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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" FCV   tllPUUN\nIC TO*I A   I   C\nBoundary Expects\nJANUARY ELEai\nSee Page 5\nt\nVOL. 23\nNELSON, B. O, MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 8, 1924\nNo- 198\nCOALITION LEADS IN THE GERMAN\nTRAIL\nNOTGMUYOF\nFERNIE MURDER\nCoke   for   Smelter   Only\nMinor Item in Lost\nBusiness.\nSOMETHING WRONG\nSTATES BLAYLOCK\nCoke at Ovens Over Thrice\nProduction Cost in\nPennsylvania\nTRAIL, Dec. 7.\u2014Denying that the\nTrail smelter its guilty of \"the attempted murder of Femie,\" or that\nthe 100 or ICO tans of coke used by\nthe fcmelter dully make or break, or\nare even a major factor in the apera-\ntlon of the Crow's Nest Paw Coal company's mines, \u00bb. G. Blaylock, general\nmanager ot the Consolidated Mining\n& Smelting Company of Canada,\nstated today that there wan something radically wrong with the situation In the western coal fields when\nBritish Columbia coke cost more than\nthree times Pennsylvania coke at the\novens. With only a double price, the\nCrow could supply every western\nsmelter, he said. The Trail business\nlost by the Crow's Nest company, he\nintimated, was a minor item compared\n-I* the loss of the Great Northern's\npatronage in steam coal, and the loss\nof the prairie market.\nDeveloping these points, Mr. Blaylock said.\nPoliticant Put Up to Trail\n\"From press dispatches it would\nseem that many pollticans were conveying the impression that if the\nConsolidated Minihg & Smelting Company of Canada, could be Induced to\nbuy Crow's. Nest coke, the Coal\nCreek mines would be reopened.\n\"The Consolidated company only\nuse from 100 to 150 tons [it coke per\nday. As far as I can make out, the\nFernie coke ovens were shut down\nfive years ago, since which time this\ncoke has been furnished from Michel.\nConsequently, it Is a question whether\nbuying the .coke from, the Crow's\nNest woeld affect the Caol Creek\nsituation.\nCoat and Coke Now Exorbitant\n\"llie price of coke in the Crow's\nNest pass at the ovens is $9.48\nfor a product which Is not ono bit\nbetter   then   can   be   bought   in\nPennsylvania   for   from   $2.50   to\nJS.20.    There  is  evidently  something  radically   wrong   with   the\nwhole   situation   in   the   western\ncoal fields.     There is no possible\nreason   why   lt   should  cost   more \u2022\nthan   three   timeB   as   much   to\nproduce a ton of coke in British\nColumbia  than  In  Pennsylvania.\n\"From   statistics . published   during\nthe   last   two   or   three   years   it   is\nquite evident that for too many local\nmines  are  being  operated,   and  this\nundoubtedly  is the  main  reason why\nthe   price   of   coal   and   coke   is   bo\nexorbitant.\n\"The average coal miner ln British\nColumbia is working less than half of\nthe week days, and the price of both\ncoal and coke is more than 100 per\ncent higher than it wns prior to the\nwar.\nDetriment to Industry\n*'The high prices of coal and coke\nin British Columbia are probably the\ngreatest single detriment to industrial\nlife in the province, and are one\nwhich must be overcome before the\nprovince can take fts place as a\nproducer.\n\"Undoubtedly Fernle's situation is\nserious, and Is worthy of very careful . consideration. If Fernie could\nproduce cool and sell it fbr even\ndouble the price that is received for\nlt in Pennsylvania, they could supply\nall the WesleVn American smelters\nwith coke. On the other hand, these\nsame western smelters, particularly\nthe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\ncompany, have got id produce metals\nand sell them In the open markets\nof the world.\nA Minor Item\n\"The loss of Trail's 100 tons of\ncoke is not of much importance\nwhen compared with the loss of the\ncoal for the Great Northern railway\nand the prairie market. All of these\nlosses are due to the high cost of\nproduction.\n\"One to two hundred tons per day\nWould be far too small to consider\nthe opening up of a mine for, particularly when Michel is not working\ntip to tonnage.\n| CABINET DECIDES\nON RELIEF VOTE\nWill  Total   Hundred  and\nFifty Thousand; Some of\nIt for Fernie\nVICTORIA, Dec. ;.\u2014Premier Oliver\nhaa announced thai'a supplementary\nestimate tor $151,000, to he spent by\nthe  public  work,  ana  labor  departments   In   unemployment   relief,   will\nbe Introduced in the house tomorrow.\n1     The  situation  in  Fernie.  to  which\n, Tom Uphill, Labor member for that\n] district, arew attention in the houso\nlate Friday, will receive special consideration,   the   premier   said,   after\nyesterday's emergency  cabinet mcet-\nI Ing to deal with unemployment.\n\"Most of the money will be spent\n[ In  works.\"  Mr.  Oliver said,  \"but  In\ni instances of real  distress,  where no\nf work call be done, we may have to\nresort to the dole system.   We can-\n'l not expect more than 60 per cent of\netflcency  on   work   done   under  this\nVote  under   the   circumstances.\n-JATHOUC BISHOP\nDIES  IN  INDIANA\nFORT WAYNE,  Ind..  Dec.   1\u2014Rt.\n-v. .Herman J. Alederlnft, bishop of\nCatholic diocese of Fort Wayne,\nyetterday, uged li,\nHis Freedom Party\nWiped Out at Polls\nflLLA Ul   IlKKUKi ] \u00ab Penitentiary\nIN FRENCH Ti\nBY COMMUNISTS\nHerriot Ends It by Suspending Mayor Leading\nDemonstrations\nGEN.   ERICH   VON   LUDENDORFF\nLed his German Freedorrt party\nto extinction in yesterday's German\nelections, even losing Bavaria. He\nis   apparently   defeated   himself.\n(MTHOQCSlN\nROUBAIX JEER\nTHEJREMIER\nIn Quimper Thousands of\nBretons Demonstrate\nAgainst Policy\nROUBAIX, France, Dee. 7.\u2014-Premier\ntJerriot ran into a hostile demons-tra-\ntion of whistling, jeering and booing\nwhen he arrived here today to attend\na banquet of the congress of the\nFederation  of Lay societ es.\nThe authorities had an imposing\npolice and military force along the\nline traversed by^ the premer, and\nsoon put down the hostile demonstration. A score of persons wore arrested.\nM. Herriot had, a hearty welcome,\nhowever, from his supporters.\nQUIMPKR, France, Dec 7.\u2014A\ngreat demonstration of protest on the\npart of the Catholics, against Premier\nHerriot's revival of his anti-clerical\ncampaign, brought tens of thousands .\nof Bretons, dressed in picturesque j\ncostumes, to Quimper today, to participate in a procession, ami to listen\nto addresses by Bishop Dupars and\nother churchmen.\nIn another quarter of the town\nthere was a smaller counter demonstration by anti-clericals.\nFighting Deer\nHold Up Train\nat Alert Bay\nALEBT BAY, B.C., DM. 7. \u2014\nSo Intense was tbe straggle between two deer near hers that\nthey got on to the railway tracks\nof the Wood fe England Timber\ncompany and held up a train. Tbe\nsection gang lxad to be scoured to\nmake thorn break apart and let the\ntrain by.\nSeventy Mencan\nBandits Raid City\nand Kill Eleven\nMEXICO XStVY, Deo. 7\u2014Eleven\nunarm-*! civilians were killed and\nseveral sarionaly wonnded, when\n70 bandit* sacked the town of\nTapalp* today. The principal\n\u2022tore* and residences of the town\nwere looted.\nSHE WAS WIDOW OF A\nMARITIME  GOVERNOR\nHOPEWF.LU N.B., Deer. \".\u2014Airs.\nA. H. Mr-cieiiiin, widow of a former\nlieutenant-governor of the province,\ndied at her hoftie here yesterday, after |\nn. short Illness. Walter R. Held of\nVancouver, well-known architect, is a\nbrother.\nGOVERNMENT EXPELS\nSIXTY FOREIGNERS\nCircular Discovered Gives\nInstructions Regarding\nEspionage\nnoUAHNEZ, France, Dee. 7.\u2014The\nfear striken population of this town\nbegan lo breathe easfer yeHienlay, at\nthe news that Mayor Lee Francesco\nhad been suspended by the government, and ordered tried lor Inciting\na   rebellion.\nThe people had been living in\nterror for tho past week, since the\nCommunists' strike of tho sardine\nfactories spread, practically tying up\ntho town, while the mayor, wearing\nhis Bash of office, led tho demonstrations.\nCommunist leaders have been canvassing the merchants fur subscriptions, which usually were given\nin order to avoid hostile action by\nthe daily paraders.\nParties nt Communists also have\nbrought back loads of food from the\nsurrounding farms, whose owners are\nsaid to have made \"gifts.\" when\nthey wero reminded of what would\nhappen to them if they did otherwise, as soon as the Communist'-'\ntake power.\nAlien Communists Kicked Out\nPAR1H, Dec. 7.\u2014The French government's secret police today pushed\n60 foreign Communists agents over\nthe French frontiers, and announced\na policy of weeding out foreign agitators, in line Willi Premier Herriot's\nbelief that the menace of a red peril\ncomes rather from foreigners than\nfrom  French   Communists.\nThese who were expelled today on\nwflrlvints signed by tho minister of\nthe interior, comprised 43 Italians,\nseven Belgians, six Poles, one Jugoslav, one Swiss, ono Swede and one\nGerman.\nAdherents   of   Lenine   College\nAli those deported were organizers\nof the Communist \"centurie*,\" or adherents of the Lenine Communist\nschool at Bobbigny. where red propaganda and plans for the disorganisation of the bourgeoise was\ntaught in. the class rooms,\nTho government purposes to watch\nforeigners closely, and to expel any\nwho are found to be mixed up in\nany revolutionary movement.\nThe names of the persons expelled\nfrom tho country today were not\nmade public, but it is not believed\nthat and very prominent Communist\nleaders were among them.\nThe Communists are showing no\nalarm. None of their widespread\norganizations have been troubled, as\nfar as is known, and their organ\n\"Humanito,\" continues to denounce\nthe government, and to caution red\nadherents to be ready for Action ut\nany moment.\nThe   police    seized    a    number    of\ndocuments    in    Saturday's    raid    on\nsoviet  headquarters   nt   Bobbigny.\n\"Confidential   Circular\"\nQuotldien, Premier Herriot's organ,\ntoday prints a full page of what\npurports to me Communist \"confidential circular No. 128.\" It is\ndated Nov. 22, and addressed to the\nFrench Communists, apparently by\nthe  French   Communist  headquarters.\nThe circular contains detailed information to Communists for recruiting, and gives them arguments to put\nforth to convince persons who ore\nhesitant to join the organization, but\nparticularly it urges secrecy in spying, and persistant insidious activity-\nWomen, it declares, should he told\nthat Communists promises equal pay\nand better treatment for them, and\nallowance during childbirth.\nIt says youth should be promised\nmoney for education, and that discontent should bo fostered everywhere under the new organization of\n\"cells.\"\nSpecial instructions aro given for\na regular census on automobiles and\nnil   stores   of   arms   and   ammunition\nLEO   KORETZ\nWhose \"Panama'' bubble In oil that\ndid not exist in tracts of land he\nbought, went to the penitentiary Friday, having pleaded guilty to four\ncounts, on each of-which he received\na sentence of from one to 10 years,\nto run concurrently, He paid dividends   out    of    stock    sales.\nMEMBERS URGE\nEUGENICLAW\nFOR PROVINCE,\nRothwell and MacKenzie\nfor It; Lead in Lunacy,\nStates Sloan\n'BUMP'ENTOMBS\nTWENTY ONE IN\nSPRINGHILL PIT\nEarth Fall After Tremors\nTraps Men Far Under\nGround\nVOLUNTEERS RUSH;\nARE DRIVEN BACK\nOne  Man  Is  Crushed   to\nDeath; Others Rescued\nBadly Bruised\nSays Stargeon Falls\nWill Enforce Dry Law\nVICTORIA, Dec. 7.\u2014Moro than\nthree-'iuarters of the estimates had\nbeen voted when the legislature adjourned for the week-end, the last\nhalfday having disposed of $1,000,000\nfor the provincial secretary's department. While this vote was under\ndiscussion, Hon. William Sloan, the\nminister, in answer to questions\nabout the steady increases in recent\nyears in the cost of mental hospitals,\n\u25a0stated -that liritish Columbia now\nhad the largest number of mental\ndefectives in proportion to population,\nof any   province   in  Canada.\nPay  Tribute to  Institutions\nOpposition members paid tribute to\nthe efficiency in tho management of\ntheso institutions.\nDr. E. J. Rothwell and W. A. MacKenzie urged a law to prevent mentally deficient people  from marrying.\n\"Couples intending to marry, should\nsee the doctor before the parson,\"\nthey urged.\nOnly two or three departments\nhave yet to receive their supply votes\nfrom the house, hut there is still\nmuch controversal matter to be debated, Including timber royalties, the\nbeer Question, thc P.G.E. problem.\nMotor art amendments, church union,\nand oilier issues,\nAMHERST, N.S., Dec. 7.\u2014Twenty-\none miners were entombed, and one\nman killed, in the No. 2 slope of the\nPprlhghill mines' yesterday afternoon,\nfollowing one of the worst bumps In\nthe history of the mine.\nThe earth fremors occurred shortly\nofter 12 o'clock. The heavy fall of\nearth that imprisoned the party of\nminers took place on the 600-foot\nlevel east, in the top piller on No 4\ndecline.\nFour bumps in quick succession\nbrought down the roof of the mine.\ncutting off the miners working at this\npoint, and crushing John Sweeney beneath the debris.\nVolunteers    immediately    endeavored\nto   rescue   the   men,   but   were   driven\nfrom their task by another bad bump.\nBetwn to nt and Open hiMfi\nAfter this tremor subsided the miners returned to their work, and cleared\nthe way through the fall and effected\nthe release of the imprisoned men,\nmany of whom were budly bruised by\ntba falling stone.\nThe body of John Sweeney was not\nrecovered until late this morning. Hfl\nwas found buried in rocks and dirt.\nThe bumps caused earth not only to\nfall in No. 2 slope, but on the surface\nas well, and it resembled an earthquake.\nNumerous bumps have occurred\nwithin the past few weeks, and on\nthree occasions men have beep injured.\nA *\"\"bump\" In a mine gallery is one\nof the most dreaded \"of the lesser difficulties that beset miners, and tlje\ntunnel in which Saturday's accident\noccurred has been subject to these occurrences. Through some disturbance\nof the earth, the carefully walled and\npropped tunnels are choked up by\nearth from all sides, accompanied by\nearth tremors. Only a few months\nago Premier Armstrong of Nova Scotia, who is also minister of works and\nmines, brought an expert on \"bumps\"\nfrom Washington to try to ascertain\nthe cause of these frequent occurrences   at   thc   Springhill   mines.\nS06UUSTSM\nMarx Liberal Coalition il\nIncreasing: Vote Appar- \u25a0\nently t\nFREEDOM PARTY\nABOUT WIPED OUT\nGeneral Likely Beaten in\nBavaria; Prussia Voting:, Toe\nPOLICE ESCORT\nGRANDDUCHESS\nIsolate New York Dock in\nCase Cyril's Russian Foes\nPresent\nNKW YORK, Dec. 7.\u2014The Orand\nDuchess Victoria Feodorovna, wife of\nthe Grand Duko Cyril Vladmiro-\nvttch, who recently proclaimed himself heir to the Romanoffs on the\nthrone of Russia, arrived here yesterday aboard the steamship Paris,\nnnd was cavorted to her suite in the\nWaldorf Astoria hotel by a squad of\nmotor cycles.\nA special force of detectives and\npolice had lslnated tho pier at which\nthe Paris docked, to prevent any\ndemonstration by the grand duke's\nlocal political opponents\u2014both red\nand   white   Russians.\nThe grand duchess Is a cousin of\nKing Oeorge of Great Britain.\nPENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD\nOFFICIAL   DROPS   DEAD\nPHILADELPHIA, Dec. 7.\u2014Robert\nC. Wright, aged .\".ii, general traffic\nmanner of the Pennsylvania railroad, dropped dend In his office here\non Saturday,\nWife Has Receipts;\nMasked Bandits Get\nOnly Eight Dollars\nVANCOUVER, Deo. 7,\u2014A minute\nafter he bad sent his wife upstairs with the day's receipt*, K.\n0. rorsythe, grocer, was held up\nby two armed and masked men, la\nhis store, and relieved of 98,\nPRINCIPALS IN GREAT \"BLACKMAIL\" CASE\nIfUHl\nC. E. ROBINSON MRS.  MAUDIE   ROBINSON SIR   HARI   SINGH M   N   NEWTON\nThe above layout shows Charles Ernest Robinson, alias Rloomfteld, the former Knglish bookmaker, who sued the Midland bank for the Bum\nof \u00a3125,000 which he claimed was wrongly paid out to an attorney, William Hobbs, after Hobbs had deposited a total, in Robinson's name, of \u00a3160,000.\nThis money had been obtained from the Indian rajah who wished to avoid undesirable publicity in connection with his friendship for Robinson's\nwife. This woman, Mrs. Maudle Robinson, is the daughter of a meat sales man, and married her bookmaker husband at the age of 21. The Indian\npotentate shown above in the turban is Sir Hari Singh, 29-year-old son of Lieut.-Gen. Sir Pertab Singh. Right, Montague Noel Newton, who tes- '\ntified ftt the recent trial that he was a member of the fang- which extorted \u00a3150,000 from the Indian, potentate-,\nJAMES   LILLIE\nTho new mayor of Sturgeon Falls,\nOnt., is strongly in favor of enforcement of the Ontario Temperance act, and declares that the new\ncouncil at its first meeting will rescind the resolution which the old\ncouncil passed instructing tho chief\nof police not to enforce the Ontairo\nTemperance act.\nTRAPPllHTS\nTHE WOLF PACK;\nNARROWESCAPE\nDispatches Leader With\nAxe on Pole; Others Eat\nCarcass\nPORT ARTHUR, Ont., Dec. 7.\u2014\nMat Lapanin, a trapper on Little\nPine lake, north ot Seagram, staggered Into Long Lac yesterday well\nnight exhausted, and recounted a\nthrilling   encounter   with   wolves.\nHe had heen out on h's trap lines,\nand at tiie farthest he found a wolf,\ncaught in the trap. He skinned the\nanimal, and placing the hide in\nhis  pack,   made   for   home.\nShortly afterward he heard wolves\nhowling, nnd Judged from the din\nthat they were consuming tiie remains of the dead wolf. Then, to\nuse Lapanin's own words \"they came\non  my  track,  singing.\"\nThis did not bother h'm ag rc.it\ndeal, being an experience 1 trapper\nand woodsman. But when they\nbroke from cover and advaneed eV-w-\nly growling and show their\nfangs, he counted 16 in the pack.\nSixteen Advance on Him\nThis rather perturbed him, for he\nhad never encountered so manv in\na single pack before. The wolves\nadvanced to within 100 feet, and\nthen paused. Lapan'n bound his\naxe, with the aid of the moose hide\nfrom his pack, securely upon a\nstout green pole, and then advanced on them. They retreated a\nshort distance. He retraced his\nsteps,  and  the  wolves  followed  him.\nThe leader, bolder than the rest,\nfinally making a snap at him, actually succeeding in tearing his pant\nleg. The trapper then went into\naction  and   k lied  the  animal.\nWithout stopping to skin thc dead\nwolf he made tracks for Long Lac.\nThe animals were quiet for some\ntime, evidently enjoying a repast on\ntheir late leader's carcass, but once\nagain   the   pack   took   up   the   cry\n\"Mat\" made the railroad an-1\nthe town just a lap ahead of the\nanimals.\ntarns compiled ap to ft o'eloek *a~m\nmorning showed the Soo-ua-Demo-\ncrats 1-MdiM-r wltt C\nelected to the niefcrtM.   '_.\u201e__-\t\n. liaouum ka it.\n\u2022*' !\nRAIL BROTHERHOODS\nPAN SWITCH BYLAW\nAsk   Cabinet   Alter   Rule\nOuter  Main   Track\nSwitches\nOTTAWA. Dec, 7.\u2014Two railroad\nbrotherhoods, the Order of Locomotive\nEngineers ami of Locomotive Firemen\nand Enginemen, appeared before the\ncabinet yesterday, and asked the\ngovernment to rescind a bylaw in\nforce on the Canadian railway which\nprovides thnt the outer main track\nswitches shall be regarded as station\nlimits.\nAccording to rail way men's counsel,\nits existence means that the engine\ndriver is forced to take ,esponslbtlty\nfor the safety and protection of his\ntrain, which has been taken by the\nrailway   company.\nCounsel for the C.P.R. complained\nthat the rule has been found to work\nwell, and argued that nothing could\nbe gained by lending it back to lhe\nrailway commission.\nHon. G. P. Graham, minister of\nrailways, assured the delegation thut\nfull consideration would be given to\nthe request.\nBandits at Canton\nKidnap Forty-eight\nTeachers, Students\nCANTON, Chins, Dec. 7.\u2014\nForty-eight Chinese teachers and\nstudents of Canton Christian col-\nlego were kidnaped yesterda\nen board a launch flying an\nAmerican flag, while going from\nCanton to the college.\nSix bandits among the passengers of the launch overpowered\nthe crew, and after landing the\ncaptives, sent the launch back to\nCanton with a foreign woman and\nseveral   Chinese  girls  on   board.\nThe bandits then hurried inland\nwith the kidnaped teachers and\niWdtptf,         ;\t\nThe i\nthe Centrists  (0\nmail peoples party, \u00bbf ,\u201e _._,\nlata. 14; BerarUa 9aaja**_m__f\nt; \u2022erman DoHUMBBjMe patty. T|\nB-ctreme Vatloaalists. Si ami Maa-\naomlo party, B. *\nSocialists Lax-rest ftrovp\nBERLIN, Dec. 7.\u2014An extraordinary\nincrease in the vote of the Socialist\nparty over that of last Mar. oonslstewt\ngains by the Democrats, and the political obliteration of General Ludew\ndorff's Chauvinistic anti-Semitic party\nare the outstanding features of the\ngeneral election, held today for the\nreturn of members of the relchetec\nand the Prussian diet.\nThis is evinced by the partial returns received at govemmeat headquarters up to midnight.\nWhile definite deductions regardlnf\nthe relative ultimate strength of the\n\u2022 eight contending major parties are we\n1 yet impossible, the present returns,\ntaken as averages, indloate that ,,the\nSocialists will enter the new relchstac\nas the strongest party. Their gains\nwere made chiefly at the cost of the\nCommunists.\nThe Democrats will. In \u00bbU probability, elect 40 deputies, as against SS last\n, May. 4   \u2022        *\u25a0'-.. a_\nI The Clerical party's vote shows only\na slight variation as compared with\nthe figures In the last election, end\nChancellor Marx's party will be returned with aa Increase at- five mad-\ndates.\nBoth  might Partus fcoee\nGerman Nationalists appear to have\nannexed Hie defections from Luden-\ndorffs party, but they have also lost\nvotes to the German People's party.\nThe Nationalists will probably be the\nsecond strongest party in the reichstag.\nIf the Socialists, Clericals and\nDemocrats maintain the ratio reflected\nin the early returns, they will command sufficient mandates to constitute a new government coalition.\nUp to midnight Ludandorffs Fascist\nparty had failed to qualify for a\nsingle mandate In any one of the electoral precincts thus far produced.\nUntil the rural returns are received,\nno estimate of the ultimate strength\nof the German Nationalists will ho\npossible, as their strongholds are In\nthe  Prussian agrarian sectors.