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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":" w^mmmBmmmmmmmm\nWrtoirnas Adventure in Nelson\nas Frost Follows Snow\nPag\u00ab thret\nVOLUME 37 -\ntrail Blazers Take.\nx2x;r$^jj^'I^i^:\nPage) Swot \"'\nFIVE CENTS t>|R COPY\n\\ON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, DEC. 27, 1938.\nNUMBER  215.\nFrance Says lr\\f^Not Negotiate With Italy\nExcept on Basil of Renounced 1935 Accord\nHuge Defence Rtirifmcemmts\nTo Be Recommended for U. S\u00bb\nRoosevelt Congress Message\n-.\n\u25a0\nArmed Might of Aggressive Dictator States,\nThreatens Security of Nation\nand Its Neighbors > \"\u25a0\nBy EDWARD E. BOM AR\u2014Associated Preu Staff Writer\nWASHINGTON, Dec. 26 (AP) .\u2014President Roosevelt was reported\nluthoritatlvely today to have decided on a double-barreled recommenda-\nllon to congress for United States defence reinforcements of unprecedented\npeacetime magnitude.\nPersons close to the administration said the president Intends to\nreport, in the message he will deliver personally to a Joint senate?\nhouse session Jan. 4, that the security of the'nation and its neighbors\nis threatened by the armed-might of aggressive dictator states.\nA week later, under present arrangements, a special message\nwill present detailed recommendations for an army, air force of some\n10,000 planes and numerous other measures.\nThus, the administration contemplates a quadrupled military air\nfleet of at least 13,000 aircraft, including the minimum of 3000 congress authorized for the navy in\nthis year's Fleet Expansion act\nSTARTLING EVIDENCE\nSupporting the proposals, congressional circlei have heard, will\nbe \"startling\" evidence that Germany's aerial force and aircraft\nfactories geared to war demands\nthreaten to upset completely the\nworld balance of military and pol-\nworld balance of military and political power.\nFOUR SERIOUSLY\nHURT IN COAST\nAUTO ACCIDENTS\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 26 (CP) -\nTraffic accidents sent 13 persons\n, to hospitals, four in a serious condition, in Vanooliver and nearby\nNew Westminster over the Christmas holiday week-end. Almost a\ndozen drivers were arrested here,\nmostly on drunken driving charges.\nMrs. Elizabeth Fuller, 59, was\ntaken to hospital In a serious con-\ni dltion Christmas ,Eve with undetermined injuries, after a hit-and-\nrun motorist struck her. Police later\narrested a man they said was the\ndriver ofthe car and charged him\nwith failing to return to the scene\nof an accident\nMrs. Ales Mitchell, 82, and Arthur Hopper, were; alio taken to\n-notpital with varlou\nTtr\nmobiles and their condition was described da serious.\nAt New Westminster, 12 miles\neast ot here, G. S. Montclth, 62,\nsuffered two fractured legs when\nstruck Christmas Eve and was\ntaken to hospital In a serious condition.\nInsurgents Take\nImportant Town\nHENDAYE, France, Dec. 26 (AP).\n\u2014The Spanish Insurgent military\ncommand reported tonight the capture of Borjas Blancas, strategic\ntown 16 miles southeast of Lerida\non the main Catalonlan highway to\nTarragona on the Mediterranean\ncoast,\nInsurgent radio stations broadcast\na report from General Franco's head -\nSuarters that this Important posl-\non tell on the fourth day of their\ngeneral offensive into the heart of\nthe gpvernlnent stronghold in northeastern Spain, Borjas Blancas Is approximately 35 air miles from Tarragona. , \u2022\n'\u25a0 ,,\nChinese to Talk\nTruce With Japan?\nBONO KONG, Dec. 26 (AP) -r\nRoports Wang Ching-Wei, former\npresident of the Chinese executive\nYuan (cabinet) was en route to Hong\nKong to discuss \"truce\" terms with\nJapanese emissaries have caused\nlively discussion in diplomatic circles here, i\nThe reports of Impending \"truce\"\nnegotiations could not be confirmed.\n(Continued on.Page Ten)\nPRAIRIESFREEZE\nVancouver   Watches\nMercury Drop to\nFreezing\nWINNIPEG, Dec.. 26 (CP) \u2014 Traditional Christmas weather prevailed across the prairies during the\nweek-end-^old and snow. It was a\ngreen Christmas at the Pacific\nit but the cold wave struck\n -Amtm^lt^i.\nArctic breezes swept over it*\nprairies Christmas Eve, the mercury sliding to near-record tows\nfor the-season after heavy snowfall.\nEdmonton had a nearly a foot\nand a half of snow; a light fall was\nrecorded at Calgary and far-below\nzero temperatures prevailed In Alberta's capital tonight\nThe mercury sank almost to the\nfreezing mark in Vancouver. It\nstarted snowing in Vancouver early\ntoday \u2014 just a day too late to bring\na white Christmas \u2014 and tonight\nthree inches of snow covered the\ncity. It was deeper ln the.outlying\ndistricts.\nAlta. Man Dies\nin Auto Accident\nINNISFAIL, Alta., Dec. 26 (CP).\n\u2014Vern Perry of Jumping Pound,\nAlta., was killed and his wife injured when their automobile skidded\non loose gravel and left the Calgary-Edmonton highway four miles\nsouth ot Innisfail last night Mrs.\nPerry Is in Innisfail hospital where\nher condition was described as\n\"fine\" today. Innisfail Is 76 miles\nnorth of Calgary.\nHarry Myers of\nComedy Fame Dies\nHOLLYWOOD, Dec, 28 (AP). -\nHarry Myers, the brightest ot comedians when the movies were\nyoung, the gamest of extras when\nhis fortunes waned, died on Christmas day in a hospital room paid for\nby the film industry's relief fund.\n. The 56-year-old actor, best remera-\nbered for his starring role ln tho\nfirst screen version of \"A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court,\"\nsuccumbed to a three-day attack of\npneumopia.\nESPIONAGE DOCUMENTS IN BRITISH\nCONSUL BAG RESULT IN SO ARRESTS\n,\nHENDATEE, France, Dec. 26 (AP).\n\u2014An official insurgent communique\nfrom Spain today announced 50 persons had been arrested as a result\nof tha discovery of espionage documents to a valise carried by a British vice-consul and that two British subjects would be tried by insurgent courts.\nThe communique said \"The British diplomatic pouch was used currently by if y rings at Sen Sebastian\nand St Jean De Luz (France),.\" The\npapera were found In the pouch\ncarried by Vice-Consul Harold\nGoodman, British vice-consul at San\nSebastian.\nIt was declared the documents included the names of two British\nsubjects: \"Mr. Golding at San Sebastian consulate and Mr. Ratten-\nbury, attache at the British agency\nat Burgos (insurgent) capital.\"\nThe communique said insurgent\nJudges would determine the \"responsibility of these two men\" \"who\nwere mot identified further.\nPRESENTS PILE ON CHILDREN OF\nMAN SHOT GETTING THEIR TREE\nELYRIA, 0\u201e Dec. 26 (AP) \u2014Two\nlittle girls received more presents\nthis week-end than they ever\ndreamed of \u2014 but there was little\nmerriment In their Christmas.\nIt was gone with the shotgun\nilugi of a rural \"Santa Claus\" who\nkilled their Jobless father and seriously wounded their mother\nwhile he said, they were taking a\nChristmas tree from his farm.\nMore than 30 presents \u2014 dolls,\nbuggy, toy sewing machine, sweets\n\u2014 showered in upon Sarah and\nGeraldine Rousseau, eight and It\nyears old, at the home of their\ngrandomther, Mrs. Sarah Dahm.\nThere were anonymous gifts of\ncash.\nToday their father, William Rousseau, 37, was burled and yesterday\ntheir mother, 29, had a blood transfusion at the hospital \u2014 aa result\nof trying lo provide a Christmas\ntree and a few trimmings.   \u00bb,\"\u25a0',\nWilliam Case, 84, known as \"Santa Clans\" to the' children ot his\nneighborhood because of his long\nwhite beard and bla kindliness, had\na sad Christmas too \u2014 sorrowful\nthat hia shots struck the couple.\nt&ern\nDEATHS IN U.S.\nMOUNT TO 400;\nTRAFFIC CLAIMS\nBIGGEST NUMBER\n\"Green\"   Christmas\nCredited  With\nSmaller.Toll\nLIST HEADED BY\nNEW YORK'S 35\nNEW YORK, Deo? 26 (AP).-\nThi United Statei paid with more\nthan 400 lives for iti Chrlitmat\nholiday week-end and at least\n301 of the violent deathi were\ncaused by traffic accldenti.\nThe total death count for ths\nweek-end,, however, was ihort of\nthe 500 fatalities reported lut\nChriltmai. *.  \u2022\nFire claimed 17 lives thii yiar;\ngunshot woundi, 13; suicides 13;\ntrain accidents 10; drowning *| and\nmlscellaneoui causet, the rest.\nLargest death tolls by states\nIncluded: California 25; Illinois 22;\nMichigan. 26; Missouri 16; Neto\nJersey 13; New York, Including\nNew York City, 35; Pennsylvania\n26; Texai 29.\nTraffic claimed the greatest number of lives with a known count of\n2B5 VUataa, - -1 - '\u25a0\u2022 *\u25a0\nOther fatalities Included hunting\naccidents,, suffocation, electrocution\nPPRiW''W'Pli <**\nobscene language in the presence\nofwomeh.-'\nA' prevailing \"green\" Christmas\nwith its attendant restriction of icy\nroads and snow, was credited with\na smaller death count than last\nChristmas.       \"   ; \u25a0     \u25a0 ,\nAmbassadors of\nU. S. and Britain\n\". Meet Japanese\nTOKYO. Dec. 28 (CP-Havas)-\nJapanese leaden were occupied today with new representations from\nGreat Britain and United States\nand an appeal from Emperor Hiro-\nhito tor a stronger national spirit.\nSir Robert Craigle, British ambassador, calling on Foreign Minister Hachiro Arlta today, was reported to have Urged him to work\nfor a solution of issues involving\nBrltisll concessions in China.\nEarlier, the United States ambassador, Joseph Grew, discussed\nJapan's China policy with Arita. It\nwas understood Grew called the\nforeign minister's attention to more\nthan 10 Japanese air attacks' on\nAmerican property in China.\nFire Destroys\nAlta. Buildings\nMAYERTHORPE, Alta., Dec. 26\n(AP)j \u2014 Damage estimated at $22,.\n000 was caused by a fire that started\nin a garage heating room here yesterday and destroyed the garage\nand two adjoining stores,       *\nThe blaze broke out In Stratton's\ngarage and gutted N. S. Hoffman's\ngenual store and L. 0. Crocket's\nimplement Shop.\nAlta. Man Dies   .\nas Horses Bolt\nROCKY MOUNTAIN HOUSE,\nAlto., Dec. 26 (CP)-Joseph Jnowlee,\n63, was killed Saturday when a team\not horses he was unharnessing in\na bar became frightened, bolted\nand threw him against a wall crushing hia head,     -\u25a0 .\nGolf Teacher Dies\nLONDON, Ont, Dec. 26 (CP). -\nJames Edward Klethan (Kiernle)\nMarsh, 43, one of Canada's best\nknown golf teachers, died suddenly\nIn hospital tonight He was professional of the London Hunt and\nCountry club tor almost 15 yean.\nTweedsmuir Sends\nCanada's Greetings\nfO King and Queen\nOtTAWA, Dec. 28 (CP - Governor General Lord Tweedsmuir\nsent the Canadian people's Christmas greetings and best wishes for\nthe New Year, to King George and\nQueen Elizabeth and received an\nacknowledgement.\nHis excellency's message read:\n\"My humble duly to your Majesty\nI have,the honor on behalf of tha\nCanadian people to send to.your\nMajesty and har Majesty the Queen\nour respective greetings and good\nwishes lor..Christmas and the new\nrepjy! -The- Queen\nr thank you for the\nige which you\n[ of the people\nfte King's\nand j slncei\nkind and lo\nhave sent tu on\nIndicted on Anti-Trust Charges\nTwenly-one of the foremost leaders ln'American medicine have\nbeen indicted on anti-trust charge by a grand jury bf the U. S. district\ncourt Shown here, are two bt those Indicted. At left Dr. Morris\nFishbein, of Chicago, editor of the American Medical association\nJournal, and Dr. William Creighton Woodward, director of tha Bureau\nof Legal Medicine and legislation of the American Medical association.\nThe medical men are being Charged with conspiring to thwart the\noperations of the Group Health association, Inc., of Washington, D.C.\nEmpire Families Led in\nGaiety by King and Queen\ni.iiiimiiiiliiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiii.iiiiiii\nVANCOUVER AUTO\nHOLDUPS WORK\nFOR POLICE\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 28 (CP).\n\u2014Three automobile holdups In\nVancouver by bandits using almost identical tactics, confronted\npolice over the holiday weekend. Two of the victims were\n,.<aitt drive*.,'.'..i,; \\\u00b0. ,.,,\u25a0;-.-\n' Charles E.' Yoiing was robbed\nof $20 after forced to drive from\nher* to Chilliwack, about 50\nmiles east, by a bandit believed\nto have been armed.\nAnother taxi driver. R, G. McPhee, was forced to drive to an\naddress In the east-end Christmas night but tha bandit fled\nafter. McPhee hailed some\nfriends on the street       >'\nJ. Callagars told detectives\nhe was confronted by an armed\nthug when he entered his parked\ncar here Christmas eve. Callagars was forced to,drive to\nthe Kitsilano district, where the\nman robbed him of $1.50.\niiiiiiiiiiiiliimtiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii\nAttend Dedication of\nTablet  to\nGeorge V\nBy The Canadian Prats\nPeace on aarth\u2014ihatterad by\n\u2022taccato gunfire and bunting\nbombs en far flung battlefronti\nIn Spain,and China..   \"\ndeed will toward men \u2014 Im.\nRerllted by nationalistic anlmoi'\nilea and racial outbreak! In Central Europe and Palestine.\nSuch wu tha picture Canadian!\nholiday- '   \"   ~ ;\nA lymbol of the fact thii holiday li a family ens throughout\ntheir vast empire, the King and\nQueen gathered about them In\nmow-covered Sandringham, In\nNorfolk, their closest relatives In\nEngland.\nA gay Christmas tree, personally\nchosen by the King from nis estate,\ndominated the celebration as the\ntwo young princesses, Elizabeth, the\nheir apparent and Margaret, opened their gifts.       ;\nAccompanied by tha Queen,\nQueen. Mary and other members of\nthe house party, the King attended\nthe dedication of a tablet to the\n(Continued on Page Two)\nDaladier Pushes Plans for a Mighty Hands\nOff Demonstration at Tunisia? Adolph Hitler\nin Role of a Peacemaker Is Not Acceptable\nBUCHAREST, Deo. 26 (AP) -\nOfficial circles tald todty 88 per-\n\u2022ont were killed and 260 seriously Injured In a passenger train\ncollision last night between tha\nSouth Betsarablan station of Fre-\nkatzel and Etulea.     -\nIt was, feared deaths might\ntotal 160 because many of the Injured were laid to be In a hope-\nTen   condition, i Molt   casualties\nwere peasants, workmen, small\ntradesmen and soldiers on their\nway home for Chrlitmii. \u25a0\nAn Investigating committee,\nheaded by the mlnliter of com-\nmunlcatloni and publlo health,\nhurried to the teens. Two station\nmasteri were laid to , be undir\narreit Because both trains were\nlocals, officials ssld It Was Improbable any foreigners were\npassengen.\nGreat Expansion in Canadian\nAviation Stales Hungerford\nPlanes   Multiplied,   Personnel   Expanded,\nThrough and Other Routes Opened for\nMail; Through PassehgersComing Up\nBy S. J. HUNQEftFORD   \u2022\nPresident Tram-Canada Air Lines\nDuring the past 12 months, Trans-\nCanada Air Lines has grown steadily and surely. With the fleet of\nplanes assembled and thoroughly\ntested under Canadian conditions,\nthe staff trained, the ground facilities gradually taking shape over\nthe transcontinental route, we are\nflying on daily schedules* between.\nMontreal and''Vancouver, between\nLethbridge and Edmonton, and between Vancouver, and Seattle; The\nlast-mentioned service, which hat\nbeen ln operation tor more than a\nyear, connects the two cities by two\nflights daily, and carries passengers\nas well as mails. Postal matter Is\nbeing transported by night hetfceei)\nWinnipeg and the coast and by day\nbetween Montreal, Ottawa. Toronto,\nand Winnipeg, our pers<)nneMa be?\ncoming more and more familiar\nwith the eastern section of this\nroute. We are making a painstaking study of terrain and weather\nconditions, and such details as .landing fields and lighting arc being\ncarefully developed by the department of tt-tmipoi-i.-with a view to\nnight schedules between Montreal\nand' Winnipeg. Air express ll carried from Montreal to Vancouver,\nbetween Lethbrld ge and Edmonton,\ns_d,'by arrangement with the Prairie AlrWays, from Regina to Saskatoon, Prince Albertand North Bat\nU-rfwil . \u25a0\nYEAR OF ORGANIZATION\nBetween April, 1937, when the\ncompany was incorporated, and tha\n'\u25a0'\u25a0\" WMaaZ'a-  7''\\'. '\nEND OF LITTLE\nWINTER'SIGHTED\nGREAT BRITAIN;\nMERCURY RISING\nSnow and* Fog Cause\nCancellations af\nSports\nVILLAGSS, TOWNS\nISOLATED BY THAW\n.' By PAT U88HER\n; Canadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Dec. 26 (CP Cable)-\nThe end of Great Britain's \"llttlt\nwinter\" wai lighted tonight as\nrlilng temperatures brought iluth\nand fog In place of mow and frost.\nWarm air from Ireland drove off\nthe . oold currents from Europe\nwhich had kept the continent\nshivering for 10 days.\nThi weather again halted iched.\nuied outdoor iports ai Boxing day\nwai celebrated. If It wai hot mow,\nIt was fog that caused postponements and cancellation! of foot\nball, rugby and horse racing-\nKent was hardest hit by the\nwaning cold ipell.- Many towns\nand villages were Isolated, Including Deal and St Margaret's Bay\nbut the thaw Indicated condition!\nWould soon Improve.   '.'\n(Continued on Page Three)\nLife Saved When\n(uls OH Hand\nMINNEsVPtiUS, De<J. 26 (AP).-\nHenry Donnett, 32, had the courage\nto cut off hii own right hand with\na pocketknUe to wye hia life and\nphysicians said today he was recovering.\nDonnet reported last night tor his\njanitor duties at Central high school.\nPart of his Job was keeping the\nfires going.\nWhen the stoker plunger of the\nfurnace became clogged, Donnett\nreached Into the hole with his hand.\nThe metal bit into his hand, mashing and imprisoning it. The mashed\nhand would not budge, only spurted\nblood. -\nAlone In the building and tearing\nthe plunger would tear off his entire arm, Donnet managed to reach\nhis pocketknile and despite the intense pain hacked off the hand at the\nwrist\nIt took several minutes \u2014 \"that\nseemed like an eternity,\" he said.\nHe made a wire tourniquet and\nstaggered to a telephone. Doctors at\nGeneral hospital, said Donnet had\ndone a neat Job of amputating and\nthat they had merely cleaned up the\nwound.\n\u201e -\nOperation Gives\nGoldfish Freedom\nVICTORIA^Dec. 28 (CP).-Here's\na real fish story\u2014one about a two-\ntolled goldfish who couldn't swim\nbecause - the two tails worked\nagainst each other.