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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":" 23 Stocks Lower on Toronto\nMarket; Three Gain\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nthen %mln\nFred Morrison Wins Open\nTournament, California\n\u2014Pa$e Ten\n7<Soffi\nia\nVOLUME It\nTHI NELSON DAILY NIWS, NELSON, B.C\u2014THURSDAY MOBNINO, .HOTRMBCR 14. 188*\nnVE CENTS  A  COPY\nROBERT CRES      ^ EAKS JAIL IN NELSON\nU. S. Debtors Must Mee* iiecember Payment\nPROPOSES AGENCY TO REWEN\nTHE INTERNATIONAL PLEDGES\nHoover Suggests Other Forms of Tangible Compensation Than Cash; Mixed Chorus of\nApprobation, Opposition\nSEEMS LITTLE CHANCE OF UNITED STATES\nCOMMISSION DEALING WITH THE MATTER\nWould Be Closelv Allied With U. S. Delegation to\nWorld Economic Conference and World\nDisarmament Conference\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 23.\u2014(AP)-(By John F. Chester,\nAssociated Press Staff Writer.)\u2014Climaxing a rapidly-mov.\nIng picture of war-debt discussion, President Herbert Hoover\ntoday launched \u2014 with the knowledge of President-elect\nFranklin D. Roosevelt\u2014a request) that foreign debtors meet\nthe December 15 payments on their war debts to the United\nStates. .;.....\nSimultaneously and in the face of congressional opposition, he proposed legislative creation of an agency to review\ninternational financial pledges in connection with world economic and disarmament problems. .        '\nIn view of determined objections made on Capital hill,\nespecially by Democratic pow- \u2666\ners in the house, there seems\nlittle chance for such a United\nStates commission.\nOnly a tew ahort minutes before Ur. Roosevelt left Washington\nand shortly after an extraordinary\nconclave of congressional leaden at\nthe White Houae. Ur. Hoover Issued\na lengthy formal statement declaring flatly against debt cancellation\n~ but auggeatlng \"other forms of\ntangible compenritlon than cash.\"\nMIXED CHORl'J\nImmediately there followed a\nchorua of mixed approbation and opposition. One senator and representative aftejr, another declared againat\na commission to review the debts.\nThe same m-n, however, expressed\napproval of Mr. Hoover's stand\nagainst further moratorium or cancellation.\nSome congressional leaders told\nPresident Hoover at the White House\nconference that he Already had power to negotiate or aet np a com-\nmlaalan such ba he proposed to\nnegotiate with Oreat Britain, Prance\nand other Kur pean powers. The\nearn* view was echoed Uter by\nother prominent members of congress who did not attend the meeting, but ln Admlnlatration quarters\n30 WOMEN TO GO\nTO PIER ISLAND\nTO MAKE ROOM\nTAXOOUVBR, Not. W^-In order\n< make room ftt Oakalla for Um\nItat of Uw Doukhobor woman \u00bbt\nNeiaon, who han bean eentenoed\nto three yeara for nuda parading,\nprovincial pollot will take, SO of\nthoae now at Oakalla. Jail farm to\nPier  laland  on  Thuriday.\nThia will be tbe eeoond female\nparty to join the penal colony es-\ntabltahed on tbe gulf laland for\nDoukhobora.\nEAST AND WEST\nHA PROPOSAL\nON INSURANCE\nWTTER STATES\nUNABLEACCEPT\nHAS PROPOSAL\nAMERY SUGGESTS\nPLANON DEBTS\nWould Pay and the Recoup by\nSpecial Duties to Be Paid\nin Gold\nLONDOW,< tat. at (CP cable)\u2014Bt\nHon. L. C. M. a. Amery, former Conservative dominion secretary, suggested ln the bouse of common* tonight Oreat Britain should pa) IU\n(CONTINUED ON PAOE TWO)\nGOLD PRODUCUON\nIN B.C. A RECORD\nvicrroHiA. not. as.\u2014(CP)\u2014b. o,\ngold production this year la estimated\nto exceed M.OOO.ootf wltb a record\noutput of both lode and plaoer gold\nLode gold Increased 2d per oent thl:\nyear over the 1931 figure, and la estimated at 13,800,000 while a still\nhigher yield ls expected for 1933. Placer gold, worth 1391,000 laat year will\nexceed 1300.000 this year by a comfortable margin It la expected. The\nfigures are those prepared by the\nB. C. department of minea and released today by Hon. W. A. McKen-\nOutlines Way to Solve the\nCrisis in Shortest PoS'\nsible Time\nInter-Prorincial   Conference Now Awaits Data\nand Suitable Date\nDRAFIWG SCHEME\nWILL BE SLOW\nMain Obstacle la Agreement Allowing: National\nUniform System\nUNEARTHS JEWELS\nOF CLEOPATRA\nWfW TORK, Not. 33 (AF) \u2014\nCount Byron de Porogk, who\naaya he haa been unearthing\nancient cltiei alnoe he waa 19\nyeara old, returned to the United fitatea from Egypt today and\ntold of having found 800 emer-\nalda ln the mlna of the aummer\npalace of Cleopatra near Alexandria.\nThe count eald ht wae euro\nthe relica he found ln Egypt\nwere the flrat Intimate poaaea\nalone of the gyptlan queen\never  unearthed,\n\"Some of tbe emeralds,\" he\nnld, \"mre only a traction of\na carat, while othere were IB\noarata. Buna were separated, but\nmoat of them were co-mlngled\nIn Jewelry aat with gamete and\n\u25a0 caroellana.\"\nCOL J. Z. FRASER\nDIES IN ONTARIO\nBRANTTOBD, Ont, NOT. 23 (CP>.\n\u2014Col John Zimmerman Fraser, 78,\nlife-long rea'jnt of Brant county,\nprominent ln military and political\ncirclea and >ne of the leadera of\nthe United Farmers' movement ln\nOntario, died In hospital today aa\nthe result of fc stroke eome weeks\nago.\nwar debt tp tbe United States ln\ngold and recoup the loaa to the\ntreasury by levying special dutlea on\nImports from the United Statea to\nbe paid. In gold or dollars.\nShould auch a courae prove un<\npallatable to tne United Statea, be\naald, he would be willing to con-\nalder any proposal from their standpoint from modification of the present debt agreement.\nHe suggested the United Kingdom\nrectify Its unfavorable trade balanoe\nwith tbe United Statea by imposing\nImport restrictions to enable It to\nmeet debt payments In gold \"whloh\nls no longer wanted for purpoaea\nof our own currency and le only\nkept In tba Bank of England yaulta\nas \u00bb tribute to an. old superstition.\"\nWIFE OF MEXICO'S\nIRON MAN IS DYING\nMexico crrr, not. 23 <ap>.-\nThe office of President Abelardi.\nRodriguez announced shortly before\nmidnight that Senora Leonora Llor-\nente de Alas Calles, wife of Oen.\nPlutarco  Bias  Calles.  was  dying.\nBERLIN, Not, ft (A?)-Adolf\nHitler, head of tlw National socialist party, today rejected president Von Hlndenbnrg'a condition\noffer of tbe chancellorship and\nfct the aame time mtde fc count-\ner-propoaal of hia own.\nAfter deliberating on tho question\nfor moro than a day, the Mud\nleader wrote the president he could\nnot \"undertake to aolvs the govern*\nmental crlala on a purely parliamentary baste at that was Impossible\nbecause of the reeerratlona\" stlpu*\nlated by the aged field marshal\nwhen he aaked Hitler to . become\nchancellor.        ' '\nIn his letter to the preaident tHt\nNational Socialist leader set forth\n\"a clearly-defined proposal by which\nthe crisis can be eptved trttbin the\n\u2022riorteet time.**\nDO  UTMOST   \u25a0 \u2022\nHe eiplalned he did thii \"In view\nof the hopeleae condition of our\nfatherland, th* ever-increasing distress and the obligation upon every\nGerman to do his utmost so that\nthe people and the Reich will not\nsink into chaos.\" \u25a0   \u2022\nIn offering the chancellorship lo\nHitler the president had stipulated\nthat he must obtain a working\nmajority of the Reichstag and that\nOTTAWA, Not. 23 (CP).\u2014Hailed\nby anthorltlee In both eastern and\nwestern Canada aa fc constructive '\natep, the summoning of an lnter-\nprovlnrtsl conference to deal with\nunemployment Saurance now\n\u25a0waits the compilation ef necessary data by the Dominion fcurea*\nof statistics and consultation wltb\nthe provinces aa to a suitable\ndate.\nHeads of provincial governments\nand labor leaders united in expressing approval of Premier R. B. Ben-\nnett'a proposed method of approaching tbe problem of providing Canada\nwith a permanent scheme of Insurance agal at unemployment.\nUNIFOM    SYSTEM\nAs the chief obstacle In ths\nway la the constitutional provision\nwhich delegatea matten of property and civil rights to tbe provincial legislature, ths main work\nof the oonferenoe will be to arrive\nat an agreement which will permit  of  a  national  uniform  ayatem,\n\"Pereonally I *n\u00bb ,aU for It,\" said\nPremier^ Oeofga 8,, Henry .pf On-\nlilrlo\".'\nQuebec would \"gladly fcooept the\nInvitation,\" said Premier L. A-Taschereau.\nPending ncelpt of official word\nfrom Ottawa neither Premier C.\nD Richards of New Brunswick nor\nPremier 3. D. Stewart of prinoe Edward Island would '\u2022omment on the\nproposed  conference.\nAll four western premiers expressed approval and Premier John E.\nBrownlee of Alberta voiced the\nhope the conference would not stop\nat unemployment Insurancs but\nwould consider other aspect* of tbe\nWHITE BANDITS\nFARE BADLY IN\nNEGRO VILLAGE\nKill Negro President; One\nIs Killed and Other Is\nWounded\nDESPERADO SAWS HIS\nBRITAIN  WILLWAY OUT OF THE JAIL\nOLIhJ uLvUnU    Robert Cress Escapes Just Before Prisoners to \\\natitpiipiit Locked up; May Have Confederates;\nST   TEMENT District-Wide Search on\nWill Give Concrete Reasons for Suspending of\nPayments\nHIGHLIGHTS OF\nGREAT INTEREST\nSawing hi\u00bb way through the plasterboard and wdod\npartition that separated his cell block from that of the S(\nof Freedom women prisoners, and climbing over the won\nen's cells into their corridor which opened into the jail yard.\nh,   mint   not- Interfere-wtth   the constitution  which   need   overhaul -\narray, the established foreign policy i lng,\nend with the economlo programme   PUBLIC VU \"AVOft\nnow being  carried  out under  the\ngovernment's   emergency   decreea.\nOn good authority- lt waa learned\nHitler urged ln hie letter that, an\nauthoritarian presldlal  cabinet,  re-\n(CONTINUED ON FADE TWO)\nBANK PRESIDENT\nSEESTURN, TIDE\nImperial Bank President Tells\nShareholders of Greater\nOptimism\nand Inventor dies\nILTRIA, Ohio. Hot. 93 (AP)\u2014John\nOeorge Tutford, 78, preildent o(\nthe I. T, S. Rubber company and\ninventor of the suction type of\nrubber heel, died  today.\nHe came here ae a shoemaker\nfrom BeamsvUle, Canada, In 1181.\nIn 1913 he conceived the Idea of\nmaking the Inner surface of a .rubber heel concave so that suction\nwould keep the edges fitted tightly\nagainst the shoe without cement.\nThe Ides made him wealthy elmoet\nImmediately, through formation of\nthe rubber company.\nCOL R. ROBINS\nHE ADg SOUTHWARD\nASX-mVU-lm-t, N. O., Not. 33 (AP)\u2014\nCol. Raymond Robin*, who dropped\nout of light tn September and cauied * nation-wide lenaatlon, aped\nout ot Asheville In a large automobile Uto today, and beaded eouth-\nward, presumably for hit BrookivlUe,\nFla., home. '\nThe publlo had beln In favor\nof unemi*>yraent iniurance for aome\nyean, aald Tom Moore, preald-nt of\nthe tradei and - labor congreu of\nCanada Mr. Bennett'i announcement\nbrought renewed hope to thoea who\nhad 6een advocating lt. The government would be aasured of the\nfull oooperatlon of organized labor.\nDrafting of an unemployment In-\n\u2022uranoe scheme for Canada will necessarily be a alow and difficult Job.\nWith tbe problem In mind the\ngovernment had data on unemployment collected at the 1831 oenaui.\nCompilation of thli material la now\nbeing completed and the conference\nwill not meet until the Dominion\nbureau of itatiitici hai a complete\nreport to Uy before lt.\nTORONTO, Kov. tt. (CP)\ndent Frank A. Rolph told the annual meeting of the ihareholdera\nof the Imperial Bank of Canada\nhere today there Ii a greater feeling\nof optimlam throughout tbe country\nthan there hae been for two yean,\nthat ' opportunity are offered for\ndeveloping business due to the Imperial Economic oonference and that\nfurther itablieaUon may be expected\nfrom the oomlng world Economic\nconference.\nIn hia addrese, Mr. Rolph said ht\nT*t^_T2mlT* **\u00a3 U tUrD'|lutlonary encountered a hostile dem-\nlng though the upturn will neceeaar- __^\u201ei,:_ *\u201e.\u201e _*.\u201e \u00bb,. hi.\u2122..\nUy be slow and t^pendi upon many\nBOLET,   Okla.,  Not.   tl   (Ar)*\nAn Invasion of thli all-negro vll-\nlUge et two white  bank  robben\nended today In \u25a0 roar of gunfire\nthat left a negro  bank  prealdtnt  \u25a0\ndead, and the robben  and  their\nnegro accomplice dead or dying.\nShot down by one of  the  white\nrobben when   he   pulled   a   hidden\nburglar alarm, D. J. Turner, president Of tbe farmers end Merchant!\nSUte  bank,   died   on   the   way .te\nhotpital. But  hia killer  teU  before\nthe flrt of H. C. McCormick, negro\nbookkeeper, and the man's companions  wen hit by the   bullets of a\n\u2022con or more ennged cltlaena who\nrushed to the bank.\nThe loot was noovend.\nWhen   ambulances   from   Okemah\nromoved the dead and dying, one of\nthe white robben waa reported still\nalive. None wu  Identified.\nRefuse to Discuss Other\nAlternatives Than Cash\nin Payment\nBy GEORGE HAMBLETON\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nLONDON, Nov. tS (CP cable)\u2014\n\"Not et all unsatisfactory,\" was\ntha reaction In high official circles tonight to President Hoover's\nWashington atatement on war\ndebta.\nImmediate attention focused on\nthat part of the statement In\nwhich the president dectared \"no\nfacta have been presented by fhe\ndebtor governments\" which would\nJustify their request for postponement of the payments doe on\nDec  15.\nTba British government lmmedl-\n'ately began preparation of a new\natatement to the United States glv-\nhere's robert cress,\nif you see Him\nAge, M years.\nM\n9\n,     Height, 1 feet, MH Inches.\nWeight, IM ponnds.\n1     lyes,  brown.\nft   Balr, light krown.\nH\n\\l       Several gold teeth.\nf\n'    Complexion,  sallow.    Fan   dark\nrings below eyes.\n_u\nWeU built, athletlo, erect ta carriage, alert ta manner.\n.     Speech, Tankee twang.        -   .\ntOtttt CEESS\n[    Dreu, dark pants, krown sweater\nJ           with gray stripes, teet haee\nF         ' hive orercoat, no hat.\n1\n(CONTINUED  ON  PAOE TWO)\nBANDITS ROB\nONTARIO BANK\nGet $6000 in Cash and Escape; Using Big Blue\nSedan\nFLOOD WATERS\nRISE AGAIN AT\nBELLA  COOLA\nUnless Protection Winy\nDam Replaced Town\nin Danger\nBELLA  COOLA, B. C, Nor.  !S\nRobert Cress, alias J. W. Robertson, alias J. W. King, prison,\ner extraordinary of the provincial jail here, made a break\nfor freedom at dusk Wednesday, and up to a late hour had\nnot been recaptured by the large force of men looking for\nhim.      \u2022   .- i  t   \u25a0\u25a0 . i .'\u25a0  \u25a0\nCress, who has served two term* in. New Westminster\npenitentiary, one of tnem of five years, and who was due\nto have a speedy trial at Grand Forks next Monday on a\ncharge of committing the government liquor store robbery\nat Greenwood last July, was seen by Deputy Warden A. T.\nStephenson 10 minutes before his escape was discovered.\n : *At that time he was in the\nmen's corridor, which is over-\nGets Two Months\nfor Hitting Wife\nWith Crib Board\n(CP)-nood waters in the Bella   Cribbage Argument Ends in\nMrs. Lanchick Receiving:\nCat on Head\nFLKSHERTON. Ont., Nov. 23 <CP).\n\u2014Two armed and masked bandits\nwalked-Into  the  Flesherton   branch   above  H^gensborg which waa iwept\nCool\u00ab river which a few days ago\nmenaced valley homes and did\nconsiderable damage to property,\nafter receding for 31 hours were\nagain on the rise today as the\nresult of heavy reins and further\ndamage la feared.\nUnlesi   the   protection   wing  dam\nof the Canadian Bank f Commerce\nthree minutes, before closing time\ntoday, herded the manager and\ntwo clerks Into the vault under\nlevelled revolver! and eecaped with\napproximately (0000 tn cash.\nTonight a far-flung watch was\n\u2022pread by provincial police. All\npointi  In  the   Fleaherton   area  and\naway last week by rush of waters Is\nreplaoed, that little town standi\nln constant danger of destruction\nIf flood condltioni continue, lt li\nfeared the water fron the river\nwill eventually cut a new channel\nthrough the hamlet.\nThe awollen river began to recede\nTuesday   morning   but   rains   since\na screw driver and released themselves by removing the combination\nfrom the inside.\nHOSTILE PARADE\nGREETSTROTZKY\n\"Long Live the Soviet; Down\nWith TroUky the Traitor!\"\nBanners Read j \t\n  , BOMB. Nov. 34.   iThureday AP)\u2014\nBSBJHta. Denmark. Nor. 38.  CAP)   \"\u2022\u00bb\u00bb  P\u21221*\u2122   * J***\"  *>  **\u00bb\n\u00ab,\u00bb\u201e*..* tm mr <I\u00abM to tho United SUtti\n\u00bbxt\u00abidln\u00bb \u00aboutliw\u00bbrd u ttt u Tor- I ttlen \u201e, Maln ,dding t0 th\u00ab danger,\nonto   were   on   the   watoh   lor  the      Mountain    atreama    turned    Into\ngunmen and their Urge blue eedan.  ngi       im^n   by   conataat   rains\nThe   bank   employeee,   locked   ta I rfu      \u201e,\u201e\u201e,   iut   WMk   mt\nthe vault ae the bandits scooped\nup aU tht cash ln sight and lied\nto their car, worked frantically with\nITALY UNDECIDED\nON DEBT PROBLEM\n-Leon TTotiky, exiled Russian revo-\ntactors, both national and International.\nVON GRONAU FINISHES\nROUND-THE-WORLD TRIP\nUST, ble of Sylt. Nor. IS (AP).\u2014\nCaptain Wolfgang von Oronau arrived here from Friedrichshafen today, completing a flight around the\nworld, which be began last July.\nPEACHLAND   IRRIGATION\nDISTRICT  OITS  LOAN\nVICTORIA. Nor. 31 (CP).\u2014A loan\nof #500' from the conservation fund\nwae advanced to the Peachland Ir-\nrlgatlon district ta South Okanagan\nriding today by order ln oouncll.\nARGENTINE   EVENS  POLO   SERIES\nBUINOS AIRXS. Not. 93 (API.\nArgentine evened the polo eerles witn\nthe United statee for \"the Cup of\nthe Americas\" today, winning \u2022\nfeet and stormy game, S to 1. It\nan e\u00abr\u00bb chukker.\nonatratlon today when he disembarked .from the rteemer that had\nbrought him from Dunkirk, France.\nAbout SOO Biblerg Communlste\nparaded about, carrying banner*\nmarked \"Long lire the Tovlet; down\nwith Trotiky the treltor.\"\nThe entire local polioe foroe were\nmustered at the harbor and Trotiky, surrounded by a guard and a^\ncorpe of secretaries, was escorted to\nbis tram. Mrs. Trotdty look\u00bbd frail\nand UL\nIn \u2022 few minute the train started for Copenhagen where the called Rueelan will lecture on the\nrevolution which brought about the\npresent  regime  In  Russia.\nEXPECT TREATY\nBENEFITS WILL\nBEGIN TO SHOW\nMONTREAL, Hot. 3* (CP),\u2014Now\nthat all but two of the trade\ntreaties concluded at the OtUwa\nImperial economlo oonferenoe are In\noperation, th\u00ab advantage! expected\ntherefrom ahould aoon begin to accrue,  itatee  the  monthly  letter  of\nwai ai doubtful as ever today sfter\nadjournment of the aecond night\nlession this week of the grand counoll of fascism.\nPremier Mussolini spoke lengthily,\nbut after a three-hour aesslon the\nmeeting adjourned until December\nS.\nKILLED WHEN TOUCHES\n5200 VOLT TRANSMITTER\nBHRKVB\u00bbORT. Le. Nov. M <AP>\u2014\nDorr Slmmone, engineer at radio\nstation KTBA wai kJllei tonight\nwhen he came In contact with a\naectlon of the transmitter carrying\n8300 volte. The accident illenoed the\n\u25a0tatian.\naway roadi and bridges, and some\nf-imilles In the danger nine were\nenforced to leave their dwelling\nhouses when the water was at IU\nhighest. Deep trenches were cut\nIn the rlada by the rushing waters\nand damage ln the menaced are*\nwould have been much greater bad\nnot the waters started to recede\nwhen they did.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 33 (CP). \u2014 A\nfamily cribbage gane at the home\nof Peter S. Lanchick ended In an\nargument, which In turn ended ln\nMr. Lanchick rising and bouncing\nthe cribbage board off the head\nof Mrs. Lanchick, according to the\nevldenoe given In Judge P. P.\nLampman'i   criminal   court  today.\nMr. Lanchick, -ho was charged\nwith assaulting and beating hli wife\nand- causing actual bodily harm,\ntestified that he sought only \"to\nbang\" the cribbage board In an\neffort to emphasize a point in his\narguTnent, but that It flew apart\nwhen he brought his arm down\nand  half of  It struck hia wife.\n\"In the passing of thia cribbage\nboard from the accused's hands,\nMra. Lanchick suffered a cut on the\nhead,\" aald the Judge. \"I have no\ndoubt lt was thrown at lomebody,\nand I have no doubt he threw lt\nat her.\"\nUnemployed Try\nBreak Way Into\nBlairmore Council\nBLAIRMORE. Alta., Nov. 3) (CP)-\nA number of workless attempted to\nbreak their way Into a town council\nmeeting hero yesterday when they\nfound the door of the hall locked.\nThe unemployed demanded admission and hammered on doors and\nwindows. Council members finally\ndiscussed the situation with the\nworkless deputation and declared\nthey would do thetr utmost to tender additional relief.\nCONVENTION  TO  REAR\n'    PROPOSAL OF FARM STRIKE\nCALOARY,    Nov.    33     (CP).\u2014Pro-\nposala for a general atrlke of weet-\nDENIES   KNOWLEDGE\nor EXPLOSIVES\nNIW   WESTMIN8T R,   B.C,   Nov.\nJ\u00bb,-Walter   George   Stone,   charged. |ern Canada's wheat growere ta pro-\nJolntly   with   Ernest   Stilton,   with (test sgalnst preeent  lepressed wheat\nhaving,   unlavftuVy   and   knowingly, prloea   and   general   economic   con.\neiploalvea  under  their   control,  de-  dIUons  wtll   t plawd   before   dele-' Winnipeg\nnled In assiar  court Wednesdsy af- : gatss  at  the  an-'.uel  convention  of j Npnalmo\nWINNIPEO, Nov. 13 (CP)\u2014Robert\nO. Dean waa today sentenced by\nMr. Justice W. J. Donovan to serve\nfive years tn Stony Mountain penitentiary following hia convlotlon on\na charge of breaking Unto a theatre\nhere and stealing 11,000.\nMax\n41\n4T\n48\n44\n48\n42\n3\n48\n53\n70\n44\n40\nTHE WEATHER\nMln.   11\nNELSON   _       a\u00bb\nVictoria     SS\nVancouver          _    83\nEstevan    Point\nPrince   Rupert   \t\nDawson,   T.T.'  \t\nSeattle     .\".....\t\n44\n_ 98\n    8*\n  JS\n.._  SS\nSan   Francisco   .a\t\nSpokane     \t\nPrince Oeorge \t\n  SO\n38\n \u201e S3\n 58\n SS\nOrand Porks ...\t\nKaalo    \t\nCranbrc't; \t\n35\n38\n IT\n- IS\n-.. JO\nSwift   Turrent\nPrlna.    Ubert   \t\nQu'Apptlle    \t\nWinnipeg   \t\n10\n    4\n....   8\n_   8'\nlooked by a barred window in\nthe jail office.     \\\nM18HI.NO AT  LOCK-UP\nT1MB\nWhen the deputy warden and a\nguard went down into tha cell block\nto lock up the prisonen, Creaa waa\nmissing, and a hasty search revealed\nhie mode ot exit. He had remove^\na aectlon of plaiterboard from behind the men'i toilet, had aaw a\nthrough and removed four or flv*\nsolid timbers, three Inches or mora\nthick minimum dimension, and then\nremoved the plasterboard on tha further wall. The timbers wire cleanly and neatly nwn.\nApparently Cresi had accurate Information ai to the Internal itructure of the jail, which waa extensively altered ln the summer ot IMl,\nin part with Inmate labor, and evidently knew.what tha officials themselvei did not know\u2014that there waa\nwooden gap ln tha partition a*\nthat point, the cell blocks not oomlng quite together. There waa nothing on the surface to indicate that\nthe partition waa different there from\nelsewhere, and the Information may\nhave been paued by prisonen.\nImpector John MacDonald, commanding \"B\" division, end alio warden of tha JaU, itated Wednesday\nnight that varloua weak pointa ha^\nbeen discovered and remedied but\nthat thu one had not previously\ncome to light.\nWIDE   SEARCH  ORGANIZED\nThe Instant Cress wu diicovered\nto be missing, the alarm waa spread,\nand a minute search et tha JaU\ngrounds and outbuilding! took place,\nall provincial polioe offloera and\nguarda not on duty wera called cut,\nthe city polioe were notified, the Oanadlan Pacific police, tha ferrymen oa\nthe different ferries, end the customi\nofficial! at International boundary\npoints.   In a few mlnutea the polioe\n(CONTINUED ON PAGB 10)\nJUDGE DESCRIBES\nWITNESS IN CASE\n\"THE BIGGEST LIAR\"\n...- 33\nternoon that he had any knowledge of exploelvei found In the\nautomobile which he drove to Chll-\nthe Bank of Montreal, lasued here, liwack Auguet  U lert.\nDRUMHEULER, Alta, HOY. 31 \u2014\n(CP)\u2014Th# principal witness for tha\ncrown ln a cattle theft case her*\nyesterday waa described by Ur.\nJustice T. tc Tweedie of Calgary aa\n\"the biggest liar\" tha Judge hsd\nheard.\nHia loruerup's remark came aftef\ntha wltnees in question, Jeea Mo-\nCannell of tha Rumsey area, ha4\ngiven testimony ln the caae ot Her*\nbert Moore, farmer of Rumsey,\ncharged with stealing a eteer. Mo\nOannell t*W he had been employed\nby   Moore   when   the   alleged   theft\ntbe   Alberta   Wheat   Pool,   lt   waa      \u2022\u2014 3clow  xero. (\nauthoritatively   learner   tonight.   De-   FORECAST\nbate on the question la anticipated I    Nelion and vicinity\u2014Generally fair 1 occured but Moore waa acquitted b?\nat the Friday aesslon. not much change in tempsraturs.    | the   lury.\n\u25a0mMII\n r tm\n\u2022 THE NELSON DAILY NIWI, NELSON. B.C.\u2014THI BJDAY MOININO, KOTKMBn M, UN I\nCARPENTER SHOP\nWINS FIRST AID\nPRIZESTO TRAIL\nZinc Plant and Machine Shop\nSecond and Third; Attend.\nance Good\nTRAIL. B- C. Not. 23\u2014Carrying t\nott the 31. John's Ambulance asao- j\nelation cup and tbe first prize of\n916. which went to each member or\nthe entry, the Carpenter Shop team\nWn the annual first aid competi-\ntlon of the Consolidated Mining Jt\nSmelting company at the Memorial\nhaU tonight, before * large attendance.\nZinc Plant No. 1 took aecond prize,\n\u202210 going to each member of the\nteam and the third prize of \u00bb5 each\nwent to the members of the Machin*\nShop team.\nThe problem put before the entrants, which they were required to\ndeal wtth aa ther would tr eueh as\nincident had happened while at their\ndaily work, and ualng standard\nequipment allotted to such emergencies, read aa follows;\n\"A paUent 1* found on a 'live'\nwire la not breathing, la bleeding\nprofusely from a wound In Une back\nof the head and has broken hia left\nupper arm at the middle.\"\nOr. M. R. Baeted. Dr. W. Leonard\nand Dr. J. K- Palmer set and Judged\nthe problem.\nComplimenting the teama and ei-\npressing gratification at the attendance, B. A. Stimmel presented the\npriaea.\nNine teame competed and they\nwere Zinc Plant No. 1, Zinc Plant\nNo. a. Shelter, Lead Refinery, War-\nHeld Ammonia Plant, Machine Shop,\nElectric   Shop   and   Carpenter  Shop.\nWins First\nFellowship\nWESTERN CANADA\nHOCKEY STAR IS\nDEAD EN SOUTH\nCALOARY, Nov. 28 (CP)\u2014Reub\nBrandow, one-time hockey atar of\nwestern Cmada, la dead ln California, aooopdlng to word received\nby reLvtives here. His death waa due\nto injuries received In an auto\ncrash   laat  aummer.\nBrandow started hia hockey career ln Winnipeg and later Joined\nthe old Selkirk aquad that tackled\nHamilton Tigers for the Allan cup\nmore than a decade igo. tn 1939 he\ncame to Calgary Canadiena and\n\u2022tarred In the Alberta Big Pour\nleague.\nANNOUNCE  ENGAGEMENT\nOF   THHffi   DtAUOHTER\nVICTORIA, B. C. Nov. 3J._(CP>\u2014\nHia honor, the Lieutenant-Governor\nof Brltlah Columbia and Mra. J. W.\nPordham, today announced the engagement of their daughter, Helen,\nto Commander Oeorge C. Jonei,\nR.C.N., of H.M.CB. Skeena,\nCANADIAN    AMERICAN    HOCKEY\nAt Boaton: Boaton a, Springfield 1.