\nBERLIN, Dec 7. \u2014 Germany went\nto the polls today to elect a reichstag\nami a new Prussian diet. The three\nLiberal parties \u2014 Socialists, Clericals\nand. Democrats \u2014 led by Chancellor\nMarx, have centered their efforts on\nthe defence of the republic, and opposed to the Nationalists, led by Admiral Von Tfrpits and Count Von\nWestarp; Stresemann'B German People's\nparty, and the Fascist party under\nGeneral   Ludendorff.\nA survey of scattering returns from\nmore than 75 metropolitan and provincial election districts late tonight\ncredits the Socialists with heavy gains\nover the Communists. The members\nare also liberally exceeding their vote\nof last May, while the German People's\nparty appears to be absorbing the vote\nlost by the Germnn Nationalists.\nLudendorff Banning Behind\nGeneral Ludendorff's National Freedom party has suffered heavy losses iu\ndistricts which formerly returned a\nmajority for it. Thus far Its losses\nin   Bavaria   are   especially   conspicuous.\nAt midnight the re-election of Ludendorff was made uncertain owing to\nhis party's failure to carry a sufficient number of districts to insure him\nthe necessary surplus vote as candl-\nuate-at-large.\nThe counting of the ballots is proceeding slowly, owing to double voting In Prussia under the Varying proportional   system.\nThe future of Liberalism In Germany, and the ability of Germany to\nkeep unimpaired the continuity of her\npost-war economic recovery, will be\nheavily influenced by the outcome of\ntoday's  voting  for  the  new  reichstag\nand   the   Prussian  diet.\nDawes Plan Kay Oet a Show\nIf   the   Prussian   reactionaries. . who\n(Continued  on   Page  Five)\nSTEAMER 'ARRIVALS\nCameronia, nt Glasgow, from Ne\u00abf\nfork.\n.vioiita. nt Glasgow, from Mon\u00bb\ntreal,\ncadric, nt Queenstown, from New\nYork.\nLaconla, at Liverpool from New\nfork.\nParis, at  Now York, from Havre.\nMount Lauriar, at St. John, N.B.,\nfrom Laverimol.\nCalgary, at St. John, N.B, from\nXewport   News.\nSBBSSBB\n \u25a0ppn\nPftgeTwo\"\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 8, 1924\nEdward Blmmonds, aged 88, dropped\ndead at Duluth, Minn., and waa found\nto have a heart three times the normal sise. \\\n-* Tr   |\nJames Kieran of Chicago compelled\nhis wife to place her hand against the\nwall so he could shoot at It. He got\nsix months ln Jail.\nMexico Won9t Open I Winnipeg Pastor to\na British Parley] Accept Toronto Call\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel oi the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES,   $3.50   TO   $5.00\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths.\nHeadquarters for all Travelling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists.\nROTARIAN   HEADQUARTERS\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nTHE   MOST  COMFORTABLE   ROTUNDA  IN  THE  CITY\nHUME \u2014 W. O. Ward, A. C. Scott,\n,J.\" Hall. H. J. Godley, Vancouter; C.\n\u25a0 D. MacKenzie, Calgary: Mrs. , A. Carlisle, Penticton: W. A. Puller, Vernon;\nH- E.- Rogers. Seattle: D. A. Bremner.\nVancouver;    F.    A.    Bradley.    Calgary.\nGuy Browell, J. B. McLaughton, Creston: Charles E. Marlatt, Bonnington;\nG. M. Duncan, Hamilton: J. P. Hy-\nland, Winnipeg; J. E. Cowan, F. R.\nArchibald, J. E. Slobel, 11. B. Zurckcy,\nVancouver; W. A. I'nrrott, Montreal.\t\nEUROPEAN  PLAN\nDaylight Sample Rooma far\nCommercial Men.\nHotel Strathcona\nOnce Yon Get Acquainted With the Strathcona\nYOU WILL STOP AT NO OTHER\nMEXICO CITY, I>ec. 7.\u2014Mexico, it\nwas said today by Foreign Minister\nSaenz, will not open negotiations for\na resumption of relations with Great\nBritain.\nThis statement was made after\nthe retpipt of news here that the\nHritish chamber of commerce in\nEngland had petitioned the British\ngovernment to resume relutons with\nMexico.\nNelson's Best Cafes\nROYAL CAFE\nClsssic   Restaurant\nRefinement  and   Delicacy   Prevails\nOPEN   DAV   AND   NIGHT\nLuncheon.   11:30   to   2    SR*\nSpecial Dinners, 6:30 to 8 36c\nWe   Specialise   In   Chop   Susy\nand Noodles\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped restaurant In the\nCity. OPEN DAT AND NIGHT.\n8PECIAI*\u2014 Ice cream, soda water\nand hot drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe   cater   to   private   parties.\nREV.   S.   W.   AIKINS\nFormer pnstrttf1 of the Metropolitan\nchurch, Toronto, nationally known\ndivine, who has accepted n call from\nHoward Park Methodist chun-h. He\nis   now   in   .Winnipeg.\nC^MS\u20ac*\u20acW\u00ab^\u00ab^C\u00ab\u00ab*^\u20acW\u20ac\u20ac<\u00ab*\u20ac\u00ab*$\nAnd Now!\nOur sale. U over and the decks all cleared for a big display of Christmas\nmerchandise.  \"\nDay after day, articles you will covet for dainty Gifts will be placed on display\u2014articles representing the newest'ideas that~the market~affords^-articles selected to combine real \"usefulness\" and sheer beauty.\"-   ' ~~ \u25a0\nMAKE YOUR SELECTIONS EARLY!\nDo not forget to get a Free Prize Ticket lOith each $2.00 Cash Purchase. Two pi izes, $25.00 in Gold and $25.00 in Goods will be drawn\nfor on Christmas Eve.\nNelson Dry Goods Co*\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n120 Bakar Street, Nelaon, B.C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIOHT\n11:30 to 2:30,  Special  Lunch  ..88c\n6:30 to 8:00 p.m.. Supper    ....35c\nPhone  164\nIBRONCHITIS\nheaves a had Cough. Ro does \"flu\"\nand la -grippe. Rut these lingering: coughs yield cnsily to the\nht'uMng und cwative qualities of\nCHAMBERLAIN'S\nCOUGH   REMEDY\nEvery  user  it  a  friend.\nELECTRIC CAFE\n807 Baker St.,  Neleon, l.C\nOpen   Day   and  Night.\nexcellent Meals, Quick Service\nEverything   cooked   by   electricity\nLuncheon, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., 35c\nSupper 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., 35c\nSpecial Sunday Turkey Dinner, 60c\nPlata Phone 460\nBeauty\nOf Hair and Son\nPreserved By\nCuticura\nOln\n\u00bbp to Cleanee\njtmenttoHeaJ\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water in every room.\nSteam  heated.\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nSteam-heated   Rooms   by  the   Day,\nWeek   or   Month.\nEvery   consideration   \u00bbhown   to\nguests.\nCor.   Baker  and   Ward   Sts.   Nelson\n}\"*V'    *'\u25a0 '\u25a0'   \u25a0\/..;.** I   ' He.'.\n'.Ki'J'-'i 111 I h\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA. C. TOWNER,  Proprietor\nThe  home  of  plenty.\nFifty   rooma   of   solid   comfort.\nWe serve the best meals in Nelson.\nIt's the cook.\nI MADDEN \u2014 D. A. Mcl'eak. Peak's\nLanding; W. ft*. Hunter, Spokane; A.\nMcNeil. Bonn I n jft on; John Wall, Jamew\nMcNiven, Pike's Teak; Bert Oil\nBonnington; J. D. Kaylon, T.. M. Roberta,    city;   J.    McNeil.    James   Studlev\n! G.N.Ry.; C. C. Young. Cranbrook; Hill\nCholook, Bonnington; Mr, and Mrs. J,\nUlrlght. Orand Porks; W. flllmour,\nMoose Jaw; i'. Dennett, Pend' Oreille;\nTom  Rahl, Kdmonton.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nNick  Stoochnoff,   Proprietor\nNlre,  warm, comfortable rooms at\nreasonable   rates.     Open   day   and\nnight.\nCorner   Hall   and   Vernon   Streets\nWE don't expect you to be\nAS enthusiastic about our values\nIN Men's and Boys' Wear ns we are,\nUNTIL you have made\nA JUST comparison;\nTHEN you will select \"His Gift\" here.\n\u25a0   - '.     '.*-\nIt- ,\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\n^>^'*^5^^5^^*^\u00bb^S-^^j>^*ift*\u00bbj^>j9*j'\u00bb \u00a3^jfc9\u00a3i9\u00a3i.\nINDIAN REFORMS\nARE SANCTIONED\nBY GOVERNMENT CHAMBERLAIN IS\nport 100,000 undesirables under the\nrecent law grantinp the authorities\nexceptional powerB lo maintain order.\nA large number of Russian simper! a who cannot well be son! hoiim,\nwill be iw|iilred to live In n restricted\narea.\nIn fifteen Years Helf of\nCicil Sercive half of Cicil\nService Will Be Native\nPopular Prices\nThe Smile Store\nI\/>ndon, Dec. 7.\u2014(Canadian Press\nCable)\u2014Heveral of the most important\nrecommendations in tho report of the\ncommission of the services in India,\nheaded by Lord Lee of Fareham,\nhave been srnctioned hy the government.\nThe general effect of these recommendations shows improvement in the\nemoluments and security of tenure of\nthe Indian civil servants! certain\nspeeding up of the Indianization of\nthe services, and increasing the\nIndian element therein to 50 per\ncent in 15 years, and delegating to\nthe government of India the duty\nof making appointments to a number\nof the local services.\nThe object of the proposed reforms\nis lo satisfy to some extent Indian\ndemands for a greater share in administration, and simultaneously attempt to solve one of the most\nserious problems of gevernment in\nIndia, namely, a dearth of the best\ntype of British officials.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616 Vernon  Street   East\nOnly  brick  hotel   in  city.    Steam\nheated;  hot and cold water.\nEuropean and  American  plans.\nLAKEVIEW   \u2014   F.   Soloff,   E.   Warren, Balmo; s. Harlekin, Taghum.\nNEW ORAND \u2014 W. R Halpenny.\nCalgary; John R. Chalk, Winnipeg; EC\nfJerber, Swift Current; M. Oeber, R.\nBurk, Maple Creek; Mr. and Mrs. \u00ab.\nW. Jenks, Creston; Mr. and Mrs. B.\nE. Oliver. Ymir; Louis Mntassa. Erie;\nA.  Williams,  Vancouver.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n71S   Vernon   Street   East\nSteetm heated.   Hot and cold water.\nWe  are  here to  serve  you.\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\nMRS.   MALLETTE\nAnnounces    the    Reopening    of\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nVernon   8treet Phone   692\nCompletely   renovated.    Thirty   comfortable   rooms.\n\"A Home for the World at Reasonable\nPrices.\"\nSAVOY HOTEL\n2   Block  from   Depot.\nSteam  Heated.    By  Day, Week  or\nmonth.       Hot    and    cold    running\nWater.\nFor  Your  Comfort\nJ,   A.   KERR,   Prop.\nSAVOY \u2014 J. Macks y, Bonninpton;\nE. Hook, Colville; O. Boiart, Walker-\nville; J, Illlngworth. Vancouver; W.\nLangron. Calgary; L. Venter, G. Pel-\noso, A. Grappi, A. Remargin. Nordegg;\nMr. and Mrs. D. Keith, Moose Jaw,\nJames Bird,  Nelson.\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nNear C.P.R.  Station.\nRooms  at   Reasonable   Rates.\nH. DUNK, Proprietor\nRmu) tht Advertisement!\nTHEY UGBTES WORK\nFOR NEWLYWEDS\nEstablishing a home is often a rather expensive\nproposition.\nBut there are many ways of saving, here and\nthere.\nAnd through them, many couples succeed in furnishing their homes delightfully at comparatively\nsmall cost.\nLarger than any store is the great market place\nknown as The Daily News Classified Ad Department.\nBy making purchases through this department\nvery material savings are often possible.\nFurniture, rugs, curtains, musical instruments,\nphonographs, radio sets, stoves, refrigerators and\nother things are frequently advertised here at bargain prices.\nUsed cars, real estate, help wanted female, are\nother classifications which may interest the new\nfamily.\nThis talk is headed \"For Newlyweds\" because\nmost married people already know of these short\ncuts to economy and thrift.\nThe Daily News\nPHONE  144  (TWO LINES)\nMiners Stampede\nMildly to Find\non Glacier Creek\n.DAWSON, Y.T., Dec. 7.\u2014A mild\nstampede to Glacier creek, 60 miles\nwest, has resulted from the assay\nnf ore brought in by Oeorge Kennedy, well-known prospector, showing\n40 ounces of gold to the ton, in a\nwell  defined  vein.\nThe discoverer declares the vein\nwas  traced  for  several   miles.\nGUEST IN ROME\nWITH MUSSOLINI\nBritish Criticisms of the\nProtocol Said to Be Three\nin Number\nof tho Associated Boards of Trndo\nof Eastern British Columbia, waa\nnmong the cabin passangerH landed\nhy the steamship Mont I^iurier, when\nshe  reached   port   yesterday.\nGovernment Will Not\nHinder Liquor Exports\nREACH HEBRIDEANS\nUNDER HANDICAPS\nImmigration Agent Makes\nUist   Through   Heavy\n\u25a0Seas\nLONDON, Dec. 7.\u2014Canadian Press\nCable)\u2014The difficulties attending immigration propangda in the Hebrides\nIs illustrated by a recent incident.\nOwing to heavy seas, the Canadian\nimmigration agent had difficulty in\ncrossing from the mainland to South\nUist. the crossing being hazardous as\nwell as difficult, and by the time\nhe crossed there was little opportunity\nfor giving notice of the meeting he\nwished to hold. Thereupon, children\nwere asked to give notice, and they\ndid so in the surrolinding hamlets,\nwith such good effect that in a few\nhours the meeting was held, with B0\nadults present. Many of the** had\nwalked five miles to be present to\nhejir of the advantages Canada offered\nto the Hebrideans us settlerB in the\nDominion.\nROMK, Dec. 7. \u2014 How to handle\nthe Geneva peace protocol, which is\nregarded as the great preliminary step\ntoward world disarmament \u2014 forms\nthe delicate problem which faces the\ninternational statesmen when they\nmeet tomorrow as members of the\ncouncil of the League of Nations.\nAusten Chamberlain, the British foreign secretary, whose new Conservative government has asked for more\nlime to study this instrument of arbitration nnd security, saw Premier\nMussolini today, had luncheon with\nKing Victor Emmanuel and conversed\nprivately with various members of the\nleague  council. .\nTonight the delegates summarized\nthe three main criticisms in Britain\ntc the protocol as being, first, the absence of the United States from the\nLeague of Nations, and the increased\ndifficulty which the protocol presents\nto thc United States eventually Joining the league; second, difficulties\nwith the British dominions because of\nthe Japanese amendment concerning\ndomest ic questions, und with Canada\nbecause of the Canadian tendency to\nstand aloof from European entanglements; and third, the maintenance of\ntho  status  quo. >\nCommon Line Possible\nFollowing the conference between\nMr. Chamberlain and Premier Mussolini the British embassy issued a\ncommunique which said that \"the\npossibility of establishing a common\nline of action, and the Intention of\ncloser collaboration, in accordance with\nthe traditions of the two countries,\nwas   affirmed.\"\nMussolini, Tlttoni and other members of the Italian cabinet, attended\na banquet at the embassy tonight\nRiven in honor of Mr. Chamberlain and\nthe Hritish and Italian delegates to\nthe council meeting.\"\nRumania Deports\nThem Wholesale;\nConfine Russians\nHas Forty Thousand\nbut Dies in Dire\nPoverty in Toronto\nTORONTO, Dec. 7.' \u2014 Comparatively\nwealthy, with three bank accounts\nshowing a credit of $41,000 to his\nname, and the owner of valuable property. Alex. McKenzie, 67, was found\ndead here tonight amidst the direst\npoverly. in the dingy kitchen room\nwhere his body lay on a sofa, clothed\nin tattered garments, with mftny evidences of want while the only 'means\nof lighting found In the place was\n(.btained from a tallow eandlc. A roll\ncontaining $60 was found ln h's\npocket.\nCommissioner Starkey\nArrives 'at St. John\nBUCHAREST,  Dec.  7.\u2014The Ruma-       ST-   JOHNS.   N.B..   Dec.   7.\u2014P.   A.\nj nlun  government  Is preparing to  de-    Starkey of Nelson, B.C., commissioner\nTHE   GUMPS-BENJAMIN   MIDAS   GUMP\n\\Nt\\X, THt fcMWS WU. STM 0?t>4\nY-.t   lUROSMS   CHECKS AROV*H\"t> UKF  A\nWKTROONA Q\u00bbR\\_-  MM)\\NCi m*A *~oo  -.v,\nWCIE VS  vJUS'T mE H&N\\N<3 A ?\\R*ST\nMOR*Tfc)*\\e>\u00a3 ON  Tut \\).*S.  MlHT- \"cMtUS\nTVM-*-. VAfc  LOOKS Kt ME  \\ Cf\\*s  HEM*\".\n\"Tv\\fi \"f-xN\\M0j  Tfc\\X*y*i  fc'SWM'VVNVU.'NaO\nV\n\u25a0zm\nHON. JACQUES  BUREAU\nMinister of customs and inland revenue, states it is not the duty of hia\ndepartment to interfere with liquor\nexports to the United States,\nrrrhh-iuofih\nBANDITS CAPTURE\nPRIESTS AND NUNS\nAre Being Held at Hankow\nfor   Ransom   by   Their\nCaptors\n8CRANTON, Pa., Dee. 7. \u2014 Two\npriests, members of the Passlonlsls\norder, and formerly stationed at St.\nAnn's monastery in this city, have\nreen captured hy bandits near Hankow. China, and with two nuns, aro\nbeing held for ransom, according to a\ncable message received rere tonight.\nThe priests are Rev. Father Dominic\nformer rector of St. Michael's church\nat Hoboken, N.J., and Rev. Father\nMatthias, missionaries. The nuns are\nmembers of the Sisters of Charity,\nformerly stationed at Convent,  N.J.\nA cablegram received at the monastery here tonight, stated the missionaries and nuns had been relieved of\nall  their possessions by  their captors\nThe priests have heen in China but\na short time, having sailed from\nSeattle in September of this year\nHuge Pulp Merger\nGets Incorporated;\nto Combine Five\nQUEBEC, Dee. 7.\u2014Incorporation .-\u2022\nthe Quebec Pulp ft Paper Mills \"com\npr.ny, limited, wilh a cupitaliiatlon of\n$7,250,000, and power to acquire tn\nwhole or In port the interests of the\nCh'routlml Pulp company, ChicoutimI\nFort company, La Cie Generals \u00abt\ntort de Chlcniitlml. Saguoaay Pulp ft\nnp*r company, nnd also the Roberval\nKuguoniiy Hallway company, is announced In the current Issue ot the\nRoyal  (Jaaette.\nLightning    struck    the      bicycle      \u201e\u201e\nwhicii   Sieve   (loorkln   wan   riding   to\nwork   in   a  storm  at   Mimjuette,   Mich\nand he  was instantly  killed\nHAD HEARTBURN\nAND HEADACHES\nFOR MANY YEARS\nMiss Beta Burrls, R.R. No. ]\nWaterford, Ont., writes:\u2014 \"I have\nbeen troubled wilh heartburn and\nheadaches for many years. There\nwere very few things I could eat\nwithout suffering from either the\nheartburn   or   severe   headaches.\nA  friend  recommended   me   to   tij\nMILBURN'S\nLAXA-UVER PILLS\nThis I did, and found relief at once\nand have never been troubled since\nI will always recommend your Pilli\nto any of my friends who ar\ntroubled with heartburn, headache\nor any other liver trouble,\"\nMilburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are ft\nsale at all druggists and dealers; pu\nup only, for the past SO yeart,\nTh\u00ab T. Milburn Co., Limited, To\nronto, Ont.\n \u2014i \u00a3J*Jw_.-\nfelE NELSON DAJLY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING\/ DECEraElTi, M\n....v \u25a0. *\n- \u25a0     -...->   \u25a0\u00ab-,\n*' fags Tb# *'i;w\nchapter lxvii.\n1,    Virginia's   cosfessiov  '\nVirginia remained mute, her mouth\na drawn, frightened' smudge Iur\n\u25a0pay.\n\"Answer,   Virginia.     Ig   It   true'\"\n\"ls^-what\u2014 true?\"      The   violence\not her breath became an affliction.\n'About  you. and   Humphrey Arnold.\n\"About being engaged, Cleve? Is\nthat what you mean?\"\n\"I\u00ab that all there ever waa be-\n**e\u00ab\" you? Juat an engagement?\nVirginia, don't torture me. Why\nare you shaking? Tour little hands\nare cold ?>\u2022\n' She -wound them under his In a\nKesturo of frantic, childish appeal'\nt-leve,. listen. You shouldn't ac-\ncuro me.\"\n,. 7 flftn't. Why, darling! Just-sav\n1( Isnl; true. I only want to hoar\nyou say that. I'll believe you against\nthe whole world. You know that.\nDon t cry. Oh, here, kiss me. Look\nat me,, little sweet darling. Don't\nturn your head. Don't cover your\nface like that.\"\nShe swayed, reaching her hand ud\nSSj^i? push hls \"us 'rom hers,\nwait, Cleve\u2014wait. You must hear\nine. Oh, don't Judge. You see\u2014I\nthought\u2014I didn't know at all\u2014wait\na  moment\u2014\"\nHis cheeks, his lips, even his eves\nturned slowly to a clayey dullness.\nHe took'her hands and clenching\nthem, peered In her face. \u2022 What\ndidn't you know? Good God Virginia, are you going to tell-me the\nthing is true? If it is\u2014eay if\n\"Peak!\"\nShe tried- to pull from him. Little\nShrill moans sobbed at her l|ps.        '\nSuddenly he gripped her shoulders shaking her. \"You - can't bo\nthat. Virginia! You can't hnve\ntricked   me  so.     Say  you   haven't!\"\nThen she began to cry; to plead\n\u25a0wildly. She hid against his shoulder and moaned: \"Listen\u2014\"\nHe was now so uprooted that h<>\nstood there shaking her, unable to\nutter a syllable.\nAlmost fainting she whispered\n'Let me so\u2014please! Oh, let me\ngo!\"\nHe wrapped his arm about her,\nklBsinf her with a brutal violence,\nsqueezing her white, imploring face\nln his hands. \"You're not that. Virginia. You couldn't do that. There\n\u25a0was never anything between you\ntwo. I believe you. ' Say it's not\nbo!    Say they lie!\"\nShe lay motionless and sinking\nln his arms. She felt his lips demanding against hers: \"It is true?\nThere  was that  affair?\"\nEven her flesh cowered with the\nchill that went into her veins.\n\"Listen, Cleve\u2014let me tell you\u2014oh,\nIt's  true,   but  you   ste\u2014\nIn the sudden release of his arms,\nshe staggered. He steadied her.\nHe was pushing her to a chair. He\nwas walking to tho table and taking his hat.   .\nSho watched him with a blind\nsmile on her face. He stood before\nher a moment, a boy with the bubbling exuberance gone; a hard dullness in his eyes. Hhe noticed the\nside burns and wished to cry but\nthere were no tears In her heart.\nHe stared gauntly, fixing her imago in his mind. He turned dumbly\nand went out of the room. The\nthud of. his feet caino to her with\nphysical pain as though he walked\non her face. She counted\u2014the\nfirst step, the second, the third, oh\nnow tho last; the door opening, shutting.    He was gone.\nNora Lee found her with limp\narms dangling over the chair, her\neyes rigidly fixed cm the opposite\nwall. She touched Virginia's shoulder. A wavering, dim smile went\nover the ashy l!p\u00bb: \"He's gone,\nNora Lee. It's quite over. Oh, no\u2014\nho  isn't coming  back    .    .    .\"\n\"He will, Virginia\u2014he will!\" They\nfaced each other dumbly as though\na beloved thing lay dead between\nthem.\nVirginia rose: \"Oh. no, Nora Lee;\nyou mustn't go to him. Is that what\nyou say? You'll go and tell him\nI'm lovely? But I'm not. You'H\nmake him see tliat he must love me\nmore\u2014oh\u2014\" Hhe stood with her\npalms drawn together, thc fingers\ntouching her tips, tho delicate black\nbrows arched }n a sail, bewildered\ninquiry. \"I must think what I\nBhould do.\"\nShe knelt on the floor and sorted\nthe things in her chest.    She turned\nYour Bin Should Be Full\n||now. To put oft ordering your winter\nItcoiil   is   to   tuko   tho   cliance   of   a\n\u25a0 cold snap with Its attemdunt diacom-\nifort ahd possible colds, etc. Let'*\nJ-fill your coal bin nt once. You must\n\u25a0\u25a0have the cual sooner or later, and\n1 the sooner the  better.    