{"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":"2021-11-30","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":"1933-11-22","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\/1.0405128\/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":" Gold Stocks Are Lower ori\nCanadian Market Lists\n\u2014Pa&e Six\nVOLUME 11\nO!\u00ab3.0tt i\n_*kiii?J* -\nllHD.\nCanadiens Hand Maroons a'\nFive-Nil Defeat\n\u2014Pa_e Seven\nLABORITE\n*iiWW \u00ab*****\u25a0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.\u2014XX EDNESDAV MOBNINO. NOVEMBER il. ISSS\nrtVB CENTS A corv\nNUMBER 184\nLS NOBILITY \"PARASITES\nIf\nFLOODS, SLIDES, RAILWAY TIEUPS ARE\nIN WAKE OF TERRIFIC QUAKE RECORDS\nProfessor Settle Goes Up 59.000 Feet\nHEAVY DAMAGE\nREPORT FROM\nCENT. AMERICA\nExact Location of the\nQuake Is Not\nKnown\nRIVER RUNS WILD\nVILLAGE IS LAKE\nVarious Recordings of\nQuake Made on\nContinent\nB7 THE CANADIAN PRESA\nSeismographs ln observatories In\nCanada and many other parts of\nthe world recorded the most* violent earthquake ln recent year*\nTuesday and unprecented wet\nweather sent floods raging through\nColumbia   and   Honduras.\nMeteorological   observatories,   in\nOttawa   and    Victoria,    B.C.,   at\nFordham university in New York,\nIn  London, Budapest and Frankfort-on-the-Maln. all reported Instrument  recordings  that  *howed\nan   unusually   severe  disturbance.\nNo one wsa able to pin ltd location dawn definitely, but the generals   consensus   pointed   southward\nto the Caribbean or the countrlea\nbordering lt.\nFordham scientists fixed Its poaitlon somewhere In the vicinity of\nMexloo or Central American. Dominion obeervatory officials In Ottawa\nthought lt waa probably centered\nnear Ucatan, Central American,\nthough they also offered Baffin Bay\nIn Northern Canada aa a possibility.\nRIVER  RVNS  WILD\nIn Honduras the Chameleon river\nran wild above New La Lima,\nflooding large areu of rich banana\nPAT MAITLAND IS STILL IN CABINET\n\".\u2022-signation Is Not Gazetted\nHe Tells New \"AG\"\nVICTORIA, Nov. 21\n(CP). \u2014 \"I think you\nhad better get me out\nof the way, aa I might\nwalk in some day and\ntake serious part in\nyour deliberations,\" R.\nL. Maitland, K.C, has\nwritten to Hon. Gordon\nSloan, attorney-general\nof British Columbia.\nMr. Maitland, who\nwas minister without\nportfolio in the government of Dr. S. F. Tolmie, points out that his\nresignation was not gazetted as was done with\n^^^^^^^^^^^ the resignations of other members of the late government.\n\u2022\u2022r\u00bbt\"  MAITLAND\nJONES WISHES\nHART SUCCESS\nIN COST CUTS\nHopes He Does as\nWell at Late\nCabinet\n\"Gerry\" McGeer Is Peeved\nBecause Not in B. C. Cabinet\nIf Present Cabinet Had Been Presented to\nElectorate It Would Not Have Won\n10 Seats; Will Steer Own Course\n(Contlnned on Pace Eight)\nPAnULLO HAS\nREFUND PLANS\nEarly Remedy for\nFinancial Needs Is\nHis Aim\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 21 (CP) \u2014\nProvince of British Columbia ls In\n\u00bb truly distressing financl-l condition but Premier T. D. Pattullo\ndeclared here today be la confident tbe government wlll find a\nmeans to meet Ita obligations. \"X\nfeel very optimistic because of tha\ngreat variety of resources in the\nprovince,\" tbe premier said.\n\"It la a matter now of good administration and applying remedial\nmeasures,\" Mr. pattullo aald todiy\n\"We wlll attempt some plan of\nrefunding as an early remedy.\"\nThe premier reiterated his belief\nln the neoesalty of closer cooperation between the Dominion and provincial governments.\nWage Dispute\nConfab Adjourns\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 21 (CP) \u2014The\nboard of conciliation hearing the\nwage agreement dispute between the\nBritish Columbia Electric railway\ncompany and Its running rail employees ln Victoria, Vancouver and\nNew Weatmlnater, adjourned today\nuntil next Monday.\nITALY BAN'S USE\nOF IMPORTED\nWHEAT\nROME, Nov. 21 (AP)\u2014A complete prohibition of the domestlo\nuse of imported wheat was announced tonight hy Premier\nMussolini, who proclaimed a\nvictory in hla elght-yenr battle\nto bring bome production In\nline   with   the  country's needs.\nAddressing the nstlonsl permanent wheat committee, 11 duce\naald the government had decided not only to continue to\nmaintain high tariff walls\nagainst foreign wheat but also\nto put a restriction on ths use\nof Imported wbeat In flour and\nmeal.\nMills which heretofore have\nbeen permitted to use a small\nand varying percentage of Imported wheat In their flour now\nare restricted completely to\nhome-grown   grain.\n\u25a0*\u2014a>ai^aa^*as|aasaas>aa'\nVANCOUVEB NOT. 21 (CP)^ *>\n\"Maybe I dldn*t want to go Into |\nthe cabinet, but I wouldn't have\nbeen Insulted If 1 had been given\ntha prlvllefe of refusing,\" atated\nG. G. McGeer, K.C, Liberal M.L.A.-\nf leet for Vaneouver-Burrard In the\nBritish Columbia legislature. He\nvoiced his disapproval of the composition or Premier T. P. Pattullo's\ncabinet ln addressing the annual\nmeeting of the Vaneou ver-Burrard\nProvincial Liberal association laat\nnlfht.\nThe meeting, after excitement attendant upon Mr. McOeer's apeech,\npassed a resolution of congratulation to premier  Pattullo and expressed loyalty and confidence towards, his cabinet.\nMr.  McGeer  declared  that  If  the\npresent cabinet had been presented\nto the electorate. It would not have\nwon 10 aeats. \u2022\nINTERESTED IN A.G. JOB\n\"The reforms I fought for are\ndrifting Into the realm of Impossibility,\" he declared. He said he respected Mr. Pattullo's mandate during the campaign. \"There were no\npromises, but the matter waa once\ndiscussed and I was aaked what I\ni Interested ln. I told them I waa\nInterested In nothing but tbe attor-\n(Contlnued   on   page   Eight)\nLINDBERGHS ARE\nAT THE AZORES\nHORTA, Azores, Nov. 31   (AP)\u2014\nCol.   and   Mrs.   Charles   A.   Lindbergh received a greeting of flowers and  cheers  this  afternoon   as\nthey  completed   a  000-mlle   flight\nfrom   Lisbon,   Portugal.\nThe entire populace of Fayal Island\nwelcomed   th 3   flyers   and   brought\nthem armaful of flowers.\nTbey hopped from Lisbon at 7:29\na.m., Greenwich time (2 tb a.m..\nE.S.T.) and at 4:20 p.m. Greenwich\ntime (11:20 ajn., E-8.T.) made a\nsmooth landing against a atrong\nwind on Horta bay.\nThey declined to ^discuss their\nplans, but lt was understood they\nIntend to contlnus their transatlantic flight by way of Bermuda,\n48 Killed in B.C\nin Motor Crashes\nVICTORIA, Nov. 21\u2014More tban 60\nper oent of tbe motor accidents\nwhich occurred ln British Columbia\nduring October were attributed to\ncarelessness on the part of drivers\naccording to a summary complied\nby the motor record office.\nThere were 291 accident* during\ntbe month, seven persons were killed\nand  ISO Injured.\nThere has been a total 9f 2171\naccidents to date In British Columbia tbls year. In wblch 48 persons\nhave  been  killed  and   1233  injured.\nTRADE HAMPERED\nBY EXCHANGE\nGYRATIONS\nHERITAGE OF BAD\nDEBTS IS CAUSE\nFalling  Revenues  Is\nAnother Factor to\nConsider\nVICTORIA, Not. 21 (CP) \u2014Taking Issue with the construction\nplaced on provincial finances by\nHon. John Hart, J. w. Jonea,\nformer Incumbent of the office,\nmade reply tonight ln the following  terms;\n\"The chief cauae of the present position of provincial finances Is the heritage of bad debta\nleft by former administrations, Involving consistent deficits between\n1917 and 1928; Uklng over the\nP. G. E. railway in 1918 with provision for Its further construction and maintenance; huge land\nprojects from which neither revenue nor capital can be received;\nvarious irrigation schemes to\nwhich mone* waa advanced; Industrial loans; the millions Invested ln the university scheme\nwhich waa to cost nothing; and\nother projects; costing ln all over\n170,000,000.\nSuperimposed on that basis came\nthe full weight of the worst depression In modern history, with\nthe war's aftermath, sudden fall\nln provincial revenues and the existence of a growing body of unemployment for wblch adequate provision had to be made, all this\ncreated a situation without parallel in the history of the province.\nwith problems that had to be\nfaced and met.\nBELIEF  COSTS  HEAVY\n\"Unemployment relief alnce Ita\nInception has coat the provlnoe directly and indirectly through loana.\nMONTRBAL, Nov. 21 (CP)\u2014\nExchange fluctuations are hampering International trade and\nare \"astonishing'* ln their scope,\nRt. Hon. Sir Robert Borden\ntold the annual meeting of Barclays bank (Canada) here today.\nSir Robert is president of the\nbank.\nDespite the complexity In the\nrelations ot the Canadian dollars\nto sterling, a largely Increased\nInterchange of products within\nthe Empire affords assurance\nthat mutually beneficial results\nare a-lslnj from the Ottawa\nconference of last year, said the\npresident.\nThe retiring dlrectore were all\neleoted and at a subsequen 1\nmeeting of directors Sir Robert\nwas again elected president and\nArthur B. Purvis, vice-president.\nMEAL TAX DIES\n(Continued on Page Eight)\nDeer \"Pitlampers\"\nFined $500 or Sent\nDown for 30 Days\nNANAIMO, BC, Nov. 21 (CP)\u2014\nThree men. alleged to have been\n\"pltlamplng\" for deer ln the vicinity of Piper's Landing Monday\nnight were each fined 9500 or 30\ndays* Imprisonment by Magistrate\nBeevor-Potts here today. None of\nthe men was able to pay the flnr.\nThe men are Mat Stafford. Chase\nRiver, and Charles Ward and\nThomas Hampson, Nanaimo.\nThey were arrested by F. Greenfield, game warden, who testified\nthat they had In their possession a\nyoung fawn  recently  killed.\nThe game act provides a minimum penalty of 9500 and a maximum of 91000. or both fine and\nImprisonment of 30 to 00 days.\nDENUNCIATION\nMADE BEFORE\nROYAL COUPLS\nClyde Member AngryJ\nWith Assemblage,\nHouse Opening\n: jht to the M-ri-tospliere had no mors\n.rills to It than the safe landing or\nuu tenant Commander T. O. W. Settle\naud  Major C.  L. Pordney, his co-pilot,\nwho   squashed   to   earth   ln   the   tidal\nmarnhea of Delaware bay.\nAfter their contact with the earth\nand while much of south Jeraey searched* woods and fields, the two balloon-\nIsts slept peacefully wrapped lh the\nfolds of the great gas bag that had\ncarried them to new heights.\nThey came down ln .total darkness,\neight mllea southwest of Brldgeton,\nperilously close to the wide expanse of\nDelaware bay at 6:50 p.m., yesterday,\nonly to find themselves marooned by\nthe tidal water.\nSettle said they reached tbelr greatest altitude, which they figured waa\n50,000   feet,   over   McConnel is burg,   Pa.\nSettle turned over to Professor R. J.\nStephenson of tho University of Chicago, the scientific equipment whlcn\nthey had taken aloft.\n\"SHAME WHILE\nPEOPLE STARVINCI\nKing Does Not Heedl\nMcGovern Attack;*\nDebate Arms\nPROFESSOR SETTLE, HIS  COMPANION  AND  BAI.I-OON\nRUSUPIS\nCONSERVATIVE\nBut Majority Cut by\nLaborite in\nBritain\nLONDON, Nov. 31 (CP cable).\u2014\nThe Conservatives retained the houss\nof commons seat for Rusholme division of Manchester In today's by-\nelection but with a greatly reduced\nvote.\nTha rwult announoed tonight waa\nu follows.\nE. A. Radford, Conservative, 13,004.\nRev. o, S. Woods, Labor. 11,005.\nDr. F. McDougall, independent,\n3503.\nThe vote constituted a draatlo cut\nIn the Conservative poll since the\nlast general elections, when the\noount showed 38,817 votes for Sir\nFrank Boyd Merriman, Cons.; 8319\nfor J. Adshead, Labor, snd 4658\nfor F.  S.  Tornborough,  Liberal.\nLabor supporters hall the reeult\nas a triumph aecond only to Labor's\ncapture of the tradltlonally-Oon-\nservstlve East Fulham last month.\nThe Rusholme byelection was the\n38th alnoe the general elections of\n1031. Labor haa captured East Fulham and haa recovered three former\nLabor seats taken by the Conservatives ln the last elections, the 34\nother byelectlons having resulted ln\nno change.\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy  the   Canadian   Press\nToronto and Montresl \u2014 Stocks\nirregularly   lower.\nToronto   mlnea\u2014Lower.\nNew York\u2014Stocka closed lower.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat closed slightly\nhigher.\nToronto\u2014Bscon hogs off oar up\n10 oenta to 000.\nLondon\u2014Bar ailver and oopper\nunchanged; tin, lead and sine unchanged.\nNew Tork\u2014Cotton and coffee hlgh-\n; rubber lower; augar unchanged.\nNew Tork\u2014Canadian dollar up ft\nto 103',..\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 31 (CP) \u2014\nProbably the last echo of the provincial meal tax instituted earlier\nln tlie year and which the new ad\nministration has decided not to en\nforce, wjs heard ln county court\nhere today when judge J. N. Ellis\nsustained a preliminary objection\ntaken by counsel for F- C. Elliott,\nVictoria banister.\nSprague, Special Adviser to VJBJL.\nTreasurer, Has Tendered Resignation\nWASHINOTON, Nov. 31 (AP).\u2014O.\nM. W. Sprague resigned today as\nspecial adviser to the treasury and\nasserted \"there is no defence from\na drift Into unrestrained Inflation\nother than an aroused and organised  public opinion.\"\n\"It is for the purpose of contributing aa I may to such a movement that, with feeling of profund\ndisappointment, I aevsr my connec<\ntions with your administration,\" he\nsaid ln a letter to Prealdent Roosevelt.\nSprague came to the treasury\nfrom an Important post with the\nBank of England. It has long been\nknown he was not In agreement with\nMr. Rooeevelt on matters of monetary policy.\nBelfast Women Are\nUrged to Fight to\nDefeat the British\nGovernment Aid\nfor  the Tourist\nIndustry Urged\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 31 (CP).\u2014The\ntourist industry la the most competitive buslneaa In the world, Mayor\nDavid Leemlng of Victoria, declared\nhere in addressing tho llth annual\nmeeting of Vanoouver publicity\nbureau. \"If we-were to fall in our\nefforts to Induce the tourist to come\nto British Columbia, we would soon\nsee him disappear,\" the mayor said.\n\"I would suggest tbat the Van*\ncouver and Victoria publicity bu\nreaus ahould get together and put lt\nup squarely to the provincial. government to provide a reasonable\namount of money each year for the\ndevelopment of the tourist traffic,\"\nthe  apeaker   added.\nBELFAST, Nov. 31 (CP cable).\u2014\nBelfast women were appealed by\nRepublicans today to work against\nJoseph Devlin, Nationalist candidate\nIn the Northern Ireland general elections and to fight the British. Republicans seek union with the Free\nState.\n\"Women of Belfast,\" the appeal\ndeclared, ''each deal your blow at\nBritish tyranny. \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 Work to\nsecure victory for Thorbury (Republican candidate) who seeks Irish freedom.\"\nFined $25 When He\nObstructed Warden\nNANAIMO, B.C., Nov. 31 (CD-\nJohn J. Wllgress haa been found\nguilty of obstructing a game warden\nand fined 833 and costs by Magistrate c. H. Bee7or-Potta. Oame\nWarden Gr;enfleld allegedly found\nWllgress walking on his fa.m at midnight Thursday with flashlight and\ngun. The warden claimed Wllgress\npointed a gun at him.\nJONI^VislTSrHART\n-WILL TALK LATER\nVICTORIA, NOV. 31 (CP).\u2014Hon\nJ. W. Jones visited Hon. John Hart,\nminister ot finance today, but no\ni statement was Issued when he\nemerged from his former office.\nAsked lf he cared to aay anything\nabout Mr. Hart's statements at lut\nevening's Liberal meeting, the former finance minister aald he was\nInterested and might have some\nthing to any later.\nCANADA'S GOLD\nRESERVE FIRM\nSufficient to Boost\nCirculation of\nNotes\nTRACY SOUGHT\nFOR NUDE SHOW\nMovie Actor Appeared on\nBalcony a la Natural\nMEXICO CITY. Nov. 81 (AP)\u2014\nHeracllo Rodrlguei, acting prosecutor of the federal district, said\ntoday he was ordering pollce on\nall roads today to arrest Lee Tracy,\n\\ nlted States movie actor, who\nleft here aome hours earlier by\ntrain from Laredo, Texas.\nThe actor had departed by permlulon of the pollce after being\nheld In custody twice since Run-\nday and questioned on a complaint\nthat ho had \"ofrended public\nmorals.\"\nNo explanation was made of\nthe apparent divergence of opinion\non the action against Tracy.\nThe case passed Into the hands\nof Rodriguez when Tr*cy was arrested for the second time yesterday on the complaint-of a lawyer,\nAlfonso Esparza, who said he aftd\nhis 12-year-old daughter saw Tracy\nstanding unclothed on a balcony\nof his hotel.\nOTTAWA, Nov. 31 (CP)\u2014The gold\nreserves of Canada ar\u00bb sufficient to\nmaterially increase the Dominion\nnote circulation without vollattng\nthe principle of a as per cent gold-\nsupported currency adopted by tho\nworld conference. Prami* R. B.\nBennett explained this In a speech\nhere and Intimated auch a method\nmight be used to meet the needs\nof the Dominion but In such\nmanner as not to Injure credit at\nhome or abroad.\n\"The gold reserves of the Dominion of Canada amounted, on the\nlast day of October, to over (69,-\n900,000,\" the prime minister said,\n\"and, on the application of the\nprinciple adopted at the world conference, would warrant the Isrue of\nover  W78.600.OOo of currency.\"\n\"The Dominion notes outstanding\nat tbe end of October amounted, ln\neven   money,   to  D74,900,000.\"\nBy   THOMAS   T.   CHAMPION\nCanadian  press  Staff   Writer\nLONDON,  Nov. 21   (CP cable)-* |\nThe   house   of   commons    tonight I\ni  had plunged Into the heavy bnsl-.l\nness   of  a   new   session   after   an |\nunprecedented   scene   In   which\nleft-wing Laborite from the  Clyde I\nassailed the assembled  nobility  of I\nEngland,  ln  the   presence \"of   tht ]\nKing   and   .Queen,   aa   \"parasites.**\nMuttering    angrily    to    himself\nwhile  the  King  was   reading   tba\nlengthy speech from the throne In\nthe historic house of lords,  John\nMcOovern, Labor Mi*., finally bunt\nInto   bitter   denunciation   aa   his\nmajesty   had   just   concluded   tltt\nspeech.\nFacing from the bar of the homo\nthe brilliant assemblage of high\natate functionaries, stately garbed\nmen and women. Including bench**\nof peeresses with scintillating tK\naras, and bishops In their scarlet\ntemporal tobes, McGovern aska-t\nangrily:\n\"What   about   measures   for   ttttt\nabolition  of  the  meana   test   an41\nthe unemployment cuts?\n\"LAZY   IDLE  PARASITES\"\nHe oontlnued grumbling whtt\nLady Astor and other membera ol\ntbe commons around him sought U\nquiet hlm. \"It's a shame while pao\npie are starving,\" ho aaid. \"Llvlm\non wealth created by the people,'\nIn another embittered murmur hu\nsaid \"ynu are a gans of laay, IdU\nparasites. Tou ought to be aahsmrt\nof yourselves.\"\nThe King glanced ln th* dlrectla\nof McGovern as his voice rag\nthrough the chamber with hla op an-J\nShips Broker Must\nAccount Activities\nof Coost Rum Boat\nVANOO U VER, Nov. 31 (OP)\u2014A\nfour-day trial of a rum running\nventure on the high aeu ended in\nsupreme oourt today when Mr. Justice W. A. Macdonald ordered Frank\nW. Bccles, ship's broker Vancouver,\nto account to Barney B. Perlman,\nPortland, Ore., merchandise broker,\nfor the operatlona and earnings ot\nthe   50-foot   sp.edboat   Kltnayakwa.\nHis lordship dismissed with coats\nPerlman's claim agalnat pacific Forwarding company, limited, of Van*\ncouver. finding tha company had no\ninterest ln the boat.\nPerlman must also account to\nSocles ln respect to a liquor running\nventure ln which they engaged as\n\u2022_. trtners  ln   1931.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nP   W   L   B   F\nCANADIAN   DIVISION\n1   15\n0   11\nToronto    4   3   0\nCanadian-   -.53.\nMontrwl    \u2014 3    1   -\nOttawa     6    a   4\nAmericans   _.. 4   0   1\nUNITED STATES DIVISION\nChicago \u00ab   3   i   I\nDttrolt    S   4   3   0\nBwton 5   3   3   0     3\nRangera  5    13    17\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nBoston 3; Chicago 0.\nCanadlens 6: Maroons 0.\nDetroit 3*.  Ottawa 3.\nToronto 1;  Ranger, 1.\nINTEBNATIONAL\nDetroit 3;  London   1.\nfl\nI\n\u00bb 15\n11    13\n8   M\nS     3\n18    11\n14\n11\nCorrespondents  Back\nMorgenthau's Ban\non Treasury News\nWAaHmOTON. Nov. 31 (AP) \u2014\nProtest, against the ruling of Acting\nSecretary Morgenthau ol the united\nStates treasury that all Information\nfrom the multiplicity of agenclea In\nthe department ahould pass through\ndesignated channel of newspapermen vott today from correspondents\naa-lgnad to the department.\nDepartment officials In private\nconversations expressed deep resentment at the action. Correspondents\ndispatched a telegram to President\nRoosevelt protesting against the order which forbade all except Mor-\n8-enthau and his aaslstant, Herbert\nOaston, from disclosing departmental\nInformation,\nSocialism and\nCommunism Flayed\nby Catholic Church\nMONTREAL, Nov. 21 (CP)\u2014Condemnation of socialism and communism as Inconsistent with Roman Catholic truth Is contained\nIn a pastoral letter Issued today\nby His Imlnenre cardinal J. M. R.\nVllleneuvT. Evils of capitalism are\nlikewise castigated, his eminence\ndeclaring those allowing auch veils\nto continue arc lacking In Christian aplrlt.\n(Soviet communism still stands under the han of Catholics, the pastoral\naaya.\nNO NEW ELECTION\nNEEDED IN MADRID\nRightists  Have  Lead  or 24\nVotes; 175 Seats to Come\nMADRID, Nov. 31 (AP).\u2014Minister\nof the Interior Rico Avello announced tonight a second election would\nnot be necessary ln Madrid Inasmuch aa Julian Beatelro, former\npresident of the Spanish congress.\nhad polled mote than 40 per cent\nof the votes cast.\nUnder the new electoral law made\neffective for the first time In Spain,\nseoond elections are required In any\nprovince In which any single party\nor party candidate polls less than\n40 per cent of the total votea.\nThe Rightists were still holding\ntheir lead over the Leftist faction,\nbut hy a narrow margin of 24 votes.\nOf the 473 seats in the Spanish\nparliament, 162 had been won by\ntha Rlghta and 130 by the Lefta.\nVote on the remaining 175 seats was\nstill missing.\nHerriot Is Back\nand May Be Center\nof Coalition Move\nBy   MELVIN   K.   WII1TELEAT1IER\nAssociated   Press   Foreign   staff\nPARIS, Nov. 21 <AP) \u2014Former\nPremier Edouard Herriot, partly political jack-or-all trades, returned\nto the Jousts on an unbalanced\nbudget in the chamber of deputies\ntoday and was hailed as the probable\nchief of a \"Bury-the-hatchet\" coalition  government.\nMacpherson Gets\nBruhn's Glad Hand\nVICTORIA. Nov. 21 (CP).\u2014R. W.\nBruhn, lormer minister of public\nworks, was ln tho diy today, and\npaid a complimentary visit to his\nold office, congratulating Hon. P. M,\nMacpherson on his appointment as\nminister of public works.\nTake a Rest From Party Politics\nCommission's Urge to Newfoundland\nOTTAWA. Nov. 21 (CP).\u2014Struggling under a burden of publlo\ndebt beyond Its capacity to bear,\nlaboring under difficulties \"engendered by a political ayatem which\nfor yeara haa been abused and exploited for personal or party ends,\"\nNewfoundland haa  been advised  by\nroyal oommlsslon to tako \"a rest\nfrom party politics\" and place lts?lf\nunder a commission government to\nbe eet up by the crown.\nIn 300 page blus-book report, th-\nfindings of the royal commission\nappointed Jointly by the United\nKingdom, Canadian and Newfoundland governments, weie made public.\n(Contlnned  on   page   Eight*\nPRISON RIOT\nSHORTLIVED!\n75 Prisoners Are\nHerded Into\nCell Block\nPHILADELPHIA. Nov. 31 (AP)\u2014Bai\nthe most damaging riot ln tha\ncentury-long history of easternl\nstates penitentiary, 75 prisoners broksfl\nInto open revolt within Its walli||\ntoday.\nTaking advantage of tho *yard\nout' call, marking the exerctttl\nperiod for the 1,300 prisoners com\nfined ln the Institution, the TM\nrioters smashed machinery ln thli\nshops, fired the dye and kltchtu\nand partially burned the chaplain*^\nquarters.\nA    clty-wlde    polioe    alarm\nsounded and 600 officers were ruah<|\ned  to the scene.\nWith riot guns flashing and\ng.is   bombs   ready,   and   while   m*-|\nchine guns barked from tho pfi-M\nwall,  the recalcitrants were herdo$|\ninto  unoccupied  cell  block* to :\natoro   comparative   quiet.\nNo Reorganization\nof League Nation.)\n\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\nROME, Nov. 21 (AP)\u2014No reorg**,\nnization of the league of nation\nIs being considered. Joseph A. 0\nAvenol, secretary -general of tM\nleague, told the Associated Prw\ncorrespondent when he arrived hom\nthis evening from Oeneva.\nTHE WEATHER\nMln.    Man\nNELSON   44 47\nVictoria     A3 64,\nVancouver    46 it\nKamloops      30 43\nEstevan   Point     48 60\nPrince Rupert     44 48\nDawson, VI     4 S\nSeattle       60 64\nPortland.   Ore 46 te\nSan   Pranclsco     60 PH\nSpokane       40 411\nPrince   Georgo     36 62.\nLos  Anueles     48 70\nPenticton      36\nVernon     30\nOrand    Forks      34 4*4 ]\nKills      36\nCalgary      :!8 U\nEdmonton      30 fl\nSwift   Current     26 fl\nPrlnco   Albert      10 .4\nQu'Appelle       1 \u25a0\nWinnipeg         '\u25a0 *m\nKanaUBo     At --l\nMooso  Jew      Ill 401\nForecast:    Nelson    and    vlclr\nGradually   clearing   and   coid'r   t\\\nlllglU.\n 1   HEALTH  \u2022*\nHousehold Drudgery\nTho Bine of a Woman's Life\nNature intended women lo be strong and healthy\nii stead of weak and sickly, but how can a woman\n1'ivc good health when she has to go through the\nhousehold drudgery without any relaxation. Is it any\nwonder she becomes nervous and irritable, has hot\nflushes, faint and _ltr,y spells shortness of hresth,\nsinking and smothering sensations, and can't tXttp at\nnight.\nWomen who are weak and run down will find in\nMilburn'a Tf. A N. Pills a remedy to strengthen the\nsystem and bring bark the much dceired health,\nOgenski Is Fined in\nLicense Plate Case\n\u00bb Pleading guilty in provincial police oourt to a charge or lining license plates on a different motor\nvehicle than the one for which\nthey werc Issued, Joseph O'OcnM.i\nwas fined OO and costs hy\nStipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel Tuesday forenon. He was also\nfined $5 on a charge of being unable to produce bis driver's Uoenss\nwhen cilled on by a police officer\nto do so, also pleading guilty In\nthat case. Both fines wtre paid.\nJOE DEPRETTO\nHAS NOSE BROKEN\nJoe, Depretto suffered \u00bb broken\nnoes Tuesday aftefhoon when he\nwas hit by tha crank on the city\nderrick while workln*? on the Doug-\nlis road, The derrlcn was lowering\na stone at the time.\nV   R    DE LUXE BARBER SHOP\nNMXT      \"\"   sm)|> \"\"l P^RTirntAit. peopi.e\n\u25a0*\u25a0* I      iIihm   .MusMige   ami   -sculp   Trentments\nrm iwkfr si.\nopposite Imperial llstik\nCURLERS WILL\nOPERATE OWN\nTOURNAMENTS\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C., Hotels\nBreakfast\n25< (o 601\nLuncheon\n35** to BOO\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nDinner\nMt* and 6B<*\nI'hone 78T\nHUME HOTEL\nNelson, B.O.              Free Qua Bervlce              George Benwjll, Prjp.\n_ -nstaty  Hnd  Gyro  Headquarters \t\n\u25a0 KtTMB\u2014O.   P.   Brown.   Peterboro; I H   A, Brad', E. t. Law, X. P. Van-\nfr. B.  Allard loe, 49 orepk;   E.  Jac-    dlsscl,   Spokane;   Mr.   and   Mrs.   C,\n(lieae. Edmonton: H n K^nnerlv,\njphbrldge; C A- Martyn. Med-\nIBne    Hat;    f.   Putnam.    Creston;\nfttt&tottot^xi-rA&siiistt&x\nP    Perry.   Mrs.   W.   Colllni,   B.lmo;\nT.   Dick,   n.   j,   ciodley,  Vancouver.\n\u25a0>\/ f_-t-*e*t*m*^--\nj r j __^v*v*^vvv*^^-\"v--r*A-fv^\nc(5he Savoy\n\"Where the Guest Is Kin_\\\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nIM BAKIR  BT.\nBAVOT\u2014I. R. HHloolm. Ke-lowni;\n_Jri. O. W. R WRo\u00bb. Mlfh'l; Cl.\n1. Mill\". S\u00ablmo; R. Bisetge, Noliu\u00abI>*.\nI|.\u00bb   M.   Groom,   Ite.vi   Denver;   t.\n3. A. KERR, Prop.\nizissxiisxtsessssitss\n\u25a01. l*~-_ise. Sloc-n, City; J. K\nMurphy. Kmlo; a. A. Crernr, J,\nJ.  Wood,  Vniiemifer.\nNew Grand Hotel\nr.   U   RAPAK,   Prop,\n,    WeeklJ Ul Monthly  Rltei\nBot  an-  Cold   Water\n\u2022Injle .00 UD     Uoutila 11.51) up\n1 lto a Month and Up\nOccidental Hotel\ntM Vernon SI. I'lmnr .\"HT 1.\nII. WASSICK\n5 SPECIAL   MONTHLY   RATES\nI    Oood  Con__forti**b-\u00ab   Rooma\nMinora'   Headquartera\nMadden Hotel\nA IIWcowc Awaits You\nJAS.  E.  MADDEN\nKimpieiei;   Remodelled\nHot  nnd  Cold   Wtttr\nIn  tha  HEART ot tht  CU;\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.\nRooma trom soc to 11.90 Monthly\n\u202210 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and cold\nwater la every  room\n60S  Baker st, Phont 33\nTRAIL, B. C.\n. NEW CROWN\nPOINT HOTEL\nEuropean Plan\nHEADQUARTERS\n-.Commerclti tnd Tourlit Trada\nSample Rooma\nCOMMERCIAL   RATU\nI; Without    Bath      11,90\nWit* Bath _ I-...I and l-.o.\nTRAIL, B. C\n\"A Palace\nin the Kootenays\"\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nDufferin Hotel\nVANCOUVER,  B.  I*.\nBrliht Rooms \u2014 central\nModeralt  Rltea\nA.   Patteraun,   latt   ot   Coleman.\n<ni\u00ab 1   Neat,   Proprietor\n900   Seymour   St. Sty.  441\nVisitors to Ntlson\nRead The\nNcison Daily Ntws\nASPORTATION -Freight & Passenger.