{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2021-12-01","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1934-11-29","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404795\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" 1934 Production of Gold in\nB.C. Will Be a Record\n\u2014Pa_e Nine\n-\"\"\"\nH^H\n|^HF\nZ~M*m* Bails\nCo-Operation Solves Labor\nProblem Says Blaylock\n\u2014\u25a0 Pa_e Two\nVOLUMI U\n______________________________\u25a0_______\u25a0_________________________________\u25a0\nFIVI CENTS A COPV\nNUMBS!  MT\nGERMANY ASKED ABOLISH ITS SECRECY\n*       ************************* * *       *\nBRITAIN ACTS TO EASE FEARS OF WAR\nSHIP TOSSING\nINTYPHQONIS\nSEEKING HELP\nOne Boiler Is Out of\nCommission; \"Looks\nBad\" Is Message\n\"PLEASE STAND BY\"\nCALL OVER ETHER\nii\nForty Men Aboard the\nShip Which Drifts\nOut of Control\nMANILA, Nov. 29 (Thundty)\n(AP).\u2014Caught In t typhoon tuch\nti hu Itthid thli pirt of tht\nworld recently, the Philippine!-\nAmerlctn freighter New York\nflethed in 808 call for help\ntodty. The thlp cirrlei t crew of\nabout 40 men.\nThe menage uld:\n\"Ont boiler dlubled. Look!\nbtd.   Pleue ttend by.\"\nA liter menage from the New\nYork uld ihe wu drifting In\ntht lee of the ihore netr San\nBerntrdlno itrtlti, it the louth-\neutern end of Luxon Iiland, on\nwhich Manila li loctted.\nThe New York, t vetitl of 34SS\nnet torn, commmded by Cipttln\nBoe, ulied from Manila November 23, hetded for San Frtnclico,\nCalif-, and Portltnd, Ore. She\nwu en route to the imall port ef\nTobtco, nur Ltgupl, to ttke\naboard a cargo of copra when the\ntyphoon itruck.\nTht weather bureeu here reported wlndi of more thtn 75\nmllee in hour velocity In the III-\nindl of Samar and Leyte, fori-\nciitlno that the atorm would put\nto thi touth of Minllt.\nJim\n\u25a0))\nSchofield Honored at Ceremony\nUNVQL CAIRN\nAND PLAQUE AT\nROYAL COUPLE ARE WED TODAY\nLondon Is Bedecked in Finery for Wedding of the Duke and His\nPrincess; 10,000 Police Keep Order\nSTREET CAR IS\nHOISTED OVER\nViolence Flares in\nLos Angeles Car\nStrike\nLOS ANGELES. Nov. 38 (API\u2014\nWhile a telegraphic appeal waa on\nIti wiy to preildent Roosevelt from\nunion leaden tn the five day old\nitreet ctr itrlke, the nitlonil relatione board today ordered P. A. Don-\noghue, weat cout regional super,\nvisor, to come here it onoe from\nSeattle In in effort to tettle the\nitrlke.\nMeanwhile, violence tgiln flared\nu t group of approximately 50 men\ntt the peak rush hour late today\noverturned a atreet car it Hoover\nitreet and Vernon avenue in the\nlouthweeet pirt of the city, blocking\ntraffic for aome time. No one was\nburt, u the strikers forced crew\ntnd passengers to leave the car before upsetting It,\nOther scattered reporte of violence\nwere answered by polloe, but Uttle\nother damage wu dom and no one\nInjured.\nDonoghut Is scheduled to arrive by\nplane early tomorrow.\nThe Duke of Kent.\nDESTROYERS COLLIDE\nBAN DIEGO. Calif.. Nov. 38 (API \u2014\nA collision lut night between the\ndestroyers Rubin James and Du\nPont, botb baaed here, 25 mllu otf\nPoint Looa, wu reported today when\nthe veaael! irrlved ln port under\ntheir own power. No oni wu Injured.\nRt Rev. John Hugh MacDonald, in a Solemn\nService, Is Installed Bishop of Victoria\nVICTORIA, Nov. 28 (CP) .-Solemn Installation of Right Rev. John\nHugh MacDonald, D.D., ai tenth\nblahop of Victoria took place to-\nniffht ln St Andrew'! Cathedral, the\nedifice being crowded with clergy,\ncivic and provincial government\ndlgnlttriet and repreientative! of\nthe army tnd navy ai well ai hun-\n\u25a0IIHOP OF VICTORIA\ndredi of parishioners.\nThe new prelate, who succeed?\nBiihop G. Murray, now of Saskatoon, was received at the door of\nthe cathedral by Rev. Father Ronald\nBeaton, administrator of the diocese,\nand was conducted to the high altar,\nwhere special prayers on behalf of\nthe bishop were recited and tbe\nbulls of appointment were read.\nThe bishop wai then led to the\nthrone where clergy of the diocese\npaid their homage, following which\nMost Rev. William Duke, archbishop\nof Vancouver, delivered a sermon\nBishop MacDonald addressed the\ncongregation and imparted an indulgence of 90 days to all present. On\nhia return to the high altar, the\nAntlphon and prayer of St. Andrew,\npatron laint of the cathedral, were\naung.\nThe ceremony concluded with his\nlordship's episcopal blessing md the\nbenediction of the blessed sacrament.\nOn Bishop MicDomld'i trrlval\ntoday he was tendered a formal\nwelcome by Mayor David Leemlng\nof Victoria and Hon. John Hart,\nBritish Columbia minister of finance.\nLater he wai the guest of honor\nat dinner, the guests including:\nArchbishop Duke: Most Rev. H. J.\nO'Leary, archbishop of Edmonton;\nRt. Rev. P. J. Monahan, bishop of\nCalgary; Rt. Rev. J. A. Melamon,\nbishop of Gravelburg, Saik.; Rt.\nRev. E. Bunoz, biihop of Prince\nRupert; Rt. Rev. J. O'Shaughnessy,\nbishop of Seattle; and Rev. Father\nMclsaac of Sydney, N.S\nMarkets at\na Glance\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Induitrial  itocki  Irregularly  higher.\nToronto Mlnei\u2014Higher.\nNew York \u2014 Stoeki cloud\nhigher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheit un tt to tk.\nToronto\u2014Bacon hoga off cir\ndown 15 cents to 7.85.\nLondon\u2014Bir illver unchtnged: copper lower; tin, lead ind\nnine higher.\nNew Tork\u2014Bar allver and tin\nhigher; lead and alnc unchanged.\nMontreal \u2014 December illver\nlower.\nNew York\u2014Cotton, rubber tnd\n\u2022ugir higher:  coffee lower.\nNew York \u2014 Canadian dollir\ndown V, to 1.031',.\nSOVIET AMBASSADOR ON\nWAY TO WASHINGTON\nMOSCOW. No.-. 38 (AP)\u2014Alexmder Troyanovsky, Soviet imbassador\nto Wtihlngton, left on the triniil-\nberlin express tonight enroute to\nAmerica by wiy of Japan ind Honolulu.\n*-gi-..*jr'*;*,\"'.\n*mnil 4 mL%- - \u2014 <\u2014 \u2014\nBy BURDETTE T. JOHN*\n(Copyright,  1934,  by the\nAuoclated Pren)\nLONDON, Nov. 28\u2014London, bedecked in all its finery\nfor the marriage tomorrow\nof the Duke of Kent and Princess Marina, cocked apprehensive eyes at the weatherman's forecast that fog might\nmar the decade's most brilliant social event.\nWith the capital in itn most\nfestive mood since Londoners\nianced in the streets at the\n-signing of the armistice,\n,veather officials who furn-\nshed periodic reports\nhroughout the day predicted\n'local fog early but only mist\nluring the greater part of the\nlay.\"\nHowever, there wai no idea of\nletting the weather Interfere with\nthe preciie schedule of the gorgeous\npageantry of tht wedding of the\nKlng'i fourth ion and Princeii Marina.\nCHEERED AT THEATER\nThe Duke of Kent tnd Prlnceu\n(Continued en Pitt Ten)\nPHEASANTS ON\n800-Pound Wedding\nCake Will Be Cut\nNear Lunch Time\nLONDON. Mov. 28 (AP)-Ctke will\nbe urved for bretkfut it Buckingham pilaoe tomorrow.\nIt will be wedding cake, the 800-\npound beauty baked ln Scotland\nfor thl marrlige of the Duke of\nKent ind princess Mirlnt.\nUnless precedent ll shattered\u2014and\nthe roytl family li llttlt addicted\nto shattering precedent\u2014the wedding breakfast menu will read clear\nsoup, fish, limb cutlets, green peas,\npotatoes, hot or cold rout chicken,\nham tnd tongue, uied, trult lnd\niweet wtfen, coffee tnd wedding\ncike.\nPheuanta ahot by the king hlmulf and South African ttriwberrlei\nwill be idded dtUcaclea.\nThl Bretkfut wlll be urved immediately after the aecond wedding\nceremony of the diy. the Oreek orth-\ndoi rites it Buckingham palace. The\nhour wlll be nearer lunch time tbtn\nbreakfast, for the flrat aervlce it\nWestminster Abbey il eet for 11 a.m.\nImmediately tfter the breikfist\nthi bride tnd bridegroom wlll dash\noff to a railroad itatlon enroute to\nt country eitite it Himley for the\nflret pirt of their honeymoon.\nGRAVE CHARGES\nMADE BY YUGOS\nGENEVA.   Nov.   28   (API\u2014A  71-\nPMe memorandum lorn-ill** charging the Hungarian government\nwith complicity In the aisuslna-\ntlon of King Alexander at Marseille lait month was delivered In\nthe Letgue of Nations todiy by\nM. M. Fetich, the Yugoelav dele-\nlite.\nLetgut observer! decltred the\nBelgrade protut exceedingly grave\nbemuse lt spoke of th! direct\nresponsibility of the Budapest government, whereu Yugoslavia's original letter to the League council\nreferred only to Hungtrltn tuth-\norltles.\nNAVAL AFFAIRS\nIN BACKGROUND\nLONDON, Nov. 38 (CP Cable).\u2014\nThe defence debate ln parliament\nand the royil wedding tomorrow\nahoved tb! falling trl-power naval\nconversations Into the btckground\ntoday wltb the likelihood of no\nfurther movei for some dtyt\nHas Term Reduced\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 28 (CP)\u2014A\nreduction of one yetr on t five-year\nsentence has been granted to Thomai Andrew Duncan, 32-year-old marine engineer, by the court of 'ep-\npetl. The court refused to Interfere\nwith hli conviction September 14\nbefore Judge J. N. Harper on t\nchtrge of irraed robbery.\nHis Bride, Princess Marina.\nPEG THE PRICE ON GOODS\nAT FACTORY IS THE URGE\n< linn ii iiiiiiiiim ii > in *\nCHACO WAR INTO\nTHE DECISIVE\nSTAGE?\nBUENOS AIRES, Nov. it-\n(AP)\u2014Overthrow of the Bolivian government today and\noperation! of the Bolivian and\nParaguayan armies in the Chaco\nBoreal tonight led neutral observers to express the opinion\nthe Chaco war has entered its\ndecisive stage.\nNeutral observer! were agreed\nthat the odds favored Paraguay\nafter the two and a half years\nof fighting which has cost upward ot 80,000 casualties.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:ii\nFRANCE GRANTED\nEXPORT QUOTA\nBUDAPEST. Not. 18 (AP)\u2014 Hepre-\nuntatlvei ot ilx wheit exporting\ncountrlei meeting bin todiy decided to grant Prance in export\nquoti for 1934-38, provided their\nrespective government approve.\nDrift of the agreement, which\nUnited States delegate! described u\n\"very complicated.\" wu unt to the\nseven government!, Including France,\nIor approval.\nWould Eliminate Cuts in Price\nDemanded by Chain Sfbre\nCompetition\nOTTAWA, Nov. 28 (CP)-Pegged'\nprices for foodstuffs, drugs and retail staple! were proposed before\nthe *parliamentanr mass buying\ncommission today by Joseph Crowder, Toronto merchandising investigator. To forestall chain and department stores from forcing down\ngeneral price levels by underselling\n^^^^^^^^. ggeited\nthat manufacturer! and distributors\namong \"themselvei, \"he   suggest)\nNelson Schools\nto Remain Open\nIn in effort to mtkt up iome of\ntht tlmt loit when thi publie\nhetlth btn wti on, Nelson ichool!\nwlll rtmtln open todty. Thunday\nwai declared a publie holldty be-\netutt of the royil wedding in\nEngltnd.\nbe empowered to fix prices for their\ngoods, below which no retailer\ncould cut.\nIn t comprehensive report on\nchain  stores and  their effect on\nGeneral retailers and manufacturer!,\n'rowder, formerly a Vancouver\ndruggist and chain manager, gave\nnumerous examples of ruinous price\ncompetition among mass buyers. In\nrecent years, manufacturers, he said,\nhave been powerless to maintain\ndecent prices for their product! and\nhave been forced to accept the dictates of chain tnd department store\nbuyers.\n8ELL AT COST\nThrough mau buying and man\nadvertising, chain and department\nstores fixed prices for their own\ncompetitors and eventually for the\ntrade as a whole, Crowder said. He\ngave many examples ot drug and\nfood chains telling at t cost or t\nfraction of a cent above, while Independent merchants were unable to\npurchase the same goods at prices\naeveral cents higher.\nAn example of mass buying was\ngiven by Crowder ln the candy trade\nand it! effect traced back to factory\nwages. In April, 1034, National\nGrocers bought a carload of Jelly\nbeans from William Paterson, Ltd..\nof Brandon. Ont., at prices of tv,\nto 9.i cents a pound which wes\n(Continued on Page Ten)\n200 Brave Inclement\nWeather to\nAttend\nFINE TRIBUTE TO\nWILLING WORKER\nBurns Gives Address;\nJack Schofield\nReplies\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov.\" 2\u00bb-Approxl-\nmately 200 citizens of Trail and\nRossland disregarded dirty weather\nand a anowfall to attend the unveiling of the memorial cairn and plaque\nln honor of Jamei H. Schofield,\nex-M.L.A., and the naming of the\nRossland-Trail highway \"Schofield\nhighway\" Wednesday afternoon at\nthe alte of the memorial at the Junction of the Schofield highway and\nWarfield road.\nBundled up snuggly tn robes. Mr.\nSchofield sat on a imall platform\nplaced there for the occasion, in\nsilent recognition of the honor bestowed on nim.\nWhen R. R. Burni, M.L.A.. unveiled the cairn, the bronze plaque\nwaa revealed. It bore tbe following\nInscription:\nnfehofield highway. Thli highway\nIs Medicated to Jamei Harvey Schofield, M.L.A., In recognition of hli\nservices to the province of British\nColumbia during the years 1907 to\n1933, for which period he repreiented thii section of the province\nin the legislative assembly.\"\nMEMORIAL RUGGED\nThe memorial, a huge three-ton\nboulder with a natural smooth 'ace\nWORLD POWERS\nARE INFORMED\nOF THE MOVES\nBaldwin Says Rumor\nGermany Rearming\nIs Exaggerated\nBRITAIN READY\nFOR EMERGENCY\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nChallenges Germany\nReveal Strength to\nEase France\nLONDON, Nov. 28 (CP cable).\u2014\nSir John Simon, fortlgn tecretiry,\nwound up t \"council of itite\" de-\nbite on home defence! In the\nhoun of common! tonight by in-\nnounelng thtt the full content! of\nSUnley Baldwin'! ipeech, urging\nGermany to abandon her policy of\n\u2022ecrecy and Iaolatlon, had been\ndelivered to Germiny, Fnnce,\nItaly and the United Statei with\na full explanation by the fonlgn\nofflct.\nSir John1! innouncement climaxed an all-day debate on Imperial defence. The houu rejected\nan tmendment to the tddreti In\nreply to tht throne ipeech from\nWlniton Churchill, declaring Britain'! defences were entirely In-\ntdequtte, tnd tpproved tht government'! tddreti.\nNO DIFFERENCE\nOF OPINION\nTht foreign etcnttry empho-\nilied there wll no dlfftnnot of\nopinion In Brltiln on tht quutlon\nof defence. There wen no \u00bbdvo>\ncitei of  unilateral  dliimTiamtnfc,\nGerminy etie theroncuabnwnS**\nvoui apprehension in Europe by\ntearing away the veil ot secrecy,\nhelped clear away a grttt deal oi\nsuspicion. Thtt speech bad been\ndelivered to world powers, he itld,\n\"because this Is not an Anglos-German proposition but an European\nand world proposition.'*\nCLEARS SUSPICION\n\"We have thus helped to clear\n(Continued on Page Ten)\n\"LIFEON EARTH AM1STAKE\" SAYS A\nNOTE IFF BY MAN FOUND HANGING\nHUGE WARSHIP\nPARIS, Hov. 98 (AP)\u2014Ptance'a reply* to Italy's navtl challenge wlU\nbe t 83-000-ton battleship corresponding to the two Premier Benito\nMussolini hi! innounced.\nFrancois Pietri. mlnllter of the\nntvy, disclosed thl plan to i secret\nsession of the chamber of deputlei\nntvy committee today.\nMcGEER  NOMINATED\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 28 (CP)--G.\nG. McGeer, M.L.A., was nominated\nofficially today for the poaition of\nmayor of Vancouver for the 1935-36\nterm. Mayor L. D. Taylor entered\nhis papers November 13, seeking\nreelection.\n|ames ]. White, Formerly of\nGrand Forks, Is Found\nDead Near Nelson\nJamei J, White, formerly of\nOrand Forki and Greenwood, but\nrecently of Nelson, wai found\nhanging from the limb of a tree\nabout two miles weit or Nelson\nWednesday morning by Engineer\nI,. YV. Humphrey, who wu taking a freight tnln wnt. Mr.\nHumphrey itopped the tnln tnd\nlater wired back to Nelion from\nSooth Slocan to notify the Canadian Pacific Railway offlclala who\nImmediately got In touch with\nthe provincial police.\nConstable! I. O. H. Lock tod\n(Continued on Ptge Ten)\n\"Baby Face\" Nelson IsForaid Riddled With\nBallets by Roadside Close to Chicago\nVictim of Cuns in Hands of\nMen He Shot the Day\nBefore\nCHICAGO. Nov. J8 JAP).-Thf\ncrime career ot George (Baby Face)\nNelson. 25-year-old Dillinger gangster, ended today If a muddy ditch\nwhere he wu found a victim of\nbullet! fired yesterday by the same\ntwo federal agents who had dlea\nfollowing the Tuesday gun btttle.\nThe body ot the United Stitet\npublic enemy No, 1 wat found\nwrapped in a garish blanket ln a\nculvert on a lonely prairie near\nsuburban Milei Center.\nHis body wai unclothed, and\nstained with blood which had lushed\nfrom 47 bullet wdbhda he luffered\nIn a furious guv battle ln itiburban\nBarrlngton wit* two crack government agents, Samuel P. Cowley and\nHerman E. Hollis.\nThe federal men died apparently\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nFive Spanhlng-New Baby Carriages\nArrive for the Dlonne Quint Babe*\nCALLANDER, Ont., Nov. 28 (CP).\u2014Chrlitmai hasn't come to tho\nDlonne quintuplets, but a little western girl wants one of the quintuplet!\nfor Christmas.\nDr. A. R. Defoe laid today, the tig monthi birthdate of the famoui\nfive, that the girl lives \"well past Edmonton.\" He wouldn't reveal her\nname, but she wrote to the good natured physician and made known\nher wish. She went so far as to name the train and conductor thtt could\nbring one of the babies to her.\nFive fide new biby carriages arrived tt the hospital to help the\nsisters celebrate their birthday. And the babies liked them.\nH\n\t\n\u25a0____\u25a0\n I\nPAM TWO -\n-THE NELION DAILY NEWS. NILION. B.C.-THUR8DAY MORNINO. NOV. ft. 1IS4 \u25a0\nCo-operation Solves Labor Problems Says Blaylock\nC.M.&S.CHIEF\nTELLSOFPLAN\nUSED AT TRAIL\nCommittees Better\nThan Trade\nUnions\n\"BUT YOU MUST\nPUY THE GAME'\nLegislation Is the\nWorst Method,\nHe Says\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 28 (CP).-\nCooperatlon between employen and\nemployee on a bail! fair to both is\nthe only tolutlon of problems of\nInduitrial relatlonibip, S. G. Blaylock of Trail. B.C., president of the\nCanadian lmtitute of Mining tnd\nMetallurgy, declared today In tn\naddren to Britlih Columbit member! of that body.\nUndentindlng and good wlll\nctn bt aehltved through \"coopentlve eommltteei\" rathtr thin\nthrough tht old tyitim of tridei\nunloni, ht uld.\n\"Ctopentlve committee! de not\nmein the lurrenderlng ef either\nthe rlghtt ef tht employer or the\nemployee; but provide thi machinery for une conildintlen of\nthl Idea* of ttch,\" Mr. Blaylock\naald.\n\"I am convinced thtt moit of\nthe detllngi between employer tnd\nemployee todty retult ln leivlng the\npartita rtally further apart and\nmore antagonistic than ever. Thii\nii tlmoit certain to be the remit\nof conference! which tre only arranged when trouble It tctually\nunder wty.\n\"LIOISLATION WORIT\nMETHOD\"\n\"Leglilttlon li thl lut reiort,\nIn my mind, tnd thi viry wont\nmethod of htndling libor problem!. Thttt probltmi ihould bi\ndlicountld befon thiy iriie; and\ndltcuiud whin both pirtlei an\nable to aet nuonibly tnd lm-\npiulontttly.\"\nMr. Bltylock itld hii own com-\nEiny. the Coniolidtted Mining *\nmelting Co., Ltd., hai practiced\nthese ideas for U years. He said\nprofit-sharing bonusei have had to\nbe withdrawn when necessary and\nreinstated when poulble. On the\nwhole, he laid, wagei have been\nvery coniidertbly increued: He told\nthe memberi group Iniurance and\npenaiom have been provided free\nof charge to the worker and pricei\nof inpplies htve been reduced even\nln ftce of increased cost.\nCARRIED ALL\nEMPLOYEES\nThui, he nld, the compiny wti\ntble to ctrry tU it! 8000 permtnent\nemployee! throughout the \"depret-\nilon.\" In the 18 yetri the cooperative committee! have functioned,\nJ00 employeee bave eerved on the\ncommittee! and union organization!\nhave been dropped one after another by the men, he declared.\nMr. Blaylock tald he had nothing\nagainst the idea of unionism. He\nsaid hil company employee! had\ndropped the unioni of their own\nvolition, feeling that the cooperative lyitem had more poisibilities.\nHe warned otheri who might\nconsider taking up the icheme that\nthe \"first esientlal of success Is that\nyou play 100 per cent fair with\nyour committee. They muit have\nfull parlllmentary privilege! tnd\nsuggestions must be given tbe fullest\nand fairest consideration.\"\n\"I do not believe that government\noperation of industry la a solution\nor is fetilble,\" he concluded. \"I believe thtt, whllt we have humin\nIndividualism, humtn tmblUons,\nhumin hopei tnd fcari, lucceiaful\nsocialism is is far off is the mlllen-\nium.\"\nBaby Bovlnes Come Six at a Time on This Farm\nHert we htvt lextuplett, If you pleue. Perhips\nthl three cowl on the ftrm on Joieph Biker, nesr\nDeltwire, 0\u201e reid newiptper itorlei of thl Dlonnt\nquintuplet! tnd organized te belt thlt noord. Etch\nof thl three give birth to twlm it tht umt tlmt.\nAll the twini win mtrketed.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\n\"Finest in tht Interior\"\nThe HUME HOTEL\nPHONI 787\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLuncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nFree Bui Service Nelion B.C Qeorge Benweil, Prop.\nHUME- W. H. Mundie, D. O.\nChrlrtqpher, Vincouver; H. H. Mc-\nBaln, C. A. Wartyn, Medicine Htt;\n& A. Cronter, S. Geun, W. R. Hirt\nley, W. Buergei, Kailo; A. Dtwion\nTrail; J. N. McLeod, Mn. S. H. Randall, Edgewood; O. Htmbly, Metaline Falls.\n.The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kini'\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms Witb Private\nBaths or Showers.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nIU BAKER ST. PHONE 1\u00bb NILSON, B.C.\nSAVOY\u2014D. Chandler, Kailo; L.\nM. Cuter, Victorli; C. L. Peanon,\nCalgary; Edna Dankin, J. Doyle,\nCreston; T. B. Goodenough, 0. D.\nFrith D. 3. Bonnycastle. Ymlr; Mr.\nand Mrs. P. Sapples, F. G. Stan-\nmore, R. Cox, Salmo; J. C. Street,\nReno Mill; Mr. and Mra. F. Amdt,\nSeattle; George Kerr, T. Hanton,\nVancouver; Mra. Gordly, Klmberley; S. R. Sherman, Boiwell; A. B.\nStanley Jr., Nakusp; A. M. Turner,\nToronto.\nI\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK\nHet and Cold Watir\nSingle SOo up; double BOe up\nMonthly ratei $10.00 up\nPHONE 234\n1\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nIkl.   *Z.  MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nBot  and Cold  Water\nIn  the HSART ot the city\nOccidental Hotel\n\"OS Vernon St. Phone MIL\n& wassick\nspecial monthly rates\nGood Comfortable Roomi\nMlnen' Hetd.utrters\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA.   LAPOINTB,   Prop.\nRoomi from No to $1.50\nMonthly $10 tnd up.\nStetm betted tnd hot tnd cold\nwtter ln every room\n60S Biker St. Phone IH)\nVoncouver, B. C, Hotels\nNIWLY \"VOUR VANCOUVER HOME\" ^^\nRENOVATED Dlfff\u20ac1*111  HOtOl     **\u25a0*\"\"'*\n-AcPlteraon, Itte \u00bbf Colimin, Altt,, Prop.    $00 Siymour St., Vincouver\nTRANSPORTATION-Freight ond Passenger\nNELSON and TRAIL to VERNON\n11  HOURS\nLetvee Nelion $:00 A.M.\n$8.00 ONE WAY\nTrail 7:00 A.M.\nControl Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ltd.\nNELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAN J\nDui.rvte?'ck    FREIGHT UME\nPhone\nNelson\n,.77\nLeivlng Nelion\nIt 9 i.m.\nPhon*\nPROMPT    EFFICIENT    SERVICE Trill\nAT  ALL  TIMES jg   \u201e   ,ftl\nJ. C. \"SCOTTY\" MUIR. PROP.\nBUYING ACM\nON WAU STREET\nVolume  Increases; Several\nIssues Cain a Point\nBy FBEDEBICK OABDNIB\nAuoclated prwi Flmnclil Writer\nNEW TORK, Nov. 38 |AP)\u2014Trading flowed mainly on the buying\nilde oi itocki todiy md continued\nftlrly ictlve deiplte the holiday tomorrow.\nFavorable builneei newi ind dlvidtd ictlont give bull! additional\ncauie tor thanksgiving.\nTht prelerred of Commonwealth\nA Southern row 3 polnti and Nitlonil Power It Light common ploked\nup i tmill gtln.\nVolume Increued to 1.1M.M0\nshores. Oalna ot a point or eo were\nrecorded ln American Can, Chrysler,\nNuh Motor, North Amerlctn, Public\nService of New Jeriey.\nO. W. Helme ipurted tbout 8\npointe to t new peak tt 149 ifter\ndividend announcement. Lorlllird idvinced IH polnti tnd ingeraoll\nRind mtdt t similar gtln on dividend newi. International Cement\nfinned frtctloniUy.\nJACK ADAMS CETS\nSOME NEW MATERIAL\nDETROIT, Nov. 28 (AP).-Jack\nAdams, manager of Detroit Redwing i of the National Hockey\nleague, announced today that George\nPattenon, Redwing forward, hai\nbeen eent to St. Louli Eagles with\nan option of purchaae for $3500.\nAdami laid Detroit would receive Mickey Blake, young defence\nman, from St. Louis for a trial and\nthat If Blake is retained, Detroit\nwould take him tn the deal for Pattenon.\nRUGBY UNION SPT\nLONDON, Nov. 28 (CP cable).-\nRugby union matchei today reaulted\nat follows:\nPortarnouth Service! 11, Guy'i\nHoipital 30.\nAldenhot Servlcei 3, Bristol 13.\nCounty championihip:\nEaitern Counties 19, Surrey 9, at\nWoodford.\nThe second estimate of wheat production In the Prairie province! for\n1934 il two million bushel! lower\nthan the preliminary eatimite of\n289 million bu\u00b0hels made on September llth lilt\nRobert Kennedy Is\nTaken to Hpspital\nRobert Kennedy Jr. of Robion\nstreet was taken to the Kootenay\nLake General hospital Wednesday\nafternoon to be operated upon for\nappendicitis. He wai taken ill suddenly Wedneeday.\nWHEAT PRICES\nCLOSE HIGHER\nWINNIPIO, Nov. M (CP)\u2014Cini\ndlan whut found i more ready aale\n:*bro;d todiy tnd pricei on thi Win*\nnlpeg grain exchinge cloeed H to\n\u00bbi of t cent higher. Tht December\noption ended tt 78 V* cenU, Hiy\n83Vi-'\/.  ind July 89%  centi.\nOne million buiheli of wheat were\ntold for export, chiefly to European buyeri. on rumon of ule of\ndenatured French wheat to the United Statei, unfavorable weither In\nArgentina tnd an Improved continental demind, Liverpool cloud higher.\nCaih grains reflected the export\nitrength. Coarse grain futurei held\nfirm.\nBlake Allen Is on\nFreihmen Executive\nBltke Allen, of Nelion, hu been\nelected to the executive of the\nfreshman class, according to t recent luue of \"The Getaway,'1 the\nUniversity of Alberta paper, at Edmonton.\nBlake Allen ii well known in Nelion. especially for his activities in\ngolf and badminton. He ia the ion\nof Mr. and Mrs. Wilfrid Allen.\nThe work of the Dominion Divl\nsion of Forage Plant! which ll car*\nrled on tt the different Dominion\nExperimental farms and stations in\nCanada is concerned not only with\nherbage plants, which Include the\nvarious annual and perennial hay\nand pasture plants, but also with\nleveral cropi which tre grown primarily for feeding purpoiei, luch\nai corn, sunflowers, and dried field\nroot!. Experiments with turf\ngrasses ire tlso part ot the work\nof the diviiion, as well ai certain\nspecial crops, the moit important of\nwhich are aoybcani and augar beets.\nCherriet tnd aprlcota eipecitlly\nsuitable for North Dakota conditions\nare being developed at the State\nAgricultural college.\nWW They Try TMt Next?\nHOST FRIENDS\nPAYTRIBOTE\nFrederick  Emory  Is Laid at\nRest; Masons Attend\nServices\nA hoit of friendi. many of them\nichool boy \u2022oquilntt.ncu wednuday tfternoon ptld their lut trt\nbute to Federlck D. Emory, ion\nof Mr. tnd Mn. A. D. Imory, who\nwu lttd it rut ln the Nelion\ncemetery. He died following an appendix operation ln Portland, Ore.,\nlut Prlday,\nServlcei were conducted at Trinity\nUnited Church by Rev, W. c Ma\nwhlnney, and betide! a large num\nber of friendi, memben of thi\nMiionlo lodge ittended ln \u2022 body\nJohn Teague officiated at tht grave\nilde for the fraternil order. Floral\nu well u penonil tributes wert\nmtny for thi former Neleon boy.\nmd flowen banked tht church tnd\ncaiket.\nP-llbeirart wtrt Douglu Nigle\nwaiter c. Kettlewell. Boy Shirpe.\nOllbert c. Arnuon, Dr. w. B. Steed\nind Samuel Hunter of Kulo.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTBAU,,  B. C.  Nov.  38  \u2014 Mn.\nThomu Nome, who hu been a patient In tht Trall-Tadamc hoapltal,\nhu been removed to her home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. Richard Drew, who\nwire viiltlng with Mn. Drew'i pirenti, return to Nelnn Sundiy.\n...\nMlu Loulie Kavlc, who hu been\nviiltlng ln Spoktne, hu nturned\nhome.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   and  Mn.  D.  K.   Milliliter\nwho   htvt   been  reildlng   tt  Rou*\nland,    lift    recently   for    Englind,\nwhen they wlll mike their home\nlei\nMn. 1. Nordmtn, who hu been\nthe gueat of her parenta it Rou*\nltnd, hu nturned home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. W. A. Smith wu hoiteu\nrecently tt brldgt, Mn. John Pox\nwinning flnt prlu tnd Mn. Wilfred Dorey oontolition.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. A. X. Oilmi hu nturned\nto her homi from the Trill-Tidante\nhoipital.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAt St. Andrew's Anglican church\nSundiy, Kenneth, aon of Mr. tnd\nMn. Harold Hill of Annable. was\nchristened by Rev. Leonard A. Morrant, A christening ptrty wu held\nliter it the home of Mr. and Mri\n(fill, the gueiti being Mr. tnd Mn.\nA. Tomlinson, Mr. md Mn. Stanley\nHIU, Mr. md Mn. J. T. Henderaon.\nMlu Nellie Civailn, Mrt. Hill lr.,\nHirvey Bach, Mlu Mtrgint Henderson, ctmpbell Henderson md\nMiurene Hill.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. md Mn. Hirold Cvtnt of\nRonlind entertained Saturday at\ntheir homt with t mutlctl tvenlng.\nrefreshment! liter being urved. Out-\nof-town gueiti wen Mr. md Mn.\nJ. T. Henderion, Mlu Owen Cook\nmd J. p. onnt of Trail md Chle\nRogera of Toronto.\nAn enterrrlilng artist has figured\nthat lf C. W. A. Scott tnd Campbell Black, who won the London-\nto-Melbournc air race with an average tpeed of 176 miles per hour,\nwere to maintain this speed on a\nfllgh^ through space, they would\nrcaclj* the moon in only lifty-six\ndays! But lt would still take a bit\not time to catch up with Venus\nand Mars, an. if anybody in the\nfamily wanted to get Saturn or\nJupiter, It had belter be the great-\ngreat-great-great-great -grandc h 11-\ndrcn.\nBloirmore Will\nNot Observe the\nHoliday Today\nCALGARY, Nov. 28 (CP)\u2014On\nthe 17th annivenary of the Ruulan\nrevolution Blalrmore ichool children were given a holiday but tomorrow, the wedding day of Prince\nGeorge and Princeii Marina, they\nwill (attend classes as usual.\nAll other school! ln the Crow'i\nNeit district will be cloied, but allowed only one holiday a month\nunder the School act, the Blalrmore\nboard has no authority to declare\nthe ichool cloied tomorrow.\nBlairmore has a Left Wing Labor\ntown council and ichool board and\non November 7, to commemorate\nthc Ruisiin revolution, t ichool\nholiday wai declared.\n3-Cent Dividend by\nPremier\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 28 (CP)-A\ndistribution of three centi t shire\non Premier Gold is announced by\nToronto Genenl Trust, transfer\nogenti for the company. The dividend li payible Jtnutry 15 to\nshareholders of record December 14.\nMELBOURNE, (CPl-Austrtlit'i\ncapital li becoming one of the garden cities of the world. Three million trees and shrubs, 40 milei ot\nhtdgei tnd 20,000 roiei have been\npiloted to resemble t piece of\nmottle, according to t preconceived\npltn. Wtlki, garden! and boulevard! comprise one of the largeit\nlandscape gardening jobs ever attempted. '\nSTE OWNER\nGOB TO JAIL\nAlex  Dresdoff Convicted  on\nCharge Under the\nExcite Act\n10-Cont Advance in\nBar Gold\nAlex Dretdoff, Sproule creek\nDoukhobor, wu sentenced to pty\nt fine of 8150 or to terve four\nmonthi ln the provinciil jail Wednetdty when he wu convicted of t\ncharge ot having a itlll unlawfully\nin hit possession. He appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate John\nCirtmel In* provincial police court\nand pletded not guilty. J. G. Bun-\nyin, customs tnd excise officer, tnd\nH. J. Giles, R.C.M.P., officer of\nGrand Porks, prosecuted. A. Spiel-\nmans acted aa interpreter.\nDreidoff wai arretted Tuesdty\nafter provincial police officen, Constable R. H. Mclntoth, Constable J.\nG. M. Lock tnd J. Lawrence Smith,\nhad searched hit home on Sproule\ncreek and uncovered a itlll In the\nbasement. Entnnce to the btsement\nwai carefully concetled behind a\nkitchen range md it wu only after\na lecond search by Comtable Lock\nthat it wai uncovered.\nOverseas Mail Most\nLeave by Next Week\nSome Christmas Mail Moving\nAlready, Stated Nelson\nPostmaster\nChrlitmu mail and ptrceli tre\nalretdy on the move for the old\ncountry, according to Major R. M.\nManahan, Nelion postmtster. Chrlitmu mill deitlned for old country\ndelivery ihould leave Nelton not\nlater thm next week, he itated. lf\nthe recipient ii to be lure of hiving\nthe ptrccl in time.\nOwing to the system adopted by\nUnited Statei In collecting Chrlitmu mall ln two mall centero, any\nparcel! being tent tcrou the line\nshould be given plenty of time to\nallow for cuitom examination. Mall\nshould leave for there not later\nthin December 10.\nMail to tbe marltimei ihould be\nsent not Uter thm December 11\nRELIEF CAMPS\nALMOSTFULL\nThe deptrtment of nttlontl dt-\ntenet nllef campe In thle dlitrlct\nin now tlmett filled to ciptclty\nmd no further mm will be brought\nln trom the pnlrlei unleu the Rock\nCnek ctmp, the only one not operating tt pruent, ll opined. Then la\nitlll room for t ftw men tt eich\ncamp but luch t condition It maintained ln ordtr thit dlitrlct mm\nwanting to go to tht ctmpi will bt\ntaken can of.\nPark Trees Will\nBe Planted Cloie\nThe Norway md Silver maplei,\nwhich tre to be planted tround the\nRccrettion ground! in the iprlng,\nwill be iptced 18 feet apart. The\nplan to be followed In planting\nthem will be two Norway maplei\nand then two Silver miples.\nIn 10 yeen tfter the treet htve\nretched t fair lite every tecond\ntree can be cut out.\nMAYFLOWER MINING\nCONCERN  RESTORED\nVICTORIA, Nov. 38 (CP)\u2014Mayflower Mining company, which a taw\nyeara ago wai developing lta ntw\npropertlei netr Stewirt, B. 0. undir\nthe preeldency ol H. P- Olhion, wu\ntodiy mtond to the Britlih Oolumbli totlvt compmy lilt, following tn application mtde by P. C.\nElliott, counael, to Mr. Juitlce H. B.