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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" New York Stock Market Gains\nMuch gf Lost Ground\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nthon iMla\n  Vt-m-^\n: NRLSON DAILT NEWI, NELSON, B. C\u2014lAeTl'RDAY Meil\nCanzonerl Flails the'\nExpress\" to Win Dec\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\neTTVe- CCNTH A COTT\nrgo\nM *!' \u2022 n  1(3\nCONVICTS ST UARDS AND FIRE SHOP\n\u2022      \u2022\n*      \u2022\n*       *\n*      *\n*       *\n*      *\nQuebec Penitentiary in Uproar; Prisoners Cut Hose to Prevent Fighting Blaze in Shop\nFRENCH URGE\nSEC0RI1YIN\nTHREEPACTS\nA\n[Wm Mhitter Aiks Nation of World to Or-\nftnlze for Security\nWOULD ESTABLISH\nREDUCTION BASIS\nOm Psct Would Briny\nNations Together in\nCase, War Menace\nGENEVA, gwltiertanj, Nov. 4\u2014\n(AF)\u2014Josrph Paul-Boncour, French\nminister of war, outlined France's\nnew arms play tonight and coupled tt with an eloquent bid for\nsupport In oilier countrlea.\nHo prevented the plan, parta of\nwhich already had been revealed\nIn Paris, to the ateerlni committee\nof tbe world disarmament con-\nfere not.\nTh* wir minuter uked tbe nationa ot the world to organise International aocurlty by a aerlea ot threa\npacta.     . '\nTho moat comprehensive of tbeao\nta an aireament by tbe participating\nnationa to oonault when war men-\naoee.\nTbo aecond pact would ba a reaffirmation of loyalty to the covenant\nof tba League of Nationa and apeclflc\nacknowledgement of the oovenant'a\nprovisions for penalizing an offending state.\nTha third would ho a regional\nagreement for mutual assistance\nWiln_t  an  aggressor.\nThis plan, the war minister aald,\nwould do much to establish a beale\nlor the reduction of existing arma-\nSOAJtlA.\nABMY  CONeJCB-PTlON\nBe alao outlined to tbe oommlttee\na ayatem of army conscription In all\nthe European countrlea which pre-\nsumably would Involve abolition af\ntbe German retchswehr. He explained thle would permit creation of\ndefence forces upon tba baala of\nequality\u2014approximating what Oer-\nat_-r demands. He added that recruitment In countries \"with powerful populations\" would require certain restrictions In order to prevent\ndisproportionate strength.\nOne of the fundamental bases of\n' tbe three pacts, the Frenchman told\n- the committee, would be tbe constitution of a strong League of Nations armed foroe equipped wltb the\nmost effective weapons, and able\nto aid an attacked nation.\nBeads of the Important .delegations  reserved 'comment.\nPOUCE DISTURBED\nOVER ING MAN\nGeorgetown Resident Disappear! ; Though Illiterate\nLeaves Note\nVICrORIA. Itov. 4 (CP)\u2014If Napoleon Labelle, aged TO, formerly\nresident at Oeorgetwod, Big Bay,\nsear Fort Slmaon, Is alive and well\nbe would confer a favor on Brltlah\nColumbia polioe by saying ao. At\npresent ba la listed as mlaelng in-\nder olrcumstanoea which have oc.'\ncjjloned some alarm.\nOn October 11 lut Labelle **ea\nreported missing by an Industrial\nfirm for whom be bad worked. Living alone In a cabin near the plant,\nthe aged men had been In receipt\nof a monthly cheque Jrom the\nworkmen's compensation board. Being unable to read or write he had\nendoreed these cheques with bis\nmark. Frienda therefore were confused to find his cabin empty one\nday and a note pinned to tbe wall\nIntimating he had left for Alaeka\nand would not return.\neeeeeseiefe-ewssssesins-\nOUTJS-ANDWG\nDEVELOPMENTS\nSummery ot outstanding factors ln week's Industrial de-\nvelopaen':\nOttawa-\u2014Retail sales Index for\nB-rpt-ember abows Increase in\neight   groups   and   decline   ln\nthree.\ntt. John's, Hfld.\u2014newfound-\nland government agreed to trade\n10,000 pit props for English coal.\nToronto\u2014Toronto has collected  77 per cent of  1032  taxes.\nBelleville, Ont.\u2014Customs returns for Fort of Belleville for\nOctober show Increase of 96080\nover   September.\nOshawa, Ont.\u2014Moton for Pontiae cars in future to be manufactured and assembled at\nWalkervUle.\nOtUwa\u2014The first nine months\nof 1932 Canada purchased 1,2*7,-\n163 tons of U. K. coal, lncreeee\nof about 00 per oent.\nPort Hope. Ont.\u2014Eldorado plant\nfor ex traction of red t um from\nOreat Bear lake ore start* up\nnext   week.\n2 ARE KILLED\nIN BERLIN BOS\nUNE DISORDER\nTwo Women Are Seriously\nWounded In Transportation Strike\nMOTHERS ABLE\nGUARD AGAINST\nCANCERRAYAGES\nNoted Caiicer Research Workers Give Insight Into\nPrevention   \u2022\nOTTAWA, Nov. 4.\u2014<CP) \u2014 Dr.\nJoseph C. Hoodgood, Internationally known eaneer research worker of John Hopkins university,\nBaltimore, tonight told the OtUwa\nmedical chlrurgi-al society mothers might become the guardians\nof their famUles against the ravages of cancer.\nNo beautiful woman, Intent on\npreserving ber beauty, the specialist aald, ever became a victim of\ncancer of the akin.\nWomen, he added, by tbelr growing addiction to tobacco In recent\nyear had taught men emokere bow\nto avoid cancer of tha mouth by attention to tbe appearance of the\nteeth.\nPr. Bloodgood declared that when\nthe majority of people aooept voluntarily the rules of periodic examination by medical men for cancer\nof the skin, mouth or breast,\nand of ths cervle In mothers will\nbe relegated to tbe category of preventable  diseases.\nPeriodic examination and preventive medicine, he aald, are like\na new religion, and tho majority\nof people must be reached aa tbey\nhave been reached ln the past by\nnew religions. He blamed \"so-called\npersonal liberty\" for tbe difficulty\nmedical men bad Jn persuading\npeople to accept new scientific\ntruths of preventive medicine.\nP.G.E.DEAL\nIS RAPIDLY\nTAKING SHAPE\nIntermediary to Leave In Few\nDays, Regarding Initial\nPayment\nHOOLEY SMITH ,\nREACHES TERMS\nMOJCntlAL, Nov. 4.\u2014(CP)\u2014Hooley\nBmlth, -bitty right wlnge. of tbe\nMontreal Maroona of the National\nHockey league signed up today after\na long holdout. He worked 'out with\nthe Maroona at their practice late\ntoday.\nKIUJ-D   INdTANTtY\nVTBISN   TOUCHES   WIM\nVANOOUVER, Nov. 4 (CP)\u2014Touching an electric wire Ie_dlng from\ntbe abort to a floathouae on False\ncreek. C Clancey. 332 tutt, Tint\natreet, North Vancouver, met ln-\natant death by electrocution late\nthis afternoon.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 4 (CP)\u2014The Pacific Oreat Eastern railway deal is\nrapidly assuming definite shape, It\nIs believed, despite tbe ellence tbat\nmeets all questions put to tbe gov-\nenynent.\nMartin Orlffln, K. C, of Vanoouver. who le in charge of tbe legal\nend for the negotiators, waa busily\nengaged today ln checking over each\nclause of the agreement of sale\nwhich It Is expected will be plaoed\nbefore the leglalature at'its next\nsession.\nAn extraordinary meeting of tbe\nexecutive waa called today and another atep forward was believed to\nhave been taken toward tbe completion of the deal.\nColonel I. J. Ryan of Vancouver\naald to be the cblef Intermediary\nbetween the government and financial In-ereeta, will leave for the east\nln a day or two ln connection with\nthe Initial payment of 8500,000\nwhich. It Is said. Is requested by\nthe government as an evidence of\ngood faith.\nNEW YORK, NOV. 4\u2014City offl-\nelala upon whom acting Mayor V.\nMcKee haa been attempting ta\nforce hit own discipline of subway\nrather than limousine 'riding had\nthe laugh en McKee today.\nHe revealed that he tost his\n$800 watch yesterday, probably ta\na pickpocket ln a eubway Jam.\nCHINUE PROPOSE TO RESUME\nRELATIONS WITH JAPANESE\nTOKYO. Nov. 4 (AP)\u2014Resumption\nof diplomatic relations between\nChina and Russia was recently proposed by tbe Chinese, tte Japaneae\n-oreign office said today.\nSTRIKERS PELT\nSTONES AT CARS\nEight Out of 10 Cars Are\nWrecked Soon After\nStarting:\nBERLIN, Nov. 4 (AP)\u2014Two men\nwere killed and two women were\nseriously wounded today In disorders arising from the transportation ttrike In whloh 15,000 men\nare participating.\nThe first death occurred early ln\ntbe morning when police and strikers dashed at a car barn tu the\nauburb of Schoenberg. Again later\nln the day police had to fire on a\nmob of strikers ln the Schoenberg\ndlatrlct. One man ww killed and\ntwo women were wounded.\nAU day long trolley cars and\nbusses were kept running with\ngreat difficulty. .About 3000 men returned to work, but tte strikers\nwho stayed out pelted trolley ears\nand busses wltb rocks. Busses which\nran the gauntlet were badly damaged.\nSight out of 10 wers wrecked an\nhour after they started. Xa Schoenberg one bue waa fired upon, but\nno one waa hurt.,\nThe atrlke began without the authorisation of tne union over a pay\ncut of about, halt, a oent an hour.\nMacDonald WUl\nPreside Over the\nIndian Conference\nIn Addition Government Will\nHave   Seven\nDelegates\nMiss Canada In Birmingham\nSELL POPPIES TODAY\nIN HONOR OF FALLEN!\nToday Is \"Poppy D--7,\" whsn artificial popple* will be aold to tht\npublic of Nelson by a lores of tae-\ngera composed of ladies of members  ot  tns   Canadian   Legion,\nThr popples are for wearing on\nRemembrance Day, anniversary of\nthe Armistice, nert rriday. ln memory of the fallen ln the Oreat War.\nThey are manufactured by disabled veterans and the proceeds of\nthe tae ln exceas of coats will be\nused as a part of the relief fund\nof the Nelson branch of the Canadian Lesion.\nM***m 3\nPATRIOTIC  LN  APPLE EATING.\n\"Mias Canada\" Is shown here sampling some Canadian apples on the\nCanadian government stand at the Twelfth Annual Fruit show ln Birmingham,   England.\nTO SERVE 5 YEARS\nFOR GOLD THEFTS\nPioneer  Mine  Assayem  Get\nFive Years on Each\n._:.;f.. . \u25a0 \"\u00a3lurgfr'   ,-,-  -'  \u2022\nLONDON, 'Tot. 4.\u2014(CP) \u2014 Prime\nMlnlVer Ramsay MacDonald will\nagain preside over the resumed Indian Bound Table conference which\ntn the forthcoming months will\nendeavor to finally dispose of the\ndetails of the new constitution\nwhich will grant India a greater\nmeasure of government.\nIt was announced tonight ln\naddition to the prime minister, the\ngovernment will have seven delegates at the new round table; there\nare three non-governmental delegates, but the Labor party wlU\nhave no representation, having declined to take part ln the conference. .   ,\nIn addition of court*, the conference will include representatives\nof the Indian communities and\nthe native states, and presumably\nof the Hindu Nationalist congress,\nrepresented at tbe second conference last winter by Mahatma Oandhl.\nLord sankey, lord high chancellor\nand chairman of the federal structure oommlttee of the Initial round\ntable conference In 1030, Is again\ndelegated to the conference. Other\ngovernment delegates include Sir\nSamuel Hoare, secretary for India,\nLord Irwin, president of the board\nof education and former viceroy of\nIndia, Lord Hallsham, minister for\nwar and noted authority on constitutional questions, and Bir John\nBlmon. foreign secretary.\n\u2022 VAlfCOOVTO, Nov. i (CP)\u2014R.\nBurton, former assayer at tbe Pioneer mine. Bridge River, who pleaded guilty to two charges of retaining stolen goodi In connection with\nths theft of gold from the mine,\nwas sentenced by Police Magistrate\nW. M. McKay to two years and fire\nmonbt-s la tbe penitentiary on each\ncharge, The sentences will run concurrently.\nC. R. Summer and I. L. Walters,\nwho pleaded guilty . to a. similar\ncharge, were sentenced to 17 s n 1\nfive months respectively.\nFIVE DAYS JAIL\nHORACE ENSING\nFOR RIDE THEFT\nDisembarking from a train prac*\ntlcally into the arms of C. P. R.\nConstable C. A. Brown, on the station platform here, Joseph Bourget,\nwho h\u00bb* fulled to pay for his transportation, was sentenced Friday by\nStipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel to pay a fine of $5 or spend\nfive days In Jail. Having no funda\nhe is now In Jail..'\nSERVE TERM FOR\nCRUELTY TO TURK\nW. Zanalio of Creston was brought\nto the provincial Jail here Thursday* night by Constable R. B.\nMcKay to serve four weeks Imprisonment\u2014two weeks for driving to\nthe common danger, and two weeks\non a conviction of cruelty to animals, the latter ln connection with\ni turkey.\nWEST KOOTENAY FARMERS\nBACK KIDD COMMISSION\nEXCEPT AGRICULTURE CUT\nIn Semi-Annual Convention Here Declare Further\nCut Would Hurt Efficiency; Want\n*    ; Agriculturists Retained\nAPPROVE GENERAL AIMS\nOF KIDD COMMISSION\nj Endorse House of 38 Members; Proposal for Merger\n[ of Departments Obtains a Number\nof Supporters\nLIGHTKEEPER\n- IS DROWNED\nPORT AST-TOR, Nov. 4.\u2014A tele-\n(run received Ut* thia afternoon\nfrom Roseport by customs collector\nJ. Hartley ststes that Malcolm Sutherland. Ught keeper at Battle Island\nhaa been drowned. Mr. Sutherland\ndisappeared on Thursday afternoon\nwhile crossing from the Island to\nRossport ln an open gasoline-driven\nboat. \u00bb\nCOOUDOR TO AID\nIN   HOOVER   DRIVE\nOHICAOO, Kov. *\u2014 Republican\ncampaign headquarters announced\ntonight Calvin Coolldg* will take\npart with President Hoover In the\nfinal drive of the United state, campaign on election eve.\nMOSCOW, Nov. 4 (AP)\u2014IncrVeaee\nln pay ranging up to 100 per cent\nln some casea were ordered tonight\nfor the army and navy as Soviet\nRussia's 15-h anniversary present to\nth* nation's fighting foroes.\nBoth.bouquets and brickbats described parabolas through\nthe air in the general direction of the famous Kidd commission, at the semi-annual convention of the .West Kootenay\nCentral Farmers institute here Friday, but the bouquets\noutnumbered the brickbats, and when the four or five hours\nof juggling was over, it was seen that more flowers than\npieces of drain pipe festooned the brow of the commission.\nOn the matter of the agricultural reductions proposed,\nhowever, the delegates took the view that the limit of reduction had already pretty well been reached, with the government's agricultural estimates down to $285,762.04, without cutting a further $198,668.44, as the Kidd commission\nproposed should be done. At the same time they declared\nthemselves solidly back of the commission in its general aims.\nKEEP AGRICULTURISTS\nThe recommened reduction that evoked most opposition\nwas that which involved cutting the horticulture appropriation from $15,879.80 to $5000, with elimination of the district agriculturists, and dropping the $11,821.60 for plant\npathology and $9,063.20 for field crops, though these last\ntwo items may be partly covered by a recommended grant\nof $25,000 to the university for agriculture research. The\nconvention, passing a resolution emanating from Grand Forks,\nasked the government to entertain no thought of any cut\nin the number of district ag- ,\u25a0\u00bb\t\nriculturists. 'agriculture  department   with  lands\n|    A   long   and   vigorous   debate   on j  ____\t\nth*   question   of  a   merger  of   the I    (CONTINUED   ON   PAGE   TWO)\nPLEDGE AGAIN\nKEEP CANADIAN\nPRODUCTS OUT\nHoover's Speech Dwells\nChiefly on Tariff as\nEffects Farmer\nABOARD PRESIDENTIAL SPECIAL, Enroute west, Nov. *\u2014A\nrenewed pledge to keep Canadian\nfarm products out of United States\nwas given today by President Hoover In a speech prepared for le-\nlivery this afternoon at Springfield, TC.\nThe speech, mad* public aboard\nthe president's train as he continued hia campaign through Indiana and. Illinois for re-*leotlon on\nNov. S, dwelt largely on th* tariff\nas It effect* th* farmer and th*\ndepreciated currencies of otA-er countries.\n\"Already foreign farm products\nsuch as butter, pork product*, cattle\nand competitive oil* hav* begun to\nllo*. ovei *__\u25a0 borders -4\u00bb eomprtl-\ntlon with our American farmera and\nhave contributed to th* d*pr*ct*t-_n\nof prices,\" Mid Mr. Hoover. \"Par-\ntlcularly la this so from Canada,\nMew Zealand and th* orient and\nfram certain European countries.\nNEGRO, INSTIGATOR OF\nRIOT, NEARLY PERISHES;\nREFUSES TO COME OUT\nThree Guards Are Stabbed and Beaten and Severely\nScorched; Tailor Shop Is Ruined;\nAH Back in Their Cells\nBf WALLACE WARD,\nUnt-lin Preu Staff Writer\nBT. VINCENT Dl PAUL, Que., Not.\n4 <CP).\u2014Th\u00ab flash of a knife wee\nthe spark thet touched off * ihort\nbut fieroe riot In St Vincent dt Pftul\npenitent!try her* today, when rebellious convicts suddenly turned on\ntheir guards tnd Mt tire to the prlion\nworkshops.\nThree guards were stabbed snd\nbeaten by five prisoners and severely\nscorched by the fire that raged ln\nthe workshop* .- moment later, A\ngiant negro convict named Crossley\nleader of the Insurgents, wes Injured\nln the fighting end nearly perished\nIn the flames, when h\u00ab refused to\ncome out of the biasing workshops\nIt was several hours before the negro\ncarried unconscious from the fire\nand lodged la the prison Infirmary,\nSix unnamed guards and a prisoner\nnamed Legsoe were lesi seriously injured.\nROOFLESS RUIN\nLate tonight ft heap of glowing embers eut flickering shadows on ths\ngaunt and rooflese mine of the workshops. Ths 1108 convicts confined m\nthe penitentiary were securely locked\nCASTLEGAR MAN,\nINJURED IN MILL\nACCIDENT, WES\nTRAIL, B.C., Not. 4.\u2014Following Injuria received nearly two months\nago at tne sawmill of WilUam Waldie\nSs Sons, Limited, Castlegar, death\ncame today to William Boloboff ln\nthe Trall-Tadanac hospital. His body\nwu taken to Cutlegar where It will\nbe burled according to Doukhobor\nceremonies.\nHoloboff, a man of 45 or 50, who\nleft a family, had been in employ\not the company for 10 or 15 years and\nwu engaged ln trucking lumber for\nloading, a horse hauling ft 5000-foot\nload on the two-wheeled vehicle, ei__\\\nhad driven. onto the loading platform when the piles spread, letting\ndown a whole section on the platform.\nlhe excited hose lost its head and ln\nits struggl * Inflicted injuries on *he\nmr.n, when he wm rushed to the\nTrail hospital.\nLOAN IS 70 PER\nCENT SUBSCRIBED\nDominion Loan Is Gradually\nCreeping Toward the\nFoil Amount\nMONTREAL, Not. 4.\u2014 (C\u00b0)\u2014-Gradually creeping up toward subscription, the 1932 Dominion ot Canada\nloan had been bought to the extent of 70 per cent according to\nlatest figures   available  today.\nOf the Issue ot tbe $80,000,000\ndivided into short and long term\nbonds, a total of *M.OOO,000 wu\ntaken ln the first four daya of\nthe week, 140,000,000 on Monday,\nIncluding the entire amount of\nthe $26,000,000 three year bonds;\n$8,000,000 on Tuesday, $4,000,000 on\nWednesday and $4,000,000 still to be\ntaken up by tbe public. The managing committee stated a substantial Increase In wrttlngs-up wu\nexpected over the week-end.\nSHIP WAS IN\nNO DANGER\nHALIFAX Not. 4.\u2014(CP)\u2014The Norwegian steamer Nervlon, reported\nln distreu early tonight, wu not\nln danger, according to Captain\nHeruchlan, who brought her into\nHalifax harbor under her own power.\nHe uld she was leaking ln the\nforepe'ak and might have to be\nrepaired  hert.\n$ln the oells and a doubte guard pe-\n| trolled the stone walla encircling toe\nfederal penal Institution.\nA group of 13 conrkts went to work\nln the tailor shop of the penitentttury\nat the  usual   hour  this  morning.\nCrouley was In the group.\nWHIRLS ON GUARD\nAs Guard Aube strolled by Crossley,\nths big negro whirled and leaped a$\nhtm, a knife flashing Into his band.\nAs at a pre-arranged signal, four\nother prisonen propped their work\nand plunged at tha other guards.\nPotest and Jacques.\nThe three guards were trapped. The\nconvicts hurled themselves upon their\nwarders, beating them down with Improvised clubs and thrusting at them\nwith the knives they had carried ln\ntheir drab prison uniform.\nAube, Jacques and Forest tried\nmadly to get away. The other 10 prisoners set up a din of howling and\nshouting which was soon picked up\nby prisoners ln other shops u guartia\nrushed to aid their companions.\nSETS  FIRE\nOne of the prisoners, believed to\nhave been Crouley. stooped and aet\nfire to a pile of doth cuttings ln\nthe tailor shop. As guards po-ande*\nacrou ths courtyard armed with rlllea.\nths convicts slammed the shop doon\n\u25a0hut. Aube, stabbed In the neck by\nCroM.ey'e knlie, waa unconscious em\nthe floor aim th* other two guards\nwere struggling feebly as blows rain-\nId on their heads from ths despe.--\nConservatives Turn Aside the 1**1prttonert-\nTongues of flam* licked at tc*\nwalls.     A has* of smoke from the\nHome Ready for\nLiberal Criticism on\nPolicies\nOTTAWA,' Nor. 4 (CP)\u2014In a\nwhirlwind finish to the afternoon\nsitting, the house of commons today swept away the address debate,\nclearing decks for detailed study\nnext week of the Anglo-Cans dlan\ntrad* treaty.\nBy a majority of 1$, Conservatives turned ulde a Liberal motion\ncriticising the government's financial ftnd tariff policlee. A Progressive motion, calling for abandonment of the. gold standard and a\ncampaign   of   currency   'inflation,\nwu rejected  by 48 votes.\nDebate   of   the   two   amendments\novershadowed th* paulng without a\nvote of tbe main notion, a formal\none   thanking   th*   governor-general\nfor bis addreu  at  tba  opening of\nparliament.\nTbe addreu debate, which opened\n\u00bb few daya after the eeuton began,\nwu .resumed today efter th* ratification of the Anglo-Canadian trade\npact.\nIs Given Two Years\nMagistrate Brands It as Most\nExtraordinary-\nCase\nVANCOUmER. NOT. 4.\u2014(CP)\u2014Paul\nDykatra, gunman, who gave himself up to tbe police, confessed\nto two holdups and helped In his\nown identification, was sentenced\nto two years In the penitentiary\nwhen he appeared in polios court\ntoday.\n\"A most extraordinary cau,\" uld\nMagistrate W. M. McKay ln pawing\nsentence.\n\"I know of no other like It ln\nmy experience. The manner ln which\nyou gave younelf up and assisted\nthe police and then aided ln your\nown Identification la very extraordinary.\n\"This cue hu given me much\nworry u to Just what to do with\nyou. The public must be protected.\nI think the ends of Justice will\nbe met by giving you two years in\nthe penitentiary. If you behave yourself ln that institution and If. an\napplication for parole la made, 1\nwill   assist   such   application.\"\nWILL   ITTJDY   POSSIBILITY.\nOF   ZKPPELIN   SERVICE\nFRIEDRICHSHAFEW. Germany,\nNot. 4.\u2014(AP)\u2014 Dr. Hugo Eckener,\nwill go to the Dutch But lndlw\nln January to study the possibility\nof inaugurating a eeppelln servloe\nbetween Amsterdam and Batavla,\nlt wu announced today. .\nHe will make the trip upon the\nInvitation of the Royal Dutch airlines.\nburning cloth Mnt prisoners and\nguards stumbling, half blinded and\nchoking through the shop.\nQuards rushed into battle with the\nInsurgents. Tbe convicts did not give\nIn without a fight. A heavy mau of\nstruggling humanity stumbled\nthrough the smoke. Ouards ran to\nhou racks and dragged long hose to\nthe doors of the tailor shop.\nUPROAR REIGNS\nThe whole penitentiary wu tn an\nuproar. A* th* hou swelled -under\nthe jreasuze of water, yelling convicts\nslashed  them  tn  two.    Infuriated\n(CONTINUED   ON   PAGE   TWO)\nSMASHES WINDOW\nAND CUTS WRIST\nResentment toward his foroed departure from a Nelson beer parlor\nat 9:30 o'clock Friday night landed Jamu Fleming of cMdlclne Hat\nln Kootenay Lak* General hospital,\nFriday night with a badly gashed\nforearm.\nWarned about using rough talk\nIn the beer parlor, Fleming continued and wm put out. He disappeared for a moment and reappeared a moment later, .smashing\na window In tha door with hie\nhand. Before police arrived at the\nscene, moment later, Fleming had\ndlui-fpeared. Shortly after being\ncalled to the beer parlor Constable\nR. Harshaw wu called to a Baker\nstreet cigar store where a man wu\nreported to be bleeding badly from\na cut wrist. First aid wu applied\nand Fleming wu rushed to the\nhospital where be was treated.\nTHE WEATHER\nTemper* tures:\nNKLSON\t\nVictorii   \t\nVsncouvesr\t\nKsxloops \t\nEstevan  Point  _\nPrlnc  Rupert  _\nAUltt     \t\nDtwson\t\nSesttle     \t\nPortland   \t\nSan  Pranclsoo _\nSpokane    \t\nPrince Oeorge  _\nLos  Angeles  .\t\nPenticton   \t\nVernon  .....\nOrand  Porks  ...\nKaslo     \t\nCalgary\nMln. Max.\n-93 M\n_ 44 49\n._ 4\u00ab\n._ 38\n... 4\u00ab\n._ 38\n._ 11\n._   4*\nEdmonton  .....\t\nawlft Current \t\nPrtnoe   Albert\t\nQurAppell. 10      40\nWinnipeg  28      44\nNanalmo   .  ,  44      40\nFORECAST\nNelson    and    vicinity\u2014 Prwh    to\nstrong eist  and south winds partly\nclcudy    and   mild   with   occuion\nrain.\n. 4_\n. SO\n3]\n. 31\n. M\n. M\n. 83\n. 38\n. 32\n. 30\n. 18\n. 38\n. 34\n. 20\n- 38\n.. 48\n64\nto\n5.\n43\n2-\n10\nSl\nill\n83\n50\n44\n80\n46\ntt\n43\n \u25a0TO* KELSON DAILY NEWS, KELSON, B. U. BATl'IDAY MOWING, NOVE\nI, IM--\nKOOTENAY FARMERS\nBACK KIDD COMMISSION\nEXCEPT AGRICULTURE CUT\nWMiimiau  PROM  PAOl  ONI)\n+_z\naad minea ta a new department .ot\nnatural reeoureea\u2014ooe of tte more*\nby the eommlasion\u2014\na atrong body of \u2022\"fr'-tr\nor it, most of the advocates envl-\nthwilnt a large tavlng. though P. w.\nOreen of Wlnlaw oontended the only\nsaving would be the minister's .salary, which \"amounted to nothing\nIf he wm efficient.\" o. S. Squires\nif Bobson led the fight for a declaration  that  tbe project of  merging\ntbe Item* ln detail and giving their\nindividual comments. '\nUCOMMIN D ATIONB\nCRITICISED\n\u25a0 Cutting down of the grant* to thc\nsmall faire and many other of the\noommiasiona re con me nda tiona were\nadversely commented on, but most\nof these were covered en bloe ln\nthe resolution opposing gurther agricultural reduction. One of the criticisms was levelled againat tbe com-\nmisa-on't proposal to do awsy wtth\nthe rebate* on stumping powder,\nthat body declaring that with the\nlarge  areas  of  cleared  land  In  the\n.tba   department,   \"thue  effecting   a\nserin, ef approximately g30,0O0 In I proVlnw^tuVmenVVhould avoid the\nadministration.\" was \"worthy of eeri- j mv wher< ,tumplng wal nweaBary.\nou* eonalderatton.\" If the propost- j Th, ^erament'a answer to this\ntton had been submitted by lteelf. | recommendation was that with one\nIt would probably hav* carried. at,^., exception, the areas that ^ad\nleast in principle. Judging by the ^ tlinber\u20acd h%A prown ^t for\nnumber of thoae who pronounced ln | igrtcuUu\u201ef and Mr. Appleton point-\nf-?^.^*!:.?^1 \".?^fl!!,!d 'M out that practically every lyncher\nln  th* Kootenay had aome wooded\nSa another that dealt with the matter of the agricultural appropriation, and  waa lost.\nTltie convention took up the Kldd\nSin-Helm's report before th* lunch\nhour, having O. B. Appleton, advisory board member, read the 'portion\nof tbe report dealing with agrlcul-\ntvre, and then the government's\nln detail. In general there\nagreement with the govern-\ncomment that with the appropriation down to two-third* of\none per cent of the estimated total\ntola* of th* province's agricultural\nproduction, lt ws* unreasonable to\nout any move. Discussion of th* re-\nland.\nMajor H* Turner Lee, Colonel John\nMurray, and 0. S. Squire* were\nstrong supporters of the commission\nln IU proposal for reduction of\noverhead.\nOutaide of th* agricultural section of the Kldd report th* convention strayed only onos, declaring\nitself ln favor of th* M-member\nlegislature suggested. . \u00ab,\nEi: SOLUTIONS\nOn the district agriculturist quae\ntion. a Grand Porks resolution, mov.\ned by O. V. Meggitt, put tb* views\nof th* convention In tb* following\nport took th* entire afternoon, up terms:\nto adjournment, delegate* going over     \"Reeoved that ln view of tb* tre-\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels and Cafes\n\"Finett in tkt Interior\"\nDinner ft Luncheon\nHUME HOTEL\ni\nKELBOH, B. C.\nOeorge HenweU, FrflJ..\nNEW LOW WINTER RATES NOW IN EFFECT\nHUMS \u2014 0. McDowell, t. Howe,\nA. J. Ironside, Cranbrook; J. J.\nMaoKay. U. W. Watt, J. T. Alley, J.\nK. Cowan, J F. Tener, O. C. Thompson, 8. 0. Neveson, T Dick, X. 8.\nWinn, A. John Nay, H, B. Pulton,\nJ. U Parker, TX Duncan, Vanoouver;\nA.  B.  MoOormack,  Toronto;   C.   V.\nMeggitt, Grand Forka; R, B. Balladr,\nRobson; Colin C. Brown, Vancouver;\nMr. and Mrs. V. Soucle, Sirdar;\nC. D. Martyn, R. fiteedman, Medicine\nHat; Mr. and Mrs. R. R, Oarnett,\nKingsgate; J. Fltnlmmons, Nakusp;\nA. Outlet, Victoria.