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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" r.i  i   I ><w   ..tarn.\" au^!|^l|Wlp\u00ab\u00ab;i<t]UI (U^IIKWirww\n\/6>7V I\nKimtterley Beats Coleman as\nLethbridge Takes Nelson\n\u2014Page Seven\nPlane Crashes, Boat Upsets\nin a Search for 'Santa Clans'\nParachuter Lost in Ocean\nB08T0N, Deo. 22 (AP)\u2014High\nover Boston airport, a brightly-\ncostumed Santa Claus tonight\nttepped from a circling plane and\ndrifted lazily down, suspended by\na wind-caught parachute, to drop\n\u00abnd disappear in dusk-blanketed\nBoston harbor as a Christmas\nparty of children looked on horrified.\nSeveral houn later, two army pilots reported they had teen the\nbody of the parachute jumper, 35-\nyear-old Harold Kraner of win-\nthrop, half on a sandbar, half in\nthe water. They tald he still wore\nthe parachute.\nCoastguard, army, navy, and harbor police craft converged on the\ngeneral locality. Darkness and a falling tide impeded the search.\nSoon after the search started, an\narmy plane, taxiing to a landing,\nand a police automobile, rushing\nunderwater searchlights to tht\ntctne, crashed, tending Seageant\nEdward J, Selboldt, Boston police\nballistics' expert, to Eatt Boston\nrelief hospital critically Injured,\nLest seriously hurt was his assistant patrolman John Clorin,\nBOAT CAPSIZE8\nAlmost simultaneously, a small\nboat in which two enlisted army\nmen, Richard Miller and Earl Jordan, were searching for the parachute jumper, capsized. Coastguards\npulled the men, half-drowned, from\nthe frigid water. They, too, went to\nEast Boston relief hospital.\nThe accidents came at the climax\nof a party for children of members\nof army air corps detachment at\nthe East Boston airport.\nJumping,up and dawn with glee,\nthe children eagerly awaited tha\ndescent of Kris Knngle from the\nair when:\n\"Private Kraner stepped out of the\nplane,\" reported Capt. Richard E.\nCobb, commanding officer of the\ndetachment and pilot of the ship.\n\"His 'chute opened. We were about\n1600 feet above the airport. There\nwas a 40-mile-an-hour wind blowing.\nVVIND CAUGHT PARACHUTE\n\"The wind caught the parachute.\nKraner landed in the water about\n150 to 200 feet from the airport. He\nstruggled to free himself from the\nparachute.\"\nCobb landed hit plane at the airport, seized a life preserver, took\noff again,'and dropped the preserver at the spot where the parachute made a light splotch against\nthe water,\n\"I don't know whether he got it,\"\nCobb said, \"but he seemed to be\nabove water then.\"\nKraner, an enlisted man and a\nveteran parachute jumper, is married and has one'child.\nCobb returned to the station.\nAlarms went out to the army, navy\ncoastguard and police stations. Pursuit planes roared away from the\nairport, piloted by civilian-clad officers who were at the party. Red\nflares cut brilliant streaks across\nthe water.\nAnd 100-odd children, their\ncheeks wet with tears, straggled\nhome.\nFARMING PAY.,\nHE HAS PROOF!\nERSKINE, Alta., Dec. 22 (CP)-\nDon't tell Mr. and Mrs. Lester V.\nLohr that farming doesn't pay. Tbgx\nknow it does. .\u25a0.    \u25a0*>-.'\u2022\u2022- .--'--Tmsmt \u25a0\nThe Lohrs who know what It la. lo' I\npioneer in a log cabin will spend this\nChristmas in a $10,000 home, their\n\"Dream House\" paid for solely out of\nthe profits of fanning.\nIt is one of the most modern farm\nhomes in Alberta, even supplying a\nshower bath for the hired help. It\nalso has a billiard room and a \"den\nfor the master\" complete with gun\nshelves.\n\"There is no need for other people\nto envy us,\" said 49-year-old Lohr as,\nwith his 39-year-old wife, he told the\nstory of the Dream House, \"for what\nwe have done, anyone else can do.\"\n\"The farm has always been a paying proposition,\" he said, drought hit\nhis farm only one year, in 1924, and\nno crop was harvested.\nBachelor of Science, University of\nManitoba, Mr. Lohr has been farming \"on his own\" since the Great\nWar. Today he has 1440 acres.\nGets $10,000 of Her\nHusband's Insurance\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP)-Mr.\nJustice D. A. Macdonald in supreme\ncourt today granted an order awarding Mrs. Mary Gertrude Macdonald $10,000 of $26,477 insurance\nmonies left by her husband, Donald\nAlexander Macdonald, who died\nhere last August.\nHis lordship ruled the money\nformed part of deceased's estate so\nfar as the testator's family maintenance act was concerned. Mrs.\nMacdonald invoked the act to increase the $3300 which had been\nleft her from the insurance. She\nclaimed $15,000.\nScout Toy Shop\nGives Out Toys\nfor 155 Kiddies\nSome 155 kiddies of 44 of Nelson's\nless fortunate families will not go\ntoyless Christmas day, thanks to the\nefforts of the Boy Scout toy shop.\nToys for that number of kiddies\nwere distributed by Fred Gill, the\n\"Scout Santa Claus\", from the toy\nshop in the I. O. O. F. hall Wednesday night\nLast opportunity will be given\nparents to collect toys for their kiddles Christmas stockings tonight at\n7 p.m. There was still a number of\ngood toys left when the shop closed\nWednesday at 9 pjn.\nMARSHALL, Mo\u201e Dec. 22 (API-\nMae West sent Santa Clause $250.\nA man here called Santa Clause suffered so much ill luck lately he had\nto dig ditches to support his family. Miss West heard about it and\nwired him $250.\n65 at Christmas\nGen. Evangeline Booth, world\nhead of the Salvation Army, who\nvisited Canada during the summer,\ncelebrates her 65th birthday on\nChristmas Day. The militant army\nhead appears in excellent health\ndespite her strenuous duties.\nPope Will Receive\non Christmas Eve\nVATICAN CITY, Dec. 22 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014Pope Pius' Christmas Eve\nreception for members of the Sa\ncred college, cancelled last year\nbecause of the pontiff's illness, will\nbe held as customary this Friday.\nItaly Sends 8000 More Troops to Aid Japanese Troops Approach\nPol and Joe Heading 'Down Under'\nFranco as 'Bands Off Move Held Up\nCOMMITTEE, IH A\nDEADL0CUAKES\nREST TILL AFTER\nCHRISTMAS DAY\nReport  Moors  From\nItalian Africa\nAre Sent\nTRAVELLERS TELL\nOF HEAVY GUARD\n(Copyright 1937 by The Havat\nNewt Agency)\nLONDON, Dec. 22 (CP-Havat)\n\u2014The \"volunteer.\" question wat\nstill at Issue tonight following another meeting of the \"hands off\nSpain\" sub-committee held amid\nreport Italy had ttnt $000 North\nAfrican troopt Into the Inturgent\nrankt within the lait two weekt.\nThe Spanish question wat alto\nmtntloned In the houie of commons when Foreign Secretary Eden  disclosed  the  ambassador  at\nHendaye had been Instructed to\nrequett the Immediate public trial\nOf a. Britlth newspaperman arrested  In   Insurgent territory mora\nthan a year ago for alleged violation of currency regulations.\nWhile reporting progress on several subordinate points in the plan,\nthe non-intervention sub-committee\nwas unable to reach agreement on\nthe \"substantial\" number of foreign\neffectives to be evacuated before\ncertain belligerency rights are granted to the two combatants. Tbe deliberations  were  adjourned  until\nalter, Christmas w%a. aonition ap-\n:iJWSBy w'8p\u00bbww'is~\u00abVer.' '\u2022\nThe Daily Herald, Labor, in a\ndespatch Irom its Gibraltar, correspondent, charged Premier Mussolini had sent 9000 Moors into Spain\nfrom Italian East Africa within the\nlast two weeks.\n(Travellers reaching Gibraltar,\nfrom Cadiz, Spain, said Insurgent\nauthorities had thrown a heavy\nguard around the port, possibly to\nprevent observers from witnessing\nthe debarkation of troops and war\nsupplies.)\nFINE PAINTING GIVEN\nTO NATIONAL GALLERY\nOTTAWA, Dec. 22 (CP) \u2014 The\nNational Gallery announced today\nJ. W. McConnell, Montreal capitalist and philanthropist, had given lt\none of tne finest works of the 17th\ncentury Spanish painter, Jusepe\nRibera.\nDISCUSS\nTo Licence Betting\non Horses, Chicago\nCHICAGO, Dec. 22 (AP)- The\ncity council voted tonight to licence\n\"pari-mutuel brokers\" to handle bets\non horse races.\nThe unprecedented ordinance \u2014\ndesigned to take the multi-million\ndollar business out of the hands of\nscofflaw \"bookmakers,\" drive hood\nlums from the trade and raise $2,.\n000,000 a year in revenue\u2014was adop.\nted by an overwhelming margin, of\n43 to 4.\nProtracted debate over its legality\npreceded passage of the measure\naimed at drawing the cloak of legality over that form of gambling.\nAPPEAL SUSTAINED\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 22 (CP) \u2014 A\njudgment of Manitoba appeal court\nyesterday sustained Ernest Chis-\nwell's appeal against Mr. Justice\nJ. E. Adamson's ruling he must pay\n$100 costs before his action against\nCharleswood municipality and two\ngolf courses can go to trial.\nFor nearly three years Chlswell\nhas been fighting the golfers. He\nclaims the bouncing golf balls roll\nacross his property much to the discomfort of the Chiswell family.\nPAT HALEY\nJOE HALEY\nWith Canada's Empire games contingent, Pat and Joe Haley of Trail,\ntrack and field entries, are today out on the ocean heading for Australia\nto compete against athletes from throughout the British Empire. (Story\nelsewhere in today's Daily News).\nNEW CONTEST FOR\nPLANS OF $2500\nHOMES IN B.C.\nOTTAWA, Dec. 22 (CP)\u2014To provide the benefit of professional\nplanning for low cost residences\nbuilt under the Dominion Housing\nact, Finance Minister Dunning tonight announced a new architectural\ncontest for homes costing not more\nthan $2500 ln British Columbia or\n$3000 elsewhere in Canada.\nArchitect* throughout the Dominion will be eligible to compete\nand the contest closes January 24,\n1038. From the entries the judging\ncommittee will select not more than\n10 and not less than five sketches\n-orwtdphjie government will pay\n$250 \"eacUi Architects submitting\nwinning designs will then bo asked\nto send complete plans and working drawings.\nThese finished plana will then be\nmade available to prospective homeowners at $10 each. Tlius giving to\neven the lowest-cost home builders\nthe benefit of architects' plans.\nBaroness jailed in\nJapan Niece of Vice\nConsul in Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP) \u2014\nBaroness Shidzue Ishimoto, one of\ntwo women among the 370 Japanese arrested in the Tokyo campaign\nagainst suspected Communists and\nPacifists, is a niece of Yozo Tsura-\nmi, vice-consul for Japan here.\nThe baroness was well known In\nthe Pacific coast cities, she is related to the Tsurumi family, known\nin Seattle diplomatic circles and was\nin Seattle herself last April 21 at\nthe end of her fourth lecture tour\nof the United States.\nAnother uncle is Ken Tsurumo,\nformerly Japanese consul at Portland and now consul general at\nHarbin, Manchuria. Yusuke Tsuru\nmi, famous Japanese author, also is\nan uncle.\nNEW\nCAMPAIGN\nAGAINST C.\nI. O.\nWASHINGTON, Dec. 22 (AP) -\nA. F. of L. leaders talked today of\nstarting a \"divide and conquer\"\ncampaign against the C I \u2022 O., now\nthat peace negotiations in organized labor's factional war have collapsed.\nTWIN  DAUQHTER8 FOR\nCHRISTMAS FAMILY\nPHOENIX, Ariz., Dec. 22 (AP)\n\u2014Christmas will be twice as joyous\nin the H. J. Christmas home this\nyear. Mr. and Mrs. Chrlstm_s became the parents of twin daughters\nyesterday.\nFOUR SOLDIERS, A SAILOR AND\nA SCRIBE ARE BRITISH VICTIMS\nTotal Killed on Duty in Sino-Japanese War, Eden\nTells the-British House of Commons\nLONDON, Dec. 22 (CP-Havas)\u2014\nforeign Secretary Anthony Eden In\nI the house of commons today said\nj four soldiers, a sailor and a news-\nIpaperman comprised the British\nI subjects killed whi)e on duty In\nI connection with the Chinese-Jap-\nlanese conflict\n' The soldiers, privates of the Royal\n(Ulster Rifles, died ln or near Shang-\nIha, the sailor was fatally wounded\n\u25a0 aboard the gunboat Ladybird at\n\u25a0Wuhu Dec. 11, while the newspaper\nman\u2014Pembroke Stephens, correspondent for the London Daily Telegraph\u2014fell a victim to machine gun\nbullets near Shanghai, Nov. 11.\nEden said the circumstances surrounding Mr. Stephens' death negated the ossibllity of making claims\nfrom the Japanese government. In\nall the other cases, he declared. Tokyo had offered apologies and reparations, either prior to, or as a\nresutt of, British official representations.\nWit\nWeaittier\n^-^t^a^K\nMin. Max.\nNEL80N  _    24 32\nVictoria     34 42\nNanaimo _ _ _  34 43\nVancouver _ _.._  36 48\nKamloops  _...._  24 SO\nPrince George   _  12 18\nEstevan Point _ _..._  32 48\nPrince Rupert    30 -*-\nLangara _   36 36\nAtlin _   12 2Q\nDawson _ -..._    0 28\nSeattle _   38 44\nPortland - _  38 42\nSan Francisco -  46 56\nSpokane   _  26 36\nLot Angeles ..    50 64\nPenticton       24 \u2014\nKelowna    30 33\nGrand Forks \u201e _.  24 34\nKaslo  _   18 \u2014\nCranbrook  _... \u201e   10 23\nCalgary  _    0 10\nEdmonton     0 8\nSwift Current     4 6\nMoose Jaw  _    0 -6\nPrince Albert      6* 4\nSaskatoon      2* 8\nQu'Appelle     \u2014 2\nWinnipeg -    4* 4\n\u2022\u2014Below zero.\nForecast: Okanagan and Kootenay\n\u2014Moderate to fresh winds. Mostly\nfair and moderately cold scattered\nsnow flurries in extreme south.\nVeteran C.P.R.\nMan, Cranbrook,\nLoses Right Fool\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Dec, 22 (CP)\n\u2014Richard H. Moore, veteran Canadian Pacific Railway company\nbrakeman of Cranbrook, B. C. was\nin hospital here today, where physicians amputated his right foot after he tell under \u2022 train a few miles\nsouth of here yesterday.\nHospital    attendanta    reported\nMoore was resting well today.\nNo pne\/.tasted. tl\u00bb \u00a5!_4ant.but\nft was beflevea Moote (lipped as he\nattempted to leave the moving train\nin the performance of his duties.\nThe train passed over his foot amputating and further amputation was\nfound necessary when he was\nbrought to hospital here.\nDEAL   FOR\nCANADIAN RADIO\nOTTAWA, Dec. 22 (CP)-New arrangements that will go far toward\nclearing the air of interference\nnuisance were completed at the radio conference recently completed at\nHavana, it was announced tonight\nWhen ratified by the various governments concerned the agreement\nreached at Havana will give Canada\nsufficient channels to care for all\nthe present and projected high power stations using five kilowatts or\nmore.\nLast Riles for\nGerman General\nTUTZING, Germany, Dec. 22 (AP)\n\u2014General Erich Ludendorff, honored by the German nation and saluted by Chancellor Hitler at impressive rites in Munich, was buried today in the picturesque cemetery of this simple Bavarian village.\nThree volleys were fired as the\nbody of the man many considered\none of the great military leaders in\nhistory, was lowered into its grave\nin the presence of villagers, an hon.\nor guard of soldiers and close members of his family,\nNo clergymen were In evidence as\nGermany's great war hero, enemy\nof Catholicism and Protestantism,\nwas the founder of a Germanic faith\nmovement, a neo-pagan religion\nstemming back to the old Teuton\ngods.\nTWO COMMITTED ON FRAUD\nCONSPIRACY CHARGES\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP) -\nOakley B. Zush and Robert W. Mo\nKitrock were committed for trial\nby Magistrate.H. S. Wood in police\ncourt today on charges of conspiring\nto defraud. The charges allege the\nmen conspired in connection with\nshares of National Silver Mine., ltd,\nBROKEN-HEARTEDFATHERLEARMS\nAFTER SEVEN YEARS MAN NOT SON\nERIE, Pa., Dec. 22 (AP)\u2014A broken-hearted father learned today\nthat the man who had posed as his\nson for seven years is in reality a\nstranar to his flesh, bound not to\nreveamhe secret by a strange deathbed oath to his real son. .\nBut today Mesrov Kalultian, alias\nSolomon Papazian, a 3_.year-old\napprentice tailor, disclosedvthe true\nstory to A. L. Barkman, hem of the\nUnited States .immigration bureau\nhere.\nIn 1915, Kalustian said, his mother and the mother of Solomon\nPapazian were killed during a massacre of Armenians in Turkey. The\ntwo boys, both 12 years old, fled a's\nthey saw their mothers slain.\nSTARVED TO DEATH\nHe said they roamed around Turkey until Solomon died of starvation, but oh his death bed, Solomon\nmade Kalustian promise he would\nfind the father and pose as his son.\nKalustian finally located and Joined the father, Abraham Papazian,\nnow a resident of Meadville, Pa.\nThe father had seen his son only as\na six-month-old baby.\nA week ago, Kalustian said, he\nbecame stricken with fear that some\nday his real identity might be learned and went to a friend, Attorney\nEdward Petrlllo and made a full\nconfession.\nWEALTH MOVES\nCLOSER 10 SOME\nFAMILY AS WILL\nOF MILLAR VALID\nStork Derby Will   Is\nUpheld by Supreme\nCourt of Canada\nWHO GETS THE\n$500,000 NOW?\nOTTAWA, Dec. 22 (CP)-Wealth\nmoved up a step eloter to some\nlarge Toronto family today but\nthe question of which one remained unsettled. \u2022   -\nThe tuprema court of Canada\ndeclared clause nlna of the famous\nbaby-raco will of Charlea Vance\nMillar wu valid and rejected an\nappeal by Millar relatives bated\non tha ground of public policy.\nClause nine directed that tht\nresidue of Millar's estate, estimated at $500,000 or mora, ahould be\npaid to tha mother who gave birth\nin Toronto to the largest number\nof children In the 10 yean following hit death. In case of two or\nmore mothert having an equal\nnumber of children, and a larger\nnumber than any others, the money wat to be equally divided be\ntwetn them.\nBACK TO THE\nONTARIO COURT\nMillar died October 21,1926.\nThe court's decision throws the\nquestion back to the Ontario court,\nprobably to Mr. Justice Middleton,\n*!)\u00ab-\u2022 Wl-^W.'Mfttsa upoii to decide\nwhich mother or mothers will get\nthe money.\nThe only thing likely to delay matters is an appeal by Millar's next of\nkin to the privy council. Samuel\nFactor,-solicitor for Arabella West\nand Alexander Butcher, who carried the appeal to the supreme court\nof Canada, was unable to say whether a further appeal would be launched.\nAn official of the National Trust\ncompany, one of the executors of\nthe estate, said every effort would\nbe made to expedite matters so that\nthe woman entitled to the money\nwould get it.\nFive Judges of the supreme court\nof Canada were unanimous in upholding decisions of the Ontario\ncourts that clause nine of the will\nwas not offensive to public policy\nand should not oe disregarded. Mr.\nJustice Crocket disagreed with some\nof the reasons in tho main Judgment, written by Chief Justice Sir\nLyman Duff, but reached the same\nconclusion.\nThe litigation started with a reference by the executors to the Ontario courts to determine whether\nclause nine was valid and if so,\nwho were entitled to benefit. At the\nsame time action was started by the\nnext of kin to set the clause aside.\nDECIDED WILL\nWAS VALID\nMr. Justice Middleton decided the\nclause was valid but illegitimate\nchildren could not be counted in arriving at the ultjmate >eneficiary.\nThe court of appeal for Ontario,\nfirst, and the supreme court of\nCanada today affirmed this decision.\nA dozen or more women are ready\nto claim the bequest, among them\nMrs. Martin Kenny, who says she\nhas 12 children eligible for the\ncount.\nSeven mothers, Mrs. Grace Bag-\nnato, Mrs. Lucy Timleck, Mrs. Hilda\nGraziano, Mrs. Kathleen Nagle, Mrs.\nAnnie Smith, Mrs. Vera Meldrum\nand Mrs.'Pauline Clark have reported nine children. Mrs. Marg Fee-\ngan and Mrs. A. Harrison have\nsaid they have eight Mrs. Margater\nLescoumb, seven, and Mrs. Manuela\nDarrlgo, six.\nHangchow, Famous Spot of\nBeauty, as Thousands Flee\nCanton and Other Centres\nInvaders Massing Troops for Attack Upon\nCanton; Two U. S. FlagsTorn Down by\nInvaders of Yangtze River Port\nBRITAIN AGAIN PROTESTS TO JAPAN\nAFTER BOAT TAKEN OFF HONG KONG\nBy MORRIS j. HARRIS\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nSHANCHAI, Dec. 23 (Thursday) (AP)\u2014Japanese declared today the fall of Hangchow was imminent while thousands of foreign and Chinese refugees fled from Canton, Tsingtao, Hankow and other widely scattered cities where attacks\nwere expected.\nA Japanese spokesman said the Invading troops were approaching Hangchow, seaport south of Shanghai, and were\nohopeful   the   Chinese  would\nYOUTH JUST LEFT OAKALLA TO SEE\nHIS GIRL, WHOM HE HEARD WAS IN\nTROUBLE, THEN RETURNS TO JAIL\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP) -\nNineteen-year-old Edward Lippon\nreturned to Oakalla prison in adjoining Burnaby municipality late\ntoday after nearly 24 hours' freedom and told Warden Walter Owen\nhe was \"sorry he caused any\ntrouble.\"\nLippon,   serving   a   nine-month\nterm on a breaking and entering\nand theft conviction, disappeared\nyesterday from the prison yard\nwhere he had been working with\na number of other young men.\nHe surrendered to guards at the\ngate of the prison late today and.\ntold Warden Owen he had heard\nthat his girl friend was \"ln trouble\"\nand went to Vancouver to see her.\nINSULIN SHOCKS\nCURE A SECOND\nMENIAL PATIENT\nVINITA, Okla., Dee. 22 (AP) \u2014\nA 29-year-old oil field worker went\nhome from the State hospital today\nwith a priceless Christmas gift\u2014 a\nclear, sound mind.\nDoctors said he had been rescued\nfrom Insanity by \"shocks\" of insulin.\nDr. Felix M. Adams, superintendent, explained the patient, an inmate for five years, was the second\ndementia praecox cure out of an original group of eight started on the\ninsulin treatment by the hospital\nJasf August ,.t.\" -.    '-.''\nAlberta Varsity\nlo Play Rossland\nUniversity Team Due\nTonight; Townsend\non Defence\nUniversity of Alberta hockey team\nwhich played Wednesday in Spokane, will match shots with Rossland Miners at Rossland tonight, it\nwas announced by Irving Trem-\nbleth, manager of the Miners.\nRossland's lineup will be: Williams, goal; Neil, Wynn and Wade,\ndefence; Salmond, Hanson and Wanless; Forsey, LaCree and Cowland,\nand Petrosky, forwards.\nVarsity will take the ice with\nArt Townsend, ex-pro manager, on\ndefence in place of a regular who\nwas injured in the Gonzaga game.\nTownsend is a hockey player of\nconsiderable ability.\nMRS. DAWSON, T. WOOD\nWIN PRIZES, ROSSLAND\nSLOCAN PARK, B.C.-Mrs. Nick\nLytsoff slipped on some ice the\nmorning of December 15 and broke\nher foot.\nSam Blonidln fell on the Ice and\nbadly twisted his leg.\nPROBE HIGH RIVER'S\nDISPUTE ON RELIEF\nCALGARY, DOC 22 (CP)- Disputes between the High River municipal district authorities and the\nAlberta government relief department over payment of jobless aid\nin the town is being investigated by\nA. L., Smith, K. C, agent of the\nattorney-general ln Calgary, it was\nlearned today. Relief recipients in\nthe town complained to the government agency they were receiving\ninsufficient aid from the local authorities. High River officials blamed provincial rulings for reduction\nin relief grants. <\nBattery Plans\nChristmas Tree\nChildren of members of the lllth\nbattery. R.C.A. and the children of\nthe affiliated Bugle Band, members\nwill be presented with a grand party,\nincluding a Christmas tree in the\nArmory hall next Monday. The party\nis to be sponsored by the sergeant's\nmess.\nSTEALS POULTRY IN\nNEW ONT. RACKET\nGUELPH, Ont, Dec. 22 (CP) \u2014\nWellington county poultry breeders have been warned that a man\nvisits breeders with documents purporting to Bhow he is authorized to\ncull flocks for diseases. He culls\nthe best birds out and leaves.\n8EGAR SERIOU8LY ILL\nSANTA MONICA, Calif., Dec. 22\n(AP) \u2014 E. C. Segar, cartoonist creator of \"Popeye the Sailor,\" is in\na critical condition at Santa Monica\nhospital, Dr. Raymond Sands said\ntoday. He is sufferings from a chest\ncongestion.\nWEIPPE, Idaho, Dec. 22 (AP)\u2014\nFrozen to the ground beneath an\noverturned hack, with his hands\nstill locked in a death grip on the\nreins of a -run-away team which\ncaused his death, the body of Willis Dillon, 24-year-old Weippe farmer, was found today.\nwithdraw to prevent destruc\ntion of the famous beauty spot\nand Buddhist mecca.\nForeign sources reported tha\nHangchow defenders were offering stiff resistance in tha vicinity\nof Wukang, but that Japanese armored trains had advanced to within\n18 miles ot the city along the Shang-\nhai-Hangchow railway.\nJapanese said approximately 10,-\n000 Chinese troops were in Hang-\nchow-Kasking area.\nMASSING TROOPS\nReports the Japanese were massing troops for an attack on Canton,\nsouth China metropolis, increased\nthe evacuation of natives to enormous proportions. Thousands fled\nwestward into the' interior and to- \u25a0\nward Hong Kong.\nUnverified reports said Japanese\nattempted to land forces in Bias\nbay, northeast of Hong Kong, but\nwere beaten, off and now were planning a second attempt. . . \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\n';. CJold weather brought a heavy Increase in the death rate among\nShanghai refugees. The daily average for the past two weeks waa\n443, of which 371 were children.\nMore than 40,000 refugees wera reported to have died here in the past\nthree months.\nTwo new Incidents Involving\ndisrespect by Japanese troops for\nthe United States flag wore reported from Wuhu, recently captured Yangtze river port According to foreign despatches, both\nflags over an American school\nand a boat belonging to the Wuhu hospital were torn from their\ntheir staffs.\nBRITAIN AGAIN\nPROTE8TS TO JAPAN\nLONDON, Dec. 22 (CP Cable)-\nIn two meetings today and tonight\nat which the far eastern crisis was\nreviewed, the cabinet, it is understood, took the view there is no\nnecessity for substantial naval reinforcements In Chinese waters.\nAny question involving the despatch of battleships and heavy\ncruisers would only arise as part of\na concerted operation to meet some\nspecial emergency, observers indicated.\nBritain today ordered a battalion\nof fresh troops to Hong Kong and in\na new protest to Japan sought guarantees her territorial rights in the\ncrown colony would be fully respected.\nThe troopship Dunera left Southampton to transport the second battalion of the* Royal Scouts from\nBombay to Hong Kong, where the\nnormal army strength is 8000 men.\nREPLACE ROYAL\nWEL8H FUSILIERS\nThe fresh troops numbering about\n700 men are Intended to replace the\nRoyal Welsh Fusiliers who were at\nthe Hong Kong garrison but at present are on duty n Shanghai and\nare scheduled to go to Port Sudan.\nSir Robert Craigie, ambassador\nto Japan, was instructed to deliver\na note to the Japanese government\n\u2014the 16th since the outbreak of\nthe far eastern conflict\u2014protesting\nagainst infringement of territorial\nwaters of Hong Kong.\nThe note charged a Japanese\nvessel Dec. 11 fired upon and seized a Chinese customs vessel.\nCANADIAN  HURT IN PARI8\nPARIS, Dec. 22 (AP)\u2014Robert B.\nAnso, 22, a Canadian, was among\n11 persons injured today when\nthree automobiles, a truck and a\nbus piled up on a fog-bound icy\nroad outside Provins on the Paris-\nBasle highway. Police said Anson\nlived at Le Tourquet but they did\nnot known his Canadian address.\nHis injuries were not believed serious.\nJAPAN CLAIMS STRAY BULLETS\nMAY HAVE STRUCK THE PANAY\nNo Intentional Machine-Cunning of U. S, Gunboat,\nNew Statement From Tokyo Declares\nTOKYO, Dec. 22 (AP)\u2014Japan admitted today \"there might have\nbeen stray bullets \"flying toward\nthe Unitea States gunboat Panay\nafter she was bombed by Japanese\naircraft, but said the vessel was not\nmachine-gunned intentionally.\nThe new statement on the Panay\nincident was contained in \"interim\nreport\" issued by the foreign office.\nPreviously the Japanese had denied reoorts bv American eye-wit\nnesses that surface boats had fired\non the Panay.\n\"The shooting was aimed at the\nChinese vessel, the Linta,\" the foreign office said, \"and the American\nshpis were never objectives. It is\nsupposed the allegation ot the machine-gunning of the Panay was\nmade on the part of those who mistook this ana it is supposed there\nmight have been stray bullets flying\ntoward the Panay.\"\n_______   \u25a0    ' \u25a0       \u25a0\n-id-d-i-k-li-i-i-i-ii-.\n- \u2014\n \u25a0 ;'*\"' ^-.' ''^Yjm^.!^i^,^mjf^p^l^\nH1WW111SU!*!!..  J II I    I    Mll|_\nPAGE TWO-\nNEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ, DEC. 23. 1937.\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nSave on These Pre-Christmas\nSpecials for Thursday and Friday |\nOccasional Chairs\n4\nSPECIAL\n$24.75\nMahe ideal Gifts\nReg. values $32.50 to $42.50\nRoyalties $13.50 to <DQ 7-J\n$16.00. Special . .,.