\nRobertion of the supreme court.\nMONTRIAL, Nov. 28 (CP)-Bar\ngold ln London up 10 cent! to tU_M\nan ounce In Canadian fundi; 139s\n7 .id ln British funds. The fixed $38\nWuhlngton price tmounttd to 834.13\nin Canadian.\nCOPPER GOING UP\nON POWER UNE\nCopper hu now been itrunf over\n\u2022 six-mile itretch of the new city\npole line between the Bonnlntton\nplant md the aubitation. Railing\nthe heavy copper, iome three torn\nto t reel, li a llow job, but good\nprogreu is being made.\nip! There Goes\nAnother Nice Queue\nThey're Outlawed in Shantung\nand Police Turn Barbers\nSHANGHAI, China, Nov. 28 (CP).\n\u2014The recent order issued by Nanking that the wearing Of queue!\nmd the cuitom of binding the feet\nof girl children muit be discontinued immediately hu been literally taken to heart by the authority of Taian, in Shantung province,\naccording to letten received in\nShanghai from mlulontrlei itationed in thli region.\nAU police offlctn, eipecitlly thote\nitationed tt the gitae ot the city\nhtve been trmed wtth ihein and\norden have been luued to the effect\nthtt lf the mandate tgtlmt the\nweiring ot quiuei ll not voluntarily obeyed, the policemen are\nto enforce it In levenl etiet, the\npolice htve not given the offender\nt chmce to dispose of hli queue\nhlmielf, but heve snipped off the\noffending braid with prictlcilly no\nceremony whttieever.\nAlthough the order tgtlntt tbe\nbinding of tbe feet ot gin children\nli explicit enough, the mlulontrlei\nof Ttitn expreu t certain imount\nof penlmtnn u to iti effective enforcement Such m old cuitom dies\n\u2022lowly, eipecitlly ln the mon remote diitricti, where the mtgli-\ntritei ud thoie In chtrge ire more\nin lymptthy with the petunti tnd\nthe tge-old cuitomi thin thty tre\nwith wbtt tbey consider \"new\ntingled\" lnnovttlon!.\nThi order tgtlnit toot-binding\n\u2022In itatei thtt women under the\ntge of 30 whole feet have been\nbound muit take off the wrapping!\nmd allow their teet to develop\nniturtlly. Thli put ot the order\nhu been prictlcilly dliregirded In\nthe country district!.\nLOCAL SOCIETY\nHAS PROGRAM\nW.M.S. Stages a Play\nat Trinity Church\nMeeting\nA ihort pity, celled \"The Hlgheet\nTender'' wu enacted when St\nPaul'! tnd Trinity WM.S. met it\nTrinity United church Tuetdty.\nMn. G. E. Sptrkei preelded tt\nthe meeting, tt which 48 wert\npreunt.\nTbe bible raiding wu glvtn by\nMrt. R. Gugln, continuing uie topic\n\"The Circle of Friendihlp.\" Mn. J.\nJ. French led ln prtye:*.\nMn. Grummet give t raiding of\nMiu Qulnn's lite work in China\nmd Jtptn.\nMn. E. Martdm wng DU Wheeler Wilcox'i poem \"Wnttever II, It\nBeit\" md as an encore \"Whtt t\nWonderful World It Would Be.\"\nThe iclos were tccomptnled by\nMn. H. Hunt.\nMn. A. G. Ltmbert gave in In-\nterettlng raiding entitled \"Mn.\nPlcktrd'i Mlnloniry Box.\"\nMM. J. J. French md Mn. C.\nGlendenning received the mite\nboxei.\nThoie taking ptrt in \"The Hlgheet Tender\" were Mn. Higglnboth-\nam, representing Mr. Lang in 'The\nHouae of Thought\"; Mn. D. D.\nTowniend, repreienting \"The Houie\nCompanion\"; Mn. Robert Smill*.\n\"Faihion Craft\"; Mn. J. Armttrong,\n\"World Eventi,\" Dr. Annie Smith,\n\"Literature. Muiic md Art\"; Mra. N.\nC. Stibbi, \"Tht Mlnloniry Monthly\";, Mn. D. Mtloney, the \"Olrli1\nSchool In Trinidad\"; Mlu I. Graham, \"an Oriental\"; Miu May Smith,\n\"Peace of the World\"; Mn. Bertha\nSlmms, \"Our Gifts to Chrlit\nCASTLEGAR HAS A\nWHIST, DRIVE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C, Nov. \u00ab-A\nmilitary whist drive wu held in\nthe Castlegar Community hai' when\n10 tablet were in pity. The winning\ntable wu Canada with t total of\n'I fla\/n. Playen were Mn. Johnion,\nMn. Pratt, Mr. Johnion and Mr.\nRobinson.\nTht losing table wu France, Mn.\nWataon, Mn. R. Defoe, John C\nWaldle md Art Steele.\nTed Pratt officiated.\nSouth African rillroidi in utlng\nbig, six-wheeled trueki u feeder\nvehicle! to etrry ptntnign tnd\ngoodi over \"branch Unu\" to tht\nmain rotdi.\nPerfect Health\nIt It Possible?\nProper food, exercise, freah air and plenty of\naleep,\nThat* ara induciva to perfect health.\nBut wa ara not born with thia wisdom,\nAnd faw thara ara who properly value good\nhealth,\nUntil thay hava loat it.\nPhysician* find faw perfect human bodiaa.\nBut it 1* ours to do tna bait wa can\nTo Iceap up energy and vitality and pap.\nSudden ehangee of temperature\nSaps tha vitality of all who ara in poor health.\nWhy not fortify tha system, at this time,\nBy using Dr. Cnasa'a Nerve Food.\nIt makes the blood, pure and rich and nourishing.\nIt hastens recovery for those who are convalescing.\nIt givee new vigor to people of advanced years.\nRestful sleep comes naturally\nWhen the nerve force is replenished by this\ntreatment.\nFINK'S \u2014\nMonth'End Specials\nCOATS Z\nAll wool cloth. Interlined. Fur trim.\n$1*.95\nDRESSES _r-;_.\"'.\".'\"$2.9S -*\u25a0 $5.95\nCVTDTC      Pure Wool Flecks, or Plain Cloths. A|   f|\u00a3\nCREPE HOSIERY r.rrM\"$1.00\nT TXT-OTj'DT'D   Danee ^ets' v*st *nd B'oom\"' -*\u2022'\u2022   AAn\nLliNLr-CKlE.    Gowns and Pajamas      ~%~f*S\nq vt ^v*ri o       'or Street or Dreu, Brown or\n0_LlA_yHu      ***<\u25a0\u25a0*\u2022 AAAA'i to El, J to \u00bb\n$1.95 ** $4.95\nnr TT)T_)T-?1_) C     *-eat*ner D'orsays. rkji Green, Blue,\nOLll i JL\/KO    Mauve and Black\t\n$1.00\nFINK'S Limited\nBURNS\nBLOCK\n _\\^_^_________m\nB\n^4-p\nHALL PACKED\nFOR CONNELL\nAT S. SLOCAN\nOpposition Leader\nGives a Fine\nTalfc\nGEORGE TURNER\nNELSON, SPEAKS\nFine Word Picture\nof C.C.F. Plan\nPainted\nSOUTH SLOCAN. B.C., Nov. .\u00bb.\n\u2014The Rev R. Connel, M_L.A., leider\ni of the opposition, gave a most in\nterestlng and educational addreu\nbefore a crowded meeting in the\n| hill here.\nThe chtlr wu taken by Frank\nFrisby, pruldent of the local C.CJ..\norganization.\nGeorge Turner of Nelson laid he\nhad no apology to make tor calling\nthe meeting on a Sunday. Owing,\nto luch a Itrge territory to be covered. Rev. Mr. Connel hid only a\nlimited time and thii section was\nnot very well represented by the\nC.CJ. Mr. Turner dwelt on the\nactiont of Premier Pattullo. saying\nthe people muit feel t whole lot\nbetter lince receiving work ind\nwages u promised to them on this\nplatform Just over i year ago. He\nwis greatly delighted to see the\nilave camps so prosperous and the\ninmates so well fed tnd healthy.\nHe wu torry there weren't more\nby-elections seeing thtt Mr. Pattullo made auch t success. When\nhe uked for \u25a0 vote of confidence,\nthose remarkable people ln North\nVancouver showed their confidence when they returned the C.CF.\neindldtte. \"The offensive, press talks\ntbout the C.C.F. taking drastic action regarding confiscation.\" but\ncould it be any worse thin the preient dty system of ttx sales on the\nhomu of the starving unemployed,\nhe uked. He ilso spoke on the\nSteven'i Invutigation of price\nipreads it Ottawi which revealed\nthat capitalist! were more concerned in the making of profits thm\nthey were in the livelihood ot the\nworkers. He thought thit the slo-\nfin of the magnates was \"Bigger\n-THI NILSON DAILY NEW*. NILSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNING. NOV. 29. 1M4-\nIt must rid yeu of\n.RHEUMATISM\ner It won't cost you\na cent\nBere'f treat newi tor thonund* of\n\u2022ufftrm \u2014 \u2022 new BeitnUfle pmcrtption\nthftt drl*\u00ab urio ft\u00abU (tht csuh of 90%\ner til rhtunutUm, neurltU, iQtnbftfo)\noct ol th\u00ab \u2022jiUm. or ALLENRU do*\nnot ooit you ft etnt\nTwonty-four boun ftftcr yon ttftrt tiklni ALLENRU exewi uric ftdd - on lu\nwar o\u00abL In 48 boun, tht pain, tht iwtll-\n, Inf \u2014 tht ttlffntH, art unbtlimMy re-\n* lie\u00bbtd\u2014or no eharf t. Juit bur ont bottlt\n, \u2014take ae directed.   If, by tht tlmt tht\ni   bottlt la flnlthed. you don't ftd like \u25a0\nI  new Htn, return tht tmpty bottle and\nI   ttt yonr monty back.    What eould be\nUlrert\n,' Wttrtbftttd hi Cauda by\nW. t Backlty Umlttd, Ttrtnte I.  7\nALLENRU\nMil   (iLMIAMIfl) m MlltY\n\u2022nd betttr profit!.\" Mr. Turner went\non to uy thtt tbt C.CJ. li not t\nbuiineu organization, but one thlt\nit tolely the people's party. This\nprovince hu been plentifully endowed with natural resource! tnd\nif in the hands ot the people instead of the handi of t few. It would\nbe t mighty good place to live in, he\ndecltred.\nMR. CONNEL TELLE OF C.C.F.\nRev. R. Connel, speaking on the\nmeaning of the Cooperative Com-\nmonwealth Federation, uid that it\nmight mem anything. It was\nbrought about to sink the original\nsocialistic bodies into ont, to that\n\"we might htve unity.\" The word\nCommonwealth has a distinct meaning, \"icientific -racialism\". Philosophy and socialism combined sprang\ninto existence in the middle of the\n19th century, he uld, referring to\nCtrl Mine u one of the expounder!. Socialism and science ire closely connected ind the Cooperative\nCommonwealth from \u25a0 standpoint\nof science was fully elucidated. Mr.\nConnel spoke of the inanimate and\nanimate life which waa tomethlng\nof the nature of prophecy in this\nland, cognizant of human beings.\nHe explained the formations of carbon from Taphite to the hardest\nmlnertl known and the most beautiful, the diamond. Following on\nto ipeak of the animate life of\nplants, which were composed of\nmillions of cells, each cell a living\nplant, he brought the subject of\nplant life and animal life to the\npoint where even scientists disagreed as to jts nature.\nReferring to the mammals of prehistoric age he illustrated how the\nsmaller animals such as the horse\nwhich was then a miniature tnd\nother sxciei Touoed together collectively have survived to the present day.\nThese three basic illustrations so\nwell described b* Mr. Connel gave\na clear outline of the principle of\nCooperative Commonwealth. Speak-\nin*\u00bb of the present economic system\nwhich resembled very closely the\nlaw of the iungle where the capitalist rides rough shod over other\npeople, he uld there had been a\npersistent downward drifting of affairs for 150 years.\nMr. Connel gave several quotations from the scriptures which\nwere allied closely to socialism, and\nconcluded his addrer by i ying thtt\nthe C.C.F. represented the people's\nparty. The one way out of this\n\"political mess we are in,\" would\nbe to help one another and think\nto a purpose and to an end, thereby laving the foundation for a contented anH prosperous people.\nThe C.CF. movement Is a moit\npatriotic organization, ht uid tnd\nappealed to the public to use common sense and Judgment in their\nown interests.\nAPPROVES TRIO\nFOR CITIZENS\nJudge Nisbet Passes\non Three More\nApplicants\nDue to tbt record numbtr of\nnaturalization examinations held by\nJudge W. A. Nttbet tt tbe October\ncountry court here, iome M,, the\nnumber for Tuesday's monthly court\nwu only three. His honor favored\nill three applicants for citizenship,\nand recommended them to Ottawa.\nKarl Larsen, 45-year-old miner,\nnow it the Second Relief, but\npreviously ln succession it the\nQueen, Kootenay Belle, and Good-\nenough, told hli honor bt wu a\nwidower, with daughters tied respectively 16 and 17 years Uvlng at\nOddi, Norway. He landed at Quebec\nfrom Norway ln 1933, tnd worked\nat the HoUlnger mine foe thret\nyears, and at the Noranda In Rouyn\nfor two years. He came to Procter\nln 1939, and to Nelson ln 1933, and\nthtn went to Sheep Creek. Lanen\nadmitted paying two fines for Intoxication In northern Ontario ln\n1934 end 1628, his only contacts\nwith the law.\nCarl Meier, Boswell rancher, was\nthe lecond candidate examined.\nBorn in Switzerland 84 yeara ago,\nhe landed at Saint John in 1921.\nwent direct to the Lethbridge district and worked t short time on\nfarms at Magrath and Letham, and\nthen moved to Crinbrook, where he\nwas for six yeirs. Then he wu\n\u2022 year ln Blairmore, one in Balfour,\nthree in Vancouver, and settled a\nyetr ago with his wife at Boswell,\nwhere his ton purchased a amall\nfruit ranch tor him. They htvt no\nminor children.\nHugh Strand, Winlaw section\nhand, aged 24 years, landed at Hall-\nfax from Sweden in 1928, coming\ndirect to Winlaw, where lie had t\nbrother, who is a naturalized Cinadlan. Christened Kill Hugo Al*\ndin Strand, he shortened hit ntme\nto Hugh Strand, he told the court\nHe was married a month ago.\nBONNINGTON W A.\nPUNS HOLD SALE\nMrs. W. C. Motley Is Hostess\nat Meeting\nBONNINGTON, B.C., Nov. 28-\nA meeting of the Women'a Auxiliary was held \u00bbt the home of Mrs.\nW. C. Motley. Mrs. Turner Lee presided.\nAfter the routine of buslneu the\nstall holden and committees were\narrayed for the forthcoming ule of\nwork and the needlework turned ln.\nThe year's itudy book on Canada\nwas continued tnd discussed.\nMrs. Motlev wu hosteu for tet.\nMiu Molly Irvin\"? of Tirryi It \u25a0\nTuest of Mrs. W. C. Motley for i ftw\ndtyi.\nMr. and Mn. W. G. Elsdon tnd\nsons were Nelion Visiton Stturdiy.\nMn. A. Somerville wu i Nelson\nshopper Saturdiy.\nSerbian archaeologists trt exploring tbt ruins of stobi. once tn Important city of Macedonia, destroyed\nby earthquake In 518 A. D.\n***\u00ab*\u00ab*'\u00ab\u00a3'\u00ab\u00ab<\u00ab>\u00ab<*\u00a3>\u00ab\u20ac>\u00ab>\u00ab<\u00ab*>\nTHE RUSH FOR\nrisfmas.\n>W.r*W.+J&.+Wt*t&m*.\nGSmtmg fflarta\nis gaining momentum\n2 - DOZEN - 2\nChristmas Cards for\n$lt75 Up to $4.00\nPRINTED WITH YOUR\nNAME  AND  ADDRESS\nOut-of-town Customers write for samples. We can\ngive you immediate service. We mail cards the\nsame day as ordered.\nPRINTED CHRISTMAS\nCARDS MAKE CHEERIER\nGREETINGS!\nPHONE 144\n\u25a0tommmial Jrinttttg Brjiartmrnt\nHfr_}_ft2}-ft\u00ab}!_h9'-ft7-h\nROADS IMPROVED\nNEAR KIMBERLEY\nGrading, Straightening and\nRelocating  Carried\nOut\nKIMBERLEY. B.C., Nov. 28.\u2014It\nii a pleasure to ride or walk on the\nnew roads in and near Kimberley.\nThe stretch between the high school\nand Chapman Ctmp la straight,\nwide tnd with only a few inchei\ngrade in the whole length. It is\nfinned and gravelled tnd ready for\ntarvia as soon it spring opens.\nThe one wty rotd from the high\nschool through Lower Blarchmont\nii widened tt far as the bridge and\nt ihort cut It being built through\nto the Chapman Ctmp rotd. The\nCamp road is ignoring i lot of tht\nold twists and turns, corners ire\ncut off or made into wide sweeping\ncurves. This will be \u2022 wonderful\nimprovement over the old narrow,\nrutted trick, full of bumps and\nholes. Ptrt of it netr the camp is\nto run several ytrds from the old\none.\nNetr Black Bear Bridge there il t\nbig improvement, with i wide ap\nproach on etch end to the site ot\nthe new bridge, to go in next iprlng.\nFrom the bridge to camp the road is\ncompleted except for graveling part\nof the way md tarvia.\nAnother step ahead up town Is\nthe new road down the Catholic\nchurch hill. This makes a convenient short cut for the folks who formerly hid to go around by the-|\nchurch. This short cut his been in\nuse, t narrow slanting pith, but\nnow it li i well graded rotd ready\nfor traffic.\nAll these new sections have been\nbuilt by Fred Baynes. whose reputation for road building stands high\nin the Kootenays. With him is Ul'io\nKtry.\nGOATFELL EAST\nAGAIN WINNER\nCeremony Introduces London Mayor\nYOUNG!\t\nARE GUESTS AT\nIn accordance with indent procedure, the lord mayor-elect of London is introduced to the lord chancellor it the House of Lords by the\nrecorder of London. Sir Stephen\nHillick end Lady Killick are seen,\nABOVE, leaving . e House of Lords\nin traditional costume after the\nceremony.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nGOATFELL EAST CAMP, B.C.,\nNov. 28.\u2014Goatfell East football team\ndefeated Yahk 4-1 to run its string\nof victories to three in succession.\nRoy Weitzel hu left for Cranbrook.\nThomai Wittinghtm. former timekeeper here, hu returned.\nC. Radford and A. Wilkinson met\nwith success on t hunting trip to\nMovie diitrlct\nGlenn Lockwood of the Yihk airport was \u25a0 visitor here.\nT. A. Lazenby, engineer, wai a\nvisitor here.\nFred Coffey. Jr., viiited Yahk.\n\"Pudge\" McKenzie, t former football player of note, is recovering\nhere from an Injury to his inkle.\nBilly Lawson, member of the toot-\nball team here, ll lime is t result\nof recent gimes.\nKINO'S PILOT DIES\nCOWES. England, Nov. 28 (API\u2014\nJoseph Giles, 74, pilot of King\nGeorge's ytcht Brittnnia for the\npast 14 yean, died todty.\nIt li estimated that fungus and\nbacterial diseases of 10 leading field\ncron in the U. S. ctuie tnnual losses\nof 13 per cent of the total value.\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n7:00 i.m.\u2014Royal Wedding Ceremony of Prince Qeorge of\nEngltnd, tnd Princeii Marina\nof Greece, tt Weitminiter Abbey, London\n6:00 Three Aspects of Life: Plants\nand Man, Univ. lecture\n6:15 The World Court and the Collective System, talk\n6:30 Royal Wedding Ceremonies of\nPrince George and Princess\nMarina blattnerphone\n7:00 Roads That Move\n7:00 Drama of B.C. (CKWX tnd\nB.C. Net, ex. CJAT)\n7:30 Billy Bisiett's Orch. (ex.\nCRCV)\n7:45 Newi and Weither Forecaat\n8:00 Pacific Nocturne, Vancouver\n8:30 Bridget and Pat (ex. B.C.)\n8:30 News (B.C. Net)\n8:45 Three Guitars\n9:00 Happy VtlleV, Chilliwack\n9:30 Under the Stars, organist\n10:00 Sparklets, vocal and instrumental, Vancouver\nN.B.C.-KPO  NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\n890     (20     (40     680     920     970\n6:00 Captain Henry's Show Boat\n7:00 Whiteman's Music Hall\n8:00 Amoi 'n' Andy\n8:15 Symphony Hour\n9:16 Winning the West\n9:45 Dancing in Twin Cities\n10:00 Newe Flashes\n10:15 Big Ten\n10:45 Tom Coakley's Orch.\n10:55 Press-Radio News\n11:00 Tom Gerun's Orch. (KPO)\n11:00 Fio-Rito's Orch. TKGO to Net)\n11:30 Way Back When (KPO)\n11:30 Jimmy Grier's Orch.\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI    KPRC    KOIN    KSL    KOL\n670       610       940       1180    1270\n6:00 Romance of Travel (D.L.)\n6:30 Waring's Pennsylvtnlans\n7:00 45 Minutes in Hollywood, KSL\n7:45 Rhythm Club *\n8:00 Myrt and Marge\n8:15 Little Jack Little and Orch.\n8:30 Annette Hanshaw, Walter\n\u00a7''Keefe, Ted Husing\nrchestras\n8:45 Melody Palette\n9:00 News Reporter\n9:15 Charlie Kent and Singers\n9:30 Uncle Sam's Exchange\n9:45-10:15 Jack Mills' Orch.\n10:55-11:00 Memory's Garden\n11:30 Till Tomorrow, Reed\nKNX\n285.5 m\n50,000 w\n1050 k\nHollywood       ^\t\n6:00 News Service\n6:15 Concert Group\n6:30 Your Dinner Dance, E.T,\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Watanabe and Archie\n7:15 Lawrence King songs\n7:30 The In-Laws, play\n7:45 King Cowboy\n8:00 Electrical Transcriptions\n8:45 Mona Lowe, songs\n8:30 Amagon, Drury Lane\n9:00 News Service\n9:15 Song of Songs\n9:45 The Crocketts\n10:30 Pete Pontrelll's Orch.\nCRANBROOK Y.P.\nSTAGE TWO PLAYS\nCJOR\n500 m\n500 w\n600 k\nVancouvtr M^^^^^^^\n6:30 Prairie Drifters\n6:45 Frankie McPhalen, instrum.\n7:00 Women's Viewpoint\n7:15 Chamber of Commerce\n7:30 Wally tnd Sonny.\n7:45 Blind Institute\n8:00 Newi\n8:15 Leo and Ray. guitars\n8:30 Romances of Cariboo, Philip\nD. Randolph, drama\n9:(KI Don Pedro's Sextet\n9:30 Melody Train\nOther Ptriodt: Records\nKGO\n379.5 m\n7500 w\n790 k   J\t\nOtkland \u25a0\t\n6:00 Everybody Sing\n6:30 Federal Business Talk\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Rlcardo and His Violin\n7:15 San Francisco Mun. Gov.\n7:30 Paul Martin's Music\n8:00 Clef Dwellers\n8:15 College Daze\n8:30 i-ddie Duchln's Orch.\n8:45 Dream Dramas\n9:00 Crime Cluei. E.T.\n9:30 DancinB in Twin Citiei\n10:00 Music Box: Hornik's Orch.\n10:30 Press-Radio News\n10:35 Orchestra\n11:00 Ted Fio-Rito's Orch.\n11:30 Jimmy Grier's Orch.\nKJR\n970 k\nSstttle ^^^^_^_^_\n6:00 News Reporter\n6:15 Romance Time\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Silver Strains\n7:15 Greater Washington\n7:45 Sweethearts on Parade\n8:15 Jack and Melody Maids\n8:30 Arm Chtlr Traveller\n309.1 m\n6000 w\nmi-\nWanted\u2014\nStraw, Hay or Other Fodder\nI will bt purchasing fodders ot all descriptions until June 1,\n1935, for export. Any fodders purchased by me must be of\naverage qutllty tnd ot feeding vilue. My purchases are for\nthe tccount ot the Federal Emergency Relief Administration\nof the USA. Funds for theie purchases are guaranteed by\nThe Canadian Bank ot Commerce, Brandon, Manitoba.\nCorrtipondenct promptly ittended to, ani*\\ If nmplei ire\nforwtrded, pricet will be given by return mill.\nHiy pretiei. Hammer Mills tnd Cutting Boxet cm be placed\nfor full winter's work.\nSHERIFF MALCOLM McGREGOR\nCOURT HOUSE\nBRANDON MANITOBA\n\"Seven  Women\"   and   \"The\nGhost Story\" Pleasing\nto Audience\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Nov. 28-\nTwo plays, \"Seven Women\", by\nJ. Barrio, and \"The Ghost Story\",\nby Booth Tarkington, were presented by members of the United church\nYoung Peoples society, in the\nchurch hall with a program of miscellaneous numbers between the\nplays.\nMiss V. Cummer capably portrayed the seven women in one, adding\nto previous laurels on the Cranbrook stage. A supporting cast consisted of the following: Layton Warren, the officer wary of women;\nMurry McFarlane and Miss Grace\nFlett. host and hostess. Miss Elizabeth McDonald, thc maid.\nIn tho second play, Jim Sims it\nthe bashful young man trying to\npropose, and telling a ghost story\nto try to clear the room of hindrances, displayed considerable histrionic talent, as did also Miss Jeanette Snetth as the young lady of\nhis choice. The supporting members of the cast were Miss Sybil\nNorgrove, Miss Bet Irwin, Miss\nFlorence Johnson, Miss M. Carpenter, Marshall MacPherson, Walker\nWillis and Herbert Gibson.\nThe numbers on the concert part\nof tho program were: two solos by\nMr. J. Little with Miss Jean Glendenning as accompanist; tap dancing number by Miss Ruth McKowan\nand Miss Gladys DeWolf, with Mrs.\nFergie as accompanist; two readings\nby Miss Edna MePhee and the Highland Fling danced by Miss Nan McLeary in costume, with Mrs. Finlay-\nson as accompanist.\nRev. R. W. Hardy acted as chairman for tho evening.\nMajor Moodie of Victoria, provincial organizer of thc Liberal party,\nis a Cranbrook visitor.\nMrs. J. Martin was tet hostess at\nthe women's badminton club Tuesday.\nMajor Moodie of Victoria and H.\nA. McKowan were Kimberley visitors Tuesday.\nCRAWFORD BAY\nHAS FINE SALE\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C., Nov. 28\n\u25a0The Women's Institute Christmas\nsale held ln the public hall here was\na great success. It realized $55.30.\nTwenty-five dollars of this is for\nthe children's Christmas tree. Mrs.\nWatson and Mrs. Fisher were in\ncharge of the stall full of useful and\nfancy articles as well as things for\nthe children to purchase.\nMrs. McDonald and Mrs. Gordon\nMcGregor were soon sold out it\nthe cake and candy stall.\nMrs. Bourne. Mrs. Gooch and\nMrs. Frater served tea.\nThe Three Musketeers held a very\nenjoyable .dance ln the hotel here.\nThere was a good crowd present.\nSeveral motored In from Deanshaven, Boswell and Gray Creek. Peppy music was supplied by Miss L.\nLytle, piano, and J. Jakeman of\nBoswell, violin tnd banjo. Thert\nwere several novelty dances.\nRefreshments were served. G.\nKing acted is master of ceremonies.\nF. Draper cut his wrist btdly\nwhen sawing wood with a circular\nItw. It wti necessary to have several stitches made.\nC. H. King has returned from the\nSoldiers' hospital at Shaughnessy\nHeights, Vancouver.\nMrs. Dee and son. Leslie, have\nmoved to Gray Creek where they\nIVill retide.\nMrs. J. Davidson Is a\nHostess to Sewing\nCircle\nMRS. J. DOLMAN\nIS TEA HOSTESS\nTrojans Beat Legion\nin Hoop League\nGame, 44-26\nNAKUSP, B.C., Nov. 28-Mn. J.\nDavidson entertained memberi of\nthe young people's sewing circle.\nThose present were Miss M. Kirk,\nMrs. R. Sanderson, Miss Phyllis\nSheffield, Miss E. Oxenham. Miss\nAlice Ptrent, Miss Nellie Harvey,\nMrs. D. Fulko, Miss A. Bowes, Mrs.\nJ. Parent jr., Mrs. D. Powell. Miss\nI Boden and Mist Alberta Hascarl.\nMr. ind Mrs. A. Lidberg ire\nthe gueiti of thetr son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. A. Renwick, Nelson.\nMrs. Walker of Nelson was a\nguest of Mrs. M. Baird.\nMrs. J. Dolman entertained at the\ntea hour when invited guests included Mri. F. Rushton, Mrs. H.\nClark, Mrs. E. C. Johnson, Mrs. W.\nCook, Mrs. W. Carruthert, Mrs. F.\nFellows and Mrs. E. Brown.\nThe first basketball game of the\nseason wtt pltyed when the Tro-\njim bttt tht Legion  44-26.\nTht tint quarter wu fairly even\nbut ln the ucond hilf tht Trojans\ngtlntd t substantia letd tnd held\nft. The line-ups were:\nTrojint\u2014C. Howirth, R. Jonei, P.\nBJorkland, R. White, L. Btiley. C.\nHorrey.'\nLeglon\u2014L. Wtrd, C. Evtni, L. Orun, C. Picird, H. Hiltz, C. Campe,\nF. Benton.\nNtkutp btdmlnton pltyen wtre\nvictorious when they competed with\nEdgewood tournament playen. The\nviiltlng pltyen were Miu M. Kelso,\nMill N. Ntylor. MlM M. Witton, J.\nMcLeod, A. Watson and J. Eselmont.\nP. Young hat arrived from a\nbusiness trip to Arrowhead.\nCtpt. W. Wrlfht hu left for Robson.\nJ.Robins of Arrow Pirk motored\nto Ntkutp.\nMlu A. Kty of Arrow Ptrk spent\nt day here.\nW. Shlpmtker, who has bten receiving medictl trettment here, hu\nreturned to Edgewood.\nMiu Iris Ferguion of Edgewood\nspent t day In Nakuip.\nT. P. Horaley and G. Brown were\nvisiton to Ntlion.\nRETURNS FROM NELSON\nMn. M. Baird, who had been\nvisiting in Nelion, hu returned to\nNakusp.\nMr, ind Mrs. H. Mtuchllne tnd\nMr. md Mn. G. Mauchline of Arrow Park were shoppers here.\nT. Rogerson of Graham's Landing\nwis i butlneu visitor here.\nAt a meeting of the United\nChurch Lidies' tld further arrangementa were made for a novelty bazaar, a \"Mother Goose Firm\" to\nbe held next month.\nF. Mtrsltnd motored to town from\nArrow Park.\nDr. C. A. Courvllle hu returned\nfrom Beeton.\nMr. Starklauf of Makinsom wu\na business visitor here.\nMn. C. Marahall jr., of Burton is\na guett of Mn. C. L. Hiltz.\nS. Hall of Arrow Park wu a\nmotor visitor to Nikusp.\nJ. McQualr, who had been working tt the Wlterloo mine, Edgewood,\nhu returned home.\n- PAOI THREE\nRECEIPTS HIGH\nIN GAS REPORT\nExpenses Down  for October\nCompared With Year\nAgo\nv\nTbt riport of tht iu department\nfor tbe month of October u prenntad to tbt Ntlton city council\nMonday nlfht, ahowed thlt tbt\nchtrge for the month tmounttd to\n\u2666 1788 tnd receipt! wtn I177J. Tbla\ncomputa wltb chtrgei of IMltS\ntor tht umt montb lut yttr whtn\nreceipts were 11600.\nThe upenaei for tbt tmatdltta\nput montb were 81973 cornpired\nwith 12037 \u2022 yttr ago.\nAlderman J. I. McKenile ll chilr\u00ab\nmin of thi tu commlttw.\nYmir Dance Draws\nMany\nYMIR, B.C.. Nov. aS-Ymir Ladies'\nguild entertained at a dtnce tn tha\nguild's hill here with t Nelion orchestra providing the music. Thtre\nwas t good attendance, many coming from Nelson tnd Stlmo. Supper wu served.\nMr. end Mn. S. A. Curwtn tnd\nAlfred Ciwley of Stlmo wert visitors to Spoktne.\nSeveral new houses hive been\nbuilt in Ymir to accommodate new-'\ncomen.\nMn. Harry Steveni and children\nwere Nelion viiiton.\nA new garage ia being built on\nFirst avenue.\nJ. L. Parker, manager of the Two\nStar mine was a visitor to Nelson.\nO. D. Frith, manager of the Good-\nenough mine, spent i tew dayi In\nNelson.\nJot Brenntn of Ymlr wu a Nelaon vliltor.\n$ Ttateon^T^ (Lmpattg^\nimco-imiiatio tti may itra\nIt Starts Today at 8:30 a.m.\nOUR BIG THREMJAY\nPre'Christmas Sale\nCHECK YOUR CIRCULAR FOR THE OPENING\nDAT SPECIALS\nDont Mlsi Them!\nExtra Sales People to Assure Quick Service\nCharge Account Customers\u2014Charge Now, Pay by\nJanuary loth.\nPRE-CHRISTMAS SALE\nSpecials in House Furnishings\nON SALE THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY\nEnd Table \"Specter\nThese beautiful little tables are in smart\nnew design, well made with real walnut tops in matching grain. Specially\npriced for this event. djl AC\nEACH\nGreat Savings in Fine\nCups and Saucers\nA splendid every day article. Good looking gold lines on white ground, with\na fine even finish. Q-f\nSPECIAL PRICE, EACH ....\ny\nOptic Glass Tumblers\n6 gross only in this shipment. Stock up\nfor Christmas. This chance may not\ncome again. AQ*\n10 FOR  \u2122\nFrilled Curtains in a Sale\n75 pairs dainty 60-inch frilled curtains,\ncream or white body with marquisette\nfrills in rose, blue, gold, orchid or green.\nComplete with ties. A remarkable tM\nvalue.  PAIR *~\\r'\nCut Glass Specials\nFine quality glass ware at special prices.\nThese come in a pretty grape design\nand are real value.\nHigh Goblets, each   29<.\nCOCKTAIL CLASSES, each  .... 25*\nPORTS, each  \\  15*\nSherbets, each   25*\nVacuum Bottles at\nSpecial Prices\n60 only, strong vacuum bottles in any\nshade. A handy size at a remarkable\nprice.\nEACH\n45*\nEnglish Felt Linos\n900 square yards of good quality felt\nlinos in a great Variety of new designs.\nSuitable for any room. All 6 feet wide.\nBrighten up for the Christmas JC*\nholidays. SQ. YARD 4J\nReal Feather Pillows at\nEconomy Price\nStandard size pillows, covering of good\nfancy tick over mixed chicken feathers.\nSALE PRICE, 7ftf\nEACH     IV\nDresden Pattern China\nPretty gift cdps and saucers In rosebud design. Especially bought for this\nevent. ntt)\nEACH    tid\nWindow Blinds\nA limited quantity only at this price.\nThese are in fawn shade and 36 Inches\nwide by 5 feet long and are standard\nquality. CM\n\u00a3ACH_________M., 03\nSale of Heavy Printed\nLinoleums\nThis is standard quality jute backed\nlinoleum and usually sells at $1.00 sq.\nyard. A good range of designs for your\nselection. Come early. CM\nSQ. YARD   .,\nn   yuui\n69*\nGift Cups and\nSaueers\nEnglish China in new shapes and designs. Wonderful value. *}M\nEACH    L3\n ^^^^^^^^^H\n^^^pp\nPAOI POUR <\n- THI NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. B.C\u2014THURSDAY MORNING. NOV. If. 1884\nBIG BUSINESS\nRULES CANADA\nHo Sentiment There\nSays Hon. H. H.\nStevens\nTOBONTO, Nov. 28 (CPL-'Tht\nmanipulators ot bli buslnen are\nth* r*al government of Canada,\"\ndeclared Hon. H. H. Steveni before\nUniversity of Toronto itudenti at\nBart HOuse tonight\nTh* former minister of trade and\n\u2022ommtrct was gueit ipeaker at the\nUnivenlty debate on the resolution,\n\"That In th* opinion of thli house\nbig buslneu is a curse when directed solely by the profit motive.\"\n\"Now don't get me wrong,\" he\noontinued. \"I do not aay, nor would\nI admit, that the leaders of big bus-\nines personally interfere with the\noperation ot the government, but\nthe vtry nature of the laws ot the\nCountry and the character ot this\nlg business, as defined in the resolution, exerts an economic influence\nWhich supplants government control.\"\nTbe greatest crime of the age.\nSlid Mr. Stevens, was the refusal ot\nlg businessmen to accept respon-\n\u25a0ibility for those working under\nthem. \"I may be accused of being\nsentimental,\" he said, \"but we can\nafford iome sentimentality, for\nthere ia dog-gone little of it in big\nbuilneu.\"\nMINING MEN SEE\nAN ORE DETECTOR\nHear Papers bn One Occur-\nence$ in Parts of B. C.\nPROBE ORDERED BY B.C. INTO COAL\nAND PETROLEUM PRODUCTS INDUSTRY\nCosts and Profits in Both\nIndustries the Big\nQuestions\nVANCOUVER, May 38 (CP)\u2014An\n\"*lectro-ma8nometer'' with \"eyea and\nmet\" which have an affinity for\nmineral desposltlons, attracted attention at the annual meeting todty\nOt the British Columbia division, Canadian Inttltute of Mining and\n\u2022Metallurgy.\ntugene Bergman of the university\not Washington, Seattle, gave a technical description of lt and of its use\nIn locating ores.\ntt does not glvs any Indication\nttt values.\nMsjor c. B. North, manager of\nth* B. 0. Nickel Mines, Ltd., property ln Tale mlnint division, told the\nnwetlng ther* were no material met-\nAlurglcal difficulties regarding method* to b* applied tor extraction of\nth* minerals from B. 0. nickel orea.\nHe expected that within the next\ntew montha ther* would be sufficient tonnage \"ln sight\" to lustily a reduction works.\nMajor A. M Davis described de-\nvafc-pment of the Dentonia mine and\nmill ln southeastern British Colum-\n}bt. The property had been \"paying\nta way\" from ore.\nUnexpected veins of ore had been\nfound ln the Cariboo district, Douglaa Lay, provincial resident engineer,\neld.  It   wu  reasonable  to  expect\nat the veins go to depth and are\npersistent, be said.\nE. V. warren, M.E, gave a highly\ntechnical address regarding tha ores\nthe cariboo Oold quarta com-\nny. It was his conclusion tbat the\nwu deep-*eated.\nWillow Point Man Is\nOldest at Ceremony\nTRAD-, B.C.. Nov. 98. \u2014 Of the\ntnany visitors who gathered from all\nparts ot west Kootenay to attend\nthe unveiling of the J. H. Schofield\nmemorial plaque this afternoon, perhaps the oldest waa A. B. Shannon\nof Willow Point.\nA .pioneer resldenct of the district, Mr. Shannon Is now In his\n17th year and recalls having acted\nas the chairman of the Conservative\nnominating convention held ln Nelaon In 1807 at which \"Jim\" Schofield wm flrat nominated M a\ncandidate for parliamentary election.\nIt was a nominating convention\nof Conservatives of Tmlr riding. He\nhM wen the riding, which for\ntwenty-six years was represented by\nMr. Schofield. grow from a few\nscattered communities to the dlatrlct of thriving centers which Is\nnow weat Kootenay.\nMr. Shannon told the Tlmu today that In spit* of bis 87 years\nhe was feeling very fit and that\nhe wu happy to be present at tha\neeitmony in honor of his old friend\n\"Jim\" Schofield.       *\nCometi Halt Aces'\nWinning Streak\ni \t\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 28,-After winning six straight games the Aces\nmet defeat at the hands of the\nCometi in a game of the Trail\nBaaketball league, intermediate division, in the Memorial hall Wednesday night. Comets ran up a small\nmargin in the first half when the\n(core was 18-12. but after nine minutes ot the second frame, Acei\ntvened the score at 21-21.