\namount of \u25a0taUtat.sr given\nto tb* farmers throughout the province br ib* dlatrlct agriculturists\nand alto the interest of the younger\ngeneration tn poultry and liv* stock\naroused by the varloua bon and\ngirls clubs organ lead and looked after\nchiefly by tbe** men, there should\nbe no thought by tb* government\nof any out tn tbe preeent number\nof there district tgrteutturlsts.\"\nTwo Balfour resolution, on free\neducation and tha tire of the legislature, moved by A. H. Noakes,\nwere adopted as follows:\n\"Resolved that we approve the\nKldd report regarding recommendation that the legislative assembly\nconsist of 28 members and tbat each\nDominion electoral riding return two\nmembers.\"\n\"Resolved that regarding the recommendation of the Kldd commission that the limit of free education shall and at 14 years of age,\nvt suggest that the limit of free\neducation should depend upon the\nefficiency of the pupil rather than\nthe  age.\"\nThe resolution finally .adopted on\nthe question of further agricultural\nreduction was drafted by O. B. Appleton after a Nakusp resolution\nto much the eame effect, by H.\nKershaw had been defeated, both\nsingly and In combination with\nthe Squires' amendment regarding\na departmental merger. The Appleton version, whloh passed unanimously,  was aa  follows:\n\"Resolved that we of the West\nKootenay Central rarmers' institute\nare unanimous ln our support of\nthe Kldd committee ln Its efforts\nto show our government ways and\nj means of economizing, but we are\nI also of the opinion that any further reductions ln the agricultural\ngrant would seriously Impair Ita\nefficiency and would not be In the\nbeat interests of th* province of\nBritish Columbia.\" .\nMANT MARKET\nLEGISLATION\nOn the motion of Major Turner\nLee, the convention confirmed the\nopinion expressed by the commission\nas to tbe alms of agriculture, in\nparagraph IW of Its report. After\npaying the department of agriculture\na tribute for It* sincerity, the commission expressed the view that discontinuance of tbe Items proposed\nto be eliminated would not prove a\nshock to th* Industry, snd thst\nthose engaged ln agriculture did not\ndesire special treatment not accorded other major Industries. The portion endorsed was as follows:\nWhat these people do desftr* la\nthat they be given the opportunity\nof carrying on thetr productive and\nmarketing operations under conditions governing ln other basic industries, and tbat from time to\ntime they b* given such legislative\nenactment as may be required to\nenable tbem to develop, regulate and\noontrol their industry ln tbe In-\ntareat of ths industry and the state.\"\nThe fact that W. L. Macken, aecre-\n! tary-treaaurer of the Fraser Valley\nMilk Producers, and m former official of the British Columbia Fruit\nProwers association, was a member\nof the commission, weighed heavily\nwtth Various delegate*, particularly\nMessrs. Appleton and Squires, though\ntb* latter aald with regard to several recommendations, that he\n'could not see how Mr. Macken\nsigned thst one.'*\nCANCER NEVER STARTS AS CANCER\nNorma! Cells Become Abnormal; No Cancer Cells,\nSaya Doctor\nOTTAWA. -*>v. \u00ab (OP>\u2014Cancer\nnever begins Ss cancer, Dr. Joseph\nC. Bloodgood, internationally noted\ncancer research worker of Jbhni\nHopkins university, Baltimore, told\nthe otuwa Medical Chlrurgleal society today.\nIt beg.rui as a single spot, be said,\n\"and the normal oells of that spot\nare changed to abnormal cells, which\nare not cancer cells.\"\nOjronlc irritation. Injury or preexisting lumps such aa warts or\nmoles and unhealed wounds anywhere are the site ln which cancer\ndevelops, the doctor continued.\nHe stressed it waa important that\neveryone ahould know the ''symp-\ntecms, signs and warnings of little\nthings that are not cancer but which\nmay become cancer.\"\nA semi-annual examination of\nmothers, he aald, would permit detection of spots ln the verclx which\nare net cancer but which may become cancer or are the earlier stages\nof cancer. Radium treatment could\nthen be used to cure at least 00\nper cent of tbe oases.\nINTERIM SUPPLY\nBILL, PROBABLE\nC(5he Savoy\n'Where the Gueti Is King'\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nTWO RAILWAY\nSYSTEMS CLOSE\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nUi BAKIR ST. PHONI 11\ntJA*70T \u2014 J. 8. FUsgari. J. f. ATtuB. ,H. A. Frae*.. Wlnnlp-j;*\"Vir_r Q.\n_ W. Springer, Mr. HeMbald, Mr. Johnson, Midway; Mr. and Mr\u00ab.\nKennard, O. Andenon, Spokane; w. p. Rudvln, Oreen wood: W. White,\nMr. and Mn. Arthur SUnley, Ka- p__emore; O. L. Phillips, Mr. and\ntaUD: a. J. .Jamleeon. Calgary; L.' Mn. J. Riley, Robert Speak, Win-\nJ.   Weber,  T.   Blankey.   Vancouver; nlpeg.\nOTTAWA, Nov. \u00ab.\u2014(OT) \u2014 \"One\ncannot help thinking of th* two\nsystems will bo brought virtually\naa dow together aa th* Siamese\ntwini,\" declared-. Ron. Baoul Das-\nurand ai th* senate today gate\nsecond reading to bill \"A\" destgnM\nto Implement th* recommendation,\nof tb* royal conunlaalon on railway,\nand transportation. The measure\nstanding committee on railway, tele-\nwlU now b* considered by th*\ngraphs and harbors. Th* senate\nadjourned until next Tuesday.\nRELIEF SOUGHT\nBY DOUKHOBORS\nAT COURT HOUSE\nThey Were Cut Off lo Allow\nan   Individual\nInvestigation\nDue to the cutting off of government relief from Independent Doukhobora ln the district a crowd of almost 300 Doukhobors, plus eome local\nunemployed, gathered at th* Neleon\ncourt bouse on Friday afternoon. A\ndelegation of four Doukhobors appeared before Government Agent\nJohn Cartmel and asked that they\nbe placed back upon th* relief\nschedule ae they were in need.\nThe government agent declared\nthat an Investigation Into tb* relief\neases wae under way, and ln order\nto get flnt hand Information he\nwished Investigation of Individual\ns. To do this be had cancelled\nrelief. Be declared that complaints\nhad been made several Doukhobors\nwbo had ready money, or who were\nearning money by selling wood,\nfruit and vegetables, were alio getting reUef and it wa* thee* oases\nthat made an Investigation necessary. He declued he did not wish,\nand lt was not the wish of the\ngovernment, that anyone^ should\nstarve. The delegation left tlie oourt\nhouse and passed the word along to\nthose congregated there. The crowd\ndispersed orderly after, several\nspeeches had been made.\nThe Doukhobor delegation wa* accompanied by on* A. Kinlock, and\nanother chap from the Workers'\nUnity league of Kelson and dlatrlct,\nwho wished to do th* talking before\nthe government agent. But Mr. Cartmel refused pointedly to bear him.\nKinlock recent], addressed tbe Nelson olty oouncll regarding r unemployment insurance.\nIn caae of eventualities the court\nhouse Friday wae well policed wltb\ncity and provincial officers while\ninterested citizens were on hand to\ngive aid 11 violence was contemplated. .\n______..\u2014- \u2014x... -\nOTTAWA. Nov. 4 (CP)\u2014An interim supply bill wlU probably be\nlnstTOduced' Ul th* bouse of oom-\nmorn on Monday. Hon. Hugh Outhrle, n.lnUter of just loe, wbo wm\nleading the houae, today moved that\nthe house on Monday resolv* lteelf\ninto a committee of supply. It le\nexpected bhe minister ot finance,\nHon. E. N. Riioies, will introduce\ninterim supply to cover a part of\nthe coming fiscal year. The present\nfiscal year ende on March 81  neit.\nONE VANCOUVER\nMYSTERY DEATH\nISJXPLAINED\nUnidentified Man Found on\nVeranda Died From Acute\nAlcoholism\nKIGHT FBOM GREECE\nOn th* University of California\nfootball squad ls a young fellow\nfrom Athena, Greece. He's Oeorie\nArfaras, wbo plays right guard.\nMew Grand Hotel\nf. L. KAPAK   rror>.\nWeekly ee Monthly rat**\nHot and void water\nSingle, alio up.   Double $I_M> sip.\nil 110 \u25a0 Month and Dp\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA. LAPOINTE, Prop.\nNot tnt toll water In every mom\ngleam   Heated\n\u2022oi  Biktr   bl rhon* go\nStirling Hotel\nblocks East of Post Office\nHot and Cold Water\nSteam Heat\nModerate Ratei\nP. H. Bush. Prop.\noccidental Hotel\n70J Vernon it- rhon* MTL\nH. WAiSlCK\nFifty  Rooms of  Solid comfort.\nHeadquarters   for   Loggers\nand Miners.\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awattt You\nJAS. \u25a0_ MA IUEN\nCompl   ely   Ktmodeued\nHot  -itlt  (old   w-lee*\nIn tue HtART -f the tity\nt. D. CAFE\nThe Finett in the City\nOPEN ALL HOURS\nFresh Food\u2014 De,irlous Chop Buey\nprompt Serrlr*\nsods   Fountain\nROOMS   TO   RENT\nRead Thc Nelson  Daily\nNews Classified Ads.\nVANCOUVER, B. C\u201e HOTELS\nDoff trta Hotel\nVAMVUUVER, nx:\n\u2022right  Room. \u2014 central\nModerate  Bates\n- _L Patterson, late of rnl.tnan,\nCrowi Mttt, rraprletar\n\u00bb\u00ab. .-7 tt\nCASTLE HOTEL\nIM Uraanile St.\nVANCOUVER. B.C.\nIn tne heart of the shopping end\ntheatre   ll.trict.\nWARM ANU COMFORTABLE\nVery Low Winter Rates\nInsomnia\n\"TNSOMNIA doea not Hll lti mu\n--* unlet! he killi himaelf\u2014sleepiest-\nneu it the mott common cause of\nsuicide. It kills the joy of tiring, it\nsept hit itrength, It euclci the blood\nfrom hia brain and from hit heart like\na vampire.\" So writes a famous nerve\nspecialist.\nSJeepIeasnest can bett be relieved\nby Dr. Chase's Nerve Food which\ntOothei and restores the tired nervei\nand removes the cause of sleeplessness,\nheadaches, Indigestion and other symptoms of exhausted nerves. Under\nthis restorative treatment discouragement and depressed feelings five way\nto new hope and confidence.\nDr. Chase's\nNerve Food\nRig-grit Tiwei, Ktapkw Nerves\nSecond Officer Is\nWashed Overboard\nEfforts to Locate Japanese\nAre Unsuccesful; 200\nMiles Out\nVANCOUVER, Not. 4 (OP)\u2014Vancouver haa one njurder mystery less\ntonight? with en, tutopsy revealing\nthat an unidentified man found yesterdty on the verandah of a Union\nttreet houae had died ot acute alcoholism. Marks on hit tkull were\ncaused by his fall. Also, the position\nof the body, tbe hea4 hanging,\ncaueed a flow of blood to the head\nwhich gave an tppearanoe ot a blow\nfrom a weapon,\nThe aecond death mystery which\ncame to light yesterday with the\nfinding of the body ot an unknown\nOi-lneee ln the brush weat of Lan-\ngara golf ooune, it itlll regarded as\na murder.\nThe body of the Chinese waa\nround face down, with the right arm\nunder the head and the left arm extended. The lege were croeeed. Tha\nface waa covered with blood and\ntbe man't necktie had been pulled\nto Ught about hia neck tbat lt had\nbroken.\nA piece of the necktie, apparently\nwrenched off ln the strangling of\ntha mtn, wat found eight feet from\nthe body. Two pools of blood were\nfound along with alihoet indistinct\ntrail leading to tbe nearest roadway.\nPRISON RIOT\n(CONTINUED   FROM   FACE   ONE)\nVICTORIA, Nov. 4.\u2014(CP) \u2014 Tbe\nsecond officer ot Japanese freighter\nH '-basan Maru, waa washed overboard ttu'.y tti.s morning about 300\nmiles off the British Columbia cout\nand efforts to locate him had not been\nsuccessful, according to a message received by the Oonzales wireless station here today .rom the steamer to.\nday.\nTbe steamer wat bound tTom St'\nattle to Japan and thia morning waa\neportM about 300 miles from Estevan. The vessel evidently encountered heavy teas as It hae been blowing\nhard off the coatt for several dayi.\nRoosevelt Scores\nSpreading of Fear\nBROOKLYN, N. T.. Nov. 4 (AF)**-\nFranklln D. Roosevelt walked rs\nln arm with Alfred E. Smith to a\nfour-minute ovation tonight and\ntold several thousand persona that\nthe administration Pretident Herbert Hoover gave the United Statea\nhad been distinguished \"by destruction, delay, deceit and despiir.\"\nThe Democratic presidential candidate reiterated the policies be has\noutlined on tariff, monetary affairs\n'and governmental economy and taid\nthat President Hoover not only had\nmisrepresented him but had \"mit-\nquote_t  himself.\" he added:\n\"Then X tt-lnk of the innumerable\npeople X have seen In thit campaign,\npatient, steadfast, though bitterly\nhurt in tbe collapse of our economic\nlife, I feel that to take advantage\nof tbelr deprivation to spread among\nthem a gospei of fear Is about the\nmott reprehensible act of a campaign that wai yielded many examples ot unscrupulous rppeela for\nvotes.\"\nguarda atood helplessly with limp and\nuseless hoee in their hands while the\nother end writhed Vm the floor,\ndrenching fighting guarda and Pri*-\nonere.\nSix guards, whose namee were not\nleerned, received miner lnjuriea in\nthe wild brawl. Reinforcement! frem\nthe force of 150 guardi atationed at\nthe pentltentiary made a concerted\nruih and tbe prisoners were forced\nback to the cell block.\nThe  big tlren moaned tba alarm\nserosa the countryside. The  milling\nconvicts were thrust Into thetr cells\nana iteel doort clanged abut.\nDRAG GUARDS OUT\nAcross tbe courtyard tha crackle\nand ro*r of flamea could be beard\nabove the ominous roar of the convicts. Guarda dragged Aube, Jacques,\nand Forest from the blazing building.\nConvicts In tbe carpenter ehop, the\nbindery and the ahoe shop wen led\nbact to their .cells.\nStill howling defiance,' Croetley was\nsomewhere In the murky bace of\nsmoke. Guards shouted to him, Hia\ncause defeated, the big negro refused to come out.\nHalf their flreflghtlng equipment\nrendered useless by the sla_shlng\nknives of the rebellious convicts, the\nprison guardi were handicapped In\ntheir fight against the flamei.\nCttOSSLKY   UNCONSCIOUS\nFlamea broke through the roof and\nflickered from the upper windowi\nSomebody saw Crossley lying on the\nfloor at an eddy of air cleared the\nsmoke. Guards rushed ln and dragged\nhim, unconscious tnd wounded, to\nsafety. He was badly bruised about\nthe head and had a wound in bit\ncheat.\nFire apparatus hastily aummoned\nfrom Montreal, IS miles away, careen,\ned through the deserted streets to the\nlittle village of fit. Vincent de Paul.\nThe wail ot their sirens cleared a path\nthrough the villagers crowded in curiosity around tha walls of the prison,\nThe grim gates opened briefly and the\nfiremen were through to pump water\non tne flamei.\nNewspapermen were not far behlna\nthe firemen, but found thepuelvet up\nagainst a blank wall. A atrict cen\neorthip wat clamped down on the\npenitentiary. Reporters were baulked\nby a heavy oak door and tersely re-\nfused admittance.\nHOOP   COLLATES\nFrom the vantage point of a slight\nhtll a quarter of a mile from the\ngrim walls of the prison, reporters\nand photographers oould ate the\nfiercely blazing upper floors ot the\nsho 3. A heavy cloud \u00b0f amoke hung\nlike a pall over the prison. As they\nwatched, the roof of the building collapsed with a dull roar.\nAt noon the fire was under oontrol\nbut firemen were still directing\nstreams of wster on isolated outbreaks\nvisible from without tht prison.\nLleut.-Col. P A. Pluze, warden ot\nthe penitentiary, finally permitted\nnewspapermen to interview him, but\nwould reveal nothing except thtt\neverything it under control. The\nprisoners are all In their cells under\nlock and key.\"\nA-nethpst, cairngorm, ohaleedonv,\nopal, jaeper, agate am some other\nprecious stones are forma of quart...\nSBATTLE, Nov. .4.\u2014(AP)\u2014Horaot\nR. Bnslng, 67, a well-known business\nman and clubman, wat still miming tonight tfter dropping from\nnight late yesterday afternoon when\nh* left the Arcitic club, and authorities were asked by hit fi_jnlly to\nsearch for him. t\nBREAKS BOTH LEGS;\nALONE EIGHT DAYS\nFanner Without Food, Water\nand Medical Attention\nOver Week\nBURWILL. Neb.. Nov. 4\u2014With\nboth legs broken, Clarence Wilson.\n40. bachelor farmer, remained in hit\nfarm home without food, water C*\nmedical attention for eight days.\nToday be was in a hospital and\nphysicians  aald   he   would   recover.\nWilson's dog refused to leave him\ntfter he fell from a windmill on his\nfarm. He crawled on his hands and\nknees into his houae. While he lay\nIn his home, he had nothing to eat\nor drink, but aome raw potatoes, the\nmorning of October 24. Both legs\nwers  broken  Just  above  the  ankle.\nBARRIE, out.. Nov. 4 (CT) .\u2014MarUn J. Insull, former uMUtlee magnate of Chicago, wanted by Ooo*\ncounty. Illinois, authorities on\ncharges of larceny aaa embeaBle-\nraent of more than half a million\ndollem, will appear to mams county court here tomorrow, but it\nseemed certain extradition proceedings against him would not te\npressed immediately.\nTREATED POWER\nCOMPANY WITH\nPROPRIETY, FIND\nRoyal   Commission   Probing\n, Beauharnois Dealings\nGive Report\nTORONTO, Nov. 4 (CP)\u2014The Ontario hydro commission acted with\npropriety throughout ln Its dealings\nwith tbe Beauharnois corporation\nand John Alrd jr. and In the purchase of the _>>mln_on Power and\nTransmission company of Hamilton,\nin the opinion of the royal commission which probed these transactions tnd tonight Issued its report.\nSigned by Justice W. R. Rlddell\nand G. H. Sedgewick, the report of\nthe commission declares their lordship*, on the facti proved beyond\ncontroversy, have no doubt whatever ot the propriety of the payment by the hydro commission of\n\u00bbM,000 to Alrd in connection with\nthe purchase by tydro of the\nO'Brien power Interests on the Mississippi and Madawaaka rivers.\nHoover in Digest\nPresidential Poll\nNEW YOBK, Nov. 4 (AP)-The\nLiterary-Digest announced that on\nthe basis of final returni In Its\npresidential poll for the approaching United States elections, Franklin o. Roosevelt, the Democratic\nnominee, waa leading President\nt Hoover In 41 states wtth a total\npopular vote of 1,715,789, ln comparison wltb l,150,39g for Hoover.\nThe electoral vote is divided at\nfollows:' \u2022\nRoosevelt, 474; Hoover, 87.\nThe   luminary,   ln   part,   of   the\nLiterary Digest follows:\n\"A grand total of 3,0*34,487 ballets\nwere returned and tabulated. Ot\nthese 1,715,139, or 55.5. per cent, are\nfor Roosevelt; 1,150,389, or 37.53 per\ncent, for Hoover; and 148,079, or\n4.84 per oent, registered their sentiments for Norman Thomas, Socialist.\n\"Hoover shows a slight gain from\nthe 37-33 per cent of the total vote\nwhich he had ln tha semi-final returni. '\n'The final Tote givei Hoover a\nlead In ths seven itatea of Maine,\nVermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut\n#nd New Jeney.\n\"Roosevelt leads his Republican\nrival ln all the other 41 states.\"\nPortrait Is New\nWhist Drive Prize\nA large selection of whist prises\nIt being covered ln Nslson this\nwinter, Including chlnaware, tilver-\nware, novelties of varloua kinds,\ngfooerles and the newest thing Is\npersonal photoi for the winners,\nrhla latter pries waa Introduced by\nthe Nelson Lawn Bowling club's\nmilitary whist drive and dance at\nthe Legion halt Priday night. Africa\nwas the winning table In the whist\nwhich brought a large crowd. Those\nplaying at Africa were Mra. A.\nFoster. Mr. and Mrs. P. Coulter,\nand E. Sharp. They will all bs\npresented with three photos. The\nprises were donated by George A.\nMeerei.\nRefreshment* were served followed\nby dancing.\nThe ladles' commute-- was Mrs,\nP. Coulter, Mrs. E. Frost, Mrs. A,\nFoster, Mrs. t. I. Wheeler, and Mrs.\nB. Y. Brake *\nThe men's committee waa composed of J Draper, w. Crowther,\nW.   Wylle   and   P.   Coulter.\nt. Y. Brake waa matter of ceremonies.\nArrest Samuel Insull\nPending Extradition\nATHENS, oreeoe. Nov. 4 (AP)\nSattuel Insull, under indictment In\nChicago on charges which grew out\nof the collapse of the Middle West\nUtilities oompany, wat trrested todty pending extradition.\nHe was Uken to police headquarters tnd kept there tor the night,\ndespite his attorney'i plea that Ur.\nInsull, now 73 yeart old. Is suffering\nfrom sieart trouble and ought to be\nIn a hospital.\nHe came here several weekt ago\nfrom Paris by way of Italy, leaving\neaoh of those countrlea Just ahead\nof a request for hit arrest.\nJutt after noon the police commissioner \u00abjalled at the holei where\nMr. Insull was a guest. lie went upstaln  and  served hli  warrent.\nMARTIN INSULL\nAPPEARS FRIDAY\n65 PER CENT OF\nLOANSUBSCRIBED\nMONTREAL, Nov. 4 .CP)\u2014The\ncampaign for the Dominion of Canada loan enters upon its fifth day\ntomorrow, with subscriptions for the\nfirst three dayB amounting to C5\nper cent of the objective, \u00bb52.Q00,-\n000. out of a total of |BO,000,000.\n8ubsci;lptions reported for Wednesday from all parta of Canada added\n$4,000,000 to the total of \u00bb23,0O0,0O0\nsubscribed for the loni-terra bond\ntn the first two days,  bringing this\n?   to   S27.000.0O0.\nThis leaves 428,000,000 still to be\nmet of the total of the long-term\nbond of 455,000,000. The short-term\nbond. \u266635,000,000. wat over-subscribed\non  Monday.\nDesirability thtt not only the loan\nbe fully subscribed but that the\ntotal be raised promptly, \"at a renewed demonstration to the world\nat large, where Canada's credit haa\nalways stood high, of the ability of\nCanadians to meet their ow.i financial problems and solve them In a\nresolute manner.\" was expressed ln\na message issued during the day by\nSir Charles Oordon, chairman o_\nthe management committee.\nIn addition to subscriptions which\nhave been received from all provinces, flurctt-#es are reported from\nGreat Britain and the United Statet.\nDEATH OF CHILD\nBRINGS UFE TERM\nATHABASKA. Que., NOV. 4 (CP)\n\u2014Life imprisonment was tlie Sentence pronounced by Mr. Justice\nGlbsone In court of King's bench\nupon Charlea Henry Pardy of\nDurham, Que., who , waa convicted of manslaughter yesterday In\nconnection with the death of\nhit  newly-born   Illegitimate   child.\nPardy wat found guilty on three\ncharges, three of hli children\nborn to his 20-year-old daughter\nhaving'been killed by blm shortly\nafter birth,'according to tbe girl's\ntestimony.\n\"Such a man at yon most be\nbanished from society\/' tbe judge\nstated.\nPROTECTING TARIFF\nHIGHER THAN PRICE\nOF WHEAT  IN  U.  S\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 4 (CP).*-\nUnprecedented In United States\nannals, the golden grain, wbeat,\nwai worth less on the market to*\nday than the amount of the tariff designed to protect lt from\nforeign competition.\nWhen prices plumbed their lowest ln Chicago December contract\nwheat. for future delivery wag a\nfraction less than tbe 42-cent per\nbushel tariff rate.\nNO CASH TO BE\ngiven ore\nffTORELIEF\nInstead Will Pay $.50 Per\nCent on Theie\nLoans    S\n25 OUT OF 78\nTO BE HELPED\nGovernment  to   Suggest\nNew Scale on Harried\nMen and Families\nVICTORIA, Nov. 4 (CP)\u2014Brltlsb\nColumbia municipalities to be aided by the payment of their relief\nbills In the next two months by\nthe provincial government will p\u00bby\n5.5 per rent on these loam and\nwill not handle the cash, lt was\nmade clear at the legislative buildings. Instead the cttlea will be\nasked to send In tbelr relief\nvmicheers, which will be paid by\nthe province from funds lt ha\u00bb ln\nturn borrowed from the Dominion\ngovernment at Interest,\nApproximately SB municipalitlei\nout of 78 ln tee province may have\nto be helped ln this manner during\nNovember end December, lt wat explained, ai municipalities have already applied and 10 Of these have\nbeen assured ot assistance. Including\nBurnaby, pernle, Prince Rupert,\nNorth Vancouver city, North Vanoouver district, Port Moody, Prince\nOeorge, Trail, Port Coqultlam and\nPort Alberni.\nAs the total amount received by\nthe province itself to loan In this\nmanner is amall, the attittanoe that\ncan be extended to any municipality\nunder the plan will be limited W\nstrictly narrow proportions. , .\nNEW J..CALE\nWhile Jt has not yet taken the\nmatter up with the municipalities\nthe government ls getting ready to\nsuggest a new scale for the relief\nof married men and families in\nurban renters. Maximum aid of 135\na month per family of which under\nhalt would be a fixed allowance for\nfood and the rest tor shelter, fuel,\netc., is being mentioned unofficially\nat tbe scale the province may recognise In this respect. Municipalities\nare to be budgeted .alto ln respect\nto their total, relief costs ln tbe\nnext few monthi. . _\nConference between municipal\nleadera and the \"officials Of the government will be held shortly lt was\nIntimated though the date of the\nhearing hat not yet .been fixed.\nHELPFUL   FREE   BOOK   OK\nEPILEPSY\nIf you or iny friend suffer, from\nthli dread disease, clip thil advertisement and send for FBEF, book of\nparticulars on Trench's World Famous remedy for Epilepsy and Fits.\nNlmpls home treatment, 40 years'\nsuccess. Thousands of Testimonials.\nAddress TRENCH.) REMEDIES LTD.,\nDept. it;, It Adelaide St., E. Toronto,\n(Cut  This  Out  Now)\ncmiui\u00bbV-\nroe neoe.se.'*\naus \u2022\u2022*-__\n\u2022 *\">'\n\u2022OUS\u2014 .\n\"\u2022\"\"\u2022\"Sll\n<\u00bb\"*'\"_li\nMADH IN CAHADA\n9 T-e right inti-acid offset, tba lurm other**!**\ndose by excessive eating, drinking, tnd constant\n\u2022moklng, inything causing an acid condition. When\n\"sunk\" from iuch indulgences, Phillips* Milk of\nMagnesia will always straighten you out. A joy and\ncomfort to hearty eaters, constant smokers. Get the\ngenuine; substitutes don't act the same.\nAtSO IN TAI18T FOIIM, Phillips' Milk of Magnesia\nTablets are now on eale at drug stores everywhere,\nKeich tiny tfltcl.t i, tlie equivalent of a teaspoonful\nof genuine Phillips' Milk of Msgaesis.\n EXCHANGE RATES\nAT NEW YORK\n\"\u25a0V TOW*. \u00bbot, 4 (At>>\u2014rmifn\n_***-* arttrtat, oraat Britain in\nP*. \u00ab**m In oetUs; Oreat art.\nmn demand i_h T-16; osbMs s__\u00bb\nM* w-tur bfils ._\u00bb.\nI-\u00ab\u00abK\u00bb, demand, sw  j-H;   cables\nt$t%.\nBalr dtn_u__ j.iiH; cables 6.ii\\%.\nBtdflum   UMV..\nOeimsnr \u00bb.MH.\n-Wland 40_\u00bbH.\nl\u00bb\u00abw\u00bbr   1\u00bb.1\u00bbK.\n-He-f-ton MtV,.\nBsnmsrk  17.10(4.\n(hrltaarltnd  1131%.\ntfein -\u00bb.\nefartnaal 8.-4.\nOnses  (1)  M%.\nMud (i)  11.11.\nCwchoe-lo-s-la     II)    \u00ab.86!4.\n' Ju(__U**em   (x)   1.39.\nAustria (i)   13J4H.\nXoumanla   (   )   .W<4.\nA-jenttn*   _.7J.\nBruU (i) 1ST.\nTokio  Jl .18.\nIgUngbsel   M.75.\nMontreal   \u00abQ.1_',4.\nHutljrratt GUjtirrlf\nBtanlST snd Silica  6ta.\nOerman Heading BerUM 10 a. m.\nSunday  School,   (rnjUsh)   11:18\na. m.\nEnglish Reading eServloe T:S0 pjn.\n0. O. JAJIZOW, Pastor\nlu-flt\n]Ir*iil-tjtrrUm\nQHlurrlj\ntee 3, Youngson, \u00bb. D.\u2014Minister\n818 Carbonate \u2014 phone 8131.\nBunds-  School   10  a.  m.\nDivine worship In Church Parlors\nlis.   m.   and   7:30   s.   m.\nWomen's association meets Monday at s p. m. In church\nparlors.\nAnnual tes snd Bake Sals of\nwork,  Prtday,  Not,   18..\n3Flrat GHfurrlj of\nQUtriBt \u00a7rktitist\nS09 BAKEB STREET\nA Braiech of the Mother Church.\nThs  nrst  church   of  Christ\nScientist In Boston Massachusetts.\nSundsy School 0:48 a. m.\nSunday service 11 a. m.\nSubject leeseon-eVrmon:\nADAM   AND    FAMSJ)    MAN\nWednesdsy Testimonial Meeting,\n8 p. rn.\nFRBE  IBADINO   ROOM. IN\nCHURCH   BUILDING\u2014\nOpen J to t Dally.\nAll Cordially Welcome\nffiijurrl, of il}t\n;   8bto.fit.rr\n. \u25a0;    PAmvurw\nRsv. W. J. Sllverwood \u2014 Vfcar\nHoly Communion st 8 a. m.\nChildren's  Service   at   10   a.   m.\n(In  church)\nMorning prayer 11  a. rti.\nsermon Subject: \"THB OXORY\nOF   SAINTS    REDEEMED.\"\nEvening Drayer 7:30 p. m.\nSermon     Subject:    \"WORLD\nBROTHERHOOD,    A    FARCE\nOR A REAUTT.\"\nAnthem:    \"And    Ood    Shall\nWipe   Away   Mr   Tears.\"\n;   fct flaitfa\n1li\u00ab (Eljurr 1?\nHey. T. J. B. l^rguson, B.A.\nMinister\nANNIVERSARY   SERVICES\nRev.  Andrew  Walker,   B.   A.,\nwill  preach\n11 s. m.\u2014Boys' Choir and Senior\nchoir.\n730 p. m.\u2014Senior choir.\n.   Anthema: \"Walk About Zlon.\"\n\"Abida With Me.\"    \u25a0\nMonday, Nor. M p. m. Anniversary Supper and \"A CnUse\nAround the Mediterranean\nwith   Unterh   pictures.\nWednesday 8 p. m.\u2014Y. P. ti.\nExcelsior Club will neet Monday\nevening at the home of Miss\nO.   Martin,   Detbruck   street.\nSritutg .\u2022'.'\u25a0\nIlnttfu (Eijurrl?.\nnf (Eauai-a\nW.   0.   Mawhlnney,   Minister\n10 a. m. Sunday   School\n11 a.   tn.  