We are still\n\u25a0 making prompt deliveries. Get your\nlorder in while we are still able to\nprill it at once.\nWest Transfer Company\nPHONE 33\nsweetly tQ Ktoa Lee: \"I'm doing thla\nto help me think. \u2022 I see you're\nfrightened. No\u2014you mustn't be.\u00bb I\nWill  find  some  way   .   .   ,\"\nWhen her mother came into the\nroom she burled her face ln a silky\nmass and laughed: \"I'm oounting\nmy things, mother\u2014\" When her\nmother went, she turned to Nora\ntee: \"Tou won't leave me, will you?\nYou're afraid of. me. I would like\nto rest . . .to He on the bed and\nsleep. Go downstairs, Nora Lee-\nTalk to my mother.\"\n. Nora Lee. moved about the room,\nnumber and terror-laden.\nAt 5 o'clock a messenger brought\na letter. Virginia took it to the\nwindow and read It. She turned her\nback and read it again. After a long\nwhile she gave a faint, triumphant\nlaugh: \"Now. you can leave me,\nNora Leel It's all right. He soys\nit's all right. , Oh,. I must answer\nlt. \"See\u2014lt says we will be married\nJust the same\u2014read that line. I'll\ntry on the wedding dress soon\u2014\"\nBhe gilded to her writing table and\nsmiling took up Cleveland Wayne's\npicture. ' She Waited for Nora Lee\nto go.\nThen she took the crumpled sheet\nof his letter ind ironed it with her\nhand. No salutation. But there\nwere letters in her chest that Tjegan\nmaid\u2014and \"Darling sweet girl\"\u2014\nSho repeafed these to the. empty\nsplice between the angle paragraph:\n, \"The day .after tomorrow fs our\nwedding day. It is too late to alter\nthis and It would do no good, for\nyou have killed In mc the capacity\nto love. I am not going to blame\nyou. I have spent three hour$ of\ncrucifixion and I suppose these hours\nhaven't been sWeet to ybm Why you\nlet md go on worship-ping what you\nweren't, I do. not understand. It\nwaa a 0rueHy; thnt is past curing.\nYou could have told me in the beginning and given me the chance\nto go on or not as I Wishel. But you\nknowingly misled n;3\u2014you listened\nand smiled when I poured out all\nthe things I love in you. I wonder\nhow you endured it\u20141 wonder how\nyou Justify it? I hear you moaning: 'Listen\u2014listen\u2014' But what\ncan you say? Virginia, what can\nyou say? t am finiahful with life\nnow\u2014t would like to walk out of lt,\nfor there Is no bc.nuty left that I will\never see\u2014I am thinking of others\u2014\nmy mother and yours. So we will\nbe married the day after tomorrow.\nI will go through with the ceremony.\nThat Is all. there will ever be to it.\nIf you were to kiss me now, I know\nthat I would die.\"\nShe tucked the letter under the\nvest and it stuck against her heart\nlike a claw that picked and picked,\nShe smiled.    She wrote:\n\"Dearest My Dear\u2014Tho day after\ntomorrow Is our wedding day. How-\nodd for me to recall now that you began your letter In Just this way.\nWell, it Is the holiest and most beautiful thing in the world, Isn't It* I\nhave ft. strange Idea that my life be^\ngan when I met you. Cleve, a!l be\nfore-that is shadowy and unreal, aa\nthough it belonged tb another\u2014its\nthough really I had died and been\nborn anew. Could such a thing happen, do you think? I like to feel\nthat you only have been in my\nthought all my life long.\n\"Dear, Cleve, how often you have\ncalled me an angel and said I was\nso very white and beautiful. I\nlaughed in my heart at that, Just because of joy and because I thought\nthat I was and would always be\nwhatever you wanted. You seemed\nto have that power to give mo these\ngreat qualities, as though you were\na God and were casting me in whatever form  you  chose.\n\"It is rather terrible to love. Tike\nthis, Cleve, and I could havo my\nheart torn out more easily than part\nwith such a dear, dear gift. I think\nI had no choice at all. I had to take\nit.\n\"I am pouring out my heart to\nyou, ns though you need to hear\nthis all again. But I want you always to remember this, Cleve dear,\nand how blessed your love has been\nto me. It muBt be this way always\nwilli me. I must keep it as it was.\"\nSho put down the pen and taking\nout his letter read it slowly until it\nwas burned on the nerves of her\neyes and went from them and seared\nredly in her soul. She tore the letter\ninto tiny fragments. . Ah\u2014-If \u2022 she\nwere tb kiss him now, he knew that\nhe would die, -s\nSo she must never Un tlitft\u2014rttJ-\u2014\nDownstairs Nora Lee and her\nmother were waiting. Sho must try\non the bridal gown. 8he slipped the\nsoft, glowing satin over her head\nand raised the graceful, simple train\nover her arm.\nShe stood hesitant\u2014something she\nhad forgotten\u2014something she was\nto do. Oh yes\u2014she felt along the\nhall to her brother's room\u2014then\ninto the small, gloomy cupboard\u2014\nthe dark room where he developed\nhis   pictures.\nOn a shelf were jars. She searched\nfor one with a brown label. Herb,\nher brother, had once laughed and\ntold her about that Jar\u2014\"Just one\nof these crystals\u2014Just ono and no\nmore   .   .   .   you   .   .   .\" ,\nShe leaned against the chair,\nwhispering:    \"Yes\u2014now!\"\nSho took down the Jar, held lt ln\nshaking hands. Suddenly she seized\na round bit of filter paper, poured\nout a little mound of the white\ncrystals, twisted them deftly and\nran back to her room.\n(To Be Continued.)\nFAIRVIEW BOYS\nSKATE AT TROUP\nFirst Skating of Year Is\nReported by Nelson Boys;\nDistrict Points Report\nWhile there has been skntlng at\nvarious points In the district ln the\npast few weeks. Fairvlew youths yesterday had thefr flrdt whin on the\nstc<d blades at Troup Junction, more\ncommonly known as Plve-Milo point.\nA large Bhtet of tco is now formed\non a slough there, and Is excellent for\nF.kating. Two weeks ago the crew of\nthe ' steamer Nasookin enjoyed several\ndays' skating at Kootenay Landing.\nAt Hall Siding an excellent Ice sheet\nwas formed last week.\nLONDON, Deo. 7.\u2014ft Is announced\nhere that Mona Dunn, daughter of Sir\nJfimcs Dunn, formerly of Bathurst,\nN.B., and one time member of the\nMontreal Stock exchange, but now residing In London, Is engaged to Lieut.\nE, H. Tattlers, of the Fifth -Irngoonn.\nFifty Thousand Dollars Is\nDividend Expected for\nLast Quarter\nNOW OPENING UP\nSLOCAN STAR SHOOT\nTwo Cents Per Share Is Di-\nvident Expected; Early\nHistory of Property\nDividends paid  by  the Silversmith\nMines limited, ot the Siocan district,\nto the shareholders up to the end of\nthe third quarter for 1924, amounted\nto $175,000. The probable declaration for yie fourth quarter is $50,-\n000. The mhie has from January to\nNovember 15 produced 3780 tons of\nsilver-load ore and concentrates, and\n3932   tons   of   sine   concentrates.\nTher haH* been but little change in\nthc Silversmith tdnce May of this\nyear: Ore reserves ate reported as\nabodt the'same though steady production, has been carried on. A new\ncable and tram have boon installed\nand plans .mudp far a new ball\nmill. ' '**'\u25a0'\"\u25a0 * '\u2022\u25a0 ' '. Ly t' |.J!\n:- \u00a3Hftintfj\u00bb Wall*  ..;\u2022f t-.\"\ntsLuKiug^haa' W**^ matfn^in*^ c^v tWe\ntl, 10, 9, 8 and 5 levels at the\nSilversmith 'erfd'tot the pl'f^prtyi nnd\nthis pan-- olj'-ipft miije''' l*as \/been\nopened* .up'fiifrthet by drifting oil\nboth walls, witft ore dtVoloped' on\nboth sidqe ot-u. largo \"liyrse\" Jn evidence there. \u201e*Sb|tWrijj. has l*en ddne\nIn t*e direction lift; dee&flftftW the win^e\noil the TSHv**;\u00bbmUh ore shoot, as there\nis ample ore available for four or\nfive years yet, and the Silversmith\nshoot is known to have a healthy\nappearance underneath the tracks ot\nthe No. 11 level.\nAs far as new development goes,\nthe inclination has been to concentrate\non opening up the Siocan Star ore\nshoot below the main adit Icyl. Last\nspring a winze was started within\nthe vein und went down both in ana\nout of ore. at times. A ahort time\nago' a station was cut on this wm\u00ab?\n200 feet beneath tlio main adit level.\nCrosscuttlng and drifting Is being\ncarried on, the latter to the west. In\nwhicii direction it Is anticipated lies\nthe best chance ot picking up the\nb*g Siocan Slar shoot on H\u00bb downward rake. The work done so far\nhas opened up some ore, but no body\ncomparable to some of those mined\nbv the Byron N- White Co. from\nhigher levels in that sector of the\nmine. , _       m _.\nNext  Dividend Two Cents\nJline and mill production is being\nmaintained at about the same levels\nas last vear, with an added advantage\nof much better prices for silver and\nlead than hitherto obtainable. Following a few months In the spring\nwhen one cent, per share per month\nwas the dividend rate, tho company-\nhas reverted to the regular one cent\nper share per quarter dividend rate\/\nwith present indications making It\nreasonable to assume that the next\ndividend, which will bo declared soon,\nwill be at the rate ot two cents per\nshore.\nEarly    History\nIn the year 1801 several prospectors of the old school, including Bill\nand Jack Hennessy, Jack McGuigan\nand Ell Carpenter, set forth from the\npioneer Kootenay lake mining camp\nof Ainsworth, bent on exploration of\nan unknown land to the west. After\nseveral weeks' wandering amid mountain hardships of utmost severity,\nthey discovered a new Eldorado, a\nland wher ledges ot high-grade silver-\nlead ore outcropped on the surface.\nThey made a number of locations\nalong the western slope of what iH\nnow known as Payne mountain, and\na short time afterward returned to\nAinsworth to record their locations.\nThey endeavored to keep news of\ntheir find from leaking out. but that\neffort was to no avail. .The word\nspread rapidly in the little isolated\ncamp. The rising of a September sun\nfound the plaro deserted of all its\ninhabitants save a few rheumatic\ncripples and half a score of women,\nEvery ma-ii who could make tha\ngrade, had hit tho trail for the\nSilvery Siocan.\nAn Unknown Land\nSttctt was the initial stampede to\nthe Siocan, It was but the beginning\nof a feverish prospecting and profitable mining era Of vast extent. A\nland pt high and forbidding mountain ranges, flanked with deep dark\ncanyons and cold clammy glaciers,\nthe region lying between Arrow and\nKootenay lakes had for years remained the unknown land to hundreds\nof hardy prospectors who viewed the\nsierrcd ranks of mountains with due\nrespect from tho fringe of advancing\ncivilization of their surrounding lake\nedges. It remained for the llennes-\nsys et al to penetrate those forested\nand Ice-clad battlements and show\nthat they could get back aga In.\nMoreover they had brought with them\nchunks of argentiferous galena of\nsuch richness as to stimulate their\nprospecting brethren of less daring\nand Initiative to go through hell and\nhigh water.\nHit  Out   Over   Hills\nAlthough it was late in the fall,\nand the snowline was already creeping down the peaks, the Ainsworth\nmale population cared not one bit.\nWith hastily gathered bacon and\nbeans and flour for provender, and\nblankets for bedding, they started\noff by two or three different routes.\nSome, being like the late Jim Hill,\nfelt that easy grades were preferable\nto steep ones, und entered, the district by the two known passes. Some\nof the more hardy specimens disdained such a method of approach,\nand went straight across country\u2014or\nnearly straight as they could make\nit over thirty or forty miles of\nterritory which Insisted on maintaining Itself at an angle of fifty or\nsixty degrees about fifty per cent of\nthe time.\nSandon  and  White  Locate  Ore\nAmong these was John Sandon. In\nthe party with him was a young man\nfrom Wisconsin or northern Michigan, Bruce White by name. After\nseveral days of heart breaking effort they reached the north fork of\nCarpenter creek and finally Payne\nmountain, where the Hennessys and\nothers had mode their location. On\nan extension of this ridge, now-\nknown as Iteeo mountain they made\nsome locutions adjoining those of the\nearlier arrivals. On October 9. Sandnn\nand White separated from their fellow travelers with a verbal agreement that udll should sharo in any\nlocations made subsequently. . The\ntwo then worked down Carpenter\ncreek Hhout a mile, to where the\ntown of Sandon now stands. From\nthere they went up a smaller stream\n\u2014\ncoming In from the southwest At\nits best, the traveling was not easy.\nHuge holders, logs and fallen trees\nlay everywhere in hopeless confusion,\nand any wandering away from the\ncreek bottom was met by a dense\nunderbrush that contested every step.\nSueh conditions made prospecting exceedingly difficult.\nNotwithstanding these drawbacks,\nthey did., however, find \" occasional\npieces of galena float. These signs\nled them oij.' Finally they came to\nan immense boulder of almost solid\ngalena, and wherever they nicked it\nwith their picks, the broken rock reflected the September sunshine like\na thousand diamonds. The two knew,\nwithout a doubt, that they were on\nthe trail of something good. As the\ngalena boulder had not rolled'' up\nhill, it was obvious that it must have\nrolled down. Ergo, they must search\nhigher for, the ledge from which lt\ncame. * '(*:?-\nThey camped that night near the\nboulder and.speculated what It might\nbe worth If it could be removed\naway from the resting place whore\nIt had been lying so long. It wns\nnot until some years later that they\nwere able te find out. The chunk\nof galena weighed 125 tons, and when\n=t==m    'i ii     i i '\nlt woe .eventually    arifpped as crude\nore, netted something like IGO.OOO.\nLocated Vain .\nA senrch for \"mineral in place\"\nwas commenced with the da*n of the\nfollowing day. They continued up\nalong one of the tributary creeks,\nanxiously searching the rock outcrops.\nAt last their effort Vcas rewarded, for\nthey found the outcropping of the\ngreat lode now known as Siocan Star\nv\u00abin. This was tnte-'d along the\nsidchill until about two o'clock in\nthe afternoon White stumbled ,on the\ngreat.ore cropping of the Slogan Star\nmine. Tradition ,has Ht that never\nbefore had such a magnificent surface\nshowing of galena gladdened the eye\nof a- prospector on this side of the\nNew Jerusalem. In places the ore\nwas 20 to 30 feet in -width.\nThe discoverer-*'were so excited that\nit woe only with'difficulty that they\ncould ut*e their axes in cutting out\nthe lot ait if m posts, while their hands\nbecamh so shaky, they could scarcely\nscrawl the names and dates on them,\nas required by statue for and in such\ncases made and -provided. But at\nlast lhe pleasant and at the same time\npainful task was done. \"Siocan\nStar,\" \"Silversmith\" and several\nother high-sounding titles had been\neonftttTt-d upon certain areas hitherto\nclassed as mountain goat pasture.\nThe locators realized, too. that their\ntitle to the ground rested largely in\ntheir ability to leg It to their home\ncamp uad make a record of the\nlocution before some unscrupulous\ngt-Liuy came along and Jumped the\nclaim*!. They, accordingly, proceeded\nto leg It ns fast as circumstances\nwould allow. Their movement outward was assisted by Old Man Winter\nwho came down from the. higher\nregions und dusted the valleys with\nhis long, clammy beard, lujiug the\ncountry under a mantle of white.\nThe locators, however, sucoeeded in\ngetting \"back fo Ainsworth' without\nmishap, and proceeded forthwith to\nmake record ot the locations, they\nhad  made.\nCompany Organized .\nThese forma till ties concluded. Bruce\nWhile Jeft Ainsworth, by boat for\nBonnets Fertx en route to Spokane.\nIn the eastern Washington metropolis\nhe showed samples of the Siocan Star\nore to his brother, Byron N. White.\nThe latter had some money, and\nability to raise more, and organized\na corporation -known as Byron N.\nWhite Co. Negi.tiathms were finally\nconcluded whereby ihe' Sandon and\nBruce 'White locations were> transferred   lo   the   company.     Thc   name\nof  the   first  of   the   claims,   \"WkKg*\nStar.\"   was   given   to   the   property\nas a whole, and so it has reflBftln**!,.\nuntil quite recently. ,    -\u25a0'*\nDtstriouted    Dividends -\nSuch is the early history of -flitm*\nsmith   mine,   aliau   Siocan   Star.\/ Ol\nhut little Interest Is the story off tb*\nRyroh  It.  White  Co;,   forme* to  Htka\novf-r   the   holdings   located   by   Bntrd\nWhite  and   John   Saiulan.    Klrtt  antl\nbvt   the    Byron   N.   Whit**   Co.   distributed   a   total   of  |r\u00bb17.609   In  dividends   among   its   stockholders,   moat.\nerf   the   money   finding..its   ira*   to <\nSpokane.    But  this company, despite'\na lr-arJ of financial  mit********, had Its .\ntroubles,    and    20   years \"\"ago-   theae \"\nculminated tn a long-drawn out. law- ,\nsuit With Star Wlhlng & Milling Co.,\nowner  of   adjoining   grounds   located\nin    the   early    days\" uixl-pr   the'' eM\nprovinfial   bxirslaterel  rights  mining\nlaw.    Thc whole thing was eventually\nsettled   by   amalgamating   all   of   the\ndisputed  gruund,  and   finally,   formation  uf  Silversmith  Mines Ltd.\nCol, John C. Coolidge. father of\nPn-sMrnt Cuolidfr--. paid an Income\ntax   of   $.1.41   at   Burlingt6n,   Vt.\nWaltp.r Barnes, aned fif. oontraijW,\nhri-iko both nrms -and legs when he\nfell off a house at Elisabeth, N.X\nINHERE  are over  two millions of  English-speaking,\nJjp educated people in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta\n_*m and British Columbia holding his or her own share of\nwell-earned spending money.\nThose people have decided that the most reliable guide in the disposal of their means is the Western Canada Daily Newspaper. It is\ntheir one dependable source of information as to market fluctuations,\nwith an up-to-the-minute news service unexcelled by anything of the\nkind in North America.\nFor the greater part, the needs and desires of this great cash market are those of the very highest type of civilization and culture. It\nbuys the best in every requisite of home life, of indoor\nand outdoor sport, quick and comfortable if not luxurious transport radio equipment, music and all else\nthat fills the horizon of an ideal community life.\nEastern financiers affirm that there is now a\nbuying power in Western Canada greater by at least\n$200,000,000 than it had from the harvest of 1923.\n\" There is a Buy-\ning Power in\nWestern Canada\ngreater by at\nleast $200,000,000\nthan it had from\nthe harvest of\n1923.\"\nThe merchants of Western  Canada  have no\ndoubt about it\u2014if they may judge from what has\nrecently passed over their counters.   One of the oldest and largest of these made sales for the week ending 15th November\ngreater by many thousands than that of any week in its long history.\nIn response to \"a very modest newspaper campaign, one jewellery\nstore registered nearly 8000 visitors on one day, while a shoe store on\nthe same date, with a largely increased sales staff, could not take care of\nthe business. The daily newspaper did it, and the cost thereof had disappeared before ten minutes of the business day had gone.\nAre your goods passing over these Western Canadian counters?\nDo these Western Canada Daily Newspapers sell your product to the\npeople as they have sold the goods of every reputable merchant who has\nmade use bf them as a selling force?\nDetailed, reliable information from any\nleell-equipped oelverlit-\ninri agency err dieect\nfrom tho publisher*.\n\u25a0Ar>\nThe Big Western Canada Daily Newspapers offer you the one selling\nforce that effectively cover, this whole field, quickly, inexpensively, with\nresults that are never in doubt from the first step in the campaign.\n\u2022MEAlTtt\n! \/       is   IN   1 iii\nWinnipeg:\nBrandon:\nRegina:\nMoose Jaw\nSaskatoon:\nThe Big Daily\nFree Press\nSun\nLeader &. Post\nTimes & Herald\nStar & Phoenix\nVancouver:\ntli Each City\nLethbridge:\nMedicine Hat\nCalgary:\nEdmonton:\nNelson:\nProvince\nHerald\nNews\nHerald\nJournal\nNews\n69\nMHMHM\n '\n1\n* .Page Foil*1\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 8, 1931\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by The News Publishing company,\nlimited.   Nelaon,   B.C.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npeyable to Th* Newa Publishing company, limited, and in no case to Individual   membera of  the  staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A.B.C\nclatements of circulation maPed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the office\ncf any advertising agency recognised\nI'T the Canadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy mall (country), per month ...$   .80\nPar  year   ..'.     fi.OO\nIty  mail   (city),  per year     1S.O0\nOutald* Canada per month 75\nPer year         7.50\npeltvered,   per   week    \u00a35\nPer   year     1S.00\nPayable la Advance.\nMember Audit Bureau  ot  Circulation\nMONDAY,   DECEMBER   8,   1924\nShop Early\nThere are only 15 more shopping days to Christmas\u2014only\n15 more days in which to select and purchase the gifts for\nwife, husband, children, fiancee, friends.\nIt pays to shop early. Clerks\nin stores are able to give more\nattention to customers than\nduring the rush of the last few\ndays. The selection of articles\nis larger.\nAnd it is a great satisfaction\nif during the last week before\nChristmas one can feel free to\nenjoy the festive season with\nall one's gifts purchased.\nSo do as much of your shopping as you can this week.\nHe Was Ahead of His Time\nYficienf\nL*u r%. A. Uptown\nDISHES   IN   THIS   WEEK'S   MENt*3\nToxommows mew\nBreakfast\nBananas\nCereal\nDropped Eggs Toast\nCoffee\n\u2022Luncheon\nFish Chowder\nVegetable   Salad\nWhole   Wheat  Bread\nJam Cocoa\nDinner\nCelery\nLamb Chops\nPotatoes Peas\nLettuce  Sulad\nBaked   Apples Coffee\nf_=-\nFish Chowder \u2014 Put three small\nslices of raw salt pork Into a hot\nsaucepan and let It sizzle till almost\nmelted, then add one small peeled\nonion cut thin, and continue to fry\ntill the onion is a light brown. Now\nadd one pint of boiling water, two\nlarge potatoes pared- and cut smalt,\none and one-half teaspoons of salt, a\ngenerous dash of pepper, and one and\none-half pounds of either fresh cod or\nhaddock In one piece. Cover tho pot\nand let boll for 20 minutes. When the\nfish is tender remove bones, break It\nup with a fork, and then thicken the\nchowder wilh a mixture of two tablespoons of flour and one-half pint of\nsweet milk, break two or three large\nunsweetened crackers into the chowder\nand serve.