 PamgmmmfBMjam^yji   i ji   liip»?>»<»|J^iii^i wiyy^i-iiiiiiiji|M,.i|jjWW^^^    -     ■ .
Ghristma$iG<^ Stocked'Jap*
Qrap&es Arrive
'•':.'■.'',■ ,    ■'';' Pagf Saytin :■'.'■.''
"Maple leafs and Blazers Open
League'WarsTonight
:'.''P«fs":N|nt,y..-
VOLUME 37
FIVE«ENT8 PER COPY
DALADIER BR
'■;''.'yv-    ■'a        ■ '.'•,-'.;   ■''*/-"'■''.■■'■•■'   "'..'--''     ■  r' ■
Jewish Swietcle Wave Follow^
Ncttfsf New tflietto Measures
LSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-
■ I1
-THURSDAY MC
'■.     NicTl
MORNINO, D*j*V»419M
jn«A,iir
NUMBER;
m*4
_3
LABOR STRIKE IN FRANCE;
GHOSTWAVEAND
SUNSPOT ENERGY
PLAYED PART IN
CRASH IS THEORY
Plenty   to   Support
Pi lot's   Report
on Reception
SCIENTISTS POINT
ftf "GHOST WAVE"
8AN FRANCISCO, Novi 30 (AP)
A radio "ghost wave" and a barrage of tunspot energy possibly
played tlnlater parti, scientists
tela tonight. In the loss of in airliner and five of Its seven occupants In th* Pacific yesterday
■morning.' '.',-.        * '■'•'•'> v.
Following up the report, of the
united, fir Line officials that
radio reception wai "too good,"
causing Veteran Pilot Charles B.
Stead to become confused over a
ttrange multiplicity of signals,
radio I engineers tald ther* was
Slenty of technical considerations
i support the unusual theory.
(Continued on Pagt Seven)
Inquiry ih Death     /
of Railroad Man
: CHILLIWACK, B. a, Nov. so
(CP). — Body of Joseph Jennys
was found today In hit blink on
the Canadian Rational Railways
work train spotted at Hope, B. C,
east of here. Cause of death was
not known,. and a coroner's inquiry Hat been-Jtuncbads,    '-■>..
I.ONDON, Nov. 30 (CP Cable)-
General Franco has admitted a mlt;
take in impounding two Greek shine
carrying wheat owned by the British government and will rejease
! them, Prime Minister Chamberlain
announced ih the house ot commons
" today." ;■'"'
iiiiililliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiniillllliiiiii
Piclieters. Stond by
as M-stal[Loaded
for Japan
NANABJO, "B. C. Nov. 80
(CP). -? David Wallace, Vancouver owner of 500 tont of
scrap metal which has been tied
up in a picketed storage yard
here for nearly two weeks, late
today began moving the' material to■'*■■ Vancbuver-bound aeow
after receiving a highway traffic licence from the British Co?
- lumbla public  works  depart-
'  bient
. Wallace, with four helpers
from Vancouver, began moving
the metal at 4 p.m. and an hour
later "had placed two loads on
the scow. When-loaded the scow
will he taken to Vancouver and
the metal traniterred to a '
freighter for shipment to Japan.
About 30 picketers who have
objected to ' the. iMpment
which they believed was to be
used by Japan "for war purposes," ttood by 'tt movement
of the metal began but did not
attempt to interfere.    '..,',   ■
iliillililillliilllililliiiiillilllllllliiiitlll
Glaser Convicted
NEW YORK, Nov; St) (At). -
German-born Erich Glaser, 28, a
former United'Statei rmy alr'cbrps
private, was convicted late today
— with a recomm^asUpu for clemency ,-;*- of Conspiracy to steal
American military secrets. The same
federal court Jijt-y. xonvwed two
other German spies last midnight
Without recommendation.; '•:
: Sentenetnj willbe' at 2 tup. TA-
dayty federal Judge John C. Ifnox.
Fishermen Saved
..Pttoe.iiiMmin, mho
aamji-Wtimi-
rocks pounded by
, Santa Cruz island,
were hauled to safety late today by
Breeches buoy, the United Statei
coast guard reported, .,'v ,\ .- .",. J
The men were members of the
crew, of fhe* $10fi00 puree' seiner
Danta l'Aligherl, wrecked on a reef
off the island. Six other memberi of
the. craw were retcued' by pfter
fishing boats. -    .  ■ " ,,   ,     .
MACAUUY ANNOUNCES WILL ACT
FOR CHRISTIANS0N, PRESS ASSAULT
CHARGE NAMING HOUSE AND CITY
•ABERHARTREPORTS
^ISFAGTORY
h\ ilSlTERVIEW
OTTAWA, Nov. 80 (CP)-^Pre-
.':  mier William Aberhart of Albcr-
.   tf had a "mott satisfactory" in-
: • tJWiew this" afternoon wth Hon.
Charles Dunning, minister of finance, on the' details of roll plant
' tot refunding of Alberta's $157,-
: mm debt. U    '
"I wat very aorry to find that
MT. Dunning is in ill health,"
Mr: Aberhart tald. He would not
indicate the form of assistance or
cooperation he had requested.
Mr. Aberhart desires to arrange
a refunding of the debt of hii
province," Mr. Dunning-iaid. "I
. told him the Dominion government would be pleased to tee any
province succeed in any constructive effort along,thlt line."
yCdostManPN
pf,Natural Caus?s
VANCOinraat, Nbv. 80 (CP)Ti
/Natural causes were responsible
for the death of H. Ingolfsand, Norwegian, who died in hospital yesterday, a month after: he wat taken
from hti downtown, rooming house
ln semi-conscious condition, Coroner
J. D. Whl thread laid today'following an autopsy. There will be no
Inquest
To Press Charges of
Bayonne Miher He
Thathe had been retained by Otto
Christianson, Bayonne miner who
told Nelton police commissioners ho
had been attackeii without provocation after being arrettedy&y Constable Richard House of the city police, and that he would press charges
of assault, naming boih Constable
House and the City of Nelson, was
announced Wednesday night by R.
D. Macaulay, barrister. ""
Members of the police commit-
slon and Constable Hpuso itated
Wedneiday night they had received
no official intimation that formal
charges would be brought, although
they understood Christianson had
said he would,bring charges.
The police-commission announced
Monday that Chrlstlanson's allegation! would be fully investigated,
end that he would be asked to appear before the commission in tne
course of that investigation.
The man faces a charge ot wilful
destruction of property, on which
he will be required to appear before William Brawn, police magistrate, upon hit release from hospital. He is under treatment for a dislocated shoulder and face bruises.
Christianson is charged with smashing a door at the rooming house operated by Mrs. Elsie Bingham at
617 Ward street, where he waa arrested.
GLOUCESTER FISHERMEN CONTEND
TREATY TO END THEIR SAILING DAYS
GLOUCESTER, Mail., Nov. SO
(AP) ■ — Gloucester fishermen,
abort on "book learning" but graduate! troitt the school of eleperiene*.
prepared tonight to fight enforcement of a treaty they contend will
and their sailing days and cripple
New England's fishing industry.
"You dont hlflpeti to know what
ert qt a ticket Christopher Colum-
had, do you?" asked Captain
Pine, who for,yean haa con-
.. =d the international fishermen's
trophy with Canada, pt he ttudled
Bie.termi of the international labor
treaty.      ••'.-,
The treaty calls for licenced captains, mates, engineers and aislst-
, ant engineers, tnd eight-hour working dayi on all vessels operating outside Inland waterways.  ::
Thii meant a minimum of 12 licenced men -would ba' required
aboard each vessel, more than mahy
carry as an entire crew, tad comparatively few fishing captaiqt and
engineers have! papers of any kind,
"ll they want to *IU the New
England fishery, this ought to do it,"
said Captain Pine.   ,,'-■*'
"The trade p«ct with Canada, lowering the duty on fish, waa bad
enough, but I don't aee how we can
continue to operate under the labor
treaty." .-       . ;,- > ■".-"'.
Recalling President Roosevelt's
visit to Gloucester on one ot hit
vacation cruises in a small schooner
Captain Pine tald;    >.   - >'■■    , ,
'■We made him an honorary member of the Matter Mariners' association that trip; Well, he couldn't
take such a cruise under the labor
treaty. Thera wouldn't be enough
room aboard the Amberjack II. with
12 licenced officer!."'       , -
DISCLOSURE OF
DEATH TOLL IS
FORBIDDEN AS
NEW LAWS MADE
, Imprisonment Ond
Fines  Set ■; fer   ;
\;       Viqtotjon   y y\
60,000 ESTIMATED
$EHTtJ5tAMM
By EDWIN SHANKE
•   Associated Presi Foreign Staff
BlRtlN, Ngv. 30 (AP)- A
wave of Jewish tulcldes was re"
ported by respontlble perioni today to have spread throughout
.  Germany at the Null decreed haw
"Ghetto" measures.
Rabbit worked long hourt eon?
ducting fifnerali. Thty and other
authoritative  sourcei wire for?
, bidden to disclose how many killed themselves or died suddenly
from causes attributed directly
to antl-Jewlsh actions, :
i Police In all parts of Germany
were empowered by a new order
to forbid Jews to appear In certain districts or leave honie at
certain tll-Nr',..
The official gazette printed tot
"Jewish curfew" iaeasure under
the* beading, "Police Order Regarding the Appearance of Jewi in Public." The regulation declared "the
proper pfrivMclal* "Jwlice departments" may forbid German Jewa
or Jewa without nationality to appear in definite districts or to leave
their homes at definite" times.
(Continued on Page Two)
. -..:'',"".'''7   ■   A^S'7 v ,-'
People Afraid tb
Stand on Own Feet
OrtAWA.-Niv. Wf (CP''—A tymp?
torn of the delirium that affects the
Wdrld 'today it that "people are
afraid to stand on their own feet,"
Lord Tweedtmuir. told the local
St. Andrew's society at Ita annual
banquet here tonight.       ''
"They seem to want to huddle together tor security, and to sell their
souls to a dictator or to a machine,"
He was sure the spirit of independence which dominated Scotsmen
was* a safeguard against, this in
Scotland. T • '
"But: there is another thing as
dangerous as this craving tor a
base security by surrendering freedom,'' said th*. governor -general.
"That is the modern craze for false
doctrlnei—what Ihsiargon otto-
day calls ideologies. These are
creedt which teem to be accepted'
with a passionate devotion, 8s if
they were new revelations, but
which, for the most part, are the
oldest of heresies, which were centuries agb exploded and discarded"
Ghostly Light IJ
Still Pottering
Prairie Farmers
ESTERHAZY, SatfcyNov, 80 (CP),
-Like .something from, the eejrie
iges of a mystery thriller, teem-
ily.fantatUc tales of a itakhfo,
flickering light, glowihg fitotouhly
frdrn the thSter of- Tabprt ceme;
tery, tonight continued to throw
tuperttitious fears into residents of
a rolling farming community. 17
miles northeast of here.
The light,;appearing apparently
from nowhere, moving Bghtoing-
fast and disappearing as quickly aa
it came, was. seen again last night
Ratldents', watched •the."., sinister
flicker; four ttoiea one night-last
week'and veteran residents claim
to have teen it many times in the
paatfouryeara.--     I",- ' ",
So rial It the quivering flare to
farmers ahd residents that patrols
of armed men nightly drive along
the cemetery road watching for ita
sign.   . ■ .   .
Thug Takes $116 t
F-rom Pensioner
Vs\NCOUVER. Nov. 80 (fcP) -
An armed bandit bound a nearly-
blind pensioner and nit companion
today, escaping with .$118, part of
which was proceeds from a monthly
pension Check..:,      _   ■>",-. -■'
Edward'Jarvis, 51, the pensioner,
returned from hit bank with the
money to find his friend, Wilfred
Duplin, 64, trussed up upder guard
of:the tong.
The gunman tied up ,
and fled with the $116.
''Mercy Trip" Baby
Condition is "Good"
VANCOUVER, Nov. 30 (CP).'-
Hospltal ittendanls tonight reported
the condition ot the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Cruik-
thank, brought here yetterday by
speedboat, private automobile and
ambulance from Britannia Beach,
B. Cb-good.'.-'.-.
The i infant, born In the Howe
Sound mining town Sunday, was
rushed 40 muat to hospital here
when tha suffered a hemorrhage.  -
larlous Hells for Happy Hermann
Just bubbling over with happinett, detpite the fact that he was
. obliged to dress in the plain brown shirt of the original Nazis, and to
leave hit beloved field marshal's baton at home, Field Marshal Hermann Goering,-" premier of Prussia, and No." i Nazi, gaily acknowl-
edgesthe enthusiastic hails Of lesser browHshirts during the celebration commemorating the Ill-fated "beer cellar putsch'"] of 1928,
when the hells that m«t revolting Najla were hail* of bullets that
killed 18, A, tniall boy, carried away by admiration for the.pJttmp-
tield marshal, crashed through storm troop lines to give the great
man,a real close?up hell and salute. ■'-..'■..
Two Hunters Lost
Near Greenwood,
Are Found Safe
Provincial police at Kelson were
notified Wednesday by Constable
,0. Enisley, stationed; at Greenwood,
that two huntert, Louit Luc«»»
and Joteph KUnotky, who were tost
any ill effeeta from being.'lost They
had lost their bearings in the woods
and whin found at 11:30 the next
morning, were heading north.
In his report, Constable Emsley
said that about 8:80 p.ni., November
24, Lucente's brother, Edward, had
reported toe two men had not returned, as they had promised when
they set out in the morning ot that
day. Owing to darkness, no search
was made that night, but Consta
ble Emsley got together a search
Ear$, with Ga»e Warden -H. Mc?
ean,  to start next morning.  At
8:00 a,m. the next day, the search
party split into three parts, and
searched the mountains cast of
Greenwood. The lost hunters were
found about 11:30.; near Wallace
creek, by Allan Cudworth and Edward Lucente, brother of one of the
lost men,-.:' V'-.. -. ' ■■ ■' ..
Constable Emsley, reported that
neither of the hunters, and only two
of the search party knew the distress signal used by woodsmen
when lost, He suggested that the
signal be printed on the back ot
all hunting permits and licences.
Rossland, Trail
Bakeries
,       Price of Bread
TRAIL, -'.B.]i O,' Nov. 30 ,A-' TM
price of bread in Trail and Rossland
will be reduced one cent a loaf,
from: 10 to. nine canti,,' l»glw>ln|
Thursday, nine bakeries announced
here today.   '■    ■ •',' : ,'*-:- •'    '."",
The reduction is being made due
to a lpWer price in flour. v '
i Bakers emphasize that while the
pricevwjll be reduceij, thalngwUr
eiitswill be unchan^d" : . ' ■    <
, £<>..   r' ' }'''    " i  I,,.
Canter BiH Gives
fower' to Borrow :
forRiadium Purchpse
LONDON, Nov." 30 (CP Cri)le) -r;
Under the government's cancer, bill
the ministry of health is empowered
to lend up to £500,000 ($2,330,000)
to the National Radium trust tor the
purchase ot radium and other radioactive substances: '•"'. -   '    .,
The trust already has arranged an
option tor a substantial purchase of
radium from Canada at a fixed
price' over the next five years,
iiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin
Police  Begjnnirtg ;tb
Belieye'flasher Is
Actual |*h0ntoiti
IjOTPON, Nov. SO (AP).—
Scotland Yard "detectives and
provincial police pondered tonight the possibility the phantom "slasher" who has terror-1
hied women of the north. counJ'
try may, after all, actually baa
/.Wtatom..:;." ,^ A-'-:7AaA:
man who jumped out of ths
dark with a razor last night,
confessed today she had lied,
and that her Injury was acci-
'   dental.       ,?'"   ■'„■.    .    ....
Police-recounting numerous
■^tt(p»l*-,VvhtcBapre«d to ftvir •
, other towns after starting at
Halifax in Yorkshire a week
ago—recalled that all wounds
Were superficial, most of them
on the arm, and many on the
■left/a-ln.   "-.■    z* 'y:      '"."',
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIM
Nabbed With Parcel
Taken From Cache
Near Medical Arts
■ Bernard Kellrone was arretted by
Sargeant Robert Harsbaw ofthe
city police Wednesday afternoon in
possession of a parcel containing b
leather jacket belonging; to William
Neilson, Nelson Maple Leaf hockey
player. He, Is booked to Appear in
police court thia njorriing'','■.■'
Police'aald that Con Cummins,
(who"first had the.-parcel,■ left it,
■with another pared, in front of a
store at the corner of the Medical
Arts building, and went to the post
office. A man passing the store told
Sergeant Harshaw, who was near,
that, ho had seen a man pick up
one of tho parcels and go down
Ward street in the direction of
Vernon. At that point, Cummins
returned for his parcels ahd found
that ono was missing. - , -
-, He accompanied Sergeant Harshaw to Vernon street, where toey
saw a man entering an apartment
house,: with a package under his
arm. Sergeant Harshaw halted the
man, and Cummins Identified the
parcel.-.:.,- .' ". -■■/  -V   -.-;'/,.- '■.
Shrub Provides    v
■.Work'for Mten
t»tlRTENAY, B.-C., Nov/80 (CPV
—Devil's club, a thorny shrub found
in the coast district of British Columbia, It providing, "employment
for six men in this Vancouver island, town.
A New York clinic has placed an
order for half a ton of roots from
the shrub, for use as a treatment for
diabetes. •■
A trial shipment of Devil's Club
roots, worth $600 per ton, was Sent
from hens to the clinic last July. ..
BRITISH HOUSEWIVES IN DITHER
OVER MORRISON'S BILL ON MILK
By J. F. SANDERSON
Canadian Pratt Staff Writer   -
LONDON, Noy.-'!80 (Oi?: Cable)
—A Britlth thlp may be bombed
in Spain ahd Britlth \ commercial
interests threatened ln China, and
Prima;Minister, Chamberlain may
fly away as tha fdremost traveling
salesman tor the world's peace—
bUt the biggest political question in
Great Britain today is whether
housewives should be permitted to
buy from their favorite milkman.
/Clergymen preach sermons about
it, the press , devotes columns of
space to it, members ot parliament
hold meotings and sign protests
about It, and associations and organizations pass resolutions about
It-' :.■■',,'
(Continued on Page Two.)   '
10Y«orv$10,000
Tfliie foif Leader
of Narcotics Ring
NEW YOHK, Is'ov,^80 (AP)-A
sobbing plea for mercy by YaSha
Katrenberg, 50, head of a $10,000,000
international narcotics smuggling
ting, was denied in federal court
today as Judge Henry W. Goddard
sentenced him to 10 years in prison
and a $10,000 fine. Katzenberg
pleaded guilty to a series of Indictments accusing him' of smuggling
narcotics, bribing customs guards
and-violating the tariff la'ws.
BANNED ARMY IS
FEARED ACTIVE;
MORE BOMBINGS
ON IRISH BORDER
Innocent Bus Drivers
v Deliver Dangerous
SuitcasesT-     y
THIRD MAN DIES
IK EXPLOSION
BELFAST, Nov. 30 (AP) -
Fein of a possible organized resurgence of the banned Irish Re-
fiubllcan army were relied tonight
n the wake of a aerlet of bomb
explosions along the' border between'northern Ireland-and Eire.
The fears were based chiefly on
disclosure the bombs, which had
wrecked tlx customs houses on the
northern Ireland tlde-of tho,bor-
der, were delivered by but along
tha 180-mlle frontier.
Bus driven from various points
Innocently handed In at the customs posts suitcases given to them
to deliver with Instructions they
would Ba 'ealled' for. The tult-
cases contained time bombs, most
of which Were'tet to go off about
midnight.
■  (Continued on. Page Seven)
Fred While Head.
Alar Labor Fed.
CALGARY-Nov. 30 (CP) '.-.ft**
J. White of Calgary today waa W-.
elected president of the Alberta
Federation of -Labor at the final
session of a three-day convention
here.." . .'■'.    ',■'  " '    "".;■''
. Carl E Berg, of Edmonton was
reappointed-secretary. ■ •
. Resolutions passed asked complete revision ox the minimum Wage
scale for' fenijile employeea. One
aecttori bf the telolutfon requested
a minimum salary of $100 a month
IB^Ldil -aJiMrhour day. '40-hoipj
week, for ffiepdants to •« -Albca-ta
JjUVlMftUm'tlUtlUstfCftsS.*"'''- ,**%*
Kstablisliment of a provincial corrective institution to deal with of-
fenders under 21 years of age, to
give vocational and moral training,
was also sought. A, ... '
' A' resolution, passed unanimously, requested the Trades and Labor
coligress of (Canada, to petition the
federal government, to cooperate
with other democratic governments
In providing safe refuge for political refugees from; dictatorship
states,.    •
PUBLICATIONS 'UNFAIR"'
• ; Three North American publications, "National Home Monthly," in
Canada, and "Time" and "Life1,, in
the United States, were placed on
the "Unfair" list because they were
printed by non-union shops.   -
Gov't, to Give
Captive Animals
: >;." . of B.C. a Break
VlCtotUA,, Nov. SO (CP)-WUd
animals in captivity are going to
get a brealt from the British Colum-
ia government,
E. E. Winch, Cooperative .Commonwealth Federation member for
Burnaby, has been Worried about
the bears in Vancouver's Stanley
park. Ho Introduced a bill which
would make it necessary to provide
larger and better quarters for the
animals. Today he withdrew the legislation at the suggestion of Attorney-General Wismer...
- The government will bring lh a
bill giving tbe provincial, game
commission power to deal with all
caged wild animals. He was not,
trying to take any credit from Mr.
Winch, the attorney-general said.
The' C.C.F. member nad dona a
"very tiieful work".
DEAD QUEBEC WOMAN '
,    0„ HAD A SON OF 80 YEAR8
JONQUIERE, Que., Nov. 30 (CP)
—Survived by more than 400 great
grandchildren- ahd by an 80-year-
old son,- Mrt. Alexandre Larouche,
07, is dead In this Sagucnay district
town." .- ■■.   ,i
MIXSON " m '^-a—
Victoria ',>. .~.u ...
Nanaimo ..... .—,
Van<ruver. -™„ u_-.*.
Kanuoops   .... .----'-—
Prince Gedrge „.
Estevan Point ...
Prince Rupert......
Laagara.   -.-..—
Atlin .......
Dawson, ¥.T.a.~~
Seattle - -
Ec*Uandy, ,A~A
San Francisco .....
.Relowffl.   ......™
Penticton    ....
Grand Forks..
K-Ho*   ..........
Crahbrook
Calgary ... .....
Edmonton
SwuVCurrent .
Moose Jaw .)....
Prince Albert
Saikatoon   ■
Qu'Appelle
-32
41
40
1
48
44
48
■",»V
10  i
.48
45
SO
32 -
52
30
32-
a-"
21
20
28
20
28
20:.
Max
51
52
48
44
50
64
48
38
20
56
56
60
42
60
14
Winnipeg .......... _..".,.-  10
Forecasts — Kootenay:
southeasterly winds, cloudy
mild with scattered showers
36
32
50
38
48
36
30
34
36
28
Fresh
and
Bles at 83
i} '.   dlR'JOHN AfRDy '
Former president of tho Canadian Bank of Commerce, Sir
John Aird -died suddenly at
Toronto Wednesday. See page
8 .for further details; ■"
TELFORD DROPS
STEEL CHARGES
■ VICTORIA Novi 30r (CP)..-r Dr.
3. Lyle Telford, Cooperative Com-
mottwealth- Federation member of
the British Columbia legislature, tonight Withdrew charge! he-had
made that the provincial govern?
ment apent $300,000 more than it
needed to. for steel used in building the Pattullo bridge over the
Fraser.-tlyar.   :■. .'   ■ ,;,. -
Asked by the public- accounts
committee to make his withdrawal
"absolute;" Dr. Telford said:   : "
"t- will just let this .one drop,
You have got me stopped now, but
I am not through With the bridge.
I will withdraw the charge, wth
respect to overpayment for steel
of $60 a ton. But I am not through,
don't worry." •,
V   STRANDED RESCUED . *
^UDSON^OntvNov. 30 (CP)
Airways and two passengers, stranded on the shores of Lac Seul since
Sunday when their airplane broke
through soft ice, were reacued^toi
day by ahotnerSfarrett plane. They
suffered no ill-eflecta. . ..",,.
WORKERS (Ui
WITH POUCE I
ENFORCED HOURS
COME TO FINISH
Lille :Crpvvds   Sebfli
.Guard to Disdrrri
Him
DALADIER StARll_
THREE-YEAR PLAN
PARIS, Nov. 30 (AP).- fM
mler Daladier broke French la*
bor's general strike today with tht
threat of armed force, but work*'
ers showed their temper by claHfl
Ing with police.Ih halt-a d«H
cities after enforced worktjB
hours were finished. , -
There were few dlsordtrt did
Ing the day at,the preipler turn
polled publlo service workert tl
stick to their Job! under mlllttry
orders. Labor taclty admitted It
had lost Itt fight with Daladier
In other Industries as well, ttat-
Ing "the uie of military fercfl
resulted In I "resumption o
work.",
But scuffles resulted after tt|
men were related from their JHH
Qreneble and Marsellli thtra Vfm
At Lille, Lyon, Nantaa, Dlam
encounteri between poljqe an
mobile guardt' en the one hah<
and -foiled atrlkera on tha etHtnij
. (Continued on, Page Two)
Doctor Testifies
,'■'; Gave Man Di
' VANCOUVER, Nov* »*<(!__.
A doctor took the witness ttaa«
in police court here today In deUH
of Oeorge Hunter who la charged
with possession ot narcotics.
Dr. T. a' Agnew testified that bf
had given Hunter the drug! si
though he realized tha mtn'i DM
vous condition might have MM
due partially to hia "addiction.""
"Your end of the law prevent*
your giving addicts drugs to tal
away with them," Magistrate X. ft
i-Nil'««^''-*•*A, ",• - a.* ■-: - ;aa
• "I only give such median* »
cases where nothing elte will.Titj
lteve the condition," Or. AgnW *■
plied; -The- tick fdeUng hi hj|
wai separate from his-drug addle*
tion."- .',""       ".    , ■-..-- ,-»jfl
PETER McDOUGALL SUFFERS FATAL
HEAD INJURIES IN FAIL IN SHAFT
AT WEST KOOTENAY POWER PLANT
lhq|uest;Opens Today;;
■Making Routine";
■, Lris'pectioh
Suffering severe head Injuries
In a fall Tn a. shaft at the No. S
plant ofthe Wttt Kootenay-Povwr
A Light Co. at South Slocan, Peter
McDougall died at 6 p.m. Wednesday In Kootenay Lake General
hospital.
-Mr. McDougall received his Injuries shortly after midnight Tuet-
day, when he fell from a tcaffold
. In the courte of a routine Inspection.of a concrete pit below one
of the hydro-electric units at No.
3 plant-He dropped about HZ feel
and apparently struck hit; head,
since his Injuries were confined
. to thMkull.
<t Dr. T, M. Auld, who Wat called to
South Slocan, attended him there,
and at Kootenay take General hit;
pital, and then from morning until
he died Dr. UX."Borden attended
him pr(ictle_Ily hourly. He never regained consciousness.-' ;, ,
Preparations were- under way
•Wednesday night for an inquest to
be opened this morning.. , .-
Mr. McDougall leaves hia wife at
South "Slocan. ,.    "  \ t     ■ ;
1000-Barrel Dally
Boost Turner Valley
CAIflARY, Nov. 80 (CPl-Tl*,
Alberta Gas Conservation board
which controls oil and gas produag
tion in Alberta tonight announcasl
an Increase of 1000 barrel!, eniffll
oil daily could be taken from to*.
Turner valley field T
"An order, issued tonight, brings
daily production to" 12,600 barrela,
compared with 11,800 barrela dafly»
since Oct 28, 14,500 barrela between Oct 20 and 28, and 22j0i»s
barrels between Sept _* and OcV
20 of this year,
In Commonwealth
"Free^ Unfettered'**
' BIsOBMFONTEIN, South Afrl«i
Nov. 30 (CP-Havas)—"We can^-jl
as we like if Britain Is Involved to
war," Prime Minister J. B. M. Hertzog said during a tour at his can*
stltuency here today. . •.■.--.Ml
. •Britain,'' he said,' "has taken trt
Into the commonwealth of nations,
aa free and unfettered a country aa;
herself, to do precisely as we wish.
We can make war or peace."
PROFIT-SHARING PROGRAMS SNARE
AND DELUSION SAYS C.1.0. LEADER
WASHINGTON, Noi 30 (AP)-
John L. Lewis, chairman of the Con-
greas^r Industrial Organiaatioiia,
called profit-sharing programs, a
"snare and a delusion" today when
he testified "before the senate committee studying the.'use and pos^
stble. extension of such systems ln
United States Industry.
Labor, I*wl» said, does not like
them because,they have been put
forward-too frequently as a substitute for genuine collective bargaining. The workingman, the witness added, wants hia pay each
Week without waiting for It, and
resents "paternallitte generosity." ~<
Beyond that the buaby-halred
union executive iaid:        '  ,       ■
"The perfect .system of profit-
sharing would 'not'ava(l the man
who is going to. be displaced next
month. Production it ooming back-
but we are not reemploying men ln
the'old ratio—and we won't"   ;
.Today, he continued, there are
still as many unemployed as In
W33, "after all .these year* of eK-
perimentatlpn." '■' , ...,: ,    ■
Ht added: "There la only one an-
awer, and that la to give the adult
Sopulatlon Willing to, w,0* a share
i the work remaining to be done;
. He said He believ.d that if a" corporation's earnings permitted it to
share Its profit with Its emnloyee»
there would bo "no difficulty under collective bargaining to make
the-necessary adjustments in thai
wagft structure."
-■—. "    ' ."     .    . !*.
#&$7
,1«»_
'" •-•"'-^^liiiiiiiftfi
 PPlf,IU.j|.^,NI^
PP!*1*PPf!l^^
»ltW6-
If Canada Shipments of
War Munitions lo Gen. Franco
Were in Violation Non-.nlervenl.on
LONDON, Nov. 80 <CP).-Lord
ANS
fcf
BBSS*    V.    m.~ BSMi/...^..*.
Canadian port* to government Spain
n_5e 'house ol lords -next Tues-
nounced ha would ask the
•nment whether the following
are tubatantlally correct apt},
.j, what steps have been taken
i prevent aimflar breaches bt non-
Jlwventlon agreement in the fu-
'.   I, Whether there, were shipped
I trom the port* ol Montreal and
Saint John during the months of
". April and May, 1938, cases container lni 34 Grumman airplanes,' avow-
j edly to the order of the goverri-
: ment ol Turkey, lh the freighters
'  Hada County and Brant County?
•   2. Whether, a further oonsign-
.   ment ot airplanes was disembarked by order of the Canadian gov-;
* eminent June 2, after it had been
;  shipped aboard the Hada County?'
-"  8. W06*6'tfte secretary ot state
■ at the United States has since had
an Inquiry made and established
f, wat, aa a matter of lact, the Turk-
j   ish government had made no such
.   purchases and that these airplanes
». were in lact purchased by an
t. agreement of the republican gov.
1   ernment of Spain and shipped to
Republican Spain?
!'•  4. Whether it is known to the
:   British government that exhibit
|   No. 15005 of the war exhibition
in  San  Sebastian,  in  insurgent
Spain, of captured foreign arm-
; '■ amenta contains a specimen of the
ir Crumman 'FFI" chaser all-metal
plane, that this plane shows clear-
m ar platei bearing the name of a
\    Canadian firm and other plates
p,- Bearing United States names?
ti  1 Whether Canada la a member
of the non-intervention commit-
^"■tae?
' fl. Whether the whole transac-
: tion is not a breach ot the order's-
in council referring to shipments
ot arms to Spain?      (
DOCUMENTS FORGED?
WASHINGTON, Nov. 80 <CP)-
The United States federal bureau
of Investigation hat been investigating since late last month an
alleged forgery ot documents under which 40 airplanes were believed ' shipped through Canada
■ to government Spain.      ■      •
il NOT OUT
VIC. MAYORALTY
.VICTORIA, Nov. 80 (CD-Walter Limey, tormer council member,
said today he will be an aldermanic candidate In Victoria's civic
election thlt month. Nine othen
have already signified intention of
running.
Simultaneously, Herbert Anscomb,
M, L. A., announced he aad no intention "at present" of entering the
mayoralty fight in which Mayor Andrew McGavin facet opposition
Alderman James Adam and John
Deai)." ';■- ,-.y
tiiiaw "iiAii^ivv*. ^iL^H^M^THustfiAY mobnino. pte. t; wis
C.P.R. Employees
Honor J. Coleman
m
MORE ABOUT
(Continued From Page One)   .
■ ^Violations may be punlthed by
tines up to 100 marks ($60) or imprisonment up to six weeks. It was
explained the order provided a "le-
gal basis" lor a decree forbidding
Jews to appear on the streets during eight hours on the day of na-
tional solidarity, Dee. 3, When Nail
leaders collect lor the winter re-
I lief fundi .•   ■_ "
DEATHS CLASSIFIED
f .'The sudden deaths ol both inert
. and women laU- into two classifi-)
.cations:, ':■..•.. ,
."Those who could not stand the
unaccustomed rigors of concentration cimpe and either died while
still contmcrt or shortly after their
release Irom the effects. Jewish
sources estimated up to. 60,000 Jews
[have been taken to concentration
2. Men  and women  who  died
fitter heart attacks resulting from
S;rief over the late of relatives and
riends or Irom strain and excitement ol repeated searches by police and the destruction ol their
Swoperty. .'••'■'"
'.Applicants for paasports who
3«ve German securities with which
they have been trying to jay their
there ol the $400,000,000 levy against
Jews so they could emigrate soon
fare being told by bank* they may
not sell their securities except by
special permit.
GOLD WANTED FIRST
It was explained the finance ministry wants Jewi to give up their
OTTAWA view
OWAWAslftov. SKCommenting
on those aspects ot Lord Phllll-
more's questions not covered by
the revenue minister's statement of
OcL 29, external affairs department
officials said Canada Is not.and
never was a member of the nonintervention committee, nor is the
United States a member.      '     .
Hon. Mr, Isley said Oct 29 that
applications were made by a Canadian manufacturer for permits to
export 84 airplanes to the Turkish
jvernment These permits were
-sued-by the department ot national revenue in due course, the department hlaving no discretion under the law to refute permits lor
export to Turkey,
Subsequently, upon request trom
the United States government tor
Information concerning these shipments, all the documents pertaining to the order and the shipments
were re-checked by the depart?
mental officials and found to be in
order and it wat verified that the
airplanes and parti had been loaded on the ships for export from Canada in accordance with the terms of
the permits and that the bills of
lading were properly drawn to
cover shipment to Turkey.
It would appear that the planes
reached Spain, a country shipments
to which are prohibited by order-
in-council. There is, however, no
evidence belore the department to
indicate the exporter acted in other
than good'falth In applying lor per-,
mits tor export to Turkey.
-   ■  - ■■'■■ '" I - '   - ,   t.t" '■".(.,	
gold,. Jewelry and art objects first,
financial sources believed the reason for this regulation was that gold
and jewelry can be converted readily .into foreign exchange whereas
German securities might find a less
ready market,
When Jews with to draw on their
bank account* they muat explain
Joseph A. Coleman was honored
at Nelson Tuesday night when the
employees of tho locomotive, ear,
yard and section departments oi the
Canadian Pacific railways presented
him with a well filled-wallet.
The occasion marked Mr. Colt-
man's departure for Winnipeg,
where he haa been transferred.
Walter Crowther made the presenta
HAtJILTON, Ont, Nov, 30 (CPV!
—Bocco Perri, formir "king of the
bootleggers," trapped la the back
scat ' of   an   automobile  tet -lire!
an explosion, said today he knew
no reason tor the latest of sev-
VA   IIU   H.UOUU   mi     iiav   susnavasv
eral attempts upon his life.
The Italian waa cut and bruised
whett the explosion of a bomb
wrecked his automobile late last
night. Two other persons, injured
seriously will recovers •        ..  . i
Social.. it
WARDNER
where the money is going
 _ atpenditure j, Consm-
they are refused the
money.
One Jew preparing to emigrate
was not permitted to draw enough
 ■-— -I. am.™* rwmm
money from his 8000-mark ($3200)
account to buy himself new clothes.
Jewish shopowners met difficulties
attempting to dispose ol their stock
at retail prices, hoping to get
enough to leave the country.
, Under a government decree they
hre permitted - technically to conduct their business until Jon. 1.
' A subsequent regulation prevents
the merchants frpm selling to the
public. Instead, they must let their
goods go in wholesale lots to government commissioners at sacrifice
"clbsing-out" prices fixed by the Nazi
•regime.   , '". .
Jewish passports have been declared invalid.
Mild Weather Brings
.04 Inch Rain Here
With mild weather prevailing, intermittent drizzles of- rain fell in
Nelson Wednesday, amounting to
.04 inch during the 24 hours ending
yesterday afternoon according to
Howard Jeffery, Nelson meteorological observer.'
At no time during the day did
the mercury go below freezing point
the extremes being 30 and 32 degrees. Snow hat now practically
entirely disappeared from the lower
levels of the city.
CLOSE UNIVERSITY
AFTER JEWS BEATEN
WARSAW, Nov. SO (AP)-War-
saw university was closed tonight
after anti-Semitic demonstrations In
which 11 Jewish students were beat-
pi.
- Tension has been high at the university since Monday, when Nationalist students tried to put into effect a "week without Jews."
WARIfNER, B. C, - Mr,- and Mrs.
G. Johnson were visitors to JaHray.
Mr. and Mrs. C-Sinclair and,son
Boy, and It. Thompion of Flagstone, were visitors to Mr. and Mrs.
B, Embree.
J. Martlno* wa* a visitor to Cranbrook. " ■
Mrs. A. Kievill and daughter,
Joyce, and Helen Moberg, were
visitors to Cranbrook.
G. Todhunter ol Elko waa in
town. :.
V. Lundbom motored to Skookum?
chuck. .   "i   _
G. Carlson was a visitor to Cranbrook.
Mr. and Mrs. L, Davis of Bull
River were visitors to Mr. and Mri
Kievill Wednesday. \ A-.'■■•■
Mill X Maltman of Bull River
was a Visitor here. • -
' Mr. and Mrs. H. Thompson visited Coal Creek.-   ' ■'■■ -.'.'
G. Mlggins, M. Rothwell, A. Jones
of Mayook, were visitort here.
B. Embree and G. Thompion ma?
tared to Lumberton Friday; Keith
Thompson accompanied them back,
and will visit here for a few days.
The Christmas tree. dance held
Friday was well patronized.- -
Whist prizes were won by ladles,
Mrs. H. Renstrom. Gents, Mac Rothwell. ...
B. Hill of Cranbrook wa* a visitor
here Friday.
Mr. ana -Mrs. H. Haney and
daughter, Beverley, were viaitors
here.
Mr. and Mrs. G. Todhunter ol
Elko, were visitors here Friday.
Mrs. A. Erickson and son* ol
Lumberton. are spending the winter here with Mr. and Mrs. N.' Renstrom.
,   H. Simpson of Cranbrook apent
fthe week-end here.     ... :' •;   -
W. Reid of Cranbrook ipent Sunday here.   J • ■ -,. '•.,.-.-
N. Moberg ol Skookumchuck
spent the week-end here.
T. Muir apent the week-end
here.">• ... v
-rill    W13UIII6   ll""   .H.?w-??<p-f
ment In the tervice of the company,
Mr. Coleman came to Nelaon from
Calgary last February and has been
acting as storekeeper for the Canadian Pacific railways since that
time. He leaves for Winnipeg on
Thursdty. mqrning.
MORE ABOUT
wUku ;
(Continued Prom Page Ona)  |
It started when W. S. Morrison,
mlniiter ol agriculture, introduced
in tbe house ot commons the government's milk bill, which among
other tblngt provide* Ior "ration?
olization" fn 10 areas. As an economy move the number of milkmen
serving an area would be cut down
to avoid needless duplication. Instead of 10 companies hiring men,
feeding horses, and maintaining
equipment one would be given a
monopoly in a whole neighborhood,
with, the money saved going to
farmers in higher prices for fluid
milk*/. ;'; "'™ r " ""' . -" £«
< Mr. Morrison was told trom score*
ol platforms and by thousands 01
letters that it was the constitutional
right of every, British housewife to
choose her own milkman. Not only
that but it wat the constitutional
right of every Briton to start a milk
route where and* wheh he. liked;
without getting permission from
some government board. '
There the matter rests tor the:
moment But no one would be surprised if Mr. Morrison, despite his
ingrained Scottish tenacity: gives
ifcto. public clamor., In, fact, unofficial report* were current tonight
the government had decided tp
abandon the bill.
istmas
13ress6s  Goats
Dress-tip Frocks. A
gala collection of new
frocks. Styles for every
figure. Frocks, with
shirring, tucks, pleats,
skaters' skirts. All brilliant with rich embroideries. Glowing
colors. Sizes 14 to 44.
Luxuriously furfed, If
you've Waited, here are
the supervalues of the
season. All wool cloths.
Tweeds, fleeces, bou-
cles. AH.wirmly interlined. Two season linings. Creep, wine, blue,
black. Sizes .14 to 44.
Formerly   to  $19.95.
Special
$6.95   $12.95
Hosiery      Hats
LOST HIS BANKROLL
TO HIS OWN LOADED
DICE IN CRAP CAME
TUCSON, Arlt, Nev, 30 (API-
Harry Srlckey, 23, Negro, denied
In court he burglarized tho home
of a. friend, at. charged. He testified he' wat Invited to a crap
game and hit holt "cleaned" him
of all—25 cents—with loaded,
dice. ■ "•'•■-■•,   i
"How do you knew they were
loaded?" he was asked.
"Beeauit I ook thept here," he
replied. ■ ■ ,-
BUE ftlVER
BULL Rltrip-B. <*-Mr*. C. Dll-i
Ion add ton Pete, Bab Charles, Oscar Durvol, Miss I. Maltman, Mn.
J. Flodin and son Willie motored,
to Watdner-Friday. T •
Arvid" Damstrom ot Jaffray was
the guest of Mr. Costanzo for tile
Week-end.    *
Mr. and Mrs.' J. Mader and family were guests at C. Costanzo and
Mrs. M. Costanzo' Sunday.   ,:     ;.
Mr. Oral and son Warner motored to Lethbridge, Alta., Satur-
■ fiance and whist drive were hild
at the achool hall Saturday. Ladies'
flrat and second prizes were won
by Mrs: Garbutt and Mrs. Savories
Mep'i first and sevond prizes were
won by J. X Brown ahd Alex Pierce.
-Mrs. M. D. Costanzo left for Calgary to visit her mother, Mrs. P,
W. Duke for two week*.
I
I
I
II
Panties. Waffle knit
snuggies. Knee length-or
Short leg. White or flesh.
Small, medium,      OCm
large. '■-*vy
Vests, waffle knit snug-,
gles. Small, med-   OC-
ium, large. ..... Wv
Pure thread silk. Colors
in tones of tan or greys.
Full s^ioired slipper
heels. Chiffon, senrii-stjr-
vice. Sizes 8 Vi to
lO'/j. Special
2 pairs ....... t*.iO
57c
Our complete stock of
fall and winter hats, reduced, A good -selection
of styles and colors. Reg-
&_,":*'..,$1.00
Regular to (PO QC
$4.95. Social -•**•*'«',
All wool gloves. Novely
knit.  Contrasting trims.
iNaw novel sryteyCoJCiB,';
green," black,' wirl(£' redr
etc. All sizes.      *&., ,,„"
!f0OTWEAR
dvt^sliioes
Min I. Maltman waa the guest
of.Mr.and Mrs. Bower* Monday,
A. Damstrom -left for his home
in Jaffray Tuesday.
Miss Emma Costanzo was a Wardner visitor Tuetday.'
W. Hitter 'of Wardner wa* a Visitor here Wednesday.  "'•-.".-'
Miss I. Maltman Wtt a visitor to
Wardner Wednesday.
TRAU* S0CIA1,
CIALS
:'.\   • f-i f       ;'■/„--
Vejvet fur trimmed. First
quality only. Brown or black.