Berroon   Subject:\n\"The, secret   of   Serenity.\"\nThe Sacrament of the Lord's\nSupper  will   be   observed.\nThe   Treble   choir   will  sing.\n7;80 P. tn. \u2014 Trinity congregation will worship with St.\nPauls   la   their   Anniversary\nservice.\nMonday, 8 _>. m. \u2014\u25a0 Servloe Club\n(Mn.    J*    Armstrong,    1124\n, Water street.)\nThursday 3 to 0, Tea and Bake\nfrie at the home of Mrs.\nA. W. Nagle, 806 Baker street,\nby members of circle No. 4.\nMSsTTUTE TO\nASKFOR ACTION\nON THE DOUKS\nWill Keep on \"Kicking the\nFootball\" With the\nAuthorities\nII l  les IBE KCUOK DAILY *ntWB, NELSON, B. C SATl'RUAY HlltUllNU, Mc\nEGG MARKETS\n\u2014_\u25a0\u00bb\nOTTAWA. Hot. +-~1n markets\ncontinue  firm  today at unchanged\nprion.\nToronto: Poultry la arriving rery\nfreely oa thia market now aad the\nton* ta weaker. Fresh egts continue\nfirm tad storage eggs steady. Prloe*\nare unchanged.\nMontreal: Egg receipts hers today\nwtrt 13Qt cages as compared to 1S24\ncaaea for tbt corresponding day laat\nyear. Tht market is still firm and\nunchanged. Fresh receipts are scatcs\nand there la a somewhat better la.\"\nquiry for storage eggs. Puces remain\nat previous ltvejLft.\nWILL SEEK FACTS\nABOUT COMMUNITY\nMay Get Wholesale Prices\nTrail Fertilizer fpr\nInstitutes\nDecision to \"keep on kicking the\nfootball lt had started\" on the\nDoukhobor Issue, was reached by\nthe West Kootenfiy Central farmers\nInstitute ln semi-annual session here\nyesterday, this being the phrase em-\nplayed by w. Write of Passmore. a\nmember of the institute oommlttee\nthat studied the Doukhobor question for two years.\nTbt letter that Secretary K. Wallace had forwarded Premier Bennett,\nPremier Totmle. Hon. R. H. Pooley,\nW. K. Baling. M. P., Premier Anderson of Saskatchewan, and others,\non Instructions from the annual\nconvention at Robaon of laat May,\nargued that the cost of caring for\nthe hundreds of Sons of Pree-tom,\nnudist* for three years In the penitentiary should be placed oa \"Verigin _t Co.,\" otherwise, tbe Christian\nCommunity of Universal Brotherhood, which waa alleged to have\ndiscarded these ex-slaves,\" and also\nurged every effort to force the\nDoukhobors generally to obedience to\nCanadian laws.*\nCONSTITl'TION BARRIER\nAnswers of the various statesmen\naddressed, though sympathetic In\ngeneral, varied, and a reply from A.\nE. Miller, secretary of Premier Bennett, that he understood there were\n\"certain constitutional difficulties in\nthe way of carrying out your proposal,\" but that te had sent a copy\nof the letter to tht minister of Justice, was characterised by Mayor H.\nTurner Lee aa \"bluff.\"\nIt waa decided to follow up the\noriginal representations, and seek\nparticulars of the alleged difficulties, and also obtain whatever Information was to be obtained of the\nstatus of tbe Christian Community\nof Universal Brotherhood under tbe\nCompanies act, and of whether Its\ntreatment of the Sons of Freedom\nwaa subject to review by tbt authorities.\nC. V. Meggitt of Grand Porks aald\ntht Community had expressed a\nwillingness to take care of tht chUdren who bad been aent to the\ncoast, and he said this offer ought\nto be accepted, to relieve the tax\npayers. H. Kershaw of Nakusp, however, commented that this aolutlon\nwould not Canadian.** the children,\nand Colonel John Murray of South\nSlocan agreed with Mr. Kershaw thit\nthis was a primary object.\nFISH PLANTING\nA letter from J. A. Motherwell,\nohlef supervisor of fisheries for the\nBritish Columbia dlatrlct, epoke appreciatively of the institute's resolution supporting the hatchery work,\nand stated that aeveral plantings of\nfry had been madt In tht Arrow\nlakes, which district had been referred to ln the resolution.\nIn trply to a resolution asking\nfor free flying licences for farmers,\nBryan Williams, provincial game\ncommissioner, wrote that the Game\nact gave him no authority to Issue\n\"free hunting llcsnces.\"\nMajor J. C. MacDonald of Victoria, provincial water rights comptroller, to whom the body's resolution asking that long use of water\nshould give Its user a preferred position againat another, wrote that\ntre provinct ha*, first adopted the\nprinciple of \"title by record\" in its\nOold Fields act of 18&0, that this\nprinciple had been Adopted ln regard to water for over 20 years, and\nthat any attempt to change that\nprinciple now would Injure more\npersons than lt oould benefit.\nBULK   FEF^UZER\nSecretary WaUace read a letter\nfrom J. J. Warren, president of thc\nConsolidated Mining <U Smelting\nCompany of Canada, In reply to the\nrequest for Tadanac fertlliaers to be\nsupplied to Institutes la carload lota\nat wholesale prloes. President barren stated that the company must\nplay fairly with the wholesale trade,\nwhose organisation It had to use for\nmarketing, but that he would take\nup the question and might be able\nto i arrange for wholesale prices to\nInstitutes.\n. The sessions of the convention\nwere held In the city council chamber, President O. B. Ballard of Robson {residing.\nMayor J. P. Morgan waa present\nat tte opening of the morning session, and extended a hearty welcome\nto the delegates, which was replied\nto fcTlcltously by President Ballard.\nIn'the afternoon C. B. Oarland.\npresident of the board of trade, and\nAlderman J. B. Gray attended, and\nPresident Oarland further welcomed\nthe organization, and stated the\nboard would bo happy to lend Ita\nassistance at any time In any way\nthat was open to It.\nT.iosa ln attendance were O* B.\nBallard and C. 8. Squires, Fobson;\nH. Kershaw, Nakii-sp; C. V. Meggitt,\nGrand Forks; P, W.'Oreen. Wlnjjw;\nThomas W. Dodd. Tarry's; W. White,\nPi-wmore; Col. John Hurray, South\nSlocan; Mayor H* Turner Lee and\nT. A. Whelldon, Bonnington; A. H.\nNoakes, Balfour; O. B. Appleton,\nProcKr; and Secretary K. Wallace. !\nBoswell. Visitors were District Agrl- '\nculturlets O. L. Landon of Ornnrt\nForks and W. C- Hunt., Nelson.\nRANCHERS SEND\nMORE DONATIONS\nT0THEH0SP1TAL\nTrucks  and Buses  Bring   in\nAre Produce, Mostly\nVegetables\nSince tht closing of the campaign\nstaged by the board and staff of\nthe Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital,\nin cooperation with the city, which\nresulted In several tons of fruits,\nvegetables, fowl and preserves being\ndonated to the Institution by district ranchers, aeveral late shipments\nhave been  received.\nThete bave come from various\nparts of the district and have been\nconveyed to the hospital by Hufty's\ntransfer of Slocan City and the\nGreyhound busses. Other donations\nhave been brought ln by the ranchers  themselves.\nFollowing ls a list of donations\nreceived  during  tht past week:\nBelmont Poultry farm, Wlnlaw,\nsix fowls; Chris Newcomen, Vallican, two sacks of apples; J. Knauff,\nHarrop, one sack of carrots, one\nsack of marrow; William Winstanley.\nCrescent Valley, one sack of cabbage,\none sack of apples, one aaek of\nturnips; V. C. Francis, R. R. No. 1.\none sack of cabbage, one sack of\npotatoes; Anonymous, one sack of\npotatoes; Mrs. A. S. Morley, Slocan\nCity, two cartons cooking apples;\nGeorge White, Taghum, one sack\nof carrots, ont sack of cabbage.\nNO TRAIN FOR\nCOAST TOMSHT\nGOES IN MORN\nStarts West on Sunday\nMorning on New\nTime-Card\nA SPFXIAL RUN TO\nROSSLAND TONIGHT\nRestored Rossland (Nelson\nLocal   Starts\nMonday\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Nov. -V\u2014Tht Firemen's ball, aa annual event, held\nin the K. P. hall here tonight was a\ngrjeat success. Tht large crowd attending passed many compliments\non tht decoration scheme carried\nout tn tbe hall. Sx&H paper helmet* and siren whistles were favors.\nTbt ladle*', flrat prlae, a wrist\nwatch, was won by Mm. E. Wright,\nwhile tht men's first prize went to\nJoe Nuclch. Tickets were drawn by\nTom  Putnam.\nThere will be no train from Nelson Saturday evening for the coast\nas the through train arriving from\nthe east Saturdsy evening will be\nheld over, to ga out Sunday at 8\na.m. for Vanoouver, as tht first \u00absy-\nUg.t train under the new time card,\nwhich goes Into effect with Sunday.\nThe evening connection tonight\nbetween Nelson and Trail-Roasland\nwill be carried out by bringing the\ntrain that ordinarily runs between\nRossland and Castlegir to connect\nwith the KetUe Valley trains,\nthrough to Neison, arriving t.ere at\n6 p.m., and leaving for Castlegar\nand Rossland at 9 p.m.\nTRAIN   CHANGES\nUnder the new schedule, the train\nfrom the east will reach Nelson st\nthe usual hour, 7:15 p.m. It will\ngo out the following morning for\nVancouver at 8 s.m., reaching Vancouver a day later at 1:15 a.3_.\nTve eastbound train wUl leave Vancouver at 7:15 p-m., reaching Nelsoh\na day later at 0:35 p.m. The following day It goes east, leaving at\n10 a_m.\nMonday morning the Ro.\u00bb_ and-Nelson local will be restored, but on a\nschedule that will give a service into\nNeiaon ln the morning and out ln\nthe evening. Leaving Rossland at\n8:25 a.m., ani Trail at 7:85 a.m.,\nthe local will reach Nelson at 8:45\na.m. On the itturn trip the local\nwill leave Neleon at 7:40 p-m., arriving at Castlegar at 9:08 p.m., and\nleaving Castlegar again at 9:15 p.m.\nfor Trail, where It will arrive at\n10:15 p.m.. finally terminating Its\ntrip at Roseland at 13:10 a.jp.\nIn the case of Kit train service\non the Kaslo &. Nakusp branch, the\nnew time card makes the return\ndays Tu\u00abday and Friday, Instead of\nMonday  and Thurtday   aa   recently.\"\nOn Monday an] Thunday Um train\nwill leave Kaslo at \u00ab\nat Nakusp at  11   a.m.  On  Tuesday\nand Priday it will leave Nakusp at\nI  iff., arriving at  Kaslo kt  S\nBOAT    (HAM-IS\nChanges ln the boat service are\nconfined to Kootenay lake, v\naa announced a couple of days ago,\nthfft will be \u00bb weekly t.ie_,;ner serv-\n)c\u00ab from Procter Batik, eftKTiag on\nFriday at 11:15 im., and tying up\nat Kaslo for t e nghl. the trip b*-\n]ni{ con tinned to l___Lf-_-0 the next\nmorning.   On    \"atttilMKf*    MUh   the\nt> nt win itjtnrn pra-atiea-Jy without\natop,   malting   Proettg   JSrtxudMj  *f-\nternoou, but tn \".itfnnicr ani barg?\"\nw**k*, when \u00bb train will be bj.r_;-d\nfrom Kaalo to LaMo, to run over\niixe LarJeau subdivision,, the boat\nwill tie up Saturday night at Kaslo,\nand return t_t Procter early Sunday\nmorning, connecting with the east-\nbound train. Rlondel will be served\nonly on \"steamer\" week*, and Crawford Bay wU be serve 1 by the government ferry on lit last run from\nGray creek each Tuesday.\nINSURANCE ON\nAUTO COVERS\nonly owe\nLONDON. Nov. 4.\u2014(CP Cable.\u2014\nMembers of the family of an insured\nmotorcar owner are not persons Insured within the meaning of the\nBritish Columbia act. rules the\nhighest tribunal ln ths Emp!Fe.\nThe Judical committee of the privy\ncouncil today dl\u00abml(wed the appeal\nof Alice Marie Vandpltte of Vancouver from a Judgment of the Supreme court of Cat-ads, which had\nheld Miss Vandpltte was not entitled to Judgment for accident dam-\niages against the preferred scciden:\nInsurance company of New Tork.\nMiss Vandpltte was Injured by a\nmotorcar owned by R. E. Berry\nbut driven by his daughter. Jean,\nand Mr. Justice Gregory of the\nsupreme court of British Columbia\nheld she was entitled to recovery\nfrom the insurance company of\n85000 and costs. The supreme oourt.\nho-srever, held respondent was not\nentitled to Judgment ln her action and Judgment was against\nJean Berry and not the owner\nof the car and that Jean Berry was\nnot \"Insured\" within the meaning\not ths British Columbia Insurance\nact.\nBOTH SUMMITS\nPASSABLE TO\nTHEBOUNDAHY\nEight and 10 Inches of Snow\nNot Ha_npering Cars\nWith Chains\nLONDON   CLOSE\nHeavy enow fall of the past few\ndays has not tied up traffic over\nthp two summits between Rossland\nand Cam*ade, Recording to the Neleon   public   works  department.\nInformation received here on Friday from a road foreman at Rossland was that snow to a depth of\neight Inches rests on the flrat summit beyond Roseland. On the second summit the depth ts 10 Inches.\nHowever, wheel tracks over both\nsummits are well beaten and there\nIs no dltff-K-lty In getting through,\nbut chains are necessary. If chains\nure used state goverment officials,\nthere ls no trouble getting through.\nPRICE  RANGES  ON\nIMPORTED BACON VARIES\nOTTAWA, Hot. 4 (CP)\u2014WMle Canadian bacon regained unchanged\nfrom l\u00abt week on tbe British market, there were aoir.e slight differences la the price range over the\nweek of otber Imported varieties.\nThis waa particularly noticeable on\nthe lower  qualities.\nCrystal\nand Cut\nGlass\nWe have a fine selection\nof all that's newest and\nbest in Cut Glas^ and\nCrystal.\nFinest Quality\nReasonably Priced\nPieies from ?2.50 to Sets\n\u25a0     at $20.00.\nJ. B. Gray\nPHONE 333 401 BAKER ST.\nLONDON. Nov. 4 (kti\u2014CXOttBt:\nAmtnoM itock. quoted In dotlem\n11 4 \u25a0 mtnfi p\u00ab dcc'l.r. BrutUu\nTrteeTtloo, 913. Ctn\u00bb_lan Pexelflc.\n\u2022_0t: Urttro Bee-trie, m'i. Inter-\nnitlon.1 Nickel, till.; BntUh Aawr-\nIctn   Tobacco,   f-'\/,;   DUtlUera,   67.\nlu. aa. m. HiMUon Bar\nImperlc_l Cl-.m-.i-. t\npee-lal To\u00bba.cco, MM td;\nOH; TMm, <_\u2022 \u00abd; ani\ncent war loan leMt,\n1103%; Brltlah 5 pi\nloan, aaeente_, 09%:\nper eent war loan, 199%; Butt\nJJ;   Dunlop  BUbber, 19a  7tt_;   toni per  cent   190O-9O  --00%.\n,000 Cash for You\nin a Few Years\nFeatures of a Policy for a Young Man,\nor a Young Woman who Earns Her\nOwn Living:\n(1) No Medical Examination Required.\n(2) Pays $1,000 Cash in Twenty Years;\n(3) $1,000 immediately if death oc.\ncurs:\n(4) $2,000 if death occurs as the result\nof an accident.\n(5) If disabled through sickness or accident\nfor six months ot longer it will not bo\nnecessary for you to pay any premiums\nfalling due during thc period of disability.\n(6) Your annual deposits earn interest.\nEach year a dividend is declared which\nmay be used to reduce the premium or\nallowed to accumulate as a special fund.\nThis requires very moderate savings on\nyour part.\nWe ehall be pleated to tend futl particular, rrgordinl \u25a0\npolicy for you, atith annual depoeit required at your ale.\nTHE Hmmmmmmmdmm1\u2014-mr.mlymmrNma.\n._ m .    \u00ab  .. en__fee__>!\u00bb I'M. Bndmmmm,t faUry\nMutual Life\n. r, Kama\t\nAssurance Company\nOf Canada Addrtae\t\nHead Office: Waterloo, Ont.\n_,CeetU_IIU> Ale.,\t\nt$P0\nINCORPORATED   2?? MAY 1670.\nFeaturing 95c Specials All Through the\nStore on Saturday and Monday\n95c SPECIALS-LADIES' AND\nCHILDREN'S WEAR!\nCREPE   NIGH AGO WNS\nNew no-elty crepe sown. In smart styles and colors. Just the OfiC\nthin; tor the cooler  nlgMs : __;.... _.__.-.    *y**'\nLADOES'   AM.   WOOL    LENGERIE\nVest and Bloomers ot pure wool. Fine and sort In Hlilte oni). *U\nSizes small, mcdlum^and large^JEach  \u2014\u2022-..   *y**\n\"tadies' and Misses' Novelty Sweaters\nSmart sweaters with short sleeves tor sports or nice to wear eftfi\u00a3\nwith a suit, (lay color comblnatjons. sizes H_to 38' ~  ****\nBEREI~ANO   SCARF   SETS\nThe modern ilrl must 1iave a beret and scarf set to complete her\nwool; sports costume, smart novrllT knits and ia* color rom- QBef)\nM nal Ions of fine  botany wool. Hpertal ___. -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- -  *y*>\nFLUFFY   WOOLEN   SCARVES\nSoft u flown snd no ntyi l! Von cannot be without a woolen\n\u2022rarf fupcclalij- at this low pure. Colors match any 9_S^\ntnflftnble .  - .*\u25a0\u2022\u2014 \u2022\u00bb _\u00ab\u2014.... _ **\nRAYON ~VESTS   AND   BLOOMERS\nFine uuallty non-run rajen In soft colors. Small medium and QC**\nlarge.   3   for^....^. \u201e..,.... \u2022-.: : -    \"\nGIRLS' AND BOY'S NOVELTY SWEATERS\nJl'ST NFW IN. Novelty knlli and hrlrht color comhinaticns ln thew\nnew pullover sweaters, Jonu Blceves and  V-neck. 95^\nfilxes  6  to  IJ  yean .......\u201e^~- - \u2022-\u2022 -\u2014-    '^\n~~CHILDREN'S   COMBINATIONS\neVlne quality cotton and wool wilh rayon stripe. F,spec1ally food for\nthe child who cannot wear pure wool, easy to launder. QC^\nSizes  e  to  14  years   \u25a0___._^;...-^-___:r;:^._...e-;::^_::^_.-:v.......   *-.\n\"Suede^Do   and   Fleece   Lined   Gaiters\nl~\\rre assortment of falters to match any outfit, colore Bed, Qf^.\nFawn,  Blue and  (Ireen.  __to  6_jears  _...    ****\n__ R~t s _     ^ , ^ \u201e , g j,\nFine quality Jean cloth with navy flannel detachable collar and Q\u00a3^\ncarta.   Sizes   6   lo   14   years_      - .-_-_ _______\nJERSEY   SKIRTS   FOR   THE   WEE   TOT\nFine pirated Jersey skirls for the wee miss. Colors, Oreen Fawn QW\nand   Blur.  Sizes  ! to I  years   \u201e    **\nTOWEL SETS\nThis Towel Set includes one large novelty bath towel and one face cloth to\nmatch. Wrapped in' cellophane envelope. Makes a nice present. QK\/\u00bb\nSpecial, Set ttOK,\nMADEIRA HAND WORK\nBuy now for gifts. These values may\nbe unattainable later. QPip\nR6xl8 Runners, Each \u2022'MV\n11-inch Napkins, tV_0\n6 for *,OK'\n      t \u2014\u2014\nSILK SCARVES\nAnother shipment of these wonderful hand blocked Scarves have just\nbeen put in stock. 100 to Qf-\u00bbn\nselect from. Each  oO\\-\n95c TABLE\nOdd pieces of fancy china, silverware.\nJapanese vases, etc. Values up\nto $2.50. QCrt\nEach  UOV,\nGLASS TUMBLERS\nExceptional value in light or heavy\nweight glass. QP\\f\u00bb\n12 for      \u00ab7*Jl\nMEN!\nHere's\nNews!\n95c\nSHIRT SALE\nA Special Purchase by Our Montreal Buying\nOffice Has Arrived Just in Time for 95c Day.\nEvery shirt beautifully tailored from fine quality English\nbroadcloth in plain shades of Blue, Sand, Green. Popular\ncollar attached style and buttoned cuffs. Sizes 14 1-2 to\n17 and a choice of three sleeve lengths in each sixe.\nWorth $1.25 in the regular way. You'll want several at\nthis sale priceJ\t\nSATURDAY and MONDAY 95c DAYS-Join the Crowds that Shop at \"THE BAY\n two periods, In bis life,\na man doesn't under-\ndl And when are ther?\"\n\"Before and after  marriage.\"\nPrance rejoices  In  the \u00abvxw_i at\nLausanne. Vo have thut our doon I\nto peaslon.\u2014Eo-Aard Herriot. premier:\nof PTtncc. after reparation* agreement j\n*'ith  Oermany.\nInsist\u2122\nASPIRIN\nBecause \u2022 \u2022\u2022\nAnyone can take Aspirin\u2014as often as there is any\nneed\u2014for it is perfectly safe.\nAspirin cannot depress the heart.\nThese tablets dissolve so rapidly that you get\namaringly quick relief from the pain.\nThey dissolve completely; leaving no coarse particles to irritate throat or stomach.\nNo disagreeable taste or odor to these tablets;\nno unpleasant after effects. Why experiment with\nother remedies, or othef' forms of relief when\ny\u00bbu've a headache, a cold, neuralgia, neuritis,\nor rheumatism? '\n\"A-P_H_,\"U.tr__U-____k (lAYER) r.ll.t.r.d In Cuds\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\ntr LAIBA A. K1BKMA.N\nEFT  HOUSE  KEEP   RZ  NOV  i  1933\nTOMORROW'S  MENU\nBreakfast\nSliced  Bananas  and Oranges\nCereal\nW tides\n. Ootfee\nDinner\nSirup\n' THE NTLSON DAILY Mil, .NELSON. B. C\nIs it TKrifty for French\nWomen to Spend Millions\na Year on Beauty?\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority oa Problems of Love and Marriage\nOTKMMB I, 1*3.1\nTlie ^Beauty\n<Boi\nBy   IIEI-EN  FOU-TTV\nFrench women are euppoeed to be$>   Other  ltetna In  the  bill  of $300,-\nthe mott thrifty in the world, but\nthey apend S300,000,000 a year on\ncoemetlca ard beauty proceaaee. Perhapa they think it'a thrifty to look\ntheir best. Statistics prove than no\nother women In the world, not even\ntbe Americans, apend so much ln\nthe  quett  of  beauty.\nWhen questioned o- thit point tn\nofficial of the Coty manufacturing\nconcern, one of the leading makers\nof the bautlflera In Prance, smiled\ntnd taid: \"But the American women htt to come to France to he\nmade really beautiful.\" Am lean women will probably dispute this.\nThe tiny lipstick surprisingly\nenough, ia the most -oatly Item In\nthe aggregate, consuming a third of\nthe total coett. Tu\\n 1100,000,000 it\npaid out to paint th? various types\nof mouth on French women's faces.\nThe cuptd't bow la a bit outmoded,\nthe fashionable woman now Insisting\non something more subtle In the\nway of a mouth. \"Penseroso,\" with\na alight down tweep at the corners\n\u00ab Celery\nFrlcaueei   Fowl\nwith  Potatoes   tnd   Pets\nDumplings\nLemon Sherbet Coffee\nSupper\nEgg  Salad\nHoi  Cornbread\nPineapple   Whip Cookies\nTea ,\nKELTS   FROM   READERS\nF.F.: \"I put up fine DUt Pickles\nthit fall, aa follows: Pack sterilised\nglass Jars with freth, crisp cucumbers four lnchet long (either split\nlengthwise hi rather than strips, or\nelse left whole.)  Now over the fire\nput two aPd one-fourth quart* of to Indicate suffering la much af-\nwater mixed with one cup of salt fected by ladlea who have recently\nand one pint of elder vinegar, auarreled with their boy friends. Oa\nheating but not letting the mixture the other hand, \"L'Allegro.\" with an\nboll. Add thia to tht jars, nt |upward stroke at tht wrasse, stands\nputting one medium-size  bunch  of\nCHRISTMAS\nSailinqs to the Old Country\nThis   Year It  Coils  Lest  To  Enjoy\nYuletide In Europe\nA LL Canadian Pacific Steamship rates to Europe\n_\/T. are greatly reduced this year\u2014also, due to favorable\nexchange, your dollar .pent in thc Old Country goes\nmuch further.\nThis Christmas give yourself a luiurious ocean voyage\nand a happy hohdjy among old friends, amid familiar\nscenes\u2014in the HOMELAND. It costs less than it has\nfor years and years' Plan your trip early to take\nadvantage of the choice of accommodation.\nShips Sail Freejuently Each Wet\\\niUST MINUTE CHRISTMAS SAILINGS\nFrom Saint John\nDuchess of Richmond    ........... Dee.   t\nMontcalm      \u2022_..-_-.-__-.____ Pec.   9\nDuchesa of Atholl    --.--------_- Dee. IS\nMole.\u2014These ships sail one da; later from Halifas.\nSPECIAL -rtOME-UOINO RAIL FARES\nFor complete Information and reservation!., apply to etc.- p4.nl, or write:\nN. I. LOWES, cil* I'eteecrnger  e._<*nt, Nelson, B. C.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\ndill into each Jar. ut cool before\nsealing Jart airtight over new rubbers. Store three weeks before using.\"\nMist T.T.: \"Here It a pretty Dollar EJglng. Uae alee 80 mrcerlaed\ncrochet cotton and t atze 13 steel\ncrochet hooH- Have the dolley hemstitched all Tound. Bow One: Two\nS.C. in first bole of hemstitching.\nOne S.C. ln neit hole. Repeat\nacross material, or around, for required length. Row Two: \u2022 One p.\nC.f and P., one D.C. ln same atltch\n\u2022, skip two 8ts., repeat between\n\u2022s.\"\nMrs. p.'t Ham-Bean Ra nek Ins: In\na mixing bowl put tbe contents of\none can of lima beans, well drained\nfrom the liquid of the can. Ada two\ncup of cold sweet milk, one teacup of cold .weet milk, one teaspoon of aalt, pepper to tult Individ uai liking one cup of dr?\nbread-crumbs tnd two beaten '.in-\nseparated eggs. Divide among buttered ramekins or individual baking dishes and sprinkle buttered\ncrumbes on top. Bake 30 minutes\nIn a moderate oven and terve\nhot.\"\nfor all torte of Joyouanes*\u2014 that ahe\nlookt wtth favor on a new tultor,\nthtt the haa made a fortunate turn\nin stocks, or thtt tomething nice\nhas happened or It about to happen, things In beauty.\nMisguided members of the feminine contingent seem to take lt for\ngranted that any mouth la aU right\nAt long as the lipstick holda out\nPut on enough retl tulip pigment\nand nothing elw matter*. Tliirts not\nTen Tears Ago\n(Tnm The Dally News of November\n5, 1WS)\nL. D. Oughtred, mining man of\nAliurworth, leaves tonight for Montreal.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. and Mra. W. B. Bamford left\nlast   night  for  Calgary.\n\u2022 \u2022    .\nMr. and Mra. H. H. Pitts apent the\nweekend    with    their    daughter   and\n000,000   are   rarlous   types   of   face ;1>fauty ]oglc. Llp\u00bb should be smooth.\npowders, skin lot Ions, eye lotions.\nmanicure preparations, and literally\nbarber expentes, manicuring and\neyelash preparations, hair lotlone,\ntona of cold cream. Manufacturers\nof beauty preparations in Prance\nrank  with  r.utomobiie  maenates,   as\nthe   richest   rien   in      ie   country, UunWai-Cfi. It can become supercil\nprincipal   honors Jor   wealth   ^ln8liOU8,  which   does   not   add   to  the\n'\" \"\"    sum total of pulchritude. Wise gals\ncorners should be lifted. A emillng\nexpression nvans that a woman is\ninsured RRalnst taking on hard Ja*\nlines. The mouth Is pretty much\nwhat a woman makes It. It can assume indications of discontent cast-\nj lng a cloud over the most beautiful\nshared by Andre Citroen, e.-ito man.\nuiacturer, and Trancola Coty, who\nmakes the beautlflers.\nLike women's apparel, styles In\nfacial makeup mutt change often if\nthe manufacturers are to make men-\ney, and it taxes the Ingenuity of\ncosmetic manufacturers to invent\nnew modet so that they shall not\nsuffer a diminution In profit*. Oreen,\nat tn eye shadow, i one daring\ninnovation tried thli year with considerable success.\nSomeone discovered, or claimed to\nhave discovered, that Cleopatra,\nmost bewitching of alrens, affected\na dash of green around her eyes\nwhen ahe \/recked Mark Antony and\nmade disastrous history for Egypt;\nso Gladys, Katherine, Dorothy. Minnie and Irene all thought they\neould do with a little touch of\ngreen when tne boy friend called.\nIn this way millions of dollars are\nlured  from seekers after the latest\nc\/4nswers By\nBeatrice\nWANTS TO BE TAKEN\nBACK\nDomestic Ducks.\nPer Ib\t\nLocal Fowl.\nEach\nVassar's Cash Meat Market\nGOOD BUYING FOR SATURDAY\n21*\n45<\nW\n\\$\nIV\nw\nir\nw\n25*\nCHOICE   STEER\nBEEF   .\nPot Roast.                   0<* |Eg~;storage sec.'\nrer lb  \u00b0       onds. Per dor.\t\nBoneless Lean Stew. 10f\nPer Ib I--\n-oiled Rib Roast.\nPer lb\t\nT. Bone Roast.\nPer lb\t\nBlade Rib Roast.\nPer lb. ..._\t\nSirloin Steak.\nPer lb\t\nThis is choice Steer Beef.\nIT\nHE\n18*\nCottage Cheese.\nPer Ib\t\nDairy Butter.\nPer Ib\t\nSpring Chicken.\nPer lb\t\nSwift's Premium\nHams. Per lb. ..\nHeinz Dill Pickles.\n4 for \t\nTripe.\n2 lb\t\nHAMBURG STEAK; fresh made.\n3 lbs\t\n25'\nCREAMERY BUTTER; 2 brands.\nPer lb.  ......\n24c\n' *.Gg LAMB;\nPer lh.      ...\nlimited number.\n18'\n\u2022rtrk Roast.\nPer lh.\n\u25a0'cei-k -\u2022-Ti.\nPer th\t\nir\n14'\ncal Roast.\nPc- Ih.\n\"<i.. rhops.\nPer\t\nDEAR   MISS   FAIRFAX:\nOne year ago I left my hutband and baby girl. I wat discontented with marriage, snd ha1\nno patience to raise a child. I\nwanted to be free and come and go\nas I pleased. Now 1 r.allae raj\nmistake'and want to go back to\nmy husband ard child. I admit\nI ran around, but I swear 1\nnever dii a wrong thing ilnce I\nleft. My husband refuses to take\nme back, and alto refueea to let\nme aee our child. The count\ninada him her guardian because I\nnever came near her.\nWe ail make mistakes. I've suffered enough. I'll  do anything  to\nget  back.   Not   because  I  need  a\nho.ne,  but  becaua;  I realize now\nhow my huaband an    baby have\nsuffered,   and   I  love, them  both.\nWhat  would  you  tuggest?  If you\nthink   X   don't   deserve   a  chance,\npleue tell  me. I'm positive every\n'thing   will   b.   different   if   he'll\nonly take me back. Is lt possible\nthat he at.If loves me and refueea\nto take me back\" HOPEFUL ANNA.\n\"Never   is   a  long   word.\"   aa   the\nmaxim   haa  It.  And  you   will   have\nto   show   your   husband   that   you\nI really mean it, before you can ex-\n! pect hl.n to open hia door to you.'\nj Low  no  time  in  ahowlng him you\nI are   ln   earnest.  Try   to  get  a  Job.\nbe  prudent,  and  prove  that you've\n\u25a0 turned   over   a   new   leaf.   As   long\n' as   it   was   only   a   year   aga   that\nj you   walked   out,   you   can't   expect\ni to  have  him  forglvo and forget so\n{quickly.\nOn the Air Tonight\nSATURDAY,   NOV.   >\nNBC-KUO NETWORK\n(KOO-KHQ-KOMO-KFI-KOW)\n..CO RapM In Forenn Land*\nB:30 Political T-1-,  KOO EOT\n7:00 Hour, O'Keefe, A_.ce orch. ana\ntaut. com. itar,\n\u00bb:00 Amo\u00ab 'n' Andy\n8:15 Concert,  mixed  quartta \"8on|r\nof the Frame\"\n8:30 Oolden     St.     ram.     