 23 Stocks Lower on Toronto
Market; Three Gain
—Pa&e Nine
then %mln
Fred Morrison Wins Open
Tournament, California
—Pa$e Ten
7<Soffi
ia
VOLUME It
THI NELSON DAILY NIWS, NELSON, B.C—THURSDAY MOBNINO, .HOTRMBCR 14. 188*
nVE CENTS  A  COPY
ROBERT CRES      ^ EAKS JAIL IN NELSON
U. S. Debtors Must Mee* iiecember Payment
PROPOSES AGENCY TO REWEN
THE INTERNATIONAL PLEDGES
Hoover Suggests Other Forms of Tangible Compensation Than Cash; Mixed Chorus of
Approbation, Opposition
SEEMS LITTLE CHANCE OF UNITED STATES
COMMISSION DEALING WITH THE MATTER
Would Be Closelv Allied With U. S. Delegation to
World Economic Conference and World
Disarmament Conference
WASHINGTON, Nov. 23.—(AP)-(By John F. Chester,
Associated Press Staff Writer.)—Climaxing a rapidly-mov.
Ing picture of war-debt discussion, President Herbert Hoover
today launched — with the knowledge of President-elect
Franklin D. Roosevelt—a request) that foreign debtors meet
the December 15 payments on their war debts to the United
States. .;.....
Simultaneously and in the face of congressional opposition, he proposed legislative creation of an agency to review
international financial pledges in connection with world economic and disarmament problems. .        '
In view of determined objections made on Capital hill,
especially by Democratic pow- ♦
ers in the house, there seems
little chance for such a United
States commission.
Only a tew ahort minutes before Ur. Roosevelt left Washington
and shortly after an extraordinary
conclave of congressional leaden at
the White Houae. Ur. Hoover Issued
a lengthy formal statement declaring flatly against debt cancellation
~ but auggeatlng "other forms of
tangible compenritlon than cash."
MIXED CHORl'J
Immediately there followed a
chorua of mixed approbation and opposition. One senator and representative aftejr, another declared againat
a commission to review the debts.
The same m-n, however, expressed
approval of Mr. Hoover's stand
against further moratorium or cancellation.
Some congressional leaders told
President Hoover at the White House
conference that he Already had power to negotiate or aet np a com-
mlaalan such ba he proposed to
negotiate with Oreat Britain, Prance
and other Kur pean powers. The
earn* view was echoed Uter by
other prominent members of congress who did not attend the meeting, but ln Admlnlatration quarters
30 WOMEN TO GO
TO PIER ISLAND
TO MAKE ROOM
TAXOOUVBR, Not. W^-In order
< make room ftt Oakalla for Um
Itat of Uw Doukhobor woman »t
Neiaon, who han bean eentenoed
to three yeara for nuda parading,
provincial pollot will take, SO of
thoae now at Oakalla. Jail farm to
Pier  laland  on  Thuriday.
Thia will be tbe eeoond female
party to join the penal colony es-
tabltahed on tbe gulf laland for
Doukhobora.
EAST AND WEST
HA PROPOSAL
ON INSURANCE
WTTER STATES
UNABLEACCEPT
HAS PROPOSAL
AMERY SUGGESTS
PLANON DEBTS
Would Pay and the Recoup by
Special Duties to Be Paid
in Gold
LONDOW,< tat. at (CP cable)—Bt
Hon. L. C. M. a. Amery, former Conservative dominion secretary, suggested ln the bouse of common* tonight Oreat Britain should pa) IU
(CONTINUED ON PAOE TWO)
GOLD PRODUCUON
IN B.C. A RECORD
vicrroHiA. not. as.—(CP)—b. o,
gold production this year la estimated
to exceed M.OOO.ootf wltb a record
output of both lode and plaoer gold
Lode gold Increased 2d per oent thl:
year over the 1931 figure, and la estimated at 13,800,000 while a still
higher yield ls expected for 1933. Placer gold, worth 1391,000 laat year will
exceed 1300.000 this year by a comfortable margin It la expected. The
figures are those prepared by the
B. C. department of minea and released today by Hon. W. A. McKen-
Outlines Way to Solve the
Crisis in Shortest PoS'
sible Time
Inter-Prorincial   Conference Now Awaits Data
and Suitable Date
DRAFIWG SCHEME
WILL BE SLOW
Main Obstacle la Agreement Allowing: National
Uniform System
UNEARTHS JEWELS
OF CLEOPATRA
WfW TORK, Not. 33 (AF) —
Count Byron de Porogk, who
aaya he haa been unearthing
ancient cltiei alnoe he waa 19
yeara old, returned to the United fitatea from Egypt today and
told of having found 800 emer-
alda ln the mlna of the aummer
palace of Cleopatra near Alexandria.
The count eald ht wae euro
the relica he found ln Egypt
were the flrat Intimate poaaea
alone of the gyptlan queen
ever  unearthed,
"Some of tbe emeralds," he
nld, "mre only a traction of
a carat, while othere were IB
oarata. Buna were separated, but
moat of them were co-mlngled
In Jewelry aat with gamete and
■ caroellana."
COL J. Z. FRASER
DIES IN ONTARIO
BRANTTOBD, Ont, NOT. 23 (CP>.
—Col John Zimmerman Fraser, 78,
life-long rea'jnt of Brant county,
prominent ln military and political
circlea and >ne of the leadera of
the United Farmers' movement ln
Ontario, died In hospital today aa
the result of fc stroke eome weeks
ago.
war debt tp tbe United States ln
gold and recoup the loaa to the
treasury by levying special dutlea on
Imports from the United Statea to
be paid. In gold or dollars.
Should auch a courae prove un<
pallatable to tne United Statea, be
aald, he would be willing to con-
alder any proposal from their standpoint from modification of the present debt agreement.
He suggested the United Kingdom
rectify Its unfavorable trade balanoe
with tbe United Statea by imposing
Import restrictions to enable It to
meet debt payments In gold "whloh
ls no longer wanted for purpoaea
of our own currency and le only
kept In tba Bank of England yaulta
as » tribute to an. old superstition."
WIFE OF MEXICO'S
IRON MAN IS DYING
Mexico crrr, not. 23 <ap>.-
The office of President Abelardi.
Rodriguez announced shortly before
midnight that Senora Leonora Llor-
ente de Alas Calles, wife of Oen.
Plutarco  Bias  Calles.  was  dying.
BERLIN, Not, ft (A?)-Adolf
Hitler, head of tlw National socialist party, today rejected president Von Hlndenbnrg'a condition
offer of tbe chancellorship and
fct the aame time mtde fc count-
er-propoaal of hia own.
After deliberating on tho question
for moro than a day, the Mud
leader wrote the president he could
not "undertake to aolvs the govern*
mental crlala on a purely parliamentary baste at that was Impossible
because of the reeerratlona" stlpu*
lated by the aged field marshal
when he aaked Hitler to . become
chancellor.        ' '
In his letter to the preaident tHt
National Socialist leader set forth
"a clearly-defined proposal by which
the crisis can be eptved trttbin the
•riorteet time.**
DO  UTMOST   ■ •
He eiplalned he did thii "In view
of the hopeleae condition of our
fatherland, th* ever-increasing distress and the obligation upon every
German to do his utmost so that
the people and the Reich will not
sink into chaos." ■   •
In offering the chancellorship lo
Hitler the president had stipulated
that he must obtain a working
majority of the Reichstag and that
OTTAWA, Not. 23 (CP).—Hailed
by anthorltlee In both eastern and
western Canada aa fc constructive '
atep, the summoning of an lnter-
provlnrtsl conference to deal with
unemployment Saurance now
■waits the compilation ef necessary data by the Dominion fcurea*
of statistics and consultation wltb
the provinces aa to a suitable
date.
Heads of provincial governments
and labor leaders united in expressing approval of Premier R. B. Ben-
nett'a proposed method of approaching tbe problem of providing Canada
with a permanent scheme of Insurance agal at unemployment.
UNIFOM    SYSTEM
As the chief obstacle In ths
way la the constitutional provision
which delegatea matten of property and civil rights to tbe provincial legislature, ths main work
of the oonferenoe will be to arrive
at an agreement which will permit  of  a  national  uniform  ayatem,
"Pereonally I *n» ,aU for It," said
Premier^ Oeofga 8,, Henry .pf On-
lilrlo".'
Quebec would "gladly fcooept the
Invitation," said Premier L. A-Taschereau.
Pending ncelpt of official word
from Ottawa neither Premier C.
D Richards of New Brunswick nor
Premier 3. D. Stewart of prinoe Edward Island would '•omment on the
proposed  conference.
All four western premiers expressed approval and Premier John E.
Brownlee of Alberta voiced the
hope the conference would not stop
at unemployment Insurancs but
would consider other aspect* of tbe
WHITE BANDITS
FARE BADLY IN
NEGRO VILLAGE
Kill Negro President; One
Is Killed and Other Is
Wounded
DESPERADO SAWS HIS
BRITAIN  WILLWAY OUT OF THE JAIL
OLIhJ uLvUnU    Robert Cress Escapes Just Before Prisoners to \
atitpiipiit Locked up; May Have Confederates;
ST   TEMENT District-Wide Search on
Will Give Concrete Reasons for Suspending of
Payments
HIGHLIGHTS OF
GREAT INTEREST
Sawing hi» way through the plasterboard and wdod
partition that separated his cell block from that of the S(
of Freedom women prisoners, and climbing over the won
en's cells into their corridor which opened into the jail yard.
h,   mint   not- Interfere-wtth   the constitution  which   need   overhaul -
array, the established foreign policy i lng,
end with the economlo programme   PUBLIC VU "AVOft
now being  carried  out under  the
government's   emergency   decreea.
On good authority- lt waa learned
Hitler urged ln hie letter that, an
authoritarian presldlal  cabinet,  re-
(CONTINUED ON FADE TWO)
BANK PRESIDENT
SEESTURN, TIDE
Imperial Bank President Tells
Shareholders of Greater
Optimism
and Inventor dies
ILTRIA, Ohio. Hot. 93 (AP)—John
Oeorge Tutford, 78, preildent o(
the I. T, S. Rubber company and
inventor of the suction type of
rubber heel, died  today.
He came here ae a shoemaker
from BeamsvUle, Canada, In 1181.
In 1913 he conceived the Idea of
making the Inner surface of a .rubber heel concave so that suction
would keep the edges fitted tightly
against the shoe without cement.
The Ides made him wealthy elmoet
Immediately, through formation of
the rubber company.
COL R. ROBINS
HE ADg SOUTHWARD
ASX-mVU-lm-t, N. O., Not. 33 (AP)—
Col. Raymond Robin*, who dropped
out of light tn September and cauied * nation-wide lenaatlon, aped
out ot Asheville In a large automobile Uto today, and beaded eouth-
ward, presumably for hit BrookivlUe,
Fla., home. '
The publlo had beln In favor
of unemi*>yraent iniurance for aome
yean, aald Tom Moore, preald-nt of
the tradei and - labor congreu of
Canada Mr. Bennett'i announcement
brought renewed hope to thoea who
had 6een advocating lt. The government would be aasured of the
full oooperatlon of organized labor.
Drafting of an unemployment In-
•uranoe scheme for Canada will necessarily be a alow and difficult Job.
With tbe problem In mind the
government had data on unemployment collected at the 1831 oenaui.
Compilation of thli material la now
being completed and the conference
will not meet until the Dominion
bureau of itatiitici hai a complete
report to Uy before lt.
TORONTO, Kov. tt. (CP)
dent Frank A. Rolph told the annual meeting of the ihareholdera
of the Imperial Bank of Canada
here today there Ii a greater feeling
of optimlam throughout tbe country
than there hae been for two yean,
that ' opportunity are offered for
developing business due to the Imperial Economic oonference and that
further itablieaUon may be expected
from the oomlng world Economic
conference.
In hia addrese, Mr. Rolph said ht
T*t^_T2mlT* **£ U tUrD'|lutlonary encountered a hostile dem-
lng though the upturn will neceeaar- __^„i,:_ *„.„ _*.„ »,. hi.™..
Uy be slow and t^pendi upon many
BOLET,   Okla.,  Not.   tl   (Ar)*
An Invasion of thli all-negro vll-
lUge et two white  bank  robben
ended today In ■ roar of gunfire
that left a negro  bank  prealdtnt  ■
dead, and the robben  and  their
negro accomplice dead or dying.
Shot down by one of  the  white
robben when   he   pulled   a   hidden
burglar alarm, D. J. Turner, president Of tbe farmers end Merchant!
SUte  bank,   died   on   the   way .te
hotpital. But  hia killer  teU  before
the flrt of H. C. McCormick, negro
bookkeeper, and the man's companions  wen hit by the   bullets of a
•con or more ennged cltlaena who
rushed to the bank.
The loot was noovend.
When   ambulances   from   Okemah
romoved the dead and dying, one of
the white robben waa reported still
alive. None wu  Identified.
Refuse to Discuss Other
Alternatives Than Cash
in Payment
By GEORGE HAMBLETON
Canadian Pren Staff Writer
LONDON, Nov. tS (CP cable)—
"Not et all unsatisfactory," was
tha reaction In high official circles tonight to President Hoover's
Washington atatement on war
debta.
Immediate attention focused on
that part of the statement In
which the president dectared "no
facta have been presented by fhe
debtor governments" which would
Justify their request for postponement of the payments doe on
Dec  15.
Tba British government lmmedl-
'ately began preparation of a new
atatement to the United States glv-
here's robert cress,
if you see Him
Age, M years.
M
9
,     Height, 1 feet, MH Inches.
Weight, IM ponnds.
1     lyes,  brown.
ft   Balr, light krown.
H
\l       Several gold teeth.
f
'    Complexion,  sallow.    Fan   dark
rings below eyes.
_u
WeU built, athletlo, erect ta carriage, alert ta manner.
.     Speech, Tankee twang.        -   .
tOtttt CEESS
[    Dreu, dark pants, krown sweater
J           with gray stripes, teet haee
F         ' hive orercoat, no hat.
1
(CONTINUED  ON  PAOE TWO)
BANDITS ROB
ONTARIO BANK
Get $6000 in Cash and Escape; Using Big Blue
Sedan
FLOOD WATERS
RISE AGAIN AT
BELLA  COOLA
Unless Protection Winy
Dam Replaced Town
in Danger
BELLA  COOLA, B. C, Nor.  !S
Robert Cress, alias J. W. Robertson, alias J. W. King, prison,
er extraordinary of the provincial jail here, made a break
for freedom at dusk Wednesday, and up to a late hour had
not been recaptured by the large force of men looking for
him.      •   .- i  t   ■■ . i .'■  ■
Cress, who has served two term* in. New Westminster
penitentiary, one of tnem of five years, and who was due
to have a speedy trial at Grand Forks next Monday on a
charge of committing the government liquor store robbery
at Greenwood last July, was seen by Deputy Warden A. T.
Stephenson 10 minutes before his escape was discovered.
 : *At that time he was in the
men's corridor, which is over-
Gets Two Months
for Hitting Wife
With Crib Board
(CP)-nood waters in the Bella   Cribbage Argument Ends in
Mrs. Lanchick Receiving:
Cat on Head
FLKSHERTON. Ont., Nov. 23 <CP).
—Two armed and masked bandits
walked-Into  the  Flesherton   branch   above  H^gensborg which waa iwept
Cool« river which a few days ago
menaced valley homes and did
considerable damage to property,
after receding for 31 hours were
again on the rise today as the
result of heavy reins and further
damage la feared.
Unlesi   the   protection   wing  dam
of the Canadian Bank f Commerce
three minutes, before closing time
today, herded the manager and
two clerks Into the vault under
levelled revolver! and eecaped with
approximately (0000 tn cash.
Tonight a far-flung watch was
•pread by provincial police. All
pointi  In  the   Fleaherton   area  and
away last week by rush of waters Is
replaoed, that little town standi
ln constant danger of destruction
If flood condltioni continue, lt li
feared the water fron the river
will eventually cut a new channel
through the hamlet.
The awollen river began to recede
Tuesday   morning   but   rains   since
a screw driver and released themselves by removing the combination
from the inside.
HOSTILE PARADE
GREETSTROTZKY
"Long Live the Soviet; Down
With TroUky the Traitor!"
Banners Read j 	
  , BOMB. Nov. 34.   iThureday AP)—
BSBJHta. Denmark. Nor. 38.  CAP)   "•»»  P™1*™   * J***"  *>  **»
«,»„*..* tm mr <I«M to tho United SUtti
»xt«idln» «outliw»rd u ttt u Tor- I ttlen „, Maln ,dding t0 th« danger,
onto   were   on   the   watoh   lor  the      Mountain    atreama    turned    Into
gunmen and their Urge blue eedan.  ngi       im^n   by   conataat   rains
The   bank   employeee,   locked   ta I rfu      „,„„,   iut   WMk   mt
the vault ae the bandits scooped
up aU tht cash ln sight and lied
to their car, worked frantically with
ITALY UNDECIDED
ON DEBT PROBLEM
-Leon TTotiky, exiled Russian revo-
tactors, both national and International.
VON GRONAU FINISHES
ROUND-THE-WORLD TRIP
UST, ble of Sylt. Nor. IS (AP).—
Captain Wolfgang von Oronau arrived here from Friedrichshafen today, completing a flight around the
world, which be began last July.
PEACHLAND   IRRIGATION
DISTRICT  OITS  LOAN
VICTORIA. Nor. 31 (CP).—A loan
of #500' from the conservation fund
wae advanced to the Peachland Ir-
rlgatlon district ta South Okanagan
riding today by order ln oouncll.
ARGENTINE   EVENS  POLO   SERIES
BUINOS AIRXS. Not. 93 (API.
Argentine evened the polo eerles witn
the United statee for "the Cup of
the Americas" today, winning •
feet and stormy game, S to 1. It
an e«r» chukker.
onatratlon today when he disembarked .from the rteemer that had
brought him from Dunkirk, France.
About SOO Biblerg Communlste
paraded about, carrying banner*
marked "Long lire the Tovlet; down
with Trotiky the treltor."
The entire local polioe foroe were
mustered at the harbor and Trotiky, surrounded by a guard and a^
corpe of secretaries, was escorted to
bis tram. Mrs. Trotdty look»d frail
and UL
In • few minute the train started for Copenhagen where the called Rueelan will lecture on the
revolution which brought about the
present  regime  In  Russia.
EXPECT TREATY
BENEFITS WILL
BEGIN TO SHOW
MONTREAL, Hot. 3* (CP),—Now
that all but two of the trade
treaties concluded at the OtUwa
Imperial economlo oonferenoe are In
operation, th« advantage! expected
therefrom ahould aoon begin to accrue,  itatee  the  monthly  letter  of
wai ai doubtful as ever today sfter
adjournment of the aecond night
lession this week of the grand counoll of fascism.
Premier Mussolini spoke lengthily,
but after a three-hour aesslon the
meeting adjourned until December
S.
KILLED WHEN TOUCHES
5200 VOLT TRANSMITTER
BHRKVB»ORT. Le. Nov. M <AP>—
Dorr Slmmone, engineer at radio
station KTBA wai kJllei tonight
when he came In contact with a
aectlon of the transmitter carrying
8300 volte. The accident illenoed the
■tatian.
away roadi and bridges, and some
f-imilles In the danger nine were
enforced to leave their dwelling
houses when the water was at IU
highest. Deep trenches were cut
In the rlada by the rushing waters
and damage ln the menaced are*
would have been much greater bad
not the waters started to recede
when they did.
VICTORIA, Nov. 33 (CP). — A
family cribbage gane at the home
of Peter S. Lanchick ended In an
argument, which In turn ended ln
Mr. Lanchick rising and bouncing
the cribbage board off the head
of Mrs. Lanchick, according to the
evldenoe given In Judge P. P.
Lampman'i   criminal   court  today.
Mr. Lanchick, -ho was charged
with assaulting and beating hli wife
and- causing actual bodily harm,
testified that he sought only "to
bang" the cribbage board In an
effort to emphasize a point in his
arguTnent, but that It flew apart
when he brought his arm down
and  half of  It struck hia wife.
"In the passing of thia cribbage
board from the accused's hands,
Mra. Lanchick suffered a cut on the
head," aald the Judge. "I have no
doubt lt was thrown at lomebody,
and I have no doubt he threw lt
at her."
Unemployed Try
Break Way Into
Blairmore Council
BLAIRMORE. Alta., Nov. 3) (CP)-
A number of workless attempted to
break their way Into a town council
meeting hero yesterday when they
found the door of the hall locked.
The unemployed demanded admission and hammered on doors and
windows. Council members finally
discussed the situation with the
workless deputation and declared
they would do thetr utmost to tender additional relief.
CONVENTION  TO  REAR
'    PROPOSAL OF FARM STRIKE
CALOARY,    Nov.    33     (CP).—Pro-
posala for a general atrlke of weet-
DENIES   KNOWLEDGE
or EXPLOSIVES
NIW   WESTMIN8T R,   B.C,   Nov.
J»,-Walter   George   Stone,   charged. |ern Canada's wheat growere ta pro-
Jolntly   with   Ernest   Stilton,   with (test sgalnst preeent  lepressed wheat
having,   unlavftuVy   and   knowingly, prloea   and   general   economic   con.
eiploalvea  under  their   control,  de-  dIUons  wtll   t plawd   before   dele-' Winnipeg
nled In assiar  court Wednesdsy af- : gatss  at  the  an-'.uel  convention  of j Npnalmo
WINNIPEO, Nov. 13 (CP)—Robert
O. Dean waa today sentenced by
Mr. Justice W. J. Donovan to serve
five years tn Stony Mountain penitentiary following hia convlotlon on
a charge of breaking Unto a theatre
here and stealing 11,000.
Max
41
4T
48
44
48
42
3
48
53
70
44
40
THE WEATHER
Mln.   11
NELSON   _       a»
Victoria     SS
Vancouver          _    83
Estevan    Point
Prince   Rupert   	
Dawson,   T.T.'  	
Seattle     .".....	
44
_ 98
    8*
  JS
.._  SS
San   Francisco   .a	
Spokane     	
Prince Oeorge 	
  SO
38
 „ S3
 58
 SS
Orand Porks ...	
Kaalo    	
Cranbrc't; 	
35
38
 IT
- IS
-.. JO
Swift   Turrent
Prlna.    Ubert   	
Qu'Apptlle    	
Winnipeg   	
10
    4
....   8
_   8'
looked by a barred window in
the jail office.     \
M18HI.NO AT  LOCK-UP
T1MB
When the deputy warden and a
guard went down into tha cell block
to lock up the prisonen, Creaa waa
missing, and a hasty search revealed
hie mode ot exit. He had remove^
a aectlon of plaiterboard from behind the men'i toilet, had aaw a
through and removed four or flv*
solid timbers, three Inches or mora
thick minimum dimension, and then
removed the plasterboard on tha further wall. The timbers wire cleanly and neatly nwn.
Apparently Cresi had accurate Information ai to the Internal itructure of the jail, which waa extensively altered ln the summer ot IMl,
in part with Inmate labor, and evidently knew.what tha officials themselvei did not know—that there waa
wooden gap ln tha partition a*
that point, the cell blocks not oomlng quite together. There waa nothing on the surface to indicate that
the partition waa different there from
elsewhere, and the Information may
have been paued by prisonen.
Impector John MacDonald, commanding "B" division, end alio warden of tha JaU, itated Wednesday
night that varloua weak pointa ha^
been discovered and remedied but
that thu one had not previously
come to light.
WIDE   SEARCH  ORGANIZED
The Instant Cress wu diicovered
to be missing, the alarm waa spread,
and a minute search et tha JaU
grounds and outbuilding! took place,
all provincial polioe offloera and
guarda not on duty wera called cut,
the city polioe were notified, the Oanadlan Pacific police, tha ferrymen oa
the different ferries, end the customi
official! at International boundary
points.   In a few mlnutea the polioe
(CONTINUED ON PAGB 10)
JUDGE DESCRIBES
WITNESS IN CASE
"THE BIGGEST LIAR"
...- 33
ternoon that he had any knowledge of exploelvei found In the
automobile which he drove to Chll-
the Bank of Montreal, lasued here, liwack Auguet  U lert.
DRUMHEULER, Alta, HOY. 31 —
(CP)—Th# principal witness for tha
crown ln a cattle theft case her*
yesterday waa described by Ur.
Justice T. tc Tweedie of Calgary aa
"the biggest liar" tha Judge hsd
heard.
Hia loruerup's remark came aftef
tha wltnees in question, Jeea Mo-
Cannell of tha Rumsey area, ha4
given testimony ln the caae ot Her*
bert Moore, farmer of Rumsey,
charged with stealing a eteer. Mo
Oannell t*W he had been employed
by   Moore   when   the   alleged   theft
tbe   Alberta   Wheat   Pool,   lt   waa      •— 3clow  xero. (
authoritatively   learner   tonight.   De-   FORECAST
bate on the question la anticipated I    Nelion and vicinity—Generally fair 1 occured but Moore waa acquitted b?
at the Friday aesslon. not much change in tempsraturs.    | the   lury.
■mMII
 r tm
• THE NELSON DAILY NIWI, NELSON. B.C.—THI BJDAY MOININO, KOTKMBn M, UN I
CARPENTER SHOP
WINS FIRST AID
PRIZESTO TRAIL
Zinc Plant and Machine Shop
Second and Third; Attend.
ance Good
TRAIL. B- C. Not. 23—Carrying t
ott the 31. John's Ambulance asao- j
elation cup and tbe first prize of
916. which went to each member or
the entry, the Carpenter Shop team
Wn the annual first aid competi-
tlon of the Consolidated Mining Jt
Smelting company at the Memorial
haU tonight, before * large attendance.
Zinc Plant No. 1 took aecond prize,
•10 going to each member of the
team and the third prize of »5 each
went to the members of the Machin*
Shop team.
The problem put before the entrants, which they were required to
deal wtth aa ther would tr eueh as
incident had happened while at their
daily work, and ualng standard
equipment allotted to such emergencies, read aa follows;
"A paUent 1* found on a 'live'
wire la not breathing, la bleeding
profusely from a wound In Une back
of the head and has broken hia left
upper arm at the middle."
Or. M. R. Baeted. Dr. W. Leonard
and Dr. J. K- Palmer set and Judged
the problem.
Complimenting the teama and ei-
pressing gratification at the attendance, B. A. Stimmel presented the
priaea.
Nine teame competed and they
were Zinc Plant No. 1, Zinc Plant
No. a. Shelter, Lead Refinery, War-
Held Ammonia Plant, Machine Shop,
Electric   Shop   and   Carpenter  Shop.
Wins First
Fellowship
WESTERN CANADA
HOCKEY STAR IS
DEAD EN SOUTH
CALOARY, Nov. 28 (CP)—Reub
Brandow, one-time hockey atar of
western Cmada, la dead ln California, aooopdlng to word received
by reLvtives here. His death waa due
to injuries received In an auto
crash   laat  aummer.
Brandow started hia hockey career ln Winnipeg and later Joined
the old Selkirk aquad that tackled
Hamilton Tigers for the Allan cup
more than a decade igo. tn 1939 he
came to Calgary Canadiena and
•tarred In the Alberta Big Pour
league.
ANNOUNCE  ENGAGEMENT
OF   THHffi   DtAUOHTER
VICTORIA, B. C. Nov. 3J._(CP>—
Hia honor, the Lieutenant-Governor
of Brltlah Columbia and Mra. J. W.
Pordham, today announced the engagement of their daughter, Helen,
to Commander Oeorge C. Jonei,
R.C.N., of H.M.CB. Skeena,
CANADIAN    AMERICAN    HOCKEY
At Boaton: Boaton a, Springfield 1.
Guide for Travellers
Nelson, B. C, Hotels and Cafes
111111 n 11 r 111;; 11111 in 111 n 11111111 ii 111 t r 11 r:
"Finest in tht Interior" H
Dinner        Q. Luncheon
75c   rfj*    n    50c
HUME HOTEL
NILSON, B   0.