\nRoast Duck with Onion Stuffing \u2014\nSinge, wash and wipe the duck inside\nand out. Make a dressing of six\n'onions chopped fine, one quart of\nbread crumbs, two tablespoons of\nground sage, one teaspoon of salt, a\ndash  of pepper,  a piece of butter the\nsite of an egg, one beaten eeff, and\nenough boiling water to molnten tlior\noughly. Stuff the duck with thli\nmixture and sew it up. Put the liver\nand gizzard In the opvnlnfi boluw th'\nneck and do not sew up. Nun i ub the\nduck with butter nnd salt and put\none-half tenspoon of salt at the opening over the gluk-tn. Place the bird\nin the roasting pan and ronst Irt a hot\noven for two hourn, possibly ft little\nlonger, now hthI then basting and adding a little boiling water to the pan-\nbottom. Turn tbe duck over -\/hen it\nhas roasted one hour.\nCornmeai Omelet \u2014 Cook together\ntill thick, one largo cup of water, one-\nhalf cup of corn meal, and one teaspoon of salt. Add to this mush a\nsmall piece of butter, one cup of\nsweet, cold milk, and the bcuten yolks\nof two eggs. Fold Into the mixture\nthe stiffly-whipped whites of two\neggs and pour all Into a fairly hot\noven (a little hotter than \u2022\"medium\")\nand   bnKe   for   25   minutes.\nWhite Cake \u2014 Cream together \\_\ncup of sugar and one-half cup of butler. Add one-half cup of sweet milk\nalternately with two cups of flour\nmixed and sifted with two teaspoons\nof linking powder. Flavor with one\nteaspoon of vanilla extract and, last,\nfold In the stiffly-beaten whites ot\nthree eggs. Bake fn -a greased loaf-\ncake pan for 40 minutes in a moderate  oven.\nTomorrow\u2014Answered   Letters.\nAll inquiries addressed to Miss Kirk-\nman In charge of \"Efficient Housekeeping\" department will be answered\nIn these columns In their turn. This\nrequires considerable time, however,\nowing to the great number received.\nSo, If a personal or quicker reply Is\ndesired, a stamped and self-ad dressed\nenvelops must bo enclosed with the\nquestion. Be Bure to use your full\nname, street number, and the name\nof your city and province.\n  THE   EDITOR.\nthousand    words   when\npresses the same thing?\n'Blah\"   ox-\nWhat became of scores of\npictures which the Dutch artist,\nJan Vermeer of Delft, must\nhave painted has long been an\nartistic mystery. Only 37 of\nhis works are known, a small\nfraction of the number he must\n\u2022-have painted in his more than\n20 years bf activity. It is believed that many of his pictures\nexist, attributed to other artists\n\u2014for Vermeer's fame became\nobscure soon after his death,\nand it would have been an easy\nmatter for dishonest dealers to\neliminate his signature and replace it by that of Pieter de\nHooch and other more popular\nartists who painted in much\nthe same style.\nOne of these lost pictures by\nVermeer has now been discovered, it is believed. Under a\ncovering of varnish and a false\nbackground, Vermeer's monogram was found on a portrait\nsupposed to be of little value;\nand to corroborate the find, an\nengraving has turned up which\nshows that this picture was\nknown as a Vermeer more than\na century ago, long before the\nmodern treatment of light had\nshown the Delft artist as some\n200 years ahead of his time,\nand had revealed him as one of\nthe great artists of the world.\nThus by a scientific process\ndevised for the cleaning of pictures without injury, a canvas\nof no great apparent value has\nbeen shown to be worth a few\nhundred thousand dollars. It\nis quite possible that other Ver-\nmeers will sooner or later be\ndiscovered, to become the glory\nof private collections and eventually to come into the possession of the public, since this\nseems to be the ultimate destiny\nof most famous pictures.\nAs a general thing you find the\nHottest hearts where the hardest hands\narc\nIt takes time to get into society.\njAt first you don't know people\nwell enough to gossip intelligently.\nAged 10: Gimme a nickel. Aged\n20; What ubout a few berries? Aged\n30:   Come  tthrough  with   the  roll.\n o\t\nCorrect this sen (ence: \"I'm used\nto it now,\" said lie, \"and Uun't mind\nbeing buld.\"\nThirty Years Ago\n(The   Weekly   .Miner,   December   8,\n1H'.H.)\nWe hope ther umor is not true\nthat our popular station master,\nMr. Hamilton, is to be moved to\nNakusp. Mr.      Hamilton      himself\nknows    nothing    about     it\n*    \u2022    \u2022\nThe committee In charge of the\nhospital ball at the Phair was cum\nposed of: Ladies, Meadamea Akehurat,\nMcFarland, Blake Wilson and the\nMisses Irvine, Scott and Scanlan;\ngentlemen. Messrs. Im Bail, Fletcher, and Noelands. Among the many\npretty dresses noticed\u2014here our reporter wanders off Into regions\nwhere lie is evidently out ot hi.s\ndepth.\nLABORING MEN\nOF DOUKHOBOR\nWANHERIGIN\nWish Present Heads to Be\nPut to Log Cutting, Boom\nWrites\niruwM\nThe Lighter Side       |\n\u25a0Readers of The Daily News contribute many of tiie best Hems to\nthis column, .lust sign your name\nor Initials, or nom-de-plume, and\nsend in your brightest ideas.\u2014Editor.   Lighter   Side.\nTt's getting to where nobody ear\ndie without being looked over for '\nbullet hole.\nIt seldom pays to marry for money\nIf she has the sack, he usually hold:\nthe   bag.\nScotch dialect writers usually\nget everything from the Scotch\nexcept th\u00ab dialect.\nIf she hasn't sufficient ability to\nearn a man's pay, she can get some\nman's   pay.\nIt's a sad world, and most of Ibe\ngood listeners are too darned dumb\nto  talk.\n(The  Weekly  Tribune,   December  8,\n1894.)\nOn  the   Saturday  before  Chrlsmas,\nWalter  John   Sully  will  give   bis  second    annual    turkey   shooting    match\nthe flat  lo  the  northend  or the\nCanadian   Pac'.fie  depot.\n\u2022    *    *\nThe ball given at the Hotel Phair\non Friday night by the ladies of\nNelson waH a success financially.\nThe net proceeds were something\nover $100 for the Kootenay Lake\nCentral    Hospital   society.     The   only\nresidents of a  neighboring  town   in\nevidence Wefe those in a party thai\nCommodore BtlBK brought down from\nBalfour in  the  launch  Flirt.\nTo the Editor of The Daily News\nSid\u2014The Doukhobor are going to\ngather at Brilliant on Tue., or Wed.,\nnext. There will be about two or\nthree times more of people as -it\nthe   funeral.\nThey are going to pick out a new\nleader after they come back from\nthe grave of Peter Lordly Ver'-gin,\nAll the working men wish to\nhave Jr., Peter Verigin, the son of\nlhe last leader. But all lhe Veriglna\nwho helled a good job and lived\non the labor mens shoulders wish\nto have Miss Anastasia Verigin, or\nby ber right name, Miss A. !\u2022'. llolo-\nboff, so they would live the rest of\ntheir Ives on tbe shoulders of the\nlabor men. But the labor men\nwant to throw them off their ahou'-\nders, and have Mr. L. Verigin go to\nHall siding ami cut log, and not sit\non a nice soft chair in the office nr.\nmore, und go und work as well as\nothers.\nHns   l-eft   Kussln\nAll the labor men of Christian\nVniversa 1 Brotherhood are awaiting\nJr. Peter Verigin to be around Boon.\nHe has left Ilutwla three months\nago. They expect him to be at lhe\ngathering  on  Tue.   or   Wed.\nMl** A. r. Holoboff has told lol\nof people to keep quit about Jr.\nPeter Verigin, but this will not d'>\nas she has no say. About Jr. Pet'-r\nVerigin.   '\nJr Peter Veiig.il Is going lo he\nthe bader of the Universal Christian Brotherhood.\nPerhaps the Verigin party won I\nlike to see this in the paper, but\nlabor   ni'-n   will   will   be  glad   to  read\nSlender lines are given now character in a black crepe dress adorned\nwith generous sized paleh pockets of\ncherry red velvet, and gleaming cut\nsteel discs massed in triangles. This\ndress is LU!Vltt**< and one of her most\nsuccessful models. As is usual with\nFrench dresses, however, the details\nare a stumgling block fur the copyist,\neven for the professional. These little\nsteel discs are nut made in America\nso Fifth Avenue shops are duplicating\nthe Idea with shiny nickel nailheada,\nwhich are attainable in department\nstores. Or flat cut steel buckles ure\nturndown velvet collar is new, and\nUfed .\nOf course, the high neck with the\nexcellent for a thin face. For remember, high collars make a thin face appear rounder. Buttons, ol self material, and buttonholes running down\ntbe entire length of thc straight\nback take away its plainness and permit   easy   entry   into   lhe   drees,\nFRUIT AND^EGEUBLES\nVancouver, B.C.\u2014Imported Valencia\nfaney onions, ?:i.Mi half case; Washington Spanish standard, $2.<i6 ewt.;\ncauliflower, $:; dozen; Hritish Columbia\napples, boxes, extra faney Newtown,\n18.75! Deliclpue. 13.50; Bplttenburg,\n!?:i; Mcintosh, Jonathan, fS.^O; Banana.\n%_'17i; Crimes, %,.x',; fancy Kin if. Snow.\n12.25; Jeffiev, JI.D0, combination fancy\nand C. Romes, Spy, (2; crated Wegener, |1.7\u00bb; Senator. Hen Davis, ?1.r.0;\ncauliflower, f3.50; celery, 76c; cucumbers, hothouse, $3.25 all dozen; Okiin-\naR-an Stamford onintis, $2.17<; potatoes.\nlocal A. Jl.til); drybell B, Gems, $1.95;\nwhile. Si.Si} ewt; hothuuxc tomatoes,\ntour-basket crate, $4j Business improving. Car arrivals since November\n2<t: Imported\u20141.2 potatoes, 1 grapes,\n2 lettuce. 1 mixed vegetable; local\u20141\nmixed vegetables, 2 mixed fruit and\nvegetables, 2 apples. 2 potatoes, 1\nonions.    Weather mild, raining.\nCalgary. Alta. \u2014 B.C. Delicious,\nfancy. $3,r\u00bb0; Newi own, Wine-sap, $3;\nBanana. Rome, Spits. Spy, Baldwin,\nJ2.Hi': Wagoner. $2.35: Belief lower,\nGreening. $2.15; R.C. potalocB, B grade,\newi.. $2.5H; onions, choice, $3.60; Alberta   potatoes,   11  grade,   $2;  beets,  tur-\n,bli\u00bbge,  carrots,   Sc.<    Car\nnber   2   to   4:     B.C.   \u2014   2\n**-\u00bb\nTh.\nMitchell   brothers   have   re\n  quite   a   number   Of   new   boi\n\u25a0lebjhs lit tCaalo, ami expect lu lian\nseveral hundred tens of ure frori\nThree Forks to Kaslo for >8 ber\nion.\n|        Ten Years Ago        \\\n\u00ab\u2014 <\niKroni The Daily News of Dee. a, 1 stilt\nMrs.    Boy   Campbell   of   Mouse   Jaw.\nSank.,   is   visiting  Dr.  anil   Mis.  \\v.  It,\nll!|i>.\nfits\n'I'l\niinl\"\".\nAlt:\n_   TIC.   ex\nNewt\"Wtl.\nTil is\nlo let people now what is\nB.C\nM.\nDec.\nH,   BOOM.\n6. if:I.\nELECTIONS   AMD   ADMIHISTH.ATION\nrt   uf   a\ntifiial\nIt\nanil\n..rr\nIII\nand\nHu\nearly another .v.-.n\nlessful    part)\niilal'l'il\nti-ans-Atlaiit\nthe   entire\n(if   euursi\ni   llie   Urilish\nled   Kiiisdiitn\nIts\nra fancy\n\\Vinesa r.,\nf::ncy Spy. Si'il\/.inl.nrR. Sfli.lill; Jonathan. Wnirener, Mcintosh, $2.3:. to\n12.50;   crates,   11.85   to   *tuo:   fancy\nD'Anjuu. tfl.'.'i: onions, standard. $3;\ncell rv. fie; CflblwRP, tl^ic; ioeal potatoes, B, St.:,\": cabbage, carrots, beets,\nlius. 14 ewt; Callfor-\nII'.    hox,    It.TiO;    Ins\nI lettuce, 17.6 uull-\n....... uls.   Drei-tnl.i-r 2  lo   I:\n11,(1.\u20143 apples.    Weather cold.\n^-.'.r.'i\nBy Jama W. Bvlan. MJ>9\nKeeping Ahead of\ntuberculosis\n(Registered in accordance with the\nCopyright act)\nSome recent statistics regarding ]\ntuberculosis, or \"consumption\" aa it\nwaa formerly called, should be of\ngreat   interest   to  all  of   u\u00ab.\nFrom 1897 to 1891, tuberculosis waa\nreduced twenty-five per cent. From\n1891 to 1921, it was reduced another\nthirty-five- per cent.\nNow, has uny cure been found for\ntuberculosis?\nHas anyone discovered a serum or\nvaccine that will rid the body of\nthis dread scourge. *\u25a0 Insulin, discovered by Dr. liaiiting, controls diabetes.\nNo! As yet no definite Bcrum, vaccine, or medical preparation, has\nbeen found that will cure it.\n.Now then, has this Wonderful decrease, of first twenty-five, and then\nthirty-five per cent, been accomplished?\nWell, one of thc big reasons is that\nboth the doctors and the people\nknow more about It now.\nTbe doctor la looking for It, and\ndoesn't hesitate to call it tuberculosis,\nbecause lie has more definite means\nof diagnosing it, und because lt\ndoesn't scare people now to be told\nthat they have it. An early diagnosis\nusually means a cure, and the early\ncases or beginning cases, combat the\ntrouble often in a few months.\nBesides, during the months that a\npatient spends in a sanitarium, he\nlearns how to live properly. When\nhe returns home, he endeavors to\nlive the same way, and spreads this\nknowledge directly and Indirectly, to\nltls family snd neighbors.\nAnd the 4blg factors in the treatment\nas I've mentioned before, are the\nfresh air, the good food, and a little\nlater,  the  light exercise.\nWhat Is the whole idea under all\nthis?\nThat these three things do not\nkill the germ of tuberculosis, do not\nbanish it, as it were, but actually\nput tbe body in shape to fight it,\nto keep on top.\nNow, the lessons that the patient\nlearned at the sanitarium whilst he\nwas sick, are the very lessons that\nyou and I must learn, not only when\nwe're sick, but when we're well,\nalso.\nIn other words, just building up\nsuch good everyday rugged healih\nthat we can fight off various ailments, or If wo do go down, it will\nnot   be   for   long.\nRemember\u2014no specific cure for\ntuberculosis, and yet by building up\ntbe body, these wonderful results\nhave been obtained.\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nHo Belief Prom Ottawa\nVANCOUVER, Pec. \u00ab, \u2014 Repeated\ntelegrams from the city council to\nOttawa have brought the reply that\nrelief for tliu unemployed is a mutter\nfor the  municipalities.\nFrench Bound Up \"Beds\"\nPAR IB. Pec. 0. \u2014 Following llie de-\nnunciation of Communist and clerical\nactivities in France by Premier Herriot t in the chamber, :i round up of\n\"reds\"   was   begun   by   Ibe   police.\nDissolve Egyptian Chamber\nCAIRO,   Dec.   C. \u2014 A  newspaper announces  the  Egyptian  parliament will\nbe dissolved and a new   election  held.\nSteal  Nearly  Million  ln  Liquor\nCHICAGO,    Dec.    6.-~Ui-jackers    raid\nnn   army   Warehouse   and   steal   spirits\nvalued at ?SO0,OOU..    Fifteen steel doors\nare cut away.\nErie   Storm   Takes   Toll\nPORT   COLBtTRN,   Ont,    Dec.   ti.   \u2014\nSteamer   Midland   Prince,   grain   laden.\nis   ashore   here   after   a   storm.     Two\ntuge sink tn Lake Erie.\nOntario Needs New Revenue\nTOUUNTO,   Dec.   6.  \u2014  .Much   signifi\ncance ia attached to the itatement here\nby Attorney-General Nickle that Ontario must find some new source of\nlevenue. ,\nDeport Amy of Undesirable*\nBUCHAREST,   Dec 6-   \u2014   Rumanian\ngovernment deports 100,000 undesirables.\nMold Up  Couple Im Apartment\nNKW   YORK.   Dec.   6. \u2014 Three  ban-\ndits  held  up  J.  P.  Rosenburg and hie\nwife  as  they  entered  their apartment,\nand    Btole   Jewels\nfrom  them.\nvalued   at   $20,000\nDawson Woman Is\n.    Still Unloaded;\nSuicide Unlikely\nDAWSON, Y.T., Dec. 7.\u2014The mye-\ntery surrounding the disappearance of\nMrs. Anna Carson on October 15 remains unsolved. She had been a resident of Dawson since '98, and it was\nSidelights on a Great Industry\nIs the Trade Barometer\nat 'Set Fair'?\n*\u00ab\ntorntc  is  much\ntorial   domain   >*\nof   ours.      lt    is\nIt large slate \u25a0\nsecond place, tl\nhas developed i\nof fine traditiu\ncleney, tbe higl\nactually run th''\nall respects exc\ncles.     Any\niruitler and lis ttrrl-\nlutt a minor fraction\neasy to conduct an\n, as it is to conduct\nection here. In the\n\u25a0\u25a0 uritlsh government\ncivil service system\nand matchless et'fi-\ner officials of which\nliritisli government in\nnl to decide its poll-\nministry inherits this\nJournal.\nNot only the lumber industryy of\nBritish Columbia but the whole business community of the Province foresee int a satisfactory settlement of\ntiie timber royalties question an indispensable , factor for a renewal of\nconfidence in our general trade\nprogress.\nThe manufacture and marketing of\nBritish Columbia's forest products,\nher principal natural resources and\nher main source of revenue, cannot\npossibly proceed sueeessfully as long\nas her lumber Industry remains the\nsubject of unfair and unworkable\nlegislation.\nThe outlook for a revival in the\nPacific Coast lumber trade is quite\npromlsinfT. but if Urilish Columbia is\nto benefit accordingly and continue\n\u2022to enter with her lumber products\ninl o the world's markets, she must\nnot be handicapped out of tho com\npetition.\nBusiness men realize that manu\nfat:ture of lumber is thf industrial\nmainstay of the Province, and Its\ndistribution by rail and water the\nprincipal source of their commercial\nadvancement.\nThe trade barometer of British\nColumbia will never remain at \"Set\nFair\" until the conditions In her\nmain basic industry are such as will\npermit the carrying on of business\non a fair competitive basis and will\nassure the timber operator that the\ngoodwill and confidence of the public\nis behind bis efforts for their industrial progress.\nsupposed she had - made considerable\nmoney. The theory of suicide is dismissed, as suitcases and other of her\nbelongings are missing.\nSeveral sticks of dynamite wero\nfound by police at Tifonderoga., N.Y.,\nnear the Alexandria Catholic cemetery.\nWhere a 16-foot wooden cross was\nturned.\nRivet* tf* htatitit af the Scarlet j^b-^t' Tarmfn\nThis series of articles cortir\nviunicated by the Timber Industries  Council  of British\nColumbia.\nGive a\nGood\nOne\nDon't Hold Back\nat Christmas\n3 SMintttes of Tour Time at the\n\u25a0Duofold Counter Means 25 Years of\nHappiness for Someone Tou Lore\nONLY n pm of permit n<\"i)t vntur is\nworthy of the ChrlMinan occasion. And Parker Duofold wil I nigniiy\ntoBiiyone who (,'ct sit. thnt you gave\ntiie finest tliat money can buy.'\nBe*ities,the Duofold'riblack-tlrrrd\nlacquer- red color aboundn with\nChristmas cheer. A gift that will preserve the memories oft his Christ ui:'*\nanions as ita point Shall weiir\u2014guaranteed,if not mistreated,tor :'3year*.\nNot ones, but nevernl timet \u00bb dsy\nwilliriends and loved ours write wilh\nthis inspiring reminder ol you--a pen\nto beaut) fu lands moot ha nil bnl-\nanced that day by day it grows on\nona. Hence will one's affectum lor\nthe givH grow accordingly.\nFive minutes of your time st the\nDuofold counter means 25 years of\nhappiness for someone you love. But\nlook and look carefully lor thi* honor\nStsmp-\"Geo.S.PRrker-DUOKOLD.\"\nThen Imitations cant deceive you.\nThe Parker Fountain Pen Co., Limited\nFactory and Genera! Offices\nToronto, Ontario\nParker Duofold Pencilt to match the pen, %'i 30\nOvtr-ttze, M\njgSBk\nT>arker\nimam\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\ned.\nnf   Nelson\n\u25a0.Ik\nA self-made man would be dumb\nWUbout a waistcoat. He'd have no\nplace to hook his thumbs.\nHome Is a sweet plnce where you\nCan growl for service instead of\ntipping.\nStocks going up mean prosperity for the working man if he\nhappens to have a Tot of them.\nThe man who eats breakfast at the\nnext table thinks the daily dozen\nmeans link sausag*1.\nThe times are not rotten Just because the children know the things\nyou knew  at   their age,\n.   Mf-jidK-ii i|i Kwd,   Jcfut \u00bbh_ uav a\nPic W. A.. Turner\nbas joined the flrat Canadian con-\nilng-nt at Salisbury Plains, England,\nbas been appointed range finder wilh\n(ho machine gun section of his rej:i-\ntnont. He ia with tbe Highland regiment.\n\u2022     as\nThe Nelson opera house was crowded\nto the doors last night by a highly\namused and delighted audience to wl'-\nnew the flrf-t performance of \"An Obi\nMaids' Con vent fon,\" given by talented\nlneal amateurs In aid of the Nelson\nLibrary association. Thc performance\nwas a decided success, and will be\nrepeated   this cMning.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(Prom The Dally News of P<*c\nV.   M.  Gallon,  who  has  brf\n1904)\nOH   Mir\nstaff of the Nelson branch of tha\nRoyal Hank of Canada for nearly three\nyears, lias been transfer red Io thc\nbranch at Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJ. W. Coxhead and Mrs. Coxboad,\nwho were restdenta of Nelson for several years, have been In the city renewing acquaintances for the past four\ndays, and after going away for the\nwinter, will return in the spring to\nlive here  permanently.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAt thc annual meeting of the University elub tonight F. W.> L-uliig, B.A.,\nwill read a paper, after tbe business\nof  the  meeting has been  concluded.\nApparently antleipatlng hard hat'les\nfor the Philadelphia police foot lull\nteam, IMreetor of Public Safety Butler\nhas hud the life of each member of\ntiie   squad   insured   for   $5000.\nOil was struck for the first time\nin Mississippi 110 miles from Jack-\ntBOn* - \u201e\nAlways Uniform in Quality\nDelicious      ,\n\"SALADA\"\nTEA\nHSU\nHAS   THE   LARGEST   SALE   OF ANY\nPACKET TEA   IN   NORTH  AMERICA.\nOnly%\/i\\Huvswki^\ndiVes vou these\nWire Goods\nAnother largo shipment of Wire Goods just to\nbaud, consisting of Howl Strainers, Tea Strainers,\nExtension Strainers, Toasters, Soap Shakers, Potato\nMashers, Egg Beaters, Mixing Spoons, Egg \"Whips,\nCoat Hangers, Gas Toasters, Lir cad Tins, Gem\nPans, etc.\nSee   Our   Windows   for   Bargains\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale   and   Retail   \"Quality   Hardware\"\nNELSON B.C.\n1*\ntwo exclusive features \u2014 the All-Wood Oval Horn\nand the Ultona.\nThey are thc Key principles of the noted Brunswick\nMethod of Reproduction.\nThc All-Wood Oval Horn\u2014built entirely of wood\u2014\namplifies the tones of any record in full harmony with\nthe laws of acoustics. No nasal twang. No metallic\nharshness. The true, rich, natural tone of instrument\nand voice.\nAnd the Ultona gives yoii unrestricted choice of records without fussy attachments or adjustments. A twist of the wrist gives\nyou the exact point, position and weight for any type of record.\nIn the Brunswick you have a phonograph th.it plays every\nmake of record perfectly and whose beauty of design, workmanship and finish is a real credit to your home.\nHEINTZMAN & CO.', LTD.\n611\/2 BAKER ST., NEL80N, B.C.\nKOOTENAY MUSIC STORE\n304 BAKER ST., NELSON, B.C.\n<7ht Sign of Musical fnsligt\n_oe\u2014>C* 'Jin Jtgn ojjnusicai rmtigt _,\nJcfrwrmMc\nPHONOGRAPHS\u2022RECORDS\u2022RADIOLAS\n 1''*'\"\n1\n\t\nTIIE NEL30N DAILY NETi'L, MONDAY MORNING,. DECEMBER 8, 1924\nNew Ones\nWe have just received\nfour new Evening Shoes\nof the latest approved\nstyle. These shoes are\nmade by the best manufacturers in Canada.\nBamboo Buck Gore Strap\nPump,\nJack   Rabbit   Buck   Gore\nStrap Pump,\nBlack Kid 3-Button Strap\nSlipper,\nBlack   Satin   Front   Gore\nPump.