It-blnson\ndrama, KOO KFI\n8:30 Old   World   Serenade\u2122.   KHQ,\nt:00 Rhythmic     Shadows.     PolaX's\norch.\n9:00 Political Talk, KOO KIT\n8:30 Spotlliht  nevin\n11:00 Phll   Harrl*' \"Orcheitra\n11:20 Karl Burtnett'a orchestra\n11.40 Phll   Hsrrla'   orchestra\nNBC-KPO   NETWORK\n(KPO-KGA-KJU-KEX)\nJ:00 Musics]   Echoes,   Gall   Taylor,\ntop.    harpist,    violinist    snd\norganist\n8.10 Argentine  Trio,   irom  BT.\n6:48 Cecil and Sally   IKPO)\n7:00 Medicine Show, (arte Hodgins\n7:30 Con.  orch.,  E.  Polak\n8:15 Night   Songs,   from   N.Y.\n9:00 Ralph Klrbery, Dream Singer\n0:08 Roger W. Kahn'e orch.\n9:30 Den Borate's Orchestra\n10:00 McElroy's  orch.  from  KJR\n10:30 Tom   Gerun's   orchestra\n11:00 Reminiscences, organ concert\nEast and West\nar* mouth conscious. Never let  lips\nrelax; the habit is a beauty wrecker.\nCertale are what the skinny girls\nneed. A large portion for breakfast\nwith plenty of augar and cream.\nPuts fat on the ribs, pads out the\nelbows, makes cushions wher* cushions should be. To gain weight,\neat the usual amount of food each\nmeal, top off with a glassful of mll$\nof cream, half and half. Never go\nto bed hungry*' Do not exercise after\nbecoming consctout of a feeling of\nfatigue.\nContracting ths muscles or the\nface, sending flesh Into folds, are\npractices that produce wrinkles. Many\nwrinkles are self-inflicted. Frowning\nmakes them, ao does lifting the\neyebrows, opening the eyet wid;\nto express surprise. Narrowing the\neyes digs crow's feet Into surround*'\nlng tissues. When llnet first appear\nfacial gymnastics must cease, the\nskin surface be anointed with a\nheavy cream, tapped briskly with\nfingertips. Ironing with lee la a helpful  treatment.\nFed women wear stockings that\nare as large at they should be. They\nshould be. They should be of ampt?\nwidth that toes can move comfortably. Huddling toes together results In all manner of foot ills\u2014\noorne, ingrowing nails, even hammer\ntoe. The Inner side of the shoe\nshould be straight; It should fit\nsnugly over the Instep. Shoes that\nslip are almost at harmful to the\nhealth and appearance of the feet aa\nthose  that  pinch.\nKon-ln-aw Ur. r.nd Un. \u2022\nat  Castlegar.\nMr. and\/ Mrs. A. D. Emory taft\nyesterday to apend the Thaiikagiv-\ning holiday with their toi\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Urs. ned\nS. Itaory at  Vfer&Jt.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMias   Muriel   Redpath   arrived   in\nthe   olty   last   night   Camp   Ueter\nwhen  she  teaches.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs.   R.    H.   Louis   organised\nbadminton'club  hert  yesterday.\nFinest Quality . . Unfailingly\n\"SALADS\nT E A\n\"Fresh from th\u00ab Garden*\"\nVZZZuZZZZZZZZZZZl\nDon't press out the contents of\nplmplea by digging at them with the\nfingernails. Oet a comedone extractor at the drug store, and avoid\nscars.\nViennese society wat startled when\nJulius Melnl, Austrian cpffee magnate, married Mlchlko Tanaka, a\nJapanese opera singer w'-om he had\nheard in concert. The girl, ehown\nabove, ls he daughter of a Japanese\nportrait painter.\nGood Assortment Fresh, Smoked and Salt Fish\nUNABLETOKNEEL\nNeuritis Hampered Her\nIn writing of the pain and Inconvenience she suffered from neurltl,,\nthis *o;iian t.lls also how she rid\nherself of lt:\n\"1 have been using Kruschen Salts\nfor neuritis, and It certainly hss\nthc most weenie-ful effect. My __*ees\nwere very pslnful, ani It became\nIlmost impossible to kn:el. As J do\nall my own housework, you will appreciate what lt means to me. Two\nmonths ago I began using Kruschen.\nand I certainly would not be without\na bottle ln the house for anything. I\nocnslder Kruschen ls worth Its weight\nin _J-c_rat gold.\"\u2014O. M. W.\nNeuritis, like rheumatism, lumbago,\nand aolatlcs. ls caused by deposits ot\nneedle-poloted, flint-hard, uric aold\ncrystals, which pierce the nerves and\ncause thoee stabbing pains. Kruschen\nbreaks up these deposits of torturing\ncrystals and converts them Into a\nh-rrnless wlutlon, which la promptly\n' r moved through the natural channel\u2014the kidneys. And because Kruschen keeps the Inside so regular\u2014\n;ao free from ferx ntlng waite matter\n!\u2014no such holy poisons as uric a. Id\never get ths chance to accumulate\nagain.\n1310   K \u2014CJOR\u2014 -ITS   M\nVANCOUVIR MO W\n6:00   Roller   Skating   Derby\n6:19   Muslonl   Program\n6:30   News  flashes\n6:45   Musical   Program\n1:15   Garden   lovers  Pgr.\n7:80   Old  Oatry   Ptbll  Rait\n.:\u00ab_   Studio  Program\n8:00   B   C.   Bangers\n8:30   SUdlo   Program\n9:30  Mart.  Kenny's Orchestrk\n10:00 Mart.  Kenny's  orchestra\n10 JO   Roller   Skating   Derby\n10:45   Studio  Program\n11:00  \"Ship 0'  Dreama\"\n11*0 K \u2014 KSL\u2014 -05.\u00bb    ell\nsalt lajck cmr eW.OOO W\n6:15 Political  Talk\n6:45 political   Talk\n7:15 King   Sisters\n7:30 \"Peter Spraynoissle\"\n8:30 Political  Talk\n8:_0 Mary and John\n10:30 Ogden   Dance   Music\n11:00 Silent ,\n1050   K \u2014KNX\u2014\nHOLLYWOOD\n6:00   Newa\n6:15   KNX   Ensemble\n6:30  Oh-h-h   timer\n6:46   Feature   Pgr.\n7:00   Prank   Watanabe\n7:15   Ensemble\n7:30   Ke*T:  Playlet\n6:00   KNX  varlettes\n8:00   News   Items\n0:15   Musical   Pgr.\n\u00bb:30 KNX Danoe Band\n10:00   KNX   Ensemble\nHOME  PILLET  FICIRF.S\n_85...    \u25a0\n26,000   W\nIn this day of new value, even\nthe most carefully prepared reporta\non production costs are of value only\nin so far as they serve sa a general\nguide. However there ll a special ln-\nereet ln a report submitted by the\ns .perlntendent of the Dominion experimental sUtlon at Lennoxvllle,\nQuebec on the cost of feeding laying\npullets during tbe period of the pullet year, that ia from November 1,\nto the time at which they are transferred to their laying quarters, until\nOctober 31 of the following year.\nSo that lt may be adapted to your\nImmediate purpose the complete detail of this study IS given as follows:\nAverage number of pullets ....     1-i\nCOST OP PEED:\n6167 lbs. rain at (30 per too . I 9- 50\n4-66 lbs. masb at M0 ton     66 86\n3730 lbs green feet. 16.50 ton ..    10.33\n411 lbs oyter shell. t_0 ton .     431\n340 lb, grit at 130, ton ....     3.40\nvotai coat of feed for 1 year . 104.60\nCost of feed pet\" bird, 1931 .      1.57\nCost of feed per bird for 12-\nyear average         2.37\n,3.808 eggs sold at 37c doe.    734.08\nProfit over cost of feed    539 38\nProfit p-r bird over cost feed      4.5\nPure Food Markets\nEXTRAORDINARY  VALUES  FOR  THIS\n  WEEK-END\nPrime Quality Meats at Prices That Will\nAppeal to the Economical Housekeeper.\nEXTRA SPECIALS\nSPECIAL QUALITY LAMB\nCHOICE SHOULDERS; whole or half. 10l\/^\nPer lb IL' -\nCHOICE LOIN ROASTS; any sUe. 1 \/\\\nPer lb *. 10\nSPECIAL LEGS LAMB. OA<\nPer lb Di\nFRESH KILLED FOWL. , 1 n,\nPer lb IC\nFRESH KILLED CHICKEN and Or\u00ab\nBROILERS.   Per lb LJ\nNEW LAID PEE WEE EGGS. 0[V\nPer doz Lu\nFRESH KILLED RABBITS; 4-l_>. average.       OAtf\nPer lb    Di\nPINK SALMON TROUT. r A\u00ab\u00bb\nEa\u00abh       DU\nBPEAKFA ST BACON. 1A*>\n. *f! Ib. **W\"e  ,   ... .     IU\nTIP TOP CREAMERY BUTTER. nr*\nNo. 1 Steer Specials\nChoice Boiling or<.\nBeef. 3 lbs _-D\nChoice Pot      1A\u00a3 \u2022\u2022)_\nRoast. Per lb.  IU    IC\nChoice Rib Roast.\nPer lb\t\nChoice Prime Rits\nRolled. Per lb. ...\nFresh Minced\nSteak. 2 lbs\t\n15*\n25*\nYoung Pork Specials\nPrime Shoulder\nRoast.    Per lbf..\nPrime Leg Roast.\nPer lb\t\nPrime Loin Roast.\nPer Ib\t\nFresh Spare Ribs.\n3 lbs\t\nFr^sh Pork\nStxtttgt. 2 lbs...\nw\na*\n25<\nSee Our Window for Other\n Specials\nBURNS & Co., Ltd.\nMONK   50\nWEST KOOTENAY BUTCHER CO.\nWEEK-END\nSPECIALS\nSEE  OCB  VTINDOffl\nSMALL   WOMEN'S   DKHSeSBS.      QC<*\nPrints.  3 for    'V*\nI      \u2022v%^' ANOTHER  OBOTTP AM\nWOMEN'S   CEI.   SILK 93 QC\nDRESSES to  44   _..\"._\"*\u2022'\u00bb\nSMALL WOMENS COATS \u2014 Also ft\nSizes. Fur Trimmed. 90.QC\nOne Oroup at _  ~*rs\nSMART NEW CLOTHS \u2014 New Styles\nFur Trimmed, sines to It. \u00bb_,_ ****\nEach    _  ***M>\nSPECIAL OROUP of Coats for lana\nWomen.    Tall    or    short.    Specially\n5?  ?*9.75 TO **4\nOTHER COATS REMARKABLY\nREDUCED to Jsnuary Prices. Yon must\niee these  specials to  appreciate them.\nNEW SKIRTS for Mlsaes or . >\u2022\u00ab(\u25a0\nLadiei. Each  :.\u2022****\nLADIES' KNITTED SUITS la nr\n3  Piece      .?1*7*\nWOOLEN JERSEY DRESSES \u2014 Nexeit\nStyles, the most serviceable Sea Mt\nGarment,   at   , .'  ^\"^\n, _,.. _; \u2014af-   , >*E AHE DISPLAY-NO -TUMEROTS .\nR  I '   ^__H i OUTSTANDING SPECIALS\nRAMSDEN BROS.\nSEE   OUB   SPECIAL   CIRCULAR\n;_u,i;;;_:liiii_:__L___-_-__)!_-_-i._j-___:iii.li . .iwri'-f ______g____e_rta___\nWhat a Handsome\nKitchen!\nBy RUDDY.'\nEverything to Match\nand Harmonize\nGiven Away FREE!\nGroceries to start housekeeping. No trouble. Forty-\ntwo articles in kit and set of cutlery. Just think, absolutely FREE with each cabinet.\n$62.50\nShould you want entire Ensemble of Kitchen Table,\nPorcelain top, guaranteed stainless, flJO_2 f.(\\\nand 4 Chairs': >.   \u00abP_i!lJ.DU\nPorcelain Stainless Top $A PA (POO CA\nTables for  \u2022_?\u00bb\/.t)U to e])0-_,D\\)\nTerms Arranged.\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nThe Store of Service and Satisfaction\nComplete House Furnishers Nelson, B.C.\n THC NEMOX Oiar NEWS, NEISON, B. C\u2014--\u00a7ATl'RD AT MUI-DKI, NOVLMBIR S, MM\nGaytees\nThe, Tailored Overshoe\nfor Women.\n$1.85 , $3.00\nR. Andrew\n&.Co.\nLenders  in  Footfashion\nSociety\nThta column to conducted by\nMn. II. J. Viincui. Al] new ot a\n\u2022octal nature, tnrludlm receptions,\nprivate entertainment!, penonal\nItems, marrtaiea, etc., will appear\nIn thu .column. Telephont Mra.\nVlgneux at )\u00bbt home, 519 filllra\nttreet\nj Yeaterday afternoon it very prpt tj\nj tea waa given at the lion* cf Mrs.\n1 A. D. Emory, Vernon afxeet, which\n! waa given under the ausploea of\n; Mrs. McHardy'a circle of Trinity Unit-\n; ed church whan U.e guests vrere\n! received by Mrs. Emory and Miss\n\u25a0 Eleanor McHardy. Bronze chry iu-\n.hcii-Uni.. graced the dining table\n'where Mrs. William Howe preside\",\n| while serviteurs Included Mrs. J.\n;\\_ong. Miss Etlna Earle Buchanan,\ni Miss Prances Rowe, Mrs. O. A. Oray,\n) jintt Mra. David Proudfoot. Mrs. Ma-\n| whlnney eeewted the guesta to the\ntea room. Mri. B. Lowery wae ln\nchange ol tie fancy work Uble\nwhile Mrs. M. E. rieury acted as\ncashier. ,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLady Aylmer of Willow point waa\nIn town shopping yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMias Clarice Schupe Jiaa arrive;!\nfrom Calgary where she hae bwn\nattending college. She will make her\nCompare Our\nPrices and Quality\nONIONS. B. C 10 Lbs. 25c\nCORNED BEEF      , Tin 14c\nPEACHES, Sixe 1% Tin 33c\n10 Lbs. SUGAR and 1 Lb.\nCOFFEE  82c\n320Z.MAPLE SYRUP and\n1 Pkg. PANCAKE FLOUR ... 87c\nMACARONI 1 Lb. Pkgs. 9c\nHORSWILL BROS.\nPhone 235 418 Baker St.\nHY STORE\nDIMRIB-JIION WllHOUTWA'STE\nBigger and Better\nSavings at\nSafeway\nSATURDAY AND MONDAY,\nNOVEMBER 5th and 7th\ni Orders of $1 and Over Delivered \\\nFree. Phone 153\nFELS NAPTHA\nSOAP\nLIMIT   S   CAKES\ni Per Cake\nLARD\nS-LYMROCK    THIStLE\n2 for 25c\nPORK AND BEANS \u201e\"_.X'f'..\n25c I\nBLUE\n)NTEA Lb. 39c1\nMel-Lille.  U-t.IT   3   TINS.\nMIAS,\nTIN  \t\n29c I\niWAXRC\n'QUICK Ql\n40  SHEETS TO A ROLL\n15ci\nIOATS\nrillNAWARK\n29C,\nOLIVES      MCLAREN'S,    I.ABtiE\n18   IH.   BOTTIJK.   KITH\nTOMATO JUICE\nMRRV'g\n2   TINS   ..\nCauliflower\nEXTRA   URGE   IIEATIS\nI Each\nCRAPES\nBed~~feniperbrf   Fancy   Quality I\n10c 2 Lbs 33ci\nLETTUCE Jjfji\u2122 \"\u2022\"* \"FADS 5c\nCELERY  ,V\",Tli   \"\"SI\"  TENDER\nHEADS. 2 LBS.\n15c I\nVegetable Special\n10 LBS. COOKING ONIONS; 10 LBS. FINEST\nTURNIPS; 10 LBS. TABLE CARROTS; 10\nLBS. NETTED GEM POTATOES, D P -\nALL FOR .....: OOt\n1 in\nNEAT DEPARTMENT\nPOT ROASTS Lb.7Ci\nRUMP ROASTS     Lb. 12c\n,2 Lbs 25cl\nIround steak\nhind oiAinm\nI PORK HOSTS\nPICNIC   STILE\nLb. 8c\nLAMB SHOULDERS ,. ,, r Lb. 12c\nSAUSAGE BBiiAKF ast 3 Lbs. 25c'\nSAFEWAY   STORES   LIMITED\nhome with ber parent*. Mr. and\nMra. Oeorge Schupe, SIS Josephine\n1 atreet.\nAmong vlsltora to Kelqpn raster-day\nwere Mr. and Mrs. Robert Quln of\nHarrop.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nR. K Crerar of Spokane has been\na recent visitor In Neiaon In on-\nnectlon with the Gyro meeting held\nln Trail Thursday  night.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\n0. C. Thompson. M. K. of Vancouver  la  a  city   viMi-or,.\n\u2022 *   *\nK. Wallace of Bosweil paid a visit\nto town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA rial tor In Neltou from Wlnlaw\nyeat^rday was P. W. Green.\nEx-Chief T. H. Long and Mrs. Long\nleft lut n.gtt for Vancouver where\nthey intend making their homee.\n\u2022 \u00bb    \u2022\nX.   C.   francls   of   Sunshine   Bay\napent yesterday In Neiaon.\ns'. s. s\nWalter Tattrie of Wynndel ls visiting   bis  family   on   Latimer   street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nU. P. Innes of Robson was a city\nvisitor yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. M. Murphy of Kaslo ls the\nguest of ber daughters, Mrs. Leslie\nand   Oeorge  Tralnor.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH- Jordan of Nakusp paid a visit\nto town yesterday.\n\u2022 *   *\nAmong shoppers to ths city yesterday were Mrs. C. 6. Squires and\nher sister. Miss Ruth McDiarmid,\nboth of Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nW. Downie of Perry Siding spent\nyesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCapt. James Fltzslmmions, who has\nbeen ln Nelson and district for the\npast week, returned to his home lh\nNakusp yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Alex Sutherland of Kaslo ts\nvisiting friends ln town.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss F. Perrin of Robson paid a\nvisit to the city yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong Nelson  shoppers  yesterday\nwas W. J* Astley cf Queens Biy a\nformer resident of Nelson.\n\u2022.**\u25a0\u2022\nMr. and Mrs* Oeorge Steel, Billea\nstreet, have as their guest Mrs.\nFrank Abey of Kaslo.   H\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n1. T(#)augh of Salmo spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOeorge Dobson, who has been visiting friends for the paat oouple of\nweeks, left yesterday afternoon for\nhis home tn Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong vlsltora to town yesterday\nwas Peter Strand of Slocan City.\n\u2022 \u2022   * \u25a0   \/\nOswald McDougaU ls a city visitor\nfrom Kaslo*\n- \u25a0 '..' \u25a0.\u2022   \u2022 ..\u2022 .__ , j- t\nMiss Florence Grayling was a visitor from Kaslo yesterday.\n*' \u2022   \u2022\nAmong shoppers to the city yesterday was Mrs. R. O. Kingsley of\nSouth Slocan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMrs. J. Hawkins of Bonnington\nwho was recently operated on at the\nKootenay Lake Oeneral hospital for\nappendicitis, ls  doingx nicely.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. W. C. Mawhlnney. Josephine\nstreet, entertained members of Mra.\n0.   F.   McHardy'a   circle   No.   1   of\nTrinity United church Thursday afternoon when those present vere\nMrs. McHardy, Mrs. J. Long. Mrs.\nWilliam Rowe, Miss Frances Rowe,\nMrs. B. Lowery, Mrs. o. A. Oray,\nMn. A. D. Emory. Mrs. saare, Mrs.\nM. I. Fleury a*H Mrs. Divld Proud-\nloot.\n\u2022    \u2022    *\nTurner Lee of  B-.-rn_ings.on paid a\nvU.t  lti town  yesterday.\nMra. T. K. Bruha of Nakunp spent\nyesterday ln Neiaon.\nFERNS WISHES\nTO CUT SALARY\nOFMAGISTRATF\nFunds on Hand to Tay Pai!\nTeachers' and Civic Workers' Salaries\n^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0J-tai'-^eu.-BB\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. C'Kov 4.\u2014Mrs. James\nDevlto, Nelson avenue, entertained\nlast evening at a cup and saucer\nshower for Mrs. J. Truant, who was\nrecently married ln Revelstoke. Mauve\nand yeMow chrysanthemums decorated the rooms and the baskets\nin which the gifts were placed\ncarried out the color acheme. Mrs.\np. Travison, Mrs. P. Fantin and Miss\nGlna Vannucchl  assisted In serving.\nThe guests were Mrs. K. M. Hobson, Mrs. Frank D'Ar change lo, Mrs.\nBruno Lerose, Mrs. M. De Meo, Mrs.\nF. Romano, Mra. J. Recchl, Mrs. E.\nTorrlsan, Mrs. T. Bertuzsl, Mrs. A.\nLeonarduccl, Mrs. E. Pisapio, Mrs.\nO. De Fasquale, Mrs. p. Dozl. Mrs.\nL. Lerose, Mrs. A. Matovltch. Mrs. G.\nGattafonl. Mrs. M- ffaocaretto, Mrs.\nJ. Tan, Mrs, A. Vannucchl, Mrs. W.\nBerll, Mrs. C. Cashaton, Mrs. C. Cat-\nalana, Miss Llvia Daioise, Miss Glna\nVannucchl, Mias Elda ffracora. Miss\nEsther Dtsteasaiio, Miss Ena Ai-fter-.il\nMiss Xllando, Miss Vera Devito,\nand   Miss   Celia   Smith.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. snd Mrs. C. Lauriente and\ndaughter Ardie bave returned after\nspending a few days ln Spokane.\nThey were accompanied by Miss\nAnna Carlstro who will visit here\nfor a week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. H. CV Davis and Miss Fred\nToung of Frultvale were visitors\nIn  the   city   todsy.\n\u2022 s   \u2022\nMrs. Arthur Dutton and daughter\nIlene of Klmberley who havs been\nguests of Mrs. Dutton's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. James Melvin for a few\ndays left tonight for the coast\nwhere they will visit Mrs. Duton's\naunt.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nJack Ardagh of Vancouver arrived\nyesterday to take up duties at the\nBank  of  Montreal   ln  Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL  HOUSES  AHD  LOTS  \u2014  TN-\nsurance.  Notary.  J.  D.   Anderson.\nv\u00ab33)\nOPPOSE  APPEAL Or HEKERTED\nWIVES   MAINTENANCE   ACT\nVANCOUVER, NOV. 4 (OP)\u2014De-\nspite reports yesterday that tbe province would not oppose an appeal\nwhich would result In the Deserted\nWlveg Maintenance act being declared Inoperative, lt waa announced\ntoday that Hon. R. H. Pooley, attorney-general, had Issued Instructions to oppose tbe appeal.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. *\u2014Carl lafck-\nlund, Pandora atreet, was almost Instantly killed today while working\non construction of a grain elevator\nat the foot of Silsbury drive.\nYour Photograph\nmm\nA gift of sentiment\u2014\nTo someone your photograph would mean\nmore that any other\ngift you could buy ...\nGEO. A. MEERES\nPhone 46\n715 Baker St.\nTHONE 149\nPHONE 140\nBUTCHERTERIA\n*\u2022 We are building up a business by giving you\nSERVICE and QUALITY Meats at reasonable cost.\nA GRAND SLAM AT HIGH PRICES\nGood for Saturday and Monday.\n18c\nPrime Rib Roasts Choice\nSteer Beef;  boned and\nrolled.\nPer lb. ... i\nPot Roasts Choice Q n\nBeef. Per lb Ot\nLoin Roasts or Loin\nChops Choice- Spring\nLamb. 1 Pp\nPer lb i-tlt\nLeg Roasts Grain-Fed\nPork. 1 0\u00ab\nPer lb i-Ot\nEggs, Storage\nFirsts. 2 doz.\n55c\nChoice Young Frying\nChicken; ready for the\npan.  - AKp\nEach    HttIC\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nDeal No. 1\n3-lb. Roast Choice Lamb;\ni\/a lb. Choice Sliced Bacon; 1 lb. Breakfast Sausage; 1 doz. Eggs;, V_ lb.,\nHead Cheese or Bologna,\nAll for\n>nly   ..\n$1.00\nDeal No. 2\n3-lb. Roast Cholw Beef\nor Pork; I lb. Creamery\nButter; i\/2 Ib. Choice\nSliced Bacon; 1 lb. Breakfast Causage; V. lb.\nChoice Cooked Ham, and\nthe lot\nfor only\n$1.00\nPure Lard;\n3 lbs. for  .\n45c\nGet the Habit of Taking a I.ook at our Window and\nLearn How to Save Monev.\nPHONE 149 FREK DELIVERY\nI PERNIE. B. C. Nov. *-\u2014At tli*.\nPernle city council meeting IMaral\nI rn.rw.na requested more favora-blc\n| i*rrma for rent owing the city, and\nj sf king for work to offaet accounts\nj owing.\nA petition was read fron residents\nIn the vicinity of the septic tank\nobjecting to the placing of garbage\n1 near the river tn that locality. The\npractice haa been to cover the garbage with aahes and use lt for fill\nln a low portion of t..e ground in\nthat vicinity. The council instructed\nthe mayor an! health officer to Investigate and take the necessary\nmeasures.\nA letter waa read from Attorney.\nCeneral Pooley, in answer to a suggestion from th-> council that the\nFernie city magistrate receive as pay\nonly the fees collected by his court.\nThe attorney-general said. \"It ls\nadvisable to rave an experienced\nmagistrate In flu city.\" The council\npassed a motion asking him for permission to reduce the magistrate \"a\nsalary   from   175  to  #50.\nThe city engineer was Instructs!\nto check up the witer taps in each\nhotel ln the city for water rates\npurposes.\nThe government agent of Nelson\nsent a bill for expenses contracted\nduring taking two Fernie mental\ncasts to pte mental hospital at Es-\nsendale, amounting to \u00bb77.40. This\nwas passed for payment.\nAccounts to the amount of \u26663238,-\n36 were ordered paid.\nThe Holy Family achool bylaw received Ua final leading and waa\npassed. This Is a bylaw granting th-\nHoly Family school \u00ab200 so thnt th-y\nmsy carry on their school of 160\nchildren until December 31.\nOn the advise of Engineer Sciles\ncatch basins will be placed at the\ncorners of Howland avenue and\nMcEvoy street and Dalton avenue\nand Cox street with connections to\nthe storm sewer. This work will he\ndone   by   the   direct  relief   workers.\nThe council wa* Informed by the\ncity clerk that only sufficient funds\nwere on hand to pay 75 per cent of\nthe teachers' and city employees'\nsalaries for October. TM city has t>\nrinance Its current expences until\nthe end of the year on the money\nIt receives from debts owing It ani\nthe revenue of tbe cities public\nutilities; The city clerk stated that\ncollections were very difficult to\nobtain. Mayor Douglas received a\ntelegram Wednesday evening from\nFinance Minister JonfB_.statlng that\nthe government had set sslde *7500\nfor Jernie unemployxent relief. This\nsum Is to cover all expenditures\nuntil ihe end of December.\nTi-ts telegrsm was ln answer to\ntwo wires during the week from\nMsyor Dougl__s and a pbone message\nfrom Thomas Uphill, M. P. P., on\nWednesday.\nThe aldermen expressed tbemslvs\ni greatly relieved at the message\nfrom the government. They said\nt;-.at now they knew what they had\nto meet the needy cases. Eighteen\nhundred dollars of this a.nount bis\nalready   been  spent  on  relief.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nThe following ceiunin of social\nnews aud happenings in Ko\u00bbsla\u00bbu\nIs conU-icted by Mrs. U-easle B.\nher home In Koshlaiid and gi.e\nft'erguM... t'liune Mrs. n't-rguso-i at\nher details of events of interest to\nthis  column.\nRASSLAND, B.C., Nov. 4.\u2014The evening branch of the women's auxiliary\nof the Church of Bt. oeor\u00bb\u00ab the\nMartyr were the guests of Mrs. George\nNixon, Park street, at a delightful social gathering, Tuesday evening. Th\u00ab\ngusts were met at the door and guided itttr- the living room by ghosts,\nwhile walling and shrieking added to\nthe \"creepy\" effect. The guests _J-\nrived in fancy dress snd appropriate\ngames were played. Dainty refreshments aerved by the hostess, assisted\nby Mrs. Woodward and Mrs. D. S.\nCatchpole. Alter voting tlielr hosteaa\na \"Jolly Good Fellow,\" the gueBts left\nfor home. The following were present,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Ward, Mr. and Mrs.\nWoodward, Mr. and Mis. George Nixon, Mrs. C. Moen, Mrs. Kenneth Martin, Mrs. A. C. Rldgers, Mrs. B* G.\nLots, Mrs. Oscar Toblason, Mrs. D. K.\nMacAUlster, Mrs. J. van der et, Mis.\n\\ Desmond 8. Catchpole, and Mrs. Rob-\ni crt Anderson.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00ab\nj    Richard   W.   Tlmins,   caretaker  at\n[the   postofflce,   ia   enjoying   a   two\nworks' holiday at Halcyon hot springs.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. snd Mrs. T. White have returned from a visit to Bonnington, where\nthey were the guests of their son-in-\nIhw snd daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kennedy.        ' )\nR B. Lawrence of Penticton was ln\nthc city this week*\nQytyfeagher'sSc*\n607 Baker St. Phone 200\nNovember Sale\nof\nLadies Ready*to*Wear\nThere is still a wonderful selection of quality merchandise in Ladies'\nReady-to-Wear and at the lowest prices every known.... All\nare very well made and in the newest materials and\ncolors for Fall and Winter wear.\nMODEL COATS\nat $15 to $25 Less Than Re&ular\nHere is your opportunity to save on your better coat.\nCoats of the finest quality materials and workmanship.\nLarge fur collars of Beaver, Persian Lamb, Kolinsky,\nSquirrel, Fox and Sable. Travel Coats or Dressy Coats\nin all sizes. Regular values ?65 to f 100 each.\nSALE PRICE, EACH   $50 TO ?75\nWOMEN'S COATS\nat $34.95 Each\nOur largest range of coats are offered at this price.\nThey come in fine all wool materials in all the new\nweaves. Heavy silk or duvetyne linings. Fine quality\nfur collars and cuffs. All in the new Fall colors and in\nall wanted sizes. Values to $45 each.\nSALE PRICE. EACH S34.96\nWomen's Coats at $24.95 Each\nA complete assortment\nin all the new Fall colors.\nRough finished diagonal\ncloths. Rich fur collars\nand good quality linings.\nAll sizes up to 44. Regular values to $32.60 each.\nSALE PRICE-\nEACH  f 24.95\nWomen'sDressesReduced\nAU dresBes of the better sort. Individual\nstyles of the finest quality materials. Silks\nvelvets and crepes. Dresses for street\nwear or dinner dresses.    All colors and\nREDUCED FOR THIS SALE.\nWomen's and Misses'\nWoolen Dresses\nHere is a wonderful buy just at the beginning of the dress season.   TheBe come\nin every new Fall shade.   All sizes up to\n38.   Regular values to $17.50 each.\nSALE PRICE, EACH  ?10\nMisses' Evening Dresses\n'   at $14.95 Each\nSmart new dresses of Taffeta or Satin in\nWhite or pastel shades.   Sizes 14 to 18.\nValues to $22.50 each.\n' SALE PRICE, EACH 914.95\nFAVOR  STUDY  OF I'RAIBIE INION\nDAUPHIN, Man. Nov. 4\u2014The United Farmers of Manitoba tonight\nadopted a resolution which favors n\nstudy of tha waya and mean* of\nbringing about tha political union\nof tha threw prairie provinces The\nfarm aeseoclatlona of Sankatchevan\nand Alberta will be asked to cooperate  In thia study.\nRose Island, part of the Samoan\njroup, has the distinction of beln?\nthe most southern hmd to which\nt'.-fl United bt-ttM bss .mdlap.n*d\npossession.\nHarrop Institute\nStages Party for\nHallowe'en Event\nHAaROP, B. C, Nov. 4\u2014Th. H_r-\nrop Women's Institute held . Jolly\nHallowe'en   party   Monday   evening.\nT-\u00ab young mewquem-era were attired ln almost every type of straate\ndrew, and several adults, aa veil,\ntook the opportunity ol \"dresalnj\nup\" and appeared In the p_r_do before the Judges.\nThe difficult tart ot Judging was\ndone by MIM n. Hlndley, Mrs. I.\nSparas. E. Harrop and W. J. MeCon-\nnell. Prizes were awarded aa follows: Beet dreseed girl, Ithel Pair-\nbank; best dressed boy, Vivian Rowley; best girl's cocrcl-. Idna Johnston; best boys' comic, Walter yit-\nchelt; best dresevd person over 15\nyears, Mis. S. Mcintosh.\nA committee composed of Mrs. A.\ntl. Johnston, Mrs J. E. Pltchett ana\nMra, P. Andrews, prepared ea splendid program of games and contests,\nin which both old and young took\npart.\nThe proceeda were in aid of the\nChristmaa tree  fund.\nI'.r.M.   TO   MEET   AT\nI PORTAGE  LA   PRAIRIE,  1KI1\n1    DAUPHIN, Man., Nov. 4\u2014The 1933\nconvention of the united rarzner.\nof Manitoba will be held at Portage la Prairie,  lt wa. announce.\nnm i ii; 111 iniiiiiiiii\nTHE IDEAL\nBRIDGE PRIZE\nMOIRS\nSTRICTLY FRESH\nCHOCOLATES\nBags 251\nBoxes 75<S ?1.00, f 1.50\nMINTON'S\nPHARMACY\nPHONE 101)\nU-1_._--_U.U__-\nQlirK .IEI.1VERV\nHir Hurt Wis Wuk\nDerm Shaky, Rigtts listless\nlira. A. Blaek. Wallaceborg, Ont, writ*:-\n\"I mffered from heart wetknew, sha-cy uerr.\nud reatleea nighti.\nI mw yonr adrertisMnflBt for litttmr* *\u25a0 Heart\nud Nerrt Pith and derided to try thtm ahhongh\nI did not hav\u00ab mneh faith, bat bow I am wr\nthankful I did u they hare proved of wonderful\nhelp to me.\nI an now strong asd well agaia, bot an aster\nwithout a box in the houie.''