\nGREYHOUND LINES\nl OAST TO  COAST\nONE-WAV  tttttt  IROM  M.LSON\ng_To   Minn.prs    9MJI       To  Utt  AriidM\n\"To  Reilna     lfl.'o      To  Urlcirla   ....\n'*Ta   aaikttoon     MM       To   Portland   ...\nWo  calcnry   UM        To    Mimknur    ...\nS.S.00\n.  ll.',9\n.   11.00\n.    3.U0\n'Central Canadian Greyhound Lints, Ltd.\n\"Nelson Depol, 20.1 lialicr St. I'hone 800\nTake Over Duties of\nRink Company But\nNot Finances\nC. I. MANSFIELD\nIS PRESIDENT\nReduce Fees of Junior\nMembers; Name\nDirectors\nThla ytar all curling play, Including tournament!, will bt managed\nhy offloera of tht NeUon Curlinu\nclub and not the Nelaon Curling\nRlnk, Limited, 11 haa hitherto been\ndont. At tha annual matting ot the\nclub htld In tht city hall Tueaday\nnight .following tM company's meeting, thote preaent vottd on tho\nproposition and officers werc named\nto ttkt ovtr tht aupervlalon of the\nwork of tht committees, c. E.\nManafleld was elected prealdent and\nA. Jeffa vice-president. The finances\not the rlnk will bc handled by thc\nrlnk company.\nAt \u00bb meeting ot the Ntlson Curling Rlnk, Limited, prior to thc general meeting. William Brown, H. M.\nWhlmater, A. B. Oliker. Roy Sharpe\nsnd R, D. Barnta were named dlrectore. Officers will bt choten by tho\ndlrectore lattr. o. D. Blackwood wat\nelected auditor and the financial\nstatement waa pr\u00bbtenu*d. The retiring officers ot tha rlnk company\nare Pre.*\/.cnt H. M. Whlmater, Vice-\npresident Roy Sharpe, Secretary\nOeorge Horatead, R. D. Barnes, a.\nBennett and P. E. Poulln.\nA resume of last years financial\nundertakings waa glvtn tt tht general meeting by H. M. Whlmater,\nwho broached tho auggeetlon ot a\nnow body to run tht curlers' activities. He Hi.ted that the actual ooat\not running the rlnk laat year had\nbwn 4970 and that with other consideration* 41900. If tht club -waa\ngoing to take over tht work at the\ncompany, there must be aome guarantee la connection with the es-\npensea.\nAmong disbursements laat year\nwere fuel and light. 41-9.00; lot\nmaker. 4179. lnsuranoe. 41.410;\nspiel prlr-e* and per capita, 470;\nequipment and repalra Including a\n479 repair ]ob to tht root, 4319;\nand other expenses totalling 41018.\nJ. Teague declared that the curlers had no Intentlona of In'erfarrlng\nwith the rinancet of tho club bttt\nmerely wanted to take over tht\nsupervision of thc play. A rcaraiu-\ntlcn embodying the request waa\npassed and It waa decided to appoint\na president and vice-president to\nsupervise the various committees,\nC I. Mansfield and A. Jeffa receiving\nthe appointment!. H. M. Whlmater.\nwho prealded. was of the belief that\nmore intereat would be created by\nthe curlers handling their own games\n.ind local spiels\nIn connection with tha question\nof membership the membera dla-\neussed letting Junior members In\nat a reduced rat* tnd finally paaeed\na resolution to that effect. Boya\nUnder 18 yeara wlll bt allowed to\npiny in the afttrnoon.. only, and will\nbe charged a fee ot 4.8n a yetr\nThe regular tee la 410. The club\naleo dlicutted tht fetslbllttv of taking In new membera at a 'flrat-year\nfee of 47.80, but no action waa\ntaken. New comers will pay the\nregular ftt.\nA reqiittt from tha Rottland club\nthat Nelson, with othtr cluba In the\nBC aasoclatlon. chooae rinka to\nplay In a cloned competition at thc\nRoeslena spiel thit year to pick *\nrepresentative team to enter the\nMacDonald Brier cup playdowns waa\nendorsed. Means by which Neiton's\nrepresentative team wlll be choten\nwill he deeldtd at a meeting to he\nhen tor tht classification of playera\nThe clasaificstion committee will\nhring in a report on tht queetlon.\nSome of the members were of the\noplnlqn that skip* ahould choose\nthe strongest rinks possible and\nhavt a knockout compttltion Juat\nbefore the bonsplel, while othera\nthought that tht pick Of tht pity-\nera ehould be choaen to form thc\nlepreaentatlve rlnk. Membera of the\n1933-34 bonsplel committee wlll alao\nbc named at the classification meeting, to delegatee wlll bt ahlt to\nhand In the namea to tht bonapiel\niccretary before tht tpitl.\ncommltteea elected were:\nMemberthlp\u2014J, Long  W, Marr  R\nB. Horton, 8. p. Bottock. H. Buah.\nM Bisklt,. r. A. Whitfield tnd R.\nPollard.\nClaJalflcatlon-T. W. Mdln:l*.am,\nH Buih, c. D. Blackwood, R. D.\nBarnes, Roy Sharpo and II. M.\nWhlmater.\nIce commlttet\u2014w. Allan. W M\nVance. A. o. Ritchie and W. Man*\nRules\u2014Jark Smith, T. W Ledingham and Jack Long.\nDelegatee to tht Brltlth Columbia\ncurling aaaoclatlon annua! meeting\n-A. Jeffa and H. M. Whimster* al-\nternative\u00ab-T. W. Ledingham tnd\nMax   Baskln.\nlnter-clty competition commlttct-\n*t t. Horton, W. Manaon. H. M\nWhimster and R. L. McBride.\nCoaches for Junior players\u2014c I\nArchibald. W. Man ana P. a. Wnlt-\nIlild.\nChaplain-Rev. James Youngson.\n-THE NELSON DAILT NEWS, NELSON*, B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAT MOBNINO, NOVEMBER 55. IMS-\nNtw Disarmament\nConfab Talktd\nWould Revise Existing Peaw Treaties\nand Reorganize thc  League\nOENBVA, Nov. 21 (AP).\u2014A naw\nworld disarmament conference ' to\nreorisnlw the League of Nationa and\nrevise exlltlnx peace treaties vu\ndiscussed aa a. possibility today by\n\u2022 rm* delegates after they deeldtd to\nndJoUII. tha current dlacuaalon until\nJanuary.\nAt the anme lime n battle ln a\nconference eteerlng committee meeting tomorrow loomed over the question ot whether all work at Oeneva\nahould be suspended during the recess.\nHOSPITALIZATION\nFUND HAS PROFIT\nLoss In Early Operation Is\nWiped Out at TraU\nTRAIL. tU\\, Not. *l\u2014Dalane*\nof 9870.8(1 after the ftrat yeara\noperation of the Conaolldated Mining \u00ab.- Nmaltlng companr employers' dependents liospllailMtlnn\nMind Is reported by the nmployees'\nmedical committee*. This la eon-\naldered to be an rxcrllent nhowtnR\nIn view of heavy demands made\nupon the fund pooii arter Ita Inauguration, it la expected continued progrfss utll  be made,\nRevenue, according to tht* flrnt\nfinancial rataleinent laaued. amounted to 91*0.71)1.4.1. Expendlturei totalled    910,821.59.\nTlic fund commenced working November I, 1933. In the first three\nmonth* a p.of It of 9119*04 waa reported. But In the aecond quarter\nthe fund operated at a low ot\n9180.01, Then in Uli third quarter\nthere wax a profit of 945.M, ahd at\nthe end of tho year there waa a balance on hand of 9879.86.\nThe committee in charge of the\npaat year conalated of Bdward Johnaton, chairman; T. o, DAVlea, a;ere-\ntary; C. N. Ande.aon, P. W, Jackaon\nand 1. R. Forgle Thompaon, Trail;\nThomas Be.mllpu. Oeorge Beat and\nFrank Leaaom, Rowland, Mr. Lea-\n*om recently reilgtied from the committee and hla placo la to h* filled\nshortly.\nLATE NEWS FLASHES\nBELFAST. Ireland\u2014 Thirty -six candldatea contesting 19 aeats ln Northern Ireland on November 30. Unionist gownm.nt hla majority already\nthrough nominations of Monday.\nOe valera's candidacy ln County\nDown causing discontent.\nLONDON\u2014 Charge made by J.\nBatiy Labor lor ipennymoor, that\nCanada  is  preventing  Britain from\nentering new trade pact with Soviet.\nClaims Canadian protest* against\ntimber Importations from ltussla\nholding up pact.\nQUEBEC\u2014Por;, of Quebeo 1* busy\nplace ai result ot stoppage ot night\nnavigation between Quebec and\nMontreal. More than 90 ablps docked\nTuttday.\nOOSPORT. Kng.\u2014Construe Hon ot\nT. O. M. Sopwlth** challenger endeavor ts begun. A lead ke.l weighing between B0 and 60 tons Is being\neaat.\nVICTORIA*--J. A. Orant. chief of\nmarket branch, will attend meetings\nof federal tariff board ln Ottawa\nDecember 1,\nTORONTO\u2014Unlted Farmers of Ontario may dtvorcj s?lvea from C.CJ''.\nand outline own policy, says R. J.\nDcott, president.\nVANCOUVER\u2014 Vancouver tradea\nand labor council asks thorough Investigation into handling of relief\nfunds by late administration with\nprosecution for any one found guilty\nof  \"malfeasance  of  office.\"\nSAN   RRUNO.   Cal.-Oolden   Title,\nwin* Tanforan feature yae?.\nBERLIN--Oermany silent regarding Arne. lean threat nob to partlcl*\npa.; in olympald.\nVICTORIA\u2014Hon. Dr. O. M. Weir,\nprovincial secretary, declares cautious approach necessary in regard\nto state health and unemployment\n.ura ranee.\nPORT ARTHUR\u2014Crowd of picket-\ners numb*: Ing 700 dispersed by police\nln pulpwood cutting camps strike.\nOne under arrest.\nCHICAOO\u2014Charles (Chuck) Klein\npurchased by Chicago Cubs from\n-.'.illadelphla Nationals.\nWINNIPEG\u2014 Traces of amoebic\ndysetnary originating at Chicago fair\nfound  in  Winnipeg.\nNEW CHEMICAL FOUND THAT OFFERS\nRELIEF TO HIGH BLOOD.PRESSURE\nSocial Events\nMrs. Dockerill Chosen\nPresident of Guides\nTrail Association Has Suc-\nrcfi'.ful Year Report\nShows\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLeaf* Nelson Twk\u00ab haily\n\u25a0i a.m. and 10.84 a.m. Except Sunday.\nTrail\nrhone\n135\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nM. H. MclVOIt. Prop.\nNelaon\nI'hone\n35\nHe Could Not\nStraighten Up\nHENDRICKS' KASLO*\u00bbELSON\nMOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE\nLlXAVINM  KASl.O  AND  IIII'KN    MONDAT,  wkdnmdav   ntlDAV\nI.t.UXi KAMA    \u25a0 '\u25a0   * *1 LEAVtt   NELSON   11   A.M.\nKrUnil   llipipl\u2014 milium*.'   Tl Iir;   lMi,n\u201e-      h\u201e.l\u201e   I'll,    .;l\nPROMPT,   EFFICIENT   SERVICK\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 IS i O.y-\nOo-Jdi Me,, tela\n\"1 have batn i unr\nof I i>tdti , Kidney\nPUU (or about\ntwenty yt.ri,\" wyi\nJ. L. Booth, Mt-\nWn, Suit. \"I had\niu_h \u2022 pain in my    w\nback that I could      >\u2022%\nnot nr_.ii._tfn up and wai unable to\ndo my choree.   Uodd'e Kidney Pille\nwere recommended by a friend and in\ntwo or three dayt I wai quite well\nattain. Since then at the ftnt lign of\nbackache I i.-ike Dodd'l Kidney Pills.\nI ftet wonderful reiultl.\" _,\nDodds Kidney Pills\nTRAIL, BC, Nov. 31 \u2014At the\nrecent meeting of the Trail oirl\nOuirle eneoelatlon, Mrs. F. E. Dockerill waa reflectttl prealdent and\nMra. M.n .P. McLennan secretary\ntreasurer.\nMrs, w. A. Curran. Mrs. Jesse\nKemp and Mrs. D. C- Irwln wero\nudderi to tho executive committee,\nwhich consisted or Mra. W. O.\nKennedy, Mrs. p. 8. Willie, Mrs. n.\nC. Crowe, Mra. .Tamea Thompaon,\nMra. J. o. Calder, Mrs. A. R. McCarthy. Mrs Charlea Fransen, Mrs.\nAlex Aniisndsie and Mra. James\nCoupland.\nMembera were told by Mia. Mc\nLennsn thst the past yesr had\nheen a eucreasftii one In every re-\napecl. Arrangement* tor a permanent csmp site st Sunshine Bsy\nwere going ahesd. It was hoped\nto hava some ot the bulldlngt\nresdy for next year'a camp.\n\"Our drive In connection with\nthe Boy scout association for membership, wss a great success,\" aald\nthn aecretary.\nMrs. McLennan In her report\npointed out financial assistance had\nbeen necessary thl- year lo enable\nseveral to attend thc annual camp.\nFinancial statement for the 10S1\ncamp showed receipts aggregating\n\u2022$713.52 and a balance remaining\nof \u00bb87,81. The naaoclitlon's sheet\nahowed a balance on hand of *lo 78\nMra. Dorktrlil, district commissioner, in her review of tho past\nyesr said \u25a0although wc hava not\nIncreased In number, 1 am proud\nto report that all companies and\npacia are active and very much\nalive.\" There had been many\nchanges in leaders and No. a company, Bast Trail, waa torce-d to disband early in the year, but several\nmembers of thc company trsnafer-\nred to No. 1 company.\nMrs. Dockerill again appealed to\nthe ladles of Trsll, \"particularly\ntho mothers of OuldeB to help lh\nthis importsnt work by becoming\nmembers of  the local  association.\"\nA letter thanking Mrs. Dockerill\nand Mrs. McLennan on behalf of\ntha executive from Mra. R. C. Crowe\nwas resd by Mrs. f. S. WIUIs. Mrs.\nCrowe in her letWl\" expressed the\nhopo thst lhe good work would\nbe carried on by the officers.\nIt wu decided to again sttga n\ndisplay along Hues similar (0 that\nstaged last year, probably In March,\nTRAJUSCOUTS \"\nPLAN DISPLAY\nTRAIL. B.C., Nov, J1\u2014Everything\nregarding ihe n\u00abw camp site ai\nFrultvale wss progressing favor.-!;*\n\u2022nembea of the Boy ecout asioclc-'\ntion, Trail dlatrlc:, learned at thalr\nbi-monthly meeting in the Memo.lal\nhall nere Tuesday night. The annual\nmeeting of the association wlll be\nheld December 8.\nThe handicraft, competition wlll\nbe end:d and juiged near the end\nof December or the beginning of\nJanuary. Work In the tny shop Is\ngoing veil, but old toys are not be- >\nIng admitted to tti- shop ln the j\ni:.t:cl,ieted abundance.\nA boxing and i_v*nn.i_s!lo dlapla*.\nwill be etlgcd b\\ lh* Boy Scouta\nDfcembei'   l'.^\nTRAIL SKI HILLS\nNEARLY FINISHED\nTRAIL. i.C, Nov. 21,-*Or\u00abr \u00bb0\nntm** \u00bbrt riow tnroHM with the\nTrtu-a-ttBUnd tkl club it \u00ab-m leuo*\n*n it * mMtlng h-Md tMr* TUf\u00abUy\nalint. Completion of iround wort\non \"A\" ond \"B\" MIU wu rlDortW.\nAnother bee will h* held Aundty to\nlive a iiiuti groomlnc to \"C\" hin\nPurchase of lumber to complete thc\ncabin Interior win RUthorined ind\nthis work 1* expected to end next\nweek.\nUd to the preient tlm\u00ab, no iuc-\ncom In pccutlnit lho applied for mow\nInsurance for ihr. western C'nnitfU\nBkl tournnment. in TraU Februnry\n10 und 17, hud been obtained.\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B.C. Nov. 51.\u2014Mrs. K. M.\nSpence and Mrs. M. L. Brothers were\njoint hostesses at a bridge honoring\nMrs. D. c. Manley and Mrs. H. J.\nMatthews ot Orand Forks at Mrs.\nBrothers' home last evening. Mrs.\nMatthews vtss flnt Prla* aIK* Mr**\nW. o. Carrie consolation.\n...\nMrs. Walter Veltch. who has been\na patient in the Trall-Tadanac hospital for the last two weeks, returned   to   her   home  yesterday.\nMlaa Frances McHardy of Robson\nwaa A visitor to Trail over Mia weekend.\n...\nMn. F. S. Chandler of Kaalo waa\nIn Trail Saturday.\nCharlei Saffer of Northport. Waah ,\nwaa . Sunday vUltor to Trail,\naaa\nR   Edwarda of Robaon spent the\nweek-end with Trsll friends.\n...\nMlaa Katherlne Olllla, who was the\nguest of h> parenta, Mr. and Mrs.\nHugh dlllls of Keelo, haa returned\nto Trail.\n\u2022 .  .\nTad Edwardj of South Slocan has\nI returned to his home from Trail,\nwhere he vlalted for two daya.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. Anderson, who haa been In\nTrail for a few days, haa returned\n\u25a0 to her home in I\/nigbeaeh.\n.   \u2022   .\ni    Mrs. A. Willys of Bonnlngton wu\nIn   Trail   Monday  on   her   way   to\nI Northport, where she wlll  spend  a\nj few daya with friends.\nMr. and Mn. WUllam Wardale and\nI daughter Peggy were In Roasland\n'. yeeterdey.\nAnother Stops Growth of\nNatural Cancer\nAdjustment of\nWorking Hours\nIs Pearson Aim\nVICTORIA, Nov. 31 \u2014 One Of thc\nfirst subjects engaging the attention\nof Hon. o. 0. Pearson, mlnlater of\nlabor In the Pattullo government,\nIs how to bring about a reduction\nof Working hours In some large Industries without bringing Into force\nlegislation already oh the statute\nbooka or lhtroduclng new and more\ndrastic hours of labor lawa.\nThe department of labor haa bean\ndeluged with mall containing complaints of men working from 1] to\n18 hours a day In aome of the leading industries, while othen remain\nunemployed and are forced on relief.\nGAINES GIVEN\nPRIVILEGES\nWife Sighed Statement Giving Him Single Man\nStatus\nDl YITO HEADS\nCOLOMBO SOCIETY\nD'Andrea Becomes the Grand\nMarshall at Trail\nCoach Plant Farm\nfor lhe Red Wings\nHockey  pUy-sri  who  Juit   fill  to\n\\ mike  tbe   fUd   Wlnfi   will   not   be\nj lost sight of, -statu Coach Jick. Carr,\nI but tbey wlll go into An lnterm?*\ndlito aggregation, or sort of farm for\nthe Red  Wings, \u00abo that  lf a regular la not up to the mark the coach\nwill know where to get the mm to\ntike   hli   plsce    It   wlll   alio   give\nthoie pliyeri who tre Just breaking\nin a chanoe to learn a few of thn\nfiner   points,    tnd    enhance   their\nchince for a regular place next year,\nradkTgiven to\nhospital ward\nUy  HOWARD  W.  HI.AKIX IT,\nAsMUlaU'ti   I'reiB  Mcncc  Bditor\nCAMBRIDGE. Mass., Nov. il (Apt\n\u2014A complicated new chemical which\nmay offpr relief to high blood pressure and another chemical which\nhas stopiKd the growth of naturn\ncancers in mice were reported to\nths National Academy cf Bclence\ntoday.\nA \u2022Hamln which rctard-s the onset of senility alio wts deicrlbed.\nThe blo.M pressure chemical lh\nadenosine triphosphate, obtained directly from blood of animal\/. It\ndisintegrated so rapidly tint thua\nfar lt has been extracted only by\ndrawing It from the blood directly\nInto an Ice-cold solution.\nDr. Cyrus H. Flsko of Harvard\nmedical school, who reported It,\nuld tt might be possible that lick\nOf this chemical caused high blood\npressure, but that lt has not been\ntested i'n humans. In anlnwli It\nappears to bo a repressor of\npriaiurt.\nAdenosine triphosphate containi\nI nitrogen and phospherous.\nThe cancer discoveries were reported by Dr. James B. Murphy of\ntho Rcckfcller Institute for medical\nreeearch. A substance protecting\nlarge numbers of mice from etneer\ntrouble! which Dr. Murphy aald\nclosely parallel human experience,\nw.is extracted from rapidly greying\nbody tissues.\nIt was taken from tbsueg of both\nmice and rabbits, and either extract  worked   about equally  well.\nDr. Murphy pointed out there\nwas Jtt no lde.i how this know-\nledgs might be applied to human\nbeings.\nThc vitamin which relays sonillty\nis O. nported by Dr. H. C. Sherman\nof Columbia university, it la found\nprincipally lu milk, eggs nnd in\nbrewort yeast nther than baker's\nyeast, he said.\nTRAIL BOWLING\nRESULTS\nTRAIU B C, Nov. Ji\u2014Hcctrl-\nclena mada . bid fcr tlie city\nleague bowlint title here Tueaday\nnlent when thry defeated the Trail\nTlmea In all threo samrt, with the\nTlmea carrying a apot of 33.\nJ. Vanatter acored 207 plna and\nD. Balfour aoe to tike tho high\nscoring honora of the evening. Reaulta were aa followa:\nKooteniy hotel, 040, 133, Ml, Trail\nMeat Market, with apot of aB, 771\n7D3, 883: Electrlclam, 831. 870, 83r)'\nTrail  Tlmea   71S,  803,  831.\nMAROONS PUT\nPLAYERS ON THE\nAUCTION BLOCK\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 31-\u00abucce\u00abdlng\nOliver D'Andrea, pompllo Dl Vlto\nhas been elected prrsldent of the\nChrlitoforo Colombo society. .D'Andrea   becomes   grand   marshal.\nAnnuil election of othir officer*\nof the aoclety wire as followa:\nEugenlo Delia Ltna, vice-president;\nSilvio Romano, secretary; Plitro\nLauriente, assistant secretary; Plet.o\nI.arzarotto, treasurer; ciulaeppi Flllp-\npelll, Angelo AjaEZl, M. R. Landuccl,\nA. Dela Lam, Francesco Moro, Adolfo\nStefan iii. committeemen; Oulseppe\nTruant, Lulgl Tgnottl tnd Olovannl\nManarln, sick and vlaltlng committee; Raffaelo Stefani, conductor;\nQlobatta Ptstro and Felice Mene-\nghlnl,   guards.\nGRAHAM SPEAKS\nAT TRAIL ROTARY\nTHAIL, B.C.. Nov. 31\u2014\"Idetllim\"\nwas the theme or tn tddress given\nby Rev. ArcMetcon Fred H. Graham\ntt th 1 lunchaon-meitlng of the\nTrail Rotary club Tuesday. Unself-\nlahneM tnd thinking ot the other\nfellow first waa tbe thought conveyed\nby  the  speaker to his listeners.\nVisiting Rotarlani were Attn\nCampben and F. F. Payne bf Nelson.\nP. Auitln of Victoria attended as\nthe guest of H. C. Caldlcott.\nSPOKANE. Wash.. Nov. 31 iAP.--\nAn agreement by which Uly Banka\nQalnftj gave her husband, Dr. James\nI. Otlnei 'the privileges of a single\nmtn' 1cm than a month before ho\nwai slain wae introduced in tho\ncomely young widow's trill on a\nchtrge of murdering him.\nOver strenuous objections of Mre.\nGalnet' counsel, proeecutor Loui*\nBung* reid the agreement to the\nJury to lupport nil theory thit\ndomestic difficulty had preceded\nthe doctors death on August if..\nThe agreement, written on oalnes'\noffloe stationery, wu dated Jul\/\n23.   1033.\nTho agreement waa M-lef, containing the following single wntence:\n\"I havi this day through my\nown voluntary act extended to my\nhusband, Dr. James t Oalnea, all\nthe privileges of a slngls person\nuntil Jan. 1, 1934.\"\nIt  wai   Igned   \"LUy  H.   Qalnw.\"\nMRS. OLIVER HEADS\nWOMfiNUBERALS\nAssociation to Give $5 to thc\nChristmas Cheer Fund\nTRArL, B.C., Nov. Jl\u2014Through\nlhe effort* of the Coiuolldtted employee!' medical committee, money\nmcee-in. to purchue > radio haa\nbeen gathe.ed and \u2022 mechlne purchued and metalled In the men'a\nward at the Trall-Tadanac hoapltal,\naccording to en announcement Tueaday by Eiward Johnson, chairman.\nMONTREAL. Nov. 31   (CP)  \u2014Five\nplayere of the Montreal Maroon:\n\u25a0 National   league   hockey   team   are\non the auction block u \u2022 reault of\nI lhe aquad'a B-0 defeat by their\nj home   town   rlvJls,   cani:dlen_*.   to-\nnight. The players tor sala, Presl-\n] dent   James   strachan   announced,\nare   D\u00abve   Trottler,   pjul   Haynes.\nOien Brydson, Lome Dugulc! and\n1 Archie   Wilcox.\nDrive to Goal Is\nMiss Cairns' Urge\nTRAIL, Br. Nov. 21-JDeclirlng it\nwm necessary to give iny ind all\np.ojecti undivided attention until\nthe goal was reached, Mils ll. (Don)\nOslrns epol.1 to thft Excelsior club at\nKnox church parlora las. night on\nthe theme \"Courage of Inspiration.\"\nEveryone had a talent of iome\nkind, Mlsa Oalrns \"said. A peraon\nwith one talen; developM wag in a\nmuch better position Mian one who\nwas gifted and versatile. The latter\nva** apt to fritter tvrty time and\nideas.\nWork at an* p.oJ#ct unceasingly,\njhe urged, and the way to the goal\nwojld be found. Anything undertaken ahould be for the good of the\ngroup as a whole rather than for\npermnal gain.\nThe club decided to preaent a\npro$ram at Rock Cieek December l.\nWork on a concert to be given\nlocally Is go^ng ahead.\nMrs. r. L. Oliver waa choaen president of the Nelaon Women'a Liberal\naasoclatlon at the annual meeting In\nthe Canadian legion Tuesday night*\nwhen a large attendance wai preaent.\nThe association decided to donat i\nU to the Chrutmu cheer fund.\nTho next meeting will be held In\nJanuary.\nOther offloers elected were:\nWi. T. D. Pattullo, honorary pml-\nd.nt; Mrs. Paul Smith, honorary\nvice-president; Mm. J. orahin, flra.\nvice-president; Mrs. J. P. Herron.\nsecond vice-president; Mrs. L. L.\nBoomer, reco.dlng secretary; Mra. P*\nO. Mosses, treasurer; Mrs. W. O.\nMills, corresponding secretary; Mr.-,\nW. M. Vance. Mn. A. N. Wlnlaw.\nMra, W. It. Smythe and Mra. R. E.\nOray,. enecutlve.\nWILDCATS JOIN\nFAC. CIU8\nAt a meeting of th* former Pair\nview Wildcat*, Tueaday night, thr\nglrli went ln favor of Joining th*\npairvlew Athletic club, and wll\nchange the name of their team, th<\nname to be picked ln the near future. Isabel Oughtred wae chcsei\ncaptain nnd Nellie Leslie team representative.\nThose attending the meeting werr\nEffle Bpears, Lena Young, Nellie\nVslie, Isabel Oughtred, Lota Boomer, Merle Archibald, Florence Maundrell Tlna McLean, Dorothy Tlts-\nwortfi, Evelyu Crahan, Eileen Placher and Martha Allen.\nBISONS DEFEAT\nINDIANS 5 NIL\nPORT BRIE, Ont., Nov. 81 (CP)\u2014\nBuffalo Blious smothered Cleveland\nIndians 5-0 In an International\nHeckey league game here tonight.\nBurton scared the flrat goal for\nBleone on a triple pass from Bchulta,\nJirvls and Teasdale. On the face\noff Busher Hollett pnued to Jarvla\nwho  (.cored  Bisons second  oounter.\nThe scoring ended In the third\nperiod with goals bV Teasdale, Roter\nand   Hollett.\nGrubbe to Attend\nths Bank's Annual\nW. R. Orubbe, manager of the\nNelaon branch of thl imperial Bank,\naccompanied by Mrs. orubbe his\nleft for Toronto, to sttend the annual meeting or the shareholders\nof the bank, ind alao to vlilt\nnt hla fcrmer home at flault Ste.\nMarie. Mr. and Mra. Orubbe will\nreturn to Neleon about the first of\ntho  year.\nMrs. Condy Speaks\nto C.G.I.T. Group\nGives Interesting Address or\nSubject of Missions at\nTrail\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 21-*Ire. Inne\nCondy. preildent of the Women\"--\nMlsslonary society of the Plrst preabyterlan church rendered an Interesting address on the subject .or\n\"Mlaslona,\" to the membevs of tho\nSunshine group, C.O.I.T, at tho\nchurch hall Mondiy ntght. Mis-.\nJean Downle president ot ths group,\npresided.\nMrs. Condy told of the mission\nhome ln Vegrevtlle, Alta., to which\nthe group wlll send lti annusl\nChristmas box declaring that much\njoy and pleasure were evinced by\nth\u00bb orphans in the home when they\nreceived such boxes.\nMn. A. B. Clarke, leader tt tbe\nj mip. introduced aal weloomed Mrs.\nCondy,\nFormer Governor\nHoy Drops Dead\nSPOKANE, Wash, Nov. 31 <AP>\u2014\nFormer Oovernor M* E. Hay of Waahlngton dropped dead in his offloe\nit 0 s.m., tbls morning of a heart\nattack.\nAll packages now con-\ntain mort tobtecof\nom\nit Pays to \"Roll Your Own\" with\nTurret Fine CuL>\nOfTtfKftET\n\u00a3<_>-!        __m^_*.\nMore tobacco for \\\\i_\nPoker Hands, too.\nFine (to\n^H!io.7cco\nYetl Thc price of Turret Fine\nCut has been reduced so thit\nyou reilly sire money by purchasing this fitter cigarette\ntobacco tnd buying your own\npapers! In every package of\nTurret Fine Cut you gtt more of the same quality tobacco you\nhave always preferred\u2014the dean, silky cut that will roll a\ncooler, more fragrant aod more satisfying cigarette cy cry time.\nAnd remember\u2014you can get i large booklets of \"Vogue\"\nor \"Ch-wtecler\" cigarette papers fru in exchange for eat\ncomplete tct of Poker Hinds.\nIt pays to \"Roll Your Own\" with\nTURRET\nFINE   CUT\nCIGARETTE TOBACCO\nSAVE     THE     POKER     HANDS\nImperial Tohtcco Comfito? of fynidi. Limited\n \u25a0 TOE NELSON DAILT NEWI, NELSON, B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAY MOBNINO, NOVEMBEB SS. ISSS\nIlHj\nMOT.\nOPTIMISM IS\nHIGH AT MOYIE\nActivity at Gold Field\nMine Is on the\nIncrease\n\u25a0t '        t\nStar of Earth\n\"By OtHavus <Roy Cohen\nK_\n_S\u00bb\nINSTALMENT   THIRTY-NINE\n\"Tou    murdered    him    In    South\n  | Canyon   road   laat   night.   Tou   shot\nAt 7 o'clock  ln  the morning the, him as  Ue sat  helpless  behind   the\nMOYIE, B 0.. Nov. at\u2014Thursday\nwas the biggest pay day seen ln\nMoyle since the cloelng of the\nCM. <t S. company's concentrtor\nhere. The work being done at the\nOold Fields mine haa employed quite\na number of the residents and\nthere la a bigger feeling of optimism and a brighter outlook tban\nhas been for a long ttme. The\nmine, which Is now officially known\nas the Oold Fields Camp, ls the\nmecca of visitors from all parts of\nthe district and every day sees numerous cars parked by the roadside\nwhile Interested spectators view the\nscenes of  activity.\nThe camp Is to be made one of\nthe official stopping places of the\nOreyhound Bua Co., the time keeper\nthere acting as their agent. During\nthe visit of Mr. Riel, managing director, who left for the coast on\nThursday, construction work was\npushed to the limit. The exceptionally good weather for this time\nof year was taken full advantage of\nand In a few more days Old Man\nWinter will be at a discount. The\ntramway from the tunnel mouth\nnow leada to a- high trestle from\nwhich tbe ore la dumped Into a\n100 ton ore bin. From there it is\ntrucked to the siding at Aldrldge\nwhere an elevated platform has\nbeen constructed to facilitate load-\ntog Into the oro cars for shipment\nto Trail.\nThe completion of a new cookhouse and dining hall wtth capacity for 160 men has added\ngreatly to the amenity of the camp,\nt n addition to setting free more\nbunkhouse accommodation. Of the\n50 odd employees, more than 90\nper cent are local men mostly from\nMoyle. Three shifts are working ln\nthe tunnel, and diamond drillers\nare alao working 24 hours a day,\nI i seoond diamond drill Is on the\nground and will be ln operation\nfhortly.\nC. 8. Lord, who ts ln charge of\nthe operations spent several years\nin the heart of Africa on a geological\nexpedition, and when th* guest of\n<hv Cranbrook Rotary club last week\nuavo an exceedingly Interesting lee-\nlure on his experiences there Illustrated by lantern slides from\nji.-otos he had taken.\nThe plant Is now lighted with\nelectric light from the company's\nown Delco plant, and continual Improvements are being msde to have\nihe camp as comfortable as possible\n:or  the   employees.\nMerritt Leask and Doug Flnnts\nwere visitors ln Cranbrook at the\nweek-end.\nThe engagement of Mlss Edith\nKordln, who was a resident of Moyle\n. nil last year, Is announced. The\nprospective bridegroom Is Stewart\nRlake of Marysvllle and the wedding will take place in Tahk at the\nhome of Miss Nordin's sister Just\nbefore Christmas. Miss Nordln spent\nnearly all ber schooldays ln Moyle.\nalso residing at Yahk for some\nyears.\nCharlie Clark, foreman at the\n< i''\u2022fields Camp waa In Cranbrook\n.-'riday visiting the doctor, Mr. Clark\nhas not been feeling well since\ncoming from Bridge River and has\niKten confined to bed for several\n.lay*.\nJ. Lldja and Ous Carlson from\nMrt Steele were visitors to Oold\nFields Camp  Friday.\nMrs. Folsey and daughter, Ger-\nmalne, are the guests of Mr. and\nMrs. Omar Geroux, and expect to\nrtr \u25a0 for some time visiting.