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels and Cafes\n111111 n 11 r 111;; 11111 in 111 n 11111111 ii 111 t r 11 r:\n\"Finest in tht Interior\" H\nDinner        Q. Luncheon\n75c   rfj*    n    50c\nHUME HOTEL\nNILSON, B   0.\nGeorge tienv.ll Prop.\nNEW LOW WINTER RATES NOW IN EFFECT\n1111111111 ii11111111111111111111111111nuii|rttl\nHUME~A. P. Watson. Kootenty\nBiy; Beleon B. Bmlth, Olw; I. W.\nHutton. Montreal; W. Bhaw, Calgary; F. Ix>6b, 0. M. Robton, P. B.\nCorcoran, Vancouver; H. M. Courae7.\na. 3. Oium, Medicine Bat; A. 1,\nBalm\u00abnt, Cranbrook; R. w. Bordca,\nKlmberley; Douglas Corcoran, Pernle.\nC(5he Savoy\/\"\n\"Where the Guesl Is King\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nlit BAKER BT.\nBAVOY\u2014H. Moore, Corra Lynn:\nMr. and Mra. 3. T. Broughton, Penticton; J. Colgate, Mre. Dutton, Vanoouver; D. McFarlane, Pred Buoce,\nCalgary; Uri. Marshall, Silverton; K.\nCunningham,    Winnipeg;    Mr.    and\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nPHOTO It\nMn. K. L. Myeekoff, Spokane; Mr.\nand Mn. p. McOulre, Princeton;\nRoy W. Canlngton, Reno Mill; J.\nMelvln, TraU; MIm Jane Kotturott,\nMla* Mary Kotturofr, Retta, Saak.;\nJohn Slbbard, Oran Creek.\nNew Grand Hotel\nP.  L.  KAPAK   Prop.\nWeekly  or  Monthly rates\nHot and Cold Water\nSingle, ave ap.    Double |1J0 op.\nf 10 \u2022 Month and Dp\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA. LAPOINTE, Prop.\nHot and eold water In every room\nSteam   Heated\nSOS   Baker   St. Phone  N\nStirling Hotel\n4 Blocks Kast of Post Office\nHot and Cold Wat\u00bbr\nSteam Heat\nModerate Rates\nP. H. Bush, Prop.\nAccidental Hotel\n703 Vernon St. Phone MTL\nH. WASSICK\nrifty Rooms ot Rolia Comfort\nHeadquarters  for   Loggers\nand Mlnen,\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits Yosts. E. MA IUEN\nCompl   ely   Remodelled\nHot and  told  W-tef\nIn the HEART   I the City\nL. D. CAFE\nThe Finett tn tht City\nOPEN ALL HOURS\nFresh Food\u2014 De.lclous Chop Suey\nPrompt  Service\nBoris  Fountain\nROOMS   TO   RENT\nRead The Nelson  Daily\nNews Classified Ads.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nDuller .\u25a1 Hotel\num iii vut. nc,\nBnghl   Rooms   \u2014 central\nModerate   Rates\nA. Paltermm   iat* if Coleman.\nCraw's  Nrnt,  Proprietor\npoo ttfmate bt. Scy 41;\nCASTLE HOTEL\nISO Oranvllle St,\nVAM'Ol-\\KR. B.C.\ntn tt\"  hrart  of the nlmppfng     ti\nthrtire    Motrin. \"\nWARM \\Mi tOMKOKTABLfc\nVery Low Winter Rates\nADOPTION OF DUFF REPORT WOULD\nTHROW THOUSANDS OF RAHWAYMEN\nOUT OF WORK, LABORITES DECLARE\n-$>\nCANADIAN STUDENT\nREPORTED MISSENG\nBEATTLE, Nov. 33 (AP)-Lawrenoe\nB*rnae ol New Westminster, B. C,\na student at SeatUe Pacific college,\ndid not return to hi* boarding house\nhere after being released from Harbor View hoepltal several daye ago,\nnor hu he ittended claaaee at the\ncollege, hia friends taid today.\nHe had been ill for aeveral week*\nand It waa believed he might have\nreturned to hia hom*.\nHumphrey Mitchell Places the\nNumber at 20,000; Heen-\n&n Asserts More\nDr. A. H. Sellers of the School of\nScience, Unlvenity of \"INwonto. hae\nbeen awarded the Initial Hastings\nMemorial Fellowship commemorating\nthe late Dr. Hastings, medical officer\nof  health  for Toronto.\nThree Men on Trial\non Charge Operating\nLiquorRing in U.S.\nAlleged to Have Formed Company at Vancouver; Had\nSubmylnes\nSAH FRANCISCO, Nor. 39 (AP).\u2014\nWith the Introduction ot every\npiece of eTldenoe seriously contested, three men, whom the government aliased operated a liquor\nsmuggling and distribution rlnsf\nhere, went on trial before t Jury\nIn Federal Judge Harold Louder-\nbaclt's   court   here   today.\nThs defendants are John Marino,\nSan Pranclsoo, Barr; Nelson, alias\nBartlett, San Francisco, and Pete\nMagRlor*. San Jose. A fourth defendant, *Quldo Megglore, also of\nSan Jose, died last March after Indictments bad been returned aad\nthe fifth, Barry Megglore la critically 111 In a San Mateo hospital.\nCOMPANY AT\nVANCOUVER\nAssistant United Statea Attorney\nAlbert I. Bagshaw told the Jury\nhe would prove the defendants formed ths Pacific and Foreign Navigation company ot Vancouver. B.C..\npurchased submarine chasers from\nths United Statea government, and\nbegan running liquor from Canada\nto the California-Mexican ooast,\nwhete It waa transferred to smaller\nboata and landed. He said he would\nshow the alleged' ring kept in constant touch with th* llqi r ships\nby means of radio stations here and\nat Vancouver and told bow a special government sgent decoded meev\nssges between the stations and\nships over a period of several\nmonths. Bruce McWatt, who waa ir*\nrested here for operating a radio\nstation on l\u00bbth avenue, wae sentenced to McNeil Island.\nWW A, Nov. 33.\u2014(CP)\u2014Canada's\nmuseums don't amount to much, and\nbeing mora or less orphans, nobody pays a gnat deal of attention\nto them except for the small number of publlc-mlnded citizens and\nofficials who understand their value\nIn the cultural sii\" of the nation.\nThis, ln general, summarises the report of Sir Henry A. Mlers, D. Sc.,\nT.tt.. and 8. F. Markham. IU.,\non these Institutions In Canada,\ncompiled for the Carnegie corporation of New York. .\nThe two authority spent t great\npart of last yesr 'nvestlgating the\nmuseum  -Ituatlon In this  country.\nIn Csnsda there are 135 museums,\nonly a few of wMch ara directed\nalong lines that enable the general\npubllo to get any value from them\nthe   report    'ndlcates.     A    64-page\nbrochure, the report Is filled with VICTOnr\u00bb Nov n trri-r, __,\nwith observations of which very few .\"ifow?' NoT; *', tcP'-u \">\u2022\nar.   at   an   \u00abm,\u00bbilm.\u201et\u201e.   ,7 L.  f,<\"^  \"I  PWlnoW  governments\nECONOMIC MEASURES\nINSUFFICIENT   FOR\nSOLVING PROBLEM\nBHJAST, Northern Ireland, Nov.\n33 (CP oible)\u2014H. M. Pollock, mlnlater of finance, told the Northern\nIreland parliament today he was\nsatisfied the empire problem oould\nnot bs solved fully and permanently\nby purely economic measures, however great or Important they might\nbe.\nMr. Pollock, who attended the\nOttawa economic oonferenoe, said\nsolution must bo based on higher\nethical and spiritual standards.\nFILE SUIT AGAINST\nC. P. R. FOR OVERTIME\nSSATTUt, Nov. 3J.\u2014(AP)\u2014Suit to\ncollect 1431.13 from the Canadian Pacific railway company for overtime\npay for Immigrant inspectors wsa til,\ned ln federal court here today on\nbehalf of ths United Statei.\nSTABT REGISTRATION\nOr SINOLE WORKLESS\nMEN AT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 38.- -Reglstre.\ntion of single unemployed men haa\nbeen started at 411 Dunsmulr street\nand they are being despatched to\ncamps as rapidly as possible, today,\nstated Major J. O. Fordham. chairman of the special oommlsslon ln\ncharge.\nSurvey is being mads of accom,\nmodation ln tha various camps and\nall msn will be placed aa soon\nspace and squlpmsnt is available\nISSUES DECREE TO\nPROHIBIT COrrEE PLANTING\nRIO DI JANEIRO. Brazil. Nov. 39.\n\u2014(AP)\u2014Presldsnt Oetullo Vargaa issued a decree todsy prohibiting the\nplanting of coffee anywhere ln Braail\nlor a period of threo yeara.\nGERMAN  CYCLER  IN   l.S-A.\nTheodore Frankenstein, a newcomer\nln American bicycle racing elrelss.\nhalls from Germany, and la that\ncountry's outstanding rider.\nThere is a field for every type of\npicture, and by appealing to ths\none-type or Juvenile audience we've\nneglected the selective oudlenee.\nThus we've lost that larga group\nof Intelligent people who wish to\nsee different type pictures.\u2014Dsvid\nO. Selenlck, movie producer.\nCommercial dreau patten, manufacturers hav* adopted JS of the designs for children's clothing developed by the U. 8. Bureau of Home\nEconomics.\nSNUGGLE BIBLES\nINTO RUSSIA\nAre Adopting Religion Quick-\ner Than Any Other Country, Says Lecturer\nPITTBBUItaH, Pa.. Not. 23 <AP)\u2014\nThe Rev. WUllam Petler, founder of\nthe Russian missionary society, la\nPittsburgh on a lecture tour, wld\ntoday hia organization Is \"smuggling\" bibles Into Russia.\n\"We are smuggling thousands ef\nbibles across the Russian border by\nfight,\" he aald. \"The people are\nadopting religion more rapidly than\nany  other oountry ln the  world.\n\"The Plve-Year plan can not succeed. Its greatest miscalculation ls\nits oppotltion to religion.\"\nOTTAWA, Not. 23 (CP)\u2014Thousands of Mllwaynwi throughout\nCanada will be thrown into the\nranks of the unemployed If the\nEhftf oommlasion'a report la adopted,\nthe house of commons was told today when labor made ita initial attack  on   Its   recommendations.\nHumphrey Mitchell, Labor, Hamilton Bast, estimated 20,000 railway-\nI men would lose Jobs. Hon. Peter\nHeenan, who returned to overalls\nand a looomtlve cab when he left\nthe portfolio of Labor ln the King\ncabinet, placed tbe number at\n\"many thousands and thousands.\"\nBranch raUway lines would be\nscrapped, noted the former minister.\n6ervioea would be dropped and curtailed. The Canadian National and\nCanadian Pacific railways would be\ndrawn Into closer cooperation. Competition  would  disappear.\n\"Where, oh where now ls that\nslogan 'amalgamation never! competition evert\" exclaimed Mr, Heenan,\nleading over his desk and pointing\nhis finger at government members\nacross the floor.\nLABOR  NOT   REPRESENTED\nCanadian labor wu \/not represented on the Duff commission,\ncontinued the former cabinet minister. \"Instead there waa % Mr. Loree,\npresident   of   a   railway   ln   United\nlittle Attention\n. Paid fo Canadian\ns, Is Finding\nOwe Most of Their Value to\nFew Public Minded\nCitizens\nAnderson Promises Announcement\non Coalition Question Thursday\nRBGtNA. Nov 23\u2014The promise of a grand cllmai to th*\ncoalition talk that has kept political circles on edge an week was\ncontained  In  developments tonight.\nThese   developments  inn:\n1 a sUtement will hs Issued Thursday on ths decision\nreached In caucus bv govtnunant members of the legislature.\nPremier J. T. M   Anderson lntlmatad.\n2 A statement on coalition waa promised for Thursday by\nDr. i. T. Myers, Rosetown, president of the provincial conserratlvs\nOovenimant members wsnt Into caucus st the parliament\nbulldlnas at 3 o'clock this afternoon, adjourned after six to be\nentertained bv the premier at a banquet and re-asoemWed to\ncontinue deliberations  until  a lata  hour.\nDuring the interval Premier Anderson was approached for a\natatement.\n\"Tomorrow,\" was his reply.\nAMERICAN GIRL\nWANTS TO JOIN\nGANDffllNFAST\nWrites Mahatma Announcing\nIntention to Join Him\nin Next One\nMORE ABOUT\n(CONTINUED   FROM   PAOE   ONE)\nsponsible to President Von Hindenburg. be appointed. In order not\nto complicate the situation the Nasi\nleader mentioned no name for the\nchanosllorahip, according to an Informed source.\nSOLEMN PROMISE\nThe leader of the strongest party\nin Oermany closed his counter-proposal with thl* solemn promise\u2014\n\"In the event of Its acceptance I\npledge both my person and my entire movement to the solving ot\ntbe governmental crisis and thereby\nthe  saving  of   the  fatherland.\"\nMEN RETURN TO\nWORK IN C.P.R.\nCOMPANY SHOPS\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 23.\u2014Two hundred men went back to work this\nmorning at the Canadian Pacific\nrailway Drake street shops after\nhaving been laid off slnoe October\n2B. Two hundred m< . remained at\nwork.   ,\n1800   STREAM   BACK\nAT   WINNIPEO\nWINNIPEO, Nov. 23 (CP).\u2014The\ntime clocks sang merrily at the Canadian Pacific railway's Weston shops\nhere today as 1800 shop m-n streamed back to their benches after an\nenforced   layoff   of   more   than   a\nDELHI, India, Nov. 23.\u2014(AP)\u2014\nThe American girl, Nlla Cram Oook.\nwho recently embraced the Hindu\nreligion, has written a letter to\nthe Mahatma Gandhi announcing\nher intention to Join him in his\n'next  fast.*'\nThe Indian Nationalist recently\nwent through a sU-day period of\nabstention from food ln an effort\nto enforce upon upper caste Hindus\nrecognition of the principle of\nequality for the Hindu lower classes\nof   \"untouchables.\"\nMiss Cook, who to her HindU\nfriends ls known as Nlla Nagini,\nwrote that the conscience of tbs\n\"upper castes throughout the world''\nmay be roused by Mr. Gandhi's\nfast.\nWhile castes ln America may open\ntheir hearts to the down-trodden\nNegroes,\" she said.\nAt Nad heedquarters the opinion  month.\nwas expressed that the communlca- t\t\nStates within the womt working I tion paved the way for another per- 143 MEN REiVRN\nconditions in that country. He was! sonal taik between the president NORTH BAY, Nov. 23\u2014Reopening\ngood enough to be on that board.\" and the party leader ln the course of the Canadian Pacific railway loot which the president's misgivings comotlve shops and car repair de-\nabout aaklng Hitler to form a prea- partmant here today Htmm 1\u00ab\n(dial cabinet might finally be al- men, chiefly heed* of t*ml\\bs, to\nltyed> } work.   Thsy   had   been   KM   **noe\n\"Hitler can waiit.\" said Dr. HJal-  October   21.     ^^\nmar   Schacht,   former   president   of I , .   \u25a0_.'*_\u25a0__.  mntv\nthe   Relchsbank,   who   was  cleeet*  2^2J1E*  \u2122 JT\u2122\nwith   the   Nasi   chieftain   most   of\nthe afternoon. \"If he does not be-\nParliament swung today tn a full-\ndress unemployment debate. Prom\nthe opposition came general criticism of the government's reoord and\npolicies. And from the Conservative\nside, general defence.\nA steady Improvement has been\nnoted In employment figures in the\npast three months, said Hon. Wesley\nA. Oordon, minister of labor. But\nIndividual Canadians must adopt\noouraga and initiative during these\ndepressed days. \"If the people ot\nCanada would realise the opportunity there is In their own country,\nand instead o: living in Uw Indus*\ntrial oenters. get a comprehension\nof the empt'c they bave ln trust,\nthen, although there Is a dislocation\nof industry and trade ln the world\ntoday, I think there would be very\nUttle suffering or deprivation among\nthem.*    (\nIncome Taxation Has\nSpecial Significance\nto B.C. of $5,600,000\nQuestion May Be Opened at\nFederal and Provincial\nMeeting\nare   at   all   complimentary   to   the\ncountry. .\nPublic Indifference towards these\ninstitutions es at the root of the\nsituation. Canada's \"educational\nmuseums are embryonic,\" the report has it, and \"her museum endowments are negligible.\" However,\nthe investigators found much ground\nfor praise and admiration \"for what\nhas been accomplished against almost insuperable odds by a few\nenthusiastic   individuals.\"\nDemocrats Begin\nTwo-fold Program\nCalls for Farm Relief and Beer\nfor Revenue Legislation\nopen up tbe question ot Dominion\nIncome Uxatlon In the provlnoes st\nthe suttestM conference snnounced\nby Rt. aon. R. 8. Bennett thu\nweek, they will broach * subject\nthst hs< > slgnltlcsnoe of 15,800.000\nyeirly to British Columbis. That\nsum ls the estlmited return from\nfederal Income taxation In this province. In common with other provinces, BrIUsh Columbia hss always\nmaintained thtt the Income tu, at t\ndirect Impost wtt solely the in.\nrequisite . or the proTlnoet. ThU\nprinciple wu set ulde by wartime\nleiislatlon, tnd since then the ttx\nhu been continued. BrltUh Columblt receives t return subsidy fron\nthe federtl government of 1731.000\nyetrly bited on t number of factors.\nToul payments to the Dominion by\nBrltUh Columblt Cltlnna under til\nheads am said to be close to Mo,-\n000,000 yetrly.\nMORE ABOUT\nDEBTS\nBy TBANCIS M. STEPHENSON\nAssociated   Press   Staff   Writer\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 33.\u2014Democratic leaders went to work todsy\nln response' to conferences with\nGovernor Roosevelt on a two-fold\nprogram for the short session calling\nfor farm relief and beer for rev- I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)\nenue   legislation.\nThe president-elect was represented by the Democratic pilots as\nvery hopeful of avoiding an extra\nsession of the new congress ln the\nspring.\nlt was held the executive had no\n\u25a0uch power.\nSpeaker John Nance Garner, the\nvice-president-elect, v led the\nj Democratic contingent into this\nHowtver. he was said to predicate morning's cabinet room conference\navoidance of the extra session on Ut the White House, and later into\nthe enactment of legislation before patl0y w(th Mr_ BooMnK teltente*\nMarch 4. which would assure a to publlc a Uu*f expressed by\nbalanced budget for ths nation.        \u201eVcral at both meetings.\nThe    Democratic    fiscal    program \u25a0 wo ULD   THEY\nwould   be   directed   principally - *t j PEFALXTf *\nfurther econom-s In government, j -..ut thtm ^ir. M exclaimed\nNew revenue raising would be eon- ln timw to QlwltlonJ_ ..^ JJ\nfined  solely  to   the   proposed   beer they would CiauIt- Tiwy   r0n.t.,\ntax.\nEXPERIMENTAL   PLAN\nOn the farm relief the governor\nand his advisors rre centering their\nattention on an experimental plan\nto be confined at first to the\ngigantic wheat crop. It la based\non the idea of paying :> the farmer the 43 centa a bushel tariff on\nwheat which is domestically consumed.\nAnother feature of the embryonic\nfarm plan calls for establishment\nof redistributing oenters throughout the country to aid the cooperatives ln disposition of their crop\nto tbe consumers, thus cutting down\nthe spread ln price between producer and consumer.\nJust what stand the president*\nelect himself took upon Mr. Hoover's statement of policy was not disclosed before he left the capital\nioi Warm Springs. Ga. Ogden Mills,\nsecretary of tbe United states treasury,, who conferred wltl him after\na morning spent with th> president. wa\u00ab asked whether any commitments had been made by Mr.\nBoose velt.\n\"Wait and see,\" was the treasury  \u00a3&\",!\u201e\u00bb to\" thi Chit,\nsecretary's   only   reply.\nAssociates of Roosevelt said he\nhad  made  no  oommltment.\nPresident Hoover suggested ln his\nstatement that the agency he proposed \"to exchange views\" with\nforeign debtors should be 'osely\nallied \"with the United SUtes dele,\ngatlon to the worl4 eoonomlc con>\nmonths.\"\nDomestic Servants\nHold Elaborate Ball\nNearly 5000 Cooks, Footmen,\nMaids; Valets and Butlers\nat London Ball\nMONTREAL. Nov. 3S (OP)\u2014No\none wu late for work tt Angus\nShops todty u 3400 htppy Canadian Pacific railway workers Jostled\nbtck to work after t lengthy Ity-\noff.\nNot only t\u00bb workers, but their\nwlvu tnd ftmllles. rejoiced.\nReceiver Appointed\nProperty of Friars\nFamous Theatrical Club to Go\nOut; Organized 28\nYears Ago\nA new mtrk ln whist drives for\nthe present season wss set by tho\nCanadian legion Wednesday night\nwhen 132 persons participated ln Its\nmilitary drive. The number playlnj\nmade up 31 tablet.\nA triple tie resulted wtth Australia.\nIreland and Africa dividing honors\nwith 34 flags. In the cut Australia\nwon' out. Bams' wera given for\nprises.\nThose occupying ttble Australia\nwere H. Elliott, A. Patton, Miss E.\nHunden and Miss M. Hunden. Africa\nwu occupied by Mr. and Mn. F.\nFoster and Mr. tnd Mm. O. Mulr of\nSouth Slocan, while Miss F. Sherrl-\ndan. Miss JS. Wlnsor, H. Stirzaker\nand R. Harrison occupied table\nIreland.\nRefreshmenU tnd dancing foUowed ctrdt. ,\nK. T. Brake wu muter of ceremonies tnd t oommlttee composed\nof Mrs. T. Frost, Mrs. R. Riley, F.\nHartwig,. tnd A. Elliott convene!\ntfftlrs.'\nLONDON, Nov. 93 (CP ctble).\u2014\nNearly 6000 cooks, parlor maids,\nvalets, butlers, and chauffeurs gathered lut night at Albert htll In jn^ YORK, \/Nov. >\u00bb.\u2014(AP)\u2014A\nthtlr finest tttirs for the West \u201e__uet w\u201e appointed todty for all\nEnd btll for domestic servants.\nThe beauty of the ltdles tnd tbe\nchfvtlry of tlfe gentlemen combined with t general feeling of Joy\nand   happiness   and   the   ball   wu\ngrett  success.\nIn the meantime, the masters\ntnd mistresses of Mayfair either\ndined tt restaurants or contented\nthemselves with something cold from\nthe Ice box and t \"spot of tet.\"\nThe btll wu promoted by Ltdy\nMalcolm, wlft of sir ltn Mtlcolm,\nnoted tuthorlty on foreign tfftlrs.\ntnd for years hu been widely ijec-\nogntsed. both by the employees who\ntttend lt tnd the employers who\nmtke poulble Itt large attendance.\nAnnual Statement\nHolds Wheat Growers\nAction of Delegates on the National Wheat- Board Is\nIndefinite\nCALOARY, Nov. 33 (CP).\u2014With\nthe annual statement of R. C. Pin-\nlay, treasurer of the Canadian Cooperative Wheat- producers, Limited,\nstill under review, delegate; to the\nannual meeting of the Alberta\nWheat Pool adjourned tonight to\nmeet  again  tomorrow.\nIt was still Indefinite tonight\nwhether the delegates would take\nany action regarding the proposal\nfor a national wheat board, supported tn the annual report of the\ndlreoetora which wu before the convention yesterday. Officials said tbe\nquestion, IX any action were anticipated, would go before the delegates\nIn the form of a resolution based\non the directors' report. So far\nthe resolution has not been prepared.\n190 BOXES APPLES\nFOR TRAIL NEEDY\nDONATED, ROBSON\nTRAIL, B. 0., Nov. J3\u2014Total of\n100 boxes of apples htve been given\nto the Tnll Community Chest by\nthe Robton Cooperative exchtnge\nfor distribution ln t truck lotd.\nJohn Wildle brought ln t truck\nlotd of 100 tnd an additional B0\nboxes wtrt given by, the exchange\nwhen t truck wu sent out fram\nTrtU.\nIn addition t ftw sacks of po-\ntstoet   tnd   other   vegetables   htve\nHert ls the man  (Samutl Insull)\nwho   ukt   to   bt   protected   from'. _tnac tnd to tht general dlttrm-\nAmerlctn llbtrty, under which un|lm,nt   conference.\"\nart   murdered   by   machine-guns   ln  ,\t\nthe streets. It such t mtn u thit |    j,. ora,r to conserve tht blutberry\nJ. H. SCHOFIELD, M.P.P.\nLEAVES FOR COAST\nTRAIL. B. C, Nov. 33\u2014J. H.\nSchofield, M.PF. left TrtU this\nmorning to tttend the British Columbia oonventlon of tbe Conservatives being held st Vsnpouver, Friday tnd stturdty. He wu the only\nTrtU delegate going to the conven-\noapable of trying to escape Justloe? crop of Chlppevt county, MIcMgtn, |uon,\nI \u2014Crlstoe Ladu, Greek attorney uk-  tbe   stttt   hu   ordered   thst   blue-'    I'   wu  understood  Mr.  Schofield\nlng   reletse   of   Samuel   Insull   la   I   berries on ststr-c-ned Isnds msy bewu to Join Lieut. Col. Fred Lister,\nAthens. picked only by hand. M.P.P. for creaton, on ths trtln.\nthe property of frltrs, famous theatrical club which hu numbered\namong Its members many of the\nworld's greatest tctors.\nThe receiver wu tppolnted be-\nctuw tht club wu unablt _to pty\nt bill of 11.130.40 for butter, eggs\nand cheese.\nTht mars, of which Oeorge M.\nCohen Is the head tnd Alfred E.\nSmith tn honartry member, wu or-\ngenlaed 38 yeart tgo u t ttrlctly\nstag ttfalr. Seldom hu a woman\nentered IU portals.\nThe tnnutl Friar's frolic hu be-\ncomt a tradition along Brotdwty.\nMORE ABOUT\nPREPMEKPLY\n(CONTINUED FBOM PAOE ONE)\nlng   concrete   reasons why,   In  the\nBritish view, tbt Deo. IB payments\nshould bt suspended pending recon-\ntlderttton of tht entire question.\nHIGHLIGHTS\nEspeclsl Interest wu tttached to\ntwo highlight! of tht president's\nsUtement. First, tn Intimation thtt\nothtr forms of ttnglblt compensation thtn cuh might be of tdvtn-\ntegt to tht UnlUd stttet (such u\nexpansion of markets for tht producU ot United Statu agriculture\ntnd ltbor, In tbt preeldenft words i\nmd tscond hit Intimation thtt\ndebtors might be tllowed to pty In\ntheir own currencies.\nIn official clrdM tonight there\nwu a disinclination to discuss the\nsuggestion of how tbe debts might\nbe met otherwise thtn ln ot\u00abb, unUl the actual proposals are received.\nAuother point In the president's\ndedtratlon, that reiuratlng tht\nAmerican policy of treating each\ndebt settlement separately, occs-\nsloned no surprise ln London.\nThe United Kingdom hu well realized this policy tnd htt ttken the\nutmost care to guard tgainst any\naction which would give tny grounds\nfor the belief the debtors of the UnlUd SUtes were tctlng In concert.\nA \"united front\" It Uve intlthettt of\nBritish policy.\nSo Itr u the president's sUtement\nthtt no facU had yet been presented\nJustifying postponement of the De.\ncemtftr payment, wu concerned, no\ndoubt wu felt ln government circles\nthtt the case would be supported\nby powerful argumenU.\nVANCOUVER CITY\nTO OPPOSE CUTS\nIN THEIR GRANT\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 38.\u2014Any movement by the provincial government to\nreduce its grants to tha city of Van-\ncouer will meet with vigorous opposition from clvlo authorities.\nThis was forecast at this afternoon's\nmeeting of the civic finance committee when aldermen adopted a resolution protesting against Victoria's\nreported plans to reduce grants to\nmunicipalities.\n132 PERSONS PLAY\nAT LEGION WHIST\nOccupants of Table 'Australia'\nWins on Cut With Africa,\nand Ireland\nMale Glee Club\nPresents Program\nWednesday Next\nA musical treat ls in store for\nKelson music lovers on Wednesday\nevening November 30, when the Nelson Male Glee club presents a -program in Bt. Paul's church under\nleadership of 7. JS. Wheeler.\nIn all 30 male voices will he heard\non the program while the artists\nwlU be auisted by U local musicians and  two outside artists.\nProceeds will be in aid of the\nmusic fund so that additional concerts may be given during the oomlng season.\nQuebec to Oppose\nMingling of Pros\nWith Amateurs\nMONTRIAL, Nov. 23.\u2014(CP)\u2014Quebec delegatea to tha annual meet*\nlng of the AJI.U. of 0. at Ottawa\nnext month will take a definite\nstand on the question permitting\nprofessionals in one sport to register\nss amateurs In other sports, Leo E.\nBurns, president of the Quebec\nbranch  stated  today.\nIt was unofficially reported that\nMontreal officials In many branches\nof sport were enthusiastically in support of the move made ln western\nCanada hut no one has yet been\narmed with official authority to\nvote for the amendment, tt was\nconsidered likely, however, tbat a\nblock of votes from thh province\nwould be aligned with the western\ndelegates supporting the proposed\namendment.\nLABOR CANDIDATE\nELECTED CALGARY\nCITY COMMISSIONER\nCALOART, NOV. 33 \u2014(CP)\u2014T. B.\nRiley tonight became the first Labor\ncandidate to be elected city commissioner of the city of Calgary. He\nwas elected by a strong majority In\ntoday'a civic elections over A. O.\nOraves, present incumbent, and Phil\nLuck, candidate ot the United Front\nparty.\nThere's Health\nfor You\nin My Treatment\nAs m woman like you IJ\nhave endured heAdaches, I\nb a c k a dies, constipation, J\nnervous attacks, sleeplessness. Experience and study have taught me\nthe remedies. Now I can help you.\nSimply send me particulars about\nyourself, and I wtll forward, Absolutely Free, ten days' trial treatment. I have helped hundreds ol\nwomen.\nMRS. M. SUMMERS\nCare  of  Vanderhoof A Co.