\nfor wl* at aD dr\u00bbf a*4 feearal tt-jrei; pat vp only tj Th* T. MiUmn Ce., XJ*.,\nTwottM, Ont.\n[yilLBUR^\nInstant\nPopularity\nThat's what we are saying about the new\nPalm Milk Slice\nChildren and adults alike enjoy this\npopular new refreshment.\nAt All CURLEW Dealers\nand Only\nIt's New\nIt's Delicious\nSc\nIt's a Nickel\nIt's Nutritious\nOn and after NMemher l our office win close at 5:30 p. m.\nInstead of \u00ab.\n_'....-.     _    ,\n \"Interior of. Brithk Columbia's FamUji 'Newspaper\"\nALL THE  NTWS  WHIU IT IB N-WS\nPubluhtd ever, moraine eicept Sunday by THI NSWa\nPtJBLJjrairtQ COMPANY. LIMITED, 318 Baker Street, Nelson,\nB.C.    Member ol CANADIAN PBB63 Leased Wlrs Service.\nADV__STlSINa   RATES  ON   APPLICATION\nOr rats card, may be wen at the orflce of an, Ad vertlalnj Agency\nIWXWnHced  by tlie CANADIAN  DAILY NEWSPAPEliS ASSOCIATION.\nINC. of winch tha Nelson Dally Neva Is s member.     ,     ,     .     .\neuBSCR-TT-CW RATES\nRy  fn.U   (oountry),   *_\"*  *nren..>i             _\n8   40\nHy  ene.ll   \/.It-,,   per   -...\nn__a_1_  nan.ria    pee   .-.-.th\n.... 19.00\n      .78\nIcIUered   tr.it.j hy   rsrrf.r),   per  TT\u2014S   ,\n39\nPayable In adrance.\nMember Audit Bureau of circulation.\nSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7,\n1932\nUnion Idea Not Very Popular\nJudging from what has happened in the Western\nProvinces proposals affecting coalitions of political parties have not proved popular. The Victoria Colonist\ndeclares \"they have aroused hardly an atom of enthusiasm anywhere. In Manitoba, Premier Bracken's proposal in the matter of a coalition government was refused by the Confervatives. The Liberals were willing\nenough, and in fact they were given cabinet representation. To the extent that they coalesced with the Progressives there was a partial carrying out of Premier\nBracken's proposals. That coalition however was not\napproved at the polls. Premier Bracken's government\nwas returned to power, but the Liberal ministers in his\ncabinet went down to defeat. Coalition in any form\ndocs not now prevail in Manitoba,\nDr. J. T. M. Anderson, the Premier of Saskatchewan,\nrecently gave his blessing to a proposal for coalition\nin that province. It was rejected by the leaders of\nboth opposition groups. Premier Anderson has now\nabandoned the idea, though he has invited members of \u2022\nother groups, especially Liberals, to support the government under present conditions. That they will do\nso is wholly unlikely. We have had our own experience\nin British Columbia of the efforts of Dr. S. F. Tolmie\nto form a Union Government. In this province the only\nofficial group which could make such a coalition possible is the Liberals. .Mr. T. D. Pattullo opposes the\nproposal. He does not believe in Union Government\nunless he is himself the leader of such a coalition. Union Government, therefore, has been knocked oh the\nhead, for there can be no union of parties for the purposes of administration unless there is coalition between\nthe government in office and the official opposition.\nIn commenting on efforts in the direction of union\ngovernment, that have been made in western provinces,\nthe Montreal Gazette says: \"Party governments continue in all theese provinces and it is perhaps as well it\nshould be so. The formation of a union government at\nOttawa during the war period was by no means an un-\nqualified success, and the public do not look back upon\nit with any marked degree of satisfaction or pride.\"\n\"Let Government Dolt**\nWhile world-wide conditions of depression have had\ntheir effect on the employment situation in Great Britain, the recent riots in London are in a sense directly\nattributable to the Dole, which has taught large portions\nof the British public to blame all their troubles on the\nGovernment.\nIt is a misconception of government functions, but it\nhas been encouraged so long by the outgivings of vote-\nseeking politicians that it is perhaps natural. The conception of the government as something above and outside, with power of setting at naught natural and economic laws and achieving results impossible to an aggregation of individuals, is basically to blame. The government is no more capable of working magic than is any\nindividual.\nSo far London's so-called hunger riots have not got\nbeyond control of the police, though the latter have been\nconsiderably aided by the weather. The fact that the rioters do not care to riot in the rain is perhaps significant,\ntending to indicate that their hearts are really not in\ntheir cause. The affairs are Communist demonstrations\nof familiar type. The marchers carrying red banners and\nthe hammer and sickle emblem of Communist Russia;\nand their main protest is not that they are hungry, but\nthat the government, in administering the dole, has been\ntrying to confine it to those who are genuinely without\nother means of support.\nThat in so doing the government has got away from\nthe conception of the dole as unemployment insurance\nand now views it as a form of poor relief is both true and\nimportant. It probably would be useful if this change of\nviewpoint were admitted and clarified, even if it proved\nto be politically difficult. To brand the government-supported insurance scheme as unworkable, which it is, and\nto abondon it definitely would clear the ground of much\ntheoretical rubbish and permit the British nation to get\nback to fundamentals.\nNone of the devices, and they are many and varied,\nwhich have been tried by various countries to deal with\nunemployment, or to establish a system of direct or indirect relief have brought satisfaction. All have had\nserious defects, and perhaps in the very nature of things\nthis is inevitable.\nThe basic defect may be the fact that when govern-\nment spends money, it first takes it out of the pocket of\nan individual, and on the average the individual could\nhave spent it hirrlself with better effect on the economic\nstructure. A British economist has cast this fact into the\nstatement that every plus of government expenditure\nmeans a minus of private expenditure, so that even\nwhere government and private efficiency is equal the\nresult is no better than a stand off. There is thus a respectable body of opinion to the effect that any government meddling with the economic structure necessarily\nhas more bad effects than good ones. This is an old, a\nconservative view, and out of favor with parlor theorists on that account. But it was parlor theories who gave\nKritain the dole.\n'i tehers in Wildwood, N. J., have joined the ranks\ni so bring paid in scrip\u2014just a lot of paper-work,\nvt presume.\nThey're changing the rules of bridge again\u2014apparently in hopes of competing with the great game of\nfootb_J|^HB_____-9\nThe world's groateat optimist has been discovered.\nHe is that Nebraska!) who set himself up in business\ntly wilh a miniature golf course.\n\"Between You\nantfMe**\nBy \"J.B.C.\"\nIIIII III I HH      I' r f. 11 i' i r ;\u25a0_-_\n- THE NEISON DAILY NIWS, NELSON, B. C SATURDAY MOBMIKO, NOVEMBER J, -Mla\nPoppies\nWa* wondering wfeet to write\nabout when I met a certain lady on\nthe street wbo a.-*ed If I had done\nmy baking for the Boy Scout bake\naal* today. Bhe aald her husband\nwaa home doing hia atuff. I replied\nI wm sfraid to do any baking at\nhome\u2014because I mlgt.t hare to do\nIt all tb* time.\nBut ladiei, just Imagine your\nchance today\u2014Dav* Wade, they aay.\n1* an expert on ahoe leather steaks\u2014\nand he ta making blsquite for the\nsale\u2014They are guaranteed to bounce\n\u2014But I hear Dav* l* not Including\nany rubber heal* ln hia biscuit*\u2014\nElmer Horton, I have It on good\nauthority, li making some delicious\naawduat muffin* and throwing a\nf*w splinters ln for good measure\u2014\nHarry Paterson being an adept electrician, will be pending down aome\n\"current\" buna\u2014And J. P. Coates\nalao tn th* electrical g.nie will provide mut \"Juice\"\u2014Oen* Gillott will\nlend \"variety\" to the aal* with a\nconglomeration that might be called\nhash\u2014Bill Hlpperaon ahould be good\non \"Pan\" cake* or hard \"tacks\"\u2014\nIn fact lt look* a* though the men\nwill be Quite busy\u2014But don't blame\nme for Indigestion, etc. T.-la 1* not\na knock, thl* Is a boost for the sale.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPassing th* hospital X heard the\nstrains of a violin and the song\nwm \"I Love Tou Truly\" or something similar\u2014-Appear* tbe music\nwm oomlng from quarters occupied\nby on* Mr. Pearson, who was energetic In hi* \"\"tours off\". Now I\nwonder 1\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nWm called down by a lieutenant\nof a Ur. Kinlock who led the unemployed to the court house yesterday. The gentleman claimed I had\nmade a mistake In calling the .aid\nKinlock \"H\" Kinlock. His r*a. Initial Is \"A.\" I learned further *.faat\nhe ls a Dundee Scotchman snd bad\nbeen present at unemployed riot* at\nti.e coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAn old Doukhobor dressed ln a\nbuckskin shirt tried to gain admittance to th* court house but wu\nstopped by a policeman. He said\nsomething about \"brother\" workers\nand when someone asked him If he\nwas Scotch he said he was Doukhobor but tbat wu Just the same.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTh* other night the citizens and\nseveral other bodies mad* a presentation to Chief Thomas H. Long,\nwho left last night for the ooast\nunder superannuation. The new chief\nAlex Stewart wa* re_nlnlsclng of\nearly diys ln Rossland and be aald\nh* r*_nemberes well, obeying orders\nfrom, hia then chief In Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBob ntzslmmons wu touring .he\ncountry u champ of th* world, and\nAles wu young and a boxer of\nability. He wu lined up against\nth* famous Bob. In Alex's corner\nwu Chief Tom Long.\n\"I did pretty well tn th* opening\nround* and X thought I hsd Bob\ngoing,\" atated Alex. And \u00abo did tb*\nChief.\"\n\"Tou got him going, Alex. Oo out\nand  get him thl*  round.\"\n'I went out to get Bob,\" aald\nAlex, \"and I was knocked cold. When\nI came around Chief Long had disappeared. I didn't aee him agsln\nthat night. In fact It wu 3 o'clock\nthe next afternoon tbat th* chief\nphoned me. 'Alex,' he said, 'I guess\nyou *r* not feeling very good today.\nTou don't have 'o come on ahlft.'\"\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nBut we will mis* Chief Lonf. HU\nfigure hu been more or 1cm a part\nof tbe main streets of the city..We\nwill miss his stories\u2014and w* will\nmiss the way he swung his watch\nchain. I don't know of anyon*\nels* In th* dlatrlct v..o could swing\na watch chain Uk* Chief 'Long.\nAur revolr, chief.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe otber day I printed a \"sticker\" and there wer* prUses donated\nfor Junior high achool students getting the correct solution without\noutside aid. Tco answers are supposed to be In not later than Monday. I have on* salu tion but by\nsomeone who is out of th* classes\nspecified. Here's thc question. Oet\nbusy  Junior  high   students:\nAddress answers care \"J-B-C.\" this\npaper.\nThree women, Mrs, Brown, Mrs\nOreen and Mrs. Whit*, each accompanied by her daughter, went stopping, and each person bought ~\nmany yarda of ribbon u h\u00ab\" choice\ncost ln centa per yard. Each mother\nspent ta cent* more than her daughter. Mrs. Oreen bought 11 ysrds more\nthan Mary and Mrs. Wblt* 33 yards\nmore than Kate. Who wu the mother  of  Agnes?\nAUNT HET\n\"Polks don't mistrust an unmarried doctor. They Just feel\ncheated becaus* he ain't got a\nwife to tell 'em about hi* patient*.\"\nTh*   \"forgot  n    man\"    give*\ntrouble.  He doe* all  th*  work  and\nrarrlea  all  fr..e  burdens  of  society.\u2014\nRev. John Haynes Uo.mt-s, New York,\nclly.\nBV GERALD S- BEES\nAnother j-ww hu gone by with the\nearth in Its trip around tlie sun; this\nls poppy day, WlUi city strerte color-\nsplashed with Vet-craft popples, artificial emblems made in the Red\nCr es workshops by men who were\nonly \"soldiers for the working day\"\nbut wh> remember how t*_e popple*\nonce bloomed In the field of war\nIn the long ago; who once marched\nwhere the guns spoke, and the smoke\nof battle was ever In the sir.\nThey have made them for you to\nwear on this dsy of all the year; the\nred b 'om of the wheat fields\u2014a\nancient symbol of oblivion-\u2014by reason\nof Its foignant associations with \"over\nwiere*' hM become the flower of a\ngreat remembrance. Popples sUU stain\nthe fields of Flanders.\n\"Tall,   green   candle*  stand  the\nb .me\n\"Lighten by flames of red.\nTh* larks still sing u of yore;\nthere are msny more popple* now,\nblue and whit* coroners of cDrnflow*\nem too, and the song of the larks ts\nunrestrained and buoyant. In Artolls\nand Picardy the wheat trembles In\nth* wind again, as browned pcasan-s\nscythe half-moons of tinkling grain:\n\"One*  more  with  Angelu* bells\nsweet prayers ascend,\n\"The larks tn old memories rehears*  and  blend\n\"Airong the clear pure notes the\nbelfries chime, .\n\"Along the noontide heat of autumn time.\nIn poppy time out from th* farth-\nerest chambers of the sky comes an\nair, neither breeze nor repbyr, but\na fresh warm breath that steals over\nthe earth\u2014crimsoned with the toll of\nopposing armies \u2014 snd ripples the\nHold into billows of red; a prolonged\nbush, then, fainter than th* lisp of\ngrass combed by tho wind, In the\nsilence of high uoon. comes the ethereal murmur of the popples, whispering cf \"those other years\"; their\nnodding crowns bslsnce now right,\ndow left, u the soft breath caresses\ntbe waving blooms.\nTHE UfctD OP 8C.tR .UT\nBefore the war masses of popples\nalong the old battle lines\u2014\"Where\nrich line ran ln furrows, shell plaw-j\ned, long\"\u2014 were practically unknown\nbut their multltualous presence\nsince In cultivated fields constitutes\na positive menace to crop*.\nBe this as it may, the glint of the\nscarlet poppy recalls the spirit of\nthe men wbo loved life, but faced\nd -tn . . Its most terrifying forms,\nwho hated th* Job, but stuck It out\nand kept sane againat all odds that\ntore at men's nerves and stormed\nagainst tbelr souls; they were not\npioneers, nor wild men of the desert, bred to war, but came from large\nand amall towns and littl* farms,\nwhere they led ordinary and commonplace lives. They went out on their\nInst earthly pilgrimage, and never\nagain came homeward to any shor* or\nany tide; their bodies ll* in nearly\nevery land and ae* throughout tbe\nglobe, though more thickly tn Prance\nana Planders. \"All died in faith, not\nhaving eoeived the promises, but\nhaving seen them afar off.\"\n\u25a0j \u25a0 \u2022   *\nOn tho forthcoming anniversary of!\nArmistice Day\u2014the fourteenth sin*1\nthe ending of the world war\u2014if precedent be foUowed, a unique service\nof remembrance will be held In the\nRoy-il Albert Hall of Kensington in\nthe capital city of th* Empire. It ls\na fitting climax to the earlier gather-\nUS in Whitehall \"at eleven hours,\" in\nthe abadow of th* national cenotaph\nthat stark unimbelllshed aloof reminder of civilisation's greatest blunder, before which the brightly colored\npeace Ume omnibuses now rumble by\nunceasingly. An Immense auditorium,\nwith which many are familiar, packed\no Its loftiest galleries; a riot of color\nwith every branch of his Majesty's\nservices reprr :nted. Scarlet-coated\nChelsea pensioners, Veterans of Britain's bygone campaigns on tat flung\nbattle fronts. TruL-ptcrs ln gold and\nplalded pipers dt the Scots guards,\nwith .ne drummers and fIters of\nthe Grenadiers, massed bands of the\nColdstreamers and the Irish guards,\nmarines, sailors, nursing sisters,\nWmcs, Wrens and other war-time\nauxiliaries.\nACROSS THE  TEARS\nThere will take place a solemn act\nof remembrance.\nA dimming of the lights . , . the\npipers play the \"Flowers of the Por-\nst.\" To the roll of th drums a huge\nflag, the flag of the British Legion,\nis drawn back to reveel a field of\nremembrance, a poppy strewn field \u2014\nThe Last Post\" from the silvery trum.\npets of the high-booted snd scarlet-\ncoated trumpeters of the Royal Blues\n\u2014the ensuing silence ii gently broken by the voices of an unseen choir;\n\"Ob. valiant hearts, who to your\nglory came\n\"Through  dust  of  conflict and\nthrough battle flame,\n\"Tranquil  you lie. ...\nThen from the high vaulted dome\nflutter over on* mil.lon poppy petals\na blood red shower falling to form\na crimson mantle on the shoulders\nof the assembly below, eacii silken\npetal representing a sacrificed life, one\nfor each of the Empire's dead I A\nmillion and more who never wanted\nwar, Ood knows, but who went -ike\nlambs to the slaughter, praying or\nblaspheming, and never came to\nknow which side won the war, and\nwho were t..e victors of the peace.\nWe hardly even know now! Maybe,\nall were the loser*! still ln the\nshrouded light a high Admiral of\nthe fleet, standing on the platform,\nrecites very quietly the Immortal\nnoes:\n\"They   ahall   grow-not   old,   u\nwe wbo ar* left grow old;\n\"Age shall not weary tbem, nor\nth* feets condemn\n\"At the going down of the sun\n\u2022nd ln tbe morning,\n\"We shall remember them.\nThe long reveille by a ton* trumpeter . . . \"Abide With Me\" . . .\nOod flav* tte King\u2014So cornea' the\nfinal*.\nTb* ether may bring It to you\naround   the  hour  of  noon  on  November 11, even as it came faintly\nto me qver the ridlo a year ago.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nAt dusk on the green lawns out-\n-\\-r\nSteward: \"Will you take  coffee, madam?\" '\nTourist: \"No, thank you.\"\nSteward:  \"Perhaps  your  husband wouldV\" ,\nTourist: \"He\u2014he'a not my husband, I don't know who he ts.**\n\u2014London   Opinion.\nWEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN\nFor   Western   and   Central   Canada,\nEmbracing British Columbia, Alberta,\nSaskatchewan,    Manitoba    and    On-\n, '    tarte        >\nMonday, Nov. 7, 1033\u2014Probably\naome rain or snow ln most of central provinces and on Paclflo alope.\nIn mountains and on high plateau\nlands snow ls expected. Considerably\ncolder.\nTuesday. Nov. S\u2014Rains and snows\nbecom; light ani scattering; tending to clear ln most parta of the\ncountry; still cold but temperatures\nrising ln west.\nWednesday. Nov, ft\u2014Clearing day\nln sll oentral regions. About the\nPaclflo slope and nothwest allghtly\nwarmer, but In great lakes regions\nand east colder and unsettled.\nThursday, Nov, 10\u2014Cold, dry\nweather, except on Pacific slope and\nalso probably about th* Ontario districts. Middle of a clear cold spell\nPriday, Nov 11\u2014On Pacific slope,\nabout the great lake and in Ontario\nregions some rain or snow, but tn\ncentral provinces clear and cold.\n.Saturday, Nov 12.\u2014Rains about the\nPaclflo slops now. extended across\nmountains into th* central regions,\nprobably carrying light snows though\ntemperatures expected to rise slightly.\nSunday, Nov. 13.\u2014In ' northwest\ncolder, but to southwest warmer,\ncloudy and unsettled. May be Ught\nsnows or rains ln tb* lakes regions.\nWe?k of Nov. 7 to 13, 1933, In cen-\ntral regions begins with some unsettled weather, light rains or snows,\nthen grows colder, yet about middle\nof week .clears up, changes to warmer and finally at end of week still\nmore unsettled weather, with rising\ntemperatures. On Pacific slope about\nnormal rainfall but ln central sec\ntions slightly less. By the middle of\nNovember In this country the rains\ndefinitely cease, the winter snows\nbegM. whlle^ rlvrra and lakes close\nwith Ice. yet this year winter ought\nto be retarded by a fairly warm\nNovember.\nThe upper Mississippi and Missouri\nriver drainage areas really merge with\nthe orthera lakes to th* Basket'\nchewan basin, while the Alberta\nplains reach to the Oluf of Mexl%.\nthe whole constituting the great\ncentral valley of North America.\nOver this wide valley the autumn\nand winter storm drift from west\nto <sst causing the weather changes\nwe experience in this country. This\nweek the storm paths should be\nfrom Alberta via St. Lawrence gulf.\nTo the northwest of these disturb*\nsnoes It ls cold, but to the south'\neut warmer.\nTHE   FARM   PRODUCE   MARKET\nPrsctlcilly all farm produce prices\nstruck bottom in the summer of 1933\nand then rebounded back to Intermediate levels, The most notably re\ncovery wu ln the price of meat\nanimals and cotton, although nearly\nall other product* participated. Like\nall rebounds of this character, we\nmay reasonably expect some slack\nback below the peak but yet it\nwears highly Improbable that the\nrecent low levels will again be reached in any near futur* tlm*\nPor 1933 the wheat harvest was\ngood and th* carry-over 1* large,\nnevertheless It ls fairly safe to conjecture tbat' the Chicago December\ndelivery at around 80 cents a bushel\nm quoted ln the first part of October, represent* about the lowest\nlevels to which wheat ts likely to\ngo this year. Below this level wheat\nbecomes a feed grain for meat an'\nlmals, surplus supplies being limned,\nlately diverted Into this line of\nconsumption. The outlook ls for\nhigher prices this winter.\nCotton prloes went to a top tn\nAugust, and i while thl* year's _>rop\nwill probably be very near 11,400,000\nbales, price* ar* not expected to\ndrop back very much below the\n8 cent level for No. fl.\nPrloes for meat animals have Increased materially, feed condltona\nhave Improved, and this will probably result tn a full hog crop for th*\nIat* winter and early aprlng shipments. While * slight drop ln hog\nprices may b* expected, no permanent decline to lower level* appears\neminent.\nPrices of dairy products, e\nand poultry, ar* slightly on the rise\nand will probably remain for some\ntlm* well above the recent low level*. Prices of these products, owing to\nthe manner ln which they are handled and marketed fluctuate greatly\nand are subject 'to periods of unsatisfactory market conditions. Nevertheless, prices should be fair this\ncoming winter seuon.\nTho New York Stock market ls\ntaken u a general business barometer in this oountry, and from the\nrecent movement* of the average\nprices, In that market we infer that\nwhat Is called the \"business depression\" hu bit bottom and general\nbusiness conditions ara quit* certain to Improve, carrying upward, m\nln a vortex, practically all' lines of\nfarm produce. A boom peak Is not\nlooked for, yet a higher than the\nlut summer level ts certainly anticipated.\nIn a recent economic survey the\nfollowing notes wrre made regarding\nthe Industries: Agricultural machinery, slow; automobiles, restricted\noutput; building materials, awaiting\nspring demand; coal, stocks are low;\nfood product manufactures, fairly\nbusy; petroleum, prices weakening;\nrailroad equipment shops, at low\npercentage of capacity; retail trade\ngenerally, Improving; steel, slight increase ln orders; sugar, fair but not\nexcellent; textiles, fair to good demand; theater attendance, gaining.\nThat Body of Tours\nBy   'MUI   W.   BARTON\nTHE WISDOM OF THE~\nBODY\nDo you ever reallne that that body\nof yours is capable of rendering\nyou services every minute of the\nday that are beyond even yuur\nimagination? ,\nThe human eye ls 3000 time.-,\nmore scnslt.lv* than the most rapid\nphotogra.phlc plate; , ovr nose can\ndetect one part vanillin in 10,000.000\nparts of air. Only recently have men\nwould even approach the ernsitive-\nbeen able to make apparatus ___* ih\nnew of your organs of hearing.'\n\"Men may be exposed to dry heat\nat temperatures of '239 to 357 degrees Palirenhelt without an increase\nof their body temperature above\nnormal. Furthermore, in regions\nwhere th* sir ls extremely dry, th*\nInhabitants have little difficulty in\nretaining their body fluids. And in\nthese dsys of high ventures in\nmountain climbing and ln slrplanes\nhuman beings may be surrounded by\na greatly reduced pressure of oxygen\nln the air without showing serious\neffects of oxygen want.\"\n\"Tet this wonderful resistance of\nyour body to outside Influences is\nequalled to Its resistance to disturbances ln the body Itself. Por example, the heat produced by very\nhard exercise, continued for 30 minutes, woud\" be so great that If It\nwere not promptly removed from the\nbody, It would cause some of the\nalbuminous substances ln th* body\nto become stiff, like a hard-boiled\negg.\n\"Again, continuous and extreme\nmuscular effort produces so much\nlactic acid (the acid of sour milk)\nln the working; muscle* that within\n2$ Years Ago\n(From The Dally News of November\n. 8,   W07>\nThe Eastern Townships Bank has\nopened   up   a   branch   on   Victoria\natreet,   pernle. -    .\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. CampbeU yesterday took over\nth* Lakeview hotel from Oeorge\nHarrison.\n\u2022 *   *\nA. B. W. Hodges of the Oranby\nsmelter was in the city yesterday.\n.*.*'\u2022\u25a0\nBorn on November 5 to Mr. and\nMrs.  Duncan  McCua'g,  a  daughter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. D. C- Coleman returned last\nnight  from  California,\n\u00bb   *   \u2022\nBorn on November 8 to Mr. and\nMrs.  Albert  Kellogg,  a  son,\n\/        \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nJames Johnston* yesterday shipped a special \u25a0 consignment of apples\nto  England.\ni, '\u2666,'.\u2022.\nMr, and Mrs. R. W. Hennlngton\nhave returned  from  the  Maratlmes.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dally News ot November\n8, 1912)\nAt Cranbrook, Michel and Pernle\n3000 members of the Canadian\nBrotherhood of Ralh7ay Employees\nwent  on  strike   yesterday.\n\u25a0 \u2022   \u2022   *\nH. E. Dill haa returned from a\nfour day's business trip on the\nArrow   Lakes,\nI abort time lt would neutralise al\nthe alkali In th* Mood, if tb* ted.\nwere not able to pr*v*nt that disaster.\n\"In short, that body ot your* a_q\nbe confronted by dangerou* conditioni in the outer world and equal!j\ndangerous possibilities within thi\nbody itself, and yet It ean eont-tnu-j\nto live and carry on It* function\nwtth   very   little   disturbance\nWhen you think of th* *p**fl oj\nthought and action, of the chem.\nlstry of alges 'on, tb* phystoai\nchangps during breathing, th* get-)\nting rid of harmful wMt*e, and sC\nmany other processes all so p*r.\nfectly adjusted, the wonder 1* that\nsuch a delicate mechanism doesn't\nget out of order mor* frequently, ;\nDr. W. B, 'Cannon. Harvard, whom\nX have quoted so freely above, coll)\nthis \"The  Wisdom of th* Body.\"\nDon't be careless with it. Just because It seems able to withstand ea\nmany enemies,  without  and within,\nFURNACE\nREPAIR.   -\nAtao\nHOT WATER\nHEATING and\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS\nWE DD ALL WORK UIII'KU\nAND   EFFICIENTLY,  AT\nLOW PRICES.\nI. A.  SMITH\n313 Baker St.\nT. S. JEMSON\nPhone 6<5_\nawaeaaaamaaawaaaaaaeaaam\n\"Bl'I_.D K  C  PATROLLS1*\nGlad\nMrs. D.\nLikes\nPacific\nThis to Mrs. Est* D.\u2014., o ro\ncent bride, wh6 learned cooking\nat home tn the country.\nFirst we are glad you ltko\nBritisn Columbis and ar* doubly\npleased that you find your cakes\nand puddings ar* nicer with Pacific Milk than you ever made\nat home.\nAnd we wish you continued\nhappiness.\nPacific Milk\n\"100-7,* B. C. Owned and Controlled\"\n. I'Uift  st  Abbotsford\nisaaaaass\nside Westminster Abbey, floodlights\nthrow Into reUef tens of thousands\nOf tiny crosses and scarlet popples\nplanted tjcre, each In memory of a\nloved one who died in some foreign\nfield. Far into the night, a procession passes with bowed heads,\nani the field of popples grow more\ndense as the hours go by . . .\n\"They burled hl.n among the\nKings.\"\n'And some t;.ere be that have no\nmemorial\u2014within the Abbey itself,\nthe Valhalla of Britain's ancient\nkings and of ber \"tatesjien ..nd\nchurchmen, uf her great poets and\nmen letter..; of her modern men\nof science and discovery, and of\nher servants to mankind in every\nforms, an endless crowd passes\nthrough Into the misty dimness of\nthe Nave, and file by a black marble\nslab, quietly placing on It a* poppy\nuntil the tomb la hidden beneath a\ngreat mound of glowing color.