{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2022-03-16","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1936-11-03","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412354\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Mine Issues to Rescue in\nSluggish Trading\n\u2014Page Nine\nVOLUME 35\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNELSON, BRITISH ^-   .VIBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER. 3, 1936\nNUMBER 170\nLABORITES  FLOP  IN  CITY  ELECTION\nBOTH DEMOCRATS AND REPUBLICANS IN\nSTATE OF WASHINGTON PREDICT A WIN\nBUT DEMOCRATS\nLAY CLAIM TO\nHUGE MAJORITY\nDeclare They Will Be\nVictors by 95,000\nVotes Today\nLANDONITES CLAIM\nMAJORITY 35,000\nU. S. Betting Favors\nRoosevelt by Two-\nand-Half to One\nSEATTLE, Nov. 2 (AP)-Both\nDemocratic and Republican spokes-\ni men claimed victory in Washington\nstate tonight from more than 850,-\n, 000 eligible voters ln tomorrow's\nelection.\nv The weather bureau predicted\ncold, clear weather throughout the\nstate. A turnout of over 700,000\nvoten waa Indicated.\nSaul Haas, Seattle, collector of\ncustoms and Democratic campaign\nmanager, estmlated his party would\nwin by 95,000 votes while J. N.\nEmerson, Pullman, forecast Governor Landon would carry the state\nby 25,000 to 35,000 votes. Four years\nago Franklin D. Roosevelt polled\n144,000 more votes than Herbert\nHoover.\nWashington will elect six congressmen; a governor for a four-\n\u25a0 year-term; three supreme court\nJudges and eight other state officials.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nMHMISIllMMWUllllll\nCANADA'S DEFENCE\nPLANS WILL BE\nKNOWN DEC. 1\nTORONTO, Nov. J (CP). \u2014\nHon. Ian Mackenzie, minister\nof national defence, said in an\ninterview here today results of\nCanada's plans for reorganizing\nthe militia will be announced\nDec. 1.\nEvery phase of the reorganization, which will reduce the\n\"paper-strength\" of the militia\nfrom 125 units to 85 has been\n\"practically concluded,\" he said.\nActual strength, when the\nunits have been mechanized,\nwill be far greater than at present, he said.\na_s_s_vai\u00abaa\u00aba>\u00ab\u00bbj*\"^t*~\u2014**~\nFRENCH SHOUT\nDOWNjL DUCE\nCommunists Jailed for\nan Attack Upon\nItalians\nPARIS, Nov. 2 (AP).\u2014A Crowd of\nanti-Fascists shouted \"down with\nMussolini\" outside the Chambery\ncourthouse tonight after two communists were arrested for an attack\non Italian Fascists yesterday.\nDemonstrators dispersed when police arrived. French officials, apprehensive of possible international\nrepercussions, pushed an inquiry\ninto the attack.\nA 48-year-old plaster worker\nnamed Perrotin and a 40-year-old\nchauffeur named Croissant were\ncharged -With'' asiatfltirif *Charf\u00ab\nSoardi, Italian consul.\nFour other Fascists were Injured\nin street battles which followed a\nblackshirt meeting.\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014Trani-\nportation by land, sea and air and\nall the government activities that\nare a part of the passenger, freight\nand parcel carrying systems of the\nDominion were moulded today into\none great branch of the public\nservice\u2014the Department of Transport.\nHon. C. D. Howe, who heads the\nnew department, gave some indication of the scope of the merger\nand the hopes for its development\nOutstanding in the forecasts of\nfuture activity contained ln the two\nannouncements were the following:\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nBUILDING PERMITS HERE SWELL\nTO $133,20 AT END OF OCTOBER\nFINK IS BUILDING $610 HOUSE\nWASHINGTON AND\nrOREGON POLLS TO\nCLOSE AT 8 P.M.\nPolling plaees will begin doling\nit 3 p.m. today, eaitern itandard\ntime, (12 noon, Notion time) In\nrural eaitern Georgia, and continue \u25a0hutting up ihop at half-\nhour and hour Interval! In other\nMctlom of the country until the\nliitboothi are locked In Oregon\nind Washington at 8 p.m., Paelflo itandard time.\ntt will be 11 o'clock on the eaitern inboard when the tv\u00bbo Pa*\ntide coait itatei close their poll*.\nCloting only an hour earlier\nthan Oregon and Washington will\nbe lonu polling placet In Rhode\nIsland, which remain open until\n10 p.m., eaitern time. Thoie In\nCalifornia are due to clou at 7\np.m., Pacific time.\nOctober Total Reaches\n$25,594; Month's\nPermits 42\nBuilding permits in Nelson to\ndate this season -are at their highest\ntotal for the period since 1931. They\nreached $133,289 on October 31 compared with $59,829 last year, excluding the $144,000 civic centre permit.\nThe figure itfas twice the 1934 total\nat the same time, ond four times\nthe 1933 total.\nOctober permits were unusually\nheavy at $25,594, compared with\n$11,184 in the same month of 1935.\nFeature permit of the last 10 days\nof the month was that issued to A.\nH. Green Co. Ltd. to build a house\nfor J. P. Fink at the corner of Ward\nand Hoover streets, the permit being for $6000.\n(Continued on Page Two)\ningernail Tortured Sailors of\nBritish Navy Charged on Japanese\nOfficer Is Allegedly\nermed 'Drunken Sot'\nby Policeman\nSHANGHAI, Nov. 2 (AP).-De-\n\u25a0III of the alleged \"fingernail\ntorture\" of three Britlih iillon by\nJapaneia police were disclosed\ntoday by Britlih naval official!\nlira.\nThe official! aald a fountain pen\nJammed  under tha flngir-\nMill of one tailor and then Ink\nforced Into the wounds to make\nhim ilgn a \"confession\" sought by\nthe Japanese.\nThe Incident, which caused\nVlce-Admlr.il Sir Charles Little,\ncommanding on the China station,\nto poitpone a visit to Japan, occurred at Keelung, Formosa, October 7.\nAccording to Britlih naval officii., three seamen from Britlih\nnaval craft then stationed at Keelung were arrested by Japanese\n(Continued on Page Tin)\nEXPORT COPPER TOUCHES 10.48 CENTS\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (AP)-Price\nexport copper reached a new\neak today at the equivalent of\n1.48 centi a pound.\nUp from around 10.35 cents at the\nlast week and from 9.85 cents\nmonth ago, the metal commanded\nla best price since January, 1931,\nhon it was quoted at 10.55 cents\npound.\nMetal authoritiei reported the\niBrket reflected a continued large\nemand   for   armaments,   limited\nstocks and broad buying for Industrial demands throughout Europe.\nAt the same time it was said some\ndomestic producing quarters had\nheard that some of the recent buying abroad was for speculative ac\ncount.\nIn the domestic market the quo\ntation was unchanged at 10 cents i\npound. Sales in October were said\nto have set a record at 178,795 tons.\nThe previous monthly high was\n175,900 tons in July of this year.\nNEW TRANSPORT\nDEPARTMENT IS\nBROUGHT ABOUT\nAirmail, England to\nPacific Coast Set\nfor 1938\nRAIL COMMISSION\nGETS REVAMPING\nPresent Officers Are\nRetained With New\nAppellations\nNo Commercial\nFreeze Damage\nTrees Matured, Says\nHunt; May Need\nIrrigation\nWith the orchard! on a winter\nbasis ai a result of early frosts,\nwhich   matured  the  leavei and\ncaused the tap to retreat to the\nrooti, no damage from the preient\nlow temperatures, uihered In on\nHallowe'en, li to be feared, E. C.\nHunt, diitrlct agriculturist, stated\nMonday, when questioned on the\nmatter.   The fruit was all picked\nand the field crops all harvested,\nMr.  Hunt  stated,  io  there  wai\nnothing to be Injured.\nA year ago the big freeze that\nbegan with October 28 caught all\nthe trees, both orchard and shade\ntrees, in full leaf, quantities of winter apples unpicked, and large fields\nof vegetables still unharvested. The\nleaves turned black in a night and\nbeside the crop loss there was costly\nwinter-killing    all    through    the\nKootenay.\nWhile the trees are in good shape,\nMr. Hunt stated, the soil ls extremely dry, owing to the deficient\nrainfall, and growers may find it\nadvisable to do fall irrigation to restore it to a normal condition for\nproducing growth.\nMaritime Strike\nOfficials Extend\nOrder to All U. S.\nSAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 2 (AP)\n\u2014Striking Paelflo coait maritime\nunloni tonight extended their\nblockade order to all United States\nporta.\nThe order affecting Pacific coait\nihlpi wherever they may be, ex-\noept thoie outbound from Honolulu for coait porta, wai issued\nafter union representatives caused Indefinite postponement of a\nUnited States maritime commission hearing here by walking out\nWhere Mayor Papworth of Kaslo\nMet Death In Saturday Crash\nAbove are two-photos of scenes at Kaslo where Mayor W. Vidler\nPapworth met his death on Saturday last. The upper photo show the high\nbridge which connects the upper and lower sections of the city of Kaslo.\nThe crolsses indicate where the auto containing the mayor, Mrs. Papworth\nand W. P. Dudkin went through the board railing of the bridge to crash\nradiator-foremost 30 below. Mrs. Papworth and Mr. Rudkin, C. P. R.\nagent at Kaslo, were seriously injured. The lower photo shows the auto\nresting upside down below the bridge. Upper photo was taken by Frank\nMorton of Kaslo and the lower one by Edward L. Costello, also of Kaslo.\nEIGHT KIDDIES\nRAID VICTIMS\nSWEEPING CONSERVATIVE GAIHS\nAT LABOR EXPENSE RECORDED IN\nMUNICIPAL VOTE, ENGLAND, WALES\nInsurgents Bomb the\nSuburbs of Madrid;\nExpect Attack\nMADRID, Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014Thrn\nchildren wera killed and eight\nadults Injured In Fascist air and\nland bombardment! of Madrid\nsuburbs today.\nIniurgent warplanei dived on\n1 Madrid's outskirts In four iipar-\n, ate villus, bringing, the totil of\n; their daylight raids In the part\ni four dayi to 21,\nDeaths of the children in the Val-\nlecas district railed the total death\ntoll to 216 since last Friday.\nFascist-field batteries at the same\ntime shelled heavily the. environs\n,o$ Madrid, whas,e.4*}ha.bili(lJts. feared\nthe~range shortly might be lengthened anti their homes bombarded.\nThe \"zero hour\" for the final iniurgent attack was expected momentarily tonight.\nU. S. ELECTION\nAT A GLANCE\nTo be elected: President and\nvice-president, 35 United States\nsenators, 432 members of the\nhouse of representatives, 33\ngovernors and many lesser\nstate officials.\nTo do the electing: An estimated 55,427,000 registered voters, of whom perhaps 45,000,000\nactually will go to the polls.\nTo watch and count: Approximately 912,000 clerks, judges and\nother election officials, and uncounted other thousands of\nparty workers.\nVoting units: 122,464, an increase of 2277 over 1932.\nNecessary to elect for president: 266 electoral votes.\nPresident Roosevelt will vote\nat his home at Hyde Park, N.Y.,\nand Governor Landon at Independence, Kas. The governor\nafterward will go to the state\ncapital at Topeka to await returns.\nVice-president Gamer is registered  at   Uvalde,  Tex.,  and\nCol. Frank Knox, hii Republican opponent, at Chicago.\n...._.,t<tttttitM<t<tim\nLate Returns Show a\nLandslide Against\nthe Laborites\nINDICATION OF\nPOLITICAL WIND\nLabor Suffers Total of\n147 Losses in 130\nMain Cities\nTOKYO SHAKEN\nBY EARTHQUAKE\nAnglican Churches\nWill Give Thanks\non November 29th\nTORONTO, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014\nThankiglvlng for completion of\nthe restoration fund campaign will\nbe observed In all Anglican\nchurches In the Dominion Sunday,\nNov. 29, Archbishop Der*wyn T.\nOwen, primate of the church In\nCanada, announced today. The\nfund of nearly $1,000,000 hai bam\nrailed since 1932 and will be uied\nto benefit tuperannuated clergymen and wldowt and orpham of\nclergymen.\nTwo Wildcats Are\nKilled, One Shot\nHALIFAX, Nov. 2 (CP)-Arthur\nRogers never killed two birds with\none stone but he did slay two wildcats with one bullet Rogers found\nthem sleeping on a pock, fired away\nand saw both animals roll over,\nshot through the head. He claimed\na bounty today.\nDunbar Must Die\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nChief Justice Aulay Morrison in\nsupreme court today refused an application for a stay of execution for\nEarl Dunbar, convicted with Charles\nRussell of the murder of a bank teller here last January, and sentenced\nto be hanged in Oakalla Jail on Friday. 7\nMARKETS AT\nAGLANCE\nBy the Canadian Pren\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks irregularly higher.\nToronto mines\u2014Higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat down -H to V,\ncent.\nLondon \u2014 Bar silver unchanged;\nother metals higher.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver, lead and\nzinc unchanged; export copper\nhigher.\nMontreal\u2014Silver unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Cotton, rubber and\nsugar higher; coffee lower.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar unchanged at 1.00 1-16.\nTRUCK INJURIE8 FATAL\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) .-William Steele died here today from a\nfractured skull suffered a short\ntime previously when knocked\ndown by a truck at a downtown\nstreet intersection.\nFATHER FAINTS\nWHEN TOLD ABOUT\nQUADRUPLE BIRTH\nSENATH,' Mo\u201e Nov. 2 (AP).-'\nMrs. James Bridges gave birth\nto quadruplets in a two-room\nlog cabin near here tonight and\nher sharecropper husband fainted when Dr. F. W. Speidel told\nhim the news.\nThe children, one boy and\nthree girls, were born from 6:30\np.m. to 6:36. Two of the girls\nare in serious condition and Dr.\nSpeidel said he was trying to\nobtain a nurse.\nDr. Speidel estimated weights\nof the babies at between two\nand three and one-half pounds\neach.\nMrs. Bridges is 35, and her\nhusband 44.\nBridges said he had not named\nthe quadruplets. \"I'm hardly\nable to count them yet,\" he\ngasped.\nBallots Talk Today in lhe U.S. But\nElectors Will Be Silent for Weeks\nElected Today, U. S. A.\nPresident Not \"It\"\nTill December 14\nBy CHARLES NORMAN\nAuoclated   Pren  Staff Writer\nNEW YOBK, Nov. 2 (AP)-The\ncollege of electon doesn't have a\nfootball team, but it's a famous institution throughout the United\nStates.\nThat is because when the sovereign people of the United States go\nto the polls to elect a president, they\nonly elect the electors who elect\nthe president The electors them\nselves can't do anything about it un\ntil they have been notified of their\nelection by the secretaries of state\nof their respective states.\nIt Is all very complicated, particularly Article XII of the constitution\nwhich provided this method of\nchoosing the chief executive, but it\nworks out pretty smoothly, and a\ngood time is had by all, particularly\nthe electors. As for the sovereign\npeople, practically everybody in the\nUnited States will know the night\nof Nov. 3 who has been elected, although it won't be official until the\ncollege of electors says so. And it\nwon't \"talk\" until the first Monday\nr.der the second Wednesday in De\ncember,\n(Continued on Page Two)\nTOKYO,   Nov.  3   (Tuudiy)-\n(AP).\u2014A sharp earthquake today\nihook Tokyo and all eaitern Japan\nat 4:56 a.m, (11:56 a.m., Monday\nP8T).\nThe epicentre wai in the tea off\nthe coait of Fukuihlma, about 150\nmiles northeast of Tokyo. No dim-\nage or casualties had been re-\nported. \u2022\nComing Juit before dawn the\ntremblor awakened the sleeping\ncapital, many of whole citizens\nruihed Into the itreeti In night\nattire.\nThe movement of many buildings due to the shock wn perceptible to observers.\nGoes to Jail\non Nights Only\nHAMILTON, Ont, Nov. 2 (CP).-\nAlthough Matthews Kennedy received a jail term following his\nconviction on an assault charge\nhere, his family will nbt become\npublic charges while he lervei his\ntime. An agreement was made between' his counsel and the magistrate whereby Kennedy would\nspend each night for the next two\nmonths in jail.\nWeaffi\ni&\nMin. Max.\nNELSON  14 34\nVictoria   34 47\nNanaimo   26 45\nVancouver   26 44\nKamloops  -  16 30\nPrince George  8 28\nEstevan Point   36 48\nPrince Rupert... -  34 46\nAtlin  32 40\nDawsop, Y.T  14 26\nSeattle   30 50\nPortland, Ore  30 52\nSan Francisco  50 62\nSpokane    12 30\nLos Angeles  52 60\nPenticton   -  14 \u2014\nVernon '. 14 \u2014\nGrand Forks  8 42\nKaslo   15 -\nCranbrook   18 25\nCalgary  4 22\nEdmonton   0 22\nSwift Current   2b 26\nPrince Albert  2b 16\nSaskatoon  \u2014 0 16\nQu'Appelle   4 IB\nWinnipeg  16 20\nMoose Jaw  2b 20\nForecast: Nelson and vicinity-\nLight shifting winds, mostly cloudy,\naccompanied by rising temperatures.\nChildren Must\nObey the Curfew\nVALLEYFIELD, Que., Nov. 2 \u2014\n(CP).\u2014Woe betide the boy or girl\nunder 14 here who itayi out after\n7 o'clock at night. Police Chief Ovila\nClaude began last night to enforce\nthe old curfew law, which carries\na penalty of $1 to (20 fine or a\nmonth ln Jail.\nLONDON, Nov. 3 (Tuesdiy) (CP\nCable). \u2014 Sweeping Conservative\ngains at the expense ot Labor became apparent early, today as returns from yesterday's municipal\nelections through England and\nWales were compiled.\nIn 130 principal cities and towna\nthe galna and losses in polling for\nmunicipal councils was as follows:\nLabor: 47 gaim; 124 losses.\nConservatives: 76 gains; 39 losses.\nLiberals: 10 gains; 16 losses.\nIndependents: 67 gains; 25 losses.\nLabor candidates in many cases\nwere defending gains made three\nyears ago. Polling took place ln\n360 cities, towns and boroughs to\nfill vacancies created by the trlen- '\nnial retirement ot one-third of the.\ncouncillors. In many smalle-(|owns\nthe voting was not on party lines,\nwhile in numerous larger center!\nLiberals and Conservatives coalesced or cooperated against Labor,\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nCHERRY GROWERS SEEK HIGHER\nOF NEW PROCESSING INDUSTRY\nWRONG SIGNAL\nSHOREHAM, England, Nov. 2\u2014\n(AP)\u2014A crowd lining the ihoro\ncheered when a lifeboat wai launched to rush to the aid of a French\nsailing ship.\nFrom the vessel's mast fluttered\nthe code signal \"W,\" the international signal meaning \"I want medical assistance urgently.\"\nThe lifeboat, with a hastily recruited phyiician on board, drew\nalongside-^and the ship's skipper explained he wanted a pilot\u2014not a\ndoctor,\nHe had hoisted the wrong signal.\nSALESMAN IS GUILTY\nCRIMINAL NECLICENCE\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP). -\nJohn Harper, 53-year-old automobile salesman was convicted of\ncriminal negligence by an assize\ncourt Jury today ond remanded by\nMr. Justice Manson to the end of\nthe assizes for sentence.\nHarper was charged with manslaughter arising out of the death\nof Mrs. Fanny Stephenson, 60, who\ndied of injuries received when\nstruck by a car allegedly driven by\nthe accused, Sept. 2.\nIn Position to Supply\nCanada Processed.\nCherries\nHEARING SLATED\nFOR NOVEMBER 26\nBlack Cherries Suited\nProcess; Means Much\nto Growers\nApplication of tha Britlih Columbia Fruit Growers' association\nfor an Increased tariff on processed cherries will be heard November 26 at Ottawa, according ta\nword received from James R. MacGregor, secretary of the Canadian\ntariff board.\nRepresentation! by the Fruit\nGroweri are to the effect that\nwith adequate protection, B. C.\nprocessed cherries cm supply tha\nCanadian market In competition\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nKing Edward Will Take Pari Today\nin Opening of British Parliament\nDefence, Regulation\nof Political Dress\non the Program\nLONDON, Nov 2 (CP) .-Making\nhii first appearance in parliament\nai Sovereign, King Edward tomorrow will deliver the speech from the\nthrone opening the new session. A\nheavy program of legislation awaits\nthe lords and the commons.\nBecause the King is a bachelor,\nthere will be only one throne on\nthe dail in the houie of lords. In\naddition the King will not wear the\ncrown on entering the chamber,\ngarbed in the traditional heavy\nvestments of scarlet velvet bordered\nwith gold. It will be carried before\nhim by a court dignitary.\nThe King is to make the declaration of Protestant faith required of\nall British rulers. According to law\neach Sovereign must make the pronouncement either during the coronation ceremony or at his initial\nmeeting with parliament, whichever\ncomes first.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nDAUGHTERS TESTIFY; MOTHER SENT UP\nON CHARGE MURDER BY COUNSELLING\nSTETTLER, Alta., Nov. 2 (CP).-\nNear collapse, Mri. Christine Pogmore, widow of George Pogmore,\nvictim of a \"window slayer\" at his\nByemoor district farm, heard her\ntwo daughters testify for the crown\nin court here today.\nThe 41-year-old widow was committed for trial at the next assizes\non a charge of \"murder by counselling.\" Emmanual Ernst 31-year-\nold farm hand, accused of the actual\nmurder, was also sent to the high\ncourt for trial.\n\"Listen dear, if I can get rid of\nGeorge\u2014\" began a note which Betty\nPogmore, 15-year-old daughter of\nthe accused woman, found on the\nfarm last spring, the girl told the\ncourt\nShe had shown the letter, which\nshe said was in the handwriting\nof Ernst, to her mother. Her mother\ndestroyed it, she testified.\nNineteen letters, allegedly given\nthe police by Emit, October 19, the\nday after the slaying were, put in\nas evidence without being read in\ncourt    '\n_____.______________t___________i\n HOE TWO-\nBAYONNE Mill\nDUE 10 START\nUP THIS WEEK\n.Non-Arrival of Motors\nIs Delaying Its\nOperation\n. ' Mill at the Bayonne mine, near\nTye, is expected to be in operation\nthii week, according to announce-\nlinenti in Vancouver papori credit-\n*\u00abt_ to W, C. Ditmars, president of\nOrull-Wihkine Gold Mine Ltd. It ii\n\u25a0 80-ton mill but it ii expected lt\n[will be itepped up to 60 or 65 tons\n'\u25a0\u25a0 a day when in steady operation.\n' Delay In the arrival of twa small\nmoton held up the opening of operations, expected in October.\nThe coast announcement states:\nDevelopment has been done from\nUme to time during the pait 24 to\n25 years, but it was only when the\n- present  company   took   hold   and\nbuilt a wagon road into the prop-\nI erty that actual mill construction\nWas decided, upon. Early this year\na superintendent and staff of men\nwas sent into the property to clear\nthe wagon road of mow and begin\n.instruction of the mill buildings.\nA sawmill was put Into operation\nen the ground and the necessary\ntimbers and lumber required for\nthe  construction of the buildings\nwas cut.\nCYANIDE TREATMENT\n, Details of the plant were worked\nqut by T. V. Lord, member of thc\nstaff of the Cinsoltdatcd Mining tc\nSmelting Co. Ltd., by whom he was\nloaned to the company to make the\nnecessary metallurgical tests and\ndesign the mill plant and buildings.\nAfter making the necessary tests,\ncyanide treatment was decided\nupon and the mill designed accordingly.\nThe mill will be operated by a\n225 h.p. diesel engine with a direct\ndriven generator. All plant units\nWill be driven by Individual motors,\nthus doing away with Bhafting, belting, etc. In addition to this engine,\nthere,are two engines totaling 250\nri.p. (or operating the air compressors. Crushing equipment consists\nLUMBAGO\nThe p_in and atiflnwe of back-ache, that maVf\n\u2022wry movement a torture. go quickly when yen\nlake T-R-C'e. T-R-C'e atop ibarp palsa and\ndull \u25a0_*__, quickly, aurely. Actim thru thl\nblood, they mire oot th\u00ab pain-esuainf. toxica.\nTake T-R-C'e. You'll let nlW-awa. No\nharmful dnije. SOcandllat, alldniuilU. .\nT-n-C'a (Tansaleu-n'e Rsiaunsatle Capi\nof a Jaw crusher and a ball mill\nDEVELOPMENT PROCEEDS\nDevelopment operations are proceeding at the none and sufficient\nore has been steped to supply the\nmill operations (or a considerable\nperiod, Mr. Ditmars statei. The drift\non No. 8 level is being proceeded\nwith and the new level, known as\nNo. 4, ii being driven to cut the\nore body underneath No. 1 level.\nThe ore shoot, according to engineer!' reports, li quite rich. There\nii every reason to expect that within\nthe next two months Bayonne will\nbe shipping its bullion to the assay\noffice either at VafKfluver or Ottawa, Mr. Ditmars advises.\nFred Webber in\nKaslo Hospital\nKASLO, B. C\u2014City Clerk H. T.\nHartin was a recent business visitor\nin Rossland.\nFred Webber is a patient In the\nVictorian hospital, sutfering from\na poisoned hand.\n\"Bud\" Thompson of Gerrard was\na city visitor Thursday en route to\nhis home after visiting his parents\nat Willow Point, and welcoming\nhome hi! daughter Joan, who ipent\nthe past six monthi visiting relatives in England. Mrs. Thompion\nand son are also In Willow Point\nfor a few dayi.\nR. Bell of Ainsworth wai a Kailo\nvisitor Thursday,.\nProvincial Constable Gilker left\nFriday lor points in the Lardeau\ndistrict.\nMrs. F. S. Chandler ls a patient\nin the Victorian hospital.\nCarl Mohr of Ainiworth spent\nThursday in the city.\nHarold Abey has returned to his\nMirror -Lake home after visiting\nhis grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. F.\nT. Abey of Rossland.\nJoe Streit of Ymlr was the guest\nof his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J.\nStreit, early in the week. Mr. Streit\nwas accompanied by V. Mclntyre,\nalso o( Ymir.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Wilson and\nchildren left Friday (or their new\nhome in Princeton, where Mr. Wilson will be manager ol the Over-\nwaitea store, having been transferred to that point (rom the Kaslo\nstore.\n- NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B,C*-TUE8DAY MORNINO. NOVEHpR\nYmir-Nelson lode\nGold Geological\nReport Complete\nDescriptions of Chief\n. Properties Feature\nNew Memoir\nBONDS SLIP\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (AP)-Prlces\nin the bond market slipped fractionally to a point or more today\nas the attention o( traders and Investors was trained on the national\nelection.\nThe foreign list attracted little attention.\nOLD\nSCOTCH WHISKY I\napeqo\nNew Low $\u00ab3.00\nPrice      O *H *\n\"DBTniED, AMTOTHD .AND BOTTLED tS SCOTLAND*\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Llaucr\nControl ;Board or by the Covernment of British Columbia,\nComprehensive descriptions of\nthe principal lode-gold properties\nIn the Ymir-Nelion area o( Britlih\nColumbia are contained in a memoir issued by the geological survey, department of mines, Ottawa.\nThe 400-iquare-mIle area, an Important producer of lode-gold many\nyean ago, hai experienced a renewal of lntereit in recent yean.\nNearly 20 years have elapaed, however, lince geological work wai undertaken in the area, and the object\nof the inveitigationi by W. E. Cock-\nfield leading to the present report\nwai to study the ore deposits ln\nthe light of recent mine development.\nThirty-three properties are described, with accounts in each case\nof the geology of the deposits and\nof the nature and extent of development work. The report ls accompanied by a colored map showing the geology of the Second Relief\ngroup o( claims, and is Illustrated\nby figure sketchei of several of the\nnropertics. In the introductory lection, accounts are given o( the general and economic geology of the\narea.\nThe rise ln the price of gold, the\nsuccess achieved by several properties, and the activity exhibited by\nthe neighboring Sheep Creek camp\nhave combined to attract considerable attention to the Ymir-Nelson\narea. Consequently, more properties\nare bein -.'developed or examined\nthan has been the case (or yean.\nMany (ormer producers are being\nre-examined or tie under development, and several new mills have\nbeen constructed. The area is readily\naccessible, with Nelson the chie!\ndistributing center. Electrical power\nis available to most of the properties at a reasonable capital expense.\nCurrencies Have\na Mixed Trend\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (CP)-The\npound iterling and French francs\nappreciated fractionally in termi o(\nthe United States dollar today while\nthe Belgian belga and the Netherlands guilder declined.\nSterling closed up Vs o( a cent at\n4.89, francs up .0014 o( a cent, at\n4.65VS). The belga down .00% o( a\ncent, and the guilder down .06 of a\ncent. The Canadian dollar was unchanged at 100 1-16.\nReduced Fares\nFOR\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Fineit In the Interior\"\n'. HUME HOTEL\nFree Bus Service                                 Geo. Benwell, Prop,\nBREAKFAST 30c and UP\nLunches 40c to 50c                           Dinner 40c to 65c\n\u25a0 . , , ROTARY AND OYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 7W         NELSON, B.C.         422 VERNON ST.\n.: \".'     '':'\":: .\"   \"*    '     ',,5\nRemembrance\nDay\nbetween all points in Canada\nFare and One-Third\nfor Round Trip\nGOING \u2022 Tues.. Nov. 10, to\n2.00 p.m. Wed., Nov. II\nReturning I Leave destination\nnot later than midnight, Nov. 12\nFull iiijcrniiiUon {rem\nany agent\nW.JHW\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nProduct of Paris\nSimone Simon . .. imported (rom Paris .. . Hollywood's latest (ind\nIMPORTATION OF\nPETROLEUM IS UP\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)-Can-\ncda's imports of petroleum during\nSeptember amounted to 138,029,034\ngallons worth $4,804,769 compared\nwith 131,234,607 at $3,888,889 in Sept.