\nBOX   101   WINDSOR.   ONT.\nFor   aale   by   leading   druaglflte.\na-2j\n 9THE  NELSON  DAILV   NtWS,   NELSON,   B.C.\u2014THIKSDAY   MOKMMi,   NOtLMNr.H   21.   IM.'\u2014 r*\nI\nFORMER CRESTON\nMAN IS MARRIED\nCBWTON B. C. NOV. 23\u2014Murel\nOlson, who \u00ab. few years ago was\nassistant C. p. R. agent at Creston,\nI nd stnee then Canadian customs\nurfioer at Kingsgate, becs^n* a\nIwnedict at Spokine last week, ac-\nDonUnfl to word Just received here.\nIbi bride la Miss Myrtle Flowers\nof Hollywood Oallf. They will re-\nAide   at   Kingsgate.\nlm. B. B. Staliwood of Nelson\nwas an Armistice weekend visitor\nwith her parents, Cl, and Mrs.\nrred  Lister.\nMr. and Un. H. W. Fortin aro\nJust hack from a short holiday\nvisit with Spokane friends.\nPred T lelt for Cranbrook on\nMonday, where he Is temporarily\nrtsuming work as C. P. B. fireman.\nMiss Helen Nystrom was a visitor with her friend. Miss Helen\nMarshall, at Cranbrook during the\npast week.\nMrs. Cecil Moore returned Irom\nCranbrook on Tuesday where she\nhaa been visiting with her husband,\nCecil Moore, who ls a patient at\nSt. Eugene hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. A. N. Couling were\nrenewing acquaintances in Bonners\nFerry the fore part of the week.\nR. Stevena of Camp Lister was\nlu town at the first of the week\nen route to Trail on a visit with\nhis son, Ernest. He will also make\na short stay in Nelson before returning.\nMAKE ADDITION TO\nCRESTON FACTORY\nA Mother Watches Her Son Become President of U.S.\nCRESTON, B. C Nov. 23\u2014Work-\nmen have Just completed work on a\ncement structure 13x32 feet at the\nCharles O. Rodgers box factory and\nsawmill. The new building will be\nused aa a dry kiln for the box factor\" veneer aa weU as for the cut\nof flooring and the better grades of\nlumber. The structure will require a\nfew daya to \"set,\" and when lt is\nready a mechanic will be here from\nVancouver to take charge of installing the Interior equipment.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Celli of Coleman, Alta., are here at present looking after late fall operations at their\ncherry ranch east of town.\nMr. and Mrs. J. O. Connell left\nWednesday on a visit with relatives\nand frienda at Edmonton and other\nnorthern Alberta points.\nEach Spoonful\nMeans\nHealth Insurance\nl#l i  rcgulirfy\nSCOTT'S\nEMULSION\n. ft    oi Norwesisn\n\/      i,    Cod Liver Oil\nj.4 I    Build; Resistance\nsi      Easy to Digest\nProudest mother ln the V. S. A.,\nbnt betraying none of her emotions,\nMrs. sara Delano Roosevelt, mother\nof President-elect Franklin D. Booee\nvelt, Is shown at the right In the (headquarters In New York, In her\nphoto left above, as she received sister, Mrs. Dora Fort<w. Right\u2014\nthe news of his sweeping victory. Mrs. Roosevelt voting for her son\nHeated    with    her,    In    Democratic, for president  at   Hyde   Park,  N.  V.\nREV. JANZO HOLDS\nSERVICES, SALMO\nu\t\nRoad to Gold Belt Mine Finished; Manager of Queen's\nIs Back\nCAPE FLIER TO\nSTART LAST LEG\nPraises Home Treatment for Bladder\nWeakness, Backache, Irritation\nNo matter whst your age may be,\nhow long you have been troubled or\nhow many medicines you have tried\nwithout success\u2014If you are a victim of functional Bladder weakness\nand irritation, causing days of\ntroublesome annoyance and nights\nof Broken Rest, you are invited to\ntry the wnazing value of Dr. South-\nworth's \"Uratabs\" without risk of\ncost unless pleased with the results.\n\"Made from a special formula\nused by the doctor for over 40 years.\n\"Uratabs\" are designed to sw'ftly relieve the pain and misery of Burning Urethral irritations. Backaches,\nfrequent dally annoyance and\ntroublesome nights. Any good druggist will supply you on a guarantee\nof money back on the first box purchased if vou are not wonderfully\nsatisfied with swift and positive relief obtained.\nSALMO, B. C, Nov. 33\u2014The Rev.\nCarl C. Janzow of Nelson held\nLutheran services In Salmo Sunday.\nMrs. M. McCaslin had as her guest\nover the week-end her daughter\nMiss Merle who attends high achool\nat  Creston.\nMrs. M- C. Donaldson, daughter\nPeggy and Shirley, and aon William\nof Nelson, apent the week-end at\ntheir   home    here.\nMr. and Mrs. Chester Bush have\ntaken   up   residence   tn  town.\nMr. and Mrs. Dory and family\nhave taken up residence In their\nnew home.\nMiss Winnie Bush Is visiting In\nNelson   with   friends.\nAlfred  Cawley returned to Nelson\nSunday    after    spending    the    past\nweek   here  with  his  parents  while\non the sick  list.\nMANAGER   QUEE1  S   BACK\nMr. Witer, manager of the Queen's\nmine returned from Spokane Monday. He waa eccompanled by Mrs.\nWitter  and Miss Elaine De Witt.\nMrs. W. B. De Witt of the Queen\nmine ls spending a few days in\nNeiaon, the guest of her brother-\nin-law and elster, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nQ.   Bunyan.\nFriends of Carl Troyer of Metaline Falls were vsry sorry to hear\nof hia death ln the lone hospital\nrecently.\nMrs. C. A. Cawley was a oharm-\ning hostess. Wednesday afternoon\nwhen she entertained, at a Jolly\nparty In honor of her daughter\nMarjorlea' sixth blrthdsy anniver-\nary. The little invited guests were:\nJoyce Bremner, Eva Maude Leaky,\nJacqueline Johnson, June Fair, Doreen Gibbons, Dorothy Hansen, Max-\nine Lindow and Hrtoml Lindstrom.\nROAD  COMPLETED\nTho road to the Gold Belt has\nbeen completed under the supervision of W. Orutchfleld road foreman.\n. Mike O'Donnell was visitor to\nSalmo on his way to the Gold Belt\nwhere he is foreman.\nMrs.   H.   H.   Townsend   is   visiting\nher   son-in-law   and   daughter   Mr.\nand  Mrs.   Archie  Oray.\nSON   DOWN\nMrs. M. M. Caslln received word\nof the birth of a wn to Mr. -and\nMra. E. Bhear of Spokane. Mrs.\nBhcar was formerly Miss Pean McCaslin.\nW. R. Salsbury and daughter Miss\nEdna and granddaughter Lois Brown\niof Penticton have taken up residence in town.\nORAN, Algeria, Nov. 33 (OP cable).\n\u2014Victor Smith, 18-year-old Cape\nTown flier, planned to take off\non the last leg of his flight from\nthe Cape of Oood Hope to England.\nThe youthful aviator arrived here\nafter making a KW-miie flight\nacross the Sahara from Gao, French\nWest Africa, ln 21 hours and 35\nminutes.\nLegion Presents\nPlaque Honoring\nCreston Mothers\nCurling Activities\nDiscussed, Creston\nCRESTON, NOV. 23\u2014There waa\nquite a good turnout of members\nof Creston Curling club at the town\nhall on Tuesday night for tbe\npurpose of an informal discussion\nof the coming season's activities.\nThe chair was occupied by President\nM. R. Joyce, with R. M. Chandler\nas secretary. The club ls ln possession of some funds and the meeting decided on some improvements\nat tb^ rink. The foundation of the\ntwo rinks will be carefully gradei\nand some more sand fill put in\nwhich Is anticipated will help get\naway from the \"crooked ice\" encountered ln past winters.\nKOOTENAY RIVER\nOBSTRUCTION IS\nBEING REMOVED\nCREETON B, C. NOV. 23\u2014A tug\nwith barge ln tow, and * crew of\neight tte now st work on the Kootenay River between Bonner* Ferry\nand the boundary at PortHUI-\nRykerta, removing the trees, sunken legs, ani other obstructions to\nnovlgation on that strean. A stock\nof powJer is also sbosrd tho craft\nan3 Is being used in some quantity.\nThe work ls In charge of an engineer fnom the U. S. ro.rine department, ard from present appearances the Job wiil not be completed till about the end of December. A similar work was done\nabout three years agj, and the\ndecision to again undertake the\nwork on * more thorough scale\nIs due tbe fact that navigation hM\nbeen resumed cm the river in\nccnectlon with the movement of\nthe grain crops on the dyked lands\nin the Kootenay Valley, which\nnow total over 20.000 acres, not\nall cf which, of course, are dependent on barge movement of the crops.\nNew Westminster\nMan Is Awarded\nTyrrell Medal\nOTTAWA, Nov. 23 (CP>. \u2014 The\nRoyal Society of canads baa awarded the Flavelle medal for 1033 to\nDr. Joseph Tyrrell, of Toronto, and\nthe Tyrrell medal to Judge Frederick W. Howay, of New Westminster,\nB.C.\nDr. Tyrrell ls fellow of the\nRoyal Bociety of Canada, the Royal\nGeological Society of Ingland and\nthe Geological Society of America\nHe ls not only a geologist and\nmining expert of international reputation, but one of the greatest living Canadian explorers.\nSCHOOL STANDING\nIS GIVEN AT YMIF\nTMIR B. C. NOV. M\u2014 Standing\nof the Tmlr school pupils for the\nmonth of October was:\nOrade 1\u2014Lena Fraser, Evelyn\nHarris,   Elsa  Anderson.\nOrade 2\u2014Florence Slako, Molly\nPlctln,    Vera   Harris,    and   Thomaa\nAnnette Keltermon. One-\nPiece Bathing Suit Pioneer\nMrs. W.H. Wilson Is\nHostess, Cranbrook\nIn Honor Mrs. C. E. White;\nMiss Mary Maltman Wfaw\nPrize\nCRANBROOK.    B.    C,    No*.    W\nMiss  May   Kennedy   was this  week*\nhostess    when   the    girl's   BrtdpMi\nclub   met.     Miss  Kennedy   and   Dot\nSpenoe   holding   the   high   ecqpea.\nMiss Jean Fleet was thta week'.\nhostess to the Girl's Contract dub.\nMias Mabel Parker and Miss Bett?\nGreen holding the hljfh scores. _U\nMarion Fleet and Mlaa L. Henderson  acted  as substitutes.\nMrs. church entertained the\nThursday evening bridge at her\nhome this week. The prizes belnt\nwon by Miss Delia Baxter and Mrs\nWhlttaker.\nMrs. W. H. Wilson was a luncheon\nhostess on Saturday ln honor of Mre.\nE. White, nee Mias Marion MacKinnon of Klmberley. White Chrysanthemums were used ln dee-\norating the table. After luncheon\nNewmarket waa played, the high\nscore being won by Mliw May Malt-\nmnn., The invited guesta were: Mrs.\nWhite, Mre. A. A. MacKinnon, Mrs.\nBride, Miss May Mailman. Miss Aubrey Mckowan. Miss Delia Baxter,\nMiss Ivy Dezall. Miss Kathleen Dezall, MIbs Dorothy McKowan, Misi\nLylltan   Jackson.\nCranbrook Gyros who motored to\nTrail to be present at the initiation\nceremonies at the installation of\nofficers of the new Gyro club there\nwere: Messrs. R. Harris, R. t. San?.\nD. Gray and p. Katserllls.\nIt's a far cry from the days when suit, to present times when  scanty\ncostumes,  like   those   worn  by   An-\nAnnette Kellerman (shown upper\nright as she ap :ars today) waa arrested in Boston for the \"indecency,\"   of   her   one-piece    bathing\nwffigwp*\n*\u00a3\u00bbS!\nnette's swimmlr - companions (left\nand lower right) in Paris, have become commonplace at almost every\nbeach.\nSlattery   (tied),   Walter  Clarke   unranked  Sigrid   Nord.\nGrade 3\u2014Shirley Stevens, Alvln\nSlattery, Thomaa Clarke, Bdlle Flag-\nel,   Polly   Verigin,   Perry   Anderson.\nGrade 4\u2014Francis Plctln, Mike\nPlctln.    .\nGrade  5\u2014Mike  Pognlkoff,   Orlstaf\nWagei,    Evely    H nilson,    Charlotte\nAnderson,   Jfcraes   Grant,   unranked\nFrancis Hanson, Annie Nord.\nGrade  0\u2014Jack  Grant, Sam Veri\ngin, and Harry Stevena (tied), Annie\nKalesnlkoff. ,\\\nOrade   7\u2014Jamee Tilton-,  Woodrow\nAnderson, Annie  Flagel, t-.~r.er Pet- \u25a0\ncrson. i\nThe war changed the world. This\nis not my world any more, ln\n*93', twenty-five years after It, the\ncountry hadn't recovered from the\nCivil War. now, I don't know what's\ncoming,  but  I shan't  see  itr\u2014Miss\nIda  M.  Tarbell,   75,   author.\nComplexion Curse'\nShelhoughtshewtajurt unlucky when he called\non her once\u2014avtwlci hre thereaitw. But noon*\nadmires pimply, blemished tl\nwomen are realizing that p;\nare often danger signili c\nimiflouotix wastes ravaging the V, \u2014\n(Nature's Remedy) affotd complete, thorouuh\nelimination and prompUy eaae away bewrtv-\nruining poisonous mailer Fine lor Bick headache, bilitius conditions, dlaineas. Try this sale,\ndependable,all-\n7^'_i^f\\x.\ngi\u00bbll'-^>nly25c\"\nCRESTON, B. C, Nov. 23\u2014The\nplaque oomraemoratlnft the mothers\nof Creston Valley, who loat sons ln\nthe great war, presented by Boundary post American legion, Bonners\nFerry. Idaho, at the Armistice day\nexercises here, and entrusted,to the\nsafe keeping of Creston Valley post,\nls on display at a local store.\nThe plaque ia of silver mounted\non oak and bears tbe inscription.\nTo the gold star mothers of Creston, British Columbia, and vicinity,\nwhose sons made ths supreme sacrifice In the world war, this tablet Is\ndedicated by the Amerloan legion\nof Idaho, U.S.A., 1933.\"\nA chain ls suspended from the\nbase of the plaque, and supports a\nneat gilt-framed scroll about six by\nfour Inches, whereon is Inscribed.\n\"Gold star mothers of Creston, British Columbia, and vicinity: Mrs. F.\nRoss, Mrs. J. Wood, Mrs. J. Smith,\nMrs. L. Leamy, Mrs, K. Howard, Mrr\nR. Stewart. Mrs. C. E. Ross, Mrs. J.\nArrowsmith, Mrs. J. Stocks, Mrs. F\nPenson, Mrs. J. Johnson, Mrs. H\nTruscott, Mrs. E. Simmons, Mrs. H\nBrownrigg, Mrs. Burn-Murdoch, Mrs\nF. B. Turner, Mrs. E. Butterfield.\"\nBooklets and\nPamphlets\nOur battery of Linotype machines enables\nns to set type for booklets and pamphlets at\n\u2022 moderate coet and with great speed and accuracy.\nte us print your next order; you will find\nthat we An give you a good job, excellent service, and a moderate price.       , .\nThe Nelson Daily News\nJob Department\nPhone 144 Nelson B. C.\nSmiths Entertain\nat Dinner, Moyie\nMOYIE. B- C, Nov. 3J\u2014Oscar\nBurch of Chapman Camp spent the\nweek-end with his mother Mrs. B.\nBurch.\nMr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith had as\ntheir guests to dinner on Sunday,\nMr. and Mrs. S. E. Fyles. Mrs. Nelson L. Smith and little son Eddie,\nall of Cranbrook. Mrs. Smith and\nson ls spending a few days with\nher   husband's   parents.'\nMrs. Mary Conrad returned to\nher home on Sunday, after spending\na few days In Chapman Camp, the\nhpuse guest of ^er daughter Mrs.\nRay Curran. She also visited at the\nhome of her son Frank Conrad and\nfamily.\nMrs. J. Taylor visited friends in\nCranbrook,   during   the   week.\nMrs. H. Hogg and little daughter\nHelen-Jean spent Thursday night\nat the home of her mother Mm.\nA.   Pearson   in  Cranbrook.\nMiss Maggie Smith of Cranbrook\nla the house guest of Mrs. B. Ballantyne.\nW. R. French, after spending several months in Alberta, returned\nto Moyie by car on Saturday. While\nhere he la visiting at the home\nof Mrs.  E.  Cameron.\nNelson L. Smith with his mother,\nMrs. R. A. Smith, and Mrs. C. James\nspent Friday evening with Mrs. F.\nGulndon.\nTMIR  BRIEFS\nSee\nWindow\nDisplay\n|? ttitfi\u00bbf*'ft\u00abt| (IamjMtt\u00a3,\nSee\nWindow\nDisplay\nINCORPORATED   2?? MAV 1670.\nTMIR B. C. NOV. 33\u2014J. H. Duck\nof NeUon end Johnny Del? ehot\n. elf deer laat wett.\nMra. NwaM D\u00bbIy la Ttolting with\nrelatione In Neiaon thia weet.\nW- Qulnn ta * patient In the\nKootenay Lake Oeneral hoapltel.\nt. P. Crawford and Andrew Burgee, were vleltora to the Reno mine\non Tueedasf. Mr. Crawford and\nO. C. Thompson \u00abr\u00bb leaving hy\nmotor for Vancouver.\nOne-third of all the eeuertreut\npacked In the United statea la put\nup ln factorlee ln a radlua of W\nmilea of the New Tork state Experiment Station at Oeneva.\nFECIAL! 200 MEW'S\n TTO MEASIUU^\nr suJ\nWHEN we say tailored, we mean TAILORED\nTO FIT ... and we guarantee this. You've\nheard of tailored-to-measure opportunities before\u2014but we've seen these fabrics and we\nKNOW this is a sensational, unparalleled offer!\nYou can't afford to miss it!\nExpert Clothiers Measure You!\nNo Extra Charge for Oversizes!\nNo Extra Charge for Try-Ons!\nMatched Celanese Sleeve and\nBody Linings!\nChoice of 30 Beautiful Fabrics\nYou'll be delighted when you see our range of fabrics\u2014\nblue and grey serges and fancy worsteds in many fashionable new weaves.\nMen's Clothing.\n--\u2014_ Main Floor\u2014H B C\nAmazing m\nValue*   Hudson's Bay Company's\nEnormous Buying Power Brings You This Unparalleled Value. Oa Sale\nfor 4 Days Only . THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATW^AY and MONDAY\nExhaParfs\n1400\n*\u00a9\u00ab TiPT)osit\nrder\n mm text\nWOMAN'S PAGE\nParisians Take Chic fey the Necfr\nA sapphire blue niching bf ribbon\nis the muter touch on a pale blue\ncrepe romalne evening dress from\nWorth.\nA   sable-ed.ed   oape   back   dUtin-\ngulshee a Worth gown ln pels helge\ncrepe.\nTen Rules by a Famous Authority\nRule 7-KEEP OUT OF RUTS\nHow to Stay Married\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nTh* other day ther pulled *ah* &\" \u2022 foiling that lovemaUng **\nFrenchman out of the Seine, where\nhe had tried to drown himself. \"Why\ndid you do that?\" gasped the rescuer.\nIlie would-be Tictlm smiled ' wanly\nand said:\n\"LUe U so daily.\"\nAnd \"dally** tk u for the millions\nwho are horn, marry and die\u2014always\nln a rut. Life becomes the equivalent\nol eating the same meal three timet a\nday, 806 daya a year, and not having\nenough imagination or energy to vary\nthe menu.\nSoma couples even stop talking at\nhome, not from sulks or because.\nlike ex-president Ooolldge, they \"dont\nohooee to\" but from sheer sluggishness. They drift Into a tort of grunting language suggestive of the Jungle\nand our primitive ancesters. If they\ndo talk. It's tbout boresome trivialities.\nDo you know tbe formula girli resort to, when they wonder If the man\nand woman at the next table at the\nrestaurant, or In a nearby seat at\ntbe theatre, are married? They observe them for a few minutes, and\nIf the silence and boredom are profound, they conclude that they're\nmarried. Not always ls this cynical test\ntrue, but far too often.\nThe \u00abvent of the day to which the\nnormal family looks forward la the\nevening meal. A good story, an amusing happening, anything Interesting\nahould be saved for the dinner table.\nBut with tha average rut-dweiUng\nmarried couple dinner often degenerates Into a suffering match ftt one\nend of the tabla and a starvation\nmarathon ftt the other\u2014tf madame\nhappens to be dieting. A husky word\nnow and then may break the funeral\nsilence.\nyrho's to hl*me? Both. Tbe once\nhappy lovers have lei themselves\ndrift into the doldrums. They're becalmed and too sluggish to steer out\not thetr de-.dly dullness. Very likely\nthe trouble began with the husband,\nwho dropped love-making as aoon as\nhe returned from the honeymoon.\nThe best, most liberal, most fore-\nbearing mate ln the world ls this same\nAmerican husband\u2014but ha Is the\nmost limited of love makers. Raving\nequipped the plant, stocked the pantry, agreed on a suitable allowance to\nhis wife, he cut out love making, the\npretty compliments and little attentions that mean far more to his mate\nthan limousines and pearl necklaces.\nmovie stuff, or something peculiar to\nforeigners, and not quite worthy the\ndignity of an American business man.\nHe bat a vague feeling too, that\nthe \"little woman** isn't strong for lt\neither, but, dear American husband,\nstop, look, listen! Watch the \"little\nwoman\" make for the radio when\nthe crooners begin.\nSome women In time become acclimated to the chilly temperature\nof ft home where the husband ii\nabout ts responsive as a tailor's dummy. These are likely to lose heart and\ntake to \"crimpers\" at the breakfast\ntable. Their homes take on the petrified look that you recognise at a\nglanoe. Old newspapers and magazine*\n;\u00bb~e shoved Into comers. Artificial\nflowers gather dust, everything seems\nto be waiting for something to wake\nlt up. But the radio Is likely to go\nfrom morning to night, in the hope lt\nmap emit a sentimental ballad to\nhearten the love-starved wife.\nIn such households, each knows\nsomething ls wrong. Deadly dullness\nhas smothered Uie fire on tbe hearthstone. The man knows he's liberal and\nfaithful, and he means to be kind.\nThe woman knows he bat fed her\nyouth, suoh beauty as shs bad, her\ngifts and talents Into tbe domestic\nhopper, and has gotten out of It a\ndull man who doesn't seem aware of\nhar.\nA little Imagination, common sense\nand unselfishness would help lift the\nblight, but too often they keep\ndown Monotony street until they\ncome to its bitter end\u2014at Reno.\nTo avoid this tomb-like existence-\nput a few questions to yourself be.\nfor you takt that step to ths altar\u2014\nso hard to retrace. How about the man\nor woman you're considering for\nlife partner\u2014what have you got to\nfall back on, when the kissing slows\ndown? Do you both enjoy the out-of-\ndoors- Do you like the country end\ncamping\u2014or does that Just mean ants,\nmosqultles and smoky first to tome\ntown-bred man or girl.\nDoet one like to read, and the other\nhate books? Do you argue over religion, politics, the way children should\nbe reared, the amount of freedom one\nshould enjoy after marriage? Do you\nlike the same type o. movies? What\nis there for this proposed life partner to fall back on, ln tba way of\ncongenial tastes, Interests in common,\nwhen the honeymoon will be a thing\nof tha past? Stop, look, lister I\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBj LACBA A. HUMAN\nTout\nTOMOHROW'S   MEND\nBreakrast\nLeftorer Prune,\nCereal\nCodfish   Cake,\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nPrench  ToMt\nSirup\nrrult Oup Macaroon.\nTn\nDinner\ncream of Corn Boup\nOold   Slice i  Turkw\nPickle.\nMo, Squaeb\nrrult   Wed\nCup   Custards Coffe,\nGAMES  FOI A  CROWD\nA reader Mend haa Written to wk\nma for game, suitable for a crowd\nto play. \"When our relative, gather\nat holiday tlmea,\" aaya her letter,\n\u2022we sometlmee find lt a little dull\nafter mealtime. Several oouaine dont\nplay oardr, ao we can't Indulge In\nbridge. Can you suggest some con-\nteate which old and young cm\nenjoy   together?\"\nAn Observation Contest la always\nfun. Put a number of object, on a\ntable, such as a hammer, screwdriver, tall, spoon, knitting needle,\nthimble, scissors. Ink bottle safety\npin snd postage stamp. Aak tbe\ngathered company to study this\ngroup of articles tor three minutes\nby the clock. Then throw t cloth\nover the table, and pass around\nsheet, of paper and pencils. OKe\neverybody five mlnutea ut which to\njot down the objecte of which they\ncan recall (not helping'one anoth-\nerl) Awwd aome simple prtae for the\nmoat correct Ust Of articles.\nA Vocsl Endurance Contest Is another fun-provoker. Ask everybody\nto atart singing s different song,\nand see who can stick tt th, tune\nhe has chosen, ln spite of the beldam around hlml Tbe player who\nholds out longest, might receive, as\noomlo prue. s ten-oent pscksge\nof cough drops.\nSafety Pin Forfeits: Pin \u00bb large\nsstety-pln on every player. Have\neverybody question everybody else.\nNobody must snswer a question with\n\"Tes\" or \"No.\" If they do, the\nquestioner takes the safety-pin trom\nthe one who his made the mistake-\nIn time, a clever questioner, collects\nalmost sll of the aafety-plnal\nIHe ^Beauty3\n<Box\nBy HELEN POLLHT\n= THI NELION DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014THUnSDAY MOKTOTO, NOTEMBOt t- VKttttttt\nDecollete Keeps Us Balance at W outlines Fall\nON THE AOL TONIGHT\nKOO NETWOK a.1***- C**T\n\u25a0OO-ERQ'EOMO-Sn-KOW   \u2022VAXCOBTO*\nit*   ne    nt    tit   trxo\ntM Capt Henry's Show Bost\n1X0 Moor, danoe muelc. OKecfe and\nBaron Munchausen\n8:00 Aim, 'n' Andy\nfill Symphony hour\n8:18 Howard Thurston, magician\n0:80 Concert to rytbm, Ben Klusen,\ntenor, Polsk's orchestra\n10:00 News flashes\n10:18 Danoe   muslo,    Phll     Harris'\nsnd Sari   Burnett's orcb Altera.\nuaftDollo Sargent, organist\nHill\nKPO  NETWORK\nKPO - KOA - KJB \u2022 KEX\n880       1470       DIO       IMO\n8:80 Polio, chief Quln (KPO)\n8:4 J Cecil snd Sally   (KPO)\n7:00 Mod* Lowe, Edna Fisher\n7:15 Taraan of the Apee (KPO)\n7:30 Log O- the Day, Dr. L. Cross\n\u00bb:00 Myron Nlealey, tenet\n8:10 Sodero'a NBO orch.. fm. N.Y.\n0:00 The  Ooldberge,  strip\n8:18 Synco-Tbota, piano duo\n0:30 Hollywood on the air\n10:00 Pigskin Romanoee, ftbll drama\n10:80 Ship of dreams, orch., soloists\n11 tt> Pacific Serenade\u2122 and Orch.\n1140 Tom Gerun's orchestra\nCOLUMBIA NETWORK\nKOL-KVI-KOIN -K8L-KFBC\n1170     870       148     UM     810\n8:00 Muslo tbat satisfies\n8:18 Henry Busse's orchestrs   \u25a0\n8:80 \"Omar Khayyam\" fr. L. A.\n7:00 Kostelanes presents\n7:80 \"Huxan side of news.\" Hill\n7:48 \"Myrt and Marge\" fr. Chicago\n8:00 Symphony orchestra\n8:80 Ieham Jones' orchestrs\n9:00 Eddie Duchln's orchestra\n030 Bevlera orcheetra\nIM Popular reoordUws\n6:80 Dinner  muslo\n7:00 Our Jimmy snd Jene\n7:18 Varied program\n7:80 News Herald\n7:43 Travel talk\n8:00 Altr. Meunler,. pianist\n8:80 News servloe\ns\n8:80 Continental   concert  onto.\n.\n610 k                 KFRC\n481 .Sm\nSAN  FRANCISCO\n1000 w\nDecollete, should follow the principal theme of one's evening gown,\naccording to Jean Paton. (Lett)\nOn a deep wine red evening gown\nof the new Yeloors Paysan, paton\ncuts a horizontal strapping to the\ndecollete thst tends to diminish\nthe greater length of bodice brought\nabout by the lowered waistline,\nwhich ls the theme of his new col-\n1210 k\nlection.   (Right) On * Bordeso red VANCOUVER\nevening gown with a very low back,\npatou  adds  an  extra  brace sround\ntbe top ot the arm to glv, width\nto the shoulders.\nCJOR\n847.8 m\nB00W\nCorn Foods Cheap and Healthful\nHome-makers   who   must    count*,!  cups milk, 4 tablespoons butter.\nthe coet very closely will find that\nthe com product, offer many appetizing snd nourishing dishes rich\nln calories. The popula. New England supper dish of mush and milk\nla exceedingly nourishing ond wholesome as well ss economical snd\neasy to prepere.\nOt the corn cereals, hominy and\ncornmeal are most popular, for\nthey sre not only Inexpensive but\nhigh ln food value. Hominy ls the\nwhole corn from which the outside covering has been removed.\nIt can be purchased either dry.\ncooked  or  canned.\nWhen the corn kernel ls crushed,\nafter the outside covering haa been\nremoved, the product ls known as\nhominy grits or samp. Samp has\npractically   the   tttt    food\n1 tablespoon sugar, 1\nAdd salt to boiling water snd\nslowly sift ln throug' Ilnegrs, stirring constantly. Add grits. Bring\nto boiling point snd boll snd stir\nfor two minutes. Then oook ln\ndouble boiler until' water ls Absorbed. Stir ln one oup of milk\nand cook an hour longer. Eemove\nfrom heat and idd butter, sugar,\negg, slightly beaten, and remaining\nmilk. Turn Into a buttered baking\ndish and bake In t slow oven for\none hour.   Serve from baking dish.\nOrange Sponge Cake\n8:80 News   Cashes\n7:18 Sweet muslo\n7:80 Ted  WlllUms   ,\n7:48 Studio program\n8:00 Troubadours\n8:80 Wrestling matches\n1180 k KSL\nSALT    LAKJS    CITY\n7:00 Fam.  Furn. Stories\n8:00 Musical  revue\n8:45 Eb and  Zeb, E. T.\n8O0 Unlnralty of  Utah\nOnce tried, you will try again.\nSix eggs, the weight of the eggs ln\nsugar, half their weight lg flour,\nthe grated rind and Juloe of 1\norange. Beat the yolks until thick.\nAdd sugar gradually snd then the\norenge. Best whites until stiff sad 10;MW Flo-Blto1, orch.\nadd half of them, then half the'\nflour,  tbs  rest  ot  th,  whit,  and 10Mk KNX\nthe other half of  th,  flour. Bike HOLLYWOOD\nln a lost or Turk's bead. May he\nlo:d It desired.