\nMrs. F. Golightly and baby daugh-\n'n  of   Erie   are   vlaltlng   Mrs.   Oo.\ntwo detectives were admitted to\nMartin Glynn's private office.\nGlynn's thin, aharp faoe was lined\naa lt had not been before the killing\nof  Tanse   Wilson.\n\"I   have   aent   for  Mlsa   Randall,\"\nhe announced crisply.\n\"That's fine, Mr. Glynn.\"\nIris   Randall   ente.ed   the   office\nwheel of his car. Then you started\nto walk home and your fe:t gave\nout. You accepted a rldo from a\ngentleman.\"\n\"He\u2014he , told?\"\n\"Never mind whether he did or\nnot. But we can identify you without the slightest trouble. Now I'm\ngiving you your last chance; tell\nus the truth and we'll see that you\nunannounced.   Once    again   Hanvey I\"\" \"'\" 'W^' dee,   R-fu.      lrt we-u\nShe swept Into the room, nouded to\nOlynn and bowed\u2014with more than\na hint of hostility\u2014to the detectives. She seemed confident and\nassured.\nOlynn excused himself and at\nHanvey's Invitation Iris Randall accepted a chair,\n\"Well,\" she aaked, \"what u lt\nnow?\"\n\"Dkl  you read  Mr. Bergdorf's interview in yesterday's papers?\"\n\"Certainly.\"\n\"What did you think of it?\"\n\"I thought,\" she said coldly, \"that\nKail proved himself to be the coward\nI   have   always  suspected.\"\n\"Why?\"\n\"Because he made a deliberate attempt to involve me ln the killing\nof my husband.\"\n\"When did you last see Bergdorf,\nMlss   Randall?\"\n\"I don't remember, probably a\njreek  ago.\"\n\"Did  you see  him yesterday?\"\n\"No.\" She was obviously on the\ndefensive.\nHave you the faintest Idea who\ncould   have killed   him  lut night?\"\n'No.\"\n\"On the night your husband was\nkilled, Mlss Randall\u2014you we.e found\nunconscious   ln   the  Paris  set,   You\nremember?\"\nCertainly.\"\nWho ...ruck you that night?\"\n't told you once before that I\ndon't   know.\"\n\"Tchk!\" Hanvey shook his head.\n\"Don't you think lt would be a\nheap better to come clean with us,\nMlsa Randall?\"\n\"I don't know what you mean.\"\n\"You were married onoe before,\nweren't   you?\"   asked   Jim,\n\"Waa I?\"\n\"Yes. To Bob Kanzler\u2014the fighter.\nAnd It was Kanzler who slugged\nyou that night. Why didn't you\ntell  us tbat ln the lirst place?\"\nShe thought swiftly and clearly.\n\"Because,\" she answered with startling candor, \"I didn't wish Hollywood or the public to learn that I\nhad once been the wife of a third-\nrate pug.\"\n\"He was a swell fighter\u2014In his\nday.\"\n\"You seem to know all about lt.\nI suppose  Bob  haa  told  you.\"\n\"Yes.\"\n\"Just the type,\" sho eald bitterly.\n\"A  welaher.\"\n\"Did Bob Kanzler kill Tanae Wllaon?\"   asked   Hanvey   harshly.\nAgain she hesitated. \"Perhaps.\"\n\"You are not certain that he\ndid?\"\n\"No. And I am not certain that\nhe didn't.\"\n\"But isn't lt a fact that you\nquarreled that night and he struck\nyou . . . and that he oouldn't have\ndone that aM also have killed\nT-u_se7\"\n\"Not at all,\" she retorted viciously.\n\"No shots had been fired when he\nstruck ire. He waa crazy with anger.\nHe could have gone Jn a rag.) from\nMISS McINNIS HAS\nA SURPRISE HONOR\nYAHK. B.C., Nov. 31-^Alan Vercb\nairTlvei home from Canal Flat Sunday evening to spend a week. He\nwas accompanied back by Howard\nParker who spent the week-end at\nthe Flats,\nIt. and Mrs. C- H. Burkless, Mines\nMargaret Mclnnis, Bertha Gartslde\nsnd Fvelyn Oartsld- spent Sunday\nat tbe home of Mlss Mclnnla'\nparents, Mr* and Mrs. Hugh Mclnnis,\nThe party motored ln from Cranbrook.\nA lantern allde was held In the\nhall on Saturday evening by Rev.\nCharles Addyman of Moyle who\nshowed a number of pictures Illustrating the North American Indians.\nA large number of boys and girls\nenjoyed the show.\nA surprise supper was held at the\nhome  of  Mr.   and   Mrs,   Hugh   Me\nBUILDING TOTAL\nPASSES $40,000\nTwo small building permits were\nIssued by the city since the weekend to bring tho total to \u00bb40,304.\nE. H. Welbourn wat given permission to build a IftO lean-to kitchen\non Vancouver street and R. M.\nManahan to build a shed and\ngarage costing #50 on Carbons'*\nstreet.\nKIMBERLEY SCENE\nOF U.6.C. REUNION\nU-Nlv\u00abn, Mr. and Ux*. Douglms\nTork, Mr. and Mr* J. renglsnd, Mr.\ntnd Mrs. Praser McKay. Leo Abel,\nPaul Elliot. Mr. and Mrs. Fran*\nFortler. Mia D. McKowan, Mlfls\nJanet McKay, Mr. and Mra. Altcha-\nson, Mr. and Mrs. Raymonds, Mr.\nand Mn. L. Telfer, Mr. and Mrs.\nR. O. Oliver, Mr. and Mrs. orant\nHenderson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Marleau, Mr. and Mr*. E. S. Shannon,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Lindsay, Mr. Wal-\n__--,_-.-.\u201e,..\u201e   _.-.    ..      .._,..   ,dle. O. Schneider, Mrs. N.  W. Bud-\nMlas   Ruth   McKowan,   Dr.   Oeddes\nCollege   Spirit   Prevalent\nFrolic and Fun\nin\nF. E. WHEELER TO\nCONDUCT CONCERT\nThe Nelson Olee club of 40 mah\nvoices   will   be   conducted  by  F.  E\n. .'onner U.BC. student* aat down to\nI a happy reunion banquet in 'Kim-\nI berley last Friday night. The hall\n! was decorated with the blue and\n{gold and the college aplrlt was much\n; :u evidence, the earliest graduate\npresent. D. L. Thompson, proposed\ntho Alma Mater and a former yell\nleader. Joe Oelgerich led In \"Kitsi-\nImo.' The pn-og.-am consisted of a\nsktt    from    tho    Cranbrook    people\nwhich\nllwly   and   humorous.\nUnited    church.    Nov.    29.     Mr.llnent   university   figures,   and   the\nwith  his  personal  ability,  has  won j\nmurder  of   Karl  Bergdo.f   that   you\nwon't   know   where   you   are.   Then,\nafter you've been convicted of  that  ^    ^       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n\u25a0we'll   have   you   Indicted   for   the I [{\u00a3\u00a3 ^ght\u00abr Marga.et's 18th birth-1 those \"who have heard  the club  on\nmurder of your husband.\" jrtfty    jhe   Invited    guest*   include-i j other  occasions,   but   also   from   Its\nWh\u00abrer,,,;;r Pupation  \u00a3.  ^T^nT^rT^nT ^  -\n-*     ?ir.\u2122J\u00b0.'JZ      mJmm\\\\&L7Sm       \u00ab\u2122>    7^ \u00ab.     0\"?\u2122\" J\u2122, __*   S^,\"   Z\n5 SundTy  eve_ln,  in   h-nor  o, | h'.m   -^.rSuS.   nTon*   fSS ! -\u00abP  \u00ab\" .'Sf. W^tjTL^.\nand Dr. J. M. Lange, \t\nThoae registering as u.B.C. student* at the banquet were W, Ross\nWorkman of Ooal creek, W. Douglas Wallace, Mlss N. Douglas, H.\nBlack, Mary Cott Ingham, Frances\nQuail, Mlss A. Matlman, Campbell\nDuncan of Fernle: J. c. Roberts,\nA. L. MdPhce, Maloolm Harris, Mlyan\nJackson, Ivy O. Daaell, R. Oreen,\nGeorge C. Batclay, C F. Hillary,\nVincent Fink from Oranbrook; Mrs,\nM. irwln,. Mlss Nettle Henderson, 0,\nE.  McKlnnon. Murray   Garden  from\nEllis,   J.   E.   White,  Drummond   Os-\nBUILD HOMES\nDOUGLAS ROAD |\nCottonwood Cores Make\nNovel Materia]\n'Stop   HI\"   Her   voloe   waa   shrill .Misses  Bertha  and  Evelyn  Gartslde.\nwith hysteria. \"I didn't kill Tanse!\" iKathleen    Revans.    Annie   Smedbo!\nThen why did you till Bergdo.f?1\nI killed Karl Be.gdorf,\" she confessed  alowly,  \"because   he   was  at-\nt:mptin\u00ab   to  convict   mo  of   killing\nTanse.\"\n\"What made you think that?\"\n\"The interview he had In yesterday's papers. It was a deliberate attempt to make lt look as though\nkilled my husband. And It was all\na lie.\"\n\"Wao did kill Tanee Wllaon?\"\n\"I doft't know. It may have been\nKarl and it may have been Bo-b\nKamzler.\"\n\"Tou went out with Bergdorf last\nnight with the intention of killing\nhim?\"\n\"No. It wasn't that bad. Rut I\nwas half crazy wl.h fright when I\nread his interview. It put me tn\ndanger of the law, and lt p.obably\nmarked the end of my screen ca.eer.\nI was desperate. I determined that\nhe muat retract the story\u2014publicly.\nAnd quickly\u2014before lt oould ruin\nme.\"\n\"Tou took your own gun?\"\n\"Yes.\"\n\"Why?\"\n\"To irlghten hlm.\"\n\"Where, and at what hour, did\nyou meet him?\"\nAbout 10:30 st the Boulevard\nhotel where he lives. I went there\nfor hlm and he was out. I watted\non the ve-anda. I aaw him when\nhe drove ln, and before he could\nget out of his car, I joined him. I\ntold him 1 had to talk to him,\nalone. He did not object. He drove\nout toward the canyon.\"\n\"What happened .hen?\"\n\"I told him that he muat retract\nhla story. He laughed and paid the\nstory was true. I argued with him.\nI even pleaded. He seemed to bc\nenjoying himself. He reminded me\nof what I had done to him\u2014getting\nhim taken off his first big picture\njust wh.'n he was about to make a\nsuccess of lt. He said that the\npicture he was making with Glory\nHale wae certain to be a success,\nand that he waa delighted to start\nhis own career and ruin mine at\ntbe same time.\n\"l toid mm lf be didn't retract\nhla lien I would kill him. He waant\nall frightened. By that time we had\nturned back toward Hollywood. I\nknew that wc would soon be home\nsnd thst I'd never have another\nchance to frighten him. 1 pulled ou.\nmy revolver and pointed lt at him\ntela Birch, Jean Rattray. Toot* An\nderson, Marie Thompson, Betty Cooper  and   Mr.   and   Mrs.   H.   Buckles.)\nOn the Air Tonight\nCANADIAN   RADIO\nCOMMISSION   NETWORK\nCJrj  CJCA CHWK CFQC CKV CFAC\nG90      7-m       -,m      81)0      RIO      930\nCKCK    CFCN    CRCV    CKOV    CFJC\n1010       10.10       HOO       U00       1310\n0:00 One   Hour   With   You.   from\nMontreal\n7:30 Canadian  Press News\n7:36 Moonlight on  the River. Jack\nDale, tenor, Bud Spense, piano\naccordionist\n8:00 Varieties  from  Saskatoon\n9:00 The   Cowboy  from  Calgary\n9:15 Fredda    Bradley,    violin,    Saskatoon\nmembers. His untiring efforts to\nwork up au organization which\nwould merit support, la, year by\nyear,   showing   rapid   progress.\nMr, Wheeler's desire ts to give\ntha citizens of Nelson and district\nan opportunity to hear the club\nfrom time to time, as well as aome\ndistinguished artists of Nelaon, and\noutside artists that can be secured.\nTruck Hit by Train\nVANCOUVER.' Nov. 21 (CP) \u2014Two\nmen had a narrow escape from\ndeath here today when a truck\ndriven by A. Gray, a florist's employee, was struck by sn eaatbound\nGreat Northern train at a Rupert\nstreet crossing and completely demolished. Mr. Oray and his pas-\nssnger were thrown clear and escaped with minor cuts and bruises.\nNews   of   suicides    ls   prohibited\nDy law ln all newspapers ln Tu.teey. Mrs.   K.   Qrogan.\nloclty and \"pep,\" led by Ian Doug\nlaa with Mlas Jamleson at the piano.\nJ. J. McKay, the author of \"HI.\nHI,   U-B.c.\"   was  present.\nFollowing the banquet waa a\ndance to which all students of other\nuniversities, residing In Kimberley,\nwere invited. During the Intermission and supper several college\nduets were sung, snd yells were the\norder of the evening. MoGUl, Toronto, Queen's and U3.C. yells brought' ^U1T\nforth hearty applause and one lone '\nenthusiast gave the Manitoba yell.\nOld danoe Iavo.lt?* of Fairview days\nas well as those Of Point Grey days,\nbrought   back   happy   memories.\nChairman of the reunion was R.\nB. Cribb, \"31; Secretary Murray\nOarden. *31; treasurer. Mlss J.\nKler, '31: decoration, Mrs. H. Oel-\ngerlch, Mlas B. Larb-alcster; music\nand  danoe, Mlss Jean Jamleson.\nDance guests of other universities\nwere Dr. and Mrs. Davis, Dr. and\nMrs. Haszard, Dr. and Mrs. Dorman,\nI Dr. and Mrs. J. Rowland, Mr. and\nMr.   and   Mrs.   J.\nft aid, Jean Jamleson, Harold Stafford, AIM.. McRae, Jean Kelr, Dave\nFoublster, J. J. McKay. Wlnnifred\nBurdette, Mildred Burdette, D. L.\nThompson, F- M. Waldle. lan Douglas, Mrs. J. Wolverton, J. Wolverton,\nJoseph Giegerich, Henry Olegerlch,\nMrs, H. Olegerlch, Beatrice Larbnt-\naster, Mlss S. Burns,\nIt was agrtftl that In 1934 the\nreunion for the East Kootenay will\nbe held ln Cranbrook and an exe-\nwaa appointed as follows:\nGeorge c. Barclay, A. L. McPhee,\nMlas L- Jackson, and District Representatives H. Cb-rster, Campbell,\nDuncan and Ian Douglas.\nBACKFILLING\nON NEW MAIN\nBackfilling after the laying of\nthe new water main in the 800\nblock on Mill street, has been completed. A ditch ls now being dug\nalong the south side of the street\nto  take care of  water  seepage.\nRealizing that lots ln tbe vl-\niimty . of Douglas road win be |\nvaluable when the road Is fur**\nther developed, a number of Nel-\nj-oattes are grabbing at the opportunity and are settling ln that |\narea. ]\nSome are content to build amall I\nshacks while clearing and improving their property, but othera are 1\nputting up substantial structural\nand already there is conslderabnt I\nirHivlty along the road. *\nA new style of architecture has I\niwn Introduced to that section of I\nFairview. Several are building homes I\nof imooth cottonwood cores dls*\ncarded by the veneer factory. These\nare stood on end Instead of horizontal ss ln the construction of\na log cabin, and give a novel appearance to lhe exterior of the\nbuilding.\nDaughters England\nHold Whist Drive I\nA successful progressive whist drive;!\nwas held by the Daughters ofjL\nEngland ln the Memorial hall Mortal\nday night, in aid of the Christ- f\nma_t Cheer fund. It was Incorrectly I\nreported thst the Daughters of |\nScotia sponsored the drive.\nMrs. GERMAIN IS\nTAKEN HOSPITAL]\nMrs. p. Oermain was taken ttL\nKootenay Lake Oeneral hospital.!\nTuesday in the Somers' ambulance,\"\nTasteless quinine la a recent pro-*)\nduct   of   the   scientist's   laboratory*!]\nNBC-KGO   NETWORK\nKHQ   KGW   KFI   KGO   KOMO   KJR\n890      620      640       790      920      970\n6:00 Troubadours\n6:30 John  CcCormack, tenor\n7:00 Corn  Cob  pipe  Club, barn-\nmusic\n7:30 National Darlo Forum\n8:00 Amos V Andy, blackface com.\n8:15 Don   Carney's   Dog   Stories\n8:80 Oen Man's Family, serial dra. il\n9:00 Lee   8,   Roberts   and   Memory **\nBox\n9:18 Herb Dana on Football\n9:30 Harry Sosnlck and Orch.\n9:30 Waltz   Time   (KPO  to  Net.)\n10:00 News  Flashes\n10:18 Anson   Week's   Orch.\n11:00 Orch.   (KPO to network)\n11:00 Tom Coekleys Orch.   (KOO)\n11:30 Tom  Oerun's  Orch.\n11:30 Organ   Concert   (KOO)\nCBH-DON   LEE  NETWORKS\nKVI      KFRC       KOIN      KSl,      KOL\n870        610 Dto 11.10 1270\n6:00 H.-Bar-O   Rangera   (D.  L.)\n6:15 Alexander  Woollcott, Town\nCrier\n6:30 Burns   and   Allen\n7:00 Moran and Mack, led Waring,\npianist  and  Waring'*.  Pennayl.\n7.30 The Town Crier\n7:45 Myrt   and   Marge,  fr.   Chicago\n8:00 Headlines (Don Lee)\n8.00 Presenting Mark Wsrnow\n8 no Human Side of the News\n8:45 The Buccaneers  (Don Lee)\n8:45 Ozzle   Nelson's   Orcb\n9:00 Ted Wo Rlto'a Orch. (DonLee)\nui\/ tttt^ttwA mm mm,,.!! i\u00bb \u00bb\u00ab. Unix |   9:30 Catherine  the   Great   (KBL)\nHe dared me to shoot. The gun went [ 10 :W w*   of   Oolden   Dreams   Dl*.,\ntbe I\nu   w-ist    ,_,.,__\u00bb    hm KVI.   KOIN.\ncar   slewed   toward I 10:\u00b0\u00b0 Ted Flo Rlto's Oreh. (D. L.)\n| 11:00 Gus Arnhelm's Orch.   (Don\nLee)\noff.   He   slumped   down   under\nwheel   aud   the       ^^^^^^^^^^\nthe aide of  tbe road. I  turned off ^^^^^^^^^^^\nthe   ignition   and  clamped  my   foot I i\u00a3J'. ni    Kr>.    Knrw\non the brake to keep wfrom folug I \u00bb ;0\u00b0 Wnndeiws, D.I,, KOL. KOIN\nover the cliff.\nThen   I   Decame   t\u00abrrlfled.   I   got\nI .11 Ml\nnie to Tanae and kUled my huaband |out and started to wark toward Hoi\nlywood. Whenever I saw a car coming. 1 hid ln the bushes by the side\nof thc road. After walking about\na mile. I threw the gun into the\ncanyon\u2014I can show you almost the\nexact   spot.\n\"Then my feet started hurting.\nThey are swollen and blistered now.\nI knew I could never reach Hollywood tbat way. I was afraid to\nstay   out   there   alone.   Some   one\nthen.\"\nShe was obviously quite pleased\nwith herself. He.- poise and self-\nconfidence had returned. And because she felt secure, she waa completely     defenseless    when    Hanvey\n:.htry*.-p.r.nf, Mr. \u00abd Mr,, ^mftt^sm^   .^^ ^ ^\n\u25a0*Ju-t   why   did   you   murder   Karl\nBergdorf list nlgbt?\"\nShe   caught   her   breath   sharply.\nimi  k\nVAXCOI'VIR\n6:00 Balladler\n6:15 Theatre   Critic\n6:30 Musical Program\n6:46 News  Broadcast\n7:06 Avalon  Trio\n7:30 Charlie   and   Kddle\n7:45 The  Word  Man\n6:00 Barney's   Hawallans\nano   in\nrm w\nWilli.\nThe following school report Is Issued   by   MIM   D.   M.   Spence   for\n''arSen'--^\u00b0Ln^tWnritehead, (ler-1 \"JH don't know what you're Two-Id\" .lnd\"\"m\u00ab\" aid~I iie~w the.\nnldlne   conrad.   Pranlc   Sanders.        I talking about.' would   tlnd   Karl'a   body.   My   only\nOrade   3-Emberaon   Walker.   Joan       Y\u00ab**   l\u2122   d0-    Hanrey  waa  .ud- , chance was to get a ride Into town\ndenly   wide   awake,   and   bis   voice l___ hope , wouldn't be  recognized.\nretained   nothing   ot   Ita   customary j ] stopped a passing car.\"\ngentleneM.   \"You   went   out   riding     she   made   a   dsapalrlm   gesture.\nwith Be.gdort last nlsht. Tou mur-1    \u2014   -  -    -        -    \u2014\ntieroui, Fred  Barr,  Ed  Barr.\nOrade 4\u2014Henry watowskl. La Von;\nCHEST\nCOLDS-\nMECCA\nMUSTARD\nPOULTICE\n1100 k               CRCV\n:7:.7 m\nVANCOUVRK\n500   w\n7:00 Financial Talk'\n8:30 News Bulletins\n8:45 Political  Talk\n10:00 CRCV    Conoert\nOrch..   Ernest\nCaldwell, barlt.\ndfred  hlml\"\nShe   waa   on   her   feet,\nlie I\"\n__         _     ,        680   k KPO\n\"That ls how  I  killed  Karl Berg- i KAN   FRANCISCO\n441    in\n50.000   vr\ndorf,\"   she   finished.   \"I   have   told\n'That'a   a  you  the truth.\"\n(To be Continued)\nRelieves Cong \u2022\u2022tion\n^^^^^^        \u2014 Does Nek Blister\nAt fir-it ilfn of a cold oa the chest apply a Mecca\nPoultice with tha addition of mustird. The\nwannlb la combination with marvellous hrtlinj\nrruprrtits of Mecca Ointment will -give quick\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0lief.   Full directions .fn each package,        38\nConrad,   Nick   Watowskl.   Ada   Barr,\nAilsa   Forsyth.\nOrade 5\u2014J. J. Whitehead. PhUio\nConrad.   Robert   Walker.\nOrade 7 \u2014 Russell Conrad. Josle\nWhitehead, Yvonne Handera, Margaret Whitehead.\nAndy Oram, Charlie Valvovlch and\nSciiL Kaakell from Chapman Camp\nare gueats at the Cameron houae\nthla week. They are engaged In dl\u00a7-\nmantllng the crusher in the C. M.\nit 3. company's mill here and shipping It to Trail.\nMr.   Lee,  service   engineer  of  th-\n6:00 Tone  Portraits\n6:30 Paul  Martin,  banjo\n6:4& Black  and Blue\n7:00 Edna   Fischer,   piano\n7:15 Tiiran   of   the   Apea\n7::.o Irving   Kennedy,   tenor\n7:45 Agriculture   Today\nK.IK\n|07(Nk\n' KKATTI.fc\n!   6:00 Woodwind  Enaemble\n6:30 High   School  Reporter\nJ   6:46 Silver   Str1n_f\nl   7:15 Tarzan,  E.  T.\nj   7:30 Blue  Streaks\n.   7:45 Dollars   and   Cents\n8:00 Next   Door   Neighbour*\n1   8:15 Olympic  Main  Chorus\ntM Muted    Strings\n,   8:45 Frank Watanabe, E, T.\n|   9:00 Evening  Melodists\n9:15 Chamber of Corr.mercn\n30f\u00bb.i   m\n5000    W\nSullivan    Machinery    company    lefi\nfor  his home in Seattle  Wednesday.   \t\nafter   spending   aome   daja   at   thel   8:00 Nathan  Abas, violin\nGold   Fields   Camp. |   8:15 Red  Davlea, E   T,\nW. J. Smith and his fsmily tmc    8:30 Calif,   on   HW*\ntaken   up  residence   ln   Tom   Chris. I   9:?5 \"nr:*1\u00b0DU8r.^\ntlan's house. Mr. Smith  is employ-1  \u00bbn\\* ^ok   Parade\ned   by   the   Diamond    Drill   outfit I ,12 H*  \u2122,   Markka\noperating at the Oold Fields mine.        \u00b0;g \"\u00a3*\u00a3\u2022   \"\u00a3\u00a3'\nMrs. Oordon Jewell left for South I   \u00b0:30 The   Seven   -Seas\nSlocan   Tuesday   to   visit   her   par-   J  '^ JCm?\"\nmta  there. j 113U urcn\t\nJoe Coleman of Rossland ar'lved\nhere today to atart work with the\ndiamond drillers .it oold  Fields,\nMr. and Mrs Dankert of spn-\nkgBa have been visiting wltn Mrt.\nDankert's aunt, Mra. Bremner \u00bbho\nhas recently returned from a visit\nt3  her sou,  Johnny,   In   Nelaon\nHarry Stone, conatructlon boa* of\nthe C. M. ii S. at Sullivan concentrator was a visitor to tttt this\nweek.\nRev. c. Addyman gave a mtwt interesting    lantern    lecture    of    t ho \t\n\"Trail    of   the    Red    Man'     in   thl ' 10I60 JmVs   Buffanos-   Orch\nchurch on Tuesday night   fb-jre wa*\u00bb | \t\na   fairly   good   attendance   although j 1(l*y( y KNX 2sj.-S ni\nthe  numbers  were  not  ao  gr*t  ns j HOLLYWOOD 25,000   w\nthc excellence  ul  thc  riiterta-.un.cnt j   a:oo news   service\nChristmas\nStocks in\nNelson Were\nNever More\nAttractive\nIt Pays in\nthe Long\nRun!\nYou'll bc tired\nenough from so\nmuch shopping\nwithout being a\niiimper or football\nas well. The stocks\nand clerks in Nelson stores are all\nready, so be smart\n\u2014shop early!\nDon't wait until the last\nminute\nI m.rlted\nMlwes Mary nnd Thorn Andrews\n| were visitors to Cranbrook Inst\nweek, being tho guesta of Mr anu\n| Mra. Jack Flaher\nMlaa Dorothy Spence. school mis.\n1 tree* at Moyle la already making\np r e pa r a 11 o n a for the children*s\n[chrlatmaa concert\nMrs    Babe   Leask    who   wu   well\nI known ln Kimberley .and district as\nspecialty  dancer  before   her  mar-\nPILLS\nFor\ni  Indigestion\nBiliousness\nThe World's Family Remedy   I\n0:15 Spanish Concert Oroup\n8:30 King   Cowboy\n0:45 Bill. Mack   Jimmy\n7:oo Watanabe and Archie\n7:15 Black   and   Blue.  R.  T.\n7:30 Red   Davis\n7:45 Mualcal   Program\n8:00 Orand   Opera\nf\u00bb:t\u00bb0 News   Service\n0;I5 Charlie   Hamp\n0:43 Mualcal  Program\nSoilor Improved\nVANCOUVER Nov 31 (CP) -\n-John W. Chlvas young Vancouver aallor shot hy a bandit tn\nHouston Texas, last Saturday night,\nIs making ateady improvement and\nhaa   a   good   chance   of   recovery.\nrlage.   la   instructing   the   girls   in\ns'..nif numbers for the show.\nBabe Leask had the misfortune to\nbe lil' by a falling rock ln tin\nmine Tuesday and sustained \u25a0n'ur-\ntes to his head. After receiving first\naid he was taken to Cranbroow hoapltal. His hurts were only of a\nminor nature and he wai able to\nreturn homo, after a couple of\ndayi.\niM)COReOBATJtO_aj\u00bb MAYJeTSt\nExceptional Values for Thursday Shoppers\nCLEARANCE OF\nLINED GLOVES\nLined fabric gloves by\nDent and other good\nmakers. Many styles in\nthe group. Values to\n$1.2fi. Thursday\t\n\"Van Raalte\"\nService Weight\nHOSIERY\n49\nTAM AND SCARF SETS\nA amart feature of this splendtu\nhosiery is the new \"Flext-oe\" whlcii\ngives greater stretch and oom fori\nPerfect fitting full\nservloe weight In\n8 new dull shades.\n:* lengths ln each\nbox. 81ms H' to\ntn'*,.    puir\n\u20221\n.00\nNew and different at a low price for such\nsmart sete. Checks and mixtures of browna,\nreds, greens, fawns and black and white.\nSet  \t\nn\n.00\nCOTTON CREPE SPECIAL\n100 yards fine cotton crepe In colors of peach\npink, orchid, green.  30 Jnches wide.\nThursday,  2  .vards  for   \t\nBoys' Sport\nCoats\nKegula\nr $3.95\nOnly a few of these attractive\ncoats  left to clear.   They  are\nmade of heavy wool cloth with\nleather   bound   slash    pockets\nand   semi-elastic   waist   band.\nSizes 8 to 12 years In the lot.\n\u00ab2\n,-95\n25c\nHighest Grade Sheeting\n59c\nWABASSO SHEETS\nBetter quality sheets in large size.\nThese    fine,   quality   sheets   nn* K*| .10\nhemstitched and full length. JL\n-Special value, each  \t\nKxtra quality round  thread sheet\ning in 81-inch width. A splendid val\nue for real wear and appearanoe.\nSpecial HBC \t\nMEN'S DRESS SHIRTS\nBroadcloth ahtrts, that wlli stand lots of\nwear. Nicely tailored, ln plain shadea. Blue,\ngreen,   tan  and  white.    Sizes   1414   to   17'A.\n69\"\nCrepe Back\nSatin\nLustrous Black satin for\nthe. new dresses. Crepe\nfaille reversible fabric in\nnice weight. 39 inches\nwide. Yard\n$1-49\nMEN'S WORK SHOES\nMade in Black or Brown elk\nor Black ox grain with plain\nfronts   or   toe   caps   outside\nountcr,   solid   leather  sewn\n\u25a0 is   licinforced at all vital\nparts to ensure  fulfillment of rough\nwear. Made in\niiilf sizes, 6 to\ni. 1'air \t\n$A*o\nSale of Inlaid Linoleum\nFinest quality inlaid linoleum. Wl\nand years of service and\nnot   get   shabby.   Full   i\nyards wide. A regular $l.r>\"\nvalue,\nThursday only, sq. yard\n.uivc years\n'I\n.29\nBOYS' SWEAT SHIRTS\nBoys' fleece lined sweat shirts with zipper ftout,\nnnd close fitting waist band. Polo collar lu\nbluidea of blut, tun. yrten and wine\t\n\u00bb1\n.00\nWomen's All Wool Combs\nVine weight comblnatlona in shaped top Itftt,\nsleeveless or ahort sleevea Knee length. 8ms l\nmedium and large    ffpeclal   \t\n$1-50\nMen's\nHatchway\nCombinations\nMedium weight combs.\nKnit from fine wool yarns\nand fashioned to fit snugly\nwithout binding. Sizes 3G\nto 44.\nGarment,\t\n$1-9S\nOn Sale Today and Thursday\nGROCETERIA\nHm*   Bacon\u2014Sliced.     _'!,\u2022\ncfllo pfct.. pcr lb ..     *\u2022\/\nKrnrt Chwic\u2014 UC\nH4b    pkt        *\u2022*\nrox'l   Gelatine - \\HC\nPer   pkt    .      *l\nllii.l~.mi.   nuttrr\u2014       CtC\nI   lb\u00bb     '*\n1 larffe pkt. Prlnce.i Soap\nFlakes and 1 trial pkt. Prtn-\nc\u00ab\u00bb Soap Flake*\u2014 \\^C\nThe two for .... *\nR*\u00bb*al City Plum! In heavi\niyrup-_n \\AC\nper  tin     *t\nService Grocery\nThone 13\nJS*\nV\nas*\n32c\nKoyaJ city rear*\u2014 3..\nper   tin   \t\nllroders   Toraalu\nlulce\u2014le;   per   1111\nKratt   cneew\u2014\nl-lb.   pkt\t\nLlbby'i  Aiparuus\nTip*\u2014 13-ai   tin   ..\nOoean   8pray   cranberry Saoce\u2014 I ,-os. tin\nRed Emperor Grapes\u2014 JCtf\nPer   lb   ***\nCalifornia   Oranie*\u2014\nLarge alw; per doz ..\n43*?\nGirls' Pleated\nSkirts\nRegular Price $1.95\nTweed pleated skirts on a\nWhite cotton bodice so\npractical for school wear,\nin Green, Red, Tan and\nNavy. Sizes 6 to 14 years.\nSpecially Priced\nn\n.29\n PAGE FOCB '\n\u00aety Jtoemt Hatty _K>wa\n\"lnterwt of British Columbia's Family Newspaper\"\nALL  1KB NEWS WHILE IT 16 NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by THE NSWS\nPUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED, 218 Baker surest, Nelson,\nB.O.   Member ol CANADIAN PRESS Leased Win Bervlce      .     .\nADVERTISING  RATES  ON   APPLICATION\nOr rate oards may be seen at tha ofllce ot any Advertising Agency\nrecognl-ed by the CANADIAN DAILY NEWSPAPERS ASSOCIATION,\nINC, ol which the Nelson Dally Newa u a member\t\nSUBSCRIPTION  HATES\nBy mau (country), per month _..__...\u2014--\u2014..-.\nBy mall (city), per year ...._____\u2014_\nOutside Canada, per month\t\nPar  year  \u2014\u2014._\u201e\u2014  \u2014_\u2014\u2014\nDelivered (clt; by carrier), per week\nPer year\n-I    .80\n- 6.00\n_ 19.00\n_ .75\n._ 7.80\n_     -14\n- 19.00\nPayable ln advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ot Circulation-.\nWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1933.\nBANKRUPTCIES DECREASING\n, A considerable decrease in the numler of assignments under the Bankruptcy and Winding Up acts,\nas reported to the Dominion bureau of statistics, was\nrecorded in September, as compared wiih September,\n1932, while the liabilities of the assignors also showed\na decrease. Commercial failures numbered 155, as compared with 193. The estimated liabilities of the assignors amounted to -$2,3*14,568 as compared with -$2,979,-\n544.\nIn the Maritime provinces there were seven assignments compared with nine. Liabilities totalled $26,000.\nIn Quebec there were 80 compared with 90; liabilities\n$1,360,000, of which 37 at $548,000 were in Montreal. In\nOntario there were 45 as against 72; liabilities $710,000\nof which eight at $240,000 were in Toronto. In the\nprairie provinces there were 16 compared with 21;\nliabilities $170,000 of which 2 at $12,000 were in Winnipeg. In British Columbia there were seven compared\nwith 9; liabilities $79,000, of which one at $5,000 was\nin Vancouver.\nTrading establishments furnished the largest number of failures, 87 assigning in September compared\nwith 99 a year ago; manufacturing 20 compared with\n38; agriculture 12 compared with 11; services 18 compared with 21. There were 6 failures in construction,\none in transportation and public utilities and two in\nfinance.\nThe number of failures for tho first nine months in\n1933 was 1585 compared with 1792 in 1932.\nGROWING EMPIRE TRADE\nIn the last few years there has been a remarkable\nre-orientation of Canadian trade within the Empire. It\nis due to several causes. First and most important\narc the Empire trade agreements, which give preference lo Canadian goods, and secondly, to a growing\nfeeling in favor of dealing within the Empire.\nHon. II. H. Stevens has made public some astonishing figures as to growth of Canadian trade within\nthe Empire. For the 12 months ending September, 1930\nour exports of domestic products to the United Kingdom were 26.89 per cent of our total exports of domestic products. In the corresponding periods ended 1931\n1932 and 1933 thsy rose to 27.60 per cent, 33.59 per\ncent, and 39.60 per cent respectively, of our total exports. Similarly, taking all Empire countries together\nwo find that our exports of domestic produce to these\ncountries amounted in the 12 months ended Scpetember,\n1930, to 35.91 per cent of the total, rising slightly in\n1931 period to 36.16 per cent, and rising substantially\nto 41.60 per cent in the same period ended 1932, and to\n47.81 per cent in thc same period ended 1933. In a word\nthe production of our exports that go to thc Empire\nhas risen from rather over one-third in 1930 and 1931\nto nearly one-half in the latest period. In the month of\nJuly, 1933, our exports to the British Empire were\npractically one-half of our total exports to the world.