\n\"KNOWN   LNTO   GOD\"\nIt Is the burial pr.ee of the unknown So.dler; this British warrior;\nunknown by name or rank, will never appear In the title pages of sny\nbiograpi y, but he la one of the most\nfamous ln history, snd the most\nobscure.\n\"Who now keeps habitation with\ntbe great\n\"Brotherly   umt*,     unconquered\nsnd   unknown.\nThere come* at times to all ex-\nservice men, wearers of the old Hed\nPatch or other bt-ttle colored insignia, an evocation of bitter-sweet\nmemories.\nOOOD  BYE-E-E, N\nDON'T  CRY-E-E\nA trivial incident in the humdrum\nof life, a word, a smell or a sound\nsuffice^ to awaken recollections that\nbecome as vivid as if the happening was ypsterda;'. once again, they\nhear   words   spoken   by   aft comrade\nacres* th* dark, and smell the reek\nof the old salient; cr remember th*\nquickening of the senses-light snd\ndarkness\u2014nlg_vt and day, dawn,\nfatigue and sleep after fatigue.\nThey hear the rolling barrage of\nenemy guns In the misty dawns\nof autumn along th* blood stained\nridges of the Soxme\u2014really one of\nthe lost battles of the war, but\nacclaimed a great victory; or recall\nthe heart breaking marches In t.:e\nardour of hot pursuit and the terrors of the last One Hundred Days\nwhen smashing through to victory.\n\"Unarm I Eros, tt* long days work\nIs done I\" To the men who cime\nthrough, the long hard' strife ls\nbeing changed by tbe kind alchemy\nof memory into a pleasant \u00abort of\ndream, but tj the end or life, sitting ln tbelr peaceful tomes, tbey\nwill still see faces ln the fire,\nfaces that never grow old, but remain for ever lit with hope and\ncourage as when, in the glowing\nbeauty of the inset, these gentlemen-at-arms, their comrades, went\nswinging down t^e roads of war\nand faded away In the deepening\ntwilight. . , .\n\u2022    *   *\nThis Is P-^PPy Pay. Popples made\nfor you to buy st your own price\nby those who will msrch no more\nto drumbeat and bugle call. No-\nb-ese* oblige.\nOur goal 1* not armament to tie\nstandard of our neighbors, but disarmament throughout Europe and\nthe world, equal right snd equal\nsecurity.\u2014Chancellor Franz von Papen of Germany.\ndon't\nSTRIPPING\/!\nNow is the time to fix up your windows and doom\nand keep out the cold and save fuel\nPrice.Per Package\n35c\nPackage Contains 22 Feet\nNelton Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON. B.C.\nJim\u2014\"So    you    and    Jack\nspeak. What's the trouble?\"\nQladys\u2014\"We had a terrible quar- I\nrel sbout which loved tho other the\nniwi.\"\nFurther Change\nKOOTENAY LAKE\nSERVICE\nAfter NOV. 6 on FOLLOWING SCHEDULE\nPASSENGER DAY\nSteamer Moyie\nLv. Procter  11:15 A.M., Fri., Nov. 11\nAr. Kaslo  1:30 P.M., Fri., Nov. 11\nLv. Kaslo    8:00 A.M., Sat, Nov. 12\nAr. Lardeau   10:00 A.M., Sat., Nov. 12\nLv. Lardeau    10:10 A.M., Sat., Nov. 12\nAr. Kaalo  12:10 P.M., Sat., Nov. 12\nLv. Kaslo   ,  12:15 P.M., Sat., Nov. 12\nAr. Procter   3:00 P.M., Sat., Nov. 12\nAND   EACII   ALTERNATE  WEEK   FOU.O'  INO\nBARGE DAY\nLv. Procter  11:15 A.M., Fri., Nov. 18\nAr. Kaslo   ............. 3:00 P.M., Fri., Nov. 18\nLv. Kaslo     6:45 A.M., Sat., Nov. 19\nAr. Lardeau  ......'  9:15 A.M., Sat., Nov.,19\nLv. Lardeau    4:45 P.M., Sat., Nov. 19\nAr. Kaslo     7:15 P.M., Sat., Nov. 19\nLv. Kaslo  6:30 A.M, Sun., Nov. 20\nAr. Procter  10:15 A.M., Sun., No. 20\nAND  EACH  ALTERNATE  WEEK  roLLOWINQ\nPr<*e**nt   Crawford   Rny   -.-rice   In   withdrawn,   that   point   being\nwrvfd by t:_vornmnit Ferry on the last ferry trip every Tuesday,\nFor feirther particulars apply to any ajent or\nN. J. LOWES, Clly Ticket Airnt, Nrlaoei, B. C\nL\n I tmt-tt MBit tnmt. tt-tae, a. <v\u2014utdbdat MoaMM. nohuibb j, w\nMOeS^^U\nSEVERAL IMPORTANT AMERICAN\nFOOTBALL 6AMES ON SATURDAY\nLeaden Will Buckle Down to Serious Business of\nWinning Championships; Meeting of Pittsburgh\nand Pennsylvania Elevens Tops Eastern Card -\nimw TORK, Jfoe. 4\u2014America's,\nfootball leadera will buckle down to\nthe eserloue business of winning .sectional championships Saturday, relegating Intersections! warfare temporarily to the b*r*?round.\n. Topping the eastern card Is the\npead^on collinion between unbeaten\nrsuns of Pltt*burgh and penwyl-\n' Miia. Jook Autherlande Fltt Fan-\nmien, wbo scored the season's big-\ngest upset Saturday by beating Notre Dame, naturally ara heavy favorites over the QiiAkers, whose out-\nt>* anting aoeompliflhmanl* ere v\\_-\ntorlea over Nary and Dartmouth.\nBrown, ' conqueror of Harvai*d,\natake* its perfect reoord against unbeaten Holy cross; tb* powerful\nunbeaten Columbia eleven should\nhave uttle difficulty ln sending another torpedo into Navy's sinking\n\u2022hip, and the West point Cadet*\n'are favored to execute John Harvard.\nCOLGATE HAS\nTBMATHJBR\"\nColgate, one of bhe strongest eeet-\n\u00ab\u00abrn teoime, hae another \"breather\"\nIn M-iMiesippi ooUege la an Inters**-\niioual affair, and tn similar contests,\nflBt. Mary's undefeated aggreg-vMO'B\nfrom California should iwnove the\n.horns from Fordham's staggering\nram; Syracuse wtth its seven sophomores Is a slight favorite over Oglethorpe, and Temple stakes Its perfect reoord sgalnst Haskell Friday\nnight.\nIn the mid-west MWMgan and\nPurdue, big ten oonference leaders,\nare favorite*\u2014-the Wolverines to beat\nIndiana, and th* Boilermakers to\ntrouno*' Chicago, Illinois' Varsity,\non th* comeback trail, wlU give wia-\njOonein a tussle, and Ohio Mete ls a\nslight favorite over Northwestern*\nIn three inter-section \u00bb1 encounters,\nMinnesota tackles Mississippi, Iowa\nplays Nebraaka, and Notre Dame\ntries a comeback against Kansas.\nDown lo Dlrfe, the Virginia Poly\nbrawl with Alabama tops the southern list. V. P. I, a conference leader, should bare little difficulty In\nriding the crlmeon tide, Other oonference matches pair Mississippi\nState and Tennessee, North Carolina\nand Worlda, Kentucky and Duke,\nAuburn, a leader, has an easy non-\noooferenoe opponent ln Spring Hill\nat Montgomery, Ala., Friday night.\nSHOl'I-D BE EAST\nSouthern California, oo-leader of\ntha Paolfle coast conference, should\nhave a walta wtth faltering California, while the other leader, U. 0.\nL. A. conqueror of Stanford, has *yi\nopen dat*. In other oonference games\nStanford tackles Washington, and\nOregon   takes  on  Oregon mate.\nOklahoma, oo-leader of th* Big\nSix, has *n easy opponent ln Missouri. Kansas State should trounce\nIowa Stat*, while Nebraska, oo-leader\nand defending champion, has th*\nedge over Iowa lh a non-oonferenoe\nc\\*etu\nwx of th* seven teams ta the\nsouthwest conference tangle ln three\nshindig* Saturday. Teas, oo-leader,\nshould beat Baylor, whil* Texas A.\nand M. is expected to trouno* Southern Methodist. Th* Bioe Owls should\nfly away with Arkansas. Texas Chrls-\ntiau, tne other leader, hae a vacation match against the non-oonferenoe team of Simmons university\nat   Abilene,  Friday night.\nCANZ0NER1 STOPS \"FARGO EXPRESS\",\nIN BRILLIANT 15-ROUND BATTLE TO\nTO HANG UP A UNANIMOUS DECISION\nfalli to Knock PetrolU Down\nBat Does Everything\n<\u201e_,     EteatoHIm\n'    BT tOWAKD t. NBIL\nAssociated press Sports Writer\nMADISON SQUARE GARDEN, N.\nT._   Na*.  *.\u2014(AP)\u2014Tony  Canxon-\neri   a   masterful   little   champion\nwith the merry manner of a Joy-\nIons   schoolboy,   finally   met   the\nchallenge   erftggy-faoed   Billy   F*t-\nrolle   ha*   been   flinging   to   the\nlightweight    boxing    division    fer\nyears, and all bnt demolished the\nveteran  tonight  befor* a roaring\ncrowd of 20,000 that Jammed the\nbig battle pit to the raves.\nBrilliant as any of the lightweights\nof   legend,   Tony   battered   th*   old\ntimer from Fargo. N, D., so badly\nthat .there was no question a* to\n-the victor at the end of their IB-\nround   battle.   Canzonerl   failed   to\nfloor   the   challenger   but   he   did\neverything ale* tbe ring permit* to\nwin a unanimous decision.\nOanaonerl, one* a newsboy of the\netreet* of New Orleans, never has\nappeared to finer advantage than\nhe dtd In driving the \"Fargo E__-\neprees\" to It* worst *ma*hup ln a\nJon? and valorous career.\nFrom the-first round through the\nlast, with Just a breather at the\nstart, a temporary stay in the elgtht\nahd tenth rounds. Tony made a\ntarget of the courageous warrior\nwho has been whipping ell-comers\nin a thrilling come-back campaign,\neven to Uie extent of slugging. Jimmy Mcl*rnin of Vancouver over\ntwice on* night la this same ring.\nBARELY   WOBBLE\nThe champion's, left raked Pet-\nrolle's face with Jab* and hooks,\nright hand smashes and upperouts\nthudded on his Jawbone, and battle-\nscarred BUly, his face ah Incongruous caricature of lumps and welts\nand small cuts, barely could vobble\nthrough the last three rounds. His\nrglht eye wa* completely closed at\ntha and from th* left hooks Can-\nGOODFOOD\nIs Appreciated\nThis is proven by the,\nfact that the Golden Gate\nhas so many regular pa-\ntrons. People eat\nhere three times a day,\nand enjoy every meal.\nYou, too will appreciate\nthe fine foods that are\nserved from the Kitchen\nof Nelson's finest and\nmost popular restaurant.\nGive yourself a treat,\ndine on good food all the\ntime at the Golden Gate.\nGOLDEN\nGATE CAFE\nedoam poured Into his features ftnd\nhis let* ere wss rapidly reselling\ntb* sun. condition.\nD-\u00abptt. tht terrtflo tlMttaf Iw\ntook, IWoll., _l|_itlnt * ohtmplon\n(or tht tint tin. ln hit otrwr,\nnsvtr ttopped surging into th. champion, hit famed left hook cooked\nfor tht body smashes on which\nrested hit hopt lor victory.\nOften hi nailed Tony's hod\/, particularly ln th* eighth and tenth,\nbut Canreoneri itood up nobly under\ntha punishment that seemed only\nto tcptir him to ft mort vicious\nattack. Etch tlm* BUly Itaged\ntht two-fisted rallies that had beaten down McLarpin, Bat Battallno,\nJusto Sauna, Ray Ml Uer, Billy\nTownsend and Eddie San, the confident llttlt champion promptly\nrallied ta hotter tbt challenger\ndl\u00ab_T.\n[yfii.^ismiy^M'ad.\u2014\n(By IL DEMAREE\nThore's plenty of sentiment left\nIn revnnf jet,\" \u00bbys my old friend\nPat  eHorgan.\n\"Take the east of Benny Chapman\nand his horse Mountain Rose li\"\ncontinued Pat\nYou m\u00bby nmtmbt- him. he wis\nno Twenty Orand, If you Judged by\n-lass. Just a cheap plater. But he\nwas more dependable than Twenty\nGrand. Drop him ln when he belonged and he'd comt on tht chin\nstrap,\n\"And \u2022 veterinarian said there w\u00bbt\nnoticing to do but destroy him.\nAud Ohapple had blm burrled\nright there at Laurel. Out behind\nthe barns with tt stone at hit head.\n'Tears went liy and then ohapple\ntook War Saint out of ft claiming\nraoe ln Maryland, He won tig\nitraight f r Chappie and In tht\nHenry Horner purse at Aurora thty\ngave him a big blanket of flowers.\nOhapple Iced those flowers and tx-\npreased them to his wlft. * \u25a0\n\"She', taking them out of the lot,\ntearfully carried them out back of\nthe bams ftt Laurel and reverently\nplaotd them upon the grave of\nMountain Bote 11, \u2014- an honest\nand faithful horse that did hit best\nto   the  end.\nREG MACKIE TO\nPUUALGARY\nFoothill Pupil to Play Where\nHe Learned His\nHockey\nCALOARY, Hoy. 4 (CP). \u2014. Lloyd\nTurner, owner ot th* Calgary Tigers,\ntonight announced tie had signed\nReg. Mackie, former captain of the\nBoston Cubs In the Canadian-American leagu*, to play vlth the Calgary\noutfit ln the newly organized western\nCanada professional hockey leagu*.\nMackie, who learned his hockey in\nCalgary, wll play on ths defence with\nthe Tiger*. He Jumped trom amateur\nto pro ranks here by Joining the Calgary Tigers of the old western pro\nleague. Later he was sold to Vanoou-\nv- ln the Paclflo coast league and\nafter playing with the Boston Cubs\nseveral yean b*c*m* a free agent last\nseason.\nVICTORIA SCORES\n306 FOR 6 WICKETS\nBYDl-rrr, Australia, Hot. 4 \u2014 (CP\ncable) \u2022\u2014Victoria had scored SOO runs\nfor six wickets when play wae closed\nln the match here today against New\nSouth Wale* for the Sheffield shield.\nPondsford scored 168 and still held\nhis bat while Woodfull obtained 74.\nWHOLESALE   TRADE   IN  VICTORIA\nTh* Tolum* of business by S3\nwholesalers In Victoria, In. 1630 was\n\u26667.2T..800, 800 persons employed and\npayroll $403,100. The food and tobacco gitmp had la wholesalers with\n00 per cent of the total business.\nVictoria's population In 1031 was\n39.063.\nThere were also some ei-Ubllsh-\nmente similar to wholesalers, such\nas bulk tank stitlone and electrical\nand maohlaery representatives which\ndid business to the extent of $4,-\n877,700.\nDomestic export* to Hongkong ln\ntbe last three months totalled #220,-\n139 compared with $222,92* last year.\nTh*. import* were (-92,806 compared\nwith   \u00ablift.702,\nFAITHFUL EQUINE\nUVED IN MEMORY\nOU) COUNTRY SPORT NEWS\nBritain Warned to Improve Performances in Field\nAthletics Before Next Olympics Happen Along;\nTaney Lee Claims Boxing Pension\nM.C.C. SCORES\n341 RUNS FOR\nFIYEWICKETS\nSutcliffe Gets 154 Runs, Ley-\nland Knocks Out\n127\nADELAIDE, Australia, Nor. 4. (CP\ncable).\u2014Th* touring M, C. C. scored\n341 run* for five wickets today against\nSouth Australia befor* play was\nclosed.\nTher* were 10,000 spectator* at -he\ngame which was favored with fine\nweather and good pitch. Captain D.\nR, Jardine won the toss and the\nM. C. C. bated first. After a four-\nhour stand which Included 13 fours\nand two sixes H. W. Sutcliffe got 184\nruns. M. Leyland played a moot aggressive Innings and knocked up 137\nln a Uttl* over three hours, including\n14 fours. Sutcliffe and Leyland made\na partnership stand of 323, Th*\nNawab of Pntnudl,. whose artistic\nstyle usually accounts fer a fair\nquota of the M. O. O.'s runs ws* dismissed today for nothing.\nEDMONTON GRAD\nCAPTAIN RESIGNS\nDuring Five Years of Piloting\nHu Lost Only One\nGame\nEDMONTON, Nov. _.\u2014Miss Hsls\nBennls, captain of the Edmonton\n\"Grads\" who have held ths world's\nI e m 1 n 1 n e basketball championship\ncontinuously throughout the past\ndecade, has tendered her resignation\nto the duh. During the Jive veers the\nteam has operated under the captaincy\nof Mies Bonnie, the \"Glads\" heve lost\nbut a einetin gnmc as compeu-d with\nover loo Victoria-.\nMiss Bennle will be succeeded by\nMiss Margaret MseBurney, holder ' ot\nthe world's tree-throw record with \u00bb\nmark ol 61 consecutive baskets to her\ncredit.\nMany famous sportsmen were pres-.*,\nent when members of the British\nteam who competed ln the Olympic\nframe, at Loa Angeles wsre entertained by the British sportsmen's\nslub at a luncheon In London.\nIn addition to members of the\nteam, who included Lord Burthley,\nthe oaptaln; T. Hampson, who won\nthe _o .metres, and T. W. Oreen, the\nwinner of ths so.ooa, metres walk,\nthere wen, Lord Defies, A. S, P.\nChapman, \"Steve\" Donoghue, Bir\nMalcolm Campbell, Berl Howe, Barry\nPreston and many others.\nlard Desborough,\" who presided,\nproposing the toast to the team,\nstated that British people did not\ncare nearly as much about the Olymplo games as h_ would like them to\ndo. They viewed a great many Of\nthe contests which secured points\nwith  considerable  Indifference.\n\"The next games are going to take\nPlaoe at Berlin ln IBS.,\" he added,\n\"and I am quite sure that unless we\ntry to improve our performances in\nfield athletic* we will not be very\nhigh on the list. We have seriously\nto consider our position.\"\nLord De-borough referred to the\nsplendid performances ot the Individual members of the Olymplo\nteam. Lord Burghley, he declared,\ndistinguished himself both on the\nflat and over the \"sticks.\" In addl-\ntion to that he was an ambassador\nof athletics to America from this\n-ountry. That alone mad* 11 treu\nworth while to send a British team.\nLord Burghley stated that If Sot-\nland had not been represented at\nthe gamea, apart from the discourtesy which It would have been to\nthe United States, lt would have\ngiven a very strong argument to\nthoee who said \"Great Britain ll\nfinished.\" It would have been a\nstrong blow to our prestige.\nSir Harold Bowden, chairman of\nthe BrIUsh council, pointed out that\nthey had not received the general\nencouragement which they felt they\nmight expect. He added, \"If we do\nnot specialise rather more than We\nhave done we shall never be up ao\nmuch at future Olympiads aa we\nhave In the past.\"\nWILL  CJIFT COMPLAINTS\nIN REGARD TO KIRKWOOD\nVICTORIA, Nov. _ (CP)\u2014Attorney,\ngenersl pooley haa sent for the\ntranscripts of evidence lh the Alexander Kirkwood cexse taken at \u25a0 both\nthe prellmlnsry hearing and subsequent trial of the man on a charge\nof manslaughter, and will aift oom-\nplalnta aired recently ln respect to\nKirkwood by John Bull, a British\npublication. Evidence given at the\nInquest on the victim of the shoot-\niTixr for which the private detective\nveils tried Is alw under review.\nDO NOT MENTION \"CAT\"\nIf Englishmen want, to keep ln\nfavor wlta the Manchester r-slle Vue\ngreyhound racing officials they must\nnot mention the word, \"cat.\" They\ndo not. believe euch creatures are\ncarriers ef good luck.\nOn a recent evening ia stranger\nmanaged to penetrate the etronghold\nof th* greyhound track unknown to\nthe \"keepers\" ot the gate, and,\ncrossing the lln* a* the bogle was\nIn full flight, cam* Into contact\nwith the machine.\nAs ths \"hare\" hit the cat there\nwu a terrific crash, and boards\nwere .torn up as the bogle became\nderailed.\nFurther racing seemed out ot the\nquestion, but the damage was not so\nserious aa was at first thought, and\nin 40 minutes the bogle and the\nhare arm had been repaired, and\nthe rest ot the program carried\nthrough.\nTHREE  CHAMPIONS\nLancashire, and especially Manchester, haa excellent reasons for\nfeeling pleased at the present flstlo\nsituation. Three of the British championship* belong to th* County\npalatine. Jackie Brown and King,\nthe new bantamweight champion,\nmake a tine official double, and although Ney Tarleton has been deposed for the moment by th* mere\nstroke of a pen, nobody seriously\nretards anybody els* as being the\nreal occupant of the feathered\nthrone.\nMoreover, Lancashire has a very\nformidable challenger for the middleweight champlonahlp In Jack McAvoy of Rochdale. He hsi already\nfought Harvey once for the belt, and\nmost of those present thought that\nhe was unlucky both ln the manner\nof the contest and In the verdict.\nMcAvoy Is to meet Marcel Thil, the\nEuropean champion, who beat Harvey, a{ the end of the month at\nthe Albert hall, and lt would not\nsurprise the fsns If he were to provide, by fit form against the Frenchman, an undeniable claim for a\nreturn title bout with Harvey.\nWtLl NOT ACCEPT FLAG\n. An Important aUtement wa* made\nat * meeting of the Northern Ireland Association held ln Belfast by\nHerbert   Nelll,  ohalrman.\nGeneral O'Duffy, president of the\nNational Athletic and Cycling Aseo~\nclatlon of Ireland, laid claim on\nbehalf of that body to govern all\nIreland  in  athletlos. '\nMr. Nelll sale* the decision of the\nInternational Athletlo Federation at\ntheir meeting ln Loa Angeles, When\nthey refused to discus* the appeal\nof th* N. A, and O. A. against the\nAmsteur Athletlo Asio'-vtlon Interfering In Northern Ireland athletic*\non tlie ground.'hat the matter waa\na political on* and must be settled\nat home, terminated any authority\nof the Irish body to rule ln\nNorthern Ireland.,\nIn further course of his statement. Mr. Nelll, on behalf of th*\nIreland Association said th* A. A. A.\nremain mastera of ths situation\nand has given to the Northern Ireland Association autonomy und*r\ntheir ae.is and assured them of\nIts unswerving aupport.\nMr. Nelll read a further letter\nforwarded to the A. A. A., In which\nlt waa pointed out that General\nO'Duffy haa been Informed ther*\n.was not the slightest hops of In*\nIductng the Northern Ireland eVeaocl-\ntlon to accept  the Free  State  flag\nfor   international  or  other  contest*\na* laid down and demanded by the\nNational   Athletic   and   cycling   Association.\nA  UNKrt  FLIGHT\nTh* decnion of Don McCorkindal*\nto fly to Johannesburg for the purpose of meeting Toung Btrlbllng\nrsthsr stirs the Imagination. Boxers\nln these modem daya engage in\ntheir flstlo Odyeeseys with very\nlittle pomp and circumstances, but\nfor sheer distance this proposed\nflight aeroes two continents tor a\nfight will be rather unique precedent.\nOf course boxers hav* used aeroplane* before, and when Gene Tunney flew from his training camp\n300 milea away to Philadelphia that\naerial Journey ended In him win.\nning the world's heavy-weight championship from Jack Dempeey.\nTunney one* stated that during\npart of that flight the machine\ntook a short cut down a rocky\ngorge over a river which afforded\nvery little margin of space on either\nwing of the aeroplane. He admitted\nfrankly that ht was nervous and\nwhen they ran Into a wtll et Impenetrable fog lt wa* nothing but\nthe skill ot his pilot that saved\nthem from disaster. That Journey,\nby tbe way. wa* primarily made\nfor psychological purposes, to work\nthe nerve* of Dempeey, but\nMcCorkindal* knowi better than to\nattempt any suoh Impression on\nstriQling. Th* American Is an accomplished aviator.\nNewport County eould never hav*\nexisted but for the sale ot playeri.\nIt I* now revealed that from this\nsource slone the club had received\nfM,ooo In their comparatively brief\nexistence.\nSomerton Park ha* been the developing ground for many players\nwho have won fam* with eluba in\nhigher leagues; the pity ls that ln\ntheir hour of need they hav* so far\nfailed to weld Into an effective\nfore* th* players they secured after\nall tba other eluba had had their\npick.    ,'\nBut th* directors ar* determined\nto win through, and the signing of\nCharlton, th* Crystal Paiaoe left\nback, la an earnest ot thetr intensions.\nACE WESTERN\nRUGBY SQUADS\nVIE SATURDAY\nFour Bout Perfwt Records for Year; Juniors\nki Playoff Too\nCOAST GRAPPLER\nBEATS KRUSKAM\nWlKNino, Not. 4 (OP)\nlng perfect  records,   four ot th*\ngreatest football tesrns ever turned\naut by we*t*nt Canada win Joast\nfor points tomorrow. TH* test will\nprovide candidates  for senior and\nJunior western rugby honors.\nPairing  for tn*  crucial  playdown\nperle* in th* senior group bring together Winnipeg St. John's. Manitoba\nchampions, and Regina Roughriders,\nSaskatchewan titlists,  at  Regina  In\ntha eastern half of tli* draw.\nVancouver Meraloma*, kicking kings\nof British Columbia, and Calgary AN\ntomato. Tigers, mighty Alberta machine, wtU Hold tti* spotlight in th*\nsecond game of a western series s*ml-\nIlnal playdown, at Venooufer.\nTh* ooaat otoamptoo* enter tb* **c -\nond gam* with * cn*-poin. margin\nover th* Albertan* by virtu* of tbelr\n0-8 vlotory in th* first gam*, pUged\nlast Wednesday. Total pointa ta tb*\naeries decide ttl* victor.\nTigen* d*fs*t ww ao <H*grao* aad.\nexcept for a f*w minor brul*** tb\u00aby\nwill be at full strength tomorrow. Th*\ncoast big four ehamplona will b* ban*\ndloapped tfy the absence of Don Stewart, star half back, Injured la th*\nflnt gam* when hs guttered * broken\npelvis bone.\nJunior championship playdown*\nbring together th* faat-*t*pplng\nMoose Jsw Maroons, last year's western finalists, and Manitoba Varsity.\nTh* winner* of this sneounter will\nbe ssked to gambol with Calgary Alt\ntomah Tigers. Junior monarch* of tb*\nfoothills province, la the second g*m*\nof th* western Junior final. Th* Calgary team haa a 13-polnt margin a*\nresult of * 13-1 win 1a th* flnt gams.\nIn the senior olss, respective winners at Regina and Vancouver wlU\nmeet ln a sudden death gam* at the\n[coast city on November IS, for th*\nright to travel east la *s*rch of Dominion  bOROTS.\nTAROOUVBl. w-v. 5 .CP).\u2014fa a\nvery tame main event at the wrestling\nmat-obs* here Thuradsy night. Jack\nPorsgrsn, Vancouver, defeated Hardy\nKnakam of Ohio. Ths locsl grappler\ngot hi* first fall la th* third round\nwith \u00bb body pr**s and tn th* fourth\n_\u00bbnto Cuskatap mad* no effort to\nvTesti* and Forsgrva again pinnsd\nhtm with a body press to take the\nevent. Kruskamp weighed 308 and\nForsgren 310.\nCANADIENS BEAT\nSYRACUSE STARS\ntt-UttitJBt. V. T, Nov. \u00ab  <CF>\u2014\nMontreal Canadiena packed th* last\nperiod seorlOI punch nece-*ary to\nflv. them a IS win over flvraou-s\nStars in an exhibition hockey tut\nher* tonight.\nTh, winning roa! cam* ttn th.\nthird period from th. flaahinf (tick\nof vrtngraan  Aurel Joliat.\nDomo-stle ,\u00abport* to th* Straits\nsettlement, tn July. August aad\nBeptraber totalled M8.7.1 compared\nwith MT.M0 In th. earn, period\nlast jeer. Th* Import* vsn $96,1**5\ncompared wtth \u00bbW4.4M.-\nBCTNESS FOOTERS\nWITHDRAW FROM\nSCOTTBHSOCCHl\nForced Out Through I*ck \u00abf\nFundi i Will ComptU\nCup\nOtAAOOW, Kov. 4 (CD. \u2014 Tk*\nBo*n*ss soccer team ha* \u00abMMm|\nfrom the stcond division of \u00abb* ie***\ntleh football league on aoount of feck\nof fund*. At a meeting of th* dW**fltt\ntoday to consider th* raising ef M00\nto *nabi* the club to eoatlno* wn.\npetition In th* l;*gu* lt wa* d**M*d\nto withdraw la view of th* apparent\nimpossibility of obtaining the funds.\nThe Bo'ness Mam wa* in 18tB petition of th* 30 teama la th* league,\n18 points behind th* leagu* loading\nHibernians. They were scheduled to\nplay sgalnst Leith tomorrow but tbe\nmatch hu been cancelled. The club ls\nstill eligible to compete for the Scottish cup, however, and tb* directors\nasnounosd their Intention of doing *o.      -      -\niitiiinu'rfmninimmiiMiHHHUinmfii\nDomestic Wines & By-Products, Ltd.\nKELOWNA B.C.\nAiwoums the Introduction to tha publle, of\nOKAYS WINES\nOn Sale at Government Liquor Storei\nOkay Clear, 75c      Okay Port, 75c\n<_\u00ab-rone-s bottlsa)\nf 3.50 Per Galton\nBetter Wines From Okanagan Froit\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nim iiiin mi m I'm inn nun Minn ti iiimu.\nAND THEN\nI CALLED ITA DAY\"\nsaid\n\"Welt,\" said Mr. Picobac, \"I think I'm\nentitled to a smoke \"\nAs he settled down in his chair, though\nhis face wore a quizzical smile, Mr.\nPicobac seemed more than a trifle\nweary. He filled his pipe with Picobac,\nhis favourite tobacco, and surveyed the\ncompany with slow deliberation.\n\"Could anybody oblige a hard-working\nman with a match ?\" enquired he. \"The\ngood woman had me moving the piano\nafter supper. This is the first smoke\nI\"ve haS tonight. Whew! First we tried\nit at one end of the parlor... Then\nthe other end. Then opposite the door.\n... Then cat-a-corner at the window.\nAt last she says. \"Put it back where It\nalways was,' she says. 'It don't look\nright anywhere else!'\u2014And then, I\ncalled it a day.\"\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nPicobac tobacco ii made from the pick of the\nburley crop produced in Canada's famons\n\"tropic belt, on the shore of Lake Erie\u2014\ncool... mUd... iweet in your pipe. Try It,\nOn aale everywhere. And don't forget, you\ngee more tobacco for your money.\nGood for making cigarettes, too.\nTheTick ef Canada. 'BurUj Crop\u2014\ngrown in Sunny, Sotttbtrn Ontario.\nHaadv Pocket\nS_\u00bbTin\n15c.\nH lb. Humidor\nTi\u00bb\n75c.\n* HOOK TASTE GOOD IN A PIPE I *\nImpttial Tobacco Company of Canada, limited\n ta muett nuur ntn, tmtot, t c\u2014satotday tttuyvm, to\nSection\nWhere Buyer -SSeiler Heet\nJet\nWBM\\__WB_\\_\\__\\\\\\WBMWBm~mU_M__B\\\\Wm-^^\n_&\n<K    j\nBABES\n{\nON BROADWAY\nBy Jane Dixon\nj.j    _*, \u2014\t\n... _..L..........-....\u2014  \u2014 -_~ _._,_...-..\u2014.\u2014X__-j______-____-\n4\n\u201e\u2014..it\nINSTALMENT   THIETT\n\"Toni\u2014it only you lud come back\n\u2014 thrn. There'i .someone else now.\nSomeone to whom I owe everything.\nYou know about Jock Selden. I\nhad nothing to do with what happened.\"\n\"No one had anything to do\nwith what happened to Selden except Beldep himself. He drank too\nmuch. He waa in the room with\nl>e. He went to the window. Tbe\nmelanchollft that tend possessed\nhim for month* must have Uken\nhim by the scruff of the neck.