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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":" Mary Pickford and Ro&ers\nAnnounce Wedding Plans\n\u2014Pake Ten\n35 KILLED, 200'MANGLED AS EXPLOSIONS SHAKE WHOLE TOWN\nCHRISTENS MOLLISON'S PLANE\nThree Corbin Hunters, Lost 18 Days in\nthe Rockies, Are Located by Airplane\nRUSSIA SCORNS\nNAZI PROTESTS\nOVER ARRESTS\n23 Germans Held on\nEspionage Charges\nat Moscow\nIn the Bellanca monoplane In which he made a solo flight trom\nNew York to London, Jim Mollison, famous British aviator, and Dorothy\nWard, English actress, are pictured after the latter had christened the\nmachine \"The Dorothy.\" Shortly after the picture waa made, Mollison was\nto fly the actress to a stage engagement at Edinburgh, Scotland.\nSiRMAN PROTEST\nSHARPLY WORDED\nEden Regrets Action\nof Hitler Regarding\nNavigation\nMOSCOW, Nov. 16 (AP)_-\u00abavlet\nRunla declined tonight to accept a\nsharply-worded German protest\nagalnit the Jailing of 23 German\ncitizens, held Incommunicado on'\ncharges of etplonagt and of being\nInvolved In a Fascist plot agalnit\nItuiala.\nN. N. Klrettiniky, Soviet vice com-\nliaaar for foreign affairs, advised\n_e German charge d'affaires, Wern-\nr von Tipplcskirch, that ho was\nunable\", to receive the complaint\nThe protest, declaring the arrests\nrare \"extremely aggravating\" and\nertain to strain relations between\nhe two countries, demanded im-\nnediatc proof of the charges against\nhe imprisoned Germans.\n(Continued on Pagt Ten)\nROOSEVELT GOING TO\nSOUTH AMERICA\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 16 <AP>.-\n'resldent Roosevelt announced late\noday he would extend hli post-\nlection vacation cruise into a 12,-\n00 mile trip to address the open-\nrig session of the Inter-Ametean\neace conference at Buenos Aires\nJecember 1.\nRebels Mass Tanks, Troops\nfor Big Posh Into Madrid\nLegionnaires Sweep Into University Part of\nthe Capital; 50 Madrid Homes Afire\nAT LEAST 60 KILLED IN REBEL AIR RAIDS\n\u00ab\u25a0 'HI      \u25a0   Mil     ..!\u25a0\u25a0 .-II       \u2014\u2014rf\nNight Attack Directed at Station; Crowds Flee\nInto S6bways; Buildings Wrecked\nWITH INSURGENTS OUTSIDE MADRID, Nov. 16 (API-Attacking Fascist Iniurgenti tonight mailed tanki and Infantry to make Madrid's streets and plazas the next battlefields of the Spanish civil war.\nThe hard-driving advance unite of Qeneral Franclico Franco's\nMoorish legionnaires were announced officially to hava swept Into email\nsections of the unlvenity city diitrlct In the northweit part of tha capital.\nBehind them tha Insurgent high command packed serried ranka of\nregular! and swift baby tanki, ready to surge forward as soon as the\nfront line leaders flashed word tha\nway Into the city proper had been\nblasted open.\nMADRID AGLARE\nMADRID, Nov. 17 (Tuesday) -\n(AP)\u2014Madrid was aglare early today with bright flames and red\nsmoke after an insurgent artillery\nand air bombardment had killed at\nleast 60 persons and set fire to about\n50 houses.\nIncessant rifle and machine gun\nfire waa heard from University City,\nin the northwestern comer of Madrid, as defending militiamen tried\not fight back insurgents attempting\nIppledale Man Is Alleged lo Have\nThrown Pepper In Eyes of Sheriff\nand Officer Carrying Oul Eviction\nREPORT ORDERS\nFOR MUNITIONS\nNOW IN CANADA\nTORONTO, Nov. 16 (CP)^The\nlivening Telegram said today It\njhad learned aircraft and munitions for ths British government\npre to be manufactured In To-\nonto \"almost Immediately,\"\n\u25a0Official! of the Massey-Harrli\nompany, said to be the one Involved,  have  neither confirmed\nor denied the suggestion that\nhey hava received a large order\n[from the Britlih government,\"\nhhe Telegram itory said. \"But\n(reliable sources staU iuch io be\nhe case.\"\nShort Terms for\nCoast Men\nJ VANCOUVER, Nov. 16  (CP).-\n|aul Pasternlck was sentenced to\nmonthi ln Jail for retaining\nolen goods. He had previously\nlerved a lentence  for  a limllar\n\u25a0nee.\n[Pleading guilty to  passing two\northless checks and to obtaining\n[150 as a loan on an automobile to\nMilch he had no title, Albin Smaas-\npt was sentenced to three months\nI jail.\n[Murray Boutilllcr who was confided of unlawfully carrying a re-\nphrer   wu.  sentenced   to   Jwo\nhonths. \u2022\"\nJohn Fink Jailed on\nCharge Assaulting\n\"Public Officer\"\nAlleged to have thrown pepper In\nthe eyes of Sheriff M. E. Harper\nand Provincial Police Constable R.\nH. Macintosh when they attempted\nto carry out an eviction order, John\nFink of Appledale is lodged in the\nprovincial jail at Nelson on a charge\nof assaulting Sheriff Harper, \"a\npublic officer then and there engaged In the execution of his duties.\" Placed under arrest Saturday,\nrink was brought to jail and Monday morning appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel.\nThe hearing was remanded to Wednesday morning.\nIt is alleged that Fink refused to\nmove off the Hlghfield property,\nwhich lies between Appledale and\nPerry's Siding, as directed in an\neviction order.\nNotice that he must move out\nwithin a specified time was served\nby Corporal C. W. A. Barwia of the\nprovincial police. When the sheriff\nand police party went to the property Saturday Fink still occupied It\nand lt is said, threatened the party\nwith a pitchfork.\nIt ia alleged that the pepper-\nthrowing incident occurred when\nSheriff Harper and Constable Macintosh followed Fink Into the house.\nFink was then arrested and the\nsheriff's men carried out the eviction.\nto push into that section from the\nCuatro Caminos district.\nThe insurgents, ln a surprise attack, occupied the former British\nAmerican hospital in the Cuatro\nCaminos district, and government\nforces opened an intensive attack in\nan effort to dislodge them.\nMany houses ln Madrid caught fire\nfrom artillery shells, while incendiary bombs set others ablaze.\n150 WOUNDED\nMore than 150 persons were\nwounded or injured ln the shelling\nand the three air raids of yesterday\n(Monday) which occurred at 2:30\np.m., 7 p.m. and S p.m.\nDuring the third air attack\u2014after\nnightfall\u2014the insurgent planes loos\ned bombs on the Atocha station near\nthe parliament buildings.\nThe insurgent attempt to push Into\nUniversity, City last night came after\nthe government had declared a\nsmall body of insurgents, after penetrating that district within the confines of Madrid proper, had been\ndriven out after 12 hours' fighting.\nThe defence Junta declared five\n(Continued on Page Ten)\n.'..[',       i\nFOREMAN SLAYS\nFIVE, THEN SELF\nThree Shot, Two Are\nBeaten to Death\nin Alberta\nLETTER EXPLAINS,\nBUT IS WITHHELD\nKiller's Attempt to\nHide Own Body Is\na Failure\nTIILAND, Alt.., Nev. It (CP)-\nA coroner's Jury here tonight returned verdict that Karl Schveiti,\n40. former Northern Alberta Rail-\nwaya section foreman, killed five\nperiom by shooting or bludgeoning them, then ended hli own lift\nwith a rifle bulletin his temple.\nTIELAND, Alt.., Nev. 16 (CP)-\nA eat \"with bleed all ever Its\npaws\" led te the discovery ef the\ndeath ef tlx periens In e whole-\n.tela shooting that wiped out tht\nentire population of thli little\nrailway atop ever the week-end,\nJoseph Garry said today.\nAfter tellln, of being ihot at\nand  of how another man  was\nthreaten** by i gunman ti the\nsettlement 100 miln north ef Id*\nmonton, Garry stated he saw the\nelt and \"got an Inkling something\nwai wrong.\" five persona were\n\u2022lain and the Alleged killer's body\nwai found later, a rifle In One\nhand and a bullet In hla brain.\nCarl Nelaon,  northern Alberta\nrailways section foreman, wai shot\nIn the third quintuplet slaying In\nAlberta in recent yean, hia 23-year-\nold wife and three-year-old son were\nbeaten to death. John Mardniuk, 35,\nsection hand, and George Rucl, 55,\nsettler, were shot.\n\u25a05Be \u00ab*>\nHa?\nWea\ntic\n\u00a3\nMin.\nMax.\nNELSON\t\n    34\n4|\nVictoria   \t\n    40\n49\nNanaimo \t\n    40\n52\nVancouver \t\n    46\n5fi\n40\nPrince George ....\n    42\n44\nEstevan Point\t\n    45\n50\nPrince Rupert ...\n    48\n54\nAtlin\t\n    ess\n44\nDawson, Y.T. \t\n     0\n6\nSeattle\t\n    46\n60\n    42\n58\nSan Francisco\t\n _   54\n62\nSpokane\t\n    26\n44\nLos Angeles\t\n    64\n78\n    22\n\u2014\n    27\n\u2014\nGrand Forks\t\n    12\n34\nKaslo\t\n    31\n\u2014\nCranbrook\t\n.\u2014.,   12\n37\nCalgary  \t\n   42\n60\nEdmonton    \t\n._    32\n54\nSwift Current\t\n    32\n54\nPrince Albert .......\n    26\n52\nSaskatoon \t\n ,   24\n52\nQu'Appelle\t\n.......   SO\n02\nWinnipeg\n    -2\n46\nMoose Jaw    \t\n    32\n68\nForecast: Nelson and vicinity-\nFresh to strong southerly winds,\ncloudy and mild with probable\nshowers.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy The Ctntdltn Preu\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks higher.\nToronto mines\u2014Irregularly higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed higher.\nWinnipeg-Wheat up *\u00bb to ft.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver, copper and\nlead lower; zinc higher.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver unchanged;\ncopper and zinc lower; lead higher.\nMontreal\u2014Silver lower.\nNew York \u2014 Cotton and rubber\nhigher.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar down\n1-32 to 1.00V4.\nMontana Pilot Drops Food\nand First Aid tut to Men\nOne of Trio Injured; Sighted in a Narrow\nRavine; Will Take Three Days to Reach\nThem Overland, It Is Believed\nWARNS GIRLS NOT\nTO \"CHISEL\"\nVANCOUVER. Noy. 16 (CP). -\nFour hundred delegates to tbe third\nannual conference of Vancouver\nGirls' Hi-Y association are wondering today whether Dean M. L. Bol-\nlert of the Unlvenity of British Columbia was right when she told\nthem girls did \"too much chiseling\nnowadays-.''\nIn her address on \"Boy and girl\ndates\" Miss Bollert gave two rules\nfor the girl who wants to be socially luccesaful.\n\"First, friendship should be the\nbasis ot all association,\" she laid.\n\"Second, a girl should observe the\nrequirements of chivalry aa much\nas a boy. There's too much chiseling nowadays.\"   .\n550 Stranded ot\nHonolulu Will Be\nRescued ty Linor\nwwowstf^iic-vv ie tm.-t\nSteamihip ottleiau eiiimated today\nthlt 550 person! who htve been\nstranded In strike-bound Honolulu\nnearly three week* will depart tor\nSan Francisco next Monday.\nThe Mation company announced\nits liner Monterey, en route from\nAustralia, trill anchor three miles\noft thli port to avoid being tied up\nby maritime strikers here and tourists, business men and otheri will\nbe taken aboard In tugs and barges.\nThe Monterey will take passengers at present In Honolulu. Seventy otheri sailed.on the Japanese\nliner Aaama Maru Saturday.\nPLANE IS FLAGGED\nBY WAVING SHIRT\nG. Urbann in, J. Stevens\nand B. Grave Missing\nSince Oct. 29\nCORBIN, B.C., Nov. 16 (CP)-\nLeit 18 dayi In the rugged Canadian and American Rockies, three\nCorbin hunten, ont ef them Injured, were sighted by a Montana\npilot and hit obierver today, louth\nof here nttr tht International\nboundary.\n. Tht trio\u2014George  Urbannln, 19,\nJohn Stevens, IT, and Billy Grave,\n88\u2014were discovered In e ntrrow\nravine to remote that rttcut partita will bt unable to resch them\noverland for tt least three dayi.\nThi terrain It too rough te allow\nan airplane to land.\nOn October 29 the men left Corbin in search of game. Neighbor*! expressed teara tor their safety when\nthey failed to return, and search\nparties were organized. The men\nhad not been seen until sighted from\nthe air today although traces of a\ncamp-site had been found.\nSUCCEED FIRST DAY\nEarly today,Pilot George Smith,\nand Ewart Jackson, bis observer,\ntook up the search. They were about\nto return to their Montana base, unsuccessful, when a shirt waved by\none of the party attracted their attention.\nAi the plane circled the ravine\nboth  pilot and obierver notlctd\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nGREAT INCREASE AUTO TRAFFIC,\nNELWAY, SHOWN IN STATISTICS;\nCANADIAN TRAFFIC IS HEAVIEST\n200 Carloads of\nFruit Roll From\nCreston Section\nCRESTON, Nov. ik-Tht untold balance of Crtlton'l apple-\ncrop Is moving out fairly steadily\nand at tha present rata of shipping the crop will be cleaned up\nvery early In December. Up to\nthe middle of tht month 200 carload! had be ihipped from Wynndel, Creiton and Erickson.\nRogers Points Oul Building Mining\nRoads to Help Mining Development\n\"To Create Collateral Employment\" Is the\nObjective of Relief Projects, He Says\nVICTORIA, JJov. Id (CP) \u2014 Low\ncost housing including home rehabilitation, construction of tourist highways and mining roads, encouragement of forestry and farm employment and development of the country's external trade, are policies\nframed by .the federal government\nto take up the\nunemployment ;i\nslack ln Can-'\nada, Labor\nMinister Roger! said here|\ntoday.\n\"We are confident that aa el\nresult  of  thai\npolicies   formulated and be-]\nIng put Into et-'\nfeet   by   the]\ngovernment]\nsubstantial pro-'\ngress  will   be]\nmade ln the re-1\nlief of unemployment,\" aald\nN.L. ROGERS\nMr. Rogers, In an interview.\n\"We have built up an organization\nwhich can meet the problem successfully,\" taid the minister. 'We\nfully realize, however, the magnitude of the problem.\"\nMr. Rogers is making his first trip\nto the Pacific coast since he took\nover the portfolio ot labor. He is\nmaking a survey ot unemployment\nsituation and personally acquainting\nhimself with the problem! peculiar\nto every taction of the country.\n' Mr. Rogers stressed the point that\nIn considering public worki programs it WM tint of all necessary to\nseek the type ot project which could\nbe economically justified, from its\nimmediate utility as t relief project.\nIh other words they mutt be worki\not value.\n\"It li our objective to create collateral employment,\" he said ln support ot such project! aa conitruetlon ot mining roads, which would\nbring about mining development and\nin turn create employment. *'\nExceed Foreign Cars\nby 880 in Period\nSeven Months\nFOREIGN CARS\nBIGGEST GAIN\nPassengers Show Gain\nof 7651 to Total\nof 22,943\nMAN ON ROAD MILE FROM PLANT\nIS KILLED BY FLYING STONE; FIRE\nFOLLOWED BY A SERIES OF BLASTS\nTWO MINERS ARE\nENTOMBED\n8UPERIOR, Mont, Nov. 16 (AR)\n\u2014 Occasional sounds emerging\nfrom the crumbling, water-soaked\nmine tunnel where two gold miners, A. Gustafson and B. Gevart\nwere entombed by a cave-In 48\nhours ago, caused rescue workers\nto double their efforts tonight\nThey scarcely dared hope the\ntrapped men were alive, and said\nthey were unable to determine\nwhether the noises were made by\nthe men or came from more falling\ngravel Inside the tunnel.\nDoukhobor Dies,\nSlashed Throat\nAllegedly Suicide; Op\nWay Visit Son at\nGrand Forks\nEn route from Kemiaok, Suk.,\nto Grand Forks, a Doukhobor got\noff the Canadian Paelflo train at\nFernie Sunday morning apparently believing someone wat Intending to take away hla money.\nFound later with hla throat out,\nhe died Monday afternoon. The\nwound waa allegedly self-lnfllct-\ned.\nDetallt received sit provincial\npolice divisional headquarters at\nNtlton were meagre, and an Investigation wu under wey to locate relatives. It was understood\nht wai oh hit way to visit a eon\nat Grand Forki.\nFormer Dictator's\nSon to Stand Trial\nas Fascist in Spain\nVALENCIA; Spain, Nov. id (AP).\n\u2014A Spanish press dispatch trom\nAlicante tonight said Jose Antonio\nPrimo de Rivera, ion of the former\ndictator of Spain, had been summoned for trial before a popular\ntribunal on a charge ot being a\nFascist.\nHis brother, Miguel, the latter's\nwife and several others were said\nto be on trial.\nCanadian Writer's\nFuneral Today\nWASSAIC, N.Y., Nov.'16* (AP)-A\nCanadian who achieved distinction\nin several fields will be burled here\ntomorrow.\nMiss Agnes Christina Laut, newspaperwoman, biographer, historian\nand social worker, died here Sunday\nafter several week's illness.\nBorn 66 years ago in Kingston,\nOnt., where her grandfather was\nprincipal of Queen's university. Miss\nLaut was taken to Winnipeg .by her j\nparents when a child and later attended University of Manitoba.\nChimneys Topple and\nWindows Shatter\nAll Around\nFIRE DISCOVERED\nIN A STOREHOUSE\nExplosions Heard for\n.10 Miles; Roar Is\nDeafening\nSAINT CHAMAS, France, Nov.\n16 (AP).\u2014Ono of France'a biggest\npowder factories blew up today,\nkilling 35 persons and Injuring\nmora than 1200.\nArmy officen directing the rescue work ttld there wire 35\nknown dud, Including a man\nwalking along tha Eitrti-Salnt\nChamus road more than a mile\nfrom tht scene who wat killed by\na atone hurled through the air\nby the explosion.\nMany of those Injured wtre In\nserious condition, tht officers said,\nsome so badly mangled tnd scarred identification wss Impossible.\nThe entire town wai shaken by\nthe scries ot explosions which could\nbe heard tor 10 miles throughout\nthe countryside.\nTlie first thunderous blast ln one\not the storehouses tent a column of\nsmoke and flamei roaring Into the\niky.\nBefore .trapped workers in the factory had time to run-tor their Uvea,\nthe gendarmes ,sald, -a showov of\nflaming timbers struck the roofs of\nother storehouses and the factory\nItself, causing quick successive explosions.\n, Chimneys were knocked down\nand windows shattered all over the\ntown, whose terrified inhabitants to\na man rushed to the scene.\nRescuers dug .into the wreckage\ndragging out body after body as\nthe little town in a few hours waa\nturned into one large hospital.\nVictims included Pierre la Rocque,\nmanager of tbe factory, and among\nthe injured was the mayor of Saint\nChamas, struck down by hurtling\ndebris 200 yards from the scene.\nThe mayor said a watchman first\ndiscovered fire in one of the storehouses in which explosives were\nstored.\nThe siren was sounded immediately. Manager La Rocque and a\nnumber of workers rushed from\nthe factory to the storehouse, which\nblew up with a deafening roar when\nthey were but a few yards from\nits door.\nCHAIRMAN OF BOARD v_\nOTTAWA, Nov. 16 (CP)-Mr. Justice A. K. MacLean president of\nthe exchequer court of Canada, has\nbeen appointed chairman ot the\nboard of concilation and investigation on railway wages, the department of labor announced today.\nGlade Man Lacking Contractor's\nLicence Refused Building Permit\nStatistics of auto traffle between\nBritish Columbia and Washington\nthrough Nelway show a great Increase In traffic this year compared with last, according to figures\ncompiled by Henry John, agent at i\nthat point\nCanadian cara crossing the border to and from tha United States\nIncreased by 1187 to 4193 In the\nseason from April 1 to October .11;\nforeign cen gained 1233 to 3459;\ntnd passengers Increased by 7651\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nTO SURVEY LAND\nOWNERSHIP\nOTTAWA, Nov. 16 (CP)-A further stage in the federal government's campaign agalnit drought\nmenace in the western provinces\nwill be entered upon the Dominion-\nprovincial agricultural conference\nmeeting here December 11\nHon. J. G. Gardiner, minister of\nagriculture, outlining today progress made with the immediate\nproblem est relieving those in the\ndrought areas, announced a survey\nof land ownership would be Initiated and cooperative methods to\nobtain it would be discussed at the\nforthcoming conference.\nStoopnoff Application\nfor Contract Job\nTurned Down\nSix building permits issued at the\noffice of R, I. Potter, city engineer,\nduring the past 10 days amounted to\n$528, bringing the total for the\nmonth to date to $1821.\nApplication of Mike Stoopnoff of\nGlade tor a permit to put concrete\nwalls in the basement of a Nelson\nhome on a contract was refused\nwhen Stoopnoff waa unable to produce a contractor's licence.\nPermits granted in the week\nwere:\nJ. M. Ludwig, to repair roof,\nBaker street property, $75.\nA. H. Green Co. Ltd., to reshingle\nsoap factory, Front street, $135.\nA. H. Green Co. Ltd., to beam\ncelling for R. L. McBride, Hoover\nstreet, $68.\nA. H, Green Co. Ltd., erect shelving, Shell OU warehouse, $40.\nW. Reid, to reshingle part ot roof,\ncorner Fourth and Fell, $75.\nT. H. Waters, to erect garage and\nwood shed, Observatory itreet, $135.\nORILLIA, Ont, Nov. 16 (CP)-A\ntriple drowning in Lake Simcoe wai\nfeared tonight after an overturned\nrowboat was found floating in the\nlake and clothing had been washed\nashore.\nRadio Head to\nVisit B.C.\nMAJOR MURRAY\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 16 (CP) -\nMajor W. E. Gladstone Murray, general manager of the Canadian\nBroadcasting Corporation, will vialt\nthe Pacific coast shortly to study\nradio conditions here, according to\nhis father, Paul Murray, Pitt Meadows, B. C. Mr. Murray Sr., is a visitor here.   -\n',.,.-_i\u00ab^.ifc-;.,,...\u201el.._aL^\n PAID HONOR BY\nI \t\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.-Wednwday\nevening wu an extremely Joyous\none at the Castlegar Community hall\nwhen close to 200 penons wen\npresent at a miscellaneous shower,\ngiven ln honor of Mr. and Mrs. L.\nWatson, who were .married recently\nin Trail. The hall wu artistically\ndecorated in colors ot white, pink\nand blue. One corner, set with small\ntables, was given the appearance of\na little room, delightfully set off\nwith pink and white streamers and\nblinking lights. The many gilts were\nurt-anged there.\nDuring the early part ot tha evening the following Items, Interspersed with dapchig provided much\nentertainment for the guests. The\nprogram included a long by Alex\n(Smokcy) Miller; a song \"When I\nI\nRoundtrlp Coach\nExcursion\nFares\nPram 8outh Nelson to\nVANCOUVER, $10.30\nand to\nVICTORIA, $12.05\nNOVEMBER 20 ONLY\nReturn limit  Oec. 4, 1936\n_!5\/\\       For Particulars\nApply:\n321 Baker St.\nPhone 67\nNelion, B, C.\nGreat Northern\nGrow Too Old'to Drc.-i*-,\" by Ruth\nFobs; a relay game in which practically everyone participated; the\naction song, \"No, No, a Thousand\n.Times. No,\" by Ruth Fota, Eleanor\nand Marian Pratt; a piano sojo by\nMarjorie Houston; a duet by Helen\nMagee and Margaret Miller. Piano\naccompaniments wera rendered by\nMrt. D. Magee and T. Pratt.\nAfter thli portion of the program\nMn. Magee, with very fitting words,\nintroduced and extended a cordial\ngreeting to the bride and groom. Al\nthis tlttio Dorothy Dams-'and Donna\nWallner dressed as bride and groom,\nrespectively, entered the hall drawing a miniature caravan decorated\nwith pink, blue and white fringes,\nand ladened with many beautiful\ngifts. Donna Wallner, ln a vary\nImpressive address, presented the\ngifts on behalf of thoie preient at\nthe hall. After thc opening of the\nRifts Louis Watson expressed his\ndeepest' thanks for the klndnut\nshown to Mm and Mrs. Wation.\nWhUe (he tables were being set for\nsupper muiic wu provided by\nCharlie Williams and his aids. Tho\ntables were pleasingly decorated\nwith chrysanthemums of various\ncolors, and place-cards, in the shape\nof flags set oft the different placet.\nIn front of the bride and groom\nstood a beautifully decorated three-\ntier wedding cake with a miniature\nbride and groom on the tide of lt\nAt the end of the supper T. L,\nBloomer gave an Interesting address\nusing a few humorous illustrations.\nIt. Watson responded once again expressing his slncerest .gratification\nand thanks to those friendi present.\nWith everyone standing at their\nplacet a few old-time soldiers' tongs\nwere tung with Johnnie Wilson uf\nTrail at the piano. Helen Magee entertained further with a song and tap\ndance, the accompaniment being\ngiven by Mrs. D. Magee. The final\nItem was a few cowboy songl rendered by Alex Finch who hu at\nprevious timet, been sponsored over\nVancouver station CJOR. The remainder ot the evening wai taken\nUp with dancing ta the music of the\noreheitra. Guesti invited were trom\n_, Bargain Trip to\nVancouver,\nVictoria, Nanaimo\nGOING NOVEMBER 20 ONLY\nFROM THE WEST KOOTENAY\nNAKUSP AND SOUTH\nProctor to Midway; Trail to Castlegar\nRottland paisengon entrain and detrain at Trail\nRETURN FARES:\nFrom:                     To Vancouver        Victoria Nanalmo\nGrand Forks  $ 8.40      $10.15 $ 9.65\nNelion     10.30        12.05 11.65\nTrail      10.15        11.90 11.40\nNakuip \u2022....' 11.65     ' 13.40 \u2022 12.90\n\u2022\u2014Via West Robson Nov. 19.\nCorreipondingly Low Farei From Intermediate Pointi.\nFinal Return Limit Dec. 4\nTickets Cood In Day Coachei Only\nNo Baggage Checking Privilege*\nNo Stop Over Allowed\nChildren 5 yean of age and under 12, half fart.\nRegular Train Service in Each Direction\nFOR FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY NEAREST AGENT OR\nN. J. LOWES, City Ticket Agent, Nelton, B. C.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nCrescent Valley\nLady Is Guest at\nSlocan Park Home\nSLOCAN PARK, B.C.-Mrs. Das-\nkin and Mrs. Greavison attended tho\nWomen's Institute meeting at Pats-\nmore.\nMlts Norma Curson and Mr. Taylor ot Nelson were guests ot Mr. and\nMn. Dickey Sunday.\nMiss Leslie Fraser spent Armistice\nday in TraU.\nMrs. William Wlnstanley ot Crescent Valley spent Monday at Slocan\nPark, the guett of Mrs. A. D. Crebbin, also guett ot Mrs. E. H. Greavison.\nPaterson Acting\nMayor ol Kaslo\nKailo, B.C. \u2014 The board ot directors of the Kaslo and District\n1900 club held a special meeting in\nthe club's office Thursday afternoon.\nPresident H. Giegerich presided.\nRoutine business as well as some of\na special nature wai disposed of.\nA vote of sympathy was pasted\nfor the widow of the tecretary, W.\nV. Papworth, killed in an auto\naccident.\nAlderman Mrs. E. M. Sandilands\nhas been appointed chairman of the\nfinance committee of the city council, replacing Alderman John Paterson, who hat been appointed acting mayor.\nRailroad Men Urge Rehabll\nFund as a Pari ol Compel\nAlso Ask Rate of Compensation Be Raised to 75\nPer Cent and More Diseases Included; Well\nReceived by Cabinet Says Sutherland\nReturning from Victoria, where the representatives ot the railroad\nbrotherhoods and orders placed before the Pattullo cabinet their recommendations for new legislation, and received \"a fair and attentive hearing,\"\nwith the promise that their proposals would be taken under consideration.\nAlex, Sutherland, chairman of the provincial legislative board of the\nBrotherhood ot Railroad Trainmen, reports other social legislation overshadowed by the government's big health iniurance job.\nHealth insurance, he states, is under consideration by several other\nprovincial governments, and the angle ha brought back from meeting at\nOttawa recently representatives from different provinces was that \"lt will\nnot be long until It will be adopted by other provinces.\"\nEstablishment of a rehabilitation fund, with expenditure in any one\nyear limited to $50,000, was one of a large number of additions proposed to\nthe workmen's compensation scheme. It wa also urged that compensation\nfor injured workmen be railed to 71 per cent ot the wage earned at time\nof injury. Seven new kinds of dis-r\nCastlegar, Robson, Nelson, Thrums,\nTrail and Procter,\ntupervision of Mrs. D. Magee, whose\nassistants were the Misses P. Watson,\nHall decoration! were under the\nB. Damn, B. Pratt, J. MacKinnon,\nL. Lampard, the Messrs. V. Jenks, G.\nMcGauley, B. Davidson and F. Parent.\nSupper arrangements were handled by Mrs. D. Magee and Mrs. A.\nLampard. Those* assisting were the\nMisses B. Damt, P. Watson, J. MacKinnon, Mrs. V. Jenks, Messrs. V.\nJenks, N. Hanson, T. L. Blooomer.\nMrs. D. Magee had charge of the\nmusical program and Victor Jenks\nacted as master of ceremonies.\n\"FlnsMt In the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree But Service Geo'. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30c snd UP\nLunches 40c to 50c Dinner 40c to 65e\nBOTARV AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON, B.C. 422 VERNON ST.\nG. M. Thorn, A. T, Abra, W. Mc-\nCullock, Penticton*, M. A. Tyton,\nMti f. X. Dockerill, Trail; T. S.\nHarrison, victoria; R. W. Wallace,\nL. E. Morgan, Calgary; R. Shreed-\nraan, Medicine Hat; Mr. and Mn.\nT. E. Peters, R. Buttorf, H. F. Wilmot, Grey Creek; G. Kesselman, H.\nR. Powell, Winnipeg; N. Johnson,\nSpokane; P. M. Smith, C. P. Nlckerson, O. O. Stratton, F. A. Sherrln\nVancouver; H. Renfrew, Vemon.\nML  .\n_PRCS_PE_R\u00a3>tl\u00a7\nBRITAIi\nAH Britain, enjoying a deiemd\nprosperity, b preparing far th*\nmfTMt, happiest Christmas.\nThe passage M Cunard White\nStar and Donaldson Atlantic\n\"Chrlstmat Ships\" otters you in\nertra week af holidays a delightful prelude to Christmas\namong those you love. Note the\nsailing dates af these \"Christmas Ships\".\nfrom Montreal\nttm.V      -       \"ALAUNIA\"\nto Plymouth, Herr*. London\n* terirmttllr conrSuctad excursion\nNm.27        -        \"LETITIA\"\nCo Belfast, Lira-pool Glstigow\nfrom Halifax\nDec I -       \"ASCANIA\"\nto H ymouth, London\nDM. I - \"LANCASTRIA\"\nto Cl__low, BtUsstt, I.l.f tpool\nDec. 12 -       \"AURANIA\"\nto Plymouth, London\nRegular seeetsl. eeretee Irom Montreal\nlo all at'ota port, until Nosembor n\nUm OCEAN RATES IN ALL\nCUSSES pi\nApply to your local ateox (no erne can\n.on. you bMter) or lo\nqOH ALDSoa\/\n**      ATLANTIC   lime\n5l7Grrsn.lllefil.(S\nrIMllVisncounr\nabilities   on   which   compensation\nshould be paid were also proposed.\nMOTHERS PENSIONS\nACTED ON\nRecommendation \"that tbe entire\ncost ot mothers' pensions be taken\nover by the government and made\n_ government responsibility\" was\nthe chief specific social proposal ot\nthe railroad brotherhoods and orders\noutside the workmen's compensation\nfield, though they also made some\nobservations on relief; aiming in\nnart to protect wages from depreciation. 1\nAction of the government on\nmothers' pensions hai been along\nthe line recommended, as thc government ls relieving the municipalities of the share of mothers' pension! put upon them a few years\nago.\nFollowing ls the complete presentation made on the subject of the\nWorkmen's Compensation act:\n\"Workmen's Compensation act-\nIt it is the intention of tho government at present session to open this\nact, we respectfully request that\nthe following provisions be included:\nCOMPENSATION   ALLOWANCES\n\"A.  That funeral benefits be $180.\n\"B. Allowance for widows be $40\nper month.\n\"C. That allowance for dependent children where there is a widow\nor Invalid widower be 110 per\nmonth.\n\"O. That allowance for dependent parents, or other dependents not\nspecified above, be $40 per month.\n\"E. That provision be made for\npayment of a lump sum of $100 to\nthe widow, or to the person acting\nas foster mother, in addition to other\nallowances provided for in this act.\nREHABILITATION FUND\n\"F. That a rehabilitation fund be\nestablished:\n\"(1). To aid in getting injured\nworkmen back to work and to assist\nIn lessening or removing any handicap result from their injuries; the\nboard may take such- measures and\nmako such expenditures as it may\ndeem necessary or expedient, and\nthe expense thereof Bhall be borne\nout of the accident fund and may be\ncollected in the same manner as\ncompensation or expenses ot administration; provided that the total expenditure under the provision! of\nthis section shall not exceed $50,000\nin any one calendar year.\n\"(2) In the event of the death of\nan unmarried workman or widower\nwithout dependents, a sum of $1000\nIn addition to funeral expenses will\nbe collected from the employers, to\nbe credited to this fund.\n\"G. That the age limit be raised\ntrom 10 to 18 years where in the\nopinion of the board the furnishing\not further or better education to a\nchild approaching the age ot 16 years\nappears advisable. The board at its\ndiscretion may extend the period to\nwhich compensation shall be paid\nin respect to such child for such additional period as is spent by the\nchild in the furthering of his or her\neducation.\n\"H. That the compensation for\ninjured workmen be 75 per cent.\n\"I.  That compensation be not less\nthan $12.30 per week unless  the\nworkmen's average earnings are less\nthan that amount.