\nThc complaint is sometimes made that wc arc\nnot correspondingly buying from thc Empire. However,\nthe official figures given by Mr. Stevens show that this\nis not correct. In the 1930 period ending September, only\n15.49 per cent of our imports came from thc United\nKingdom. In the 12 months ended September, 1931,\nthe proportion rose to 17.68 per cent, in thc 12 months\nended September, 1932, to 19.17 per cent and in the 12\nmonths ended September, 1933, to 2*1.14 per cent, or\nnearly one-quarter. Similarly, tc.king our imports from\nthe British Empire as a whole in these same four periods, we find that in the 12 months ended September,\n1930, they were only 21.62 pcr cent of our total imports. In thc period ended September, 1931, they rose\nto 23.94 per cent, in thc same period ended 1932 to\n26.97 pcr cent, and in thc 12 months ended September,\n1933, to 32.93 per cent, or practically one-third. This\nincrease means that, whereas in 1930 we spent in thc\nEmpire less than $2 out of every $9 that we spent for\nimports, in 1933 we are spending approximately $3\nfor Empire products out of every $9 that we spend.\nOn the other hand our exports to the United\nStates have been declining in proportion of our total\nexports. Taking the four periods mentioned, we find\nthat while in thc 12 months ended September, 1930,\nour total exports to the United States werc 45.42 pcr\ncent of our total exports, they declined lo 42.92 pcr\ncent, 35.98 pcr cent, and 30.89 pcr cent in the corresponding periods ended 1931, 1932, 1933, respectively.\nThis decline is, of course, not unconnected with changes\nmade in the United States tariff in 1930 and 1932.\nOur imports from thc United States have declined from\n65.87 per cent in the 1930 period to 54.82 per cent in\nthe 1933 period.\n\"Between You\nand Me\"\n07   J.B.C.\nOnly 33 days before Christmas,\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nAnd the hills look like it. Molly\nOlbson peaks are cold but beautiful these days. The trees are losing their leaves. Tho old auto\ncamp ls about tbe most deserted\nlooking spot ln the city. Things\nand placea long covered by foliage\nare showing up, yes. it won't be\nlong now.\na   t \u25a0 *\nBut there la no frost In the\nground as yet, At leaat that la\nwhat WUUam 8. John3on. the florist, told me yesterday. Mr. Johnson waa digging celery, wblch he\ndeclared, was net io good ae be\nhad planted It rather late. But\nindications were the frost wlll b*\nhere aoon, aald Mr. Johnson who\nhas hta greenhouse (.11 prepared\nfor the  winter.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nAnother sign that waiter seems\na long way off Is the Motion garden\nat the e.ul of BaXer street. Rosei\nuie  still   blooming   profusely   there.\nHere and there\u2014Jack BeU squirming around the hind end of an\nautomobile which wae up on a\njack\u2014and Tom Ledingham and Roily Brown were Interesting -spectators\u2014It may havo been Tom's car\nfor all I know\u2014And across the\nstreet Oarl Laraon and Charlie Pearson were In conversation\u2014And Carl\nwae telling ot a fall of 10 feet\nfrom a ladder\u2014And he landed on\nhla neck\u2014Oeorge Clarke was out for\nhis afternoon's stroll\u2014and I noticed\nArchie Blaney, leaving his home for\na walk\u2014Lou Ollbert, deaplte the\nwinter aeaaon approach\u2014Is still\ntalking apeed boats\u2014And has some\nnew pictures of the Lady Bird\nthat are worth seeing\u2014Jtmmie Bates\nwaa getting all groomed up\u2014And\nhad to take a back seat whllo\nLou discussed speed boat racing\u2014\nOut Fairview way Bob Jadlne la\nbusily engaged remodelling an old\nhome\u2014And Fred Jarvis was watching htm work -Tom Peake passed\nby dressed ln hla sweater trimmed\nIn yellow\u2014The city haa made a\ngreat Improvement on the road to\nFairview Just In front of Jlmmle\nLundte'B home\u2014And the doing away\nwith the big portion of rock bluff\nthere\u2014Should go a long way to\neliminate accidents\u2014Down at a. H-\nGreen'a I noticed w* K. Blanchard\nbusy on a planer\u2014and Lawrence\nSimpson was working on his books\n\u2014Or trying to duck J.B.C.\u2014Davla\nKerr waa too busy to even talk-\nHe says thla pound sterling buslneaa Ls the bunk\u2014And Li making\nlota of work and worry ln mor*\nways than ohe\u2014Bob Cunningham of\nCrescent Valley was ouying gro-\neerlea and Frank Bamford was helping him out\u2014i never knew before\nthat Cobbett WIU rolled his own\nsmokes\u2014Dolph. Browne likes the\nnew exchange racket\u2014And says he\nis getting hla own back a Uttle\nJust now\u2014Noticed Jack Meek taking\nInstruction from Inspector John\nMacdonald at the provincial Jill\u2014\nHarry Crowe of Ymlr district ls etlll\na ctty vlaltor\u2014And It. may have been\nHarry who phoned me to say that\nPat Shermi woa a llttle dlsap.\npointed becauw he didn't get the\nJob of minister of mines\u2014But 1\nhaven't seen Ptt of lato to check\nup on this\u2014But I also heard from\nanother source that Jack St. Denis\nlg to be made superintendent ol\nsnow plowing ln the Ymlr dlatrlct\nthis winter\u2014How's that for the dayi,\ngossip?\u2014There ls a touch of nature\n\u2014A touch of Industry\u2014A touch\nof polttlcs-and a touch of buslneaa\u2014Should please people of all\nwalks\u2014 Maybe\u2014\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-WEDNEMMY MORNINO, NOVEMBER lft. 1933\nt\u00a3<y>'\nTHK  FRENCHMAN'S  BIRDEN\nu  Vlctolre   (P\u00bbrl\u00bb.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally News of\nNovember 22, 1923J\nTemperatures yesterday were 23\nand  32  degrees.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGriff Morris, former physical Instructor here, was heard over the\nradio from Edmonton last night.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe city band yesterday held a\ncharivari for Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Carter, Mr. Carter being an enthusiastic patron of thc band.\nArthur Oliver returned last night\nfrom Kenora. Ont., where he has\nbeen since  September.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMlss Alma Alice Hodgson and Wilfred Barrett were united In marriage\nat   Fruitvalc   yeaterday.\nThe Truth About\nthe War, Secret\nDiplomacy, Etc,\nTo the Editor:\nSir: The article entitled \"The\nCurse of Secret Diplomacy\" by the\nRev, W. J. silverwood appearing In\nyour Issue of the 17th* Instant has\nhurprlsed me very much. Not that\nI doubt the accuracy of the facts\npresented nor that I question tha\nlogic of the reasoning but I did\nnot Judge that an Anglican clergyman would, within 15 years of the\nfirst armistice day, dare to speak\nhis convictions s,j freely and 1 was\nnot a little surprised that The Nelson Dnlly Newa had the courage to\npublish the article. It has been said\nthat the first casufllty in any modern war ls truth nnd that the first\nof many liberties of which the\nbelligerents are deprived ls the right\nto express their honest convictions\nabout the Justice of the cause for\nwhich life and property are being\nsacrificed. But ln spite of the Intensity or four years' of national madness, ln spite of fanatic efforts to\nprolong and perpetuate this madness, people are slowly beginning to\nassert their right to know the facts\nand to draw their own conclusions.\nIt haa been said:\n\"Truth crushed to earth shall rise\nagain.\nThe eternal years of Ood are hera.\nBut Error wounded wrlthea in pain,\nAnd dies among her worshippers.\"\nThe opening sentence of Mr. Bll-\nverwcod*a very  able  article reads:\n\"It Is with shame and anger that\npeople lu all civilized countries\nlearned of secret treaties made by\nallied diplomats during thc war.\"\nRev. Mr. Silverwood then proceeds\nto give details of alx Iniquitous\nbargains that disgraced diplomacy\nduring the course of the war, But,\nI presume, that Mr. silverwood ls\naware of the fact that secret diplomacy was thc curse of Europe long\nbefore the opening of the World\nWar. In fact If we are to believe\nArthur Ponsonby, a member of the\nBritish parliament and at one time\nunder-secretary for foreign affairs,\nsecret diplomacy was tho major\ncause of England's participation tn\nthe war. I have before me a copy\nof tho Manitoba Free Press dated\nJanuary \u00ab, 1929, in which a book\nby Arthur ponsonby entitled \"Falsehood lu Wartime\" is reviewed on\nthe front page. Severol quotations\nIN  Riven  from the work.  I should'\nlike   to  copy one  as  given   ln  the\nManitoba  Fret) Press on date  given\nabove,\nPonsonby wrote: \"Our prompt entry ln the war was necessitated by\nour commitment to France. Thla\ncommitment was not known to parliament. It was not known to alt\nmembers of the cabinet. More than\nthis. Its existence was denied. How\nbinding the moral ogreeraent was\nsoon   became  clear.\n\"Whatever may have been the\ncause of the war the Oerman Invasion of Belgium was certainly not\none of them. Nor waa It even the\nreason of our entry into the war.\nBut the government, realising how\ndoubtful it was whether they could\nrouse public enthusiasm over a\nsecret obligation to France, was able\nto repreaent the Invasion of Bel-\nglum and the Inlrlngment of a\ntreaty of neutrality as the causo of\nour participation.\"\nIn 1920, we In Canada, were atlll\nwar mad. Chargea of lack of patriot-\nIsm were hurled against the Free\nPreas for daring to repeat the words\nof Ponsonby. There was no attempt\nto deny the facta but without atat-\ntng the cause of their anger many\nof our leading Journals poured out\ntorrents of abuse on the unfortunate\nauthor of \"Falsehood ln Wartime.\"\nBut there are algns of a return to\nsanity. Just the other day another\ncarefully guarded secret of diplomacy leaked out from Washington.\nSome of the secret messages aent\nduring the war were decoded and\nmade public and for the first time\nthc Oreat American public learned\nthat the war could have been closed\non advantageous terms to the allies\nfully 10 months before Armistice\nday. But. there was no abuse of\nthose who had been unpatriotic\nenough and traltoroua enough to\ngive this bit of newa to tho American  public.\nSome years ago McClure'a magazine published a series of artlclea on\nthe war entitled \"It's Time You\nKnew tlie Truth.\" I wonder lf the\ntime haa really come for the people\nof Canada to hear and know the\ntruth about the war. The time Is\ncoming when, with all due humility,\nwe shall trace every atep of ojt participation tn the ttttt cata\u00bb:rophe\nand pass the Judgment of our own\nunsparing conscience on our actions\nBut, I fear, thft war madneas atlll\ndominates our mentality and that\nmany years must pass before we can\npasa Judgment upon our actlona in\nthe light of truth, acting under the\ncompelling power of reaaon.\nCANADIAN.\nNelson. B.C., Nor. 31,  1933.\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nAUNT HET\n\"Tl.ey thought I was feelln' had\nbeoauae I didn't smile none, but\nI ttttt off In a hurry on' forgot\nto   put   my   teeth   in.\"\nGROWTH   OF  AIR  IMMfOM\nSteadily and unostentatiously, air\ntravel has nude tremendous strides\nwithin the British Empire during\nthe last few years, it Is shown by\nnew statistics furnlihed by Imperial Airways, Inc. During six months,\nf.om April to Scpt-rmber of this year,\nthc 'passengers, mails aud freight\ncarried on the routes from England\nto Egypt, India, Burma and Africa\nshowed an aU-round Increase ot\n45.54 per cent, as eompnred with the\nsimilar period ln 1932. The percentage increase ln p:.ssenge:s wna 41-92\nper cent. In mails It was 46.18 per\ncent, nud In freight 40-59 per cent.\nBy air mall to India, ns revealed\nby the latest figures, appreciably\nmore than 40,000 letters are now\nbeing alr-borns weekly, while on tho\nextension which was established\nrecently across India, between Karachi and Calcutta, thc loads ln each\ndirection are already avcraglnj 11.000\nletters a we:k.\nStatistics tor the first six months\nof 1933 have been available la ie-\ngard to sir transport In South Africa. They ahow that, during thts\npe:lod, the total number of passengers by airway who disembarked ln\nSouth Africa was more than 150\nper c;nt greater than ln a corres-\np*->nding mon:ii of 1932, while the\nnumber embarking on air journeys\nin South Africa was 250 per cent\nhigher than in thc previous ftttt.\nIt  Is  tho same story nil over  th;\nEmpire except in Canada. This country, for various reasons, has lagged\nbehind the rest of the Commonwealth, although owing to the vast\ndlatancea and scanty population,\ngreater use of air transport would\nbe of much benefit to Canada. However, steps are being taken in ths\nright ril:ect.;on. This year and last\nyear thousands of single unemployed\nmen have been placed in work camps\nthroughout tha nine provinces and\na large percentage is engaged upon\nthe construction of airport sites.\nWhen thc work ls completed thc\nnumber or reasonably good landing fields will have been quadrupled,\nand one of the obstacle* to thc\ngrowth of air transportation wlll\nhavo been overcome. There can be\nno doubt that air travel in Canada\nwill Increase trftnendously within\n.ho next decade.\u2014London Free Press.\nDESTRUCTION   OF   WEALTH\nWhy should we limit thc destruction of v-Xalth for the common good\nto pig. and wheat and cotton and\ncoffee? If it Is a good thing to\nkerp people busy cutting down the\ngoods that they posses so that\nthey can get rich on what Is left,\nwe might turn ou; attention to\nhouses and shops and theatres and\n! ships. If wc hum up enough houses\njand sink enough ships, the time\nwill soon come whm some one will\n[have a Job building new ones. Then\ni every one will be qutte happy, elnce\nAuction and\nContract Bridge\nBy the World's Leading Authority,\nMILTON C.  WORE\nWHEN  TO  STOP LLAD1NU\nTRUMPS\nIn the old daya when Whlat was\nthe popular card game ot England,\nthere wu no dummy and, therefore,\na player with a strong trump holding could not tell whether his\npartner had aupport for It or not.\na saying became prevalent among\nEnglish Whist players to tbe effect\nthat ten thousand men were walking the streets of London barefoot\nbecause they had failed to lead\ntrumpa with a hand containing five.\nIn Contract It ls much easier to\ndetermine whether trumps should\nbo led than lt la m Whlat, but\nthere are many cases, even when\nadverse trumpa csn be easily drawn,\nin which a precipitate lead may be\nunfortunate. This was admirably\nillustrated by the following hand\nplayed ln a recent tournament:\n\u2666 7*5-4\n\u25a0tm\n\u2666 0-1-5\n\u2022fin\n-$14444 1 \u2014 i\n\u2666J*l\ntm\n1   Dm-,  -\n\u25a0HOW\n\u2666 4-3-2\n\u2666 ll-K-lll\na i.1\n-OUT*\nXtl.tA\n4141\n\u2022 3-2\nIMM\n\u2666 A-J-IH          e-'\u00bb\nWith North nnd South illent, the\nbidding was: West one Spade, East\ntwo Hearts. West three Spades (virtually a forcing bid,) Eturt three\nNo Trumps,  and  West four Hearts.\nSouth, not wishing to lead from\nhis Club tenaw. selected the fourth\nbeat Diamond for his opening and\nWest won with the King. At moat\ntablea three rounds of trumps followed, exhausting the adversaries,\nand tho Jack of spades led from tha\nEast hand so aa to establish West's\nspades while he still hsd an entry\nto get In and cash them. The\ntrouble with thts play was that lt\nleft the Club suit In a most **nil-\nnetable condition. However, the\nAce of Spades was held by South\nand at some tables when South\nwon with It. he led the Aoe of\nClubs and followed with another\nClub, thus Mtabllahlng East's Queen\nand handing East the game on a\nplatter. The majority of Souths,\nhowever, when they won with the\nAce of Spades led the Jack of Clubs,\nNorth covered with the King and\nreturned a Club, thus setting the\ncontract.\nAt less than halt the tables, the\nhand was plsyed correctly. After the\nfirst Dlsmond trick, the Aoe and\nKing ot trumps were cashed, leaving\ns small trump ln dummy, and then\na spade wes led In order to establish that eult: played ln this\nmanner, nothing that North-South\ncould do would defeat the contract.\nTOMORROW*  HAND\nThe following hand will be the\naubject of tomorrow's Bridge article. Before reading the description\nmake up your mind what Is tbe\nbest defense against a five Diamond\ncontract.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dolly News of\nNovember 22, 1913)\nWith an output ln October of\n3581 tons, the Queen Victoria mine\nat Beasely beat all records for the\npresent year.\nMen aro working ntght and day at\nthe Standard mine in an effort to\nget out 2500 t ma of ore for treatment at Argentine,  Kan.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMayor Keefe, E. E. Robinson, Pred\nIrvine. Lealie Crawford. J. V. Murphy. J. J. Walker, A. Blaney. C. W.\nAppleysrd. W. E. Fotheringham, Alex\nSutherland and O- 8. Rees compos?\nthe floor committee for the Charity\norganisation'a ball.\nTHAT BODY OF YOURS\nBy JAMES W. BARTON,  MD.\nA NEW  TREATMENT  TOR\nPIMPLES  OR  ACNE\nTen years ago tbe biggest selling\npoint about an article was that\nIt. was good for the health; articles\nto Improve one's appearanoe\u2014beauty\npreparations\u2014stood aa low as 30th\non the list. Today ws find the\nhealth appeal u strong as ever but\nthe beauty or \"appearance\" appeal\nnow stands at the head of the list\nwith'the health appeal.\nOne of ths disfiguring conditions\nthat causes distress, embarrassment,\nan Inferiority complex. Is \"pimples\"\nor acne as lt la now called. Coming\non In the teens and remaining until\nnear the age of thirty, Just when\nappearance means so much, there Is\nno question but that some gland\nconditions\u2014thyroid, parathyroids or\nother gland\u2014so changes the body\nprocesses that certain foods are\nnot handled aa well as they should\nbe  and acne results.\nThus cutting down on certain\nfoods has helped tome cases, and\nusing ultraviolet rays haa helped\nothers.\nWhat may be a wonderful dlacovery and a great blessing to theee\ndistressed individuals ls put forward by A. Dotkoraky and S- B.\nPiatt, Chicago. Being sufferers wltb\nacne themselves, they worked under\nthe supervision of Dr. A, B. iAick-\nhardt.\nAs the ultra violet rays improved\ntheir condition temporarily, they got\nthe idea that vitamin O Itself might\nbe of help, so starting off with 10\ndrops a day of viosterol ln oil 350\nD, increasing the dose gradually until at the end of the two weeks\nthey were taking 30 drop* t day\nthey continued the viosterol for another two weeks, or four weeks ln\naU.\nAs this treatment lessened the\nnumber of pimples or pustules aa\nthey are called, by at leaat 80 per*\ncent. It was decided to try the\ntreatment on 30 men and women\nof tha University of Chicago, ranging age from 17 to 30. They were\ngiven exactly the same treatment,\nthat is from 10 to 30 drops the flrat\ntwo weeks and 30 drops the eecond\ntwo weeks.\nAfter a period of from four to\nfive weeks of this treatment there\nwas a 70 to 80 percent Improvement\nln 00 per cent of the cases- In the\nremaining cases there wss A 40 to\n50 per cent  Improvement.\nThe way the Improvement was\ndetermined wna hy counting the\npustules on the chest, faoe, snd\nback before and after taking the\nv)osterol. In 10 cases for a period\nof 3 weeks the vlesterol was discontinued and the pustules again lnereaaed.\nThe above experiment should\nstimulate phyalclans to try this\ntreatment as the usual treatment\nIs slow and discouraging.\nVERSE\nTHE   UOHT    IN    VOIR    EYES\nIn a neat little cottage surrounded\nwith snow.\nSet a grey aged pair by a hearth's\ncheerful glow\nAnd  the soft  fllrk'ring  shadows of\ntwilight   define\nLove's    sweet    enchantment    each\nheart doth entwine.\nAs   he   gazed   on   the   faoe   ln   his\nloving embrace.\nHe whispered  those  words tenderly.\n\"Through life I have prlis'd\nThat aweet smile   In  your  eyes\nCause lt tells of your love for me.\"\nChorus:\n\"There's light ln your eyea,\nNever seen ln the ekles\nLike a beacon that gleams o'er tho\nsaa:\nAnd   the   beautiful   glow,   wben   I\nsee   tt  I  know\nIt la shining for no ons hut me.\"\n\"The locks  once  so  dark  are  now\nwhite    on your brow,\nBut your smile ls more welcome the\nolder   we   grow.\nPot  the  love   in   our  hearts,  care\nnor  sorrows   bedim;\nTime   only   strengthens   the   lore\nthat's   within.\nThrough   tho  years  we   live   yet,   I\nshall never regret\nAs long as my eyes  they  can see.\nI   wlll   live   for   the   light   that   ls\nalwsys so bright\nIn your eyea that  are smiling to\nme.\"\n\u2014J. W. MULHOLLAND.\nCHERRY   BLOSSOMS\nThe spring-time comes with songsters  singing\nOn gladsome wing, midst cherrle'a\nsnow-white bloom;\nTheir mating song on echoes sweetly ringing,\nIn fragrant bower their warbling\nvoices croon.\nAnd I alone, await my love's returning\nTo be his bride, as promised long\nago.\nBeneath tbe cherry blossoms I am\nyearning\nOh, Patsy boy!  because I Iots, I\nlove you so.\nThe   daylight   fades   and   songaters\nthey are Bleeping\nIn   flow'rlng   trees   while   lonely\nmaiden plnea.\nThrough moonlit shades, came footsteps softly  creeping\u2014\nIn   sweetheart's   arms   ahe   blissfully   reclines.\n\"My   sweet   Coleen,   I   heard   your\nvoice a-calllng\nOn   whispering   winds   across   the\nrolling  aea.\nAmidst the shower of  faded  petab\nfalling,\nI give my love,  my Uttle sweetheart all  to  thee,\"\nJ. W. MULHOLLAND\nTYPEWRITING\nLltrrarv,  Scientific  and\nTechnical  Manuscripts.\nEXPERT SERVICE\u2014MODERATE\nCOST\nrrompt Delivery of Work sent\nby Mall.\nANNE   BELL\nPubllo Stenographer\nHotel Vanoouver, Vancouver, B.C.\nThirty Years Ago\n(From The Dslly News tt\nNmember 22,  1903)\nThe Granby ora shipments ln ths\nBoundary for the past week, 18,802.\nwere tbe largest In the company's\nhistory.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. McGirr wss elected honorary\npresident; WUUam McQueen president snd B. L* Master-son secretary\nof the Poplar Trades committee, a\nnew body organized ftt Poplar last\nweek.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFred Starkey was reelected president of the Conservative association\nat a meeting last night.\n\u2022 s   s\nSoft weather last night prevented\nthe curling tournament from getting\nunderway, but W. Richardson, lessee\nof the rlnk, has made all preparations for colder conditions.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE, L. Klnman haa received a contract to deliver 100,000.000 fest of\nlogs at the Trout Lake mill of the\nCanadian Timber ds Sawmills, Ltd.\nBASE FRENCH COIN\nOne reason why the Daladler\ngovernment was overthrown wss\nthat It had what the French people\nconsidered the Impertinence to issue five-franc pieces with an intrinsic nickel value of less than half\nOf one franc. The people of France\nInsisted they did not see much\ndifference between that and what\nthe United States had done to the\ndollar and lncldently may do to\nthe franc\u2014Paris Corespondent.\nSOLID COMFORT\nFor\nHEAT AND SATISFACTION\nLETHBRIDGE\nIMPERIAL COAL\nThe Standard\nFUEL\nEconomizer\nSaves one ton of coal in\nfour, conserves heat lost\nin chimneys and eliminates\nsoot.\nOperates on any type of\nstove or furnace\nInspect this money saver at\nKootenay Plumbing\n& Heating Co., Ltd.\n313 Baker St.\u2014Phone 666\nIt Is only the work that Is needed,\nnot the pigs and wheat and shops\nand houses and ahlpa.\u2014Fo:t WlUlam\nTl mrs-Jour nal.\nRUSSIA'S   STAKE   IN   CHINA\nRussl.-in investments ln 1930, In\nthe who.e of China, amounted to\nB33.5&0.000 gold rubles (value about\n30 cents each). Of thts amount 510.-\n300.000 was Invested In Manchuria.\nThe Manchurian estimate Included\n410,300,000 gold rubles ss representing Soviet Russia's interest in the\nChinese Eastern Railway; of the\nremaining 100,000,000 gold rubles,\n[nearly all was concentrated ln one\n'elty, Harbin, wher- there is s permanent settlement of Russians.\u2014\nBy Dr. Renter, authority on Russian   Economics.\nMagic Hot Pad\nA most marvelous Heat Producer for indoor or\noutdoor use.\nNONELECTRIC\nALWAYS READY - NO COST TO OPERATE\nNo deterioration when not in use\nPRICE $1.60 EACH\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale, Retail Quality Hardware\nNelson, B. C.\nTHE ARCH FIEND ON THE JOB AGAIN\njt mt. piece or- wlmv\nIS THIS ?\n.   XWAT IS TWt* STRAJ***,\nSINISTER 7H-V THAT\n2AMDKR IS FMENDISMUY\nPREPARING  POR\nTOMORROW f\n THr NEUON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNINO, NOVEMBER Jl. H33 \u25a0\n\/\/^\nFAOE KITE\nHP FIRST\nCAR POLES\nCanadian Smelters\nBusy on Seventh\nCar of Ore\nMRDAJl. B.C., NOV. ill- Mrs. J.\noilmen  Is rapidly  recuperating.\nWorkmen ut it present engaged\ni the enlargement of the road camp\nere providing accommodation for\nBother 18 men with this Increase\n1 the number of men and the\nMvy fill finished much should be\nxompllshed whero the cuts are\nOt so heavy,\nP. Ophner arrived st the Rogers\nifglng cimp bringing a heavy truck,\nUd P. Tomplnlcs a team.\nH. Ophoer and Art Brett secured\nve  geese during tho week-end.\nMike Talerlco was ln luck when\ne brought down a heavy buck very\nLow to the highway at Atbara.\nThe canadlin Smelters. Umlt.d.\n\u25a0avo Just completed the loading of\npother heavy car of ore for the\nnil amelter. This ls the alxth car\nWd this yen- ind It la understood\nw returns keep consistently round\nie same figure. Another car wlll\nloaded   about   tlic   end   of   thc\nMk.\nTb* Rev. Mr. McKlnney of Procter\nta here and gave a motion picture\nlow to a Urge and appreciative\nIdlenoe.\nAmong the msny hunters noted\nire at present are A. Speers. R.\nevan and H. Coullng of Oreston,\nVance ind ptrty of Kimberley.\nItckwood tnd Wataon or Nelson,\n[r. Smythe and tw-p sons of Nelson.\nha latter securing a nice buck\nDd a itood big of ducks.\nMr. Martello left here to spend\nit long week-end In Trail. (\nDaisy Rogers, who attends high\ntbool  In Creiton arrived home.\nThe witer gauge tt Slough bridge\nlowt a drop of .8 foot for the\nvek  is -against a  gradual  rise for\nperiod of a month.\nThe   Rogers   Lumber   company   Is\nmaklntr much progress with the lagging hire the first cars were shipped\nat the beginning of the week. The\nlogs are taken direct from the woods\nto the can tt Atbara by truck saving\ntbe skidding la the buth.\nA CP-&. crew are at work remov.\nIng any loose rocks along the tracks\nbetween Kootenay Landing tnd Tye.\nRocks likely to be effected by tbe\nspring thaw next year are also being\nblasted tnd removed.\nThe Lalb brothers motor boat\nfrom Cultus Creek mine was here\nfor mining and other supplies.\nMrs. Parento, who hss been t pitlent ln the St. Eugene hospital,\nOranbrook. for the put sevrral weeks\nIs Improving tnd ts expected home\nIn a few dtys-\nMOOT BANQUET\nTO\nBoard of Trade May\nDiscuss Honoring\nMacPherson\nCalifornia Girl\nWill Spend Winter\nVisiting Slocan City\nSLOGAN CITT. B. C, Nov. 21-\nMlst Beryl Talent of Longbeach, Cil.\nls spending the winter hen with\nher grandmother. Mrs. Palmqulst,\nand other relatives.\nB. O'Neail, principal of Thrums-\nTarry a school spent the week-end\nat his bome here.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Life and Mrs* A.\nS. Palmqulst, were visitors to Nelson  Saturday.\nMrs. M* Cimeron and Mrs. T,\nJ. Armstrong spent Friday the guesta\nof Mr. and Mn. R. D. Kennedy it\nLemon  Creek.\nMr. and Mrs. H. D. Curtis tnd\nMlss Catherine Curtis have returned \u25a0\nfrom  Kulo.\nMrs. H. Parker arrived home from\nYthk,   Cinal   Plats   and   Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Wstson of\nVictoria were guests Wednesdsy of\nMr.  and   Mrs.  P.  Pox.\nMr. and Mrs. Watson are returning from New York and Chicago.\nMr. Watton ls maniger of the Vlctorli brtnch of the Hudson Bay\nstore.\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. Oraham, Mr.\nand Mrs. T. McNelsh. Murray McNelsh snd Mis. W. A. Blackbourne\nwere visitors to New Denver tnd\nSilverton.\nA proposal- to honor the Koot-\nenty'i provincial ctbinet mlnliter.\nHon. p. M- Macpherson. minister ot\npublic works, by a public banquet,\nat which the members-elect of\nother Kootenay-Boundary ridings\nwould also be guests, la being mooted ln board of tnde circles ln\nNelson.\nJ. R. Hunter, secrettry-treuurer\nof the Associated Boards of Trade\nof Eastern British Columbia, ls one\nof the originators ot**he proposal,\nwhich may come up for discussion\nat the next meeting.\nIt li presumed the new miniate;\nwilt before long be visiting different   parts  of   the   province   to  be\nGOOD   HOUSEKEEPING\nBy Circle No. 4 of St. Paul's Ladies' Aid.\nNone but tested recipes will be  inserted.\nTAAU11   PIE\nThree cupt chopped mitt, make\nt thick corn meal mush, (tbout 1\ncup corn meal.) Line sides snd bottom of ptn with mush, drop meat\non this ind sdd 1 can tomato sauce,\n1 can ripe olives and about 3 teaspoon* chill powder md 1 small\ncsn mushrooms. Sprinkle with bread\ncrumbs and dot with butter and\nbake 3ft mlnutea. If mush hu\nsoaked up sauce, servo sauce wllh\nPie.