George tienv.ll Prop.
NEW LOW WINTER RATES NOW IN EFFECT
1111111111 ii11111111111111111111111111nuii|rttl
HUME~A. P. Watson. Kootenty
Biy; Beleon B. Bmlth, Olw; I. W.
Hutton. Montreal; W. Bhaw, Calgary; F. Ix>6b, 0. M. Robton, P. B.
Corcoran, Vancouver; H. M. Courae7.
a. 3. Oium, Medicine Bat; A. 1,
Balm«nt, Cranbrook; R. w. Bordca,
Klmberley; Douglas Corcoran, Pernle.
C(5he Savoy/"
"Where the Guesl Is King"
Nelson's Newest and Finest Hotel
Many Rooms With Private
Baths or Showers.
lit BAKER BT.
BAVOY—H. Moore, Corra Lynn:
Mr. and Mra. 3. T. Broughton, Penticton; J. Colgate, Mre. Dutton, Vanoouver; D. McFarlane, Pred Buoce,
Calgary; Uri. Marshall, Silverton; K.
Cunningham,    Winnipeg;    Mr.    and
J. A. KERR, Prop.
PHOTO It
Mn. K. L. Myeekoff, Spokane; Mr.
and Mn. p. McOulre, Princeton;
Roy W. Canlngton, Reno Mill; J.
Melvln, TraU; MIm Jane Kotturott,
Mla* Mary Kotturofr, Retta, Saak.;
John Slbbard, Oran Creek.
New Grand Hotel
P.  L.  KAPAK   Prop.
Weekly  or  Monthly rates
Hot and Cold Water
Single, ave ap.    Double |1J0 op.
f 10 • Month and Dp
QUEEN'S HOTEL
A. LAPOINTE, Prop.
Hot and eold water In every room
Steam   Heated
SOS   Baker   St. Phone  N
Stirling Hotel
4 Blocks Kast of Post Office
Hot and Cold Wat»r
Steam Heat
Moderate Rates
P. H. Bush, Prop.
Accidental Hotel
703 Vernon St. Phone MTL
H. WASSICK
rifty Rooms ot Rolia Comfort
Headquarters  for   Loggers
and Mlnen,
Madden Hotel
A Welcome Awaits Yosts. E. MA IUEN
Compl   ely   Remodelled
Hot and  told  W-tef
In the HEART   I the City
L. D. CAFE
The Finett tn tht City
OPEN ALL HOURS
Fresh Food— De.lclous Chop Suey
Prompt  Service
Boris  Fountain
ROOMS   TO   RENT
Read The Nelson  Daily
News Classified Ads.
VANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS
Duller .□ Hotel
um iii vut. nc,
Bnghl   Rooms   — central
Moderate   Rates
A. Paltermm   iat* if Coleman.
Craw's  Nrnt,  Proprietor
poo ttfmate bt. Scy 41;
CASTLE HOTEL
ISO Oranvllle St,
VAM'Ol-\KR. B.C.
tn tt"  hrart  of the nlmppfng     ti
thrtire    Motrin. "
WARM \Mi tOMKOKTABLfc
Very Low Winter Rates
ADOPTION OF DUFF REPORT WOULD
THROW THOUSANDS OF RAHWAYMEN
OUT OF WORK, LABORITES DECLARE
-$>
CANADIAN STUDENT
REPORTED MISSENG
BEATTLE, Nov. 33 (AP)-Lawrenoe
B*rnae ol New Westminster, B. C,
a student at SeatUe Pacific college,
did not return to hi* boarding house
here after being released from Harbor View hoepltal several daye ago,
nor hu he ittended claaaee at the
college, hia friends taid today.
He had been ill for aeveral week*
and It waa believed he might have
returned to hia hom*.
Humphrey Mitchell Places the
Number at 20,000; Heen-
&n Asserts More
Dr. A. H. Sellers of the School of
Science, Unlvenity of "INwonto. hae
been awarded the Initial Hastings
Memorial Fellowship commemorating
the late Dr. Hastings, medical officer
of  health  for Toronto.
Three Men on Trial
on Charge Operating
LiquorRing in U.S.
Alleged to Have Formed Company at Vancouver; Had
Submylnes
SAH FRANCISCO, Nor. 39 (AP).—
With the Introduction ot every
piece of eTldenoe seriously contested, three men, whom the government aliased operated a liquor
smuggling and distribution rlnsf
here, went on trial before t Jury
In Federal Judge Harold Louder-
baclt's   court   here   today.
Ths defendants are John Marino,
San Pranclsoo, Barr; Nelson, alias
Bartlett, San Francisco, and Pete
MagRlor*. San Jose. A fourth defendant, *Quldo Megglore, also of
San Jose, died last March after Indictments bad been returned aad
the fifth, Barry Megglore la critically 111 In a San Mateo hospital.
COMPANY AT
VANCOUVER
Assistant United Statea Attorney
Albert I. Bagshaw told the Jury
he would prove the defendants formed ths Pacific and Foreign Navigation company ot Vancouver. B.C..
purchased submarine chasers from
ths United Statea government, and
began running liquor from Canada
to the California-Mexican ooast,
whete It waa transferred to smaller
boata and landed. He said he would
show the alleged' ring kept in constant touch with th* llqi r ships
by means of radio stations here and
at Vancouver and told bow a special government sgent decoded meev
ssges between the stations and
ships over a period of several
months. Bruce McWatt, who waa ir*
rested here for operating a radio
station on l»th avenue, wae sentenced to McNeil Island.
WW A, Nov. 33.—(CP)—Canada's
museums don't amount to much, and
being mora or less orphans, nobody pays a gnat deal of attention
to them except for the small number of publlc-mlnded citizens and
officials who understand their value
In the cultural sii" of the nation.
This, ln general, summarises the report of Sir Henry A. Mlers, D. Sc.,
T.tt.. and 8. F. Markham. IU.,
on these Institutions In Canada,
compiled for the Carnegie corporation of New York. .
The two authority spent t great
part of last yesr 'nvestlgating the
museum  -Ituatlon In this  country.
In Csnsda there are 135 museums,
only a few of wMch ara directed
along lines that enable the general
publlo to get any value from them
the   report    'ndlcates.     A    64-page
brochure, the report Is filled with VICTOnr» Nov n trri-r, __,
with observations of which very few ."ifow?' NoT; *', tcP'-u ">•
ar.   at   an   «m,»ilm.„t„.   ,7 L.  f,<"^  "I  PWlnoW  governments
ECONOMIC MEASURES
INSUFFICIENT   FOR
SOLVING PROBLEM
BHJAST, Northern Ireland, Nov.
33 (CP oible)—H. M. Pollock, mlnlater of finance, told the Northern
Ireland parliament today he was
satisfied the empire problem oould
not bs solved fully and permanently
by purely economic measures, however great or Important they might
be.
Mr. Pollock, who attended the
Ottawa economic oonferenoe, said
solution must bo based on higher
ethical and spiritual standards.
FILE SUIT AGAINST
C. P. R. FOR OVERTIME
SSATTUt, Nov. 3J.—(AP)—Suit to
collect 1431.13 from the Canadian Pacific railway company for overtime
pay for Immigrant inspectors wsa til,
ed ln federal court here today on
behalf of ths United Statei.
STABT REGISTRATION
Or SINOLE WORKLESS
MEN AT VANCOUVER
VANCOUVER, Nov. 38.- -Reglstre.
tion of single unemployed men haa
been started at 411 Dunsmulr street
and they are being despatched to
camps as rapidly as possible, today,
stated Major J. O. Fordham. chairman of the special oommlsslon ln
charge.
Survey is being mads of accom,
modation ln tha various camps and
all msn will be placed aa soon
space and squlpmsnt is available
ISSUES DECREE TO
PROHIBIT COrrEE PLANTING
RIO DI JANEIRO. Brazil. Nov. 39.
—(AP)—Presldsnt Oetullo Vargaa issued a decree todsy prohibiting the
planting of coffee anywhere ln Braail
lor a period of threo yeara.
GERMAN  CYCLER  IN   l.S-A.
Theodore Frankenstein, a newcomer
ln American bicycle racing elrelss.
halls from Germany, and la that
country's outstanding rider.
There is a field for every type of
picture, and by appealing to ths
one-type or Juvenile audience we've
neglected the selective oudlenee.
Thus we've lost that larga group
of Intelligent people who wish to
see different type pictures.—Dsvid
O. Selenlck, movie producer.
Commercial dreau patten, manufacturers hav* adopted JS of the designs for children's clothing developed by the U. 8. Bureau of Home
Economics.
SNUGGLE BIBLES
INTO RUSSIA
Are Adopting Religion Quick-
er Than Any Other Country, Says Lecturer
PITTBBUItaH, Pa.. Not. 23 <AP)—
The Rev. WUllam Petler, founder of
the Russian missionary society, la
Pittsburgh on a lecture tour, wld
today hia organization Is "smuggling" bibles Into Russia.
"We are smuggling thousands ef
bibles across the Russian border by
fight," he aald. "The people are
adopting religion more rapidly than
any  other oountry ln the  world.
"The Plve-Year plan can not succeed. Its greatest miscalculation ls
its oppotltion to religion."
OTTAWA, Not. 23 (CP)—Thousands of Mllwaynwi throughout
Canada will be thrown into the
ranks of the unemployed If the
Ehftf oommlasion'a report la adopted,
the house of commons was told today when labor made ita initial attack  on   Its   recommendations.
Humphrey Mitchell, Labor, Hamilton Bast, estimated 20,000 railway-
I men would lose Jobs. Hon. Peter
Heenan, who returned to overalls
and a looomtlve cab when he left
the portfolio of Labor ln the King
cabinet, placed tbe number at
"many thousands and thousands."
Branch raUway lines would be
scrapped, noted the former minister.
6ervioea would be dropped and curtailed. The Canadian National and
Canadian Pacific railways would be
drawn Into closer cooperation. Competition  would  disappear.
"Where, oh where now ls that
slogan 'amalgamation never! competition evert" exclaimed Mr, Heenan,
leading over his desk and pointing
his finger at government members
across the floor.
LABOR  NOT   REPRESENTED
Canadian labor wu /not represented on the Duff commission,
continued the former cabinet minister. "Instead there waa % Mr. Loree,
president   of   a   railway   ln   United
little Attention
. Paid fo Canadian
s, Is Finding
Owe Most of Their Value to
Few Public Minded
Citizens
Anderson Promises Announcement
on Coalition Question Thursday
RBGtNA. Nov 23—The promise of a grand cllmai to th*
coalition talk that has kept political circles on edge an week was
contained  In  developments tonight.
These   developments  inn:
1 a sUtement will hs Issued Thursday on ths decision
reached In caucus bv govtnunant members of the legislature.
Premier J. T. M   Anderson lntlmatad.
2 A statement on coalition waa promised for Thursday by
Dr. i. T. Myers, Rosetown, president of the provincial conserratlvs
Oovenimant members wsnt Into caucus st the parliament
bulldlnas at 3 o'clock this afternoon, adjourned after six to be
entertained bv the premier at a banquet and re-asoemWed to
continue deliberations  until  a lata  hour.
During the interval Premier Anderson was approached for a
atatement.
"Tomorrow," was his reply.
AMERICAN GIRL
WANTS TO JOIN
GANDffllNFAST
Writes Mahatma Announcing
Intention to Join Him
in Next One
MORE ABOUT
(CONTINUED   FROM   PAOE   ONE)
sponsible to President Von Hindenburg. be appointed. In order not
to complicate the situation the Nasi
leader mentioned no name for the
chanosllorahip, according to an Informed source.
SOLEMN PROMISE
The leader of the strongest party
in Oermany closed his counter-proposal with thl* solemn promise—
"In the event of Its acceptance I
pledge both my person and my entire movement to the solving ot
tbe governmental crisis and thereby
the  saving  of   the  fatherland."
MEN RETURN TO
WORK IN C.P.R.
COMPANY SHOPS
VANCOUVER, Nov. 23.—Two hundred men went back to work this
morning at the Canadian Pacific
railway Drake street shops after
having been laid off slnoe October
2B. Two hundred m< . remained at
work.   ,
1800   STREAM   BACK
AT   WINNIPEO
WINNIPEO, Nov. 23 (CP).—The
time clocks sang merrily at the Canadian Pacific railway's Weston shops
here today as 1800 shop m-n streamed back to their benches after an
enforced   layoff   of   more   than   a
DELHI, India, Nov. 23.—(AP)—
The American girl, Nlla Cram Oook.
who recently embraced the Hindu
religion, has written a letter to
the Mahatma Gandhi announcing
her intention to Join him in his
'next  fast.*'
The Indian Nationalist recently
went through a sU-day period of
abstention from food ln an effort
to enforce upon upper caste Hindus
recognition of the principle of
equality for the Hindu lower classes
of   "untouchables."
Miss Cook, who to her HindU
friends ls known as Nlla Nagini,
wrote that the conscience of tbs
"upper castes throughout the world''
may be roused by Mr. Gandhi's
fast.
While castes ln America may open
their hearts to the down-trodden
Negroes," she said.
At Nad heedquarters the opinion  month.
was expressed that the communlca- t	
States within the womt working I tion paved the way for another per- 143 MEN REiVRN
conditions in that country. He was! sonal taik between the president NORTH BAY, Nov. 23—Reopening
good enough to be on that board." and the party leader ln the course of the Canadian Pacific railway loot which the president's misgivings comotlve shops and car repair de-
about aaklng Hitler to form a prea- partmant here today Htmm 1«
(dial cabinet might finally be al- men, chiefly heed* of t*ml\bs, to
ltyed> } work.   Thsy   had   been   KM   **noe
"Hitler can waiit." said Dr. HJal-  October   21.     ^^
mar   Schacht,   former   president   of I , .   ■_.'*_■__.  mntv
the   Relchsbank,   who   was  cleeet*  2^2J1E*  ™ JT™
with   the   Nasi   chieftain   most   of
the afternoon. "If he does not be-
Parliament swung today tn a full-
dress unemployment debate. Prom
the opposition came general criticism of the government's reoord and
policies. And from the Conservative
side, general defence.
A steady Improvement has been
noted In employment figures in the
past three months, said Hon. Wesley
A. Oordon, minister of labor. But
Individual Canadians must adopt
oouraga and initiative during these
depressed days. "If the people ot
Canada would realise the opportunity there is In their own country,
and instead o: living in Uw Indus*
trial oenters. get a comprehension
of the empt'c they bave ln trust,
then, although there Is a dislocation
of industry and trade ln the world
today, I think there would be very
Uttle suffering or deprivation among
them.*    (
Income Taxation Has
Special Significance
to B.C. of $5,600,000
Question May Be Opened at
Federal and Provincial
Meeting
are   at   all   complimentary   to   the
country. .
Public Indifference towards these
institutions es at the root of the
situation. Canada's "educational
museums are embryonic," the report has it, and "her museum endowments are negligible." However,
the investigators found much ground
for praise and admiration "for what
has been accomplished against almost insuperable odds by a few
enthusiastic   individuals."
Democrats Begin
Two-fold Program
Calls for Farm Relief and Beer
for Revenue Legislation
open up tbe question ot Dominion
Income Uxatlon In the provlnoes st
the suttestM conference snnounced
by Rt. aon. R. 8. Bennett thu
week, they will broach * subject
thst hs< > slgnltlcsnoe of 15,800.000
yeirly to British Columbis. That
sum ls the estlmited return from
federal Income taxation In this province. In common with other provinces, BrIUsh Columbia hss always
maintained thtt the Income tu, at t
direct Impost wtt solely the in.
requisite . or the proTlnoet. ThU
principle wu set ulde by wartime
leiislatlon, tnd since then the ttx
hu been continued. BrltUh Columblt receives t return subsidy fron
the federtl government of 1731.000
yetrly bited on t number of factors.
Toul payments to the Dominion by
BrltUh Columblt Cltlnna under til
heads am said to be close to Mo,-
000,000 yetrly.
MORE ABOUT
DEBTS
By TBANCIS M. STEPHENSON
Associated   Press   Staff   Writer
WASHINGTON, Nov. 33.—Democratic leaders went to work todsy
ln response' to conferences with
Governor Roosevelt on a two-fold
program for the short session calling
for farm relief and beer for rev- I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
enue   legislation.
The president-elect was represented by the Democratic pilots as
very hopeful of avoiding an extra
session of the new congress ln the
spring.
lt was held the executive had no
■uch power.
Speaker John Nance Garner, the
vice-president-elect, v led the
j Democratic contingent into this
Howtver. he was said to predicate morning's cabinet room conference
avoidance of the extra session on Ut the White House, and later into
the enactment of legislation before patl0y w(th Mr_ BooMnK teltente*
March 4. which would assure a to publlc a Uu*f expressed by
balanced budget for ths nation.        „Vcral at both meetings.
The    Democratic    fiscal    program ■ wo ULD   THEY
would   be   directed   principally - *t j PEFALXTf *
further econom-s In government, j -..ut thtm ^ir. M exclaimed
New revenue raising would be eon- ln timw to QlwltlonJ_ ..^ JJ
fined  solely  to   the   proposed   beer they would CiauIt- Tiwy   r0n.t.,
tax.
EXPERIMENTAL   PLAN
On the farm relief the governor
and his advisors rre centering their
attention on an experimental plan
to be confined at first to the
gigantic wheat crop. It la based
on the idea of paying :> the farmer the 43 centa a bushel tariff on
wheat which is domestically consumed.
Another feature of the embryonic
farm plan calls for establishment
of redistributing oenters throughout the country to aid the cooperatives ln disposition of their crop
to tbe consumers, thus cutting down
the spread ln price between producer and consumer.
Just what stand the president*
elect himself took upon Mr. Hoover's statement of policy was not disclosed before he left the capital
ioi Warm Springs. Ga. Ogden Mills,
secretary of tbe United states treasury,, who conferred wltl him after
a morning spent with th> president. wa« asked whether any commitments had been made by Mr.
Boose velt.
"Wait and see," was the treasury  £&",!„» to" thi Chit,
secretary's   only   reply.
Associates of Roosevelt said he
had  made  no  oommltment.
President Hoover suggested ln his
statement that the agency he proposed "to exchange views" with
foreign debtors should be 'osely
allied "with the United SUtes dele,
gatlon to the worl4 eoonomlc con>
months."
Domestic Servants
Hold Elaborate Ball
Nearly 5000 Cooks, Footmen,
Maids; Valets and Butlers
at London Ball
MONTREAL. Nov. 3S (OP)—No
one wu late for work tt Angus
Shops todty u 3400 htppy Canadian Pacific railway workers Jostled
btck to work after t lengthy Ity-
off.
Not only t» workers, but their
wlvu tnd ftmllles. rejoiced.
Receiver Appointed
Property of Friars
Famous Theatrical Club to Go
Out; Organized 28
Years Ago
A new mtrk ln whist drives for
the present season wss set by tho
Canadian legion Wednesday night
when 132 persons participated ln Its
military drive. The number playlnj
made up 31 tablet.
A triple tie resulted wtth Australia.
Ireland and Africa dividing honors
with 34 flags. In the cut Australia
won' out. Bams' wera given for
prises.
Those occupying ttble Australia
were H. Elliott, A. Patton, Miss E.
Hunden and Miss M. Hunden. Africa
wu occupied by Mr. and Mn. F.
Foster and Mr. tnd Mm. O. Mulr of
South Slocan, while Miss F. Sherrl-
dan. Miss JS. Wlnsor, H. Stirzaker
and R. Harrison occupied table
Ireland.
RefreshmenU tnd dancing foUowed ctrdt. ,
K. T. Brake wu muter of ceremonies tnd t oommlttee composed
of Mrs. T. Frost, Mrs. R. Riley, F.
Hartwig,. tnd A. Elliott convene!
tfftlrs.'
LONDON, Nov. 93 (CP ctble).—
Nearly 6000 cooks, parlor maids,
valets, butlers, and chauffeurs gathered lut night at Albert htll In jn^ YORK, /Nov. >».—(AP)—A
thtlr finest tttirs for the West „__uet w„ appointed todty for all
End btll for domestic servants.
The beauty of the ltdles tnd tbe
chfvtlry of tlfe gentlemen combined with t general feeling of Joy
and   happiness   and   the   ball   wu
grett  success.
In the meantime, the masters
tnd mistresses of Mayfair either
dined tt restaurants or contented
themselves with something cold from
the Ice box and t "spot of tet."
The btll wu promoted by Ltdy
Malcolm, wlft of sir ltn Mtlcolm,
noted tuthorlty on foreign tfftlrs.
tnd for years hu been widely ijec-
ogntsed. both by the employees who
tttend lt tnd the employers who
mtke poulble Itt large attendance.
Annual Statement
Holds Wheat Growers
Action of Delegates on the National Wheat- Board Is
Indefinite
CALOARY, Nov. 33 (CP).—With
the annual statement of R. C. Pin-
lay, treasurer of the Canadian Cooperative Wheat- producers, Limited,
still under review, delegate; to the
annual meeting of the Alberta
Wheat Pool adjourned tonight to
meet  again  tomorrow.
It was still Indefinite tonight
whether the delegates would take
any action regarding the proposal
for a national wheat board, supported tn the annual report of the
dlreoetora which wu before the convention yesterday. Officials said tbe
question, IX any action were anticipated, would go before the delegates
In the form of a resolution based
on the directors' report. So far
the resolution has not been prepared.
190 BOXES APPLES
FOR TRAIL NEEDY
DONATED, ROBSON
TRAIL, B. 0., Nov. J3—Total of
100 boxes of apples htve been given
to the Tnll Community Chest by
the Robton Cooperative exchtnge
for distribution ln t truck lotd.
John Wildle brought ln t truck
lotd of 100 tnd an additional B0
boxes wtrt given by, the exchange
when t truck wu sent out fram
TrtU.
In addition t ftw sacks of po-
tstoet   tnd   other   vegetables   htve
Hert ls the man  (Samutl Insull)
who   ukt   to   bt   protected   from'. _tnac tnd to tht general dlttrm-
Amerlctn llbtrty, under which un|lm,nt   conference."
art   murdered   by   machine-guns   ln  ,	
the streets. It such t mtn u thit |    j,. ora,r to conserve tht blutberry
J. H. SCHOFIELD, M.P.P.
LEAVES FOR COAST
TRAIL. B. C, Nov. 33—J. H.
Schofield, M.PF. left TrtU this
morning to tttend the British Columbia oonventlon of tbe Conservatives being held st Vsnpouver, Friday tnd stturdty. He wu the only
TrtU delegate going to the conven-
oapable of trying to escape Justloe? crop of Chlppevt county, MIcMgtn, |uon,
I —Crlstoe Ladu, Greek attorney uk-  tbe   stttt   hu   ordered   thst   blue-'    I'   wu  understood  Mr.  Schofield
lng   reletse   of   Samuel   Insull   la   I   berries on ststr-c-ned Isnds msy bewu to Join Lieut. Col. Fred Lister,
Athens. picked only by hand. M.P.P. for creaton, on ths trtln.
the property of frltrs, famous theatrical club which hu numbered
among Its members many of the
world's greatest tctors.
The receiver wu tppolnted be-
ctuw tht club wu unablt _to pty
t bill of 11.130.40 for butter, eggs
and cheese.
Tht mars, of which Oeorge M.
Cohen Is the head tnd Alfred E.
Smith tn honartry member, wu or-
genlaed 38 yeart tgo u t ttrlctly
stag ttfalr. Seldom hu a woman
entered IU portals.
The tnnutl Friar's frolic hu be-
comt a tradition along Brotdwty.
MORE ABOUT
PREPMEKPLY
(CONTINUED FBOM PAOE ONE)
lng   concrete   reasons why,   In  the
British view, tbt Deo. IB payments
should bt suspended pending recon-
tlderttton of tht entire question.
HIGHLIGHTS
Especlsl Interest wu tttached to
two highlight! of tht president's
sUtement. First, tn Intimation thtt
othtr forms of ttnglblt compensation thtn cuh might be of tdvtn-
tegt to tht UnlUd stttet (such u
expansion of markets for tht producU ot United Statu agriculture
tnd ltbor, In tbt preeldenft words i
md tscond hit Intimation thtt
debtors might be tllowed to pty In
their own currencies.
In official clrdM tonight there
wu a disinclination to discuss the
suggestion of how tbe debts might
be met otherwise thtn ln ot«b, unUl the actual proposals are received.
Auother point In the president's
dedtratlon, that reiuratlng tht
American policy of treating each
debt settlement separately, occs-
sloned no surprise ln London.
The United Kingdom hu well realized this policy tnd htt ttken the
utmost care to guard tgainst any
action which would give tny grounds
for the belief the debtors of the UnlUd SUtes were tctlng In concert.
A "united front" It Uve intlthettt of
British policy.
So Itr u the president's sUtement
thtt no facU had yet been presented
Justifying postponement of the De.
cemtftr payment, wu concerned, no
doubt wu felt ln government circles
thtt the case would be supported
by powerful argumenU.
VANCOUVER CITY
TO OPPOSE CUTS
IN THEIR GRANT
VANCOUVER, Nov. 38.—Any movement by the provincial government to
reduce its grants to tha city of Van-
couer will meet with vigorous opposition from clvlo authorities.
This was forecast at this afternoon's
meeting of the civic finance committee when aldermen adopted a resolution protesting against Victoria's
reported plans to reduce grants to
municipalities.
132 PERSONS PLAY
AT LEGION WHIST
Occupants of Table 'Australia'
Wins on Cut With Africa,
and Ireland
Male Glee Club
Presents Program
Wednesday Next
A musical treat ls in store for
Kelson music lovers on Wednesday
evening November 30, when the Nelson Male Glee club presents a -program in Bt. Paul's church under
leadership of 7. JS. Wheeler.
In all 30 male voices will he heard
on the program while the artists
wlU be auisted by U local musicians and  two outside artists.
Proceeds will be in aid of the
music fund so that additional concerts may be given during the oomlng season.
Quebec to Oppose
Mingling of Pros
With Amateurs
MONTRIAL, Nov. 23.—(CP)—Quebec delegatea to tha annual meet*
lng of the AJI.U. of 0. at Ottawa
next month will take a definite
stand on the question permitting
professionals in one sport to register
ss amateurs In other sports, Leo E.
Burns, president of the Quebec
branch  stated  today.
It was unofficially reported that
Montreal officials In many branches
of sport were enthusiastically in support of the move made ln western
Canada hut no one has yet been
armed with official authority to
vote for the amendment, tt was
considered likely, however, tbat a
block of votes from thh province
would be aligned with the western
delegates supporting the proposed
amendment.
LABOR CANDIDATE
ELECTED CALGARY
CITY COMMISSIONER
CALOART, NOV. 33 —(CP)—T. B.
Riley tonight became the first Labor
candidate to be elected city commissioner of the city of Calgary. He
was elected by a strong majority In
today'a civic elections over A. O.
Oraves, present incumbent, and Phil
Luck, candidate ot the United Front
party.
There's Health
for You
in My Treatment
As m woman like you IJ
have endured heAdaches, I
b a c k a dies, constipation, J
nervous attacks, sleeplessness. Experience and study have taught me
the remedies. Now I can help you.
Simply send me particulars about
yourself, and I wtll forward, Absolutely Free, ten days' trial treatment. I have helped hundreds ol
women.
MRS. M. SUMMERS
Care  of  Vanderhoof A Co.
BOX   101   WINDSOR.   ONT.
For   aale   by   leading   druaglflte.
a-2j
 9THE  NELSON  DAILV   NtWS,   NELSON,   B.C.—THIKSDAY   MOKMMi,   NOtLMNr.H   21.   IM.'— r*
I
FORMER CRESTON
MAN IS MARRIED
CBWTON B. C. NOV. 23—Murel
Olson, who «. few years ago was
assistant C. p. R. agent at Creston,
I nd stnee then Canadian customs
urfioer at Kingsgate, becs^n* a
Iwnedict at Spokine last week, ac-
DonUnfl to word Just received here.