\n193S, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported today,\nThe leading supplien were the\nUnited States with 108,021,937 gallons, Colombia 14,635,333, Peru 7,-\n794,629 and Venezuela with 7,637,235\ngallons,\nMORE ABOUT\nBUILDING WORK\n(Continued From Page One)\nPreparation! (or winler, notably,\nreshingling, again marked the permit applications, of which there\nwere 42 in the month. The number\nof penons undertaking repain to\ntheir houses is regarded as a reflection of much improved business\nconditions locally.\nPermits applied for In the closing\ndays ol October included:\nT. Hulls, to build concrete basement and chimney, Nelson avenue,\n$200.\nWilliam Mack, to repair houie,\n1223 Water street, $50.\nA. J. Crack, to shingle hal( house,\nJosephine and Mill streets, $75.\nF. A. Stuart, to remove lumber\n(rom armoury, $75.\nN. C. Stibbs, to reshingle, 817\nJosephine street, $75,\nA. J. Crack, to reshingle Dr. L. J.\nMaurer's house, 703 Mill street, $280.\nA. J. Crack, to build fence, 416\nLatimer, $20.\nJ. A. Curran, to reshingle house,\nThird and Gordon, $75.\nT. Hulls, to build foundation, Fifth\nstreet, $80.\nR. A. Aldersmith, to add partition,\n$30.\nCrows are said to be the worst\nnatural enemy of ducks.\nHUME\u2014B. B. McCannon, Grand\nForks;- R. S. Fraser, Penticton; A.\nNelson, E. Boucher, 0. Sibley, J. B.\nWhalen, Medicine Hat; J. V. Car-\nMichael, Calgary H.Dale, E.H.Han-\nIcy, Toronto; J. W. Falls, H. Wlnslow, Trail; R. A. Meggy, Mrs. J.\nMcK. Buerge, Mrs. A. J. Wltson,\nKootenay Bay; Mrs. D. Fisher, Port\nCrawford; H. E. Mlard, Fernie; B. F.\nSmith, Premier; W. H. Ahler, Procter; W. M. Johnstone, Silverton; J.\nD. Kennedy, Vancouver.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL    ^\n\"Where the. Guest is %ing\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE  ROOMS\n\u25a0\u201e\u25a0 Fully Licenced\nJ'2*) Biker St.     . W..K. Clark. Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial Tourist and Faintly Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking; NELSON. B.C. Phone 234\n\u25a0a\u2014\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St \u2022\u2666hone 897\n8. WASSICK. Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHL.  RATES\nGood Comfortable' Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\n-AS. & MADDEN, Prop,\n.    Completely  Remodelled\nHet'-lh-J  Cold  Witir\nIn the HEART ol the City\n\u201e\u201e\u201e  Bargain Trip to\n\u25a0 UNI!        I \" *\nVancouver,\nVictoria, Nanaimo\nGOING NOVEMBER 20 ONLY\nFROM THE WEST KOOTENAY\nNAKUSP AND SOUTH\nProcter to Midway; Trail to Castlegar\nRossland passengers entrain and detrain at Trail\nRETURN FARES:\nFrom:                       To Vincouver Victoria Nanalmo\nCrand Forks $ 8.40 $10.15 $ 9.65\nNelson       10.30 12.05 11.65\nTrail       10.15 11.90 11.40\nNakusp  ' 11.65 \u2022 13.40 \u2022 12.90\n\u2022\u2014Via Weit Robson Nov. 19.\nCorrespondingly Low Fares From Intermediate Points,\nFinal Return Limit Dec. 4\nTickets Cood In Day Coaches Only\nNo Baggage Checking Privileges\nNo Stop Over Allowed\nChildren 5 yein of age ind under 12, half fire.\nRegular Train Service in Each Direction\nFOR FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY NEAREST AGENT OR\nN.). LOWES, City Ticket Agent, Nelson, B. C.\n. \u25a0 .'  .._...   .;-\u25a0..._;-L-  \u25a0\u201e_.'lL_  __ _\nMrs. Yeld Visits\nNakusp Reluming\nFrom Old Country\nNAKUSP, B.C.-Mn. R. A. Veld,\nwho hai been holidaying in England, viiited in Nakusp Wednesday\nen route to Edgewood.\nMrs, Markwick of Grahams Landing ii a guest at the home ot Mri.\nA, E. Fowler.\nMrs. C. Horrey spent several dayi\nat Arrow Park last, week vliiting\nher parents, Mr. and Mrt, G. Mauchline.\nM(. and Mrs. R. Sanderson and\nbaby daughter potored to town\nfrom Trail list week-end. Mr. Sanderson hai returned to TraU but\nMrs. Sanderson is remaining here\nfor several days and is a guest of\nher brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mn. H. L. Miller.\nMn. J. Parent Jr. and two children left Wedneiday for Foitoll,\nwhere her husband ii occupied ln\nlogging operations.\nDr. and Mn: J. Fish, who ipent\nthe summer monthi tn Nakuip, left\nTueiday. Mn. Fish will visit in\nFernie before Joining Dr. Fish at\nVancouver.\nMr. and Mn. Dave Fleming of\nKindcrsley, Sask., are guests at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. P. Henke,\nMr. Fleming was a former resident\nof Brouse.\nMiss Bessie McWhirter, who\nhu spent a six-week vacation with\nher parents, Mr. and Mn. H. McWhirter, left Saturday for Vancouver.\nA, H. Freeman of Rowland li\nrenewing acquaintance In Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Harvey spent last\nweek-end ln New Denver, guests\nof their son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mra. E. Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Rollins of Fauquier were shoppers in town Friday.\nB. Lock-wood of Edgewood wai a\nvisitor In Nakusp Wedneiday.\nMORE ABOUT\nBRITISH HOUSE\n(Continued From Page One)\nMORE ABOUT\nBALLOTS TALK\n(Continued Prem Page One)\nTextbooks, guidebooks, the constitution itsell filled to mak* the\nfunctions of an elector clear; lt wu\ntherefore necessary to track one\ndown. This hu been done. Th* result makei lt plain that the life of an\nelector ls not an unhappy one.\nHonored above hli fellow party\nmemben, he is notified by the state\ncommittee that he hu been appointed an elector. H* thereupon becomes a member et perhaps the\nmost exclusive college enrolment\nIn the country, If not the world. The\ncollege of electon consists of 931\nmen and women, or equal the number Of senators and representatives.\nIn some states the electon' names\ngo on the ballot\nComes election day. When the\nvotes have been tabulated, the secretary of state of hla state notifies\nthe elector ot his election a second\ncommunication tells him whit to do\nabout it He can hardly wait but\nwait he does, tor the forms must be\nobserved.\nOn the first Monday after the lecond Wedneiday in December he\nnyi good-bye to kith and kin. He\ntakes a train to the state capital. He\nmeets his fellow electon, strikes up\nfriendships. All pose for plcturei.\nThere ii a luncheon, en masse. The\ngovernor miy receive them as honored guests.\nThe amenities observed, the electors hold an organisation meeting,\n--noose a chairman and are called to\nirder. Each elector is given a ballot\nNow comei the most momentoui\n\u2022noment in the career of an elector.\nOne ot them putt the president ln\nnomination. As each man casta his\nvote he signs the rolls. (Sometime!\nengraved ballots are kept as souvenirs.) Once more there li a nomination \u2014 for the vice-president.\nAgain the electors cut their ballots\nind sign th* roll.\n\u25a0Thereupon all receive cheques for\ntheir expenses trom the secretary\nof state. They shake hands all\n\"round and \"drop ln to see me some-\ntime\" ls heard, or perhaps\u2014\"I'm\ncatching the 4:15; can you make It?\"\nThe rest ot the job devolves upon\nth* secretary of state who tends the\ncertified ballots to the secretary ot\nstate at Wuhington for transmission\n'.0 tha two Houses ot Congress ln\ntheir Joint lerilon, There the ballots ar* tabulated by statei.\nRut while the elector's Job li over\nafter he hu voted, hts fun may\ncontinue. In 1(53, ell the electon In\nthe union were invited to attend\nthe Inaugural ceremonies at the capital u special guests of honor, the\ntint time In the natlon'i history this\nhas happened. Souvenir bookt were\nhanded each. Their delighted posterity no doubt will show these and\nexclaim;      '    , ,\u2022' '\"\u25a0\n''Suit\u25a0.rrot.'hflier was *. college\nman. He went to the collage of\nelectors1'.\nFishermen Still\nGetting Big Ones\nProcter Ladies' Aid\nHears of Nelson\nConference\nPOUND FIRMS\n: MONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nPound Iterling firmed 1-18 cent on\nMontreal foreign exchanges today\nto $4.88 11-W wUh the United\nStatei dollar at 1-18 discount and\nthe French franc at 4.65 cents held\nunchanged.\nPROCTER B.C.\u2014J. Foss, another\nlucky fisherman, recently landed a\n13-pound salmon while fishing on\nth* main lake.\nCapt J. A. McDonald ot Nelson\ncaught two beauties Wednesday\nweighing 16 and IB pounds,\nT, Kelly ot Cranbrook wu a\nTuesday visitor at the Outlet hotel.\nRev. C. Harvey lift Tuesday\nmorning tor a dioceian meeting in\nKelowna.\nT.'M. Smith of Cranbrook arrived\nWednesday to tak* over the position ai C.P.R. operator in place ot\nA. 0. Arthur.\nRalph Hale ind William Harkneis\nof Ne'son are her* enjoying a few\ndays' fishing.\nJ. A. Jones, section foreman, wai\na Thunday viiitor ln Nelson.\nThe ladles' aid of the United\nchurch held Iti meeting Thundiy\nft the home of Mn. George Donaldson.\nMrs. A. R. Johnston of Harrop\n\u2022lave in address on the church conference which ihe attends In Nelion ai local delegate. She spoke\non the many ways ln which the\nchurch mbney is being uied and\nthe great need of more funds. She\nalio clerly dascribed all the departments of the church work. In\nconclusion she told of all the many\nIncidents and comical stories\nbrought to conference by different\ndeloi-atcs, which all went to mike\nher report very interutlng and en-\ntertiln'ng. Thoie ath-dlng were:\nMn. J. Hunt, Mrs. M. Mcleod, Mn.\nJ. UtlAOi, Mn. Wl'lhm Muirhead,\nMn. M. MncK'nnon, Mn. T*. Mair,\nMra. A. Crcbv, Mra. T. Know'son,\nMra. H. Clift, Mrs. J. Sewell, Mra.\nO. Johnion, Mrs. F. Boniccl, Mn.\nW. Halg-SmelMe, Mn. C. M. L*n-\nr-ster, Mn. Ma-Don-ld, Mn. D.\nMcintosh, Mn. L. Bulloch, Mra. P.\nBennett rnd Mra. R. Johmton.\nLoc-1 farmers, fearing last year's\nearly frost, have all tti>\u00bb> f'-ld\ncropa In and are now finlih'ng the\napnle nicking.\nG. Danlells, who tor the put\nweek has been confined to bed\nthrou'ti Illness, Is un and around\nagain in Improved health.\n$11 Million Out\non Farm Loans\nVICTORIA, Nov, - (CP) - Dr.\nJohn I). MacLean, chairman ot the\nCanadian Farm Loan board, Ottawa,\nand former premier and minliter of\neducation tor British Columbia, arrived here today to confer with W.\nS. Palmer, Victoria manager for the\nboard.\nOh the question ot farm loans, he\nlaid $11,000,000 had been loaned\nthrough the board to farmers ln Canada during the fiscal year, Repayment! were considered good, he\nlaid.\nBuy\nFINK'Shnb\nFURNITURE\nOn Mm Deferred\nPayment Plan.\nMcGEER TALKS\nLOW INTEREST\nTORONTO, Nov. t (CP) .-Canadians were called upon today by\nMayor McGeer ot Vancouver to\nbuild \"a new Canada-* twentieth\ncentury dominion that will tit properly into the scheme of progress\nthat Great Britain is developing\ntoday.\"\nThe Vancouver mayor pointed to\nBritish prosperity and the government's policy ot low Interest rates\non long-term debts and focuised\nattention on housing aAd the tourist trade u possible avenues ot Canadian advance,\n\"If It hu been necessary to find\nrecovery in Great Britain, where\nthere are hundreds of yean of productive capacity, through the medium ot low rites on long term\nInterests, how much mora necessary\nmutt it be where we are -till in a\nitate of development and require\nnew capital tor development and\nexpansion,\" he asserted.\nIndex on Mines\nStocks Is Down\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)-The Dominion bureau ot statistics today reported the index tor U mining\nstocks wu 158.7 for the week ended\nOct 29 compared with 158.4 the\nprevious week. The index on tha\nbise 1828 equals 100 was 110.1 the\ncorresponding week lut year.\nThe index for 20 gold stocks wu\n125.7 against 126X the preceding\nweek and 106.8 the same week in\n1835.\nThe Index tor three ban metals\nwu 295.2 compared with 286 the\nprevloui week and 170.2 a year ago.\nBronchitis\u2014\nAsthmajufferers\nGET QUICK RaiEF\nSleep Sound All Night Long\nOna or lore doaaa of thl FUMH BUCK-\nI.EY'f* MIXTURE eloped alotrb jut baton\nraUrlnc ensuree a rcatiul slight, a ateep.\nBUCKLEY'S famoue MIXTURE-mi.* In\nCanada \u2014 Is guaranteed - often \u00bb lew elpe\natop tn ordinary oosstb.\nAathnia-Bronchltia aufTerera aeijoy *\nooughlaaa night s you'll aim aound sad wake\nrefraahad If you will ba Juit wlaa enouib to\nlat \u2022 bottla and Oka I or I doata before Toll\nto to tad. BUCKLE J '3 ia aold avtry where.\nBecause there Is no consort, lt li\nunderstood the Duke of Beaufort,\nmaster of the horse, will ride with\nthe King In the state coach from\nBuckingham palace to Westminster.\nThe coach is the one in which King\nGeorge rode to his coronation,\nREARMAMENT TO FORE\nOne of the major items in parliament's heavy program ls the task\nof financing the government's plani\nfor large-scale rearmament.\nThe government also eeeki legislation to prevent disorders at public\nmeetings and to regulate the wearing of political uniform!, as the\nresult of recent Faiclit-Communist\nrioting In London's East Eend.\nIn some quarters it had been re-\nported the government will propose\nlegislation along two lines to cope\nwith the Rightist-Leftist troubles:\n1. Prohlbtlon of political uniforms, j\n2. Granting of discretionary, powers to police to close prescribed\nareas to political demonstrations.\nA large number ot persons' will\nflock to the house of commons tomorrow from all parti of the country to urge members to bring pressure on the government concerning\ndivorce law reforms;\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP)-But-\nter ipot close: Que. F-24.\nWheat, No. 2 nor. 1.16.\nBarley, C.W. No. 3 .68.\nOats,  No.  1  feed  .46*-..  Spring\nwheat paten's 6.60.      .% \u2022\nPotatoes: Que. and N.B.\n1.10-1.15.\nMts ilO's\nLOANS\nHOME IMPROVEMENT\nUnder tht ntw provisions in respect to\ntht Dominion Housing Act\nTbe Bank of Montreal is co-operating In the plan\nannounced by the Dominion Government for assisting\nhome owners who wish, to renovate, modernize or otherwise improve their homes, and it is now prepared to\nmake loans to property owners under the new provisions\nof the Dominion Housing Aa Briefly, the provisions\nregarding home improvement loans ate:\n* Minimum loan on one property \u2014 $2,000.\n* Discount\u2014Charge equal to $3.2) pel tlOO. of\nthe face value of the note, fot one yeu, pay-\nable in advance. Repayment by monthly instilments.\n* Loans to be used solely fbr improving and\nrepairing existing property, ind not foi building on vacant land. Improvements Include ail\nluch work Is new plumbing, remodelling of\nrooms, installation of furnue, painting, roofing,\netc Fixtures, which are not removable attachments or appliances, tie considered improvements.\n*No endorsers are required.\ne Loans made to owners only. Properties on\nwhich loins may be made include: private\nhomes, duplexes, small apartment houses, farmhouses ud combination rout ind dwelling\nhouses.\n* Standing of axel, mortage payments, etc., to\nbe acceptable to the lending institution.\nIf you wish to obtain funds to repair, improve or\nmodernize your property, we would be very glad to\nhave you call and discuss your requirements with us.\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nMTABllSHID   1117   a . .   HIAD   orriCE, MONTRIAL\nNelaon Branch! E. E. I.. DEWDNEY. M-nagrt\nTrail Brandt! A. H. CARSON, Manager\nRonland Bntschi J. N. CRAN. Manager\nNew Denver Branch:   F. M. BRADY. Manager\nKailo Branch! W. WRIGHT, Manage.\n' tt    hank    whir*    small   accounts    are    welcome*\n.\n \u2014\nREADY TO WASH\nPLACER GOLD IN\nFORKS DISTRICT\nBoundary Placers Has\nWater Running to\nOperations\nBoundary Gold Placers, Inc., has\nturned on the water after an intensive construction period involved\nin carving a right-of-way for some\n11,000 feet through gravel and rock\nand \"found everything working satisfactorily,\" reports the Grand Forks\nGazette. Excerpts from the report\nfollow:\nThe company ia now utilizing this\npower to clear out a pit for the commencement of actual sluicing operations.\nThe company plans merely on\nmaking a thorough test of the efficiency of its equipment this fall,\nalthough it expects that the several\nthousand yards of pay dirt from\nthe bench land lying above creek\nlevel and run through the sluice\nboxes will yield a substantial return\nof the golden metal. . . .\nTO GET BEDROCK\nAccompanying the operation will\nbe the task of continuing systematic\nand accurate testing of much of the\nground surrounding the end of the\nline, to provide the locale of winter\nwork in getting to actual bedrock\nin preparation for large scale operations with the opening of spring.\nThe average visitor can hardly\nconceive of the extent of the ambitious program carried on by the\ncompany or how some $50,000 to\n$60,000 has been expended on the\nconstruction to date until he takes\nto the pipe-line and walks the pipe\nfrom end to end.\n'-__\u00bb-__>\nMrs. Richardson and\nMrs. Patterson Win\nin Kimberley Bridge\nKIMBERLEY, B. C\u2014 A bridge\nevening in Oughtred hall, sponsored by the Anglican ladies, with\nMrs. Stelliga acting as convener,\nincluded auction and contract, 15\ntables being in play.\nMrs. R.'chardrjon won the auction\nprize, and Mrs. Patterson won first\nDlace in contract, with Miss N.\nHenderson, second.\nRefreshments were served by\nMrs. Stelliga, Mrs. Mattingley, Mrs.\nMcintosh and Mrs. Dave Robertson.\nMiss G. Hall was called to Spokane by the illnness\nkane by the illness of her mother\nNORWAY\nPINE\nSYRUP\nTroublesome Night Coughs\nHard on the System\nIt is the cough that sticks; the cough that is\nhard to get rid of; the cough, accompanied by a\ntickling in the throat, that causes the nerve and\nthroat wracking trouble that keeps you awake at\nnight.\nDr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup relieves this\ncoughing condition by soothing the irritated parts,\nloosening the phlegm, and strengthening the\nbronchial organs. When this is done there is no\nmore lying awake at night with tho system wracking, irritating cough,\nGet a bottle from your druggist. It will help you.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 3, 1936-\nLeague Nations\nSubject Debate\nAffirmative  Speakers\nWinners in School\nJoust, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-The lecond\ndebate of the Cranbrook high ichool\nliterary society was held in the auditorium Wednesday afternoon. The\nsubject for debate was \"Resolved\nthat the League of Nations has\nProved a Failure.\"\nMelvin Roberts, leader of the affirmative, waa supported by Min\nGertrude Evans and Miss Lucille\nHamilton. For the negative Allan\nBakken was leader with Miss Mar-\ncella Nedelec and Jack Caldwell.\nRoberts, in his opening speech,\nreminded the audience that the\nleague was formed primarily as an\norganization of peace, and that as a\npromoter of peace the league had\nfailed He dealt with II Duce'a war\nof aggression in Ethiopia when the\nleague did nothing and waa powerless to intervene. He stated the\nleague was doomed to failure from\nits birth because it never included\nevery nation of the world, and until\nthe league is stronger than any nation or nations outside it, it is bound\nto fail.\nMiss Evans showed, by dealing\ncomprehensively with the present\nSpanish crisis, that the league had\nfailed by not enforcing the \"nonintervention\" policy. She stated\nEurope is on the verge of war because of this.\nWEAK ATTITUDE\nMiss Hamilton went carefully into\nthe league's part in the Japanese-\nManchukuo question, showinr; thc\nweak, vacillating attitude displayed\nthere. She mentioned that the\nleague had proved efficient in minor\nquarrels in-the first years after the\nGreat War, when no nation could\npossibly, In its weakened, terrorlred\ncondition, have waged war on any\nother nation. They were glad then\nto accept any terms of peace, she\nsaid, but now when the nations are\npowerful the league is failing to\nmeet the test and failing to keep\npeace.\nFor the negative, side,. Bakken\nbrought home to the audience the\nfact that tha league had already\nsettled many quarrels, such as the\nSweden-Finland quarrel re the\nAaland islands in 1920; avoiding a\nBalkan war when \u25a0 lt settled the\nJugo-Slavia vi Albania dispute in\n1921; the serious boundary quarrel\nbetween Poland and Lithuania over\nthe district of Vltna in 1.2.; and\nin 1923 it settled the Corfu crisis\nregarding the boundary between\nGreece and Albania, which had\ncauied' serious trouble.\nMiss Nedelec dealt with the social\nwork of the league, the work of the\nleague in connection with the white\nslave traffic and-the trade in opium,\nthe fight of the epidemic commission against disease in the Orient\nand other parti of the wdrld.\nCaldwell dealt very fully with\nthe work of the league in dividing\ncaptured territory into mandates\nunder protection of certain strong\ncountries. He showed the strict\nsupervision of the league in.specific\ncascs. He told how the league had\naided refugees from Russia after the\nrevolution; how they had dealt with\nthe Saar valley question; and how\nthey had aided many European\ncountries to get a sound economic\nbasis of currency and Internal organization.\nThe judges awarded the victory\nto the affirmative, after congratulating both teams on a very fine\ndebate.\nKaslo Mine District\nEnlarged to North\nBoundaries of the mining recording district of the-Kaslo office have\nbeen enlarged according to the Kaslo\nKootenaian. In. the Lardeau district the Kaslo area now Includes\nall the territory as far north .aa\nGerrard, and as far as the west side\nof Healy creek. Heretofore the district north of Poplar was in the\nRevelstoke recording district and\nresulted in some instances in much\nadded expense to mining men.\nTwenty per cent of home accidents occur in lhe living room.\nDOUBLE QUICK STARTING vM\nWINTER 76 * .. w TRITON\nGasoline and oil function as a team in your\nmotor. A sluggish fuel nullifies the benefits\nof a fine oil, and a viscous oil dulls the performance of a good gasoline.\nThat's why so many careful motorists are\nusing the Double quick starling combination\u2014WINTER 76 gasoline and TRITON\nmotor oil. They get you away faster, with\nmore power and less cold motor wear.\nWinter 76 is especially refined for cold\nweather driving. It is ready to go when you\nstep on the starter.\nTriton retains its fluidity at low tempera*\ntures, flows freely to cylinder walls and\nbearings, and permits the motor to turn\nover easily at starting. Triton ia 100% pure\nparaffin-base . . . forms less carbon than\nother oils.  This reduces the tendency of\nyour motor to knock.  For double quick\nstarting and smoother power use Winter 76\nand Triton.\nM-WX-1\nUNION   OIL   COMPANY   OF   C AN AD A \u2022 Ll M r, ED\n-\n\u25a0PAOE THRU\/\n-\n IWCCKNMtATlD   8W MAY 167a       \t\nLadies' BLANKET CLOTH\nSKI JACKETS\nIn plain shades and novelty checks. Some with full\nlength zipper fastening, others with flJO QP\nbutton style front. Sizes 14 to 20 .. \u2022?\u00ab*) \u00ab7v\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nBLANKET CLOTH\nSKI SLACKS\nWith button fastening and adjustable waistband. Colors navy, brown and wine. ffO QC\nSizes 25 to 32 waist QL.Vd\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nGirls' Woolen Gloves\nKeep your fingers cosy these chilly days in\na pair of snug gloves. Snug at wrists and\nneat fitting in the fingers. Contrasting trim. Sizes 5 to 7. Blue,\nsand and navy. fiQ\u00ab>\n-Main Floor HBC\nPAIR\nBRUSHED WOOL\nSKATING\nSWEATERS\nHere is an ideal cardigan for outdoor\nsportswear. Made of heavy brushed\nwool in bright shades. Zipper fastening. Sizes 34 to 40.\nIEACH \t\n \u2014Second Floor HBC\n$4.95\nLADIES' ALL WOOL\nHOSIERY\nOur \"best\" in pure wool stockings for\nthe winter weather. Double soles and heels and they\nare seamless. Full-fashioned throughout. <*M AA\nExtra width et top. PAIR \u00abJU.UU\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nHANSON WORK SOCKS\nThe reliable favorite of outdoor\nmen. One full size. Weight 3 Vi Ibs.\nper dozen. Crey color with reinforced heels and toes. OQ.\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nPAIR\nHBC Pure Food Specials\n193\u2014Phones\u2014194 Free Delivery\nPrices Effective Today, Wednesday and Thursday\nCOFFEE-                                                            1\nFort Garry, Mb. tin tin \t\nHONEY\u2014                                                             1\nLinden, 4-lb. tin - tin \t\nLARD\u2014 1\nShamrock, l's cirton .\nPEANUT BUTTER- 1\nMcColl'i l's  - tin \t\nFIG BARS\u2014 1\nOrmonds \u2014 Lb\t\nCOCOA- 1\nFrys', 1 lb tin - - tin ....\nBAKING POWDER\u2014 1\nFort Garry; 12-or. tins tin \t\nONE SMALL PACKAGE OXYDOL-                All\n3 medium slie, Ivory soap for \t\nMEN'S WINTER\nUNDERWEAR\nMade from good quality cotton yarns brushed soft to assure\nmaximum warmth  and comfort without  excessive weight. ft *\u00a3 #QC\nLong sleeves and ankle length. White or plum shade. Sizes      JL\n36 to 44. PRICED AT\t\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nHumphrey\nWORK PANTS\nAnother favorite garment for cold weather. These warm\ntrousers come in dark shades. Finished with five pockets\nand cuff bottoms. \u00abJO QC\nPAIR .'..... $d.Vd\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nm\nm\n15*\nw\nwft$i\\mm\n\"; \u25a0\u25a0;w\u00bbi\u00abr,* \u201e\n.% \u00ab<%*\u00bb\u00ab\u2022..,**.\n;>\u00bb'__l_i!_^:\nMen's Plaid\nWindbreakers\nSmart new windbreakers of woolen\nmaterial finished with stylish pleated back. Popular colors in M QC\nsizes 36 to 44. EACH ... .O.VJ\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN  BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION NETWORK\n5:30 news, Vancouver, (B. C. Net);\n5:45 M.B.S. Exchange (rom\nChicago; 6:00 Addresses by L. W.\nBrockington and Rene Morin (rom\nOttawa; 6:30 Canadian Concert Hall\no( the Air, Montreal; 7:00 National\nSine Song, community singing; 7:30\nJoe de Courcey's orch, Toronto:\n7:49 Canadian Press news and\nweather; 8:00 C.R.C. time signal, Ottawa; Old Time Frolic, Saskatoon;\n8:30 Au Clair de la Lune, salon\norch., Edmonton; 9:00 Just Sup-\nposin', drama, Winnipeg; 9:30 Organ\nRhapsody by Allan Caron, Winnipeg; 10:00 News, Vancouver; 10:15\nEric Gee and his Kolle-Jeans, Van-\nNBC-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ    KGW    KFI    KPO    KOMO\n690      620      640      680       920\n5:00 \"Long About Sundown, dir.\nLouis Ford; 5:30 Crosscuts (rom Log\no' the Day; 6:00 Ben Bernie and All\nthe Lads; 6:30 Fred Astaire, Charles\nButterworth, Johnny Green's orch..\nguests; 7:30 Barry McKinley, baritone; 7:45 Roy Campbell's Royalists;\nThe Sports Forum; 8:00 Amos\n'n' Andy; 8:15 Lum and\nAbner; 8:30 Leo Reisman's orch.,\nartists; 9:00 Death Valley Days, drama; 9:30 Good Morning Tonight,\nvocal chorus; 10:00 news (lashes,\nSam Hayes; 10:15 Eddie Fitzpatrick\njr. and orch.; 10:30 Gri(( Williams'\norch.; ll:00 Jan Garber's orch.; 11:30\nHerb Saman's orch.\nCowboys; 6:15 News (lashes; 6:30\nPreaching mission; 7:00 Sel( Help;\n7:30 Buddy Smith; 7:45 Sonny Hudson; 8:00 News comments; 8:15 Buster Brooker; 8:30 Symphony orch.;\n9:00 Len Chamberlain's orch.; 9:30\nEric Gee's orch.; 10:00 Swing Trio;\n10:15 Len Chamberlain's orch.; 10:45\nSlumber Hour; 11:00 News (lashes;\nother periods, records.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n5:00 Cecil and Sally, E.T.; 6:30\nGypsy Fortunes; 6:45 Peacock\nCourt; 7:00 Program (rom CKUA,\n7:30 Slices o( Lite; 7:45 Seal o( the\nDon; 8:00 Rhythm Rhapsody; 8:30\nSong Styles; 8:45 True Con(essions;\n9:00 News.\nSHORT WAVE PROCRAMS\nPacKic Standard Time\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTrinimlulon 6\nThi following frequenclei will be\nused GSF 15.14 mcs, 19.82 ns.,\n\u2022nd G8C, 9.68 mcs. 31.32 m,\n6:00 p.m.\u2014Big Ben. B.B.C. Empire\norchestra; Margaret Eaves, soprano.\n7:00\u2014\"Foreign Attairs.\" A talk. 7:15\n\u2014New British dance tunes. 7:30\u2014\nMurray Ashlord and Edgar Sawyer,\nentertainers. 7:40\u2014News and announcements.\nINTERNATIONAL\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; 6:30 Husbands and\nWives, open Corum; 7:00 Hildegard,\npersonality singer; 7:30 Portraits in\nHarmony, guest orch.; 8:00 Harry\nReser'i orch.; Call! Consumers' con-\n(erence, KGO; 8:30 Log Cabin Bar-\nZ Ranch, western stories, The Westerners; 9:00 Mickey Gillette'a Music;\n9:30 To be announced; 10:00 Bernie\nCummin's orch.; 10:30 Jimmy Grier's\norch.; 11:00 Paul Carson, organist.\nBerlin 2 p.m.\u2014Music and Poetry.\nDJD, 25.4 m, 11:77 meg.\nSchenectady 2:35 \u2014 Mail Bag.\nW2XAF, 31.4 m, 9.53 meg.\nRome 3\u2014News in English. 2RO,\n31.1 m, 9.63 meg.\nLondon 3:30 \u2014 \"Foreign Attairs.\"\nA talk. GSP, 19.6 m. 15.31 meg.;\nGSD, 25.5 m., 11.75 meg.; GSC, 31.3\nm, 9.58 meg.\nBerlin 5\u2014Songs (cr Girls. DJD,\n25.4 m., 11.77 meg.\nParis 7:20 \u2014 News in English.\nTPA-4, 25.6 m, 11.72 meg.\nTokyo 9 \u2014 \"Overseas Program.\"\nJVH, Nazaki, 20.5 m, 14.6 meg.