\nCRAB  CHEESE   DELIGHT\n3 tibleapoom green p:ppcr\nil   tablespoons   IH***.!-'\n2 tablespoons butter   ,\n1 j    teupoon   mustard\n14 teupoon salt\n*t cup milk\ncup  catsup\n'. cup grated cheese\n1  cu_> crab meat\ni   tig   beaten   light\nLOBSTER CUTLETS\nPrepare thick, white tauoe. Add\nto sauce 2 oups lobster mest, broken\nor picked in small bits, 1 teaspoon\nlemon juice and 1 well beaten egg,\n-Va teupoon flnrly chopped parsley\nand few grain* nutmeg, spread mox-\nture on plate, set aside until cold.\nShape in cutlet*, dip tn crumbs\nand fry in deep, hot fat. Drain\non brown paper. Serve with tartar\nsauce and garnish with parsley.\nG OOI, ASH\nCook two psckages dry noodles\ntill tender tn about a quarta of\nsalted water. Pry till brown. 1 pound\nground round steak, and Vz pound\nground veal, pry l chopped onion\nand l chopped green pepper in little\nbutter. Combine the three mixtures\nln large mixing bowl; add l csn\ncom, 2 cans tomtto soup and sesson with aalt and pepper and chill\nsauce  and mix well.\nTake deep pan, pill half of mixture In and add 1 can ripe olives,\nthen sprinkle or. this 1 cup grat:d\nheene,   cover   with   remaining   hslf\nKIMBERLEY IS\nHELD IN FOG\nBegin Making of Ice;\nMusic Recital\nAppreciated\ncj.yenn. ,\nCoo\/.  .isorfiA  ptpp**:.-.  tnd  butter\ncome familiar with condition**, and j _ minul*a, blen 1 In flour aud then\nthe   Idea   would   be   to   have   Uut\u00ab$tf seasoning, oataup, cheeae, milk, j of   mixture,   aprlnkle   with    bread\nfunction coincide with hla flrat visit and cook 10 minutes. Beat egg and crumba  dot  with  butter  rand  cook\nadd   io   other   mUtu.t,   laatlji   add   till aoup bubblea up through,\ncrab meat and aprlnkle with cheeae      Thla makes an excellent gueat aup-\nand bake 15 mlnu-;a. 'per dlah serving about 18 people.\nto his home district, If agre?al:l2\ncanyWciYyhas\nbadminton club\nMrs.  W.  M.   Archibald   Returns From Rossland\nA funeral eervloe was stopped by\nthe minister who wts reading the\nBible beside an oprn coffin ln Aberdeen. He thought the face of the\ndesd woman flushed, but medical\nevidence proved she was dead.\nWhy\nVicks VapoRub is best\nfor Children's Colds\nTHERE'S good reason why\nVlckf VapoRub ii pre.\nferred by mothers, the world\nover, In treating the frequent\ncolds ot tbelr children. Its\ntreatment is external\u2014 therefore stfe. It avoids the risks\nof constant internal dosing.\nVapoRub can be used as freely\nand as often as needed, even\non the youngest child.\nFomoui Poultlc.-Vopor Action\nJust rubbed on throat and\nchest at bedtime, VapoRub\nrelieves a cold by Stimulation\nand Inhalation. Through the\nskin, it \"draws out\" soreness, passages. This combined poul*\nAt the same time, its medi- tice-vapor action works all\ncated vapors are released by through the night. By morn-\nbody-beat and breathed in ing, almost always, the worst\ndirect to the irritated air-   of the cold is over.\nEQUALLY GOOD FOR ADULTS\nSociety\nThis column la conducted by\nMrs. H. Madden All newa of t\nsocial niture. including receptions, private entertainments,\npersonal items, marriages, etc\nwill appear ln this column.\nD.  L.  Kerr.  L.  K.  Urien,  J.  O.\nBunyan and WUllam Irvine returned reoently  from * motor  trip to\nSpokane.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nTudor Rutherglen was a visitor\nla the city yesterday from longbeach.\n. \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nT   Romano.  Clirence  McDougall,\nns   tho   gime   went   well   there   two j Bfrt ciartof Tommy Bird and Bobby\nBell   left   yesterdiy   on   a   motor\ntrip   through   the   Slocin   district.\n*   \t\nCJIK8T0N, Nov. 21\u2014Intersecttonal |\nrivalry ln the shuttle sport is now\np.omlsed with the organisation on\nThursday night of a badminton club\nat Canyon city, which has rented\nthe oommunlty hall at that point for\ntwo nlghti each w?ek, snd early ln\nthe year hope to be able to furnish\nopposition to the more experienced\ntalent it Creston. ta well as Yahk.\nCanyon club starts with a membership of 1$ which ls expected to\ngrow to at least a couple of doien,\nand threo years ago. The club offl\ncers are: President, Robert Burns;\nvloe-presld'nt, Albert, Nelson; secretary-treasurer,   MUs    Eleanor   Blair.\nCreston Badminton club li planning to Invade Yahk this evening\nfor Its firet out-of-town gsme this\n.season* A couple of weeks a-jo Yahk\nwas it Creaton when tbo locals\nplayed a series of men's, ladles' aod\nmixed doubles. In which Creston\nwon sbout 20 of the 30 sets played,\nMrs. W. M. Archibald is bsck from\na vlilt at Rossland, during which\nshe was a guest speaker at a largely\n.it tended meeting of the Young\nPeople's society of the United church\nIn thst town at which she presented\nan Illustrated lecture on a recent\ntrip to South Africa. On the Roseiand trip sbe was accompanied by\nM*. Archibald, who .eturned with\nher.\nMlss Iris Taylor, wbo Is taking\nfourth year high -Khool work at\nCranbrook. was a week-end visitor\nwith htr parents. Mr. and Mrs. ll, u.\nTsylor.\nMrs. Charles Perry of Golden his\narrived on a vlilt it the home of\nher parents, Mr. ind Mrs. W. H.\nCrawford.\nHoward and Douglas Corrle were\nweek-end visitors with frlenda at\nCranbrook. They state that Cres-\nton's reputation for fist basketball\nhas travelled far. snd at both Cran*\nbrook and Kimberley there Is a\ngreat desire to irrangc home and\nhome games with Creston mens and\nladles'  teams.\nMlss Dorothea Spratt, a recent\ngraduate at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital. Nelson, who is vlaltlng at\nher home here, Is taking night duty\nat present at Creston Valley Public\nhospital.\nMlss Margaret Speaker left to visit\nrelatives and friends at Nelson and\nTrail.\nMr. and Mri. A. Donaldson, who\nhave resided in town for several\ntttn, have leased the E. Langston\nplnrr at Camp Lister and moved\nthere.\nRichard and Douglaa Penson were\nvisiting with Kimberley friends dur-\nIng tho past week.\nTrail\nFROM\nDay to Day\nby A. R. J.\nJ3- -Low whitei.\ntarn\ncosting less than\never before\nFart-and-a-quarttr Round Trip\nfichu to Important points in\nEastern Canada Generous\nStopover privileges  en route.\nOn Sale\nuntil Jan. 5\nReturn Limit t\u2014Three Months\nAlio rery low Fotm to Atlantic tea-\nboard when part oi orereeas booking!.\nStopover*. Return limit Five Monthi.\nAsk Your Nearest Ticket Agent\nMrs. W. Blner and Mrs. J. P.\nHerron wero joint hostesses yesterday afternoon at the home of the\nformer. Latimer street, to Mrs. J.\nVlvi-in's and Mrs. M*J. Varseveld'e\nsewing circle of the Catholic Women's league. The tea table wai\ntastefully centered with white and\npink chrysanthemums and those u-\nflatlng ln --serving were Uta. Leo*\nS. McKlnnon and MUa Betty Blner.\nThoae attending Included\u2014Mrs. A.\nA. Perrler. Mrs* T. L* Marquis. Mrs.\nA. La-point. Mrs. H* B. Lindsay,\nMrs. a. Choquette, Mrs. A. W.\nStubbi. Mrs. H* Oagnon, Mrs. M\nj. Varseveld, Mrs. J. Vivian. Mri.\nC. Romano, Mrs. P. Denlson. Mrs.\nW. MeDomld, Mrs. a* Bouchard,\nMrs. u. LePage, Mrs. F. Murphy.\nMrs. L- 8. McKlnnon and Mrs.\nP.  J. Rahal.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLord and Lady Aylmer were city\nvisitors on Tuesday from Queens\nBay.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n1>. St. Denis returned yeeterday\nfrom a few dsys spent ln Spokane.\neee\nMr. Olbson of Deer park Is spending a few dsys in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022 . e\nMrs. w. R. Tate left yesterday\nmorning for her home In Calgary\naccompanied by her husband who\narrived In Nelson on Prlday. Mrs.\nTate has been visiting in the city\nfor tho past month at the home\nof her brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Penney.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. James and Miss Blanche Forsberg   were   motorists   to   the   city\nyesterday  from  New Denver.\n. \u2022    \u2022   \u2022\nA.   Ward   was  a   city   visitor   on\nTueeday  from  Valllcan.\n\u2022 \u2022    e\nMrs. Ollle wae a city visitor yesterdsy from Ymlr.\ns \u25a0**   \u2022\nP. P. Piyno accompanied by\nVenerable Archdeacon p. H- Oraham motored to TraU on Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Tawse were city\nvisitors on Tuesday from Willow\nPoint.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nO. I. Carter of kelowna ls spending a few days In the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr.  and  Mrs.  Coulter  who  have\nbeen   spending   a   holiday   in   Spokane returned home yesterday.\nEdgewood to Vote\non Highway Jobs\nLiberal Association Calls\nMeeting to Ballot\nBDGI_WOO(D. Nov. 21\u2014Tlie following advertisement appears on the\nlocal notice boards, and apparently\nls intended to refer to road appointment* In the event of their\nbeing vscinclea:\n\"Notice of Public Meeting.\n\"A public meeting will be held\nIn the Edrrwood hall on Monday\n27th Nov.. to deal with the following\nresolution:\n\"Thst this A_w>ciaUon call a public meeting of the voter*, and Including Mr. and Mri. Langllle, for\nDivide between Thompson and (he purpose of nominating a msn\nRussell creeka\u2014W. A. McNabb was I to contest with the nominee of the\nsgent for the following: M. A. Mc- Liberal Assn.. for each position; and\nNabb, Margaret; Allien McNabb. Al-1 that the election be held by bai-\nlieu; Mabel Dixon. Jim; Archibald ; lot In tho afternoon, from 1 to ft\nMcNabb, Arrhie; Hazel Wlttlchen, . o'clock, one week after the public\nOeorge; C. Ben-raael, Havi; O. M. i meeting of the voters. And. that a\nWlttlchen,   Wittichen;   J.   H.   Dixon,   oollrctlon   be   made   ut   the   meet\nClaims Staked by\nGuffin and McNabb\nDuring the past aummer considerable prospecting work was done on\nMiddle Sister mountain by Archie\nOuflin for various parties, and on\nthe divide between Thompson and\nRussell creek  by  W.  A.  McNabb.\nClaims ataked ln these two localities, and claims staked elsewhere, are included ln thc following list:\nWild Horse creek\u2014A. L. .Purdy,\nJ. F. Rosa agent. No. 2 B.C. Frac;\nJ. F. Rou, No. l B.C. Frac; No. 3\nB.C.  Frac.\nSitkum creek\u2014T. L. Parla waa\nagent for the following: J Radcllffe,\nHom.stake; M. W. Brown, Republic,\nQueen Victoria.\nHall creek\u2014Oscar A. Tapanllla,\nTapanllla; Louis Madien, O. Tapanllla,   agent.,\nPark Siding\u2014O. A. Haglund, Oold\nCup, BIu  Grouse.\nMiddle Sister mountain \u2014Archie\nOuffiu waa agent for the following;\nR. W. Hlnton. Dundonald; E. P. I\nOnwford, Spruce, E. C. Wragge,\nBalsam. Mountaineer; H. A, Wragge, j\nSultana: H. U Wragge, Laurlentlan.\n.).  H,  McDonald, Sovereign.\n\"There\".! hi speed lu thit thar\nhill-\"\u2014and many spills too . . but\nIt will be \"safe aa a church.\" What?\nWhy the new ski hill that the\n-rjl.tustsltntx   ttl   cl*,.; I.   g.vln,    W-.  ~Jg*\u00a3mjt  \u00abg\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., NOV. 21 \u2014\nThe Lole-la club met Wednesday\nntght ln the Anglican church elub\nrcoms with lfl young women preeent.\nJean Chat-son was elected vice-president, owing to the resignation of\n^ former member. Two new members were initiated, Mtss Ella ind\nBarbara McKay. The play for the\nwinter was chosen, rend ind the\nparts   assigned.\nAt the tea held recently by th*\nAll Saints church. Women's auxiliary a Christmas cake, made and\ndonated by Mr. Jarrett of the\nIdeal bakery was won by Mrs. Dow\nund Mrs. Burns. The correct weight\n7 lbs. IS on, being guessed by both.\nKimberley hss been enveloped\nin a dense white fog for three daya.\nIt moves acroes the valley like\nheavy wreaths of smoke, shuts\ndown thickly at night and lilts a\ntrifle in mornings, always freezing\na llttle. Every tree and shrub,\nevery buih and blade of grass ls\ndressed ln a feathery lice of frost\ncrystals. The delicate beauty of\nthis fragile whiteness against the\ndirk earth Is a delight, a sight\nworth going far to see, and all too\nrare. Tbe motorists are not so\nfond of it, cars are hard to *t*\neven at SO feet away and at night\nthe lights are shrouded and dim\nNot many oars ire out and thoee\nare going cautiously and slowly.\nThe Townslte Bridge club met at\nthe home of Mrs. E. James on\nThursday evening. Mrs. c MacKay\nwon flrtt prlee, Mrs. a. clerf second  ind Mrs, MaLelsh consolation.\nSkating is good on all the small\nevery attention to get into ship-\nbefore the snow files. About 30\nmembers of the club were out over\nthe weekend doing their damdest\nto assist in the hllla construction.\nIt la surprising to see some of the\nboys who probably have Bn office\nJob get there ind handle a sledge\nbreaking rock, liko an old vetenn\n. . . there'a hardly room for thought\nthat they might have had eiperi-\nenoe ln Sing Sing for they ire all\nquite young as yet.\nThe hockey girls of Rossland are\nanxious to get a feminine league\nstarted with teams from Trail and\nRossland participating. Mlss Eda\nVetere brought word to Trail Monday with this news. The girls also\nwlnt to play on the same dates\nas the Rossland and Trail Juniors,\nmaking   double-hesder  events.\nNow that the Rossland glrla hive\nexpressed the Idea It Is up to the\nhockey pulchritude of Trail to assist\nthem  In carrying out the  Idea.\nProbably the girls ln Nelaon could\nbe Interested. Seeing thst Rossland\nIs entering In the West Kootenay\nleague with Nelson, Trill and Kimberley, why not have a girls' teim\nfrom the eame cities represented In\na   ladles'   league?\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nThe Trail dty bind, under ths\nbatton of Conductor William Donelly reoently motored to Rock Creek\nto preeent a concert to the relief\ncamp men there. The interest shown\nby the cemp men was so enthusiastic\nand they so heartily Joined ln a few\nsongs lead by WUllam Ramaay of\nthe band that Mr. Ramaay ls ttttt\nto try to get the boya a piano.\nA short time ago the c, M. & S.\nGioo party motored to the isme\ncamp and gave the boys a few\nrejections and r-scelved as much enjoyment from giving the conoert as\ndid the audlenoe.\nThoee two organizations have shown\nthe right aplrlt in putting themselves\nout to give these boys a llttlo\nsomething out of the ordinary of\nthe drab routine, credit is Justly\ndue such practice of their muslcsl\ntalents.\ngroup! are going constantly to Mc\nClurls' lake. They started making\nloe ln the Arena lut Frldiy.\nNo mow and remarkable weather\nfor November, mild end sunny with\nfrosty nights. Old timers say lt\nis 40 years since we havo had a November like this.\nKeith Masken. chief operstor of\nthe Power plant at Bull river wu\nin Kimberley on Saturdsy. Mn.\nMacken hu beeu vlaltlng her sister ln California for some time.\nMr. and Mrs. e. o. Montgomery\nhave been spending a week it thi\ncout. They went as far a* Spokane by car then by train and art\nexpected home soon.\nClaire Holden wu in town lut\nweek and Mr. Chataon and Mr.\nFabreau motored down to Boswell\nFriday evening to vlalt the Holden\nfamily  for   the   week-end.\nOn Friday ovenlng Mr. Hobson\nheld a recital at the TJnlted church,\nthat parents and friends of the\npuplla might see how they are progressing. Some of the pupils were\nvery small and making their flnt\npublic appearance, a group from\nthe Orpheus choir and the United\nchurch junior choir aulsted with\nseven! numbers. Many of the violin pupils performed excellently. A\nviolin and plino duet by Tommy\nand Aleo Caldwell wu especially\nappreciated. Mildred Hobson'* playing of the Largo wu tlie outstanding event of the evening. Mr. Nord-\nlund wm chairman.\nThe program wu as follows;\nViolin selection. \"Maple Leaf\",\nschool orchestra. Violin solo, \"La\nPaloma.\" Lily Ashe, aong, \"There's\nMusic ln the Air\" junior choir;\nviolin solo. \"Jaunlta\". Beatrice Hibbert; song, \"Who Taught You\"\nfive girls; violin golo. \"Violets,\"\nJlhimy Douglas; violin selection,\nschool orchestra; violin solo, \"Jingle\nBells.\" Bobby stulrt; violin solo,\n\"Whip-poor-Will\" Pearl Dolaon; song\n\"Daisies Won't Tell\" Ola B\u00abntle>\nand choir: violin solo. \"La Nlnlta\"\nKenneth Clements; selection, aenlor\norchestra; violin solo; \"Twinkle,\n_-_    _.   __ *_'\u201e \"* - . I Twinkle. Little star\" Jessie Munro;\n_\u00a3 \"HK22 '55S \u25a0\u00a3*,\u00a3\u00a3 *m -Might,* un. \u00bb _m*- mo\nstrides Saturday night ln league\ngames played at the Memorial hill.\nThe Wolves, which team has always\nlost this year, turned the tables and\ndefeated the Elks, 21-20. The Wolves  have  been  improving  rapidly.\nTlie F. X. Olrls, who are at th.i\nbottom of the Ladles' division lost\nsgsln Saturday but at hslf time the\nwore was only 7-8 against them.\nProbsbly in the next match they\nwill be able to hold their own ln\nthe neeond half of the  game.\nAbsent\" Mrs. Osterlow; violin solo,\n\"Lilacs\" AUco Entwlsle; tttttttt, two\nselections by Orpheus group; recitations, \"I Ain't Agoln' to Cry No\nMore\" and \"Plea\", Mrs. Vsnclse;\nviolin solo, \"Spring Song\" Uoyd\nArmour; song, \"Memories\", Mildred\nHobson and choir; violin and piano\nduet, \"Mandollnata\" Tommy and\nAlec Caldwell; violin solo, \"Just\na Song at Twilight\", Violi Campbell;   eong.  -Wings\"   Phyllli   Dakln;\nMabel; J. D. Gorman, Jrrildlne;\nE. C- Cretney, Ann; J. M. Adams,\nAdams; Fred Smith, Smith; W. A.\nMoNibb, McNabb; Mr. LePage, LePage;  J. White, Oeannie.\nFawn   u.eek\u2014Ilobrct   Qua,    Overweight.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nGRADUATE  NURSES\nTO RAISE FUNDS\ning to defray expenses.\"\n\"The   following  are  the  nominees\nof  the   Lateral  Association:\n\"Road Foreman  (local)  W. Loughery.\n\"Upper    Road    Foreman,    F.   Nesbltt.\n\"Truck   Driver.  Lockwood\n\"Tractor   driver,   H.   Hopp.\n\"Orademan. L. J. c\u00ab Oans.\n\"At  the  election   by   ballot  qualifier!   voters  ara  allowed  to  vote   by\nproxy.\nWith   the    object    of   providing      \"This   notloe   Is   posted   by   the\nfunds   towsrd   equipment   for   thi {Edgewood   Llbe;al   auoclltlon.\"\npathological   laboratory  and  towird! \t\nthe Chrlatmaa Cheer fund, the | permtta to carry revolvers in\nNelson Graduate Nurtes association, i Canada are now lasued only by\ndecided   \u00bbt   a   special   meeting,   to   Roysl Cinidlin Mounted Police ind\nhold   a   dance   in   the   form   of   a\n6nowb.ll frolic ln the early future.\nOf  the  313.8B7  governmental  employees in Englind, 235.534 are men.the penitentiary.\nby provincial pollco authorities Any\nperaon found In possession of u\nrevolver for which he hu no legal\nlicense   Is   liable   to   five   years   In\nGreat\nNorthern\nmakes drastic\nreduction in fares\nNOW\n2C PER MILE GOOD ANYWHERE, EVERY DAY in\nCoachaa in rail Trains, and\nIn modern Tourist Slaaping\nCan on tht Empire Builder.\nDec. Ill and Ihcr.alur\n2C PER MILE ROUND TRIP\nCOOD IN STANDARD\nSLEEPING AND PARLOR\nCAR3 on payment of barth\nor aeat fare. 10-dar return\nlimit. 2\u00abc PER MILE\nROUND TRIP, fi montha\nreturn limit.\nPER MILE GOOD IN\nSTANDARD SLEEPING\nAND PARLOR CARS on\npayment of barth or eaat\nfart, A one-way fare good\nevery day.\nSpecial Low\nRound Trip Fares for\nTHANKSGIVING\nIN Tilt UNITED STATES\nTicket- on salo Nov. 28, 29,30.\nC ctt rn limit If) Dayi.\nPullman farms Reduced 23%.\nSec Great Northern Agent\nTravel by Train\nlor Comfort, fconomj.\nSecurity.\ny\nI'titiiii.in :\nSleeping\nCar\nI \u00abires\nReduced\nOne-\nI liiiil\nOn .mil Alter\ndec. I si\nPopular\niiininq Car\nPrices\ndyMea^hers^O\n607 Baker St. Phone 200\nNOVEMBER SALE\nMODEL COATS AND DRESSES IN A\nSPECIAL SALE TOMORROW\nDresses and coats of the better sort\n... exact duplicates of Paris and New\nYork models at the greatest saving of\nthe year ... garments of the finest\nquality material and workmanship\nand with the additional advantage of\nonly one of a kind ... see these tomorrow.\nWomen's Coats\nThis range includes many of the finest coats wi\nhave shown this season. Model coats of the best\nquality imported woolens. The season's last word\nin styles. Del Monte Hickey and Langburne makes.\nColors are Black, Brown, Green and Wine. Large\ncollars of fox, wolf, squirrel, French beaver,\nGenet and Persian lamb. Sizes 14 to 44.\nEACH   ?39.95\nWomen's Dresses\nModel dresses and some of thc smartest styles\nshown this season. Fine sheer woolens, rough\ncrepes, sheers and satins. New colors such as\nBrown, Green, Wine, Blue, Black and Scarlet.\nSizes 11 to 40. Values to ?39\u201er)0 each.\nSALE PRICE, EACH   f24.05\nTamwm_m_M_i\nviolin aolo, \u2022\u25a0Andante'' Oartrude nolo. \"Handles Larro\" Mildred Hob*\nfoater* Tlolln aolo. \"Caprldatta\" aon; cloelng chorua, \"I Love You\nVivian   Norton;   eonrr,   choir,   violin | Canada.\"   choir.\nVassar's Cash Meat Market\nGOOD BUYING FOR WEDNESDAY\nAND THURSDAY\nChoice Steer Beef,\nand Government\nInspected\nBoiling Beef;\n6 lbs. for \t\nGood Pot Koasl;\nPer lb\t\nSirloin Steaks;\nPer lb\t\nRound Steaks, Good;\n2 lbs.\nBoneless Slewing,\nLean; 3 lbs\t\n25'\n5'\n15<\n25'\nPork Steaks, Leun; -OPf\n2 lbs. for  ltd\nPork Chops, Loin; QF<.'\n2 lbs  OD\nVeal Chops; 1 P<\nPer Ib. _  IJ\nl-ggs, C. Grade; OA<\nPer doz  LV\n[_Rgs, Kresh Pullet ACt*\nExtras; per doz. 4J\nHaddie  Fillets; nnt*\nPcr lb  LV,\nliaby Beef  I,iter, 1A<\nSliced; per Ib. . 1\"\nI .inili (hops; \\ kt\nPer  Ib  M\nBreakfast  Sausage, Fresh\nMade; 1Ar>\nPer Ib.  IU\nKresh Red Salmon, OM\nSliced; per lb  Ot\n<;i\\{  Herring. Salt Cod,\nSalt Mackeral, Close prices.\nWc Deliver at These Prices.\u2014Phone 862\nsm*_^__________m\n4\n PAOE  SIX\nTHE NELSON DAILT NEWS. NELSON, B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAY MOBNINO, NOVEMBER It. IMJ\nLIQUORS SHOW\nSLIGHT DROPS\nC. P. R. and Ford 'A'\nGain Fractions at\nToronto\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials    100.29 off .99\n20 rails     39.98 up .53\nJO utilities -.. 23.40 off .22\nTORONTO. NOT. 31 (CP)\u2014Buying\nenthusiasm was lacking on the Toronto stock exchange today and\natocks drifted lower on thtn demand.\noils beld llnn.\nUquor stocks weakened with New\nTork. Canadian Industrial Alcohol\nand Distillers seagram eased %,\nthe forme: at 15 Vi and the latter\nat 10 34 Walkers common dropped\nHUH\nStrong In early trading Nickel' MONTREAL, Nov 21 (OP)\u2014The\nclosed off 20 centa at 21.70. Smelt- British pound starling led a general\nera lost a point at 135. CP.R. and (advance   on   Montreal   foreign\nPOUND MS\nTO OVER 5.25\nDiscount on U. S.\nDollar Over 3\nat Montreal\nFo d   A  both gained  fractions.\nInternational petroleum gained %\nto 22, MeCoM gained U and BA.\nlost   Vi\nNARROW RANGE\nIN WINNIPEG PIT\nWOTNIPBO. Nov. 31 (OP)\u2014Futures prloes drifted over a narrow\nrange In listless trading on the\ngrain exchange tociay and ended the\ndrab session at levels unchanged\nto   l,a   oent over  tbe  prevloua close.\nNovember -wheat closed at 6514,\nDecember at 64V\u00ab. May at 8814 and\nJuly at 89 % oents. Expo t buslnesa\nwas restricted to small amounts.\nLiverpool responded to the advance here yesterday, and also to\nunfavorable news from the southern\nhemisphere where new crops are endangered by weather conditions. Closing prloes ln the Liverpool market\nwere % to ?\u201ed higher. Buenos Aires\nwaa fractionally higher, while Chicago  was erratic.\nTrading in cash and coarse gralna\nwas  featureless.\nchange today, closing wi.h a gain of\nmore than 11 cents over Its previous\nclosing level. At the close practically\nall foreign currencies we.e holding\ngains. The pound sterling opened\nstrong at *5.l7'\/a and advanoed\nsteadily to its final quotation of\n\u00bb5.25 1-18, up 11 1-16 cents from\nMonday's   close.\nThe United States dollar moved\nwithin a nar.ow r*nge and at the\nclose was off 1-18 of one per cent,\ntrading at SH per cent discount.\nThe Prench franc firmed .10 cent\nat 8*29 cents.\nMetal Markets\nNSW YORK, Nov. 31 (API -Copv\nper quiet, electrolytic spot and future 8V\u00ab\nTin steady; apot and nearby\n:5.6a; future 55.87\nIron quiet;   unchanged.\nLead steady; spot New York 430;\nEast  St   Louis  4.18\nZinc dull; East St Louis spot\nand   future   4-60.\nAntimony   spot 7-35\nBar   silver   steady.   u   hightr   at>\nLondon copper. Standard spot\n\u00a339  7s  6d,   future  \u00a329  10s.\nElectrolytic   spot  \u00a333  10s;   futuri\n, \u00a339   10s.\nI      Tin.   spot   \u00a3337    13s   fld;    future\n\u00a3237 lOs\nLead spot \u00a311 2s 6d; future\n\u00a311   7s  3d.\nZinc, snot \u00a314 10s; future \u00a314\n17s 6d;\nBar silver quiet, unchanged al\ni8Hd.\nSUGAR STEADY\nNEW TORK. Nov, 21 (AP) \u2014Raw\neugar unchanged today at 3.15 foi\nspota with no aales reported.\nFuturea two to four polnta net\nhigher, sales 55.200 tons. Including 26,700 ln exchanges. Dec. 1.11-12;\nJan. 1.15-16; March 1.21-22; May\n1.26-29;  July   134;  Sept. 1.39.\nToronto Stocks\nNew York Stocks\nAllegheny    _      4V.\nAl    Chemical      144)4\nAmerican   Can     100\nAm   For   Pow   _..   ll\nAmerican    Ice 7\nAm Ma As Fdy 15-',\nAm Sm.lt Ss Re 46',j\nAm   Telephone     121*,\nAm  Tobacoo\nAnaconda\nAtchison ,\n77 Vi\n16',\n60H\nAuburn   Mo  _   47%\n12\".\n25%\n15%\n34\n28\n13\n38 V,\n41%\n1%\n38%\n72\n80%\n78\n5\n1\u00abH\nBaldwin\nBait As  Ohio _\nBendlx   Avla  \u2014\nBeth Steel \t\nCanada Dry  .\t\nCanadian   Pac\nCerro De Pasco\nChes Aa Ohio ..\nComm As South\nCon   Oaa   N   Y\nCorn  Products\nC Wright Prd  .\nDupont       \t\nEastman    Kodak\nElect Pr As Lite\nErie   \t\nFord English ..\nFord of Canada\nFirst Na Stores\nFreeport Tex ....\nGen Electric ....\nGeneral   Foods\nGeneral  Mo     33%\nOold   Dust       20%\nGoodrich  _   15%\nOranby     \u201e.._   10%\nOrt  North Pfd      19%\nOrt  Wat Sugar      36%\nHowe Sound     34.i\nHudson Motor*      11%\nIntv   Nickel   ...\nInter Tel & Tel\nJewel Tea Co _\nKenn Copper ..\nKresges S S \t\nKroegger is Toll\nMack Truck     31%\nMilwaukee   Pfd 5.4\nMon Ward ....\nNash Motors ..\nNat Dairy Prod\nN Pow & Ll\nN J* Central ..\nPac Oaa _ Elec\nPackard Motora\nPenn P. R ....\nPhillips  Pete   ..\nPure    OU    \t\nRadio Corp ....\nRadio Keith Or\nHem Rand ....\nRock Island _\nSafeway' Storea\nB Louis As S F\nShell Union _\n8 Oal Edlosn\nSouth Pac ...\nBtan Oil ot Ctl\nStan Oil of ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStow    Warner\nStudebaker   \t\nTex    Corp    \t\nTex   Oulf   Sul\nTlmken   Roller\nUfcder   Type   ...\nUn   Carbide   ...\nUn  OU  of Cal\nUn   Aircraft   ...\nUn   Biscuit      24%\nUn   Pacific     112%\nu 6 Ot Ira Ppe     18\nU  8  Rubber   ....   10\nU S  Steel       45%\nVanadium Steel     21%\nWeat    Electric       41%\nWoolworth     41J1\nWrigley         M\nYellow   Truck        S\n3%\n142\n31V,\n10%\nIt\n45%\n120\n7\u00bb\n16\n48%\n45%\n12%\n24%\n16\n33%\n27\n12%\n37%\n40\nIS\n37%\nIt..\n87%\n76\n4%\n16\nAconda \t\nArno ,\t\nAJ-x\t\nAmity \t\nA P conaolldated .\nAshley      \t\nAssociated    ,\t\nAna    \t\nBaltic oil .\n-%\n142%\n89%\n10%   Base   Metels\n7\n18\n45%\n120\nIVA\n16\n48%\n45%\nBarry   Hollinger\nBobjo    _\t\nBig Missouri \t\nBunkerhlU Ext ...\nCalmont  \t\nc and E Landa \u201e.\nCentral Manitoba .\nChemical  Research\n12%  Conlagaa      -\n56%\n48%\n22 V,\n35%\n23\n14%\n32%\n23%\n13%\n24%\n24%\n31%\n16%\n38%\n17\n4\n38%\n17%\n18%\n7%\n3%\n7%\n4\n44%\n2%\n9%\n16\n21\n44%\n47%\n\u00ab%\n6\n27%\n46\n30%\n33%\n40\n21%\n35%\n56\n48\n21%\n35%\n33\n19%\n14%\n10\n19%\n36%\n33%\n10%\n32%\n14%\n22%\n13%\n22%\n30%\n5%\n23%\n20%\n15\n36%\n16%\n3%\n37%\n17\n12%\n7%\n7Vi\n43%\n\u00ab%\n14%\n20\n43%\n4*8%\n6\n4%\n26%\n44%\n30\n33%\n47%\n20%\n34\n23%\n110%\n17%\n18%\n44\n30%\n40%\n40%\n4%\nDalhousle    \t\nEastcrest     ........_.._._\nFoothills\t\nFalconbrldge ........\nOoodflsh\t\nHome   OU    \t\nHowey   \t\nHollinger   \t\nInternational   Nickel\nKeeley\t\nKlrkland Lake \t\nLake Shore \t\nMacassa    _  \t\nMandy    _ \t\nManitoba   Baaln\t\nMcVlttle    \t\nMclntyn    -  _\nMcWatters\nMlnlnj Corporation , ,\nMurphy     \t\nNewboc      ,\nNipissing   .\nNoranda      \t\nNorthe.n Canada\t\nPend  Orellle  _\u2014\u2014\nPremier Oold  \t\nSan Antonio  \t\nSherritt   Oordon\t\nSudbury Baaln   .\nSterling   pacific   ._.\u2014\u2014_-_.\nSlscoe  \t\nStadacona   \t\nTech   Hughea\nThompson Cadallac .\nVlpond    _\t\nVentures     \t\nWright  Hargreaves  .\n.01%\n.04%\n1.12\n\u202203%\n1.02\n1.55\nM\n.03%\n.07\n1.65\n.12%\n.17%\n.42\n.01%\n.12\n1.00\n.11\n2.11\n12.,\n.02\nas\n33.13\n.64\nJi\n410\n3.33\n.13%\n1.53\n1.07\n10.50\nJ1.75\n.47\nJl\n47.50\n.86\n.05\n\u202202%\n1.01\n38.75\n.40\n1.85\n.01%\n.03\n2.50\n34.50\nJl\n.IS\n1.10\n1.38\n1.01\n1.10\n-16%\n1.55\n.09%\n5.65\n.18\n.40\nJl\n7.15\nMIHFS LOSSES\nUF TO $1.50\nNew U. S. Price on\nGold Ignored\nat Toronto\nTORONTO.\nhares   roUed\nNov    31    (CP)\u2014Gold\nllttle farther  down\nPRICES WEAKER\nAT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, NOV. 31 tCP) \u2014\nPrloes were weaker on the Vancouver stock exchange today. Bralorne lost 25 cents at 9*10, Cariboo\nOold wu off five cents at 3.05,\nReno was down four oente at B0,\nBridge River Exploration at 21\nwa\u00bb down three cents, Meridian lost\ntwo cents at 28 and Bridge Rlvei\nConsolidated at 20 was off one\ncent. Morning star at 18 and Pre*\ng ade coda\u00ab ln light trading on the\nStandard Mining and stock exchange,\nlosses   extending   up   to   11.50.