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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" p\nBosun Mine\nIS SHAPING WELL\nSee Page 3\nIU&\nWinter\nSWEEPS NORTHWEST\nSfeePa|e3\nT\ni n\nKELSON, B.O\u201e TUESDAY MOHNlNG, NOVEMBER 22, 1921\n~vdtTW\niiiu   - iii\nNO\/176.\nINTERVIEWS MOORISH CONSUL\nReturn  of King to Power\na** >M$i#* \u00b0f\nVoters, Says Meighen.\nOT ONE BELIEVES IN     I\nFREE TRADE PLATFORM\nfritish Colombia Progressive\nCandidates All Oppose\nCrerar's Plank, -\nFORT  WILLIAM,   Ont.,  Nov.   21.\u2014\nI rho Opening of what will -probably be\nI ho mofit strenuous period off Premier\nMeighen's election campaign wan tenured by two large meetings  In  the\n[ Twin Cities off Fort William and Port\nI Vrtlmr  tonight.    The  premier  spoke\ni ((rat in the olty hall at Fort William,\nrolng from  there  to  the armories at\nj 'ort  Arthur,  where aeveral thousand\ni \u00bbople wero waiting to hear- him.\npremier Meighen snld that parties\nnurt  urllte  on  a  policy  and  follow\nbut   policy   in  every  section  off   the\nsountry,   or   responsible   government\n! inu gone,    itt tne opposition  camps\nnen were running on widely varying\nprograms  to   suit   the   section   off   the\n1 lomm unity   in   which   they   happened\nJ o   be   located.     One   off   the   leaders\nI )ff the opposition  parties had a set\nipecch,   most  off   which,   tho   premier\ntald, meant \"nothing, but part of which\ncon Hi Hied    In    calling   blm,    (Premier\nMeighen). an autocrat.    This charge\nR*U all humbug, sold tho prime minner.    He  had   attained   his   present\n\u25a0 offflco In Just Uie same manner that\n\\ numerous other prime ministers had\npn   Canada   and   Uie   British   Empire,\n. *f oily to Abandon Protection\n\u2022 For Cumula. tp abandon the protective principle would be folly and mad-\ninefli, the premier declared. His plat-\n.orm Implied no change In tho fflacal\niltcy at present being followed by\nhe government. Tho demand ffor a\n| change In \u25a0Canada's tariff policy* had\ncorned not from the government, but\nfrom, those -mile wero opposing the\ngovernment. The tariff of Sir Wilfrid\nLaurier was Jn force today*, save ffor\nsome reductions on certain items and\nIncrease In the duty on apples.\n. \"dyer half of Mr. King's candidates\nare running on platforms whloh are\nprecisely opppslto to their lender's\npledged platform.\" declared the premier.\n\"Consequently,\" he argued, \"Iff Mr.\n[King was returned to power there\n'rouit lnetltably. nwtilt a Mack betrayal of a ne half of the people who\nhad voted to-mako him prime mln\niHrtet.\"        , m\n;    \"Hon. T. A> qrerar Is Just about a\nii second Mr. King.\" Mr.  Meighen  said,\n.^n   contending   that   the   Progressive\nI leader was not  standing fpr a free\ntrade   policy,   though   declaring   that\nprotection   wos   morally   wrong   and\neconomically  unsound.\nTrim Sail, to th* Wind\n!\"Ho Is trimming hla satis like all\ntbe rest. He Is circling round gener\namies and avoiding the definite undertakings In his platform,\" said the\nprime  minister.    . . ,\n\"Mr   Crerar  aiid his  followers  are\niUSt   patterning   t-foetr   campaign    on\nMr.  King's.\"  he  said.    Ho  did   not\njbellcve    that    ti    slnglo    progressive\n*candldnto, ln  BrltWh   Colsmbln   sup-\ni porter   the  free  tntde plank  Jn   the\nFarmers', platform,\nI' **1 would like to\" know what' there\nliis In the characters of Mr. King or\n||Mr. Crerar that'entitles them tb sym-\nIpathy with tho common people while\nI lack it,\" said Mr. Meighen Iti dlscus-\nJjslng the charge  that  ho was  allied\n;!wlth. big   business.\nJ.  \"When   Mr.   Crerar   tells   What   ho\nIknowe to be the truth about my relations with big business then 1 will\nivb fflbre  reiftfefct  tot  Mr.  Crerar,\"\nie went pp.   Those, who wore Indulg-\ntho bl'f'; business cry, knew that\nefr accusations were  baseless.\nMen with large Incomes could move\n[mu the International boundary line\n[ pay. a. lower tax than they were\ntiled  upon' to  pay   In  Canada.\nlass Taxation   Drives Classes  Away\n\"Place   a   heavy --'burden   off   taia-\nlon on any; class of the community\nwand you run the risk off losing that\nHass,\"   the   premier   said.\nHa went on \u2022 to discuss what the\nivemment   had   done . ln   regard\neep   waterways   development.\nThe   question   bf   development   off\n\u25bawer and navigation on the Bt -Law-\nnce,   had,   op   tho   inlatlve   off   the\nivernment, been referred to the deep\ntterways commission and  engineers\nere   now   engaged   In   preliminary\nork along these lines.    It was  the\n,ntentlon  off the government to  con-\nInuo this so that when the time came\ndefinite  step*  to   be   taken   the\nrcmllminary work would be done.\nTurning   to   a' discussion   ot   the\nIn.question, Mr, Meighen relterat-\nhla   charge   that   profits   gained\n'rom  handling  grain  of  the  western\n-partners  had \u2022 been used  for political\niropaganda   In   newspapers.    It   was\n_   great   advantage   for   a   political\nleader to be the head of a numher\nf grain companies, ho said.   He was\niot attacking  Mr.  Crerar  personally,\n*it the Former leader seemed to think\nhat be and hla party must be treat-\nAd with  \"honeyed  words\" while  the\n\u25a0progressives pn  their side,  were   using -what  they, oould  gather  against\nhe  government* J\nm The premier said he bad, in dls-\nA-ussIng the grajn question, mode no\nBefforence to, tne, Prlco Waterhouue\nHbompany report on terminal elevators.\nmst. Crorar was now asking hoar It\nKappenod that this supposedly confidential report had heen mado publlo\nthrough a newspaper advertisement.\nJap-bad not re*4ilbe report himself.\nI|in|-1 the premier, but on hearing what\n\u25a0fctfv Crerar said, he had wired to\nJfiwi department of trado and oora-\nHhierce for information. The reply of\nKi.s ' uuixutwept w>\u00bb *<\u00bb the effect\nwhat only tva pages off this report\ncovering statistics had been brought\ndown ln the hbuee off commons, but\nSlhot on May 88, Dr. Maglll, head of\nShe Wlpnlpw ST**n exchange, had\nnformep Sir Qeorgo Foster, then mtti-\ntister off trade and commerce, that\nShe oWtenta off %M reports wero ap-\njfcarantly well known to western Journ-\nr George Foster had consequently\nn permission that Mr. Maglll bo\nwed to make a copy of the roport\nreturn li-to the department   An\n(Continued on Page fi)      t\nPRINCfc ui- walls AT GIBRALTAR\nTho prlnco is not Interviewing tho designer of n new style In night-robes,\nbut Is conversing with the Moorish consul at Tho Kock nt a garden party\nheld In his honor duMng his visit on his way to India.\nLONDON, Nov. 21.\u2014Sixty-four of 100 Moplah prisoners\ndied of suffocation while being transferred in a closed railroad\nwagon from Tleurur to Belarit in the Madras presidency of\nIndia according to a dispatch to the' Daily Mail from from\nMadras.\nThe government has ordered an investigation and Mohammedans have telegraphed representations to the government\nand to Earl Cromer, who is head of the personal staff oi the\nPrince of Wales, now in India.   *       '%**> \\\nTroubles Fall Thick and Fast\non Oliver Administration;\nHard Blows.\nVICTORIA. Nov. 21.\u2014The Liberal\ngovernment Is tottering, the chnrges\nleveled against the Oliver-Ferris administration first commencing with\nthe liquor chftrge, then the beaver\nscandal and Jrtlll later by the resignation of Mrs. Ralpb Smith, reached the\nclimax this evening when David\nWhiteside, Liberal\/ but professedly\nIndependent memher for New Westminster, made a slushing attack on\nthe govrnment In regard to the budget\nspeech of Hon. -John Hnrt nnd more\nparticularly harder against the operations of thn government in connection\nwith the Pacific Great Kastern rnll-\nway.\nSpeaking on the budget, Mr. Whiteside stated that tho matter was a\ntopic on every street corner of Vancouver and New Westminster. It waa\ntime thnt the house came (o somo solution and arrongo a budget which\nwould bring tlie provincial finances\nwilhin the figure suggested by tho fl-\nnhnee minister.\nMr. Whiteside auggosled that Instead off spending $511.R00 on agricultural education* the province eomo to\nsome agreement with Ottawa whereby\nsuoh work could be worked through\ncooperation.\n\"And that Is nol saying nnything\ndisparaging against a government\nwhich may bn of anolher political\nstripe but which contains sttch men\nas Pr. S. F. Tolmle anil Arthur\nMeighen.\" Tho member for New\nWestminster advocated the stoppage\noff all work on the P. G. i-:. past Quesnel, claiming that englnocrs he had\nspoken to had told him thnt past tha\n(Continued   on   Page  Five)\nULLEEES UnEMPT\nTO KM ULSTER\nRiots Break Ont Anew in\nBelfast; Gunmen Fire Volley in Street.\nBELFAST. NOV. 21.\u2014A pedestrian\nwas fatally wounded this evening\nwhen the rioting which broke out\nBunday, spread to the York street\n'district. Under cover of darkness,\ngtlnmen fired a volley along Bar)\nstreet and tho pedestrian was hit by\na bullet.\nLater two men entered a station\nstroet public house and ordered the\nbartender to throw- up his hands.\nWhon he declined to du so he was\nshot  ana killed.\nThe unity of Ireland can only come\nIff at all when time has dimmed\nto Some extent, tho memory of the\nrecent outrages which have disgraced\n\"bur island home and through the\nunion 'of hearts brought nbout by\ncommon nterests, common deals and\nmutual confidence based on the enduring foundation of loyalty and\ngood will,\" declnrod Hon. J. M. An-\nlrelnnd, ln addressing the townsfolk\ndrews, minister of labor of Uorth\noff Comber, county Down tonight. Ha\nrepeated his statement of lost week\nthat a \"disgraceful betrayal off Lister  was being attempted.\"\nIff the government's suggested all-\nIrish parliament was given effect,\nhe said it would mean that \"our parliament In Ulster would be subordinate and our efforts In the direction of\nsolving tho education problem, labor matters and other domestic questions would undoubtedly be thwarted\nby the parliament In Dublin.\"\nCalls for Suspension.\nCORK' Nov. 21.\u2014The Cork corpo-\nrat imi at a special ,meeting.. today\nadopted a resolution asking the Dall\nBlreann cabinet \"to suspend pence negotiations until the question of prisoners Is satisfactorily adjusted.\"\nThe resolution called on the Dall\nmembers In southern Ireland to make\nsimilar \u2022 representations. The three\nDall members present supported the\nresolution.\nStart Hunger Strike,\nCORK, Nov. 21.\u2014Seventeen prisoners In the Waterfford jail have begun\na hunger strike owing to the refusal\nof the government to grant them increased tlmo for recreation.\nCrerar Complains of Efforts\nto Undermine and Wreck\nFarmers.\nROBBBURN. Man., Nov. 21.\u2014Addressing a capacity audlenco here tonight, Hon. T. A. C'rcmr again emphasised his contempt for taotlcs\nwhlcU he asserted were being employed by the government party In\nurder tor undormlno tho people's belief In tbe National Progressive party.\nThere was a deliberate* ut tempt, he\nsaid, to wreck the Farmers' organisations In western Canada and the\nmoney ffor this campaign of misrepresentation was being furnished by\nthose privileged Interests In the east\nwhich were Identified with Mr.\nMeighen ami his supporters. Farmers' Organisations, said Mr. Crerar,\nhad built up by long years of effort, and he asked his audience It\nthey were going to be stamped\nagainst then* best Interests by the\nsuggestions 6f the government and Its\nsupporters.\nAlleges   Monopolist\nMr. qrerur_criticised the fiscal polity of the htesent government. Canada, he \u2022nssehed, had far more com-\nblnefr njnl monopolies than any other\nobuntry^ ana, the direct result off\ntin-ill' was Inevitably Increase thc\ncost of living. Protection kept goods\nout of the country, and tho umount\n,of customs duties was simply added\nto the \"Jjrlee peoplo must pay for\nthoso manufactured  In Canada.\nThe peiipli- were tired of the present policy of protected Interests, asserted the Progressive leader. The\ncost of living has got to come down,\nand the rettUctlon of thc tariff was\nthe only \u2022practtceablc way of bringing\nthis about.\nIn n country where woollen goods\nwere so essential, lt was wrong that\nthere should be a duty on them of\nSR  per tent.\nMr. Crerar denied that the Progressive tnbVement wns a class movement. It stood for tha Interests of\nthe rank and tile,) whereas the present government waa self-licensed of\nstanding ffor protection of small\nclass, to the Infinite loss off all the\nothers.\nVETERINARIANS FAVOR\nDOMINION REGISTRATION\n\u2014\nOTTAWA, Nov. SI.\u2014A talk In ffa-\nvor off Dominion registration for vet- j\nerlnary mirgoons, and a discussion of,\nhog cholera. Its prevention nnd treat-1\nment, --featured the sosslona here to- j\n\u2022day off a conference of veterinarians |\nfrom all parts off Canada called by\nDr. V. Torrcnoe, veterinary doctor\ngeneral, to discuss makers pertaining to tho profession and to deal with\nthe livestock problem generally, ,\nDr. J. Tl. Cirisdule. deputy minister\nof agriculture, occupied the chair at\nthe moraine ftfl4'if&go9\u00a3 \u2022Wlfns.l\nMASHES BY WIRE\nXonaircMrlan Dlea.\nI1HAJJDON. Man., Nov. JI.\u2014Mra.\nJohn Hornlbook, 91, \u00bb realdent of thla\nolty alpoo 1991, died thla -Utornoon.\nBhe wna born nenr Brookvllle, and\nwith Mr. H\u00abrnlliook celebrated, her\nmat anniversary i-nrly In October. Her\nhuabund, two aona and aeven daughters aurvlVa.\n.Tnlin Utsst. VmM Peterboro. Die*.\ni-kthhuoiici. Ont., Nor. 21 \u2014\nAfter n ahort lllncim John Lang, ex-\nmember ol parliament for Eaat Peterboro, tiled at hi. realdenoo In tha village of Keenw todny, agad 81.\nFor CO yeura Im fnrmod In lho township of OtoiMbe, retiring to tha village,16. yeara ngo. Mr. Ijing rapre-\nM.'titiW I'rte-iilirn Knst ''or 19 years In\ntlio Laurier government. Hla wifo\nprcilcoenied him a little over * yenr\nago. Two aona and four daughters\nsuptita,  t.\nCANADIAN BOOKS IN\nCANADIAN HOMES IS\nSLOGAN OF AUTHORS\nTORONTO, Xov. #.\u2014\"Canadian\nbooks In Canadian homes\" Is Ihe pjlze\nwinning slogan for Canadian authors'\nWeek, being selected by tho special\ncommittee from, among hundreds of\nsuggestions. The prl\u00abe of $R0 goes to\nCharles C. Parker, bookseller, Manitoba. The committee, comprising F.\nP. Appleton. Hugh H. Ayren and V. I.\nWeaver, wero guided In their selection\nof this slogan by the fact that it Is so\natrongly Iu keeping with the object of\nthis whole campaign, which is to promote wider reading of books by the\nCanadian people; ^t get more hooks\nInto tho homes, and to especially encourage people to start homo libraries\nof hooks by Canadian writers and\nabout Canada.\n' Canadian authors In all parts of\nCanada are busy tbls week addressing\nvarious organisations on thi* development of Canadian literature.\nDIVORCES GRANTED\nPASS ALL RECORDS\nI-ONDON, Nov. 21.\u2014A now high\nrecord was made In the divorce court\nhero today, when Ixird Just Ico Henry\nDuke made absolute 207 decrees nisi\n\u2014the highest number in any single\nday ln the courts In this country.\nMCE\nPRES BRIAND\nFrench Premier Holds Conference Spellbound in Dynamic\nAddress; Points to France's Isolation; Dare Not Reduce\nFurther Land Armaments While Europe Still Unsettled;\nSecurity Demands Preparedness A\/ Fist Recovery of\nGermany and Possible Danger Fr I Russia; Avers\nGermany Could Put 6,000,000 Ui fr Anns; Britain\nVirtually Pledges Support Should Oc fiion Arise; Land\nArmament Question Likely to Collar I\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 21.\u2014In\nemotional plea for national security,\npronounced by Arlstide Rrlah-ri, French\npremier, he informed the armament\nronference today that however deeply she might he moved by the* call to\nlighten tho burdens of armaments,\nsho dared not destroy tho effectiveness of her army so long as tho Eu\nropenn situation  Is whnt it Is.\nSummoning to the effort all tho\ndynamlr force nf his eloquence, tho\n\"Strong man of France\" held tho\nrapt at ton tion of the conferenco ffor\non hour na ho recounted, ono by one,\nthe perils that beset his people\nVirtually   Pledges   Britain.\nWhen the French premier concluded. Right. Hon. Arthur .1. Ilalfour\nresponded Tor Great Britain with a\nvirtual [fledge of Rritish support\nshould    lho    civilisation    of    Europe\nSUPERSTITIOUS PEERESS\nAll Nations, at Conference\nSubscribe to Joint Declaration of Policy! to China.\nWASHIXQTO.V. Nov. 21.\u2014A joint\ndeclaration of policy toward China\nbasod on territorial and administrative integrity, sconomie opportunity,\nan enforced open door and thc abolition of ' special rights, was agreed\nupon today by all the nations represented In the conference. The first\ndefinite atreement to come out off\nthe conference, the declaration touches In general terms most off the prln-\nolptos for which China asked In hor\nbill of rights, but does not provide\nIn detail ror tho settlement of the\nspecific problemit with which sho Is\nconfronted.\nElihu Root, of the United States\ndelegation proisised the declaration\nresolution nnd two hours of debate\npreceded Its adoption. During the\ndiscussion, both Japan and China, as\nthe most directly Interested nations\nwere asked many questions as to\npossible application of the suggested\nprinciples tu specific problems, while\nall other nations took a less active\npart In tho debate.\nJapan Quits Satisfied\n\"Perfect satisfaction,\" with the resolution wos expressed tonight by Admiral Karon Kato, held of the Japanese delegation, although ho declined\nto suggest what changes the agreement might lead to In tbe Fur East.\nThe chin.-!'*- also declared themselves\ngratified at the development and the\ndelegates of thc other nations generally voiced the view that the agroc-\nment was a good start toward com\nplote agreement on the most Import\nant of the Fnr East problems.\nThe two features of tho declaration attracting widest attention tonight wero the clauses approving\n'administrative integrity\" for China,\nand that under which tho principles\nagree not to seek \"special rights'\nwithin Chinese terrltQry. Previous\ndeclarations of policy regarding Chin\nese integrity have stopped with \"ter-\nrltorlsl Integrity.\" commonly construed us a mucb narrower term than\n'administrative   Integrity.\"\nTho special rights' agreement was\nconsidered generally a direct contravention of the policy of \"spheres of\nInnuenco.\"\nTerms Comprehensive\nTho text of Hie resolution was\nembodied In un official communique\nIssued by tho conference late today.\nIt  follows:\n1. To respect the sovereignty the\nindependence und tho territorial and\nadministrative  Integrity of China.\n'I. To provide the fullest nnd most\nunembarrasslng opportunity to China\nto develop and maintain for herself\nan effoctlvo nnd stable government,\n'I. To use their Influence for the\npuprose of effectually establishing and\nmafntning the principle of.equal opportunity for tho commerce and Industry of all nations throughout the\nterritory  of  China. -\n\"4. To refrain from taking advantage of the present conditions ln order to seek special rights or privileges which would abridge the rights\nof tho subjects or cltlions of friendly states nnd from countenancing notion inimical to tlio security of such\nstates.\"\nThe , committee adjourned to meet\nAt  11  o'clock  tomorrow  iporntng.\nCHILDREN    DIE    IN    FIRE\nilAiWHURa, -Nov. JI.\u2014Twslvo children lost thelrf Uvea today Jn a firo\nwhich swept through a playhouse.\nThlrtf others were Injured.       <*\nCHURCH   CELEBRATES   JUBILEE.\nEDMONTON, Nov. n.~~McDougnll\nMethodist church celewated- Its fiftieth-anniversary today with n bnn-\nawt \t\nBATTLES HER WAY\nJI\nDayton, Lost for Twelve\nHours in Blinding Snowstorm Makes Port Arthur\n, PORT ARTHUR, Ont.. Nov. 13.\u2014\nMinna her whistle, which had been\nleft ashore for tcpnlrs, lost for 12\nhours In a blinding snowstorm In\nThunder hay. constantly In danger of\nbeing rammed by other ships proceeding to port \"under signals,\" tho\nfreighter Dayton, formerly the Francis Wldlnr. nosed her way Into port\nSunday night.\nTho Dayton left the Port Arthur\nShipbuilding company's plant'for Fort\nWilliam, a dlstnnce pf eight miles,\nnnd became lost, Two tugs wore sent\nto find her. but had to return on ac-J platform ffor the\nV9UBI \u00b0f (h* density off tho atornij    (party, be said.\nTH\u00a3   MARCHIONESS  OF   CREWE\nThe  beautiful   nnd   talented   dauxhtcr  of   Lord   Rosebery,   who   Is  soon\nto visit  the United  States,  Is extremely superstilutlous.    Ifer  pet  aversion\nIs the  number thirteen.    Siie  will  noot   sit   down  at   a   tablo   with   twelve\nothers and will avoid anything with which tho number is connected\nFIXESDfttEFDR\nBIU TRIAL\nCase Arises Ont of Libel\nCharge by Horatio Bottom-\nley of Jobn Bulil.\nLONDON, Nov.' IM.\u2014.-Justice Swift.\nat the Old Halley today, fixed tho trl 11\nof Reuben Klglaiut mi a charge ot libeling Horatio Bottomley, m. p., for\nthe January session of the court.\nThe alleged libel was in connection\nwith Bottomley's Victory bond club,\nwhich Blgland is accused off having.\nIn a printed pamphlet, charactcriied\nas a swindle. The Victory bond club,\nof which Rottomley is the head, purported to be for the benefit of thOBc\npeople who wished to subscribe for\nvictory bonds In Kngland. but Who\ncould not put up the necessary t_. His\nscheme was to accept \u00a31 subscriptions. There are several court cases\nns the outcome of thc Rottomley Victory bond club, Rottomley being defendant in some of them and plaintiff\ntn others,\nHoratio Rottomley Is n member of\nthe British house of commons and\npublisher of John Bull. Reuben Blf-\nland Is an agent, who resides at\nHandsworth, Rlrmlngham.\nProsecutor Seeks to Prove\n\"Bluebeard\" Strangled\nWomen Same Way as Dogs\nVER8AILLKH. Nov. 81.- Bottes of\ntwo dogs which belonged to Mile. Mm*\ncandler, one of the 11 alleged victims\nof \"Bluebeard'' Luidru, figured prominently in today's session of Lnndru's\ntrial for murder in tlio Versailles assizes court.\nLandru having admitted that he had\nkilled thc two dogs, whose bones were\nproduced In court again today, Judgo\nGilbert fynssed the prisoner to explain\nin what niauii'-r he had killed them.\n\"I strangled them,\" Landru finally\nshouted, and nxptnlncd tht he had\nused a waxed conl In thc process.\nProsecutor (ioefrey, who insisted\nthnt this particular point bo brought\nout, declared It would aid the prone-\ncutlon in proving that LnnUi'it, *Jur:i,-'\nfflts of excitement, had strangled the\nmissing women, cut them up Into\nsmall bits and then, after regaining\nhis normal state of mind, had sold\n\u25a0i few cheap belongings of his victims\nlu order to give the appearance that\nhis relations with the women wero\nmorely commercial transactions.\nPolitical Pot Boils\nBottle   River   Nameo   Flsldhouse.\nBattle  River\u2014IT.  B.  Fleldhouse,   K.\nC,   Liberal.\nCALOART, Nov. 21.\u2014Hugh Olllls,\nbanister, of Blalrmore, waa nominated by the Liberals of M\u00abeLeod riding today.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 23.\u2014There will bo\nno oanldato ln Victoria city on tho\nNatlonnl Progressive ticket, It was\ndecided at a final meeting of the local branch off the party  tonight.\nCALGARY. Nov. 21.\u2014W. G. Johnson, Labor M. P. P for Medicine Hat\nwho took part In the' federal byelection thero last June, ln a speech here\ntonight donled tho statements which\nhe said were bolng made In the east\nby Gideon Robertson and Premier\nMolghcn that the Farmers hod four\noff the Winnipeg strike leaders on tho\nplatform in the byelection. Not one\nof theso had been on the elect Ion\nFurmor   or   Labor\nho ngaln th -ened oa It was In 1914.\nFor the 1 ltd Statea Secretary\nHughes de- ^nX tho plea ot Franco\nnever won!.