\nPagnan, of the Aces, snatched tht\nball from Strachan's hands to put\nthe Aces in the lead, 23-21. He followed with two penalty ihots, again\nincreasing the Aces' lead. Comets\nrut on a burst of speed and Euerby,\nTemple and Bishop ran the score up\nto 29 polnta.\nThe teams were:\nCometi\u2014Smith 8: Temple 4;\nEuerby 7; Bishop 1; Straehan 7;\nEvans 2; McPhail.\nAces\u2014Martin 4; Ponak: Pagnan\n10; Tognottl 2: Turik 2: Baldasil 2;\nfialclsiolli 2; Zinio 2.\nJoe Wallach refereed.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 2 (CP)-Th*\nBritlih Columbia government today appointed a royal oommiulon\nto Investigate th* coal and petroleum products industry of th*\nprovlnc*. Th* Inquiry wlll commence at one* under Mr. Justice\nM. A. Macdonald, of th* eourt tf\nappeal.    *\nThe aosp* of th* Inquiry, *l\ngiven In a statement laaued to the\npreu, follows:\n1, Th* following matters re*\nmeeting coal mined In or Imported\nInto British Columbl*, ana ueed\nfor fu*l purpoMi In Britlih Columbia.\n(a) Th* coat of production.\n(b) Th* manner and ont of\npreparation for th* wholeule and\nretail trade* reipectively.\n(c) The cost of transportation.\n(d) The cost to dealers in British\nColumbia.\n(e) Th* cost to consumers in British Columbia.\n(f) The profits made by persons\nor corporations owning or operating coal mlnei in Britiih Columbia,\nluosjad Xq apeui -ijjojd ot|j (I)\nor corporation! engaged in the buiiness of buying and selling coal ln\nBritish Columbia.\nPETROLEUM PRODUCTS\n2. The following matters respecting, petroleum products, that is to\nsay. gasoline, fuel-oil, lubricating\noil, kerosene, and other petroleum\nproducts imported Into or refined\nor produced in Britlih Columbia\nand used Or designed for uie therein for fuel purposes, lighting purposes, or in the operation of Internal combustion engines:\n(a) The cost of Importation or\nproduction.\n(b) The cost of refining or preparation for use.\n(c) The coit ot transportation.\n(d) The cost to dealers in British\nColumbia.\n(e) The cost to consumers in British Columbia.\nPROFITS   MADE\n(f) The profits made by persons\nor corporation! engaged in the importation of petroleum products\nInto Britiih Columbia, or refining,\nproducing, or supplying petroleum\nproducts for use in British Columbia.\n3. Generally, all matters tending\nto show the comparative value of\ncoal and petroleum product! for\neconomic use as aforesaid ln British\nColumbia and the value to th* economic welfare of British Columbia\nof the development of industry baled upon the production of the fuels\nenumerated, or tending to ihow\nwhether or not the pricei charged\nfor coal and petroleum products\nreipectively are unjust or unreasonable; and all such further matters as the commissioners may consider to be Incidental to any of the\nforegoing matters dt inquiry.\nFlashes From the Wires\nSAN FRANCIBCO-Th* Mui-\nael Rook itatlon of th* Olobe\nWlrtlau, Inc., reported receipt of\na meaiage from tho Philippine!\nAmerican freighter New York,\nlaying th* veuel wai saf*. Th*\nship had flashed an SOS, saying\nIt wai on a It* shore.\nNAPLES\u2014An electric car coun-\ning down the side ot Mount Vesuvius, loaded with tourists, left\nthe rails and crashed into an electric power pole today killing seven\npersons and injuring nine.\nHAVANA\u2014Th* ministry of Jul-\ntloa dlacloaea that an organisation\nknown as \"Railing* 18\" has takin\ncontrol of 800,000 acru of Cuban\nterritory and set up a \"rad regime\" where paopl* pay no taxu\nand Ignore th* Havana govtrnmtnt\nOTTAWA\u2014A message of congratulation waa sent to the Duke of\nKent by the governor-general.\nNIW YORK, - Primary producers of copptr In th* United\nStates hav* waived thtlr ulu\nquote In favor of cuitom smelters\nand aecondary producera for anothtr two monthi, It wai learned.\nLLOYDMINSTBR, Alta.-Increti-\ned hope was seen for the recovery\not Mr. and Mn. Oscar Sands and\ntheir oldest ton, Leon, who were\nfound unconscious ln their farm\nhome Tuesday after they had lain\nin the grip ot coal-gas poisoning\nfor 36 hours. Two other som, Grover\n19, and Elmer, 17, succumbed.\nHOLLYWOOD, Cal.\u2014\"I havt\nnothing to lay.\" That wai tht answer\u2014and tha only answer\u2014Douglaa Falrbank! Sr. would give today In rttponit to requeata for\ncomment regarding tha $10,000\ncourt coiti aliened agalnit him\nai coreapondent In tht Ltndon\ndlvore* ault of Lord and Lady\nAihley.\nLOS ANGELES\u2014In rapid iuc-\ncession three groups of strikers\noverturned two street cars completely and pushed a third on its\nside during the rush hour tonight.\nLONDON \u2014 Tht dominion!\n\u2022hould bt conaulted at to policy\nbtfort tht Britlih government decide! an th* eountry'i defenalve\nayatem, urged David Lloyd George\nduring tht defanct debate In tht\nhouu of common! tonight\nSAN DIEGO, Cal.\u2014Air Commodore R. H. Verney of the Britlih\nroyal air corpl and Squadron Leader A. Ferrier of the Royal Canadian\nair force today Inspected the army\nand navy air bases on North Island.\nLONDON\u2014Th* wedding of tht\nDuk* of Ktnt and Prlnceu Marina will (Ivt tight London bell-\nringer* their hardeat day'i work\nIn rtctnt ytan.\nThty ar* reaponalble for th*\npeal Ing of tht Wtitmlnittr abbey'!\nchlmei, of which thl full ranga\nof 8040 change! wlll require an\neetlmated thrtt houn.\nLONDON\u2014A htlf doten people\ncarrying stools arrived in the Westminster section thortly after (\no'clock this evening and took their\nplaces to await tomorrow's processions.\nWINNIPEG\u2014Tht body ot Rtv.\nW. T. Beatty, wh* dltd suddenly\nIn Toronto, wlll arrive htrt Thurtdiy whtrt burial will takt place.\nHi dltd of heart failure.\nWINNIPEG\u2014A discordant note\nsounded on Winnlpeg'i volume-\ngaining musical life when it wai\nlearned the Symphony orcheitra\nwould not be heard this season.\nRather than submit his right ot\ncontrol and selection to the Winni-\nSeg Musician's association, Bernard\n[aylor refused to conduct the orchestra through another season.\nOrioles Hopelessly\nOutclass Canucks\nTake  Basketball  Came at\nTrail to Tune of 47-6\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 28.-Canucks\nproved to be no match for the Ori-\noles in a game ot the Trail City\nBasketball league, ladies' division,\nplayed at the Memorial hall Wednesday night, when they lost 6-47.\nOrioles received little competition\nto be bothered about and the game\nwas terribly alow.\nJoe Wallach refereed.\nOrioles\u2014J. Davidson, 11; E. Bailie,\n10; L. Cuisick, 12; R. Severn, 12; D.\nEdwards. 2; Y. Guillume.\nCanucks\u2014M. Burton, 1; M. Somerville. 4; Mr. McLeod; A. Reynolds,\n1; T. Andrews; A. Tether.\nTrail Has its\nFirst Snowfall\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 28.-Trall received its first blanket ot mow thii\nwinter Wednesday, the precipitation\ncommenced at about 2:30 pjn., and\ncontinued intermittently until late\nthe same night.\nLittle snow remained on the\nstreets, however, white only being\nseen on roofs and board walks.\nDespite the snowfall th* weather\ncontinued mild.\nSome Settlers in\nNorthern B. C. Are\nin Need Clothing\nVICTORIA, Nov. 28 (AP).-While\nlarge shipments of clothing and\nother comforts have been made\nfrom time to time through the Red\nCross and other agencies ln cout\ncities, some settlers in tho Prince\nGeorge and Peace River sections of\nthe province are in need ot additional clothing, particularly for\nchildren, provincial officials reported today.\nIHMPLES MSAPPEAR-HEALTH IMPROVES\n\u2014^_ . -___ _J\ngURDOCK\nRlood\nBitters\nThose aggravating and dligqsting\nplmplti or blemishes os your akin ara\nprobably cauaed by bad blood. The\nremedy Is limple\u2014BURDOCK BLOOD\nBITTERS. Thia Great Blood PurlJer\ntones tbe blood stream,' regulates tht\nInner system and your skin become!\nclear aod tmooth again.\nM THEStOMAOT\nr BIPOD AND SKIN\nFAIRBANKS NAMED\nCO-RESPONDENT IN\nLORD ASHLEY CASE\nLONDON, Nov. 28 (AP).\u2014Lord\nAahley wai granted a divorce dt-'\noru nlal today from Lady Aahley\nand coata of th* action wtr*\nawarded againit Douglaa Pair-\nbank! Sr., named at corespondent.\nR. C. Crowe Leaves\nto Attend Meeting\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 98. \u2014 tt. C.\nCrowe, general counsel for the Conaolldated Compiny, left this morning for Vancouver where .he wlll\nattend tht annual muting of the\nB.C. Mine Owners' association.\nWhile tt tht coast ttr. Crove\nwlll addreaa the mmt owners on\nsome legal aspects of the mining\nInduitry.\nT. w. Blngay. formerly vlw-preii-\ndent In chtrgi of finances for the\nConsolidated, Is prealdent or the aaaoclatlon.\nBrother of Mrs.\nMotte   Honored\nTRAIL, B. C. Mov. 18\u2014Provo*t\nLllee Callander of Bngland, haa been\nelected a fellow of the Royil Society of Arts, according to word received hen by Mri. C. t. Motte. hli\nsister. The Royal Society of Art* la\nassociated with the Royal Academy\nof Arte ln developing the artistic\ntrades of Oreat Britain.\nBIRTHDAY PARTY\nHELD FOR ADJUTANT\nSeventeen lady memberi of the\nNelson corps of the Salvation Army\nasemblal at the barracks on Wedneaday evening and, led by Mrs.\nCharles E. Leggatt, held a surprise\nbirthday party for Adjutant Harold\nChapman, who was born in Barns-\nley, Yorkshire, England, on November 28. Adjutant Chapman observed\nhis birthday by taking Mrs. Chapman for a trip to Rossland.\nWednesday evening'! progrim in\nNelson was opened with the singing of \"Happy Birthday to You,\"\ngame; were enjoyed, choruses sung\nand a pleaaant evening was brought\nto a close with a pnyer sfter tht\nadjutant had Informed th* members ot the corps that h* would invite thtm to hia birthday again\nnext year.\nrive visiton attended tht meeting during the evening.\nDR. DONN1LLY IS CANDIDATE\nASSINIBOIA, Sask., Nov. 28 (CP)\n-Dr. T. F. Donnelly, M.P. for Willow Bunch, was unanimously nominated by the Liberals of the new\nfederal constituency of Wood Mountain^ In convention here today.\nC.C.F. LEADER\nGIVEN HEARTY\nWELCOME HERE\nCitizens Brove the\nStorm to Hear\nConnell\nARE TOLD MUCH\nABOUT FATTULO\nTurning out ln goodly numbers\ndespite a rain and sleet atorm, to\nbear Rot. Robert Connell, leader\nor tht C.C.P. group ln tb* tali-\nlatur* for tb* flnt time, Nelaon\ncltlaens Wedneaday evening uw a\npleaaant faoed elderly man with\npointed gray baud standing almoit\nmotionless except for reference to\ndocuments, and heard blm speak\nclearly, easily and pleasingly for\nover an hour, during which, with\nmany an Illuminating fact, unusually picturesquely clothed, and with\napparent logic, he told a story of\nabsorbing  interest.\nTh* taction of (aale hall wltb\nchair and opera-chair seating wu\nwell filled, but the benches, wblcb\nfilled about half tb* floor space,\nwere only apsraely occupied. R. Foxall wu chairman of the muting,\nand Oeorge Turner gave an address\nof half an bour betore the speaker\nof the erenlng wu reached.\nHEARTY WELCOME\nAfter being accorded a hearty welcome by the houw. Rev. Mr. Connell spoke so evenly, and almost\nconversationally, that, although hli\nlubject matter wu Intensely interesting, he wu Interrupted only onoe\nor twice by applause, the audience\napparently being busy absorbing\nwhat h* wu Mjlng.\nHis addreu ftll Into two portions,\nthe flrat dealing chiefly wltb the\nrecent 'legislative session, and with\nthe Pattullo governmente year Of\nInactivity with regard to work and\nwagei, and the tteond dealing with\ntht genenl economic altuatlon, th*\npurported breakdown ot th* economic lystem, and tbe remedies tb*\nCooperative Commonwealth federation proposed to apply wben entrusted with power,\nRIFER8 TO PATTULLO\nThe provincial C.CF. leader wai\nparticularly interesting when dealing with the legiilative session, and\nhis revelations tended to puncture\nthe myth of a colossal Liberal master mind at Victoria. Though challenged throughout the seuion to\ndivulge the government's plan for\nrehabilitating provincial conditions\nwith work and wages, neither then\nnor since had Premier Pattullo revealed any plan, though he was\nnow in office a year\u2014unless his\ngoing to the Dominion for money\nwu a plan, the speaker stated.\nIn thc caie of the economic council, promised ln the Liberal platform, and hailed as a wonderful accomplishment, Mr. Connell showed\nthat the act, except for title and\nconclusion, was practically Identical\nwith that of the Oliver government\nin 1918 establishing an industrial\ncouncil, and the middle portion ot\nthe new act was lifted bodily from\nth* old one. How could a government that hadn't enough ability to\nwrite an act tor itself and that\ncouldn't distinguish between economics and industrialism possibly\ngovern the provlnc* intelligently?\nhe queried.\nA somewhat similar method was\nused hy the government ln writing\nits Special Powen act, he explained,\nthe government simply copying\nfrom the British North America act\nthe lilt of powen set apart to the\nprovinces, and inserting tt in the\nmiddle of the measure. He explained that he did not fear the measure\nparticularly, and actually Premier\nPattullo had, so tar ai he could recall, not made any use of It as yet.\nMr. Connell itated, however, he\nwu Indignant at the act, u it was\nunconstitutional for the houit to\ndelegate Its powen to the government, and the only parallel for it ln\ntht history of the Britiih Empire\nwas ln the time of Henry VIII wnen\nparliament \u2014 unconstitutionally,\nwriten now agree\u2014delegated Its\npowen for eight months to the King\nand his council.\nDOMINION RELATIONS\nMr. Connell was able to explain\nMr. Pattullo's attitude toward the\nDominion only on the theory that he\nbelieved he could, If Mr. Bennett\nrefused to finance his program,\nraise such a feeling in the province\nagainst Dominion connection that\nMr. Bennett would bow to the storm.\nNo one who knew Mr. Bennett\ncould imagine that ending, the\nspeaker said, and so Mr. Pattullo\ncame away from Ottawa declaring\nhe had been treated with great discourtesy. In tnll connection, Mr.\nConnell recalled how Mr. Pattullo's\nsensitive soul recently accused the\nreeves and mayOn of discourtesy,\non the occasion when he refused to\nreceive the delegation.\nTh* C.C.F. leader conceded that\ntht Pattullo government had actually done a oouple of thlnga to\npromote work and wages. It lowered\nthe coet of beer licences to certain\nbeer parlors, and It made an Industrial loan to the White Pine Lumber company, which happened to be\nbeaded by tbe Uberal whip.\nIn. hli general talk, Mr. Connell\nwent Into the economic situation,\nand particularly ridiculed the widely held theory of. the business world\nthst foreign trad* wu the necesury foundation to proiperlty.\nHe alao laid down the proposition\nthat the country's debt could  not\nbe osld and ntver would be paid.\nTAKE  OVER WEALTH\nOnly one solution for the situation\nremained, and that waa tor the\npeople, through the C.C.F., to take\nover the nation'* wealth, 'and lee\nthst tbe returns from production\nwer* ao distributed that everyone\nwould ihare equitably ln enjoyment\not tha product*.\nFrequent nferenou w\u00abn made to\nPremier Bennett and to Rr. Hon.\nMackenzie Xing. Neither of the old\npartlu could poulbly uve the\noountry, the speaker asserted. Regarding Mr. King's offers to sav* the\nsituation lf elected, he pointed out\nthat the depreulon itarted under\nMr. King, nad lf he had the power\nto uve the nation, that wu the\ntime he ihould have applied It.\nAt the clou of his address, Mr\nConnell answered a numb*- of ques-\ntlona asked by members of tbe audience.\nTHE WEATHER\nMln. Mis.\nvictoti*  ~\t\n.    41   44\nNanalmo   _ \u00bb.\n.   88   44\nVancouver   ..\n88   48\nKamloops \t\n.   88   83\nPrlnc* Oeorg* _.\t\n.   80   28\nEattvan   Point   \t\n.   88   48\nPrince Rup\u00abrt  ~...\n88   48\nAthn    ....\n...   -   80\nDawioa    \t\n..     8\" 8\nBtattlt _\n...   48   48\nPortland\n...   44  48\n...   80   ti\napokani   .. \t\n..   88   88\n84   74\n...   88   -\n...   27   -\narano Forki  -\t\n34   83\nNelion   . .r \t\n30   34\nKailo    _, - \t\n18   31\nCranbrook -\t\ncranbrook      \t\n87   38\nCalgary'       \u2014\n...    18   38\n8   38\n8   28\nPrlnot Albtrt _\t\na tt\n8    IB\nQu'Apptut .....\n8   38\nMoon  jaw \u2014\t\n.    18   98\nNelson    and    vicinity:\nGenerally\nfair and colder at night.\nMERCER JOINS\nEDMONTON ESKS\nLeaves Ranks of Simon Pures\nto Play for \"Duke\"\nKeats\nTRAIL, B.C. Nov. 28.-Lorln\nMerctr, of tht Trail Smoke Eaten,\nhai joined tht pro ranki of\n\"Duke\" Ktati' Edmonton Eiklmoi,\naccording to a Itory In tht Calgary Albtrtan.\nThe itory itatei In part: \"Lorln\nMercer, who itarted ai a junior\ndefence player In Edmonton, hat\nilgntd to play for tha Edmonton\nEiklmoi of tht Northwo.it Pro\nHockey league. Mercer hai been\nan outstanding performer for Trail\nfor tha ptit two winten. Ha li a\nihlfty itlck handltr and a clevtr\npuck oarrytr and ihould go a long\nway In pro hookey.\"\nMEN TAKE WHIST\nHONORS, LEGION\nWhist honon wtnt to A. Kraft, L.\nPickard, W. Latta and H. Renwlck\nat the Canadian Legion whist drive\nWednesday night when tht number\nplaying was considerable larger\nthan on the previous week. Cards\nwere In charge of F. V. Webber and\nmemben of the committee were R.\nA. Aldenmith, Mn* Jtmes Mclvor\nand E. A. Woolls..\nSt. Paul's Players\nScore Second Hit\nSt. Paul's playan excelled themselves again Wednesday evening tn\ntheir presentation of Dickens'\n\"Cricket on the Hearth.\" at SL\nPaul's hall, when they played btfore another large audience. Applause met their acting at every\nturn. and. on the strength of the\nsuccess, of the presentation, tht\nmembers of the caste were planning\nto show outside the city.\nHarvey Still in\nContest for tht\nBank Directorate\nVANCOOVBR, Nov. 38 (OP)\u2014J. R.\nHarvey, Vancouver financial agent.\nwho bas agreed prior to the recent\nmeeting of shareholders of the Bank\nof Canada to permit hlmulf to bt\nnominated aa a Brltlth Columbia\nrepresentative on thi directorate of\ntail aq Aapol paounouu* 'guiq et\\-\ndeclded to leave hil name ln nomination.\nW. C. woodward received a majority vote as th* province's favored\nnominee at a meeting of 100 share-\nholden.\nMr. Harvey contend! the shareholders meeting did not conform to\nthe scheme laid down by tht Canadian chamber of commerce to Insure\ngeographical representation.\nStrike Rioter\nGiven Two Years\nAMOS. Que., Nov. 28 <CP>\u2014Sentences of two yean in the penitentiary and deportation were imposed\nhere today upon Tony Zouptn, convicted of being a party to a strike\nriot at Noranda Mines last Junt.\nZoupan ii the 18th agitator to be\nsentenced by Mr. Justice Komeo\nLanglais.\ni ,    t\nNo Green Cheese\nin Moon Makeup\nWASHINGTON, NO. 38 (CP)\u2014\nTake It from pr. F. E. Wright,\ntnere's nothing to that moon-U-\nmade-of-green-cheeae theory. The\nCarnegie Institution iclentlit innounced tbat the moon's lurrare\nla made of translucent rocks, light\nln color, and other material! sucn\nas volcanic ashes.\nVETERANS OFFER\nAID TO RELIEVE\nJOBLESS AFFAIRS\nLADIES REVEL\n1NFDNFEST\nRotary  Members  Prove  Fine\nEntertainers at Club\nAffair\nMONTREAL Nov. 28 (CP)-Im-\nprovement In the pensions' situation\nfor war veterans enabled the Canadian Legion to consider questions\nwith which it could not deal previously, Col. W. W. Foster, Vancouver,\naction president of the Legion, itated her* today. As a result of this\nimprovement, he said, the Legion\nhu now offered the services of Its\nmemben to the Dominion government to help If poulble in relieving\nthe unemployment crisis.\nSHOT THROUGH BEAD\nCHICAOO. Nov. 98 (API\u2014The body\nof a youth about 80 years old, ahot\nthrough the head, was placed on the\naldewMk In front of a doctor's emergency hoapltal tonight by two men\nwho fled In automobile.\nRECORD SALES MADE\nFOR FOSTAOE STAMP\nLONDON. NOV. 38 (CP-Hlv.s)\u2014A\nnew record tor postage stamp salts\nwas wt here today when thi total\nfor the Arthur Hind sale passed the\n\u00a3100.000 mark at Hanger's auction\nrooma. \u25a0\nRttarlani fated Rotary Annea at\na   rlotoui  antertalr.mtnt  In  th*\nHum* illver ball room Monday\nevtnlng   whin   Rotarian   P.   C.\nSharp* playad a itellir role ia\nchief   comedian.   Tha   entertainment wtnt pleasingly tram tht\nrldleuloue ta tht lublmi In tht\nvtrigui itunti pulled on membtn,\nand  tht  flnt   mutlctl   numben\nprovided  by  Mn.  Gladys Wtbb\nPoitar'i  itrlnged  trio and   Mn.\nJ. T. Andrew's vocal lelectiona. A\ndance rounded out tht program.\nR. A. Feeblts, J. A. Smith and A\nA. Perrler aMlited with the lerving.\nMr. Smith, in hli exuberance over\nthe gracious felicitations extended\nthem  by  grateful  guests,  spread\nfragments ot broken dishes over the\nball room floor and brought down\nthe house generally. The guests had\njust recovered from the ihock when\nChief of Polict Alex. Stewart staged\na realistic raid and placed F. C.\nSharpe  under   arrest  tot  double\nparking and pmduced a miniature\ncar to prove hit case. E. P. Dawaon\nand C. B. Garland responded nobly\nto their profession and there ensued a legal battle over tht arrest\nMr. Sharpe was again lingled out\nin the fun-making program when\nho received the bett wiihei ot the\nRotary Annes for reaching his majority. In a manner befitting a Rotarian,  he  was  congratulated  by\nMn. A. T. Honwill who read from\na scroll the wishes of the gathering.\nShe presented him with a bouquet.\nUpon opening the bouquet Mr.\nSharpe brought forth a bloom that\nembodied the charms ot all mentioned flowen,  a healthy cluster\not celery, and promised the Rotary\nAnnes that it would probably grace\nmany a tabl* on the westward trip\nof the morning train. The congratulations ended amid the strains ot\n\"Working on the Railroad.\"\nFrom the riotously humorous\nscene above, the party wai brought\nto a more sane level with three\ndancti trom Henry VJII, pltytd by\nMn. Gladys Webb Fogter> itrlnged\ntro, Mn. Foiter. Mn. Anne Aihby\nahd Mis* Mte Eccles, and \"Hungarian Dances,\" by Brahms. Mn. J.\nT. Andrews gave two lolos, \"For\nYou Alone,\" tnd a fanciful numbtr,\n\"Once ln a Blue Moon.\" Mn. Foster gavt a violin aolo.\nWhen tht musical numben were\nconcluded the fun wti iwitehed on\nonce more and th* contributors were\npresented with daintily packaged\ntin whistles and miniature violins.\nR. W. Dawion. I. G. Nelton, J.\nWheeler, J. T. Andrewi and Dr. W.\nLaishly made tho presentations w|th\nprofused thanks.\n\"Him Sing.\" ln penon of Mr,\nSharpe added another humorous\ndivenion. Decked out in a cook's\napparel ahd wearing the traditional\nnig tall, Mr. Sharp* received one\nround of applause after another of\nhii Chinese song interpretations.\nMiss K, Ethel Gray gave a de\ntailed address on the progress of\nKootenay Lake General hoipital\nand plant for th* futurt, and the\nprogram waa brought to a close\nwhen W. E. waston collected 100\nshekels from Mr. Sharpe for old\nage pension, which the latter paid in\ncoppen.\nDOG DISCHARGES\nGUN WHICH KILLS\nITS MISTRESS\nCHATTARCY, Waih., Nov. 28-\n(AP)\u2014A hunting dog'i happy greeting of Mn. Marvel Harbour of Spokane, hli mistress, caused her death\nnear her* today.\nMn. Harbour and her huiband,\nArthur, had bten hunting rabbits\nwith shotguns. They separated to\nhunt around a small hill, with the\ndog following Harbour. Mn. Hart\nbour returned to their parked automobile tint\nThe dog, seeing his mistress at\nthe car, ran to her and leaped upon\nher In greeting. The gun was discharged, the full load entering her\nheart\nPotato Growers\nTalk Marketing\nVICTORIA, Nov. 28 (CP)-The\nprovincial marketing board received\na delegation of British Columbia\npotato growen today, tor discussion\nof a proposed marketing scheme\nfor tuben, under provincial regulation. Hon. K. C. McDonald returnsd\nfrom the interior, and is expected to\nact shortly in connection with appointment of a sheep products board.\nWilliam Harrison of PriRhard, L.\nHoover ot Kamloops, and Alistair\nCameron of Kelowna, are being suggested at the iheep regulating body.\nSchool Holiday\nin Trail Today\nTRAIL, B. C Nov. 38\u2014In honor\not tbe marriage of prince Qeorge.\nyoungest son Of King Oeorge v.. to\nPrincess Marina, Of Greece, tomorrow will be a school holiday throughout tbe provlnc* according to word\nreceived by W. R. B. Monypenny,\nschool board aecretary.\nUlm Arrives\nat Los Angeles\nLOS ANGELES, Nov. 28 (API-\nCharles Ulm, navigator tor Sir\nCharles Kingsford-Smith on his\noriginal California to Australia\nflight, paused here tonight en route\nto Vancouver, B.C., where next week\nhe plans to take otf for a second\ntranspacific Jaunt to Auitralla.\nLeaves Hospital to\nFace Charge\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 28 (CD-\nJoe Rosenok, critically injured two\nweeks ago when struck by a bullet,\nbelieved to have bten fired by Str-\ng\u00abut G. Sunstrum of th* city police,\nwas releaied from hospital today\nand w||l stand trial on a chargt of\nbreaking and entering.\nASK CUT IN SALU\nTAX ON ICI CREAM\nTORONTO, Nov. 28 (CP)-Allen\nC. Fraier, lecretary of the National\nDairy Council of Canada, today told\nthe Ice Cream Manufacturers association that the Dominion government will be asked to reduce the\nsales tax on cream from six to five\ncenta.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. C, Nor. J8-J. H S.\nWinter, who visited ln Nation, hta\nieturn*d to Tnll.\n\u2022   \u00ab   \u2022\nMn. Ales Tates wta hottta* yta-\ntirdiy afternoon to mtmbtn of the\nwomen'i auxiliary to gut Trail million. Finn arrangements for tb* fall\nsalt of work wen completed.\n.   .   .\nMr. and Mn. A. Uelk havt nturned from a trip to Ktlowna.\n.   *   .\nBoric* of military whlat drlvit given br ladlea of tbe Royal Purple,\nconcluded Tueiday night. WUUam\nMarah winning tht grand prlae\nThlrty-thrt* table* wen ln pliy lait\nnlgbt. Poland winning tint pltc*\nwith 181 flagi. Pitying for Poland\nwere Mr. and Mn. j. Melrose and\nMr. and Mn. w. Melroee. Andy\nCrlchton won ipeclal evening prise.\nW. 3. Hardlngton waa master of cere-\nmonlei and aervlng on tht refreshment committee wtn Mn. w. J.\nHardlngton, Mn. W. Marah,' Mra.\nArthur Sherman, Mn. WUUam Morrice, Mn. I. Matthew* lnd Mrs. val\nKavlc.\nGOVERNMENT OF\nBOLIVIA IS OUT\nPresident Arrested by Troops;\nWill This Prolong\nWar?\nWASHINOTON, Nov. 38 (AP)\u2014A\nsudden overturn of the Bolivian government waa disclosed today through\nadvices received hen thit Daniel\nSalamanca, Bolivian pretldtnt, bad\nbeen arretted by troops on tbl Chaco\nwar front.\nApparently aa part of a carefully\nplanned coup d'etat, vlce-preeld-mt\nJoie Lull Tejada Soriano wu rtported to have seised control of La\nPaa, the capital.\nUnited sutes official* tonight\nwtre appnhenilv* ovtr what effect\ntht apparent coup might htvt on\nLeague of Nitloni effort* to bring\nptace In the Chaco war between\nBoUvla ahd Paraguay, in the tbtenoe\nof complete official dispatches, how*\never, thty declined to comment.\nTOYREPAIRING\nWORK BEGINS\nScouts and Guides\nto Cooperate\nin Task\nThe thrtt NtUon scout troop*\nand th* Nelion Olrl Ouidei an now\nraady to begin tbtlr work of toy\nrepairing, tnd tbty hope by getting\nan early start that tbey wll) get\nthe toy* nady well baton Christ-\nu.\nThi WUlow Point Boy Soout* tnd\nOlrl Ouldu hara alnady unt In\neome toys to be repaired.\nIt wu tbt flnt intention of tht\nNelion Bcoute and Ouldu to obtain a central plaoa to repair tbelr\ntoys but when thli could not bt\ndone lt wu decided to um tht\nscout bill.\ngreryone having old toyi thlt an\nrepairable and wblcb are of no\nfurther um, la asked to glvt tbem\nto th* aeouti and guldea to mak*\nonr tor children leu fortunate. Tht\ntoy distribution tn put nut hat\nproved an event which hu mtdt\nChrlstmu for many children tnd\ntht work It worthy ot tvtry tup-\nport. Tht toontr tilt toys ean bt\nobtained, too, tbt toontr the tcovtt\nand guides will bt abl* to get their\nwork aligned.\nTbt   schools   an   cooperating   ln\nthis work  and aome  of th*  merchanU an placing a bos In thalr j\n\u25a0tons In which may b* put ntw\ntoyi that people would Ilk* ta glv* !\nfor distribution.\nIt Is believed there an many old I\ntoyi   stowed   away   ln   attic*   tbtt\npeople wlll ntnr want again and\ntheae, lf repairable, will bt wholly j\nacceptable. ^^^\nbuffaloes win\nfasthoopgame;\nTake Elks Into Camp 47-29 j\nin Fine Match at\nTrail\nBEER RACKET\nLEADER TAKEN\nALBANY, R X, NOT. 88 l'AP)\nDutch Bchulte, onot a New Tock\nbetr racket leader, aurrendered to\nthe united State* government today\nwhile tu agenu pushed an Intensive\nMarch to bring him to trial on an\nIncomt tax evulon charge.\nTbt neatly dreued Uttle chap\nwalked Into tht offlot ot united\nSUtea Oommiulon Litter T. Bub*\nbird, tdmltted ht wit Arthur Fteg-\nenheimtr, alias Dutch Schults. fugitive Since lttt January, schultz la\naccuaed ln one lmtanca of aide-\nstepping a payment of 888.369 on\nan Income ot |130 _\u2022_ lo 1838.\n\"My only regret It that Bchulte\nwill not bt carried hert In t wooden box,\" wu tht comment of Ntw\nTork clty'i police commlMlontr, uw*\nli J. Valentine, on Schulta' surrender.\nLawrence Beltner\nIs Laid at Rest\nTRAIL. B.C., Nov. 88.\u2014Utt rltea\nfor Lawrence Beltner. 11-year-old\naon of Mr. and Mn. Charlu N.\nBeltner wbo died here Monday, wtn\nhtld thli afternoon from St. Andnw't Anglican church. Rev. L. A,\nMorrant conducted tht Mrvloea it\ntht church and graveside at Moun*\ntain view cemetery.\nA wealth of floral tribute! from\nthe boy's hoit of friendi covered\nthe coffin. Pallbearers were Jack\nBrady, Marvin Olover. Billy Klnnla,\nMaurice Mawdsley, John Palmer,\nOordon Redgrave, Ernest Olover and\nEddie Paulson.\nTrail Colombos\nWill Barnstorm\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 28. - Tnll\nColombos. leaden of the Trail Bas*\nketball league, senior men's division\npropose to do some barnstorming\nover the week-end and havt arranged to play in Kelowna and Penticton on the nights of Friday and\nSaturday, respectively.\nPASTOR KIDNAPPED\nDOROVILLE, Calif., Nov. 28 (AP)\n\u2014Police said today that James M.\nOchtltree. 59, pastor of the First\nMethodist church of Tulare, told\nthem he had been kidnapped by a\nnan who threatened his lift unless\nhe was driven to Portland, Ore.\nAfter he was forced to take drinks,\nRev. Mr. Ocheltree told officers,\nhis automobile crashed into a tree\non the Gridley highway yesterday.\nHe suffered a dislocated left hip,\nfractured left leg and minor cuts\nand bruises.\nFIRE  IN  HONDURAS\nTEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, Nov. 38\n(AF)\u2014Fire dutroyed four entire\nbusiness blocks In San Pedro Suit\nTueaday night, nporte reaching here\ntonight said.\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. tS.-Although\nboth teams wert bolstered with\nplayen of intermediate caliber, llkt\nand Buffaloes played ont of tht\nfinest tnd cleanest buketbill gamts\nvet wltnewtd at the Memorial htll\nIn a gam* ot tht Senior Men's\nleague, Wednetday night.\nBuffaloei won, however, 47-28,\nbut at times the Elks wtre not ttr\nbehind. After the tint five minutes\nof play the Buffaloes had a small\nlead, 7-3. They continued to increatt\nthlt icore throughout the tint halt\nwhich endtd 22-8.\nIt was after the 10 minutei of tht\nsecond frame when Elki, who had\n13 polnti compared to the Buffaloes' 32. brought themielvei up to\nwithin seven point* of tht othen.\nBuffaloes surged thead to hive 47\npoints at the end ot full time, Elks\nonly making two tdditionil btskets.\nThe teams wert:\nBuffa-oea\u2014Gripich, 10: Weit, t;\nBurrows, 18; Curtii, 13; Stnchan, 2;\nWettwood, 4.\nElkl-Hartley, 2; Williams, 2; Morris, 8; Nlcholion, 18; Smith; Halliwell. 2.\nJoe Wallach referttd.\nARROWS BLANK\nNEW HAVENERS\nPHILADELPHIA, Nov. 28 (AP).\n\u2014A last period icorlng ipree good\ntor two goals netted Philadelphia\nArrows a 2-0 Canadian-American\nHockey leagut victory over New\nHaven Eagles tonight. Stan McCabo\ngot away in the cldsing minutes to\nnet the two tallies. In each Instance,\nRoy Burmeiiter wai credited with\nan assist.    ,\nMARITIME HOCKIV\n, Moncton 2; at Charlottetown 8.\nHalifax 4; at Saint John 2.\nIf you suffer\ntake advantage ol\nthis offer to tij\nKRUSCHEN\nat NO EXftNS^\nSufferers fram rheumatism, sciatica!\nlumhigo, overweight \u2014 try Kruscba]\nSalts it our expense. Kruachen bu\nbrought relief lo millions of ptoplt scaU\ntend over mon thu one hundred countries throughout the world. Kruschen\nrids tbt body of all food refuse, of all\npoisons ud harmful adds wblcb ire lit\nroot of your troubles or which may mm\nday bring these aflllctioni upon you.\nAik your druggist todiy for tbe KruJ\nscbeq Glut Package. This coaaliu oj\none Regular ISc package ud a FREE\nTRIAL BOTTLE. Um tbt trial bottk\nfint Use it u prescribed ind Kruscben'l\nlix natural mineral salts will itirt you\nout to t new life. With your internal\norgans functioning u nature Intended\ntbey ihould you'll find sew health ud\nnew energy. Try Kruschen todiy AT\nOUR EXPENSE but remember, yew\ndruggist hu only a limited lupply.\ntt&flfc\n ftHT\n-THI NILION DAILY NIWS. NILSON. I.C-THURSDAY MORNING. NOV. t\u00bb. 1M4-\nNakusp Women's Institute\nCelebrates 25th. Birthday\nHas Done Much Good Work; Mrs. J. A.\nStobo of Nelson was First\nPresident\nTES, DEBS MUST REALLY WORKJOR A LIVING\nNAKUSP, B.C.. Nov. it.\u2014An epoch ln the hlitory ot the Nikuip\nWomen'i lnititute wu the twenty-fifth tnnlveritry'which wtl retched\nthli month.\nIn obtervance, the memben entertained their huiband! md friendi\nit t truly delightful entertainment.\nA program of ipetchei md im*Kj>\t\nlical itema wtl opened by the pre\nopei\nlentation of the fltg by the lmtitute memben ud the ilnging ot\n\"Oh Ctntdt\".\nAn iddmt of welcome wtl given\nby Mn. O. H. Otrdner, preeldent,\nwho hu been \u2022 member of the organization ilnce 1910. She told how\nthe lnititute wu organized in November, 1900 by Mill Laura Rose of\nOntario.