Ibi bride la Miss Myrtle Flowers
of Hollywood Oallf. They will re-
Aide   at   Kingsgate.
lm. B. B. Staliwood of Nelson
was an Armistice weekend visitor
with her parents, Cl, and Mrs.
rred  Lister.
Mr. and Un. H. W. Fortin aro
Just hack from a short holiday
visit with Spokane friends.
Pred T lelt for Cranbrook on
Monday, where he Is temporarily
rtsuming work as C. P. B. fireman.
Miss Helen Nystrom was a visitor with her friend. Miss Helen
Marshall, at Cranbrook during the
past week.
Mrs. Cecil Moore returned Irom
Cranbrook on Tuesday where she
haa been visiting with her husband,
Cecil Moore, who ls a patient at
St. Eugene hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Couling were
renewing acquaintances in Bonners
Ferry the fore part of the week.
R. Stevena of Camp Lister was
lu town at the first of the week
en route to Trail on a visit with
his son, Ernest. He will also make
a short stay in Nelson before returning.
MAKE ADDITION TO
CRESTON FACTORY
A Mother Watches Her Son Become President of U.S.
CRESTON, B. C Nov. 23—Work-
men have Just completed work on a
cement structure 13x32 feet at the
Charles O. Rodgers box factory and
sawmill. The new building will be
used aa a dry kiln for the box factor" veneer aa weU as for the cut
of flooring and the better grades of
lumber. The structure will require a
few daya to "set," and when lt is
ready a mechanic will be here from
Vancouver to take charge of installing the Interior equipment.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Celli of Coleman, Alta., are here at present looking after late fall operations at their
cherry ranch east of town.
Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Connell left
Wednesday on a visit with relatives
and frienda at Edmonton and other
northern Alberta points.
Each Spoonful
Means
Health Insurance
l#l i  rcgulirfy
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
. ft    oi Norwesisn
/      i,    Cod Liver Oil
j.4 I    Build; Resistance
si      Easy to Digest
Proudest mother ln the V. S. A.,
bnt betraying none of her emotions,
Mrs. sara Delano Roosevelt, mother
of President-elect Franklin D. Booee
velt, Is shown at the right In the (headquarters In New York, In her
photo left above, as she received sister, Mrs. Dora Fort<w. Right—
the news of his sweeping victory. Mrs. Roosevelt voting for her son
Heated    with    her,    In    Democratic, for president  at   Hyde   Park,  N.  V.
REV. JANZO HOLDS
SERVICES, SALMO
u	
Road to Gold Belt Mine Finished; Manager of Queen's
Is Back
CAPE FLIER TO
START LAST LEG
Praises Home Treatment for Bladder
Weakness, Backache, Irritation
No matter whst your age may be,
how long you have been troubled or
how many medicines you have tried
without success—If you are a victim of functional Bladder weakness
and irritation, causing days of
troublesome annoyance and nights
of Broken Rest, you are invited to
try the wnazing value of Dr. South-
worth's "Uratabs" without risk of
cost unless pleased with the results.
"Made from a special formula
used by the doctor for over 40 years.
"Uratabs" are designed to sw'ftly relieve the pain and misery of Burning Urethral irritations. Backaches,
frequent dally annoyance and
troublesome nights. Any good druggist will supply you on a guarantee
of money back on the first box purchased if vou are not wonderfully
satisfied with swift and positive relief obtained.
SALMO, B. C, Nov. 33—The Rev.
Carl C. Janzow of Nelson held
Lutheran services In Salmo Sunday.
Mrs. M. McCaslin had as her guest
over the week-end her daughter
Miss Merle who attends high achool
at  Creston.
Mrs. M- C. Donaldson, daughter
Peggy and Shirley, and aon William
of Nelson, apent the week-end at
their   home    here.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Bush have
taken   up   residence   tn  town.
Mr. and Mrs. Dory and family
have taken up residence In their
new home.
Miss Winnie Bush Is visiting In
Nelson   with   friends.
Alfred  Cawley returned to Nelson
Sunday    after    spending    the    past
week   here  with  his  parents  while
on the sick  list.
MANAGER   QUEE1  S   BACK
Mr. Witer, manager of the Queen's
mine returned from Spokane Monday. He waa eccompanled by Mrs.
Witter  and Miss Elaine De Witt.
Mrs. W. B. De Witt of the Queen
mine ls spending a few days in
Neiaon, the guest of her brother-
in-law and elster, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Q.   Bunyan.
Friends of Carl Troyer of Metaline Falls were vsry sorry to hear
of hia death ln the lone hospital
recently.
Mrs. C. A. Cawley was a oharm-
ing hostess. Wednesday afternoon
when she entertained, at a Jolly
party In honor of her daughter
Marjorlea' sixth blrthdsy anniver-
ary. The little invited guests were:
Joyce Bremner, Eva Maude Leaky,
Jacqueline Johnson, June Fair, Doreen Gibbons, Dorothy Hansen, Max-
ine Lindow and Hrtoml Lindstrom.
ROAD  COMPLETED
Tho road to the Gold Belt has
been completed under the supervision of W. Orutchfleld road foreman.
. Mike O'Donnell was visitor to
Salmo on his way to the Gold Belt
where he is foreman.
Mrs.   H.   H.   Townsend   is   visiting
her   son-in-law   and   daughter   Mr.
and  Mrs.   Archie  Oray.
SON   DOWN
Mrs. M. M. Caslln received word
of the birth of a wn to Mr. -and
Mra. E. Bhear of Spokane. Mrs.
Bhcar was formerly Miss Pean McCaslin.
W. R. Salsbury and daughter Miss
Edna and granddaughter Lois Brown
iof Penticton have taken up residence in town.
ORAN, Algeria, Nov. 33 (OP cable).
—Victor Smith, 18-year-old Cape
Town flier, planned to take off
on the last leg of his flight from
the Cape of Oood Hope to England.
The youthful aviator arrived here
after making a KW-miie flight
across the Sahara from Gao, French
West Africa, ln 21 hours and 35
minutes.
Legion Presents
Plaque Honoring
Creston Mothers
Curling Activities
Discussed, Creston
CRESTON, NOV. 23—There waa
quite a good turnout of members
of Creston Curling club at the town
hall on Tuesday night for tbe
purpose of an informal discussion
of the coming season's activities.
The chair was occupied by President
M. R. Joyce, with R. M. Chandler
as secretary. The club ls ln possession of some funds and the meeting decided on some improvements
at tb^ rink. The foundation of the
two rinks will be carefully gradei
and some more sand fill put in
which Is anticipated will help get
away from the "crooked ice" encountered ln past winters.
KOOTENAY RIVER
OBSTRUCTION IS
BEING REMOVED
CREETON B, C. NOV. 23—A tug
with barge ln tow, and * crew of
eight tte now st work on the Kootenay River between Bonner* Ferry
and the boundary at PortHUI-
Rykerta, removing the trees, sunken legs, ani other obstructions to
novlgation on that strean. A stock
of powJer is also sbosrd tho craft
an3 Is being used in some quantity.
The work ls In charge of an engineer fnom the U. S. ro.rine department, ard from present appearances the Job wiil not be completed till about the end of December. A similar work was done
about three years agj, and the
decision to again undertake the
work on * more thorough scale
Is due tbe fact that navigation hM
been resumed cm the river in
ccnectlon with the movement of
the grain crops on the dyked lands
in the Kootenay Valley, which
now total over 20.000 acres, not
all cf which, of course, are dependent on barge movement of the crops.
New Westminster
Man Is Awarded
Tyrrell Medal
OTTAWA, Nov. 23 (CP>. — The
Royal Society of canads baa awarded the Flavelle medal for 1033 to
Dr. Joseph Tyrrell, of Toronto, and
the Tyrrell medal to Judge Frederick W. Howay, of New Westminster,
B.C.
Dr. Tyrrell ls fellow of the
Royal Bociety of Canada, the Royal
Geological Society of Ingland and
the Geological Society of America
He ls not only a geologist and
mining expert of international reputation, but one of the greatest living Canadian explorers.
SCHOOL STANDING
IS GIVEN AT YMIF
TMIR B. C. NOV. M— Standing
of the Tmlr school pupils for the
month of October was:
Orade 1—Lena Fraser, Evelyn
Harris,   Elsa  Anderson.
Orade 2—Florence Slako, Molly
Plctln,    Vera   Harris,    and   Thomaa
Annette Keltermon. One-
Piece Bathing Suit Pioneer
Mrs. W.H. Wilson Is
Hostess, Cranbrook
In Honor Mrs. C. E. White;
Miss Mary Maltman Wfaw
Prize
CRANBROOK.    B.    C,    No*.    W
Miss  May   Kennedy   was this  week*
hostess    when   the    girl's   BrtdpMi
club   met.     Miss  Kennedy   and   Dot
Spenoe   holding   the   high   ecqpea.
Miss Jean Fleet was thta week'.
hostess to the Girl's Contract dub.
Mias Mabel Parker and Miss Bett?
Green holding the hljfh scores. _U
Marion Fleet and Mlaa L. Henderson  acted  as substitutes.
Mrs. church entertained the
Thursday evening bridge at her
home this week. The prizes belnt
won by Miss Delia Baxter and Mrs
Whlttaker.
Mrs. W. H. Wilson was a luncheon
hostess on Saturday ln honor of Mre.
E. White, nee Mias Marion MacKinnon of Klmberley. White Chrysanthemums were used ln dee-
orating the table. After luncheon
Newmarket waa played, the high
score being won by Mliw May Malt-
mnn., The invited guesta were: Mrs.
White, Mre. A. A. MacKinnon, Mrs.
Bride, Miss May Mailman. Miss Aubrey Mckowan. Miss Delia Baxter,
Miss Ivy Dezall. Miss Kathleen Dezall, MIbs Dorothy McKowan, Misi
Lylltan   Jackson.
Cranbrook Gyros who motored to
Trail to be present at the initiation
ceremonies at the installation of
officers of the new Gyro club there
were: Messrs. R. Harris, R. t. San?.
D. Gray and p. Katserllls.
It's a far cry from the days when suit, to present times when  scanty
costumes,  like   those   worn  by   An-
Annette Kellerman (shown upper
right as she ap :ars today) waa arrested in Boston for the "indecency,"   of   her   one-piece    bathing
wffigwp*
*£»S!
nette's swimmlr - companions (left
and lower right) in Paris, have become commonplace at almost every
beach.
Slattery   (tied),   Walter  Clarke   unranked  Sigrid   Nord.
Grade 3—Shirley Stevens, Alvln
Slattery, Thomaa Clarke, Bdlle Flag-
el,   Polly   Verigin,   Perry   Anderson.
Grade 4—Francis Plctln, Mike
Plctln.    .
Grade  5—Mike  Pognlkoff,   Orlstaf
Wagei,    Evely    H nilson,    Charlotte
Anderson,   Jfcraes   Grant,   unranked
Francis Hanson, Annie Nord.
Grade  0—Jack  Grant, Sam Veri
gin, and Harry Stevena (tied), Annie
Kalesnlkoff. ,\
Orade   7—Jamee Tilton-,  Woodrow
Anderson, Annie  Flagel, t-.~r.er Pet- ■
crson. i
The war changed the world. This
is not my world any more, ln
*93', twenty-five years after It, the
country hadn't recovered from the
Civil War. now, I don't know what's
coming,  but  I shan't  see  itr—Miss
Ida  M.  Tarbell,   75,   author.
Complexion Curse'
Shelhoughtshewtajurt unlucky when he called
on her once—avtwlci hre thereaitw. But noon*
admires pimply, blemished tl
women are realizing that p;
are often danger signili c
imiflouotix wastes ravaging the V, —
(Nature's Remedy) affotd complete, thorouuh
elimination and prompUy eaae away bewrtv-
ruining poisonous mailer Fine lor Bick headache, bilitius conditions, dlaineas. Try this sale,
dependable,all-
7^'_i^f\x.
gi»ll'-^>nly25c"
CRESTON, B. C, Nov. 23—The
plaque oomraemoratlnft the mothers
of Creston Valley, who loat sons ln
the great war, presented by Boundary post American legion, Bonners
Ferry. Idaho, at the Armistice day
exercises here, and entrusted,to the
safe keeping of Creston Valley post,
ls on display at a local store.
The plaque ia of silver mounted
on oak and bears tbe inscription.
To the gold star mothers of Creston, British Columbia, and vicinity,
whose sons made ths supreme sacrifice In the world war, this tablet Is
dedicated by the Amerloan legion
of Idaho, U.S.A., 1933."
A chain ls suspended from the
base of the plaque, and supports a
neat gilt-framed scroll about six by
four Inches, whereon is Inscribed.
"Gold star mothers of Creston, British Columbia, and vicinity: Mrs. F.
Ross, Mrs. J. Wood, Mrs. J. Smith,
Mrs. L. Leamy, Mrs, K. Howard, Mrr
R. Stewart. Mrs. C. E. Ross, Mrs. J.
Arrowsmith, Mrs. J. Stocks, Mrs. F
Penson, Mrs. J. Johnson, Mrs. H
Truscott, Mrs. E. Simmons, Mrs. H
Brownrigg, Mrs. Burn-Murdoch, Mrs
F. B. Turner, Mrs. E. Butterfield."
Booklets and
Pamphlets
Our battery of Linotype machines enables
ns to set type for booklets and pamphlets at
• moderate coet and with great speed and accuracy.
te us print your next order; you will find
that we An give you a good job, excellent service, and a moderate price.       , .
The Nelson Daily News
Job Department
Phone 144 Nelson B. C.
Smiths Entertain
at Dinner, Moyie
MOYIE. B- C, Nov. 3J—Oscar
Burch of Chapman Camp spent the
week-end with his mother Mrs. B.
Burch.
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith had as
their guests to dinner on Sunday,
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Fyles. Mrs. Nelson L. Smith and little son Eddie,
all of Cranbrook. Mrs. Smith and
son ls spending a few days with
her   husband's   parents.'
Mrs. Mary Conrad returned to
her home on Sunday, after spending
a few days In Chapman Camp, the
hpuse guest of ^er daughter Mrs.
Ray Curran. She also visited at the
home of her son Frank Conrad and
family.
Mrs. J. Taylor visited friends in
Cranbrook,   during   the   week.
Mrs. H. Hogg and little daughter
Helen-Jean spent Thursday night
at the home of her mother Mm.
A.   Pearson   in  Cranbrook.
Miss Maggie Smith of Cranbrook
la the house guest of Mrs. B. Ballantyne.
W. R. French, after spending several months in Alberta, returned
to Moyie by car on Saturday. While
here he la visiting at the home
of Mrs.  E.  Cameron.
Nelson L. Smith with his mother,
Mrs. R. A. Smith, and Mrs. C. James
spent Friday evening with Mrs. F.
Gulndon.
TMIR  BRIEFS
See
Window
Display
|? ttitfi»f*'ft«t| (IamjMtt£,
See
Window
Display
INCORPORATED   2?? MAV 1670.
TMIR B. C. NOV. 33—J. H. Duck
of NeUon end Johnny Del? ehot
. elf deer laat wett.
Mra. NwaM D»Iy la Ttolting with
relatione In Neiaon thia weet.
W- Qulnn ta * patient In the
Kootenay Lake Oeneral hoapltel.
t. P. Crawford and Andrew Burgee, were vleltora to the Reno mine
on Tueedasf. Mr. Crawford and
O. C. Thompson «r» leaving hy
motor for Vancouver.
One-third of all the eeuertreut
packed In the United statea la put
up ln factorlee ln a radlua of W
milea of the New Tork state Experiment Station at Oeneva.
FECIAL! 200 MEW'S
 TTO MEASIUU^
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Amazing m
Value*   Hudson's Bay Company's
Enormous Buying Power Brings You This Unparalleled Value. Oa Sale
for 4 Days Only . THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATW^AY and MONDAY
ExhaParfs
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rder
 mm text
WOMAN'S PAGE
Parisians Take Chic fey the Necfr
A sapphire blue niching bf ribbon
is the muter touch on a pale blue
crepe romalne evening dress from
Worth.
A   sable-ed.ed   oape   back   dUtin-
gulshee a Worth gown ln pels helge
crepe.
Ten Rules by a Famous Authority
Rule 7-KEEP OUT OF RUTS
How to Stay Married
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
Th* other day ther pulled *ah* &" • foiling that lovemaUng **
Frenchman out of the Seine, where
he had tried to drown himself. "Why
did you do that?" gasped the rescuer.
Ilie would-be Tictlm smiled ' wanly
and said:
"LUe U so daily."
And "dally** tk u for the millions
who are horn, marry and die—always
ln a rut. Life becomes the equivalent
ol eating the same meal three timet a
day, 806 daya a year, and not having
enough imagination or energy to vary
the menu.
Soma couples even stop talking at
home, not from sulks or because.
like ex-president Ooolldge, they "dont
ohooee to" but from sheer sluggishness. They drift Into a tort of grunting language suggestive of the Jungle
and our primitive ancesters. If they
do talk. It's tbout boresome trivialities.
Do you know tbe formula girli resort to, when they wonder If the man
and woman at the next table at the
restaurant, or In a nearby seat at
tbe theatre, are married? They observe them for a few minutes, and
If the silence and boredom are profound, they conclude that they're
married. Not always ls this cynical test
true, but far too often.
The «vent of the day to which the
normal family looks forward la the
evening meal. A good story, an amusing happening, anything Interesting
ahould be saved for the dinner table.
But with tha average rut-dweiUng
married couple dinner often degenerates Into a suffering match ftt one
end of the tabla and a starvation
marathon ftt the other—tf madame
happens to be dieting. A husky word
now and then may break the funeral
silence.
yrho's to hl*me? Both. Tbe once
happy lovers have lei themselves
drift into the doldrums. They're becalmed and too sluggish to steer out
ot thetr de-.dly dullness. Very likely
the trouble began with the husband,
who dropped love-making as aoon as
he returned from the honeymoon.
The best, most liberal, most fore-
bearing mate ln the world ls this same
American husband—but ha Is the
most limited of love makers. Raving
equipped the plant, stocked the pantry, agreed on a suitable allowance to
his wife, he cut out love making, the
pretty compliments and little attentions that mean far more to his mate
than limousines and pearl necklaces.
movie stuff, or something peculiar to
foreigners, and not quite worthy the
dignity of an American business man.
He bat a vague feeling too, that
the "little woman** isn't strong for lt
either, but, dear American husband,
stop, look, listen! Watch the "little
woman" make for the radio when
the crooners begin.
Some women In time become acclimated to the chilly temperature
of ft home where the husband ii
about ts responsive as a tailor's dummy. These are likely to lose heart and
take to "crimpers" at the breakfast
table. Their homes take on the petrified look that you recognise at a
glanoe. Old newspapers and magazine*
;»~e shoved Into comers. Artificial
flowers gather dust, everything seems
to be waiting for something to wake
lt up. But the radio Is likely to go
from morning to night, in the hope lt
map emit a sentimental ballad to
hearten the love-starved wife.
In such households, each knows
something ls wrong. Deadly dullness
has smothered Uie fire on tbe hearthstone. The man knows he's liberal and
faithful, and he means to be kind.
The woman knows he bat fed her
youth, suoh beauty as shs bad, her
gifts and talents Into tbe domestic
hopper, and has gotten out of It a
dull man who doesn't seem aware of
har.
A little Imagination, common sense
and unselfishness would help lift the
blight, but too often they keep
down Monotony street until they
come to its bitter end—at Reno.
To avoid this tomb-like existence-
put a few questions to yourself be.
for you takt that step to ths altar—
so hard to retrace. How about the man
or woman you're considering for
life partner—what have you got to
fall back on, when the kissing slows
down? Do you both enjoy the out-of-
doors- Do you like the country end
camping—or does that Just mean ants,
mosqultles and smoky first to tome
town-bred man or girl.
Doet one like to read, and the other
hate books? Do you argue over religion, politics, the way children should
be reared, the amount of freedom one
should enjoy after marriage? Do you
like the same type o. movies? What
is there for this proposed life partner to fall back on, ln tba way of
congenial tastes, Interests in common,
when the honeymoon will be a thing
of tha past? Stop, look, lister I
Efficient
Housekeeping
Bj LACBA A. HUMAN
Tout
TOMOHROW'S   MEND
Breakrast
Leftorer Prune,
Cereal
Codfish   Cake,
Coffee
Luncheon
Prench  ToMt
Sirup
rrult Oup Macaroon.
Tn
Dinner
cream of Corn Boup
Oold   Slice i  Turkw
Pickle.
Mo, Squaeb
rrult   Wed
Cup   Custards Coffe,
GAMES  FOI A  CROWD
A reader Mend haa Written to wk
ma for game, suitable for a crowd
to play. "When our relative, gather
at holiday tlmea," aaya her letter,
•we sometlmee find lt a little dull
after mealtime. Several oouaine dont
play oardr, ao we can't Indulge In
bridge. Can you suggest some con-
teate which old and young cm
enjoy   together?"
An Observation Contest la always
fun. Put a number of object, on a
table, such as a hammer, screwdriver, tall, spoon, knitting needle,
thimble, scissors. Ink bottle safety
pin snd postage stamp. Aak tbe
gathered company to study this
group of articles tor three minutes
by the clock. Then throw t cloth
over the table, and pass around
sheet, of paper and pencils. OKe
everybody five mlnutea ut which to
jot down the objecte of which they
can recall (not helping'one anoth-
erl) Awwd aome simple prtae for the
moat correct Ust Of articles.
A Vocsl Endurance Contest Is another fun-provoker. Ask everybody
to atart singing s different song,
and see who can stick tt th, tune
he has chosen, ln spite of the beldam around hlml Tbe player who
holds out longest, might receive, as
oomlo prue. s ten-oent pscksge
of cough drops.
Safety Pin Forfeits: Pin » large
sstety-pln on every player. Have
everybody question everybody else.
Nobody must snswer a question with
"Tes" or "No." If they do, the
questioner takes the safety-pin trom
the one who his made the mistake-
In time, a clever questioner, collects
almost sll of the aafety-plnal
IHe ^Beauty3
<Box
By HELEN POLLHT
= THI NELION DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.—THUnSDAY MOKTOTO, NOTEMBOt t- VKttttttt
Decollete Keeps Us Balance at W outlines Fall
ON THE AOL TONIGHT
KOO NETWOK a.1***- C**T
■OO-ERQ'EOMO-Sn-KOW   •VAXCOBTO*
it*   ne    nt    tit   trxo
tM Capt Henry's Show Bost
1X0 Moor, danoe muelc. OKecfe and
Baron Munchausen
8:00 Aim, 'n' Andy
fill Symphony hour
8:18 Howard Thurston, magician
0:80 Concert to rytbm, Ben Klusen,
tenor, Polsk's orchestra
10:00 News flashes
10:18 Danoe   muslo,    Phll     Harris'
snd Sari   Burnett's orcb Altera.
uaftDollo Sargent, organist
Hill
KPO  NETWORK
KPO - KOA - KJB • KEX
880       1470       DIO       IMO
8:80 Polio, chief Quln (KPO)
8:4 J Cecil snd Sally   (KPO)
7:00 Mod* Lowe, Edna Fisher
7:15 Taraan of the Apee (KPO)
7:30 Log O- the Day, Dr. L. Cross
»:00 Myron Nlealey, tenet
8:10 Sodero'a NBO orch.. fm. N.Y.
0:00 The  Ooldberge,  strip
8:18 Synco-Tbota, piano duo
0:30 Hollywood on the air
10:00 Pigskin Romanoee, ftbll drama
10:80 Ship of dreams, orch., soloists
11 tt> Pacific Serenade™ and Orch.
1140 Tom Gerun's orchestra
COLUMBIA NETWORK
KOL-KVI-KOIN -K8L-KFBC
1170     870       148     UM     810
8:00 Muslo tbat satisfies
8:18 Henry Busse's orchestrs   ■
8:80 "Omar Khayyam" fr. L. A.
7:00 Kostelanes presents
7:80 "Huxan side of news." Hill
7:48 "Myrt and Marge" fr. Chicago
8:00 Symphony orchestra
8:80 Ieham Jones' orchestrs
9:00 Eddie Duchln's orchestra
030 Bevlera orcheetra
IM Popular reoordUws
6:80 Dinner  muslo
7:00 Our Jimmy snd Jene
7:18 Varied program
7:80 News Herald
7:43 Travel talk
8:00 Altr. Meunler,. pianist
8:80 News servloe
s
8:80 Continental   concert  onto.
.
610 k                 KFRC
481 .Sm
SAN  FRANCISCO
1000 w
Decollete, should follow the principal theme of one's evening gown,
according to Jean Paton. (Lett)
On a deep wine red evening gown
of the new Yeloors Paysan, paton
cuts a horizontal strapping to the
decollete thst tends to diminish
the greater length of bodice brought
about by the lowered waistline,
which ls the theme of his new col-
1210 k
lection.   (Right) On * Bordeso red VANCOUVER
evening gown with a very low back,
patou  adds  an  extra  brace sround
tbe top ot the arm to glv, width
to the shoulders.
CJOR
847.8 m
B00W
Corn Foods Cheap and Healthful
Home-makers   who   must    count*,!  cups milk, 4 tablespoons butter.
the coet very closely will find that
the com product, offer many appetizing snd nourishing dishes rich
ln calories. The popula. New England supper dish of mush and milk
la exceedingly nourishing ond wholesome as well ss economical snd
easy to prepere.
Ot the corn cereals, hominy and
cornmeal are most popular, for
they sre not only Inexpensive but
high ln food value. Hominy ls the
whole corn from which the outside covering has been removed.
It can be purchased either dry.
cooked  or  canned.
When the corn kernel ls crushed,
after the outside covering haa been
removed, the product ls known as
hominy grits or samp. Samp has
practically   the   tttt    food
1 tablespoon sugar, 1
Add salt to boiling water snd
slowly sift ln throug' Ilnegrs, stirring constantly. Add grits. Bring
to boiling point snd boll snd stir
for two minutes. Then oook ln
double boiler until' water ls Absorbed. Stir ln one oup of milk
and cook an hour longer. Eemove
from heat and idd butter, sugar,
egg, slightly beaten, and remaining
milk. Turn Into a buttered baking
dish and bake In t slow oven for
one hour.   Serve from baking dish.
Orange Sponge Cake
8:80 News   Cashes
7:18 Sweet muslo
7:80 Ted  WlllUms   ,
7:48 Studio program
8:00 Troubadours
8:80 Wrestling matches
1180 k KSL
SALT    LAKJS    CITY
7:00 Fam.  Furn. Stories
8:00 Musical  revue
8:45 Eb and  Zeb, E. T.
8O0 Unlnralty of  Utah
Once tried, you will try again.
Six eggs, the weight of the eggs ln
sugar, half their weight lg flour,
the grated rind and Juloe of 1
orange. Beat the yolks until thick.
Add sugar gradually snd then the
orenge. Best whites until stiff sad 10;MW Flo-Blto1, orch.
add half of them, then half the'
flour,  tbs  rest  ot  th,  whit,  and 10Mk KNX
the other half of  th,  flour. Bike HOLLYWOOD
ln a lost or Turk's bead. May he
lo:d It desired.
888.1 m
50,000 w
740 Chandu ths maglolaa
10:00 Blsqulck Band, B. T,
10:05 Flo Rite's orch.
10:40 Stan Smith'a orch.
1130 Dinclng with stars
11:00 Midnight hour
Hook
your Mesl. , •
How you thrill os his eyet
odore you. How comfort-
lns to be sure thit your
skin will retain Its smooth
beauty ... thanks to the
clinsins, velvet texture of
Pompeian Beauty Powderi
Now, as always, you
may pay more for beauty
preparations but you can.
not buy better than
Dutch Apple Pie
Mix thoroughly with apples. Turn
into pie pan lined with crust. Pour
cream over  apples  and  bake in t
Glorifying Yourself
By   Alicia   Hart
If you are ln an experimental
mood about _m ralr, why not try
s   pompadour?