\n888.1 m\n50,000 w\n740 Chandu ths maglolaa\n10:00 Blsqulck Band, B. T,\n10:05 Flo Rite's orch.\n10:40 Stan Smith'a orch.\n1130 Dinclng with stars\n11:00 Midnight hour\nHook\nyour Mesl. , \u2022\nHow you thrill os his eyet\nodore you. How comfort-\nlns to be sure thit your\nskin will retain Its smooth\nbeauty ... thanks to the\nclinsins, velvet texture of\nPompeian Beauty Powderi\nNow, as always, you\nmay pay more for beauty\npreparations but you can.\nnot buy better than\nDutch Apple Pie\nMix thoroughly with apples. Turn\ninto pie pan lined with crust. Pour\ncream over  apples  and  bake in t\nGlorifying Yourself\nBy   Alicia   Hart\nIf you are ln an experimental\nmood about _m ralr, why not try\ns   pompadour?\nTea, pompadours sr. In sgaln.\nBut not ths old 'sahloned, made-\nover-rats kt:.d. Th, 1038 ; . .-\ndours ln nst, sleek ud glittering.\nIt Is modified to suit ths times,\ntlie hats snd th, glrlsl\nThis ls the wsy to pompadour\n\u25a0your hair this winter. Brush,\ncomb snd pull your hair bsck from\nyour forehead, temples and Mrs\nevenly, w'thout , rlppW to Its\nshining   surface.\nWhen you     t       bsck over the\n_$sure thtt either roll or cur's stay\nln place. No'hlng will do but utter\nneatness, lt you take to pompadours.\nI already hsve described the\nhalo of curls across the front of\nevening colffur . that gives tbe\neffect of a pompadour. This coiffure ts good on the young girl and\nalso on the older woman wtth grey\nos whit, hair. But lt must he a\nrestrained halo ot curls.\nThere Is onr \u2014ord of warning\nsbout these new modified pomps-\ndour effects, Tbey do emphasise\ntb* aoe,. first and foremost.\nIt your features sre regular or\nIf  tbey  srs   -tnall or  If  they  are\nWhen all Is ssld snd done, when\none glimpses th, beauty pageant\nwith a oold and calculating eye, ths\ncoiffure ls the big Important detalL\nHelen ot Troy, with wisps on her\nneck ox reg tags hanging round her\nears, would never have launched t\nthousand ships or gone down ln tha\nannals of fssclnatlng sirens ss tbe\nchampion ot them all. Th^ hirsute\ncasque ss presented this season is s\nwork of art. Undulations are wide,\nsoft snd fluid. Th, outline ot the\nbead Is revealed. Ends sre cured,\nlocks must glisten, the hair cut\ngiven careful consideration. Never\nwere coiffures more exquisitely designed, hsir beauty so highly developed.\nParenthesis lines extending fram\nnostrils to lip ends sre t family Inheritance due to the formation ot\nthe upper Jaw, or they an dug ln\nby pulling down the dellcste muscles\nof the mouth. Trest thorn to a gentle patting with a heavy cream.\nPlace thumb at tbe lower end of\nthe line, first finger at the upper,\nhold finger stationary, come creeping up with the thumb picking\nquick Uttle nips ln the flesh. Iron\nwith loe twloe a day.\nWhit, hsir la easily discolored.\nHot air drying of tbe finger wave\nwill do lt. Hair tonics must be\ntested before they sre used; those\ncontaining glycerine will tum silver\nlocks to a golden hue. The shampoo\nmedium must be bland, soip melted.\nStrong sunlight dims the snowy\nsplendor. Ordinary washing blueing,\na few drops ln a bowlful ot water,\nmakes a desirable rinsing bleach to\nbe used after the hsir hss been\nwashed.\nWomm who tire easily should\nsnatch a wt-nap every day lt only\nfor 15 minutes. Fstlgue bugs are devastating to appearance, rob tbe\neyes ot glowing lights, dig creases ln\nthe complexion. Highly energized\nfemmes who work diligently, then\ngo limp, need more sleep than those\nof a phlegmatic type. Yet they're the\nones who prowl around until ell\nhours.\nExtra rouge pads to fit compacts\ncan be purchased. Bad policy to\nwield th, asm, old blush distributor,\nsine, lt picks up dust with the\numt keen Industry thst tbs powder\npad displays.\ncrown of your hair, then lt ts tlms \u201eMl, chiMUwl, atlt ls one coiffure\nto do somethlriC' to bruk the surface.\nThe best blng to do is to have\ntt fall ln triple diagonal waves, from\none  ha'f-eipoeed ear  to  the other.\nIf your hair Is long, either ha-3\nthe ends curled and arranged ln\nplace at tbe nape of your neck, r\nelse tuct lt Into a wtt    aU.   Be\nthst    make,    everybody    recognise\nthis fact.\nAnd. If your nose Is lsrger thsn\nyou might vlsh tt, k i, tier oolf-\nfure, one thet brings ths hsir\ndown ou io tb, temples or has a\nfew curls to jak the hard Une\nwlU be * wiser choice.\nNext: I air care\n)\nPeriod Book-Ends\nGift for Boy's Room\nFor the boy's room, a pair of bl-\nvalue  centennial book-ends makes A last-\nas  hominy and resembles  a  rather   tog and practical gift. They are of\ncoarse-grained   wheat   oereal. i sheet metal, painted ln the nitional\nCorn whloh has been ground colors, bearing the national emblem, moderate oven for 00 minutes.\nstUl more flnei- Into a meal ls cornmeal. Usually the germ Is removed\nln the milling process of cornmeal.\nThis lowers the vitamin and mineral value ot the cereal to some\ndegree.\nIn general the dietary properties\nof com are similar to t'\\oee of\nwheat. 'Tie proteins and mineral\ncontent ss well ss the energy value\not cornmeal are much the same as\nthose  of wheat flour.\nIt ls slso worth while knowing\nthat the yellower the corn the\nhigher the vitamin and mineral\ncontent. Yellow corn fumlshea\nsome of vitamin A ss well ss B,\nbut white corn furnishes only the\nB vitamin.\nAs tbe weather grows colder\nhominy snd hominy grit, an es.\npeclaUy desirable. If fried hominy Is used It must be soaked tlve\nor six hours In boiling water, using four times as much water as\nhominy.\nPerhape the use ot hominy as a\npotsto substitute Is new to you,\nbut It's excellent with fouL\nHominy   Grits,   a   ls   Msrylsnd\none cup boiling water, 1 teaspoon  salt,   4-4   cup   hominy   grits\n8:00 News\n8:15 BUI, Mac and Jimmy\n8:80 Oh-h-h Elmer\n8:45 Feature program\n7:00 Frank Watinab,\n7:15 To be announced\nSix apples, H cup sugar,- ft tes-   7:45 Tarzen, I. T.\nspoon salt, ^ teaspoon mace, 1 cup    8:00 Martin Luther Tho.ns,\ncream,* 1   teaspoon   cornstarch. i  8:15 Realty, values\nCut spplee fine, sltt sugar, oom-   8:80 To be snnounced\nstarch, salt snd spice snd stir well.   8:45 Oolden Memories\n8884 n\n\u00ab5,ooo w The NEW\n8:00 News Items\n8:10 Danoe hsnd\n10:00 KNX orchestn\n10:80 Organ ooncert\niV^\nBLOOM\nPOWDER\nCREAMS\nLIPSTICK\nLONDON PAWS NIW YOUX IOKONk.\nttf aeat* t HmU t. Hi*. 8 Ce. bt\n10.18 MdCwl St. TmoM,       xt-tt\nCRESTON BRIEFS\n,*N\nCRESTON, B. C, Nov. 38\u2014Miss\nFrances Lewis was t visitor at Nelson\na few dsys this week, s guest of\nher sister, Miss Lillian Lewis.\nMiss Merle McCaslin got back yea.\nterday trom s tew daya' visit with\nher mother st Salmo.\nMrs. H. W. McLaren snd dsugbtw\nEthel and Mis. A. L. Palmer were\nvisiting with Spok-ne friends over\ntbe weekend, getting bsck on Monday. *N\nWhen you're HEALTHY\nyou're HAPPY\nHAPPY daya sre usually healthy\ndaya. Why not add to these\n\u2022unshiny days!\nPoor health and constipation\ngo band in hand. Get rid of\ncommon constipation by eating\n\u2022 delicious cereal.\nTests show that Kellogg's\nAll-Bran provides \"bulk\" to exercise the intestines, and vitamin\nB to tone the intestinal tract.\nAll-Bran Is also twice as rich\nin Iron as an equal weight of\nbeef liver.\nThe \"bulk\" in All-Bran U\nmuch like that ln leafy vegetables. How much better than\ntaking pills and drugs\u2014so often\nharmful\nTwo tablespoonfuls dally aro\nusually sufficient If not relieved\nthis way, see your\ndoctor.\nAt all grocers.\nIn the red-and-\ngreen package.\nHade by Kellogg\nin London, OnL\nCHRISTMAS\nCARDS\nSelect From\nMaqVour\nCHRISTMAS \\\nBa \u2022 Bountiful OntJ)\ni.\na\n&\n&\n&\n|\ntv\n5>\nthe largest ard most complete stock of Private Greeting Cards in the Interior of British\nColumbia. In TWO DOZEN lots only, at prices that are the lowest being offered in the\nProvince. Why pay more when you can get yours here at practically half the price yoii\npay elsewhere.\nWe would like to have you call and see our exclusive line of Greeting Cards\u2014you will'\nwonder how we can sell them so reasonably.  Look at these prices:\n$2.00, $2.25, $2.50, $2.75, $3.00, $3.50, up to $7.00\nTwo Dozen Cards\n\"tinted wtth your name and address\nSend for Samples\nOut nf-town customers, tend for samples. We request\nthat after making your selection you return them\nimmediately, as tee only have one sample for each lot.\nIf in town and unable to coll personally, PHONE \\AA\nand we will have samples tent to your heme. .j\nMamt iatly Njhib\nlob Btjit.\nBaker Street\nNelson, B. C.\n) <\nI\n_.\n \/H3<f\nJust\nReceived\u2014\n3 BEAUTIFUL Model*\nfor Evening wear.\nWhite and Black Fabrics\nwith Gold trim. Genuine\nhand sewn soles.\nf O.00 and ? Q.50\nR. Andrew\n&. Co.\nLeaders bt Footfaihion\nR. C. TRIMEN WAS\n; PIONEER IN TRAIL\n1TOPTH VAWCOUVm, TB. Hot.\nW.\u2014Blohinl Cecil Tflmen, resident\nIn B.C. foe 40 years, died ln hia\niome. 313 Weet Twenty-sixth avenue, hen Saturday last.\nHe la survived by hia wife, one\nbrother and one slate*.\nFuneral semoee wer\u00bb held yesterday.\nLTRAIL, B.C.. Wot. 3). _ \u00bb. {J.\n, lmen, whose death la reported\nabort, wh t plonee- realdent of\nTrail. Re waa manater of tbe Bank\nof British North America here about\nSO years ago. The bank of B.N.A.\nwas later taken over by the Bank\nof   Montreal.\ni Mr. Trtmen left Ttall aboot Mil\nwhen he \u2022wtt afflicted with falling\neyesight and general Ul health. Re\ntook np reeldence at Vancouver.\nwhere he waa subsequent]; married.\n| Of e aomewhat retiring disposition.\nMr. TOmen wu not Identified to\nany tree- extent with tbe publlo\nlife et the pioneer community of\nTtall. but he was popular with the\npublle generally. To old timers of\nTrail hia death wu the cause of\nexpressions   of   deep   regret.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nT\u00bbAtt, I.C. Nov. 3J,\u2014Mrs. Harry\nHankin and Mn. Prank WUby were\nJoint hostesses last evening at bridge\nat the home of Mn. Hankin, pine\navenue. Five tables were in play.\nMra. Angus Johnston won high\nsoore. Miss Betty Ifegert, second\nprize and Mra. J. Hart reoelved the\nconsolation. Other gur-ta were Mn.\nD. W. Forteath, Mn. William Spooner, Mn. Alex Hector. Mrs. June.\nDwyer, Mn. Wesley Dwyer, Mra. I.\nMinion. Mra. O. A. Burton, Mn.\nCharlee Wlnterbottom, Mn. T. Bob-\nerteon, Mn. C. J. Mlntor Mra. J.\nBeU, Mn. Paul Jonee, Mrs. Frank\nVerauh. Mrs. John cormack, Mn. W.\nBaril. Mlse Selma Belmann and Mlaa\nClara Minion.\ne   \u2022   >\nH. M. Brinkman returned to Orand\nForka today after spending a few\ndays ln the dty.\n\u2022   e   \u2022\nR.  Doubleday  of  Penticton Is  e\nvisitor ln tbe city.\n...\nWomen'a auxiliary to Btat TnU\nmission met in the mission hall yee-\nterday afternoon, Mra. A. Selby acting as hostess. Othen present were\nMn. Herbert Johnson, Mn. HamUton\nCurrie, Mrs. C. T. Conry, Mrs. James\nMcLean, Mn. Alec Tatea, Mra. Archie\nBrown, Mn. A. J. Williams. Mn.\nHarry Eperson, Mrt. W. P. Robertson,\nMn. Thomu Hayes and Mlaa Evelyn\nAUen.\n...     *\nR. H. Devitt Is .pending a few\ndays et hia cottage at Bobeon.\n...\nWomen's auxiliary to last TraU\nmlaalon entertained at a eoclal 'Monday at the mission ball. Whist wu\nplayed during part of the time, flnt\nprleee being won by Mn. WUUam\nMelrose and WUUam Robertson. Mrs.\nWilliam Robertson and Misa Margaret\nJonee won consolations. Mn. Arthur\nFletcher and Mr. and Mn. Samuel\nPowell gave vocai solos. Mlse Milan\nDewson won e priae ln a contest.\nThomu Hinton had charge of the\nCard gemaa and Mrs. o. T. Conry\nand Mra. Albert Dawaon served refreshments.\nLadlu of tba Royal Purple entertained lut evening at military whist.\nSixteen tables wen ln play. Japan\nwon high soore, the playen being J.\nOeUl. M. Molina, M. Pagnan and P.\nSwings. J, Hardington had charge of\nthe gamee. Refreshments wen served\nby Mra. A. McWhinnle, Mn. A. Sherman, Mn. David Smart, Mn. J. P.\nKeUy and Mn. WUUam Morrlce.\nMr. and Mra. willlim J. Sullivan\nhave been apendlng e few dayi In\nSpokane.\n...\nMlu Doris O. Johnson, Rlvenlds\navenue, wu hostess lut evening to\ntbe Business Olrls' branch of tbs\nLargest Sale In Canada\n\"SALADA\"\nTEA\n\"Fmh from thc Girdeni\"\nPRINTING\nTHAT IS READ\nlike fflejrlMe handwriting, poor printing creates\na sub-conscious feeling in the mind of the receiver.\nIt fall* to produce respect and confidence.\nI\nIf yen would han everything 70a mafl be a\npersonal messenger, properly expressing the nature\nof yonr business or profession, take care that\nyour printing is the best.\nThe efficient office or business\nhouse is based on the many printed\nforms that reduce errors and make\nwork faster and easier.\nWe  can  help  you   design\nand print the best for your\nvarioui needs.\nPHONE 144\n&tam Sathj Jfomu lob Bf pi\nCreaton of Fint Printing\nBaker Street\nNelson, B. C.\nTBI HUSON BAILT NEWS, KELSON, D.C\u2014TIll'RSDAY MORNINO, NOVEMBER  24, 1933-\nJapanese Qtrl Signs Contract\nSumako Hamaguchl, H-year-jld\nLoa Angeles girl, known aa one ot\ntha forenf 3t exponents ot Japanese\ndancing, bas been signed by a\nHollywood studio tor dancing  ln  a\nforthcoming feature production. She\nis only four feet ten lnchet tall and\nbecause of ber youth, will attend\nthe studio school while not en*\ngaged  before  the   camera.\nWomen'a auxiliary to St. Andrew's\nchurch. Pinal preparations were made\ntor a sale of work. Miss Connie\nTaylor and Miss Barbara Caldloott\nassisted Miss Johnson in serving.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. Fisher of Hall\nBiding are viators ln the city for a\nfew days.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. J. Levesque returned to Trail\nyesterday after spending some time\nln Creston.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJf. W. Burdet of Klmberley ls\nspending a few days here,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Tboruas Miller. East Trail, ls\na paUent ln Trall-Tadanac hospital.\ne   \u2022   \u2022\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AKD LOTS -  IH-\naurance. Rotary. J. D. Anderson.\ntttttl\nSociety^\nThis column Is conducted fc>\nMrs. %L i. Vlgneux. Al] new ef s\nsocial nature, including reception*\nprivate entertainments, persons)\nItems, marriages, etc will appem\nln this column. Telephons Mra\nVlgneux at her boms, 119 SUica\nstreet.\n9BB\nIBI\naaasBMssassMi I\nTO SHIP LAST\nLOT OF WOMEN\nNEXTSUNDAY\nFinal Party of 36 or 37 Will\n.  Go Direct to Tier\nIsland\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nthe following column of social\nnews and happenings In Rossland\nIs conducted by Mrs. Bessie B.\nber bome In Rossland and give\nFerguson. Phone Mrs. Ferguson at\nher details of events of interest to\nthis column.\nROSSLAND, B. C. Nov. 23\u2014Lady\nLuck smiled, on the recent excursion\nof Joseph McDonell, Bruoe Irvln\nsnd Oeorge Gilmour into the Kettle\nriver district, the youthful hunters\nreturned wltb five fine deer.\npes\nA. L. Acorn hae returned home\nfrom the hospital.\n\u2022 \u2022   s\nMrs. R. B. Smith of Sumas was\nhere for * few days this week.\n\u2022 *   i\nMn. M. X. Davidson hs* returned\nfrom spending a few days with\nfrienda la TraU.\nBAPTIST YOUNG\nPEOPLE SHOWN\nSCENES OF B. C.\ni Major J, W. Clark entertained Uie\nmembers of tbe Baptist young people\nwith lantern slides and a lecture on\nthe British Columbia water ways at\na gathering at the church Tuesday\nevening.\nMr. Clark's pictures included\nscenes of the various power projects\nof the province Including those on\nthe Kootenay river west of Nelson.\nPictures of orchard culture ln the\nOkanagan, floral pictures and lake\nand river scenes of the northern\nBritish Columbia  were  also  shown.\nShe Suffered With Bad\nBackache For Months\nBritish Columbia Lady Finds\nRelief By Takinir Dodd's\nKidney Pills\nMrs. Arthur Eeeley Is Very Thankful for the Relief Afforded Her\nLadner, B. C, Nov, 34 (Special)\n\"I bave suffered with bad backache tor aeveral months,\" writes\nMrs. Arthur Keeley, Box 1400, this\nplace. \"A friend of mine to.d me\nto try Dodd's Kltney Pills. I have\ntaken a down boxes and the pain ln\nmy beck and across my kidneys ls\nnearly all gone. I am Indeed very\nthankful and always k*-p * box\ntn the house and tell all my friends\nbow bow they bave helped me. I\nmust also recommend your Dodd's\nAntiseptic Healing Ointment. It Is\nwonderful fo? sore feet, cuts and\nburna.\"\nDodd's Kidney pills act directly\non the kidneys. Healing and\nstrengthening them. Strong healthy\nkidneys are absolutely necessary tf\nthe blood Ie to be pure and the\nbody  healthy.\nDodd's Antiseptic Healing Ointment la a aafe, soothing treament\nfor all skin abrasions, infections and\nIrritations. It quickly relieves pain\nand* brings about a tpeedy recovery.\nInetructlons have been received\nby Inspector John MacDonald, commanding \"B\" division of the provincial police, to ship the remainder of\nthe Sons pf Freedom women prisoners here Sunday morning, to the\npenitentiary area at Pier  island.\nThere will be 36 or 37 women sent,\nthose with Infanta being excluded,\nand possibly an aged wo.ioan whose\nfitness for the trip ls to be passed\non by the doctor.\nThe 00 women forwarded last\nSundsy went only to Oakalla, from\nwhich point tbey were to go on to\nPier laland ln small lots.\nMUSEUM TEA IS\nGIVEN AT NAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C, Nov. 33\u2014A unique\nevent ln the form of a museum\ntea was held at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. Eugene Leveque Wednesday\nafternoon and evening under the\nauspices of the Nakusp women's\nInstitute,\nThe guesta were reoelved by the\npresident, Mrs. O. Hunter Oardner,\nand Mrs. E- Leveque. Mr. Leveque's\nprivate museum waa thrown open\ntor inspection. Interesting explanations   accompanied   each   collection.\nTea was served by the ladles,\nthose ln charge being Mrs. W. Carruthers, Mrs. F. Rushton. Mrs. J.\nParent Sr., Mrs. J. Parent Jr., Mrs.\nH. Clarke, Mias Ellen Abrlel and\nMiss Nellie  Johnson.\nGET-TOGETHER CLUB\nREORGANIZED; MISS\nM. MacKINNON, HEAD\nThe Ot\u00bb_r__ of Utxy Immiculite\nwm the Ken, of an lntereitlng\nwedding yesterday mornln* at 9\no'clock, when Very Be,. J. c, Mc-\nKentle, at a nuptial high man,\nunited tn marriage Lorna Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Mra. W. R.\nMacLean, Edgewood avenue, and th.\nlate W. B. MacLean, former M.P.P.\nof Nelson, and Nicholas Dosenberger, second son of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nA. Doaenberger of Sunshine Bay.\nThe bride was attended by her slater, Misa Claudia MacLean and\nthe groom by his brother A. Dosenberger. The bride, who was given\nln marriage by her brother, Kay\nMacLean, chose for her weddlnp\ngown a form 'fitting dress of\nelectrio blue crepe hack aatln, wltb\nthe same colored Jacquette and corresponding aooeeeorler. Her slater\nwore a blue canton crepe frock.\nJacquette style. Mn. Frank Murphy\nand   Mrs.   M.   J.   Vlgneux   rendered\nPanto Angellcua'* during the Maaa\nof the Angels, which waa sung by\nthe full choir. The wedding music\nwaa played by Mlse Margeurlte\nOagnon. After the ceremony the\nbridal party repaired to the home\nof the brides' mother, where a\nwtddlng breakfast was aerved to\nimmediate relatives. Mr. and Mrs.\nDosenberger left * by motor on a\nnovel honeymoon, a hunting trip,\nafter which they will make their\nhome ln Sunshine Bay, Multi colored chrysanthemums graced the\naltar of the church and also the\nMacLean home,\n...\nFrank W. Woodrow leiMt via\nthe CP.B. thia morning for Montreal, to sail December 8 on the\nDuebess of Richmond, for t visit to\nrelatives   ix   Englsnd. . ,\n...\nA very pleasant bridge was held\nTuesday evening by tbe membera\nof the Rose City chapter of the\nEastern Star, When the honors of\nthe game were woo by Mrs. James\nB. curran, Mn. A. T. HonwUl and\nMn.  John O. Argyle.\n...\nMiss PhyllU Archibald, Stanley\nstreet, wu successfully operated on\n\u25a0for appendicitis yesterday morning\nat the Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital.\n...\nMn. B. Lowery. Nelson avenue, re-\ncently entertained at a small tea\nwhen she was assisted by Mn. T.\nW. Wllllte, whQ aerved. Volcal selections were rendered by Mn. Oourt-\nney-8cott of Calgary. Other Invited\nguests included Mn. Lowes, Mr,. J.\nO. M. Lock. Mrs. Ernest Marsden.\nMn. 8. C. Couch. Hn. O. F. Hunter, Mn. Thomas Manden, Mn. A.\nW. Nagle. Six.. T. M. Auld, Mn. T-\nW. Brewer and Mn. A. O. Lambert.\n...\nCharlea   M.   Beltner   of   Trail   ls\nvisiting his family on Stanley street.\n...\nMr.  and  Mr.  N.\" Dosenberger   of\nSunshine Bay \"were ln town to attend the Dosenberger-MacLean wedding, yesterday  moming.\n...\nMn. A. T. Stephenson recently\nentertained at a aerlea of teas, when\nshe waa assisted by her daughter,\nMiss Florence Stephenson. Mrs.\nStephenson's Invited guesete were\nMn. Hugh W. Robertson. Mrs. A. A.\nO. Williams, Mrs. Paul Lincoln, Mrs.\nOuy W. Davis. Mn. W. M.. Walker,\nMrs. A. H. Wallace. Mrs. Arthur\nBaird. Mn. I. O. Matthew, Mn.\nJoseph Sturgeon; Mrs. William J.\nSturgean, Mrs. M. J- Vlgneuk. Mn.\nH. McArthur. Mrs. Charlea F. McHardy, Mn. C. V. Oagnon, Mn. J.\nW. Clark. Mn. W. s. King. Mn.\nOilbert Hartin, Mrs. W. O. Rose,\nMn. H. H. Pitts, Mrs. O. Spencer\nGodfrey, Mrs. Charlea Kelman. Mn.\nJ BeU. Mn. li. A. Mann. Mrs. T.\nJ. Behan. Mn. W. A. Wt . Mrs. J.\nLawrence Smith. Hn. Harold Penny.\nMn. John Teague. Mrs. S. P. Jepson,\nMn. T. Camm. Mn. L. W. Oughtred,\nMn. L, M. Vamer and Mrs. J. Locke.\n\u2022   \u2022\u2022\nThe Misses Mary and  Julia Potosky h\u00bbd as'their  guest  yesterday,\ntheir sister, Misa Millie  Potosky ot\nSouth  Slocan.\n...\nMn. O. T. Stevens. Terrace apartments, haa returned from Seattle,\nwhere ahe haa been for the P\u00ab\"\nfew weeks. She waa met In Spokane\nby Mr. Stevens.\n...\nMr.  and  Mrs.  W.  Soles  of   Sunshine Bay were  among  those  from\nSunshine   Bay   yesterday   to   attend\nthe Dosenberger-MacLean wedding.\n\u00ab\u2022\u00ab\nThe Mothen' club of St. Saviour's\nChurch Helpen were hoetessea at\na successful tea, bake aale and\nfancy work -ale Tuesday afternoon\nin the Memorial bill, when O. K.\nAshby, preaident of tne club, acted\naa hoetess. Mn. W. B. Olbbon convened the tea arrangements assisted\nby Mn. S. Phillips, Mn. A- B. Hall,\nMn. S. T. Murnene, Mn. R. Morrison and Mrs. T. Lund. Mn. Thomis\nManden did the honon at the tea\ntable. Mn. C. Olbbon was In charge\nof the home made candy booth. The\nanimal booth waa supervised by Miss\nBloomer, while Mn. O. A. Fletcher.\nMrs. R. O. Joy and Mn. James Joy\nhsd  charge   of   the   novelty   Uble.\nPROCTER. B. C. Nov. M\u2014The\nflnt meeting for this aeaaon of the\nGet-Together club waa held at tbe\nhome of Mr. E. c. Francis of Sunshine Bay. upon the resignation of\nthe preaident. M sa Mary Jarvla. Mis,\nMorag MacKinnon waa elected to\nfill the vacancy.\nC. w. Tallies of Balfour was received Into the club aa a new member, and Miss Eleanor Merrifield was\nmade a group leader.\nQ^dea^hev Vo>\n607 Baker St. Phone 200\nNOVEMBER SALE\nSmart Coats of the Better Kind\nBX,'\"I\"\"\"\" '\"^^,\",,    \u25a0;  - 'i ij\nAre Now on      > j.\n*\nSALE\nClever designing has produced many\nnovel and captivating coats for Fall\nand Winter wear .. . and these are\nnow on sale at substantial reductions.\nFashioned of soft surfaced fabrics, they\nachieve an elegance which will gratify\none's penchant for a smart and stylish\ncoal for Fall. Fur trimmings of Fox,\nBeaver, Wolf, Muskrat, Genet, Squirrel and Persian Lamb. A complete\nrange of sizes. The season's best colors.\nRegular values $65.00 to $100.,00 each.\nSALE PRICE, each .. $50.00 to $75.00\nMrs.   O.   A.  King  made   a   capable\nOordon Strong of Vallican was\na1 city  visitor Tuesday.\n\u2022 %   \u2022\nP. Leslie of Willow Point left\nvia the C.P.R. fr a visit to the\nPeace  Rivet  district.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. William Rutherford left\nTuesday night for Trail, where she\nwill visit for a time at the home\nof her aon-ln-Isw and daughter,\nrr. and Mrs. Frank Willis.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nVery Rev. J. c. McKenzle had aa\nhis guest Rev p. Patterson. O.M-L.\nof St. Eugene mission near Cranbrook, who left yesterday for bis\nhorhe, en route from the coast,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. A. Cutting of Fauquier spent\nyesterday   In   town.\nthe Inonoaklin Social  club, at the 1 plegrove were weekend vlsltora with\n\"Flra\" Friday night. I Mr.   and   Mrs.   Oswald   Jowett   of\nRobert Hopp and family, who have I Ooldeprtng ranch.   '\nbeen visiting In Vanoouver and Spo- 1    Iris Ferguson, Fauquier, apent tbe\nkane, bave returned home. 1 weekend with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Boothby and Adeline of Ap- l Mrs. c. Ferguson, inonoaklin valley.\nDRINK\nMrs. C. Williams\nWorthy Mistress\nRossland Lodge\nROSSLAND, B. C, Nov. 23\u2014Mra.\nCasale Williams wu elected worthy\nmistress of Oolden City lodge. No.\n786, L. o. B. A., at the regular meeting of that organization Monday\nevening. The other officers were\nFlorence V. Williams, past mistress;\nLilian Buick. deputy mistress; Sarah\nKerr, chaplain; Bessie B. Ferguson,\nrecording secretary; Mabel Clelland\nfinancial secretary; Edna Mason,\ntreasurer; Gladys Evans, first lecturer; Mrs. Thomas, second lecturer;\nMllllcent Topliss, director of ceremonies; Lilian Turner, Inne^ guard;\nFranklin Ellis, outer guard; Jessie\nRutherford, senior member of committee. The guardian, and members\nof the several committees will be\nnamed tbs first meeting ln Deoember. \\\nEDGEWOOD BRIEFS\nEDGEWOOD. B, C. Nov. a\u00bb\u2014The\nSt. Agnes Church Helpers held their\nsale of work at tbe Arrow Lakes\nhotel. Each stall was suitably dressed according to tbe various articles\nexhibited for sale. AU were wei.\npatronised, especially tbe home oook-\nlng and candy stalls, which were\ncompletely cleared of wares. A good\nsum   wab   realised.\nWilliam William* spent the past\nfew days in Trail and district.\nMrs. Walter Wright, Nakusp, was\nwinner of the beautifully embroidered tea cloth presented by Mrs. W.\nColgrave at the Church Helpers\naale.\nDr. Yeld hae been laid up with a\nslight oold.\nAbout SO members Attended the\nweekly   card   and   dance   party   of\nBails Sl Ui\nMi lit Work\nEVER\\\n< BEe FIT\nBovril is the strength and\nCONCENTRATED GOODNESS*BEST BEEF\nSAFEGUARDED\nMILK\nDoubly rich ta crenn, Cinution\nMilk mttet every diih richly delicloui. And how it cuti your creim\n\u2022nd butter bills r Use thia pure,\ndependable milk for all cooking.\nCarnation Milk, through the con-\natant activity of Cirnation \"field\nmen\", ia aafegturded at the tource.\nby elein houiing of evtry herd and\nclean handling of all the milk. And\nthia protection continues until\nCarnation Milk retches yon in itt\nhtrmttiully tealed containers.\nWrite far Ceo* Beak aeat BabjBoak\nCAKNATION CO, LIMITED\nIM Khbaa St, Vmm, B.C.\nJf iU hem Cm-dim ream.\n\u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0   r...i    -\nami t\ntr^ltj  e.tk.e i. C...I* i\nSP   Cemadiem rem.