\nNELSON WOMAN FIRST\nRPIIIDENT\nThe officen elected at that time\nwere: Preeldent, Mrt. J. A. Stobo,\nwho now reildei in Nelion; vlct-\npritldtnt, Mn. J. H. Ittvinton;\niteretary-treMurer, Mln Betili\nAbriel. Thi mtmbtn tnrolltd it\nthtt tlmt wtrt Mrt, A. Q. Bell,\nMn. J. H. Stivtnwn, Mlu Belli.\nAbrlil, Mn. Wm. Herrldge, Mn.\nF. Htyet, Mri. W. Ctrruthtn, Mn.\nH. Ruihton, Mn. R. Abbli tnd\nMn. J. A. Stobo.\nPenomlly.\" the ipetker itld, '1\nhave found the inttltute t wurce\nof intereit md pleuure it ill tlmei.\"\nShe spoke of whit the lnititute\nmetnt to the memben in the eirly\ndaya and pointed out that ilnce its\norganization 25 yean ago the inatitute htd justified iti exiitence.\nSECRETARY 16 YIARI\nThe minutes of the ftnt lnititute\nmeeting were retd by Mn. W. Car-\nruthen, t chtrter member, who hu\nbeen lecretary for IS yein. Tribute wai paid to the memory ot\nMrs. E. D. Barrow, a paat pretident,\nwho died recently ln Engltnd.\nMentget of congratulation were\nBANISH COMMON\nCONSTIPATION WITH\nDELICIOUS CEREAL\nKellogg's Ao-Bban Brings\nRelief\nLook out for heldichu, lott et\ntppetita and energy, tallow complexion!, iltepleuneu. Frequently,\ntheie ar* warning ilgni of common\nconitipttion. If neglected, your\nhealth mey b* impaired.\nTodaj, you csn rid yourtelf of\ncommon conitipttion by ettlng a\ntempting ceretl. Laboratory teiti\nahow thst Kellogg'i Au-Bmn f ur-\nntihta \"talk\" and vitamin B to aid\nregultr habite. Au-BraM 1* also\ntlch in inn for the bipod.\nTh* \"bulk\" in All-Bun it much\nlike that found tn leafy vegetable!.\nWithin the body, it forma a aoft\nmtu. Gtntly, thla dem out the\ninteitlntl wute!. Bow much better thii ii than Uklng patent\nmedicineil\nTwo tablttpoonf till of Au-Bsah\ndaily will uiually overcome mott\ntypt! of common conitipttion.\nChronic cant, with etch meal. If\nteriouily 111, aee yonr doctor. Au,\nBran makei no claim to be a \"cure-\nsll.\"\nServe All-Bun sa a ceretl, or\nuse in cooking. At- all grocen. In\nthe red-and-green package. Mtdt\nby Kellogg in London, Ontario,\nretd trom Mri. R. Quince ot Delhi,\nOnt., Mn. M. Vipond of Trill tnd\nMn. J. A. Stobo ot Nelion, who were\nell former memberi.\nA voctl lolo wu betutifully rendered by Mn. G. D. Stibbs.   The\naccompaniment was played by G.\nH. Gardner Jr.\nREMINISCENCES OF EARLY\nDAYS\nReminiscences of eirly institute\ndayi wai given by Mn. W. Herridge\nwho hu alwayi taken an active\npart in the welfare work of the organization.\nAnecdotes told with t hint of\nhumor proved unututlly intereit-\ning.\nAmong the miny good worki\nwhleh the lnititute hu ipomond\ntrt tht fencing tnd upkeep ef the\ncemetery, the fint mow plow, t\nhigh tchool for Nikuip, child welfire, dentil cllnlct, tnd le en,\ndomtloni to loltrlum tnd crippled children'! homi, tht raising\nof tvtr (1000 towtrd thi Eileen\nAndenon fund tnd mtny ethtn.\nC. I. LEARY\nLAUDS INSTITUTE\nC. S. Leary, M.P.P., wu also preient and apoke very highly of the\ninititutei of the province which\nhad been the meant of bringing\ninto force mmy ltwi for the benefit\nof womm, children, the dliabled\nand the aged. He also tpoke of the\nprobability of itate hetlth iniurance md atked that the local lnititute support the meuure ihould\nlt arise.\nAnother illusion ii shattered! All\ngirls in the so* al register are not\nwealthy. Moit of them do not\nwork for the fun of lt\u2014but because\nthey \"need the dough.\" Theie dii-\ncoveries were made through a consensu! after New York tociety girls\nwere accused by t models' association of using their social poeltlon to\nobtain job! u mannequins. The\nassociation charged further that the\nblue-blooded young ladiei worked\nfor the \"fun of it\" md did the ordinary working girl out of a Job.\nThe three society model! above]    EIGHT\u2014Bea    Hudion,    ll   the\nwere queried on the reisons they\nwere working.\nAT LEFT\u2014Elsie Little, ll the\ndeughter of the loclallyprominent\nMra. Kobbel Uttle. She clalmi\nthat ahe works as hard as my other\nmodel and that no favoritism ii\nshown.\nCENTRE\u2014Miml Richardion, is\nthe 19-year-old debutante daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Co.urtland Richardson. She says that society girls are\nordinary working glrli.\ndaughter of the loclallyprominent\nMr. md Mn. Ernest R. Hudion. She\nis famous as the potter girl for \u2022\ncigtrette comptny. She said the\ncompltint wu \"silly\" md thit She\nhoped the association wouldn't picket her, because ihe'i been working\nJuit u hard u my other. She's\nbeen posing for three yean. All\nthree reiterated that it wu no fun\n\u2014md they did it beciuse they\nneeded the money.\nRev. C. Addyman apoke in appre*\nu*tlon ot the afftir. u did Ctnor\nG. Thompson,\nDr. G. D. Stibbi favored wltb a\nmonologue entitled \"Jutt Blue,\"\nT. Abriel. who hu tlwtyi ihown\nt keen lnterett ln the tccompllih-\nmenta of the lnititute, congratulated\nthe memben on 29 yeen of lervice\nto the community.\nRemtrki ot intereit were alio\nmade by Mn. A. J. Grlgg, a put\npreeldent\n, Mn. C. Howirth ud Mn. 0. P.\nHenley delighted the gueiti with\n\u25a0 pienoforte duet\nWHUT II PLAYID\nUter military whiit wu In pity.\n\u00a3\u00a32J x~n,won \"y ~**** PkyiiK\nSheffield, Miu Id* Bodin, Dr. G. D.\n\u00a7\u00ab\u2022'\u25a0*. RJordtn, Mr\u00bb A* Cow\u00bbn*\nMn. W. Herridge, J. Ptrent tnd\nA* t. Powler.\nRefreihmenti were urved. A\nbirthdty cike, betutifully Iced was\nembedded in green tulle. Decora-\ntloni were ln lnititute colon of\ngnen, white md gold.\nTroilites Guasts\nat Shoreacres\nSHOREACRES, B.C., Nov. it\u2014\nMr. md Mn. P. Bonato of Trail\nwere gueita of Mn. Bonato'i parenta, Mr. and Mn. L. Schiavon.   '\nMiai H. Kruichen md Mlsi W.\nColemm, Khooltetchen at Glade\nipent the week-end in Trail.\nMn. Fred Edwards wu a weekend visitor in Nelion it the home of\nher pirenti, Mr. tnd Mn. R. I. Kirby MIU itreet\nFred Schiavon it ipendlng \u2022 few\ndtyi in Trail.\n\u2022RITTON WORKI ON FIRRY\nBOAT AT NELION\nAfter thoroughly overhauling the\nHarrop feery at the Nelion shipyard!, W. W. Britton of Harrop is\nnow working on repain to the\nNelion ferry-\nThe etrlieit spectacle! were de-\nligned to improve \"old light\" md\nhence were worn elmoit excluiively\nby the aged.\nNELSON NURSE\nGIVES A TALK\nAT SLOGAN\nMiss K. Gordon Tells\nof Dangers of\nDiptheria\nMRS E. ANDERSON\nIS W.A. HOSTESS\nMrs. E. J. McGregor\nBadminton Club\nHostess\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.. Nov. 13-\nA meeting of the Bonnington md\nSouth Slocan Women's Institute\nheld In No. 3 plant hall was largely\nattended by members and guesti.\nMiu Kathleen Gordon, ichool\nhealth nurse of Nelson, wis the\nipeaker. She give a most initruc-\ntive talk on \"Diphtheria and Iti Prevention,\" dealing with the cause, the\nlource of infection, md the treatment She stressed, in the litter\ncue, the need ot tntitoxin.\nSpeaking of the source of diseases\nahe mentioned dirty surroundings\nand dirty milk, and alto: carrier!\nwho harbor the germ. One per cent\nto five per cent of the population\nare cirnera, the portal of entry is\nthe note or thrott tnd exit is the\nstme. It starts with headache, lore\nthrott, tough membrane which hu\na very offensive odor, ihe laid.\nMiu Gordon ihowed t chart of\nthe length of time trom the injection of the germ to the onset, the\ntint sign of illness, acute illness and\ndetection. Diphtheria wts one of the\nmost dreaded Infectious diseases\ntmong children, being most serious\nbetween the ages of two md eight.\nIt cm be cured if antitoxin is given\nearly. Prevention by the use of tox\nt#\n*\u2022*\nSo Simple to Talk\na Thousand Miles\nIT'S io simple to talk a thouund miles if there's a telephone\nhandy. You just take the receiver off the hook, say a few words\nto \" Long Distance\" in your own wty, and she will do whatever\nif needed to reach the person to whom you wtnt to ttlk.\nYou ctn sit in the comfort of your home or office tnd travel\nby telephone to t nearby town or across the continent.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY\nold at an immunizing agent it t\nsimple md harmless procedure. It\nis not \u2022 serum, md Is given in three\nsmall injections three weeks apart.\nIf every child were toxoided at ilx\nmonthi, diptheria could be wiped\nout, ihe declared.\nIn large centers where there were\nmmy cua tnd t great mmy death!,\ntoxoid had been given on a large\nscale and today diphtheria ii almost unheard ot in those places.\nCities which once had special buildings tor diphtheria patients ln connection with their hospital! have\nbeen tble to cloie them entirely\nilnce toxoid campaigns have been\nconducted.\nThe department of health ln Britiih Columbia is urging the uie of\ntoxoid. Miss Gordon stressed the\nimportance of this and urged the\nInstitute to arrange for a toxoid\nclinic, so that the children in the\ndistrict would be protected, should\ndiphtheria appear again in the\nspring.\nMiss Gordon was heartily thanked tor her enlightening and inspiring addreu.\nMrs. P. 0. Bird presided at the\nmeeting.\nAmong the buslneu brought up\nwes the report of the Armistice\ncelebration. Tho secretary wis instructed to think those who htd\nhelped in the lervice.\nA request from the Hall eociety\nfor the lnititute to give 'it! aid ln\nimprovement! that were plmned to\nbe made in the hall, wai tabled. In\nthe matter of mothers bringing their\nyoung children to the meetings, it\nwas decided to ask the co-operation\nof the Girl Guides in the way of\nsupervising the little guesti during\nthe business sessions.\nA motion was passed to provide\nrubbers for needy children attending school, and alio to collect clothes\ntor a large family of boys.\nThe dramatic play which is being\ngiven under thc auspices of the lnititute is to take place in the new\nyear.\nThe secretary wai initructed to\nsend a gift with the best wishes of\nthe Institute to Mrs. Arnold Kempthome, nee Miss Mary Brtdshaw, a\nrecent bride, who has left to reside\nat Duncan. B.C.\nIt was planned to have a Chrlitmai Gift sale at the December\nmeeting.\nA donation of hand knitted locks\nfrom a member was acknowledged\nwith thanks.\nAmong the committee reports,\nMn. John Murray, convenor of public health and child welfare, reported having paid seven visits and attended to a number of minor cases\nat her home.\nMrs. William Walkley of the aocial committee had sent flowen and\nsupplies to sick patients\nThe \"\nbalance of $30.93 in the general fund\nmd $4.41 in the social fund.\nMr. md Mn. William Wadtton\nwho were recently married in Kulo, have taken up residence ln one\nof the West Kooteniy Power tt\nLight compmy'i houses tt the pool.\nMr. Wadeson is on the company's\nstaff.\nMr. md Mn. 0. V. Milling were\nNelson visiton for the week-end.\nMr. and Mn. P. 0. Bird were\nshoppen* in Nelson Stturdiy.\nMr. and Mn. Herbert Wood, who\nhave been residents here for iome\nyears, htve left and are making\ntheir home at Shirley. Mr. Wood\nwu ln the employ of the Weit\nKootenay Power & Light company.\nThe Woman'i auxlliiry met it the\nhome of Mn. Eric Andenon for\ntheir bi-monthly meeting. Mn. John\nMurray wu in the chtir. The report\nof the recent ule of work wu given\nwhich wti considered extremely\ngratifying. The financltl tatement\nshowed that over $50 had been\ncleared at the sale.\nThe winning number for the Af-\nShan had been won by Mn. Thomas\nIcLaughlin of Nclsim and the tea\ncloth by Mra. Murray. The W. A.\ncalendars for 1935 were on hand.\nMn. Anderaon entertained tt the\nclose ot the meeting.\nThe Badminton club at No. 3 plant\nhad a social club day when Mra.\nE. J. McGregor was hostels for tea\nin the afternoon, the members all\ncontributed refreshment! in the\nevening with Mrs. A. F. McDonald\nand Mn. W. Walkley u hostesses.\nMr. and Mra. W. A. McCabe and\nMr. A. McGibbon were motorists\nto Willow Point Saturday.\nThe Rev. Father Cheeven celebrated low mass at the Sacred Heart\nchurch Sunday and preached an impressive sermon choosing for his\ntext \"Man is vain In whom there Is\nno knowledge of God.\" A Urge\ncongregation attended.\nNELSON SOCIETY\nDISCUSSES OPERA\nThirty Applications for Nelson Operatic Society\nPossibility of producing the Gilbert and Sullivan opera, \"Gondoliers'' and a place to show this and\nfuture productions were dlieuned it\na meeting of the Nelion Operatic\nlociety. No definite decision wu\nmtde, however, as the lociety ii yet\nto receive permlulon to stage the\npliy. Next week plani will be discussed further.\nAt present there tre 80 applications in for membership and several\nothera have expressed their wish\nfinancial statement showed a to join the society.\nGood\nouse\nkeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMenus, Recipes tnd Hlntt\nMENU HINT\nCold Roast Meat\nCreamed Potatoei     Buttered Beets\nJellied Vegetable Salad\nSteamed Pudding Coffee\nThe cold weather invariably\nbrings out the hot steamed pudding\nfor dessert. They are made of \"sugar\nmd Spice and all things nice,\" with\nraisins, currants, candled fruits and\nsometimes nuts. It Is well to make\nthc Christmas pudding now, steam\nit, let it get cold, and keep ln a cold\nplace until it is reiteamed tor the\nfestive dinner. An euy way to make\na fruit pudding il given in one of\nthe receipes printed here.\nTOPAY'S RECIPE!\nFruited Bretd Pudding\u2014Ont nine-\nounce package dry mince meat md\none-half cup water boiled almost\ndry, two cups one-half Inch bread\ncubes, two tabletpoom melted butter, one egg. one pint milk, one-htlf\nteaspoon vinegar, two tablespoons\nbrown sugar, one-half teupoon salt.\nBreak mince meat into piecee. Add\ncold water. Place over heat md stir\nuntil all lumps are thoroughly broken up. Bring to brisk boil; continue\nboiling for three minutes or until\nmixture is practically dry. Allow to\ncool. Cut enough bread In one-half\ninch cubes to make twd cups. Pour\nmelted butter over broad cubes and\nmix with a fork. Beat egg slightly,\ncombine with milk, vinegar, brown\nsugar and salt and blend thoroughly.\nFold in cooled mince meat and bread\ncubes. Place in buttered baking\ndish. Bake 45 minutes or until set\nin a slow oven (300 degrees, F.).\nServe with cream or hard sauce.\nEight servings.\nOld-Fashloned Steamed Pudding\n\u2014One cup chopped suet, one-half\ncup dark molasses, one-half cup\nlight brown sugar, one egg, one-halt\ncup chopped apple, one-fourth cup\ncitron, two and one-half cups flour,\none-half teaspoon soda, one teaspoon baking powder, one fourth\nteaspoon cloves, one-fourth teupoon\nallspice, one teaspoon clnntmon, one\nteaspoon salt one-half cup tour\nmilk, one cup raisins. Put met.\nmolasses, sugsr, egg, tpple and\ncitron into t mixing bowl md mix\nthoroughly. Sift flour, meuure tnd\nsift with soda, baking powder md\nspied. Add to first mixture alternately with milk. Last of all, add\nraisins. The batter should be quite\nitiff. Turn into greued mold! and\nsteam from two to three hours, depending on size of mold.\nWIFE PRESERVER\nWhip the white of tn egg into\nyour mayonnaise instead of cream.\nIt is delicious and a good substitute\nfor cream.\nl^SOC?ETY\nThli column li conducted by\nMra. M. J. Vlgneux. All newi of \u2022\nwclil ntture, lnclud. ig rectptlons.\nprivate entertainment!, penonil\nltemi, mintage!, etc, will appeer\nbi thli column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux it ber home, Sll Silica\nItreet\nSt Stvlour't Mothen club held t\nsuccessful tale ot work ind home\ncooking on Tuesday tfternoon ln\nMemorul hill. Mn. G. K. Ashby\nwu convener. Thoie twitting tt the\ntablet were Mn. R. G. Joy, md Mn.\nG. Fletcher, needle work; Miss\nBloomer md Mn. Frank Phillips,\n50 cent booth; Mn. E. Boyce ind\nMn. W. Ironmonger, home cooking.\nMra. Joy htd chtrge of the tet tr-\nrangementt md wu utlited by\nMn. R. Morrison, Mn. J. Lund and\nMn. A. Forreiter. Mn. G. Hornett\npoured tea, Mn. G. King acting u\ncashier. Decorations for the tea\ntablet were yellow md bronze\nmums.\nJ. D. MtcDonnell of Cedtr Point\nwu tmong outsiders to ittend the\nfuneral of F. D. Emory yesterdiy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGeorge Anderaon of Spoktne wis\na Nelson visitor Tueiday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nChirlu Russell of Slocm City\nvisited Nelson Tueidiy.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nAmong ihoppen In the city yeiterdty wu J. Sutcllffe of Riondel.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nFred Llndirom of Stlmo ipent\nyeiterdty In town.\n\u2022 \u2022\nF. M. Hutty of Sloctn City hu\nreturned from a visit to Spokane\nand Seattle. He made the trip from\nSpokane to Setttle by airplane.\nMr. and Mn. A. E. Murphy hive\ntaken up residence in the Medictl\nArte ipartmenti for the winter\nmonthi.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\n0. S. Desmond wu In town trom\nKailo yeiterdty.\n\u2022 \u2022  i\nMn. A. P. Hudion of Longbetch\nipent Tueidiy in the city.\nWillitm Clark of Ymlr ctme to\ntown yesterdiy to ittend the funeral\nof F. D. Emory.\n\u2022 i   t\nMlu Mary Paget of Crmbrook\nwho hu been ipending i few weeks\nat the home of her brother-in-law\nend liiter, Mr. md Mn. W. R.\nGrubbe. leavei thli morning for the\ncout.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. md Mra. C. H. Bean ot Willow\nPoint motored in yetterday to tttend the funeral of F. D. Emory.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNoble Binns of Trtll viiited Nelion Tueidiy.\ni  .  .\nMrs. J. A. Greer wu in town frorr*,\nNew Denver yesterdiy.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMn. R. H. Eddy, who hu been\nthe gueit of Mr. md Mra. Arthur\nTerrlll. High itreet for the put 10\ndayi. left yeiterdiy for her bome\nin Spoktne.\neee\nJ. J. Ctmpbell wit In from Willow Point yeiterdty to tttend the\nfuneral of F. D. Emory.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. C. Aylwln wu a vliltor from\nNew Denver yuterday.\n\u2022 e    \u2022\nMr. and Mn. J. Stpplet vlilted\nNelion yeiterdty.\nMr. tnd Mn. R. Hewtt were ln\nthe city yuterdty from Kulo.\nAmong ihoppen ln Nelton yeiterdty was Miss Dorothy Jackson of\nCedar Point\nRev. ud Mn. E. Pitt Griffiths\nwere in town shonplng yuterday.\nNelion temple No. 10, Pythlin\nSistera were Joint hoitesies at their\nannual roll call Monday evening to\ntheir friendi at a locial evening in\nthe K.P. hall. A conteit and military whiit featured the entertainment, the conteit being won by Mn.\nW. Hlpperson. Indii wu the winning table tt whiit the wlnnen\nbeing Mra. Ptrker. Mra. P. Jeffrey!\nmd Mr. and Mn. E. Boyei. A cush-\n'BONNIE PRINCE\nCHARLIE' TO BE\nPRESENTED HERE\nScottish Musical Players to\nPerform Gyro Club\nin December\nIt il doubtful if ln ill Scottiih history two chtrtcten have been aur-\n.rounded with more abiding romanticism than \"Bonnie Prince Charlie\"\nand Flora Macdonald\u2014the young\nchevalier who came to regain the\nthrone of the Stuarts, and the comely hlghltnd ltu who managed his\neicipe tfter defett\nIncidents in the tdventure ot\n1745 form the bails of the new offering ot the Scottiih Pltyen, who\nmtde such a favorable Impreuion\nin Nelion lut leuon in \"lbe Cotter'! Saturday Ni-ht\", \"The Bon*\nnie Brier Buih\" md \"Tam O'Shant*\ner\" which are alao Included ln the\nrepertoire of the compmy thia ica-\nlon, but not icheduled here.\nTo regain the crown of hit ancestors wu the dream of hii youth, md\nbecauie the daring md romantic\neffort of the eirly mtnhood of\nPrince Chtrlei Edwird Stuart. In\nthe twenty-fifth yeir of hii tge. he\nlanded in the Wutern Htghltndt of\nScotland, with but aeven comptn*\nioni, utterly unprepared lor hii haz\ntrdout adventure. By fill amiable\nmannen, captivating addreu and\ntttrtctive appearance, he aoon enlisted the feeling! and services ot\nmany of the clans, while othera re\nmalned aloof. Wtth the tollowen\ndevoted and brave, Prince Charlei\ntook poisession of Scotland, penetrated England u far ai Derby, md\ncaused King George to tremble on\nhis throne. For varloui reuoni, he\ndetermined to retrett to the highland! for the winter.\nPROSPECTS GLOOMY\nFrom that moment the proipects\nof the Prince began to look gloomy.\nHis bright star began to wme, until\non the 16th day of April, 1746, it was\ncompletely   extinguished   on   thc\n{iloody moor of Culloden. Then f ol-\nowed five months of fugitive win-\ndtring jn mounttln fistnesses, in\nSves and in hull, with a price ot\n,000 poundi on hit held; yet not\none wtt found to betray hii Prince.\nIt wu Flora Mtcdontld, tt peril\nto henelf md her folk, who contrived hii escape by diiguising the\nPrince u in Irish spinning maid.\nIn thii preeentation, no ittempt\nIon donited by Mn, Frank Goucher\nwu raffled md won by Mn. W.\nHippenon. Retntomenti were icrv-\ned. On the committee ln chirge\nwere Mn. P. Jeffrey, Mn. 0. Shel-\nl\u00bbr md Mn. Goucher. Frank Goucher wu muter ot ceremonies.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMn. W. S. Jtrvis tnd diughter\nMary, of Procter, ibent yeiterday in\nthe city. They were gueiti of Mrs.\nJarvli' ton and daughter-in-law,\nMr. and Mn. Rex Jarvis, Biker\nitreet\n* *  \u2022\nH. R. Board of Howier leaves tomorrow morning for Victoria.\ne    \u2022   \u2022\nD. L. Doyle wu ln from Cedir\nPoint yesterdsy to tttend the\nfuneral of F. D. Emory.\ni \u25a0 PAOI FIVI.\nbat betn made to follow the fortune! ot Prince Chtrlei other thm\nfrom culled incident!, and Into\nwhich hu been interwoven mmy\nof the itlrring Jicoblte nngi and\nthe blunting bighltnd melodlu.\nIncluded in the cut ire: Mtry\nMcMihon, soprano, who appear! u\nJeule Cameron md Flora Mtcdontld; Rtndolph Stlmoni, tenor, is\nPrince Chtrlei, T. McAUltter. Wallace, btrltone, u Jimu Ctmeron:\nDouglu Gordon, btrltone u Ronald\nCameron; Edith McGregor, contralto u Lady CUhranald, ud WUIltm T. Wilson, tenor at \"Archy\", a\nlervtnt, Anne Forsythe u Dugtld,\ntin, of courae clever Florence Reed,\nwho looks tfter the Incidental muiic.\nThese Scottish playi ire preiented by thii clever group of Scottiih\nMuslcil pliyen and are not only ftr\nthoee of Scottiih descent md lnterut!. but for all who tppredtte the\npure trt of Folk Drama portrayed\nby gifted profesiionil artliti, who\ninterpret in these pltyi the spirit\nof the simple home life ud people,\nimmortalized in literature by Robert Burns md Im Mtcltren.\nIt it reported thit the Leningrad\nState Public Library hu slmoit\ndoubled its book collection!, and is\nnow lurpeued only by the Library\nof Congress.\nMUSTARD\n-First Aid for\nCoughs and Colds\nGood Old Muttard Platter\n\u2014It hu uved muy s life!\nEsnlf prepired\u2014belt Colmia'i\nMuitird, hilf floor, with a\nlittle cold wtter, ipretd oa cotton cloth ind covered with flm-\nnel. Applied to cheit, throit, or\nidling put, It givu qtick tilled\nKeep Thli Chart tl a Rmlndtr\nTl\n1IIIIVI\nMUWn.MtTMt\n<*\u2022_>           -\u00bb\nI-\n\u2022f\n*i\nCMW*     -*\u00bb\n1\n4\n'\nCM             f\n*\n'\nk*\nam.      ->\n9\nI\"\nCOLMAN'S\nd.s.f. Mustard\n'It's ALL Ptr, Mtitsr*** m\nEdwardiburg\n1MB\n 1\n\t\n'\nFAGE SIX\nTHE NSLSON C.'.LY HEWS. NELSON. C :.\u2014THURSDAY MORNINO. NOV. \u00bb. 1W4-\nNriamt flaily News\nEitibllshed AprU 21 1901\n\"Interior ot Britiih Columbia's Family Newspaper\"\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPubUihid   every   morning  except   Sunday  by\ntha NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY  LIMITED,\n116  Baker   Street  Nelion.  Brltlab  Columbia.\nPhom Iti Private Exchange Connecting all Department!\ni \u25a0\nMember ot tha Audit Bureau of Circulation! aod\nTba Canadian Preu Leued Win Newi Service.\nThursday, November 29, 1934.\nGREAT BRITAIN'S NAVAL NEEDS\nReading between the lines of all discussions on the\nsubject of naval disarmament it is becoming clearer that\nat least the Great Powers of the world are now mainly\nconcerned with what naval forces are necessary to defend their countries in the light of developments in international relationships. Great Britain, though her leaders have not said so in an outright way, is persuaded\nthat her requirements for the naval defence of the Empire cannot be measured by ratios and global tonnage.\nJapan, as the leading Power in the hemisphere which\ncontains the densest population, has defined her attitude\nas one which will not play second fiddle in any naval\norchestra. The United States has insisted on naval\nparity with Great Britain and has won her point. That\ndoes not mean to say, however, that such parity helps\nGreat Britain in the provision of adequate force afloat\nfor the defence of an Empire which in area, population\nand far-flung distribution bears no comparison to the\nUnited States in the matter of naval needs.\nIn the opinion of any country an adequate naval\nforce must be of a character to meet the greatest foreseeable danger. Tri-Power discussions and bilateral\nconversations on the subject of disarmament may readily\nlead nowhere in this particular, since one Power will\ndissent from the viewpoint of another as to risks. A\nwriter in The National Review has been examining the\nBritish naval situation, and, in view of the conversations\nnow in progress, his findings are of interest, since they\nIndicate very considerable naval knowledge. Great Britain in the Grand Fleet has fifteen units oi battleships\nand battle-misers, a fleet, however, whose operations\nfor defensive purposes would be confined to a submarine-\ninfested area. For protective purposes such a fleet,\non the basis of the experiences of the Great War, should\nhave fifteen cruisers and thirty destroyers. For a convoy system the writer says that at least fifty cruisers and\neighty destroyers are needed, with forty sloops. For the\ndefence of one large and two auxiliary bases the requisites would be fifteen destroyers, fifty torpedo boats\nand thirty submarines, together with mine sweepers and\nsmaller auxiliaries. Great Britain is now, for defensive purposes, fifteen cruisers short of the number\nnecessary; she is ten sloops short; and she has enough\nsubmarines to cover three fleet bases and a small residue\nfor other operations. In concluding his summary, the\nwriter in The National Review reaches' the conclusion\nthat Great Britain's naval forces ought to be increased\nby about a third. Then he says:\n\"There is nothing alarming in this; it means only\nthat our cruiser fleet ought to be increased to about\nseventy units; our destroyer forces to about 200 or 222;\nour sloops and submarine proportionately. Great Britain would readily shoulder this burden if the need of\nit were properly presented. It should be added, however, that these additions ought to be agreed to soon,\nand steadily executed; because the forces necessary for\nmenacing us can be built very rapidly. To give a single\nexample, Germany, pressed on all fronts, maintaining\nhuge armies, and separated from all oversea sources\nof supply, was yet able to increase her submarine fleet\nby one hundred units in two years, for she had 27 operating U boats in February, 1915, and 127 in March, 1917.\nI do not suggest that any Government at peace with its\nneighbors would attempt such a tremendous expansion\nof its naval forces in so short a time; but I quote the\nfigures as proof that the Government of a resolute and\nambitious Power (many are said to be so today) could,\nin a comparatively short time, threaten us with a danger\nagainst which we are at present making very poor provision.\"\nA KENTISH MAN OR MAN OF KENT\nAs is wise in these days, great precautions are being\ntaken to prevent any misadventures happening to the\nDuke of Kent and his bride-to-be during the marriage\nceremony. To the end that law, order and safety may\nbe preserved, an unusually large number of uniformed\npolice are to be on duty, some 8,000 and added to this\nsuper-corp, 600 special constables will be on hand for\nextra service.\nNo doubt the recent regrettable disaster to the late\nKing of Yugoslavia has, aroused some apprehension\nwhere state ceremonies are concerned.\nThere is general satisfaction that the title, Duke\nof Kent, has been bestowed on Prince George and an\nargument has arisen as to whether the new duke is a\nKentish man or a man of Kent; a subtetly or too deep for\nthe uninitiated to follow; but all agree that after a lapse\nof 114 years it is well to revive the title.\nKent, it seems, is one of the real titles reserved for\nroyalty and Canadians have no interest in its revival,\nfor the last holder was the Duke of Kent, father of the\nlate Queen Victoria and the second member of-the royal\nfamily to visit Canada in an official position. He was\ncolonel of the 7th Fusiliers, stationed at Quebec. Kent\nHouse is still the name of the quarters occupied by the\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nBy J. B.C.\nHI WA* INFLUENTIAL\nHere li a little itory ibout the\nlite Hon. \"Btll\" Gillihcr.\nDetr J.B.C:\nI enjoy reading your funny squibs\nin your column, ln referring to the\nlite Judge Galliher In next night\nafter the incedent it Sandon where\nthe boyi after a poker game decided to vote solidly for him, he\ntalked here in the Bosun hall, ind\non leaving the hall I wu wilking\nwith him down the aiile he wis\nhanded an envelope. When we got\nto tbe hotel and hli room, there\nwere probibly 12 of us beildei \u2022\nlot of other wet stuff.\nHe opened the envelope ind\nhanded lt to me. This ii whit it\nsaid: \"Whit can you do tor me? I\nhave a lot of Influence in this town.\"\nI won't mention his name becauie\nthe poor fellow is dead now.\nAi a matter ot fact he could not\ncontrol hii own vote.\nA. M. INNES\nNew Denver, B.C.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHANGING DOORS\nBetween you and me\u2014I'm tired\ntoday. Just completed the hanging\nof the storm doors for the winter\nseason. I wonder what other fellows\nthink about when hanging doors.\nTo me there always cornea thit\nimpulse to get the lait screwnail\nse' tightly and caU it a day. Outiide\nof a tore right hind trom handling\na screwdriver I seem to have come\nthrough okay. Nothing to worry\nabout now until next spring when\nwe change back to screen doors.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nON THE SICK LI8T\nThii column is ihort for many\nreasons. Fint I hive to rush to\npren. You iee the place has been\ninfected with some Kind of a bug.\nThe composing room foreman Is ill.\nThe pressman ii iU and the composing punk has appendidt' With\nthree important members ot the\nstaff we nave to give the boys a\nbreak at times.\nBOW PROPELLERS\nFOR SPEED\nCANCER SPECIALISTS REPORT OVER\n4000 CURES\nFirst Racecoune Tough: \"Winer matter?   You look icired.\nSecond ditto: \"Lumme!   'E 'td 'indcuffs ln 'ii pocket!\"\n\u2014London Opinion.\nWHAT THE PRESS  IS SAYING\nIf marina engineer! reaUy wanted\nto increaie the speed of great ocem\nlinen, they would put the ship's\npropellor in the bow md make it\nact at a. \"puller\" instead of i \"pusher\" ai now used. This is the verdict of the German scientist. Dr.\nHeinz Judis, after a study oi the\n'methods of movement in fast-swimming sea animals like the penguins,\ndolphins, seals and sharks.\nAll theie animals, which gain remarkable speed in spite of comparatively small effort, have two sets\nof 'tiropellers\" which are the tins\nin front and rear. But in tast swimming only the forward fins are employed for straight-ahead motion.\nThe tail fin serves mainly for steering. A ihlp produces a bow wave,\na resonance wave, and a system ot\nstern waves. It high speeds these\ncomplicated wave systems constit-\nute the major part of the total resistance, declares Dr. Judii. 3v*ry propeller, and ao alio a penguin's wings,\nsays Dr. Judis, produces a system\not waves. But when a penguin is\nswimming fast, the waves produced\nby the wings cancel the bow waves\nso that the animal saves nearly the\nwhole of this resistance.\nNew Dyes to Resist\nFading\nNew dyet, resistant to fading by\nlight and washing are being developed by itudiei of the colon\nwhich they absorb when light is\npassed through them, Prof. Wallace\nR. Brode of Ohio State Univenlty\nrevealed before the Second International Spectroscopic Conference\nconducted at Massachusetts Inttit\nute of Technology.\nBy analyzing the light absorption\nof dyes. Prof. Brode Is investigating\nthe causes which make dyes decompose. \"Apparently it is a photochemical reaction,\" he said.\n\"We hope to be able to predict\nfrom the absorption spectrum ot a\ndye itt exact structure. Then we\nshould be able to synthesize dyes\nand make exactly what we wish,\"\nhe added.\nL. G. S. Brooker ot the Eastman\nKodak Co., described the technical\nmethods of creating photographic\nplates sensitive to all colon of the\nvisible spectrum and parti of the\ninfrared region also. In an illustrated talk he ihowed the difference\nin the final picture obtained with\ncolor-sensitized plates and the kind\nnow in ordinary use.\nLIFE IN A SMALL TOWN\nLite ln a small town, according\nto the idea which ii widespread\namong city people, li just a long,\nrestful vacation. There ii no excitement and llttlt rushinu about, tor\nthere'i nowhere to go, and no way\nto tell one diy from mother, except\nthtt on Sundays, we go to church.\nAnd among those city people who\ndo newspaper work, f-jre is an idea\nthat the rural editor hu the world's\nsoftest job. AU he hts to do it lit\ntround md mtke t few clippings,\nand report the birth of twins, or\nthat Sam Jonea' cow choked on a\nturnip. There is no rushing around\nlike there ii on the daily papers.\nWe hate to dispel tradit it ot\nlong standing, being by nature no\n\"debunker\" md being tn ardent\nlover of fiiry tales and legends,\nbut ai we look btck over the lut\nfew hectic dayi md yawn from fatigue, md not because of boredom,\nwe do think maybe we ought to say\nsomething.