- \u00ab.ttl on deaf ears In the\nUnited States and Italy and Belgium\nadded their word off appreciation for\nthe peculiar situation of the French.\nAdmiral' Baron Kato, speaking in\nhis turn, expressed the profund sympathy of Japan for tho declarations\nof Premier Briand, and asserted that\nfor themselves, the Japanese desired\nto maintain on land only such military forces ns seemed \"necessary ffor\nnational security and tho maintenance of order within.\" Both Mr. Balfour and Baron Kato suggested that\ntho dny's developmenta seemed to Indicate that any limitation off land\nurmaments would be difficult to establish und although the subject was\nreferred to a committee off tho wholo\nfor future consideration, there was\napparently no Inclination to hasten tho\ndlscusslun of detAlls, It would not\nsurprise somo of the delegates if tho\narmament negotiations simmered won\nto an effort merely to agreement on\na general statement af policy.\nOmits Military Figures.\nDetailed figures of the present and\nproposed military strenngtn off Franco\nwore not Included In 1'remler Brl-\nand's address to the conference, but\ntonight he explained that bis allusion\nto contemplated reduction -forecast a\nfuture strength of 316,000 regulars\naa against &00.000 now under arms.\nThi** would be accomplished, he sold,\nby keeping only one and a halt\n\"classes\" In training, whereas at present there are two (ull \"classes\" In tho\nexisting authorisation.\n\"Iff anyone asks us to go further\/*\naald tbo premier, in concluding hta\naddress to tho conferenoe, \"I shall\nhave to answer clearly and definitely\nthat lt would be Impossible (or ua to\ndo so without exposing ourselves to\na most serio-w dancer.\"\t\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 21.\u2014The proposals for land disarmament made by\nPremier Briand off France ln his address today before tho armaments\nconference are contained in the ffdl-\nii-wuii; excerpt from the official translation of his speech;\n\"Thu thought of reducing armaments, which was the noble purpose\nof this conference, is not one from\nwhich wc would feel disinterested\nfrom the s0nt of view off land armaments. Wo have shown tt already.\nimmediately afu-r tha armistice demobilisation began and demobilisation\nbegun ns rapidly and as completely aa\nposaibU'.\n\"According to the military laws of\nFrance, there nre to bo three classes\nof men. that is, three generations off\nyoung men under the flag.\n\"Tbat law Is sllll exlstant. That\nlaw ls still valid. It ijas not been\nabrogated yet and the povornment hae\ntaken the responsibility of reducing to\ntwo years the thne spent under tho\ncolors, and instead of three classes we\nhave only two undergoing military\nservice..\n'It is therefore nn Immediate re-\n(Contlnued on Page Seven)\nTHEWEATHU.\n\"Zimmie\"\nVICTORIA, Nov. 21.\u2014FOtfecasta fo*\nNelson nnd vicinity: Mostly cloudy\naTUl cold with snow.\nSynopsis\u2014An Important ocean\natorm Is hovering over tho coast\nand snow or sleet Is general in southern British Columbia; Intense cold\nprevails In central British Columbia,\nand xero temperatures continue from\nCariboo   to   Manitoba.\nMax.\nNelson ...\nVictoria ^^^^^^^^^\nVancouver \u2014.....-._.._.__   II\nKamloope  \u2014.\u2014\u25a0.     I\nBarkervllle _,, *1S\nPrlnco Rupert  -_   14\nAtlin >JJ\nDawson   \u2014- \u2014 -82\nCalgary      ,    ,~ -22\nWinnipeg \u201e,    -14\nPenticton i\u2014...wj   11\nGrand   Forks   \u201e.,\u25a0    $\nfi\nCranbrook   ..._\nMln,\nn\n10\n18\n14\n16\n14\n0\n-H\n-I\nI\nlt\n10\nIt\n-\n Tfris -wasbs'-ronc? m_, ftit&tfki fltofeftke, soflSisfes as; \\m.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhan lh. Tnralllng  Publl. May OMtAt **aa_m- Aoomnraodatlon\nTable d'HoU \u2014\n\\fo9uw\nA la Carte\n00T&5\nHe Premier Hotet of ike Interior\nGEORGE BENWELL, Propriety,\nSPECIAL  SUNDAY   DINNER,    $1.00\nService Unexcelled.\nINCOMPARABLY THE  FINE8T TEA  ROOM   IN   B.  0.\nOpan Dally 10 a. m. ta Midnight. Mutlo and Danolni\nTha Latest Sundae, loa Cold  Drink, and  loaa\nAftarnoan Taa (2 p. m, ta B p. tn.) 25o\nH.adqu.rtor. far All Traveling  Man, Mining  Man and TourlaU\nEUROPEAN PLAN\n*     '   t\nROOMS, |l.00 UP\nHI'MB\u2014T.     A.     Itobloy.    Trnll;     fl. Tllnrmlil,   Montreal: Aiir.  Alslinni,  Hpn-\nRmltli.   W.   Allen.   W.   Kld-r  linn  wife. \u2022\u00bb*>\u2022!   '*\u00bb\u2022   \u2022'-, '*?\"\u00ab\"\"'\u2022,   M, UM'\u201e,\"'V,f''!:\n_.                     \u201e     '                 ^     -    ,, \\nnrou\\cr; .1. S.  Di-Hi'lninuis,  Itoxmiui'l,\nVMoouvari   _,   l-mrnon,   n.   O.  wort- -p, (_,. fimuW. Mtlwtoni ArboaroohaM,\nmnn,   Cnlanry;   W.   O.   WVImtrr.   Sno- I City:   A.  <>.  Qldenabnw,   Vant vi-r;   A.\nltnni*: J. H. Hiimfiirnmnn. cnlitnry: \\v. K. Miiiiu-or,!, Vancouver; Mis. K. li. Dn-\nO. Rroueh.  Mumm; n.  Hannrit. City; via*:   ll.  II.  Tewaley,  K.   v.  Tewalcy,\nJ.   Flahi-r   nn.l   wifo,   Hull;   .1.   It.   Mc- Toronto; ,;. _,  Yoisnlo, Toronto.\nMMMMMBMBSIMff^M^fira-i^ff^f? flllll'I'llWMIHHWIIIlliMMWBWHBBMIMIBMBMWWWi\nAmarloan Plan, $3.00 and Ur- European Plan, $1.00 and Up\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nNelson's Leading Hotel\nTHE HOME OF THE COMMERCIAL MAN\nWell lighted sample rooms on\nground    ffloor.\nSpecial winter rates by week\nor month.\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS HOTEL and SANITARIUM\nArrow  Lakes,  British Columbia\nAmerican Tlan, $3.50 per day.\n$24 per week. For rates apply\ngtrulhcona   llutel   or   Halcyon.\nH. W. SHORE        :\nThe finest water for Rheumatism, Selailru. Gout. Urlnlc Conditions,   etc.\nProprietor\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nluropwn  and Amarloan   Plan\n\u25a0Mam Haat In Evary R..m\nA, LAPOINTE, Prapriatar\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616   VERNON    ST.    EA8T\nCamfortabla Rooma,  Hot and  Caid\nWatar.   Dining   Room   in\nConnection\nRataa $1  and  up.\nEJIT LESS MEAT\nIF\nTake a Glass of Salts to Flush\nKidneys if Bladder Bothers You\u2014Drink Lots of\nWater.\nlilting' moat regularly eventually\nproduces Uldnoy trouble In somo form\nor oihcr. says a well-known nuthor-\nIty, them uso the uric acid In moat\nexcites the kidneys, they become\noverworked: got .siuggiHh; clog up\nntul'* cii uso - all - sorts- of *-dlst ress, particularly backache nnd misery In the\nkidney reginn: rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, ueid -stomach, con-\nsllpatlon, torpid liver, sleeplessness,\nbladder nnd urinary Irrlttitlon.\nThe moment your back hurls or\nkidneys aren't acting right or if\nbladder botherH ynu, get nhnut four\nminces of ,I;id Salts frnm any good\nI>h;irm;i**y; tnko a tablespoonful In a\nglass of \\vrit< r bofore breakfast for\nii few days anil your kidneys will\nthen net fine. This I'linmus suits is\nmnde frnm tho field of gnipos nnd\nlemon juice, conrrtilned with lit hin,\nand hits been used fnr generations to\nflush I'lnKgeti kidneys and stimulate\nthem to normal activity; also to neutralise the acids lu tho urine so It\nno longer irrllates, thus ending hhid-\niii-r disorders.\nJad Salts cannot injure any one;\nmakes a delightful effervescent Ilthlu-\nwnter drink which millions of men\nau<l women take now and then to\nkeep the kidneys nml urinary organs\nClean, thus avoiding serious kidney\ndisease.\n\u25a0Klaaa aaM>aa..a..a.a >\u2022\u2022.\u25a0\u00bb\u2022\nf ACCIDENTS, 1\n!| WILL HAPPEN!!!\nit \u2014and fer the ufe speedy healing ',',\n!! of cuts, tcsldi snd burns, or clearing ',',\n;| th**  'im  of   cruptioni and   torci !!\n\u2022I Zam-Buk is indispensable.   Scienti- ;]\n\u2022\u2022 fically prepared from rich herbal \u2022\u2022\nm oils and essences Zam-Buk is en- it\n\u2022j dowed with extraordinary sooth- j,\nI; i.ir.  healing and disease-riispclling \\\\\nrowers     It saves doctors' bills I jj\nQUEKNH\u2014\u00bb. A. Cur-wen, rustlegar;\nW. Wells. Htrehtmiik; .1. Sutherland,\n(i. Wilson, Jiu-. Small. A. II. Uosniun,\nltouldi-r, B. Ci Mrs. fid. OrSham, Mrs.\nT. M. Hufty. Hlucun City; \\V. It. Coon-\nfare. Wsnetii; H. Turyosuk. Cranbrook;\n\\    McLeod,   Itoelt  Cn-. k.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nFirst   Class   Rooms   by   ths   Day,\nWeek   or   Month.\nEvary  Consideration  Shown te\nGuests.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sti., Nelson\nMADDBN\u2014-J. Ii. Campbgt Cltyi B.\nJobtison. H.i*-li:iw; L. HarKh. Slocan\nPark;   Mrs.   D.   W,   Willford,   Winlaw;\nMrs. Ed. U Vnrn.-y nml family, Nim-\nton; J. MyHlon, City; J. MoOrach, I-Vm-\nle; Thomas Candle, Vancouver\nTREMONT HOTEL\nr, NILSON, Prapriatar,\nBAKER   STREET\nFurni.h.d  Rooma  by   Day,  Waak\nar Month.\nTREMONT   \u2014   T.   Il.'iirlkli-n.   IU\nMnke; Khun small, Cnttciul.'.\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nMra.   Mallatta,   Propri.tr...\nA bam* far tha world at raaaanabla\nrataa.\nOpan   night   and   day.   Flrat-\n\u2022l.i. dining-room. Camfortabla\nrooms.\nIll V.rnon *t     Naar Poal Offlca\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nOwned end run  by Cunndlans. No\nalien labor employed.\nRoom and board, per month.\u2014$45\nE. KERR, Proprietor.\nStirling Hotel\n711 Vernon St. Two blocks and\na half east of thn pent office.\nNewly opened, i.iirhi and cheerful\nrooms with hot unci call) water,\nsteam heat Also S Hnd 1 room\nhousekeeping  np.-irtnH-nts\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\nCLUB HOTEL\nJ.  GRANT,   Prop.\nCorner Stanley and Silica Streets.\nItooms, SOc up,.\nSpecial rates by week nnd month.\nJHE STANDARD CAFE\nU0   Bakar   Straat.   Notion,   B.   C,\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30 Special   Lunch.,35<J\n5.-30   (o   8:00   p.   m\u201e   Supper.  35(<>\nPhona  lf'1\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nK*X)TKNAV-M Shoosborn, Ornnd\nForku; W. W. L*bby. Job BIoIk, J OS\nDun-mult. rrnnliriM'k; W. tlanson, Minim-\nJaw: N*. Hall. John Llverliolm. A.\nJuekHon, Crunbrool;; John J. IVn in-lkln.\nBrilliant.\nIP   VOU   WANT   RE8ULT3   TRY\nA     CLASSIFIED    AD.     IT    HELPS\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1170   Qrandvllla   Straat\nCoay,   bright   rooma.   Juat   tha\nplac.   for   your   vacation.    Rataa\nmodernto.    Wrlta    for    particular..\nMRS.   A.   PATTERSON\nLata of Royal Hotal, Qranvilla It.\nWindow\nEnvelopes\nAddress Themselves\nMad. ot blihgnd. whlta wovo\natoek and Wtth a window of\nclaar  traruiparent quality. t\nTHIY SAVE HOURS Of\nVALUABLE TIM!\nwhan mii-1Ii>\u00ab out lnrol*a* bum\nor l.ttara.\nmita (or aamplwi and qaoU-\ntfaa*B\nThe Daily News Job\nDepartment\nTha Ham. of Oood Prlntlno\nNELSON, m. O.\n\">Mrs.LiliauTaylor0\nTells How Cuticura\nHealed Her Baby\n\"Our baby  wss two weeks old\nwhen bis face become very red snd\nterribly itchy, end be\nwss fairly qasy nibbing  and   Krstchinf\nVif  till the skin brake and\n's bled.    He could not\ni (r*tVr^-***fi7 r BlttP\u00aban<*di<* nothing\nMVhiiTr.il but cry. His fice looked\nas though he ;i*l\"ht be disfigured\nfor life. 0\n*'I thought I would give Cuticura\nSoap and Ointment a trial. I found\ntbe free sample so good tbat I bought\nmore and two cakes of Cuticura Soap\nand a fifty cent bet of Cuticura Ointment healed him.\" (Signed) Mrs.\nLilian M. Taylor, Box 99, Braoe-\nbridge, Muskoka, Ont., D-ec.30, 'IS.\nCuticura Soap to cleanse snd purify, Cuticura Ointment to soften\nsnd soothe and Cuticura Talcum to\npowder and perfume are Ideal for\n_u:-y toilet purposes\nSo\u00bbp 2tc. Ointment 25 nnd 80c. Sold\nthtnuiilKin* thc Dominion. C a nad iin Depot;\n__m_m_ I iii.ii-J. St. Paul St., Monlrc-sL\nJ\/ajp- Culicur. 5\u00ab\u00abP akn-rM witlxaut muc\nA Displav Ad in the\nDAILY NEWS\nEnters Mcru tint.\nCatches Man_ E%es\nH* Perils sf Neglect\nDigestive ailments are frequently neglected.\nPeople say \" It's only a touch of indigestion-\nit will go away.\" What begins as simple\ndiscomfort is allowed to become a serious-\nchronic ailment Never neglect the treatment of digestive derangement To relieve\ndisorders of stomach, liver, kidneys and\nbowels, Beecham's Pills act promptly and\nusually overcome the difficulty.   Take\nBEECHAM'S,\nMLLS   \/\nSold everywhere in Canada.\nIn boxes, 25c, EOc\nLargest Sale of any Medicine tn the Worltf\nILYIHE\nIS ENTHUSIASTIC\nNational Liberal and Conservative Candidate and Senator Green Discuss Issues.\nDlni-cHordlng ley hlnsla. elector* of\nboth noxon pncktul the Nntlonnl Liberal and ConaervntU'o pnrty commltteo rooma Mat nlRbi. nt n political\nally thiit opened the cnmpnlftn In\ntills city. Dr. W. O. none, the pnrty\ncandidate for the Went Kootenay\nriding, nnd Sennter R. F. Groen,\nlate member, being lhe spenlters. Pren-\nIdent C. D. Blackwood, of lbe Nntlonnl Liberal nnd Conservative nnROeln-\nllon. wna In tlie ehnlr, nnd Mrs. W.\nriailnnd Fostor also spoke for a few\nmoments. The utmost enlhiislnnm\nrelKned, and the dolermlnntlon won\nevident to Bond the parly's sinndnrd-\nbenrer to Ottawa with n majority of\nrecord proportions,\n['resident Blnckwnod iirccd support-\nh of the government to take oft\nIheir cont* In onrnest. nnd not to\nrelax till thc last vote waa polled.\nThey had persftaded Dr. Hose, at great\nsacrifice to himself, to accept the\nmmiinatlon, nnd th.-y owed It to him\nto pile up his major.ly to hip proportions. Their aide laid all till' best\nif the argument, and none of tho\n\u25a0nnlcnllons of their opponents would\nhold wnter. It wan Just a case of\nmajority, but every supporter should\nwork ns hard us if the contcat were\nIn  extreme   doubt.\nCombine Confidence With Hard Work\nSenator Oreen, who received n hearty\nI'leome, mentioned unit he had heen\nop for election mnny times in Ihe\nKootenay for various. public offices,\nbeginning with 18H3, when he was\nelected tnnyor of Knslo. Tho only\ntime he wan dofeated wos when he\nwas candidate for a municlpul office,\nnnd that dofent wus Incurred through\nover-confidence. It wns all right to\nl.e confident so long as one accompanied his confidence with hard work,\nr.eforrlng to the recent tour of\nDr. Hose and himself throuah the\nSlocan. ho snld Bloeun City was going lo give Dr. Hose, tha coinlnk\nmember, a good mujnrlty. Silverton\nlilso wnn all referred to condllions In\nBandon and Knslo. predicting Dr.\nHose's return ns member with* a fine\nmnjorlly. Ho declared ho was proud\nto nsslst In the canvnss of Dr. Hose,\nwho, be sold, waa equipped by edu-\neallon. ability and experience to give\nlhe riding the representation to which\nit  was entitled.\nThc senator Bald he was going to\nlho Crow today, and would then return to the const, but If It was nl\nall possible he would endeavor to\nbe buck In Nelaon for the meeting\nnext week which Is lo bo addressed\nby Hon. H. Hi Stevens, minister of\nimde and commerce.\nSenator Green suld he would unhesitatingly challenge lhe slntoment\nof nny num who would say thut the\ngovernment had not done moro for\nthc returned men than nny other\ngovernment that wus In the wnr.\nSevan Yeara Work on Pension,\nFor seven years ho had served on\ntho pensions. committee of tho bouse,\nanil for the Inst \"two years th's committee dealt with all soldiers matters, nnd he knew beyond question\nof whnt he wus speaking. The pen-\nnlons woro tho product of this House\ncommittee, and its report was invariably adopted by the government nnd\nenacted In its entirely. No other\ncountry that wna In the wnr had,\nsuch a liberal pension on scale, or\nlook In such u wide range. Pensions\ntmid to Inst Mnrch represenled |Bl.-\n111)0,000, and there were ut tbat dute\n70,711 pensions In force, and 150,7f>S\npersons  were  benefitted  by them.\n\"I snv to you honestly nnd frankly, tnut In the wny of pensions nl\nleast, nothing has been left undone\nlhat should huve lieen done for thc\nreturned man und thc dependent,\"\ndeclared  the speaker.\ntliulultles, which were nol Intended as iMiymonts for patriotism, but\nwere given to enable Cunndn'a soldiers io get stnrtod In iheir homos\nagain, amounted to the sniggering\ntotal of $161,000,000. This Included\ngrnnls to supplement the grnlultles of\nlmperlul und Allied soldiers who were\nresidents oi Canada nt thc outbreak\nof the wnr.\nThe munv phrases of reestablish\nment. Including thc year's medical at\nlontlon, vocational training, vocation\nal pav nnd allowances, nnd lustltu-\ntlonnl treatment, coat up to .Mnrch.\n(lui.ooo.mo.\nNiarly Half Billion for Retumad Man\nLand seitleincnt, agulnst which\nmuch unfair nnd uninformed criticism\nwns directed, waa Inatltuted so that\nthe returned man who wished to go\non the lund might have u loun tn\npiirihuso a farm and a loan to slock\nII. Applications numbered 59,000, und\n\u25a0J.000 men qualified, of whom 19.000\nreceived loans. Theso men collective;\nly cultivated 079,(100 acres tho- 4UM\nyear, breaking 194,000 aires, and Ihd\ngrout mnjor.ty of them were mnklna\ngood. Including coata of ndmlnlslru\ntion. the government hnd expended\n182.600.000 on (hln account up It*\nMnrch. .     . ,    _,\nSoldiers Insurance was In force to\nthe   amount   Of   17,011,000,   and   was\nFIFTEEN BOILS\nON NECK\nAT ONE TIME\nAny one who' has suffered from\nbolls can nympaOilw with poor old\nJob.\nThoro wns no Burdock Blood Bittors\nin thoso dnys. so Job bod to suffer\nIn sllonce. Nowadays no ono noed\nendure  tbo   misery   of  bolls.\nBolls nro simply evidences of thc\nbad blood within coming to thc surface and Just when you got rid of one\nanother seems ready ta take Its\nplace and prolong your misery.\nAll tho poulticing and Innclng you\nmny do will not stop more coming.\nWhat you havo to do Is to take\nBURDOCK   BLOOD  BITTERS\nand the blood will bo cleansed of all\nIts Impurities, and then every boil\nwill disappear.\nMn Koy McBwnln, High Bank,\nP. te. t, wrll cm \"J was troubled\nwltb bolls for somo tlmo nnd had as\nmany as fifteen oh my neck at dnce\nAfter taking ono <botllo of Burdock\nBlood Bittors they commenosd to\nget bettor, and after I had \"taken\ntwo bottles I was relieved of them\nand felt much bet ler. 1 think B. B\nB, Is a i grand blood medicine, and\ncan retomtnorid It highly.\"\nFor ths past 4K years B. B. B,\nhas been manufactured only by Ths\nT. MUburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.\nfurnjefcod at coit, r\/Ithout examination.\nIn rcpnmtlng tbo families, of sold\nlers,   12,800,000  hnd  boen   spent.\nTho. governmont had also redeemed    $14,800,000    of   Sterling    funds\nbrought home by the soldiors, losing\ntho exchango.\nUp to March the government's various expenditures on the returned\nsoldiers and dependents, siheo demobilization,   amounted   to   $442,700,000.\nThc promise of tho government to\ngivo tho returned men preference\nin the civil servico had been fully\nenrried out, 37,000 having boen placed in either tho pcrmnnent or tom-\npnrnry categories. The temporary\nwere to bo made permunont as fast\nn_  qualified.   -\nSenator Groen asked whether the\nreturned man wns safer in tho hands\nof the government tbat had done theso\ntilings, or ln the hands of Mnckenxlo\nKhu;. who hnd fought tb\u00ab battles ot\ntho 'Rockefeller 'Institute during tho\ngreater part of \u201eibo wur nt a big re-\nmunerntlon and who only loft thnt\nlucrative work for tho purpose of\nstumping Cunnda ugainst conscription? The returned mun'n third nl-\nternntivc wns Mr. Crerar, who was\nhead of n cIosh movement. *\nIf ho came back noxt week, the\nsenator said be would Ilko tn discuss\ntbo questions Involved in the relations\nof lumber, fruit, and the mctulllfcr-\nou\u00bb products of the Kootonay, to the\ntariff, and would give his views of\nwhat be thought this district was en\ntitled to expect. Recognition In this\nrespect, however, could only Ik\u00bb expected from a protectionist government, and not from Mr. King, who\nwus for tho lowering of the tariff, or\nfrom Mr. Crernr, who wus for doing\nnwny with ll altogether. (Applnusc).\nRosa  Hsi Wsrm  Reception\nDr, Rose, whoso rising wns tho\nsignal for prolongcr applause, said n\ncundldnto who hnd to get around\nnmong 13,000 voters ncatterod over\n1,000 square mlle-a hnd to sprend himself out pretty thin at limes, ,nnd It\nwas obvious he would hnve to largely\ndepend on his friends, so far ns some\npnrts of the riding were concerned.\nHis tour through the Slocan, however,\nhnd shown thnt ho had the people\nwith him, and In this connection ho\nacknowledged his deep debt to Senator Oreen.\nConditions wero better in Canndn,\nBr. Hose declnred, than In any other\ncountry thnt hnd been In the wnr, but\nthere wns hIIII unrest, and the Inevitable tendency to blame the government for all tbe Ills that flesh was\nheir  to,\nHe was not ashamed to support\nRt. Hon. Arthur Meighen and his\ngovernment under any and ull clr-\nlUmttUlOMi mtlH he felt tbat government was entitled to the support of\nevery good Canadinn If only for four\nof tho outstanding fads of Its administration.\nOutstanding   Accomplishments.\nI.,4lt had enncleil the civil Service\naet, which abolished pnironnge so far\nas tho civil service was n'oncorned.\nand gur%-anleed lo every civil servant\nn permanent position so long as he\ndid his work faithfully,\nIt   had   extended   the   franchise\nIn women.\n3. It hnd mnde n wonderful record\nIn prosecuting Us wnr servlees, whieh\nIt bud carried on to successful com-'\nlotion even though having to Invoke\nconscription  to do it.\n4. It hnd labored enenrnestly to\nreestablish the returned mnn, and\nwilh n  notable ile\u00abree of success.\n)r. Rose declared the great Issue\nnf tho election eould not he camouflaged, lt was the tnrlff Issue,\nhough the Liberals tried to any It wns\nthe railway Issue. If there wns n\nrailway Issue, It wns due to the assistance granted to the Canadlun\nNorthern nnd the Ornnd Trunk Bn-\nIflc by Libernl governments. If the.\ngovernment hnd permitted two grout\nrailways to go under, probably carrying n grent bunk with them, the\ncountry would hnve been ruined.\nOrent ns the burden of currying theso\nrailways was. It must be shouldered,\nnnd In lime the development of the\nountrv would bring them tf* th- point\nof at   least  paying their way.\nShall  Canada Throw  Down  Bars.\nThe challenge of the Liberal party\nnnd of ihe Karmorn' pnrty to the\nprinciple of protection of Cunndlnn\nmnrketr. and Canadian workmen was\ntbe real Issue of the campaign, the\nenndliliiio ufflrmed. and nothing eould\ndisguise that as the issue. Should\nCanada maintain a rensonahlc nnd\nmoderate tariff, sueh as ll had nt\npresent, nr should It throw down the\nburs to foreign goods, to close down\nCanadian factories and throw Cunndlnn workmen out of employment?\nPremier Meighen saw thnt Cnnnda\neould never be a great country unless It protected nil home Industries\u2014\nmining, fishing. Itimheilng, and manufacturing. The United States had\nbuilt up Its stupendous machine by\nmeuns of protection. Countries that\nhad never adhered bofore lo the principle of protection were adopting It\nnow. even Orcnt Britain.\nLow tnrlff advocates forgot that\nCanadn hnd a wnr debt of $2,000,000.-\n000 to be paid, Dr. Hose pointed out.\nIf the tariff were wiped out in whole\nor m part, there would be nothing\nfnr it but direct taxation.\n\u2022 il* \u25a0*\u00bb!\u2022 i l;ii\"l Premier Meighen hod\nmnde nn enviable record In his short\ntenure of tho highest offlco tn the\ngift of thc Cnnndlan people, nnd that\nthe young nnd gifted lender wus destined to add new lustre to thut high\noffice, and to International statesmanship.\nRounds of npplnusn followed the\nconclusion  of  Dr.   Hose's  address.\nMrs. Foster WM culled upon nnd\npaid tributes to the cnndldnte, nnd to\nPremier Melghon. Tho latter, she\npredicted, after tho return of his gov\nernment, would mnke ns brllllunt a\nrecord us thai he bad already written\nNo one could possibly have more\nnympnthy for the returned men than\nPremier Meighen. Sho also paid n\n\u25a0.-.iiiu   tribute   to  Senator  Oreen.