\u00ab?*\/. I \u00abJ\nReg. values $12.95.\nSpecial\t\n$5.95\nA Special Group Consisting of Combination End Tables, Magazine Racks\nand Smoking Cabinets. Values up to $ 4 \/|\u00bb7S\n$21.00. - -----     *\"\u2022\nHASSOCKS\nValues to $8.50. d\u00bbC QC\nClearing at ... $0.20\nFOOT STOOLS\n12\"x18\". Many\ncolors. Special at'\nMAGAZINE\nRACKS\nReg. values to    (PC QC\n$7.50. Special att\\-0.\\70\nRayon Bed Spreads\nA Beautiful Gift for       S\"C'A^\nMother. Reg. $3.00        V.49\nOur Complete Stock of\nSmall\nElectric Appliances\nToasters\nWaffle Irons\nPercolators        *m Mmrrf\nTree Lights      Mt\\M \/\u00b0\nDISCOUNT\nSandwich\nToasters\nHeirloom Cedar Chests\nTHE CIFT THAT STARTS A HOME.\nClearing at\t\nComforters        SPEC,AL\nA Beautiful Useful Gift. Regular $5.95\n$14.95\n.    32 PIECE\nDINNER SETS\nSET $1.95\nALL LAMPS AT\n15% DISCOUNT\nSAVINGS ON DESKS\nA Real Gift for Mother or the Home\nReg. $21.00 for $15.00       Reg. $42.50 for $37.50\nReg. $35.00 for $29.75       Reg. $58.50 for $49.75\nt\nTapestry\nable Covers\nHALF PRICE\nFURNITURE\nDRY GOODS\nPHONE 553\n409 BAKER ST.\nSEWING\nCABINETS\n$6.95\nCLEARING\nAT   \t\nCaptain Guscott\nIs Recipient of\nCoronation Medal\nBefore the lull lllth Battery,\nR.C.A. on parade, and at \"present\narms\", Captain H. W. Guscott, <Shap-\nlain of the battery, was the recipient of His Majesty's Coronation\nmedal,, presented by Major A. E.\nDalgas; In the Armory hall Tuesday night.\nMajor Dalgas, ln presenting the\nmedal, congratulated Captain Guscott and spoke highly of him, declaring \"it was a most deserving\ncase as anybody admired a man,\nbe he chaplain or otherwise, who\nhad the courage of his convictions.\"\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel.\n.Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor,\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1,50 up\nHUME\u2014L. Clark, Gray Creek; Staines, E. Giegerich, Kaslo; Miss\nW. Kennedy, Salnior V. Johnson, Alice Sweet, Procter; A. Davis,\nSpokane; D. Wilson, Boswell; H. L. I Trail.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors\nCommercial, TourLst and Family Trad. Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nFre\u00ab Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n'OS Vernon St. Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA  Welcome Awaits You\nJAS.  E.  MADDEN,  Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled.\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the City\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"   Newly Renovated Throughout\nDufSerin Hotel A.PpAransoN.\"a.'erof\n900 Seymour St.      Vancouver, B.C.   Coleman. Alta., Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nCRESTON Freight Truck\n3 ROUND TRIPS WEEKLY\nLEAVE NELSON MONDAY. WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY\nLEAVE CRESTON. TUESDAY. THURSDAY AND SATURDAY\nPHONE 342 NELSON or 16 CRESTON\nASK THE RED TRUCK FOR SERVICE\nGLEN'S TRANSFER\nP. O. Box 539\nNelson, B. C.\nFRUIT, VEGETABLES, TOBACCO\nIH SPOTLIGHT,WHOLESALEROW\nOther Lines Quieter;'\nFancy Vegetables\nin Demand\nTURKEY PRICES\nARE UP SLIGHTLY\nWith the exception of fruit, vegetables and tobacco, wholesale row\nat Nelson was comparatively quiet\nduring the past week. But Christmas\nbusiness on the whole was fairly\ngood.\nFancy lines of fruits and green\nProcter\nLardeau\nService\nRegular steamer trip\nProcter - Lardeau return\nscheduled for Saturday,\nDecember 25, will be\nmade Thursday, December 23 instead of Dec, 25,\nN. |. LOWES\nC. T. A.     Nelson, B. C.\nvegetables have been ln demand\nfor the past two or three days, and\ndealers have been bringing supplies\ninto the district in express and\ntruck lots to keep pace with demand. Cauliflower, tomatoes, brus-\nsel sprouts, cranberries\/sweet potatoes, celery, lettuce and so on are\namong the popular choices. Some\nfine field tomatoes are reported to\nbe due for the Christmas trade.\nChristmas candy In the hands\nof wholesalers is about cleaned up.\nIn fact, dealers expect but little\ncarryover of most such lines.\nJAPANESE ORANGES\nMOVING\nSales of Japanese oranges, comparatively slow on the Christmas\nmarket to date, have been moving\nfaster this week and demand is expected to be much keener today and\ntomorrow. Bananas also are In demand.\nTurkey prices have advanced\nslightly, as anticipated a week ago,\ndue to shortage of supplies. Meat\ndealers point out that turkey prices\nare low compared with a few years\nago, some of the recalling prices of\n42 to 48 cents a pound.' Since that\ntime sales have become much more\nwidespread, however, and with the\nvolume up prices have come down.\nMEAT8, FLOUR STEADY\nMeat prices otherwise are steady\nas are egg and butter prices.\nFlour, rolled oats and bran and\nshorts have not changed in some\ntime.\nCarlot arrivals were extremely\nlight in the week, two cars of flour\nand feed and the regular meat arrivals being the only cars reported.\nTWO MORE DAYS\nKimonos   \u2014   Lingerie   \u2014   Hosiery\nFine\nLingerie\nEach piece is so exquisite she'll enthuse over\nevery garment. In colors Flesh, White and\nTea-rose.\nGowns\nSilk crepe gowns, imported lace trim. Ice\nblue, peach, flesh.\nSmall, medium, large.\nRegular $2.00. QFp\nSpecial ....... \u00ab\u00ab\/v\nGowns, Pyjamas\nDance Sets, Vest\nand Bloomer Sets\nSatin, Crepe or Rayon\n$1.00 to $5.95\nKimonos\nNew high neck styles\nor tailored. The season's foremost in style.\nSilk, Moire, High\nShades.\n$3.95\nSatin, smartly trimmed\nwith contrasting\nshades. In the outstanding colors that\nare a vogue.\n$4\n.95\nto\n75c Hosiery $1\nCHIFFON\u2014CREPE\u2014SERVICE WEIGHT\n(You'll find our stock complete)\nCHIFFON OR\nSEMI-SERVICE\n(By ]. Kayser)\nAll the new shades. Stockings that wear better for\nless. Sires 8'\/2 to     HC*\n10'\/2. Pair  *Ol\nCREPE SILK\n(Lady Nelson)\nPure thread silk, full fash-\nioMed, cradle foot, All the\nwanted shades.\n8'A to IOV2.\n$1.00\n1\nChildren's Wear\nPYJAMAS\nSilk and Flannelette.  Neatly   tailored.\nS2:0.16:.... 79cand $1.49\nGirls' All Wool\nKNITTED DRESSES\nGreen, brown, wine, etc. Sizes 3 to 10,\nNEW YORK, (CP)-Don't drink\non the job, and don't promise too\nmuch as many do these days, advises Kris Kline who after 10 yules\nexperience says Santa Clausing isn't what it used lo be.\nij Coeur d'Alene Hotel*;\nOn the Trent Highway\nCanadian Headquarters in\nSPOKANE\nHome of the Famous\nDUTCH MILL\nTune In on:\nTh.  Dutch  Mill   Entertainers\nover  KQA  Radio Station\nEvery   Wednesday. 3:45 p.m.\nEvery   Friday.   7:30   a.m.\nMrs. Harry Coeti, Mgress.\nand\nDOLLS AND TOYS\nIOC to   $2.95\nBOYS' SUITS\nVelvet pants with broadcloth Blouses.\nNavy and brown. Sizes 2 to 6.   0\\ AA\nALL WOOL STOCKINGS\nWhite or Camel. Sizes -\\Vi to      OA-\nIO'\/_. Up from. Pair U\\i\nKIMONOS\nEiderdown and flannel in blue, green,\nwine. Sizes to 14.\nyl.UJ  and  qhuo\nSLIPPERS Make a Lovely Qift\nBridge Slippers\nComfortable fitting style \"with steel\narch. Block heel. Black, blue'or green.\nVelvet. Sizes 3 to 8. {1 AC\nPair   $1.00\nfcfr\nLeather\nD'Orsays\nBlock heel. Black or red. AC\u201e\nSizes 3 to 8 3\u00abJl\n*%T FINK'S\nBURNS BLOCK\nReady- to-Wear\nChildren's Wear\nFootwear\nCHRISTMAS CHEER FUND PASSES\n$t(N; \"WHITE GIFTS\" RECEIVED\n\u00ab' -Toy:\ns Given Scouts to\nSend Out; Food to\nGo to Needy\nNelson's Christmas Cheer fund\npassed the $1400 mark Wednesday\nas $12,25 was added to the fund\nin six donations. In addition to quantity of toys and food was turned over\nto John Draper, president of the\nChristmas Cheer association, to further bring the spirit of the season\ninto the homes of the. city's destitute.\nCash donations amounted to $4.25\nand a gift of knitted goods added $8\nto the fund total. Toys, canned goods\nand bottled fruits received at a\n\"white gift\" service at Trinity United\nchurch were turned 'over to Mr,\nDraper by Rev. J. A. Donnell. Mr.\nDraper In turntlaced the toys In the\nhands of the Boy Scouts to go out\nwith the articles pr'pared ln their\nannual Christmas toy shop for less\nfortunate youngsters; while the\nfood is to be distributed to homes\nwhere lt will do most good.;\nWednesday's donors Included:\nMr\u00ab. W. Waldie .\nh: Waters\t\nA. Smith\t\nJ. McDlrmid\t\nTommy Waters .\n2.00\ni:oo\n.50\n.50\n.25\nMrs. B\". Lowery, knitted goods    8.00\nTotal  $  12.25\nPreviously acknowledged $1380.85\nGrand total $1402.10\nTRY   A   WANT   AD\nKNOWS NOTHING OF\nSIT DOWN STRIKE\nAlberta government authorities today said they had not heard of\nK\u00bbny contempated \"sit down\" strike\nTjy unemployed from Drumheller,\nEDMONTON,  Dec. 22  (CP)  \u2014 Alta., as reported yesterday.\nINSIST   UPON\nChocolates\nTHE    FINEST    IN.  THE   LAND\n-' io-~-.\n\u2022 \u25a0 -. :\u25a0,;.':.' - \u25a0_\u25a0 \u25a0 . i  .   ',\n -   '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0v,.-ii..TJs&i&s^^ >-\u00ab{-;_a-;jy__... -\n__    _-L_-_ .-_J \u25a0'__\n- -     \u2014\n NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING, DEC. 28. 1937.\nPAO! THRU\n_.*__\nJUST 2 MORE\nSHOPPING DAYS\nTILL CHRISTMAS\nINCORKORAT.D \u00ab. MAY IVO.\n\u25a0\"\nSTORE OPEN\nTONIGHT and\nFRIDAY NIGHT\nMake Your Selection From \"The Store of a Thousand Gifts\"\n4\nii\nWOMEN'S COATS\nEnjoy the luxury of a warm winter coat or give it to Mother\nfor Xm.s. Smart styles in tweeds and smooth velours. All\nfully interlined. Fitted or tailored styles.\nRegular $16.95 and $19.95\t\n$13.95\n\"QivsL BlsMMA.\nYou have your choice of ever so many styles\u2014all carefully\ntailored in the most becoming fashions of the year. All are\nmade of the finest quality materials. Misses' tf 1 CQ\nand women's sires in every color \u00abpi\u00bb\u00abJv\nTWIN SWEATER SETS\nPure wool pullovers with matching cardigans. Colors of\nrust, green, wine, brown and navy. An acceptable ffO JA\nChristmas gift for women fflee'w\nENGLISH WOOL UNDIES\nNovelty ribbed wool vests and panties\u2014generously cut\nwith an elasticity in the ribbing that keeps them snug fitting. Cream and peach in small, medium and large. 70_\u00bb\nGarment     '*'.*'\nXT      \u2022 THE\nJtlOSierV     SUPREME GIFT\n.   \/ MERCURY   HOSE\nMERCURY HOSE\nIn three lengths: short, medium, or long, erther sheer\ndull crepe to the top, or silk\nto the top, or silk to the top,\nsemi-service weight. Smart\nshades or the new season.\nSizes 8Vi to 10%.\nPair\n$1.00\nINFANTS' GIFT\nSETS\nAdorable Baby Sets containing a tiny brush and\ncomb, powder jar and tray,\nall in a dainty gift i\"\nbox. Set ...\n$1.00\nSHAVING SETS FOR MEN\nPotter and Moore's Lavender line in handsome boxes\ncontaining talc and shaving stick.\nPer box\n$1.00\nWOMEN'S GIFT SETS\nThese contain one large box of dusting powder and a generous bottle of bath crystals in Sweet Pea, Eaude tf 1 AA\u201e\n\u2014Meln Floor HBC\nCologne and Lavender. Set\nGIFTS FOR THE MEN\nBROADCLOTH SHIRTS\u2014\n2 for\t\nLINED CAPESKIN CLOVES\u2014\nPair \t\nSILK SOCKS\u2014\nPair .-\t\nPECCARY HOC CLOVES\u2014\nPair\t\nBATH ROBES\u2014\nPrice\t\nSILK and WOOL\nSWEATERS\u2014Price\nFLANNELETTE\nPYJAMAS\u2014Suit\nFUSED COLLAR\nSHIRTS\u2014Price\t\nHANDKERCHIEFS\u2014\n3 to box\t\nBROADCLOTH\nPYJAMAS\u2014Suit ....\nSCARVES\u2014Wool\nPlaids \t\nBOW TIES\u2014\nEach\t\nMEN'S SILK TIES\u2014\nEach\t\nSILK SCARVES\u2014\nPrice\t\nSmcdL \u00a3ool $tft fihuLL\n1.00\n$2.50\n1.00\n50c\n$1.00\n$1.95\nExquisite designs in Ecru Appensall lace. Make lovely gifts and are so handy for filling\nout a present.\n6\" Doilies\u2014                                  OA-    10\" Ovals and Oblongs\u2014\nEach   _lt\/C    Price\t\n10\" Doilies-\nEach  \t\n29c\n49c\n18x36 Runners\u2014\nPrice\t\n49c\n$4.95\nDOWN COMFORTERS\nJust 18 in this shipment. Covered with\ngood English sateen well filled with\nchicken down.\nA great value. Each\t\nMADIERA PILLOW SLIPS\nExtra fine work and beautiful designs.\nRichly scalloped edge?. Firm tf>1 7C\nquality. Pair.'.......\". tPl.ttf'\nColored\nLuncheon Sets\nA moderately priced gift which any\nhousewife or batchelor girl will be glad to\nget on Xmas. Multi-color rayon sets of\n1\u201452\" cloth and 4 match- tfl AA\ning serviettes. Special value ... \u00abpl\u00bbUU\nSiva  JhtWL  JooiivsaJt\nLADIES' FUR TRIMMED OVERSHOES\nNeat, snug fitting, fleece lined\u2014fits all heels.\nFint quality only. Pair\t\nWomen's White\nCavalier Slippers. ...\nMen's Black Romeo\nSiippers \t\nMen's Spats:\nPair \t\nBoys' Leather\nSlippers\t\nWomen's Ski *\u00a3 rti\nBoots <pD.DU\nMen's Ski Boots.-tf \"7   \u2022\n|Pair j)\/ and\n$2.25\n$2.00\n$1.25\ne$ak ofc tfJuridimoL \u00a3qhh.\nOut they go at a clearance price. Your chance to get that need- \u2022\u00bb_.__ J\ned decoration you've often wished for. KPflUfiPfl\n98c WREATHS WITH CANDLE\u2014 ct\\   am^^mmm*tW9m\nToClear    WC g\\WV\n$1.49 HOLLY WREATHS- nn Unit\nTo Clear  J\/OC    mws\\mmmm% m**\\\n$1.90 8-LIGHT STRINGS\u2014 <fl OA    XltlLRD\ni o Clear.\n$1.39\nGIFT SILVERWARE\nGroup 1\u2014Salts and Peppers, Bon Bons,\nVases, Comports, Salad Spoons, fljl OC\nOne price -?l.\u00a3.d\nGroup 2\u2014Candlesticks, Butter Dishes,\nComports, Sandwich Trays, Pie Plates\nartd Frames, 'Vasel.\nEach \t\n$2.5T\nIndirect Lamps\nTri-Light Lamps of 1Q0, 200 or 300\nCandlepower\u2014switch controlled. Elegant\nshades, heavy stands in old ivory\norbforftfe. Regular $15.95.\nComplete\t\n$10.95\n&fe3a>\u00bbst\u00bbs>$&\u00bbsare^^\nDivision lr Grade 1 Heads Central\nin Attendance Wilh a 98.9 Average\nLeading Division V of Grade V\nby .11 per cent, Division I of Grade\n1, with an average of 98.8 per cent,\nled all of Central school in class\nattendance for December.\nFollowing is a list of pupils\nfrom the various divisions of the\nCentral school who scored 60 per\ncent or over in their Christmas\nexaminations. Attendance percentages are also given.\n(Names are given In order of\nmerit.)\nGrade I.\nPercentage of attendance: Div. I\n\u201496.67; Div. 2\u201498.8; Div. 3\u201497.5.\nMargery Morris, Norma Simpson\nand Joan Kerf, equal; Betty Brown,\nAlan Ramsden, Norma Wood, Robert Ahrens and . Margery Ruppel,\nequal, Frances Boyes, Fern Open-\nthaw and Lloyd\" Ridenour equal,\nMaureen Holtom, Betty Aldersmith,\nBetty Collinson, Beryl Maddin, Peggy Cornfield, Evelyn Hammond,\nDoris Leslie, Pat Gillot, Carol Perdue, Lillian Crossley, James Corbett, Laura Keen and Frieda Berg-\nmann equal, Hinton Mayne, Margaret McLennan, Nello Stedile, Effie\nSmall, Bessie McLeod, Jack Gallicano, Elmer Dyck, Bruce Arneson,\nDoris Ford, Jean Livingstone and\nAlfred Limacher equal, Pearl Leg-\ngett Pete Hlookoff, Arthur Town-\nsend, Jean Anderson, Lucille Carter, Paul Hielscher, Eyleen Brock\nand John Gansner equal, Davina\nRichardson and Phyllis Patterson,\nReginald Crawford, Margaret Morrow, Barbara McLennan and Bud\nWhitfield equal, Bob Emory, Harry\nWassick, Roland Zubick, Hugh Wallace and Mureen Wilson equal, Ro-\nJand Brown, Vtola Goulding, How-\n'ard Green, Johnny Maglio and\nBilly Benwell equal, Bob Morrow.\nOlaf Moen, Bruce Anderson, Doreen Robertson and Verna Black-\nwell equal, Jim Brown, Helen King,\nDorothy Blight and Joyce Coventry equal.\nGrade II, Division IX.\nPercentage attendance\u201494.91.\nEllen Carbett, Geoffrey Rees, Angela Bergmann, Bruce Veitch, David Story, Norman Thompson, John\nPopoff, Donald Stainton, Lillian\nLequereux, Peter Sopow, Melita\nBergmann, Millie Romano, Violet\nLongden, Arnold Kennedy, Ena-\nbelle Laing, Nancy Basic, Ruth\nPowell, Paul Jaremko, Nora Juriloff, Cora Kerr, Charley Lequereux, Gaie Dawson, Bob Chamberlain, Patsy Sleep, Annie Soukoroff, Freddie Walgren, Ernest Hanson, Alan Hood, Douglas Beatty,\nJack Wallach, Freddie Scott, Jimmie Valentine, Rosie Hyrnuik, Lil-\nlle Joan Ferguson and Dorothy Mae\nAmes.\nGrade III, Division VIII.\nPercentage attendance\u201498.13\nAlice Smith, Ann Hamilton. Eeth-\n.- elwyn   Crossley.   Doreen   Nelson.\n| John Holmes, Bobby Younger, Har-\ni ry Clivei Mildred Parker and Vic-\nI toria  Senych  equal,  Dorothy   Zubick,   Peggy   Tait,   George   Drew.\nWilfred Hammond   Bob Pickering,\nMargaret    McLeod.    Joe    Staples,\nTommy   Waters,   Marion   StDenis,\nAlex Clark, Betty Langill, Dorothy\nHarrison, Ronald Jarrett, Betty\nWassick, Helen Welbourn, Ronny\nBrown and Neil Wood.\nGrades III and IV; Division VII.\nClass Percentage\u201498.02.\nRosina Maglio, Billy Livingstone,\nMargaret Summers, Mary Jaremko,\nOliver Firth, Helen Anderson, George Turner, Nick Soukoroff, Josephine Caliguiri, Pat Dunwoody,\nIvan Walgren, Lawrence Chaluk,\nJoe Stedile, Mildred Dyck, Henry\nNorberg, John Genero, Billy Swain\nand Johnny Breeze. (Grade four,\ndivision 7.) Elaine Stringer, James\nCreech, Allan Corbett, Richard\nBrown, Kathleen Wilson, Mary\nTait, Marjorie Patterson, Bunty\nWaters Desmond Mayne, Bernice\nHale, Rose Beattie, Bruce Plank,\nMolly Jean Idiens, Tilly Sopow,\nJean Hedley, Kathleen Kane, Fanny Ford, Frances Schumaker, Eleanor Kennedy, Alice Robison and\nNina Patterson.\nGrade IV, Division VI. Percentage\u201498.31.\nNorman Ackley, Gwen Clark, Pat\nMcCandless, Marie Summers, Neil\nSimpson, Graham Avis, Inez Del\nPuppo and Edith Hughes equal,\nHarild Ronmark, Dorothy Crerar,\nDawn Mansfield, Vivian Hall, Billy\nDeRidder, Joyce Wylie, Billie Open-\nshaw, Pearl Hickey, Sheila Dawson,\nTommy Leggett, Peggy Smith Ellen Trickett, Pat Davis and Frances Turner equal, Alex Trickett,\nMargaret Parker, Frank Harty, Olga\nStefiuk, Kenneth Morrow, Vyonne\nArmstrong, Elsa Andersonand Teddy Gillott.\nGrade V, Divisions IV and V.\nAttendance percentage; Div. IV\u2014\n96.15; Div. V-98.69.\nJoan Nagle, Viola Lipsack, Gwen\nGarland, Audrey Nelson, David\nPearce, Vernon Hall, Bob McCracken and Sheila Gallaher equal,\nAudrey Lander and Peggy Gromes\nand Connie Hammond and Elsie\nBradshaw equal, Steve Harty, Bobbie McMordie, Reid Sahara, Billy\nHorner, Kathie Paddon and John\nGyurkovits equal, Glenna Lowes,\nNora Gormley, Billy Baird, Rose\nRamsden, Allan Moster, Ian Mackenzie and Arthur Gordon, Isabel\nGoggin, Jerry McAvin and Norman\nTough, equal, Ronald Hanson,\nChristina Fotos, Jimmy Mclvor, Bill\nJarvis, Roy Thompson Ralph Simmons, Douglas Hall, Dick Powell,\nTeddy Jackman, Jack Johnston,\nRose Swain, Francis Morrow, Pat\nKerr, Rose Ludwig, George Spence,\nDanny Haigh, Richard Carter, Byrn-\nice Burgess and Susie Klein, equal,\nFred Maglio, Ronnie Crayford and\nVera Pictin.\nGrade II Jr., Division X.\nPercentage of attendance, 93.15.\nBeverley Maddin, Grace Dietrich,\nDonald Johnson, Barbara Rell Morris, Jack Todd, Alex Hyde, Jimmie\nWilson, David Hammond, Alvin\nDrew, Phyllis Turner, Dorothy\nHarkness, Kenneth Ridenour, Eddie\nHedley, Joe Hielscher, Freddie Nelson, Johnny Perdue, Donavon McKee, Doreen Wallace, Angie Abbott,\nBert Longden and John Swan.\nNot ranked\u2014Nindi Angus.\nGrade I Senior:\nFreddie Smith, Polly Salikin, Ed\nmund Trickett, Elsie Kootnikoff,\nLillian Swain, Irene Bergmann,\nDougal Spiers, Jacqueline Black,\nPauline Genero, Joan Wigg, Bill\nApostoliuk, Kathleen Dyck, Owen\nBrown, Margaret Clark, Lois St.\nDenis, George Lane and Norman\nHill.\nGrade I Jr., Division II.\nAttendance percentage, 90.38.\nMarie Ball, Shirley Bradley, Nellie Joy Brindle, Olga Caruk, Isla\nClemints, Gloria Joan Couper,\nBubbles Hawes, Jackie Hicks, Lorraine Jarrett, Mary Juriloff, Dorothy Rose Kellogg, May Lequereux,\nJohnny Leschuk, Mary Leschuk,\nDorothy Meyer, Mary McGinn, Iona\nMcKee, Inez Nelson, Verner Nelson, Evelyn Pavich, Joe Pavich,\nLancelot Pearce, Freddie Perasso,\nBarbara June Perdue, Effie Plank,\nDerek Pollard, Nellie- Powers, Edna\nRobinson, Joyce Schumaker, Elsie\nSopow, Stanley Sorensson, George\nWelbourn, Annie Louise Doodall\nand Margaret Zubick.\n\u25a0 Grade I junior, Division 12.\nPercentage of attendance, 93.1-\nAlfred Anderson, Molly Arneson,\nPaula Lee Bates, Donald Collinson,\nJimmie Dawson, Billy Dawson, Raymond Demchuk, Anne Dill, Merwin\nElton, Bob Fleming, Allan Fletcher,\nMildred Hall, Bob Hickey. Philip\nHolmes, Flora Johnson, Betty Lawrence, Charley Maglio, Atillio Mores,\nKenneth McLeod, Roy Palosa, Billie\nParker, Gordon Pickering, Annette\nRelkoff, Bob Rich, Vera Salakin,\nMarjorie Sims, Jean Marie Sixtone,\nJaunita    Smiley,   Jimmie    Smith,\nDawn Spencer, Ezra Spray, Irene\nSummers, Helen Sutcliffe, Frank\nTurner and Lloyd Brock.\nTrail Knox Church\nHas Christmas Tree\nTRAIL, B. C, Dec. 22 \u2014 Knox\nUnited Sunday school children enjoyed a Christmas treat in the\nchurch hall Tuesday afternoon and\nevening.\nThe beginners and primary classes were entertained at supper 'followed by games. Impromptu vocal\nsolos, recitations and dances were\ngiven by Florence Bailey, Pearl Lee,\nHenry Lee, Jacqueline Jones, Harold Jordan, Roy Harrison, Louise\nWatts, Ruth Stiles and others.\nSANTA ARRIVES\nSanta arrived at 5:30 and amid\nmuch excitement distributed Christmas bags and books. Mrs. A. C. B.\nCooper was in charge of the program.\nEast Trail Sunday 'school children under the direction of Mrs.\nA. K. Gairns, entertained the intermediate school with concert numbers in the evening. Carol singing\nand games followed after which\nSanta arrived and distributed treats\nto all.\nR. E. Hawkes, superintendent of\nthe Sunday school was in charge\nof both afternoon and evening affairs,\nThe coney, a little animal about\nthe size or a rabbit is a near relative of the elephant.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H. S. ALLEN\nOld St. Nicholas chose Tuesday afternoon to visit the pupils of the beginners and primary departments of\nFirst Presbyterian church. Games\nand a musical program was enjoyed\nby all after which each child was\npresented with a bag containing\ncandy, nuts and fruit. The children\nof the Cradle Roll with their mothers were also entertained. During\nthe afternoon tea was served. The\nmembers of the junior, intermediate\nand senior departments were treated\nwith an early supper, after which a\nprogram was enjoyed, Mrs. D. J.\nDuffus convened the catering committee and J. M. Allison was in\ncharge of the program and was assisted by Hugh McLaren, J. Alexander, J. S. W. Hardy, R. Livingstone, and the .teachers. Twenty-\nfive pupils. Jackie Ferguson, Campbell Henderson, John McDonald V.\nMacaulay, Josephine Hardy, Normal* McLuckie, Madeline Lauener,\nBilly Milne, Campbell Aitken, Donald Murray, Ira Macaulay, Margaret\nDuffus, Elsie Hardy, Rita Melrose,\nMargaret Henderson, Joyce Crom-\nbie, Jean Pearson, Angus McLeod,\nBert Milne, John Sjursen, Allister\nMacaulay, Frances Mclntyre, Sandra Aitken, Ina Aitken, and Mary\nMelrose, were awarded prizes for\nattendance at Sunday School. Mary\nMelrose received the award for perfect church attendance, while Rita\nMelrose, Jean Pearson and Frances\nMclntyre received prizes for being\nabsent only once during the term.\nAn honor certificate was given to\nIna Aitken, while John McDonald,\nRoland Lauener, Josephine Hardy,\nBarbara Milne, Kathleen Cook, Heather Forbes, Madeline Lauener, Norma Wilson, Catherine Morrison, Norman McLuckie, Jack Birch, Billy\nRoss, Donald Murray, Campbell Aitken, Douglas Milne, Angus McLeod,\nJean Pearson, Joyce Crombie, Netta\nOwen, Rita Melrose, Sheila Downie. John Sjursen, Mary Melrose, Violet Fletcher, Peggy McLuckie, Edith\nCrombie and Thomasina Carter all\nreceived honor rolls for proficiency\nin bible lessons.\nWhen the ladies of the Royal Purple held their weekly whist drive in\nElk's hall Tuesday evening, Mrs. H.\nJohnson and W. H. Russell held the\nhigh score, while Mrs. H. Cox and\nMrs. E. L. Rhodes came second. Mrs.\nW. Langlands won a turkey draw.\nNineteen tables were in play.\nR. E. Hawkes, superintendent of\nKnox United church Sunday school,\nwas in charge of arrangements when\nSanta Claus made his annual visit\nto the members Tuesday afternoon\nand evening. The beginners and primary classes enjoyed a delicious supper, which was followed by games\nand a short program. Mrs. A. C. B.\nCooper was in charge of the program, which comprised recitations,\ndances and vocal solos, those taking\npart being Louise Watts, Ruth Stiles;\nPear Lee, Jacqueline Jones, Florence\nBailey, Henry Lee, Harold Jordon,\nRoy Harrison and others. At 5:30.\nSanta arrived. Mrs. A. K. Gairns was\nin charge of the East Trail Sunday\nschool which entertained the intermediate classes in the evening, when\n\"W* (tone. M ff faithfoir\n:. ^ammtr'a f ra-OIatljfkal\nREV. J. Q. HOLMES\u2014Rector\nCHRISTMA8 DAY\u2014Saturday, December 25th,\n8:00 a.m.\u2014-Holy Communion\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Matins and Choral Eucharist\nSUNDAY\u2014December 26th.\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n11:00. a.m.\u2014Choral Eucharist\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Children's Christmas Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Festal Evensong and Carols.\n(NO SERMON)\nSt. Andrew's By-The-Lake (Willow Point) Monday, Dec. 27,\n10 A.M. Matins and Holy Communion\n\"O Come, Let Us Adora Him\".\nconcert numbers were given, after\nwhich games and carol singing was\nenjoyed. At the close of the evening\nSt. Nick arrived and treats for all\nwere given.\nA quiet wedding took place ft. Colville today, when Verna, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. E. Wightman of\nCreston and Leonard, soti of T. H.\nNegus, Trail, were principals. Miss\nEmma Sandow and William Fowler,\nboth of Trail attended the happy\ncouple. After a short honeymoon\nspent in Craton the guests of the\nbride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Negus\nwill return soon after Christmas and\nwill reside in the Marlatt block.\nHarold Davies has left for New\nWestminster, called there through\nthe illness of his father. He will return after Christmas.\nMr. and Mrs. B. K. Farrar, Dockerill street, will have as their guest\nduring the Yuletide holidays the\nlatter's brother, Rupert Slater of\nVancouver, who will arrive Tuesday.\nMrs. W, H. D. Campbell, who has\nspent the past few months at Vancouver has arrived here to tpend\nChristmas and New Year with Chief\nCampbell.\nMiss Mary Marshall, Douglas\napartments, has as her guest her\nmother, Mrs. Marshall of Robson.\nWilliam Godber will spend the\nnext five days at Penticton, where\nhe will visit his parents.\nMrs. W. E. B. Monypenny, Cedar\navenue, has as her house guest Miss\nBarbara Lang of Slocan City.\nElection of officers of the Wo;\nmen's Missionary Society of First\nJfrattftiiaitfatt\n(Eljurrlj\nRev. Earl E. Lindgren\n\"YULOTA\"\nChristmas morning, 6 a.m.\nSUNDAY\nScandinavian Service, 11 a.m.\nChildren's Christmas Concert\nSunday Evening, 7:30\nCHRISTMAS-1937\n(Eatljrisntl of\niJtey Imttwrulat?\n\u2014FRIDAY (Christmas Eve)\u2014\nConfessions\u201410-12:00 A.M.\n3- 6:00 P.M.\n7-10:30 P.M.\n-12 O'Clock MIDNIGHT-\nSOLEMN PONTIFICIAL MASS\nCelebrant\u2014Most Rev. M, M. Johnson, D.D.\n\u2014CHRISTMAS DAY-\nMASSES\u2014\nChildren's High Mass   8:00 A.M.\nLow Mass  9:00 A.M.\nLow Mass  10:30 A.M.\nPresbyterian church took place Monday afternoon. All officers were reelected with the exception of Mrs.\nWilliam R. Smith, home helpers'\nsecretary, who could not stand for\noffice on account of ill-health. Mrs.\nDonald Campbell being elected in\nher stead. Reports of the year's\nwork were read, and proved very\nsatisfying.\nMiss Vera Wightman, whose marriage to Leonard Negus takes place\nat Colville today was guest of honor\nSunday evening, when the groom's\nfather, T. H. Negus Green avenue,\nentertained with a pleasant social\nevening of games, moving pictures,\nand music. Guests bidden were Mr.\nand Mrs. T. Kjorsvik, Mrs. G.\nCheyne, Miss Helen Mawdsley, Miss\nHazel Mawdsley, Miss Emma San-\n(Eljurrlj of tljr\njRr&ppmrr\nFairview\nRev. W. J. Silverwood\nCHRI8TMAS SERVICES\nHoly Communion at.... 7:30 a.m.\nHoly Communion at.... 8:15 a.m.\nHoly Communion at.... 11:00 a.m.\ndow, Miss Jean Hood, Fred Cheyne,\nCharles Taylor, Leonard Negus, and\nthe guest of honor.\nW. M. Campbell of Edmonton Is\nthe guest of his son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. B.\nMonypenny, Cedar avenue, for the\nholiday season.\nft.\nna\ni&tttljrran (Hljurrlj\nCor. Stanley and Silica Sts.\nRav. V. L. Meyer, Pastor\n204 Latimer St.       Phone 517Y\nDec. 24\u20147:30 p.m., Children's\nChristmas Service.\nDec, 25\u201410 a.m., Christmas Service in German.\nDec. 25\u201411 a.m., Christmas Service in English.\n\"Glory to God in the Highest!