\nHerb Warren, city park super-\niiiiiiiiiMiiimiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiniiiiiii\nMAN , INTERRMPT-S\n, ARCHBISHOP IN\n, BtBSING    '\",\nCANTEBBUBY. ingland, Dec.\n28 (AP)'.7-The Archbishop of\nCanterbury: was interrupted\nduring his blessing of the nativity scene in Canterbury cathedral Saturday'when a man strode\nforward and shouted; \"I pray\nyou to desist from this pre-re-\nformation, childish practice,\"\nPolice removed the man and the\narchbishop continued from\nwhere he had left off\u2014\"Unto\nus a child is born.\"      ,\niiimmiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiii\nTrail Polar Bear\nin Christmas Dip\nGayda   Says  Voyage;\nConsidered, as\nUnfriendly.   -.-\u25a0'J\nPARI8, Deo. 2d (AP) - France\ntold Italy today ihe accepted tha\nItalian note renouncing the 1935\nLaval-Muisollnl territorial treaty-\nbut that the accord mutt stand I\nas the only bull for negotlatlone\nbetween the two powen. -.,-\nThui, the next move In the col?.\nonlal issues wai put squarely up\nto Italy ai Premier Daladier, despite Fascist orlei of \"provocation\", dlicloied plant to make\nhit tour of Corscla and Tunlila\na mighty \"handi off\" demonitra?\ntion to Premier Mussolini. .    -\u2022\nAt the ume'time, France was\nreported In Informed circlet to\nhave Instructed Iti ambassador In -\nRome to reject any propoiali\ncasting Chancellor Hitler of Ger?\nmany In the role of peacemaker\nbetween Italy and France.\nOn Christmas day at Paris, it wat\nreported, Premier Musiollni had\nlet the Paris government know\nthrough unofficial channels he\nwould suggest French-Italian differences arising trom Fascist agitation for Tunisia and other French\nterritory be lubmltted to arbitration.\n(Contlnuid on Page Thna)\n\u25a0- \u00ab. 3. HUIWlMIFORD\nend of the year, Trans-Canada activities consisted largely of organization. In 1 September, \u25a0 WI, we acquired the Canadian Airways, Limited,, sertloe between Vancouver\nand Seattle, and'in that month we\nbegan our first commercial operations, with two Electras. In ihe following month, we took delivery- of\n(Continued on Pige Tin)'; '\nintendent, iayi imall boys playing\nIn-Beacon Hill park first noticed\nthe goldfish's plight He was splash-\ning near the surface, one tail trying to drive him forward and the\nother\u2014growing near the head\u2014trying to shove him back.\nThe boys called an unidentified\npark.visitor with a penknife. The\nforward tail was chopped off and\nthe' goldfish swam merrily downward to join his fellows, Warren\nsald.\nNELSON\nVictoria   ..\nVancouver\nKamloops ..\nPrince Geoi.\u201e- ....\nEstevan Point _\nPrince Rupert\nLangara\t\nDawsbn _\u2014.....\nSeattle\nTRAIL, p. C* Dec.-\nlone Polar Bear, William Gopp, 69,\nagain took his Christmas day swim\nin the icy waters of the Columbia.\n\"Once more I accomplished the\nfeat\", Mr. Gopp said today. \"A biting wind greeted me, making it\ndifficult dressing. My hands got\npretty cold, but as usual I warmed\nup pretty quick. I feel well despite\nthe extreme cold of the water.\n\"I bade my friends, the fish, a\nMerry Christenw\"...\nMr. Gopp has taken a daily dip\nln the Columbia 22 times this\nmonth, beating his previous record\nof 17 for December.\t\nKilled by Auto\nos Flags Help\nPARKLAND, Alta.. Dec. 2D (CP).\n\u2014Peter Sorkilon, bachelor farmer ol\nthe Parkland district 65 miles south\nof 'CalBlry, was killed instantly\nwhen struck by an automobile on\nChristmas eve. Sorkilon was Injured fatally during an attempt to\nflag another machine after his own\ncar went into a ditch,\nOntario Traffic\nDeath Toll Is 11\n, TQRONTO, Dec. 26 (CP).-Hew*\npersons died in Ontario fro... traffic\naccidents during ths three-day\nChristmas holiday. Five of them\ndied in two accidents Involving a\ntrain and a radial car.\n.Charles E. H. Thomas, 53, roaster\nof Ridley college, St. Catharines and\nhis wife were killed tonight when\ntheir automobile was struck by a\nradial car five miles north of Weiland. -    a\nThree residents of Detroit died\nin the flaming wreckage of their,\nautomobile when it exploded after\nbeing struck by a train at Maiu\u00ab\nStone; near Windsor, Saturday night.\nRobert Bird, 15-year-old meeseng. ,\ner boy, died in a Toronto hospital\nafter being knocked from his bicycle   ftid   crushed   beneath   the\nwheeli of a milk cart Sunday.\nMrs. Fred Trowbridge of Morrit-.\nton .near St. Catharines, waa killed\nand   het  husband   injured   when\nstruck by a car while crossing *;\nstreet intersection.\nCanadian Car to   \u2022\nEstablish. Air\nFactory Mexlct\nMEXICO CITY, Dec 26 (AP).-\nInformed sources here reported\nday that the war and treasury\npartments signed a contract !\nday with the Canadian Car k Foi\nry company of Montreal for\nestablishment of a military\nplane factory ln Mexico.\nWork was to start early In January, these sources stated, but ao\nfurther details' were available ina\"  ,\nmediately.\nPlanes Bomb Cities\nBARCELONA, Dec. 26 (CP Havas)\n\u2014Insurgent airplanes pounded cities\nand villages in Catalonia and Estre-\nmachira today as government armlei\nfought stubbornly to check the\npowerful Insurgent land drive in\nthe Pyrenees and Lerida zones.\nPlanes attacked Barcelona, Mon-\nmartre, Cambrils, lic'us, Almedijar,\nEl Viso and other objectives.\nFirst reports listed 34 civilians\nkilled and 98 injured.\nREPORTS CONFIRMED\nMONTREAL, Dec. 26 (CP) - Tha\nCanadian Car k Foundry companjr*\n\"will operate a military airplane\nfactory In Mexico City which is the\nproperty,of the Mexican government\" Leonard A. Peto, company\nvice-president said here tonight in\nconfirming reports the Canadian ,\nfirm has signed an agreement with\nthe Mexican war and treaiury de\u00bb,\npartments.\nMr. Peto said the company mere?\nly would take over Operation of a\nfactory now standing in Mexico\nCity and now concerned \"with i\npair work ind the building of s~\nmachlnes.\"\nE. D. Archibald and George Trites\nFarmer Held on\nFailure to Use\nGun With Caution\n\"Archibald, t. M. &:\nEmployee, Great\nBear Lake\nPortland *:....._\nSan -Franclico\nSpokane  \u2014\nLos Atigelei _\nPenticton -.-_.\nGrand Forks .\nCranbrook \u2014\nCalgary.._,-\u2014\nEdmonton\t\nSwift Current..\nMoose Jaw _\u201e.\nPrince, Albert .\nSaskatoon\nlu'Ap\n24* 4\n34 40\n30 32\n32' 36\n46* 44'\n36 42\n34 SB\n48 60\n18 24\n82 68\n12 -\n4 10\n9* J\nV \\t\n22' 18*\n8* V.\nW t*\nIV, 2*\nW' IO'\nU*. 12*\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C\u201e.Dec. 28\n(CP). \u2014 Jack McMaster, a farmer\nof the Nukko lake district 16 miles\nnorth of here, Saturday stood remanded to Jan. 10 for trial on\ncharges of falling to use reasonable\nprecautions in handling firearms\nand of wounding D. Franklin Allan.\nMcMaster appeared before Judge\nH. E. A. Robertson in county court\nhere Friday for preliminary'hearing on the charges laid after Allan,\nanother Nukko- lake farmer, was\nwounded while hunting along the\nshore.of the lake Nov. 4. He was\nreleased on $600 ball bonds. '\nAllan suffered a chattered bone\nin his forearm and pieces of metal\ntrom the breech of a shotgun he\nwas carrying penetrated his lungs\nwhen the gun was struck by a\nbullet alleged to have been fired\nby McMaster, hunting in a boat\nBear th_ lake shore.    , '\nVANCOUVER, Dec. J\u00bb (CP). -\u00bb|\nA   Chriltmai   drowning   trag\nwhich took two lives at Alta lake,\nsome. 60 miles north of Vancouver,\nwas reported here today.\nErnest D. Archibald, 80-year-ola I\nemployee of the Consolidated Mining k Smelting company at Great I\nBear lake in the Northwest Tet- j\nritorles, and George Trites were\nfiresumed to have drowned ln the'\ncy waters of the lake after a search\nEarty discovered their dog-sled and\nlggage abandoned. _,'\u00a3{__\nThe men had started out for Rate*,;\nbow lodge last Monday en route here\nbut no fears were felt for their safety until Archibald failed to visit his\ndaughter's home here on Christmas day.\nA hurried telephone call was made\nto  H.-ynbow  lodge   and  a  search I\nparty sent out to look for the mei\nThe sled and luggage were fou\nbut no trace of the men.\nA^aa-fflate^,^^\n maaaM)\n\"*\"*\"\u25a0\". \u25a0\"\u25a0\naammmme\n\\*wm\n\u25a0rv*.-\nI   PAGE TWO.\nFERNIE, \\KES COLEMAN 5-3 Ai\nPASS JUNIOR PUCK LOOP WENS\nFERNIE, B, C.-CaplUllzlng on\npenalties to their opponents Far?\n| nle K. P, Juniors Inaugurated\ni their home season with a 6-3 vie-\nI' tory over the Coleman Juniors In\nI a regular Crow's Nest Pass junior\n. hockey league fixture played In\ni.' the local arena on Monday after-\nt> noon before a large crowd of home\np.  tans.\nit   Four of the local and two of the\n.\" visitors' goals were scored when\ntheir opponents were short handed.\n: The match, was a gruelling hard-\nchecking game with players being\nI sent to the cooler in a regular procession. There  were IB penalties\nthanded out, 10 of them going to the\nlocals. Jenkins with two goals and\nI Moore with a goal and an assist\n[-\u25a0were outstanding for Coleman, Fer-\n, nie's stars were Burt with a goal\n\u25a0 apd an assist, Serek with two goals\nand Baker with a goal and an as-,\n- sist. George Anderson.althoughfail-\nf Ing to get a scoring point, proved to\nSite, an excellent offensive and de-\n\u25a0 dtasive player, his back checking\nspoiling many a Coleman-attack.\nLINEUPS \u25a0-\u2022:>\u25a0-,\nColeman \u2014 Petrosxy, Boulton.\nSmith, Cocclolonl, Nlmcan, Ferano,\nKrowall, Trotz, Jenkins, Moore.-\nFernie \u2014 J. Anderson, Cairns,\nDolynuk, Burt, Baker* Serek\/\/ohn-\n, stone, SkUUngS; G. Anderson Wilson,\nMcNaugbtorr, Washburn.'I    \">'..\n8UMMA&Y* -'-,\nFirst period: Coleman, Jenkins,\n9:10; 2, Fernie, Burt, 10:15: 2, Fernie, Johnstone (Cairns) 11:30; 4, Fernie, Baker (Burt) 18:45,\nPenalties: Jenkins,, Wilson',.Trotz,\nKrowall, McNaughton, Burt, Nlmcan. , '\u25a0...   -...\u25a0     '.-,      \u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\nSecond period: 5, Fernie, Serek\n(Baker, McNaughton) 14:00; 8, Coleman, Jenkins (Moore, Smith) 10:40.\nPenalties: Burt, Serek, Wilson,\nCairns,. Jenkins, Ttoti (5 mins.),\nWilson,       ,.    ,    -.       -.'   ,\nThird -period: >7, Fernie, Serek\ntBurt) 1:30; 8, Coleman Moor* (Nlmcan) 14:00. \u2022 \u2022   -     ' -  *\"\u25a0\nPenalties:' G, Anderson, Smith,\nNlmcan, Burt. '\u25a0\u2022 ,    ....\nReferees; Squib Coughlin and Ab\nDicken,\nNelson Churches Honor\n-In^special services Saturday night\n; and all day long on Sunday church-\n,es of all religious sects in Nelson\ncelebrated the birth of Christ, often\nr with most impressive ceremonies.\n'.The true Christmas spirit seemed\nBo'be' deeply imbued in Nelson-\n' Hes as churches were nearly' all\ntilled to capacity at the numerous\n^services. -   '\nI Commencing with a children's\n\"service Christmas Eve In St. John's\n\u2022 Lutheran church under the super-\nI vision of Rev. V. L. Meyer, church\nI Christmas celebrations continued at\nyj:45 p.m. at St. Saviour's pro-\nJcathedral with a midnight holy com-\nLlhunion service, Rev. J. G. Holmes\ni. officiating.\n[.\"sCATHOLIC MIDNIGHT\nMASS\nI' The Catholics commenced their\n-lavish and spectacular display to\n\u25a0-commemorate  the coming  of  the\nfKing with the midnight mass, in\n\"Which Rev. Radey J. McKenna, D.D.,\ngave an address. Lighted candles\nadded both brilliance and meaning\n.to th? splendor of the environment.\n\u2022Christmas   morning   three   masses\nTwere held with Most Rev. Martin\nPM. Johnson, D.D., bishop of Nelson,\nV conducting the services. Beautiful\nB. Christmas carols and other music\n'' accompanied these services.\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundstrand Adding Machines\n,   OFFICE 6UPPLIE8\nI-Underwood Elliott Fisher Ltd.\n636 Ward St., Phone 39\nCOAL\nLUMP\n$10.50 Ton\nSTOVE\n$9.00 Ton\nPHONE 889\nTOWLER\nFUEL and\nTRANSFER\n526 Stanley Street\nEarly morning communion services also took place in the two\nAnglican churches, St. Saviour's and\nthe Church of the Redeemer with\nRev. W. 3. Silverwood, and in the\nScandinavian church as conducted\nby Rev. Earl E. Llndgren;\nMost churches cancelled Sunday\nschool services to encourage communion with each lamily attending\nas a unit. Christmas Carols and\nsongs of Christmas praise comprised\nfor the main'part all Christmas services, accompanied by short addresses honoring the greatest day\nin the calendar of Christian churches. Morning services at 11 o'clock\nwere' fhe day's. features at all\nchurches, while a few held carol\nand choral services in the evening.   \u25a0      ,\nSPECIAL MUSIC. \u00b0\nMattlns'and Holy Eucharist were\nheld in the late morning service at\nSt. Saviour's, with Maundcr's setting for the communion service,\nStephen's \"Te Deum\", and Gounod's anthem, \"Though Poor Be the\nChamber1', featuring a vesper service took place.in the evening.\nTwo services were held in the\nLutheran church, both' being in the\nmorning, the first being held in\nthe German Language and the\nsecond in English, with the sermon\nof the latter being \"The Heavenly\nLight of Christmas\".\nThe First Baptist chutch held Its\nusual Sunday school in the morning\nfollowed by- the service, with the\nsermon entitled \"The True Christmas\". The topic of the evening service, again conducted by Rev. Ger-\nild M. Ward,' was \"A Christless,\nChristmas\".\nSpecial carols by the choir and\njoined in at times with the congregation featured the service at the\nChurch of the Redeemer. There\nwas no evening service.\nNeither of the United Churches\nheld Sunday school classes. Rev.\nFoster Hilliard of St Paul's church\npreached on the subject \"In the\nFullness ot Time God Sent\" accompanied by special Christmas anthems by the choir. In the evening\nfor the half-hour previous to the\nservice there was a carol-song-service for the congregation, assisted\nby the choir. The special Christmas message was \"Love or Perish?\",\nagain with special Christmas anthems by the choir.\nPORTION OF CANTATA\nAt Trinity church the senior choir\nsang the anthem \"A Christmas Ca-\nTAKETHE\nShortest Route\nBy BUS TO\n- Spokane\n\u25a0 Seattle\n- Vancouver\ns\nLv. NELSON Greyhound Depot\n6:45 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. dally.\nAr. SPOKANE, Washington\n12:10 p.m. add t'M p.m. dally.\nInterior Stages\nLIMITED\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nsr\nHume Hotel..Nelson, &.c\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   .   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\nHUME \u2014 Thomas Lawson, Nelaon; Mr. and Mrs. A. Whyte, Victoria; Bishop Adams, Vernon; G. W.\nDrury, Miss H. Harvey, Trail; Jdhn\nWilson, Boswell- J. H. Bauvlse,\nSheep Creek; E. J. Amey, Montreal;\nH. M. Coursey, B. M. Wards, Medicine Hat; C. B. Munson, Chicago.\nVANCOUVER, B. G, HOTELS\nI      \"YOUR   VANCOUVER   HOME\"    Newly Renovated Through-\nls% mm t mm ____ - * out   Phones and   Elevator.\nuuiierin not el a. paterson, .ate ot\n000 Seymour St, Vancouver, B.O.    Coleman, Alta, Proprietor\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nWhen In SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at tho\n\u00ab10 Riverside UA#*_1 VAI 11W      0iPpo,lta\nAvenue     . HOHBI V <U1jH El I   pall|,en D|dg.\n.  '  EVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN QUESTS\n-T-      NELSON DAILY NEWS, NlLSON, B.C-TUESDAY MORNING, DEC, 27. 1958.\nNucleus of British Women's Army    '\n'\" ,   .-\nOil Wells 100 Miles South Arctic\nd Northern Development\nKEY\nand  THERE\nA squad'ot the newly-tormed women'* auxiliary\nservice Is pictured at Chelsea. England, undergoing\ndrill at the Duke - of York's headquarters. The\nwomen will form the nucleus of a new women's\narmy, of which they will be the officers. They will-\ntake regular army drill except that the | regulation\narmy Step of 30 inches has Been shortened to 27\ninches to suit the female stride.\nResigns\nGen. Ludwig Beck, chief ot\nthe German general staff, whose\nresignation was accepted by\nChancellor Hitler. He was\nsucceeded by Gen. Franz Haider.\nrol\", by Dr. J. E. Hodgson, under\nthe direction of Choirmaster C. C.\nHalleran, and A. A. Pagdin gave a\nbeautiful rendition of \"Legend\" by\nTschaikowsky. There was a short\naddress by Eev. J. A. Donnell and\nthe sacrament of baptism was performed three* times. The evening\nservice was wholly choral, with\nmusic by the senior and' junior\nchoirs. The songs included \"Holy\nNight\" as arranged by Sir Hugh\nRobertson, two Christmas carols\nwith descants, \"the First Noel\".\n\"Shepherds Shake Off Your Drowsy Sleep\" by the junior choir, and\nselections from the Christmas cantata \"Bethlehem\" by J. H. Maunder, by the senior choir with Miss\nAmelia Hanna as soloist\nSpecial services at the Bethel\nTabernacle where Eev. C. A. C.\nStory officiated and a children's\nservice in the evening at the Scandinavian church concluded the\nChristmastide devotional programs\nin Nelson.\n8ERVANT OF ALL\nWe feel it almost unnecessary to\nspeak here of the protound regret\nwith which we have learned of the\ndecision of Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett to leave Canada and make his\nhome in Great Britain. For Mr.\nBennett this newspaper has always had unbounded admiration\u2014\nfor his extraordinary intellectual\nequipment, for his equally extra'\nordinary knowledge and experience,\nand for his splendid and unselfish\ndevotion to his native land.\u2014Halifax Herald.\nSOAP LAKE\n(or HEALTH\nOur moderate prices include\nSoap Lake Mineral Baths,\ncomfortable rooms and home-\ncooked meals. Soap Lake Water is beneficial for rheumatism, skin diseases and stomach troubles.\nOPEN THE YEAR AROUND\nRATES FROM $16 A WEEK\nLAKESIDE Hotel\nAND SANITARIUM\nMrs. E. Malln 4 Son   .\nSoap Lake, Washington\nSHEARS\nBETWIH ALL SUTIOHS III IjUUM\nSINGLE FARE\n-.-.AHD,. fl( \u25a0 \u2022   \u25a0\nONE-QUARTER\nFOR ROUND TRIP\n.     (Minimum Fare,250\nOpINO\u2014Dcctmber 30 to 2 p.m. Jinuiry 2.\nRETURHIHQ\u2014Ltjv. destination until\n\u25a0    Midnight, January 3, 1939.\nFill jwrtlmlora fro* Uml Aomt.