\nIncidentally, we write this on Stturdiy afternoon, when we shouldn't\nbe doing it at all. We should be\non tha roid to Mimico\u2014i-road becoming well known tnd heavily\nworn by traffic, because there the\n\"crucial1' game of lacrosse is being\nreplayed this afternoon, under conditions that are again tar from ideal\nWe should be there, not only beciuse we like lacrosse, but beciuse\nwe belong to the executive, tnd became we wmt t report on ill Important games for the piper. But we\nstay here because we are too tired\nto go there, becauie writing editorials ia leu fatiguing to the body md\nthe mind and the nervu, and because we have to stay at home sometimes, or there woiild be no paper\nnext weitt\u2014Fergui News Record.\n .\t\nJOB OF THI SCHOOLS\nThe childr-.i trooping into the\nschoolhouses\u2014what a colorful picture they make in their shiny new\nclothes and with their bright eager\nfaces. The shouts thtt split the tir,\nmd their irrepressible wrestlings\ntnd tumblings, how they teU of t\ntremendous alertness. T..ese children ire capable of producing a marvelous advmce in our country.\nThe schools are like t mill thtt\nhu to take all grades of material.\nIt that miU must utilize defective\nwool, cotton, and leather, lt won't\nturn out any first cltsi product. Tbe\nichool is forced to take the industrious md the lazy, the willing and\nthe unwilling. It is expected to turn\nout a uniform first class product of\ngood citizens, which under exisUng\nconditions can't alwtya be done.\nMmy. of those growing minds\ntre like young treei bent out of\nshape, which the good gardener may\nbe tble to straighten out. Innumerable children who made a wrong\nitart, are trained bjr devoted teachers to stand erect in the garden of\nlife.\nAmerica plants ambition In the\nheart ot youth. It pointi to successful men md women who came from\nhumble tnd depressing homes.\n\"You ctn also rise, it says to every\nyouth from a back alley.\nSome boys dream thtt thit plice\nof fortune cm be found over the\nslippery ways ot the crooked path.\nIf they stick to that belief, the school\ncan do nothing for them. Modern\neducation hu t job other thm thtt\nof fetching facts ibout verbs and\nfractions. It has to point out the\npath of industry, md convince\nyouth that only by toiling up that\npath, which is sometimes steep, can\nhe wtn life's prlzu.\u2014Citizen, Culver, Ind.\nENGLISH 'PHONES\nMany people experienced in the\nuse of English telephones wonder\nthat the service should so much u\nSAVING THE SIDES OF THE TEETH FROM\nDECAY\nBY JAMES W. BARTON, M.D.\nAfter the tooth hu ached, the\n\"hone hu been stolen.\" The fact\nthit the tooth hu ached shows\nthit the damage has been done.\nDr. Howard r. Riper, In \"The New\nAim In the Cire of th\u00ab Teeth.\"\nstates thtt while the special x-ny\nexamination which reveals the cavities ln all the teeth win not live\nthe particular tooth thit hu ached.\nIt will protect every tooth that\nhu not ached. ,\n\"Cavities ln the teeth must of\ncourie be found before ther cm\nba filled. Cavities on the exposed\nportions of thi teeth\u2014front md\nback\u2014mty readily be seen but how\nabout the hidden lurf-ces. the tuf-\nfacei In between the teeth?\nThere li no question but t number of these cavities ctn not be eeen\nby the dentist by the uiual method\nof elimination. Those using a new\nmethod ot X-ray examination have\nbeen tble to detect cavities thit\nhive uctped the moit careful elimination of the dentist using only\nhli eyea isd the Uttle mirror he\nputi ln behind the teeth.\nSome Idei of the value of tbi\nx-ray examination of the ilde sur*\ncontemplate encouraging t rush ln\nnight ciU\u00bb In view of the difficulties which have long mtde evening\ntelephoning in England a nightmare.\nIn the evening male operator! take\nthe plice of the telephone glrli tnd,\nin ipite of the unquestioned luprem-\ntcy of the mile in the Britiih Isles,\nit must be regretfully idmitted thtl\nts telephone opertton they tre pretty btd.\nThey tre cheerful, friendly tnd\nwilling to pleue, bul lomehow or\nother Uaa calls do not seem to get\nthrough. When a traveler is told tt\n10 in the evening thtt the Hyde\nPtrk hotel dou not answer, he ia\njustified in feeling that the switchboard mm's instinct for research\nhaa somehow failed him.\nTo put upon these already haras\nsed men the onus of such a spur to\nnew builneu u cheap night ratea\nmuit have been, seems li..e overloading the beast of burden. Nevertheless, the experiment ought to\nprove to the authorities who operate\nthe telephone service that Engltnd\nis panting for more md better telephoning It costs ire reduced tnd\nlervice improved. Those who htve\nwtited two md three houn for their\ncells, however, might be somewhat\nskeptical about the value of the\nicrvice, event it \u2022 ihllling.\u2014Btltl-\nmore Sun.\n10 YEARS AGO\nI From Ntlion Dtlly News Flln\n\u2666 \u00ab\n(November 29, 1924)\nMn. Guy Wright wu elected preildent when a Ladlea Hockey club\nwai formed here. Miss Gladys Jeffs\nii vice president md Miu Doreen\nSt. Denii li recretary-treaiurer.\nMn. George Benweil Is honorary\npresident. Among other ladies at-J\ntending the meeting were: Mrs. G.\nM. BenweU, Miss M. Morrison, Miss\nEva Moir, Miss H. Murphy, Miss H.\nMaundrel, Mist M. Carlson, Mist W.\nThompson, Miu L. Waten and Miss\nEileen DiU.\ni .\u2022 a\nThe Dowager Queen Alexandria\nof England is SO years old today.\nShe it in good health, but hu withdrawn entirely from public aftairs.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRev. N. D. B. Larmonth wu Inducted u rector of the new Church\nof the Redeemer, Fairview, lut\nnight by Rt. Rev. A. J. Doull, D.D.,\nBishop of Kootenay.\n|   30 YEARS AGO   \\\nI From Ntlion Dtlly News Files!\ni,\u2014, . $\n(Nov. \u00bb, 1904)\nPossibility of \u25a0 world-wide pact\nto ensure peace for future generations it seen tn the fact that fourteen\ntreaties hive been signed by Euro-\nptn countrlei with the expectation\nthtt countries in Asit, Africa and\nthe Americai will come into line.\n\u2022 *   *\nStrengthening of the forts at Vancouver md other point! on the Britiih Columbia mainland li to be\ndone Instead of maintaining a naval\nsquadron at Esquimau. Craft of\nthe British North Pacific squsdron\nare being recalled under the oolicy\nof the new senior lord of Admiralty\n\u2022 .   .\nHenri Martolitte tnd MIm Mtry\nAllan were married at the home of\nthe bride'i fether, John Alltn, yesterday afternoon, by Rev. E. H. H.\nHolman. Miss Elizabeth AUm, the\nbride's lister, wu bridesmaid md\nGeorge King wu best mm.\nI   20 YEARS AGO   '\nI From Nelson Dtlly Ntwi Files \u25a0\n*         *     \u00ab\n(November 29, 1914)\nGeorge Fleming of Flirview wu\nelected preildent of the newly formed Kooteniy Beekeepers' association tt m organization meeting here.\nVice presidents ire Maj.-Gen. Lord\nAylmer, Queen's Bty md James\nJohnstone, Nelton; W. J. Sheppard\nof Nelson is secretary-treasurer.\n ^_M .    .    .\nficei of the teeth u compared with I    Sidney Smtrt md Miu Mtry Ir-\njuit mini the eye md mirror may j ying of Nelson were mirried it the\nbe gathered from the cue of\nyoung woman twenty years of age\nwith good-looking teeth. An x-rty\nexamination which Included tbe\n\u00ablde surfaces of the teeth revelled\none Itrge cavity, two medium sized\ncavities, two very amall cavities, one\nfilling with decay going on underneath lt. one filling Improperly\nplaced\u2014seven finding ln tU.\nAfter the x-ray examination of\nthe patient a group of dentist! examined tha patient by almply using\nthe eye, mirror, or other Instruments jinn only two the findings\nwere found, and then by only two\nof the group.\nThis method of x-ray examination\ntakea a picture of both the upper\nand lorer teeth together ud li\nmeant ',*. try to locate cavities md\nao save the teeth, whereu the usual\nx-ray examination la to try to locate Infection.\nDr. Raper polnta out that this\nmethod ot x-ny examination -exam\"*\"-, the Inner or adjoining aides\nof 'mm teeth\u2014tlao reveals the be-\n\u00ab'       - ot pyorrhoea.\n.ethodist parsonage by Rev. R. J.\n.clntyre, Nov. 28.\nroyal visitor, as well as that of his country residence at\nMontmorency Falls.\nIs it too ambitious a thought to suggest that the present Duke of Kent may, at some time, be appointed to the\nvice-regal chair of Canada and thus become the second\nroyal governor-general of this young Dominion.\nGranby company hu given no*\n'ice that the smelter will itart un\nwith two furnaces u soon u possible, with two more to be blown\nln when conditions permit, uys\nword from Grand Forks. Wtges will\nbe 23 per cent leu thm tt the time\nof the shut-down.\nThirty-one leading cancer ipecial-\nllll, meeting in t clinictl congress\not the American College ot Surgeons\nin St. Louii, participated recently\nln I gympoiium on the curability\nof cancer\" in which they told of\npenonal experiences ln cancer cases\nof all types that they htve cured\nmd ln which the patients remained\nfree from t recurrence of the diseue for periods of five to twenty-\nfive yetri.\nThe diieue takei i toll of 190,000\nannually in the United States tnd\nCanada.\nIn all a total ot 4,344 cures of five\nyeirs' itandlng ahd more were reported. Other known reported cues\not five-yetr cures and more brought\nthe sum total up to 8,836.\nThey were unanimously tgreed,\nu the result of persontl experience\nmd achievements, that, contrary to\nwidespread belief among laymen\nmd even among a Urge number of\nphysicians, cancer wu definitely\ncurable\u2014it Ms-covered In iti etrly\nstages.\nMoreover, the specialists emphasized, preaent developments in medicine make it poulble to discover\nthe diseue when it ii stiU in its curable itage.\nEARLY EXAMINATIONS URGED\nFlnt md foremost ln this category comet the periodic physical\nexamination, particularly for persons who htve reached the \"cancer\nage,\" thirty-five yean or over.\nThe other equally important factor In the early discovery of cancer\nis not to pr* -rastinate on the appearance of any suspicious lump,\npersistent indigestion, and similar\nsymptoms, which mty appear trivial\nto the indlvlduil, but mt\" give the\nfamily physician the fint danger\nsignal for the taking of the proper\nitepi to check further devolopment.\nIn addition the physician himself\nmust be ever on the alert, alwtya\ntaking himself the vital question,\n\"Cm this poulbly be cancer?\"\nThousands of cases htve been\nloit, it wu itated, because physicians hive neglected to ask this\nquestion.\nThe specialists who participated\nin the symposium included Drs.\nRobert B. Greenough of Boston,\nFranklin H. Martin of Chicago,\nGeorge W. Cril. of Cleveland, Floyd\nE. Keene of Philadelphia, Dondd\nGuthrie of Sayre, Pa., Frank H Lth-\ney of Boston, Neil John MacLean of\nWinnipeg, Howard Ctnning Taylor\nJr. of New York, Frank W. Lynch\nand Edwin I. Bartlett, San Francisco, Chtrlei H. Mayo of Rochester,\nMinn., Curtis F. Burnam of Baltimore, Lincoln Davis of Boston, William E. Caldwell of I.ew York, Welter W. Chipman of Montreil, J. M.\nT. Finney of Baltimore, Stuart W,\nHarrington of Rochester, Minn,\nBurton J. Lee of New York, M. A.\nGatewood of Chicago, Hugh H.\nYoung of Baltimore, Waltman Walter! of V. S. Counseller of Rochester,\nMinn., Frank Pinmtn of Stn Francisco, Edward L. Keyes of New\nYork, Winchell McK. Craig of Rochester, Minn, Fielding O. Lewis of\nPhiladelphia, Vilray P. Blair of St.\nLouis, Ferris Smith of Grand Rapids, Jonas S. Friedcnwald of Baltimore and Erwin P. Zeisler of Chicago.\nDR. CRILE TELL8 OF ADVANCES\nDr. J. Bentley Squler, professor\nof Urology, CoUege of Physicians\nand Surgeom, Columbia University,\nmd president of the American College of Surgeons, presided it the\nsymposium.\n\"My associates and I,\" uid Dr.\nCrile, \"have seen 8,679 cues of malignant tumon of the various organs\nof the body.\n\"Of these, 2,756 were treated by\noperation only, 1,399 by operation\ntnd radiation, 1,931 by radiation\nonly md 2,593 were not suitable for\ntreatment.\n\"Four thousand md fifty-nine of\nthe patients seen prior to 1928 have\nbeen traced. Of these, 1,182 have\nsurvived for three yean or more\nmd 737 for five yetn or more.\"\nThe types of cancer treated by Dr.\nCrile md his associates included\ncancer of the skin md subcutaneous\ntissues, buccal surfaces tnd jaws,\nthe larynx, the thyroid glands, cancer of the breast, gastro-intestinal\ntracts, stomach, kidney, bladder md\nmale and female reproductive parts.\nOf the total of 1,555 cancers of\nthe breast reported by Dr. Crile, 919\nof those treated prior to 1928 have\nbeen traced. Of this series, 437 patients have lived for three years and\n307 for five years.\nThirteen patient! with cancer of\nthe stomach have survived for\nthree yetri md seven for five yein.\nEighty-nine patients with malignant tumon of the large intestine\nhave lurvived for three years, and\nforty-eight for el\"M   .ars.\nOf 143 cues of malignant tumon\nof the kidney, sixteen htve survived for three yean tnd soven for\nfive yetn. Of the 289 cues of\nmaligntnt tumors of the bladder\ntreated, forty-seven survived three\nyean and thirty for five yean.\nDOCTOR TELLS OF HI8 OWN\nCURE\nThe total of 8,836 of cured cancer cases reported by speakers tt\nthe symposium md in registered\ncases in possession of the American\nCoUege of Surgeons, Including an\nincomplete survey of cases registered in medical literature, md a\nreport of 140 cures presented at the\nBtmey hospital St. Louis, before\nthe congress thii week, were classified in tecordtnee with types of the\ndisease as follows:\nOncer of the cervix, 1561 cures;\nfundus, 345: ovtry, 42; breast, 3634:\nblsdder, 23\": prostate, 43; kidney,\n125; testis. 38: thyroid, 165; larynx.\n50; mouth, 867; stomach, 353; skin,\n866; colon tnd rectum, 116; bone,\n90; other cltssificatlons, 305. Total.\nctgo for ten yean beginning with\n1920, stated the pstients wilted m\ntvertge of 5.3 monthi before consulting t physicim, md thtt t further delay ot 33 months occurred\nbefore these patients came to operation.\n\"Tbe reasons tor the delays ire\nnumerous, the moet common being\nthe ftct thtt the patient had had\nsome previous itomach troubles,\"\nuid Dr. Getewood.\n\"However, lick of ctreful extm-\ninatlon of the patient was very often t cause md the responsibility\nrested squarely upon the physicim.\n\"A third, which \u00abwu present all\nto frequently, wu the tact that\nmtny physicians still feel thtt U.e\npatient is ht -lessly doomed from\nthe start md that operative interference carries t high mortality,\nwith UtUe or no relief.\"\nProfessor Keene of the Univenlty\nof Pennsylvania reported itt more\nthin four-fifths of 475 patients treated tor cancer ot the cervi.. tt the\nunivenlty hospital between 1913\nmd 1926 were in advanced stages\nof the disease, md only 12 per cent\nwere In the tint stage.\nAbout htlf of the cues of the same\ntype presented for treatment at\nHoward A. Kelley hospital In Baltimore were considered operable, according to Dr. Burnam, surgeon of\nthe hosoital, but \"only t very smtll\nproportion\" were in the eerly stage.\nStill he reported 251 cues alive md\nwell after five years or more, tnd\nthree free from cancer since 1911.\nUNAWARE OF HIS OWN CURE\nDr. Davis of Harvard University\nGraduate School of Medicine told of\na lawyer friend who once uked\nhim, \"As a mttter of fact, has a\ncase of cancer ever been cured?\"\nThe lawyer was entirely unaware\nthtt he, himself, had been cured by\nm abdominal operaUon 15 yean\nearlier of a very dangerous f, rm ot\ncmcer.\n\"As a matter of fact,\" commented\nDr. Davis, \"the patient is usually\nentirely in his own case, the secret\nhaving been carefully guarded by\nthe doctor u weU u by relatives\nmd friends.\n\"The brilUant results are tsre-\nfuUy hidden while the fatal cues\nare thoroughly discussed.\n\"There ll still t very wldespretd\nfeeling thtt the disease is hopeless\nand incurable. Thts exists not only\ntmong the ltity, but also with mmy\ngeneral practitioners.\n\"Each ot the litter sen relatively\nfew cases in his own practice, and,\nIf there happens to be a consecutive\nnumber of bad results, he naturally\ngets a very pessimistic view of the\nsituation.\n\"If large serlea of cases sre analyzed, however, it is found that\nthere is a very respectable percentage of arrested or cured cues.\n\"The standard of cure generally\nadopted in compiling cmcer statistics the so-called five-year 'cure' '\n\u2014Dr. Davis explained, \"consists of\nan observation period ot five yean\nfollowing treatment, tt the end of\nwhich time the pttlent is living\nwithout discoverable symptoms of\nthe disease.\n\"Recurrences are most frequent\nin the first two yean after treatment md progressively diminish\nthereafter. Recurrences unfortun\nately, do take place after five yean\nor even tfter ten or twenty 'etn,\nor tt my* period.\" Dr. Davis stid.\nPAIN HELD SELDOM\nEARLY SYMPTOM\nDr. Lee of Cornell university em-\nphuized thet pain \"is almost never\na symptom of early cmcer.\"\n\"The public at large must realize\nthe importance of this statement,\"\nDr. Lee said. \"The only safe rule\nto follow Is to have t complete physical examintUon every six months.\nIf each individual in this country,\nthirty-five years or over, would\nmake this a rule, the cmcer problem would be largely solved md\nmany livra would be saved every\nyear.\"\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teschers\"\nCAN FOUR SPADE* BE BEATEN?\nSouth played the hind at four\nSpades. West doubled. Wut led a\nHeart. South made his bid. Eut\nbet thst t trump letd wiU defett the\ncontract North bet thtt t Dlimond\nletd will defett it Wot t t thit a\nClub lead will defett it South covered ill three beta. Whtt do you\nthink?\nfjfl\n\u00a5 J878\n\u2666 10\n\u2666AKQJJ\n\u2666 A1063\n\u00bbQ 8 5 2\n\u2666 AKJ\n*97\n\u2666 \u00bb\nfKlOII\n\u2666 tttt\n\u2666 8654\n\u25a0\n_\u00a7_.\n\u2666KQI41\n\u2666Q97I4\n\u2666 10 2\nAs South is anxious to clear out\nopposing trumps it seems poor policy for Wut to lead a trump u an\nopener. He admits that he was unable to defeat the contract by trading a Heart. If West's blind lead is\nthe King of Diamonds he maku it\neasy for the Declarer to establish\nthat suit, which he never cm do\nwithout loss if West does not lead\nthem. The most promising opening\nlead appean to be a Club to kill the\nDeclarer's chances to utilize that\nauit (after trumps are out) for discards of Declarer's Diamonds.\nLead a Club. Declarer's Ten must\nwin. The only chmce for gtme is\nthat Weat will make a mistake. Letd\nt low Spade. If West's Ace wins he\nmay lead a Heart. Win with the Ace.\nLetd t low Spade. Win with dummy's Seven or Jtck, according to\nwhat West plays. Overtake dummy's last trump and pull the lut\ntrump from West Lead Decltrer's\nlist Club. Win four Club tricks. Discard three .of Declsrer's Diimondi.\nRuff t Heart Give Wut two Diamond tricki tnd go gtme.\nIf Weit wlm the tecond letd with\nhii Ace of Spades he may decide to\nlead a winning Diamond, followed\nby a high Diamond, to ruff dummy.\nThis error will give South five-odd.\nRuff the second Diamond lead. Lead\nthe Jack of Spades. Letd t Hetrt.\nLead South's two top Spadu. The\nQueen of Dlamondi is good md he\nwill win all the remaining tricki.\nIf West wlm the second trick with\nhis Ace of Spaces, lead his last Club,\ninstetd of helping the Declarer by\nleading either red suit. The Declarer is ln a bad position. If the Ten of\nDiamonds is led, West will win with\nhis Jtck. A heart will put South in\nthe letd. Dummy mty ruff two Dia-\nr onds, establishing the suit, but\nSouth has too few trumps to stand\nbeing ruffed md still pick up West's\ntrumps.\nIf the Declarer decides to lead a\nClub from dummy, insteid of t Diamond, Wut will ruff, giving him his\nsecond defensive trick. He csn put\nSouth in the letd with t Hetrt.\nWest's trumps cm be pulled, but\nSouth cm discard only two Diamonds on dummy's Clubs, thus going down n trick by having to lose\ntwo Diamond tricks. The best opening lead is a Club, just as West bet\nMUST RESIST\nA man will never aqulre a fortune\nunleu he Is proof agtinst buying\nuseless things beciuse   they   ire\ncheep.\u2014Detroit News.\nRADIO SUPPLANTS\nENGINE WHISTLE\n\"No wonder Sue lost him. A\nmtn don't never forgive you\nfor lettln' him know you've got\nmore sense thm he his.\"\nThere wis s dramaUc moment\nduring the symposium when Dr.\nKeyes, who is Professor of Orology\nat Cornell university Medicine college, uld he himself was a living\nexample of the curability of the\ndisuse.\n\"Cmcer,\" Dr. Keyes uid, \"alwiys begins ti t loctl process md\nit its beginning is always curable. I\nam an example of the cure of can*\ncer. Three cancera have been removed from my face by radium or\nactual cautery, the last in 1918.\n\"Yet contrast with these itate\nmenta the ftct thtt when I en*\ntered my father's office in 1887 I\nfound only one recorded five-year\ncure of cmcer of the testis.\"\nDr. Keyu cited a number of striking cases which, he uld, illustrate\n\"the fact that cancer in this generation, Uke tuberculosis ln the proceeding one. ii becoming each year\nmore and more a cur Ue disease.\"\nDELAY IN REPORTING CITED\nDr. Gatewood of Rush Memorial\nhospital, Chicago, l.i an analysis of\ncases ot cancer of the stomach at\nUie Presbyterian hospital in Chi*\nThat strange haunting night\nsound, the whistle of a train at night,\nwill become as much a memory to\nmost Americans as the voice of the\nnightingale, if the plans of the communication engineers of the country's leading railways materialize.\nThe railroads plan to substitute for\nthe whistle and hanc-signals a two-\nway radio-telephone service between train engines and cabooses.\nA radio - telephone front - to - rear\ncommunication was tried out on a\nfreight ain from Springfield, Mass.\nto New Haven, Conn, recently, with\nH. A. Snepard, New Haven general\nsuperintendent of electrical transmission and communication, in\ncharge.\nThe engineer md conductor, although separated by a hundred or\nmore freight cars and out of sight\nof each other, handled train orders\nmd maneuvers through use of the\nnew communication link. Using ultra high frequency radio waves, the\nexperiment was extremely successful, it wu reported.\nThe new signal system is the result of months of work, and experimental equipment has been tried out\nby the Westinghouse engineen on\nthe Springfield-New Haven run\nthrough the co-operation of the New\nHaven Railroad, until it has been\nperfected to the smallest detail.\nLoud speakers md hand microphones are equipped in the engine,\nconvenient for the use of the engineer. No eijl-phones are needed,\nand the new system, lt is believed,\nwill soon replace the old methods.\nOver half of the turkey crop of]\nthis country last year was sold on 1\nthe Thanksgiving market.\n'\" MIMING GAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are a suitable\ngrade for aU mining\nand other camp buildings It is strong\nwaterproof, light ana\nvery easy to handle.\nDistrict Distribute\u2122\nWood, VaKance\nHardware Co.; Ltd.\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nQuality\nAt Its\nHighest\nThe vacuum can has preserved Pacific Milk so much\nbetter than the old style of\npacking that the demand for\nit has decidedly increased.\nThe improvement lies in the\ngreater vitamine content end\nis detected by a finer natural\nflavor.\nPacific Milk\n\"100% B.C. Owned tnd Controlled\"\nPLANT AT ABBOTSFORD\nRoofing Papera\nNow is the time to repair your leaky\nroof before the snow comes. Tar\npaper, building and felt papers also\nin stock.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNeUon, B. C.\n I^h^^^^^^B\n^__^_____t__w^_________u\n^^^\nI^BB^H^^H\nAmazing Advances Made in\n17 Years Since N. H. L. Was\nFormed as Four-Club Loop\nHos Spread Out in Great United States\nCities; Only Major International\nProfessional Body in World\niws\nBowling - Badminton - Hockey - Basketball - Boxing - Wrestling\nLacrosse - Rugby - Soccer - Skiing - Horse Racing -Indoor Sports\nFAOI IIVtN-\n* THI NELSON OAILV NIWS. NILSON. S.C.-THURSOAY MOANING. NOV. it. 1934-\n- FAOI SIVIN\nLeaving behind perhips the most\namazingly-progressive record in all\nthe history of sport over a similtr\nipan of yetn, the National Hockey\nleague, the only major orginiittion\nIn that diviiion of sport, on November 22 celebrated iti seventeenth\nbirthdiy.\nIn the brief span of seventeen\nyeirs, since the Nttlontl League\nctme Into being ts t modest foui-\nelub. all-Canadian league, some of\nthe outstanding advances and\nchanges have been:\nThe League hu becomi international in icope, the only major in-\nternttionil professional sporti organization ln the entire world.\nThe playing rules -hive been ilmott completely revolutionized, to\nspeed up tht play, ind eliminitt.\nhalts.\nPlayers' saltrles havi soired. In\nsome instances when salaries were\nit thetr peak, to ten times the iver-\ntge paid seventeen yetrs tgo.\nEvery club in the grett internf\ntional league plays ln a luxurious\nrink, fully-equipped with modern\nartificial ice-plants, as against the\nnatural-ice conditions which were\nin the majority when the letgue\nwis orgtnized.\n\u25a0 WHIN THE N.H.L. WAS FORMED\nThl Nttiontl Hockey letgue was\nformed on November 22, 1917, at\na meeting hell! ln the Windsor hotel,\nMontreal The old Nitlonil Hockey issoclttlon, functioning ts one\nof two major leaguei\u2014the Picific\n. Coist leigue wts the other \u2014 hid\nsuspended operations i few weeks\nprior to this.\nAttending the meeting it which\nthe Nttiontl letgue wai born Were\nThomas P. Gorman, now manager of\nMontreal Mtrooni. representing the\nOttawa interests; S. E. Uchtenheim,\not Montreil, representing the Wan-\nderer club, t ftmoui hockey organization which wti destined to piss\ncompletely out of the picture t yeir\nliter; the lite George Kennedy, representing Ctnadieni of Montreal,\nnnd the late M. J. Quinn. representing the ancient city of Quebec,\nwhich for yein wu i itronghold\nfor such professional hockey as was\nplaved In those days.\nThe Quebec team resigned at once\nand made wty for t Toronto club,\nand when the new league pliyed\nits first gtmet. on Wedneidiy, De-\nrember 19, 1917, theie three cities\nconstituted tht new circuit, Ctna-\ndiens pliyed it Otttwt, Toronto tt\nWanderers, both gamei on natural\niee surfaces. Indeed, Toronto wat\nthe only city in the major loop\nwhich hoisted artificial ice, a condition thtt will be unbelievtble to\nmost followers ot hockey today, who\nsee the elimination series started\nin etrty November on glittering\nsurlacei provided by artificial\nmeans, md finishing out ln the heat\nof April, on equally good surfaces\nthat defy nature.\nAN  AMAZING  INTERNATIONAL\nGROWTH\nIt is a far cry from thc modest\nlittle four-club circuit of that era,\nto the far-flung, two-section leigue\nwhich operates today on both sides\nof the border, attracting ftni who,\nin the course of t season, number\nin the millions.\nFor three yeirs, there wai Uttle\nchange in the circuit. The Quebec club re-entered for one setson.\n1919-20. Hamilton, the sporting\nOntario city replaced Quebec in\n1920-21, tnd remained until 1924-25.\nJuit then l..e Big Ptrade to internationalism wti fully into its stride.\nMajor letgue hockey became international for the first time in thc\nseason of 1924-25. It was in that year\nthat Boston Brutal entered the\nleague, under the ownership of\nCharles F. Adtmi tnd destined to\nbecome ont of the grettest hockey\ncenters in the world.\nThe stme yetr 1924-25 Montreal\nMaroom purchued t franchise ln\nthe National league giving Montreal two professional teams for the\nfirst time since the season of 1916-\n17, tht list ippeirance of Wanderers.\nIn 1925-36 two more United States\nteams ippeired in the league, Pittsburgh Pirates and New York American!. PIttsburgh'i team wis\nmadt up on t bull of the amateur\nHornets, tltlt-holderi ot the United\nStates the previoui setson, while\nAmeriesns bought thc Himilton\nfranchise snd tetm intact.\nIn 1926-27, mijor letgue hotkey\nhad lured In three more United\nStates teams, reprtsenting two cities\nnew to major hockey.   The power\nful Ringers came into existence in\nNew YOrk; Detroit interest!, pur-\nchtsing the Victoria tetm of the defunct Pacific Coast league, also bc-\nctmt t trtnehise-l.older. Chicago\nentered a itrong tetm in the major\ngroup. It wis in 1926 that the Pacific Coast league expired, as a mtjor organization throwing .on the\nmarket a flood of playing stars destined to later write history in the\nN.H.L., notably Shore, the Cook\nbrothers, Dutton, Gardiner and\nBoucher. Thli helped to mtke possible the new eutern tetms.\nThe Pittsburgh franchise was operated in Philadelphit for one season. 1920-31, thus bringing to a total\nof six, tnd the six greatest cities\nin the United States, where major\nleague hockey had been pliyed\nwithin the period from 1924, indl\neating thc wild-fire fashion in which\nthe grip of the thrilling Canadian\nsport had taken hold. St. Louis, en\ntering the N.H.L. this season, is thus\nthc seventh United Statei city to\nenter, replacing Ottawi, which tor\nt second yetr suspends operations.\nRULES HAVE ADVANCED IN\n17 YEARS .\nAs other conditions surrounding\nhockey have changed, so htve the\nrules governing the play of the\ngame.\nHockey Is primarily t game of\nspeed, stick-handling skill, ind combined effort, tnd this it remains.\nProgressive legislation enacted from\ntimt to time hai been aimed at Increasing the sustained speed of the\ngame, and eliminating delays.\nThe forward pus tnd the thret\nireas of the ice were unknown to\nthe National league when it ctme\ninto existence. Today they are\naccepted rules in all hockey, amateur and professional.\n1918-19 were the yeirs that saw\nthe most sweeping changes in hockey rules. The three areas. Ihe forward pass in the center area, and\nkicking the puck in the center area\nill ctme into exiitence in this set-\nson.\nIn 1921, It became permissible for\nthe gotlers to pass forward in the\ndefensive areas.\nOn September 24, 1__7, legislation\n[was effected whereby forward\npisses could be made in the attacking zones. On September 26, 1929.\nthe legislation removed all restrictions from forward puses, in all\n\u25a0rets.\n, Tremendously-increased gate-receipts; salaries to pltyers wit ire\nstaggering In comparison to the\nsums paid in 1917; the wide spread\nof the gtme into minor prolessional\nleagues, none of which existed when\nthe N.H.L. ctme into being, all mtrk\nthe constructive pith of this grett\nsporting  organization.\nM'NAMARA AT\n51 TO ENTER\nSIX-DAY RACE\n| Plans to Ride Until\nHe Is Sixty; Has\nLots of Scars\n'Big League'\nBOWLING\nCOAST HOOPERS\nTO PLAY TRAIL\nProvince Team Scheduled for\nSmeiter City Dec. 28\nTRAIL. B. C, Nov. a\u00bb\u2014TN Vancouver Province basketball team, Dominion diamplons for 19S8-34 tea-\nion, wllPplay In Trail aialnit a\nCtty representative .team on Friday,\nDecember 38, according to an announcement by Mrs. D. Hartley, secretary of the Trail Basketball association. Mra Hartley reoelved a\nletter from C. F. Jones, manager\nof the visiting team which le making a tour of British Columbia. Mr.\nJones asked lf tbe Province aquad\ncould Include a game against Trail\non lte Itinerary to which request\nthe local body has bladly assented.\nThe Province team giving their\nname, height measurements and\nposition In order are aa follows:\nM. Peebles, 6 feet, 8 Inches, forward; Hose Helem, fi feet 10'^\nInches, forward; Jim Purves. 5 feet\nil'i Inches, forward; Joe Ross, 6\nfeet 3 Inches, forward and oenter;\nArnle Bumstead, 8 feet 3 inches,\nforward and center; Jack Purves,\n8 feet $% Inchei. center; Red\/Mse-\nDoneli, 8 feet 2'i Inches, guard;\nEddie Armstrong, 8 feet IH Inches,\nguard; Norm Will, fi feet 3 Inches,\nguard; Bert Bmlth. fi feet 0 inches,\ngusrd; Russ Kennlngton. fi feet, 10\nInches.\n\"I WONDER IF I\nCAN OET BY\"\ni miny times htve you cwlcM\nyourself, \"I wonder it I eta get by\nwithout ihtving?\" And yet when\nthert li tny doubt you ihould hive\nbut ont inswtr\u2014\"Nol\"\nReilly now\u2014iin't \u2022 mm foolish to\nrisk tht retpect of others by neglect.\ning toihtvt? Why handicap your-\nMlf whtn theOillet te \"Blue Blade,\"\ntpecitllyprocuietl for tough betrds,\nquickly tnd comfortably ihtvet the\nmort lender skin? Bventwoihavei\nt dty, If needed, leave the flee\nrefreshed\u2014smooth. Find out for\nyounelf. O't t pirkage of Oillette\n\"Blue Bltdes\" todty.\nThe Ptrftct Chrittmat Gift\n\"Tht perfect Christmu gift lor tvtry nta on\nyoar \u2022hopping list \u2014 \u25a0 boi el 50 Gillett* Blut\nBlade, contained In t colorful, \u2022ttractira holiday\npackage\u2014 for only IZM. Aty ibtvtr will thank\nyou for thla practical gilt, Sm your regular daalar.\"\nGillette Blue Blades\nNoW S'='25<f -10'\u00b0'50*'\nBy EDWARD J, NIIL .\nAuoclated Prtii Sport, Wrlttr   '\nNEW YORK, Nov. 28 (AP)-Tht,\nagelest wonder of Ihe athletic world,,\ngrizzled Reginald McNamara, climbs,\naboard his bicycie next week to '\ncompete for six days ind six nights'\n\u2014for the 113tb tlmt ln his career\u2014\nagainst bulky legged, leather lunged riders in Madison Square Gar-\nd'n's semi-annual  bike mtrathon.\nThere is nothing new about six-\nday bicycle races, but there is\nsomething growingly amazing about\nthc 51-year-old Auitrallan who, al\na tlmt when he mlfht be expected\nto be sitting back witb hli pipe and\ncarpet slippers witching tht world\ngo by, ii down in the saucer pedaling instead.\nGOLF ONLY IXCIPTION\nNo other athletic competition with\nthe possible exception of golf, which\nscarcely compares in rigors to six-\nday bike riding, boasts a top line\ncompetitor approaching McNamtra's\nage. Babe Ruth at 40 is on the sidelines. Jack Dempsey quit at 83.\nOnly Bill Tilden, of the tctlvt patriarchs, continuei to play pfb tennis at 41..\nMcNimin,  piired  with    Dive\nLands of New Jersey next week,\nholds  ill  records  for  cuperative\npower.\nCHOPPED HIS FINGER\nWhen he wu 12, hunting rtbbits\nwith his brother In New South\nWales, he stuck his htnd into t log\ntfter t hiding bunny tnd wts bitten on one finger by a make. His\nrugged brother decided there waa\nonly one wty to live hli life. So\nhe chopped the bitten finger off\nwith \u2022 hafthet.