\nUNEMPLOYMENT BE\nINCAPACITY   ,\n\"J. If a workman has so far recovered from his injury as to be fit\nfor employment of a certain kind\nand has failed to obtain such employment, he shall be deemed not\nto be able to earn wages, and for\nthe purpose of the act be treated as\ntotal incapacity resulting from the\ninjury for such period as he may be\nunemployed.\n\"K. In cases where an injured\nworker has been furnished employ\nment, remuneration which ls less\nthan formerly earned, hit compensation, plus wages paid try hit em:\nnloycr, shall not be leu than total\ndisability compensation.\n\"L. That the wordi 14 daya* in\nsubsection 2 of lection 1 shall be\nchanged to read 'lix days.'\n\"M, That all diseases such as\nrheumatism, neuritis, lung aliments.\nsmoke poison, hernia, diseases of\nthe kidneys, deafness or defective\neyesight, which are directly traceable to or have arisen out of or in\ntho course of employment ot the\nworkmen be considered as disabilities under the act and compensation therefore paid accordingly.\n\"N. We retpectfully recommend\nthat the present chairman, whose\nterm of office we understand hai expired, be reappointed, owing to his\nknowledge of the act, his fairness\nin adminsterlng it, and the general\nand wholesale confidence those coming under the act have in him.\n\"We wish to reiterate our declaration of former yean expressing our\nunalterable opposition to the establishment of a board ot appeal against\nthe final decision of the board.\"\nRepresentation! of the delegation\non the question ot relief were as\nfollows:\nBASIS OF RELIEF\n\"Unemployment Relief Meatnire*-\nWe are in accord with a policy by\nwhich provincial authorities shall\nassume responsibility for the initial\naction necessary to relieve existing\nhuman needs within their Jurisdiction to the full extent of their financial ability. If unable to cope with\ncurrent demands for direct relief,\nwe trust that the federal government will continue the policy of\nassisting those municipal and provincial authorities by every practical means, Including that of furnishing the necessary financial assistance. We feel that thoie citizens\nwho because ot varied circumstances\nhave been forced away from the\npath of self reliance must be fed,\nclothed and sheltered. To ensure thai\nno citizen shall want for these necessities is a matter of national and\nprovincial concern.\n\"As a suggested measure of relief,\nlt would seem that the promotion of\na program of necessary public works\nwould create an opportunity for\nmany thousands ot willing workers\nto obtain the wherewitball to reestablish tome measure of their\nformer economic independence. Any\nsuch program should be carried on\nunder supervision which would\nmake impossible the exploitation of\nthose unfortuante victim! who are\nobliged to accept public aid aa a\nmere human existence.\nAGAINST FARM DEAL\n\"We are opposed to the recent\nagreement entered into by tho provincial government- with federal\nauthorities whereby unemployed\nmen are placed on farms, the remuneration which tends to reduce\nearnings of those already employed\nin that capacity, and generally tends\nto reduce the whole wage structure.'\nOJSP LADIES\nPUN SALE AND\n1WS.C PROGRAM\nNAKUSP. B. C.-The United\nChurch ladies aid met at the home\nof Mn. E. C. Johnion Tuesday\nafternoon.\nFinal arrangements wen made\nfor the .annual Christmas bazaar to\nbe held in early December. The\nnovel idea for thli year is a \"Family\nA-Fair\" with a stall arranged with\ngifts for each member ot the family.\nPlans wera also made for vocal\nrecital which will be given ln aid\nof the society by Callum Thompion,\nlyric tenor, who li male lead ln the\nU.B.C. Musical society. Thii will\nbe held ln mid-December.\nA donation of $5 was made to\nthe Cc\/nmunity Christmas! Tree\nfund. ,\nFollowing the business the hostess\nserved tea assisted by Mils J. Fawcett and Mrs. O. Salstrom.\nPresent at the meeting were Mrs,\nE. W. Bill, Mn. F. Carlton, Mlu\nJ. Fawcett, Mn. M. Ion, Mrt. H. L.\nMiller, Mrs. R. S. LaRue, Mrs. G.\nKeys, ..Mrs. B. McRoberts, Mrs. O.\nSalstrom, Mrs. C. B. Hambling and\nMrs, A. J. Harrlion.\nReduced Fares Boost\nRailway Earnings\nBALTIMORE, Nov. 16 (AP).-\nDaniel Willard, president cf the\nBaltimore Ic Ohio Railroad company, said today lower passenger\nfares on B. & O. trains had proved\na financial success.\nIn his report at the company's\nannual meeting Willard said he believed the reduced fares responsible\nfor the Increased travel which, with\n\"very little additional train mileage, has resulted in increased earnings per train mile of about 10.5\nper cent.\"\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN. SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 BakerSt.      W. K. Clark, Prop.      Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nt. L KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFt*ee Parkins NELSON, B.C. '    Phone 234\n-\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St Phone 89?\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nspecial'Monthly rates\n>.    Good Comfortable Rooms\n\\_        \"Fiiliy Ltaeisosjd'\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E. MADDEN. Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot  and   Cold   Water\nIn the HEART ol tho City\nNew Fast Frequent\nTRAIN SERVICE\nNELSON-TRAIL\nEffective November 22\nDally\nEx. Sun\n7:45 a.m.\n8:40 a.m.\n9:30 a.m.\nDally\nEx, Sun.\n10:05 a.m.\n11:20 a.m.\n12:10 p.m.\nDally\nDail)'\nEx. Sun\n6:30 p.m. Lv.-Nclson-Ar. Coast Con.\n7:40p.m.   -Castlegar-   10:45a.m.\nDally\nEx. Sun\n2:30 p.m.\n1:35 a.m.\n8:30 p.m. Ar. - Trail - Lv.   9:40 a.m. 12:30 p.m.\nStops will be made at Intermediate points as required.\nNo Change In Present Dally Schedule of Through Tralni\nTrail-Rossland service will be withdrawn.\nFor further particulars apply local ticket agent or\nN. J. LOWES, City Ticket Agent, Nelson, B. C.\nDally\n11:00 p.m.\n10:05 p.m.\n9:00 p.m.\nCranbrook School\nDebaters in Win\nUphold Negative in a\nDemocracy Versus\nDictator Thpme\nCranbrook\nHOSPITAL AID\nWHIST IS HEID\nAT NEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-The Ladles'\nAid ot Knox Presbyterian church\nmet at tne home ot Mrl. H, S. Nelson. Eleven members wera present. Mist Ruth Kumlin and Mrs.\nEarl Nelion Wera welcomed u visitors. Tea wu served by the hostess assisted by Mrt, Eirl Nelton.\nThe Hoipltal Aid held a whist\ndrive in the K. of P. hall Saturday,\nNovember 7. Eight tables ot progressive whist were ln play, Tea\nwai served by the hostesses, Mrt,\nBeggs and Mrt. T, Pearson. Prizewinners were: Ladiet' tint, Mitt\nDora Clever; ladles' consolation,\nMrs: Jeffrey; gentlemen's first, H.\nClever; gentlemen's consolation,\nBob White.\nThe meeting of the Anglican WA.\nwit held at the home of Mn, Clay-\nbourne' Vandergrift. Mrs. Vandergrift and Miss Gladys Reynolds\nwere hostesses. Ten memben were\npresent, and .one visitor. Tea was\nserved by the hostesses after business was over.\nC. Harrison is in town from Appledale' visiting hit wife, who is a\npatient in Slocan Community hospital. '\nThe Women's Institute met ln the\nLegion rooms. Twenty-six memben and two visiton were present\nTea was served by the hostesses\nMrs. C. Kennett and Mn. M. Shannon.\nMiss Isobel Mack hai left for her\nhome in Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. Christophenon and\nson, Bobby, Mn. A. Schnable and\ndaughter, Frances, and Miss Sera-\nohin Balllan>eon spent Friday night\nln Slocan City.\nThe .monthly meeting of the Hospital Aid waa held at the home of\nMrs. H. Clever. Fourteen memben\nwere preient. One-new member\nwas welcomed and two visiton attended. The buying committee wes\nordered to purchase necessary articles for tho hospital. Mn. H. O.\nGUnn was appointed to the tewing\ncommittee in place of Mn. Mathew-\nson. The December whist drive ls\nIn charge of Mn. Charlei Vander-\nf-rlft and Mn. G. Burkett. The\nvisiting committee ls Mn. R. W\nCrellin and Mn. Charles Van-to-\ngrift Misa Dora Clever re-ved refreshments, assisted by Mrs. J.\nDraper ahd Mrs. Beggs.\nMrs. Conrad of\n. Greenwood Is\na Tea Hostess\nGREENWOOD, B.C.-A. J. Campbell hat left to consult specialists\n111 Vancouver.\nConstable R. Pritchard returned\nfrom Kamloops where Mn. Pritchard is recovering trom an illness.\nMiss Kay Haden wai a visitor\nto Oliver.   '\nMn. A. McMillan of Grand Forks\nwas a visitor in town.\nMn. Conrad entertained at the\ntea hour Wednesday.\nThe Ladies' Aid of the United\nchurch held a successful tea in the\nWindsor hotel. Mn. Leslie assisted\nin receiving the guesti. Tea tables\nwere prettily decorated with pink\n'mums. Mrs. J. Reid and Mn. D. M.\nMcDonald were in charge of the\ntables while Mn. McDonald, Mrs.\nConrad and Miss Falch read tea\ncups. Assisting in serving were\nMisses May Clark, Edna Pope and\nEthel McArthur. Mrs. Sater and\nMn. Campbell were in charge of the\ntea and coffee.\nMiss Bernadine Brown spent a\nshort time at Oliver.\nMiss J. Mclntyre hat returned\nfrom Vancouver where she was\ncalled through the aeath ot iissr\nfather.\nRoy Powen of Danville, Wash.,\nwas a visitor In town.\nMiss Rene Fillmore tpent the\nweek-end at her home In Rhone.\nMajor and Mrs. A. W. Davit are\nvliiting in Spokane.. ,\nMrs. E. Fentlman of Vancouver,\nwho has been visiting her parents\nMr. and Mn. I. D. Skelton of Trail,\nls the guest of Mr. and Mn. A. Sater\nof Greenwood after spending a short\nstay with relatives in Grand Forki\nen route to her home.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Curls of Molson,\nWash., were the guests of Mr. and\nMn. A. Sater.\n11JnH.asiMtifall-sllll i    7'nil\nHEN PLEASES TILBURY OWNER\nTILBURY, Ont., (CP)-Those\ndouble-yoked eggt will have to\ntake a back teat now where young\nClifford Warnock Is concerned. On\nhis parent's farm near here one of\nClifford's Plymouth Rock hens\nlaid an egg four inches long and six\nInches in circumference,       '\nriLi.i.'i-...'.\nIBROOK, B.C.\u2014A debate of\nouf^Uing Interest between teams\nof ^PFernie high school and the\nCranbrook high ichool took place\nin Cranbrook high school auditorium Friday night The lubject for\ndebate wat \"Resolved that a Dlctat-\nonhlp often more to the people of\na country than a Democracy.\" The\nmemben of the Fernie team upheld\nthe affirmative ud the Cranbrook\nteam the negative. Speakers from\nFernie were Don McLean, Misi Rose\nBicker, and Bob Clement, and the\nCranbrook memben were Bill\nHaynes, Melvin Roberts and Min\nLucille Hamilton. Cranbrook won\nthe debate.\n0. C. Barclay acted as chairman,\nwelcoming the memben from Fernie. He itated Fernie and Cranbrook schools had met before tor\nhockey, baseball, tennis and leveral\nother sports, but thit thit wu the\nfirst time they had ever met on the\ndebiting platform.\nDon McLean, leader for the affirmative, defined the termi of dictatorship and democracy, stating\nthat under a dictatorship the government wai supreme and under a\ndemocracy the people were supreme. He explained the greater\nsimplicity and unity under a dictatorship such u the complications\nof patting a bill under democracy\nare done away with ln dictatorship.\nand the idle time during the change\nol government ln democracy that\ndoes not occur ln dictatorship.\nMcLean told of the chances for\ngraft in democracy. He mentioned\nthat the lobs of officials do not\nchange with the government in dictatorship and that politics does not\nenter when men are being chosen\nfor their positions, they are choten\nfor their ability and trained for\ntheir position at the expense of the\ngovernment. He mentioned the millions of dollars spent in elections\nand sessions. He explained the difference in the great unity of a\ncountry like Germany or Italy and\nthat-of the two- great leaders ot\nCanada who oppose each other, but\ncould accomplish much if they\nwould cooperate.\nBill Haynes, Cranbrook, said that\nthe only government working entirely for the people Is a democracy. He outlined the democracy\nof the Scandinavian countries\u2014\nwhich are considered the most successful countries ln the world. The\npeople of those countries are aided\nfinancially by the government, to\nbuild permanent homes, their living\nstandards and educational standards\nare high, which'are tome of the\nfactors that make successful and\npeaceful nations. He explained that\nunder a dictator the living standard- are low, learning hu suffered\nmuch, and since Nazi power the admittance to schools and univenities\nhas been reduced 15 per cent.\nFREEDOM OF SPEECH\nHaynet told of the freedom of\nipeech and religion under democracy, where German youths must\nbelieve as Hitler believes, they are\nput under arrest if they ipeak\nagainst the government and many\nof the modern books and modern\nart has been banned from the country. He stated that dictators, not\nGod, lead the churches In Germany.\nHe gave examples of dictators, both\nof old and present times, which\nshown th.t dictatonhlp means war.\nnot war for peace, but destructive\nwar for which the youths of those\ncountries are trained.\nMisa Rose Bicker of Fernie, for\nthe affirmative, stated that a dictator can view the wants of a whole\ncountry and need not please only a\nfew in power. She. referred to election promises Which are not taken\nVery seriously and only give the\nopposite party a chance to prove\nthey are better, at the next-election.\nA dictator, she said, could change\nhis policies if necessary without a\nchange of government and without\nlosing the confidence of the people;\nthli givet the country stability, one\nthat is not ruled by the whims of\nthe people. Miss Bicker mentioned\nthat a democracy usually collapsed\nat the end of a term and gave way\nto an equally weak form of government, and a dictator could only be\ndislodged by armed force.\nMelvin Roberts, Cranbrook, for\nthe negative, stated that countries\nwith a dictator are lower financially\nthan they were before dictatonhlp.\nHe said the unemployment had increased 272,000 for one year under\nHitler, and though their unemploy\nBuy\nFINK'S fine\nFURNITURE\nOn the Deferred\nPayment Plan.\ned were building roads, they were\nroads for war, roadt to Invade Rut-\ntla. The difference in employment\nwu explained by Roberts\u2014undci a\ndemocracy a man workt for waget\nwhich are hit own. Under dictatorship there are no llbertiet ln connection with the work and waget\nof a man. * He mentioned that humans could learn to live under any\ngovernment but they were much\nhappier and peaceful under a democracy.\nRoberta touched on tha attitude\nof theie dictatorships to tht League\nof Nations, staling thlt they have\na policy agalnit world peace and\nthere could be no hope, In tho flee\nof their attitude, for world peace.\nBob Clement of Fernie, for the\naffirmative, itated that a dictatorship with Its economy and efficiency can meet requirement! at the\nopportune time and can accomplish\nmuch more when lt did not have to\nwait for legislature. He itid a dictator could lee a need and Issue\norden. but In a democracy the head\nwould see a need, refer It to the!\nminster who relets lt to the deputy\nminister who ln turn confers with\nhis staff, a policy li made and passed at the next cabinet meeting and\nmuch time hu bten wisted. In\nreference to economy, Clement itated that twenty-five mlllloni waal\nspeht on the last election ln the!\nUnited Statei, and will be tpent]\nagain ln tour yean, but ln a dictatorship this it not needed.\nClemens pointed out, ln summing\nup the argument! uied by the affirmative, the slmpllcty, unity;\nadaptability, stability, economy and\nefficiency would all be bound ln a\ndictatorship.\nMiss Lucille Hamilton, Cranbrook,\nspeaking for the negative itated\nthat a dictatonhlp was only a temporary measure compared with a\ndemocracy, that they were only a\nstage behind and all dictatorships\nwould eventually obtain a democracy. Mlu Hamilton pointed out\nthst there had never been a succession ot dictator! ln any one country,\nand at the government died with\nthe dictator the people Were untrained in government affairs, could-\nnot carry,on and the remit wu #\u25a0\nperiod of corruption. She touched\non the subject of freedom of religion\nstating, that under a dictator the\npeople had no freedom in- thli mm\npect as civilized people should;\nwhen the dictator compelled them\nto follow a given wonhip.'       J\nRev. J. F. Bell, Rev, R. W. Hardy\nand Rev. E. E. King acted as Judges.\nMr. Bell, as spokesman for tha\nJudges, complimented all the speakers, stating that tbe debate wat\nbetter than they expected. In hS\ncriticisms he pointed out that their\nexamples were too restricted, they\nhad referred mainly to Germany\nand Italy, and Canada and United\nStatei, leaving out many Important\ncountries. He explained that tost\nmany headings were confusing ana\nj they should pick out the main ones\n' and enlarged on them. -\nThe decision was awarded to the J\nnegative side.\nFollowing the debate a one act\nplay entitled \"Keeping Kitty's\nDates\", wu preiented by memben\nof the high school literary lociety1\ndirected by Miss Myrtle Qusvner.\nThe roll of Kitty wu played by |\nMiss Thelma Erickson and that of\nNina wu played by Miss Catherine J\nFergie. Mist Marcella Nedelec played the part of Flo and Min Joyce\nMaidment acted the part of Evelyn.\nJack Cadwell played the part of\nMr. Rollins, a' life insurance salesman, and the roll of Mr, Fleming,\na love* story salesman was taken\nby Bob Murray,. Douglas McKay1\ntook the part of Stanley DuPoii{\nand Min Joan Bowley the part, of\nthe maid.\nThe High School Glee club, which'\nwat formed about a month ago by\nMr. E. Davies, sang several selections, accompanied by Mist Mae\nVolsey at the piano,\nWHO WANTS AN OCELOTf\nTORONTO, (CP)-Wanted- a\nbuyer for a wart-hog, a wombat, a;\nphalanger, a young emu and al\nwhite pelican, for sale by the Toronto parks commute. At the zoo\nthere are also some racoons, blade\nbear cubs, ferrets, gophers, ganneta,\nturkeys, geese and an ocelot await-l\ning purchaie.^        j j\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by* the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Covernment of British Columbia.\n KASLO HOSPITAL AID REELECTS\nML OFFICERS BY ACCLAMATION\n\\rs. Latham Again Is President, With Mrs.\nBarclay, Mrs. Sandilands, Vice-presidents .\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 17. 1936\nSLO, B.C.,\u2014A postponed meet-\nng of the Kaslo Ladies Hospital aid\nwas held Monday afternoon in St.\nAndrews United church hall. The\npresident, Mrs. E. H. Latham, was\ntn tbe chair, other members present\nbeing Mrs. D. J. Barclay, Mrs. John\nTonkin, Miss C. M. Fawcett, Mis.\nFred McGibbon. Mrs. John Paterson, Mrs. Frank Helme, Miss A.\nHodges, Mrs.-Driver, Mrs. L. Lockard, Mrs. E. M. Sandilands, Mis. E.\nJWtt Griffith. Mrs. J. M. Kirk, Mrs.\nS. A. Hunter and Mrs. John Keen.\nMrs. Sutherland, Mis. Wright, Mrs.\nShaw and Mrs. Hild were visitors.\nThe members stood in a minute's\nsilence in respect to the memory of\nMayor W. V. Papworth, killed in\nan auto accident and in sympathy\nfor Mrs. Papworth.\n: The secretary, Mrs. Tonkin, gave\nthe monthly report.\n' Acting for Mrs. Papworth, the\ntreasurer, Mrs. Latham gave a financial report. Bills amounting to\n$39.85 were ordered paid as were\nseveral bills recognized but not\npresented at thc meeting, these\nto be paid before the closing of the\nbooks for the year.\n\u25a0 Miss Fawcett of the house committee staled there were no needs\nat the hospital for the current\nmonth.\nThe \"Sunshine\" secretary, Mrs.\nMcGibbon, had sent the usual flowers, gifts and letters to bereaved\nand ailing members and read sev-\na-al letters o( appreciation as well as\ngiving verbal thanks conveyed\nthrough her from recipients of remembrances.\nMrs. Paterson and Miss Hodges,\nrespective representatives of St. Andrew's United church and St. Mark's\nAnglican church Womens' auxiliaries, and Mis. Helme, representing\nthe Kaslo and District Women's institute, gave reports of their activities.\nThc board representative gave a\nconcise report uf tlie activities of\nthe governing body since the August meeting.\nMrs. Barclay staled that she hoped\nto have the baby cribs installed in\nthe nursery soon.\nA vote of thanks were extended to\nthe public of Kaslo and the surrounding district for thc response\nto the \"free-will\" appeal.\nMrs. Sandilands and Mrs. Griffiths, the committee in' charge, reported that door stops had arrived\nand consented to arrange to have\nthem installed immediately.\nThe secretary stated that R. A.\nChester had consented to audit the\nbooks of the society, these to be\nclosed Nov. 23.\nArrangements were made toApld\nthe annual meeting ut the home of\nMrs. D J. Barclay. As the nomination for officers resulted in all being elected by acclamation at the\nnominating meeting, this lime will\nbe devoted to the first general meeting of the new year to be called to\norder directly after adjournment\nof the annual meeting, Mrs. Hunter\nwill be co-hostess with Mrs. Barclay for the tea to follow the two\nmeetings.\nMrs, Sandilands and Mrs. McGibbon volunteered to act as nominal-'\ning committee and scrutineers when\nnominations fo rtbe 1936-37 officers-\ntook place and all nominees were\nelected by acclamatlpn as follows:\n\"President and board representative Mrs, E.H . Latham; first vice-\npresident, Mrs. D. J. Barclay; second\nvice-president, Mrs. E. M. Sandilands; secretary Mrs. John Tonkin;\ntreasurer, Mrs. W. V. Papworth;\njunior buyer and member ot the\nhouse commute, Miss C. M. Fawcett; \"Sunshine\" secretary, Mrs. Fred\nMcGibbon; Mrs. F. S. Chandler,\nmember of the house committee, automatically becomes senior buyer,\nhaving been elected for two years\nlast year as Miss Fawcett was at\nthis meeting.\nIn the event that Mrs. Papworth\ndoes not wish to carry on as treasurer. Mrs. John Paterson consented\nlo take over this office.\nThc three churches. Canadian Legion auxiliary and the Women's institute have still to appoint their\nnew representatives to complete the\nexecutive committee for the ensuing year.\nRefreshment, were served, the\nhostesses being Mrs. Griffith and\nMrs. Tonkin with Mrs. Hild and Mrs.\nLockard as their assistants.\nMrs. Dovey Heads\nFruitvale Ladies'\nAid for Church\nj FRUITVALE. B.C - The tint\nmeeting since its organization of the\nUnited church'Ladies' Aid was held\nat the home ot Mrs. W. M. Smith\nI Thursday,  November  12,-with  10'\n\u2022 members present.    .\ni   The    following    officers    were\n1 elected for the year:  Mrs. J. B.\n! Brown, president; Mrs, A. R. Hep-\nI burn,  vice-president;  Mrs. W. M.\nI Smith, secretary-treasurer.\nj It was decided to hold a home-\ncooking and apron sale in tlie near\n! future. Tea was served by the\nhostess. >\nCRESTON HILLS\nF.W.Simpson Is\nLaid to Rest\nSign to Guide Planes\nPainted on Roof\nof Theater\nREPAIRS MADE\nTO THE DEPOT\nj Vancouver Man Gets\nDuck; Curriculum\ni    ,   Is Discussed\nCrawford Bay Man\na Distinguished\nScholar\nWilliam Tully\nof Femie Dies\nNEURITIS\n\"Slurp, -stabbing ptioj of neuritis mada my\n\u2022nae useless, and would not let me deep. I\nnt ]utt about deiperate with pain, when I\ntriad T-U-C'a. Am now entirely well and back\n\u2022t work.\"-John Juerjenp, Milflinny, Ont. Let\nT-R-C'e drive tbe pain-cawing toxin* out of\nRev ey-stem\u2014quickly, Mirely, safely. 60c and\n1 at druupitB. Qood for all Rheumatic pains, m\n-R-C'a (TiUflittn'i Rheumatic Cipaulea)\nFERNIE, B.C.-Word lias been\nreceived from the coast of thc death,\non Tuesday, of William Tully, son\nof Mathew Tully, and the late Mrs.\nTully. He was thirty-eight years of\nage at the time of his death and\nlived practically all his life in Fernie. Since the death of his mother,\na year ago last summer, he has\nresided at Michel. For the past\neight years he has been in ill-health\nand went to the coast for treatment\na few months ago, He is servived\nby his father, two brothers of Lethbridge, Alta. The body is being\nbrought back to Fernie for internment. The funeral will be held on\nSunday.\nThe Danger of Cough\nAmong the Children\nIn young children a cold or cough is not a thing\nto be disregarded, as it is often a grave matter,\nand unless attended to immediately it may\neventually causo serious trouble.\nOn the first sign of u cold or cough the mother\nwill find in Dr. Wood's Norway Piuo Syrup just\nthe remedy required.\nIts promptness and effectiveness is loosening tho\nphlegm is such that the trouble may be checked\nbefore anything of a serious nature sets in.\nChUdren like it; take it without any fuss.\nCHAWFORD BAY, B.C.-Freder-\nick William Simpson, who died at\nliis home November 5, was laid to\nrest in Crawford Boy cemetery Monday afternoon, November 9. Rev. C,\nHarvey conducted the service. Pallbearers were 0. Burden, E. T. D.\nFrancis, H. Richardson, W. Baylis,\nR. McGregor and A. Nelson.\nMr. Simpson was born at Perry\nStafford, Northamptonshire, England, in 1857. He was a B.A. London\nand Cambridge, senior Wrangler,\ngold medallist in mathematics, .and\nfellow of Jesus college, Cambridge,\nEngland. He came to Crawford Bay\nfrom England in 1907 with his wife\nand two children. He taught the first\nschool here, which was held in the\nold hotel and had seven pupils.\nOwing to his age he. offered his\nservices during the war to the 107th\nRocky Mountain Rangers at Field\nInternment camp and when this\nregimenl was disbanded was transferred lo the 102nd, guarding the\nBonnington power plant, later being\nmade quartermaster sergeant in the\ncanteen. He is survived besides his\nwidow by a son, Frederick E. Simpson ot Gray Creek, and a daughter,\nMrs. F. Draper of Crowford Bay.\nFernie Debaters\nVictors al Home\nFERNIE, B. C\u2014The world Is quite\nsafe for democracy, according to the\nresults of a double-header debate\nheld on Friday between the Fernie\nand Cranbiook high schools. The\nquestion under discussion wos \"Resolved, that dictatorship offers more\nto the people of a country than does\ndemocracy.\" The debates were held\nsimultaneously ln the two cities.'The\nvisiting team ln each case upheld\nthe affirmative view of the proposition. The Cranbrook team which\nspoke in Fernie consisted of Fred\nBrian, Edgar Holmes and Jean Rat-\ntree and they were opposed by the\nFernie negative team of Egcrton\nKing, Loretta Dutka and Frank-Corrigan. The decision was awarded to\nthe negative by the judges D. Mitchell, Mr. Crookston and Dr. Hodgson\nFrancis King occupied the choir\nwith Gwen McNeil as timekeeper.\nFollowing the debate a one-act\nploy, \"The Second Story Mon,\" was\nenacted with Mike Ross as a rising\nyoung lawyer, Irene Hamer as his\nwife and Gordon Perry os o mill\nworker forced into crime os a\nsuit of unjust treatment at the hands\nof a great corporation following his\ninjury in the corporation's plant.\nCRESTQN, B.C.\u2014R, G. Penson has\nmade a workmanlike job ot painting, the word \"CRESTON\" on the\neast roof of tlie theater at the joint\nexpense of the village council and\nboard of trade. This is for the guidance of distressed air craft, and os\nsoon . os funds permit a similar\nlettering will be*put on the west\nroof. The letters are four by six\nfeet ond nicely spaced to make\nreading^ eosy.\nMrs. John McKoy, who has been\nholidaying with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Victor Carr, has left for\nFarron, to join Mr. McKay, who Is\nrelieving C.P.R. agent at that point.\nHarry Yerdury of Camp Lister\npassed through a couple of days ago\nwith his trap line equipment headed for Summitt Lake in which territory he will again operate.\nMr. and \"Mrs. .Harry VanAckeren\nof Okonagan Centre, and doughter,\nJoan, ore on a visit with his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. VanAckeren\nthis week. He reports winter damage to trees in the Okanagan, with\nthe Jonathan a heavy sufferer, In\nthis district the severe weather was\nfflt most severely by thc Wagener variety of Apple.\nMrs. Leslie Clark and children\nare on a visit with her parents.\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Staples, en route\nto Florida, where they expect to\nreside in future,\nHarvey Gobbett got away by auto\non Thursday intending to spend the\nwinter at Longbeach and other\npoints in southern California.\nAubrey   Cross   of   Winnipeg,   is\non o holiday visit with his mother,\nMrs. A. E. Cross.\nREPAIRS TO DEPOT\nA C.P.R. extra gang has just completed some repairs at the Creston\ndepot. At the east end the platform\nhos been repaired and some of the\nold planking replaced. At the west\nend 10 feet of the cinder platform\nput in four years ago, has been\ndug out and replaced by a 10-foot\nplank walk.\nJeff. Knott has returned to Sno-\nqualme, Wash., after a week's visit\nwith Mrs. Knott's p.-ents, Mr. and\nMrs. A. Halstead. Mrs. Halstead is\nslowly regaining her health but\nMrs. Knott will be remaining for\nsome days yet.\nHarry Mather ls back from Kitchener to which point he had transported the trapping equipment of\nTom Mountford and Walter Johnson, who will ogoin operate up Goot\nriver,\nMiss Lizzie McNeil Is on a visit\nwith her uncle and aunt, Mr. and\nMrs. John Ringheim, at Camp Lister.\nWill Miller and Fred Baker have\n- PAGE THREE\n^n^unv'Bug Qbntjttnji\nINCORPORATED  2?? MAY 1670!\nNEW WOOLEN\nPLAID CLOTHS\n\\.   .. \u25a0 -i      _.    i\nScotch Plaids\n\"Wallace\" and \"Cameron\" plaids for the new sport\nblouses. All pure soft wool, and washable. tfO ^C\n\u2014Second   Floor   II 3 C\n54 inches wide. YARD\nNew \"Balmoral\" Plaids\nHis Majesty's new. Royal plaid. In grey and red. Very\nwearable for skirts, tailored dresses, ski pants . dJO \"7C\n\u2014Second  Floor HBC\nRAYON\nPLAID\nCLOTHS\nNew and smart. In\n' fast colors. Size 50\nby 50 inches or 52\nby 52 inches. Plaids\nof blue, gold, green\nand red combinations. EACH\u2014\n79'\nor coats. 54 inches wide. YARD\nSPECIAL CHINA ASSORTMENT\nDirect Import at a Big Saving\nThis group includes cream and sugar, bon bons, marmalade jars, vases, butter dishes all daintily decorated on\na cream ground. 9'><>\nALL ONE PRICE, EACH LOl\nSILVER GREY BLANKETS\nThe finest quality grey blanket made in Canada. Fine\nsoft wool for home use. These come in a size (P-7 CA\n60 inches by 80 inches. Special value. PAIR. . \u00abJ>I \u00abJV\n\u2014Second  Floer HBC\nFINE DAMASK SETS\n\"Shamrock Brand\" hemstitched sets in three popular\nsizes. All new patterns in double damask. Boxed for gifts.\n54x54, and 6 14-in. Napkins. Set  $5.95\n68x68, with 6 20-in. Napkins. Set    $7.95\n68x86, with 8 20-in. Napkins. Set $10.95\n\u20148econd  Floor H 3 C.\n\"BLUE MIKADO\" CROWN DERBY\nA complete stock has just arrived. Every piece marked\nat the minimum price. Make your selection while the\nstock is complete.\n\u2014Second  Floor HBC\n32-PIECE BREAKFAST SETS\nIN FINE CHINA\nMade by Wedgewood. The designs are outstanding. The\nset comprises 6 cups and saucers, 6 tea plates, 6 breakfast plates, 6 cereal dishes, I platter, and 1     (PC QC.\n1 vegetable dish. .SET ;-*$tWW *\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\n\u2014Se-nn-i Flcor HBC\nPLAID WOOL BLANKETS\nNew arrivals in the blanket family. Plaids in combination\nof gold, orchids, blues and greens. Purest- fins tf\u00bbQ QC\nwool. Double bed size, 72 by 84 inchs-  PAIR -J\/V.i\/d\n\"   \u2014Second Floor HBC\nCOLORFUL GIFT TOWELS\nFine quality Turkish towels, in solid colors of green, blue,\ngold, coral or orchid, with jacquard borders in a lighter\nshade. A pair makes a very lovely gift. Size CO.,\n22 by .42 inches. EACH DJ>C\n\u2022  \u2014Second Floor HBC.\nHBC Pure Food Specials\nOn Sale Today, Wednesday and Thursday\n193-PHON-S\u2014194 FREE DELIVERY\nCOFFEE\u2014 ,,^\nOur Special Blend per ib. _\u00bb'\">\n1 Large Pkg. Chipso or Oxydol, _t______f,\n1 Shopping Bag, the two -\u201e,\u2022 V9y\nHONEY\u2014 -Q#4\nSweet Clover. Riedell's    4' . lb. tin j9r\nALMONDS\u2014 S\/.J,\nShelled, Nev; stock per Ib. \u2022iM'\nSOUP-                      \u25a0 \u2022Visit\nVegetable. Campbell's  2 tins *-\u00bbr\nROMAN MEAL\u2014 a\u00aba\nAids disestion ptr c-fn. _\u00bb_tr\nPEANUT BUTTER\u2014 *~J,\nButternut,   l's     p;r tin *-W\"\nBAKING POWDER- \u2022*_*__.\nMagic, 12-6- tin \u00ab_!\u00bb\u25a0\nICING-SUGAR\u2014 |oj\nSogers' ..'.-. 2 Ib. e'fh. **V\nSWEET  GINGER\u2014 eng,\nFrosh stock  per-lb. *W.'-\nCORNSTARCH\u2014 i_A\nCanada 1-lb. pkg. ***\nGOLDF.N SYRUP- f Oft\naosei-R'.X-' __,..., -. per tin  *\u00b0T\nCAKE FLOUR\u2014 _9jA\nAnna Lee Scott's per pkg  3*T\nleft for Grand Forks, ln which district they hope to obtain winter employment.