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfash.ion\nPostal Officials\nVisit at Nakusp\nj    NAKUHP,    Dec,    7 Thuraita)'   while\nlhe steamer dotted here, J. \u25a0*. Murray,\nW'ipuihit.-iKl.-iit nf postal aarvlce for\nltrltlstl Columbia, iiecoiiijinnlru* by J.\n[W. Unterwocd, chief Inspector of Ot-\nli'wa. visited the town.\nj J. Williams has been transferred to\nlliluc River, up the Thompson Valley.\n[mi tha C..V.H. He Ib auceeeded here\njby  .1.   Front  of  Blue  Ilivr\nThe   Arrow   Lakes  hospital   treated   1\"\nQ itliuts   tlurinii   November   with   treat-\n,ieent    QQVertng    U'l   days.      The    total\n%  lost   for   maintenance  was   $r\u00bb7S.tl,   and\n[ 'the  per  capita  cost per day  was  (I.K..\nBlackheads Go Quick\n, By This Simple Method\nBlackhead*\u2014big ones or little ones\u2014\nKi.i't en\u00abM or hind ones\u2014on any part\ncf the liodv nt, guloklf hy a simple\nmethod   thai Just dlemlvee them.    To\ndo     this     gel     about     two    ounces    of\nI'tamxliiu   powder   from   jour  druggist-\u2014\n,   wrinkle  a   little on a hot,   wet  cloth-\nrub   over    the   blackhead*-*    briskly    for\nn   few  eeoonde\u2014end  waah  off.    you'll\n1   v under    when'    lhe    blaekli<:ids    have\n[j one.     t-Mnatihm and   M-nccf ig  blaek-\nli-'ads only open  llie  poreH of  the  skin\n.ind leave them large and unsightly\u2014\nIt   while   the   wimple application   of   perox-\n, lino    powder    and    the    water    dlisolve\n,   t'tem   right   out,   leaving   the   ;skln   woft\niind   the   -pores   in   their   natural   condition.\nKootenay and Boundary\nIP LADIES\nUP FOR FIGHT BROACH STABLE\nEN BOUNDARY FOR COMMUNITY\nGovernment Is Expected to\nBring Byelection in\nJanuary\nCONSERVATIVES FORM\nTHEIR   ORGANIZATION\nLiberals    Will    Nominate\nNext Week; Out to\nCapture Seat\nORANll KORKS. Dee. 7. \u2014 Both\npolitical parties are \"trimming their\nsails' 'and getting in readiness for an\nexpected announcement ot a by-election In Grand Forks-fjrcenwood constituency to fill lhe vacancy caused\nby the death of the lale John MacKie.\nTnoffielai Information In local circles\nis that the government may bring the\net.nlest on early in Jmiuary, and thut\ntlu-re is a possibility of a spring ses-'\nf-iwi  of  the   legislature.\nLocal Liberals will meet the coining Friday evening to elect delegates\nlo the Liberal nominating convention\nIo be held on Tuesday, December 16.\nThe Conservative parly is also active, meetlag in Grand Forks thin week\nnnd farming an electoral district Conservative ussoeiatlun. which followed a\ndinner given at (he Orand Forks hotel.\nConotrrttlTt \"Fo\u00bbiihlet\"\nWhile   no   date   has   been   set   for  the\nnominating convention, the representatives who were present from Greenwood. Boundary Fails. Midway. Reek\nCreek, Riverside, Weeterldtfe, Bride*.\nville and CaffCftfle, as well ns is\u2122 ml\nFolks, discussed candidate possibilities q\u00ablt\u00ab freely, those named as\n\"possibles\" being Dr. C M. Kingston\nof Orand Forks. Duncan Mclnlosh of\nReaverdeil and Donald McCallum. li,\nC.  Kerman,  Ed,  Bailey and T. A. Love\noT   Qrend   Forks.\nThe name of W. S. Ruling, former\nmember fnr Itossland, who was present by Invitation, was alto nieniUme.l\nfor candidate, but Mr. Fsllni* would\nnot allow it to be considered, as he\nexpreiwcd himself opiioaed to the principle of running candidates who reside\noutclde the constituency.\nIn reviewing the proeont political\n\u2022situation to the gathering. Mr. Bating\nstated that the approaching contest in\nGrand Forks would not be considered\na whit less Important than either Nel-\n:--on or the North Olcningnn contests,\n\u25a0ind that lhe Conservatives of Grand\nForks and Greenwood would find the\ngovernment throwing Us full weight\ninto an attempt to win thin scat*\nDistrict Extcutlve\nElection   rf   officers   for   the   District\nvat Ive     association     resulted     u<\nHo\nMelghi\nJ\"\nnts.\nHo\nirf     It.     II.     Fool\nIdents,  Major F.  13. Ol\nsop ot Kettle Vallev and Mrs. John\nMncKte    of    Orand    Porks:    presldenl\nWilliam     B.     Fleming    of    Oreenwood\nfirst     -i'-e-oresid, nl.    Mrs,    C     M.    King.\npton of Orand Forks; second vice\npresident. Isaac Crawford of Cascade\nthird vice-president. Major Grav of\nRock Creek: secretary, Donald McCallum of Orand Forks: treasurer. J. D\nCampbell   of   Gland   Forks.\nAssociation    representatives    at   eoo\npolling      division     are: Paulson,     t\nRrecknell; Fife. C Tiimb-lliiit; Cai\ncade. R. L. McAllister; Grand Forhi\nE. Ballev; Brown Creek. W. B. Glai\nville; Kholt. M. W. Ludlow; Greer\nwood. Robert Lee: Boundary Falls. ,\nCastlcman: Midway, John R. Jackson\nUock Creek,  H.  s.   Ptttendrlgh;  Rivei\nside. Major K. Da vies; Wostbrldgi\nLouis Clery; Christian Valley. E. d\nj Lat our: Beaverdell. Duncan Mclntosl:\nOarmf, Mrs. Clark; Brldesvllle, W, \\\nBlythe.\nMrs. Weasel Mochty, aged 65, mother\nof nine children, of Kast Texas, Mich.,\nwas fatally burned while healing lard\nand   turpentine  on   the   stove.\nj\nStainless\nSteel Cutlery\nWhite and Buck Horn Handled Carvers.\nWhite-Handled   Dessert   Knives.\nWhite-Handled Table Knives.\nWhite-Handled   Steak   Knives.   .\nA splendid  assortment  ot  Pocket  Knives.\nHIPPERSOIN HARDWARE CO.\nPHONE  497 P.O.   BOX   414\nLook   for   the   Red   Hardware   Store\nQuick Service In\nChristmas Cards\nWe will deliver, printed with your own name and\npersonal greeting, within 24 hours of receipt of order,\nusually the same day.\n\"QUALITY PRINTERS\"\nWould Serve School Children Riding in; Elect Officers\nNAKUSP, Dec. 7. \u2014 At the annual\nmeeting of the Women\"** institute, held\nTutisduv, the treasurer's report showed\na  balance  on   hand   of  nt.lt.\nThc erecting of a community stable\nfor the housing of out-of-town horses,\nparticularly those of the children riding to hcIiooI. was d'^-usscd, but was\nlaid over for Earth\"t coftfttdermttofl ami\nto await a more auspicious t*b~fte* Mrs.\nC'Xfc  Herrldgr.  convener of ihe chile\"\nwelfare commit lee, staled emidltiuns\nhi nil three schools to be meet satisfactory, as well as the health of the\nchildren   below   school   age   and   over.\nMrs. Lod^e, convener of the committee on local nelghorbood m-eds, also\ngave i report, wiiieh embodied the\nsucKeslion   for   the   conimunify   stable.\nThe   following   officers   were   elected:\nPresident  Mrs. ltrnest H.  s.  McLetn,\nvice-president, Mrs. K, l.ndgt*; pianist.\nMrs. 11. W. Sinners; librarian. Mrs\nRobert Mills; secretary, Mrs. \\V, Cuv-\nruthers.\nA committee to meet wilh the executive and arrange the year's pro*\nsniin was appointed, consisting of\nMrs. C. U Herrldce. Mrs. B. U. Vi\npond and  Mrs. A. R  S. Stanley.\nNOVELIST KILLED\nIN CAR COLLISION\nSocial Happenings\nm In Nelson m\nThis column is being Conducted\nduring Mm. Vlpreiix's ahs'-nce by\nMiss (jwyrielh Vincent. All newa\nof .1 social nature. Including receptions, private entertainment*, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear In this column. Telephone\nMiss  Vincent,\nMiss -Mitrguiet Jarvis made a gra \u25a0\nclove tea hostess, Saturday afternoon,\nat her home on Ward street. Miss\nJarvis was assisted jn receiving he.\"\nguests by her mother.' Mrs. W. It. Jarvis, while Mrs. VV. Louis and Miss\nJean assisted in the tea room. The\ninvit-d gliesls included Miss Katnieen\nBraille, Miss I.oulse Cunliffe. Miss lea\nSteed. Mill Alia Johnstone. Miss Gwen\nKraser. Miss Kitty Johnstone. Mine\nVera Waliev. Miss Jean CMBurf, Miss\nKulalie Uaguon, Miss Dawn Hume,\nMiss Margaret Arthur. Miss Creina\nHorstead. Mtss Alnise Wragge. Miss\nViolet Hamilton. Miss Orac** Wilktn-\nr-on, Miss Helen Townsend. Miss Joan\nHnmtttou. Miss Nanei* tiracey. Miss\nPhyllis Church and Miss Grace Bad-\npMll.\nUll Baker Street. Phone tOO\n\\V.    J     Fanner\nth\n\u25a0   t'astlegiir   m\nbunt,   was  a   cii\nsh\nipper   Saturda)\nMrs. Gene Stratton Porter\nWrote    Fifteen    Books;\nAuthority en Birds\nLOfl     ANQHLBS,     Deo.     7,\u2014-Oenc\nStfntton I'orter. novelist an.l short.\nstory writer, died here last night,\nfrom injuries she sustained when\nlnr automobile collided with a Btreet\ncar earlier In   the evening.\nThe injury from which Mrs, Porter\ndied   was a  fracture  of   the  skull.\nMrs. Porter's machine was struck on\nthe side and back of the driver's seat\nhy a car on a downhill grade, and was\nreduced   to   wreckage.\nJames Gowdy, the writer's chauffeur, was slightly hurt in the collision.\nThe writer's husband, Charles l>\nI'orter. a bunker of Koine City Ind..\nwhose arrival here for Christinas was\nexpected by Mrs. I'orter. has been notified   of   his   wife's   death.\nMrs. Porter bad been a resident of\nCalifornia for the last five yeurs, during which time she continued writing,\nand reproduced some of her books io\nmotion   pictures.\nShe was born on a farm In Indiana\nIn IBM, tbp -daughter of Mark nnd\nMary Btntton. In 18*6 she married\nCharles Derwin I'orter at Wabash.\nInd.\nWrote   Fifteen   Books\nMis. Porter was noted as au author\nand Illustrator, her two most noted\nworks being -The Cirl of the-Limber-\nlost\" and \"Frecl'Ies.\"' She was ths\nauthor off more than 15 books, among\nthem being several on birds and bird\nlife, on which subject she was a recognised authority. For two years she\nwas on the natural history staff nl\nOuting Magazine, snd for four years\nwas   a    specialist    in      natural      history\nphotography on lhe Photographic\nTimes  annual   almanac.\n\"Singing Stevedore'\nDies at Lakehead;\nInquest Ordered\nFOHT WILLIAM. Ont.. Dec, 7 -\nThe \"Hinging stevedore,\" italinondt\nDel Blanco, who entertained his Italian\ncompatriots while they tofhd at thi\nPort William docks, is dead, and the\ncoroner  has ordered an   Inquest.\nDel Blanco was found dead in i,\nroom at a local hoarding house \\. *-\nlerday, and the cause of his death Is\nunknown, though bis friends s.n- hi\nbad   been  drinking   lately.\nHe had a tuneful voice, nnd was\nconstantly singing Italian songs while\nat  work;   hence  his eftybriquol\nJapanese Consul\nCables Home About\nMrs. Smith's Bill\nVANCOUVER Deo. 7 ,lu|mniw\nconsul has sent lo his guvrrnmciit\ntnll information regarding Mrs M B\nSmith's bill burring domestics from\nworking with Orientals in domestic\nservoe.\nTEAM DROWNS IN\nTHE YUKON RIVER\nDAWSON, Y.T., Dec 7.\u2014A loam of\nhorses was drowned Friday when a\nsleigh loaded with cord wood broke\nthrough the Ice on the Yukon river.\nI miles south of hero. Charles Rulter,\nthe owner, narrowly escaped the\nsame   fate.\nWhooping Cough\nIs a Very Serious  Trouble\nHer 5 ChUdren Had It\n.Mrs. S. H. Craig, It. li. No. 1,\nPalmerston, Ont., writes;\u2014\"Two years\nBfo hist winter, our five children had\nvery severe attacks of whooping\ncough. We were recommended, by\nour  druggist,  to  use\nDR. WOOD'S\nNORWAY PINE SYRUP\nwhich we did whti the greatest of\nsuccess. It cleared out the throat\nand bronchial tubes, and loosened\nthe phlegm so thnt they were able to\ncough It up. and ln no time I had\nquenched   the  'whooping.'\"\n\"Dr. Wood's\" is put up on ly by\nThe T. Milburn Co.. Limited, and hus\nbeen on the market for the past 35\nyears.    Be suru and get the genuine.\nE. P. McDermld of Vancouver, the\nfinancial man, --pent the wet k end In\nlhe  city.\nCapt. Douglas Brown left Saturday\n\u2022 \u25a0-.filing for J'ciitlclon on a business\ntrip.\nJ     M     ttacedo,    travelling    passenger\nagmt  for the   Pacific sieamsblp company,   who  has  been  In   Nelaon   tat  thi\npast   few   days,   haa   bft   for   Trail   and\nKossland.\nMrs.  A.   Wllley  ol   Himninglou   WAS  a\nweek-end   visitor   iu   Nelson.\n*     \u2022     \u2022\nl.ect'iillv arrived iu lite citv from\ntheir Iminc in New llriinswicl* are MNs\nAddie K. Irvine and David Irvine, who\nwill visit and in future reside wilh\ntheir    sister    and     brother-in-law.     Mr.\nand  Mrs. .1.  Fred  Hume. Ward street\nss   Irvine   will   be   remembered   by\nmini her    of    Nelson    friend*,    having\nde    ber    home    with    Mr.    and    Mrs.\nPractical Gifts\nSee our Fancy Linens, Silk Sea rves, Wool Scarves, and Fur Neckpieces, any of which would make a splendid Christmas Gift\nArtVv\nVENETIAN LACE TRIMMED\nLINENS, at 45c to $4.50\nPure Linen Doylies and Centres, sizes 18 to 24 inches\nacross, also oval-shape pieces in\na range of sizes. New goods\nthat make beautiful and useful\nGifts. Very reasonably priced.\nAt 45<, 75<*, $1.00 to \"M.50\neach.\nMADEIRA EMBROIDERED LINENS\nAt $1.50 to $6.50 Each\nBeautiful patterns in Madeira embro idery, in round, oval or oblong shapes.\nSeveral sizes lo match can be purchased at prices that will surprise you.\n$1.50 to $6.50 each.\nllu\nK.\nll K\nMr\nvlalli\nii ni\nM ra.   1\niver     II\n.  1,.\n.'i:.k-\nInaii WITI\nml      fn.n\nKiull\nel.\n,\n,   .\nL.\nS   II\nwkina li\nIt \"\nllli-\nI'r.ia    l\u201e,at\n\\ l-Ht,\nTill)'\nmorning\nI'M\nCr*i\nbniuk.\nA\nnihil.\n\u2022r of ril\nlids\nKiith.\nred al   the\nli.MII,\nnf Miss Dure\nii H\niinii\n.   I'ait'illll\nHtl'.T\nr\n\u2022iilnv     0\nmi'\n\u00ab.    \u00ab\nInn     the)\nM iTf\nente\n\u25a0iiiiii.il a\nBii\n11, 5\nI'd   tinisic\nThe\nRlli'sl\ns   liiHiidi\nil   M\nS     'J\nKininii'i'-\nling.\nM is\nK.   V.   Hr.Hi.\n.    M r\n.   VV.   1'nl\n k,\nMis\nK    Mm\n,|ills\nMis\nil.   Mor-\nk.i ii\nMiss\nI.   nana\nlal\nMiss\nM    Brake\nMiss\nC.\nMadden,\nMl-\nII\nTi'iKllllls\nMiss\n11\nThorpe.\nMis\n1,\nRaymond\nMiss\nM\nRnyim\nnd.\n.Mis\ns      VVIniii,\nTllllM\nMlaa IS,\nTin\nuasun and  .Mis,\n.1.   M\nCVICIl\nr.\nMi\ns.    H\nII     Sel\nrs.\n'is-..ll\npa,dad     ll)\nliar\nland\nl.r    was\n\u25a01,1,-\nnd   vlsltul\nin   tl\nf     L'i\n\u25a0la.\n. ,-.\n\\V.\nHit\nHl.ali,.\nif     '\n'rail\n.pan    .lh.\nweek\n-end\nin   Nell\"\n'*      \u2022\nI,.\nS.   Muelwrav\nhas\nI'lni\nad    In    II,\n1 liv\nlinn\nIf   sp'ill\nlh\"\npasl\niv.ii  week\nM\ns.   \\\\\nHa (i\nW    llrl\ni,-i.r-h,w\nrdity.\nal\nII,alii\na,I'|\u201e\nlllil.m   \u201ea\nS        111         til\nMl\na.    1.\nS      Ma\nken,\n,     an\n1    Mis     ,;\nlimia\nIns   \\\n'ere   lii.sl\n'SS, .\ndill'\nnr   tlia   I.a\nlinur\nnl   t\nia  Hadm\nillll\nSatin-da)\nS^   1\nSomen's JAEGER WOOL SCARVES\nAt $3.50 to $5.00 Each\nMade of soft Iceland Wool, in solid colors with striped\nend\u00ab. Tnese are splendid warm Scarves, and\nwill make acceptable Gifts. Prices from $3.50 to\n$5.00 each.\nWomen's SILK SCARVES\nAt SI.50 to $6.50 Each\nAn  unusually complete line of Silk  Scarves, shown\nin our Neckwear Department.   From the  smallest  sizes  made   to   neaily\nshawl size, antl in every wanted color and weight.    Be sure to buy one or\nmore of these for Gifts.    Prices fro  m $1.50 to $6.50 each.\nFUR NECKPIECES\nAt $25.00 to $100.00 Each\n-\/iy Furs are the \"Gift Supreme,\" and you can make no mistake\nin giving fine Furs. No matter which shape you prefer\u2014\nChokers, Full Animal Skins, or Wide Throws\u2014vou can find\nexactly whal you requite in our large stock, which consists\nof Ermine, Fitch, Squirrel, Hudson Seal, Alaska Sallle. Fox\nand Wolf,  in  every wanted  style.     Prices   $25.00,   $35.00,   $50.00.\n$05.00 to $10U.00.\n11 ii i     ,ti      iur     ridtiiTi i j i iv ji     i  i :,.i.     tri.i un 'in,'   t     **,  \u25a0\nItarnri.n.     Tlioae   lltlemllliK    were    Mr. I   f>\nml    Mis,    K.   ('.    WraKJ.1',    Miss    Alois,, !   {\/\nMa\nliss   Mntlim    l:la,'l,v ii-.d.   .11\nII.    ItnslliiK'    Mr.   and    .Mis    I',.   Mueliror\ni',,.dfi','v.    Mrs     (Ionian    Hall,at.    Mrs     \t\nJan,as Johnstone. Mis !\u2022'. I' Uliil.-\nhouee, Mrs. James MeOreeor. Mr. and1 Hie li\nMrs. P. O. Morev. Miss Alia .1.dm-I maim\nsta,,,.. Mrs. If. I: Townwend, Mlas tl] lie\nMlimuerlte Adams, Miss Mann,. Car- . \u201e.,,.,.\nri,-.   Miss (Jwvn.lli   Vlneent,  Mis\u00ab  llionl\nSa.ll.l.i r.      Miss     Cla.lys     Cornlnll.        ,i\n.Mrs,   A.   ,1.   Cornish.   Mi\u00bbs   .loan   llaniil- I l\",\"\">\nIan.   Miss    Vinl.\u25a0(    Hamilton.    It.    Fergll- I !\u25a0<\u00ab    \u00bb\nMm.   Charles   Humllton.   A    W    Idiens ; minor\nIt.   W.   [lawson,   J.   I.,   nnrliialal,'.   I..   S     would\nMnckeray.     Leslie    Craufurd     and    '!  I Internal  nnd   foreign\nDouglaa. ... i lain. ,1  hy  the experl\na Marx-KIr,\n, in office i\nfirst post-v\nresident    is\n\u25a0d   t\nfeasible   if   the.   Soeial-    I\nto      tolerate      Ilia    presenl I '\n,il,ia.t,   ,ai   condition   tliat\nlinue   its   fins.ait   proKratn\n%lt^$^^^o\\k^^__\nWindshield Cuts\n','.',' the Girl's Throat;\n!,'! Brother Arrested\nrt\nA.   B.   laaiill   of   Spol    is\nm   to   his   home   todav.   having\nlie weelt-end in tiie city.\ntha Kasl,, mining\nla   Nelson.\nc title\nlltun\na,,   who liav,\nm   Hoovel\nid   Mrs,    H.   I'.   C.   S\nay  street.   FnlrviCW\nIf  tha   la\nnrliatnelilii\nI lection\naiistriteliiiii\n,     nnd.'i'lal\n, tisidanal\n,add    assu\nI\u00bbon(f   Live   the   Reptihlic\nTranscending     i inaial     s,\n,n.'a   ail    eonsid, ration    >>f    tl,,'\n,s   in   sup I   of   tli,'   election,   i\niiar.,1    verdict    of    Hie    voters\nadarid   in    this   eleeti, a    th,'\non ,,!'  fortifying  the  republic aa\nINTERNATIONAL WAR;;:\nUPON WOLVES URGED;|\nPort Arthur Member Wishes J\u00b1\\\nMinnesota,  Manitoba,  to\n\u25a0.   T\u2014lill   ley\nId.   broken   \u00ab\nHT.     r.ltll.'I'ilM'     il\nNorth    tinner    s\nI   ;;n*li   in   her   till\nml   ili.'il    before   .\nnie\nli)\nSOCIALISTS IN\nDo Part\n,\\ i: rm if.\nNelson Native Son\nWins Scholarship\nMcGill Commercial\nmi\n>h.\nal,la\nFIRST RETURNS\nfContJmied  rn.rn  Pa*o  One)\nere   tho   LntdHtnniil. j\"i\u00abl   Irrecoticilabli\nffifs   or   Ocrniaii   rti'inocracy.   are   ']<\u25a0\u25a0 !\n':isi\\^ly   r.-iniis. it   in   their   cliosen   am-1\nbitton  t-i .u-M-iif'- control  nf tin*  Pru\u00ab- j\nnlan   diet,   ami   tin    national   electorate i\ni-i-nirns   n   re*ii*hnt:tK   which    would   In ..\n(Vflnttfly domtnaird by  the BocIalUtt,\nDemocrat*\u2022 ami Cl**rlctrt\u00bb, Oerminy  will\nIjc   enabled   i\u00bb   \u00abt*ttlc   down   to  a   concerted    and    ii\u00bb-t>nllnated    attempt    to I\nwork   out   her   iHiliik'iil.   economic   and,\nmoclal   HulvatUm   al-mu    the   bard   and\nfast   nil.'*   im!   ilown   by   the   Da wet j\nreparation   plan.\nWhile   Hits   plan   lutri   been   rormally ,\nSeven Ex-Chancellors Re-elected j -\nBKi;l,lN. Dec. \".\u2014Voting in the '\nKt-neral i lection, which wits Komewhal '\n\u00bblug(ci(-h in the inorninB, took n stnl- l\ni!en apurl In the afternoon, hrlnglnp\nthe participation in Berlin to KO per ,\ncent of the tjualiflcd vutcrx. Pur the | ,\nwhole    cuuntry    those    casting    ballots t i\n\\\n\\N<\nit'VKll\nline     7.\nlti\nllie   WM-\n1     W.    .1.\nt   w\nIf-i n,\nin.'siili\n1    uf    the\nIan  cluh\ninn\nlhs\nIU!     in\nv            H.\nr   Hum\n ice   e\ninlar\nilttve\n\u2022o..   Van-\nhip  key\n!   Meilill\n(-nil     oi\nn.r\nepted,\nthree\nlithe.\noperation\nent  which\nfailed to conn\nparliament w-\nr,elf iii the i,\ntlona! Clemen\nthe <ii 1'iiian\nmunlata. but\ncertain tlevina\nAmong the\nIr  the outcom\nisiantly find It-\ngrowing opponi*\nnot   onlj\nnpt\nlists ami Com- :\niImo the habitually un-\ni People*! parly. _ I\ne\\emualltiea lUggt-flfd '\nnt' tha ballotliiK Ih tlte .\nreturn of the fnrnier \u2022o-oallcM) Wlrth I\n(calltiou, comprlalng Social lata, Clerl-1\neal\u00ab and Democrat!, un ihe Mtumptlon ]\nthat their combined mandatei would I\ngive  them a  secure majority.\nIndustrialists Hay Join Again\nAnother prospect is suKgo.>-ted by the\npi OpOSltlon to Include Htresemnnn's\nPeople's party in such a coalition, lu\nthe Oelhf that, ai It would be the\nsmallest partner in the four-party\ncombine. Its intlueiicc ln the cabinet\nvould be restricted. The primary purpose of inviting the Industrialists in\na tour-party ministry would be to\nforce them to as*Hiime responsibility in\nthe conduct of the government, and\nincidentally eliminate iliem from the\ncpposttlonal forces on the floor of the\nleichatag.\nA third aolution might bo |oua4 iu\n#t R'%\nBlue\nRibbon\nj^sm-ig^:\nPaying a Higher Price\nwon't get you better quality.\nInsist on Blue Ribbon \u2014\nthe best at'any  price.\nSpn.l 2iV tn [tin\" Itibbin Lid,. Wmrnpi-K.\nlor tha Pino Uibboo Conk Bwik bound in\nwhite oilcloth\u2014the brmt ooek bouk for\n\u00bbviry dsy iiari in Wcatern homes\nLittle Finger\nRitigs for Ladies'\nk-ri'i'M      onyx,      white      cryatat,\nlnpui.    a Hi,-i.     liti,is    lazuli.\nwith   Jewel*   In   center.\n$6 \" sao\nA. T. NOXON\nYour   Jeweler\nTasty Meat\nSubstitutes\nWe Irll you how to makft\n24 dclirioui meal subtli\ntut? dishes with Kraft Chcett,\nin the new Kraft Recipe\nBook, eent free on request.\nNrndfnritto-da-* and treat\nvour family to \"Something\ndifferent\". The children\nespecially will benefit by\nIhe change in menu.\nRrif t-M scLtrtft Ck mm ts. Ltd. Moilrul\nStsi bi FrM fiecin B\u00bbtk.\nN\u00bbf.\u00ab   \u25a0\u25a0 \u2014- ,         ...\n4-tlMH\t\n__.\n___\n__m\n .-^fajHfc\"*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\/\nY- MORNING, DECEMBER 8,~I924\nWM CLOSES\nREAOKMARf\nFirftt Time Since the Bull\nMovement Started;  but\n'\\w.   LoB6es Small\nJJEW TORK, Dec T.\u2014For the first\ntime Blnoe the \"bull\" movement\nstarted five weeks ago the week in\nthe stock market closed yent unlay\nwrth reactionary tendencies predominating. Net losses in most of the\netaiulard industrials and rails were\nheld to fractions, although a number\nof specialties and ordinarily Inactive\nshare*   showed   recessions   of   1   to   3\nJhe, decline, however, yas not general, .bullish demonstrations being\niHlVged in various sections of the list\nthroughout the session, with thc re-\nsiilt, that 34 issuesi w.ere lifted to new\npeak prices. These included eight\nrails, six public utilities and five\nmotors and  rubbers.\nGood buying was noted ln some of\nthe northwestern rails, Chicago &\nNorthwestern issues standing out,\neach fnoving up about 2 points to new\ntop prices for the year. Ann Arbor\ncoinmon and preferred, Chicago & Al-\ntop preferred and common, and West-\n\u00abrn Pacific also broke through their\nprevious maximum quotations, while\nLehigh Valley sold at Its highest price\nsince the segregation of the coal prou-\n.et'tles.