\nIn tht 90 yttn ht's bten riding\nbicycles professionally, ht's been\nttken apart and put together igain\nlike a grandfathers clock by one\ndoctor after another. Hli wound\nstripes include 11 fractures of the\ncollar bones, three broken ribs,\nfractures of tht skull, noie, jtw,\nboth trmi and one leg. He's been\nln and out ot hospitals so much he\nmarried t nurse.\nYet he hu won 16 racei, finished\nsecond 11 times, third 16 times.\nfourth 12 times, tnd like Rtbbit\nMarar-vllle, he doesn't see how this\nyounger crop can hope to get him\nout of there in the immediate future.\n\"They'll have to build them faster\nand stronger,\" he says, \"or they\nwon't ride me otf the saucer until\nI'm 60.\"\nRYDER WOULD\nBAR H. COTTON\nLONDON. Nov. 28 (AP)-Ssmuel\nRyder, donor of the trophy for\nwhich British and united States\nprofessional golf teams compete \u00abn-\nnually, said today he waa not In favor of the American suggestion that\nHenry Cotton, British open champion, be permitted to plsy In the\nnext matches.\nCotton, though British born and\nbred, Is the professional st the\nWaterloo club in Brussels, Belgium,\na foreign affiliation that disqualifies\nhim from the team under the deed\nOf   flft.\n''If there Is a single exception to\nbe made, 1st both sides agree to it.\nAlteration   would   mean   the   thing\ncould go on Indefinitely,\"\nin\n'Comeback' Class\n,-ei _A*m-mitytjtt\u2014-1\nBy AL DEMAREE\nThere ll nothing Intricate tbout\nkeeping t bowling score. A \"ftmt\"\nconsists ot 10 frames. Not mort than\ntwo balls tre mowed for etch\n\"fnme.\" If ill the pint ire knocked\ndown by tht first ball, It is called t\nstrike. If some pins remtln standing\nafter tha first bill hu been thrown,\nbut ire knocked down by the second bill, t spare ii mtdt. After\nmiking \u2022 strike, you tre entitled\nto tdd whtt ii mide on the next\ntwo bills. After, making t spare\nyou tre entitled to tdd whtt li\nmtde only on the next bill.\nIn my ibovt ctrtoon I ihow t\nscore sheet ai in example of scoring.\nFor frame 1-10 (on strike) plus 10\n(second strike) plus 0 on next bill,\ntotal 20.\nFor frame 2-10 (on itrikt) plut I\non first btll tnd 1 pin on second\nbill, or 20 to be idded to the first\nframe which shows 20, tottl 49.\nFor frame 3-10 for spare, plus\nwhtt will be mtdt on fint Mil\ntfter spare hit been mtde.\nSuppose the bowler geti inother\nstrike in the fourth frame, In other\nwords he gets 10 pint on the first\nbtll tfter the frame htld open by\nthe iptre. With three more strikes\nin lucceitlon, the score retds 129.\nSuppose In tht eighth frame he\ngets 9 pint on the flrtt bill and\nfills to get tht remaining one ptn\non his second btll, tht icore will be\n186. In the ninth frame, if ht gets\nthe 7-10 railroad, which of course\ncannot be made, but picks up one\nof the pins and then strikes out in\nthe tenth, the score of thc game ends\nai shown above in i 229 gtme.\nAnswer to Wtdnesdty'i question\n\u2014Bill Urbimki of the Boiton Braves\noperitei his own btrber shop during the winter.\nToday's question\u2014Of whit descent lt Hil Troiky of the Cltvelind\nIndltni? Aniwer tomorrow.\nAl Demtrte his prepired in Illustrated letflet ctlltd \"Spires\"\nwhich he will gladly lend to tny\nreader requesting it. Address Al Demaree In cire ol thli piper ind be\nsure to enclose t self-addressed\nsttmped envelope.\nOrder Trees for\nRecreation Grounds\nNorway and Silver Maples to\nBe Used; Will Arrive\nin Spring\nFOUR-TEAM\nMEN MANY\nMILL\nConacher, Burke and\nChaboj Among Most\nTravelled\n\u25a0ftt record number of pltytr\ntrades ind sties tint preceded ths\npreient setion In the Nttiontl Hockey letgue has resulted In t number\nof pltyen becoming \"four club\nmen,\" thtt is playing with their\nfourth team in the loop.\nJoe Limb, who was traded by\nBoston Bruins to Montreal Ctria-\ndiens In the detl ot Johnny Gagnon,\nIs one of theie. Limb started bis\ncareer witli Montreil Maroons, was\ntraded to Ottawa, from tlKre to Boston Bruins and now to Canadiens.\nLiontl Contcher. returning to\nMontreil Maroons from the chimpion Chicago Black Hawks, becomes\none of the most-travelled men in\nthe gtmt. Ht started hit ctreer In\nprofessional hockey with the origin-\nil Pittsburgh Pirates, who c\u00bbme into\nthe National leagut in 1929-26. From\nthert ht went to New York Ameri-\ncms, to become for t season one of\ntht very few pitying managers*in\nmajor league hockey. Then Mtrooni secured him in t trade, called\nfor waivers on him, but retained\nhim when he suddenly found hil\nform. Last season he wts traded\nto Bltck Htwki for Teddy Graham. Now ht goes to Maroons in\nthe big deal thtt Involved htlf t\ndoien pltyen.\nLome Chabot, moving into the\nChicago nets to replace Charlie\n\"Chuck\" Gardiner, joins his fourth\nclub. Chabot was goalgr for the\noriginal New York Hangers when\nthtt tetm entered National league\ncompetition in 1929-27. He wis\ntraded later to Toronto Mtplt Letts\nfor John Ron Roach, and last season, Canadiens twtpped George\nHiinsworth to Letfi for Chtbot.\nBefore tht start of thts setion, Chabot wit traded to tht Htwkt.\nMtrty Burke, also Involved in the\nCimdien-Hiwk detl, li wetting\nhil fourth National league jersey.\nTbt hard-hitting Irishman broke\nIn origintlly with Ctnadieni ai \u25a0\nrookie, but wts farmed out to Pitttburgh for ptrt of his fint lesson\nln tht Big Tent. List season, he\npltytd with Otttwt Senators, this\nseason he wears the Bltck Hawk\nlivery.\nWally Kilrea, placing this seuon\nwith Detroit Red Wings, has seen\nlervlco with Ottawa, New York\nAmericans tnd Montreal Maroons\nin other seasons. George Patterson\nis also wearing his fourth livery,\nwith Red Wings. Canadlens. Boston,\nAmericans htve hid him on their\npty-rolls in other yetn.\nJOCKEY QUITS\nCOLUMBIA, S.C., Nov.\u00bb \u00ab_?>.-\nMick Gtrnir, wiry jockty who\nrodt Cavalcade to record victories,\nwu reported todiy to htvt quit\nthe trick.\nSTOCKPORT ANP\nLINCOLN WIN\nLONDON, Nov. 21 (CP cablf--\nStockport County tnd Lincoln City,\nEnglish letgue elevens, tied by\nminor oqtflti In tht fint round\nproper oi tht Enflilh tocotr eup\nlttt Stturdiy, finally won through\nin todty'i repltyi of tied gimts.\nThe rttulti wtrt:\nStockport County 4. Blyth Sptr-\nttni 1.\nLincoln City 4. Shlldon Colliery 0.\nExter City B. Chtrlton Athletic 2.\nHartlepooli United 2, Htllfax\nTown 0.\nNtw Brighton 1, Bouthport 1 (tfter extra ume). ^^^^H\nRANGERS FIRE\nVIC RIPLEY\nBill Cook Will Go\nBock on Forward\nPosition\nNEW YORK, Nov.\u00bb <CP)**-Word\ncimt from hetdquirters of Ntw\nYork Rtngen todty thtt Vic Rlplty\nhid been released outright tnd Bill\nCook moved from defence btck te\nhis old stand on tht forward line.\nMtntger Letter Patrick hastened\nto announce thlt these moves did\nnot foreshtdow t wholeitle shtke-\nup in tht Nttlontl Hockey letgue\ntetm, which hu been filtering ln\nthe yet young setion, but it wu rtported unofficially that tht blue-\nshirts trt dickering with St. Louli\nEagles tnd two othtr clubi for\nnew pitying mtttrltl.\nThe reason for the reltti* of Ripley, young Calgtry speedster, wu\nnot innounced. '\u25a0\nMoving of BlU Cook btck to Ml\nold right-wing berth will igtln\nplice him alongside hli brother Bun\nind Center Frankie Boucher.\nBill wai shifted to tht rttrgutrd\nthli seuon tnd pltyed thert in tht\nRangers' first six gtmu, only two\nof which htve retulted ln victorlei\nfor tht Pttrick men.\nMetntime the front llnei htvt not\nbeen clicking tnd the old scoring\npunch hu been lortly licking.\nTOWNSEND AND\nWALLACE MEET\nWill Battl* for Christmas\nFund and Possibly the\nTltta\nMontreal Mtrooni Mtm to htvt\nt corner on \"comt btcki\" this tet-\nwn, in tht Nitlonil Hockey league.\n\"Dutch\" Glinor. t member of\nBoston Bruins, timed \"Dynamite\nLine\" t ftw yetn btck. and lut\nseason leading scorer in the Northwestern leigue, It essaying a return\nto major letgue hockey via the\nMarooni.\nAleck Connell. veteran Ottiwt\ngoaler. is Uklng the stme courie.\nConnell wis out of hockey last lea-\nson. Ten years tgo Connell then t\nstir with St. Brlgid's In the Ottawa\nAmtteur Hockty league, jumped to\nprofeuional ranks with the Senaton and replaced Clint Benedict\nafter the latter had been sold to\nMaroons. From the start Connell\nwas a star and rose to brilliant\nheights to aid Senators in the dtys\nwhen the red. white tnd bltck wts\na dominant factor in professional\nhockey.\nSinca turning profusions ht htd\nplayed but ont season In the colon\nof a city other thin Otttwt, prior\nto this year. Thret yeirs tgo when\nthe Senttors failed to exercise thtir,\nfranchise Connell was loaned to\nDetroit. He returned to Otttwn\nagtln, but saw no action last year,\nthough signed to a contract with the\nSenators. i\nSome notable come-bicki have\nbeen made with Maroom in other\nyears. Reg. NoMe. long t ittr forward with Toronto, wts considered\nabout through when Maroom purchased him. He wu turned Into \u2022\ndefenet player and starred for yttn.\nA yur after Maroons bought\nLiontl Contcher, wtlven were\nuked on hli services. Ht flashed\nback with \u25a0 series of great games,\nand came btck to star bo \"i if Montreil md Chlctgo, flntlly becoming\nan all-star selection.\nMarooni even had t come-back\nm-tnager. Eddlt Gerard, who pilot-\netl the team to the Stanley Cup in\n1920, came back after a year's ab*\nsence wilh New York Americans.\nTht Nelion city council his decided to plice in order for Norway\nand Silver maples to be uied it the\nRecreation grounds. Tht trtei will\nnot be delivered until spring.\nSomt tint tgo the council went\nInto the mttter of placing trees\ntround the grounds for decorative\npurpose! ind It was decided that\nNorway mtple tnd Silver maplt\nwould serve tht beit,\nTht treei will bt placed about 19\nfeet apart tnd liter on they will bt\nthinned out. About 120 trees will\nbe needed, costing in til tbout $79.\nBoucher Ail-Around\nAthlete\nThe good iportimtnship which\nhis made Frank Boucher of Ntw\nYork Rangers a frequent winner of\nthe Lady Byng cletn-play trophy in\nthe National Hockey league.doesn't\nend on the iee.\nBoucher ii \u2022 crick cricket player\nU well ti t hockeylit of mtrlt. In\nin exhibition mttch lut summer\nbetween in eleven selected from thc\nOtttwt Villey cricket council ind\ntht touring Upper Cinida college\ntttm, Boucher, pitying for the O. V.\nC. C. mtde t thrilling cttch, clou\nto the ground. It wti one of tht\nkind thtt only tht pliyer himself\nknew whether it wu fair or t pickup but in hli chtneteristic mm-\nner Frank immedltlely notified the\numpire that tttt bitsman wu not\nout.\nFor ilx seasoni Boucher has been\n\u2022warded the Ltdy Byng trophy,\nwhich (ott to the player in the Nitlonil Hockey league idjudged the\nmost useful to his teim combintd\nwith iportimtnthlp pliy. Good\nsportimtnihlp comes natural to hint.\nLowe Bowlen ond\nK. P. Teams to Plov\nJtek Oriper hu leeepted a ebil-\n\\m,e from t numbtr of K. p. cir-\nnet bewltri to a ttm* it tht K  P.\n[ hall  Thunday evening. Mr. Tnt\u2014r\ni will head teur rinks of lawn towlera.\nCHERRY PICKERS\nAND STARS WIN\nTake the Plumbers and  the\nBarbers  Into Gimp on\nBowling Alleys\nChirry Flekera triumphed over tbt\nPlumbers, and tbe All Stan took\ntht Barbers into camp Tuetday night\nIn city bowling league gamea rolled\non Otltnu' alleys, t, choquette. r.\nHimman md L. petta wen high\nbowlers for the evening.\nBcorei  wert:\nCHERRY  PJCKWS Tl.  PLUMBER*\nlit  2nd   srd   Tot.\nr.  Hamipan    178   1S7    174\u2014 807\nA. Choquette ... 1-3   IM    179- 465\nJ. Htmson   104   10O   115\u2014 310\nE. Nndeau   116   143   167\u2014 416\nTotal      648 634 636    1707\n3. Teague   148 100 IM\u2014 364\nJ. Hunden  104 107 116\u2014 ?36\nV. Oravea   ,        104 100 116\u2014 319\nP. Hunden   136 134 167\u2014 497\nBpot      240\nTotal      487   441   608   1679\nHigh   Individual   seore,   A.   Choquette,   179.\nHlgb iggregatt score, p. Hammin,\n607.\nBARBERS ts. ALL STABS\nH.  Hughes\n3.   Plero\nA.   Hamson\nA.  Fleming\nSpot   \t\nlit   and   ard   Tot.\n86 76 106\u2014 367\n104 133 101\u2014 831\n96 130 106\u2014 333\n140 146 190\u2014 416\n300\nToUl   436 474 443 1643\nc. o. mlchirdson 93 146 114\u2014 962\nA.   Arcure     139 168 131\u2014 438\nL.  Ptttlt     178 123 176\u2014 471\nH.   Hunt     164 133 144\u2014 441\nSpot     240,\nToUl      667   570   666    1943\nHigh   lndlrlduil  score,  L.  pettlt,\n176.\nHltlj uiregitr score, l. Pettlt, 67).\nEarnshaw Will\nStay With Gome\nPHILADELPHIA, Nov. 28 (AP)-*\nGterge Farmhiw. the \"big moose\"\nmoundimtn of Chicago White Sox,\nhu chingtd Ui mind tbout becoming \u2022 yew-round iniurance salts-\nmtn, lnd will be on the diamond\ntgain next iprlng.\nAfttr t conference with Jimmy\nDyku, White Sox manager. Earn-\nshiw announced todty he will bt\nbtck la tht windy city in )I35 undtr\nttrmi of tht 1934 contract that give\nhim 1 $900 bonus for each gtmt\nwon tbovt 10.\nA 100-dty ctmpalgn against the\nwaste of miterltl li being conduct*\ned in Germiny. reporti a corrci*\npondent to \"Industrial and Engineering Chemistry.   '\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 58 (CP)-\nGordon Willtct tnd Billy Town-\nsend, who fought 19 roundi thret\nweeks ago tor the Ctntdltn welterweight title u approved by the\nVincouver boxing commission, with\nWallace getting the decision, hive\nbeen remtlched to fight on December 11 for Chrlstmu chtrity.\nWallace is willing to stake hil\ntitle on tht bout if tht commlulon\nwill give itt unction.\nBOOSTER PINS\nG0INCJU1CEY\nOnt Person Sails Nearly 50 in\nDay and a Half; Club\nMeats Tonight\nThe ult ot Ntlion Senior Hoekey\nBooiter pint continued tt t fut\npice throughout Tuetday and Wednesday and most of the people on\nthe street! nOwNirt decorated with\nthe little sliver hockey sticks.\nAs early as Tuesday evtnlng, only\nt day and a half tfter the pins trrlved in Nelson, tomt Indlvlduil\nsellen had accounted for neirly\n90 pins. A Itrge number of ptople\ntrt wiling tht pint tnd there trt\nalio a number of storu assisting\nthe Booster club In this wty.\nA checkup will probibly be mide\ntonight to ticerlaln the number\nsold.\nThe Booster club will go into the\nquestion of wiys ind meant to\nraise fundi when it holdi i meeting\ntonight.\nvailIgoaT\nHOCKEY LINES\nGIVEN NAMES\n'College Line', 'Kid\nLine' Among\nMany\nThirt trt more \"ntmed llnei\"\nthis rauon ln the Nttiontl Hockty\nleigue thin tt tny time btfort ln\nthe history of hockey'i mtjor loop.\nfor the first time In tht hiitory\nof tny profesUontl hockty league,\nthert ire two all-college llnu In\ntht Nttlontl.\nToronto Letfi htvt ont of them,\ntht Art Jtckson-Pep Kelly- Meti\nUnt thtt cunt up Intact from St.\nMlchtel'i college, tht junior imt-\nteur chtmploni of Canidi lut set-\nMn.\nCtntdieni ot Montreal htvt tht\nothtr. This is compoied of Nelion\nCrutchfleld md Jick McGill, who\nsUrred lut seuon with tht crack\nMcGill college tetm ef Montreal,\nboth graduiting thli iprlng. Tht\nthird unit in thit \"collegitle Unt\"\nll Ptul Rtymond. lightweight right\nwing, who li i pidutle of St. Jttn\nd Breboeuf cotlege in Montrul. t\nnoUblt Prench Ctntdltn institution\nwhtre hockty tnd lacrosse trt tbt\nmtjor iporti.\nTht Ctntdltn trio hit tlrudy\nbten ntmed thl \"collegt Uat\", while\nln Toronto tltt St Mikt't trio, bt-\ncium of their youth hit betn dubbed the \"Infant Line\" to dlatiniuilh\nit from the \"Kid Line\" of Contcher-\nJickson-Prlmuu. ' .\nChlctgo Bltck Hiwki htve tomtthlng unusutl In tht wty of for-\nwtrd llnu. Ont of the moit for-\nmldtblt gotl-getting combinitlom\not the SUnley Cup-holders li com-\npond of Howie Moreni it centrt,\nJohnny Gottselig left wing, Lolo\nCoutun right Morenz li Germtn-\nCmiditn, GotUelig it the only Rui-\niltn-born player ln profttilontl\nhockty, ind Couture li \u25a0 French-\nCtntdltn t rttl melting-pot trny\nof varied riciil tthletic product!\nthit hu bttn termed tht ''Coimo-\npoliUn Lint\".\nDttroit Rtd Wlngi htv* in \"In-\nttmttionil Lint\" of Andtrton, Boyd\nind King, ilgntd up lntict from the\nPhlUy Arrowi.\nNtw York Ringert htvt thtir\nftmoui \"Vetertni Lint\", tht two\nCooks tnd Boucher.\nSt Louli Utiles htvt tn \"Alltn\nCup lint,\" for tnt two Roche Brother!, tnd Glenn Brydson, wer* tetm-\nmttu on tht Montreal team of 1030\nthtt won tht Alltn Cup, emblemttic\nof the world'i imateur chimpionihlp.\nMontreil Maroons alio hive t\n'chimpion lint\" with Aubrey Weblter tnd Simmy McMtnnm of the\n1033 tnd 1934 world's imtteur\nchimpion Moncton Hiwki on tht\nwinn tnd Ptul Hiynu, of tht 1(30\nworld'! unittur chimpion Mont-\nreal tttm in tht centrt.\nSOCCER REFEREE\nDIESAT COAST\nVAJtootmoi, not. aa (Cpi\u2014tthic\ncoincidence moved todsy to tftln\nbntk the rtnu of Vancouver's soccer referee\". A yur ilmott to tht\ndty llnet Jack Oray died from\npneumonia contracted after referee-\ning a gime between two Wtdnwdiy\nsoccer litgue clubt, Jim Wllion, fellow rtfaree. died todty from t similar lllneu ifter retiming . match\nbetween tht ume two turns.\nWllion, 38-yeir-old. and ont of ttw\nyoungest soccer referees In tht prof.\nInet, wu forn-lfl; getlkttper for\nSt. Saviours elub of Vtncouvtr In\nthl unlor Intercity letgut. Ht retired from totlvt oompttltlon two\nyurt sgo to tiki up rtferwlnt.\nA col,j caught whllt handling the\nlime two wukl ago in I pouring\nrun diviloptd Into pntumonli H\u00bb\nwu Uken to hospltsl sundiy night.\nMRS. CHAPMAN\nBEATS WINDSOR!     HIGH BOWLER\nWINDSOR, Ont, Nov. 21 (CP).-\nA Soil by \"Sparky\" Vtil on a pass\nfrom Milt Halllday lit* In tht third\nperiod give Cleveland Indians a 2-1\nwin tt the expense of Windsor Bulldogs in' in lnternitlonil Hockey\nleague gamt hert tonight. Vail'i\ngoal came less thtn three mlnutei\nbefore ths cloie of the third period,\nshitttred 11-1 tie md pulled Cleve-\nland out ot i prolonged losing\nstruk.\nRETURNS TO BOSTON CUBS\nBOSTON. Nov. 91 (API-Bert Me-\nIntnly, OlUwa defence player, today was rtturntd to Boiton Cubi\nby Boston Bruins of tht National\nHockty league.\nMn. Junes Mclvor'i ltdy bowlen\ntook Mn. J. H. Chtpmui'8 trio Into\ncamp on tht Legion alleys Tuudty\nnight despite tht latter'i effort in\nrolling high single of 173 tnd aggregate of 457   ^^^^^^^^^^^\nScores wtrt:\nMrs. Chtpmtn\nMn. J. SindtU.\nMn. H. Leslie\nMn. Chtpmtn\nTotall ,\n2nd\n48\n|\ntrd   Ttt.\nei\u2014 isa\nW-33U\n172- 457\n391   Ilt   535-947\nMn. J. Mclvor 1st\nMn. J. Anntble 109\nMnL.Plckird. 157\nMn* J* Melvor.. 161\n2nd\n113\n122\n115\nSrd Tot\n98-317\n150-429\n128-403\nB.C.TOWATCH\nCOMERK. GAME\nCommercial Hockey\nProbable Outcome\nin This Province\nBritish Columbit\nInttrettt  htvt   i\nthtmselvu In fivor tt   \t\nhoekey in ptao* of th* amateur\npetition for tht Allan cup, vie*-\nPruldent Alien Pellowi of & British Columbia Amtttur Hockty aaw\nctatlon ttld today.\nInformed thlt HtUfut 1\nraottrs wert ttronaly i\t\ntht mirctntll! ttatut, Ftltowt j\nthtt unleu lomtthlng wtr*\nabout the rttldtnc* mlw l\nfutll to annt triniftn to .\nby tht Ctntdltn Amtttur r\u2014_\nauodatioti. the coait would prott.\nbiy withdraw trom tbt tmateur or*\ngtnlutlon ant uuon.\nDominion-wld* oommtreial\nhockey competition wu tufieetad\nwrlltr thlt month it th* tnnutl\nmt\u00abting of th* B.CA.H.A, by dele-\n(ttu rtprtttntlng the Wut Koota-\nmy Hockty letgut, producer ef\npnctlcilly ev*ry provinciil chimpionihlp tttm the cout provlnc* hag\nhtd. Vtncouvtr delegatei supported\nth* projoul but lt wu decided not\nt* tak* tny iction thii setson but\nto witch the development of th*\nmerclntilt gtmt ln th* Mtt with\ntht possibility of forming tuch in\norganisation throughout Ctntda\nnext yetr.\nA commtrcltl lttgut ii operating\nfor iti lecond yeir in Britlih Columbit but lt it strictly t loctl or-\ngtnltttlon in Vancouvtr. A ihort\nschedule li pltyed. then two tetms\nire picked to pliy off tor thi city\ntltlt under imtteur rulu, the winner to contut the provinciil title\ntnd the right to enter the Alltn eup\npltydowni. ,\nBUCK SEASON\nENDS FRIDAY\nTht hunting tuson for buck\ndetr cluei In tht eutirn dlitrlct\nwhich comprlui tht East tnd\nWut Kootimys and thlt uction\nof thi Boundiry lying tut of thl\nCout rtngt, en November 30. Two\nwukl trt tllowid for thi thootlng of detl, howtver, commencing\nDecember 1, The big limit for\ndots ii ont.\nFOR 40 YEARS\n-POPULAR\nWITH SMOKERS\nNOW\nIn Attractive I\nChristmas\nWrapptn\nTotal! 437  U0   374- 1151\nBOXES OF IO\nBOXES OF 25.\nAT YOUR DIALIW,\nHit\nRoyal\nlochnagar\nOLD SCOTCH WHISKY\n\"4\u00bb ExtraortUnttru WhUlttj Voloe-\n^^^^^^1 26'\/* o*. bottle - #3\u00ab75\nDISTILLED, MATURED & BOTTLED IN SCOTLAN^,\nThii advartisamant is not published or displayed by th* Liquor Control Board er by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\nI\n\t\n \u2122\n\u2014'\nPAGE EIGHT-\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINO. NOV. M. 1M4\ntW CUSS If I ED SECTION - WHERE BUYER &SEUERMEEI\nNrlBon Baily \u00a3frmg\nMember ot tha Canadian Dally\nNewspaperi Awodatlon\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exehingi connecting to\nall Department!\n__________pBTTTTW *~\"\u2014\u2014~\nSubscription Bates\nSlatfe eopj % 3b\nBy carrier, per weak     33\nliy carrier, per year, \u2014 13.00\nBy mall ln Canada, to subscriber! Uvlng outiide regular\ncarrier areis, per month, 80c;\nthree monthi, Jl-80; six months.\nI3JJ0- ona yeir, $6X0.\nUnltad \"tates and Great Britain, one month. 75c; six months,\nKM; one year, $7JS0.\nForeign countriee, ether thin\nU.S., aame aa above plus any\nextra pottage. \t\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiliii\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\n11c a lint\nMinimum 2 Unit\nli linn, onee  t 32\n3 Unit, onoe     33\n4 llnei, ono*    -44\n2 lines, 9 times    31\n3 lines, ttlmi  1.32\n4 llnei,\u00abtlmei 'ITS\n2 llnei, 1 month  iM\n3 Unit, 1 month  4.29\n4 lines, 1 month   5.72\nAll ibove len 10% for prompt\npayment\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIlllllllllllllllllllllll'\ntt)tKt\u00bbiitSi\u00bbCmm\u00bbit4tlmk^^\nThe Blonde Countess\nBy HERBERT O. YARDLEY\n*$!ri&SSSiSS!m*immiS#iStX#Sk**^^\nREAD THIS FIRST!\nPretty Joel Csrter is secretary\nto Nathaniel Greenleaf, held of\nthe U. S. \"Black Chamber,'' where\nmuch of the real wartime lecret\nservice work is done. Countess\nThorlund, wife of the Scandinavian ambassador, whom Joel distrusts, asks Greenleaf to permit\nher to work for him at the Black\nChamber. Suspecting her, he.\nnevertheless, agrees that she id-\nvertise for a secretiry in hopes of\ntripping J-37, mysterious woman\nipy. While Greenleaf is working\nin the telegraph room, where code\nbooki are kept, the Countess en-\nten unannounced and, before he\ncan get her out of the room she\nhas carefully noted its exact layout. She tells him she has some information for him.\nCHAPTER 23\n\"Oo on,\"urged Greenleaf as the\nCountess glanced questioningly at\nJoel. \"My secretary is sife as s\nchurch.\"\n\"Ah, thit,\" wld the Countess. \"It\nli not a happy comparison. I have\nknown churcnei put to strange uses.\nIt wu in a church I uied to meet\ncertain igenti once. Thit wu in\nSouth Americi.\"\n\"Churches here ire wholly different,\" Hid Greenleaf. \"Or eo I am\ntold.\"\nThe Countess smiled it thlt.   .\n\"I have to ny chiefly thit I hive\nengaged a aecretary, not at all ao\ngood to look it is the charming Miss\nCarter, no. She is perhaps 40 years\neld. She wears rimless spectacles.\nShe ll atairdy, wean her black hair\nawept back severely to a knot. She\nhaa atrong squire hands. Her voice\n^ rather flat and colorless.\" She\nneed it Greenleaf. \"I distrusted\nt voice. It was neutral. A aelf-\n\u2022ttacing voice thit refuses to tell\nItvhat goes on inside.\"\n\"So you engaged her?\" Greenleaf\n\"Naturally. If she is to be ius-\npacted I must hive her under my\n\u2022yea. Beiides, she is in excellent\ntypiit and linguist\"\nMln Sarah Renmble wu ill thit,\nGreenleaf reflected, and it wis perhaps a waste of her abilities to let\nthe CounteM hive her. The litu-\nation wai not without humor, how-\nover, Sirah md the Countess witching eich other like hawks.\n\u25a0\u25a0Whit Is her name?\" he asked.\n\"Matilda Sorensen\u2014so she said.\nAnd this ii her iddress.\" The Countess laid i slip of paper before him.\nGreenleaf who had himself picked\nthe lodging for Miss Sorensen, nee\nKemble, looked at the familiar address with seeming interest.\n,\"Thlt at least we can verify,\" he\nsaid.\n\"I've no doubt lt is correct,\" the\nCountesi laid. \"How foolish it would\nbe otherwise.\"\n\"Just so.\" Greenleaf agreed. \"We'll\nmake wme discreet inquiries and\ncheck them with what she told you.\"\n\"I hive it here,\" the Countess said\npromptly, \"ill her references. The\nlast two I checked myself. They\nwere corrett. But as for the others\n\u2014some you see are in the far west.\nSeattle, Portland. Those are not so\neasy to check. She says she has\ntaught school and that her parents\nwere Norwegian.\"\n\"Ah, well, we'll do what we can,\"\nGreenleaf remarked, putting the\nmemoranda in a envelope.\n\"And you think she should be\nwitched, thit she miy be \u2014 you\nkhow who?\" the Countess asked\nanxiously.\nGreenleef reflected unhappily\nthat if the Countess was playing\nstraight with him he was putting\nhimself to much needless trouble\nand expense. And certainly the\nCountess played the devoted assistant to perfection. Those earnest blue\neyes were surely void of guile. Had\nhe been 10 years younger he would\nhsve been sure of it.\n\"And these,\" slid the Countess,\nlining before him i slip with the\nnames and addresses, \"are some of\nthe other applicants who seemed to\nme worth looking into. They are at\nleut intelligent.\"\n\"Why,\" questioned Greenleaf, \"did\nyou choose thii \u2014 i \u2014 Miu Soren-\neeh?\"\n'Because,\" explained the Count-\nen, \"she met my requirements so\n-exactly. If she is the womm we\nleek, ihe would do thit of course.\"\n\"Of course,\" Greenleif issented.\n\"Why, by the wiy, do you not have\nher uve ln the house? wouldn't.she\nbe of more use to you? And couldn't\nyou keep your eye on her better?\"\nThe Countess mide a helpless gesture.\n\"I know. But my husband will not\npermit It. After ill, it is an embassy.\nMy husband must know and trust\neveryone around him. If she is what\nwe luipect ihe might do harm, for\nI cannot, u you siy, keep my eye on\nher ell the time. My many social\nduties forbid. Today, for Instance, I\nmast pay iome calls. I shall take her\nwith me In the cir. The drive, the\nair, will no doubt be good for her.\"\nAnd likewise, Greenleaf reflected,\nthe efficient Sarah would not be\nsniffing about among the Countess'\nbelongings as he'd very much like\nher to do. He began to doubt hii own\ncleverness in this matter. He had\nbeen too clever perhaps. He would\nat the moment nave given a considerable sum to read the thoughts\nt\nof the beautiful woman beside him.\nHe sat back to be less close to her.\nThe delicate perfume which she\nemployed had a demoraliting effect\nupon him, and the arm which all\nbut touched his was a beautiful arm.\n\"I must go,\" the Countess declared, abruptly rising. \"I am late to an\nengagement. You will forgive my\ninterrupting your work?\"\n\"It was no matter,\" he said. \"1\nam out of luck in my work.\"\nShe regarded him searchingly, but\nhis face betrayed, he thought, a convincing hopelessness, for he did as a\nfact feel rather down at the moment.\nThe German cipher seemed just as\ninsoluble as ever.\n\"Cheer up,\" said the Countess\nwith a subtle effect of Intimacy.\n\"Your luck will him. I have faith in\nyou.\"\nThen she went awiy, ind he\nfound himself hoping thst she was\nall she seemed to be and that all his\nelaborate countermining useless. It\nwu,-on the face of it, improbable\nthat she was herself the redoubtable\nJ-37 md almost as unlikely that she\nhad dealings with that fabulous\ncreature. He had the uncomfortable\nfeeling of _. impalpable net closing\nabout him. of unseen enemies who\nknew vastly more of him than he of\nthem. Until he could break the German cipher md find the reigent of\nthe invisible ink, he was a man\nfighting in the dark against creatures to whom darkness was native.\nThere came over him for a moment\nthe fear of ultimate failure. Not\noften did he fear that. Yet It was\nsomething he must face as a possibility. It was better to overestimate\nyour enemy thm to underestimate\nhim. To lear failure, to take precautions against it. md yet to fight\nwith all the enthusiasm which confidence gives\u2014was it possible to do\nthis?\nHe came to himself to find Joel's\neyes upon him.\n\"What do you think of our Countess today?\" he asked.\n\"I think,\" said Joel simply, \"she\nis a dangerous woman to have u an\nenemy.\"\n\"Yes, and as a friend?\" he asked.\n\"She would still be dangerous,\"\nJoel said.\n\"Why?\" he asked curiously.\nShe absorbs one.\" Joel said seriously. \"There is something compelling about her.\"\nThat evening at nine o'clock\nGreenleaf drove his car into the outlying parts of Washington to seek\nthe opinion of Sarah Kemble on this\nsame compelling personage. Sarah\nhad suggested that a seemingly\nchance meeting on a dark and unfrequented street would be the\neasiest means for her to report on\nthe day's activities. At the Black\nChamber her coming might be too\neasily observed.\nGreenleaf parked his car on a\ndark side street. Joel's neighborhood, he reflected. Mrs. Harris'\nboarding house was but a couple of\nblocks to the east. Just as well not\nto be seen by her. Few of his subordinates knew the identity of their\nfellows. He found it advantageous\nto keep their identities md employments to' himself. He crossed the\nstreet at the corner, collar turned\nup. hat pulled over his eyes. It was\na chilly evening and the street was\ndeserted. His footsteps sounded loud\nin his ears.\nSo, too, in the ears of Joel who.\ntaking a walk before an early bedtime had paused lo identify the few\nstars and constellations she knew.\nThat was Vega surely, overhead.\nAnd was that the constellation of\nOrion low upon thc eastern horizon?\nHer eyes dropped earthward and she\ncaught a glimpse of Greenleaf'.*;\nfamiliar figure. Could it be he? Shi*\nwalked slowly to the corner and\nlooked after the retreating form.\n(To Be Continued)\nBIRTHS\ni    BIDDLECOMBE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\n1 Prank   Blddlecombe   of   Marysvllle,\nat   McDougall   hospltsl,   Klmberley,\nMondsy. Nov. ae. a son.\nLECAL NOTICES\nOOVEHMIIEKT LIQCOR ACT\nNotice   ot  ippllcitlon   for  consent\nte Transfer of Beer Licence.\nfotlce Is hereby given that on tht\ndiy of December next thi undersigned Intends to apply to the\nLiquor control .Board (or consent to\ntransfer of Beer Licence No 2874 and\nIssued ln respect ol premises being\npart of a building known aa Midden\nHotel situate st 507-9 Ward street\nCltv of Nelson upon the lands described is Lot One Block Plve Officii! Plsn City ot Nelson Kootenay 'Land Registration District, ln\nthe Province of British Columbia\ntrom Floyd M. Barnett of Argenta.\nB. C, the transferor.\nDATED \u00abt Nelson. B. C. thla 3rd\nday of November. A. D. 1934,\nA. SHUTTY.\nApplicant and transferee.\n (4736)\nPERSONAL\nGENTLEMEN, BAVE 50\"?,,. BUT YOCR\nSanitary requirement! by mall\nStamp brings catalogue, sanl-\nTex Company, p. O. Box, No. 61.\nVancouver,  B.  C. *    (4644)\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR\nList of wanted Inventions and full\nInformation sent free. The Ramsay\nCompany, world Patent Attorneys\n373 Bank Street, Ottawa, Canada.\n(4834)\nOROW MUSHROOMS POR US AT\nhome. Bli demand: excellent profit!, write for free booklet to Domestic Mushroom Growers, Edmonton. Alta. (4745)\nEczema Itch Piles Dlcen Try Oeo Lee's\nChina Remedy it Hudson'! Bay Co\n(4M51\nitf_V0jrtmjumimJtt0JttmjmOmjfitt-*^0ur\nr*T\n16\nfi\nCHRISTMAS\nJf GIFT -f\nSUGGESTIONS\nClfta for \"Her\"\nFOR  JOY  AND  COMPORT\na dress or wooly Kimono by\nNORAH  COLEMAN. Annable  Blk.\n\u202250*07)\nJuit the present (or Her. An uo-\nto-the-minut*    Cabinet    Electric\nBINDER BEWINO  MACHINE  Co.\n(50101\nWhat could be nicer than a Permanent.  Capitol Beauty Shoppe.\n(50091\nNoveltl-sfc Hankies. Weidrest Hose\nand chic Dresses at the\nD. C. DRESS SHOPPE.\n(5011)\n* POLAR PUBS LTD. 548 Orsn-\nvllle St. Vincouver. pur coatt,\nFoxes, Chokers. Reduced prices.\n(5106)\nGifts for \"All\"\nGifti fer \"Him\"\nOrder   Xmss   wrapped   Tobacco.\nCigars. Clg'ts, Wllllsms News s\u00bb*J.\n 150161\nChristmas Economy\n Suggettions\t\nChooee from our wide range of\nnovelty China. The ARK STORE.\n.  (6013)\nYour friends will appreciate\nChristmas Cards, a dosen cards\n- NELSON\nDEPT.\nilACLEAN 8 BPECIAL OFFER FOR\n-hrlstmas. 5 or more orders 60c\nit. per yr. NELSON NEWS DEPOT.\n(5012)\nMCGREGOR   _.\nChristmas   pbotograp]\nBROS.   FOR   YOUR\nigraphs.    Special\nChristmas prices. Phone 224.,\nMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS\nLEWIS PIANO  SPECIALS\nEasy Terms. No interest Charged.\n8g5-Brosdwood Piano, boudoir.\n^^ model, In lovely rosewood\ncaw.\n\u25a0135\u2014Berry-Wood Piano, upright\n~ grand,    overstrung   iteel\nframe, rich tone.\n\u00ab150-Rlch toned Kimbill Plsno.\n~ Wilnut   Caae.   full   over\nstrung steel frame. \\\n8185-Helntiman and Co.. Plsno,\nT upright   grind,   fine   rich\ntone quality.\nWhy psy Interest charges on i piano\nfiurcliaae? Lewis offers approxtmste-\ny 200 fully overhauled pl-tnos\u2014all\nleading makes\u2014On Easy Terms\nWithout Interest charges, we crste\nIree snd ship F.O.B. Vancouver, B.C.\nLEWIS PIANO HOISE LIMITED.\n1041 Granville St., vancouier, B. C.\n(6077)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nHunter Electric, opera\n\u25a0 Combination coal, wood and elec-\n* trie range with witer (ront. 1220.\nt_ \u2014Terms. J. P. Coates, P.O. Block,\n3 Vernon Bt.                          (5096)\n\u2022*\u00bbr*mm**Tt(m*r-Wmr\u00bb(\n(or   $1.75   Up   to   14.25.   