\nBob Parkim and K. Constable are\nback from a couple of days' business\nvisit at Nelson.\n\u25a0 Jim Cherrington has returned lo\nNelson after  a  holiday stay with\nhis parents.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  James\nCherrington.\nVANCOUVERITE\nSHOOTS DUCK\nG. P. Salter of Vancouver was\nhere during the week for a meeting\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nWhen you're oul to-win-*\nIfOif cdittci^erc\/fc cccttf\/\"\nNASH LAFAYETTE-\"400'\nToday, Nash is showing Canada how\nHi a low-priced car can be. It's the\nNash LaFayette-\"400\". 117 inches of\nwheelbase! More than sixteen leet\nlong from bumper to bumper I 90\nhorsepower gas-saving \"400\" motor!\n$\n810\nAND UP*\nCM illustrated is Nash Ambassador \u00a3i(A(\nNASH AMBASSADOR\nNash lias found a way to built into\nthis car that thousands can afford \u2014 J\neveryimfortoiifadvanUgeotthemost T\nexpensive cars. See the big, luxurious\n121-inch wheelbase Ambassador Six\nand the 125-inch wheelbase Eight!\n1030\nAND UP*\n\u2022Alt price* Canadian list. Special\ntquiptnent extm.    Cruising Gear\niv.'il.it.!-\u25a0 on till in \u25a0 1.1-. .si extra cost.\n;  CM;, Budget Payment Plan\nNASH^1937\nCAMKRSI TOURISTS!\nYou can turn your Nub\noar Into a elecplog car.\nMake a room), Moot\nbed In less than 10 minute*. Ask your dealer.\nNELION.   1WAIL   AND\nHOSSLAND   DEALERS\nKOOTENAY MOTORS (NELSON) LTD. \\T\\'il:\n,99   BAKER\nI. C.\nCANADIAN   BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION NETWORK\n5:30 news, Vancouver, (B. C. Net);\n5:45 Musical Tapestry, Detroit; 6:00\nCanadian Corps reunion dinner; 6:30\nCanadian Concert Hall of the Air,\nMontreal; 7:00 National Sing Song,\ncommunity singing; 7:30 Tubersul-\nosii association talk, Ottawa; 7:45\nCanadian Press news and weather,\nToronto; 8:00 C.B.C. time signal Ottawa; Friendly Enemies, bass, tenor,\norchestra, Winnipeg; 8:30 Au Clair\nde la Ume, salon orchestra, Edmonton; 9:00 Just Supposln', Edmon-\nWinnipeg; 9:30 Organ Rhapsody by\nAllan Caron, Winnipeg; 10:00 News,\nVancouver; 10:15 Eric Gee and his\nKolle-Jeans, Vancouver.\nNBC\u2014KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ    KGW    KFI    KPO    KOMO\n590 620 840 680 920\n5:00 'Long About Sundown, dir.\nLouis Ford; 5:30 Crosscuts trom Log\no' the Day; 6:00 Ben Bernie and All\nthe Lads; 6:30 Fred Astalre, Charles\nButterworth, Johnny Green's orch..\nguests; 7:80 Jimmie Fidler's Hollywood gossip; 7:45 C.1I.B. house party,\ndrama, orchestra; 8:00 Amos 'n' Andy; 8:15 Lum and Abner; 8:30 Leo\nReisman's orchestra, artists; 9:00\nDeath Valley Days, drama; 9:30\nGood Morning Tonight, vocal, orchestra; 10:00 News flashes, Sam\nHayes; 10:30 Gritf Williams' orchestra; 11:00 Jan Garber's orch.; 11:30\nRan Wilde's orch.\nNBC-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO. KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\nPaul Martin's music; 5:30 Beaux\nArts trio; 6:00 Yesterday's Music,\ninstrumental; Mayor Rossi, interview, S.F.; 6:30 Husbands and Wives,\nopen forum; 7:00 Hildegarde, personality singer; Calif. State ch.m\nber of commerce, KGO; 7:30 Portraits in Harmony, guest orch.; 8:00\nHarry Rcser's orch.; 8:30 Log Cabin\nBar-Z Ranch, western stories, The\nWesterners; 9:00 Mickey Gillette's\nMusic; 9:30 Jimmie Grler's orch;\n10:00 Bernie Cummin's orch.; 10:30\nHerb Saman's orch.; 11:00 Paul Carson, organist\nChorus Parade; 8:00 Poetic Melodies; 8:15 Refrew of the Mounter drama; 8:30 Ken Murray, Phil\nRegan, Huss Morgan's orchestra;\n9:00 Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians;\n9:30 Maurice Spitalny's orchestra;\n10:00 Harry Barris, orch.; 10:30 Al\nLyon's orch.; 11:00 Sterling Young's\norch.; 11:30 Rainbow's End, KV1-\n. OIN; Harry Barris' orch,, KSL-\nKOL.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 500 w\n5:10 news flashes; 5:15 Cariboo\nCowboys; 6:15 News flashes; 7:00\nStock quotations; 7:3. Buddy Smi'h;\n7:45 Sonny Hudson; 8:00 News comments; 8:30 Symphony orch.; 9:30\nGee's orch.; 10:15 Len Chamberlain's\norch.; 10:45 Slumber Hour; 11:00\nNews flashes; Other periods, records.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n5:00 Cecil and Sally, E.T.; 6:30\nGypsy Fortunes; 7:00 Program from\nCKUA; 7:30 Slices of Life; 7:45 Seal\nof the Don; 8:00 Rhythm Rhapsody;\n8:30 Song Styles; 8:45 True Confessions; 9:00 News.\nCBS-DON   LEE  NETWORK\nKVI   KFRC   KOIN   K8L   KOL\n570 610 940 1130 1270\n5:00 Hamerstein Music hall;'5:30\nChapel Moments; 6:00 Invitation tto\na waite, KVI; 6:30 Caravan, Rupert\nHughes, m.c, Benny Goodman and-\nGeorgie Stoll, on.h. directors; 7:\"0\nStrange  as- It. Seems;  7:45  Male\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\n'  BRITISH EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nThs following frequencies will be\nused GSF 15.14 mcs., 19.82 m.,\nand GSC, 9.58 met., 31.32 m.\n6:00 p.m. \u2014 Big Ben. Johann\nStrauss, 1825-1899. A Biography in\nmusic. 7:00\u2014\"Foreign Affairs.\" A\ntalk by Sir Frederick Whyte, K.C.-\nS.I., LL.D. 7:15 \u2014 Sonata Recital.\nYfatson 'orbes, viola, and Myers\nFoggln, pianoforte. 7:40\u2014News and\nannouncements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nof the executive of the Reclamation\nFarmers' association. He is trustee\nin bankruptcy for the company that\nformerly owned the farm. While\nhere he had several days' excellent\ngoose and duck hunting on the farm\non which public shooting is prohibited.\nFred Hurry of Victoria, a former\nwell known resident ot Creston, is\nrenewing acquaintance In town, and\nwith his brother, Arthur Hurry at\nWest Creston.\nFloyd   Walde   of   Kimberley,   a'\nformer  Creston   resident,  was  re\nnewing friendship here.\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Harvey arc\non a holiday with their daughter at\nAddie, Idaho, after a short stay\nwith friends in Spokane.\nMiss Ada Lynn'of Stettler, Alta.,\nis on a visit with her brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. A. R.\nLynn.\nDenzil Maxwell uf Cranbrook\nspent a few days here the pr.st week,\na guest of his mother, Mrs. James\nMaxwell.\nMr. and Mrs. V. M. Vasseur and\nMiss E. Armltage have returned\nfrom a vacation with friends in\nSpokane.\nMrs. Archie Chisholm of Kimberley is a holiday guest of her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. G. R. John.\nMrs. Ivan Staples and family of\nVernon are visiting her parents, K-.\nand Mrs. J. W. Bell.\nThe Armistice night dance by\nCreston Valley Post Canadian Legion at Park pavilion was well\nattended, and will net the organisation a satisfactory sum after all\nexpenses are paid.\nAfter being shut dev\/n for a few\ndays, operations have been resumed\nat clearing the right of way at the\nCreston end of the new Wynndel-\nCreston highway. Stoppage was due\nto a breakdown on the bull-dozer.\nW. Mackie of Boswell was a visitor here at the first of the week.\nPublic school inspector J. E.\nBrown was here on Thursday evening for a conference of school\ntrustees at which he discussed the\nnew curriculum and consolidation\nof nine of the districts for high\nschool purposes.\nMr. ami'Mrs. W. Upton arc back\nfrom a few day^' holiday stay in\nSpokane.  V\nFritz Molander was a visitor with\nhis'riarentsV.Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Molander, at \"stitchener.\nMr. und Mrs. Ted Winchcombe\nof Nelson 'haye been -guests of Mr.\nand Mrs.' J: E. Hayden. Ted was\nhaving a few days at the ducks\nand geese in company with Mr.\nHayden and other local hunters.\nHE'S TOPS AT SHUFFLE-BOARD\nSTRATFORD Ont. (CP)-Friends\nof Red Ford are urging him to take\nan ocean voyage, not because of his\nhealth, for Red is strong and vigorous.  But  he's  just  won   the  city\nshuffle-board championship fur the\nj third time and his supporters feel\n| he could maks a clean-up on ship-\ni board.\n'Cranbrook Plans   :\/.-\u25a0.\na Welfare Drive\nI CRANBROOK, B. C.-Anivjial' rt;-\nport of the welfare committee states\n| that the families and dependentsjto\n! whom Christmas hampers should Bo\nsent number 45 families,'\"26 adUIts\nI with 132 dependents. ;\nj The report states lhat the. di-i-^c\nj for clothing tuok place on Nov. ,8\nllast year and wa.: succcsful. The\nj date for the drive this year.-is.set\n| for Nov. 18, and the service' clubs\nand members of the executive will\naid in the collecting.\nTlie secretary, W- R. P.eid showed in the financial statement that\nthere is a balance in.the bank'bf\n-.128.69. The receipts were $5-9.47\n.ud expenses $409.58. '     '\nA committee has been app6intetf\ntu go into the matter of dental work\nfor the families on relief.\nBerlin 2:15 p.m.\u2014Wo.nen's Hour;\nWomen in the Reichsassoclatlon of\nPhysical Cujture. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77\nmeg.\nSchenectady 2:35 \u2014 Short wave\nmall bag. W2XAF, 31.4 m\u201e 9.53 meg.\nCaracas 5:30 \u2014The Continentals.\nYV2RC, 51.7 m., 5.8 meg.\nBerlin 6:18\u2014Abu Hassan. Opera\nby Carl Maria v. Webe\"r. DJD, 25.4\nm., 11.77 mej.\nParis 7:20\u2014News in English. TPA-\n4, 25.6 m\u201e 11.72 meg.\nTokyo 9 \u2014 \"Overseas Program.\"\nJVH, Nazakl, 20.5 m\u201e 14.6 meg.\nDRUMHELLER\nMERCURY\nGOAL\nOne of the finest coali en thc\nmarket fer heater, itove or\nfurnace.\nLUMP: Ten    ?10.50\nNUT: Ton        9.00\nother PolioyioJd     V* '\u00ab\u25a0 the 70,000\n_   .^^t^m9M*JL&^*lA*}lU.2IML\u00bbi*l*A*4~Z*\u00a3HkiUKE^KR\n... .....\n\t\n pag_ i-our \u25a0\u2014\nMIAN (UPPERS,\nBOXLA CHAMPS,\nROTARY GUESTS\nDynamiters Toasted\non Eve of Tour\nof Europe\nHOPE POR MORE\nHOCKEY TITLES\nNelson Boxla Squad\nAlso Hohored by\nRotarians\nEntertaining the Kimberley Dynamiters, Canadian hockey champions, and the Nelson senior lacrosse\nteam, Kootenay box lacrosse champions, the Rotary club at Is Monday\nluncheon had an all-sport let-up.\nTendering congratulations to both\nteams, the Rotary, spokesmen expressed Nelson's best wishes to the\nDynaitilters for further honors on\ntheir coming European tour. The\nluncheon Was one of the largest of\nthe year, with 62 members and\nguests. President R. E. Potter was in\nthe chair, and W. K. Clark was in\ncharge of the program.\nPrior to the business agenda, Miss\nRose Hartwig sang two beautiful\nsolos, \"Homing\", and \"When You\nCome Home\", accompanied by Pianist P. G. Morey.\nIn Greeting thc visitors, President\nPotter said the Rotarians were delighted 10 be seated next to > many\nchampions. He reminded the Dynamlten that the English teamt they\nwould meet trained on Yorkshire\npudding and roast beef.\nOn taking charge of the program,\nMr. Clark welcomed the two teams\nheartily, and then called first on\nHarold Whitmore, secretary and\nmanager of the Kimberley team.\nTELLS KIMBERLEY\nHOPES\nBringing greetings to Nelson from\nthe executive of the Kimberley\nHockey club, Mr. Whitmore stated\nthc executive had quite a job on\nill hands, as it had to finance the\nteam until it got to London, after\nwhich point all its expenses would\nbe paid. Starting in a few days, the\nteam would play Calgary Monday,\nand then proceed east, playing in\nsuccession Edmonton, Saskatoon,\nPrince Albert, Regina, Sudbury, Ottawa, Montreal and Saint John,\nsailing for the Old Country on the\nDuchess of Bedford December 12.\nHe expressed appreciation for Nelson -rlvlllg the team these games, as\nIt '.-.-.-I no artificial.ice at home, the\n-semes meaning a lot financially, beside putting the players in shape to\nfro on tour. He knew Nelson would\nfellow the Dynamiters with lis best\nwishes, and then take t crack at\nthem when they got home agil'n.\nOn the European tour the Dynamiters would pity All-England, and\nthen play in Belgium, Holland, Germany, Ctceho-Slovakia, Austria and\nHungary. There wu alto possibility\nof games in Switzerland, Italy, Poland, and Sweden. On returning to\nLondon thty would play tor lite\nworld's championship, and were\nhopeful of returning to Canada with\nall the laurels of the world.\nCoach Johnny Achttciirr, \"thc\nman who Wielded the axe\", as Mr.\nClark described him, alto thanked\nthii Nelson Rotarlsns for making\nthlt meeting possible, the Dynamiters, he declared, always enjoyed\npltylhg In Nelion. At they wouldn't\nbe in Canadi to defend the Allan\ncup, they hoped Nelton would stall\nin whtrt they left old tnd be\nthought the Maplt Leafs htd a good\nchaact of doing IL\nMurray Clark, coach of the Nelton\nbox lacrosse team, was then called\non by hit dad, who declared ht had\na fine lot of boyt, who htd the stuff\nto put it over. Thanking tht Rotarians tor their hospitality, Murray\nClark aaid he knew the local boys\nappreciated lt deeply.\nAt tor l. honon won by Nelson,\nhe said it wu done by the boys\nthemselves. They had more fighting\niplrit, and Nelion give th^m wonderful support.\nReferring to the future, he expressed the belief that great things\nwere ahead for Kootenay lacrosse,\nand expressed the hope that the\nEast Kootenay would come in. Several lacrosse players were on the\nMaple Letts. Some new boys turned\nout fine players. If Kimberley wovjd\ncome ln too, it would help to make\na great league.\nBISHOP GIVEN CUP\nCelling Jack Biihop of the Nelson team to the front, he presented\nhim with tlie Jack Boyce cup for\nthe cleanest player of the league.\nOn a speech being demanded\nfrom Jack, he declared It was \"ture\ngreet to win it\", and he hoped he\ncould keep on winning it for a\ncouple of years.\nPresident Potter, In winding up\nthe program, congratulated both\nteams. It had been lough getting to\nthc top, but it would bt tougher\nstaying there. He hoped Kimberley\ncould come In for' lacroiae, which\nwas one of the fastest games. When\nthe season started the games here\nwere drawing 250 patrons, but at\nthe end they Were drawing over\n2000. He declared lacrosse wat a\ngood thing tea the town.\nT. Buscomb Head of\nC.M.&S. Committee\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 16\u2014Tim Bus-\ncomb was elected chairman ot the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\ncompany's employees' cooperative\ncommittee last week. Alex Smith\nwas elected vice-chairman and D.\nE. Smith, secretary. Committee\nchairmen elected were Bert Repton,\nemployment; J. A. field, coal; T.\nDawson, relief; and T. Wilson, cost\nof living committee.\nNE'.-.O*.' DAILY NiW\u00bb, \u2022:____H. I.C.-TUE3DAY MC*MN\u00abi. nOVIMilfl ,17. MM\nDRIVE FOR TOYS\nNow at Work on Few\nToys on Hand but\nWill Need-More\nNelson Boy Scouts ere hard at\nwork in their toy repair shop at\nthe Scout hall, repairing and rebuilding broken toys for distribution to underprivileged children at\nChristmas.\nOrganization for the annual drive\nfor \"mendable\" toyt It going forward and an announcement of piths\nis expected to be made soon. At\npresent the Scouts art concentrating on putting in shape the few\ntoyi On hand but that work will\nsoon bt completed and the big drive\nwill probably be launched then.\nDrugstore Lunch\nCounters May Be\nTaboo al Coast\nNew By-Law Draft Is\nPrepared; Bans Use\nof Houses\nTrail (ily Council Spends Over\nBudget, but Finds Ihe Needed Cash\nVANCOUVER (CP). - Drug-tore\nlunch counters faced possible extinction after Inspector J. F. C. B.\nVance, Vancouver, city analyst,\nsubmitted the draft ot a new \"eating house\" bylaw for consideration\nof Vancouver restaurant proprietors.\nThe draft bylaw, which will be\nlaid before the oivic health committee shortly, calls for compulsory\nmedicil examination of all restaurant employees, and bans the use of\ntemporary stands, tents or vehicles\nand houses uied as private residences for rating-house purpose!.\nOne clause provides that poisons\nmust not be stored, sold or dispensed in any eating place.\nStrict sanitary measures are demanded. One orders that the only\nanimals kept on the premise, shall\nbe \"a reasonable number of cats for\nthe control of rats and other vermin.\"\nRevelstoke Rector\nScience Graduate\nStudied in Liverpool;\nHas Been in Kaslo\nSince 1933\nMILLER ENTERS\nCOAST RACE FOR\nTHE MAYORALTY\nVANCOUVER, NOV. U (CP). -\nSenior membtr of Vancouver city\ncouncil for several years as chairman of \"the finance committee, Aid.\n0. C. Miller announced today he\nWill contest tlie mayoralty in civic\nelections Dec. 9.\nTwo other candidates are already\nin the field\u2014Charles E. Thompson,\nformer campaign manager for Mayor\nG. G. McGeer, and ex-Mayor L. D.\nTaylor.\nAid. L. D- McDonald and Dr. A.\nD. Buchanan are considering filing\nnomination papers. W. C. Shelly.\nformer minister of finance ln the\nTObnie government, also may run.\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 16\u2014\"this has\nbeen an exceptional year,\" proudly\nstated Mtyor Bruno Lerose at the\ncity council meeting here Monde;\nnight when he reviewed work done\nby the council during 1996.\n\"At thc beginning ot thc year w<\nwere like 'a cat In a sack,'\" Wos the\nway he described their outlook.\n\"We made a budget on paper\nbut didn't known whether we would\nmake it or not. But we have done a\nlot of permanent work, a lot ot road\nwork, built a stone wall in east\nTrail and done a lot ot cribbing. We\nfigured on 50 feet of wall on Glovrr\nroad, but we did 100 feet.\n\"Yea, tnd If We don't finish that\nwall, w* will lose the whole ttreet,\"\ninterposed Aid. Anderton.\n\"I hope that will be done next\nyear,\" replied the mayor.\n\"Tht comfort station coit tar more\nthan ***e figured,\" he went on. \"It\ncost W2S0. We received $1000 trom\nthe Rotary club and budgetted $1000\nfor it, but we spent an additional\n$1500..\n\"We didn't flgurt on work In the\nHalliwell subdivision nor on Lookout street. We put on an extra\npoliceman, his wages not being figured in the budget\n\"A total ot $15,000 more than\nwhat was budgetted tor wai spent.\nNow I suppose you want to know-\nhow wo did it. It was done due lo\nthe cooperation of the city staff\nand the police too.''\n\"We collected road and poll tax\nthis year from all whom It wtt pow-\nible in thc city. Increase tn water\nrates ahd a checkup on water services also contributed to thit sum.\nIn tht water service checkup iheri\nwera fnunri many services that wert\nnever declared.\n     \u2014,    \"Also we were thle to spend $-000\nabor members of parliament from fer pipe. We did it and I hope the\nWales refused tonight to be on hand ; new council will continue to do It not\nur\"l S_ln!l Ed,var(1 when h* lw themselves but on btliau ot the\nvisits south Wales Wednesday to ratepayers of the city.\"\ninspect conditions among the unem-! The mayor then spoke on thc\np'\"ya>- council*! policy of tvoWing the\nOne of the parliamentarians, An- j wort relief.\nTweedsmuir Lauds\nCanada Technical,\nScientific Depts.\nOTTAWA, N6v. 16 (CP'\u2014Scien-\nti(ic and technical departments ot\ntlie Canadian government have no\nsuperiors in any country, Lord\nTweedsmuir, governor-general, said\nhere tonight, speaking at a function\ncommemorating the work of erfti-\ncert of the department of mines and\nthe national res-arch council in developing the deposits at Great Bear\nlake.\nThe development arose out of\ngeological observations mtde by\nofficers of the mines deptrtment\nand was made possible by research\non metallurgical problems in government laboratories. The result had\nbeen achieved by a combination of\nthe prospector, the mining engineer,\nthe metallurgist and the chemist.\nRefuse to Greet\nKing Edward\nLONDON.   Nov.   18   (API-Two\nCouncil -Has Done a\nLot Permanent\nWork, LeRose\neurin Bevan, declined the Invitations of Labor Minister Ernest\nBrown to be present when the\nKing visits his Constituency on the\nground there are pressing problems\n.ind. suffering in Bouth Wales for\nwhich Hie King's liiiiiisters arc re-\nsponilble.\n\"It It Impossible tor ut to give\nwork to every man who comes to\ntown, but we htve provided -work\nfor all our city old timers and we\nare going- to try te continue to provide them with work and waite.\"\nThe mayor commended City En-\nI .iter S. S. MCDlntmid ruKl D. H.\n__l\nW. M. Mainwaring, another Welsh I Bayley, assistant city englhter. He\nmember of the home, wrote Brown j said that little wts ever heard of\nlie could not-Join \"a tour of this j Mr. Bayley wholt many jobs in-\nciiaracler\". He advanced reasons', volved a great deal ot work.\nsimilar to those ot Bevan for hit ab- \"It's no use to tell him atter he\nos**      \u2022**\u2022* I diet,' ttW Mtj-ot Urttt.\nRev. E. Pitt-Griffiths of Kaslo,\nwho his been appointed to take\ncharge of SL Peter's parish in Revelstoke in succession to Rev. J. G.\nHolmes, now at Nelson, has been\nat Kailo since 1933. He went to\nthat city from Qu'Appelle diocese,\nSaskatchewan, where he was ordained ln me.\nMr. Pitt-Griffiths was graduated\nin science at Liverpool university\nand later studied theology at St.\nChad's college, Regina. He was a\ntekcher in the civil service In India\nfor some time, according to the\nRevelstoke Review.\nNo Statement After\nConfab at 'Frisco\nSAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 10 (AP).\n\u2014The first brief conference between employers and unions in several days of the maritime strike was\nheld today as one union official\nexpressed belief striken would refuse to arbitrate all differences as\nrequested by seaport mayors who\nmet with Pretident Rooievelt in\nWtshington.\nRepresentatives of three seagoing\nunions and the coast committee for\nshipowners conferred briefly and\nthen adjourned until tomorrow\nmorning for further discussion of\nhiring hall control, crucial istuc.\nand penalties which employers wish\nestablished for violation of working\nagreements.\nNo statement was issued afler\nthe meeting.\nClimaxing a hectic and at timet stormy romance, John Barrymore,\nnoted actor, and his youthful protege, Elaine Barrie, were married at\nYuma, Arizona, after a flight from Los Angeles by airplane. Barrymore\nls 55 ahd Was recently divorced from his actress wife, Dolores Costello\nBarrymore. His bride is 21. Only last August, Mlts Barrie announced\ntheir engagement had been broken, while Barrymore had been quoted as\nsaying lt never existed. They are pictured together here at they attended\na social gathering ln Hollywood.\u2014Central Preu Canadian Photo,\nFIRE PREVENTION\nTAX INCREASED\nVICTORIA, Nov. 18 (CP)-Hon.\nJohn Hart, minister of finance Introduced a $5,000,000 loan bill IS\nthe British Columbia legislature\nthis afternoon, taking authority for\nthe government to borrow up to\nthat sum net fof public works, on\nsecurities repayable up to 1965 but\nnot exceeding interest rates of five\nper cent, Construction of highways,\nferries, bridges and public buildings\nand other public works were included in the range of the measure.\nAttorney General Sloan introduced a bill to extend the present B.C.\nMoratorium law by an undetermined period, \"thirty days after the\nfirst session of 1937.\" The terms of\ntho present Moratorium law remain\nunchanged.\nMayors, reeves, aldermen and\ncouncillors throughout British Columbia who have been incorrectly\nsworn in after their election are reassured in their respective offices\nby a bill introduced by Hon. A.\nW, Gray. Many municipal bodies\nhad been sworn In by city clerks,\nwhile statute law requires the ceremony to be performed by a county\ncourt judge or justices of the peace.\nThe amending measure validates\noaths incorrectly administered; and\nvalidates the actions of the respective municipal boards. Assessors and\ncollectors arc included.\nAmendments to the Forest act,\nunder which the fire prevention\ntix It Itepped up from 2.5 to 3.3\ncenti per acre; right of entry on\nprivate lands provided; and a new\ndefinition of responsibility for\nfighting fires Inserted, as part\nof a general program to tighten\nup fire prevention in the woods\nand assist natural regeneration\nproceeded with unanimous consent\nof the house, piloted by Hon, A.\nW. Gray.\nA bill of importance to municipal\nities, as it redefines residents and\nI transients for purpose! of provlnc-\nlal-munclpal relation! In health, welfare and relief services, wai advanced unopposed, after explanation\nby Hon. Dr. G. M, Weir. An arbitration board will be set up of *.\\o-\nvincial and municipal officials to\nsettle cases in dispute, where necessary.\nMRS. A. GRAY OF\nTRAIL, PASSES\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 16. - Mn.\nAlexander Oray, 55, passed away\nnt the Trail-Tadanac hospital at\nabout 5:30 Monday afternoon, having been taken 111 suddenly a few\ndays ago. It ia understood thlt her\nhusband is on his way from the old\ncountry and it expected here Wednesday.\nShe ls survived, alto by one son\nAlexander, and a brother Urquhart\nInnis, at Robson, as well as relatives\nln the old country.\nNelson Travels\nCalgary, Hockey\nOpening There\nNelson hockey team leaves by\ntrain early Wednesday morning for\nCalgary for two games opening the\nscason in lhat city.\nWith thc Kimberley series away\nand the two Calgary' games to bring\nthem Inlo condition for thc stretch\nof thc 1936-37 season, the Maple\nLeafs are expected to get out and go\nplaces when they return to home\nterritory. It is hoped that the ttam\nwill be strengthened when It returns from Calgary.\nPoppies Sold\nto Moyie People\nMOYIE, B.C. Mrs. Bert Beck and\nson, Glen Roy, arc vlsitin*- with\nKimberley relatives.\nMrs. R. A. Smith and Mrs. James\nSmith motored to Lumberton.\nMiss Jessie Walket canvassed the\ntown with Remembrance day popples receiving goodly results.\nMr. and Mrs. Rty Ctfrrau and\nfamily ot Chapman Camp were\nguests at the home of Mrs. Mary\nConrad over the week-end.\nMoyie school report for September and October:\nGrade 0- Jessie Jane Whitehead.\nPhilip Conrad.\nGrade 7-,-La Vaune Conrad,\nVincent Conrtd, Ada Barr.\nGrade 6\u2014Emberton Walker, Fred\nBarr.\nGrade 5 \u2014 Gordon McFarlane,\nGtrry Conrad, Frank Sanders, Eddie Birr, Jimmie Whitehead.\nGrade 3\u2014Remlglt Picco, Lois\nAndrews, Glen Barr, Buddy Grondahl.\nGrade 2\u2014Pearlie Walker, Gordon\nBirr, Harold McFarlane, Eric\nBoake.\nGrade 1-Honry Simmonds, Gordon Groundalil, Ptddy SliUar,\nFlorence Simmonds, Dennis Simmonds.\nAttendance: 96.98 per cen!\n_|*_{_\u00bbr~-Adel--e Nicoletti.\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWSOF TRAIL\nThis column is in charge of Mri. Glenn Quayle ot Trail. All\nevents of a eocial nature ot Interest in Trail and Tadanac will tppeir\nin this column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad io have tny such news\ntelephoned to her at her home in Trait\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 16.\u2014Christmas\ndecorations were used in Trail for\nlhe first time this year when \"B\"\nbranch auxiliary to St. Andrew's\nAnglican church entertained at a\nsuccessful bazaar and sale ot work\nin the I.O.O.F. hall Saturday afternoon. Red tapers in silver sconces\ndecorated lhe serving table, Individual tables also having as their center pieces, red candles. Novel booths\nand tables, representative ot the\nChristmas season, were effective\ncenters ot distribution for the many\nand various kinds ot work on sale.\nMitt Connie Cain, ih charge of tabic\narrangement*, had assi-iiug te in\nserving Miss Audrey Doubleday,\nMill Kathleen Olover, Misi Betty\nMorrant, Miss Dorothy Plumb, Mist\nDorothy Haines, and Miss Edith\nWoodburn. Miss Jean McCallum\nand Mrs. Robert Bainbridge presided at the homecoeking table, Mrs.\nA. Annable and Mlts Margaret Sar-\ngeant selling articles of home sewing. Another popular stall wat that\nsupervised by Mitt Doris Johnson\nWM) had assisting her.Mrs. B. S.\nThurber. Miss Nora 'Calms conducted the ticket salt. Serving in thc\nkitchen -ware Mts. Frank Pennoyer,\nkitchen wert Mrt. Frank Pennoyer,\nMrs. W. W. __ntl_y and Mrt. A.\nHumphrey!.\n\u2022  o   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. N. Stefanick, a recent bride,\nwtl guett ot honor at t kitchen;\nshower, Miss Gladyt Allen enter-1\ntkiaing. MiM Doris Frishuk and\nMiss Martha Smith we winner*I\nof first and second prizes In games\nwhich provided considerable entertainment. A basket, decorated in\npink and white, containing many\nuseful and delightful gifts, was presented to the guest of honor by\nMrs. H. Hanson and' Miss Allen.\nRefreshments were served at the\nsupper hour by the hostess who was\nassisted by Mrs. William Whittle,\nMrs. Hanson and Miss M. Smith.\nOther guests included Mrs. P. Gry-\nshuk, Mrs. James Smith, Mrs. P.\nSoberlak, Mrs. J. Palmas, Mrs. S.\nErickson, Mrs. M. Machiori, Mrs. N.\nThompson, Mist Edith Allen, Miss\nLena Turik, Miss Doris Frishuk,\nl! M Kcsekn and Miss Allen.\n\u2022   *   *\nAt a quet wedding ceremony November 14 tt Knox United church\nnJinse, Myrtle Violet Gray was married to William E. Tillen, witnestet\nbeing Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ackermm.\nRev. Dr. M. W. Lee\u00bb officiated. Mr.\nand Mrs. Tillen will take up immediate residence in the city.\na  \u2022   o\nMri. Grieve, East Trail, was hottest Monday evening to memberi ot\nthe Ladies' Service auxiliary to\nKnox United church at a meeting\nat her homc. Refreshments were\nserved at thc conclusion of business.\nO     9   .0\nMn. D. J. Tte*, Third avtmie,\naccompanied by her ton Tommy,\nhat left tar Cloverdale where tht\nwill take up residence. Mrs. Teek.\nduring the past lew weeks, hu been\nhonored at a number of nettl\nevents, ,  s*\nGRIMES TELLS\nGYROS COMING\nRISE IN GOLD\n* *,.\nNational Debts and\nBad Currencies\nto Boost It\nGIVES RULES FOR\nJUDGING STOCKS\nDemand Will Be for\nBase Metals to\nNext Turn\nExpressing the belief that iu the\nnext depression gold would go to\n$55 or $60 an ounce, and perhaps to\n\u00bb75, R. A. Grimei gave the Nelson\nGyro club Monday evening his view\nin compact form of mining invest-\nments and outlined hit own method\not appraising mining risks. He wis\nspeaking on a program arranged by\nR, E. Horton. -\nJUDGING A PROtPECT\nHt divided mining risks into\nthree classes, the firtt embracing\nprospects. In appraising a company\nbased on a prospect, ht said the\ntint thing to look to wtt whe wai\nbehind tht company, and what was\ntheir experience and. record. The\nhuman element wu moat Important, li there wu tht slightest\nquestion ai to their probity, the\nInvestment ihould be out of bounds\nat once. But If they wtre expert\nenced men, who htd previously\nbeen successful in thtt field, I Urge\npart of the risk wai eliminated. In\nsiting up tht picture ot a flotation\nbased oo a prospect, it wtt alio Important to note how much itock\nwas issued tor consideration Other\nthin cash \u2014 covering promoters'\ntett and payment for tht property.\nIn no cue ihould these two together exceed 40 per cent ot the\nitock, Mr. Grimes laid he did not\nlook favorably on any venture of\nthia kind where the proportion exceeded 25 per ctnt, but if there\ncould be catet where with a very\nfavorable showing the larger figure\nwould be Justified.\nJUNOI1 PRODUCERS\nHis second Class ot risks embraced\nthe Junior producers, companies\nthat had been financed and had\nreached production, or apparently\nreached it. With this class the average man was not competent to\nJudge of the investment, aad If one\nwere thinking ot investing ln such\na itock he should do to only on\ncompetent advice, aa it wu ehtlrely\na matter of ore reserves thd ot the\nprofit thtt could be realised from\nthe ore. The only yardstick of\nvalue that could be applied wu,\nwhat could the ore be made to\nyield?\nThe third, class, comlstlng ef old\nettabllshed producers, wit the tat-\noit for investment by the uninitiated as the stock ot such companies\nwas usually on the bull ot any\nother industrial stock. In buying\nsuch established stocks, however, it\nwu advisable to buy those bf Com-\npanics that were balanced in thtt\nUiey were not producing only one\nmetal or a group of metals. In \"\ntime of depression a company thtt\nproduced bate metali only wis\noften forced to shut down, Irrespective of ore reserves. Such flocks\nwore subject te great fluctuations.\nA very good type ot riak would be\nthc stock: of a base metal company\nthat alto had one or two good gold\nmines.\nGOLD SITUATION\nDiscussing gold, Mr. Grimei referred to the rite? in gold iharei\nowing to the appreciation ot tht\nyellow metal till there htd been\nliterally thouiands ot promotions.