Tea, pompadours sr. In sgaln.
But not ths old 'sahloned, made-
over-rats kt:.d. Th, 1038 ; . .-
dours ln nst, sleek ud glittering.
It Is modified to suit ths times,
tlie hats snd th, glrlsl
This ls the wsy to pompadour
■your hair this winter. Brush,
comb snd pull your hair bsck from
your forehead, temples and Mrs
evenly, w'thout , rlppW to Its
shining   surface.
When you     t       bsck over the
_$sure thtt either roll or cur's stay
ln place. No'hlng will do but utter
neatness, lt you take to pompadours.
I already hsve described the
halo of curls across the front of
evening colffur . that gives tbe
effect of a pompadour. This coiffure ts good on the young girl and
also on the older woman wtth grey
os whit, hair. But lt must he a
restrained halo ot curls.
There Is onr —ord of warning
sbout these new modified pomps-
dour effects, Tbey do emphasise
tb* aoe,. first and foremost.
It your features sre regular or
If  tbey  srs   -tnall or  If  they  are
When all Is ssld snd done, when
one glimpses th, beauty pageant
with a oold and calculating eye, ths
coiffure ls the big Important detalL
Helen ot Troy, with wisps on her
neck ox reg tags hanging round her
ears, would never have launched t
thousand ships or gone down ln tha
annals of fssclnatlng sirens ss tbe
champion ot them all. Th^ hirsute
casque ss presented this season is s
work of art. Undulations are wide,
soft snd fluid. Th, outline ot the
bead Is revealed. Ends sre cured,
locks must glisten, the hair cut
given careful consideration. Never
were coiffures more exquisitely designed, hsir beauty so highly developed.
Parenthesis lines extending fram
nostrils to lip ends sre t family Inheritance due to the formation ot
the upper Jaw, or they an dug ln
by pulling down the dellcste muscles
of the mouth. Trest thorn to a gentle patting with a heavy cream.
Place thumb at tbe lower end of
the line, first finger at the upper,
hold finger stationary, come creeping up with the thumb picking
quick Uttle nips ln the flesh. Iron
with loe twloe a day.
Whit, hsir la easily discolored.
Hot air drying of tbe finger wave
will do lt. Hair tonics must be
tested before they sre used; those
containing glycerine will tum silver
locks to a golden hue. The shampoo
medium must be bland, soip melted.
Strong sunlight dims the snowy
splendor. Ordinary washing blueing,
a few drops ln a bowlful ot water,
makes a desirable rinsing bleach to
be used after the hsir hss been
washed.
Womm who tire easily should
snatch a wt-nap every day lt only
for 15 minutes. Fstlgue bugs are devastating to appearance, rob tbe
eyes ot glowing lights, dig creases ln
the complexion. Highly energized
femmes who work diligently, then
go limp, need more sleep than those
of a phlegmatic type. Yet they're the
ones who prowl around until ell
hours.
Extra rouge pads to fit compacts
can be purchased. Bad policy to
wield th, asm, old blush distributor,
sine, lt picks up dust with the
umt keen Industry thst tbs powder
pad displays.
crown of your hair, then lt ts tlms „Ml, chiMUwl, atlt ls one coiffure
to do somethlriC' to bruk the surface.
The best blng to do is to have
tt fall ln triple diagonal waves, from
one  ha'f-eipoeed ear  to  the other.
If your hair Is long, either ha-3
the ends curled and arranged ln
place at tbe nape of your neck, r
else tuct lt Into a wtt    aU.   Be
thst    make,    everybody    recognise
this fact.
And. If your nose Is lsrger thsn
you might vlsh tt, k i, tier oolf-
fure, one thet brings ths hsir
down ou io tb, temples or has a
few curls to jak the hard Une
wlU be * wiser choice.
Next: I air care
)
Period Book-Ends
Gift for Boy's Room
For the boy's room, a pair of bl-
value  centennial book-ends makes A last-
as  hominy and resembles  a  rather   tog and practical gift. They are of
coarse-grained   wheat   oereal. i sheet metal, painted ln the nitional
Corn whloh has been ground colors, bearing the national emblem, moderate oven for 00 minutes.
stUl more flnei- Into a meal ls cornmeal. Usually the germ Is removed
ln the milling process of cornmeal.
This lowers the vitamin and mineral value ot the cereal to some
degree.
In general the dietary properties
of com are similar to t'\oee of
wheat. 'Tie proteins and mineral
content ss well ss the energy value
ot cornmeal are much the same as
those  of wheat flour.
It ls slso worth while knowing
that the yellower the corn the
higher the vitamin and mineral
content. Yellow corn fumlshea
some of vitamin A ss well ss B,
but white corn furnishes only the
B vitamin.
As tbe weather grows colder
hominy snd hominy grit, an es.
peclaUy desirable. If fried hominy Is used It must be soaked tlve
or six hours In boiling water, using four times as much water as
hominy.
Perhape the use ot hominy as a
potsto substitute Is new to you,
but It's excellent with fouL
Hominy   Grits,   a   ls   Msrylsnd
one cup boiling water, 1 teaspoon  salt,   4-4   cup   hominy   grits
8:00 News
8:15 BUI, Mac and Jimmy
8:80 Oh-h-h Elmer
8:45 Feature program
7:00 Frank Watinab,
7:15 To be announced
Six apples, H cup sugar,- ft tes-   7:45 Tarzen, I. T.
spoon salt, ^ teaspoon mace, 1 cup    8:00 Martin Luther Tho.ns,
cream,* 1   teaspoon   cornstarch. i  8:15 Realty, values
Cut spplee fine, sltt sugar, oom-   8:80 To be snnounced
starch, salt snd spice snd stir well.   8:45 Oolden Memories
8884 n
«5,ooo w The NEW
8:00 News Items
8:10 Danoe hsnd
10:00 KNX orchestn
10:80 Organ ooncert
iV^
BLOOM
POWDER
CREAMS
LIPSTICK
LONDON PAWS NIW YOUX IOKONk.
ttf aeat* t HmU t. Hi*. 8 Ce. bt
10.18 MdCwl St. TmoM,       xt-tt
CRESTON BRIEFS
,*N
CRESTON, B. C, Nov. 38—Miss
Frances Lewis was t visitor at Nelson
a few dsys this week, s guest of
her sister, Miss Lillian Lewis.
Miss Merle McCaslin got back yea.
terday trom s tew daya' visit with
her mother st Salmo.
Mrs. H. W. McLaren snd dsugbtw
Ethel and Mis. A. L. Palmer were
visiting with Spok-ne friends over
tbe weekend, getting bsck on Monday. *N
When you're HEALTHY
you're HAPPY
HAPPY daya sre usually healthy
daya. Why not add to these
•unshiny days!
Poor health and constipation
go band in hand. Get rid of
common constipation by eating
• delicious cereal.
Tests show that Kellogg's
All-Bran provides "bulk" to exercise the intestines, and vitamin
B to tone the intestinal tract.
All-Bran Is also twice as rich
in Iron as an equal weight of
beef liver.
The "bulk" in All-Bran U
much like that ln leafy vegetables. How much better than
taking pills and drugs—so often
harmful
Two tablespoonfuls dally aro
usually sufficient If not relieved
this way, see your
doctor.
At all grocers.
In the red-and-
green package.
Hade by Kellogg
in London, OnL
CHRISTMAS
CARDS
Select From
MaqVour
CHRISTMAS \
Ba • Bountiful OntJ)
i.
a
&
&
&
|
tv
5>
the largest ard most complete stock of Private Greeting Cards in the Interior of British
Columbia. In TWO DOZEN lots only, at prices that are the lowest being offered in the
Province. Why pay more when you can get yours here at practically half the price yoii
pay elsewhere.
We would like to have you call and see our exclusive line of Greeting Cards—you will'
wonder how we can sell them so reasonably.  Look at these prices:
$2.00, $2.25, $2.50, $2.75, $3.00, $3.50, up to $7.00
Two Dozen Cards
"tinted wtth your name and address
Send for Samples
Out nf-town customers, tend for samples. We request
that after making your selection you return them
immediately, as tee only have one sample for each lot.
If in town and unable to coll personally, PHONE \AA
and we will have samples tent to your heme. .j
Mamt iatly Njhib
lob Btjit.
Baker Street
Nelson, B. C.
) <
I
_.
 /H3<f
Just
Received—
3 BEAUTIFUL Model*
for Evening wear.
White and Black Fabrics
with Gold trim. Genuine
hand sewn soles.
f O.00 and ? Q.50
R. Andrew
&. Co.
Leaders bt Footfaihion
R. C. TRIMEN WAS
; PIONEER IN TRAIL
1TOPTH VAWCOUVm, TB. Hot.
W.—Blohinl Cecil Tflmen, resident
In B.C. foe 40 years, died ln hia
iome. 313 Weet Twenty-sixth avenue, hen Saturday last.
He la survived by hia wife, one
brother and one slate*.
Funeral semoee wer» held yesterday.
LTRAIL, B.C.. Wot. 3). _ ». {J.
, lmen, whose death la reported
abort, wh t plonee- realdent of
Trail. Re waa manater of tbe Bank
of British North America here about
SO years ago. The bank of B.N.A.
was later taken over by the Bank
of   Montreal.
i Mr. Trtmen left Ttall aboot Mil
when he •wtt afflicted with falling
eyesight and general Ul health. Re
took np reeldence at Vancouver.
where he waa subsequent]; married.
| Of e aomewhat retiring disposition.
Mr. TOmen wu not Identified to
any tree- extent with tbe publlo
life et the pioneer community of
Ttall. but he was popular with the
publle generally. To old timers of
Trail hia death wu the cause of
expressions   of   deep   regret.
Social Events
of Trail City
T»Att, I.C. Nov. 3J,—Mrs. Harry
Hankin and Mn. Prank WUby were
Joint hostesses last evening at bridge
at the home of Mn. Hankin, pine
avenue. Five tables were in play.
Mra. Angus Johnston won high
soore. Miss Betty Ifegert, second
prize and Mra. J. Hart reoelved the
consolation. Other gur-ta were Mn.
D. W. Forteath, Mn. William Spooner, Mn. Alex Hector. Mrs. June.
Dwyer, Mn. Wesley Dwyer, Mra. I.
Minion. Mra. O. A. Burton, Mn.
Charlee Wlnterbottom, Mn. T. Bob-
erteon, Mn. C. J. Mlntor Mra. J.
BeU, Mn. Paul Jonee, Mrs. Frank
Verauh. Mrs. John cormack, Mn. W.
Baril. Mlse Selma Belmann and Mlaa
Clara Minion.
e   •   >
H. M. Brinkman returned to Orand
Forka today after spending a few
days ln the dty.
•   e   •
R.  Doubleday  of  Penticton Is  e
visitor ln tbe city.
...
Women'a auxiliary to Btat TnU
mission met in the mission hall yee-
terday afternoon, Mra. A. Selby acting as hostess. Othen present were
Mn. Herbert Johnson, Mn. HamUton
Currie, Mrs. C. T. Conry, Mrs. James
McLean, Mn. Alec Tatea, Mra. Archie
Brown, Mn. A. J. Williams. Mn.
Harry Eperson, Mrt. W. P. Robertson,
Mn. Thomu Hayes and Mlaa Evelyn
AUen.
...     *
R. H. Devitt Is .pending a few
days et hia cottage at Bobeon.
...
Women's auxiliary to last TraU
mlaalon entertained at a eoclal 'Monday at the mission ball. Whist wu
played during part of the time, flnt
prleee being won by Mn. WUUam
Melrose and WUUam Robertson. Mrs.
William Robertson and Misa Margaret
Jonee won consolations. Mn. Arthur
Fletcher and Mr. and Mn. Samuel
Powell gave vocai solos. Mlse Milan
Dewson won e priae ln a contest.
Thomu Hinton had charge of the
Card gemaa and Mrs. o. T. Conry
and Mra. Albert Dawaon served refreshments.
Ladlu of tba Royal Purple entertained lut evening at military whist.
Sixteen tables wen ln play. Japan
won high soore, the playen being J.
OeUl. M. Molina, M. Pagnan and P.
Swings. J, Hardington had charge of
the gamee. Refreshments wen served
by Mra. A. McWhinnle, Mn. A. Sherman, Mn. David Smart, Mn. J. P.
KeUy and Mn. WUUam Morrlce.
Mr. and Mra. willlim J. Sullivan
have been apendlng e few dayi In
Spokane.
...
Mlu Doris O. Johnson, Rlvenlds
avenue, wu hostess lut evening to
tbe Business Olrls' branch of tbs
Largest Sale In Canada
"SALADA"
TEA
"Fmh from thc Girdeni"
PRINTING
THAT IS READ
like fflejrlMe handwriting, poor printing creates
a sub-conscious feeling in the mind of the receiver.
It fall* to produce respect and confidence.
I
If yen would han everything 70a mafl be a
personal messenger, properly expressing the nature
of yonr business or profession, take care that
your printing is the best.
The efficient office or business
house is based on the many printed
forms that reduce errors and make
work faster and easier.
We  can  help  you   design
and print the best for your
varioui needs.
PHONE 144
&tam Sathj Jfomu lob Bf pi
Creaton of Fint Printing
Baker Street
Nelson, B. C.
TBI HUSON BAILT NEWS, KELSON, D.C—TIll'RSDAY MORNINO, NOVEMBER  24, 1933-
Japanese Qtrl Signs Contract
Sumako Hamaguchl, H-year-jld
Loa Angeles girl, known aa one ot
tha forenf 3t exponents ot Japanese
dancing, bas been signed by a
Hollywood studio tor dancing  ln  a
forthcoming feature production. She
is only four feet ten lnchet tall and
because of ber youth, will attend
the studio school while not en*
gaged  before  the   camera.
Women'a auxiliary to St. Andrew's
church. Pinal preparations were made
tor a sale of work. Miss Connie
Taylor and Miss Barbara Caldloott
assisted Miss Johnson in serving.
• •   •
Mr. and Mrs. J. Fisher of Hall
Biding are viators ln the city for a
few days.
• •   •
H. J. Levesque returned to Trail
yesterday after spending some time
ln Creston.
• •   •
Jf. W. Burdet of Klmberley ls
spending a few days here,
• •   •
Mrs. Tboruas Miller. East Trail, ls
a paUent ln Trall-Tadanac hospital.
e   •   •
Trail News of the Day
TRAIL HOUSES AKD LOTS -  IH-
aurance. Rotary. J. D. Anderson.
tttttl
Society^
This column Is conducted fc>
Mrs. %L i. Vlgneux. Al] new ef s
social nature, including reception*
private entertainments, persons)
Items, marriages, etc will appem
ln this column. Telephons Mra
Vlgneux at her boms, 119 SUica
street.
9BB
IBI
aaasBMssassMi I
TO SHIP LAST
LOT OF WOMEN
NEXTSUNDAY
Final Party of 36 or 37 Will
.  Go Direct to Tier
Island
Social News
of Rossland
the following column of social
news and happenings In Rossland
Is conducted by Mrs. Bessie B.
ber bome In Rossland and give
Ferguson. Phone Mrs. Ferguson at
her details of events of interest to
this column.
ROSSLAND, B. C. Nov. 23—Lady
Luck smiled, on the recent excursion
of Joseph McDonell, Bruoe Irvln
snd Oeorge Gilmour into the Kettle
river district, the youthful hunters
returned wltb five fine deer.
pes
A. L. Acorn hae returned home
from the hospital.
• •   s
Mrs. R. B. Smith of Sumas was
here for * few days this week.
• *   i
Mn. M. X. Davidson hs* returned
from spending a few days with
frienda la TraU.
BAPTIST YOUNG
PEOPLE SHOWN
SCENES OF B. C.
i Major J, W. Clark entertained Uie
members of tbe Baptist young people
with lantern slides and a lecture on
the British Columbia water ways at
a gathering at the church Tuesday
evening.
Mr. Clark's pictures included
scenes of the various power projects
of the province Including those on
the Kootenay river west of Nelson.
Pictures of orchard culture ln the
Okanagan, floral pictures and lake
and river scenes of the northern
British Columbia  were  also  shown.
She Suffered With Bad
Backache For Months
British Columbia Lady Finds
Relief By Takinir Dodd's
Kidney Pills
Mrs. Arthur Eeeley Is Very Thankful for the Relief Afforded Her
Ladner, B. C, Nov, 34 (Special)
"I bave suffered with bad backache tor aeveral months," writes
Mrs. Arthur Keeley, Box 1400, this
place. "A friend of mine to.d me
to try Dodd's Kltney Pills. I have
taken a down boxes and the pain ln
my beck and across my kidneys ls
nearly all gone. I am Indeed very
thankful and always k*-p * box
tn the house and tell all my friends
bow bow they bave helped me. I
must also recommend your Dodd's
Antiseptic Healing Ointment. It Is
wonderful fo? sore feet, cuts and
burna."
Dodd's Kidney pills act directly
on the kidneys. Healing and
strengthening them. Strong healthy
kidneys are absolutely necessary tf
the blood Ie to be pure and the
body  healthy.
Dodd's Antiseptic Healing Ointment la a aafe, soothing treament
for all skin abrasions, infections and
Irritations. It quickly relieves pain
and* brings about a tpeedy recovery.
Inetructlons have been received
by Inspector John MacDonald, commanding "B" division of the provincial police, to ship the remainder of
the Sons pf Freedom women prisoners here Sunday morning, to the
penitentiary area at Pier  island.
There will be 36 or 37 women sent,
those with Infanta being excluded,
and possibly an aged wo.ioan whose
fitness for the trip ls to be passed
on by the doctor.
The 00 women forwarded last
Sundsy went only to Oakalla, from
which point tbey were to go on to
Pier laland ln small lots.
MUSEUM TEA IS
GIVEN AT NAKUSP
NAKUSP, B. C, Nov. 33—A unique
event ln the form of a museum
tea was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Leveque Wednesday
afternoon and evening under the
auspices of the Nakusp women's
Institute,
The guesta were reoelved by the
president, Mrs. O. Hunter Oardner,
and Mrs. E- Leveque. Mr. Leveque's
private museum waa thrown open
tor inspection. Interesting explanations   accompanied   each   collection.
Tea was served by the ladles,
those ln charge being Mrs. W. Carruthers, Mrs. F. Rushton. Mrs. J.
Parent Sr., Mrs. J. Parent Jr., Mrs.
H. Clarke, Mias Ellen Abrlel and
Miss Nellie  Johnson.
GET-TOGETHER CLUB
REORGANIZED; MISS
M. MacKINNON, HEAD
The Ot»_r__ of Utxy Immiculite
wm the Ken, of an lntereitlng
wedding yesterday mornln* at 9
o'clock, when Very Be,. J. c, Mc-
Kentle, at a nuptial high man,
united tn marriage Lorna Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Mra. W. R.
MacLean, Edgewood avenue, and th.
late W. B. MacLean, former M.P.P.
of Nelson, and Nicholas Dosenberger, second son of Mr. and Mrs. J.
A. Doaenberger of Sunshine Bay.
The bride was attended by her slater, Misa Claudia MacLean and
the groom by his brother A. Dosenberger. The bride, who was given
ln marriage by her brother, Kay
MacLean, chose for her weddlnp
gown a form 'fitting dress of
electrio blue crepe hack aatln, wltb
the same colored Jacquette and corresponding aooeeeorler. Her slater
wore a blue canton crepe frock.
Jacquette style. Mn. Frank Murphy
and   Mrs.   M.   J.   Vlgneux   rendered
Panto Angellcua'* during the Maaa
of the Angels, which waa sung by
the full choir. The wedding music
waa played by Mlse Margeurlte
Oagnon. After the ceremony the
bridal party repaired to the home
of the brides' mother, where a
wtddlng breakfast was aerved to
immediate relatives. Mr. and Mrs.
Dosenberger left * by motor on a
novel honeymoon, a hunting trip,
after which they will make their
home ln Sunshine Bay, Multi colored chrysanthemums graced the
altar of the church and also the
MacLean home,
...
Frank W. Woodrow leiMt via
the CP.B. thia morning for Montreal, to sail December 8 on the
Duebess of Richmond, for t visit to
relatives   ix   Englsnd. . ,
...
A very pleasant bridge was held
Tuesday evening by tbe membera
of the Rose City chapter of the
Eastern Star, When the honors of
the game were woo by Mrs. James
B. curran, Mn. A. T. HonwUl and
Mn.  John O. Argyle.
...
Miss PhyllU Archibald, Stanley
street, wu successfully operated on
■for appendicitis yesterday morning
at the Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital.
...
Mn. B. Lowery. Nelson avenue, re-
cently entertained at a small tea
when she was assisted by Mn. T.
W. Wllllte, whQ aerved. Volcal selections were rendered by Mn. Oourt-
ney-8cott of Calgary. Other Invited
guests included Mn. Lowes, Mr,. J.
O. M. Lock. Mrs. Ernest Marsden.
Mn. 8. C. Couch. Hn. O. F. Hunter, Mn. Thomas Manden, Mn. A.
W. Nagle. Six.. T. M. Auld, Mn. T-
W. Brewer and Mn. A. O. Lambert.
...
Charlea   M.   Beltner   of   Trail   ls
visiting his family on Stanley street.
...
Mr.  and  Mr.  N." Dosenberger   of
Sunshine Bay "were ln town to attend the Dosenberger-MacLean wedding, yesterday  moming.
...
Mn. A. T. Stephenson recently
entertained at a aerlea of teas, when
she waa assisted by her daughter,
Miss Florence Stephenson. Mrs.
Stephenson's Invited guesete were
Mn. Hugh W. Robertson. Mrs. A. A.
O. Williams, Mrs. Paul Lincoln, Mrs.
Ouy W. Davis. Mn. W. M.. Walker,
Mrs. A. H. Wallace. Mrs. Arthur
Baird. Mn. I. O. Matthew, Mn.
Joseph Sturgeon; Mrs. William J.
Sturgean, Mrs. M. J- Vlgneuk. Mn.
H. McArthur. Mrs. Charlea F. McHardy, Mn. C. V. Oagnon, Mn. J.
W. Clark. Mn. W. s. King. Mn.
Oilbert Hartin, Mrs. W. O. Rose,
Mn. H. H. Pitts, Mrs. O. Spencer
Godfrey, Mrs. Charlea Kelman. Mn.
J BeU. Mn. li. A. Mann. Mrs. T.
J. Behan. Mn. W. A. Wt . Mrs. J.
Lawrence Smith. Hn. Harold Penny.
Mn. John Teague. Mrs. S. P. Jepson,
Mn. T. Camm. Mn. L. W. Oughtred,
Mn. L, M. Vamer and Mrs. J. Locke.
•   ••
The Misses Mary and  Julia Potosky h»d as'their  guest  yesterday,
their sister, Misa Millie  Potosky ot
South  Slocan.
...
Mn. O. T. Stevens. Terrace apartments, haa returned from Seattle,
where ahe haa been for the P«"
few weeks. She waa met In Spokane
by Mr. Stevens.
...
Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  Soles  of   Sunshine Bay were  among  those  from
Sunshine   Bay   yesterday   to   attend
the Dosenberger-MacLean wedding.
«•«
The Mothen' club of St. Saviour's
Church Helpen were hoetessea at
a successful tea, bake aale and
fancy work -ale Tuesday afternoon
in the Memorial bill, when O. K.
Ashby, preaident of tne club, acted
aa hoetess. Mn. W. B. Olbbon convened the tea arrangements assisted
by Mn. S. Phillips, Mn. A- B. Hall,
Mn. S. T. Murnene, Mn. R. Morrison and Mrs. T. Lund. Mn. Thomis
Manden did the honon at the tea
table. Mn. C. Olbbon was In charge
of the home made candy booth. The
animal booth waa supervised by Miss
Bloomer, while Mn. O. A. Fletcher.
Mrs. R. O. Joy and Mn. James Joy
hsd  charge   of   the   novelty   Uble.
PROCTER. B. C. Nov. M—The
flnt meeting for this aeaaon of the
Get-Together club waa held at tbe
home of Mr. E. c. Francis of Sunshine Bay. upon the resignation of
the preaident. M sa Mary Jarvla. Mis,
Morag MacKinnon waa elected to
fill the vacancy.
C. w. Tallies of Balfour was received Into the club aa a new member, and Miss Eleanor Merrifield was
made a group leader.
Q^dea^hev Vo>
607 Baker St. Phone 200
NOVEMBER SALE
Smart Coats of the Better Kind
BX,'"I"""" '"^^,",,    ■;  - 'i ij
Are Now on      > j.
*
SALE
Clever designing has produced many
novel and captivating coats for Fall
and Winter wear .. . and these are
now on sale at substantial reductions.
Fashioned of soft surfaced fabrics, they
achieve an elegance which will gratify
one's penchant for a smart and stylish
coal for Fall. Fur trimmings of Fox,
Beaver, Wolf, Muskrat, Genet, Squirrel and Persian Lamb. A complete
range of sizes. The season's best colors.
Regular values $65.00 to $100.,00 each.
SALE PRICE, each .. $50.00 to $75.00
Mrs.   O.   A.  King  made   a   capable
Oordon Strong of Vallican was
a1 city  visitor Tuesday.
• %   •
P. Leslie of Willow Point left
via the C.P.R. fr a visit to the
Peace  Rivet  district.
• •   •
Mrs. William Rutherford left
Tuesday night for Trail, where she
will visit for a time at the home
of her aon-ln-Isw and daughter,
rr. and Mrs. Frank Willis.
• •   •
Very Rev. J. c. McKenzle had aa
his guest Rev p. Patterson. O.M-L.
of St. Eugene mission near Cranbrook, who left yesterday for bis
horhe, en route from the coast,
• •   •
W. A. Cutting of Fauquier spent
yesterday   In   town.
the Inonoaklin Social  club, at the 1 plegrove were weekend vlsltora with
"Flra" Friday night. I Mr.   and   Mrs.   Oswald   Jowett   of
Robert Hopp and family, who have I Ooldeprtng ranch.   '
been visiting In Vanoouver and Spo- 1    Iris Ferguson, Fauquier, apent tbe
kane, bave returned home. 1 weekend with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Boothby and Adeline of Ap- l Mrs. c. Ferguson, inonoaklin valley.
DRINK
Mrs. C. Williams
Worthy Mistress
Rossland Lodge
ROSSLAND, B. C, Nov. 23—Mra.
Casale Williams wu elected worthy
mistress of Oolden City lodge. No.
786, L. o. B. A., at the regular meeting of that organization Monday
evening. The other officers were
Florence V. Williams, past mistress;
Lilian Buick. deputy mistress; Sarah
Kerr, chaplain; Bessie B. Ferguson,
recording secretary; Mabel Clelland
financial secretary; Edna Mason,
treasurer; Gladys Evans, first lecturer; Mrs. Thomas, second lecturer;
Mllllcent Topliss, director of ceremonies; Lilian Turner, Inne^ guard;
Franklin Ellis, outer guard; Jessie
Rutherford, senior member of committee. The guardian, and members
of the several committees will be
named tbs first meeting ln Deoember. \
EDGEWOOD BRIEFS
EDGEWOOD. B, C. Nov. a»—The
St. Agnes Church Helpers held their
sale of work at tbe Arrow Lakes
hotel. Each stall was suitably dressed according to tbe various articles
exhibited for sale. AU were wei.
patronised, especially tbe home oook-
lng and candy stalls, which were
completely cleared of wares. A good
sum   wab   realised.
William William* spent the past
few days in Trail and district.
Mrs. Walter Wright, Nakusp, was
winner of the beautifully embroidered tea cloth presented by Mrs. W.
Colgrave at the Church Helpers
aale.
Dr. Yeld hae been laid up with a
slight oold.