\nAfter cheers for the candidate, the\nrally was closed with the national\nanthem.\nLadies' Coats\nSeveral late models just in from\na leading eastern manufacturer in\nBotivias, Duvetyns and Velours. Col-\nbrs Reindeer, Taupe and Brown.\nFur collars nnd cuffs. Special today, *f65.00.\nTen Only Coats\nCheviot and Freize, smart styles.-\nThese are very special buying.\nClearing at fSO.OO\nBlankets\nSix pairs White Wool Blankets, medium weight.    Price $8.00\nThe Nelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES'   WEAR  SPECIALISTS\nminis were visited almost simultaneously liy police' working In pairs,\nln each case n blank wns drawn at thc\nsecond plnce vi\u00bbliod.\nAt 8:40 o'clock lho milling police\nlen lbe cily hall. Chief T. H. Long\nand Constubte II. K.ng procccde*! Im-\nm-dinlely to the Tremont hotel und\nthence to tho QUOOM. .Sergeant Alex\nStewart and n member of the Dominion polios onteiyil Mrs. .Montellone's\nstore, and laler the Klondyke hotel.\nChief I.. Ciimmur. and Patrolman D.\nT. Iiesltrlsay entered tbe pool room\nof Tony (Juliana and later proceeded\nto tbe Hex cigar store.\nSTAPLES MEETS\nLiberals Hold Rally in the\nMaglio Block; Appoint\nSub Committees.\nH. H. Staples, of Creston. tbe new\ncnndldnte nf the Llbernls of West .\nKontenny, warf Introduced to the |\nsupporters of thai party ln Nelnon at\na rally lu the commit lee rooms in\nihe Mugllo hloek last night. A. N.\nWinlaw. vlce-preHldetit nf the West\nKootenay Liberal nssocluiion. presld-\n\u25a0si.\nMr. Staples ru'.d lbe people of Creston had been much disappointed ut tbo\nposslhil-ty of there being no Liberal\ncnndldnte In the field, recognising\nthut the dologiitOH lhat attended tho\nconvenllon tlmt brought out L. W.\nHumphrey wore' not representative\nfurmorx, unit that Mr. Humphroy waa\nnot a true representative -of tho\nfarming interests. It was a great relief to them whon a now convention\nwus ciilli-il; and ho was sent ovor to\nImiist t lui t i\\ Llboral cundldnto bo\nmnn nnted. After his nomination ho\nreturned to Creston intending to devote ubout four dnys to clonnlng up\nbin buxlness before starting In on\nhin campaign. Hut thero was a con-\nmnni succession of visitors, to pledge\nsupport, nnd finding he could not\ntransact business, he closed up bis\nif fhe, and started In on tho work.\nOwing to the principles at stoke,\nami their lmportnnce to British Columbin, he sold the people recognised\ntin- Importnneo of having a member\nwho would be ln sympathy with the\ngovernment, tl being certain that M;u*\nkenxte King would bo tho next premier.\nT. A. Hobley, of Trull, campaign\nmnnnger, mnde the principal speech,\ntalking upon orgunlxutlon, nnd upon\nDom.nion Issues, ln particular he\ncontended ihnt the grcut Issue was\nnot Ibe tnrlff. but tho railway question.\nKenneth Campbell and J. R. Hunter both spako very briefly. They\neluimed thttl ihe Libernl party had\ndealt fnlny w.ln u'l classes, and that\nmore labor h glsjitloil hud toon put\nthrough by Uie L.Ihmu's thnn by any\nolher party. The I.i'im* legislation\nenucted by the Consei\u25a0vntivos. Ihese\nnpeukers eluimed, was due to the\nLiberals having prejnred the way, nnd\nTD\nSKATING!   SKATING!\nBest makes in Hockey\nShoes, among them Mc\nPherson's Lightning Hitch,\nat best bargain prices for\nmen, women, boys and\ngirls.\nGet your Shoes now\nwhile theylast,      *   *   \"f\nC. Romano\nRubbers   for   everyone    in    tha\nfamily.\nhaving mado It good politics for nn:\nparty  to  do   tt.\nSub-commltteen wero nppolnted t<\nlook nfter various phases of thl\ncampaign. \u00bb\nNOMINATIONS WILL\nBE RECORDED TODAU\nFour contributions to tho great pro\ngram of the Nelson Opora troupe to\nmorrow night wilt bo by tho Interna\ntlonnl Vour. These will bo \"Annli\nLaurie,\" \"Tho Cornfield Medley,'\n\"Swnnee River\" and \"Boys of the Oh\nBrlgnde.\"\nIF STOMACH IS BAD\nLET DIAPEPSIN END\nGAS, INDlGESTIOf\n\"Pope's Dlapepsln\" has proven tt\nself tho surest relief for Indlgcstlot\nOases, Flatulence, Heartburn, Sour\nness, Fermentation or Stomach Dis\ntress caused by acidity. A few tab\nlets give almost lmmedlute stomaci\nrelief and shortly tbe itomaah ls cor\nrocted ao you cnn onl fnvorlte food\nwithout fear. Largo case costs ont\nfew cents nt drug store. Million\nhelped   nnnnMlv,\nL\nProprietors of Establishments\nRaided by Police on Saturday Get Hearing Today.\nNels Nelson, proprietor of tho Tremont hotel; Tony Qallano, T>ool room\nproprietor, nnd .Mrs. D. Montsllone,\nstorekeeper snd pool room owner, nro\ndue to appear at 10 o'olock this morning In the city police court to answer\nto charges In connection with tho raid\nfor liquor carried out under the city\npolice department on Saturday night.\nLiquor, apparently purchased through\nthe government vendor, was found on\ntho premises of each psraon charged.\nThree other establishments visited by\ntho polios In tho raid did not reveal\nanv liquor.\nThe raid wns carried out wtth speed\nand remarkable fine organisation and\nwas so timed that   threo   establish-\nDon! Neglect\ntbatCough !\nPersistent coughs lead to chronic\nbronchitis, \u00bbsthma and permanent chest\nweakness. Swallowing druggy mixtures inlo the stomach is useless, in\nbronchial trouble. It needs Peps the\nbreatheable remedy which goes direct\nto the root of your cough.\nAs Peps tablets dissolve in ihe mouth,\nthiy give off powerful medicinal fumes\nwhich soothe and heal the inflamed\nbreathing tubes, and destroy a'l disease\ngerms, reps speedily end chest soreness, clear the, bronchials of phlegm and\nmucus, stop the whcci-.iricss and cough-\ning, and make breathing easy.    -\nR.membtr, ii it Iti better to prevent plrutiiy\npnciraonii .nd othtr Ivjih dhtuci \u00bb;i,ng (rom net*.\nleaei coojht ind coldt, thin lo cure ihem. There-\ntor. tike Pip* n ih\u00ab Urn ijgn ol \u2022 cough cold or thill.\n50c. box ill driwi'iu and Horn, or pon-p.id from\nTht Pept Co.. Dupont St.. Toronto.\nSAMPLE OF m nm\nIt Van cut ou, this fata-\n\u2022tree\/,*,, .nil .end II wilh It.\n.taint,, Iht Vrh. Co.. Tnexmie,\nle-tll ,l,uliy eentl ytm a trial\nUintah. Fw tor. theeteel.\nItityngtli., cough., ,,'lett.\nchills, brancliitta. ttilhaia\nami other lh,\u201e\u201et and cheat\ntrouble., I*rpa ter. eomtttam.\ndad *>\u201e Ur. Vol don Stables\netna olher medical mutt.\nTake PEPS\nL\n . Lowe Marries Miss\n. Campbell at Edmonton. _\nEDMONTON. Nov. ll>.\u2014A very\ninning wodillng, mid offo of wide\n'-\u2022rtiHt. was solemntised In -Robertson\n\"Hbyterian ' church, Edmonton, on\n-dncsday,. Novomber 16th, at 12\ntook noon, when Margery Mtary.\niKhtc*.'   of  tho   lute   Mr.   aud   Mrs.\nhlbajd Campbell, of Colborne, Ont,\ntame the brldo of Harold Anderson\nWe, of Nelson, British Columbia.\n\\ of Mrs. Frederick Ooorgo Lowe of\nidon, England.\nfhe   ceromony   was   performed   by\nKev.  Honry Dickie.    Tlm brldo.\n0 was given away In marrlugo by\nf brother-in-law, Goorgo B. Hen-\nrod, entered tho church to the\n\u25a0 tins of tbo wedding mnrch played\nfr-Herbort Wild, Sho was lovely In\nbecoming tailored silk suit of navy\nwdcloth with collar and cuffs of\n,-t grey squirrel fur.    Hor, hat wos\nsmall model of panne velvet trim-\na with grey ostrich of a glistening\nJer .tone.     Her   corsnfce   bouquet\nid of violets and orchids.\nIrs.   t Italia nl Bennett  attended  tli-*\nlo as matron of honor,   she wore\n31-nart costume of grey gabardine\nmind with robin's.egg bluo and\neffeottvely  embroidered  In  wool\ni tho same color, nnd carried a bou-\nt of ophella roses.\n'he   bridegroom   was  supported   by\non Phelps of Edmonton.\nmoro were present at tho wedding\n! relatives i.i'  llu-  In Mr,   Miss Caoip\n, Miss Maud Campbell, Mr. and\nI. ueorgo B. Hcnwnod, -Mi..*; Jean\nwood nnd many friends. \/\n\u2022he ehurch  was  beautifully  doeor\n1 for tho occasion with palms,\nis and autumn flowers, which,\niliiiietl In making n fitting burtc-*\nund for the ceromony. after\n[ch Mr. and Mrs. Tjowe left Iinme-\nfely for tho Pacific coast, where\ny will spend a few weoks. before\nUlS up the.lr residence at Nelson\n\u25a0lull  Columbia.\n-JtoSUDE IN SICILY\nOffeRWHELMS TOWN\n-ONDON*, Nov. 21.\u2014A landslide\nsed by heavy rains has overtimed the Sicilian town of Kai ion\nruling to a Romo dlsputuh lo the\niti'iii News agency, sixty persons\nreported dead.\n\/\/\/\/\ni\nLegal Notices\nCirtUlut,   of\nACT\nImproTiKfal\nNOTICE\nJCIXROCK, RENO. LATHAM, CUR\nTf and DANDY Mineral Claims alt-\n) In the Nolson Mining Division of\nAt Kootenay District\n\u25a0 hood of rawn Creek, about twelve\n.n  from  Snlmo.\nAKB NOTICE that I, CLARENCE\nPOOL, acting aa agent for Reno\n1 Mints, Ltd. Free Miner's Cortlfi-\nh No. 1H1SC, intend, alxty days\nM the (Into hereof, to apply to the\nlng   Recorder   for  a   Certificate   of\nrposo\n\u20ac th*\ning a  Crown Grant  of ths  above\nEw. 4\n, a   further   laU   notlo*   that   eo-\n. \u25a0*, under coctlbn ,17, must tw com-\n1 iced   bofore   the   issuance   of   iuo>>\ni Ufleate   of  Improvements.\nI atod thla 10th day of October, A. D\nI [  '\"\u00ab\u00bb\n\u25a0   THE BUFKXMX OOVXT OF B*IT-\nj|   ISH   COLUMBIA\nI hpSBN\nB NELSON AND POUT SHE1TARD\nRAILWAY COMPANY,\nPLAFNTIFY.\nFRANCES ETHEL BAKER,\nDEFENDANT.\nEFORE   THE   HONOURABLE\nI  \"R,     JUSTICE    MncDONALD\n1   CHAMBERS:\nointi.y, thu 9-Hh day of October, A.\n1921.\nPON the application of the above\ned Plaintiff mid upon hearing rend\naffidavit of Francis Drewo Prsti\nrn tbe 20th day of Ootober, A. D.,\n, nnd filed, uud the exhibits there-\nefcrred to, and upon hearing Mr.\nQ. Pratt of counsel   for tho Plain-\n* IS ui;iu;i;i:ii that service -upon\nDefendant of the Writ of Siuiinious\nhis action by iiuMr lihij. nu.. order\nther with tbo notico licrcou cn-\n'od, once a weok fur four wcokf\n,lio \"Nelson Dally News\" u news-\nar published at Nelson, B. C, be\naed good mid sufficient service of\n1 said Writ of Summons,\nND IT IS FURTHER OKpEKED\n! the said Defendant do enter an\nfranco to the said Writ of Hum-\n'a within 21 days nfter lust publlcu*\n[ herein.\nND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED\n: the coHts of tbls application be\n\u00ab  In  tho etiusc.        *\n'\u25a0uy   A.    Macdonald,   J\"\n.   F.   M.\"\nID.R.\nitered:\nov.   \u2014.   11131\n-der  Book,  Vol.   101,   foi.   250\nA.   L.   R.\nNOTICE\nto rialotiff claim against the dean t.\n-That nn account bo tuken . of\nt is due thc Plaintiff for prlnftl-\nluterest and costs under three oor-\nngrtements for sale made between\n1'Ialntlff ns Vendor and the Dcfeii-1-\nas Purchased, particulars or which\nns .follows:\u2014\n.) Agreement for sale Juno 10th.\n, of thi- following property: That\ndn parcol of lund situate, and lie-\nIn Kooteunv  Hhn-i.-l   In  iho Prov-\nOf British Columbin and tnoie\nleulnrly designated mid deiierllieil ns\n\u25a0ws. to wit: all or Block Thirty\ni (32) la the Townslte i.f Ymir.\nthown on a map or pluti depoHlted\nIm  Land   Registry   Offlc*  \u00abl   Nnl-\nHrltlHh Columbia, and ttlero num-\nd   010:\n) Agreement for sale. iliit\u00abd Ahg-\n5, _i\\9U. of the tollowliiK pro|K-rty:\ncertain parcel of land eitunto am'\n.r In Kootenay Dlstrtat In tlm Prov-\n<>f British Columbia* and purtlt-u-\n1 MSlgnatml and described Ss foi-\n, to wit:'  all of Wock Thirty Blx\nIn the Townslte of Ymir. uceord-\nlo o map or plan -do posit eil .In\nLand Registry Offlco at Nelson,\nnb Columbia, and  there numbered\nCOUMCiL CALLS\n\/*\u25a0_*&$.**.\n-YOUR  CHRISTMAS  TURKEY   MAY   BE   HERE .\nScone-on a turkey farm, where bird,'are belnffiiresarcrt lur the slad neuron,    Wi\nGobbler's\"'Appetite iyould-lio half ho good'If W,kno^;nnd'cotfld urideretniid the fate\ntf\nIS LfliEILL\nCrew.of Thirty Is Employed\nand High Grade Ore Is\nSloped From Both Veins.\nSloping actively on 4both veins and\ncentering development largoly on tho\nnewer or the (wo. tbo Bouun properly\nit Now Douver, owned and operated\nity ih.? Itosebcry-Burprlse Mining company, Is now lookliiH particularly well,\niccordliif to Information froni N'ew\nDenver. About 30 men are employed\n^n the property, all singlc-Jncke'rs and\nmiu-lu'.a. Tho Bosun Is an old mine,\nas nge goes In tbo Hlocan, and Its oro\nIs wild to average r><) pcr cent higher\ngrade tjiun any other ln the two Hlocan mining divisions.\nThe original vein Imd a famous\nstope on thc fourth level that showed\ncontinuous lend ore from two inches\nto a foot In width for u distance of\nZOO foot. The principal source of tba\npresent production Is the ore body beneath this level and dlreotly underneath tho eld stope. Thin Ib being\nmined bj- moans of drifts and raises\nTrom the fifth level.\nAbout u year ago a socond vein was\ndiscovered about 20 feot within tho\nhanging wall and considerable work\nhas I ii done un this tbo pant year.\nSome very flue bunches of ore hnve\nbeen mined from Ihls vein, but nothing very targe or continuous bas so fnr\n.born found. Tbls vein ts inu<-h\nstronger, more pcrsiftcut, and morc\nopen than the old or footwall vein.\nOno stope opened on il above the fifth\n'ovel Hhowed a perfect  hanging watl.\niih a dip of ubout CO degrees nnd\nun average width or vein of eight feet.\nThus this vein dues nol luck room for\nmineral deposition.\nBoth the lend ore and the sine ore\nIs very high grade, the silver running\nup to 180 odnces In the former and to\n100 ounces in the lutter. Thc veins\nbeing von- wide and soft and lhe mineral mofe or less In one or two\nstrtmks, (leucriil Superintendent .1. P.\n,M:m-i\".i\u25a0 di. n finds thnt greater efficiency Is obtained by handwork than\nfrom machines. In tills manner the\nore und wflsto nSo broken down In\nfairly coarse size, enabling tho sorting\nout of most of the waste, and the retention uf It In the Mopes as 4-llllng.\nTho mineral, wilh such fine waste as\ncan uot be readily separated, is delivered to tho lake bin for idilpim-nt lo\ntho Trail gmoltsr us ore.\nDevelopment at present is being\nlargely centered on the new vein,\nwhero It Is being carried on In thrro\nhoadltjgy. This development bt meeting ut present will,  falr.sudcoss.\nTE\nREttSTil\nParty of Twenty Bring* lt in\nIn One Day; Six Miles Up\nBear Creek\nmimotlmes, wonder\n1\u00bb In latere for\ntlilit\nl!\nIt  \".Mill Itn.\nHE TO Til\nSenator Will Speak at Kimberley; Doctor to Address\n. Rallies.\nInformation that thc body of (he\nInto Sherrlll W. Ingruhnm. -the young\nTrail hMiii* im.hi wifo wan found dead\nIn the bills, reached Trail lust nlghl.\nwas received In a telephone message\nfrom Chief of Police Hen Dojftei,\nThe party that won! Into (he twill\nSaturday and succeeded In locating\ntho body Sunday afternoon numbered\nsix. A second party of six. guided by\nono of tho original six. loft Trailt yvn-\ntcrday mornnig to hrlp bring In the\nbody. Another parly of eight followed later to cstubllsb a camp half\nway out. where last night could huve\nbeen spent.\nTho bearers, however, decided they\ncould ooinplete the tusk In ono day,  \u00b0ther \u00abl>\u00abikers\nund tho whole 2. came ln together.\n.Members of the search party were\nof the opinion thut young Ingraham\nwas accidentally shot by bis own rifle.\nwhich hti may have dropped or\nthrown ln front of him. us ho emerged\nInto u little clear. The going was\nvery difficult unit be must have penetrated much of the i.ii,m by crawling.\nTho body wim \u00bb; u point five or six\nm]les up Bear crook.\nIir. John Mny, the coroner, hnd not\nannounced his Intentions regarding\nthe Inquest when the chief's message\nwus received.\nIY GREENFIELD'S\nSHOES WERE DEAR\nFormer Premier of Alberta\nFails to Smile at Joke on\nHimself.\nSenator Ft. P. Oreen leaves by the\nCrow boat this morning nnd will\nspeak tonight at Kimberley witli Dr.\nSaul Ronnoll, National Liberal and\nConservative cumlldalo tn the Kast\nKootenay. He will return lotndmrtv\nnight, pnsslng through for the cout.\nDr. AV. O. nose. National Uberal\nnnd Conservative cnndldnte for West\nKootenay, will proceed to Trail tomorrow, where a rally will be held in\ntho party committee rooms tomorrow\nnight. Ho will go lo ItusHluud for a\nrally Thursday.\nPublic meeting* will be held at\nTrail and Itossland Inter, which Dr.\nHuso  will  address,   In   company   wilh\nANOTHER CASE FOR THE\nJUDGMENT OF SOLOMON\nAgreement for sale, dated Aus\n, 1\u00bbU, of tlio folowlng proportr\ncertain parcel of land situate tmt\n. In Kootenay District In _.\nQnce of HrltlHh Columbia and per-\n\\_v designated uud described lis\nsT to WU: That part Of the\neist  \u2022outiAer   of   the   north-west\ntbo   no nth--west.^ quArter\n-east   quarter   (8.   W.   U\nH)   of  Section   Seven   (7)\nS* it\n,   of  tbe\n), Tows\nSeventeen  07) 1-ot Twelve Hun\nand forty, Twojl\n___) oroup Onrf\nof  the  Townsite  of\nwest or tbo rlKbt or wiiv or\n. ii   nnd   Fort   Sheppard   Rall-\nmtld   right of way  so for  aa   It\nirns tho herein dcKcrltrod  pro ml pes\nTwo   Hundred   (200)   feet   wide\n\u2022xtending Ono Hundred  (100)  feot\nich Hide of thi) centre Una of the\nThat In'defuutt of payment of the\nva found to lie due, tbe cslato and\nit ef the Defsridctit In the said\nrty'bo foreclosed mul debarred.\nFor posMSSton of the nald Isndii.\n-.   For a Ms Pendens\n. Po\u00bbti irf tWMttm. ,    <\u00ab-\u00bb<\u00bb\nHeavy Snowfall in Washing-\nington and Oregon; Floods\nand Delayed Trains.\nYAXCOHVfiH. Nov. 21.\u2014Wintry\nWeather lo sweeping llu? Pacific coast\nmutnluml, resulting In dohtyed liaiim\nand mild floods In widely Reparoled\ndistricts. - In (his province nothing\nworse thun delayed strceL cap* hna re-\nsuited so far. but from Washimtt\nand Oregon come reports ot crippled\ntrain service.nnd flooded-^(ro^ts. ,jAt\nWftll-i Walla '10 Inches, and at Ynl*t-\nImti IK inches ut snow ovor (ho weekend \u2022 \u25a0iVlltute a record. At Bulem,\nOre., |he Wlilmncltq river ^h In flood,\na mm 'ihi-r of railway hrldBes having\nboon  washed out nild  low lying sot-\nH-- ni.\u25a0   f'liiuit: .I.   Al Molulla. Ore., :i\ndnm nt the sourco of the town water\nsupply has been wushed away and Iho\nstreets in*'* flooded. The duinago there\nalreAdy --huM -reached $-10,400. v There\nIs n benvy rainfall In the Willamette\nyalley und'lhe floojlamiy have become\nserious. In the citu-s of Seattle and\nCortland no -damage Is reported -o'x-\neept to wires broken ttndnr lhe weight\nof snow and sleet. Trains ure delayed. At Seattle tho I'uclflc Northwest Fruit exposition opened today\nbehind closed doors.\n. I'll nil HwCC|M slui Mini.\nSHERIDAN, Ore., Nov. II.\u2014Mt'\nlorn mon-: in llie business dlSlHot\nhero were vacntod today when -flood\nwtners from tho Tamhlll river limn\ndated Alain street. Severnl stores\nwero washed away. Two brjdgos on\nthe -mnln highway between hero und\nWitiniiiln-i. Ore., were washed out and\nthe railroad .bridge was so badly damaged that traffic was Huspondod^ A\nlorgc purt of the town pf Wilfathptu\nwas fldOded. if\nWatch  closely tbo driver ahead if\nyou hilnnn'toffljjsijhflt  *\nKDMONTON, Nov. 21.\u2014They are\ntelling a good one In Kdmonton these\ndays, und ll never fulls tu provoke a\nMU lie.\n'I*u(c lasl week a brunscd ulranget*,\nwith u very prominent jaw, walked\nInto one of tho leading shuo stores on\nJasper avenue and remarked that he\nwuntcd a pair of winter shoes. Plenty of shoes wero forthcoming, uud It\nhappened that the proprietor uf tho\nstore himself was wulllng on the customer. At last ono pulr seemed tu Oil\nthe bill.\n\"How much nre these sbocM?\" usked\nthe prospective buyer.\n\"They're $\u00bb, and cheap at the\nprice,\" said the shocmun.\n\"Nine dulliirs.\" snld llm customer,\n\"\\Vh>. li-l me tell you, 1 sent three\nhides into the hide buyers here the\nother duy. und after paying express\nnnd commissions I got nbout Og cents\nuk my end of it.\",\n\"Well,\" Kiild the sbocman, \"wo have\na l'*urniei*H' government now. During\nthe elections they said they Would\ni-lunge all that. They have been In\npower now fur some months, and If\nthey haven't changed lt you had better sic them. I know that I cun't afford ti> soil the shoes at a luwcr price\nthun that, nnywuy.\"\nThe customer accepted the answer\nwithout u smile, und ufter suylitg he\nwuulil tula- the shoes, nml paying for\nthorn, went lo huvo the store.\n\"Can yuu scud thorn?\" he nsked.\n\"Certainly.'' snld tho shocmun.\n\"What name and uddress, ptease?\"\n\"Premier Greenfield, * at the Mac*\ndnuahl hotel,\" wild the customer, und\nwalked out, still without a smile. And\nthe \u25a0 :i*.( iii*iii ls Idling n. us mn- on\ntbo premier.\nENGINEER MEETS WITH\nPAINFUL ACCIDENT\nT .A. Truvos, engineer of'the Nelson\nDicwing compuny, met wilh u painful\naccident on Snturdny ufternoon about\n4:30, He was admitted to Kootenay\nTake Qoneral hospital on Sunday suffering from sovcro Injuries to his\nright foot und unkTc, also some Internal Injury, and Is nnder the cnn- of\nDrs, Hordon anQ MeKi-n\/ii**.\nMr. Traves Wua up u luddcrlkttetiding to n holler when the ladder slipped\nand he foil heavily to the floor.\nFriends Immediately took him to\nDr. Borden's office, where X-rnys ro>\nvealod extenslvo Injuries, ulthough no\nbones nro broken.\nHAMILTON. Ont., Nov. 21.\u2014Two\nmothers ore claiming u two-yeor-old\nbnhy girl, whu bi lying 111 In the children's ward of the cily hospital. Thc\nchild's birth wus registered under ihe\nname of K\\elyn Osbnrne. bin Mr*\nHnrning of tbls eily claims Ibe child.\nBin' had the custody of the child for\nsevernl mouths, bul previous,tu that\nthe child was in tin cure u' the bus-\nbund . of Mrs. Ohbi-rne. thc other\nclaimant. Mie. (i.-burnc says that she\nVepti ra led f cum her h usba nd nearly\ntwo yenrs ugo mid the' child, (hen a\nmonth old. wus Uikun by thc fat lui*.\nNow Mix. Osborne wants the child\nund a cult Ih threatened.\nNERVOUS BREAKDOWN\nCOULDN'T SLEEP NIGHTS\nTo those on tho virgo of n nervous\nbreakdown    the    following   symptoms\nncrvbus head\ndepression, fitful,\n\u25a0..ml unrefi'cshlng\n\u2022\u25a0I wltb frightful\ni crowded places,\ne, horror of uu-\npreseni     theiuselv\nai'hu**-*-.  a   f.cling  uf\ndislii**l*..l.    rostlcss\nsleep,    ofteh    h- nl-l\ndreams, avohluni e i\ndreud  of  Ih-Iiir  ;il\"\nclely.  etc.\nWhen the nerves boconiO affected\nIn this w:i>* tin- heuri generally becomes iiifcci.-.l. too. and uu the flrat\nsigns nf uny weakness of thc heml or\nnerves, flagging energy or physical\nhreakduwn o\\o nut wait until your case\nbei-upu's hopeless, but got a remedy\nthat will ut onco uui-ion Iho nerves,\nKtreiiKlhen the lieurt and build up\nUu- entire systepi.\nThlH yuu will find  lit\nMILBURN'S\nHEART  AND   NERVE   PILL8\nMrs. M. Damgand, Toung's Cov*\nRoad, N. i-*.. writes: -l was bothorj\no* vpry much with my heart and\nncrv\/s; had nervous heuduches and\n(llulness, could not sleep., nl-nighty\nand my appetite wus ill gone. I wus\non n nervmis breakdown when a\nneighbor told nn: lo try Milburn's\nHenrt and Nerve IMlls. TIjIk I did,\nand before I had lho seeond box used\nI was better and would advise any-\nono who hns nefvc trouble to take\nthem.\"\nPrice uOc u box ut nil (tollers, or\nmalleil direct on receipt of prlco by\nTho T. Milburn Co., Limited,'Toronto.\nOut.\n' ASIIRIN\nOnly \"Bayer\" is Genuine\nTwenty-five Cases of Scarlet\nFever Reported; Take\nMeasures Against Spread.\nConHldorutlori of nirnmirpB for preventing the \u00bb)>renri of the opldpmlc'of\n**earlot fever In llie eity occupied the\n.\u25a0in\u25a0\u25a0indm of the city fathom for about\niui hour and u \"Tuilf last nlBht. A\njoint conferenee was called of tho\ncounell. the NblBon school bonrd, Su-\npervlHlinr I'lincltml 11. McArthur;\nPrincipal A. .1. iMalher, Dr. InoboI Arthur, city health officer; Dr. p, Baa\ntin nnd Dr. K. Camion of Uona'nnni,.\nwho In rellevhifi X)r. AV. O.\npronen\nA one-cylinder motor car Im, beep\nbrought out In France.\nNearly (9(1,000,000 Ib Invested III tho\nmotor cm- ImlttBtty In Canada.