\nVolume of sales was less than\n100,000   aharrs.\nA new high mark for newly mined\ngold pos.ed at Washington was ignored by the big Canadian producers.\nMore than 4000 shares of Mclntyre\nchanged hands and the prloe finished 91-50 down at 130.25 Dome\nlost 61 to 133.25 Lake Shore 91.50\nto $40.50; Wright Hargreaves 10\ncenu to $7.15; T:ck 20 oents to $5.65,\nUloncer 6 to $8.75 and Bralome 25 to\n$0.30.\nLess shaky than the golds, base\nmetal leaders closed with a moderately ateady tone. Noranda was\nunchanged at 34.50 and Nickel was\ndown only 10 cents at 21.80.\nIn oils, Acme and Eastcrest were\nup narrowly and Home Oil down 7.\nChemical Research lost 6.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Nov. 21 (AP) \u2014Closing: Br..__l_lan Traction $10*%; Canadian Paclflo $11%; Hydro Electric *.\\_\\ Intl Nickel $21; Distillers\ntla; Dunlop Rubber 36s 4%d; Electrical & M ind ord 16s Od; Ford\nLtd. 22a; Hudson Bay 31s 3d; Imperial Chemical 30s; Imperial Tobaooo 110s 6d; Mining Trust Ltd\n3s lOVad; Rand Mines \u00a35%; Rhodeslan Anglo Am 13s; Rhokana Corp\n\u00a35%; Crowns \u00a38%; Springs $5%;\nBast Oeduld \u00a30%; Rio Tintos \u00a318ft;\nRoyal Dutch \u00a321%'. vickers 8s\n4Hd.\nBonds-Canadian 4 per oent loan\n1033-58 \u00a3105%; Brlt 3% per oent\nConsols \u00a372%; Brlt 3% per cent\nwar loan \u00a3100; Brlt Funding 4s\n1060-00   \u00a3110%.\nAMERICAN CAN\nAT HEW HIGH\nCLASSIFIED SECTIO]\n'May We Serve You?*\nSHORTY'S   AUTO   REPAIR   SHOP\nAnU-Freete, Tire Chains, Floor Mats.\nFurs   remodelled,   repaired   and   re-\nlined.  Mrs.  Falrhead   Ph   346 U.\nExpert Watch clock and jewellery\nRepairs, our work Is satisfying\neervlce prompt. E. COLLINSON\nP.O. Drawer 1102, Nelson, B.C.\t\ntl a. STEVENSON'- Electric and\nacetylene welding; steel works.\nFor \"smart Permanent Waving -\nthelma;s BEAUTT_PARIOR3.\nPho-je 35 for I'axi\u2014-Sale, Reliable\nBuick Cars. NELSON TRANSFER\nOo.,__Llmlted,\t\nRadio Repairs, installations. Tube\ntesting   KOUTENAY MUSIC, Ph 58j\nPAINT1NO   AND   KLAL60MININO\nC.  Miller.  Phone  790L.\t\nSPENCER\n  DECORATiNO    \t\nReUabrs Auto Repairs with modern\nftQt'lpment   NELSON  TilANSFER.\n\u2022May We Serve You?*\n(Contlnutd)\nAVENUE SERVICE Gas, OU. Wash-\nlng, Oreaslng, etc   Drive In  today\nGEO. A MEERES\u2014For Oood Photographs\u2014Ask   Anybody \u2014Phone  48*\nPlease Phone 673 R for Mlss Thomp-\n__son Dressmaking. P.O. Box  1Q1._\ni F. COATES\u2014Registered provisional Electrical Engineer. Contracting,  Supplies.   Phone   766.\nNelson Dully News job Department\nfor all kinds of commercial print-\n_ ing. Phone 144. __\nMcGregor Bros. Portraits for Christ-\nmas. Phone 324.           \t\nR H MABER. rinsmithing, Pur-\nnace Repairs   Roofing   Phoue_ 655\nLIVESTOCK    roi\u00bb    BALI\nGOOD RELIABLE T\u00a3ILK <_\nfreshened.   Also   heifer,  to  fit.\nen ln April. Geo. Steele, Appled\nFOR   SALE\u2014PURE   BRED   J\u00ab\nbull.   2   yojrs   \"Id-   Price   $25.0\nPhont  1R&R2, BOX 206. ($2f|\nt'lumb ng aud Heating installations\nand supplies work Guaranteed\nPhone Jtuliua _Reisterer_ at  650L2\nKAT.   Auto   Repair   Shop.   Ex-\n_pert  workmanship,  low  Rates.\nFor cleaning, pressing, alterations\nTHE   WARDROBE.   417   Hall   6t\nRails Give Up the\nGains Made on\nWall Street\nGrains Slightly\nLower in Chicago\nCHICAGO.   Nov.   21    (AP)   \u2014Un*\nmier   Ooid'Tt   Ut \"each   advan\u00abo! tftttmsmm ot  the  monetary  altua.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER,    Nov.    11\u2014   Mining\ntharea aold on  the Vanoouver stock\neichange   today:\nLISTED\u2014\nBeaver Stiver  300.\nBralorne   1107.\nBralone Pract 4*8.\nBridge   R.   Con.   2700\nBridge  R. Ex. 6400\nGold Belt 2990.\nMercian   12.400.\nNat   silver   2200.\nNicola  0639.\nPioneer 280.\nP.emler 800.\nReno 1800.\nCN LISTED\u2014\nB.   C.   Nickel   1380.\nBluebird  1000.\nCariboo 1000.\nOork   Prov.   3000.\nOeorge Copper 100.\nOolconda   600.\nMorning  Star  2800.\nNative Bona 3800.\nNobb Plve 3000.\nReward   800.\nSnowflake  6000.\nTaylor   Bridge   100.\nWaverly   18,500.\nWayalde   10,553.\nWhlt* Eagle  1000,\n\"Vi Clerlcy\n13 Conlarum\n--H Dome\n37\nIM\n37%\n40%\nlg\n37%\n72\n5%\n88\n77\n4%\nl\u00ab8\nlg\n13 Vi\n68 V4\n48*%\n31%\n35%\n33\n20\n14%\n10\n19%\n38%\n34\n10%\ntn,\n14%\n33%\n23\n13%\n23%\n30%\n5%\n23%\n21%\n15\n0%\n37%\n18%\n4\n38\n17\n13\n7%\n3%\n7%\n4\n44%\n3%\n8%\n15\n30%\n43% I\n33% .\n46%\n6     ,\n4%\n37\n44% !\n30% |\n33%\n47%\n20%\n34\n23%\n110%\n18\n18%\n44%\n21%\n40% I\n40% I\n,\u201e 1 onto atock exchange today were:\nAbitlbi Ptd BOO: Brazilian 784;\nBrewer, and Dist. 600: Dla Seagrams\n660: Pord \"A\" 1610: Walkera 4501;\nWalkera Pfd 315; Intl Nickel 3098;\nWeston 316; Loblaw *'A*' 376; MU\nPower 3761; stand Steel 245; & A\nOU 601: Int Pete 2067.\nAT  MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Nov. 21 (CP) \u2014Salsa\nof 100 or more ahares rm the Montresl stock exchange today were:\nBrazilian 909; Can ind. Ale 3S9;\nCan Nor. Power 515; C PR 330.*\nInt Nickel 5163; Mtl Power 367;\nMcColl-Prontenac 491; Natl Brew\n240; Natl Steel Car 575; Shawlnigan 263.\none point.\nIn the baae metals British Oolumbli Nickel at 42 and Pend Orellle\nat 73 were each down three centa\nand Big Missouri and Nobel Plve\ncloaed unchanged.\nRoyalite colied at 17.85, up five\ncente, and Calgary and Edmonton\nwaa down one cent at 1.00. A. p.\nConsolidated and Home Oil ware\nunchanged.\nCoaat Breweries eold at 9.36 and\nclosed at 9.00, a net gain ot 39\ncenta and Brewera and Distillers\nclosed at 2.35.\nVancouver List\nMINES\nB 0 Nickel\t\nBralorne  _ \t\nBig Missouri\t\nBeaver Silver ___-\u00bb\t\nBridge R con \t\nBridge R Ex\t\nOeorge    Copper    \u2014\nGold Belt  _\t\nGeorgia   River   \t\nOolconda    \t\nGrandvlew    \t\nInt  C -Si   C\t\nKoot   Florence   \t\nLucky   Jim\t\nMeridian     \t\nMorning star  ,\nNational silver \t\nNoble Five    \t\nPend Orellle  \t\nPioneer   Gold\t\nPorter Idaho  -\t\nPremier    \t\nReeves  McDonald  -\nReno   Gold    \t\nRuth Hope\t\nSllvercreat     _\nSnowflake   \t\nWellington      \t\nWhitewater    \t\nOILS\nA P Consolidated ...\nAssociated  -\t\nCalmont  \t\nO and E Landa\t\nDalhouale    \t\nEastcrest\t\nFreehold    \t\nHome Oil\n.42\n9.10\n.44\n47\n9.20\n.46\ntlon counteracted stimulating ef\nfects of a reported bullish Washington overnight announcement and\ngrain prlcea dropped galna to cloae\nslightly   lower  today,*.\nWheat cloaed nervous % decline\nto % advance; corn %-l down;\noata unchanged and provlalons unchanged to 32 centa lower.\nTraders attention waa largely devoted to advices regarding possible\nhavoo by yellow stripe rust ln\nArgentine wheat fields. Cables aald\ndamsge  reports were exaggerated.\nExchanges\n.20\n.27\n.30\n.02 '\"\n.40\n.03\n.18\n.01%\n.03\n.28\n.16\n.ov,\n.08\n.73\n8.78\n.10...\n1.11\n.16\n.80\n.03\n.03%\n.on;\n.01.*\nMONTR-EAL, Nov. 31 (CP)--British and foreign exchange ln relation\nto the Canadian dollar, aa compiled\nby the Royal Bank of Canada, cloaed\ntoday as fallows:\n\u2022?\"% 'Argentina, peso      .4068A\n\u25a0\u2022\"      Australia,   pound    4.1467A\nNBW YORK. Nov. 31 (AP)\u2014The\nUnited States dollar was down again\ntoday, but speculative markets had\ndifficulty making much headway on\nthe upside and early progress ln\nsome directions gave place later to\nmild icactlons. Stocks fell back to\na general lower close.\nAmerican Can touched 100 for the\nfirst tlma since 1931; lt was up ly.\nnet at 99%. Rails gave up their\ngains. Transactions for the five hours\ntotalled 1,803,300 shares. Money waa\na bit firmer. An advance of one-\neighth of one per cent was made\nefective on shorter maturities of\nbankera acceptaneea aa dealera tried\nto adjust the discount 'market to\nsuch factors as slightly higher time\nmoney quotations and widening yields\non competing Investment media.\nDemand for accommodation la light.\nNICKEL OFF 15\nCENTS IN EAST\nBIKTHS\n(1)\nBARCLAY\u2014To Mr. md Mrs. T.\nBarclay of Ross 8pur. at the Trall-\nTadanac hospnal, November 18, a\ndaughter, Edith Ann. Mrs. Barclay\nbefore her marriage was Mlss Phyllis\nChandler of Kaslo.\n.28\n.33\n.40\n\u202203%\n.42\n.03%\n.14\nAustria,  schilling\nBelgium,  belga  ....\nBrazil,   mllrels   ....\nBulgaria,   lev\nChina,   Hon.kong  dollars\nCzechoslovakia,    o.own    -.\nDenmark, krone  \t\n\u2022JJ1V4 Finland, tinmark\t\n\u2022J*    I France,  frano  \t\n\u202229%  Germany,  relchamark  \t\n\u25a018%  Great Britain, pound \t\n\u25a008%  Oreece.   drachma   \t\n\u25a0\u00b08%  Holland,   florin\t\n\u25a076      Hungary,    pengo\t\n900      India,   rupee\t\n\u2022jj     Italy,    lire    \t\n1***1    Uapan.  yen\t\n*1B     Jugoslavia, dinar,\n.82\n*__\u25a0\nNew Zealand, pound\nNaway,   krone   \t\nRoumania,   leu\n.   .1867A\n,' .2331A\n.    0825A\n,     .\"151111\n,    -I705A\n.    .0478A\n.    .2323A\n.0243A\n.    .0629A\n.    .3812A\n8.2506A\n.    .0091A\n6436A\n.2808A\n39S2A\n.    .0643A\n.305SA\n.0236A\n41633A\n\u25a03614A\n     .0I04A\n\u25a001% south  Africa,  pound     S.2016A\n\u25a003%  Spain,  peseta  _     .1297A\n\u2022\u25a0>'    I Switzerland,   f.-anc    __   .3099A\nUnited  States, dollar,  3%   per  cent\ndlecoun-D.\nMcDougall Segur Ex\nMercury    \t\nMcLeod    \t\nMill   City\t\nOkalta  New\t\nRoyalite\nSterling pacific\n. .19\n. Jl\n.     .10\n.    1.00\n.      .53\nM\n\u25a0      09%\n1.55\n.06%\n.17%\n_S0\n.18*\n.05 * *,\n17.88\n.38\nDominion Uve Stock\nWINNIPEO. Nov. 31 (OP)\u2014 Recelpta: Cattle 1100, calves 46, hoga\n1580.   sheep   46.\nSteers, up to 1050 Iba.: Oood and\nchoice  13.76  to 1450.\nSteers, over 1050 lbs.: Good and\nchoice  \u00ab3.76  to 8490.\nHeifera: Good and choloe 13.60 to\n\u20224 23.\nPed calvea: Good and choice 16\nto  1650.\nCows: Good 13 to \u00bb2_25\nBulls:  Good. 81.10 to 81.23\nstocker and feeder st.ers: Oood\n81.90  to 83.\nVeal calves: Good and choice 68.80\nto 86.50.\nHoga: Select baoon 61 per head\npremium, bacon 86, butchers 61 per\nhead discount, heavy 89.50. extra\nheavy 84.50. lights snd leed*rs 84\nto  85.60.\nLambs: Good hanjy weight 16.50\n.0  86,  good   heavies 64  to 88\nSheep: Oood heavies 11.15 to 61 80.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS. Nov. 21 (4P)_\nFlour 39 higher .Carload lota family\npatents 7.40 to' 7.50 a barrel ln\n98-pound aacks Shipments 38,086\nPu e bran  14.00 to  19.00.\nWheat: No. 1 no them 87% to\n00% No 1 durum 79% to 81%,\nDec. 64%, May 87%. July 88%.\nCorn* No  3 yellow 39 to 41.\nOats: No  3 white 32% to 33%.\nFlax: No. 1, 173% to 176%.\nBRINCINC UP FATHER:\nMontreal Stocks\nBank of commerce ..\nBank ot Montreal \t\nBank of Nova sootu .\nRoyal Bank ...._\t\nBell  Telephone\n131\n186\n373\n. 132%\n110\n11\n, 33\n4%\nToronto Industrials\nBeatty   Broa    ,      6%\nBell  Telephone     110\nBrazilian     11\nBrit  Am   Oil     141*,\nCanada   Bread         3^\nCanada Bud        ty,\nCanada  Dredge     ||jZ\nCanada   Gypsum          3\\:\nCanada  Malting     38%\nCons   Bakeries         8%\nCons   Mining      135\nDist  Seagrams     19%\nDominion   Stores      23\nPord  of  Canada  A     12%\nGoodyear     90\nHiram   Walker      36%\nHiram Walker pfd     18\nImperial   Oil      1434\nImperial   Tobaoco     10%\nIndustrial Alcohol A    151\/,\nInternational   Nickel     21%\nInternational   Pete     23\nLobiaw A     15\nMassey   Harris    ,      4%\nNoranda      3414\nOnt Equity Life       8%\nPhoto    Engravers      14 s_\nPage   Kersey      60\nService   Stations         6%\nStandard   Paving         2\nMONTREAL, Nov. 21 (CP)\u2014Un\n__.tleount in foreign exchange made\nfor dull trallng on the Montreal\natock exchang? today. The general\nlist closed with a weak appearance.\nTurnover was less than 12,000 shares.\nInternational Nickel closed at\n21.75, off 15 cents, taking . sudden\nalump from a top of 33.00 held\nshortly  after  noon.\nAmong leaders, Canadian Industrial Alcohol A lost % at 15% aud\nB sls_.es halt a point at 14%,\nwhile Hoillnger was olf 15 cents ac\n10.60 and Consolidated Smelters %\nat 134%. Losses ranging Irom % to\n% we.e shown by Bruck SUk, Canada Cement, B\u00a3. Power and a\nnumber of others while Shawlnigan,\nB.C. Paciers, General Steel Wares\nand a tew more were fractionally\n-llgher.\nSales 11.563. Bonds 68900.\nWinnipeg Grain\n64%\ness.\n67%\n65%\n64%\n68%\nBrazilian T L As Power\t\nB c Power \"A\"  \t\nCanadian Car tt Foundry ___\nCanadian   Cement      6%\nCockshutt   Plow   _ _____ 7%\nCan Industrial Alcohol  17%\nC p R  _   12%\nCons Mining ts Smelting ,  135\n\u25a0omlnlon Bridge   39%\ndominion   Textile\n\u25a0ake   ot   the   Woods   ...\nlassey Hsrrla \u2014\t\nMontreal   Power   \t\nMitlonal Steel car\t\nOgllvle Milling _\t\nPower   Corporation   \t\nShawlnigan     \u2014_\nSteel ot Canada\t\nWinnipeg Railway ___\nWINNIPEO,   Nov.   31    (CP)\u2014Oraln\n.-{notations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWheat:\nNov. _\t\nDec\t\nMay \t\nJuly\t\nOats:\nNov _\nDec. \t\nMay  .......\nJuly \t\nBarley:\nNov. -\t\nDec. \t\nMay ......\nJuly .\t\nFlax:\nNov. \t\nDec. \t\nMay \t\nRye:\nNov.    \u2014\nDec.     48%\nMay     49%\nJuly     49%\nCash prices:\nWheat:   No.   1   hard   69%:   No.   1\nnor.   68%,   No.   2  nor   63%;   No   3\n8%   nor.  60%;   No.   4   nor.   88%;   No.   6\n16% 1 wbeat 69%; No. 6 63.i:  feed 90%:\n38% I No. 1 hard tough 66%; No 1 Durum\n1      69%.\n64\n10%\n4%\n83%\n12\n191\n69%\n64%\n68%\n89\",\n31\n34%\n33%\n35%\n38%\n39%\n63%\n64%\n06%\n31%\n34%\n35%\n33%\n38%\n39%\n30%\n33%\n34%\n33\n38%\n38%\n144\n190\n144\n190\n143%\n147\n49%\n49%\n49%\n44%\n48%\n49%\n30%\n30%\n34%\n34%\n39%\n34%\n38%\n38%\n143\n143\n147\n44%\n46\n49\n49%\nArchibald Heads\nIva Fern Company\nAt the annual meetlnj ot the Iva\nFern, held ln the offices ol the\nConsolidated Mining As Smelting\ncompany of Canada Tuesday afternoon, W. M. Archibald was e.cc-cd\npresident, T. W. Blngay, vice-president and E. 0. Randall, aecretary.\nB.uce Ritchie and J. W. Mulholland\nof Nelson  were named directors.\n1 It.MSIll.l)    liOOM*. Kill  KENT (19)\nFURN.    OR    UNFURN.    APTS.    BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts Bldg.\n(9078)\nTERRACE APTS.\u2014Beautiful Modern\nFrlgiqaire  equipped  suites.    9079)\n(191\n.tnm.  Kill  KIM\nAPARTMENT  UNFURNISHED, OtfER\nStore,  J.W.  Oallagher,  Nelson.\n(9336)\n(21)\n.OB HEM\nTWO-ROOMED FURNISHED APAKl*-\nmciH. Light, hot water and fuel\nsupplied, aiauu pcr month. Ap-\nply I*'lemlng*s caolns. (926j)\n.,_.W MODEUN \"HOME. 6 ROOMS.\ncement basement, furnace, garage, cloee schools. Phono Sugar\nBowl Grocery. (9281)\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTiDJ*__<\u00bb\nWANTED\u2014CLEAN    COTTON    RAO\nNelson Dally  Newa. (Ml\n.tfIS( EI.I.ANEOl'S tt\nMONEY TO LOAN ON CITT\nPROPERTY\nEasy terma ot repayment, tt\nyou are contemplating borrowing money on Real Eetata\nMortgage, call end see proposition.\nH. E. DILL\nFire and Auto InsuranM\n(933\nPROPERTY   WANTBl.  (J\nWANTED\u2014ABOUT   6   ACRES  WTI\nsmall  house,  must be good lev\nsoil   on   good   roads   near   tow\nE. F. Hoverman, Wynndel, BO.\n(931\nFURNITURE   FOB   SALE\n(4\nFURNITURE FOR SALB \u2014 BI\nDresser, Rug. Phone Mrs. Col\nway, 874. (Ml\nCATS   AND   DOOK   FOR   SALE   (SI\nWANTED\u2014GOOD HOME OUT C\ntown tor gentle Police dog. Phot\n631L, or  write  Box  1048 Netoo\n  _ (93J\nSmall Classified Ads bring big n\nturns  Try one.\t\nLLASSIFIEU    OlSVLAY\nNEWLY R E NOVATED 6-ROOM\nhouse, all modern conveniences.\nApply West Transfer Co.       (9100)\nUN-ON \" STHEET LAKGE HOUM!,\nmodern. Garage, three lots, 615.00\nmonth.   Harrod,   Trail. (92!.61\nFOR RENT \u2014 SMALL FURNISHED\nhousc.   Apply   712   Josephine.\n(9273)\nFIVE ROOM HOUSE. 306 VIC-OKiA\nBt.   Phone   591R 4. (9300)\nHOUSE, CLOSE  IN.\nrent. Phone 623X.\nREASONALLL\n (9282)\nKOR MU OR RENT\nWE DO EVERYTHINO Dt\nPRINTINO\nBOOK  BINDING\nPAPER   RUL-NO\nCorrect styles In Wedding Invl-\ntatlons, Announcements, and\nInvitation Cards.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nJOB  PRINTING   DEPARTMENT\nPhone 144 Phone  148\nBusiness, Professiona\nDirectory\n Accountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, SF., INT. A. (\nMunicipal and Commercial Audit\nP.O. Box 1191, Nelson. B.O,    (OOW\nFOR   SALE \u2014 HOTEL   FULLY   LI*\noensed. Apply Box 895, Nelson.\n (9251)\n(24)\nAssayers\nMvrsrocK wanted\nAYRSHIRE COW, REQISTERED\npreferred, milking or to freshen\nsoon. State total production last\nmilking period. Fisher, Port\nCrawtord. B.C. (9267)\nI MlSCtl.tAHgQDB   TOB   SALE       (211\nFIVE MILLION\nBUSHELS BOOKED\nFOR VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER. Nov. Jl (CD-Fur-I\nther Improvement waa Indicated ln j\nthe wheat market here-today when I\nIt was announced that December j\nbookings total nearly 5,000,000 bushels and the amount ls governed'\nto & large extent by available;\ntonnage.\nCargo rates have been holding\nat 19 shillings and bidding for January space at 20 shillings is brisk.\nIt la believed rates will strengthen.\nBONDS RECOVER\nNew and Used Black and\nGalvanized Pipe and\nFittings, Boilers, Engines, Pumps, -tyila, Pulleys, Belting, Shafting,\nBearings, Gears, Sprockets. Wire and Manila\nRope.\nEnquiries Solicited\nCanadian Junk Co., Ltd.\n350 Prior St.       Vancouver, B.C.\n(9049)\nNEW YORK. Nov. jl (AP)\u2014Moderate recoveries were scattered\nthroughout the bond market today\nbut the list, as a whole, was unable\nto do much ln the face of further\ndeclines lu united Ststee government\nsecurities.\nUtility loana lagjfd, but rails and\nlndustLlals edged up a trifle In the\naveragea.\nForeign obligations were relatively\nquiet.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Nov, *31 (AP) \u2014\nSterling exchange strong at 15.41\ntor 60-day bills and at as.42 for\ndemrnd. Canadian dollar.. 3'i pel\ncent premium. Francs 6.49. Lire\n3:75,  Uruguay   78.50.\nAlmost   twice   as   many   caaea  of\notoaclerosls, or hereditary proj[*o_w-\nlve deafness, occur ln females as lr\nmales.\n100,000 FEET BECOND HAND RE-\ncondltloned pipe, suitable for all\npurposes. All sl-__es. Write to\nswart**  Pipe   Yard,   310.   1st  Ave,\nVancouver,   B.C. (9053)\nFOR SALE \u2014 LOGOINO SLERlHS.\nchains, tongs, blocks, cables, sleigh\nparts, wagons. Jack screw*-. Burns\nCoal 6c_CartageJ  (9319)\nFOR 8ALE\u2014SET OF DRUMS AND\ntraps. Elementary lessons w.lth\nsame free. Apply P.O. Box 902.\n(9298)\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. established 190\n305 Josephlns St., Nelson, B.C.\n (90S:\nORENVILLE   H.   ORIMWObD,   P.   (\nBox  418,  Kaslo.   B.C. (908i\nB. C. Land Surveyor\nR. O. LESLIE, B. C. L. S. 302 K-__R\nBlock, Nelaon. Phone 37\u00abL    (90W\nChiropractors\nR. E. dray, D.C, Ph.C., Oliker BIooj\n_ (9084\nC   .HULTGREN,   D.C,   Ph.C,  PalnM\nOraduate, McCulloch Blk., Ph. 811\n_(9081\nMCMILLAN  AND'CAMERON\u2014ABKB\ndeen Blk. Phone 313. (9111\n Florists\nJOHNSON'S QREENHOUSE8. Phon\n343.   Cut   flowera,   potted   plant\n__e,ntl floral  designs. (908J\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. FUL\nline cut flowers at all times. Flor\nsi  designs.  Phone  233. (9087\nInsurance and Ileal Estate\nR. W. I&WSONTReaT Estate. In\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hlppenso\nHardware,   B.ik**r   alreel.       (9089\nProduce Easier\nMONTREAL, NOT. 21 (CP) -Pro-\nduce prloes were slightly easier to\nunchanged on the Montreal dairy\nand produce market today.\nOntario cheese t%; Quebecs, 9%:\n:*:3elpts 863 boxes.\nButter, No. 1 grade, 20%; arrivals,\n115 boxes.\nEJ33 flrm.A-large. 50; A-medium,\n46; A-oullets 40; B-medlum, 19\"_:\nC: 16; for Ontario and B.*,,!sh\nColumbia graded. Offerings 741\ncases.\nPotatoes   steady   and   unchanged.\nMining Engineer\nt.  S   PETERS\nMining Engineer\nExamination, operation and manage\nment  of  mlnea  and  mineral\nproperties, Rossland, B.C.\n (9089\nH. D. DAWSON\u2014NELSON\nENGINEER AND SURVEYOR\n   \u00bb0M\nPiano Tuning and Refinishin,\nCALL CHARLES  AT KOOT. MUSI\nfor tuning As refinishing.    (9144\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTORY. HARI\nwood merchsnt, 217 Baker stree\n.  .    (9001\nSecond Hand Stores\nTHE ARK BUYS AND SELLS EVERY\n_thlng._ phone   534.  (909J\nRAW  FURS  BOUOHT,  ALSO\" CAT\ntie  hides.  8.  Pearl,  411  Hal'   B\n'9231\nBy Geo. McManui\nFER COODNC*i5 *3A-<_..\n\u2022who*. The Gu\\*\nthsyre ra.vin *>*30ut7\nh&_=> im a oniform-eh?\nMUVT BE\nEASTERN SALES\nAT  TORONTO\nTORONTO.  Nov.  31   (CP)   \u2014Salea\nof  100 or more ahares on the Tor-\nit% funny how \"women\nFt\\t_\\_ FER BRA\u00ab) BOTTON*?)\ni* l_l_ TAKE. A LOOK AT THl'i\n. A^OL-UO- THET\nSAVO HE WoZ ON\nTILLIE THE TOILER:\nBy Westove\nCalgary Live Stock\nCAI\/JART. Nov. 21 (CP) \u2014Re-\neel pts: 197 cattle. 46 calves. 366\nhogs.   436  sheep  and  limbs.\nCattle market moderately active\nat prloes steady for quality offered.\nHog market ateady at yesterday's\nadvance, selects 16.25. butchers 15.25\noff trucks.\nCommon to medium butchei\nateera $3.00-\u00bb3.40. Medium to good\nbutcher heifera 13.25-I2.50, oommon to medium butcher cows |i.oo\nto 81.25. Medium to good veal\ncalvej 13.00-8250, common 81.60.\nCommon stocker steers aiJiO.\nI  7_*JT   RANG- (JP  TO ev-\npi-AIN    TO-T V-HV SHB\nMlSSEO   MB \u2022 t   HAb My\nCAE   PARKED TOO   NBA* \u00bb-\nHybWANT  IU   F=EOMT OP *-.\nMSTAUBANT v-HEB-C *WE\nV-EEC   OlNll-3 AND A COP_\nmadbi me move >t*\ni hope -she\nV-OM'T   \u00bbE\n\/-vNSBy\n\\A1ITH ME\n RUINS BRUISE\nWAY TO A WIN\nsat Black Hawks by\n2-0 Score; Fist\nFight Thrills\nM.CC. TOURERS\nPILE UP SCORE\n10-STON. NOT. 31 <AP).-Back in\nllr old-time bruising form, Boi-\n[^Bruins out-roughed the nggres-\n\u00bb Chicago Black Hawks Ior * 3-0\nScary tonight at Boston Garden.\nrho*v burly rival* slashed out\nih reckless abandon from start to\nUh. Xt wu not until the laat\nBite of play, however, that tho\nIon reached the fistic atage, with\nvt but sturdy Joe Lamb and big\npel Conacher, on? of Canada'a\n\u25a0it athletic products, doing the\n[tllng.\nonachT waa foroed agalnat the\nboards when he atopped Lamb's\nI and the Boston winger elbowed\nl, Conacher stripped off hla gloves\nlanded a heavy left tinder\nftb's eye. They were mixing furl-\nly when their mates combined\nh the officials to pull them\nIt. Conacher drew a major pen-\nbut Lamb escaped with a\nior.\nMMAKY\nIrst period:\n\u2014Boaton, Ripley, 8.83; penalty\u2014\nId* 11.\nlecond  period:\nfo score;   penalties\u2014Lamb  tt  P.\nHhpaon  3.\n\"bird period:\n\u2014Boston. Clapper (Stewart) 13.59;\nlaities\u2014 Conacher (major). Lamb.\ntop*?: Thompeon 84, Gardiner 33.\nAROONS ARE\nINABLE SCORE\nlanadiens Win 5-0;\nJoliat Scores\nTwo Goals\n--ONTREAL. NOT. 31 (CP)\u2014Mont-\nI Canadians registered their third\nlory of the National Hockey league\nion hore tonight whan. they\nnkotl tho Montreal Maroona 6-0,\nthe flrat intercity gama of tha\nr. By thetr victory Cana-dleni\nt out of a second plaoe tie in\nCanadian aectlon with Ottawa\ni Maroona, who both slipped back\nthird place.\nHsnadiens completely outplayed\nIf dty rivals, and wer* never\naatcnod by a badly disorganized\ntoon team. Aurel Jollat, in hla\nh season with Canadlens was tha\nstanding man on the ice. Hli\n\u25ba untwisted goals were the lea-\nI of the game.\nRt-ttmary:\nIrat period\u2014 <T\u00bb Canadlena, Jollat\nI;   (2)   canadlena, Jollat 0:30.\nTo penaltlea.\nleeoiu  period\u2014 (3)   Canadlena,  8.\nntha  (Rlley)   :04;   (4)   Canadlena,\nion  (leroohelle)  15:41.\n'\u25a0malty\u2014Jollat.\n\"hlrd   period\u2014(5)   Canadlens,   Lab-Hie   (O.   Mentha)    13:18.\nfcnal ty\u2014MacKenzle.\nhots stopped\u2014Chabot 38, K*TT 40.\nNBW DELHI. India, Nov. 31 (CP\nCable)\u2014As the touring M.CC. cricket XI opened a three-day match\nwith the Viceroy's XI today, Kedley\nVerity took seven wicketa for 37\nruna,\nrhe Indian XI wu dlamlaMd for\n180 runs and tha M.CC. had rolled\nup ISO for only one wicket by the\nclose of play.\nSENATORS ARE\nBEATEN 3 TO 2\ntBB NELSON DAIL* NEWS, NELION, fcC\u2014WEDNESDAY MOBNINO, NOYEMBEB ... 19-3\nu4\nNo Fiddlers in\nRoman Fights\nREFORMED PRO\nMAY GET BACK\nTHE FOLD\nSO\/VNG\nOf,\nGr?eeK$-\nDetroit Red Wings\nVictors; Sorrel\nGets a Goal\nOTTAWA, Nov. 31 (CP)\u2014Detroit\nRM Wing, defeated Ottawa Senators\n3-2 here tonliht In tbelr ft.at meet-\nInt ln the National Hockey leagu*\nK lied uie.\nJohnny sorrell, leading the acorlnt Hate or the league, added I goal\nto hla batting average on a paaa\nfrom Gordon Pettinger after Herb\nhtwls put the wings ahead on a\npaaa from Carl Voae. Doug Young\naoored the only aeoond period goal.\nBarl and Dense Roche did a brother Act to keep Ottawa In the running halfway In the final period,\nDene* taking the ahot. Then Allan\nShlekle connected after a double\npar* from Jen*- Shannon and Frank\nFlnnlf-n.\nSummary:\nFlrat period\u2014fl) Dttrolt, LewU\n(Vow). 9:15: (3) Detroit, Sorrell\nIPettlntjer)   8:64.\nPenaltlea\u2014Oaraon, Roberteon.\n* Second period\u2014(3) Det.olt, Yount\n3:33.\nPenaltlea\u2014Bowman and Young.\nThird period\u2014 (4) Ottawa. D.\nRoche (t. Roche) 8:00; (5) Ottawa,\nShlildJ  (Shannon-rinnlgan)   11:19.\nPenaltloa\u2014\u25a0\u00a3.  Roche.\nShot, stopped\u2014Bosch 31. Beverldge 33.\nrfmsHr\nBoxffts\nftuG\/rr\nTfifiaOMTH\njfti. ^amrtrrfAitmrts*.\n'ood.uli Has Good\nDay With tht Bat\ntBAOUIW-C. Auatralla. Not. 31\n\u2022 Cablt)\u2014Score* at tha and of\nay* play in lh* unofficial teat\n:ket trial match: Victor Richard*\n'a XI 491 runa for eight wicketa\nlared,  and  W.  M*  Woodluira XI\nfor only four wicketa.\ngoodfull hlmaelf put on 118 runa\nI Just un*>r four hours.\nDID YOO KNOW?\nMany loeil baaeball followera pride\nthcnuelvee on their knowledge ot\nthe game, but how many of them\nwould obtain 100 per cent on the\nfollowing 10 queetlon*.. In an endeavor to -MUt local fane to ascertain their knowledge the Dally Newa\nwlll from time to Ume print 10\nqueetlona, and wlll give the anawer. the following day.\n1. What Athletlo star pitcher ssn_\nsuspended for 10 days thla June\nand fined $300 by Connie Mack?\n3. How many times did Walter\nJohnaon lead the American league\nIn   strikeout*?\n3. When did Max Blahop Join the\nAthletics?\n4. Who wtu the flrit National\nleague pitcher to win two games\nln one  day?\n8. What old time Cub pitcher\nbeat the Brooklyn club nine times\nln one year?\n9. When wu tbe lut time the\nNew York Yankeea finished ln lut\nplace?\n7. Who was manager of the Ill-\nfated 1919 Chicago White Sox?\nB. Who holds tho Major league\nrecord of the moat gamee caught\nln one seaaon?\n0. Of how many pennant win-\nIng teams ha* Eddlo Collins been\n. member?\n10. Who wu the manager of\nthe pennant winning New York\nOhnta of 1888?\n|RT SOMERS HAS\nBROKEN JAW\nTORK,   NOV.   21    (CP)\u2014Art\nners, peppery Ranger forward, waa\nthe  sideline*  tonight  when  the\nithamite*   tangled   with   Toronto\n|tf>le  Leafi.  Ha eu\/fered a  broken\nln  the Rangera' opening game\nI Toronto November   11.\nMEN\nYou'll find\nyour Christmas\nshopping easier\nif you read the\nads in The\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nM.A.A.A. Juniors\nSet High Record\nEight Year Winning Streak\nBroken in 1933 Series\nUy   AL  DEMAREE\nIt's * far cry trom the recent\nfight between Primo Camera and\nPaulino U-oudon In Rome and the\nancient real fights In Oreece and\nItaly centuries ago. Camera, with six\ninches advantage In height and\nsixty pounds In weight could not\nput the ancient Basque woodchop.\nper away In fifteen rounds.\nThe flrat boxing matches In ancient Athens and Rome wero messy\naffairs. Thoae old boys fought\nwith the Caestua, which was made\nof leather and Iron with ahort\nrsplkes on the knuckles of the\nhand, Instead of modern padded\nboxing glove. There were no de-\ncielons, end the matches were fought\nto . finish, which was death. In\nthose old daya there were no\nclever boxers aa tho rules allowed\nno footwork of any kind. It wu\ngive and take and th* fighter who\ntried to aide-step or back up from\na blow wu considered a coward.\nTommy Loughran and Jack Sharkey would havo had thumbs turned\ndown on them lf they had lived\nthoae daye. but \u2022\u25a0Klngflah\" Levinsky would havo owned both Athens\nand Rome.\nTEN YEARS AOO TODAV\nNovember 33, 1933\u2014The Chicago\nCube buy Rogers Hornsby from\nthe Bt. Loula Cardinal! tor gioo.000\nand five ball playera.\nCANINE CRITIC\nSTIRS GOLFERS\nThose Out 3 Years\nMay Become Simon-\nPures Again\nMUST MOVE FAST\nFOR THIS YEAR\nHockey Players Have\nUntil December 31\nto Apply\nB*C* Will Not Enter Dominion Curling\nCompetition; Champs Enter Next Year\nVANCOUVBR, Not. 31 (OP)\u2014Brit-\ni-sli Columbia will uot enter tho\nCtnadlan curling ehamplonahlp oompetltlon for the MacDonald Brier\ntrophy this uuon, It wm announced\ntoday hy Secretary Jimmy Richmond\nof the Vancouver Curling club. Mr.\nRichmond Indicated, however, the\nprovince would be repreeent-M ln the\ntitle  eerles  In  future   yearn.