Lowest price ih our history.
Siws'j to 8.   .
Moccasins
Indian Moccasins. Wool lining. Fur
trimmed; Beaded vamp. Brown, blue
or wine. Sizes 3 to 8. Special
$2.45       $1^00
By MRS. a S. ALLEN
Distilled, Blinded and Bottled,
in Scotland
:"■ 2tifYim%t2S  ^-
I Thll advertisement la not published
let displayed by the Liquor Control
f Board or by the Oovernment of
t.  ,        British Columbia.-
SALT LUMP
COAL
Williams Transfer
813 Ward 8t Phone 160
Guide for Travellers
KltaSON'S LEADING HOTELS
I..Nelson, B.C
Q-OROl B-'NWEtL. Proprietor.
SAMPtpOOMS ;:   EXCELLENT. DINING ROOM
• mmm*m***eA**Ak*.A»mem-t-*mpmt*M*i^:*:'' <*«^wwJwn»*^w^.
European Plan, $ 1.50 Up
TRAIL, B.C., Nov. SO-On her
18th birthday, Miss Elizabeth Mclvor "was the guest ot honor at a
gay party recently, wheh her par-
tents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Mclvor, Oak
Street entertained. Games and music
supplied the evening'a entertainment, Frank Amoroso and George
Swanson, both of South Slocan,
contributing songs and instrumental
selections, also supplying the music
tor dancing. At midnight a delicious
supper was terved A lovely birthday cake, topped with a spray of
rosebuds and lighted by tiny tan-
dies, centered the table, which waa
effectively decorated with chryi-
-nthemums and lighted pink tapers.
Invited Ruestij included Mr. ond
Mrs. George Dimock, Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie McLean, Mr. and Mr*. Ken
Haywood, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Peterson, Mr. and.Mrs. Kohler, Mr, and
Mn, Letoria of Paterson, Mr. and
Mrs. It. E. Samuelson of Rossland,
Mrs. De Ballnhard, Mrs. *f. Paterson, Mrs. James De Ballnhard, Mrs.
C. Jones, Miss Lorraine Thorndale,
Miss Josephine Pcrrin, Miss Audrey
Jones, Miss Margaret Mclvor, William Finley, Charles De Ballnhard,
William Pash, Arthur Defoe, Mr.
Amorso, Nick Winnlchuk, ■ John
Richard and George Gibson, .Allan
Sutherland, Jack and William Jones,
Basil Langille and Mr. Swanson.
A quiet wedding was solemnized
In Colville, Wash., Monday afternoon when Miss Velma J, Davidson
ol Trail became Hie bride of Harry
G. McGregor, also of this city. Rev.
Chester C, Blair officiated. Mr. and
Mrs. David I.. Shaw of Rossland
, HIJW-*."^ J&Nulty, J. TUriier,
Vancouver; A. W. Man will, W. J.
! Kidman,! Crawford Bay: A. Rohk-
jaer, F. Perry, Calgary; J. H. Lewis,
R. Brough, Medicine Hat; J. S
Shorn, Edmdnton; G. Kesselman
Winnipeg; J. B. White, J. J, Stanford, Spokane. '
VANCOU VER; B.C., HOTEL?
Lucky DrawNos~1462,1633,2621,2284/lill
~"        * "  ~ -r_-   ■^^a_^«^_l__.a^_-___M__-_^«___a_a__M_a.l__^ia__»
were the only attendants. Mr. and
Mrs. McGregor left for a honeymoon'trip to BridcsVille and Spokane, and on their-return will reside in' Trail.   .
Mitt Eva Horwell, ot the teaching staff of Eaat Trail achool, left
Sunday morning for licr home in
Agassiz, haying received word of the
sudden pasting on Saturday evening ol her lather, Albert Horwell.
Mr. end Mra. E. Fitzpatrick, Dock?
erill atreet, have aa their guest
the latter's mother, Mrs. W. A.
Hufty of Nelaon. -
James Vipond left Wednesday for
Grand Forks, where he will tpend
two weekt,    .'■:.■..': j
James Logan, who has spent the
past week here the house guest of.
Mr. and Mre.' H. P. Cann, has returned to hia home in Cranbrook.
Mrs, W. B, Williamson, Annable,
was at home to the Ladies "Service
club of Knox United church Monday evening. A social period was
enjoyed' at the conclusion of business, .during which the hostess served dainty refreshments. Mrs. C.
E, Fenton and Mrs. Norman Mitchell assisted in serving. Mrs. James
Downing, Nelaon avenue, invited the
club to hold its meeting next week
at her home.
PHONE 73
.    "VOUR VANCOUVER  WW    Newly Renovated Throuah-
■%-._-___--_:._.  U___._*I out-  Phones • and  Elevator,
uuiieriii notei a. paterson, i^ ot
W Seymour St., Vancouver; B.Q,   Colauian, Alta.. Proprietor .
SPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS
When Jn SPOKANI iToti Will Enjoy Stayinj at Hie
' R-"• HotelVOLNEY  C,M0",,
Jsvtnut
Ptulten Bldg.
_...m   .ssisnissl  i_altt_T_
HALLIDAY
HOTEt
8PRAOUB * STEVENS
SPOKANE, Woih*
Ctntrally l-6e«ted y
Oibpotite City Ramp Garai*
Under New,
Management
REASONABLE  RATES
LADIES'WEAR
FQQTWESft
GHM^'S^EAR ':M
..    '..:   '■•"'-:  :'7-:'y7: ,_
BURNS BLQCK
Ul SSCS   lliuvin:., ...in. uv^ut ..urn,.,,.,
left for her home in Vancouver
Wednesday'. Mr*. Rankine accompanied her daughter as far as Cat-
llegar. *'■>.     ■ ".   :•■.'■:,■
Mr. and Mr*. F. Lloyd Hallam,
Schofield 'Road, have had at their
guest for the past month Miss Lucy
Emerson, who left Wednesday tor
her,home in Vancouver.-     ■
Mils M. E. (Tillic) Hoehn has returned to her home here after
spending the past two weeks visiting relatives and friends at Valley
City, N.D.   . '-,-'.
HOTEL
SPOKANE
Specltlliina
In Genuine
CHINESE FOOD
-Is, It. Hasats .1 Sp.ks_.-
F, i!>. .arm, tram' tha
Nwlktns, U.lo. P.,
SB* : As,t..l»t.furhw.
Pm.lt   mn.   Nvtt Cats.
"  Ratet frem $1.60.
MORE ABOUT
FRENCH STRIKE
(Continued From Page °ne)
Guards fired into the air at Lille
to break up a group ot several
hundred strikers who besieged them
in a cafe. Lille crowds seized one
bf the mobile guarda, tore oft hit
helmet and took away hia carbine,
his cartridge belt and hit automatic
pistol. Eleven other guards who
were patrolling with him called reinforcements by firing into thi
air.
in another part ot Lille several
hundred strikers overturned.: a
brewery truck and lought With mobile guards until they were dispersed.
At Marseille 10 persons were arrested for attacking police.-
Lyon c.owds clashed with police
outside a metal factory, and at
Nantes mobile guards and gendarmes were-' attaqked by refinery
workers. .•;■'..
. At Dieppe a police Inspector wat
Injured by dockworkers. Eleven
workers at Grenoble were arrested
for "violence against the police."
Organized labor ol France had
sought to tie up, the country for
one day in protest against the Daladier -government's economic program, ft waa the' first big challenge
to the Daladier regime.
DALADIER MOVES
Tonight Daladier went ahead by
ordering for France a three-yetr
•tite of "economic mobilization,"
ahd turned to a campaign for par-
- Ilamentatf approval ot hit decreet Imposing,new taxw and suspending the 40-hour week — LI-
bor'i chief target In the general
itrlke call.
"Economic mobilization" was decreed ln the "national Interest," the
government said,in explanation ot
its 1939 budget demands. The full
-'•■ "' — ■**- wai
made public today,
"During tha whole (three-year)
plan," the note laid, "the French
must understand they are ln a state
of economic .mobilization."
Daladier broadcast his thanks to
worker* tonight tor disregarding the
general strike order.
He said Nov. 3? would remain "an
historic date" in French history because it wti marked by a renewal
ot "respect for law-and respect tor
order" throughout the nation.
He declared the general strike
order had met "total defeat" and
emphasized his government would
continue ita efforts to improve the
national position domestically as
Well as internationally.
STRIKE CRUMPLES
The 24-hour itrike call was met
head-on by Daladier. Within a'few
hours the,'movement bad crumpled
and there wete only isolated par-
tlal strikes ih some private industries, dock workers' strikes In some
I ports and1 a few street car strikes.
| Thousand* of public service workers were requisitioned under their
military service obligations to continue at their appointed posts. Mobile guarda, police and in many
cases army units supervised industry and services. Few requisitioned
workers chose to risk tha drastic
military punishment' for disobedi
ence, ■"'   *.  ■" ■' '"■-.'
Leon Joithnux, leader of the Gen
eral Confederation. bf '• Labor, issued an implied concession of defeat. Parliamentary supporters of
Daladier called.'it :«i.labor liaico
and a triumir'n'tor the nrenUer. ;
_ fH» - QtouSat' C**ttfewio|i of
Lebpr. jr.CptiMttmii' et 5,
»,-'h,dV.iiai-on',-borr4.J5o:-
had bferi'Mda for *pl attfvjefe.;■
.The proUst was directed especially at Daladler's suspension of the
40-hour week by one of the decree lawt issued by the goveromaht
under; bafpmentaiy authority fo
restore Franc, to financial and economic " equilibrium".    '   "•   T7",
ROSS SPUR
ROSS SPUR, & C, - Mr*. 3.
McColm has returned from visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. F. Doerk-
m,:-at Fruitvale,
Mr. and Mra. A. Beetstra and family of Trail were vlsitora at Mr.
and Mrs. T. Stavast, -.
L. A. Wood hs returned Iran, a
visit to Frultvile.    ~
H. Stavast waa a visitor to Park
Sidlhg.      '■;:•'."_..
X Meachem ot Trail wa* a visitor
of J. McColm's.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Heimstra were
business visitors to Trail.   >•■".■
Mill Elizabeth Faultner was a
recent viiltor to Fruitvale.   '
T. Barkley ot Nelson is visiting
at Boa* Spur.  "        '■■''-.■
A Stavast wa* a visitor to Trail
H. Faultner of Park Siding wa* a
Ross Spur visitor,
D. Thain of Trail waa a visitor
ol J. McColm1*.
A. Beetstra bl Trail was a viiltor
ol 3. McColm'*.  ,
CLAIMS KINGSFORD-SMITH
CRASHED   BURMA   COAST
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. SO <AP).
—Evidence CifbL Charles Kingsford-
Smlth crashed to, hi* death on the
island of Aye off the-Burma coast
while flying from. London to Sidney, Australia, two years ago, was
brought hire>e«terday by XW «
n n _,»h _ rl._,l««-AL
Stamge, radio o
yious flight W
Prandsco to A
..ator, on a
Smith Irom,
ua.
IR1*"^'"^
    iner -
ig rie'r'e from Sidney,
'hen ha
tuamm,
tyWx
ot  the
JJsWffiTbiSffiar
lou* Ultt.
Stanage laid Jack Hodden a former co-pilot of Kingsford-Smlth had
led a searching party oil the island
of Aye which had .ound sheared
off trees, wreckage, ol ah airplane
Identified as Smith's and Indications that the plane hit an uncharted
cliff and had plunged through tree*
-?-j|—-■     .
Castlegar Ferry
to Begin Morning
Operation at Sin
Announcement that the Castleg
leny would- operate trom 8 a.m., 1..
stead of 7 a.m., to midnight, be- ,,
ginning this morning, was made
Wednesday-by the department of
public work*.
' It had been previously announced
that 24-hour service would end at
midnight Wednesday, and that until next (print ferry hours would'
be 7 n,m. to midnight.    -
The new schedule, on which tot
ferry begins to operate at 8 a.mi
will assist Robson men working at
Trail ahd commuting to work each
day. ■::'.-• ■   - ■■
VANCOUVER MEN
' MISSING IN SPAIN
TORONTO, Nov. 30 (CPI-Whert-i*; ■
abouta and tafety of seven Canadian! "somewhere ln Spain" created
concern today for their relative* in
i Canada and the friends ot the Mac- '.
kenzle Papineau Battalion associated ah organization that has aided
Canadians fighting tor the Spanish
Loyalist forces.
Beatrice Colic, secretary of the';
association, said today name* M
Canadian* known to have been captured by the Insurgents have not
appeared on the lists of name* of
imprisoned Canadians. They are ,
Isaac Mattson, • Vancouver; Percy
M. James, Vancouver; John W.'
CrOll, Regina; Walter Sidney and
Paul Burns, whose home townt are
not known; Junes Black, Toronto
and Nelll Madsen, Vancouver.
LEADS DOMINION
SAINT JOHN, N. B,;(CP). -
Saint John High School rifle t-
hns won the Dominion champt
ship for small hore junior comu.
Mion..Coached.by Captain J. Neal.
Dow, a Bisley shot, the team scored
1492 out ot a "possible 1500 — a new
 PRiisvii.iq 9 .iimimwtf.rhw«jhjwp!ii»i ■ jiuii Mil. J lupmiw w- U< jump?
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C^THURSOAY MORNINQ. DEC. 1. U88 < .V  ' : ,	
Passchendaele in
of 111th Barrage
Mimic  Bombordment
Is Laid Down Using
.22 Bullets
f     With Passchendaele in miniature
I   —complete to machine gun -nests,
. enemy batteries, balloons and so on
.—providing a multitude ot targets,
I   the lllth Battery, R. C. A., on Tues-
I day night laid down ah artillery
'   barrage in a realistic enactment pf
actual field jconditions.        "...
"'.     The scene was laid in  the armory,   with   the   miniature   landscape at one-end of the drill hall,
and the two 18-nountes cfthe lllth
were fitted to fire .^-calibre jhells.
i at.the opposite end. The tog guns
Completely, screened irom. their target, the gun, .crews- Were directed
from an observation; post, with: a,
field  telephone . ln ;Us'e' to •relay'
.orders. ..,'' , . ,.
Tiny houses and churches, paper
ballons filled... with firecracker
bombs, "pill boxes" made of matches,
more firecrackers for ammunition
dumps, and flashing electric light
bulbs representing the firing of
enemy batteries■-? "Passchendaele"
as viewed through field glasses was
a most, realistic picture..' It represented the famous battle field toward the end.of the drive centering
ahout it. " ', ;-.,'. :■-'/•
.The "barrage" rtsilted In the destruction of three ballbons, blocked
a-railway, destroyed ai church spire.
used by the enemy as an observation post, blew up seven houses, and
pUt an enemy battery and a machine
- gun nest outof action. '
■ * The enemy observation post was
• destroyed on the second shot directed at It    .
'.DARWIN, Australia (CI*) --Traces
.nave been found near hare of a
migratory people from-Bgypt 2000
JWs at*o whera.parents WUed their
wBbring.and gradually, extinguish-
edtherace. : .,■. , , .-
UNDERWOOD
TYPEWRITERS
Sundstrand Adding Machines
*     PFFI«;iui»PLIES
Underwood. Elliott Fisher Ltd.
, . MS.Ward St, Phona, 9«*
Trail Health Officer
Tells Gyro Club About
Health in Community
TRAIL. X 0, Nov. S0^-Dr. N.
D. C. MacKinnon, city medical
health oficer, guest speaker at tha
Gyre club supper meeting ln the.
Crown Point hotel pain, room Tuesday, gave an enlightening address
oh the health and welfare df a community.
It jyes reported "that the New
Year's dance plans were progress?'
ing favbrably. Doug Smith and
"Curly" Wheatley were guests, •
G^v Creek Area
CRESTON, B. ■<?., - Public school
Inspector J. E. Brown of Cranbrook,
was a visitor at Creston, Thursday,
returning from Gray Creek, where
he has Completed arrangements for
the teaching ht seven or eight pupils within the boundaries of the
recently organized LaFrance Creek
school district
There are insufficient pupils to
warrant erecting a school building
and engaging a teacher, so tha
situation iwill be, met by transporting the children to Gray. Creek. A
car of sufficient capacity, has been
secured at Lumberton, and wUl be
ln charge of Jim Burge, a resident
of Gray Creek,
The experiment will be. watched
Vwith interest, as there is some feeling that consolidation of the schools
at Sanca, BoSwell, Gray Creek and
Crawford Bay would be a good
move, with a suitable building erected at Gray Creek.. ■.        "'- \   ,
If the much-wanted highway between Crawford Bay ahd Gray
Creek -were assured consolidation
would not be long in taking definite
forin. '   ,   ' }    ■ , '.     i
Christmas Cards   t
for Their Majesties
LONDON, Nov. 80:(CE Cabje)-
Photographs of tha royal family's
1038 Christmas cards were issued
■  today.by the printers.
•    The king and queen.ere send-
Tijg.a card  bearing'a  colored
photograph of the garden at Balmoral Castle. Queen Mary's card
Is a reproduction.of the pitating
"The 'Rose Ga«*(eri" by Theresa
Sylvester Standard; -
A, PEODUtt; Q.   OUBiY'S -CANADIAN   Dis'TIUERY
-   ■'^HSIPm^amp^gmmmtA ll. in    s ii     i    ...      ■■-
thia advertoemerit is not published tir displayed by the Liquor Control
■ Board or by the Government ofBhtish Columbia.     ^
LESS MONEY
:y     . ■• ^V'^xxP
'■^TTH MICHEL COAL--the coal that
" he^ta big buildings ~ now available
for household use, yoi| isan't afford to go
on burning any fuel that gives less heat
for the mojj_yi      >.,■'.     >y
JgIG building managers must taeet the
public demaftd for;heatinj( comfort, and
sound business calls for lowest possible fuel
cost. That's why they use Michel Goal.
JtfOtf MtdHEL CO-VL;is:i>^.ed,
laundered — washed free of dirt, slate
and rock, and vfldngized — made dustless.
Why not'burn it in' your home and get
more solid .comfort; more heat and better
heat, for less money.   .? '';.     ■   <■• ■ V
COBBLE AND STOKER SIZES
Road and Union
Slrel^mied
CoMncJI  S^ks Cost;
local Irtipfovlnrteiit
Project
Permission for E. Peterson, 301
Union street, to" Install: a septic
tank, provided It be so installed as
to permit connection to a sewer
later, was granted by the city coun-
CU Tuesday night;  ?.--.•.•:.
In a later discussion the council
decided to initiate at once the steps
* iding  toward  installation' of  a
aiplete sewer system for the Dn-
Ian street ahd Douglas road area..
X.X Potter, city engineer, was In-
structed to draw plans preparatory
to launching local improvement bylaws, and to prepare estimates,
Alderman T. H. Waters ur^ed
that the plan should be undertaken
to keep relief men at work on something of a permanent nature during
the winter. If they Were to be employed it should be upon something
of lasting benefit, he contended.
Colaufii Head
ltalo-Caiiad.se
TRAIL,, B. C, Nov. 'Mfc-Although
the past 12 months had not been
as successful as previous years, the
Socle,ta Mutuoso Sorcoso, Italo-Ca-
nadese made preparations for a
record 1939 at a meeting Sunday,
when officers were installed. '
A considerable sum o. money remains to be paid for the society's
hall, built four-years ago, and an
effort Will be made to clean up the
debt ■-.. • ..,';.-; .;, '- -. ,
' AU are new officers except Ab-
ramo Cancian, secretary, Pietro Gir-
ardi, vice-secretary, Davide Dean,
treasurer, and Giovanni Sacilotto,
conductor, who were-reelected..
Other-officers follow: Gidio Vol?
autti, president; Aristide Brazzoni,
Vice-president; Pietro* Baldassi, Ernesto Zanon, Antonio Delia Mattia,
Gino Gambin, Pellegrini Luigi and
Antonio Ferraro, trustees; Luigi
Corente and Romano Bortolussi,
sick rcommittee; Ezio Babuin, funeral committee; Girolamo Meurin
and Angelo Bortuzzt, doormen; Vin-
cenzo Sammartino, grand marshall;
Aldo Romanin and Antonio Dor-
atti, flag carriers,     . r    .  i.
Social. . '. V-
LONGBEACH
LONGBEACH, B. C. - A. P. Hudson and D. G. R. Sargent attended
a meeting ot the Parish of Kokanee
at Nelaon. . ■'.-■ *•". •• ".
'Mrs. E. D. Rutherglen and son,
Conway, Nelatra, visited here Wed-
hlss4ayv   - • -
Mia. H. Donald spent two days ln
Nelson.
H. N. Major has returned from a
Jew days' visit to his father, Dr,
Majorat' Procter.   ■    '•", ■•        ,
Recent Visitors to Nelson included
ti H. Chanter, Miss 1. Kerr, H. N.
Major and Mrs. A, P. Hudson.
G. Whiteside of Trail -is visiting
Mr. and Mra." H. Leggatt.   -. J .'
-   Mrs- H- Sanders of Queen's Bay
was in Ldngbeach Tuesday. .,.,.. .
Rev.- B. H. L. Dance, temporary
vicar of the new parish of Kaslo-
Kokanee, was in Longbeach Thursday, guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. P.
Hudson, making acquaintance of a
few of his hew parishioners. '.,
Reliefers to Get
Christmas Bonus
;     City Is Notified
That the provincial relief department had authorized additional
food allowance of $3.20 to the head
of 'each, family and of $1.20 to single
persons On relief, tb be paid during December, was stated in a letter, received by the city council
TaetSsy night from E. W. Griffith,
administrator at Victoria.
No work was to be demanded for
the extra allowance, and it was
£ referred that it be paid during
hrlstmas week, the. letter stated.
The. government "would contribute
80 per cent of the cost to municipalities.1   ■".'.    -    ' '■■,",", -.:■■
32 Tables in Play
at Catholic Whist
With'a large crowd In attendance
requiring 32 tables in play, Mr. and
Mrs. L. Colettl, Mrt. J. DeGirolamo.
and Mrs. M. DeGirolamo won lint
prize with a score of DO at the Catholic whist drive In Cathedral hall
Tuesday evening. With: a score of
-34, consolation honors were won by
Miss Eda .DeGirolamo, Emest DeGirolamo, A. F. Dodd, and Armando
Maglio. Albert Lindsay acted aa
master of ceremonies.
Jn (he regular end of the month
draw prizes, conducted last night by
Albert Lindsay and. Miss Irene
Brown, prizes were won by M
Lund, M. Heddle, Mrs.-M. J. Deck,
and Sparky Romano in the order
named. This' will be replaced by
weekly door prizes in the future. •
\ The Catholic Young People's or*
chestra, consisting of Miss Irene
Brown, Miss Naida Perrier, Earl
Halliwell and Albert Lindsay, played for the, dance..'"
Open Pine Street;
As a temporary measure fry the
winter, the city council Tuesday
night approved Installation of a
standpipe on a water line to H.
Ronmark's house near Gyro park,
toaerve'four families.-...'.
One applicant, Mr. Sheppard, will
be made, responsible for collections
from those using the standpipe.
R. E. Potter, city engineer, stated
he had been informed the government intended to open up Pine street
next year,-and a pipe line.probably could be laid in the summer.
Fernie Men,
Women, Win
FERNIE, B. C. - Fernie.basket-
ball teams were victorious in both
ends of a doubleheader played here
Friday night when the Fernie ISO's
(men) defeated the Kimberley Or-
pheums 59 to 45 and the Fernie Redwings (ladies) detested the Kimberley Swlngettes 35 to 18.;
' The men's game was fast and exciting with play swinging rapidly
from basket-to basket and both the
teams displaying clever plays. Klmberley were satisfied to attempt long
shots while Fernie worked the bail
under the basket. Jimmie Thompson
of Kimberley, displayed excellent
shooting skill, sinking several long
shots and capturing scoring honors with 19 points. Rex Morrison,
top scorer in several of Fernle's
games was held to eight points as he
was closely checked by Tony Marasco- of Klmberley who played a
bang-up game at his guard position.
* The teams;
Fernie 160's — R. Morrison 8, E.
Coughlln 15. Don Brewster 18, I
Goldie 2, B. Blackey 8, T. Shaw, G.
Barrett, J. Salmon, F. Moore 10. Total 59.
Kimberley Orpheums — J. Pro*?
enzaro 4, T. Marasco 8. J. Orr 10,
D. White 4 C. Nesbitt, J. Thompson
19. Total 48.
Kimberley Swlngettes — D. Nesbitt 8. P. Nesbitt 2. M. Chambers 2,
G. Chambers 6, L Campbell, M.
Ford. Total 18.
Fernia Redwings — H. McLaren 8,
B, Boese 9, B. McLean. I. Kasmar 4,
F. Bean 2, R. Bricker.sA. Minchuk 2.
Total 28,  .;
AUXILIARY SALE AND
TCA. SOUTH SLOCAN
SOUTH SLOGAN. 6.0. - Tha
Woman's auxiliary held a successful sale of work and tea Friday
afternoon. The hall was attractive
with crysanthemums decorating the
stalls and the daintily set tea tables.
The home cooking stall presided
over by Mrs. E. J. Bowkett and Mrs.
H. Strand was piled with tempting
delicacies. The novelty stall In
charge of Mrs. O. W. Humphry, Mrs.
M. Downie and Mrs. J. Young did
a good business in Christmas gifts,
calenders, and Christmas cards.
. The tee conveners were Mrs. C.
Grayson, Mrs. Fenwick. and Mrs.
F. H. Russel. Mrs. Stanley Dawson
supervised the fish pond, a source
of delight to children.
Mrs. G. K. Ashby delighted with
pianoforte selections at intervals.
The guests were recieved by Mrs.
Murray..
CRANBROOK FISH HATCHERY
HAS RECORD IN SPAWNERS
VIKINGIZED
CLEAN
AUNDERED
PURE
=$***=
NELSON MICHEL AND FERNIE COAL DEALERS
West Transfer
Company
Phone 33
MacDonald Ctg.
fr Fm»I Co.
Phone 258
CRANBROOK, B, C. — A report
of the Cranbrook-Fish Hatchery op-
erationsi submitted at the annual
meeting of the Cranbrook District
Rod and Gun- club, showed-that the
collection of cutthroat eggs at Fish
lake returned to normal conditions
this season, after a drop to practically half that of the previous year
in' 1837, The number of spawning-
fish entering 'the traps exceeded
that of any prevjous year; there
being 4180 compared to 1800 last
season and 3000 in 1938, the record
year. The fish were in good condition but were generally smaller than
the run of 1938, and also showed a
considerable increase in the percentage of males. The total collection of 1,794,500 was practically-1,-
800,000 over that of last; year.
Water conditions at Fish lake were
bettet than the average year,-which
was fortunate because of the large
run Of fish, and thClrieturn to the
lake was accomplished without undue loss.
The collection at Mineral lake
consisting of almost all hybrid fish
was slightly less than last year, but
the subsequent distribution was
about the same, At Premier lake,
owing to'the high level.of the lake,
the fish did hot enter the south Inlet, but a collection ot 85,000 was
made at Dlarlte creek. These were
retained, in the hatchery all season and released as" flttgerllnge, averaging three inches in size, 8300
eggs were obtained from Smith Ifike.
Owing to the Increased collection
of cutthroat' eggs, the allotment
for the game 'department was increased. 850,000 being placed at their
d-iposal. 263.000 of these were shipped to the Nelson Hatchery, tho bal-
ance being distributed by their officers' throughout the Windermere.
Creston. and Nrnie'districts, Ot
the above 707*00 were taken as eyed
eggs and the balance as fry;
piping system of the hatchery to allow for a quick conversion to the
-creek in- case of a shutoff of the
city water, and'provision made for
runoff Into the ct<xk uptil water
clears after, being turned on.
An allotment of 400,000 Kamloops
were received from the game department hatchery at Penask lake,
and were hatched and distributed
throughout the surrounding districts.
The services of the district game
warden and their trucks have also
been supplied to a considerable vt-
tent in the transportation and distribution of eggs and fry in local
waters.  .        •-. '<■■•',
A rearing pond similar to those
in use. at the Stanley Park hatchery
vfas installed, in the hatchery, but
results were not satisfactory, and
information will be obtained from
the game department regarding the
handling of fry in these tanks before another season.
It was decided to take up with the
district -road superintendent the
problem: of filling the' pool below
the culvert in the main creek for
natural reproduction on Moyie
lake. Filling of this pool will enable
the fi?h" to fight their way through
the culvert, as was impossible this
season.     .   ■ ■ -,»
The success qf the fish exhibit at
the Pioneer Reunion was discussed,
and thanks were expressed to Mr.
Kearns Who supplied some of the
fish native to west Kootenay but
not East Kootenay.- .
The election ■ of officers of the
Rod and Gun club resulted as follows: President, A. C, Hayden; vice-
president,. G. J: Spreull: executive,
H, Petrie. Dr. W E. L, MacKtnnoti,
R, Hill, G, C. Wilton, W. Whiting.
H. Nctiy, J. Atchison, C, Atchison
and 3. ,S. GeddfR, Auditor, E. H,
McPhee.   .'■?■„
The financial report showed that
the receipts tor the year were $3,-
341.45/ and when debts were cleared
_     Changes have been made ln theup a balance sjf $927.02 iii the bank.
manrr^ri n a it_i 'i****J—*ia-*>-'
"iSl'V?
-PAGE THR8E
THE "BAY'S" GREATEST
Pre-CHRISTMAS SALE
See Our Four Page Circular for Store Wide Bargains       ,
Opens at the "BM" Tcwky
Boys and girls. This is the big day you have all been waiting for. Hundreds of the world's finest and newest toys.
Red Wagons, Scooters, Aeroplanes, Drums, Fire Trucks, Big Racing Cars and Trains for the boys. And girls! The ' 1
biggest.crowd of Dolls you ever savy. "Baby Tobtsie", "Gloria", -"Toddles", "Cow Girl"; "Baby Bubbles" end "Mer-    j
garet Rose" herself. Doll Carriages, by the dozen and such an assortment of picture books! You'must all come In
and see the big sho,w.   . .,   .  ; ."._ -T ...
1
SRECjAL
forfhiGirli
House   Cleaning   Set
with vacuum cleaner,
Complete
tW
tmtmummm^iimmmmm
»\
IJDUsr
SPECIAL
for the Boys
"Buck Rogers"
Eaeh
Ht
79c
15" DRESSED DOLLS: Each ..
19" "PYJAMA" DOLLS: Each
"BABY TOOTSIE": Each ....
"HONEY CIRL": Each	
"TOODLES": Bach	
"BABY BUBBLES";'Each ....
"CUDDLEKINS": Each ......
. ,■ o&-p
SIM
SIM
SIM
$1.75
$2.25
"SUNSHINE SUSY": Each 59t?
"SHIRLEY TEMPLE": Each        $4.95
"BABY-MARIIYN": Each  $3.ei
"WEYUMS" 69^ and $1.39
SCOTCH LASSIE: Each  $1.39
And scores of Dolls from ...      .. 29»* to $1.00 each
LOOK OVER THIS
LIST GIRLS
You are sure to see what you would'like
'.; < 7Santa to bring you.
METAL TEA SETS   tj&k and 79s? ,
PASTRY SETS  29* and 59«*
CARPET SWEEPERS  35<>
LAUNDRY SETS With WRINGER  $1.69
WASHING MACHINE: Each ............... 98t>
CHIME BEARS: Each  .. 25***
DOLL BASSINETTES $2.89 to $5.89
BLACKBOARDS  $1>98 to $2.95
PLUSH BEARS: Each\    $2.75
TEDDY BEARS         .... 39*. 69* and 98*
VELVET DOCS i....... 15*
DOLL PIANOS 69*-te.fl.49,"
TABLE and CHAIR SETS   .... $3.50
ALUMINUM TEA SETS ...,'..:..... 49*
CHINA TEA SETS ......  19* t* $1.4?
BOYS! BOYS!
BOYS!!
Here's every toy you have ever wanted.
Games ef all kinds 15* to 49*
Table Tennis Sets, each $1.40
SPECIAL GAMES: Each ;..  69*
TIN PINS: Each ........;..... 69*
TOPS: Big ones, each »: 39*
MECHANICAL TOYS  .*•>... 19* te |2.95
MECCANO: All sites .............. 70* te $4.25
SLEIGHS  95* te $1.96
TRICYCLES: Each  f6.95 and $8.95
PEDAL CARS: Each  $3.50
PLAYBOY WAGONS: Each ...  $4>50
STEERWCSLEIGHS:Urge ............... $3.50
PICTURE BOOKS ANP STORY BOOKS
THE BIGGEST VARIETY AND LOWEST PRICR^WE HAVE EVER SHOWN
PICTURE BOOKS ...
ANNUALS:From ....
..'..;. 10* to 75*
.... 75tf te$2.95
Hundreds ef beautiful Books ......... 39* to 98*
i^n^ltri <l»sipK|.
ING0RP0f_ATE_C»_2^M_KLI.62Q
sg-aa&fifca&aajs^^
City Telegraphs to Ottawa Asking
lor Expert to Fight Radio Noise
Have to Pay Licence
Pees, Action Is
Net-ded       Ki
Radio oHlclala at Ottawa irfay
will receive a telegraphe^complalnt
from the city ol KeUon that radio
interference In Nalaon; continues
a| a high level. With it will go a
request tor'an Investigator to be
sent to the city.immediately to as'
sist in eliminating some, ot the
noise. * :    r,   ■   .   .' . "  ■-  .
With the: comment that' Va Jiave
to pay licence fits," taiembers of
the council exprened the, oplntoa
that 'action "by the proper authorities was urgently needed.
Mayor ti.. C. Stibbs and Alderman
A. G. Hitchla told of tracing interference in the Johnstone block to a
business man's sign: and Alderman
T. H. Waters ratattd 6is; experience
with street car Ihtarterehce, stating
it was not, constant, and that the
apparent source changed frequently. Alderman P. G. Morey.was of
the opinion that "something drastic
should be done." , .    "• ■
CITY ACTIVET
R. E. Potter, city engineer, stated,
the city had done everything pos
sible to cut down noise from the
street cars, but sttit;these" \ytte' a
source of interference. Making inquiries to find what "further had been
done .elsewhere, anij-what more
could bs done in Nelson, he Was
informed by the British board of
trade, that Nelsdn had taken every
beneficial step known* and that
there -was: nothing more known by
electrical men.' , ;..-"■."". i-.; ...
-ilia experience had been'that on
some occasions radio reception here
Was sufficiently good to get "above
the noise level" but that at other
times the noises were supreme. The
caUSS was not known.
SMALL FIRE HOSE IS
ON NEW CITY TRUCK
Five .tilmdred feet of Inch and
a half hose, to be used on the city's
new lire track, for fighting small
fires, has arrived and has been installed on tho truck, Alderman Roy
Sharp reported to tha city council
Tuesday night. He expressed the
belief It would he of great assistance, in fighting small outbreaks,
and would avoid a good deal ol
water damage attendant upon out ot
tot large hose. ,v       ■ •
"' ■'.' .•   '.-  •'    AA
Social...
BALTOUR
BALFOUR, B.'-C.-'- The phurch
Guild meeting was held at Mrs.
Seal's home Wednesday. Those present were Mrs. Maynard, Mrs. Hudson, Mrs. Pueschell, Mrs. Shrieves,
VSn. A. M. Hall, Mrs. X W. HaU,
Mrs. Cooper. Mrs. Cohrad, Miss
Audrie Hudson, Miss Barbar Seal,
Mrs. Seal,
Mrs. McKay ol Procter waa a
Balfour.-visitor Wednesday.
': Miss Allison Holt was In Nelaon
Saturday.
Miss Connie Noakes arrived home
Monday.:-       - •   ',  ,
Mrs,-Gold who haa been in Nel-
joh and Balfour during her'niother's,
Mrs, A. H. Noakes' illness, has returned to the coast. Mrs. Noakes
is as well as can be expected but
is still In hospital.,..-:       : ,, ,.. .
Mr. and Mrs.. W. McHardy have
as their gue'st Mra. McHardy'a moth-t
er, Mrs. Frederickson of Mission,
City. ,. " vi i
. On Nov. 23 a meeting of the Balfour Young People was held In the
Economise with a
For quotation call or write
B. C. Plumbing fr Heating Co.
club house which has been loaned.
by H. Seal. There were 13 members present. It was decided to hold
a whist drive. The remainder ol the
evening was spent in playing ol
games. Refreshments were served.
Have You Read the Classified;
RELIEVE HEAD and
CHEST COLDS wilb
DR. THOMAS'
ECLECTRIC OIL
','.        A::,\
"yW^yJ
^A- !HAfs   Mill
mi*-:' ■
NORTHROP & LYMAN
 PAGE FOUB-
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNINO. DEO. 1,
HUSSIA BUILDS MORE NURSERIES AS BIRTHRATE
Mind and Soul . . .*'
Nervous System Complex Layout
That Makes Man Lord ol Creation
By LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
I  in the human body we must con-
clude, It we are in philosophic mood
i that all the work of the lower organs of the body the stomach and
llvar and lungt and heart—hai, for
itt maip purpose, the maintenance
lot the oentral nerVoue lystem In a
I state of functional efficency.
'   The situation it unique In the anl-
f mal kingdom. It la what makes man
I tot lord of creation. In the lower
: animals these vegetative functions
fot digestion and respiration and ch*
culation serve to maintain activities
I which Include the search and acqul-
| sifion of food, fighting with enemies,
|. fluting and the raising of the young,
i The lower animals do not progress;
f year after year they go mOnoton-
1 ously about torn affairs, in the Identical way. .       .,   .
i.- But man, while he does spend
| some time on the acquisition ot food
I and mating also, has higher reaches.
: His wonderful central nervous sys-
I tem splnt sermont of philosophy,
wrltet poetry and eonatas,  plans
Ifs  and  political  systems,  and
rat to attain to teU-maatery tn
It,""-
MAINTAIN ORGANS
So, we iriuat assumer-lf, as I say,
we. are In philosophic mood—that
i "the highest purpose of all the hum-
• Me activities- of th* inside ot our
chests and abdomens is to maintain
the organs that give us- mind ahd
Even the physiologist as well as
the philosopher, must stand before
I that central nervous system In awe,
SHbW can audi a thing be responsi-
ble for Noughts and emotions? How
:.«an It tecrete a sonnet? There 1*lit
tle ln Its structure to give us a Clue..
The physiologist can lake it apart,
but he cannot tell what makcs.lt
"As.he takes It apart he finds,
In every other organ, myriads of
cells, but in the nervous system
they ate not all. crowded together;,
they are separated and hanging in
a medium Jellir. Front' each one
goes out tendrils, and these, reach?
Ing into the void around them, make
contact with the tendrils of other
nerve cell* and, tomehow, In thlt
way all these magical things, like
thought and emotion, ate born.
These contacts,of the tendrils ot
the nerve cells result In the transmission ot excitation, which Is the
serve impulse.. The only known
function of nerve fibert is to conduct Impulses. Even so simple a
piece of brain activity as the decision to go downtown may Involve
millions of these contacts. The number of responses concerned in con-
centratcd thinking stagger Die imagination. The-nerve: impulse la, as
Sherrington, the great English neurologist says, "the universal currency of the nervous-system."
, ,One other fundamental feature ot
nervous activity must.be understood
—the result of reflexes, Here I am
speaking of the reflex action of the
brain eehters. They depend upon
stjihulatiMi from the outside world.
A being born' blind, deaf, without
taste,' smell or feeling in the skin
would not think because it would
have no material to think with. Our
mental lite is the result of our
sensations of the world around us,
which is our experience.
sricalStory « ''.'."''
ROMANCE INC.
By OREN ARNOLD
JCBASSXX 10        ...
The faculty meeting ot the Bice
'istitute was called to order at 4
.'m. 5 -       ..-
[a     Flirt Item of business:
6    ."Mr. Sam Konomos request* permission to sneak to the faculty,
air." V
. President Edgar Odell Lovett oi
the Rice' Institute looked at his
.aacretary.
"Konomoa?"    .._..;-.
"Yet, Dr. Lovett. He ii proprietor, I believe, of the Hdusfcx Inn,
located across Bice boulevard from
'the campua."     V,        .
: "Um. Well, It le In no way contacted'Witi tha univertlty, bn) con-
ceivaby Mr. Konomos his legitimate business here. Ask him to
come In, please." .'
■'■: Mr. Konomos would have been
completely in atmosphere inside a
< prize fight ring. Indeed, he had
once   been   a   prize  fighter.   He
weighed 205 pounds, and he was
i  hairy, and hit skin was dark, and
'  his nose was flat which caused
him to wheeze a trifle He smelled
a little of alcohol and cheese.
„   On the other hand the faculty
chamber in the Bice administration
building ia one of the most beau-
'iful rooms in Texas.
.  "Itls an hondr'to wilcomeyoh,
J 'Mr.'- Konomos,"- said Dr.  Lovett.
tVtmtoo it about the mostgracious
■gentleman  Imaginable.  "Will  you
h have thla teat sir?" He indicated
a chair, and Sam slid Into it, wheez-
L -. ing, glancing right and left
no »I ain't got much' time," Sam he-
t   an.
"Quite to. tlf. 'We Shan endeavor
I- to mova twiftly. Proceed."
"IVt about Hue widow, this-Dav-
lt. She's ruin my business."
Nobody taid anything to that   '
"She't take all the trade," Sam
>..> went on. He turned, to glare at the
professors,  instructors and assistants.  "She come here with  soft
WA toap. She put bf the' ttelh sign.
aL She make love. with, everybody,
£ hai She Is ruin my business, this
¥ romance- -house!"- ■ Sam's ■ muscles
f bulged noticeably and he got up
Iasctatedly. "Ihave been In business
three year. Is not fair Bhe cut in!'
There was much more talk, with
aome questions from the faculty.
Nobody voiced an opinion, however, until Ui. Konomos. departed.
EI i "So far as I ein concerned, one
I faculty member spoke out than, "I
I cannot tee that it is any affair of
sp aura. But personally I can testify
«- fhat the Hnstcx Inn is. anything
v but savory in reputation. I hope
'. the puts nun out of buslnessl"•.' '
:■ Applause, and smiles, closed the
.:».discussion. ._..
:"-  Next item of business:
Report from Mr.  James
g football coach.
"I have nothing unusual at thit
time, gentlemen," said Coach Jim-
I m^, who had just come in. "The
M. 'squad  seems  to be progressing
■ nicely. Yo«< are already aware of
the high interest in football this
tall'I am doing everything possible to stress scholarship, af  we
previously agreed here. If any of
my lads show signs ot falling down
: in  studies, please let me know
promptly and I will take up the
matter individually. The team, morale   seems   to   be   exceptionally
gopd For one thing I am getting
aome  valuable  cooperation  trom
I a person who, it appears, has a
rather remarkable personality and
influence. It is a Mrs. Davis, a
Widowed lady; ot whom you may
have heard elsewhere. She operates a new, ah—service, across Main
itreet I find., her quite a help,
when I had feared she might be
a distraction." .
?Um. Thank you, Jimmy," said
'Dr. toVett "Please meet with us
as often as you can."
Brltt
Next item of business:
"The faculty Is herewith presented with a brief written report
from Mr. Walton, the dormitory
manager," said Dr. Lovett'l secretary. "'It reads ,'as follow*:-.
, " "Gentlemen: ,,
" 'My records for the week show
all rooms occupied, three, illnesses
ot which one required hospitalization, and disbursements ot $84.75
for supplies and repairs, invoices
attached. This is exclusive, of the
mess ball.
" The general survey Indicates,
however, some minor disturbances
are'resulting from students trading in memberships- lit a-hew social club. Demand for these memberships, which seem to be limited
ln number, apparently is yery, great
Memberships which cost $3 initially
have told for as high as *30 in a
tew cases, I learned.'I will make
further investigation, tf you so request
>   . " "Bespactfully tubmltted,
••JACOB WASSON.' "
The dean of the institute arose
trom his chair at this point -
"I move you, sir," he addressed
the president,- "that Mr. Wasson
and the student government counsel be asked to meet at once with
a faculty committee'to Investigate
this matter. As you well know.