\nThe first tire t\u00bb mar\nrlglU rnii ,\u00abliee|,\nThe f\n\/ I'll. 1*1.'' r\nWarning! Take no chhneos with\n\u25a0ubitltutca for genulno \"Bayer Tab-\nWW of A:.nil in \" L'nleiw you noe\nlh\u00bb namo \"Bayer\" on package or on\ntablets yoa are not getting Aspirin\nat all. In every Buyer package are\ndirection* for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Karnclie, Tooth-\naehe. Lumbngo and lor 1'aln. Handy\ntin boxes of twolvc labials eost few\neonis. Druggists ain\" sell larger\nimcka\u00abc-:i. Mnde lu Cunudu. Aspliln\n;s the trade mark (registered lu Canada) of H;i;.-i- Al.iliufuctUI-e ,ot Mo\n\u2022IWlfa'lJHjvi'l'vIlT \u00abl |tul|''}-U\u00abl\u00ablt|.\nio Ik relieving Dr. A\\. O. Hose Mt ,\u201e\u201e  ,__,,  \u201e\u201e,,.\u201e   i,lcl\u201e-r,\u201ei  )n  rihrnlng\n\u00b0'\u00b0'\"-                  ,    t    *   ,              \"i thn nnnttnl fair.. Tlie mailer wnn Inkl\nIt wim reported thnl  21 ensoa o\u00ab w.r \u201e\u201e\u201e, th(, h(.x, oouncfl m^un_\nurlet   fever   .-.vl.sl   In   the   city   atj|l     ,\\._....M,\u201e,r   \\\\;   *.-..   Affleck   -.van   Innt there have    hecn   Instances W __\\y_r__A t0, ,)r,1>:1TO \u201e roport on (he\n. .  . . I .      I   I \u25a0  .  .     , '.It \u25a0!..     foul,.   AH,,!.,,     1i,..rA -      \" ..' \u25a0-  . .\nIIC11\ntlvnt\nwhich the (|tmrantino restrictions huve\nbeen dlHreffnrded by Inhiibltiuits of\n([ii*tr.i ni iin\"i houeeis. The medinnl\npraclltloiu-iM present did not mint\nmire the danger, but Hinted that the\nepldoifiic could be restricted and\nquickly slumped nut If the qurtrnntlne\nlaws were observed to -tho letter.\nOne doctor tllnutrtilrd the point by\nsaylut,' Hint In honm-a from which a\nfever case had been taken tn -tiunran-\ntlno the other nicinhcrti of the family\nhad nol been attacked by tho disciise,\nThe council wuh loath to close lhe\nCANADIANUI..PACIFIC\nTo Europe\nttata _\\\\______u_9_____________i Vote I\nCHRISTMAS     SAII.IHOS\nTrom Bt. John, St. S.\nTo  (llaagow,  TlinlHlui Dec.   S.\nTo  Italy. OiHcrln    lire.   c.\nTo l.lvcrlmol. MelaRiuiia  ...   Dec. 9.\nTo  Liverpool,   Branress   of   l-'rnnce\nIlcc. 13.\nMOHTREAH   TO   MVIRPOOI.\nNov. 2r,, 'Jnn.    s, \u00bbMar. 10.  Mlnncdosn\n\u2022Dee. I'   \u2022.Ian.  |3    uetasaino\n\u2022Dec. T.'.   'Keli. .17    Mellln\nQUEBEC    TO    LIVERPOOL\n\u2022Ih-e.13    I9mpre*s of  P-mnoi\n\u2022Knb.   1     .Muntciilm\nKORTREAL   TO  tlLASCOW\n'IJec. 3. 'Jan. 2lf \u2022.Mar. I.  ...  Tnnlnli\n\u2022Hue. -IK \u2022Feb. :\u25a0\u2022   ProtOrM\nKOHTHEALANTWERP\n(Via Havre and fiouthamptoe)\nNov. 20, '.lun. 31, '.Mur. II.  ..Comb:\nMice.   24.   \"Keli.   21 Kealullnavl\n<lafl\n\u25a0T.   JOHH-BOSTOn-HAVAHA\nDec.   !\u2022    .Sicilian'\nMONTREAL TO NAPI.ES-OEHOA\n\u2022rvc. n  Cossrta\nCnmbhipd   Service   Canadian   Pacific\n&   Nnvagoslonc   (j.neralo   Itallann\nI\n\u2022Soil   rroni   Bt.   John.\nPRE^UHT   OMLT\nApproximate  Sailing  Dates\n\u25a0OVTBBAL-LOmON\nNo\\.   22r  . I \"uui. iiiii,-.\n\u25a0T.   JO!i:;   H.   B.-LORBOV\nDec.   9       Uollnnbroko\nDm. II   llutsronl\nDec.   21    Iloswortll\n\u25a0T.  JOHN.   >.   B.-KI-ASGOV\/-\nAVOMMOUIH ,\nDi-C.   13         IAlliwi-11\nApply    to    Agent,    Everywhere\nJ. B. Carter, B. P, A.,\nNeleon, B. C.\nCanadian Pacific  Railway\nTraffic  Affeat,\nTHE VALUE TO THE\nPUBLIC\nOf telephone service is\nbused on the reliability,\npromptness and accuracy\nof that service. Quality of\nservice depends on the\neconomic operation of ull\ntelephone activities. From\nthe time raw material is\nproduced until the finished equipment is complete,\nit is a matter of continuous exhaustive tests to get\nthe best. After installation, ceaseless vigilance is\nmaintained to gel the bast\ncharacter of service. All\nefforts are directed toward\nthe highest standard.\nschools und lhe churches if ally olll\nmcaaurcH would contr-ol nnd cruulca\ntho disease.   It w.is therefore tlcrldt\nto enforce the nuitruiithie rostncUunb.\nIgldly.   The sohool buuM wlllputjllli J\nspecial nur'ne to Investigate ovltf..'\u2022>\n\u2022SEES TROUBLE\nt   MARKETING IMPROVED\nTOnOVTO. N'ov. !*1 - Ifcin. Mijfl-\niase* reported nt the KChooE Tho c\u00bb Jifng Dnhcrt,v, mlnlnler rf nSil<-\"lt<.ro\ncouncil doclded to appoint Immodlutli- \\ot Ontario, sees trouble -ilic:id f,.-.- W\nly la qunranttnc of.'loer. whoio .mln nation fnrmern If n\u00ab\"oitureii are rt#t\nduties will be to enforce tho rcguil- italto* lo overcome thu l**\u00bb?i\u00ab'\u00abll'*S\ntlons regarding tiun-nntlne. In doing pr-urent'methods of i -.-,-\nthis tho city fathers expressed a hope , product:^\nthat cltlxens Iheimelvos would otiofi-\n'We\nernte lu every w.-iy In lhe effori\nntamp out the'dlfl-aso at once. '\u2022\n\u2022An esthnnte of the com of- construct\nIng nn electric ponvor line In Willowi'liutrltetlnf\nPoint lo provide nenxis llie. lake re*;- .erful   to\ndents ?>r tin   Weal Arm wlUl Ifcht aiid\nnbwer f.-.im the city's main- lets pre-\n.ented  b:   0   T   MhcOuIre,  tn* 11 I\nnre liAhe1 midst\nworldwide war fnr-markets.\" h*,^1\ndared, In addressing Hi Vuung .Men's\nCanadinn club,    \"Only   through    tho\nil,-<cie|>in<-nt \"of   sirong   cooperntlvb\najrenclos Hiif-'lclcnfly potv^\nu-ee  errad'ng und   rc'lahlo\nl\"llt'\"1 \u25a0\u2022! nua'ltv.\" cpltM Ou-\n,.;,.\u201e.,..r,.   hope   t\u201e %ec|   the\n'111\nin tl\nnl\nA\ni' Dt.Hlves ef f-o fa.r bna.d. wh i \u25a0<\u25a0:\nbrought Hit the (inestion of obtiln\na sriint froni' the idly toward lolpinir\nwater supply of Ihe city, with p.-irtlc\n'ar reference to available source^ o;\nnow supply.\nMpmbers of the council present\nwero Mayer C. P, McHardy. A. B.\nKmoi-v. W. M. Cunllffe. (1. Turncf,\nInhn rt-ll and City Clerk \\V. K. Wn*-\nson.\nINTERNATIONAL   FOUR\nNominations will  be  held  at noojn\ntoday throughout Canada for thn Dominion election.\nIn the cane of Wesl Kuntenny, Ilft-j-\nry Wright, reliirnlnn officer, reeelveil |\nthe papers of It. 11. Staples, Llberjl \u25a0*\ncandidate, yesterday.\nAt lust night's rally Dr. \\V. <>. Itossln -\npupers, reculvcd- many alffnuiuijen.\nImproves f lavor\nof fcet-eals\nand fruits\nNo other refreshment is quite like that cheery,\nlingering glow that comes from a steaming cup\nof Tetley's Golden Tips.\nTETLEY'S\nMakes good TEA a certainty\nIts flowery fragrance is made possible by a\nknowledge gained in over 100 years of blending\nexperience.\n.I'*\"\"\nPRICE\nThese Prices for Export\nOnly\nKeivar's S lal -$42.00\nSandy    McDonald    Siwi-lal    l.i-\nuuer (10 years .dill 842.00\nBuchanan  ninek and\nWhite    842.00\nQueen  Anne  Bbttru  S|'i-.ImI\nPmnj\"          S45.0O\nWalker's  Rod  label      $45.00\nBandy   MacDonald- v.-   Sncleni\n\u2022Ju-Veur-Old   Dumps 848.00\nThis  Ik the finest   BcojHi   1.1-\nmm\nl|l|e\nSoloci\n:orby's\ntin\ni   IX\nS|ii\neil    ....\nM.lll-Hll\n'  market\nRye\n1   Letter..\nlal\nloii.i\n830.00\n835.00\ns:io.oo\nBourbon\ni r.ths ...\nPints\u2014>\nPobblof\nlllll   R-   11\nmors old .\nIIIII  &   Hill Quail\nluei-s   Old   \t\nIt\n00\n$l>5.00\niii'Vhl\nMil\n\u00bb\u00ab:>.oo\nBrandy\nVlllnrd's Three.brown 835.00\nVlllard's   Three   Star    S40.*00\nRum\n''\u25a0\"isel   (ilmv        $40.00\nVermouth\nNoilly l',-.,l,  I.-,v\u201e,|,      835.00\nChampagne\nt'liati-au llmlciu. Pls..$50.00\nChuuteuu l.leale.-iii, i|ls 845.00\nDo not remit by personal\nchequo unlets same is certified\nond with exchanne.\nTHE KINGS EXPORT-\nING AGENCY, LTD.\nDRAWER  4\n\" Lethbridge, Alta.\nALBERTA\nPRIDE\nLethbridge\nEER\nIn Pints or Quarts\nWo are ottering until\nfiiii lun* mil ice, freight pre*\npaid\u2014tit the following\nprices:\nl'er  linrrel\n$17.00\n$17.20\n$17.40\n$17.40\n$17.30\n817.55\n$1*8.00\n$18.20\nBlrdar $18.20\n\\Vii ii $18.30\n\u2022Neb-\".' 818.00\nBIOMUi Ci'y $10.80\nWhen ordering be sure\nlo give cowed street ud-\ndiess or post office box\nnumber.\nYour orders will be\nshipped same day as received, weather permitting,\nor in first heated car.\nSend all orders to\n\u25a0ferule,\n1-lli.ll\nWaldo\nW.inlu\nlaflr.iy\nCi anl.-\nTHE KINGS EXPORTING AGENCY, LTD.\nDRAWER 4\nll\nLethbridge, Alberta\nThe Consolidated Muting & Smelting Ca\nOF CANADA, LIMITED\nf Offles Smelting and  Refining  Departmanl\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSUITERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS   OF   GOLD,   SILVER,   COPPER   AND   LEAD   ORIS\nProduct\u2122 \u00abf' Gold, Silver, Copper, Bluestene, Pl| Lead, tin\nTADANAC TRAIL\nii\u2014\u2014mam\nwmm\n\u2022ammmm.\n 1     \"\u2014\"\u25a0\u2014\nmwsm\n\u2022r*t\nTHE IWPSOI. ffifllY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMfiEK'.Vfl\/teS\nw\nffi THE DAILY NEWS\n^\"ilfa'imrT\"itierninjr'eioept Sun-\nlhe Newe Publishing Company,\nNeleon,   a   C,   Canada.\nu letters ehould bo addroeeed\neheeka and money ordere made\nable to trite Newa FuMtahlof Com-\nr. Limited, end In no caae lo Indl\nnombera ol the ataft.\n.Jaw rate cards and A. B. C.\nlents of olroulatlon mailed on re-\nmmsir-Sr\naSv.?ffiL\n\u201e JuuMHmiTeress\" Association., ,\nSubscription rates: By mall (ooun-\n\"J oetiu per month; \u00bb6.B\u00abr year,\nj Canada, a month, v6q.; a yoar,\nDelivered, 7Bo. per itonth; >l\nx months; ST.EO per year, parable\nlijA&Tfcnce.\nAudit   Bureau   et   Circulation\nTUESDAY,   NOV.   22,   1921.\nWhy Give Uncle Sam More\nBusiness?\nLast year the United States\nbought from Canada 542 million dollars.\nj And Canada bought from the\nUnited States goods worth 856'\nmillion dollars.\nThe United States has about\n108 million people.\nCanada has about nine million people.\n'* Thus, last year, each inhabitant of the United States bought\nfive dollars' worth of Canadian\nproducts, while each Canadian\nbought ninety-five dollars'\nW,orth of United States products.\n- This is the situation with a\nCanadian tariff. What would\nit be if that tariff is abolished\nor reduced?\nOthers Have Tried the Class\nGovernment Experiment\nto Their Cost.\nSeveral American states have\nhad sad experience of the results of electing to office class\ngovernments. On this side the\nClass party which is appealing\nfo the people for votes is the\nFarmer party led by Mr.\nCrerar.   In combination with it\nUi jmosudimBim m l\u00bbhor candidates. . On the American side\n-Uie party with much the' same\nplatform and with the same\ngeneral object, the grasping of\npower by a government composed of one or two classes, is\nknown as the Non-Partisan\nleague or the Townley party.\n. The Townley party won office in several states and has\nbeen in power for several years.'\n. Class legislation of various\nkinds has been brought into effect but without the beneficent\nresults promised. In fact, the\nresults have been the opposite.\nIn every state where the Nonpartisan league has gained\npower the people as a whole\nhave suffered, without benefit\nto the farmers or ta labor. It\nia.only a few weeks ago that the\npeople of one of the Dakotas\nSweated by a large vote the\non-Partisan league government. This occurred after the\nfinances of the state had got\ninto a most serious condition,\nafter many banks had closed\ntheir doors with the resultant\nsuffering to people whose savings had been invested in them\nor placed with them for safekeeping, and after a carnival of\nfreak legislation from the effects of which it will take years\nfor the state to recover.\nCanada   and  the   Canadian\npeople cannot afford expensive\nexperiments of this  sort.\n\u25a0\u25a0        \u00bb*      .\nThe Chemical Age.\nThe  chemical laboratory of\nthe  average school  is  to  the\nmodernly   equipped   industrial\nor research laboratory what the\nblad&mith shop is to a factory\n\u25a0^quantity production.\nMn the laboratory of the sin*r_\njfle form thevmaniptilaETon \"IS \"*\n\u25a0asrried out almost entirely by\nband.    In the research plant\nare many elaborate contrivances\nboth, for  speeding work  and\nSr insuring accuracy. The\nofessional chemist has the use\nof high speed air pumps, of mercury pumps which carry out\ntheir work automatically, of\nvessels of ingenious type for\nseparating mixtures, of instru-\nSents for determining melting\nlints, of barometers and thermometers that may do nothing\nelse than check the experimenter's conclusions. It is a field\nin which invention haa been as\ngive and productive as me-\nhies.\n' In Canada the most spectacular industrial advances have\nbeen along mechanical lines. As\ntHe locomotive, the automobile,\nand the aeroplane have been\ndeveloped a ramification of less\nstriking devices has been\nevolved in ten tnousand directions. Compared with this labor, chemical industry is merely poking along lazily. Yet the\nchemical age is near at hand.\n[Mljay be within our own gen\nbeen laid. Research is proceeding and the equipment for research indicates plainly that a\nhigh quality of brains is being\napplied to chemical problems.\nRemembering that the early\nappliances in the mechanical\nschools were of the most fundamental order and since have become intricate and elaborate\nwe may expect the chemical\nlaboratories of the educational\ninstitutions to go through the\nsame evolution.\n*\nffieienf\nvsek\nu\u2122.A.K-?*B***n\nANSWERED   LETTKItH\nA Rtnder; \"My bluo velour winter\ntmngln\u00ab;\u00ab are faded In places from\nthe sun. .Can anything be dono to\nbrlihtens,the>e places?\" \u2022\nAnswer: Unless they are of the deepest blue shade, you can have them\ndyed a deeper blue. 1 would advice\nyou to eond thorn to a dyeing firm\nto have thla done, rather than attempt   It  yourself.\nMrs. a. at-. \"Kindly print some helpful suggestions for combining a birthday party nnd Hnllowe'en party.\"\nAnswer: 1 regret that you did not\nwrlte'tne further In advance. By writing ao short a time beforo Hallowe'en\nyou could not poeslbly have had a column reply In time\u2014for I get many,\nmany letters and they must be answered In rotation. If you had given your\naddress nnd sent a stamp. 1 could have\ngotten you a personal reply bofore the\nevent. And right now I am going to\noak my reader friends to send me\ntheir Inquiries concerning Christmas\npartlea at once! Thla ls not too early\nto send them In.\nAnonymous: \"How can .1 remove\nmarks made on a polished table by\nhot dlahesr- \u25a0\nAnswer: Heat an Iron and hold this\na few Inches above the marka on the\ntab e, so that Its heat will warm the\ntablo surface slightly; then lay the\nIron down und rub In a little linseed\nell nt once.    Polish with a soft cloth.\nMrs. E. R. w.i \"I recontly bought a\nnew lenthcr overstuffed Bet for my\nliving room and now I frequently see\nsmnll Insect on It\u2014like lice or flens.\nShould I tell tho furniture man, from\nwhom 1 bought tho aet, about thla?\nOr is It possibly my fault from leaving\ntt near an open window?\"\nAnswer: Neither. The furniture man\nhas nothing ro do with It. And your\nleaving the aet near an open window\nToU in Rhyme\nurssi.AN- andtCrk.\nThere was a Russian came over the\nsea.\nJust   when   the   wnr   wns   growing\nhot;\nAnd liis nnme was TJnllknvnkareo\u2014\nKnrlndobrollknnahudarol\u2014\nShlbkadlrovn\u2014\nIvnrdllstova\nSanlllk\nDanerlk\nVaragobhot.\nA Turk was standing upon the shore-\nRight where the   terrible   Russian\ncrossed,\nAnd he cried: \"Blsmlllah!    I'm Ab-\nEl-Kor-\nBasarou \u2022 Kl Igona u tosgob ross\u2014\nQetflnpravadl\u2014\nKl'lgckolndjl\nGrlvlno\nBllvldo\u2014\nJenlkodoek!\nSo they stood tike brave men long and\nwoll;\nAnd   they  called   each  othor  their\nproper ntunes.\nTill    the    lockjaw    seised them, and\nwhere they fell\nThey buried them both by the Irdes-\nholm mee\nKnlatalustchuk\nMlitchtarlbuslclup\u2014\nBulgarl\u2014\nI miliary\u2014\nSaghartmbalng.\n(From a Nonsense Anthology.)\nThe Lighter Sub       |\nBucecss   depend!   upon   backbone,\nnot wishbone.\ncould not have been the eau tie of attracting, the Insects. At the present\ntime there are many homes, all ovor\nthe country. Infested with different\nvarltles of house flen. Sohiutitnes thes-s\nflens come from pet dogt and cats;\nsometimes thoy get Into rugs\u2014from\ngoodnpBH knows where: and often they\nannoy people by getting Into the\nclothing. Oil of foii-ir drives them\nnway, for thoy hate the smell of It.\nBuy a little of this oil from a druggist and apply It to your leather set\nand to the floor under your rugs.\n. A Subscriber: \"Will you plenwo give\nme a recelpe for a floor paint that\nwill harden quickly, yellow pr* fur red.\"\n' Answer; I am sorry, but t have no\naueh recipes. A painter would mix you\nww. Or you could buy one of the\nnmny fine brands of-paint on the market.\nMrs. R,: \"I recently rend your nnHwer\nto Ij. D. P. In regard to stiffening\ncrocheted baskets. If they are dipped\nInto molted parafflne and Bhaped while\ncooling, thoy look a pure white, nnd 1\nbellovo It ls a much easlor and cheaper ,wny to stiffen them than to mnko\nthe sirup\u2014as you suggested,\"\nAnswer: Thank you, Render-friend. It\nwas kind of you to take the trouble to\nwrite in about It. That's what we're\nall looking for\u2014better ways of doing\nthings.\nTomorrow\u2014One Week's Meals for\n'\"I.Hiiith   Over   Three.\nAll Inquiries addressed to Miss Kirlt-\nm:in In care of the \"Efficient Housekeeping\" department will Be answered\nIn these columns ln their turn. This\nrequires   considerable    time,    however,\nK'lnr to the great number received.\nIf a personal or quicker reply is\ndesired, a stamped and self-addressed\nenvelope must b\u00ab enclosed with the\nquestion.\u2014Tho  Editor.\nTwenty Years Ago\nFrom tho Dally Miner, Nov. 22, 1901.\nA. W. Muxwell und W. J. McPherson leave today for Kingston, Ont.\nMr. McPherson has been ln Nelson for\na few weeks winding up the business\nof the Ontario Powder company.\n'    \u00bb     _f *    *    *\nMr. nnd Mrs. C. Fen nol I nrrlved yesterday -.'rom Montrenl to take up their\nabode In Nelson, Mr. Fcnncll having\ntaken up n position as express messenger for the Dominion Hxpresa company.\n* \u2022 \u2022\n::,VJ:-S. Carter, district phs8enger_ft|{ent\ntar the C. P. R., returned yesterday\n\u25a0from .i trip to Rosslahd ami tho Boii'n*\ndury. He reports business prosperous\n.there, particularly at Grand Forks.\nAll the employees of tho Tramway\ncompany hnve been given n weok's\nnotice of dismissal. Mr. Mason, superintendent of the company, was\nasked as to what the company Intended doing here, but he stated that he\ncould not give any Information on the\nmatter for a few days yet.\nTen Year$ Ago Today\n^ 1 .   , .. \u00bb\nFrom The Dally News, Nov. 22, llil.\nDonald McLeod, chh'f engineer of\nthe C. P. R. steamer Nelson, who sustained a severe scalding about the\nhead white that vessel was In port\nwashing boilers on Sunday, is recovering from whta might hnve been a\nnasty accident.\n\u25a0  \u2022\nW. Parker, thc employment man.\ngoes to Spokane today to attend the\napple show. J. R. Cranston of Rossland, who hns kept shop tov him before, will be In charge of his business.\nW. F. Bard, chief operator for the\nSpokane Inland power plant at Henen,\nWash.. Is tn Nelson on n short visit.\nMr. Bard has recovered from an operation for appendicitis.\nTHE DESERT THAT\nWENT TRAVELING\nAn old Haying has It thnt \"a peck\nof March dust Is worth a king's ransom,\" and about twenty years ago>\nJust to be sure the king would be ransomed, a Mnrch wind picked Up a\ncouple of million tons of Sahara sand\n... . and spread It over southern Europe.\n^-?i!.U-bt .J.a\u00a3*n SPKJi J14SS   This transfer af real estate. In which\nw\nw\nWhile iqnny ot the Paris dressmakers\nhave made tne wnlntline the feature of\nInterest in their models this season\u2014\nfin[>)m--1*\/(iir- thin palm In the costume\nby an Ingenious Joining of skirt to\nbodice and With curiously wrought\nleather or metnl belts\u2014lu tlie now models of Mnlimji Jenny the most exciting\ndlfforenco Is to be found In her sleeves.\nAnd Jenny, be It understood, because\nof the -very wearable charactor of her\nmodels. Is one of tlio most copied of\nFrench    couturiers    in   America.\nCnn her alcove be properly called a\nslecvef A'soft drapery rails from the\nshoulder, and' It serves ns sleeve. An-.\nothur type of arm covering Is madr\nby n long straight piece of fabric at-\ntachsd lu front of the arm from the\nother. Thla was shown In an evening\nfrock. The same curious tendency runs\nthroughout her entire collection, both\ndresses  and  tailored  things.\nThe sleeve shown ln the above frock\nin nnottrtr type, which i'ir-i became\nknown here in Aiperlca as n Jenny\n\u25a0leeve( though In this model it Is\nt2 Olljh7TWDdM1**d.' *\" T*|upe\" -crepe\nrocaln with Frertch blue irlmmlnjr\nlt*Uied'?e*hif)rol<lery or novelty braid\narc Equally shiitrt.  '\nPATTERN NO. 113.\nA pattern for the above model (No.\n311) 'can be obtained In slses 34, 36 or\n31, by sending to Ths Dally Newa.\nyour name- address, nnd SO cents In\npostage stamps. Bo sure to keep this\nnewspaper clipping of the sketch and\ndescription of the garment to use as\na working model when the pattern\nreaches you\u2014which will be within two\nweeks' time.\u2014The i-'iiihn*.\nDaily Recipe\nd'.iht.-  this  iii  Your Cook  Book.)\nSOUTHERN MAPLE CANDY.\nBoll In, a saucepan two cupfuls of\nsugifr, one cupful of maple syrup and\nft half cupful of sweet cream until\na soft ball Is formed when a little la\ntried In cold water. Take from the\nfiro and l*teot threo minutes, adding\nslowing, two cupfuls of pecan nuts\nDrop from the end ot a tablespoon\nIn round cakes on wax paper to cotil.\nthen slip off onto a fancy plate to\nservo.\nA woman doenn't make much headway driving a nail, but did you ever\nsee a man try to wrap up a bundle of\nlaundry?\n\u25a0he needs\nroom.\narms    to    acquire elbow\nA writer snys headlines cause crime.\nEspecially tht old standby. \"Police\nBaffled.\"\nAs the world grows more nnd more\ncivilised, we keep right on Improving\npadlocks,\nAfter a man has tramped for alx\nweeks looking for a lob he realises\nthat he hasn't an unconquerable sole.\nHow easy world problems would be\nIf the nations, would first find a common domlnator.\nThat singer who had himself\nequipped with sheep glands should1\nmake a hit In gland opera.\nThe chap who slammed the door\nlast summer ls the same one who\nforgets to close lt now.\n' Hard times: A season during which\nhorny-handed sons of toll are reconciled to their sire.\nBleeping on the porch this weather\ncauses goose flesh, but you expect\nthat kind on ft goose.\nLet's see. what was It they did with\ntho beef scraps' before the Invention\nof pipe pork sausage?\n\u25a0 New Tork city had 140 Industrial\nstrikes ln a year. Well, one for every\nlanguage Is fair enough.\nStandpatter: One who endures a.\ntack In his shoe because It is too much\ntrouble to unlace the sljoe.\nThe reason some people never get-\nanything done Is because they spend\ntoo much time talking about how,\nbusy they are.\nno man had any part, was accomplished in four days. It Is Interesting\nto conjecture whnt would have occurred if thnt March wind had continued for, say, thirty days.\nMany are the queer prunks which\nwind and tlie motes that dance ln\nsunbeams play. Not long ago the captain of a steamship plying tho Tollow\nHen had to call all hands to sweep the\ndecks following n dust storm that was\nso thick as to obscure the sun.\nTho yellpw rains are caused by the\np*fiTJen\"oTni'n'STiemg'C(rmed ttymgh\n-wl&ds .ueaupn^ipiutqi cjuier^the\nabatement of lhe gale *oY because''U\nencounters a rainstorm. _ The ro<|\nsnows ore thc result of wind-placed\ndeposits of the motile algae Chtamdo-\nmonas, in the nuclei of which are-rod\npigment spots. Other kinds of algae\nhave a green tint.