\nOeorge Cameron of Winn 1 pet. a\nmember   of   the   MacDonald   Brier\ntrophy committee ls not sat la fled\nB. C. ran properly declare t champion team to represent the province\nthtn year, and, In order to Inaugurate a competition so they may do\nso in the future, he hu donated a\nspecial t.ophy to be played for by\nprovincial clube.\nWinners of the new trophy will\nb\u00ab British Columbia representatives\nIn the Dominion championships after\nthis year.\nKnow Your Nelson\nHockey Players\nPrank O'Oenskl started to play\nhockey soon after the atone ago\nand has hardly missed a year slnoe.\nHe can quite appropriately bo called\nMax of Kosedale Quite a Favorite With the Members\nMONTREAL,-One ot Montreal's\nmany football records was shattered with the defeat of the Montreal Amateur Athletic association\nJunior football team hy westward\nJuniors thla fall. MA AA, had established the record by winning\nthe Quebec Rugby Football union\ntitle for eight consecutive years,\na feat which win go down ln the\nannals of sport at a high mark for\nfuture team\u00ab to aim &t. During\nthese eight years of victory the\nMontreal 12 aucceeded ln capturing\nthree Dominion crowns as well.\nTheir long string of victories\ncommenced way back in 1925 and\ncontinued until they were defeated\nthla year by the atrong Westward\noutfit by the soore of 13-8. Fot\nmany seasons the Westward team\nand many other contenders were\nattempting to wrest the provincial\nchampionships from the seemingly\ninvincible Winged Wheelers. Many\ntlmea the champions came near to\nbeing beaten but eaoh time with a\nglgantlo effort they succeeded in\nconquering their opponent!, westward had long been one of tb\"\nstrongest threat* to the Montreal\nteam but It waa only this year\nthat they became powerful enough\nto ates.1 the laurels. During the\nchampions' winning streak they\nwere first coached by Hoddy poster\nand in the final yeara by Bill\nSodden who atlll contlnuee to be\ntheir mentor, it was due to tho\ngreat work done by thle latter football genius that Montreal succeeded In retaining the championship.\ndetroit!>owns\nlondon 3 to 1\nTORONTO (CP).\u2014Meet Max, the\ngolfing canine, or the canine golfer.\nHe may not play the actual shota\nthe human golfer does, but he\nknows the game, and at times ex-\npresses displeasure of the manner\nln which shots are played.\nMax resides ln a kennel Jwhincl\ntho Rosedale Oolf club. Hla circle of\nfrlenda and acquaintances extends\nwidely, tho former being a select\nfew and the latter numbering hundreds, according to Charles W. Mac-\nQueen ln the Mall and Empire.\nFrom early In the spring until\n1st* In the fall he keeps a close eye\non thoee who tec-off at Rosedale.\nWhen one of his friends starts on a\nround Max follows, but mere acquaintances are only permitted to\nhold a conversation with him on the\nlee, and perhaps scratch him behind\nthe esrs while they -await their\nturn.\nHe ts an Airedale and was purchased some 11 years ago by c. W.\nHitchcock, steward of the club. Bhira\nthen he haa been a fixture, Just\nthe same as the starting box at the\nfirst Uo or the clock behind tho\n14th.\nMax knows his golf etiquette, perhapa as well as anyone. When ho Is\nfollowing play from tee to green lie\nkeeps well to the aide of the fairway. When a player la addressing\nthe hall Mux becomes a statue. Ho\nrefr__Jns from audibly expressing his\nappreciation or disapproval of a shot\nhut in his case actions apeak\nlouder than  words.\nDuring his residence at Rosedale,\nMax has become a student of topography and. with the addition of\nyears accompanied by the cuatomary\nobesity and weakening of the Ut*,\nhe haa learned to economize In exertion. He finds his shuffling gait\nwill barely keep him up with the\nplayers, unless they are slow, and tt\n1 they arc too alow he shows his disapproval by either dlsdslnlng to\nwatch them play thetr shots or by\ntrotting  on.\nDETROIT. Mich., Nov. 21 (Cp)\u2014\nDetroit'* Olympics tightened their\nhold on first plaoe tn the International Hockey league here tonight\nby beating tha London Teoumsehs\n3-1.\nflu* Murker got two goals and an\nIMlit to Massecnr, (MdtWOrthy scored for Loudon.\nBowling Scores\nThe Canadian Legion \"A\" division\ntournament got under way Monday\nnight when the following garner\nwero  played  on   the J^eglon  alleys:\n( IIKKIIY   PICKERS   TS.\nCANADIAN  1,1...Ion\n1st Snd 3rd   Tot\nP.  Oraham    201 181 203\u201456a\nA. Choquette   .... 202 190 153\u2014544\nJ.   Hamson    - 200 194 18&\u201457ft\nE. Nsdeau   147 178 135\u2014450\nTotal  760   723   885 2138\nJ.   Worthington 200 142 174\u2014516\nW.    Fowle,      140 155 201-\u2014496\nP.   Hartwig     209 185 187\u2014581\nJ.    Alien      205 187 208\u2014600\nTotal     784   669    770 2193\nHigh Individual score, F. Hartwig.\n200.\nHigh aggregate score, .T. Allen, COO.\nC.  P.   It  ta.   i.Ol.litN  OATE\n1st 2nd 3rd Tot\nJ. Oouldlng _.... 148 104 150\u2014411\nMr. Klngtett ....- 143    144    136\u2014425\nH.  Htnnltt  - 131    140    130\u2014430\nE.V.   BrAke  140    188   205\u2014513\nTotal     M2   C87   GftO 1719\nR    Maber      186 206 178\u2014569\nB. Stevens    ..... 174 122 150\u2014446\nO. DUl    172 149 191\u2014512\nN. Casslos   107 198 181\u2014546\nTotal    098   675   700 2073\nHigh  individual  score,   R.  Maber,\n200.\nHigh   -Aggregate   score,   R.   MftMf,\nr>G0.\nTORONTO, Nov, 21 <CP) \u2014The\nbars are really down for the reformed professional athlete who\nwants lo get hack Into amateur\ncompetition, it was explained today hy w. A. Hewitt, secretary\nof the Ontario Hockey association.\nDut the professional hockejWt\nwho desires to play amateur this\nwinter will have to move quickly\nIn order to qualify.\nTlie ruling of the amateur unjon\nor Canada last week at Winnipeg.\nPermitting professionals who have\nnot played for three years, to make\napplication for amateur curds, is\neffective at once. Downs of onetime pros who oan't make a living any more from hockey are expected to apply.\nHewitt explained the procedure\nfor hockey pliyers as follows:\nIn Ontario players must write\nto the secretary of the Ontario\nhockey e-ssociatlon, applying for an\namateur card. The application is\nto bo accompanied by $5.\nThey will be forwarded a form\nto be filled out and returned to\nthe secretory, and on the basis\nof the information contained ln the\nform and the information ot tha\nO. If. A. already has regarding\nthe applicant, the o. H. A. executive will pass on the cases. The\nO. H* A. reoommend a tlon ln eaoh\ncase wlll be sent to the district\nA. A. U. branch for final decision.\nXnterpetlng the A* A. U. of C.\nresolution, Hewitt said It was the\nintention to open the wsy for all\nformer profeesionais after _ three-\nyesr playing lapse who are not \"undesirables.\" Whether or not an athlete's return to the amateur fold\nls desirable to amateur authorities\nls a matter for the governing body\nof the sport tn which he participated ond. his A. A. u. branch to\ndecide-.\nHockey playera who Intend making, application for amateur' cards\nmust have their cases passed before Dec. 31 to bo eligible to plsy\nthis season, Hewitt said.\n11   SEEK   CLEANSING\nSUDBURY. Ont., Nov. 31 <CP>\u2014\nSudbury's colony of former professional hockey players rejoiced to-\ndiy. At least \\\\ hockeytsts here\nplan to make immediate, application for cards.\nBammy Rothchlld, former Montreal Maroon player, intends to\norganise a team, and Wilfred\ntBhorty, oreen, who starred in\npast years with New York American, Tulsa, Oilers and Hamilton\nTigers, ssld ho will tak\u00ab the Ice\nonce more.\nOther player* Include Ale* McKlnnon, Jack Duncan, Fred Faugh t,\nRed Oreen, Gerald Oreen, ateve\nYankoskl, Cecil Daley and Joe ironstone ona Babe Donnelly.\nTHREE   AT  EDMONTON\nEDMONTON. Nov. 21 (CP) \u2014Three\nfnrmer Edmonton hockey players,\nall prominent members\" or amateur\nteams here, Lloyd Mclntyrc, Iaiac\n\"Phat\" Fsuldcr and Lindsay Carver, will at last get a chance to\nbc back ln the game, as the\nresult of decision of tho amateur\nathletic association of Canada to\nallow   reinstatements   of   amateurs,\nihe daddy of the puck chasers of\nNelson, and when asked how long he\nhad been playing, he ran his fingers\nthrough his hair (that has almost\nbecome a mere memory now) and\nsaid hc Just wasn't quite sure when\nthe game began. But Frank la In\nbetter shape than he has been tor\nthe post five years and he will give\na good account of himself when he\nsteps out on the ice thia season.\nFrank hasn't confined his playing\nto   any   one   particular   plaoe.   He\nstarted out in Nelson playing intermediate  hockey  for  the  Tigers  for\nthe aeaaon  1913-14. Then came the\nr.nly panne ln his puck-chasing\ncareer, for he enlisted and went\noverseas. Bae). again, he once more\nplayed for the lntermedlatea In\n1919-30 and 1920-21. Then he began to rove as the following wlll\nindicate: 1921-22, Trail aenlora; 1922-\n23, Coleman, Alberts; 1923-24, Trail;\n1924-25, Nelson; 1925-26, Vancouver\nMonarchs; 1920-27, Nelaon; 1997-28,\nNelson; 1928-29 Seattle, Waah.;\n1929-30, Nelson; 1930-81, Nelson;\n1931-32. Nelson; 1932-33, Nelson,\nMaple Leafs,  Ir^rmedlatea.\nFrank la a fcxy player and makes\nuse of hla experience.\nFor effectiveness around a goal\nmouth, It's his turn  to atand  up.\nYears   ago   Frank   showed   great\n, ^^ promise of becom-\nfk Wy,.        ing   a   boxer,   but\njt_y-*'_^_     he had no broth-\nCCtkr   ?r* * ,iBht wltn-\n*+**y \/ Am Being a dairyman,\nwhen he first heard the phrase\n\"milk of human kindness\" used, he\nthought It waa some form of pasteurized bovine fluid.\nRANGERS FLOP\nINTO CELLAR\nNEW YORX. Nov. 31 <AP>\u2014The\nNew York Rangers and Toronto\nMaple Leafs, Stanley cup finalists\nIsst spring, fought to a 1*1 tie in n\nfast and furious National Hockey\nleague battle tonight before a crowd\nof 13.000. The result, first break In\nToronto's string ot victories, dropped\nths Rangers to the bottom of the\nAmerican division but left the Leafs\nat the top ot the Canadian section.\nThe game left room for plenty of\narguments, chiefly because of a decision by Referee Sus.ibe Dlagneault\non a ahot by Harvey Jackson lata Jn\nthe  second  period.\nFrom tho press box lt appeared to\nhave gone into the net and bounced\nout but the ref-ree did not ose it\nthat wsy and when Jackson protested loudly, he waa given a 10-\nmlnute misconduct penalty,\n\u25a0   Summary;\nFirst period\u2014No acore.\nPenalties\u2014 Johnson, A. Blebert,\nBoll.   Ke:llng,   Horner.\neecond period\u2014(1> Rangers, W,\nCook (F- Cook-^Boucher) 15:37; u*\nToronto, Blair  (Cotton-Sands)   18:00,\nPenaltlea\u2014 Clancy. Day, Jackson\n(10   minutes,   misconduct).\nThird period\u2014No score.\nPenalties\u2014Oatley, Cotton, Heller,\nJohnson.\nOvertime pried\u2014Ho score.\nP:nalty\u2014Clancy.\nShots stopped\u2014Halnsworth 32, Altkenhead 42.\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA. NOV, 21 (CP) \u2014Advloe\nwas reoelved today the duty on\nimports of turkeys into Oreat Britain from foreign countries haa\nbeen changed to one penny per\npound instead of the ten per cent\nformerly applying thla change wu\neffective November 17.\nToronto: The ng market waa un*\nchanged  again  today.\nMontreal: Bgg recelpU were 741\noases aa compared to 0<s caaea on\ntha corresponding day laat year.\nGrade B large eggs were rather\ndraggy but grode B medium and\ngrade C moved well, prices ot these\non apot to distributors were grade\nB large 21-21-v grade B medium\n20'i. grade C 16'i, baaea of grading\ninto storage.\nBasketball Play\nKeen at Kimberley\nChapman Camp, Pirates and\nHigh School Leading\nJobless Rioters\nGet Three Months\nNO RUGBY TITLE\nPLAY LIKELY\nTORONTO, Nov. 21 (CP) \u2014The\nsenior football season wlll wind\nup quietly Saturday with a group\nof champions content to let the\nCanadian throne room go for a yeer\nwithout an occupant, unless unexpected developments within the\nnext 24 hour, bring a settlement\nin a situation apparently hopelees.\nly deadlocked.\nAt tha same time the Canadian\nRugby union may pass out of existence. Tlie revenue that permits\nthe organization to function, ls derived from the annual senior playdown.. and if thc*e are done away\nwith this Reason the C.R.U*. It\nwas said today, would not have\nfund-i to call an annual meeting\nI or assist intermediate and junior\nchimplonship  series.\nArgonauts and Montreal will de-\nclda the interprovlncls] title \u00bbat-\nurdiy at Montreil. Bamta Imperials.\nO.R.F.U. champions and Winnipeg,\nchallengers from the west, aro\nstanding by\u2014but neither will agree\nin playoff proposals made by the\nO. R. V. so lf tho deadlock continues until the week-end. there\nIs every prospect there v. Ill be\non   po-Jt-eeason   firlnp.\nVICTORIA. Nov. 21 (OP)\u2014Three\nor five men arrested after a clash\nbetween police nnd unemployed at\nan eviction here October 27 were\nsentenced today to t\u00abrme of three\nmontha Imprisonment by Magistrate\nQ-orgr ,I.iy. Those sentenced were\nJames Beynon, convicted of s.-aault-\nIn? Police Chief- Thomas Heatley,\nand Hans Kroeger nnd Eric Linden,\nconvicted of obstructing poltc*> In\nthe  execution of their duty.\nWilliam Bragg, convicted of assaulting a constable, wss allowed\nsuspended aentence, U was held he\nhad been influenced by the fact It\nwaa his family that waa evlc.td.\nFred McOee was dismissed on a\ncharge   of  obstruction.\nIn passing sentence, tho magistrate\npolntei out that Kroeg2r, Beynon\nand Linden, by their own admission,\nhad set ou. with the purpose of\npreventing thc eviction which was\nitself ba\u00abd on court order.\nKlMBKRliEY B.C., Hot. 31\u2014TWO\nsenior league gomes were played\nst McDougil hall on Tuesday night.\nIn an exhibition game the High\nschool boys defeated the Hawks.\nwiiiie tn a fast game the Klwannas\ndefeated the Tllllouma by one basket. Final score Klwannas 13, Ttlll-\ncums   11.\nIn the final game tho Meteors\ndefeated the wheelers to the tune\nor 33-28. The end of the first half\nsaw them leading l0-<. Tho Wheel-\nera opened up faat and piled up\na score within ft points of the\nwinners. Final *oore waa 83-38.\nBASKETBALL   LEAGUE    STANDING\n(senior Leafue)\nTeam                              W t. Pte.\nChapman ....\u2014..-.   6 1 .868\nPat.      3 2 .600\nEx-High      ~*.    4 4 .B00\nZeniths        3 I 600\nMeteors            8 fl .375\nWheelers       - 6 .260\nLADIES 1 I M.i 1\nTeam                                 W I. Ptf.\nTlrites     \u201e     6 0 .1000\ncranbrook  \u2022\u2022  * 2 .667\n1 Tilllcums   3 * \u00ab9\nChapman    -  \u2022 4 .333\nKlwannas      1 <* -1*3\nI   UNMO.H  i.lli.ll\ni High School  _   a   0   ,1000\n; Chapman    1    3     -333\nciMiibroofc     -   0   1     .00\nPAGE  BETFN\nMAPLE LEAFS AND RANGERS\nSTRONG TEAMS THIS YEAR\nFinalists of Last Year\nAre Almost\nIntact\nYIELD   RATES   INCREASED\nNEW VOIUC. Nov. Jl (AP) \u2014\nYield rates on short-term binkers\niiiceptsnoes were increased today\nby one-eighth of one per cent,\nmaking the new quotatlona for 60\nand PO-day maturities *\\ of one\nper cent bid, 1-2 aaked.\nThe property of the former Kaiser\nIn Germany la asseaaed to 700.-\n000.000 marks.\nEnglish Cricket Captain's Welcome\nSPRAGUE QUITS\nU.S. TREASURY,\nDOLLAR BREAKS\nNEW YORK, Nov 31 iCP) -\nBeilgnsllon Of 0. M. W. Bprsfue I\nag adviaer to the United States\ntreasury cauasd * ahirp break \u25a0 in\nthe United Statea dollar on the!\nforeign exchange marktt* lata today, resulting in corresponding advance! in other currencies.\nSterling closed with a ntt gain ot.\n12 cents ot $[.,42. a cent under its\nhltjh for the day.\nThe French fr.nc closed ot 8 55\ncents, up .17 of a cent.\nTho ctnadlan dollar'improved -i\nto 3(i per cent premium on the\nBpratlM iH'Wc. Earlier It hurt bent\nalugglah, Ktetdtaf In full nn early\ngain of U'cciH.\nThe   picture,   taken   in   Dombay. .The  team  received  ft  gl**t  ovation\n\u2022shows D. R. Jardlne. captain of tin ] at the start of their tour through\nBritish Mnrlebone cricket cluh. after | India   and   the   British   captain   ls\nhft    had    been    welcomed    by    the j wcarlnK a garland ot  flowers.\nrrlck-H   bOWd   tt   coin ml   In    Indlu  '\nMONTRJ-AiL, Nov. 17\u2014Tlte finalists of laat aprlng In the battle for\nthe Stanley cup\u2014Rangers of New\nYork, the winners, and Toronto\nMaple Leafs, tha runneri-up\u2014go\nInto the 1933-34 National Hockey\nleague raoe with two powerful mi-\nchinas.\nHere are two great cluba for consistency. Leafs hav* been aecond\ntwice, flrat once, in the divisional,\nor league, race ln the last three\nseasons. Rangers, never out of the\nplay-offa sine* they entered hockey,\nwere third last aeason\u2014the tint\nttme a third-place team in the\nleague race ever won the Stanley\ncup\u2014and aeoond in each of the preceding yeara.\nAnalysis of theae two clubs who,\nln two successive aeasons have\nfought ln out for tha Stanley cup,\nwould indioate that both have\nstrengthened for tha coming raoe.\nNew York's colorful Rangers, who\ntought thetr way to the world's title\nlast spring over Toronto Maple Leafs\nand thua avenjed themselves for\nthe crushing defeats Leafs had heaped on them ths yaar before, show\nthe leaat change, perhaps, of any\non the circuit, silver-thatched Lester\nPatrick, most successful of all pilots\nln the major loop, on a basis of\nplay-off entries made the titles acquired alnce he entered the National\nleague, will again rely largely on\nplayers of proven worth and claas\nthough here and tben, the smart\npilot ot the champions it quietly developing new cogs to replace the old\nsuch time aa they are needed.\nDEPENDS  ON  REGVLARB\nBut for the present it is apparent\nPatrick is confident the great machine of last season can again carry\non. Defensively, he wlll rely on the\npowerful rear-guard of other ysars,\nin which the ponderous \"Sing\"\nJohnson and Carl Slebert. another\nbig, hard-hitting player, will front\none ot last season's most sensational\nfinds. Net Minder Andy Altkenhead.\nOtt Heller play-off sensation of\ntwo sessoru back, injured ln sarly\npractices, but likely to be available\nearly in the aeason, and rugged Doug.\nBrennan, form the defensive reserves of known qualities, but ln\naddition, Patrlok Is grooming a\nplayer who may turn out to be the\nsensation of the season. Just as\nwas Slebert when Patrick first\nbrought him up trom the minora.\nThla newcomer le Oene Pusle, Montreal Pren ch- Italian -Canadian, 200-\npound giant who was the star of\nthe Weatern League lut season. Although a defense player, young\nPusle led that league In scoring\ngoals. With his speed, skill and\ntremendous strength, he was prao-\ntlcally unstoppable In the minors\nand at the end of the seaaon, two\nplayers were almoat invariably dels-\ngated  to cover this dashing giant.\nPulsie ts a rreat all-round athlete.\nThs past summer he campaigned\nln the professional wrestling rings,\nwith great suoceea. He has starred\nat baseball, lecToem and swimming.\nas well.\nTHAT  OREAT   FORWARD  UNE\nOt course, the Ranger forward division la built around that amazing trio of the two Cooks and\nPrankie Boucher, possibly the\nsmoothest and moat polished attacking trio In the game, the whirling dervlsbea of hockey whoee Intricate weaving and passing systems\nhave baffled opposing defenses tor\nyears. After seven years of continuous service in the major group,\nthe end of the raoe last seaaon\nfound all three members of this\namazing trio finished in the flrat\nsix scorers Jn this division, with\nthe veteran Bill Cook leading the\nentire lesgue with 28 gosls and 22\nassists. Between them in the regular season, thla forward line had\nnm.iv.ed 57 goals nnd 122 assists.\nIn support ot his regulars, Patrlok has a fine array of attacking\nreserve strength. The Ranger general has In pre-aeoaon practice, been\nworking Cecil Dillon, a lefthander\nwho played right wing laat year, at\ncentre, possibly In recognition of\nthe scoring punch this blsck-thatrh-\ngunner unleaaed In the world hockey\naeries, ln which lie led all snipers\nwith eight goals, and Cecil has beeu\nmaking good, ossle Oatnundson. Art\nSomera and Murray Murdock have\nlikewise all had a try at the play-\nmaking pivot position. In addition\nto these there Is Lome carr, a\nsmart right-winger who came uf.\nfrom Buffalo Bisons, of the International, the veteran Melville\n\"Butch\" Keeling, a sound left-\nwinger, and the sturdy A. C. \"Babe\"\nBlebert.\nMAPLE  LEAFS   M ROM,\nprom all indications, the ml*\nrunners-up. the Toronto Maplo Leafs\naro destined to be right in the running once again both for the honors\nIn fi\u00bbe Canadian dlvlaion snd for the\nStanley cup. They lost to New\nYork Rangers last aprlng after a\nrecord-breaking scries with the Bon-\nton Bruins that softened them for\nthe Rangers. Had it not been for\nthat series with the Bruins, Wltb\nits flnsl overtime Into the wee iran'\nhours. It Is poesible that the Leaf*,\nnot the Rangera. would be the\nChampions today,\nThe Leafs have lost Bob Oracle,\nbut they have plenty of material\nleft and in the Oracle shift they\nacquired the dashing left winger.\nHector Kllrea. Charlie Conacher\nthreatened to break up their first\nline as a holdout, but got back ln\nthe fold, to team up once more with\nHarvey Jackson and Joe Prlmeau.\nAll the reports are to the effect\nthat \"Busher\" Jackaon, standout\nplayer of the eerlea with the Bruins,\nIs in peak form, and there ls little\ndoubt that at the termination of\nthe 1212-33 season he waa the king-,\npin player of the league, among\nthe left wingers.\nNow the Leafs, possessed of the\nservices of Kllrea, will have a second line which will meaaure up tn\nJsckson, conacher and Prlmeau. On\nthis line they will have Kllrea, \"Ace\"'\nBailey and \"Beahfut Bill* Thorns, as\nthev have named him, former Newmarket and Marlboro Hash. They\nfigure thst thu lint has plenty or\noffensive atrength and that, defensively, tt win be almoat impregnable,\nbecause all Ita membera are ao fast.\nFor the third Une they have such\nmsn aa the clever and experienced\nAndy Blair, Hal \"Baldy\" Cotton,\nCharlie Sands and as a further reserve the amart \"Cagey\" Doraty.\nLast spring ln the play-offa It was\nSands who stepped Into the breach\nwhsn Ballsy was inpuretl and held\nup  his  end   In   ren.Hrkabte   fashion.\nou  thf  deftnea  thi  tcots hnvc\nmaterial galore, starting wtth their\nregulars. King Clancy, Happy Day\nand Alex Levinsky, along with ths\ntwo strapping youngsters brought\nup trom Syracuse, Freddy Robertson\nand \"Busher\" Hollett.\nLeafs go to the post with Oeorge\nHalnsworth In tbe nets In place of\ni-orne chabot\u2014a trade ln which two\nfine goalers were swapped on even\nterms.\n\"Physical Needs'\nIs Church Subject\nCall for Clothing Is Made at\nKimberley Church\nKIMBElUiUY. B. C, NOV. Jl \u2014\nDr. Charles Endicott spoke ln the\nUnited church in ths evening. He\ncomes once a year to bring a large\nvision of the work the church ls doing In Canada and the world. He\nused as hla text part ot Paul's letter\nto Timothy, asking him to bring\nhim his cloaks, books, especially the\nparchments and hla trlend Mark. Ha\nwas asking for physical necessities,\nmental culture, spiritual inspiration\nand friendship: these things were\nalwaya humanities' needs. The church\nwas being called upon now tor all\nthe\u00bb; things. How was ths church\nresponding? Where lt was making an\nearnest endeavor unique results wsre\nbeing obtained. Dr. Craig ln Winnipeg had a shoddy young man oome\nto htm asking for a Job. Mr. Craig\ngave him a meal and showed htm\nthe room where the tidies had hed\na rummage sale and a few miserable\nold clothes were left. \"Can you do\nanything with this junk\" asked *the\ndoctor. The young man looked it\nover and said, \"If lt were clean and\nmended It would be worth something.\" \"Oo to it,\" and he did and\nsold It for $16. Four ysars lster\nthis was a S2V0O0 buslneaa using\nfour large buildings and a crowd of\nemployees. They tako things peoplo\nhave no uae for, old Jumiture, broken clocks, old shoes, eto. Dr. Endicott dumped eome bags and said he\nwanted to take tho Junk out tu\nthe baok and burn it, but going to\nthe fourth building he found ahoes\nho wouldn't bo ashamed to wear,\ndecent clothing, furniture repaired\nand painted looking like new. dock*\nas dead aa some church members\ngoing again merrily. And this waan't\nall, at this same plant more than\n260 waste lives hed bsen made over\nand gone out to positions of honor,\nDrunks, bume, women from the\nstreets hed been given work and *\nchance to make good and had done\nlt. This was Christ's way. When John\nwanted to oall down tire from heaven and burn a village sa li lt wsre\njunk he said, \"No, I came not to\ndestroy but to aave what is being\nwnffted and make lt mors valuable '\nHe apoke of the churchea' work in\ngiving education, in China, gad of\ngiving friendship and ssked what we\nwere doing in the way of friendship\nand service.\nWELFARE   MOIIh\nAt both morning a ud even! nt\nsendees on Sunday Rev. R. Cribb\nmade an appeal for used clothing\nLetters are coming to blm trom\nTata Creek. Baiui Creek, Wardner\nand other polnte for help or children will suffer this winter. People\non relief with large faxnlUas csn\nmanage food but clothes and footwear for children Hre not possible.\nLetters am also coming li'om Crsnbrook, telling ut that their eupplte*\nof uaed clothing *i> about don-~\nu they have had a \u25a0\u25a0\u2022w y burden or\nrelief to carry the last two years,\nwhile Klmiberley has had few <*alk\nalong this line. After the mornlnfi\naervloe the ladles went to M*'. Cribb\nasking him to be definite, to say\nexactly what he needed ao at lho\nevening service lie read a long list\nof things needed\u2014underwear, stockings, shoes for children from 16\nyears down to Bnfanta, d-rt-ssse.\nsweaters of all slaes, ooetn :ind\nreefers, a pair of blankets for *..\nWardner family. Borne bundles h.tvo\ncome In but much more lu tttttt,\nMr. Cribb asked for help In handling\nthis part of the work, some one to\nk<> with him and sec that each child\nwas properly supplied. The lower\nBlarrhmont. C.O.LT. group haa\nbrought tn some good children'),\ncoats, winter scarfs and dresses, and\nsome of the girls who knit well aro\nat stockings for children, the leader\nsupplying the ysm.\nThe Sunbeam Mission bin<.i, under\nthe leadership of Mrs. W. B. Miller,\nheld a t*- \\ and eale of home cooking\nand sewing, on Saturday afternoon.\nThere a^e 24 Children in thts band,\nfrom 7 to 11 yeara. and aro doing\n-surprising work. Their teas, with\nno one to aaslst except their leader,\nare very popular. After expenses\nwere paid they had |18.\nTho ladles of the CaUiolIc church\nheld a -moceMlul side of doughnuts\nand rolls last week. All the sales\nput on by this church reoently *p-\nto help pay the building debt.\nLatest Reno Brick\nIs Worth $16,000\nAnoOier gold brick from the Reno\ncold mine on sheep creek waa\nbrought In to the Bank of Montreal\nTucsdav. representing the latest\nlier.n-up. It wan worth approximately   116.000.\nMiro than a third of all tbo population of Central America tit* In\nGuatemala,\nOur Old Favorite\nITALIAN\nSPAGHETTI\nSPECIAL FEED\nTONIGHT\nBFTVEEN   8  AND   \u00bb\nG\nSO'\nper Plate\nOLDEN\nATE Cafe\n PAOE  EIGHT\nPredicts Canada Will\nProduce $200,000,000\nQold Annually by 1940\nMining  Industry on\nEve of Great Advance\nSays Miner\nfhe Canadian mining Industry ls\nabout to record one of the mast\nsurprising advances ln Its surprising history, says The Northern\nMiner ln Its annual number issued\nthis week, predicting that ln 1940\nthe value of Canada's gold output\nwlll  reach  $2,000,000,000  annually.\nThe Miner's annual number ls of\n104 pages nnd makes a size-record\nln national mlulng editions. It\npoints out that for several years\npast there has been In evidence an\nIntensive campaign of prospecting\nand developing of ore deposits.\nThis country-wide effort Is about\nto bear fruit and the harvest will\nbe  Impressive.\nIn the ordinary course Canada\nadds one or two new gold producers\nto Its list ln a year. But ln the\nyear from June, 1933, to June, 1934,\nthere wlll be added to the list of\nthe nation's producing gold mines\n35 new names, bringing the total\nof regularly producing gold mines\nto 58. In addition, 17 of the present\nproducers wfll Increase their output. The lists, it should be noted,\ndo hot  Include plants  merely pro-\nMMtflMMMtMOM-W\nChristmas\nCard,\nI\n4 Choice Selection of\nS 12  Christmas   Greeting Cards of the\nHoly Land.\n80\u00a3 per Box of 12 I\nCAllen s Art Shoppe\nWEDNESDAY\nNOV. 82nd, 2 P.M.\nRailway St., Fairview\nOet off street car at end of line\nand fo through lumber yard\nActing under Instructions from\nIda. J. McAllister I wlll offer\ntbe following:\u2014 Garden Toole,\nLawn Mower, Hoae, Planet Jr.,\nSteel Wheelbarrow, Jack, Meat\nSafe, Dog Kennel, Wood1 Heater,\nKitchen Table and Chairs, Utensils, Dishes, 3 Kitchen Ranges,\nDrop Leaf Table. Living Boom\nSuite, Gramophone, steel Beds\nand Bedroom Furniture, Canned\nFruit and Pickles, etc., etc.\nG. HORSTEAD,\nTERMS: Cash Auctioneer.\nGooda on View Morning of Sale\novercoats at |100. The Northern\nMiner, which credits Itself with\nbeing consistently right, in tho paat\nperplexluR years, on gold and money\nmatters, here steps out of Its special\nfield and brings home to the average man the Implication of vital\nmoves ln the metal world.