\n,   . \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\"'*\u25a0_; \u25a0 W37-38H\nQtMjimGL^c\nffce\nHUMAN SIDE\nllNEWSJ\nBY   EOWIN; C.HILL\nWhen the Germans were mere\nbarbarians, they got along with the\nJews without much trouble. The\nFranks, Burgundlans, Swabians and\nFrisians, German tribes which swept\ndown,the Rhine in the sixth century, were wild and rampageous\nand it they found any person distasteful, they sestfully clove him in\ntwo with a battle axe.\nSome Jews met this fate, but It\nalways involved something personal\nand never such nonsense as ritual\nmurders, protocols of Zion and Aryan race theories. These tribesmen\nClovis among them, found many\nJews in Germany, traders and merchants, there with the Romans from\nthe second century on.\nSo, If one takes a look at history,\nin the light ot what is happening in\nGermany today,.he feels that it is\na wanton slander on these earlier\nGermanic tribesmen to compare\nthem with the reich,  ,\nLIKEABLE WARRIORS\nThe early German barbarians\nmust have been a likeable people.\nThey had some quaint customs of\npillage, were great fighters, as the\nRomans found out, and got up a\nlooting party on short notice, but\nnever did they poison a nation with\nstupid myths, never did they turn\non cruel hatred and sadism like a\nfaucet; never did they wreck homes\nand temples and assess their victims\nwith the. damage, never did they\nscourge multitudes of desperate men\nwomen and children into penniless\nexile, never did they profane civi\nlizatlon by committing execrable\ncrimes in. its name.\nTheir exploits in murder and arson were imputative and spontaneous,, unpremeditated and invoked\nno hypocritical sanctions of national regeneration or the resurgence\nof their venerated \"Volkgelst\", Furthermore, they picked on somebody\ntheir' size, wholesome, sportsmanlike, chivalrous, generous and kind\nwere the barbarians ot those dark\ncenturies. We cannot and would not\nforget the Gentian\/ of Goethe,\nHeine, Schiller, Leasing, Bach, Mozart, Haydn and Beethoven! It is\nwell to call the roll of these names,\nas an antidote to this infection of\nhatred against whole .peoples and\nwhole cultures.\nAbout 12,000 Jews were killed by\nfanatical German mobs ln the first\ncrusade. They were expelled from\nEngland in 1291, and from Spain\nln 1492. The \"Black Death\", the\nplague which killed one-fourth of\nthe people of Europe in the years\nfrom 1348 to 1350, was ascribed to\nthe Jews. It was said to have been\ncaused by their poisoning of the\nwells. In Germany they were killed\nand tortured by the thousands, their\nsynagogues burned and their property seized.\nBut these were unorganized, more\nor less, spontaneous outbreaks of\nfanatical ignorance and brutal stu-\n'aATIi,RDAY\nBternational-American\njburgh 4, Cleveland 1\n;tern United States AmateUr\nYork Hovers 9, Atlantic City\n5 (overtime tie)\nHershey S, Baltimore 4\nSUNDAY\nNational Hockey Leag\nNew York Rangen 1, Boat\npidity. Never was there anything\ncomparable to the cold-blooded\nstate program of extermination\nwhich exists today. Further, Europe\nwas ot a more fluid make-up, before'the days of the modern sovereign states. There were many small\nstates and petty principalities, and\nthe victims ef these persecutions\nfound many avenues of escape or\nhaven of tolerance. And in a few\ndecades they were always back\nagain.\nIt was after one of these periods\nof exile that Rudiger, the Bishop\nof Spires, welcomed their return.\nHe had missed the stimulus to learning and Industry, and he wrote at\nthat time: \"Wishing to make of\nSpires a city,.I thought to increase\nits' honor a thousand-fold by bringing in the Jews.\"\nThrough all the long dreadful\ncenturies of religious persecution, in\nwhich the Jews were by no means\nthe only victims, the only bold,,\ncivilized, effective assault on antl-\nscmitism was made by the young\nhumanists in the late 14th and early\n15th century, in the time of the\ngreat Erasmus. Reuchlin, a German\ndisciple of.Erasmus, carried through\na brilliant foray against the Jew-\nbaiters- and with satire, ridicule and\na devastating attack on the hoary\nritual murder myth scored heavily\ntor tolerance an decency.\nUlrich von Ilutten, a young knight\nridiculed the bigots in a noglatin\nsatire which had all Europe laughing. Somehow, they kept their\nheads on their shoulders. And with\ntheir great leader, Erasmus, these\nand other young men proved for\nall time that' the mere rallying of\ncivilized people against cruelty and\nstupidity is 'more effective, then\ncounter-force and counter-hatred.\nArid it maj, be that a wave of\nplanetary laughter may. yet blow\nthis new and wickeder tyranny into\nsome dark dust-bin of the centuries.\nWife Preservers\nigue .\n         _., ioston 0\nNew York Americans 5 Chicago 1\nDetroit 4, Canadiens-l,.\nInternational-American\nSyracuse 4. Springfield 2\nCleveland 5, Hershey 1,\nNew Haven 2, Pittsburgh 2\nPhiladelphia 3. Providence 2\nSeattle S; Spokane 6.\nVancouver 0; Portland 4.\nEASTERN U. 8. AMATEUR\nNew York Hovers 4, Hershey 2.\nlytbNDAY\nKootenay\nNelson 4, Trail ,8\nIn Europe\nSmoke Eaters 9 \"Germany 1.\nSmoke Eaters 8, Germany 1\nManitoba South Division Junior\nWinnipeg Monarchs 3, Portage La\nPrairie 3   ..\nKenora 6, Winnipeg Falcon-Rangers 1\nALBERTA SENIOR\nLethbridge 2, Edmonton 1.\nSASKATCHEWAN SENIOR\nSaskatoon 3, Flin Flon 2. (Overtime). \u00bb\nWeyburn 4, Moose Jaw 2.\nYorkton 8, Regina 3.\nINTER. AMERICAN\nPittsburgh 5, Springfield 3.\nPhiladelphia 6, Rhode Island 3.\nAMERICAN ASSN.\nWichita 0, Bt. Louis 4.\nHockey Schedule\nThe Nelson city hockey * leaguo\nschedule, announced by Jack Wood\nof the N. A. H. A. Monday night,\nwill complete the first half of\nleague play In bantam, midget and\njuvenile hockey for the 1938-39 season. A strenuous holiday schedule\nhas made possible this early completion of the first half.\nThe schedule follows:\nTODAY ,\n9:00-10:00 a.m. \u2014 Panther bantams\nvs. Westerners.\n10:00-H:00 a.m. \u2014 M.R.K. bantams\nvs. F. A. C. (No. 3).   .; \u201e -       ,.\n11:00-12:00 a.m. \u2014 M. R. K. midgets vs. F. A. C. (No. 2).\nIf no senior practice 6:00-7:00 p.m.\nF. A. C. bantam (No. 1) and ft A. C.\n(No. 2) will play in this time.\n7:00-8:00 p.m. \u2014 F. \"A. C, midget\n(No. 1) vs. M. R. K. ..\u00ab\n8:00-9:00 D_n. \u2014 FA.C. juveniles\nvs. M. R. K.\n9:00.10:00 p.m, \u2014 Junior practice.\nWEDNESDAY\n9:00-10:00 a.m. \u2014Panther bantam\nvs.M. R. K.\n40:00-11:00 a.m. \u25a0\u2014 Westerners vs.\nF. A. C. (No. 3). .\n11:00-12:00 a.m. \u2014 F. A. C. midget (No. 1) vs. F. A. C. (No. 2).\nTHUR8DAY\n9:00-10:00 a.m. \u2014 Parither bantam\nvs. F. A. C, (No. SO.\n10:00-11:00 a.m. \u2014 F. A. C. bantam\n(No. 1) vs: F. A. C. (No. 3)\n11:00-12:00 a.m. \u2014 M. R. K. midget\nvs. Ti A. C. (No. 2).\n8:00-9:00 p.m. \u2014 M. R. K. Juveniles\nvs. Scouts.\n9:00-10:00 p.m. \u2014 Kline's.\nFRIDAY\n9:00-10:00 a.m. - M. R. K. bantams vs. F. A. C. (No.l).\n10:00-11:00 a:m. \u2014 Westerner ban\ntarns vs. F. A. C. (No. 2).\n11:00-12:00 am. \u2014 F. A. C. midget\n(No. 1) vs. M. R. K.\n3:00-4:00 p.m. \u2014 Panther ban\ntam vs. F. A.C. (No.-3).\n4:00-5:30 p.m. \u2014 F. A. C. juveniles\nvs. M. X K.\n8ATURDAY\n9:00-10:00 a.m. \u2014 F. A. C. bantam\n(No. 1) vs. Westerners.\n10:00-11:00 a.m. - M. R. K. bantam vs. F. A. C. (No.'2).\n. 11:00-12:00 a.m. \u2014 Scout juveniles\nvs. F. A. C.\nTo maka a foolproof Stan, talta two\ntablespoons fat, ono and one-half to two\ntablespoons flour (or each cup of sravy\ndesired, mix smooth to separata stsrch\n' grains and discouraso lumping. Then\nadd water, Milk or meat stock\u2014oold or\nlukewarm, never hot\u2014stir constantly\nwhile cooking, and cook long enough to\nprevent raw eUreh taste.\nProduction^ in   1938\nLikely to Treble'\nLost Year     ,,\nOil walls one hundred miles south\nof .the'Arctic Circle at Fort Norman\non the Mackenzie river, are playing an Important part in tbe use\nof modern transportation to develop\nCanada's vast Arctic hinterland.\nOperating only three months in the\nsummer,. the wells produced this\nyear three hundred- and fifty barrels ot oil daily. Last year the wells\nproduced eleven thousand five hundred barrels, more than double that\not any previous year. Last year's\nrecord, however, will be nearly\ntripled when the final totals are\nadded up for 1938. ' .\nThe oil wells supply fuel tor\ndlesel-powered boats and mining\nmachinery in that part of the universe- During the summer months\ntanker barges move oil on regular\nschedule to the radium-silver mine\non Great Bear lake as well as to\nGreat Slave lake, to supply the\nYellowknife bay and Gordon lake\nmining areas. Last year, an eight\nand a half mile pipeline, with storage\ntanks, was constructed to overcome\nthe.bar to navigation at the St\nCharles rapids on Great Bear river,\nabout 1200 miles north of the International boundary.\nFdr the transportatioln requirements of a country so-vast as tha\nCanadian Northwest Territories, an\nample supply of gasoline is re?\nquired. To meet this demand, caches\nof gasoline are strategically placed\nthroughout the actively developed\nregions of the Arctic and sub-Arctic\nfor the convenience of aviators,\nprospectors, traders, fishermen ana\neven native Eskimo and Indian\ntrappers. Fuel oil is indispensable\nto mining operations, and the discovery, several years ago, of oil\nnear Fort Norman has. greatly aided\nCanada's far northern development.\nWith further refining to be made\npossible In the near future, thiB\noil supply may be adapted to heating and cooking purposes ln hospitals, schools, police and trading\nposts in the region, thus materially\naiding the conservation of the\nlimited timber resources. \u2014 James\nMontagues in Canadian Business.\nNo Concessions\non Freight Rales\nCreston Is Told\nCRESTON, B. C.-Guy Constable,\nchairman of the agricultural, committee of Creston board of trade,\nwhich Is making an effort to secure for Creston shippers a freight\nrate reduction to Swift Current, Regina and Moose Jaw, Sask., on (\npar with those conceded Okanagan\nshippers Dec. 12, reports a letter\nfrom A. T, McKean, Cf. P. R. general\nfreight agent, says:\n\"While your representations have\nbeen given the most careful con-\nslderatldn,' I regret to advise-that\nWe cannot make any further concessions in the rates from Creston\nand district. . . \"\nJ. B. Holder, chairman of Creston\nbranch of the- B. C. F. G. A., said\nthe matter was being pressed by the\ntransportation committee.\nWith a'pple movement sluggish,\nselling concerns are not in a position to definitely state how serious\nthe loss in trade will be to- these\npoints- in view of the wiping out of\nthe preferential rate Creston enjoyed of five cents a box to Moose\nJaw and Regina, and two cents to\nSwift Current.\nHowever with more than 50,000\nboxes still to move it is figured the\ntrade to these Saskatchewan points\nwould be very helpful,.particularly\nWith the free entry of oranges and\nother citrus fruits due to commence\nat the first of the week.\nWILL AND ENERGY\nQuite as impressive as Neville\nChamberlain's strong will and self-\nassurance is the physical energy\nof this man of 09, who used to be\nregarded as something of an invalid. If there is a thing to be done,\nhe goes and does it himself, whether\nIt is* to see Hitler or see the French\npremier or see the Windsors. It\nwould not be an utter surprise if\none ot these days Mr. Chamberlain\ndropped in on Washington with his\numbrella.\u2014New York Times.\nMark of (he Terrorist in Berlin\nBars Jewish\nStudents\nDr. Bernhard Rust, Nazi min-,\nister of education, issued instructions to all German universities and technical colleges\nto ban all Jewish students from\nlectures buildings and premises\nunder their supervision.\nSimmons\nTHE WORLD'S FINEST\nBEDDING\nFURNITURE - BEDDINC\nPhone 553 \u00ab1 Baksr \u00bbt.\nEngaged to\nHeiress\nPrince Aage of Denmark, uho\nrenounced his royal fights yeara\nago to enter the French loreign\nLegion, was reported by tha\nParis Soir to be engaged to\nmarry Dorothy Gould, daughter\nof Frank Jay. Gould, American\nmillionaire. \"I'll marry Prince\nAage if he wins a divorce,\"\nMiss Gould, the former Baroness\nde Graffenried de Villars, told\nThe Solr in a telephone interview. The prince's divorce action will be complicated. His\nwife, the Countess Mathilde des\nContl Calvi di Bergolo.ls a\nCatholic He must obtain the'\npermission of his uncle, the\nKing ot Denmark, to seek a divorce. He is dlso subject to\nFrench law as a major in the\nFrench army.\nMORE ABOUT\nCHRISTMAS\n(Continued From Pane One)\nmemory of his father, George V,\nin Sandringham parish church.\nAs a Christmas gift to, the western\nworld, the 21 .American Republics\nsigned at Lima, Peru, a pact for\nintercontinental solidarity against\nforeign aggression, ,\nDEATH IN SPAIN\nIn Spain the birthday of Christ\nwas observed\u2014as last year\u2014under\nthreat of death. While tens of thousands prayed in snoW-mantled cathedrals for an early peace, insurgent\narmies pressed forward at Christmas dawn'in a determined offensive against the government capital\nBarcelona.'\nAnd in China, Japanese bombers\ncontinued roaring overhead, systematically raiding important cities.\nThe mass of German citizens observed Christmas in the old-fashioned, Christmas way, despite a Nazi\nedict for a Neo-Pagan celebration.\nPOPE PIUS PRAY8\nIn Rome, Pope Pius XI, aged\nand troubled pontiff of the Roman\nCatholic church, rested and prayed\nafter the exertion of celepratin.\nthree masses and delivering a strong\ndenunciation of what he termed Italian- disregard of the Papal Concordat. ,\nIn Palestine, where a temporary\nlull was observed in the conflict\nbetween Jew and Arab, the Latin\nPatriarch, Mgr. Lulgid Barlassini,\nissued a Christmas message of \"good\nwill and good wishes originating in\nlhe hnly town of Bethlehem\" to the\nAmericas.\nTwenty thousand British troops\nmain'.ain.d the troubled peace In\nthe land of Christ's nativity and an\niron rfnp: encircled'Bethlehem while\nthe Holy drama of the Gentle\nTsrcher's birth was reenacted.\n\"Hitler himself gave 1300 brown-\nshirt \"old guard\" -Nazis a Christmas\nentsrtainment Saturday in historic\nLoewenbraeu beer cellar. Der fuehrer expressed \"complete confidence\nin the future.\"\n*LIFE IN GERMANY\n, It Is not safe to be a Jew in Germany\u2014witness the persecutions of\nthe past and present and the threat\nof worse to come. It Is not safe to\nbe a Catholic ln Germany\u2014witness\nthe demonstrations and insults aimed at Cardinals Innitzer and Faul-\nhaber. It ia not safe to be a Protestant in Germany\u2014witness the plight\nof Pastor Niemoeller. It is not safe\nto be a Nazi in Germany\u2014witness\nthe bloody purge of 1934. No sane\nperson is safe in Germany.\u2014New\nYork Sun.\n-,\nJail Inmates Enjoy Christinas\nDinner, Privileges and Services\nWicse wrecked store fronts in a Berlin thoroughfare stand tor only a fractional part of the destruction wrought by the enraged mob of Nazis that\nrioted, unchecked -by police,, through the German\ncapital in I ho worst nut I* Jewish orgy since Reichsfuehrer Hitler's rh-e to supreme power. Jewish stores\nwere looted, synagogues bumed to the ground while\nfiremen stood by (\"only able to save adjoining\nbuildings\") and any who dared to1 protest were\nbeaten. Similar riots took place in other German\ncities\" notably Munich and Vienna.\n-  ' . (C.P.O. Radlophoto),\nRigid discipline was relaxed and\nconfinement within four iwalls\nmeant less for inmates of the Nelson provincial jail, as they spent\none of the best Christmas days for\nseveral years, Deputy Warden W.\nA. MacBravne stated Monday.\nCarol ana religious services by the\nSalvation Army, a talk by Rev. J.\nA. Donnell of Trinity United church,\nturkey dinner, and better food\nthroughout the day. made the oc-,\ncasion considerably brlghter'for the\n51 men confined in the jail. An add?\ned Comfort was the entertainment\nprovided by a radio installed by\nsome of the prisoners, some ot the\njail officers and several citizens.\nThe Salvation Army rendered carols and a short service, and distributed gifts among the inmates In\n(he morning, and Mr. Donnell spoke\nto them In the afternoon. Many\nhad gifts of various kinds, sent in\nby relatives and friends.\nKINO TURKEY.\nThe turkey dinner menu, served\nat noon, Included the turkey with\nIts trimmings, roast pork, two or\nthree vegetables, and plum pudding. For breakfast there was fried\neggs,' buttered toast and \"good\"\ncoffee, while two of the main ingredients for supper were cold meat\nand cake.\nAll the Inmates were allowed to\nBtoy out of their cells until 8:00 p.m..\nInstead of- being locked up at 4:00\nor 7:00 p.m. as usual. Non-working\nprisoners are usually locked up at.\n4:00 and workers at 7:00 p.m.\nTHREE PAROLED\nThe jail's population ot 51 al\nChristmas was considerably lower\nthan In recent months, when the\naverage has been 64, The decrease\nwas brought about by the parole of\nthree prisoners by the governor-general at Ottawa,,,and the \"lopping\noff\" of a few days from the terms\nof some prisoners who were scheduled to leave _prlson on or about\nDecember 21 The men were given'\ntheir freedom in time for Christmas.\n T\nCURLERS ANNUAL\nPREXY TOURNEY\nTO OPEN TODAY\n\u25a0*\u25a0\u2022\nNelson Curling club's President\nvt Vice-President competition, an-\nBual battle for .the season-ending\nanqutt opens today.  Fifty-two\nrinks will take part In the knockout event, \u2022 :,-\u2022\nThe schedule follows:\nTUESDAY   '\n7 p.m\u2014Syd Haydon vs J. H. Allen, P. T. Andrews vs J. J. McEwan, and Alderman A. G. Ritchie\nvt P.- E.. Poulin, William Kline vs\nJ. M. Gordon, and William Marr vs\nDaVe Laughton.\n9 p.m.\u2014W. T. Fotheringham vs\nE. H. Simpson, J. X McLennan vs\n' H. M. Whlmster, T. A. Wallace vs\nA. X Murphy, Andy Kraft vs J. G.\nBennett, Robert Smillie vs John\nDingwall,   '\nWEDNESDAY\n1 p.m.-A. B. Gilmer vs T. R. Wilson, Alt. Jeffs vs F. A. Whitfield,\nA. J.Hesse vs John Teague, City\nSchedule final, H. Erickson vs Doug\nCummins. .1\n9 p.m.\u2014William Brown vs E. C.\nHunt,, S. P. Bostock vs J. P. McLaren, R. E. Horton vs J. H. Long,\nG. W. Dill vs E. H. Woolls, Dr. H.\nH. MacKenzie vs E. E. L. Dewdney.\nTHURSDAY\n7:00 pm\u2014Hugh Robertson vs C.\nH. Marshall; R. D. Wallace vs P. E.\nPoulin, C. F. McHardy vs G. S.