked support for the provincial exhibit in the triennial congress, which he said may never be\nheld in North America again with-\nIn a generation. It is the first time\nthe gathering has met In the United\nStates. .,'.,'\nOn display at the 11-day congress\nwill be a pen ot birds owned by\nClaude Vroom of Cloverdale, B.C.,\nwhich captured the world* championship egg-laying record last Oc-\nNELSON DAILY NEWI, NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNINO, FEB. 18. 1139.\nMarket and\n. _ \u2014_, ___\nMontreal Moves Up\nMONTREAL, Feb. 17 (CP). -\nProfit taking entered the stock market late today at the heels of an\nearly forward movement\nSt Lawrence Paper preferred advanced a point to 34 while St. Lawrence Corporation Issues moved\nahead fractionally. Brazilian gave\nup tt.\nNoranda held a small Improvement Also ahead slightly were Imperial Oil, Steel of Canada and National Steel Car. Canadian Car, Mc\nColl Frontenac and Dosco sold lower.\nA two-point gain still ihowed in\nCanadian Celanese rights while the\ncommon was ahead more than a\npoint\nCarloadings Down\nOTTAWA, Feb. 17 (CP) - Canadian carloadings for the week\nended Feb. 11 amounted to 39,227\ncars compared with 40,430 the previous week and 43,634 the corresponding week last year, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported to*\nI day.\nToronto Stock Quotations\n. INE8:\n[ton Mines\t\nUdermac Copper\t\nmm Gold\t\nnglo-Huronian \t\nIrntfield Gold\t\nMaria Rouyh Mines\t\nSagamac Rouyn ..-.\t\niankfield Gold \t\nise Metals Mining \t\n|eattie Gold Mines \t\ndgood Kirkland \t\ng Missouri \t\nibjo Mines \t\ntlorne Mines \t\nIrett Trethewey   \t\nItiftalo Ankerite    \t\nnker Hill Extension\nnadian Malartlc    \t\nrlboo Gold Quartz ..\nttle-Trethewey    ,\n'antral Patricia    \t\nhlbougamau   \t\nIhromium M A S \t\noast Copper       \t\nKoniaui-um Mines \t\ntontolidated     \t\ntarkwater   \t\npome Mines \t\norval-Siscoe   \t\nist Malartic    \t\nildorado Gold  \nalconbridge- Nickel  \nederal Kirkland  -.\nrancoeur Gold  \nlilies Lake     \t\ni's Lake Gold\t\nold Belt \t\nGranada Gold Mines\t\nBrandoro Mines \t\nlunnar Gold    \t\nard Rock Gold\t\nParker Gold \t\nMlinger   \t\nRowey Gold \u25a0\t\nHudson Bay M Jt S\t\ninternational Nickel \t\nJ-M Consolidated   \t\n|ack Waite    \t\nicola Gold\t\nKerr-Addison      \t\nLlrkland Lake    \t\nake Shore Mines\t\nlamaoue Contact  \t\napa Cadillac   \t\n_oitch Gold        \t\n.abel Oro Mlnei \t\nLittle Long Lac\t\n\"lacassa Mines \t\nacLeod Cockshutt \t\n[adsen Red Lake Gold .\nSandy  \t\nitcIntyre-Porcuplne\nKcKonzie Rod Lake\t\nIcVittie-Graham   \t\ndcWatters Gold   \t\nHilling Corporation    ...\nfflnto Gold \t\nllOneta Porcupine    \t\nIMrfris-Kirkland   \t\nNipissing Mining    \t\nNOranda\t\nNormetal        \t\nMtlen Gold  \t\nOmega Gold       \t\nPamour Porcupine   \t\nMlore M \t\n>ayma*tcr Cons \t\n\u00bbehd Orfllle        \t\njOTron Gold \t\nJlekle Crow Gold\t\nHonecr Oold \t\n\u2022render Gold      \t\n'owell Rouyn Gold\t\nrcston F^st Dome\t\nii*hec Gold...\n.03\n.40\n.12%\n3.03\n.14%\n.06%\n.14\n.29\n.19\n1.38\n.20\n.24\n.18\n10.73\n.02%\n14.00\n.07\n.93\n2.19\n,87\n2.60\n.21\n.80\n1.80\n1.50\n54.25\n.07%\n32.00\n.06%\n2.26\n1,85\n5.05\n.05Vk\n.20%\n.09%\n.20\n.55\n.10%\n.04%\n.46%\n1.92\n.08%\n14.50\n.27%\n33.25\n51.90\n.07\n.28\n.03%\n1.90\n1.38\n46.90\n.02%\n.45\n.70%\n.05%\n3.20\n5.40\n2.70\n.48\n.13\n54.00\n1.22\n.09%\n.93\n1.69\n.02%\n1.22\n.14%\n1.70\n79.75\n.30\n2.75\n.46\n4.00\n.05'4\n.50\n1.65\n1.75\n5.25\n2.62\n2.15\n1.95\n1.54\n_ft\nReeves MacDonald\nReno Gold Mines\t\nRoche Long Lac \t\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nShawkey  Gold   \t\nSheep Creek Gold \t\nSherrltt Gordon    \t\nSiscoe Gold \t\nSladen Malartlc  \t\nStadacona Rouyn  \t\nSt Anthony  \t\nSudbury Basin    \t\nSullivan Consolidated\nSylvanite     \t\nTeck-Hughes Gold  \t\nToburn (Sold Mines ...\nTowagmac\t\nVentures\t\nWaite Amulet   \t\nWhitewater     \t\nWright Hargreavet ...\nYmir Yankee Girl ....\nOILS:\nAjax   \t\nBritish American    \t\nChemical Research\nImperial    \t\nInter Petroleum \t\nTexas Canadian   \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power A \t\nBell Telephone  \t\nBrazilian T L & P ...\nBrewers & Distlllert ,\nBrewing Corp\nBrewing Corp Pfd \t\nB C Power A .\".\t\nB C Power B \t\nBuilding Products \t\nCanada Bread  \t\nCan Bud Malting   \t\nCan Car A Foundry\nCan Cement\t\nCan Cement Pfd\t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Malting    \t\nCan Pacific Railway\nCan Ind Alcohol A ....\nCan Ind Alcohol B\t\nCan Wineries    \t\nCarnation Pfd \t\nCons Bakeries\t\nCosmos   \t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDominion Stores \t\nDom Tar A Chem ....\nD Tar A Chem Pfd ..\nDistillers Seagrams ....\nFanny Farmer    \t\nFord of Canada A\t\nGen Steel Wares \t\nGoodyear Tire \t\nGypsum L A A\t\nHarding Carpet \t\nHamilton Bridge    \t\nHamilton Bridge Pfd.,\nHlnde Dauche   \t\nHiram Walker \t\nIntl Metals       \t\nIntl Milling Pfd .,\t\nImperial Tobacco \t\nLobllw  A  \t\nLoblaw B \t\nKelvlnator\nMaple Leaf Milling   ..\nMassey Harris\nMontreal  Ppwer \t\nMoore Corp      \t\nNat Steel Car\t\nOnt Sleel Prods   \t\nOnt Silk Net \t\nPage Hersey    \t\nPower Corp   \t\nPressed Metals   \t\nSteel of'Can ,\t\nStandard Paving .\n.25\n.27\n.08%\n1.95\n.03\n1.00\n1.11\n1.27\n.60\n.89\n.13%\n2.45\n3M\n4.40\n2.00\n.30\n5.55\n7.00\n.03tt\n8.60\n.06%\n.16\n22.02\n.52\n16.90\n26.50\n1.12\n171%\n8%\n4%\n1.45\n21%\n24%,\ni|\n4%\n14%\n8%\n97%\n19\n34%\n4%\n1%\n2\n3%\n103\n19%\n19\n33%\n5,4\n5\n74\n18%\n21%\n21\n6%\n74\n9%\n2%\n4%\n30\n12%\n47\n6\n104\n21\n10%\ni\n30'A\n38\n99.\n10\n5\n100\n10\u00bb\u00bb\n9%\n72\n2%\nNickel Smellers\nUp al Toronto\nTORONTO, Feb. 17 (CP).-To-\nronto market lumbered through a\nsluggish session today and at the\nclose prices were little changed from\nThursday's final level. Volume was\ndown to about 429,600 shares.