\nCBS\u2014DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n570 610 940 1130 1270\n5:00 Hamerstein Music hall; 6:05\nInvitation to a waltz. KVI; 6:30 Caravan, Rupert Hughei, m.c, orchi. dir.\nBenny Goodman and Georgie Stoll;\n7:30 Strange as It Seems; 7:45 Male\nChorus Parade; 8:00 Artie Shaw'i\noreheitra; 8:15 Renfrew o( the\nMounted, drama; 8:30 Ken Murray,\nPhill Regan, Russ Morgan's orch.;\n9:00 Fred Warlng'i Pennaylvanlam;\n9:30 Dick Stabile's orch. KSL 9:50;\n10:00 Election returns; Jimmy Dorsey's orch.; 10:30 Larry Kent's orch.;\n11:00 Sterling Young'i orch.; 11:30\nRainbow's End; Jimmy Dorsey's\norch, KSL, KOL.\n_-\u00ab   i, 'in -   l.- V in i    iiMi'ilYi'nr'lii-^ilif-Sia-ai-'iMii'iali'''--\u25a0'\u25a0-'\n600 k\nVancouver\n5:10 news\nfri _'-.._-1M_: ifo_-\n\t\nCJOR 499.7 m\n600 w\n(lashei; 5:15 Cariboo\nKaslo-N. Denver\nRoad Improved\nBig Shovel at Work;\nWiden Road at\nOld Mill\nDisposing o( material at the rate\nol (rom two to 10 yards a minute-\ndepending on the nature o( the material handled \u2014 the big power\nshovel being used on the road improvement between Twelve and\nFourteen Mile on the Kaslo-New\nDenver road, is making short work\no( a (airly big job. This bad piece o(\nroad has been straightened and wid\nened out to standard width\u2014between 24 and 30 (eet wide, and will,\nwhen completed, be a vast Improvement on a piece of road that\nhas been cursed by motorists (or\nyears, says the Kaslo Kootenaian.\nThe shovel work is completed now,\nand the roadbed is being put in\nshape with the scarifier and the\ngrader.\nWhile this important work has\nbeen under way another part o( the\ncrew has been drilling and plugging\nthe big rock wall close to Monte\nDavys' old mill, where > stretch\no( very narrow road is to be widened out. This will be blown out\nwith powder and the debris moved\naway over the bank with the power\nshovel.\nA cubic mile o( the ocean contains 8600 pounds of gold in suspension.\nDRUMHELLER\nMERCURY\nCOAL\nOne of the finest coals on the\nmarket for heater, stove or\nfurnace.\nLUMP: Ton   110.50\nNUT: Ton        9.00\nFAIRVIEW\nFuel & Teaming\nPHONE 701\nAMERICAN\nR. E. CRERAR, C.L.U.\nDISTRICT MANAGER\nNELSON, B.C.\nALL  PROFITS FDR POLICYHOLDERS\n________\u2014.\n _-_______.\nI  ,,, \u201e :\u2022 <\u00abW|W\u00ab>i'\n_____\n_\n PAG- FOUR-\nROSSLAND HOT TO OPPOSE C.P.R.\nTAKING OFF PASSENGER RUN TO\nIMPROVE NELSON-TRAIL SERVICE\nBut Wants Assurance\nI of Freight, Express,\nMail Service\nRAILWAY AIMING\nAT NEW SERVICE\nMcCracken Tells City\nCouncil and Board\nof Proposal\nROSSLAND,   B.  C,  Nev.  2\u2014\n'Resolution letting forth that the\ncitizens  of   Rowland  would   not\noppose withdrawal of the passenger train between Trail and Roiiland provided tha Canadian Pacific railway agreed to maintain\nadequate freight, mall and exprew\n:   aervlee to the city, moved by W.\nG. Ternan, president of the board\nI of trade, and icconded by f. T.\nj-   Abey, wat passed at a joint meeting of the Roiiland city council\nand the Rossland board of trade in\n'   the city hall Mondiy evening.\nE. S. McCracken, divisional superintendent at Nelson, preiented the\ncase of the railroad company, stating that the C. P. R. was contemplating putting on a better passenger service between Nelion and\nTrail and to do that it was necessary to use the crew which operated\nthc present passenger train to Rossland.   In   order  to  take  off  this\nlervice to Roseland the permission\not the board of railway commissioners must be obtained. If the consent\nDt the citizens of Rossland were\nliven, he thought tha approval ol\nthe commissioners could be obtained in short order, and the new\nschedule might be put into effect\nby the lint of the year.\nExpress lervice to Rossland would\nbe improved and freight would be j\ntaken care of, he said.\nBoard of Trade President Ternan\nthought that al'freight into Rossland averaged from 65 to 100 carloads per months there should bo\na definite undertaking on the thc\npart ot the C. P. R. to give Rossland a definite number of freight\nserviecs per week and suggested\nMondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.\nRossland was entitled to express\nservice twice a day, ha said.\nMr. McCracken said he could\ngive assurance the railroad would\nfurnish \u2022uleqnulo service but did\nnot like to be tied down to definite\ndays. If freight offered thc C. P. R.\nwould be only too glad to take care\nof it. In answer to comments on service ottered by bus companies he\npointed out that theie companiei\ncould take oft their tervicei during\nthe winter, but the railroads were\nnot io fortunate.\nSupported by thli resolution, the\nmatter will now be placed before\nthe board of railway commissioners,\nit ls understood.\nAttending the meeting were Mayor William Arrowsmith, City Clerk\nJ. A. McLeod, Alderman James\nCooper, A. Bourget, R J. Portman.\nW. G. Mara, Philip Gallie and John\nWilmot; and W. G. Ternan, T. 8.\nPeters, Robert Anderson, 0. W.\nHertig, V. M Van, F. T. Abey and\nJames Wright of the board of trade;\nand E. S. McCracken and G. H. Taylor of Nelson.\n-NELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY  MORNING, NOVEMBER 3, 1936-\nTRAIL RESERVOIR\nWATER HAS DROP\nTRAIL, B.C., Nev, 2. - City\nEngineer 8. 8. MoDlarmld reported a drop In the reservoir\nover the week-end. He attributed\nthli to running of water tapi during the recent cold nights.\n\"If water wattage continue.,\"\nhe laid, \"It will effect a terloui\nsituation on the hillsides.\" he\n\u2022aid that there was a general dry\ncondition of the country making\nIt dangeroui to let water run.\nYoung Lutherans\nof District Hold\nRally at Nelson\nSemi-Annual Meets at\nTrail, Nelson and\nYmir Hoped\nCONDITION OF\nRUDKIN, KASLO,\nSTILL SERIOUS\nHope Still Held for\nRecovery Victim\nCar Accident\nMRS. PAPWORTH\nIS IMPROVING\nSunday School to Be\nIncorporated Service\nLutheran Church Here\nCongregation ot St. John's Lutheran church at Nelson decided by\nresolution to rearrange Sunday service!, incorporating tbe Sunday\nschool with the mid-morning service ln the hope ot increasing the\nattendance of tbe children at church\nservices. The new arrangement is\nfor a service In German in the early\nmorning, a mid-morning service in\nEnglish, and the regular evening\nservice.\nDelegation From\nNelson lo Attend\nPapworth Funeral\nNelion'l city, council and board\nof trade will both be repreientcd\nat the funeral of Mayor W. V\nPapworth of Kaslo, car accident\nvictim, which will be held at Kaslo\nWednesday, according to plans laid\nhere Monday. Mayor J. P. Morgan\nwill represent both the city of Nelson and the Union of Kootenay Municipalities, of which he 16 president, Mayor Papworth having been\nvice-president. President W. B.\nBamford of the board of trade on\nMonday authorized arranging for a\nboard of trade representation.\nLutheran young people ot Ymir,\nTrial and Nelion launched what\nthey hope to make semi-annual rallies when they met at SL John's\nLutheran church, Nelson, over the\nweek-end.\nRev. E. A. Biberdorf of Trail\ndelivered the sermon ln the opening\nservice, basing it on Joshua 3-.5\u2014\nFuneral of Mayor on\nWednesday; Inquest\nIs Adjourned\nKASLO, B.C., Nov. 2.-W. P. Rudkin was in serious condition, though\nhopes were maintained for his recovery, and Mrs. W. V. Papworth\nwas improving in Victorian hospital\nas they remained under treatment\nfor injuries sustained Saturday\nwhen Mayor W, V. Papworth's car\ncrashed through th'e railing of the\nA avenue trestle, fatally injuring\nthe mayor, during a severe storm.\nMrs. Papworth, who waa driving\nthe car, was less seriously Injured\ntitan Mr. Rudkin. Her huaband\ndied a few minutes atter admission\nFinal Badminton\nDrive Now on\nFinal drive to add prospective\nbadminton players to the official\nmembership list ot the Nelson Badminton association in preparation\nfor a big year at the civic centre\nis under way this week.\nLarge number of proipective players signed up for the season, but\na number of them hava not yet\ncontributed the required halt of the\nseason's teei to officially list them\nas members, and it is these intending players the canvassing committee is now endeavoring to line up.\nSanctify yourselves, for tomorrow\nthe Lord will do wonders among I to hospital, without regaining con-\nyou\". He stressed the importance of J sciousness.\na sanctified Christian life'on the     Coroner. Jury impanelled by Dr.\npart ot the youth of the church and D. J. Barclay today viewed the body\nFrozen Taps and\nCar Radiators a\nPrank ol Frost\nSUGGESTS MORE\nFIRE APPARATUS\nFOR TRAIL HALL\nMore Apparatus, Men\nNeeded Declare\nUnderwriters\nWind Dies Down and\nMilder Weather\nIndicated\nasserted the Lord's promised blessings would make bright the future\nof those who walked in His ways.\nF. W. Hamann led in the Bible\nstudy based on Matthew 16: 13\u201419.\nIt brought forth considerable discussion.\nRev. V. L. Meyer of Nelson, told\nthe story of Jonathan Udo Ekong,\nan African boy from Nigeria who\nwent to the United States to train\ntor mission, work among hia native\ncountrymen. He enrolled in Im-\ntnanual Lutheran college at Greensboro, North Carolina, and as a result of his repeated pleas on behalf\nof his people a Lutheran million i\nof Mayor Papworth and then adjourned the inquiry Into the cause\nof death until Mrs. Papworth and\nMr. Rudkin were in a condition to\ngive statements.\nThe car, travelling toward the\nupper section of the town, crashed\nthrough the bridge railing on the\nleft, ripping out about 30 feet ot\nrailing, and plunged down with its\nwheels in the air, the front end of\nthe vehicle smashing into the rough\nground and the top buckling as it\nstruck. The victim* were extricated in a short time and rushed to\nhospital.\nArrangements hive been mad*\nwas established ln Nigeria. Discus-1 for the funeral of Mayor Papworth\nFlashes From the Wires\nFIR8T U.8. BALLOT8 CAST\nMILLSFI.ELD, N.H., (Tuesday)\n\u2014Thli town becime the first community in thi United Statei to\ncomplete tabulation of votei In\nthe presidential election, giving\nfive vctei to Gov, Alf M. Landon\nand two to President Roosevelt.\nThii town ll In the northeait corner of the itate. Five voters, three\nmen and two women, declined to\nvgte. The town'i voting population gathered in a small shop, temporary town hall, at midnight,\nand promptly at 12:01 a.m., began\ncasting their votei. Officials begin tabulating immediately after\nthe latt voter hid left the ihop.\nRADIO RECOMMENDATION\nOTTAWA, \u2014Chief recommendation ot Major Gladstone Murray,\nfirst general manager of the Canadian Broadcasting corporation to\nthe board of governors of the corporation, will be for more cooperation between publicly and privately-\nowned radio stations, he said in an\ninterview. The general manager also\nbelieves there is ample talent in\nCanada to provide good programs\nnot c\u00ably for Canadian stations but\nalio for United States networks. No\ndefinite advertising policy has been\nset, he said.\ning appointment of a royal commission to investigate social and economic conditions of British Columbia orientals engaged in agriculture\nand fishing was offered by Clivc\nPlanta (Ind. Peace River), during\nthe debate on the throne speech in\nthe legislature. Premier Pattullo\nsuggested the motion was out of\norder. Mr. Speaker Perry reserved\ndecision.\nSEAMEN DISAGREE\nHOU8TON, Tex.,-Thi two fiction! In the Seimeni strike on the\nGulf coait acted toward bolstering\ntheir standi. Official! of the International Seamin'i union, led\nby builnin agent, Wilbur Dickey,\nvoted to outlaw the strike md urge\nleamen \"to live up to their contrast!.\" At ths ume time, about\n300 of the striking rink and file\nmemberi voted to pursue thl\nwaterfront tleup that hid spread\nto Galveston, Betumont md Port\nArthur, Texas, md to Lake\nCharles, Ll.\nMILLMEN   FEEL   MARITIME\nSTRIKE\nPORTLAND\u2014Tho grave effect!\nof the constwide Maritime made\nthemielvei known more than evir\nIn Oregon u the lumber Induitry\n\u2022tarted major retrenchment!. Mill\nexecutives estimated 2000 men In\nPortland had been squeezed out of\ntheir Jobi. They aaid logging campi\nwill be forced to close by tha fint\nof next week unlm a break develops.\nMARYLEBONE WINS\nADELAIDE, Australia, (Tuesday)\n\u2014The touring Marylebone Cricket\nclub team scored a 105-run victory\nover South Australia In their four-\nday cricket match concluded today.\nThe Englishmen posted innings o(\n233 and 236 againit 162 and 202 runs\nfor the Aussies.\nLANDON'S APPEAL\nCHICAQO^AIf M. Landon urged the nation! citizens to go to the\npolli tomorrow \"reiolved that thl\nAmerican way of life shall not\nfall.\" Thi Republican presidential\nnominee, In a final appeal to thi\neleotonti, exprened confidence\nthey would be united In one aim\u2014\n\"to vote ai Americans for the\nfuture of America.\"\nsion of the theme \"Our Young People as Missionaries\" followed.\nA reading by Miss Ingeborg Mart-\nichinke and a talk on the life of\nLuther by Miss Irma Arlt were followed by questionnaires testing the\nyoung people's knowledge of Luther's life.\nto be held Wednesday afternoon\nfrom the United church. He was\nan old-timer in the vicinity, having\ntaken part in the early day mining\nboom. Later he was in the hotel\nbusiness, and still later became city\nclerk, and then mayor, with a record of about 20 years service to the\ncity of Kaslo.\nFrozen garden taps, frozen car\nradiators and a greatly extended\narea ot surface ice around the boat-\nhouses were the results ot a continuation of the week-end's cold\nsnap Monday, when ln the early\nmorning the mercury dropped to a\nlow of li degrees, the season's lowest temperature.\nIn spite of Old Sol's best efforts\nduring his few short noun In the\nsky Monday, the maximum wai recorded at 34, juit two Kant degrees\nabove freezing, and the Hallowe'en\nsnow still remained on grass banks\nand ln ihady spots.\nMonday night the wind that had\nbeen blowing at timet during the\nday-died down, with milder temperatures, and it seemed thit the cold\nmap would soon ba over. The\nweatherman forecasts tor today\nlight shifting winds, mostly cloudy,\nwith rising temperitures.\nTHREE HOCKEY\nLEAGUES TRAIL\nTBAIL, B.C., Nov. ..-In a. letter\nfrom F. F. Dowling. chief engineer\not the fire branch of the B.C. Fire\nUnderwriter! aaiolcation. Trail city\ncouncil wai asked to give favorable\nconsideration to the installation ot\na new piece of apparatus tor the\nfire department as previously outlined, it was disclosed at a meeting\nMonday night.\nThe letter stated that the city ot\nTrail bad grown considerably in'\nthe past few yean and no doubt\nwould continue to grow and that\nan additional piece ot apparatus and\nadditional men were, in the opinion\nof the underwriters, an urgent re\nqulrement to the fire department.\nIt was also hoped that the city\nwould adopt a new building bylaw\nalong the lines of one suggested.\nThe letter stated that Its adoption\nwould eventually result in a bene\ntlcial effect upon grading the structural conditions within TraiL It\nasked that a copy of the bylaw be\nsent to fire branch before final\nadoption, so that comment could be\nrendered on the some.\n\"They are right, but\u2014.\" ipoke\nup Mayor Bruno Lerose. \"If finance!\npermit we are going to buy another\npiece of apparatus.\" The letter wai\nmoved received and filed.\nAces Trounce Yonks\n34*1 in Trail Gome\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. J, - Heavy\nicorlng by Gerald Armstrong and\nFrank Turik, who ran up the total\ncount tor Aces, banded Yanks a 34-1\nwhitewashing in a junior boys' division game ot the Central School\nBasketball league at Central school\ngymnasium Monday afternoon.\nTeams and scores follow;\nYanks \u2014 Billy Scheer, Robert\nCheyne, Carl Groslin, Sebastian\nNutinl 1, Jack MacDonald and Malcolm MacKenzie.\nAces \u2014 Gerald Armstrong ao,\nFrank Turik 14, Jim Pearson, Albert Cavallin and Enzo Georgetti.\nTony Borsato refereed.\nTRAIL HAS 22\nCASES CHICKEN\nPOX IN MONTH\nNelson Rotary\nInitiate. Two\nDUTTON PICKS\nOPENING TEAM\nWill Field the Same\nTeam Thursday as\nWon on Friday\nOSHAWA, Ont., Nov. 2 (CP).\u2014\nMore than latlsfled with the manner in which hii team performed\nin an exhibition game against New\nHaven Eagles last Friday, Manager\nMervin \"Red\" Dutton today stated\nhe had definitely decided to start\nthc lame lineup when the New\nYork Americans open the National\nHockey league season in Chicago on\nThursday against the Blaekhawks.\nThe team used Friday was: Goal,\nRoy Worters; defence, Allan Shields\nand Al. Murray, Red Doran and\nJohnny Gallagher, while Ihe forward lines had Art Chapman, Lome\nCarr, and Sweeney Schriner as the\nlirst string with Joe Lamb, Eddie\nWiseman, and Tommy Anderson on\nthe second trio. Tho third line was\ncomposed of Lloyd Jackson, Harry\nOliver and Harold Cotton. Happy\nEmms will hold down the utility\nberth.\nFormally Open\nKootenay Belle\nMill Saturday\nPresident W. B. Bamford, of the\nNelson board ot trade, haa been invited to attend the official opening\nof the new mill of the Kootenay\nBelle Gold Minei, Limited, at Sheep\nCreek Saturday, '.he mine will be\ninspected in the forenoon, luncheon\nwill be at 1:30 in the afternoon, and\ninspection ot the mill will complete the program.\nDALOISE HEADS\nLEGION BRANCH\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 2.\u2014Vincenzo\nDaloise was elected president of\nCanadian Legion, B.E.S.L., Trail\nItalian branch No. 132, when annual\nelections of officers was held in\nColombo hall November 1. Other\nofficers were named as follows:\nCharles Catalano, honorary president: J. B. Filipelli, first vice-president; R. Borgo, second vice-president; A. Secco, secretary; G. Carg-\nnelli,\nColombos Win Hoop\nGome From Shorties.\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. i.\u2014Colomboi\nhanded a 20-9 defeat to Shorties in\na senior boys' division game, Trail\nCentral school basketball league, at\nCentral ichool gymnasium Monday\nafternoon.\nColombos had the game well in\nhand throughout its entirey, an improved brand of comblnaton giving\nthem a six-point margin by half\ntime.\nlt was Colombos' first win, tieing\nwith Shorties for cellar position.\nTeams and scores were:\nColombos: Tony Merlo 12, Joe\nSimpson 8, Oscar Lazzorotto, Armando Cavallin, Fred Pagnan and\nEarl Wilson.\nShorties: Campbell Anderson,\nGlno LeRose 4, Andy Klimovitch,\nJack Carth, Buster Smart 1, Allister\nMacAuly, \"Brick\" Edmunds 2, An\ngus MacDonald 2.\nBooster Club Will Ask\nRossland to Join\nJuveniles\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 2.\u2014At a meeting ot the hockey committee of the\nTrail Hockey Booster club tonight\nit was decided to hava Juvenile,\nmidget and bantam leagues with\ntwo teams ln the first, four tn tha\nsecond and tive ln the third.\nNegotiations will be opened with\nRossland aiming at including a\nRossland team In ths juvenile\nleague,\nRegistration dates will be announced.\nBaby Gillett Is\nLaid at Rest\nFuneral services tor Alice Adeline\nGillett, infant daughter of Mr. and'\nMrs. Walter R. Gillett, 923 Edge-\nwood  avenue,   was   held   Monday\nMrs. P. Pisacreta\nBuried at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 2.-Final tribute tor Mrs. Carmela Pisacreta, wife\not Domene Pisacreta, who passed\naway at Trail-Tadanac hospital Friday morning after an illness ot two\nmonths, was paid today when requiem mass was celebrated at St.\nFrancis Xavier church by Father\nT. P. Freney, at 8:30. Following\nmass the cortege proceeded to Colombo hall where the body lay in\nstate until 3:30 when tuneral services were held. Interment took\nplace ln Mountain View cemetery.\nMrs. Pisacreta had resided in Trail\nfor the past 13 years, coming from\nSin Stef-xno del Sole, Italy, where\nshe wai born In 1900. Besides hei\nhusband she ia survived here by\none daughter, three sons and two\nsisters. Her mother, father, two\nbrothers and an uncle survive in\nItaly.\nHendricks Back\nFrom the Coast\nWalter Hendricks returned Sunday night from a fortnight's business trip to Vancouver.\nMonday's program at the Rotary\nclub revolved about the initiation\nof two newly elected members, E.\ng. McCracken, Canadian Pacific superintendent, and w- K. Clark, proprietor of the Savoy hotel, who were\nwelcomed with the customary welcome song ot Rotary, and with the\nhandclasp of all the members.\nAfter tha official -welcome, the\ninitiations were addressed by E. p.\nDawson, one of the past presidents\not the club, who gave them his conception of what a Rotary club\nshould be, and his conception of\nwhat Rotary membership should\nmean.\nDescribing Rotary as an ideal or\na philosophy, Mr. Dawson said while\nan Ideal or a philosophy could not\nba confined, to be applied some\nform ot organization was needed,\nand hence the Rotary constitution.\nDAWSON GIVES\nOBLIGATIONS\nUpon members of a Rotary club\nthere were some obligations, his\nreference being not to the obligations found in the constitution, but\nto certain moral duties that the\nsincere Rotarian assumed.\nFirst, there was his duty to himself. On this, Mr. Dawson refused\nto enlarge, saying every man wai\nentitled to live his own life, but it\nwas to be assumed that a sincere\nRotarian would live Rotary principles.\nSecondly, the Rotarian had a duty\nto his fellow Rotarians. He joined\nwhat he believed to be an active\nclub that stood high in the community on account ot its principles\nand its active work. If it was juit\na luncheon club composed ot good\nfellows,, it was not a Rotary club In\na real sense, and a member Was not\na real Rotarian If he did not want\nhis club to be a force ln the community. Far more effective was i\nsmall Rotary club composed of\nworkers than large club that had\nonly a tew members who really\ncared.\nMUST FURNISH MEN\nThe third obligation on a Rotarian, Mr. Dawson said, was to his\ncommunity. There was no Rotary\nclub but had many opportunities to\ngive community service. It was\nhard, for instance, to find suitable\nmen lor public office, to do important and necessary work that,\nhowever, was almost always thankless. A Rotary club should be willing to furnish these men. A good\nFour of Scarlet Fever\nDr. Gayton States\nin Report\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 2.-Dr. J. L.\nGayton, city medical health officer,\nat a meeting of the city council\nMonday night reported as follows\nfor October:\nInspection!\u2014\nSanitr.iy  17\nCafes    3\nDairies     8\nMarket    6\nWater    2\nStable \t\nSocial examination? -\t\nIntervlewi      \t\nInfectious Dlieuei\u2014\nMeeslej \t\nErysipelas   3\nChicken Pox 22\nScarlet fever   4\nTyphoid fever      1\nQuarantines during month 23\nReleases          11\nContacts viiited (scarlet fever) .. 75\nTRA1LITES ASK\nADDED BRIDGE\nACROSS RIVER\nPetition Asks City to\nTake Steps Toward\nFoot Bridge\nLEROSE URGES\nWIDE BACKING\nCouncil Will Forward\nPetition to Burns\nat Victoria\nCUSTOM TOTAL\nNELSON AREA\nDOWN OCTOBER\nReach $12,662; Only\nOutport Gain at\nWaneta\nCustom and inland revenue receipts at the Nelion cuitoms office,\nincluding outportl, totalled $12,-\nM2.27 in October compared with\n$13,253.25 in September. In October last year returns for the district, exclusive of Trail, now a\nseparate port, totalled $15,548.-4.\nWanets was the only outport reporting increased receipts for October, the figure being up over\n$1000 to $1498.52.\nReceipts were listed as follows:\nSeptember     O:tober\nNelson  $11,632.32     $10,312.22\nMidway       195*82 159.97\nNelway       657.72 498.15\nMlncaster        21.25 \u2014\nCascade       189.74 57.14\nWaneta       483.30 1,496.52\nCarson        3283 13.99\nKaslo        - 24.27\nBridesvllle ...      40.17 -\nTotals     ..   $13,253.25      $12,562.27\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 2 - Petition\nsigned by a large number of Trail\ncitizens asking that the city take\nsteps toward having a foot bridge\nconstructed across the Columbia\nriver at the foot of Victoria' street\nwas presented by a delegation comprising John Flew, Jack Powell\nand Joseph Hardy at a meeting ot\nthe city council Monday night.\nMr. Flew stated the petition had\ncovered the greater part ot the city\nand that the foot bridge should be\nof interest to all citizens.\nMayor Bruno Lerose agreed that\nit was of interest to the city as a\nwhole and added that lor five years\nhe had preached a foot bridge. He\nsaid he had taken up the matter\nwith Premier T. D. Pattullo on hla\nlast visit here and had also discussed the proposition with R. R. Burns,\nM.L.A., for Rossland-Trail.\nThe mayor asked that everyone\nln the city render support to make\na strong recommendation to tha\nprovincial government for tha\nbridge.\nIt was moved that the petition ba\nforwarded to Mr. Burns at Victoria.\n\"We have a good building site on\nthe other side ot the river,\" said\nthe mayor, as he dismissed the\nmatter.\nThe House Numbering bylaw waa\nfinaly adopted.\nAlderman John Young wu (ranted permission to Introduce an additional anticipation revenue loan\nbylaw.\nTRAIL BOWLING\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 2.\u2014Trail Times\nwon three straight from Motor Inn\nand Elks defeated Union Hotel two\nout ot three in matches of the Trail\nBowling league at Memorial hall\nMonday night Scores follow:\nMotor Inn\u2014\nD. Balfour 10J 157 135- 39*\nB. Carlson  103 117 120- 340\nB. Lazareff 120 183 159- 448\nJ. Wallace 120 142 138\u2014 390\nSpot    \u00ab2  82  62\u2014 186\nTotals  507 641 603-1751\nTrail Tlmei\u2014\nM. R. Cumming .. 14LM70 112\u2014 430\nJ. Thorndale  143 162 176\u2014 481\nL. Euitts   147 156 192- 466\nD. B.lfour  134 147 174- 455\nTotals        572 635 624-1831\nUnion Hotel\u2014\n\"Doc\" Postill 170 161 168- 314\nC. Illot 181 137 156- 474\nT. Jonei  135 174 155- 464\nB. Molisky 150 212 198- 588\nTotals  636 684 687-2007\nElks- ,\nF. Vellutinl 184 173 206- 968\nJ. Lilley      175 161 144- 4801\nS. Blagioni 139 139 139- 417\nC. Bradbury  143 118 144- 408\nSpot       57   67  97-171\nTotals  698 646 690-2034\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWSORTRAIL\nThis column is In charge of Mrs Glenn Quiyle of TraiL All\neventi ot a social nature ot interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin tills column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad to have any such newa\ntelephoned to tier at her borne in TraiL\nvice-secretary; P.' Lazarotto ! a\"erno\u00b0n irom the parlors of the\nnvi 0. Cantarutti, finance commit- \u00b0avls ,fun.e,ral ,Service* Rev' *-' A-\n1 Donnell officiating.\nThe funeral was private, being\nFASCIST   EDITOR   ATTACK8\nFRANCE\nROME\u2014The authoritative Fascist\neditor Virglnio Gaydi violently attacked France, the Soviet Union and\nCommunist propaganda. \"France and\nIhe Soviet Union were the authors\nof the cloudy formulas of collective\nsscurity,' he declared, \"while the |\nlatter sends emissaries throughout.\nIhe world to divide the citizens ot\nvarious countries and leads the intrigue at Geneva against Italy, the\nreich and Portugal.\"\nRPOS-VELT'S APPEAL\nHYDE PARK, N.Y.,-In his final\nspeech before the election, President\n(Roosevelt asked the voters not to\nbe afraid to \"vote as you think bait\nfor the kind of a world you want\nto have. There need be no strings\non any ot us in the polling place,\"\nhe said.\nI tee; P. Secco and L. Lippa, servants at arms; G. Merlo and L.,  ..    ...     ,,     , .\nI Colonello, sick committee; L. Pas-1 ..f^jfj* the ,amily and close\ntro. conductor.\nJ friends only.\nThe new officers will be installed\nearly in January.\nBRITAIN TRIES KEEP  ACCORD\nLONDON--Negotiations for a\nnew Locarno before or at least\naimultaneoui with my move for\na Mediterranean pact wai Britain'!\nLstand m official! studied Premier\nMuuollnl'i speech it Milan yeiterday. Britain feeli a niw western\nEuropean pact his priority over\nany negotiations concerning trie\nMediterranean, It wtl stated ieml-\nofflclilly. However, Britain ap-\npnolatei thi Italian position and\ndeiirn thl but possible relations\nwith Italy, It wai added.\n_\nNEWSPAPERMAN KILLED\nTIMMINS, Ont, - Wallace J.\nLaut, 51, one of Canada's but\nknown mining wrlten, died In-\n\u2022tantly when run ovir by a freight\ntrain In thli town In the area hi\nknew Intimately, Police were In-\nveatlgatlng the accident, to which\nthere win no eyewitneuei.\nSEEKS COMMISSION\nVICTORIA-An amcadment _\u2022*-\n8HIP HELD IN PORT\nNEW YORK-The International\nMercantile marine late cancelled Ihe\ntailing ot the 8.S. Manhattan, icheduled for Wedneiday, became ot a\n\"sit down\" strike by seamen In New\nYork harbor.\nHUIY LONGV8 HENCHMAN\nJAILED\nNEW ORL.AN8\u2014The Rev. Gerald L. K. Smith, self-styled head\nof the lata Senator Huey P, Long'i\n\"ihare the wnlth\" movement, wn\narrntid  ind   Jailed   with   three\nFIRE DAMAGE IS\nSMALL IN TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 2\u2014The report\nIor October of Fire Chief A. A. McDonald as submitted to the city\ncouncil here Monday night, follows:\nInspection 177; orders served under\nFire Marshals act 14; appeals nil;\nalarms two; value of building involved by fire $12,000; insurance\n50000; damage $20; value of contents $5000; insurance $1500; dam-\nage nil; cause of alarms, loose stove\npips and fire crackers thrown in\nbrush.