\nMr. Wm. Davyduke, Saaettoa,\nSkiL, write.:\u2014\"Three years ago\nI wu troubled with boils which\nwere te bid I could not work.\nA friend told me ny blood aut\nbe bid and tdrited me to tike\nBurdock Blood Bitten. I didn't\nknow toy medicine could pet net\n1 sudden itop to neb misery, if\none bottle put tbe boils to aa end.''\nlwm.mll trae ..I eaaarml mamma, evaalereajai ImlnUI] imn. ntr I i__^_^t_^tai_^t\n<\nFROM CONTENTED COWS\ni____\\_t_mt_\\_\\_tmk___________m\n iML .\\tLfeON  iJAlLI  M.WS, .NLLSU.N,  B.C\u2014 iilLUoU.U   \u00bbUt>\u00ab.*LSu,  AOVUlitt.il   1(4,  ltf\u00bb-\n\u00aelf? Jfalflim latltj Nema\n\"Interior of British Columbia's Family Newspaper''\nALL THE NEWS WHUJB IT IS NEWS\np-jM!nh\u00bbd every morning .tempi Sunday by THE NTW5\nPtfBLISnCia COMPANY, LIMITED. JIB Baler Street. Neiaon.\nB.C.    Member of CANADIAN PHESS Leased Wire Service.'\nADVERTISING  RATES ON  APPLICATION\nOr rate card, may be Men at the office or any Advertising Agency\nrecognised by the CANADIAN DAU.Y NEWSPAPERS ASSOCIATION,\nINC, of which the Nelson Dally New, Is a member\t\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nBy mall (country), per month \u2014_\nPer   year\t\nIly msll  (elty), per year \t\nOutside Canada, per month\nPer   year\nDelivered (city by carrier), per week .\nPer year \t\nPayable ln advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ot circulation.\n_\u00bb   to\n-   \u00ab.oo\n_ 13.00\n_ .78\n_ 7.50\n_ 2S\n_ 13.00\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24,1932.\nA Futile Plan\nA.A. Heaps, a Winnipeg Member of the House of\nCommons, is still pressing for a Federal Commission to\ninvestigate unemployment and its causes. Mr. Heaps\nseems to imagine that unemployment is more or less a\nlocal matter, confined to Canada, and that some good\ncould be accomplished if we had a Royal Commission\ntravelling over the country, and asking why men are\nout of work. It would be difficult to conceive of a more\nutterly futile undertaking and waste of time.\nEveryone knows why we have unemployment.\nWhat we need is the development of a definite\nand sound plan for getting industry back to normal. Can.\nada alone canhot get to first base in any such effort. The .\ncauses of unemployment are world-wide. It is possible\nthat the world economic conference which is to take place\nshortly, may develop some plan which will bring about\na more speedy recovery. Fundamentally, however, we\nhave to let nature take its course. No government can\nput an end to unemployment, because no government\ncan raise enough taxes from the impoverished taxpayers of the present day to keep the necessary number\nof men at work.\nSuch measures as those which have been put into'\neffect as a consquence of the Imperial Economic Con.\nference will develop additional business for Canada and\nfor Great Britain, as well as for other countries within\nthe Empire. But they will not remove the causes of unemployment, nor will they bring about a complete cure\nof unemployment. All they can do is to put a little more\nweight behind the upward swing of the pendulum towards normal industrial conditions, which, judging by\nthe prices of basis commodities, has already begun.\nAH through history we have had periods of depress,\nion, which is only another word for periods of unemployment, followed in their turn by periods of expansion and\nof high wages, resulting from unusual demand for labor.\nThere is no power under the sun which will prevent future depressions or future booms. They are as inevitable\nas the rise and fall of the tides. The best we can do\nunder present conditions is to devote every ounce of\nenergy we possess to doing everything possible for those\nwho are unfortunate enough to be out of employment,\nto keeping employed those who now have jobs, and to\nconcentrating upon the creation of new work.\nInvestigations and chatter and advocacy of discredited nostrums will not get us anywhere. They rather\ntend to make conditions worse instead of better for the\nunemployed.\nHelp the Welfare Fund\nIt was only to be expected that municipalities which\nare burdened, in many cases from no fault of their own,\nWith an exceptionally large proportion of unemployed,\nshould make a vigorous assault on the decision of Hon.\nJ. W. Jones, Minister of Finance of British Columbia,\nthat the Provincial Government cannot put up more than\n$100,000 a month this winter for unemployment relief.\nAdd to this $100,000 as the municipalities' share,\nand $100,000 as the Federal Government's share, and\nwe get S total of $300,000 a month. This is a large sum,\nbut many municipalities are going to find it difficult to\nget along on the share of this amount which will be allotted to them.\nOn the other hand, what other course can Mr. Jones\nfollow than to limit definitely the amount of the Provincial contribution, if the Provincial Treasury cannot\nraise a larger sum? Neither Mr. Jones nor any other\nMinister of Finance can pick money out of the air. The\n\"Midas touch\" was never anything more than mythology.\nWith this strict limitation of contributions from the\nProvincial Government, which automatically limits to\nthe same amount the contributions of the Federal\nGovernment, the necessity for private effort in the direction of providing relief through such media as the\nNelson Welfare Fund will be more acute this winter than\nfor very many years. It will be absolutely essential that\nexpenditures by the Federal, Provincial and Municipal\nGovernments should be expanded by expenditures out of\nCommunity Chest funds, and similar organizations, contributed to by the people who are fortunate enough to\nhave an income, whether that income be large or small. It\nis also a time when everyone who is in a position to do\nso, should endeavor to give employment by having\ncarried out work which perhaps might otherwise be post,\nponed. Donations of clothing and food stuffs will also be\nof great, assistance.\nWhile we cannot spend more money than is available, we can by united public effort make sure that no-\none will starve, or lack essential clothing and shelter.\nBut if we are to accomplish this end, not a cent of money\nmust be waste;!, nor must a pound of goods be given out\nif is not needed.\n|^\n\"Between You\nand Me*\nBy  -JB-C.\"\nA Jarvla avenue realdent Ln Winnipeg, who was found lying on tbe\nstreet In an unconscious condition,\nhad been injured vlth some blunt\ninstrument. A safety naor, probably.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThis comos fro.n our advertising\ndepartment:\nHEAVY  HINTS\nWe sat In blissful silence,\nMy  Mary  Jane  and  I,\nAnd  UtUe did we notice\nThe minutes slipping by.\nWhen suddenly two dull thuds stopped\nMy spirit's upward climb\u2014\nHer  dad  upstairs  was  dropping\nHis boots a second  time.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nAt a party recently an actress oxtered to bet * newcomer that he\ncouldn't remain true to his wife in\nHoUywood for one year. The actress\nclaimed such a thing was impossible\n\u2014she used to be married, too\u2014but\nthe actor turner her down, saying\nthat such a bet would be an Insult\nto his wife, to whom he has been\nmarried 22 years.\nIt happened ln Nelson on Siturday\n\"Tour car awaits without,\" said\nthe poljceman to tbe diner In the\nOolden Gate.\n\"Without what?\" asked the smart\ndiner.\n\"Lights,\" said the policeman.\n\"Name and  address, please.\"\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n\"Uncle Tom's Cabin\" Ij being revived on a New York stage. No\ndoubt they'll have Eliza crossing the\nIce to a Jazz-band accomplanl.nent,\nand Simon Legree crooning a whipping song, In fact, with so many\nhandsome actresses out of work, snd\nNew York being what It Is, no one\nwould be surprised if the hound.*\nturned out to be chorus girls in\ndisguise.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nRichard Penkind, California court\nreporter, was a Roosevelt supporter\nand Mrs. Richard Penland believed\nPresident Hoover should be given\nanother chance. They agreed not to\nvote.\nElection day passed. Penland came\nhome with something obviously on\nbis mind. He paced up and down a\nwhile and then addressed his bride\n(they hadn't been married long.)\n\"My dear,\" he said. \"Today I deceived you for the first time. I got\nto thinking things over and decided\nthat one vote one way or another\nwouldn't help or hurt Roosevelt. 1\nknew how set you were on seeing\nHoover get a good vote in Ban Fran-\nI clsco so I voted for Hoover.\"\nI There was a Ung alienee and then\nMrs. Penland said:\n\"Dick, old dear, I got to thinking\nthings over\u2014that n.aybe you were\nright, and I wanted to do what waa\nright, so I went and voted for\nRoosevelt.\"\nr   \u2022. \u2022\nBroajway'a stfeet urchin crowd\nsays a New York writer, has been\nJoined by a wistful faced tad who\nstands in tbe Times square area\nselling ties at 15 cents each from a\nbox-cover. Because he is such\nlittle fellow and looks so pathetic,\nills wares are soon gone. But he'a\nback Again ln no time wtth more,\nand if you were to follow him, you'd\nlearn that the lads father has quite\na sizeable place nearby and that the\nurchin Is one of bis best salesmen.\nLITERATI RE IN  THE SCHOOLS\nA generation ago literary study ln\nschool war carried on ln a manner\nsomewhat different from present-\nday practice. It used to be tho\ncustom to prescribe for study a\npoem of the length of \"The Elegy.\"\nor \"The Traveller,\" or \"Tlie Deserted\nVlUage,\" or \"Lyridas.\" As there was\nnot much ground to cover, it was\npossible to make a very careful\nand minute analysis of the poem ln\nhand. There was much word study,\nmuch examination of figures of\nspeech and historical allusions, and\ngood deal of rigorous topical,\nrhetorical  and  grammatical  analysis.\nToday the theory ls that the\nstudent should be encouraged to\ncover a ridtt field and that witn\nthis view he should be required\nto read.extensively rather than Intensively. Intensive word study and\nconsiderations of etymology and\nsyntax are now regarded as rather\nold-fashioned    and    the    minds    of\nOh,   poor   little   birdie I   What   a   shame I\"\n\"Never   mind,   ma'am.     I'm   sure lt   was   quite   an   aocldentr\u2014TUe\nmotorist. f.\nWhat Do You Think?\nFORM A PLAN\nAND ACT UPON\nIT IS HIS URGE\nTo the editor of The Nelson Dally\nNews:\nfllr\u2014Three years Ot steady and Increasing depression hare rendered\nmankind more susceptable to new\nideas so that at present we may discuss questions that formerly were\ntaboo:\nTills opening of our minds ls the\ngreat advantage that our discomforts\n\u00a7 might do this (not the polios for\nif squeezed too hard they might\nturn Communist) and now we have\nbright hopes of a future (eiy fiO\nyesrs hence) with no Interest to pay.\nBut gentle reader. Is lt not alto*\ngether likely t^at our nobl* .\u00ab\u2122dl-\ntors who we have carried for so\nlong will take tt*e utmost care that\nnothing of the sort happens?\nNo! They will vehemently exclaim.\nWe will never desert them. These\ngood, patient asses (we mean the\nBritish Columbian taxpayers) who\nhave borne us so png will feel lonely If they and we are parted. We\nwill continue our pleasant ride and\nand perplexities  have produced, and\nour sorrows  wUl  be  weU  repaid   11 we   wUl   reinvest   the   money   that\nsociety ls brought Into the healthy\nand hopeful stage of being ready to\nlearn.\nMankind must almoet Immediately\nmake its choice of two very distinct\nIdeals. Postponement of the issue\nwill be dlsasterous, even as fatal,\nas trifling with the disease of oancer.\nBritish Columbians are confronted\nby the Kldd report which brings\nthe mater to a head for this province. This celebrated report on the\ncondition ot the province presents\ntbe business man's viewpoint in s\nfrank and logical manner. The authors of the report were given access\nto all the Informitlon they needed\nby the government\u2014they put good,\nhard work into the task that had of our present business world, but\nbeen given them and though the re- I really honest, suppose that ws deport can be' criticised ln details, on terralned to &\u00bb*\u2022 don* wlth *\" ***\nthe whole, there Is rfo doubt, that \\ pe'tty trickery and smart little ways\nthe report and Its suggestions are j by which we snatch our livings from\nfairly accurate from a business man's <;%;h other at present. And that we\nthey so foolishly wish to return to\nus. both for their own benefit and\nour own, for this ls what we consider a good working partnership.\nSurely no business man wUl deny\nthat this Is exactly what wlU happen. History proves it. The noble\nBritish ass, otherwise known as the\noommon taxpayer \u00bbttU pays tribute\nto the smart gentlemen who helped\nhim beat Napoleon at Waterloo, or\nrather to their heroic and greedy\ndependents. Such ls this wonderful\nthing called money, and such ls tbe\nmagnificent aaslnlnlty of the human  ass.\nIf on the other hand we turned\nhonest,   not   the   miserable   honesty\nwould not tolerate Idle and useless\npeople ln Canada. What oould be\ndone about IW\nA nation that had once made up\nits mind to adopt such a oourse,\nwould hy the very act of making up\nIts mind, have taken the first and\nmost difficult step. Where there\nwas a wiU the way would soon appear. In very truth. The way does\nappear,\nWe should have to form a plan\nand then act on that plan. We\nshould have to compel our citizens\nto fall In with that plan. We made\nquite a creditable start on such a\nplan during tbe greit war. Oreat\nnumbers of us found that we had\nto do what was oonsldered best for\nthe nation and forget our miserable\nUttle selves for once. Then there ls\nvery much thst sensible people can\nlearn from Russia. It ls wonderful\nbow even a blazed trail helps one\nIn finding one's wuy through thick\nbrush and the Russian trail ls be-\nsurd   extravagance,   with   no   direct   coming pretty well defined and will\ncash   benefit*  for  so   many  of   the I be of Immense help to mankind.\neducated,  who  are  only enabled  to      Our real difficulty is psychological\nvoice their discontent the more eea-  as our great financiers now explain,\nily. Reduce the number and pay of! It ls this. So many of us still have\ngovernment officials, and make those\nleft work harder. A balanced budget\nwill   be   wclj   worth   the   temporary\ndistress that it miy cause them.\nNow  let   us   assume   that   we   do\nbalance   our   budget.   Also   th^t   we\ncontinue to balance our budget, year\nafter year. Even this will not help\nus much for we should continue to\nowe the debt unreduced, fresh and\nvigorous   and   hungry   as  ever.   No.\nwe must more than strike a balance.\nBack must go those carefully boarded\npoint  of   view.\nThe report must stand. AU we can\nadd is tbe obvious fact that it is\nalmost equally true of each and\nevery government on this continent,\nor of this world, which to myself is\na matter of extreme congratulation,\nfor I should not like to feel Isolated\nin this delicate matter.\nBudgets do not balance. Budgets\ncannot be made to* balance. Expenses mount, revenues fall.\nIf we of British Columbia adopt\nthe heroic course suggested by the\nKldd report and behave ourselves\nlike good UtUe men and cut out\nour follies snd extravagances, so\nthat we actually enable the wistful\nMr. Jones to balance his budget,\nwhat wUl happen?\nLuxuries, like old gae pensions and\nmothers' pensions would of course\nbe cut off, and the unemployed reduced to a proper state ot subserviency on a slim diet of potatoes and\nmush. Education has become an ab'\nvague hopes of forming one of the\nmerry party who ride on the poor\npatient donkeys and escaping from\nthe herd of common asses who bear\nthe  burdens.\nDear 81r or Madam\u2014I have no\ndoubt but that with your profile\nand figure you would look exceedingly weU on assback, alas\u2014lt ls my\npainful duty to inform you, that\nyour chanoes of a mount are grow^\nlng slimmer snd slimmer, as tbe\nvery big fellows take more and more\nasses   to   support   them\u2014Join   the\nUtUe extra pinching of our officials New Denver, B.C., Nov. 23,  1932.\nThat Body of Yours\nBj JAMES   tfl.  BARTON\nMEDDLESOME INTERFERENCE IN q,   When tha doctor ii called ln and\nyouth ar. not overlooked \u00abth auch  *\u00bb>'<>\u00bb\u00bb\">\u00ab <\"'r \"*\u00ab\u00ab\u2022 \u00bb\u00bb\u2122 \u00ab\u00b0\niroubl-ome thins. \u00bb metonymy and  f\u2122 f0\"\"'  P1\"^,        , ,T, , i   T?     fa\nsynechdoche.   How   did   the   change'\ncome  about  and is it altogether to\nbe  approved?\nIt began to be 'he fashion ln the\nlast quarter of last century to sBy\nthe grammatical analysis and parsing and the Identification of figures\nof speech, and the elucidation of\nhistorical and literary allusions had\na tending to crea > In the minds\nof young people a distaste and a\ndislike for poetry, and that this\ndanger was to be avoided at all\ncosts. Looking back on the' episode,\nthose who are ln a position to\ncompare the results of both systems are apt to think that the\nchange has not been all for the\nbetter. No doubt there were dry-as-\ndust, gerund-grinding schoolmasters\ntn those days who sometimes overdid\nthe linguistic side of literary study,\nbut most of them at any rate\n\u25a0tood for clear thinking and sound\nscholarship. In those days the student was expected to know the\npoem h* was studying from end to\nend, snd he could hardly help knowing tt because it waa studied with\nextreme minuteness, line by Une and\nword by word.\nTimes change and we change with\nthem. The desire to get something\nfor nothing, however springs eternal\nln tbe breast of the student who\nls either lazy or Incompetent; nut\nthere ls no royal road to literature\nany more than to geometry. If\nliterature ls to Justify Its claim to\na place on our school programs it\nshould   be  made   an   Instrument   of\nABDOMINAL PAIN\nNotwithstanding all our knowledge\nof the dangers of delaying operation\nln cases of acute appendicitis and al3\u00b0\nof obsructlon of the bowel, the percentage of deaths from these twp\nconditions has actually increased during the  past ten years.\nlt must be admitted that this Is\nnot the fault of the surgeons who\nperform the operations, because the\noperative ability of the surgeons o.\ntoday ls at the highest point ln history.\nDr. W. H. Parsons tells us that If\nthe death rate from these conditions\nls to be reduced it must bo done by\nlack ot meddlesome Interference ln\ncases that will really require an operation anyway.\nWhat ls meant by \"meddlesome\ninterference\"?\nThis simply means that when there\nts an acute pain ln the abdomen\nno treatment of any kind ahould be\ngiven.\nAs you know the first thought\nwhen a pain occurs ls to try to get\nrelief, and a pain klUIng drug ls\ngiven.   This means thst as the drug\nkills or deadens the pain tbe condl-\ndiscipiine snd scholarship as weU tion can be growing gradually worse\n'em enjoyment.\u2014Victoria Colonist.       and the patient doesn't know It.,,\ni\nAuction and\nContract Bridge\nBy  the   World's  Lssdlng   Authority.\nMILTON  C. WORK\n\u2666 15 3\ntt+M\n\u2666 A-W\n\u2666H\n\u2666 J-M\n\u2666MfM\nfW-t \u00bb\nUl\ntm\n\u2666WN-2\nXI Jll\n\u2666T+4\n90UIV\n\u26664-2\n\u00bb 7-3-2   \u25a0\nsm\n\u2666K-J-H-3      -^\nWhen Z saw the above hand play.\ned ln a rubber game of contract.\nEast opened the bidding with, a\nfourth-hand call of three Spades.\nHis hand contained eight sure tricks,\nwith sn additional possibility la\nClubs. Bast's honor-count made it\napparent that the hand should be\nplayed at Spade rather than at\nNo Trump. West's raise to four\nSpades was the only other bid. The\nsame final declaration would have\nbeen reached If East had started\nwith  any  forcing  bid.\nSouth led the Queen of dubs,\nwhich Bast won with the King.\nEast drew three rounds of trumps,\nthen false-carded by leading the\nQueen of Diamonds. North was not\ndeceived by the false eard, nor\nhad he any reason to hold up his\nAoe. He then decklen to lead his\nKing of Hearts hoping 1 remove\ndummy's Ace and ihow Bouth what\nto lead. Declarer won with dummy's\nAce, put closed hand ln with the\nKing of Diamonds and led the Nine\ndf Hearts. He played low from\ndummy ln the hope tbat North did\nnot hold tbe Ten: but of course\nNorth won with both the Tsn and\nQueen, after which he led a Club.\nDeclarer lost ln all two Hearts, a\nDiamond and a Club; and was thus\nset one trick. Do you see how\nthe four-Spade contract could have\nbeen made, despite North's exceUent\ndefence?\nTHE   CORRECT   PLAY\nNorth set a trap and Declarer fell\nright into it. When North led the\nKing of Hearts at trick six, Declarer should h. ve permitted lt to\nwin. North then would be helpless.\nAnother Heart lead would give Declarer two Hep.rts and a show-down\nfor the \/ malnlng tricks. North's\nbest lead would be a Club. Declarer would win with the Aoe,\nlead the King of Diamonds, put\ndummy ln with the .|e of Hearts,\nand discard a Heart and a CU*'* on\ndummy's high Diamonds. He would\nthus lose but one Heart and one\nDiamond, aame could be saved if\nSouth had the \"double dummy\"\nInspiration to lead a Heart to trick\n1, but th* lead from a Seven-high\ntrebleton would not be made, except\npossibly on the replay ln single table\nduplicate.\nTold in Rime\nMY EVENING PAFER\nOne of Canada's Oolden Pages\nOr.fr&i J. I. B. Sceley misses no\nopportunity to sing the praises of\nthe Canadian Calvary trUUa'ie\nwhich he commanded from early in\n1913 until April. 1013. It is ' not\nsurprising therffore. that he should\ntell again the great story of a\ngallant Canadian cavalryman when\nhe addressed the Authors club ln\nLondon the other day. Lieut. Flow-\nerderv, V. C, Strathcona Horse, was\nthe hero of the attack at Moreull\nthat , held up the German advance on Amiens late ln March\n1918 until Foch- was able to concentrate sufficient infantry and artillery to halt that tremendous snd\ndangerous drive. General Seeley hss\ntold tbe story before. In bis book,\n\"Adventure.\" published in 1930, he\ndevotes considerable space to It snd\nto the other attacks In which the\nCanadian  brigade took  part.\nNo wonder thoae days remain ln\nthe forefront of General Seely's\nmemory, m his book, drearibing\nhis feelings as he stood on the high\nground overlooking ths vaUey of the\nLuoe\u2014the Canadian corpe won back\nall that area and far to the southeastward a little more than four\nmonths later ln the great Battle of\nAmiens\u2014he says\u2014\"I knew that moment to be the supreme event of\nnty life. I believed that -If nothing.\nwere done the hetreat would continue and the war would be lost. . .\nI knew that this was. what all my\nlife had ben for.\" So he gave his\norders for the mounted attack on\nMoreull wood ln an effort to\ncheck the German advance. The\nfighting that followed has been described ln detail ln military ournals\nand histories; lt ls unfortunately\nUttle know to the people of Canada.   The   reference \u25a0 to   Foch   and\nWeygand standing oa a hiU watch\nlng the Canadian oovalry start ou\nfor Moreull eowras aprocryphal.\nleast, h Is not iripntloned In Genera\nSffley's book. Even If imaginative 1\nls   good  ennugli   to   be   true.\nThat Foch did place very big\nvalue on the work of the Canadi\"\nCavalry brigade during the critici\ndays early In 1918 Is evident fro!\na note he sent to General \u25a0\u25a0\nIn which he says\u2014\nI do not forget the heroism\nthe valiant Canadian C&voQry br!\ngade.   In   the   month   of   March\n1918, the battle had reached ttn\ngates of Amiens. It was a questioi\nof maintaining at any cost clo-\ntouch between our two armies, ot\nthe   30th   of   March,   at   Moreull\nand on the 1st of April at Han\ngard   en   Santene,   It   succeeded\nby Its splendid spirit and its of'\nfenslve operations, in keeping tht\nenemy   ln   check   snd   definitely\nstopping   his   advance,   in   largi\nmeasures,  thanks  to  It;  the  situation, dangerous at the  beginning \"of the battle, wu restored.\nThe  general  offers   tihat   evldenc\nby   the  commander-in-chief   of  th\nallied armies in support of hts con\nteution thst  he  doea   not  attribut\nmore   Important   to   the   Cansdla\ncavalry     than     the     facts\nrant. He dedicated his book to \"thel\ngreat achievement in the last phas\nof  the most terrible  battle of  th\nworld war.\" The other eeiMoes wer\nInclined to think cavalrymen had\n'cushy\" time of lt ln the war. But, le\nby such heroes ss Plowerdew, Ha:\"vei\nDochierty   rf id   others,   they   prow\nthemselves  great fighters   wheneve\nand wherever opportunity offered.\n\u2014Edmonton  Journal\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally News of November\n24,1922.)\nMiss Ella Mabey, who has been\ntraffic chief of the B. C. Telephone\ncompany for some time, has been\ntransferred to the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA bucket brigade headed by A.\nCawley saved the residence of W.\nMiller at Salmo yesterday from being destroyed by fire.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNelson bowlers beat a Revelstoke\nteam by 62 points In last night's telegraphic bowUng.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nYesterday at the high achool\nI.O.D.E. medals for school work and\nessays wers presented to Arthur England, Evans Wasson and Miss Nancy\nGracy.\nI read the paper with eager Joy\nConcerning a coming sale,\nOr  the   Intricate state of  Gandhi's\nhealth\nAnd the riot in Portsmouth goal.\nI see the stocks are going down,\nThen, with a sad expression,\nI note that no one has nerve enough\nTo verbally end the depression.\nAnd  factories etlll close and  wages\nare cut\nBoth here and across the Atlantic,\nIt   would   almost   seem,   from   the\nvlolmt  deaths\nThat the world wu going frantic.\nA war seems imminent, so one says.\nThat  the  world  will soon  be on\nfire.\nThen    graciously    speaks'    anothe:\nprophet\nAnd calls the first a liar.\nSo I close  the  paper,  replete  witt\nnews,  \u25a0\nAnd hustle to catch the car,\nAnd think, as I ride, what a sob<.\nlot,\nI and  my neighbors are.\n\u2014O. R. WRAY, Edmonton Journ;-\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dally  News of  Novemcr\n24,1912.)\nThe ConsoUdated Mining St Smelting company has purchased a 73 per\ncent Interest tn the Silver King and\nKeUy mines on Toad Mountain and\nwill commence operation today. The\ndeal was consummated by T. W. Blng.\ney, S. G. Blaylock and Munroe Archibald of the ConsoUdated and R- s-\nLennle and A. E. Rand of the Kootenay Bonanza Mines, limited.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPrimroses are blooming tn the garden of Hugh W. Robertson.\n\u2022 *   *\nA big logging camp Is being estab\nlished at Deer Park with 60 men em\nployed. The outfit has a two-yea\ncontract to deliver to the waters edg<\n10,000,000 feet of logs. \u2022\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nDespite the lateness of the eeasoi\nquite a number of rowers were ou\nyesterday. L. Johnstone and E. Hack\ning were out ln a double and R\nBall. P. R. McGregor and A. GUkf\nIn singles.