\nHe stood by the window and finished a bottle of wine. Then, suddenly,   he   plunged.\"\nTony's face wu hidden ls the\ncrook ot her arm. Tom's hand\nsmoothed back the cap of teniae\ne-tirlt.\n\"Lee !\u25a0 having her punishment.\"\nbs aald. \"She loved, Belt-en. As\nmuch \u2022* * woman ot ber kind can\nlov* a man.\"\nLova. What had Tony to do with\nlore?  Love came  too  late.\n\"Tom,\" ehe said, drawing ber hand\naway from caressing 'Ingen, Tm\nwaiting for the man I expect to\nmarry.\" \u2022\nTom Stewart reclaimed not only\ntbe hanf- had withdrawn but Its\nmate.\n\u25a0 \"There'i no use waiting, Tony.\"\nbe laid. \"The man you are going\nto  many  la here.\"\nTony thought: I must escape from\nhis hands. I dare not look into his\neyes. I must be fair\u2014Donald Kemp\n.   .  ,   .   hia   wife   .   .   ,\n'Tm waiting for Donald Kemp,\nTony said, resolutely, and struggled\nto release her hands.\n\"Kemp isn't oomlng.\" Tom Stewart\nheld her hands the tighter. \"I've\ncome In hia plaoe. He understands,\nTony. He got the truth from Lee.\nAbout tbe letters, and what happened to Selden. He called me at\nmy club when ha cum back from\nHaven Beach. I went to his room\nat tbe Carlton and be told me\u2014\neverything. Kemp's a man In a\nmillion. Just as you are a woman\nin a minton. It's as he said. There\nare women in this world who love\nonce, and for always. \"They're rare,\nbut they do exist. You're (tne ot the\nor tne rare kind. Men are not, as a\nrule so staunch. But I love you,\nTony. I couldn't love again\u2014after\nyou.\"\nTony faltered,\" I couldnt bear\nto think of Donald\u2014being unhappy.\"\nip ls not unhappy,\" Tom\n\u2022aid. \"At least he ls not ao un-\nunhappy as he would be having\nyou and knowing that you belonged to someone else. He's decent.\nHe's thoroughly right, if be  wasn't\nisjcsjgMLm room. Ik imwt havs been\nIta.   K-sfcn   His   saw  us  from  the\nlobby  a  minute  ago.\n'\"ftoyP\n\"Tom!\"\nLean   brown   hands   that   cling..\nlips  that  linger  . . . .love's  ecstasy.\nTHB   END\nBIBTHB\n(1)\nLir-TD\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. c. bind, of\nAinsworth, at Victorian hospital,\nXaelo,   Oct.   39,   a  daughter.\nBABRJSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. O,\nHarrison at ValUoan. B. C, Oct.\n31. a son.\noeaeed to struggle. They dung.\n\"That's our next stop, Tony. Tve\ngot a chance down there, my first\nbig chance. I oant put It through\nwithout  you.\"\n\"But Tom\u2014my name\u2014Antoinette\nBrookes. Tou can't marry a woman\nwhose name ls spread across first\npages of scandal sheets\u2014\"\n\"After tomorrow your name will\nbe Mrs. Tom Stewart. Antoinette\nBrookes will be absolved, as far\nas tbe Selden affair Is concerned.\nIt wlU uke time to scratch the\nname ofj the. hectic list, tout we\nwon't worry about that. We'll be\nln adobe house where the blue begins and wondering If Joss is tuning up the coffee for breakfast.\"\n\"May I take my drawing boards?\"\nIt. dldnt really matter. Only the\n'dobe house, which one day would\nbe a cottage on a hilltop, mattered.\n\"Special luggage for Mrs. Stewart's\nsrt kit.\" Tom was drawing Tony\nclose. \"There's color where we're\ngoing, Tony. Beds and greens.\nOrange and purples\u2014colors that eat\nInto you, colors you wont forget .\"\n\"Tom!\" Tony's body was tense, her\neyes wide with a vision that was\nrevelation. \"The Spanish shawl!\nMagenta, with purple and orange\nand green blurbs on lt. It was on\nLee's piano. In her apartment. .Mrs,\nHiggins was wearing it one evening when I went to her house from\nthe studio, I knew I had seen it\nsomewhere.\"\n\"The shawl was part of Lee's payment to Mrs. Higgins for holding and\nyour letters. It seems Impossible\ndoesn't lt, that so smal' a thing\nSpanish shawl oould have\nseparated us. Well, It hasn't. \"Tom\nbrushed Tony's chest with hli Ups\nft-Kb ON Al.\n(&)\nWOULD TOU MARRY IP SUITED?\nFree list, \"ladles snd gentlemen\nwishing marriage.' Many wealthy.\nWrite for list today 1 Eva Adams,\nBox 80. Springfield. Ohio. U. S. A.\n(4M7)\nLOVE \u2014 ROMANCE. SEEK YOUR\npartner by correepondence. Particulars free. Bluebird bureau, 301\nLee Bldg., Main and Broadway,\nVanoouver, B.  C. .4535)\nFUR-3 OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS RE-\nUned, repaired and remodelled.\nMrs.   Falrhead,   511   Silica   Bt.\n(4SS4)\nPRIVATE KINDERGARTENS PAY.\nAdvice given free. Canadian Kindergarten Institute, Winnipeg.\nmm\nhow to orr   a   government\nJob.  Free  Booklet.  The  M.  C.  C.\nLtd.. Winnipeg. (45M)\nHOUSES  FOB RENT\n(Zl\u00bb\noblivious of audience.\nHadn't we better find some less\npopulous place?\" Tony suggested.\nTom laughed and kissed ber\nagain, Lightly, this time, on the\nUps, \"Tbe public square at noon\nwlU do for me. We might go out\nInto the city though and try to\nfind a dark street. You'd have to\nchange your dress.\"\n\"But I couldn't do that,\" Tony\nprotested happily. This ls my celebration disss. It's quite historical.\nIt's the darllngest dress Tv* sver\nhad\u2014now. And I dont want to find\ndark street, ever again. Dear.\nsomeone's   closed   the   door  of   the\nAPPOINTED  DEPUTY  MINISTER\nOF   NATIONAL   DEFENCE\nOTTAWA. Nov. 4  (CP)\u2014Cal. L. B.\nLaFleche, Ottawa, has been appointed deputy  minister, of national defence.   He  succeeds   Oeorge   J.   Des-\nI might not be here. I'd be on my  DV*ts, who retired November 1. Of-\nway to South America wtth lead tn\nmy  feet  and  aloes  ln  my  heart.'*\n\"South   Amerteat\"   Tony's   hands\ntidal announcement to this effect\nwas made by Prime Minister R. B\nBennett,\nCOAST TRAIN\nTrain from East arriving\nNelson, Saturday, Nov. 6th\nat 7:15 p.m., will remain in\nNelson overnight and leave\nfor Boundary and Coast on\nnew ichedule Sunday Nov.\n6th at 8 a.m.\nNELSON-\nROSSLAND\nTRAIN\nTrain 7 04, Rossland to\nCastlegar will be run\nthrough to Nelson Saturday,\nNov. 5th, arriving Nelson\n8:00 p.m. and will leave\nNelson at 9:00 p.m. for\nRossland.\nThis service will thereafter\noperate as previously advertised.\nN. J. LOWES,\nCity Ticket Agent   .\nINDEX  TO  CLASSIFIED  AOI\nAgents Wuted ________________ u\nAutomobiles (or Hire __________ 41\nAutomobiles Ior Sale ___________ 40\nAutomobiles Wanted ___________ 43\nBees    _________ U\nBirths\nBoats, beun-hee (or Bent\nBoata, Lsunohss (or Bale _\nBoats,  Launchea  Wanted  .\nBuslnsss Opportunists, _\nCanaries for Bale\t\nCats and Dogs (or Sale _\nCats and Doss Wanted _\nDeaths\t\nj_i i rt i r i m 1111111 \u25a0 1111111111 i \u25a0 111111111 \u25a0 i \u25a0 i \u25a0 1111\n1      FOR RENT *   1\n~ HOUSE   AT ~\ni *17 i\n= Usually rents for 138. t Bed- E\n-Z rooms,   Open   Fire   Place,   Oe- S\n= ment foundation. E\nS Beautiful  new  home  ln  Fair- 5\nZ view.    Polished    Floors,    Open S\n\u00a3 Fire Place, Furnace, full base- S\n\u2014 ment,   White   Bathroom    up- \u2014\n_Z stairs   and   Wash   room   and __.\n5 toilet   downstairs.   This   home \u00a3\nS ls  only  Just  completed. r\n*40 1\nA MONTH =\n5 C. W. Appleyard   =\n& Co.t Ltd*       |\n('\u2022eneral   Insurance is\nCity  Property *\nNelson. B.O.     (M6-3)   =\nIMllltlltllltllllltlMlflltllllllllllllllllllifl\nLEGAL NOTICES\nTHE    BANKRUPTCY    ATT.\nNOTICE TO CBJBDITOBfl OP FlRflT\nMXETHfO IN THBB-TATE OF\nALBERT   A.    0_J__NZMANr   of   th'\noity of Nelson, In tbs Portnce of\nBrutish Columbia, Restaurateur, Authorised  Assignor.\nNOTTCB IS HEREBY OTVBN that\nAlbert A. Glaiizman, of Nelson, in\ntt_e Province of Brltlah Columbia,\ncarrying on business und-er the\nnt-me 01 the \"Grill\", did 26th day of\nOctober, A. D. 1932. make an an.\nthanaed aaslgnment ot all his property for the benefit of his creditors, and that Howard Clifford Irving, Official Receiver, has appointed me to be custodian of tlie Estate at the Debtor until the first\nmeeting   of   crert.tnrs.\nNOTICE IB FURTHER OlV-GN that\nthe first meeUng of creditors in the\nabove estate will be held st the office    ot    the    Official    Receiver    at\nthe   Court   House,   Nelson,    British\nColumbia, on Tuesday the 15th duy\npf   November,   A.   D.   1932   at   3.30\no'clock   In  the afternoon.\nt_______H__HH__feK_B_n__HC__t I ft_Vet*-_*MB\nl_roo^^_you_rciMm mus^SJsiod^d\nwith me befor* the meeting Is held.\nProxies to be used at the meeting must be lodged with me prior\nthereto,\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE\nthat at such meeting the creditors\nwill   elect   the   permanent   trustee.\nAND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE\nthat If you have any claim against\nthe Debtor for which you are entitled to rank, proof of such claim\nmust be filed with me or with the\nTrustee whep appointed otherwise\nthe proceeds of the Debtor's estate\nwill be distributed among the\nparties entitled thereto without regard to your claim.\nDATED at Nelson, British Columbia, this 31st day Qf October, A. D.,\n1932.\nDENIS 8T. DENIS,\nCustodian.\n(4551)\nHELP WANTED\n(10t\nAGENTS  WANTED\nOl)\nAGHITS\u2014BIG MONTY BHUJNO\nShoelastlc. Bote shoes a* boot*\nfor a few cents. New scientific\ncompound applied like putty.\nWears like leather. Everybody\nwants lt. Write Dept. DC, Bboe-\nlsstlc Company, 1332 WUUam St.,\nMontreal. (4058)\nLIVESTOCK   FOB  SALfc\n(S3)\nBOUSES FOB BINT\n(ti) houses for taatt\nOl)\nlllliniHIMIHIMMIUIIItllMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIlHIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nCOW, jfcR-SEY, HOI-STEIN, 5 YEAR8\nJust freshened. T. B. tested, gentle.   Innes,   Robson. i4623)\nFIVE MILK  COWS  FRESHENED.  T.\nB. tested. Ko-loff, Orescent Valley.\n(4478)\nMlbl'ELLA.NEOUB   FOB   RALE    (27)\nGALVANIZED IRON PIPE AND FTT-\ntlngs Belting, etc.\u2014Full line of\nnew and used Oalv. and Black\nPipe and Fittings: -A Galv. new\n6*4 c; l\" Black 6c; 2 Black, cutt-\nabie for Irrigation and water line\n12c, other sizes tow prices: New\nCorrugated Galv. iron *5 per 100\nsquare feet, Poultry wire netting,\n3 an* 6 feet. Full stock of steel\nSplit Pulleys; Potato and Grain\nBacks, Barbed Wire; Wire Rope;\nCanvas Doori. Windows: Roofing\nFelt Garden and Air Hose; Boom\nChains; Merchandise end Equipment of ail descriptions. Enquiries solicited.   _\nB. C, JUNK CO.\n138 Powell BU VANCOUVER. B. C.\n14564)\nFOR RENT\nWe have a number of comfortable housed to rent,\nboth furnished and unfurnished. Also an unfurnished\nsteamheated apartment.   Rentals on these propertle*.\nare reasonable.\nSee Our Listings.\nR. W. DAWSON\nRIAL BHTATB\nBOX -3a\nH-PPERSON BLOCK\n-V_I*TRA*4<-E\nPHONE  It.\nMI \u25a0 1141111111M11111111ll 111 r t M < 11111111 11111111111MI f 111M11111 ri 111 f 1111 ru IM111111 i I ll\nMOTORCyiLFS FOR SALE\n(BO     MirrUltUVlXF.S FOR S'Ug\n100,0-0 FEET SECXJND BAeND RB-\ncondltloned Pipe snit-blo tor all\npurposes. All sir**\", writ* to\nSwarts Pips yird, MO, 1st Ave.,\nEast. Vancouver, B. C. (4490)\nKOOTENAY    HONET    FOR    SALE.\nPhone 3J7R.  A.  8.  Homersham.\n(MM)\ncMISCFIXANEODS  WASTED\neMANTUI   MODEL   RADIO.   P-SONE\n428. (4528)\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(19)\nSEVEN ROOM FURNISHED HOUBE\none block trom Baiter street.\nPhone 340X. (4417)\n.-ROOMED HOUSE, 9 UJT9. OUT\nbuildings. Apple. DBlIJ News Box\n4483. (4488)\nFOUR-ROOM HOUSE WITH 4 LOTS\n\u202218 * month. Apply Mrs. Hall, 8th\nst. (46e_)\nSMALL  HOUSE  FOR  RENT.   APPLY\nMrs. Poulin, cor. Stanley  and  Innes\n(4631)\nFOR RENT\u2014FTOB ROOM FURNISH-\ned  house. 712 Victoria street.\n\u2022 (t47_)\nBIO MON7CY O-KTWINO MDBH-\nrooms from wild sterilized spawn\nright prices for dried or fresh\nmushrooms, information and contract. Canadian Mushroom Producers, Regina,  Saak. (4469)\nWANTED\u2014*800 SECURITY, A FIRST\nmortgage, on Improved property.\nBusiness block, value $2800. Apply   Dally   News. (4838)\nHOUSEKEEPER FOR CHTLDREN.\nOver 38. state wages. Box 6332,\n\u2022Trail Times. Trail. (4621)\nWOMAN WANTED HELP HOUSE-\nworit. one child. Apply Box 72,\nPfocter. (4834)\nSITUATIONS WANTEO\nYOUNO WOMAN WISHES HOU8E-\nwork Immediately. Writ* E. M.\nTaghum. B. O. (4482)\nFUR  COATS  REPAIRED,  RELINID,\nremodelled. Phone 428. Mrs. Lee.\n(4500)\nFUH-HHUED ROOMS TOB RENT   (16)\nFURNISHED    SUITE,     807     SUCA.\nMrs.  Leslie.  Fhone  440X.     (4287)\nWARM   COMFORTABLE   BOOM   BU\nBaker St. Phone 487X. (4488)\nBOOM  AND  BOARD\nan\nLADY WILL SHARE STEAM HEAT\napartments and give board reasonable to business girls. Box 4639\nDally  News. (4839)\nimiMiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..iiiiiiiiiiii\nI   y   4 COAL    I\n| JLeaders \u00a7\nS Economy Lump; i\n5    per ton f 10.00 5\n1 Wildfire Lump; 2\n2 per ton $10.50 S\n1 Corbin Furnace; 2\n2 per ton 110.50 |\n= Corbin Pea Size; \u00a7\n3 per ton .. $8.00 S\n| PHONE 106 1\n1   WILLIAMS'   |\n= TRANSFER =\n|  toe   WARD   IT. NELSON =\niiiiiiiiiiniiiiMiMiiiiiMiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiili\nFOR   RENT   FOR   WINTER   KEBP.\n-   Saddle    pony   with   saddle   and\nbridle.  S.  J. Towgood,  sandon.\n(4468)\nAUTOMOBILES   FOB   SALB\n(40)\nMODEL   T   FORD.   RUX'l'EU,   M-\noence.    Mechanically    first    class.\nCash |39. Box 4488 Nelson News.\n(4463)\nIndian Motocycles\nfrom   \u00bb396.0o   up.   America\/a   finest.\nB.  B. A.  from  1206.00  up.\nFrancis   Barnetts   from   1106.00   up,\nEngland's   finest.   Ride   a   winner.\nNow   ts  the   time   to   start   mi-klni*\npayments   for   spring    delivery.   We\npay  you   Interest   on   your  deposit.\nSeveral  good  used   buys.\nPALMFR RtjTl_BDaK \u2014 TraU. B.  C.\nPATMORE  BROS.   -?  Cranbrook\na <466_1)\nRental Problems\nCan Be Solved Through\nNelson Daily News Want Ads\nLandlords! If you have vacancies, tell the location,\nconveniences offered, the amount of rental asked\nand the time available in a Daily News Want Ad,\nand if attractive, the problem is solved.\nDaily News \"Rental\" Ads are effective because\nprospective tenants read them \u2014 they know they\ncan find in these columns a great selection of\nhouses, apartments or rooms from which to choose\n\u2014and at the right price.\nOrder a Dally News \"Rental\" Ad Today!\nTelephone 144\nNelson Daily News Want Ad. Department\natewn products\nRALPH   PEARSON\nNURSERY AGENT\nVEBNOW, a. o.\nJSl\nCan deliver now bulbe, grapes\n\u25a0mau fruits. Write Box 3\u00ab8( Vti\nB. C.  Advice  glvea tsom\nexperience.\n\u20224474)\nThe Nelson Dally. Newi\nClass Ads Bring Results!\nBusiness and\nProfessional\nDirectory\nAccountants\nCHAS. r. HUNTER. ST. INT. AXJ.\nMtentrlpel and CecnejueTolal Audits\nP. O. Box 1191. Nelson, B. C (4801)\nT.   a.  JONES\nPubUc  Arrount*i-t\nP. O. Boi 7-1. Nelson, B. O.  (4101)\nAssayers\nB. W. WIDDOWSON established  1M0\n805 Joes-phln. at., NeLson, B. C\n<4Mt)\nORENVTLLE   H.   ORIMWOOD,   P   O.\nBOT 418,  Kaalo.  B.  O. (4804)\nChiropractors\nDR. ORAY, GUJKER BL__\u201e NBLBON.\n<4B0\u00bb\nDR.   MACMILLAN.' ORAD.   PAU-XS\nSchool, Aber BUt., Neiaon, Ph. 31\nten\nMITTUN AND GEDDEa, X-RAY and\nMCM. Cranbrook and Trail. (4507)\nFlorists\nJOHNSON'S OREEHHOUBBB\u2014Phona\n343. Cut flower., potted plant.\nand floral designs. (4808)\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPB. PUU,\nline cut flowers at all tlmea. Floral designs, phone 333. <48QP>\nGrl-zelle's Orsenhouses. Nelson. Cut\nflaaeers and floral designs.   (4810)\nJnsurahce and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014 Real fttate. Insurance Rentals. Next Hlpreerscn\nHardware. Baker street.        (4511)\nSecond Hand Stores.\nThe   Ark\u2014Dsalers   In   Second   Hand\n\u00ab\u00b0\u00b0\"\u00bb. Phone 534. Joeep_eine.(4eia>\nStorage\nSTORAOB,  MOV-NO, COAL,  WOOD,\nPhone 58. Burn's Coal _c Carta.**\n  (45131\nB.C. Land Surveyor\nC. MOORE, K.W.C. Blk., Nslson. Sur.\nVeylng, drafting, blue prints,\n.  '    (4553)\nTransfer\n*'S*5l'S<?_.   -_t-mrat- -WS-SMONT.\nCoal and Wood, (4814)\nWood Factory\nTHE GUMPS-The Man of the Hour\n\"JJ^O*? *?0P -FACTORY HAHO-\nwood merchant, an Baker street.\n...\"   \u25a0     '- -.4816)\nDressmaklnt .,.,\nFarm and Dairy Produce ,\nFarm .property for Sale ,\nFor Sale or aacnange \u2014\nFor Bale or Bent\nFurnished Rooma for Rent .\nFurnished Rooma *Vapted _\nFurniture  tor saia   -, \u201e,..\nHelp   Wanted        \u25a0     .,,\nHouses  tor  Kens  ._______________\nHouses   Wanted \t\nIn  Memorlam            ,      ,\nInsurance      ,    \u25a0\u201e\u25a0\u25a0      ,\nInvestmenta   \u00bb_______\nLivestock  for Sale\nLivestock Wanted .\nLiterary\nLost  and  Found\nMachinery   .,.\u201e._...\u201e\nMarriages\nMining. Timber, Lumber ,\nMlscelle&neous\nMlscellaneoua  ior  bale\nMiscellaneous   Wanted  .\nNotices , .,.\nMusical   Instruments\nNursery   Products   \u00ab_\nPoultry and Eggs \u2014_.\nPrinting  u\nProperty for sale ..-,,\nProperty  Wanted  ________\nRabbits for Sale  .\nPersonal  _________________\nPlanta\nRanches for Rent\nResorts\t\n___. 47\n ae\n  97\n  84\n  85\n. _ SB\n_\u2014 S\n___-. It\nRoom and Board \u2014\nRooms for Rent _.-\nRooms Wanted \u25a0,*-...\nSchools ___,\nSituations Wanted\nStores to Rent\n\u2022MUSH\nmvi wi-Guy fc wtAiwa-w* htiatm.wmweytoeM\nAMbY 6UMP\nPEOPLl'S\ntMOt\u00ab -\n\u25a08.T1U. IM\n\"THE\nSTILL\nWMTE Wft4Ne\nANb itlX\nRA.VIM6\u00bb\nABOUT twr\neMlEDtV\not tue\ntOONYRY-\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nIT\nW*U_- EM CM IF I VAIlkJr ELECTED-1' M\n*J*ST CUR_OU*S ENOUGH TO *WA^IT TO\nKNOW WOW MAOJV OF MY EMPLO-YEe%\n -D *_r\\ ME--So I'M HAV\nvtraw vote take***\nVJELL- ALL THE VOTE'S.\nARC leM THEHE -1 TOUO\nTHEM eMOT TO F^3T\nTHEIR MAMES OM THE\n*HJt-*5,- jo&t to Vote-\n Hv\n__^___________________________$ t- 0* 8AT-8.UAl  HOtttnttO, KOVIMM-C S. ltft-\nNEW -0________\\\n^_^_^_^_^_M\nMarket and Mining News\ne YORK LIST\nCCOVERSLOST\nIROUNMTOCK\nfederal*   Short   Covering;\nPrices Somewhat Under\nj       Highs of Day\n\u25a0r JOHN L. COOLLY\nAMSoUted Press Financial Writer\nVtW YORK, Nov. 4\u2014-Stocks were\niPldly Influenced by moderate short\n\u25a0verlng today and Uie market got\ntck a liberal percentage of the\nound loet earlier this week.\nStock prices closed somewhat un-\n\u25a0 their highs of the day. t-'e\nng* ot net advances being roughly\nto 5 points against a slightly larg-\nmaxlmum. issues speculatively\nerulfieij with a possible change in\nLe United States prohibition lawa\na* prominent throughout the sea-\nm. Owen Illinois Glass expended\n' National Distillers and U. fl.\nttfuftrltil Alco..oi more than 2,\n*d crown Cork about 1V4.\nAmerican Telephone climbed well\ner par with a 4-point rise, Union\n\u25a0.trifle'* fl-polnt excursion was cut\n4Vt. Oold Mining Issues, so lus-\n\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-* y*st*rday, were dull. Sales\ngregat-M B69.188 share*.\n[0R0NT0 STOCKS\nAPPEAR STRONGER\nVolume Is Very\nLow\nrOltOlTVO,   Kot.   4   (OP)\u2014On   a\n'\u25a0ry low volume ot trifling th* To-\n[>nto stock exchange worked Itself\n; to an appearanee of strength this\nternoon  through the marking  up\nInterlisted shires which had\nipport from New York. Only B500\nmres changed hands, about one\n.uarter of yesterday's business.\nC. P. R. and International Nickel\nd In th* rallying movement, the\n\u25a0rmer up % to 15!4 and the latter\np % to |%. A report t.-.at Nickel\nrill show improved sale* for the\nMrd  quarter was a  market factor.\n11 lan   gilned   H   to   6%,   Ford\neked  up  a half to  7%.\nwill\neked\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n80 industrials  61.63 up 8.25\n20 rails  2\u00ab,45 up 1.7S\n20 utilities  26.90 up 1.27\nMONTREAL STOCKS\n119\nSI\n30\n88 c,\n8ft\n\u00abft\nWH\n4ft\n35\nCanadian Steamship Lines  ...\nCons Mining fz Smelting  ....\n3\nee*i\n\u00ab\na\n3\nsm\n7ft\n10\n13 ft\n1854\nBONDS REVIVE\n8\n1\nFlurries of Buying Come in\nRail and Industrial\nSpecialties\nNEW YORK, Nov. 4 (CP)\u2014Ths\nrecently dropping spirits of tbe bond\nmarket wtre revived somewhat today\nas flurries of buying came Into some\nof tte rail and industrial specialties.\nTotal   sales  dwindled   to   $8,810,000.\nThe recovery of several of the\nmore .speculative rails was attributed\npartly to a rally In commodities and\nto covering by a number of traders\nwho had gone short ln these volatile\nliens. The oi\\i reflected Improvement\nIn   the   petroleum   Industry.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS. Minn., Nov. 4\u2014\n(API\u2014Flour 10 lower. Carloid 'ots\nfamily patents quoted 3-85 * barrel\nIn 98-pound cotton sacks. Shipments\n80.351.   Bran   8.00. *\nWheat: No. 1 nor. 47H to 48%;\nNo. 1 red durum 40; Dec. 45%;\nMay 47 %.\nCorn: No. 8 yellow M\\_ to M.\nOats: No. 8 white* 14% to 14%.\nFlax:   No.   1,   1.06-4    to   1.09^.\n_\nE\nCarry Selected Group of\nStocks to Higher\nLevels\nMONTREAL, Nov. 4 (CP)\u2014Strength\nin market leaders carried a selected\ngroup of stocks to higher levels on\nthe Montreal stock exchange tolay\nalthough at the close losses outnumbered gains by a small margin.\nInterlisted and power lasuea scored\nadvanced ranging up to a point\nwhile agriculture Imprement stocks\nand banks were lower.\nMontreal Power led the list ln\nactivity with a turnover of 2*80\nshares. A steady demand for the\nstock ensued, bringing up the price\nto 31%. up %. Power debentures\ngained \\k at 40ft.-Shawlnlgan lost \\_\nCanadian pacific closed % higher\nat 15%. Brazilian and Nickel both\nclosed at the same figure. The former moved up % to 8% while\nNickel picked up %. Point advances\nwere scored by Consolidated Smelters &t 68 and Dominion Textile at\n61. B. C. Power \"A\" recovered an\nearly lou to close % higher at 18%.\nCALOARY LIVESTOCK\nCALOARY. Nov. 4 Receipts: Cattle\n31, calves 8, hogs 1132.\nSteers: Good and choice, 83.75 to\n83; medium, 83.20 to 83.50; common,\n81*50 to 83.\nHeifers: Ckwd and choice, 82.75\nto 83; medium, 83-35 to 82*60; common, 81.50 to 82.\nCows: Qood, 81*75 to |2; medium,\n81*28 to 81-50; common, 81; canners\nand cutters, 8,50 to 8-76.\nBulla: Oood, 81.60 to 81.75; common, 81 to 81.35.\nVeal calvea: Oood and choice,\n88.50 to 84; common to medium, 82\nto 88.\nSheep: Oood handywelght, 83 to\n83.50; common, 61 to 61-50. \u2022\nLambs: Qood and choice, 64; common, 63-A0.\nHogs: Select bacon, 8855; bacon\n62.76;   butchers, 63-25.\n'A    A;\nDaily News Job\nOffice\n_V.\nTonight\nCome in and Select Your\nChristmas\nCards....,\nIn order to cooperate with the outside public and local citizens in the\npurchasing of their Christmas\nCards, the office of the Job Department of the Nelson Daily\nNews will remain open every Saturday evening unitl after the holiday season from\n7 to 9 o'clock\nCall in when in town Saturday\nevenings and inspect our splendid\nline of Private Greeting Cards.\nPHONE 144\nv     . and make an appointment\nNelson Daily News Job Dept\nBaker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nMining Markets Buoyant;\nBase Metals Share in\nImproved Tone\nTORONTO. Nov. 4 (CP)\u2014Demand\nfor the goU stocks said to have\ncome (rom New York gave the Standard mining market a buoyant appearance this afternoon,* the bane\nmetal l'sjes sharing fully ln thc\nImproved tone. Sales were higher\nthan (or several days.\nNoranda, supported by a favorable\nforecast of wlut the quarterly report from the mine will show, advanced* 75 to 19.75 and Nickel\nmoved up (t5 to 8-90. Falconbrldge,\nlu heavy tracing, advanced 31 to\n1.80, Hudson Bay, 40 t_> 3.50, Sherritt 3 to 40, Coa.t Oogpcr 50 to 63.\nSudbury Basin 8 to SO and Ventures B'i to 66.\nBuying was good In all the big\ngold producers, Teck made the best\nshowing with a jump of 13 to 8.30.\nThe cheaper gelds were all strong,\nAnd gains of a couple of points\nwere  registered.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbana        .04'\/a\nArno   021,\nA)a_    70\nAimil-l   ia\nA P Con-oIldM- 07\nBate  Metals          .00\nBee-go-d    ,.      .01U\nBarry HoUlnger  '..      .03ft\nBig  MIMOUrl   13\nUalmont    05\nC tnt t Landi      M\nChemical  Rea-a-CU    78\nClerlcy    01\nDome  13.85\nDalhousie 10\nE__tcrr_t    07\nEldorado       1.37\n     1.80\n 70\n       M\n       .55\n _8.05\n     3.30\nFalconbrldge .\nOnenada   .\nHome Oil\nHowey   ...\nHoUlnger  .\nHudson Bay\nAitafMnr      l*     IS lit\nAllied CMmlcsl. 78% 88ft 71ft\nAme-leta Ou .. 93 Mft MS\nAm ltn Pccwer..     7^      \u00ab',',       7'A\nAm Smelt It Put ij lis l\u00abH\nAmer   Telep&ooe lots ' 100!- INK\nAmer   Tobsoco. St; NS M\nAnaconda       8 8'\u00ab      9\nAtO&lMn     40H 37 .1)\nInternational Nickel      8.73\nKlrkland Lake        38\nLake Shore 39.18\nMbc_\"_a    18\nManitoba Basin      ill\nMalartic ,       .0314\nMclntyre    10 38\nMining Corp   \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022    *37\nMayland       .24\nNewbeo         .04\nNlpls-lng       1.10\nNoranda.     }\u2022 50\nPend OreUle 60\nPremier Oold       .54\n3her.lt Oordon      .40\nSudbury  Baaln        .50\nSterling Paclllo 11\nSlscoe       -13b\nTech Hughes ,.,.;    8.30\nVlnond      JO\nVenturer        .80\nWright  Heergreeve,       380\nWalte Ackerman      .40\nAuburn Motors.\nAm Ma. h _f Fdy\nBaldwin   \t\nBait dt Ohio ...\nBendlx   Aviation\nBet'   tt   el  \t\nCanada Dry  \t\nCanadian Faclllc\nCerro de Paaco..\nChta dt Ohio ...\nChyaler   \t\nCom __\u25a0 Southern\nCon Oas New Tk\nCorn Products..\nC Wright ptd  ..\nDupont \t\n;,a-,m_e.n Kodak.\ni-eec Power St Lt\nErie\t\nFord _*iegll-_c ...\nFlret Nat Storea\nFreepoe'. Texas..\nOeneral Motors.\nCeneral Electric\nOeneral   Poods..\nOranby    ,\nGreat North pfd\nGoodrich   \t\nOeld  Dust \t\nOreat Weet Sug\nHowe Bound ...\nHudson   Motors.\nInter Nickel \t\ninter Tel _s Tel.\nKenn Copper   ...\nKresge S3\t\nMack Truck ...\nMilwaukee pfd..\nNa*h Motors ...\nNat Dairy Prods\nN Power St Light\nN Y Central ...\nPac aaa i_ Biec.\nPackard Motors.\nPenn R K ....\nPhillips Pet, ...\nPure  On   \t\nRadio Corp ,..'.\nRadio Keith Or!\nRem Rand ....\nRock Island ....\nSateway Stone..\n3 Louis ft 8 P..\nShell Union ...\nS Cal Edison ...\neSouth Paclflo ..\nStand Oil of Cal\nStand OU of Ind\n8tand OH of N J\n.Stewart Warner.\nStudebaker \t\nTens* Corp ....\nTexu Oulf Bu),\nTlmken Rollers.\nUnion Carbide..\nUnion OH of cal\nUnited Aircraft.\nUnion paclflo ..\nU fi Rubber ...\nU S Pipe _i My\ntl 8 Steel  \t\nVanadium steel.\n| West Electric   ..\n|W111.b Overland.\nYellow Truck ..\n41\".\n--'_\n5'.\n13'.\n10\nMS\nDi.\n13',\n7S\n32 V,\n14'\u00bb\n2ft\n57 ft\n5014\n34\n51\n38'i\n6*.\nUS\nK\n18\n8\n13's\n7\nsi*\nUS\n3%\n55\n4814\n\u202211\n48 ft\n7\n\u00abH\nVANCOUVER LIST\nBig Missouri     -18\nBralorne    -88\nOeorje Copper    .40\nGeorgia River    .08\nGrandview      -OS\nKootenay Florence ....   .00ft\nLuck; Jim    -Utt\nNational Silver    -01H\nNoble Five      ~c2_ec\nPend OreUle    M\nPioneer Oold    \u00ab_\u00bb\nPorter Idaho    -04\nPremier     ~>6\nReevea McDonald ....    \u2014\nReno Oold     38\nRuth Hope     .03\nSllvercrest   .,..'    .01\nWellington    .01\nOILS\nA P ConeoltdateiJ \t\nC and t Lands  \t\nDalhousie   \t\nEastcrest   \t\nFreehold    '*..\t\nHome Oil \t\nMcDougal Segur __.  \t\nMcDougall Segur New \t\nMayland \t\nMercury   \t\nMcLeoa   \t\nOkalta   Com   \t\nRoyalite   \t\nSterling Paclflo \t\n.14\n..70\n.48\nJOSS\n.03 S\nMl\n.03\n.03\n438\n.04'\/i\n_1\n30\n.89\n.03\n.03\n.01 Hr\ntrt\nas\n.18\n.07\n48\n.80\nj04S\nMV,\n.17\n.08'\/,\n-0\n.05\n6.75\n.11\nEXCHANGES\nMONTRBAL. Nov. 4 (CP).\u2014British\nand forelffn exchange In relation to\n\u00bb\"\u25a0*, Canadian dollar, aa coropUed by\nthe Royal Bank ot Canada, closed today aa foUows:\nArgentina,   pesos    .38 17\nAustralia,  pound     39588\nBelgium,   belga    .'  .1563\nBrse.ll,   mUrels        .0888\nChina. Hong Kong dolan ....   .2583\nCrachoeeovAkta,   crown        .0333\nDenmark,   kron    1930\nFinland, flnmarlt     4188\nPrance,  frane        4441\nOermany, relchamark      \"1887\nOreat Britain, pound  3.-965\nGreece, drachms,   v .0068\nHolland, florin 4518\nHungary, pengo 1984\nIndia,  rupee    .3805\nItaly,   lire   ,,     .057..\nJapan, yen      -_*ll\nJugoslavia, dinar   v    -0163\nNew Zealand, pound , 3.3804\nNorway,   krone 1890\nPoland, ilotl    1363\nRoumanla. leu      4069\nSouth Africa, pound   8.4018\nSpain,  peseta    0920\nSweden,  krone   ...