Rice has maintained, strict taboo
on.fraternities, sorroritles and such
social clubs as function in a secret
manner, tending to destroy the freedom and democracy we have cherished here. Perhaps it Is ]u»t some
Of the'new students, not acquainted
with our traditions, however, so
I think there it no cause for hasty
action.">
At that juncture -Loren Ball Rogers, Ph. D., took the floor. Dr.
Rogers, instructor ln English literature", *was smiling.
. "I think I can allay the dean's
fears," he announced "I happen
to room in the-faculty tower myself, near the students. This 'dub'
"to -which Mr. Wasson refer* Is no
threatened secret order,. nor fraternity. It Is simply the same one
already m entioned-*e Cottage
club, organized by one, Mrs. Sara
Sue Davis, who resides across Main
boulevard I have heard interminable discussion of it in the dormitories. I think the matter will
evolve its own solution satisfactorily, but I shall be glad to look
Into It and report further here."
. Next item .of business:
"A telegram," said tht president's secretary, "Has come from
The New York Journal-American.
" K3entlemeA-.       . ,
" 'Our Houston correspondent
has sent a most interesting article
concerning a new Cottage Plan for
developing Individual and group social life in Bice institute sponsored b Sara Sue Davis, a matron.
Are we authorized to say that Mrs.
Davis is ex-offtclo a member of the
Bice faculty, or that ahe operates
Independently, but with your guid-
ance and approval? You can un-
derstaad how this would have added weight if it carried faculty endorsement at least. Apparently
Mrs. Davis' plan Is rather distinctive. In that she offer* personal
guidance. Eastern colleges have
been striving at some means of combatting the unwholesome roadhouse
type of social attraction for students, and we are prepared to give
full display to Mrs. Davis' enterprise, but would like to have your
exact relationship to the plan there."
"The telegram is signed by the
managing editor, who requests that
We telegraph him a reply, collect" the secretary concluded
"Um," said Dr. Lovett
He peered over his spectacles at
hia colleagues. Could he be detect-
Paris Chooses Lace
Marriage Courses . .
Requirements lor
Happy Marriage
By GARRY C. MYER8, Ph.D.
If we were to believe aome of the
writers on marriage during recant
years, we would suppose that success in marriage was chiefly a matter of sex.,   " /   ■&'■' ' I: ■•; t '■
Now comet a scientist who hat
made the moat-careful atudy ot
marital relationships to date, and
knocks this motion all haywire. Ha
finds that satisfactory sexual mating is not at all the chief essential
for being happily married. Profet?
sor Lewis Terman, celebrated psychologist of Stanford university, is
the scientist His study has just
been published. « j ■ ■
New Colors * . v,
Glamorous Make
UpalRllzy
Fashion Show
,'">..  By DONNA GRACg
During the week-when we attended the beauty and fashion show
St the-Bltz Carlton, one of the ques-
ona we heard was "Are all models
so beautiful, or Is It just the makeup and charming clothes they are
wearing?" ',':-- i
Well, it's a bit of both, we believe. A beauty authority such as
Miss ATden wauld not select unattractive girls to demonstrate the
tt-hlbnable new make-up nor wear
these gotgeous costumes, but even
the experienced models are improved when the clothes and makeup Is done In one harmonious ensemble,-' ■ *;:
A attaining brunette who wore
the Coxcombe. yelvet'gown, tvhlc i
ELIZABETH ARDEN
_ one of the richest ot the red
purple shade*, wore a make-up in
the same suggested tone, but which
appeared in an ivory toned to the
harmonizing tint with rouge, lipstick and ahadow. There was a deft
blending of the brown and reddish
thadtiw for eye beauty. ,
The girl who wore the violet velvet was .also a brunette and her
''TT*     ByA^iAfcbWy'.'T:. -'■*•'"
When in doubt choose lace. That is the dictum of more than one
fashion expert when asked to suggest evening clothes. Lace is soft,
feminine, flattering and altogether lovely, And smart women favor
It for gala afternoon wear, too. At a recent New York *tyle <hnw of
Paris clothes, lace was the sole fabric shown, and it proved to be one
ot the nicest shows seen this season. Here is a model that attracted
much attention. Vera Borea made this good-looking afternoon dress of
soft Chantilly lace in a delicate russet shade. The skirt is molded,
and four satin bands circling the bodice constitute the only trimming.
IProt.   Terman   and   hit   tttttt.
tudied m mlddle-claas couplet in
to ascertain statistically
they wete, tha kind Ot
and Ideaa they liavt,
  .—y were reared at home.
Ha found that tha happine* of
your parentt hankt first as a guarantee of your happiness aa man or
wife. Banking next Is having parents who, have made you happy at
home, guided you firmly but not
harshly, and won your affection and
esteem, v ■-,, ' -
MARRIAGE COURSES
As you know, in the last few years
a number of collage* and universities have introduced courses lh marriage, and these courses are Vary
popular. We are glad to see this development-better late Utah never
—and we believe considerable gr"
may result trom It Some of us,
however, have wished that these
course* might put more emphasis on
self-discipline, self-sacrifice a n d
good sportsmanship, and less on individualism more on the psychology
of personal adjustments and lee*
on sex, i
Some years ago when I was a
graduate student working for my
doctorate in psychology, Freud was
just coming to the tore. I read ln a
scientific journal a note by my
teacher, wot B. S. Woodworth, to
the effect that one reason why to
qiany wan accepting Freud was because they probably got a great deal
ot vicaricus (imaginative) sex satisfaction trom his writings. As 1
examine some at the books on some
of the marriage course* tor unmarried college students, I sometimes
recall Woodworth'* note."Undoubtedly much ot the literature properly meant for married persons is
read chiefly by unmarried youths.
Might It not be more wholesome for
them to read some of the salacious
literature on the news stand? But
that wouldn't have social and "sf'
entitle" approval. What do yi
think? . .. .       " ■
South Creston Has
Its First Wedding
CRESTON, B.C.,—The first wedding in the new South Creston, or
Riverview, area, was that ot Thursday when Mlu Sarah MathUde,
daughter of Mr. and Mrt. H. J.
Good, was united in marriage with
George Alfred Phypert. The ceremony took place at the bride's home,
and was solemnized by Evangelist
Orr of Vancouver.
The bridesmaid was Mis* Loreen
Good, sister of the bride, and tha
bait man was H. J. Good, Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Phypers will reside on the
groom's farm at Creiton.  ',..-'"'
BOSTON (CP) - Canned ftow-
era — the fantastic possibilities at
it endless, says a Transcript writer
commenting' on the bouquet sent
from London to Melbourne, Aus-
tralla, in ice for the opening of the
Russian ballet there,
Beavi-Catchihg, . .'*
All Her Happiness
Upon a Regular Date, How!
DEAR MISS CHATFlSLD;
My parentt are wonderful, home
attractive, job satisfactory, fairly
good looking and well dressed,
i Jl and no beau. Now you know
I am unhappy. What gets me
down is friends ahd relatives constantly raising their eyebrows and
saying, "What no "beau yettf I
can, count on one hand the dates
' I've lad though 1 love tb dance
and enjoy all sort* ot fun. What
I* the matter?. Are aome girls
doomed from birth to be old
maids? MABY LOU.
ANSWER: T T
It seems at though anybody
thould be able to answer those questions, Mary Lou, but they are hard
ones. No doubt you know scores ot
girls with less background, less
looks and less sense who have more
beaux and more fun., They ware
born with the knack of knowing
how to get dates; or their mama*:
gave them a lift at the crucial time
and started them off on a' run; or
they were members ot a crowd of
boys and girls in School and formed friendships with the boyt when
they were very young that carrWd
over to dating day*.
Beaucatching is evidently hot dependent upon beauty or brains or
personality or position or-background; because girls as ugly as
mud fences, girls with little or no
personality, girls with and without
background catch beaux ahd marry
them. Luck may play a part; Its
more likely that their determination
to grasp opportunities,.if any; or
to make opportunities, if none, is
the thing that finally lands them
where every girl want* eventually
to be—in a home with her husband.
When the opportunity I* made
to order, a girl ha* only to smell
make-up suggested the same warm
tone, but waa a much darker shade
to contrast with the" violet Her
dye make-up was a blue green and
bronze.   ' .'. ,   . -T   ,
The blonde who wore the bride's
costume had a brilliant make-up
that had'all the rich color harmony
of the Cyclamen flower,, but ln the
tlnts which, were the rouge and lipstick accents. The eyeshadow and
lash coloring were brown ahd
bronze with lining bf the warm pink
to subdue the white akin coloring
between the eyelid and brows.
The coiffures by Guillaume were
kydy.'but showed a more modified
TEA
mg twinkle* in eye* that normally
were serious, dignified?
"Aheml" the president rumbleji
it quite seriously. "It I* almost
time to adjourn thi* faculty session, and -we seem not to have accomplished a thing. Have you gentlemen observed that every Item
of business, so far has centred
around, or at/least led up to, some
consideration of this Davis woman? Lady, perhaps I should say; 1
do not know her. I understand she
Is a widow. One of you mentioned
that she is red-haired, although
what significance that holds in
these discussions, I cannot see. But
is it true that an entire faculty
session must be' given over to a
young lady in no way'connected
with this university?" I
A youngish looking professor,
wearing horn-rimmed spectacles,
took the floor.      .-   ■  i
"Mr. President!"
"E-. Holgate," the chairman acknowledged him. i    *    .   ,;'.   '..
"I, of course, lament the crowded condition of our business calendar thjs afternoon, but I do wish
to declare, emphatically, that-Mrs.
Davis Is a most estimable young
woman, and one, J think, ot extraordinary—" .".-    -    ^ :-
After considerable further discussion, the faculty meeting of the
Bice Institute adjourned at 6 p." m.
(To Be Continued)     "
MRS. OGILVIE HEAD
HARROP BIRD CLUB
HABBOP, B.C.r"Harron Badminton club held its annual meeting
Friday evening and elected Mr*. W.
D. Ogilvie for president; V. Bowley,
secretary, and G. Sargent and T.
Butherglen, committee.
Thai club decided to play one
evening each week during the winter months.     -
Procter Women
Prepare for Tree
ond Entertainment
PBOCTEB, B.C. ?- Procter .Women's institute met at the Outlet hotel on'Rrlday, -with IB ladies present.
Arrangemenfa were made for the
children's Christmas tree in the
Community hall.    • T     T
The committee to purchase gifts
were Mrs. N. Shkwarok,.Mrs. H. C.
Carne, Mrs. W. Ward ahd Mrs. W.
B. Jarvis,      ,f-
It was decided to engage thelocal
orchestra for the dance following
the visit of Santa Claus. .
Refreshment committee were Mrs.
W. B. Jarvis, Mrs. A. B.. Johnston,
Mre. J. Sewell and Mrs. W. Don?
aldson, Mrs. N. Shkwarok to supervise servlteurs.   ':     ■.,
The secretary was asked to write
a resolution which was carried by
those present regarding service of
Harrop ferry after schedule hours.
Copies are to be sent to Frank
Putnam, Nelson board ot trade and
the junior board of trade. ,
Tea was served by Mrs. J. Sewell
and Mrs. W. Donaldson.
Those present were Mrs. T. Muir,
Mrs. N. Shkwarok,. Mrs. ■ W. B.
Jarvis, Mrs. H. C. Came, "Mrs. J.
Sewell, Mrs. P., Bennett Mrs. A.
Crosby, Mrs. W.Mvflrhead, Mrs. W.
Donaldson, Mrs. H. McCarthy, Mrs.
A, Johnston, Mrs. W. Ward,,Mri. W.
Smellie, Mrs. D. Taylor and two
visitors,'Mrs. F. Walton add Mrs. E.
Brasch. ■   -v.'       ,   ,.■','.■,- .■ -
WHILE MOTHERS LEARN
LONDON "(CP). - South West
Essex Technical College, Waltham-
stow, has opened a huraery where
mothers may leave their children
with trained nurses while they attend cookery and housecraft classes.
trend ot the "Up" style, but still
definitely high.
There is, of course, the girdle or
corselette to consider when the new
lines are brought out, and this was
done with perfection. A few of tb,e
model* wore no suggestion ot a
foundation garment but they wete
the ones who were slender and
trained to perfection In posture and
carriage. '• '
sweet ha amiablcj show lntereit ln
tha: bird in hand, play up to him,
making him feel that he ia tha biggest smartestmost desirable bird
In the world When she's done that
he's mesmerized; ahd the tan adi
the tain. ' *
When -the opportunity has to be
made that's another matter. Flrtt
ot aU, tha must conceal tha fact
that thev making an opportunity
and then she has to strike the happy medium between a warm friendliness that attracts a man and a
hot eagerness that repells him; too
anxious uid the boys laugh at her;
too persistent and they run from
her. '
Now, Miry Lou, there must be opportunity tor you in the business
office if you'll put tout mind to
grasping it. If you toil there you
have two more chances; luck that
put* you in propinquity to a boy
who is, like yourself, lonely and
looking for a date. You thould be
prepared to meet him by learning
to do the thing* that modern boya
have a taste for. Learn to play a
iod game of tennis,  ping-pong,
nton, squash, golf, cards; to
swim, skate, dance, ride, bowl and
any other game you've ever heard
«!•■ -v   -.'/-'..'•''■ i -",.
The second chance is to entertain small group* ot young people tn
your home-where you will have
the advantage of being hostess in
familiar surroundings. Plan refreshments that won't strain the family
purse and feel your way along tn
the matter of entertainment until
you discover ,what the crowd en*
Joyi most If you know how to stir
up a few good dishes you'll find that
people can get Very clubby over
%altltehen-rtove^ .. ,
dUnilL (oil
oHdumwwsa.
By, BETSY NEWMAN
'.«.■■       -* '■■--' 'i' ■ , ■',',-
Soviet Stork Kept Busier Since
Slate laws Are Made Stricter
TODAY'S MENU
Bacon       Baked Potatoes
Acorn Squash .
Cabbage and Celery Salad
Cottage Pudding    Chocolate Sauce
Coffee or Tea -
, Yon can use your oven for this
menu. The bacon can be laid in a
pan and baked, but watch it it your
oven is pretty hot and .take It out
when.it is crisp and brown. It will
brown evenly without having to be
turned or the curls pressed out
Wash potatoes well, take out any
blemishes, rub with bacon tat and
bake. Wash squashes, nit in half,
per
water if you wish. They take about
three-fourthi of an hour "to cook,
like the potatoes. The bacon will
only take ten minutes, but don't allow it to be in that-long without
looking at tt The chocolate sauce
may be used over Ice cream, sponge
cake, puddings, or anything you
wish, even fresh grapefruit  .   >
?,; '   Cottage Pudding
Sift one and one-half cups flour,
one cup sugar, one-quarter teaspoon
salt two teaspons baking powder
into mixing bowl.
Melt one tablespoon butter In
metal measuring cup. then add one
Whole egg in cup, till with milk,
mix ana add to dry ingredients.
Mix well, add one teaspoon flavoring and bake ln moderate oven.
,    Chocolate 8auce
One cup sugar, on* tablespoon
flour or cornstarch, two tablespoons
cocoa or two squares melted cho-
olate, one cup boiling water and one
.teaspoon butter are needed.
Mix dry ingredients, add boiling-
water, cook until thickened, add
butter and »erv*..
Streusel Coffee Cake
Twd cub* bread flour, two teaspoons baking powder, one-half
teaspoon soda, teaapoon salt one-
quarter teaspoon each nutmeg and
Cinnamon, one-quarter cup butter,
four egg yolks and one cup but'
.... flour and measure. Sift
again wi* rest ot the dry In-
gredienls. Work in the; butter.
Seat egg yolks and add to buttermilk, gtlr- egg mixture into dry
materials only until smooth. Pour
into buttered Coffee cake tin.
Cover with topping and .bake in
a moderate oven (UNI'.) for 30
minutes. Iton. out ot pan only
after cake has partially cooled.
To make the topping you will
require one^haK cup brown sugar, two tablespoons flour, two
tablespoons butter, one-half teaspoon ;- cinnamon ahd, one-eighth
^MaTdry Items together. Work
In butter, sprinkle on coffee cake
batter before baking. Nuts, citron
or raisins Cap be added to coffee
'■batMT''lf'dline<L' -"'"-:. ■ ■*"■-,".
FLOUR
MAKES    BETTER    BREAD
■m ■-*-■»-■___■■ mm
MtfeCOW, Nov. 30 (CP) -New
nurseries tor the babies ot working
mother* are springing up in many
sections of the Soviet Union as the
government strives to catch up with
te demands of a swiftly increasing infant population.
.-The Soviet rtork ha*, been busy
since the reversal of the official
Silicy ot legal abortion and easy
voroe. More women who work
are having babies. The problem is
how, to build nurseries tut enough.
Early thia year new nurseries accommodating 89,840 infants up to
three years of age had been built
Seasonal nurseries oh collective
and state farms were equipped to
handle 3,812,000 baby Reds." The
Soviet started organizing nurseries
Immediately after the revolution.
Their function waa to, liberate women bom- drudgery aad create favorable conditions for the develop
ment of. children. .
. When 1,800,000'new wnnen workers came into industry in 1928. with
the first Five-Year Plan, their or-,
Conization on a big scale really started. Women worked both day and
night shifts in mills ana factories.
And tho nursery service was organized to, correspond with the
mother's working hours,
Children In state nurseries ara tad,
washed,  get regular medical Inspection and an under the care of j
trained nurses. Education starts in
tha crib. , ■;■   '
State nurseries are becoming more
ahd more part of the dally life of a
Soviet community. Little children
of all nationalities may be found lh ,
them. What the mother pay* for
the care of her child depend* on her
"work and pay, Far those Ih the law-.
est wage categories the service is
tm.: ■ ■'      '■;
"Smile With Me"
Here I* 19-months-old Norma, little daughter of Mr. and Mr*.
.    ;,     ',.'  Hi Uyjolfaon, Ndsqn. -,.x-
tjjwKuU! Get these grand
Gifts FREE! f^
with Quaker Oats
Box Tops
rnmornciA_cR_sT-M»t>-*
UAF BANTAM HOCKEY CLUB
^
FREE for Miy I bufka. O.I_ -.. Up.
(or 1 Qusker Osis bo_ lop ind 10c).
Wttl Autograph.-PIct-rMsl
THI TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS ,
OET THIS RiaULATION
JUNIOR HOCKEY PUCK
lol l toil The real thins! A'toall-
i wefsht hsrd robber puck just.    „
' those used lo regulsf lesgues.
FHEEI  REFEREE'S  WHISTLE
Sounds lust like thewhlsdes used br
referees it the fimous tbpU'UU
Gardens. Msde ot sturdy composi-
.     &"i.yilh htnir cMenlai chiin to
■ml loss FREE for 4 Qusker Oat, bos tops
(or 1 Quaker Oats box top snd 10c).
"To Help Get Pep and Strength,
/ eat Delicious, Nourishing QUAKER OATS,"
lift "Busher" JACKSON, famous Toronto Mople Leal Hockey Star
help to health ud ner.es, "Thiamin"
(Vnsmin Bl). Pet'ect health .is. not
BOYS AND OIRLSI   Here's the best
ops.   ten motnersna aaa that
nt to trow bit; and strons like
 »" Jtaeee, srf Ape, snd ill the
fimous N.H.L. Champion Toronto
Maple Leaf Players who eat delicious,
nourishing Quaker Oats for breakfast. '
tl k new knew, thlt Oatmeal is the
richest thrifty soutce of thst precious
: without It; You should have
un"  daily  because  It  is  sol
_ in the body.   And remember.
ImdilwHor. h'e'allhful *iSti_o "**F.
Scire nourishing breakfasts . . . Sa»e
Ooner .-. . Older Qusker Oits Bom
your grocer todsy.
BOYS, GIRLS, Income a member of the Maple]
l*at Bantam Hockey Club. Send Just ONI- I
Quaker Oatk box tap far FREE membership .
bidg., certificate and (rand hockey book.J
TEAR OUT THIS COUPON NOW!
I Miple U*f lUniirn Hockey
tl        Please send mc the *ifls
lob. Box 100, Stskitoon, Sask. ..
i '•.,'.-.:: 3-rng mm am »iu*» -.decked below (milk distinctly in the jqnirc
I tem or items you desire) for which I enclose Quaker Oats-box to
flaSi SSS SSS M>P**twU^—ifl coin.
■»»-
tops, or,
d-iy
AUTOGRAPHED PICTURES
Slpcture-lboitop
4tfcMm-4bos —
.. U Full team am
fop       Djikt««r?Jbojttoet   n
:topt      0 7 pictures—'boxtops   M
id Foster Hewitt—7 bot tops      ,     g
I
a. 	
|-S!_2S_!^-'te?B*Sfl   ,*M"W>
!■     ■ CREST ' box lops (or 1 boxtopsnd 10c)
, D HOCKEY PUCK } box tops (or 2 box top's snd 10c)
I O WHItTLE   -      i box tops (or 1 box topsnd IOC)
'I Ma**     ' ' ■ •' '      -       .    .   ".' .'.  '
Mleue Playen DesiredI
Apps     DChsmberlsin
Hsmilton D Thorns
Q Kelly       DBoll     .
DParsons   DBrodi
DJsckson    DMetx
DHotner    ODisldsen
DDrllion    DFowIer
DFotterHewItt
*AAdr*a-
tOtfA^l
■-.»
JW._
Quick Quaker Dats
• ASK MOTHER TO ORDER QUAKER OATS
FROM   YOUR   GROCER   RIGHT    NOW
 —————,	
	
I^WUi^iiiipnijiiu- I,   I. Lllrl»IJ^ip^pp9f|^^^
15^5
SKATING
OUT HIS
E
Our stock Is complete In
outfits ■ for. men, boys,
women and girls.■'■".:
$3.25*% $11.00
Men's   arid   Ladies'
Figure Skating
Bootf
See our selection
R. Andrew
& COMPANY
"Leaders in Footfashion"
■
I
When you're constipated, It's a
great temptation to bo satisfied
with quick relic/. But physics
may become a habit And they
don't keep constipation from returning. It's so much better to get
at tho cause of tho trouble.
' If you eat what most people do,
chances are the only thing the
matter is j/otl don't act enough
"bulk." And "bulk" doesn't mean
Km much you eat It means a
kind ot food that isn't consumed
ln the body, but leaves a soft
"bulky" toats to tho intestines
and helps a bowel movement.
What to do? Eat a little Kellogg's All-Bran for breakfast
every day and drink plenty ot
water. Thla crunchy toasted cc-
; real Is not only rich ln "bulk"-
lt also contains the natural Intestinal tonic, vitamin B„ All-
Bran Is mado by Kellogg In Lon.
don, Ontario, Sold by every grocer.
-  ['7 ":.: .'■'■'  -■'■"■' ■    J
With the Guides
and Brownies
af Hie District
The Brownies enjoyed a hike on
October 20 which, was toe laat outing of the season. Fay Johnstone
was recently made a Sixer in charge
of the "Fftiries." Last Friday Division Commissioner Mrs. F. E.
DockeriU of Trail and District Commissioner Mrs. W. A. McCabe of
South Slocan visited our pack.
Twenty-four Brownies are now
enrolled and are working hard on
testa,.,' ,."■;' '
Flrat South Slocan Guldea'-r Our-
tog toe past month regular weekly
meetings haye been " ell attended.
Two extra meetings were held,
when the Guides made. novelties
for their .Christinas sale. The girls
who are working for their Needlewoman's badge are dressing a doll
to be sold at the sale. A hike took
place during toe month,-when three
girls passed their tracking test On
October 24 Mae Bowkett and Florence' Nixon: were enrolled. At this
meeting games and contests were
enjoyed, and lunch was served by
the girls. The mothers of the Guides
were' invited. As a "community
good torn" on National Guide Day,
October 29, toe church" and halt
windows were cleaned and toe
hymn books ware.mended., Qri Remembrance Day.the Guides and
Brownies,, vftto their. leaders, attended,church serviced ; -:.
WILLOW POINT ACTIVE
First Willow Point Girl Guide
company opened: its season's work
on October .9 with 'ja hike riora-
to the home of the,captain, Mrs. "t.
E. Holt There each patrol received
the same amount of provisions, and
was told to light a fire on the beach
and cook p meal. Points were given
for the best laid and brightest fire,
and the general cooking and serving
of lunch. After cleaning up, the company went,on toe beach for com",
pany .drill and Morse games. Patrol
Leader'Betty Holt, theh laid a long
trail, using tracking signs,and morse
messages en route, The Treasure,
(a bag ot peanuts) was discovered
by Daphne Leggatt ot the Oriole
patrol. i - -:: .   ■ * .'       • j
Guide Day, October 29, was celebrated in the Institute house, and
a full company was present After
inspection and.toe opening exercises, the Captain gave a special
talk on Guiding and toe meaning
of Guide Day. Five second class
Guides then went out tor their walk?
tog test the remainder doing various
tasks indoors: Games, competitions
WE SAVE YOU MONEY AND
SERVE YOU WELL
at HILLYARD'S   ...'■
n
Phone OS  .     vie (Jrawford, Mur.
mmmimwmmmmmm'mi
'.:',    STORE WIPE
CLEARANCE SALE
Thursday % Friday -^ Saturday
COATS % SUITS % DRESSES
ALl ON SALE   ,
EDITH A. CARROTHERS
$5 Afternoon Dresses $5
In* -50 only smart new winter afternoon ■
dresses,   all   sizes,   shades,   materials, ft C'JMJ
some wools, regular values to $12.50.'
Thursday Clearing at    	
I
25% OFF
25% OFF
Fur Trimmed Winter Coats
The entire balance of our beautiful-fur trimmed winter
coats, all sizes, some tweeds, others dressy coats, regular values $23.50 to $49.50.-,    "
Thursday Clearing at 25% OFF
25% OFF
•25% OFF
12 Ohly untrimmed winter coats, mostly tweeds, greys,
blues, browns arid blacks. Regular values from $22.50.,
Thursday Clearing at 23?6 OFF
MILL
Regular
INERY
Sale price
$2.95
$1.95
3.95
2.95
4.95
3.95
5.95
4.50
BETTER
AFTERNOONS
The entire balance of our
better afternoon crepe
dresses; all great'/ reduced. Sizes from 12 to 52.
IMPORTANT NOTICE ■
Wo have just received our shipments of fine Christmas
Lingeries. A deposit will hold.
REMEMBER—THE SALE STARTS
THURSDAY MORNING AT     ':
NlLSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNINQ. DEC 1. 193S
and singing followed. Al quite i
number ol Guides celebrate their
birthdays around this date, afternoon tea was served, the arrangements for this being in tbe hands
of the local association representative, Mrs. J. K. Learmonth: A large
birthday cake was cut by Patrol
Leader Mary Corrigan. The guest of
the afternoon was Spokane Girl
Scout Patsy Jaeger. Afio tea everyone enjoyed dancing to the gram-
phone donated to the company by
Patrol Second Joan Thompion. The
meeting closed with every Guide
repeating the Guide Promise,: then
Taps-.
,, The following three meetings
Were held in the Institute house,
when a good-deal of general work
was accomplished; and various tuts
were successfully passed. Lieutenant Miss Mildred Horrigan gave a
special talk on the Peace Garden,
which is situated in Manitoba and'
Norm Dakota, and tbe Guides were
instructed to write essays on this
subject.
On November 28 tbe company was
honored by a visit from Division
Commissioner Mrs. F. E. Dockerili
and Diitrict Commissioner Mrs.' VT.
A. McCabe, who opened the meeting by inspecting the company. A
letter was read from an English
Guide, and then the girls read their
essays on the Peace Garden, at tbe
conclusion of which Commissioner
Mrs. DockeriU agreed it would be
a nice idea for tne Guides of Canada to have a plot in the Peace
Garden. Handiwork in the "corners"
was inspected and judged, end then
District Commissioner Mrs. McCabe
took charge of the proceedings, giving the girls an JpJeUlgence;. test,
teaching a new game, and how to
make ,paperflowers..The Horseshoe
was' then .formed, and three recruits Were enrolled by Commissioner Mrs. Dockerili,' Eva Bing,
Daphne Leggatt and Edith Heddle.
Mrs; McCabe then presented -'the
following proficiency badges; swimming badge Betty Holt; artist-
badge, Joan Thompion and Joyce
Denny; cooks badge, Helen Sutherland, Joyce Denny, Winnie- Blng,
Kathleen Sutherland -and Joan
Thompson; friend to animals badge,
Joyce Denny; international knowledge badge, Betty Holt; second class
badges. Marjorie Learmonth, Alice
Heddle, Betty Marshall.   -'.,-   ;-
After a little campfire singing,
tea was served by the Guides ,and
flowers were presented to Mrs.
Dockerili. and' Mri. McCabe as a
mark bf appreciation: The meeting
was closed with Taps./
The regular meetings ot the Nelson. Girt Guides have been held on
Monday nights, with one "special
meeting on Friday, November.».
At the special meeting, the/Guides
were inspected by Division Commissioner Mrs. DockeriU ot TraU
and District Commissioner Mrs. McCabe of South jSlocan. Mrs. McCabe
enrolled, three tenderfoot Guides,
Muriel Hunter, Bernice Burgess and
Effie SmaU. During the month Mar'
jorie Fraser passed tier, knitter's
badge. W. Wood has been lectui-lng
fo the Guides on tint. aid. Several
of the girls have passed their useful article test We bad a demonstration by Mrs. McCabe of handicraft work.
Social . . .
SLOCANPARK
SLOCAN PARK, B. C-Mrs. A. D.
Crebbin is visiting her daughters,
Mrs. Walter Dams of Castlegar and
Mrs. C. P. Jones of Trail.
Stanley Dams of Castlegar is
spending a week at Slocan Park.
Mr. and Mrs. Houston and Walter
Dams ot Castlegar were visitors
to Slocan Park.
Ellen Reid was a visitor to Vallican Saturday.. ■. • .-,'-
Have You Read the Olaislfled?
KIMBERLEY AID
TEAM IS VICTOR
toMBteijmr. a ts - Nov. h
the Kimberley First Aid team defeated the Trail team by 330 points
to 300. The local team consisted of
T. Hotehkiss, G. P. Reeves, O. Skrlbe,
K. Bdgell and P. Dumert, This team
has already won the Lindsay and
Oughtred cups. The Judges for the
competition were Doctor) Davis, Hazard, and Huckvale*. The team wUl
now represent-this district in the
Dominion competitions. ?•,••■'•
CRESTON,. B., &,:*- Witt the
spacious auditorium at the new
high school rapidly nearin. completion, student activities that centre
round the recreation hall are being
rapidly organized amongst the stu-:
dents. Four of them have been formed within the past week.
These include a dramatic club
with IS of the students attending the
meeting, which was in charge' of
Miss Pearce, Mr. Weeks and Mr.
Gautier, with the following executive named:, president, Ethel Morrow vice-president, Margaret Bundy; treasurer, Jack Hall; secretary,
June Wigen.
Half a hundred boys and girls
wer. in evidence tor the organization session of the gymnasium and
boxirig dub, with Ben Crawford
outlining the work to be taken up,
and the following officers elected:
president, Albert Ingham; vice-pres-,
ident, Harry Kamo; secretary-treasurer, Audrey Weir. ....>.-
There Was an overflow crowd for
the meeting to form, a badminton
club, W. A. Marchbank, teacher of
senior matriculation,, and president
of the Creston shuttle club, Was In
•charge, ahd the officers are Clayton Sinclair, president; Helen
Staples, secretary-treasurer
.' There, is alsb a wadio club With
Syd. Davidge', president;. Edward
Argyle, vice-president; and Rfibert
Johnson, secretary-treasurer.   ■
SociaL ..."
QUEEN'SBAY
QUEEN'S BAY. B. G-M..' and
Mn. D. M. Soolc of Banff were tha
gueits of Mr-, and Mrs. Kenneth
Attree and W. J. Astley.
H. E. Mahood attended the meeting ot the .Church Wardens ot the
parish of Kokanee, at Nelson.      "
A meeting was held In the school
house to discuss arrangements for
the children's Christmas tree. It
was decided to ask for donations
and to hold a whist drive at the
home of Mr. and Mn. H. Sanders.
Mrs. H. E. Mahood and Mrs. G, Porteous were asked to buy presents
for the tree.     . '.
Misa Phyllis Maber of Govan,
Sask., arrived here last week and
was married quietly in. Nelson to
J. S. Livingstone of Queen's Bay.
They returned here after a short
honeymoon in Nelson        jt
lbs. 'Fred Kinakln and her two
children, Billy and Virginia, -have
returned after being away several
weeks visiting relatives. ■ , •■
CHILDREN BURN
PBTOSKEY, .Mich, Nov. 30 (AP).
—Four children Bf .Mr.' and Mrs.
Charles Shag were burned to death
in" a fire that destroyed their small
home last night near Harbor Point.
The victims ranged in age "rom six:
months' to five jfears,     .     ,
CRANBROOK Social ...I.
CRANBROOK, B. C. — Mrs. 3. X
Atchisoh was a tea hostess at her
home oa Norbury avenue, wheh
floral decorations were Albert Sunset 'mums. Those asked to preside
were Mrs. A. J. Schell and Mra. W.
Scott. Assisting With the serving
were Mra: W. G. T. Taylor and Mrs.
Gordon Hanna. The Invited guests
were Mrs. Frank Jenson, Mrs. Marshall MacPhereon, Mn. NeUy, Mrs.
A. C. Fournier. Mn. W.-W. Bride,
Mn. J. C. Little, Mrs. J, Ward, Mn.
It, Strachan, Mn. James Davidson,
Mn. A. J. Schell, Mrs. E. Laurie,
Mrs. Eric MacKinnon, MA. W. Scott,
Mn. R. E. Sang, Mn. C. Atchison,
Mn. R. Lynch, Mn. Hubert Neily,
Mn. D. .Burton, Mrs. W. G. T. Taylor, Mrs. T. A. Moore, Mn. D. Clapp,
Mn. F. L. Jeeves, Mrs. Gordon.
Hanna, Miss Yvonne Williams, Mis*
Ethel Neily, Miss Muriel Little, Miss
DeUa Baxter, Miss Muriel Reade,
Miss Nancy MUes: and Miss Jessie
MeLanderj, ... ,
Miss Nora Miles, daughter of Dr.
and Mra. F. B, Miles, who has been
spending six weeks, touring Norway,
Sweden and Denmark, will return to
Canada early next mopth, when she
will reopen a ski lodge at St. Adele
en Hants ih partnership with Miss
Nancy Nlsbet of Nelson,. "  ■
Miss Joan Benion of Lethbridge
was a city visitor.        '■ '    »'
L. B, Sanders and faniily ot Picture Butte, .Mta, are visiting the
city.- .        .-,,'.•     .... -.,
Mrs. Blimey was tea hostess at
the women's badminton club Friday afternoon,   y ' -
Mr. and MM.' James Norgrove,
who have been visiting the Okanagan, have returned. - ■'•■
Mr. and Mn. D. V. Laing of Medicine Hat were, city visiton. '
Mrs. R. Skillicorn and son John
have arrived to spend the winter
with Mra. SkUUcorn's parents, Mr.
andiMn.'C. Carlson,  .
Miss Rose Andenon, who .was a
city Visitor during the week, haa
returned to Nelson.     T      ."■■'"
CRANBROOK. 'B.C.-Mrs. F. J.
Scott entertained at tea at her home
on Garden avenue on Saturday aft-
ernopn, Mrs. R. Turner presided at
the tea table, and Mrs. R. E. Sang
assisted With the serving. The guest-
Were Mra. E. Church, Mrs., H. E,
Wheeler, Mra. A. Fournier, -Mrs. W.
G. T. Taylor, ■ Mrs. Osborne, Mrs.
Gordon Hanna, Mn. Angus MacPherson, Mn. J. C. Little, Mrs. John
Atchison, Mrs, Marshall MacPherson, Mn.. D. W. Dow, Mn. John
Ellis, Mn. - Frank Jenson, Mrs. W.
Scott, Mn. Eric MacKinnon, Mrs.
James Davidson, Mrs. R.'E.-Sang,
Mrs. George MacDonald and Mrs.
R, -Turner. '
Mn. Marshall MacPherson entertained'at tea at her home on Norbury avenue on two afternoon? this
week. Floral decorations were pink
'mums and pastel snap dragons. Mrs.
A,D. Bridges an* Mrs. Wlo: Scott
were asked to preside. at the tea
tables. The -invited guests were
Mrs. H. L. Harrison, Mrs, J. G,
Cummings, Mrs. C, R; Spence, Mrs.
M-. McCrindle, Mrs. R. W. Hardy,
Mrs. F. W. Burgess, Mrs. A. D.
•Bridges,- Mrs.'Windsor, Mrs." G. E;
L. MacKinnon, Mrs. w.'D. Gilroy,
Mra. W. 0. Scott. Mn. Walter Laurie, Mrs,. E. Laurie, Mrs. John Ellis,
Mrs. E. ChurCh, Mrs. R. E. Sang,
Mrs. Stanley McNeil, Mn. E. Davies, Mrs. J. C. Little, Mrs. G. M.
Argue and Mrs. Eric MacKinnon.
Mrs. Wood wa« teahostess at the
Ladies' Badminton club on Monday,
NELSON Social ,-,
By MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX
, • Mn, r. A. Peebles, Latimer
street, is confined to hospital, with
a badly crushed knee. ■ : t
• P. S. Sullivan-of Boswell visited town yesterday. .,:'..*,,   .
• Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Dobble,
Carbonate street, had as their guest.
Mrs. A. Lowe, who haa returned
toiherhtoie ih PenUctOn,■' ■     .
• -Mrs. C. I. Archibald,:Stanley
street, recently visited her son and
daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mn. Far-
ran C. Archibald, and her son-in-
law and daughter, Mr. and "Mrs, T.
Biihop, hi mil.
• Dr.- Prentice, ex-resident of
Nelson, is in the city visiting friends
for a few days. -y■■:■.-.
• Barney Browne of New Denver spent yesterday in Nelson. ■■■'■■
. e The Redeemer service met at
the home of Mrs. H. W. Ward, Monday evening. Those present were
Mrs. Clarence' Ward, Mrs. W. J.
Silverwood, Mn. Alex Tullock, Mrs.
W. Solowan, ,Mrs. B. B. Stallwood,
Mrs. T.'Carew, Mrs, Jack Horswill,
Mra. Reeve Harper, Mrs.-H Chester, Mrs. R, Dycke, Miss Mary
Sh'ardclow, Miss Eva Massey. Miss
Lois Sheffield, Miss Louise Milburn
and-Miss Buby Morgan.*','  " >.: y
• Mr: and Mn. Robert A. Kirkland, Victoria street, had' as their
guest, Mrs. W. Matlock of Spo-
_ane,.wh6 has returned.: ,
, • Mrs. H. B. Jerome, who has
spent the past two woks visiting
Mrs. H. E. Johnson, Kootenay street,
also Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Armstrong,
SUver King road, has left for Trail
where she will visit relatives tor a
month; ■-     ;, ; ".--•■.
• J., F. Donaldson, merchant of
Salwol visited Nelson yesterdaj-'and
attended the "Creaking Chair"by
the Nelsbn Little Theatre Tuesday-
night,    .   -, ",'.-■
• An enjoyable evening Was
spent by St. John's Lutheran congregation when-it gathered for its
annual birthday social at the church
parlors, Friday evening, Nov. 29,
Tables Were decorated according
tb the seasons of the year. The pro-
rm included an opening address
Rev. Meyer,, followed by a birthday'greeting by Mra. Fredericks; a
reading by Mra. Gausdal entitled "A
Poefs Calendar". A_play. entiUed
"Waiting for the. Stump-Hollow
Train" by the. Yoling People's society; a shadow picture "In the
Operating Room" ahd several contests. The Ladies' aid conducted a
sale of fancy work,
• W. R. Munn of Nakusp spent
yesterday, in the city.
• Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ellis of
the Reno gold mine were Nelion
visiton yesterday. -    -.-",
• Shoppers in the city yesterday included Mrs. A. Major of Procter.       ■ ■..-:"■    ■',    ,■»
• 'Mrs. Isnes of Vallican spent
yesterday in Nelson shopping.   ,
• Bennett Duffy, who spent the
past few,day*",ln,the/city, has returned to Vancouver. .   ,.   ":
• Miss Shirley Dobbie, daughter
of Mr. and Mn. 3. X Dobbie, Carbonate street," la a patient in the
Kootenay Lake General hospital.
' • Mr. and Mrs. H. Donald, Mr.
and Mrs. A. H. Leggatt, Mrs, J. D.
Kerr-and Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Major, all of Longbeach attended
She Creaking Chair", produced by
a Nelson,Uttle Theatre  Tuesday.    .     ,'   ..",    •--;' '" ,, .;
• Mr. and Mrs. Aylmer Coates
of Upper Bonnington were guests
of the/former's parents, Mr. ahd
Mrs. J. F.. Coates, Victoria street,
yesterday. -    ' '.
'.,- • Mrs. .J. M. Armstrong, SUver
King road, has returned from Rob-,
son, where she spent: a few days,
the gueit of her. mother, Mrs. A. D.
Clyde.   -,  ",-   -.    •;■".   ■
• Miss Helen Tompkins of the
staff of the Kootenay Lake General hospital.has returned trom a
month's vftit in San Francisco and
Los Angeles, Calif., where she Visited her aunt. She was accompanied
by her mother, Mn. TompHns of
Coleman, Alta.v .   .- "-■•/.
• George . Rossington of the
staff of the Imperial Bank of Can?
ada has returned from his three
weeks furlough spent, in' Biggar
and other Saskatchewan cities.
• Harry Taylor was iff town
from New Denver yesterday. '
• Mr. and Mn. Stanley Bostock, Latimer street,,have as their
guest, Mn. J. Draper, of New Denver.   :   ' •  • I.'.    ■-     '":.   ': '.
• Mrs.- M, Thomas and daughter
of Sunshine Bay spent-yesterday in
the city.- • .   7   ,*'   - -•'•-'• ■•
: * Mrs, A. M. Burnett,-718. Hendryx street- has returned from
PinCher Creek and other points in
Alberta, where she'spept several
weeks. - .',-" .    '■•    •   .   .. _...
• Mn. F. Scott of South Slocan
visited town Tuesday.
• - Miss Hope Taylor,,auperin-
tendent ot the Slocan Community
hospital-in New Denver, was a Nelson shopper yeeterday.
Social.. .;■"
nakusp ;.;;
NAKtlSP, B. C.-A: B. S. Stanley returned,ob Wedneiday from
Vancouver where he attended an
executive meeting of the British
Columbia Weekly Newspaper asso?
elation. ..-.'-. , ' ',
.-' Misa NeUle Harvey returned from
Vancouver Wednesday. She was accompanied by.her sister, Miss Doris
Harvey, who met her at Revelstoke.
. H. I- Bawlings.of Victoria a former Nakusp resident, spent several
days ln Nakusp this week.
Mr. and Mrar Mrs. H. W. Stones
of Burton-were,xhotor visiton taNa-
kusp on Thursday.
Mr. and Mn. H. Murphy of.Edge-
wood Wera visiton in Nakusp on
Tuesday. :
R. McCulloch returned from Vancouver. '■ '..    *■ '._■: • -.:,'".
L. Potter arrived from Vancouver
on Tuesday and WiU spend the
winter in the district
P. Young returned Wednesday
from the Lardo district,
Mr. and' Mrs. Wy Williams of
Burton were among shoppers in
Nakusp Wednesday..,   .••
Mrs. A. P. Hudson Is
Longbeach Women's
Institute  President
LONGBEACH, B. C. - The tohg?
beach Women's guild-held the first
meeting of theaeasbn Nov. 23, at the
home of.Mn. IN, Major. Present
were Mrs. J. D. Kerr, Mn. B. A.
Smith, Mrs. A. P. Hudson, Mrs. J.
Armstrong, Mrs, D. R .Ferguson,
Mrs. F.>H\ Chanter?
Mrs. rfudson was. elected president: Mrs. H. Donald was elected
secretary..
In view ot the decreased membership, it was decided to hold meetings fortnightly instead Ot weekly.
The funds being low, only $3.00
were to be'spent on the children's
Christmas treat, the remaining money to be raised by a collector, ln
charge of Mrs. Kerr and Mrs. Major.