\"\nDec. 20\u201411 a.m., Christmas Service, German.\nDec. 26\u20147:30 p.m., Christmas Service, English.\n'Love's Mighty Miracle and the\nGift of Love\".\nA Cordial Welcome to All!\n '*\u2022*\u25a0<*. !.n**i-.-..\t\n\u2014ii^-\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014I\n pajP^fB^iw^Tsjs?\u2122^\"\nPAGE FOUR\nNEtSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ. DEC, 23, 1937.    -\nROYAL FAMILY LEAVE\nHuge Christmas Tree in Westminster!\nAbbey Has Gills lor Needy Children\nBy EDWIN JOHNSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer.\nLONDON, Dec. 22 (CP Cable)-\nFrigid blasts which brought the\nheaviest snowfall in years throughout the British Isles faded today\nbefore mild breezes and dashed the\nhopes of old and young in many\nsections for an old-time white\nChristmas. \u25a0\nToday the royal family moved\nto Sandringham in Norfolk where\ntheir Majesties will spend a quiet\nChristmas with their family. Queen\nMary, the Duke and Duchess of\nGloucester and the Duke and Duchess of Kent will Join them.\nThe Princess Royal and her husband, the Earl of Harewood, are\nentertaining their own family party\nat Harewood house, near Leeds. It\nis expected, however, they will visit\nthe King and Queen at Sandring-.\nham early in the new year.\nPrior to their Majesties' departure, the King was presented with\na huge Christmas tree, cut from the\ncoppices of the Sandringham estate,\nwhich tvill b. erected Jn Westminster. Abbey to mark the end of the\nCoronation year. Lighted with colored candles and loaded with gifts\nfor needy children, the tree will be\nplaced near, the tomb of the unknown warrior.\nOn their arrival at Sandringham\nthe Queen will be busy supervising\nthe distribution of presents to many\nvillagers and tenants ot the royal\nestate. On Christmas Eve the servants and tenants will attend a party\nat Sandringham house and receive\ngifts at the hands of the King and\nQueen from a giant Christmas tree.\nThis will be followed by carol-\nsinging and dancing.\nOn Christmas Day the royal family and their guests will gather\naround the luncheon table where a\nturkey from the King's own farm\nwill be served with viands from\nscattered ports of the Empire. After\nlurjcheon the King will go to his\nstudy to broadcast his first Christmas message of his reign\u2014a custom\ninaugurated by His Majesty's late\nfather.\nAngina Pectoris -.-,.\nHeart Malady Is\nEas\nWiltiNew\nDaddy reminded Huwer that \"the\nspirit\" was what counted at Christmas an' she hanged a wreath ober\nthe hole in the wall an' never mado\nno howl!\nMarlene Dietrich\nand Studio Part\nHOLLYWOOD, Dec. 22 (AP) \u2014\nMarlene Dietrich, 33-year-old German star, parted company today\nwith the studio which paid her\n$150,000 a picture for her blond\ncharm.\nThe rift between Miss Dietrich\nand her studio was disclosed in\nParamount's announcement that it\nhas \"indefinitely postponed\" filming of \"French Without Tears.\"\nBehind her formal separation\nfrom the studio, film industry observers cited the facts of million-\ndollar production costs and waning\nbox office receipts of Dietrich pictures.\nHalf-Moons\nDo you remember the brooch\ncarved like ahand, that grandma,\nor maybe mother, wore? Lady\nMedl, who is Elsie De Wolfe, an\nAmerican woman who lives in\nParis, was seen in that metropolis\nwearing a coral hand holding a diamond rose. It decorated a black\ndress.\nDally Care of Cuticle Will\nKeep Finger Tips Attractive\nBy GLADYS GLAD\nGAINING NEW FRIENDS\nEVERY DAY\nEVAPORATED\nMILK\nPure at the\nSnow on\nMountain\nPeaks.\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\nThe form of heart disease which\nkills suddenly due to affection of\nthe small blood vessels of the heart\nmuscle itself, variously called \"an'\ngina pectoris\" or \"coronary thrombo.\nsis\" is probably increasing more rapidly than any other form of heart\ndisease.\nPeople are easily Tightened by\npains in the heart, howeyer. Of\nabout sixty patients who complained of heart pain, over half\nof them were not found to have\nany real angina, and even with real\nangina, the psychologic attitude has\na great deal to do with the attacks.\nIn the same series of cases 21\nof the people were subject to mental attacks and disturbances and\npsychologic upsets, such as anxiety\nstates and anxiety hysteria, I have\nheard that angina pectoris is practically unknown among the Chinese,\nalthough they have every other\nform of heart pathology. Physicians\nwho have practiced there\" state that\nthey have never seen a case of angina in a Chinese person. This interesting observation shows that the\nChinese mind probably keeps them\nfrom worrying about angina, if it\noccurs, and therefore ihey do not\ncomplain about it.\nOur methods of diagnosing and\ntreating angina are improving regu\nlarly. A patient may have wry\nsevere heart pains and yet have no\nchange in the size of the heart or in\nthe blood pressure or In the sounds\nof the heart as examined by the\nstethoscope, but of the disease is\nreally present it will show up in a\nheart tracing\u2014electrocardiogram.\nAnother method of ' diagnosis\nwhich has been developed Is the\nobservation of the reaction of the\npatient to exercise. True angina\ncan usually be brought on by exercise. False angina, due to to-\nbacco usually, on the contrary goes\naway with exercise.\nACTIVITIES SHOULD\nBE LIMITED\nIn treatment, the most Important thing is the limitation of strenuous living. If the patient With\nangina will bank his fires and be\ncontent to reduce his activities, he\nmay continue to live comfortably\nfor many years. This specter of\nour national life (for contrary to\nthe Chinese, angina is particularly\non American disease) will probably\ncontinue to be with us. It is a disease of middle life or late middle\nlife, and the fact that it is increasing simply means that mora people\nare living Into middle life. ,\nTHEY CALL HER \"SANTY\"\nNEW YORK, Dec. 22 (AP)-Miss\nS. Claus, of the Bronx, New York,\nis among those believing it's just\nas well that Christmas comes but\nonce a year.\nThe only genuine \"S. Claus\" in\nNew York, her real name (s Sally\nClaus, and she is a clerical worker\nfor the municipal government.\nAbout Dec. 10 or so every year,\nher friends can't resist calling her\n\"Santy.\" The condition usually ends\nNew Year's day or thereabouts.\nPurple and violet shades' are\nfavorite colors fpr evening.\nSerial Story ....\nPeacock Feathers\nBy TEMPLE BAILEY\nIt\nCHAPTER 18\nwas on  the day before my\nKEEP FIT\nTHIS XMAS\nALICE   FAYE\nGives her pretty hands excellent can,\nModetji women's hands, on, the\nwhole are far more presentable than\nthey've been in any other era. How;\never, there is one step in nail care\nthat a great many women neglect\nnowadays, and that is the half-\nmoon on each nail. The cuticle, it\nneglected, tends to quickly adhere\nto the nails and to cover the half-\nmoons partly or entirely, but it\nreally Is possible to develop perfect\nhalf-moons and to retain them, if\nthey are given proper care.\nThe basic factors in preserving attractive half-moons on the nails J\nis that the cuticle must not be given an opportunity to adhere to the\nnails. Any girl who really wishes\nattractive fingertips should not be\ncontent merely with a weekly manicure.\nGIVE DAILY '\nMASSAGE\nGive your cuticle a daily massage.\nA bit' ot cotton should be wrapped\nabout the end of an orangewood\nstick, and then dipped in cuticle or\nwormed olive oil. Then each nail\nshould be gone over with the oiled\ntip, working the stick from the nail\ntip up to the cuticle. Next the orangewood stick should be passed\noyer the base of each nail and the\ncuticle gently pushed back. This\nshould be repeated over each fingertip every day. For perseverance is\nneeded to keep the half-moons perfect.\nIf. you haven't time for this daily\nprocedure, you can benefit your\nfingertips somewhat merely by the\nmanner in which you wash your\nhands and the way in which you use\nyour hand lotion or cream before\nretiring each night. When yon lath'-\ner your hands, give them a bit of a\nmassage, rubbing the lather around\nthe cuticles on each nail and gently,\npushing back the cuticle with your\nfingertips. After rinsing your hands\nwell, take your towel and go over\nthe cuticle again while drying.\nFirst dry your hands, then rub\nthe towel from the tip ot each nail\nup to it$ cuticle, and finally follow\nthe lino of the cuticle with a firm\nmassage movement. After cleansing\nthe hands in (his manner, a good\nhand lotion or cream should always\nbe used. And when massaging such\na lotion in, give your cuticle a fin.\nal massaging.\nOn Sale\nEverywhere\nEverything\nfor Your Christmas\nBaking Needs\nRaisins, Currants, Cut Mixed\nPeel, Glace Cherries, Glace\nPineapple, Shelled Walnuts,\nShelled Almonds, Ground\nAlmonds, Almond Paste,\nSmyrna Cooking Figs, Cranberries.\nUP-HILL RESIDENTS\nOur location at 911 Stanley\nStreet makes personal shopping-So-convenient and also\nenables our delivery service\nto take care of your orders\nmore promptly.\nClogs with two and one-half-inch\nsoles are being shown for cruise\nresort and evening wear.'\nLarge Assortment of Nuts\nand   Christmas   Candy   In\nBoxes or Bulk,\nPhono\n1-0-1\nQuality\nService\nMaple-leaf\nGrocery\nJ. P. HERRON, Proprietor    .II\n&#-3r3r&3r&&&\u00a7'\u00bbi3'\ndiiniA, foJt\ndioumoivsA,\nBy  MR8.  MARY  MORTON\nMENU   HINT\nVeal Birds    Baked Sweet Potatoes\nFrozen Cheese Salad\nSteamed Ginger Bread Coffee\nThis frozen cream salad may\nstrike you as too elaborate to bother\nwith, but is very delicious and can\nbe made early in the day if you are\nplanning this as a guest menu, and\nit does dress a meal up.\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nVeal Birds\u2014Take veal steak that\nis cut fairly thin- A small bit of dry\nbread dressing is placed in the centre of each serving piece, and the\nveal rolled around it. The steak is\nthen held in place by skewers or\ntoothpicks. To prepare the best veal\nbirds you ever tasted, saute them\nfirst, in fat until they are evenly\nbrowned, and then add sour cream\nand simmer until the veal is tender.\nThe sauce that remains makes a\ndelicious gravy without adding any-\nthingthlng to it or further cooking.\nFor each pound of veal used, allow\none cup of dairy-made.sour cream.\nThis will make ample sauce. If you\ncare to omit the bird style of serv-\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nling the veal steak, prepare it by\nI searing first, then adding the cream\nand simmering as directed for the\nveal birds.\nFrozen Cheese Salad\u2014Use three\ntablespoons of thin cream or of\nFrench dressing to one package\u2014\nthree ounces\u2014of cream cheese, Vary\nthe usual half cup of mayonnaise\nused when thin cream is used to\ndilute it, by adding instead a similar scant measure of fruit juice of\nthe fruit used to give accent to the\nsalad. Canned pineapple cubes, sliced peaches or pears allow'variety of\nflavor. Add to either-fruit, one-half\ncup of finely sliced or chopped ripe\nolives, and two teaspoons of lemon\njuice, if French dressing is not included in the making. Fold in one-\nhalf cup of whipped cream for bulk\nand lightness of texture If desired.\nThe addition of whipping cream is\noptional. Pour into refrigerator\ntrays and freeze until firm enough\nto cut into slices for service on lettuce, .shredded cabbage, or water\ncress. A tart cream mayonnaise accompanies this salad. Garnish with\nolives.\nSteamed Gingerbread\u2014One and\none-half cups flour, one cup chopped suet, one-half tablespoon ground\nglngerj one-half teaspoon baking\npowder, one-eighth teaspoon salt,\none-half cup molasses, one-fourth\ncup milk. Sift together the flour,\nginger, baking powder and .alt. Stir\nchopped suet and rnolasses mixed\nwith milk. Steam two hours. Serve\nas a dessert with a thin custard\nsauce.\nmother died that I. told my father\nabout Mimi. Confession was easy.\nI was. consumed with a desire to\nspeak her name to someone. I\nwanted to dwell oil her beauty, her\nremoteness from the rest of the\nworld,- her graciousness to me. I\nwas bursting with big thoughts \u2014\ndreams \u2014 hopes \u2014 and these things\ncried for utterance.\nWe were in the church when I\ntalked to him. It was. Saturday\nnight, and we had brought flowers\nfrom our garden for the Vase by\nthe pulpit. This had always been\nmy mother's office, and she had\nworried lest it should not be done.\nMy father had not let her illness\ninterfere with his preaching. Heavy-\nhearted though he was, \u2022 he still\nspoke to his people and found refreshment, I think, in doing it.\nWhen the flowers were arranged\nfinally in the big vase, I came down\nto where he stood waiting for.me\nin the dim aisle.\n\"I want to tell you something,\"\nI said. \"Do you remember, years\nago, you said that some day I\nshould find the woman who would\nhold my soul in her hand? Well,\nI've found her!\"\nHe did not seem surprised. He\nstood . there beside me, tall and\nstiff in his blaek coat. \"I\"thought\nit might be so, Jerry. You are\nmugh changed.\"\n\"How. am I changed!\"\n\"You live in a world of your\nown. Your body i- here, but your\nthoughts are far away.\"\nHe was, smiling at me, and I\nknew hhh for' the same man to\nwhom I had poured out my soul\nas a boy\u2014that whatever might be\nstiff and formal in his outer aspect,\nthere was softness within and sympathy.\nI described Mimi, sitting down\nin one of the pews to do it, and he\nsat beside me and listened. When\nI was through, he said:\n\"She doesn't love you?\"\n\"She says she doesn't know. She's\nvery1 proud. And they've always\nhad money. And her family is very\ndistinguished.\"\n\"And she wants these things in\nyou?\"\n\"Yes. But\u2014I tell her that some\nday I'll make a name for myself\n\u2014and that she won't be ashamed\nof me\"\n\"Love is never ashamed, Jerry.\"\n\"But she has a right to expect\nthat I shall give her something in\nexchange for all she would give\nme.\"\n\"If you give 'her youth, hope,\naspirations, sha can give you no\nmore than that.\"\n\"I  know\u2014\"    I   was   eager,   assured \"and some day she is going\nto give it,\"\n\"How can you know that?\"\n\"Life couldn't be so cruel as to\ntake her away from me!\"\n\"Life is ojten what we call \u2014\ncruel\u2014\" I saw him clench his hand\nas it lay on the back of the pew.\n\"But\u2014we have to bear it, and find\nthe good in it.\"\n\"I couldn't bear it If I lost Mimi.\"\n\"You would have to bear it, as I\nhave to bear\u2014losing your mother.\"\nIt was the first time he had spoken of it. There was a break in his\nvoice\u2014an agony\u2014\nI laid my hand on his. Yet even\nin the face of what he was feeling,\nI would not admit that losing my\nmother could mean to him what it\nwould mean to me to lose Mimi.\n\"Mother loves you \u2014 you know\nshe is yours throughout eternity\u2014\nbut if I lost Mimi, I should go alone\nthrough all.the ages.\"\nOh, it was ' utterly high-flown,\nbut I was much in earnest. And\nhe knew it and put aside his own\nsorrow to help hie.   -\n\"Perhaps it would be best for you\nto meet'the situation strongly and\nput her out of your life now.\"    \u25a0\n\"Oh, no,\" my voice was sharp\nwith the fear of It. \"Why should\nyou say that?\"\n\"Because you have nothing to\noffer her, and she wants things offered.\"\n, \"I\u20141 have my ambitions, Father\n\u2014and some day I shall have Uncle\nJerry's ranch.\"\nHis sad, steady eyes met mine.\n\"You are counting on that?\"\n\"Why not?\"\n\"You won't have it until ho dies,\nJerry. And there is nothing more\nstultifying than waiting for a dead\nmail's shoes.\"\n\"But I am not waiting.   I\u2014I am\ngoing  to  work   and   achieve\u2014and\nmake  her  love  mc\u2014and  nothing\nelse will matter.\"\nHe stood up and laid his hand\non my shoulder. \"No, nothing else\nwill matter. And when it comes\nto marriage, it is best to say 'hands\noff to everybody but the, two\npeople concerned. ' I might tell you\nthat Mimi is neither of your kind\nnor class\u2014and that there's danger\nin that. I might point out that'she\nis utterly unfit to be the wife of\na poor man such as you must be\nin all probability for some years to\ncome. I might say that you are on\nthe wrong track when you build\nyour future on so frail a structure\nqs writing a play and inheriting a\nranch. Yet what do I knpw of the\nfires you two may kindle? Or to\nwhat heights your love may sweep\nyou? So it is in the hands of God. I\ncan only ask that He will give you\nthe best\u2014and make you worthy of\nit!\"\nIt seemed to me that he had\nnever been so fine as when he put\nbehind him all the prejudices which\nmight have ruled him at this mo-1\nment and thought only of how he\nmight meet me on some high ground\nof mutual understanding.\n\"Only remember this,\" he said\nafter a moment, \"that there must\nalways be truth between you. Never\nanything less.\"\nI assented eagerly. It seems to\nme astounding that I should not\nthen have grasped the fact that\nmy imagination was already weaving a web of falsehood which was\nto enmesh both Mimi and myself.\nSo real to me was the future which\nI had painted that night under the\nmoon.\nIt was on Sunday at dawn that\nmy mother died, I was not with\nher, and my father came to my\nroom in the gray of the morn and\nlaid his hand on mine.\nI opened my eyes, startled, and\nwhen I saw his face, I knew what\nhad happened.\n\"She just fell asleep,\" he said.\nHe walked to the window \"and\nlooked out. The wprld was very\nstill\u2014with now and then the sweet\nclear note of some waking bird.\n\"Love doesn't die, Jerry,\" he said\n\"Thank God for that.\"\nI went and stood beside him. \"II\nwas wonderful that you could have\nall these yedrs together.\"\n\"Yes,\" he said \"it is wonderful.\"\nI think that in both of our minds\ndeath gave back to my mother sonje\nof the aspect of romance which\nshe had lost in those busy years.\nI know that my own vision pictured\nher as she must have seemed to\nmy father on her wedding day. I\nsaw, too, in their faithfulness the\nfaithfulness which might be mine\nand Mimi's, The love-affair of my\nfather and mother gained in depth\nand significance because of my own.\n(To Be Continued)\nPsychologist;. . ,.,,\nGives Some Fads\nSuited to family\nDiscussion, Talks\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D,\nWhen you were born you were\nabout 20 Inches long and weighed\nbetween seven and eight pounds. It\ntook you four years to double your\nlength, but you doubled your weight\nin five months. At the age of one\nyear you weighed three times as\nmuch as ot birth. A child at 11 years\ndf age' is ten times as heavy as on\nhis day of birth.\nChildren grow faster in sqmmer\nthan in winter. They are heavier\nin. the evening than ln the morning,\nbut shorter\/ .\nA flea can Jump 200 times the\nlength ot its body.\nHow large is your stomach? If\nyou are an average adult, it is a\nfoot lorig and holds about three\npints.\nThere are about five times as\nmany women teachers as men\nteachers in our schools.\nA gallon of gasoline weighs six\npounds; a gallon of water Weighs\neight founds.\nA No. 7 shoe is one-third inch\nlonger than a No. 6. A No. 8 shoe\nis one-third inch longer than a\nNo. T.Japan is about the size of California.\nCOTTON PRODUCTION\nThe United States produced about\nhalf of the cotton used in all the\nworld last year.\nAbout a quarter of all the rice\neaten in the United States is grown\nIn Louisiana.\nThere are about 11 million Negroes in the. United States; one for\nevery 11 white persons.\nAbout three-fourths of a potato\nis water.\nA blonde has more hairs,In her\nhead than a brunette; a red-headed\nwoman has the least of the three.\nSome of us men are worse off than\nany of them!\nA hen's egg hatches ln 21 days.\nA duck's egg in 26 days. A goose's\negg in 30 days. A turkey's egg in\n28 days.\n\u2014go for a visit\u2014and just see how\nthey get along? Maybe your husband would get a glimpse, then,\nof what you have been enduring,\nand he would back you up in asking this young relative to move\nelsewhere.\nHAS ANNIVERSARY\nCHICAGO, Dec. 22 (AP)-Author\nOpie Read became 83 years old today. ..'\u2022\nWhy Not a Want Aa?\nCrowds Home .'..._\nThoughtless Youth\nMakes Extra Work;\nWon'IAidinHome\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nMy friend, thi child, psychologist,\nstates that a properly' brought up\nchild will respect others'- rights and\nshow consideration for them,\nThat is, he says that it a youngster is trained from his earliest\nyears to wait upon himself when\nhe is able, to respect the possessions of the rest of the family, and\nto do his share of the household\nchores, he will be a popular tatm-\nber fo any circle, and a good citizen.\nMaybe I exaggerate a little, but\nthat is the gist of his theory.\nNow When a- .young man, fully\ngrown, goes to live with a-relative\nin a very small aiartment, where\nhis mere presence is an inconvenience; when he expects said relatives to pick up after him all the\ntime, to cook his meals, whether\nthey are preparing for the. other\nmembers of the family or not; when\nhe refuses to lift his hand to help\nin any way, or to s^ow any appreciation for things that are done for\nhim, I am sure the good psychologist would.say he had been very\nbadly spoiled when he was young. '\u25a0\nThat Is what I am sure you have\nbeen thinking, my dear Mrs. L. A.\nI can see no reason why this young\nrelative should clutter up your\nsmall place and make such a bore\nof himself., If he were a little child\nthat\/ you could' hope to correct or\nshow the error of his ways, with\nsome hope that he would reform,'\nit would not be so bad. He is, however, of age, capable of taking care\nof himself, and I feel sure he needs\nthe training he would get in fending for himself and taking his\nchances at a regular boarding house.\nI think your husband shows very\nlittle affection or consideration for\nyou in his attitude. Couldn't you\nleave the two alone for a few weeks\nSpecial Holiday Rates\nfor Long-Distance\nThe low Sunday rates for long-distance telephone calls to\nCanadian and American points will be in effect all day on\nChristmas Day and on New Year's Day.\nOn calls to the United Kingdom, the Sunday rates will apply\nevery day from December 23 to January 4, inclusive, except\nduring the day hours of Christmas Day.\nThere is less likelihood of delay on calls when they are\nplaced early in the day.\nFor detailed rate information, call the\nLong-Distance Rate Clerk.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA TELEPHONE COMPANY\n-\n: *\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nt^sm^mism\n WmWWmWmWf!1^^^\nmm\nT^lrJ^^fS\nPWPIB\nWw\\\nGIFT FOR NEW CHURCH\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP)-\nEnglish friends of Rev. T. W. Fry\nhave sent him a money draft for\n$17,000 to be used in building a new\nchurch in the east end of the city.\nMr. Fry is rector of St. Margaret's\nFree Church of England.\nNEW HEATING PLANT\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP) -\nVancouver city council has given\nsecond reading to a bylaw providing for the borrowing of 5100.000\nfor a new heating and power plant\ninstalled at the Vancouver General\nhospital.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING. DEC. 23. 1937.\n\u00a3^^\u00ab**H6*\u00ab\u00ab^^MHm\u00ab\u00ab**$\nPlace These\nItems on\nand Come arid See Us\nGifts That Will Be Appreciated\nEVENING SLIPPERS\nHOUSE SLIPPERS\nSKATING BOOTS\nDANCING SHOES\nSKI BOOTS\nSPATS\nR* Andrew & Co* I\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\n*\nMANY MEN CATER TO THE VANITY\nOF THEIR LADIES IN CHRISTMAS\nGIFTS; PERFUMESINSPOTLIGHT\nLadies    Reciprocate\nWith Fine Shaving\nAccessories\nHUSKY TOYS,\nFINE DOLLS\n. Madame's private beautifying and\nm'sieur's facial attentions are coming in for a great deal of attention\nthis Christmas, for hundreds of toilet and shaving Bets are being purchased as gifts. The choice of the\nbuying public runs heavily to the\nfiner classes of these goods.\nPerfumes, and toilet waters, particularly the more expensive lines,\nare attracting many shoppers. New\nperfumes designed to make madame\nmore entrancing, and beautifully\npacked toilet waters and bath salt\nsets that mean luxury to women\nare largely  responsible.\nHigh quality men's shaving accessories are high in the favor of\nwomen shoppers, possibly a matter\nof reciprocation for the perfumes\nand toilet waters destined for them,\nATTRACTIVE GIFTS\nNovelty packs or. dusting powder\u2014musical boxes, mirror boxes,\ncubes and spheres and so on\u2014make\nextremely attractive gifts. So do\nthe new manicure sets, which this\nyear are presented in especially\nfine materials and designs and in\nhighly attractive cases. Many-styled\ncompacts are being sold to numerous shoppers.\nBillfolds and key cases for men.\nfeaturing zipper fasteners, and\nmen's fitted cases of brushes and\nso on are moving out fast in response to popular demand. Fountain pen sales, dealers state, have\nbeen remarkable, and the supply\nis by no means limited. Boxed stationery is another popular line.\nChromium trim is strikingly to\nthe fore in many of the foregoing,\nparticularly the toilet sets. Leather is emphasized. A distinctly modern note is struck in many designs.\nTrays using chromium trim and\nmodernistic  designs  also  are  receiving attention.\nTRAVELLING\nCASES ATTRACT\nOvernight bags and travelling\ncases in new shapes and styles, in\nmany instances filled with the es-\n*,\nHH^^MP\u00ab^\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab^,\u20ac\u00ab\u00ab^(\u00ab\u00ab^l\u00abt\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab^l^!\u00ab^^,\u00ab*^\nFor the Home Nothing Could Be\nFiner Than a\nR.C.A. Victor or\nStroinberg Carlson\nRADIO\nThe greatest Radios on the market\ntoday.-R C A Victor Models from\nspiv's to $\nStromberg Carlson models at all prices.\nYou will find a Radio to suit you\namongst our grand selection.\nLET US ALSO SUGGEST -\nFOR THE HOME\nToasters\nWaffle Irons\nCoffee Makers\nWashing Machines\nIroners\nAnd many other electrical\ntppliancei for the home.\nFOR the Young MUSICIAN\nVIOLIN OUTFITS\nSAXAPHONES\nSNARE DRUMS\nMANDOLIN SETS\nTENOR BAN|OS\nTRUMPETS\nKQOT-ENAY\nMUSIC\nPHONE 585\nHOUSE\nNELSON, B. C.\nscnlials for mademoiselle's dressing\ntable, will be the spotlight this\nChristmas for a good many ladies.\nNovel clocks emphasizing^ the\nmodernistic in color and shape are\neye-catching.\nIt will be a sturdy Christmas for\na great many Nelson youngsters,\nfor sturdy toys have the preference\nin gift buying. Trucks and cars, particularly those with electric lights,\ncontinue to be the leading choice\nfor husky youngsters. Their chief\ncompetitors are the many types of\ndolls offered especially for Little\nSister. Her favorite book or film\ncharacter, or her favorite doll type,\nare among the large family.\nBOOKS  IN   DEMAND\nThere has been a tremendous\nswing back to books this year. The\nanimal stories beloved by children,\nand familiar volumes of years past\nare in favor again. There is a heavy\ndemand also for new fiction for\nadults.\nSmall dish sets of china, glass and\naluminum, will gladden the heart\nof many a tiny miss, and the new\nscooter skates will provide. action\nfor the boys.\nAirplanes with wheels attached\nlhat Sonny can ride, streamlined\nwagbns that will make him the envy\nof every lsd in the neighborhood,\nsmall blackboards, tiny furniture\nand games the whole family wilt\nenjoy are rapidly disappearing from\nstore shelves. Mechanical toys are\namong the most popular, and there\nhas been a great sale of animated\n\"Popeye\", \"Mickey Mouse'' and other favorites of the movie cartoons.\nEven in painting books, it is the\nones featuring these favorites which\nare most in demand.\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nDEATHS\n(By The Canadian Press)\nDETROIT \u2014Theodore Delavigne,\n47, veteran newspaperman who\npublicized the ship sent to Europe\nin 1915 by Henry Ford in an attempt\nto end the Great War with peace\npropaganda.\nQUINCY. Mass.-Jake Kilrain, 78,\nold-time heavyweight boxer,\nROCKVILLE CENTER, N.Y. -\nMilton Garges, 70, retired executive\nassistant to the general manager of\nthe Associated Press.\nLONDON, Dec. 22 (CP Cable)-\nSir Even Spicer, 88, former chairman London County council.\nMONTREAL-John T. Lewis, 46,\none of the finest football ends in the\nannals of McGill university. Grandson of Rev. J. T. Lewis, Archbishop\nof Ontario.