\nWilliam Gunnip of\nSalmo Passes\nWilliam P. Guunip of Silmo, aged\nabout 66, died In Kootcnry Lake\nGeneral hospital, Nelson, Monday\nmorning.\nIt wai undentood Mr. Gunnip had\nresided at Salmo for some time.\nCourt Collects\n$60 From Fines\nFinei Imposed by MagiiLrate William Brown Monday morning on\nthree young women who pleaded\nguilty to icreamlng on Baker itreet\non Halowe'en, totaled $60, and were\npaid. One offender was a transient\nfrom Vancouver, and the others\nwere minors.\nHitler entered politicil life\npost-war German spy.\nMRS. SPAIN DIES\nIN TRAIL, ACED 70\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 2-Rose Elizabeth Spain, wife of Thomas C.\nSpain, passed away in Trail-Tadanac\nhospital Sunday morning after a\nlong illness. She was 70 years of age.\nBorn in London, England, Mrs.\nSpain came to Canada 25 years ago\nand since 1922 has resided in Trail.\nShe is survived here by her husband, at present a patient in Trail-\nTadanac hospital, two sons, Donald\nC. Spain and Ernest E. Spain; and\na daughter Mrs. Iris Black.\nPrioi to coming to Trail, Mri.\nSpain had resided in Ontario, Saskatchewan, and in Vancouver. Funeral services will be held Tuesday\nafternoon from Fint Baptist church,\nwith Rev. W. Sadler officiating.\nGraham Funeral Home ll ln charge\nof arrangements.\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 2\u2014Hallowe'en\nfestivities were carried out in traditional style Saturday evening in\nTrail, numerous house partlei being\nenjoyed by the younger set. Among\nthose entertaining were Mr. and\nMrs. P. Jones who were host and\n         ,     , hostess to a large number at a so.\n&,\"MSi*2l_!fi \u00ab_*!S cUl evening honoring their daugh\nZ&^^JSSG&yS* ter, Miss Margaret Jones who cele-\nNEW  YORK   (CP)-Dr.   Ira   S.\nWile, psychiatrist of Mount Sinai\nhospital, states that there arc al\ncompanion! liter he had mide an | l?ost al,000,00!l  \"problem\" children\na-jdr-js,   jn schools in tlie United States.\nGREENWOOD, PARLIAMENTARY LABOR\nMAN, IS CAUSTIC AGAINST MUSSOLINI\nfinally liaued an ultimatum to\nGreat Britain regarding hli position In the Mediterranean.\n\"Mutsollnl spoke with the arrogance of a mighty emperor dizzy\nwith hli lucccsses. The fumei of\nIllimitable ambition have mounted\nto hli brain.\n\"Por thli itate of attain thi\nBrltlth government It largely responsible. It hai betrayed the\nLeague of Nations and foiled disarmament and virtually tha principle of collective security. It ll\nfor theie reaiom the Italian coek\nnow crowi on.hli.dunghni;^ '\"\"\nCLAYCROSS, Derbyshire (CP-\nHavas).\u2014\"The Italian cock now\ncrows on hli dunghill,\" Arthur\nGreenwood, vice-president of the\nparliamentary Labor party, declared in a speech commenting on\nPremier Muuollnl'i address Sundiy In Milan,\n\"Mussolini Insolently declared\nthe new Itilo-German alliance\nwai an axis around which other\n\u2022tatei who wanted peace could\nrevolve,\" said Greenwood. Hi\npontiflcally and hypocritically illumed the mantle of democratic\nleadership against Bolshevism and\nbe to go over iti membership roster\nand find out how many ot iti members were also actvie memberi of\nothers community organizations.\nOf the fourth obligation, that to\none's country, he said it boiled down\nto the rule that every true Rotarian\nwould be a good citizen. He should\nbe actively Interested ln. public\nissues, should accept his country's\ntraditions, and lt could be assumed\nthat he would be willing to serve\nit if needed.\nTho fifth obligation seen by Mr.\nDawson was that no humanity in\ngeneral, and that, he said, meant\ninternationalism. The Nelson club\nwai particularly favorably situated\nfor this kind of service, as a member of one of the few international\ndistricts in Rotary. In Europe, he\nsaid, Rotary clubs were regarded\nas one of the great agencies for\nworld peace.\nOTHEK8TO EMERGE\nThere were probably a number ot\nothers obligations on a member of\na Rotary club, which the member\nwould think of from time to time\nand recognize. He suggested it was\na good thing for Rotary clubs and\nfor club members to check up from\ntime to time, on these things, to\nsec if they were recognizing and\nperforming these moral duties. It\nwas not enough that a club should\nhave some worthy object\u2014It had\nmany obligations, and the acceptance of these duties lay on its membership.\nPresident R. E. Potter was In thc\nchair.\nScience estimates the earth gains\nweight about a pound an hour trom\nshooting stars.    '\nbrated her birthday anniversary.\nEast Trail Anglican mission hall,\nwhere the young people meL was\ngayly decorated with seasonal festoons and wilh autumn flowers.\nGames and dancing provided an interesting program of entertainment,\ndelicious refreshments being served\nby Mrs. Jones, who was assisted by\nT Hinton. Among the guests were\nMiss Margaret Jones, Miss Audrey\nJonsi, Miss Betty Hayee, Miss Annie Robertson, Thomas Sloane, Albert Ross, Jack Jones, Wallace Sav-\ncge, Chappie Mathews, Norman Hinton, Miss Elizabeth Mclvor, Miss\nBetty McLuckie, Alphonso Vel-\ndramlni, Miss Mary Robinson, Mill\nFreda Bradley, Leonard Holmes,\nHarold Clare, Ernest Cleverley.\nFreddy Fustini, Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Watson, Charles Spatterl,\nVic Rom, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Samuelson, Richard Price and Thomas\nJones. During the evening Bobby\nHinton drew in a dscorted wagon\nloaded with gifts and presented\nthem to the guest of honor. Music\nwas supplied by Ernest Cleverley,\nHarold Clare, Boots Rossi and Bernard Holme of Rossland by Dave\nUnger ot Trail.\n^^^^^jjjljjljgjglljll^^\nAnother interesting party was that\nheld in Orange hall, the guests wearing masquerade costumes. Miss\nMary Farnum was winner of a\nballoon contest, Sammy Saprunoff\nsecuring the prize In the apple\neating contest. Miss Flora McLeod\nand Pat Archibald were awarded\nprises tor their costumes. Miss\nPauline Crowe, Miss Audrey Routledge and Harold Fransen supplied\nthe music for dancing. A program\n_*\" -**\u25a0 'w   \u2022 '.'..   .-..' ''*\/ *_. 1^0 s__.- t_|*\n*BB_. ___,\nof Hallowe'en games and contests\nwas concluded with the serving of\nlefreshments.\n.   .  .\nMrs. B. Donnan was hostess recently at a delightful ihower entertaining in honor ol Mrs. J. LePage, a recent bride. Presentation\not many delightful gifts were made\nto the guest of honor at the suppei\nhour.\n\u2022 a   a\nMrs. Irene Condy, Misi Dim\nCouch ana* Miss Connie Green wen\nhostesses Saturday evening at I\nparty for the Canadian Girls it\nTraining of East Trail Unites\nchurch, the guests visiting at thi\nhomes of the three hostesses ln pro\ngressive style. The evening wa\nclosed with a fireworks display a\nthe home of Mrs. Condy.\nO     O     0\nFrank McLeod of Thrumi wai\nvisitor to tho city Saturday evenlni\na   a   a\nMr. and Mn. E. L. Groutagi\nDouglas hotel, have returned trot\na vacation of several months sper\nin Europe.\n\u2022 a    a\nMiss J. Stevens has returned froi\na short vacation spent at Spokan\na    a    a\nMrs. Bertha Whitehead, who ipei\na short vacation at Spokane retun\ned Sunday evening to Trail.\na    a    a\nMiss Kay Cairns was hostess '\nmembers of the Canadian Girls :\nTraining ot St. Andrew's AngUci\nchurch at a theater party Saturdl\nevening. Games were enjoyed a)\nrefreshments served later by Ml\nCairns at the home of hcr paren\nMr. and Mrs. J. Cairns, Cedar a\nenue.\n\u00ab    a    a\nW. T. Sinclair has returned to i\ncity from a vacation spent with 1\nlatives in Alberta.\na   a   a\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Verzuh, was.\nend visitors to Spokane, have I\nturned to Trail.\n '\nrjio\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 3. 1936-\nORANGE PEKOE BLEND\nMil mm\nTEA\nWest Arm Shows\nSlight Recovery\nAlter declining to 1.1 toot above\nthe low water mark Sunday, the\nWeit Arm recovered slightly Monday, possibly because of an upstream wind, and registered 1.12\nfoot at 6 o'clock in the afternoon,\nky the old Launch club gauge.\nCHINESE POTATOE8 IN DEMA\nCHINESE POTATOES IN DEMAND\nPORT CREDIT, Ont. (CP)-Su\nku bulbs, Or Chinese potatoes, a\ntable delicacy among orientals, are\nscarce this year, and are commanding high prices. They are found ln\nmarshland here.\nThe oldest cooperative wai born\nin England 92 years ago.\nRECIPES\nMENUS\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nBv\nMri.\nMarv\nMorton\nHousekeeping\nMENU  HINT\nTomato Juice and Other Fruit\nJuice Cocktails\nCanapes Baked  Ham\nCream   or   Scalloped  Potatoes\nPickles Relishes\nHot Rolls or Biscuits, Buttered\nDevil's Food Cake     Tea or Coffee\nThii, my friends, ii a menu for\na buffet nipper you may serve to\n\"the bunch\" when they meet at\nyour house. There are many recipes\nfor canapes. I've used a number,\nincluding smoked salmon, cheese,\nof various kinds, sardines, kippered\nherring,  deviled  ham,  etc.  Have\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nyour mixtures ready, toast your\nbread which has been cut into various small shapes, at the last moment before your guests are called\nto dinner, spread with whatever\nmixture you prefer, and pop into\nthe oven or broiler for a last minute before serving. Crackers may bo\nsubstituted for bread. They save\nwork. The mincemeat devil's food\ncake recipe is new to me, and well\nworth filing for future use.\nTODAY'8 RECIPES\nDevll'i Food Mlncemut Cike\u2014\nTwo cups lifted cake flour, one\nteaipoon soda, one-half cup butter, one and one-fourth cups brown\nsugar, firmly packed; two unbeaten\neggs, three squares unsweetened\nchocolate, melted; one-half teaspoon\nsalt, one cup milk, one teaspoon\nvanilla, one and one-fourth cups\nmincemeat. Green tomato mincemeat is preferable for this. Mix all\ningredients as for any devil's food\ncake. Add mincemeat last. Good\n\u25a0with or without frosting.\nist-itui\n'GOLDEN RECIPE\nGOLDEN CHEWS\n2 cups stoned and chopped dates, v, cup\nchopped nuts, 2 eggs, % cup Rogers' Golden\nSyrup, '\/, cup flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, Mi cup bran. Beat the eggs until light and\nadd to the egg mixture. Add the fruit and nuts\nand et>mbine well. Pour Into a well greased and\ni floured cake pan. Bake in a moderate oven.\n| Cool thoroughly before marking into squares\nand rolling in powdered sugar. Note:\nThese make a tasty addition to any\ntea table.\nt*\nm^\nGOLDEN\nSYRUP\nEight Inches of\nSnow, Kimberley\nCars in Difficulties;\nFink Family Is to\nReside Nelson\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Nov. 2-Miii\nBarbara Fink visited Miss Helen\nSutherland during the week-end.\nThe Fink family la soon to leave this\ndistrict to reside ln Nelion, '\nMn. J. Mills, who hai been ln the\nMcDougall hoipltal, li much improved.\nMiss Lily Ashe ii a patient ln\nhospital and ls likely to remain there\nfor several months. She ii luffering\nwith heart trouble.\nMrs. Colin Chisholm il UI with\nan infected hand. There are several\ncases of infection in town at preient and the hospital is kept busy\nwith most of the rooms full. A few\ncasea of measles are reported. Rev.\nMr. Gelbraith's children have measles and George is back again in the\nhospital.\nMr. Stafford, principal ot the\npublic schools, was at home all last\nweek owing to illness.\nEastern Star lodge held a bridge\nand whist drive, there being 11\ntables in play.\nWinners ln bridge were Mri. Fenton Smith, ladles' first, and Mn.\nEvans, second. J. Boardman men's\nfirst and B. H. Bentley, second.\nWhist winners were Mre. Woolley.\nladies' first, Mrs. Beck, second; H.\nWhitford, men's first, Mr. Parsons,\nsecond. Refreshments were served.\nWeeks of perfect autumn weather\nwere brought to a close with a real\nsnow storm. In less than three hours\nbetween eight ahd nine inches of\nsnow fell. The roads were damp\nand slippery and many cars got into\ndifficulties on the front and back\nhills to the townsite. Early in the\nevening seven cars were stuck on\nthe back hill at one time. Dr. Davis'\ncar left the road and skidded into\nthe ditch. The big C. M. & S. Co.\ntruck endeavored to pull tha oar\nback on the road but lt skidded\nalso and ran Into the doctor, car.\nSeveral can were stuck on the\nlower hill but no damage was done.\nSeveral can drove into Cranbrook\nSaturday evening and found little\nsnow past MarysviUe and none past\nthe Wycliffe bridge. Cranbrook had\nnot a flake and was much amused\nover the Kimberley can with their\ntops and tenden white with snow.\nRossland Dances\nUpon Hallowe'en\nDance of K.P.'s Best\nAttended for a\nLong Time\nPORK\nand BEANS\nfor a Beneficial Change\nSpecially srown beans, carefully\nselected pork, tomato sauce and\nseasonins to conform with an ever\npopular recipe. Of appetizing appearance and delightfully flavored.\nKeep Out Draughts With\nWeatherstrip\nOZITE FELT\nWeatherstrip\nn.        Comet  In 22 ft.  length!.\nLidore'i rubber covered\nweatherstrip. Flexible and\neaiy to apply.\nElectric Heitin two watt\nEach $3.00\nColored granite door mitt\nSpecial\u2014\nEach 75c, $1-00\nand if i .ar,\nHIPPERSON\nHARDWARE CO., LIMITED\nPHONE 497 The Friendly Store BOX 414\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThis column is conducted by Mrs M A. Vigneux All news of a\nsocial nature including receptions, private eiilertaiimieiits, peisunal\nitems, marriages, ate, will appear in this column. Telephone Mra,\nVigneux at her borne, UD Silica itreet\nROSSLAND, B. C\u2014Attendance at\nthe Hallowe'en maiquerade ball\ngiven by Rossland lodge No. II,\nKnights of Pythias, Friday evening,\nwas among the largest seen at a\nRossland dance for a long time.\nDecorations were in keeping with\nthe season, and the costumes showed considerable originality as well\nas attractiveness. Prizes went as\nfollows: Best fancy costume, Mn.\nAdrian Cotnoir as \"Cleopatra\" and\nIan Fry as a Crusader; best comic\ncostume, Mr. and Mrs. Irving J.\nTrembath, who represented courtiers from the court of Queen Elll-\nabeth; best dressed couple, Miss\nEileen McDonald as an Egyptian\ndancer and Herbert Minion as an\nArab chief.\na   a   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. S. Palmqulit and\ndaughter  Florence  have  returned\nfrom a visit to Grand Forks.\n*   .  .\nRev. and Mn. C. H. Daly, who\nhave been visiting In the city and\nin Trail, left for Lilloet, where\nRev. Mr. Daly will have charge of\nsome mission work for the United\nchurch.\na   a   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. S. Johnson and sen\nTeddy were visiting in Grand Forks\nthe past week.\no   \u2022  .\nMn. Thomas Wood has returned\nhome from the hoipltal,\na    a    \u2022\nMiss Isabel Jensen has returned\nfrom a visit with friendi in Grand\nForks.\na   a    a\nCharles Gibbard is spending a\nfew days in Greenwood.\nGrand Master\nVisits Kaslo\n.\nKASLO, B. C\u2014J. E. Fitzwater of\nKamloops paid the local I.O.O.F.\nlodge an official visit Wednesday\nevening. After the business of the\nevening had been concluded the\nmembers enjoyed a happy locial\nhour.\nH. D. Dawson of Nelson passed\nthrough Kaslo Thursday en route\nto the Whitewater district.\nJ. Burns of Nelson was a recent\nbusiness visitor in town.\nJ. R. Hunter of Nelson was ln\nthe city Wednesday evening to attend a special session of the I.O.O.F.\nMr. and Mri. Lester Riley have\nas their guests the former's brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mn. Virgil Riley of Crystal Beach, Ont.,\nwho are en route to visit ln Grand\nForka.\nMn. M. McQueen has had as her\nguest Miss E. Frederickson, teacher\nat Balfour.\nPostmaster D. P. Kane and Mr3.\nKane were Nelson visitors recently.\nD. H. Proudfoot of Nelson was In\nfor the special I.O.OJT. meeting\nWednesday evening,    ' \"* \u00bb\u2022 -\n \t\nThe borne of Mrs. 0. A. Gray,\nThird street, Fairview, wm the\nscene of a gay Hallowe'en party\nwhan Mrs. Gray's daughter, Agnes,\nentertained her friends.. From\nbranches attached to the walla effectively hung many black cats,\nwitches, bats and lanterns. The\nevening was spent in dancing,\ngames and contests. A buffet supper wai served with the cakes and\ncandies, appropriately decorated for\nHallowe'en. Miss Gray's guesls\nwere: Mr. and Mra. F. Doodson, Miss\nLouise Payne, Miss Betty Doodson,\nMisi Jean Burgess, Miss Kathleen\nPritchard, Miss Louise Milburn,\nMiss Minnie Jacobson, Mlu Mildred\nSmith, Miss Janet MacKay, Miss\nJfretda MacKay, Miss Muriel Forbel,\nMiss Janet Young, Miss Muriel\nWetherhead, Mlts Bernice Wether-\nhead, Leslie Laithwaite, Jack Burgess, Raymond Burgess, Bob Andrews, Charles Pritchard, Ted Baker, Colin Baker, Thomas Milburn,\nLeonard Battley, Gordon Berry,\nNorman Fawcett, Steve Smith and\nFred Forbes.\na   a    a\nMn. G. Wilson was in town yesterday from Golden.\na    a   a\nMn. E. M. Munn of Nakusp visited town yesterday.\n.   .   .\nAmong shoppen to Nelson yesterday were Mr. and Mrs. E. Hirrop\nof Harrop.\n\u00ab   a    a\nMiss Irene Denny of Willow Point\nleaves   today   for   Victoria,   from\nwhere she will sail on a five-month\ntrip to South Africa snd the Weit\nIndies.    While  in   the  city  Mils\nDenny was a guest of Mr. and Mn.\nG. Spencer Godfrey, Vernon street.\n.  .  .\nGordon Berry of Trail ipent the\nweek-end in Nelion.\n.     0      *\nRobert Laughton wu over from\nTrail to spend the week-end with\nhii parents, Mr. and Mn. David\nLaughton, Edgewood avenue.\na    a    a\nAmong visitors to Nelson yeiterday was Gordon McGregor of Winlaw. *\n\u2022    *    a\nAmong Trailites to Nelson over\ntbe week-end was George Fawcett,\na   a    a\nMrs. Donald A. Sinclair, Nelson\navenue, expects to leave today for\na visit to tbe coast.\na   a    a\nJohn Avis ot Perry Siding was a\nvisitor to the city yesterday.\n0      0      0\nAmong city visiton Monday was\nJack Lynes from Salmo.\n.  .  .\nMiss M. Scobe, who has been\nvisiting for three weeks at the home\nof har sister, Mn. Barclay, has left\nfor her home at Crescent Manly,\nSidney, Australia.\no     .     *\nMiss Agnes Cant, Carbonate\nstreet, who has been for the past\nfew weeks visiting friends and relatives in the city, leaves today for\nGait, Ontario, where she will reside with her brother.\na    a    a\nAt St. Paul'i Hallowe'en tea last\nThunday Mn. Spence kindly assisted Mrs. Sparke's circle in the\ntea room and the trlditional Hallowe'en decorations were in charge\nof Mrs. J. Fogle and Mrs. E. Shaw.\n\u2022 \u2666  *\nMr. and Mn. Noel Harrop and\nion. Ernest, of Trail are visiting\nMn. Harrop'i parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. R. Relsterer, 21. Robson street,\nfor a week.\n\u2022 a    a\nHenry Welbe of Robson was\namong week-end visitors to Nelson.\na   .   .\nWilliam Bennett has returned to\nthe Ainsworth Banker mine after\nspending tbe week-end at the home\nof his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A.\nBennett, 1215 Front itreet\n\u2022 a   a\nE. Tingle of New Denver visited\nNelson at the week-end.\n.    .    o\nMrs, J. Tait, Carbonate street, li\ntaking up residence at the Terrace\napartments.\n\u00bb   \u2022    a\nA. G. Cameron of Trail was\namong week-end visiton to Nelson.\na    a    a\nMn. J. Vlchen spent the weekend in Nelson.\n.  .  .\nMn. W. 0. Rose, Vernon itreet,\nhas as her guests Mr. and Mrs. W. R.\nJarvis of Procter.\n0      0*\nMr. and Mrs. Jack Boyce have\ntaken up residence ln the Terrace\napartments.\n0      0      0\nMra. W. Kelly of Spokane is visit\ning at the home of her mother, Mn.\nJ. V. Meyer, Hill Mines road, and\nher uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mn.\nKirby Grenfell.\na    a    a\nMn. J. Patenon of Kaslo was in\nNelion yesterday en route home,\nafter spending the pait two months\nvisiting  friends  in   the   southern 1\nStates.\na   a    a\nThe Mines Kay and Nancy Nil-\nbet were week-end guests in Trail\nattending the Cinderella dance\nthere.\na   a   a\nMr. and Mrs. Frink Phillips, 914\nCarbonate itreet, had ai their weekend guests their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mra. F. W. Cartwright of the Kootenay Belle mine,\nand their two children, Lilian and\nBilly.\na   a   a\nMiss Val Houle was among Nelsonites attending the Navy ball in\nSpokane Saturday.\nooo\nSt. Saviour's church bridge club\nmet yesterday ot the home of Mn.\nC. W. Appleyard, Hoover street,\nwhen those playing were: Mra.\nJames O'Shea, Mn. W. M. Walker,\nMrs. E. E. L. Dewdney, Mrs. P. G.\nMorey, Mrs. John Cartmel, Mn. L.\nV. Rogers, Mrs. Leslie Crauford ond\nMrs. C. Appleyard.\n\u2022 *   .\nArthur B. Gilker was among Nelsonites attending the Navy ball ln\nSpoksne Saturday.\n.09\nE. H. Hanley of Toronto, ex-\nresident of Nelson, is a city visitor.\n\u2022 a   a\nR. A. Grimes, who ipent the past\nweek in Spokane, haa left for Sandon,\na   a   a\nB. B. McCannon has arrived from\nGrand Forki to take up hii duties\nas telegrapher ln the Great Northern office. His family is to follow in the spring.\na   a    a\nMrs. D. J. Davis of South Slocan\nspent the week-end in the city,\na   a    a\nLee Phillips, who has been visiting his parents ln Lethbridge, has\ntaken up permanent residence in\nNelson.\na   a   a\nMrs. Rod McDonald of Corra Linn\nwbs a shopper in the city yesterday.\na   a    a\nMr. and Mrs. Bailey of Denver,'\nColo., are city visiton.\na   a    a\nMrs. K. McLean and daughter,\nLouise, have returned to Trail after\nvisiting at the home of her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Charles F. McHardy,\nMedical Arts building.\n\u2022 a   a\nMr. and Mrs. William Waldie ot\nRobson were in the city over the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. S. B. Jepson, Nelson avenue,\nrecently entertained at tea when\nher guests included: Mrs. J. S. W.\nClowes, Mrs. E. A. Mann, Mrs. Nelson Ball, Mrs. Arthur Foster, Miss\nGladys Ewing, Mra. J. R. McLennan, Mn. C. D. Pearson, Mn. Knight\nof Seattle and Miss Hickey of Seattle, Mrs. D. A. Darough, Mn. R. A.\nPeebles, Mrs. L. M. Varner, Mrs.\nH. A. Nicholson, Mn. Sidney Hayden, Mrs. Frank Baker, Mn. Russell B. MacEwan. Mrs. Arthur W.\nParker, Mrs. T. W. Slader, Mrs. G.\nC. Arneson and Mrs. A. Clyde Emory.\na   a   a\nGeorge Dvorjetz has taken up\nresidence in hii new home at the\ncorner of Behnsen and Third street,\nFairview.\n9     9     9\nMiss Margaret McDonald, who\nteaches at Brilliant, was a week-end\nvisitor to Nelson.\na   a   a\nH. Bowes was a visitor in town\nat the week-end from Nakusp.\na    a    \u2022\nMost Rev. Martin M. Johnson,\nBishop of Nelson, has left to visit\nKelowna, Revelstoke, Golden, Penticton and Grand Forks. He expects\nto return tola week-end.\n\u2022 a   \u2022\nMn. Marwin Quance and daughter, Eileen, have returned to Robson after visiting at the home of\nMn. Quance's parents, Mr. and Mn.\nC. F. McHardy.\n9     9      9\nMn. George Lee-Warner's circle\nof St. Saviour's Church Helpers met\nyesterday afternoon ln the Memorial hall when those present were:\nMn. C. H. Hamilton, Mn. Reginald\nDill, Mrs. W. Taylor, Mn. A. J.\nCollinson, Mn. Bruce Sutherland,\nMn. Duncan Smith, Mn. W. W.\nFerguson, Mn. Bruce Weld, Mrs.\nMarker Puner, Mn. R. W. Dawson\nand Mn. George Lee-Warner.\n\u2022 a*   \u2022\nMils Geraldine Dunkerley, 609\nNelson avenue, is doing nicely at\nher home after a recent operation.\na   a   9\nMn. Lome Smellie of Ymlr was\na week-end visitor to Nelson.\nOld Timer Dies\nal Invermere\nDouglas Grainger iri\nDistrict for 40\nYears\nRush to Declare\nVote Eligibility\n34 Attest Saturday\nAfternoon Before\nCity Clerk\n: INVERMERE, B.C.,- Athalmer\nInvermere Hockey association has\nobtained the generous support of the\ncitizens of the district, especially the\n. ousiness men and recent donations\ni have been liberal. Grading and in-\nI stalletlon of the water mains are\nalmost complete, and the founda-\nI tion for the club room Is under way.\nThe combined Women's auxillar-\niei ot the Church of England of\nWindermere and Invermere met at\nthe home of Mrs. T. W. Turner,\nhospital road, Invermere.\nLittle Theater association under\nthe preildency of Mra. T. Weir, Invermere, report a growing member-\nihlp. Two playi have been selected\nto date, and rehenals on them have\ncommenced.\nCan passing through the Kootenay Park gates from May to the\nend of September numbered 8236\nand carried 9919 passengen.\nA party of girl hikers under the\nleadership   of   Mrs,   Walter   Elms\nclimbed to the top of Castle rock.,\nThe Invermere hotel Is now under\n PAO\u00bb Mvl\nthe management of Mr. and _W\nJ. E. Dunn of Invermere.\nDr. and Mn. Barclay of I\nwere; visitors h|re.\nVisiting Mr, and Mn. 0. A.\nGuinness of Invermere mar*\nters Genrd and Cornelia- of\nOrder of Mirtha of the Ml\nSprings hospltil, Banff, Alta. -\nwai the sisters' tint visit to Bin\nColumbia. Tbey are from Antif\nish, Nova Scotia.\nTbe death occurred la Irrvermai\nI of Douglas Grainger, of IrrvermeH\ni-Mr. Grainger bad lived iu the dU\n' trict over 40 years. He was borl\n1 in Jedborough,  Scotland,  in  189*1\nHe leaves three ions, all reside\nin tha district, Hardwiike, Sterli\n,and Brett; a sister, Mn. Leightt.\n,of Vulcan, Alta.; two small granl\nchildren   in   Invermere,   Raymon|\nsand Catherine.\nNo fewer than 34 poll and road tax\npayen and holders of city licences\ntook declarations of qualification\nfor the civic voters list Saturday\nafternoon, when City Clerk W. E.\nWesson kept nil office open till 5\no'clock for the accommodation of\nthose not able to get down in the\nregular office hours There was also\na heavy volume ot declarations in\nthe forenoon.\nAll told, 87 persons In recent days\ntook the declaratloni neceisary to\nassure being added to the householder and licencee section of the\nvoters list, which closed Saturday.\nsix of tha 87 being llcencees, and the\nrest householders.\nAs there are 244 holdovers from\nthe laat Jilt, provided they are qualified by current payments, 219 being\nhouseholders and 29 llcencees, the\nhouseholder and licencee section of\nthe new voters list can have a maximum of 300 householders and 31 llcencees.\nMichel Auxiliary\nEagles Has Whist\nNATAL, B.C.-Ladiea' auxiliary\nNo. 1864 of the Michel F.O.E. held a\nsuccessful whist drive, 20 tables\nbeing occupied. Supper wai served\nby the auxiliary.\nThe winnera at wbiit were:\nLadies: Fint, Mn. A. Walker;\nsecond, Mrs. J. McGlnnls; third,\nMra. S. Stevenson; fourth, Mra. J.\nFirth.\nMen: Fint, J. Pedpral; second,\nJ. Whlttaker, Natal; third, P. Lai-\naruk, Natal; fourth, E. T. Jones.\nThe winner for the prize drawing\nwas J. Repka of Natal.\nRemodelling of the Michel tipple\nof Michel colliery mines was underway Thunday. It is estimated\nfrom four to five days will be required.\nRats destroy over five billion dollars worth of goods each year.\nfor Baby* Col<\nProved  beat by twol\ngenerations of mother..!\nmaims\u2122.\nA100% WHOLE WHEAT\nMftUY-IU tfll I'tHty,\n_-n*it_a*F_m    ~-~-- *.\n3\u00a3m.-;\n\u00abU THE EIEMT I\nMl TIE MOTEIls 1\nUI TIE MIMEI\/US 1\nau tie m_M.it i\nau tie itan\nMUFFETS\nJH-tr, * \u2022*--\nr^'fSW^ KKG.F WHEAT\n\u25a0hC^t|.1lltallM,0lt>e\u00bbp,,\n1   \",l 7i-_35_g__l\nNew Party Frocks\nOf brocade or plain satin. Puff\nsleeves, peplum or bolero styles.\nColors are turquoise, peach, antique,\nroyal blue, tea rose and\nnile. SPECIAL\t\nImported velvet flowers of every\ndescription for your corsage or hair\nwreaths for evening wear.\nPRICED\nAT\t\n29c \"$150\nJERMAN\nHUNT'S\nREADY-TO-WEAR\u2014DRY GOODS\nPhone 200 Baker St.\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\ny PILLS\nA Steady Even Heat\nFor Users of West Transfer Co.'s Coal\n24 HOURS A DAY We  Recommend \u2014\nGait Lump\nFOR HEATER AND RANGE\nCrow's Nest\nFOR FURNACE\nCanmore Briquettes\nFOR FIREPLACE\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nFU|L SPECIALISTS SINCE 1899 PHONE 33\nifiiMiTitiiiirun-   \"'\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.\nBAKER STREET NELSON, I. C.\n_\u00a3j^\nasm.\nm\n PAGE SIX -\n.Maim lathj Jfaroa\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish golumbia's Most MeteUino Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBUSHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n._1\u00ab   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   Britilh Columbia.\n\u2022 Phono 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   ol   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Clrculitlona   and\nTho   Canadian    Press    Leased    Wire    Newi    Service.\nTUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1936\nU. S. A. GOES TO POLLS TODAY\nWith <-ach side predicting an overwhelming victory,\nthe fates of President Roosevelt, Democratic presidential\ncandidate and Governor Alf Landon of Kansas, Republican,\nrest in the hands of the electors of the United States today.