\n' The clote was down narrowly for\nMcLeod-Cockshutt, Pamour, Wright-\nHargreayei, Pickle Crow, Hard\nRock; Powell Rouyn, Eatt Malartlc\nand Kirkland Lake.\nNoranda posted a decline ot tt.\nThe market was up slightly s for\nNickel ahd Smelters. Walte-Amulet,\nChromium. Sudbury Basin and\nPend Oreille also firmed slightly.\nSteels were limited mainly to\nsmall tractions with the margin on\nthe up tide.\nMinor losses were boarded by\nHome, Davies, Anglo-Canadian and\nOkalta. Royalite weakened a traction in a broken lot sale.\nPropose Wash. Labor\n,      Relations Board\nOLYMPIA, Wash., Feb. 17 (AP)-\nCreatlon of a Washington Labor relations board\u2014similar to the National Relations Board\u2014was pro-\nSosed to th estate legislature to-\nay in a house bill Introduced by\nRepresentative Julia Butler and J.\nK. Van Buiklrk (both Dem.-Cow-\nlite, Wahkiakum).\nThe measure would let up a 3-\nman Washington labor relations\nboard, appointed by the governor\nand subject to confirmation by two-\nthirds of the state senate. The board\nwould have power to conduct hearings, supervise labor organization\nelections ond certify such organization! al representatives tor collective bargaining.\nOptimistic View\nfor Island Coal\nVANCO-TvlS, Feb. 17 (CP) -\nOptimism for the future of Vancouver Island's coal-mining industry wai expressed in an interview\nhere today DjrH.IL Plommer, general manager of Canadian Collieries\n(Dunsmulr) Limited.\nHe declared that British Columbia coal is competing successfully\nwith Alberta coal in the coast market, partly because of an increased\ndemand for stoker coal, which he\nsaid was unable to stand long distance transportation.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Feb. 17 (CP) .-British and foreign exchange closed\nsteady today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, .2322.\nAustralia, pound, 37613.\nFrance, franc, .026611.\nGermany, relchsmark, .4034.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.7088.\nHolland, florin, .9389.\nIndia, rupee, .3526.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.7915.\nNorway, krone, .2368.\n\u25a0 .South Africa, pound, 4.6874.\nSweden, krone, .2427.\nSwltierland,' franc, .2281.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Feb. 17 (CP)-Cattle\n172; calves eight; hogs and sheep\nnil   '\nCattle market steady. Choice\nheifers 6; good cows 3.78-4; good\nto choice veal calves 7-7.25.\nThursday's selects 9.25; bacons\n8.75; butchers 7.75.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 17 (CP).-Raln\nfutures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nWHEAT:\n.May\t\nJuly.\t\nOct\t\nOATS:\nMay-\t\nJuly........\nOct \t\nBARLEY\nMay\t\nJuly\t\nFLAX:\nMay\t\nJuly\t\nRYE:\nMay\t\nJul:\n63%\n63'\/,\n64%\n62%\n63%\n63%\n62%\n62%\n63%\n29%    20%    29%\n28%    -       -\n*37%\n37\n37%\n37\n37%\n36%\n62%\n63%\n64\n29%\n28%\n28%\n37%\n190      151%   190\n43%    43%    43%\n150%\n147%\n43%\n43%\nCASH PRICES.\nWHEAT-No. 1 hard 61%; No. 1\nNor. and track 61%; No. 2 Nor. 58%;\nNo. 3 Nor. 53%; No. 4 Nor. 47%;\nNo. 5, 41; No. 6, 39%; feed 38%; No.\n1 Garnet 52%; No. 2 Garnet 49%;\nNo. 3 Garnet 43%; No. 1 Durum\n48%; No. 4 special 42%; No. 5 special 40%; No. 8 special 39%; No. 1\nmixed 43%; screenings 25 cents per\nton.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 28%; No. 3\nC. W. 26%; No. 1 feed 28%; No. 2\nteed 24%; No. 3 feed 21%;. track\n28%.\nBARLEY-Maltlng grades: 6- and\n2-row Ex. 3 C. W. 40. Others: No. 3\nC. W. 36%; No. 4 C. W. 36%; No. 5\nC. W. 34%; No. 6 C. W. 33%; track 39.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 148%; No. 2\nC. W. 144%; No. 3 C. W. 132%; No. 4\nC. W. 127%; track 149%.\nRYE\u2014No. 2 C. W. 41%.\nImperial Tobacco\nProfit $6,462,354\nMONTREAL, Feb. 17 (CP)-Net\nprofit of $6,462,354 before Income\ntax adjustment but after preferred\ndividends, equal to 63%' cents on\n$3 ordinary snares, was reported today by Imperial Tobacco company\not Canada for the year ended Dec.\n31. Profit for the previous year was\ngiven as 50,409,082 or 63% cents a\nshare.\nDirectors today declared the final dividend ot 22% cents on ordinary shares for 1938, together with an\ninterim payment of 10 cents a\nshare.\nWorld Exchanges\nNEW YOBK, Feb. 17 (AP).-The\nNetherlands guilder today sold at\nthe lowest price in lt years. It lost\nanother .03 of a cent which dropped it to 53.61 centa.\nClosing rates, Great Britain In dollars, others in cents:\nGreat Britain 4.68%, 60-day bills\n4.68 1-16; Canada, Montreal In New\nYork 99.53%, New York In Montreal\n100.46%; Belgium 16.86; Czecho-Slo-\nvakla 3.42%: Denmark 20.83; Finland 2.07; France 2.64 13-16; Ger-\nmany 40.14%, benevolent 20.10, travel 20.10; Greece .86; Hungary 19.85;\nItaly 8.26%; Jugotlavla 2.33; Neth-\nerlands 53.62; Norway 23.55; Poland\n18.93 Portugal 4.26: Rumania .75;\nSweden 24.16; Switzerland 22.70;\nArgentine 31.24N; Brazil 8.90N;\nMexico City 20.00N; Japan 27.34;\nHong Kong 29.15; Shanghai 19.00.\nRates in spot cables unless otherwise indicated. (N)\u2014Nominal.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Feb. 17 (AP) .-Closing:\nBrazil 39%; C. P. R. $5%; Int Nickel\n$99; U. S. Steel $64%; Celanese Corp\nof Am \u00a34%; Cent Mining \u00a318%;\nConsol Gold Fields 62s 6d; Crowns\n\u00a315%; East Geduld \u00a311; H. B. C.\n22s; Metal Box 73s 10%d; Mex Eagle\n6a Od; Mining Trutt 2s 3d; Rand\n\u00a38%; Springs 28s l%d.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent Consols \u00a370; 3% per cent war loan\n\u00a397%; 4s 1860-90 \u00a3107%.\nHeadey Overhauls\nScheibler Birds\nTo Stand Second\nPredicted rearrangement of the\nleaders in the British Columbia laying contest at the Agassis experimental farm has taken place, and\nat the end of the fifteenth week, the\nC. Headey & Sons pen is in second\nplace on the heels of the F. C. Evans\nSen. and the late leader, the W. J.