\nGodfrey, J. A. Smith vs R. - D.\nHall, J. J. McEwan vs J. W. Smiley.\n9:00 p.m.\u2014L. S. McKinnon vs P.\nT. Andrews, Alderman Roy Sharp\n. vs C. D. Blackwood, R. L. McBride\nvs Robert Andrew.\nRinks, taking part, follow:\nPresidents\u2014Alderman A. G. Ritchie, S. Haydon, W. Kline, W. Marr,\nW. T. Fotheringham, j: R. McLennan, T. A, Wallace, A. Kraft, R.\nSmillie, A. B. Gilker, A. Jeffs, A.\nJ Hesse, H. Erickson, W. Brown,\nS. P. Bostock, R. E Horton, G. W.\nDill, Dr. H. H. Mackenzie, H. Robertson, R. D. Wallace, C. F. McHardy, J.' A. Smith. J. J. McEwan,\nL. S. McKinnon, Alderman R. Sharp\nand R.X. McBride.\nVice-Presidents\u2014J. B. Gray, J.\nH. Allen, J. M. Gordon, D. Laughton, E. H. Simpson; H. M. Whimster,\nA. E. Murphy, J. B. Bennett, J.\nDingwall, T. R. Wilson, F. A. Whitfield, J. Teague, D. Cummins, E. C.\nHunt, J. P. McLaren, J. H. Long,\nE. H. Woolls, E. E. L. Dewdney, C.\nH. Marshall, P. E. Poulin, G. S.\nGodfrey, R. D. Hall, J. W. Smiley,\nP. T., Andrews, C. D. Blackwood and\nR. Andrew.\nLast two rinks of each side are\nunattached. They follow, in order of\nskip, third, second and lead.\nR. Sharp, W. R. Dunwoody, C. H.\nStark, Jerry Wallace; C. D. Blackwood, F. R. Pritchard, C. H. Hamilton, Murray Clark; R. L. McBride,\nJ. G. McKay, A. C. Virtue, R. DeGirolamo; R. Andrew, R. Bell, F.\nF.wlng, p. Valentine. '\nBEAUTIFUL \"COLD SEAL\"\nWINDOW SIGNS\nAs Low as 10c per Letter\nCTJACKMAN   1811 Ward\nBusiness Services    I- Phone 196\nj\nGALTUJMP\nCOAL\nWilliams Transfer\n613 Ward 8t , Phone i06\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-TUE8DAY MORNING, DEC. 27, 1938,\n,   i ,  i.i i; i i i -,__. VI. i     \u25a0   i.    i \u2022 \u25a0  . \u25a0 \u25a0' i    \u25a0 i ... i \u25a0\u25a0\nwtmnmBiim\nant? \u00a9abib Eortnelfcet\nmmmmmmmmmWlWm'i\nTtlE CHtMESBEGAN TOW ASAIN AND THE PHANTOMS\nAPPEARED IN MULTITUDES. THE SPIRIT OF IK CHIMES\nM0D0NED TOBY TO FOLLOW HER.\nTOBY WAS TRANSPORTED T0A DISMAL ROOM.HE SAW\nMEG, BENT ANO (UNSEATED AT A TABLE. LILLIAN. WILL\n\\!m. jjMjjflgj. NOW Ai flWH WW.WAS WITH HER,\nTHE SCENE FADED AND T0BYAN.1H.MOFTHECHIWS\nFLEW TO THE KWLEY MANSION WHERE A NEW YEAR'S\nPARTY WAS IN P\u00ab)6liE5S.\nIHECOrM^SATI\u00bbWN\/.TH\u00a3BAN(!UETTAM.E.SUDDENLY\nWILL FERN'S SPIRIT APPEARED, A GNARLED FIGURE, WHO\nScout Triumph Ties Up Juvenile\nPuck League; Panther Bants Win\nSaturday city hockey league\ngames resulted as follows:\nBANTAM  LEAGUE\nPanthers 7, P. A. C. (No. HO.\nMIDGET LEAGUE\nM. R. K. 3, F. A. C. (No. 1) 3. \"\nJUVENILE LEAGUE\nScouts 8, M. R. K. 1,\nThe Panther bantams hung up\nanother win to their long series\nof victories Saturday morning\nwhen they swamped the weakened\nF. A. C. No. 1 bantams with a\ncount of 7-0.\nDue to three of their players\nbeing on the sick list the.Fairvlew\ndub had only two ot their veterans\non the ice. .The little rookies- put\nup a game fight and held the score\ndown against great odds. The Panthers relied on solo efforts to score\nall of their goals except one. Bud\nHesse was the big scorer getting four\ngoals. Jack Jarbeau was good for\ntwo and Jack Breeze found the net\nfot- the other count. Bud Whitfield,\nwho generally gets two or three\ngoals, had to be content with just\nan assist. Of the F. A. C, the few\nwho played worked hard. There\nwere no penalties. Jimmy Ringrose\nwas the referee, John tang kept\nthe time and looked after the score\nsheet.\nM. R. K.'a and F. A. C. DRAW\nThe Midget game between the\nM. R. K.'s and the F. A. C. No. 1\ndid not come up to expectations.\nThe-ice was heavy and both teams\nfound the going very tough. The\nfinal score was 3-3. The F. A. C.\nstarted the scoring and the M. R. K.\ncame back to tie it up every time.\nIn the first period Frank Ghrlstlan\nopened the scoring on a two-way assist from Matheson to Smith. Tommy\nGriffiths evened the count when he\nbatted in a rebound off Goalie Delmer Ferg. In the second Ar^ Smith\n\u00ab\u00abs\u00abs\u00abswa\u00bb\u00ab*\u00absss*\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab\u00abs*^^\nSHORT TALKS ON\nADVERTISING\nPrepared by the\nBureau df Research and Education, Advertising,\nFederation of America\nMILK FOR BABIES\nNUMBER 14\nTomorrow morning, 30,000,-\n000 bottles of milk will be\nplaced on the doorsteps of Canadian homes. The milk will\nbe clean, pure and safe from\ncontamination. Special milk\ntrains will serve the large\ncities, rushing the precious\nfluid at express speed direct\nfrom cows to customers. In no\nother land do consumers enjoy\nsuch a wonderful milk distribution system as we have in\nthis countrv. In Europe, milkmen still dip milk from their\ncans into the open containers\nof householders.\nOnly a generation ago, our\nown milk supply was insanitary and the source of much\ndisease. Bacteria in milk took\na staggering death toll among\nbabies. Since then a marvellous change has come about.\nToday the dairying industry\nis almost a miracle of cleanliness and rigid sanitation. In\nthe modern dairy, every piece\nof equipment Is taken apart,\nscrubbed, and completely sterilized twice each day\u2014an 8-\nhour job. This scrupulous care\nsaves the lives of thousands of\nbabies every year.\nBesides making this important food safe for babies and\ngrown-ups, the milk industry\nhas conducted a widespread\neducational campaign, through\nadvertising, to make better\nknown the great health value\nof drinking milk. As a result,\nthe public now consumes one-\nthird more milk per capita.\nThe use of cheese and other\nmilk products has also been\nshharply increased by advertising.\nThis development of the\ncountry's milk industry is an\neducational story. It illustrates\nthe progress in food merchan\ndising, which has Improved\nthe quality of almost everything you serve on your table.\nIt is interesting to see how\nImportant a part advertising\nplays in stimulating this progress.\nEvery housewife over 40 remembers the old-fashioned\ngrocery store where her mother bought the family food,\nmuch of it scooped out of open\nbins and barrels, where it was\nexposed to dirt and smells.\nThe cat in the cracker barrel\nwas no fairy tale in those days,\nbut the files really got first\nchance at everything. All this\nis changed now. Modern food\nstores are models of cleanliness. Their neatly arranged\ncounters and shelves are lined\nwith attractive packages, cans\nand bottles of well prepared\nfoods.\nNot only are these processed\nfoods clean and attractive.\nThey also save many weary\nhours of kitchen labor for\nevery housewife. Perfectly\nbaked bread wrapped In wax\npaper, fresh ground coffee in\ncans, ready-cooked breakfast\nfoods, mixed pancako flour,\ncanned fruits and vegetables\nDf every conceivable variety.\nThis great change has been\nbrought about by modern\nmerchandising methods. The\ndemands Of up-to-date merchandising reach back into the\nfood factories and control the\nprocessing and packaging. Advertising is the most compelling force iri the Whole system,\n'orclng manufacturers to devote every resource to giving\nthe consumer better values in\nquality, safety snd convenience.\nAdvertising Is the housewife's friend and helpmate,\npicked up John Worthlngton's pass\nto give Jimmy Ritchie no chance\nand the F, A. C. were,in the lead\nagain. Doug Winlaw evaded his\ncheck to put the M. R. K.'s oh a tie\nagain. The last-canto found both\nteams tire, and the puck was beyond\ncontrol most of the' time. .Johnny\nMilne picked up a loose puck during a Fairview drive and Goalie\nRitchie failed to get his eye on it\ndue to the players milling around in\nfront of him, and It went, into the\nnet for the F.A.C.'s last marker.\nThe ever-reliable Doug Winlaw\ncame to the rescue of his team\nagain and tied up the count..The\ngame was very clean, in contrast\nto the previous tussle between these\ntwo clubs, and Referee Jim Ring-\nrose did not hand out a single penalty. Timekeeper was A. N. Winlaw.\n8C0UT8 TRIUMPH \u00ab-1\n'The Scout juveniles trounced the\nM.R;K. team 6-1 to win their first\nleague gome. This puts the three Juvenile teams oh even terms as to\npoints as each have wOn a game.\nThe Soouts found added strength\nwith Bert Ramsden out with them,\nand he accounted for four of their\ngoals. Art Matheson and Don Gibbon snared the other two counters.\nMatheson was good for two assists as well. Tommy Cookson in the\nScout net had little to do, but he\nhad some close calls whenever the\nM. R. K.'s had the pressure on.\nJim Eccles had a lot of breaks, but\nhe was successful on only one occasion, when he scored the.M' R.\nK.'s only-goal. Jim was also given a\npenalty shot when he Was tripped\nby Mickey Prestley, and incidentally Mickey drew five for It, as\nEccles received a cut over one eye\nIn the trip-up. Jim failed to score\nas Cookson handled the shot quite\neasily. Other hard workers for the\nM X K. crew were Walter Nisbet,,\na midget moved up for the game;\nWilf Wood, Wilbert Anderson arid\nBilly CSossley. Referee Jim Ring-\nrose and Jack Whitehead handled\nthe game very well, and handed\nout a lot of penalties.\nThe Scouts got the most of them.\nJim Tarling, Art Matheson, Mickey\nPrestley, served time in'the cooler.\nMatheson was sent off three times,\nthe last being a major for kicking\nRef. Whitehead. Mickey was off\nthree times as well, end One trip\nwas for five. For the M. R. K.s\nBilly Crossley was off twice and\nWilbur Anderson once. The referees\nwere Jim Ringrose and Jack Whitehead. Time keeper was A. N. Winlaw.\nAMERICAN FIGHTER WINS\nKOENIGSBERG, Germany, Dec.\n26 (AP)\u2014Steve Dudas, Edgewater,\nN.J., heavyweight, defeated , Paul\nWallner of Germany in a 10-round\nbout here today.\nAlberta Block Is\nDestroyed by Fire\nCROSSFIELD, Alta., Dec. 26 (CP),\n\u2014A small apartment block and a\nstore, valued at $10,000, were destroyed here by fire of unknown\norigin during the week-end: Four\nfamilies were made homeless.\nCrossfield Is 30 miles north of Calgary.        :\t\nBEARS WIN 13-0\nBERKELY, Cal,, Deo. 20 (AP)-\nPushlng over two touchdowns In\nthe last half of the final period,\nUniversity of California completed Itt 1938 football season today\nwith a 13-0 triumph over Georgia\nTech before a crowd of 35,000,\nMORE ABOUT\nLinLE WINTER\n(Continued From Page,One)\nMore'snow fell In London and\nsouthwest England before the thaw\nbegan. Some Londoners plodded\nthrough slush .in the West End\nwhile pthers were still gayly sleighing and skiing on the slopes ot\nHampstead Heath.\nMore than, 100 guests at a St.\nMargaret's Bay hotel spent a cheerless Christmas when the heating\nsystem broke clown. All roads were\nblocked, to, tha nearest railway,\n.three miles away. Repairmen, had fo\ngo by\" boat from Dover. They took\na .boatload of shivering visitors\nback to Dover,\nRoads from Deal ln all directions\nwere impassable. Some automobiles\nwere abandoned in snow up to the\ntop.\nIn Norfolk the King was compelled to cancel his customary Boxing day shoot.\nRailways reported services running normally, however, as the\nfrost menace disappeared.\nFear was mounting for the safety\nof fhe North Shields trawler Jean-\nnie Stewart with a crew of nine.\nThe craft is unreported since she\nleft port 10 days ago, due to return\nlast Saturday.\nFires in various parts of the\ncountry caused ll deaths during\nthe holiday weekend, but traffic\nand other fatalities were negligible.\nAt Bootle, near Liverpool, an explosion damaged the house of John\nHerbert, killing him and critically\ninjuring his wife.\nFor lhe first time since 1928\nweather forced cancellation of all\nair services between Great Britain\nand the continent.\nBOVINQTON, England (CP). -\nMrs. Emily Newman, 60, doesn't\nshirk her duty. A. telegraph messenger, ' she delivers telegrams in\nsun and rain. \"I started when I\nwas quite young, 20 years ago,\"\nshe says.\nDR. McKENNA SAYS MR. DONNELL\nt-? may tatfi..\n. WATCH THIS SPACE\nTOMORROW\n\u25a0 ' \"\u25a0\u25a0'   \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0' 't \u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0- ', \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0* .     \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0 .:.:\nImportant Newi te Men and Women\n'immmmmmmmmmm&k\n\u25a0 In answer to a communication\nfrom Rev. J. A. Donnell published\nSaturday, dealing with questions\nraised between Dr. R. F.-McKenna\nand himself at and following a discussion between them at the Cathedral hall, Dr, McKenna has submitted the following statement for\npublication: .\nThe correspondence whloh has\nbeen struck up between Rev. Mr.\nDonnell and myself through the\ncolumns of The Daily News, need\nnot be prolonged. Our taking turns\nat being surprised and assuring everyone that controversy is the. farthest thing from our minds, would be\nrather comical if we continued such\nprotestations. My communication of\nlast Friday was meant to end the\naffair.\nIn that Issue, the Catholic attitude\ntowards giving ear to contradictory\ndoctrinal explanations was, I\nthought, stressed sufficiently td obviate any such question as that\nposed the following morning by\nthe pastor of Trinity United. The\nconsistency of the Church's position\nin this matter was stated quite clearly. Rev; Mr. Donnell's right to apeak\nfor Protestantism was challenged.\nReasons tor the challenge Were adduced. A sample of his \"theology\"\nwas given; Repeated assurance of\nample opportunity for him, and others, to- state their objections and arguments at a future series of lectures, was given.\nI had thought that covered everything worth \"tidying\" in the report.\nBut, no such luck. In Saturday's\nheadlines, \"Donnell Asks Will Catholics Be Permitted to Attend His\nLectures,\" a couple of hoary old\nchestnuts are dug up for public\nconsumption. Let's look at them for\na moment:\n\"Dr. McKenna knows that the\naccusation is brought against his\nchurch that it is afraid to let its\npeople listen \u25a0 to more than one\nside of the case. I hope that he\nmay find some way of showing\nthat he has no such fear.\"\nI leave it to tHe readers of The\nDaily News to decide whether or not\nan open forum and the repeated invitation to everyone, including Rev.\nMr. Donnell, to tqke part in the discussion, Is full answer to that ancient accusation and the suggestion\nof fear on my urtt. The only thing\nI fear is that, the supply of such\nchestnuts will cease before I get a\nchance-to crack them. For Bix weeks\nthe- open fdrum was conducted. At\nthe conclusion of every lecture I invited discussion. I offered to answer any difficulties or arguments\nthat might \u2022 be advanced. No one\nraised his or her voice. I realized\nthat, shyness'might prevent an ordinary person from speaking out in\npublic, and encouraged such a one\nto drop me a note by mail, to state\nobjections by 'phone, or to come\nprivately, to the Rectory. Seyeral\nsuch contacts were made, and the\narguments dealt with at the following lecture:. But at every lecture\nuntil the. last Rev. Mr. Donnell,\nwho cannot be) accused of shyness,\nremained silent. Were I in Mr. Donnell's place I shouldn't speak of fear\nat this stage, -,   .    ,       '   ..\nBut since the word has beerf mentioned, we shall take the reverend\ngentleman's own words tor at moment's reflection. Speaking of the advertisement that announced the beginning of my lectures he says:\n\"These lectures were to be glv?\nen on Sunday evenings at 7:30 and\nProtestants,were specially Invited.\n\"I called on Dr. McKenna arid\npointed out to him that this was\nnot a fair thing to dp Inasmuch as\nhe was Inviting people to leave\ntheir own church. He told me he\nhad not thought about this, and\nlater the hour was changed to\n8:30.\"\nThe Trinity pastor did indeed call\non me and requested a change in\nthe hour. What I had not thought of\nat the time, however, was not the\n\"inviting people to leave their own\nchurch\", but the combined special\nservices of the two United churches\nbeing held on that and the following Sunday. Rev. Mr. Donnell's\nvisit was productive of the change\nin time, and for the two objections\nstated. Evidently there was some\nfear that I might seriously affect\nattendance at these services. It was\nnot I who was doing the fearing.\nBut there's another chestnut to\nbe opened. Arid it too gives off an\nodor consonant with its age. Like\nall Rev. Mr. Donnell's remarks, it is\ncouched in courteous phraseology,\nhut the odor is offensive just the\nsame.\nHe writes:\n\"The one and only question is\nas to whether Catholics are free\nto listen to me on terms ot equality. It they are not, then there\nremains th. suspicion which I tor\none would gladly see dispelled, the\nsuspicion that Catholics are treated like children by their clergy\nand not allowed to think lor themselves. Can We not do something\nto banish this and all other suspicions, and talk frankly and fearlessly, as Dr. McKenna has done\nto my people with my full consent, but as he is apparently not\nwilling that I should do to his\npeople?'*,\nThe question has beeri answered,\n\u2014publicly and privately. Mr. Donnell knows the answer perfectly. If\nhe has forgotten it, he need only\nturn to last Friday's Daily News\nand read again what I^said there,\nHad it been read carefully, this\npresent statement need not have\nbeen made. Again, and, I hope, for\nthe' last time, until the next series\nof lectures is Inaugurated, I extend\nto Rev. Mr. Donnell and to every-\nA Glimpse Into Nelson's Municipal library\nCopyright, 1938, Advertising Federation ot America\nThis picture shows a portion of the north side of the capacious\nlibrary, which Is permanently housed in the Civic Centre, the librarian,\nMiss Margaret N. Hincks, being seen seated^at her desk. (Chairs hint\nat the presence ot reading tables. The picture shows between a\nquarter and a third ot the well filled shelves of one of Nelson's oldest\nInstitutions, dating back to 1898, though It became a municipal institution only since the war. r, .,'\u25a0\u201e.. \u25a0\u25a0\u2022 ;\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0.. .,-i-'-\u25a0-'.\n.'..-.-.. '..;    ^\u2014:\\T..  \u25a0:    >\u25a0} .