\nAdvance straw polls have been numerous and it is interesting to note, on the day of the battle of ballots, that the\nLiterary Digest poll, a trustworthy barometer in former\nU.S. elections, predicts a Landon victory with 370 electoral\nvotes. On top of this the latest of the major polls conducted by the American Institute of Public Opinion favors\nRoosevelt with 315 electoral votes.\nSo, early this evening, the eyes of the world will be\nturned upon the United States. Particularly will the\nstates that hold the key to the riddle be watched with\ninterest. Returns from New York state will be later\nthan usual because of a two-hour extension to polling\ntime due to heavy registration.\nAn indication of the trend may be available tonight\nbefore New York's vote is known but so weighty are the\n47 votes in the Empire state they might change the whole\nsituation. Only Woodrow Wilson among modern day\npresidents managed to get into the White House without\ncarrying New York.\nClose attention will be paid also to Pennsylvania and\nOhio, Indiana and Illinois, since in them the election may be\ndecided. And should the vote be close, the interest will\nswing to the west, where time differences make states in\nthis sector among the last to report. No political observer\nin the U.S.A. can forget 1916, when California came along\nto elect Wilson after it appeared that CharleB Evans Hughes\nhad been elected.\nHere are some of the election and campaign statistics:\nExpenditures\u2014More than $13,000,000, making it the\nmost costly campaign in history. With final reports of\nspending still to come, Republican national organizations\nreported $7,488,717; Democrats, $3,430,494.\nRegistrations\u2014Unofficially estimated at 55,427,000,\nan increase of 8,527,000 over 1932.\nAnticipated vote\u2014A possible total estimated as high\nas 45,000,000, which would be an increase of more than\n5,000,000 over 1932.\nVoting units\u2014One hundred and twenty-two thousand,\nfour hundred sixty-four, an increase of 2277 over 1932,\nrequiring the services of an army of around 612,000 men\non election day.\nCandidates\u2014For the senate, 132; for the house, 1207;\nfor major state offices, excluding state legislatures, 844.\nCONTROL OF AVIATION IS SHIFTED\nIN CANADA\nCivil aviation in Canada, linked with the department of\nnational defence at Ottawa since after the war, left that\ndepartment yesterday and now comes under the guidance\nof the new ministry of transport.\nCivil aviation control in Canada was a post-war development and arose from the fact that during the conflict all training camps and aircraft factories in Canada\nwere under direction of the Imperial government. Canada's first effort in her own aerial development resulted\nfrom the sinking of an oil-tanker by a German submarine\neight miles off Halifax harbor, in 1917.\nSteps were then taken to establish aerial patrols at\nHalifax and Sydney and these patrols were at first manned\nby personnel from the United States who were waiting to\nproceed overseas.\nIn 1919 parliament passed the Air Board act, administered by Hon. A. K. MacLean, at present justice of the\nexchequer court, who was then minister of reconstruction.\nEstablishment of the civil aviation branch followed immediately, with John A. Wilson in control.\nAir regulations were drafted and licencing pilots begun. From the beginning the connection between the\ncivil aviation wing and military air operations was slight,\nalthough personnel for the branch was furnished by the\nRoyal Canadian Air Force.\nIn 1923 the branch became part of the defence department and the old air board was abolished. In the past\n12 years considerable development has taken place and\njrreat success has attended efforts of the branch in making\na survey of Canada's airways. The prairie sections were\nconcluded in 1930 and the coast regions, both Pacific\nand Atlantic, in subsequent years.\nLast July the civil aviation branch took over construction of emergency landing fields begun as a relief\nmeasure under the defence department in 1933.\nTwo main divisions operate under the branch\u2014one,\nair regulations and the licencing of pilots; two, maintenance and lighting of airports.\nAt the end of September Canada had 981 licenced\npilots, of whom 501 were commercial and 480 private.\nA total of 517 air engineers had obtained licences.\nCommercial aircraft in Canada number 465, of which\n103 arc commercial and 62 private. There are 102 licenced\nairports.\nBETWEEN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-\n<S>\u2014\u2014 . \u2022\n-TUESDAY MORNINO, NOVEMBER\nt!B\u00a3\nHe'i really mailing a letter.\nIV\nThis is Frank Hutty o( Slocan\nCity caught by the candid camera\nas he drops a letter into a postal\nbox on Baker street. Frank is well\nknown up and down the Slocan\nvalley and travels th\" road between Nelson and Slogan City probably as much as anyone in the district. When younger, and he's'still\na youth, he was a hockey and baseball player. Right now he is one ol\nNelson's enthusiastic boxla supporters and he seldom misses a good\nhockey game.\nWINTER IS HERE\nWell shiver my timbers\u2014it has\nreally turned cold. Around town\none sees new gloves, new (ur coats,\nnew overcoats, new muflers. Real\nsigns of winter. And I saw a chap\nall dolled up in a lur helmet.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nSUCH A IGGERENCEI\n\"Vot is scienoe?\"\n\"You should be ashamed to csk!\nScience is dose tings vot say: 'No\nSmoking,' or 'Kip olf de gress'.\"\n\u2022 *   \u00bb\nTHE AVERAGE MAN\nA writer in the Ottawa Journal\nhas drawn a picture of an Average\nCanadian. It is a cheerful picture of\na very likeable cuss who works\nfairly hard, plays the game decently, and does not take life too seriously.\nIt is evident the writer did not\ngatner his information from the census returns of thc Dominion Bureau\nof Statistics. Had he done so he\nwould have teen overcome with despair. It is such an eminently practical document. It is also impersonal.\nNevertheless it seems to breathe a\nwholesome contempt on the part of\nits compilers for all of us. \"God\nmade him, and therefore let him\npass for a man\": this seems to be thc\nspirit with which they have recorded our physical exis'.ince in the\ncolumns headed \"male\" and \"female\" as the case may be.\nWhat sort of creature is \"the average man\" depicted by the census\nbureau and the insurance actuary?\nHe is a strange, elusive creature.\nYet the statisticians claim to know\nall about him. They will tell how\nmuch he weighed at birth, how tall\nhe was at 15, at whut age he marries,\nhow many years he has to live.\nThey can even tell us within cer-\ntaiii limits of what he will die. They\ncan tell us for any given year how\nmany of us are living, how many\ndie, and how many are in the sen-\n10 YEARS AGO\ni From Nelson Dally Newi File*\n*> i\nNovember 3, 1928\nW. 0. Smith of Moyie is \u00ab guest\nat the Hume.\n\u2022 *   *\nJ. Nolan o( Ymir is at the Strathcona.\na   a   a\nE. C. HUnt, district horticulturist,\ngave figures showing that British\nColumbia's apple yield (or 1926 was\nestimated at 6000 cars or 3,790,000\nboxes.\n,a   \u2022   a\nMn. F. Kellman of Bay avenue\nand Mrs. Brownridge o( the Consolidated apartments In Trail are\nvisiting in Nelson.\n\u00bb  \u2022   \u2022\nTRAIL-Mr. and Mrs. P. Mclntyre o( Tadanac returned (rom a\nsix weeki' vacation tour tn which\nthey visited Toronto, Montreal,\nNew York and Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. F. C. Rowley, Mr.\nand Iid[rs. T. E. Maddock, and Mrs.\nA. Kraft motored to Trail and are\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. G.\nCarter, former residents ol Nelion.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGeorge Carter and three ions left\n(or   Vancouver   via  the   Spokane\nroute.\na   \u2022   \u2022\nMra. Papazian o( the Strathcona\nhotel returned (rom a visit to New\nYork.\na    a    \u2022\nL. H. Choquette left (or Chicago\nvia the Crow's Nest to attend the\nmeeting o( the state deputies o( the\nKnights o( Columbus.\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. A, French left lor\nVancouver.\na   a   \u00ab\nJ. C. Kennedy of Penticton Is\nvisiting In town.\na    a   a\nCRANBROOK-W. J. Scorgle and\nMiss Geraldine Richardson of this\ncity were married by Rev. M. S.\nBlackburn yesterdayi\n\u00ab    a    a\nB. A. Stimmel of Trail was appointed chairman at the meeting of\ninter-city bowlers.\nooo\nWilliam Ramsay, provincial government engineer of Nelson, reported that the new bridge at Vallican is nearing completion and that\ntraffic is going over the bridge at\nthe present time.\n|   20 YEARS AGO   I\nI From Nelion Dally Newi Files I\n<\"> *\nNovember 3, 1916\nOperations at the Granby Consolidated, held up because of the\nFernie strike, arc returning to normal.\nBorn, to Mr. and Mrs. Lionel\nAddington of Fairview, a son.\na    a    a\nPrices ot mining stock in the\ndistrict are on thc rise.\nLieut. W. Sturgeon of Nelson has\napplied for transfer from the front\nto an aviation unit.\na    a    a\nCapt. B. B. McAlpine is ln the\ncity with a view to organizing u\ncadet corp.\n\u2022 \u2022       0\nA. D. Wheeler of Ainsworth is at\nthe Strathcona.\n\u2022 00\nP. L. Trainor of Trail is at the\nNelson House.\n\u2022 O      0\nGeorge J. Priest and Sergt. J. E.\nGoulding of Nelson were among\nthose reported wounded on the latest\ncasualty list.\na   a    a\nAn additional value of $23,000 will\nbe made to the resources of the\nRambler-Cariboo company through\nthe sale of their zinc concentrates.\n\u2022 a    a\nThe Standard mine is now em-\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN  CLENDENING,  M.D.\nCONSULT PHYSICIAN IS ADVICE\nThe belt advice thit can be given\nto the woman who hai Juit diicov-\ncred that she il to become a mother,\nls to coniutt a phyilcian immediately. It hai only been within\nrecent yeari that thli pracUce haa\nbeen recognised as lenilble. Indeed\nUie founder of the (Int prenatal\nclinic, Dr. J. W. Ballantyne, of Edinburgh, -till il alive.\nSo even the advice ti not io very\nold. In other dayi a falm sense of\nmodeity made women think they\nihould keep the matter a tecret,\neven from the physician. But in our\nhealthier-minded present day, motherhood ii no longer regarded as a\nsubject (or a whispering campaign,\nand a perfectly natural event is\nrecognized as something (or (rank,\nopen discussion.\nAnother reason, however, that\ncomes in nowadays\u2014the grim specter o( expense\u2014may prevent some\ncouples (rom seeking medica] advice at the very beginning. Thii\nis an idea that should be dispelled.\nPhysicians quite generally make no\nmore charge (or advice all through\nthe prenatal period, as well ai attention at delivery, than they do\n(or the latter alone. They recognize the great advantage to them\not a thorough ecquainlancc with\nthe phyilcal condition of the mother.\nPrenatal care as at present understood .includes first a careful\nhistory inquiring into the possibility of pre-exlitlng disease, such as\ntuberculosis, tonsilltii, rheumatlim,\nscarlet lever and syphilis, on account o( their possible bearing on\nthe condition o( the heart and kidneys. The heart and kidneys can\nbe carefully examined to determine\nwhether they are perfectly sound.\nTIME OF BIRTH\nCALCULATED\nThe time when birth may be\nexpected is calculated from the history and the condition of the child,\nand the dimensions of the mother's\npelvis\u2014which is so important a determining (actor ln easy birth\u2014are\nall simple calculations to make.\nIt is usually o( Interest, especially\nto the prospective (ather, to ,know\nwhether there are going to be twins\nor not. This ls also usually easy to\ndiagnose, although I emphasize the\nusually becauses surprises do occur.\nMn. Dionne, I believe, did not be-\nS, 1936\t\nlieve in prenatal care, and the quintuplets nearly caused the only paternal fatality in Dr. Dafoe's experience.\nThe moat reliable means of determining whether the mother Is de-\nevloping any of the poisons ot pregnancy li by urine examination and\ntaking the blood pressure. These\nare simple, routine procedures\nwhich any physician can carry out.\nThey give (air and early warning\nso that the prospecUve mother can\nbe safeguarded against these insidious dangers.\nThe physician ii able to give the\nmother advice about such almost\nregularly preient lymptoms as\nnausea and vomiting.\nAU prospective mother! wish to\nknow about diet and exerciie and\na hundred other things. Each cue\nii individual, and sometimes rest ii\nnecessary and exercise ihould be\nprohibited, and sometimes a good\ndeal of exercise is advisable.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nNORTH LOSES HI8 BET\nEast played the deal at 6-Dla-\nmonds. Ai is briefly sketched below,\nhe fulfilled hli contract, loilng only\na single spade trick. North bet that\nhad hii partner led a trump when\nln with his J of ipadei, instead of\nleading a second round o( clubs, the\ncontract would have been defeated.\nIs this so?\n\u2666 K Q 10 \u00bb\nf\u00ab3M\n*\u00ab.!\n\u2666 86\nt A J I \u00ab\n*9 8 S 2\nhi.\n$ ...j\n$\n(AIM\n\u2666 A  K Q\n10 4 3\n4>A K\nate. Yet we never seem to meet\nthe average man.\nNeither are we the average man\nourselves. We know InsUnctlvely\nthat we are not merely something\ndiKerent, but something also greatly\nsuperior. \"What a piece of work is\na man,\" wrote Shakespeare. \"How\nnoble in reason; how infinite in fac\nulty; in action, how like an angel;\nin apprehension, how like a god\nthe beauty of the world; the paragon\nof animals!\" That's us.\nBut the statisticians engaged tn\ntheir nefarious craft are too busy\nto read Shakespeare. So they continue chaining us to our average;\nand so submerge us. However, it\nis useless for the staticians to ar^ue:\n\"Why should a man desire ln any\nway\nTo vary from the general race of\nmen\"?\nThis is precisely the desire that\nall men and women cherish. But\nuntil the statisticians wake up to\nthe fact that the mind's the standard of the man, we mult bear the\nquinquennial slight of being recorded merely as male and female persons.\nploying 215 men. They have driven\nNo. 8 tunnel to the 3000-foot mark\na    a    a\nMayor J. J. Malone is visiting in\nSpokane.\n.   .   .\nH. W. Rust of Nelson left on the\nGreat Northern for Spokane.\n'  a    a    a\nA. J. ErlH of Nelson has'-'es his\nguest his brother, C. W. Dill of\nWinnipeg.\nooo\nW. A. Oswald of the censor department in Vancouver, is in the\ncity.\nooo\nInland revenue receipts for the\nlast month amounted to $4989.89, an\nincrease of $3000 over the receipt's\nof the same period last year.\n30 YEARS AGO   I\ni From Nelion Daily Newi Fllei I\nNovember 3, 110.\nJay P. Graves, general manager\nof the Granby Consolidated, returned from the company's annuel\nmeeting in New York and is visiting\nthe company's mines in the district.\na    a    a\nW. Martin o( Rossland ls in town\nen route to Calgary.\nooo\nMiss Victoria Cameron left for\nSpokane, where she is to join the\nstaff of Western Union Telegraph\ncompany.\na   a   a\nAn Important strike of about 14\nfeet of clean ore has been made\nat the Libby mine near Ainsworth.\nooo\nA. 0. Wheeler, who arrived in\nNelson (rom Butte, states that many\nButte mining men are expressing\nmuch interest in the Krao workings.\na    o,o\nKootenay apples are finding a\nready market in Manitoba.\nSeveral placer claims have recently been staked to the north of\nCottonwood lake.\na    a    a\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. C. Hamilton\nof Montreal are the guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. F. S. Clements.\na    a    a\nNelson tramway receipts for the\npast week totalled $127.75 as against\n$84.50 for the same period last week.\na    a    a\nD. StDenis of Slocan ls a guest\nat the Hume.\na    a    a\nG. 0. Buchanan of Kaslo is at the\nStrathcona.\na>Jlt\nf K 10 6 I\na>9 g\nJaQ i a I\nHow bidding went is unimportant. First we will see how declarer fulfilled his generous contract.\nThe opening lead was the Q ol\nclubs. East won with his (alse-\ncarded Ace. Cunningly declarer\nled a low spade, which South won\nwith his J, and led back the 10 of\nclubs, the bottom of his sequence.\nDeclarer led the Ace of spades.\nDummy ruffed a spade with its lowest trump. The Ace of hearts was\ntaken. Declarer ruffed a low heart\nAt the eighth trick dummy's J of\ndiamonds was used to ruff declarer's last spade. Declarer led one of\ndummy's clubs and ruffed. All East\nhel dwas an established trump suit\ncontaining the last (our tricks, Just\nfulfilling his contract.\nReplay the hand according to\nNorth's suggestion. Win the first\nclub trick with declarer's Ace. Lead\nthe 2 o( spades and have South win\nwith hii J. Have him lead the 9 ot\ndiamonds, as North wished. Win\nwith declarer's 10. Lead the Ace of\nspades. Have dummy ruff the third\nlead of spades. Lead a club from\ndummy. Win with declarer's K.\nHave declarer take four rounds ol\nwinning diamonds. Let the defend-\nen discard as perfectly as possible.\nThat will take play through tho\ntenth trick, o( which declarer has\nwon nine. The three cards held by\neach player will be as shown below.\nfQ9\n*\u00bb\nV.\ns.\n\u2666 3\nfK 10\n\u2666 \u2022>\nAt the eleventh trick lead declarer's last diamond. South must\nretain his high club, or dummy will\nlet go its lowest heart to win the\ntwo last tricks. Retain South's\nclub, and let go his lowest heart.\nDiscard dummy's now useless club,\nretaining its A-J o( hearts. What\nis North to discard?   H he lets go\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUU.I.EN\n\"We had lost track of one uncle\nand three second cousins till the\npapers told about Jim havin' the\nlucky ticket ln that lottery.\"\nIllMAN Sil\nOF THE\n\\NEWS\/\nBY   EDWIN C . HILL\nCoafriiU. tm.ot Carnal nm toaottso\nJ\nONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO, THE CZAR EXECUTED A MAN FOR\nMAKING COUNTERFEIT COINS OF PLATINUM-NOW SOVIET\nRUSSIA IS THINKING  SERIOUSLY OF ESTABLISHING\nPLATINUM   COINAGE\nPlatinum used to be known as\n'frog gold.\" People were intereet-\ned in it because it was hard to get,\nbut they couldn't seem to do much\nwith it. Several weeks ago It told\n(or 70 dollara an ounce, juit twice\nthe price o( gold. Wall itreet is trying to solve some fast and furtive\noperations, which indicate that\nspeculator! are shoving Uie metal,\non the ground that here ia a safe\n\"hedge\" against inflation.\nOne can carry tenthousand or fifteen thousand dollan' worth of it ln\na money belt, at preient prices, without discomfoit, and with the ban\nof gold-hoarding that might appeal\nto certain investors who want to\nkeep their wealth mobile and foot-\nlose.\nWhile platinum has been unstable\nin price, the trend of recent years,\nwith its widening use, not only for\nJewelry, but in the chemical and\nmechanical arts, has steadied and\nboosted Its market value. In 1032,\nworld consumption was 75,000 ounces, and in 1935, 375,000 ounces. The\nprice has risen from $18 an ounce in\nthat year to the current $70.\nInformed penons do not find in\nthe increased uses a satisfying answer for the swift rise In price.\nThey note that speculation has been\nsharply curbed in the silver and\ngold markets, and observe that the\nthree-ounce bricks of platinum\nwhich the speculaton carry in their\npockets Is a splendid attention-getter (or one working on a build-up.\nA (lash of $210 in mch small compass is an easy dramatization ot\nvalue twice that o( gold.\nCANADA LEADING\nPRODUCER\nBut there are ample reasons (or\na widening demand for platinum.\nChemists long have known Its yaluo\nas a catalyzer \u2014 the friendly element which likes to introduce\nstrangers in a chemical equation,\nbut never gets mixed up in the one-\nstep which follows. Modern chemistry needs catalyzers the way a\nnight club needs a master of ceremonies.\nThey got platinum to work making platinum black, used in the\nmanufacture of sulphuric and nitric\nacid. Now platinum is, being extensively used in the manufacture\nof rayon, for the spinnerets which\nrequire a substance resistant to\nhigh temperatures \u2014 and platinum\nls that, melting at 1750 degrees centigrade. Catalysis is revolutionizing modern chemistry and, to a degree, industry. Platinum inevitably\nwill play a more important role in\nthis, provided it isn't too expensive.\nCanada has been the leading producer since the world war. Before\nthat, Russia had almost a monopoly\nof the element, with its deposits in\nthe Ural mountains. Also since the\nwar, Colombia has been working\nlarge deposits, and there have been\nimportant discoveries and some production in South Africa. In 1925,\nprospectors located, 240 miles from\nthe Rand, a platinum-bearing reel\n200 miles long and 60 miles wide.\nUSED IN DENTISTRY\nThe metallurgical world is keeping an eagle-eye on the once-de-\nsplsed \"trot gold.\" Here's another\ncurious thing. It was just last year\nthat Ethiopia exported 3856 ounces\nof platinum, thii happening to b-\nthe year that Ethiopia waa grabbed\nby Italy. A French survey of a few\nyean before had reported tracea of\nplatinum deposits. British mineralogists had been studying the outcropping!. In 1933, some German\nscientists looked them over. Whatever they are and however promising, II Duce hai them now.\nThe Jewelry demand waned, but\nnow it ii waxing as the price rises,\nand K you are platinum-trimmed,\nyou enjoy a distinction not common\nto the herd. As it stands now, jewelry takes about 46 per cent ol the\nplatinum; dentistry, 25 per cent;\nchemistry, 14 per cent; electrical\nuses, 9 per cent, and miscellaneous\n6 per cent. Dentists, of course, as\nwell as metallurgists, are concerned\nabout the rising price, and it is believed that a return of gold for\nfilling teeth will be necessary if\nthis price holds.\nPLATINUM COINAGE?\nFor the last two yean, Russia\nhas been considering establishing\nplatinum coinage, an idea which\nhai been advanced by Dr. George\nF. Kunz, gem and precious metal\nexpert of New York. The years\nwhen Russia had virtual monopoly\nof platinum came before the booming scientific renascence of tha\nlast two decades, and Soviet Russia has become alert to the mounting world demand during the last\ntwo years. Its scientists are now\nscouting the shores of the Caspian\nsea and the Ural mountains for\nmore deposits, and labra'ory studies\nof new refining processes are being\nmade.\nThe first report of platinum in\nthis hemisephere came (rom Balboa's expedition into the Darien region in Central America in the sixteenth century. In letters to Spain,\nthere were a few casual reference--\nto such discoveries, but with Uttla\nInterest expressed and apparently\nno efforts to mine it. Platinum first\nreached Europe in the middle ot\nthe eighteenth century. Its rarity\nwas impressive, but it was always\na humble element.\nA hundred yean ago, a Russian\nczar executed a man for making\ncounterfeit money out of platinum\nalloy. And now it's worth twice as\nmuch as gold! If somebody tries lo\nsell you one o( those little three-\nounce bricks, don't be lmpulsiv*.\nAny Jeweler -will tell you that it\nis impossible to distinguish between\nplatinum and nickel by a visual\nexamination. Only a chemical test\nwill suffice.\nhis top spade, the last two tricks\nwill be taken with declarer's spade\nand dummy's Ace of hearts. If\nNorth retains his spade and lets go\ncne ot his hearts, dummy will win\nthe next trick with the Ace of\nhearts and the last trick with its\nJ. North wjs wrong. The small\nslam cannot be defeated.\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nSCRAP BOOK\nON TEACHING\n\"The best teacher is the one who\nsuggests rather than' dogmatizes\nand inspires his listener with the\nwish to teach himself.\"\u2014Bulwer.\nooo\n\"Men must be taught as if you\ntaught them not,\nAnd things  unknown propos'd as\nthings forgot.\"\u2014Pope.\na    a    a\n\"He who sees clearly and enlightens other minds most readily, keeps\nhis own lamp trimmed and burning.\"\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\na    a    a\n\"The true aim of everyone who\naspires to be a teacher should be,\nnot to impart his own opinions, but\nto kindle minds.\"\u2014F. W. Robertson.\na    a     a\n*Tf you have knowledge let others\nlight their candles at it.\"\u2014Margaret\nFuller.\nF0R MINING GAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nal] mluin. and other\ncamp buildinas They\nare strong, waterproof ll.ht and very\neasv to handle.\nWood, Val.an.ee\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nDiitrlct Distributor!\n\"Build B. C. Payroll.\"\nUnsurpassed\nfor a\nBaby\nNext to mothers care Pacific\nMilk is unsurpassed for a baby.\nIt is so easy on digestion and\nso nourishing. No liner endorsement from users can ba\nhad than the statement that\ndoctors recommend it. Time and\nagain It has brought comfort and\nsleep to bablei who are 111 and\nrestored health\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Count\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McMinui\nMcintosh apple.\" formed over half of the interior fruit\nshipments up to October 10.   Some people will think this\n lbl\n*t\"\nMUSCLEMAN\n!'   \"\no, U.S. welghtlifter, den\ntbe two-handed snatch.\nWORRIED? NOT MR. DUTTON!\n4 PAGE SEVEN I   NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C\u2014TUESDAY MORNINO, IMOVIMMW \u00bb\u25a0 HM -       PAOE SfVIN\nSean 'midst the iteam of th* dressing room after he had driven hit New\nYork American! through two noun of Intensive ice practice at Oahawa,\nOnt., ln preparation for the National Hockey league opening, Manager\nMervin \"Red\" Dutton looks a bit worried. Actually Red thinks his star-\nspangled puckstera are shaping tip into a fait, well-balanced crew, a\nlittle stronger than the team he led into the playoffs last season.\n.1   \u2014Central Press Canadian Photo.\nSouth Australia. Wilh 5 Wkkels in\nHand, Needs 170 to Beat Marylebone\nAustralians Out for\n162 in the First\nInnings Play\nHAMMOND GAINS\nSECOND CENTURY\nADELAIDE, Australia, Nov. 2 (CP\nCable)\u2014Fighting an uphill battle,\nSouth Australia, with five wickets\nin hand, needs 170 runs for victory\nover the touring Marylebone cricket\nclub team. The match concludes tomorrow.\nLed by Walter Hammond, who\nacored a century in each innlngi,\n. the . visitors scored 233 and 236.\nSouth Australia was dismissed for\n162 in its first innings and when\nItumpi were drawn today had lost\nfive wicketi for 138 runs.\nFOUR CENTURIES\nFOR HAMMOND\nly leering 136 today, Hammond,\n\u2022tar of thi English team, equalled thi Auitnllan record of Don\nBradman, the Commonwealth',\nleading batimin, who made four\neinturln In lucewlve Innlngi In\nflnt-eliH cricket In the 1931-32\ncampaign. In the opining match of\nthl tour against Weit Australia at\nPerth, thi Olouciitanhlre star\nhit 141, A fiw day* later In a\nmatch agalnit a combined Weit\nAustralia eleven hi made 107 and\nfollowed thli In tha first Innlngi\nef thi preient match by compiling\n104. The one-day match agalnit\nClare, Oct 2$, In which Hammond\nmade 40 rum, don not rank ai\n( flnt-clm conteit.\nIn making hli century today,\nHammond'! batting wai featured\nby many stinging square cut,, In-\nItead of hit customary off drive,.\nHe wu it thi wicketi three houri,\n89 minutei ind hit 11 foun.\ni 10,000 FANS ATTEND\nF. Ward, clever young spin bowl-\nJar, who learned many of his tricks\nI Irom Charles Grlmmett, veteran\nIj^issle googly expert, again starred\nI Ior South Australia and enhanced\nhli prospects of playing in test\ncricket. He captured five English\nwickets for 08 rum. In the first\ninnings Ward got five for 78.\nVisitor Richardson, veteran South\nAustralia, defended stubbornly today and at the close had made 44\nnot out. He was bowled on the last\nball of the day by Sims but the\ndelivery was ruled a \"no-ball\".\nTen thousand were present for the\nthird day'splay the wicket favoring\nbatsmen.\nBowling - Bodminton - Soccer - Hockey - Basketball - Wrestling - Boxing\nfaa\nRugby- Soccer - Curling - Skiing\u2014 Horse Racing\nHelen Jacobs ind Fred Perry, International tennis stars,\ntalk over their game- when they meet in London.\nKIMBERLEY DYNAMITERS COMING\nTO NELSON TO OPEN THE HOCKEY\nSEASON; GAMES NOVEMBER It, li\nTo Limber Up at Civic\nCentre for Jaunt\nto Europe\nNELSON HOPING\nFOR ICE SUNDAY\nDepends on Repairs to\nAmmonia Cooler\nUnder Way\nKimberley Dynamiters, championi of Canada, will open the\nNelson hockey seaion November\n14 In the first gime of a series\nof two exhibitions with the Nelion Maple Leifi, It wai announced Monday night by Dr. D. W.\nMcKay, preildent of the Nelion\nclub.\nThe Dynamiter! will come to\nNelion two or thru dayi before\nthe  fint game for  preliminary\nworkouts, and following the game\non the sixteenth will return home\nfor a week before starting eastward on the first stage of their\nEuropean Jaunt It ll undentood\nthey will  play at Calgary  and\npossibly at other Canadian cities\nen route to St. John, N. B., whence\nthey tail December 4 for Europe.