\nPolice Quest for\nan Escaped Youth\nEdward Lippon, 19-year-old Vancouver youth who escaped Tuesday\nfrom Oakalla prison, is being sought\nby provincial police. Lippon was\nemployed with a work guard when\nhe escaped, radio advices to \"B\"\ndivision headquarters at Nelson stated.\n\u2022 Lord and Lady Aylmer of Willow Point, were city shoppers yesterday.\n\u2022 W. C. Muir was in town from\nSouth Slocan Tuesday.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. V. Smith of Appledale\nspent yesterday ln the city.\n\u2022 Shoppers in Nelson yesterday\nIncluded Mrs. J. F. Donaldson of\nSalmo.\n\u2022 Miss Helen Scully, Victoria\nstreet, has returned from a few days\nat Spokane.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Domonic Maglio\nhave as their guest over the holidays\ntheir son, Thomas, who attends\nUniversity of Alberta at Edmonton.\n\u2022 Miss Hazel Fuller of Kaslo,\nwas a city visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. Sharp of Fruitvale, is\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Vyse,\nFairview.\nt Shoppers in town yesterday included Mrs. C. Olson of Ainsworth.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Gordon Bennett, Terrace apartments, have returned from a few days at Spokane,\n\u2022 Miss Ann Riesterer has arrived from Wenatchee, Wash., and\nis at Trail at the home of her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs^\nNoel Harrop. -\n\u2022 Miss Nellie Aylwin ol%New\nDenver, is spending two weeks in\nNelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. George Porteous of\nQueen's Bay. visited town yesterday. She was accompanied by her\ndaughters, Betty and Peggy.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday included Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nMcFadden of South Slocan.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. Harrop of Harrop, vis.\nited town yesterday.\na Miss Florence Rutledge of\nTrail, spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 Miss Gladys Ewing and her\nbrother, Fred Ewing, Silica street,\nhave as their guest, their nephew,\nGordon McDowell, who attend University of British Columbia at Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. Thomas Sargent, Fair-\nview, leaves this morning to spend\nChristmas with friends at Regina.\n\u2022 Mrs. Halbauer of Sheep Creek,\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. L. F. Spearing of Willow\nPoint, was. shopping In the city yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Janni of\nWenatchee, Wash., are expected in\nNelson tomorrow night to spend the\nholidays at the home of the latter's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Riesterer, Robson street.\n\u2022 Mrs. Carl Mohr of Ainsworth,\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. C. D. Pearson, Kootenay\nstreet, has left lo spend the holiday at the home of her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart\nSmillie, at Trail. Mr. Pearson will\nfollow later.\n\u2022 Hugh Greenwood of Willow\nPoint, spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 Verne Conwan plans to leave\ntomorrow for Vancouver.\n\u2022 Jack Buchanan of Spokane, is.\nexpected to arrive tomorrow to\nspend the holidays with his mother,\nMrs, E. L. Buchanan, Terrace apartments.\n. \u2022   J. M. McAulay of Silverton,\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Cook left\nyesterday for the coaat.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Boyce, 410\nNelson avenue, Fairview, had as\ntheir guest Mrs. Boyce's brother,\nBert Price of Greenwood, who has\nreturned.\n\u2022 Mrs. G. H. Hobb of Ainsworth,\nspent yesterday shopping in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. S. Ritchie, Latimer\nand Ward streets, is a patient at\nKootenay Lake General hospital.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Grubbe,\nHendryx street, will have as their\nguest over the holiday Mrs. Grubbe's\nsister, Miss Mary Paget of Cranbrook, who is expected to arrive\ntomorrow.\n\u2022 Murray McNeish of Slocan\nCity, visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Elizabeth Carrie, Silica\nstreet, plans to leave this morning\nfor Vancouver to spend the holidays.\n\u2022 Mrs. Curwen, Latimer street,\nhas as her guests, her daughter and\ngranddaughter, Mrs. C. A. Cawley\nand Marjorie of Salmo, who arc\nspending a few days here.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. H. Wensley of Crescent\nBay, is a patient at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital.\n\u2022 Captain and Mrs. C. S. Price\nof Harrop, spent'yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Jack Bell was in the city from\nAinsworth yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. George F. Hunter\nplan to leave today to spend the\nholidays at Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. T. W. Smith of Crescent\nBay, spent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 Miss Irene Cummings, who\nteaches at Longbeach, is spending\nthe holidays at Spokane and Seattle.\n\u2022 Miss Hincks, Stirling hotel,\nplans to leave today to visit relatives at the coast over the holidays.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Johnston of Sheep\nCreek, visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. H. Baskin of Slocan\nPark, was shopping in the city yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Strong\nof Vallican, spent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Miss Edith Tattrie, who teaches\nat Silverton, and her niece, Miss Patricia Greer of New Denver, are\nguests at the home of the former's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr and\nMrs. Ralph Anderson, Rosemont.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Smythe,\nCarbonate street, have as their\nguest over the holidays, their son,\nHarold Smythe, who attends University of Alberta at Edmonton.\n\u2022 Mrs. Joseph Potosky of South\nSlocan, visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. T. Coleman of Vallican\nand her daughter, Maisie, were city\nshoppers yesterday,\n\u2022 Shoppers in town Tuesday included Mrs. W. R. McDonald of\nSouth Slocan.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Heani\nof Salmo, visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Dorothy Jackson of Cedar\nCHRISTMAS STORE\nVricUjK, LO*, TnaJuL JkUSL\nShut, VYlinuisi Su^&iiionA, 1\nDIAMONDS\nA wonderful selection. Genuine Diamond Rings from $10.00. Some beauties $15.00 and $25.00 and up' to\n$400.00. Come in and see these values.\nSILVERWARE\nBon Bons, from  % 1.50\nButter Dishes, from  % 1.25\nCasseroles, from  % 4.50\nTea Sets, from   $12.50\nWATCHES\nLadies' Wrist Watches from $8.75 to\n$65.00 and all prices between. These\nare all 15 and 17 jewel and all guaranteed. All in the latest cases.\nMISCELLANEOUS IDEAS\nLeather Goods Toilet Sets Novelties\nSilver Deposit Ware Copper Goods Cigarette Cases\nLamps, Vases Book-Ends Lighters\nJ.B. GRAY\nCome in and\nlook around.\nIt's no trouble\nto show you the\ngoods. THE JEWELER\nPhone  333 All goods neatly wrapped for Christmas delivery.\nPAGE   FIVE\nFailure lo Take Out Decrees After\nDivorces Granted in B.C. Cause of\nWarning by Mr. Justice D. Murphy\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP)-Mr\nJustice Denis Murphy in supreme\ncourt today warned Vancouver lawyers he would grant no more divorces unless they gave their undertaking to take out the decrees\nwithin a week.    \u2022\n\"I regret to have to do this, but\nit has come to my knowledge that\na great number of these decrees aro\nnever entered,\" his lordship said.\n\"It may be that people are going\nand getting married and it won't\nbe a legal marriage. If there is issue, these children are illegitimate.\n\"That such a thing should happen\nin Vancouver is almost inconceivable but It has happened'\" Mr. Justice Murphy said.\nPoint, and her niece, Miss Betty\nMarshall, spent yesterday in Nelson,\n\u2022 Mrs. James Fitzsimmons and\nsons, Jerry and Larry, of Ainsworth,\nspent yesterday shopping in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs.. P. Garret was in town\nfrom Salmo yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded Mrs. Kenneth Attree of\nQueen's Bay.\n\u2022 Mrs. Smith Curwen of Ymir,\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Miss Doris M. Latornell, nurse-\nin-training at the Royal Jubilee\nhospital at Victoria, is spending her\nvacation at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Latornell,\n1511 Stanley street.\n\u2022 C. V. Meggitt of Grand Forks,\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. H. Rushton of Fruitvale, is\na guest of Mrs. R. Morrison for the\nholiday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Emmott,\n516 Carbonate street, have as their\nguest, their daughter, Miss Marian\nEmmott, who teaches at Hedley.\n\u2022 George Gelinas, who attends\nGonzaga university in Spokane, is\nexpected home tomorrow to spend\nthe holiday with his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. G. Gelinas, Victoria\nstreet.\n' Mrs. Charles Mora and infant\nsbn have left Kootenay Lake General hospital for their home at\nSalmo.\n> Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Olson\nof the Queen mine in the Sheep\nCreek, visited In town yesterday.\nHE SHOWED SANTA\nWINSTEN, Conn., Dec. 22 (AP) -\nThe day was gray, chill winds\nblew, the grass long since had\nwithered to a yellow stubble.    \u2022\n, But Richard Mannl, 7, wanted\nto show Santa Claus what a good\nlittle boy he was.\n' So, all his regular chores done,\nhe dragged out a lawn-mower and\nmowed the lawn.\nLONE FAMILY IN\nONTARIO GHOST\nTOWN\nNORTH PINES, Ont., Dec. 22\n(CP)\u2014When Bert Botham and\nhis family sit down to enjoy\ntheir Christmas turkey and plum\npudding Saturday it will mark\nthe 16th year they have celebrated the Yuletide season as\nthe only residents of this deserted mining town 270 miles\neast of Winnipeg.\nThe North Pines mine, where\nMr. Botham is caretaker, was\noperated successfully from'1900\nto 1921, producing large quantities of sulphur, but reduction in\nthe price of this valuable wartime material following the\ngreat war, forced the company\nto abandon production.\nVeneer Factory\nHas long Season\nWith its longest run on record\nfeaturing the year's operations, B.C\nVeneer Works will continue to operate as long as the weather will permit, it was announced Wednesday\nby George Dvorjetz, manager. Open\nweather and maintained demand for\nveneer is responsible.\nCottonwood logs are being obtained for the present from Grand\nForks. Canadian orders comprise the\nbulk of shipments, but the factory is\nis also shipping'to lhe United States\nand New Zealand.\nIn celebration of its long season,\nthe Veneer Works is distributing\nturkeys to employees for Christmas.\nTen-Hour Limit\nStore Employees\nUnder the Hours of Work act\ncity store employees are permitted\nio work 10 hours Thursday and\nFriday, instead of Hie usual eight\nShould proprietors wish to remain\nopen longer than the 10 hours they\nwill be required lo stagger the\nshifts of their employees so no one\nwill work longer than the 10-hour\nlimit.\nCOMING\nEVENTS\nt.i \u25a0\u25a0\u2022>''\nPaul Robeson and Sir Cedric\nHardwicko as they appear ln one of\nthe finest adventure stories ever\nfilmed. The Civic Theatre presents\nLiberty's Three Star picture, \"King\nSolomon's Mines\" for a three day\nengagement, opening with a special\nmatinee on Boxing Day, December\n27th. A faithful screen portrayal of\nRider Haggard's romantic novel of\nthe same name. Appearing in the\ncast, with Robeson and Hardwicke,\nare Anna Lee, John Loder and Roland Young.\n\u00a3M_*j\u00a3MO__UM-l_^^\nFREEMAN    LEE w\nI        FURNITURE CO.\nI The House of Furniture Styles\nI   PHONE 115 NELSON, B.C. EAGLE BLOCK\n| FURNITURE GIFTS\nSpecial Values\nI       STORE OPEN TILL 9 P.M.\nI GIVE A CEDAR CHEST\nLovely walnut chests-\ncedar interior\u2014large selection from\n$\n13-50\nOCCASIONAL TABLES\nALL TYPES\u2014PRICED LOW\nCOFFEE\nTABLES\nWALNUT\n\u00bb6-so\nand up\nEND\nTABLES\nSolid Walnut\nShaped Top\n$2$\u00b0\nCARD\nTABLES\nWashable Tops\n$1\u00ab79.\nj Walnut     End Tables     Walnut\nii    a   js   MjkChoice of Coffee Tables, a    *m   _,A I\nI    9^.0\"End Tables, Book Tables,?>jflpU i\n\u00a3       \u25a0\u00a7 etc. *ff k\nI SEE OUR SPECIAL {\nI  CHESTERFIELD SUITE VALUES j.\n^r_\u00ab--r-._r_M_\u00ab-_jr_M-._r\u00bb^^\n1 1      i-   -       \u25a0 '\u25a0r.._-\".-ft-.il_-__i_____r___-.-.i;   ;r. \u25a0..,._.:....;_\n..   ...\u25a0\u25a0,......  __________\nmmm^^^\n^^^^jkg^ta\n PAGE SIX \u2014\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNINQ. DEC. 23. 19S7.\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every motnlng except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n216 Baker Street.   Nelion,   British Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments,\nMembers of the  Audit  Bureau  ot Circulations  and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nTHURSDAY, DECEMBER 28,1987.\nUPHOLDS LIBERTY OF SUBJECT\nIt will come as a surprise to most people to learn that\nthe admittance to bail of a man charged with murder is a\nrare thing in Canada.\nA dispatch in Regina states that Mr. Justice Embury\nallowed Jacob Daum out on bail of ?16,000. It was the\nfirst time in the history of Canada that a man charged with\nmurder had been given this privilege.\nVeteran officials of the justice department at Ottawa\ndid not confirm the statement that this was the first time\nin the history of Canada that a person charged with\nmurder had been let out on bail, but they said that they\nwere unable to recall any precedent. If there was danger\nthat it would become established as a definite inviolable\npractice in our Canadian courts to refuse, no matter what\nthe circumstances might be, to grant bail to a man charged\nwith murder, it is a very good thing that Mr. Justice Embury has preferred to base his action on fundamental principals of British justice rather than upon the habit of the\ncourts.\nIf a man or woman is charged with murder its does\nnot follow that the accused is guilty. In fact in a very large\nproportion of murder cases, the jury decides otherwise.\nGuilt or innocence has very little to do with the-decision\nof a court in the matter of bail. The circumstances surrounding the alleged offense; the character 6f the accused\nand the real and personal property held by himself and\nhis friends, are factors which are taken seriously into\naccount by the court. The court does not care to risk turn-\ning loose a person who may be a danger to society. No\ncourt, no matter how much ball may be available, will\nknowingly allow temporary freedom to a homicidal maniac.\nNeither will a court allow freedom to a man of great wealth\nif tbe court has reason to believe that such a person intends\nto jump his bail.\nOn the other hand a court will quite often allow bail\nfor a relatively small amount, to a person of generally good\ncharacter, who the court feels, will honor his pledged word\nto appear for trial when called upon.\nThis consideration applies in murder cases. There are\ncases of murder in which the court may have good reason\nfor believing that the man it is asked to release oh bail is\nnot a danger to public safety, that he has no intention of\n-No.?0.\nBickmT Cfjriatmag Carol\nIllustrated by Alfred J. Buescher\nCENTRAL PRESS ASSOCIATION\n\u25a0ADAPTED BY, C. 0. VOKMELKER-\nSCROOGE AND THE _\nVANCED TOWARD ONE CUT ...\nHUTS AND PASSED THROUGH ITS\nWALL OF MUD AND STONE, INSIDE. A CHEERFUL COMPANY\nWAS GATHERED ROUND A GLOWING FIRE. SINGING A CHRISTMAS\nSONG.\nTHE SPIRIT DID NOT TARRY\nHERE, BUT BADE SCROOGE HOLD\nHIS ROBE AND SPED WITH HIM\nTHROUGH   THE   AIR   OUT   OVER\nTHB THUNDERING SEA.\nUPON A DISMAL REEF OF ROCKS,\nABOUT A LEAGUE FROM SHORE.\nTHERE STOOD A SOLITARY\nLIGHTHOUSE SHEDDING ITS\nLIGHT OVER THE TURBULENT\nWATERS.\nPASSING THROUGH THE ROCKY\nWALL, SCROOGE AND THE SPIRIT\nLOOKED UPON ANOTHER CHRISTMAS SCENE THERE IN THE\nLIGHTHOUSE. THB TWO KEEPERS\nHAD JOINED HANDS AS THEY\nWISHED EACH OTHER A \"MERRY\nCHRISTMAS\". i'o \u00bbe continued\nLooking Backward...\nTEN YEARS AGO\nDecember 23, 1927\nA. J. Morrison of Greenwood Is\na Trail visitor.\u2014Miss Sybil Towgood\nof 'Nelson was the guest at South\nSlocan of Mrs. 0. W. Humphry.\u2014\nMiss Janet Marion Lewis of Vernon\nand Lieutenant-Commander Som-\nmervill Wentworth Davis, R.N., were\nmarried at St. Saviour's church by\nVen. Archdeacon F. H. Graham, December 22.\u2014Miss Jessie Alexandra\nBaynes and George Herbert Fleming\nwere \"married at Cranbrook, December 21. Rev. Bryce Wallace officiating.\u2014Nelson defeated Trail, 1-0 in\nthe opener of the West Kootenay\nhockey league at Trail.\u2014Miss Margaret Robson of the high school\nstaff left to spend her holidays at\nVancouver.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nDecember 23, 1917\nSergt. C. G. G. Mclnnes has left\nfor Vancouver.\u2014Charles O'M'Hey\nof Nekon has been recommended for\nthe Military Medal, according to a\nreport received by A. McQuarrie.\u2014\nJ. Henry of Ainswdrtli is a Nelson\nvisitor\u2014J. P. Morrison ot Silverton\nla a city visitor.\u2014Mrs. Marjory McGregor of Kaslo has left for Vancouver to spend the holidays with\nher sister, Miss Norma McGregor,\nwho is a student at the University\nof British Columbia.\u2014Ernest Harrison and George Sheppard ot Grand\nForks have been injured overseas.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\nDecember 23, 1907\nWilliam Marchant, customs inspector, who has been a city visitor,\nhas returned to Victoria.\u2014Since the\ninstallation of the ten new stamps at\nthe Queen mine, there are about 55\nmen workinf. The mine has been\noperating for sever,-', years.\u2014The\nTrail smelter has just finished shipping 25,000 ounces of silver to the\nnew Canadian mine for the subsidiary coinage.\u2014J. E. Sullivan of\nWinlaw Is a visitor to Nelspn.\u2014J. S.\nMoore of Slocan is a Nelson visitor.\n\u2014The Whitewater mill has reduced\nits production to 280 tons per day.\nevading trial and further, that while it is obvious that the\nmore serious the offense the greater must be the amount of\nbail, the bondsmen are both honest and competent to put\nup the amount involved, in the event that the court should\nhave made an error in judgment and find that the beneficiary of freedom under bail does break his promise to appear for trial.\nThe decision of Mr. Justice Embury puts it definitely\non record that under Canadian jurisprudence it is not a\nfact that a man charged with murder is necessarily any\nmore likely to be guilty than a man charged with manslaughter or robbing a bank.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nFORESIGHT PLUS NERVE\nGETTING the Jump on your.op-\npoMnts with a lead of your suit,\nwhich must get set up ln order to\nbeat the contract, may require\nplenty of foreslghf and ths courage\nto back lt up. It Is even necessary\nsometimes to lead right Into the\nJaws of a tenace In order to obtain\nthat all Important early rt>und\nwhich is essential to the proper\ntiming of the whole action-\nAK8 64\nVQ78\nOK J 8\n*JW2\nC 10 7 ii 2\n493\n*K63\n_L_\n4 A3\nV10 9 2\n+ AQ7S2\n*86.\nAQJ9\n\u00bbAKJ\n\u2666 10 6 4\n+AQ97\n'(Dealer: South. Both sides vulnerable.)\nAgainst South's 3-No Trumps\ncontract, West led the spade 2,\n\u2022which East won with the A. An\nImmediate return of spades at this\npoint gives South hla contract. A\nhurt to the Q enable, declarer to\ntake a club finesse, which, even\nthough lt falls, gives South three\nclub tricks, one diamond, three\nhearts and three spades.\nl Tha East defender In thli In\nstance, however, did not give tip\nso easily. He reasoned that, if his\npartner was able to get Into the\niead again to put him in with a\ndiamond, it wai up to him to give\nup one trick in the suit first with\nthe hope that his partner would\nstill have one to l._d him, to enable him to cash his remaining\nfour tricks.\nWith this In mind, hs deliberately led up to dummy's K-J-8 and\nfrom that point on the hand was\nhopeless for South, as the club K\nwaa In the wrong spot When the\nclub finesse was tried and lost,\nWest returned his dlemond and\nEast cashed his four good diamonds.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\n4KQJ7\n#10 9 4\n\u2666 JTB\n+ 10 5 3\n41092\n\u00bb3\n\u2666 10 642\n...Q.T982\n_\u00a3\n486543\n\u00bbJ7\u00bb\n\u2666 KQJ\n*T4\n\u2666 A\nVAKQ862\n\u2666 A93  .\n*AK\u00ab\n(Dealer: South. Neitner side\nvulnerable.)  .\nWhat ihotild North respond to\nSouth's 2-Hearts bid and how can\nSouth make .-Hearts?\nI      AUNT HET      |\nI      By ROBERT QUILLEN      |\n*, , \u2666\n\"I reckon the world's big men ar\u00bb\nsmarter'n I am; but if they'd ever\ntried to wean a calf, they'd know\nyou can't change, nature by passm\na law.\"\nI\n.J? Questions tl\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader o*\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will Ihe name .f the person\nisking the question be published.\nJ.M., Nelson\u2014Do light and electricity travel at the same rate of\nspeed?\nLight travels at the rate of 1,186,-\n342 miles per second and electricity\nis presumed to be the same as light.\nL.T., Trail\u2014How often is a gentleman supposed to dance with his\nlady friend at a dance?\nHe is expected to have the first\nond last dances; to escort her to\nsupper and to dance with her every\ntime the girl wishes to dance and\nhas no partner or as often as she\nwishes to dance with him.\nJust curious, Nelson\u2014Can you tell\nme the capacities of the following\narenas; at Boston, Toronto, Montreal, Chicago and New York?\nBoston, 16,289, Toronto, 12,614;\nMontreal, 9059; Chicago, 16,160; New\nYork, 14,836.\nM.M.B.. Creston\u2014What is the value\nof a 1910 Liberty cent?\nThe face value.\nS.I., Nelson\u2014Who was the actor who\ntook the .part of the nobleman who\ngave the candlestick to William\nPowell in \"The Emperor's Candlestick?\"\nHenry Stephenson.\nSHANGHAI (CP)-In Higashl\nTemple, \"Little Tokyo\", across Soochow creek are rows of urns containing the individual ashes of\nJapan's sons who have died in the\nconquest of this part of China.\nFOR\nMINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall mining and .other\ncamp buildings They\nare strong, waterproof, light and very\neasy to handle.\nDistrict Distributors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nThe high standards of\nqualify set up-by the\nfarmer owners has\nmade Pacific one of\nthe outstanding evaporated milks in Canada for the past twenty\nyears.\nPacific\nMilk\nis irradiated to insure healthy\nbones and teeth in your children and is the only milk vacuum packed in Canada, making Pacific an even purer milk,\nEVERY STORE HA8 AND CAN\nSELL PACIFIC MILK AT COMPETITIVE PRICES.\nPacific Milk\nTerror in the Old Mill\nBy W. BOYCE MORGAN\nWhoopsie! Bu-j exclaimed. \"That almost scares me, and I know what it is!\"\nling dummy in the beams from the\nbicycle headlight.\n\"Whoopsie!\" Buzz exclaimed In\n.lwe. \"That almost scares me, and\nI know what it is! Imagine how the\ngirls will feel. We'd better find a\nplace to hide now, for they ought\nlo be here- in a few minutes.\" -\nJimmy wheeled his bicycle back\nlo the big tree, and Ihey settled\ndown there to wait, talking eagerly and snickering now and then\nas they anticipated the laugh they\nwere going to get when the sisters\nof Pi Pi Pi saw the \"hanged man.\"\nBut it was cold waiting behind Ihe\ntree, and soon they began to jump\nup and down and swing their arms\nto keep warm.\n\"I wish they'd hurry up and gel\nhere,\" Jimmy complained. \"You\ndon't think there's any chance of\ntheir leaving their cars on the highway and walking up, do you? We\nmight have missed them.\"\n\"We haven't missed anybody,\"\nsaid Buzz confidently. \"We see the\nroad from here, and nobody could\ncome up to the mill without us seeing them.\"\nBut Buzz was wrong about that.\nFor at that very moment, a roughly dressed figure was inside the\nmill, standing beside the hanging\ndummy, running his hand over it\nin the darkness.\nTo Be Continued Saturday\nINSTALLMENT 6\nVi's important doings made il\neasy for Buzz lo get away early,\nand he met Jimmy behind his\nhouse at a little before seven. It\nwas a clear, cold night, and they\nhad both bundled-up well. They\nexamined the lights on their bicycles to be sure that they were\nworking, and started out the Frankville road.\nA pale moon made the concrete\nroad a white ribbon stretching before them. There was little traffic, and their lights and the moonlight made them easily visible to\nthe few cars which passed them.\nIt did not take them very long to\nreach lhe dirt road which led to\nthe old mill, and as they pedalled\nalong it. they saw the tumbledown building, squatting on the\nbank of a stream a short distance\nahead-\n\"We can't leave our bikes here,\"\nBuzz pointed out os they reached\nthe mill. \"The girls would see\nthem.\"\nThey pushed the wheels back around the mill and hid them behind\na lasge tree. Then Jimmy uttered\nan exclamation of annoyance.\n\"Darn!\" he said. \"We both forgot flashlights. We'll have a fine\ntime tying the dummy up, because\nit will be as dark as your hat in\nthere.\"\n\"Push your bike up to the door.\"\nBuzz suggested, \"and shine your\nhoadlifiht in. Then I can see lo tie\nthe rope lo the neck of the dummy.\"\nJimmy ran to get his bike. Buzz\nfound the dummy and dragged It\ninto the mill. In a moment he had\nfastened the rope, and the grotesque figure swung above the\nfloor. Buzz retreated to Jimmy's\nside, and they surveyed the dang-\nCATCHING  COMPLAINT\nAbsent-minded' Professor: \"Eliza-\nbc!h, 1 believe I hnve lost the road.\"\nAbsent-minded  Professor's Wife;\n\"Are you sure you he.d it when you\nleft the house?\"\n\"And they call America the land\nof free speech,\" said the disgusted\nScot when tho telephone operator\ntold him to put a nickel ln the box.\nTHE BOYS AND GIRLS PAGE\nYou probably don't feel like\nworking your brain too hard at\nthis season of the year, so we are\ngiving you an easy crossword puzzle this week. And its in a nice big\nChristmas star!\nMERRY CHRI8TMA8\nIn this Christmas picture there\nare all sorts of things beginning with\nthe letter T. How many can you find\nThe puzzle editor found twenty-five.\nTlie Definitions:\nHORIZONTAL\n2. Public auto for hire\n7. To daub\n8. A serpent\n9. Streets (Abbr.)\nVERTICAL\n1.   Most arid\n3. So\n4. Christmas\n5. Coverings for tiie head\n6. In the year of lhe reign (Abbr.)\n-2 -\nChristmas terms may also make up\nour word chains. Change only one\nletter at a time, and always form a\ngenuine word.\nChange  STAR  to  EAST  in  six\nmoves.\nChange FILL to SOCK in four\nmoves.\n-3 -\nEverybody who has ever heard\nof Santa and his reindeers knows\nwho Blitzen Is. The second word in\nthe diamond means ancient, the third\nIs a constellation of stars, the fifth\nis slept lightly, and the sixth is a\nboy's nicltname. Complete the diamond.\nB\nL\nI\nB L I T Z E K\nZ\nE\nN\nClever Christmas\nTree Ornaments\nAre Easily Made\n' By RAY J. MARRAN\nVery few Christmas trees have\ntoo many ornaments on Ihem, for il\nseems that the more bright and\nsparkling ornaments there are, the\nmore appealing the tree i_- to young\nchildren.\n. Last-minute Christmas tree ornaments are qiiickly made at home.\nUse colored cellophane to wrap\nstick candy, gumdrops, lemon balls,\nIn the sentence below, the missing\nwords aro spelled differently, but\npronounced lhe same.\nThe brave captain  his men\nforward through a hail of \u2022\ndeHophane\nCovered\nCandy\nCardboard\nand Soda\nStraw\nHomelcigh\u2014\"Do you know, old\nman, I don't spend .so much money\nnow as I did before I was married.\"\nMarks\u2014\"How's lhat?\"\nHomeleigh\u2014\"Well, I don't have\nit to spend.\"\nMother's Christmas\nIf yours is one of those families that have\na big Christmas celebration ln their own home,\nwith a tree and a big dinner, it means an awful\nlot of work for some member of the family,\nusually Mother. She has been working hard\nfor several days before, making preparations.\nShe probably stays up late on Christmas Eve,\ntrimming the tree. And then all Christmas\nmorning, she labors in the kitchen, getting\nthat huge and wonderful Christmas dinner.\nAs a result of all this, when Christmas\nnight comes she is often pretty tired. Christmas\nhasn't meant much for her but work.