About SO members Attended the
weekly   card   and   dance   party   of
Bails Sl Ui
Mi lit Work
EVER\
< BEe FIT
Bovril is the strength and
CONCENTRATED GOODNESS*BEST BEEF
SAFEGUARDED
MILK
Doubly rich ta crenn, Cinution
Milk mttet every diih richly delicloui. And how it cuti your creim
•nd butter bills r Use thia pure,
dependable milk for all cooking.
Carnation Milk, through the con-
atant activity of Cirnation "field
men", ia aafegturded at the tource.
by elein houiing of evtry herd and
clean handling of all the milk. And
thia protection continues until
Carnation Milk retches yon in itt
htrmttiully tealed containers.
Write far Ceo* Beak aeat BabjBoak
CAKNATION CO, LIMITED
IM Khbaa St, Vmm, B.C.
Jf iU hem Cm-dim ream.
■   ■ ■   r...i    -
ami t
tr^ltj  e.tk.e i. C...I* i
SP   Cemadiem rem.
Mr. Wm. Davyduke, Saaettoa,
SkiL, write.:—"Three years ago
I wu troubled with boils which
were te bid I could not work.
A friend told me ny blood aut
be bid and tdrited me to tike
Burdock Blood Bitten. I didn't
know toy medicine could pet net
1 sudden itop to neb misery, if
one bottle put tbe boils to aa end.''
lwm.mll trae ..I eaaarml mamma, evaalereajai ImlnUI] imn. ntr I i__^_^t_^tai_^t
<
FROM CONTENTED COWS
i____\_t_mt_\_\_tmk___________m
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®lf? Jfalflim latltj Nema
"Interior of British Columbia's Family Newspaper''
ALL THE NEWS WHUJB IT IS NEWS
p-jM!nh»d every morning .tempi Sunday by THE NTW5
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B.C.    Member of CANADIAN PHESS Leased Wire Service.'
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recognised by the CANADIAN DAU.Y NEWSPAPERS ASSOCIATION,
INC, of which the Nelson Dally New, Is a member	
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24,1932.
A Futile Plan
A.A. Heaps, a Winnipeg Member of the House of
Commons, is still pressing for a Federal Commission to
investigate unemployment and its causes. Mr. Heaps
seems to imagine that unemployment is more or less a
local matter, confined to Canada, and that some good
could be accomplished if we had a Royal Commission
travelling over the country, and asking why men are
out of work. It would be difficult to conceive of a more
utterly futile undertaking and waste of time.
Everyone knows why we have unemployment.
What we need is the development of a definite
and sound plan for getting industry back to normal. Can.
ada alone canhot get to first base in any such effort. The .
causes of unemployment are world-wide. It is possible
that the world economic conference which is to take place
shortly, may develop some plan which will bring about
a more speedy recovery. Fundamentally, however, we
have to let nature take its course. No government can
put an end to unemployment, because no government
can raise enough taxes from the impoverished taxpayers of the present day to keep the necessary number
of men at work.
Such measures as those which have been put into'
effect as a consquence of the Imperial Economic Con.
ference will develop additional business for Canada and
for Great Britain, as well as for other countries within
the Empire. But they will not remove the causes of unemployment, nor will they bring about a complete cure
of unemployment. All they can do is to put a little more
weight behind the upward swing of the pendulum towards normal industrial conditions, which, judging by
the prices of basis commodities, has already begun.
AH through history we have had periods of depress,
ion, which is only another word for periods of unemployment, followed in their turn by periods of expansion and
of high wages, resulting from unusual demand for labor.
There is no power under the sun which will prevent future depressions or future booms. They are as inevitable
as the rise and fall of the tides. The best we can do
under present conditions is to devote every ounce of
energy we possess to doing everything possible for those
who are unfortunate enough to be out of employment,
to keeping employed those who now have jobs, and to
concentrating upon the creation of new work.
Investigations and chatter and advocacy of discredited nostrums will not get us anywhere. They rather
tend to make conditions worse instead of better for the
unemployed.
Help the Welfare Fund
It was only to be expected that municipalities which
are burdened, in many cases from no fault of their own,
With an exceptionally large proportion of unemployed,
should make a vigorous assault on the decision of Hon.
J. W. Jones, Minister of Finance of British Columbia,
that the Provincial Government cannot put up more than
$100,000 a month this winter for unemployment relief.
Add to this $100,000 as the municipalities' share,
and $100,000 as the Federal Government's share, and
we get S total of $300,000 a month. This is a large sum,
but many municipalities are going to find it difficult to
get along on the share of this amount which will be allotted to them.
On the other hand, what other course can Mr. Jones
follow than to limit definitely the amount of the Provincial contribution, if the Provincial Treasury cannot
raise a larger sum? Neither Mr. Jones nor any other
Minister of Finance can pick money out of the air. The
"Midas touch" was never anything more than mythology.
With this strict limitation of contributions from the
Provincial Government, which automatically limits to
the same amount the contributions of the Federal
Government, the necessity for private effort in the direction of providing relief through such media as the
Nelson Welfare Fund will be more acute this winter than
for very many years. It will be absolutely essential that
expenditures by the Federal, Provincial and Municipal
Governments should be expanded by expenditures out of
Community Chest funds, and similar organizations, contributed to by the people who are fortunate enough to
have an income, whether that income be large or small. It
is also a time when everyone who is in a position to do
so, should endeavor to give employment by having
carried out work which perhaps might otherwise be post,
poned. Donations of clothing and food stuffs will also be
of great, assistance.
While we cannot spend more money than is available, we can by united public effort make sure that no-
one will starve, or lack essential clothing and shelter.
But if we are to accomplish this end, not a cent of money
must be waste;!, nor must a pound of goods be given out
if is not needed.
|^
"Between You
and Me*
By  -JB-C."
A Jarvla avenue realdent Ln Winnipeg, who was found lying on tbe
street In an unconscious condition,
had been injured vlth some blunt
instrument. A safety naor, probably.
• •   *
This comos fro.n our advertising
department:
HEAVY  HINTS
We sat In blissful silence,
My  Mary  Jane  and  I,
And  UtUe did we notice
The minutes slipping by.
When suddenly two dull thuds stopped
My spirit's upward climb—
Her  dad  upstairs  was  dropping
His boots a second  time.
• • •
At a party recently an actress oxtered to bet * newcomer that he
couldn't remain true to his wife in
HoUywood for one year. The actress
claimed such a thing was impossible
—she used to be married, too—but
the actor turner her down, saying
that such a bet would be an Insult
to his wife, to whom he has been
married 22 years.
It happened ln Nelson on Siturday
"Tour car awaits without," said
the poljceman to tbe diner In the
Oolden Gate.
"Without what?" asked the smart
diner.
"Lights," said the policeman.
"Name and  address, please."
• •   •
"Uncle Tom's Cabin" Ij being revived on a New York stage. No
doubt they'll have Eliza crossing the
Ice to a Jazz-band accomplanl.nent,
and Simon Legree crooning a whipping song, In fact, with so many
handsome actresses out of work, snd
New York being what It Is, no one
would be surprised if the hound.*
turned out to be chorus girls in
disguise.
• •    •
Richard Penkind, California court
reporter, was a Roosevelt supporter
and Mrs. Richard Penland believed
President Hoover should be given
another chance. They agreed not to
vote.
Election day passed. Penland came
home with something obviously on
bis mind. He paced up and down a
while and then addressed his bride
(they hadn't been married long.)
"My dear," he said. "Today I deceived you for the first time. I got
to thinking things over and decided
that one vote one way or another
wouldn't help or hurt Roosevelt. 1
knew how set you were on seeing
Hoover get a good vote in Ban Fran-
I clsco so I voted for Hoover."
I There was a Ung alienee and then
Mrs. Penland said:
"Dick, old dear, I got to thinking
things over—that n.aybe you were
right, and I wanted to do what waa
right, so I went and voted for
Roosevelt."
r   •. •
Broajway'a stfeet urchin crowd
says a New York writer, has been
Joined by a wistful faced tad who
stands in tbe Times square area
selling ties at 15 cents each from a
box-cover. Because he is such
little fellow and looks so pathetic,
ills wares are soon gone. But he'a
back Again ln no time wtth more,
and if you were to follow him, you'd
learn that the lads father has quite
a sizeable place nearby and that the
urchin Is one of bis best salesmen.
LITERATI RE IN  THE SCHOOLS
A generation ago literary study ln
school war carried on ln a manner
somewhat different from present-
day practice. It used to be tho
custom to prescribe for study a
poem of the length of "The Elegy."
or "The Traveller," or "Tlie Deserted
VlUage," or "Lyridas." As there was
not much ground to cover, it was
possible to make a very careful
and minute analysis of the poem ln
hand. There was much word study,
much examination of figures of
speech and historical allusions, and
good deal of rigorous topical,
rhetorical  and  grammatical  analysis.
Today the theory ls that the
student should be encouraged to
cover a ridtt field and that witn
this view he should be required
to read.extensively rather than Intensively. Intensive word study and
considerations of etymology and
syntax are now regarded as rather
old-fashioned    and    the    minds    of
Oh,   poor   little   birdie I   What   a   shame I"
"Never   mind,   ma'am.     I'm   sure lt   was   quite   an   aocldentr—TUe
motorist. f.
What Do You Think?
FORM A PLAN
AND ACT UPON
IT IS HIS URGE
To the editor of The Nelson Dally
News:
fllr—Three years Ot steady and Increasing depression hare rendered
mankind more susceptable to new
ideas so that at present we may discuss questions that formerly were
taboo:
Tills opening of our minds ls the
great advantage that our discomforts
§ might do this (not the polios for
if squeezed too hard they might
turn Communist) and now we have
bright hopes of a future (eiy fiO
yesrs hence) with no Interest to pay.
But gentle reader. Is lt not alto*
gether likely t^at our nobl* .«™dl-
tors who we have carried for so
long will take tt*e utmost care that
nothing of the sort happens?
No! They will vehemently exclaim.
We will never desert them. These
good, patient asses (we mean the
British Columbian taxpayers) who
have borne us so png will feel lonely If they and we are parted. We
will continue our pleasant ride and
and perplexities  have produced, and
our sorrows  wUl  be  weU  repaid   11 we   wUl   reinvest   the   money   that
society ls brought Into the healthy
and hopeful stage of being ready to
learn.
Mankind must almoet Immediately
make its choice of two very distinct
Ideals. Postponement of the issue
will be dlsasterous, even as fatal,
as trifling with the disease of oancer.
British Columbians are confronted
by the Kldd report which brings
the mater to a head for this province. This celebrated report on the
condition ot the province presents
tbe business man's viewpoint in s
frank and logical manner. The authors of the report were given access
to all the Informitlon they needed
by the government—they put good,
hard work into the task that had of our present business world, but
been given them and though the re- I really honest, suppose that ws deport can be' criticised ln details, on terralned to &»*• don* wlth *" ***
the whole, there Is rfo doubt, that \ pe'tty trickery and smart little ways
the report and Its suggestions are j by which we snatch our livings from
fairly accurate from a business man's <;%;h other at present. And that we
they so foolishly wish to return to
us. both for their own benefit and
our own, for this ls what we consider a good working partnership.
Surely no business man wUl deny
that this Is exactly what wlU happen. History proves it. The noble
British ass, otherwise known as the
oommon taxpayer »ttU pays tribute
to the smart gentlemen who helped
him beat Napoleon at Waterloo, or
rather to their heroic and greedy
dependents. Such ls this wonderful
thing called money, and such ls tbe
magnificent aaslnlnlty of the human  ass.
If on the other hand we turned
honest,   not   the   miserable   honesty
would not tolerate Idle and useless
people ln Canada. What oould be
done about IW
A nation that had once made up
its mind to adopt such a oourse,
would hy the very act of making up
Its mind, have taken the first and
most difficult step. Where there
was a wiU the way would soon appear. In very truth. The way does
appear,
We should have to form a plan
and then act on that plan. We
should have to compel our citizens
to fall In with that plan. We made
quite a creditable start on such a
plan during tbe greit war. Oreat
numbers of us found that we had
to do what was oonsldered best for
the nation and forget our miserable
Uttle selves for once. Then there ls
very much thst sensible people can
learn from Russia. It ls wonderful
bow even a blazed trail helps one
In finding one's wuy through thick
brush and the Russian trail ls be-
surd   extravagance,   with   no   direct   coming pretty well defined and will
cash   benefit*  for  so   many  of   the I be of Immense help to mankind.
educated,  who  are  only enabled  to      Our real difficulty is psychological
voice their discontent the more eea-  as our great financiers now explain,
ily. Reduce the number and pay of! It ls this. So many of us still have
government officials, and make those
left work harder. A balanced budget
will   be   wclj   worth   the   temporary
distress that it miy cause them.
Now  let   us   assume   that   we   do
balance   our   budget.   Also   th^t   we
continue to balance our budget, year
after year. Even this will not help
us much for we should continue to
owe the debt unreduced, fresh and
vigorous   and   hungry   as  ever.   No.
we must more than strike a balance.
Back must go those carefully boarded
point  of   view.
The report must stand. AU we can
add is tbe obvious fact that it is
almost equally true of each and
every government on this continent,
or of this world, which to myself is
a matter of extreme congratulation,
for I should not like to feel Isolated
in this delicate matter.
Budgets do not balance. Budgets
cannot be made to* balance. Expenses mount, revenues fall.
If we of British Columbia adopt
the heroic course suggested by the
Kldd report and behave ourselves
like good UtUe men and cut out
our follies snd extravagances, so
that we actually enable the wistful
Mr. Jones to balance his budget,
what wUl happen?
Luxuries, like old gae pensions and
mothers' pensions would of course
be cut off, and the unemployed reduced to a proper state ot subserviency on a slim diet of potatoes and
mush. Education has become an ab'
vague hopes of forming one of the
merry party who ride on the poor
patient donkeys and escaping from
the herd of common asses who bear
the  burdens.
Dear 81r or Madam—I have no
doubt but that with your profile
and figure you would look exceedingly weU on assback, alas—lt ls my
painful duty to inform you, that
your chanoes of a mount are grow^
lng slimmer snd slimmer, as tbe
very big fellows take more and more
asses   to   support   them—Join   the
UtUe extra pinching of our officials New Denver, B.C., Nov. 23,  1932.
That Body of Yours
Bj JAMES   tfl.  BARTON
MEDDLESOME INTERFERENCE IN q,   When tha doctor ii called ln and
youth ar. not overlooked «th auch  *»>'<>»»">« <"'r "*««• »»™ «°
iroubl-ome thins. » metonymy and  f™ f0""'  P1"^,        , ,T, , i   T?     fa
synechdoche.   How   did   the   change'
come  about  and is it altogether to
be  approved?
It began to be 'he fashion ln the
last quarter of last century to sBy
the grammatical analysis and parsing and the Identification of figures
of speech, and the elucidation of
historical and literary allusions had
a tending to crea > In the minds
of young people a distaste and a
dislike for poetry, and that this
danger was to be avoided at all
costs. Looking back on the' episode,
those who are ln a position to
compare the results of both systems are apt to think that the
change has not been all for the
better. No doubt there were dry-as-
dust, gerund-grinding schoolmasters
tn those days who sometimes overdid
the linguistic side of literary study,
but most of them at any rate
■tood for clear thinking and sound
scholarship. In those days the student was expected to know the
poem h* was studying from end to
end, snd he could hardly help knowing tt because it waa studied with
extreme minuteness, line by Une and
word by word.
Times change and we change with
them. The desire to get something
for nothing, however springs eternal
ln tbe breast of the student who
ls either lazy or Incompetent; nut
there ls no royal road to literature
any more than to geometry. If
literature ls to Justify Its claim to
a place on our school programs it
should   be  made   an   Instrument   of
ABDOMINAL PAIN
Notwithstanding all our knowledge
of the dangers of delaying operation
ln cases of acute appendicitis and al3°
of obsructlon of the bowel, the percentage of deaths from these twp
conditions has actually increased during the  past ten years.
lt must be admitted that this Is
not the fault of the surgeons who
perform the operations, because the
operative ability of the surgeons o.
today ls at the highest point ln history.
Dr. W. H. Parsons tells us that If
the death rate from these conditions
ls to be reduced it must bo done by
lack ot meddlesome Interference ln
cases that will really require an operation anyway.
What ls meant by "meddlesome
interference"?
This simply means that when there
ts an acute pain ln the abdomen
no treatment of any kind ahould be
given.
As you know the first thought
when a pain occurs ls to try to get
relief, and a pain klUIng drug ls
given.   This means thst as the drug
kills or deadens the pain tbe condl-
discipiine snd scholarship as weU tion can be growing gradually worse
'em enjoyment.—Victoria Colonist.       and the patient doesn't know It.,,
i
Auction and
Contract Bridge
By  the   World's  Lssdlng   Authority.
MILTON  C. WORK
♦ 15 3
tt+M
♦ A-W
♦H
♦ J-M
♦MfM
fW-t »
Ul
tm
♦WN-2
XI Jll
♦T+4
90UIV
♦4-2
» 7-3-2   ■
sm
♦K-J-H-3      -^
When Z saw the above hand play.
ed ln a rubber game of contract.
East opened the bidding with, a
fourth-hand call of three Spades.
His hand contained eight sure tricks,
with sn additional possibility la
Clubs. Bast's honor-count made it
apparent that the hand should be
played at Spade rather than at
No Trump. West's raise to four
Spades was the only other bid. The
same final declaration would have
been reached If East had started
with  any  forcing  bid.
South led the Queen of dubs,
which Bast won with the King.
East drew three rounds of trumps,
then false-carded by leading the
Queen of Diamonds. North was not
deceived by the false eard, nor
had he any reason to hold up his
Aoe. He then decklen to lead his
King of Hearts hoping 1 remove
dummy's Ace and ihow Bouth what
to lead. Declarer won with dummy's
Ace, put closed hand ln with the
King of Diamonds and led the Nine
df Hearts. He played low from
dummy ln the hope tbat North did
not hold tbe Ten: but of course
North won with both the Tsn and
Queen, after which he led a Club.
Declarer lost ln all two Hearts, a
Diamond and a Club; and was thus
set one trick. Do you see how
the four-Spade contract could have
been made, despite North's exceUent
defence?
THE   CORRECT   PLAY
North set a trap and Declarer fell
right into it. When North led the
King of Hearts at trick six, Declarer should h. ve permitted lt to
win. North then would be helpless.
Another Heart lead would give Declarer two Hep.rts and a show-down
for the / malnlng tricks. North's
best lead would be a Club. Declarer would win with the Aoe,
lead the King of Diamonds, put
dummy ln with the .|e of Hearts,
and discard a Heart and a CU*'* on
dummy's high Diamonds. He would
thus lose but one Heart and one
Diamond, aame could be saved if
South had the "double dummy"
Inspiration to lead a Heart to trick
1, but th* lead from a Seven-high
trebleton would not be made, except
possibly on the replay ln single table
duplicate.
Told in Rime
MY EVENING PAFER
One of Canada's Oolden Pages
Or.fr&i J. I. B. Sceley misses no
opportunity to sing the praises of
the Canadian Calvary trUUa'ie
which he commanded from early in
1913 until April. 1013. It is ' not
surprising therffore. that he should
tell again the great story of a
gallant Canadian cavalryman when
he addressed the Authors club ln
London the other day. Lieut. Flow-
erderv, V. C, Strathcona Horse, was
the hero of the attack at Moreull
that , held up the German advance on Amiens late ln March
1918 until Foch- was able to concentrate sufficient infantry and artillery to halt that tremendous snd
dangerous drive. General Seeley hss
told tbe story before. In bis book,
"Adventure." published in 1930, he
devotes considerable space to It snd
to the other attacks In which the
Canadian  brigade took  part.
No wonder thoae days remain ln
the forefront of General Seely's
memory, m his book, drearibing
his feelings as he stood on the high
ground overlooking ths vaUey of the
Luoe—the Canadian corpe won back
all that area and far to the southeastward a little more than four
months later ln the great Battle of
Amiens—he says—"I knew that moment to be the supreme event of
nty life. I believed that -If nothing.
were done the hetreat would continue and the war would be lost. . .
I knew that this was. what all my
life had ben for." So he gave his
orders for the mounted attack on
Moreull wood ln an effort to
check the German advance. The
fighting that followed has been described ln detail ln military ournals
and histories; lt ls unfortunately
Uttle know to the people of Canada.   The   reference ■ to   Foch   and
Weygand standing oa a hiU watch
lng the Canadian oovalry start ou
for Moreull eowras aprocryphal.
least, h Is not iripntloned In Genera
Sffley's book. Even If imaginative 1
ls   good  ennugli   to   be   true.
That Foch did place very big
value on the work of the Canadi"
Cavalry brigade during the critici
days early In 1918 Is evident fro!
a note he sent to General ■■
In which he says—
I do not forget the heroism
the valiant Canadian C&voQry br!
gade.   In   the   month   of   March
1918, the battle had reached ttn
gates of Amiens. It was a questioi
of maintaining at any cost clo-
touch between our two armies, ot
the   30th   of   March,   at   Moreull
and on the 1st of April at Han
gard   en   Santene,   It   succeeded
by Its splendid spirit and its of'
fenslve operations, in keeping tht
enemy   ln   check   snd   definitely
stopping   his   advance,   in   largi
measures,  thanks  to  It;  the  situation, dangerous at the  beginning "of the battle, wu restored.
The  general  offers   tihat   evldenc
by   the  commander-in-chief   of  th
allied armies in support of hts con
teution thst  he  doea   not  attribut
more   Important   to   the   Cansdla
cavalry     than     the     facts
rant. He dedicated his book to "thel
great achievement in the last phas
of  the most terrible  battle of  th
world war." The other eeiMoes wer
Inclined to think cavalrymen had
'cushy" time of lt ln the war. But, le
by such heroes ss Plowerdew, Ha:"vei
Dochierty   rf id   others,   they   prow
themselves  great fighters   wheneve
and wherever opportunity offered.
—Edmonton  Journal
Ten Years Ago
(From The Dally News of November
24,1922.)
Miss Ella Mabey, who has been
traffic chief of the B. C. Telephone
company for some time, has been
transferred to the coast.
• •   •
A bucket brigade headed by A.
Cawley saved the residence of W.
Miller at Salmo yesterday from being destroyed by fire.
• •   •
Nelson bowlers beat a Revelstoke
team by 62 points In last night's telegraphic bowUng.
• e   •
Yesterday at the high achool
I.O.D.E. medals for school work and
essays wers presented to Arthur England, Evans Wasson and Miss Nancy
Gracy.
I read the paper with eager Joy
Concerning a coming sale,
Or  the   Intricate state of  Gandhi's
health
And the riot in Portsmouth goal.
I see the stocks are going down,
Then, with a sad expression,
I note that no one has nerve enough
To verbally end the depression.
And  factories etlll close and  wages
are cut
Both here and across the Atlantic,
It   would   almost   seem,   from   the
vlolmt  deaths
That the world wu going frantic.
A war seems imminent, so one says.
That  the  world  will soon  be on
fire.
Then    graciously    speaks'    anothe:
prophet
And calls the first a liar.
So I close  the  paper,  replete  witt
news,  ■
And hustle to catch the car,
And think, as I ride, what a sob<.
lot,
I and  my neighbors are.
—O. R. WRAY, Edmonton Journ;-
Twenty Years Ago
(From The Dally  News of  Novemcr
24,1912.)
The ConsoUdated Mining St Smelting company has purchased a 73 per
cent Interest tn the Silver King and
KeUy mines on Toad Mountain and
will commence operation today. The
deal was consummated by T. W. Blng.
ey, S. G. Blaylock and Munroe Archibald of the ConsoUdated and R- s-
Lennle and A. E. Rand of the Kootenay Bonanza Mines, limited.
• •   •
Primroses are blooming tn the garden of Hugh W. Robertson.
• *   *
A big logging camp Is being estab
lished at Deer Park with 60 men em
ployed. The outfit has a two-yea
contract to deliver to the waters edg<
10,000,000 feet of logs. •
*   •   •
Despite the lateness of the eeasoi
quite a number of rowers were ou
yesterday. L. Johnstone and E. Hack
ing were out ln a double and R
Ball. P. R. McGregor and A. GUkf
In singles.
cm
033333232
"Build ac. payrolls"
Thanks.
ItWas
Sent
SM
In mentioning the courtesy of
Pacific Stages, who turned,
over a telegram from a lady
In Seattle requesting 14 tins
of Pacific MUk for her baby,
a friend points out we failed
to say the milk was sent
Thanks. This was an oversight.
The 14 tins went South at once
by express.
Pacific Milk
100% B.C. Owned tnd Controlled
Plant at Abbotifora
asms:
The Coeur d'Alene 1
Hotel
In the Heart
of
SPOKANE
finds that a pain killing drug has
been given he ls unable to tell much
about the condition as he can't locate tbe exact spot of, or know the
severity of the pain.
This lost time may prove fatal.
Another kind of meddlesome interference li giving a purgative medicine. It ls only natural to give a
purgative medicine to drive out any
harmful material that Is In the bowel
as a dose of castor oil or epsom salts
ls very effective for this purpose. But
if the pain ln the abdomen ls due
to an Inflamed appendix, or an obstruction ln the bowel, then a purgative medicine Is the most dangerous
kind of "meddlesome Interference"
and ts the cause of a large percentage of deaths.
The lesson then Is quite plain.' In
aU cases of abdominal pain no medicine should be given to relieve pain
and thus hide the symptoms, and
no purgative should be given which
might cause a break or rupture ln
the appendix or Intestine, thus setting up an lnflamatlon of the peri
toneum—covering of the bowel and
lining of the abdomen—which often
results  ln death.
Watt for the doctor before giving
any treatment
25 Years Ago
(Front The Dally News of Novem'
24, 1907.)
8. 8. Taylor, who has been atten.:
lng the sittings of the full court c
Vancouver, arrives In the city tonigh
• •   •
R, T. Embleton, grand masW
of the Odd Fellows, ls over fron
Rossland and wUl pay the local lodg<
an official visit.
• •   •
A contract for a new skating an
curling rink at Fernie has been le
to a contractor of Femle for $18,-
700.
• •   •
Approximately 1532 has been raised
for the antituberculosis ball this Friday.
ANNOUNCES
Rooms newly furnished throughout in preparation for our usual excellent winter patronage
from our friends in Canada.
HARRY F. GOETZ, Mgr.
§
The HOTEL COEUR
d'ALhNE continues Its
policy of accepting
Canadian money st
par In payment of
room accommodation.
The Coeur d'Alene Is
the only hotel In
Spokane that has
for years consistently
maintained this polity In regard to
Canadian money*
SPOKANE, Wash.
AUNT HET
"She says she's only thirty, but
X never saw anybody under fifty
that could spend a wbole visit
talktn'  about blood pressure.".
Heating
Stoves
What about that New Stove for
the Cold Weather.   We have all
kinds on hand to select from.
Prices $0.25 to ?CC-00 each.
Stove Pipes, Elbows, Coal Hods,
etc.—Get Busy.
Nelson
Hardware Co.
Wholesale and Retail Quality
Hardware
NELSON, B. C.
 lis
•in VtUUm DAILY KSWH, MBUON, ■.C—THUBgDAT MOBNWO, NOVIMBU M, Ml*
DISPORT PAGE
MM ItVtt
RULING ON RUGBY
GAMES PUYED \
ON OCTOBER 29
Rochdale and Swinton Match
to Be Replayed; Committee Decides
j    I/ONDOJt, Hot. M (OP «Ma)-The
] management commltt*. of th, Eng-
I lisli   Rugby  leagu,  met  today  and j
rules aa to the atandlng ot leveral I
imatchaa whloh wer. played Oot. It ■
during * fi«ro« wind and heavy rain. ;
Play   wu  abandoned   In  several  of
the matohes before time.
Offlolal atatement today declared
the games of tbat day neulted aa
followi: Barrow defeated Bradford
ll-O. ealfoM defeated Wakifleld
Town 15-0, St. Helen', defeated
Bramley  i»-J.