\nThe start of Ice making at the\ncivic centre arena is dependent on\nrepairs to the ammonia cooler now\nunder way. The cooler had developed a leak. The boxla floor has\nbeen removed and the building ls\nall let for ice-making. Maple Leafs\nexpect to get on the ice Sunday to\nbegin limbering up for a long drive\nthis seaion which haa as its immediate   objective   capturing   the\nWest Kootenay and British Columbia titles, and then travelling the\nAllan cup path.\nON TO CALOARY\nNelson's hopefuls will get two\ndays rest after their games with the\nDynamiters, and on November 18\nwill leave for Calgary for games\non the nineteenth and twenty-first\nopening the Calgary season. They\nwill cross sticks with two foothills\nteams on that Jaunt, and expect later\nin the season to have at least one\nof them come here for exhibitions.\nLloyd Turner, Calgary hockey promoter, figures Nelson is the team\nto beat ln the fa- west playdowns\nthis season and chose the Maple\nLeafs for his season-opening exer\ncises for that reason.\nAlthough the Nelson and Kimber\nWill Prune Hie\nCanadlen Lineup\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP).\u2014Nine\nplayers in Montreal Canadlens'\ncamp will be skating for berths\nwith the National Hockey league\nteam when it meets Providence\nReds of the American-International\ncircuit In an exhibition match here\ntomorrow night.\nAt present Canadiens have 23\nplayers and their Jobs depend on\ntheir showing, Manager Cecil Hart\nsaid tonight.\n. \"We have lo get down to 14 men\nby Saturday night when we meet\nBruins and we will have only three\nmore practices,\" he pointed out.\n\"There is no time to waste and the\nroster is too unwieldy for our own\ngood,\" the manager added.\nGoodman Takes\nMexican Amateur\nMEXICO CITY, Nov. 2 <AP)-\nJohnny Goodman of Omaha trounced Percy J. Cllffore, Mexican-born\nBriton, 10 and 0, to win the Mexican\namateur golf championship today.\nARRANGE CRICKET FIXTURE8\nILFORD, England (CP). - Essex\nwill meet all counties in the county\ncricket championship next season\nwith the exception of Leicestershire\nand Warwickshire. Matches against\nNew Zealand and Cambridge uni-\nversity ire alio carded.\nTHE  SCOTCH   THAT  CIRCLES   THE   GLOBE\nIjhli advertisement Is not published pr displayed by the Liquor\nIControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nley puck chasers expect to get on\nthe Ice several daya ahead ot the\nfourteenth \u2014 the Maple Leafs are\nliopeful of action ort Sunday\u2014the\nhockey rink will not be open to\nthe public until the season-launching game a week Saturday, according to Manager Denis StDenis.\nIt is alio understood that the\nMaple Lcafa will do a good deal\nof their practicing behind cloied\ndoon this season, with occasional\nworkouts open for the railbirds to\ngive their team the onceover.\nHELEN JACOBS\nTO WRITE BOOK\nLOS ANGELES, Nov. 3 (CP)-\nThe gals who wield championship\ntennis racket* are certainly versatile.\nHelen Will* Moody, queen Of all\ntennis for several years, ll a good\nenough artist to command a one-\nwoman show ln New York's Grand\nCentral Palace and ia a dress designer of no little ability.\nToday it was learned Helen Jacobs, all-England champion, is en\nroute to London to write a book.\nThen it developed Alice Marble,\nthe current United States champion\nhas ambitions to become a pr fes-\nslonal singer. Her rich contralto\nvoice has already attracted attention ln radio auditions. She plans\nto study during the winter while\nkeeping up her game for new tennis conquest* next year.\nBirthday Greetings\nBy Canadian Pren\nTo John F. Timms, Northamptonshire county cricketer, who will be\n20 years old today. Although hi* club\nhai fallen on lean yean Timms ht*\nstarred a* a batsman since he turned\nprofessional in 1027. He hit 213 run*\nagalnit Worcestershire at Stourbridge ln 1934 for the highest icore\nof hit career.\nLEDINGHAM TO\nCURL AT COAST\nFirst Game in Novelty\nBonspiel Slated\nTonight\nTom Ledlngham of Nelion Is at\nVancouver for the grand novelty\nbonspiel at the forum opening Monday, and was icheduled to go into\naction tonight.\nA Vancouver Daily Province advance on the bonlplel layi of Tom:\n\"One of the moat colorful player*\non the Ice will be Tom Ledlngham\not Nelaon, who arrived with hii wife\nto enter a rink... He never mines.\n... Tom'i first gime ls against Mr.\nLees' bank rink Tueiday night at\nNon Bruins\nDefeat Maroons\nHALIFAX, Nov. 2 (CP)-Boston\nBruins resumed the lead tonight in\ntheir Maritime exhibition hockey\ntour with a 3-2 victory over Montreal Maroons in the fifth pre-season meeting of the two National\nhockey league teams.\nMaroons will have a chance to\neven matters again when the teami\nmeet in Moncton Wednesday in the\nlast game of the exhibition series.\nBoston has won three of the five\ngames.\nLeroy Goldsworthy, Charlies\nSandi and Cooney Welland notched\nBoston's tallies with Jimmy Ward\nand Earl Robinson replying for\nMaroons.\nOttawa Plans on\nWinter Dog Derby\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)-Yelpi\nof mushing dogs will be heard\nalong snow-covered highways about\nOttawa again thi* winter .or the\nfirst time in five year* Plan* tor an\ninternational dog derby, the tirst\nheld here since Emile St, Godard,\not The Pan, Man., won in 1031, are\nbeing formulated by the Ottawa\nValley Sled Dog association.\nCHING JOHNSON\nSIGNS AS COACH\nOF N.Y. RANGERS\nNew Title Is Defence\nCoach; May Play\nin Pinches\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2 (CP)-Ching\nJohnson, veteran defenceman of\nNew York Rangers, came to terms\nwith the National Hockey league\nclub today as defence coach.\nThough no longer regarded at a\nregular player, the 38-year-old Johnson may tee tome action thlt season\n\"in the pinches\", Manager Letter\nPatrick announced. HU status with\nthe elub i* similar to that of the\nveteran Bill Cook, coach of forward\nlinei and still an effective right-\nwinger.\nSigning of Johnion completed tbe\n1030-3? Ranger roster but satisfaction in the Ranger organization wai\ntempered by the discovery Bobby\nKirk, star right-winger of the farm\nteam, Philadelphia Ramblers, will\nbe unable to start the International\nAmerican league season because\not a' chipped ankle.\nManager Herb. Gardiner revealed\nKirk had struggled through the latter part of last season, in Which\nhe led the Canadian-American\nleague in scoring, with I bad ankle.\nTh\u00ab trouble returned thia season and\nx-rays ihowed the ankle bona was\nchipped. When the team reached\nPhiladelphia thli weak-end, an operation will be performed to remove bone fragments.\nbraddock will\nmeet McCarthy\nin exhibition\nHOT SPRINGS, Ark., Nov. 2\n(AP) \u2014 Haavywelght Champion\nJimmy Braddock will meet Jack\nMcCarthy, Boston heavy, In a\nilx round exhibition at New Orleans La., Nov. it, thl title-\nholder's manager announced today,\nNo Decision on\nAmerican Outfit\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (CP)-Preal-\ndent Frank Calder of the National\nhockey league was ln conference\nhere today with a number of league\ngovernors, it was learned, but could\nnot be reached for comment as to\nwhat developments, if any, had\ntaken place In regard to the New\nYork Americans franchise.\nThe league recently declared William Dwyer had forfeited his franchise for failing to meet obligations\nto the league.\nMarty Shenker, secretary of the\nJOE LOUIS TO\nBATTLE RISKO\n10-Round Bout Is Set\nfor Cleveland Ring\non December 7\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (AP)-Jo\u00bb\nLouis is to make hi* next ring start\non Dec. 7 against Johnny Risko in\na 10 rounder in the Cleveland auditorium.\nMike Jacobs said he ls negotiating\nto have the Brown Bomber appear\nin Detroit and Chicago later in tha\nwinter and either in the Hippodrome or Madison Square Garden\nin New York in February or March.\nAmericans under tbe Dwyer regime,\nreturned today from Oshawa, Oot,\nHe reported his club ha* paid all\ntraining and hotel expenses to date,\nand will pay travelling expenses of\nthe hockey players to Chicago war*\nAmerican* open their schedule On\nThursday, Nov. 5. They break training camp at Oshawa tomorrow.\nTAKE CRICKET RELIGIOUSLY\nKARACHI, India (CP)-The Muslims defeated tha Parsees by 311\nruns in a warmly-contested fixture\nof the Sind Cricket pentangular.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liqucr\nControl Board or by the Covernment of British Columbia.\nOld Country Football Standings\nUp to and Including games of\nSaturday, October 31\nENGLI8H LEAGUE\nFint   Division\nW\nPortimoulh    7\nBrentford     6\nGrimsby T    7\nSunderland      6\nDerby C     6\nSloke City     5\nHuddersfield T... 5\nCharlton Ath ...\nEverton \t\nPreston N End .\nMiddlesbrough .\nBirmingham  \t\nChelsea \t\nWest Brom Alb.\nLiverpool  \t\nArsenal     3\nBqldton Wand ....   3\nManchester C     3\nSheffield Wed .... 2\nWolverhamp W... 4\nManchester U ... 3\nLeeds U     4\nD F AP\n4 -J 13 IU\n3 27 24 15\n1 30 26 15\n2 26 23 14\n2 33 26 14\n4 23 17 14\n4 21 17 14\n6 16 16 14\n1 23 23 13\n3 16 17 13\n3 21 24 13\n5 25 25 13\n5 15 16 13\n2 2. 27 12\n4 21 24 12\n3 14 15 11\n5 14 17 11\n5 24 22 11\n6 18 20 10\n2 19 23 10\n3 17 25 9\n1 17 25 9\nSecond  Division\nBury   7 1 5\nBlackpool   7 3 3\nPlymouth  Argyle 5 2 6\nCoventry City ..634\nNewcastle U   7 5 1\nSheffield U   6 4 3\nFull-am   6 4 3\nAston Villa   5 3 5\nBarnsley   5 4 4\nChesterfield   5 5 2\nSwansea Town .... 5 5 2\nBlackburn   Rovs.. 4 4 4\nTottenham   Hot... 5 6 2\nSouthampton     5 6 2\nLeicester City  4 6 3\nBurnley  4 6 3\nWest Ham United 4 6 3\nNotts Forest  3 5 - 5\nNorwich City  3 . 4\nBradford City  3 6 4\nDoncaiter Rov .... 2 6 4\nBradford   3 8 2\nThird  Dlvlilon  (Southern\nLuton Town   t 8 1\nBournemouth    8 4 1\nCardiff City   7 4 2\nWatford   6 4 3\nMlllwall     6 3 5\nSouthend U   3 3 8\nBright Ic Hove A 7 6 1\nClapton Orient .... 5 4 4\nNotts County  5 4 4\nReading   6 8 2\nGllllngham     6 5 2\nSwindon Town .... 5 5 3\nCrystal Palace .... 5 5 3\nQueen! Park R... 5 5 3\nNorthampton T... 4 5 4\nTorquay U  4 6 3\nBristol Rovers .... 5 7 1\n24 13 19\n22 17 17\n27 17 16\n20 12 16\n20 14 15\n23 18 15\n19 15 15\n25 21 15\n18 20 14\n24 18 12\n19 15 12\n11 13 12\n27 19 12\n18 24 12\n18 19 11\n15 18 11\n18 23 11\n17 25 11\n15 21 10\n19 28 10\n7 21 8\n16 43 8\nSection)\n30 14 19\n20 13 17\n21 16 16\n27 18 15\n23 15 13\n24 17 15\n20 15 15\n17 16 14\n21 30 14\n24 23 14\n11 17 14\n26 18 13\n24 20 13\n16 13 13\n19 19 12\n18 20 11\n17 22 II\nWalsall  4 8 3\nBristol City     4   6   3\nExeter City     3   7  3\nAldershot     2   7   4\nNewport County..   18   4\nThird  Dlvlilon  (Northern\nChester   10   1   3\nLincoln City     7\nMansfield T    7\nHull City     6\nStockport C     6\nWrexham      6\nHalifax Town     7\nOldham Ath    5\nSouthport     4\nHartlepools U ....   5\nCarlisle U     6\nNew Brighton    4\nPort Vale    4\nRotherham U     4\nBarrow     4\nYork City    3\nTranmere Roveri 2\nCrewe Alexandra 1\nAccrington  Stan..   3\nDarlington     2   6\nGatehead       1   6\nRochdale     2   9\nSC0TTI8H   LEAGU\nFirst  Dlvlilon\nAberdeen  12   1   3\nCeltic  10\n19 34 11\n16 22 11\n16 36 9\n14 27   8\n17 42 6\nSeetlon)\n37 10 22\n30 15 13\n28 16 17\n18 14 10\n27 14 16\n26 20 16\n17 15 16\n29 24 14\n24 26 14\n13 11 13\n20 22 13\n13 12 IS\n18 35 11\n33 24 10\n18 21 10\n18 35 10\n21 31 9\n14 36 9\n12 16 8\n19 35 8\n14 25 7\n12 33 6\nE\nRangers \t\nMotherwell  \t\nThird Lanark ...\nHearts \t\nDundee \t\nPartick Thistle .\nKilmarnock     7   6\n2 3\n0 6\n4 3\n4 3\n4 2\n3 6\n4\nSt. Mirren   6   6\nHamilton Academ 7   7\nFalkirk    6   7\nSt. Johnstone   5   8\nArbroath   5   8\nQueens Park   4   8\nClyde   4   8\nHibernians   2   8\nDunfermline   Ath 3 10   2\nAlbion Rovers .... 3   9   4\nQueen of South... 1 10   4\nSecond Dlvlilon\nMorton  9   2   3\nAyr United   8   8\nSt. Bernards\nRaith Rover*   8\nAirdrleonlan*   6\nCowdenbeath   7\nEast Stirlingshire 7\nEast Fife  5\nAlloa  6\nDumbarton    8\nB'orfar Ath  5\nKing* Park  6\nBrechlnJClty   3\nStenhousemuir .... 4\nLeith Athletic ..... 4 8\nDundee  Athletic. 8   8\nMontrose     3   8\nEdinburgh City _ 1 13\n46 17 37\n35 18 33\n27 10 20\n34 22 19\n23 15 10\n36 23 18\n22 23 18\n34 20 16\n29 27 IG\n30 31 15\n37 38 14\n37 33 14\n21 27 12\n20 30 12\n19 33 12\n22 39 10\n22 38 9\n38 44 8\n31 88 8\n30 45 6\n43 16 30\n39 18 18\n36 16 18\n37 26 17\n32 19 16\n33 36 18\n37 24 15\n33 17 14\n18 18 14\n18 33 14\n30 36 14\n30 84 13\n33 33 10\n33 35 9\n18 36 9\n3838 8\n3043 8\n1138 2\n:*\nv*\u00bb: ^\n\u00ab*\n* Mo\n*P'    teO\u00ab\n\u00ab..\u00bb*  ciu\u00bb *0\u00bb\nno. a\n*^_x\n, 0\u00bb . o\\\n SE EIGHT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 3. 1936-\nNrlamt Sailti Sfattts\nMember of the Canadian Dally\nNewspaper Association\nLEGAL NOTICE\nAdvertising Rates\n11c a H iie\nMinimum 2 Llnei\n2 tines,   once   $ -22\n3 lines,   once   \u25a0*}\n4 lines,   once  \u2014 M\n2 lines, 6 times    -88\n3 lines, 6 times    1.32\n4 lines, 6 times   1.78\n2 lines, 1 month \u2014  286\n3 lines, 1 month   4.29\n4 lines, 1 month  5.7.\n.  All above leu 10% for prompt\npayment\n- Box numbers 11c extra (lew 10':\nfor cash). This covers any numbe:\nof insertions.\nTELEPHONE  144\nPrivate Exchinge connecting to\nall   Department!\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy  $  \u00ab*\nBy carrier per week .25\nBy carrier per year    13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas per month 60c;\nthree months $180. six months,\n$3.00. one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c, lix months,\n$4.00, one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU. S. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\n+\u2022\u00ab\u00bb\u2666\u2014-\u00bb*\u2666\u2014\u2666\u2014\u00ab\nFLOWERS AT HER FEET\nBy   MARIE   BUZARD\n-iorvw.iTi siu-sus iv co*\u2122*-. rstss association -\nCHAPTER  18\nJohn Sayre is just another man.\nHe is president of the Sayre Advertising Agency. He's really your\nchief. He isn't someone you know\n\u2014or knew \u2014 socially. Remember\nthat, my girl, and expect nothing.\nWhere's this new point of view of\nyours?\nThat was the way that Alix dis-\ntlplincd herself during tlie fortnight following her visit to Sayre's\nhome.\nShe didn't know what to expect\nof him. She didn't know whether\none put such things as had happened away in a niche to be taken\nout at will or whether such things\nchanged the whole pattern.\nShe hoped fervently that it\nwouldn't. She wanted the calm\nsecurity of good work to be done.\nNol work done between waiting to\neee him, wondering what he would\nsay. She wished that everything\ncould have been different and yet\nthe same, that she might have had\nthe same wonderful Job In another\nagency and still known John Sayre.\nNEW RADIO HEAD\nTO TALK TONIGHT\nW. Brockington on\nAir at Six\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 \u2014 The new\nbroadcasting authority, The Canadian Broadcasting corporation, will\ntake over control of the national\nbroadcasting system as from midnight, Sunday, November 1. On\nTuesday evening, November 3, L. W.\nBrockington, K.C., chairman of the\nboard of governors of the new corporation, will broadcast a message\nto the Canadian public in which the\nInitial policies of the corporation in\nregard to the national radio service\nwill be announced. Mr. Brockington'! statement will outline the Immediate plans and aims of the corporation.\nMr. Brockington wil! deliver his\nmessage from Ottawa over the\ncoast-to-coast network of the national system. He will be heard\nfrom 6 to 6:15 p.m., P.S.T. Rene Mor-\nin, vice-chairman, will speak from\n6:15 to 6:20.\nRobson Play Is\nWell Received\nProfessor's Trouble\nMother-in-Law Is\nBasis, Comedy\nROBSON, B.C.\u2014Robson Amateur\nDramatic society opened its 1936-37\nseason with a three-act comedy entitled \"A Poor Married Man.\" The\nplay, held In Robson haU, dealt\nwith the adventures of a small-town\ncollege professor who brought home\na bride accompanied by her mother\nas chaperone.\n\"Too much mother-ln-law,\" decided the professor, and after a host\nof screamingly funny icenes the\nbride and her mother left for Reno.\nThe professor married again, first\nmaking sure there was no mother-\nin-law. But the second bride had\na widowed father who after a time\nmarried and, much to the consternation of the professor, he found hli\nnew mother-in-law was hli old\nmother-ln-law.\nThe play wai well received by a\nlarge and appreciative audience,\nwhich particularly enjoyed the antics of Jupitor Jackson, the negro\n\"chambermaid\", while the continual\nwar between Professor Wise and\nhis mother-in-law kept the audience\nIn an uproar.\nMusic for the play was furnished\nby Miss D. Whellams, Mrs. W. R.\nCampbell W. R. Campbell and J.\nHam.\nThose In the cait were: \"Prof.\nJohn B. Wise,\" C. H. Duplat; \"Dr.\nMathew Graham,\" J. T, Webster;\n\"Billie Blake,\" Ronnie Webster;\n\"Jupitor Jackson,\" Alex Miller:\n\"Mrs. Iona Ford,\" Mri. L. Hett;\n\"Zole,\" Miss Helen Quance; \"June\nGraham,\" Miss Jean Ballard; \"Rosalind Wilson,\" Miss Helen Magee.\nW, R. Campbell was director and\nFrank Webster .tan manager.\nHer first nervousness, dreading\nyet hoping to see him, the morning\nafter her return from his country\nhouse, wore off as days went by\nand' she didn't see or hear from\nhim. She didn't even know thai\nhe had made a hurried trip to Chicago. She wouldn't hove mentioned\nhis name to any person in that\nwhole organization, let it be known\nshe wanted information. She heard\ntoo much of the talk and conjecture that went on in the rest room\nbetween the girls. Knew that it was\nalmost impossible for them not to\nknow everything.\nAdjusting her lipstick in the mirror reflecting so many other faces\nbeing repainted, she wondered\nwickedly what they'd say if she\nwere to say coolly \u2014 with that\npursed mouth \u2014 that she had been\nweek-ending with him, and his\nguests, of course.\nNaturally, she didn't.\nShe was grateful that the Warner account was coasting smoothly\nand required nothing more from\nher than the development of technical details. It was no longer\nnecessary for her to go to Sayre's\noffice for his official approvaL\nThus, she had two weeks to fortify herself for their next meeting.\nIt came in the elevator that bore\nthem both upward.\n\"Good morning,\" she said. Four\nother people in thc elevator said\nthe same thing to him. He smiled\nat all of them and said to Alix,\n\"How are you?\"\nHe said it across the car and\nAlix felt as though it were the warm\ngrasp of a friendly hand.\nThey walked down the corridor\ntogether. \"Colonel bore you to\ndeath?\" he asked.\n\"No. he waa interesting.\"\n\"Did you get back in time to\nkeep your engagement?\"\nAlix had to think of the answer\nto that one because she had had no\nengagement. \"My engagement? Oh\n... yes. yes of course.\"\nHis office was to the right, hers\nto the left. They stood at the end\nof the corYidor that divided them\nfor a moment without saying anything.\n\"Well,\" ihe smiled, \"goodby.\"\nHe waved his hand airily ahd\nthat was all. Enough. Enough because she knew that he had wanted\nto stop and talk \\o her.\nThat night when she got home,\nshe found a letter waiting for her\nwith a Bairdsvale postmark. A\nletter that had been redirected.\nThe hand-writing was bold, masculine. She tore the envelope, opening it with eager anticipation and\nlooked at the signature. It was from\nBill Boyd.\nThere was a picture of him ln\nher desk, a picture he'd sent her\nthe first year she came to New\nYork.   He used to write her every\nA Former Resident\nCrawford Bay Dies\nJohn English Moved\nto Vancouver 13\nYears Ago\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C.-Mrs. E.\nL. Bourne, who was called to Van-\n| couver by the serious illness of her\nj brother, has returned home.   Her\nj brother, John Forster English, died\nOctober 21 after an illness of about\nthree weeks, and was laid to rest\nin Ocean View Burial park, Vancouver.\nj Mr. English lived in Crawford\nBay leveral years, leaving for Van-\n! couver 13 years ago. Several old-\ntime Kootenay friends were present\n, at the funeral, which wos conducted\nby Rev. Mr. Owen. There were\nmany beautiful flowers.\n[ Mr. \"English leaves one sister, Mrs.\nBourne of Crawford Bay, and one\nsister and four brothers in England,\nand one brother In Australia. He\nwas 54 yeari of age.\nCAT HAS BIG FAMILY\nWATERFORD, Calif (CP)-A eat\nowned by Mrs. Ludwig Shlma ls 26\n\u2022\/cars old and has produced a litter\nnf kittens every year for the past\n25. The exact number of the offspring is unknown.\nMOSCOW (CP)-Anna Dimltrl-\nveva showed such coir*\"*e and re-\n\"lurce when she first joined the\nMoscow fire brigade that she was\nquickly promoted to command a\nunit\nTINLINE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. J.\nTinline of Annable, at Trail-Tadanac\nhospital, on October 30, a ion.\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigoratori and othei\nstimulants One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write. Mann-Rutherford Co\n(3365)\nIIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment tor $1\nOrder direct and be lure ot best\nPacked plain Free catalogue National Importers, 812-Centre St..\nCalgary, Alta.       (3368)\nFOR EXCHANGE\nCORD WOOD IN EXCHANGE FOR\nlight cars or trucks up to $100.00.\nPhone 119. PEEBLES MOTORS.\n(3327)\nROOM AND BOARD\nBUSINESS MAN WANTS ROOM tc\nboard. Comfortable. Drawer 279,\nNelson. (3391)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\n\"GOVERNMENT 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 of December next,\nthe undersigned Intends to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board for consent to transfer a one half (*-.) interest ln Beer Licence No. 3372 issued ln 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,\nln the Province of British Columbia,\nupon the lands described as Lot 8,\nand the East V, 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)\nELECTRICAL\n5 RM. HOUSE, FAIRVIEW. CHEAP.\nOwner leaving town. 3394, News.\n(3394)\nweek then while he still hoped\nshe'd marry him when she saw th\nworld he was so sure she'd be fed\nup with long before this.\nIt was a picture of a nice looking\nface. A nice middle western honest lace, rugged, kind. It came\nbetween her and the page ln bold\nhand-writing.\nShe hadn't heard from Bill in\nover a year.\n\"I hope you're not married,\" he\nwrote, \"but it yo uare, I'm going\nto see you anyway. The Dietrich\ncompany has bought a patent ol\nmine and I've got to come to New\nYork to fix things up with their\nlawyers. I'm arriving the first ot\nNovember. That'll give you a week\nto break any other dates. I'd like\nto see you the night I arrive and\nall the other spare time you have\nwhile I'm there ...\"\nThe first was tomorrow. The\nletter had taken a week to arrive\nfrom her old address.\nShe'd be awfully glad to see him.\nRemember to buy flowers. Do some\nmarketing. Show Bill Boyd how\ncompletely you've mode this new\nworld into something happy and\nreal.\nShe sent him a wire. He said\nhe'd be staying at the Plaza. She\ntold him the telephone number of\nher office.\nHe called her at three. She told\nhim she'd be at home by five-thirty.\nHe said he would be there waiting\nfor her.\nAt four o'clock Mr. Sayre's secretary asked her if she could come\nto Mr. Sayre's office.\nHastily she checked over her work\nwondering if something were wrong.\nHe was writing at his desk when\nshe opened the door as he said\n\"Come in.\"\nShe waited.\n\"Sit down, Alix.\"   She sat down.\n\"This is the first chance I've had\nto speak to you. You know I was\nin Chicago?\"\n\"No, I didn't.\"\n\"Beastly trip. I went out to see\nabout the McCall account. I'm\nafraid we're going to lose it to\nFederal.\"\n\"Surely ...\"\n\"I didn't ask you to come in to\nhear me unload my troubles.\"\n\"No?\"\n\"No, I thought perhaps you might\nhave dinner with me tonight.\"\nMOTORS\nGENERATORS AND TRANSFOR-\nj men, 15,000 H.P. to select trom.\nI   Stock delivery on most items.\nCROSSMAN MACHINERY CO.\nLtd. 61 Alexander St., Vancouver.\n(3363)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRELIABLE YOUNG MAN WANTS\nwork, any kind. Experienced farm\nhand. Handy with tools. Phone 91).\n(3359i\nEXPERIENCED     GIRL    WANTS\nhousework. Apply Box 3299, News.\n(3299)\nThe Lord had answered her\nprayer all right, Alix thought.\n\"I'd like to,\" she said. \"But I'm\nafraid I can't. I ... I have another engagement.\n\"I'm sorry,' 'he said and looked\ndisappointed. \"Another time?'1\n\"Another time,\" she said.\nShe let her breath out like a\n-wimmer plunging into cold water\nWell, that's thc first hurdle. I'll\nbe busy next time, too. I'm not\ngoing to be hurt and I'll surely be\nhurt if I see him many times more\nalone. The very thought of him\nsweeps over me like a flame. A\nflame that's bright and warm but\ndoes not burn. It isn't good to feel\nthat way for a man you cannot\nhave. That's the way that heartbreak lies. I'll keep it out of my\nlife, or closed away if it is here.\nThen she went home\u2014and there\nwas Bill Boyd. ,\n\"Not engaged or anything?\" Bill\nBoyd said, holding hcr at arms\nlength while he studied her.\n\"Not anything,\" she denied.\n\"What's the matter with these\nfellows in New York? How did\nyou ever escape from them?\"\nAlix laughed at him delightedly\nIt was so good to see Bill. Bill\nwho made her feel like something\nvery special.\n\"You've been talking about me\nfor thc last hour, Bill. Tell me\nabout the patent and I'll start dinner.   We're going to have it here.\"\n\"Oh, no, we're not! You're going\nto put on your glad rags and we're\ngoing lo step. I rover could seo\nyou in a kitchen, Alix. You're the\nromantic lady in my life and you're\ngoing to stay that. Go along and\nput on your prettiest things. I'll tell\nyou about the patent and my pol\nof gold when we've had dinner.\"\nAlix gave Bill that week. She\ntook him to Kathleen's house, asked\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nFOR SALE\nFOR RENT - MODERN, HOME,\nfurnace and electric range.- Apply\nWest Transfer Co. (3281)\n8 ROOM HOUSE, FURNACE. FIRE-\nplace, newly decorated. Fairview.\nBox 3303. Dally News. (3303)\nFOR SALE\nA Quantity of young standing tamarack 3tt to SV\u00bb inches ln size. Suitable for fence posts or irrigation\ntubing. Located 12 miles west of\nNelson on highway near Thrums,\nB.C. Number of Lot 1239, Block 17,\nMap 857, Kootenay Land District.\nRegistered to A. J. HIU. Will sell for\ncash or proposition. Elmer Foss,\nGrande Prairie, Alta. (3326)\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent   Annable Block.\n(3378)\nLOVELY    BUNGALOW    HOME.\nClose in. Garage. $35. Appleyard.\n(3385)\n7 ROOM HOUSE.\nD, Maglio.\nPHONE 808L.\n(3381)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (3379)\n5TvO\\5MrFURWSHED~HOUSEFOR\nrent,.close in. J. E. Annable. (3322)\nLIGHT HSKPG. ROOMS. NO CHIL-\ndren. 918 Kootenay St.        (3268)\nFOR RENT - THREE MODERN\nhomes. C. F. McHardy.        (3380)\nDOCS\nDOG, BROWN WATER SPANIEL,\nmale. 11 months old, $10. Box\n3349, Daily News. (3349)\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND AT ROSEMOUNT, LAST\nweek, glasses. Owner may have\nS3me by identifying and paying\nfori-iis ad Daily News.       '3393)\nLOST-3 KEYS ON RING. PHONE\n627. (3354)\n25,000 FT. 1V< IN. GALVANIZED\nPipe, also large stock Black pipe\nand fittings, all sizes. Write Swartz\nPipe Yard, 220 East, 1st. Ave.,\nVancouver, B.C. (3375)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B.C.\n(3376)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (3377)\n3 ROOM MODERN HOME. FURN-\nished. 2 lots. Silica St. $1450.\nTerms. F. Whitfield. (3334)\nDINING ROOM SUITE, H.B. BLAN-\nkets, Metronome. Phone 679L.\n(3279)\nDROP IN AND SEE THE ARK'S\nThird Anniversary Sale Bargains.\n(3370)\nLARGE RANGE $30.    2  SMALL\nstoves $15 ea. Ph. 265, 723 Latimer.\n(3311)\nCIRCULATORY HEATER $14.   608\nHoover. Phone 806R. (3383)\nTo Finders\nIf yeu find a cat or dog. a poc-\nketbunk jewelry oi fur or anything else of value telephone\nThe Daily News A \"Found\"\nAd will be Inserted without roit\nto you. We will collect from the\nowner\nFUEL\nCOAL\nTraesfer\nPHONE 106\nSLABWOOD FOR SALE. PHONE\n163. (3269)\nFOR SALE - FIVE DESIRABLE\n.homes. C. F. McHardy.        (3362)\nWANTED\ny, TO 2 H.P. GASOLINE ENGINE\nfor cash. Box 3287, Daily News.\n(3287)\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - MAN FOR FACTORY\nwork who would be willing to\ninvest in business. Steady work\nand good wages. Box 3361, News.\n(3361)\nEXP. GIRL FOR HSWRK. 306 Carbonate Ave. or P.O. Box 1049.\n (3330)\nHOUSEKEEPER  AND   COMPAN-\nion for elderly lady. Phone 382R1.\n(3392)\nEXPERIENCED   CHOCOLATE\ndipper. Fart time. P.O. Box 796,\n(3395)\nEXPERIENCED WOMAN ORGIRL\nfor housework. Phone 843L. (3384)\nCANARIES\n\u25a0\u25a0copl-i in for cocktails to meet him,\nsaw three of the leading shows and\ngave him the time of his life. He\ndecided to remain in New York an\nextra week.