Flowers were ordered purchased
for a sick member. • •
A committee waa .appointed to
meet a' committee from Harrop
Women's institute to coordinate
plans for the Harrop-Longbeach
school children's Christmas concert.
It was, decided to leaVe other
plans for discussion until 'alter the
■New Year. ■•""••■' -■ /.-•'.-   ■ ,."
KAStD Social,,.
KASLO, B.C.-G. Dodds of Nakusp was a visitor in town.
Mrs. W. F; MacNic'ol arrived in
the city Friday en route from a visit with relatives in Maple Ceek, to
her home at Johnson's Landing. Mra.
MacNicol was accompanied by her
daughter, Mra. J. R. Thompson and
children of Nelson, who will spend
some .time in Johnson's Landing.
- George McCready of Blaylock
was a business visitor in town during the' weekend.  •■■,'■
3. N. Murphy -was a recent visitor
,ln Nakusp.  /• -A    ' :■ '
Mn. R. A. Hamilton was a visitor
in Nelson during the weekend,.
, Mrs,: W. |T..Marieau of Kimberley
arrived in the city to spend several
days with her parents Mr. and Mrs.
E. H. Latham., '
Mn. W. M. Cannlff of Farroii arrived in town to spend several
weeks with, her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Hamilton.-■
Miss, Flora Pearson, It.N. left for
her home in Spokane after paying
.a short - visit to her mother, Mrs."
E. Pearson.., '■''/,.'
KlMBERl-fY Social
♦ ♦ •
CRESTON. B. C. - Mr?.' Aubrty
Kemp has returned from Spokane.
Dr. A. E. Shore of Calgary was
a viiltor at Creston Monday. .'   -
Miss Dixon of Merritt, .the newly-
appointed matron of Creston hospital has taken over her new duties.
BEATTY
FOB XM>18 iuY BEATTY
.WORTH WHILE APPLIANCES
WASHERS    $79.50
IRONKRS   ..... #49.50
BEATTY FACTORY ■RANCH
PHONE it'-'-     321 BAKER 8T.
mimimmmmtmm»u^Amtamm*t
HOME COOKED MEALS
IN DOMESTIC ATMOSPHERE
Grenfeirs Cafe
Opp. CIVIC THEATRE
-■J«$*»««S«4«JS«*$«$5a»SWS*«
"♦"* *:
S. A. Speers, R. J, Forbes and
M. R. Joyce were* at, Nelson'on
Thursday, for sessions of the Scottish- Rite section of the Masonic
institution, '    •.    ;'-'.
I Mr. and Mn. H. Adams and children returned Friday trom Spokane. '   ■."".''"
Raymond Bcvan has returned
from a holiday at. Calgary.
Uoyi Cartwright has returned
from Medicine Hat
Mrs.- K. Knott was at Spokane. „
Mra. Hall, who. has been' a patient at Creston hospital, has returned to her home m Boawell;
, Mr. and Mn.H. X Cox have left
for Cranbrppk, whehs they expect
to reside.      ,•;•".'.:■•:■.,'
George Campion is hack from a
week end visit to his sister, Mrs.
D, Wi Dow at Cranbrook.  . ,   .
Mn. Longdon of Winnipeg visited her daughters, Misses Myrtle
and Ethel Lahgdon. ' - :
* Mrs. Charles Andenon is home
trom Spokane. Where she visited
Miss R. Boberta, ' .-  .-,■ ■    . •;.
Oscar Kilgren of the Bivervlew
district is* spending the winter in
Regina.      '-.,,**
KIMBERLEY, B. C. -' Mra. D.
Robertson and the Misses E. Wilson,
A. Honeyman and V. Zac have ac--
cepted positions at the Mark- Creek
store to help over the Christmas
rush.      . ','
Mn. Hutchison of Chapman Camp
and daughter Doris have been
spending a tew daVs at Nelson and
Trail, while in Nelson they attended thfe wedding'of Toin'-Blrrel,
who is weU known here.        ,
The Kimberley Golf club held
a bridge party at Oughtred hall
NoV. IB When 11 tables were-ecp-
ployed. The party was a success and
the proceeds went to the Kimberley
Qplf .and Country club. ,
Miss Kay Gower celebrated her
15th birthday Friday night. when
16 guests were present. .The evening was spent in games after which
delightful refreshments were served.
Miss Edith Wilson,of the Mark
Creek store Was confined to her
home for a few days last weak owing to illness."..-: > „ *.. .'■
.Mn and Mrs, Bob-McLeod and
family have moved to the former
Ritchie residence. ':   ""  ... ...    y
"Mn. F, Holdsworth entertained
friends for tea last Wednesday.,
WiUiam DerhyshirC refturned. last
week from Trail.'.   <V--       : .
Sunday affernqon saw a number
of camp ski enthusiasts busy buUdlng a lean-to on the ski dopes behind the mill. This is only a temporary shelter but .I'l is hoped that at
some .future date a cabin will be
built and a ski dub started in camp.
' Miss Eileen Dutton of Chapman
Camp entertained a few friahds at
her home last Wednesday afternoon,
the occasion being her 8th birthday.       ."' - ■-..', i:••■■   . ,'".
Hugh Price entered the McDougtl
hospital, where he is recuperating
from influert-a and sinus trouble.
M^ and Mn. EarLMellor and baby
Joan arrived from Sheep Creek
and will make their home here.
" B. HNWen left Wednesday for
Edmonton where.he will.proceed
to the,G. M. AX"Co. property at
Yellowknlfe. ,    *..   ?.   ._"
Eri? Holdswtirth of Chapman
Camp entertained a few bf hia
friends on Saturday afternoon, the
occasion being his 12th birthday.
The afternoon was spent at the movies after which the boys returned
to supper and spent an enjoyable
evading, playing games.
Jack Wolstenholme of Marysville
was able to resume his duties at tbe
mill last week'after a 10-day-illness,
but again Is confined to hia home
due to-illness.       -■     * .
The Chapman Camp school children have started practicing tor
their annual Christmas concert.
The Chapman Camp contract
Bridge clbb met Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. G. O'Connor. Top
honors went to Mra.McKenzie while
Mrs. J. Charnock captured the consolation. Dainty refreshments were
served, by. tho hosteSs.
W.-jBi-a-mm, chief of the mines
branch at Ottawa, paid a visit to tbe
mill Inst week.; ...
Jim B&rton has resumed his duties at the mill after being called to
the coast by the death of a relative.
Les. Lane is a patient in the McDougall hospital, having been taken ill last Sunday.
- Mrs. E. S. Shannon leaves today
for Trail where she will join Mr.
Shannon and reside.   .   "■'.
-PAGE Flvfl
fur Goat
Fashions
Buy your fur Coat or
Fur Neckpiece for
Christmas now .while '
you can,choose from
our large selection that
, is being shown ail this
week.
We can arrange convenient terms and will
even give'you a liberal
allowance on your old.
fur Coat.
Hudson Seal, Black Ca-.
racul, Smart Muskrat,
Persian Lamb, Kolinsky Electric Seal.
Broadtail and many >
other novelties.
COATS
PROM
$39.50 4608
NECKPIECES
FROM ' ,'.-
$12.50 to $95
This showing is supervised by tn expert furrier and stylist. He will
give special attention
to your fur problems, '•'
Remodels and repairs
at factory cost.
WOOL DRESSES
By WOO.CRAFT
Just in, are new styles in Wool Dresses. A useful
■garment you should not be with- . y      .
out. I New colors Of'Roseberry.'S  |    A   Q5
Brick Dust, Laurel Green. '"
Bluestone	
14
Ready-to-Wear and Dry Coods
PHONE 200 BAKER ST.
Mr?. S. E. Jones
■ .: Dies,"Kimberley
KIMBERIJE?, B. C. -.Mrs. S. X
Jones died at the McDdugall hospital, Wednesday, following a lengthy illness. She had resided in Klmberley for three years, coming here
frpm England/She is survived by
four sons, William, and George ot
Kimberley; Robert ot Kirkland Lake,
Ontario, and Alberta of Drumheller;
also by three daughters, Mrs. G.
Horn of Calgary, and Fanny and
May In England. ■ -    . -,|
Flowers and Plants J
Dolivered Anywhere in; the I
World for Christmas
.... ORPER EARLY,     . I
Kootenay Flower Shop
J. H. Coventry, prop.   ' Phepe Wfj
CURB COUGHS *** COLDS QUICKER
; with -PAiBMOrtriS''*;''
tho licaling action of Paimofc'i ,
3-Mlnutc-AJd Droochtal Mixture uttrU
with the fint #lp.   You ctn teal the   y'
in^Kdlcnta gofntf to work — looienlntf
phlegm, clearing tho throat, head end   t
\ bronchial tubca ■— bringing prompt
relief —quickly, ettcctltely.
Jutt lime tttchtmyou tafte UI
J2 - -mutuJe aid.
8R0KCHIAL MIXTURE
mzgtfm
We'irMake Any Radio
duiomaiic
■■'■ .FOR % 14.95
Nelson Electric Co;
Phone'260
WMmmmstmm
XMAS  LINGERIE
Satin Gowns. and Jaiamas.' Satin
Dance Sets." Satin and Silk Slips.
Satin. Wool and Taffetta Dressing
Gowns. A Deposit Will Hold
SdillL Cl CahholhsJiL
569 Ward St—Opp. Capitol Theatre
tmmmmmmmmmmmmammmm
MILK
contributes more to good nutrition than -does any other single
tood. •'':■     ..-       '•   .
PHONE 116
Kootenay Valley Dairy
■
Have Ybu Changed
Your Address?
REVISION OF THE
THIRD EDITION
, "■•    .   ofthe v
Nelson Street Address
DIRECTORY
IS NOW UNDER WAY
If you have moved since June 1 or contemplate
moving in the near future, we Will be pleased
'   to have your new address for the directory.
PtlONE144
ASK FOR C. D. PEARSON
COMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT
 •AQE8IX-
y,:-W-llahed'AprU il UD2
British Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper
Published every morning except Sunday by
the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,"
266   Baker   Street,   Nelson.   British   Columbia.
Phona Iti Private exohange Connecting All Departments.
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS A-4D.
THE   AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1988.
MOVING EARTH IN THE WINDWARD
ISLANDS
Beautiful Saint Lucia, where landslides are causing
•grave damage to cultivated lands and taking .heavy toll of
llives, Is one of the Winward group, a British colony. Whe-
•Nher the cause of the present disturbances ia volcanic or
'pluvial has not been established; on Saint Lucia is a peak
Erich in sulphur, hot springs and miwral water pools testi-
IfyiBjg to tiie continued activity in the district of the internal fires of the earth. On nearby Saint Vincent is La
I Soufriere, which in 1902 erupted in company with Mont
|pelee on Martinique at the time wh«_ Saiiit, Werre, ijie
Iprincipal town of the French island, was pvetwbelmed,
with loss of 40,000 lives. ,
L The volcanists on Martinique recently reported signs of
[unusual disturbances at their observatory. The rainy seagpn
tin the islands covers the period June^Octpber and in Bar-
h»dos, to the east, there have recently been «»rbh mbye-
(niente of considerable volume, though none producing such
I aeriotts consequences as tbose on Saint Lucia have been re-
^.ported. ■',')    ":■ i   ■"■ .,'■■
All the West Indies have suffered heavily in the years
of worldwide economic dislocation, and the misery of their
Inhabitants has caused violent uprisings pf populations,
from Jamaica to Trinidad. These popular displays of .dissatisfaction have led to the creation by the British parliament of a commission which is now in.being to investigate ecpnojnlc, social and''political conditions. It is highly
impr*-bable that the Saint Lucia treasury can meet the costs
ofthe emergency. On Saint Vincent the task of restoring
the district which suffered from La Soulriere's eruption
more than a generation ago has not been completed.
'      >   ■.:■'■■■■ ■ ■   -
NORFOLK RECLAMATION'
A different kind of land reclamation from what we
ive in the Creston district/a reclamation whose guiding
_iclple Is to do nothing and let Nature take Its course,
apparently what is prescribed for tiie recent sea-inun-
ited portions of Norfolk, in England, :
The salt water lay on the land for three months in the
parishes of Somerset, Horsey, Waxburn and part of Hick-'
ling, writes Anthony Buxton in the London Spectator. All
the fish in Horsey, with the exception of eels, were killed
the first night, and a few days later at Hickiing. In their
- there entered from the sea, smelts, herrings, flat fish,
tbs and barnacles. Practically all vegetation wasdes-
>yed, with tiie exception of reed,
The question on every one's lips is how long, if the sea
; kept out, will recovery take? In answering that question
there seems to be no reliable evidence except other cases of
t^seafloodingv and in those where careful records have been
Rhept (floods in Essex, on the Humber and in Holland),
Bttje sea watqr was only on the land for a fortnight, whereas
gin the East Norfolk floods it Was on continuously for three
nonths. In these other cases complete recovery took from
rep to 20 years, and the more the land was worked, the
j.sktwer was that recovery. ,
The salt turns the soil into a sodium clay with the con-
I sistency o. putty. It wilj hot work, it will not drain, and
'attempts to plow it or even to harrow it apparently retard
^•natural processes bf recovery. The experts-say that when
j-rthei worms come back we can begin to hope. The only worm
tj| present is the wire worm, nothing, not even salt, will
kill him.
AS TWO MEN USED WEALTH
The wealth of John D. Rockefeller sr., estimated.at
one time at $1,000,000,000, was some $26,000,000 when his
•■WiU was recorded a few days ago, and became about 810,-
< 000,000 after payment of succession duties and other taxes.
During his career he was subjected to more publicity as a
capitalistic bgre than any other rich man in the American
republic. He shrunk from newspapermen. Later in life he
wrote a book Which earned him $585 and was pictured as a
benign old gentleman who gave aWay shining dimes, To
what extent he deserved the merciless muck-raking he en-
I dured was a point ho longer. He had retained only, one share
I ot stock, worth $44, in the. industry which produced his
I fabulous riches. At any rate, a billion dollar., the means
■of accumulating it and why any one would want it are
beyond the comprehension of most men....
One thing to his credit is that during his life he gave
$580,000,000 to churches, educational institutions and other
I worthy causes, besides providing ample means for his fam-
I'lly.Most of his huge fortune became a blessing to humanity
tin. ways thatWi.l last. Had it been retained at its peak and
^divided among the American people it would have allowed
I'less than $8 for each person.
Andrew Carnegie distributed for libraries and other
| benefactions about the same sum that Rockefeller gave
and lett an estate bf a little more than $23,000,000. When '
?>men Who gather great wealth regard it as a public trust and
• devote it to services for the masses of the people they are
fciK)- enemies of the less privileged. If persons of average
■ financial standing were depended upon for epdoWments W
hospitals, colleges, research foundations, churches and
charitable causes such institutions would not be available.
And.it is to be noted, whether from choice or otherwise,
'*--' "i**1io fc«Ui« nuii mnro unit mora in thia way.
NBLSON DAILY NEWI. NELION. B.C-THURSDAY MORNINQ, DEO. 1. IMS
SALLY'S SALLIES
Timeia&likmtatt,'
(■ont/uicL
Shepard Barclay
Tells How to Bid
and May
WONDEES NEVEK CEASE
NOBODY WOULD HMOR tut
prOQlCL ID aCIVaDOO ao^DL6 O
tier things *hf* happm oa bridge
bind!. Too often to believe,
a player with an apparently worth-
leaa band manages to take t> trick
with aome Insignificant little cart
which happens to decide Uie success
or failure of the oontract.
trick, tat that would not ta msm\-
dent to Ull declarer's chance tar
♦ AKQ.J
if
4 as «
XUfi
At
* J s « *
8 3
♦ 52
its
12
Memories are all right to live on provided you fyave
' ^metl^is else.1;
9ttitifflymt)eSmtemstyt#W3ts^^
Letters may be published over-a nam de plume, but the sctual '
name of tho writer must be given to the editor ti evidence ot
Sbod filth. Anonymous letters go In the waste paper basket
*   x *aesss«*w«««
World Needs New
Moral Code or It
is Lost-Prospector
Tt-mmtmmVm,
I notice where otae ot our propi;
intnt Smelter executives has lore?
sew the dangtrs of Dictatorsh P
for Canada. I would not care to
Uve S'It, nor would I jnJoy
raicStonhip of the mt*w
kind. We must deal W'* «*"?*
and ejfect, and men art-WK"1
mond means to "ducate people
Song Moral and Spitttual ■ ltnw,
he has struck the soutton of the
What wo need today is an advanced Christianity such as la
taught by Christian Science and
Oxford group. Otherwise, we face
chaos in the world today. It is
impossible to have a decent Social
order without we do the things
that are good for life and future
generations.,- '".*'. T.'-T '****
The cause of Crime. War, Social
disease, Divorces and Insanity ia
a low moral code; Most young
people today are starved for Spiritual Truth. We must be reborn
to a greater Honesty, Purity and
Unselfishness.- Andr we will make
new progress in our,, Control of
Nature and. the Mastery ot Time.
.      PROSPECTOR.
Nelson, B. C.       •■       »
Nov. 27, 1938.     .,'.
AUNT HET
By ROBER. QUILLEN
"I read about a country where
everybody is ashamed to. eat
with anybody watchln'. It seems
queer, but I've felt the need o!
privacy when I was eatln' corn
on the cob."
tpanohamcL
e&M&itt,
Illuminating
From questions and answers In
the British Columbia legislature-
all quite parliamentary, oi course.
Mr. Guthrie asked the Hon. the
Minister of Railways the following questions:
1. How many gallons of fuel-oil
were used on the Pacifio Great
Eastern Railway during the year
1937? "    ■
2. What was the. total cost of
same?
The Hon. Mr.-Pearson replied
as follows;   .      * . ■       ,'
"1, Information not.available in
the Department of Railways.
"2. P.G.E. is not operated by
Department of Railwaya."'
Radio for
Mpntal Patients
At bedtime in the disturbed male
wards of Worcester (Massachusetts)
State hospital, the loudspeakers of
radio station WSH may be heard
:*''»'■'•
'   ■',•***■* '"■
t) J9 8-1   ...
Jflltf*
(Dealer: North. Bast-Wert vulnerable.) ■
North Md 1-Club on this deal,
South 1-Diamond, West S-Spades,
North .-Diamonds and South S-
Diamonds, which West doubled.
Holding the trump A, West figured if, in*- addition to that and •
spade, he could gel; a olub ruff, he
could prevent South from making
the contract Be therefore lea his
Binglcton club and declarer won.
South then led a trump to West's A.
Welt could poeslbly cash one apade | th^club Q ?
Cornilbt.lMS,Kln|Fat<uoSt«-cstt.jK.
How to get Best In the lead was
Wert's problem, and the chances
lw that were very slim. One slight
i of hope wu Ott Bast might
d toe apade 5 and the 4 might
ta play' trgn dummy. He took
tha <_v_w_ of sacrificing a possible
trick In order to gain two. The spade
reason (Ot the undertead waa quite
apparent ta lait, who returned a
club tor the setting trick.
TomotTWi'i Problem
4.«-*-T .""• I *'.""!*«.
f*f-H L'      _   *AQ8T
♦ AJTBf,,     •   ♦K1008
**,w   1 ■",»'.", I-**'Mt ■
AAKloes
~iioe«t
txts  '■
J^let: South. East-West '***■'
What Is South's bent play for Ut
 * contract after the lead of
STAMP CORNER
By JAMES MONTAQNES
New stamps, left to right, from Tonga Islands tor Queen Salotc's
20 years ot reign, from Manchoukuo for Red Cross, from Dominican's
Republic for the 400th anniversary ot the founding ot University ot
Santo Domingo—Stamps courtesy Stamp Haven, Toronto, and Marks
Stamp Co-, Ltd., Toronto. "
Looking Backward. ♦ ♦
.   TEN YEARS AGO
From .Dally News of Dec. 1,1928
Nelson experienced its first real
snowfall yesterday with two inches.
—R. O. Leslie hai returned from
his holidays visiting tr(eBda_ln the
Okan agon—nal Miller, Chicago
welterweight, knocked out Vancouver's Jimmy McLarnln, leading
title contender, in the severitti rwpd
at Detroit last night - The deer
hunting season in. the Kootenays
closed last night — Number of
boxes of apples grown' in British
Columbia in 1928 totalled 4,378,970,
second only to Ontario ln Canada.
—Nelson men's and women's basketball teams met defeat at Trail
last night by scores of 38-JO and
S6-2 respectively.'    "
. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AOO
From Dally News of Dm. 1, ,1911
Rend»l Matt and Duncan Macaky,
both of Edmonton arrived last t-tht
in Grand Forks -where they WiU
play hpekey this winter.—Tha Brazilian dreadnought Rio Janeiro has
been purchased by the Italian gov-;
ernment for $19,000,000.—Chief Justice Hunter ruled at Vancouver
that all immigration restrictions
concerning Hindus to British Columbia were illegal.—E. K. Bees-
ton returned from, a visit to coat
cities laat night-Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Hoskins ot Fraser's Landing left
yesterday on the Crow boat ior
mlypoql, Ont^Trail smelter's receipts last week were 8215 tons.
FORTY YEARS AOO
From Dally News of Deo. 1,1898
Nine persons lost their lives on
the Kootenay Lake yesterday when
X steamer Ainsworth foundered
Rhinoceros Point in a disaster
thus far unparalleled In Kootenay
-i»vi|atton. — Nearly seventy mpn-
of the St. Andrew's and Calc-
'** society Mid honor to the
 *n saint Ot Scotland at a ban-
duet In a local hotel last night—
W. 3urns provincial School inspector, returned here last night alter an
inspection' of Trail and' Rossland
schools, —-'Jta.*"!. Dewdney, ex-
lieuten'ant-governor ot this province
has been Inspecting the Arlington
mine on the north fork of the Salmon river' witty S. S. Fowler, M.E.
—A mild torn of measles is prevalent lh Nelson at present
above. the overtones of f rcniled
sickness". A quiet confident voice
speaks ln much the manner of a
hypnotist: '..'•;,
""You're going to sleep. It's time to
sleep. It's time to rest Go to sleep
now, to rest. Let nothing worry
you while you try to rest"  .
The repetitive bedtime story goes
on for from ten to fifteen minutes,
using the airwaves to force
gestlon into unaware minds. At rising time, on the same type ot wards,
the centralized hospital broadcasting station sends a pep talk to start
the day:  V ; '■■ '",
"You are rested now, and here a
a new day. A new day.on.the way
to health—Don't worry today. Don't
worry if you didn't sleep well last,
night. Today will be a good day,
and tonight you'll have a good
night Don't worry about anything today-"   ,
A Dear Old
Bachelor .
YOUNGSTOWN, 0, has a kindly
old, extremely girl-shy - bachelor,
whose chief interests in life, apparently, are working with hisooys'
clubs, reading, and seeking out
beautiful nature spots. "       •
The Youngstown Vindicator carried a highly laudatory article
about him written by a member of
one ot his boys' clubs. Unfortiinate-
ly, some lines were accidently dropped out of tiie piece so that it
read, in part: , ■   . A.
"His hobbies are his boys' clubs,"
reading, I and driving about the
Countryside looking ior beautiful
women":■'   '■'
THE WONDERING.JEW
?? Qtiesti-ptis??
ANSWERS
This.column bt questions and
answers Is open to any reader oi
the Nelson Daily News In no
case will the name of the person
asking the, question ta published
With Canada Issuing on Nov. IS,
a 13-cent stamp showing entrance
to Halifax harbor, it. is of interest
to note that Canada shows the Vancouver harbor at the other end of
the Dominion on the* 50-cent value
ot the current issue, and showed
Quebec harbor as background ot the
$1 value of the last issue.
WhUe tbe Canadian stamps do
not Show harbor traffic predominantly, but are more of a scenic
nature, other countries in recent
years have issued stamps showing
Srincipal harbors and harbor traf-
c. Such stamps serve to publicize the sea-borne commerce of those
nations. 'Canadian stamps could
perhaps .also show more the bustle
of our main harbors, thus using
stamps in the modem manner of
not only paying postage, but at the
same lime using them to advertise
Canada's commerce.
'Belgium tor instance, shows big
liners in the Antwerp harbor on'a
1929 charity stamp. Chile similarly on a 1938 stamp shows traffic
in Valparaiso harbor. Cuba on' Its
1936 Port of Mantanzas issue has a
number of stamps depictlng'morden
harbor traffic. France has several
stamps, notably the 1929 stamp featuring Port ot Rochelje and the 1938
stamp showing the Port of St. Male
(from which Jacques Cnrtier sailed). Australia's Sydney harbor
bridge stamp of 1932 shows harbor
commerce. Uruguay on its 1930 50-
cent stamp shows a modern view
of Montevideo's harbor, and Holland
to commemorate tercentenary ot
its colony Curacao in South America, showed a view Of the harbor
of Wlllemstad in 1934, The stamps
Of Panama show frequently modern ocean traffic passing, through
various stages o{ the Panama canal.
Nigeria's half-penny 1936 stamp
shows a steamer loading at Apapa
wharf. New Zealand's Chamber of
commerce congress stamps of 1938
include one showing steamers loading. Many British colonial stamps
feature harbors, but like the Canadian stamps do not show predominantly the hsrbor trafli-*..
NEW ISSUES
Tonga Islands, a South Sea British protectorate, has issued a three
value set marking the 20th anhiver-
sary iot Queen Salote's reign . . .
HollsM will issue next year I \vp
value let marking the 1200th,anniversary of the death of St Willl-
brod, tint Bishop of Utrecht . , .
North Borneo will issue in January,
16 new pictorial stamps, following
the previous issues by showing
native animals, birds, people ana
scenes . . . Switzerland is overprinting its current stamps for official use with a CeneVa cross, replacing the perforation method ot
the past . . . Algeria has Issued a
five value set noting the centenary
of they town of Phlllppevale, the
stamps featuring Roman ruins found .
there in 1888 .-.. Bulgaria has issued four more stamps to Its national produce set showing.strawberries, grapes/ roses ana wheat
. , . Twenty-one French colonies
have one value commemorative
sets for the Curie's ef radium fame,
the stamp being similar to that recently issued by Franoe . . . Bel- *
glum will issue a special postage
set for the international exhibition
at Liege next year,... The united
States issues-early in December the
24,25,30 and 50 cent stamps ot the
presidential series... From London,
England, comes a report that the
1932 overprint of Canada's first air
malt stamp, changing the value from
5 cents to 6 cents, has been forged
in four, varieties, overprint inverted,
double overprint, triple overprint
and pair, one without overprint A
London stamp dealer's name Is
printed on the reverse of «ich
stamp guaranteeing gcnuin;n-s.
The derler denies issuing this guarantee, claiming the stamps to be
forged.  ■
iSSSSt&mKWMStWWSWSWgWSffM
Jsud^uhi^
f**5*K*«*
L. H,, Castlegar—Where and how
can one have a cow tested tor
T. B.7 Is It done by testing the
milk or the blood? Also what are
the charges? -■■ '-. ■'., '■;■,
Tbe government,Inspector makes
a trip to the Kootenay once a year.
Make aftnllcatlon to Animal Hus-
bandry, Department of Agriculture,
Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B,
C. The government makes no charge
for this service.' The test is done
hypodennically.
T. B-, Nelson-How should a Kootenay city police magistrate be
addressed   when  officiating  in
court?
As "Your Wemhlp."
P. D., New Denver—Has. any British king visited the Kootenay?
No'. .", ,,.        ■'_,./
V. M.. Trail—Can you tell me whom
I should write to ln Beglna to
ask information about a member
of the staff ot tho R. C. M.-P.?
Write to the Officer Commanding,
R. C. M; P. Barracks, Regina.
W., Trail—Is there- any record of
a law among any primitive people, or savage tribes whereby a
member of the tribe may be arrested or punished for asking for
food or begging? Or is such a law
found only among civilized nations? .-,. ■ •
We know ot no example of the
existence ot an anti-begging taw
among savage peoples-,  prior  to
civilization..     ,'
H. P., Erie—Do cargo steamers on
tjte Atlantic and Pacific' carry
mail occasionally?^
.Only for places outside the regular mall route.      ...;;'_
In answer to 8,1". D.. South Slocan, would like to>dd E. H. Grimwood, Nelson, B. C„ is also a public analyst- ,      - -     -   •' .      ...
Potter Hqs Leave
for Coast Meeting
Permission wai granted by tbe
elty council Tuesday night to R. it-
Potter, city engineer, to attend the
B.C. meeting of the Association of
Professional Engineers at Vancouver, to which he has been elected
eastern district delegate.
The council also authorized him
to attend a convention of the Canadian Electric association at- Victoria following the engineers' meeting.
liaial.'
SWSSWW5S*
ONE-MINUTE, TE8T   -
1. Was ahy child ot a president
ever born in the White .Rouse? .
2. What Bize hat do most men
wear? ,    . ,.
3. In what language are the
schools in Russia Conducted?
TODAY'8 H0R08C0PE
Persons whose birthday is today
are full of self-confidence and prefer to manage-their ,owri affairs,
rightly or wrongly. They neither
give advice to others noi want it
from them They take offense easily, being quick-tempered. They
like to be honestly praised, but
have no use for flattery. They also
have a tendency towaru mysticism,
but are entirely practical in their
everyday affsiiira.
ONE-MINUTE TE8T AN8WEH8
1. Esther Cleveland, second child
of President Cleveland was bom
in tbe White House in 1893..
2: About 25 per cent of the hats
sold to men are size six and seven-
eighths. .-"    ■:..
8. Seventy different national
tongues are Used in teaching in
Russian schools.
Nelson to Buy
Manitoba Bonds
Purchase of $5000 of Province of
Manitoba bonds for the city's sinking fund Was authorized by the city
council Tuesday night < >
The bonds, 8 per cent due in 1948,
were obtained at 99%.
The   United   Statei   Issued   this
-.tamp of Calvin Coolldge on Nov..
'•   ".';'   -: FOB"-' ''■■ *T -:v
MINING CAMPS
Unsanded Cottonwood
' panels are suitable tor
all mining and other
camp buildings They
nrc strong, waterproof,
light and very easy to
handle.'" V    '
District Distributors
Wood. Vallance
Hardware Co., Ltd.
ACTIVE IN . ..:.?'.'.
KOOTENAY LIFE
miimmuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
•>Birtld B.R; Payroilt"o'J?
WAr.BURTON
Now of Nelson, but for many
years to charge of the big Corbin
colliery, until its closing. He is
one of the stalwarts on the executive of the Chamber ot Mines of
___■___> B_tti»JL.(WnmWa.
' 1
Healthf
Children
From Trail we get a letter trom
Mrs. N„ who is a constant user
ol Pacltic Milk. "I will rtcom-'
mend Pacific to anyone," 'she
writes. "I get wonderful results
from it in cooking and baking,
and I am sure it mothers would
give their children more Pacific
Milk the- children would be
"taohger and healthier.';
Pacific Mflk
Irradiated, ol Course     ',
» '.-'■'•"   , ,/--•"'..
iiiiiiiiiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiinimii
"i— —:
Have You Any
UmoT
S
WkyN»J*1"urn
Them Into Cash
WANT AD
;    Will Find a '
<   Purchases' .
Two i2i lines t times 80c net
Two (21, lines once 20c net
Nelion Daily News
PHONE 144
 .
1513
NELSON DAILY HVMX.NELSON  B.C-THURSDAY MORNINQ   nee. 1. 1031
,
Mann Pays Warm
Tribute to 111th.
Battery at Nelson
"Proud to Wave You,"
■'TE^I&es; Hoover
Commends Shots
When, "a tew short weeks ako a
crisis threatened in Europe. •■., w»"
were all thankful that We had as a
defence nucleus, such an organization' as we have here." asserted E.
A. Mann, addressing toe lllth-Battery, R. C. A., and guests Tuesday
nisht following the battery's guu
■ drill.", i ,'"T'.-.,'"
"The fact that your organization
may be criticized In some quarters
I should not make you hesitate to belong to the lllth or the militia,"
Mr. Mann declared. "Every right
thinking citizen In our town is proud
to see you men on parade/and proud
to have you among us."
He paid high tribute to Major A
E. Dalgas, commanding officer, and
. the battery, and repeated. "We are
glad to have you as a nucleus .to
whom we may look ln time of
trouble." .", '
SPLENDID SHOOTING
Lleut.-Col. G. A. Hoover, formerly officer commanding south-
. em Alberta rifles, complimented the
battery on its - splendid shooting
during a miniature barrage on
"Passchendaele." Asserting, each
member could be proud of/being a
member of the militia, Colonel Hoover expressed pleasure,in seeing
men of the 1914-18 expeditionary
force taking an active Interest in
the battery, and complimented the
lllth on the type of young men Join-
I A. S. Horswffl was "delighted with
the marksmanship" ot the gunners
and expressed regret that their work
was not more widely supported.
FINE TARGET
There was 'not another militia
unit In Canada with as fine a target
as you had," R. W. Dawson told the
gun crews. He felt the battery did
not advertise-itself sufficiently, for
' it was doing "wtaderful work1' and
the value of that work was not
w'lily enough known,
"Ih a time of peace we prepare
ou-selves as well as possible,' Major-
Dalgas replied. He explained that
one inch, on the miniature range
ln use, was the equivalent of seven
yards on a 8000-yard range, and the
Kpffii'WJli shooting were there-
lore tot more commendable,
Other speakers included A, S.
Ritchie, Lance-Bombardier A. L.
ClaTk Bnd J. J.Boyd,
Social...
FHBT-VAi/K, B. C.-rl-$r. and Mrs.
R. Bartlett and Ueverly, have left
to reside in Trail tor the winter
months.        .   -    -'      . .-■■■
Mr. ind Mrs; H. Dlllirig and Bruce
left Friday for a lew -days at Spo-
Mr. and Mrs. X Curtis and family have left to take up permanent
residence in Trail. ,    .
, G, M. Barrett was a weekend
jitor to Trail.   '
Miss Kay House of the Trail-Tadanac hospital staff was a visitor
here, guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. Oil-
3d* ■ ■ '     '
F.ve Players Chosen
for Rossland Drama
Club Presentation
i ROSSLAk),, B.& Nov. SO^Che
■ cast for "The Atobltlon", one of
I thtee plays to be presented tn December by Rossland Thespians, was
I announced, today by. George Dir-
I sol" Srector." This play ii the only
drama of the thtee, and it takes 29
I minutes to show.     ■ ,
The cast consists of E. B. 0. Bour-
ohier, Hkrold Fach, Miss Marjorie
McDonell, Miss Eileen Mara and
Miss Lillias Jarvis.
Rossland Students
Sit for Christmas
Exams This Week
TroSSI^ND,   B.C., Nov. 80 -
I Christmas examinations at the Rossland high school got under way
v this week. At the MacLean public
school the students will sit for
I exams toward the end of this week;
Twelve Tables Ploy,
Trainmen Whist Drive
With a score of 48,i_.Pickard and
Mrs. H. Burgess won lint prize, at
■ the partner whist drive held in.the
; Canadian Legion hall Wednesday
evening under the auspices of- the
Ladies' Auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Railroad, Trainmen, Mn.
H. Parker and Mn. P. Jeffery won
consolation honors wih a score of
, IL There were 12 tables In play.
Percy Jeffery acted as master of
eeWmon'M- The refreshment cpm-
StieV Consisted of Mn. V. Rick-
man, Mrs. E." R. McC&skle .Mrs. A,
Oliver and Mrs. It. Stainton.
DETECTIVE, CbNVICT^ battu
C-HCAGO, Nov. SO AAP) - A
". ftrtoua gun battle, fought ina west
aide tavern while the proprietor and
lour patrons sprawled on the floor,
ended today ln the deaths of a de-
; tectlve hero and an escaped convict,
'.  The victims were Sergeant Edward Lynn, who-twice was cited
for bravery for killing robbers in
" pistol duels, and James Wpod, 33,
a fugitive from Missouri.
Americans Take Bike
Lead? Pedens Second
BUFFALO, N. Y, Nov. 80 (AP).
-Jitomy. Walthour and Al Ciossley
spurted out of tbe pack tonight to
take the lead In the six-day International bike races. The American
team set a sizzling pace.
The favored Canadian team of
Doug and Torchy Peden Of Victoria, B. C, made a bid for the
lead In toe'first sprints of the
night and rode Into a tie for sec-
, ond place but were unable to
match the pace set by Walthour
: and Crossley,        .
Mrs. David (alder
Resident of;Trail
for 15 Years, Dies
TRAIL, B. C, Nov. 80 - Mrs.
Mina Mae Calder, who had been
in ill health for several years, died
in Trail-Tadanac hospital early this
morning. Mrs. Calder, a resident
of Trail for the past 15 years, was
toe wife of David Calder, 1038
Green avenue. She Was 62 yean of
Bom in the United States, Mrs.
Calder came to Canada at the age.
of seven;: -'   '   T
Besides her husband, she is survived by two sons, Davidi ot Rossland, and Arnold of Trail; her mother, Mrs, C. A. Berry of Robson; two
brothers, Ray Berry of Robson and
Dr., E; Berry of Toronto; and one
sister, Mrs. Robert Calder of Edmonton. • , .     . , -.'
Social...
ELtfQ      _   ■
ako, B. C. - A Whist drive was
held in the school room on Friday
evening with six tables in play.
Ladies f rst tfr.ze w_s won by diss
A. Sheridan and consolation, Mrs,
R. Lister. Men's "first prize, W Vanderburg, consolation, C. Millett. An
impromptu dance followed, the proceeds for the children's Christmas
tree entertainment. J. Verkerk was
master of ceremonies. *-•
Mrs, M, Roo and het daughter,
Mrs. W. Beaudry were Joint hostesses op Thursday evening to the bridge
club. Three tobies were in play.
W. Vanderburg won tint prize and
Mrs. W, Beaudry, the consolation.
A. Martin and R. Hubberstey, Jr..
left tor Nelson,     > "
Mrs. F. Ingham Is visltlnng her
daughter, Mrst H. Long at Crestdn
tor the winter.
Alice Cooke of Jaffray spent the
week?end with her sister Mn. R.
Hubberstey, jr.
eSacial...
South Slocan
SOUTH SLOCAN, .B. C.-Mra.
J, 0. Yeatman entertained the Junior Woman's.auxiliary when members attended.
- The Juniors arc making two bedspreads, under the direction of Mrs.
Yeatman.. '
Mrs. Turner Lee eave an address
on "The Mission Work of the W"'A."
Mrs. Main and two daughters of
Perry's Siding have come to reside
here.    V- -.
Mn. P. Horlick returned from a
visit to Nelson. .      ■ •'
Mr. and Mrs. H. Strand.and baby
Marjorie Have returned from McConnell, where they were the guests
of Mr. and Mrs. John Strand. .
Mrs. E. Perry and children have
moved to Nelson to. make their
home.    .
Mr. and Mrs. A. P. McDonald
Were Nelson visiton. "
Mrs. George Kennedy of Trail
was a visitor here, the guest ot her
mother, Mrs. M. Kelsey.
A. McCurdy, who recently returned from Paulson, Is a patient
in the Kootenay Lake General hospital,
Mrs. G. K. Ashby, of Nelson is
leaving for England In January,
she is the guest ot Mr. and Mrs.
0. W Humphrey.
Mrs. J. G. Taylor of Oliver have
returned and propose making their
home here..,-,   ; •     ■.    ,
CLIPPERS LOSE 3-2
SEATTLE, Nov, 80 (AP)-The Se-
»ttle"S£ahatoks held off a third period rush and defeated the hapless
Spokane Clippen 8-2'here tonight
in a Pacific Coast League ice hockey
game. -    " .-■ yy ■'  ':■-    - .' •
EPWYOURKIDNEY-S?
POR the relief of
• minor kidney
irregularities Dr.
Pierce's A-nuric
Tablets have, been
found very beneficial. The action of
this stimulant diuretic in flushing the
kidneys diluting
—- m- acid, and relieving
Irritation has given relief to men ind
women In every part of Canada. Read whll
Mra. C. Wilson, Jl 2 Park St, Niagara
Falls, Ont,, slid: '"My kidneys didn't function properly and my rest was often disturbed at rifg-t. Dr. Pierce's A-nuric wfta
the medicine that helped flie, 1 certainly
bad ft trying time of It before I used
'A-nuric' but since I have started io take
these tablets 1 have improved beyond my
.:^tt%^<ij-^,Wia^^
Arawona Garden
WiniCPRvPrixe
PENTICTON, B. 'tf Nov. 80 -
Mrs. John Mtllershlp, wife? ef the
Section foreman at Arawana, a tew
miles east of here, smiled a greeting at C,A. Cotterell, assistant general'manager,of the Canadian Pacific railway, as he stepped from
the Kootenay express, and carte
away from the brief encounter $50
richer.    -'■■':-       ;   .     '  .-
Mn. Millership wtu given Mr.
Cotterelfs check for that amount
for producln*- the best flower garden along th/Canadian Pacific right
of way ln British Columbia during
250 Cars Are Put
Away for Owners
to Apply Refund
Approximately 250 residents ot
Nelson district nave put away their
can tor the winter and have mailed
their licence plates to Victoria, seeking a refund of a quarter of the annual fee. While no accurate check
was possible,' since each person
mailed his own plates to Victoria.
about that number obtained the
forms necessary to make application for the refund.
It Was necessary to have the plates
in the mail, accompanied by tbe
forms ordinarily attached to the
steering post of each-car, by midnight of November 30 to obtain the
refund. Only those resident* east of
the Coast range were eligible for it.
Provincial police have also requested that car owners check the
address on steering post licences
with their present address, and "give
notice of any changes, in order that
there might be no delay next year,
itt sending out renewal wma;
MORE;A60gT
BOMBINGS
. (Continued frem Page One).
The force ot some of the explosions was so great debris blocked
the roads between the two countries
forcing a tfl-Bing ot the bbrdyr. No
one was hurt.
The explosions- apparently constituted the answer ot Republicans
to the stiff Ulster drive against
their under-cover campaign to end
partition.
The I. R. A. in northern Ireland
constitutes the physical force of a
section of anti-partitionists aiming
at ah. independent all-Ireland republic. They are "blamed for most
ot the many explosions along the
border and In Belfast during the
fast eight months.
A third man died today as a result of an explosion Sunday
which wrecked a laborer's cot-
' tage ai Cnstlepln, near Dublin.
Police found I. R. A. literature and
i firearms In the debris. Police
guarding the dying man heard
him murmur; "lt?> all a mistake."
Social...
Grand  Forks
GRAND -FORKS,; B.C.T-Gordoh
Clifton, accompanied by Miss Alice
Spragget and Miss Mary Woodward,
motored to Spokane on Friday.   .
Mayor T. A. love has returned
from Vancouver.
Robert Kerr was a visitor to.
Greenwood on Thursday:
Mrs. J. Willis, who has been the
guest of Mrs. Newbaeur, has return-
ed to Farron.
J, Graham ot Trail (pent the
week-end with his father, John Graham.     -.   -
A. Sutherland lett Saturday lor a
trip to Nelson. '   .   . -   I
S. Fulton lett on Friday lor Carmi. '"', ■ "7
Mr. and Mrs. Cleeton, of Cascade,
were among the out ot town vlslton who attended* the telephone
bridge party, given under the auspices of Banner Rebekah lodge, on
Friday evening. "'
Mn. Cuppebbender; ol Greenwood, was a Grand Forks visitor
on Saturday.
Gordon "Buzz" Wilkinson motored from Wenatchee ahd is visiting
his mother, Mrs; O. PennoyeT;.
Eric Dodd and D. McDonald of
Greenwood motored to the Forks
and attended the Saturday Legion
dance. * »■".■■      v
A. Cudworth of Greenwood was
a Grand Forks visitor on Saturday.
' E, S. Reynolds was the grand
prize winner of the.Rebekah telephone bridge held on Friday.evening. Hostesses were, Mrs.. Bon-
thron, Mrs. Wolfram, Mn. Bailey,
Mrs. Gowans, Mn, Euerby. Other
prize winners were: Mn. Bicker-
ton. Mrs. Kerr, Mrs. McMillan, Mn.
Williamson,. „        '-:'       •"    ?