Tbe oommlttee ruled the game between Rochdale and Swinton stopped
aftar w mlnutea wltb Swinton Iwd-
uig 1-1, bo replayed.
PITCHER'S JOB SOFT   '
NOW TO OLD DAYS
TOMMY PAUL TO
MEET YOUNG GENO
Primo Carnera and Levinsky
Will Mix in Non-Title
Affair
CmCAOO, Nov. IS (API—TBnny
Paul, of Buffalo, NY., the NatloniU
Boxing association's featherweight
champion, will meet young Oeno of
La Salle, III., In a 10-round non-
title bout at White City November 38
Oeorge Nlchol*. another Buffalo
boxer, wbo Ja recognised by the R
B. A. aa light heavyweight title-
bolder, will tackle Martin Levan-
dowekl of Orand Rapids, Mich., ln a
non.tltle 10-rounder on the Prlmo
Carnera-IQng Levinsky card at tbe
Chicago stadium November 10. Negotiations to sign up Frank Battaglia, Winnipeg middleweight sensation,
to meet Nichols fall through.
St. Andrew's Club
I Withdraws, Bird
Play in Trail
TRAIL, B. c. Nor. 38.—Bt. Andrew's Badminton club ls not to
enter dty badminton league before
Christmaa lt was reported today.
Tbe olub la suffering the lack of
a full complement ot membera thta
year and until tha membership grows
will not bs likely to enter tbe
league.
Bt. Andrew's withdrawal Is generally regretted, for this elub was
active In originating ths league and
has been a keenly Interested participant. I .
BV  AL  DEMAREE
Tlu ahade of "Iran Man" Joe Mc-
Olnity must chuckle to himself
when he looks down upon ths
"over-worked" pitchers ot todsy.
There has not been » pltshor ln
tha last two yeara In slther major
league. wh» worked tn 300 cr more
Innings.
In years past, two and sometimes
three pitcher, ott the earn, bail elub
took part ln considerably over that
flgun. Nowadays if a pitcher works
with two days Ah ht ratea a headline.
In tba old days, Jo* MoOlnlty
alwayi itarted the second gam* ot
a double header. It he won the
first gams. It a certain pitcher had
the "Indian sign" on any particular olub, be always worked twloe
ln every series sgalnst them, whether wtth one or two days rest,
Tony Mulane of Cincinnati and
St. Louis oould work two dsys in, a
row, pitching either right or left
handed.
Another bard worker wu "One
Armed" Daly, who once led the
NaUonal leagu* In strike out*.
mottled
"Scotland
The   fiem   of   gvmlne   Seats
whiskies,   distilled,    agrd-fn-th*.
wood, bl«od«J sb. BOlTLkO fa
Zdinbargh, Scotland aad ifclpr*d
to Ctoidt la taped ind mftd
26Vs os. sod 40 es. bottl* oolf.
ACES LEAD FERNIE
BASKETBALL LOOP
Zipps, Aces and 150's Win
Games Daring Past
Week
naurat B. c. NOV *»—In the
rernie city basketball lesgue .he
Acei now lead with tbe King Edwards and 1S0» tielng tor seoond
place.
Thru elty leagui gamea were
playid thia week.
The first game was betwien the
"Zips" of ths high school and
the King Edwards, resulting ln a
soon of 17 to It ln favour of
the Zipps. Th* soon at balf time
waa alao ln Zipps' favour 11 to 3.
The winning team showed good form
and combination work. Thoae starring for the hl(b school won frank
Hughei wltb 11 pointa and Frank
Oonstsnna with 10.
In th* seoond gam* tb* Aoss of
th* high ichool met and vanquished
th* Northerners 10 to 11. Balf tune
showed 19 to s ln Aoss favour.
Verklrk of the Aoes scored 10 ot the
point*.
Th* third time of th* teries
between the 1Mb and th* Hornet*
belonged entirely to th* ItOs with
31 pointi to sero. Tb* HorneU
seemed to be In hard hick all
th* way through. Their many trtee
nfuslng to go through th* loop.
Pernle High school teams of boys
snd gills sre being formed to visit
Klmberley snd play their high school
teams next Saturday.
SMELTER SPORTS
BODY IS SHORT
CURLING MATERIAL
TRAIL, B. 0., Nov. 33.—forty mam.
binhlpi in required, lt la understood to put B3.K. curling on an
organised basts.
The new branch of' th? Smelter
Sports auoclation activity apparently wll attain this mtmbtnhlp without trouble. Erceptlonal enthusiasm
has been shown smong curlen on
shift work ind the opportunity to
get morning gamet will not be overlooked by miny of them.
A membership of to Would previa*  10 rinks.
This advertisement is not
mblished or displayed by the
Liquor Control Board or by
he Government of British
Columbia,
SARNIA 12 BEATS THE
WOODSTOCK JUNIORS
IN FIRST SEMI-FINAL
WOODSTOCK, Ont., NOV. M (CP)
—Sarnia Oedlams lived up to advance
notices ta being oni of thi beet
Junior teems ever turn*d out 'in th*
tunnel city when thtr held th*
strong Woodstock Grade to an 8-5
scon hen this afternoon tn the
flnt of thl two-gam*. ORp.U.
Junior eeml-Ilnals. Conditions were
anything but Ideal with fumblee
playing a big part ln thl scoring
chances for both twelvee.
H. M. WHIMSTER
HEADS CURLING
RINK  LIMITED
Roy Sharp Ig Vice; Jeffs
and Whimster Named
Delegates
McQovern-Corhett-There Was a BatUe!
H. 14. Whimster was named president ot the Nelson Curling Rink ltm-
lttd ftt ft meeting of the directors
Tuesday night. Roy Sharp was elected vloe-presldent, Oeorge Horstead.
secretary*treasurer and O. V. Blsck-
wood auditor.
At ft meeting of the curlers the
same evening, committees were named for the various functlonlngs of
the sport. AI Jeffs and H. M. Whimster were named delegates to the
British Columbia Curling association
convention and B. Bush and W. M.
Vance were named as alternatives.
A resolution was forwarded to ths
B. C. Curling associstion recommend-
log that Vancouver be granted a
membership to the provincial organisation.
Rev. J. Jt. Youngson was named
chaplain.
Committees were;
Membership—A. B. Qtlker, J. H.
Long. H. Bush, R. S. Horton. 8. T.
Bostock and ?•>!- Poulin.
Classification—Al Jeffs, C. J. Minefield, J, o. Bennett, C, D. Blackwood.
Roy Sharp, and Howard Buih.
loe—P. A. Whitfield, W. A. Marr.
and P. Arlt.       <
Rules—C. X. Mansfield, Magistrate
WUUam Brown and William Biner.
Inter-clty competition—J. M. Gordon, R. 2. Horton, A. B. Gilker, XX.
H. H. MacKenzie, R. Andrew, Roy
Sharp and J. Teague.
Coaches—A. J, Dill, O. I. Archibald,
and George Douglas.       . .
Ladles — H. M. Whimster, R. d.
Barnes and Roy Sharp.
Ice-maker—I. A. Calbick.
SKI CLUB COMES
INTO BEING, YMIR;
PREPARE THE HILL
YMIR, B- C, Nov. 33—A meeting
was held at the horn* of Mr. and
Mrs. D. McKay, for the purpose of
organizing aski club. Quit* a number of the looil boys attended and
the toUnVfing officers were elected.
9. Curwen, president; D. McKay.
secretary; Clifford Anderson, treasurer; William McKay, hill captain;
James Til ton, vtoe-hlll captain. Arrangements were made to put the
hill In shape as soon as there is
enough snow.
Turn back the pages t March 31, i
1M3, and you'tt- get picture like I
the one above, tt shows Terrible
McGovern, left, facing Young Corbett,   right.for   the   second    tine,j
Terry having lest his featherweight
crown when Corbett knocked him
out ln the tecond round of their
fight ftt Hartford, conn., Jn 1901.
After (Ms picture wns snapped Cor
bett gave Terry another beating,
knocking him out In the eleventh
round., in oenter of picture ls Ed.
Grsney, famous old-time referee, H
TOCGH   FOR   GAR
Gar Davidson's first year as
couch of the Army's football team
will find him with only three ->t
this year'i regulars back. They are
Brown,  Jablonsky  and  Kopesak.
LOST   TO  MATTY
Andy Coakley, victim of a Christy
Mathewson shutout victory during
the Athletics-Giants world series
of 1905. Is now baseball ooach at
Columbia   University.
The secret of all those Democratic votes ln New York might
ae well be spilled now. It
wasn't Roosevelt or Al Smith who
swung the boys into line under the
Tammany banner. It was Stanislaus Zbyssko, the wrestler.
Just before tba campaign ended,
Tammany engaged tha big Polish
grappler to make a aeries of speech
ea in the vicinity of St. Mark's
Place New York City. They gave
Ztbby a truck In which to ride
and from whloh he was to mtke
several talks to the voters.
•   •   i ■
WHERE'S   STANISLAUS?
Zbyszko went ao swiftly from
plaoe to pl*o» that his miuu-
gem oould not keep up with blm.
Aa soon as he had delivered hli
quota of oonsonants be tfould vanish, and the managers would duh
frantically In pursuit, wondering
where bs would speak nest and
jrhat he would say.
Reporters finally caught up with
him. Hs explained:
"I made ft speech at Twenty,
sixth atreet In English. Further up
I made a speech ln Russian. I have
been nuking epeechea all evening,
and I have spoken ln German. Polish, Russian, French, Italian, Spanish—even Turkish. I speak ton
languages   fluent,   you   understand,"
Zbyszko ww asked about his political views. He replied:
"I believe ln unity. I believe
maybe there would bs a revolution
if ths Republican stayed in power.
That's what I teU the voters.
"I teU tbem that Z em firmly
oonvlnoed that the Democratic administration will restore prosperity
to this magnificent country. Mr.
Hoover's administration has been a
failure and he has no practical
plans for the future, tt would be
very stupid of ua to re-elect him
tq office. The Democrats will repeal
this foolish prohibition law. lift
this horrible depression which Is
driving us mad, and bring ua back
good tinw"
■   *   i
AN   EXPERT   YANISHER
A reporter started to ask a
question, "And how about—?"
but Ebysko was 90ns, on the ww
down the street to make another
speech-
Zbyako Is a big man, but he has
a way of getting around. Probably he has u many ways of getting
around and away as Houdini him
self knew about. It ls aa wonder
reporters and managers oouldn't
flAd Stanislaus.
Ones in Russia during tha war,
Zbysko actually had to wrestle
for his life. A Russian wrestler
named Aberg had accused Stanislaus of being an lmposter and not
real wrestler at all. In addition
information was lodged with the
government to the effect that
Stanislaus wu a spy.
Tbe authorities ordered him to
wrestle Aberg, and If he should be
defeated, he would be executed.
Ths contest, held ln a big hall ln
Petrograd, waa attended by hundreds of soldiers who wera fried-
ly to Aberg.
•   •   •
HELP YOURSELF,  BOYS
After the two m*n had wrestled
for nearly three hours. Zbysko finally pinned Aberg'a shoulders to the
mat. Then running to his corner,
Stanislaus tore open *~ bag containing a thousand rubles. He
hurled tba money Into the crowd.
There was a wild scramble for the
money. After it was over Zbysko
waa not there.
So it is n^t hard to understand
GEORGE YOUNG
AND MARGARET
umt WED
Both Famous Swimmers; Will
Live in Toronto After
Honeymoon
Bowling Scores
Following 1, th, remit of , ladles'
ftm, played ftt tbe teflon Wednesday:
MM.   A.   KRAFT   VI
MM.   I.   WORTHINGTON
let 2nd ird Tot.
Mre. T. PU;er 11] IM IM 405
Mre. A. Kralf  ._ IIS   140   IK   453
ToUl,   M   IH   101   U!
HIM  I.  lasll* — IN   lit     M   Ml
Mn. J.
Wort bin, ton — 14*   UT   lit   iii
Total*   379   Ml   313   7S»
High   Individual   more,   Mri.   A.
Kraft, IM.
High aggregate aoon, Mra. A. Kratt
4S3.
•O LONO MABCHIONESi
Tbe Marchioness, world', champion 3-year old trotting nil;, haa
Men iold by Mra. Ralph R. Keeler,
Auburn, K. T., to a party In Italy.
The  reported  sal,  prloe  la  113,000.
THAT'S   NIC!   SUGAR,   LOU
Lou Gehrig la doing a atand la
vaudeville during the winter at
•3000 a week.
CANADIAN UNION
TO DECIDE ON
METRIC SYSTEM
WmMPBO, Kov. 23 (CP>—Adoption of the metric eystem for use in
Canadian track and field events wtt!
coma up for important dl»cu»lon
at the annual meeting of the Arniteur Athletic 'Union of Canada. J
Morkln. president $f that body.
stated today.
Mr. Morkln said tha unlvmna'
system of measurement was looked
upon with not a little favor in
great many sections snd added there
was a strong possibility of Canada
making the change from measurements of miles and yards to thst of
meters.
*•
r-
• I
■
e    \
a
BEEO  ORCtK   HEAVY
Tha only Greek heavyweight boxer
tn tb. United States at present Is
Oeorge Neron. He la training ln Los
Angelea Ior an Amerloan campaign.
MOST   FROM   ILLINOIS
More playera—30—In th, Nitional Professional Football leagu, eome
(rom Illlnola than any other state.
MARGARET  RAVIOR
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 33 (API-
Margaret Ravlor. Olympic swimmer,
and long-distance aquatic star, today became the
bride of Oeorge
Toung, ot Toronto, Oct., wbo, as
lad of 17, won
the gruelling 30-
mils Oatallna Island marathon
swim.
Th, ceremony,
at ths hom, of
Oeorge Kellerman,
an uncle of tbe
the bride, was witnessed by membera of her Immediate family and
a few friends. Toung'a mother was
unable to attend. The Bev. w. S.
Kerchnsr, of the Heldslburg Reformed Lutheran church, performed
ths ceremony.
Leaving Immediately for a short
trip before taking up residence in
Young's horns la Toronto, presented
to him after he won the Catallna
Swim In 1937, the couple refused to
discuss their Immediate plana.
Th* romance ct the two noted
swimmers began when they were
training for the 1930 Canadian national exhibition marathon awlm.
Aces Trim Hornets
Fernie Basketball
AOES   TRIM   HORNETS
FERNIB, B. 0., Nov. 33—Tlw Fernie basketball league of six teama
haa got well Into Its schedule of
play, and competition ls keen. Tbe
Aces, a high school team ls ln ths
lead wltb eight pointe having not
lost a gam* yet. The Xing Edward
Hotel boys follow them *lth six
points, having lost one game. The
standing of thc league la aa flollowe:
Aces. I; King Edward. 8; 150s, 4:
Hornets.  3;   and  Northerners, 0;
In Friday night's game ths acee
showed their superiority by beating tk* Hornets 34 to 13. Dou-
four and Verklrk of the Aoes sgsln
ecortag heavily, getting 17 points
ot th* teama 34. The Hornets
ahowed an Improvement lit form.
In the gam* between the ztpps
and Northerners, resulting ln tbe
Zlpp* victory 33 to 30, there was
splendid combination work between
Coles. Hughes and Lancaster of the
Ztpps, Hughes wu the star scorer
making 13 points, stelnheart of
the Northerners made half hia teams
score.
In th* third gam* of the evening
th* King Edwards had 30 to the
IKK' 9  point*.
why th* Tammany managers and
tbe reporters uver oould quit,
catch up with Zbrako In New
York. Stanislaus baa a way of
getting around.
•    I
DRY GINGER ALE
A sparkle in the
first sip.... in the
last "Say When"
Accept only the genuine
BUFFALO BRAND
Calgary Brewing and Malting
Co., Ltd.
I
CHRISTMAS
-CARDS—
24'Hour Service
on all order? reaching this office if requested.
You still have time to mail to
Old Country if you act quickly.
We have hundreds of samples
to choose from at prices that
are positively the lowest.
2 DOZEN CARDS
printed with your name
and address.
$2.00, $2.50, $2.75
"p *<> $7.50
Take advantage of this
extraordinary offer to
remember your friends
this Holiday Season.
PHONE 144
for thrisivnias Cards
Nelson Daily News
Job Dept.
 "
et-m
MM MR
• TRE KELSON DAILY KIWI, KELSON, ».C—THTJMDAT MMMOTO, NOVEMBB* t- lltt*
?m$w wantsedm Where Buyer &$euer Mm W(,n&,
"Murder of the
Night Club Lady"
Th« New Thatcher Colt Detecti-e Mystery
V-.W: .V
By Anthony Abbot
STNOTSIS
lota, Oarewe, night club habitue,
tetxlra, a death threat. New Tear',
eve. Pievloualj her do, and tar-
tot wera mjaterlouily killed. Dlatrlct Attorney Wri* *_. DoujhwW
•uspect* LoU ol being tbe "brain,"
ot tb, jewel tbelf rlnj that hu
tattled the police. Although her
huaband, Oaylotd Olftord, died
practically penniless, Lola Uvea In
luiunr. Polioe Ooramlealoner Thatcher Oolt place, a fuard In U>la'a
penthouee apartment, warning her
that ehe muat not be alone In a
room at any time. Mra. Carewe.
Lola'a mother; Chun, tbe butler,
Xunlo, the maid, and Vincent
Rowland, an attorney, are praaent.
In the mini room, tbe commie-
•loner flnde a ba belonging to
Christina Quires, Lola's ffueet. It
evidently had been UMd tbat nicht,
yet Lola Informs Oolt that Chrls-
tlne la at the Lion's Paw, a madhouse, where Lola waa to bave
Joined her. Colt U surprised to
find Mra. Carewe's room ln strante
contract to the surrounding wealth.
Lola'a own boudoir la a gaudy con-
twdlctlo* of the living rooen'a elegance. Lola refueea to reveal the
Identity of the young man whose
photograph adorn, her dresser.
Againat orden, she uteri tbe guest
room alone. A scream follows.
Rushing ln, Oolt finds her on the
floor, unconscious. Dr. Hugh Beld-
wln. a friend, diagnoses the caae
as t heart attack. Lola dies; Oolt
calls it murder. Unnotloed, he
take, something from, the doctor's
beg.
CHAPTER TEN
District Attorney Dougherty faced
Colt In the- middle of the room and
laid two red hands on the chief's
shoulder*.
"Por once you and I agree, That-
eber." be announced. "Thia ta murder!"
COtt nodded aombrely.
"And I think I've got the solution!" added the district attorney In
a husky whisper.
"Which Is "
"Inside Job-r-those desth threats—
killing of the dog and parrot—all
that stuff—get this room-mate woman and give her the worksl"
"Tou mean Christine Quires killed
Lola?"
"Or knows Wbo did!"
"Motive,   Dougherty?"
"The dead gin knew too much—
about jewel robberies."
"I don't know how It was done!
But no matter what kind of hocue-
pocua they used, we oan find It—
give ua time," proclaimed the district attorney with ao oracular wave
ot his mighty wm. "Touli aee that
the Jewel ring Is at tbe bottont of
this!"
There was a telephone beside the
bed. Escaping from Doughterty's
grasp, Oolt lifted the receiver and
called for hie private number at
police headquarters.
"Inspector Plynn, please," the
commissioner murmured into the
transmitter, and then turning his
luminous eyes on me, he added:
"Tony, get Lieutenant Pallon. Tell
him what', happened. Have him
check up on hia men, to see If anv
of them heard anything unusual.
Then report to me here ln five minute,. And Tony—"
I wat at the door.
"Find  out who Is ln charge ot
INDEX  TO CLASSIFIED
ADS
11
,i, ,  fl
10
ie
"
i
Bouts. Launches for Rent —
Boats, Launches for Sale —
  49
' M
f.eoes 'home until released."
"I understand, chief."
Aa I hurried from . tha detth
chamber, I knew full Well what waa
now happening down at Center
street. Once the commissioner's message wu received, action oommenoed.
Instantly the bureau of criminal information was notified tint a woman
named Lola Carewe had died sudden*
ly and mysteriously; murder was
suspected. All' the facte Oolt gave
over the telephone vere transmitted
to thli oentral bureau and ' thus
made available, If and when necessary. U> the entire foroe. Meanwhile,
a corps of specialists was being organized and dispatched to the scene;
detectives from tbe borough homicide squad, with their official photographers and stenographers. With
them would come the medical examiner or one, of hia assistants.
Probably the Inspector commanding
tha particular detective division
which included Lola's apartment
house ln lie boundaries, would also
appear, ln oompany with tba captain of tbe local precinct.
Knowing that these troope from
the homicide squad would soon be
In possession of the premises, I was
also sure that Thatcher Oolt would
follow hia usual custom of learning
as much as possible before hli re-
enforcements arrived. It la sensible
police practice In the conflict between authorities and witnesses to
strike at the earliest possible moment. In the shock that overcomes
all except the most hardened—or
the most Insane—or criminals, Just
after a violent death, the bertiera of
deception are difficult to sustain. A
murderer may prepare In idvance
the most convincing story and yet,
Immediately following the execution
of hia dark deed, find hlmaelf utterly unable to speak a syllable of
his lying tale. I felt positive Colt
would begin his inquisition at onoe.
The fact was, as I learned later, that
Colt gave orders to Inapector Flynn
to arrive half an hour late, ao that
he might have time to begin his
Inquiry.
Closing the door behind me, 1
crossed tbe wide expanse of the living room floor. In one of the easy
chain by the fireplace sat Dr. Hugh
Baldwin, smoking a cigarette. His
beg lay between his feet. The physl-
clan'i alert gase searched the fire
and ashes, ln quest of what, only he
oould have revealed. Standing between the windows, hia hands folded
at hia thighs, wsa Chung, hia great
and ugly face a Uttle to one side.
the baldness of hia enormous crown
gleaming under a suspended lamp.
Neither man seemed to notice me as
I opened the front door and strode
to the head of the Iron staircase.
There I encountered Lieutenant Fallon.
"I aaw the doctor go ln," waa Fallon's greeting, **but the chief sent
word that everything waa oke and
told me not to stir from here until
I was relieved. What tbe hell ls happening In there?''
When I enlightened Fallon, the
look of demoralised astonishment on
that honest Irish faoe waa beyond
all  art.
"By Ood I It couldn't have been
done by anybody getting Into the
room" he blurted. "Nobody oould
get by tne or these boys of mine,
and there's no such thing as secret
doorways in this Joint. There is
something awful funny about all
this. Mr. Abbott Tell the ehlef 111
report back to him in five mlnutea!"
(To Bc Continued)
OLD-TIME    RESIDENT
; OF   Y1CT0EIA   PUS
VICTORIA, Hov. as. — Joshua
Henry Warner, an old-time .resident
of.   Victoria,    died    today    at    Bt.
Joseph's hoepltal. Born at Halifax,
Nova Scotta, he came to this ctty
in I 1880.     .
Boats. Launchea  Wanted
Business Opportunities *___.
Canaries for Sua  ___
Cats and Dogs for Bale —
Cata and Ooga Wanted _
Deaths
Dressmaking     —..,—■■—■—
Farm and Dairy Produce
Farm  property  for  Bale  .
Por Bale or mtcnange  __
For Bale or  Rent
Furnished  Rooms for  Rent
Furnished   Roomi  *Vnrted  -
Furniture   !or  sale  -.,,
Help   Wanted .
Houses  for  Kent ——
Houses   Wanted    ,., , ,
In  Memcrlam   „—.,. -,	
Insurance  —.■■■,—..—..■■■■
Investments   ,	
Livestock for Bale
Livestock Wanted
Literary
Machinery    .———.—
Marriages ■■ —
Mining, Timber, Lumbar ,
Miscellaneous
Miacellaneoui   tor   eate
Miscellaneous   Wanted   -
Notices   .._
Mualcal    Instrument!
N ursery    Prod ucta   _~
Poultry and Egga —.
Printing    „m~.,.—.■—
property for Bale —
Property   Wanted   —-
Rabbits tor Sale  ___.
personal  —, „    . ■ ......
PlanU «—
Ranches for Bent
Reanrta
Room   and   Board
Rooms  for  Rent  .
Roo oil   Wanted   -
Schooli        -   -
LEGAL NOTICES
Little Expeiue and No Delay Buying or Selling the Classified Way
Everything Listed in the "Want*Ads"
MAIL WANT-AD'
FORM'
Fill Out and Mail or Bring It to
The Daily News Want* Ad Dept.
FIGTTRI OUT THI COST OF TOUR AD FOR YOURSELF: Rites, are Ue per tine psr day, •
coMScutivi daily insertions tor ths price of 4. .Minimum cost of insertion. Mo Rates are less
101 for prompt payment. Minimum number of llnea charged, "J. Name, address (and box number when used) are part of id. and therefore chargeable. CBK IBIS FORM, AHD WRITE
PLAINLT.
"QOVtBNMENT   MQtOB  ACT"
NOTICI     OF     APPLICATION     FOR
L'U.NBLNT      TO      TRANSFER      OF
BEEK'LRLNtE
NOTICE IS HFItEBT GIVEN that
on the 1-th day of December next
the und«rsign?d Intends to apply to
the Liquor Control Boird lor consent to transfer of an undivided
one-half share or intereat tn Beer
Licence No. 2027 and issued in re-
sunt ot premises being pirt ot a
buildlnp known as "Pmehurac Inn,"
situate at South Slocan in the
County of Kootenay upon the lands
described as parcel 2 of Blork "B"
of District Lot 303. District of
Kootenay, Map 672, Nelson Land
Registration District, in tlie Province of British Columbia, frutn
Oeorge Jerome Kingsley to Ernfst
John Bowkett of South Slocan, British   Columbia,   the   transferee.
Dated at South Slocan, B. C. this
Oth day of November, A. D.  1932.
Ernest John Bfwkctt
14639)
(I)
SHUTTER—To    Mr.    and    Mrs.    J.
Shu tele,   at   Trail-Tadanac   hosptta.,
November ll, a son.
CAN A HIES   FOR   BALK
FOR CHRISTMAS GUARANTEED
Singer canaries. Phone Mrs. Omy
407R. (4803)
SITUATIONS WANTED
FUR   COATB   REPAIRED,   RELINED,
remodelled, phone 428. Mrs. Lee.
(4500)
rOR  ALL  RADIO TROUBLES  CALL
Lee's Radio, 428. (4060)
ROOM  ANU BOARD
BOARD AHD ROOM VERT REAS*-
onable. Apply DaUy News Box
4781. t476»
 CLASaiHKD    al»V<«i'»INO
Local Kcadi'n  iMKci
(Minimum  two One*)
£2q   a   Hue    Display    type   la/gei
than Q  point, charge at  rate of  221
a   line   8   point:   i.e.,   on*   Uno   U
point, charge 440;  one line  14  point
charge eee   Daily for oue month or
mure deduct 25  per cent spac* disc
fi oni    above    ratea,    minimum    for
r.iouth.y   advertinemeLis   sll 44   lase
dlsccuut.  Minimum   charge.  44c.
CLASfclFUED
(Minimum   lau   lines)
lie,a Hue per insertion   Six consecutive Insertion*,  44c  a  line;   per
mouth.    1143    a    Une.    Mimmum
cbatgo,   22u. f
Marriages, death, and in raemor*
lam notices. 22c a line. Lists of
iloweis nt funerals, gilts at weddings, etc., i/o a Une.
HON   M Mill RS
If a Dally News hoi Number in
deeired theie Is sn extra charge of
*llo,
LEGAL   NOTICES
16c  i   line  first  insertion.   12c  a
line  additional  insertions.
riiOlLsMU.VU.   OR   BUSINESS
(.'Alt US
(Minimum two  linei)
Yearly cuntract*-*! io a line per
month. ■ '
Six months' contract—II37 a line
per month.
Transient—#1 65 a line per month"
I'LASMHED   DISPLAY
Sams rate s% transient or contract
display, according to classification
and spsce used. Minimum l Inch.
with same provision *or caih discount
i Above rates are les, io per cent
cash discount when accounts ara
paid on or before the 20tli of
month   following   publication.