\nJected but only those definitely\nknown to bc candidates for place\nln the production or expansion list.\nGAINS    10    YEARS\nTlie year 1934 should, therefore,\nwitness an unpwallel advance ln\ngold production in Canada. While\nsome of the new plants are starting\nat modest tonnage rates, they aro\nerected on commerclsl deposits and\nshould, many of them, expand Just\nas our present producers have expanded   ln   the  past   10  years.\nCanada, seizing an unique opportunity presented by high priced\ngold, wlll gain 10 years on Its ner-1\nmal progression, Tlie year 193;< i\nwill itself provide a record goKi I\noutput, placed by Ottawa authorities at \u00bb30.000,000. It ls eipected that 1934 will see It over thc\n\u2666100,000,005   mark.\nThat a new hh_rh gold standard,\naffecting Canada, will be sec appears almost certain, and In thc\nlight of this probability an estimate\nls made that the value of Canadas\ngold output wlll reach *r.00,000,00C\u00bb\nannually by 1940.\nThe Miner says that the total\ngold output of Canada wlll reach\nalmost the billion dollar mark by\nthe end of the ysar. Half of thl..\nlarge sum ls the production of the\npast 10 years.\nWhile gold has become an enlarg-\nIng feature of Canada's export trade,\nother metals have gained a high\nplace without the same publicity.\nIt wtll astonish many Canadians to\nlearn that their country ls first\namongst nations In the export of\nr.lnc, third In copper and ln lead.\nOur domination In nickel, of which\n09' i per cent Is exported, Is well\nknown.\nGREATER  THAN  WHEAT\nThis year the exports of Canada's\nmines wlll greatly exceed the exports from our wheat fields, ln\nvalue. The Northern Miner anticipates that mining will become\nthe mainstay of Canadian business\nat home and abroad ln every way,\nJust as lt has been the country's\nbackbone   during   the   depression.\nFor silver, once the orphan amonj\nmetals, the prospect of continued\nIncreasing prloe ls seen, now that\nlt is being adopted for wider monetary use.\nThe details of the natlon-wld*.\nmovement to expand the gold mining Industry suggests the potentialities inherent in the mineral resources of the country. Tlie fact\nthat the production of gold la a\nnon-competitive Industry, that a\nnew outpouring of the precious\nmetal wlll assist Canada In Its\nnational financing, that the construction of new plants, the purchase of machinery and supplies on\na large scale, wlll assist manufacturers, will provide an Increasing\nmarket for labor, directly and Indirectly, lends a national Interest\nta developments ln the mining industry.\nThe Northern Miner points out\nthat since the first recorded nold\nstandard In semi-modern times, that\nof 22s. 9l3d. In England ln 1344,\nthere havo been a dozen new gold\nstandards. Each successively gave\ngold a higher prloe and raised it\nsixfold ln six centuries. There ls,\ntherefore. In history, nothing strange\nabout the present movement. An\nimportant point, though, la brought\nout ln this edition; repricing of\nexisting stocks and stimulation to\ngold mining promises to provide an\nunparalleled amount of gold for\nthe world's money needs. Aa a\nresult, prices of all goods will rise,\nand ln three to five yeara lt may\nwell be that 110.000 houses of today\nwill be selling for $20,000,  and  150\nMORE ABOUT\nMGEER SORE\n(Continued From rife One)\nWE  SPECIALIZE  IN  THE  MAKING   OF\nDOORS AND STORM WINDOWS\nLarge or small, and ln any style, we can take care of your door and\nstorm window requirements. Strongly made of durable materials,\nand moderate ln cost.    Be ready for winter weather.\nThone ts Your Order Now, and We Will Fill It Promptly\nA. H. GREEN GO. LTD.\n101   1RONT   STREET\nI'HONE   HS\nCOLEMAN\nGASOLINE LAMPS\nand LANTERNS\nGood light is one of the grcalct necessities of life.\nIt promotes comfort, health and happiness ... yet\nit is one of the cheapest things wc have.\nSeveral different styles\nto chdose  from,  all\nsafe and easy to operate\u2014from\n|\"7.95 to ? 10.75\nThe ideal light for indoors or out. Provides\n.00 to 300 candle power of brilliance. Equipped with Pyrex Clear\nGlass Globe\u2014from\n$\u25a07.95 to SJO.50\nINSTANT LIGHTING WITH 40 HOURS OF\nSERVICE PER GALLON OF FUEL\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nney-generalship. Then after the election I was informed that I was not\nto be ln the cabinet, that Mr. Pattullo couldn't work with me. No\nman has a tight to say that before\nho has tried to work with me. Yes,\nI'd be hard to work with if the\noovernment wanted to play with\nthings vlth which I mean business.\"\nWhen Wilfrid Hanbury, MP- for\nBurrard made a warm reply to Mr.\nMcOeer, the latter declared he Intended to run ln Burrard ln the\nnext federal election.\nMr. McOeer said that A. M. Man-\nson, K.C.., waa more entitled to the\nattorney-generalship than he, and\nIf he had been given the post \"I\nwould havo no fear that the reforms\nI advocate would have been carried\nout.\"\nMr. McOeer criticised the cabinet\non a number of grounds, especially\ncertain members of lt, mentioning\nparticularly Hon. A. Wella Oray and\nHon. Gordon Sloan.\nHe would support the Liberal\ngovernment so long as he thought\nthey were working for the common\nman; when he did not think, so, he\nwould oppose with equal diligence.\n\"And,\" concluded Mr. McOeer,\n\"there will be no whispering behind\nwhen I have anything to eay.\"\nHe declared the liquor interests\nhad a great deal more to do with\nthe government of British Columbia\nthan they should.\nTHREE TEAMS IN\nBASKETBALL LOOP\nFalcons, Maulers and Tollers\nto Be Men's League\nThe Nelaon basektabll league will\nget away November 34 with three\nteams In the men's loop, and two\nglrla 'teams. Pairvlew Falcons, Maulers and Tollers will comprise the\nmen's league and. from these, two\nteams wlll be chosen to represent\nNelson against two Invading teams\nfrom Trail, the Sheiks and Canucks.\nA girls' team wlll play the Jimmies from the Smelter city, also a\ngirls* team and the leaders of the\nfeminine loop ln Trail.\nCecil Sharpe of Nelson Is donating\na cup for the senior men's league,\nwhich ehould make the playera more\nenthusiastic than  ever.\nA Junior league will also be drawn\nup for the boys shortly.\nTeams as drawn up in the men's\nleague are as follows:\nPairvlew Falcons\u2014Steve Smith,\nCollie Baker, Jack Bishop, Tom Harrison, Archie Bishop, Art Langlll,\nRoy  Anderson.\nMaulers\u2014R. Kirby C. MacDougal,\nBert Clark, Bill Kirby, Allan McLean,  Santo Del  Puppo,  Bill  Vance.\nTollers\u2014Din Lucas, Bud Oreenwood, R. Walters, t. Muraro, A.\nFarenholta, Alex Nlabet, Oordon Williams.\nThe schedule wilt  be  as  followa:\nNov.   34\u2014Maulers   vs.   Tollers.\nDec.  8\u2014Falcons  vs.  Maulers.\nDec.   15\u2014Tollers vs.  Falcons.\nDec. 23\u2014Tollers vs.  Maulers.\nDec.  39\u2014Maulers  vs.  Falcons.\nJan. 5\u2014Falcons vs. Tollers.\n\u2022 THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 22. 1033\nMORE ABOUT\nBRITISH HOUSE\n(Continued From Page One)\nCOOK HEADS\nRAIL ASSOCIATION\nNELSON'S TEAMS\nMUST PLAY FIRST\nCannol Play Inter-City Contests Unless Choose Rep\nPlayers\nNelson's basketball teama are being organized and the first games\nwill be played this week. After these\ngames the representative teams wlll\nbe picked to play the three Invading\nTrail teams. The home games are\nscheduled  for  Friday,  December   1.\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 31.\u2014Arrange-\nments are under way for the Sheiks,\nJimmies and Canucks, Trsll men's\nwomen's and Intermediate basketball teams, to go to Nelson to play\nrepresentative teama ln the lake\ncity Friday night. Definite word\nfrom Nelson ls awaited and Is expected soon.\nIt will be the first time this season that hoop teams have travelled\nout of the city for games, and It\nls hoped that it wlll be a start of\nthe annual warfare between Nelson\nand  Trail hoop squads.\nJuat what strength the Nelson\nteams carry ls yet unknown, but the\nlocal hoopsters expect plenty of opposition.\nIng interjection. Then, without pausing his majesty handed the copy of\nthe speech of the lord chancellor,\nwaiting on bended knee, turned and\nescorted her majesty from the chamber. No other notice was tiken of\nthe incident.\nWhat aroused the lro of tho fiery\nleft-winger was the brilliant scene\nln the hous.* o' lords, following on\nthe great state procession of the\nKing ann Queen to Westminster.\nNO   REGRETS\nMcGov.ru s-.d afterward to newspapermen he hid no .egrets for his\noutburst. \"I was ao filled with indignation at tho el-flit of all this\ncolossal show that I could not stand\nJt any longer and I simply had to\nexpress my thoughts.\" he explained.\nAs the house of commons assembled after the fo.mal opening In\nthe house of lords, disarmament was\nimmediately made an issue. Prime\nMinister Ramaay MacDonald made It\nplain the united Kingdom would\ncontinue efforts in International collaboration for a disarmament agreement.\nThe Labor and Liberal oppositions\nsubmit Led amendments to the address ln reply to the throne speech.\nThe Labor amendment expresses regret at the \"mishandling of International and Imperial affairs and\nfailure to revese the unjust economies enforced on the unemployed,\nor to resto.e and develop social\nservices.\"\nThe Liberal amendment regrets\nthat the throne speech did not indicate any effective policy to restore\nworld trade or develop thc resources\nand equipment of the nation.\nThe Liberals under Sir Herbert\nSamuel were ironically cheered as\nthey formally crossed the floor to\nthe opposition benches, abandoning\ntheir previous neutrality largrly because of dissatisfaction with thc\ngovernment's record in disarmament\nefforts.\nIn general remarks George Lansbury, the veteran Labor leader, complained that no mention waa made\nIn the speech of the trade negotiations with Russia, and he asse.ted\nthat the failure of the world economic conference was almost a\ncrime.\nPLAN   SUBSTANTIAL\nThe prime minister d;sc;lbed the\nEuropean altuation toiay as a continuation of the aftermath of war\nand the peace treaties. \"So far as\nwe are concerned.\" he said ln reference to disarmament, \"we were\nnever under the delusion that an\nagreement on dlsa.mament which ls\nnot a full agreement Internationally\nwould be of much use In establishing peac.> on a secure basis.\"\nThe British government stands\nup boldly to the assertion tbat the\nplan was a substantial one, and tf lt\nhad been carried out lt would have\nbeen a great contribution to complete  disarmament.\n\"That structure, however, was\nshaken by political events culminating ln Germany giving notice she\nwould leave the confe.ence and the\nleague. That the conference should\nbe csrrled on was never lu question,\nthe only matter for any doubt being\nwhat   was   best   to   do  Immediately.\n\"Sir John Simon, returning today\nfrom Geneva, Is able to report there\nIs a determined spirit of cooperation\nat Geneva, and no Intention of allowing disarmament to die or fall.\"\nINBALANCEU    ATTACK\nHe concluded with a reference to\nwhat he described as a very unbalanced attack by the opposition\nagainst private armament firms In\nBritain, In which lt had been charged\nthat B.itatn supplied one-third of\nthe total export trad? ln armaments,\nThat wa\u00ab sn exaggeration of the\ngrossest character, said the prime\nminister, \"which becomes almost\nfantastic.'1\n\"Exaggerated and disturbing statements of this kind,\" said the prime\nminister, \"only make mor? difficult\nthe task of this country In International relations.\n\"Peace in the world ls the greatest\nIssue any government* British or\notherwise, could have placed before\nltsrlf, with the determination to\nkeep tha\u00bb before Jt until lt is accomplished.\"\nThe speech from the throne was\nfreely Interpreted as a declaration, in\nthe face of Italian efforts to transfer disarmament talks to Rome, that\nB.ltaln would not agree to any lessening of the prestige of the league\nof nations.\nWINNIPEO, Nov. 21 (OP)\u2014*dgar\nH. Cook, Transcona, Man., waa today\nelected president of the Canadian\nassociation of Railway Englnemen,\nconductors, trainmen, yardmen, telegraphers and dispatchers. Tbe association embraces running trades from\ncoast to cosst.\nCook entered tha aervlee of the\nGrand Trunk railway at Belleville,\nOnt., In 1906, moving westward to\nthe   Pacific   coast   two   years   later.\nMORE ABOUT\nJONES\n(Continued From Paje One)\nVernon Beekeeper\nIs Heavy Winner\nCarries Off Six of thc 19\nPrizes in Bristol Honey\nShow\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 31 (CP)\u2014Leonard Hants, veteran beekeeper or\nVernon, effectively swept the honey\nboard at the British Columbia exhibition Just held in Bristol, according to cabled  .eports.\nApparently British Columbia took\n16 awards out of a total of 19, including  all   the  firsts   and  seconds.\nThe full prlae list ls not yet\nflvallbsle, but It Is reported that Mr.\nHarris Is unbeaten lti six competitions. This Is a notable achievement\nJn a show regarding which Judge\nShort says he has never sren a more\nattractive display  anywhee.\nMr. Harris Is a retired provincial\napiary Inspector, who now supplies\nthe CPJt. diners with toothsome\nsweets   for   breakfast.\nThe finest Empire granulated honey\nwis that shown by H. C. Derrick of\nthe   Blackbu:n   market,   Vancouver.\nNine other British Columbia winnings aro yet to be announced.\nItl I U PARLOR ROBBED\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 31 (CP).-Po-\nllce are searching for three masked\nand armed gunmen who held up\nthe Kingston hotel beer parlor.\nRichards street, late lost night and\nescaped with 1114 in caalx.\nadvances on municipal account,\nmore than $10,000,000. Normal revenue dropped from more than 126,-\n000,000 In 1929 to en estimated\n\u00bb30.000,000 approximately for thia\nyear.\n\"Wo are criticized on the cost of\nthe.London loan for \u00a31,1500.000 borrowed ln the spring of 1932, My\nhonorable friend overlooks the fact\nthat In 191B he floated a loan of\n(11,000,000 ln prosperous times when\nIt waa easy to secure funds and fold\nthe same at a net price of 1865,300\nor at a loss of $134,700. The loss\nto the province was 6.88 per cent.\nKEVENTES DOWN\n\"In the last budget speech I referred myself to the fact that the\nestimates of expenditure submitted\nto the house were In excess of estimated revenue to the extent of sinking funds for which no provision\ncould bo made unless revenues Increased during the year. In regard\nto outstanding cheques my friend\nwlll probably find himself In a very\nsimilar position for the next few\nmonths.\n\"For a year and a half we had\nfaced revenues falling so rapidly\nthat it was extremely difficult *o\nmeet current bills as well as finance\nunemployment relief In advanoe of\nfederal payments for relief.\nWRONG  IMPRESSION\n\"In regard to the special accounts\nthe honorable minister gives rather\na wrong impression as to the state\nof these funds. As a matter of fact\nthe amount of money. Invested in\nsecurities for superannuation fund\namounts to $5841.089 at par value.\nIn the teachers' pension fund, the\namount of securities held by the\ngovernment totals $842,754 at par\nvalue. Both totals are as at March\n31,  1933.\n\"If we had elected to be unfair,\nwe too could have ahown that when\nDr. MacLean left office there wis\n\u2022 1.533,207 owing to the superannuation fund; and that when John\nHart himself was retired ln 1924\nthe consolidated revenue fund was\nindebted to the superannuation fund\nto the extent of 1779.644. The minister has made a great to-do about\nnothing. There has been no Irregularity ln connection with the custody of these tmst funds, for which\nthe province at all times stands as\neecurlty.\n\"Reference was made by the minister of finance to unfunded debt\nof some 917,000.050. Of this \u00bb5.362.-\n000 was loaned by the Dominion\ngovernment to the province of B.C\nTreasury bills for unemployment\nrelief; g2.000.000 further was provided by B.C. out of borrowings for\nunemployment relief and ls Included\nIn tlie deficit; $4,697,000 ls due to\nthe bank which held B.C. treasury\nbills; and the balance was due to\ndeficits caused by the loas In revenue.\nCOT of tosts\n\"No reference. I notice, was made\nto the efforts made to cut down provincial costs in the light of these\nfacts. The reduction ln expenditures\nmade ln the last two years was $7,-\n430.000.\n\"Docs this Indicate reckless extravagance and Incompetency on the\npart of the late administration,\nwhich was endeavoring to fac? the\nvery grave burdens before It? Those\nare burdens which the honorable\nminister of finance will now have\nto carry. Let us hope he will have\nan equal measure of success,\" Mr.\nJones concluded.\nSees Bright Silver Prospect\nWithout Artificial Support\nPolicy of \"Laissex Faire\" Urged for Metal by\nBrookings Institution After a\nComprehensive Study\nAfter making a comprehensive _\nstudy of the much disputed question!\nof silver and what the nationa of the\nworld ahould do to restore its price\nor its monetary prestige, the Brookings Institution of Washington haa\napparently come to the conclusion\nthit silver needs debunking. The\nresults of its study have been\nbrought out in book form, Just\npubished under the title of \"Silver;\nAnalysis of Factors Affecting ita\nPrice.\" The conclusion ls reached\nthat silver wlll recover as the world\nemerg*s from depression.\nPROSPECT   FAIRLY  BRIGHT\nThe author, T. S. Leong, con-\nconcludes his volume In these word*.\n\"The future prospect for silver Is\nfairly bright. Wren the present\nworld-wide depression gives place to\na revival, demand for sliver Is almost certain to re-assert itself. Pro-\nauction has under-gone considerable curtailment and wlll undergo\nfurther reduction, particularly lf\nthe demonetized silver continues to\nappear in the market. It may therefore -be expected that an Improvement ln the price of silver wtll\nsooner or later manifest itself. Our\nenquiry tnto the price of silver may\nbe briefly Hummed up in the following terms.\n\"1. The reduction ln the pries of\nsilver has none of the alleged cataclysms! effects of depreciating the\npurchasing power of India and China\nin foreign markets. Despite the world\ndepression, civil perturbation, and\neconomic distress, and notwithstanding the fact that they have to purchase foreign commodities at a rela-\ntve disadvantage and that there lias\nbeen a severe decline ln the demand\nfor their export products on the part\nof western countries, these two\nprincipal sliver-consuming countries\nhave not only maintained their\nmerchandise imports ln pecuniary\nand physical volume at a relatively\nhigh level but China has been a\nconsistent Importer of silver and\nIndia has continued to Import ailver\nfor private purposes throughout the\npresent period of the sharpest drop\nIn the price of silver,\nIS RELATIVELY STABLE\n\"2. The silver price level ls more\nstable than that of many Important\ncommodities such aa the non-\nferrous metals with which silver Is\nproduced as a by-product. It la even\nless variable than that of agricultural products, lf the period of comparison ls confined to the years elnce\nthe end of the world war; and certainly during the present depreaalon the price of silver has declined\nless rapidly than the prices of non-\nferrous metals and agricultural products. At the present time there are\nmany important commodities\u2014Important from the standpoint of the\nmagnitude of revenues which they\nyield\u2014whose prices have fallen relatively more than the price of ailver.\n'3. The purchasing power of silver does not fluctuate more than\nthat of gold; lt is ln fact more\nstable than that of gold lf the\ncomparison be restricted to the war\nyears and alnce.\nThe Emperor of Ethiopia hat,\npromised that he wilt free all cf\nthe 2,000,000 slaves ln his country\nwithin 15 years.\nMore Relief Coses\nin Vancouver Citv\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 21 <CP>\u2014 In-\nI crease of 1S9 relief cases during\n' the first two weeks of November\nbrought the total number on relk:f\nIn Vancouver city to 8104 at November 15. Costs however, decreased\nfrom 993.596 in the first two we?ks\nof November, 1932, to 183,588 for\nthis   year.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nEagles   meet   tonight,   8   o'clock.\nInitiation. <9338>\nUnited Service ln Salvation Army\nCitadel tonight, 8 o'clock.       (9317)\nKEEP IN MIND EXCELSIOR\nCLLB   BAZAAR,   DEC.   2nd.     (9321)\nMONTREAL STANDARDS AT NELSON  NEWS  DEPOT  TODAY.   (9050)\nFor rent, furnished or unfurnished\n3-room  suites. Kerr Apartments.\n(9063>\nWhen you want a Taxi ride in a\nBuick, Phone 35, Nelson Transfer\nCo..  Ltd. (9051)\nWanted\u2014Several cars dry fir, tamarac and birch wood. West Transfer company. (9312)\nEFFECT IN CANADA\n\"4. From, the standpoint of the\nnational economic life, the consequences of the recent serious fall\nIn the prloe of silver In two principal silver-producing countries\u2014the\nUnited States and Canada\u2014are negligible. The output of aUver constitutes oo amall a part of the national production of these two countries that, even were the pries of\nsilver to dwindle further, the effect\non their national Incomes would be\ntrifling. The recline ln the price\nof silver has had a relatively more\nserious effect on the national economies of Mexico and Peru the other\ntwo principal silver-producing countries, because stiver contributes a\nrelatively large share to their national Income and because silver\nexports comprise a relatively greater\npart of their foreign commerce. But\naa the productive capacity of these\ntwo countries ls small compared\nto that of the entire world, aud as\ntheir foreign commerce makes up so\ninsignificant a share of world trade,\nthe low Incurred by them as a\nresult of the depreciation ln the\nprice ls of no importance to world\neconomy. Sliver ls in fact one of\nthe Insignificant among many commodities which have suffered severe\nprice reduction.\nPROULEM   END   ITSELF\n\"In conclusion, one further observation may be made. As tho price\nof silver wlll probably show an\nImprovement with the recovery of\ntrade tlie problem of price depreciation wlll to some extent find\nIts own solution. Even ir the price\nof silver should remain low, sliver\nas a problem to this country and\nto the world at large ls so very Insignificant compared to the many\nformidable problems which are facing the nations of the world today\nthat It could well be neglected.\nWhile this study has not concerned\nItself with all the aspects of the\nsilver situation, we may nevertheless safely venture the opinion that,\nao far sa the United States and\nthose countries which neither hold\nnor produoe much silver are concerned, the policy which ahould\nmend Itself with respect to silver as\na commodity  Is lalssea fatre.\"\n\"Silver\" la published by the Institute of Economics, a branch of\nthe Brookings Institution of Washington. The data and the opinion.!\nupon which the final conclusion ls\nbased aro given ln some 160 pages\nof well documented historical and\nstatistical material. The volume ls\npublished at $2.\u2014Financial Post,\nMORE ABOUT\nEARTHQUAKE\n(Contlnned From Page One)\nlands and threatening homes and\nproperty.\nThe government reported two Honduras workers drowned and said the\nCangrejal river wa\u00bb threatening to\nflood the Important city of La\nCelba.\nColumlba continued to suffer\nsevere damage throughout the coun*\ntry from floods and landslides.\nOfficials feared all railroad traffic would have to be discontinued,\nlf the rains ahould continue. The\npower aupply may be completely\ncut off lf the coal mines become flooded and production stop,\nped.\nThe village of Satlva Notre, with\n6.000 homeless seeking shelter ln\nneighboring towns, became a like\ntwo-miles square when mountain\nstreams overran their banks. Loss\nfrom floods and the landslide that\ncompletely destroyed the town yesterday was estimated at $1,000,000.\nSTART NEW LONGBEACH CAMP,\nALL EXISTING ONES ARE FULL\nAround 800 Men Now in Dominion Camps in\nThis District; Green Building\nSectional Bunkhouses\nAll seven Dominion camps in this provincial engineering district\u2014the airport camps at Salmo and Kitchener,\nand the road camps at Longbeach, Shoreacres, China Creek,\nand Nelway\u2014have a full complement of relief workers for\nthe first time since the Dominion authorities started their\ncamp program, it was disclosed Tuesday. As the camps\nhave from 100 to 125 men each. There are around 800\nmen now on the camp list.s.\nFirst of the additional camps needed, for the anticipated winter increase in numbers, with men to be brought\nfrom the prairie, is to bev\nerected immediately on the\nwestern end of the Longbeach project, the camp\nbuildings, of sectional construction, now being fabricated by the A. If. Green\ncompany in Ncison. Its site\nwill be just east of the western end of the Longbeach\nssjiui \";\\\\ inoqu pus 'uoima\/up\nfrom Longbeach No. 1 which\nis just east of the road to\nthe Longbeach ferry, the entire diversion having a length\nof 2.7 miles.\nA  IIOISE A  DAT\nJust  .  lev  tickets  left  for  Glee\nClub   Concert,   Not.   39.    Ask   any\nmember for yours now.   Adults 35c.\n(9318)\n\u2022fourth of the aeries of K.C. Military Whist Drives Thursday, Nov.\n23rd, at 8 o'clock sharp. Admission 35C <93_0)\nSnuggle Up in\na Muffler\nThey are as \"dress up\"|\nas they are comfortable.!\n3ee the new assortments j\nof wool, silk and wool|\nand silks.\nJfl.25    ?1.75 Up\nEMORY'd\nLimited\nSEE\nVIC 1\n    GRAVES I\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nFor Modern Plumbing\nAT   MODERATE   l'RICES\nOpp. City HaU       PHONB   811]\nSmythe's Pharmaoj\nPHOM   1\nPrescriptions Our Special.]\nOPEN EVERY  SUNDAY\nj. A.C. Laughton, _M\n\u2022Wis!.!. Medical Arts Bnll--_-|\nA new machine slices bread dough\nbefore the loaf ls baked.\nCOAL\nGait Lump  ?10.50j\nThe old favorite.      J\nWildfire  Lump $10.50\nClean hot, Bootless.\nBellevue   Lump $10.00'\nBest for hot air.\nGreenhill Lump ?10.00\nSteam or hot water.\nWOOD\n14-in. todar, 2 ricks *t\n12-in.  Fir,  2   ricks 85\n16-in.  Fir,  2  ricks $8\nBirch in All Lengths\nBURNS\nCoal & Cartage\nPhone 53  518 Ward St\nLumbago? Chiropractic treatments\nwill remove Its cause. McMillan i_\nCimeron Chiropractors over Emory's.\nPhone 212. (0110)\nChristmas photographs \u2014\nDon't ocerlook the Ideal gift. Make\nyour appointment now. GEO. A.\nMEERES.  Thone 40. (9321)\nThe Saturday night dance will\nbe held at Oelinas' tltl* week. Admission 35 and 15 cents. First five\ncouplea  free. 1.9322)\nportable bunkhouses, to accommodate 12 men each, and the regular\nwish and door factory crew lr*. turning out one completed hw' '\nln aectlona, per day, four mm~mm\nbeen now completed. Each h\nhouse ls 28 feet by 16 In ground\nplan, and the sections are built to\na atandard plan, each bouse having\ntwo doors and eight windows. The\nenda are made of three sections,\nthe middle one having door and\ntransom window; the floor ln four\nsections, each 10 feet by 7; the sides\nIn four sections, each 7 by 7; and\nthe roof In eight sections. One of\nthe roof sections contains a chimney hole.\nAfter the take-down bunkhouses\nare trucked to the camp nite, they\nwlll   have   an   outside   covering   of\n12 for 2 dozen cards printed\nwtth your name and address at\nNelson News Job Dept. Phone 144\ninr our sitesman. (9166)\nCANADIAN LEGION MILITARY\nWHIST DRIVE TONIOHT. GOOD\nPRIZES. ADMISSION 35c, INCH D-\nIN(i   REFRESHMENTS  AND  DANCE.\n1930S)\nMisses Ruby Young and May Eccles In piano duets; Mrs. Charlotte\nAnnable and Mlss Loleta Horstead,\nvocal solos; part of an attractive\nprogram at the Hume on Saturday, at the Hospital Auxiliary tea\n(9327)\nTho Oreen contract calls for eight extra heavy sheathing  paper.\nFINERAL NOTICE\nNnrrro-ss\u2014John of Granite road,\na^ed 72 years, passed away Sunday,\nBody will rest at Somers' Funeral\nHomo until Wednesday, when services wlll bo held at a p.m. Ven.\nArchdeacon f. H. Oraham officiating. (9310)\nCANADIAN LEGION\nNo. M. ttttttt\nVERY IMPORTANT RALLY OE\nALL VETERANS, WHETHER LEGIONNAIRES OH OTHERWISE. TO\nBE HELD FRIDAY, NOVEMBER\n24TII, 1033, AT 7:30 P.M. TO DIS-\nCL'K-H PENSION SITUATION AND\nOTHLR VERY IMPORTANT MATTERS OF A SERUMS NATLRE TO\nEX-SERVICE MEN. PLEASE MAKE\nA  POINT OF  BE1.NO  PRESENT.\n(9293)\nTODAY and THURSDAY\nMatinees Daily 2 p.m.\no    t    t\nLILLIAN HARVEY\nLEW AYRES\nCHAS. BUTTERWORTH\nHARRY  LANGDON\nand MAMMOTH CAST\nBRIGHTEN   THE   WORLD   WITH\nGAY MELODIES and LAUGHTER!\nYour Weakness!\nEverybody's Weakness!\nON THE STAGE\u2014LAST TIMES TONIGHT\nTHE GREAT MIRZAR\nSets All!   Knows All!   Tells All!\n  and -\nGASH NITE - TONIGHT\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_1933_11_22","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0405128","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":"1933-11-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1933-11-22 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}