\nNow that prosperity wat returning\nthen would bt little new gold activity, but tht demand for tht but\nmetals would automatically rise,\nahd there would be but metal pro*\nmotions. Not until tht neat depression could new gold promotions bt\nlooked for ln tny mirnben, and\nthen a new rise In the price ot gold\nto high level* WW Inevitable because bt the increase ot indebted-\nneat by government, and further\ndepreciation ot currencies. It wu\nin connection with this thlt the\nspeaker foresaw gold rise al commodities got cheaper, until lt should\nperhaps reach 175 an ounce.\nAsked about tht Pend d'Orellle\nstock, Mr. Grimes said til tht bale\nmctil stocks were due tor t rite, u\nno new but metal mines had been\nbrought In since 1929. When thc\ndemand swung to tht bate metals,\nit wu inevitable thtt the public\nwould buy many \"cats and dogs\" ti\nwell at sound stocks.\nSILVER GOING UP\nAnswering a question about silver, the speaker laid It would bt\ncurled along with the but metals,\nfor anything that wu mtde scarce\nwould appreciate tn price. Silver\nwu associated with the but mettli\nfor on thlt continent IW' tne*t\nonly about three straight silver\nmines, all tbe mt ot the production coming trom association with\nother metals.\nSeveral speakers expieteed tht\nutmost appreciation ot Mr. Grimes'\ncompact .iddress, Utd P. I. Poulin\nadded the prediction thtt gold\nwould reach 111 a year from now.\nMr. Horton rounded out the program With tome BCW Jokee from t\nlabor miga-tne.\nPretldtnt Charles Morrit wtt tn\nthe chlir.\nSTUBGIS, Sttfc. (CP) - Well leW\nplant ot Sturgis ttachtrs to provide a party Isst school children to\nkeep them out ot mischie. Hallowe'en Eve went awry. After consuming the c\u00bbke and ice-cream, official) estlmtted thty caused more\ndsmngs %w In Othtf t_mk\nMACDONALD TO\nPROBE COAST\nPOLICE\nVANCOUVIB fCT'.-Vineouvtr\ncity council ordered in Inquiry into\npolice deptrtment attain and appointed Hon. W. A. Macdonald, retired Judge of the supreme court ot\nBritish Columbia, u commissioner\nto\u00bb investigate charges mtde ln the\nreport of W. A. Tucker, discharged\npolice department accountant,\nTRAIIAIDERMEN\nKitchin and Young to\nSeek Reelection\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 16-Aldermen\nJ. L. Kitchin and John Young announced intention to stand tor reelection to next year's city council\nIt t regultr meeting here Monday. Alderman C. A. Lauriente is\nthe third whose term ends at the\nend of 1936. He left for the south\na ihort time ago and it it not known\nwhether he will return before the\nelection.\nAldermen Hugh Bell, J. R, Anderson and J. H. Woodburn htve still\nt year to serve of a two-year term.\nMayor Bruno Lerose reserved hit\ndecision about the 1937 mayoralty.\nJACK CLEMENTS\nHEADS TRINITY\nYOUNG PEOPLEI\nElection ot officers formed thai\nchief business of the meeting ot the I\nTrinity Young Peoplei' society held I\nln Trinity church Mondiy evening, f\nThe offlceri elected were Jack Cle-1\nments,  president,  Lilt-Anne War-\ndale, secretary-treasurer, Robert Mc-\nHallam, leader of the citlienihlp\ngroup, Frances Pacheo,  leader of\ntht Christian culture group, Gordon Wllliims, leader of mlsiionary\ngroup tad Lenore Anderson, leader\nof  fellowship  group.   Miss \"Gwen\nLowtry WU pianist for tht evening.\nThe memberi were entertained by\ntn address on t Social Credit by\nDave Link, formerly tt Pincher\nCreek, Alia., but now cf Nelton.\nTRAIL COUNCIL\nBRIEFS\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 16-Followi.ig\nthree readings ot tht sewer extension bylaw, Alderman John Young,\n-who had introduced it, told the city\ncouncil here Mondty night that it\nwai tht first bylaw ht had bten\nprivileged to introduce since being\non tht council.\nThe traffic regulation bylaw wos\ngiven three readings.\nWater application of Mri. Huel\nM. Westhaver WU approved.\nDr. J. L. Gayton, olty medical\nhealth officer, reported that he had\nmade during the put'week, four\nspecial examinations, one mothers'\npension investigation and three sanitary inspections. Cues of Infectious\ndisease! reported to him during that\nperiod were chicken pox, 12, septic\ntore throat, three tnd scarlet {ever,\none. At hit special clinic given each\nSaturday mbrnlng 44 personi wetc\ngiven treatments.\n.. A. SMITH IS\nLAID AT REST\nGeorge Albert Smith, who died\nat hit residence on Oak Itreet lut\nThufKliy, was laid to rest in the\nNeUson otfetttry following the\nfuneral services conducted before\nI large gathering of friends by Rev.\nst, A. Donnell ln the parlors of Davis\nFuneral Service at 2 p.m. Mondiy.\nThe hymnt, 'Itock ot Agee\" and\n\"Abide With Me\", were sung.\nPallbearers were Herbert Day,\nPhillip Allan, Harry Hughei, John\nHoogerwerf, George Scott and Edward Boyes.\nHAWKS BEATTHE\nLIONS IN THIRD\nDownie From Gilhooly\nScores to Break\na 3-3 Tie\nVANCOUVER, (CP).-A lone Its\nperiod goal by Dtv. Downie broki\na 3-3 deadlock here Monday nigh\nand gave the Seattle Scahawks I\n4-3 decision over tht Vancouvei\nLions. It WU tht Hawki lecom\nvictory ln three starts ln tht Paclfii\nCout Hockey league schedule.\nLineups:\nSeattle-Venne; Mullen, Gllhoolyl\nMcAdam; Ttbor, Proudlock, Subtil\nJacobs, Lyon, Bill Gilhooly, DOWntel\nVancouver \u2014 Jackson; Mercerl\nCreasy; O'Neill; Palm, Carse; Subl\n\u2014Arnott, Shepptrd, Rimstad, Besi-T\nltr.\nReferee\u2014Pete Send.\nSUMMARY\nPint period\u20141\u2014Vancouver, Palrrj\n.21; 3\u2014Vancouver, Carte, 8:81; 3-\nSeittle, Downie, 10:12; 4\u2014Vancou!\nver, Mercer, 11:10; .-Seattle, S|\nGilhooly, 18:41.\nPenaltiet-D. Gilhooly \u00ab), Carse|\nTabor (five mini, each), Palm.\nSecond period \u2014 6\u2014Seattle, Mc|\nAdam (Ttbor) :36.\nPenalties-Jacobs, Arnott, 8essler|\nLyon, McAdam, Downie, Rimstad.\n-Turd period\u20147\u2014Seattle, Downie]\n(D. Gilhooly) 4:50.\nPenalties\u2014Carse.\nTRAIL BOWLING\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 16.-G. DIPas\nquale of Kootenay Hotel copper\nboth high single and high iggrtgite\n204 tnd 520 respectively, ln Trai\nBowling league competition at th;\nMemorial hall Monday night.\nWith the aid of \u2022 ipot of 38 pia\nper gtme. Company Stort won tw\nout ot three from Kooteniy Hole:\nCentral School, with the aid oi I\npint per fame, took throe stralfh\ntrom Trill Timet.\nTeam scores follow:\nKootenay Hotel . 638 838 K4-UM\nCompany Stort .. 857 611 (85\u2014INI\nTrail Times   \u00ab1J 9M 868-1771\nCentral School ... 624 814 583-18JI.\nBoard Asks MacPherson lor Three\nMonday Trips of Main Lake Ferr^\nEarly Run Will Enable Commercial Traveller\nto Get I nto Terri tory Wi thout Lost Day;\nAdvise No Action on Arrowhead\nAt a Joint meeting ot the roads\nind bridges and freight ind Importation committees ot tht board\nof trade Mondty afternoon, with H.\nM. Whimsler, chairman ot the tint\nnamed committee in tht Chair, tht\nquestion of adapting the winter\nschedule ot the Kooteniy lake terry\nto the needi ot tht commercial\ntraveller! working out et Ntlton\nwithout injuring the through bus\nservice which ii served by tht noon\nrun wit taken up, and it was decided to atk the department ot public\nworks to put on I morning run\nMondays.  .\nwire at Once\nIn order to ttkt td vant age of the\npretence in Vlctorii ot tht hou**\nmemben, -who wlU be dispersing\nthli week, 6tcret\u00bbry W. Q. C. Luv-\ntktll wu instructed to wire the request at once to Hon. P. M. MacPherson. mln-rter ot public work*,\nITrink Putnam, Mff. tor Nelttm-\nCrtiton, tnd H. !t Burnt, MM.\ntot Rossland-Trail.\nTht nutter wu referred to that\ncommittees from tht board on receipt of t letter from tht Associated\nCanadian Travellers, pointing out\nthtt tht omission ot tht morning\nn, instead oi the noon run as\nprevious winters, was working a\nhsnuVri'rH 88 MSS****!-! traveller!.\nJohn Learmonth, mamger ot tht\nCentrtl Canadian Greyhound Linea,\nexplained thit the retention at Un\nnoon tats enabled hit company to\nconvert a hut run that htd Men\nooor paying into one that wu carry-\n| Itself, and alto was at advantage\n...Nelson bustnets u it offered inducements to the Crawford Bay\npeople to come to town. It was\nalio popular with thl deptrtment\n\" public worki as lt Mved 25 pet\n*-*\u2022 oh Mel on account of not hlv>\n... to keep banked firtt between\nmorning and afternoon rum.\nI*. R. Prltchud explained the pu-\nItion of the travellers, who On account est the lite Mart trom Nelion\nwtre not able tp work Crttton ind\nWynndel aad get back the tame\nIt worked out u the lott of a\n\u00abn -w\u00ab7 trip to tht crow hx-\nln_\nday.\nday\nritttry. Ak thtw wwt to trav-Btr.\nresiding in Nelton. ht figured il\nwu important to facilitate their tree\nmovement.\nADDED TRIP SOLUTION .<\nA suggestion by Mr. Learmonth\nthlt an additional trip Mondaj'\nmorning leaving the rest of thi\nweek with just the noon and afternoon trips, would help tht travel!\nlen Without disturbing the bul\nschedule, WW carefully debated, ant\nit wu the concensus ot opinion il\nwould solve the problem, U it woulc\nenable the travellers to have theii\nweek-end it home and still get int*\ntheir selling territory expeditiouily\nIt wu alto pointed out by R. D\nBarnes and others that tht govern1\nment could give that extra trip, an<\nstill bt ahead ot the game as com\npared with previous winters, u 1\nwould still be saving coal alx days\nOn motion of F. R. Prltchird om\nAdolph Browne, it wu decided thi\ngovernment should be asked to gran\ntn extra terry run tor Monday morn\nings, on the old tlmt schedule.\nSitting u t roads md bridge\ncommittee, the committeemen tin\ntook up tht proposal trom the Rev\nelstoke board Ot tnde thlt th\nbond should prett tor a road con\nmiction between Nakusp tnd Ar\nrowhead.\nFINISH EXISTING ROAM\nApart from tttt mtna oi nuh i\nroad, tnd tht matter ot comtructioi\ncosts, terry operation tt Arrowheac\ntnd other points involved, tht com\nmitte* took tht view expounded b;\nR. 11 Barnes, that the board shoul\nadhere to tha stand it hu taken to\nyetrt thlt it wanted existing high\nways completely finished aad stand\nardi-ed before \u00abny new cotulructlo:\nwu undertaken.\nOn motion of R. D. Barnes in\nAdolph Browne, tht committee rec\nomnwnded to tht hoard thlt I\nshould adhere to that itand, and I\nadvise tht Revelttoke board.\nThoie MUtnt Wtrt Vlet-pretlder\nE. A. Mana, H. M. Whimster, I\nL. McBride, J. A. McDonald, R. I\nBarnes, Adolph Browne. J. M. OOl\ndon, John Learmonth, J. R. Hunte:\nr. R. Pritchtrd nd Secretiry W. C\nC. Unsktil. '\n..\u2022__s_4___^\n_^^^M\n EUROPEAN MAIL\nBEGINS MOVING\nShould Be Mailed for\nDecember 4 Sailing\nFrom St. John\nChrlitmai mill going to European countries li beginning to\nmove through Nelion pott office,\naeeordlng to Postmaster R. M.\nManahan, though the movement\nla by no means heavy ai yet\nMoney orders for theie countries\n\u2022re now being purchased.\nPostmaster Manahan hu been\nadvised that paroali and other\nmall for delivery In European\n\u25a0g-e-gg-ag \". i,    ,i\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\nfe, PULS\n\\';'V:vr\\r ,*'\u2022\n. Hill  -- |\ncountries ihould be milled, \"at\nthe very litest,\" to connect with\n8,1.  Montcalm  from  SL John,\nN.B., OKembtr 4, and Halifax,\nN.8., Decimber 6.\nBOSWELL SUE\nNETTED $24\nBOSWELL, B.C. - On Tueiday\nevening, the church guild met at\nthe home ot Mrs. Kenneth Wallace,\nwhen those present were Mlu E.\nHoliday-smith, Mn. Donald West,\nMrs. A. Kennedy, Mrs. I. Lewis,\nMrs. K. Wallace, Mrs. J. Kirkpatrick,\nMrs. M. MacGregor, Mrs. S. J. Cummings, Mrt. Frank Cummings, Mrs.\nRankin, Mn. R. C, Yager, Mrs. T.\nDodman, Miss Inez Dodman, Miss\nBlanche Yager, Mill Rita Rankin.\n' A report wai given on i \"white\nelephant\" sole and military whist\ndrive which rpallzed about $24. Van-\nout donations ware voted, including\n(16 to the parish fundi.\nMrs. MacGregor will be hostess\nat the next meeting.\nD. V. West returned Wedneiday\nfrom a visit to Nelion and Trail.\nA. Mackie was a visitor to Nelson.\nW. Stanley Hepher spent a weekend in Boswell, a guest ot his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Hepher.\nJim Johnstone has returned to\nTrail after a week'i visit to his\nmother, Mrs. H. Johnstone.\nR. Graham Brown of Walker's\nLanding spent Thursday in Boswell.\nFree Trial of Vick Products\nFor Better Control of Colds\nOffered by Local Druggists\nFrae Package! Contain Trill Sin Vlcki Va-tro-nol\nand Vicki VapoRub, with Details of Plan that Cut\nSickness from Colds In Half In Clinic Testj\nla _ut own horn* thli winter,\nwouldn't you like to soc sickness\nfrom coltto cut more than half? That\nwai just one ot the results averaged\nby thousands of people In clinic\ntests of Vicki Plan for Better Control oi Colds\u2014a pratlcal home guide\nio greater freedom from colds.\nTlie tree trial packages now ottered by your druggist introduce you\nto Vicks Plan and the producta Oust\nmake it potilble: Vleki Va-tro-nol\nand Vicka VapoRub.\nTe Help Prevent Many Colds\nVicta Va-tro-nol ii\n|thc scientific aid in\nar eventing colds.\n, skjVick Chemists spent\n_,    ^s______moro than nine years\n^T*-M tatm in re-\nIsearch, experiments,\nland tests before per-\nIfactini this exclusive\nIVicksformula,\nI Va-tro-nol is spc-\n\u2022clally designed for\nthe nose and upper throat, where 5\nout of 4 colds Hart. The moment you\napply It\u2014a few drops up each nostril\n-Ve-tK>-nol spreads swiftly through\nthii trouble rone, aiding and gently\nstimulating Nature's defences,\nUsed at that tirst sneeze, sniffle oi\nany sign ot naaal irritation\u2014Naturals\nusual warning that a cold threatens\n\u2014Va-tro-nol helps to prevent many\ncolds, and to throw off head coldi\nin tha early stages.\nAnd when neglected irritation haa\nled to a Stuff ed-up nose or a miserable head-cold, Va-tro-nol brings\ncomforting relief. It reduces swollen\nmembranes, clears clogging mucus\nrrfikes every breath clear and cool\nagain.\nYou'll find Va-tro-nol wonderfully\neasy and pleasant to use, at homc\nand at work.\nTo Help End a Cold Quicker\nWhen a cold strikes without .warning or gets by even thc best precau\ntions\u2014as some colds always will\u2014\nVlckl VapoRub helps end it quicker.\nIU   i      m   You  simply mal-\nl__tWV V ..\u00bb\u00ab_*   VapORub   on\njs+X?*!Uthe throat, cheat,\n\u2022 _>>*\u2022. n and back for three\n\u25a0nlnulcs Almost bc-\npre you finish rub-\nJlhg, VapoRub\nMarti to bring relief two ways at\nonce: (1) It acts direct through the\n. akin like a poultice\nor plaster; (2) Its medicated vapors,\nreleased by body heat, are breathed\nIn for hours\u2014about 18 times a minute\u2014direct to tbe irritated air-pas-\nsages.\nThis combined potfltlce-and-vapoi\naction loosens phlegm, relieves irritation, helps break congestion\nWhile the patient relaxes into comfortable sleep, VapoRub keep! right\non working, Often, by momlng the\nworst ot the cold is over.\nCough Drops Free, Too\nFor the throat that is dry and\nharsh, or irritated by coughing,\nVicks Medical Cough Drops\u2014throat-\nsoothing ingredients of Vlcki VapoRub ln pleaiant candy form-provide quick, convenient relief.\n9\u2014IT_-SSaaEr  N*L\u00bbQN DAILY NEWS. NILSON, \u00bb.C--TUI_0AY MORNINO, NOVEMBER 17. HM -\n(vial packages containing ...\nVlck preparations. Get youn today, before they're all gone.\nAnd be lure to look ln your free\npackage for full details ot Vicks\nPlan for Better Control ot Colds\n\u2014which cut sickness from colds\nmore than halt in clinic tests\namong 17,353 people. What it can\ndo for your farolly may be lessor mot*-but doesn't this fine\nrecord make lt well worth trying';\nm\n\"Are you etrtain it ii made in Britilh Columbia?\"\n\"Absolutely, madam. Wt prefer to Mil I. C.\nproduct* on account of their quality and price!\"\nTHIS experienced buyer for a British Columbia\n1  home couldn't be sold something she didn't want.\nShe has learned the many advantages ot buying\nBritish Columbia producti. Very rarely is it necessary\nfor her to accept an imported article.\nShe Insists on quality at a thrifty\nprice and geti lt\u2014when It's made ln\nB.C. Besides, she knows -that every\ndollar she spends for B.C. products\nhelps to keep and make Job. tor her\nsons and grandsons\u2014means greater\naef\u2022.;;\u2022!*\".- _r,_ te_to_____ f_*f helWT.\n!;S!rMliifflS,itlBrWiffll__Wf\n -\u25a0' *-;      r^ifi* j,... \u25a0\nReminder WEEK\nIN NELSON, NOV. 23-28\nREMEMBRANCE\nSERVICE HELD\nATCRANBROOK\nRev. J. F. Bell Speaks;\nBand and Buglers\nPlay Their Part\nCRANBROOK, B. C.,-The Arm-\niitice Day service ot Remembrance\nfor the fallen took place at the\nCenotaph beginning with a parade\nat 10:45 when memberi of the Royal\nCanadian Mounted police, tha Kootenay Regiment, cx-servlceraen and\nthe City band marched from the\nCanadian Legion via the hospital\nto the oenotaph. Rev. J. F. BeU, Legion chaplain, conducted the tervice.\nTha customary two minutei silence was observed and buglers ot\nthe Kootenay Regiment rendered\nthe military commands: Cease fire,\nThe Last Post and Reveille.\nIn hla address Mr. Bell recaUed\nthe number of times the memory of\nthe fallen had been commemorated\nsince the signing of Uie Armistice.\nThe men had given their Uves ln\nthe beUef that a new world would\nemerge from the struggle. The new\nworld they had fought for had not\nmaterialized. No one knowi from\nwhat qaurter the challenge of a new\nwar will come. The destlnlei of rail-\nlions, he stated is at present in the\nhands ot a tew mortal men. Peace,\nunder the Nazi idea, meant peace by\ntear, whleh was not the peace sym-\nbollted by the cenotaph. The men\nwho had given their lives had\nthought to make other safe. Their\nmemory would Be remembered always.\nHymns sung were 'Oh, God Our\nHelp in Ages Past' and 'Abide With\nMe.' Sir John Elgar's 'Land ot Hope\nand Glory' wu played by the Cranbrook City band.\nFoUowlng thia wreath! were placed on tha cenotaph by various organizations and individuals.\nIn the ^evening the annual Armia-\ntice ball waa held in the auditorium\nwith memben ot the Canadian Legion and the Kootenay Regiment at\nhosts. Prior to the dance the Kootenay Regiment entertained about (0\nguests at the armouries.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThli column is conducted by Mrs. M. A. Vigneux AU newa ot a\nsocial nature Including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc. wilt appear ln thii column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home, .19 Silica itreet.\n-fso-\nMr. and Mn. Gracien Bourgeois\nond young daughter of Castlegar\n--\/ere in Nelion yeaterday \u00ab route\nto CranoVook to visit the former's\nparents, Mr. and Mr*. Orphir Bour-\ngeois. On their return they will\nreside in Nelaon.\nGIVEN SEND-OFF\nATGRAND FORKS\nMrs. H.Taylor a Guest\nof Honor at Tea\n\"Sponsored by the Nelson md District Women's Institute\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.-Mrs. Eric\nAtwood was a hostess at a tea at\nher home here Friday, given by\nthe Women'l guild ot the Holy\nTrinity church, complimenting Mrt.\nIt Taylor, who left for Nanaimo.\nMn. C. Hansen presided it tha tea\nurn,.\nOa behalf of the guild. Mn. J.\nTopp preiented Mn. Taylor with\nHow Long Can a\nThree-Quarter Wife\nHold Her Husband?\nVOW have to work at marriage to\n- make a success of It. Men may\nbe selfish, unsympathetic, but that's\nthe way they're made and you tnilhl\nas well realite it.\nWhen your back achea and your\nuarvei scream, don't take it out on\nyour husband. He can't possibly\nknow h6w you feel.\nFor three generations one woman\nhas told another how to go \"tmiUng\nthrough'' with Lydla E.TNnkham-\nVejtetable Compound. It helps Nature tone up the system, thui lessening the discomforti trom the\nrahciional disorders which women\nmuit endure ln the three ordeala ot\nlife: 1. Turning from girlhood to\nwomanhood. 2 Preparingfor motherhood. 3. Approaching \"middle\nage.\"   .\nDon 1 be a three-quarter wife, take\nLYDIA B, PINKHAM'S VKGE-\nTr\\Bl_- COMPOUND and Go \"Smil-\ning Through.'\nButcherteria\nPhone iI__._U)._i   phono\n527 WOWI   528\n\u2014 m&K&m-^\"\u25a0\u25a0T-r\"' mm tmmttm\nTUESDAY AND\nWEDNESDAY SPECIALS\n'inn I\t\nLOIN PORK CHOPS-     -aCA\nLb _. __ *5P\nROUND S+EAK- m\nSIRLOIN STEAK- o\\f_J,\nUr.   MS\nSALMON-Kootenay ...... mmA\nLake, H>.  HH|\nBOILING BEEF- _e_\\\nlib*. - *Sf\nSTEW BEEF- +\u2022*_\nboneless, _ ibt \"Jt\nBACON- s|K|\nSlked, lb. \u201e M\nBUTTEB-Biittcrcup, with meat\norder, \u00abJM\nLb. , , **r\nMINCEMEAT- MM\ntor pies, lb   *#!\u00bb\ni. a.i ir. 'i   \u00bb- I,   .   \u00ab|i\nFree Delivery\nM. MacLeod ol Procter\nthe city at the week-end.\nvisited\nNotman Ashley -waa a visitor ln\ntewn from South Slocan.\ns   s   s.\nAmong visitors to Nelson wtt L.\nL. Robinson af Ymlr.\n*' 9     9 '\n1. V. Donaldson ot Salmo was ln\nNelson shopping yesterday.\n\u2022 9    9\nC. J, MacDonald ii a visitor in\nNelson from Procter.\nShoppen in the city Included Mist\nEnid Graham ot Slocan City,\n\u2022 \u00ab  \u2022\nMn. George Leroy ot Ymir was\nshopping ln the dty Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    sr\nMrs, Frank Hufty of Slocan wai\namong ihoppen in town at the\nweek-end.\n._\u2022  \u2022  \u2022 i\nWilfrid Lowary of Trail Is spending a tew days at the home of hit\nparents, Mr. and Mn. B. Lowery,\nNelton avenue, Fairview.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nAlex Finlayson of Procter ls a\ncity visitor.\n\u2022 \u2022      \u00bb\nMrs. John Gilroy and her sister,\nMisa. Ross, ot Willow Point were\nshopping in Nelion yesterday,\ni. a \u00ab\nCaptain and Mn. J. A. McDonald,\nHoover Itreet, left yesterday for\nVancouver and other coast cities\ntor an extended visit.\n\u2022 \u2022    sr\nJ. F. Donaldson was in town yesterday from Salmo.\n\u2022 0     9\nW. Bennett of the Banker mine,\nAiniworth, visited hit parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. A. Bennett, Front\nstreet, over the week-end.   .\n* \u2022  \u2022\nWeek-end visiton in Nelaon included 0. G. Maclntyre of Salmo.\n* '   *\nShoppen In town Included F. HIU\nof Slocan City.\n* *   ss\nMr. and Mn. Walter Tattrie and\nion have returned to their home at\nthe, Relief Arlington mine atter\nspending the week-end at the home\nof Mr. and Mn. P, Stanley Bostock,\nLatimer street.\n.   \u2022    9     I    .\nMils Mollie Irving of Thrums was\na visitor in Nelson at the week-end.\n\u00ab  * \u2022\u00bb\nMrt. A. E. Jure and ion of Kimberley were In town Stjnday en\nroute borne from a visit to her\nparent!, Mr. and Mn. F. S. Peten,\nin Rossland,\n* 9   *\nAmong ihoppen in Nelaon were\nMr. and Mn. William Clarke ot\nYmir.\nt \u2022  \u2022\nWeek-end vlaltort In the city Included J. Sutcliffe of the Reno\nmine.\n* \u2022  \u2022\nA. A. Connon ot Vancouver wat\ntn Nelion yeiterday en route to the\nBayonne mine where he haa accepted a position aa accountant.\n* 9    9\nMn. S. L. Buchanan, Third street,\nFairview, bat taken up residence at\n312 Carbonate street.\ni    \u2022    Sr\nMn. R. Raymond, Granite road,\nwai a Trail visitor Sunday.\n9  i \u25a0 i\nBertram O'Neill at Slocan City\nwaa ln town attending the hockey\nmatch.\n* \u2022 \u2666\nL. M. Manning, superintendent of\nthe Hellet Arlington mine, visited\nhii family in town over tho weekend.\na gift, a token ot appreciation for\nher work in the guild.\nThoie preient were Mh. Brie\nAtwood, Mrs. Andrew, Mn. Osborne Alien, Mn. Carl Hansen, Mn.\nJack Tapp and Mrs. K. R. Wood.\nThe Women's Missionary society\nei St, John's United church held\na successful (Uver tea at the home\not Mn,- E. S. Reynolds Tuesday\nafternoon. Miss Helen Campbell,\nformerly of the United Church\nMission hospital at Hazelton, gave\nan interesting talk on her work in\ntha north.\nA vary handsome aum wai realized (or the auxiliary.\nMn. E. S. Reynold! gave two\nviolin solos accompanied by Mrs.\nD. M. Perley.\nMrt. H. Taylor and ion, Hugh,\nleft Saturday tor Nanalmo where\nthey Intend to make their home.\nMrs. J. A. Bertols and daughter,\nMrs. Hughei, were vlttton to town\nFriday from Cascade.\n, Mr. and Mn. Qeorge Egg had at\ntheir lut week-end visitor, their\ndaughter, Dorb ol Rowland.\nMitt Dorothy Hey ot Vernon arrived Saturday to reside with her\nmother, Mrs. Elizabeth Hey.\nMr. ahd Mri. A. N. Docksteader\narrived home On Thunday evening\natter spending Wednesday ln Spokane.\nConttable Cahoon returned to\ntown Tuesday after relieving the\nconstable at Greenwood.\nWalter Manson, formerly ot the\nCrand Forks Gazette staff, but now\non the staff of the Roaaland Miner\nin Ronland, tpent the week-end\nhere with hit father, George Man-\nton.\nMn. Cane and daughter, Elite\nand ton, Theodore, spent Wednesday at their home ln kettle Valley.\nMrt. Mickey McKay, Mn. W. D.\nSmith and Mn. Glen Manly ipent\na week-end at Greenwood.\nGeorge Ronald left Tueiday for\nVancouver.\nLouli Santano was a week-end\nviiltor from Trail.\nSalmo Pythian\nLodge Hosts to\nVisiting Orders\nSALMO, B.C.,-C. I. Archibald\nand son ot Nelton are in town load-\nlog out some can Ot posts.\nMr. and Mn, J. W. Leahy and\nfamily have taken up residence in\ntheir new home at Sheep Creek.\nC. W. Lindow haa returned home\nfrom Halcyon hot springs where he\nipent leveral dayt.\nJena Ericson was a visitor to\nNelion on Sunday.\nMr. and Mn. Hamburg and family formerly ot Fruitvale have taken\nup residence in the home owned'\nby A. Holmes.\nMr. and Mra. C. Hughes spent\nArmistice day with relatives in\nNelton.\nMrs. W. L. Shiell, who for the\npist terSe wes*., has been visiting\nat the home of her brother-in-law\nand sister, Mr. and Mrs. F. Water-\nstreet, left Saturday tor Needles.\nShe wat accompanied by her niece,'\nPat Watentreet.\nJamet Donaldson la able to he\nIbout again after being confined to\nhit home tor aeveral days with a\nbad attack ot pleurisy.\nThe Salmo Templo ot th* Knights\nOt Pythias lodge were hosts to the\nnumerous other lodges of the diitrlct GiltUrslay night when a convention Waa held here. After the business tesslons the sisters were their\nguests at an entertainment followed by a banquet Which wat greatly\nenjoyed by all.\nBarn swallows that spend their\nwinter! in Brazil fly at far north\naa Greenland and Alaska for the\ntummer.\nStages \"One-Man\nCrime Wave\"\nSEATTLE, Nov. 16 (AP)~WUliam\nvan Houtten, 30, arrested In Tacoma last night atter staging what\npolice called a \"one-map crime\nwave,\" will be brought to Seattle tor\nquestioning, Det. Capt. Marshall\nScrafford said today.\nScrafford said a time-worn cap\nand bill pistol ln van Houtten's possession when he wat arrested was\nstolen from a Seattle antique shop\nNovember 7.\nThe man was accused of stealing\nan automobile, robbing a theater\not (IH, crashing hit automobile Into\nanother and engaging ln a atreet\nbrawl with the owner ot the car, aU\nbetween the hours ol 8 and 10 p.m.\nlast night\nLet a Wont Ad Do It!\nI.O.D.E.\nDRIVES BRING\nIN SUMM3.50\nKokanee Chapter, Imperial Order\nDaughten ot the Empire haa concluded a Milea ot bridge games\nplayed at homes ot the members and\nyeaterday It wis announced tha proceeds, In aid ot tha milk fund, wlU\ntotal $123.50. Mn. I. Q. Smyth,\nwith a icore ot 10,810, won the\nhigh at contract and a glass comport donated by Mrs. J.. B. Gray.\nS. W. Dickens, playing aucUon, had\na icore of 3887 to take four decks\nof cardi donated by Mn. John Gansner md Mn. C. F. McHardy.\nI\" |l '       i.ur, , i     i_j in\nBishop Adams Is\nArmistice Day\nSpeaker, Nakusp\nNAKUSP, 3.C,--U. Bev. W. Mr\nami, D.D. Biihop at Kootenay wai\nthe special speaker at the Armistice\nservice held on Remembrance day\nin the Legion hall.\nThen lervlcet held evety year\nthroughout the Empire, Blthop Ad-\nami tild \"are not to celebrate a\nvictory but to commemorate a pt_>_e\nand to remember those who gave\ntheir lives.\" He pointed out that\npeople could best honor those who\nsacrificed io much In tha late war by\nworking tor peace.\nKe showed that the spirit of peace\nend good will would hava to be\nmade manifest in the hearts ot men\nbefore people could hope for world\npeace.'\nRev. C. Addyman of Nakuip Vnil-\ned church conducted the service.\nThe Boys Bugle band lead the\nparade trom the hall to the Cenotaph whan wreaths were laid. A\nprayer was offered by Bishop Adams and H. W. Herrldge called tbe\nroll. Following the benediction tte\nLut Port wai seunded by the Boys\nBugle band.\nLake Stationary\nat .81-Foot Mark\nRemaining stationary for tbe 24\nhours, the West Arm stood at .81\ntoot above the low water mark at 6\no'clock Monday afternoon.\n\u2014\u2014 PAOE FIVE\nSUN MISSING IN\nNELSON MONDAY\nMonday's weather WM much the\nsame at that prevailing over the\nweek-end. During the whole ot the\nday the iky wai covered with dark\nclouds and not once wu the tun\nvisible. Atter the chilly spell of the\npast two weeks the laat tew nights\nhave been noticeably milder. Minimum temperature for the 24 hours\nending at 5 p.m. Monday wu registered at 34 degrees. The maximum\nfor the same period wu registered\nat 41 degrees.\nRECIPES\nMINUS\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nHousekeeping\nMENU HINT\nCream of Black Bean Soup\nCracken\nChicken a la Francalie\nMutied Potatoes\nButtered Peas      Celery\nOUvei, Stuffed or Ripe\nOrange Meringue Ring with\nChocolate Ice Cream\nCoffee or Tea     Salted Nuta\nThis ls a dinner for Sunday, U\nyou're entertaining guesta on that\nday ,or for luncheon. The recipes\nserve eight penons. I snitched them\nfrom a grocery pamphlet, because\nthey are so good. They are compiled by Beulah V. Gillespie.\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nCream of Slack Bean Soup\u2014One\nand bne-half cups black beans, four\nand one-half cups water, four whole\ncloves, two bay leaves, one small\nonion, sliced; one carrot, sliced; six\ntablespoons Hour, one and one-half\nquarts milk, tait, pepper, yolki of\nthree hard cooked eggs, four tablespoons butter. Soak the beans for\nseveral houn In the water and add\nthe dovei, bay leaves, onion and\ncarrot. Cook slowly until beans are\nsoft and press the mixture through\na sieve. Melt the butter, add the\nflour and mix weU. Add the milk\nand cook, stirring untU thickened.\nAdd the bean mixture, season with\nthe salt and pepper to taste and\nserye garnished with chopped egg\nyolks.\nChicken a la Francalie\u2014One four-\npound fowl, nit, two stalks celery,\nfour peppercorns, one small onion,\nsliced; four tablespooni butter, one-\nhalf cup flour, chicken Itock, one\nand One-half cups cream, three egg\u00bb\nCut the fowl In pieces, aprlnkle with\none and one-half teaspoons salt, and\ncook in water to cover until tender.\nReserve the giblets for the sauce.\nSeparate tha meat trom the akin\nand bones and put through the food\nchopper. Place the itock, bones,\ncalory, peppercorns aad onion in a\nsaucepan, add enough water make\nabout two and one-bait cups of stock\ncook slowly tor about one-half hour\nand strain. Melt the butter, add the\nflour and mix well. Add one and\none-half cups of the itock and cook,\nstirring, until thickened. Add salt\nto taste. Combine tha cream and\nbeaten egg yolks and add to the\nmixture. Cook ior a few minutei\nlonger, stirring constantly. Add the\nchopped chicken and fold in the\nstiffly beaten egg whites. Bake ln\na buttered baking dlah in a moderate\noven (SJ0 degreea F.) for about _5\nminutes. Serve with cream giblet\nsauce.\nCream Giblet Sauce\u2014Two tablespoons butter, four tablespooni flour,\none cup chicken stock, one cup\nmilk, Wit, pepper .chicken giblets,\none hard cooked egg. Melt the butter in a saucepan, add the flour\nand mix weU. Add the chicken itock,\nmilk and salt and pepper to teate.\nCook untU thickened, atlrrlng con-\nstanUy. Add the chopped giblets and\nchopped egg and reheat\n\u00bb\u00abS\u00bb(SBSBSS\u00bb\u00abS1PSi\nPURITY\n* n.oim\nMAKES WTTtR BREAD\nTODAY'\nWN iVRUP\nBAKED CUSTARD\n5 eggt,  _s CUP Rogera' sjolden\nSyrup, 4 Cupt scalded milk, dash ot\ncinnamon, V, teaspoon tait. Beat th*\neggs and add the milk into Which\nthe syrup hu been beaten. Add the\nclnamon and salt. Pour into auitard\ncups or into large mold. Set\nin a pan ol hot water and bake\nin a moderate oven\nuntil firm\nSalada Orange Pekoe Blend\nis incomparable in flavour\nm\n*\nii bA\n...Ull til IIIII1\nnt nmiis\ni\n...Ul til Ml I EMU!\n...Ill HE lit*KIM!\ntend a Hand to These\nGLOVES\nTAEFOUSSI FINE KID 0*\nSUIDICLOVIS\nFor stylish smartness. All new -hid*,\nin a complete variety of sizes.\n$2.25 \"$3.75\nCAPI SKIN CWVW\nIn Fawn, Black, Crey, -N\u00abvy, Brown\nand Tan.