\ncmebler pen, has fallen to third\nplace. They stand, Evans, 784\/4\npoints; Headey, 770.8; Schiebler,\n760.8. All are in the White Leghorn\nclass. The fourth pen, the John Burgess Rhode Island Reds, with 699.1\npoints,, Is the . highest from the\nheavy-weight breeds,\nFollowing Is the standing ot the\n34 pens  In the  contest,  omitting\nthe   day-by-day   record  and  the\nweek's eggs:\nBreed and Wks. Tot. Tot.\nOwner Pts. Eggs Pts.\nS. C. Rhode Island Reds:\nAllen, A. M 22.6   362   374.0\nArnould, H. K. A... 30.7   399   616.1\nBrown, Miss A. G. 42.8   577  668.4\nBrown, Jack  13.4   452   487.7\nBurgess. John 50.4   610   699.1\nFinch, Lewis H 14.4  489  467.2\nGame, Geo. W 32.6   556   611.0\nGoodman, John  41.8   493   534.5\nRussell, D 25.7   624   640.3\nStaverman, F. H 25.6  376  429.0\nThomson, R. Grant 48.3   616   611.1\nBarred Plymouth Rocks:\nBrown, Miss A. G. 56.7  450  443.4\nGram, Jack  38.1   315   339.1\nGolding, C. G 25.8   475   440.0\nBarnevelders:\nFits-Herbert, H. G. 45.6   260   305.3\nS. C. White Leghorns:\nChalmers, J 45.6  623  670.9\nCorlett, Mrs. Eva K, 44.6   617   953.1\nEvans, F. C 81.2   669   784.2\nFairweather, W. M. 34.0   552   691.9\nGolding, C. G. ........ 17.9   217   188.1\nHeadey, C. A Sons 56.7   728   770.6\nHenke, Ulrich  39.6   584   618.2\nKerfoot, W. D 27.9  494  478.7\nLawson, M 40.7   606   538.7\nPollok, G. L. H 48.9   667   687.3\nRuttledge, M. H 35.1   695   746.0\nSchiefbler, W. J 42.0   666   760.8\nSchotield, A. W 46.6   650   686.2\nSmith, T.eJ 46.5   635   660.2\nSmyth, T. J 37.5  428  432.7\nSwensson, P 41.3   942   983.3\nVroom, C 26.5   570   679.7\nWatson, A. G 35.9   388   613.3\nWindermere Exp.\nStation\". 41.8   843   586.1\nMetal Markets\nLONDON- Feb. 17 (AP) .-Closing:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a342 Is 3d,\nfuture \u00a342 7s 6d, both up 6s; electrolytic spot \u00a347, asked \u00a348, both\nup 10s. Tin spot \u00a3213 5s, up \u00a31 5s;\nfuture \u00a3212 10s, up \u00a31. Bids: Lead\nspot \u00a314 5s, future \u00a314 7s 6d, both\nup Is 3d. Zinc spot \u00a313 10s, up 3s\n3d; future \u00a313 10s 3d, up Is 3d.\nBar gold 148s 4%d, unchanged.\n(Equivalent $34.76).\nBar silver 21%d, up %,\nMONTREAL\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic 11.40;\ntin. 48.20; lead 4.46;. zinc 4.30; antimony 15.00.\"\nSilver futures 'closed firm today,\n20 points up. Bid Feb. 43.20.\nBar gold in London up two centa\nat $34.05 an ounce in Canadian\nfunds; 148s 4%d In British. The fixed $35 Washington'price amounted\nto $35.18 in Canadian.\nSllver'futures opened firmer today, 50-points up. Bid: Feb. 43.20.\nNEW YORK'\nCopper steady: electrolytic spot\n11.25; export 10.05. Tin -toady; spot\nand nearby 45.37%; forward 45.30;\nLead steady; spot, New York 4.75;\nEast St. Louis 4.60. Zinc steady; Eatt\nSt. Louis spot and forward 4.50.\nQuicksltver 89.50\u201493.00. Pig iron,\naluminum, antimony, platinum and\nChinese wolframite unchanged.\nBar' silver 42%, unchanged,\nPetition to Abolish\nSooke Fish Traps\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C.; Feb.\n17 (CP).\u2014A petition urging abolition of fish traps at Sooke, B.C.,\nwas circulated here today by members ot the Pacific Coast Fishermen's union and the British Columbia Purte Seiners union.-\nA resolution urging the Dominion\ngovernment to protest against the\nproposed traps In Washington, now\nthe subject of legislation before the\nstate legislature at Olympla, Wash.,\nwas forwarded to Ottawa yesterday\nby the United Fishermen's Federal\nUnion, local 44, of Vancouver,\nWestbank Asks Power\nExtension From West\nKootenay Company\nVICTORIA, Feb. 17 (CP)-The\nnew public utilities commission of\nBritish Columbia today mapped out\nits plans to deal with six applications (or Improvements in power\nand light services and rates, the\nfirst that have come before lt since\nthe board was organised.\nThe applications were considered\nat a meeting of the commission this\nmorning. They include:\nFrom the Wcsbank chanber of\ncommerce for extension of power\nservices to the West Kootenay Power A Light company to Westbank\non Okanagan lake.\nMARKETS AT A\nGLANCE\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto \u2014 Base metal and junior\noil shares lower; other index groups\nfirm.\nMontreal \u2014 Paper stocks lower;\nother index groups higher.\nNew York \u2014 Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Wheat unchanged\nto 'A cent higher.\nLondon \u2014 Bar tilver unchanged;\nother metals higher.\n. New York \u2014 Silver, lead and zinc\nunchanged; export copper firmer.\nMontreal \u2014 Silver higher.\nNew York \u2014 Cotton and rubber\nhigher; sugar and coffee lower.\nNew York \u2014 Canadian dollar up\n1-16 to ,99' 17-32.\n\u25a0 PAGE ELEVEN\nDow  Jones  Averages\nHigh   Low Close   Change\n80 lndustrlali    146.03   144.69 144.85   off    .44\n20ralli     30.63    30.24 30.31   off    .09\nfutilities \u201e     25.49    23.00 25.07   off    .27\n40 bonds  -   90.34 .     unch.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh Low Close\nAm Can   91 90% 91\nAm For Pow ....    3 3 3\nAm Smelt & Re 44% 44% 44%\nAm Tel  138% 157% 157%\nAmTob  86 85% 85%\nAnaconda  - 29% 28% 28%\nBaldwin  14% 14 14\nBait A Ohio ....    6% 6% 6%\nBendlx Av  28 27% 27%\nBeth Steel  71% 69% 69%\nBorden  18% 18% 18%\nCan Dry  18% 18 18\nCan Pac     5 4% 4%\nCerro de Pasco 43 43 43\nChrysler   77% 76% 76%\nCon Gas NY.... 33% 32% 32%\nC Wright pfd....    7 6% 6%\nDupont  160% 149% 150\nEast Kodak   174% 174% 174%\nFordEng     3% 3% 3%\nFord ot Can  21% 21% 21%\nFree Texas  23% 23% 23%\nGen Elec  40% 40% 40%\nGen Foods  40 39% 39%\nGen Motors   49% 48% 48%\nGoodrich   21% 21% 21%\nGranby     6% 6% 6%\nGreat Nor pfd.. 26% 25% 26\nHud Motors      7% 7% 7%\nInter Nickel .... 51% 51% 51%\nInter Tel A Tel\nKenn Cop \t\nMack Truck\t\nMont Ward \u2014\nNash Motors .....\nN Y Central .....