\n\u25a0. AU the pivotal industries lost\nground. United States Hteel coinmon\nclosed 14 lower at 117, Baldwin registered a loss of % at 12314, and American Can waB off % at 149 \u00a3 after\n-having eold as high as  150%.\nPublic utilities showed Independent\nstrength,' Philadelphia company leading that group to higher ground by\nadvancing more than 3 points to 65%.\nSubsequent profit-taking forced lt back\nto M**. The oil shares also developed a few strong epots. General Asphalt and Pure Oil moving to new high\nground, while the Pan-American is-\nsiwa, Houston, Marland and several\nother* showed moderate gains.\nHeavy buying of Nash Motors Just\nbefore the close sent that stock soar-\ninr.fi points to a new record high at\n174. Other outstanding issues were\nA(r Reduction, American Radiator,\nBarret Leather preferred, Certalnteed\nProducts, Columbia Carbon, Uoodyear\npreferred, Iron Product*, Market\nBtreet Railway prior preferred, l'ullman and United States Realty preferred, all up 2 points or more.\n\u25a0  * '' Closing1  Quotations\n_   . High   Low   Close\nC.'P.  R.        153H    152        150\nC M. A St- P.   ..      17%       11%      17U\nGen. Motors         6114     6OS1     60%\nIitt\"\"Marine   com.      15^i      15%      15%\nltlt   Nickel           23T\u00ab      23%      23%\nMiami Copper      2314\nMo. 'Pac  32% 2\\h_      81%\nMo*.   Pac.   pfd.   ., 71% 71         71\nRock .Island   .... 47% 46 \u25a0&       46%\nStudebaker     43H 42%      424\nU.   S.   Steel     117% 116% 116*4\nWillys       10V4 10^      10U\n(MA\nHigher   Wheat   Prices   in\nSouth American Are Re-\nflected in \"Chi\"\nCHICAGO. Dec. 7. \u2014 Higher prices\nhere for wheat resulted more or less\nyesterday from a sharp advance ln\ngrain values in Argentina, ano from\nindications of better European demand.\nClosing quotations here on wheat were\nfirm at l%c to Ujc net gain, May\n$1.62% to $1.62>*i and July $1.4:1%.\nwith corn \\_c to l%c up, oats showing l%c to 1%C advance, and provisions varying from unchanged to a\nrise of 30 cents. I\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW YORK. Dec. 7. \u2014 Sterling exchange firm at f-i.f-5 11-10 for sixty-\nday bills and at 3-U8 7-16 for demand.\nBar   sliver\u2014Foreign,   69 %\u20ac-.\u25a0\nCanadian   dollars\u201499   15-16c.\nFrench   francs\u2014Demand,   5.44%c.\nLire\u2014Demand, 4.33%c.\nGerman marks\u2014Demand, per trillion,\n23%c. \u25a0\nNelson    counter    rate    on    sterling,\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA, Dec. 7.\u2014Egg quotation*\niare:\nToronto\u2014Special-***,   73c;   extras.   70c.\nWinnipeg   and   Montreal   unchanged.\nBritish Columbia \u2014 Pullets, extras,\noffering  $19 per  case.\nVictoria \u2014 Dealers paying for extras.  58c  to  60c.     Firsts,  56c  to  58c.\nNew York\u2014Poultry firm, unchanged\nexcept fancy dressed turkeys, 36c to\n39c; extra firsts, 56c to 59c; firsts,\n52c to 55c.\nChicago \u2014 Spot, unchanged, Decembers, 37 Vic.\nMONTREAL LIST\nTORONTO BOARD\n\"  TORONTO,   Dec.   7.\u2014Dullness   again\ndescended    on    the   Toronto   stock   exchange during  the short  Saturday session.   -Twin   City   and   Brazilian   were f\ntjie   most   prominent   stocks.     The   fnr-,\nmcr improved a point, to 55, and Bra-)\n\u25a0Man   held   steady   at   53Vi-     Goodyear,\nTire  preferred  reached a new  high  of j\n91%   for the year and  closed at iltf, j\ngaining  %.\n-Other changes: American Sales Bonk\ncommon, off 1; Bread common, off hit;\nLocomotive preferred, up \\_; C.P.R. on\n%;  Steain^ii|)s preferred,  off  1,   to  5-.\nMONTREAL, Dec. 7. \u2014 Montreal\nPower was the main feature on Saturday's stock market, closing at 160,\na net gain of %. Second in volume\ncame Brazilian, which was up %. lo\n53%. Canada Cement closed at 90lb.\ndown   \\b-\nCanadian Connecticut cotton preferred was the strong spot, selling up\n2, to 54. Shcrwin Williams closed at\n115. down 8.\nOther changes: REj Steel first preferred, off 1; Canadian Car preferr< '\noff JAj Smelters, off V. ; Laurentlde,\noff ft; Price Brothers, off \\_\\ Quebec\nPower, up 1; Spanish River, off ?i;\nland T-jrin City,  up 1.\nClosing prices: Abitibi 63, Brazil\n53*4, Breweries 62. Brompton 32, Cement, 90H. Laurentlde H2%, B.E. Steel\nfirst preferred 32. BE. Steel second\npreferred nil, Spanish preferred nil,\n\u25a0Spanish common 101%. Smelters 18'i.\nMontreal Power 160, Quebec i'ower 92.\nTextile  67,   Steel  of Canada  82%.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nCHRISTMAS JOYS\nSEEN AT MARKET\nMincemeat   and   Suet  for\nPuddings Are Sold; Also\nBelgian Hares\nSturday's public market was distinguished by the first showing of Christmas supplies, and suet for Christmas\npuddings and mincemeat fnr plus sold\nout very quickly. Belgian hares,\ndressed, which had not heen displayed\nfor weeks, also sold very well At 20\ncents a pound.\nEggs wen- plentiful, and sold at 70\ncents a dozen. Fresh dairy butter remained at the same price, 45 cents a\npound.\nApples and winter vegetables went\nwell,  ss did the supplies of baby beef,\n\u2022al   and   pork.\nFollowing is a list of the prices:\nSpring chickens,  lb 30c\nFowl,   lh  ,25c\nBeef,    lb 10c to IU\nVeal,    lb 15c to 26c\nFork,    lb.     20o to 30c\nKoef heart, lb 12fcc\nFresh liver. 2 lbs. for  25c\nSausage,   lb 25c\nPotU'd   meats,   !b 20c\nDairy  butter,  lb.    4\nKggs,   doz 70c\nCelery,    bunch     5c\nParsnips,   lb   5c\nBe\u00ab?ts,   6 lbs. for    25c\nCarrots,  6 lbs.  for   25c\nCabbages, lb 4c\nPotatoes,  6   lbs.   for    25c\nGrapes,   lb\t\nPotted   plants,   up  from    26c\nMarmalade, por lb 80c and >5c\n\u2014****w\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nB.   C.   Silver    \u00bb0.90\nDouglas    01\nInt.   Coal    211\nSilversmith 34\nTrojan  Oil        .0314\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMI.NNEArOI.IS, Dec. 7. \u2014 Flour unchanged.\nBran\u2014|2S to \u00bb29.\nWheat \u2014 No. 1 northern, Jl.Ufic to\ntl.&8%; December, $l.r\u00bb5!i to 11.55%\nWay,  11.511%.\nCorn \u2014 No. 3 yellow, $1.13U t(\n*1.19'i.\nOats\u2014No.   3  white.  52c to 53140.\nFlax\u2014No.   1,   \u00bb2.63!4   to  $2.65',\u00bb.\n  '\u25a0-\nTen to\nTen Thousand\nDOLLARS!\nI\nI\nAVe   have   money   to   loan\non slock anil bonds at low\ninterest  rates.\nFor   full   details,\nWrite\nGRANT  MAHOOD &  CO.\n522-5   Rogers   Bldg.\nVANCOUVER   .   -   \u2022   B.C.\nWOnOPEO   OUAIW   QUOTATIONS\nWheat\u2014\nDec.\nMay\nJuly\nOats-\nDec.\nMay\nJuly\nBarley-\nDec\nMay\nm\u00bbi\u2014\nDec.\nMay\nRye-\nDec.\nMay\nOpen High T-^v Close\n160\"i 1fil\u00bb; 18(1% lfil1\"'*\n16\u00ab 167% 165% 167'i\n164* 16i\u00bb,i 164 U 165>i\n59\n64\n64 <;i\nII\u00ab\n87 li\n59 V,\n235%\n245\nfit\n64%\n235\n211\n13(1%    130(4     12914\n13311    136        133',;\nR944\nfin;\n65 V.\n84 V.\n89 %\n2-14 54\n129'i\n133\nMoney\nAT WORK\nBrief lint Important Lessons In\nTtnance. Markets, Stocks, Bonds and\nInvestments.\nr-1 CURES\nARE SUBJECT\nTO MANIPULATION\nTME CHARACTER\nOFTHE BORROWER\n15: OF MORE-\nCONCERN TOTttfc^\nWi5\u00a3 INVESTOR j\nMONTREAL, Doc. 7. \u2014 Egg! active\nantl  un change).\nCheese \u2014 Finest westerns, l\"*Jic to\n17MiC.\nButter \u2014 No. 1 tiasU-urize't, \"l'-}c to\n36c; No. 1 creamery. 84%c to 35%C'\nEffgs \u2014 .Storage extras. 48c; HtoraKe\nfirst**, 43c: storagfi seconds, 38c; extras,   C5e;   firsts,   30c,\nVANCOUVER   WHEAT\nVANCOUVER. Dec. 7. \u2014 Bidding en\nn basis of No. 1 northern wheat on the\nVancouver Merchants' Exchange, Saturday, was 170%  hid and 17-% asked.\nNELSON BVTTERFAT\nSweet,   per   lb %    .41\nNo.  l  Sour, per Ih v*\nNo.   2   Sour,   per   11) 3\"i\nFAILURES SHOW\nLARGE   DECREASE\nTORONTO. Tico. 7.\u2014A large decreas.\nwaH shown in llio number of commer\ncial failures In the Dominion\nthe past week, 37 having been reported to Dun's as compared with 6f\nfor the corresponding w\u00abek of lust\nvear. Five failures occurred in Urilish Columbia, while Saskatchewan and\nManitoba had two each, and Alberta\nhad   one.\nng\nWEW   TRAIN   CUTS\nSOWN   THE   TIME\nWINNIPEG,   Man..   Dec    7.\u2014Smashing aJI  record!   Cor regular passenger\ntraffic service between Montnal, Toronto and the piarie. the \"Winnipeg\n.siH'Cial.\" the new Canadian Pacific\ntiain No. 97. drew Into Winnipeg this\nmorning at 8:57, three minutee ahead\nof time, having completed the run\nfroirt Montreal in 39 hours and 4 J\nminutcB, and the trip from Toronto in\n3ti  hours  and   12   minutes.\nWhen a livery\nSpring Luke. N.J.,\ncats   perished.\nstable    burned\n18   horses   and\nYOU have the freedom of the ship-\nbright, artistically\nfurnished drawingrooms\nand lounge, card rooms,\nsmoking rooms and\ndining rooms\u2014spacious\ndecks \u2014 comfortable,\nrestful state rooms\u2014\nwith cuisine \u2022'nd service\nalways up to thc Canadian\nPacific standard.\n9,\niur fall particular* ask\nLaval Agenl-i\nmeleatiu\nCanadian\nPacific\nJ.  S. CABTEB.\nD.J.A., Balaon. B.O.\nk^.-.'\nTEScm\nte\nTeRert\nBoat* and\nAntomobSet\nCLASSIFIED\nHelp Wanted\nPositioiu Wanted\nLost ad Found\nLive Stock'\nMachinery\nFarm Prodnce\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Redes\nLocal XMdiaff Kotlce*\u2014Three cents\nper won! each insertion. In blackface\nor machine \"'capitals 4c per word.\nBlackface capitaiR Oc a word. Twenty-\nf!v6 per cent discount If run dally\nwithout change of copy for one month\nor more. Where advertisement ia set\nout In short lines the charge Is 15c\na line for Roman type, 20c for blackface and 25c for blackface capitals\nMinimum  3r*c,  If charged TiOc.\nWant and ClawMed AdVK-tUlng\u2014\nOne and a half cent? per word per\ninsertion. If paid In advance 6c per\nv.ord per week, or 22'ic per word per\nmonth. Transient nda (accepted only\non a cas-h-m-advnnce basis. Each initial, figure, dollar sign, etc., counts\na:: one word. Minimum 2jc, If\ncharged  60c.\nBirths, Marriages, Deaths and Xn-\nmemoriam Cards\u2014Kifty cents per in-\nttttt..m up to 33 words. Additional\nwords   \\y_c.\nLists of Wedding Vrssenti and\nTloral Trlbutae at runcrals \u25a0\u2014 T*n\ncents   per   line.\nMale Help Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Grader am! Shipper, must\nbe acquainted with Pine grade*- and\nable to grade Tine Shop and Pine\nfor United States. Must be good at\nfigures and accurate, uleady and not\nafraid of work. Steady job year\nround. Qood place to live. Reply fn\nyour own handwriting, and ln first\nletter answer the following questions: Age, Nationality, married or\nsingle. How long at grading, who\nlast worked for and how long, and\nsalary you would want by thc month\nyear round. Apply Box 7497, Daily\nNews. (7497)\n$300.00 A MONTH to distribute everyday household necessity in rural and\nsmall town districts. No monev\nneeded. Million dollar firm behind\nit. Write for particulars and state\nterritory desired. H. I>. Johnson,\n579  McDermott Ave.,   Winnipeg.\n(7485)\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED FRESH COW for winter\nkeep or purchase on easy terms.\nRox  744'.!,  Daily News. (7442)\nFor Rent\nPOR RENT \u2014 Dining room, kitchen,\npantry, two bedrooma. Well furnished\nand  clean.    507  Silica. (74r.7)\nKITCHEN, dining and living rooms,\nthree bed rooms, cellar, close In.\nReasonable    rent.      Box    7440,    Daily\n_News. (7440)\n4-ROOMED    FURNISHED    HOUSE    to\nrent   on   Stanley   street.     Phone   118.\n(7371)\nFOR RENT\u2014Josephine Street, six-\nroomed house, $25.00 per month.\nR. W. Dawson, Annable Black,\nP. Box 733,  Phone  197. (7185)\nFor Exchange\nWILL EXCHANGE Ford one-ton truck\nextra heavy springs body and solid\ntires, for good dairy cows or helf-\ncr(t due to freshen Soon. W. Fraser,\nKootenay Bay.  K.C. (73341\nFruits and Vegetables\nMUSHROOMS for sale, sixty cents por\nlb. for five-pound lots,or over, trc^h\n\u2022 picked. Mrs. -Porter, Mushroom\nFarm, Elk Valley,  Natal,  B.C.   (7451)\ni.1-i.       -i-j '\nSalesmen Wanted\nRELIABLE salesmen to sell Calendars\nexclusively or side line for short\nterm starting January First. We\nsupply convenient portfolio for\nsamples. Liberal Weekly Commission. State experience, territory desired, also time you can devote.\nNational Art Company, Calendar\nManufacturers, Toronto. (7502)\nMiscellaneous   Wanted\n200 MEN WANTED\u2014We want more\nmen who are willing to qualify for\njobs paying 5125.00 to J300.00\nmonthly as garage mechanics, battery and electrical experts, vulcan-\nlzers, welders, engineers, etc. Also\nmen wanted to learn the barber\ntrade, which Is nice, clean, inside\nwork and pays $25.W> to $50.00\nweekly. Write today for free catalog and our special employment plan.\nHemphill Trade Schools. Limited.\n228 Ninth Avenue East. Calgary, or\n1311 Granville Street, Vancouver.\n(7366)\nMEN,    WOMEN\u2014To    learn    bartering;\npaid   while   learuing;   tools   supplied.\nCatalogue free.    Moler College, Van-\n_c*>uver. (7399)\nSituations Wanted Male\nCOOK   wants   nnsitlon.   lumber or  mining camp.    Room. 25, Queen's Hotel.\n (7494)\nFill XT-class general blacksmith and\nmillwright open for position. State\nwages.    Hox 7450, Dally News. (7450)\nWORK   WANTED   any   hind.   Minding\nfurnaces, etc.  Box  7424; Daily  News.\n(7121)\nLive  stock  sells quickly when  It Is\n\u2022dvfrti.\u00abed   in   thesn  columns.\nSituations Wanted FemaU\nNURSE.     Open   for   engagement.    Maternity   work   preferred.     Apply   Box\n_7tl2.  Dally  NVws.         (7112)\nBoats and Automobiles\nFOR SALE\u201435-foot stcatn work or\npleasure boat with complete equipment, situated Pilot Bay. Good\npaying   outfit.     E.   Montreal!,   I'roc\nter,   H.C,\n(71fifi)\nMining:, Timber, Lumber\nA wen-Hno**\u2122 inr-wtment banker\ntelle this story of hie first attempt to\n\u25a0ell bonde..\n*.. *   *   \u2022\n\"I .was asked to go to an inland\ntown and try my luck, A list was\ngiven me of people who had bought of\nour firm in that vicinity and who\nwere considered good prospects. I\ncalled on the proprietor of a department store\u2014a big red-faced Scotchman with * beautiful -burr ln his\nvoice. 1\n.'.'He said, \"Son, come in; I am glad\nJo ace you. I always thought well of\nyowr house. I have thought now and\nthca I would buy a ftw bonds of you,\nbut I never did. What Is your leader\ntoday ' I thereupon trotted out the\nleader that I had carefully committed\nto memiory, and I recited some earn-\nIngfigures and the capitalisation. He\nput up a big hand and said, 'Walt,\ndon't talk, figures to me. There are\ngentlemen clever enough to twist them\nso1 -both of us would not recognise\nthem. When I make aa investment I\nbuy nine-tenths maa and one-tenth\nproperty and in 50 years I come out\null rlgat. .Who Is the man that is running this concern?\" I answered that I\ndidirt know. 'Go and find out, young\nman- and maybe I'll lend him Home\not ray money. When I pass my money\nto aaother man to take care of I would\nIlk-* to know that he has the same reaped for It as I have-'\"\n(Copyright, 1924, Associated Editors,\nllie Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada. Limited\nOffice Smaltlng  and   Refining   Department\nTRAIL,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducer*) of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTAOANAC,   TRAIL\nLOGGING AND SAWMILL\nEQUIPMENT FOR SALE\nThe Lovering Lumber Co., Ltd.,\nW'asa,    B.C.,    havo    for     disposal\ncoinpi'tn Bawmltlj Planing Mill\nand I,-.ill*. Mill machinery; several head good heavy hoi-wctf\"\niiiru) eetl lugging sleiffhs; a five-\nton While motor truck, with\ngravel   box   una   lumber    rolla;\nlumber    buggies,    roll-off    wagonn\nantl   dump   cttlH.     Sundry . other\nlutfgiilg   und   hiiwinill   tK'uiptncnt.\n\u2022 (71B7\nWANTED\u2014Apples in carload lots for\nspot cash. Delicious, fancy, |2.40;\nSpies, fancy. $1.40; SpiU, fancy.\n$1.15; Wageners. fancy, $1.30; $1 for\nall crated. Prices absolutely net to\nthe grower. Creston Valley Produce.\nAlf Nelson. (7501)\nTO BUT\u2014Davenport covered  In brown\nleather.      In   good   condition.      State\nlowest price.    Box 7100, Dally News.\n(74G0)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nSUITE for rent\u2014Campbell's  Studio.\n(7469)\nPOR   RENT\u2014Warm,   comfortable   room\nin   quiet   home.     Phone   381R.   (7a:il)\nTO RENT\u2014Furnished housekeeping\napartment. Hot water every purpose.  Apply 073  Baker street.   (Im)\nTW( )-UOO M EI >    Steam    heated\nCity Property for Sale\nFOR HALK \u2014 Nine-room residence on\nSilica street. A beautiful home, In\nfirm-class condition. Two fireplaces,\nbig stone basement. Now furnace.\nThree bedrooms and dressing room.\nRig sun porch. Apply F. F. Pavne.\nDaily News. (73S5)\nA  $5000  Property  for  $2500\nA well-built, seven-roomed House,\nstone foundation, two fireplaces,\nfurnace; good location. Two lota.\nEasy terms.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nFire\u2014Life\u2014Automobile  and  Accident\nInaurance.\n(7484)\nLive Stock for Sale\nHORKE, about eleven hundred pounds,\nuulet nnd gentle; cheap; is a little\nfoundered.    Apply  Crescent  \"'f!__\nSIX WKKKS OLD* pig\". |.r'-00. J. Mc-\nOvuley, Taghum.      J\u00a3gW\nFOR HALM\u2014A team of heavy draft\nhorses, with harness. Apply to Win.\nHunter, Silverton,  V\u00a3. BMW\nFOR SALK\u2014Within 30 days, two good\nteams of horses in good condition\nwith harness. One heavy team\n-'weighing 2200. aged 8 and 'J years.\n1450. the other team weighs 2800\nlbs. age 7 and 8 years 1350. H. W.\nClarkston,   Fife.  B.C. (744D\nFOR SALE\u2014Chester-Brood sow. 2W\nyears. Good mother, cheap. Nearly\nnew American Separator, M. Bush.\nFruitvale.      (.74871\nFOR SALE\u20142-year-old Yorkshire Boar.\nAny reasonable price accepted. R. Ih-\nbotson.   Passmore.   (7420)\nREGISTERED BERKSHIRE sows, bacon tvpe, first class stock, 10-woeks-\nold, W. Fraser, Kootenay Bay. B.C.\n(7S83)\nONE COW 55 dollars. Joe Postnlkoff.\nTaghum.  (7381)\nCOYOTE HOUNDS OF THE DIFFER-\nent breeds\u2014I have them, real good\ncnes; held over the summer for\nnow.    Percy Neale,  Lovat,  Sask.\n(7256)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nVICTROLA   and   records,   walnut   cabinet,  good as new.    Phone 211L.\n(7487)\nStirling   hotel.\n(7\nSO)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMiscellaneous\nIIIDDH AND  WOOL\u2014For (rices upply\nJ.  P.  Morgan,  Box  117,  Nelson.\n\u25a0   (741SI\nHOTEL HKJUS\nWe print Hotel Menui, either\nwith complete menue or with\nthe different headinge and\nblank apacee far typing in tha\nbill  af far*.\nThe   Daily   Newi  Job\nDepartment\nTha Heme af Good Printing\nNeleen, B, C.\nTo Creditors of the B.C.\nPoultrymen's Co-operative\nExchange in Voluntary\nLiquidation\nTAKK NOTR-1', that if you have any\nclaim against the Exchange, for which\nyou arc entitled to rank, sworn proof\not sueh claim must be filed with nie\nON OB BSPORK THK IWth DAY OP'\nDECEMBER, DM, for, from aud after\nthe expiration of such time. I whal I\ndistribute the proceeds of the Estate\njunonff the parties entitled thereto.\nhaving regard only to the claims of\nwhicii   I   havo  then   notice.\nPromieeory   notes   of   the   Exchange\nmust be returned endorsed hy the\npayee. (Person to -whom note is made\nptyable.)\nDATED at 1150 Hamilton BK Vancouver. H.C, this 1'sth day of November,  1924.\nQ.  C.  MILNSJ3,\n(Jjgjj _ Liquidator. _\nV'ATKlt\" NOTICE   * *\nDiversion   nnd   Use\nTAKE. NOTICE that Sullivan\u25a0 .CfOek\nLumber   Co..   Ltd.,   whose   add rem   i;v\nBirehbank. B.C., will- apply for a li-\netnee to take and uue \"HHH* Kallo-titt per\nclay   of   water   out   of   Champion   Creek\nand   tributary,   alnu  known   as\t\nwhich flows westerly and drains into\nthc Cot iim ii In river aLiout 7 miles south\nof Brilliant,  h.c.\nThe water will bo diverted from the\n.stream at a point about .0(10 feet east\njOf the west boundary and 1500 feet\nnorth of the south boundary of BL 6r\nI. 4WX ami will he used for Industria\n(loir pond), Champion creek; domcatii\nand strain, tributary. Described ns sit\nat.:d on Sublot G& of Lot iEtfS of Cham\nplon   creek.\nThis notice Mas posted on the\nground on the 24th, day of November,\n11)2*1.\nA copy of ibis notice and an nppli-\ne:i t Ion pursiinii t t hereto and to the\n'Water Act. 1814\/' wilt be filed in Hie\n\u25a0 l'flce of the Water Itccorder at Nelson.    B,C\nObjections to the application mav be\nfiled with the said Water Recorder\nor with the Comptroller of Water\nlilchts, Parliament Buildings, Victoria.\nB.C., within thirty daye after the first\nappearance of this notice lu a local\nitwspiipcr.\nSCI.LIVAN     CREEK     LUMBER\nCO.,   LTD.\nApplicant.\nB.  W.  DYAART,\nAkciU.\nTho date   of  the   first   pubilention  oi\nthis   notice   is   December   1st,   RCM\n(7370)\nFOR SALE\u2014Writing dealt and double\nbed. Also child's fumed oak high\nchair and wicker baby buggy. Cheap\nMrs.   C.   W.   Tyler,   706   Stanley   st.\n^___  11*11!\nSMALL COTTAOE PIANO. Canadian\nmake. Excellent    condition    $200\nTerms    or    cash.      Box    7-JS2,    D-\u00bbi'v\nNews. (7382)\nAND\nIONAL\nECTORY\\\n(Continued)\nElectrical\nDEAKSHAVBH   DIT1LOF1IIRT  COt I\nLTD.,     DBAJTSKAVav,     B.     C.~-1\nWeettnghouso Radio Sets, Radio Partii\nComplete Super-Heterodyne Kits, Myers\nTubes. Westingboiisu Mazda Lamps,\nIrons. Toasters, Etc. V. & K. Auto\u00bb\nmatlc Electric Pumps. Small Hydro**\nElectric   Plants   a   Specialty.       (7318)\nHOWB BLBCTBIO CO.\u2014\nPower, Light and Itadio Distal la-I\ntlons. Battery Service Station. Dealers I\nIn   Electrical   Supplies. \u25a0 , \u25a0\nOpera   House   Block .\nF.  O.  Box  928. Vhoae  53a\n(7481)\nTELL your  wants  through  The  Dallf j\nNews classified columns.\nRepairing\nHH.   HITTO,   Qunsmltb   \u2014   Tennis\n\u2022 Rackets    Kestrung   and   Repaired\nBicycle Dealer. Machine Works'.  (7816)\nChimney Cleaning\nline     FOWZ.ES,     Official    Chlmn\nt\u00bb Cleaner.     \t\neyl\n19\nPrinting\nTHE DAILY KEWS\u2014Quality Printing I\nRuling,  Loose  Leaf Forms,  Ledger I\nSheets   and   Binders   always   in   stock. I\nInsurance and Real Estate!\nDA. UoFABLAHD\u2014Ileal Estate In-1\n. surance, (Irecnliill and Bellevual\n,-oal. Room No. e, K.W.C. Block. I\nPhone  49.  (7351)|\nRW.   DAWSON\u2014\n\u2022   Real  Batata,   Xnanranoe,  xaatflll.1\nAnnable li'lk. P.O.  Box 73S. Phona  197.1\n_   (7400)1\nHE.    Dill,    IHSOTtASTCB    FABmI\n.       