\nThe day that he decided to remain\nand Kathleen invited them to dinner\nat her house, John Sayre came to\nAlix's office and asked hcr if she'd\nlike to go to the opera with him thc\nfollowing night. She said she was\nsorry she couldn't and cried all\nnight.\nBut she felt strong and was proud\nof her strength.\nThe night before Thanksgiving\nday, she found John wailing in his\nroadster before the little yellow\ndoor of her apartment.\n\"If Lochinvar has gone away, may\nI have some of the crumbs please.'\nWill you give a poor man something to bo thankful for tomorrow?\nWill you dine with me tonight?\"\n(To Be Continued)\nGOOD SINGERS. $4.50 PAIR. C.O.D.\nExpress. F.O.B. Vancouver. Mrs.\nE. Sauerberg, Ladner, B. C. (3356)\nFARM LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy termi in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan Write for full Information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. C.P.R. Calgary. Alt.i\n(3374)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nONE BAY GELDING, 5 YEARS,\n1500 lbs. $160; one Bay Gelding,\n4 years. 1500 lbs., $140.; one black\nmare, 9 years, 1200 lbs., $125.; one\ngrey mare, 12 years, 1200, $100:\none Bay mare, 7 years old, 1100\nlbs., $65; one Grey Gelding, 5\nyears old. 1000 lbs., $40. R. Buerge,\nNakusp, B. C. (33581\nYORKSHIRE PIGS $3.75 f.o.b. Edge-\nwood. Boothby, Edgewood.t (3208)\nAssaycrs\nE. W WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyit Anayer. Chemist Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agents at Trail and Tacoma smelters, 301-305 Joiephlne\nSt., Nelion, B.C. (2933)\n\"T3RENVILLE H GRIMW69t)\nProvincial Aisayer and Chemist, 618\nBaker itreet Nelson. B.C. P.O\nBox No. 276. Representing Shippers interest at Trail, B.C.  (2934)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCar Heaters Repaired\n(2935)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk. Nelson\n(2936)\nE. M. WARREN, D.C, Gilker Blk..\nNelson, B.C. P.O. Box 872.   (2937)\n(2937)\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES, The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766. P.O. Box 1065\n(2939)\nEngineers and Surveyors\n*_. L. WARBURTON. AGENT, NEL-\nlon, B.C Ph. 53. Rei. 239 PO\nBox 668 Oils. etc.. Mine Machinery and Equipment,.Steam Coals.\n  (2940)\nO76AWS0N Nelson, B.C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(2941)\nBOYD C AFFLECRTFruitvale, B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(2942)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 215 All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays tc etc. Phone 215\nMrs. Hearty. Box 29. (2943)\nDIRK de JONG\nFront   St.,   Nelson,   B.C.   Sprays,\nWreaths and Floral displays.\nPrompt Service Given (2770)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 282\nOpen day and night. Lady attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(2944)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\nBaker St. (2945)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate. Insurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, B3ker St. (2946)\nCTd.\" BLACKWOODTlnsurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99\n (2947)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 508 Ward St.\n  (2948)\nAnnable.\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance. Annable Blk\n(2949)\nLIFE, FIRE AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulh*. Ph. 70. _<2950)\nraASTTWHARDYTiNSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Ph. 135. (2951)\nInvestments\nLIVING PROTECTION\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nF.A. STUART.  BOX 388\n(2952)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work. Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.  Motor  Rewinding,  Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(2953)\nNotaries\nBUSINESS ENTRUSTED TO ME\nwill be done promptly, efficiently,\nand legally. D. J. Robertson.\n(3373)\nPatent.\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, Hit of wanted Inventloni and\nfull Information tent tree. The\nRamiay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St, Ottawa.\n(2955)\nPhotography\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned, any size, 25c Reprints, eight\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints. Val-\nuable coupon. \"Better prints st\nlower cost\" KRYSTAL PHOTOS,\nWilkie, Sask. (2956)\nOWING TO OUR EVER INCREAS-\ning business, we have found it\nnecessary to enlarge our plant,\nalso adding more up to date equipment and we have now the most\nmodern plant in the West. Air\nConditioned. KRYSTAL PHOTOS,\nWilkie, Sask. (3190)\nSanitariums\nCHRONIC DISEASES MIND AND\nbody. Dr. Aldrich, Spokane, E.\n4504 Frederick. (2957)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker St.\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,  SELL  &  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.\n(2959)\nTaxidermist\nP. W. RISSLING, TAXIDERMIST. -\nGame heads, birds, rugs. Work\nguaranteed.   Sport   Shop,   Nelson.  The Merc, Trail.        (2977)\nWatch Repairing\nH. E. L. HICKS, I.B.M\nInterior Watchmaker, Nakusp, B.C.\nMainspring  '5c\nMainspring it Cleaning ... $1.50\nCleaning Only 1.00\nRepairs to Shell and Metal\nEyeglass Frames  50c up\nGUARANTEED 1 YEAR\n(3313)\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\nWatchmaker and Jeweller\nRutledge block, Baker St, Nelson.\n\"When   Sutherland   repairs   your\nwatch It is on time all the Ume.\"\n(2960)\nSPECIALIST REASONABLE. Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St\n(2961)\nNELSON\nSHOPPING AND AMUSEMENT CENTER\nOF THE INTERIOR\nTHE GUMPS\n\u25a0y Cm Idson\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Ruaa Westovtt\nI'M AFI2AID \"WE DAY 1 LOST \\\nMV  HAiri I LOST  TILLIE\t\n \\y&\n(OAST COPPER\nUP ONE DOLLAR\nMines Index Shows a\nGain of More Than\nFour Points\nTORONTO, Nov. . (CP) \u2014 A\nlain of mora than four pointi wai\nregistered In thi mlicellaneoui\nininei Index of thi Toronto Hit\ntoday In demand for copper and\nban metali.\nAdvance In export copper prloei\nputtied ooait copper up $1 to\n6.76. Aldermax, Sudbury Basin,\nVenture! and Waite Amulet galn'\/i\n8 to 23 centi. Eldorado up 3 cent!\nwai the only active inue In the\nillvert,\nIn the lecondary gold group Red\ntake Gold added 21 centi to 1.99.\nLittle Long Lac gained 25 centi.\nFamour, Read Authler Gunner and\nMoneta added 9 to 19 cents. Bralorne lost IS.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK. Nov. 2 (API-Copper firm: electrolytic ipot and future 10.00; export 10.45.\nTin barley iteidy; ipot and nearby\n45.75-87*4; future 45.50-55.\nLead iteady; ipot Naw York 4.80-\n03; eaat St Louli 4.18.\nZinc firm; eait St Louli ipot\nand future 4.85.\nIron firmer; No, 2, F.O.B. eistern\nPennsylvania, 20.(0.\nAluminum. 19.00-22.00.\nAntimony, ipot, 12.60.\nBar silver, unchanged at 44%,\nAt London:\nCopper, itandard ipot \u00a343 it Od;\nfuture \u00a343 8l 9d.\nElectrolytic, ipot bid \u00a347 10s;\nasked \u00a348.\nTin, ipot, \u00a3209 10s; future, \u00a3205\n10s.\nLead, ipot \u00a319 10i; future, \u00a318\n8s 9d.\nZinc, spot, \u00a315 18s 9d; future \u00a316\n5s.\nBar illver steady and unchanged\nat 20d.\nFIND NECKLACE ON STREET\nLONDON   (CP)-Found   on  the\n-ldewalk ot a busy itreet, a $2500\npearl necklace hai been restored to\nits owner. Mn. Bernard D. Davis.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nBarry HoUinger  -     .05\nI B.ie Metali  - 34\nBig Missouri  54\nBobjo      _ - 2S*4\nBralorne   -     8.80\nBRX    - 10\nEulfalo Ankerite     10.50\nCan Malartic     _     1.37\nCariboo Gold      1.75\nCastle Treth         l.*J\nCentral Man    _      .20\nCentral Patricia      3.80\nChibougamou     2.17\nCoait Copper  -     5.73\nConarium      1.80\nConsolidated M it S    70.59\nDome     53.10\nDominion Explorer      .07\nEldorado _     1.37\nFalconbridga     ll-'iS\nGod'i Lake  - 79\nGold Belt _ 13\nGranada  -       .31\nHardrock \u2014 - _    3.05\nHolllnger  ..._ -    13..0\nHowey        88\nHudson Bay    ..  .       28.87\nInternational Nickel    62.E0\nJ M Comolldated     43\nKirkland Lake  - 60\nLake Maron    12\nLakeshore    55 25\nLittle Long Lac   ...    6.70\nMacassa      5.05\nMaple Leaf    .. -     .20\nMcLeod Cockihutt     4.25\nMclntyre    .       41M\nM_K R L Gold     1.72\nM.Vittie Gr 20\nMcWatters G    _        1.05\nlining Corporation ..._,     2.20\nSlpining      2.40\nNoranda      89.52\nParl-hill    _'V4\n     1.16\n     1.20\n     6.23\nPaymsster\n>end Oreille\n'lckle Crow ..\n'Ioneer\t\n\"remier \t\nleno      \t\nSan Antonio ..\n3.01\n1.27\n2.33\nSheep Creek    \t\nSherritt Gordon _.\nSiscoe - \t\nSmelter Gold\t\nStadacona     \t\nSt Anthony      ...\nSudbury Basin  _\t\nSullivan \t\nSylvanite      \t\nTeck Hughes  \t\nToburn        \t\nTowagamac    ...\nTreadwell  _ -\nVentures     \t\nWaite Amulet  .\t\nWayside  -\nWhite Eagle \t\nWr-ht Hargreaves  _\t\nOILS\nAJax    .   \t\nBritish American Oil \t\nC tc E Corporation     \t\nCham'cal Research\t\nDalhousie    \u00bb\t\nHome         \u2014\nImperial \t\nInternational Petroleum ...\nMerland  \u2014\u25a0\nNordon\t\n7-oyal'te     .. . - -\t\nBaatty Bros     -\nBall Telephone\t\nBrazilian\nBrewers tc D'stlllers    .....\nCanada Bread\nCanada Car te Foundry\t\nCanada Cement    _\t\nCanada Dredge   -\t\nCanada M**lt        \t\nCanadian Pacific Railway\nConsolidated Smelters    ...\nDominion Bridge        \t\nDominion Stores    .. .._\t\nDist'llers Seagrami  ...\nFord of Canada A \t\nGoodyear  -\t\nHiram Walker \t\nLoblaw A \u2014\nMas:ey Harris   \t\nSteel of Canada ... -\t\nWalker Brew\t\nM\n2.59\n4.40\n.06\n.60\n.1614\n5.95\n1.94\n3.01\n5.15\n3.35\n'    M\n.35\n2.78\n2.38\n.09\n.OS'*\n7.65\n.41\n22 73\n1.33\n1.04\n.72\n1.02\n2?.37\n36.12\n.11\n.13\n2862\n.    10*4\n151\n...   17\n 80\n... 7*4\n.... 12%\n... 11%\n.... 44%\n.... 33*4\n.... 13%\n... 70%\n.... 60*4\n.... 10%\n.- 22*4\n.... 24%\n... 85\n.... 44%\n.... 22%\n_. 3%\n.... 70%\n...    2%\n-NILSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER 3. 1936-\nGOLD VALLEY\nPROPERTY IS\nGOING AHEAD\nNew Machinery Being\nPlaced; 19 Claims\nin Okanagan\nDirectors of Gold Valley Mines\nLtd. shortly contemplate further developments to their property ln the\nOlalla camp, Oaoyooi mining divi-\nlion, between Hedley and Penticton,\nit Is reported by A. C. McDougall,\nmanaging director of the company.\nNew machinery, valued at $9000,\nhai been purchased, and is expected\nto be installed within a fortnight on\nthe operation of the company's\n\"Something Good\" claim. The present machinery on the property will\nbe moved to the company's other\noperation on the \"Sunrise\" claim In\norder to further develop the crosscut Which will tap the exposed\n\"Sunrise\" vein at depth.\nGeorge Shepherd, M.E., Is making\nan examination and carrying on a\nthorough study of proposed develop\nMarket and Mining News\n\u25a0H\u00ablWWW-WlWWWW\"W'\"lfH\nNEARLY ALL U. S.\nMARKETS WILL BE\nINACTIVE TODAY\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (AP) -\nNearly all leading iicurltlal and\ncommodity ixehangei In tha United Statei will be cloied tomorrow,'\nelection day, Several produce,\ndairy and livestock market* will\nremain open.\nMETAL SHARES\nAT NEW PEAK\nAdvacing Prices in\nCopper Cause the\nMontreal Spurt\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP)-Meta!\nihares moved swiftly to new peaks\nment work, and it is from his rec- |n today's stock market under the\nammendatlons that a further pro- impetus of advancing prices in\ngram of development is to be carried world copper market. Volume was\non by the company on the \"Some- heavy.\nth-n*! Good\" cla'm.\nMINE FAVORABLV SITUATED\nThe property comprlsas 19 claims\nand fractions, located on the western\nwall of the Olalla townsite. It Is\nideally situated, with abundant\nwater and timber tor operation!, a\npaved highway pass-'ng its boundaries, and It ll only 4*4 miles from\nKerecr.sos sttlon on the Great Northern railway.\nCamp accommodation! ire excel- _\nlent, oi the offices, cookhouse and\nbun'.-Jiouse are contained in the old  tersected by the upper workings.\nOlalla hotel, built during boom dayi I    Recently four test shipments of\nof the district when optimism ran ore ln five-ton lots from the \"Sun-\nSmelters advanced more than two\npoints to 70%, while Nickel firmed\n1% to 62%. Noranda gained %\nto 69%, new peak.\nShawinlgan pushed up 1% to 28,\nwhile gains of one to five points\nshowed for Canadian Hydro-Electric, English Electric, Quebec Power\nand Canada Northern. Canada\nBronte added 2 at 46, Dominion\nBridge firmed % to 50%.\nh'-h throu\"hout the ent're province.\nENGINEER'S REPORT\nAccording to report of George\nShepherd, M.E., a m-ln drift tunnel\nhas been driven 361 feet on the\n\"Something Good\" claim, and a persistent ore shoot of good itoplng\nr.'se\" claim were sent to the smelter\nat Trail. Assays showed values\nranging from $39.50 to $46 per ton,\nwith an average of $42.37 per ton\nfor the four shipment!.\nDirectors of Gold Valley Mines\nLtd. are: A. K. Shlves, president;\nwidth has been developed. A second A. C. McDougall, managing-director\ntunnel in thli lection hai been'and secretary-treasurer; Dr. E. S.\ndriven 230 feet below the first level, Harris, Dr. G. A, Lamont, all of\nand he states It should be directly Vancouver; and H. K. Shlvei and\nunder the high-grade ore body in- W. H. Miller of Campbellton, N.B.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nAssociated Brew \u2014   12\nBell Telephone  ~. 151%\nBrailllan   .1\nBC Power A  87%\nBruck Silk  - \u2014 8*4\nBuilding Product* _. 34\nCanada Bronze    46\nCan Car fc Foundry  12%\nCanadian Cement  \u2014 U!4\nCanadian Cement Pfd .\nCan Celanese .\nQuotations on Wall Street\n.lied Chemical 232\nimerican Can. 125*4\njner For Pow    7%\nUn Mach tc F\u201e   22\nLin Smcl & R.   95%\nim Telephone. 180\njnerican Tobac 100\naaconda _    49*4\n.tchison    78%\nlUburn   Moton   33\n,vlation  Corp..    5\nlaldwin        4%\nlott tc Ohio .....   22-%\nendlx Av ......  25%\nHth Steel     73%\nlanada Dry ...   17%\n\u00bbn Prc!fic     13%\nlerro de Pasco   65%\nlies tc Ohio ....\nhrysler \t\non Gas N Y...\norn Prods ....\nWright pfd....\nupont     174\nMt Kodak  172\nPow & Light   15%\nrle     \t\n\u00bbrd English ....\nord of Canada\nlrst Nat Storei\nreeport Texaa\neneral Electric\neneral  Foods..\neneral Motors\nold Dust    14\noodrlch     25%\nranby -   4%\nreat Nor pfd..   42%\nreat West Sug  35%\nowe Sound ....\nudion  Motors\nit\u00abr Nickel ....\ntar Tel & Tel\nenn Copper....\n77\n. 129\n.   47%\n70%\n(1%\n15%\n8%\n24%\n51 Vi\n25%\n49**f,\n41 %\n73\n54%\n21\n02%\n12%\n59%\n230%\n124\n6%\n21%\n94\n178%\nOiHH\n47%\n70%\n32\n4\".\n4%\n22%\n28 Vi\n71%\n17%\n13%\n62%\n76%\n127%\n46%\n69%\n6%\n170\n171\n15\n15\n8%\n2'.%\n51%\n25 %\n48%\n41%\n72%\n14\n24%\n4%\n41%\n34%\n53%\n20%\n60%\n12\n68%\n230%\n126%\n7\n21%\n94%\n179\n100\n49%\n77%\n33\nS\n4%\n22%\n29%\n72%\n17%\n13*4\n65%\n76%\n120%\n46%\n70 Vs\n8%\n173%\n171\n15\n15%\n8\"3\n24%\n51%\n25%\n49\n41%\n73\n14\n23\n4%\n42%\n35\n54 %\n20%\n62%\n12\n59*%\nKroag   Grocery 24%\nMack Truck  48%\nMilwaukee pfd.    2\nMont Ward   57%\nNash Motors .... 16%\nNat Dairy Prod 25%\nN Pow & Light 12%\nN Y Central  45%\nPac Gas tc Elec 39%\nPackard Motors 12%\nPenn R R  43%\nPhillips Pete .... 43%\nPure Oil   18%\nRadio Corp   11\nRadio Keith Or    7%\nRem Rand   21\nSafeway  Stores 40%\nShell Union  26%\nS Cal Edison .... 31%\nSouth Pac'flc... 45%\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of N J\nStan Oil of Ind\nStewart Warner\nStudebaker    14%\nTexas Corp  47%\nTexas Gulf Sul 38%\nTimken Roller.\nUnderwood T....\nUnion Carbide.\nUnion Oil Cal...\nUnion Aircraft.\nUnited Biscuit.\nUnion Pacific...\nU S Pipe  55%\nU S Rubber ..... 37%\nU S Steal   76%\nVanadium Steel 22%\nWarner Broi .... 14%\nWest Electric... 144\nWest Union  93%\nWoolworth   61%\nWrigley   70%\nYellow Truck... 19%\n39%\n59%\n40%\n19%\n67%\n81%\n100\n.   23%\n.   23%\n.   32%\n144%\n23% 24%\n47 47\n2 2\n57% 57%\n16% 16%\n23% 25%\n12 12%\n44% 45%\n38 38\n12% 12%\n42% 43%\n44% 45%\n17% 18\n10% 10%\n7% 7%\n20% 21\n30% 40%\n26% 26%\n30% 31\n44% 45%\n38% 39\n58 59\n40% 40%\n19% 19%\n14% 14%\n46% 47%\n38% 88%\n67% 67%\n80% 81%\n99 99%\n23% 23%\n22 23\n31% 31%\n141 142\n53% 34%\n36 36%\n75% 76\n22% 22%\n14% 14%\n141 143%\n91% 92%\n60% 60%\n70% 70%\n18% 18%\n95'A\n27\n6%\n5%\n10%\n2\n10\n70\nDominion Bridge    50%\nDominion Glass 112%\nDominion Textile    75%\nDryden Paper    10%\nCan Ind Al A -\t\nCan Ind Al B\t\nCPR \t\nCanada Steamers ....\nCockshutt _\t\nCM&S.\n7%\n7%\n8%\n13%\n62%\n5%\nMcColI Frontenac    13%\nMontreal Power   34%\nN Steel Car   27*4\nNat Brewing    40%\nGen Steel Wares .\nCharles Gurd \t\nHamilton Bridge ...\nImperial Tob Can\nInt Nickel\t\nMassey Harris\nOgilvie   \t\nPower Corporation \u2014_-.\nQuebec Power _\t\nShawinigan  \t\nSherwln Wllllami\t\nSouth Can Power \t\nSteel of Canada \u2014\n235\n17\n20%\n28\n20%\n.   13%.\n13%\nCURBS\nB C Packing    12%\nBrew & Dist \t\nB A Oil    22%\nMINING ISSUES\nHALT N.Y. DROP\nTraders Stand Upon\nSidelines Pending\nElection Result\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (API-Backsliding utilities started the itock\nmarket on the downward path today but a brisk rally In mining Issues cushioned the drop.\nMany traders shifted to the sidelines, brokers said, pending outcome\nof the election. Others exhibited a\nlittle nervousness over the spread\nof the shipping strike.\nTransfers totalled 1,601,710 iharei\nagainst 1,667,820 last Friday,\nAmong losers of 2 or more pointi\nwere American Telephone, 179, Union Pacific, 141, J. I. Caie, 158%,\nand U. S. Steel preferred, 146%,\nWHEAT DRIFTS\nU.S. Election  Outcome  Hai\nSagging Reiulti In Trada\nat Chicago\nCHICAGO, Nov. 2 (API-Reluctance that numerous traders ihowed\nin  regard  to entering upon  new\ncommltmenti until after tomorow'i\nUnited States election did much today to make wheat prices lag.\nChicago wheat futures closed\neasy, unchanged to % lower, corn\n% off to % up, oats unchanged to\n% higher, and rye unchanged to %\noft\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2 <CP)-Grain\nfuture! quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWHEAT:\nNov.  ....\nDec,   \t\nMay  ..\nOATS:\nNov\t\nDec\t\nMay   .\nBARLEY:\n107%\n104%\n105%\n43%\n42%\n42%\n108\n105%\n106%\n43%\n42%\n43%\nNov.  ....\n67%\n57%\nDec\t\n55%\n56%\nMay\n63\n55%\nFLAX:\nDec\t\n163%\n164\nMay\n165%\n167\nRYE:\nNov.  \t\n\u2014\n\u2014\nDec\t\n67\n67%\nMay   .\n68 V4\n68%\n107\n104\n105%\n43\n41%\n42%\n57\n55%\n54%\n102%\n165%\n66%\n67%\n20 rails\t\n30 Industrials.\n20 utllitiei\t\n40 bondi \t\nDow-Jonei Averages\n-OftQE NINE\n58.51\n177.74\n36.00\n57.78\n175.35\n35.00\n38.13\u2014off\n176.67-off\n35.20\u2014off\n105.11-off\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014Silver futurei cloied iteady today, eight\npoint* up to five off. No sales. Bids: Nov. Dec. March May and July all 44.45.\nHigh       Low    '   Close   Change\nForester Sees\nIndustry Hall\nVICTORIA, Nov. 2 (CP)-\"The\ncircumstances now show that it Is\nthe responsibility of this generation to decide if we will continue\nthe policy of devastating our forests,\nwhich wai all right in its time, or set\nup a policy of getting a sustained\nyield which will enable our industry to last Indefinitely,\"- declared\nF. D. Mullholland, chief of the B.\nC. Forest Survey division before\nthe forestry committee of the\nlegislature this morning.\n\"If we allow our 'devastation'\npolicy past its usefulness, It will\neventually become a policy of death\n death to our Industry, death to\na $3,000,000 annual government revenue, death to the Jobs of 30,000\nmen.\"\nAbout 75 years ago there were 226\nbillion feet of lumber on the coast.\nNow there were 162 billion feet,\nof which about half was accessible\naccording to present day standards,\nmeaning there had been a depletion of 64 billion feet In that time.\nCanada Dredge\nCanada Malting\t\nCan Wineries\t\nDominion  Stores\t\nFord Canada A \t\n44\n35%\n2%\n10%\n24%\nImperial Oil    22%\nInternational Pete    36%\nMitchell Robt     14\nPrice Bros      16%\nPage Hersey  100\nBANKS\nCanada   ......\nCanadlenne ..\nCommerce\t\nDominion \t\nMontreal\t\nNova   Scotia   \t\nRoyal \t\nToronto  _\t\n 58*4\n 139\n\u201e_  181\n 202\n 207\n.  284%\n_  185\n  227\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nBid\nA P Cons 16\nAmil Oil       \u2014\nBig Miss       JS3\nBralorne       8.70\nBrew tc Dlst - 85\nBrit Dom       17\nBridge R Con       .04\nBRX \u2014\nCariboo G Q ..II    1.70\nC tc E Corp     1,35\nCoast Brew        13.50\nCommonwealth 14\nDentonia  10%\nGold Belt  10\nHargal   13\nHome 0     1.02\nThe\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany oi Canada, Limited\nTRAIL-BRITISH COLUMBIA\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphates \u2014 Sulphate ef Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertilizer!\nPRODUCERS AND REFINERS OF\nTadanac Brand Metals\nCOLD SILVER\nELECTROLYTIC ,,   ,.\nLEAD ZINC CADMIUM BISMUTH\n!_\u25a0_....\nAsk\n.17\n.11\n.35\n8.85\n.20\n.11\n1.75\n1.38\n13.75\n.15\n.15\n.14\n1.03\n.22\n1.35\n.0214\nMV,\n.19%\n.30\n7.05\n3.02\n.01\n.03%\n1.27\n.17\n.13\n.09\n.83\nGeorge Copper .....      \u2014\nGolconda ....  14\nGold Mtn     12\nGeorge Enter 03 Vt\nInU Coal        21\nIII Mtn     1.31\nKoot B  _ 82\nMak Siccar 02\nMcDSegEx  11\nMcLeod Oil (new)      .25\nMinto  18\nModel        .28\nMorning S 02V4\nPioneer       6.95\nPremier      3.01\nPremier Bord  00%\nQuatsino       .03%\nReno           1.25\nReeves MacD 12\nSally  -...-.      .lltt\nSilmon    08*4\nSheep Crk 80\nSher Gord     2.55 \u2014\nSpooner  -     .15 \u2014\nTaylor Br        .06%     .07\nVanalta   06 \u2014\nVidette  _ _    1.27 -\nWayside          .0814      .10\nWellington        \u2014        .09\nCURBS\nAlexandria .-       \u2014        -05\nAnaconda   05%      .05%\nBaltac    -     HIV,     .0414\nBeaver S - _     .0114     .02\nB C Nickel      XI        .38\nCm Rand       .0414      -\nCalmont          .25        .2614\nCapital Eitatea      7.55       8.00\n.07 .0714\n.OOH .0014\n\u2014 .02\n.10 .11\n.01 .0114\n.69 .75\n.om\nM\n.04\n.02\n.12\n.0014\n.1614\n.1014\n.03\n.02\n.0814\n,0014\n.0014\nCongress\nCork Prov\t\nCotton B  \t\nCrowi Nest\t\nDalhousin\nDalhousie 0 \t\nDevenlih  \t\nDictator . \t\nDunwell    \t\nFairview Amal\nFawn   \t\nFederal G \t\n.04\n.02%\n.03\n.08\n.05\n.03\n.04\n.08%\n.70\n.04\nGeorge River\nGrand Oro _\nGrandview ...\nGrange   \t\nGrull W .....\nHaida \t\nHedley Am\nHedley Sterl\nHighwood S .\nHome G\t\nIndian  \t\nIntl G\t\nIndeo\nKoot Flo \t\nKoot King  00%\nLakeview  \t\nLucky Jim ....\nMadison \t\nMar Jon\t\nMercury\t\nMeridian \t\nMerland \t\nMcGillivray ..\nMidwest Pete\nMill City \t\nMorton W \t\nMarmot Met ..\nNicola\nNoble Five ....\nOkalta  \t\nPend 0 \t\nPilot . ...\"....._..\nPorter Idaho\nQuesnelle Q .\nRanchmens ...\nRed Hawk ...\nReliance   \t\nRelief Arl\t\nReward  \t\nRoyalite  _    28.50\nRufus Arg  02%\nRuth Hope  01\nSilbak Prem _     2.50\nSilverado     02\nSilversmith          .01%\nSnowflake   -     .0014\nStd Silver Lead\nSunloch        .25\nU D L .        \u201e       .92\nUnilted Emp  02%\nUnited O  09\nViking 01%\nVulcan            \u2014\nWaterloo          .01%\nWaverley Tang      .00%\nWellington        .01%\nWesko       .4. 28\nWhitewater    05%\nYmir Y Girl         -\n107%\n105\n106%\n43%\n42%\n43%\n57%\n56%\n55%\n163\n166%\n68%\n67%\n68%\nCASH WHEAT:\nNo. 1 hard 11%; No. 1 nor. and\ntrack 107%; No. 2 nor. 106%; No.\n3 nor. 103%; No. 4 nor. 101%; No.\n5, 96%; No. 6, 91%; feed 75%; No.\nI Garnet 103%; No. 2 Garnet 102%;\nNo. 1 Durum 129%; No. 1 A.R.W.\n97%; No. 4 special 93%; No. 5 special 88%; No. 6 special 82%; screenings $10 per ton.\nB. C. Man Heads\nFisheries Body\nVICTORIA, Nov. 2 <CP)-George\nJ. Alexander, deputy commissioner\nof fisheries for British Columbia,\nis the new chairman of the international fisheries commlnlon which\nregulates tha halibut fisheries of\nthe North Pacific, it v. as announced\nhere today.\nThe commlnlon chose Mr. Alexander at a week-end meeting in\nSeattle. He succeeds tbe late J. B.\nBabcock.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER,  Nov. 2   (CP)   -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight  Tough\nNo. 1 hard\t\n  108%\n106%\n  106%\n104%\nNo. 2 nor \t\n  105%\n103%\nNo. 3 nor\t\n  100%\n98\nNo. 4 nor\t\n    09%\n97\n     96%\n9314\n    90%\n8714\nFeed \t\n....   80%\n7714\n.40\n.15\n.13\n.0414\n.0114\n.07\n.04%\n.0214\n.13\n.00%\n.17%\n.03\n.12\n.03'\/,\n.02%\n.00%\n.00%\n.02%\n.0214\n.16\n.11%\n.1014\n.00%\n.1214\n.04%\n.07%\n1.18\n.04%\n.00\n.09\n.37\n.04\n.02%\n.39\n.05\n28.75\n.02%\n3.00\n.02%\n\u2014 .42\n1.00\n.03%\n.00'\/.\n.0114\n.85\n.00%\n.02\n.25\n.05!'\n.40\n.02%\n.02H\n.1511\n.10%\n.02\n.10%\n.18\n.0314\n.00%\n.0011\n.1114\n.04\n.07\n1.15\n.03%\n.05%\n.08\n.35\n.02\n.37%\n.04%\nDominion Livestock\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2 (CP)-Cat-\ntle 4500; iteeri 4.74; hellers 3.75;\ncalves 6.50.\nCalves 1590; vealers 5.50.\nHogs 2800; bacons 7.75.\nSheep 1400; lambs 6.75; sheep 2.50.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (AP) .-Closing:\nBrazilian $17%; Nickel $62%; Brit\nAm Tob 131s 10%d; Carreras Ord A\n\u00a39%; Courtauldi 57s l%d; Cr Minei\n\u00a315%: De Beers \u00a314%: Distillers\n112s; East Geduld \u00a310%: Hudson\nBay 31s 3d; Mining Trust Ltd 4s 6d;\nRand Mines \u00a39; Rhodeslan Anglo\nAm 29s ex-dividend.\nBonds: British 2% pc Consols\n\u00a385%; British 3% pc War Loans\n\u00a3106%; British Funding 4s 1960-90\n\u00a3117%.\nDIVIDENDS\nSylvanite Gold Minei, Limited,\nregular quarterly of five per cent,\npayable Dec. 31 in United States\nfundi to shareholders of record\nNev. 16.\nMcColl-Frontenao OU Company,\nLtd., 20 centa payable Dec. 15 to\nshareholders of record Nov. 14.\nIndustrials Up\nSmelten Climb Over Two, Tol*onto\nIndustrial Lilt Hltl New\nFlva Year Level\nToronto, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014Prenlng\nforward the Industrial lilt of the\nToronto exchinge today registered\nths highlit level In five yean.\nSmelters climbed 2'\/2 to 70'\/2\nand Nickel V\/i to 62%- Gains of\na point or more were boarded\nby B.C. Power A. Comumen gas,\nBill Telephone and International\nUtilities A.\nUnited Steel Corp advanced %\nto 8, and other itocki adding\nfractions to a point or mora Included Canadian Car common,\nDominion Coal pfd and Hamilton Bridge.\nWHEAT EXPORTS\nUP FOR A WEEK\nWheat   Pricei   at   Winnipeg   Firm\nTowards End of An\nInactive Session\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2 (CP)- Wheat\norices firmed toward the last In an\ninactive session of the\" Winnipeg\ngrain exchange today.\nThe close was only %-% cent\nlower, November at $1.07%, December $1.05 and May $1.06%, after setbacks of nearly two cents a bushel\nhad been registered.\nTending to offset earlier bearish\nnews were statistics showing Canada's exports of wheat last week\nwere more than 6,000,000 bushels, a\nrharp increase over the previous.\nweek.\nUntil near the close, unconfirmed\nreports Argentina was planning to\ndo away with the set minimum price\nfor wheat had weighed heavily upon\nthe market, offsetting the constructive effect of 3,000,000 bushel export\nsales.\nFrench demand for No. 1 hard\nwheat enlivened cash-grains operations. Spreads on that grade moved\nup iharply, coane grains price! followed the trend of wheat.\nBar Gold Firm\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP).-Bar\ngold in London unchanged at $34.74\nan ounce In Canadian fundi; 142s\n2%d In British. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $34.98\nin Canadian.\nJUMPS140S.\nBase Metals Active\nat Coast; Golds\nHold Firm\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP)-B_M\nMetal stocks featured an active session of the Vancouver stock exchange today, doling with galni\nranging from fractions to 14 centa.\nGolds were firm, some Issues closing\nwith small advances. Transaction!\ntotalled $301,720 shares.\nPend Oreille topped the Base Metal group, gaining 14 centa at 1.15\nafter selling up to 1.20. Rufus Argentina and Quatsino were heavy\ntraders, the former closing up 2 at\n2% and the latter up 1 at 3%, Reevei\nMacDonald firmed 2 at 12, Golconda\nadded a cent at 14 while Grandview\nat 4 and Noble Five at 4 both advanced fractions. B.C. Nickel waa\nup 2 at 37.\nPremier Gold advanced 8 at 84)1,\nBig Missourie gained 6 at S3 and\nVidette was up 2 at 1.27. Island\nMountain added 3 at 1.31 and Way-\nside held unchanged at 8%. Bralorne\nat 8.70 and Pioneer at 6.05 each lost\n5 and Minto eased 1 at 19. Relief\nArlington at- 37% and Sheep Creek\nat 80 were each off 1% cents. Nicola dropped a traction at 11%.\nIn the oils, Calgary & Edmonton\nwas off 1 at 1.35, Dalhousie slipped\nback 2 at 69 and Crow's Nest waa\nunchanged at 10. Hargal gained S\nat 13, Home added 1 at 1.02 and Calmont was unchanged at 26.