\nPack Mo -\nPenn R R\t\nPhillips Pete ....\nPullman\t\nRadio Corp \t\nRem Rand\t\nSafeway Stores\nShell Union\t\nS Cal Ediaon ....\nStan Oil of N J\nTex Corp\t\nTex Gulf Sul .\nTImken Roller\nUnder Type .....\nUn Carbide\t\nUn Oil of Cal....\nUnited Air\t\nUn Pacific \t\nU S Rubber\t\nU S Steel\t\nWarner rBoth\nWett Electric ....\nWest Union\t\nWoolworth \t\nYellow Truck ..\n8% 8%\n37% 36%\n28% 28%\n93% . 50%\n8 7%\n18% 18%\n4% 4\n20% 20%\n39% 39\n34% 34\n7% 7\n..   14%     14\n38% 38%,\n13% 13\n25% 29\n.49% 48%\n44% 44%\n31 30%\n47% 47\n59% -\n84 83\n18% -\n41% 40%\n96% 95%\n46 45%\n61% 59%\n5% 5%\n111% 111\n21% 21%\n48% 48\n18% 18%\n8%\n36%\n28%\n50%\n7%\n18%\n4%\n20%\n39%\n34\n7\n14\n38%\n13\n25\n49\n44%\n30%\n47\n83\n41\n95%\n46\n59%\n5%\n111%\n21%\n48\n18%\nMontreal\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain\t\nAssoc Brew of Can\t\nBathurst P1PA\t\nCanadian Bronze\t\nCan Bronze pfd \t\nCan Car A Fdy pfd\t\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese pfd\t\nCan North Power .._.i._\t\nCan Steamship\t\nCan Steamship pfd\t\nCockshutt Plow _ \t\nCon Mln A Smelting\t\nDominion Coal pfd\t\nDom Steel A Coal B\t\nDominion Textile ___\nDryden Paper _..,-\u00bb\u2014\u2014\nFoundation C of C\t\ntiatlneau Power\t\nGatlneau Power pfd _\u2014\nGurd Charles .\t\nHolt Renfrew  \t\nHoward Smith Paper\t\nH Smith Paper pfd\t\nImperial  Oil\t\nInter Petroleum\t\nInter Nickel of Can\t\nLake of the Woods -\t\nNational Brew Ltd \t\nNat Brew pfd \t\nOgilvie Flour new\t\nPrice Brot\t\nQuebec Power \t\nStock Exchange\nMoney\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal-Pound 4.70%; U. S.\ndollar 1.00 15-32; franc 2.66%.,\nAt New Y\u00abrk-Pound 4.68%; Ca-\nnadian dollar .99 17-32; franc 2.64\n13-18.\nAt Parlt-Pound 176,96 fr.; U. S.\ndollar 37.762 fr.; Canadian dollar\n37 59 fr\nIn Gold-Pound Us 5d; U. S. dollar 59.46; Canadian dollar 59.14\ncents.\nU. S. Dollar Declines\nLONDON, Feb. 17 (AP). -The\nUnited States dollar was quoted\n$4.68 11-16 to the pound In final\nforeign exchange trading today, a\nnet loss of % of a cent In sterling\nterms. The rate compared with New\nYork's overnight sterling at $4.69\n9-16.\nFrench franct ended 176.97 to\nthe pound against 177.00 yeiterday.\nDividends\nSitcoe Oold Mlnei, Ltd., three\ncents.\nLava Cap Gold Mining corpora,\ntion, two cents.\nDALLAS-TESTED PRINT\nWHITER THAN CANADIAN\nDALLAS, Tex., Feb. 17 (AP).-\nPaper made from east Texas pine\nwas fed through the presses of the\nDallas Morning News last night\u2014a\nforerunner ot the Texas newsprint\nindustry.\nThe eatt Texas pine paper taket\nprint well, has a good tear \u2014 the\nprinters' test for strength\u2014and was\ndescribed aa whiter than west coast\nCanadian pulp on which all the\nnews was printed except 2500 special pages.\nThe paper came from a carload\nof loblolly and slash pine, from the\nforest that will feed the Texas newsprint plant at Lufkln. Shipped east\nto the Herty Foundation laboratories at Savannah, it was subjected to\na series of laboratory tests.\nTraders Cheerful\nDue Simon Speech\nLONDON. Feb. 17 (AP). - Stock\nmarket traders were more cheerful\ntoday following the optimistic\nspeeches made Thursday night by\nSir John Simon, chancellor of the\nexchequer, and R. S. Hudson, secretary of the overseas, trade department. Buying was renewed in the\nindustrial section, especially rayons,\nsteels and tobacco shares. Rubber,\nmetal and diamond issues also sold\nhigher. Transatlantics and German\nbonds were in demand.\nPound Sterling Up\nNEW YORK, Feb. 17 (CP).-The\npound sterling strengthened in mid-\nafternoon foreign exchange dealings\ntoday, picking up 3-16 cent from\nyesterday's close to $4.68%.\nThe franc was at 2,64%, % point\nbetter than the previous dote while\nthe Canadian dollar held at a discount of % per cent compared with\n17-32 discount at the close yesterday.\nHome Oil Dips Four\nCALGARY, Feb. 17 (CP).-With\nthe exception of Home, oils on Calgary stock exchange moved narrowly today. Only 7195 shares\ntraded.\nHome dipped four at 2.26.\nOkalta advanced 1 at 1.11; Prairie Royalties % at 20 and McDougall\nSegur and Highwood were % up.\nExtension and Mercury eased %.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Feb. 17 (CP)-Ca-\nnadian commodity exchange. Spot:\nbutter Que. 22%-%: western re-\ngraded 22%. Sales 200 Que. 22%.\nButter futures: Feb. and March\n22%-%; April 22%; Nov. 23.\nECONOMIC INDEX DROPS '\nOTTAWA, Feb. 17 (CP)-Four of\nthe six economic [actors indicating trend ot economic conditions in\nCanada were lower in the week\nended Feb. 11 and the Dominion\nbureau of statistics' economic index\ndropped to 107.1 from 107.5 the\nprevious week and 108.2 in the corresponding Week last year.\nTHE PAS, Man. (CP). \u2014 Thomas\nHarvey, rancher and fur trader,\nplans to ship beef from the most\nnortherly ranch in Saskatchewan\nto the Old Country this year from\nthe port of Churchill. He has 250\nhead of cattle on his ranch at Cumberland House, 40 miles west of\nhere.\nGolds Better on\nVancouver List\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 17 (CP). -\nGold prices were irregularly higher\non Vancouver stock exchange today\nwhile oils turned lower in light\ntrading, Transactions totalled 73,\n988 shares.\nRelief Arlington topped trading\nIn the gold division and closed at 13,\n1% cents above Thursday's closing\nbid. Bralorne advanced 20 cents at\n10.95 and Sheep Creek added 2 at\n1.02. Unchanged issues Included Cariboo Gold Quartz at 2.20, Dentonia\nat 4, Pioneer at 2.60, Premier at*2.19\nand Island Mountain at 1.35. Hedley\nMascot was off 2 at 1.48 and Privateer slipped 3 at 1,10.\nCalgary & Edmonton oil was two\ncents lower at 2.07 and Home eased\n1 at 2.28. Model firmed Sat 33 and\nVulcan was up, 2 at 62.\nBonds Move Up\non Steady Tone\nNEW YORK, Feb. I7'(AP).-the\nbond market coasted along on an\neven keel today.