\nDust, despite the fact lt Is thc enemy of the housewife nnd the curse of\nthe automobitlst. plays an important\npart tn our existence. But for tho fine\nparticles In the air we would not condense without them, and without the\nrefraction of the dust our daylight\nWould be far less brilliant. As an aid\nto agriculture, a Judicious compounding of wind and dust have been found\nmost beneficial. In northern China\nare deposits of fine yellow powder,\nbrought by the winds from the desert\nregions, sevoral hundred feet In thick-\nnoaa. which have been tilled, without\nfertilisation, -for thousands of years\nand to all Intents and purposes they\nare as fertile today as ever. Volcanlo\ndust ls found In Kansas and Nebraska\ntoday, and In some places the deposits\nare as much as thirty feet ln thickness. There have never been volcanoes within hundreds of miles of these\ndeposits, and the wind was either the,\nculprit or benefactor.\nWind and dust do not confine their\npranks to the heights, but play many\na fantastic trick beneath the earth's\nsurface and In mines Increase the Inflammability and assist tha explosion,\nof gases which otherwise would be\nharm loss.\nCount the persins in any way connected with the conference, and you\n,      ,   will know .how many books to expect\nH\u00bb grpund worjc baa on u\u00bbs subject        I\t\nThe Test of\nYears\nHAVE YOU ever known the\npleaaure of aeelnf eome amall\nwedding gift you gave yeare\nago mill kept In a plaee of\nhonor among the houaehold'e\ntreaaured poeseaalona?\nThla aatlafactlon may he sour.\n\u2014many tlmee\u2014If you give lovely, laatlng gifts from Dlrka\n\u00bb**v\nVANCOUVBH, B. c.\nMU OF DIG\nGoes Through Thin Ice on\nMoose Like Wiih Dogs\nand Sledge While Training\nTttfi PAS, Man.,' ttov. 2V.\u2014{By Canadian Press.)\u2014Waiter Ooyne, winner of the 1920 dog diwby and known\nas tho \"doing Kid,\" w.ia drowned tn\n,Mooso lake, 80 miles fiW The Pas.\non November IS, it beOpmo known\nhere this evening. On that date Ooyne\nset out if rom the Du Pas tivdlng post\nut Moose luke for a rislilni; camp 26\nmiles away, for the purposo of securing fish for hie dogs. Ho win driving\nnine dogs attached to a heavy> racing\nsleigh, and was followed by u\" pups,\nTwo days later the Ul pups rt-uirnud\nto Du Pas and iho people there became apprehensive. Coyne's ti^cks\nwere followed for 18 miles, where Mii-y\ndisappeared, the general belief being\nthnt he.encountered thin Ice at tlr;it\npoint and went, with dogs nnd sleigh,\nwolghlng 100 pounds, through the Ice.\nWas Hauling Plsli for Dogs.\nOoyne had a number of dogs at\nMoose lake which ho was preparing\nfor the next dog derby, to be lnlil\nFebruary 28, over a 100-mlte course,\nfor a purse of $2500. Ho was engaged\nIn hauling fish nnd getting his dogs in\nracing trim. He won,tha 1920 dog\nrace In ensy style, introducing new ,\nmethods of harnessing and the Alas- |\nknn sleigh, ns ngalnst the local car-\nrlglo. He had previously done considerable racing in Alaska and was a\ncripple on nccount of his feet having\nbeon frosen, necessitating his riding\nall the way behind his dogs. After\nannexing the 1920 \"dog derby, Ooyno\naccepted a theatrical engagement In\nthe United States and spent the early\npart of tho winter of '1920-1921 ln\nMlnenpolls and St. Paul. He was the\nfavorite In this year's dog derby, but\nwas unsuccessful, lie determined to\nstay in The Pas and.spend his time\nprepnrlng for subsequent races. He\nvisited Fort Korman during the past\nsummer and returned to The Pas bofore freexeup, taking his dogs to\nMoose lake. It wns his Intention to\nrace -from 16 to 20 dogs next February, and he ini vory hopeful of winning.\nCustomer: \"That watch you'sold\nme tho other day does not keep good\ntime.*'\nDealer:   \"It  isn't the fault of  the\nwatch. Haven't you heard people say\nthat times are very bad Just now?\"\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0 \u25a0\n=7=\n\"To what, sir, do you attri\nyour sucoess?\" a wealthy drye\nmerchant  was asked.\n\"To this,\" he replied. \"If a oiw\ner doesn't see.what she wants, I.\nher want what Bhe sees.\"\n\u25a0ep*\n-**\u25a0\nINTNG SEASON\nIn a few days you will be able to shoot all kinds of game\nAre you prepared with necessary Guns, Rifles and Aramu\nnit'on? We have Shot Guns, Rifles, Cartridges, Cleaners\nGun Oil, Greases, Hunting Clothing, Rifle Covers, Knives\netc., etc  Lowest prices.\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nBAKER 8TREET, \u2022 NELSON, B. 0\nCold Storage\nTencher\u2014Now. children, ll Is u cu-\n,riou\u00bb. fact thla.   tho    bee stings only\nonce.\n.Boy\u2014But Isn't once enough?\nKind LsiOy: \"You can got work\nbeating carpets two doors from-here\u2014\nthey are cleaning house.\"\nHdmeiess Holmes: \"Thanks, mum,\n! mii-iit*. i* bumped right Into It If you\nhadn't   warned   me.\"\nPeggy:   \"You arc a man after my\nown heart.\"\nFreddie:    \"Darling:\" -*\nPeggy: \"But you won't gut lt!\"\n\"On my Inst voyage,\" n young sailor\nremarked, \"I saw .wnves forty feot\nhigh.\"\n\"Oct out!'' cried nn pld sailor. \"1\nwas ii t sea for fifty years, and I never\nsaw them that high.\"\n\"Well.\" the young sailor retorted,\nthings aro higher now than they used\nto be.\" ' *\nJohnny hud eaten the soft portions\nof his toast at breukfust and piled iin*\ncrusts on his plafe\n\"When I was u -little boy.\" remarked\nhis father, \"I always ut the crusts of\nmy toast\"\n\"DM you like them?\" asked Johnny, cheerfully.\n\"Y-ni,\" replied his ffither.\n\"You mny hove these, then,\" aald\nJohnny, pushing his plate across tho\nUble.\nThe Liberal Policy\nis to Increase Natural Products\ni, \"\nINCREASED PRODUCTION OF THE FARMS, MINES\nFORESTS AND FISHERIES MEANS:\nMore Freight lor Railways,\nMore Work (or Men,\nMore Money to Buy Goods,\n.  <.   More Business for Manufacturers.\nTHE PROTECTIVE TARIFF HAS NEVER \/JI\nCANADA BEEN SO HIGH AS THIS YEAR WHEN\nDUTY IS LEVIED ON COST PLUS PREMIUM ON\nU.S. FUNDS, YET     .\nProtection Has Failed,,\nTo Keep the Wheels ol Industry Turning\ni\nExports have decreased,\n-Imports* have decreased,\t\nTariff collections have decreased,\nPrices of Canadian goods have been kept just\nbelow the cost of imported pins the duty, ,\nConsumers have cut down their purchases,\nManufacturers' sales have fallen off,\nMen are out of work,    .\nThere is more unemployment in Canada than\never before.\nThe Liberal Party Will Boost Production Work and\nProsperity\nVote for the Liberal Candidate\nR. B. STAPLES\nBaby's Own\ntni rtft\u2014Jet'mt\n\u2022An ironclad guarantee with\nevery CALORIC. Invetti-\ngate before buying.\nJohn Burns & Son\nLOOSE LEAF LEDGERS\nIn AU Standard Sizes\nr- a**\nAnd in Different Bindings\nSPECIAL\nRULED\nFORMS\nRULED\nSTATEMENTS\nRULED\nSYNOPTICS\nWe carry a stock of ledger, billhead and transfer binders.\n\u00bb*\u2022\u2666   \u2666- +   *-**\"*\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u00bb\u2666   \u2666   +   \u2666   \u2666\nOur special ledger binding in red\nleather and corduroy, with solid\nsteel back, is noted for its long wearing qualities, attractive appearance\nand -Reasonable price.\n\u2666i \u2666\n*\u2022   +   +   +\n*  t  *  *\nOur transfer and billhead binders\nare made up much more strongly\nand in better wearing material than\n(\u25a0he, ordinary binder for this purpose.'\n\u2666   \u2666*Jl***t-\u00bb*   +\nThe Daily News Bindery gives\nprompt service in making up all\nkinds of ruled sheets, both standard\nand special.\nRULED\nLEDGER\nSHEETS\nRULED\nBILLHEADS\nRULED\nINVOICES\nWRITE OR TELEPHONE\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPARTMENT\nQuality Printers\nNELSON,  B.  4\nm\n\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0*.. \u25a0\u25a0\n \t\n(THE KELSON lHHIit HEW8, TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 22, 1921,\n'     COMFY SLIPPERS\nFor every member, of the family at our store.\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLEAOER8 IN FOOT FASHION-\n!\u25a0\u2014\u00ab\u00bb\u25a0*\nClean Child's Bowels with\n\"California Fig Syrup\"\nFERNIE SWASTIKA\nGIRLS GIVE DANCE\nKERN 113, Nov. 21.\u2014Thn Girl* Hockey cluh or moro properly \"Swastika\"\ncluh entertained at a dance given tn\nVictoria hall on Tuesday evcnlns.\nUver a hundred couples attended anil\nthe Hockay Girl* proved that thoy nre\nadept In the capacity of hosts as well\nna thoy aro when taking part hi\nCnnndn's National winter sport. Tho\naffair In addition to being such nu enjoyable soelnl function was also a\nfinancial  hucccsh.\nPolice Gather in\nRussian Gamblers\nin Raid at Fernie\ni-'KltNii-:, Nov. 21.\u2014On receiving information <>n Tuesdny evening complaining that a dlKhoncst Rambling\nTnnm was bring operated on the premises of tho Hoyal hotel here, tho\ncity police carried out a raid and\nsucciicded In gathering In five Russians\nwho wero playing carda. These part-\nIoh appeared before Major G. G. Moffatt, J. P., who Is acting for Pollco\nMnglstrato Whimster at pr-asont absent from tho citv. AU wor-i found\nguilty of a charge tnld under tho crlni-\nliiiii code and fined aa follows: William I'llukowk, who was tho man. behind tho hox running thc game. Brew\n$60. fine with costs; each of the remaining four, John Gawruluk, Jim\nRndcn, Andrew Adynskl nnd John Stem-\nko,   contributed   $16.   and   costs.\nWANETA NOTES\nPROVIETIFF\nShould Not Be on Dominion\nLines; Norcross Notes\nTradesmen Afluent.\nEven a alck child lovea tho \"fruity\ntaste of \"California Fig Syrup.\" If\ntho littlo tongue ta coatcil, or If your\nchild la Hallow), cross, fovorlsh, full\nof cold, o\" has colic, Rlvc u lenspoon-\ntul to cleanse tho liver uud bowels.\nln a few hours you can seu for yourself how thoroughly It works nil tho\nconatlputlon poison, s6ur bllo und\nwaste out of the bowels, and you\u201ehave\na woll. playful child uguln.\nMillions of mothers keep \"C'nllfor\nnia Fig Syrup'' bundy. Thoy know u\nteaspoonful todny raves a sick child\n1 \u2022tomorrow. Ask your druggist for ge*n-\nulno \"California Fig Syrup.'' which\nhas directions for babies and children\nof all ages printed ou bottle. Mother!\nYou must aay \"California\" or you may\nget an Imitation fig syrup.\nWHIST AND DANCE\nWHILE AWAY TIME\n1'KItKY SIDING, Nov. 21.\u2014Tho Perry\nSocial elub held a very onjoynblo\nwhist drive and dance on Friday Nov.\nIS, In the school houeQ. Tho prise\nwinners being: Lady's\u2014MHs Freda\nDawney; gtiiUletnnn's\u2014A. Curlson. Tho\n\"lloohy\" prises were won by Miss Nellie Hodgson and 1). Tawing.\nDancing wns kept up to a lato hour,\nthe music being supplied hy tho cluh\norchestra, which waa much appreciated.\nDuring the ovenlng the commltteo supplied a recherche supper.\nPERRY SIDING NOTES\nPKRRY HIDING, Nov. IJ,\u2014V, Powell,\nsecretary of the Farmer's (exchange,\nreturned from Pans more on Saturday,\nWhere he has been unloading n carload  of   flour  and   Feed.\nMr. Scott, of Slocan, conducted Ber-\n\u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0'\u25a0 ln lhe tMchoolhouse on Sunday,\nNov. HO. Previous lo the service, the\nSundny school held its session being\nwry   well   nttruded.\nAH tin* men folk engaged nt the\nNetcrtw Mill at Goat Creek have rc-\nlurm-d homo, us operations luivi- been\nsuspended  for the winter.\nGETTING READY FOR\nSKATING AT SLOCAN\nBetter\nHerds\nSome of tho finest dairy eattlo In\nCanada are In tho Fraser Valley.\nThis Is a well-known fact.\nPacific Milk, as you know, ls tho\nonly milk put up ln this province\nand we feel that lt Ib in no small\nmeasure duo to the strategic locations of our factories thut so\nmuny flno herds aro being developed betwoen Chllliwack and the\nDelta.\nThe high quullty of Pacific 'Milk\nhas made It thu biggest milkman\nin the West.\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\nLIMITED\nVANCOUVER\nFactories at Abbotsford and  Ladner, B. C.\nHLOCAN CITY, Nov. 21.\u2014J. W.\nCrow, who has a b-nMn on the skating\nrink ngaln this winter hns bejui busily\nengaged the punt few days making thfl\nbuilding comfortable nnd, muklng lei-\nMr, CroW says If the cold spell continues there will ht- skating oh Thursday night.\nWANETA, Nov. 21. \u2014 Arthur\nBuckley, of Hunker Hill, left\non Mondny for a month's visit with\nrelatives lu Victoria and Vancouver,\nthis is Mr. llucklcy's first vacation in\nten years.\nCharles Archibald, of Columbia Gardens, was in Waneta on business ou\nWednesday.\nA. A. Johnson, A. Adie, W. A. Dun-\nean, ll. Adie and Arthur Roberts mo-\ntontd to Itossland ou Wednesday night,\nwhere the hater was Initiated Into tho\nOrder  of  Ingles.\nK. I*. 1 tit tier ond Ernest Stone, motored from the Salmon to Trail on\nThursday.\nNumerous flocks of quail have boen\nHod) In the valley this fall and the\nranchers are quite anxious to harbor\nnnd feed them during the coming\nwinter.\nDr, rax ton, government veterlnnry\nsurgeon, of Nelson, was hero ou professional   business  ou   Monday.\nMiss Mildred Wick, spent the weekend ul her homo at Parks Hiding.\nGOLF CLUB MEMBERS\nSPEED PARTING GUEST\nrilKHTON, Nov. 20,\u2014The opening\ngun In the election campaign here, was\nflrod In Mercantile hall on Saturday\nnight, at n meeting In the Interests of\nL, W, Humphrey, tin* Farmer-Labor\ncandidate, at \u2022 which John Norcross,\nhead of tlto -United i-Farmer local, nt\nNelson, and the nominee wero tho\nspeakers. The gathering was presided\nover by W. V. Jackson, chulrmun of\nthe valley Fnrmur-1-ahoi- party organ-\nzation.\nMr. Norcross. wlio spoke first, dwelt\non tho necessary of a. government at\nOttawa, lhal would show genuine\nconcern In legislating on behalf of the\nagricultural industry which, .according\n'o   figures   submitted   by   the   speaker\n\u25a0overing a aun.-y of farming opera- his who might Incline to other than\ntions in a section nf the Krnm-r Valley conservative views was going to bi\nand  Saskutehnwaii.  wiih  fur rrom  being   permitted   to  lend   a   hand   hi   his   plut-\ninouey  making business.    Contrnstod   form   effort,\nwith    non-divldeiul   paying   agriculture,       Tho   gathering,   whlh-   attentive,   was\n\u25a0Ir.   Norcross   balled   atimtlun   to   the   hnrdtv   as   demonstrative   as   Creston\nufriuonc-*,   particularly   of   the   doctors   audhne.-s oro wont to be, nrtll thnt por-\nlawyers,   and   tnul-speople   goner-   tion of the audience  thnt  went\nunited support of tho Fanner-Labor\ncandidate who, if oloctcd, would stand\nshoulder->to shoulder with the Progressives ln Inaugurating the co-operation\nplunk of lho farmer platform which,\nul though not. elaborated at uny detail,\nhad Mr. Norcrotu' \"\u2022\u2022 k,\" ns being 100\npor cent efficient In putting ngriuul-\ni mi \u25a0\u25a0 on a prbSPerous footing, uud with\nagriculture thriving all other Industries\nwould   lu   like   manner   flourish.\nMr., Ilitmi'lircy confined hla remarks\nalmost exclusively tu elaborating us\nextensively as bis tlmo would pro mlt\nthe platform adopted nt the Farmer-\nLabor convention ut Kelson and at\nwhich ho was selected us standard\nbctner. Ho had a good word for each,\nof. the thirteen plunks, with parte lulat*\nemphasis ou the need of abolishing\ntlo- senate, and more generous treatment for pensioners of the grunt, war,\nparticularly In tho direction of equalising tho ullowuncc.i puld officers uud\nmen.\nWonts Tariff to be Provincial\nIle tUtpressod the greatest opthnislm\nan to the beneficial offects thnt would\naccrue from having a permanent tariff commission with no political Htrlngs\nto It, expressing lho hopo that powers\nwould In1 given It so thut tho tariff\ncould he automatically - adjusted to\ntake cure of provincial needs, and not\napplying as It does now to the Dominion as a whole. Mr. Humphrey assured\nthut ou his part an u labor man ha\nwas prepared to go the limit in having tile interests of labor subjugated\nto any extent in order to assuro a\nsquare   deal   for   agriculture.\nMr. Hamphivy ut*o briefly stnted\nhis nationality and places of domicile\nsince soelttg the light of day In answer\nto criticisms of his loyalty and cltixen-\nshlp. In his remarks, too,'Mr. Humphrey wus quite emphiiiic thai his lab\nor sentiments were quite conservative\nthat lie advocated nothing extreme, o)\nradical,  and   thnt   no   follow\nind\nally\u2014all begotten at tho expense uf\ntho man on the lunil\u2014on an eight-\nhour dny, whilst the farmer regulated\nhis hours or labor by the longlh of\ndaylight rather than bv the lut nil*\nthe clock. Mr. Norcross1 ebi\nundesirable    Ktate    of   affair\nfor this I candidate\nwas   a j vita\nbig I list the representatives of the\nConservative and Liberal parties would\nalso be heard briefly, went home disappointed, as neither a Conservative\nipoakor  nor  It.   H Staples, the  Liberal\nwho  wore  present,  were  In-\nipeuk.\nThe Store for tbtaUh\nFurther REDUCTIONS in Prices of\nWinter Coats\nTHE DAILY NEWS LADY\nPERNIO, Nov. 21.\u2014Ludy members\nnf thi* Fernie (lolf ctllb guve a bridge\nnnd five hundred party Wednesday\naftoruoon. This special function was\nIn honor of Mrs. Q. O, M-zUr-at-* >vI-\u00ab.\u25a0..\nhas been a most anient --'worker in'\ntlm Club, hut who Is leaving within\na few days for an extended visit to\nher old home in Nova Scot In. Mrs.\nA. I. Fisher, ou behalf nf -(he club,\nmade a pr-scntntlon to the departing\nmember of a beautiful bouejst of chry-\nBcanthemums. Crises w\u00abnv awarded for\nbridge u;id five hundred, Mrs. Dr. As-\nselstlue being the winner In tho first\nnamed competition, with Mrs. Andrew\nHlnek carrying off the- ho-wow- nt fin****\nhundred.\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nWhere there is a\npersistent cough or\ngeneral rundown\ncondition, there\nScott's\nEmulsion\nis a positive help.\nSeaU m Down.. Toronto, Out.\n ALSO MAKERS OF\u2014\nKbMOIDS\n(Tablals or Granule,)\n'fpr INDIGESTION\nSLOt'AN CITY, Nov. 21\u2014Mrs. T. .1\nArmstrong, Mrs. J, E. Tattermill uud\nmm. Howard, spent the week-end as the\ngnistslof    Mrs.    It.    D.    Kennedy,    at\nPerry s,\nDr. David llitrtin, of Nelson, received\na hurried roll on Sundny to the bedside\nel' Mis. .1. Elgin, the wife of one of tbe\nemployees at Batern'S Mill, who wi\u00bb-\ntaki-n suddenly   III   Saturday   nlghl\nI For Headache I\nHUT\nRELIEVES PAIN I\n$ 1.00 > tub,, \u00bbIyourd(\u00bbltr'\u00ab,\u00abr by m\u00bbil|\nTHI' B'MI\u00abr. MlttS CO. U.VIIED. lOKTIUll\nMeres tip best o\/ faoking Tips\nGrjy Mill banks iu\/ixtjour lips'\nMILL BANK\nMRS.   C.   G.   MUNRO\nof ;oi  Sill\u2122 Strom, ului.se inMttlqw matinm- ihown above won lh\n|.rl\u00abo for llic most original costuras tl  llio DoWo linlluwo'\nclam-.' in Basle hull on Ocl. ill.   H wus fashioned\/from copie\n.News, out In ii si-rlcs of fringes nnd  put together skillfully\nui'P'-r portion of tin- ri-.-nt ii.it:'- for a y.'k.-.\nfirst\nn nins.iucrnilc\nof The Dally\nlo utilize  tho\nPARENTS CONSIDER\nCHRISTMAS TREEE\nSI AN   I'lTV,  Nov.  21.--A   liiovlliut\nor III,- parents of tin- rhlhlivii or the\ntown iraa hold in one uf tin, scliool-\nronniK on l-'ii,..i.v evening to make or-\nrangements for n i-iuisim-is Tr,-- to i\u00bb-\nhold Iii Dec IS, Mr. Imvlis, teacher\nof Hi.- IiUIi nchool, iviis nsked to i>iv-\nt,\\il\u201e   u\\'-r   the   iio-.-lliiK und   Mih.   A.   ]\u2022'.\nOago, was appointed socrsfary-treasur-\ner.     The   lirosraoi   will   ho   enllr.lv    in\nthe hands of .l.e latohant\nBUNGAL0\u2122W BURNS\ninvi:i:mi-;i:i:. Nov. 1i \u2014i,umtenant-\nCommander .1 C. 1'owles and Mrs,\nI'owle.s suffered a severe loss by the\ndestruction of iheir pretty hmuc bungalow and It-; e\u00bbtlr\u00ab contents, by fire\non ih. morning of Tuesday last. The\nMpi-.-id   of   Did   flames wus so  rapid   as\nto mako ii impossible to secure any\nof the personal ijetongiugs or ihe household rurnltun The cause of tho fire\ncnnnot  even  be suriul*-ed\nINVERMERE NOTES\"\nINNVKIUIKIlB, Nov il\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Peter Mltcnell Rtoddart hnv returned tu tin Ir ranch home near Wll-\nmer after un absence of severnl vears\nbuck In the rltlos of Scotland, where\nthey had previously resided.\nMrs, tl. K I'nrham and Mrs. T. A.\nPope, uf Penticton, ure mnl'lnu a slmrt\nstny In tin Windermere district with\nold tlmo rrleuds. MNs Tlioinuson, of\nICnglnud, is iie<-<iiupnnylng Mrs. I'urhum.\nT\n(Conllnnrd From Pa-jo One)\njiolnt thn line would bo worllilcns and\nthut IF It reached Prlnco Oeorge it\nwould meet with competition v.-lth tho\nCnnndlnn National ho thnt tho Intler\ncoutd haul i'-ilili 1 twloo the distance\nand nt hnlf iha*cxpqm<s ns tho I*. O. E.\nMr. WhliesliW stntod that ho wns\nastonished to tfienr (ho member from\nItosnlnnd go unclinllcnRcd when hu\nslated thnl u few days nfter tho hist\n.-!.',-li-m the govornmom rail wny engineer, without the consout of his chief,\nhad consented to tho Northern \"Construction company Increasing Its oust\n<>r a unit basis of 30 por cont nnd further still thnt the snmo engineer hus\npresented a bill fttnountlng^o $700,000\nwhich tho premier had not previously\nknown of. \"I \u00abai\" that an engineer\nwho con not keo(> n premier within a\ncloser fdfriro thnn thel Is duo for retirement,\" concluded Mr. Whiteside.\nThe ipOQph of Mr. Whlicsiile hus\noreatod a sensitlon in tho Qorrldon\nnnd wlille Premier Oliver at a luto\nhour is attempting to Justify his position us minister of railways the 1\nlief )\u25a0 expressed that construction\nwork on the P. (1. K. will be order\nto cease by a vote of tho houso and\nthat the end of the government Is im\nLucks ('mirage l\u00ab\u00bb (\"olleri,\nSmall lawns In eastern Canada get\nhet'i-r terms from financial bouses in\ntheir borrowings than dues tin- iii-n-\nIsh Columbia government in us borrowings, declnred Hon. W. J. lluwser,\nleader of the opposition, speaking ln\ntin- Inuigi-t debate today in lhe legislature. II\" criticized tin- government's flnniii-l.il policy nnd ;.ild thc\npersonal property tax was turned over\nto thi' municipalities because the government lucked cuurngo tu collect It.\nHut-incHs men. In-*ntd, were up in the\nair owing to the financial uncertainty\nbrought abbut by the governnint's\npolicy.\nMr.   Bowser   congratulated' lion.\nHfa Smith on her judgment on\nsigning from .111 nd ministration which,\nhe said, \"wah fast tottering to its\ndoom.\"\nReferring to the gams board in\nquiry, Mr. Bowser said while he hud\nno criticism against Magistrate Shaw\nthe fuel remalnod thftl this man wa\u00ab\n:i servant of the uttorncy general nnd\nSilk-Lined COATS\nAt $39.00 Each\nWonderful values in new\nWinter Coats, any one\nof which is worth\nmore than double the\nmoney. Made of finest\nquality Velours i and\nSilvertones, and lined\nthroughout with guaranteed Silk. Colors are\nNavy, Burgundy,\nTaupe and Grey. Belted or loose-back styles\nand hardly any two\nalike. Sizes 16 to 40.\nSale Price, each,'\nonly $39.00\nAll-Waal COATINGS Gearing at $4M Yard.\nTaken from regular stock, and much reduced for this\nSpecial Sale. These consist of Heather Mixtures, all-\nwool Cheviots and Silvertones in a range of colors. Full\n54 inches wide and sold regularly up to $9.50. yard.\nSpecial Sale Price, yard  $4.95\nAH-Irool HEATHER HOSE at .1.25 Pair.\nSplendid quality pure wool Hose, heather mixtures, seamless feet and legs.   Sizes 9, '.)<\u25a0_ and 10. Sale Price..$1.25\nWomen's COMBINATIONS at $2.95 Suit\nFine knit Combinations in good weight, soft, fleecyjli.l)ed,_\nmade with V-necks and elbow sleeves. Sizes 36 to 40.\nSale Price, the suit $2.95\nWomen's FLANNELETTE GOWNS at $1.75 Each\nGood Flannelette, made up in pull-over style, trimmed with\nnoveltv embroidery or fancy stitching. White only.\nSale Price  $1.75\nall-Wool SWEATER COATS at $9.50 Each\nHandsome Sweater Coats, made in a variety of styles,\nwith belts or girdles. Colors are Saxe, Rose, PUfple and\nGreen.   Values to ?20.00. Sale Price, each $9.50\n611 Baker Street\nPhone 200\nshould ho bring nn adverse report the\nattorney general had the right to dismiss him.\nDIFFERENT\nTO\ngnnlxittlon to the Chinese detegtites\nfor their stand aud pledged them (heir\nmoral support. Similar messages\nwere received from Tal Hon Kong\nDuu, a Chinese publication Issued In\nVnncouver, and from a Chinese organisation In Halifax. A reply wna\nsent by Alfred Sze, chief of the delegation, declaring they were a \"suuroo\nuf great encouragement.