\nOf course, she loves to do it for you and the rest of the family, but\nshe deserves some appreciation, and some help.\nYou can give her both. You can let her know how much you\nlike the turkey. You can find time, to help her with the dinner,\nor the dishes, ln other words, you can do a lot of things that will\nmake her Christmas a lot \"merrier.\"\nAnd it will make your Christmas just that much happier, too.\nAnd that's what we wish you\u2014a really Happy Christmas.\n\u2014The Editor.\nKAY'S CORNER\nBy KATHERINE HOUISON\nand other hard candies in small\nsquares of this shiny material. Then\nattach these bright-colored \"drops\"\nto the tree branches with wire or\nstring hangers. Old thread spools,\npainted with bright-colored water-\ncolor paints, may be used in the\nsame way. Also, small toy blocks\nmake excellent tree ornaments\nwhen covered with colored cellophane.\nShort lengths Of soda straws and\noblongs of cardboard may be strung\non a thread to form a gayly colored\nfestoon. Popcorn and cranberries\nalso make splendid tree trimming\nchains.\nTin foil may be used for coverings\ninstead of cellophane.\nBy making a number of foil-covered ornaments and a number covered with cellophane, you should be\nable lo fill, out any vacant looking\nspot on your tree:\nJUST AN EXHIBIT\n\"Congratulations, Mr. Jones,\" said\na friend. \"I understand your oldest\nson is a model boy\"\nMr. Jones looked a bit sour. \"Yes,\"\nhe acknowledged, \"but he's not a\nworking model.\"\nAERIAL SCENERY\n\"I've been cheated!\" stormed an\nirate guest at a resort hotel. \"You\nsaid there was a beautiful view for\nmiles and miles from my room.\"\n\"So there is, mister, so there is,\"\nsoothed the hotel .owner. \"Just stick\nyour head out the window and look\nup\"\nCOOL\nHe\u2014\"I dreamt of you last nijht.\"\nShe (coldly)\u2014\"Really!\"\n\"Yes, Then I woke up, shut the\nwindow, and put an extra blanket\non the bed.\"\nCHRISTMAS DECORATIONS\nChristmas is the time to decorate .\nand here are ways and means to\nmake the job interesting and unusual!\nIf you're near the woods, get a\nsmall birch log to fit your table for\nthe centrepiece. Bore holes in it\nhere and there and fill them with\npine branches, holly, mountain ash\nberry clusters, etc. Use birch bark\nplace cards with this table decoration.\nWhen you use a Christmas tree on\nyour table, \"plant\" small pine branches full of cones in tiny flower pots\nand set one at each place with the\nguest's name lettered on it. If you're\nusing snow and can't get the artificial kind, melt some sugar in water and spread it on the branches\u2014\n! Its just as effective.\nAnd if you're tired of evergreens,\ntry making your Christmas tree of\nboxes this year! With a family group\nthis is a fine idea. Get a number\nof various sized boxes, plenty of metallic wrapping paper, and cellophane. Put the gifts in the boxes, \\\nwrap them artistically and colorfully, then pile them roughly in the\nshape of a tree with a small one on\ntop to which is fastened a glistening\nstar. You can twine your Christmas tree lights among the boxes for\nadded effect.\nAnd don't forget strings of whits\npopcorn with fat red cranberries\nbetween, when you're decorating\nIhe tree, pine cones dipped In gold\nend silver bronze liquid are very\neffective too, while cornucopias o!\ncandies and nuts add Just the right\nfinishing touch.\nA FUTURE PRE8IDENT\nMother: \"Tommy, how did you\nget that black eye?\"\nTommy: \"Because I did not choose\nto  run.\"'\nTHE ADVENTURES OF PETER PEN\nBy NICK NICHOLS\nOur next test is the House of\nSpears. We enter through lhe giant's mouth and come cut on a\nnarrow walk. On each side are\nthousands of sharp spears. One\nfalse step ... 1\nHigh above the head of the Professor is a great sword, held by\ntwo thin threads. Remember the\nsword of Damocles? This must be\nits twin brother.\nLittle Peter Pen is awed by a\ngreat weight held in place by a\nheavy rope . . \u2022 but beside the\nrope is an evil-looking fellow\nwith a sword, ready to cut it.\ndown. Better hurry, Peter Pen.\nHans and Bobo have discovered\na way out. The door is labelled\n\"Melting Pot.\" We have heard\nthe saying \"Out ot the frying\npan into the fire,\" but here we\ngo into the \"melting pot.\"\nOnce'ir.sidc the door, wc wish we\ncould turn back. Hie heat is terrific. The only way out i.s an\niron ladder leading below. Let's\ntry it \u2014 maybe we can get awajr\nfrom this heat. \u2022.\n^^*i^^v^_fl:fifi)t\u201e'il_^^_-,_itli:');).,'.__:.__\n-,   \u25a0    ,    .     ____ :\n :\t\n __\t\n.SMAlHA-iLittM-.'i: ..    ...    :.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .........    ._\u25a0    m    |11_^__\n-\u25a0-\u25a0*-\u25a0-\u25a0\">-\n___________\n ^^^^r^Bs^r^^^r^Pl^fl^^^^^^^^^\niPPJIPPJPpjIftllll]^\nm\nLETHBRIDGE SAVES TWO POINTS\nOM WESTERN TOUR WITH FINAL\nPERIOD 2-1 WIN OVER NELSON\ning-Dong Affair Up\nto End Marked by'\nLack Penalties\nGOOD ONE WIN,\nTOUGH TO LOSE\n*>-\nfonwtbiakA.\nJjiojh JOmbsthbuf,\nBy W.E..L.\nDynamiters Take Measure of the\nColeman Canadians by 7-3 Score\n\u2022 Lethbridge won the game, but\nNelson Maple Leafs gave them an\n\u25a0 almighty jolt in the first meeting of\n\u25a0 these two teams in the new oKote-\nI nay Hockey league setup. The score\n- was 2-1. It was the first win in\n[ three West Kootenay starts for the\n^leaders of the eastern division.\nI It was a ding-dong affair, full of\n'.action  all  the  way  through  and\npacked with thrills. The boys didn't\nj hesitate to hand out tough body\nchecks, and there was an occasional high stick, but despite that and\nthe  high  tension  there  wasn't  a\n., penalty throughout 60 minutes of\nfast hockey.\nNelson's 1-0 lead on a Johnny\nSmith-Jim McPhee goal in the second period looked good until a\nquarter of the way through the third,\n\u25a0when Lethbridge b^gan to break\nthrough more effectively. A disallowed goal broke the ice for the\nvisilors, and goals by Stewart and\nChristensen tucked il away.\n,    It was a good game to win, and a\n. tough one to lose.\nWaiman started Onyfrechuk and\nCormier, with Kirkpatrick, Mclndoe\n;. and Ursaki on the forward line.\nOpposing them were Johnny Smith.\nEuerby ond McPhee, and Bicknell\nand Atwell on defence.\nlt was up and down for the first\nfive minutes, with play mostly between the blue lines, until with\nthe change of lines Nick Smith got\nin a hot shot on Young and the Nelson forward line piled in to give\nthe Leaf goalie a really hot time.\nAnderson of Leafs' second string\nbattled through for the first test of\nMcKay. Stewart repeated on the\nnext rush on Anderson's pass. McKay stopped Stewart again and then\na third t*me. Young had another\ntaste of action under a Kirkpatrick-\nSmith-Carr drive to the net.\nFour Lethbridge men moved in\nto retaliate, losing the puck in the\nscramble. Young came out with McPhee and J. Smith in behind his\ndefence, but Smith's snap shot was\nwide. ,\nYoung came clear out to upset\nCarr as the Nelson wing got ia behind with only the goalie to beat,\nand Leafs piled thrill on thrill with\nAnderson going in to test McKay\nsimilarly. Both teams were playing\nmuch tighter defence. Lethbridge\ncleared up the ice to break up the\npressure.\nYoung again came through when\nCarr twice got in through the Lethbridge defence, once bodying the\nNelson wing.\nOpening of the second stanza was\nslower, with Lethbridge penetrating\nto better effect. Kaleta's shot from\nStewart'l pass was close, McKay\nkicking it across the goal mouth\nbehind him after taking the puck on\nthe pads. Kirkpatrick made a save\nlor Young as Nick Smith's shot hit\nhis stick.\nThe game began to hit Its pace\nwhen McPhee broke away and\npassed through the Lethbridge\ndefence for Johnny Smith to go\nIn, draw Young, and backhand\nthe biscuit Into the centre of the\nnet. The visitors' first string started to put on the heat then and\nMcKay made a brace of saves. The\nboys also began to hand out the\nbody checks a little heavier.\nFighting to break through, Lethbridge sent four men up to the\nNelson zone to make it tough for the\nhome defence, with occasional\nbreaks livening it up for the local\nfans. Kirkpa.rl_k got through to\ngive McKay the opportunity for a\nfine save. When four men failed to\nbreak it up five moved in. Nelson\nshot up the ice to clear.\nKilpatrick, \u25a0 Carr and Nick Smith\nbad Young in trouble Until his defence covered him near the end-\nNelson kept on the heat at the\nstart of the third, taking a lot in\nthe way of bodying and high sticksj\nand Young was on the spot on two\nrushes before his team males had\nsettled down. Stewart led another\nattack on which Christensen tested\nMcKay, then Carr gave Young a\nchance to do the splits. Lethbridge\ncame right back and found the net\nin a scramble that gave rise to a\ngreat game of \"argufying.\" The goal\nI was disallowed, Lethbridge having\nman in the creche when it was\nscored.\nStewart worked in to test McKay, and then drove down on another similar rush to catch the light.\nThis one was argued loo, but it was\na goal. Onyfrechuk's rush and a\nscramble in the goal mouth gave\nChristensen his goal and Lethbridge\nthe lead. And the prairie boys, with\n10 minutes to go, settled down to\nhold it. Nelson attacks met five men\nat the blue line almost every time.\nBreaks by Stewart and Mclndoe\nwere dangerous. Nelson started four\nand five man rushes in a fight to\nmake up the deficit, but that five\nman defence was too tight. When\nthe visitors began to shoot up the\nice under the pressure lhe refs call\ned tlicm. bock. A lolling puck brjat\nCarr in front of the Lethbridge goal,\nTwo Lethbridge breaks failed by\ninches in the last driving minutes,\nfor the finals thrills.\nTeams:\nLethbridge\u2014Young; Cormier, Onyfrechuk and Stewart; Kirkpatrick,\nMclndoe and Ursaki, Hayes, Anderson and Christensen, Kaleta.\nNelson\u2014McKay; .Atwell, Bicknell, Sutherland and Duckworth;\nJ. Smith, Euerby and McPhee; Kilpatrick, N. Smith and Carr.\nOfficials\u2014Leo Desireau, referee;\nHenry Viney. judge of play; T. R,\nWilson and Alex Tickle, timekeepers; Bill Freno, penally timekeeper;\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u2014No score.   '\nPenalties\u2014None.\nSecond period \u2014 1, Nelson,\nSmith  (McPhee), 6:14.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nThird period \u2014 2, Lethbridge,\nStewart. 6:42; 3, Lethbridge, Christensen, 7:40.\nPenalties\u2014None.\ntJioMland. SpoJdL\nSpot\nBy M. W.\nSehue*\niKBB\na*ulr\nEntice your holiday\nguests with a choice\nof the mellow Muscatel or the richer,\nfull-bodied,- Paarl\nTawny Port.\nCO-OPERATIVE  WINE\nGROWERS OF SOUTH AFRICA\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by tbe\nLiquor Control Board or by\nthe Government of British\nColumbia.\nGOOD FELLOWS\nAT HEART\nWonder how Trail will make out\nwith \"Rossland on Christmas Day?\nIt should be a great tussle, though\nthe Rossland miners will be handicapped without the services of Stan\nSmith, who is going home to Fernie for Christmas, but though Stan\nis undoubtedly one of the most\nvaluable players the Miners have,\nstill you may rest assured that\nCoach Morin will have a strong lineup out there.\nThe intermediate playoffs will be\nstaged at Vernon this year, hi their\nnew $5O$O0 arena. Although there\nare all kinds of players in both\nTrail and Rossland who are anxious\nto play hockey, and from whom a\nstrong intermediate team could be\nbuilt, little hope is entertained of\nan entry from this district unless Mr.\nAlbo of Rossland, who has other\nyears sponsored a team, breaks out\nof his seclusion, or some other enterprising group or individual steps\nforward. I am sure that those who\nare anxious to play and not quite\ngood enough to catch on with the\nMiners or Smoke Eaters would pay\npart of their expenses or find other\nways of financing the team.\nThe 6-4 defeat of the Lethbridge\nMaple Leafs at the hands of the\nTrail Smoke Eaters substantiates\nmy belief that the Rossland victory\nwas won on fair grounds, and not\non the \"sardines in a can\" excuse\nthat Duke Waiman, the Lethbridge\ncoach, would have the fans believe.\nOnly four of the, Rossland Miners\nhad previous game experience on\nRossland ice- Lethbridge might have\nhad what the critics would call\nbigger names, but Rossland had a\nbetter defence than Duke Waiman's\noutfit, and the forwards were four\ngoals to one better. Considering the\nnumber of exhibition games and the\nexperience of playing together that\nthe Lethbridge club had before\nmeeting Rossland, I believe credit\nis due, rather than an excuse for the\ndefeat. No, Hockey Fans, that win\nand the previous one were not accomplished by mere chance.\nAs this column will not appear\nagain until after the Christmas holiday, I wish you a Merry Christmas.\nHigh School Drops\nStiff Hoop Battle\nto Old Crocks 23-19\nNelson High school basketballers,\nalthough turning in their best performance of the season, were unable\nto hold down the league-leading\nOld Crocks in a senior battle Monday night- The final count was 23-19.\nPacing lhe victors Jim Cherrington rang the bell for on even dozen\npoints. George Russell and Jim Allan led the school boys with six\npoints apiece. \\\nTeams and scorers were:\nOld Crocks \u2014 Jim Cherrington.\n12; George Wallach, 5; Jack Clements, 4; Alex Ioanin, 2; Bob Patterson.\nHigh school \u2014 George Russell, 6;\nJim Allan, 6; Duffy Stewart. 3; Ken\nMcBride, 4; tlob Crerar, Howard\nCampbell, Nick Apostoliuk, Bob\nMorris and Frank Raukuc.\nPicking'up only one point out of\na possible six in three league games\nhas by no means made-tbe Dynamiter camp downhearted. The boys\nrealize that it's quite a-handicap to\novercome' this lead they have spotted Lethbridge and Trail, but they\nfigure to make It up, Thoy realize\nthat\" competition Is going, to be\ntough alt tha way, but ths old spirit is good, and we all'know the\nability is there, so don't thiol, the\nChamps are down and put Monday\nnight Achtzener had the 'boys out\nand put them through their paces\nin no uncertain manner, A month\nlate start on teams such as the\nLeafs and Smoke Eaters is no joke\nand the club is working hard to\nmake up for that period ot titna.\nTheir condition is improving all the\ntime and their timing is the main\nfault at this moment, but that will\nsqon adjust itself. We have never\nseen so many chances missed by split\nseconds as we did '\" the game with\nLethbridge on Saturday night\u2014all\na matter of timing.\nPOST MORTEM\nJust a short resume of Saturday's\ngame. This bunch of boys representing Lethbridge are one sweet\noutfit. They back check from tho\ndrop of the hat, and break very very\nfast. This Kirkpatrick-Mclndoe-Ur-\nsaki line is one of the nicest combinations we have ever seen in action on Kimberley ice since the\narena was built. If they click as well\nin the West Kootenay as they did\nover here Saturday night, fans in\nthat district are in for fine entertainment. Tiie defence is also very\ngood, and the three boys who took\ncare of lhat position on Saturday\nwere just'as good in their offensive work as in their defensive duties. Young, the goalie, is also high\nclass.\nThe Kimberley team, for more\nthan halt the game looked far from\nthe Dynamiters of old. The other\nhnlf of the game they were ace high,\nSwede Hornquist was beaten seven\ntimes, but could hardly he blamed\nfor any of them. .Johnny Pratt on\ndefence played a bang-up game and\nwas most valuable. Burnett and\nBrown rounded out the defence,\nond worked hard, but are not as yet\nright up to form. Tom Almack was\nnot used, but in practice is going\ngreat guns.\nThe famous \"kid\" line of the\nDynamiters finds Red Goble on the\nwing that used to belong to Ken\nMoore. Most of the topic of conversation in the gloomy aftermath\ncentred around this line. We refuse to be drawn into any argument. You folks can Judge for yourselves when you see the team. On\nthe second line Achtzener used Cria\nSoreson flanked by - Wilson and\nKemp. Ness and Barlbeau were not\nin uniforms.\nWe believe this season's team will,\nin time, come up to standards set by\nDynamiters' of the past Jew seasons. Don't take them too lightly,\nbecause they have been licked twice\nby the boys from the prairie. _\nCALLED THEM CLOSE\nAnd now a few compliments to\nthe referees, a feature not often\nheard of. Kimberley Dynamiters\ntook eight penalties to their opponents' three. The officials in\ncharge were Reddick of Kimberley\nand Viney of Lethbridge, and they\ndid a swell job. They called them\nvery close, but very impartially,\nand kept the game in check all the\nway. When the old thumb went up\nto signal one of the boys to the cooler, it was a deserved rest.\nThe Kimberley Arena was Jammed\nto the rafters for this first senior\ngame in two winters, and the customers sure got their money's worth.\nNELSON DAILY NW\u00bb. NIUON, l.ft-THUMOAY M0HNIN9, D\u00abC. H. 1HT. \u2014\nBurnett and Almack;. Mackie, IUd;\nding ana doMe; Pratt, Wilson and\nNet.; Barlbeau. .   '  \u25a0 \u2022\nColeman\u2014Colagrasso; Joyce, Hill\nand Johnson; Ainsworth, Landiak\nand  Lopichuk;  Jenkins,   Schnepp\nand Fraser: Brown. !\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u20141, Kimberley, Goble\n(Hackle), 8:30; 2, Kimberley, Pratt\n(Wilson),  14:10.\nPenalty\u2014Burnett.\nSecond period\u20143, Coleman, Ainsworth, 11:00; 4, Kimberley, Redding\n(Mackie), 13:15; 5, Kimberley, Wilson (Pratt), 16:25.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nThird period\u20146, Coleman, Landiak (Ainsworth), 0:50; 7, Ktmberley,\nRedding (Brown), 2:44; 8, Kimberley, Goble (Redding, Mackie),.14:50;\n9, Kimberley, Wilson (Neff), 17:00;\n10, Coleman, Schnepp (Lopichuk),\n18:10. '\u25a0'_..'\u25a0_\u25a0 .\nOfficials-Mackle and Reddick.\nKIMBBRLIY. B.C, Dec. 24-Hlt-\nting.a high scoring pace for the first\ntime this season, Kimberley Dyna-.\nmiters smashed out a 7-3 win over\ntbe Coleman Canadians ln a clean\nhockey game here tonight Dynamiters scored two goals Tn the first\nperiod, added another pair in the\nsecond, and rounded out tbe night's\nperformance with three more in the\nthird.\nCanadians fought back hard but.\nwere unable to keep pace with the\nDynamiters team, which looked like\nthe club of two seasons ago. Goble\nand Pratt scored Kimberlcy's two\ngoals in the first period, which was\nmarked by the only penalty of the\ngame. This went to Bill Burnett for\ncross-checking Ainsworth.\nKID LINE CLICK\nThe Kimberley kid lino clicked\nfor the third goal for the locals,\nRedding getting the marker. Wilson\nbanged in No. 4, taking a perfect\npass from Pratt, Ainsworth of Coleman scored the Pass team's only\ngoal of the period on a long shot\nfrom the blue line. The Dynamiters\ndisputed the point hotly.\nLandiak caught the Dynamiters\nnapping In the first minute ot the\nthird period to score Coleman's\nSecond goal of the game. Redding,\nGoble and Wilson then added three\ngoals. to the Kimberley count to\nmake it 8-3. A Coleman- ganging attack ln the last three minutes ot\nplay brought results in the form of\none more goil scored by Schnepp.\nLineupsjollow:\nDynamiters \u2014 Campbell; Brown.\nAorangl Sails\nWilli Canada's\nHopes lo Games\n78 Leave Vancouver\nfor Lbtig jaunt to\nAustralia\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP)-The\ntrans-Pacific liner Aorangl bearing Canada's powerful team of 78\nto the British Empire games at\nSydney, Australia, steamed out of\nport here at 4:30 p.m. today, SVs\nhours behind^ schedule.\n \u2014 PAGE SEVEN\nThe crack amateur contingent\nlined the deck rails as the big green\nand white vessel backed into the\nharbor, then headed about tor the\nsix-hour run to Victoria, last stop\nbefore starting the Pacific crossing. Pat and Joe Haley ot Trail,\ntrack and field entries, were among\nthose on board.\nFriends, relatives and other well-\nwishers waved good luck to the\ndeparting athletes, selected after\nrecent trials from the cream of\nCanada's amateur talent\u2014boxing,\nwrestling, swimming, track and\nfield and lawn bowling.\nTo the final list was added a\npair of cyclists, I. Lampard of Toronto and G. Graves of Montreal.\nMorris Robinson of Vancouver was\nthe third wheelman making the\ntrip.\nTrack and field represenlativcs\nnumbered 87, with 18 swimmers, six\nboxers and four wrestlers.\nthe defence area of a team that\nclears the puck the length of the\nice to relieve pressure when they\nare not shorthanded came Into play\nseveral times Saturday in the second period, with the Leafs respon-\nsibe. Viney and Reddick both called\nthe play a couple of times. It. looks\nlike a good rule all the way. Kimberley fans saw the red penalty line\nfor tiie first time, but it was not\nused.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nKimberley fans will witness Coleman and then Nelson ln action next,\nand following on that will be the\nTrail Smoke Eaters. Rossland will\nbe the last of the clubs to put in\nan appearance.\n* \u2022  \u2022\nWe were warned that personal\nopinions were not to enter too freely\ninto this cplumn, so to conform with\nthese Instructions we will bring\nthis first offering to a close, with\nthe opinion, that West Kootenay\nfans will still find the Dynamiters\nputting up an entertaining brand\nof hockey and that they will, if they\nlose, go down fighting, Kootenay\nfans pulled hard for the club when\nthey were fighting for the Allen\ncup, and the boys will try and show\nthem they appreclete it.\nHOCKEY\nALTA, SENIOR SIX\nOlds 4, Calgary Bronks S.\nA product of the\nGrape... Perfectly\nAged in the Wood\nThe rule calling for a face-off ln\nPresident's Rinks\nHave Cinch Hold\nPrexies' Tourney\nPresident's curlers, lifting their\ncount 74 points against 4. by the\nVice-President's, Tuesday night took\na cinch hold on the Nelson Curling\nclub's President vs. Vice-Presidents\ntourney. With but one game, Roy\nPollard vs. J. J. McEwan, remaining to be played the President's rinks\nlead by 232-190.\nResults ot Tuesday's play, with\nPresident's rinks first, follow:\nHoward Bush 12, T. R. Wilson J.\nS. P. Bostook 8, G. S. Godfrey 0,\nR. D. Hall 8, C. E. Mansfield 10.\nJ. M. Gordon 11, Syd Haydon 7.\nA. E. Murphy 10,-J. R, McLennan\n4.\nDave Laughton 14, Robert Smillie\n11.\nL. S. McKinnon 11, C. T. McHardy\n5.\nU. OF ALBERTA\nBEATS GONZAGA\nSPOKANE, Dec. 22 (AP) - A\nsmooth working University of Alberta hockey team literally \"skated\nrings around\" the Gonzaga Bulldogs\nhere tonight to take a lop-sided B-8\nvictory in Spokane's first intercollegiate hockey match.\nHills advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor; Control Board or by the Government o{ British Columbia;.\nSURREY WINS\nPORTSMOUTH. Eng., Dec. 221\n(CP Cable)\u2014Surrey defeated Hampshire 12-6 in a county rugby championship match played here today.\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Llquoi Control Board or bv the Government of British Columbia\n\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\n^mmm^mm\ntm*timmmim^ma^mmaammMmm\n m**>\nS^PPW^PWpp\n,\nKOI EIGHT.\nPat and Joe Haley of Trail Out\non Ocean Heading lor Australia\nto Seek Sport Laurels tor Canada\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP) \u2014A\n; piir of towering young athletes left\n\u25a0 today on the trans-Pacific liner\nAorangi with the Canadian team\nto the British Empire Games In\n. Australia, one of the two brother\n- combinations making the trip.\nJoe Haley, who tops the six foot\nmark by two inches, and his younger brother, Pat, who has two inches\non Joe, left wilh hopes of adding\nEmpire laurels lo the Canadian high\njump championships they already\nhold. Their home is at Trail, B. C.\nThe other brother combination\nis of H. Brown and W. Brown, Mea-\ntord, Ont., twins, both on the track\nand field squad.\nJoe Haley holds the Canadian\nsenior high jump championship.\nHis official mark was six feet\n3% Inches, made at tht last Cana\ndian Olympic trials In Montreal,\nHe will enter only In his specialty\nat 8ydney.\nJUNIOR CHAMPION\nPat, who plana to compete in the\n100-yard dash and the relay in addition to jumping, Is Canada's junior champion high jumper. It will\nbe his first trip for, competition\noutside Canada, but Joe has two previous jaunts lo his credit.\nThe elder brother tied with\nThacker of South Africa and Mit-\nchie of Scotland in the 1934 Games\nat London. Each cleared the bar at\nsix feet three inches. In the jumpoff\nThacker was placed first and Joe\nsecond.\nJoe aso travelled to' the Berlin\nOlympics in 1936.\nTlie boys were born in Pictou, N. S.\nand came to British Columbia 12\nyears ago, when their parents moved\nto Trail.\nThey, lay out their own training\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C,\nroutine and act as coach to each\nother.\nJoe is 23 and Pat 19.\nOut of the By Eric Ramsden\nBOX\nCAUGHT ON THE\nREBOUND\nNoticed a Vancouver reporter reported Bruins were \"badly handicapped by the loss of Munro Tully\nand Stu Paterson\". when they lost\n3-2 to panadians. 'tother night. . . .\nTribute is paid in the same story to\n\"Shrimp\" Milne,. Canadians' goalie.\n. \u25a0 . Milne used to be in Rossland.\n... Remember his whiskers?\nHockey greetings to hand from\n\"Gus\" McDonald and Johnny Wadsworth of Trail, president and secretary of the B.CA.H.A. . . . they're\nreciprocated, .fellows, and more\npower to,you.....-, -   ' \u2022\nYou may have missed it, but this\nis worth a whole page in the record\nbook. . , .When Lethbridge made\nits final drive against Trail the boys\nscored three goals in. two and a\nhalf minutes ... eight points in that\ntime ... of which Kirkpatrick collected three points and Mclndoe\ntwo . . . that's scoring.\nThree members of the Lethbridge\nLeafs, Jim Mclndoe, Bob Kirkpatrick and Johnny, Ursaki, bet two\nof their home town medicos that the\nLethbridge first string, themselves,\nwould score three goals against\nKimberley Dynamiters ... the\namount was nine simoleons .. \u2022 they\nscored four ,to win the bet... but\ntheir winnings and their own bets\ngorfo the Lethbridge Herald Christmas cheer fund . . . which was to\nget the winnings in any case , . ,\nbut it was a sporting bet....\nDown Fort William way a referee\nknotted his brows as to whether a\ngoalie was committing a breach of\nthe rule that calls for a faceoff after\nclearing the puck down the ice....\nIn one game a goalie made several\nsuch clearances.... F. W. Edwards,\nsports commentator, could find\nnothing in the rule book, nor'any\nofficlal opinion, to prohibit him doing it. . . . But a goalie may not\nthrow the puck forwards... \u2022\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00bb\nDick Matthews of the Lethbridge\nHerald is quite gleeful over the suggestion of Jack Kelly, sports ed of\nthe Edmonton Bulletin, that the\nnew year might bring a shakeup in\nAlberta hockey, with Lethbridge\nand Coleman being invited to play\nin their own. back yards by realignment of of the Alberta Senior\nSix to form northern and southern\ndivision. , . .\nMatthews adds:\n\"Lethbridge and Coleman officials\nare still seething at the manner in\nwhich they were cold-shouldered\nwhen they applied for admittance\nto the Senior Six. . . .\n\"Just what hockey fans In the\ncentral and northern part of the\nSi-ovince think of their league has\neen indicated in no uncertain\nmanner in the box office receipts.\nLowest gate at an exhibition game\nin Lethbridge is better by several\nhundred than the best gates at\nleague games played in Edmonton\nor Calgary. . . \u2022\nNO COMPARISON\nIN CALIBRE\n\"There is no comparison in the\ncalibre of hockey played in the\ntwo leagues, and Lethbridge promoters and fans know it. With\ndrawing cards like Kimberley\nDynamiters, Trail Smoke Eaters\nand Coleman Canadians included\nin the circuit, what kind of chumps\nwould wc be to desert the Kootenay\nleague to play against teams in the\nSenior Six?\n\"As for tlie statement 'Lethbridge\nand Coleman are in the Kootenay\ncircuit for the first half of the\nseason only and may withdraw\nthen', somebody has been pulling\nFriend Jack's leg. The schedule for\nthe entire season has been drafted\nand Lethbridge and Coleman will\nbe in there to the end.\n\"Question of receipts to the B.C.\narid Alberta hockey associations is\nalso more or less beside the point-\nIt is up to the two associations to\ncome to some kind of an agreement\nin this regard.   