\n$1.75 am\nFLHCE LINED KID ClOVM\nBrown and Black.\n$1.25-$195-i2.M\nNIAT LIATHERITTI GIOVIS\nIn  Bottlegreen,  Rust,  Coppertone\nand Mocha.\n550^750\nWOOLEN CLOVES\nFor sportswear, plain or crochet cuffs in striped peasant\ncolors or subtle shade; of black, grey, royal and brown.\n79c $1.00 $1.95\nFABRIC CLOVES\nAll colors\u2014all sires.\n59c 79c $1.00\nJERMAN HUNTS\nDRY COODS AND READY-TO-WEAR\nPhone 200 hktr St.\n5=\n\u2014O\nChristmas\nShopping\nAround \u25a0\nTown\nS   \"\u25a0\" {ft\nSo that your hair will look Itt\nbest for the Season's gaieties,\nhave your permanent now at MILADY'S BEAUTY PARLOR8.\nPhone 244.\nA Gift to last a year. Subscriptions to any magazinee\u2014   .\nBISHOP'S NEWS 8TAN0\nIS\nSoft Drlnkt\u2014Youll need them\nby the case-so buy them by the\ncase at your grocer't or Phone\n(19. COLUMBIA BOTTLING\nIrVORKS.\nGifts that are\nsun to please any\nman. liet JACK\nBOYCE'S STYLE\nSHOP solve your\n(itt problem for\nmen.     -\nHave your Chrlslmss Photo\ntaken NOW! A sltttlnctlve gift.\nMCGREGOR BROS. Phone 224.\nChooie trom our wide range at\nnovelty ohtoa. -lie ARK STORE,\nShop Early I\nMany pretty, toexpenalve and\nuseful gifts for her at\u2014\nO. C. DRESS SHOPPE.\nHnrnilif\u00bbl-\u00abilli--^,-t'*','-*'^-1ii||f[si1|liii|i\n\t\nA Slnier Sewing\nMachine, thc gift de\nluxe for Mother,\nWife or daughter.\nCall at our shop tor\nconvenient terms and\nprices.\n PAOE SIX-\nKtbrni.-. latlg Jforoa\nEstablished April. 22, 1902.\nliritish Columbia's Most Interesting Nevisyap.i\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n216   Baker   Street   Nelson.   British Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   ot   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe    Canadian    Press    Leased    Wire    News    Service.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 17. 1936\nTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 17,1936.\nMADRID DOOMED TO BE CITY OF RUINS?\nAccording to week-end news dispatches Spanish rebels\nwill start a campaign to blast or starve the capital city of\nMadrid into submission. The government forces are putting\nup a wonderful defence of the city and the rebels hope to\nstop contacts with the city or blow it to bits by means of\nartillery and bombs from the air. The insurgents must\nact fast because it will be impossible for General Francisco Franco to play a waiting game because of the approach of winter. If the insurgents decide upon a concentrated aerial bombardment there is every prospect of\nMadrid going up in flames. Only last week 40 city blocks\nwere destroyed by fire in a brief bombardment. Any\nconcentrated attack upon the city from the air will easily\nmean the entire destruction of the city.\nWhen a city the size of Madrid is destroyed by natural\nforces it is regarded as a great catastrophe. The nearest\nequivalents on this continent have been the Chicago fire\nand the San Francisco earthquake. That such a tragedy\ncould result from dissension within a country is almost\ninconceivable, and demonstrates the depths to which\nhuman folly ean descend.\nMadrid, in addition to being the capital of Spain, is\nthe largest city. In 1923 it had a populatipn of 813,991,\nand as it has been growing rapidly, is probably now well\nover the million mark. A number of modern buildings\nhave recently been erected, and much slum clearance work\ncarried out. Its subway system, the first in Spain, was\nopened in 1924.\nThe origin of Madrid is veiled in antiquity. It was a\nMoorish stronghold in the 10th century, and .was chosen\nby Philip II, the same monarch who sent the Armada\nagainst England, as his capital in 1560. It has a number\nof magnificent churches, and a picture gallery considered\nby many to be the finest in the world. The, National\nLibrary and the library of the University of Madrid\ncontain internationally recognized collections of books.\nNo doubt the great modern buildings which adorn Madrid\ncan be rebuilt, although such a task will be a heavy one\nfor a poverty-stricken nation, but the architectural monuments of the past, and the priceless paintings of Velasquez\nand his colleagues cannot be replaced, and their destruction\nwill be a loss not only to Spain but to the world,\nThe price is a heavy one to pay for a decision which\nin most countries could be reached through the medium\nof the ballot. It is a warning to other nations to avoid\nviolence and extreme measures in political disputes.\nHon. F. M- MacPherson, minister of public works for\nB.C., has announced a plan of highway standardization\nand surfacing from the coast to Alberta's boundary. His\nidea Is a good one provided the portions not being standardized are kept up to scratch by government crews working\nunder the general maintainence fund. It is just such\nsections of highway that are not standardized and not\ngraded that cause all the uproar from not only B.C.\nmotorists but from the tourists from other parts of the\nworld.\nNearly 20 carloads of vegetables, including onions,\npotatoes, turnips and carrots have rolled from the Grand\nForks district through the marketing board according\nto figures just released. It is interesting to note that all\nof .this produce was distributed between Trail, Rossland\nand Nelsoh markets; Grand Forks, once a thriving smelter\ntown, has no doubt successfully turned into an agricultural\ncommunity, which should grow as years go by.\nRegistration has opened for the course of lectures to\nbe given this season at the Chamber of Mines in Nelson\nby the department of mines. While no classes were held\nlast season there was a good response the year before.\nHere is an oportunity for the younger men interested in\nmining and prospecting to gain sonic valuable information\nand advise regarding mines, mining and prospecting.\nA Doukhobor, member of the fanatical element, has\ngone to jail for one month for refusing to send his children\nto school. This action by the authorities should, be an\nexample lu others of this sect who defy the laws and deprive their children of a Canadian education which is so\nnecessary for them.\nNearly every community in the Kootenay district reports a bigger and more enthusiastic Remembrance day\nturnout War clouds in Europe and Asia, no doubt, had a\nlot to do with the response of the returned men and the\npublic for observance of the day hailing and commemorating world peace.\nB.C. parliament will likely end its fall session this\nweek. There can be little more to do as practically every\nmember has had his little say. The session developed,\nperhaps mildly, into a battle between Vancouver and Victoria and members from the balance of the province.\nRemembrance day Observation in Nelson made history this year.   But it was noticeable that there were not\nmany flags flown in the^city that day.   In the main section of the city but one or two flag poles that graced the\nI    \u2022 tops of buildings displayed the flag.,\n\"BETWEEN\nJBL\n0\nPLEASANT ERROR\nSays tbe Financial Post: A Winnipeg man sent in the following reference to Noranda mines, clipped\nfrom a local paper, with the com'\nment: \"What, no Tea?\"\nStill I Copper Mine\nNoranda, however, has not lost\nits identity as a copper producer,\nbut, on the contrary, has a big output of this metal and has developed\na market to absorb its entire* current output\nIn. recent months is has reached\na producUon stage of about 30,000\ntons of coffee and about $6,000,000\nin gold annually, the latter figure\nbeing exclusive of exchange. The\nconcentrator capacity has been\ndoubled recently, and ls now 2000\ntons daily.\n* *   \u2022\n'ROUND ABOUT\nHere and there\u2014A chap purchasing a railway and steamship ticket\nfor Scotland\u2014A huge dog, Great\nDane probably, making friends\nwith Wilfrid Marquis\u2014Con Cummins talking hockey and more\nhockey\u2014Paul Kozak of the Kimberley Dynamiters minus those sideburns\u2014Paul says he got rid of them\nlast season \u2014 Pat Aitken kidding\nEric Hornqulst of the Allan cuppers\nabout eating around Piccadilly Circus in a short time\u2014\"Red\" Goble\ncarting a calendar under his arm-\nBert Whimster all smiles and waving a greeting\u2014Dr. C. E. Bradshaw\nout for a stroll\u2014two chaps talking\nabout the new car models, and one\ndeclaring there was a lot of superfluous affairs on them\u2014R. D. Hall\nplanning a winning curling rink\nthis season\u2014Bob Crerar buzzing\nabout on hockey business\u2014Some\nfellow on the street corner trying\nto raise funds\u2014as he told his pal,\nfor a bottle\u2014George Fleury getting\nout accounts.\n* \u2022   *\nTHE FORGOTTEN MAN\nRex B. Goodsell, Los Angeles attorney and Republican leader, was\nwinding up a denunciation of thc\nRoosevelt administration . . . \"If\nyou want four more years of extravagance,\" he cried, \"vote for Roosevelt. It you want four more years\nthat may lead to dictatorship, vote\nfor Roosevelt\n\"In contrast, if you want to return to liberty that is real, a return\nto those tenets of self-initiative that\nhave made this country great, if\nyou want to return to that existence\nwc once knew as the American\nform of government, then vote for\n \" lie faltered \"vote for \"\nGoodcell gulped and mopped his\nbrow.\n\"I guess I've forgotten the man's\nname,\" he explained.\n\"Landon?\" shouted a voice from\nthe audience.\n\"Yes, Landon,\" the speaker finished.\n(News item in thc Hollywood\n-.Calif.)  Citizen-News).\nDOUG AND HI8 WATCH\nDoug Keiver, former Nelson\nhockey star, now of the Kimberley\nDynamiters, dropped into our sanctum the other night to say hello.\nDoug went well in the Allan cup\ngafnes last winter and is working\nhard to retain a place on the Kimberley squad for the European trip.\nDoug is quite proud of the gold\nwatch and the medal, chain and\ncharm he received along with the\nbalance of the Kimberley boys after\nthey won the cup. He is guarding\nthe trophy faithfully and says he\nwas hot so big hearted as Jack\nForsey, also a former Nelson player,\nwho is now in England performing\nwith Harry Brown. Jack, it appears, in a moment of enthusiasm,\ngave his watch away. Doug seems\nthe same old boy and is perhaps a\nlittle heavier than usual.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE  ,\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\n\"1  8AW 4-ODD MADE\"\nJames Bralnerd; Minneapolis,\nMinn., writes: \"I saw 4-odd made\nby East at no trumps. The opening\nlead was the 7 of hearts, as partner\nhad opened bidding with 1-Heart.\nIt seemed remarkable that such a\nfeat could be accomplished.\"\n\u2666 A1063\n-\u00bbQJ9\u00ab_\n4>AQ\u00bb\n\u2666 -\n\u2666 most *   y* Jass\n\u2666 105 * .\u2022\".Jjji\n\u2666 A1076 I   5.   I $Q88<\nJ?\"\n\u2666 -7482\n+ KSI4\nBidding went: - North, 1-Heart;\nEast, l-No Trump, as a nuisance\nbid; West, 3-No Trumps, on account\nof his heart strength and side Ace;\nNorth, double. As the declaring\nside's probable tricks were short ot\ngame probabilities, it.required both\nexcellent play and much good luck\nto go game, let alone making an\novertrlck.\nAs stated, the opening lead was\nthe 7 of hearts. Dummy's 8 covered. North's 8 lost to declarer's\nAce. Declarer led the Q of clubs,\nperhaps to put North in lead,-perhaps it was a lucky hit Anyway\nit worked out like a charm. South\ncovered .with the K. Dummy's Ace\nwon, dropping North's lone J.\nIt seemed evident that North must\nhold the A-Q bf diamonds, as well\nas the Ace of spades, to have\nopened the bidding, then doubled.\nThe 10 of diamonds was led through\nNorth. He played low. Declarer's\nJ won the trick. The 8 of clubs was\nled through South, who covered with\nthe 9. Dummy's 10 won. North let\ngo a low spade. The 3 of diamonds -\nwas led from dummy. Up went\nNorth's Ace, for the first defensive\ntrick.\nNorth led his Q of hearts. Dummy's K won. The 5 of spades -was\nreturned. North played low. Declarer's K won. The K of diamonds picked up North's Q. A low\nspade was discarded from dummy.\nThe 3 of clubs was led by declarer.\nSouth played the 4. Dummy's 5\nwon. Players were- down to four\ncards each, holding as shown.\n\u2666 AY.\n\u2666 JS\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Ceo. McManus\nfw  \/%A*l*J-\u00abJ7\n\u2666 J\n\u00bb10 4\n\u2666 7\n\u2022 8\n1     *2\nVERSE\n\u00ab\u00bb--j.-:-.,-..-A-\u00ab,, .-U*-*A-\u00ab---a-. i^^mia-^kM^lMsistAos\nTHE  UNKNOWN SOLDIER\nHis body lies in Flanders.\nBut  you've  carved  his  figure  in\nstone\nAnd set up on a pedestal\nTo watch through the night\u2014Alone\nAs the signal lights of heaven\nFlare up in the northern sky,\nI pause at thc foot of the statue\nFor I know that his spirit is ntgh.\nHis rifle, he swings to his shoulder\nWith a smile so hearty and true   '\nAnd steps down here beside me\nAnd we swing up the road\u2014we two\nWe sing the old songs together,\nThe songs that we loved so well\nFor he is The Unkno-fm Soldier!\nAnd I\u2014his unknown pal.\nWe growl at the sergeant major\nWe curse the mud and the rain\nWe vow if we get to 'Blighty'\nWe'll never come back again..\nWe lie side by side in our blankets\nAs often before we have done\nWe smoke and we joke together\nAnd we think of the folks at home\nI show him a cherished piet. re\nHe speaks of the girl he loved well\nFor he is The Unknown Soldier\nAnd I\u2014his unknown pal.\nTo you\u2014he's a graven image\nStanding up there on a stone\nTo me\u2014he's a living comrade\nAs I sit with.my pipe\u2014alone\nHis eyes to me are asparkle\nWith friendship and mischief and\nhealth\nTo. you  they're  but marks  upon\ngranite\nAs you scratch and scramble for\nwealth\nThe    estaminet   rings   with    his\nlaughter\nTears of joy fill the eyes of mam-\nselle\nMay God bless \"he Unknown Soldier\nGod help\u2014his unknown pal.\nM. J. O'LEARY, B.A.\nNelson, B.C.\ntl\n\":?\u2022 '\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0\"\u25a0 ..\n*\u00bb\nDummy's goo j 7 of clubs was led\nfor declarer's ninth trick and game.\nIt. was North's turn to play, Probably he thought that dummy's hearts\nwould be led up to his tenace, lor\nhe made the error of discarding his\n10 of spades. North was put in lead\nwith his lone Ace of spades. Then\nhe took his J of hearts, but after that\ndummy had to be given the last\ntrick with its 10 of hearts. To win\nthe last thre defensive tricks North\nshould have let go his lower heart\nand kept only his Ace and 10 of\nspades, hoping that South held the\nQ of spades.\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nSCRAP BOOK\nOVERCOMING  CIRCUMSTANCES\n\"When fate throws a knife at you\nthere are two ways of catching it,\nby the blade and by the handle.\"\u2014\nOriental proverb.\n* \u2022   \u2022\n\"The very circumstance which\nyour suffering sense deems wrathful and afflictive. Love can' mak,;\nan angel entertained unawares.\"\u2014\nMary Baker Eddy.\n* \u2022   \u2022\n\"He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves and sharpens our\nskill.\"\u2014Edmund Burke.\n\"There are no circumstances however unfortunate that clever people\ndon't extract some advantage from.\"\n\u2014La Rochefoucauld.\n* \u2022     0\n- \"Each day the world is born\nanew\nFor him who takes it rightly.\"\n\u2014Lowell.\nMEIGHEN\nMen of Arthur Meighen type\ncome but seldom in this world. He\nis an \"intellectual\"\u2014but far more.\nWhen he entered the Senate as it_\nleader in 1932, he re-vitalized that\nbody by the very force of his genius. And to see and hear him analyze a speech or measure is a pleasure one wishes every person in\nCanada could enjoy.\n\u2014Halifax Herald.\n\u2014tt\n\"Sunday ain't a day of rest\nfor Pa's folks. They nap all afternoon,' but their Sunday dinner\nis makin' double work for their\nstomachs.\"\n...... i   ..   ...\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letters to the editor must be signed with the name of the\nwriter. A nom de plume may be used tor publication if desired.\nLines in typewritten copy should be double spaced.\nWESTERN AIRWAY\nSTATIONS NOT\nFAIRLY PLACED\nTo the Editor,\nSir: 1 was interested in an article\nin thc Daily News of November 14,\nrelative to the proposed change in\nthe wave length ot radio station\nCJAT of Trail, B. C. and also\nIn an article appearing in the coast\npapers upon the proposed change\nln the wave length of CRCV of\nVancouver.\nSome years ago we had guite an\nactive radio club in Nelson and it\nwas my privilege to be president\nfor several yearn. During that time\nwe took up. things similar to that\nproposed at the; presenV time of\nlooking into the change of the\nstations, and I understand there is\na possibility pf resurrecting the\nclub again, it would seem fo me\nthat' one of the first things that\nshould be done, is to consider the\nsituation of the different Canadian\nstations in the west, with a view\nto bringing the matter before the\nnew Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.\nIn looking through the position\nof our stations and the wave lengths\nthat are open to Canadian stations,\nand those which we share with\nstations in the United States, it\ndoes not seem as of our western\nstations are at all fairly placed.\nI believe that we have wave\nlength 580 Kc. as a Canadian station and which at present is held\nby a small station in Edmonton\nfor the west, this adjourns a powerful station KHQ, Spokane, and it\nwould not seem at all advisable tc\nmove either of the stations mentioned to that wave length.\nWe have length 800 on the othei\nside of KHQ and is shared by\nCJOR, Vancouver and a San\nDiego, California station. The next\nwave length used by Canada is 630\nwhich is a present held by Kelowna,\nbut as this Is right between powerful stations in Portland and Los\nAngeles no good object could be\naccomplished in making a change.\nWave length 690 is held by a\nsmall Calgary station, CJCJ and\nadjoins two very powerful stations,\nKPO San Francisco and WLW\nCincinnati, but these two stations\nare quite sharply 'defined in their\nwave length, and it is a posiUon\nthat might be used for either of the\nproposed changes. 730 Kc. is used\nby CJCA, Edmonton and is probably the best position for any western station. It is quite close to a\nnew Seattle station but apart from\nthat it can be obtained as readily\nas any of our radio stations.\n780 Kc. is held by ChiUiwack but\nthis is shared with two or three\nother stations in the west 840 Kc.\nwhich adjoins Denver, Colorado, is\nheld by Saskatpon and as a very\npowerful station in Mexico uses the\nsame wave length it would not help\nus to make a change there.\n880 Kc. at present used by Kamloops CFJC, is shared I think with\nOakland, California and adjoins\nKFPY Spokane, on the other side\nof which station is Kc. 810 which\nis held by TraU, then follows KOMO\nSeattle and sandwiched in between\nthat and Portland KOIN, is a well\nknown Calgary station CFAC.\n960 Kc. and 960 Kc. between Portland and KJR Seattle, are held\nby Lethbridge and Winnipeg, and\nthe former might possibly stand an\nexchange. 1010 Kc.tis shared by two\nVancouver stations and San Jose,\nCalifornia, the latter station being\na lot more powerful than the Vancouver ones, so that they can rarely\nbe obtained In this district.\n1030 Kc. ls held by CFCN, Calgary an Is the most powerful Canadian station in the west but this\nadjoins KNX and two powerful\neastern stations which spoil the\nprogram.\nWe then come to 1100 Kc. which\nis the present CRCV wave length,\nVancouver, which it is proposed\nto move, as it conflicts with KSL\nSalt Lake City. From this wave\nlength down to 1320 there are au-\nmerous small stations, but 1301 I\nbelieve. Is open in the west and it\ndoes not seem as of there is anything of a troublesome nature there\nto any Canadian stations.\n1410 is a small staUon in Vancouver and 1450 is CFCT at Victoria,\nalso a very small station. These\ntwo wave lengths are surrounded\nby numerous little stations but it\nwould seem about the best position\nto make a move to from either\nCJAT or CRCV.\nI have carefully analyzed the\nsituation arid I think the figures\ngiven are all correct, though I have\nnot the American list or recent\n\u2022alterations but I would like others\nto analyze the situation somewhat\nalong these lines to see of a meeting could not be got together in\nthe Kootenays to bring the matter\nbefore the new commission, because\nthe present situation here is such\nthat we cannot get a decent program from any Canadian station.\nI understand that the new station\nat Vancouver, CRCV, will be open\nfor operation in the very near future and I think that before it goes\non the air that we should make\nevery effort to get a wave length\nby which we can obtain the programs in the upper country.\nE. W. WIDDOWSON\nNelson, B.C. Nov. 14, 1936\n10 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelson Dallv News Files]\nNovember 17, 1926\nTRAIL\u2014W. McLean of Bay avenue is visiting his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. McLean of Baker street\nNelson.\n\u2022 *\u25a0 \u00ab\nMr. and Mrs. J. Wiseman and Mrs.\nJ. B. Stewart of Riverside avenue\nleft for a short visit to Silverdale.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMrs. J. Fred Hume has returned\nfrom a visit to her daughter and\nson-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. C. Franklin Magee of Moscow, Ida.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss M. Kelso of Edgewood Is a\ncity visitor.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. C. Motely of\nBonnington are visiting in town.\nt   \u2022   \u2022\nDr. and Mrs. G. A. C. Walley\nhaVe taken a suite in Uie Kerr apartments\t\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Ivy Mawer and Malcolm\nMcLellan were married in the\nChurch of the Redeemer, Fairview,\nby Rev. D. F. Cowie yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. William Rutherford has returned from an extended visit in\nthe -east.\n\u2022 Si      \u2022\nTRAIL\u2014Officers elected for the\ncoming season at the meeting of the\nTrail curlers were W. Forrest, president, Donald McDonald, first vice-v\npresident, F. Hopkins, second vice-\npresident, Rev. A. Wilson, chaplain\nand J. A. Wadswortlvsecretiiry-trea-\n|   20 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelson Dally News Files J\n-!>\nNovember 17, 1926\nGIRLS WARNED NOT TO GO TO NEW\nYORK WITHOUT A YEAR'S FINANCES\nOne hundred and twenty-two social agencies in New York City join\nIn warning outrof-town girls that\nunless they are provided with the\nmeans to support themselves for a\nyear they should not come here in\nsearch of employment. s\nWhen it comes to the cost of living, they are reminded that in New\nYork a girl must provide not only for\nher lodging and food, but also for\nthe many odds and ends which come\nin the course of the simplest existence, and which are so automati-\ncally provided at home that they are\nonly missed when a girl is here\nalone.\nThe out-of town girl is told, also\nthat she is at a disadvantage in the\nrace for the job. It is the New York\ngirl, who knows her way about the\ngreat city, who ls likely to be first\non the scene in answer to an advertisement. More than that she\nhas local references.\nHaving a home in the city, and\nbeing wise to Its way, the chances\nare that she will not become a\nvictim of unscrupulous employment\nagencies exacting fees for placing\ngirls in sub-standard jobs. The out-\nof-town girl is warned that if she\naccepts such employment, and tries\nto make a \"go\" of New York, she\nwill be exposed to poor housing\nconditions and inadequate food.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nHON. R. B. BENNETT'S\nQOOD WORK\nWe are sorry Viscount Elibank\ntakes this rather gloomy view.of the\ntrade arrangements worked out at\nthe Ottawa Conference under Mr.\nBennett's direction, but glad.to note\nhis acknowledgment that a foundation has been laid soundly. We assume he believes steps may be taken\nto iron out the wrinkles and place\nthe agreements on a more mutually\nsatisfactory basis. All the complaints heard from time to time\nserve to prove that the former\nPrime Minister was the right man\nin the right place so 'ar as looking\nafter Canada's interests was concerned.\n-Windsor Star\nThe Banker and Maestro mines\nnear Ainsworth shipped ore totalling 37 tons to the Trail smelter for\nthe first time last week.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThe mines in the Nelson district\nshipped only 101 tons of ore this\nweek to the Trail smelter.\n* \u00ab      0\nThe laying of 4,000 feet of airpipe\nline at the California mine near\nNelson has been completed and operations on No. 2 tunnel by machine\ndrill will begin tomorrow.\n\u2022 \u00bb    \u2022 s\nAbout thirty tons of ore are being\nproduced daily at the Jackson Basin\nzinc mines, according to Manager\nC. F. Caldwell of Kaslo, who is at\nthe Strathcona.\n'\u2022   -   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. P. Pitner will\nleave this morning on the Great\nNorthern for Spokane.\n\u2666 *   \u2022\nMrs. John Cartmel left for New\nWestminster to join her husband,\nJ. Cartmel of tlie 225th battalion.\n*     0     O\nCaptain and Mrs. J. C. Gore have\nas their guest their daughter, Mrs.\nJ.E.I. Corbet of Vernon.\nLieutenant M. D. McLean, who\nhas been in charge of the guard\nof the 107th regiment at Bonnington Falls power plants, left for\nVictoria, where he will take a\ncourse at the Work Point barracks.\n* \u00bb   \u2022\nFrank B. Gibbs, who opened the\n......   .* is..   ,,...,'  or-.-   \u2022'-\u25a0'\nu,w,ku >\u201e ..... .......VIM.,,, ,ni ensuing company in Nelson and who is\nnow secretary of that company, is\nvisiting in the city.\n|   30 YEARS AGO   j\n\u00bb . <}\nNovember 17,' 1906\nSmelter receipts are already\nshowing an increase due to the\npractical ending of the strike of\nemployees of the Crow's Nest Pass\nCoal company and the Nelson Hall\nMines receipts show that 207 tons\nof ore was handled this week compared to 105 of last week.\nSr \u2022 , \u2022\nC. F. Caldwell of Kaslo Is a guest\nat the Hume.\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nWilliam Impey and MiBs Mathilda Kowalewsky,  both of  Nelson,\nTHE DOCTOR\n'.'SAYS     \u2022\nLOGAN   CLENUENING.   M.D.\nTO SURVIVE BODY MUST\nHAVE WATER\nWe referred yesterday to the\namount of water In common foodstuffs. This, although a matter of\ngreat importance in the physiology\nof the body, is something that need\nnot concern the practical dietitian\nunder ordinary circumstances.\nWater plays a very important part\nin the physiology ot the body, but\nit is of such great importance that\nif there is any lack of, the requisite\namount, the body immediately responds with such suffering that the\ndeficiency has to be made up. In\nplain terms, that means that thirst\nis one of the most agonizing of all\nhuman emotions and must be satisfied.\nIt is said that an Italian political\nprisoner lived 18 days without either\nfood or water, but it would be very\ndifficult to convince anyone who\nhad gone even 24 hours without\nwater that that was possible. It ls .\ngenerally accepted that a man cannot live more than 72 hours without\nwater.\nOf course^ the body forms water\nfrom the oxidation of foodstuff. A\nhibernating animal takes no fluid\nduring its sleep period of several\nmonths, but forms 107 -grams of\nwater by the oxidation of 100 grams\not fat. Perhaps the Italian political\nprisoner was fat when they cooped\nhim up.\nHOW MUCH WATERT\nAn adult of average weight ln a\ntemperate climate takes in from one\nand one-half to three quarts of water\ndaily. Temperature, weather, activity and other things may change'\nthis. In the tropics the average\nis said to be 13 quarts a day.\nDoes water at meals do any harm?\nThis question is considerably debated, but few competent physiologists seem to thing that it does. Noils it probable that water drinking\nwith meals is likely to lead to overweight. The water that is drunk in\nthat way probably runs down a sort\nof trough in the stomach and goes\nout into the intestines without being\nmixed with the food at all.\nEuropeans drink water at the\ntable hardly at all, getting what they\nneed for their use from the wine or\nbeer which they use as a beverage.\nThe best information We have\ncomes from the painstaking researches ot Rehfuss and Hawke on\ndigestion, who concluded that water-\ndrinking does not influence the rate\nor thoroughness of digestion at all.\nWater between meals is calculated\nto help mildly constipated people,\nand a large amount of water-drinking results in washing out of the\nbody three grains of nitrogen into\nthe urine, a day.\nRARE CXTS\nThere are now seven tortoise-\nshell tomcats in all England. The\nlatest is one of a family ot four\nwhich arrived at Balham Hill. The\nmother is a Persian. During the\nlast 36 years only 21 tortoise-shell\ntorn kittens have been born ln Britain, and of these ll were the property of Sir Claud Alexander, the\ncat breeder, of Horsham, Sussex,\nwho hai made a special study of\nthem. Plenty of tortoise-shell female kittens are born, but, for some\nstrange reason, the male variety is\nparticularly rare. Nobody can tell\nwhy.\n\u2014Vancouver Province.\nwere married by Rev. R. N. Powell\nat the home of the bride's parents\nin Fairview.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nT. G. Procter has returned to\nNelson from a visit to the East\nKootenay,\n* \u2022   \u2022\nF. Lenay of Rossland is a guest\nat the Sherbrooks.\n* *    9  \u25a0\nBorn, to wife of A. G. Lang on\nNov. 14, a son.\n* \u2022   \u00bb\nRev. and Mrs. E. H. Shanks left\non a visit to Grand Forks.\nF0\" MINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall minim and other\ncarno bulldinas They\nare strong, waterproof liaht and very\neasv to handle.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co.., Ltd.\nDistrict Distributors\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nBritish\nColumbia's\nQuality\nMilk\nEither British Columbia of\nitself adds extra quality to\nmilk or else something ln\nthe  good climate,  soil  or\nwater more thoroughly safeguards the natural perfection and purity.\nAnyway   Pacific   Milk\nhas an excellence of its\nown,   proven   by   It's\nvalue   as   a   food   for\nbabies  and  the  credit\nwe are sure is due to\nBritish Columbia.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Course.\n_,_.._._._.-.\u00bb-_._\u2022\u2022\u2014-.\u00bb.\n,\n'_________\n, \u25a0.\n \\V&\nCURLERS BOAST\nFINEST LAYOUT\nYET IN NELSON\nIce Is in Splendid\nCondition, Says\nJack Long\n\"We've got the finest layout and\nthe finest ice we've had tor curling\nin Nelson,\" chorused President A\nBrowne and Secretary Jack Long\nI of the Nelson Curling club as they\nissued an appeal to \"anyone and\neveryone, ladles and men, to come\nand look over our rink, whether\nthey're curlers or not.\"\nBriefly, these club executives\nwere anxious that everyone interested should call at the rink and\n''tee what we've got.\" They felt\nthat citizens generally would in-\ndone the curlers' pride in the accommodations provided, the fine\nIce, and the generally \"spruced up\"\nappearance ot this section of tho\ncivic centre.\nSecretary Jack was concerned\nmostly with the splendid Ice, declaring Nelson had never had better\nsheets for play.\nClub membenhlp ls around the\n300 mark and ls expected to be increased In the next two days. The\nlltt will be cloied shortly to permit\nrinks to be drtwn and icheduled\ncompetitions to be ttarted.\nAces Defeat Yanks\n18-12 in Fixture,\nTrail School Loop\nTRAIL, B.C, Nov. ltJ-Establish-\ning a strong lead in the tint half,\nAces defeated Yanki 18-12 in a\njunior boys league game at central\n\u25a0ichool gymnasium Monday afternoon, despite a splendid* recovery\nby Yanks in the second halt\nGerald Armstrong and Frank Turik ran up 14 poind between them\nfor Aces while Jimmy Mandeville\nacored all four polntt for Yanki in\nthe tint half, After the Interval\nYanki came back with eight points,\nholding Aces to four.\nTeamt and scores were:\nYanki \u2014 Billy Scheer, Bobby\nCheyne, Jack MacDonald, Jimmy\nMandeville 8, Bill Brownlie 4, D.\nArmstrong and Ian McLeod.\nAces\u2014Gerald Armstrong 8, Frank\nTurik 10, Enzo Georgetti, Lome\nZinio, Jim Pearson, Albert Cavallin\nand Arthur LePage.\nGino Lerose refereed.\nArrow Lakes and\nSlocan Badminton\nLeague Looming\nNAKUSP, B.C.