\nInerborough rapid transit 7t were\naround 3 ahead, while Brooklyn I\nManhattan Transit 4%t advanced\nmore than a point. \u2022,\nUnited States governments were\n3-32nds of a point higher to 4-S2ndt\nlower in scattered dealings. Small\ngains were registered by French\n7%s, stamped, Japanese 5%s and\nMilan 6%t.\nProfit Taking\nHolds New York\nNEW YORK, Feb. 17 (AP). -\nProfit taking dfflcultlei beset the\nttock market today and the rallying\niwing of Thursday turned into a\nside-wise shift for many leaders.\nGains ran to a point- or so for '\nsteels, aircrafts and specialties at '\nthe start. Closing prices were nar- j\nrowly mixed.\nWith the ticker tape frequently\nidling, transfers approximated 700,-\n000 shares.\nThe apparent chilling of buying .\nsentiment, brokers said, was due ,\npartly to the desire of speculative\nforces to await further signs of a\nspring business recover, as well as\nto continuance of fears of a new .\nEuropean crisis after the end of the\nSpanish civil war.\nResistance was shown by Marshall\nField, United Aircraft, llenn Martin, N.Y. City Omnibus and Cluett\nPeabody, all of which hit new 1938-\n39 peaks. Some receded ot the last.\nBehind the greater part of the\ntime were General Motors, Chrysler,\nSears Roebuck, Anaconda, Standard\nOil of N. J., Santa Fe and Standard\nDome and Hiram Walker posted\nnarrow gains among Canadian Issues but most others were about unchanged. ,\nSASK. EDUCATION TAX\nREVENUE IS $3,133,277\nREGINA, Feb. 17 (CP)-The education tax, introduced In Saskatchewan August 2, 1937, and collected on tho basis of two per cent\non all purchases except food and\na few other items, has produced\n$3,133,277 up to Jan. 31, 1939, it was\nannounced In the provincial legis- '\nlature.\nSheep Creek Gold\nMines Limited\n(Non-Rersonal Liability)\nNotice of Dividend No. 12\nNotice is hereby given that a Quarterly Dividend of three cents per\nshare and a 'special bonus of one\ncent per share have been declared\non the paid-up Capital Stock of the\nCompany, payable on the'13th day\nof April, 1939, to shareholders of\nrecord at the close of business on the\n31st day of March, 1939.\nPersons holding certificate! not\nregistered in their name, commonly\nknown as \"street\" certificates,\nshould have them registered in\ntheir name by the Company's transfer agents, Prudential Trust Company, Limited, at their office, 473\nHowe Street, Vancouver, B. C, or\nat their office, 217 Bay, Street, Toronto, Ontario, on or before 31st\nMarch next.\nBy Order of the Board.\nJAMES ANDERSON,\nSecretary.\nVancouver, B. C,\nFebruary 14, 1939.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\n2%\n10\n7\n35%\n104\n32\n14%\n102%\n16\n2%\n9%\n7\n55\n16%\n10\n59\n4%\n8%\n13\n90%\n8%\n14\n12\n94\n17\n26%\n51%\n14\n42\n44%\n26%\n19\n18\nShawinigan W A P\t\nSt Lawrence Corp*\t\nSt Lawrence Corp pfd\nSouth Can Power \t\nSteel of Can pfd\t\nBANKS\nCommerce \t\nDominion   \t\nImperial \t\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotia\t\nRoyal  -\t\nToronto \t\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd\t\nBathurtt P A P B\t\nBeauharnoit Corp\t\nBritish American Oil\t\nB C Packers\t\nCan Marconi\t\nCm Vickers  .....\nCons Paper Corp \t\nFairchild Aircraft \t\nFraser Co' Ltd\t\nInter Utilities A -.\nInter Utilities B \t\nLake Sulphite \t\nMacLaren P & P\t\nMcColl Frontenac pfd ..\nMitchell Robt\t\nRoyalite Oil\t\nUnited Dlst of.Can ........\nWalker Good It W\t\nWalker Good pfd -\n. 21\n, 3%\n. 15%\n. 12\n. 70\n. 170\n. 202\n. 207%\n. 205\n. 308\n, 187%\n. 248\n.   IS\n.    2%\n.    4%\n.   22\n.   11%\n. .98\n.    7%\n.    3%\n.    4%\n.   13%\n.    8%\n. .55\n.     1%\n.   14\n.   87%\n.   13%\n.   39%\n. .80\n.   47%\na      20\nBid Ask\nMINES!\nBig Missouri     23 .25\nBluebird       .01% -\nBralorne       10.75 11.00\nBridge RIv Con       .02% .03\nCariboo Gold     2.18 -2.20\nDentonia    04 .04%\nFairview Amal 04% .04%\nFoderal Gold  10 .01%\nGeorge Copper       - -M\nGolconda            .04 .04%\nGold Belt  54% .57\nGold Mount        .02 -\nGrandview    05 .06%\nGrull-Wlhksne   ..\u201e     .02% .02%\nHedley Mascot      1.47 1.49\nHedley Sterling ....      .\u00ab% -\nHome  Gold  00% .01\nIndian Mines 01% \u2014\nInter Coal A Coke      .29 .35\nIsland Mount      1.35 1.37\nRoot Belle       1.88 1.42\nLucky Jim  01% .02\nMak Sic Gold        .01% .01%\nMcGillivray           .20 -\nMinto  Gold   02% .02%\nNicola M A M 03% .04%\nNoble Five        .02 .03\nPend Oreille       1.50 1-60\nPilot  Gold    00% .01\nPioneer Gold     2.60 2.63\nPorter Idaho       .02 .03\nPremier Border 01 \u25a0 .01ft\nPremier Gold      2-2 2.15\nPrivateer          110 1.1}\nQuatsino    02% .03%\nQuetnelle  Q   03% .04%\nReeves MacD 28 \u2014\nRelief <Arl  12% \u2022\"\nReno Gold    27% -\nReward       M% -\u00b04^\nRufus Argenta 01\nSally Mines    02 -\nSalmon Gold        - Jg\"\nSheep Creek      101 1.02\nSllbak Premier     1.70 !\u25a0\u00ab\nSilver Crest        .01% .W%\nSurf Inlet    20 .24\nTaylor B R  04 .05\nVidette Gold  06% -07\nWaverlv T       .00% .00%\nBid Ask\nWellington    01% \u2014\nWesko Mines        .01 \u2014\nWhitewater .: 03% .04\nYmir Yank Girl ...      .05% .07%\noils:\nA P Con  16% \u2014\nAmalgamated    00% \u2014\nAnaconda      10 \u2014\nAnglo Can       1.12 1.18\nBaltac  02 -\nCalgary A Edm     2.08 2.12\nCalmont     38 \u2014\nCommonwealth 24% .27\nCrows  Nest  00% .00%\nDalhousie  42 \u2014\nDavies Pete  32 .35\nEast Crest  08 .08%\nFirestone  Pete  ....      .09% .10%\nFoothills      60 -\nFoundation Pete....      \u2014 .12\nFour Star Pete 09 .11\nFreehold Corp 03% -\nHargal            \u2014 .20\nHighwood Sarcee .,      .16% \u2014\nHome          2.25 2.28\nMadison     03% .05\nMar Jon     04% .08\nMcDoug Seg          .13% -\nMercury      07% .08\nModel       31 -\nMonarch Roy' 07% .10\nNordon  Corp  07% .10\nOkalta com       1.10 141\nNational Pete   10% \u2014\nPacalta       05% .08%\nRoyal  Can       ..16% JS\nRoyalite        37.00 40,00\nSouth End Pete 05 .06\nSouthwest Pete 40 .60\nSunset             .30 -\nUnited      09% -\nVanalta            .06% \u2014\nVulcan     60 \u2014\nTurner       09 \u2014\nINDUSTRIALS:\nB C Packers   1100 , \u2014\nBrew A Dlst     4.50 -\nCapital Est  :..    