-,fr--\nCHRISIMAS AN ADVENTURE WHEN\nFROST FOLLOWS RAIN AND SNOW;\nNO SERIOUS ACCIDENTS ARE LISTED\none else a hearty Invitation to speak-\nout during the open forum part ot\nthe evenings to come.\nThe suspicion that Catholics are\ntreated as children by their clergy?\n\u2014 . .... ._ .__   jjy\n\u2014You're right In, oi* way, ...\u00bb\nfriend, we treat them like God's\nchildren and protect them from error and confusion. You're wrong, and\nyou know it, in entertaining, even\na suspicion that wa keep them trom\na knowledge of contrary religious\ntenets. You hsd, and shall have, ample opportunity to test the sincerity\nof this repeated assurance at any of\nmy lectures.\nWe do treat them as God's children, and we have to warn them ol\nthe dangers In listening to any one\nman's Ideas on religion, They sre\nwell aware that It Is Christ's Ideas\nwhich count And they remember\nthe solemn warning of Saint Paul\nto the Galatians (Chapter 1, v. 8):\n\"But though we, or an angel\ntrom heaven, preach any other\ngospel unto ,you than that which\nwe have preached unto you, let\nhim be accursed.\"\nThose are strong words. I took\nthem from a non-Catholic version\nof the Sacred Scriptures.\nMORE ABOUT\nFRANCE-ITALY\n(Continued From Page One)\n11 Duce would name the German\nfuehrer, this report said, as his\nrepresentative, while Prime Minister Chamberlain ot Great Britain\nmight stand for France.\n.This reported suggestion met with\na flat refusal in Pans, where it was\nconsidered an Italian manoeuvre to\nmake Italy's denunciation last week\nof the 1935 French-Italian treaty re\ngardlng Tunisia, an entering wedgi\nfor further expansion at Frances\nexpense.\nSuch an arbitration agreement,\nthe French pointed out, would put\nthe French-Italian quarrel on an\nentirely different plane from the\none on which the French maintain\nit now stands.\nFrench .quarters pointed out Premier Mussolini himself,, following\nsigning of the 1935 Laval-Mussolini\nagreement, said all differences, between the two nations had been\ntween two nations had settled. Paris\nofficials said that since Italy declared that agreement invalid, Italy\nalone was to blame for the Rome-\nParis diplomatic differences.\nThe French note was sent to the\nItalian foreign minister,. Count\nGalea.ro Ciano, by Andre Francois\nPoncet, French ambassador to\nRome, It answered Italy's note\nwhich declared annulled the 1935\npact. The pact gave more than 44,-\n000 square miles of territory to .tal\nian Libya and Italian Somaliland\nat the expense ot Tunisia and\nFrench Somaliland.\nTRAVEL BY WARSHIP8\nDaladier arranged to travel by\nwarship and to review huge parades ln Corsica, France's Mediterranean Island department, and Tunisia, her North African protectorate, in a tour of military fanfare.\nBoth territories have been prom\nInent in the Fascist territorial clam\nor raised in the Italian chamber of\ndeputies Nov. 30 and given official\nencouragement by the Italian governments renunciation of the 1935\ntreaty, which also assured citizenship rights of Italian subjects in\nTunisia until 1965.\n.(The Italian press continued the\nFascist ' aati-French campaign,\ncharging Daladier was attenuating\nto sabotage the appeasement efforts, of Mr. Chamberlain when he\ngoes to Rome next- Jan. 11)\nDaladier announced hit trip,\ntentatively scheduled to start Jan.\n*t, after tha tension over colonies\narose and touched off angry demonstrations on both sides. Vlr-\nglnlo Gayda, authoritative Italian editor, gave warning yesterday; that Italy would consider\nsuch a voyage an unfriendly act\nFormer Socialist Premlem Leon\nBlum, fighting to retain control of\nhit powerful party,- meanwhile,\nmade hit bid on a platform of\nclose coopratlon among Franc,\nUnltd Statet and Great Britain to\nourb Italy, Germany and Japan\nThe veteran Socialist leader opposed an insurgent group led by\nPaul Fauje, the party's secretary,\nwhich was urging the party in its\nannual convention to oppose tri-\npower friendship on grounds it\nmight lead to \"Ideological war.\"\nBlum declared union of the three\ngreat democracies would mean a\nworld front strong enough to tup-\nport peace. He urged France to seek\nfo effect close ties,between United\nStates and Soviet Russia to oppose\nthe totalitarian states.\nFind Your Job In the \"Clattjfled.\"\nEconomize with a\nSAWDUST\nBURNER\nFor quotation call Or write\nC. Plurhblng flr Heating Co.\nHomes and Churches;\nAre Focal Points\nChristmas 1938\nSANTA PROVES A\nGENEROUS GIVER'\nChristmas was an adventure this\nyear, the day Itself and the holiday following. Throughout tha*:\nKootenay rain and mild weather\nwhich melted fresh snow were tol? I\nlowed Christmas eve by sharp frost\nand on Christmas morning roads\nand sidewalks were ley surfaces\nwhich provided thrills and spills for\npedestrians, and skids for vehicles.\nNo serious accidents were reported up to Monday night, but.\nthere were, many minor casualties.\nA fine snow was falling and cover-y\nIng the Ice at that time, probably to\nprovide further \"adventures\" to;\nd^y.\nSANTA IS GENEROUS\nThe weather wss the leading\ntopic of conversation over the holidays, except of course the visit dt\nSanta Claus. He did a splendid job\nof Christmas this year, eVeryone\nfrom Granddad to the new ,oaby 1\nsharing In his largesse. Christmas\nCheer checks, Community Chest,\ngifts and toys repaired in Boy Scout\ntoy shops brightened the festival\nfor those In difficult circuir'tancfts.\nClothes were a big Item in Santa's\nbudget, and as a result a great many\nwardrobes have been enriched. His\nChoice were, like himself, color?\nful.\n\"HOME CHRISTMAS\"\n\u25a0\u25a0 For many folk it waa a \"home\nChristmas.\" Places of public amusement were closed and as a result\nvisiting or staying at home to be\nvisited were the major outlets tor\nholiday energy\u2014along with the at?\ntack made upon Christmas dinners\nwhich featured turkey.\nWith- the festive day on Sunday,\nthe religious nature of the day was\nemphasized. Carols, Christmas anthems and hymns were joyful, ringing praise.\nRadio entertainment came to ths\nfore also. Almost every program was    I\n\"Christmassy.\" Of special interest I\nwere carols and hymnB, and Christmas music, by famous choirs.and\norchestras. The British Broadcast\":\ning company was the focal point\nof  a  concert  program  to  which\nalmost all the world listened.\nDances Christmas eve closed at\nmidnight; and others started after\nmidnight Christmas day, lasting\nuntil a late hour Monday morning.\nChallenge, Practice,\nScratch Games Mqrlcp\nHoliday for Curlers\nScratch games, challenge games\nand practice games for B. C. bonspiel rinks featured activity at the\ncurling rink on the Christmas lioli-'\nday Monday. The rinks were in -\ncontinual use for the greater part of\nthe afternoon and evening.\nFind Your Job In the \"Classified.\"\nm\nDEAF MAN HEARS\nMINISTER FIRST\nTIME IN YEARS\nAfter using AURlNE EAR BAL- *\nSAM, the preparation of a well\nknown car specialist, only a short\ntime, Joseph Meredith, of Ontario,\nCanada, reports that \"all the head\nnoises have gone and I can hear\npeople talking. I heard the minister read the Scripture for the\nfirst time in two years.\" If you\nare hard of hearing, bothered by\nhead noises, earache, ringing and\nbuzzing in ears, worried about ap-\npreaching deafness, get AURlNE\nEAR BALSAM today. Easy to use-\nRelief is quick. Costs only a few\ncents a day. Money back it it does\nnot help yop.\nFor  tale  by  Mann,   Rutherford\nDrug Co., Nelton, B, C.      (Advt.)\n\"^^^\nDrumheller's   BEST\nThia ia positively\nthe best coal we\nhave ever handled\nTry a ton today\nand you will be\nCONVINCED\nSTOVE, Ton..... $9.00\nLUMP,Ton... $10.50\nPHONE 701 TODAY\nFairview\nFuel Co.\n PPPPPPPPffl*!\n^.'I^^l'f.Llll4W;^^'-'.l^ [\u25a0.n.u, mu^iiti-.^.u HU! v .i-H\">'\n,QE   POUR-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-TUE8DAY MORNING, DEC, 27. I\nictures\nAn Amateur Santa Clout\nA Trail Case of Silverware\nRobson Boat Mooring\nx\n\u00ab_.      __MB\n.   \".' v;'\u25a0\u25a0...\n-\u25a0\u25a0   :.', \u25a0:\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0\u25a0:' . \u25a0\n>\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0k-\"-'-.:.\n*^S8\u00bbK\n..JJutant D. A. Hammond, of the Salvation    winter clothing, which is i\nAmy, Nelson, after completion of the drive tor    ot it.\nlied to those ln need\ntThls array of silverware decorates the wall ot    supremacy; the Oiatl-Ronlani. clinic doctora* Ufc?\nie Memorial hall reading room, Trail, and includes     laving clip, \u201e\u25a0>. '   i\nvi trophies won by the Trail Smoke Eaten In the lower left hand corner Is the famous\nsenior hockey team.\noh a AeU\nOn tho, lop of tha cue Is the Paton cup, for farthest left yet; ln the centre the Nelson Dally\nthe western Canada amateur hockey champion? News cup, for tbe Kootenay hockey title, snd on\nship. On the top shelf, from left to right are tha the right the Savage cup tor the British Columbia\nMas1*M>       VllsnlvSn       Mill     I**      rp.,-,'1        \u201ei4.T       L<n*1.J>\u00bb       -\u2022Ut\u00abHl_- mmmmtw.%.     l.*!,).^..     .l..\u00ab^l.__LI_         Y_       t\\m-     \\mmm'\nModem Electric cup for Trail city hockey league     senior hockey championship. In the background Is\ntitle; the McBride cup for the Boundary hockey   . tha George Murray shield for girls' relay races.\nThis picture, of a placid bend in the Columbia river, \u2022\nmltted by D. B. Crowther.\nPresentation at Nelson Cub Bt\nLittle Wayne Levlck of Trail,\nas he appeared when visiting his\ngrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nMcCallum, Alnsworth.\nLast summer's fire\nCrawford Bay section,\nfrom Ainsworth.\nin the\nBob Smith, president of the\nland, skiing up around the ski\nRed Mountain Ski club, Ross-\ncabins recently.\nThis topsy-turvy picture was snapped at the Balfour Sunday\nschool picnic on Balfour mountain June 10 last, George Men, left,\nand Dorothy Cooper standing merrily on their heads tor the photographer, as Kathleen Cooper, extreme left, and Margaret Dodman and\nBobble Men looks on.\nMrs. E. 3. Shardelow, left, veteran worker in gift The lady at the corner Is Mn, L. P. Walton,\nGuide, Scout and Pint Aid circles, who has twice wife of Scoutmaster Walton, and at the head of\nbeen nationally honored, once by decoration with the table Is Commissioner J. M. Dronsfield.\nthe King's coronation medal, is seen receiving a\nA Fiiw Squad of Young Nelson Citizens\n\u2022j.'.' .\nArthur Fletcher, gym Instructor at Trail, who has been conducting gymnasium classes - In\nMemorial; hall for the past U\nyears.\nA,' :\u25a0';\u00ab'\u25a0\n>'-.\n1\n:\ns;|j\nml*\u00ae\n\u2022\n; 1\nJi J\\k\nW im\n'   :\n\u00a3_   I\n'.\n; ,*.'\ni  -''i\n;--:   ,                  1          I\nMisses Alvina Arlt and Joan Hornet ot Nelson, as these equestriennes appeared on an Alberta holiday.\nEden Pays \"informal\" Visit to\nWashington\nPicture shows fhe boys in the small banquet hall at the Canadian Legion just before\n_j'annuel Cub\/banquet of the Nelson District Boy. Scout association. Besides the\nCubs, there were present Scout officers and various dignitaries. At the extreme left\nquet of the Nelson. District Boy, Scout.aisoclation. Besides the\nmmm.,...... m\u201em r..sent Scout officers and various dignitaries. At the extreme lett\nmoy. be seen Meyor N. C. Stibbs, thirdUrom the front, and at his shoulder, Cubmaster\nMmkiuMmmiimm^^^MM^\nDonald lire. At the extreme right IS seen President N. Roy Freeman, ot the asioci-\ntlon, and beside him, Mrs. X 3. Shardelow, a guest ot honor, and behind her, Scoutmaster L. P. Walton. Commissioner J. MADronifleld is seated In tha middle of tha\nback row.-\u00bbDaily Newsphotos., ..J) -.-,v.\u25a0\u2022.-.\u2022\u25a0'\u2022,: ,      v\nPaying a visit to Washington, that was stressed as \"strictly informal,\" Anthony Eden wasgreeted upon his arrival In the United\nStates' capital by Sumner Welles, acting secretary of state. With a\npackage of cigarettes between them, Eden snd Welles are shown\nduring the first ot the \"Informal\" conversations Eden iaid he hoped\nto have with Washington officials. \u00a7     ' , ,\n T\nfoamy.\n:\nOur stock is large in slippers to match every eve- \u2022\n',   ning ensemble.\nR. Andrew\n& COMPANY\n\"Leaders in Footfashion\"\nChristmas Mail at\nRossland Reaches\n100 Sticks Per Day\nROSSLAND, B. C Dec. 26 -\nWith Its regular staff bt four and\ntwo temporary clerks\/the Rossland\npost office has handled\" on the\naverage of 100 sacks of mail per\nday during the Christmas rush\nperiod. Such an influx of Christ-\nmat mall was not equalled in tho\npast several years.\nConstruction Crews\nin Rossland Enjoy\nVarying Holidays\nROSSLAND, B. C, Dec. 28 \u2014\nA two weeks' vacation for Christmas was allowed the construction\ncrews working on the wing of the\nMater Mlsericordlae hospital here.\nThe men ceased work December 17,\nand will resume construction shortly\nafter the beginning \u25a0 of the new\nyear.\nA brief holiday was granted to\nworkmen who are building the extension to the Rossland high school.\nPrairie Woman\nHurt in Crash\nLLOYDMINISTER, Sask., Dec. 26\n(CP). \u2014 Mrs. T. Woods of Llqyd-\nminister was Injured seriously on\nChristmas evd when an automobile\ncollided with the cutter she was\nriding in. An automobile, driven by\nJack Layton of Msrwayne, Alta..\nswerved as It turned onto the icy\nhighway from a side road and\ncrashed Into the cutter a mile west\nof Lloydminister.\nAlta. Centenarian\nGets Royal Greetings\nCALGARY, Dec. 26 (CP). - Mrs.\nEleanor Kerr, celebrating her 100th\nbirthday today at her daughter's\nhome here, received congratulatory\nmessages from King George VI and\nQueen Elizabeth and scores ot Canadian friends.\nThe little white-haired woman\n\" s life links with the Upper Can-\nhellion of 1837-38 had scores of\n\u201e riahs call on her. About her\nWere her daughter, Mrs. A. C. Jeffery, several great grandchildren\nand other-relatives.\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nThe muscles make up tha1 bulk\n(not most of the weight), however)'and the form and contour ot\nthe body. The \"living skeleton\"\nwhose muscles have all wasted\nhardly resembles a human being\nat all. \u25a0-.  \u25a0\u25a0\nAs machines, muscles are quite\n\"remarkable contraptions. They-obey,\nwith some exceptions, the laws of\nthe stretching of,an elastic body,\ntuch as a wire or a rubber hand.\nAll the pulleys, fulcrums and jack-\nscrews ever invented by man were\nmodeled on the action of muscles\non bones,,\nAs to efficiency, any machine is\nmeasured on the basis of the ratio\nof the energy put out in mechanical\nform, divided by the total energy\nexpended in the process. In the\nmuscle, the energy which cannot\nappear as muscular wdrk is degraded to heat and can be measured\nas such. The equation is:\nEfficiency equals Work divided\nby work and heat.\nOn this basis our muscles are\nabout 30 per cent efficient. Few machines made by man show such\nefficiency. A steam engine is about\n10 per cent efficient It loses 20 per\ncent more of the energy in its fuel\nthan the muscle.\nOCCUPATIONAL  DISEASE8\nFortunately, muscles are subject\nto few diseases. In a few rare cases,\nthe muscles atrophy\u2014this is the familiar living skeleton\u2014but most\nmuscular troubles are occupational\ndiseases, confined to baseball and\nfootball players. I mean sprains,\ntears, \"Charley horse\", etc.\nFor most people a great deal ol\nthe feeling of well being of the\nbody depends on keeping the muscles fit by exercise. I have expressed myself on the subject of\nexercise many times with the result\n(not uncommon with my expressions) that I have been misunderstood. People say to me as I am\ntaking my constitutional or playing\ngolf. \"Whyl I thought you didn't\nbelieve in exercise.\"\nAll I said was that I did not subscribe to all the hooey of the \"big\nmuscle boys\", that big, muscles\nmean good health, or that exercise\nFrozen to Death\nNANTON, Alta., Dec. 26 (CP). -\nWilliam H. Fraser, 60-year-old elevator agent at Nanton, 57 miles south\nol Calgary, was found frozen' to\ndeath Christmas morning. Fraser\nleit his home Christmas eve and was\nexposed to zero weather for about\n10 hours.\nSLEEP AND\nAWAKE REFRESHED\nIf you don't sleep we0|\n\u2014if nights tre interrupted by re.tluiiKU\n\u2014iookto your kidneyi.\nIf your kidneyi ire out I\nof ordtr tnd failing tol\ndtsnse the blood of\npoiiont aad watte]\nmitter\u2014your sett- is\nlikely tuHerinj, too. At the bit tign of\nkidney trouble turn eonfidraiUy te Dodd's\nKidney Piila\u2014lor iier hilf a century the\nWite kidney remedy. Btsj to Uke. IH\nDodd'sKidneyPHIs\n\u25a0\nPHONE 962\nFOR LATEST STYLES IN\nCORSAGES\nKootenay Flower Shop\nPhone tl 32! Baker\nNEW BEATTY\nWASHER\n$79.*0\nBeatty Washer Store\nPhon\u00ab1 . 321 Baker\nHave You Any\nUsed\nSKIS\nI\na\nWhy Not Turn\nThem Into Cosh\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 8 times 80c net\nTwo (2) lines once 20c net\nNelson Daily News\nPHONE 1\u00ab\nMusclOs-. .  'ft'\"-'*\nOffice Workers\n\t\n. NlLSON OAILY NEWS. NELSON. -.C-TUESDAY  MORNING. DEC. 27. 1(3**,\n,l  JlllliipjUUHUJ.\n.\nwill make you live longer or keep\nyou frpm catching oold.\nUndoubtedly It makes you teal\nbetter and for most people thereby\nadds to the efficiency of their routine.- I say \"for most people\" because ior some\u2014the thin asthenics\n\u2014it is pure poison. \"\u2022E   |; \u25a0'.,\n8-T OP EXERQI8ES \"'\u2022'        j]\nFor the desk worker who cannot\nget out at the favorable hews these\nwinter days, I saw the account of\na set of exercises to take at tha\ndesk or ln the. wash room every\nhbur pr two:    \u25a0\u25a0    -.*','.,.-,.;\n1. Squeeze your eyelids together\nas tightly as you can,' and blink\nthem rapidly 20 times, with fingers pressed to temples. You will\nlose those notebook face cramps.\n2. Put your arms Up, to the colling  and  stretch, stretch,- stretch.\n3. Lean over and pick up an envelope from the desk; with your\nteeth. It's good for your neck.\n4. Sit down or lie down (in the\nwash room) and put. your legs up\neven with your head, massaging\nyour calves as you,-do so,,-''\u25a0 .*\u25a0\n5. Take your shoes off and-squirm\nall over. '\u2022       . ,-.. .   \u25a0\nFor those more fortunately placed\nand under 40, tennis and handball\nare good. For those over 60 or any\nage walking rapidly is superb.\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nC. R. M.: \"Am writing to ask\nyour opinion'of the X-ray method\nof removing tonsils.\nAnswer: Opinions differ as to\nthis. My. personal advice would be\nthat since Surgical removal is so\nsafe and effective, it should be the\nmethod of choice.'\nNelson Mercury\nMakes 7 Degrees\nfor Boxing Day\nDropping suddenly after .overcast skies of several days-previous\ncleared as Christmas Day dawned\na minimum of seven degrees, was\nregistered Sunday night- for the\nlow for the present season. The\nprevious low was 11 degrees in mid-\nNovember.\nThe sun shone for a total of four\nhours and 10 minutes Sunday the\nextreme temperatures being 39-ahd\n24 degrees. Rainfall the previous\nnight amounted to .09 inch.\nMonday's high was 24 degrees\nwith the afore-mentioned low being seven degrees. Monday's skies\nwere again clouded with the result\nthat traces ot snow began to fall In\nthe afternoon, but'up to 5 p.m. was\nnot enough to measure.\nHave You Read the \"Want Adi?\"\nComfortable Shoes . . .\nDaily Massage and Bathe the Feel\nIs\nOur Hollywood scout sends u> a\nbit of news about the stars. First,\nwe hear from Miss Ann Sheridan,\nwho tells us that no job Is harder\non the teet than acting. Ann says\nshe had to walk 8 miles during the\nrehearsal and shooting of a single\nscene in one of her recent movies,\nand we agree with her when she\nsays she is qualified to. offer notes\nahout the care of leetf Here they\nare:\n1. Pat the favorite bath powder\non the feet after the morning\nshower.\n2. If possible, during the day take\noff shoes and stockings, exercise\nand relax feet.\n3. In the evening, bathe them\nwith epsom salts solution and massage them with oil.\n4. Never neglect the weekly pedicure.\n' 5. Proper filing of nails and care\nof cuticle makes feet more attractive and prevents minor foot ills.\nThis seems, to be good advice and\nwe will assume that the lovely Ann\nknows the importance of selecting\ncomfortable shoes. And while we\nare on the subject of foot care,\nthere are few screen beauties who\never have much foot trouble. First,\nthey must be in the best of health\ntb keep up the arduous work and\nfheywould not think of neglecting\nany detail of grooming, especially\none so important as feet\nWhile we have never.advocated\nthe reflecting shine lor a skin finish, there are a tew girls who seem\nto favor it, so you, may be interested to know that Miss Resells Towne\nis,said to like such highlights and\nuses higher color shoes tor her\nmakeup and then the nearest trace\nof vaseline over the cheeks and\nforehead.. Wc still believe this- -was\nconfined to a screen makeup such\nas the one She wears In one of her\npictures.\nA light film of white vaseline over\nthe eyelids does suggest glamor.\nThe exotic Dorothy Lamour used it\nlong before she went to Hollywood\nand It photographs beautifully. Try\nit when 'you-,.have your new picture made.\nEveryone knows how lovely are\nthe clothes Madeleine Carroll wears\nShe has appropriate costumes for\nevery occasion and changes her outfit several times a day but her\nmaid takes charge of every gown\nas it Is removed. Before it is put\nback in the closet, it must be pressed and then folded over tissue\nwith each plait laid out smoothly.\nSleeves are stuffed with tissue and\nput in a cellophane bag with little'\nsatin flowers filled with the sachet\nthat goes with the costume.\nTweeds and sport clothes have\nthe woodsle tweed scents while the\nformal gowns are lavish with the\naroma ot the subtle perfumes she\nuses..\ndihiL goJL\ndteuMwivsLL\nBy BET8Y NEWMAN\nTODAY'S'MENU\nHam Slice Baked in Milk\nBaked Potato Slices\nHot Cabbage Salad\nBrown Bread\nCoffee or Tea .\nBaked Potato Slices\nBoil potatoes in jackets until tender. Peel and cut each one in three\nslices crosswise.\nPlace slice of onion on each slice,\nsprinkle with salt and buttered\nbreadcrumbs, dot with butter and\nput tn baking dish. Bake In moderate oven, 350 F.. for 30 minutes.\nBrown Bread\nTake two cups sour milk, one cup\nlight molasses, two level teaspoonB\nsoda, one and one-half cups white\nflour, one big teaspoon baking pow-,\nder, two cups graham flour, one cup\nchopped raisins, one cup chopped\nnuts.\nDivide into three coffee cans and\nbake very slowly for two hours.\nHave oven rather hot to start, then\nreduce heat\nHere are some holiday hints that\nmay be of assistance to you ln\nplanning menus and snacks.\nAppetiser\nMix two teaspoons flour, cayenne, one-half teaspoon self with\none cup grated cheese and fold\ninto a stiffly-beaten egg white.\nFry in deep fat at 375 F. until\ngolden brown, after having shaped the mixture into small balls,\nand.roll in crushed nutmeats.\nCompany Dish\nA lamb roast can be made into a\nSSL\nFLOUR\nMAKES    BETTER    BREAD\nm\n\\        '\u25a0       __\u00a3_       \u25a0    '\nmmm*.\ngrand company dish If prepared the\nSwedish way. \u25a0\nRub a five-pound lamb roast with\nthree-quarters tablespoon salt and\none teaspoon dry mustard. Insert\nlardoons ot slivered garlic clove,\n'Roast at 350 F\u201e basting with stock;\nturn occasionally.\nWhen half done, baste with one\ncup hot, freshly-brewed coftee to\nwhich cream and sugar have been\nadded. When roast Is done, make\ngravy with pan juice, adding live\ntablespoons flour and three.quart-\ners cup cream. Cook 10 to 12 minutes; add.salt to taste and one dr\ntwo teaspoons currant jelly. An\nexotic diSn, but a good one!\nSquash Pla\nSquash pie is a new and different\ndish that should add interest to any\nmenu., ,    ;\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\nIt requires one and one-quarter\ncups cooked, sifted squash, one and\none-quarter cups dark corn syrup,\nthree-quarters teaspoon salt,, two\neggs, one tablespoon oarnstarch,\none and one-quarter cups rich milk,\none and one-quarter cups, cinnamon, one-quarter teaspoon ginger\nand flaky pie crust.\nLine deep pie plate with crust,\nfluting the edge. Combine all ingredients, pour into place and bake\nuntil firm in center, tn 375 F. .oven.\nOrange Charlotte\nOne envelope plain unflavored\ngelatin, one-quarter cup' cold\nwater, one-half cup boiling water,\none cup sugar, two tablespoons\nlemon -juice, one cup fresh orange juice and segments, whites\nol three eggs, lady lingers and\nsalt.-        -. ,. .    .\nSoften gelatin in cold water and\ndissolve In boiling water. Add\nsugar, and when dissolved add\nlemon juice. Cool slightly, add\norange juice and segments.\nWhen mixture begins to stiffen,\nbeat with wire whisk until light,\nadd stiffly-beaten whites ot eggs\nand mix thoroughly. Turn Into\nmold lined with lady fingers.\nWhen firm, unmold,\nuniiMii   \"\nTW\nWatch Gestures\nGirl Can't Be a\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nDear Miss Chatfield!       '\u2022*'    -\nMore than a year ago my wife\ndied and left me with a Uttle boy\nseven years old and I have tried\nte be lather and mother to him\nSince. A lew months ago I met a\nyoung woman who seemed to be\nthe sort ol wile I. wanted and we\nhave seen a! good deal ol each\nother. I was rather well settled in\nmy owh mind about our marriage\nwhen shf dropped several remarks\nthat have.thaken me considerably.\nShe said Bhe wished I didn't have\na son. And another time she spoke\nol how much nicer it Would be\nil we two were alone. I .want to\nbe fair to her but I also Want to\nbe just to my boy. I realize he\nwould be absolutely at a step-\n. mother's mercy. Can you shed\nany light on my difficulty?\nL.P.\nAnswer, Friend, I'd say the liancee\nwould bear close watching In her\ndealings with your little hoy. See\nhow she treats him* ho* he- responds\" to her treatment. It won't\nbe difficult for you to lind out how\nfar her jealousy will take her. Yes,\nthat's what it Is. She's jealous ot\nhis place In your lite, jealous of\nthe dead wife of whom he's a constant reminder, and it's not likely\nthat she could be very merciful toward him in her present frame of\nmind, .\nOnce I heard a friend say that\nan acquaintance of hers had no\ntime for her own Uttle daughter.\n\"What maker you think tnatr\n\"Just watch her,\" she said, \"when\nthe chUd comes up to her, the palm\nof her harld is always turned out,\npushing the Uttle one away from\nher, instead of palm turned In puU-\ning the little one toward her.\" Since\nthen'I have watched this and it's\ntrue. So simple a thing as a woman's\ngestures reveal her attitude toward\ner children.and other people's children too.\nHowever, in defence of your fiancee let me tell you that ninety-\nnine women out of a hundred would\nfeel as she expressed herself though\nsome who felt that way would have\ntoo much gumption to admit it. You\nsee every'woman likes to believe\nthat she's the only love in her husband's life and the average man\nbeing acquainted with this feminine\nloible caters to It and does'all he\ncan to convince her that she's the\nonly woman he has loved or ever\nwill love. She knows It's too good\nto be true but she lets herself be\ntooled because she wants to be\nfooled.\nCan't you see that your liancee\nIS fearful that you are trying to\nfind a good mother and home-maker\nfor your little boy, primarily, and\nthat your love for her is a secondary\nmatter? Maybe her suspicions are\nwell founded. If so, you'd better stop\nshort and scout around until you\nlind a girl who has strong maternal\ninstincts, one who wiU love your\nson on his own account as well as\nbecause he's your son.\nCABOUNE CHATFJfflLD.\n<aJ     - *ih--\".-7niT'.\\*r**-\\ -T,-*^5*' :'\"    ' '\nRoss Spur Pupils,\nHave Concept\/ Tree\nROSS SPUR, X. C. \u2014 The annual\nChristmas concert and tree was held\nin Perry Siding school-Thursday.\nMany .parents and friends' of the\npupils attended. The program, announced by AUce Verfschagln, consisted of:\n\"Words of Wisdom,\" Emil Gustafson; songs \"While Shepherds\nWatched Their Mocks By Night,\"\nby the school; recitation, Our\nGrandma,\" Ella Gustafson; monologue, \"Elisabeth's Christmas Presents,\" AUce Verischagtn; gong, \"All\nThrough the Night,\" girls', choir:\nrecitation, \"Christmas Stocking,\"\nthe school boys; song, 'Come AU Ye\nFaithful,\" Uie school; acrostic,\n\"Christmas,\" primary grades; recitation, \"Our Schoolroom,\" John Pop-\noff; 'song, \"Little Old Lady,\" Alice\nVerischagin, Lillie St. Thpmas and\nLouise Swanson; play, \"Santa's Toy\nShop,\" the school; \"God Save The\n\u2022fCint? \"\nSanta Claus distributed candles\nand gifts and refreshments were\nserved. The pianist was Miss Madeleine Harris. \t\nCranbrook Schools\nHold Two Concerts\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-The Christ?\nmas concerts of the United church\nSlocanites at Savona\nSecond generation British Columbians are Andy, 2>,_ years; Mary\nAnn, IH years, children of Mr. and Mrs. R..T. Avison of Savona. Mr.\nand Mts. Avison were both born in the Slocan district.\n* \u2666\nBy MRS. M. J. V1GNEUX\n\u2022 Ven. Archdeacon Fred H.\nGraham and Mrs. Graham, Terrace\napartments, are spending the holidays in Trail at the home'of their\nson-in-law and daughter,;.Mr. and\nMrs. James Bryden.\na Mrs. Edward Rosenthal and\nbaby daughter have left Kootenay\nLake General hospital, for their\nhome at 1514 Stanley street.\n\u2022 Mrs. M.. Houle, Mill street,\nhad as their hoUday guests her Son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nEric Paterson of Kalso.\nt 3. D. Macdonel of Cedar Point\nleft yesterday for Vancouver, where\nhe wiU leave by motor with S. A.\nWilliams and son, Jack, ex-residents\nof Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. *W. M. Cameron\nof Trail are holiday guests at the\nhome on Silica street ol Mr. and\nMrs. Louis Choquette.   '.-\n\u2022 Donald Bunyan of Sheep\nCreek, who spent Christmas day\nwith his mother, Mrs. J. G. Bunyan)\nKerr- apartments, has returned. -\n\u2022 Mrs. Arthur Ross and infant\ndaughter have left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital for the home ot\nMrs, Ross' mother, Mrs. Aurelia.\n,\" \u2022   Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Strong\nof Vallican visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 Miss Claire MUler of Vancouver passed through Nelaon en\nroute to fauquler, where she spent\nthe'hotlffliys withf~herispaents.\n\u2022 Miss Doris Weaver, carbonate\nstreet, is' spending tho holiday in-\nVancouver., <\na J. D. Notman ol Vancouver,\nex-resideiit of Nelson, is spending\nthe holiday With his parents, Mr. and\nMrs.' John Notman, Fairview.\n\u2022' Miss Given' Harding is visiting\nher parents in Kelowna over the\nholidays.\n\u2022 Mrs: Joseph Mack and infant\ndaughter have left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital for their home at\n308 Union street. -\n\u2022 Miss.Marcelle Nedelec, who attends Nelson business college,, has\nleft to spend the holidays with her\nparents at -Yahk. :\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Varseveld,\nKootenay street, have' as their guests\nover the holiday their son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nBrant ot Trail.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bishop\nof TraU and their son are spending the holidays with the latter's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. C. I. Archibald, Stanley street, and Mr. Bishop's\nmother, Mrs. Harry Bishop, High\nstreet      ','\u2022\u2022'-.        '\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. C-B. Hanna,\nCarbonate street, have as their\nguests their'son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Rankin R. Hanna\nof TraU. \u2022     \u2022\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. D. HaU,\nJosephine street, spent the week-end\nat the home of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nD. Hall in Trail.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Fred Steel and\nfamily of Trail are guests at the\nhome of Mr. Steel's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. George W. Steel, SiUca street\n\u2022 Rev. and Mrs. Ward, Mrs. H1U-\nyard, Miss Shirley, Reid and Miss\nEllen McCandlish left yesterday by\nmotor to spend a few days In\nVancouver.\ne George Cady, of Trail visited\nhis family in Nelson over the\nChristmas week-end.\ne Miss A. E. (Toots) Houston\nand Miss Beth Matson are spending the holidays at the home of the\nlatter's parents in Penticton.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Stenson and Reg.\nof Winlaw are spending Christmas\nwith tho former's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Spiers.\n\u2022, Mr. and Mrs. W. Byers, HaU\nMines road, have as their holiday\nguests their family, Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert Byers ol Annable, Jack Byers\nof Trail and Mr. and Mrs. W. Easton\nof Castlegar and their family.\n\u2022 Wilfrid Bush of TraU spent\nthe week-end with his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Howard  Bush,  Robson\n' \u00ab George Le Fort 61 Trail visited\nfriends in town over the Yuletide\nholiday. \u00bb\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, Charles Kel-\nman, Ward street had as their\nguests over the holidays, Mrs. Kel-\nman's sister, Mrs. J. Williamson of*\nTrail, also her nephew and niece,\nDr. and Mrs. Williamson and daughter Lois, aU of TraU.\n\u2022 Elmer Hall of TraU visited\nfriends and relatives in Nelson over\nthe week-end.\nSunday schools were held in the\nsocial hall of the church for the\njunior school Tuesday afternoon,\nand the senior school Thursday evening. The hall was decorated with\na large, trimmed Christmas tree,\nand a visit from Santa Claus delighted the children.\nRev. R. W. Hardy acted as chairman for both concerts. At the jun?\nior concert games were played,,directed by Mrs. Martin Harris, Miss\nMyrtle Gummer, Miss Klsa Brandt,\nand Miss Ida Mann. Christmas songs\nwere rendered by the members of\nSerial Story .,\nROMANCE INC.\nBy OREN ARNOLD\nCHAPTER 32\nThe Sunday edition of The Houston Chronicle carried a full-page\npresentation of Sara Sue Davis,\nInc., Counsel in Romance.\n\u25a0 \"Look! Look at that, mammal\"\nNathan Epstein barked at his wife\nover the breakfast -table. \"This\nwoman she gets 160 column inches\ntree publicity. She never does advertise. Me, I advertise my clothing\nstore six thousand dollar a year.\nDo I get a 160 inches free? Do I\nget even six inches Iree? Look at\nthis!\"\n. Mrs. Epstein, however, was a\nsensible woman. And a calm one,\nwith a touch of humor.   ,    .\n\"Look at the picture, too, Nathan: Lodk at her. Then look at\nyou. Maybe better you develop slim\nsvelte figure, and pose yourself in\nbathing suit too, hah?\" She chuckled at Tier husband.\nThe Chronicle art department\nhad developed acute enthusiasm\nwhen the photographer put a 14-\ninch print of Sara Sue belore them.\nThey had, therefore, suggested a\npage built around that bathing suit\npose, which showed not only a\nmodel figure, but a million-dollar\nsmUe. The editor in turn had lound\nthe enthusiasm contagious, and so\nthe layout showed Sara Sue'B lovely\nform extending the lull length of\nthe page; Inset photos showed her\ncottage, .h*i- sign, and three more\nviews of Sara Sue herselt, The\nheadline read; -   Ty\n\"CAMPUS L&VE GUIDEIV\nBY LOVELY EXPERT'\nMr, Summers, the feature writer, had outdone himself. He had\nwritten an excellent story, and had\nshown a proofshaa' ol- It to the\npaper's editorial writer. That sen*\nous-mlnded gehtleman had iforth-\n.with written a Sunday editorial en\nthe \"Importance of Love at College\nAge,\" pointing out that a young\nHouston girl nad set a precedent\nwhich the wise but stodgy college\nprofessors everywhere might well\nfollow.\n. \"The extra-currlculur course\nWhich Mrs. Davis offers a select\nfew at Rice Institute,\" the. editor\nwrite, \"is worth moro in guiding\nyouth toward life happiness than\nall the mathematics, all the biology, and all the philosophy combined. It is tp be hoped that universities everywhere wUl In the\nnear future reallie that romance is\nnot something to- be scoffed at but\nis a .genuine influence in molding\nthe careers Tot-\" He had a great\ndeal to say, in two columns by 11\ninches of space, his lead editorial\nfor the day.