> 1950\nSwitzerland,  franc     .3164\nUnited statea, dollar, 13.J-16 per cent\npremium.\nTORONTO INDUSTRIALS\nBill Telephone  08%\nBraiillan      8S\nB   A   Oil     IV,\nCona  Bakeries  8\nCOna   Mining    ,  66\"*\nD'cenlnion   fHoree     1614\nHiram   Walker     t\nImperial   OU     9\nInternaUonal Nickel     B'ij\nLOb'.aw   \"A\"     13V!\nr_t:ct_s^^|^^^g,\t\n4814\n48\n34',\n21.1\nUS\n1314\n18\n147,\n37%\n27\nis\n\u2014\n12\n10%\n614\n8\nus\n1614\nfti\n_\n7V4\n\u2014\n414\n4S\n814\n7%\n9\n8)4\n10%\nty.\n10*4\n1 OI-\n3114\nlO\n3*4\nIS\n1314\n13*4\n17*4\n17\n\u2014\n__.  .\n23*4\n30*4\n371,\n3614\n>%\n2.4\nHH\n11\n6\u00ab4\n614\n4\n\u00bbT4\n\u00abs\n6 H\nSH\nS',i,\n-V,\n\u00bb'4\nI\n4914\n4714\n1\n74\n\u2022S\nIS\n3614\n3614\n18\n16*4\n35 S\n3414\n30 ti\n39 %\nay.\n\u00bbH\n474\n4S\n14\n1814\n31S\n21\n18\n14\nass\n3 Hi\n1014\n10 s\n3814\n33\n\u20224H\n6014\n6\n\u00abti\n1014\n10\n35*4\n331i\n1214\n11\n35 \"4\n33 V4\n3\nIS\n\u00abs\nss\n\u2666os\nus\n\u00bb74\n1214\n\u2022s\n17S\n\u2022s\n131,\n22\n13%\n8S\n8614\neW>_e.\n3t,\n3314\n51\n714\n614\n3%\n48'4\n3314\n1314\n16\n27H\n61.\n19\n814\n15%\n-Vi\n7S\n4*4\n(\nes\n10*4\nio\u00bb,\n311.\n3*4\n1314\n17*_\nMS\nn\n37*5\n374\n1414\n,.s\n-s\n\u2022It\n37,\n\u2022ti\n49\n6S\n38 V,\n11%\n33 S\n33\n39 Ti\nss\n414\n14\n31%\n16\n32%\n10V,\n33%\nts<i,\n6\nio s\n\u20224%\n13%\n38\n3\nPEAT LIFTS\nM0RETHAN2\nCENTS BUSHEL\nPlain Signs That the Market Is in Oversold\nCondition\nSESURITIES AND\nCOTTON UPTURN\nPurchases   of   Canadian\nWheat Overseas Made\non Gigantic Scale\nBy   JOHN   T.   BOl'OHAV\nAMoclated FreM Market Editor\nCHICAGO,   Not.   4\u2014Brisk   rtf-it\naboot   face   action   lifted   wheat\nmore  than  t  cents a bu&hcl  today  from  tht  commodity's  record\nlow point, 41H centt.\nPlain eftlgna that for at leaat the\ntime being the wheat market wm on\na   decidedly   oversold   condition   led\nto mora general buying today than\nhas been witnessed since tha latest\nextraordinary down-swings on  grain\nvalues  began  a  week  ago.   Helping\nto hoist wheat prices wer* upturns\nin  securities  and   cotton   and   that\noverseas   purchases     of     Canadian\nwheat _ were   on   a   glgantlo   scale,\n3,000.000   bushels   yesterday   Instead\nof   between   1,000,000   and   3,000,000\nas heretofore announced.\nAlthough reacting somewhat from\ntop levels and showing late symptoms of fresh unsettle ment, wheat\nolosed relatively firm at substantial\nnet gains, \\\\\\ to 114 higher than\nyesterday'* finish, corn ^ to 1 up,\noat* K to *i advanoes, and provision* unchanged to a rise to 10\noents.\nChange* of trad* sentiment aa to\nwheat waa also promoted by drought\noomplalnt* from large sections of\nKansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado\nand Nebraska winter erop territory.\nflome estimate* Indicated that Kansas might net hav* mor* than\n9,000,000 acre* of winter wheat thl*\nyear, and that th* condition of\nmuch wbeat already sown wa* far\nfrom good. Thai* were alao suggestions of rust developing In Argen\nMONTREAL, WOT. 4   (CP>\u2014TJnlted\nStates  funds   continued   strong  today, tha doUar moving up  1  lt-16\n^^___mm^ .;__________ **\u00b0 cl0B# \u25a0* * premium of  18 *-l\u00ab.\n14 tina   owing   to   unusual   humidity. Sterling was firmer at *3.6965.\nEXCHANGE HATES\nHt TOM, wm. 4   ata-it\u2014 \u00ab*-\nchange firm at 43.38 for 00-daf\nbill* and at IBJt T-14 for detaand.\nCanadian dollan 10% par oeftt\ndiscount.\nFrancs |Jt  1-U cent*.\nUn 1.11% out*.\nUruguay  47-M  cent*.\nPioneer Gold,   Premier\nand National Silver\nAre Up\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 4 (CP)\u2014Improvement was ajaln shown by some\nof the mining Issuer today on the\nVancouver stock exchange. Sales totalled  26,000 shares.\nPioneer Oold closed at 4-20, up\nfire cents. Premier gained one oent\nat .55 and National 6.1 ver was up\nH cent at .01%. Georgia River and\nCrow's Nest each lost U cent, closing   at   .03   and   .00%   respectively.\nHome Oil lost five oents, closing\nat -SO. All other Issues closed unchanged at yesterday's final quotations.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR\nCLOSES DAY WEAK\nFinal Quotation Is at 89 1-4 in\nUnited   SUtes\nFunds\nNSW TORK, Nor. 4 (OP)\u2014A shipment of (090,700 In gold from Canada failed to strengthen the Dominion's currency today on local\nforeign exchange* and It closed weak.\nPinal quotation* were ai 19-4\ncents In United State* funds, a decline of on* par oent oompared to Its\nopening price and % ot one per\noent lower than Thursday'* close.\nThe dollar sank gradually throughout the day being- quoted at 8B%\nai noon.\nU.S. FUNDS\nSTRONGER\nSTM UT\nCMCAGOMDS\nWHFftT RISE\nLiverpool and Buenos\nAires Are Both Firmer;\nExport Good\nWINNIFSO,  NOT. 4   (CF>\u2014M**4\nby    itrength   it   Cfcleag*    wheat\nprice*   held  steady  em tte   grtta\nexchang* here today nd finished\nwith gains of % to %.\nNovember  closed   at  45%.   %   up,\nDeoember   at  45%,   %   better.  May\nat  40%,  up  *  and  July  at  60%,  \\\nhigoer.\nAbout 1.000,000 bushels ot expert\nwas worked from Atlantic port*, in-\nrlucl ng one full cargo to the United\nKii-Kdom.\nLiverpool and Buena* Aire* were\nboth f trmer tod s y, w h lie Ghioafo\nexperienced a oom para tlvely bullish\nsession.\ndome business wa* transacted In\nNo. a northern at practically unchanged spread* and a amall export\nmovement of oat* was noted, but In\ngeneral cash wbeat and ooars* grains\ntrading   waa uninteresting.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nwnnnpio, Hot. 4 <OP)^-rutur\u00ab\u00ab\nauou tiona\u2014\nOPU   Hlfh   LOW     ClOM\nWHEAT\u2014\n49*     4\u00abV_      *S%\ntit,     \u00ab4H\n49\n41*\n4*\u00bb_\n*\u00bb%\nM*a\n_____\n32'*      -314      -IV-      \u00bbV_\n_3*4     38 M*.\nNor\nDec     \u201e\t\nMor   ....    4\u00bbH     WH     48%\nJuly   ....   49*     lift     49*\nOATS\u2014'\nNot     33ft     38ft'   33ft\nDM.   ..-.\nI Ust   ....   38\nBAULKY\u2014\nNot     38ft     -9ft     38ft     38ft\nDM     38*     39ft     38*     38*\nMsy   ....    38*     89ft     39*     38*\nFLAX\u2014\nNot     88ft     88ft     88*     88ft\nDm    \u00ab9ft     \u00ab8*     88ft     \u00ab8ft\nUsy   ....    78*     78ft      78*      74*\n78ft     \u2014        \u2014 7\u00ab',j\nlJulT ...\nHXB\u2014\nNot. ...\nDM. ...\nUST\nJu-T\n\u2014 \u2014 38*\n\".    38ft     39ft 38 \u00bbV.\n.81 83* 31 Sift\n.   81*     83ft 31* 83V.\nW. M. WALKER\nStocks _\nAuto itul nrt J__i***\u00bb*-o\u00ab\nPHONE SS\nAb\u00abt\u00abejm BU-.\nHsl-oa, t. e.\n\u00a7\nThe World\nIs Watching Canada\nGREAT BRITAIN, France and other Countries have recently\nmet with striking success in public financing, due to the\nready response of their citizens.\nThe citizens of Canada, by resolutely supporting their internal\nloans in the past, have met the country's financial needs and have\nenhanced Canada's credit in the markets of the world.\nToday it is Canada's opportunity again. And new issue of Dominion of Canada's Bonds has been offered to the public and the world\nis watching the results.\nBuy the new Bonds today. You can find no better investment for\nyour savings. You can find no more effective form of national service\nSend Your Order Today\nAny recognized Bond Dealer, or any branch in Canada of any chartered\nBank, will give you complete information and application forms\n. Dominion of Canada\n20-Year 4#> Bonds, 1932    \u2022      .\nPrice 93.45 and Interest\u2014Yield: 430* to Maturity '\nFor National Advantage    \u2014    For Individual Benefit\nDEPARTMENT OF .FINANCE\nOTTAWA\n rAOB  TKX\n\u2022THE NEISON DART HEW*. NELSON. B. C. SATl-RDAT MORNINO, NOVEMBER \u00ab, Uttm\nCUP AND SAUCER\nSALE\nSOe Cup and Saucer .. 86*\n75c Cop and Saucer .. 56*\n% 1 Cup and Saucer .. 67*\nMann, Rather! ord\nDrug Co.\nGUNMEN PULL\nDOUBLE HOLDUP\nLower Prices\nTHAN EVER BEFORE\nTour   Teeth   extracted   with   no\ndtaromfort   uid    without    charge\nwith   put*   or   bridge   work.\nEXAMINATIONS\nand\nESTIMATES\nVAMOOTJVra. HOT. 4.-\u2014cor.\u2014Two\ngunman who held up the Ivmahoe\nhotel. Main street, this morning, escaping with 11300 ln eaah, sre\ncredited wit^ a second holdup this\nafternoon.\nOn the second occaaion they walked Into the Owl drugstore at Kings-\nway and Fraser, held up X. H. Xreu-\ntzwelrser, and escaped with \u00bb52\nfrom   tbe   cash   register.\nThe men used a beige-colored\ncar bearing a United Statea license plate. Descriptions of the two\nmen ftnd the car used ln both\nrobberies   correspond.\nDIVISION 1 LEADS CENTRAL SCHOOL\nWITH ALMOST PERFECT ATTENDANCE\nMaay Puptk Rank Over Required Mark in Monthly\nTeats\nBEND FOR OUR LIST Of\nLOW PRICES\nNELSON'S FINEST\nDENTAL OFFICE\nX Dr. Ray Shaw X\nR R\nA    .    DENTIST A\nY BIO RAKRR-aiLKtR BLOCK Y\nFor\u2014\nSERVICE\nPRICE and\nQUALITY\nSTAR\nffWsavff)\nLIMITED\nPhones 10 U 11\niMuCCO.\nLUMBER and MATERIALS\nLimber, Lime,   Brick, Cement,\nIn ear large and complete\n\u25a0tock 70a will find the kind\nof Quality Lumber and\nBuilding Materials to suit\nyour exact requirements,\nat prices that were never\nso low.\nDoors,  Windows,  Plywood, Etc\nA* He GREEN LTd.\n(Buoo\u2014on to John -__, t tet)\nRtJIU-IMO  CONTRACTORS,  INGINnRI  AND  ICRTITOBS\nNELSON and ROSSLAND\nFACTORY ADD LUUBXR TARO-T01 FRQKT IT.    ROM  111\nofficb -tu ward *t. fhohi sm\nBuy A Poppy\nTODAY! TODAY!\nAmple** Melion Branch, B.E.S.L. $1\net    i-ttafulBMi\n*\u00bb    draadfui\n\"Sban   .all    ear    \u25a0\n. bt mt?  .     .\n\"8ha_l     m,    who     1ev>e4\nHolocaust,\n\"B* elfgaiUlT tn reepenaa to ftra\nTo    thoee   who   cannot   work\u2014f\u00abt   muat\nBBifF-iiHiglt\nAll monies received from this Tag Day are\nused for the aid of disabled\nand needy veterans.\nAll poppies sold are made exclusively by disabled\nveterans at their Vet Craft shops in Victoria.\nWARE\nTO MAKE YOUR HOUSEWORK LIGHTER\nWE SUGGEST-\nIroning Boards Clothes Racks\nMixing Bowls '    Bread Boards\nPastry Boards Slaw Cotters\nPantry Stools Step Ladders\nEtc \u2014 Etc,\nWood^ Vallance Hardware\nCOMP ANT, LIMITED\nWholesale - Nelson, B.C. - Retail\nMnslon 1 ltd the Centnl school\nfor Um month of September with\nthe hl\u00abb attendance of 08 79. almost a perfect attend ence. Division U trade 1 Junior wm next with\n88.87 closely followed by Division\n7   grads   4A  With  88.87.\nThe foUowing Is ft list of pupils\nwho obtained 00 per cent or orer\nin their tests. They ara listed In\norder of merit.\nORADl VT\u2014Division 1 WW. DlTt-\nalon n 97.38. Division IU 96.4ft.\nIris Johannson, Asta Johnson, Ingeborg Martachlnka, Mattle Smith,.\nBlDy Townsend, Catherine Pearoe,\nand William Horvath, Norman\nPowell, John Munroe, Mai Graham,\nBilly Taylor, Arthur Guscott, BybU\nBradl\u00aby, Margaret Cslpe, Doreen\nHelen Wigg, Diana Williams,\nRamsden, P th Chrlstenson,\nBialkowsB, Antonny Berg-\njmann, Vlrtan Cosgrove, Violet\nKootnlkoff, Bertha *Molr and Prank\nLlpplngwell, Gladys Worthington,\nLtioeeter Longden and Peggy Dun-\nnettand Olga Korolak, Sdwln Powell,\nSwanhlld Moen and Ronald Newell,\nSam Pasacreta and Hugh Peter,\nMabel Roblson, Allen Barton, Margaret Mathewi, Ernest Ball, Wolf-\nssng Hauffe, Florence Maglio and\nSusta Doerksen and Alienor Cam,\nJack Goulding, Glen Prlct and\nDonald Hunter, Isabella Oxley,\nLome Blackwell, Jack Wilson, Teddy Bialkowskl and Albert Hooker,\nKathleen   Maber   and   Andy * Spelrs,\nEllen Mc' 0 idlisb and Iverson Rup-\npsland Dora Lapointe and Morris\nAldersmith, Howard Jeffrey, Henry\nTonlck, Tants * Coulter, Olive Lane.\nAnnie Saxon. Billy Affleck, John\nDeFVrro, Herbert Stewart, Victor\nBachynskl, Jack Wright, Bobbie\nBeattle.\nGRADE V, Division 4\u2014Clasa percentage\u201488-6. Division 6\u2014-Clasa percentage\u201485 8. Division 6\u2014Claaa percentage\u2014 88.88. Jocelyn Wragge,\nAnnie Busk, Genevieve GMzzelle,\nShirley Scatchard. Gertie Johnson,\nBlUy Harrison, Elizabeth Ferguson,\nShirley Beeston, Hazel Smith, LoU\nGamble, Phyllis Paterson, Anna Del\nPuppo, Mona Drorda, John Beattle,\nand Roy Mann, Rosie Tonlck, Kath-\nertne Anderson, Mora Barwood, Bob\nMcKay,    Donnelda    Cunliffe,,    John jrjj-iUe\nFor Modern Plumbing\nat Moderate Prices\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8Tr.il   PLUMBER\nOm Cit; Bail nm III\nYour\nWatch\u2014Clock\nand\nJEWELRY REPAIRS\nwill receive prompt\nattention here.\nOar work is satisfying\n\u2014charges moderate.\nE. Collinson\nJEWELER\nC. r. R. Timt Inspector\nSPECIALS\nIn Men's\nPants\nStrongly made WORK\nPANTS, priced very low.\nFive pockets and belt loops.\nSizes 82 to 42\u2014\n$1.75\nHeavy Herringbone\nTWEED PANTS in light\nand dark shades. An excellent value at\u2014\n$2.25\nThe Store of Good Quality*\nFletcher's\nMen's Wear\nBaker Street\nSaion, Johnnie Wade and Graham\nKitchener, Beverly Green and LiUlan\nParker, George Breeze, Delia Whitfield* Connl* Hancock, Wenonah\nUvcrsldge and Bobble Colllnson,\nLillian Hickey and Harry Hanson,\nHoward Pateraon, Norma McKerns,\nDawn Sharp, dive Waters, Margaret Smillie, Lucille plowman,\nOordon Allan, Margaret Dingwall,\nand Arthur Larson, Jessie Heath,\nWalter Baragon, Nina Gansner, Clifford Sparkes, Beda Moen, Laura\nMclwan, Roy Hickey, Harold Poster,\nJanet Morrison Philip Brewer. Bobble Colllnson, and Bobby Kerr,\nBessie Richards and Victor Del\nPuppo, Walter Wood, Walter Thompson, and Robert Matthew, Joy Guscott, Louis Buyzat, Dora Dyck,\nCatherine McLeod, and Joe Prancta,\nSusan Crossley, Annie Nord, Olga\nAppel, and Josephine Riley, Norman\nMay, and Donald Cherry, Olga\nMyhre. Reggie Newell, Donald Gibbon, Melvln Frederlckson, Bobby\nI Proudfoot, Arthur Currier, Pat\nPlowman.\nGRADE 4A\u2014Division 7\u2014Attendance percentage S8.A7\u2014Jean Horner,\nTeddy Affleck, Stephen Boweli,\nBetty Emory, Ida Busk, Herbie Guscott, Dora Perasso, Victor Graves,\nGeorge Oill, Bale Bergmann, Jeanne\nArchibald, Silvio Bragagnola, Lena\nBojnaruk, Jimmie Gelette, Patsy\nWilson, June Kennedy, Leslie Rowe,\nMary Zetnuk, David Hale, Kay\nSmith, Virginia Day, Tommy Lane,\nNorman Palrhead, Ardell Prloe,\nDoreen Manahan, Stanley Bachynskl, Gladys Wigg, Vergil Frederick-\nson.\nGRADE IV\u2014Division 8\u2014Attendance percentage 95 \"5. Edna Kennedy, Evelyn Ball, Annie Slkorskl,\nPaul Hlookoff, Denis Boyd, Harold\nStanton, - Dellcla Leith, Ritchie\nSmith, Gordon Pickard, Delbert\nSmiley, Walter Nisbet, Teddy Elliott,\nDorothy Gormley, Tom Griffiths,\nAvonla Stewart, Frances Aldersmith.\nMuriel Newell, John Day, Oliver\nLaakao, Douglu Fredrlckson, Helen\nCsepe,\nGRADE IU (Senior)\u2014Division 9\u2014\nPercentage of attendance 89.14.\nDaphne Rhode, Frank Simmonds,\nJohn Ludlow, Avid Moen, John\nBradley and Muriel Brown, Mary\nStarchuk, Jamei Wilson, Davtd\nSlader, Pamela Dewdney and Ernest\nDefoe, Betty Livingston, Connie\nJohnston and Gertrude Crack,\nEleanor Simpson, Verna Hickey,\nHelen Foster, Freddie Sutcliffe,\nAnnie Pavlch, Jack Wilson, Eleanor\nPaddon, Donald Argyle, Reno Stedile\nLeatrloe  Smiley, Mary Beattle,\nGRADE IH\u2014Division 10\u2014Class\npercentage 98.43. Patricia Baird,\nKathleen Thlel, Charles Noel, George\nPerdue and Jimmy Ritchie .Evelyn\nGunn, Betty Hickey, Evelyn Breeze,\nLogan Morrison, Christine Moen,\nJimmie Coleman. Dalton Boomer,\nArthur Cherry and Mike Kootnt\nkolf and Evelyn Perdue and Mljte\npavlch, Bobby Taylor, Iris Kennedy,\nEarl Wilson, Albert Vulcano, Tommy Ratcllffe, Wallace Pond, Arthur\nBradshaw, Ernest Wilson, Harry\nRoblson, Lawrence Beltner, Elva\nGoldie Lee Day, Bobby\nGraham,   Billy   Holland.\nGRADE II (Senior)\u2014Division 11\u2014\nPercentage attendance 90.13. Christ-en Roos, Mary McLeod, Boydle\nAffleck, Walter Scott, Catherine\nArgyle, Isobel Del Puppo, Francis\nPowell, Dickie ' Horswill, Lorraine\nFredrlckson, Frank Paddon, Ruth\nNelson, Sigrid Holmgren, Grace\nStanton, Delorea Elliot, Gunnar\nHansen, Gorden Olson,, John Dunnett, Joyce Rees, Jeanett* Loenhart,\nHarry Bommera, Donald Brown, Joe\nKorolak, Clifford Murnane, Marie\nStringer, Elmer Dyck, Jessie Paterson, Jerry Jerram, Bernard Brown,\nPred  Hinitt,  Howard  Green.\nGRADE n (Junior)\u2014Division 13\u2014\nAttendance   percentage\u201497.22.   Mar\ngaret   Weet,   Dagmar   Hauffe,   Mar\ngaret   Oogftn.   Norene   Brake,   Gertrude Nad*. Mureen Wilson,\nIrving, Stall* Wilson, Jessie\n_-      .     r \u25a0     i   AkSO.    we\nCunllXfe, Marte Droeale and Edward\nAndenon, Bobby Ludlow, Rayford\nBrerton, Bessie McLeod, Jack Steed,\nCharlie Llplnskl, Jean Livingstone,\nIan Currie, Roddy Gaskell. Margaret Mann, Norrls McDonald, Sigrid Nord, Leslie Gormley. Clara Hall.\nClarence Scatchard, Haley Miller,\nLeo Wallin, Teddy Jackman, Alfred\nLimacher. Not ranked\u2014Bonnie Thlel\nBillie BeU, Doris Leslie, Kenneth\nDarough.\nGRADE 1 (Junior)\u2014 Percentage\nattendance 98 40. Marjorie Rupple,\nJoan Kerr, Norma Wood. Alice Graham, Howard Sharp, Betty Curran,\nFrances Stadnlck, Lillian Crossley,\nIvy Ruth Gray, Fern Openahaw,\nPearl Leggett, Paul Hlelcher, Hilda\nMarzke, Carol Perdue, Maureen\nNorrls, Margaret Falrhead, Beryl\nCalbick, Jimmie Ball. Jackie Waters,\nArthur Townsend, Jack Johnstone,\nCarter.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 4.\u2014(OP)\u2014Forty-\neight Doukhobor women prisoners\nnow   quartered   at   Greenwood   will\nbe transferred to the Pier island\npenal settlement Monday, It was\nlearned at the provincial police\nheadquarter., today. Following this,\ntransfer of 120 women from Neiaon\ny_.il and 12o women Doukhobors\nfrom Oakalla wtll take place at\nintervals with 30 belqg taken at a\ntime.\nGRADE I (Senior)\u2014 Dlvlna\nRichardson, Johnny Maglio, Harry\nWassick, Pete Hlookoff, Jackie Galllcano,   Betty   Wigg,\nORADE I (Junior) Division 14\u2014\nPercentage of attendance 98.87\u2014\nDerry Dawson, John Gansner, Betty\nBrown, Gwen Garland, Bruce\nArneson, Linda Barwood, Betty\nAldersmith, Audrey Hinton, Frances\nMatthew, Charlie McArthur, Buddy\nWhitfield, pfctrlcia Glllott, Norma\nSimpson, Betty Colllnson, Bob\nEmory, Alan Ramsden, Viola Smiley,\nHanna Busk, James Brown, Frances\nBoyes. Olaf \u2022 Moen, Jean Duck,\nRoland Brown, Frieda Bergman,\nBror Johnson, Bert Webber, Gladys\nScott, Bob Swan, Bob Ahrens, Jimmie Mclvor, verna Blackwell, Nello\nStedile. Jack Oausdal, Wilma Coffey,\nBernle* Brerton.\nPrices at London\nSii Aly Better\nMR., MRS. BAKER\nENTERTAIN AT CARDS,\nFRUITVALE HOME\nTORONTO. HOT. 4 (OP)\u2014Canadian\nproduce p.ioei at London hive Improved flUghtly over lut mk on a\nslow market, a cabl, received by the\nOntario department of agriculture\ntoday Indicate!,\t\nBacon, ham and \u25a0 cheese aalea aU\nwere alow.\t\nFollowing are today's prices per\npound In Oanadlan currency with\nthe exchange quoted at 13.85 to\nthe pound sterling: Bacon, Oanadlan\n7.83 to 8.1\u00ab. Danish, 7*8 to 847;\nIrish 8.47 to 10.1.\nBam,: Canadian 10.30; American\n8.13.\nCheese: Canadian new finest white\nand colored 11 to 1114, New Zealand 9 45 to 10.7.\nButter: New Zealand finest, 11.4\nto 18.9; Danish 3S.3 to 30.5.\nGREENWOOD TO\nMOVE MONDAY\nSTRIKE AGAIN\nDeclare Drum Showed Men\nPrisoners Tortured on\nPier Island\n^^\nBUTTER PRICES\nTAKES UPTURN\nCheese Firm, Eggs Unchanged and Potatoes Are\nSteady\nMONTREAL, Nov. 4\u2014An upturn\nIn butter prloes featured the produce\nand  dairy market  here  today.\nAs the result of Improved demand,\ncar lots or les\u00bb of N9. 1 butter advanced a' quarter to a half cent at\n21 to Jl 1-3 cents a pound. Receipts were 304 boxes.\nCheeae, wu firm, current reoelpts\nfrom Ontario, being quoted at 9-V.\nto OVi oents and Quebec at 834\nto 0 cents a pound. Ontario Septembers were 10Mi centa and Quebec\nSeptembers at 1014 centa a pound.\nReceipts were 4933 boxes.\nEggs wen unchanged, freah Ontario extras aelllng at 38 to 39 oents,\nflrsta at 83 to 83 centa and seconds\nat 19 to 30 oents. British Columbia\nfresh extras were 40 to 43 oents for\nextras, M to 88 for firsts and 84\ncents a dosen for pullet extras, delivered. Storage extras. In car lots,\nwere quoted st 33 to 34 cents, firsts\nat 30 to ST3 oents and seconds at\n18 to 17 cents ft dozen. Receipta\nwere  1309  casei. \u25a0\nPotatoes held steady.\nBecause one of the woman Doukhobors imprisoned ln tha Neiaon pro-\nvincial ja.ii had a dream that the\nmen on Pier's Island were being\ntortured and starred as puniihment,\nthe women Jnll inmates -Friday morning went on a hunger atrlke. They\nrefused aU food all day and declared they will continue the strike.\nThey are also protesting against\nyoung girl being taken from\ntheir midst and shipped wtth others\nfrom Boundary Palls to the coast.\nThere were no other demonstrations\nFriday\n, See li for lour\nELIZABETH   ARDEN   OR   DUBARBY\nTOILET PREPARATIONS\nWe are agents for Nelson and District\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's   Dispensing   Chemists\nThis Store Open Sunday\nNelson\nBusiness College\nDAY   OK   EVENING   CLAUSES\nIndividual    Tuition\u2014Commence\n\u25a0\u2022ny time.\nP. o. Box 14 Phone 808\nAUCTION\nWEDNESDAY,    NOV.    I\n2 p. m. Sharp\n_1_ ROBSON ST\nActing under Instructions from\nthe owner I wlU offer the following: Kitchen lit-neilU, B\u00abv.ral\nScreen Dejors, JO gallon Wine\nKeg, screen, Linoleum Rugs, Kitchen Table and < hairs, Urge\nKitchen cabinet BEACH COMBINATION OA8, COKE OB COAL\nHANCE. Jewell Circulating Fur-\nnacette. White Enamel Tup Kitchen Table, Child's Oak Kocker,\nDrop leaf Dining Table and\nChairs, Buffet to Match, Oelt\nLibrary Table, Writing Des* and\nBench, Book Cue, Card Tables,\nleather Upholstered Oak Rocker,\nPictures, Ea\u00bbr Chain, Mirrors,\nMedicine Cabinet, Electric Lighting fixtures, Child's Table and\nChair, Cream Panel Single Weel\n***d and Mattress, Simmon's Bed\n\u2022\u2022lng and Mattress, a quantity\nof Bed Linen, ABOUT 20 PA1H\nBED  BLANKETS,  etc.,  etc.\nTERMS:   CASH\nGoods on View  Morning of Bale\nO.    HORSTEAD,\nAuction er.\nCITY BAND CONCERT\nAssisted by Artists in the\nCapitol Theatre\nSUNDAY EVENING, 9 P.M.\nA Good Program. Everybody Come.\nSUMMONSED ON\nDAM INQUIRY\nCALOARY. Nov. 4.\u2014(CP)\u2014About\n65 witnesses hare been .summoned\nto testify before the Judical Inquiry Into the building of Glenmore\ndam, t4.000,00o unit of Calgary's\nnew water system. The Inquiry will\nbe conducted by Mr. Justloe A. P.\nEwlng of Alberta supreme court\nand wll itart November 7.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nTnt. A unfurnished suites. Hec.\nfrldg. From t-32 up. Kerr Apts.-4*91)\nConservative Military Whist Drive,\nCanadian Legion ball, Tuesday evening, November ft, at 8 o'clock. (4520)\nB. B. METER TAXI saves you\nmoney. Heated cars. Phone 93.(4543)\nWatch our \u25a0 windowa for cash\nst.\"CIA.'*.  J.  A.  Irving  &   Oo.   Pree\nDelivery. i4559)\nWood\nFir\nTamarack\nBirch\nAH Lenirths\nCoal\nGait\nDrumheller\nGreenhill\nPellevue\nBurns Goal & Cartage Co.\nMoving  |\n518 Ward St\n[ Storage\nin aid of funds for\nBOY SCOUT\nPAVILION\nin the Silver Room\nHume Hotel\nThis\nAFTERNOON\nMusic, tea, candy booth\nCooking by Men\nLadies! Don't\nMiss this event!\nMotor Freight\nNelson-Trail\u2014Daily, leaving at 9:30 a.m.\nNelson-Salmo\u2014Daily, leaving at 10:00 a.m.\nELKS TAXI, TRANSFER\nand FREIGHT, LTD.\nPhone 77\nAVENUE SERVICE STATION. We\ndeliver to eny part of Fairview.\nPhone 857 for prompt aervice. (4545)\nCANADIAN    RUGBY\nMake sure you eee tbe last game\nof the eeeaon Sunday. Trait vi. Nelson, come out and help support\nlocal sport. (4544)\nKokanee Chapter I. O. D. E. next\nmeeting Tuesday, Nov. 8, 3 o'clock\nat the home of Mrs. Hartin, Vernon\nstreet,    I_aet  meeting this year.\n(4574)\nONLY $250\nI Must Sell My\n1926 Studebaker\nSix Coach\nIt has A-l Tires, New Paint and is in first-class condition.   Has 1932 Licence and is all ready to go.\nC. C. LOVE JOY\nPHONE 35 NELSON TRANSFER CO.\nPTii i un . \u25a0_. .xn:rn_gTTT\nFor\nCHRISTMAS\nYour own snap - shots\nenlarged and colored\nmake ideal Christmas\nGifts: with the personal touch that only\nyou can give. I Prices\nreasonable.\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nMedical Arts Bldg.\n\"A Greeting Card for Every\nOccasion.\"\ni t fttt t TTigELx.uu:rr rrrwa\nENJOY PANCING TONIOHT AT\nTHE PLAZA. PREMIER ORCHESTRA. (4361)\nDunk  -te  Conway  \u2014  Velvet   ind\nkrinkly   orepe   dreaeee.     Perfect   (or\nluncheon, afternoon or evening wear.\n(4563)\nACTONS BEAUTY PAIU.OR SPECIALS\u2014Shampoo and Finger Wave.\n\u20221,00. Shampoo and Marcel, 11.00.\nFor two weeki only. (4565)\nCome . to the Canadian Legion\nMilitary Whist Drive and Dance-\nWednesday, Nor. 0 \u2014 Turkeys for\nprizes. (4599)\nEUtott'i Bakery\u2014See our windows\nfor   Saturday's   speCal. (4508)\nFor a Complete Beauty parlor\nService Phone or Call Mlaa Mc-\nOulre's Beauty Bhoppe, 304 Ter.\nraoe   Apta. (4570)\nAnniversary servicei in St. Paul's\nchuroh tomorrow. (4572)\nl p.m., Anniversary Sud-\nPaul's   and   \"a   Cruise\nMonday, fl\nper   at   St.     -,-,^_,\nAround   the   Mediterranean.\" Adults\n60c;   children   25c. (4573) I\nMoonays Ladlea.-Ready-to-Wear\noffers \u2022 Special Sale on Ladlee, Winter Coats ranging ln price from\n\u202211.00 to $39.50. Come In and see\nour new shipments of Dresses. Hats\nand Sweaters. 808 Baker Street.\n(4571)\nCARD   OF   THANKS\nWe wish to thank Chief Stewart,\nthe Legion, neighbors and friends\nfor kindness and floral tribute* sent\nln our recent bereavement, Mr. and\nMrs. Wt Middleton. (4076)\nCARD OF THANKS\nMrs. w Ferguson, Penticton,\nwishes to thank her many friends\nfor the beautiul letters of sympathy and lovely floral tributes received during her great lose of a\ndearly beloved husband. (4550)\nModern Equipment Makes Flat Rate Possible\nOUR MODERN UP-TO-DATE\nSHOP METHODS\nare yonr guarantee of a perfect Repair Job at a reasonable charge.\nREMEMBL-i\u2014Advertining and sa.rsniani._iip ran  pat a man in a\ncar, but only service can keep him there.\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nNewCaps\nYoung men like their distinct iva style and long.'\nwearing qualities ... th\u00abjr\nlike their \"easiness,\" and !\nthese caps are easy to1\nbuy, too, at\n$1.50to$1.75\n$2.50\nCLASSES -\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R. O.\nO-TOM-.-HS'l  mm. OPTICIAN\nturn aaa.ua Mtocguq tare _uc_o\u00bbi.\nPh.\u2122 TAXJ\n35\nThe Bet of Mn)\nCareful, Coorteon\n >H|      Driver!\n\u2022(\u2022Uon Truutw Co* Ltd.\nGALLAGHER'S\nThe treat Indian LUNG TONIC f\nall affectlone  of  pulmonary  orgat\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPHONE 1\nShop with na bj mall\nAll Classes of\nMETAL WORK, LATHI\nWORK, DRILLING, BOB\nING AND GRINDING\nMOTOR REWINDING\nACETYLENE  WELDING\nBENNETTS LTD\n>_iff\"**\"**'**a*e**>iSi<\nTHE\nSugar Bowl\nGROCERY\nWEEK-END   SPECIALS\nFRESH   BROWN   PULLeVT   \u2022\u00ab.\nBOGS.   DM    \u2014 *y\nCREAMERY BUTTER, Our ng,\nSpecial. 3 Lba for  \/\"\nBLUE RIBBON COPTO -IU\npacket   with 'Qlaai      \u00ab|  a.\nTumbler  Free    __ T*\u00ab*'\nBLUE RIBBON TEA lib\nPer   U>  V*\nPia biscuits, Freah,      mm\n3   Lb\u00ab  .**\nOUR SPECIAL PEKOE TEA Si\n3 Lba.  for  _    T'\nPIAS.    CORN.    TOMATOES    a\nBEANS.    8    Cane ftp,\noranges'\u2014' jSct\"and \" oe,\nSweet. 3  doe. for  _***_i\nPEARL  WHITE LAUNDRY  Ag,\n\/SOAP. 35 Cakea -~e\nVXJX FLAKES | A,\nPer   pkt.   ___; *-*\nFLOOR   WAX *US\n1 Lb. Tlu .._.-_______--\u00bb\nCHIPSO *WV\nPer   Pkt **\"\nJILLO  JELLY  POWDERS   **,\n4 Pkte.   .^^^_  *~f\nPEANUT   BUTTER,   Glaea   *M|t\nJan, Cottage brand V*\nPHONE   lit\nWe Dellrer FREE from I a. i\nto fl p. m.\nWM.WUU\/\/\/\/A\nTHEA1\nShowing 2\u20147\u20149 p.m.\nLast Showing Tonight of\nGrand Hotel\nADVANCED PRICES\nNext Week's Program\nMonday and Ture_>r\nWILL    ROGERS.    IRENE    BIC\nand   DOROTHY   JORDAN   I*\n\"DOWN TO EARTH\"\nWedneiday  and   Thnriaay\nCLAVDET COLBBRT\n\"THE WISER SEX\"\nFriday and Satnrdaj\nCHARLES   FAKRF.L   and   JAN1\nGAINOR\n\"THE FIRST YEAR\"\nk.\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_1932_11_05","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\/1.0405704","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":"1932-11-05 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":"1932-11-05 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":""}]}