AND   CITY   PROPERTY. I\n:il)8 Wurd  Street Nelson, 13.C.I\n<727\u00bb)|\nMonuments\nCAMPBSLI,      fe      RITORIB     afOBtJ-l\nKBMTAI. CO.\u2014P. O. Boi 805, N'el-C\nson.   H.C\\   Telephone 164 (7401)1\nIOll    HAT.U\u2014Coekrr    Spaniel    pupple\".\nIf. H. 8M\u00abMa, Tmll,  B.C. (7258)\nFOIt  HAI.1'3\u2014Ono  firm-class fcal'e  made\nby   J.   J.  Tuytor.     Heavy   structure.\nConvenient size, 47x3F,x2S Inrhea.\n__Apply. BoK 7S,JS, Daily News (7\"flS)\nBARRELS,     KEGS     AND     EMPTY\npacks \u2014 MacDonald    Jam    Company.\nNelson.     (7317)\nTELI.  your wants  through  The  Dally\n New ola\u2014tflad columns.\nPIPE AND FITTINGS, ETC.\nComplete line Pipe and Fittings,\nall sizes.   Special, 1-Inch Pipe, 8c\nper    foot.      Roofing    Felt,    1-ply,\n|l.50; 8-ply, $2.00; 3-ply, $2.65 per\nroll.    Extra heavy  3-ply  Mineralized    Surface,    90   lbs.    per    roll,\nspecial,   $3.25.     %-inch   Air  Hose,\nsuitable for gardens, 6c per foot.\nMixed Wire N'alla. $2.00 per keg.\nWire Rope, Canvas, Logging Supplies   and   all    kinds    equipment.\nB.C, JUNK CO.\n135 Powell St.               Vancouver, R.C.\n. (7213)\nPoultry  and  Eggs\nWHITE WVAMJOTTE cockerels,  April\nhatch,   fnim   hens   wit li   rulvancod   K.\no.p. certmeatc; $3 each,   F, Rapl*\/-\nNelsnn,   Rt,'. 17 14li>\nRoom and Board\nliuAKlt-AND   KOOM fur   lady.      414\n.Silica   street. Ciihi)\nWELI,     FPRNI^HEb HOOM*\" WITH\nboard Phone 8S9L. (7418^\nLive  stock sells quickly wlitiii it is\ntgvfi lisi-il   in   tht-Mf   cihininp.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nTransfer\nATKINSON    TBANSPES \u2014 Coal    nnd\nWood.     I'h\"ii<-   421. (UK)\nPiano Tuners\nHBOLET W, aSHDILIi, Expert\u2014Pianos, Player Pianos, Organs, P. 251\nMechanical\nELECTRICAt SUPPLIES ANO SB-\nPAIBS \u2014 Machine Shop Work.\nMechanical Repair.. Oxy - Acetylene,\nWelfling. Radio Supplies. Tubes and\nParis. Auto Accessories. Tires, Tubes.\nDistributors for Prest-O-Lilo Batteries.\nRennetta T.imilcd, Masonlo Floek,\nNelson.    U.C. (73^j)\nl.A^MKIEll ads  brtriR   results qulckly|\nand economically.    lHc a word.\n Chiropractor-!\nt u\u00bbr S. DOSSS, D.O.\u2014Phone  6RJ |\nOffice linurs, 10-12; 1-4 and by ap.\npolntmcnt. Ai>erdecn Block, Nelson, B.O. I\n \u25a0 (7<92)|\nAccounting\nCHAIir.ES  P.  HUNTEB\u2014\nAuditor,   McDonald  Jam Bulld!nj-.|\nBox   11J1                               Nelson,   B.C.|\n (7402)1\nFlorists\nGSIZIELLES OBZSNKODSB, NBt.L\nson. Cut flowers and Floral deslans.l\n t7403)|\nWM.  S. JOHNSON\u2014\nl'hone   :'A'i.   Cut  Fevers.    Potted I\nI'lantw and  Floral   Kmblenis. (7.'(.12> |\nWholesale\n4      MACDONALD  k  OO\t\n^\u00bb. Wholesale llrocers and Provision I\nMerchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees, I\nSpices. Dried l-'rults. Staple and Fancy 1\n(liocerles.    Nelson,    B.C. TN04) 1\nEngineers\nGtee*\nBros., Burde*,\ni-o.\nNELSOlff,   B.   O. \u201e\nCIVIL    AHD    MIKIWO    BWOIW\u00bbB\u00bb\u00bb I\nB.C., Alharta  and Dominion 9\nX.and   Surveyor!.\nCrown  Grant  Affent3.      Bltt* Printing.\n Q405) j\nHD.   dawsoit,   tana   Surrtyor, j\n>   Mining-  and  OWll* BnflnMr.\nK.i.vln,   Rf. (7406) I\nAs.sayers\nW. WIDDOWSON, BOX A1108 Vol- {\n\u2022 nun, H.C. StHiidaiil western cnav*re.i.\n (7407) I\nAuctioneers\nWCUTLEB-\n\u2022 Goods Sold Prlvattly and atanctlonl\nNclij-jn   Aucil-jii   Wart,   Vernon   Street*\n.   (743fl)P\nFuneral Directors\nDJ.   BOBERTSOXT,   P.D.D.   ft   X-\na    sil   Victoria   street    Phone   291\nNight   l'iionc,   157U (710g>|\nStandard   *urnitt\u201e __\nCo. \u2014 Undertakers!\nFuneral     Directory\nAuto hearite, up-to^\nr$ date  cha*pel.     Beat\n)    servleea.     Prl co a\nreasonable.      (74081\nWANTED\u2014Clean    cotton   rtLga.       Flfi\neenta per pound.    The Dally  Newt]\nBRINGING  UP FATHER        \u2014:\nJJv Geor\u00abe McManto\nfLL (6ET TMKViTHE. C^^^O\nPWON1N Me - V\/AvNTIN' ME. TO\nCOME OOT COT I PROM^ED\nMAC.CIE ID *oTAT    lN^OluL\nr^oT A.ts\u00ab>vye\u00ab*   \"s''1'\nWEPHONt:  J.\nC WW en Intt. re*Tu\u00abi Scavict. twc.\n_*W-W*tn,~mtn\t\nOON'T  t-lt TO l**E \u25a0    ;\nPHOt>*eO HERE. |\nTHi\u00bb.eLe Tiwe'b wo\nCar mo \/M-t-bv-E:!^\n iVT\n\u25a0 .,-* '\u2022\nTHE .NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 8, 1S24\nPage Seven\nMONTREALS WIN\nFIRST VICTORY\nOF THEJEASON\nNew Team Scores Over the\nSenators; Ottawa Boys\nHelp         .\ni MONTREAL, Deo. 7.\u2014Montreal's new\nprofeaaional hockey team provided the\nfind upset o( the National Hockey\nlfflgiie BPaHnn, when they defeated\nthe Ottawa. Senators Inst nteht 3 io 1.\nThey piled up a dRfe load In the\nfirst two periods, and stood olf the\ndetermined attacks of the Senators In\ntiie final session, to score their first\nvictory fts a club.\nBenedict, in Kuol, and Rraodbent on\nthe forward. lint:, were the bright\nFfttrs of the locals, the two former\nOttawa players giving their utmost lo\nsend their forward team mates down\nto defeat. In thla they were helped\nhy an Ottawa youth playinK .his\nfirst season of pro hockey, Kred Low-\nivy, \u25a0Montreal i-enlcr. en minx sustained plaudits from S'00 enthusiast*.\nOf this trio. Hint FonedU't emerged\nns the main stuinldin\u00ab bfodi to the\nOttawa \u00ab-*im-*l.\n\"ttawa   was   without- the  servlee  of\n\u2022heir   sta'\"   defence:   plnyer,        Oeorge\nBoucher, who was sick.\nLineup\nMontreal    ,    Position Ottawa\nGoal\nONTARIO BARS\nPRO COACHES\nChange of Residence After\nNew Year Will Be Closely Checked\nWINNIPEG TO SEE\nTWO ICE CLASHES\nTigers and Vies Tonight;\nVies and Maroons\nThursday\nDefeftce\nForwards\nprosidbervt   .\nJ>rllmjuette:\n.   Denenny\nSubstitutes\n. Finnegan\nRothschild\n,  Campbell\nHitch man\n... \u2014 \u25a0\nSummary\nFirst   Ml\niod\u20141.\nM.ontre-\nil,    rhoud-\nbent, 6:55.\nSecond    1\"\n\u2022piiod\u2014\n8,    Montreal,    Cain,\n5:10;   3,   Montreal,\nBfMldjM\nnt,   6:00.\nThird   Period\u20144,\n,   Ottawa\n,   (inrman,\n17:00.\nTORONTO, Dec. 7.\u2014The fact that\nduring a period of 23 year* the number of the clubs in the Ontario\nHockey association had Increased\nfrom \u00ab\u00bb to 180, was stressed by\nPresident W. A. Fry at tbe annual\nmeeting of the association here yesterday.\nA motion which would have allowed   .    .   \t\nprofessional   coaches   who   had   been   Vancouver    and\ngranted    permission    hy   the    O.H.A.   n ght\nexecutive, to coach fn the association,\nwas   decisively  rejected.\nAnother amendment lhat all players\nchanging residence since January 1\nmust satisfy the executive of the\nbona fides of such change, was unanimously car-led. Under the new rule,\nplayers In cities having more than\none club must not change clubs\nwithout the consent of the club and\nthe permission  of the O.H.A.\nWilliam Easson of Stratford wds\nelected president for 1925. .\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 7.\u2014(Canadian\nPress.)\u2014After having viewed the\nprofess orial squads of eastern tenms\nln exhibition games, Winnipeg hockey\nfans this week wilt have the opportunity of watching two scheduled\nleague fixtures of the western Canada league, when Victoria and Calgary clash here tomorrow night, and\nVictoria    Thursday\nTOP POS\nBirmingham   From   Third\nIs First but Without\nDeserts\nSEVENTEEN TEAMS\nFIVE POINTS APART\n'Cleveland Wallops\nSt. Paul Once More\nCLEVELAND, Pec. 7\u2014 The Cleveland\nhockey team made it two Mralffht wins\nfrom St. Paul by defeating the visitor*\nhy a score of 4 to 0 last night.\n| PITTSBURGH  BUNKS\nEVZLETH   SEXTETTE\nPITTSBVIROH. . Dec.   .1.\u2014The    Pitta\n| burgh     weatern,   group    hockey    team\nmade   lt   two  straight  over  Eveleth   by\nv.'innlng last  night's game, 2  to 0.\n'SPUNK SPARROW\nTO BOSTON NOW\nSuspended Eskimo Sold to\nBruins; Western Canada\nClubs Waived\nCALGARY, Dec. T.\u2014President Fred\nJohnson nf the Calgary Tigers, an-\nnounotd * re tonight that \"Spunk\"\nc5l*alrow, who wan suspended Thursday for disobeying orders and breaking training rules, has been ; sold to\nBoston, of the National Hocks,\u25a0\nleague. All clubs In the West<r>\nCanada league waived on Spurn.-',\nand his raJfl to the Bruins is conditional, as he has to bel-ave.\nSparrow has shifted around In hockey, going from amateur ranks in\nWinnipeg, to semi-pro in M-tosc Jaw.\nFrom there he won signed by Itegina,\nbut was tv,,\/>d hist winter to the\nEdmontnn juiIUsum for Oagne. He\nplayed good, hud and indifferent hoc-\n,key for the Rfefct, and Kenny Ala-\nKcnzie sold him to Calgary, the deal\nbeing closed Rt Sparrow's own request.\nAfter several weeks of Intensive\ntraining, which included exhibition\ngames In east and west, the teams\nare reported to be In excellent\nshape.\nCalgary and Victoria will go into\ntomorrow, night's battle in good\nconditio n*, though the Tigers have\none real casualty on their lineup.\nHarry Oliver will be out of ihe\ngame owing to an Injury tactimi at\nToronto. His place probably wlfl\nbe   taken   by  Cully   Wilson.\nThe   lineup.\nViciora \u2014 Holmes, Hildsrson,\nLaughlin, Frederickson. Hah, Walker, .Foyston, Meeking, Andorsoa, fSI-\nmer   and   Fraser..\nCalgary\u2014Winkler. Dutton. flarll-\nner, Morris, WllpHI, Crawford, Oat-\nman,  Bensoii and  Mnrklo.\nDerby  County Loses Second Division to Manchester United\nSouthern California\nWhitewashes Syracuse\nin East-West Rugby\nSAM KUANCI.SCO. Deo. 7.\u2014In a 10\nto-0 victory which tht I'niversity of\nSouthern California scored over Syracuse university In the CotlWUra al Los\nAn \"ft\"*? lew yesterday, Ihe west took the\nfirst of a series of print-sen son football  games  with  the eaat.\nlord Brilliant Beats\nKnight Commander\nOttawa,  Dac. \".\u2014\"t.ord  Brilliant,\"\nCanadian   bred   champion   at   the   last\nToronto horse show, and owned by\nMiss _. Vlnu of Montreal, heat Knifht\nCommander, champion harness horse\not Great Britain of 1(121, at the closing session of the Ottawa horne show\nI ere  last  night.\nNanaimo Champions\nof Upper Island \\\nHamilton Collegiate\nLONDON*. Dec. 7.\u2014(Canadian\nTVesfe.)\u2014Notts County renounced\nleadership of the first division of\nthe English league yesterday, and\nIncidentally suffered thp biggest de\nfeat yet inflcted on them thW sea\nson. when West Ham took Ihem'intP\ncamp by a score of ihree to nil\nThe county's trimming was due -in\nthe main to the irresistible attack\nof the Hammers' forwards. Tjty\nground was in a deplorable condition, nnd was not conducive to\ngood soccer, but West Ham adapted\nthemselves perfectly tn the muddy\ncondlt ons, whereas the County players slithered all over the field, mis-\nkicked, stumbled, and in nine-tenths\nof the tussel left the ball at Ihe\nHammers'   toe. d?J *1\nDue to Sunderland's defeat by\nHiKblersfield town, Birmingham, who\ndivided the points with Nol Li' Forest, obtained nn additional counter\nsufficient to put them, temporarily\nThey did not deserve even this fleet-\nat least, at the head of the le-iKuc.\ning honor on their form of yesier-\nd:iy, for they displayed anything hut\nchampionship form. They were leading in the game until one nvnme\nfrom time, when a converted penalty  put   the  Forest  on  equal  terms.\nWhile It was not surprising thai\nHuddersfleld Town should defeat\nSunderland, Incidentally the Town\nare evidently determined to retain\nthe honor they won last season\u2014the\nmagnitude of the More came as a\nsurprise to Sunderland's supporters.\nThe f rat half of thc game was evenly contested, and resulted in no\nscoring, hut in the second period\nthe Town swept Sunderland off their\nfeet, and ran up fonr t till Lea in rapid\nMiccehslon. On their play they were\neasily superior to the Durham, men,\nnnd outclassed them In the strenuous\nbatiTe of the day.\nThirty thousand spectators, the\nlargest   gate   of   the   afternoon,   saw\nanl displayed outstanding merit'\nthroughout.\n..The second largest crowd on Saturday\u201425,00ft\u2014was present at High.\nhury. when the Arsenal overwhelmed\nPreston Northend by 4 to 0. Preston now are wallow.ng in the depths\nof  despair.\nEverton were badly defea ted by\nBlackburn Rovers, They revealed\nlots of talent, but lacked the knack\nOf   goal   getting.\nCardiff City was the only visiting\nteam of the first division to garner\nin full points. Six home teams registered successes, wh'le four games\nwere  drawn.\nAs the league stands now, there\nis little to choose among any of the\nteams, With the exception of the\nsmall number of tallenders, who\n-ptnrt at Burnley and finish with\nPreston, include Everton. Sheffield\nUnited and Notts Forest. The other\n17 teams- are separated only by five\npoints between the first <Birmingham) and the 17th (West Ham).\nHuddersfleld jumped into second\nplace as a result of Saturday's game\nwhile Sunderland fell from that\nposition  to  fifth.\nln the second division, Mnnohester\nUnited again leaped over Derby\nCounty into leadersh p of the lenKiie\nby virtue of their win at the expense of South Shields. The United\n.victory was creditable. Inasmuch as\nthoy had played throughout the second- half without the services of\nMoor****.     \u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0-    -\nDerby County succumbed with\nUmazing'ease to Leicester City. It\nwas the County's f r\u00abt home defeat.\nDerby's wild kicking was mainly responsible for their failure to retain\nthe leadership.\nBarnsley, who registered an emphatic win over Crystal Falace, easily outclassed the viaitors.\nSLddleshoro were compelled to accept a draw from Southampton, and\nthis was due to bad shooting on the\npart of  the home  team.\nIn the southern section of the\nthird division, one of the best displays of the afternoon was given by\nU.nndall,   the   Swindon   goal    keepi\n\/~t_*-j.L**e_l r{.\/.M\u00ab.   Cardiff  City   travel   to  Aston   Villa'*\nnterschool Lnamps\\gl(,una and tak*e the Enau.nn\nmen im\n  I \u2014  i camp   by   -   to   1.     Davia   was   the\nNANAIMO,    B.C.,    Dec.    7.\u2014Nanaimo I      LONDON.    Ont.,    Dec.     7.\u2014Hamilton    biggest   factor   in   the   Welsh   team'*\ncity   soccer   team   today   won   the   foot-    Collegiate   institute,   last   year's   chum-    success,     making     the     Villa's     first\nball   cup' emblematic  of   the   champion- j rions,   again   won   the   Canadian   Inter- ; home     defeat     certain     \\(y     nc\/tllng\n'ship  of   the   upper   section   of   Yancou-' s-cholastic   rugby   championship   yester- ! both      of     CardlfF-ar-   goals.        Davis\nt ver   Island,    hy   defeating    Cumberland    o;iy.    by    defeating    London    Collegiate ! proved   himself  to   be one  of the  fln-\niC goals to 2, before J090 spectators,    iii  to 2 in tt sudden death final game.' eat   players   in   Ihe   game   this  year,\nwho kept Charlton's attempts out\nnotwithstanding that Swindon had\ntu  take a defeat.\nScores were as  follows:\nENGLISH LBAOtK\nFirst Dfvtatea\nArsenal,   4;   Preston,   N.K..   0.\nAnion   Villa,   1;   Cardiff  City.   2.\nBlackburn,  8;   Everton,  li.\nHury,   1;   Leeds,   I).\nHuddersfleld,   4;   Sunderland,   D.\nLiverpool,    1;    West    Bromwich,    1.\nManchester,   3;   Burnley,   3.\nNewcastle,   1;   Tottenham,   1.\nSheffield,   2;   Bolton,   I).\nWest  Ham,  3;   Notts County,   0.\nOne   missing.\nSecond   Division\nBarnsley,   3;   Crystal   Palace.   0,\nBlackpool,   1;   Stoke,   2.\nBradford   ('.,   3;   Slockport,   n.\nDerby.   0;   Leicester,   3.\nFulham, 2; The Wednesday, 1.\nHull  Ctty,   4;   Coventry   C ty,   1.\nAliddlesboro,   0;   Southampton,  <>\u2022\n'Portsmouth)   -;   Oldham,   -\\\nPortvale,   1;   Chelsea,   1.\nSouth    Shields,    1;    Manchester,    2,\nWolverhampton,   1;   Clapton,   2.\nThird  Division,   Northern   Bert ion\nAsh ing ton,   4;   Darlington,   2.\nBarrow,   l\\    Wrexham,    2.\nCrewe.    1;   New   Brighton,   0.\nDoncaster,   l;   Hartlepool,   0,\nDurham,  0;   Qrtntaby,   l.\nLincoln,    3;    lUHherliam,     1.\nNelson,   2;   Bradford,   2.\nSouthport,   0;    Rochdale,    ft.\nTranmere,  6;  Chesterfield,   I.\nWalsall,   i;   Accrlngton,    i.\nWigan, 2; Hal fax, \".\nThird   Division,    Southern   Sartion\nBristol R..  1;  Luton.  1.\nCharlton    1;   Swindon,   0.\nExeter  City,   3;   G-llinftham,. I.\nMerthyr,   1;   Plymouth,   2.\nNewport,   C;   Millwall,   t,\nNorwich,   t;   Wntford,   1.\nQueens Park,  6;  Brimol City, 0.\nHead ng,   0;   Broughton,   0.\nSouth   End,   6;   Brentford,   1.\nSwansea,  1; Bournemouth, fl.\nSCOTTISH  LEAGl'K\nFirst    Division\nCeltic,   2;  Ayr,  0.\nDundee,  0;   Rangers,  0.\nFalkirk,   5;   Cowdenbeath,   1.\nHamilton,   1;   Third   Lanark,   2.\nHibernians,  1;  Alrdrle,  1.\nKilmarnock,   0;   Motherwell,   2.\nPartick, 2; Morton, 2.\nJtaith Rovers, 2; Aberdeen, I,\nSt.  Mlrren, 0;  St. JohnMtone,   1.\nSecond   Division\nBathgate,  2;   Forfar,   0.\nBroxhurn,  1;  East Stirling,  1.\nJohnstone,   4;   Clydebank,   0.\nDumbarton,   |;   lioness,  0.\nSt.  Bernards,  1;  Eturt Fife, 2.\nAlhion   Rovers,    3;   Armadale,    1.\nAlloa,  2;  Kings Park. 0.\nArbroath, 2; Arthurile, 1.\nDundee-Stenhou*-emuir,    unplnyed.\nDunfumline,   1;   Clyde,   0.\nJUDGE FUCHS DENIES\nSLUSH FUND REPORT\nOwner  of  Boston   Braves\nSays  He  Gave  Out  No\nSuch Story\nNEW YORK. Dec. 7.\u2014Former Judge\nKmll Fuchs, pirn owner of the I'oston\nBraves, has explained the cireum-\nslanees which led to llie report thai\nhe hud been asked to contribute to a\nJ lfiA,000   fund   to   bring   about   passu*?\u00ab\nof   a   bill   permitting   Sunday   prufes-\nr.\\cn-A[ baseball in Mnssnehusetts, nnd\nwhich report resulted in demand* for\nf rand jury and legietattve enqulrlea,\nJudge Furiis reiterates his den in I,\nmade by telephone, that he had been\napproached by n lobbyist as had beer.\nii ported.\n-Th.n'H   nothing   to   ll nt   all.\"   sold\n,*udge    Fnchs.     \"it's   a Int   of   noise\nabout   nothing.'     1   made tto   Knit, men*\njustifying    the    remarks attributed    tu\nAUSSIE-DUTCH\nCYMSTSHK\nMcNamara and Yan Kemp-\nen Far Ahead in Points;\n\"Kids\" Second\n____ *\nNEW YORK, Dec 7. \u2014 Reggie Mo\u00bb\nNamara, Australia, and Pete Van\nKe > pen, marvel of Holland, thla morning woo the annual six-day bike race\nr.t Madison Square Gardens, by piling\nup an immense total of points ia tha\n.'prints  In  the final  hour.\nHobby Walthour Jr., and Georgettt\nof Italy, the \"kid\" team of the race,\nfinished second.\nMcNamara and hla partner gathered\n10r-7 points ln the schedule sprints,\nwhile the second team could obtain\nbut 513 despite desperate riding.\nThird came Buysse and Gosseaa ot\nBelgium.\nGoullet, riding hla last race, lost\nhia team male, Horan, who was injured Thursday morning, suffering a\nbroken collar bone. He teamed With\nAicBeath of Australia, but finished\nthree laps behind the leaders.\n\"BABBIT\"   CK-tXMCAV\nOV CHICAGO CUBft\nNKW YORK, Dec. 7.\u2014Walter \"Rabbit\" Maranville, traded to the Chicago\nNationals by Pittsburgh, has been appointed chairman of the Cubs, Manager   Hill  Killefer has  announced.\nrARRELL    CRUICXSKAHK\nBEAT   BRITISH   PAIR\nTAMPA, Pia\u201e Decy. T. \u2014 Johnny\nParrel] and Hobby (Vitiekshaiik derated Oeorge Duncan and Abe Mitchell, :t and 2 In a 3d-hole match here\ntoday. Poor putting by hoth Britons,\nand thc tying of the Course record\nwith a 88 bv Ouncan, featured the\nmatch.\nSHEIKS ENGAGE\nREGINATONIGHT\nHave Three New Players to\nPut Through the Prairie\nBaptism\nSASKATOON, Dec. 7. \u2014 Saskatoon\nSheiks will open the professional\nL- ekey season here tonight when they\nmeet   the   Heglna Capitals.\nRight now the Sheiks nre in much\nbetter shape than at this time last\nn inter, having had a stiff training\ngrind for four or five days here. The\nSheiks have three players to put\nthrough the prairie hockey baptism\ncremonies, Corbett, Denenny, Cook\"\nand Leo Bougault. The two last\ni.amed are breaking Into -professional\ncompany, Cook having been with {fault\nSte. Marie last year, and Bourgault\nwith  liuelph Juniors.\nHa in.sworth will be In goal for tho\nSheiks, with Relse and Stevens or\nCameron on the defence, and Laionde,\nRill  Cooh  and Scott out   In  front.\nKOOTENAY BITTER ALE\nTht   Ala   wilh   tha   raal   flavor,   $2.20   doz.     Order   through\nGOVERNMENT    LIQUOR   STORE.\nFREE  DELIVERY   DIRECT   FROM   BREWERY.\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY  LIMITED\n(This  advertisement   is   rui   published   or  displayed   by   the  Liquor\nControl   Board  oi   by   the  Government  of  British  Columbia.)\nOur Mail Order Department has already taken on quite an air of Christmas. Orders from outside have been\npouring in lately, and we have been\nkept busy packing and shipping. We\ncan give you better service now.\nTry us.\nBaggage of Distincton\nIs always appreciated as a gift, especially\nif it is solid leather, which lasts a lifetime.\nWe have just received for the Christmas trade in gifts some Old Country\nEnglish-made Baggage, the kind that\nstands the punishment.\nBROWN LEATHER COWHIDE SUIT\nCASES\u2014Two brass locks, of good\nquality; well niade.\n22-inch, price   $17.00\n24-inch, price $18.00\n26-inch, price  $19.00\nIt man he only a little simple Gift\nfor a child, costing but a few cents,\nnr it may be a useful Gift for the\nhouse, something of the lasting kind\u2014\nwhichever it is, you icill find vs pre-\npared, and always at the H. B. Co.\neconomy price for quality merchandise.\nAND NOW FOR CHRISTMAS-NOW FOR THE BUSIEST SHOPPINGS DAY OF ALL THE YEAR\nIt is a satisfaction to be able to say we have Christmas merchandise in plenty that measures up to the\ntradition of the Hudson's Bay company in point of excellence and seasonableness. -   i|*$lL'*g\nWe are glad to say that our entire organization has never been as large and so capable as today to give\nyour wants careful and efficient attention. f , e _      -.      _.,       n. \\AAaA\nShoe Department C,othing of Qua,,ty That ^ \"\" A<Med\n125 Yards Pure Silh Georgette Crepe\nStrong, durable weave. Dark green,\ntaupe, purple, brown, grey, sand, saxe,\nrose.   nink.    maize;   -10   inches    wide.\nSpecially priced, per yard   $1.00\nFin\u00ab Tricolette Waists\nFin'^ed with a contrasting shade. White\nw'th black, grey with blue, white with\nblue.   Special  - $3.95\nBed Spreads\nHandsome raised designs.   Heavy quality.\nDouble bed size. Each....