Al'iOMOMUS   FOB  UIB<
CHEV. SPORT COUPS, iMfe mr*.
class condition, cheep for eaal
Apply Box 4783 Dally News. \VM
APARTMFNT-BI7.E   PIANO  PERK
condition, litis cash or term*. Oa
or   wr.tc   Mason   &   Rlsch.   (47f~
6-TUBE   KOLSTER   BATTERY_
dio,   only   $lft.50.   Mason  &
>UH.N|»UEU BOOMS FOR RKNT   (15)
HOU8EXEEP1NQ ROOM AND 3
room suite on Baker St. Phone
631R. (4731)
FURNISHED ROOM. RFNT M08T
reasonable. Strathcona hotel.
(4879)
FURNISHED      HOUSEKEEPING
room, phone MM. Cove, 3B0R.
(4714)
HOLMES   FOR  RENT
(Zl)
MISCELLAKEOS  FOR  SALE
(27)
UNFURNISHED BUNOALOW. 8TAN-
lv street. Close tn. Redecorated,
throughout, garage, furnace. Immediate possession. Phone 20.
(4770)
100.000 FEET SECOND HAND RE-
condltloned Pipe suitable for all
purposes. All etzes. Write to
Hwartz Pipe Yard. 230. 1st Ave,
East, Vancouver, B. C. (4490)
STREET (or P.O. Boi Wo.)
POST   OFFICE
CLASBOTCATIOH
NUMBTO  OF  DATS
AMOUNT   ENCLOSED   I
Daily News Want'Ads Bring Results
mrr ra™™n^vairuiiiffiirrr^^^ _ta^iE__-_-_
SEVEN    BOOM    HOUSE    MODERN.
B'aney   St.   NeaT   cratral   echool.
t20. Apply O. F. McHardy, agent.
(4781;
MISCEIXANEOUK
C<9)
iiimiiiiiMiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHi
SMALL  HOOSE  FOB  BENT.   APPLY
Mrs Poulin. cor. Stanley   and   Innes
  14531)
FIVE   BOOM   BUNOALOW.   THBEE
bedroomo. Phone 294. (4774.1
HOUSES FUBNISHED AND  UNFUR-
nlshed. Phone 80SL (4780)
PROPERTY  WANTED
IIIIMIIIIIIItlMIIIMIIIIMMMIIIIIIIIIIimil
1   WANTED   I
s Up4o-Date Home 5
5 6 rooms including 3 |
S bedrooms. I
5 Possession Dec. 1st. =
2 Phone or Write =
S '  Manager, =
= HUDSON'S BAY CO. =
= (4804)' =
illlllllllllllMMIIIIIIIMIINIIIimilllllllll
I If you contemplate moving In I
z the near future, set ln touch =
3 with us.   We are equipped to s
Z. take care of your moving     W
jS problems.                 , S
~ PHONI  106 ' ~
| WilliamS'Xransfer |
H 009   Ward  St. '  Nelson 2
I (4770)   1
iiliiiiiiimiiiiiiitimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim
PROPERTY   FOR  BALB
(34)
"THE  OBILL'  RE8TAUBANT.   N15L-
" eon,   B.   C.   Very   modern   equip.
ment.   Very  low  price,   cash   and
terms. Apply, D. StDenis, trustee.
Nelson, B. C. (4800)
BANCH CIOSE TO NELSON. GOOD
house, barn and lien house, fruit
trees, cash $900. terms arranged.
Dally  News Box No. 4728.   ,47281
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
Accountants
CHAS. F. HUNTER, S.F. INT. A.C
Municipal and Commercial Audits
P. O Box 1191, Nelson, B. C.(460J)
T.   O.   JONF3
PuWlo Accountant
P. O. Box 721, Nelson, B. C.  <tS02i
Assayers
E. W. WIDDOWSON established 1009
305 Josephine St., Nelson. B. C.
<450S)
ORENVILLE   H.   OR1MWOOD,   P.   p.
Box 418, Kaslo, B. O. (4004)
Chiropractors
DB. OBAY, OILKEB BUC, KELSON
'     .  .   . (45051
DR.   MACMILLAN,   ORAD.   PALMER
School, Aber Blk., Nelson, Ph. 212.
(450«l
MITTUN AND OEDDES. X-BAY and
MCM, Cranbrook and TralL (46071
Florists
JOHNSON'S OREENHOUSES—Phone
342. cut flowers, potted plants
and floral designs. (4508)
NEUON FLOWER BHOPPE. FULL
line cut flowers at all times. Floral designs, phone 333. (4500;
Qrtraselle's Oreenhouses. Nelson, Cut
flowers and floral deslgna.   (45101
Insurance and Heal Estate
R. W. DAWSON-Real SrtaW, In.!
surance Rentals. Next Hlpporsoii
Hardware. Baker etreet.        (4511) I
Second Hand Stores
The  Ark—Dealers   In   Second  Hand
goods. Phone 534. Josephlne.(46iai
Storajre
STORAGE, MOVING, COAL,  WOOD
rhone 63. Burn's Coal It Cartage,
 . .  (46131
Transfer
ATKINSON TRANSFEB, ROSEMONT
Coal and Wood, (4614)
Wood Factory
LAWSON'S WOOD FACTORY IIARD-
wood merchant, 217 Baker street
■4616)
THE GUMPS-Welcome, Uncle Bim!
No means of communicating your WANTS'
or 'OFFERS' to the General Public compares with the Quick, Easy, Inexpensive
NELSON
DAILY NEWS
"WANTAD"
METHOD
Whether you wish to Buy or Sell, Rent or
Lease, Loan or Borrow, the Solution is
equally simple—Just write out your JV ANT
AD and Mail to the
Nelson Daily News
WANT AD DEPT.
Phone 144
 'Ttt NIUON BAILT
NCWf, NIUON, &C—THVMDAT MOBNINO, NOVEMBER 24,   1938
arket and Mining News
irons
MN OVER BY
OAST PEOPLE
jemsworth & Co. Given
Bond by Jackson and
McDonald
JLANTOERECTA
MILL IN SPRING
>ates» Elmendorf Are
Engineers; Get in
Supplies
ffemsworfch & Co. of Vancouver
tb taken 4 lease uid bond on
d Gtoodeonffh mine new Tmir
jm the owners. Butt Jackson and
hdy McDonald. The engineers Jn
arge of development, whloh haa
en commenced, -re J. P. Coatee.
•merly connected with the Granby
nlns company and W. J. Slmen-
ft ot Seattle. They hare com-
nced to'get tn supplies and to
ondition Jhe bulldlngi. It is to*
>ded to lnstei compreessor equip-
■nt, and plans are to erect a mill
; the eprtng.
'RECENT  SHIPPER
jieporte of B. T. O'Orady, district
jnlng engineer, have repeatedly
iwn attention to the merits of
Is property. It has been mention-
frequently m the annual re-
i In the department of mines,
attention wae drawn to lt ln
Lode Gold Bulletin, which
s Issued this year.
lowners of the property han
Ipped over 5000 tons of ore since
QO. Smelter returns showed con-
[its of around $17 a ton and suf-
lent stiver and lead at present
w prices for these metals to pay
tight and treatment.
Iftieat Down in
Face of Liverpool,
Chicago Easiness
xport Figures Are Placed at
Less Than 500,000
Bushels
WINWIPBCJ, Hot. 38 (CP)—In the
■sence of any substantial export
terest, etolness at Uverpool and
llcago forced wheat prloes 1% to
lower on tre grain exchange here
day, when farmer Intereat as the
vult of yesterday's bulge caused
•evy hedging pressure. Export flg-
es were pieced at lees than 500,-
0 bushels.
November cloeed at 40H, December
1 45H, May at 49 and July at 50'V
U.S. markets plaoed a bearish conduction cn the war debt announce-
jmt from Washington, but declines
We kept to a fractional range with
te exception of the oish month,
r food buying ln tbe May on the
>wn scale by Dew York and Chl-
go houses.
EXCHANGES
'Montreal, not. as <op),-Brit-
1 and foreign eicbange ln relation
j the Canadian dollar, aa compiled
r th, Royal Bank ot Canada,
Med today a. follows:
-gentlna,   peso,   , 1 .3013
jatralia,   pound 3.0311
ilglum,  helia    ,„ _   .loos
(ani, mlliele i    .0884
[Una, Hong Kong dollar, _   J618
Sechoelovekla,   crown       .0344
fenmerk,   krone .1078
bland, flnmark —: .0174
ianoe, frano _____   .0493
— .2754
-_ 8.7748
._ .0071
_. .48(2
... 5029
... .2881
.. .0592
,.  — 5375
goslavla, dinar  ',' ,     ,.   .0182
w ZeaUnd, pound  3.4314
irway, krone _.__ .1841
land,   aloll .1800
lumanla,   liu .0071
Uth Africa, pound -___ 8.5783
ttn, peaeta —— ,.. .0848
»den,' iron,    : 5038
Itaerland,   frano  .2220
lted statee. dollar, IV% per cent
>remlum.
DOW JONES AVERAGES
30 industrials  ......  59.47 off 3.69
20 rails ;  26.73 off 1.15
20 utilities 27.22 off 1.13
MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN
Mor. JJ.—
MINNEAPOLIS,   Minn.
(AP)—
Wheat:   No.   1   Nor.  47K;   No.   1
Bed   Durum   39%;   Dee.  48H:   May
Corn:   No.   1   Yellow   9314-34.
Oat,: No. 8 White 14H-H.
Flax: No.  1  1.03K-1.06K.
INE LIST 15
LITTLEIM
Gold Stocka Hold Finn
But Volume Down
Sharply
TORONTO, No». 23 (CP)—Mining
•hare, on the Standard exchange
milled about a little today on the
uncertainties arising from the conference on war debta hut at the
eloee prlcea wer, not very far from
the previous close except ln the caae
ot tb, two big base metal stocks
Nickel and Noranda. Oold stock!
held quite flrmi; but the volume
waa very much under reoenf sessions.
The weakness of the «rly afternoon, engendered by a Wall street
slump, waa partly overcome and
Dome cloeed at 13.20, only five down,
Bollinger unchanged, Lake shore up
IS and Mclntyre otf 28 at 23.78,
and Wright Hargreaves down alt
pointa at 2.02. B. C. Pioneer closed
at 4.81 for a loss of nine points.
NEW YORK STOCKS
srmany, relchsmark
eat Britain, pound
■eece,   drachma   .....
Hand,  florin	
mgary, pengo .—
dia,   rupee   ...._..._
My,  lire	
pan, yen
Jo:
RONTO INDUSTRIALS
1   Telephone.
tl
85%
98ti
izlllan   _.—_
ts.
8%
8H
A OU _-,—.
IV,
8!4
M
87
85
88
minion stores
—
—
11
rd of Can A_
•tv.
Iti
754
■am  Walker—
*%
t_
•Ti
perlal  OU  ....
»_
»ti
t
jjerlal   Tobao.
—
—
• ti
ter  Nickel  —
»%
»*1
»%
«r pet, r—
—
—
HH
JlaW     A     — mm-
nvt
11
;i
randa' .—.
30 ti
.*>
20.05
Allegheny 	
Allied Chemical
American Oan ..
Am Foreign Pwt
AmMaAFdy ..
Am Smelt St Bat
Am Tobacco ..
Am Telephone ..
Anaconda	
Atchison 	
Auburn Motor, .
Baldwin   	
Bait & Oklo ...
Bendlx Aviation
Beth Steal ....
Canada Dry •■•
Can Paclflo ....
Cerro de Pasco ..
Ches 8c Ohio ...
Chrysler   	
Com Se Southern
Con. Oaa N. T. .
Corn Producta . *
0 Vfrlght pfd. .
Dupont 	
Eastman' Kodak
Elee Power & Lt
Erie   	
Pord English ..
Pord of Canada .
Pint Nat Store,
Preeport Texas .
Oeneral Motors .
General Electric
Oeneral Foods  .
Oold Dust 	
Goodrich   	
Oreat West Bug
Oreat North pfd
Hudson Motors ,
Inter Nickel ....
Inter Tel * Tel
Kenn Copper ...
Kresge S. S. ...
Milwaukee pfd .
MM Truck ..
Nash Motor, ...
Nat Dairy Prod
N. Power ft Lt .
N. T. Oentral .
Pao Gas tt tieo
Packard Motora
Penn R R 	
PhUllpa Pete ...
Pur, OU   	
Radio Corp ...
Radio Keith Or .
Rem Rand 	
Rock Island —
Safeway Stores'.
St. Louis St 8. P.
Shell Union ...
S. Cal Edison ...
South Pacific ..
Stan Oil of Cal
Stan OU of Ind
Stan Oil of N. J.
Stewart Warner
Studebaker ....
Texas Corp ....
Texas Gulf Sul .
Tlmken Roller .
Onion Carbide .
On Oil of Cal
United Aircraft .
Union Pacific .
U. B. Pipe St Fdy
U. S. Rubber ..
U. S. steel 	
Vanadium   Bteel
West Elee  	
Wlllye Overland
Yellow Truck  .
1_
12 ti
14ti
•3 y.
lti      IU
78ti     7414
54 ti
.TV
UH
IB
«*%
108
• ti
43 ti
48
8
HH
ion
17V,
11
1*K
8H
lti
74H
tlH     52ti
7%
12 ti
14 ti
82 %
3
58 ti
51H     48ti
loeti    lOSti
8 8
89 88H
43ti     42 ti
«
10 H
lOli
l«Ti
11
13ft
7ti
33 H
14H
8
56 H
Blti
3
10ti
10
lOti
10 ti
13
'14
34ti 231i
18 I4H
2%
MM
U. S. DOLLAR UP
MONTREAL, Not. 33 (CP)-4ft\tted
ites funds and sterling moved ln
poalte directions tods;. Tb* Amer-
a dollar advanced Vs ol one per
it to eloee at % premium of 15%
* cent, while the pound eued
tlB    to    W.7746.
}
87
38 tt
38
MH
83ti
82 ti
7H
Vk
7*4
•Ti
•
6
3H
•y.
«2H
61
MH
35
23 ti
2314
ISH
13
13H
ISti
15
l«ti
34 ti
22'4
2214
IS
15 ti
15 y.
8ti
*  Vk
6H
«H
10 ti
10
10 ti
8
8
nt
7%
8
8H
•Ti
8TI
11
10!i
10 H
lltl
10 H
10%
3
STt
3
:iti
31
31
13 H
IS'/.
isy.
18
HVi
Wti
Wti
23 It
33 ti
32 ti
20'i
28!i
28 li
8
211
3T4
14
12H
13T.
8Ti
6H
• H
4ti
4
4
IVi
>Ti
S
8ti
4
Stl
4
Exchange Rates and New
York Stock Market
Bearish Affect
By  JOHN   P.   BOIOHAN
Associated Press Market Editor
CHICAGO, Nov. 23—Under the
shadow of fresh liquidation of Deoember wheat contracts, all grain
value, suffered downturns today.
War debt developments, together
with new setbacks both In BrltUh
exchange rates and New York stock
market quotations, hM a contributing bearish effect. Buying power
wu restricted because of tomorrow
being a holiday, with all United
States gram markets closed.
Wheat finished unsettled at almoat
the day'a bottom, 54 to 111, net
lower, corn H to H down; oata ti
to ti off, and provisions unchanged
to 25 cents decline.
REND IS ONLY.
T SPOT
Advances in Heavy Trading on Otherwise
Dull List
VANCOUVIR, B. O. Nov. 33.—
(CP)—Reno furnished the bright
spot ln sh otherwise dull market
on the Vancouver stock exchange
today. The Issue was trade' heavUy
a total of 11,000 shares. Opening
firm at 56 the Issue sold steadily
until th, doe, which waa a half
higher.
Bralorne halved a twe point gain
to end the day at 17 for the only
other gain among the -llnea Issues.
Pioneer continued Ita decline of
th, previous eealon dropping 10
points to 4.50 after a firm opening
at 468. Premier reached a peak ot
81 during the day but closed unchanged at 58.
A. p. Consolidated waa firmer
among the olla advancing a half
to 7ti.
WINNIPEG GRAIN
WWNIPBO, Nov. 23.   (CP).-
market   quotations:
Open   High   Low
wheat-
hot.   —_   48H 48H
Deo.' —   48ii 48ti
May    —   60ti 50)i
81 tt 51 ti
46 >i
45 ti
48
50!i
July    _.
OATS-
Nov.    	
Deo.    _.._
May    	
July   ...._
BARLEY—
Nov _
D«,    	
May    	
July    ...._
FLAX—
Nov.    	
Deo.   	
May    .....
July    .....
RYI—
Nov	
Dec.    .....
Ma/    	
July      —       —       —
CASH   ORAM   CLOSE—
Wheat:   No.   1   hart   47tt:
nor 46ti:   No. 2  nor 42ti:
nor. 48li;  No. 4 nor. 42li;
38H:  Ho. 8 34ti;  feed 30tt;
48ti: No. 1 durum tv,',.
24
22 Ti
24 Ti
25!i
31'.4
33
70!',
75
75
28 ft
33 Ti
24 It
24%
25 ii
31 ti
70 il
75
75 ii
20%
33%
24
21H
24 ti
25
31
32%
OO'.i
7414
74 ti
38H
32%
«Vt       IH    «li
50%     48%     48
Ml
8%
28
16%
25 ii
114
5H
18
Wti
26
• lti     30%
8%
8
15%
33
14%
24%
11
37
7114
11%
4%
38%
18 H
37%
3%
lti
5%
25
17
35!,
32%
30%
3%
5
l«tl
32%
14%
23%
11
24%     24%
4%
14%
31%
14%
23%
67 H
11
4%
61%
11
4%
33%     33%
13%     13%
35%
3%
•Tt   an
35%
3%
s%
DOMINION LIVESTOCK
WINNIPIO, Nov. 31 (CP),—Receipts: 618 cattle; 180 calves; 3490
hogs;   850 sheep.
Cattle—Steers, UP to 1080 lbs.
(3.50 to 84.46; over 1060 lbs., »3.25
to 88.75; heifers 83.50 to 84.26;
fed calves |S to 86; cows, 8228 to
32.50; bulls IIM to 3176; stocker
and feeder steers, 32.25 to 3.75;
veal   calves   85  to  84. »
Hogs—Select bacon 81 per head
premium; butchera 81 Per head
disoount.
Lambs—83.50 to 84; sheep 11.50.
Close
48%
48%
48
50%
24%
33%
34%
-i
81
31%
32%
32%
•8%
60%
74%
76%
38 ti
28%
31%
34%
No.   1
No.   3
No.   5
track
L
In Most Cases Fairly Well
Absorbed; Volume Is
Over 10,000
MONTREAL, Nor. 23 (CP)—A wave
of eelllng that ln moet eaees wm
fairly weU absorbed swept across
the market on the Montreal stock
exchange today and resulted In 10
losses of s point or more and nine
fractional declines. Against this were
three small advances and a down
Issues   unchanged.
Transfers exceeded 10,000 shares
for the first time ln two weeks.
tn this class was Bra&lUan which
recovered a small loss to close unchanged at fl'/j. Shawlnlgan Power
closed higher, gaining % at 10%.
Steel of Canada picked up the ume
amount whHe Fraser companies sold
five cents higher at  30.
Canadian Pacific yielded Vs at
1514- International Nickel eased %
to 6V_. Consolidated Sxelters was off
three points at M.
Meat Prices on
Wholesale Mart
Fluctuate Some
Eggs Go Up Two Cents; Pick
Up Noted in the Feed
Business
Lamb cuts moved up a oent and
ham and bacon prlcea retreated a
eent on the wholesale market during
the paat week. While some llnea
marked time during the week there
was a fairly steed; oall for most
commodities.
The Christmas movement haa made
Itself noticeable and confectioneries,
nuts, cranberries, peels, nuts, raisins
and figs an moving ln small Quantities, Three cars of groceries and
two cars of sugar arrived for local
wholesalers and a shipment of
oranges la due today.
Egg prlcea have advanced two
cents a doeen with the supply of
fresh eggs waning. There Is stllj a
good supply of storage egg* to he
had.
A general tendency ls shown for a
fractional pickup ln flour and feed
market but no change ln prices
have occurred during the past week.
Shipments received during the week
Include a car of flour and one of
alfalfa with a number of cars waiting loading.
TORONTO STOCKS
Absna   „ ,	
Amo   LJiulm nn
AJa*  .....	
Amulet    ,
A  P   Consolidated
Base   Metals    	
Bldgood      „„,
Barry Hollinger ....
Big . Missouri
C and E Lands .....
Chemical   Research
Dome      „_
Dalhousie   '	
Eastcrest    	
Eldorado   ..... ^,
Falconbrldge   ,. 	
Home Oil ._  ,
Howey    . , .„—	
Hollingir  	
Hudson Bay   ...
International Nickel „.._	
I^ke  Shore    „  __	
Macassa       „....„
Manitoba Basin 	
Malartlo    „  „ 	
Mayland      .:	
Newbec    _ 	
Nipissing    . ,,, ,,     	
Noranda  	
MONTREAL STOCKS
Bank of Commerce	
Bank of Montreal 	
Bank of Nova Scotia
Royal    B»nk    	
270
146
33
9«
Abltlbl  power &  Paper  „
BeU    Telephone    	
Brazilian T L & Power ...
British   American   Oil         8^
Canada    Bronw         17
Oanadlan Oar & Foundry  ......    4%
Canadian Car & Foundry pfd   12 Vi
Canadian  Cement   _      4H
Canadian    Industrial    Alcohol     2 %
Cons Mining &  Smelting
Dominion   Bridge    	
Dominion   Textile    ^
Imperial   Tobacco
05
50
Ml
1
3
31
IV,
Ogilvie   Milling     125
Lake  of  the  Woods
Massey  Harris 	
Montreal   Power   ......
National   Breweries   „
National   Bteel   Car
Power   Corporation
Quebec   Power   _	
Shawlnlgan
So Canada Power 	
Steel   of   Canada   	
Wabasso  Cotton  	
Winnipeg Railway^ ,
Wlnlpeg   Railway   pfd
9'i
im
10
3 ft
8
APPLE PRICES
QUOTED, LONDON
LONDON, Nov. 83.—Private treaty
prloes, Jonsthons l"s 8d, 13s 6d.
Uses 8s lid. Delicious 13s 14d. All
according grade cozes 10s Oees 18s.
Extra fancy stop auction London
B. O. Jonafana ts lid. According
grade American Newtons fancy and
extra stop r ctlons Liverpool B. C.
Jonathan 10s Sd to 13s. American
Newtons 10s to 14s.
Premier Oold	
San Antonio 	
Sherrlt Oordon
Sudbury Basin
Slscoe     	
Tech   Hughes  	
Ventures    ...-...._	
Wright Hargreaves ....
Wlate   Ackerman   ....
.03
.03
.85
•UH
.07
.88
•01W
■06 %
.13
.85
. .75
. 13.05
, ^.18
. .06
. 1.35
. 1.18
.      .50
.55
. 5.40
. 4.00
. 9.35
. 31.10
. .Wi
. .01
. .04
. .18
. .05
. 1.13
. 30.00 •
. .59
. .85
. .40
.      .58
SO
. 3.30
. .87
. 3.03
.     .40
Russian Peasants Inspect Nev Airplane
-
t         r    " *SHp(    *Ste3
"v    X^-  <&Tb                                            Han                    \m
"%£?**$'  _^w^   St—alt        aP-fatffnHPwrwSflBsiaa 11  ^BM                   ^H
M
] ^^^^WS^^^'.m^PP^S^,' TLr*-^J fr
H      ^Wif'r   *?J^-    Wf _*i_^tA  5 \Wm\
The ancient mode of travel and ,(„„ be seen the ancient type of har-
transportatlon of old Russia l«L111UM),toh,tchtu,110n,t0.
linked with the most modern mode
ot modern Industrial C.8.8.R. ln the P'ohably even more ancient wagon.
ABOVE picture.   In the foreground j The crowd of peasants la Inspecting
ln awe-struck manner the newest
of the Soviet's fleet of aeroplanes,
said to be the world's largest land
plane.
METAL MARKETS
NEW  YORK,  Not.  33  —  Copper
quiet; electrolytic spot and future
8H   to   6H.
Tin easy; spot and nearby 33.19;
futur* 33 35.
Iron quiet, unchanged.
Lead steady, spot New Tork 3.00;
Bast St. Louis 340.
Zinc dull; last St. Louis spot
and  future 3.10.
Antimony 5.35.
At London:
Copper, standard, spot £31 15s; future £32; electrolytic, spot £?8 It;
future £37 5s.
Ttn,  spot  £153   15s;   future  £154.
Lead, spot £11 13s 81; luture £11
17s  6d.
Zinc, spot £15 3s ld; futun £15
17s 8d.
23 Stocks Decline
While Three Gain
Toronto Exchange Is Sickly;
18 Issues Unchanged at
the Close
TORONTO, Not. M (CP)-Th# Toronto stock exchange board looked
rather sick at the close today with
the record showing 34 stocks with
losses, 18 unchanged and only three
closing higher. Failure of the war
debt conference at the White House
was regarded a* a bearish factor by
Wall street and the Toronto board
followed the leid of the New York
market. Sales totalled Uttle more
than flood shares.
The   interlisted   shares   wers   all
lower at the close except Font "A"
which managed to close unohanged.
C. P. R. finished at 15*. off H.
Brazilian down ft at 9H. Consolidated Smelters at S5, off two points,
and Nickel at 9U, off Vs.
CALGARY LIVESTOCK
CALQART, Not. J8—Reoelpts: Cattle 125, calves 30. sheep 319, hogs
4S9.
Steen: Oood and choice $3-50 to
13: medium, $3.35 to $3.60; common,
$1.50 to $3.
Heifers: Oood and choloe, $3.50 to
$3.75; medium, $3 to $225; common,
$1.50 to $3.
Cows: Oood, $1.80 to $1.75; medium, $1.35 to $1.50; common, $1;
canners end cutters, $.50 to $.75.
Bulls: Oood, $1.50; common, $1
to   $1-33.
Veal calves: Oood and choloe, $$
to $3.76; common to medium, $3
to  $3.
NEW YORK LIST
CONTRACTS IN
IATE JRADWG
Moderate Wave of Selling:; Debt Settlement
Disturbing:
By JOHN L. COOLEY
Associated Press financial Writer
NBW YORK, Not. a*-atocks mm
spilled out of their rut bf a moderate wash of selling today. Bonds,
wbeat and ootton alao reacted, eo
the day before Thanksgiving observed Nor. 34 in the United States,
saw a general letdown In financial
marketa.
Wall street felt tbe debt situation
had been a cause of unset tleroent,
especially slnoe the ultimate solution seemed obscure. The market,
after more than three boub of dull-
nese, underment a oontractlon of
values In the late trading. Turnover
Increased to 1,201,515 shares, non
than  double   yesterday's.
Ralls tended to resist ths early
selling, their fairly steady tone being
attributed to the better loadings
statement Issued by ■ fsw carriers,
including New York Central.
STERLING OFF
TOANEWLOW
Canadian Dollar Ia Dom Vt
Cent ln Sympathy; Haa
Early Strength
mew YORK, nor. -- (cm-tmat
aterllnj touched t new low oa W.W
Tork foreign exctuuu. mu-ket, _o-
d.y, ckwlng two eent, lower at
W.35H (or cable.. Tlw Cuudlta
dollar ln .ymp.thy wltb .Urllnf
ended tho der Vi oent lower at 86^4
cent,  after  early ,trengtX
Tba pound', decline wm attributed chiefly to unjettlemen$ ot torn
foreign debt lituation.
VANCOUVER LIST
MINER
Big Mluourl
Bralorne  ..,	
cosrt Copper .... a
Oeorge Copper 	
Oeorgla  River	
Orandvlew  ;
Int C tf. . .