The A.A.H.A. exe\ncutive can't order teams in and out\nof leagues just to suit their own\nfinancial. ends.\n\"We don't forget.\".\nBLUENOSE MAY BE\nOUT OF PICTURE\nHALIFAX, Dec. 22 (CP)-Lack of\nfunds for overhauling might prevent the Lunenburg, N.S., schooner\nBluenosc from defending her title\nas champion of the North Atlantic\nfishing fleet next year.\nfhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nBASEBALL CLUB SOLD\nSEATTLE,   Dec.   22   (AP)-Sale\nof the Seattle Pacific Coast base- I\nball club to Emil Sick, Seattle brewer,   was   approved  last  night   by |\nstockholders.\n\"'*\"!' '\"\"linn iiiiiwnrwun\nThe\nRoyal\nChooses for\nYour Comfort~\nRestmore\nThe Quality\nMade in B.C.\nLine of-\nBeds\nInner Spring\nMattresses\nDressers\nand other\nFurniture\nWe extend our\nbest wishes to\nthe\nManagement of\nthe Royal Hotel\nand are glad to\nhave had the\nprivilege of\nsupplying their\nrequirements\nthrough our\nNelson Dealer-\nJ. P. Morgan\nRestmore\nM\u00a3g. Co.. Ltd.\nVancouver, B.C.\n-THURSDAY MORNINQ. DEC, 23, 1937.\nNELSON'S NEWEST HOTEL (FORMERLYTHE ALLEN) REMODELLED AND REFURNISHED NOW OPEN UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF THAT WELL KNOWN DISTRICT HOTEL\nPROPRIETOR\u2014ALF. A. VASSAR.\nAF a bull's-eye whisky is your\ngame, set your sights on\nHiram Walker's OLD RYE, for\nsmoother whisky never came\ndown the trail! It's a really ripe\nwhisky at a really right price.\n16 Ox. $1.50\n25 0*. $2.25\nDouble Your Enjoyment with. %mm \/ft.\nfRODUC. OF HIRAM WALKER \u00bb SOUS, LIMITED, CANADA. '\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control board or by (Vie Government of British Columbia.\nQood Luck to the\nRoyal Hotel\nThe plumbing and heating installation is another example of quality workmanship completed by our men.\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING & HEATING\nCO., LTD.\nSUCCESS AND BEST WISHES\nto Mr. A. A. Vassar\nAll electrical contracting at the Royal\nHotel is our workmanship.\nStandard Electric\nWard St.      JACK HOOGERWERF      Phone 838\nNeon Sign Agents and Electrical Contractors\nBest Wishes\nTO THE\nRoyal Hotel\nALTERATIONS WERE\nCARRIED OUT BY\nJohn Ahrens\nNELSON, B. C.\nROSEMONT\nGood Wishes to Mr. A. A. Vassar\nProprietor of the Royal Hotel\nMay his new venture have a long\nand successful life amongst Nel-.\nson businesses.\nCater ina Pisapio\n(Mrs. M. Scally)\nOwner of Building\nCongratulations\nTo Mr. A. A. Vassar\non the Opening of the\nROYAL HOTEL\nComplete Furnishings Were\nSupplied by\nJ. R MORGAN\nNEW and USED FURNITURE\nPhone 47\nBaker St.\nAgents for:\nNelion, B. C.\nRestmore Mfg. Co., Limited; Cault Bros,, Limited;\nand Other Leading Companies.\nAnnouncing\u2014\nThe Opening of the\nFORMERLY KNOWN AS THE ALLEN\n326 BAKER STREET\nUnder the Management of A. A. Vassar\nCOMPLETELY REFURNISHED AND REMODELLED\nTHROUGHOUT, HOT AND COLD WATER IN EACH\nROOM, EVERYTHING TO INSURE THE UTMOST\nIN COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE. NO EXPENSE\nHAS BEEN SPARED TO HAVE IT ONE OF THE INTERIOR'S FINEST HOTELS AND THE TRAVEL-\nLING PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED TO MAKE\nTHE ROYAL ITS NELSON HEADQUARTERS.\u2014\nYOU'LL LIKE THE LOCATION.\nTRANSIENT AND\nPERMANENT GUESTS\nMODERATE\nRATES\nSERVICE THAT\nPLEASES ALWAYS\nStop at \"the Royal\" for\nComfort and Convenience\nLICENSED PREMISES\n'\u25a0\u2022^\u25a0^^\u25a0\u25a0-\u00abA_i-Milte^ \u25a0    . | \u25a0 _____ __..\/\u201e\u201e___ |    .:..\n \u2014 ' - \u25a0\n<**&***\u25a0\u25a0: \u25a0      \u25a0 --'rifrlwrim\nv_ \u2022\u25a0 _i .''\u25a0\u25a0\u00ab_'\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0    -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'--\u25a0-. ;'.'\u25a0\u2022   ,\nmmm^MMmtM\n-\n\u25a0.    . .     \u25a0-. ,        .;\n________________\n~\n *%^-jm$F?.\nw^W^^^^^^^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-THUR8DAY MORNING. DEC. 23, 1937.\nASSISTTOBE ALLOWED FOR GOAL\nSCORED ON REBOUND IN THE N.H.L\n.NEW YORK, Dec. 22 (CP)-The\nfederation ot minor and professional hockey leagues stole the spotlight\nfrom tbe. big-timers here today when\n;lt virtually decided to stage play\noffs for the \"minor league championship of the world,\"\nMaurice Fodolott .of New Haven,\npresident of the association formed\nlast spring, also announced the In-\nIHE LARGEST  SELLIHG\n.on... rle in confinn\nI .^^\nv\\ \u25a0\/-\nJmtt-\ntstee vouimI! and your tttessis a not tnathy\nseMrte Chu lln\u00ab,-'imooth\u00abr,,rich\u00ab, mefl-w\u00bbd\nof- cm duiina Ih. holiday moho. Mob'ynt\nVotty ct eure success by ordering a supply from\nyour mamt liquor tton today. Nol\u00bb:-F-r\nyiTOMlKtctlllliHondacaMolBtlKXlIOnSE\n(li\u00ab-TOut lilcnds will-oppredoto your wod\nHaiti'\n. romME \u00bbr no,\nGOVERNMENT UQVOH .MOW\n\u25a0This advertisement i$ not published or displayed by the Liquor\nContror Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nternatlonal-American   league,   tht\nAmerican association and the Pacific\ncoast, league would adopt the three,\nminor rule changes decided upon by\nthe National league board of governor! in jenion her*> ' *\n' Tht N. H. L. heads, In a powwow prior to the testimonial banquet for President Frank Calder,\nof Montreal tonight, cleaned up\n: an old controversy by ruling that\na player Is entitled to an assist\non a goal scored irom a rebound.\nThe move Wis a reversal\" of the\npresent rule but brought the rule-\nbook in line with the opinion of most\nscorers. In the circuit who have\nbeen crediting assists on rebounds\nthis season to date. To balance' the\njioint-scoring problem, it wat also\nruled no assist will be awarded a\nplayer who starts a scoring play\nfrom behind centre ice,  *\nAlso amended wat the rule on icing the puck. If contending teams\nare on even strength and a player\nshoots from his defensive .one tad\nthe puck goes into the net, it shall\nbe scored as\\a goal,\nCONNIE MACK IS\n75 YEARS OF AGE\nPHILADELPHIA, Dec. 22 (API-\nConnie Mack, the \"grand old gentleman\" of baseball, celebrates his 75th\nbirthday tomorrow, \u00bb\nMack, spending most pf his time\n,at home these days recovering his\nstrength lost in an illness during\nthe late baseball season, says he is\ngoing to continue managing Philadelphia Athletics as long as he can.\nSo happy were Rossland Miners\nand the fans who have been cheering them for a long time with a\nlump in their throats, following Miners' victory over Lethbridge we feel\nsure you could have smacked anyone of them on the kisser and, they,\nwould have said \"Thanks.\"\nWhen we walked Into tht dressing room' of Miners following tht\ngame wt understood tht thrill\nNapolton mutt have received with\nvictory. For fIvt yean we've walked Into\" that dressing room at the\nfar and of tht Rossland rink but\nnever wat tha atmosphere at\nglowing at It was on this occasion.\nThere's a reason, and a good one.\nAfter Rossland was, defeated 10-1\nby Trail in their first game of the\nloop here, everyone figured Miners'\nchances of picking off wins were\nmighty slim. It it different now. For\nthe team considered the most likely\none to slump into the cellar walloped the undefeated Lethbridge\nLeafs. And what makes it more,pu_-\nzllng Is that Miners defeated the\nsquad  that   took  into   camp   the\nInsist on Grant's Best Procurable\u2014The Original\nFor Sale at Vendor, or Direct From \"Mall Order Dept',\nLiquor Control Board, 847 Beatty St, Vancouver, B.C.\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nhighly publicized Kimberley Dynamiters.\n,\u25a0\u2022\u2022.*\nDespite results to date, many ]ust\nwon't believe whit hat happened.\nThey are looking for excuses for\nKimberley on every hand. Some argued black and blue that Lethbridge\nJust took lt on the chin at a \"come\nalong.\" Some said Kimberley and\nColeman had a bad start, only having a practice game before entering\nthe Wett Kootenay loot).\nPerhaps so, we tty, but Rossland\ndidn't go to prep school either.\nMiners were badly broken when\nthey lost four of their met. to Gonzaga university'. Spokane. Wouldn't\nthese boys feel a bit upset if Rossland won the league championship';\nYou say that is impossible? Humph,\nafter that game at Hossland Monday\nnight nothing's Impossible in the\nleagUe this year,\n\u25a0'..'\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\u00bb.\nWe can't help thinking about\nMorln's predictions since lie has\nbeen in the Kootenays. Practically every one he has made has\nturned out accordingly. He didn't\npredict on every turn, and the law\nof averages didn't help him, but\nhe has given his opinion of the\noutcome from .time to time, and a\nhigh percentage of them have been\ntrue.\nMorin, after being defeated 10-1\nby Trail and then beating Nelson,\nwt\u00bb mighty proud of the crew he\nproduced in that second battle. He\nhad reason to be, for they have\nbeaten the eastern division champions. Morin taid Smoke Eaters\nwouldn't beat him by five goals as\nthey had Nelson, and from what hit\nteam has just done, we shouldn't\nthink so either.\n* '\u00bb -.\nLethbridge it supposed to have a\nhunch of expert and seasoned players. But Miners consist of many juniors playing their first season in\nsenior company. And many of those\njuniors made Lethbridge look\nwoozy. Smith, Cowland and LaCree\nare three of those juniors, anil their\nstick handling baffled the boys in\nthe dark uniforms. Maurice Williams is playing his first season Of\nsenior hockey. Apparently the Min-\ners have confidence in him, and that\nmeans a whole lot\nC. A. H. A. hockey laws:\n\"No, 5\u2014Each rink shall be provided with seats or benches for the\nuse of players ot both teams. Such\nseats or benches shall have accommodation for at least 14 persons\nand shall be placed immediately\nalongside the ice as near to the center of the rink as possible and conveniently adjacent to the dressing\nrooms. None but players ln uniform,\nmanager, trainer and coach shall be\npermitted to occupy the bench as\nprovided.\n\"No. 6\u2014Each rink must be provided with a bench capable ot seating eight persons, for. the use of\npenalty' timekeeper, timekeeper,\nscorer and penalized players.\"\nHoliday Cheer\nWhen it's snow-time over here it it tun-time over\nthere\u2014in sunny South Australia. And all the vigor-\nout, health-giving properties of tlmt sunshine are\nyours-for-the-osklng in every bottle of full-bodied,\nrich EMU Ports. They are beautifully mellow wines,\nequal to the finest. non-Empire vintage* and, because they are produced under-the-Flag, JEMU Portt\nbring you the full benefit of the Imperial Preference\nTariff. ,\nFIGHTS\nTORONTO\u2014Frankie Oenovese,\n147, Toronto, outpointed George\nSalvador, 143V4, Houston, Texas (10).\nNEW YOHK\u2014Westey Ramey, 139,\nGrand Rapids, Mich., outpointed\nPete Cara, 188%, New York (8).\nLOS ANGELES-Eddle Sims, 198,\nCleveland, and Big Boy Bray, 204,\nLot Angeles, drew.\nDUKE OF KENT GREETS\nGOLFERS OF CANADA\nTORONTO, Dec. 22 (CP) - A\nChristmas greeting for Canadian\ngolfers from Hit Royal Highness\nthe Duke of Kent arrived today by\ncable to tbe Royal Canadian Golf\nassociation, from St Andrew's,\nScotland ' \u2022    .\nHornets Fade Before\nGrocers Attack 28-22\nSnatching bade a lost lead in the\nfading moments of the game, Grocers ran off with a 2T-22 decision over the Hornets, senior men's basketball team, Monday night    7\nTeams and scorers follow:\nI Qnj*e_s\u2014 Howie Bunt, 9; Det McQuaig, J; Colin Baker, 8; Jack Bishop\n4; Gilbert Hunt, 2.\nHornets \u2014.Fred Graves, 12; Dong\nJohnson, B; George Bishop, 3; Bill\nTownsend, 2; Frank Jqnes, Howie\nJeffrey and Frank Koralak.\nGame, Lose Points\nIn a hard fought Midget league\ngame Tuesday morning, the Catholic Boys' club puck-chasers defeated an ever-trying Scout aggregation 3-1. AH four goals were solo\nefforts, Hunden, Defoe and Barney\nPrestley netting for the C. B. C\/s\ntnd Frisby for the Scouts. Frlsbv,\nHundejv (ind Desireau drew penalties. Bud Emery refereed, aided by\nJack Gray as judge ot play.\n; As neither team had qualified for\nleague play by turning in the required age certificates to the Nelson Amateur Hockey association, lt\nwas announced later that the game\nwas a total loss to the two teams,\nthe C.B.C.'s losing the two points\nwon, and the Scouts the two points\nthey might have obtained on the\nCB.C's default had they themselves\nattended to this detail\nTeam were:\nC. B. C. \u2014 Goal, Louis Gagnon;\ndefence, Syd Desireau, Jim Reisterer; forwards, Ernie Defoe, Frank\nChristian, Bob Hunden, Barney\nPrestley, Micky Prestley,\nScouts\u2014Goal, Earl Jorgenson; defence, Dick Hornett, Alan Frisby;\nforwards, Herb Guscott, Martin McLennan, Warren Ferguson, Dalton\nIrvine.\nMM. Bantams\nBeat Fairview\nM.-LK. Bentams, who in two yeari\nhave hardly lost a game to any team\noutside themselves \u2014 in 1838 they\nwere \"twins\"\u2014started league plays\nTuesday morning auspiciously by\ndefeating the Fairview squad 8-2 in\nspite of having lost their entire first\nstring of last year to the M.R.K\nMidgets.. ..\nHielscher tallied thrice for the\nM.R.K7s, twice from combination,\nwhile Whitehead and Slader got the\nother tallies. Matheson and' Norris\ntallied for the F.A.C.'s. Two F_A.Cs,\nHinitt and Ludlow, drew penalties.\nJack Gray refereed, with Leo McKinnon judge of play. Teams were:\nM.R.K.\u2014Qoal, Jim Ritchie; defence, Red Wassick, Bob Percival,\nAlex. Allan, Bob Graham, Jerry Jer-\nram; forwards, Jack Whitehead\/Paul\nHielscher, David Slader, Dick Wassick, Ian Currie, Bernard McNicol,\nBill Holland.\nF.A.C.\u2014Goal, Bill Buchanan; defence, Jack Ludlow, Fred Hinitt,\nJack Greer; forwards, Mac Norris,\nWallace Matheson, John Milne, Doug\nCurrier, Joe Crosby, Charlie Johnston, Billy Ludlow, John Buchanan.\nRookies Score 15-8\nOver C. G. C. Team\nRookies, senior basketball lassies,\ntook a firm stand on the second\nrung ot the. league ladder Monday\nnight when they downed the Catholic Girls'club 15-9.\nThe fair winners played a tight\ndefensive game all the way. Their\nscoring was split between six players. Mary McDougall, star of the C.\nG. C. lineup, ran up seven of their\nnine points.\nTeams and scorers were:\nRookies: Iris Johansson, 4; Phyllis\nWallace, 3; Deanie Wallace, 2; Doreen Long, 2; Hazel Smith, 2; Eva\nHenrickson, 2; Hazel Spiers, Freda\nDunlop, Alice Gillett, Marjorie Todd,\nLillian Fisher and Beulah Greer,\nC, G. C: Mary McDougall, 7;\nBetty Kirkpatrick, 2; Rosa Stewart,\nKay McDougall, Louise Colettl, Lillian Hlckey and Edna Gormley.\nLONDON (CP)-Valuable because\noverprinted \"official\" a 10-shilling\nEdward VII stamp brought \u00a3880\n($4250) at auction here.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by tlie Liquor Control Board ,or, by, ths \u00a3>SWi.n,n'ent of. British Columbia.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by 1he Liquor\nControl Board or by tho Government of British Columbia\nSUGGESTIONS FOR\nn,  PAGE  NINI\nJJ\nYour good taste tnd judgment 1$ timed rwhen yo*\nspecfo B. C. l>UWery Co.\nProducts .. .all gloriously\ntick k'fmor tnd qutdky.\nUSB THB LIST BELOW\nWHEN ORDERING\n'3 STAR\"\nF*2\n13 o\u00bb..\n23 oz,.\n40 oz.\n\"B.C. SPECIAL\"\n16oz._- U-\u00bb\n25 oz.: \u00bb2-\u00ab\n40 oz. ___\u00bb3a\u00bb\n\".6YEAR0LD.D.D.\"\n25 oz _\u00bb2\"\n40 oz M-W\n\u25a0\u25a0 .feti\n\"monogIam\"\n12 oz.\n25 oz.\nr40of._\n\"STERLING\"\n12 oz..\n25 oz..\n$1.00\n_*200\nt.'\/A\n\"PiPttr\n12 oz\t\n25 oz.\t\n_*2-\u00ab\nk***\n\"CALEDONIA\"\n16oz._ __U\u00ab\u00ab\n26 oz \u00bb2\u00bb\nHO oa.      \u25a0      \u00bb3M\n\"SHERRIFFS\"\n26 oz *2\"\n40oz.._____\u00bb3-w\n\"FIVE SCOTS\"\n26oz.__ _\u00bb2*\u00b0\nt\n\"SPEYSIDE\"\n26o*._ W*\nimw*.\nm\n\"RHUM HEGRITA\"\nBottle.\n\u2022^\nVz Bottle\n\"SILK HAT\"\nMartini '& Manhattan\nDry and Extra Dry.\n25oz.____J\u00bb20*\n\"BARDINET\"\n12 Varieties\u2014\n*2-9\u00ab ami *3-<>\u00bb\n4 Compartment\nBottles \u00bb7-W\nThe BRITISH COLUMBIA DISTILLERY Co. Ltd.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\n_..,_\u25a0[\n-\u25a0s,?-:'^-.m_-:,.,L.i,.-.)-   ..    i .\nVs..     a,--Ai,iA.Vii ^'itMsMt.,,    u\u201e       \u25a0 _,^. ^^..^J^^.^.^^\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING. DEC. 28. 1937.\nRent the Spare Room Make It Help Pay Expenses Phu 144\nHalleran Recitals\nPlease Big Crowds\nMr. and Mrs. C C, Halleran of\nthe Halleran studios presented an\nextremely pleasing and interesting\nrecital by their students in Trinity\nUnited church hall twice Tuesday.\nA \"full house\" greeted both afternoon and evening presentations,\nwhich included piano solos, along\nwith something new introduced into\nNelson, pre-school singing and\nrhythm band numbers. Particularly\ninteresting were the pre-school age\nsinging and rhythm band selections,\nwhich included Mother Goose songs,\nsinging game, folk dancing and\na dramatization, \"Pirates and Robbers\", by children ranging between\nthe ages of six, seven and eight\nyears. The rhythm band, which the\nHallerans have introduced into Nelson, is composed of boys and girl-\nbetween the ages of five and 12\nyears. The pre-school singing and\ndramatization was also introduced\nby Mrs. Halleran.\nPROGRAM\nThe program as presented follows:\nDemonstration of pre-school singing and rhythm by the junior class;\npiano solo, \"Jolly Roger\", Clara\nKing; Austrian folk dances, Mollie\nArneson, Bubbles Hawes, Dorothy\nHarrison and Dawn Spencer; piano\nsolo, \"On the Meadow\", Doreen\nManahan; dance, \"Rustic Courtship\",\nGlenys Mansell and David Town-\nsend; piano duet, \"March\", Donald\nHunter and Ted Affleck; piano solo,\n\"Flower Song\", Constance Manahan; tap dance, \"School Days\",\nGlenys Mansell, Carol Fetterley,\nSylvia Fetterley and David Town-\nsend; piano solos, \"Frolic in the\nForest\" and \"Lament\", Ted Affleck;\nhigh school tap dance, Audrey Maxwell, Merriam Armstrong, Bernice\nMarapodi and Fay Johnson; piano\nsolo, \"The Butterfly\", Kay Manahan; chorus, \"Dashing Away With\na Smoothing Iron\" and \"Jenny\nWren\", junior singing and rhythm\nclass; piano duet, \"Romance\", Constance Manahan and Virginia James;\nrhythm band selection, rhythm\nband; piano solo, \"Fifth Nocturne\",\nDonald Hunter; dramatization, \"Pirates and Robbers\", junior singing\nand rhythm class; piano solo, \"Gypsy Dance\", Virginia James; vocal\nsolos, \"One Fine Day\" and \"Smile\nof Spring\", Mrs. James Stallwood;\npiano duet, \"Valse Gracieuse\", Kay\nand Doreen Manahan. John Riddock\nwas cashier.\nFORMER BELGIAN PREMIER\nINVITED TO LONDON\nTO DISCUSS ECONOMICS\nLONDON, Dec. 22 (AP) - The\ngovernment invited former Premier\nPaul Van Zeeland of Belgium to\nLondon to present his world economic survey.\nHe was commissioned by Great\nBritain and France to make the\nsurvey last summer.\nGOES TO |AIL RATHER\nTHAN PAY TAXES TO BE\nSPENT ON ARMAMENTS\nBROMLEY, Kent, Dec. 22 (CP\nCable)\u2014F. C. Ade, schoolmaster at\nEltham college, went to prison for\nseven days today rather than pay\ntaxes to be spent on armaments.\nADJOURN DR. LAMBERT\nFASCIST CASE IN QUE.\nMONTREAL, Dec. 22 (CP)\u2014Dr.\nGabriel Lambert, Montreal Fascist\nleader, sought in court today to\nJustify his action in urging a group\nof university of Montreal students\nto prevent a Communist meeting\nIn northend Mount Royal arena two\nmonths ago.\nConducting his own defence at\npreliminary inquiry into a charge\nof indicting to riot, the blue-shirt-\ned Fascist, a red swastika on either\narm, sat quietly in a corner of the\ncrowded courtroom with Adrien\nArcand, leader of the National\nSocial Christian (Fascist) party,\nuntil his case was called.\nThe crowd was dispersed but the\nofficers said in their opinion there\nwas no disorder and peace had not\nbeen disturbed.\nCATTLE WILL PERISH\nUNLESS FEED INCREASED\nSASKATOON, Dec. 22 (CP) -\nBetween 30 and 40 per cent ot the\ncattle and horses in Saskatchewan's\ndrought area will die before spring\nIf feed quotas are not increased.\nTHREE TO HANG\nHUNTINGTON, W.A., Dec. 22\n(AP) \u2014 A triple execution was\nordered today for three ex-convicts convicted of kidnapping Dr.\nJames Seder, 79-year-old retired\ndry leader, who later died.\nJudge H. Clay Warth directed\nArnett A. Booth, 46, John Travis,\n25, and Orville Adkins, 24, be\nhanged.\nROB ONTARIO BANK\nMAPLE, Ont., Dec. 22 (CP) -\nTwo armed men robbed the Maple\nbranch of the Canadian Bank of\nCommerce of $300 today, escaping\nln n .stolen car.\nFIVE DIE IN FIRE\nCONNELLSVILLE, Pa, Dec. 22,\n(AP) \u2014 Five persons perished today in flames which destroyed their\nisolated home near here while they\nslept.\nThe dead: William Yothers, 71,\nhis sister, Annie Yothers, 69, Wilmer D. Crow, Jean Crow, and Ann-\nabelle Crow, all under 16 years.\nFEWER UNEMPLOYED\nEDMONTON, Dec. 22 (CP) -\nDrop of 1218 in total jobless registered with the Alberta provincial\nemployement service was recorded\nduring the week ended Saturday as\ncompared with the same week in\nDecember, 1936.\nPICKETS OUSTED\nPARIS, Dec. 22 (AP) \u2014 Police\nousted strike pickets from a score\nof wholesale food warehouses and\nstores today as iney enforced the\ngovernment's warning that sit-in\nstrikes would not be tolerated.\nMOORS IN SPAIN?\nLONDON. Dec. 22 (CP-Havas) -\nThe Daily Herald. Labor organ,\ncharged today Premier Mussolini\nsent 8000 Moors from Italian East\nAfrica to Spain during the past\nfortnight.\nLethbridge Hockey\nMen Address Trail\nGyros ot Luncheon\nTRAIL, B.C., Dec. 22-Trail Gyros\nwere entertained Tuesday by addresses on the West Kootenay\nHockey league by H. J-. Thole, manager of the Lethbridge Leafs and\nHenry Viney, referee accompanying the club, at their regular supper\nmeeting in Crown Point palm room\ntonight. Mr. Viney is also the announcer for radio broadcasts of\nhockey games in the eastern section. Reed Chapman, who gives the\nplay by play description over the\nradio of games in the western section spoke to the club also.\nHEALYDIEDOF\nNATURAL CAUSES\nLOS ANGELES, Dec. 22 <AP)-\nPolice said they would drop further investigation of a mysterious\nfist fight involving Ted Healy after\nan autopsy indicated today that the\nfilm   comedian   died   of   natural\nTrail Rotary Club\nEnjoys Carol Singing\nTRAIL, B.C., Dec. 22\u2014Accompanied by the music provided by G. G.\nRennison on his violin and Gwilym\nJones at the piano. Trail Rotary\nclub members sang Christmas carols\nat their regular luncheon meeting\nin Crown Point palm room Tuesday.\nIt was announced that Dr. Ernest\nCleveland, past president of the\nEngineering Institute of Canada,\nwould address the meeting next\nTuesday.\nH. J. Thole, manager of the Lethbridge Maple Leafs Hockey club,\nand Henry Viney, visiting hockey\nreferee, were guests, as were Mr.\nShelleby, Spokane, and J. H\nDoughty, Trail.\n4__ \u2014\nSanta Pays Visit\nTrail Anglicans\nTRAIL, B.C, Dec. 22\u2014Approximately 160 children of St. Andrew's\nAnglican church enjoyed .their annual Christmas tree celebration in\nKnights of Pythias hall here Tuesday. About 60 junior members banqueted in the afternoon, and after\na light supper, to which senior\nmembers sat down, a concert program by the church junior choir,\nconducted by Mrs. R. G. E. Anthony\nwas rendered-\nThe Rev. L. A. Morant, rector,\npresented prizes to Sunday school\npupils. Santa Claus made a hurried\nvisit to the affair and gave each\nyoungster candy and other goodies\nand presented some special prizes.\nSTOLE MAIL BECAUSE\nHE COT NO LETTERS,\nGIFTS FOR CHRISTMAS\nSAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 22\n(AP)\u2014A forgotten man, head\ndown, hands twisting, painfully\ntold his story in United States\nfederal court through an interpreter.\nYes. he, Hugo Zander, had stolen letters from a hotel mailbox.\nHe had not opened them. He did\nnot want money.\nWhy had he stolen? Because,\njudge, it was Christmas.\nBecause everyone else ln his\nhotel had letters, greetings, gifts\nfrom loved ones.\nCASTLE TUMBLES OVER\nCLIFF ON HOMES BELOW\nFORLI, Italy, Dec. 22 (AP)r\nA medieval castle atop a cliff in\nthe village of Civittella Di Rom-\nagna collapsed today arjd tumbled\non to homes lying below, crushing\npossibly 20 persons while they\nslept.\n11-YEAR OLD BREAKS\nLEG FOR 14TH TIME\nBATH, England, Dec. 22 (CP)\n\u2014Kenneth Swart- will spend\nhis ninth Christmas in hospital\nthis year although he is not yet\n11 years old. Last week he slipped and broke his right leg for\nthe sixth time. He has broken\nhis left leg eight times.\nTHREE STUDENTS DIE\nIN AUTOMOBILE CRASH\nMEDICINE LODGE, Kas\u201e Dec. 22\n(AP) \u2014 Three Medicine Lodge high\nschool students were killed and\nthree others injured last night in an\nautomobile accident\nKilled were Wanda Lee Wilson,\n13, Glenna Lee Howard, 15, and\nWayne Strickland, 16.\nCETS FIVE YEARS\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Dec.\n22 (CP) \u2014 Charles Collins, 50-year-\nold resident of a shack was sentenced today to five years in penitentiary on each of three statutory\ncharges of statutory offences. The\nsentences will run concurrently.\nBECOMES \"GHOST TOWN\"\nBROUGHTON, N.S., Dec. 22\n(CP)\u2014Idleness settled over this\nsouthern Cape Breton mining\ncommunity today and once again\nBroughton, scene of an ambitious\ncoal-mining project in the early\npart of the century, became the\nghost-town it was for more than\n20 years. Bad roads prevented\ntrucking of coal.\nTO EMPLOY MORE MEN\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 22 (CP)-Em-\nployment of 187 additional men in\nthe three western shops for a period of six months starting in January was announced today by D.\nC. Coleman of Montreal, vice-president of the Canadian Pacific railway.\nTORONTO TO CELEBRATE!\nTORONTO, Dec. 22 (CP)\u2014Toronto's New Year welcome to 1938\nwill be longer, and probably louder,\nthan any year-end celebration in a\nlong time, thanks to the police department's decision to switch the\ncurfew for dancing to 3:30 a.m. or\nlater.\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION NETWORK\n. 8:00 Democracy at Work; 5:15\nPianists; 5:30 Honolulu Xmas broadcast; 6:00 Streamline; 6:30 Alf\nWallenstein's orch; 7:00 Concert\nHall; 7:30 Canadian Portraits; 7:45\nNews, weather; 8:00 The Farmer\nFiddlers; 8:30 Theatre Time; 9:00\nLet's Go; 9:30 European Gaieties;\n10:00 Book Review; 10:15 News,\nweather; 10:30 Songs to Remember.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI  KPO KOMO\n690     620    640   680      920\n5:00 Rudy Vallee; 6:00 Good News\nof 1938; 7:00 Music Hall; 8:00 Amos\n'n' Andy; 8:15 Standard Symphony\n9:15 I want a divorce; 9:30 Hollywood News; Earl Hines orch.; 10:00\nNews; 10:15 Book Parade; Three\nCheers; 10:30 Orch\u2014Jack Winston,\nJoe Reichman, Ballroom.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO  KJR  KEX  KECA  KGA\n790    970    1180    1430    1470\n5:00   Story   hour;   5:15   The\nSingers; 5:30 The March of Time;\n6:00 Concert hour; 6:30 Town meeting; 7:00 N.B.C. Jamboree; 9:00 Ed\nLebavon's orch.; 8:15 Review; 8:30\nNews; 8:45 Orch.\u2014Fred Nagle. Gar\nWood Van; 9:45 University explorer; 10:00 Orch.\u2014Fletcher Henderson, Jimmy Grier; 11:00 Haven of\nRest; 11:30 Charles Runyan, organist.\nCOLUMBIA  NETWORK\nKVI   KOIN   KNX   KSL   KOL\n570     940      1050    1130    1270\n5:00 Maurice's orch.; 6:00 Major\nBowes' Amateurs; 7:30 We the\nPeople; 8:00 Poetic Melodies; Scat-\ntergood Baines, dr.; 8:15 Screen-\nscoops; 8:30 Kate Smith; 9:30 Richard Himber's orch.; 9:45 Hawaiian\nMoon; 10:15 On the Air with Lud\nGluskin; 10:45 Orch.\u2014Jan Garber,\nTed Fio Rito, Henry King; 11:45\nBlack Chapel, ghost story.\nDON LEE NETWORK\nKOL Seattle\n5:00 Music By; 5:30 Shep Field's\norch.; 6:15 Phantom Pilot; 6:30\nSports; 6:45 News; 7:30 What's New?\n8:00 Don Miam presents; 8:30 Sam\nHayes; 9:00 The Newspaper of the\nAir; 9:30 Shep Field's orch.; 9:45\nInlaws; 10:00 Orch.-Griff Williams,\nHarry Owens, Everett Hoaglund,\nPaul Whiteman and Frank Sortino\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 600 w\n5:00 Cookie Kids; 5:15 Uncle\nMickey's club; 6:00 Concert Hall;\n6:30 Christmas Seal committee; 6:45\nSports, Wrestling interview; 7:30\nSkipper News; 7:45 Michael O'Brien;\n8:00 News; 8:15 This Week; 9:00\nSports: 10:30 News; 10:45 Sports;\n11:00 Slumber Hour.\n910 k\nTrail\nCJAT\n319.6 m\n1000 vi\nTO INSPECT AIRPORTS\nLONDON, Dec. 22 (API-Marshall of the Royal Air Force, Sir\nEdward Ellington, will leave tomorrow for a three-month inspection tour of empire air bases. Sir\nEdward will visit Egypt, India,\nSingapore and Hong Kong.