\ncm\n033333232\n\"Build ac. payrolls\"\nThanks.\nItWas\nSent\nSM\nIn mentioning the courtesy of\nPacific Stages, who turned,\nover a telegram from a lady\nIn Seattle requesting 14 tins\nof Pacific MUk for her baby,\na friend points out we failed\nto say the milk was sent\nThanks. This was an oversight.\nThe 14 tins went South at once\nby express.\nPacific Milk\n100% B.C. Owned tnd Controlled\nPlant at Abbotifora\nasms:\nThe Coeur d'Alene 1\nHotel\nIn the Heart\nof\nSPOKANE\nfinds that a pain killing drug has\nbeen given he ls unable to tell much\nabout the condition as he can't locate tbe exact spot of, or know the\nseverity of the pain.\nThis lost time may prove fatal.\nAnother kind of meddlesome interference li giving a purgative medicine. It ls only natural to give a\npurgative medicine to drive out any\nharmful material that Is In the bowel\nas a dose of castor oil or epsom salts\nls very effective for this purpose. But\nif the pain ln the abdomen ls due\nto an Inflamed appendix, or an obstruction ln the bowel, then a purgative medicine Is the most dangerous\nkind of \"meddlesome Interference\"\nand ts the cause of a large percentage of deaths.\nThe lesson then Is quite plain.' In\naU cases of abdominal pain no medicine should be given to relieve pain\nand thus hide the symptoms, and\nno purgative should be given which\nmight cause a break or rupture ln\nthe appendix or Intestine, thus setting up an lnflamatlon of the peri\ntoneum\u2014covering of the bowel and\nlining of the abdomen\u2014which often\nresults  ln death.\nWatt for the doctor before giving\nany treatment\n25 Years Ago\n(Front The Dally News of Novem'\n24, 1907.)\n8. 8. Taylor, who has been atten.:\nlng the sittings of the full court c\nVancouver, arrives In the city tonigh\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR, T. Embleton, grand masW\nof the Odd Fellows, ls over fron\nRossland and wUl pay the local lodg<\nan official visit.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA contract for a new skating an\ncurling rink at Fernie has been le\nto a contractor of Femle for $18,-\n700.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nApproximately 1532 has been raised\nfor the antituberculosis ball this Friday.\nANNOUNCES\nRooms newly furnished throughout in preparation for our usual excellent winter patronage\nfrom our friends in Canada.\nHARRY F. GOETZ, Mgr.\n\u00a7\nThe HOTEL COEUR\nd'ALhNE continues Its\npolicy of accepting\nCanadian money st\npar In payment of\nroom accommodation.\nThe Coeur d'Alene Is\nthe only hotel In\nSpokane that has\nfor years consistently\nmaintained this polity In regard to\nCanadian money*\nSPOKANE, Wash.\nAUNT HET\n\"She says she's only thirty, but\nX never saw anybody under fifty\nthat could spend a wbole visit\ntalktn'  about blood pressure.\".\nHeating\nStoves\nWhat about that New Stove for\nthe Cold Weather.   We have all\nkinds on hand to select from.\nPrices $0.25 to ?CC-00 each.\nStove Pipes, Elbows, Coal Hods,\netc.\u2014Get Busy.\nNelson\nHardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality\nHardware\nNELSON, B. C.\n lis\n\u2022in VtUUm DAILY KSWH, MBUON, \u25a0.C\u2014THUBgDAT MOBNWO, NOVIMBU M, Ml*\nDISPORT PAGE\nMM ItVtt\nRULING ON RUGBY\nGAMES PUYED \\\nON OCTOBER 29\nRochdale and Swinton Match\nto Be Replayed; Committee Decides\nj    I\/ONDOJt, Hot. M (OP \u00abMa)-The\n] management commltt*. of th, Eng-\nI lisli   Rugby  leagu,  met  today  and j\nrules aa to the atandlng ot leveral I\nimatchaa whloh wer. played Oot. It \u25a0\nduring * fi\u00abro\u00ab wind and heavy rain. ;\nPlay   wu  abandoned   In  several  of\nthe matohes before time.\nOfflolal atatement today declared\nthe games of tbat day neulted aa\nfollowi: Barrow defeated Bradford\nll-O. ealfoM defeated Wakifleld\nTown 15-0, St. Helen', defeated\nBramley  i\u00bb-J.\nTbe oommlttee ruled the game between Rochdale and Swinton stopped\naftar w mlnutea wltb Swinton Iwd-\nuig 1-1, bo replayed.\nPITCHER'S JOB SOFT   '\nNOW TO OLD DAYS\nTOMMY PAUL TO\nMEET YOUNG GENO\nPrimo Carnera and Levinsky\nWill Mix in Non-Title\nAffair\nCmCAOO, Nov. IS (API\u2014TBnny\nPaul, of Buffalo, NY., the NatloniU\nBoxing association's featherweight\nchampion, will meet young Oeno of\nLa Salle, III., In a 10-round non-\ntitle bout at White City November 38\nOeorge Nlchol*. another Buffalo\nboxer, wbo Ja recognised by the R\nB. A. aa light heavyweight title-\nbolder, will tackle Martin Levan-\ndowekl of Orand Rapids, Mich., ln a\nnon.tltle 10-rounder on the Prlmo\nCarnera-IQng Levinsky card at tbe\nChicago stadium November 10. Negotiations to sign up Frank Battaglia, Winnipeg middleweight sensation,\nto meet Nichols fall through.\nSt. Andrew's Club\nI Withdraws, Bird\nPlay in Trail\nTRAIL, B. c. Nor. 38.\u2014Bt. Andrew's Badminton club ls not to\nenter dty badminton league before\nChristmaa lt was reported today.\nTbe olub la suffering the lack of\na full complement ot membera thta\nyear and until tha membership grows\nwill not bs likely to enter tbe\nleague.\nBt. Andrew's withdrawal Is generally regretted, for this elub was\nactive In originating ths league and\nhas been a keenly Interested participant. I .\nBV  AL  DEMAREE\nTlu ahade of \"Iran Man\" Joe Mc-\nOlnity must chuckle to himself\nwhen he looks down upon ths\n\"over-worked\" pitchers ot todsy.\nThere has not been \u00bb pltshor ln\ntha last two yeara In slther major\nleague. wh\u00bb worked tn 300 cr more\nInnings.\nIn years past, two and sometimes\nthree pitcher, ott the earn, bail elub\ntook part ln considerably over that\nflgun. Nowadays if a pitcher works\nwith two days Ah ht ratea a headline.\nIn tba old days, Jo* MoOlnlty\nalwayi itarted the second gam* ot\na double header. It he won the\nfirst gams. It a certain pitcher had\nthe \"Indian sign\" on any particular olub, be always worked twloe\nln every series sgalnst them, whether wtth one or two days rest,\nTony Mulane of Cincinnati and\nSt. Louis oould work two dsys in, a\nrow, pitching either right or left\nhanded.\nAnother bard worker wu \"One\nArmed\" Daly, who once led the\nNaUonal leagu* In strike out*.\nmottled\n\"Scotland\nThe   fiem   of   gvmlne   Seats\nwhiskies,   distilled,    agrd-fn-th*.\nwood, bl\u00abod\u00abJ sb. BOlTLkO fa\nZdinbargh, Scotland aad ifclpr*d\nto Ctoidt la taped ind mftd\n26Vs os. sod 40 es. bottl* oolf.\nACES LEAD FERNIE\nBASKETBALL LOOP\nZipps, Aces and 150's Win\nGames Daring Past\nWeek\nnaurat B. c. NOV *\u00bb\u2014In the\nrernie city basketball lesgue .he\nAcei now lead with tbe King Edwards and 1S0\u00bb tielng tor seoond\nplace.\nThru elty leagui gamea were\nplayid thia week.\nThe first game was betwien the\n\"Zips\" of ths high school and\nthe King Edwards, resulting ln a\nsoon of 17 to It ln favour of\nthe Zipps. Th* soon at balf time\nwaa alao ln Zipps' favour 11 to 3.\nThe winning team showed good form\nand combination work. Thoae starring for the hl(b school won frank\nHughei wltb 11 pointa and Frank\nOonstsnna with 10.\nIn th* seoond gam* tb* Aoss of\nth* high ichool met and vanquished\nth* Northerners 10 to 11. Balf tune\nshowed 19 to s ln Aoss favour.\nVerklrk of the Aoes scored 10 ot the\npoint*.\nTh* third time of th* teries\nbetween the 1Mb and th* Hornet*\nbelonged entirely to th* ItOs with\n31 pointi to sero. Tb* HorneU\nseemed to be In hard hick all\nth* way through. Their many trtee\nnfuslng to go through th* loop.\nPernle High school teams of boys\nsnd gills sre being formed to visit\nKlmberley snd play their high school\nteams next Saturday.\nSMELTER SPORTS\nBODY IS SHORT\nCURLING MATERIAL\nTRAIL, B. 0., Nov. 33.\u2014forty mam.\nbinhlpi in required, lt la understood to put B3.K. curling on an\norganised basts.\nThe new branch of' th? Smelter\nSports auoclation activity apparently wll attain this mtmbtnhlp without trouble. Erceptlonal enthusiasm\nhas been shown smong curlen on\nshift work ind the opportunity to\nget morning gamet will not be overlooked by miny of them.\nA membership of to Would previa*  10 rinks.\nThis advertisement is not\nmblished or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by\nhe Government of British\nColumbia,\nSARNIA 12 BEATS THE\nWOODSTOCK JUNIORS\nIN FIRST SEMI-FINAL\nWOODSTOCK, Ont., NOV. M (CP)\n\u2014Sarnia Oedlams lived up to advance\nnotices ta being oni of thi beet\nJunior teems ever turn*d out 'in th*\ntunnel city when thtr held th*\nstrong Woodstock Grade to an 8-5\nscon hen this afternoon tn the\nflnt of thl two-gam*. ORp.U.\nJunior eeml-Ilnals. Conditions were\nanything but Ideal with fumblee\nplaying a big part ln thl scoring\nchances for both twelvee.\nH. M. WHIMSTER\nHEADS CURLING\nRINK  LIMITED\nRoy Sharp Ig Vice; Jeffs\nand Whimster Named\nDelegates\nMcQovern-Corhett-There Was a BatUe!\nH. 14. Whimster was named president ot the Nelson Curling Rink ltm-\nlttd ftt ft meeting of the directors\nTuesday night. Roy Sharp was elected vloe-presldent, Oeorge Horstead.\nsecretary*treasurer and O. V. Blsck-\nwood auditor.\nAt ft meeting of the curlers the\nsame evening, committees were named for the various functlonlngs of\nthe sport. AI Jeffs and H. M. Whimster were named delegates to the\nBritish Columbia Curling association\nconvention and B. Bush and W. M.\nVance were named as alternatives.\nA resolution was forwarded to ths\nB. C. Curling associstion recommend-\nlog that Vancouver be granted a\nmembership to the provincial organisation.\nRev. J. Jt. Youngson was named\nchaplain.\nCommittees were;\nMembership\u2014A. B. Qtlker, J. H.\nLong. H. Bush, R. S. Horton. 8. T.\nBostock and ?\u2022>!- Poulin.\nClassification\u2014Al Jeffs, C. J. Minefield, J, o. Bennett, C, D. Blackwood.\nRoy Sharp, and Howard Buih.\nloe\u2014P. A. Whitfield, W. A. Marr.\nand P. Arlt.       <\nRules\u2014C. X. Mansfield, Magistrate\nWUUam Brown and William Biner.\nInter-clty competition\u2014J. M. Gordon, R. 2. Horton, A. B. Gilker, XX.\nH. H. MacKenzie, R. Andrew, Roy\nSharp and J. Teague.\nCoaches\u2014A. J, Dill, O. I. Archibald,\nand George Douglas.       . .\nLadles \u2014 H. M. Whimster, R. d.\nBarnes and Roy Sharp.\nIce-maker\u2014I. A. Calbick.\nSKI CLUB COMES\nINTO BEING, YMIR;\nPREPARE THE HILL\nYMIR, B- C, Nov. 33\u2014A meeting\nwas held at the horn* of Mr. and\nMrs. D. McKay, for the purpose of\norganizing aski club. Quit* a number of the looil boys attended and\nthe toUnVfing officers were elected.\n9. Curwen, president; D. McKay.\nsecretary; Clifford Anderson, treasurer; William McKay, hill captain;\nJames Til ton, vtoe-hlll captain. Arrangements were made to put the\nhill In shape as soon as there is\nenough snow.\nTurn back the pages t March 31, i\n1M3, and you'tt- get picture like I\nthe one above, tt shows Terrible\nMcGovern, left, facing Young Corbett,   right.for   the   second    tine,j\nTerry having lest his featherweight\ncrown when Corbett knocked him\nout ln the tecond round of their\nfight ftt Hartford, conn., Jn 1901.\nAfter (Ms picture wns snapped Cor\nbett gave Terry another beating,\nknocking him out In the eleventh\nround., in oenter of picture ls Ed.\nGrsney, famous old-time referee, H\nTOCGH   FOR   GAR\nGar Davidson's first year as\ncouch of the Army's football team\nwill find him with only three ->t\nthis year'i regulars back. They are\nBrown,  Jablonsky  and  Kopesak.\nLOST   TO  MATTY\nAndy Coakley, victim of a Christy\nMathewson shutout victory during\nthe Athletics-Giants world series\nof 1905. Is now baseball ooach at\nColumbia   University.\nThe secret of all those Democratic votes ln New York might\nae well be spilled now. It\nwasn't Roosevelt or Al Smith who\nswung the boys into line under the\nTammany banner. It was Stanislaus Zbyssko, the wrestler.\nJust before tba campaign ended,\nTammany engaged tha big Polish\ngrappler to make a aeries of speech\nea in the vicinity of St. Mark's\nPlace New York City. They gave\nZtbby a truck In which to ride\nand from whloh he was to mtke\nseveral talks to the voters.\n\u2022   \u2022   i \u25a0\nWHERE'S   STANISLAUS?\nZbyszko went ao swiftly from\nplaoe to pl*o\u00bb that his miuu-\ngem oould not keep up with blm.\nAa soon as he had delivered hli\nquota of oonsonants be tfould vanish, and the managers would duh\nfrantically In pursuit, wondering\nwhere bs would speak nest and\njrhat he would say.\nReporters finally caught up with\nhim. Hs explained:\n\"I made ft speech at Twenty,\nsixth atreet In English. Further up\nI made a speech ln Russian. I have\nbeen nuking epeechea all evening,\nand I have spoken ln German. Polish, Russian, French, Italian, Spanish\u2014even Turkish. I speak ton\nlanguages   fluent,   you   understand,\"\nZbyszko ww asked about his political views. He replied:\n\"I believe ln unity. I believe\nmaybe there would bs a revolution\nif ths Republican stayed in power.\nThat's what I teU the voters.\n\"I teU tbem that Z em firmly\noonvlnoed that the Democratic administration will restore prosperity\nto this magnificent country. Mr.\nHoover's administration has been a\nfailure and he has no practical\nplans for the future, tt would be\nvery stupid of ua to re-elect him\ntq office. The Democrats will repeal\nthis foolish prohibition law. lift\nthis horrible depression which Is\ndriving us mad, and bring ua back\ngood tinw\"\n\u25a0   *   i\nAN   EXPERT   YANISHER\nA reporter started to ask a\nquestion, \"And how about\u2014?\"\nbut Ebysko was 90ns, on the ww\ndown the street to make another\nspeech-\nZbyako Is a big man, but he has\na way of getting around. Probably he has u many ways of getting\naround and away as Houdini him\nself knew about. It ls aa wonder\nreporters and managers oouldn't\nflAd Stanislaus.\nOnes in Russia during tha war,\nZbysko actually had to wrestle\nfor his life. A Russian wrestler\nnamed Aberg had accused Stanislaus of being an lmposter and not\nreal wrestler at all. In addition\ninformation was lodged with the\ngovernment to the effect that\nStanislaus wu a spy.\nTbe authorities ordered him to\nwrestle Aberg, and If he should be\ndefeated, he would be executed.\nThs contest, held ln a big hall ln\nPetrograd, waa attended by hundreds of soldiers who wera fried-\nly to Aberg.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nHELP YOURSELF,  BOYS\nAfter the two m*n had wrestled\nfor nearly three hours. Zbysko finally pinned Aberg'a shoulders to the\nmat. Then running to his corner,\nStanislaus tore open *~ bag containing a thousand rubles. He\nhurled tba money Into the crowd.\nThere was a wild scramble for the\nmoney. After it was over Zbysko\nwaa not there.\nSo it is n^t hard to understand\nGEORGE YOUNG\nAND MARGARET\numt WED\nBoth Famous Swimmers; Will\nLive in Toronto After\nHoneymoon\nBowling Scores\nFollowing 1, th, remit of , ladles'\nftm, played ftt tbe teflon Wednesday:\nMM.   A.   KRAFT   VI\nMM.   I.   WORTHINGTON\nlet 2nd ird Tot.\nMre. T. PU;er 11] IM IM 405\nMre. A. Kralf  ._ IIS   140   IK   453\nToUl,   M   IH   101   U!\nHIM  I.  lasll* \u2014 IN   lit     M   Ml\nMn. J.\nWort bin, ton \u2014 14*   UT   lit   iii\nTotal*   379   Ml   313   7S\u00bb\nHigh   Individual   more,   Mri.   A.\nKraft, IM.\nHigh aggregate aoon, Mra. A. Kratt\n4S3.\n\u2022O LONO MABCHIONESi\nTbe Marchioness, world', champion 3-year old trotting nil;, haa\nMen iold by Mra. Ralph R. Keeler,\nAuburn, K. T., to a party In Italy.\nThe  reported  sal,  prloe  la  113,000.\nTHAT'S   NIC!   SUGAR,   LOU\nLou Gehrig la doing a atand la\nvaudeville during the winter at\n\u20223000 a week.\nCANADIAN UNION\nTO DECIDE ON\nMETRIC SYSTEM\nWmMPBO, Kov. 23 (CP>\u2014Adoption of the metric eystem for use in\nCanadian track and field events wtt!\ncoma up for important dl\u00bbcu\u00bblon\nat the annual meeting of the Arniteur Athletic 'Union of Canada. J\nMorkln. president $f that body.\nstated today.\nMr. Morkln said tha unlvmna'\nsystem of measurement was looked\nupon with not a little favor in\ngreat many sections snd added there\nwas a strong possibility of Canada\nmaking the change from measurements of miles and yards to thst of\nmeters.\n*\u2022\nr-\n\u2022 I\n\u25a0\ne    \\\na\nBEEO  ORCtK   HEAVY\nTha only Greek heavyweight boxer\ntn tb. United States at present Is\nOeorge Neron. He la training ln Los\nAngelea Ior an Amerloan campaign.\nMOST   FROM   ILLINOIS\nMore playera\u201430\u2014In th, Nitional Professional Football leagu, eome\n(rom Illlnola than any other state.\nMARGARET  RAVIOR\nPHILADELPHIA, Nov. 33 (API-\nMargaret Ravlor. Olympic swimmer,\nand long-distance aquatic star, today became the\nbride of Oeorge\nToung, ot Toronto, Oct., wbo, as\nlad of 17, won\nthe gruelling 30-\nmils Oatallna Island marathon\nswim.\nTh, ceremony,\nat ths hom, of\nOeorge Kellerman,\nan uncle of tbe\nthe bride, was witnessed by membera of her Immediate family and\na few friends. Toung'a mother was\nunable to attend. The Bev. w. S.\nKerchnsr, of the Heldslburg Reformed Lutheran church, performed\nths ceremony.\nLeaving Immediately for a short\ntrip before taking up residence in\nYoung's horns la Toronto, presented\nto him after he won the Catallna\nSwim In 1937, the couple refused to\ndiscuss their Immediate plana.\nTh* romance ct the two noted\nswimmers began when they were\ntraining for the 1930 Canadian national exhibition marathon awlm.\nAces Trim Hornets\nFernie Basketball\nAOES   TRIM   HORNETS\nFERNIB, B. 0., Nov. 33\u2014Tlw Fernie basketball league of six teama\nhaa got well Into Its schedule of\nplay, and competition ls keen. Tbe\nAces, a high school team ls ln ths\nlead wltb eight pointe having not\nlost a gam* yet. The Xing Edward\nHotel boys follow them *lth six\npoints, having lost one game. The\nstanding of thc league la aa flollowe:\nAces. I; King Edward. 8; 150s, 4:\nHornets.  3;   and  Northerners, 0;\nIn Friday night's game ths acee\nshowed their superiority by beating tk* Hornets 34 to 13. Dou-\nfour and Verklrk of the Aoes sgsln\necortag heavily, getting 17 points\not th* teama 34. The Hornets\nahowed an Improvement lit form.\nIn the gam* between the ztpps\nand Northerners, resulting ln tbe\nZlpp* victory 33 to 30, there was\nsplendid combination work between\nColes. Hughes and Lancaster of the\nZtpps, Hughes wu the star scorer\nmaking 13 points, stelnheart of\nthe Northerners made half hia teams\nscore.\nIn th* third gam* of the evening\nth* King Edwards had 30 to the\nIKK' 9  point*.\nwhy th* Tammany managers and\ntbe reporters uver oould quit,\ncatch up with Zbrako In New\nYork. Stanislaus baa a way of\ngetting around.\n\u2022    I\nDRY GINGER ALE\nA sparkle in the\nfirst sip.... in the\nlast \"Say When\"\nAccept only the genuine\nBUFFALO BRAND\nCalgary Brewing and Malting\nCo., Ltd.\nI\nCHRISTMAS\n-CARDS\u2014\n24'Hour Service\non all order? reaching this office if requested.\nYou still have time to mail to\nOld Country if you act quickly.\nWe have hundreds of samples\nto choose from at prices that\nare positively the lowest.\n2 DOZEN CARDS\nprinted with your name\nand address.\n$2.00, $2.50, $2.75\n\"p *<> $7.50\nTake advantage of this\nextraordinary offer to\nremember your friends\nthis Holiday Season.\nPHONE 144\nfor thrisivnias Cards\nNelson Daily News\nJob Dept.\n \"\net-m\nMM MR\n\u2022 TRE KELSON DAILY KIWI, KELSON, \u00bb.C\u2014THTJMDAT MMMOTO, NOVEMBB* t- lltt*\n?m$w wantsedm Where Buyer &$euer Mm W(,n&,\n\"Murder of the\nNight Club Lady\"\nTh\u00ab New Thatcher Colt Detecti-e Mystery\nV-.W: .V\nBy Anthony Abbot\nSTNOTSIS\nlota, Oarewe, night club habitue,\ntetxlra, a death threat. New Tear',\neve. Pievloualj her do, and tar-\ntot wera mjaterlouily killed. Dlatrlct Attorney Wri* *_. DoujhwW\n\u2022uspect* LoU ol being tbe \"brain,\"\not tb, jewel tbelf rlnj that hu\ntattled the police. Although her\nhuaband, Oaylotd Olftord, died\npractically penniless, Lola Uvea In\nluiunr. Polioe Ooramlealoner Thatcher Oolt place, a fuard In U>la'a\npenthouee apartment, warning her\nthat ehe muat not be alone In a\nroom at any time. Mra. Carewe.\nLola'a mother; Chun, tbe butler,\nXunlo, the maid, and Vincent\nRowland, an attorney, are praaent.\nIn the mini room, tbe commie-\n\u2022loner flnde a ba belonging to\nChristina Quires, Lola's ffueet. It\nevidently had been UMd tbat nicht,\nyet Lola Informs Oolt that Chrls-\ntlne la at the Lion's Paw, a madhouse, where Lola waa to bave\nJoined her. Colt U surprised to\nfind Mra. Carewe's room ln strante\ncontract to the surrounding wealth.\nLola'a own boudoir la a gaudy con-\ntwdlctlo* of the living rooen'a elegance. Lola refueea to reveal the\nIdentity of the young man whose\nphotograph adorn, her dresser.\nAgainat orden, she uteri tbe guest\nroom alone. A scream follows.\nRushing ln, Oolt finds her on the\nfloor, unconscious. Dr. Hugh Beld-\nwln. a friend, diagnoses the caae\nas t heart attack. Lola dies; Oolt\ncalls it murder. Unnotloed, he\ntake, something from, the doctor's\nbeg.\nCHAPTER TEN\nDistrict Attorney Dougherty faced\nColt In the- middle of the room and\nlaid two red hands on the chief's\nshoulder*.\n\"Por once you and I agree, That-\neber.\" be announced. \"Thia ta murder!\"\nCOtt nodded aombrely.\n\"And I think I've got the solution!\" added the district attorney In\na husky whisper.\n\"Which Is \"\n\"Inside Job-r-those desth threats\u2014\nkilling of the dog and parrot\u2014all\nthat stuff\u2014get this room-mate woman and give her the worksl\"\n\"Tou mean Christine Quires killed\nLola?\"\n\"Or knows Wbo did!\"\n\"Motive,   Dougherty?\"\n\"The dead gin knew too much\u2014\nabout jewel robberies.\"\n\"I don't know how It was done!\nBut no matter what kind of hocue-\npocua they used, we oan find It\u2014\ngive ua time,\" proclaimed the district attorney with ao oracular wave\not his mighty wm. \"Touli aee that\nthe Jewel ring Is at tbe bottont of\nthis!\"\nThere was a telephone beside the\nbed. Escaping from Doughterty's\ngrasp, Oolt lifted the receiver and\ncalled for hie private number at\npolice headquarters.\n\"Inspector Plynn, please,\" the\ncommissioner murmured into the\ntransmitter, and then turning his\nluminous eyes on me, he added:\n\"Tony, get Lieutenant Pallon. Tell\nhim what', happened. Have him\ncheck up on hia men, to see If anv\nof them heard anything unusual.\nThen report to me here ln five minute,. And Tony\u2014\"\nI wat at the door.\n\"Find  out who Is ln charge ot\nINDEX  TO CLASSIFIED\nADS\n11\n,i, ,  fl\n10\nie\n\"\ni\nBouts. Launches for Rent \u2014\nBoats, Launches for Sale \u2014\n  49\n' M\nf.eoes 'home until released.\"\n\"I understand, chief.\"\nAa I hurried from . tha detth\nchamber, I knew full Well what waa\nnow happening down at Center\nstreet. Once the commissioner's message wu received, action oommenoed.\nInstantly the bureau of criminal information was notified tint a woman\nnamed Lola Carewe had died sudden*\nly and mysteriously; murder was\nsuspected. All' the facte Oolt gave\nover the telephone vere transmitted\nto thli oentral bureau and ' thus\nmade available, If and when necessary. U> the entire foroe. Meanwhile,\na corps of specialists was being organized and dispatched to the scene;\ndetectives from tbe borough homicide squad, with their official photographers and stenographers. With\nthem would come the medical examiner or one, of hia assistants.\nProbably the Inspector commanding\ntha particular detective division\nwhich included Lola's apartment\nhouse ln lie boundaries, would also\nappear, ln oompany with tba captain of tbe local precinct.\nKnowing that these troope from\nthe homicide squad would soon be\nIn possession of the premises, I was\nalso sure that Thatcher Oolt would\nfollow hia usual custom of learning\nas much as possible before hli re-\nenforcements arrived. It la sensible\npolice practice In the conflict between authorities and witnesses to\nstrike at the earliest possible moment. In the shock that overcomes\nall except the most hardened\u2014or\nthe most Insane\u2014or criminals, Just\nafter a violent death, the bertiera of\ndeception are difficult to sustain. A\nmurderer may prepare In idvance\nthe most convincing story and yet,\nImmediately following the execution\nof hia dark deed, find hlmaelf utterly unable to speak a syllable of\nhis lying tale. I felt positive Colt\nwould begin his inquisition at onoe.\nThe fact was, as I learned later, that\nColt gave orders to Inapector Flynn\nto arrive half an hour late, ao that\nhe might have time to begin his\nInquiry.\nClosing the door behind me, 1\ncrossed tbe wide expanse of the living room floor. In one of the easy\nchain by the fireplace sat Dr. Hugh\nBaldwin, smoking a cigarette. His\nbeg lay between his feet. The physl-\nclan'i alert gase searched the fire\nand ashes, ln quest of what, only he\noould have revealed. Standing between the windows, hia hands folded\nat hia thighs, wsa Chung, hia great\nand ugly face a Uttle to one side.\nthe baldness of hia enormous crown\ngleaming under a suspended lamp.\nNeither man seemed to notice me as\nI opened the front door and strode\nto the head of the Iron staircase.\nThere I encountered Lieutenant Fallon.\n\"I aaw the doctor go ln,\" waa Fallon's greeting, **but the chief sent\nword that everything waa oke and\ntold me not to stir from here until\nI was relieved. What tbe hell ls happening In there?''\nWhen I enlightened Fallon, the\nlook of demoralised astonishment on\nthat honest Irish faoe waa beyond\nall  art.\n\"By Ood I It couldn't have been\ndone by anybody getting Into the\nroom\" he blurted. \"Nobody oould\nget by tne or these boys of mine,\nand there's no such thing as secret\ndoorways in this Joint. There is\nsomething awful funny about all\nthis. Mr. Abbott Tell the ehlef 111\nreport back to him in five mlnutea!\"\n(To Bc Continued)\nOLD-TIME    RESIDENT\n; OF   Y1CT0EIA   PUS\nVICTORIA, Hov. as. \u2014 Joshua\nHenry Warner, an old-time .resident\nof.   Victoria,    died    today    at    Bt.\nJoseph's hoepltal. Born at Halifax,\nNova Scotta, he came to this ctty\nin I 1880.     .\nBoats. Launchea  Wanted\nBusiness Opportunities *___.\nCanaries for Sua  ___\nCats and Dogs for Bale \u2014\nCata and Ooga Wanted _\nDeaths\nDressmaking     \u2014..,\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u2014\nFarm and Dairy Produce\nFarm  property  for  Bale  .\nPor Bale or mtcnange  __\nFor Bale or  Rent\nFurnished  Rooms for  Rent\nFurnished   Roomi  *Vnrted  -\nFurniture   !or  sale  -.,,\nHelp   Wanted .\nHouses  for  Kent \u2014\u2014\nHouses   Wanted    ,., , ,\nIn  Memcrlam   \u201e\u2014.,. -,\t\nInsurance  \u2014.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,\u2014..\u2014..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nInvestments   ,\t\nLivestock for Bale\nLivestock Wanted\nLiterary\nMachinery    .\u2014\u2014\u2014.\u2014\nMarriages \u25a0\u25a0 \u2014\nMining, Timber, Lumbar ,\nMiscellaneous\nMiacellaneoui   tor   eate\nMiscellaneous   Wanted   -\nNotices   .._\nMualcal    Instrument!\nN ursery    Prod ucta   _~\nPoultry and Egga \u2014.\nPrinting    \u201em~.,.\u2014.\u25a0\u2014\nproperty for Bale \u2014\nProperty   Wanted   \u2014-\nRabbits tor Sale  ___.\npersonal  \u2014, \u201e    . \u25a0 ......