Kootenay Florence	
Lucky Jim	
National   silver   	
Noble  Five     	
Pend   OreUle   _„_	
Pioneer Oold 4
Porter   Idaho   „         ,
Premier    	
Reno Gold     ,
Ruth Hope 	
Silvercreit     	
Wellington     	
OILS
A p conaolldated _..
C and E Land,  _,
Dalhousie   	
Eastcieet     	
Freehold    	
Home   Oil    	
McDougall   Segur   Sx
Mayland    .	
Mercury	
McLeod
.11
.11
.40
.40
.03(4
.00 <i
.01'A
.0114
.03
.«0
.60
.04
.50
MV,
.oan
.01
Okalta  oom	
Royalite   	
Sterling   Paclflo
■02*
.0314
.17
.01
.03
.0314
.63
too
•0414
.82
M
.03
.02
.0114
.0714
.sa
.is
.OT
.0414
M
, .03
.IS
.08
31
.0i
8.00
.10
To     compel*     patriotism      with
Christianity la Uke oomparlng marg-
1 arlne  with  butter.—Lord   Maahead,
In England..
I
^j^^^.i'.w.m.—
CASH
IN WITH
WANT
AD
ADDITIONAL
INCOME From Things
that are only in YOUR WAY
If some of the thousands of readers of
the NELSON DAILY NEWS had the privilege of rummaging through your attic,
storeroom and closets you'd be surprised how many of them would be glad
to deal with you on the purchase of
things which you never realized had so
much actual and worthwhile re-sale
value. It's easy to find such buyers.
You can scour the entire city and environs for them by merely listing the
items in the WANT AD COLUMNS of the
Nelson Daily News
Want Ad Department
144 —0— Phone —0— 143
 DOLLS
Tht Mggwi itock tt ixm-k.
tt have ertrhad and at the
Lowe-t Prices.
Nana, Rather lord
Drag Co.
FERNIE BASKET
TEAMS VICTORS
Fernie bf s ecore of 'ji   to   18   It
wm   snybodys   game   until   th«   end.
Klmberley   intends   pia>tn<   reUr.i .
gamee at feme early In l>cember.
iirnT        ('Barged with )
ODD FELLOWS AND
SONS TOP CARPET
BOWLING LEAGUE
H. L. MILLER NAMED
. TRUSTEE, NAKUSP
DEVELOPMENT AREA
KAICCSP, t. 0. Hov. It— A apeclal
meeting of tbo debenture holders of
th. Nikusp development district
wa* bald at tbe government offloe
Tuesday evening. Tbe business ot
tb* evenlnc was to appoint a true-
tee to succeed tb* 1st* L. J. Edwards.  8. L. Miller  wa*  appointed.
Beat Kimberley Hoop Players
on Klmberley
Floor 	
                         - Odd Pe:iov:s and Bona of England
mum. t.  C.  Hot. 33.—rernle'e bowlers  sre  perched  on  the top ot
thrae   basket   ba3   teams   were   all *»   C"M'   bowling   roost   wltb   30
vlctorloue   over   Klmberley'e   teams P0""1  •«*   and   two   points  lower
at Xlmberley.                                   . lighting tor a top plaoe ls the Clan
In  th*   girls   gam*   between   rer- X=Leary    team.    Foresters    are    sll
nU and Klmberley high achool tbe I1011"*    b«lllnd   th«    l"dera.    Bght
1 score   ns   11   to  I   in   favour   of «am,»  »«•  -t- »  >»  pl>»«d.  two
| rernle. Ferule showed good defence *?>«•■ -h":- T °"-~a- tb. stand-
wort Florence Mangan for the Pern- ln» entirely.
, 1.  team  d:d  soms  star  fork. |    ■-- "landing Is u follows:
!    In   th.   blgb   achool   boya   game, WLD   Pet.
! Pernle got 37 points to Klmberley.  0M IWlow   «   "     >   M
seven. This waa a faat game. Kim-   B°M « England IS   II     I   30
berley failed In tbe accuracy of Its   CUn  McLesry _  13   13     I   38
shots. Pernle's comblnaUon gave re- *"•"*•  10   I*    1   H
suits. . • I 	
Tbs best gams eg tbs evening was
between the 150s, a senior Pernle
league team and tbe Klmberley Falconers. This resulted ln a win for
Only Pasteurized
Milk Is Safe Milk
Dr. Francli E. Froncttk, Health Commissioner, Buffalo, N. Y., says:—
"We regard the pasteurization of milk so important
to safeguard the public that an ordinance was adopted to make such a procedure Mandatory. While certified milk is permitted to be sold raw, nevertheless,
from our experience we are satisfied that not even
this quality may be considered free at all times from
dangerous contamination. This city several years
ago experienced several epidemics of scarlet fever,
diphtheria and typhoid fever, traced to raw milk sup.
plies. Since pasteurization of milk supplies in this
city has been generally practiced, no such outbreaks
of disease traceable to the milk supply have occurred.''
In speaking of Certified Milk, this is a milk that retails
for from 25 to 30 cents per quart, and is produced under very strict regulations and methods, and a medical commission is appointed to see that this milk
comes up to the required specifications. Even this
grade of milk is not considered safe until it is pasteurized.
Is Your Milk Supply Safe?
CURLEW CREAMERY
PALM DAIRIES, LTD.
Jet Cream Butter
AU Perfectly Pasteurized Products
MUk
■n
W O O D v - that's good
Yon build for permanency With W. W. Powell Lumber
Strong hardy wood that resists wear. Cut in a great
variety of sizes. At reasonable prices.
W. W* Powell Co., Ltd.
»■■"
"Th. Hem. of Good Lumber"
"'«        ...., FfttK?—'-"Street
COAL and WOOD
GALT LUMP—Per ton $11.00
GALT STOVE—Per ton ....    9.00
JEWEL LUMP—Per ton ... 11.00
McGillivray lump—Ton 11.00
AIX ALBEKIA COALS
CORBIN WASHED
«SK52SsR?iR     90°
CORBIN WASHED PEA—
Per ton    8.00
CORBIN WASHED
FURNACE—Per ton  10.50
ALL B. C COALS
Special Rates on Carload Lots
. Get our pricea on Dry Wood ln any length before
putting in your winter's supply.
Nelson Transfer Co., Ltd.
■ff .-".'■' Phone J5
Wood, Vallance Hardware
COMPANY, LIMITED
FOUR REASONS
FORWARDED FOR
UNIVERSITY LOSS
! WDfNJPBO, Not. 23 (CP)—Pour
reasona the Univenity of Manitoba
; investment funds ere short 11.000,-
j 000 were suggested to a board of in-
1 qulry today by Dr. W. A. Mclntyre.
j a member of the university land
board. These, he said, were penonal
dishonesty, duplication of offices,
failure to (in full state control of
the university which be described
as purely state Institution, and allowing church and state affairs to
become mixed.    .
CAL
TRAIL PIONEER
CROSSES DIVIDE
TRAIL, B. C, Not. J3—TraU.
ln the death ot Chartea Alexander
Milligan, has lost snother of Its
pioneer citizens and one whose name
hu been closely linked with the
city for the past 23 .{ears.
The death of Mr. MUllgan occurs! following a lengthy Illness.
Besides his wife he is sumved by a
daughter md three sons, Mrs. Eileen
Lowther of Trait; Arthur A. MUll-
gatn of Victoria; formerly mayor of
Trail; Fred of Winnipeg; and Oeorge
of Orand Forks.
On coming to Trail when this elty
was In Its Infancy, Mr. Milligan located In the area above Rosslind
avenue which has since been named
after him, Milligan hill.
Ke wss ohe of the original members of Trail Curling club and as*
slated ln the construction of tbe
city's first curling rink on the sits
of the present modern headquarters
of the club. He wis one of the club's
first skips snd always took a great
Interest ln the popular winter pastime.
The funeral will take plaoe Friday afternoon.
IFRED MORRISON
WINS CALIFORNIA
OPEN GOLF TITLE
Nine Under Par; Willie Cog-
gin One Stroke Behind;
Perelli Third
THEFT OF STOVE
Hermon KUoti, a transient who
is a aback in Rosemont. was ar-
tomtit by Provincial Constable J. O.
M. Lock, and brought before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel Wednesday cn a charge of theft of a
stove from the ruins of Oeorge
Nykychyan'* house, which was burned In the fill.
' Es was remandej  for eight days.
MOCK TRIAL IS
SCREAMJROCTER
Mrs. W. A. Ward Honored at
Birthday Party Given by
Her Friends
Ask Reduction in
Shipping Rates en
•   Autos, Re Yelstoke
RVVKLSTOKI. B.C.. Nor. 33.—The
Revelstoke board of trade has added
its support to a movement initiated
by the Cansdian National Parks association and supported by boards
of trade and automobile associations
across Canada to have the shipping
rate on automobiles reduced between Oolden and Revelstoke pend-
lng completion of the Big Bend
road, last link In ths transcanada
highway system. The present rate
of 127.60 plus passenger's fare loading and unloading charges Is de-
dared to be a severs drawback ln
Inducing motorists to travel through
Canadian National par^s to and
from ths Pacific coast.
TORES
ATYOONG
PEOPLE'S MEETING
Members of the Toung People's
of St. Paul's church and a number
of friends were entertained Tuesday
at the regular meeting by Rev.
George Kinney who showed a number of motion picture films.
Scenes of Kokanee glacier, hiking
parties to the glacier, and community scenes on the lake were
shown, pictures of the Toung People's
summer activities were Included,
PASADENA, Oallf., Not. 33.—(AP)
—Shooting one the finest series of
rounds ln competitive golf, Fred Morrison, sturdy Ague Callente, Mexico,
open champion, today won the California open title with a 72-hole card
of 275, nine under par.
Except for the last round, In which
he took a 72, one over perfect figures,
the tall, professional was a complete
master over the 6350-yard par 71
Altadena Oolf club courses. He shot
67's on successive days and then turned in a 09 on the moming round today.  First place money was (3000.
Only a stroke behind Morrison
came Willie Coggln of Ban Francisco
with a consistent 71-67-07-71 for 376
strokes and 6200. John Perelli, formerly of Feather River, Calif., but now
a resident of Beverly Hlls, shot 60-
e7-72-eri-277 to eam third place
money of 6150.
Washington Mine
to Ship to Trail
NORTHPORT, Wash., Not.. 23—
One of the largest mlnlfig flea's m
nortrhern Stevens county was made
Isst week when R. O. Relnersten
and associates of Everett Wash, purchased the united Treasure mine
from Capt. Newtcn Hartman. The
property ls located eleven miles
north-east of Boundary Wash, ani
ad]oln« the famous Frisco-Standard.
A substantial cash piyment was
made on the property and the new
owners are now repairing the road
and will keep a number cf men at
work at the trine all winter and tn
the spring lt Is expected to start a
large  program  of  development.
The sale was made by Iran
Knapp, a Colville rrlner, who will
have an Interest ln the mine with
the  Everett  stockholders.
The United Treasure ore ls silver-
lead. In the past the mine was a
shipper of high grade ore, and at
the time of the sale preparations
were being made to resume shipments by truck to the Trail smelter
About 612,000 worth of development work has been done on the
property.
Capt. Hartman, who sold the property, ls one of the best and favor-
; ably known old-timers of the North-
I port and Boundary mining districts.
I He made his home at the mine. He
j wm a sea captain in his younger
I days.
I 'This property hu every Indication
! of being a steady producer of high-
grade ore," sail Mr. Knapp, ln
speaking of tRe sale and added,
"the ore ean be easily and cheaply
hau>d to Trail."
PROCTER, B, C, Not. 28—The
dinning room of the Outlet hotel
was a gay scene on Friday evening
when Mrs. t. Clayton entertalnd at
a birthday party ln honor of Mrs.
W. A. Ward, Mrs. 8. MacLennan and
E. Clayton.
Dancing and community singing
were the order of the evening. A
most entertaining mock murder and
trial was held during the evening,
Mrs. J. Hurst acted ths part of the
victim In a most realistic manner.
The three detectives, H. Cilft, A.
MacKinnon and E. Brasch, eftfr
much cross examination of the suspects finally arrested E. Clayton on
the charge of murder. The trial
was held later, Capt. W. Halg-Smel-
lie, adjourned ln a woolen cushion
top to represent a wig, made a very
severe Judge. The part of prosecuting attorney was taken by O. W.
Tallies of Balfour, while the councU
for tne defence was acted by W.
Ogden' of Procter, Witnesses were
Mrs. E. Clayton, Miss J. Allan and
Mias O. Mulrhead.
After hearing the case the Jury
adjourned and after a few minutes
deliberation brought ln a verdict of
.guilty. The Judge, taking into consideration the age of the prisoner,
then sentenced him to be publloally
spanked wtth ths left shoe of the
Chief witness held In her right
hand.
This whole performance caused
much merriment among the onlookers.
At the supper hour a three tier
birthday cake msde Its appearnce
The three guests of honor were
surrounded by the guests of Joining
hands .and 'For They Are Jolly Qood
Fellows' waa suung.
Muslo for the dancing was pro-
Tided by E. Breach assisted by Mrs.
MacLennan and a local orcheetra.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Jerome of Nelson were guests of Mrs. Jeromes
sister, Mrs. J. Bichan over the
week-end.
E. Brasch and L. Smellie who
have been spending the past few
days at their lyxnes here returned
to  Hall'  Siding on Sunday.
Mrs. J. MacKinnon and children
have returned from spending the
past  five  months  at  Penticton.
MORE ABOUT
BOB CRESS
(CONTINUED  FBOM MOB  ONE)
Austin Carter of
Saskatoon to Run
Bay Store, Nelson
Austin Carter has been appointed
manager of the Neleon store of the
Hudson's Bay Co. Mr. Carter, who
has hsd considerable experience ln
merchandising, comes to Nelson from
Saskatoon. ■.
Announcement of the appointment
was made yesterday by H. E. Cooper,
supervisor of the Hudson's Bsy Co.
stores ln Nelson, Vernon. Kamloops
and Yorkton.
Beer Plebiscite
Discussed, Board
Trade, Creston
foross of neighboring towns were also
notified, and in a very ahort time
things wsre on a war basis, for the
capture of the missing desperado. As
the news spread around volunteers
were turning up, Including game officers and members of the Canadian
Legion.
When Cress left the Jail his outer clothing consisted of a brown
sweater with tranverse gray stripes
and dark pants, and he was hatless.
A hatless msn wearing % blue overcoat seen running along tbe alley
behind the Hume hotel about the
time of the escape, which was 4:80,
may bave been Cress. It Is thought,
Cress wlU not bs long obtaining a
change of clothing, probably also weapons.
On the theory that Cress Is likely
to steal a car If he can get one, the
authorities are watching all the highways.
The snow on the upper levels gives
favorable   condition  for   tracking,
should  Cress try  to make his way
through the bush.
.'OSS IBLE CONFEDERATES
To what extent Cress had or has
confederates is one of the questions
as yet unanswered. Obviously he did
not provide himself with tbe saw.
If confederates were waiting at a rendezvous for him, he would be quickly
furnished with both weapons and
car.
The women prisoners, when questioned, declared they did not see
Cress escaping, though he obviously
had to climb over the cell block.
As they had access to the yard, lt is
possible that none were ln sight of
him.
Day and night there hu been a
guard ln the JaU yard, and a guard
has also been locked in with the men.
Evidently Cress' escape was long
planned, and his preparations may
have covered quite a period, a minute
ot two being utilized at a time.
.IIAIU.K5  ACKUMH  UNE
Besides the Greenwood liquor stcrs
robbery, Cress faces various charges
ln Spokane, Including robbery of the
Spokane armory, and attempted murder of the armory caretaker.
It was possession of two United
States army automatic pistols ln his
car ln an accident at Eraser's Landing on October 20, that led to the
arrest of Cress, then going by tbe
name of King, and his woman companion, his fingerprints later establishing his Identity as a wanted man.
At lost accounts Wednesday night
Cress was still at liberty, but It Is
not believed he has much chance of
escape.    It la believed in provincial
MISS JESSIE ION
NAKUSP HOSTESS
J
The Coal
YOU NEED
Tlie coal you need for hei'-
lag your home Is a clean,
free-burning aad heat-producing  eotl,  that  Is,
MERCURY COAL
Real fuel economy ls found
In the use of Mercury Coal,
which always gives the
greatest heat and the feast
trouble. Order your supply
tcflf.T. Keep your bins filled
all the Urns.
RENWICK'S
TRANSFER
NAKUSP, B. C, Nov. 33—Mlss
Jessie Ion entertained.the members
of the Toung Ladlee' Sewing circle
Wednesday evening.
Mrs. M. La Rue left on Wednesday
for Vancouver, where she will be
the guest of her daughter, Mrs.
Stafford   Cox.
L. H. Pic wes of Winnipeg, who
has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
J. H. Stevenson, left Saturday for
Vancouver.
Hunting in the district Is good
this year. c. Bowes ahot two deer
up the Kuskanac creek this week,
R. La Rue also shot one on the
Hot   Springs.
The Women's Hospital auxiliary
met Tuesday afternoon at tbe home
of Mrs. W. Herrldge when final arrangements were made for the hospital ball. After the busineu routine
tea wu served by the hosteu assisted by Miss OUve Toung.
CLEAR WEATHER
STILL PREVAILS
CRESTON, B. C„ Nov. 29—Matters
of considerable Importance to both
village and district were up for consideration at the November meeting
of Cruton board of trade on Tuuday night.
F. V. Staples' application for membership wu favorably received.
Soxe uked-for repairs at the
bridge and road at Rykerte received
attention, acoording to one of the
members present.
Charlu Murrell, the board's representative on the power committu
that visited Victoria the latter part
of October in an effort to help Cruton Power <b Light company get
speedy action on their application
to develop Summit creek, reported
ln detail, and his report wu concurred ln by F. H. Jackson, who
represented the village oouncll.
A letter from a member unable to
attend called attention to the withdrawal of C.PJI. station service at
Cruton depot on Sundays. The
station Is now locked up from Saturday night until Monday morning;
not even comfortable watting room
accom'iitodatlon given, and the report
persists that the servicu of the
assistant at the depot ls to be
withdrawn. The secretary will write
the divisional superintendent, Mr.
Manson, st Nelson, and Mr. Cot
terell. uklng that the old order
of Sunday service be re-utabllshel
and that the assistant be not withdrawn.
BfcEK   PLEBISCITE
While at Victoria Messrs. Jackson
and   MurreU   followed   up   a   board
letter  of  October  to  the  chairman
of  the  liquor control  board  u  to
the taking of a beer parlor plebiscite at Cruton, on the very definite   _..,.„ _    .„ -c-   «.   - .
und.nt.ndln, that no licence womd   ?JC-»"«)M S'   ^^ T(«w
be Issued exoept to a new and fully
modern hotel, of which Cruton hu
some prospect. Mr. Jackson reported
that the chairman had advised tbem
that   a   plebiscite   on   such   terms
would   be   provided   at   Creaton   u
soon   u   the   petition   carrying   the
signature* of 35 per cent of the bona'                ,    .
fid* voter- tt rrmt.nn  wtrt, rt.ntt.t-_i       Come *° ■**■*»■ Barn dance, Sll
fide voters at Creston were received   Ter King road   mtor, Nov. 35. Old
st Victoria. Mr. Jackson wu nsmed 1 Time dances. 35 cents. i48U>
chairman of the plebiscite commit-
NEWS OF THE DAY
Two   room   steam   heated   suite.
Stirling hotel. (47y?>
GUESS FREE
SEE OUR WINDOW
How Many Buttons in the BajjT
A bag full of button troubles ... the kind
saved by Hatchway.   -
How many pieces of trouble ln the bag?.
IK Nearest Guess.
O WORTH OF HATCHWAY!
?9 Second.
O WORTH OP HATCHWAY!
Third.
WORTH OF HATCHWAY!
f 9 Third.
COME IN AND GUESS—
Win a "Winter Free
From Button Troubles"
1
HEATING COSTS
DOWN!
In order to contribute our share towards lowering
the costg of living during the winter months, we
have reduced the prices of our steam coals, FOR
CASH ONLY—to
$10 PER TON
BELLEVUE SUPER LUMP—This coal has proved
itself to be the ideal coal for hot air furnaces. It
gives more heat and lasts longer.
GREENHILL LUMP—Is unexcelled for steam or hot
water heating, quick coking, extra hot and low in
ash. ...1
THESE COALS ARE SOLD ONLY BY
Burns Coal & Cartage Co.
518 Ward St. PHONE 53 Next Capitol
police circle! thet be will be taken
only efter a battle.
WANTED  IN   U.S.    '
as «u~rt;cl
SPOKANE. Wuh., Not. S3 (AP).—'
Authorities here were advised today
that Robert creee, wanted here aa
a auapect In the robbery of the
National Guard armory, escaped
from the Nelson, B.C., provincial
JaU. He wu being 1»'1 In Canada
on a  charge ot robbery.
INTERMEDIATE
HOCKEY TO BE
FORMED EARLY
To Have Fine City Loop;vOut-
side Towns May Enter
Teams
BAZAAR   BRINGS   |2SS
muni, B. O., Not. M—The Nn
ed Church of Pernle held a ex
successful bana&r on Saturday Alx
»2G5 profit wu made by the Led
church organization from the i
YARDLEY   GIFT   SETS
'  .    SSo  to  lit
Let  oi  protect   your
needs for these popular ti
We will gladly hold any
If a small  deposit is
CITY DRUG CO.
Nelson's Dispensing Chemists
Intermediate hockey follower! are
. pluming   early   thia   year   so   that
moBneyB-H.^Kr.TpSn.',,Tt«5^!"»n .« Is available there wll! -
  j no unnecessary deity. A meeting haa
Our Fish and Chips, best ln town,   been   called   Ior   tonight   when   a
MOTOR FREIGHT
NELSON-TRAIL . Daily
leaving at 9:30 a.m.
NELSON-SALMO, Mon-
day, Wednesday and Friday—Leaving at 10 a.q
Elks' Taxi Transfer
and Freight Ltd.
PHONE 77
Orey Hound.
(4817)
Two furnished rooms and one
three-roomed suit* for rent in Annable  block. 14712)
Cameron's   bus   will   not  run  on
Wednesday's during the winter,
(4741)
Dunk   a   Conway.   Hata   reduced,
Christmas bunar at CathoLc pariah hall this afternoon and evening.
Supper 35 cents. (4810)
Get your tickets early for the Nelson Glee Club Concert Wed. Nov. 30
A real treat awaits you.
(4809)
league will be doped out and possible entrants received.
A city league win be composed of j
a Fairview team, the Wolves, Hume
Hotel, the Msple Le.ifs and possibly |
others.   This   la   Itself   will   Insure
good   hockey   for   this   winter.   The
organizers are not going to atop ac 1
that,   however,  but   are   attempting I
to Interest outside teams. SUverton
and Slocan Cit; were given splendid
receptions here last winter and will j
probably be seen again this year.
JONSTABLE TAKES
PATIENT TO CO AST I
www mi/////*
MEATRE
Showing 2, 7 and 9 p.m.
REVIVAL NIGHT
LAST SHOWING OF
te* with lull power to select th-j
other   members   of   the   committee.
With the prospect of another redistribution of th* seats In the British Columbia legislature, the redls-
trlbu tion oomml ttee of the board
was asked to make another effort to
hare the territory from Boswell easi
included ln the Cranbrook riding.
In the 1083 redistribution the whole
Creston riding wu merged with Neison.     *    ,    .
in oonnectlon wltb education week,
James Cherrington was named to
handle  the  matter.
Th* weather wu again dear
Wednesday, with no Indications of
a chanze. With the clearer conditions, there ls a larger range ln
the high and low temperatures.
Wednesday'* minimum wu 35 degrees, and the maximum 41 degreea.
TAHK  BRIEFS
TAHK. B. C, Nov. a3-^Th* Ladles
Bridge dub had Its weekly meeting
at the home of Mrs. Jack Hamilton
ca Wednesday. Mrs. K. Peterson got
the prize for high soon.
C. H. Cooper was a business visitor to Cranbrook Wednesday.
Mrs. Harrison arrived In town
Wednesday   from   Ctnai   Flats.
Mr., T.    F.    Williams    spent    the
w*;lt-«nd    ct    hone
Fiats.
WEIR ADVOCATES
HIGHER  QUALITY
OFBACONHOG
Music Lover'g conoert, Sunday
next, for welfare and Xmu cheer
watch for programme aaturday.
14807)
Provincial  Constable  J.  L.  Smith |
left for the coast Wednesday morn-
lug u escort with a patient  being ',
taken to Essondale for mental treatment.
DANCE—Help the boys by attending the Hume Hockey danoe
Friday night, November 35. Troubadours orchestra. 75c couple.  (4814)
Don't miss the Trinity Service
elub display of novelties &nd dainty
gifts ln the Wood, Vallance window. . (4813)
FUfflB—1 felt hat with th* purchase of a winter coat! A few coats
left to clear at cost. Moonay's Wear.
608 Baker St. (4808)
Intermediate hockey meeting at
City hall tonight, « o'clock. All enthusiasts welcome. Election or officer*. (4816)
St.   Andrews   night.   Wed.,   Nor.
30th.   Clan   McLeary,   Odd   Fellows
hall.   Whist   drive,   and   Old   Time
dances.  Cards 8  to  10. Dancing   10
w.«.»«*™«  «      ,.-. ,r,mm.    .. ^  t  o'clock. Rafreshment«. Admis-
TORONTO, Nov, 33 (CP)—^drocat-   Hon  50c. .    (4771)
MOVIE BRIEFS
MOVIE,  B.  C,  Nov.  33—Mr.  and 1
Mrs.    Jack   Parkins   and   sons   of
cranbrook   were  the  guests  of  Mr. ,
and Mrs. E. J. Sylvestre on Sunday
Mrs. B. Ballantyne Is a paUent tn I
the St. Eugene hospital at Cran- |
brook.
mi mom
OFJUJ1E13
am iftooit, uia ue
Pictures of the
JUNIOR OLYMPICS
Showing our local athletes in action ...
In* a hljber quality of btcon hot
fulttbl* to th* demm* of th. con-
•ucmt ln Orrat Brltim, Bon. Robert
Weir, Dominion nolulitcr of .ffrtcul-
tun ftddreised wv.nl hundred firm.
en >nd eiblblton >t th, royal winter fair luncheon today.
KNIGHTS   Or   PYTHIAS
'Military whist, (outfit. n:ti
prizes, 4. 50 lb. sacks f flour—Refreshments and dancing. Admiss'on
390. (4801)
MILITARY   WhlflT
"I do not M that It it m, place ' ^^Zlo.^.J.T^. "S
to ftdilse farmers to io Into the priies. Selsctlon of groceries. Admls-
bacon or not," the minister state]. I slon, 93c. A rood time—good re-
•The  fanner  Is  tbe  Individual  pro- I freshmente-«ood prises, (4776)
ducer   and   only   the   nun   on   the      Trinity service club will welcome
farm knows  whit he can best do.' you at their om Shoppe In Trtn:ty
f,o'n    caul n» «Jf thin, w hav, preyed 1. r^^.Z^of'iS''...Jr°-
1u,lltr- noon tea. (4812)
GLASSES-
J. A. C. Laughton, R. O.
OPTOMERIST AND OPTICIAN
SUITS SOS-IOe MEOICAL AftTS BUILOINO
and
I*0"' TAXI
^L^fc      H» tea of Mrncel
t_Wamv      Careful, Courteous
Drivers
Helton Translw Co„ Ltd.
OALLA(iHKK"« j
The rreat  Indian LVNO TONIC for I
all  affections  of  pulmonary  orcans
Smythe's Pharmacy
ruoNE l I
Shop with ns b* mall
A Revival of
Greta Garbo
lataHari'
t*tetet*t*tete***ett
.    TOMORROW and
SATURDAY
BRING 'EM
BACK AllVI