1\nDAILY NEWB, PRJ1.TINQ\n(6016)\nA \"China\" Chrlstmu Gift Is sl-\nwsys appreciated. We bave the\nlargest selection ln the district.\nJ. V. MORGAN, 301 Baker Bt.\n(6014)\nLASTINO PRESENTS\nJewelrv of every  description  it\nPAPAZIAN'B,  HlU  Bt.\n__^___ 16006)\nIteplete with electrical appliances,\nnovelties,   decorative   light   sets.\nHouse Blk.\n(6097)\nREMEMBER - USED PARTS rOR\nautos, trucks, tractors. We sell\ncheap, write, wire. Elmwood Auto\nWrecking Co., Oalesburg,  Illinois.\n  i5032)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\ntf you find \u2022 cat or i oeg. a\npocketbook lewelry or fur er\nanvthlng else of value, telephone\nThe Dill? News A \"Found\" Ad\nwlll be Inserted without coet to\nvou Wi will collect from tbe\nowner. \t\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\n240 ACRES IN SALMON V\\LLBT.\nwell timbered and watered. First\ndies soil. W. J. O- Balmo. ,6110)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nWANTED-TEAM OF HORSES FOR\nwinter. Not under 3000 lbs. Applv\nC. Wlckersheln. Salmo.        (6ofe)\nPOULTRY AND ECCS\nFOR SALE 78 LEOHORN PUUJfrS\nnear laying some ire 11.00 eich,\naleo 60 bens year old 60c esch.\nP. Ettoda, Appledale. B.C.,  (4987)\nMISCELLANEOUS  WANTED\nOOOD CLEAN  RAGS WANTEB-AP-\nolv  Dillv  News Office. ,sasai\nBusiness and Professional Directory\n Accountant!\t\nCHAS J? HUNTER. SPA i\nMunicipal and Commercial Audita\nP   O   Bex  Utl.  Nelson   B   C\n(46921\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED \u2014 WOMAN    COOK    FOR\nfamily of tour. Apply Queens hotel.\n(6083)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUNG LADY WITH BOME HOS-\nnftil experience wishes care of\nnvalld or young children. Box\n5039, pally News. (5039)\nMUSICIAN. 21, ALTO, TENOR,\nbarlt., saxs, snd clsr, wants day\nwork where ability to nlay Is is-\nect. Box 5106. Dally News.  (5106)\nYOUNG WOMAN WANTS WORK,\nday or hour. Phone 328R2, (6063)\nEXPERIENCED GIRL WANTB WORK\nPhone 849R. (6114)\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE ON\neasy terms ln Alberta and Saskatchewan, write tor full Information to 908-Dept. of Natural Resources, C P. R. Calgiry, Alberti.\n(4743)\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelson Daily News endeavors to print only truthful classi- <\nfied advertising and will appreciate having its attention called\nto any advertising not conlorm-\ning to the highest standards of\nhonesty.\nAdvertisers who desire may\nhave replies addressed to a oox\nat the Nelson Daily News and\nforwarded daily to their address. A charge of 10 cents is\nmade tor this! service. In this\ncase add four words (Box \u2014\nDaily News) to the count for\nthe number of wordl.\nWe Cover the\nCountry!\nPut  your  needs  before\nthe  greatest number of\npeople   in   the  shortest\ntime  through\nTHE NELSON DAILY\nNEWS CLASSIFIED PACE\nFor Service\nPHONE\nJEAN ROBERTSON\n144\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS,  ETC.\nOut-of-town subscribers vho\nwith to answer advertisements\nIn which only the telephone\nnumber of the advertiser is\ngiven, may mall their replies to\nthe Nelson Daily News, and they\nwiL be communicated to the\nadvertiser.\nNORTT1 SIDNEY, N.S., (CP.-The\nfall season for codfish and haddock\nhas been spoilt along this coast by\ndogfish, according to thc discouraging reports received from fishermen\nof this port. The dogfish menace\nis the worst in many years and several craft returned' to port wilh\nvery small catches after long hours\nspent off the grounds along the\nshore.\nUNFURNISHED   HOUSE\u20147   ROOMS,\nelectric range and hot water. High\nStreet\u2014Apply W. W. Ferguson .\n(4932)\n5-ROOM   HOUSB.   1.4   MILE   FRO&\nferry. WIU rent to couple without\nrhlidren. W per month. Ph. 4771,3.\n(6026)\nSIX ROOM HOUSE FURNISHED.\nApply Mrs. E. J strong, Barton\nAve,, creston, B. C. * (6107)\nCOMFORTABLE BEDROOM. CLOSE\nIn, 408 Victor,!. Phone 590R.\n(5020)\nFOR SALE\nTHREE ROOM FURNISHED SUffE.\nbath ln DHvate home. Close ln 413\nCedar St. (5031)\nPURNISHED     HOUSEKEEPING\nrooma tor rent Annable Block.\n(4885)\nMODERN  OFFICES  BY  WQ_K  OR\nmonth. Medical Arts Blag. ~4687)\nIS     THE     KERR    APARTMENTS\nfurnished and unfurnished suites.\nPhone 106\nFor\u2014\nCOAL AND WOOD\nSAND, GRAVEL,  ROCK\nFURNITURE MOVrNC\nCRATING, STORING\nFREIGHT HAULING\nGENERAL TRANSFER\nWORK\nETC., ETC.\nWilliams' Transfer\n609 Ward St. Nelson\n(5109)\nFUR.     ROOMS,     STEAM     HEATED\nshower, terms mod. Can. Legion.\n(4686)\n5   ROOM  HOUSE.  GARAGE.  FRUIT\ntrees, garden. Apply 1203 Front St.\n(5071)\nTWO -ROOM    FURNISHED    SDITE\nlor   rent.  -Stirling   Hotel.   ,4689)\nUNFURNISHED 5 ROOMED HOUSE.\nHigh street, phone 862.       ,4933)\nFFDftNISHED TWO ROOMED SUITE\none single. K. W. C. (5098)\nFURNISHED SUITE. 3 ROOMS AND\nbathroom, phone 103L.        (50941\n3   ROOM   SUITE 112.  PER  MONTH\nUnion  Rooms.     (4690)\n5ARAGE.\nMODERN     BUNGALOW,\netc. 705 Stanley St.\n(6112)\nFOUR    ROOM\" HOUSE.    APPI\/lT D.\nMagllo, rhone 808L. 14772)\nFOR RENT-MODERN HOME. GOOD\nlocation. Phone 33. !*__?___\n\"TERRACE   APTS   Beautiful  Modern\nFrlgldalre  equipped   suites.   (4691)\nCLASSIFIED    ADS.    READ    THHM.\nuse   them\u2014It  pays I\nVARNISH STAINS & CLEAR VARNISH\nquart 48c. White and Cream Paint,\nquart 55c. Antl-Freeze, gallon 90c.\nF.O.B. our factory, write Herbert\nFaint It Varnish Co. Ltd., 9th Avenue It 3rd street west, Calgary.\n(6645)\nUSED CASH REGISTERS. WE GUAR.\nantes suitability and accuracy\nWrite National cash Register Co.\n670 Seymour St.. Vancouver. B C.\n (4618)\npipe aiId OTMNoiS\nCANADIAN JUNK Compsny Ltd..\n250   Prior   St.   Vancouver.   B    C.\n(4666)\nOOOD FREIOHT RUN* AND HI\ntons Ford truck in good order.\nCash 1600. Box 5018. Dally News.\n(5018)\nWe carry largest stock reconditioned\nPipe and fittings suitable for ill\nSurposes. write Swarta pipe Yard,\n20-lst. E. Vancouver. B.C. ,50511\nTWO   DIESEL   ENGINES    120   HP,\nand 50 HP. Kootenay Belle Mine,\nSalmo, B. C-\n(5029)\nFOR 8\u00bb.l. E - BARRELS, BEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonild Jam\nCo.,  Ltd, .4770)\nNEW AND USED SACKS, I. BECKER\n2809 W. 6th, Ave.. Vancouver.\n(4892)\nAtiayeri\nE W WIDDOWSON estsbllshe*) 1900\n305 Josephine St. Nelson. B O\n(4893)\n\u2014O-U-SVILIk h. orIUUOOd\n618   Baker   St..   Nelson    Box   726\nCustom snd Control sssavs. chemical    analysis     Representative    it\nTrail for Shippers' Interests. (4694)\nKOOTENAY    LABORATORIES\nAssavers it Chemist!\nBoi   1342                   TraU    0 C.\n (4695)\nBuiineu Training\nApproved    bookkeeping    course    by\npost,  practical,  complete,  reasonable   prloe.   Commercisl   Training\nBureiu, Box 1216, Vancouver. B.C.\ni4961)\nChiropedltta\nDr. Mildred Slmonds Foot Specialist\n405  Pernwell  Bldg. Spoksne.  WMh\n i4696)\nChiropractor!\nE.   M.   WARRIN.   D.   C.   BOX   872.\nPh. 116   Ollker Block. 512 Biker\n14648)\nElectrical\nJ.  F   COATES\u2014Tbe  Electrlo  Store\nSupplies snd installations\nPhone 766 P. O. Box 1061\n(4697)\nEngineer! and Surveyor!\nA   H   OREEN  CO    LTD    616  WARD\nSt. Phops 264, Nelson, B.C.  (4698)\nH. D   DAWSON -NELSON\nENGINEER   AND  SURVEYOR\n14699)\nBoyd   C   Affleck.   Fruitvale.   B   c*\nLands. Mineral Clalmi. waterworks\netc. Surveys. Plans ind Estimates\n (4700)\nFlorists\nFor Christmas flowers delivered ln\nforeign countries, let us have\nyour order now to effect 1 savings\nto you. Tile F.T.D. Service delivers anywhere ln the world.\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. Th. 233.\n(47031\nHidei and Fun\nBRIGGS TANNERY tt FUR CO, LTD.\nCalgary, Alts, wither Tinning.\nBuffalo Coats and Robes for sale.\nHides bought.     (6046)\nIniurance and Real Eatate\nROBERTSON   REALIY   CO,   LTD.\nRes.    eitite.    Insurince,    rental!\nAberdeen block. Biker St.  (4703)\nT.   D.   ROSUNO,   3   ROYAL   BANK\nBldg., for insurance of every kind\nand description. (4663)\nR W DAWSON. Real Estate lnsursncs Rentals Next Hlpperson\nHardware. Biker street. (4704)\nC   D   BLACKWOOD   Insunnci  of\nevery description Resl Est Ph 99.\n(4706)\nH   E   DILL.  AUTO AND  FIRE  IN-\nsurance Resl Eitite 608 Ward St.\n(4708)\n3     E.    ANNABLE     REAL    ESTATE,\nrentals, lnsursncs. Annabla block.\n(4707)\nLIFE. FIRE At AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nince. P. E. Poulln. Ph. 70. (4708)\nCHAS F MCHARDY INSURANCE\u2014\nReal Estate\u2014Phone 136.       (4709)\nMachinist!\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work Lithe\nWork. Drilling, Boring and Grinding.\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene Welding.\nPhone 593.\n334 Vernon street\n (4710)\nMaternity Hemes\nELIZABETH __\nMATERNITY  HOH_\nStrtctly prlvite\u2014ConfldestliL Physician In Attendance. Ph. Broad. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wssh.\n (4898)\nMuiical Tuition\nVIOLIN     AND     THEORY     PUPILS,\nMary Heddle, Phone 311R2, (4701)\nSaih  Factory\nLAWSONS SASH FACTORY   HARD-\nwood merchant. 217 Baku street.\nSecond Hand Stores\nLunch counter chairs for ule. Mm. I\nRadciiffe. Vernon St. (4712)\nCASH   FOR   OLD   STOVES.   BEDS\nlurhlture, etc. The Ark Stow.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\nPRESBYTERIAN\nDINNER LARGE!\nApproximately  120 at the\nFunction  Headed\nby Council\nA highly successful church dinner was served by tho Indies of the j\nFIrfit Presbyterian church Tuesday j\nevening, when, ns usual, patronage \u00ab\nwas undenominational, and tho 130 i\npatrons Included a wldo represent- j\natlon from the general citizenship.!\nheaded by Mayor S. H. Smythe and [\nthe aldermen and city officials.\nJ. B. Oray welcomed the patrons,\nand grace was pronounced by the\nminister,  Rev.  Wallace  McClean.\nMrs, A. Wallach was general convener for the affair, with _ committee consisting of Mesdames W. T.\nChoate. -tames May, .t. Cunningham, D. T. Heddle, A. T. Park, and\nH. H. Currie. Young ladles who assisted tn aervlng were Misses Orace\nand Daisy\/ May, Mlsa Florence Hanna, Mlsse* Nana and Hazel Stout and\nMary Wlnlnw and Mlra Esther Oliver\nwhile Jack Wlnlaw, .lack Stout and\nHampden Oray aided them. R.\nThompeon was cashier.\n \u2014\u2014\n1\t\n^\n-THE NELION DAILY NIWI. NILION. i.C-THURSDAY MORNINO. NOV. 21 1B4-\n- PAGE NINI\n.934 Bt G Qold Production to Reach All-Time Record l\nfALKER TELLS\nMetol Markets\nOF BIG YEAR\nStimates  Production\nat 307,700\nOunces\n913 PEAR WAS\n297,754 OUNCES\n*ad Production Is at\nNew High But the\nValue Down\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 28 (CP).-\nud production in British Columbia\n111 reach an all-time record thia\n\u2022r with an estimated 286,700\ninces lode tnd 21,000 ouncei placer\nr a tottl of 307,000 ouncei, Pro-\nnclal Mlnertlogiit Dr. J. F. Wilker\ntnounced todiy tt the opening\nnlon ot the sixteenth annual meet-\nIt of the British Columbia division,\ninadltn Initltutt of Mining and\ntttllurey.\nThe former production peak was\nached ln 1913 with a total of 297.-\nt ouncei, Including 272,254 ouncei\nde tnd 25,500 ounces placer.\nDr. Walker declared the province's\nineral production this year Is esti-\nated it $41,813,150, in increase ot\n,260,478 or 28.4 per cent over 1933\nlen total production volume wat\n2,802,872.  The peak year In value\nII 1929 with $68,245,443 total pro-\niction.  The low point ot the ltst\nyetn wu 1914 with $26,388,825.\nWhile the production vtlut li le-\nw that of 1928 owing to low prices\npise mtal, volume of production is\n;ely to let a new record,  Dr.\nliiter itated.\nAO AT NEW HIGH\nQold production ll estimated at\n10,480,921    In   Cinadlin   funds,\n.ead production, next In vtlut, li\nItlmtttd it IMISrOOO. Vtlut of\nlid It fir below tht high of $18-\n70,329 In 1928; but tht estimated\nRlume of 340,700,000 poundi ll\nall-time high, thi formtr record\navlng bttn 819,199,712 poundi In\n930.\nZinc it next with vtlue of $7,674,-\n1 compared with tht 1926 record\n$10,586,610 and volume ot 250,-\n0,000 pounds is ibove the 1930\ncord of 250,287,306 poundi. Coal\n\u25a00 ihowi in Increaie of 5.57 per\nnt. estimated at 1337,000 tons,\nlued it $5,882,250.\nSilver ii estimated it 8,907,000\nmet!, valued at $4,197,889, an in-\neue of 88.4 per cent over 1933.\nie volume record was ln 1930, with\n,289,171 ounces valued at 38.194\nnts an ounce while the record\noes value was ln 1926 when the\ntil wis $6,675,606 with silver at\n107 centi.\nCopper lncreue il 12.3 per cent\n\u2022r 1933, with t volume of 49,-400,-\n_ pounds vtlued it $3,566,680.\nComparing mineral production\nth that of agriculture and lumbet*-\nE. Dr. Wilker ihowed that from\nt peak of production to the low\nint in 1932, agriculture dropped\nper cent, mining 59 per cent and\nmbering 62 per cent. From the\nIt of 1932, the estimated recovery\nla year is for apiculture 18 per\n_nt lumbering 23 per cent <un-\nflcitl) ind mining, 49 per cent.\nAP ORANGES\nARE UNLOADED\nLocal Jam, trult and confectionary\nles have bttn exceptionally good\niring the past few weeks, accord-\nis to J. A. McDonald, manager ot\nMcDonald jam factory.\nA car of Jap ortnget tnd t mixed\nr of oranges, lemons, iweet po-\nton, grapes tnd grapefruit hive\nrived for distribution by thc firm.\nI* firm hu received permission\ngo Into tht tobicco jobbing busl-\n\u25a0 tnd will start thii ntw line\nfirst of the month.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 28 (API-Copper quiet; electrolytic, spot tnd future, blue etgle, 9.00.\nTin iteidler; ipot tnd nearby\n51.37 to 81.49; future 51.40 to 51.50.\nIron quiet, unchtnged,\nLetd itetdy; spot New York 3.50;\nEast St. Louli 3.39.\nZinc iteady; Eut SL Louii spot\nand futurt 3.70.\nAluminum 19.00 to 22.00.\nAntimony, spot -13.79,\nBar silver itetdy, V, higher it\nWA.\nAt London\u2014Copper, standard spot\n\u00a327 5s; future \u00a327 12s Sd; electrolytic, spot \u00a330 10s; future \u00a331.\nTin, spot \u00a3229 5s; future \u00a3229\n7s 6<L\nLead, ipot tnd future \u00a310 15i.\nZinc, ipot \u00a312; future \u00a312 5s.\nBit tilver quiet and unchanged\nat 24-Jid,\nDISTILLERS CUT\nBY PROFIT-TAKING\nAccounts for 25 Per Cent of\nTrading at Toronto\nB.C. Salmon Pack\nIt Higher\nUHCOUm. Not. 38  (OP).\u2014The\ntub Oolumbli ulmon pack ase-\n1 tu tht highlit ilnce 1930, tbt\nik ytu, when 3,231,783 cuti wert\nFlntl figures for tht current\nluued today ihowed 1.513.344\n\u2022  ten   packed   compared   with\n1,073  cttei  lut  year.\n* 1934 pick In grades wu 870.-\ntutt of Koktytt;  38.077 cut!\nan:   1161  cue* ttMlhetdi;   30,-\ncuet bluebacka;   193,979  outt\nMt: 434,369 CUM Pink! tnd 603,-\ncuet of chums.\nVancouver Sales\nTORONTO, NOV. 28 (CP).-DU-\ntlllers Seagram accounted for 26 per\ncent of the trtdt on tht Toronto\n\u2022tock eichange Industrial board today Under profit taking lt brokt\n'\/. to 1614 In active trade.\nElsewhere fractional changes appeared to bi the rule. Pord galntd\nVt tnd Nickel tt. C.P.R. tnd Bratllltn btld steady. Induitrial Aloohol \"A\" tnd Walker's oommon dropped H  ln small trade.\nExceptional advance* of t point\ncame out ln Consumer Oas, Kel-\nvlnator preferred and Wtstons preferred.\nCARIBOO GAINS\n6 AT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 28 (CP)-\nThe prlee trend wu itrong during\nthe morning session on the Vancouver stock, exchange today hut lick\nof Interest ln the afternoon brought\nshares lower and a number of losses\nwere recorded at the close.\nCariboo Gold sold up to 1.57 and\nclosed with a net gtln of 6 it 1.94.\nBralome closed unchangtd it 12.75\nafter selling at 13.00 and Pioneer\nGold sold it 11.75, tip 39. Home\nGold wai up i\\ at 13 and Premier\nGold firmed 2 it 1.25.\nCHRISTMAS\nSUPPLIES IN\nNelson Wholesalers and Retailers Look to Good\nHoliday Trade\nGOLDS STRONG\nIN THE EAST\nTORONTO, Nov. 28 (CP)-Much\ndepressed gold shares displayed\nstrength on the Toronto exchange\ntoday under the leadership of higher\nSrlce issues. Volume declined to\n10,000 sharei.\nLake Shore added ISO to Tuesday's cloie. Dome gained 1.35 md\nHoljinger, Wright Hargreavei, Mclntyre and Pioneer 30 to 30 centi\neach. Braiorne advanced 5 centi.\nGains dotted the secondary group\nincluding t for San Antonio, 2 for\nVentures and 6 for Cariboo. In the\npenny group Bobjo advanced 1.\nSilvers were quiet. Eldorado eased a point tnd Bear Exploration i\nfriction. Base Metali corporation\nheld unchtnged.\nTHREE ORE CARS\nARE TURNED OUT\nThree ore cars htve been turned\nout by tht Nelson Iron Works since\nthe beginning of the month. On the\nlist of sales made during thtt time,\nwas two ore bucket! to t mining\nconcern on Ortnlte rotd.\nSILVERS STEADY\nMONTREAL Nov. 28 (CP.-Sil-\nver futures held steady on the Canadian commodity exchange today.\nLondon pricei were unchanged\nind the opening here recorded t\ntive to 15 point loss.\nDecember opened it 54.30 where\nit remtined throughout the day and\nclosed at the opening figure as compared with yesterday's final sale\nof 54.41. February finished the dty\nit a nominal price of 55 tgtlnst\nTuesday's nominal closing price of\n55.05. March closed at 59.39 in comparison with yesterday's last Did\nof 55.40.\n(7ANOOUV--R, Nov. $a. \u2014 Mining\n\u25a0old on the Vtncouvtr ttock\ntodty:\n\" -Brtdltn   90;   Beaver   Sll\n! Brtlorne 110: B ll Con 2500;\nX 1900; Cirlboo 1750: Oold B\nMeridian 900: Morning 8 800:\ni S $800: Nicola 8880: Pioneer 75:\nO 1300; Rtno 970; Ttylor B\nWiyilde SOOO.\nVWt\u2014Atlln Pu 8300; B C Nickel\nBig Mlu 1000:  Dentonia  17.-\nFtlrtltw A 1900; Oold Mtn 200;\nnd* 3400;  Grtnge 2500:  Orull\nBadlty A 3000: Hercules O\nv. ,600;  Koot b aoo:\n7000; Mlnto 4880: Morton\n100;   Pavilion   100;   Pilot 3000:\nI A 9000:  Sunshine  300*.   Unlt-\n2000;   Vldette 2000;  Wlterloo\nWeverly 90000.\nB. C. Could Save\n$18 Million by\nMaking Own Oils\nVANCOUVER, NOV. U (CPl\u2014\nfemes Dickson, chief Inspector ot\nmine* for British Columbia, today\ntola members of the B. C. division\not the Canadian Institute of Mining and metallurgy that til gasoline and toel oil required In tht\nprovince could be produced from\n11. C. roal hy t modern hydrogen-\natlon plant, conserving to the\nprovince $18,000,000 aent out annually for a foreign product.\nNelion warehouiei trt now picked with the bulk of Christmu goods,\nand ilreidy moit ot the wholesale\nhouses have disposed of the holiday\nlines to the retailers. Nelson il due\nfor \u2022 brighter Christmu this yeir,\nwholesalers atate. From in advance\nobservation of the market prospects\nare bright and business mtn are\nplanning on a rushing business.\nSix cars ot groceries, Including\nnuts, peels and sweets, arrived last\nwcekjlor the Christmas tnd regular\ntrade. Three cars of Jap oranges\nwere also unloaded at Nelson. The\nnew crop of California oranges is\n.ilso now on the market and pricei\nappear to be about the same u\nlut yetr.\nEggs are still scarce and itorage\neggs ire being shipped in from the\ncout, but io ftr there hive been\nno chmges in prices.\nCar unloading! included one of\nmilk, one of sugir and one of flour\nind feed, and one hay.\nCN JL REVENUES\nUP FOR 10 MONTHS\nMONTREAL, Nov. 28 (CP)-An\nIncreaie of $6,501,976 ln net revenue\nfor the first 10 months of the year\nu compared with tht limilar period lut year is shown in the month-\nlv statement of the Canadian National railways Issued here today.\nThe statement shows an increase\nof 81.140,978 ln gross operating revenues for October is cornpired with\nOctober, 1933, md an lncreue of\n$14,887,407 in poss operating revenues for the first 10 months of the\npresent year u compered with the\nftrst 10 months of 1933.\nGross operating revenues last\nmonth were $15,803,292, u compared\nwith $14,662,314 in the corresponding month of lut yeir.\nOpentlng expemes were $12,993,-\n883, 11 cornpired with $12,119,728,\nan increaie of $874,134, net revenue\nlast month amounted to $2,809,429,\nu compared with $2,942,586 in October. 1933, an increaie of $266344.\nFor the 10 montht, gross opent-\ning revenues were $137,766,001 and\noperating expense! were $127,814,-\nor\n1934\nDow Jones Averages\n80 industrials 102.76 up 0.87\n20 rails \u201e    86.88 off 051\n20 utilities    19.20 up 0.84\nVancouver  Stock  Exchange\nMl\ni87, leaving a net revenue for the\n' period of $9,951,934, as against\na net revenue of $3\u00abI1IK8 In **\u25a0\"\ncorresponding 10 monthi ot lut\nyeir.\nC.P.R. NET PROFITS\nHP FOR Id MONTHS\nMONTREAL, Nov. 28 (CP)-Net\nprofits of $17,770,786 for the 10\nmonthi ended October 31 were reported today by the Canadian Pacific railway. This wu an increue\nof $3,740,888 from the figure of $14,-\n029,898 ln the same months of 1933.\nGross earnings for the 10 months\nwere $103,652,688, an advance of $9,-\n685,641 in the same comparison.\nIn. October alone, net earnings\nwere $4,100,679, an increase of $41,-\n232 over October. 1933. Gross earnings advanced $767,852 to $12,752,-\n349, while working expenses, which\nthis October included pensions, were\nup $725,620 to $8,651,670.\nWORLD SILVER\nPRODUCTION\nIS DOWN\nA P Con \t\nAmal OU\nB C Packers \t\nreaver Silver ...\nBradlan .. \u2014\nBralornt\nBridge R Con ...\nBRX Oold\nCariboo  Qold    ..\nC n S Corp ..\nCoast Brtw\nCommonwealth\nOold  Belt \t\nHome OU \t\nInt Coll     .\nMak Slccar    \t\nMcDougar Segur\nMcLeod   Oil   \t\nMercury   \t\nMeridian     _. -\nMetaline   _,_\t\nModel OU\nMomlns Star  ....\nNat  Sliver\nNicola Mlnet \t\nOkalta Olla  \t\nPlonwr ooid ..\nPremier   Gold   ..\nPremier Border\nReno Gold  .\nSally Mlnee  \t\nSpooner   Otl   ......\nTaylor Bridge\nVanaltt   \t\nWayside  \u201e\t\n\u00abTRB\nAlexandria   _\t\nAnacondi\nAtlln   Pacific   ....\nBayvlew\t\nBluebird    .   \t\nB  C Silver\t\nB C Nlokel\nB   C   -tlectrlo   ....\nB C Telephone\nBig Missouri  \t\nBrew & Dlat \t\nCan Rand\nCongress   Oold   ..\nSows Neat\nlhousle Mlnu .\nDalhousle OUt  ...\nDentonia    \t\nDevenlsh  \t\n.071-i\n.10\n..     .0714\n16.00\n.~W\n..     .07\n945\ntti\n12.78\n\u2014\n*oey.\n.OSH\n\u202287 ,\n\u25a0\n.     1.54\n1.36\n.73\n.76\n.. 13.00\n13.75\n.03\n\u2014\n.38\n.39\nto\n\t\n..     .15\n30\n.1914\n..     .02%\n.     .36\n.40\n..     .12\n.13 U\n.     .10\n.1014\n..     .01H\n.03 *%\n'     h\n~\n.04\n..     .10\n.1014\n.05\n: i.36\n'?\u00ab\n.     .OOH\n41\n..    1.06\n1.07\n.     .47\nK\n.30\nA*\n.':  k\n.37\n.10\n\u25a09\n___\nW\n\u25a0 :8i*\n.0144\n_\n1.00\n.40\n.41\n107.00\n_\n02.50\n.     .8114\n.13\n.75\n\u25a0    .0614\n\u2014\n31\n\u2022a.*4\n\u202207*\n.     .01\n_\n.      24',\nM\n.40\n.41\n.     .03\nAtlln paolflc\t\nPactlta     _\nRanchmen's   I\nUnlttd Dltt \t\nSunshine  .\nDictator    \t\nDunwell   ,\nEiitcrut -\t\nPalrvlew   _\t\nPrtehold\t\nGeo Copper \t\nOolconda\nGold   Mountsln\nGeo  Rlvtr \t\nGrandview   \t\nGrtnge       \t\nOrull wlhkine .\nSadler Amil\nercules  Con\nHlghwood earctt\nHomt   Gold\nHomestead  Oil  ..\nIndian Mines  \t\nIndependence \t\nKoot Belli\t\nKoot Flor \t\nLakivliw _\nLucky Jim _ .\nMtr Jon  _\nMtrland     ,..--\t\nMlnto Gold\nMorton WoUtr ...\nNoblt Flvt\nPend  OrtUlt ........\nPilot Gold    \t\nPorter Idiho \t\nReward\t\nRoyallte \t\nRufus Argenta\nRuth  Hope  \t\nSUvtrcrtrt \t\nSllverjdp _\nSUvenmlth\t\nSnowflake   . \t\nTaylor wind  \t\nUnited   Bmplre   .\nUnited    Oil\nVldette Gold \t\nViking  Gold  \t\nVulcan OU   \t\nWaterloo\t\nWaverley Ting ...\nWellington   \t\nWhlttwtttr \t\ngift\n.01H\nToronto Stock Quotations\nNEW TORK, Nov. 38 (API\u2014World\nalive? production ln octobtr totalled\n14.795.000 fine ouncu tftlnst 14.-\n974,000 ln September tnd 16,481,000\nIn August, according to tht Amerl*\nctn bureau of metal statistics.\nProduction ln Ctntdt wu 1,049.000\nounces compared wtth 1412.000 ln\nSeptember and 1478,000 ln August.\nUnited States production In October\namounted to 2.099,000 ounces against\n1.786.000 ln September tnd 3,087,000\nIn August.\nMexico's output totalled 6200.000\nounoes against 6,098,000 In September and 6,536,000 ln August.\n20 Ct. DIVIDEND\nFOR BREWERIES\nMCNTRBAL^Nov. 38 (CP)-Dlrec-\ntora of National Breweries Limited\ntoday declared the regular dividend\nof 40 cents a ahare on the common\nitock and Uie regular 43 cents dividend on the preferred. The declaration of the 43 cents preferred dividend, togeether with tree previous\nquarterly payments of 44 cents\neach, makes a total of $1.75 per\nshare on the senior Issue.\nBONDS GAIN\nNEW YORK, Nov. 38 (AP),\u2014The\nbond market pushed throuih to the\nhighest average levels attained alnoe\nlast July In active trading today.\nNumerous secondary Issues were\n1 to 2 or more points higher and a\nsteady to firm tone prevailed among\nprime investments.\nIn the foreign section French 7s\nadvanced lii points to 188.\nMONTREAL SILVER PRICES\nMONTREAL, Nov. 28  (CP).\u2014Silver closed steady.\n|les were 50 contracts: Dec. 25. Feb. 18, March 7.\nOpen       High      Low       Close\nnber ..._    64.80B      54.80      54.30      54.30\nbruary     54.90B      55.10      55.10      55.00N\nlurch   ,56.30B      55.35      55.35      55.35\nDominion Live Stock\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 28 (CP) - Receipts: Cattle 850, calves 210, hogs\n2295, sheeD 550.\nSteers $4.25.\nHeifers 13.76.\nFed calves $6.\nCows $2.\nBulls $1.50.\nStockers and feeder steers $2.25.\nStock cows and heifers $1.75.\nVeal calves $5.50.\nHogs, select bacon $1 per head\npremium, bacon $7, butchers $1 per\nhead discount, heavy $6.50, extra\nheavy $5.75, lights and feeders $6.40,\nsows $5.75.\nLambs $6.\nSheep $1.50.\nAlexandria  \t\nAlgoma _ \t\nAmity         \u201e _\nAshley Gold  _ ~\nBarry   Hollinger  \t\nBate Metals   ...\nBankfleld       _..._\nBear Exploration \t\nBig  Missouri    -\t\nBobjo _\t\nBradlan  ...........\nBraiorne -  \t\nBrett Trethtwsy  _ ...\nBRX Gold   \t\nBrownlee    \t\nBut  Can  Oold   - \t\nButtalo  Ankerlt* \t\nBunker Hill  \t\nCan  Kirklind    \t\nCan  Malartlc   _. _.\nCariboo Qold Quarta \t\nCastle Tretheway  _.\nCentral Manitoba \t\nCentral  Patricia \t\nChlbougamou   ...\nClerlcy        .. .\u201e\t\nCoast Copper  _\t\nCobalt Contact  ....\nColumarlo     \t\nConarlum\t\nCons M 6c 8  - -\nDome _.-\nDom  -Exploration .... \u2014\nKldori'.do          \u201e\t\nFalconbrldge  \t\nOod's Lake  __.\nOranada     \t\nSardrock   . \nolllnger     \t\nHowey   ,  .\t\nHudson   Bar    -.. \t\nInt Nickel -.\nKlrkland Lak*\t\nLake   Maron\t\nLittle Long Lao\t\nLake Shore         _..\nMcLeod Cockshutt  \u2014.\nMclntyre  \t\nMcVlttie Grahamme  \u201e_..\nMcWatters   Qold   . \u00ab.\t\nMacassa   - -._ \u2014\nMalroblc     _....-_\nMaple Leaf  -\t\nMarbuan     ~\u2014\u2014\nMlnlni  Corp\t\nMoftatt  Hall    __\nNlplaslng .\u2014.\u2014.\u2014..\nNoranda    \u00ab \u00ab...\u2014.-..\nParkhlll \t\nPaymaster     _...\u2014.\npend   Orellle   ...: _..\nPickle Crow  _ _.._..._..\nPioneer Oold -.\nPremier  oold   \t\n.01 Vt\n?!\ni*\n.4$\n.It\n.3$\n.38\n3.40\n13.00\n.03\n37\n3:SI\na\n.06\n: ,a*\n157:00\nSMo$\u00ab\n1.03\nl\u00bb\n.17\n37\n11.60\n38.00\n.66\n,    4.T\n63.00\n40'tI*\n.19\ntt\n3.80\n\u2022Si'*4\n.08\nAt\n1.07\n.\u202201*\n341\n33.35\n33\n.30\n41\n1.73\n11.90\n1.37\nReno Oold\t\nBakooae \t\nSan Antonio  -\t\nSherrltt oordon ....\nSlscoe   \t\nSmeltera Oold  -\nSouth Tlblemont ..\nstadacona   \t\n8t  Anthony    \t\nSudbury   Baaln   ....\nSylvanlte     \t\nTeck Hughes  ..._\nTowagamic   .._\nTreedwell  _\t\nVentum  _..\nWalte   Amulet   \t\nWayside\nWhite   lafle\t\nWight*. Hargrekyes\nAcme \u2014\t\nAJax\t\nA P Con ~\nAssociated \t\nialL0\"\n1.06\n.33\nItk\n46\n3.60\nP\n38\nz i:\nCalmont  .\nO * s o\nChemical\nDalhousle\nHome   Oil\t\nHomestead O and O .\nImperial   oil    \t\nInter Pet*\t\nLowery   \u201e..\nMerland  __.\nNordon     .......\nOil Selections  \t\nOlga \t\n\u00bb\u2014::::\u201e-\n\u25a0 NUl'STRIALS\nBeatty Bros A  _\t\nBnuharnols     \t\nBell Telephone\t\nBraalllan .  _.\nBrew a Dist\t\nCan Bi\u00bbad\t\nCan cement \t\nCan  Car M Poundry\nCan Ind Alo A \t\n8an   Dredge     \nan Pac Railway  _\nCons Bakeries _\t\nDiet Seagram    _\t\nDominion Stores \t\nFord of Canada .........\nGoodyear Tlr*\t\nHiram  Walker  ...\nImperial   Tob   \t\nLoblaw  A  . \t\nMaaaey Harris \t\natandard Paving\t\nSteel of Canada\t\n'_\n.30\n.80\n.86\n.43\nT\naoo\n.18\n.06\n.07\n\u25a01014\n14.76\n.03\n.08\n.78\n138\n.35\n.80\nJM\n164714\n81.8J\n:\u00b0oS5\n1540\n.0814\n= J\n::::: %\n::::: li\n  sag\n  112\n  11(4\n....   16 2\n    18\n    3614\n\"72  3714\n    13\n    17\n-i.ioH\n    40\nQuotations On Wall Street\nAllegheny   \t\nAl  Chemical   ...\nAm Can \t\nAm   Por   Pow\nAm Ma & Fdy\nAm Smelt tt Re\nAm Telephone\nAm Tobacco\nAnaconda \t\nAtchison\nAuburn   Mo   ..\nBalwln\nBait It  Ohio   ..\nBendlx   Av   \t\nBeth   steel   \t\nCanada   Dry   .\nCan   Pacific\nCerro de Pasco\nChea 61 Ohio\nChrysler\nOom It South\nCon Oi N T\nCorn   Brod    ...\nC  Wright Pfd\nDupont\nEast Kodak\nElec Pow St Ll\nErie ..    ..\n?ord   English\nord of Can\nFirst Na Stores\nFreeport Tex ..\nOen   Electric\nGen Foods ...\nOen Motors \t\nGold Dust \t\noodrlch\t\nranby   \t\nir North PId\nOrt Weat sugar\nHowe Sound\nHudson  Motors\nIns   Copper\nInt Nickel  \t\n80S\n16',\nUS\n39'i\nUK\nn\nInt Tel 8t Te]\nJewel Tea\nKenn Coppw\nKreage SB..\nKroegger it Toll\nMack  Truck    _\nMilwaukee Pfd\nMont Ward    ....\nNuh   Motors    .\nNa Dairy prod\nN Pow St Ll ....\nN  T  Central   .\nPac Gas & Elec\nPick Mown ....\nPenn R R \t\nPhillips Pete .... _.\nPur* Oil   7S\nRadio Corp    .... 6t{\nRadio Keith Oc 1\u00ab\nRem Rand       . 10';\nSafeway store* 48\nR Louis It S F IS\nShell   Onto   n .. 6S\nS  Cal  Edison  .. 13S\nSouth  Pacific 18%\nStan Oil ot Cal 83>,\nSUn Oil of Ind 35\nStan OU ol N J 43 U\ntewart   Warner 9\nStudebaker  ... 314\nTex  Corp . 33\nTex  Oulf  Sul 35s\nTlmken Rollers 84S\ntinder   Type 66 S\nUn Carbide 46 S\ntin Oil ot cal 18\nUnited   Air     13H\nOn   Psellfe     loss\nC 8 Pip*   331?\np S Rubber .... till\nO S steel   38S\nVan   Steel     MS\nWeat  Electric   .. 86*4\nWoolworth     8614\nYellow  Truck  .. 3%\nMONTREAL HAS\nUNSTEADY DAY\nTrade See-Saws; Cains and\nLosses Balance at the\nClose\nMONTRBAL. Nov. 28 (CP)-In\nsee-saw trade the Montreal stock\nexchange eloaed an uninteresting\nsession today with gains and lost**\nequally balanced.\nC.P.R. gained H at 1114, B.C.\nPower issues were fractionally\nhigher and Consolidated Smelters\ngained a point. Nickel eased a fraction while tha preferred changed\nhands at 12214.\nCnada Cement preferred advanced\nIS to 414. Steel ot Canada and\nGeneral Steel Wares gained fractionally. Equipments were mixed.\nAmong beverages Canadian Induitrial Alcohol issues were on the\ndown side. Canadian Celanes* lost\na points.\nSales 14,235; bonda $19,500.\nENGINEER'S JOB\nA DIFFICULT ONE\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 28 (CP>-\nIngineers go side by side with scientists to win universal recoaiitlon\nfor their contributions toward the\nprogress of civilization. C. P. Browning, chairman ot the British Columbia division. Canadian Institute of\nMining and Metallurgy, declared today ln opening the 16th annual\nmeeting of that organization.\nTh* position of the engineer is\nmost difficult, Mr. Browning said.\nOn the one side the mining engineer\nrepresents capital and on the other\ntho workman. He must produce for\nthe one and act with Justice to the\nother. Mere efficiency ln engineering is not enough. Human engineering has taken the place of the old\nslave-driving of the past, he said.\nGains $701 Under\nMinimum Wage Act\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 28 (CP)-\nMlss Phyllla Clark was awarded\nJudgment for $701 and county court\ncosts by Chief Justice Aulay Morrison in supreme court today for\nback wages due her under the British Columbia Female Minimum\nWage act against Mrs. Gertrude\nGoodall.\nMiss Clark alleged she was employed by Mrs. Goodall ln Barclay\nmanor as housekeeper, general and\ntea room attendant and chamber\nmain for 95 weeks at a wage of $15\na month and her board and lodging.\nShe claimed the difference between\nwhat she received and $14 a week\nto which she claims she was entitled.\nJam Manufacturers\nHear Endorsation\nof Marketing Plan\nIndorsation of th* plan of organizing Jam \"manufacturers under the\nclause pertaining to the Jam Industry, in the new Marketing act, has\nbeen given by the chairman of the\nDominion market board, J. A. McDonald, local Jam manufacturer,\nhas been advised. It remains to be\npassed on before becoming law. The\nplan of organizing Jam manufacturers has been under consideration\nacross the Dominion for some time\nand has been taken up in the various provinces concerned.\nU.S.\nDOLLAR IS\nHigher\nW\nSIS\n3514\nMontreal Stock Prices\nMoney\nfly  the   Canadian   Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.8614; US\ndollar  37 S;   franc  6.4814.\nAt New Tork\u2014Pound 438S: Canadian  dollar   1.03S:   franc 6.59S.\nAt Pari*\u2014Pound 76.78 fr: Canadian dollar 18.80 fr: U.S. dollar\n15.16% fr.\nIn gold\u2014Pound lis 3d: Canadian\ndollar 61.09 cents; U.S. dollar 59.46\netnt*.\nSouthern California has a queer\nhealth problem, exterminating rats\nthat take shelter in palm trees.\nBell   Telephon*\t\nBraslllan\t\nC\u00bbu Car It Foundry \t\nCan Cement   -\t\nCan Cement Pfd\t\nCan Oan Bectrlc \t\nCan   oypsum    -\nCan Ind Al A  ....\nCPR        ..    .......\ncockshutt Pfd  \t\nCon MAS\t\nDom   Bridge\t\nDom   Olau   _\t\nOen Bleu Wares    ...\nHamilton   Brldg*   .....\nInt NlcMl\nMassey    Harris    \u2014\nMontreal Power \t\nNat Br*wlng  ......\nOgllvle       ....\nPower  Corporation \t\nQuebec power\nShawlnlgan  r. ...\nIteel of Canada\t\n133 S\n10H\n6H\n714\n6414\n136\n\u00bb\n.\"A\n136\nv\n38\nill\n80\n180\n814\n15%\nIS\n40\nCURBS\nAss'd  Brtw ,    19\nSrew   It   Dltt,        .'\nA Ol    14\u00bb4\ncan Malting  -    3814\nCan  vlckers        i\u00ab\nDlat  Seagram    \u201e    1614\nDom Inglnew _..-..     23\nHome Oil  -       11\nImperial   Oil    1614\nImperlal Tob Can  -    13\nint Petrol    81S\nMcColl rront-mao       13\nNoranda        ..