CURLfcRSPUY.';.•■
10 MORE GAMES
Ten more games in the city
schedule of the Nelson Curling club
went down ih the books Thursday
night, in the fourth night's play.
Results to 9 o'clock follow:
T. R. Wilson 12, J. G. Bennett 5.
G. S. G_dfrey 9, C. F. McHardy 5.
J. P. McLarent, George Dill 7.
Per?y Andrews 10, James Gordon
Willlain Brown 8, S. P. Bostock 8-
Building Permits
Climb, Vancouver
VANGbtrVSR, Nov. M <CP)-
Building permits Issued in the greater Vancouver*district -during tot
first 11 months of 1818 Wen valued
at $9,133,308, an increase ot $1,173,-
883 from the same period ot last
year.
November permits this year dropped below those ot the same month
of 1887, however, being valued at
$324,089 compared with $543,071 ln
November last year.
Trustee at Trail
TRAIL,'B. C„ Nov, 30 — Charles
Catalano, a trustee of tbe Trail-
Tadanac and district school bbard,
who recently announced that he
would contest an aldermanic seat
on toe 1939 city council, today announced that he would also seek
reelection to the school board.
His decision to stonC for both
offices was made only after other
school trustees had strongly urged
him, to retain his seat on Trail-
Tadanac school board. Approached
this fall by a grgup ot business men,
Mr. Catalano gave assurance he
would run lor alderman on December 15, It was his intention at that
time to not seek reelection as trustee.      -   ,,,-".'    .,  ".   '.
No November Fire
Loss in Rossland
ROSSLAND, B.C., itov, SO-Two
chimney lires in November here
caused no loss stated the monthly
report Issued today by Kenneth
Martin,, lire chief, -',
Committed for
Selling Fake Gold
PRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Nov. 80
(CP). —- Fred Peterson was committed Ior trial today on a .charge
ol attempting to obtain, money
under false pretences by sale of fake
gold. .'"- ■' ',
Police said the/were called-to
a restaurant by its proprietor,- Jpe
Sing, after a man tried to sell the
Chinese lead pellets Covered with
gilt to look like gold., . v "
'Mayor of Goal
• Harbor" IS, Dead
VANCOUVEB, Nov. SO-ttP). -
Funeral services will be held Fri;
day fof "homas Marshall, 78-y«ar-
Old pltfmber known to waterfront
residents as "mayor of Coal'Harbor."
He died in hospital latt night. >
Marshall had lived in VaMOUVet
52 yean, for the put 30 years in a
houseboat on Coal Harbor, an inlet
.,. ______..'
Nova Scotia Wins
Maple Leaf Prize
MONTREAL; Nov. 30 - Recognition of the beauty of Nova Scotia's
hardwood forests- in the autumn
was won by Miss Betty Schatheitiin,
of Canning* N. S., when she was
awarded first prize of $100 by the
judges of the sixth annual maple
leaf contest held by the Canadian
Travel bureau at Ottawa, the Canadian Pacific railway and the Canadian National railways.
Both prizes for large map]-) leaves
went to British Columbia, lint
prize ot $30 to Miss Sadie Wellis,
Vancouver, and second prize of $10
to Miss Mary James, Cowlchan Station.  - .
HOCKEY
HERE   and   THERE
INTERN>AMER.QAN
Hershey 9, Philadelphia 6.
Providence 4, New Haven 2,
New York 4, SyracuJe 1,
ALBERTA SENIOR
Olds 5, Edmonton 1.
• Drumheller 2, Calgary 1.
ASSOCIATION
Minneapolis 4, Wichita 2. ,
6NTARIQ SENIOR
Niagara Falls 5,' Oshawa 3. >
QUEBEC SENIOR
Royals 8, Victorias 8.
EASTERN U.S.
met)'York 2, Baltimore li.
Social...
SLOCAN CITY
SLOCAN CITY, B.C.-Members ol
the Badminton club attended a tournament in New Denver on Wednesday evening.- ■
-Mrs. Howard Parker foent to Nelson Thunday to meet her sister, Mrs.
J. B. Hughes, who arrived Irom
West Bromwich. England.
Mrs. J. W. .Crow is home from
the Slocan Community hospital.
R. Ir. Reynolds is a patient in
the Slocan Community hospital at
New Denver,'
Mn. J. Law and her daughter,
Mrs. George Stewart and little
grand daughter, Ivy, went to Nelson to see Mr. Law, a patient ln the
Kootenay Lake General hospital.
Mn.' George Stewart and little
daughter, Ivy, returned to Sandon
Tuesday alter visiting Mrs. Stewart's
mother, Mn. J. Law, for two weeks.
,Sacw£..,
^ilWPoiat
WILLOW POIN*. B.C.-A «uc-
cessful tea and sale under the auspices of tho Woman's auxiliary was
held in the Institute house,'The tea?
tables, centered with bronze 'mums,
were In charge of Mrs. H. I. Middle-
ton, Mrs. B. Heddle and.Mrs. C.
Horsficld. Mn. J. Gilroy and Mrs.
M. Matheson had a second-hand
stall;, Mri E. H. H. Applewhaite
sold miscellaneous articles and Miss
D. Jackson "eatables"; Mrs B.
Townshend a clock contest
Roads in Fair
Order ar Trail
.": and Rossland
RQSSLAND, B.a, Nov. 3iK-The
Schofield highway, which caused
trouble to the motorist Tuesday
because ot Its icy surface, is re
ported today as being in good condition. Milder weather-and sand
which was spread on it Tuesday
night by the government road crew
did away with the slipperincss.
Up to Tueiday the Cascade rCad
was in good condition,- but because
ot last night's and today's fall of
snow it .is doubtful as to what condition It might/be in.   -,   ."■   ",:
The Paterson highway and those
leading out of Trail,-are in good
order. ,   :y   'ft-
Tories Edge 22-20
Win Over Buddies
5RAIL, B. C, Nov. &WSntertn$
the second half with an 11-point
deficit, Young Tories turped the
tables after' the interval to defeat
the Buddies 22-20, in an exciting
climax of a game ol the ladies: division basketball league at Memorial hall tonight. It was Jean Hood
who largely accounted .for Buddies'
strong lead, scoring four field baskets in the first hall. She tallied two
mote after the interval, for four
of her team's five points lor the
hall.
Expect to Start
School, Rossland
ROSSLAND, B.C. Nov. 30-En-
couraging strides are being made
by Gibbard and Bonthron, local contractors, to completing the $32,500
addition to the east side of the
Rossland high.school
Earlier this week windows in
all parts of the building, were installed. It is expected" the steam
fUters will have the radiators in the
classrooms and auditorium installed
this week.
The carpentering gang Were occupied this week in laying lath in
the Interior of the rooms, upon the
completion of this job, plasterers
Will start on' the tint coat which
will likely be tbe beginning of rieKt
week, ■     ■   '    ■   . :■.'..;.'■.",.■
An outstanding feature of the
40 by 82 foot auditorium Is the 20
by 15 loot stage which rests lour
feet above the level ol the main
floor. There It dressing room accommodation on one side of the stage
and'a prompter's platform on the
other side. At the end ot the protruding stage Is a gutter for foot-
ught-. ■,-"■'■ ..y .,   ,-..  y   : '
MORE ABOUT .,
(RASH THEORIES
(Continued From Page One)
The big ship rab into squally
weather and off Its couree en route
to Oakland from- Medford, Ore.
Pilot Stead ran out ol fuel while
groping to get back on his course
and landed neatly at sea near Point
Reyes, 35 miles short of its goal. All
hands climbed out- on the wings
and.five of them drowned when
the heavy surf dashed toe emit
against the rocky shore. .      .    .
While -civil aeronautics authority
officials arrived to begin an official
Investigation, Dr. L. E. Rukemo,
associate professor of: radio engineering at the Univenity of California, suggested the "ghost wave"-
and sunspot factors as a theory of
tho troccdY
Pointing to the flight log show'?
ing Stead as believing ther* was
"something wrong" with the radio
beam long before the plane got into
actual trouble, Dr. Rufcema said the
difficulty possibly was due to the
peculiarity of • overlapping of directional radio signals. Pilots refer to these overlapping signals as
"ghost beams." " '    .
Sunspot activity, which frequently
plays tricks with radio traffic, could
easily have accounted for the 'Hoo
good" radio reception which reputedly gave the plane strong signals from Salt Lake City and other
distant stations but amarently nothing from nearb-C Oakland, the station whose beam Stead was trying
frantically to find.
Social.,.
Catrip Lister
CAMP LISTER-Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Chilton who tip residing In
Creston, were Saturday visiton here.
The pontract Bridge clttb held a
practice game at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Huscroft last
Wednesday evening with three tables In play.
Miss E. Fleck of Erlckon was a
Sunday visitor at Huscroft a guest
of Mra. M.Ross. ,    ' -
John Pendrey who Is working at
the Garrison ranch at Port Hill
spent the week-end with Mrs. Pendrey and family. ' * "
Miss E. Fleck of Erickson was a
guest of Miss I. Rutledge)
Birth at Camp Lister, to Mr. and
Mrs. Jas. Handyslde on Nov. 19 a
Son.1
W. J. Uttlejohn and Keith of
Erickson were Sunday visitors to
Col. and'Mrs. Fred Lister.   ,-.
Bert Huscroft and Charles Huscroft were Thunday and Friday
visiton to Boswell. •' a ■     -'   .
Mrs. Krtlbbs .who, was a patient In
the Creston '.alley hospital for a
week returned home,
Mr, and Mrs. Frank Yerbury
and two children of Huscroft spent
Tuesday here' with Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Yerbury.-:     • '
Harry, Bill and Aleck Demchuck
and Glen York were. Saturday visiton to Creston., . ;.*■- ."..j-    .
Mn. James Huscroft has returned
from Salt Lake City, .Utah, after,
visiting relatives for a month; ■
"Herman Sommerfelt and Adoll
Domke spent a few days -hunting
near Kitchener. The former got one
deer.-      ■, -■: -        '
QUy Constable and Charles Sutcliffe of Alice Siding and J. M.
Gordon, I. G. Nelson, and W. R.
Dunwoody of Nelson were Friday
and Sunday visitors to CoL and Mn.
Fred Listet.
Insane Escape in
Hospital Blaze
STOCKTON, Calif. Nov. 80 (AP)
-SIX Inmates of Stockton state
hospital for the Insane were at
large tonight after an early morning fire damaged a wing of tha
overcrowded Institution.
Officers patrolled elty streets
and surrounding highways In the
search for the missing patlints.
none of whom was considered
dangerous.      .
Woman Ledurer
Here Next Week
Mrs.'Madge MacBeth ot Ottawa,
who Is to address the Women's Canadian club of Nelson next week,
Is a well known author, lecturer,
and traveller. ,..  .„■■ ■*
She was in Spain during thd revolution of 1931 when the Royal family fled — one of her seven Jiists
to that country. She waj to' JUlo?
Slavla soon after the assassination
of IJing Alexander, when that country was much disturbed; and saw
some current history when In Germany -alter Von Papen's speech,
when newspaper accounts were suppressed and the only source of the
message Was smuggled foreign
newspaper.. She has been in almost
every European country except the
Scandinavian, and Russia.
Included to her Far East experiences was the sight of fighting in
Palestine between Arabs and Jews.
She has witnessed several South
American revolutions, and a number ol times she addressed the large
International club in Buenos Aires.
Social... V•'"...,
HARROP
HARROP, XC—Mr; and Mrs. W.
J. McConneU were Kelson shoppers.
Miss Jessie Harrop was In Nelson
bringing home her sister, Mrs. Robert Stevenson, who has been a patient in Kootenay Lake General hospital.
W. Britton of Nelson is spending
a tew days at his Harrop residence.
A whist drive was sponsored by
Harrop and District Women's Institute, and was In aid ot the Christmas tree fund. Mrs. C. D. Ogilvie
loaned her- home lor the occasion
and eleven tables were occupied in
the spacious rooms during the eve4
ing. Court Whist was played, tot;
winners for high.score being Mrs.
J. Stevens ot Kokanee and J.TBerry.
The consolation awards went to Mrs,
F. Gainey and Capt. M. MacKinnon,
Procter, who cut cards with L. C.
Piper when they tied tor low score,
Mrs. A. R. Johnston, Procter, received a box of chocolates for-being in possession ol the "lucky cup"
and J. E. Fitchett won a decorated
fruitcake.   ■    •: ■;'
NEWS OF THE DAY
^FUNERALNOTICi*.   , ;  j
ALLEN — HerberJ, passed away
Monday in.St Paul's hospital, Vancouver; B. C. Body arrived in Nelson Wednesday and rests at Somefs'
■Funeral Home until Friday where
service will be held at 3 p.m., Rev.
T. J. S. Ferguson officiating. No
llowera by request. •  (4272)
Atfotv Creek
ARROW CREEK, 8. C '- The
ladies ot the community met at the
home of Mrs. C. Jorde.Nov. 19.'
Plans for Chrlstinaf tree were discussed and,preparations made tor
a dance ln aid ol Christmas fund.
Lunch was served by the hostess.
Mn. Ed Ingram ot Creston Is visiting her.parents, Mr. and Mn.,G.
S. Ingram. - .,   _ ., A
L. Wenger and. A, Kotlck re?
turnedfrom Lumberton....   ...
W. ?Weary and J. Wilson have
taken up residence in Arrow Creek.
Near Riot in Trail
Rink as Trammers
Beat Pole Busters
TRAIL, B. G, Nov. 80 - "Nick"
Gerimelli's ' Trammers won theii;
second straight puck victory when
they edged out the Johnson shift
Pole Busters 6-5 at the Trail rink
this morning. Keen . rivalry was
evident between the two transportation teams and several near-lights
resulted from hard checks. Wytes
shift supporters were accused of
turning oUt the lights just when
the Trammers secured a one-goal
lead in the last lew seconds ot
An-Impending riot cooled- down
When.it. was. found that play had
continued 20/ minutes past regulation time when the, lights were extinguished, , "Red"' | Waddell drove
the winning counter into the Pole
Busters' net just before the game
ended. Waddell with two. and. Joe
Moore, Al Slemlanowski, "Fat"
Woods, and' Wes Waite With one
goal each, accounted for the Trammers' points. "Swede" Petrosky and
Frank Petrosky were mainstays pt
the Johnson shift squad with jhr*e
and two goals respectively. Holo-
boff and Swanson were called upon
to stop many hard drives in a last
rough garne. "Booney" Sammartino.
refereed.'     - - . .
The teams were:
Trammers — "Nick" CerimClll
(coach), G. Gerace, A. Slemlanowski, B. Swanson, L, Gerace, W. Ca-
puto, B. Hardlngton, J. MoOre, "Fat"
Woods, W. Waite, Geno Pagnan and
Ken Rigby.
Pole- Bustert — Ed Murdoch,
Uoyd' Devlin, "Swede" Petrosky,
Jack Read, Frank Petrosky, Jacobs,
Campbell, "Sonny" Irvin; Holobtrff,
F. Graham and Bill Edgett,
-PAO!8-VIN
WHOLESALERS'SHELVES ARE ALL
STOCKED WITH CHRISTMAS GOODS;
NUTS, JAPAHESE ORANGES ARRIVE
"Reasonable"   Prices,,
for  Christmas
Nuts
BRAN AND SHORTS
REDUCED $2 TON
Statements Rouse
'     Pattullo's Ire
VICTORIA-, Nov. 30 (CP) '-r tit-
tola T. D. Pattullo told the British
Columbia legislature tonight the
government in future would take no
notice of "irresponsible statements"
made in the house unless toey were
put in writing apd "the member
takes responsibility lor them as a
member." '
. Tbe premier mid* his statement
after the public accounts committee'
reported Dr. Lyle Telford (C. C. F,
Vancouver East), wished to withdraw hia charge of overpayment tor
structural steel used on the Pattullo
bridge at New Westminster, B. C.
Trail, Rossland
Asked lor Toys
Recondition
tfRAIL, B. C, Nov. 30 -A strong
ppeal is being made by ihe Boy.
sKXiut association, Trail and Bom-
land district, lor old toys which
aro not beyond repair. ...... .., , ■ y
Boy Scout toy hospitals are be?
tog operated in the basement of the
.Memorial hall, basement of Charles
Ranger's home In Wartield, and the
Rossland Scout headojurten.   -
On being repaired, toys wU_.be
sent out in Christmas hampers dto-
trlbuted by the Community chest
A Tense Moment In Football Match Between Eire and Poland
It was an exciting game at Dailymount'Park, Dublin, when tbe
Eire International team played Poland. You can just tell it was ex-
iMUmm M 4fa_«,_!_._-__ lsutk em ihe, fnpAnf tlr TstsUsTsfisl Hvd». nresident
Of Eire, centre, and the tense expression of Premier Eamon de Jfalera,
(left, with chin on hand). At extreme right, is Alfred Byrne, lord
. mayor of Dublin. To toe right of President Hyde, is Asear Traynor.
BAL-IFOXJR
BALFOUR, ;B.C.-Saturday evening was enjoyed by many local,
Procter and Nelson people at the
W. I. hall at BaHopr, A Christmas
cake had been donated to the cocoa
tond by Mr*. Wfemm.^,
The cake, was won by Miss Partridge, fight tables of court, Whist
took up toe early part ol toe evening. Mrs. Collinson and A.?Mayn-
ard winning toe lint prizes. Dancing was then in order till 12 yften
those attending surprised H. Hudson
by surrounding him and ringing
"Happy Birthday to You.*? Supper
was then served and then came
community singing. Musicians kindly supplying the music were Mrs.
Collinson, Mrs. Partridge, Mr. and
Mrs. A. Maynard and Bud Maynard.
Jack Sherman spent the week-?
end at his home here.      ;•
The Balfour Young Peoples' club
have been busy getting out tyo0*
lor their club house. ...   ■ ;
Many Procter and BsMour skaters
have been enjoying skating lor toe
last week, both at topi»ty and the
SlOUgh.;"     ";   .     .   .  '."■   .-   ;.." -,   '
Social. ♦ V
Grawford Bay
CRAWFORfi-BAQ, RC-Mr. and
Mrs. H. Richardson entertained a
few friends as a farewell to Mr. and
Mrs. J. Richardson and Miss A.
Worinnan, who are shortly leaving
for Vancouver Island. Bridge_and
other games were played. Those
present Were Mr. and Mm, James
fil-hardson, Miss A. Workman, Mr-
and Mrs. Waterston, H. Murray, W.
Bayliss, Tt, Bayliss, Mr. and Mrs.
H. Richardson.
A surprise party wa) given to A.
G. Woolgar at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Jones. Guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Mooney, Mr. .and Mrs. White,
Mrs. Broster, Alice, David and Jim
Broster, Mrs. G. Jameson, Betty ahd
Kenneth Palmer, Mr. and Mrs.
Jones. A pleasant evening was spent
at different games. Mrs. Woolgar
was presented with a book as a tare?
well gilt and in appreciation of
many years' active service at the
Penticostal Mission here. ?       .
Mrs. J. Brundit, jr., was taken to
Creston hospital, where she was operated on toe same day lor appendicitis. She is reported as doing well.
A. G. Woolgar, Mr. and Mrs, James
Richardson and three, children leit
Ior Vancouver Island. Mr., Woolgar
and his daughter, Mrs. Richardson,
have resided to Crawford Bay lor
the past US years.
Mrs. Gooch, accompanied by her
niece, Miss Kathleen Houghton, and
Miss worktnan, left by car for Vancouver Island, where Mrs. Gooch
has purchased property.
Rev. B. H. Dance of Kaslo conducted evening service in the Memorialchurch:     '. ' '
'"■ A , ,•!.'         .   . ;   iv ■"' ' .".
Dominica Transfer y
Not Until Jan. 1940
LONDON, Nov. 80 (GP Cable)-
The colonial office announced tonight it proposed to defer transfer
ot Dominica Irom the Lee-Ward
Island, federation of the British
West Indies to the Windward Island
until Jan. 1, 1940. It was explained
toat owing to unavoidable delay in
preparing toe necessary local legislation the transfer could not be effected as scheduled at the beginning of 1939. It is being transferred
lor administrative reasons.   ;.
Halifax Challenges
Opposition Criticism
LONDON, Nov. 30 (CP-Havpsl-
Foreign Secretary, Lord Halifax today vigorously challenged opposition criticism that the government
had failed, to make fullest possible
use of its opportunities to Improve
Anglo-American relations.
' He pointed to the impending visit
of Anthony Eden; former foreign
secretory, to the United States and
the conclusion of the Anglo-American trtide agreement as proof such
assertions-were groundless.  .       -
' OLDEST ORANGEMAN
GLACE BAY, N. .S, (CP). —
Robert Parsons attended a meeting
of Caledonia Orange lodge shortly
after his 100th birthday, becoming
one ot the oldest Orangemen in
Canada to attend a meeting of toe
fraternal society.   ' k   "
Credit for being the first discoverer of a vitamin is given nearly
40 yeara after tbe discovery, to the
true discoverer of bios, Prof. Emeritus M. Ide, of the University ol
Louvain, Belgium. He and not his
assistant, Dr. E. Wildlers, actually
diminvDHi- thla. tmimtance.
-Wholesalers have completed stock.
Ing their shelves to supply thi
Christmas needs ot the Kootenay
Boundary. Japanese oranges, Christ
mas nuts, Christmas candles anc
confections and so on are all il -i
stock, and are moving into toe hand-
of retailers as the festive seasoi
Sears and the demand becomes live-
er. ■;: .   .
Confectionery and candy Is mov-
Ing fast at this time, and toe movement of oranges and nuts is becoming more lively day by day. So I
ot Japanese oranges
lar two cars ..
have arrived on toe Kootenay market, and a car of nuts ln addition
to smaller lota included In other ,
carlot receipts. Prices on seasonal 1
nuts are described as "reasonable."
NEW ORANGES  ,
New crop Navel oranges are in,
and additional supplies will be on
hand next week. At reasonable
prices, the Navels are popular but I
volume of sales Is expected to be delayed until after toe Japanese or*
auge deaL    ..;..- -*-.,^-^'61c^lS___l
Tho wholesale market Is holding
fairly steady, toe only nrl«e change I
being a reduction of $1 per ton to
bran and shorts. The prairie beat 1
and lamb markets are tightening
up, but other meats are keeping on
an even keel.  :
Butter also Is steady. Fresh eggs
are still scarce, but pullet eggs are
coming on toe market in greater'!
quantity. Meanwhile storage eggs,
are meeting the demand.  .
AMERICAN VEGETABLES
Hothouse tomatoes Irom the coast
and American cavUllower, broccoli,
spinach, sprouts, celery, and httA
lettuce are on the market, and California vegetables will probably bar
gin to arrive next week.;        .
Carlot arrivals ot the W-t* tajj
eluded three ot groceries,- two OH
sugar, two ol Japanese oranges, one -
of canned goods, one of bananas,
one of Christmas nuts, two ol eprnd
one ol Creston alfalfa, two.ol float]
and feed and jtwo of meatf.,     >*a
Social...
SILVERTON
S-LVBRTON, B. C. - T. Anderij
son was a visitor to Nelson.      .   ■
Mrs. G. Waterman ol Vancouver-!
is a guest of Mr.'and Mrs. A.' Hantjj
R. A. Grimes of Nelson waa a visitor to town.     ■    ...        •■■", _*
Hi Dewis Is spending several dayr-J
at Silver Ridge mine, Sandon, hauW
%LtXeti bt 'Nelson was a week-}
end guest of Mr. and Mrs.- C. Holmer.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaacson of Rosebery
were Sunday visitors to town.-' ..-<L
Mr. and Mn. H. Lancaster were 1
dinner guests ol Mr. and Mrs. W.1
Hunter,'Sunday, morning.     ■ Tj
R. Haigh vWted New Denver :
Monday.     T-       .   - -A   |
•Angus Daniels, who was f-j/fA
tletit at Slocan Community ho«?«;
pital, New Denver, has returned, f
Mrs. A. Harding Is visiting to?
Burton, toe guest of her wa-ww]
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. R..;
A. M Ham was a recent vlsftdM
Rev. F. Browne ot New Denwa
was a visitor to town Thursday.
Mrs. W. E. Marshall •mt-^rSQl
triends ai contract bridge. Fridffjj
evening. Prizes were wonbyMBH
A. Wallace and Mra. G. T. Iron-
side. Delicious refreshments Jteteg
served by the hostess assisted Wj
Mrs. E. A. Fajrhurst Guests ig^
eluded Mrs. W. Hunter. Mrs. As
Lancaster, Mrs. T. H. Wflson. Mrtj|
G. T. Ironside, Mrs. M. Emerson
of Trail, Mrs. A. Ham, tag, S. WWfl
son, Mrs, H. Dewis, Mrs. X A. F_tr*l
hunt and Mn. A. Wallace. >39H
SILVERTON, B. C, --_»l Oa
Waterman, who visited friends hertsl
has returned to Vancouver.
Mn. M. Emeraon has retumeW
to her home at Trail, after tf*tsi*X
ing three weeks here, guest oIMri-*j
W. E. MarahaU. . ■     . "vj
Frank Mills is visiting Ml mother,
Mn. A. Mcltnyre, ln Nelson for a
lew days.       _        .' ,M
The puoils olthe SUvertonjchpotJ
are training lor their annual ChrlaM|
mas concert, W. R. Seal, sd>oolprin«
cipal, in charge, assisted by Mfia E.
Tatterle and Mrs. R. Hambley. y.l
Smith, Cummings
Win Carpet Bowls|
Teams ot Albert Smith and J.
Cummings were winners, and ahg
other team skipped by Smith "
with another Cummings' team, w
Eagles carpet bowlers swung
action In second games of the j
season tournament, Wedna
nlght      ,':   "        : „,  ..,
Smith  beat  Steve  Vtago
While Cummings downed Eug
Stangherlin . 1-HS. The tied
was 8-8. ..-    ,.  „.,;,:
Teams ln order of skip, third, I
ond and lead follow: (AAi St
Smith, Philip }Cuntz, '• Do"
and J. McOelland..   rf .     .
Vingo, H. Otting, R.,' A. Eng
and F. W. Johnson. . I
Cummings, J. DeRldder, J. Bar-
tolac and F. W. Johnson.  ?   •    31
Stangherlin, Vito Romano, B.
Frocklage and J. McClelland.-   "
Smith, Kuntz, Dourand and Frock«j
Cummings, DeRldder, Bartolaei
and McClelland,   ." ■..,";
RYE WHISKY
Bottled In Bond In Canada-
'12-Years Old,
W ox. 1170   ' ««,-!
This advertisement is not published
or displayed by the Liquor Control
Board or by the Govertunent of
British Columbia.
 ■"TV       .■■:'      •■   »!',
PAQI EtOHT-
Windsor in Bitter
Battle Between Wlgle, U.E.I.,
And Croll, Young Russian Jew
"WINDSOR, OnC Nov, 80 ,('CP)'-
Windsor's .'■ mayoralty, campaign,
Jatterett to years, has resolved it-
felt largely into a battle between
the personalities, of two men. Side
Issues, but nevertheless large.ones,
are a five-cent trolley fare and
Windsor's emancipation from financial control by the. provincial
government.
The personalities are: ,
. Mayor E. S. Wlgle, 79-year-bld
titular head- of one at Border's
oldest families, honorary lay chan-
Rllor ot too,' Anglican diocese ot
Huron, who has more vigor and
test for battle; physical and oral,
than most men at 50.
David Croll, only 37, Russian Jewish immigrant lad who financed a
law education with a newsstand,
was Windsor's mayor at 30, a provincial minister a few years later,
,and now. finds himself criticized by
■.the premier whose minister he was.
Also in the contest but believed!
•Unlikely to poll a large vote, is
Roy Haight, 38, formerly an audi-
,'tbr with a firm that audited the
books of the municipal administra-
>n.   ■ At
k Voting i* next Monday.
CAMPAIGN AMENITIES
E   Here are tome ot toe campaign
tld-bits:
Wigle of Croll: "HeV toe biggest
communist in Ontario but he has
$100,000.       *      ■
Wt Croll, of Wlgle: ."-He's toe front
> man for toe big interests in Ontario"
t. Premier' Hepburn of Croll (in a
.letter published as an advertise
ment): "He i* not deserving the
support of toe voter* ■-, which be
seeks '* •    >* '   ■■'  ' "■'       ■' • i
Mayor Wigle springs from United
Empire Loyalist stock, from a family noted for longevity. The mayor'
attended University of Toronto,
where he was intercollegiate heavy?
weight'boxing champion, i        ".:-".
"f .could lick 'em all," aays Mayor Wigle expressing a with the contest might be-fought to. the ring.
In 1905, when Ee'! wa* 48, Wigle
became mayor of Windsor. He
served five year*, a record, and
retired though, offered an acclam-
mation for. a sixth term. ' •   ,
During toe Great War, Col. Wlgle
raised a battalion and took it -'**
sea'Si   . '.-•."
Croll was both to Moscow and
came to Windsor in 1006, two years
after his father, He shined shoe*.
He sold papers. He established a
sidewalk newsstand that became a
gou mine. :■   •■■■•,...    , ■«
After serving two terms as mayor, Croll plunged Into provincial
pdiitlcs as a liberal, In Premier
Hepburn's' cabinet he became minister of welfare, labor and municipal
affairs/'   -;,   ' ','■ . :..".'.'
The Windsor member was regarded as a right bower to the Premier
until came toe General Motors
strike at Oshawa to April, 1937..Mr.
Oroll construed the .attitude of
Premier Hepburn as favoring toe
corporation. He- resigned, determined, be wrote the premier, to
"—•—>- w°™ the workers instead
•HONOR SYSTEM"
WOULDNjTW6RK.
iJAii, lad, Nov, ao (ap». -
After 12 month* of the "honor
system" tola, town of 10 per*On*
has fallen back on a town mar-
shall for law enforcement'.-"
'. The town did away wlto the
marshal's job last December.
Then' burglar* began breaking
into trucki, thieve* stole everything toat wasn't tied down, reck-
les* drivers -Afent.wild and f|re
Insurance rate* increased. '
' Now citizens are, looking forward " *
town
NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNING. DEC. 1, 1988
GEdRGE ROBEY,
MoveToward
Civil Avlaflon
6rrAWA,yNoV. 80 -cpwtiri*-
dlction ot the transport commission
in the matter- of licencing aircraft
for the transport of passengers and
r Citizen* are, looiting iui-  "" .—i—r-i_-'     ,- ,
to a.peaceful Chrl*tma*-tha »>ods ha* been made effective bj
board blred a new marthaC- order-to-copncil, on a number of in
■    f»*~ * wir.i_-wuM.-j j^ttaji- jpij toterurban;*ervlces
Dr. Emil Hacha
COMEDIAN, WEDS
LONDON, Nov. 30 (CP-Havas).
—Oeorge Robey, comedian, and
Mlaa Blanche Littler, theatrical
managers were' married today In
Marylebone town hall. -     >•'..-■
Tha comedian Is 69 and his
bride 37. They announced their
wedding plans Monday, whan a
decree nlal granted Mr. Robey's
first wife becsme absolute. The
divorce ended a union of 40 yean.
To Relieve Car
'march with ~~  ••-•,---.■■      „
of riding with General Motors.
H OTTAWA. Nov. 30 (CPl-Bto-
used hoWholder*; who consMer
IKJtoanoTto the" cellar more of a
JSiSevourlng infernal machine
l6£T»5vwt'.et vtata comfort
t*_{ght/pay heed to -whaFtbe Dom-
Pfiira ftd"board expert* say. .
PTTW point out turaace* are def?
finitely individualistic and toeir
TOftW?—nt* have to be studied,
; WB„ are certain guiding rules.
Winter*:.Keep the ashpit
 an-ot me. toe grates will warp
-iff a^'uple of toches of ashes
"between the fire and gratesi and.in
warm weather increase, the depth
eftoe layer. This serves la pro-
:£rt toe grates and reduce the draft.
*l)on't overshake or oyerpoke: the
fire; generally one shaking a day is
iiffiaent. The poker is to pull
clinkers out
Keep the waternan on hot air
furnaces filled with water, or see
that water is evaporated into the
atmosphere of toe house.
Dont be stingy >with the fuel;
there should be a bed of about 18
inches for best results. "
Wlto bard coal the fuel should be
level with the coal door; with coke
even more ie advisable. - ,
- At bedtime, open the drafts a
short time until the tire is burning
well, add fuel and close drafts and
open, dampers as to building a tire.
The technique varies a little with
the type ot fuel used but mostly
only to the amount of open draft
necessary: All fuel* require the
little "port hole" ta the fire door
should be partly open when dampers
afe open
Hew
Czech-Slovak Rep.
PRAGUE, Nov. S0/(AP). — Dr.
Emil Hacha, formerly head o*: toe
supreme court administration,, was
elected third.president;of- Czecho--
Slovakia by the national assembly
today. Being the only candidate, his
election Waa mere formality. •
"/The. late Thomas Mimryfe wa*
fint president of toe republic. Dr.
Eduard Benes, MasarykY fcrdtege
who succeeded him; resigned, after
the Munich cession' of Sudetenland
to,Germany.:     ■ ;'*'."'.*.< /'   .:..
The 68-year?oId Jurist, who write*,
and speaks Czech, German and English, wa* elected with 272 of top
312 votes eaat. TMrty,-ntne-ot toe
ballots were blank and one was
declared invalid.
The juriat' ia tfirtually unknown
to the general public for lie never
before has taken part to politic*.
Hacha, a Roman Catholic, waa
born at Sylny, Bohemia, Aug, 7,
1072, He "took- an.'important part
ln drafting the constitution tor toe
legislature.of the Czechoslovak re-
Siblic when .it emerged from .toe
rcat War. For many yeara he haa
represented Czechoslovakia on the
world court at ihe Hague. 1
The new. chief of State will be
known as the "president of. the
Czccho'-Slovak republic," a phrase
which officially hyphenate* 'the
name of the nation to indicate
equality of Czechs and Slovak*.
As president, Hacha is also commander-in-chief of toe armed forces
but.he cannot declare war without
prior approval of toe national assembly. He can dissolve the assembly but not in the last six
montfis ot hi* seven-year term.
         Ices,
including Vancouver-Seattle and
Vancouver - Lethbridge - Regina-
Winnljjeg. 7
The commission's function* will
be to regulate freight rates and also
to ensure that existing services are
not jeopardized by the setting up
ot unstable mushroom companies.
In competitive area* new companies
will have to show "public convenience or necessity" before toey a*e
permitted tb enter the field against
established .concern*.
lolumbia
VANCOUVER, NOV. 30 ...„,
University of British Columl
board of governors today announced
toey Would grant (29,000 toward
construction ot a Brock Memorial
building on toe university campus,
.the grant being subject to approval
by the lieutenant governpr-to-coun-
will be
Jews of Radios
' VATICAN CITY, Nov. 30 (AK-
Pope  Pius,  his  health  improved
since a heart attack , last. Friday,
bestowed toe papal benediction on
'800. newly married couples. today
in an audience in toe Vatican's red
and gold, consistory hall. ...
, Though pale and visibly feeble,
"the Pontiff spoke for 11 minutes on
the duties of married life.'His voice
a'.waa   audible,   however,   only" to
t, those in toe front rows of the small
^ hall near his own apartments.
Extend Time, Limit
on Free Schooling
1 VICTORIA, NaV. 30 'CP) -An
amendment to.the Publlo Schools
. act Introduced by Hon. 6. M. Weir,
/ mlnliter of education, will .assure
children In British Columbia of
free school tuition, Up to the age
de*\ths
> (By The Canadian Press)
1 BUITALQ, N.Y.-Dr. ftederick
W. Burkhardt, 72, sportsman and
Y.M.CA. director Who Introduced
basketball toUuffatoln early"W*. .-
•MUNICH — Lieut-General Otto
Von Lossow, 70, one of the Bavarian
army generals ' who suppressed
Adolf Hitler's beer-cellar putsch
1_23
YPSILANTI, Mlchr-Dr. George
F. Inch, 66, superintendent Ypsllantl
State hospital and known for psychiatric work.
TORONTO-Alfred James Gillies,
83,' president, A. J. Gillies Manufacturing coippany.ltoiited.,; '•
TtlLSA, Okia. — Robert Eugene
Lorton, 24, associate publisher Till-,
sa World,
VANCOUVER-Mrs. Mary Ellen
Neelands,' 79-year-old wife ol T., F,
Neelands, mayor of Vancouver In
1902 and 1903. Mrs. Neelands was
born in Ontirio and came to Vancouver in 1886. She is survived by
her husband. . ■ %..
SUMMERIsAND — Mrs. Rachel
"  *** wife of Dr. X.
wee wnooi luiv.v,,, »■•»"•"".■"», iZ.i.m rirmeH R4  wife of Dr. »•
students over
special fee.
in Summerland.
Ir John Alrd,
,, Toronto, Nov. so (cpj^-sin
'John Alrd, former president of the
{Canadian Bank of Commerce, died
suddenly at hit home here today.
A heart attack was given at the
cause of death.
■ :■ For years an outstanding banker,
J Sir John celebrated his 83rd birth-
J. day Nov. 15.. Since retiring from
Etna presidency of toe bank early In
1037 his health had been comparatively good.       'ty-:
,/,; Ip retirement he retained a dlrec-
torship in the Bank ot Commerce,
I which first employed him when he
''waa 23.   .
j   "Sir John had anticipated attending
, the annual ball tonight ot the St.
jj^nflrew'a society, of which he was
a past president. Society officials
* announced toe ball would not be
cancelled. They said toey had been
assured by Hugh Alrd, a son, it
Would have been his father's wish.
s-'t He is survived by Lady Alrd, two
. Ions and two daughters.
i . His fame as a banker international,
lie was long head of the Canadian
branch of the American Bankers'
association   and  president ot  toe
E"Canadian.Bankers' association. His
travels took him around the world.
■ Particularly well acquainted with
I International  trade,  and  well-in-
WhnncoMstriVn.stttliloHl-ailrr
with Dominion C.B.Q. Tnbltu~t!is
remedy that works 4 ways at once.
(1) ALLAYS FEVER; fiihls the cold
- _ms it their KBlte.«) RELIEVES
ACHES; asel the side, heai
8) OPEK8 THE BOWELS; Itslra-
wi»Sl47'f&eifpTi?E,s'S
TEM; It bulla's resistance against
, prolonged etlacks.
Ask your druggist for Dominion
C.B.Q. Tablets ud look for the
Ti-fflcCoponthellttloRedBoi.
formed on the Canadian welt, he
was directly reeponsible -fdr the
growth -of his bank's vast branch
system, in Western.Canada. Years
after he "spotted branches through
the west it was found there were
few in the hew drought areas. He
had chosen locations, at a time
when toe west's future was wholly
problematical, that would serve the
most consistent production area*.
SURE OF GREAT ' '
BBITAIN ... ;"   .   ■" '
He'became general manager of
the bank to 1919 and for his un-
obstrusivc but Valuable. national
services was .knighted ip 1917. One
of the most popular stories about
Sir John concerns a meeting between Sir Thomas White, then minister of finance, and the general
managers of Canadian, bank* early
in the Great Wir, when i proposed
British government loan of }200,-
000,000 was" under discussion.
An ultra-cautious conferee asked:
"Are you sure that when the wdr
is over the covenant of Britain to
pay will be worth anything?"
"Hell," rugged Sir John wa* quoted as replying. "If the covenant ot
Britain td pay is,not good well all
be in hades together." ..
An ardent,advocate of a greater
population for Canhda, through immigration, he thought toe Dominion should have nt least 25.000,000
citizens. He was in favor of lower
tariffs, of less 'government interference in business and of union of
the three Maritime provinces, possibly including Newfoundland.
When he retired from the bank's
presidency in 1937 he said; "Tomon
row for.the first time on any business day in the past 66 years I am
going to sleep in." But he was up
at seven—the house set it* clocks
by Sir John's rising. "Health and
work are the greatest things in
life. Without them I think it would
be awful, but bf course I can't say
from experience, as I have never had
a day's illness aince I started
to work at 15, and I've never been
but of a lob."        ;„
He added then: "I anv really not
sorry to lay down the reins, but I
will admit I wouldn't mind, living
my life all over again. A man's not
through at 80 year* of age—not by
any means. If you ,have good health,
ant to live 100 yeara, or maybe
sound mental faculties and a relive piemory It-"would be ple^s?
BERLIN, Nov. 30 (AP)--The Jew*
ot Germany, already deprived of
economic and' social privileges,
hastened today to comply with ona
ot the most decisive measures in
toe long line of decrees to distin-
quish them troth the rest ot the
population—a requirement for special identification card*.'.       :
The .cards, compulsory by toe
end of toe year, must carry as first
name* toe government-prescribed
Israel tor Jewish men, and Sarah
for women. ■ .     -
Indications Jew* would be deprived of radios was seen, .meanwhile, in a court decision that they
might be taken to pay debts. Radios
otherwise cannot be seized; since
they are regarded as an important
instrument for spreading government news. The court held Jews are
not Germans and there is ho public interest in keeping them informed.    ■ ,.'„.-;
• .''. ""."■'•'.    '.'    -..,  ,    ■' '"'
RELIEF CIRCLE MAY AID
DIAPER SHORTAGE RUSSIA
ROCKFORD, Dl., NoV. 30 (AP)-
If the Russian government Is interested, there is a surplus of diapers in Rockford township.
Recent dispatches from Moscow
told of a diaper, shortage..
Supervisor. MelvinC. Smith iaid
that unless the relief sewing project stops making diapers Rockford
township will not sponsor the work;
after Dec. 10.. .,       '*.. •   ■
He said he had more than 10,000
diapers on hand and every baby- in
a relief family was already well
supplied.-    '.>■.■/'< 14 ._*-     " • S,
i1    .
The grant, If" ippreved,
made in 10 annual instalments ot
$2500, each, and will be added to a
fund ot $50,000 already collected by
students.  ■ ' •,'•'-.
The. buildtofj,".to' be erected to
memory of Dean R. W. ahd Mrs.
Brock who were killed in an air?
plane accident at Alta Lake, B. C,
several years ago, will home «tud-
ent offices, recreation rooms ond
possibly a cafeteria and dance floor.
Part of the basement space will be
used -by -the Canadian officers'
training corps. ' .-..,   "
Student leaders said toat If toe
•grant is approved work may be
started in the spring.
Ride Derby Winner
Own Stable Is Young
Turf Star's Ambition
TORONTO. Nov, SCl (CP)-RIde
a Kentucky derby winner and then
own a (table of horses-stoat's the
ambition bf Ronnie Nash of Toronto, a shooting star to toe turf
world.     ;/.    . ,'.: ■ ,.-'..
The 19-year-old jockey home from-
toe United State* and to shake
a cold .contracted when winter gales
and snow struck Bowie race track
last week;, confided bis ambition
today as he sat in a shoo shine
parlor. ' ,\   '        v   ,
He would also like to pilot a
winner in the King'* Plate, Canadian turf classic, and toe Santa
WedlYearsAgo
Son Is Just Born
LONDON, Nov. -SO (AE)-Slr Oswald Mosley, British fascist leader, anounced today in bis newspaper
"action" that he married Ip*. Diana
Guinness, daughter of Lord Redes-
dale, two years ago and toat a son
wai born to them last Saturday. ,.
Twd daya ago Sir Oswald issued
a statement he had not been in
Germany- for aver two year*, thus
denying London newspaper reports
he met Mrs. Guinness in Munich'or
Berlin last-December with Chancellor Hitler and other, high Nazi
officials present. *,  J ,.       '•;.:"■
MT*. Guinness is a sister of unity
Frecman-Mitford, a close friend of
Chancellor Hitler. She obtained; a
divorce from -Bryan Guinness ln
wss. ...T..•.,",,.. ■<■■". :,.
Sir Oswald'* first wile was Lady
Cynthia Blanche Curzon, daughter
of 'the late Marquess Curzon Ot
Kcdlcston. She died in 1933.?
, The leader of British Fascists, who
was knocked unconscious by p stone
at a Liverpool meeting Oct. 10,
1937, said his marriage,was secret,
because "it ia-obvious that certain
risks are attached to my lite and
It waa' my strong..desire that no
woman should share them."    t A ■
Sir Oswald is 42 years old, his
wife'28.. ,.;   :■■:■'■:7'■■'.