\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:30 Requests; 8:00 Grand Forks bulletin;\n9:00 CBC except: Old Timer; 9:45\nHearts Songs; 10:45 Melodic pipes;\n11;00 Rhythm of Today; 11:15 Stella\nDallas; 11:30 News; 11:45 On Wings\nof Song; 12:00 Easy Aces; 12:15 Spokane Welcomes You; 12:30 Pinto\nPete; 12:45 Sound, drama; 2:00\nWoman's Magazine; 4:00 Lavender\nand Lace; 4:15 Kootenay Echoes;\n5:30 Concert Time; 4:30 Time presents; 5:00 News; 5:15 Talking\nDrums', 5:30 Concert Time; 5:45 Organ reveries; 7:00 Hollywood Spotlight; Police headquarters; 8:00 Melody Time; 8:15 Blair of the Mounted; 8:30 Band Music; 8:45 Home\nFolk Frolic.\nMember ot tha Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE  144\nPrlvata Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy\nBy carrier per week\nBy carrier per year -\n.05\n.25\n13.00\nBy mall In Canada,' to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per mouth 60c;\nXtiree months \u00ab1.80; six months\n43.00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S, same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\n(Minimum 2 lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion $ .22\n2 lines. 6 consecutive\nInsertions  i :   .88\n(6 (or the price of 4)\n3 lines, per Insertion _._ .33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions   _.__ 1.32\n2 lines. 1 month 2.8\n3 lines, l month \u2014~ 4.29\nFor   advertisements   of   mora\nthan three lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox  numbers  lie  extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nBIRTHS\nKNOWLER \u2014 To Mr. and' Mrs.\nDouglas Knowler of Fruitvale, at\nTrail-Tadanac hospital, December 21\na son, Robert Douglas. (Mrs. Knowler was formerly Miss Dorothy Vyse\nof Nelson,)\nCURTIS \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. E.\nCurtis, Silica street, at Kootenay\nLake General hospital, December\n21. a daughter. \t\nHELP WANTED\nEXPERIENCED WAITRESS START\nFriday, L. D. Hotel, Salmo. (4180)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nLADY WOULD LIKE SEWING\nday or hour. Mrs. Doerr, Cabin 3,\nShardelow's Auto Camp.    (4096)\nPERSONAL\nPALMISTRY AND PHRENOLOGY,\n654 Baker St. Will tell your future and past, about your love affairs and business affairs. Don't\nfall to visit Mrs.' Johnson. (4169)\nFRESH SANITARY RUBBER LA-\ntex special grtd. 25 for $1.00, Write\nfor free catalog, National Importers, Box 244, Edmonton, Alta.\n(3800)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubbers. Send $1.00 for 15\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co, 18 Hastings St.,\nW. Vancouver. (3801)\nDOGS, PETS, FOR SALE\nCOCKER SPANIEL PUPS, LIVER\ncolored. 10 weeks old. $8 delivered.\nT. Roynon. (4134)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS,\nETC., FOR SALE\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources, C.P.R, Calgary. Alta\n(3802)\n1030 k CFCN 293,1 m\nCalgary 10,000 v>\n7:00 CKUA; 8:00 George McLeod;\n8:15 Sam Hayes; 9:00 News flashes;\n9; 18 to 12:00 Old Time Dance.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTRANSMISSION 6\nGSD 11.75 mcs. (25.53 m.)\nG8C 9.58 mcs. (31.32 in.)\nGSB 9.51 mcs. (31.65 m.)\n6:00 p.m.\u2014Big Ben. At the Black\nDog. 6:30\u2014B.B.C. Male chorus. 7:10\n\u2014News and announcements. 7:30\u2014\nGershom Partington Trio.\nLet a Want Ad Do It!\nMIXED FARM WITH STOCK AND\nImplements at Salmo, B. C. Box\n4076, Daily News. (4076)\nMUSICAL\nWEBB'S MUSIC\nHOUSE\nCHRISTMAS SALE\nBARGAINS IN\nLarge stock of Band Instruments\nincluding Cornets, Trumpets, Baritones, Saxophones, Basses, Bassoon, Bagpipes, Xylophones, Oboe\nFlutes, Clarionets, Concertinas,\nAccordions, Violins, Cellos, Banjos, Guitars, Mandolines, Mouth\nOrgans, Drums, Music Stands,\nBows, Cases, Books, Strings, Reeds\nand Fittings for all instruments.\nRepairs, Bows rehaired. All work\ndone on premises.\nMail orders, quick service.\n(Next Scandinavian Church)\n806 Baker St. Nelson\n(4167)\nLECAL NOTICES\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nNOTICE is hereby given that all\npersons having claims against the\nestate of ARCHDEACON HENRY\nBEER, late of Kaslo, B. C, who died\non the 14th day of May, 1937, are required'to send or deliver full particulars of their respective claims,\n,duly verified, to the undersigned on\nor before the 10th day of January,\n1938, after which date the executors\nwill proceed to distribute the assets\nof the deceased among the persons\nentitled thereto, having regard only\nto the claims due notice of which\nshall have then been received; and\nthe executors will not be liable for\nthe said assets or any part thereof to\nany person of whose claim they\nshall not then have received notice.\nDATED this 6th day of December,\n1937.\nCOLLINS GREEN St EADES,\nSolicitors for the Executors.\n404 Rogers Building,\n470 Granville Street,\nVancouver, B. C.'\n(3940)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nTEAM OF BLACK HORSES, WT.\n1500 each, good condition. Price\nRight, R, H. Stewart, Creston, B. C.\ni        ...,-....       (im\nFIVE YEAR OLD COW NEWLY\nFreshened, Cood milker. Crulckshank, Erie. (4160)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nYou probably ara riding around In\nthe down payment on a Fiat. Terra-\nplane, Hudson, Pontiac, Buick. Packard, LaSalle, Cadillac, G.M.C.. Indiana or White. Learn the facts\u2014see\nus now.  '\nBUTORAC MOTORS\n1225 PINE AVE. TRAIL, B.C.\n(3796)\nFOR SALE\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company Ltd\n250 Prior SL Vancouver. BC\n(3807)\nPIPE TUBES  FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\nVancouver. B.C\n(3806)\nBOB   SLEIGH,   SMALL   TOBOG-\ngan,  model planes,  tube skates\nand boots, size 2, cheap. Ph. 131L.\n(4149)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, Liners McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C.       (3808)\nUSED MANTEL RADIOS, BAT-\ntery and electric. Phone 631L,\n523 Vernon street. (4178)\nRADIO, $25. PORT. SEWING MA-\nohine, set of dishes. Mrs. Harry\nFerguson.  (4112)\nCORNET7B-flat, $30. SOPTSAX. $45\nConns. Bowkett, Crescent Valley\n(4099)\nCOMPLETE SET OF DRUMS AND\nTraps, $35. C. V. Joyce, Balfour.\n(4131)\nFIGURE SKATES, SIZE 10 2-3 &\nboots, size 6V4, $8. Ph. 214.    (4147)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nFURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT. 3\nbedrooms, 2 fireplaces, gas range,\nNear carline. Phone 423-Y. (4129)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent   Annable Block\n(3803)\nLT. HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS, 918\nKootenay Street. (No children.)\n(4095)\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE KUMBElT\nSEE KERR APTS FIRST\n(3804)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (3805)\nWANTED\nSTORE WITH LIVING ROOMS; OR\nhouse suitable for business and\nresidence. Close in. Modern preferred. Write R. G. Macdonald,\nGeneral Delivery, Nelson, B. C.\n(4175)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayer.\nE. W. WIDDOWSON; PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Joseohlne\nSt., Nelson, B. C. (3819)\nGRENVILLE ft GRIMWO.OD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 428\nFall Street. Nelson, & C P. O\n\u25a0Box No   726   Representing shipper's interest- Trail, B. C.    (3820)\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND,\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representative for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.   (3821)\nAutomobile Radiator Repair!\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(3822)\nChiropractors\nJ. R. MCMILLAN, D. C, NEURO-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCulIock Blk\n(3823)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Experience Ph. 969 Gilker Bk. Nelson\n(38241\nCorsets\nSpencer cores-;.   Surgical Belts M\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St Ph  668\n(3825)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C AFFLECK Fruitvale. B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(3826)\nH. D. DAWSON\n912 Kootenay St. Nelson, B. C.\n(3770)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME '\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert  Mortician     Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(3827)\nDAVIS  FUNERAL SERVICE\nEmbalming Sc Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Assisting\nPhone 95. Ambulance Service.\n(3828)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n347 Baker St., Phone 68.      (3829)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.   Insurance of\nevery description.. Real Est. Ph. B9.\n(3831)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsiirance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St,\n(3832)\nSEE D.  L.  KERR,  AGENT FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(3833)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance.  Annable Blk.\n(3834)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.        (3835)\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nMUTUAL BENEFIT HEALTH &\nACCIDENT ASSOCIATION. Beat\nof Its kind procurable. Stuart &\nWarburton, 577 Baker St, Nelson.\nPhone 973. (3769)\nR. W   DAWSON. Real Estate. Insurance. Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware, Baker St Phone 197.\n(3830)\nMachinists\nI\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring. Acetylena\nWelding\nTelephone 593      324 Vernon Street\nH. K STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfac.\ntion guaranteed. Mine & Mill work I\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St, Nelson. (3837)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt: Mine Mchnry. Ss\nequ.pt, rails, steels, piping, sheet\nIron, etc. Steam coals. Phone 973,\nBox 668, Nelson. (3867)\nNotaries\nD.   J.    ROBERTSON,     NOTARY\nPublic, Nelson. Phone 1.7L. (3838)\nPatents\nAN, OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted Inventions and\nfull Information sent free. Tho\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St, Ottawa.\n(3839)\nPhotography\nREALLY PERSONAL CHRISTMAS\nGreeting Cards from your own\nsnapshots. Ten cards, including\nenvelopes $1.00. Send negative\nand 10c for sample. Krystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask. (3840)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St,\n(3841)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,   SELL  Ss  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.   The Ark Store.\n(3842)\nTypewriters\nH. R. KITTO, Cleaning, Repairing.\nAgt Royal Typewriter, Ph. 964.\n(3843)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch It Is on time all the time.\nJ45, Baker St, Nelson       (3844)\ndtcTU, Inc. Wwl. njhu n-.rjt.\ni m Us. i\n.: .   .      .     ..\u25a0,;..,.:.... .....\nV L... .-.  -,..:- \u25a0r.-^.:..._^^'_^_t_^kai___,v''\t\n\u2014 \t\n'\" D \u25a0   <\u2022\u2022 -< '_' \"   i-\n i\n,a..,_,_X;,\n immmmmi\nmmmmmmmjmiimmmm'www* ww!**\u2022<\u00ab'->>imi,.,iV.,jlv,mm, <\u25a0 ,-\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab*e.*r?,-r-\nik>n\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNINQ. DEC. at, 1937.\n. PAGE ELEVEN\n>R0FlT TAKING\nNIPS NEW YORK\nNEW YORK, Dec. 22 (AP)-Tax\n.selling and profit taking nipped a\nleeMe stock market rally tdoay and\nlosses ot fractions to as much as\ntwo points predominated among\nleading issues.\n1   What  recovery  there was  took\nIilace about midday and was based\nargely on some accumulative buying and. a small amount of short\ncovering.\nSteels and aircrafts swung widest,\nenjoying brief periods of prosperity\nbut closing at or near their lows.\nHails were mostly ignored. Coppers\nwere active but failed of headway, oils and utilities were narrow.\nDealings were fairly lively in the\nfirst hali-hour, with'prices mixed,\nAfter that they remained at only a\nmoderate pace for the rest of the\nday. Transactions totalled 1,153,600\nshares compared with 1,283.540 yesterday. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks slipped .7 of a\npoint at 46.1.\nLOSSES GENERAL\nCALGARY MARKET\nCALGARY, Dec. 22 (CP). \u2014 Oil\nShare values were generally lower\non the Calgary stock exchange today.\nAside from C. Sc E., which dropped,\n10 to 3-00 and Dalhousie off seven\nat 72, losses were not severe. Calmont lost 1% at 4014. Model was\nahead 2 at 45.\nROYAL BANK'S\nPROFITS UP TO\n$3,411,383 YEAR\nMONTREAL, Dec. 22 (CP)-In-\ncrease of $107,141 waa shown today\nby Royal Bank of Canada in net profits of $3,411,383 for the year ended November 30, compared with $3,-\n304,242 in the previous fiscal year.\nThe figure was reached after\ndeduction of a $300,000 contribution\nto the bank's pension fund. Dividend payments totalled $2,800,000.\nSMELTERS OFF\nMONTREAL, Dec. 22 \u00ab_?)-Late\nselling, at the heels of a mid-session\nbuying rush, weakened stock market prices today.\n'St. Lawrence Paper preferred\ndropped five to 43 while drops of a\npoint or so each came out for Price\nBrothers common and preferred and\nSt. Lawrence Corporation preferred.\nFractionally ahead were Dominion Bridge, Dominion Steel B, Steel\not Canada and United Steel.\nNickel finished up Vs at 46%, but\nNoranda and Smelters sold off,.\nNarrow losses showed in Brazilian,\nGatineau and Montreal Power. Canadian Car Issues advanced but\nSteel Car and C.P.R. failed to hold.\nMarket and Mining News\nGrain Loses in\nDrab Session\nPRODUCTION DOUBLED\nOTTAWA, Dec. 22 (CP).-Can-\nada's petroleum production of 2,233,-\n557 barrels the first 10 months of\nthe year almost doubles that of\nthe corresponding 1936 period and\nIs 700,000 barrels greater than that\nof all 1936.\nVancouver Unlisted\nBid        Ask\nBayonne\nColumbia Oil\nDurango\nEuphrates\nRoyal   Can  ...\n.06\n.lIVs\n\u25a0l2Vi\n.06%\n.04\n.18\nDivichnds\nDominion Foundries and Steel, 25\ncents.\nInternational Metal Industries,\npreferred, $1.50.\nDow-jones Averages\nHigh       Low\n30 Industrials \u201e _ _. 130.52      127.99\n20 Rails  _    32.72       32.20\n20 Utilities    21.85       21.33\n40 Bonds \t\nClose Change\n128.55\u2014off 1.43\n32.28\u2014off .37\n21.42\u2014off .39\n93.73\u2014off   .09\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAfton Mines Ltd _\nAldermac Copper .....\nAlexandria Gold \t\nAmm Gold \t\nAnglo Huronian \t\nArgosy Gold  \t\nArntfield Gold \t\nAshley Gold \t\nAstoria Rouyn \t\nAztec Mining\t\nBagamac Rouyn \t\nBankficld Gold \t\nBase Metals Mining .\nBeattie Gold \t\nBidgood Kirk\t\nBig Miss\t\nBodjo Mines\t\nBralorne Mines\t\nBrett Treth .\n.02%\n.55\n.(>::%\n.19\n355\n.17\n.20\nxv,\n.03%\n.01!\n.24\n.6:i\n.27\n1.-5\n.35\n.38\n\u25a010%\n8.20\n.08\nBuffalo Ank     13.25\nBunker Hill Ex .\nCan Malartic\t\nCariboo Gold Q\t\nCastle Treth \t\nCentral Pat \t\nChibougamau\t\nChromium M Sc S\t\nCoast Copper.\t\nConiagas Mines\t\nConiaurum Mines \t\nCons M & S \t\nDarkwater   \t\nDome Mines \t\nDom Explorers\t\nDorval Siscoe\t\nEast Malartic \t\nEldorado Gold\nFalconbridge Nickel\nFederal Kirk \t\nFrancoeur Gold \t\nGillies Lake  \t\nGod's Lake \t\nGold Belt \t\nGranada Gold   \t\nGrandoro Mines \t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHard Rock Gold ...\nHarker Gold \t\nHollinger Mine\nHowey Gold\nHudson Bay M & S .\n.14\n.98\n170\n.60\n2.35\n.32\n\u25a0\u25a015\n3.20\n2.00\n15.00\n58.50\n.12\n52.75\n.03%\n.10\n1.02\n2.20\n525\n.11\n.411\n.13\n.4.1'\/;\n.27\n.06\n.07\n.75\n1.06\n.11%\n13.00\n.28\n21 00\nPaymaster Cons   ..   , .50\nPend Oreille      2.06\nPerron Gold            1.10\nPickle Crow Gold  5.15\nPioneer Gold\nPremier Gold ..    ...\nPowell Rouyn ..   ..\nPreston East Dome\nQuebec  Gold\nRead Authier\nR L Gold Shore ...\nReeves Mac\t\nReno Gold      \t\nRitchie   Gold   \t\nRoche L L\t\nSan Antonio Gold ..\nShawkey Gold\nSheep Creek Gold\nSherritt Gordon  .\nSiscoe Gold \t\nSmelters Gold    ...\nSladen   Malartic   .\nStadacona Rouyn 47\nSi Anthony    _      .13\nSudbury Basin      2 95\n295\n1.90\n1.69\n1.07\n.43\n3.25\n.19%\n.35\n.61\n.02%\n.10\n1.30\n.24\n.90\n1.40\n3.30\n\u25a001%\n.88\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 22 (CP) .-Wheat\nfutures lost most of yesterday's\ngains in a drab session on Winnipeg grain exchange today. It took\nonly minor sales in sympathy with\neasier overseas markets to.depress\nprices with final quotations 1% to\n\\ cent lower, December at $1.28%,\nMay $1.16%-%, and July $1.10.\nTrade in Canadian wheat was estimated below 100,000 bushels but\neven exporters withdrew near the\nclose.\nLiverpool gave way to Australian\nnew wheat hedging and United\nStates selling to close Vs\u2014%d lower.\nBuenos Aires in mid-afternoon deals\nwas 2%\u20141% cents lower. Chicago\neased about a cent at low levels.\nLiverpool established new seasonal lows,, slumping to the lowest levels since November.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 22 (CP).\u2014Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nWHEAT:\nDec  128%\nMay  117\nJuly   110%\nOATS:\nDec    47%\nMay     46%\nJuly  ..      44%\nBARLEY:\nDec    58%\nMay     58%\nJuly     -\nFLAX:\nDec    \u2014\nMay     \u2014\nRYE:\nDec    \u2014\nMay    77%\nJuly   -\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT\u2014No. 1 hard and No. 1\nNor. 138%; No. 2 Nor. 134%; No. 3\nNor. 118%; No. 4 Nor. 108%; No. 5,\n95%; No. 6, 86%; feed 76%; No. 1\nGarnet 121%; No. 2 Garnet 118V*;\nNo. 1 Durum 89%; No. 1 A. R. W.\n99%; No. 4 special 104%; No. 5 special 104%; No. 5 special 90%; No. 6\nspecial 81%; track 135%; screenings\n$5 per ton.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 50%; No. 3\nC. W, 44%; Ex. 1 feed 45%; No. 1\nfeed 42%; No. 2 feed 39%; No. 3\nfeed 37%; track 46%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6-and\n2-Row Ex. 3' C. W. 58%. Others: No.\n3 C. W. 56%; No. 4 C. W. 55y8;\nNo. 5 C, W. 54%; No. 6 C. W. 53!.;\ntrack 58%. \u2022\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 171%; No. 2\nC. W. 167%; No. 3 C. W. 146%; No.\n4 C. W. 141%; track 170%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 74%.\n127%\n117%\n111\n126%\n116%\n110\n126%\n116%\n110\n47%\n46%\n44%\n47%\n46%\n43%\n47%\n46%\n43%\n59\n58%\n58%\n58%\n58%\n58%\n55%\n-\n_\n171%\n171%\n78%\n76%\n74%\n76%\n76\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Dec. 22 (AP).-Closing:\nCopper standard spot \u00a340 5s, unchanged; future \u00a340 Us 3d; up is\n3d; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a34, unchanged; asked \u00a345 10s, unchanged.\nTin spot \u00a3189 5s, up \u00a31 15s;\nfuture \u00a3188 15s, up \u00a32 Ss.\nBids: Lead spot \u00a315 lis 3d; oft\n3s 9d; future \u00a315 15s, off 3s 9(1;\nzinc spot \u00a315 6s 3d; oft Is 3d; future\n\u00a315 6s 6(1, off is 3d.    '\nBar gold declined 1 penny at 139s\n18d.\nBar silver 3-16 lower at 18 ll-16d.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot\nand future -0.12%-11.0O, export\n10.15.\nTin steady, spot and future 42.75,\nLead steady; New York, spot 4.75\n\u201480; East St. Louis 4.60.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis spot\nand future 5.00.\nBar silver 44%, unchanged.\nMONTREAL\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 11.70\ntin 45%; lead 4.80; zinc 4.75; antt\nmony 16 per 100 pounds f.o.b. Montreal, five-ton lots.\nBar gold in London down two\ncents at $34.94 an ounce in Canadian\nfunds; 139s 8d in British. The fixed\n$35 Washington price amounted to\n$35.03 in Canadian.\nSilver futures closed steady today,\nunchanged to 10 points off. No sales,\nBids: Dec. 41.70; Jan. 41.50; March\n40.60; May 41.05.\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Preu\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal - Pound 5.00 13-32;\nU. S. dollar 1.00 7-64; franc 3.40.\nAt New York - Pound 4.99%;\nCanadian dollar .99 57-64; franc\n3.39%.\nAt Paris - Pound 147.20 fr.; U. S.\ndollar 29.45 fr.; Canadian dollar\n29.45 fr.\nIn Gold \u2014 Pound 12s 2d; U. S. dol\nJar 59.23 cents; Canadian dollar 59.16\ncents.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Dec. 22.\u2014The forthcoming Christmas holidays had a tendency to restrict business on today's\nstock market but the general undertone was steady.\nClosing: Brazilian $13 Ex-div,;\nC. P. R. $7%; Chrysler $55%; Gen\nMotors $32%; Hydro Elec $5%; Inter\nNickel $46%; U. S .Steel $60%; Anglo\nDutch 29s 6d; Brit Am Tob 108s l%d\nDunlop 44s; Ford 22s 4%d; H. B. C.\n26s; Imp Airways 25s; ImpTob 148s\nl%d; Royal Dutch \u00a314%; Shell T\n& T \u00a35; United Steel Ltd 7s 3d;\nVickers 26s 3d; Woolworth 71s.\nBonds: British 2% per cent Consols \u00a374%; British 3% per cent war\nloan \u00a3101%; funding 4s 1060-90\n\u00a3112%.\nTORONTO SPOTTY\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nTORONTO, Dec. 22 (CP)-Spot-\nty weakness was displayed .by the\nToronto market today, chiefly in\ngolds and western oils, carrying\nboth mining indices to slightly lower levels despite fair strength in the\nbase metals.\nAnnouncement Steel ot Canada\nwas paying a $2 extra on the common boosted the price to 70% but\nthe close at 69% was up only a minor fraction. The preferred added 2.\nDominion Bridge advanced a point.\nThe close was up fractions for Dominion Steel B, United Steel and\nCanadian Car common.\nAbitibi preferred dropped 1% and\nGreat Lakes Paper preferred 2%.\nNickel added a fraction while No\nranda advanced %, Waite-Amulet\n6, Sherritt 5 and Aldermac 2. Eldorado Silver was down 5.\nWeakness in the golds centred in\nthe junior issues. Dome and Lake\nShore closed higher.\nVancouver Market\nto Close on Friday\nUntil December 28\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP)\u2014 The\nVancouver stock exchange will close\nat noon Friday and will remain closed until Tuesday, December 28, it\nwas announced today.\nNo afternoon session will be held\nFriday, December 31 and the exchange also will be closed Saturday,\nJanuary 1, 1938, New Year's day.\nWorld Exchanges\nNEW YORK, Dec. 22 (AP)-The\npound sterling at $4.99% and the\nFrench franc were unchanged in\nforeign exchange dealings today.\nThe Canadian dollar closed at 7-64\ndiscount compared with 3-32 dis\ncount yesterday.\nClosing rates (Great Britain ln\ndollars, others in cents)\u2014\nGreat Britain, demand 4.99%;\ncables 4.99%, 60-day bills 4.99%;\nFrance, demand 3.39%, cables 3.39%;\nItaly, demand 5.26%, cables 5.26%.\nDemands \u2014 Belgium 16.98%; Germany free 40.30%, registered 21.50,\ntravel 25.85; Holland 55.60%; Norway 25.12; Sweden 25.77; Denmark\n22.32; Finland 2.22; Switzerland\n23.14; Portugal 4.54%; Greece .92;\nPoland 18.98; Czechoslovakia 3-51%;\nJugoslavia 2.35; Austria 18.93N; Hungary 19.90; Rumania .75; Argentine\n33.32N; Brazil (free) 5.55N; Tokyo\n29.11; Shanghai 29.60; Hong Kong\n31.29; Mexico City 27.80; Montreal\nin New York 99.89%; New York in\nMontreal 100.10 15-16.\n(N)\u2014Nominal.\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy Thi' Canadian Preu\nToronto and Montreal \u2014 Stocks\nirregularly lower.      '\nNew York \u2014 Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Wheat 1% to % cents\nlower.\nToronto \u2014 Bacon hogs off truck 10\ncents higher at 8.35.\nLondon \u2014 Bar silver, lead and\nzinc lower; copper unchanged.\nNew York \u2014 Silver, lead and zinc\nunchanged; export copper firmer.\nMontreal \u2014 Silver slightly lower.\nNew York \u2014 Cotton, rubber and\nsugar lower; coffee higher.\nNew York \u2014 Canadian dollar up\n1-64 to 99 57-64.\nREEVES HIGHER\nKellogg-Briand Pad Highlight\nof Franh Kellogg's Brilliant\nCareer Over Period of SI Years\nIn Early Life, to Get Job for Firm, He and His\nPartner Opposed Each Other in Contest\nfor Office of District Attorney\n\u25a0 17%\n.40\n.16%\n1.78\n1.27\n51.00\n03%\n.41\n.88\n.12\n5.00\n4.1\nInt Nickel      46.65\nJ M Con .    \t\nJack Waite \t\nJacola Gold\t\nKerr Addison\t\nKirk Lake   \t\nLake   Shore\nLamaque Contact\t\nLapa Cadillac \t\nLeitch Gold   \t\nLebel Oro        \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nMacassa Mines\nMacLeod Cockshutt            1.32\nMadsen R I. 36\nMan & East 02\nMandy Mines 18\nMalroblc Mii;es  01%\nMclr.tyre Pore       ..    37.25\nMcKenzie R L       100\nMcVittie Graham  12\nMcWatters Gold  30\nMining Corp     1.94\nMinto Gold   03\nMoneta Pore     2.10\nMorris Kirk  17\nNipissing Mining      2.00\nNoranda       54.00\nNormetal       58\nO'Brien Gold      5.30\nOmega Gold  36%\nPamour Pore      3.10\nParkhill Gold  09%\nPaulore M 15%\n100\n3 05\nTushota Gold \t\n...      .03%\nTeck Hughes \t\n...    5.30\nToburn Gold\t\n...    2.20\n 50\n.60\n.      1.66\nWnyside Cons \t\n.05\n....     7.45\n.24\nOILS\nAjax   Oil     \t\n 26\nA P Con\t\n.31\nBrit American\t\n....   21.50\nBrit Dom  \t\n.14%\nBrown Oil    ...\n52\nCalmont Oil\t\n 59\nCalgary Sc Edmonton  \t\n     2.95\nChem Research \t\n 40\n       .39\n 72\n. .      .13%\n.21\nFoothills             \t\n      1.00\n 17\nHome Oil\t\n      1.45\n    17.65\nInt Pete       \t\n    28.75\n 23\nMcColl Frontenac\t\n    11.00\n       .08\nModel Oil\t\n.43\n 20\nNordon Oil \t\n 14%\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain  2%\nAssoc Brew of Can  11%\nAssoc Tel & Tel  6%\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP)-Oil\nprices declined on Vancouver stock\nexchange in light trading while\ngolds were irregular and base metals firm. Transfers totalled 105,023\nshares.\nCalgary & Edmonton Oil dropped\n16 cents at 2.94 and Okalta 6 at 2.00.\nRoyalite was off $1.50 at $45.50,\nVulcan 4 at 1.29 and Dalhousie 3\nat 70. A.P. Consolidated was down 1\n2 at 31, Calmont 2% at 58 and\nCommonwealth a cent at 39, Home\nwas unchanged at 1.46.\nBralorne Gold advanced 10 cents\nat 8.10, Big Missouri 3 at 39 and\nReno 1 at 59. Cariboo Gold Quartz\nat 165 and Sheep Creek at 90 held\nunchanged. Pioneer slipped 8 at\n2.92, Premier 4 at 1.86 and Minto\na fraction at 2%.\nIn the base metals, Pend Oreille\nwas five cents higher at 2.05, Reeves\nMacDonald 1 at 36 and Noble Five\na fraction at 2%. Nicola at 5, B.C.\nNickel at 8% and Grandview at 8\nwere quiet and unchanged.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Dec, 22 (CP)-Brit-\nish and foreign exchange closed\nsteady today. Nominal rates tor\nlarge amounts:\nAustralia, pound, 3.9854.\nDenmark, krone, .2234.\nFrance, franc, .0340.\nGermany, reichsmark, .4035.\nGreat Britain, pound, 5.0042.\nHolland, florin, .5566.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0275,\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9791.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2317.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nThe Kellogg-Briand pact, in which,\n59 nations joined to renounce war as\nan instrument of national policy, was\nthe highlight of Frank B. Kellogg's\ncareer, a line of achievement which\ntook him from a pioneer Minnesota farm through the mutations of\nlaw and politics to sucessive reputations as a corporation lawyer, \"trust\nbuster,\" United States senator, ambassador to Great Britain, secretary\nof state and, finally, Judge of the\npermanent court of international\nJustice at The Hague. Mr. Kellogg\ndied Tuesday,\nWhen Kellogg tendered his resignation from the international tribunal on September 9,1935, he wrote\n\"finis\" to public activities which embraced a stretch of 57 years.\nKellogg, and Aristide Brland,\n\"France's apostle of peace,\" whose\nnames were joined in the anti-war\npact, each gave the other credit for\noriginating the idea. It grew from\na 1927 Easter message of good will\nissued by Briand through The Associated Press to the American people in which he proposed that America and France forever renounce war\nupon each other.\nHave You Some\nUsed\nSKIIS\n!\nWhy Not Turn\nThem Into Cash?\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 6 times 80c net\nTwo  (2)   lines once 20c net\nPHONE  144\nNelson Daily News\nOkalta Oil     200\nPacalta    12\nPantepec     5.90\nRoyalite Oil     46.50\nSouthwest Pete  65\nTexas Can        1.31\nUnited Oil  22%\nVulcan Oil     1.30\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power     1.90\nBeatty Bros     15\nBell   Telephone     165\nBrazilian Traction     10%\nBrew Sc Dist      4%\nBrewing   Corp        1.35\nBrewing Corp pfd     16\nB C Power A     34%\nB C Power B      4%\nBuilding Products     48\nBurt FN Co     22\nCan Bakeries A      3\nCan Bakeries pfd    42\nCanada Bread Co      3%\nCan Bud Malting      8%\nCan Car Sc Fdy      10%\nCan   Cement       9'\/\u00ab\nCan Cement pfd     95\nCan Dredge     33\nCan   Malting      34\nCan Pac Rly      7%\nCan Ind Ale A      3%\nCan Wineries -    3\nCarnation pfd  -   96%\nCons   Bakeries      15%\nCosmos    20\nDom  Stores       6\nDom Tar Sc Chem     7%\nDom Tar & Chem pfd     80\nDist Seagrams     14%\nFanny Farmer  _   20%\nFord of Canada A    16%\nGeneral Steel Wares     9\nGoodyear Tire      75\nGypsum L Sc A      7%\nHarding Carpet     3*\nHamilton  Bridge       7%\nHinde Dauche    16\nHiram Walker     42\nInt Metals      7%\nInt Milling pfd     99\nImperial Tobacco      13%\nLoblaw A     23%\nLoblaw B     21%\nKelvinator     13%\nMaple Leaf Milling     2%\nMassey Harris      7\nMontreal Power    29%\nMoore Corp     32\nNat Steel Car     34\nOnt Steel Prods      8\nOnt Silk Net     6\nPage Hersey     89%\nPower Corp    14%\nPressed Metals      20\nSteel of Canada  -....   