\nPlanU \u00ab\u2014\nRanches for Bent\nReanrta\nRoom   and   Board\nRooms  for  Rent  .\nRoo oil   Wanted   -\nSchooli        -   -\nLEGAL NOTICES\nLittle Expeiue and No Delay Buying or Selling the Classified Way\nEverything Listed in the \"Want*Ads\"\nMAIL WANT-AD'\nFORM'\nFill Out and Mail or Bring It to\nThe Daily News Want* Ad Dept.\nFIGTTRI OUT THI COST OF TOUR AD FOR YOURSELF: Rites, are Ue per tine psr day, \u2022\ncoMScutivi daily insertions tor ths price of 4. .Minimum cost of insertion. Mo Rates are less\n101 for prompt payment. Minimum number of llnea charged, \"J. Name, address (and box number when used) are part of id. and therefore chargeable. CBK IBIS FORM, AHD WRITE\nPLAINLT.\n\"QOVtBNMENT   MQtOB  ACT\"\nNOTICI     OF     APPLICATION     FOR\nL'U.NBLNT      TO      TRANSFER      OF\nBEEK'LRLNtE\nNOTICE IS HFItEBT GIVEN that\non the 1-th day of December next\nthe und\u00abrsign?d Intends to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Boird lor consent to transfer of an undivided\none-half share or intereat tn Beer\nLicence No. 2027 and issued in re-\nsunt ot premises being pirt ot a\nbuildlnp known as \"Pmehurac Inn,\"\nsituate at South Slocan in the\nCounty of Kootenay upon the lands\ndescribed as parcel 2 of Blork \"B\"\nof District Lot 303. District of\nKootenay, Map 672, Nelson Land\nRegistration District, in tlie Province of British Columbia, frutn\nOeorge Jerome Kingsley to Ernfst\nJohn Bowkett of South Slocan, British   Columbia,   the   transferee.\nDated at South Slocan, B. C. this\nOth day of November, A. D.  1932.\nErnest John Bfwkctt\n14639)\n(I)\nSHUTTER\u2014To    Mr.    and    Mrs.    J.\nShu tele,   at   Trail-Tadanac   hosptta.,\nNovember ll, a son.\nCAN A HIES   FOR   BALK\nFOR CHRISTMAS GUARANTEED\nSinger canaries. Phone Mrs. Omy\n407R. (4803)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFUR   COATB   REPAIRED,   RELINED,\nremodelled, phone 428. Mrs. Lee.\n(4500)\nrOR  ALL  RADIO TROUBLES  CALL\nLee's Radio, 428. (4060)\nROOM  ANU BOARD\nBOARD AHD ROOM VERT REAS*-\nonable. Apply DaUy News Box\n4781. t476\u00bb\n CLASaiHKD    al\u00bbV<\u00abi'\u00bbINO\nLocal Kcadi'n  iMKci\n(Minimum  two One*)\n\u00a32q   a   Hue    Display    type   la\/gei\nthan Q  point, charge at  rate of  221\na   line   8   point:   i.e.,   on*   Uno   U\npoint, charge 440;  one line  14  point\ncharge eee   Daily for oue month or\nmure deduct 25  per cent spac* disc\nfi oni    above    ratea,    minimum    for\nr.iouth.y   advertinemeLis   sll 44   lase\ndlsccuut.  Minimum   charge.  44c.\nCLASfclFUED\n(Minimum   lau   lines)\nlie,a Hue per insertion   Six consecutive Insertion*,  44c  a  line;   per\nmouth.    1143    a    Une.    Mimmum\ncbatgo,   22u. f\nMarriages, death, and in raemor*\nlam notices. 22c a line. Lists of\niloweis nt funerals, gilts at weddings, etc., i\/o a Une.\nHON   M Mill RS\nIf a Dally News hoi Number in\ndeeired theie Is sn extra charge of\n*llo,\nLEGAL   NOTICES\n16c  i   line  first  insertion.   12c  a\nline  additional  insertions.\nriiOlLsMU.VU.   OR   BUSINESS\n(.'Alt US\n(Minimum two  linei)\nYearly cuntract*-*! io a line per\nmonth. \u25a0 '\nSix months' contract\u2014II37 a line\nper month.\nTransient\u2014#1 65 a line per month\"\nI'LASMHED   DISPLAY\nSams rate s% transient or contract\ndisplay, according to classification\nand spsce used. Minimum l Inch.\nwith same provision *or caih discount\ni Above rates are les, io per cent\ncash discount when accounts ara\npaid on or before the 20tli of\nmonth   following   publication.\nAl'iOMOMUS   FOB  UIB<\nCHEV. SPORT COUPS, iMfe mr*.\nclass condition, cheep for eaal\nApply Box 4783 Dally News. \\VM\nAPARTMFNT-BI7.E   PIANO  PERK\ncondition, litis cash or term*. Oa\nor   wr.tc   Mason   &   Rlsch.   (47f~\n6-TUBE   KOLSTER   BATTERY_\ndio,   only   $lft.50.   Mason  &\n>UH.N|\u00bbUEU BOOMS FOR RKNT   (15)\nHOU8EXEEP1NQ ROOM AND 3\nroom suite on Baker St. Phone\n631R. (4731)\nFURNISHED ROOM. RFNT M08T\nreasonable. Strathcona hotel.\n(4879)\nFURNISHED      HOUSEKEEPING\nroom, phone MM. Cove, 3B0R.\n(4714)\nHOLMES   FOR  RENT\n(Zl)\nMISCELLAKEOS  FOR  SALE\n(27)\nUNFURNISHED BUNOALOW. 8TAN-\nlv street. Close tn. Redecorated,\nthroughout, garage, furnace. Immediate possession. Phone 20.\n(4770)\n100.000 FEET SECOND HAND RE-\ncondltloned Pipe suitable for all\npurposes. All etzes. Write to\nHwartz Pipe Yard. 230. 1st Ave,\nEast, Vancouver, B. C. (4490)\nSTREET (or P.O. Boi Wo.)\nPOST   OFFICE\nCLASBOTCATIOH\nNUMBTO  OF  DATS\nAMOUNT   ENCLOSED   I\nDaily News Want'Ads Bring Results\nmrr ra\u2122\u2122n^vairuiiiffiirrr^^^ _ta^iE__-_-_\nSEVEN    BOOM    HOUSE    MODERN.\nB'aney   St.   NeaT   cratral   echool.\nt20. Apply O. F. McHardy, agent.\n(4781;\nMISCEIXANEOUK\nC<9)\niiimiiiiiMiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHi\nSMALL  HOOSE  FOB  BENT.   APPLY\nMrs Poulin. cor. Stanley   and   Innes\n  14531)\nFIVE   BOOM   BUNOALOW.   THBEE\nbedroomo. Phone 294. (4774.1\nHOUSES FUBNISHED AND  UNFUR-\nnlshed. Phone 80SL (4780)\nPROPERTY  WANTED\nIIIIMIIIIIIItlMIIIMIIIIMMMIIIIIIIIIIimil\n1   WANTED   I\ns Up4o-Date Home 5\n5 6 rooms including 3 |\nS bedrooms. I\n5 Possession Dec. 1st. =\n2 Phone or Write =\nS '  Manager, =\n= HUDSON'S BAY CO. =\n= (4804)' =\nilllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIMIINIIIimilllllllll\nI If you contemplate moving In I\nz the near future, set ln touch =\n3 with us.   We are equipped to s\nZ. take care of your moving     W\njS problems.                 , S\n~ PHONI  106 ' ~\n| WilliamS'Xransfer |\nH 009   Ward  St. '  Nelson 2\nI (4770)   1\niiliiiiiiimiiiiiiitimiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\nPROPERTY   FOR  BALB\n(34)\n\"THE  OBILL'  RE8TAUBANT.   N15L-\n\" eon,   B.   C.   Very   modern   equip.\nment.   Very  low  price,   cash   and\nterms. Apply, D. StDenis, trustee.\nNelson, B. C. (4800)\nBANCH CIOSE TO NELSON. GOOD\nhouse, barn and lien house, fruit\ntrees, cash $900. terms arranged.\nDally  News Box No. 4728.   ,47281\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, S.F. INT. A.C\nMunicipal and Commercial Audits\nP. O Box 1191, Nelson, B. C.(460J)\nT.   O.   JONF3\nPuWlo Accountant\nP. O. Box 721, Nelson, B. C.  <tS02i\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON established 1009\n305 Josephine St., Nelson. B. C.\n<450S)\nORENVILLE   H.   OR1MWOOD,   P.   p.\nBox 418, Kaslo, B. O. (4004)\nChiropractors\nDB. OBAY, OILKEB BUC, KELSON\n'     .  .   . (45051\nDR.   MACMILLAN,   ORAD.   PALMER\nSchool, Aber Blk., Nelson, Ph. 212.\n(450\u00abl\nMITTUN AND OEDDES. X-BAY and\nMCM, Cranbrook and TralL (46071\nFlorists\nJOHNSON'S OREENHOUSES\u2014Phone\n342. cut flowers, potted plants\nand floral designs. (4508)\nNEUON FLOWER BHOPPE. FULL\nline cut flowers at all times. Floral designs, phone 333. (4500;\nQrtraselle's Oreenhouses. Nelson, Cut\nflowers and floral deslgna.   (45101\nInsurance and Heal Estate\nR. W. DAWSON-Real SrtaW, In.!\nsurance Rentals. Next Hlpporsoii\nHardware. Baker etreet.        (4511) I\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe  Ark\u2014Dealers   In   Second  Hand\ngoods. Phone 534. Josephlne.(46iai\nStorajre\nSTORAGE, MOVING, COAL,  WOOD\nrhone 63. Burn's Coal It Cartage,\n . .  (46131\nTransfer\nATKINSON TRANSFEB, ROSEMONT\nCoal and Wood, (4614)\nWood Factory\nLAWSON'S WOOD FACTORY IIARD-\nwood merchant, 217 Baker street\n\u25a04616)\nTHE GUMPS-Welcome, Uncle Bim!\nNo means of communicating your WANTS'\nor 'OFFERS' to the General Public compares with the Quick, Easy, Inexpensive\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\n\"WANTAD\"\nMETHOD\nWhether you wish to Buy or Sell, Rent or\nLease, Loan or Borrow, the Solution is\nequally simple\u2014Just write out your JV ANT\nAD and Mail to the\nNelson Daily News\nWANT AD DEPT.\nPhone 144\n 'Ttt NIUON BAILT\nNCWf, NIUON, &C\u2014THVMDAT MOBNINO, NOVEMBER 24,   1938\narket and Mining News\nirons\nMN OVER BY\nOAST PEOPLE\njemsworth & Co. Given\nBond by Jackson and\nMcDonald\nJLANTOERECTA\nMILL IN SPRING\n>ates\u00bb Elmendorf Are\nEngineers; Get in\nSupplies\nffemsworfch & Co. of Vancouver\ntb taken 4 lease uid bond on\nd Gtoodeonffh mine new Tmir\njm the owners. Butt Jackson and\nhdy McDonald. The engineers Jn\narge of development, whloh haa\nen commenced, -re J. P. Coatee.\n\u2022merly connected with the Granby\nnlns company and W. J. Slmen-\nft ot Seattle. They hare com-\nnced to'get tn supplies and to\nondition Jhe bulldlngi. It is to*\n>ded to lnstei compreessor equip-\n\u25a0nt, and plans are to erect a mill\n; the eprtng.\n'RECENT  SHIPPER\njieporte of B. T. O'Orady, district\njnlng engineer, have repeatedly\niwn attention to the merits of\nIs property. It has been mention-\nfrequently m the annual re-\ni In the department of mines,\nattention wae drawn to lt ln\nLode Gold Bulletin, which\ns Issued this year.\nlowners of the property han\nIpped over 5000 tons of ore since\nQO. Smelter returns showed con-\n[its of around $17 a ton and suf-\nlent stiver and lead at present\nw prices for these metals to pay\ntight and treatment.\nIftieat Down in\nFace of Liverpool,\nChicago Easiness\nxport Figures Are Placed at\nLess Than 500,000\nBushels\nWINWIPBCJ, Hot. 38 (CP)\u2014In the\n\u25a0sence of any substantial export\nterest, etolness at Uverpool and\nllcago forced wheat prloes 1% to\nlower on tre grain exchange here\nday, when farmer Intereat as the\nvult of yesterday's bulge caused\n\u2022evy hedging pressure. Export flg-\nes were pieced at lees than 500,-\n0 bushels.\nNovember cloeed at 40H, December\n1 45H, May at 49 and July at 50'V\nU.S. markets plaoed a bearish conduction cn the war debt announce-\njmt from Washington, but declines\nWe kept to a fractional range with\nte exception of the oish month,\nr food buying ln tbe May on the\n>wn scale by Dew York and Chl-\ngo houses.\nEXCHANGES\n'Montreal, not. as <op),-Brit-\n1 and foreign eicbange ln relation\nj the Canadian dollar, aa compiled\nr th, Royal Bank ot Canada,\nMed today a. follows:\n-gentlna,   peso,   , 1 .3013\njatralia,   pound 3.0311\nilglum,  helia    ,\u201e _   .loos\n(ani, mlliele i    .0884\n[Una, Hong Kong dollar, _   J618\nSechoelovekla,   crown       .0344\nfenmerk,   krone .1078\nbland, flnmark \u2014: .0174\nianoe, frano _____   .0493\n\u2014 .2754\n-_ 8.7748\n._ .0071\n_. .48(2\n... 5029\n... .2881\n.. .0592\n,.  \u2014 5375\ngoslavla, dinar  ',' ,     ,.   .0182\nw ZeaUnd, pound  3.4314\nirway, krone _.__ .1841\nland,   aloll .1800\nlumanla,   liu .0071\nUth Africa, pound -___ 8.5783\nttn, peaeta \u2014\u2014 ,.. .0848\n\u00bbden,' iron,    : 5038\nItaerland,   frano  .2220\nlted statee. dollar, IV% per cent\n>remlum.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials  ......  59.47 off 3.69\n20 rails ;  26.73 off 1.15\n20 utilities 27.22 off 1.13\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMor. JJ.\u2014\nMINNEAPOLIS,   Minn.\n(AP)\u2014\nWheat:   No.   1   Nor.  47K;   No.   1\nBed   Durum   39%;   Dee.  48H:   May\nCorn:   No.   1   Yellow   9314-34.\nOat,: No. 8 White 14H-H.\nFlax: No.  1  1.03K-1.06K.\nINE LIST 15\nLITTLEIM\nGold Stocka Hold Finn\nBut Volume Down\nSharply\nTORONTO, No\u00bb. 23 (CP)\u2014Mining\n\u2022hare, on the Standard exchange\nmilled about a little today on the\nuncertainties arising from the conference on war debta hut at the\neloee prlcea wer, not very far from\nthe previous close except ln the caae\not tb, two big base metal stocks\nNickel and Noranda. Oold stock!\nheld quite flrmi; but the volume\nwaa very much under reoenf sessions.\nThe weakness of the \u00abrly afternoon, engendered by a Wall street\nslump, waa partly overcome and\nDome cloeed at 13.20, only five down,\nBollinger unchanged, Lake shore up\nIS and Mclntyre otf 28 at 23.78,\nand Wright Hargreaves down alt\npointa at 2.02. B. C. Pioneer closed\nat 4.81 for a loss of nine points.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nsrmany, relchsmark\neat Britain, pound\n\u25a0eece,   drachma   .....\nHand,  florin\t\nmgary, pengo .\u2014\ndia,   rupee   ...._..._\nMy,  lire\t\npan, yen\nJo:\nRONTO INDUSTRIALS\n1   Telephone.\ntl\n85%\n98ti\nizlllan   _.\u2014_\nts.\n8%\n8H\nA OU _-,\u2014.\nIV,\n8!4\nM\n87\n85\n88\nminion stores\n\u2014\n\u2014\n11\nrd of Can A_\n\u2022tv.\nIti\n754\n\u25a0am  Walker\u2014\n*%\nt_\n\u2022Ti\nperlal  OU  ....\n\u00bb_\n\u00bbti\nt\njjerlal   Tobao.\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2022 ti\nter  Nickel  \u2014\n\u00bb%\n\u00bb*1\n\u00bb%\n\u00abr pet, r\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\nHH\nJlaW     A     \u2014 mm-\nnvt\n11\n;i\nranda' .\u2014.\n30 ti\n.*>\n20.05\nAllegheny \t\nAllied Chemical\nAmerican Oan ..\nAm Foreign Pwt\nAmMaAFdy ..\nAm Smelt St Bat\nAm Tobacco ..\nAm Telephone ..\nAnaconda\t\nAtchison \t\nAuburn Motor, .\nBaldwin   \t\nBait & Oklo ...\nBendlx Aviation\nBeth Steal ....\nCanada Dry \u2022\u25a0\u2022\nCan Paclflo ....\nCerro de Pasco ..\nChes 8c Ohio ...\nChrysler   \t\nCom Se Southern\nCon. Oaa N. T. .\nCorn Producta . *\n0 Vfrlght pfd. .\nDupont \t\nEastman' Kodak\nElee Power & Lt\nErie   \t\nPord English ..\nPord of Canada .\nPint Nat Store,\nPreeport Texas .\nOeneral Motors .\nGeneral Electric\nOeneral Foods  .\nOold Dust \t\nGoodrich   \t\nOreat West Bug\nOreat North pfd\nHudson Motors ,\nInter Nickel ....\nInter Tel * Tel\nKenn Copper ...\nKresge S. S. ...\nMilwaukee pfd .\nMM Truck ..\nNash Motor, ...\nNat Dairy Prod\nN. Power ft Lt .\nN. T. Oentral .\nPao Gas tt tieo\nPackard Motora\nPenn R R \t\nPhUllpa Pete ...\nPur, OU   \t\nRadio Corp ...\nRadio Keith Or .\nRem Rand \t\nRock Island \u2014\nSafeway Stores'.\nSt. Louis St 8. P.\nShell Union ...\nS. Cal Edison ...\nSouth Pacific ..\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan OU of Ind\nStan Oil of N. J.\nStewart Warner\nStudebaker ....\nTexas Corp ....\nTexas Gulf Sul .\nTlmken Roller .\nOnion Carbide .\nOn Oil of Cal\nUnited Aircraft .\nUnion Pacific .\nU. B. Pipe St Fdy\nU. S. Rubber ..\nU. S. steel \t\nVanadium   Bteel\nWest Elee  \t\nWlllye Overland\nYellow Truck  .\n1_\n12 ti\n14ti\n\u20223 y.\nlti      IU\n78ti     7414\n54 ti\n.TV\nUH\nIB\n\u00ab*%\n108\n\u2022 ti\n43 ti\n48\n8\nHH\nion\n17V,\n11\n1*K\n8H\nlti\n74H\ntlH     52ti\n7%\n12 ti\n14 ti\n82 %\n3\n58 ti\n51H     48ti\nloeti    lOSti\n8 8\n89 88H\n43ti     42 ti\n\u00ab\n10 H\nlOli\nl\u00abTi\n11\n13ft\n7ti\n33 H\n14H\n8\n56 H\nBlti\n3\n10ti\n10\nlOti\n10 ti\n13\n'14\n34ti 231i\n18 I4H\n2%\nMM\nU. S. DOLLAR UP\nMONTREAL, Not. 33 (CP)-4ft\\tted\nites funds and sterling moved ln\npoalte directions tods;. Tb* Amer-\na dollar advanced Vs ol one per\nit to eloee at % premium of 15%\n* cent, while the pound eued\ntlB    to    W.7746.\n}\n87\n38 tt\n38\nMH\n83ti\n82 ti\n7H\nVk\n7*4\n\u2022Ti\n\u2022\n6\n3H\n\u2022y.\n\u00ab2H\n61\nMH\n35\n23 ti\n2314\nISH\n13\n13H\nISti\n15\nl\u00abti\n34 ti\n22'4\n2214\nIS\n15 ti\n15 y.\n8ti\n*  Vk\n6H\n\u00abH\n10 ti\n10\n10 ti\n8\n8\nnt\n7%\n8\n8H\n\u2022Ti\n8TI\n11\n10!i\n10 H\nlltl\n10 H\n10%\n3\nSTt\n3\n:iti\n31\n31\n13 H\nIS'\/.\nisy.\n18\nHVi\nWti\nWti\n23 It\n33 ti\n32 ti\n20'i\n28!i\n28 li\n8\n211\n3T4\n14\n12H\n13T.\n8Ti\n6H\n\u2022 H\n4ti\n4\n4\nIVi\n>Ti\nS\n8ti\n4\nStl\n4\nExchange Rates and New\nYork Stock Market\nBearish Affect\nBy  JOHN   P.   BOIOHAN\nAssociated Press Market Editor\nCHICAGO, Nov. 23\u2014Under the\nshadow of fresh liquidation of Deoember wheat contracts, all grain\nvalue, suffered downturns today.\nWar debt developments, together\nwith new setbacks both In BrltUh\nexchange rates and New York stock\nmarket quotations, hM a contributing bearish effect. Buying power\nwu restricted because of tomorrow\nbeing a holiday, with all United\nStates gram markets closed.\nWheat finished unsettled at almoat\nthe day'a bottom, 54 to 111, net\nlower, corn H to H down; oata ti\nto ti off, and provisions unchanged\nto 25 cents decline.\nREND IS ONLY.\nT SPOT\nAdvances in Heavy Trading on Otherwise\nDull List\nVANCOUVIR, B. O. Nov. 33.\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Reno furnished the bright\nspot ln sh otherwise dull market\non the Vancouver stock exchange\ntoday. The Issue was trade' heavUy\na total of 11,000 shares. Opening\nfirm at 56 the Issue sold steadily\nuntil th, doe, which waa a half\nhigher.\nBralorne halved a twe point gain\nto end the day at 17 for the only\nother gain among the -llnea Issues.\nPioneer continued Ita decline of\nth, previous eealon dropping 10\npoints to 4.50 after a firm opening\nat 468. Premier reached a peak ot\n81 during the day but closed unchanged at 58.\nA. p. Consolidated waa firmer\namong the olla advancing a half\nto 7ti.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWWNIPBO, Nov. 23.   (CP).-\nmarket   quotations:\nOpen   High   Low\nwheat-\nhot.   \u2014_   48H 48H\nDeo.' \u2014   48ii 48ti\nMay    \u2014   60ti 50)i\n81 tt 51 ti\n46 >i\n45 ti\n48\n50!i\nJuly    _.\nOATS-\nNov.    \t\nDeo.    _.._\nMay    \t\nJuly   ...._\nBARLEY\u2014\nNov _\nD\u00ab,    \t\nMay    \t\nJuly    ...._\nFLAX\u2014\nNov.    \t\nDeo.   \t\nMay    .....\nJuly    .....\nRYI\u2014\nNov\t\nDec.    .....\nMa\/    \t\nJuly      \u2014       \u2014       \u2014\nCASH   ORAM   CLOSE\u2014\nWheat:   No.   1   hart   47tt:\nnor 46ti:   No. 2  nor 42ti:\nnor. 48li;  No. 4 nor. 42li;\n38H:  Ho. 8 34ti;  feed 30tt;\n48ti: No. 1 durum tv,',.\n24\n22 Ti\n24 Ti\n25!i\n31'.4\n33\n70!',\n75\n75\n28 ft\n33 Ti\n24 It\n24%\n25 ii\n31 ti\n70 il\n75\n75 ii\n20%\n33%\n24\n21H\n24 ti\n25\n31\n32%\nOO'.i\n7414\n74 ti\n38H\n32%\n\u00abVt       IH    \u00abli\n50%     48%     48\nMl\n8%\n28\n16%\n25 ii\n114\n5H\n18\nWti\n26\n\u2022 lti     30%\n8%\n8\n15%\n33\n14%\n24%\n11\n37\n7114\n11%\n4%\n38%\n18 H\n37%\n3%\nlti\n5%\n25\n17\n35!,\n32%\n30%\n3%\n5\nl\u00abtl\n32%\n14%\n23%\n11\n24%     24%\n4%\n14%\n31%\n14%\n23%\n67 H\n11\n4%\n61%\n11\n4%\n33%     33%\n13%     13%\n35%\n3%\n\u2022Tt   an\n35%\n3%\ns%\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPIO, Nov. 31 (CP),\u2014Receipts: 618 cattle; 180 calves; 3490\nhogs;   850 sheep.\nCattle\u2014Steers, UP to 1080 lbs.\n(3.50 to 84.46; over 1060 lbs., \u00bb3.25\nto 88.75; heifers 83.50 to 84.26;\nfed calves |S to 86; cows, 8228 to\n32.50; bulls IIM to 3176; stocker\nand feeder steers, 32.25 to 3.75;\nveal   calves   85  to  84. \u00bb\nHogs\u2014Select bacon 81 per head\npremium; butchera 81 Per head\ndisoount.\nLambs\u201483.50 to 84; sheep 11.50.\nClose\n48%\n48%\n48\n50%\n24%\n33%\n34%\n-i\n81\n31%\n32%\n32%\n\u20228%\n60%\n74%\n76%\n38 ti\n28%\n31%\n34%\nNo.   1\nNo.   3\nNo.   5\ntrack\nL\nIn Most Cases Fairly Well\nAbsorbed; Volume Is\nOver 10,000\nMONTREAL, Nor. 23 (CP)\u2014A wave\nof eelllng that ln moet eaees wm\nfairly weU absorbed swept across\nthe market on the Montreal stock\nexchange today and resulted In 10\nlosses of s point or more and nine\nfractional declines. Against this were\nthree small advances and a down\nIssues   unchanged.\nTransfers exceeded 10,000 shares\nfor the first time ln two weeks.\ntn this class was Bra&lUan which\nrecovered a small loss to close unchanged at fl'\/j. Shawlnlgan Power\nclosed higher, gaining % at 10%.\nSteel of Canada picked up the ume\namount whHe Fraser companies sold\nfive cents higher at  30.\nCanadian Pacific yielded Vs at\n1514- International Nickel eased %\nto 6V_. Consolidated Sxelters was off\nthree points at M.\nMeat Prices on\nWholesale Mart\nFluctuate Some\nEggs Go Up Two Cents; Pick\nUp Noted in the Feed\nBusiness\nLamb cuts moved up a oent and\nham and bacon prlcea retreated a\neent on the wholesale market during\nthe paat week. While some llnea\nmarked time during the week there\nwas a fairly steed; oall for most\ncommodities.\nThe Christmas movement haa made\nItself noticeable and confectioneries,\nnuts, cranberries, peels, nuts, raisins\nand figs an moving ln small Quantities, Three cars of groceries and\ntwo cars of sugar arrived for local\nwholesalers and a shipment of\noranges la due today.\nEgg prlcea have advanced two\ncents a doeen with the supply of\nfresh eggs waning. There Is stllj a\ngood supply of storage egg* to he\nhad.\nA general tendency ls shown for a\nfractional pickup ln flour and feed\nmarket but no change ln prices\nhave occurred during the past week.\nShipments received during the week\nInclude a car of flour and one of\nalfalfa with a number of cars waiting loading.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbsna   \u201e ,\t\nAmo   LJiulm nn\nAJa*  .....\t\nAmulet    ,\nA  P   Consolidated\nBase   Metals    \t\nBldgood      \u201e\u201e,\nBarry Hollinger ....\nBig . Missouri\nC and E Lands .....\nChemical   Research\nDome      \u201e_\nDalhousie   '\t\nEastcrest    \t\nEldorado   ..... ^,\nFalconbrldge   ,. \t\nHome Oil ._  ,\nHowey    . , .\u201e\u2014\t\nHollingir  \t\nHudson Bay   ...\nInternational Nickel \u201e.._\t\nI^ke  Shore    \u201e  __\t\nMacassa       \u201e....\u201e\nManitoba Basin \t\nMalartlo    \u201e  \u201e \t\nMayland      .:\t\nNewbec    _ \t\nNipissing    . ,,, ,,     \t\nNoranda  \t\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBank of Commerce\t\nBank of Montreal \t\nBank of Nova Scotia\nRoyal    B\u00bbnk    \t\n270\n146\n33\n9\u00ab\nAbltlbl  power &  Paper  \u201e\nBeU    Telephone    \t\nBrazilian T L & Power ...\nBritish   American   Oil         8^\nCanada    Bronw         17\nOanadlan Oar & Foundry  ......    4%\nCanadian Car & Foundry pfd   12 Vi\nCanadian  Cement   _      4H\nCanadian    Industrial    Alcohol     2 %\nCons Mining &  Smelting\nDominion   Bridge    \t\nDominion   Textile    ^\nImperial   Tobacco\n05\n50\nMl\n1\n3\n31\nIV,\nOgilvie   Milling     125\nLake  of  the  Woods\nMassey  Harris \t\nMontreal   Power   ......\nNational   Breweries   \u201e\nNational   Bteel   Car\nPower   Corporation\nQuebec   Power   _\t\nShawlnlgan\nSo Canada Power \t\nSteel   of   Canada   \t\nWabasso  Cotton  \t\nWinnipeg Railway^ ,\nWlnlpeg   Railway   pfd\n9'i\nim\n10\n3 ft\n8\nAPPLE PRICES\nQUOTED, LONDON\nLONDON, Nov. 83.\u2014Private treaty\nprloes, Jonsthons l\"s 8d, 13s 6d.\nUses 8s lid. Delicious 13s 14d. All\naccording grade cozes 10s Oees 18s.\nExtra fancy stop auction London\nB. O. Jonafana ts lid. According\ngrade American Newtons fancy and\nextra stop r ctlons Liverpool B. C.\nJonathan 10s Sd to 13s. American\nNewtons 10s to 14s.\nPremier Oold\t\nSan Antonio \t\nSherrlt Oordon\nSudbury Basin\nSlscoe     \t\nTech   Hughes  \t\nVentures    ...-...._\t\nWright Hargreaves ....\nWlate   Ackerman   ....\n.03\n.03\n.85\n\u2022UH\n.07\n.88\n\u202201W\n\u25a006 %\n.13\n.85\n. .75\n. 13.05\n, ^.18\n. .06\n. 1.35\n. 1.18\n.      .50\n.55\n. 5.40\n. 4.00\n. 9.35\n. 31.10\n. .Wi\n. .01\n. .04\n. .18\n. .05\n. 1.13\n. 30.00 \u2022\n. .59\n. .85\n. .40\n.      .58\nSO\n. 3.30\n. .87\n. 3.03\n.     .40\nRussian Peasants Inspect Nev Airplane\n-\nt         r    \" *SHp(    *Ste3\n\"v    X^-  <&Tb                                            Han                    \\m\n\"%\u00a3?**$'  _^w^   St\u2014alt        aP-fatffnHPwrwSflBsiaa 11  ^BM                   ^H\nM\n] ^^^^WS^^^'.m^PP^S^,' TLr*-^J fr\nH      ^Wif'r   *?J^-    Wf _*i_^tA  5 \\Wm\\\nThe ancient mode of travel and ,(\u201e\u201e be seen the ancient type of har-\ntransportatlon of old Russia l\u00abL111UM),toh,tchtu,110n,t0.\nlinked with the most modern mode\not modern Industrial C.8.8.R. ln the P'ohably even more ancient wagon.\nABOVE picture.   In the foreground j The crowd of peasants la Inspecting\nln awe-struck manner the newest\nof the Soviet's fleet of aeroplanes,\nsaid to be the world's largest land\nplane.\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW  YORK,  Not.  33  \u2014  Copper\nquiet; electrolytic spot and future\n8H   to   6H.\nTin easy; spot and nearby 33.19;\nfutur* 33 35.\nIron quiet, unchanged.\nLead steady, spot New Tork 3.00;\nBast St. Louis 340.\nZinc dull; last St. Louis spot\nand  future 3.10.\nAntimony 5.35.\nAt London:\nCopper, standard, spot \u00a331 15s; future \u00a332; electrolytic, spot \u00a3?8 It;\nfuture \u00a337 5s.\nTtn,  spot  \u00a3153   15s;   future  \u00a3154.\nLead, spot \u00a311 13s 81; luture \u00a311\n17s  6d.\nZinc, spot \u00a315 3s ld; futun \u00a315\n17s 8d.\n23 Stocks Decline\nWhile Three Gain\nToronto Exchange Is Sickly;\n18 Issues Unchanged at\nthe Close\nTORONTO, Not. M (CP)-Th# Toronto stock exchange board looked\nrather sick at the close today with\nthe record showing 34 stocks with\nlosses, 18 unchanged and only three\nclosing higher. Failure of the war\ndebt conference at the White House\nwas regarded a* a bearish factor by\nWall street and the Toronto board\nfollowed the leid of the New York\nmarket. Sales totalled Uttle more\nthan flood shares.\nThe   interlisted   shares   wers   all\nlower at the close except Font \"A\"\nwhich managed to close unohanged.\nC. P. R. finished at 15*. off H.\nBrazilian down ft at 9H. Consolidated Smelters at S5, off two points,\nand Nickel at 9U, off Vs.\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nCALQART, Not. J8\u2014Reoelpts: Cattle 125, calves 30. sheep 319, hogs\n4S9.\nSteen: Oood and choice $3-50 to\n13: medium, $3.35 to $3.60; common,\n$1.50 to $3.\nHeifers: Oood and choloe, $3.50 to\n$3.75; medium, $3 to $225; common,\n$1.50 to $3.\nCows: Oood, $1.80 to $1.75; medium, $1.35 to $1.50; common, $1;\ncanners end cutters, $.50 to $.75.\nBulls: Oood, $1.50; common, $1\nto   $1-33.\nVeal calves: Oood and choloe, $$\nto $3.76; common to medium, $3\nto  $3.\nNEW YORK LIST\nCONTRACTS IN\nIATE JRADWG\nModerate Wave of Selling:; Debt Settlement\nDisturbing:\nBy JOHN L. COOLEY\nAssociated Press financial Writer\nNBW YORK, Not. a*-atocks mm\nspilled out of their rut bf a moderate wash of selling today. Bonds,\nwbeat and ootton alao reacted, eo\nthe day before Thanksgiving observed Nor. 34 in the United States,\nsaw a general letdown In financial\nmarketa.\nWall street felt tbe debt situation\nhad been a cause of unset tleroent,\nespecially slnoe the ultimate solution seemed obscure. The market,\nafter more than three boub of dull-\nnese, underment a oontractlon of\nvalues In the late trading. Turnover\nIncreased to 1,201,515 shares, non\nthan  double   yesterday's.\nRalls tended to resist ths early\nselling, their fairly steady tone being\nattributed to the better loadings\nstatement Issued by \u25a0 fsw carriers,\nincluding New York Central.\nSTERLING OFF\nTOANEWLOW\nCanadian Dollar Ia Dom Vt\nCent ln Sympathy; Haa\nEarly Strength\nmew YORK, nor. -- (cm-tmat\naterllnj touched t new low oa W.W\nTork foreign exctuuu. mu-ket, _o-\nd.y, ckwlng two eent, lower at\nW.35H (or cable.. Tlw Cuudlta\ndollar ln .ymp.thy wltb .Urllnf\nended tho der Vi oent lower at 86^4\ncent,  after  early ,trengtX\nTba pound', decline wm attributed chiefly to unjettlemen$ ot torn\nforeign debt lituation.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nMINER\nBig Mluourl\nBralorne  ..,\t\ncosrt Copper .... a\nOeorge Copper \t\nOeorgla  River\t\nOrandvlew  ;\nInt C tf. . .\nKootenay Florence\t\nLucky Jim\t\nNational   silver   \t\nNoble  Five     \t\nPend   OreUle   _\u201e_\t\nPioneer Oold 4\nPorter   Idaho   \u201e         ,\nPremier    \t\nReno Gold     ,\nRuth Hope \t\nSilvercreit     \t\nWellington     \t\nOILS\nA p conaolldated _..