1.40 1.50\nCoast Brew        \u2014 \u2022\u00bb\nPaclllc Coylo\nUnited Dist,\nTAKE A TIP!\nWE RECOMMEND THE PURCHASE OF\nSILVER RIDGE\nMining Co.. Limited\nA Straight Shipping, High Grade Ore Proposition that\nshould prove a most profitable investment within the\nnext year\nGOOD GOOD\nPROPERTY MANAGEMENT\nA WONDERFUL FINANCIAL SET-UP\nIt is not often that we recommend a stock with such\nconfidence as we submit Silver Ridge to you at\n25c PER SHARE\nP. E. POULIN\nSTOCKS -*- BONDS\nPHONE 70\nINSURANCE\n582 WARD ST.\nWhat Would You\nLike to Know?\nHave you a question you\nwould like answered?. Then\nsend it to the Questions and\n. Answers Department and the\nquestion and its answer will\n' be published in an early issue\nof the Daily News.\nAsk about anything under\nthe sun. There is no charge.\nQuestions should be stated\nclearly and addressed to:\n\"QjuMilojiL and tfaawsAL\"\nNfiaoti lath} Nnua\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\n P^SIwpiPJplRIH\ni\u00bbAOI TWII.VE .   \u25a0      .mij...... ...i, -i i_ 'is irn\n.yWita^jiaWWWi^^\n' rVlT,-i\"':LAST TIMES\nTODAY\nCONTINUOUS FROM 1:00 P.M.\nNEW - DIFFERENT \u2014 SENSATIONAL j\nitwrf\u00bb\nYOUNG-GREENE\n...WAITER BRENNAN\nHiiiwwiiiu-unwiifl'WiiMra\n20lh Century-Fox\nPicture\nAT 2:15.5:05,7:22,9:39.\nNITEIS. and35*\nPlui MARCH OF TIME, COLOR CARTOON and NEWS |\nSpecial Matinee for Children at 1:00. \"WILD BILL\nHICKOK\" and TWO CARTOONS\t\nSHOWING MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY\n\"DRAMATIC SCHOOL\" and \"STORM IN A TEACUP\"\n( -COMING-\n\"YOU CANT TAKE IT WITH YOU\"\n^SSSA^__^^________^____^___^_^S_S__^_______^^g\nNELION DAILY NEWS, NELION. B. C-8ATURDAY MORNINQ, FEB. 18, 19S5.\n\"^\njRflPpNpppppppipp\nPPIiP.^PMIWa*,\nTHE CITADEL\nBy A. J. CRONIN\nNew Lew Price\nDrug Co.    . \u25a0\nPhono 81     ,       Nelaon, B. C\nFrance controls almost hall of\nAfrica.\n| Lamberts1\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nt&tSSjimSSiSSiSISASSiftSSSSSSmSt Read the serial dally In the Newt.\n1938 Plymouth\nDeluxe\nFOUR DOOR SEDAN\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker 8ts    Limited     Phone 119\nKSSSSSS$SSS&S$SSSSSSSS&Si>S&&&&\nFUEL BARGAINS\nMITAENDS-Fatrl. dry, load  $3.75\nS load* 10.00\nCORD WOOD-Per pord   8.50\nSAWDUST-Per unit    4.00\nHard Wood , 8.50\n2 corda tor 12.00\nPHONE 973 OR 434R1\nCOMPLEXION AIDS\nlVt time to think ol yours alter\nthe \"drying up\" ol the summer\n, Consult\nBEAUTY\nPARLOR\n677 Baker St.\nsun. Consult...\nPhone 244\nBull's Eye Camera\nSIX-20\nIs trim and smart looking.\nHas optical eye level Under, takes snaps or time ex*\nposures. Sells lor only $3.25.\nSee it at\nCllkixit M ShfpL\nA Greeting Card lor Every Occasion\nBOYS' NEW TWEED (Pi QF\nTROUSERS   \u00bbPlwJ\nCharles Morris\nNelson Business\nCollege\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\nComment,- Any Time\nPHONE 128 FOR COMPLETE\nLaundry Service\nKOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\n\u00bb INVESTIGATE\nInvestors Syndicate\nMonthly Savings Plan\nR. W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nP. O. Box 61 Hlpperson Blk. Ph. 197\nBreakfast, Dinner\nand Supper\nStar Cafe\n44 TAXI\nCON. CUMMINS\n501 Up to 5 Passengers\nAny Place in this City\nDOUBLE - HEADER\nHOCKEY GAMES\nNelson Civic Arena        TONIGHT\nNelson **> Kimberley\nMAPLE LEAFS\nDYNAMITERS\nIN SENIOR LEAGUE GAME\nAND\nNelson Midgets    vs. Kimberley Midgets\nWest Kootenay Champions\u2014East Kootenay Champions\nIn Bruce Ritchie Memorial Trophy\nMIDGET CAME at 7:00 p.m. SENIOR CAME at 9:15 p.m.\nWest end door open at 6:46 Both doors at 8:16\nADMISSION TO BOTH GAMES \u2014 Adult rush 50*.\nChildren under 15, 25*. Reserved teats 75*\nReserved Seats at Nelson Civic Centre Office\u2014PHONE 118\nNOTE: Persons attending at the first game are reminded that they\nwill not be permitted to occupy seats In the RESERVED\nSECTIONS, unless they hold a Reserved Sent Ticket\nTO CLEAR\nOUR STOCK OF\nSLAZENGER\nBadminton\nRACKETS\nWE WILL ALLOW A DISCOUNT OF\n20%\nBUY NOW AND SAVE\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR.H. MABER\nPtione 6S9   610 Kootenay St.\nYour mirror will show the dif-\nerence in your looks before and\nafter you've been to the\nHaifch Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 827 Johnstone Blk.\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nThe\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nCorner Mill 8L and Josephine\nPrices for Feb. 18 and 20\nSOAP FLAKES\u2014Maple Leaf,\nwith one pkt free, _>!*_!\nPrice  *W\nLUX TOILET SOAP-      _-2A\n4 for ~ ***\n. PEARL WHITE SOAP-   _[%A\n6 for  W\nEUREKA BLEACH\u2014        _C_\n2 for ***\nALUMINUM POTS-        KfiA\nLarge size, reg. 76c Vt\nPOTATOES-The finest    gn\u00ab*\nGems,' 26 Ibs W\nBUTTER\u2014Glendale, the   onA\nbutter with a name, 3 Ibs. \u00b0*T\nMIRACLE WHIP\u2014Quart   \u00a3CA\nJars, each ...: _ \u2022?\u00bb''\nCOFFEE\u2014Nabob, _OA\n2 Ibs. for \/\u00b0V\nSUGAR\u2014Granulated,    CI *_fl\n20 Ibs. for     9*0\"\nSLICED PINEAPPLE\u2014     AgA\nTall tins, 4 for Mr\nEGGS\u2014Fresh, local, *gA\nlarge, 2 doi \u201e \"Jr\nBACON\u2014Swift's Premium,\nLb.ced' 38<\nCANNED VEGETABLES\u2014Tom\natoei, Peas, Corn or -<0| ntt\nBeans, 9 for .......  r*jW\nHOT CHOCOLATE- A*A\nFry's, 1 Ib  WV\n80UP8\u2014Aylmer, Vegetable or\ntomato, _*A\n3 for  Or\n0RANGE8\u2014The finest      _TO_l\n8unklst, 3 dot. \"J'r\nGRAPEFRUIT- _*A\nCo.ichell.-i, 7 fdr  *3r\nPHONE 110\nFor the very best In groceries\nOpen an account today, we will\nplease ycu.