ViprORIA, Nov. .30  (CP)
Motorists will be relieved
liability for their passengers
legislation Introduced tonight by
Attorney-General Gordon Wlamer
is pass.d by the British Columbia
legislature.
The Motor Vehicles Act and
various other law* affecting. toe
subject would be changed so that
a- passenger injured, pr otherwise affected, cannot claim dam?
ages from the driver of a ear.
Insurance companies would be relieved of liability and the government believe* the new plan would
mean aome reduction in auto insurance rates so far as passenger
hazard.!* concerned.." ::    . ;y
TW attorney-general aald.other
firovinccs   are   adopting' similar
egislation. '"    ";,'-..'.'' '... " '
Prisoner Rilled
Now Sailors Can
Swim, Auto Their
Most Deadly Foe
WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 (AP)-
Ifj not the sea that cjalrn* the
moat live* of Bailors in the United
State* navy, but-ot all.landlub?
ber things—the automobile.    -
The--tallty figure* tor tast yea-
were ,dI*closed today:
" Deaths from drownlnf-ffl., .-■
,From automobile ,.accidenf*^«T.
UnHl 1930,, drowning wu^tHe
principal cause, but now wllors
are taught to swlto.; _    .'
German Plane
Arrives Mw
Goodwill Flight
Toivb, Nav. 30 (AP). - A four-
motored German Condor plane
landed here at 10:40 p.m. after a
8375-mile goodwill flight from Berlin. The unofficial flying time wa*
41 nourt 2. minutea. '■■■
" Thousands cheered as toe large
Focke-Wule plane came down on
the Tkchikawa arimy airfield, with
a crew of four and one passenger,
Girl Friend of
Hiller Discovers
Anita handicap, but at the moment
      m --■-----■■ "*■
POUCE SEE BURGLARY
ATTEMPT, 'ARMSTTWO
VANCOUVEltNov.SO .(CP)-W.
Clayton and Steve Bingham, arrested early today following an
automobile, 'chase in which police
fired three shot*, have been charged
With breaking ond entering a suburban drug store and the theft of
three large tins of candy.. " 1
' Conatables said they aaw two men
drive up to the store and that bhe
of the men kicked, in a window
ahd seized the candy, *   >"'•",    .
The constables followed the fleeing men and captured them after
firing three ahot* into, toeir machine.
his chief desire is victory in the
Kentucky derby. .        ••.,"'
In less than five month* toe slight,
shy youth has ridden 00 winners
and combined'with his riding ability has carved a niche to rating
honors seldom attained so soon by
jockeys making toeir racing debut,
-Unwanted and spurned when toe
Canadian racing season opened last
May, Ronnie Ta sought now- by
leading owners and trainers on toe
continent Offers to buy hia eon-
tract, however, fall on the deaf ears
of Arthur Halliwfell; Toronto sportsman, who gave toe midget jockey
his'chance,      -   -       ":•   :'  .
Halllwell didn't know about Nash
until a conversation at Hamilton
race track lut July sparked an interest.  -     .,,'"   .-     .. „'".>-   ' -'
"I couldn't reason why nobody1
had picked him up," he said. "The
general' view wasn't discouraging
ut none was enthusiastic." :
Halliwell's trainer was ordered to
mount Nash on every horse"he aad"
died. Victories didn't come, at once,
but finally Ronnie rode hia maiden
Jdly 19 on* Esglnaca,' V* <;-* ■'   >■'■
Success has .followed the jockey
since.-He-travelled to Detroit, Nara-
gansett and Bowie race tracks. In
wo week* he will be ln Florida,
ready tor toe winter campaign.at
Tropical and Hialeah parks, : v ..
So far he hasn't -found riding
"tough" among big Ume jockeys.
"They are all pretty good fellows."
At Bowie he struck a new racing
hazard, snow three and four inchea
deep. But toat didn't atop.him. He
rode three winners" that afternoon.
HALIFAX, England, Nov. 80 (AP)
—The menace  of razor  slashings
from  phantom assailants  to  thlt
Yorkshire    industrial' town    had!
spread to'four other, towns today.
At Wlgan, 35 miles from' Hall-
fax,, pretty Winifred Walsh, reported she was attacked ln her own
backyard by a man who cut a
five-inch wound .in her arm. '■ -   ' •
From Manchester came-the re?
>rt    toat    14-year-old   Marjory
urphy was wounded four tfmes
on toe arms yesterday by a than
who jumped out ot a dark1 corner
with a razor, ' -     ' ■
Another 14-yea*?old, Ivy .Smith?
ermon starggercd fainting into a
candy shop ai Brentfordi 200 miles
south of Halifax, with blood streaming Irom 12 cuts on her arm* which
she said Were inflicted by a man
who fled a* soon as ho had struck
tier.    /'"' '"'•"•". -y
There waa a similar assault at
Piatt Bridge, Lancashire, 50 miles
, . BUCHAREST.: Nov. 80 UiP) -
Corneliu Zclea Codreanu, 39-yeor?
old Rumanian Fascist leader, and
18 others serving prison term* for
treason with him were killed to;
day as Rumanian authorities struck
at terrorism attributed to' Cod-
reanu's outlawed iron guard organization. •' •■'' .
An ;offidal statement said the* 14
men were killed while attettptihg
to escape froto Rumntk-Sarat prison 10 miles from Bucharest- and
added they were burled lh the prison cemetery this .morning.
- The. death* were expected to
bring police .and toe government
to -a definite showdown to. toeir
energetic and long-standing effort
to suppress the Fascist group.  : <
Codreanu was sentenced last May
37 to 10 years' imprisonment,for
treason. The drive against the iron
guards was set in motion Monday,
When, Flory Stetaneacu Goanga,
rector'of the University of Cluj, was
•hot ..and critically wounded by
students described aa member* ot
the iron guard. «'j .,'
During his trial last May the
government Introduced' a- letter
*afd to have been written by Codreanu U German Nazi leaders asking for help to make Rumania a
Nazi country ln 1939.. Codreanu denied all knowledge.of the letter;,.
Cbtet among toe defence witnesses in the trial waa General Ion
Antonescu, former minister of war,
Who testified Codreafiuwas a real
patriot Last night General-Antonescu was ousted a* commander, of
the third army corpa by royal decree.
Thi*  was   considered   evidence
to return toe visit by the" Japanese
plane "Divine Wind" which fle»
to Berlin to April, 1937. The German
plane made the journey in tour
nop*. - .-, .
Ne\y Zeoland Minister.
Approves Croft Plan,
WELLINGTON, N. Z.,.' Nov,' 30
(CP-Hava*)—prime Minister Mlch-
al Savage today endorsed.the plan
of Sir.Henry Page Croft for-a-gov-
ernment expenditure of £ 10,000,000
($40,725,000) to permit settlement of
10,000 Britisp families in British
Columbia.' ,"'-."      '',.,'■ ,.
"It is just common sense," Mr.
Savage said. "Investments of, British capital in the Dominions are
the foundation, of migration, of
trade and of empire defence. They,
definitely lay toe' foundation* of
migration and for toe same reason
make defence of toe Empire possible. They definitely expand the
trade of toe Commonwealth. The
Britain -of toe future- will spread
throughout the Dominions." -   '.:
HOLLYWOOD,.Nov. 80 <AP).-
Leni Ritenstahl, German actress,
sportswoman and motion picture
producer, who came here to vilit
winter resorts, felt toe chill today
of local opinion and retorted—"I
-am «torprt*«dv" -,»■•
The attractive dark-haired woman, who denied on her arrival
ahe wa* Chancellor Hitler"* "girlfriend," issued ti formal statement
in reply to an advertisement to a-
film trade paper by the Hollywood
anti-Nazi league, which proclaimed: '::.'"...'. ■',"•'..:■ .,-,.' ■      •?.
-   "There Is no room in Hollywood
tbr'Lenl Riefenstahl" :'■"     .'   '   ■
She iaid: "I am surprised that
a lady making a vacation trip ln
America to see the most Interesting places of this land thould be
tnu* personally attacked.
""Already at my arrival ln New
York, I Informed the press that
my trip is absolutely private and
that. I have no official orders to
carry out . • >.
"I should like to assert further 1
that I never held an official poll- Am
.tlaninyGermany, and could never* 4™
have been called head ot the Nazi
film Industry." r
Canadians May
Spain Via.France
LONDON, Nov. 30 (CP Cable). -
The French government today informed the foreign office it cannot
permit 350 Canadian and 800 British
members of the Spanish government
aifmy to pass through French territory en route home until Deb. t.
The French government gave aa .
a reason the internal conditions in |
France. 1
The men u-e former memberi, ot
toe demobilized International bri- ■
gade. They have been waiting at I
the French border for :■ almost *lx '
week*/  ,. •-, /,' '
Fund to Aid Refugee Work
from Halifax, Monday night
Descriptions bt. toe Masher In
each case were similar to.that of
the Halifax marauder wW, has cut
13 person* In toe'past eight days,
but police did not believe he was
responsible for incidents in the
other, towhs. ■ ..,'.-
-They thought rather that he might
have an accomplice, or at least an
Imitator- inspired, by stories, ot toe
Halifax, terror..   .:• '•,. ■; ',
BENNETT IN CALGARY
RW DAYS NEXT WEIK
CAlflARV;. Nov. 30 (CP)—■
Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett, former
national leader ot the Conservative
party, will spend a.few days in
Calgary next week, friends said
today. It will be Mr. Bennett's
first -visit to Calgary since' he
purchased a home in England recently, i ■■    ■.„. ,.'*,..',.-    1
LOSES LEG
TAUNiWAIIl
BASES IN U.S.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 30 (AP). -
President Roosevelt's defence program, military circles heard today,
may include the establishment of
new army air bases at several ofthe
United States-strategic outpost*. •
: Officials' said toe president may
Ssk congress for funds to build bates
1 New England, Florida and Alaska
ln Wmnection with toe projected expansion ot toe army air fleet
VANCOUVER,' Nov. 30' (CP)
Will&m Hill, 57-->ear-old Canadian
National Railways inspector, was
recovering in hospital today from
injuries suffered shortly after.mld?
night In -the railway ytqrds here.
His leg was so badly crushed it was
found necessary to amputate it
King Carol himself was taking a
hand in the drive, agitoat the iron
guard.     .'■    " . '   -."
Police reported the 14 were placed
in open cars to be token to/Bucharest for questioning concerning an
attack, attributed to iron guordists,
dn Flory Sletanescu Goanga, rector of the University of Cluj Monday, He was critically wounded.
A short distance from toe. prison,
the police account said, the automobiles were halted by armed men.
The prisoners were said to have
disregarded guards' order* to remain" In toe cars and there was a
blast of firing in ^hlch all prisoner* werft killed. v V'•'/,'
.     . -   ■ ■
Born 10 Minutes
After Mother Dies
.KANSAS CITY, Nov: 80 (AP)'-?A,
00-mile an hour automobile dash!
Over a rough detour in the Kaw
river, bottoms ahd a hurried delicate operation on a hospital floor
gave life to baby Hale, born 10
minutes after his mother'* death/'
But even medical skill and speed
could not save the life of Mrs, David Hale ot Turner, Kan., and baby
Hale's twin; ' ■    /
Mrs. Hale died bf a heart-ailment a minute before reaching,
the hospital. '-. ' • '.. ''■'..■-.
". Baby Hale' was delivered by a
Caesarian operation. But.' bab£
Hale's twin failed to catch the spark
of life.   ~. , "    ":." ,*
"Nurses speeded: the child, to an
incubator in previously ■ wanned
blankets. The doctor: administered
injections ot carbon: dioxide, and
oxygen at J and 20 minute intervals.,:.'  •    ' v.'   .',_, "      '   ,,■'. ...
. LONDON.Nov. SO (CP)-Million*
of pounds have been raised in Great
Britain to .assist refugee work'
among Jew* while the government
conducts surveys in dls.tant.parts of
the colonial empire, to find a permanent home-for that distressed
and persecuted,rac& ■
There are 350,000 Jews-in Britain
and over a long period ot years,
British Jewry has taken a conspicuous part in banking, industry, toe
arte .science, and politics.
There are 2b Jews in tho House
of Commons and 10 Ji.wish peers,
1 One Jew sits in the cabinet—Leslie Hore-Belisha, secretary Ot state
for war-rand' another holds a jun-
"        ipsltion—Sir Philip.
_-« ,. .   .'".      _    to-
dad: banking family, who is first
literary -lights such aa Louts Zang-
will, Sidney Leeand Israel Gillancz;
in are, Simeon Solomon, Jacob Epstein and Sill Rothensteto; In music, Benedict and Costa; and in'
science," Sylvester, Meldola and
Hoffkine. • \    y -.   .'"
Sir John Monash, an Australian
Jew, was wartime commander of
the Australian troops. Sir Isaacs wa* g ■
the first Australian to be appointed    |
governor general of toat dominion.
lor ministerial position—Sir Philip
Sassoon, of toe Bombay and Baghdad: banking family, who is first
commissioner of works. None spoke
in the- parliamentary debates criticizing Nazi antWewish, decrees
and policies.   '   .      ". I. "A' ■  '
The Jewish race has given Britain one prime minister, Benjamin
Disraeli, who later became the
Earl ot Beaconstield; one viceroy
of India;, thai Marquess ot Reading,
a lord chancellor, Lord Hcrschell;
economists such as David Ricardo;
banker* such as the Rothschilds, and
Industrialists such aa Lord. Mel'
chett. '. •      '    .' *■■■■>'
Viscount Samuel has filled half
a dozen cabinet offices, his cousin,
Edwin .Montagu, was one bf the
historic secretaries of state for India. There have been Jewish lord
mayors, of London. Sir George Jes-
sel waS-one ot the greatest English
Djm Your Food
I^Hiio Y4n Qistrestf
The impairment of the atomach is     I
often of serious conaequencea. for'.ij^
only hy properly digested food ia the
system nourished and sustained, j' :■■;___
Burdock' Blood Bitter* la a re-     J
liablo. remedy for stomach disorders
such as dyspopsin, indigestion, sour
atomach, belching of gas, headaches,
It help* to stimulate tho secretion     I
of  saliva  ond  gastric   juice,  tho
main'factor in digestion, neutralizes
aciMty, tonea op toe -lining mem?. P
branc. ot the Btomnch, and restores
tho   natural,   healthy   process   of
Sjeestio-.'   "-/'-.'   j . ":   ."   H
' Pnt your atomaeli right by taMnjr *
S.BJB. and see how quickly you wifl
start to enjoy your meals free from '
dljjeetive tnrabie*.;.{..
The T. llllbiirn Co., Ud, Toronto, Out
,7 (AdvU I
or
Iii Control
Telford's
VICTOAlA, Nov. 80 (CP)- Dr.
J. Lyle Telford told Chairman E. T.
Kenney (Lib., Skeena) of toe Brit""
ish Columbia legislature's public
accounts committee he intend* to
call Premier T. D. Pattullo, and
three other cabinet member* before
the committee to give evidence concerning construction of the Pattullo
bridge over the "fraser river at New
Westminster.   .  ' ' '-,■-■'
- Dr. Telford, C. C.F., "VancoUver-
East listed the. cabinet members as
Finance Minister John Hart, Lands
Minister A. Wells Gray and Public
Works Minister F. M. MacPherson.
The committee is' investigating
charges by Dr, Telford that the government paid too much.tor steel
used ln building the bridge.v.   :'
Whert hearing ofthe charges opened before the committee today, evidence waa submitted that cost pf
steel for the New Westminster
bridge was $201 per tori, for toe
Lions' Gate 'bridge recently . completed over toe entrance to Vancouver harbor $204, and. the BUr-
rard Street bridge $187.60 per ton..
Col. J. P. MacKenzie. general manager,of toe Western Bridge Co,, at
Vancouver, testified 'hi* company
tendered a bid of $2,054,004.10 for
.the Pattullo bridge' while the successful' tenderer, the Dominion
Bridan Co, submitted a bid of $2,-
TJLFORD PRICE , T
NOT FEASIBLE
' Colonel MacKenzie did not thihk
a price of $140 per ton—a figure
quotedby Dr, Telford to' the house,
*■*** -feaiible. Steel could not be
suplled and erected for such n figure. Canadian steel cost more than
British steel, he said.
Arthur Dixon, chief-engineer for
the provincial department- of public, works, testified that when fresh-
Sts caused caissons to shift during
lie Fattullo bridge's construction,
the government did some work 'In
repairing the damage,* Thls-was not
included In the contract       ',.:■'
Major W. G. Swan, consulting engineer for the, public works department on tho bridge project, said
5500. tons' of, steel were used- to' toe
final superstructure of the bridge.
The total coat of «tructural steel
erected less painting came to $1,?
107,000 or $201 a ton. Approximately
30 per cent was Canadian "Steel, the
balance British. '        •-.■-'-
For a period of 10 years, Major
SWan teatifled, toe average price of
steel ran from 8%; cent* a pound
to 12 cents, or roughly $200 a ton.
Dr." Telford told Chairman Kenney he Intended also to call num
erous bridge engineers who attended the morning sitting.
ROME. ■NoV.iKr '(APl-Torelgn
Minister Count. Galeazzo Ciano
touched off a noisy demonstration
today,,In the chamber of deputies,
tor the, recognition ot Italian 'interests In.Tunisia, French ^orth
African protectorate...
'. . He concluded a long, .review
of recent international .events by
referring to the necessity of "protecting with inflexible firmness
the interests and natural aspiration*, of toe Italian people." , ,
'At once the; black-uniformed
deputies, attending the historic
laat' »es*lQn of tne 78-year-old
chambers of deputies,-leaped to
their feet shouting: "Tunisia! -Tun-
isio!" The chamber is being abolished.        ', _"/'.. -'   "'  :*'.,, *"/'• !
■'-Andre tfraricois-Paficet the new
French -ambassador, was in ■»
box with other members of the
diplomatic corps, and Heard the
tries, .'"v.,'..','.'',■'   ..
Premier Mussolini rose in toe
1 midst'of  Uie  demonstration  to
acknowledBc   thunderous-, shout*
' of "Ducel Ducel Ducel"-
Jle smiled and raised a hand to
et the black-shlrte'd followers.
IN DEEP 5NOW...INMUD....N TOUGHEST GOING
isariAaai
-Some political circles regarded
the demonstration as a start of a
campaign to obtain from France
at least a ■ voice in. the* admin's?
tratlon of Tunisia if not its transfer to Italian control., .-.'A- ,
' (Tunisia—of-Tunis-»thas been a
French protectorate since -1881.
It lies between toe Mediterranean
Algeria and the Sahara, and has
an area.of about "44,820 square
miles and a population of about
2,000,000. Because of toe large
Italian population France has
guaranteed special Italian rights
by treaty,)., . ,      ;'
Contrasting with toe- attitude
toward France was applause. for
Great Britain. ' .   ■   ■
Ciano,told how Premier Mussolini had personally directed the
'mobilization of 89,834 sailors and
550,000 soldiers to help Germany
.had the September crisis produced'
a general war.        i'...A   7
At dawn of Sept. 38, 22 battleships and cruisers, 114 destroyers
and torpedo boats, 81 submarines,
337 mine layers and smaller- units,
with a total of 5,123 officers and
34,731 men were ready to enter
action, Ciano said.     .....
YEAR
SURE-GRIP
Polls you through!
The most powerful Big Traction
Tire ever built for Ught truckil
British "Pick-a-Batk" Plane
Carries Ton Soulhampfon to
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt,' Nov. 30
(CP-Hayas)—The ■plok-a'bacic,, seaplane , Mercury, laden with more |
than a ton of Empire Christmas mail,
alighted here lit' 6:22 a.m. -Way,
sotting a new record over toe route
with a, 14-hour,; six- minutes flight
from Southampton.    ■•"■--*
aiHptoh yesterday for'the 2400-mile
flight to Alexandria.  ■'.
The Metoury, which earlier this
year successfully flew the Atlantic
to Canada .and made a record-breaking flight .from Ehgland'Vto South
Africa Tn October, carried about DO,?
000'Christmas letters.
Captain Donald B^nnettvWho flew
• With these smboth?
rolling Goodyear Studded
Sure-Grips on yattt. truck
you can laugh at winter
storms, and spring tha'ws.
Mercliants.farmcrs.atly?
.one who must kefcp light
trucks going all through
the bad-road-season need
these husky tires.      T
. Heavy, long-wearing,
tractor-type, self-cleaning
tread; new compMsslon*
proof Supertwlsf cord
body provide for many .
etm miles of dependable
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, The speedy seaplane, upper unit< the seaplane across the Atlantic and
oTtoe-Mayo composite alfleraft, took to South Africa, wa* at toe .controls
oft from its mother ship over South-'on today's flight..
GOOD/YEAR
THF   GREATEST'NAME   IN   RUBBER
 	
wm^^mqmi^mmjmaammmatmjimtsw
\sm
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNINO. DIC. 1. 19M
WE WBR6 WRONG
.'Christian Nestell Bovee, American author and editor who died
ln 1904 at the ripe old age of 84
once said; "It la only an error of
I judgment to make a mistake, but
it argues an infirmity of character
. to1 adhere-to, if when discovered.
' The Chinese say, The glory is. not
in never falling, but in rising every
time you fall'?.
So we rise to shake ourselves ot
toe error we made though these
ir columns a short while ago—that the
j- Klmberley Dynatnitera did not lose
-a game between winning the .Allan
cup and toe. world championship.
|' woe is me. We erred ih the first
place by erring ln the practice of
journalism. Having a W. C. Fields'
tiling system and  not,a perfect
I memory, we took someone's word
■ for Jt It was wrong.      A
\ Since we made that statement,
however, that Kimberley waltzed
across Canada without a single defeat, we have been told that they,
lost from one to-three games by
, any number of people.
Elliot Crowe came to our rescue.
He looked up some records. Here's
I what he gave us:
5 Kimberley Dynamiters tied with
Calgary '4-4 on November 23; lost
to Fort William 8-4 on November
30 ahd were shut out by Moncton
I.M on December 10.  "
B        - ....'■ ,..*•'»
* BATTLING BLAZERS
Tonight the Trail  Bfezera  will
\ yay toeir flrat gyne ol the West
Kootenay hockey league, Nelson
Maple Leafs have everything in
their favor, They gave the*' Trail
Smoke Eaters close games last season, and toey have since been bolstered by a few new players. Trail
Blazers ore a brand new aggregation, but an aggregation of experienced defencemen and speedy,
young, hard fighting forwards. Having watched the Blazers' play two
games and to several practices, we
say that there isn't an idler among
Ihcm. Experience ot team work
should mean a win for Nelson, but
the Leafs can be assured of one
thing—a real battle,
, ■»', * •
MORE 8PORT
, Trail has been reputed tor being a sport-minded city. Sport is
encouraged on every hand. And
when  those  who have played a
Same, can't make an organized
■ague, they go out, get together
and have a lot of fun.
The first hockey game between
smelter "shift" teams set. the ball
rolling. Challenges were issued,
more games were played.l   ,
While every variety and class of
hockey Is In full swing, another
indoor sports comes" to light" It's
fencing. Glancing at the notice board
ln the Memorial hall last night we
saw a small but neat Sign, announcing that fencing classes are being
conducted in connection with Art
Fletcher's gym classes each Tuesday and Friday night beginning at
9 o'clock.- •    •". ''<   i ,-f\  ., -
BRITISH SOCCER
RESULTS
LONDbN/Nov. 80 (CP Cablel-
Third division lootball teams were
successful today in replayed first-
round English cup matches against
minor league opponents. The elimination of three elevens leaves nine
junior clubs ln the competition's
: second round to be played Dec. 10.
K'Of 27 minor en|il« toe following' survived   first-round   games;
I Scunthorpe United, Runcorn, Gainsborough Trinity, Folkestone, Wal-
'thatoT*veiiue,Yeovil and Fetters,
i Chelmsford City, Bromley and Borden Welfare.   >  .   ,   ,     ■<■*■ '.;'
Today's raj-ays:    ,-."'*■
Cardiff City 1, Cheltenham 0
Guildford City 8, Aldershot 4
■Mansfield Town 2, Workington 1
Chorloy 1, Horden Welfare 2
--.Crewe Alexandra 1, OldhanrAthletic 0.'   ,Tr\ .•-
;Royals Pound Out     :
)5-Z VictoryTrail
f TRAIL, B.C. — The diminutive
Teddy Fowler saved toe Fighting
Ktfttt from a shutout when he sunk
fills team's only field goal of a Central school senior boys basketball
league game Tuesday afternoon,
when Royals defeated Fives 15-2.
'   Teams and scores follow:   ' ■
.Fighttog.Fijre«?--B_- Brownlle,
Frank Turik, Ronald Foelky, Teddy Fowler 2, Sergio Sammartino,
George 'Webster, Malcolm Serres
| and Richard Loughery.
Royals—Ian McLeod 9, Graham
Cook,   Malcolm   MacKenzie,   Bob
/MacKinnon 2, Jimmy Mandevllle 4,
George O'Farrell and Roy Cough.
Angus McDonald refereed.        ■
Westmount Seeks to
Meet Dales Saturday
MONTREALi'Nt)**. 80 <CP)r-0j-
flcials ot Westmount juniors, east-
em challengers tor the Dominion
junior lootball championship, announced tonight toey had tel-afeph-
ed Reatoa. Dales suggesting Bator-
day olftis week as the date, lor
toeir proposed Dominion title toatch.
Dales, western Iffieholders, want
to meet toe easttrners^here Dec. to.
President James. RldM of too Montreal: suburban outfit said Dales
had not yet answered the West-
mount bid for a change to date.
SEATTLE, Nov. SO (AP). -JPtet-
lditot Fred Taylor of the PacUic
Coast Hockey league said tonight a
meeting of league officials. today
"adjusted financial arrangements to
the entire satisfaction of Spokane."
Taylor would not say what adjustments were made, but It was
understood from other sources Spokane won its request tor 10 per cent
of the gate oh road- games.        f ■
to retora, Taylor said, Spokane
assured! too league it had settled
its internal financial difficulties and
would finish out the schedule. -
Meralomas Take 24-0
Licking, North Shore
VANCOUVER,'Nov. 80 (CP), -
North Shore Lions swamped Meralomas 24-0 in a Canadian Rugby
$Ig Four league fixture at Athletic
park tonight •
BELGRADE (CP) - Tomo Major
50-year-old Balkan father, waa sent
to prison for a month for gagging;
binding and chaining his daughter
to the Cellar .wall to prevent her
meeting her boy friend.
f
Itrs All Over for Monty Stratton;
Bullet Halts Promising Ball Career
DDM.U8, Tex- Nov. 38 (AP)-
Raw-boned, (% foot Monty Stratton, a fellow that literally dragged from a Texas cornfield to
major league "baseball fame, has
struck out at 25. .   . ,   ' ■
One leg — the powerful right
leg he dug Into th* pitcher's box
—Is gone. Hit off-teaion hobby,
bunting, cost him hii career. A
Rlstol dangling In a scabbard at
la hip discharged lait Sunday
as Monty trudged along locking
lor, rabbltt. The bullet clipped an
"artery and physicians amputated
his leg 48 hours later.
y©UT OF DANOO. :r
Hospital attendants aald today
Stratton was improving and apparently was onto! danger.    , ^
One of nine children, Monty started tffltag ,tJto; loll 'near, Merritt,
'$e^ after death of his father. Monty
•bad heard tell of this baseball business and even took time from his
ttoelng .to jjve it a whirl with a
m$ !
Distilled and Bottled In Canada
min We: 88 or. 81M; 40 at.MM
This advertisement Is not published
*& displayed by toe Liquor Control
Board or by toe Government of
British Columbia.     •
scrub team near Merrltt     '
One day Monty was zipping them
aoross the plate when Mayor?W. W.
Blasstngatne of nearby Van Alstyne
and Jodie Tate, former Texas lea?'
guer happened by. His honor, doubling as manager of tho Van Alstyne Grays, saw the giant ol a
farm 'boy curving Out his rural
playmates with remarkable ew.
Next day the mayor returned
to Monty's cornfield and-' made
the proposition that started a chain
that led to Chicago White Sox. His
honor offered' Stratton -8240 a
game, board and room .at Van Alstyne during week-ends If he
would chuck Sunday ball for the
Grays.    T.." (     .-.   .".A'-
Monty opened bis, professional
career by retiring toe first 12 batters In order and allowing only one
hit in nine innings and then toe
lamed pair of baseball ivory hunters, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Largent of
McKinncy, Tex., happened along.
Stratton was signed merely on his
bull pen performance.
■ He.went first to Galveston of the
Total league. <He went up fot- a
short stretch, then back to Omaha
and St. Paul In 1085. He was the
American association's No. 1 hurl-
cr. He went to toe White Sox but
ah appendectomy slowed him down.
-    In 1937 It was an arm Injury
, for a while, but he finally finished with 15 wins and rated second only to Lefty Gome*. This
t year there was a price tag of
5150,000 on him.
Gutta Percha Tires
Perfect Grip and Safe Driving
Shorty's Repair Shop
71. Baker     '. '    Nelson, B.C.
Keen Young Nelson Hecheylsts on the Job
When toe Daily News photographer paid a surprise visit to the Civic Centre ice arena Saturday
morning, he fbund one team with a 100 per cent
turnout,lor practice, the M.R.K, Bantams. On tola
year's edition of the team—which has been to toe
cup Iinals all three years and cup winner twice—
beginners predominate. Front row, left to right,
Allan Des Champs. Rlchey WaaslCk, Bonald Cray-
ford (attached), Rolf Gausdal (attached), Dick San
tor, Jack Gausdal, Paul Hielscher, Graham Avis.
Second row, Harold Ronmark, Norman Tough, Alex. -
Allan, Reid Sahara, Ian Currie, Bob McCracken,
Bill McMordie. Rear, James Avis, coach, and A. N. .
Winlaw, vice-president M.R.K. Hockey club. On*
team member, Donny Ross, missed the picture by
rushing home for hia uniform. Young McCracken •
is severing his connection with the team through
removal to Revelstoke.        , ,   ,,;....
fytuxmbu^
By W. E. LEAMAN
Klmberley Dynamiters are back
on their skates. Excellent Ice
weather has put surrounding lakes
Into fine shape for skating and
toe boys lost, no time taking advantage of It Ivory afternoon
right after shift they beat It out
to the frozen ponds and go to It.
Meanwhile,'lets making at the
arena is in full swing and a con*
tinuation of the present weather
conditions will mean action for the
local hockey teams on the big surface ere long. It is ot course much
too early, to get indications as to toe
value of the newcomers to. lhe
Dynamiters. LaFace of course^ is
well known and gave a line dls-
Slay between the pipes In toe game
ie Dynamiter»,pl«j«,aAlnst Gonzaga ,JniSpokane a. short to& ago
Strong,,a rangy fellow seems to be
a chap with plenty ot .*«**»
brains" and looks like a ^dedtf
Sgood addition to the club, while
Corbett looks like a chap who will
ve the Dynamiters plenty ot help
toe line ot aggression..
. Klmbarley 8 Oonraga 4; Nelson
5 Gonzaga 3; Trail 4 Gonzaga 1;
Nelson 7, Gonzaga 6. All three of
the Kootenay league teams have:
clashed with the Gonzaga boys
wlUi.--.tl*': abpve result, Which
would Indicate very little to choose
between the three teams.
I.EAF8-THE TEAM TO BIAT   -
■Following on With toe first paragraph ot this epistle, we have lust
received word toat the Dynamiters
will.be on thelbe In.the .Arena this
week. This 9 perhaps the earlisilt
such a thing has been heard of,      "
"Saturday night, Deoember 8, toe
bbys are booked to appear to an ex-
hibitlon gamo' agoinst toe Canadians
In Coleman. Then a week later,
December 10, will cpme the time
for the Kimberly fans to look, things
over as Coach Hornquist sets his
possibles and probables Against each
other In Kimberley's grand Winter
opening. The Dynamiters are booked to open their league season on
Dec. 17 with the Nelson Maple
Leafs as guests. Leafs are expected
to be the team to beat this winter
to toe Kootenay loop:,
f* ''..•.•*"■'
The trip, toe'loca dub made to
the coast was all to toe good. Playing in New Westminster, you might
say without any practice or even
skating of any kind, the club show?
ed plenty of power and lots ot ability. Eye; witnesses said they looked
fine. On the retum-'trip the boys
tangled wlto toe Gonzaga university
'and eked out a close, one-goal decision, They took an early wad but
were'Up against a, squad that was
ln great physloal condition, and it
made toe boys go all out to maintain their advantage. The Gonzaga
club is Very husky. In this game toe
old college cheering section and the
band was. very much in evidence.
These two conftsts certainly did the
boys no harm. Given good ice conditions, it Is honed to have a
couple home exhibition games before the league season gets under
way here on Dec. 17.
.        '.- * ,*■•".•■ ■
^Showing of tie Nelson' IJaple
Leafs in their two game tour ot
Alberta last week-end came ea -a
very pleasant surprise to this cottier.
The Leafs are to be congratulated
onythelr fine' perfortMnces. One
gathers that they have satisfactorily
flUed a couple ot key posttlons that
should make them one real tough
squad to overcome. One also gathers
from the showing of the Leafs, that
Ty Cully can coach a club quite
as easily as he could play a few
years ago.' A Strong 'team In the
•A bard fought victory came to
J. H. Allen's bowlers Tuesday night
aa they ousted Pete Borsato's quintet. 1292-1264 in Christmas tournament play at the Lflgion Bowling
club alleys. '■'      .  y   ,"■•■,',«. ""..
Scoring honors went to Ross Riley with a ISO single and J. H,
_i_len with a S1J total,     T
Teams and scorers follow:  : " *.,
J. ALLEN     ,
Miss S. Boomer .......... 100
a Leonard .„.„.., 107.
F, Simms _^y._.._'.. 181
X Riley.;:.'___,
J. Allen	
Thia advertittment ia not jmblj-lwd or -Uapl^ytd by the Litjuor
. Control Bo*rd or hy the Governrttnt'ot British Coltithbia.
Lakeside city is fine business, and
hole's waiting for toeir first appearance in Kimberley on 'Decern?
:■" ■■; ■_'., .■ ■■ ;. *':.   .
Trail Smoke Eaters, who are representatives not only of Canada,
but more particularly of the Koo-
tenays arc haying* a tough time in
their trip and have -not yet started
to "dick". Here's hoping they soon
find.that "spark".".; .'
liS:
Total .:...J_
P. BORSATO
Mrs! Hunt	
J; Baylals _:__-.
Maoo ...:.._—;	
W. Jackson .
P. Borsato .—..
■ '•T^t.    -
Total .,.*.-..,.
•88-1.8
113-220
140-281
181-311
MS-; 812
.......Im
,107
.149
.108
.120
.138
128^-238
118-288
145-254
12^-_40
132-271
BRITISH HEAVY
TITLE BOUT TO
BE HELD TODAY
LON1JON, Nov. 36 (A^j^-
Harvey and Eddie PhiUipj will
15 rounds tomorrow nifflt-at :Har-
ringay for the British heavyweight
championship. The title was declared open when Tommy Farr fall:
ed to return to defend it as directed by the Brltlih Boxing Board Of
Control" ' ■" .'V :';v- .■*' ..--V "
Harvey :1s a 1 to 2 faworttr to
regain toe title he toft to Jack Paterson In June, 1938. Phillips was
nominated to meet Harvey because
ot his recent knockout over Jack
Doyle. They have met three times,
Harvey winning twice and the other
was a draw. • ,
"'        l my [' < .       '     "   ',,",,    ".
Gallagher Men
Win In Srtwlter
, Hockey at Trail
tRATt, B.C.—Oxide plant em'-
ployccs of-the Consolidated Mining
ft Smelting company made their ap*
pearance to smelter hockey Tuesday
When Gallagher's shift defeated
Milnes' shift 8-4.
Bob Gerace and' "Buck" Rucbin-
an, husky Gallagher defencemen,
scored three goals each and proved
to be too tough a combination for
Milne's team. Stan Swcetman and
Handley put two more past Mathews
In the iosirsnet *'.
. Jerry Babcock led the Milnltes
with three counters and Caputo
scored the fourth goal.',      ';, .'
The teams were-,   \   ",.
Gallaghers shift—Don Latham, R.
Gerace, "Buck" Buchanan, R. Plate,
Ken Rigby, S. Sweetman, R. Nesbitt. TT.;'.
•Milne; shift-L. Mathews, C. Caputo, N. Coombes, J.: Sigsworth,
Gordon McLean, Verne Aherns,
Dave Milne, M. Spence, N. Dawson, O. Fertlg.
-r-
■T.m
Removal Sale
BARGAINS IN QUALITY
JACK BOYCE -.
888 Baker Si Style Shop Phone 150
KIMBERLEY
SKI TRAILS
BySITZMARK
Skiing has beoun much earlier
this year and nearly every day,
people oan be seen on their way
to tho North Star hills. With tho
temperature holding'between zero
and ten above, and with eighteen
Inches of snow, Skiing is perfect.
Practically all the travelling Is
dona on the well beaten trails,
however,, unless logs and Mumps
mean nothing te your "sohtem-
mlng^      .
Last Wednesday, several of the
enthusiasts Were Up to our ski
lodge, and enjoyed themselves so
much that they wish to mike it
a weekly affair- < How about it
*angt..-. .-- - ■>,■«., Aa'-\a:"7-.
SITE LIKE A VILLAGE
With the caretaker's cabin completed, the site is beginning to look
Sparkling snow, babbling brooks.
more like a village;'there are cabins, tall spruce trees, soft, smooth,
Boy, What a place for Tennyson, .
INTRODUCING COPLEY
Speaking ol caretakers,-Bill Copley is coming irom Banff to take
charge of activities around toe
camp. Bill is a fine young chap,
with plenty of ambition, and a
fellow who won!t take.long to get
acquainted. He comes with good recommendations as' a skier. Only
nineteen ,lie has jumped 208 feet
on the Nofquay hill in Banff, something anyone would be proud of. .
The slalom hill was put Into use
Sunday for the first time, and. some
of the boys limbered up on the
fast turns. With' constant use, it
gradually wore down to the ground,
but even clinking poles or flyingSki
chips didn't halt some of them.T
ORCHIDS P6r ZbNER8;T . -
Great work you Ski. Zbnert. With
Klmberley too lar distant, we could
not voice our opinion, but apparently you didn't need it A ski zone
is something we should- have developed some tone ago ahd will be a
decided asset to clubs here Jn the
Kootenay!■"..<■ ■-, ;-:.".'•
A meeting will be held in our
Ski Lodge, next Sunday, so in this
eolitoto next week We will have
much more important .data concerning tournaments and other activities for the winter.   "
frit SI4en Win
17-8 in Smelter
Hockey at Trail
TRAIL, B-Q-Tbeftstide CrpWs
on Moore's shift of toe Consolidated
Mining & Smelting tramming department downed toe- West tod
crews 17-8 ln a smelter hockey gamo
Tuesday morning. LawrenCfe Mathews, "Smokey"Harrison, and "Baker" Merlo were high scorers lor
the Bast Siders with live goals
•each. Johnny KowlUk was. credited
With the other two. goals.      .■■>"
Coach Freddie Bell Jed his West
squad with three goals. Dawson,
Stewart Milne .and "Flat" Cran all
looted tor the losers. , •-v.
. George Waugh played a scintillating game between." the winners
pipes, kicking out an estimated ""
shots, . a ■'      ' ■, ' -'
"Swede" Wassholm, trainer and
coach ol Moore's shift hockey players, intends to send a rep team up
•mstssslt   thn   lil_V.lv   «r,1,t-/1    Wniln'.
agalntt toe highly touted Waite's
shift aeirtette. -.
The teams were:   ':;   ..- ,
nit Side—L. Mathews, G. Waugh,
a Merlo, VSmokey1'Harrison, Jc*n
Kowluk, .Bill Fischer, Ray Sam-
broolte. '. ,:■-.-   •'.
West End—T. Bell, J. Simpson, L.
Dawson, R. Allen,'H. Stewirt, A.
-fltoy,. "Wat", Crim.   :   '  -     r
Trottier, Shields
Find Puck Berrhi
MONTREAL, Nov. 30 <CP)-Lait
names on the roster of the disband?
ed Montreal Maroons Hockey elub
we«e removed today with-ehnontice-?
ment by ex-Manager Tommy Gorman that Dave nattier had been
given Ms! unconditional release and
mat Alan Shields would play with
New Haven in the International-
American league, -
* Trottler, a brilliant skater who
earned his amateur fame with the
Toronto Varsity Grads, 1828 Olympic champions, declined to play outside Montreal, Gorman sala.
Creek Sportsters
Mines Directors to
Supply Funds fer
^uiprnenf
' SHEEP GREEK, B. C. —' Sheep
Creek Athletic dab was formed ben
Friday night when an enthusiastic
group of young men met af toe
Sheen Creek haJL Composed ol
members from, the Sheep Creek,
Kootenay Belle and Gold Belt minea
the club will boost various sports
in the winter months.  "
O'DONNELL HEAD .
Jerry, apomwll, well known to
-Sheep-Creek and Salmo sporting circles lor his softball chucking last
summer, will bead the,club and
Tommy Foreman was elected secretary.  "   '. ■. J.;.-;"
Henry/ Doelle, general manager
iol the. gheep Craek and Gold; Belt
mines, informed the meeting toat
the directors ot the mines he represented and of the Kootenay Belle
would supply funds. to equip the
hall fpr any suitable sports.
An outline of toe d ifferent sports
which the club will sponsor was
drawn up, Tbe club Is most anxious
to introduce the popular and spectacular game of basketball to Sheep
Creek. Volleyball, carpet bowling,
boxing, wrestling and any other
sports toe men are interested in
will be encouraged et tot club
groan.
The club will awing into its winter's activities Friday night when •
stag smoker will be sponsored lit
the hall. A boxing card will head
the program with wrestling, a musical program and community singing filling in between lights.
The committee in charge of tha
smoker consists of Seymour Robertson ot the Kootenay Belle; Ivor
Davis of the Cheep Creek and J.
Murray of toe Gold Belt Tammy
Morgan, wlto. bit'sax, will be master ot ceremonies.        »
Olds Take Edmonton
for 5-1 Hockey Loss
taitmiXSit, 'Nov; ,30 (CP). ?-
Olds Elks defeated Edmonton Eskimos 5-1 here tonight in an Alberto
Senior Seven Hockey league game.
Frank Coulson's Elks opened toe
season with a great display of back-
checking that smothered toe attack
of toe previously undefeated Eskimos. A . _
Buy or Sell Wlto a Want Ad
Into toe hookey trenches go Nation Mania Leah Md Trail Blu?
art tonight as league wan of th*
West Kootenay olroult open for
mother season here tonight
Trail Blazers unknown "and untested, will be out to make a name
to replace Canada's amateur champs,
the Trail Smoke Eaters, In toe Kootenay trl-circuit Nelson Maple Leafs
already have rolled tm an impreei-
ive record in their pM season exhibitions, going through tow games
without a scar. The result when the
two are mixed will be real lire?
-PAOININE
MAPLE LEAFS AND BUZERS WILL f
OPEN LEAGUE WARS HERE TONIGHT
NO INJURIES
: The Nelson hockeyista arrived
■  mt, m\m  if uuusiuiii wvu vuu muj
They came through toe battle with
out aa Injury.
"II we can possibly do it, -
going totake them." "ail Coach
Duchak, announced.
Twtti au "»g;£wM what»
answer, when he arri
son Wednesday.
Here's toe squad that will face the;
-"-"'"- ■ --! Bicknell'*!
itwell md r
ioe; Jack..
.ick Smith, -'
fellson and'
ENGLISH RUGBY
LONDON,  NOV.  30   (CP)-Eng-
lish Rugby Union matches played
today- resulted u follows:    .":.
"  Hampshire 19, Eastern Counties 8.
Kmt «, Mlddlenat SO,
St. Thomas' Hospital 8, Army 0.
Speedfes Win Trail
'   School Basketball
TRAIL, B.C.—A lead of six points
to toe first half proved helpful
to the Speedies when they defeated
Lucky Fives by toe close score of
15-13 to a game of toe Central
School Senior Boys' Basketball
league Tuesday afternoon. Lucky
Fives made a splendid recovery after the interval, whittling down toe
six point margin to two.