-A plan for a\nscflcs ot intertown badminton tournaments u well u a suggestion to\nform a district badminton league\ncomprising New Denver, Silverton,\nNakusp, Edgewood and Needles,\nare topics of discussion at the Variout clubs. It it expected that a\nmeeting of representatives from\neach of the towns mentioned will\nbe held shortly to make the final\ndecisions.\n.\ni  i\nBowling - Badminton - Soccer -Hockey - Basketball - Wrestling 4. Boxing\nfaa\ni Rugby - Soccer - Gurling - Skiing - Horse Racing\nPAQtt SEVEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWI. NILSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER 17. 1936\n*____________\u00a3___\u00ab\nFAY COLEMAN\nLEADS IN GOLF\nSteals Show as Pro\nTitle Play Gets\nUnder Way\nPINEHURST, N.C, Nov. 16 (AP).\n\u2014Fay Coleman, 31-year-old former\nCulver City, Calif., amateur star,\nlicked the wiles ot wind, cold and\ncoune, which combined to whip\nthe favoritei, and stole the ihotmak-\ning honon today in the tint half of\nthe 36-hole qualifying round of the\n19th professional gotten championship ot the United States.\nTbe tall Coleman, who wore a\ntowel around his neck as protection\nagalnit the blasts, shot the No. 2\nPlnehunt Country club layout in\n68, four under par, equalling the\ncoune record hung up a yeu ago\nby Horton Smith of Chicago and\nRay Mangrum of Plttlburgh in the\nnorth and south open. Smith, playing with Coleman, could do no better than 75 and Mangrum took 74.\nAlex Gerlak, 28, who ia a combination pro and greenskeeper at\nCatskill, N.Y., took tecond place\nwith a 71. Coleman and Gerlak\nwere the only players to better\npar 72.\nTrail Soccer* Team Champs of\nt and West Kootenai\nUse tho Want Ada\u2014It Pays?\nOwens Leading in\nVote for Award\nNEW YORK, Nov. 16 (AP)-That\nman Jesse Owens it out in front\nagain, thit time in the race for the\n193S James E. Sullivan award.\nThe Ohio State Olympic sprint and\nbroad Jump champion wu a few\nvotes ahead of Glen Morris, national\nand Olympic decathlon champion,\ntoday in the list of 33 athletes nominated for thc award by over 600\nsports everts all over the United\nStates.\nThe announcement was made by\nDan Ferris, secretary of the Amateur Athletic union. He refuted to\nreveal the margin of Owens' lead.\nill \u00a3ni<\ne\/ojr\nPer Doz.\nPlnti\nDAWES\nBLACK HORSE\niThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Covernment of British Columbia.\nTIME\nMONEY\nyourself\nBUY WHAT YOU WANT!\nSELL WHAT YOU WANT!\nGET THE JOB YOU WANT!\nTHROUGH A NELSON DAILY NEWS\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISEMENT\nyJEHONE 144\neitsr\u2014m,-\n\/\nAboVe ls reproduced a photograph Of the Trail\nsenior representative soccer team, East and Weit\nKootenay championi and holden df the Blaylock\nbowl for the lecond consecutive year.\nThey are, from left to right: Back row\u2014Bert\nRepton, trainer; Jim Patenon, Sopko, Russel, Bob\nLaUtle, Jim Strachan, club executive member;\nStewart, Crlstano and \"Dod\" Watson, manager.\nFront row\u2014Ferguson. Hillt, Jest, Stan Smith and\nTommy Laurie.\u2014Staff Photo.\nRUNNERS UP IN SOCCER PLAYOFF\nHere are the hard-rock Kimberley lads who\nwere runners up tn the sudden-death East and West\nKootenay soccer championship game staged at Trail.\nThey are, from left to right: Back row\u2014Bob\nBrown, C. Gilbert, Bob Davidson, Andy Forrest,\nBilly Fauldt, Andy Orr, McClay, C. Greenlands,\nPresident Bennett, and W. Rogers, trainer. Front\nrow\u2014Nlcholaon, G. McGarland, BUI Jones, Jim McFarland and G. Jones.\u2014Staff Photo.\nIs\nBasket Winner\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-The local\nKangaroos hoop team met Wynndel\nand after a fast and interesting\ngame won by a score of 50 to .2.\nFred Martello, who used to be well\nknown here ln hoop circles, played\nfor the visitors and played well.\nThe Valley boys put up a good\nfight.\nJ. Shaw and A. Foubister refereed\nthe garnes. The Pirates played an\nexhibition game with a scratch\nteam composed of plsyen from\nlocal ladies' teams and were defeated 44-41.\nAttendance   at  McDougall  hall\ngym classes for the past week wai\n151.\nThe lenior badminton club is expecting tome engagements with outside (Joints, first with Cranbrook\nclub. The Junior club is going\nstrong, staging a tournament every\nSaturday.\nBirthday Greetings\n(By Canadian Press)\nTo Frank H. Calder, president of\nthe National Hockey league, born in\nBristol, England, 59 yean ago tomorrow*-. Appointed when the league\nwas formed in 1917, Calder, former\nMontreal newspaperman, led the organization through bad years to\ngood. Previously he was secretary ol\nthe old National Hockey association.\nHe hai been actively Identified with\npro hockey ilnce 1914.\nOld Country Football Standings\nUp to and Including gamei of\nSaturday, November 14.\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nff L DF AP\nPortimouth    8  3  4 28 16 -0\nSunderland    8  4\nMiddlesbrough \u201474\nStoke City   6  4\nGrimsby Town ....   8  8\nCharlton Ath ........   5  3\nBrentford    7   5\nAnenal    5\nPreston N End ....   6\nEverton -  7\nDerby County \u2014 6\nHuddersfield T ....  \u00bb\nChelsea    5\nManchester City.. 4\nBolton Wanderers 4\nSheffield Wed ....   3\niminruifn.uii      4\nLiverpool   4\nWest Brorn Alb... 5\nLeedi United \u2014 \u00bb\nManchester Unit. 3\nWolverhampt'n W 4\nSeeond Dlvlilon\nBury -  8  3 5 37 17 Jl\nPlymouth Argyle.. 7\nCoventry City .... 7\n2 32 28 18\n8 27 25 17\n5 27 20 17\n1 37 30 17\n7 IB 18 17\n8 29 26 11\n5 21 17 15\n3 19 19 13\n1 28 29 13\n3 35 30 15\n5 23 19 15\n5 18 20 15\n6 29 24 14\n5 17 20 13\n7 23 24 13\nr.    on   %    1'}\n5 24 29 13\ni 24 33 12\n1 19 29 11\n4 19 31 10\n2 21 27 10\nBlackpool\nAtton Villa   6\nNewcastle Un  8\nSheffield Un .... 7\nFulham  \u2014 7\nTottenham Hots.... 6\nSouthampton \u2014 8\nSwansea Town .... 6\nBlackburn Roven 5\nNorwich City ..... 5\nBurnley ,  5\nBarnsley _~ 5\nChesterfield   5\nLeicester City  4\nNotts Forest  4\nWest Ham U .... 4\nBradford City ..... 3\n6 32 18 20\n5 25 15 19\n3 28 21 1!)\n7 31 2d tO\n2 29 18 18\n4 29 21 18\n3 24 18 17\n3 33 21 15\n3 24 27 15\n2 20 17 14\n4 14 14 14\n4 38 21 14\n4 17 12 14\n4 20 27 14\n3 27 25 13\n5 19 21 13\n5 22 30 13\n3 18 30 11\n5 22 17 1)\nDoncaster Roven  2   8  4  7 30   I\nBradford     3 10  2 17 38  I\nThird Division (Southern Section)\n10\nLuton Town\nCardiff City\nBright ic Hove A 9\nMillwall    7\nBournemouth   8\nGUlingham   8\nQueens Pk Rang.. 7\nNotts County  6\nReading  7\nWatford   6\nSouthend U   5\nSwindon Town .... 5\nClapton Orient  5\nCrystal Palace\nNorthampton Tn.. 5\nTorquay United... 5\nBristol Roven .... 6\nBristol City  - 5\nWniiall  _..... 4\nExeter City   3\nAldenhot   2\nNewport County. 1 10\n1 33 17 21\n2 25 17 20\n1 25 15 19\n5 27 16 19\n2 22 17 18\n2 18 20 18\n3 25 18 17\n5 26 22 17\n3 28 24 17\n4 28 22 16\n6 17 25 16\n5 29 21 15\n5 19 19 13\n4 28 23 14\n4 23 22 14\n3 19 22 13\n1 20 24 13\n3 22 28 13\n3 ID 30 ii\n4 17 31 10\n4 14 31 8\n.19 47\nThird Dlvlilon (Northern Section)\nCheitor  11\nMansfield T\nHull City    7\nStockport C\nLincoln City .\u2014\nOldham Ath ......\nWrexham \t\nHartlepooli Un ...\nHalifax Town\t\nCarlisle  United...\nNew Brlgton \u2014\nPort Vale 6\nSouthport  \u2014  4\nRotherham Un ....  8\nYork City _.  4\nCrewe Alexandra 2\nBarrow   4\nAccrlngton  Stan..   3\nDarlington     2\nTranmere. Roven  2\nRochdale    3\nGateshead   1\nSpeedies Zoom to\n36-1 Victory Over\nShorties at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 16-Speedies\nturned their heels to Shorties in a\nsenior boyt basketball leigue fixture at central school gymnasium\nMonday afternoon and kept the\nlatter short on counters when they\nwon out 36-1.\nScore at half time was 13-0.\nTeams and scores follow:\nShorties \u2014 Campbell Anderson,\nJack Carth, Allister McAulay, Andy\nKlimovich, Angus MacDonald 1.\nBuster Smart, Brick Edmunds and\nGino Lerose.\nSpeedies\u2014Tony Borsato 11, Nini\nForte 16, Allan Tognotti 9, Lewis\nJones, Mellwyn Jones, Eddie Gri,\nLloyd Murdoch and Warren Langille.\nBruno Baldassi refereed.\nBoy Hockey Players\nto Register Today\nfor Trail Leagues\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 16-Not only\nhockey aspirants at schools will be\ngiven an opportunity to play hockey\nthis winter in midget and juvenile\nhockey tponsored by the Trail Booster club, notice having been issued\nthat thoie not attending school may\nregister at Wagstaff's hardware on\nTuesday, Nov. 17.\nBoys attending school and wishing to play either midget, bantam\nor Juvenile may register at the\nschool to which they belong.\nWithin another week all hockey\nloops will be in full swing. The preseason league is exneetpH in _l\naway this week. Bantams, midgets\nand Juveniles will be at It toon and\nafter the latter three loops are organized the ichool teamt will be\naligned.\t\nSURPRISES MARK\nALL-STAR TEAM\nMorris, Welch, Pigeon\nand Eliowitz Again\nSelected\nBy ELMER DULMAGE\nCanadian Prut Staff Writer\nTORONTO, Nov. 16 (CP)-Sfcuf-\nfled by the steady upswing of fortune for Ottawa Roughrlden, the\nfourth annual Canadian Press All-\nstar Intel-provincial Union football\nteam was announced tonight with\none or two surprising features.\nCoaches and sports writers named\nthe team.\nHeaded again by luch perennial\nstan as Abe Eliowitz, Ted Morrii,\nHuck Welch and George Pigeon,\nthe selection recognlied the brilliance ot four playen who had\nnever made the Big Four All-stars\nbefore. Two of them were freth\nfrom college.\nFollowing it the team:\nFlying wing, Abe Eliowitz, Montreal; half, Huck Welch, Hamilton;\nhalf, Andy Tommy, Ottawa; half,\n(secondary defence), Ted Morris,\nArgos; quarter, Bobby Coulter, Argot; snap, Fred Wigle, Montreal;\ninside, Tiny Herman, Ottawa; inside, George Pigeon, Montreal; middle, Dave Sprague, Ottawa; middle,\nPete Jotkus, Argos; outside, Wes\nCuller, Argos; outside, Seymour\nWilson, Hamilton.\nChoice of the diminutive Tommy,\nwho finally came into hts own this\nseason with a series of ball-carry\ning feats that pulled the rallying\nRoughriders out ot some tough\nspots, wai one ot the biggest surprises.\nFernie Hoopers\nBeat Kimberley\nFERNIE, B.C., - ! imberley high\nschool boys' and girls' basketball\nteams played Fernie high school at\nthe community hall on Saturday.\nFernie girls won by a score of\n16-11  and Fernie boys by 37-12.\nPlayers and points for Fernie\ngirls were\u2014Hamer 1, Boese 7, Ai-\nslestine 3, Bricker, Gates 1, MacLaren 4. Personal fouls\u2014Hamer 2,\nAsslestine 1, Bricker 2, MacLaren\n3. For Kimberley \u2014 Thornton 7,\nChambers 4, Muir, Johnstone, Nesbitt, Osterloh. Personals Thornton 3,\nChambers 2, Muir 1, Johnstone 1,\nNeibitt 1. Referect Verkerk and F.\nMoore.\nThe girli played a fait game,\nfour of Fernle'i point* coming from\ntwo goali ln the last minute ot play.\nThe Kimberley boyi were handicapped by the non-arrival of one\ncar with three of their regular players, Turner, Owen and Sortome.\nThe home team piled up tuch t\nheavy lead that tho tint line players were gradually withdrawn tnd\nreplaced by substitutes to that the\ngame ended with an entirely different line-up. Points made by the\nFernie starter were\u2014B. Moore 14,\nF. Moore 2, Corrigan 11, Verkerk 4,\nand Shaw 1, Players on the floor at\nthe finish were Osborne, Sirianni\n1, Rigets 4, Barrett and Minifie. Art\nMiscisco also played part time as a\nsub.\nPersonal*\u2014Moore 1, Corrigan 2,\nShaw 3, Sirianni 1, F'Ms 1.\nThe visitors only had one substitute.\nTheir line-up consisted of\u2014Blei-\nard 2, L. Johnstone 1, GUI 8, Howey\n1, W. Johnstone 2, Wllllami.\nPersonals \u2014 Bleiard 1, Gill 1,\nHowey 2, W. Johnstone 2, L. John-\nitone 2. Referee! Foubister tnd Co-\nbus.\nCommander III\nIs Winner\nLIVERPOOL, Nov. 16 (CP Cable)'\n\u2014Captain P. G..E. Harvey's Commander 111 won the Grosvenor cup\nover a mile here Saturday, defeating T. H. Fan's Boston West by two\nlengths.\nMrs. J. Ahearn's Squadrcn Cattle\nwaa third, l's. lengthi back ot Boiton West\nThe winner started at 9 to 1, Boston West at 7 to 1 and Squadron\nC.aftla. At inn tr> 7. T.n >\u2022;-.,\nWhen the explorer Cartier tried\nIndian tobacco, offered by Indlani\nof the St. Lawrence region, he found\nIt \"almost at hot at pepper.\"\nTHE SCOTCH THAT CIRC1ES THE GLOBE\n.isi^i.iUs^\n\t\n2 2 44 14 24\n3 3 32 18 ll\n2 5 22 17 19\n3 8 29 16 U\n4 4 85 28 18\n4 4 82 25 19\n4 4 27 22 18\n4 4 15 12 It\nt 2 17 17 16\n6 1 22 23 IS\n5 5 14 16 15\n6 3 21 28 15\n4 7 25 30 15\n6 2 28 25 14\n5 5 21 26 18\n5 8 20 30 12\n7 3 21 25 11\n8 3 14 21 9\n7 5 20 28 9\n9 317 34 9 This advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\n7 615 26 8 Control Bc^rd or by the Covernment of British Columbia. I\nOVER HALE A TON 0E SALMON\nHAULED FROM MAIN LAKE AND\nWEIGHED, PROCTER, IN SEASON\nPROCTER, B. C\u2014Salmon fishing has at last come\nto a close, both as far as the fish and the law are concerned. The 20-pounder caught Thursday by ). Foss, the\n11 -pounder caught by Alphonse Pauline and Mr. and Mrs.\nEd Hall's 18, 10 and 12-pounders Friday brought the\nnumber on record between Oct. 1 and Nov. 15, to 41.\nThe total weight of these fish comes to seven hundred\npounds.\nDuring the season over half \u2022 ton of salmon was hauled out of the main lake.\nConacher Is\nInjured\nBig Charlie Conacher took a slash\non the wrltt during a pre-season\nexhibition game between Toronto\nMaple Leafs and Detroit Red Wings,\nand the big right-winger was out\nof the game for 10 dayt. X-rays\nshowed a bruited wrist bone and a\ndeadened nerve.\nlor Fishing Is Si\nDay, $5 for Year\nAmend Game Act to\nPut Licence on\nFormer Basis\nNon-resident anglers fishing ln\nBrltlth Columbia lakes and ttreams\nwill not henceforth be required\nto pay a flat licence tee ot (5, but\nmay pay a fee ot $1 a day up to\nfive dayi ln any year, or $5 for the\ncalender year under an amendment\nto the Game act passed by the provincial house.\nDuring thit year the Game act hat\ndemanded a licence fee ot $5 from\nnon-residents, whether they were\ndoing a day's fishing or a month's\nMany visitors objected to it, declaring they were perfectly willing\nto pay $1 for a licence for a day,\nbut that (5 for one day wai too\nmuch.\nUnder the amendment the fee is\nto be on the same basis as previously\n\u2014II a day up to five days, or *}5\nfor the year.\nCurlers Name\nTheir Officers\nWindermere District\nPlanning for the\nSelkirk Spiel\nINVERMERE, B.C.-At the annual meeting of Windermere District Curling club officers elected\nwere: President, W. H. Kirkpatrick;\nvice-president, W. H. Clelland; tec-\nretary-treasurer, Chariot Crook. All\nwere reelected from lart year. An\nexecutive of 12 Includes Messrs.\nAshworth, Coy, I*. C. Green, T. W.\nLee, Little, W. J. Nixon, I*. C.\nStockdale, A. Taylor, J. M. Scott,\nW. W. Taynton and C. A. Thornton.\nArrangements are underway to\nhold the Selkirk bonspiel in Invermere January 7, 8 and 8. Thia\n'spiel ls East Kootenay's big curling\nevent each year. This club's own\nlocal bonspiel will be held as usual\nduring the season. Thomas King,\nM.P.P., recently presented Windermere curling club with a beautiful\ncup which will be played for at the\nlocal bonspiel. Last season's membership stood at 72, more are expected this season.\t\n\u2022 Positively tbe greatest shaving \"buy\" in Ctn-\nadal Blades alone are worth 50c. Limited offer\n\u2014so get your Gillette \"Oold Special\" today!\nGILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR CO., of CANADA, ltd.\nYour boy wintiOCMt\nHe knows thai C.C.M. Skates have\nthe reputation of being the fastest\nand strongest, and C.C.M. shoes f'\nthe smoothest-fitting and most\ncomfortable. It will just\nabout break his heart if\nhe doesn't get n C.C.M.\nMatched Set this\nWinter.   2*.\nMaNMlM\nfNiss 11.11\nup\nMATCHED SETS\nC.C.M. GIRLS' SETS $3.95\nC.C.M. LADIES' SETS $4.75 and $7.50\nC.C.M. BOYS' SETS $3.95 and $4.35\nC.C.M. MEN'S SETS\n$4.75 $6.00 $8.00 $12.00 $14.50 $23\nHIPPERSON\nHARDWARE CO., LIMITED\nPHONE 497 The Friendly Store BOX 414\n1\n PAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWI, NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER 17, 1936\n. >,\u00bb-,_A__t____u\nIktA&u BARGAIN FOR YOU \u00bb* ife CLASSIFIEDS; &a<\/--*_W\n\u2666\u00bb\u2666_\u00bb\u2666\u2022\u2666->\u2666\n\u2666\u2022\u2666\u00bb\u2666_\u2022\u2666__\u2666-\u2666\u2022\u2666-\nFLOWERS AT HER FEET\nBy   MARIE   BUZARD\n- COr Vnil.KT: SEUUSEt, IY CENT JUL IJtU4 ASSOCIATION' \"\n.,_\u00ab-\u00ab\u00bb\u2666\u2022\u2666-\u00ab\u2014\u2666\u2014\u00bb-\u2666_\u2022\u2666\u2014\u2666-\u2666\u2014\u00bb-*\u2022\u2666\nCHAPTER 28\nAlix Carey return to Bairdsvale?\nThe   idea   was   ridiculous.   Alix\nwouldn't have used the word \"ri-\n1\u00ab CONFIRMED\nBY THE BISHOP\nNAKUSP, B.C.-There were 14\ncandidates for confirmation at an\nImpressive ceremony in St. Mark's\nchurch. Bishop Walter Adams ot\nKootenay, who officiated, gave n\nsplendid address at the conclusion\nof the ceremonies.\nArmistice was the chosen program\ntheme at a meeting of the Nakusp\nYoung Peoples society held on Tuesday evening. A reading, \"The Ceno-\n- taph,\" was given by C. Horrey. Miss\nMary Kershaw gave an appropriate\nselection on \"War.\"\nDuring the business session program topics for the new year were\ndiscussed.\nThe acting of popular songs after\n\\e style of charades caused much\ntherrlment during the social period.\n'js The annual Armistice dance sponsored by the Arrow Lakes branch\nof Canadian Legion, B. E. S. L.. was\na success. A large crowd from Nakuip as well as quite a number from\nout of town were In attendance. C.\nB. Hambling acted as master, of ceremonies.\nR. Harding of Burton spent several days in Nakusp, where Mrs.\nHarding is a patient in the Arrow\nLakes hospital.\nMis Rosa Bailey, who teaches at\nInonoaklin Valley, was a visitor here\non Wednesday.\nF. Loughery and J. DeGans of\nEdgewood were visitors in Nakusp.\nAmong those from Edgewood attending the Armistice dance were\nMiss M. Watson, Miss R. Bailey, W.\nShipmaker. L. Jordan, 0. Cooper\nand D. Poole.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Devlin and Miss\nC. Muller of Fauquier were visitors\nto town Wednesday.\nW. H. Leavit of Spokane wos a\nNakusp visitor.\nHerb Bowes was in town from\nNelson on Wednesday.\nGeorge Meakins of Nelson motored to Nakusp Wednesday.\nMiss Doreen Parent arrived from\nFostall Wednesday to visit hcr aunt,\nMrs. H. HiU?:.\nJ. Harris left on a business trip to\nNelson.\nMrs. A. E. Fowler left on Friday\nto spend several days in Trail.\nMiss J. Fawcett, who has been\nvisiting in Nelson at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. E. W. Somers, has returned to her home here.'\nMrs. P. Young, who has spent several weeks visiting at Saskatoon, returned to Nakusp Monday.\nE. W. Somers of Nelson was a\nweek-end visitor in Nakusp.\nRemembrance Is\nObserved, Forks\nBIRTHS\nMcQUEEN - To Mr. and Mrt.\nArchie D. McQueen, at Toronto\nOnt., November 4, twin daughter!.\n(Mr. McQueen wai a former Kaalo\nresident).\nVeterans Take Part in\na Program at\nthe Cenotaph\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.-In observance of Armistice, a large number\nof Great War veterans, citiiens and\nichool children tttended s program\nheld it the local cenotaph al the\npoet office on Wednesday morning.\nThe veterans marched to the cenotaph trom the Canadian Legion hall.\nThe program consisted of the singing of \"O Canada\" after which an\nArmistice prayer was given by Rev.\nD. M. Perley. Wreaths were placed\non the cenotaph by the different\norginizaliom. \"Abide With Mc\" was\ntung directly after the observance\nof the two minutes silence. The\nprogram ended b.v the singing ol\n\"God Save the King\", Bugler William Eureby soxided \"The Last\nPost\" and the veterans then marched to the Canadian Legion hall.\nA very successful smoker was\nheld hi the Legion hall on Armistice night with about one hundred\npeople present.\nA. B. Fenwick gave the toast to\nHit Majesty the King in a fitting\nmanner and the toast to \"Our City\"\nwas ably responded to by Alderman\nJahn Graham and Ex-Mayor C. C.\nHenninger.\nVocal numbers were contributed\nby Sam Powell of Trail, Fred Cleeton of Cascade, Earnest Harrison,\nAlderman John Graham, Juan\nPuddy, Don McKinnon, Pat Dohyl\nof Lsurier, Wish., and others.\nTap dancing, refreshments tnd\nmusical number! also had their\nplace on the lengthy program.\nJames Grysdale presided very\nefficiently at the piano during thc\nevening and R. Campbell filled the\nchair ai tout master. Auld Lang\nSyne chorous was Joined In heartily\nJust before midnight.\nDrive Tunnel on\nClaim at Sanca\nSANCA, B.C.-Rev. Clyde Harvey was Ihe guest of Mrs. W. Ginol\nwhile at Sanca.\nC. J. Curtin was s week-end\nvisitor In Nelson.\nJ. Karpovleh was a business visitor to Creston.\nWilfred Bambridge has returned\nfrom Cranbrook.\nAlbert Mackie and Jack Bishop\nof Creston where motor visitors to\n\u00ab\nrlculous\" however. She would have\nsaid it was most Improbable that\nshe would ever want to go back.\nWhen she had left it eight years\nbefore it wasn't because she didn't\nlike it, or because she thought it\ntoo \"small town\".\nShe had had to go after there\nwas no one left to her in the little\ncottage that was haunted with the\nghosts of Dora's music and thc\ngay color that Felix brought into\nit. She was only a slip of a girl\nthen, hardly more than a child,\nbut she had felt the need to go\nout into thc world, to see for herself where its byways would lead\nher.\nShe supposed, remembering that,\nthat in one short year she had\nskyrocketed to thc top of her profession. At 25 to be an executive\nin the New York office of a recognized manufacturing concern rated\nin these days ot hard-earned positions, as success.\nOdd that a girl with all she had\nwould want to leave it. She had\nan apartment that she maintained\neasily. She had an office with a\nthick carpet on the floor and her\nname in neat gold letters on the\ndoor. She had an ample salary\nand an expense account. She was\none of that exalted little group of\ncareer women with a future that\nshe had envied in hcr stenographic\ndays.\nBut il was a future that was\ncolorless, dry and empty to her\nnow.\nIt was August when Bill Boy-\nhad said, \"If you ever want a job\nin Bairdsvale, let me know.\"       v\nThat was the last thing in her\nmind then. And probably in Bill's.\nBut now it was October. An\nOctober lhat was an anniversary;\na scason dying gloriously with\nbrave, bright colors accenting thc\ntragedy of another year gone by.\nA year that had given hcr everything she had wanted and taken It\naway.\nEverything was gone, everything\nthat had been her world. Kathleen,\nKim and John.\nAll shc had left were memories\nand she wanted to get away from\nthem. The mute reminders of inanimate things. The clothes that hung\nin her closet said, \"Remember the\ntime you wore me?\" She gave them\naway. She crowded little hats and\nfragile frocks into the arms of Mrs\nAnderson, thc Irish wife ot thc\nSwedish superintendent who lived\nin tlie basement apartment.\n\"God bless you, my dear! I niver\nthought I'd be havin' scch bceyouti\nful things. I'll be doin' you a favor\nfor all this!\" that grateful lady promised.\n\"Take them, she said toneless-\nly while shc wished that she might\ngive her thc apartment in which\nshe spent too many hours.\nThe very streets she walked upon\nturned up as many reminders as the\nleaves Uiat littered them.\nShe went to an exhibit with\nMax Kleermann. There was tea\nand conversation. There was a\nViennese psychiatrist with whom\nshe found herself silting in an\nalcove.\n\"What is the matter with you?\"\nhe asked, blinking his eyes kindly\nbehind their thick glasses.\nAlix looked into his eyes and\nknew how direct his question was.\nShe didn't know his name: he\ndidn't know hers. It wai unlikely\nthat they would ever meet again.\n\"Everything inside me,\" she answered. \"I'm caught in a net of\nmy own weaving and I can't find\nmy way out. I'm unhappy, lost\nand I don't know what to do.\"\nAlix knew he meant to ask her\nif she had nothinjln the future\nshe wanted. She sata:\n\"Yes. Once I had work but the\nwork is part of the whole thing,\nlt doesn't even fill my time.\"\n\"And you have lost him? Arc\nyou sure?\" How wise he was!\n\"Yes. That wasn't of my doing.\nI made the mistake of thinking 1\nhad him. No. I am bereft, I have\nnothing more.\"\nIt wasn't what she laid but the\nabsolute conclusiveness In her\nsensitive, intelligent _ face that\nconvinced him that the was cor-\nect in thinking whatever she did.\n\"Why don't you go away from\nhere? Away from all that tugs\nat you with countless strings of\nremembrance?\"\n\"Away from New York?\" She\nstared at him surprised. \"I though!\npsychiatrists were the apostles of\nthe tenent that you can't run away\nfrom yourself.\"\n\"You are almost right. Not quite.\nYou can remake yourself into a\nperson you might not want to run\naway from.\"\n\"How?\" she asked tensely.\n\"I ean't. WI ynsj that. Y\"*l will\nknow yourself. You ere not'happy\nat you ire but you can make yourself a different person as though\nyou were an actress. Play a new\nrole, with different stage sets, wilh\nnew lines\u2014a new audience.\"\nThere was something that he\nwas trying to tell her but Alix\ndidn't quite understand. \"How-\ncan you expect roe to pretend that\nlife is a play and I am only an\nactress?\"\n\"But what sre you now, child?\nYou are nothing and yet you live.\nj You cannot always be nothing arid\n| yet you will live until your lime\nj comes. You cannot\u2014it Is against\n' the law of Nature\u2014always be\nnothing, wrapping yourself in a\ncloak of pain.\"\n\"What can  I do?\" she was ask-\nDAWDEY\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. C.\nDawdey, at Trail-Tadanac hospital,\nNovember 12, a ion.\nPERSONAL\nDIVIDENDS FOR ALL. AL-\nberta's amazing actions. First\nSocial Credit Government in\nworld. 25,000 word book. Full\nexplanation by prominent pioneer\nin movement. Postpaid fifty cents.\nWrite C. M. Willmolt, 406 12th\nAve. N.W., Calgary, Alberta. It\ncan be done. (3619)\nMENI GET VIGOR AT ONCE1 NEW\nOitrex Tonlo Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorators and other\nstimulants. One dose peps up organs', glands. If not delighted,\nmaker refunds few cents paid.\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n(3365)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment for $1.\nOrder direct and be sure of best.\nPacked plain. Free catalogue National Importers, 812-Centre St,\nCalgary, Alta. (3J66)\ning herself rather than him.\n\"Must you stay in New York?\nOr do you have a papa who will\nsend you around the world? Do\nyou work? If you do, find other\nwork ; if you do not, find work.\nThere is always charity.\"\n\"Yes, I have work. I must work.\"\nShe smiled at him and said, \"Thank\nyou and forgive me for making you\nlisten to my troubles.\"\n\"That is my work,\" he said, \"but\nI've never listened to trouble from\nsuch a beautiful young lady before,\"\nAUx gazed pensively at his kind\nface after he had said she was\nbeautiful. Shc had forgotten how\nshc looked.\n\"Perhaps I won't have my troubles, when we meet again.\"\n\"You should never have them.\"\nThat night, for the tirst time,\nAlix began to think of Bairdsvale.\nA nostalgia for its peace and quiet\ncame upon her. Shc got out the\nthree letters that Bill had written\nher since his return.\nThere was one paragraph shc\nwanted to reread.\n\"I dropped in to see Mac Alex\nander who runs thc Antiques and\nInterior Decorating shop,\" Bill\nwrote, \"tiic day after I got back,\nand told hcr about you. She was\nmighty interested in what you had\ndone with these new tangled fab\nrics. Shc asked me a lot of questions\nI couldn't answer. You'd better\ncome out sometime and pay us a\nvisit.\"\nAlix opened her desk, got out\nher notepapcr and pen and began\nto write hurriedly. She wrote, read\nwhat shc had wrillen and tore up\nsheet after sheet. What she had\nto write was more difficult than\nany piece of advertising copy she\nhad ever worked over, smoothing\nand rewriting.\nThis letter had lo ask for some\nthing with precisely tlie right note\nof' interest and conviction without\ntelling her true reason for wanting\nil. Not an easy thing to do and\nmake convincing. Would anyone\nbelieve that a girl with a successful career would be willing to give\nit up and go back to a small place\nand ttart all over? Would any man\nwho had seen the glamorous side\nof New York, which she -knew, believe that she wanted to give It up\nwithout a reason?\nAt last she blotted the finished\nP3ges and read what she had written:\n\"You were right,\" her neat backhand writing road, \"New York is\nall right for a little while. I've\nbeen thinking of Bairdsvale eve1-\nsince you were here and  I writ!\nLECAL NOTICE\nWATER NOTICE\nDIVERSION AND USE\nTAKE NOTICE that Bayonne\nConsolidated Mines Ltd. N.P.L.\nwhose address is 1007 Royal Bank\nBldg. Vancouver, B.C. will apply\nfor a licence to take and use 70,000\ngallons per day of water out of\nBayonne Creek, which flows southerly and drains Into Carolina Creek\nabout one mile above confluence of\nCarolina and Summit Creeks.\nThe water will be diverted at a\npoint about fifty feet below Ihe\nmiddle of the north-wett tide of\nIllinois Mineral Claim No.L.6888\nand will be used tor Milling Ore\npurpose upon the Mine described as\nBayonne Mill located on Lot No.\n9360 (Skookum Claim).\nWe intend to apply for dispensation from advertising.\nThis notice was posted on the\nground on the 26th day of October,\n1936.\nA copy of this notice and an application pursuant thereto and to\nthe \"Water Act\" will be filed in the\noffice of the Water Recorder at\nNelson, B.C,\nObjections to the application may\nbe filed with the said Water Recorder or with the Comptroller of\nWater Rights, Parliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B.C., within thirty days\nafter the first appearance of this\nnotice in a local newspaper.\nBAYONNE CONSOLIDATED\nMINES LIMITED\n(Non-Personal Liability)\nApplicant\nJ. H. Atkinson, Superintendent\n. . . Agent.\nThe date of thc first publication\nof this notice is November 17, 1936.\n(3638)\nLECAL NOTICE\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 160)\nIN THE MATTER OF LOTS 5 AND\n13  IN  BLOCK   11,   TOWN   OF\nYMIR, PLAN 640.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle Np. 14730-A lo thc above mentioned lands in the name of WILLIAM DOWLING and bearing date\nthe 18th July 1911,1 HEREBY GIVE\nNOTICE of my intention at the expiration of one calendar month from\nlhe first publication hereof to issue\na Provisional Certificate of Title in\nlieu ot such lost Certificate. Any\nperson having any information with\nrelerence to such lost Certificate of\nTitle is requested to communicate\nwith the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B.C., this\n16th day of November, 1036.\nA..W. IDIENS,\nRegistrar.\nDATE ot first publication November 17th 1936. (3633)\nLECAL NOTICE\n(Continued)\nOOViamJENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 27)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\nINTEREST IN BEER LICENCE.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\non the 2nd day ot December next,\nthe undersigned intends to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board tor consent to transfer a one half OA) interest in Beer Licence No. 3372 issued in respect of premises being\npart of a building known as the\nNew Grand Hotel, situate at No. 616\nVernon Street in the City of Nelson,\nin the Province of British Columbia,\nupon the lands described as Lot 5.\nand the East 'A of Lot 4, in Block 2,\nof the said City of Nelson, as shewn\non the Official Plan thereof, Nelson\nLand Registration District in the\nProvince of British Columbia, from\nPeter Kapak of Nelson, British Columbia, to Lena Kapak of the same\nplace, the Transferee,\nDATED at Nelson, B.C., this 30th\nday of October. A.D. 1936.\nLENA KAPAK,\nApplicant and Transferee.\n(3312)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS. ETC.\nBRIGHT RMS. BOARD OPTIONAL.\nDay, week, monlh. Steam heated.\nVictory Lodge. 119 Baker. Ph. 911.\n(3438)\nFOR RENT - MODERN HOME,\nfurnace and electric range. Apply\nWest Transfer Co. (3281)\nCOTTAGE FULLY FURN. OR UN-\nfurn. Wm. Mack, P.O. Box 236,\nNelson. (3636)\nFOR RENT - 1 SINGLE HOUSE-\nkeeping room. K.W.C. Block.