\nCalaarv Livestock\nCALGARY, Nov. 2 <CP) .- B*-\nceipts during the week-end, cattla\n431; calves 160; hogi 45; sheep 728.\nCattle prlcea unchanged; good to\nchoice butcher steers $4.25-$4.75;\nheifers $2.75-^3.50; good to choice\nveal calves $3.O0-$3.5O.\nNo hog sales; select! $7.10; bacom\n$6.60; butchers $6.10.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, Nov. 2 (CP).-Salei of\n100 or more shares on the Toronto\nstock exchange, Industrial section,\ntoday were: 1647 Brazilian; 1085 Br\ntc Dis; 535 Brew Corp; 235 Can Br;\n201 Can Cem; 516 C P R; 2270 Cons\nSm; 1155 Cockshutt; 365 D Seagram;\n1117 Ford A; 5460 Nick; 620 Ml Mlg;\n250 Mass Harr'; 3595 Uh Steel; 1830\nH Walkers.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP) .-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Montreal stock exchange today: 4630\nBrazil; 130 B C Pow; 270 Alcohol A;\n235 Alcohol B; 548 C P R; 450 Cockshutt; 4425 Smelten; 655 Dom Brld;\n2748 Nickel; 225 Lake Woodi; 635\nMaisey; 40 Nat Brew; 1063 Noranda;\n165 St Pap Pfd; 2757 Shawinlgan.\nNickel Dividend\nNEW YORK, Nov, 2 (CP) .-Directors of .International Nickel Company of Canada today declared a\nquarterly dividend on the common\nstock of 40 cents, payable December\n31 to shareholders of record December 81.\nThe payment wai the .third iuc-\ncessive -Increase In quarterly dividends this year.   On September 30\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2   (CP)  -\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nListed: Big Miss 2700, Bralorne\n1400, B R Con 4000, Dentonia 400,\nIsland Mtn 1500, Minto 10,300, Morning Star 2000, Pioneer 1140, Premier\n2175, Quatsino 34,500, Reeves MacD\n1300, Reno 500, Sally 5000, Sheep\nCreek 1200, Vidette 550, Wayside\n500.\nCurb: B.C. Nickel 1800, Cap Est\n3, Cap Est Warr 22, Congress 4700,\nCork Prov 2000, Fawn 300, Fairview\n3000, Geo Ent 500, Geo Riv 2000,\nGolconda 2000, Gold Mtn 500, Grand-\nview 27,500, Grange 1000, Grand\nOro 300, Grull W 1000, Indian 1000,\nLucky Jim 4000, McGill Creek 2000,\nNicola 6000, Noble Five 18,000, Pend\nOreille 4250, Pilot 6000, Porter Idaho\n2500, Reliance 11,000, Relief Arl 6000,\nRufus Arg 51,200, Silversmith 9000,\nSunloc1* 300, United Emp 3000, Viking 7000, Wellington 20,500, Wesko\n2500, Whitewater 1700, Ymir Y Girl\n200.\nAre You Familiar With\nthe Hedley District?\nparticularl^-GGLD  VALLEY\nThis stock hss sn active market snd we will\nbe pleased to send you on request s copy of\nthe latest report on this promising property.\nName\t\nAddress.\nW. J. TAYLOR CO., LTD.\nStock Exchange Bldg. Vancouver, B. C.\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Preu\nCloong exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.88 11-16;\nU.S. dollar .99 15-16; franc 4.65.\nAt New York-Pound 4.89; Canadian dollar 1.00 1-16; franc 4.65%.\nAt Paris\u2014Closed.\nIn gold\u2014Pound *.ls lid; U.S. dollar 59.46 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.50.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014Prime\nCommercial Paper %; Sterling exchange iteady at $4.88 for 60-day\nbills and at $4.89 for demand.\nCanadian dollars: Toijay 100 1-16,\nyesterday 100 1-16, week ago 100\n1-64.\nFranci 4.65% cent!.\nItaly 5.36% centi.\nUruguay 80.00 cents.\nThe Minerals of\nBritish Columbia\nBritilh Columbia hai produced minerals of an aggregate\nvalue of $1,425,000,000.00. The valuei of mine production in 1935 wai $48,821,239.00, an increaie of\n$6,515,942.00 over the vilue for 1934.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP)-Britilh and  foreign  exchange  closed\na dividend of 35 centa a share wai -teady today.\nmid. On June 30 the rjnyrr-ent was\n30 cents and on March 31 it was\n35 cents.\nInterim   th'rd   qurrter   earnings\nwill be issued November 12.\nArgentina, peio, .2786.\nAustralia, pound. 3.8017.\nJapan, yen, .3358.\nNew Z-aland, pound, 3.0331.'\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.8025.\nFor authoritative Information regarding the mining Industry ot\nthis Province, apply to the:\nDEPARTMENT\nOF MINES\nVICTORIA, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nNOTE: The following are lome of the recent publication! af tha\nDepartment:\nAnnual Report of the Minister, of Mines for the calendar year 1988.\n(There is a email charge for this publication.)\nBulletin: \"Notes on Placer-mining ln British Columbia.\"\nBulletin: \"British Columbia\u2014\"Tie Mining Industry.\" (The publication contains a synoptis of the various mining lawi of the\nProvince.)\n\"Elementary Geology Applied to Prospecting,\" a course of lecture*.\n PAGE TEN-\n-NELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, B.C.-TUB8DAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER J, 19jT\u2014\nNEW SHIPMENT OF\nRiley's\nToffee\n60? Per Lb.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nMORE ABOUT\nBRITISH VOTE\n(Continued From Page One)\nThe Labor party had 1070 candidates defending 446 seats and contesting others. Conservatives had\n630 candidates In the field for 314\nscats while Liberals put up 150\ncandidates in 100 scats.\nLANDSLIDE AGAINST LABOR\nEarly returns indicated slight\nI Labor losses, but as later results\nwere announced a landslide against\nLabor became apparent. They lost\ncontrol of some local councils and\ntheir representation was reduced on\nmany others, while in only a few\nInstances was there representation\nincreased.\nConservatives, where local issues\nwere not the prime issue, for the\nmost part campaigned on a program\nof retrenchment and economy.\nThe results are generally regarded\nas an indication of the way the wind\nis blowing in national politics.\nLabor made a strenuous fight to\nincrease its representation, but\nlound its voting strength in many\nareas reduced by slum clearance\nwhich has scattered populations.\nNO VOTE IN LONDON\nThere was no voting In London,\nwhere the county council retires as\na whole every three years. Voting\ntakes place in Scotland tomorrow.\nSome 10,000,000 voters were entitled to cast ballots in yesterday's\nelections. There were about 500\nacclamations. Eight committees\u2014\nClethorpes, Eastleigh, Halesowen,\nMaiden, Scunthorpe, Frodingham,\nSouthall and Surbiton\u2014recently incorporated as boroughs, voted for\nthe first time os municipalities.\n\u25a0 Prior to yesterday's voting Labor\nhad majorities of 42 of the 372 city\nand borough councils in England\nand Wales.\nPAPER QUITS AFTER 270 YEARS\nGHENT, Belgium, Nov. 2 (CP-Havas)\u2014The \"Gazet vn Ghent\", one\nof the world's oldest newspapers,\nwill cease publication because of\nfinancial difficulties on Jan. 1, 1937,\nafter 270 years of existence, it was\nreported here tonight.\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 665     610 Kooteniy St\nWestern\nMonarch\nCOAL\nA Bright, Clean Coal\nBeautifully Prepared\nLUMP $10.50 per Ton\nSTOVE $9.00 per Ton\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\nPhone 889       S*-\u00bb'ey St.\nOppoilte \"The Bay\"\n\"MORE ABOUT\nCHERRY REQUEST\n(Continued From Page One)\nwith the Italian product generally\nuied until procetilng wai ttarted\nIn thli province. During the period of lanctlons agalnit Italy the\nB. C. cherry established Itself al\nthe equal of the Imported product, and the demonstration thli\nyear that black cherrlei can tuc-\nceufully be used for procetilng\nhu widened thl possible field of\nactivities.\nShould additional protection bl\nobt.-.lned It li probable processing\nequipment will be Installed at\nNelion.\nExcerpts from the representations\nr.et forth by George E. Brown, of\nthe B. C. F. G. A. cherry committee\nfollow:\nNEW INDUSTRY\nThis industry has been developed\nin British Columbia during the past\nfour or five years. The initial quantity processed in one season was\nunder 100 tons which has gradually\nIncreased until this year approximately 400 tons of fresh cherries\nused for this purpose. The rapid\nincrease that has taken place during\nlhe past two seasons has been largely\nthe result of the sanctions against\nItaly.\nDuring the past two years experiments have been carried on with\nblack cherries such as Bings, Lamberts, Deacons and Windsors, and\nit has been demonstrated that, picked at the proper time of maturity\nthese varieties are suitable. This\nchanges the picture completely so\nfar as supplies are concerned. During this past season, which was a\nseason of comparatively light crops\nin British Columbia, it would have\nbeen possible to have taken at least\n300 tons of black cherries and processed them rather than ship them\nto markets at prices which were\nnot remunerative, partially because\nthe quality of the cherries, while\nperfectly satisfactory for processing purposes, was not suitable for\ndelivery to long-haul markets.\nThe price obtained during the\nnast season for processed cherries\nlias netted the grower approximately 4% cents a pound for the fresh\nfruit which, while not particularly\nremunerative, is much better than\nwhat was the case two or three\nvears ago. The situation, however,\nwith sanctions removed, will prob-\n-bly change next year and competition will be such as to reduce the\nn*-t price to the grower probably\n3 cents a pound where it was three\nor four years ago and which does\nnot cover cost of operation for the\nproducer.\nHIGHER COSTS\nThere are other factors that also\nhave an important bearing. In British Columbia there is in effect a\nminimum wage law which sets a\ncertain standard of wages that must\nbe maintained, and in the handling\nand pitting of these cherries it is\nimpossible for producers in British Columbia, with these regulations\nin effect, to compete with Italian\nlabor in Italy. The duty of 17**\nner cent ad valorem is not sufficient\nnrotection and while we of course\nfully realize that what the United\nStates does has no bearing on what\nCanada should do, the situation\nthere where there is a protection\nof 9 cents a pound has placed\nthis industry in a very favorable\nposition so far as retaining the home\nmarket is concerned.\nWe would wirh to emphasize that\nthe present apnlication is not just\na renewal of that made by Valley\ninterests two years ago. The situation has altered entirely, in that,\nthrough the efforts of those interested in the processed cherry industry, a most satisfactory method\nhas been evolved for treating thc\nblack varieties, resulting in the Ca-\n| nadian producer being now in a pos-\n; ition to supply the entire Canadian\nmarket for this product with an\narticle superior to foreign imoorts.\nThe efforts of the B. C. F. G. A.\nare directed to requesting recognition of this situation by the government, and the granting of such\nreasonable protection as may insure\nthe retention of this outlet for thc\nhome producer.\n4\u00bb-\n!s, \\e*\nYou'll Need Qood Tools for Winter,\nfor the Home, Shop and Repairs!\nLong winter evenings can become profitable hours,\nif you spend them in a well equipped home workshop!\nRepairs and improvements around the home cost less,\ntoo, when you've the necessary tools on hand! Start\nnow, to assemble a kit of the tools and supplies you've\nalways wanted to own! \u2022\nComplete Equipment Is\nEasy to Own!\nWood Vallance Hardware company carries a complete stock of all needed tools\nand supplies. Nationally known brands,\ncarefully selected and priced within the\nreach of every man in the city are featured. See this selection, and learn how\neasily you can equip your own shop!\nEVERY HOME CAN AFFORD NEEDED TOOLS!\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nFreighter Crew |\nToken From Ship\n\"urfboit Makes Reieue of S3 Men\nWhen Veitel Land! Upon Rocki\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (AP)-A lurf-\nboat today today took off the last\nof the 83 memben of the crew'\nfrom the stricken United Statei\nfreighter Bessemer City.\nDriven hard on rocks at Panden-\nnil Point, the vessel's keel was\nbroken, and Capt. A. Herman, the\nlast to leave hit ship, laid \"she's\nlost.\"\nThe 5686-ton vessel, bound from\nSeattle to Liverpool, is listed In\nUoyd'i register as owned by the\nIsthmian Steamship company.\n\"Visibility was wretched,\" said\nCapt Herman, \"we were on the\nrocks before we knew what had\nhappened.\"\nMORE ABOUT\nU. S. ELECTIONS\n(Continued From Page One)\nWOMAN DRESSED AS A\nMAN GETS A BROKEN\nNOSE FOR HER PRANK\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont., Nov. 2\n(CP).\u2014Dressed as a man, a Peterborough young woman had a whale\nof a time on city streets Saturday\nnight. She was disillusioned about\nmidnight, though, by a punch on the\nnose. Meeting a married couple\nwhom she knew, the masqi-erader\nproceeded to throw her arms about\nthe woman's ne-k. The husband\nswung, broKe the \"masher's\" nose\nand sent her through a plate-glass\nwindow.\nHARTLEY VS. MARTIN\nRoland H. Hartley, Republican,\nEverett lumberman, ls contesting\nwith Clarence D. Martin, Democrat,\nCheney miller, for the governorship.\nHartley, 72, and governor from\n1929-33, hai campaigned chiefly on\nwhat he terms the failure of the\nadministration to stamp out Seattle\nracketeering.\nGovernor Martin, 50, insisted hit\nopponent wai setting up a straw\nman and stood on hli record ln office, particularly Washington1! io-\ncial security and school financing\nprogram.\nWashington hai \"gone Democratic\"\nnationally only twice prior to 1932\u2014\nin 1896 for Bryan and in 1918\nfor Wilson. In 1912, the Progressives\ncaptured the state's electoral vote.\nEXPAND PLAYGROUNDS\nTO BE PLEA OF KINC\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (AP). - King\nEdward is expected to endorse a\ncampaign to \"sell\" Britons on keeping fit in his speech from the throne\ntomorrow at the opening of parliament\nPerhaps because officials remember \"the battle of Waterloo was\nwon on the playing fields of Eton.\"\nthe ministry of health plans to\nlaunch a program encouraging communities to expand their playground, swimming pool and. other\nhealth facilities.\nOlynriDic Village\nNow Army. School\nBERLIN, Nov. 2 (CP-Havas)-\nBerlin's Olympic village was transformed today Into a school for training German infantrymen.\nSCHOONER FOUNDER8\nQUEBEC, Nov. 2 (CP). - Thc\nschooner Bergeronne Trader foundered last night off Basques Cove\nduring a gale on the lower St.\nLawrence, it was reported here today. Captain ulysse Bouchard and\nhis crew reached shore In a dory.\nDISTINGUISHED BARRISTER\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (CP Cable)-\nSir Henry Curtis-Bennett, 55, distinguished barrister, collapsed, while\nspeaking at a dinner ln London tonight and died while being removed\nin an ambulance.\nROOSEVELT OR LANDON\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (CP)-The\nUnited States goes to the polls tomorrow to decide whether Franklin\nDelano Roosevelt shall continue his\nfight for Social Security and Reciprocal trade and against \"Organized\nMoney\" or whether he shall be succeeded by Alfred Mossman Landon,\npledged to budget-balancing, \"Relief without Waste\" and \"Preservation ot the American System of\nGovernment\".\nMonths of bitter dispute ended\nat midnight, by which time the\npresidential candidates had been\nheard via the air in their last bids\nto the electors who will register\ntheir verdict at 122,000 polling places\nin apparently unprecedented numbers.\nOvershadowed by the struggle between the president and his Republican opponent, but no less vital\nto the operation of government for\nthe next few years, the voters will\nalso elect 33 governors, seat 35 in\nin the senate and choose an entire\nhouse of representatives. Hundreds\nof minor offices will be filled and\nquestions of office and social policy\nin stage governments settled.\nPre-election betting favored the\npresident at 2V, to one, Dow Jones\nSc Company reported, with little\nmoney offering. Expert predictions\nand straw polls, with notable exceptions, swung to the president.\nBoth Democrats and Republicans\npredicted victory \u2014 and conceded\nnothing to the other parties, Union,\nCommunist Socialist and the like.\nNext to the presidency, chief interest centers in the battle for control of the lower house. Now en-\nJoying a majority of 198, Democrats\npredict they will at least hold their\nown and possibly gain.\nG.O.P. PREDICTS GAINS\nRepublicans have forecast substantial and possible decisive gains\nin the house where the present lineup is 308 Democrats, 100 Republicans, seven Progressives and three\nRexall Drug Store\nPRIZE CONTEST\nFOR GIRLS AND BOYS\nSixteen Wonderful Prizes\nGiven Away\n\u25a0     EIGHT FOR GIRLS\u2014EIGHT FOR BOYS\nTo the girls and boys securing the largest number of votei in the\nRexall Girls' and Boys' Prize Conteit\nAil you have to do after you have been nominated as a contestant\nis to ask your mother, father, aunts, unclei and friends to make their\npurchases at the Rexall Drug Store. Votes will be given tor each cent\nof purchases made at City Drug Co.\nRulei:   1.  No child over 14. years of age may be entered.\n2. At the tune of purchase, tell the Salesperson the name\nof the girl or boy for whom you wish your votes\nrecorded.\n3. No person shall solicit votes ln the store.\n4. No votes shall be recorded before the start of the Contest on or about November 2, 1936, or after 10 o'clock\nChristmas Eve\u20141936.\n5. In the event of a lie for any prize offered, a prize identical with that lied for will be awarded to each contestant concerned.\n6. Prizes will be delivered only at the store. One vote with\n,    each cent of purchases of Rexall Products.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelion'l Dlipemlng Chemliti\nPhone 34 Phone 460\nARABS TO DIE\nJERUSALEM; Nov. 2 (Jewish Telegraph Agency)\u2014A Jerusalem court\ntoday sentenced three Arabs to\ndeath, one of them for the slaying of\na British army officer and two for\nthe death of a British policeman\nduring recent disorders.\nFarmer-Laborltes, with 17 vacancies.\nThree Republicans were elected In\nSeptember in Maine, leaving 432 of\nthe new house to be chosen tomorrow.\nThe senate battle swings around\npersonalities and the possibility of\nthe Democratic margin being lower.\nThe Democrats cannot be removed\nfrom control in that chamber where\ntheir holdovers\u2014members who do\nnot have to seek election this year\u2014\nand those unopposed already total\n49, a majority in the membership of\n96.\nOf the 31 full-term senate scats at\nstake as one-third of this chamber's\nmembership goes to the polls, 19\nare now held by Democrats. 11 by\nRepublicans and one in Farmer-\nLabor. In addition, elections will be\nheld for the seats of four senators\nwho died, making additional elections In Iowa and New Mexico with\ntwo ln Florida. Maine elected a Republican in September.\nThe average adult has about 100,-\n000 hairs in the scalp.\nA Few BARGAINS\nIN \"AS IS\"\n1928 BUICK SEDAN\u2014Licence and Running Good. The Way It   6gA  aa\nStandi for     99Uo-a.IV\n1928 NASH SEDAN\u2014The Way It Standi ^*7C ft A\n1928 DODGE SEDAN\u2014Licence and Ready to Co as It ii (6 f <*% J* \u00a3fcfl\n1927 ESSEX SEDAN\u2014Licence and Ready for the Road. As It la   <\u00a3?C Oil\n1928 ESSEX SEDAN\u2014Licence, Etc. Looks and Rum Cood ^_fca\u00a3 00\nHaving wrecked many popular cars such as Fords, Chevrolets,\nPlymouth, Pontiacs, Essex and Dodge, we now have a\nCOMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF USED PARTS\nUSED TIRES\u2014ALL SIZES\u2014SOME OFF NEW CARS THIS YEAR\nWHEELS, AXELS, CROWN GEARS, PINIONS. RADIATORS, FENDERS, DOORS,\nCUSS, HEADLAMPS, ETC., ETC. SOME COMPLETE BODIES\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson) Limited\nDistributors    ,\nNash-LaFayette Hudson-Terraplane Cars and Trucks\nLargest Stock of Uied Can in the Interior. Valuei From $25 Up to $1250.\nBuy With Confidence\u2014Where There Are Lots of Carl to Chooie From!\nMORE ABOUT\nTransport Dep'l.\n(Continued From Page One)\n_^\u00a3tb_ Windbreakers\nFOR OUTDOOR MEN\nA real practical garment for\noutdoor men\u2014for* sport, work\nsr play. In plain colors, checks\nor fancy patterns. Zipper or\nbuttoned styles.\n$4.25 to $9.00\nSuede Leather Coats $10.95\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nPlans Ior the immediate establishment ot trans-Canada air mail and\npassenger services with -field facilities equal to the best in America.\nAIRMAIL TO PACIFIC\nExtension to the Pacific coast ol\nthe proposed British air service\nfrom England to Montreal, to be operative in 1928.\nConversion of the board of railway commissioners into a transportation commission with regulatory\npowers over all forms of transportation.\nEarly consideration In parliament\nof the capital structure of the Canadian National railways.\nHaving a permanent staff of about\n7000 people, increasing to nearly\n10,000 in the summer months, with\na payroll of over $7,000,000, the\nnew department is one of the largest in the public service. It embraces the following branches of\ngovernment activity:\nRailways, canals, marine, civil\naviation, all harbors including the\nseven national harbors under a central board, radio including national\nbroadcasting and government radio\nservices, meteorological services, the,\nCanadian travel bureau and numerous associated branches of the\npublic service.\nCol. V. I. Smart, deputy minister\nof railways and canals, and the as\nsistant deputy minister and secretary of that department, George W.\nYates, will be retained in the same\ncapacities in the department of\ntransport. R. K. Smith, appointed\nlast year as deputy minister of\nmarine, will be director of marine\nservices in the transport department.\nCHIEF OF AIR 8ERVICE8\nCommander C. P. Edwards, former director of the radiotelegraph\nbranch of the department of marine,\nwill head the merged branches of\ncivil aviation, radio and meteorology, under the title \"Chief of Air\nServices\". J. A. Wilson, present head\nof civil aviation, will continue in\nthat branch as \"controller\". H. F.\nAlward is made departmental counsel.\nPresent officials of the branches\nconcerned in the merger will continue but under different titles,\nwilh added responsibilities in many\ncases, and with some promotions.\nOt outstanding interest in the\nmerger was the coincident Inauguration today of the Canadian Broadcasting corporation which replaces\nthe Canadian Radio commission set\nup by legislation in 1932. National\nbroadcasting, while under the jurisdiction of the transport minister,\nwill be under direct control of a\nboard of nine governors headed by\nL. W. Brockington, Winnipeg. Major W. E. Gladstone Murray is general manager.\nAnother important fixture in this\ndepartment is the national harbors\nboard which will administer Canada's seven national ports, Halifax,\nSaint John, Quebec, Chicoutimi,\nThree Rivers, Montreal and Vancouver. Other ports an,t harbors,\nboth sea and inland, are under\ncontrol of the marine branch.\nJAILED ON BEGGING CHARGES\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP)-Five\nunemployed single men were convicted in police court today on\ncharges of begging, \"wo were sentenced to four months, one to three\nmonths imprisonment and two re\nceived suspended sentences.\nNews of the Day\nCanadian Legion monthly meeting tonight at 8 o'clock. (3389)\nCall 144 tor Christmas Cardi.\nNelion Dally Newi\n(3155)\n4-DAY SPECIAL, Hats cleaned,\nblocked. Genti 75c. Ladiei 50c. Boiton Hat Wki. Next Jack Boyce.\n(3388)\nBadminton racquets restrung. Holland's, opp. Telephone Office. (3382)\nAsk your dealer for Blue Ribbon\npotatoes. Something different.\n(3384)\nClsirlng elite dance lets, panties,\nslips and nightiei it $1.00. D.C.\nDRESS SHOPPE. (3387)\nWe    SPECIALIZE    In    sporting\ngoodi. Patronize the SPORT SHOP.\n(3352)\nA wonderful expreiilon of good\nwill at Chrlstmai time\u2014your photo\niraph. Make appointments early.\nMEERES* STUDIO. (3367)\nBind Instrument!, Cellos, Violins,\nGultart, Banjos, Mandolins, Bagpipe., R:sdi, eto. WEBBS MUSIC\nHOUSE, 80S Baker St. (3368)\nDANCE       DANCE      DANCE\nKeep Friday night, Nov. 6, open\n'or big hockey dance at Eagle Hill.\n(3397)\nMORE ABOUT    '\nBRITISH SAILORS\n(Coiitlnuid From Paje One)\npolice tor alleged non-payment a\u00bb\na taxicab fare.\nBEATEN IN FACE\nUpon protesting, Britlih ofiicera\nhere said, the three sailors wert\npinned down by four Japaneie police nnd beaten in the face by additional Japanese plain dlothesmen to\n\"persuade\" them to sign a confes-\nsion of their refusal to pay the\ntaxicab fare and also of resisting\nthe police.\nAt the height of the assault, British officials said, Lieutenant T. C.\nPackersford of the flotilla leader\nBruce arrived on the icene and\nrequested that the sailora bt released.\n\"DRUNKEN SOT\"\nIn the course of the argument, lt\nwas asserted, the Japaneie laid to\nLieutenant Packersford:\n\"You say you're a British officer.\nWe say you're not. You're nothing\nbut a drunken sot, Get out ol\nh-re.\" ,\nThe Japaneie threatened Lieutenant Packersford with imprisonment\nif he did not depart, olticen hero\nsaid, and after he left, the Japanese\nassertedly resumed the assault! on\nthe three seamen ond dislocated too\njaw of one of them.\nTwo of the sailon eventually\nagreed to sign the desired confer*\nsion, but the man with the broken\njaw refused to sign and wai then\nthrown into jail and further tortured with a fountain pen thrust\ninto the flesh under his tingernaila\nand ink squirted into the bleeding\nwounds until he signed tha document.\nBritish naval authorities announced they possessed indiiput-\nable proof that the lailora paw-\ntheir taxi fare.       \t\nAdvertise Youi Product NowL\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg.\nWe have a fine it*lectlon of iweat\nen for the coming ikatlng uiion. \\\nJACK BOYCE       (3350)\nSmart, distinctive, exclusive and\ninexpensive are the Nelson Daily\nNaws Christmas Cards... Phone 144\nfor samples or call personally. (3155)\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED - JERSEY   AYRSHIRE\ncow, fresh. Box 3396, Daily News.\n(3396)\nNothing nicer than a slice of CHOQUETTE BROS.' ra'iln bread with\nyour tea. Phone 238. (3369)\nGive Meeres' Studio only 20 minutes of your time and your Christmas gift problem will be solved.\nPhone 46 for appointment.     (3390)\nAll farmers are welcome to the\nsemi-annual meeting West Kootenay\nCentral Farmers' Institute, at the\nCity Hall, Nelson, Thursday. Nov. 5,\nat 10 a.m. K. Wallace, Secretary.\n(3357)\nPROSPECTIVE BADMINTON\nPLAYERS URGENTLY REQUESTED TO GET BEHIND COMMITTEE\nAND PAY AT LEAST HALF OF\nFEES BY THURSDAY, 4 p.m. Tea\nserved Tuesday night. (3*02)\nLOST - FEMALE FOX TERRIER,\nwhite \"with brown spots, between\nGenelle and Blueberry Sunday\nnight. Answers to the name ot\n\"Mltzie\". E. C. Perrott, Box 467,\nPhone 252L, Trail. Reward. (3401)\nWOMEN'S CANADIAN CLUB\nTonight, Hume Hotel, 7 p.m.\nSpeaker: Mr. W. A. Watson\nTickets Must be Procured at\nMann-Rutherford's\nNew Memberi Welcome\n(3341)\nCARDOF THANKS\nMr. and Mrs. Palmer Anderson\nand Mrs. Blais wish to thank sincerely Dr. Shaw and nurses of\nKootenay Lake General hospital for\ntheir kind care in the illness and\ndeath of Baby Anderson.      (3400)\nCARD OF THANKS\nMrs. J. W. Clark snd her sons,\nLewis and Kenneth, wish to express\ntheir gratitude to all those kind\nfriends who extended their help\nond sympathy on the occasion of the\npassing of their dear husband and\nfather. (3372)\nMore busae** go more places more\ntimes a day than any other\nmode of transportation.\n(jaJOO)\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhona 800\nNelson Depot \u2014 205 Baker St.\nAUCTION\n1801 Stanley St.\nWEDNESDAY, Nov. 4th\n2 P.M.\nActing under instruction from\nMr R. N. Ramsden, I will offer\nthe following: Scales, Kitchen\nTable utensils, Carpets, Library\nTable, Dining Room Table,\nChairs. Buffet, Chinaware, Mantel Clock, Heating Stove, 2 Steel\nSingle Beds and Mattresses, Bedding, several pairs of blankets,\nMirrors, Chestc-rlicld, Occasional\nChairs, Tailor's Shears, several\nsuit lengths of cloth, Chest of\nDrawers. Hall Banch. Hall Rack.\n5-tube \"Knight\" Dual-Wave Radio, etc.,  etc.\nG,   HORSTEAD,\nTermi: CASH. Auctioneer.\nGoodi on view morning of sale\nWorkmen!\nLEATHER\nMITTS\nand\nWool Fillers\nFor  protection  agalnit cold\nWe itock three ilies.\nto  fit  any   hand\nGENUINE HORSE\nHIDE MITTS\nPURE WOOL FILLERS\nGODFREYS'\nW  LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\n318 BAKER      PHONE 870\nI PUBLIC\nENEMY'S WIFE\nPat O'BRIEN \u2022 Margaret LINDSAY\nHit Number Two\nat 3:14-8*.14-10:3\u00ab\nROSS ALEXANDER\nBEVERLY ROBERTS\nin\n\"HOT\nMONEY\"\nfllii'itfi i-v- h_JM; _&ii-Ui*i_\n^^^^\n-a_.___.___l\n\u25a0________M\n^baajjhjbjuUtfH,\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_03","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\/1.0412354","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":"1936-11-03 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":"1936-11-03 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":""}]}