Teams .apa scores lollow:       , :
Lucky Fives — Loyal Brown 2,
Louis Treveson, Jack McDonald i,
Dickie Price 4, Jim Pearson and
Ivo Delia Lana 3. '
Speedies—Lloyd Murdoch 2, Mike
Sammartino 2, Lorn* Depaolls. John
Faninl II, Roy Osier 2. A. Erma-
cora and Bono Morandi.
Angus McDonald refereed.
Drumheller Edges 2-1
Win Over Stampeders;
DRUMHELLER,  Alta, Nov,. SO'*!
(CP). - Wlto Mix Bentley icorlng ',
to* winning goal on a pass trom \V
Brother Scoop early to tha third
period, Drumheller Miners tonight:
toned back Calgary  Stampeders'
2-1 ih an Alberta Senior Hockey -
league game, Due to,soft let, PW !
-WM Wow alter toe opening   t-
changes -and delays were frequent.
throughout toe game. „  .
This advertisement b not published or t
Board or by the Government i
"Tfiere^ tiocky in die Air"
IMPERIAL TOBACCO COMPANY
MANUFACTURs-RTOr
SWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTES
.      BRINGS YOy    t
HOCKEY
f ■ ■    !-,s";   j        f> .       *" ■ ■
Broadcasts
*) PM.
WITH tUCt BY fUY
DESCRIPTIONS BY
DOUG SMITH
Diroct from tha Rlnkilda
If you cannot attend, light up a Sweet Cap—and listen.
The Rr$t Game Tonight From Nelson-9 P.M.
Imperial Tobacco Company also presents   - >  ;
Daily except Saturday — 8:15 to 8:30 p.m.
Tune in: Enjoy nightly this sparkling musical production
featuring leading radio stars.
-.'■■'      t •■;■'.
 PAGE TEN
y     "•'", ' ■." ■   ,    .'. ■:./'• ■ .' ■■ ■ ' i ■ ■.'  ''■.''■: '■■'" . . ,
NELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON. BC^THURStiiAV MORNING, MC. 1, 193S " ; W —-: •— 1 r—
'
Sometimes There Is More Go-od Ne^ Than on Page One
Canada Manufactures War Planes
The "Stranraer^twto-taglned long distance*'
patrol, flying boat was designed and developed
originally by the famous Supermarine Aircraft
Works in, England, builders, of the Schneider Cup
racers. Ten of these huge ships are. now being
delivered to the Royal <2anadian Air Force from
the factory "of Canadian Vickers Ltd., in Montreal,
Completion ot thii "order villi leave the Vickers
factory to a position to participate in any British
government order* which may be-'oHered. The.
aircraft industry Ot Canada'- il working together'
through a central adminiatrative, and »ale* office.
It i*\ anticipated that a .alzable- order will be
placed for toe hew HahdW-Page Hampden day
bomber*. Thla. is toe second of an interesting series
of picturei arranged by Central Preas Canadian
on various tyfies of combat-planes now Jn service
With toe Royal Air.Force and which ar«-manufactured in'Canada for, the R.OA.F. •
Nakusp Hospital
Ball Is Success
Medal   for  Bravery
• PresentedAlfred
:   Pyrin.; ■■'"/./
NAKUSP, B. C—The annual hospital ball wa* thia year no less suc-
cesful than on previous occasions.
The dance waB sponsored by the
Women'* Hospital auxiliary and was
held in the Legion hall Friday eve-
'.aing....        ■■■ ."..  ■  :•",'.   ..
Festive streamers of red and white
were strung overhead and in the
centre, a large bouquet of flowers
waa suspended, i Flowers and ever-
' greens, lacing toe walls and plat'
form,, completed the decoration.
During toe supper intermission,
H. Islip, representative of the hospital board, Who was master Of ceremonies, thanked those present for
their support . - '■ ...'■'
The occasion Waa alio auspicious
for the presentation of an award
ta Alfred Duhn for heroic bravery
•in saving five-year-Old Linden. Aalten from drowning at toe government wharf June 26. The certificate,
' obtained through the efforts of the.
Nakusp board ot trade, .was Dominion recognition of toe Hbyal
Canadian Humane-society ot Hamilton, Ont Tiie, presentation was,
■ made by G. H. Gardner jr., president
of the board of trade. , '.,-
Prizes for -toe novelty dances were
woh by Mis* Irene Surina and R.
Steenhoff,. Miss Martha Steenhoff
and L, Grodski of New Denver. Winners of the three Christmas cakes
Vrere Mr*. J... Grlgg, J. Estlemont
and Mr*..M, Baird. , ./.."'
Assisting with the music were G.
, H. Gardner, C.Picard, L. Truscott
and R. Mayoh. :■ ': At. "-'   -
MAY REPRIEVE      ;;
. SACRAMENTO, Calif!, Nov. 30
(AP)—Gb% Frank F. Merrlam* said
today he feels disposed to give.another taprieve".to, John■ .and Coke
Brite, convicted slayers. ",.,'•
HcsspitalyAidTea,    ;
dt CrqnhfQqk $How
:    for New Sterilizer
CHANBROoki B..C.-Pi'an» for
the automobile ihow to be held by
the Cranbrook Auto Dealer*' association December S and 10 are well
under way. Tha show will be to the
Cranbrook auditorium and tea will
be served by toe members of the
St. Eugene hospital Ladles' aid.
The proceeds Of the tea will be
used to pay tor toe new. sterilizer
recently added to the Hospital
equipment Mrs. J. B. Miles,was
appointed.convener of the refreshment committee at a recent meeting ofthe aid, and Mrs. F. Wi Green
and Mrs. H. A. McKowan appointed
conveners, for the-decorating.:
Social'".''.■'.
SANCA
SANCA, R,C?-Mrs. J. Karpowlch
and Jimmie have left for Creston
for- a tew day*,
Mrs. E. Bainbridge and Mrs. N,
Batobrldge spent Sunday in Boswell.''   ■     ' -■' ■■■-",'»'
Miss I. Karpowich spent a couple
ot days at Sirdar last weelr; visiting
Mr. and Mrs. J. Shkwarok,  j "
Steve Zwolski of Drewery visited
Sahc» Saturday." > ,
, Mr. and Mra. J; Shkwarok and
children, and D.,Pascuzzo of Sirdar
motored to Sanca Thursday evening,
•Mr. Black, of Pincher Creei, Alta.,
renewed acquaintances at Sanca.
t O'NJel ofiCreatoh wa* a visitor
at Sanca Friday."     • -..
Far North Miner*..;[.:.
Like Ice Cream
, EDMONTON, Npv. 30 (CF).T-.The
sourdoughs down north around
Goldflelds; Sask,, it seems, have a
liking for ice cream'even in winter
time. Pilot Harry Winny carried
five ,gallqns-e_. the delicacy aboard
Ilia plane - when he took off from
here today for. the mining settlement located 'oh the eaatorn. shore
of Lake Athabaska; •'":., .
SILVERTON ^JtENytU. PAftTY FORr
ROY KEHNIPY, OFF tO SNGLAND
Campbell, 0. | Johnson," E. Crellin,
R. Herrod, P. Campbell, and L.
Campbell of New Denver/Mrs. G.
Waterman, of .Vancduvef, -Mr. and
Mrs...MI Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs. E.
Avery, Mr.'atid Mrs. L.' Trtille, Mr.
and Mrs,. H. JHsmore, Mr. and Mrs,
F. Keller; tb. and Mr*. B. Pen-
gaily, Mr. and Mrs. H. Hambly, Mrs.
O, Bergman, Mrs: Nelson, Mrs. G.
'Noi-beri, Mrs.. .T.. Elsmore, Mrs. C.
Schmidt, Mrs. W-jMarshall, Mrs.
E. Fairhurst, Mrs, H. Douel, Mrs. E,
Marshall, Mri. S. Watson, Irene
Kennedy, Thelma Johnson, Hugh-
ena Matoeson/CMa OAoper, Greta
Lienstien, Florence Moss, Edith" Tat-
terle," Rachel and Ester'Holmer, Boy
filly and Norman*: Kennedy, Jim
airhurst, Seaman Dewis, "Frtd
Scalca, Jack.Kelsall, Richard, Jack
-and 'Joe Hambly, Adria KeSer. Ca-
nute Holmer; Albert Elsmore, D'Arcy , Watson, Tormod. Larspn, R.
Fairhurst,- R, Haigh, t, Peachy.
Harry, .Arne and Haldo Norbetg,
Don, Livingston, .George Groenhy-
sen, Carl Schmidt and F. Kcsler of
Sllverfon.   ■
,   SILVERTON, B. C, — An enjoyable farewell party was held in toe
. Menjorial.hall Friday night ln honor
of Roy Kennedy, who left Monday
for Nottingham, England,
B, "A program of games ahd contests
. was featured- A vocal solo was rend-
, wed by R. Hambly, accompanied by
s,Mr*;-lfambly.at the piano. •   *-■-.,
■•'Another   highlight -wa*   a . tap
dance by Harvey Norberg, accom'
panied at the piano by D'ATcy W*t-
' son... ,'■■ ., '
Refreshments were served at midnight After supper, toe; guest ot
honor was presented with a photo-
•gyajih aftton., A large circle formed
about Mr. Kennedy and sang, "For
He's a; Jolly Gobi- Fellow-" -. PaHc-
■ ing then held sway. . . -
> Assisting'with. the', music were
Mrs. R. Hambly, Miss F. Moss, D'Arcy Watson,! and': J, Falrhurst
Those present .Were Mr. and Mrs.
T. Flint Mr.- ana Mrs. L. Beggs,
Hilda Crellin, Marjorie "Francis,
Hazel Flint, Elisabeth Meers, Annie
McKeen, Ruth Alywin, Florence
Picard, J. Huntley, K. Fowler, M.
ON THE AIR
110 k.             CJAT
319.6 m
Trait                    1     -
1000 W
-A.M,-
7:00—Good Morning
#.   ,'"v
7:15—All request program.•   >
8:00—Morning bulletin board
' 8:46—Getting the most out of life
. 3:00—Organ Melody
D:!**—Waltz "nine    .       '
0:30—School Broadcast
10:00—Happy Gang , ;
10:30—Virginia' Fair Entertains
10:45—Romance of Dan and Sylvia
11:00—Big Sister
ll:15-rRoundup '"', -   :
ll:30-MOs-ning Varieties
11:45—Songs of Today '
12:00—Mary Martin
y. p.m-. .-       '■•!',.'.■ ■"-■."•'■
;}2:I5^Ma Perkins"
12:30—Pepper  Young's  Family
12:45-Thf Gliding Light
l:00-Club 'matinee   ".",-,.
1:45—Lend me your ears
2:00-To toe ladies ■    >'•
. 2:3(H-Balladeer ■'■■...
2:45—Closing stock quotations
3:00—Norman Cloutier's orch.
. 3:15—Beverly Lane    < "...
J:30-Up-to-the?Minute     "
4:0(H-Theatre newa   ' - .
4:l5—Announcement time
4:30—Song* of Today •,
t«-Hobby Horses   '
8:00—Sport page Ot the air,
6:15—Guess What
6:30—Chandu- ■':■_.
8:48?7Crlmaon Trail      ■
fM—Good Ne*s','
7:00-Muslc HaU..
8:00—Nevre and weather
.,fI5—Listen, ,...'/.
8:30—Memories of Hawaii
8:45—Easy to Remember •
O:00-Story behind the song
0:15-^-The»tre Time.
9:30—Book' Revlbw •
9:45—News.and weather
10:00-^oncert trio ■ ->•
10:30-rRhytorn 'Ride >'
CANADIAN   BROADCA8TIN'
CORPQ^AfION NETWORK
CKOV CJCJ CJCA  CHWK CFQC
630     CM"' ■ m   .m<    ta
OFJO   CiAt sCkV   CFAC   CJOC
t»0       »1ff      91.0    .030       »60
:.,'.,   y  ,;■-, WT, 1«0    -:
P.--M.- ' Ay' -:T".'".' ■"'    '■    '
4:00—Wilfrid Charette'i orch.   '
4:15^-M«jbr Bill   .-..•'.       -    •-'..,
4:l»-^Magicil Voyage
4:45-Hobby Horses- '
5:00—Montreal Orchestra  .        ,t-
6:00—Good new*   ■>,.
.7:00^-Muslc Hill-.     '.",  A: A
7:3ft-SlUttil"er boat."
' 1:00—Ne\»is ahd weather
8:15—Introducing tonight-'    '.' v
8;80^-Famlliar Mush
9:00-^Theatre Hm«.y
9:30-Book Review
9:45—News and weather. .
10:00—Classic* for Today."
lOiStH-R1"'""" "'''"■
Helann SaUy tos
■. Member of the Canadian Daily :
.-.•;.   Newspapers Association '.    '
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BIRTHS
MARTIN—rTo Mr, and Mh_,'D.
Martin: at the McDougall hospital
oh Sunday; Nov. 27, a daughter.
HELP WANTED
(resfon Winners
CRESTON, Nov. 28-Hl»h-achool,
Motors and Blue Bombers were
winners'to Commercial league basketball fixtures here^Frlday hight
in a trio of contests that provided
close competitin in thia opening
halves. * , : ','.' ■;'■ ",- ,,' '"... ■' '
' In the Intermediate dash Bombers
were stow, getting into their stride,
bat early in toe second round they
began to pull a'way.from High
school. The final cl)Unt was 22-8.
The. losers gbt but a single tally In
the final half. Teams: -.     ■   ' ■
Blue Bombers — D. Armitage,
Scahde,, Amato, Erickson, York Ferguson, Brennan, Husband.     ,    "'
High School — Rota, Ingham,
Vigne, French, Poll*, Weir, J. Armitage,'* Kolthommer, Fowlle, McLaren.- ''•■■.' i:' "■■.
Wynndel ladles found the route
too long or the pace too,fast and
bowed to Motors 27-20, after, dominating the opening.Ho lead 8-6 at
half Ume. Ferguson' had'-a great
night accounting tor 13 of Motor's
points. "Lillian Johnson 8, and Mr*.
Martello and Louise Buttorfield
with six each,'did all the losers'
point,getting. Team*:..;
. Creston Motors—Spiers, Ferguson,
Tompkins, Keirnv Browell, Hendy,
Armitage.":   . ,..
• Wynndiel Staplettefr-^Martello, L.
Johnson, Butterficld, B. Johnson, I.
Hagen, Spencer; Merrlam,, Moon.
Height, speed and a more effective defence accounted tor 23-32
margin High School/seniors ..had
over the Canadians. It was anybody's gome at half time when the
native sons were trailing 9-10. High
boys opened up the second half to
annex six points in less than halt
that time and were never again In
danger. DeVohV had a big evening
for Canadlns with a dozen counters
to hi* credit D. Uri, led high with
10 markers; Teatoei '';.»3 •
. Canadians .-? DeVoln, Truscott
Crosson,•' Morablto,- Bourdon,:, Nas-
tasi, Comer,  ... ;.    .    .       ,'
High School—Kolthammer," Sta'
clalr, Hlp*ell, Browell, Cooper,
Wightmann, Weir, York, Avery,
Ur_\     .,-.      ,.'■'....''
Referees: were-Allan Speers and
Buster Martell. The turnout of fans
was large. Proceedings Weri livened up by1 brass band selections.
• 7., :.'   . .,:).    .    '■'■,.-
|tfl^SyS8(li«/::';'::"y5/;
Mciy Move if >/-v
'T'-^A-|fc':P#fmits
.. SHANtSSAtNoY- » (API-Vice*
Admiral Koshiro Oikawo,.commander-in-chief df the Japanese fleet to
China, anhounced, foreign-,- vessels
in the Y$ngtse would be permitted
'to conie down toe; river If naval
authoi-itiias of,'toe 'varioua nations
asked p«mi*slan.   » ■   . ■<i.
Natal Sportsmen
Seek 100 Membership
NAT-Ali X'-C. '& At the annual
nAeting-of toe Natal-Michel ;Rod
and Oun dub, Pwaideftt Sylvio
Muraro of Natal; vlce-preaident
Mike Halka of Michel and secretary-treasurer Jame*. Terrlbn of
Michel were- again elected. The
working-committee elected wa*
Mike Borsato, Primo Cimolini, Andrew .-Billy; HaroW Travis and
Dougall- Mitchell, to an effort to
reach a membership of 100 the club
will hold a banquet and turkey-
-*hoot. LMt year's, metobershlp was
to.' ,-.■...'- * & .        ;'."•■]
Jack Doyle Matt
Leave U.S. by Dec. 13
. LOS ANGELES, Nov. 30 (APi -
hter. must
,y Dec. 13
■ported to England. Immigration authorities received a war*
rant yesterday far. Doyle's deportation. The order grew out of a hearing here to October in Which It wai:
alfegai. the "Iriih thrush," ohce
stopped at the Canadian border because he lacked proper medical credentials, *weAt 'to another port of
entry and obtained a visitor's permit from the American consul without mentioning his earlier rejection.
SLAYsUlS WIPE AND
HIS MOTHER-IN-LAW
BOSTON, Nov.'sd'.jIApJ'-'Runnlng
amok after an unsuccesilul attempt
at reconciliation with his wife, John
St. Angelo, 35, of Pravidence, JL t
todajtjshot to-'death Ms**. Flotenea
St-iSftgialo.M, ht* wife, Mr*. Car,-,
mella Conte, 65, his mother-in-law,
and wounded two others before
committing suicide shortly after he
dashe-Urom the. murder sqepe,
MEN: BETTER PAY OPPORTUN?
jties to' Diesel, Air-Conditioning
and'Refrigeration-- the world's
■greatest fastest-growing i Indust-
riea offer, right now, real poasibil-
- ities tot ambitious, determined
men' between 18 and* 45, anxious
to qualify for better pay for life.
Write tp4ay, for interesting, free
- information.  State age. Address
-Box 4177 Nelson News..    (4177)
MAN FOR J-ABM WORK, 35-40
ywr*. l&tp. Milker,
for gen
Carboni
reliable. K.
Sfocan City.   .    ■ (4229)
 ICED   GIRL OVER  20
;enersl housework. Apply 702
Tate St,.'    :        .      (4239)
.1.
CRAWFORD, B. 0,—The ahnual
meettag of the Women'* institute
w«s held in thi hall, Mr*. Wataon,
president, to the chair. Mr*. Lytic,
secretary, gave^jhe report ol toe
year!* work.' The committee in
charge of children's Christmas tree
appointed was Mrs. Broster, .Mr*.
McLaughlan, Mrs. Itoy McGregor.
Directors appointed for 1938: Mrs.
WataOn, Mrs. "Nelson, Mrs. Lymbery,
of Grey Creek, all reelected/ *'-■*'■
Mrs. McLacUan was elected in
place of Mrs. Roy McGregor.;
Tea waaserved by the director*.
SOJUOI ..L.77:AA
OKAY (CREEK
GRAY CREEK, B.C,-D'Arey Ba?
con has sailed from Seattle for England, via the Panama and the Azores. . ■■'■
. Fred Wilmot-has left by train for
New York, where he will -itch the
Britannic for .Southampton to spend
Christmas with his family at Alres-
tord.. ■ '  v   i"    .■.•' ■•   i -.'■,'.
Mr. and Mrs. Peters and Miss
Romary Peters have left by car.for
a wtoter in California and Arizona.
Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Deane of
Deanshaven and Miss Ruth Deane
were Gray Creek' visitors on their
Way to Yuma for the winter; • '
■Father Fitzgerald of Creston ahd
Father Cunningham, who has been
giving: a Mission at Creston,- were
Gray Creek.visltors oh toeir way to
Nelson,    'a '..    .-.■,.'.'   •.-.'."■
.-Jr. and Mre. Edgar Smith have
been guests of Mr, ind Mrs. Leon-.
ard Clark.
SITUATIONS WANTED
EXPERIENCED YOUNG .LADY,
honest and reliable, would like
work. Louise Cornfield, Royal Hotel, Room «. ■■ ... ■•'••'*:?"', (4215)
DEPENDABLE AND ABLE GlRL
(25) Wlahea position as clerk,or- to
the home. Box 4178 Daily News.
(4179)
COOK WANTS WORK,"fIRST,OR"
second position. Free after Dec.
Bft. Box 4224 Dally News.   (4234)
WOMAN WITH HOTEL It STORE
experience wants work: Box 4182
Daily New*. ..... .   (4182)
LOST AND FOUND
Tb Finders,;
If you find a cat or dog, pocket-
book, jewelry or fur, or anything els e of Value, telephone the
Dally-Newa.,-A"Found" Ad. will
be inserted without cost to you.
We Will collect from the owner
IT-.GERMAN POUCE DOG
ip,  answers to name of Rex.
:eward If returned to A. S. Read,
Phone- 835X; ■ >     (4248):
s
I.OST, CAR CRANK, A MATHISEN
1724 FaU St. mtiSZ      14260)
WANTED  MISCELLANEOUS
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS
or iron, any Quantity. Top prices
., paid.  Active Trading Company,
' -16 Powell St, Vancouver. B. C:
.-'.     >"•,"    ' '  1  ^<     ■   MtSk)
Cocoa and Milk
for Children of
Cranbrook Schools
CRANBROOK, B. C. — The serving of milk and eocoa to the children of the Central school started
Novembw 28, with Mr*. Cooley as
supervisor, this Central School Milk
fund, started by the Cranbrook Rotary club last year, proved to be such
a great benefit,to children that It
was decided to carry on the same
aysteto this year, aervtog milk and
cocoa at toe school to all underweight children," and all other* who
wish it'     *.   -.       -      .*,-.* ."
The statement from the,mljk fund
last: year." showed all debt* paid and
a small balance left in the bank. W.
H. Wilson is president for the coining year, ana Miss Muscovich sec-
retary-treasurer. Organizations In
the city ■assisting, with the work are
Caledonians and Ladies Orange Benevolent association, Maple hett Rebekah. lodge, Canadian ■Daughters,
Ladles of the B. 0t L. E-. Canadian
Leglon.'Gyro club and^otary club,
ana- the Milk Fund executive is
comprised of- one repre*ent*tlve of
each of these organisations, one trom
the school board and one, .teacher
of toevCentral school.
PERSONAL
Our Reconditioned JOYCYCLES
and wheel toys look and run like
new. Write for particulars.
Kiddie Kan and Pedal Kars
from 31,35 to «.75. Tricycle* and
sidewalk cycles from 53,95 to $9.5*.
Autos, wagons, doll cabs, scooters.
. etc. at about}, price of new gbods.
Club order* $25.00 we pay freight
: HASKINS & ELLIOTT'LTD.
,l(jr%H*-ttogi St, Vancouver, B.C-
:.'■-• „. '■,•■;!*«■'' y::.',(«iBi»
CHRISTMAS CARDS FROM YOUR
own snaps. These card* are get?
tihg. more popular each year, If
'.. you ihave not seen them, tend
tin. cents  and   a   negative,   far
Sample. We know you will want
"mofe.   Krystal, Photo*. * WHkie,
Saskatchewan.      ,:   T      (205)
MEN OF 30, 40, 501 WANT - .VIM,
■ VIjjot. tor rundown- body? Try
OSTREX Tablets ot raw oyster
stimulants and general body builders. It not delighted with results
.of first package, maker refunds
.» Ita low ■prlc.e.. Call! write, Mann-
Rutherford and all good druggists.
•:■,-- ' '   '".'-   '.    (2187)
FOR THOSfeWBO WANT TAXI
dermlst   work   done   in   all   Its
branches, I guarantee my Work
:and mount your .specimens as
yon diaire.' Harold Fach, Allen
Hotelf Rossland: v.    y      (4178)
GENUINB1 LATEJJ SPECIAL GTD
; 25 tor $1.00,ar'llfly.prepared 18
' - fot $1*) iftei catalogue) National
Importers,.Box 244. Edmonton.
(214)
AN OFFER.TO Evtaf INVisNT-
or, lat at Vranted Invention* and
■ fuU Information aent" free. The
:- Ramaay Company, World Patent
Attorneys, 273 Bank-St., Ottawa.
MEN'S -SUPERFlUE'. SANITARY
rubber*; ,;u Jor $1.00;, also. Late*
25 tor $1.00. Burrard Specialty,
4116 McGill St.. Vancouver, (2610)
WHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT
Aimer Hotel, Opp. C. P. R. depot
' .*       • (8064)
FOR RENT, MOUSES, ROOMS
,  AjND AlPARTKIENTS     :
FOR RENT 3 ROOM SUITE'CLOSE
tn. Will supply range .and heater,
: and aome- furniture.to .suitable
parties. 0. W. Appleyard, Baker St,
(fijtt)"
TO PERMANENT TENANT, COT-
tage,,Granite Road. Suitable eld-
/ irw cpL or penaliftjr. Ph. 188R3.
TO RENT-fl ROOM H(5lJSE"SARf-'
ly furn. 7th St., Fairview. Ph. 572X
**j_   '"".*■'___   (8S«)
5 ROOM HOUSE. ALSO A POOL
room. Apply D. Maglio, Ph. 808L.
- " '" , -,   ".,.-■.   "■.'■' .*" (40781
FURNISHED HOUSltKEE!f®G
room* for rent Annable Block. :
■':.".' ■ ".        ■    fl     (210)
COMF6RTABLE FURN. HOUSE72
bedroom*. 1002 Hoover St (4246)
FOR RENT, FURNISHED ROOM.
mated. 41lOarbonate St.. (4221)
TERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern
" frigidaire equipped aultea. (221)
9 ROOM HOUSE, GARAWCTO"SE
fit Mini? Klondike Hotel. (4258)
FOR XWC SMALL HOUSErAP".
ply 811 Mnlah St,: : , (VHS)
FURNISHED SUITES. KERR APtS,
y-.;.:;",".. '.. ' ,:':.>"■■ '.."*?T^y   (-20)
LIVESTOCK
FOR SALE, 2 AYRSHDtE -BULLS.
12 and 16 months old. Gentle. Good
condition. Price $20 ahd $35, Box
4244 Daily New*. (4244)
8 WEEKS "OLD PIGS fOR 6AQ|[
■ Good one*. $4.50 apiece. R. D. Kan?
. nedy* Letoon Crk., via Perry Sdng:
(4260
WANTED A- A -WELL, TRA-tiliD
Xoung farm fiorae, 3 to 5 years,
lexI.akten,Wtou,w/       (4263)
FOR SALE
PtfES, TUBES, FITTINGS    .
NEW AND USED    :
Large stock tor Immediate, shipment
: SWARTZ PIPE YARD ,',
lit Avenue and Main St   '   -
Vancouver. B. C
'   "■•'.'- . f   V '    (218)
.    PIPE'AND EllTTtNO
CANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd
250 Prior St      '   Vancouvwr. 8. C.
'..■'■,",- "   ..(81B
SINGER ELECTRIC SEWING MX-
, chine. BookS of Knowledge. Toys.
Junior Pool Table. 414 Houston St.
(4214)
FOR SALE - BARRELS,.KEGl-
sugar sacks, liner*. McDonald Jam
Co., Ltd., Nelson, B. C.   _. (317I:
$180 CREDIT NOTE. KOOT MTOS
$105 cash. 451 Rossland Ave. Trail
.-■'.   .". " . (4^
USED ' HANO GOOD COND
Chp. for cash. Ph: Manson 436X2.
,     '•..•.?   '..:.."   .' (4217)
ROOM AN3 BOAKD
A  YOUNG  BUSINESS  WOMAN
wants room and breakfast to private   home.   Phone   662   during
, business hours. (4252)
GOOD BOARD. STEAjTHEAWO
room*. .423 Silica St Ph. 687X.
,  ■  •'    (4202)
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
FOR SALE! - EXCELLENT RES-
idential property to Nelaon. Large
livlngroom with fireplace, 3 bea-
, rooms with clothes closets, all
oak floors, $175.00 in Venetian'..
blinds installed kitchen with electric range and hot water, dining-
room and modem bathroom; cement basement and hot air pipe
system furnace; over 2 acre* and
18 fruit trees; large aU year, creek;
hard surface road right to property. $400000 cash; or $4250.00
terms, with $2500.00 cash. Phone
12. N. T. Slader, or 662 during
business, hours.  ■       ,   ; (4196)
GOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE
on easy term* in Alberta, and'
Saskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept. of Natural
Resource*, C. P. R„ Calgary, Alta,
:    (228)
FOR SALE.1BO0, 5 ROOM HOUSE!
. Good location." A real buy tor a
home Or investment. C, W. Apple-;
yard, Baker St.,  . (4203)
FOR SALE 2 HOUSES-AT SHEEP"'-
Creek, Joe Mailer, Salmo P. O.   ,'.j
"■ •■.-.  " ' ,::■-,. "  (42331 -
2 CORN. LOTS FOR SALE?WHA1*:
offers? Apply 1002 Hoover St
*'•    . (4245)
Want to Seil., Something?
PHONE
rAhy::7>iWi'7^ 7 .,
Business and Professional Directory
Accountants
C. ft.- HIGGBNS, Bookkeeping, Accounts, Correspondence. Income
.Tea . Returns.  No accounts  too
''-'small. Reasonable, Phone 980. '
•-  ■ ■'  :,,;.. ,•    .: .(4170)
Assayers
E.W. WIDDOWaON. PROVINCIAL
Analyst Assayer,, Metallurgical
Engineer. Sampling-Agents 'tor
Trail Smelter  301-305 Jpsephlne
:st-Nelrtn,RC,     .-:       1182)
GRENVOiE a GRIMWOOD
Provincial Assayer and Chemist 420
. Fill Street Nelson,! B. C, P. O.
Box  No.  8,   Representing  shipper's interest, Trail, B, C.    (183)
HAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND,
B. C. Provincial ASaayer, Chemist.
'Individual Representatives for
shippers at Trail Smelter*   (184)
Chiropractors
3.X /?JcMlLLAN, 5. C'NEURO?
calomcter. X-ray. McCullock Blk:
(185)
W. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Ex-
: prnc. Ph. 969 Gilker Blk.v Nelson;
■ '..(Itt)
Corsets
SPENCER CORSETS.'MRS. V. M
Campbell 370 Baker St Ph. 668;
' "'". •■>■■■". :•. M   '■ ■   <mn
Enginters and SurvefoTs
BOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale,B. C.
British Columbia Land Surveyor.
" -Jleg. Prbfessip^al Civil Engineer.
H: D. DAWSON,
Nelson, B:*C.
Engineer A purveyor:(*9 .
Funeral Directors
SOMERS' FUNERAL HOME ..
702BakerSt"'-       " ,     Phone252
Cert Mdrticlan      Lady Attendant
Modern Ambulanco Service
:■ -.' -"."'   •':'■ .•:•■.'"•.':;.    (190)
For Want Ad,
.'Servke'.'',/
Phohel44
Insurance and Real Estate
ROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTJ). -
Real Estate; Insurance, Rentals. 9
347 Bake> St. Phone 6t-     (I8M
C. D. ■ BLACKWOOD, Insurance ol'
' every description. Real Est Ph 90.
(192)
SiM XL Kt*ft,",ASJSOT WH<
Wawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates..
TT".''.' ■- 7■■■■■'.■'■   ■   ("*»■-
J. X ^AM-ABLE, REAL ESTATE,
Rentals, Insurance. Anhahle Blk.
(195)
CHAS F McHAftDY. INSURANCE 1
.Real Estate, Phone 13$       (196)
R" W,: t>AWs6N. ;fteat'Batat*,<In;
surance, Rentals. Next Hipperson
' Hardware. Baker St Phone lit. "■ \
-.,.;■ t, •-   '■;:    •• '. ."*,     .'"ClOTV-H
Machinists
BENNETT'S LIMITED       j 1
For all Classes of Metal Work, Utha
Work. Drilling, Boring ahd Grind'. "
tog.. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene   j
"   ■ '■    -•'.   Welding. , .•",•,"- .,  a
Telephone 693     324 Vernon Street
<189>*
E E. STEVENSON. Machinist*, <
Blacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene:,*
Welders. Expert workrden. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a L
specialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph. i
08, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson.   (201,) I
NotMriea
D. J. ROBERTSON NOTARY FCW
lie. 305 Victoria St., Nelson. (4014)'
Sash Factory
LAWSON*S   SASH    FACTOKY,«
Hardwood merchant, 273 Baker St,
..' 'A.-   "■ '      tapjy
Second Hand Stores
WE BUY,  SELL A EXCHANGE ,
furniture, eta Ark Store, Ph. 53i
(207)-:
HOME FURNITURE, BUY, SEO4]
Exch, Rpr. Upholster. 413 Hall St.
.'  ■:• •   ' ••      ■.".   :--avm
Watch Repairing
When SUTHERLAND repalra yow
watch it is on time all the time.
345 Baker St., Nelaon.    ,   WW
jrfKIMQOFVD^SlR,
w<ifi*;_
; NO TIME LIKE THE PRESENT;
D THERE S0E5 WY
. IOMB TOUfeMINO
ME I HAVE A TOB-
WrMT.HBftCwtPV-J
Tiy.i?_r vwnt vou to pwt on ■vooR
HAT. AND COAT.TAKE THAT JiTfERBU6
OUT QP TlJIlS BUILDING AND CO^Br
HIM-VB8LAND Tgl-tHIM NOT TO f
Cfim BACK. HERB *  '   '"'•' •
HOT SOOK. YOU'VE
CHANGED YOUR
MIND^HOW COME?
LIKE YOU SAID,
ANDY-.TWEM-1:
NO TIME LIKE THE
PRES6NTTO1K i
MV XMAS
PPIN6
 _—
 " '
1515
Athabasca Ore Continues lor 20
Feet in Winze Though Value Less
No   Exploration   Yet
'   Lateral Extent of
; .the Showing,;.
High grade ore recently discovered at the Athabasca property ut
Noble Five Mines, Ltd., continued
lor 20 feet of depth In the winze in
which it was located, and although
the exceptional values, of the original discovery did not continue,
the ore was still of good grade, ttat?-
ed Paul Lineoln, president of -fople
Five, Tuesday. The- original high
?trade assayed at 60 ounces, across
our inches. :'. ..   .
' A breakdown in the compressor
delayed progress " ln sinking the
-tolnze, Mr. Lincoln stated, but repairs had been effected, and work
•was now -proceeding satisfactorily
i At about tbe 20-foot mark a fault
"was encountered, but the vein was
picked up beyond.the fault, and
-with this encouragement sinking
was continuing. No attempt has been
made yet to determine the lateral
extent of the, high grade ore.
One car ol ore has'already been
■hipped to the Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co. reduction plant
at. Tadanac, but returns have not
•been received yet.
i'The Athabasca group comprises
.five claims and two fractions, all
crown-granted, with full title in the
name of Noble Five.
lumberjacks"
FIND HUNTERS
TOO DANGFPOUS
LANSING, Mich., Nov. 30 (CP)
I —Mlchlgah'vlumber Industry was
I at a standstill today ai nearly
1 all lumberjacks refuted to go into
it. the north woods. Lumberjacks
l tald tha hunting season It on
f now and hunters are shooting at
i -everything In tight that movei,
|   so the Job Is too hazardous. Com-
pahlei throughout tha state hava
halted operations.
MUST BUST WORLD
MARKET FOR WHEAT
OttAWA, Nay." JO (Cpi-Unlets
Canada blasts a place for western
wheat In- world markets the prairies will not be able to tupport their
existing population on a Canadian
standard of living, Prof. Jacob Vih-
er, of the' University of Chicago,
declared today before the Royal
Commission on dominion-provincial
relations. -. ' ■' - ;     "
Subsidies would be a kind of alternative td new markets but would
be no real solution, he said, and
Canada had no unlimited, revenue
sources from which to support Its
wheat?,..,   ...    ■'   j..   ,'■;.'' y
Toronto Market
; :;...ci^.'ii|b
TORONTO, Nov. « (CP)-Buy-
ers reached Ior ttocks in the final
hour of today'* Toronto-exohango
session. Waite-Amulet wai taken
in volume and wai lifted about SO
to around 8.26.
Along with Waite, Noranda; Nick?
el, Smelters; Sherritt, Pend Oreille
and Aldermae pushed along to a
higher close. Eldorado firmed four.
- East Malartic registered an early
spurt to 2.42, a new high for the
year. It closed around 2.38 tor a gam
of nlie. Wrljflit-Hargreaves, • selling ex-dividend, wai down 10 Mac
Lcod-Cockshutt eased off about 10
Brazilian, Ford A, Walkers common and Distillers Seagrams ware
up.- ■   "" .   ...... :",     .
SELLS BILLS ;
OTTAWA, Nov.»(CPl.-TendM*
were accepted today for $25,000,000
in Dominion of Canada treasury bills
due March 1, 1930, at an average
discount price of $99.83385 to yield
an averagtfbf .878 per oent
Trade Chicago
CHICAGO, Nov. 30 (AF).-Sales
were resumed for a brief period at
the Chitagd stock yards today under
an agreement with striking. CIO
handler*.'.
Approximately 4,000 animals,
stranded In the pen* during the
stalemate, were led to the weighing
chut**,.  , .'..;.      .    i.
The temporary truce covered
trailing in thete cattle, hogs and
sheep only. It waa arranged to allow commission men to. clear the
corral*."    ,■•'■ '■'.-"--
Neither tide moved to tettle the
dispute—ndw in it* 10th day-jiend-
Dow Jones Averages
SO industrials
20 rails 	
B uttUttea ~~
40 bonds 	
14..67
147.68
29.80
20.10
22.20
21.89
ClOie Change
149.82-up 2.75
29.78-up .70
22.lS-up .Jl
89.41-up  .09
Quotations on Wall Street
.Am .For Pow
Am Smelt A Re
Tel „„:.....
Tob	
iiida „	
Iwin —._...
tOhio™
Steel _Z
ten-—~
Pao	
de Pasco
..ler	
Ga--NY_
it pfd _
High Low
90-s*. 98U.
3%     3%
52% 51%
149% 148
OGVi m,
34Vi 331.
18 12'".
M   m
23 22",
73,4 71%
11% 17
SV,      SV,
48 48*4
81% 78%
29% 29%
26%. -25%.
_4».-:--MS,."
180 mv,
8%      3%
21%z 28%
43% 41%
36% 36%
49% 47%
at Nor pfd.
I Mdh*s .....
ire Sound ...
'23
6%
22%
6%
25% 24%
7% 7%
47% 47
53% 52%
Close
98%
3%
52%
148%
86%
34%
13
7%
23
73%
17%
8%
46
81%
29%
26%
146
180
_3%
43
. 36%
49%
23
6%
25%
7%
47
33%
Inter Tel A Tel
Kenn Cop ...__-
Mack Truck ......
Mont Ward -_
Nash Motors ._
N Y Central ™
Penn Ft R	
Phillips Pete _
Radio Corp 	
Rem Rand 	
Safeway Store*
Shell Un	
S Cal Edison ....
Stan Oil 01 N J
Texas Corn 	
Tpcar dull Sul
Timken Roll j.
Under Type	
Un Carbide _
Un Oil 01 Cal .
Un Aircraft	
Un Pac ..„..„
U'S Rub 	
U S Steel .........
Warner Bros ..
West Elec	
West Un ....	
Woolworth 	
Yellow Truck ..
%hI1%
43% 43
28 28
49% 48%
8% 8%
18% 17%
21 20%
40% 39%
. 7% 7%
16% 15%
27% 37
14% .14%
22% 22%.
51% 51%
43% 42
32% 31-
87% 6T%
85% -84
19% 19
38% 37%
92% 91
49% 48%
64% 68%
*6% 6%
117% 118%
24% 24%
80% 80%
18% 17%
Close
'43%
28
1%"
18%
21
y||
18%
27-.1
14%
22%
"■51%
43%
31%
1  50
67%
84%
.10%
38%
92%
49%
64%
8%
117%
24%
50%
18%
Montreal Stock Exchange
USTRIALS
J Pac Grain ,.„.;„;....._.	
HOC Brew bl Can	
hurst P "ft P A'...	
1 Bronze pfd ..........................
nj Fdy pfd a*.—......
Celanese
I pfd ."....
. North Power .	
/Steamship .._____ .
1 Steamship pfd _	
, Mta & s°mei'ting".:::::::::
mmon Coal pfd .
1 Steel A Coal B	
ilnion Textile _'	
den Paper
.02%
.16%
9
104
-1
18%
101
17
2
8%
8%
60%
17
12
61%
Itvrwlnigan W & P
.St Lawrence Corp Ui
St Law Corp pfd .......
South Can Power ..	
Steel of Can pfd ...	
BANK8
Commerce  ,.>.._...
Dominion 	
Imperial   .	
Montreal  .'...
Nova Scotia ...	
Royal
neau Power pfd	
_ Charles . ii",»,.;,'
dwarf Smith Paper .	
[Smith Paper pld	
■merial-.Oll.i_-.	
nter Petroleum  __,
[inter Nickel ol Can ......
keol the Wood*	
Coll Frontenac „_....
tlonal Brew Ltd -_,„...
t BreWpIdT,..^	
flvt« Flour new ..
nee Brdi „ • x_	
uebec Power ....	
5%
14
17
26%
53%
17
7   '
42
43
27%
18%
17
Toronto  1	
CURB
Abitibi 6 pld	
Bathurst P & P B	
Beauharnois Corp 	
Brltlih American Oil
B C Packers ....	
Can Marconi .	
Can Vickers .
21
.    4%
.   15
. "12
.  67 .
.171%
,204
.207
.210
.301
,187
.236
Cons Paper Corp „.
Id Aircraft
Fairchlli.	
Fraser Co Ltd
Inter Utilities £"1™.':
Inter Utilities B	
MacLaren P & P „.
McColl Frontenac pfd .
Mitchell Robt ........
Royalite Oil 	
United Dist of Can	
Walker Good te W	
Walker Good pfd	
.. 23%
..    3%
.. .8%
- 21%
,. 12%
..LOO
.    9
.    7%
..  a-.,
.. 16%
.8.80
„ JO
.. 14%
. 92
,. 16%
.. 39%
.. .75
. 50%
.. 20%
Vancouver Stock Exchange
HINES
J Missouri	
Ilueblrd 	
' ilorne  	
!ge River	
00 ooid	
htonia 	
Well  	
~ lew Amal .....
deral Gold ....	
orge Copper	
>onda'  ...
ild Belt  „.
old Mountain .....
hdvlew	
|rnll?Wihksne .....
Hedley Mascot ....:.
dedley Sterling ...
£ome Gold	
dian Mines .	
nter Coal & Coke
[land Mountain ....
Kootenay Belle .....
Lucky Jim ....'.	
' k Slccar Gold ..
Silllvray  _.
etaline M A M ....
Ulttto Gold   	
Sicola M & M	
Mdble Five	
Pend Oreille 	
Ptoneer Gold	
>rt*r Idaho 	
Wemler Border ....
amler Gold 	
atslno  „.:....
itnelle Quartz ..
[Hawk Gold
eves-MacDonald
IMlet Arlington ....
eno Gold	
•ward .„..■.'.'...	
ufus Arg-nta 	
almon Gold ....	
Bid
.05%
Ask
.06
.28
.01%
—
10.00
.02%
10.15
.03
2.45
i!
.06%
.08%
.05
.04
.04%
.01%
_  .
,.33
" .05%
.06%
.50
.60%
.01%
.01%
.06%
.07%
.04%
.04%
1.30
1.38
.00%
—
—
.01
"  .01
—
.25%
.20
1.21.
1.22
1.43
1.46
.02%
J02%
.01
.01%
.23 '
.24
.46
.54
.02%
•04%
.08
1.83
2.60
.03
■50%
2.2.1
.03%
.00
m
.15
.06%'.
m
1.89
2.90
.04
.01
2.23
.04
.10
.15%
.07
',01%
Taylor BR	
Vidette Gold 	
Waverly-Tangier- ..
Wellington	
Wesko Mines	
Whitewater 	
Ymir Yankee Girl
OILS
A p Con	
Amalgamated ...:..-
Anaconda 	
Anglo Canadian ...