\n(3576)\nUSED CARS\nCHRYSLER    \"52\"    CHEAP   FOR\ncash. WILLIAMS TRANSFER.    .\n(3537)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent.   Annable Block.\n(3378)\nROOM IN COMFORTABLE HOME.\nGentleman. Apply evenings, 411\nLatimer. (3556)\n7 ROOM HOUSE.\nD. Maglio.\nPHONE 808L.\n(3381)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped aultei.   (3379)\nLIGHT HSKPG ROOMS, NO CHIL-\ndren. 918 Kootenay St.        (3487)\nMssm Bailg Hmm\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspaper   Anoclajj\nTELEPHONE #44\nPrivate Exchange connecting to\nall  Departmenti\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy t  -05\nBy carrier per week \u2014 Jn\nBy carrier per year    13.00\nBy mall In Canada, to aub-\nscriben living outside regular\ncarrier areas per month 60c:\nthree months $1.80. six months,\n$3.00. one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c, six months,\n$4.00, one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU. S. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nFOR SALE\n25,000 FT. IVi IN. GALVANIZED\nPipe, also large stock Black pipe\nand fittings, all sizes. Write Swartz\nPipe Yard, 220 East, 1st. Ave,\nVancouver, B.C. (3375)\nBALED ALFALFA FOR SALE.\nFirst cut $14, 2nd $15, at barn.\nH. Yerbury, Camp Lister, B.C.\n  (3621)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B.C.\n (3376)\nMASON-RISCH PIANO, $600 NEW.\nWill sell cheap. 820 Gordon Road\nor Box 3567, Daily News, (3587)\nFOR SALE - BARRELSTKEGS.\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo,, Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (3377)\nBusiness and Professional.\nDirectory\nAnayeri\nInvestments\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Chemist, Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer.\nSampling agenta at Trail and Tacoma smelten, 301-305 Joiephlne\nSt., Nelson, B.C. (3403)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Anayer and Chemist, 618\nBaker street Nelson, B.C.   P.O\nBox No. 276. Representing Shippers Interest at Trail, B.C.   (3404)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCar Heaters Repaired\n(3405)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk., Nelson.\n(3406)\nLIVING PROTECTION\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nF.A. STUART. BOX 389\n(3422)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor aU Classes ot Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.  Motor  Rewinding.  Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(3423)\nNotaries\nBUSINESS ENTRUSTED TO ME\nwill be done promptly, efficiently,\nand legally. D. J. Robertson.\n(8373)\nPatents\nE. M. WARREN, D.C, Gilker Blk..\nNelson, B.C, P.O. Box 872.   (3407)\nElectrical\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull Information sent free Tho\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St, Ottawa.\n(3424)\nJ. F. COATES, The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766. P.O. Box 1065\n(3408)\nPhotography\nMAHOGANY   ENAMELLED   CIR-\nculator heater. Cheap. Ph. 434X1.\n(3629)\nGOOD BUSINESS LOCATION IN\nYmir. Apply Box 3604, News.\n(3604)\nDROP IN AND SEE THE ARK'S\nThird Anniversary Sale Bargains.\n (3370)\nCALL At 324\n(3598)\nPHONE\n(3589)\nBABY CARRIAGE.\nNelson Ave.\nSLABWOOD FOR SALE,\n163.\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXP. DAIRY FARM HAND. FIRST\nclass milker and carpenter. Wants\nwork. A. J, Box* 1025, Fernie.\n(3626)\nEXPERIENCED^ IRL WANTS\nhousework. Box 3616, Daily News.\n(3616)\nFARM LANDS\nto see it again. I was happier there\nthan I am in New York\"\u2014she\nworded it truthfully as to tense\u2014\n\"and I hope you meant it when you\nsaid that if. I wanted a job you\nmight be able to arrange it for me.\n, It doesn't cost much to live there,\nj I know, and I'd be willing to work\nfor very little. I wonder if you'd\nlike to talk to yotir Mlts Alexander\nand ask her if she'd consider taking\nme in?\"\nThere was more to the letter\nbut that was all she said about a\njob.\nBefore she htd time to change\nher mind, she put on her coat and\nran to the street to post it.\nPerhaps a girl could make a new\nlife for herself and come alive\ngain.\n(To Re Continued)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\nun easy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to MS Dept ot Natural\nResources. C.P.R. Calgary, Alta\n(3374)\nELECTRICAL\nMOTORS\nGENERATORS AND TRANSFOR-\nmers, 15,000 H.P. to select from.\nStock delivery on most items.\nCROSSMAN MACHINERY CO.\nLtd. 61 Alexander St, Vancouver.\n(3363)\nBAY MARE. ABOUT 1500 LBS.\nGood farm or logging horse. $80.\nT. Roynon, Nelson, B.C.       (3588)\nWANTED\nUSED SAWMILL. MUST BE IN\ngood cond. 10,000 ft. capacity. C.\nBrodmann, Slocan City, B.C.\n(3585)\nCHEAP USES\" PIANOIN GOOD\ncondition. State price. Apply Mrs.\nO. B. York, Salmo, B.C.      (3627)\nCANARIES\nGOOD SINGERS. $4.50 PAIR. C.O.D\nExpreit. Vancouver. Mrs. E. Sau-\nerberg, Ladner, B.C. (3620)\nROOM AND BOARD\nSTUDENTS AND BUSINESS MEN,\ncomfortable home. Phone 265.\n(3S82)\nFUEL\nCOAL\nART INSTRUCTION\nIF YOU LIKE TO DRAW, SKETCH\nor PAINT\u2014Write for Talent Test\n(No Fee). Give age and occupation. Box 3467, Dally News. (3467)\nTransfer\nPHONE 106\n(3371)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH. D. DAWSON Nelson. B.C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(3410)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B.C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(3411)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays te etc. Phone 215\nMrs. Hagarty. Box 29. (3412)\nDIRK de JONG\nFront   St.,   Nelson,   B.C.   Sprays,\nWreaths and Floral displays.\nPrompt Service Given (3413)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nOpen day and night. Lady attendant.\nModern Ambulance Service\n(3414)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\nBaker St.. (3415)\nR. W. DAWSON, RliTEstate, Insurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. (3416)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(3417)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 60S Ward St\n(3418)\nJ. E ANNABLE, REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance. Annable Blk.\n(3419)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70.    (3420)\nCHAS. F. McHTRDY. INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Ph. 135. (3421)\nMAKE IT A DAILY\nHABIT\u2014READING\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRTOT-\ned, any size, 25c. Reprints, eight\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints. Val-\nuable coupon. \"Better prints at )\nlower cost\" KRYSTAL PHOTOS, I\nWilkie, Sask. (3425)\nSanitariums\nCHRONIC DISEASES MIND AND ]\nbody.   Dr. Aldrich, Spokane, E.\n\u20221504 Frederick. (3426)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker st\n.(3427) |\nSecond Hand Storei\nWE   BUY,  SELL  <_  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Thc Ark Store.\n(S428)\n=*'\nWatch Repairing\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\nWatchmaker and Jeweller\nRutledge block, Baker St., Nelson.\n\"When   Sutherland   repairs   your\nwatch it is on time all the time.\"\n(3429)\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE. Work*\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St\n(3430)\nClassified1\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\n2 lines,\n3 lines,\n4 lines,\n3 lines,\n3 lines,\n4 lines,\n2 lines,\n3 lines,\n4 Unel,\nMinimum 2 Llnei\nonce\t\nonce  ...\nonce  _....\n6 times  -.__\n6 times  ..........\n6 times .......___\n1 month ___.\n1 month  _._\n1 month\t\n$ .22 '\n.     .33\n.44\n,    .83\n1.32\n1.78\n2.86\n4.29\n3.72\nAll above leti 10% tor prompt .\npayment\nBox number! 11c extra  (list 10%\nfor caih). Thii coven any number\nof insertions.\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022 ~ -~ _.\u25a0\u25a0,\u00bb.\u00bb*\nNELSON\nSHOPPINC AND AMUSEMENT CENTER\nOF THE INTERIOR\nTHE GUMPS\n' \\\u201e ly Chi Edson\n3\nSanca Sunday.\nE. Bainbridge and sons have a\ncontract to drive a tunnel on one of\nSanca Mines' claims, the Bears Nest.\n;,..._.,_\u00bb\u00bb__\u25a0 .: Jt.-.mS\n.,..t^o^c^..^m^,...,i.ti*..,\u201e:,,..,,, i,:,^,^^;:,..-!^^\n T^*^^^^^^ '^-fil\nCHICAGO TOPS\nSINCE 1929\nWheat Prices Reach\n$1.18^ forDec.\nDelivery\nCHICAGO, Nov. 1.6 (AP)-ln I\ngeneral buying movement that developed late today, wheat swept\nupward te a new high prlee reeerd\nelnea 1829, reaching $1.18\/4 Chicago December delivery. Indlca-\ntloni -of large flour purchases\nkindled the demand.\nAll future of rye shot skyward\nIn some cases 3*4. cents. Soy beans\n\u2022oared 4 cents, the Immediate allowable limit. Corn values advanced to almost equal to the year's\napex.\nWheat closed strong, up 11.-2\noanti.\nExchangu\nMONTRIAL, Nor. II (CP)-Brl-\ntlih and foreign oxchange closed\nhigher today. Nominal rates tor\nlarge amounts:\nAustralia, pounds 3.6005.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.860S,\nSwitzerland, franc, .22.7.\n(Compiled by tha Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nSMELTERS HITS\n78 AT MONTREM\nEAST LANSING, Mich, (CP)-\nMichlgan state puts forward its\nWalter (Ole) Nelson, end, for All-\nAmerican wonder star. He catches\npasses in mld-olr, one handed.\nr\nMONTREAL, Nov, 18 (CP)-Ra|l\nequipments, cracking highs tor recant years, led a brisk atock market rally today,\nSmelters reached 78, Up t points,\nwhile Nickel held a gain ot \u25a0% at\nMM*.      .\nCanadian Car preferred Jumped\nIH to 26tt while the common Armed a point to 16, both new highs\nfor a year or more. National Steel\nC-ir gained tt at a new peak ot 38H\nBuyers ran Canadian Hydro-Electric preferred 4 points higher to\n68%.\nNILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-TUISDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER 17. 193.\nMarket and Mining News\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nlas'd Breweries _  llty\nMl Telephone ._,  163%\nSra-Ulan   18\n> C Power A .. ...__.._.._... 86\n.ruck 611k   9\n.Ullding Products  58\nranadlan Bronte  oo\n:\u00bbnadlan Car te Foundry  WM\nCanada Cement   13Va\nJanada Cement Pld  98\n;an Celanese\t\n:an Ind Al A _\t\n3an Ind Al B\t\n?PR\nDan Steamers .._..\n:o_kahutt \t\nZone M tc S\t\nDominion Bridge\nDominion Glass ....\nDominion Textile\nDryden Paper \t\nSen Steel Wares ...\nCharlea Curd\nHamilton Bridge \t\nImperial Tobadco .\t\nInt Nickel \t\nMassey Harris \t\nMontreal Power \t\nMcColI Frontenac ._\t\n.   26V<\n.    V\/,\n.   7y,\n.   14\n.    2'\/,\n.   tv,\n.  77V4\n51*\n116\n75%\n.  40*i\ntv,\n.    9\n9%\n14\n64 V.\n.    7\n34*\n.   lltt\nNat Steel Car\nNat Brewing \u201e\nOgllvie .\nPower Corporation .\nQuebec \t\nShawinlgan.\nSherwln Williams ....\nSouth Can Power _,\nSteel of Canada ...\nCURBS\nB C Packing \u201e..\nBrew and Dlst\t\nB A Oil _......\nCan Wineries\nCanada Malting . ..\nDominion Stores .......\nFord Caneda A ........\nImpirlal Oil  ____.\nInt Petrol \t\nMitchell Robt __\nWet Broi _.__, ._..\nBANKS\nCanada   _..\nCanadlenne ..............\nCommerce ........\nImperial ..........\nMontreal  ____.\n.. 38*\n.. 41*\n. 243\n. 18*\n. 22\n. 27*\n. 24\n. 13*\n. 71*\n.  12\n.80\n. 23*\n. 2*\n. 88*\n. 11\n. 25\n. 23*\n.   38*\n14\n.   16*\n. 58\n. 141\n. 169\n. 318\n.210\nMIHES HIGHER\nTrend Is Irregular at\nToronto\nTORONTO, Nov. 18 (CP)-An Irregularly higher trend wai recorded\nat the close ot the mining section\non the Toronto itock exchange today. Volume ot 1,315,000 ihares waa\nfairly heavy,\nActive golds moved independently. Lake Short moved up to <* *\nand Pioneer eased to C.86 and oloaed\nott 35c at $6. M-Intyre, Holllnger\nand Dome weakened tractions.\nDome dropped 2* in light trading.\nIn fair demand Ktrkland-Hudson\nBay advanoed 16 to 1.45, McLeod\nCockshutt firmed 10 and Premier 8.\nThe big eopperi were iteady with\noils. Eldorado and Cattle lost some\nground.\n30 Industrials\t\n>0 rails\t\n20 utilities..........\n40 bondi ...........\nDow-joncs Averages\nHigh Low\n  183.89 181.00\n.' -.\u201e\u25a0\u201e..   56.70 58.01\n.  34.87 84.04\nClose Change\n182.65- up 1.20\n56.80\u2014up .28\n34.80- up XI\n108.49- up   .08\nNova Scotia 304\nRoyal   190%\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nListed Bid\nA P Consolidated ..      .19\nAmal Oil 07*\nBig Missouri        .33\nBralorne M        8.35\nBrew tc Diit       .80\nBrit Dom O       \u2014\nBridge R Con ..._..      .04\nBRX Gold   10\nCariboo Gold     1.80\nGtc E Corporation 2.02\nCoast Brew - 13.75\nCommonwealth 0.     .18\nDentonia. M 12\nOold Belt 12*\nHargal Oil ...._ 22\nRome 0    _   1.20\ninter Coal  ...........     31\nIsland Mount      124\nKoot Belle  82\nMak Siccar     _      .02*\nMcD Segus Ex   ...      .19*\nMcLeod Oil (New)      .51\nMinto Oold       .28*\nModel O           -37*\nMorn Star      .02*44\nPioneer Gold      6.00\n1.3!\nPremier Gold\npremier Border\nQuatsino Cop \t\n\"Reno Oold    \t\nReeves MacD ......\nSalmon Gold ......\nSheep Creek \t\nSpooner 0    \t\nSudbury Basin -\nTaylor Bridge\t\nVanalta Ltd \t\nVidette G\t\nWayside O\t\nCURB\nAlexandria G \t\nAnaconda O ......\nJttaltac 0     \t\nBayview M \t\nBeaver Sil \t\nBluebird M \t\nB C Nickel     ....\nBunker Hill 4-S\nCdn Rand  ...\t\nCalmont O \t\nCapital Est     8.25\nCongress 0  _\nCork Province ....\nCotton Belt    \t\nCrows Nest 0 \t\nDalhousie Mines _\nDalhousie O\t\nDevenlsb     _....\nDictator G \t\nDunwell       \t\nEast Crest 0 \t\nFairview Amal ..\nt_wn M     ,._,\nFederal G\t\n.10\n.00','\n.03V.\nMV,\n.04\nmv,\nm*\n.01\n.33\n88.00\n.32\n.00*\n.01\n.07*\n.01\n.80\n.05*\n.03\n.03\n.09\n.07*\n.04\nAsk\n.20\n.50\n8.50\n.90\n.20\n.05\n.10*\n1.83\n2.03\n14.00\n.20\n.13\n.15\n21\n1.23\n..22\n1.25\n.85\n.02%\n.16*\n.60\n.30\n.39\n.03\n6.25\n3.12\n.01*\n.04\n1.40\n.18\n.08%\n.80\n.22\n6.00\n.08%\n.09%\n.95\n.07%\n.04\n.07-,i\n.04*\n.01\n.02*\n.35\n93.00\n.04\n.34\n9.00\n.09*\n.02\n.87\n.06\n.03%\n.04\n.09*\n.08%\n.65\n.04*\nFreehold 0   DA\nGeo Copper     _ M\nGeo Enterprise ... D3*\nGeo River '  .01*\nGlacier Creek   .01\nGolconda      _., J2*\nGold Mount  .12\nGrandview     .06\nGrange M     _)3*\nGrull Wihk   48*\nHaida Gold  _ .00*\nHecla M    .  , 17.50\nHedley Amal     . \u2014\nHighwood  Sarcee.. .14%\nHome Gold      \u2014\nIndian Minei   J);*\nInter Gold      M\nIndependence -  .. .00*\nKootenay Florence .01\nKootenay King  .00*\nLakeview .' .12\nLucky Jim  .02*\nMadison 0 .._ _ .03*\nMar Jon  .14*\nMercury 0    .14\nMeridian M   .02*\nMerland 0     ... _ .12\nMcGillivray  Coal. .18\nMill City 0       ... -\nMorton Wolsey .._ .00*\nMarmot Metals  J)0V\u00ab\n.09%\n.40\nSS\n.01*\n.14\n.13\n.06%\n.03*\n.14\n18.00\n.16\n.15\n.03*\n.03\n.09\nm\n.01*\nNicola M\nNoble Five \t\nNordon 0     __.\nOkalta Oils  _.\nPacalta L     \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPilot Gold M \t\nPorter Idaho \t\nQuesnelle Q \t\nRanchmen's    \t\nRed Hawk\t\nReliance Gold ....\nRelief Arlington .\nReward M\n.10%\n.04%\n.68\n.09*\n1.39\n.04*\n.05%\n.07\n.02*\nM\n.05*\nRoyalite 0   33.00\nRufus Arg    -  .01*\nSilbak Premier  2.65\nSilvercrest        .04\nSilversmith M .._ MV,\nSnowflake      ...._. .00%\nSouthwest Pet ..... \u2014\nStandard Sil   .40\nSunloch        .25\nSunshine M     _ 22.00\nUnited Empire ..... .01'\/.\nUnited Oil  12\nHDL  1.06\nViking Gold  01*\nVulcan         _ \u00a31\nWaterloo M  .01\nWaverley Tangier .00*\nWellington M    ... .01%\nWesko M       ...... 3t\nWhitewater    .04%\n.02*\n.03%\n.15\n.14*\n.03\n.13\n.22\n.13\n.00*\n.10*\n.04*\n.15\n.70\n.10\n1.40\n.04*\n.06%\n.42\n.04\n.03\nat\n\u25a0MV,\n34.50\n.01%\n2.75\n.05\n.02\n.42\n22.50\n.02\n.14\n1.10\n.01*\n.01\n.01*\n.26%\n.04*\nN.Y. RECOVERS\nBusiness News Better\nNEW YOrii; Nov. U (AP)-The\nitock market climbed back In the\nrecovery aaddle today aa business\nnewi brightened and tears of immediate foreign liquidation lessened\nappreciably.\nWith favorable earning! statements and dividends heartening the\ntraders, Industrial leaders ware given a lltt of fractions to 2 pointi and\na few as much as 0 or so.\nTransfers totalled 2,374,480 ihares,\nagalnit 2,482,250 lut Friday,\nSkelly Oil directors paid oft dividend accumulations- on the preferred amounting to $23.50 a share.\nThii Issue, up about 3 at one time,\nfinished with a net gain of 1%\nat 128.\n8PECULATIVE8 FAVORED\nNEW VORK, Nov, 16 (AP).-Buy-\nera today switched their attention\nfrom high grade to the more speculative issues ln th'e bond market.\nRail, industrial and convertible\nobligations moved up appreciably\ndespite a slower trading pace,\nThe foreign list was steady.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Nov. 16 (CP)   Silver futurei doled easier today, 45*75\npoints oft. Sale one May contract.\nOpen High  Low Close\nMay _    46.10   47.00   47.00   46.15\nFarmers' Btard Urges That Health\nInsurance Include Workers on Land\nAsk Dental Clinics Be Continued and Nurse\nGive Advice in Outlying Districts\nVICTORIA, Nov. 16 (CP)-The\nadvisory board of the British Columbia Farmers' institutes went on\nrecord as being strongly in favor of\nhealth insurance and all tirms of\nmedical aid at tha first meatlng of\nIts two day session at the parliament\nbuildings here today.\nAfter hearing E. W. Neel, representative of the Farmers' Institutes\nIn the Vanoouver Island and Gulf\nIslrnds district, and president of the\nBritish Columbia Hospitals' association, sketch briefly the health insurance act especially in its relationship to agriculture, the 10 members\nof the board voted unanimously ln\nfavor ot a resolution asking that\nagricultural workers.\nAs Mr. Neel pointed out that the\nhealth insurance act In Its present\nform had eliminated all dental and\noptical services, a rider was added\nto the resolution asking that 'the\nprovincial secretary continue the\ntraevlling dental clinics in outlying\ndistricts which were laid to be moit\nbeneficial,\nThe advisory board also passed\na resolution \"proposing some provision for Inspection and advisory\nvisits to parents and children in\noutlying districts by a qualified\nnurse in order thst tendency to disease or physical defects may be\ntreated ln an early stage and advice\nthe scheme be extended to include and attention given at once.\"\nOKANAGAN APPLE\nSALES ARE BEST\nSINCE 1930 MARK\nPENTICTON, Nov. 16 (CP).-\nFlnal returns trom the sales of thli\nyear's Okanagan apple crop will be\nconsiderably better than any experienced since 1980, according to\nshippers and growers here.\nAlready more than half the 4,-\n000,000-box crop has been sold, and\nit is believed net returns of export\nconsignment and f.o.b. sales will bt\nbetter than last year. Domestic\nprices will also be higher.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nBankflold ...\nBarry Holl .\nBate Metali\nBig Min \t\nBobjo     \t\nBralorne  \t\nBRX \t\nBut Ankerite ..... \t\nCan Malartic  _..._..\nCariboo Oold\t\nCaitle Treth \t\nCentral Man  _....\nCentral Pat\t\nChibougamou  \t\nCoast Copper .....\nConarium     \t\nCom M te S\t\nDome  \t\nDom Explor \t\nEdorado  .   _ \t\nFalconbridge _.\nGod's Lake  -._..__\nGoM Belt - \t\nGranada  _..._ ._\t\nHardrock  \t\nHolllnger  _\nHowey    \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInter Nickel  \t\nJ M Con     \t\nKirkland L \t\nLake Maron \t\nLakeshore\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelling\nCompany ol Canada, Limited\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphates \u2014 Sulphate ef Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertilizers\nProducers and Refiners of\nTadanac Brand Metals\nCOL0 SILVER\nLEAD\nZINC\nELECTROLYTIC\nCADMIUM\nBISMUTH\n1.75\n.06%\nXI\n.54\n.18%\n8.30\n.09%\n10.75\n1.58\n1.83\n1.30\n.10\n4.20\n3.06\n6.50\n2.14\n77.75\n55.00\n.08%\n1.80\n12.37\n.75\n.12\n.30\n3.20\n13.75\n.66\n30.00\n64.25\n.48%\n.68\n.10%\n62.00\n7.10\n6.10\nLittle Long Lac  _.\nMacassa       .. \t\nMaple Leaf  30\nMalroblc        .03%\n... 4.90\n\u201e 43.25\n.. 1.73\n.94\n.. 2.42\n.. 2.50\n.. 73.00\n.31%\n.. 1.15\nMcLeod Cockihutt .\nMclntyre _\nMcK It L Gold   ....\nMcWatter Gold\t\nMining Corp \t\nNlpiasing   ._._\t\nNoranda \t\nFarkhlll  \t\nPaymaster \t\nPend Oreille  -     13S\nPickle Crow     6.80\nPioneer\nPremier Oold .\nReno\t\nSan Antonio\nSheep Creek\nSher Gordon ...\nSiscoe\nSmelter G \t\nStadacona  .\t\nSt. Anthony .\n6.00\n3.10\n1.41\n2.05\n.80\n2.50\n4.55\n.06%\n.78\n.17\nSud Basin     6.86\nSullivan       1.85\nSylvanite    _     3.30\nTeck Hughes _     5.05\nToburn             4.00\nTowagamac     1.00\nTreadwell   50\nVentures .    _ _    3.07\nWaite Amulet     2.70\nWayside  _.     .06%\nWhite Eagle  _      M\nWright Hargreavet      7.80\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros  _    10\nBell Telephone 153\nSTEELS TO FORE\nWINNIPEG DULL\nFive-Minute Flurry\nOnly Sign of Life\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 16 (CP)-A five-\nminute buying flurry that gave\nwheat pricei a fractional flip wu\nthe only sign ot life in a moribund\ngrain market today. Values fluctuated within a one-cent range.\nThe close wai H-% cent higher,\nNovember at $1.09, December $1.06%\nMay *1.07%-\u00bb1.08 and July Sl.03%-\n%.\nTrade newa Indicative ot a definite price trend was lacking. Liverpool and Buenos Aires were weak\nA late spurt at Chicago, were two-\ncent gains were scored, prompted\nWinnipeg's belated upswing.\nCaih and coarse grains prices\nwere firm. Rye head'lned the upturn In the latter market.\nOver 100,000 Shares\nat Toronto\nTORONTO, Nov. 16 (CP)-Inter-\nest in the steels raised the price\nlevel on the Toronto industrial exchange today to 180.56, up a point\ntrom Saturday. Volume was in excess of 100,000 shares.\nRenewed reports concerning munition contracts stimulated the pace.\nCanadian Car and Foundry stocks\npushed up %, National Steel Car,\nPage Hersey and United Steel Corporation hit new highi.\nLiquors were active with fractional gains. Banks ruled higher,\nwhile the utilities w e mostly unchanged.\nDominion Livestock\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 16 (CP)-Cattle\n3200; steers 6.00; heifers 4.00; calves\n3.00.\nCalves 1030; vealers 6.00.\nHogs 4050; heavy 6.50.\nSheep 500; lambs 7.00; sheep 2.50.\nBrazilian\nBrew le Dist\t\nCanada Bread ...\nCan Car le Fdy\nCan Cement\nCanada Dredge\nCan Malting\n18\n.80\n7%\n15*1,\n18%\n44*:,\n36',\nCan Pac Rail  14M\nCons Smelters  77%\nDominion Bridge  51%\nDominion Stores  11\nDlst Seagrams _  27%\nFord Canada A  25Vi\nGoodyear Tire \u201e  85\nHiram Walker  48%\nLoblaw A  22%\nMassey Harris \u201e     8%\nSteel of Canada  71\nWalker Brew     2%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nKresge S S\n29 V,\n29%\n20%\nAllied Chem\n234%\n232%\n231%\nKroegger Groc.\n241\/,\n24%\n24V,\nAmerican Can\n125%\n124%\n125%\nMack Truck\n45\n44%\n45\nAm For Pow\n7\n6%\n7\nMilwaukee  Pfd\n__\n1%\nAm Mach le T.\n24\n23%\n24\nMontg Ward\nCiv:,\n63\n63%\nAm Smelt te R\n99\n97Ms\n99\nNash Motors\n17%\n17%\n17%\nAm Telephone..\n183%\n181%\n188%\nNat Dairy Prod\n26%\n25%\n26%\nAm Tobacco ...\n100%\n100\n100%\nN Pow tc Light\n11%\n10%\n11%\nAnaconda \t\n51\n40%\n61\nN Y Central\n43%\n42%\n43%\nAtchison   \t\n75%\n74%\n75\nPacific G & El\n36%\n35\n36%\nAuburn Motors\n32%\n31%\n32\nPackard Mot ..\n12%\n12%\n12%\nAviation  Corp\n6%\n\u00ab%\n6%\nPenn R R\n43 ti\n42%\n43 V,\nBaldwin     _  _\n5%\n5%\n5%\nPhillips Pete ...\n46\n45%\n45%\nBait te Ohio\n22%\n21%\n22\nPure Oil\n18%\n18%\n18%\nBendix Avla ...\n29%\n29%\n29%\nRadio Corp\n12\n11%\n12\nBeth Steel  \t\n72 %\n70%\n71%\nRadio Keith 0\n10%\n9%\n10%\nCanada Dry .....\n18%\n17%\n18%\nRem Rand\n22'',\n22%\n22%\nCan Pacific \t\n14%\nHI*\nHIS\nHoieway  Siure.\nACM.\nOtlL\nCerro De Pasco\n70%\n68%\n70%\nShell Union    ..\n26%\n25%\n26%\nChes tt Ohio ....\n73%\n72\n72%\nS Ca\u00bb Edison ..\nan\n29%\n30\nChrysler    _ ...\n136%\n135%\n135%\nSouth Pacific\n42\n41%\n42\nCon Gas N Y . .\n45\n43%\n45\nStan Oil of Cal\n40%\n39%\n40%\nCOm Products\n74%\n73\n74%\nStan Oil of Ind\n43V,\n43%\n43%\nC Wright Pfd .\n6%\n6%\n\u20226%\nStan Oil of N J\n06%\n65\n66%\nDupont\n182\n180%\n180%\nStew Warner\n19%\n19%\n19%\nEastman Kodak\n\u2014\nmm\n177\nStudebaker   ...\n15%\n14%\n15%\nErie\n16\n15%\n15%\nTexas Corp\n50\n48%\n50\nFord English\n\u2014\n\u2014\n8%\nTexas Gulf Sul\n43%\n42%\n43%\nFord of Canada\n\u2014\n\u2014\n25%\nTlmken Roller\n73!i\n73\n73%\nFirst Nat Stores\n\u2014\n\u2014\n54\nUnder Type    ..\n_\n\u2014\n84%\nFreeport Texaa\n29%\n28%\n29%\nUnion Carbide..\n102\n100%\n102\nGeneral Elec\nbl%\n50%\n51%\nUnion Oil of C\n23%\n23%\n23%\nGeneral Foods\n42%\n42%\n42%\nUnited Aircraft\n25%\n24%\n25%\nGeneral Mot .\n74%\n73%\n74%\nUnited  Biscuit\n33%\n33%\n83%\nGoodrich  .. .\n27%\n27%\n27%\nUnion Pacific \u201e\n136%\n135\n136%\nGranby\n6%\n5%\n6\nU S Pipe\n56\n59\n55'ls\nGreat Nor Pfd\n40%\n40 y4\n40%\nU S Rubber\n39%\n37%\n31%\nGreat W Sugar\n\u2014\n\u2014\n38%\nU S Steel\n76%\n74%\n76%\nHeeker Prodi ..\n18%\n13%\n13%\nVanad Steel...\n25 V,\n22%\n2'.%\nHowe Sound\n61%\n58%\n59%\nWarner Bros\n18\n17%\n18\nHudson   Motori\n21%\n20%\n21%\nWest- Electric ..\n144%\n142%\n144%\nInter NIekel\n84%\n63%\n64%\nWestern   Union\n93%\n92%\n92%\nInter Tel le Tel\n13%\n13%\n13%\nWoolworth \t\n60%\n65\n65%\nJewel Tea \t\n\u2014\n\u2014\n92\nWrlgley     s\t\n-~\n\u2014\n77\nKenn Copper -\n58%\n56%\n58%\nYellow Truck ..\n20%\n19%\n19%\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Nov. 16 (CP)-Re-\ncelpts\u2014Cattle, 314; calves, 62; hogi,\n43; sheep, 200.\nCattle steady; good iteeri 4 to\n4.25; heifers 2.75 to 3; good light\ncalves, 3.25.\nHoga five centi stronger; selects\n7.25; bacons 6.75; butchers 6.25.\nBOUNDARY MILL\nEMPLOYS 50\nGREENWOOD, B.C. Nov. 16,\n(CP)\u2014Installation of a mill for\ntreatment of ores In Greenwood\narea has caused considerable ac-\ntlvlty In the reopening of old properties which wera operated until\nthe Qranby Smelter at Grand\nForks was closed tome years ago.\nThe new mill, a commurlty project financed by Greenwood and\nGrand Forks citizens, Is running\nat capacity. About 60 men are employed.\nU. 3, DOLLAR GAINS\nMONTREAL, Nov. 16 (CP)-The\npound sterling advanced 7-32c on\nMontreal foreign exchanges today\nto $4,88 7-16, while the United States\ndollar firmed l-32c to % discount.\nThe French franc held unchanged at\n4.64c.\nGold ond Base\nMetals Shares\nIndex Higher\nOTTAWA, Nov. 16 (CP)-Oold\nand bua metali moved upward during- the pait week, causing a rite in\nthe Dominion bureau ot statistics\nIndex for 23 mining stocks frc\n161.8 the prevloui week to 167.6 In\nthe week ending November 12, On\nthe corresponding date a year ago\nthe index, based on 1826 at 100,\nstood at 124.8,\nThe index for 20 (old stocks lut\nweek wai 131.9 compared with 127,2\nthe prevloui week and 111.5 on the\ncorresponding date a year ago. For\nthree bate metal stocks the Index\nwas 314.9 compared with 304.7 the\nprevious week apd 179.8 a year ago.\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Preu\nClosing exchange ratea:\nAt  Montreal\u2014Pound  4.88\nU.S. dollar .99%; franc 4.64,\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.89; Canadian dollar 1.00%; franc 4.65%.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 105.15 franca;\nU. S. dollar 21.50 francs; Canadian\ndollar 21.51 francs.\nIn gold: Pound Us; U.S. dollar\n59.43 cents; Canadian dollar 59.50\ncents.\n7-16;\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Nov, 16 (CP)  -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nSstraight Tough\n108%\n106%\n104%\n90%\n98%\n96%\n89%\n79%\nNo. 1 hard  110%\n...o. 1 nor  108%\nNo. 2 nor.  106%\nNo. 3 nor _.  102%\n\"To. 4 nor  101%\nNo. 5 wheat ....  97%\nNo. 6 yheat _. 91%\nFeed   81%\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 16 <AP)-\nWhent cash: No. 1 heavy dark northern spring, 60 lbs., 1:38% to 45%;\nNo. 1 Red Durum, 1.16%.\nFlour, carload lots, per barrel In\n98-lb, cotton lacks: Family patents,\nunchanged, 7 to 7.20; itandard patents, 15 higher, 6.80 to 7, Shipments\n15\/685, Bran 31 to 31.50,\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, NOV. 16 (API-Copper iteady; electrolytl: spot and future 10.50; export 10.60-52%,\nTin easy; ipot and nearby 51.75-\n87%j future 51.37%-50.\nLead strong; ipot .New York 5.20-\n25; Bast St. Louis 5.05.\nZinc firm; tist BL Louli ipot and\nfuture 4.95.\nIron quiet, No, I, f.o.b. Eastern\nPennsylvania 20,50; Buffalo 19.60;\nAlabama 15.60.\nAluminum 19:00-22.00.\nAntimony, spot 12.50.\nQuicksilver (8,00-95.00.\nPlatinum 4800.\nWolframite 16.25-50.\nBar silver unchanged at 45%.\nAt London closing: Copper, itandard ipot.\u00a343 6s 3d; future \u00a343 13s\nK.\nElectrolytic, Ipot, bid \u00a347 15s;\nasked \u00a348 5s.\nTin, spot \u00a3234 10s; future \u00a3232\nLead, spot \u00a320 15s; future \u00a330\n13-1 9d.\nZinc, ipot \u00a315 17s Od; future \u00a316\nfa Sd.\nBar illver wu % lower at 21 MM.\n\u25a0 i-i     ii\nw&\n\u25a0 PAG.  NINE\nWlnnloeo Groin\nWINNTPEO, NOV. 16 (CP)-Oraln\nfuturei quotations:\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nWheat:\nNov\t\nDec.\nMay   \t\nJuly  ..\nOats:\nNov\t\nDec\t\nMay  ..\nJuly  .....\nBarley:\nNov\t\nDec\t\nMay  \t\nJuly \t\nFlax:\nNov, \t\nNov, ....\nDeo\t\nMay  ......\nRye:\nNov\t\nDec  .\nMay\n108%\n105%\n107%\n105%\n48%\n44%\n45\n44%\n62%\n61%\n58\n57%\n100%\n105%\n108\n106%\n46%\n45%\n45%\n44%\n62%\n61%\n68%\n106%\n105%\n106%\n105%\n46%\n44%\n45\n44\n02\n60%\n57%\n109\n106%\n106\n106%\n46%\n46%\n45%\n44%\n62%\n61%\n58%\n57%\n169%\n169\n163\n159% 169% 160\n154% 180% 169%\n159% 159 169%\n163      162%   162%\n77% 77% 77% 77%\n74 77% 74 76%\n72% 75% 72% 75%\nCaih wheat\u2014No. 1 hard 111; No. 1\nnorthern 100; No. 2 northern 108;\nNo. 8 northern 105%; No, 4 northern\n102%; No. 5,98; No. 6, 94; feed 76:\nNo, 1 garnet 104%; No. 2 garnet\n103%; No. 1 durum 123*. No. 1 a.r.w.\n99; No. 4 Ipecial 96; No. 5 ipecial\n90; track 107%; screenlngi $12.50\nper ton.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 16 (CP) -\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver itock exchange today:\nLilted: Big Mitt 100, Bralorne\n740, BRX 1700, Cariboo 656, Dentonia 800, Gold Belt 600, liland\nMount 2300, Koot Bella 500, Mak\nSiccar 1000, Minto 6150, Morn Star\n7000, Pioneer 1480, Premier 370.\nQuatsino 2000, Reeves MacD 1000,\nReno 900, Sally 800, Salmon 1500,\nSheep Creek 500, Vidette 800, Wayside 12,800.\nCurb; Beaver SU 1000, Can Rand\n1000, Congress 7000, Cork Province\n10,000, Fairview 1000, Geo Riv 8500,\nGold Mount 1000, Grandview 11,300,\nGrange 13,000, Grull Wihk 1500.\nHome 4500, Indian woo, Koot Flo\n5000, Nicola 600, Noble Five 10,700,\nPend Oreille 7875, Pilot 1000, Quesnelle Q 1000, Reliance 2000, Relief\nArl 800, Reward 500, Rufus Arg\n2000, Silversmith 3000, Standard SU\n200. United Emp 7000, Waverly 1500,\nWesko 4000, Whitewater 1000.\nPROFITS TAKEN IN\nCOAST OILS\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 16 (\u00bb)-Oll\nstocks continued active on the Van*\ncouver itock exchange today although profit-taking developed,\nforcing the majority ot Issues down\nfraction! to 20 centi. Transfers totalled 412,9:0 shares.\nOkalta featured oil section but\nclosed down 20 at 68. Calgary tc\nEdmonton was off 16 at 2.02, Vulcan\ndropped 8 at 62 and Calmont wis\ndown 6% at 32. Home at 1.20, A P\nConsolidated at 19, Dalhousie at 80\nand McDougal Segur Ex at 16%\neach lost 2 cents.\nPioneer Gold was weak, dropping\n25 at 6.0*. Bralorne gained 15 at 8.38,\nPremier added 4 at 3.10 'and Wayside advanced 1% at 7. Vidette wai\nup l at 91, Minto firmed % at 28%\nwhile Nicola at lo% held unchanged.\nPend Oreille topped the baBe metal group gaining fl cents at 1.39 ln\nactive trading. B.C. Nickel was\ndown i at 33 and Golconda eaied a\nfraction at 12%. Noble Five wu un\nchanged at 4%.\nCANADA DOLLAR\nOFF AT N.Y.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 16 (CP)-Of-\nferlngi of the United Statei dollai\nin European market! helped send\nFrench francs and Netherlanda guilders higher today,\nThe franc closed up ,00% eent at\n4.65%, while the guilder climbed\n.02 cent, Thi pound sterling, after\nan earlier spurt, finished off % at\n14.89. Canadian funds were down\n1-32 at 100%.\nThe United States dollar tn London sagged % to finish at 4.8S tc\nthe pound, unchanged from Saturday's New York rate.\nGold engaged abroad today Included $2,023,000 taken In Canada\nand $240,000 in India.