\nC and E Land,  _,\nDalhousie   \t\nEastcieet     \t\nFreehold    \t\nHome   Oil    \t\nMcDougall   Segur   Sx\nMayland    .\t\nMercury\t\nMcLeod\n.11\n.11\n.40\n.40\n.03(4\n.00 <i\n.01'A\n.0114\n.03\n.\u00ab0\n.60\n.04\n.50\nMV,\n.oan\n.01\nOkalta  oom\t\nRoyalite   \t\nSterling   Paclflo\n\u25a002*\n.0314\n.17\n.01\n.03\n.0314\n.63\ntoo\n\u20220414\n.82\nM\n.03\n.02\n.0114\n.0714\n.sa\n.is\n.OT\n.0414\nM\n, .03\n.IS\n.08\n31\n.0i\n8.00\n.10\nTo     compel*     patriotism      with\nChristianity la Uke oomparlng marg-\n1 arlne  with  butter.\u2014Lord   Maahead,\nIn England..\nI\n^j^^^.i'.w.m.\u2014\nCASH\nIN WITH\nWANT\nAD\nADDITIONAL\nINCOME From Things\nthat are only in YOUR WAY\nIf some of the thousands of readers of\nthe NELSON DAILY NEWS had the privilege of rummaging through your attic,\nstoreroom and closets you'd be surprised how many of them would be glad\nto deal with you on the purchase of\nthings which you never realized had so\nmuch actual and worthwhile re-sale\nvalue. It's easy to find such buyers.\nYou can scour the entire city and environs for them by merely listing the\nitems in the WANT AD COLUMNS of the\nNelson Daily News\nWant Ad Department\n144 \u20140\u2014 Phone \u20140\u2014 143\n DOLLS\nTht Mggwi itock tt ixm-k.\ntt have ertrhad and at the\nLowe-t Prices.\nNana, Rather lord\nDrag Co.\nFERNIE BASKET\nTEAMS VICTORS\nFernie bf s ecore of 'ji   to   18   It\nwm   snybodys   game   until   th\u00ab   end.\nKlmberley   intends   pia>tn<   reUr.i .\ngamee at feme early In l>cember.\niirnT        ('Barged with )\nODD FELLOWS AND\nSONS TOP CARPET\nBOWLING LEAGUE\nH. L. MILLER NAMED\n. TRUSTEE, NAKUSP\nDEVELOPMENT AREA\nKAICCSP, t. 0. Hov. It\u2014 A apeclal\nmeeting of tbo debenture holders of\nth. Nikusp development district\nwa* bald at tbe government offloe\nTuesday evening. Tbe business ot\ntb* evenlnc was to appoint a true-\ntee to succeed tb* 1st* L. J. Edwards.  8. L. Miller  wa*  appointed.\nBeat Kimberley Hoop Players\non Klmberley\nFloor \t\n                         - Odd Pe:iov:s and Bona of England\nmum. t.  C.  Hot. 33.\u2014rernle'e bowlers  sre  perched  on  the top ot\nthrae   basket   ba3   teams   were   all *\u00bb   C\"M'   bowling   roost   wltb   30\nvlctorloue   over   Klmberley'e   teams P0\"\"1  \u2022\u00ab*   and   two   points  lower\nat Xlmberley.                                   . lighting tor a top plaoe ls the Clan\nIn  th*   girls   gam*   between   rer- X=Leary    team.    Foresters    are    sll\nnU and Klmberley high achool tbe I1011\"*    b\u00ablllnd   th\u00ab    l\"dera.    Bght\n1 score   ns   11   to  I   in   favour   of \u00abam,\u00bb  \u00bb\u00ab\u2022  -t- \u00bb  >\u00bb  pl>\u00bb\u00abd.  two\n| rernle. Ferule showed good defence *?>\u00ab\u2022\u25a0 -h\":- T \u00b0\"-~a- tb. stand-\nwort Florence Mangan for the Pern- ln\u00bb entirely.\n, 1.  team  d:d  soms  star  fork. |    \u25a0-- \"landing Is u follows:\n!    In   th.   blgb   achool   boya   game, WLD   Pet.\n! Pernle got 37 points to Klmberley.  0M IWlow   \u00ab   \"     >   M\nseven. This waa a faat game. Kim-   B\u00b0M \u00ab England IS   II     I   30\nberley failed In tbe accuracy of Its   CUn  McLesry _  13   13     I   38\nshots. Pernle's comblnaUon gave re- *\"\u2022\"*\u2022  10   I*    1   H\nsuits. . \u2022 I \t\nTbs best gams eg tbs evening was\nbetween the 150s, a senior Pernle\nleague team and tbe Klmberley Falconers. This resulted ln a win for\nOnly Pasteurized\nMilk Is Safe Milk\nDr. Francli E. Froncttk, Health Commissioner, Buffalo, N. Y., says:\u2014\n\"We regard the pasteurization of milk so important\nto safeguard the public that an ordinance was adopted to make such a procedure Mandatory. While certified milk is permitted to be sold raw, nevertheless,\nfrom our experience we are satisfied that not even\nthis quality may be considered free at all times from\ndangerous contamination. This city several years\nago experienced several epidemics of scarlet fever,\ndiphtheria and typhoid fever, traced to raw milk sup.\nplies. Since pasteurization of milk supplies in this\ncity has been generally practiced, no such outbreaks\nof disease traceable to the milk supply have occurred.''\nIn speaking of Certified Milk, this is a milk that retails\nfor from 25 to 30 cents per quart, and is produced under very strict regulations and methods, and a medical commission is appointed to see that this milk\ncomes up to the required specifications. Even this\ngrade of milk is not considered safe until it is pasteurized.\nIs Your Milk Supply Safe?\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nPALM DAIRIES, LTD.\nJet Cream Butter\nAU Perfectly Pasteurized Products\nMUk\n\u25a0n\nW O O D v - that's good\nYon build for permanency With W. W. Powell Lumber\nStrong hardy wood that resists wear. Cut in a great\nvariety of sizes. At reasonable prices.\nW. W* Powell Co., Ltd.\n\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\"\n\"Th. Hem. of Good Lumber\"\n\"'\u00ab        ...., FfttK?\u2014'-\"Street\nCOAL and WOOD\nGALT LUMP\u2014Per ton $11.00\nGALT STOVE\u2014Per ton ....    9.00\nJEWEL LUMP\u2014Per ton ... 11.00\nMcGillivray lump\u2014Ton 11.00\nAIX ALBEKIA COALS\nCORBIN WASHED\n\u00abSK52SsR?iR     90\u00b0\nCORBIN WASHED PEA\u2014\nPer ton    8.00\nCORBIN WASHED\nFURNACE\u2014Per ton  10.50\nALL B. C COALS\nSpecial Rates on Carload Lots\n. Get our pricea on Dry Wood ln any length before\nputting in your winter's supply.\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\n\u25a0ff .-\".'\u25a0' Phone J5\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nFOUR REASONS\nFORWARDED FOR\nUNIVERSITY LOSS\n! WDfNJPBO, Not. 23 (CP)\u2014Pour\nreasona the Univenity of Manitoba\n; investment funds ere short 11.000,-\nj 000 were suggested to a board of in-\n1 qulry today by Dr. W. A. Mclntyre.\nj a member of the university land\nboard. These, he said, were penonal\ndishonesty, duplication of offices,\nfailure to (in full state control of\nthe university which be described\nas purely state Institution, and allowing church and state affairs to\nbecome mixed.    .\nCAL\nTRAIL PIONEER\nCROSSES DIVIDE\nTRAIL, B. C, Not. J3\u2014TraU.\nln the death ot Chartea Alexander\nMilligan, has lost snother of Its\npioneer citizens and one whose name\nhu been closely linked with the\ncity for the past 23 .{ears.\nThe death of Mr. MUllgan occurs! following a lengthy Illness.\nBesides his wife he is sumved by a\ndaughter md three sons, Mrs. Eileen\nLowther of Trait; Arthur A. MUll-\ngatn of Victoria; formerly mayor of\nTrail; Fred of Winnipeg; and Oeorge\nof Orand Forks.\nOn coming to Trail when this elty\nwas In Its Infancy, Mr. Milligan located In the area above Rosslind\navenue which has since been named\nafter him, Milligan hill.\nKe wss ohe of the original members of Trail Curling club and as*\nslated ln the construction of tbe\ncity's first curling rink on the sits\nof the present modern headquarters\nof the club. He wis one of the club's\nfirst skips snd always took a great\nInterest ln the popular winter pastime.\nThe funeral will take plaoe Friday afternoon.\nIFRED MORRISON\nWINS CALIFORNIA\nOPEN GOLF TITLE\nNine Under Par; Willie Cog-\ngin One Stroke Behind;\nPerelli Third\nTHEFT OF STOVE\nHermon KUoti, a transient who\nis a aback in Rosemont. was ar-\ntomtit by Provincial Constable J. O.\nM. Lock, and brought before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel Wednesday cn a charge of theft of a\nstove from the ruins of Oeorge\nNykychyan'* house, which was burned In the fill.\n' Es was remandej  for eight days.\nMOCK TRIAL IS\nSCREAMJROCTER\nMrs. W. A. Ward Honored at\nBirthday Party Given by\nHer Friends\nAsk Reduction in\nShipping Rates en\n\u2022   Autos, Re Yelstoke\nRVVKLSTOKI. B.C.. Nor. 33.\u2014The\nRevelstoke board of trade has added\nits support to a movement initiated\nby the Cansdian National Parks association and supported by boards\nof trade and automobile associations\nacross Canada to have the shipping\nrate on automobiles reduced between Oolden and Revelstoke pend-\nlng completion of the Big Bend\nroad, last link In ths transcanada\nhighway system. The present rate\nof 127.60 plus passenger's fare loading and unloading charges Is de-\ndared to be a severs drawback ln\nInducing motorists to travel through\nCanadian National par^s to and\nfrom ths Pacific coast.\nTORES\nATYOONG\nPEOPLE'S MEETING\nMembers of the Toung People's\nof St. Paul's church and a number\nof friends were entertained Tuesday\nat the regular meeting by Rev.\nGeorge Kinney who showed a number of motion picture films.\nScenes of Kokanee glacier, hiking\nparties to the glacier, and community scenes on the lake were\nshown, pictures of the Toung People's\nsummer activities were Included,\nPASADENA, Oallf., Not. 33.\u2014(AP)\n\u2014Shooting one the finest series of\nrounds ln competitive golf, Fred Morrison, sturdy Ague Callente, Mexico,\nopen champion, today won the California open title with a 72-hole card\nof 275, nine under par.\nExcept for the last round, In which\nhe took a 72, one over perfect figures,\nthe tall, professional was a complete\nmaster over the 6350-yard par 71\nAltadena Oolf club courses. He shot\n67's on successive days and then turned in a 09 on the moming round today.  First place money was (3000.\nOnly a stroke behind Morrison\ncame Willie Coggln of Ban Francisco\nwith a consistent 71-67-07-71 for 376\nstrokes and 6200. John Perelli, formerly of Feather River, Calif., but now\na resident of Beverly Hlls, shot 60-\ne7-72-eri-277 to eam third place\nmoney of 6150.\nWashington Mine\nto Ship to Trail\nNORTHPORT, Wash., Not.. 23\u2014\nOne of the largest mlnlfig flea's m\nnortrhern Stevens county was made\nIsst week when R. O. Relnersten\nand associates of Everett Wash, purchased the united Treasure mine\nfrom Capt. Newtcn Hartman. The\nproperty ls located eleven miles\nnorth-east of Boundary Wash, ani\nad]oln\u00ab the famous Frisco-Standard.\nA substantial cash piyment was\nmade on the property and the new\nowners are now repairing the road\nand will keep a number cf men at\nwork at the trine all winter and tn\nthe spring lt Is expected to start a\nlarge  program  of  development.\nThe sale was made by Iran\nKnapp, a Colville rrlner, who will\nhave an Interest ln the mine with\nthe  Everett  stockholders.\nThe United Treasure ore ls silver-\nlead. In the past the mine was a\nshipper of high grade ore, and at\nthe time of the sale preparations\nwere being made to resume shipments by truck to the Trail smelter\nAbout 612,000 worth of development work has been done on the\nproperty.\nCapt. Hartman, who sold the property, ls one of the best and favor-\n; ably known old-timers of the North-\nI port and Boundary mining districts.\nI He made his home at the mine. He\nj wm a sea captain in his younger\nI days.\nI 'This property hu every Indication\n! of being a steady producer of high-\ngrade ore,\" sail Mr. Knapp, ln\nspeaking of tRe sale and added,\n\"the ore ean be easily and cheaply\nhau>d to Trail.\"\nPROCTER, B, C, Not. 28\u2014The\ndinning room of the Outlet hotel\nwas a gay scene on Friday evening\nwhen Mrs. t. Clayton entertalnd at\na birthday party ln honor of Mrs.\nW. A. Ward, Mrs. 8. MacLennan and\nE. Clayton.\nDancing and community singing\nwere the order of the evening. A\nmost entertaining mock murder and\ntrial was held during the evening,\nMrs. J. Hurst acted ths part of the\nvictim In a most realistic manner.\nThe three detectives, H. Cilft, A.\nMacKinnon and E. Brasch, eftfr\nmuch cross examination of the suspects finally arrested E. Clayton on\nthe charge of murder. The trial\nwas held later, Capt. W. Halg-Smel-\nlie, adjourned ln a woolen cushion\ntop to represent a wig, made a very\nsevere Judge. The part of prosecuting attorney was taken by O. W.\nTallies of Balfour, while the councU\nfor tne defence was acted by W.\nOgden' of Procter, Witnesses were\nMrs. E. Clayton, Miss J. Allan and\nMias O. Mulrhead.\nAfter hearing the case the Jury\nadjourned and after a few minutes\ndeliberation brought ln a verdict of\n.guilty. The Judge, taking into consideration the age of the prisoner,\nthen sentenced him to be publloally\nspanked wtth ths left shoe of the\nChief witness held In her right\nhand.\nThis whole performance caused\nmuch merriment among the onlookers.\nAt the supper hour a three tier\nbirthday cake msde Its appearnce\nThe three guests of honor were\nsurrounded by the guests of Joining\nhands .and 'For They Are Jolly Qood\nFellows' waa suung.\nMuslo for the dancing was pro-\nTided by E. Breach assisted by Mrs.\nMacLennan and a local orcheetra.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Jerome of Nelson were guests of Mrs. Jeromes\nsister, Mrs. J. Bichan over the\nweek-end.\nE. Brasch and L. Smellie who\nhave been spending the past few\ndays at their lyxnes here returned\nto  Hall'  Siding on Sunday.\nMrs. J. MacKinnon and children\nhave returned from spending the\npast  five  months  at  Penticton.\nMORE ABOUT\nBOB CRESS\n(CONTINUED  FBOM MOB  ONE)\nAustin Carter of\nSaskatoon to Run\nBay Store, Nelson\nAustin Carter has been appointed\nmanager of the Neleon store of the\nHudson's Bay Co. Mr. Carter, who\nhas hsd considerable experience ln\nmerchandising, comes to Nelson from\nSaskatoon. \u25a0.\nAnnouncement of the appointment\nwas made yesterday by H. E. Cooper,\nsupervisor of the Hudson's Bsy Co.\nstores ln Nelson, Vernon. Kamloops\nand Yorkton.\nBeer Plebiscite\nDiscussed, Board\nTrade, Creston\nfoross of neighboring towns were also\nnotified, and in a very ahort time\nthings wsre on a war basis, for the\ncapture of the missing desperado. As\nthe news spread around volunteers\nwere turning up, Including game officers and members of the Canadian\nLegion.\nWhen Cress left the Jail his outer clothing consisted of a brown\nsweater with tranverse gray stripes\nand dark pants, and he was hatless.\nA hatless msn wearing % blue overcoat seen running along tbe alley\nbehind the Hume hotel about the\ntime of the escape, which was 4:80,\nmay bave been Cress. It Is thought,\nCress wlU not bs long obtaining a\nchange of clothing, probably also weapons.\nOn the theory that Cress Is likely\nto steal a car If he can get one, the\nauthorities are watching all the highways.\nThe snow on the upper levels gives\nfavorable   condition  for   tracking,\nshould  Cress try  to make his way\nthrough the bush.\n.'OSS IBLE CONFEDERATES\nTo what extent Cress had or has\nconfederates is one of the questions\nas yet unanswered. Obviously he did\nnot provide himself with tbe saw.\nIf confederates were waiting at a rendezvous for him, he would be quickly\nfurnished with both weapons and\ncar.\nThe women prisoners, when questioned, declared they did not see\nCress escaping, though he obviously\nhad to climb over the cell block.\nAs they had access to the yard, lt is\npossible that none were ln sight of\nhim.\nDay and night there hu been a\nguard ln the JaU yard, and a guard\nhas also been locked in with the men.\nEvidently Cress' escape was long\nplanned, and his preparations may\nhave covered quite a period, a minute\not two being utilized at a time.\n.IIAIU.K5  ACKUMH  UNE\nBesides the Greenwood liquor stcrs\nrobbery, Cress faces various charges\nln Spokane, Including robbery of the\nSpokane armory, and attempted murder of the armory caretaker.\nIt was possession of two United\nStates army automatic pistols ln his\ncar ln an accident at Eraser's Landing on October 20, that led to the\narrest of Cress, then going by tbe\nname of King, and his woman companion, his fingerprints later establishing his Identity as a wanted man.\nAt lost accounts Wednesday night\nCress was still at liberty, but It Is\nnot believed he has much chance of\nescape.    It la believed in provincial\nMISS JESSIE ION\nNAKUSP HOSTESS\nJ\nThe Coal\nYOU NEED\nTlie coal you need for hei'-\nlag your home Is a clean,\nfree-burning aad heat-producing  eotl,  that  Is,\nMERCURY COAL\nReal fuel economy ls found\nIn the use of Mercury Coal,\nwhich always gives the\ngreatest heat and the feast\ntrouble. Order your supply\ntcflf.T. Keep your bins filled\nall the Urns.\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\nNAKUSP, B. C, Nov. 33\u2014Mlss\nJessie Ion entertained.the members\nof the Toung Ladlee' Sewing circle\nWednesday evening.\nMrs. M. La Rue left on Wednesday\nfor Vancouver, where she will be\nthe guest of her daughter, Mrs.\nStafford   Cox.\nL. H. Pic wes of Winnipeg, who\nhas been the guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. H. Stevenson, left Saturday for\nVancouver.\nHunting in the district Is good\nthis year. c. Bowes ahot two deer\nup the Kuskanac creek this week,\nR. La Rue also shot one on the\nHot   Springs.\nThe Women's Hospital auxiliary\nmet Tuesday afternoon at tbe home\nof Mrs. W. Herrldge when final arrangements were made for the hospital ball. After the busineu routine\ntea wu served by the hosteu assisted by Miss OUve Toung.\nCLEAR WEATHER\nSTILL PREVAILS\nCRESTON, B. C\u201e Nov. 29\u2014Matters\nof considerable Importance to both\nvillage and district were up for consideration at the November meeting\nof Cruton board of trade on Tuuday night.\nF. V. Staples' application for membership wu favorably received.\nSoxe uked-for repairs at the\nbridge and road at Rykerte received\nattention, acoording to one of the\nmembers present.\nCharlu Murrell, the board's representative on the power committu\nthat visited Victoria the latter part\nof October in an effort to help Cruton Power <b Light company get\nspeedy action on their application\nto develop Summit creek, reported\nln detail, and his report wu concurred ln by F. H. Jackson, who\nrepresented the village oouncll.\nA letter from a member unable to\nattend called attention to the withdrawal of C.PJI. station service at\nCruton depot on Sundays. The\nstation Is now locked up from Saturday night until Monday morning;\nnot even comfortable watting room\naccom'iitodatlon given, and the report\npersists that the servicu of the\nassistant at the depot ls to be\nwithdrawn. The secretary will write\nthe divisional superintendent, Mr.\nManson, st Nelson, and Mr. Cot\nterell. uklng that the old order\nof Sunday service be re-utabllshel\nand that the assistant be not withdrawn.\nBfcEK   PLEBISCITE\nWhile at Victoria Messrs. Jackson\nand   MurreU   followed   up   a   board\nletter  of  October  to  the  chairman\nof  the  liquor control  board  u  to\nthe taking of a beer parlor plebiscite at Cruton, on the very definite   _..,.\u201e _    .\u201e -c-   \u00ab.   - .\nund.nt.ndln, that no licence womd   ?JC-\u00bb\"\u00ab)M S'   ^^ T(\u00abw\nbe Issued exoept to a new and fully\nmodern hotel, of which Cruton hu\nsome prospect. Mr. Jackson reported\nthat the chairman had advised tbem\nthat   a   plebiscite   on   such   terms\nwould   be   provided   at   Creaton   u\nsoon   u   the   petition   carrying   the\nsignature* of 35 per cent of the bona'                ,    .\nfid* voter- tt rrmt.nn  wtrt, rt.ntt.t-_i       Come *\u00b0 \u25a0**\u25a0*\u00bb\u25a0 Barn dance, Sll\nfide voters at Creston were received   Ter King road   mtor, Nov. 35. Old\nst Victoria. Mr. Jackson wu nsmed 1 Time dances. 35 cents. i48U>\nchairman of the plebiscite commit-\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nTwo   room   steam   heated   suite.\nStirling hotel. (47y?>\nGUESS FREE\nSEE OUR WINDOW\nHow Many Buttons in the BajjT\nA bag full of button troubles ... the kind\nsaved by Hatchway.   -\nHow many pieces of trouble ln the bag?.\nIK Nearest Guess.\nO WORTH OF HATCHWAY!\n?9 Second.\nO WORTH OP HATCHWAY!\nThird.\nWORTH OF HATCHWAY!\nf 9 Third.\nCOME IN AND GUESS\u2014\nWin a \"Winter Free\nFrom Button Troubles\"\n1\nHEATING COSTS\nDOWN!\nIn order to contribute our share towards lowering\nthe costg of living during the winter months, we\nhave reduced the prices of our steam coals, FOR\nCASH ONLY\u2014to\n$10 PER TON\nBELLEVUE SUPER LUMP\u2014This coal has proved\nitself to be the ideal coal for hot air furnaces. It\ngives more heat and lasts longer.\nGREENHILL LUMP\u2014Is unexcelled for steam or hot\nwater heating, quick coking, extra hot and low in\nash. ...1\nTHESE COALS ARE SOLD ONLY BY\nBurns Coal & Cartage Co.\n518 Ward St. PHONE 53 Next Capitol\npolice circle! thet be will be taken\nonly efter a battle.\nWANTED  IN   U.S.    '\nas \u00abu~rt;cl\nSPOKANE. Wuh., Not. S3 (AP).\u2014'\nAuthorities here were advised today\nthat Robert creee, wanted here aa\na auapect In the robbery of the\nNational Guard armory, escaped\nfrom the Nelson, B.C., provincial\nJaU. He wu being 1\u00bb'1 In Canada\non a  charge ot robbery.\nINTERMEDIATE\nHOCKEY TO BE\nFORMED EARLY\nTo Have Fine City Loop;vOut-\nside Towns May Enter\nTeams\nBAZAAR   BRINGS   |2SS\nmuni, B. O., Not. M\u2014The Nn\ned Church of Pernle held a ex\nsuccessful bana&r on Saturday Alx\n\u00bb2G5 profit wu made by the Led\nchurch organization from the i\nYARDLEY   GIFT   SETS\n'  .    SSo  to  lit\nLet  oi  protect   your\nneeds for these popular ti\nWe will gladly hold any\nIf a small  deposit is\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nIntermediate hockey follower! are\n. pluming   early   thia   year   so   that\nmoBneyB-H.^Kr.TpSn.',,Tt\u00ab5^!\"\u00bbn .\u00ab Is available there wll! -\n  j no unnecessary deity. A meeting haa\nOur Fish and Chips, best ln town,   been   called   Ior   tonight   when   a\nMOTOR FREIGHT\nNELSON-TRAIL . Daily\nleaving at 9:30 a.m.\nNELSON-SALMO, Mon-\nday, Wednesday and Friday\u2014Leaving at 10 a.q\nElks' Taxi Transfer\nand Freight Ltd.\nPHONE 77\nOrey Hound.\n(4817)\nTwo furnished rooms and one\nthree-roomed suit* for rent in Annable  block. 14712)\nCameron's   bus   will   not  run  on\nWednesday's during the winter,\n(4741)\nDunk   a   Conway.   Hata   reduced,\nChristmas bunar at CathoLc pariah hall this afternoon and evening.\nSupper 35 cents. (4810)\nGet your tickets early for the Nelson Glee Club Concert Wed. Nov. 30\nA real treat awaits you.\n(4809)\nleague will be doped out and possible entrants received.\nA city league win be composed of j\na Fairview team, the Wolves, Hume\nHotel, the Msple Le.ifs and possibly |\nothers.   This   la   Itself   will   Insure\ngood   hockey   for   this   winter.   The\norganizers are not going to atop ac 1\nthat,   however,  but   are   attempting I\nto Interest outside teams. SUverton\nand Slocan Cit; were given splendid\nreceptions here last winter and will j\nprobably be seen again this year.\nJONSTABLE TAKES\nPATIENT TO CO AST I\nwww mi\/\/\/\/\/*\nMEATRE\nShowing 2, 7 and 9 p.m.\nREVIVAL NIGHT\nLAST SHOWING OF\nte* with lull power to select th-j\nother   members   of   the   committee.\nWith the prospect of another redistribution of th* seats In the British Columbia legislature, the redls-\ntrlbu tion oomml ttee of the board\nwas asked to make another effort to\nhare the territory from Boswell easi\nincluded ln the Cranbrook riding.\nIn the 1083 redistribution the whole\nCreston riding wu merged with Neison.     *    ,    .\nin oonnectlon wltb education week,\nJames Cherrington was named to\nhandle  the  matter.\nTh* weather wu again dear\nWednesday, with no Indications of\na chanze. With the clearer conditions, there ls a larger range ln\nthe high and low temperatures.\nWednesday'* minimum wu 35 degrees, and the maximum 41 degreea.\nTAHK  BRIEFS\nTAHK. B. C, Nov. a3-^Th* Ladles\nBridge dub had Its weekly meeting\nat the home of Mrs. Jack Hamilton\nca Wednesday. Mrs. K. Peterson got\nthe prize for high soon.\nC. H. Cooper was a business visitor to Cranbrook Wednesday.\nMrs. Harrison arrived In town\nWednesday   from   Ctnai   Flats.\nMr., T.    F.    Williams    spent    the\nw*;lt-\u00abnd    ct    hone\nFiats.\nWEIR ADVOCATES\nHIGHER  QUALITY\nOFBACONHOG\nMusic Lover'g conoert, Sunday\nnext, for welfare and Xmu cheer\nwatch for programme aaturday.\n14807)\nProvincial  Constable  J.  L.  Smith |\nleft for the coast Wednesday morn-\nlug u escort with a patient  being ',\ntaken to Essondale for mental treatment.\nDANCE\u2014Help the boys by attending the Hume Hockey danoe\nFriday night, November 35. Troubadours orchestra. 75c couple.  (4814)\nDon't miss the Trinity Service\nelub display of novelties &nd dainty\ngifts ln the Wood, Vallance window. . (4813)\nFUfflB\u20141 felt hat with th* purchase of a winter coat! A few coats\nleft to clear at cost. Moonay's Wear.\n608 Baker St. (4808)\nIntermediate hockey meeting at\nCity hall tonight, \u00ab o'clock. All enthusiasts welcome. Election or officer*. (4816)\nSt.   Andrews   night.   Wed.,   Nor.\n30th.   Clan   McLeary,   Odd   Fellows\nhall.   Whist   drive,   and   Old   Time\ndances.  Cards 8  to  10. Dancing   10\nw.\u00ab.\u00bb\u00ab*\u2122\u00ab  \u00ab      ,.-. ,r,mm.    .. ^  t  o'clock. Rafreshment\u00ab. Admis-\nTORONTO, Nov, 33 (CP)\u2014^drocat-   Hon  50c. .    (4771)\nMOVIE BRIEFS\nMOVIE,  B.  C,  Nov.  33\u2014Mr.  and 1\nMrs.    Jack   Parkins   and   sons   of\ncranbrook   were  the  guests  of  Mr. ,\nand Mrs. E. J. Sylvestre on Sunday\nMrs. B. Ballantyne Is a paUent tn I\nthe St. Eugene hospital at Cran- |\nbrook.\nmi mom\nOFJUJ1E13\nam iftooit, uia ue\nPictures of the\nJUNIOR OLYMPICS\nShowing our local athletes in action ...\nIn* a hljber quality of btcon hot\nfulttbl* to th* demm* of th. con-\n\u2022ucmt ln Orrat Brltim, Bon. Robert\nWeir, Dominion nolulitcr of .ffrtcul-\ntun ftddreised wv.nl hundred firm.\nen >nd eiblblton >t th, royal winter fair luncheon today.\nKNIGHTS   Or   PYTHIAS\n'Military whist, (outfit. n:ti\nprizes, 4. 50 lb. sacks f flour\u2014Refreshments and dancing. Admiss'on\n390. (4801)\nMILITARY   WhlflT\n\"I do not M that It it m, place ' ^^Zlo.^.J.T^. \"S\nto ftdilse farmers to io Into the priies. Selsctlon of groceries. Admls-\nbacon or not,\" the minister state]. I slon, 93c. A rood time\u2014good re-\n\u2022The  fanner  Is  tbe  Individual  pro- I freshmente-\u00abood prises, (4776)\nducer   and   only   the   nun   on   the      Trinity service club will welcome\nfarm knows  whit he can best do.' you at their om Shoppe In Trtn:ty\nf,o'n    caul n\u00bb \u00abJf thin, w hav, preyed 1. r^^.Z^of'iS''...Jr\u00b0-\n1u,lltr- noon tea. (4812)\nGLASSES-\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R. O.\nOPTOMERIST AND OPTICIAN\nSUITS SOS-IOe MEOICAL AftTS BUILOINO\nand\nI*0\"' TAXI\n^L^fc      H\u00bb tea of Mrncel\nt_Wamv      Careful, Courteous\nDrivers\nHelton Translw Co\u201e Ltd.\nOALLA(iHKK\"\u00ab j\nThe rreat  Indian LVNO TONIC for I\nall  affections  of  pulmonary  orcans\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nruoNE l I\nShop with ns b* mall\nA Revival of\nGreta Garbo\nlataHari'\nt*tetet*t*tete***ett\n.    TOMORROW and\nSATURDAY\nBRING 'EM\nBACK AllVI\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. 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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":"1932-11-24 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":"1932-11-24 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":""}]}