Associated  . _
Baltac	
"Irown Corp 	
Jal A Ed	
Calmont    _
Crow's Nest 	
Dalhousle  _.
Davies Pete    	
Firestone Pete 	
Four Star Pete 	
Freehold Corp 	
Hargal 	
Highwood Sarcee..
Home	
MadiSOn   mmA	
Mar-Jon	
McDouRall-Segur ..
McLeod Itaw	
Mercury  	
Merland „	
Mid-West Pet* ......
Mill City Pet*	
Model     ! 	
Nordon'Corp :_
Okalta com .....^
Prairie Royal ...a.
Southwest Pete _
RSsh
Vanalta ... u.„._
Vultan  .........w.„»;
Wart'-FIai* .,;;.__
INDU8TRIAL8
Capital Estates .....
Cont Breweries _
Bid
.04
.07
.00%
.01
.01
.04%
.09%
.15%
fit
1.03
.03 -,
.02
-!03
.24
.00%
.32%
.10 -
.10
.03%
.18
.10
1.18
.03
.03%
.12
.B
'.06%
.02%
J» .
.17%
.07
tm
r.l»%
m
.09
-i%
1.10.
1.20
NEL80N DAILY. NEWS. NELSON. B.C^?TrlURSDAY MORNINQ, DEC. 1. WS8
Strikers Allow
Ing'
next)
resumption of negotiations
londay.
On Big Selling
CrtKJAOO, Nov. 80 (AP).--C6rn
market tumbles of a cent a buthel
led to lower prices on wheat late
today, more than wiping out earlier
fractional gains,
Persilteht selling on the part ot
holders of December corn contracts
was chiefly responsible for'the fall
of values. Indications . pointed to
liberal deliveries ot corn tomorrow
in month-end settlement of accounts.
At the dote, Chicagocorhlutures
were %—& lower compared With
—-terday's finish, Dec. 47-47%,
„.Jr »l-60%, wheat' unchanged to
% down, Dec, 61%-^%, May 65%-
%, androat*.%-% o«.
Vi'     > ■» '     '  ,i    1 ■*■'■■ 1  1 <. 1  in ■
MARKETS ATA
GLANCE
By The Canadian Press
.Toronto, Montreal and New York:
Stocks closed hltfier.      - ■ ■'* .
. Winnipeg: Wheat lower by.% to
% cent ' -■--•- :---\.
- Toronto: Bacon hogi oil truck
steady at 8.40 to 8.50. ■
London:...Bar tilver; copper and
lead lower; zinc higher.
New York: Silver,'lead and zinc
unchanged: export copper higher.
Montreal: Silver lower. -
New York: Cotton, rubber and
augu- higher: coffee lower.
New. York: Canadian dollar up
1-16 to' .99%. "     ■•-     ';   '
U»$; Gov't; WorfMy
for Labor, Unify
WASHINGTON, tfov. .'80 (AP),~
unHed '*• Statei "government*' 'hldet,
with an eye on the impending congressional battle over revising the
Wagner- Labor Relations act, ore
trying to bring organized labor's
warring tactions back to the peace
conletemce table thi* winter.
New negotiations before spring
are the boal ot current efforts to
end lhe three-year-old -strife between the Coiigrccs of Industrial
Organizations and the American
Federation of Labor.   ..
WINNIPEG GRAIN
WINNIPEG, Nov. 30 (CP) .-Grain
lutures    .    ,
Open
High
Low
Close
WHEAT:
Dec.....  59
59%,
58%
58%
May ...„,.,  81%-
82%
61%
61%
July  JB%
82%"
62%
02%
OATS:       ..
Dec...   28%
28%
27%
. 27%
May   .....   29%
-29%
28%"
28%
3m ........  28%
BARLEY;
28%
28
28
Dec.   36%
36%
86%.
36%
May.......   37%
37%
37%'
37%
July .......  37
FLAX:   .
87
38%
•»«%
Dec  139
139%
139
139%
May' .... 138
.'— -
mm   1
138
-RYE: /
Dec. .......  38
38
36%
88%
39%
May  ....  40%
40%
39%
July ...™ -
—
—?
40
CASH PRICES: - * • v ,
WHEAT-No. I hard and No. 1
Nor. 59; No. 2 Nor. 58; No". 8 Nor.
51; No. 4 Nor. 44%; No. 6, 38%;
No. 8, 33%; feed 32%; No. 1. Garnet
50%; No. 2 Garnet 47%;.No. 3 Garnet 41%; Np. 1 Durum 45%; No'..4
special 40%; No. 5 special 87%; No; 8
special 35%; track 58%. .
, OATS-No. 2»C. W. and track 27%;
No. 3 C. W. and-Ex. I feed 24%;
No. 1 feed 23%; No. 2 feed 21%;
No, 3.feed 19%. .   • *
BARLEY—Malting grade*: if?' Ait
2-row Ex. 3 C. W. 36%; Othera: No. 5
C. W. 34%; No. 4 C. W. 33%; No. 5
C. W.82%; No 8 C. W. 31%; track
Je%." -       '-, , . .-. .    ~;
..J^r110' 1 c' w- *ft<> *™ck
139%; No. 2 C. W. 138%; No. 3
C W. 128%; No. 4 C. W. 118%.
RYE-No. 2 C. W. 36%.
Brisk Buying
in N(»-# York on
French Strike Break
AOTW. YORK Nov. 30 (AP) -
After travelling downhill during
most of November, the Itock. market
staged a mohth?end rally today.
• The change in trend, seemed to be
t»jnful, for.tte market wa* dow
getting started on the recovery, but
buying broadened out In the afternoon, taking leading shares to the
highest levels of toe day/        A°
A brisk opening buying flurry fol-
ijwed reports the French general
itrike had been broken,   ,*      "
At midafternoon the British pound
Was $4.88%, up* 2 8-16 cent*'The
French franc traded at 2.62 11-16
cents, up .01 1-18 et a cent
Bonds recovered with stocks,
mostly corporate loans. Major commodities generally held to a restricted aone, *   ,
Transaction* picked up in toe
buying flurries and approximated
UD fraction's to around 3 at the
height of toe upturn were V, S. Steel,
Bethlehem, Wettinghduae Electric,
General Electric, Southern Pacillo,
North American, Chrysler, General
Motors, Sears Roebuck, Du Pdnt ahd
J. C. Penney.'
. - ,  ". .,   ii. 1     , '    .-rr ;   .
N-WOftMRPOR
':'•'.   CAS, fURNIR VALLEY
CALGARY, Nov. 30, (CP)- W. F.
Knode, chairman ot the Alberta
Gas Conservation board, announced
today that the board would issue
shortly a temporary emergent order providing lor toe production of
gas In Turner Valley; not only for
fuel, but lor the extraction of gasoline, v.   .
Toronto Stock Quotations
MINES;
Alton Minet _"_
Aldermae Copper	
Amm Gold\.;.......!.	
Anglo-Huronian    .......
Arnffleld Gold 	
Astoria Rouyn Mines.
Aztec Mining	
Bagamac Rouyn 	
Banktiialdtjold	
Base Metala Mining .
Beattie Gold Mines.....
Bidgood Kirkland   ...
Big   Missouri   	
Bobio  Mtoet' —
Bralorne Mines ..—
Brett Trethewey ......
Buffalo Ankerlte
.12
3.25
'*■: .12
■02
.05
.11%
.31
.28
1.38
.   21
.26%
33
10.00 >
.01%
14.2S
Ask
.05
.08
.01
.02
.01%
.05
.11
.00%
V
.03
.23
2.10
.28
.00%
.38
.ii
.14
.05'
120
M
-M
.12
.15
'^Ori
■ 1.26
1,33
Bunker Hill Extension      .08%'
Canadian Malartic -. ■-     .92
Cariboo Gold euarte,-.-,-..    2.41
Cattle-Trethewey         LOO
Cental,Patricia -• ..-.—.,...,■   2:«  -
ChlbbU-amau   ..:...,—      .22
•Oulomlum M & S ...      -47
Coaat Copper „...„,..-_."4     2.60
Coningas Minea .....'.     1-80
Coniaurum .Mine*     1.45
Consolidated MJ&S"._........  60.25
Sarkwater --"-     -07
Dome Mines  !; :~A~~  82,00
Dominion Explorers       .03%
Dorval-Siscoe          -08?«
East Malartic     ---    2.38
Eldorado Oold  2.35
Falconbridge Vickel     5.85
Federal Kirkland .
Franeoeur Gold ....
Gillie* Lake   -."•-
God's Lake Gold	
Gold Belt .:...-.,.	
Granada Gold Mines
Grandoro Mines ...
Gunnar Gold   _	
Hard Rock Gold .....
Harker Gold	
Hollinger •"■••••••■
"owey Gold  ...
iudson Bay M & S
International Nickel 	
J-M Consolidated   	
Jack Waite   - ---	
Jacola Gold  ...........~
Kerr-Addlson" "...	
Kirkland Lake   .;., 1
Lake Shore Mines. .........
Lamaquc Oantact ..'...
Una CadiUac - ....—-
Leitch Goldr.......^.—
liebal Oro Mine*	
UtttoLow(J*» ■£;-—
Macassa,Mma ------
Madsen Red Lake Gold
Mandy   „:j*....™..-.-'--
McVlttleflrahlm —a~
SleWattenGold,.-.—
Mining Corporation
Minto Goli
Moneta Porcupine
Mo?Tta-Kirk!ana -•
Nipisslng Mining .
Noranda,. ,,. 	
Kormatal- ■-• —r-
O'Btien Gold .. «r~.
Omega ,Gold ■,-■?,-—
Pima3r Porcupine   ~	
PaulorerM   .-" .•--—~-f
Pavmasfer Cent —^-^.ip.1
Pend Oreille        ..,...,.j...
Perron Gold •.•-■•,v~
Pltkle Cmw. GoM '"--<fSwf
Pioneer Gold --, v
Premier" Gold
Powell Rou
.23
,. .11
.30
.50
.10%
'.05%
.82
1.71
.09%
14.50
.25'
33.50
S4.00
'   .07%
, .30
.10
\'ltm
1.1»:
50.50
* .02%
.84
:)78-"
at
2.65
'5.35.'
3.06
.42
.18
tut
UI
^10
. . .78
'1.93
,   .02%
1.28
,13%
.... mk
2.80
.47
4.40
;, .07..:
" :48'
1.88
- 1.59.
5.10
-.-a.*.,
:<sv: -
2.37
1.4
Quebec Gold ..'..	
Reeves MacDonald
Reno Gold Mines ..
Roche Long Lac ....
Swi Antonio Gold ..
SKawkey  Gold  	
Sheep Creek Gold ..
Sherritt Gordon ...,.
S scoe Gold	
Sladen Malartic
:  W
■■ 1.25
.      .04%
. . .90
. 1.37
- 1.48,
 ....„._„      78
itadacona Rouyn   .,„. ,„ '.,!■■     "si
St Anthony       15
Sudbury Basin     265
Sullivan Consolidated   _»..     jffl
Sylvanite. "■  3.40
Teck-Hughea Gold ..,:_...._ 4.70
Toburn Gold Mines ....  1,90
Tg^agmae  :.„     ,35,
Ventures •   ... g_»
Waite /vmulet    „__L 8.20 '
Whitewater-  ...a..„._...     .04
Wright Hargreaves   7.90'
Ymfr Yankee Girl _._.„.-...     .10%
Vancouver Gets
Moslol Wheal
WINNIPEG, Nov. 30 (CP).-W>n-
nlpeg wheat prices, alter an early
rise dipped %,—% cent near the
final- gong today When southern
commission house selling struck the
pit Big news of! the' day was sale
of 15,000,000 bushels of United States
wheat to the United Kingdom. December closed at 58%, May 81% and
July 62%-% cento.     '-,        "-.    -
wice: range was narrow throughout the day with some seagoing and
commission house buying, principally in December, to evidence. The
export sales were believed new and
mostly out of Vancouver port.
Country marketing yeaterday
reached 415,000 bushels compared
with i 224,000 the corresponding day
year ago. '■■. •".-,■■•.
LivcrpBol, suffering effects of continued strong sterling price, skidded %d while Buenos Aires continued irregular, being % cent lower
to % highe/ at noon. Chicago showed steadiness most ol the day..    ,
Bralorne Hits $10
VANCft'lIVER, Nov. 30 (CP): -
Prices in Benlor gold issues advanc*
ed to moderate trading on Vancouver stock exchange today while
oils and base metals closed mostly
unchanged. Transactions totalled
60,908 tharei.
interest turned to Bralorne Gold
which touched the $10.00 mark for
the first time since June, and the
stock held that price to close fivo
cents ehove Friday's close. Pioneer, also gained 5' at 2.90 while Premier at 2,25 and Island Mountain
at 1.22 each gained 4. Fractional
losses were posted in Dentonia at
6% and Gold Belt at 50%. V
- In toe bate metals, Pend Oreille
added 10 cento at 1.08. Oils were
(mitt";";-  .',y,;':  .'■■" ." " ■ ■ ..."
Industrials, Rails and
UtiliHM Advonce
NEW YORK, Nov. 80.(AP)-The
bond market tilted higher today
wlto rail, utilities and industrial
issues all.joining in advance ot
fraction! to.around a point or more.
. Among lorejgns, Japanese 5%s and
Italian 7i tvere fractionally advanced, **hlle German 5%a of '65
and 7s ol '49, were easier,
.: .    ,'  '^m-
Calgary Livestock
CAiOABY, i?ov. » (CP).T-ltS'
ceipts.to noon today: Cattle 442;
calves 119; hogs 100; sheep 200.
Cattle market active; prices
steady. Good butcher steers 4.75—5;
Sood heilers 4—4.50; good cbws 3—
S; good,veal.calves 450—5; good
stocker and leeder.ateers 3.75-.. v.
No hog sales.  Tuesday's  close;
Selects .8.10; bacon* 7.60; butchers
7.10.
London Close
LONDON, Nov. 30 (AP).-Clos-
ing: Brazil $11; C. P. R. $6%; Inter
Nickel $56%; Celanese Corp ol Am
£4%; Cent.Mining £20%; Crown
£17: H. B. C. Mex Eagle 5s l%d;
Mining Trust 2s. •'."' "a ■'••
Bonda-Britlsh 2% per cent Con?
toll £71%; 3% per cent war loan
£99; 4s 1960-09 £108%.
$9,000,000 IN TAX
■7      SALE LAND, COAST
' VANCOUVER, Nov. 30 (CP) -
Approximately 27,000 tax sale properties, with an assessed value ol
$9,000,000 are now carried on city
books aa security lor. accumulated
arrears ot taxes and interest charges,
totalling $5,000,000, City .Comptroller
Frank Jones found today, 'when
final entries from the 1936 tax sale
.were made.
Metal Markets
'LONDON, Nov, 30 (AP)-Clostag:
Copper standard spot £43 5s, oft 3s
Od;"future £43 10s, off 3s 9d: electrolytic spot, bid £49, unchanged;
asked £50, up 10s.   ,.      ■'-,'    > '.
Tip ipot £215tup 10s, future £216,
up 15s. Bids: Lead spot £15 "18s
9d, off Is 3d; future £ 16, unchanged-
Zinc spot £13 17s 3d; future £18
IBs Od, up 2s Od. . ;
Bar gold 149s Id, ott 2' pence.
(Egiiivalent «t76).     .'    ,
Bar silver 20 l-18d, ott 3-16.   *.-",«
MONTREAL - Bar gold In London one cent higher at $35 an ouWe
to Canadian funds; 149s Id in British. The fixed $35 Washington price
amounted to $36.22,
Spot; Copper, electrolytic 11,95;
tin 4H9p; lead* 4.75;-line 4.33; antimony 15; ; '.-".• -   > .
Silver future* closed 50 point*
off today. No sales,. Bid: Dec.,40,50.
NEW YORK - C,opper steady;
eloctrolytie *at»t 11.25; export ILg-
Tin steady; spot and forward 4}<t5
Lead steady shot, New York 5-505:
East St.* Louis 4.85. 2tac. steady;
East St! Loui? spQt and forward
4.50.   .,■-.     ''.'■■ ;■<     i ■■.    "■
Bar silver 42%, unchanged.
- PAGE ELEVEN
Abolition ol Tariff Would Give
By  CARL  REINKE
Canadian Pre** Staff Writer
OTTAWA, Nov, SO (CP)-PTO-
vinclal and municipal governments
of the prairie provinces would share
approximately $5,000,000 added revenue each, year if the people of
the prairies were relieved of the
tariff, Dr. Jacob Viner, professor
of political economy at the University ol Chicago, estimated today
belore the Royal Commission on
ddmtolon-p.rovlnclal relation!.
Dr. Viner, appearing for the Manitoba iftveroment,, calculated_the,
cost of the tariff to the people of the
...,_
oils:
AJax   .." ....:	
British American
Chemical Research
Imperial     .......'....■.
Inter Petroleum    „	
Texas Canadian „_.„.... 1'
INDUSTRIALS:
Abitibi Power A".....'..
Bell Telephonev...'.,..
Brazilian T L & P ...
Brewers & Distillers
Erewing Corporation.
Brewing Corp Pld	
B,C Powers A ....;.._:
BC Power B _.
Building Product! 	
Burt F N  ,	
Canada Bread .: Jt
Can Bud Malting	
Can Car & Foundry .
Can Cement   	
Can,Cement Pld 	
Can Dredge	
Cah Malting ..'A.	
Can Pacific'Hallway .
Can Ind Alcohol A	
Can Ind.Alcohol B .....
Can Wineries 	
Carnation, Pfd .„-	
Cons Bakeriea  .
Cosmos   .. ...'..,'..'.,...._...
Dominion Bridge ,_...
Dominion Storea .,	
Dom Tar A Chem	
D Tar le Chem Pfd ...
Distillers Seagrams .,
Fanny "Farmer   _.
Ford of Canada A	
Gen Steel Wares .„	
Goodyear Tire  ...
Gypsum L A A	
Harding Carpet  ...;....
Hamilton Bridge ..
Hamilton Bridge Pfd
■Hlnde Dauchi' "....;..':..
Hircm  Walker	
Intl Metals,.1     :..
Intl Milling Pfd  ,--
.Imperial Tobaeco ....
Loblaw; A   .....',	
Loblaw  B  :."...:'.."...
Kelvlnator   ...........
Map)* Lea! Milling .
Massey .Harris	
Montreal Power .........
Moore  Corp ' '....:.
Nat Steel Car 	
'Ont "Steel Prods	
Out Silk Net-,-..)-,
.10
21,25
.65
17.00
26.75
167%
10%
4%
1%
19%
27%
3
61%
26%
.JJ
16%
8%
92%
21 .
34%
6%
2%
2%
2%
104
16
20%
34%
;6%
78,
21%
21%
22%
8
75
6
3%
15%
50%
«%
105
Profits Record
EDMONTON, Nov.-SO (CP). ■-
Breaking all-time record!, the Alberta liquor control. board had- a
net profit of M.832,750, tor the fiscal
year ended March 31, laat, according to toe public accounts for the
period which.have just been printed
for publlb distribution.      .."..-'■-
The'prevlout high mark was established in the 1936-37 fiscal year,
when net profit* amounted 'to $2,-
331,889. "■ A    £■- "'■■
For' the 1088-39 fiscal year, the
provincial government ha* etttoiat-
cd'a "not profit of $2,600,000.
* ■T" ".'(•!*I'' f ••*(■—<m—m.'t    i-H
London Stock
,     Prices -Strengthen
LONDON, Nov. si) <APl.-Mo*t
share prices slanted a shade higher
prairie province* at $47,000,000 a
year, a reduction after checking
errors from the $58,000,000 estimate
placed before toe commission ln the
original Manitoba submission.
He explained total tax revtouta
of provincial and local governments
in the three provinces amounted to
about $60,000,000 in 1035 and income
of the people that year was estimated at $546,000,000, making provincial and local taxet approximately
1* per cent of Income.    _T ' _ "
Ttom 11 per- cent of the HtmM
now abiorbad by tarlttt would
provide about $5,000,000 new tax
revenue if there were relief from
the tariff burden;      * "»   -. ■
Dr. Vmet reviewed In detail tha
criticism made by Prof. K. W. Taylor, for McMaater University, for the
lor of McMatter Unlvertity, for.to*
Ontario -Overnment, of Manltoba'a
first estimate of the tariff disability
suffered by the people of the prair
ie provinces.
Substantial allowances had been
made tor error* but a re-check resulted In subtraction 'of approximately $38,000,000 in correction of
errors In toe West's favor. Of the
general deduction originally made
for possible errors. $20,000,600 was
replaced on the total*'and $2,000,000
had been added to provide for tariff
burden on wholesale purchases.
Dr. Alvln H. Hansen of "Harvard
University jive -the commission
yesterday an analysis ot the monetary policy follow---) by the Dom-
inlon government in the early daya
of the depression. He.clted the "realignment* or depredation of British and Australian currencies a*
luecessful attempts to cope in sub-
atalrtlal degree with'the unstable
International monetary situation of
tfet-pme... "■".   w'.'f-'-'V."
Dr. Viner agreed Prof. Taylor had
discovered several defects in the
original presentation, but "disagreed
with the claim that the prairie*
benefited from the tariff. Any tales
of butter, meat, eggs, sugar and
grain to other provinces at price*
higher than .world .prices were ol
small dimension.'he.aald." r
He questioned the benefit toe
prairies had received, from trade
treaties. The six-cent British preference on wheat "had not enabled
Canada to sell her wheat at a higher price." More wheat had been
available to Britain from prefer-
avail..-	
ential sources than Britain
consume.
could
to. the stock market today. Dome*
tic rails fell back on poor traffic
figures. Steel and speculative issues
were in demand in a steady indus-,
trial group. Gold and copper shares
firmed and oils and rubbers were
iii maintained. British fundi and
central European bonds were mostly
a shade.up.
^'/'^Moiwy ■'-■-•';'■,./'
. ■■ By Th* Canadian Preit
Closing exchange rates: • -
At Montreal:'Pound 4,71 7-16; U.
S. dollar 1.00 21-32; franc 2.64 10-32.
At New  York:   Pound  4.68%;
Canadian  dollar .99  27-32;  franc
2.62 15-16.
At Parlst Found 178.32 fr; U. S.
dollar 37.91 3-32 fr.-      -     -    -'
In gold: Pound lis 5drU. S. dollar 59.06 cents;  Canadian dollar
89.05 centt. . ,,.'.'
Montreal Produce
MONTRl-Ui, NOv; 80 (CP)-Spot:
Butter, Que. fresh 21%. Cheese, Que.
white 10-40%. Egg*, Ont A-large
38, A-medlum 32. Sales: Butter, 300
Que. fresh at 21%.
Butter futures:,Dee. 21—31%, Jan.
21%,;Feb. 22,''
WHEAT SOLUTION IN
BIG FOUR COMBINE
REGINA, Nov. 30 (CP)-<5nl;
Page Hersey .
Piiw'er Corp ,-•...
Pressed- Metats
Steel of Can
15%
23%
i
1.60 :
,6%
30%'
37%
•67
8%
6%
101
13
22
71%
iii-
NEW PUNTS FOR
VANCOUVER CITY
VANCOUVER, Nov. 30 (CP) -
Negotiations leading to possible
ettabliihmeiit in Vancouver of large
airplane and artificial silk manufacturing , plant*, tie now under
way, between- Mayor G. C. Miller
and prominent English and" United
States industrialists, the mayor said
y**t.-  ' 'v.- '!:.'.:'-*.:■■ -.  ■■'•"■ ',. '
WANTS MORE FEDERAL
AID FOR ALTA. ROADS
CAlfeAHY. NOV. 30 (CP) — A
campaign to induce the federal government to'take a more active part
inassisting. Alberta road construction was recommended in a report
presented today by D.S. Moffatt, K.
C, bl Calgary, to toe Calgary board
ol trade council. ..   "
GUILTY IN BLUBBER
BAY ASSAULT CASE
; VANCOUVER", Nov.- 30 (CP). -
Cliff Melville today atood remanded to Dec. 3 for sentence after being
convicted of assaulting Constable
Raymond Ellis of the British Columbia police at Blubber Bay, B.C.,
on Sept. 17.        .'       ,.
'   TO SHARE PROFITS
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. SO
(AP)-?-One hundred and forty em?
ployees of Harmon P. Elliott, Cambridge addressing machine manufacturers, tomorrow will receive
$•1375 as, the. first payment of a
"share the profits'' plan. The
cheques, averaging $31.25, will come
from $250,000 trust fund which Elliot established 18 months ago by
setting aside 2500 shares of the firm s
stock. Cheques will go to all employees who "have served the. company for .10 yean or longer. (,
-..v'0(1$ LOWER
CALGARY, NoCSisO (CP).-The
Calgary oil market drifted slightly
lower in a duR trading teisioij to-
Home led Ihe decline skidding 4
points to 1.17. Okalta' cased 1 to 1.02
*nd Mar Jon, with tales of 3,000,
ftoithed at 4, a hall lower, ■
Chemically treated cohea that lend
rainbow toiorsto hearth fires are
produced by the following,cheml-
cali:, .Copper . sulphate . for. bluish
green flame, strontium chloride, for
red. copper chloride tor turquoise,
calcium .-chloride for orange, pol
alum  ishlnrids,  for ,mirn1p..
ly ra-
if the
tlonal avenue to salvation of the
wheat industry i* -to approach the
problem on an international basis
wito "toe big 'four' wheat producing countries leading toe way, C.
W. Peterson, Calgary, told memberi
of Regina board of'trade today.
World Exchanges
NEW YOttt Nay. SOtAPH-Brlt?
ish and French currencies paced a
strong upturn in lorelgn exchange
rate* against the United States dollar ,toda«.A,rlae in EW»eanyr*ite*
wa* attributed in exchange circle*
mainly-to the neV*s the French general strike had- been broken.  , • •
Closing rates follow, Great Britain
ta dollars, others to cent*:;   ,".. .
Gmt Britain 4.6B%, 80-day bills
4.67%; Canada, Montreal to New
Ydrk 69.37%; New York in Montreal
100.62%; Belgium 16«)%; Ctecho-
Slovakia 3.42; Denmark 20.92; Finland 2.10t France.2.62%; .Germany
40.08%;' benevolent 20.75; , travel
23,25; Greece «; Hun-ary 19,86:
KaK mk VugoilavlTlMrNeth:
erlands 54.85; Norway 23.53; Poland
18,«; Portugal 4.28; Rumania .75;
Sweden H.». Swlt_erland 32.78; Ar?
gentine 41-15N! Bratll (free) 3.90N;
Mexico City 20,50N: Jwan 2728;
Hohg-Kong 29.27; Shanftai 16.10.
"Ratei In spot cablei unleis. other-
wile indicated. (N)-Npmtoel.'
Pound Again
Gains Strength
LONPON. Nov. 30 <AP)p-The
United States dollar declined 1%
centt in temu of Iterling todiy,
closing $4-«7% to the pound. The
rato^ontratted with aterlin« at
$4.65 13-16 in. New York overnight
French francs ended at 178.31 to
toe pound agalntt 178,80 yetterday.
Dividends
■toternattwai; Vtoitot C«»P-., **
Fanny Tarmer Candy Shapt, it.
cento wu»W carte. „
Canadian   Canners,   convertible
nraferraA» M ....      . _ -.
Canadian qanneri,-lit preferred,
25 cents.' ■.
Ontario loan and debenture, $1.25.
Stedman Bro*. 15 centt, ■ . .'   .
Riverside   Silk  MHla   "A".  M
cents.      '- . ;•', ... . ■
U.S. TREASURY TO
REFUND AND BORROW
WASHINGTON, Nov, SO (AP).-
Secretary Henry Morgenthau ol toe
U. S. treasury announced today the
treaaury will borrow P00,000,00i and
will refund $941,613,750 of old securities on Dec, 15, ..
Montreal Mart
MONTREAL, Nov. SO. (CP) — ■
The stock market thowed strength
today with leading issues recording gains of fractions to more than
a point.
National Steel Car had a gain of
1%. Canadian Car added %, Dosco
waa up % and Dominion Bridge
firmed %.   . -, .
■Nickel paced toe metal* with a
gain of 1% while Noranda added a
point and Smeltera firmed %. Hudson Bay Mlnintheldflrmat33.;
Exchanges
MONTBEAL; Nov. SO (CM-Brit-
ith and foreign exchange closed
higher today. Nominal rates for
large amount*. -' ,
Argentina, peso, 2880.
Australia, pound, 3,7681.      ■    ■■,.
China, Hong Kong dollars, .2949.
Czechotlovakia, crown.- .0844.
Denmark, krone, 3102.     "■ .
Finland, finmark, .0209.
France, franc, .026447. .«'
Germany, relchsmark, .40311.   .
Great Britain, pound, 4.7144, >
. Holland, florin, .5471.
Japan, yen,ABO.    "'*__■  ".
New Zealand, pound. 3.7064. -
Norway, krone, .2481. '
Switzerland, franc .2291, ■ -
(Compiled by the Royal Bank of
?ariad«)i  ■■'
Bottled In Bond In Canada—
10 Year* Old
16 Ol. 81.40; 28 ot. $2,16; 40 ox. IMP
This advertisement 1* not published
or displayed by the Liquor Control
Board or by toe-Government of
-"•   "    British Coluihbia.
V£^^fa>>^-^l^
."We Would Like TRem Tod-ayJ"
THIS IS ONE OF THE MANY REQUESTS THAT COME
TO US FOR-SERVICE IN
CHRISTMAS CARDS
People realize thot we carry an .exclusive range of
Christmas Cards, and also that they will be ready the
day they are promised.
.Come in and make your selection and if you need tKem
in ayhurry, tell usv... We wijj see that you get service.:
Our cards are exclusive but inexpensive . . . sold jn lots
oftWO d02en. \",     '.;.•  y
PRINTED WITH YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS
$!,650RTO$4.5O
!   IF YOU LIVE OUT OF TOWN WE WILL MAIL SAMPLES. WRITE TO   ;
iliV .'■■.< -'        I. ?• ...     (;■■•"     .'•■--..' . . -'. •. - ..'.■","-."
•266 BAKER ST.
COMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPT.
NlLSON, B.C.
 nifmst'imm.
' "■     '
PAOE TWELVE
NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON.
Wylwwww*y^w>.».>!at.i> f »iwii'ni'»'njjsijamim>j,<»«a>»w>x>i^
TODAY TIL
SATURDAY
E-EIEJ
Oup
I CHRISTMAS SALE
StartsToday
TOYS, DOLLS, GAMES AND
FANCY GOODS
TO INDUCE EARLY SHOPPlNC WE ARE OFFERING
FOR ONE WEEK THOUSANDS OF CHRISTMAS
CIFTS AT A DISCOUNT OF    y
B.e.-THURSDAY M0RNIN8. Dia 1
. VBRA CKtJZ, Maaleo. Nov. 80 -
(At) —Twelve German Jews, denied entry to Mexico because customs officials held their passports
not ln order, started back to Europe today, aboard the German ship
Iberia which brought them here 20
days ago. , -. .    - ■■
I
20$
&UYA LOAF OF
oHealiL fi)iwL
Or Old Stone Meal Bread
Made from finest Canadian
.   -; >   -.  Ingredient!
HOOD BAKING CO., LTD.
PHONB 25
Prescription.
Compounded
Accurately
Fleury's Pharmacy
Medical Arte Block
Bargains In the Classified todsyl
LONDON (CFr - TOeper it
softly In this land where there are
thousands more woman than men,
the men take-the honors In the
arts of rugs and hand-made musical instrumcnts.at the Women's fair,
All Sale Prices Are for Cosh Only
Be Thrifty Shop Early
I Mann, Rutherford Co. I
DRUGGISTS ind STATIONERS
1
KOQTINAY    CIRCUIT   THMTSIM
KASLO
Tonight 7:30
DEANNA DURBIN In
"THREE SMART CIRLS"
Prescription
Specialists
Warm Sweaters
ffi^
CHILDREN'S FANCY DRESS
.im,, V. JTlnk's Clrd»'-rf '».
Saviour's Church Hetoei»are bold-
^ Children's Ctoderella Fancy
£ma/ftr&- Hum; hotel.DafcM. >
to S-j'-nTfttaea. TicketaJOc. phone
938-B or JM OT230-R lor ^^^
BE FAIR WITH YOURSELF
Let Insurance safeguard your property. Protect your Home and Income.
We will be glad to explain;
RE. DILL
532 Ward 8t       opp. Madden Hotel
BERLIN, Nov; 80 (AP)-m The
newspaper Braenklsche Tagcszei-
tung, official Nasi organ of Jew-
baiter Julius Stretcher's district, to?
day attacked the United State! es
a 'land of lynch Justice, kidnapping, false prophets and strip danc-
Anm" >        .   .   . —     ,'
NAILS are an Important part
of women being well groomed.
BEAUTY
PARLOR
PHONE 244
SH BAKER ST. ..'
Frank A. Stuart
Insurance Service
Writing -All Classes of Insurance
577 Baker St, Nelson. B.C. Ph. 980
SUNejsonJ)
Repairing — Remodelling
and Relining
Malcolm's Furs
BW Baker Street  ■
J. A. C. Laughton
Optometrist
SUITE 205, MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.
	
Retail Lumber
t   LATH^SHINGLES
MOUtDINGS
MATCH BLOCK WOOD
W. W. POWELL Co., Ltd.
■:-,..'-     "The Home of Cood Lumber"
TWephon^7^^^^^^^^^IFoo^ntanle^t.
MEN'S.
DRESS GLOVES
,-JI^ED QR'UNUNED:
Charles Morris
SEE THE NEW
1939 CHRYSLER
PEEBLES MOTORS
Baker St      Limited      Phone 119
FURNACES
Installed and Repaired
R.H. MABER
Kootenay Bt
Phone US
en
=5=
Your mirror will show -fhe difference in your looks before
and after you've been to the
Haigh Tru-Art
• '* Beauty Salon'   : T
Phone i»'.'     415 Baker St
I Lamberts1
fOr   •
LUMBER
<l PHONE 82
First League HOCKEY GAME
Nelson Civic Arena
TONIGHT, DECEMBER lit
Nelson Maple Leaf s vs. Trail Blazers
Iv";-"'"V:      ■  ADMISSION
RESERVED SEATS, 75* ADULT RUSH, MM
CHILDREN UNDER 15; SSI
RESERVED SEATS AVAILABLE AT NELSON CIVIC CENTHJ5
OFFICE: PHONE 118.
ThoM who hava arranged fer aaaion reserved Mala - will plaaM
" , take up these tickets before 12 o'clock noon today.
DOORS OPEN AT 7:30 CAME AT 8:15 SHARP
Ybur toy wants COM*
REGULAR LUBRICATION
and Monthly Inspection
by qualified mMhanlea will save
;."".;<    you money.
Kootenay Motori
(Nelaon) Ltd. .  Phone 117
___■____-___-______—___■
Magazine
Subscriptions
POR
Christmas Gifts
When you give a
scrlptlon  for a
e sub-
gift
you give twelve months of reading enjoyment Ask tor our De?
serlpUvs Price List of nearly 40
different   popular   magazines.
Canadian Publishers
Service
877 Baker St.     Nelson, B.O.
PHONE 980
Our Representative Will Call
Woop, Vallance
Hardware Company, Limited
AUCTION
SALE
On Furniture, Crockery, Glass's, Christmas gifts Sil-
Ladles'   Toilet   Sets,
ware, Toyi
verware,
Electric Ranges, Heaters, Babies'
Buggies,   Doll . Buggies.   Dolls,
.elghs, Wagons, and a lot
of other toys. Chinawarc, Sinner
Sato, Chesterfield sets, Dining
Room suites, Beds, couches.
Breakfast sets, Musical instruments, etc. Sale starts December
1st, Thursday at 1:30 p.m., and
MO pjn. , :
H. Taylor
";.•;.    Auctioneer   'v- ,.
THRUM* B.C;
Between Brilliant and South
8locsn
J
8EE JACK HOOGERWERF
Standard Electric
"■•       .-■   ■■   '-.   tpt .    ';'■--
Electrical   Contracting
PHONE 838     617 VERNON ST.
Across from New Grand Hotel
sv&zs$$ssss$ss$sss
44 TAXI
CON. CUMMINS
SOe up to 5 passengen
Arty place in the tlty
ifcjtetesissasaw&is
Eagles whist and dance tonight.
8 gTAdnilaslon ate- tHTu
Ior sale, Kotasfcr CMt, medium
size, sacrifice. Ph. 9.1-L.       WHS)
DANCE AT VALLICAN. DEOS.
INNE8 ORCH. AOM. 38c       <«82)
CHllPREN'8 SKATING TODAY
"9™ (W)
Tomorrow nite, Kinsman club atf-
nual SnowbaU Frolic, Can. Legion
hall and Ldunga.$J.B0 coupte.
_»3   PHONE   »8—   '
). B. Taxi All new ears.
."•  (8821)
ELECTRIC WASHERS REPAIRED
Parts and wringer rolls for all
makes. Free estimates. Prompt ser?
vice. Call servlee Dept Beatty Factory Branch, 3J1 Baker St, wel*
ton. Phone 81. <«W»>
Another shipment of Sheflook-Man-
nlng lew-boy pianos will ba here
In a few dayi.
JOHN DEWICK, Pink Blk,
(2720)
phone 144 p<jr the very
best in christmas cards,
ask por our representa
tlve, miss margaret arthur
who will be glad to show
Samples, nelson daily news
Bring a friend.and have tea at
the INTERNATIONAL TEA ROOM.
In ST. PAUL'S where you will be
served hy quaint little sisters from
other lands. Be sure to visit tha
SWISS CANDY TABLE and look
over the fancy work. Don't forjat
the date, FRIDAY, DEC. 2.   («o6)
Perfect Gifts
What could mors fully
convey your warm friendship for him than a good
warm sweater. AH styles,
zippers, cardigans snd
pullovers in plain colors.
or two tone effects,
f3.95, f4.e5 to ?6.85
EMORY'S
LIMITED "A-
"The Man's Store?  ■'
—m*
TAKE HOME SOME
FISH AND CHIPS
26b par Order '
The PERCOLATOR
E. W. KOPECKI 609 BAKER
m
NOTICE!
We have Just* opened our
store with a full line of
RAWLEIGH'S Good
Health Products, fresh
from the factory.
Call and see your local
dealer or write to
E/Tinent
,  RAWLEIGH DEALER
324 Behnsen St.
KELSON, B. C.
Dont forget the Theta Rho.Olrls
Partner What Drive and nteeo*-
night at tho Oddfellows' Ball? (428')
i 1 i - ..
Trinity Service Club Gift 8hop
Display window, at Burns Coal A
Cartage Co. :       («W)
ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS
CARD8 FOR OVERSEAS NOW.
OUR STOCK IS COMPLETE. NBL?
SON DAILY NEWS, PHONE 144
FOR AN APPOINTMENT.
CHRISTMA8 SUGGESTIONS
-Vases  and  Jardiniere, complete
stock, 99c. each, sea our .window.
Hlpperson's.     - ,   ■   . <W
BOYS' BAND LAMPREDRAW-
1st number drawn, 102, 2nd, 29. 3rd,
72^-Phone 243Y. (4260)
See the new Sports and Afternoon
dresses — latest stylet - GINGHAM
8HOPPE, Opp. Dally News.   (42M)
Photos for Christmas must be
taken soon. Phona 46, VOGUE
8TUDIO, today and avoid disappointment.   -  (8832)*
You'll ba sura to please If you choose
muslo or musical Instruments for
. "      your Christmas gifts
KOOTENAY MUSIC HOU8E
.     "(708)
CASTLEGAR FERRY
Commencing from Dec 1st this
ferry will operate from 6 a.m. to 12
midnight, dally until further notice.
Signed DEPT: OF PUBLIC WORKS
.--,    Rossland-Trall District
•    (4266)
..FUNERAL NOTICE:
A^PUtWHAITE — Capt. Harry
Hannam, passed - away Tuesday.
Body rests at Somen' Funeral Rome
until Friday, thence to St. Saviour's
Pro-Cathedral where service will
be held at 2 p.m., Bev. J. 0. Holmes
officiating. (4268)
PHONE 128 FOR COMPLETE
Laundry Service
KOOTENAY
STEAM LAUNDRY
1938 G.M.C. Truck
PICK-UP DELIVERY
Slv-ply tires eta, at over 1300 I'M'
than-new price.
Kline's City Service
Jack MoDowell. Howard Thurman
PHONE #*: ; *:
for batter and prompter service In plumbing repairs and \
alterations.
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
Gift Shop, Tea, Home Cooking,
Trinity Church Hall, 8at., Dec. 3rd.
3 to 6 o'clock. THnlty Service Club.
' J      -; ^42?,)
Women'a Canadian Club, Tues,-
Dec. 6th, 8 P-m. Hume Silver room.
Speaker, Mrs. Madge MacBctli, I. 0.
D. E. members invited.
NOTICE — I wUl not be responsible for any debts Incurred by
any one other than mjaeSt
FRANK OGENSKI.
(4258)
An  Ideal   CHRI8TMA9  Gift- A
G.  E. Airflow Cleaner, complete
With attachments—only $59.50.
McKAY A STRETTON
•'.'."•". . (708)
PLANNING A
TRW   ti
YOU'LL ENJOY COING
By SUS
Sea Your Local Agent'Today.
GRLY/HGIND
mmm^mimtm
BUY A NEW 1938 (ft A <*-*,-*
DODGE $103/
FOR AS LOW AS T
F.O.& NELSON
Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.
by
STR
BAKER STREET
PHONE 75
SPECIALS
MILLENDS   I    4 FT. FIR
Load   §3.75    Cord   84.50
3 LOADS $10  >l    3 CORDS $12
SAWDUST: Unit    94.00
PHONE 973 or 434R1
Removal Sale
WE ARE SOON MOVING TO 5M BAKER ST.
Brushed   Wool
Sweaters
Reg.S8-W.Ncw
$3.98
Hats
Values to $4.00
., NOW 8  prices.
$249 $2.89
$2.98
TIES
2 »r
$1,98
Reg. Values to
SIM Eaoh
Scarfs
Reg. $1.50
Now 99U
Extra Pants Free
With Your Tailored-to-Measure Suit
Work
Pants
Regular $2.26 and
18.60.  Now
$itf9
SOlt
Reg,   SOc.   Now
3 for
$1.00
Shirts
Rag.' $2.00.  Now
$149
'AH.our'
Overcoats
and
topcoats
. , "One price
nm
' Uncalled-for
SUITS;
Several uncalled   -
.   for Suits at less
than factory cost   .
■ ■'-   Kahkl 8ports
Jackets
Neva-wet.    Pro? .
-   cesied. Rag. $855.
■■•'     ■■ Now?--
$34*
•fwaid-'-
Sport
, Jackets
Reg. $7.50        .
Now $3.98
Marino
SOX
' (tag. 40o.
Now29<i
Other Outstanding Values too Numerous to Mention
ALL CASH PRICES ONLY
Jack Boyce sl^ihoi;
636 BAKER ST. . <     01*. QUEINS HOTIL
The Outstanding Event of the
Social Season
The Nelson
Kinsmen's Club
SftowbaM
^rolie
CANADIAN LEGION
.    HALL and LOUNGE
Troubadours Orchestra'
CATERING   BY   CRENFELL'S
$1.50 PER COUPLE — Including Rofreshmonft.
DANCING 9 TILL ? A.M.
Todsy
CSVIC
Tomorrow
8HOWTIME8 7:00-9:20
REGULAR PRICE8 26c-15o
WE DARE YOU TO SEE THEM BOTH!
THE MAMMOTH HORROR SHOW ! I
2 Supor-Shockcrs Of the Century!
I
A GUARANTEED
SATISFACTION
A GIFT FOR THE FAMILY CAR
WOULD BE ANY
Motoroco
O Motoroco, G.M. Heaters
O Motoroco, G.M. Defrosters
• Motoroco, G.M. Radiator Fronts
• Motoroco, G.M. Fog Lamps
AND MANY MORE
Owing to ths demand for these accessories we
advise you to place your order early and be
sure of delivery before Christmas.
NELSON TRANSFER
Company, Limited
35^ PHONES -3&
fia_L__4^-""^i^iau---i--.