\nBefore noon a,swarm of Hous-\ntonians had started driving out\nSouth Main boulevard, to see the\nromance cottage. Just to see it.\nAnd a stream of pests began knocking at Sara Sue s door wanting\nautographs. A lot, of-Intrusive but\nwell-meaning folk just wanted to\nmeet her, talk with her, see if she\nreally was as pretty as she appeared in the newspaper.\nAU of these were received by a\nbeaming Negress, .Cleopatra Jones,\nand. her equaUy happy husband,\nCalculus. \u25a0- .\nraWm, rio suh, Miss-Sera-Sue's\n(Continued on Psqe 8lx)\nWE SAVeyYOO.MOlvlEY.AND\nsERVE.yduw-U.- ;\nit HALYARD'S\nFairway Grocery\nPhone 264   -   , Vie. Crawford, Mgr;\n'the school, and recitations were given by Miss Nancy Boyda, Marvin\nWilson,. Leonard Dundas, Murray\nHarris, Miss Audrey Wheeler and\nMiss Beverley Jean Ellis. Solos were\nrendered' by Jeannine Ball, and\nMarilyn Jenson. Jerry Kenny, Earla\nand Lillian Ratcllffe danced, and\nMiss Margaret John played a piano\nsolo. Playlets entitled \"The Watcher\", \"LltUe Christmas Dolls\", and\na series ot three tableaus were presented by the members of the various classes.\nBuy or sell with a Classified \/ d. '\nJunior Program . >\nA Training in\nCultural Arts\n73\n\u25a0y GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nWhen a woman's club really does\nsomething in Its community, it is\nnews. W&en it does something nation-wide, it is greater news.\nOver in Maplewood, N. J., about\nfive years ago, Dorothy McFadden,\nmother ot a boy.ana girl; .heard\nher fellow club members bewail\nthe lack of good cultural entertainments lor children.\n\"We can have them,\" said Mrs,\nMcFadden, and she. went out and\nfounded the Junior Programs. This\nnon-commercial, non-profit organization sends out traveling companies to put on children's programs '\ntowns from Maine to Oklahoma.\nthree troupes \u2014 opera, stage and\nballet\u2014have presented such favor-\nItesie \"Hansel and Gretel\" and \"The\nPrincess and Swineherd\" ballet in\n29 states. During this year Junior\nPronams wiU'probably reach over\na million'children ol primary school\nage.\nSuperintendents of schools, supervisors of art, music and dancing\nmake use of the materials provided\nby the organisation. These materials\ninclude suggested reading, phonograph records and sheet music, biographies of authors-and composers, and stories of the various productions composed for children of\ndifferent age levels.\nABLE ARTISTS\nThe audiences, which number\nfrom 300 to 3000, see the work of\n-pa\u00abI rvM\nCLOSER\nALL DAY TUESDAY\nOther days we oiler you- dependable merchandise at reasonable prices. Thorough satis-  'jj\nfaction guaranteed. *j\n(|) $orman7luirt [l\nReady-to-Wear and Drygoods\nBAKER ST.   '     PHONE 200  Jj\nsome of the ablest artists. For example, Cccilc Serman. who has appeared with the Cincinnati and San I\nCarlo opera companies, is the tiny\n;prlma donna of The Bumble Prince. \\\n\u2022Recently thre Junior Program sirtg-..,\nara  have  been  engaged  by  the\nMetropolitan Opera Company.-\nComparing conditions in'America\nwith those she saw in Europe, Mrs. I\nMcFadden concludes that it is tho:.j\nfault of American parents, not their\nchildren, that culture and the arts\nplay second-fiddle with young people'in this country to coarser elements in our civilization. II left'\nalone, a child wUl Instinctively nl\njoy beauty and a good drama when-.-J\never it is presented to him, she be-'j\nUeves.\n\"Something must happen to them\nln the interval, so that when they\nre grown up, the great mass ol\npeople patronize the most inane motion pictures, -vaudeville and bur?\nlesque shows, and stay away from\nthe finest music the opera and tha I\ntheatre offer.\"\nKIMBERLEY Social...\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Miss Eleanor and Miss Mary Lindsay arrived\nfrom Vancouver to spend the holidays with their parents, Mr. and\nMrs. W. Lindsay.\nEdwstrd Benson arrived Irom University ol B.C; to spend the vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nBenson ot Chapman Camp.\nMrs. Conrad- ol Moyie is spending, the holidays.with1 her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nRay Curran ot Chapman Camp.\nMiss Elaine Norton arrived from\nVancouver to spend the vacation\nwith-her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S.\nNorton.\nJack Holland returned home on\nWednesday Irom University ol Idaho at Moscow'to spend the vacation\nat'his home here.\nMr. and Mts. K. R. Banks were\nSpokane visitors last.week.\nMrs. A. Perkins of Kaslo is visiting Mr. and'Mrs. A, G. Mass'ie of\nChapman Camp,\nRichard Price, who has been visiting his parents, returned to Trail\nlast week.\nChapman Camp Badminton club\nvisited McDougall hall Sunday.\nRepresenting the Camp were Prentice, Ingstrup,, Edmonds, Edgecumb,\nGuiUe, Arnaud, Harrison, Mitchel,\nBarton and Doran, Mesdames Edmonds Wilson, Harrison, Mitchell.\nIngstrup and the Misses Young and\nIrwin.\nMeeting ol the local Orange lodge\nwas .held when the lodge was honored by a visit Irom R. J. Rowe\nof Revelstoke, grand master of B. C.\nOfficers lor the coming year were\nelected and Installed. An enjoyable\nbanquet was held, During the evening Grand Master Rowe gave an\ninspiring address.      .\nMiss Jeanette Leaman took top\nhonors' and -wen the turkey at the\nmost recent llve'-pin bowling among\nthe ladies ot Camp.\nTwo ladies suffering fractured\nlegs from falls were Miss Lillian\nOlson and Mrs. Nordlund ol the\nTownsite.\nMrs. Angove entertained. Chapman Camp Townsite Bridge club\nDec. 22; Top honors went, to Mrs.\nA. Watson.   '\nAmong students from University\nol British Columbia, arriving home\nfor the holiday season are Lloyd\nArmour, Art Andrews, . Harold\nBoardman, Also Marzacco, Norman\nGill, Frank Smith, Barbara Nesbitt and Roy Blezzard.\n\u25a0 Mr. McArthur is. spending the\nhoUdays at Kamloops.\n\u2022 Mrs. Jay Colthorpe held a shower\nlast week in honor of Miss Ethel\nColthorpe whose marriage takes\nplace soon. Four tables of bridge\nwere played, Miss Irene McGinnis\nwinning first prize and Mrs. M. E.\nGarden consolation. The guest of\nhonor . received   many,   beautiful\n* Mr, and Mrs.'N. Randall and Mr.\nand Mrs. Wilson are spending the\nholiday's at Trail.   '\nMr, and Mrs. Dave Thompson left '\nFriday lor Victoria to spend the\nhoUdays with relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. H.  Stafford and j\nfamily are spending the vacation\nwith friends on Vancouver Island.\nMiss E. Ross returned last week\nfrom Vancouver to spend the vaca* j\ntion at -her home here.\nL. F. Thompson entertained mem?\nbers ol the Camp-Kimberley Solo.\nBridge club Wednesday night,\nMoving, pictures shown at th*'\nOughtred hall by- Mr.' Desroslerty\nol a Quebec steel coihpany Wednesv\nday evening showed some ol tha,1\nloremost mining properties of Can-'\"!\nada end Mexico. -a\nThe Marysville school concert\nh?ld in MarysviUe. Thursday wai\nvery.successlul,-\nA whist drive was held Friday\nBird's HaU at MarysviUe. Alf\nLundeen won men's lirst Miss \\...\ndred Waites, ladies' lirst, Max Bidder consolation lor men and Mrs,.\nT. Boyter, ladies consolation. Re?-|\nfresbments were served.\nECCLES, England (CP).-Knoek?\ned down and fatally hurt by a'\ncyclist, Margaret HalltweU, 76, told\na policeman before her death \"it\nwas my own fault, don't blame tha I\nboy.\" A verdict of accidental death-\"\nwas returned.\nCLEANS HANDS QUICKLY\nEXCLUSIVE LINE OF\nLADIES'^EAR\ngaWL O. CaMolheu,\nM9 Ward St. Phone 970 !\nDRINK So WORTH OP\nMILK AT NIGHT\nAnd You'll Feel \"Like a MiUlon'^ ia\nthe Morning\nKootenay Valley Dairy\nPHONE 260\nFOR GUARANTEED\nRadio Service\nNelson Electric Co.\nHere Are 4 Proved Ways\nTo Relieve\n1 Head-Cold Sniffles and\nMisery. Melt a spoonful of\nVicks VapoRub ln a bowl of\nboiling water, then lnhalo the\nsteaming vapors. These medicated vapors loosen phlegm,\nclowair-passages,mttkebreathlngcasIor.Then,\nat. bedtime, massage throat and - chest with\nVapoRubilcavebcd-coveringloosoaroundncck\nso fie medicated vapors, released by'bodyjheat,\ncanbotanalcdfreelyduringthenight.VapoRub's\ndirect action brings comfort-relieves local congestion-help? you relax into restful Bleep.\nOften, by morning the wont ol the cold is over.\ni Coughing or Sore Threat\nl due to tho cold. Uso steam\ntreatmentoutllncdabove.Also\nput: a small lump of VapoRub\nonthotongue.Itmelt8,trlcklcB\nBlowlydown-bathosthothroat\nwith soothing medication\nwhloh brlnga comlorOna rallet to the Irritated\nmembranes and checks tendency to cough.\nNlghl Coughs duo to colds-\nespeclally of children - can\neaglng VapoRubon throat and\nchest at bedtime.\n4ChestCo!ds.ThoroiiBMym_c-\naaae VapoRub on throat, chest\nand back. Then spread a thick\nlayer on the chest and cover\nwith awarmedcloth. VapoRub\ngoes right to work-too ways\nat'onee: (1) Direct thfipgh the skin like a\npoultice; (3) Direct on the Irritated air-pas-\nsages aa its medicated vapors are inhaled with\nevery breath. Thla direct double action loosens\nphlegm-eases coughing-clears the air-pas-\naages-esses muscular soreness or tlghtnesa-\nrcliovcs local congestion.\nChildren's Colds are alwaysaprohlem to mothers. Neglect Is dangerous, because It of ten paves\nthe way lor more serious trouble. But constant\ninternal dosing la risky, too. It often upsets a\ndelicate Uttle atomach, lowers resistance Just\nwhen it la most needed to overcome the cold\nand ward off complications ... It ia for these\nreasons that most mothers depend on VapoRub\nto relievo the misery of their children's colds. -\nWith VapoRub there', no needless dosing, no\nrisk ol stomach upsets. It can be used freely;\n\u00abla often as needed, on even the youngest child.\nMany Other Ways in which VapoRub can help\nyou are described In the medically-approved\ndirections folder that comes in each VapoRub\npackage.\nONLY VAPORUB GIVES YOU THIS DOUBLE PROOF!\nproved In EoeruJat] Use in Mott Homes\nThen All Other Medications of lis Oni\nVVapoRub\nFurther Pmotd tn One ofthe Wo,\nI Largest Stria ofCUnkal Tats on Col\nT\ni^.^., \u25a0,.,^,.: _;:^^^^..^\n PAOB    SIX\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO, DEC. ET, 1988.\nmnWMaammaa*\n..X*lwm Ipttg Hwa\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nBritish Columbia's Most InUrttHnf Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sundiy by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY UMlTEI.,\n.86  Baker  Street,  Nelson,  Brltlih  Columbia.    .\n i     i|     ii       .,ii     \u25a0 mi    \",     \", in  'I    \u25a0 ts'\nPhona Itt, Private exchange Cgnnecting All Departments\nMEMBER OF THS CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE  AUDIT \u2022 BUREAU   OF  CHtCWLATlONS ,\nTUESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1988.\nI\n\"SKATER THOUGH THE ICE!\"\nChristmas Day's cold dip, that turned the rain and\nSlash of Christmas Eve to ice, and that will thicken and\nextend any existing ice and coat anew any quiet open waters,\nmeans of course another rush of skaters to the appealing\nsheets of ice, end the exposure in, some instances at least,\nto danger. \u2022-.,\"'' '.'.'a\n. This is a good time, therefore, to call attention to the\nlatest exposure of the old fallacy that a person who has\nbeen under the water for a couple of minutes must be regarded as drowned.\nOn November 80 a four-year-old child of St. George, a\npoint near Brantford, Ont., fell through the surface of a\nfrozen pond, and was under the ice a quarter of an hour,\nyet was alive when brought out.\nCountless persons have been allowed to die because of\nthat old belief. Who is to say that a person is drowned?\nWho is to judge whether the apparently drowned person's\nlungs have been filled with water and that asphyxiation\nhas taken place? For one thing, a stunned person may be\nunder the water for a long period of time and take no water\nto amount to anything into the lungs, because respiration\nwas suspended.\nHere is the Brantford item:\n\"Four-year-old Graham Malcolm of nearby St. George\nIs expected to recover after falling through the frozen sur-\nface of a pond today snd spending about 15 minutes under\nthe lee. He was unconscious when he was found by Earl\nBoard, Bill Dilworth and Alfred Kitchen.\n\"The child is a son of Mr. and Mrs. John Malcolm. Mrs.\nEarl Baird, who lived nearby, saw the accident and called\nher husband and Dilworth. After a few minutes search,\nAlfred Kitchen appeared and made a second hole in the ice,\nthrough which the lad was dragged.\"\nResuscitation efforts on the apparently drowned\nihould not be relaxed for hours at least.\nHe who is truly a good man is more than half way to\nbeing a Christian, by whatever name he is called.\u2014South.\nFLU TOOK 25,000,000 LIVES\nTwenty years ago the Kootenay was not only celebrating the victorious conclusion of the war and looking forward to the early return of the Canadian troops, but was\nwrestling with the terrible flu scourge that, fhroughout\nthe world, was taking lives.\nIn Nelson and district, as elsewhere, authorities and\nI public were organized to meet this scourge, volunteers went\nI into homes to nurse, or into the hills to bring in the stricken,\nand among the ultimate victims were many of those who\nhad been unsparing of themselves in this labor, including in\nNelson's case, Mayor M. R. McQuarrie. People apparently\nWell were stricken, and were dead in a few days; patients\n| died on the way to town.\nA1 scourge that afflicts a whole country, or the whole\nworld, is called a pandemic, because of its all-inclusive character. In past times, the bubonic plague, small pox, and\ncholera have won that dread characterization. The scourge\nI of influenza that afflicted practically all mankind for a\nyear or more in and following the closing year of the Great\nI War was a pandemic, and probably the most extensive one\n| In history, geographically considered,\nThe disease appeared in Spain in May; the date and\npoint of its original appearance in the United States have\nnever been determined, but the malady wss reported in\nBoston in August. Of. three waves, only one reaches the\n| United States, and yet that country had 850,000 deaths\namong civilians and 17,000 in the army.\nAccepting the period from May 1918, to March, 1919,\nas that of pandemic, the number of victims has been set at\nI 25,000,000, This total is fixed by adding to the deaths in\n'countries having standardized mortality records, the figures\nI computed from estimates of 5,000,000 to 6,000,000 deaths\nin British and native India and extension of the rate thus\n! established to China and other portions of the Far East\nfor which official figures sre not attainable.\nNo land escaped this visitation; Iceland suffered with\nSamoa, South Africa with New Zealand. No refuge was so\nwell guarded, no hiding place so obscure as to provide\nprotection against its ravages. It took its toll without discrimination from all the races of man.\npoking Backward.. \u2666\nTEN YEAR8 AGO\nJ1. From Rally News ot Deo. 27, 1828\nSending 25,000 horse power ol en-\n[ ergy, No. 8 plant ot WeBt Kootenay\nI Power k Light company at South\nI Slocan commenced production tor\nthe lirst time yesterday.\u2014Mayor R.\nD. Barnes announced intention to\nagain run tor the Nelson mayoralty.\n\u2014A new record tor distance transmission ot voice by radio was report-\ni*b hy Commander Byrd, of 11,000\nJ miles.\u2014A grant ot $5000 from Otis tawa for Wynndel cooperative Fruit\n1 Growers' association has been announced.\u2014With a fielding average\nof .979 during the season ot 1928.\nChicago Cubs led NaUonal league\nclubs.\u2014With Sammy McAdam and\nArt Somers scoring, league-leading\nVancouver Lions defeated Seattle\nEskimos 2-0, last night behind neat\n! goal-tending by Percy Jackson.\nTWENTY-PIVE YEARS AQO\n[ From Dally News of Dec. 27, 1913\nRafael Ademse, a Mexican, was\nj kUled and five policemen were Injured In a riot in a Los Angeles night\n&\u00ablub yesterday.\u2014When a railroad\nenglneenglne burst at Buffalo, N. Y\u201e\nI two men were killed and six others\nI badly Injured.\u2014The Pheonlx hock-\nfey team defeated the Nelson seven\nU-3 ln the tint Kootenay-Boundary\ngame ot the leason, Benson of the\nwinning team being high scorer with\nfour goala.\u2014Nineteen fishermen\nwere drowned during a hurricane\noff tbe coast of Denmark,\u2014S. A.\nSpeers ot Creston was a Nelson visitor.\u2014The mercury dropped to a low\nof 17 degrees yesterday.\u2014Born on\nDec. 24 at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital to Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nJohnstone of Arrowhead, a daughter.\nFORTY YEARS AQO\nFrom Dally Miner of Doc. 27, 1898\nPresident McKinley of the United\nStates hai received the peace treaty\nbetween the United Statei ana\nSpain.\u2014MoVie City has been awarded a post office by the Dominion\ngovernment, which is to be estab-\nlished on Jan. 1.\u2014Two freight trains\ncollided ln the Lexington, Ky., yard\nwith the result thit tht two engines\nwere demollihed and nine men oad?\nly hurt, two probably fatally Injured \u2014Nelson City Hockey club defeated the Nelson Fire Brigade team\n5-3 In a special holiday attraction.\u2014\nJ. D. McCasklll has arrived ln Nelson from Winnipeg to take permanent residence here.\u2014Mild weather\nprevailed during the Christmas\nweekend, the minimum being 27\ndegrees.\n*\u25a0'\u25a0 \"\"    \"*\u2014!-\nSAiirs SAUB:\n\u00ab#-wi\u00bbi>nwiia.\nM\u00abSO\nInc. WaWrijtMWUnri,\nA woman in love is not interested in your troubles.\nHogmanay\nBy ''ETTRICK\"\nThe Spoon tinkled pleasantly\nagainst the side ot the long glass as\nMuckleworth stirred the lemon\nround and round in leisurely fashion. Owing to a change in circumstances wo had not seen our old\nfriend tor quite a long Ume, and\nso we were more than a little pleas-\ned when he arrived on the bus stut.\ning his intention of staying, at least,\nUntil alter the holiday season was\nover.\nWe had got over our first greetings and the most Important of\ngossip, and now, over his second\nhot Scotch, he was thawing visibly both ln body and spirit.