$6.75, $8.75\nXmas Gifts for Kiddies\n\u2014And ones that will sure\nto be appreciated, too; for\nwhat youngster does not\nnot like to be well dressed ?\nERMINE CHOKERS, with\nfeet  and  tail  complete,\nat ' $7.50\nSQUIRREL CHOKER,\nhead,    feet    and    tail.\nPrice $12.95\nWHITE OR BROWN\nCARACAL CHOKER,\nat   $5.95\nFOR THE GROWN-UPS\nFur Pieces in thc larger\nvtV\u00abURAL AUSTRALIAN OPOSSUM CHOKER, head? feet and tail ..$17.50\nKITT FOX CHOKER, in two colors, brpwn or grey; complete with head, feet and\ntad $19.50\nBROWN WOLF CHOKER, complete animal shape  $32.50\nSTONE   MARTEN   CHOKER,   complete  animal shape  $45.00\nMINK CHOKERS       .     $19.50\nIN THE BETTER CLASS OF FURS we can show you an assortment, at prices\nfrom, each  $45.00 to $125.00\nAll these are made  in our own factory.\nSmart\nS 1 i p p ers,\nsuitable   for\nparties   and\nevening\nwear,    in\nSuede,   Pat-\ne n t   and\nBlack    Kid.\nt Just in time\n! for the festive  season,\ntoo, as they make a very acceptable gift.\nLadies' Patent Gore Pumps, with black\nSuede inseit; covered Cuban heel.\nPair  v...$9.50\nLadies' Grey and Brown Suede' Strap\nSlippers, smart cut-out patterns; covered Spanish heel.   Pair  $7.75\nBlack Suede, 1-Bar, 2-Button Slippers;\nleather heel.    Pair  $7.75\nLadies' Black Kid 1-Bar Slipper, military\nheel; very soft and flexible; good easy\nfitting.    Pair  ...$7.75\nLadies' Patent Sandal Slippers, with\nstraps; either Spanish or Cuban heel.\nPair  ..$7.75\nDistinction to the Wearer\n\u2014Clothing that gives the wearer full value in length of service for every\ndollar expended. '\nGive yourself a Christmas Gift oi a new Suit.\nMen's Overcoats\nALL-WOOL WINTER OVERCOATS, in new shades of fawn,\nbrown and navy, with check reverse lining; double breasted,\nthree-piece, belt style; Raglan\nor set-in shoulders; perfect fitting. At $27.50, $32.50,\n!?35.00 and  $37.50.\nA FEW MEN'S DOUBLE-\nBREASTED OVERCOATS, in\ngrey and brown shades; sizes\n86, 40 and 42 only. Special\ndealing price  $21.00\nMen's Suits\nALL - WOOL GUARANTEED\nENGLISH WORSTED SUITS,\nin plain or herringbone stripes;\ngrevs, browns or navy; very\nrtylish, and the most serviceable cloth for hard wear; well\nlailoied, with best quality linings.\nyour money refunded.\nPrices $32.50, $35.00, $37.50.\nGuaranteed satisfaction\nButw^ae (Sampans\nQ INCORPORATED   **V 2**\u00bb  MAY   1070 J **V\n Tarre T.'wht\n\"THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 8, 1924\n\u2022m\nThe Atk OLD RESIDENT\nOFTHESLOCAN\nDIES IN NELSON\nHal In iptex-lt a variety of useful\ndomeatic articles nuitahle for Christ-\nma* prenflnts to the young wife- or\nmatron: Aluminum Iton.itcr*'. Perco-\nlatnni, Kettles, etc.; some Sllk-and-\nWfcol Hosiery, or just Wool; Ax-minster and Wilton Hugs; Furniture,\nKtbvwt. Rnngcn, ninnkft**, Comfort- [\nera.     All  at   rock-bottom   prlcca.\n'   J. W. HOLMES\nPhone 534.. 606 Vtrnon Street.\nYou're Interested\n\"in Gifts\nJewelry Is the Best Gift\nIt In It wonderful gift, mul\nlasts; so that years afterwards\none ran still wear and look\nback with ptaUMt memories\nen  It.\nWe have stocked up a lot of\ntnlcn, new, Kuitatde gifts this\nyear, nt reason:* Me prices, and\nwe would liko ynu to come in\nand see nil the  nice things.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nJEWELER and OPTOMETRIST\nSHE 'CAME OUT' IN TORONTO\nNELSON LAUNORY, VERNON\nST., WEDNESDAY,   DEC.  10,\n1&4\u20142   O'CLOCK   SHARP\nHave been favored with in-\n\u2666rucUom* from Mrs. Nipou lo\n\u00ab<ell at pu'nlie miction her fur-\n-n-rur*** ard effects, consisting\n*\": White enn:nei beds, dressers,\n.%*>!\u2022% con--!*, tar-re and small\nvi;.-*\u25a0*, linoleup.*, mlrrorn, dining\nI Mrs, extension table targe\n\u25a0nd Kinail tables, scales, a lot\n'jf new blnnkets, crockery.\nnas^ci'ger car, 30 norm'-power,\n.kitchen utensils: a White five-\n'mssenger car, 3ft horso-prnvor.\nin first-class condition, and one\nwhite Spitz pup, 1 year old\nJanuary.\nOn   view   mornim**'   of   sale.\nTERMS\u2014CASH\nW. CUTLER,\nAuctioneer.\nWilliam Crebbin Fails to\nRally From a Severe\nOperation\nAnother old-timer of the district\npassed at the Kootenay Lake General hospital yesterday morning at\n3:30 o'clock in the per\nson of William Crebbin of Rloc;in\nPark. Mr. Crebbin was admitted to\nthe hospital on Tuesday lost where\nlie underwent a severe operation.\n,Mr. Crehbin was \"G years of age\nand came to Nelson 25 years ago\nfrom Peterboro, After a residence\nof about three years here he moved\nto Klocan rack, where he has a\nranch, nnd where he haa resided\neven   since.\nHe was born in London, Kn gland,\non March 31, 184 8, and besides bil\nwidow he leaves three daughters\nfour brothers and two s stern. His\ndiuiKbters are Miss Pearl Crebbin,\nMrs. Walter Dam of Klocan-Park\nand Mrs. C. It. Jones of Trail.. His\nbrothers are: John C. Crebbin of\nCleveland, Ohio; T. C. Trebbin of\nDanbury. Neb., fl. Crebbin of Vancouver; J;imes Crebbin of London,\nBngland, His s sters are Miss Annie\nOf London, KngJand, and Mis. Joyce,\nwho also  resides  in   Kngland.\nThe funeral will be held thll\nmorning. ,\nMAN NEVER WORTH\nONLY   A   MILLION\nB.C  PLUMBING  &\nHEATING  CO.\nAgents   for\nALBERTA   CLAY    PRODUCTS\n6EWERPIPE end  DRAINTILE\nP.rinff   us  your   Coupons   for   the\nSUNLIGHT SOAP DEAL\nInvest   40c.     Save   20c.\nFLEMING'S STORE.\nFAIRVIEW.\nA. Balcom\nDEALER    IN   COAL    AND   WOOD\nA trial order for Bcfanton Lump\nCoal will convince you of its superiority, t'lean, bright and l^iini*. No\nclinkers.      Real   value.     PHONE   15\nMaterial  Valuations  Deny\nChrist's   Teaching,   Says\nArchdeacon\n\"What .lesiiH Christ sitys is What\na man pans of ihe world\u2014that\nmany-mean ing world \u2014 is no indication whatever of a man's real\nwealth,\" said Archdeacon Fred H.\nGraham at t-'t. Saviour's church last\nnight, in the third nf a series of\nSunday evetliWE \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0rnions dealing with\nthe teaching of Chriat as Hi ihe true\nvalues oi' Ife, villi special reference  to  present  conditions.\nArchdeacon Graham's subject last\nniphi \\\\as, i ti particular, \"Christ's\nLife die Standard of Human Worth,\"\nand In* preached, as before, from\nthe text \"For what shall ii profit a\nman lu gain the whole world and loa\nliis   own   sou!'.'\"\n\"Swollen revenue and material\nsuccess may mean a shrunken soul\nand dwarfed and slnivallel spirt.\" he\nnnld.      \"Man';-    wealth    In    ihe    final\nCanadian Government Trying: to Get Them; Need\nSpecial Inducements\nST. JOHN, N.B., Dec- 7.\u2014Joseph\nDyk of Winnipeg, snecial Canadian of*\nfielal for the department of Immigration, arrived here yesterday morning\nfrom Liverpool, after spending three\nmonths in Poland investigating the\nr.nssihilities of immigration of Ukrainian families to Canada. He announced that there are 10,00(1 families,\nskilled In agriculture, and with sufficient money to make a good start,\nica.dy to corn** to Canada to nettle.\nHowever, he points out that In order\nto   secure   them   special   efforts   will\nhave   to   be   made,   as  other   countries\narc  offering   Inducements  to  them.\nVisits  Three  Bundrtd  Towns\nMr. Dyk visited over 300 towns and\nvillages, and had interviews with over\n400 mayors, priests and other leading\nUkrainians. He found that the Canadian government will have no difficulty in getting thousands of families\nto migrate here, due to lack of political stability in Poland, and high taxation, which Is made necessary to maintain the present monetary value of\ntheir unit. The families who will come\nto the Dominion ore well fixed financially, and despite the hard times prevailing in their own country were able\nto  make   money  by  tilling the  soil.\nLikeable\nShirts\nSome gifts are accepted,\nothers adopted, and some become favorites.\nThese are shirts he will\ntake to his bosom.\nEnglish Broadcloths, plain colors, $3.25 to $5.50\nEnglish Woven Stripes, $2.25 to $3.50\nBroadcloths, with fancy Silk stripes, $4.00 to $5.00   4\nMAIL  ORDERS\nCAREFULLY FILLED.      i\nCHARGES PREPAID.\nMISS  PERSIS SEAGRAM\nDaughter of  Mr   ana  Mrs.  Norman  Seagram,  whose coming-out  ball\nin   the  King BS-wara  hotel, Toronto,   wu   ono   of  tho smartest  events   of\nM,e current naura there.   WlM Boat\nracing stithlo.\nni's father Is the owner of n famous\nJOHNSTON!\nPRESIDENT OF\nTRAVELERS\nAnnual Election Takes\nPlace at Regular Monthly\nMeeting Orchestra Welcomed\nHorry   A.   Johns'\nrcsldelit   of   the   .\nin\nnln\nih\nhe\nli\n,'NI1\nanilities.      Sue!'\nJesus   Christ.\nNo     Mini\n\"Such ii  view\nmonly  aeeepte,\nth\ncap-\nhinel\nteaching   ofl vv.    11.    Bamfo\nue\nBut\nWorth     Million\not   man s\ntlfleatlons\nIt..\nheld\n,nth\u00bb\nuntested\nin,;\nurn\nI lit:,\nnli far\n\u25a0niliioit\nworth.\nof  the\ntinnity.\n\"1\nvalue  i,\ntho rigl\nlo\nMl i\n11,\n11,1    |\u201e\n.'I    Ik\n!,.'.'. .1. I.i\niiii.l J. T.\nv   The   del\nCharles  B\n'fie    ill, '\"I\ncommittee\n[\u2022rev lout\nllie    Ti'.iv\n\u25a0resident,  W\nA.   Johnst,\nit ' ficrY.arts\n. Jack .Mill\n...   I',   lletlll\nofflci\nIS,   Hi,nil','\n,1'fi,\nI trihut,\nnbc\nselections   which\nsal,I   1\nworth\ni,n,l if\nIlls       Ol\nthai :,\nnothing\n,1   value\nlife\ning, ther nr\nred iv 111 th\nhuman sou!\n,.,i uml lose\nis made n I for\nlie has liar- I nnd\nless    ,,!'    pot-I\n.in;\nVisiting Cards\nFor   Ladies   or\nGentlemen\nWe can give you\nprompt delivery of perianal visiting cards\nHighest grade printing\n\u25a0 nrl materials\nThe Dajly New*\nQuality   Printer*\nNELSON.   B    C,\n<-(   Dyfliig\na--  we  ure\nlived    hk*\ntered   Iii\nl -i Be.\nThe archdeacon paid In\nf-iclenng specially Christ'*\nf-tnndard of human lir*'.\nlife, and that everything\neveryth ng musl he measu;\nmeasured by that lift'.\nPerfect  I.i\\1njr ami   IVrfi\n\"He was in all points\nsaid the prwicht-r. \"He\nlife atJ a man, so thnt in the body\nof man an examplo ol perfect living and perfect dy ng might he Bet\nbefore men. And the life of .losim\nChrist lived on a common plan.' is\nthe most trenchant and searching\ndeclaration of human life revealed\nto ua. it 1b the world's greatest miracle,\" .\nThe \u00a7tandard*V>f human life, llie\nspeaker said. Was not in looking\nback to the past, but tho Imikingt'\nforward to tiie possitvllties of lhe\nfuture, and finding theW possibilities\nillustrated in thc fullness of truth\nin   the   1 fe  of  Jesus  Christ.\n\u25a0   MONTREAL   DENTIST   DIES\nMONTREAU Dec. 7.\u2014Dr. James\nSeattle Morrison, prominent dentist.\nand father of Dr. 1\u00bb. W. Morrison,\nWinnipeg,  died   here   today.\nfurnbshed  mucl\nOne  oe w  mei\nthe  club,   thul\nKerr,    who   ha;\nbehalf\n\u2022nek bv\nHied   bU!\nCentral\n\u25a0,1 intn\nu.v. .!.\no'apltol\nSLAYS THREE,\nWOUNDS FIVE,\nIWOHTftLY?\nIn Fifteen Years Half of\nthe Civil Service Will Be\nNative\nSOtTTHRRND. In.l., Dec. 7. \u2014 With\npolice and a sheriff's posae still\nRearching for the accomplice of Ray-\nnanid Mosley, who held up n soft\nrlrinlc emporium here yesterday afternoon, wounding five and killing two in\nu desperate effort to escape, two additional deaths a re expected tonight.\nStanley PolnJarssk, aged &j. and C. L.\nCamp, aged 70, farmers, two of the\nyouthful gunman's victims, are reported near death.\nPolice were unable to question\nMosley much today as the bandit was\n-iii! in a dazed condition, the result\nni beinB hit ever the head with a ham*\nin.r i>v a roadworker 10 miles west of\nM,!i I hit. ad. lb* had fled there with\n[.is companions In a commandeered\nautomobile and shot two more persons,\ni ne  nf  whom  died  shortly after.\n1'riiseeator Frank Cough!in announced\ntonight he would aslc for a special\ncession of the grand jury tomorrow to\n'ndict Mosley f<>r first degree murder.\nHe said tiiiit if the case came up before the first of the year, and before\nthe end of his administration of the\noffice, he would demand the electric\nchair  fur Mosley.\nGirl Eats Raisins;\nThen Drinks Liquid;\nShe Is Asphyxiated\nWINNIPEG, Dto. 7. \u2014 fltriekan\nwhll\u00bb attending a party early\nSaturday uiovniwr, Mary Holllday,\nSO years old, died before medical\naid could be secured, and the pott\nmortem examination, today disclosed on* of the strangest oasee\nln the medical annals of the city.\nSoring the evening the girl had\neaten a large quantity of raisins\nof the Christmas variety, and\nliquid she had drunk at the same\ntime had caused fermentation in\nthe stomach, resulting* in death by\nasphyxiation.\nSETTELL JAUNTY\nIN PENITENTIARY\nKINGSTON, Ont., Dec. 7.\u2014E. Clarence Bettell, former secretary to Sir\nAdam Beck, entered the penitentiary\nyesterday afternoon to servo his three\nyears for attempted theft. He was\nas jaunty as ever.\nNelson News of the Day\nThe Grill Is Open. (7479)\nPersonal Christmas, greeting cards\nprinted with your own name and\n--reeting. reasonable prices and beautiful curds. The Daily News Printing  department. (7299)\nonied  1\nRuggf\n. i at   the\n\"  ;,?;  UH   -the   afterno\nnd   that I passed   to\n\u00abus(    he .{committees.\nhy that I\nU-i!\nKii\nPASSU!\nIn Two Days Over Two\nHundred Pass City for\nBrilliant\n\u2022  \u2022 Nelson,   B.C.,   Nov.   M,   1924.\nDear  Sin  or  Mmjtim:\nMr. R. Wallace nod   Mr. W.  Tl.    McOanillisli   liavc   s,'\\'or,',l   tlnir\n\u25a0 onnoction   with   us   from   December  1.\nMr.   B.   BlaokM'Pll   will   haiolle   our   delivery   hereafter,   and   will\nk'lve   you   the   aame   prompt   ferv ice u in  the  past.\nAny   little   favors   riven    liitn   to   help   him   get   acquainted   with\nthe   work   will   he   mttrh   uppreria ted   by us.\nKOOTENAY  STEAM  LAUNDRY.\nPer C.  A.   LARSON.\nShould    the    driver    by   chance\nmiss calling, kindly telephone 128,\nEFFICIENT   AND   RELIABLE   SERVICE!\nOne  hundred  t\nhers  passed   thr,\nday nii'nt   front\nwan   points,    in.\npassed   through\nN, Ison ne s\nrtn and Paskn\n.i   nUnl. ;.,\nM.I\nrleeti,\n,,ii\ntli,\n>tober 29.\n!\u201e,r customs ,-\nuntil Blx week:\ndeath of Verl:\nHu,I a inn,], I\nthe elections tl\ncf Verigin.\nrowd  will   l\u201e\nKILLER   OF   KIECE3\nACtAIN    KliKAHDEO\nCOLEMAN\nQuick-Lit? and Lanterns\nMake  and  burn  common  gasoline.\nNo amoky chimney to wash.\nNo greasy wick to trim.\nNo dust\u2014no soot\u2014no odor.\nJust the Thing for the Rancher\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON. B.C.\nRETAIL\nPRKTORITTOS, Si:., Dec.\nHarry f* Williams again app'\nHi,- ctty police conn \\\ncharged with Ihe double tminl, i\nhalf-nieces, Cynthia and Keni\nler, aa.-! II nnd 10, ren>ectlt\nI',,si, tvilt,'. Verk ceunty, and\nmanded until Wednaeday, when\nliter   remanded   fnr    prel\n\u25a0ed   i\nerrtn)\nof his\nfurther remanded   t\nimlnatjon jbn  Pecembt\nii;\nDance Programs\nProgram Pencils\nDance Invitations\nWe can supply high\nquality materials and\nworkmanship at reasonable prices.\nc\nThe Daily News\nQuality Printers\nNEL80N, B. C.\nCommunist 'Prisons'\nParade Berlin as\nElection Propaganda\nBERLIN, D\u00abc. 7.\u2014The Communists, Saturday, gav* a realistic\ntouch to their campaign in Berlin\nhy sending motor trucks throughout tiisj citv flying red flags and\nhearing miniature prisons in which\nwere men and women looking out\nthvomjh haired windows. Th*\nprisens bore slo-rana urging working-men to vote to \"free their\nhrotheis and insure freedom of\nspeech.\"\nJewelers Hold\nGrab Bag Sales,\nArrive in Court\nwnrvHU, Dec. 7. \u2014 Tha prac-\ndi' iim rclianiH holding grnb bap\nIn which priz'-H are hithlon and\niffpp are Bold for $1, torntfl a\ni in for thr courts, following raids\n\u25a0 llir-- nn two jewelry stores, and\nvs ni\" ri> n duel iii k n K'lnte of\nThr -H'ti.m was taken on the\nInint of a number of merchants.\nDoctor Held for\nDeath of a Girl\nWard of Society\nsimcui:, ont, ttec. 7.\u2014Dr. O. O. C.\nriraKwi. medical officer of health for\nSimcoe, was arrested yesterday on a\nmnns-iaughter charge aa a development\nin Hi\" investigation Of tbe death of\nl9-yeaj--old Mildred Gould, a ward of\nN'H-r Ik County Children's Aid society.\nHe waa admitted to bail of 132,000,\nBlanchard Finds\nFamily Prominent\nin the Wires\nAVI i\n\/lew\nTENDERS   WANTED\nThe City of Nelson invites offers\nfor the purchase of a Ourtiey Oxford\nthree sectional steam boiler which can\nseen at lh.' Kite hall. Uiris should\nbe in by S o'eloek p.m., Monday, thc\nih Instant. The highest or any' offer\nnot necessarily accepted. (7414)\n(7479)\nThe Grill Is Open.\nRESERVE   DECEMBER   23rd   for   a\nreal Christmas concert at Trinity\nMetttftdlHt Church. Don't i'm-Ret.\nDECEMBER   33rd. (7495)\nBridge, Whist and Dance nt Memorial Hail, Wednesday, December 10,\nS   p.m.     Admission   Hit  cents.     Conie.\n(7493)\n\u00bbftM\u00bb9)\u00bb^>i\u00bb\u00bb)\u00bb)\u00bb>F^)Mr*MMHMH\u00bb)3|\nSpinal    Adjustn\nChiropractor.\nmts    for\nLumbago.\n(7499)\nShow   your   pen entity   hy   attending\nHospital   Blanket   Fund   Tea.     Decern*\nber   x. (7500)\nSpecial meeting of Pythian Kisiers In\nKl'. Hall tonight at 7:3n. Practice of\ndegree   staff   and   officers. (7503)\nThe Vanity Beauty T'arlor will be\nopen for business Monday, December\n15th, in the Green Block. Ward St..\nInstead   of   the   Annable   Block.-     (7504)\nDnuKbters and Maids of England\nmeet    tonight   nt    7:45.      Election    of\nofficers. (7505)\nThe funeral of the late Neil McKechnie will take place from Robertson's Undertaking Fartors todav at\n3  o'clock, (7506)\nThe funeral of ibe late William\nCreobtn of Siocan Park will take place\nfrom Robertson's Undertaking Parlors\ntoday   at   11   o'clock. (7507)\nKootenay Lodge No, ]fi, T.O.O.F.,\nregular meeting tonight. .Second degree  7:30 sharp,   tu  lei   candidate  awav\nLEGAL NOTICES\nW, I:. Blanchard of Fair-\nifd his Dally News Saturday\nmorning he found his family largely represented. On the front page\nwas ii picture of a brother, Coun\ncillor. II. a. Rlnnchard of Sturgeon\nKails, Ont., and on page three was\nh short account of the superannuation of a brother-in-law at A'nncon-\nver.\nCouncillor lilanchard wns photographed with the chief of police\nond another councillor of the town\nof Sturgeon Kalis, as the only member of the council to vote against\nthe resolution making thc northern\nOntario town \"wet,\" In spite of the\nOntario  Temperance   act.\nJames lilack, Mr. Blanchard's\nbrothei-in-law, who was retiring\nfrom t ho posit ion of Canadian Pa-\nrtffc railway freight claims agent,\nwas, according to Saturday's paper,\npresented with a gold watch on his\nretirement.\nj     Por  the   week  the  American   legion\nconvened in Bt. Paul, Minn., the city's\n. bank clearings Increased $4,000,000,\nLAND REGISTRY  ACT\n(Section 160)\nIN THE MATTER o7nn undivided   *i\ninterest,    in   all    minerals    precious\nand   base   (save   coal   and   petroleum)   in   or   under   T,ot   2:'3B,   '\u25a0Hillside\"     Mineral     Claim.     Group     1.\nKootenay   District   AND   an    undl-\ndlvlded   !i   interest  In  all   minerals\nprectnu***   and   baas   (save   coal   and\npetroleum)   in   or   under   Lot   22.18\n'Hillside\"  Mineral  Claim.   Group  I.\nKootenay District:\nPROOF   HAVING   BEEN   FILED   In\nmy   office   of   the   loss   of   two   Certificates    of    Title    Nos.    19S5-K    to    the\nabove-mentioned   lands   in    the   name\not Edmund James Palmer and John C.\nHooker   respectively,   and   bearing   date\nthe 8th of June, 1899,\nI HEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my\nintention at the eviration of one\ncalendar month from the first publication hereof to issue to the said\nEdmund James Palmer and John C.\nHooker respectively provisional Certificates of Title in lieu of such lost\nCertlfcatea of Title. Any person having any information wfth reference\nto stub lost Certificates of Title Is\nrt quested to communicate with the\nundersigned.\nDATED at tho Land Registry Office, Nelson. HC, thla 12th day of\nNovemher,    A.D.,    1934.\nA.   W.   IDIENS,   Registrar.\nDate   of   first   publication,    Novem-\n___ 17. 1924. (714\u00ab)\n$10.00 Prize\nfor a Heading\nYou Can Win It\nThe Daily News wants a new heading for\n\"Money at Work,\" a valuable feature which\nappears every day at the bottom of the first\ncolumn of the market page.\nOriginally this feature dealt almost entirely\nwith the investment of money Now it has\nbeen broadened in its scope, and touches upon\nmany 'matters of household, business and\nfinancial interest.\nWe want a title which will cover the feature in all its broader aspects.\nRead it daily for a week or so, and then\nsend in your suggestion, using the coupon\nbelow. You may send as many suggestions\nas you like.\nAll suggestions must be mailed not later\nthan December 10. The prize winner will be\nannounced in our issue of Monday, December 15.\nThe competition is open to all, excepting^\nmembers of The'Daily News staff. The decision of the editor will be final. If more than\none person suggests the name chosen for the\nprize, the amount will be divided equally.\nCOUPON\nMy suggestion   is\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS\nNELSON,  B.C.\nSubscription rate by mail outside  Nelson, 60 cents l month,\n$6.00 a  year.    By carrier or mail   in   Nelson, 25c \u2022 week.\nCORPORATION OF THE  OITT Or\nSLOCAN\nNotice Is hereby given that the\nCourt of ItevlHion for tho purpose of\nrevising anu correcting the Voters'\nList for the City of siocan and Siocan\nSchool District will be held In the\nCity Hall, siocan. B.C., on Wednesday. December 10th 192*. Rt 7:30 p. m.\nDated at Siocan City, thla 26th day\nof November, 1924.\nE.  GRAHAM.\n(?3\u00ab7)   city  Clerk.\nTONIGHT\nJfn'.ttre\nlf\\teriainme>*it\nTONIGHT\njMh**V|^s'\nHMM V MttMllUI ftUil UN\n' James t\n* \u2022Kopvcnoaj   ,\nRIORMC00KZ\nLOUI\u00ab DflESttR\n.MTHim wmeuns.\nvnaiiuiarawr\nQQammoinagkto&\nIF IT'S Cruze-directed, it's a good picture. And Cruze never turned out a\nmore soulful, heart-winning drama than\nthis one of White Way lights and shadows.\nAnd the cast!   Have you ever seen a\nbetter one?\nShort Features\nComedy, 'RENO OR BUST'\nPathe News \"*\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_1924_12_08","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\/1.0402103","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":"1924-12-08 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":"1924-12-08 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]. 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