\"\nADRIFT IN PONTOON\nIN PUGET SOUND\n(Continued from Tage 1>\nfur  us   the  department   knew,   ther\"\nwere   Only   two   copies   of   the   report\nIn   evidence,   the   premier   said.\nContradict Crerar\nPORT AllTHlTH. Out., Nov. 21.\u2014\nDuring lhe course of his meeting here\nthis evening, the it.llnwlng telegram\nwas received by Premier Meighen\nfrom    th-   general    manager   of   tho\nCockshutt   Wow  company;\n\"Crerar's Brantford statement re-\nment manufacturers refusing to sup-\ngardlng Canadian agricultural Imple-\npiy implements to United Farmers'\nassociations is not correct so far us\nthe Cockshutt Plow ciimpany Is concerned.\"\nClllUlUiail   (Vtc-Stiltls   I mini---.\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 21.\u2014-It was\nannounced V'^Kht by a representative\nof the Chinese delegation that a number of telegrams have beon received\nfrom Chinese organisations In Canada\nendorsing Chinas policy as presented\nto thc armament conference.\nOne t>' these messnges, frnm the\nChoe Kong long. Vancouver, expressed\nthe thanks of the members of that or-\nSEATTLi:, Nov. 21.\u2014Adrift In Pu-\nget sound on a pontoon and during a\nheavy storm, C. W. Bandy, a lumber-\nmnn, of tioatllc, Ih believed to huvo\nlust his lifo lust night. Ha was returning to Seattle In an airplane operated by Kddle Hubbard. Owing to\nrough weather In thc sound a furccd\ndescent -partly wrecked the machine.\nHandy decided to try his luck on a\npontoon which ho cut loose from the\nmachine and drifted landward In the\ndarkness. He hus not been seen since.\nHubbard clung to the wreckage of bin\nmachine for nine hours, at the end uf\nwhich time he was cast ashore.\nSTKAL UNBBGWTEBED BONDS.\ni 21.\u2014\nthousand dollars' worth of unregistered Llbertv bonds and fH00 worth\nofwiif KVlftll-KUH|M MfN Willi\nfn un -the. SLitc Bank of Sfcauglc. ut\nSptfngle. 20 miles south of here, nt nti\noarly hour this morning. About 2*>0\nsafe deposit boxes were rifled. Registered bonds worth about $1000 were\nthrown on the floor together with au\nenvelope containing a 910,000 bond.\nCONTAINS NO ALUM\nMagic\nBAKING\n..POWDER**-\n-_*X!VC_P.\nCANADIAN MADE\nPURE FOOD\nINSURES GOOD HEALTH\nMAGIC BAKING POWDER\nINSURES PURE FOOD\nEW.GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED\nTORONTO, CANADA.\n-W1NNIPEO\nMONTMM.\n\t\n\t\n \\^.  QJSein\nTHE NEESOff\nCopper*, Utilities -and Junior\nOils Make Noteworthy\nGalhs; Leaders Raided.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 31.\u2014Mixed con-\nilKU.itB. .urevullril In Umi etock mar-\nlii'i toflity. Iaidklng iituualiai- 'oxplau-\natloim. tlie uneven tone was tittrlbu-\ntvit lo !i:iiui.: s or money rates and\n<Vv.luiijlK-uia at the ariiinnniii conference. Among active shttrcs. tho\ntab\" noteworthy gains were made\n'\u2022'*' fop.nf!;.. utilities, and . several or\n(.ne 'junior olio. \u00ab0.uli)monts *tn\u00bb food\nulimeu. witli the.,u8uul.KprlnklitiK of\nn-riucollnntioua Is-mefi. lenders were\nsubjected to a series b( raids In lhe\nlist Hour. Supporting ordera In United WateB. BtQol and .other Slimdurd\n\u25batucks ettocled |>artla| recoveries tit\nthe .confused closo.\nSUlou wore  iliiOOO Sharon,\n' AdVlcea uver the week-end were ono\nntlll.   the    liuirkcl'K     hesitanl     iiiuveti.\npuglneas gutiiK ut western centers\n\u2022tore' .twtltrallised Uy rui-tln-i- decllnoa\nin railroad tonnuyo, luipniuiin loadings, edto'wlnk docruase's of ll) lu L'O\nver ixnt,. .. .,\n*.B*mSnd loans opened' at V yer cent\nojruiuit last week's (lhal quotation of\nM4 .per cent, bin the later rate Wus\npostal towards tlie cud, mainly . at\ntho Uptime or belated borrowers, and\nMfertngsof time money wero rclullvo-\nliv\"\"\u00bbaii.\n' .BrttlifK exchangu hovord around Its\nrecant   maximum.   French   bills   were\nttwuVy. with the Belgian rate, each\n(Welting about IO points. German\nirks eased \u00bbnljfra tririe. The li|-t\nstmeiit market continues strong and\nbread as Indicated by largo, subscriptions to Consolidated Guu notes, bg.\n\u25a0regaling -f20.uou.oou. and. the strength\nof tho general list. Liberty bonds\nclosed mostly at adeurtces and Inter\nualio-nuls strenglhoncd.\nTotal   sales   (16.875,000.\nClosing   Quotations\nHigh   I...w\nC. V.  It 110      no\nUhlno           26?;\n}hL -SUrSno   \t\nMas. Pau. com.  ...  MM.     18%\nMuh. Pac. pfd If.i     Aa%\nHerco Arrow    13%     18U\nStudebaker      It,        We.\nU. a Stciil com. .. 83'i     82H\n*Wlllrs5.Ni..':.^.'.,.\u2022. .*...    ....\nFac.   Oil    ~*t        44%\nCloso\n116\niss\n19**\nI8K,\n13U\n_\nlili\nl.-SHIttdr  00X\nboth tfiWKtiij-. and  Monday.\n. 1.0NUQ-* Sl>v. flWsilvo} Saturday\nS0(il   MOftfty,  nu_change, \u25a0\nMETAL MARKETS\n., NKW SOBK? Nov. 'Jt. \u2014 Copper\nAoady: electrolytic\u2014spot and nearby\nIt's lo ll**:  later liHi to n%.\nTin\u2014l'-lrm; spot and nearby 28.02:\nfutures,   20.ST.\nliuprHslvuiiy: NO. 1 northern. 21.00\nto ;'2,00:' Nu. 2 northern, 20.00 to\n-.'l.OO: -NOV J southern. 18.00 tu 19.00.\nl.tuU-rSlfcaily:    1.70.\nAntlmyhy\u2014Steady:   4.62   to   -1.35.\nZhn-   ijulit:   spol    1.7.\",.\nAt loodpn\u2014Stundard copper\u2014spot\nMM.  10s:   futures.   \u00a307.   10s.\nKleclrolytle\u2014Spol. \u00a371. 10; fuiures,\n\u00a376, 108\nTMir-Spol, \u00a3100. Us; futures, \u00a3165,\n12s,.,dd,   . ,_\n7s, 6d.\n'   f    '\nFbREIGN EXCHANGE\nXEW YORK, Nov.\nl-'oi-eigii -pan.\nCanadian\n21.\u2014Uur ntlvcr-\n-Deniund,  \u25a0IBM's*   cables.   4.11.\nSfEYLlNCjXtHANGE\nNKW YtillK, Nov. jl.\u2014Sterling ex-\ncluinge heavy at 13.90*4. for 60-day\nbills nml  &l '.''.'Vi tor Jwautnl.\nNELS\u00bbJ{.'' Xov. \u00bb*M.*JJllrr\u00abl*fr counter  exchange   for   sterling   11.37.\nCANADA BONDS.\nWINNIPEG.    Nov.    21 Bir   prices\nfor  Domlnluu wur  Issues;  _m -\nViCtoryl-)922.    IW.S0:   IMS. -199.15:\n1927.     ?00.00;      1033.     U00,7i;      1937,\nM02.7.V,, I..2I.   SS7.H\";    IM4.f98.3ii-\nJWar   -nana  '-+   1925. .*HiHii):   imi.\nIf-fciO?  l\u00bbJ7j, 1(04.7\nMONTREAL UST\nMONTREAL, NOV. 21.\u2014Today's nes-\na\\_\\\\ was foalured by Hit* moat \\_.t_-\nctul ami tho iffr-eateHt udvancu lh\ngovoriimtnt'bondB wltueebi'd this year.\nSlight -Ml tho Issues roachlng now\nhigh rcordu. Th trading in ,UmU-.\novci'Hhadinvtd Un-. Litcrest mauut^M\nlb stocks, lho latter being dull and\nteuturoloss.\nThe-.loader -in tin.- advances was\ntha l\u00bb;i7. -Victury, \\.\\\\\\\\ a mt gain at\nlfi_, white tho- IS)} war loan w<ta.\nsecund ' Al' un advance of'one dollar\nto  96.00.\nThere was a turnover of HWiQO In\nQuebec Railway bonds with the limitation unchanged at 64.\nTooke Brothers preferred, on Its\nflrat .board jpt .palu. wince January\n29, established a new low record\nof G9?i, or a loss of CU  pt*ln!:j.v\nBOARD\nTORONTO, Nov. M.\u2014Advances by\nVlclory bonds on tlie Toronto stock\nexchange today were tho most crm a-\nflonal yet of tlie long boom in this\nclass of securities but In other respects the. market was reactionary\nand trading was dull.\nVictory and war bonds showed their\nstrength from the start ot tmdlng.\nThe Iffl was the outstanding isnue,\nreaching the remarkable prlcu uf\n103.40 on tho last ;\u25a0*\u25a0]\u25a0\u25a0 for a full\nbotul. making a net gain of 1.70 fur\nlhe. The heaviest trading, however,\nwas ln the 1938 Victory, amounting tu\n\u00ab8M5G, which gained 30 cents ti\n101.10. !\nAbout the onl)' local stock to ad\nvance was Imperial OH, whieh follow\ncd ;up:vlts! Btrimjrth-.- of ths Week-end\nby a -i*i pulnta ris\u00ab to iu0!:_.\nM1NNEAP0US GRAIN\n\u25a0 jilNNEAPOUS, Nov. 8).\u2014Flour un\nchanged lu 10c. lower at 7.8i to 7.J0\na barrel,    tjhlpmen'.s   09,2011   barrels.\nyfiin\u2014114.00 ' to    110.00.\n. Wheat\u2014No.   1   northern.   1.2w*4   to\nJ.J7H.\nCorn\u2014Nu. 3 yellow, 44 to  I I'j.\nOats\u2014No. 3 whito, !SH tu 3o\u00abi.\n*e-la*=r-No.    I.   1.170H    lu   1.71.\nEGG MARKET\nOTTAWA, Kov. tl.\u2014PNnh specials\nand fcltras continue vcr> scarce 111\nthe egg market and they are selling\nat utmost  uuy-. price  uuked.\n.Toronto Jobbing specials' 90 to OS,\nattnu-fn -to it.   . -.M\n. Sasltuteliev.-uii stoi-oee firsts Jobbing\nAa to 47.  secunds.  40.\nCalgary und Edmonton,  unchanged.\nBritish Columbia locul fresli CO\ncountry; oolnlsi   specials   CO.\nClncagp und New York uncluinged.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nTpilONTO. ***r. 21.\u2014fttlUe receipts\n0100. Trade active; prices steady.\nIlealy, beel steers 50.00 lu $7.73;\nbutcher steers choice $0.50 tu f 0.50..\nI'i'ir rsoelptos (tl calves slew und\nGOc.   Inner. ..','.\nHJiei-p receipts D010; tombs steady;\nbluk 18 60 to fs.\"i.\nh'heeit Li-uiie goud at 25c. hjgher.\nHog receipts. .2741. l'rlce* unchanged.\nWlN.SlfliX*, Nov. 21.\u2014Offerings in\ntlie yurdo over the week and up to\nV it. in. were 21011 cuttle; ,510 hum\nand '75 lambs. JHlL    '\nHteurs\u2014Cliuiee. 58.00 tefH,,->a: full\nto tood, .J4.00 to 04.75.'  ' *\nUUtrrfcr helfera \u2014 Chulce. 1.4.25 li\nt_t\\ \u00abUlr to, good, JJ.OO lo 54.00,\nHHtcKer )*Ws \u2014 OKolte, 53.25 ti\n03.30;  fair to Jjood,  52.75 to 58.00.\nBulls' \u2014 Oood. Stat to JS.50.\nOxen \u2014 Oood,  52.5*0 tu 54.00.\nWaedur steers \u25a0\u2014 Choice, 11.75 ti\n54.04; lair to Sobih ,_la to M.C0.\nteller  steers  \u2014   Choice.  53.00  tu\nfair to good. $2.25 to 52.75.\nrou  \u2014   Choice,   $5.00   to  50.00;\n\u26661.50 to  54.80.\nM  \u2014   Oood,   51.51)   to   54.50.\nths  \u2014  Oood,   10.50   tu   57.50.\nittit-d \u2014 Selects. 10.00;   llgllts, |9.00\nno, ;;to io $8.00,\nCHICAGO, Nov. 21.\u2014With stocks uf\nwheat rapidly being reduced, bulls In\nthe wheat * market today showed an.\nIncrease of contldence.\n\u25a0 TITo close was unsettled, *?, lo llic.\nnet Higher with Doc. 109 to 100*ii and\nMay  l.U to  lip..\nCorn gained :'. to ':... und oats lost\na shade to %c.\nlu provisions the outcome ..varied\ntrom  7 c to  10c. \u25a0 decline to a rise\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\n, M0NTHtQ.\u00ab-,V Nov- 21. '\u2022\u00bb 1-Toducc\nprioes Bloody:\nCheese\u2014Wliesl cuslerns. 18 to 18H\nBuller\u2014 Choicest creumery. 38 lo\n38H-\nKggs\u2014Seleeted 50, lu 51.   \u25a0\nPotatues\u2014Per bag. car lots. 1.15 to\n1.25.        \u25a0\nWINNIPEG    GRAIN    QUOTATIONS\nOpen   High    Low   Ctosu\n^jjuftnimi\u25a0Tow**wiwiii.Tirit.r*J----ir.T--*-i*'iii' -\u25a0\u25a0 rifiifa'T \u00abi  W\"*.* \u25a0''Y r   '[. \"\ni iti. ~..:r '\u25a0'\"'- iv-i.-..*..'.':. :\";,,',. ,. *... Z'.:'A-..--\u2014\"\u25a0-.\u25a0 -*-*\u25a0,\u25a0. .-\u25a0\u25a0\u2014j-^-j-* *\u25a0     \u25a0 -\u25a0:-:\u25a0-\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0l**'-\u00aba\nHunter Says Too  .\nperts; Criticizes New Den-\nI Vtr-Thrte fifa Road.\n(& VICTORIA. Nov. 10.\u2014Oil rid of thn\nbig army of exports and olrtuln dollAf\nfor dnllur tor work porforiiod by tho\npublfc winks department, Such wns\nthe advice lendciod by Wllltam Hunter, CoiwrviLtlvo mcnilier for Slocan,\nwhen speaking on the buditot dobnto\nIn the legislature this week. Mr.\nHunior's uddress was nol a lengthy\nnun and did not sontnliv matter which\nwas not of especial Intovest to tho\nconstituency, uh In thc fault or some\nirjcnibors .of.,lhe house, who delight to\nrouin ;it largo . on the P, C. E. and\nNicomen 'Islapd. dykes.\nI'nulil Have Cut Cost.\nHln chief criticism wns levelled at\nthc alloged cmmsslve cut ot tha JfPS'\nDenver-Three Forks Coiul, whlcffflta\nclaimed could huve lt\u00abii*-\u00abll{niliiated\nhad the g'uvcrfrount o\u00abj:lflfe*(*B commenced work oh the norch'-wde of the\nI ,'cAiiyon. In 1010. when Simdon dls-\n\"irlct was prosporous und lhe people\nWnnied un outlet. siiMcd Mr. Hunter,\nlho later Kovermnent engaged engineers to make a survey for a new\nroad, the sliding nature of the ground\nalong the southern route rendering a\n'cliunge necessary. The udvlco of such\nenglnecra-was not taken by thc pros-.\ncut iidmi^smitlou. wilh tho result\nthat III 1019 Ihey spent 520,040.75 on\nthe highway; In 1920. 520.129.01. and\nthey have been working throughout\nthe' present season. Assuming that,\nthey spent 520.000 this year, stated\nMr.\" ITunler. lhe cosl aggregates 800.-\n000. wheroas to Imtld the mad un the\nnorth side of the cunyon would not\ncost 520.000 to complete. -The cribbing on the present highway, was. continually giving way ond it was almost\nuiisafo for an automobile to .attempt\nto 'make lho passage.\nIrrigation XW'di d. '\nIrrigation for thc suWin valley was\nnlso lunched upon bf *the member.\nj\u00bbli-. Hunter claiming tlnflivvlth small\nfctpenso mountain strea*ms could bo!\nSbonlrollud ond diverted to where they\nfcoold bo of sume use to settlers. The\nwork would not be expensive and It\nwunld be the means o* keeping the\npeoplo on the i land'rather than havo\nthorn oongrogato In the cities, where\nunemployment Is said-to be acute.\nIn ciineiu-iiiii Mr. Hunter stated\nthai the 'ship ot stijtc .is overmanned\n\\\\'li11*e*xp*rlir.lili!'getting tojmcnvy nnd\nthe sooner lhe   government    realized\nthis tho hotter It will bo to all con\n.ceriimd.    \"I'lien there would  be  little\nnecessity for cinparking on schemes\n.whlnh ran into the millluiin with tho\ni BAT\/K OE MONTREAL\nASSETS INCREASE\nli\nS5\u00bb-\n.\"MONTREAL.,-Nou. 2i;\u2014Tlio annual\nMUiiemeni ot llio Bank uf Mont-Mai,\nbntufcd today, shoe's an Incroase In\nnvalbhlc niiiietn. from i5i*8\u00bb,140,508.84\na .yelil-  HKo  tu'8I90.li:lt.2!'-;.5l   ut the\npre-ent tlnlti. The bank's liabilities lh\n\u2022tlie corroapoiidlng period have decreased by J48.747.M0.10.\n\u2022 lixcess .of. total-' Unposlls ovor en 11\n4ind tlmo loans stands at  8107,D-74,-\nii.,.;iii. \u25a0\/.bile ih,- Vi:;ui, . fur savings\ndepontts are $117,1115.871.38, us,compared witli 5321i(78.0i;i.54 a year ago.\n'I'oial tnsots .are IW7.403,102.00, an\n\u25a0 i.nilini- -il with 1807.19il.040.4l) OR\nAprllSO last, profits nre ehuwn to4ie\n\u00bb;t.940,7PC.r,8.' as compared with 14,-\n\u00ab33,805 In-the.prevlous year. The fill\n\u2022dividend of-12 por eent. with u boiuiu\nast 2 per eont. has been inuinluliicd.4\n\u2014.\u2014Wm~-.\t\nJackson cameMrlpping into his tiny\nliull 0110, day, and almost spoilt his\nin.wily beauty by tripping over some\n.one's shoes left lying about.\n\"Whoso ferry-boats are those in the\nhall?\" ho askod lhter when ho onterod\n\u2022the drawing room.\n\u25a0\u25a0I-,,-, j-!,\u201e,!. -.'\u25a0\u25a0 orica 1,1s iiioiin'i'-iii-\nlaw. uiigrlly, \"Why, thuso aro my-\n\u00abhoos!\" 1\n\"My dene, good mu,\" said Jackson\nliurrloAly, \"who said ferry-boats? You\nmisunderstood, l'-alry-lioots, you know\n\u2014fnlry-4)oots!'i\nAnd thon he wiped llie perspiration\nfrom his brow.\ntlreen; \"Whnt ls a sense ot htir\nmor?\"\nIlrown: \u2014A sonso of humor is lhal\nwhich makui you tough ul something\nthat hiippeiu to somebudy else which\nwould maku you uugry If il huppenea\n\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u25a0^\u25a0Vrura ,;\n49     Fynns ior Safe\n\u25a0 ------\u25a0 -^f |-e-jjinni.  ,-u 11*1.11 j\u00bbr .rt-ifinnnru-jij j\nbutylhg,land InWtsleru Canada you VIII     -\nWill'-OltE  _.   \t\ntidu you iflllTio well  repaid.-by ob\n1 .mine  In formation about  the Cana\ndian raclt-lc llallwayn farm lands In\nthe i.loxiiDhiniei- nnd Battloronl\ndistricts oif Central Allicrtu and Hits-\nkntchewalL Offlolsl crop returns\nshow, thpft. these dlsli-lcts are producing, ifoin'e of ile- largest .orops\nIn tho oounlri'. while the. highest\nAWards..Tor   grain   nml   livestock\nllie I. :ul .111; e-.Inline,i,.   have lieen woll\nby set'\nfar\u00bbllll;\nsett'ters here. No holtor nilxed\naruilare eopntrf. I.\u00ab-v priced land,\nlaisy    teiuiH.     Write    for -free    de\nscriptive   booklet\nran,   Uiml   Agonl.\n%  {_\nB.    r. ..in- h\nIt.   Station,\nHelp Wanted\nPetition* Wanted\nLost and Found\nfarm rroi\nTimbe-f and\nClassified Aidoerlismg Rates\nRe word. 1 Mlnlnium 15c. If ehart.\n0c.-Display typo double ebovs rates.\neach m\nchins-\ntoper\n_t..p*r \u00abor\u00ab\ntaee or mv\nHindi face\ncapital! Be a word. 25 per oent dln-\ncaunt if run daily without change of\ncerpy for one month or ihore. -Where\nadvertisement In set out In short tinea\ntha charge Is 12!4o a line for Roman\nSBS \u25a0Si.'SJISffi ***\u2022\u25a0Mi ,0-\u00b0 *\u00b0r-\ncharge.^ EOe.\ncapitals.    Minimum  lEe, If\n10   Male Hdp Wanted\nree I\nJust off Baket St.\nNelstn.-\nApply Box 144,\nICOtC1\nCAPAllt.K' weiiiaii   or  girl   for goherul\n83    Prop6rky fdr Sale\nhousework,\nTrail.\nMrs.    Qoorgo\nMurray,\n(0418)\nWANTED    \u2014    Experienced    wultross,\n-Queen's.hotel.   (8387)\nHOUSEMAID  wanted   Immediately  for\nsmall   family.     laundry   sent   out.\nApply Box 301, Cranbrook,  li. C.\nV \u2022    \u2022      (0300)\nWANTED\u2014At onco,  dining  room girl.\nApply Hume Hotel. L1M?)\n12 Situations Wanted Female\nWOMAN   wuuld   like   position\n' 1   camp   ur   hold   Box   813'\nNews.       \t\n1   cook\nDully\n(OUi)\n35\n*?*-=\nf-    I     'J.'*;'fi\n\\aiicosmtv.-ot A41nn-tlemeron. Generr\nal .--I'lH-rliileudent of Lnnd\". C. P. R.\n9S5 First Street East, Calgary, (8081)\n>-ff\"MJi|n>)i ; , is.\n% a Talent of ,Silvfer\n...    .\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 itutvid \u00bbl .'\u2022  \u25a0\nWhcul-\nNov\t\nDec\t\nMay   \t\nOuts\u2014\nNov\t\nDec\t\nMay  \t\nHurley\u2014\nNov\t\nDec\t\nMuy   \t\nttfit\u2014\nNbv\t\nDec.   ....'J\nMay   \t\nltye\u2014\nNov\t\nDoc\nMay\n.108^\n.104 W\n.108\n\u2022 451i\n. I2\u00bb\u00ab\n.  IS?,\n,1J5\n.107Ir\n\u25a0 175H-\n111?;\nIIIJ'.S\nno\nt:.t.\n42*^\n!4<i\n109\n104 (i\n108\nJi',.\nI2H\n43\u00bbii\n110%\n105H\n10'.\".\n45 l'i\n42'.\n48-Ji\n69'_ \"&'%'   50\n170 Jli       17511\n171 \u25a0.- U1HA. 169'i\nl7JTi i|4'.,    175U\nfa':.\nIt'..\n<2i-\n1,7.\n.. 8)4\n... 14_'.\nTELEPHONE ^AM\nINCREASE LIMITED\nOTTAWA. Nttv. IX.\u2014In u Judgment\nhutidtd down tonight tlie rulhvity cum-\nmlstilun iini'i: thru tho lu per cent-ln-\ncruuM-- lit iixchanfre ratcM reeontly\ngranu-d tu the British COlumldu Telephone compuny .-]>]\u2022 li-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 only to Vim-\ncouvor, Victoria. Ne*w WeHtnituater,\nNnUaimu and North Vancouver. The\ncompany had filed a tariff accepting\ntho 10 pcr cent lncreu\u00abe to ull exchanges in the province.\nThe new tnrlff ia to be effective De11\ncumber 1.\nNEW llAliAVAY  IHIllXtOll.       j\nWl^MPBG. Kov. ^l.-Sioh. Ver-'\nnon H. timltli. mlnlHter of ritll*nay-<\nfor tho ].ru\\-im-1 of AHi.rl:i. wuh lotiaj*\nelected a. director* of the ISdmo'rtfuii.t\nImiiiv j'.ui & l'i*!'i h Ouiumbia rullway\nutuI of Uk utwuclulvd compaiitN. Tho.\ndirectum met at tlio of .'ice of the pre*)-'\nblent in AVInnlpeg. Hon. M. tiinlth\nauccucdti Mtm. ChurtcH KU-wiut. former premlui* of Albcrtu, whu reuigncd\nfrom th.; directorate when hla purty\nwan defeated In thu provincial clue-\ntlon.\ni\nPtOM tarfliett da\\M, to butymoney tun\ntrcfen coosidered a stupid and blame\nworthy a*_,i \\m\u00a3to put it out at interest\nhat been prataed.    .   ,  v\/]\nDeposit your itaoney ia our Savings De-\n*mffi__*i**$m\"\nCANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE\nBrandies in Koofeney and  Bcumlary et NELSON, KERNIE, CRANBROOK,\nCRESTON, GRAND FORKS, GREENWOOD, NAKUSP, TRAIL,\n\u25a0'*--   --:* *-\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0***'    \" '-'     \u25a0 *-'ii\". 'e-Tl,-'\"- \u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0-\u25a0*\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0-   -\u25a0'--   v-  -\nFor Rent\nHDIt ItKNT\u2014Himg .Lakssld. eoltuce,\npartly filliilirlieil. Il5\"a imiutli. llutll-\nerford Pruie Coiii|iuii>v Nelmui. (0096)\n-i.-li-KW  elioleo roomt\n\u25a0il.  O. X.  ntra,\nom\u00ab   io\nvacant,\nler man at Y.\n(013.1)\nii nu siioi'.to rent\nm\nApply Hume\n100JI71\n18 Miscelilaneous ior Sale\nNICE    timeil    violin    120.00:    niallilollli\n- ..nn.   Mr. .   l-.niil.   SOS   Mia, - Itoad.\n(fill)\nristmas Cards\n>h     V,\nBeautifully   KrigrQVpd\naddress.\nyour name and\nScores to' choose\nIrom.\nPrices from $2.75 a dozen up\nBAKER STREET\nQuality\nNELSON,\nTHB SL'OAIt BOWL OFFERINGS\u201410\nBuirar. .'\u2022'.' mi: Blue Itlbiiou lea, Mc.1\nCreamery butter, Inc.: Curraatn, SOc.:\nHi.i>dlonM UalHlus, 2 for &5c.: l'aclflc\nMilk, t for 85c.; St. Cliarle\u00bb, : for\n:::\u201e-.. Baby. '\u25a0'\u25a0 for 2&e.: Swift's Boue-\nleHH Ham . :i.'.i -. FTe.h l^-i:-. 60e.;\nCubbase, fi.- cauliflower. 20c; po-\ntatoen. 10 for ur.e; Cume In. be cen-\n..iii-i ii. uud nave monoy, l'lioue UO.\nT \u2014 (6I8S)\nlull BALE\u2014Cabinet plionoilrapli, will\n-\u25a0'iii i... CIiiih. E. Clark, Wintnw. B.\nC. (03S3)\nI'Olt    SALE    S. :.li.I lh    kill    nail    111, a-\nirarry.    Apply at Scotch Bakery. 007\nBaker St.  , WO-')\nUOOB   DRY   WOOU   for' wile.   Hl-<leen\nJ\u00a3Z\n\u25a0t'l'lVi-\nPwd\nWilli, 'ii-*\n(6350)\nHOUSE   rOF  6A1.E     '\nVory Eftny Tinm\nI linvc bonn inMtrnrtotl to offi.T at\na ftucrlflco for qulok salo 1\\_ lots on\ncorner facing car line, six-room houxo,\nbearing fruit .tro&v, electric Ugbt, olty\nwater; In good location. Tlto price lot\nQuick.ualo Id $lflfi0;00, ana tho terms\nnre I2G0.00 co\u00bbli and $35.00 per month.\nintercut 8 pet cent. Thin ls your\nchance to GET YOUR OWN HOME\non easy payments. '\" ]l *t>ort tlmo\nyou have a packago of pnyment ro-\ncelpls, and your own home paid for.\nInstead of a packago of ront receipt\"\nand nothing to show for them. Call\nand  get 'particulars at  once.\nROSKMONT   LOTS\u2014For  $10.00     cash\nnnd  $10.00  pet  month  you  cnn  buy\ngood lots In Rosamont.    PrlccH from\n$60.00  to  $150.00  per lot.    Why not\nhave a garden nextyenc?   The cost\nof   hulldlng   and   lumber   ltT- going\ndown, why not got started on your,\nown homo?\nRANCH  FOR SAM5\u2014CO acres  In Slocan  Volley,  14  ncres cultivated, 170\nbcarlm: fruit treop, raspberry patch;\nstilcndld   bottom   hdy   land.    House,\nbarnh.     Closo    to   sohool,    railway;\ngood   wagon   mul. .   I'tlcn   $5500.00.\nwith $2000.00 cash and balance rosy\nituymcntH. \u2022   1   Ho   not   know   of\nbetter buy.\nWit your lunch os Olty Property with\nSi*   for   -Quick   Sale.\nHUCm V. KOBSBVJSOV,\nTbo Lnnd Man\nWard Street, Nelson, B.O\nKlro Insurnnce, TAto Insurance. Accident nnd Sickness Insurance, Automobile Insurance and Motorbat In-\nsuranco written  whllo  yon wait.    Oet\n28 Miscellaneous Wanted\n, \u00ab\u25a0 ,  ,. H \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0w-'.,^\u00bb ...\u201e*,a*~.'*..a .. ,w.m\u00bb\nWANTKD\u2014Leeomotlvo typo boiler 0t>-\n7i. lioreo uewer; llio poundo. iireuauro.\nWrite full -particulars. Jewell Lum-\nber Co,,  Ltd.. Caltliiiean. B, C.  IIH10)\nW3IY tlirou- away your old 6arpo(\u00a3Ywe\nmake them Into *plondl\u00ab Fluff rugs.\nFor sohiplos and prioes Phone F.\nSmith ^08711.      (\u00bb\"\u00bb)\nBusiness. anH   Professional\nDirector.\n\" 'i rr '    .-\nWe. Havrf ul,i:,li;i il tbe OKOlicy for\nGllinoii'a l.luiltctl .manufacturers of\n...ilii,. and loKKlir; supplies.. Also for\niioailiilon Subbor System. Lurire stock\nof iiininil nilnliiKv*,uiilpi!ient. Open for\ncontractu tor trnimvuya, loKKlns flumes\netc. A\"'-'\"*** ail\nWest   Kootenay   Equip.   &\nConstr'n Co.\nBox ill.\nP. o.\nNelson, B. C.\n(111311)\nmy rates.\n<r.::ni)\nIMPORTANT\nI havo a list of somo of tho best\nbuys In City Property, Orchard\nHomes, Dairy Stock and Mixed\nFarms,    Sec mc boforo you locate.\na. t. McMillan\n, Real   Estate and   Insuraneo\n624 Baker Street Phono 601\n(-tun\nFOlt KALK\u2014NclMon Property. Block\nU$, xubdivlNlon of I \"i 304, connlst-\nbig of 1.270 acres, with small house,\nTprms or bnrgnln for wish. Imiulr-?*\nBo\u00a3_ 60B. Orand  Forks,  a C,   (6-J01)\nFOR RALli^-Uood medium sized modern house located In one of the bost\nres blent ini m-l>c lions of city. Excellent vi. w of hike. Cash or sutisfac-\ntory terms.     P. Q. Box 118.     (6-103)\nPOR SALE\u2014Threo houttes nine, sevon\nand six rooms, central location and\nnice   locality;   cheap  for  cash.    An-\nply   P.   O.   Box   828,   NelBon. <\u00ab4l)\nTWIiNTY-ONtf acres offered \"as going concern, including lAusehold furniture, three head of stock, etc. Four\nacres cultivated, fourteen slashed not\nstumped, fifty fruiKtrees. Five room\nframe housi.'. Outbuildings. Prlco\n$2300.00.    On terms.    H. E. Dill.\n(tOU\n20   Livestock ior Sale\nMATCH     BLOCK    WOOD\u2014For    snlo,\npfronp   17T_ (0178)\n\u25a0HINOUeS\u2014 Buy  fbern\nkusn   BhtngU   Mill,   1\nMv trom  Nk-\nIda 1* Nakusp,\nn:n:'!'i\n54     Articles Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Ton to 40 tons of 10-pound\nrtlls.    Box   6103,   Dally   Ncwn.(C103)\nWANTED\u2014Set    It envy    tcuni\nBox 864, NelHon. U. C.      ___\n\u00abloiab\u00ab.\n(6300)\n31   Livestock Wanted\nRl*>\u00bb.     lli-t-Kl-pe     White     nows,     n-nvr-n\nI montlm   from   Prolific   stock   $30.00.\nCun bu  bred   lo reg.    Chester  Whllo\nIf desired.     Cn\u00abh with order. A. Dp-\nfrrn-jn. Crawford Bej^   (6415)\nORAlVK AyresbTrt for sale sevnn yeurn,\nJuHt fn-shunvd. Oood and c-a^y\nmilker, T. B. tented. Apply Major\nBrothern,   Proctor. (638X)\nA ttnnp in goal!-*, bttek olght montliK,\ntwo dot-H tight and ten montlm. 7-\n_ Toggouburg uon related. The three\ntugethcr ISO, Box 6371, Dally Nows.\n(C17D\nF^JU KALE\u2014'iooU cow, freshen two\nwcckK, or will exchange for Imple-\nji.i-ni \u25a0 or anything useful around the\nfarm. What have you lo offer?\nWilliam Wlnstanloy, Crescent Vat-\nley,  B.  C.  (68621\nthat\nride, for winter. Keep wltb option\nof buying. Wi, T. Jitnt\"-, Crescent\nValh*y. ^ <03S4)\nCI^ASsTFlED Rds.  brinjircMuHs qulck-\nlr nntl pcbnrtnitcallv.*2!^^.  o. n word.\n,\u2014j \u25a0   MM\u2014 ... \u25a0   .\u00bb,  .\u201e     ,  ..,,       i \u25a0\nIR.OO rach.     Add reus  Oeorge Wariry.\nEdgewood.   B.   C^ _ (834H)\nI VOtt 8ALB\u2014Oood Yorkahlre pig\", sev\"\n' .on woeka old. Six dollnrtt each. .1.\n\u25a0   J townbergcr.   l'roetor.   B. C.      (C:o\u00ab)\n10 ^otilhy and Eggs\n38 Farm Mid Davy Produce\npmTSAKlCTJSffil   Alfalfa liny^SJoTI\ntfilnllty.   <1T   v-i'i*   ion,   f.   o.   I,.   I^lh-\nbrl.lRr,   N.ptiin.i   Hay   t.  iiriiln   ca\n IMI)\n--        Miscellaneous\nSIX ltOKO I'lliil, llliiiil. 1: lull.I Rod pul\nlota, ono cockcrol, KlftMn Uollara tho\nlot Touloano Kooae-.alnl iriunlir. two\nanil throo yoani unrelatod. Twolvo\ndollar.. Ratlflfaotlan ^uariiiitoril.\n.inIm\u25a0\u201ea. ThrtimH. \u25a0 *  (1H70)\n34    Teachers Wanted\ni.AMi'.s wlnhlng to liave plnin or party\ndneaes made for ChrlHtmna, can have\nthem   done   rcakontildy 'by   phonlna\n' 437X1 (A416)\n28\nLog and Found\nLOST \u2014 Kundny near Presbyterian\nchurch, wooten acarf, \u2022 emerald band\n\u25a0'Hch end. Finder kindly roturn to\nEdgcumhc, Hudson'H Bny. (8418)\nClassified Adots.\nBring Results\nBRINGING UP FATHER\n\u25a0 *&*.*\". ~T'-\nHCH-Oai* TEACHER\u2014Wanted, man pa*\nforred. for Hulllvnn Hill public ochool.\nHulary $1080.00 per uuuUtn. Apply\nA. A. Ward, BulUvan Mine, Klmber-\nlpy, B. C.         ,    (*fl*10\nCanyon   City\nl'*ull itnrtlculnrH apply K. Van\nfor\nWANTED\u2014Teacher\nschool,    i-'uii imrlL-\nAcJtoren, sec. P. O. Erickson,\n26   Machinery Ior Sue\nFOR SAW\"\u2014 Mi H. P. Oray BBttlonnry\nsuiiolino oHKlncIn -*trnl olsaa con-\ndlilon, 15D.00.. Marinhiri, Clovcrbi-ooli\nItanch,  Taglmm. *' -jSJCI)\nRooms lb Red\nI'Xlll HMNT\u2014-To ilMlfit lM-onlc only;\ndining room, kitchen, ouilroom: woll\nfurlilNlii.il: C07 Hlllos \u00bbt.. \u25a0 .   out)\nKURNISHEn ROOMS for root, furnaco\nli..in,il,  61S Ward Btroot. <0334)\nPointer, and Siooraton\nrvalcm la WnlliMipor\nW Jodophlad St.      . Plionn 005\n\u25a0   .    '    , 16100)\nJAMES' OAI-E\nOlip\u00bb,lt\u00ab llaafmar-S Btoro\nDrop In and try tno beat homo cooked meal  In tht olty  prepared br all\nwhllo holp.      \\ \u25a0 . (MOP)\nCarpenter and iomer^\nT.  A.  EAWSOH,  All OltltH Of  Wort.\nFactory, too Hall St. Lamatco panela.\n(0871)\nGunsmith\n,\u2014\nGniia\u00bbnTH m m\u2014rasanm.\nh. b. torxo. _ \u25a0\u25a0\nRepairer of Cyclee, Phonofflmpbs and\nfine  miiohlnery. 16100)\nLodges\nNKI.BON  LODGE  No.  6.  B.  R.O-  \u00bb\nMoeia 41014 Baker St., \u00abr\u00bbt and third\n\u25a0rhur.dav.___ -   WW)\nBoots & Shoe*\num nu s co.       _\nBoot* anil  Shoei  Made  to Ordor. n\u00bb.\nSalrlog.J ci; khont st. (WW\nAccountants\nCHAUI.ES V.\nBucoeaeor   to   tho   lato\nJamea  H.  lAwronce. \u25a0\nBox U|l \"\u00b0*<|o?m\nFlorists\naMZZELI.E-3  OIlEBNHOnSK,   Slim\nCut   Uowora  and   floral   aMUM.\n\u25a0 i \u25a0\u25a0\u2014ii, w    ni nn  ni        -\nAssayers\na W. .WIDDOWSON. Bor A110I, VaU\non, R p. etaodurd tr\u00bb\u00bbtern -^Off[\nWholesale\nA   MACIWNAI.D & CO. WHOLBOAL1\nAC.ro_-r. and I'rovlalon ^-^hrjliw.\nImnorUrB of Tenn, Cofiees, Hpicwt\nD?Sd Frulta, Staple and Fauoj; Oor-\ncorlee.   Neh_oii__-B|   O. |,|MM,('}i1,||<i>\nArchitects\n** *mMM xn^TSCT,\n\u25a0ay   Aveaae.\nEngineers\nmcLioB, ii. o. j\nciviii   ahd   mniuo   ehoihsiuu\nC   Albtrtaud   Dominion\nZ.AKA   StmVXTOXS\nCrown Oram Asonlu.        Blue FrlntlDf\n (QUI)\nA.   i.   McCDLEOOH\nKydreallo   BailneK ',',\nrroilnclal  LjnJ Bnmior\nlinker  St.     4 Nelaon.  B.   C.\nam\nAuctioneers\nGoode -Mid   .\n~aid Btroet.\nOUDbBB\nprivately\nIvatcly   or   al    Auelloa\nFuneral Directors\nI'hono   Tt\n-iiiii'\nD. \/. BOU15BTSON, F. D. D. & B. 10?\nVictoria   Street.   Phone   III;   **\"'\nStreot\n107J.\nllth-\ni ilii)\nSTANDARD FURNITURE\nCOMPANY\nC. J. CarlAon. Und-firtak\u00abr, Unfl^r-\ntaken* anil )\u00a3inlmlm-ars anil b'unVol\nDlroctorn. The (Inrat and inunt up-lo*\ndmo undortakiiiff narlora and chapuJti\nInterior - B. C, Lady attendant fpr\nwomen and child mt. Day Phon* 16;\nNIkIU  phono  1&3  and   64 mi\u00ab\u00bb\npoHcnlnrrer,   Proctor,   li.   *Z.   (6101)\nBy George McMaais\n>m\n aaiasmammmm.\n\u2014\n1\/3\nTftERfiESDN DAILY NEWS, ftJfiSt^t' MOftNTftG, NO^IKBHJ HZ, 192t.\nrw\\\n_E\nNews of Sport\nBluedun Is Favorite\nManchester November\nHandicap oh Saturday\nLONDON, Nov. 21.\u2014(By Cana-\n'llnn Press Cnhlo.)\u2014Following la thc\nlatent London betting on tho Man-\nchosler November handicap, to bo\nrun on Nov. 26.\nOdds against Bluedun, 6 to 1;\nCharlebelle, antl Tremnln, 10 to 1:\nWlllonyn, 100 to 8; Lono Slur. 100\nto 6; Itock Dew\", 20 to li Crevasse,\n25 to 1; Sabotage and Riverside\nFairy, 23 to 1. Thc course Is a\nmile und a half.\nDAVE 8HADE BREAKS BONE.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 21.\u2014Mickey\nI'ulk.-r of Elizabeth, N. .1., tonight\nus awardod a decision over Dave\nhade, San Francisco welterweight,\n'hen the latter broke a bono ln his\nii.-iii  hand during tho fifth round.\nRETAINS  SWIMMING  TITLE\n-ft'INNIPEO. Nov. 21.\u2014Miss Hnsel\neasier, Winnipeg, retained her Do-\nlinlon title na woman's 100-yard\nwlmmlng champion tonight at a\nwlmmlng gala conducted at tho Cor-\nIsh bath under tho uusplclcs of the\n'anatllnn Amnteur Swimming nsHoein-\nlon. She swnm the distance in ono\nlimit,. 13 2-5 seconds, heating her\nirmer time hy 2 1-5 seconds. Miss\nUssier    also    retained    the    50-ynrd\nimlii ii\u00bb title, winning a gold  moiliil\nYoung Womnn (entering office) \u2014\n-other, dear, can't ynu move over lu\n\u25a0 dinner with mc and my hus-\nlantl?\nPapa\u2014Your husband? Arc you marled?\nYoung Lady\u2014Why yes! Don't you\nMid  the  papers,  papa?\nWilliams'\nHOLDER TOP SHAVING STICK\nTht ftrpctMl -SWcfc in IV'Mitt Itat Hokls\nKEEP the box indefinitely\nand buy Re-Load Sticks\nonly *\u2022 needed.\n(CS-EPi\nBoth ortrlntl sticks ind Itc-l-osiii\n*\u25a0\u2022*\u2022 mrUl coIUra thit can't shrink\n-\u2014 tib't iwtll \u2014 kn* tltht\u2014 MM\nwell. Thll itlck doMD't hiiiii\nwobbl-f. aad vrorr i-*'\nhit of It can ht u*c\u00abl.\nPt rfttt\u00ab\u00abno\u00bby with\ntho bvst Utbtr -mr\nnudf thr hoot tor tho\ntkln *\u25a0 well as tor\ntht btard.\nTht   J.   B.   Willi.-.\n('\u2022-pan;\n\u00abSS   Dr.Irl   St.,\nMtatrtal\nPRIZE FIGHT\nDecision Will Be Allowed in\nMcTtgue-Jeff Smith Match\n(or Championship.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 21.\u2014A rof-\ncroc will bt appointed and a da-'\nolalon allowed for the coming\nboxing contest between Mike Mc-\nTlauc, Halifax, and Jeff Smith,\nNew York, for the Canadian middleweight championship. Chief\nof Police Belanner, who la actually the boxin? tiammiaiionor of\nMontreal, atated today that in hia\nopinion the bout waa in no \\-v.-y\na prlxa fight, and that if the promoters desired to take auch a step\nhe would not interfere. Harry\nErtle, New York, has been mentioned at a referee for the match.\nWILLIE HQPPE\nCertain at Least of Tie for\nFirst Place in Billiard\nChampionship.\nCHICAGO, Nov. 21.\u2014Willi\u00a9 Hoppe,\nworld's kill; lino billiard champtnn,\nnssurcd himself of nt leant a tlo* for\nfirst place in tho International 18.2\ntouVnathent being held -here, when he\ndotal ted Welker Cochran of San Fran-\ncslco, -100 to 320 tonlRht. Hoppe now\nIkih won flvu RtimeH and lost none,\nTho tournament will end tomorrow\nnlghl with Hoppe playing Young Jake\nSchnefer, Chicago, who Ih in second\nplare wilh four victories nnd ono\ndefeat. Victory for Shucfer tomorrow\nwould give him a tie for first placo\nand   necessitate  n   pluy   off.\nThe defeat put Cochran down to\nfourth place, Roger Contl of France,\nbeing third. Contl plays Oru Morn-\nIngstnr tomorrow afternoon. Srhae-\nfer inflight continued his climb to-\nIward the lop of the percentage table\nby defeating Ont Morning-star, 400 to\n300, although the lutter averaged 60.\nSchnefer plnyed out ln six Innings\nund had u high run of 138. Hln nv-\ninigfe'wita 06 2-S.\nI\nSAYSBRIAND\nUNITED STATES\nTen High Men in President\nvi. Vice-President Fixture\nWill    Open   Telegraphic.\nSome excellent scores were piled up\nIn the opening games of the Y. M.\nC. A. Bowling club's annual opening\nmnlch, President vs. Vice-President,\nlast night. J. Allc.n, one of laat\nyenr's stars, rolling n hlirh nggreunte\nof 531 pins, nnd E, C. Hunt muklng\n21? for high Individual. Only four!\nmen rolled for the president last ]\nnight, ngalnst five for tho vice. The,\ndecision will rest on the g*gind aggregate  pins for ench side.\nIt was decided Inst night Ihftt the'\n10 men making highest three-game\ntotal scores will automatically muke\nthemselves eligible to reprosont the\nclub In the Initial telegraphic fixture\nwith   Revelstoke   nnd   Cranbrook.\nIdtst   night's scores were:\nPresident.\n1st.\nJ. Allen   181\nW -Brown, Sr.... 137\nA. Hlgglnhot-hum 13*\nK. Y. Brake... 178\nP,  Johnson   \t\nTotal   \t\nVice-President\nA C.  Hunt   170\n.1,   Hell    m    IM\nO. C. Scholnndcr 144\nJ, Armstrong .... 154\nH. Johnson    1G0\nDefeat British in Seven of\nTwelve Sabre Competi\ntions.\nInd.\n3rd.   ri'l\n180\n170\u2014 Ml\nltlS\nir,i\u2014 am\n102\n114\u2014 US\nir,3\n148\u2014 470\n    _18JD\n\u2022fit\n11.1\n217\u2014 502\n1211\n114\u2014 40\"\nIN\n170\u2014 S04\n1X2\n107\u2014 B03\n150\n158\u2014 458\nNEW YORK, Nov. 21.\u2014Hnltofl\nStates swordsmen won the Thompson Intcrnniionut fencing trophy tonight by defeating the members nf\nthe British team In seven of the 12\nsahro competitions. With four bouts\nstill in be contested, tho total score\nwas:\n1'nited   States.   24:    Rritish,   13.\nThe united Slates tenm began lh\nsabre series tonight with a lead of\nfour bouts which wns gained nt Washington when they won the foils competition, 11 to R, on Fridny, nnd lost\n8. to A. In the bouts with duelling\nswords on the following night, making\nthe two days* score 1\" to 13 in their\nfavor. There were 10 men on ench\nteam of whieh the lliillt-h used four\nuud tht United tSnios four nnd two\nsubstitutes  ln   tho bouts  tonight.\nTotal\n\">s thai cment nny good?' asked\nn prospOOttVO pun-hiisii- of u pcddlur.\n\"Any Bpodf wus the reply. \"Why,\nyuu \"could mend the breuk of duy with\nthat cement.\"\n\"Are thev unhappily married?\"\n\"Oh! I hardly think they're Ho*\nenough for that.*\"\nMACDONALD'S\nCut Brier\n\u2022MORE TOBACCO FOR THE MONEY\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order Form\nUse this blank on which to write your condensed .d., one word In eseh specs. Enclose money\norder or check and mail direct to The Daily News, Nelson,  B. C,\nRatei Ont and a half cent a word each insertion, eix consecutive insertions for prloo of four\nwhen cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25c. Each initial, figure, dollar sign, eto, counts aa one\nword.    No charge  lets than  60 cents.\nPlease   publish  tht advertisement  btlow times, for which  I enclose $.\n _!       -w !\t\n'         \u2014 * '\t\n(Continued \"From Pug\u00a9 One.)\nductlon of one-third thnt hna taken-\nplaco In the effectiveness, and I am\nspeaking of normnl effectiveness of\nthe metropolis leaving aside traopn\nneeded for colonial occupation or obligations Imposed by treaty In the\nRhlneland or countries under plebiscite. N\n\"We do not think that ondonvor waa\nsufficient and ln the future wo have\nptuns lo further restrict the extent of\nour armies, in a few dnys It bi certain thnt the proposals of tho government will he passed in the chamber\nto further reduce the military services\nby half. That Is to nay, thore will be\nonly one clnss nnd n half actually serving.\n\"The metropolitan French army\nwould be therefore reduced by half,\nbut If anybody nsks'us to go further,\nto consent lo other reductions, I\nshould havo to answer clearly.thot It\nwould be Impossible for us to do it\nwithout exposing ourselves to a most\nserious danger.\n\"You might come nnd toll us: This\ndanger that you are exposed to, wei\nsee It, we realise lt ami we uro going\nto sbary It with you. We are going\nlo offer you all the means, put nil\nmeans nt your disposal in order to secure your safety.'\n\"Immediately, if we heard these\nwords, we would strike on another\nplan. We should bo only fbo pleased\nto demonstrate the sincerity of our\npurpose.\nIs Frtnoo lo Bland Alone?\n\"Hut we understand the difficulties\nand necessities of statesmen, of other\ncountries, We understand tho position of other peoples who have nlso\nto face difficult and troublous situations. We nre not selfish enough to\nask other people to give a part of\ntheir sovereign national impnrtunor In\norder to turn It to our benefit nnd\ncome to our help. We do not expect\nll; but here I nm appealing to your\nconscience. Is France tu remain alone,\nfacing the situation such as I have described nnd without nny exaggeration? You must not deny whut she\nwants in order to insure hor security.\nYou must let her do whnt she hut to\ndo If need arise und If the time comes.\nI should bo the Inst one here An try\nto restrict the noble endenvors which\nare being made In order to limit armament In the conference, which has\nbeen convened with such noble pur-\npuses In view, aiid I should like to be\nable to say lhat I fdrosto no limit, no\nrestriction to your labors and to the\nresults which you may achieve. Any\nquestion here can be debated ond can\nbo resolved upon, but 1 must draw\nyour attention nt one thing\u2014moral\ndisarmament oi France would be very\ndangerous, Allow me lo suy It would\nhe most unlusl.\nTime Xot Yet Ripe,\n\"We do not enjoy the proper conditions. Wc should be ready to do lt;\nbut thc time bus not come yet to give\nup our defense for the sukc of final\npence In Europe. \"We have to know,\nhowever, thai France Is not morally\ni-*ni.ii--ii. lhat sho still has with her\nmen of good will, and the heart of ull\npeople who fought with her on tho\nKim*1 battlefield. Thu true condition\nof ii moral iU>*.ai uvfaumt _u (lernuiny\n\u2014I memi to uny f nm referrlnc to\nthose noxious elements of which I\nhave alrendy spoken\u2014the true condition nt this Ume of disarmament in\nGermany lies In the fact thut It should\nbe known over there that France Is,\nnot ii lone, and then I 'eel quite sure\nthat th\" poisonous propaganda of\nwhich I have spoken will simply run\nup dead ngalnst the wnll; thnt It wil'\nnol be able to go through and that\nnobody anywhere will believe In It.\n\"If those that sllll harbor evil designs know lhat, and If those thut en-\nl\u00ab rtiiln happy Ideas of pence\u2014this\nworking class that wants to return to\nu normal slate of penco\u2014If It Is\nknown lu Oermany that France Is not\nmorally alone, peace will come back\nmuch more quickly: and the words of\nanger, the words nf revenge, will be\nsimply preached In the wilderness, lt\nwill be Impossible for Oermnny to reconstruct a defensive army, and she\nwill be able to Install democratic Institution* aud then we can ull hopo\nfor final condition! in ponce. Everything that Frame mn do In this direction she will do.\nHas Already Done Mitch.\n\"In fact, she 1ms already done\nmuch. Sho did mil hesitate to open\nconversations wiih Ihe Herman government in order tu settle this painful\nquestion of reparations for devastated\nregions. Everything hns been done\nnnd will be dune in order to restore\nnormal conditions and the hour will\ncome when everything will be settled,\nbut the hour hot nol yet come.\"\n\"In un hour loot; speech leading up\ntn these conclusions the French pro\nmlftr set forili Ih\" proposition that\nFrance ardently desired peace. How\never, he said. II was necessary* lhat\npreced'ng physical disarmament there\nshould be moral dharmnment\u2014n gen\neral atmosphere of peace. He fell\nthnl he was compelled to point out\nthnt ln Europe ni present there were\nserious elements ef Instability, such\nconditions as Franco must face with\nnn eye to her own security.\nReady to Help Germany.\n\"I spoke n few momenta ago of the\nmoral ntweet of disarmament and T\nreferred In my remark! to Oermnny.\"\nM. Briand continued, \"I do not want\nto he unjust\u2014nothing is further from\nmy mini. But we know ther* Is In\nOermnny\u2014there Is one pnrt that Is\nfor peace. Then- nre many people\nespecially among tho working classes\nwho want to work, who have hod\nenough of .this war, whu hava had\nenough wnr nlinii-ther nnd who are\nmost anxious to settle down In peace.\nWe shall do everything to holp that\nOermany nnd ff she wants to restore\nher balance In the bosom of tho pacific republic and democratio Institution*, then we can help her, nnd we\nshall be abte (o contemplate the future with feelings of security.\n\"But,  gentlemen,  there  Is nnother\nGermany, a Oermany which has not\n1 changed her mind and t0 which thel\nlast war has taught no lesson. Thati\nGermany keeps thoughts in the back\nof her mind; she' ha\u00bb tho same designs which she entertained before the\nwar; she has kept the same preoccupations, and she cherishes the same\nambitions as the Hohenzollerns. How\ncan we close our eyes to this? How\ncan we Ignore this state of things?\nThis, gentlemen, ls happening at our\nvery door.\"\nComing to the question of physical\ndisarmament,* M. Brlund said that\nOermany could easily mobilise a great\narmy today from men who saw service ln the wnr.\ni These men, he said, were constituted in various forces throughout tho\ncountry and wero prepared, not only\nfor police purposes, but also far war.\nGermany Cnn Quickly Mobilise. -\nThe German government, said tho\npremier, had not yet entirely returned\nto eivii life, \"They are grouped together,\" he declared, \"in those mar-\nvelously Ingenious ways which the\nGerman people always have when\nthey want to achieve their purpose.\nThey are called Frelkorps, or former\ncombatants' associations, or what not.\nAny day, any anniversary\u2014the Germans are rather fond of nnlversarlen\n\u2014la favorable In order to convene\nthese men and mnrshal them, to see\nthat you have got them under your\nhnnd ready to do the work that is to\nhe done.\n\"As n question of fnct and from the\npoint of view of effectives, Germany\ncan* raise In n few weeks and perhnps\nalmost In a few days, her six or seven\nmillion men with officers nnd Iheir\nnoncommlrsloned officers ready to do\nthe-work and holp them dn tho work.\n\"The German government hns done\nItn duty, and nobody more thnn my-\ns'o'f'-is ready to recognize It. It Is\nonly n duty on my pnrt\u2014a mere duty\n\u2014a mere sense of fnlr play. I stated\nIt In my own pnrllament. I nm ready\nto recognize that the German chnn-\nellor. Chancellor Wirth, is a mnn of\ngood will, animated by fair purposes,\nloyal nnd frank, nnd thta he has applied eVery endeavor, acting with no\nsmall means on his part In order to\nactually reach a stale of peace and\nhonor the signature of Oermany. But\nthis government of Oermnny Is weak.\nTt Is being wntehed. Snores nre Inld\nIn ils path nnd they might fall nt any\nmoment.*'\nWa- Materials Xot Difficult.\nComing next to the question of war\nmaterials, AI. Briand suld much artillery in ^Germany hnd been destroyed,\nother destruction hnd taken place, aa\ntho allies had been told, but were not\ncertain. Bul the pmhlem of war material wns one easily solved. This\nwns proved in tho Into war, when Im\nmouse armies hnd come over to\nFrance quickly, provided with the\nmost modern material.\nFurther, great Gorman corporations\nof Industry hud bought firms In Scun-\ndtnnvln and In other parts of Europe,\nwhere It would be easy to manufacture goods without thr allies' knowledge.\nIt' wns different with the nnvy, M.\nBriand went on. It was Impossible to\nlaunch n capital ship without the\nworld knowing. But the,manufacture\nof tools of the battlefield could nol\nbe controlled with nny measure of\ncertainty.\nPrttBtla hnd beon disarmed by Napoleon, said M. Hriund. nnd yet sho\nreturned to the battlefield and France\nwns bled white; even if she wanted\nto forget, France could not. Therefore she hnd not tha right and did not\nntend to leave herself defenseless.\nRuwla Needs Watching.\nTurning to the general conditions In\nEurope, M. Briand pointed to certain\nvolumes of smoke thnt Indicated thai\nthe fire hud not been extinguished\neverywhere. Who could telt what Russia, a country of 120,000,000 men\nboiling ovor with anarchy and with\nau army nf (iOO.OOO would do? About\na year und a hnlf ago Hussia had tried\nto rush Poland an 1 through Poland\n(o reach Oermany. At times there\nwere terribly anxious hours In France.\nIf the bnrrlrr had not held -good, ff\nthat nnnrchlcal army had been able\nlo Join the people who were calling\nthem on the other side, whnt would\nhove happened? Where would France\nnow be, und where would the rest of\nEurope he? Happily thero was the\nsoldier of order, for our own account\nand for the sake of the world.\nM. Briand pointed out that the situation ln Russia was still unsettled.\naffording permanent anxiety for\neverybody. France hnd mnny problems, economic und financial, but tho\ngreatest of all wns ihe question of\nlife. First of all, she must be able\nto live.\ni-iili-M-. but i\u00bbn Nol Repent.\n\"We grieve nvefr the sacrifice; wr\ndo not repent It. And If the cause\nof Internillonnl liberty wns worthy of\nthis Immense sacrifice from one of\nthc silled powers\u2014I speak not of oth\ners, ft Is nol my right to speak for\nJhem\u2014if it deserved nnd required this\nsacrifice from one of the allied and\nassociated powers, nnd If we nt all\nevents have not chnnged our views,\neither ns to the righteousness of the\nwar nor as to Its necessity, how can it\nbe otherwlso than if a \u25a0 miliar necessity should again arise If ngaln the\nlust of domination, which has been\nthe curse of Europe for so many gen-\nertlons, should; ngnln threaten the\noeace, the Independence, the self-development of our neighbors nnd allies;\nhow should It be possible thnt sympathies, once so wurm, should become\nrefrigerated.'should become cold and\n'hat wc who hnd done so much for\nthe grent cause of international llh-\nerty should soe that case perish before\nour eyes rather than make further\nsacrifice In Its defense?