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, Nov. 16 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more shares ln trading\non Toronto stock exchange, Induttrlal section, today: 3391 Brazilian;\n300 Br & Dis; 140 Brew Corp; 3830\nC C tc F; 1065 C In Alco; 1420 CPR;\n726 Con Smelt; 778 Ford A; 690 Gyp\nte Ala; 3514 Nickel; 12,300 Mass\nHar; 11,250 Un Steel; 569 H Walken.\nMONTREAL, Nov, 16 (CP)-Salei\nof 100 or more iharei ln trading on\nthe Montreal stock exchange today:\n4317 Brazil; 116 BC Power; 233 BC\nPower B; 2343 Can Car pfd; 786 Alcohol A; 1776 CPR; 1120 Cockshutt;\n740 Smelten; 205 Dlst Seag; 467\nHow Smith; 430 Imp Tob; 465 Ind\nAce P Corp; 049 Nlck-1; 210 Lake\nof Woods; 6115 Massey; 1279 McColI; 45 Nat Brew; 5850 Nat Steel\nCar; 175 Ford A; 1195 Massey Py;\n1500 Shawinlgan.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Nov. 16 (CP) -\nPrime commercial paper %,\nSterling exchange easy at $4.88\nfor 60-day bills and at $4.89 for demand.\nCanadian dollars\u2014 Today, 100%;\nyesterday, 1005-82; week ago,\n1003-18.\nFrance\u20144.65%c.\nItaiy-5.26%c.\nUruguay\u201480c \u2022\nBAR GOLD UNCHANGED\nMONTREAL, Nov, 16 (CP) \u2014\nBar gold in London unchanged at\n$34.74 an ounce in Canadian funds;\n142s 3 l-2d in British. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $34.96\nIn Canadian.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Nov. 16 (CP) .-Butler prices firmed on Canadian\ncommodity exchange produce section ted.**\nButter:'Que F 25%; western 25%A.\nEggs spot: Ont A-large 47A; A-\nmedium 42-A.\nWheat, No. 2 Nor. 1.14; barley,\nNo. 3 C.W. 70; oats, No. 1 feed 49;\nspring wheat patents 6.60: bran,\nton 29.25; shorts 31.25; middlings\n37.25; rolled oats, bag, 3.25.\nOPTION ON GRANVILLE GROUP\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 16 (CP) -\nNorthern Syndicate Ltd. a parent\ncompany to Osoyoos Mines Ltd., hu\nsecured an option on a large group of\ngold and stiver claims on Granville\nMountain ln the Paulson area, It\nwas announced today.\n-__:\nMOVED SOLDIER'S BODY\nHAMILTON, Ont., (CP)-Twenty\nyearl ago Pte. William McBride\nMarshall was killed in Frc nee. His\nbrother has just been notified his\ngrave has been discovered and the\nbody removed to a more suitable\nresting placejn Orlvillers Cemetery\nFrance.   f^~\nChristmas Cards\nORDER EARLY\nWe Invite you to come and see our exclusive line of Christmas cards. . . Etchings, snow scenes, exquisite colorings and modernistic designs. . . from the leading Canadian and English manufacturers. Out-of-town customers write for our\nsamples. You will be pleased with our display of cards,\nTWO DOZEN CARDS\nPRINTED WITH YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS FOR\n$1.75, $2.00, $2.50, $2.75, $3.25 Up to $4.50\nPHONE 144\nAND HAVE OUR LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE CALL PERSONALLY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCommercial Printing Dept.\nii-tif'-iii biW*1^^'\n \u25a0^~\n\u2014i r-\nPAGI TSN -\nCrown Derby\nCHINA\nin a New and Distinctive\nPattern\nSee Our Lovely Display\nMann, Rutherford\nDrag Co.\nMORE ABOUT\nCORBIN HUNTER.\n(Continued From Page One)\nont man's arm wis heavily bandaged. Previously a land search\nparty had found thick splints and\ntorn stripe of cloth wh'ch led them\nto believe one of the hunters had\n\u2022uffered a broken limb.\nThe flyers dropped 80 pounds of\nfood and a first aid kit. The men had\nno game with them, Smith said, and\nwere apparently out of ammunition\nor shots would have been fired to\nattract attention.\nSignals have been flashed from\nCorbin mountain to Fred Whitney\nhead of the third search party sent\nout to look for the hunters. He will\nreturn here to take the new trail.\nWEEK BEFORE RESCUE\nIt is expected the rescued men\nwill be brought bock to Corbin within six or eight days.\nWhitney's party, investigating a\ncloud of smoke behind Corbin\nmountain, followed a trail that led\ntwo miles south of the international\nboundary.\nTwo bloodhounds have been used\nin the search since the splints and\nbandages were found at the abandoned camp.\nAccording to neighbors the lost\nmen were Inexperienced hunters.\nThey (jave been homesteadlng a\nsmall tract of land near here.\nCorbin is near the Alberta-British Columbia boundary and about\n40 miles north of the international\nline.\nABILITY TO CAPITALIZE ON THE\nBREAK. GIVES KIMBERLEY 5-J\nWIN AJ NELSON TURNS ON HEAT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON; B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO, NOVEMBER 17.\nAnnounce Plans to Wed in Spring\nMaple Leafs Battle All\nthe Way But Lose\nat Goal Mouth\nKOZAK, CARR\nTRY TO MIX\nCarr Seeks Revenge as\nHis Head Cut But\nlsHe!dOff\nAN OPTIMISTIC HUNTER\nSAULT STE. MARIE, Ont., (CP)\n\u2014Mose Russel was well-equipped\nwhen he started out from here on a\nhunting trip. Among other things\nhe carried an umbrella. \"It's to\nkeep the flies away,\" he explained.\nLet a Want Ad Do It!\nRCOFING\nEaves Troughs, Etc.\nIL H. Maber\n510 Kootenay St,\nWestern\nMonarch\nMined From the Richest\nPart of the\nDrumheller\nLower Seam\nComplete Heating\nSatisfaction\nLOW IN ASH\nA Trial Will Convince You!\nLump $10.50\nStove  $8.00\nPhone Your Order to 889\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\nOpposite the Bay\nwmmaamm\nKimberley Dynamiters oeat\nNelson 5-3 at the civic centra\narena Monday night and retained\nwithout a'blot their Allan cup\nescutcheon; but they got an awful\nscare. Nelson went out to put on\nthe heat from the start and for\nthe greater part of the game commanded the play. Lack of finish\nat the goal-end of attacks, and\nover-eagerness that gave Kimberley breaks with most of the home\nteam up the Ice, accounted mainly\nfor the 5-3 count.\nKimberley's lone goal in the first\nperiod, and two more in the second\nwith Nelson scoreless until almost\nthe bell, and another Nelson counter early in the third to make the\ntally 3-2 had the crowd on edge.\nThere wasn't any suggestion\nabout it being an easy-going exhibition game, for Kimberley found\nits vaunted supremacy challenged.\nTaking advantage of breaks as the\nMaple Leafs played all up trying\nto get the equalizing goal, the Dynamiters stretched the lead to 5-2 in\nthe latter half of the final canta,\nand found Nelson still wasn't ready\nto admit defeat Even with a man\nshort the Maple Leafs carried the\nplay to the visitors' net, and Smitn\nscored Nelson's third counter in the\nmelee.\nKimberley's speed and finish,\nplus a defence that handed out\nplenty of stiff body checks, won\nthe game. It took a mighty good\nteam to beat Nelson and Kimberley\nwas that team.\nSET TEMPO\nNelson set the tempo of the game\nwith a fast break by Car on a shot\nout from the blue, Red passing to\nCulley at the goal mouth and Hornqulst sliding out to smother, a dandy\nsave. The whole Nelson team was\nup on the play. Keiver shot across\nthe Nelson goal mouth on the return.\nKimberley's defence men were holding their positions and taking long\nshots. Keiver robbed Bicknell In the\nKimberley area and led an attack\nthat Bill McKay broke up by falling\non the rubber to block Kemp. The\nchange of lines brought Mackie,\nRedding and Moore out against\nEuerby, Duckworth and Paterson\nand Moore was close on a pass In\n'.he Nelson area that he carried ln.\nBicknell went through. Splitting\nthe Kimberley defence and was ln\non the goal when Hornquist's sweep\ntook the puck off his stick. Both\nt;ams were breaking fast from their\ndefence areas, and producing all\nkinds of speed. Nelson's pass game\nwas better than on Saturday, with\nCarr making some fine plays to\nthe goal mouth that failed by the\nnarrowest margins. Klmberlex failed to get in close until with the\nchange of lines Mackie and Redding\ngot away fast and had the Nelson defence out of place. McKay slid out\nto clear. Klmberley's defence had\nto produce all they had as the locals thrust in again and again.\nFIRST COUNTER\nWilson took the puck from Culley In centre Ice to launch Klmberley's first scoring attack, passing to Keiver when he was blocked. Keiver, coming up fast, got\nthrough unchecked and scored behind McKay at tht latter went\ndown.\nNelson replied with a return attack that was close, and almost had\nanother goal chalked up against\nthem as Almack broke away and\nwent in. Paterson lost a fine opening\ndoing it alone with Euerby unchecked beside him. The Kimberley men\nbegan to hand out heavy checks\nas the going got hotter. Atwell was\nchased for clipping Kemp's stick in\n* \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0s\u00bbwO\u00bbswsjsjpsj\u00bbsp\u00bbsisjsss*sa\nVITAL STATISTICS\nIN KIMBERLEY.\nNELSON TILT\nSummary in last night's Kimber-\nley-Nelson hockey game:\nFirst period-1, Kimberley, Keiver (Wilson) 14:39.\nPenalties\u2014Atwell, Burnett, Smith.\nSecond period \u2014 2, Kimberley,\nGoble (Redding. Mackie) 8:48; 3,\nICimberle.-, Redding 8:10; 4, Nelson,\nEgan 1:31.\nPenalties\u2014Burnett, Atwell, Goble,\nAtwell. Kozak.\nThird period \u2014 5, Nelson, Can\n(Smith) 8:06; 6, Kimberley, Goble\n(Kozak) 8:10; 7, Kimberley, Redding, 3:32; 8, Nelson, Smith 0:17.\nPenalties\u2014Egan, Kozak, Euerby.\nTeams:\nKimberley\u2014Hornqulst, goal; Kozak, Burnett, Almack, Robinson,\ndefence; Mackie, Redding, Moore,\nGoble, Wilson, Botterlll, Kemp,\nKeiver, forwards.\nNelson\u2014McKay, goal; Egan, Atwell, Bicknell, defence; Culley,\nSmith, Carr, Euerby, Duckworth,\nPaterson, Vickers, forwards.\nOfficials \u2014 Leo Desireau, Nelson,\nreferee; Ken Campbell, Kimberley\njudge of play; T. R. Wilson and W.\nFreno, timekeepers; Frank Ogenski\nand Joe Ogenski, goal umpires.\n-__.___..---.-_,_s_s_s_s_,_ssis_s\u00ab_\u00bbs.s_\nRADIO\nBARGAINS\nFor a few days we offer you exceptional buys in USED\nRADIOS and it will pay you to look over these machines.\nMajestic 4-tube Mantel Set, new tubes.\nMaiestie 9-tube Console\nSparton 8-tube Console\nPhilco 1936 11-tube, 5 band, used only six months.\nRogers 8-tube Console\nPhilco (1935) 2-volt all-wave battery set.\nPhilco 7-tube Mantel.\nAll of these sets are guaranteed in first class condition\nand at prices that no one need be without a good radio.\nSPECIAL OFFER\u2014 (\/IC AA\n1936 PHILCO CAR RADIO AT \u00ab|>4d UU\nPeebles Motors\nPhone 119 Baker St.\nMAJESTIC AND PHILCO RADIOS\nfront of the Nelson net, and Botterlll was sent out to lead the power\nplay. Fucks were flying hot around\nthe Nelson net when Burnett drew\na session in the cooler for using the\nbody on attack. They were playing\nfour apiece when Smith, slashing\nat Reddings' stick, upset the Kimberley man. Atwell got back at that\nmoment and the teams were still\neven. Smith and Burnett were still\noff at the b\u00abl.\nBurnett's penalty was up at the\nstart of the second, and with a man\nto spare the Dynamiters moved up\nin another power rush. Smith's return sent play to the other end. Burnett, losing the puck to Duckworth,\ntripped the Nelson man and was\nsent to the box again. With the locals all up Wilson broke, backed by\nKozak, and Atwell made a fast return to break it up. Hornqulst was\nln d'fficultles In a plleup In front\nof the net and Mackie \"golfed\" the\npuck out.\n8HOOT UP ICE\nAt full strength again, Kimberley\nadded to McKay's troubles with a\nrush, and Nelson came back on\nPat Egan's attack. Redding broke\nbehind Nelson and passed to Goble,\nwhose knee-high shot was cleared.\nForced back into their own area\nKimberley battled tooth and nail for\nthe puck and finally shot up the\nice in a chorus of boos,\nMoving In on Nelson, Mackie,\nRedding and Goble hammered at\nthe net until Goble put the puck\nIn as McKay went down.\nThe   Dynamiters,   taking   no\nchances, shot up the Ice to keep out\nNelson's four and five-man attacks.\nAtwell  was  Chased for  bouncing\nWilson against the boards at the\nNelson end, and Kimberley again\napplied  the  heat  treatment.  The\npower play was clicking in fine\nstyle, except for the fact that McKay\nwas hot and his team mates travelled at top speed trying to break\nit up until Atwell got back.\nNelson moved in then, and play\nwas held well ln the Kimberley\narea. Kemp and Botterlll were\nclose on their break. Goble resented\nAtwell's check and tried to tangle,\nand despite their loving up and\ngrinning Ref Desireau chased them\nboth.\nRedding broke from the faceoff\nand shot to the side of the net and\nGoal Ump Joe Ogenski said no\ngoal, Klmberley's argument won\nthe day, however, and the counter\nwas chalked up. McKay saved\nfrom Mackie when the latter got\naway unchecked,\nEGAN 8CORES\nEgan broke the \u00bbe for Nelson\nwhen, apparently having lost C-1-\nley's pass, he shot from behind to\nHornquist's stick and Hornqulst\nhelped him score It. Kosak was\nchased on the next play for elbowing Nick Smith, and Kimberley\nscrambled to shoot up. Pat Egan\ntook a baseball swing at Kimberley's\nhigh shot up the ice and was close\nto making a fair return. Mackie was\nin on McKay at the bell.\nEgan was in the box at the start\nof the third for tripping Mackie\nas the second ended, and Koiak\nwas back in the game. Mackie rode\nPaterson off the puck on Blcknell's\nnass. Nelson started shooting up\ntho Ice and the power played failed.\nNelson played three defencemen.\nunable to get a whistle, when Egan\nreturned. Kimberley shot up with\nthe first pressure, and they had to\nwith Nelson burning them ln.\nKozak drew two for tripping\nEuerby as the Nelson lad drove in.\nBurnett made a fine save when he\nblocked Smith as the latter went\nup with Carr and only Burnett tc\nbeat.\nPressing In, Nelion got the break\nat latt when Culley battled though\nfrom a faceoff. He lost It, but the\nrubber went over to Smith on the\nwing and Carr got the rebound\nof his shot to make It good. It\nwas Juit In time, for Kozak came\nback on the next play.\nBurnett stumbled over Euerby's\nstick and the latter was chased for\na penalty. Nelson turned the tables\nby playing up instead of back and\nkept Kimberley on the defensive\ndespite being short a man. Klmber-\noccasional  breaks   gave  the\nDynamiters' defencemen their only\nrest.\nNO-GOAL AND GOAL\nKimberley's fest break with Redding leading produced another argument as Mackie batted ln his second rebound, but Nelson claimed\nBUDDY  ROGERS\nMARY PICKFORD\nHOLLYWOOD, Nov. 18 (AP)\u2014The persistently -rumored and fre\nquently denied romance between Mary Picltford and Charles \"Buddy'\nRogers crystallized tonight tn the informal announcement of plans for a\nwedding in the spring.\nAvailable records give 43 years as the age of Miss Plckford, Toronto-\nborn \"America's Sweetheart\" of the silent screen. Rogers, orchestra\nleader and screen player, is 32.\nMiss Flckford has been married twice; Rogers not at all. Her first bus\nband was Owen Moore, motion picture actor. She divorced him at Mlden,\nNevada, in 1920. Three weeks later shc married Fairbanks.\nFpr more than a decade they were the \"royal couple\" of the movi-\ncolony.\nIn 1933 they separated. Two years later Miss Pickford appeared be\nfore a Los Angeles Judge and testified that Fairbanks was guilty of Indifference and neglect, \"which defeated the deepest aims of man-lags.\" She\nwas granted a divorce.\nMotor License Penalizes \"Little\nHan for Being Little\", Cranbrook\nHead of Farmers'Board Declares\nGas Tax Is Fair, A. B. Smith States, for It\nPaid as Car Used; Farmers' Institutes\nNow Have Membership of 6000\nVICTORIA, Nov. 16 (CP).-The\nburden of the motor licence on the\n\"small man\" who did hot buy as\nmuch gasoline in a year as his\nlicence cost was stressed by A. B.\nSmith of the East Kootenay district,\npresident of the advisory board of\nthe British Columbia Farmers' Institute, in presenting the chairman's\nreport at the meeting of the board\nin the parliament buildings today.\nThe gas tax was fair enough, Mr.\nSmith said, because that, was paid\nas the car was used, but the motor\nlicence \"penalized the little man\nfor being little.\"\nThe chairman also said there was\nan Increasing dissatisfaction among\nfarmers with returns from relief\nwork. He felt some useful,endeavor such as providing a stdrage\nbasis for the flood waters should\nbe undertaken Instead of grading\n.ssr\\ re'r-dini- roads.\n6000 MEMBERS IN B.C.\nTwo   new   farmers'   Institute!\nhad been formed last year, W. J.\nBonavla, secretary to the advisory\nboard, said In presenting his report This brought tha number of\nInstitutes throughout tha province\nto 211. The membership had\nshown an Increase of 400 to approximately 6000.\nMr. Bonavla also reviewed leg\nislatlon effecting farmers which had\nbe\u00bbn passed last year.\nR. C. Bias, member of the board\nfrom Surrey Center, suggested the\nadvisory board should meet once a\nyear and not at the call of the\nminister.\nMemben of the advisory board\nwho are attending the sessions are\nE. W. Neal, Vancouver Island; A.\nB. Smith, Cranbrook; O. B. Apple-\nton, West Kootenay; H. Bote,\nLower Fraier Valley; R. C, Bits,\nCariboo; W, Harrlion, Kamloops;\nR. Blackburn, Prince George; T.\nJamieson, Pouce Coupe.\nhe was in the creche and made It\nslick.\nBut the Dynamlten made good\nwithout   arguing   seconds   later\nwhen Goble came up behind the\nplay to take  Kozak's pan and\nbeat McKay cleanly.\nThere were indications of fisticuffs as Nelson forced a plleup in\nthe Kimberley net, with Carr and\nSmith in the thick of it Nelson was\nplaying all up with Kimberley still\nshooting up. Goble was close when\nthe Dynamiters' broke and Mackie\npassed to him In front of the net\nReddlng't fait break from the\nblue line and his soeedy rush In\nunenocxed gave Kimberley Its\nfifth counter,\nStill pressing, Nelson milled\nabout until Smith picked up the\npuck at the blue and drove It\nhome.\nCarr had hli head cut open In\nthe melee and tried to go after\nKozak but both teams united In\nholding them apart. Carr wu off\nthe Ico to get treatment when he\nelected to go back again but the\nboyi still held them and It wat\nno go.\nKeiver and Robinson were going\nin on McKay at the bell.\nMORE ABOUT\nNELWAY TRAFFIC\n(Continued From Page One)\nCommittee Favors\nCut in Granby's\nCapitalization\nVICTORIA, Nov. 16 (CP).-The\nirivate bills committee of the legislature today reported favorably upon a bill to empower a reduction\nin the capitalization of Granby Consolidated M'nlng, Smel'ing & Power\nCompany, Ltd., from $50,000,000 to\n$2,500,000.\nA. S. Lane, who appeared for\nthe company, said the purpose of\nthe measure was to permit the reopening of Allenby and Copper\nMountain properties which would\nemploy several hundred men.\nMcConchies Are\njust About the\nThe figures show that Canadian\ntraffic was 734 cars heavier than foreign in the past season, whereas\nlast year in the same months there\nwere 880 more Canadian than foreign cars recorded; but that the foreign cars made the greatest gain,\n1233 compared with 1187, in the\nperiod under review.\nJuly and August are the two\nmonths of heaviest traffic.\nThe figures for each year to October 31 follow, but the compart-\non above have been made on the\nmonths April to October inclusive:\nCanadian C.-.rs:\nInward\n1935 1936\nW'hoJe Cheass!\nMELBOURNE, Australia, Nov. 16\n(CP).\u2014When the McConchle family\n3oes to church in a body, it not\nonly attends the service but conducts it as well.\nThe famlly-172 members of tt\u2014\nrecently attended South Richmond\nMethodist church in a body. The\nservice was conducted by^Mr McConchle, assisted by another Mc-\nConchie. The choir of 30 and the\norchestra of three were all McConchies, and McConchies took up an\nunusually large collection from\nmore than 100 other McConchies.\nMr: and Mrs. David McConchle\ncame to Austrlla 64 years a<!o from\nLangham, Scotland, and founded\nthe family of which their eldest\nsurviving son, aged 77, Is now\n\"head man \" The family has Its own\nvery successful cricket team.\n\t\nJanuary ...\n61\n51\n\"ebruary .\n..   51\n49\n'arch \t\n44\n35\n*-pril \t\n64\n109\n'lay \t\n191\n259\n.Tune\t\n2(11\n261\n398\nAugust\t\n270\n420\nSeptember\n. 267\n347\nOctober ....\n199\n264\nForeign Cam:\nInwf.rd\n1035\n1036\nJanuary ...\n.10\n52\nFebruary .\n.   29\n18\n''larch ......\n.   31\n30\nloril _\t\n.   41\n53\nMay \t\n16.1\n245\nJune\t\n199\n226\nJuly \t\n252\n430\n\"\\ugust   \t\n. 262\n390\n\"\u25a0-otember\n. 148\n272\nOctober\t\nm\n166\nPassengers:\nInward\n1935\n1536\nTanuary \t\n210\n264\nTebruary ...\n151\n155\nMarch \t\n162\n138\nApril\t\n282\n395\nMay\t\n942\n1549\n1225\n1379\nJuly\t\n1023\n2718\nAugust \t\n1.589\n2524\nSeptember.\n1162\n1706\nOctober\n779\n1084\nOutward\n1935 1938\n59    48\n51\n39\n52\n183\n240\n269\n320\n229\n218\n51\n30\n94\n255\n285\n400\n421\n378\n302\nOutward\n19C5  193C\n31    47\n33\n30\n36\n138\n184\n232\n242\n157\n20\n29\n49\n212\n199\n407\n383\n287\n170\nMORE ABOUT\nAlBERTAKIUING\n(Continued From Pag* One)\nTha body of Karl Schvcsts, 40,\nformer section foreman at Tleland\nand alleged to be the slayer, was\nfound lying in a slough partly submerged ln water. Schvests clutched\na rifle in one hand another was lying nearby. Condition ot the rifles.\npolice taid, indicated they had been\nuted as clubs on the woman and\nchild.\nLEFT A LETTER\nPolice said Schvests left a letter\n\"explaining everythinS.\" Its contents were not divulged.\nPolice reported Schvests had chopped a hole in the Ice covering the\nslough. While standing over the hole,\nhe shot himself through the temple\nand fell Into the hole but the body\ndid not go completely under water\nPolice laid they had bten In-\n' formed Schvests had been \"acting\nqueerly\" .lately and according to\nother lection men he wat \"tore\"\nand holding a grudge agalnit Nelton. # Railway    officials    itated\nSchvests resigned  In the fall of\n1935 becauie of III health.\nIn June, 1918, five persons were\n'hot to death with a revolver at\nGrande Prairie, Alta. Tbe crime has\nnot been solved. Again in October,\n1930, a shotgun mass murder near\nSmokey Lake took the lives of five\noersons. George Dwernychuck was\nhanged for the latter shootings.\nSHOOTING STARTS\nGarry said he met Jack Towns of\nFlatbush soon after he arrived at\nTleland, adding Towns reported\nfinding the Nelson home locked and\na fire at Schvests' house where a\ncall went unanswered.\n\"Towns left us and when he got\nabout 300 feet away, shooting started,\" Garry went on. \"There were\nfour shots fired. Erna (Betook) said\n'Somebody seems to be shooting\nat m.'\n\"I thought that was Impossible\nbut it was very foggy and we could\nnot'see any distance. The last shot\nconvinced me, however, that she was\nright, because the bullet came pretty\nclose to us. We proceeded to Nelson's house and Doris Ssnds came\nout of a little bunkhouse. *\u2022\u2022\n\"While we were standing there,\nTownt cams back and  mid  he\ncould not go ahe-H In the face of\ngun fire, He mid: 'that man must\nbe cr,---'\u2014he told me to go back\nor he'd shoot me.'\n\"We  were  standing  beside  the\n(Nelson) house when a cat jumped\nun on the wlndowslll,\" said Garry.\n\"It had blood all over its paws. I\ngot an inkling then that somethin**\nwas wrong, but wanted to keep it\nfrom Erna, so I told her to wait\nand I'd go and take a look.\"\nHEADS BATTERED\n\"I went to the door and looked\nthrough a small pane and saw the\nmother and child lying on the floor,\ntheir heads all battered.\"\nMiss Ristock. sister of Mrs. Nelson,\n\u2022md Garry had been invited to visit\nthe Nelson home: Both live at Flat-\nbush, seven miles south of Tieland.\nGarry  aald   the  gunman   wat\nlighted loon after he discovered\nthe bodies. Garry fled on I speeder\nwith  Townt,  Mitt  Ristock,  and\nDorli Sandt who ipent the prevloui night alone In a bunkhouse\nafter the had failed to receive a\nreply at the Nelson home. Mrt.\nNelion, had hired her ai a domestic.\nAfter the night alone In the\nshack, Mlsi Sandt went to\nSchveiti' houie and had a cup of\ntea with- him, Garry ttated.\n\"She inquired about the Nelsons\nond he told her they would be back\npretty soon,\" the Flatbush man\nadded.\nMORE ABOUT\nSPANISH\n(Continued From Page One)\nOutward\n1935  193C\n213\n171\n146\n220\n243\n169\n133\n372\n1431\n1353\n2779\n1324\n149(1\n1597\n11381 l'i--\n841 1265\nDecision in a Week\non Stork Derby\nTORONTO, Nov. Id (CP)-Validity of the \"stork derby\" clause of\nCharles Vance Millar's will, bombarded today In.open court by attorneys representing relatives who\nreceived no part of the eccentric\nlawyer's $500,000 estate, will be determined at least temporarily next\nweek by Mr. Justice W. E. Middle-\nton.\nIn a courtroom crowded with\nlawyers, tbe Ontario supreme court\nJustice said he would hand down a\ndecision in a week, \"if at all possible,\" not only on the validity\nquestion but whether the clause\ninsurgent planes had been brought\ndown during the air attacks. Twenty-\nthree government machines flew\nover MEdrld pursuing the 15 raiders.\nOne bomb fell on a house at\nnumber seven Villalar street, close\ni the French embassy.\nThe air ministry reported government planes bombed the railroad\n-tatlon at Fascist-held Sal-manca,\nburning war materials stored there,\nand an arrenal at Cadiz.\nCROWDS SEEK SHELTER\nWhen the insurgent planes bomb-\nJ the Atocha station, homegoing\n;rowds of the Gran Via, an important business street, scattered for\n3afcty Into subway entrances as\nanti-aircraft guns were fired nt the\nilaner. The defenders' tracer bullets\na-hed the d\"rk sky.   *\nIt was the first night raid in several weeks. One insurgent plane\ncrashed in flr.mcs when a government gunner scored a direct hit\n-arlicr today.\nBefore the insurgents lost their\nfo-thold in Madrid, several beautiful and expensive new buildings ot\ntho university were wracked in artillery and machine-gun exchange,\nthe government said.\nA small group of the enemy filtered across the shallow Manzanares\nriver and se'zed one building on the\neaaptlS. th- official statement declared, but heavy fire by the Madrid\nmilitiamen kept back reinforcements\nwho sought to join them.\nAll Madrid's newspapers except\nthos6 operated by the government\nwill suspend publication because of\na newsprint shortage, the Defence\nJunta said, but some will move to\nValencia.\nTwo Youths Ara\nCaught at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 16 (CP). -\nJohn Abbott, IS, captured by police\natter a brief chase in which a warning shot wu fired over hit head,\nwas held today, charged with breaking and entering the home of Alfred\nJ. Wirth at 3 a.m. Sunday.\nReggie Parker, 19, waa captured\nby a citizen and a police officer\nSaturday night and was charged\nwith attempted auto theft\nAd* ertise Youi Prodyet Now!\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nBadminton racquets restrung Holland's, opp. Telephone Office. (3382)\nMilitary Whist tonight, Fairview\nParish Hall, 8 p.m. 25c. (3801)\nLeather Badminton Grips\nTHE SPORT SHOP\n(3618)\nC.C.M Hockey Sticks 35c to $1.50\not Hipperson Hardware Company.\n(3632)\nSKATES SHARPENED\nIMMEDIATELY si CORRECTLY\nWADE'S 8HOE SHOP\n(3635)\nColorful array of toarvet In the\nnewett fall and winter patterns.\nJACK BOYCE STYLE SHOP\n(3558)\nBand instrument!, Cellos, Violins,\nGuitars, Banjos, Mandolins, Bagpipe!, Reeds, etc. WEBBS MU8IC\nHOUSE, 806 Baker St. (3358)\nGet your B.V.D.'t at Walt'i Newi\nDepot.  \"B\" for Liberty; \"V\" for\nTrue Story; \"D\" for King Comics.\n(3637)\nWe have Christmas Cards to suit\nthe most exacting taste, and you\nwill agree they are priced right\nNelson Daily News, (3155)\nParties interested ln Mining Lectures to be held this winter please\nregister at the Chamber of Mines\n(3625)\nKeep your children healthy with\nCHOQUETTE BROS.' bread..Raisin,\nWholewheat, White, Rye.   Ph. 258.\n(3369)\nWhy not make your selection of\nChristmas Cards now? Our stock\nis still complete. Truly lovely cards\nyou'll be proud to send. Nelson\nDaily News. (3156)\nTickets TRAIL LADIES' CHOIR\nCONCERT Friday night may be\nhad from any member of St Paul's\nChurch Choln. Admission 35c\n(3639)\nYour protralt expresses more personal thoughtfulncss than any gift\nyou can make. Make your appointment NOW with MEERE8' 8TUDIO.\nPhone 46. (3390)\nToday In Memorial Hall It the\nChristmas   Sale   of   8t.   Saviour's\nMothers' Club Tea, terved from 3 to\n6. Join ut and have a cup of tea.\n(3628)\nSALVATION ARMY\nBrigadier A. E. Dalzlel, Div. Officer for B.C., will conduct a public\nmeeting in the Army Citadel tonight\nat 8 p.m.  You are invited.     (3630)\nYou heard the Trail Ladiet' Choir\nat the Festival latt iprlng. Do not\nfall to hear them on FRIDAY EVENING at the Auditorium. An artistic treat assured.\nVelour\nHATS\nby Biltmore\n$^.50\nVelours are' this season's\nsmartest hat. In pleasing\n:olors to go with your\novercoat. Black, grey,\nbrown and green. Snap\nbrims.\nRMORY'C\nUt    Limited     W\nMORE ABOUT\nRUSSIA\n(Continued From Page One)\nEDEN DEPLORES\nHITLER'8 ACTION\nLONDON, Nov. 18 (AP)-rof\neign Secretary Eden in the houie\nof commons today depored Chancellor Hitler's repatriation\".. Qer>\nman waterways as rendering \"tome-\nwhat difficult the conduct of International relations.\"   ,\nIri Paris today officials laid Bel-\nglum and Czechoslovakia would Join\nFrance ln protesting Germany's denudation of the navigation clauses\nof the Versailles treaty.\nEden expressed \u2022'regret!\" Oermany has \"again abandoned procedure by negotiation in favor ot,\nunitaleral action despite the assurance given last year.\"\nThe foreign secretary's remarks\nwere In reply to a question from the\nLabor leader, Clement Attlee.\nTAX SLOT MACHINES\nBLENHEIM, Ont, (CP)-By t\nvote of four to two, Blenheim town\ncouncil decided to tax slot machines *\noperated in the town. A fee of $50\nfor the first machine in each establishment and $10 for each additional wiU be levied.\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 203\nMedical Arts Bldg,\nRev. Theodore W. Anderton, famoui lecturer and Bible teacher\nfrom Chicago, will tpeak at the\nSCANDINAVIAN CHURCH, Thunday at 7:30 p.m. English will be\nuted. All are welcomel (3640)\nOwing to a serious Illness In the\nfamily of two of the principals In\nthe cast of the Little Theatre's play,\nadvertised for Monday, Nov. 23, the\nmanagement regret to announce\nthat the play will have to be Indefinitely poitponed. (3834)\nTELEVISION FOR OLYMPIC8\nTOKYO, (CP)-The Japan Broadcasting company is experimenting\nln an effort to make direct television\nviews of the 1940 Olympic Games\navailable throughout Japan.\ncould be construed to include births\nof Illegitimate children. One mother\nclaimant to the fortune, Mrs. Pauline Clarke, registered fire births\nafter separating from her husband,\nNELSON  FERRY\nTHE NELSON FERRY WILL\nNOT OPERATE BETWEEN MIDNIGHT, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER\n17th. and 7 A.M. WEDNESDAY\nMORNING, NOVEMBER 18th.\nProvincial Public Works Dept,\nNelson, B.C. (3631)\nA Special OKer\nby the Makers ef\nCambridge\nClothing\nWe Have Been Instructed\nte Make a Genuine\n$5*00 Reduction\non Every Suit in Stock\nThlt Enables Ut te\nOffer Yeu\nHAND TAILORED\nCLOTHING IN PURE\nWOOL FABRICS\n$27-50\nStylet fer Young Men\nand Men\nGODFREYS*\n, - LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\n318 BAKER      PHONE 270\nNEL80N FERRY\nCOMMENCING WEDNESDAY\nMORNING, NOVEMBER 18th, THE\nNELSON FERRY WILL BE OPERATED BY A TUG AND WILL OPERATE BETWEEN THE HOURS\nOF 7 A.M. AND 12 MIDNIGHT\nEACH HAY UNTIL FURTHER\nNOTICE.\nProvincial Public Works Dept,\nNelson. B.C.\nNov. 13, 1936. (3609)\nSpokane - Seattle - Vancouver via\nNelway, Daily, 7 a.m.; via Trail.\nDaily except Sunday, 11 a.m.\nHeated Coaches\nGREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nNelson Depot   \u2014   203 Baker St.\n(3386)\nLAST TIMES TODAY\nComplete Shows 2:00-7:00-8:26\nHit Number Ont at\n2:06-7:06-9:45\nOne Hour They\nCouldn't Account\nFor\nFRANCHOTTONE\nLORETTA YOUNG\nIn\n\"Unguarded\nHour\"\nI\nI\nHit Number Two at\n3:25-8:25\nA criminal lawyer\nturns on the world\n*\u25a0 of crime\nRICHARD DIX\nIn\n\"Special\nInvestigator\"\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1936_11_17","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0412304","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1936-11-17 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":"1936-11-17 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":""}]}