\u201e _    83.10\nPage   Hersey    7114\nMMM\nCanadlenn*          180\nCoshmtrc* . _     166\nMontreal -     303\nHot* icotu  \u201e  976\nRoyal    169\nToronto   216\nMIM-ELLANBOl'S\nPord Can A    25ji\nLobluW Groceries     171\u00ab\nMONTREAL, Nov. 28 (CP)-Galn\u00ab\nwere recorded by all currencies on\nMontreal foreign exchange today.\nThe pound was 7-32 of a cent higher\nat $4.86*14 while the American dollar\nadvanced 3-32 of 1 per cent at 2\n1S-3I per cent discount The franc\nwas up .01 of a cent at 6.44 cents.\nDIVIDENDS\nBeU Telephone Company of Canada, Ltd., $1.50. payable January 15\nrecord December 22.\nNational Breweries, Ltd., common\n40 cents, preferred 43 cents, payable\nJanuary 2. record December 15.\nNorthern Ontario Power company,\nLtd., common 50 cents, preferred lVi\nper cent, payable January 25, record\nDecember 31.\nCalgary Live Stock\nCALGARY, Nov. 28 (CP.-Re-\nceipts Tuesday 294 cattle, 89 calves.\n79\" hogs and 185 sheep and lambs\nup to noon Wednesday 329 cattle,\n60 calves. 297 hogs and 89 sheep\nand lambs.\nThe cattle market was moderately active at steady prices for quality\noffered. Hogs were 15 cants lower,\nselects selling at $7. Bacon st $8.50\nand butchers at $\u00ab, off trucks. Good\nto choice lambs sold from $4.25\nto $5.\nCattle\u2014Good butcher steers $3 to\n$3.50; good butcher heifers $2.50 to\nfi; good butcher cows $1.50 to $1.75.\nGood calves $2.50.\nProduce Steady\nMONTREAL,  Nov. 28  (CP)  -\nPrices held steady on the Montreal\n\/produce exchange today:\nw Eggs, graded A large 89, A medium 82, A pullets 30.\nButter, No. 1 fresh 21S. solids 22,\nprints 23. '\u2022.  .\u201e\nCheese, No. 1 Ontario 914.\nPotatoes, Quebecs 40, N.B.S 45,\nP.E.I.S 50.\t\nExchanges\nNEW YORK. Nov. 28 (CP), -f-\nSterling exchange steady at $'.98\nfor \u00ab0-day billg, and at $4.98\"S for\nCanadian   dollan. 214 ptr  cant\npremium.\nFranc 6.59*i cents.\nLire 8.52*2 cents. .\nUruguay 80.86 cents. '\nUrge Speeding Up\nof B.C. Surveys\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 38 (CP)-\nThe Dominion government ll betng urged to speed up and intensity\nthe geological survey of British\nColumbia Hon. George S. Pearson.\nEacial minister of mines, stated\nln addressing members of the\nh Columbia division, Canadian\nInstitute of Mining and Metallurgy\nin convention here.\nMr. Pearson declared this province is far behind In Information\navailable as to its mineral resources.\nVast parts of the province have\nnever been explored properly, he\nsaid, and lt Is the unexplored country that Is most attractive to many\nprospectors. For this reason, he said,\nmore extensive geological information would prove of great help.\nCanadian Dollar\nLower\nNEW YORK, Nov. 28 (CP)-Nar-\nrow losses were recorded by sterling and the Canadian dollar In the\nforeign exchange markets today.\nThe Canadian dollar dropped from\n214 to 214 per cent premium.\nThe pound cloied at $4.98% for a\nloss of % of a cent. The French\nfranc remained unchanged at 6.59%\ncents.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPBO.   Nov.   38    (CP)\u2014Futures quotations:\nOpen    High Low Clos)\nWheat:\nDec    7814      76% 76 78%\nMay       83%    8314 83S 88'.\nJutt       83%     84% 83% 88%\nOats:\nD*c    41%    43 41% 41%\nMay        43%      44% 43% 43%\nJulv    43%     44% 48% 43%\nBatley:\nDM    84%     64% 84% 84 ,\nMay        87%     87% 57 57\nJulv     ....   57 57% 56% 66%\nFlax:\nDec  135% 186% 136% 135%\nMay     141% 143% 141(4 143%\nJUlV        \u2014        \u2014 \u2014 143%\nRye:\nDeo    66%      57%     66%     57\nMay        60%     61%     60S     60S\nJuly . 61% 61% 61% 61(4\nWheat; No. 1 hard 81%: No. l\nnor. 81%: NO. 3 nor. 76%: No. 3\nnor. 7314; No. 4 nor. 71: No. 5. 70V.;\nNo. 6, 71%; feed 71%: No. 1 durum\n88%; No. 1 A. R. W. 73%; track 7814:\nscreenings 810 per ton.\nEASTERN SALES\nTORONTO. Nov. 28 (CP)-Salei\nof 100 or mor* ahare* on the Toronto\nstock exchange, Industrial section,\ntoday were:\n240 Brazilian, 320 Can In Al, 409\nCPR, 8850 Ford, 1255 Int Nickel,\n1330 Massey H, 289 H Walkers pfd,\n8880 Dist C Sea, 2200 B A Oil.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 28 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Montreal stock exchange today were:\n340 Brazilian, 289 C Cem pfd, 25\nInd Al B, 630 CPR, 2213 Bom S &\nC B, 832 Nickel, 460 Man Harr,\n1241 Mtl Power B, 416 Nat Brew.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 28 (API-\nWheat, No. 1 northern 109% to\n111%, No. 1 red durum 10914, Dec.\n106%; May 104%, July 100%.\nCorn, No. 3 yellow 92 to 9214.\nOats, No. 3 white 56 to 57.\nFlax, No. 1 IU to 191.\nFlour 10 higher. Carload lots\nfamily patents 7.30 to 7.50 a barrel\nin 98-pound cotton sacks. Shipments\n17,659. Bran 26.00 to 26.50.\nExchinge Ratei\nCORN HITS TOP\n0F$1.06BUSH.\nIs Highest in Five\nYears; Wheat\nStrong\nCHICAOO. Nov. 38 <AF),-L_k\u00bb \u00ab\nsteeplejack, corn ran upward today\nabout four cost* to tbe topmost\npoint reached In flv* yean, 11.06\na bushel, spot cash delivery her*.\nThe peak was paid for No. 1 whit*\ncorn, and the whirlwind rise of th*\nmarket waa attributed In larg* d**>\ntree to sensational shrinkage at\ncom receipts.\nCorn cloeed %\u20141% higher. Uay\n88%\u2014%. Wheat olosed firm, 14\u2014%\nup, May 99%\u2014%. Oat* %\u20141% advanoed, and provisions unohanged\nto a rise of 20 cents.\nWheat, oata and rye wera responsive to corn market atrength.\nINTERNATIONAL\nP. & P. HAS LOSS\nNBW TORK, Nov, 38 .(API\u2014International Paper 4 power Co.. and\nsubsidiaries today reported for th*\nthird quarter net loss ot ai.581.57_l\nafter charges, depletion, depreciation\nand taxes, compared with a nst\nprofit on 6431359 In the September\nquarter last year, in the first nln*\nmonths loss was 83.625,137 against\nloss ot 83,343,231 ln. the aame period\nlast year. .   .\nAgain Manager of\nC.P.R. Hotel\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 28-A. H. Devon-\nlsh has been appointed manager of\nthe Royal Alexandra hotel, Winnipeg, it was announced today by A.\nE. Robertson, assistant general -pan-\nager of the C.P.R. hotel system it\nan enforced leave of absence for\nalmost a year on account of illness.\nHe had been recuperating at Banff\nand the Pacific cout\nA former manager of the Royal\nAlexandra, Mr. Devenlsh returni\nto familiary surroundings. He succeeds Ray Owen Kennedy, who hai\nbeen appointed t\u00bb Vancouver for\nspecial duties in the department'!\noperation of the Hotel Vancouver.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Nov. 28 (AP)--Closingl\nBrazilian Traction $10%; Canadian\nPacific $1%; International Nickel\n$2314; British American Tobacco.\n\u00a3614: Courtaulds 46* 3d; Dunlop\nRubber 48s 7%d; Hudson Bay 23a\n6d; Imperial Chemical 37s 3d; Imperial Tobacco 137s 9d; Mining\nTrust Ltd. 2s 3d; Rand Mines lf\\\nRhodesian Anglo Am 9s 6d; Rho-\nkana Corp. \u00a34%; Crowns *12%[\nSprings \u00a3814: East Geduld \u00a312%|\nRio Tintos \u00a312%; Vickers 9\u00bbJ014d.\nBonds: Canadian 4 per cent loan\n1983-58 \u00a311214; British 214 per cent\nConsols \u00a398%: British 314 -per cent\nwar loan \u00a3107%; British funding 4a\n1960-90 \u00a3118%.\nMONTRIAL. Hov. 38   (CP)-Brlt-\nlsh and foreign eichange ln relation\nto th* Canadian dollar as compiled\nby the Royal Bank of Canada, cloeed\ntoday aa follows:\nArgentina, pen ..\nAustralia, pound\nAustria, schilling\nBelgium,  belga\nBrazil, mllrels\t\ngblna, Hong Kong dollars\nsecbMlovakla,  crown\nDenmark, kron*\nFrance, franc       \t\nGermany, relchsmark\nOreat Britain, pound\nHolland, florin \u2014\t\nHungary,   pengo   \t\nIndia,   rupee\nItaly, lit*\t\nJapan, J*n \t\nJugoslavia,  dinar  -\t\nNew  Zealand,  pound\nNorway, kron* \t\nPoland,  alotl   ....\nSouth Africa, pound\nSpain,   peseta    - ...\nSweden, kron* \t\nSwitzerland, franc ....\nUnited States, dollsr,\ncent discount.\nSOMETHING NEW\nKIBE INSURANCE on easy\nmonthly payments large or small\nrisks, see yonr local agent or\nwrite\nPACIFIC GENERAL\nACCEPTANCE COMPANY\n321 Hall Bldg.\u2014Vancouver B. C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited.\nTRAIL - BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nELEPHANT Brand\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium Phosphates\u2014Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\u2014Complete Fertilisers\nProducers and Refiners of\nTADANAC Brand\nElectrolytic\nLead-Zinc\u2014Cadmium Bismuth\n*MH\n \t\nPAGE TEN -\nChurch of England\nPRAYER BOOKS\nWith HYMNS\nWe have a nice selection\nsuitable for Christmas\ngifts.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrag Co.\nMORE ABOUT\nFound Dead\n(Continued From Pagi One)\n%. Mcintosh, on reaching tht\nbody, found thtt White hid bera\ndeed only s ihort while. Hli wtl-\nIrt wu on hli penon containing\namong other thlngi in unsigned\nnote tn hli own hindwrltlni to\nhit fither tt Grind Forki. Tht\nnote wu dited Nov. 28 tnd wu\ntppirently written tt Orand Forki.\nIt read:\n\"My Dear Father:\n\"I am writing thli now beoauie\nI fwl my time ll getting ihort md\nI muit leave you. My life on thli\nearth hu been \u2022 mlittke from the\nbeginning and now I am going to\nMORE ABOUT\n'BABY FACE'\n(Continued From Ptge One)\nwithout knowing fiat the ilugi they\npumped   from   michlne   gun   md\nend It.\"\nSeveral other notei were In the\nwallet md tbe content!. It wn.il-\nleged by tht police, luggeited mental derangement.\nCONDITION . NOT   NOBMAL\nPeople who have been In compuy\nwith  White  during  the put  week\nittted  that hla condition  wu not\nnormal.\nLl'NCH  PAH NEAR  BODY\nEarly Wedneaday morning he bad\nhie lunch pall filled at the C.P.R\ndepot md It li believed he muit\nhtve itarted tlong the railway trick\nimmediately ifter. The pill wu\nfound netr thi body along with a\nuck full of clothing. White's witch\nwu itlll ticking when the police\narrived. He thlpped hli overcoit to\nQrand Forki Wedneidiy morning before leaving the itatlon.\nMr, Humphrey wired back from\nSouth Slocan about 0:30 a.m. but\nhe discovered the body u he paused\nibout 7:90. It wu on the river tide\nof the track.\nWhite wu about S3 yean old\nmd wu single. The body wu\nbrought back to Nelion.\nHe leaves hli father, F. J. White,\nat Orand Forki.\nWhite had been employed ln Nelion about a week ai a salesman.\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co. Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nahot gun  had  morttlly wounded\ntheir opponent\nHIT BY 17 8LUG8\nSeventeen of the bulleta fired by\nCowley tnd Hollis before they fell,\ntore Into Nelion, but only one ot\nthem found e vital mark. Sixteen\npierced hli legi tnd the leventeenth\nripped through hii stomach, liver\nmd pancreas.\nChief A. C. Stolberg ot the Ntlei\nCenter force md Government Oner-\nativei McKee md HcCerthy,\npledged to ivenge the murder of\ntheir colleague!, came upon Nelaon's\nriddled remaini at 2 p.m. Hii inns\nwere twiited md hii ironictlly\ncherubic countenance contorted. It\nwu apparent he died In interne\ntgony.\nNO TRACE OF PALS\nAuthoritiei believed be htd tt-\ntempted to bind the gtping wound,\nand either he or the mm md woman\nwho were with him in the battle\nhad removed Nelion'! clothing during the. amateurish ministrations.\nNo trace of hit companion! hu been\nfound.\nGratified with the bagging ot John\nDlllinger'i chief gun bearer, federal,\nstate md metropolitan huntsmen\nnevertheless continued their letrch\nfor the man and woman who fled\nwith the diminutive Nelton trom\nTuesday's engagement.\nThey were certain the girl wu\nNelson's wife md believed the man\nmay have been either John Hamilton, Tommy Touhy or Alvin Karpis,\ngangsters charged with a wide\nrange of Crimea.\nChief Stolberg and Agent! McKee\nand McCarthy mide the grueiome\nfind in a ditch. A quick examination\nproved the body wu that Of Nelaon\n\u2014named the slayer of Cowley md\nHollis, and the murderer of Federal\nAgent W. Carter Baui in the ilege\nof the Little Bohemia lodge in Wis*\nconsin last April 22.\nCreamery Code of\nEthics Proposed\nTOHCNTO. Nov. 28 (CP)-L. Reddlck of Kemptville, Ont, today submitted before I convention of the\nCanadian Creamery Men'i association \u25a0 code of ethici to govern business of creamery operators. He laid\nthe head of euch a buiineu ahould\nbe a \"mm ot sound integrity, good\nreputation, unquestioned honesty,\ncourteous and friendly,\" ensuring\nfair dealings with employee!.\nLast Three Days ot Our\nGREAT MONEY SAYING\nAlteration Sale\nTHURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY\nThe new fixtures will be here on Saturday and our atock muat be moved thia\nweek-end. Come early and get your choice of these. extraordinary valuea.\nWATCHES - - DIAMONDS --JEWELRY-SILVERWARE\nCHINA - -ALL GREATLY REDUCED!\nDon't Miss This Wonderful Sole\nof High Class Goods*.\nSilverware\ni& i.\nCigarette Cases\n$1.50 Value for ... '~4\nMother's Christmas\n***.\n$2.25 Value for . $1.15\n$4.50 Value for . 92.85\nTea Sets\nReg. $12.50 for . ?8.65\n$5.00 Value for . 93.15\n$6.00 Value for . 93.85\nReg. $H.OO for . 99.65\nReg. $27.50 for $16.85\nMen's Gifts\n2 Only Large Comport!\nReg. $10.00 for . $4.85\n1 Only Fruit Bowl\nReg. $12.00 for . ^6.00\n2 Only Cake Batketa\nReg. $12.00 for . ?5.85\n1 Only Cake Basket\nrJ\nMen'a Military Sets\nReg. $8.50 for .. 95.95\nBoys' Military Sets\nReg. $2.50 for .. 91.85\nMen'a Pipes to Clear\nVi Price\nReg. $9.00 for . $4.85\nCasseroles\nR\u00bbg. $6.00 for .. 93.95\nReg. $6.00 for .. 93.65\nGlassware\nDecanter and  11  Claases\n\u25a0  Value $18.00 for 911.85\nReg. $8.50 for .. 95.35\n$8.50 Bread Tray 94.85\n$8.00 Bread Tray 93.85\n$14 Flower Basket 97.95\n$12 Flower Basket 96.85\nrWr\nLiqueur Sets\nValue $22.50\nfor 915.85\n$10 Flower Basket 95.65\nBig Reductions\nin\nDiamond Rings\nLadies' and\nGents' Wrist\nWatches\nBig Cuts in\nChina\nNice assortment of\nLadies' Handbags\nAll Marked\nDown!\nTHURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY\nA DEPOSIT WILL HOLD ANY ARTICLE TILL CHRISTMAS\nJ. B. GRAY\nGoo4 Goods at Gray's'\nTHE NILSON DAILY NIWI NILSON. B.C-THUMDAY MORNINO. NOV. tt. 1M4\nMORE ABOUT\nBRITAINACTS\n(Continued From Page One)\n\u2022way I great deal ot miplclon. The\ncommunications to other government! constituted a new development and might creete \u25a0 new litui-\ntion if we cm get international\n\u2022greement\n\"We ihould like in agreement on\ndisarmament it the lowest poulble\nlevel. It we cannot get in unattainable ideal we must seek an tgreement it the lowest level possible.\nWe stand tor regulat d limitation\nas opposed to competition and un\nregulated arming.\nPOLICY OF PEACI\n\"We ask the house to help us\ntreet this as constituting a new\nopportunity, aiming at promoting\n(or Europe a policy of peace based\nnot on prescriptions of the post-war\nperiod, but \u25a0 new effort to establish more firmly snd securely the\npeace of the world.\"\nAccusations ot Oermany rearm\nament and inadequacy of existing\ndefence forces found the government unperturbed, however. Stanley\nBaldwin, epeaklng for the government In reply to the charges, declared moet reporte of Oerman rearmament were exaggerated. He specifically denied that the Oerman\nair force would be larger than\nBritain's by 1838 and stated the\nhuge expansion program for the\nBritlah air force was well ln hand\nFormer Prime Mlnlater David\nUoyd Oeorge, making hts first\napeech ln parliament tn many\nmonths, agreed wtth Kr. Baldwin\nthat there waa no danger from Germany for two years at least but\ndisagreed with Mr. Baldwin's plea\nthat Oermany reveal how far ahe\nli rearming. That wguld be a direct\nchallenge that France could not lg-\nnore. he declared.\nBEADY FOB EMERGENCY\nMr. Baldwin assured the house\nthat the government was closely\nwatching all developmente and,\nshould an emergency develop\u2014of\nwhich he could see. no signs at\npresent\u2014the government would not\nbe caught unprepared. Further, he\ndeclared, the government was determined that not under any conditions would Britain accept any position of Inferiority In regard to any\nforces raised ln Oermany In the\nfuture.\nHe laid moat stress, however, on\nthe need tor Oermany herself removing the attitude of fear and\ndistrust that haa arisen among her\nneighbors since the advent ol the\nNazi regime. \"Situated wbere Oermany is, she Is very dependent on\nthe friendship and trade ot her\nneighbors. When wlll the day oome\nwhen she will recognize It?\" hs exclaimed.\nSECRECY  MEANS   TROUBLE\nMr. Baldwin admitted that \"thera\nhaa grown a condition ot nervous\napprehension which bodes Ul for\npeace.\" He would ask Oermany\nwhether ahe thought It was worth\nwhile. If she would tear away her\nsecrecy ln regard to armaments,\nlight would be brought on many\nthings that were alarming Burope.\n\"If she does that she may be\nable to resume conversations with\nber neighbors, all of whom are\nready to help her In regard to\ntrade and exchanges,\" he said. \"But\nso long as she stays by herself,\nhaving no direct communications\nwith other European statesmen, ao\nlong more and more suspicion wlll\ngrow, and lt may be that more and\nmora her own trouble! will grow.\"\nWinston Churchhlll, foremost of\nthe Imperialist!, took tbe lead ln\nthe debate by moving an amendment to the address ln reply to\nthe speech from the throne, declaring Britain's defencea were entirely\nInadequate, particularly ln the air,\nACCUSED   OC   KEAKMIM)\nHe acused. Germany of re-arining on aea and land and especially\nIn the air. He said Germany's\nfactories were working \"practically\non a war-time basis.\" He admitted the German people were most\nfriendly but asserted that \"under\nthe Nazi regime, the decision of\nonly a handful of men Is required to launch an attack without\nnotice.\"\nHe declared the German air\nforce was being Illegally bolstered\nand would be stronger than the\nBritish ln 1936; twice as strong\nIn 1937. A brief air bombardment\not London could kill and malm\nthousands, lt was useless moving\narsenals and factories to the west\ncoast. Every part of the country\nwss ln range of air attacks. The\nonly prt Ira I measure ot defence\nwas the ability to Inflict greater\ndamage on the enemy than It\ncould Inflict on Britain, and he\nurged the necessity of maintaining an air force substantially\nstronger than Germany's for tbe\nneit decade, regardless of cost,\nONLY HALF OF BBITAIN'S\nPOWER\nMr. Baldwin disputed Mr. Church-\nIll's assertions. Oermany'a real\nstrength ln the air today was not\nhalf that of Britain, he aald. In\nthe future Britain would still have\na margin ot nearly 50 per oent, In\nEurope alone.\nHe recalled that the government\nannounced last July lt would virtu\nally double the British air atrength\nby a long-range building and restoration program. He indicated this has\nbeen apeeded tip so that It wlll be\npractically complete within two\nyears.\nIn 1M5 and 1038. Mr. Baldwin\nInformed the house, 33 squadrons\nwould be added to tbe home defence, and three squadrons to the\nfleet air arm. The whole 25 would\nbe addition to the four already being formed In the current year.\nINCREASED BY 300\nAIRCRAFT\nFirst-line air atrength would thus\nbe Increased by 300 aircraft plus\nthe necessary reserves, wbleh tbe\nRoyal Air force considers should be\nample. He mentioned that Britain's\nlatest types of military planes hsve\na speed ot more than 330 miles\nan hour.\nSince the plan waa announced ln\nJuly, he continued, to new aerodrome sites have been Inspected\nand II have already been approved\nThe new flying training achool wlll\nopen ln April. Short-service officers\nwlll be Increased and more civilian\nPilots will be added to the reserve.\nThe first-line strength of the\nRoyal Air force, home and overseas,\nit present la 880 aircraft. Then\nare alao auxiliary air foros and apeclal reserve squadrons with a total\nof 137 aircraft. In Europe the RAF\nhad altogether 890 machines available for the first Una with sufficient ln reserve to replace current\nwastage. Building plans, Increasing\nand altering old stations, furthermore are \"well in hsnd,\" he told\nthe house.\nUoyd Oeorge spoke at length, re\nviewing the world-wide situation\nHe urged that Britain ahould again\nattempt to persuade the nations to\ncarry out the obligations ot tha\npeace treaty and disarm, France ln\nparticular. He aaked that Britain\ngive a lead to the world, awar from\nthe shambles awaiting lt, \"inevitably, at the end of the lourney lt\nla travelling blindly today.\"\nLord Wlnterton. supporting ths\nChurchill amendment, aaked Uoyd\nOeorge how Britain could give a\nlead tn a question between Japan\nand tbe United Sutes, or between\nFrance and Oermany, when tba lat*\nter waa clamoring for equality which\nFrance would never give.\n300,000 IN GERMAN ARMY\nMr. Churchill Interjected a queetlon to Sir John Simon, foreign\nsecretary, as to what wu hla Information ln regard to the Oerman\narmy. Sir John replied hla Information WU tbat a short-service army\nof 300,000 men wu being organized\nln 91 divisions with mechanized\nformation! and cavalry. He wu unaware, u Lord Wlnterton had sug*\ntested, that Oermany wu equipped\nwith six-Inch guns. (The Versailles\ntreaty limits tbe relchswehr to 100,\n000 men.)\nMORE ABOUT\nSCHOFIELD\n(Continued From Pigi Om)\non which wai inset the plaque rests\non i concrete foundation, level with\nthe ground.\nAt first, Mr. Burns told the gath*\nerlng, it wu proposed to erect a\nmemorlsl of architectural design\nbut the committee In chirge decided\nthat one of rugged design would be\nmore fitting to stsnd for \u2022 min who\nhad proven himself a sturdy and\nhardy representative.\n\"Owing to the unavoidable absence of the Prime Minister Mr. Pattullo, and of Mr. MacPherson, minister ot public works, both of whom\nfully Intended to be present, I have\nbeen given the honor of representing\nthe government ind conveying iti\nrespects end good wishes to your\nformer representative, Mr. James H.\nSchofield.\nLASTING TRIBUTE\n'It is the deiire of the present ad-\nmlnistration thit \u2022 lasting tribute\nbe erected to one who for so long a\ntime represented this district I\nnow hive greit pleasure in unveiling and presenting Mr. James H.\nSchofield thii token of the esteem\nand veneration in which he is held\nin the province of British Columbia\nand in the district he so worthily\nrepresented from 1907 to 1933.\"\nThe following reply was rendered\nby Jack L. Schofield, ion of the\nex-M.I_.A.:\n\"My father has asked me, In view\nof hii preient infirmities known to\nyou all, and, I feel, regretted by all,\nto acknowledge your words of dedication by reading to you his ihort\naddress.\n\"Allow me to offer you my sincere thinki for your kind wordl,\nand the kind wishes back of them.\n\"When the Trail-Rosalind road\nWai first paved it wu suggested. I\nbelieve by Mr. Esling In his speech\nof dedication, that the road be\nnamed the 'Schofield highway.'\n\"No action was taken in the matter and again in the summer of\n1933 the question of naming the road\nwas revived. At that time I was unofficially informed that it wu the\nintention of the government officially to name this road the 'Schofield highway,\" and to erect a memorial setting forth the fact\nFRIINO OF ELICTORS\n\"From 1907 to 1933, and down to\nthis very day, I have considered\nevery resident in this electoral district as a personal friend, and I\nhave endeavored to act as a friend\ntoward every elector, regardless of\nthe differences that might exiit in\nour political opinions.\n\"For over a quarter of a century I\nhave served the public\u2014a quarter\nof a century marked possibly by the\ngreatest social and political upheavals known to mankind.\n\"At the close of my public career\nI am privileged to see unveiled this\nmonument that testifies the country's approval of the public services\nthat I have been privileged to render her as the representative of the\npeople of thli dlitrlct\n\"In eoncluilon may I feel amply\nrepaid for my efforts in their behalf\nby seeing this tangible proof of\ntheir appreciation and good wishes.\n\"Friends, the memory of this day\nwill remain with me for the rest of\nmy Ute.\n\"I think you from the bottom of\nmy heart.\"\nWith a brief prayer and a few\nwords of dedication, Rev. L. A. Morrant    consecrated  the  cairn  and\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nSplendid   selection  English  Knitting books. Nelson News Depot.\n(4756)\nDon't forget K. C. whist drive tonight. Catholic Parish hall at 8 pm.\n(5117)\nLA FIGABO permanent special ends\nDec.   12.  ROSE  BEAUTY  PARLORS.\n(8115\nWanted,   600   gross,   empty   pint\nbottles. McDonald Jam Co., Ltd.\n(4968)\nBetter Fresh Home Made candles\nat Bandera Candy Shop\u2014Formerly\nAllisons. (8116)\nAALVATION ARMY ule of work\nand home cooking Sat., Dec. 1st In\nthe  citadel. (5118)\nMORE ABOUT\nMass Buying\n(Continued From Page One)\n13.6 per cent below usual chain\npricei and 38.6 per cent below the\nprevailing list price.\nIn the Peterson factory it Brant-\nford, \"wagei are shocking,\" Crowder said. Seventeen examplei were\ncited ihowing girls working for il\nlittle aa $3.60 a week, the maximum\nIndicated ln the lilt being $10.70.\nAnother candy minufacturer, W.\nRobertson of Robertson Brothers,\nToronto, had refused to bid for the\nbig volume of cut-rate business.\" md\ntheir production had decreased in\nconsequence.\nMr. Crowder turned to the situation ln cafes, ihowing employees to\nbe working 79 houn I week for $6\nend meals. A dishwasher who received this wage was an Engllah ex-\nservice mm, married, who had served ln the war from the spring of\n1915 until demobilization.\nIllustrating the \"dominating position\" of chain stores in retail merchandising. Mr. Crowder produced\nexhibits of advertising ih Toronto\nby these organizations for 004 day\nin November, 1933.\n\"The amount of spice domimted\nby the price-feature advertising of\nfoodstuffs totals eight pages,\" said\nMr. Crowder, \"a vert-table newspaper itself.\"\nSimilar copies of advertisements\nwere produced for the drug chains.\nplaque.\n\"The dedication of this tribute to\nMr. Schofield means much ibove\nand beyond the formalities of today's ceremony,\" said W. K. Esling,\nwho gave an eulogistic address.\nOn behalf of the citizens of Trail\nMayor E. L. Groutage extended\nheartiest appreciation of Mr. Scho-\nfield's services to all and hoped\nthat the remaining years of hia sojourn here be spent in happiness.\nCsmmille Lauriente, speaking for\nthe Italians of Trail spoke highly\nof Mr. Schofield.\nMayor Turner of Rossland being\nunable to attend, W. G. Ternan\nspoke on behalf of the Rossland\ncitizens. .\nThat It was largely due to Mr.\nSchofleld'i efforts the highway was\nin iti present location, were words\nof L. F. Tyson, president of the Trail\nboard of trade. He hoped that he\nmay long be spared t. see these two\ncommunities (Trill md Rossland)\ncontinue ln their stride is the most\nprosperous and economically healthy\ncommunities ln the interior of British Columbia.\nMiss Jeanne Levesque, regent of\nthe J. H. Schofield chapter, I.O.D.E.,\npresented a bouquet of flowers to\nMiss Schofield, daughter of the ex-\nM.L.A.\nMmy letten md telegrami of\nregret of their inability to attend\nwere received from prominent citizen! of the province. They included\ncommunications from Hon. T. D.\nPattullo, premier, Hon. Dr. G. M.\nWeir, provincial sepretary and minister of education; Hon. A. Wells\nGray, minister of lands and municipal affairs; Hon. F. M. MacPherson,\nminister of public works; Hon.\nGeorge Pearson, minister of labor;\nFrank Putnam, M.L.A., for Nelson-\nCreston; Dougald MacPherson,\nM.L.A. for Grand Forks-Greenwood;\nS. G. Blaylock, general manager\nof the CM. It S. compmy, Lome A.\nCampbell, vice-president and managing director of the West Kootenay\nPower & Light company, Ltd.;\nMayor W. A. Turner of Rossland; W.\nJ. Devltt. Burnaby chief of police;\nDr. W. O. Rose, Nelson, J. W. DeB.\nFarrls, K.C. D. D. McLeah of Nelson, H. J. Giles, R.C.M.P., ot Grand\nForks, E. S. Jones, district public\nworks engineer, R. H. Pooley. K.C,\nmd Dr. C. N. Kingston, ex-M.L.A.\nfor Grand Forks-Greenwood.\nFollowing the ceremony at the\nsite of the cairn, members of the J.\nH. Schofield chapter, I.O.D.E., were\nhosts of \u25a0 tea given in the St Andrew's parish hall.\nIrishman's\nRepresentative Here\nToday\nMr. A. M. Turner, representing the Wm. H.\nLeishman Clothing Company, will be here\ntoday with a full range of spring models\nand cloths, also cloths for immediate delivery. In his own word; the showing is the\n\"Best Yet.\" Come in, today and let Mr.\nTurner measure you for a new suit or topcoat..\nEmory's Ltd.\nMORE ABOUT\nWEDDING\n(Continued From Pago One)\nMarina, who were expected to apend\nthe evening quietly at Buckingham\nPalace and York House respectively,\npaid a surprise visit to a Weat-end\ntheater tonight iccompanied by\nQueen Mary and the Prlnceu'\nmother, Princes* Nicholas.\n- The audience cheered the royal\nparty for aeveral mlnutei, delaying\nthe rlae of the curtain. Earlier in\nthe day the betrothed couple had\nbeen almoit mobbed by enthusiastic\nCheering crowd! along the MalL   .\nA quiet family dinner at Buckingham Palace preceded the theater\nvisit but there wu nothing quiet\nabout old London, wearing Tti own\nwedding dress of flags and buntings\nmd keyed to tha highest pitch of\nexcitement\nTen   thousand  police\u2014aided  by\nThe Masses Today\nAre Guided by Price\nThat of course means, generally\nspeaking, and is simply on account\nof not receiving sufficient money.\nRAMSDEN'S advice to the consumer is be careful md buy branded\ngoods, the only kind we carry ln\nstock, yet you cm be assured you\nwill be guided correctly in price,\nmore especially now that on Saturday. December 1st we are starting\na wonderful Christmas Sale, our\nprices beat or equal any store ln\nCanada, we have our warehouse as\nwell as the store full of new mer*\nchmdiee, every article we sell ll\nsold on an exchange or money back\nguarantee.\nThe Stevens enquiry showed a lot\nof reasons why your local small\nmerchant ihould be patronized, one\nof the principal points, as advertised\nby the mass buying commission. \u2022\nThat large stores Consumer prices\nare not lover thm pricei charged\nby Independent! to the extent ot\nthe Impression creited by losi leader\nadvertising, mother point they state\nis, a greater spread between cost\nof goods at store md prices charged\nconsumer is obtained by the chains,\nthan by the independent storekeeper. Mr. Ramsden made a real\nbuy in Vancouver of Ladies' Flannelette night gowns, be guided by\norlce md quality md buy one for\n59c RAMSDEN'S Saturday, 1st, for\na real booster sale to make 200 new\ncustomers for our store. \"'\nOpening Today\nThe Boys Shop\nLook over our splendid assortment of footwear and clothing for all boys up to 15\nyears.\nOur clothes for tots are most\nattractive.\nThe Boy's Shop\nIs Opposite Meagher's\nDANCE\ngat.   night,   1-13    Melody   Makers\nEAOLE   HALL\n(4648)\nTHE VERY BliST OT HOMEMADE\nCANDY FOR SALE AT ST. PAUL'S\nBAZAAR. TUESDAY. 12 to 6\nO'CLOCK. (\u00bb1U>\nSt Andrews Night mday. Dance\nEagle hall under the auspices of Clan\nMcLeary. Come and dance tha Barn\nDsnce and the Scotch Quadrilles.\nAdmlsilon 80 md 96c. (61181\nMusic Lovers Club present! i\nprogrsm of the aeorgl&n Period In\ncoatume. Beit Instrumental, vocal,\nchoral mualc. Opera House. Deo. 6th.\nChristmas Ohaer Fund. Tickets at\nthe Nelson Flower Shoppe.      (6104)\nOXFORD   OROUP   MEETINOS\nHume Hotel, 8.30 a.m. Family Quiet\nTime. 10:00 aj_v Bible Study. 3:80\np.m. women's Meeting. 8:30 pm.\nMen's Meeting. 7:46 pm. Man Meeting\u2014 \"1938 Villon for Nelaon\". Watch\nDaily Newi for further innouncement!. Ruby Palmer, Campaign Manager. Hume Hotel. Phone 767 or\nStiTtt. (6106)\n* $ \u00a3i yj _ iiiji ijiiji iji ij! ^ m ijj iji i[i ijj ij! ijj ijj m m u_i iji w\nTOUR DONATION WILL BE\nWELCOME\nFOR THI\nNelson and District Welfare\nand\nCHRISTMAS\nCHEER FUND\nFOR THOSE  IN  DIRE NEED\nIN THE CITY AND DISTRICT\nBe Generous!\nHelp These Who Ar* Worn Off Than Yourself\nDonations will be received by the canvassers. The\nNelson Daily News and the Royal Bank of Canada\nII\nI\n*\u25a0\nU\niii[Jii-i\u00bbiiiiiiii\u00bbii-iii-i^-ii-ii\u00bbii-ii!ii^-iitiji^u\nw.\nB: BAMFORD\nPretident\nW. E. WASSON\nTreaturer\ndetachment! of the Royil Marin\nand groupi of the Automobile clul\nroad patrol \u2014 icircely sufficed:\nhandle the tremendous traffic ]\u2022\nthit crushed through the city'i na\nrow itreeti. \\,\nMotorists ind pedestrlim iloi\nBond street\u2014London's \"court itree\n\u2014provided police major troubk\nreserves being called out haU\ndozen times during the day to di\nentangle marled traffic.\nMeanwhile influenza, ai thou*\nthe fog were not enough cause f\nworry, touched the royal houiehol\nMajor Ulick Alexmder, the Du]\nof Kent's comptroller, who handi\nhli penonil affairs, was ordered\nbed.\nREX JARVIS\nElectrical Contractor and\nEngineer\nRepain and Supplies\nFor Service Phone 844\n602 Josephine Street\nTHE FINEST ASSORTMENT OF\nCHRISTMAS CARD\nYet Received\nAT\nSmythe's Pharma\u00ab]\nTHE\nPRESCRIPTION  DBCOOIM\nPHONE  1\nClean Cotton\nRAGS\nWANTED\nMutt be FREE FROM\nBUTTONS\n5c i Lb.\nNELSON\nDAILT NEWS\nRexall PRIZE CONTE8T\nfor boys and girls.\nBuy your GIFTS here and (al\nthe Tree Votei.\nWe wtll hold any Christmas GUI\ntill wanted on payment ot i\nsmall depoilt\nCITT DRUG CO.\nNelson's   Dispensing   Chemlsti\nSTARTS FRIDAY\nLAST TIME! TODAY\n'DEATH ON THE\nDIAMOND\"\nwith\nRobert Young\nMadge  Evana\n________________________________________________________________________\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1934_11_29","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\/1.0404795","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":"1934-11-29 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":"1934-11-29 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}