\n'These are the thoughts which\narse in my mind nft'-r hearing the\ngreat speech of M. Briand. I should\nonly be Interfering. I should only bo\n.weakening Ita cffocl. were I to dwe'l\nfurther on them, ond I will contont\nmyself, therefore, with thanking M.\nBrfand for the ndmlrnble nnd candid\niccount which he has given of the\npolicy of his country, nnd wishing him\nand his country every success nnd\nevery prosperity In that path of unaggressive prosperity which I hope\nand believe they are now entering.\"\n*^||g]P*^\n\\dry GOODS DEPT.\\\nIncomparable values ln\u00abCAR-\nPETS and FLOOR RUGS.\nOne only Klearflax Linen Car-\npot,  plain color, brown. Slzo,\nart $20.00\nOno only, rose, ilto (POA AA\n6x9  ft.   Price.. JD-fiV.UU\nOne only, croon, (POA AA\n.-l-.-.i- 6x9 ft. Prlco. -Sfei.V.VV\nOno only, brown, dJO'7 CA\nalio 9x9 ft. Price.. Weil I .DO\n50    yarde    CRBAM    WINDOW\nSCRIM, fancy ittrlpe, self col~\nor   bortler;    86   inches   wide.\nRegular 49c yard.'Spe. rtQ\nclal,   per   yard - Atlt\n5 on'da of FAMCT COLORED\nCRETONNE, abillt 76 yards\nIn nil, handsomo designs and\nexcellent qualities; 28 nntl 35\nInches wide. Sold formerly as\nhigh as 12.25. This lot, for\nactive   selling, f>0\/\u00bb\nper yard   9t7*L\nGood quality COCOA DOOR\nMATS, strong, deep pile; alio\n18x30 Inches. Regular. $196\nSpecial, (B-|   *\u00bb\/\u2022\u00bb\neach      -Jl.OU\n11 yards only DARK RED ENGLISH FI.ET, sultnhle for covering Inhles, desks, etc. Regular   $1.50   yard.     72   Inchea\n.tSrL _ 75c\n1 36 Inches wldo    t        A fie.\n^per yard   _ ^UC\nBROWN HEMP CARPET with\nf_oA striped border, 27 Inchea\nwide. Special, PvA\/\u00bb\nper yard   _ OvC\n36 Inches wide. Spe-     ~y\\g.\nclal per yard -..- 1 UC\nKONQORJEN CARPETS, brown,\ngreen and rose colors, ideal\nfor bedrooms. Site 64 In. x M\nin. Regular $8,00.\nSpecial value, each.\n$5.95\nREADY-TO-WEAR\nDEPARTMENT\ntVOMKN'8 UNDERSKIRTS. An\nattractive lino tn Italian\ncloth and Black Sateen; alio\nIn colors of Navy, Saxe, Ron\n\/ and green.\nPrice,   each\nAnother arrival of Universal\nall-wool LADIES' SWEATERS, shawl collars, pocketa\nand belts. In all the new\ncolors. Special,\neach   ________\n$2.50\n$9.50\nBOOT DEPARTMENT\nMEN'S  MAHOGANY POINTED\nTOE. a fine street shoe, In all\nsizes    and    the    very   latest\nPer\nstyle,\npnlr\n$10.25\n$11.50\nMEN'S MAHOOANT OR\nBLACK, gun metal Bide, wholo\nquarter, douftlo sole shoe, medium toe. A fine winter shoe\nin all sixes. Black ftQ AA\nper pair    (DOsUU\nMahogany,\nper pair .._\nA fine lino for the growing\ngirls. MAHOGANY BOOT, low\nheel, a stout wearing shoe for\nachool or street wear. These\nhave Just arrived and aro ono\nof the bost  lines we have In\n\u25a0JLS5.75\netock.     Sizes    2'\nto G. Per pair .\nFOURTH ESTATE AT CONFERENCE\n;-*_>_\naa\u00abw*\nNOTED WRITERS AT WASHINGTON.\nA group of noted writers who arc covering the disarmament confer-\nnce, nil of them nre famous elllier nr Journalists or writers of fiction. The\nlist of writers who nro rcportlnc Ihe nctlvltles of lho diplomats and statesmen gathered fnr Mr. Hardlim s conference would bo like the ''blue book\"\nof American letters. Those In llils group, left to right, are Chnrles Hanson\nTownc Mnry Roberts Rlnolnir!. Charlen .1. Rosebanlt, Mra. Wallace Irwin,\nItonth Tiirklnglon stlA Wallace Irwin.\nnectlon thnt the Hrltlsh prime minis-1 Initiated ibis morning Into the Inner\nter nlso   declared    that    thin illil no* ' suncliiury of French policy,\nmean   Great   lirltuln   wnnlil  continue l-iml Solution .Not Hopeful.\ni!i\" treaty against the Interest of any\n\"lt must be acknowledged, sorrow-\nnntlnn, and certiilnly net tiKiitnst tho i fully acnowledged. thnt the speech to\nUniled Stales, us there was no olher , which wc havo Jusl listened ia not\ncountry with which Great Uritaln so   hopeful for any Immediate solution of\nV\nIf doslr.d, rtpllas may be addrentd ta Bex Number* at The  Dally  Newa  Offic.    If  rapllaa are\ntTW mailed encloie 10o axtra t\u00bb cover co.t of postage and allow five word, axtra for box number.\n.. ,\u25a0\u25a0! . i,.ii \u00bbi. *\n~\"DODD'S '\nKIDNEY\n\/  PILLS\nL|  KlDNEJU\nApproves Chinese Integrity,\nWASHINGTON. Nov. 11.\u2014A resolution declaring for the territorial and\nadministrative Integrity of Chlnn was\nadopted unanimously late today by\nthe conference commute^ on Pacific\nand Far Kastern questions. Tho resolution, the first .concrete action of\nthe armament limitation conference,\nWas drafted nnd presented by Elihu\nRoot, ono of tho United Stntes ii>\u25a0!-\u25a0\nantes.*\nStill Stands hy Japiin.\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 21.\u2014 The\npresent British attitude on the question of the Anglo-jRpanrnc alliance,\nBritish spokesmen declared todny, Is\nnot different from thnt recontly\npressed by Mr. Lloyd Oeorge, who sa!d\nIt would not be proper to say to Japan:\n\"You stood by us during the war,\nbut wo don't need you now, so good- \u2022 drawn\nthe grtat problem of land armaments.\nAnd why is It\u2014why Is It there la this\ngreat difference between land nrmn-\nments and sea armaments? Why Is\nIt thnt we all here look forward with\na confidence which I think la not\noverrated, n serene confidence to\nbrinKinK about, us a result of our deliberations, some great measure and\nunder tbe guidance of tho program\nlaid before you by thc I'nlted 8tatesi\ngovernment; why Is It we are hopeful\nof coming to some Nolutlon of tho\nK-e.it nnvnl problems?\nMm ul  DIhormament Flrat.\n\"It Is because, ln the language of M.\nBrand, there has heen, Ui maritime\nmatters, _ moral disarmament, and It\nIs on the basis of moral disarmament\nthat the physical nnd material disarmament Is going to build. And that\nIs why we nre hopeful about the nnval\nquestion. And why are wo less hopeful about at least any Immediate settlement of the military question? It\nIs because, as M. Briand has explained\nto you In that \u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-. ther*e has not been\nmoral disarmament, because we have\nnn assurance, or because the French\ngovernment, who watch th-pe thtnga\nclosely, hove no ossurahco cither la\nRussia or In Dcrmany thnt mornl d!a->\narmament \\v.\\-- mado the degree OC\nprogress which would make material\ndisarmament nn tmmedltae possibility.\n\"I do not venture lo offer en opinion\nof my own upon this question. I leav**\nyou to Judge of the facts as they have>\nbeen expounded by one who has pro-\nHtrongly deetred to act.\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 21.\u2014Right\nHon. Arthur J. Balfour, head of tho\nHrltlsh delegation to tbo Washington\nconference, mnde the following speech\nat today's plenary session:\n\"Mr. Chalfmnn: Evidently this is\nnot a fitting moment to deal at length\nr ln dctnll with tho great speech\nwhich hns Just come to Its coneluslon.\nIt has been your privilege and my\nprlvlloge to hear one of the great masters of parliamentary oratory. Wc\nhave heard him wltb admiration, we\nhave heard him with a futt measure\nf sympathy: but we have done much\nmore, 1  think, than merely being the\nudltori* of a great, artistic perform-\nnee; we have heard something more\nthan A K'\u00bb'--.l speech; we have heard\n\u00bb perfectly candid, perfectly lucid,\nuerfcctly unmistakable exposition of\n'-he most Inmost thoughts of the prime\nminister of our great ally. He hns\ntold us. I believe, without reserve,\nwhnt are the anxieties, whnt arc the\npreoccupations of the country over\nwhose dr-stfnt.es he presides. He has\ntold us whnt they fear nnd why they\nfear It. And nothing can bo more\nuseful, nothing cnn bo morc Instructive to us of other nations, than to\nhave this full revelation of the Inner\nthoughts of one of our nllled nnd associated statesmen.\nConditions Very Different.\n\"We live under very different conditions from tho French .cltlsens, forlfoundly studied them and whose gift*\nwhom M. Brlaftd has so eloquently of exposition can not bn gainsaid,\nspoken. Im the. sacura homes ofj \"Only this 1 would say. for I peed\nAmrrlcn no'terVors exist or can exist! hardly to tell you that I am not going\ncompa*r>ibla tp those which Inevitably l to mnke a speech. M. Hi land appear*\nhaunt the thoughts, waking nnd sleep-! to hnve some fears lest France should\nIng, of the-leaders bf French politics;' feel herself In moral l\u00abolotlon.   That\nfor they \u2022<\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u2022- v- ii-it neither you In the\nUnited States hnve, nor wo In Kng-\nInnd hnve.'\"We do not veriturq to\nspeak for the other nations represented ar'oUnd the table. They have\nnt their very doors a grent country,\ngreat In spite of defeat, powerful In\nspite of losses, and of Its policy In tho\ncourse which it means to pursue Iti\nthe future, they necessarily remain In\nanxious doubt.\n\"It Is good for us all, I venture to\naay, from whatever nation* wo may be\nfrom  whatever part ot thla\nbye.\" | great    continent   we   come that wo\nThe British emphasised In this con- should be Initiated aa wo hava bean\nwould be a tragedy Indeed,\nMust Maintain Uhrrtlca.\n'Thnt the llbertl\"B of Europe and\nthe world In general, and France ln\npin it.'nl.ir. should be maintained nnd\nguarded ngalnst the dominating policy\nof her enstern neighbor ls tho cause\nfor which the Hrltlsh Empire fought\n\u2022hnd In which the British Empire still\nbelieves.\n\"Killed on the fletd of battle, wn\nlost nearly a million men. 1 am talking of the British Empire now. Wn\nlost nearly a million men. Wa loat\nwell over two million men In addition,\nmaimed and wounded.\n.\n... .  ,.^_a_.._^.\n^_^=\t\n \u2022\\_\nTTHE NELSOTi u^lLY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 22, 1021.\n'\"\"*;! '-'\u25a0 '    ' '    \u2022'\u25a0    ' '* \u25a0 \u25a0'     \u25a0\u25a0   -    - '**   -\n>>-A\n1 THE ARK )\n(TOR   BARGAINS  IN  STAPLE  DRV\nQOOD8\nSerge, al) wool, 48-Inch, 81.25\nyard. Flannelette, 32-lnch, 25? yd.\n86-ln., 304 yard. -White Duck, 351\nyard. Men's, heavy winter Underwear, Sl.OO garment. Few palra ot\nI.umbcrnmn'ti Rubbers to clear at\n82.50 i\"'d .S.'J.SO pair. Heavy\nFlannelette Sheeting, 954 yard.\nFlannelette Blankets, largest slito,\n13-4). ,83.75 Stoves, Ranges, Furniture, cheapest  ln  thc city.\nCream ol the West\n49-lb. Bng ,\t\n100-lb. Bag \t\n- 82.05\n 88.00\nOur Best Flour\nJ. W. HOLMES\n\u2022hone  834\n606   Verner   tl\nChristmas\nBargains\nWe are ready to give\nyou bargains on your\nChristmas purchases.\nCanada Drug &Book\nPhone 81\nP. O, Bex  108**\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL A RITCHIE MONU\nMENTAL  COMPANY\nSuccessor, to Kootenay Granite\nand Monumental Co.\nRUBBERS    RUBBERS\nRUBBERS\nFor you  and  yours.  Price  considerably  lower thli year\nFLEMING'S STORE\n\u00abE CLOSE  AT 6  P. M,\nSt Charles Milk\nThe  Old   Standby\n\u00bb\u00bbmll>   -Ise   \u2022 for 81.001\nAUCTION SALE\nWctlnciday,   Nov. 23rd, 2 p.  m.\n910   Edgewood  Ava.\nFavored with liiBtrurtlonn from\nMrs. JiimcH Malmlm. I will of*\ntot tor mie at I'ubllf Auction at\nthe above atldrt'K-4 on Wt-dn-H-\nday afternoon, November iSnt.\nat 2 o'clock the following houao*\nhold   kooiIh:\n(Jarden tooln, Ranlen hose, lawn\njoo wer. Mohan uten\u00ablln, refrlaer-\nator, clUiuiwuro. Kluaware, bedding, i.i.ini.. i-, dining rcwni \u00bbldc-\nboard nad furniture, .-. wim: mn-\nchin., curtatna and p\"t..\u25a0-. toilet\noats, bedroom furniture, eoiieheM\nand   rocking  i Ir.ii\"..  etc.,  ttc\nOoods on view morning of\naale.\nTEBMS   CASK\nG. Horstead,\nAuctioneer.\nMM\nThe Golden Hope\nWITH\nEdith Storey\nOut on tha trackless desert\nwaa her huaband dead er alive?\nShe knew not which. Her lover\nwaa accused of hia murder. A\nvivid pleturitatlon of the olden\nGolden Weat.\nTwo Reel Comedy\nFox News\nTopics ol the Day\n42.05\n84-lb. Bag \t\n40-lb. Bag \t\n100-lb. Bug \t\n49-ft). Bag\n100-lb. Bag   83!{)6\nRoyal Household Flour\n_ 81.20\n82.35\n\u201484.50\nK. C. Brand Jam\n4-lb. tin Annie nntl Strawberry,\nfor  -...eo*\nApex Jam\n4-lb.   tin   Strawberry., 60*\nWallace's Herrings\n1-lb. tlna Frog]) Herrings;\n2 t\u00bb*  -\u2022-  25*\nHypolite\nRcgulnr GGc Jar for.\u2014 25*\nCarrota, Parsnips, Lettuce,  Celery,  Cabbage, Turnips. Brusaela\nSprouts,   Green,   Onions,   Sweet\nPotatoes,   Beets,   Cauliflower\nSTAR GROCERY\nPHONE    10\nPERSONAL\n.0\n3. S, ppsrhnmpo, the Hiwdnnd-lum-\nhermnn,  in a city -. IhIioi*.\nJamcH Klshor, tbe Hull Siding mining\nmnn, nnd  Mi'h.  Flj-thur. an- ytxttorH.\nJ. J. N: n It ii, returned Sunday night\nfrom tho cant Kontwmy. where he lias\nbeen  on  a  laislncHH   trip.\nMrs. W, J, Vlifiiciix and Miss Hen*\nrlettn Ktnrgeon -.-isi uracil Innt nlglii\nfrom thn count, where thoy hnve been\nfor  n   fortnight'**   vacaHbn,\nSELECT TOPIC FOR  '   '\nOPENING DEBATE\n^\u2022\"RoBOlved, thnt tho renillng of\nstandard fletinn Ik mon* beneficial\ntlytn the reading of currant periodicals to u man with Hmi I ort lelmire\ntlmo.\"\nSo rwniH the proposition thai win\nform tho subject or tho opening do-\nhalo ^ni Dec. 14, of tho nowly formod\nY. Mi <*. A. Literary and Dobatlng\n\u25a0society, noeordlng to Hcorotnry Waldo\n\\V. l'V'iguson. The executive cmmfiit-\nloo hna set ^ho propoaltlon and four\nif the society's most forceful Hpciik-\nrs nntl nhttv reasonora. It Ik stated,\nhavo heen dealgnntod principal speak-\ncra to draft, and In the main carry\non thf debate. A. .1. Mnther and K.\nU. Bvana will load QiO affirmative.\nand H. Clifford Irving and H. I,.\nAcomb will load tho negative speakers.\nYOUR $1.00 IS WORTH\n$1.20 HERE   .\nWliy not huy your Chrlsimna\nglfls now? Wo arc giving you\nan extra special discount. Our\nstock In full of neat and Jftlnty\nplceos that mnke Ideal gifts, in\nSilverware, Cut Qiaos, Rings.\nPendants and Brooches and\nhosts of niln-i* things too numerous to mention.\nIf you wish we will reserve\nnny piece or pieces until Xmns\nEvo on payment of a small deposit. -     m\nShop early and avoid disappointment.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nYOUR    OPTICAL   PRESCRIP-\nTIONS    will    be   attended    to\npromptly, Intelligently and economically.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist  -And    Optician.\nCOUNCILLOR   BROWN   DIES\nNORTH VANfOrVBIt. Nov. 21.\u2014\nCounclUora Robert Brown of Lynn\nVnllPTP died today at the a^e nt 80.\nHe enme to Canada 7T\u00bb years ngo.Mlv-\nInff tho first 37 yenrs in (iin-lph.\nOnt., nnd the remaining 3U Inj'lhls\nprovince.\n'\u25a0    in    ini.\nmmmm\nArrange Dance, to Provide\nFunds for Good Cheer to\nNeedy in Glad Season\nOn Thursrtdy. Cnfted States\nThanksgiving dny the Benevolent\nProtoctuv Order of Kilts will give a\ndance tit Eagle hall-\nit. T. Pondry of Calgary, grand ex-\naltod ruler of tho ordor In the Dominion, Is due to (Utond nn Informal\nmcitlng on Wednesdny and hopes to,\nremain over for the dance.\nAll indications point to n most successful function, wiilch has for Its object the providing of good cheer nnd\nChristmas fart* -tpt iln- needy anew In\nthe community.\nList year the Klks dlsi-lbutod a\ngroat number <jf jiumpors to mnko tho\nglad tlmo gladder for many who would-\nOtherwise have had n very thin Christmas, aud tbls yenr. with the added\nfunds their lift net- Is sure to provide\nthey look confidently forwnrd to Increasing tlielr worthy scope and insure\nthat .not one needy soul shall lack\ncomforts. Also the little ones nro not\nforgotten In the scheme of benevolences. \\\nQood music, a good floor and attractive refreshments have been arranged for, which plus an excellent\ndance program and the worthiest of\nmotives ciyi not fall to insure n largo\nattendance.\nAUTO OWNERS!\nCHAINS AND\nBATTERIES\nWe have a full stock of\nChains and Cross Chains\nfnr all sizes of tires.\nAt this season of the\nyear on winter storage antl\ncare of batteries we special)'*.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO., LTD.\nVernon    and    Stanley    Streeta.\nBox 576 Phene 38\nBRITANNIA RELIEF\nFUND SUBSCRIPTIONS\nFire Insurance\nAll Classes of Insurencs Promptly\nWritten.\nH. E. DILL\n508 Ward  St.\nPhone 180\nThroe subscriptions, totalling-,' tt4,\nwere mnde to thi- Kelson nml dls-\nirlct fund for tho relief of Britannia\nflood victims over the u-'cck*'end. The\nhind   now   Ktnnds   at   $I78.M.\nWVrlt-i'nd HUbHi'rllii'rs were:\ncrorton\"s  Women's   lnsilutte..f-...$10.00\nW.   lliimnln       2*0\nA   Frlonfl    _   2.00\nNelson  News  ol  the  Day\nTiuve  flttcN  In one dn\n\u2014   today  with\nmt.   Jn:\nTake   warn-\n.   \\V.\nApple\nOMSK\nCraidirnok poultry Show, Itistrlet No.\n., November Urtih. Decembor 1st mul\nJhfl, ni(f llHt of sjM'elals. Write for\nflitry forma to II. 13. Sainsbury. Hox\nr,.,  Cranbrook,  B.  C. -\u00ab-H3)\nXi-w shipment of articles wultahle for\nflirlstmar* jrlfts or for personal use ol\ninirchasers. arrived ut .1. J. Walker's\nMon* yinti-rday and wns placed In Hie\ndollar window. Every article at the\none price. Many are worth five times\nns   much. efi-HO)\n(in Wednesday afternoon . the\nWorn. it'n ' Institute will bolil a whist\ndrive In K. I1. IpiM rrom L*: tr.. Hood\nprim s nnd refresh nunts Admins I on\nH eent*. i\u00ab\u00ab4l)\nnose city Chapter, o 13, S.. mfcets to-\nulKhl   ut   R   o'clock   sharp. tBttS)\nTO\nCar Owners\nLet us look after your\nbattery during the winter months. We are equip-1\nped to giye them the best\n\u2022of care in a steam heated\nbuilding.\nCanadian Auto & Electrical Supply Co. i\nSelling   Oat   Tail   End\nStock ol\nAfter Auction\nEverything   reduced   to\nthe last notch.\nCompare   price*  before\nbuying.\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nJEWELER\nSkate Bargains\nWe have about sixty pairs of Skates   odd sizes   that we\nwish to clear out of stock Bt prices u.way below cost\nRegal     \t\nMlo   Mae   \t\nNo. 25 N. P. Hockey..\nAnd Hockey Skates aa low as SOc All good goods and\nevery pair a bargain.\nAtlanta    (Sin   11'\/,)..\nDominion (tin 11'\/\u00bb)\nSpring  Skate,  ,\nm\nWoed-VaBance Hardware Company, Ltd.\n\u2022AKER tTftflT.\nNELBON, B. C.\nGrand Rally\nOf Meighen Supporters\nTo Meet\nDr. W. 0. Rose\ni     i\nGovernment Candidate\nIn Veterans' Hall At Trail\na*\nAt 7:30 p.m. on\nWEDNESDAY\ni\nNovember \\ 23rd J.\t\nTHE FLOUR OF FLOURS\n'Our Best'\nAfana\/actaretf by\nEllison Milling and Elevator Co.\nLIMITED\nA S. Horswill & Co.\nWE     SUPPLY     THE     BEST\nIN    GOODS,   PRICES   and\n-    SERVICE\nJonathan Apples, Imv\u201481.60\nCox Ornngo Apples, l'\"x $1,G5\nNo.   1   Oravenstein,   boautlos,\nl>\u00ab*  --u- 82.40\nTlronkfast Bacon, backs, lb. ;{7tf\nPeatneal Back Bacon, lb_43-\u00a3\nR|lced tp your liking, lh. <i7'\/i^\nPicnic Ham. very best, lb....J**4<\u00a3\nEmperor Grape*, lb 30*\u00a3\nFinest Tablo Pigs, lb      10<*\nFlorida Orapo Fruit, 2 for..35*\u00a3\nOur Best Flour, S8-lb. sack,\n\"\"    84.10\nOur Best Flour,  40r-lb. aaclt,\n'or $aio\nPHONE 121\n\u25a0at 1 LSI\t\nQuality Service\nWe ' endeavor to give\nquality and service at all\ntimes on Chocolates, Cakes\nand Bread, dive us your\ntrial order.\nMother's Bread\nCHOQUETTE BROS.\nPhone   288.\n416   Baker\nDon't Forget the\nELK'S DANCE\nAt Eagle Hall on Thursday,\nNov 24\nAmerican    Thanksgiving    Day\nAm   Busy\nTESTING EYES\nMy patrons do the advertising. My complete, accurate system always gives\nsatisfactory results. Glasses\nsupplied. Broken lenses replaced. All repairs made.\nA. Higginbotham\nOptometrist    Snoci.liit\nRooma 3, 4'and 5, Griffin Block\nCOLUMBIA\nGRA^pNOLAS\nThe Beat Valuea In Gramophone.\nCabinet  site,  solid  walnut,\nfor  v 805.00\nMahogany, full '\"i\"'-.$75.00\nMahogany, smaller slzc-8*B0.00\nFumed Onk  837.50\nCome and Let Ua Show You\nRutherford    Drag    Co.\nNELSON, B. C.\nMinnis Fuel & Transfer\nCompany\nFinest quality OALT COAL\nIn atnric.aJ'laco your order (or\nwlnter'a (Ipply now. During th*\nfall can will be scare* and\nshipment* delayed.\nPhone 39\nr. o. Bex 1039. Hidden\nWard  Iti***-.\nFor Rent\nFurnished Home, 5 rooms, fully modern $40.00\nUnfurnished House, 6 rooms, fully modern. $20.00\nCharles' F. McHardy\nINSURANCE PHONE IN       * REAL ESTATE\nAGENT,\nF\" DYEING\nand\nCLEANING\nH. K. FOOT\nHigh Clan Dyer and Cleaner\nFalrview, Neleon, B, C\nNELSON POULTRY MASH\nThis la a better blend, and bettor blended than you cnn do wltb\nonllnnry facilities. We mix large\nquantifier), and mix It thoroughly,\nand this commodity Is constantly,\nwidening Km cirole of selling territory, L   UM\nTHE   BRACKMAN-KER\nCO., LtD.\nNECESSITIES FOR THE\nCHRISTMAS BARING\nRAISINS\nSeeded, lD-os. pnckfegc 30\u00ab**\nTwo for .._ ...\nSultanas, package .\nTwo for  \u00ab\u201e\u00bb...\u00ab\nSt\nCURRANTS\nExtra fancy Grecian      <\")A*\u00bb I\nJ\nrecleaned.   Pkt..\n20c\nj-\nFANCY    CALIFORNIA    FIGS\nPacket    .JSOtf\nA full Iln* of Peels, Spices,\nExtracts ond all Staple and\nFancy linn needed for your\neootting.\nPURE CREAMERY BUTTER\nPeerless   Brand,   new   ship*\nment.  Per ^\npound    ...f,....\n45c\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nHigh  Clan  Restaurant,\nROYAL CAFE\nOpen day and night Quick aervlce.    Dinner, 11:30 a. in. to  1:00\np. nu  too.    Special  Supper.   (:M\nP. m. to 8:00 p. m., 40c,\nPhene Itt MM Baker Strut\nLast Time \"tought\nSalvation Nell'\nThe dram* that carried the\nI nation by storm! The story of\n' * girt who was down, but never\n' out-\nPresented on tho screen with\nthe power of roality that chokes\nback a aob with a smile, arid\n\u00bb gives th* ultimste in entertainment.\nIf ever a woman ean win\nyour heart with her appeal, that\nwill be Paulino Stark* a* wonderful   Cap'n   Nell.\n\"     .    .  A180\n\"WEDDING BLUES\"\nA   Two-Reel    Christie    Comedy\nUSUAL   PRICES '\nTomorrow\nCharlie\nChaplin\nin\nSunnyside\"\n___________\nIP   YOU   *_i._T   RESULTS   T*\u00bb\na   CLASSIFIED   AO.\n..*.:\u25a0'w ',.},\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ;\n% ECONOMIZE ON YOUR GROCERIES\nWe hnvo a his asnortmoiu of choice clenn  goods tit prices which\ncannot be beat.\nWE SAVE YOU MONEY\nCowan's Cocoa, bulk, Ib\t\nChas*   A   Sanborn's   Coffee.   Ib.\nIndisn   Broken   Pekoe  Tea,   Ib.   .\nP. and W. GROCERTERIA\nBMW\nPAY CASH\nSAVE MONEY\nFREE DELIVERY\nI\nA. G. Lambert Co., Ltd.\nManufacturers of and  Dealers In\nAll kinds of Lumber and Building Material, Shingles,\nLath, Mouldings, Windows and Doors and Beater\nBoard.\nDRAWER ISH\nNELSON, B.C,\nGUARANTEE!\nWe guarantee that a \"HBCLA\"\nPlpelon Furnace will heat your\nhome properly. Wa cannot\nmake It atrongor than thati\nTou aro to be the ludfa, W*\nwill stand back ot our product\n\u2014absolutely.\nCLARE BROS. 4 CO, LIMITED\nef Preston, Ontario.\nR. H. MABER\nNELSON, \u25a0, C,\nHIGH CLASS FURS\nA very fine selection kept\nin stock or mode to order.\nCustomers' own furs made\nup into any article desired.\nOld furs repaired and fe-\nmodelled.\nG. GLASER\nManufacturing   Furrier\nPhene ISS Nslwn, B, C,\nCustoms Sale By Tender\nTenders addressed to the undersigned will be received\nat his office at Nelson, B. C, until\nSaturday, the 26th Day oi November, 1921\nat noon, for Hie following property forfeited under the\nCustoms laws, yiz.:\n\"\"\" ONE FORDSON TRACTOR\n****.'\u2022'\nTERMS\u2014Cash on acceptance of tender.   The highest\nor any tender not necessarily accepted.\nGEORGE JOHNSTONE,\nCOLLECTOR OC CUSTOMS.\nDated at Nelson, B. C, 18th day of Novomber, 1921.\n-fc\nPURE WOOL\nSWEATERS\nPullover Sweaters in pure wool,\nfrom  $4.50, $5.00, f7.25\nRoll Collar Sweaters, Universal make,\nin all the best colors *\nat 98.50 and f 10.50\u00ab\nV-Neck Pullovers in white body, with\ncolors at heck. Each f5\u00bb60\nSweater Coats in pure wool,\nat |7.2S and $W.OO\nEMORY & WA'L LEY\n\"   ' ,   . -\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1921_11_22","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0397132","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1921-11-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1921-11-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}