\nMis* Dunn Urges Extension of\nBaby Clinic to District Areas\nInstitute    Members\nVolunteer to\nAssist\nMiss Nancy Dunn', M.B.E., Nelson public health nurse, spoke to\nWomen's Institute members at the\nmonthly meeting, Friday afternoon,\nKivlng the members great praise\nFor the splendid work being carried on by tt^e Institute baby clinic.\nThe .lime bad now come, though,\nahe stated, to expand this work,\nand greater effort should be made\nso that the clinic might be available not only to Nelson children,\nbut to those ot outlying districts as\nwell. '\nMiss Dunn also explained the\nbenefits of. immunization against\ndiptheria, and told of the publicity\ncampaign carried on by prominent\nToronto citizens recently, and asked\nthe members for their support if the\ntentative plans of the medical officer to hold such a campaign here\nshould materialise. Volunteers were\ncalled for and those offering their\nservices were Mrs: C. P. McHardy,\nMrs. W. E. Calbick, Mrs. H. H.\nCurrie, Mrs. T. Dolphin, Mrs. H.\nH. Pitts, Mrs. J. C. Robson, Mm.\nW. Coles, Mrs. R. Eunson, and Mrs,\nH. Forsberg.\nCOON PROGRAM\nAh entertaining feature of the\nafternoon was when five darkles\nappeared   singing   \"Polly   Wolly\nSloodle,\" after -Milch one of the\narkles, Mrs. J. Ryan, sang \"My\nNigger Babby,\" charmingly. The\npickaninny, Mrs. H. H. Jenne, then\ntold an amusing story in true darky\nstyle, and a tap dance. A negro\nspiritual, \"Steal Away,\" was then\nsung by the quintette.; Mrs. W. E.\nCalbick accompanied the artists as\npianist. The other darkies were\nMrs. A. H. Crossley, Mrs. J. Dolphin and Mrs. C. A. Moir.\nThe Mary Davidson committee\nreported six pairs of.glasses were\ngiven and six eye examinations\nmade during January, and the baby\nclinic had 16 babies examined in\nJanuary and six in February.\nMrs. C. F. McHardy was appointed  sick  visiting  convener.\nMrs. H. H. Pitts, president, conducted the meeting.\nWHITLAND, Wales (CP).\u2014Jan.\nuary sitting of Whltland police\ncourt had to be abandoned for lack\nof magistrates after five were unable to appear for varying reasons.\n\u25a0 When ancient Jerash adopted\nChristianity, a temple to Dionysus\nwas converted into the cathedral\nchurch of the city.\nWIN OR LOSE\nYou'll enjoy the badminton\ntournament more if you\nrelax with\ni\nKootenay\nMORE ABOUT\nA Grand\nBeverage\nKl LI AN, THOMAS\nHOLD BIKE LEAD\nCHICAGO, Feb. 17 (AP) - Gus-\ntav KUlan of Germany and Bobby\nThomas of Kenosha, Wis., clung to\ntheir one-lap lead tonight in Chicago's 41st annual international six-\nday bicycle race, The race ends Saturday at midnight\nTorchy and Doug- Peden of Vic\ntorio, B. C, held fourth place.\nMORE ABOUT\nDR. MANION\n(Continued From Page One)\ntrade agreements of 1932 bound the\nEmpire together. This trade agreement pulls the empire apart When\nthe Republicans go into power in\nthe United States it will probably\nbe cancelled; Then we will have\nlost our' Empire preferences and\nour trade as well.\nEXPORT LEVEL HIGH\nTime already has begun to tell\nabout the agreement Hon. W. D.\nEuler, minister of trade, said in\nreply. Trade figures for January\nshowed Canadian exports to United\nStates at the highest level since\n1930 and $15,000,000 higher than in\nJanuary 1938. Exclusive of gold\nthey were $5,000,000 higher than\nlast year. Imports from United\nStates in January totalled $28,000,000\nagainst $32,000,000 a year ago and an\nunfavorable balance ot trade had\nturned into a favorable balance.\nMr. Euler said the government\nwas giving attention to the cattle\nquota situation and he believed action would be taken which would\nbe satisfactory to cattle \u2022exporters.\nThis was in reply to Dr. Manion's\ncharge that the cattle quota had\nbeen Misrepresented and Canadian\nexporters were not aware Mexico\nshared the annual quota of 225,000\nhead of cattle more than 700 pounds\nin weight.\n(The quarterly quota of 60,000\nhead for the first quarter of 1939\nwas exhausted at the end of January with Mexico supplying 4! per\ncent of the total.)\nMILK QUOTA JOKE\nThe quota on milk imports from\nCanada was \"just a joke , said Dr.\nManion. Liberals boasted of the fact\nCanada waa permitted to ship 3,000,-\n000 gallons of milk into United\nStates at a reduced rate of duty.\nThis was less than the amount of\nmilk consumed in a city such as Ottawa in a year. It worked out at\nonerfifth of a pint a year for every\ncitizen of United States.\nIndication the government might\nremove the three per cent excise\ntax from all imports came from Mr.\nEuler after Dr. Manion suggested\nthis would have to be done Hi order to avoid a \"horrible muddle.\"\nIn the treaty Canada agrees to\nremove the tax from commodities\nnamed in the treaty. This, Dr. Manion said, would mean taking the\ntax off luxuries and leaving it on\nnecessities unless it was removed\nentirely.  ,\n\"We may take the excise tax off\nall' commodities: I am not saying\nwe will,\" sard Mr. Euler. \"That tax\nwas never meant for anything but\nrevenue. If it did act as protection\nits removal will benefit consum-\nMUSSOLINI\n(Continued From Page Ona)\nfired shots In the, Via Momentana.\"\nThe second communique laid:\n\"On Feb. 14, shortly alter 2 p.m.,\nIn Via Momentana, a militiaman in\nplain clothing noticed an Individual evidently out of his mind and\nbehaving wildly, and approached\nhim to calm him. The man suddenly fired at him with a revolver,\nwounding him In the abdomen:\n\"The attacker; immediately arrested, waa identified aa a mechanic, Bruno Shnont, 38, son ot\nLuigl Simoni, of San Giorgio de\nPiano (near Bologna), already released twice from an Insane hospital \u2014 the first time at Naples\npast year.\"\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR SALE \u2014 RECONDITIONED\nengines for motor boats or sta-\n' ttonary use. Nelson Auto Wreck\ning and Garage, Phone 946.\nFOR SALE-2 TON HEAVY DUTY\nMaple Leaf truck. In good shape\nnew tires. Will trade for later car.