69%\nStandard Paving  -     2}'\u00bb\nBathurst P & P A    10\nBell Telephone  164%\nBrazilian T L & P    12%\nB C Power A     34%\nB C Power B      5%\nBuilding Products   49\nCan Bronze pfd  102\nCanada Cement    10\nCan Cement pfd    95%\nCan North Power     18\nCan Steamship     2%\nCan Steamship ptd     9%\nCanadian Bronze     34\nCan Car & Fdy    10%\nCan Celanese ....:    16%\nCan Car & Fdy pfd    21%\nCan Ind Ale A     4%\nCan Ind Ale B     3%\nCan Pac Rly       77\/b\nCockshutt Plow     8%\nCon Min & Smelting    58%\nDistillers Seagrams     15\nDominion Bridge     30\nDominion Coal pfd    16\nDom Steel & Coal B    16\nDominion Textile    72\nDryden Paper     7\nFoundation C of C    13%\nGatineau Power    10\nGen Steel Wares       8%\nGatineau Power pfd    77\nGurd Charles      7\nGyp Lime Sc Alab      IVi\nHamilton Bridge      IVi\nHamilton Bridge pfd     47\nHoward Smith Paper    13\nHolt Renfrew     20\nH Smith Paper pfd    98\nImp Tobacco of C     13%\nInter Nickel of Can    46%\nLake of the Woods    16\nLake Sulphite       9\nMassey Harris      6%\nMcColl Frontenac     11\nMontreal L H Sc P    29%\nNational Brew Ltd    38\nNat Brew pfd     41\nNat Steel Car    34%\nOgilvie Flour Mills 222\nOgilvie Flour new    27%\nOntario Steel Prods\t\nPato Consolidated    2.10\nPower Corp of Can    15\nSt Lawrence Corp 4%\nSt Law Corp pfd    14\nSt Law Paper pfd   42\nSouth Can Power    13%\nShawinigan W Sc P    19%\nSteel of Can _   69%\nSteel of Can pfd   62\nWestern Grocers   49\nBANKS\nBank of Canada     59\nCanadienne Nationale  160\nCommerce 167%\nDominion  200\nImperial   205\nMontreal  205\nNova Scotia  296\nRoyal ..\nToronto\nCURB\nAbitibi P & P Co     1.85\nAbitibi 6 pfd     2\nBeauharnois Corp      57\/a\nBathurst P Sc P B     3%\nBrew Sc Dist Van     5\nBrew Corp of Can     1.40\nBrew Corp of Can pfd    15%\nBritish American Oil    21\nB C Packers    10\nCan Malting Ltd    34\nCan Marconi    1.15\nCan Dredge & Dock    32%\nCan Vickers     4%\nCan Wineries :     2%\nCons Paper Corp     6%\nDominion Stores *\n190\n. 240\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Dec. 22 (CP). - Receipts to noon: Cattle 205; calves 26;\nhogs 120; sheep 205.\nCommon butcher steers 3.50\u20143.75;\ncommon to medium heifers 3\u20143.75;\ngood cows 2.75; good veal calves\n4.50; common to medium stocker\nsteers 2.75\u20143.25.\nNo hog sales; Tuesday's close: Selects 8.20; bacons 7,70; butchers 7.25,\nDOLLAR UNCHANGED\nNEW YORK, Dec, 22 (CP).-The\nCanadian dollar was unchanged at\na discount of 3-32 of a cent..\nal Harvester company and what was\nknown as \"the tobacco trust\",\nFROM SENATE\nTO CABINET\nIn 1916 he turned to politics, ran\nfor the United States senatorship and\nwas elected, serving the 1917-23\nterm. The farmer-labor landslide of\n1922 in Minnesota defeated him as a\ncandidate for reelection. He went\nback to law practice for a year, then\nin 1924 was appointed by President\nCoolidge as ambassador to the court\nof St. James's. He remained in London a year, representing the United\nStates at a conference on Dawes\nplan procedure in August, 1924, and\nbeing credited with breaking a deadlock which threatened to stymie\nthat scheme for collecting and distributing war reparations from Germany.\nHe was made secretary of state\nwhen Charles Evans Hughes, after\nserving in the Harding-Cooli^e\ncabinet, decided to resume private\nlaw practice when Coolidges own\nadministration took office March 4,\n1925. Kellogg's flair tor diplomacy\nhad lull play in the four years ho\nheld the cabinet post. In addition\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 22 (CP). -\nCash prices:\nStrt. Tough\nNo. 1 hard  131% 129%\nNo. 1 Nor  131% 129%\nNo. 2 Nor  126% 124%\nNo. 3 Nor  110% 108\nNo. 4 Nor  101% 98%\nNo. 5 wheat     92% 90\nNo. 6 wheat    82% 80\nFeed     72% 70\nDOLLAR UNCHANGED\nLONDON, Dec. 22 (AP). \u2014 The\nUnited States dollar closed net unchanged at 4.99 13-16 to the pound,\nFrench francs ended 147.19 to the\npound against 147.12 yesterday.\nguided negotiations that resulted In\nmore than 80 International \u25a0 agreements, many of them providing for\narbitration, conciliation and other\npeaceful means of settling disputes\nbetween nations.\nKellogg, slight, stoop-shouldered\nand in his 73rd year, was about ready\nto call \"quits\" with active life when\nhe finished his four years as secretary of state. But a year and a half\nlater Hughes, appointed chief justice\nof the United States, resigned his\nplace on the bench of the world\ncourt and the League ot Nations,\nin September, 1930, chose Kellogg as\nhis successor. One of his outstanding;\nfindings as an international jurist\nwas a dissenting opinion when the\ncourt ruled against a proposed customs union between Germany and\nAustria. Kellogg held the plan entirely legal, discarding the idea that\nit contravened the German territorial limitation clauses of the treaty\nof Versailles,\nKellogg was a bachelor until his\nfortieth year. In 1896 he married\nClara M. Cook of Rochester, Minn,\nT. V. LORD OF C. M. fr S. AT TRAIL IS\nAPPOINTED PROFESSOR AT QUEEN'S U.\nmo^s ratafh^\nWashington, was hauled out of obscurity the tollowlng Christmas-tide\nat the behest of President Coolidge\nwhen Jane Addams, Chicago's\nworld-famous social worker, called\nit to his attention.\nIt was translated at first into a\nFranco- American agreement for\nperpetual friendship, then blossomed into a world-wide idea, was publicized and pushed in various capitals until finally there was a rush\nto join in the declaration. With Kellogg wielding the first pen and\nBriand the second, the pact was\nsigned formally by 15 nations at\nParis on August 27,1928. Later more\nthan two score other governments\ngave formal notification of their acceptance of the terms.\nThe treaty brought world-wide acclaim to the joint authors and award\nof the 1929 Nobel peace to Kellogg.\nBut it didn't halt war, nor did it\ncheck aggression, China, the United States, Great Britain and other\npowers cited it in vain when Japan\ncarved Manchoukuo out of northeast\nChina in 1931, and Ethiopia, without\neffect, called attention to the fact\nthat both she and Italy were signatories when the latter invaded the\nAfrican monarchy in 1935. Critics of\nthe treaty always said that it was\nfutile because it \"lacked teeth\".\nPOLITICS BY A FIRM\nFrank Billings Kellogg was born\nIn Potsdam, N. Y., December 22,\n1856, the son of Asa Farnsworth and\nAbigail Billings Kellogg. When he\nwas 9, the family migrated to Minnesota and with only rural schooling\nas a foundation, he started to study\nlaw at the age ot 19 in the office of\na Rochester attorney, who paid him\nfor combination clerical and janitor\nwork by guiding his studies.\nIn 1877 Kellogg was admitted to\nthe bar. The next year he was elected city attorney of Rochester. In\n1880 he formed a partnership with\nBurt W. Eaton, but clients were few\nand the firm went into politics. The\ntwo ran tor the office of district\nattorney in 1881, Kellogg as a Republican and Eaton as a Democrat,\nbecause the salary of $800 a year\nwas needed tor the firm. Kellogg\nDonnacona Pape A   5%\nDonnacona Paper B  5%\nFord Motor A   16%\nFraser Co Ltd \u201e 12%\nImperial Oil   17%\nInter Petroleum  28%\nTRAIL, B. C, Dec. 22 (CP)\u2014T. V.\nLord, member ot the technical staff\nof the Consolidated Mining Sc Smelting Company of Canada, has been\nappointed professor of metallurgy\nat \u25a0 Queen's university, Kingston,\nOnt,, according to word reaching\nhere today.\nThe appointment will be effective\nat the opening of the fall term ln\n1938.\nMr, Lord was an honor graduate\nin metallurgy at Queen's in 1922,\nand has been on the Consolidated\nstaff here since then.\nHe was principally identified with\nore concentration. Prior to gradua-\nInter Utilities A .\nInter Utilities B .\nMacLaren P&P\t\nMitchell Robt\t\nPage Hersey Tubes\nRoyalite Oil\t\nThrift Stores\t\nUnited Dist of Can ....\nWalker-Good Sc W ....\nWalker-Good pfd \t\n7%\n.8i\n14\n13\n92\n46\n41%\n18%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAl Chem  168\nAm Can    76%-\nAm For Pow .... 4%\nAm Mac Sc Fdy 14%\nAm Smelt & Re   51%\nAm Tel  148%\nAm Tob     62%\nAnaconda     33%\nAtchison       41%\nAuburn   Motors    4\nAv Corp      3%\nBaldwin      9\nBait Sc Ohio    12%\nBendix Av     12%\nBeth Steel     63%\nBorden     17%\nCan Dry     16\nCan Pac     7%\nCerro de Pasco 38%\nChes Sc Ohio ....   38%\nChrysler      56%\nCon Gas NY....   24%\nCorn Prods   61%\nC Wright pfd ....    4\nDupont  119%\nEast Kodak   167\nEl Pow Sc Lt ....   13%\nErie      7%\nFord English.....    5%\nFord of Can    16%\nFirst Nat Stores  29%\nFree Texas    23\nGen Elec     45%\nGen Foods    32%\nGen Motors    33%\nGoodrich     16%\nGranby     4%\nGreat Nor pfd 26%\nGreat West Sug 27%\n\u25a0Hecker Prods ..    6%\nHowe Sound    47%\nHud Motors .... 7%\nInter Nickel .... 47%\nInt Tel Sc Tel.... 6%\nJewel Tea     51\nLow\n166\n74%\n4\n14%\n50\n147\n62%\n32%\n'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\\\n3%\n3%\nB%\n11%\n12%\n61%\n17\n15%\n7%\n37%\n37%\n54%\n24\n61%\n3%\n118\n165\n13\n7%\n5%\n16%\n29\n22%\n44\n31%\n32%\n16\n4%\n25%\n27%\n0%\n47\n7%\n46%\nn\n51\nClose\n168\n74%\n4\n14%\n50\n148\n62%\n32%\n40\n3%\n3%\n8%\n11%\n12%\n62\n17\n15%\n7%\n37%\n37%\n54%\n24%\n61%\n3'\/s\n118%\n165%\n13%\n7%\n5%\n16%\n29\n22%\n44\n32%\n32%\n16\n4%\n25%\n27%\n6%\n47\n7%\n46%\n6%\n51\nKenn Cop     39%\nKresge S S    16%\n15%\n21\n1%\n10%\n14\n8%\n19%\n26J4\n4%\nKroegger & T..\nMack Truck\t\nMilwaukee   pfd\nMont Ward \t\nNash Motors ....\nNat Dairy Prod\nN Pow & Lt...\nN Y Central ...\nPac Gas Sc El\nPack Motors .\nPenn R R    23%\nPhillips Pete ....   40%\nPure Oil     12%\nRadio Corp      6%\nRadio Keith Or    4%\nRem Rand     13%\nSafeway  Stores   21%\nShell Un     17%\nS Cal Edison ....   21%\nSouth Pac     22%\nStan Oil ot Cal 29%\nStan Oil of Ind 34%\nStan Oil of N J  46%\nStew Warn      9%\nStudebaker     5%\nTexas Corp    43\nTexas Gulf Sul 28%\nTImken Roll .... 42%\nUnder Type ....  53%\nUn Carbide    78%\nUn Oil ot Cal .. 19%\nUnited Aircraft 26%\nUnited Biscuit.. 17%\nUnion Pacific ..  88%\nU S Pipe   29%\nU S Rubber   27%\nU S Steel     61%\nVanadium Steel   17\nWarn Bros     6%\nWest Electric .. 111%\nWest Union   26%\nWoolworth       36%\nWrigley     60\nYellow Truck _   10\n38%\n15%\n15%\n20%\n1\n35%\n10\n13%\n8\n19\n26%\n4%\n22%\n39%\n11%\n6%\n4%\n13%\n20%\n17%\n21%\n21%\n29%\n34%\n45%\n9%\n5\n41%\n27%\n41%\n52\n77%\n19%\n25%\n17%\n85%\n29\n26%\n59%\n16%\n6%\n108%\n25%\n36%\n59%\n9%\ntion from university, he spent vacation periods as a student with the\nConsolidated company here.\nHe had a long period ot war experience between 1914 and 1918 proceeding overseas with first Canadian contingent on the strength\nof the 6th Field Company of Engineers. For 15 months he was a prisoner in Germany.\nAt the first of the year he will\nleave wilh Mrs. Lord lor the Big\nMissouri mine, where he will take\ncharge of the concentrator which is\nexpected to commence operations in\nJanuary. They will remain at Big\nMissouri until proceeding to Kingston.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\n15%\n15%\n20%\n1\n35%\n10\n13%\n8\n19\n26%\n4%\n22%\n39%\n12\n6%\n4%\n13%\n20%\n17%\n21%\n21%\n29%\n34%\n46%\n9%\n5\n42\n28\n42%\n52\n77%\n19%\n25%\n17%\n86%\n29\n20%\n59%\n16%\n6%\n108%\n26%\n36%\n60\n9%\nBid\n.31\n.07\n1.80\n.06%\n.39\n.16\n8.10\n.03\n2.94\n.58\nCariboo Gold      1-85\nLISTED:\nAPCon\t\nAmal Oil \t\nAnglo   Can   \t\nAztec Min Co \t\nBig Missouri \t\nBrit Dom Oil \t\nBralorne\t\nBridge Riv Con .\nC Sc E Corp\t\nCalmont   Oil\nAsk\n.32\n.09\n1.90\n.07%\n.40\n.04\n3.00\nCom'wealth Oil ..-      -39\nDavies Pete  49%\nDentonia 16\nFirestone Pete 19%\nGold Belt Mines 29\nFoundation Pete ....      .19%\nHargal Oil  27\nFour Star Pete 23\nHome Oil      I-4\"\nInter Coal - 21\nIsland Mount 65\nKoot Belle        \u2014\nMak Siccar  01%\nMcDoug Seg Ex ...      .26\nMcLeod Oil  25\nMinto      \"2%\nModel Oil  43\nMonarch Roy\nPioneer Gold\nPrairie Roy\n.19\n2.92\n.39\nPremier Gold       1.86\nPremier Border ....     .01%\nQuatsino    03\nRel Arlington      .15\nReno Gold 59\nReeves MacD  36\nSally    68\nSalmon Gold  06%\nSheep Creek  90\nSilbak-Premier      1.90\nSpooner   Oil   1'\nTaylor B Riv        \u2014\nVidette    12\nWellington 'Oil       -66\nWest  Flank    38\nYmir Yank Girl.....      \u2014\nCURB:\nAnaconda     \u2014,..     -12%\nBaltac Oil 05%\nBeaver Silver  00%\n.52\n.11\n1.50\n.70\n1.00\n.02\n.27\n.03%\n.22\n3.00\n.41\n1.95\n.01%\n.16\n.94\n2.00\n.40\n.23%\n.01\nBluebird   00%\nB C Nickel        .08%\nB R Mount         \u2014 04%\nCapital Estates      3.25       8.50\nCongress    02%      \u2014\nCrows Nest new 05 .07\nDalhousie Oils 70\nEast Crest Oil        \u2014\nFairview Amal 04% '\nFederal Gold  01%\nFreehold Oil  07%\nGeo Copper  25\nGeo Enterprise 02%\nGeo River        .00%\nGolconda    05%\nGold Mountain 01%\nGrandview       08\nGrull-Wihksne    07%\nHaida          .05\nHighwood Sarcee ..      .17%\nHome Gold  \u201e      .01\nIndian Mines  01%\nKoot Florence 01%\nLakeview Mine 00%\nLowery Pete       \u2014\nLucky Jim 03\nMadison Oil  08\nMar Jon Oil  10%\nMercury Oil 18\nMeridian new      .00%\nMet Min & Met 48\nMcGillivray      19\nMill City Oil  -      .11\nNicola    - 05\nNoble Five   02%\nNordon Oil  15\nOkalta com      2.00\nPacalta           \u2014\nPend Oreille     205\nPorter Idaho       .03\nPilot Gold 01%\nQuesnelle Q -..     .05%\nReward Mining 06\nRoyalite   Oil       45.50\nRufus Argenta    01%\nSilver Crest       .03\nSouthwest Pete 65\nUnited Oil 22%\nVulcan Oil        1.29\nWaverly T ncw .. .00%\nWellington Mines .. .02%\nWhitewater     05%\n.13%\n.05\n.01%\n.02\n.08%\n.08\n.05%\n.19\n.01%\n.02%\n.30\n.03%\n.08%\n.12%\n.20\n.13\n2.03\n.13\n2.10\n47.50\n.04%\n.23%\n.01\n.02%\nOn October 1, 1887, he moved to\nSt Paul, forming Davis, Kellogg and\nSeverance in partnership with Cush-\nman K. Davis, then United States\nsenator, and Cordenio A. Severance.\nWhen Davis died in 1900, Kellogg\nbecame senior partner.\nThey achieved a reputation as\ncorporation lawyers, yet Kellogg was\npicked by President Theodore Roosevelt for some of his administrations\nmost famous \"trust busting\". The\nfirst case was against the Western\nPaper company, commonly called\nthe \"western paper trust\". Kellogg,\nas special counsel for the government, won a decree of dissolution\nagainst the corporation at St. Paul\nin June, 1906.\nThen he was picked for similar\nwork against the Standard Oil company. This case came to a head before the United States circuit court\nof appeals at St. Louis on November 15, 1906, and again Kellogg won\na decision that the nation-wide corporation then existing was acting in\nrestraint of trade. Its dissolution into\ncompanies chartered in New Jersey,\nKentucky, Indiana a.,d California\nfollowed.\nIn 1907 Kellogg ferreted out the\nmethods of high finance which Edward H. Harrriman. head of the\nUnion Pacific and allied lines, used\nin putting over a deal for the Chicago and Alton railway. This work\neventuated in dissolution of the Union Pacific-Southern Pacific merger.\nKellogg also had a hand in anti-trust \u25a0 *.\u2014\t\nproceedings against the Internation- but split on professionalism.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Dec. 22 (CP)-rBut-   .\nter spot\u2014Quebec gras regraded \u00bb*\n29%-30.\nEggs spot\u2014Ontario A large 81A.\nButter futures \u2014 Steady and Un-\nchanged; December, 29%-30.\nSTEEL OF CANADA\nPAY8 12 DIVIDEND\nHAMILTON, Ont, Dec, 22 (CP)\n\u2014Director* ot Steel Company of\nCanida, Ltd., today declared an\nextra dividend of $2 a share on\nthe common atock. The payment,\nalong with regular dividends of\n43.i cents on both common end\npreferred iharei will be paid February 8 to shareholders of record\nJanuary 7.\nVISIBLE SUPPLY OF WHEAT\nDOWN\nOTTAWA, Dec. 22 (CPl-JThe visible supply of wheat decreased 1,.\n113,675 bushels in the week ended!\nDecember 17, it was reported today,\nby the Dominion bureau of statistics.\nTotal stocks were 60,340,018 compared with 115,665,975 a year before.\nIn the United States were 5,315,-\n000 bushels of Canadian wheat, an\nincrease of 249,000 in the week. A\nyear ago Canadian wheat in the\nUnited States totalled 27,402,420 bushels, jfcf.\n , -J,#-\\\nBRAZILIAN EARNINGS\nARE $1,669,834\nTORONTO, Dec. 22 (CP) \u2014 Net\nearnings before depreciation and\namortization of Brazilian Traction,\nLight and Power company in November were reported today at $1,-\n659,834, against $1,585,960 last No-\nvember. Gross earnings were $248,-\n888 higher at $3,085,881 and operat- \u25a0\ning expenses $174,994 higher at $1\/1\n426,047. ,1\nU.S. TREASURY ISSUE8 L08E\nNEW YORK, Dec. 22 (AP)-U.S.\ntreasury issues yielded fractions in\nthe bond market today. Losses ranged from 1-32 to 8-32 with only three\nissues holding or gaining slightly.\nForeign bonds were lower with\nJapanese leading the decline. South\nAmerican loans went against tha\ntrend.\nBRUSSELS (CP)\u2014During recent\nmeetings of the Nine-Power conference here, English and French,\nstatesmen took time off to discuss\nrugger, in which France and Britain\nused to meet for international games,\nela&L frdL!\nHave You Forgotten Anyone ?\nYou still Have time to\nget a good selection of\nPERSONAL\nGREETING\nCARDS\nPhone 144 or call In and see our beautiful display.\nMany designs left.\nJfekm Satlg New*\nCommercial Printing Dept.\n  \t\ntt^ammmm\n imnm^km\ntl     Only Tw^Day\n**\u00ab*\u00ab*\u00ab\u20ac**\nDays Left ol Our\nCLOSING OUT SALE\n1\nReg. $3.00 for $1.02\nReg. $1.85 for $1.12\nReg.$1.50for.. 98^\nReg. $1.00 for .. 67*}\nReg. 65e for ... 42a.\nRag.\nReg.\n$2.75 for 91.68\n$1.75 for $1.06\nReg.$1.25for.. 78*\nReg. 90e f or ... 61e*\nReg. 50efor... 34*\nMrs. Maria Toti\nof Trail li Laid\nto Her Final Rett\nTRAIL, B. C, Dec. 22\u2014Mrs. Maria\nToti, who passed away Saturday,\nwas laid to rest Tuesday afternoon.\nHigh requiem mass was celebrated\nat 9 a.m. by Rev. Father C. J.\nClancy. Remains laid in state at\nColombo hall till 1:30 p.m. Inter-\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THURSDAY-MORNINQ. DEC. 2S, 1937.\nment was ln Mountain View cem-1\netery.\nSisters ot Colombo, of which Mrs.\nToti was  a charter member,  attended the. services ln a body,\nPallbearers were S. Zuccolo, T.\nChristante, F. Merlo, M. Salsiccioli,\nJ. Forte and B. Truant Honorary\npallbearers were Mrs. M. Salsiccioli, Mrs. E. Destefano, Mrs. E. Mat-\nteucci, Mrs. A. Ludovtci, Mrs. F.\nPaciflcl and Mrs. D. Bresanutti.\nHave You Read the ClassifiedT\nNews of the Day\nDoll Furniture, Dishes, Stovei, Laundry Seta and\nthousands of other Toys at sacrifice prices.\n*\n$1.50 Large Mama DoUs . \u00a3gl\nMann, Rutherford\nDRUG CO.\nThe Store of Ten Thousand Gifts\n$983,775 PROFIT FOR BANQUE\nCANADIENNE NATIONALE\nMONTREAL, Dec. 22 (CP)-In-\ncrease of $21,529 was shown today\nby Banque Canadienne Nationale\nin profits of $983,775 for year ended\nNovember 30, compared with $962,\n248 in the previous fiscal year. The\nfigure, the report said, was subject\nto deduction of $159,546 for federal\nand provincial taxes and $50,000 for\nthe pension funds.\nTable tennis sets $2.50 to $4.50.\nSport Shop, 67* Baker St     (4181)\nORDER NOW CHRISTMAS ICE\nCREAM BRICKS, BELL CENTRE8.\nKANDYLAND. (4184)\nFRE8H SAPP8 CHOCOLATES\nFLEURY'S PHARMACY\n(4124)\nFor Tired CHRISTMA8 Shoppers\n2 hrs. RELAXATION at tha CIVIC.\n(4148)\nTurkey  shoot at  Gelinas'   hall,\nThursday and Friday. (4188)\nPublic Market le being held\nTODAY AND TOMORROW\nU159)\njj    LAST   CALL\t\nCHRISTMAS CHEER |\nI   Worfc Is Nearly Over-\nHundredt In Nelion and diitrict, chiefly\nwomen and children will be made happy\non Saturday with gifts from the fund. It is\nnot too late to tend in yours.\nj Please tend contribution! to Preiident John Draper,\njj W. E. Watson, City Clerk; The Royal Bank of Canada or\nI the Daily News. \\\\\n|j CHRISTMAS CHEER COMMITTEE \u00a3\n-,,,.,..,.,.,.>,..,,>,.,.,J\nHolders of Cheer Fund hockey\ntickets 301, 674, 331, 318, 862 please\ncollect prizes at Wait's. (4186)\nJoymaker's progressive whist and\nnovelty dance tonight. Members and\nfriends. (4183)\nRemember the Vasa Lodge dance\nMon., Dec. 27, Eagle hall. Music by\nSwanson and Waldie. (4168)\nFlowering plants. Delicious applet,\nBealby't Market SUM. (4188)\nSuggestion: Give your appetite a\ntreat at the\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\n(4146)\nFREE-AT THE BUTCHERTERIA\nONE PACKAGE 8WIFT'S PREMIUM BACON WITH EVERY CASH\nTURKEY PURCHA8E. TURKEY8\nPRICED FROM 23c. (4179)\nCHRISTMA8 EVE  DANCE WILL\nBE IN EAGLE HALL\n9 \u2014 ?. Music by The Troubadours.\nGents 75c Ladles 50c\n(4173)\nBe sure to come In and look around\nMcKAY & 8TRETTON'8\nWs have a oomplete line of electrical\ngifts for all the family.\n(4089)\nWhy do extra work Christmas\ntime? BUY LEDINGHAM'S Siloed\nMilk Bread. Uniform slices \u2014toasts\nbetter\u2014tastes better. Also tee our\nChrlstmai Cakes and shortbread.\n(4177)\nGive Mother an Electrolux for\nChristmas. For parts and service,\nPhone J. Puddy, 129 Baker St. (4143)\nAvoid delays - a good Battery will\ncarry on.\nNELSON BATTERY SHOP\n(4088)\nSkl-Slelght, Frisky Flyers, Whizz-\nBy Sleighs, Hardwood Sklls, In all\nlengths. Ski Poles e\\ Harness. Hip-\nperson's. (4141)\nShirt and tie ensemble It always\nan appreciated gift\nJACK BOYCE\n(4073)\nStibbs' committee rooms open at\n417 Victoria street In former Women's Institute rooms. Phone 600.\n(4176)\nMusical Instruments from\nHarmonicas to Pianos.\nKOOTENAY MU8IC HOUSE\n(4056)\n4-CHRISTMAB MIXTURES-4\nColumbia Ginger Ale, Ginger Beer,\nLime Rickey and Siphon Soda, Columbia Bottling Works. (4133)\nBadminton Rackets, Special $2.60\nup. Sport Shop, Ph. 163.        (4181)\nGIFTS for\nMen and Women\nWaterman's, Schaeffer, Parker and Evenharp  . '\nPen and Pencil Seta.\nNamei engraved FREE of charge in gold or silver\non sets purchased from us.\n20% DISCOUNT\nSTILL APPLIES ON MANY CHRISTMAS CIFTS\nCITY DRUG CO.\nBox 460 Your Rexall Store Phone 34\nSanta's Shopping Centre\nREXALL  ANNUAL CHRI8TMA8 PRIZE CONTEST FOR THE\nCHILDREN\u2014Be sure you have your votet given to tome little boy\nor girl.\u2014Contest closet CHRISTMAS EVE\nKandyland, the store for choice\nchocolates. Boxes all sizes, cedar\nchests, and the new mirror chests.\n(4184)\nGIVE PERFUMES THIS YEAR.\nFRE8H   8TOCK-FANCY  BOXED\nFLEUlitY'8 PHARMACY\n(4124)\nChapman Presents\nTurkeys Winners\nLegion Pin Bowls\nPresident J. H. Chapman Wednesday night presented winners and\nhigh aggregate scorers in the Legion\nBowling club's Christmas tourney\nwith their prize turkeys, accompanying the presentation with a little pep\ntalk.\nPrize winners ,were Nick Cassios,\nskip; Ross Riley, third; J. H, Chapman, second, and Mrs. Vic Graves,\nlead of the winning rink; and Mrs.\nThomas Sowerby, William Wood,\nNelson Jackson and Jack Hamson,\nhigh scorers.\nTRAFFIC OFFICER KILLED\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont, Dec. 22\n(CP)\u2014Bartnett Smith, 25-year-old\ntraffic officer, was killed instantly\ntoday when his motorcycle skidded\nfrom the road into a tree. He had\nescorted a funeral from Niagara\nFalls to St. Catharines and his body\nwas brought back to Niagara' Falls\nin the hearse he had been leading.\nCOOD   NEWS\nfor our Trail Patrons\nOn Friday, Christmas Eve, a\nspecial bus will leave Trail for\nNelson and way points at 10:00\nP.M. to accomodate those unable\nlo travel on our regular schedules.\nMr. J. M. Doughty, our Trail\nAgent will be pleased to quote\nour Special Xmas Excursion\nRates. Give him a call at 642.\nGreyhound Lines\n221 Baker St Phone 800\n(3866)\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED - WATCHMAN FOB\nmine. Apply Widdowson's Assay\nOffice. (4182)\n>p\u00abc<*\u20ac*#**g?********\u00ab^\n9n, &iaausL iriiik\nSanht filaiiL\nWe Moke the Following Gift\nSuggestions, Which Are Both\nPractical and Pleasing\nTOYS\nTOOLS\nSKATES\nSLEIGHS\nTHERMOS\nSCISSORS\nCROCKERY\nPYREX WARE\nSILVERWARE\nFLASHLIGHTS\nGASOLINE   LAMPS\nSHAVING   SUPPLIES\nBADMINTON SUPPLIES\nGOLF CLUBS AND BALLS\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nSKIS\nGUNS\nSAWS\nLAMPS\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR.H. MABER\nPhone 665        610 Kootenay St\nROBT.NOLTE\nMaster Tailor\nClothes of the finest Imported\nwoolens made on the premises.\nTwo Fittings       '\nAWAY\nAttending Pacific Northwest Con\ngross of Optometry at Portland.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nMedical Arts Bldg.\nIn 1936 there were more than 176,-\n000 federal, state and local government units in the United States,!\naccording to the report of the na-|\ntiohal resources committee.\nCHARLES\nMORRIS\nMen's and\nBoys'Weai*\nfor Gifts\n547 Baker St.     Phone 147\nTop\nTip\nTailors\nOne Look li Worth\nThousand Words.\nII\n\u00ab\nil\nTHIS STORE WILL BE\nOPEN TILL 9 P.M. TONIGHT\nAND FRIDAY EVENINC\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited.\nWHOLESALE 26\u2014PHONES\u201427 RETAIL\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nt\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\n\"&HH*9i*3fc*&^^\n-YOUR OWN-\nCIVIC\nIT'S GUEST\nNITE\n2 FOR 350\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 7 AND 8:20\nStMOCf\n\/\/\"A CHRISTMAS CAROL\"\nfM by CHARLES DICKENS,\n-WWBB   wllh Sir Seymour Hick* * Donald Catthrop\nJ|m|f    IA Paramount JUUaif \u2022 Directed by Hwiry Edward.   ,\nti^H A ..11.rH.|e\u00ab-Twl(.s**a\u00ab Fro*.trie. '\nPlus Our Second Major Attraction\nTHE TOPS IN AIR THRILLS THAT NEVER LET YOU DOWN!\nt\u00bb] CHINA\nCLIPPER\n,PAT O'BRIEN\nROSS ALEXANDER \u2022 BEVEftLY ROBERTS\nHUMPHREY BOGART .MARIE WILSON\nFRIDAY IS BINGO NITE-Ten Prizes\nA Few of His\nFAVORITES\nOn the Tree . .\nHang One of These\n\"Man About Town\"\nShirts on the Tree for\nHim\n$3.50\n. . Are Sure to\nPLEASE HIM\nInfinitely!\nUnpoetically, but truly, these are exceptionally fine shirts\nespecially suited for the man who likes collar comfort,\nsmart colors and fine tailoring. We know of no better ornament for his tree.\nOTHERS AT $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00\nEmory's Ltd.\nOPEN EVENINGS TILL XMAS\nORIENT HOSIERY\n\"The Gift that tells her She's Lovely\":\nSemi-service, Service, Crepe and Chiffon\n8ILK 8CARVES-ln attractive\nPatterns\u2014\n75< to $1-75\nWOOL   GLOVES   OR  GAUNTLETS\u2014In bright patterns\u2014\n65* T0 $1.75\nHANDKERCHIEFS\nNeatly Boxed\n35*.\u201ed50<\nBRUSHED WOOL\nSWEATERS \t\n$4-95\nSLIPPER8\nA large variety and size range,\ncomplete\u2014\n65<    $2.75\n75<  ,\u201ed$1.00\nDANCE SETS\u2014Crepe or satin\n$1.00 T0 $2.25\nSLIPS\u2014In crepe, satin and Vlt-\ncosuede\n$1.00 T0 $2.25\nPYJAMAS, NIGHTGOWN8\u2014\n| In \"Visco- A*j, tC\nsuede  9\")\nNIGHTGOWN8\u2014Satin, M CA\nhand embroidered W\"\nOUTSIZES IN  LINGERIE\nA 8PECIALTY\nGODFREYS'\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\n373 BAKER        PHONE 270\n^txs&attost^fxtssssfitx!^^ I\nEEEHt^ Today\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 8:27\n; Let Us Supply Your Xmas Turkey\n5 Grade A Birds given away tonite\nDRAWING AT 9:35 P.M.\nAt 2:14,7:04; 9:51\n$\nA Breexy, Laugh-Packed Story.\n\"BLONDE   TROUBLE\"\nWith Eleanore Whitney\u2014Johnny Downs\nnut w_r Mi* tmjr-jr.tmwjt- trnje-trnje-tttrnjertrnju-tmi\nGIVE THEATRE TICKETS AS CHRISTMAS CIFTS\nran*rmt*n \u00bbtmt*rmf*rmt a mm*r*i\u00bbt*w*t*rm*rmt\nFriday ALICE FAYE \u2022 THE RITZ BROTHERS\nSaturday\nIn   \"YOU CAN'T HAVE EVERYTHING\"\n'    -   \u25a0        - ' ,;-,,-~v.. \u25a0\n\u2022\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. 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