\nBox 5229 Daily News.'\nFOR THOSE WHO CANNOT\nTAKE COO LIVER OIL\nPURETEST\nCOD LIVER OIL\nConcentrated\nTablets\nGO* and ?1.00 per bottle\nSold only at your Rexall store\nDoughnuts\nFOR YOUR'\nPARTIES\nTAKE SOME HOME\nThe Percolator\nE. W. KOPECK1    509 BAKEK S'l.\nKootenay\nBreweriei\nLimited\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia\nRepairing \u2014 Remodelling\nand Relining\nMalcolm's Furs\n659 BAKER STREET\nMANY FIRES OCCUR\nat this season of the year. See us\nat once if you are not fully protected against fire loss.\nH.E.DILL\n532 Ward St.     Opp. Madden Hotel\nTRY OUR\nHome Made Bread\nAT YOUR DEALERS\nHOOD BAKING CO., LTD.\n8EE JACK HOOGERWERF\nStandard Electric\nFOR\nElectrical  Contracting\nPHONE 838   617 VERNON 8T.\nAcross From New Grand Hotel\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nx&ss&ixxs&i&iassssfstems&s\nDance for  Eagle Hall  tonight\npostponed until further notice. \/\nCHILDREN'S  SKATING TODAY\n2 TO 4\nNOTICE\nFigure skating as usual Sunday\n' KEN AND ESQUIRE\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\nPlease study Page 79, March issue,\nof Ladies' Home Journal.   ,       \u2022\nSweets   for   your.  Sweetl   Buy\nGRAY'S CHOCOLATES. 680 Baker.\nWanted bed-sitting or hskpg. rm.\nClose in. Box 5211 Daily News.\nGuaranteed Radio Service Phone 544\nMcKAY A 8TRETTON\nVOGUE 8TUDIO closed till Mar.\n8, studying advanced photography.\nPHILLIP   MORRIS   FINE   OUT\nnow 85c '\/.lb. tin at VALENTINE'S,\nMusical Instruments and Repairs\nWEBB'S-806 Baker St\nKEEP OPEN EASTER MONDAY,\nDOKIE8 BALL, CIVIC CENTRE.\nGolf Season Starts Today\nIndoor Golf Range. Bsmt K. W. C.\nBlock.\u2014Afternoon A Evening\nC. C. F. Club meets 1st and 3rd\nMonday!) each month, Silica Hall at\n8 p.m.\n8pec1al flowering plants for the\nsick 75c each dellvered.Mac's Greenhouses or Walt's News.\nSt. Saviour's Mothers Club Sale\nof Aprons and Afternoon Tea, Feb.\n21st, Memorial Hall, 3 to 8.\nSEE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOLSTERING AND DRAPERIES. 120\nHIGH 8TREET.\nWe have two real buys in slightly\nused wide carriage typewriters.\nBoth late models. D. W. McDerby\n\"The Typewriter Man\" 654 Baker\nstreet. Nelson.\nSpecial notice \u2014 Pythian Sisters.\nKnights and Dokkles. Don't forget\nthe 75th anniversary banquet and\ndance in the K. P. hall, Feb. 20, 7:30\np.m. Admission 35 cents.\nMATCH BLOCK WOOD\nPhone' 176 any time for Immediate\n...'.   delivery.\nW. W. POWELL CO,,, LTD,\nLADIE8 - You will look and feel\nsmart In a mannish-tailored suit\nOur spring and summer samples are\nnow In. Fit Guaranteed. '\nJACK BOYCE\nTha BEST Washer In tha west The\nfamous EASY Vacuum Cup, Priced\naa low as $89.60 with 2 tubs ahd\nbench.\n.   KOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\nTONIGHT\nSPECIAL BUS\nLeaving the Civic Centre Immediately following the hockey\ngame for South Slocan and way\npoints.\nPHONE 800\nRE^OUN\nKootenay Badminton Championships\nFEB. 17,18,19,1939\nNelson Civic Centre Courts\nCHAMPIONSHIP FINALS SUNDAY 7 p.m.\nAdmission Sunday by Season or Sunday Ticket ONLY\nGENERAL ADMISSION 25*. TICKETS AT MANN, RUTHERFORD DRUG\nSee Canadian Champions In Action\nWATCH PAPERS for IMPORTANT GAMES. SAT. SUN.\nSEASON TICKETS $1.00      SUNDAY TICKETS 50c\n,.\".\u25a0\"\u25a0' '.'\u25a0'\u2022'\"\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0    \u2022 '' V:     ' '\". '. .\nSSE5TBES\u2014\u2014a____S\nSTAR TOURING\nGood rubber. Licenced and\n'.' ready to go.\nm\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson) Ltd. Phone 117 ;\nJ.A.C.Laugliton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205, MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.\nMy Business-Helping\nPeople Save Money\nFrank A. Stuart\nOVER, ANDREW'S S80E STORE\nPhone 980 Nelson, B. C.\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\n. Compounded\nAccurately\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMEDICAL ARTS BLOCK\nSpring\nTopcoats\nYouMlfeel better . . .'\nlook smarter ... and.\nthere'll be a spring iri\nyour step .-when you don-\non? of these new. .\n.   j,      topcoats' .   ; I\nRAGLANS\nWRAP-AROUNDS       J\nBAL-MACS\ni^lP-ONS\n$22,S0to$35.W!\nLimited\n\"The Man's Store?\n=fc\nQUALITY\nPrescriptions filled with the BES_\n(or those who want the BEST\nAfSMYTHE'S\nPrescription Druggist\nPHONE 1\nTlJRKE\nI     DINNER (M\nSUNDAY ....\nGrenfelFs Cafi\nRED STAR]\nUSED CARS]\nRemember the Red Star\nmeans guaranteed car.\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd\n608 Vernon St. Phone '\na*\nt I \\r E i;W\nTimes |^jm_^^_J______l   Today\nMATINEE TODAY AT 2:00 P.M.\nADDED ENTERTAINMENT\nDaffy Duck \u2014 Screen Snapshots \u2014 Going Placet.\nCOMING\u2014MONDAY and TUESDAY-Two Days Only\n\"SPEED TO BURN\" wiri,\nMichael Whalen, Lynn Bari\njoe Penner in\n\"MR. DOODLE KICKS OFF\"1\nTHE GREATEST TIRE ADVANCE\nIN YEARS\nThe Goodyear Double Eagle]\n(Built with Rayotwiit, spun from Rayon)\nFEATURES:\n1. Rayotwist so far excells in strength and\nresistance to heat that a 4-ply carcass long\noutwears 6-plies of ordinary cord.\n2. It means a tremendous increase in mileage\nbecause a Rayotwist carcass permits'tires\nthe use of far tougher, sturdier and more\ntread rubber.\n3. Safer. A combination of.Double Eagle Tires\nand Goodyear\" Lifeguards\u2014the modern successor to inner tubes\u2014will give you finer,\nsafer tire equipment than you will be able\nto buy elsSWhere for years to come.\nLet It be our pleasure to show and demonstrate '\nmore of this modern tiria to you.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany. Limited\n35 - PHONES - 36\nWaAfMi...  . . ,'\u25a0       y__________t___^ .___.____.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1939_02_18","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0414485","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}