\n\"It's a queer thing,\" he said, sip\nping his steaming drink appreciatively, \"that the Scots whae are\nusually mair than by ornar sensible should hae choosen the very\nwalrst times o' the year tae hae\ntheir celebrations. They start in the\ndull drear days o' October wi' Hallowe'en, an' then they gang on tae\nNovember wl' St. Andrews Day\n(Christmas is of course a day a' by\nltael'). but then comes Hogmanay\nand New Yean, wi' Rabble Burns'\nbirthday In the middle ol January s\nwildest days tae llnish up wi', Aye,\nIt's queer.\"\n\"Queer,\" I replied, seeing that\nsome kind ol answer was expected\nfor Muckleworth had not yet reached the stage in his reminiscences\nwhere he would carry on, answered\nor not \"queer why I think that's\nJust another sign of their good sense.\nIt's essy enough to celebrate when\nthe skies are blue, the roses abloom.\nand aU the world singing songs ot\nsummer. Ule's all a celebration then\nbut It's in the dark drear days that\none needs something to cheer them\nup, Man, ye haven't been away\nfrom Scotland so long, even tho' it is\nB0 years, to have forgotten the wet\nana cold, the rain and haar, and\neternal grey skies, that make life\na purgatory trom October to March,\nIt's sin excuse lor almost anything,\neven a Burns' supper, to say nothing ot that good brew you are sipping so Comfortably right now.'\nAlex aet down hia glass and look-\ned at me most reproachfully, \"Guid\n.save us, Manl What's gooten intae\nel\" h\u00ab said. \"Are you like the\njvc o' them mlndin1 naethin' o'\nhame but the grey skies and the\nrain, tha mists wreathin' the hill\ntaps an' the haar creepin', creepln'\nnear Maxton, an' ma folk were at\nBoone, near Lauder, maybe 20 miles\nawa'. That waud list -be an' 'oor's\nride noo, but in they days it wai\na real Journey. Jean, hooever, was\na' lor gaun hame tae see ma mithcr,\nSae A spoke tae tbe Malster an' he\nwas guid as could be. \"Alex,\" he\nsaid It's a grand thing tae see a\nyoung man want in' tae gang hame at\nHogmanay, sae ye can. louse at twat\nan tak the mare an' ma gig, an\nye should get there aboot supper\nUme. Even takln' it easy the mare\ncan make,it in three 'oors, an' A\nken ye'll tak' care o' her.\"   ,\n\"Mind ye, it was sayln' a lot lor\nme whan he was lettin' the second\ngairdener tak' his best mare an' gig\ntae. gang stravagin' ower the kin-\ntrae, especially at that time o' the\nyear,\nShepard Barclay\nTells How to Bid\nand Play\n\"... WHAT A OOMPLIMENTt\nEVERY FINE cardaman likee to\nhave hii partner draw confidence\ntn hia ability to play a hand expertly. It place* on him the burden\nof trying hia belt to justify the\ntnat reposed ln him. It It haa remitted In his getting Into a higher\noontract than he would have chosen,\nIf able to see all of the cards, his\ngreatest brilliancy should be called\nforth in the effort to find some pos-'\nslble way to make the Contract\n-*...\"'   .... i..\u00bb t.%*\u2022*'\nE io\n* a io.   :\nI \u2022       - '\nJjA'j'l mwjk.*'.,\"*\n.\u25a0**;,   7X.X-X\n(Dealer: North. East-West vulnerable.)  '\nWilliam Fellowcs Morgan, veteran player joff tha Union Club la\nNew York, gave a spectacular example of onafldenai in hii partner,\nJ. Harlln O'Connell, former Individual champion of the Inter-Club\nContract League, on thla deal Mr.\nO'Connell, known to his Intimates\nas Pat, needed all of hia acumen to\njustify the confidence.\nMr. O'Connell had opened the' bid-\nding with 1-Diamond In the South.\nAlter \u00ablet et call* around the table,\nMr. Morgan oreiwsOled the opponent-1 unmakeable 5-Clubi with 5-\nPlamonda, West doubling aad leading the heart K, followed by the club\nlie tha A ot Eaat who returned.\ntheheartQ. '\nSeeing no chance for the contract\nexcept by a iqueeze, Mr. O'Connell\nnoted that four entries to dummy\nwere needed 11 he finessed for the\ndiamond K. As the dummy had only\nthrei entries, hii only chance wai\nto \u00abave one by dropping the K. This\nhe did with the diamond A, led te\nthe diamond Q, rafted a heart,\nrutted Ida laat club, ruffed another\nheart, then led two diamonds. On\nthe laat, West had to throw hti\nhaatt A, making the* nine good, or\na spade, which he did, acttlng up\ntha winnlp-; third apade trick for\nUie (Blighty declarer.\n\u2022 '\u2022\u2022   \u2022'\u25a0\u2022\nTomorrow 'i Problem\nA'U'SS)'\ne> 10 r\n\u2022\u00bb\u00ab\ni A 10 I 4 t\n*AQ8\n\u00bb \u00bb \u00bb\nA AJB\n*\/ J7682\n\u2666 86\n\u2666 ^8 7\n(Sealer: South. North-South vulnerable.)\nWhat is the comet bidding ot\nthla dealt\nCfltsrisbt, IMS, Kins F___e\u00bb Sjodiate, Inc. *\nin trie the North Sea? Hae y* lor-\ngotten the days Whan the skies are\nas blue as a robin's egg? Whan tiie\nChevlota are blue and gold against'\nthe lilt,.and the roads crisp an'\nrlngin' aneath yer feet whan tiie\nhedges are a' lichted up wl' th;\ndark green o' the holly an' the red\no' the berries, whan the air was\nclean an' clear an' like guid wine\nas it sent the bluld coursing thru\nyer veins? Ettrlck Man!. A' ken\nan' ye ken that Scotland's a dour\nrough mlther, but oh\"\u2014He paused\nand looked out ol the window to\nwhere the great hills were standing glistening white like heaps ol\npowdered sugar, and the glorious\nBritish Columbia sunshine flooded\nthe valley. \"Aye, that's bonnie\ntae,\" he muttered. \"But d'ye mind\nthe hill road that rins up frae\nMairchcleugh tae the fit o' the hills,\nand then Joins wi' the road ower\nthe Carter whaur the black faced\nsheep are like snaw drift again\nthe green o' the heather, an' hoo\nIn the sheltered places there are\nstill great clumps o' royal purple\nthat flaunt like King's banners\nagain the front o' winter? The year's\nwark is dune, an' the Halrst in, an\na'thing is restln', waitin' on the\nSpring again, an' Hogmanay was\ncoming. It wasnae New Years. Eye\nthen. R was Hogmanay, whan yin\nmet a' their Ireends and lorgot the\nbit differences that had maybe made\nthem drift a wee thing apart. There\nwas nae radio, nae motor caurs. Yin\nmade their am fun an' A dlnnae\nken, but It seenu tae me we were\nmair staple an' mair content, maybe we were no only happier, but A\nthink that we thocht mair o' what\nwe had, an' were no aaa 111 tae\nplease. They hae Thanksgivln' noo,\nan' -Chriltmai an' dances, an' den-\nners on New Years Eve, but they\ndlnnae seem tae hae the rich full\nmeanin' o\" Hogmanay in the auld\ndays whan ye gaed Hame. Hame\nfrae three or lour mllei doon the\nroad or Hame frae the ends o' the\nearth tae say tae their aln folk.\n'A guid New Year    an' mony o\nAlex wm now ln lull swing, and\nhe hardly noticed when I reached\nover and refilled the glass, tho' he\ntook a sip and nodded as much as to\nsay \"That\"! line.\" The tun goci\ndown quickly ln our valley and\nalready In the ihort time of our\ntalking the sunlight had faded, and\nthe hills were looming steely cold\nagainst the rapidly darkening sky\nMy wife, moving softfooted, drew\nthe curtains and switched on s shaded Ught. It would be wrong to say\nthat Muckleworth smiled, but there\nspread over Ws face a sudden glow\nas il lighted from some happy\nthought within,\n\u2022 \"A mind,\" he said llowly, \"yln\nHogmanay that stands oot abune a'\nth rest.\nIt was yln o' they bonnie days A\nwas speakm' aboot. A' blue an' gowd\nan' silver, wi' the frost on the trees\nan jut a glit o' snaw on the hillside, an' whan A tucket the robe\nroond aboot Jean an' we went spank-\nIn doon the road an' thru St Bos'-\nells A wadnae hae changed places\nWi' ony King in hlstoi-y, Wa gaed\ndoon ower Msrtoun Brig,, an' Sen\neased the horse up the lang brae\ntae Clontmains, an*at the tap stop,\nped tae look over the lang valley\no' Tweed. It was gle near the place\nwhaur no sae lang alore Jean an'\nma baud stopped yln day on oor\nroad home frae schule, an' had suddenly kenn't that we werena bairns\nony mair an' that a new warld had\nopened oot afront o1 us.\n\"Weel, A raoplt the nig tighter\nroond her and dodged on again,\n\\ve skelped past Blue' Hooses, a?\nwhan we were gaun Blow up the\nRed Brae A noticed that It seemed\nto be gettin' warmer ,and the sky\nkind o' hazy, but It wasnae until\nwe were passin' Bemewyde that, A\nnoticed the lirst flakes a', snaw.\nDoon it cam' genUy, but steady an'\nslow. Ye ken the snaw there isnae\nlike the snaw here, the flakes are\nbigger an' heavier an' watter, they\ncome doon Jist like the expression,\n'salt as,a snawflake.' As we started\ntae gang doon the lang hill tae\nLeaderflt Brig, they grew thicker\nan' heavier, until it was hard even\ntae see the road. The sun had disappeared ahint the Eildons, an' it\nwas near dark, we cam tae the lit\no' the hill, an' A got oot an' lichted\nthe lamps. \u25a0\n' \"The little yellow lowe seemed\njist tae mak' the darkness thicker.\n' Al' roon was lust like a thick dark\nblanket closin nearer an' nearer. In\nthe glare o' the Ucht we could see\nthe flakes fa'aln' faster an' taster,\nthe haunches o' the mare gleamed\nwet an' dark, but its head was\njust a shadow bob,'bobbin' there\nEv'.\nin front. Oor pace got slower an'\nslower, lor wee bit oritta were be-\nginnln' tae gether at the corners\nan' sheltered places, an' It was gettin' tae be a sair traiichle tae wun\nthru. Up past Redpith an' roon\nthe Black Hill, an' then on tae the\nlang bare road that leads tae\nLauder.\n\"By this Ume we were Jict a wee\nsperk o' licht travelling on, sae slow\nin a world o' whirlln' derkness.\nTwa, three times the gig rocked\nlike a boat and A kenn t we were\nalf the road on tae the muir but\naye the mare wun her wey' back\nan' then a' at aince there was sic\na whummle, an' there we were\ncoupit ott In the snaw. A picked\nJean up an' looked at her in the\nlamp. They were cannel lamps In\nthey days an' hadnae gane oot. Sae A\ngot the gig back ontne ita wheels\nThe mare was aricht, no a bit distressed a' still tn' o' spirit The\nsnaw flakes wete melting on Jean's\neyelashes an' glltterin' there Uke\nstars. \"Lassie,\" A said, \"Are ye\ncauld?\" \"No, Alex,\" was her re-\n, but A saw that ihe wai look-\na feck feart. so A said again\n\"Are ye a wee bit feart Jean?\"\nHer big een looked intae mine\ntor a mnltc Intae mine an' then\nshe said, 'No, Alex, no whan A'm wl'\nyou.\"\n\"Man, Ettrlck, cf ter that It dtdnae\nmaitter, what was being lost on tho\nmull1 or bein' oot in a snaw storm\nwhan ye had someyin wi' tae say\na thing like that tae y*? On we\nplodded 'oor elter 'oor, an' A wai\nbeginhln' tae think that we were\nlost lor fal whan a' at alnce A could\nsee awa' tae the rlcht lichts shin-\nIn' thru the fleetin' snaw.\n\"Ye ken hoo Boone lies doon 1'\nthe hollow aff the main road? Weel,\nwhan we dldnae arrive whan we\nwere expected, ma faither had had\na big bonfire lichted ,i' the stack\nynird, an' that's what A Was seeln'\nthru the gloom,   . \u25a0 \u25a0 ' '\u25a0'-\n\"It seemed as gin the mare kenn't\nthat there was nae mair danger, lor\nshe gave a kind o' nicker, an*\nspeeded her steps an' we drave intae the term yalrd.. .,,\n\"Ma faither, looWn' like Santa\nClaus hlmse]', lifted Jean doon, an'\nhaudln' her Ucht In his nmi, grlnpct\nme by the haund an' said \"Fega,\nBairns, A thocht that ye were lost\nCa'wa intae the hooee.\" Yin o' the\nmen cam' stepln' ooto' the snsw an'\ntook the horse, sayln',, \"Gang awa\nin  wl' the wife, Alex, A'll {look\nThe door was wide open, an' in the\nbleeze o' licht streamin Aot intae\nthe whirlln' white warld stood ma\nmaither, A could see ahint her intae the hoose. The fire was loweln'.\nThe table set an' a' thing settin' Jist\nlike A minded it since ever A could\nmind onything. She held me ucht\ntae her, wat an' a' ai A was, say-\nin' hall greetin'. \"Eh, Laddie, A'm\nglad jrer hame, an then turnin\nUie Jean said, \"An' ye, tae ma\ndaughter, welcome hame,\" An' we\nwent inside ah' shut oot the cauld\nan' wind an' snaw, Inside tae warmth\nan' happiness. ,\nMuckleworth stopped and drained\nhis  glass.\n\"An' that, Ettrlck,\" he went on,\n\"an that la Hogmanay, warmth an'\nfirelight, guid things- tae eat an'\nfriendship an' happiness an' love.\"\n\"Yes;\" said my wile, rising from\nthe stool where she had been ait\nting during the recital, and switch\ning on the rest of the lights, \"Malst\no' a', en' love.' Come on and eat\nbelore it gets cold.\"\nJ? Questions??\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers ia open to any reader ol\nthe Nelion Daily News. In no\ncase will the name ol the person\nasking the question be published.\nIt was the lirst year that Jean efter the mare,\nan' me were married. A was wbrkin'l   \"It was jist a step, tae tho hoose.\nDSK, Procter\u2014In Casslno. 11 two\npeople have such scores that both\ncount on the same hand, the aces\nbeing divided between them, who\nwins?\nIn Casslno, the points count ln\nthe following order: cards, Spades,\nBig Casslno, LitUe Casslno. aces and\niweeps. If the aces have to decide\nthe game, ther score In order of\nspades, dubs, hearts and diamonds.\nG.BL, Salmo\u2014What per cent ol the\ncoal In a mine can be taken out?\nAll coal can be extracted 11 there\nare no buildings erected on the mine,\nbut 11 there are pillars there'must\nbe lett; In that case only about 80\nper cent can be extracted.\nP.L., Trail \u2014 Please tell me what\nCelluloid Is nude ol?\nCelluloid is a synthetic material\nmade by treating nitro-cellulose\nwith camphor. It is transparent\nelastic and easily molded at about\n100 degrees C. Celluloid is Insoluble\nin water but soluble in alcohol and\nother organic solvents.\nG.R., Nelson\u2014Why Is a piano called\na pianoforte?\nThe original name was pianoforte.\nIt is an adaptation ol two Italian\nwords, piano meaning soft and forte\nmeaning loud or strong. It was evidently applied to the instrument be\ncause It describes its possibilities of\ntone.\nG.R., Nelson\u2014How was the liquor\nBacardi named?\nBacardi is a Cuban liquor invented by a well known Cuban by that\nname, a native of Santiago de Cuba,\nProvince of Ofiente. The liquor is\ncalled Ron Bacardi in Cuba, while\nthe drink made from It is called\nDaiquiri cockjail.\nH.L., Sheep Creek\u2014Can you please\ntell me now to clea.n an old silver\ncoin?\nMake a solution of 10 parts of sulphuric add and 90 parts of water,\nand let the coin lie in this until\nthe crust of silver sulphite is dissolved. From live to 10 minutes usually\nsuffice. Rinse in running water, then\nrub with a soft brush and castile\nsoap, rinse again, dry with a soft\ncloth, and then carefully rub with\nchamois.\nACTIVE IN ...\nKOOTENAY LIFE\nARNOLP LBfeW\n... young Nelion business man,\nchairman ot the publicity committee ol the Nelson Junior board\nof trade.\ntSSp&bX&tWtiSSStM&SefX&ttt\nfiaiwiuunam\nAUNT HET\nBy   ROBEH1   QU11.I.EN\n\"That awlul mess in Germany\ndon't surprise me. When a flood\nwashes trash up to some high place,\nit keeps on bed' Jrtsh.\"Ar\nDoes Not Like\n'Em Too Smart\nIt should be reassuring to all\nyoung persons to know that clever?'\nness is not an essential ot success.\nIndeed, cleverness may be a real\nhandicap. Cleverness is flashy, unstable, a cheater.\nMost of us are not clever, and we\nare uncomfortable in the company\nor presence of clever men. We don't\nlike being canvassed by clever salesmen.\u2014J. C Kirkwood in Marketing.\nBusiness First\nThe secretary of the golf club came\nupon a tramp sleeping on one of the\ngreens. \"Go away, he said, angrily:\n''this is private ground.\"\nThe tramp looked at him reprovingly. \"Now, now,\" he said, \"that's\nnot the way to get new members.\"\nMillion In\nRefunds\nIn the B.C. provincial legislature:\nMr. Anscomb asked the. Hon.\nMinister of Finance the following\nquestions:\n1, Was any amount refunded\nduring the year 1938 of the 1-per\ncent tax?\n2, II yes, how much?\nThe Hon. Mr. Hart replied as\nfollows:\n\"1. Yes.\n\"2. $1,094,647.32,\"\nThese Men Ut\nUs Appreciate\n\u25a0 When Voltaire was writing his history ol the reign ot Louis XIV, he\nasked his friends in Paris to send\nhim stories about the men of that\ntime who had actually created something. He wanted no stories ol\ncourtiers, of generals, ot destroyers\nand ravagers.\n\"Nothing but a name remains of\nthose who commanded battalions\nand fleets,\" he wrote, \"nothing results to the human race from a hundred battles gained; but the great\nmen of whom I speak have prepared\npure and durable delights .for generations yet unborn. A canal that\nconnects two seas, a picture by Pous-\nsin, a beautiful tragedy, a discovered\ntruth, are things a thousand times\nmore precious than all the annals of\nthe court, than all the narratives ol\nwar.\"\nLet us praise the men who build\nour railroads, who develop water-\npower, who put electricity at the\nservice ol millions, whose business\ngenius batters down vails between\nnations, the writers of great books,\nthe scientists, the creators of beauty\neverywhere, those who make laughter and liberate good-will, those\nmen and women who raise living\nstandards, who make lite sweeter\nand liner lor the common people in\nall lands.\u2014Shining Lives.\nRoyal support is being enlisted\ntor the Oxford Group's crusade for\nmoral rearmament The Queen of\nthe Netherlands and King Leopold\nof Belgium have both emphasized\nin recent publlo statements that if\nlasting peace Is to be established in\nthe world It can only be built on a\nfoundation of moral and spiritual rearmament\u2014Calgary Herald.\n\u25a0stsssssmtistMmsttpmittmtistittmmtmtseimeeitMstm\nr\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nLetten miy be published over \u25a0 nom-de plume, but Ida actual\nname of the writer must be given to the editor ai evidence ot\n.   good futh. Anonymoui letter! go In the waite paper baiket\nmmeMBttwmmt\nJv$$$SS$$$$$S$$$i\nSending \"Tin-Canners\" toTJail Hardly\nMeets Situation Says Correspondent\nTo the Editor ot the\n, Dally News.\nSit\u2014A welcome letter appeared\nIn the Daily Newi tome time ago,\nsigned \"An Oxford Grouper.\"\nThe great work the Oxford Group\nis doing dl Over the world claims\nour Wonder and reverence. They\ndo not concern themselves with\nnational'problems, laws, or social\nlegislation, but recognize the first\nImportance of individual lives, for\nwhom governments exist and upon\nwhom governments depend, and realize that It everyone lived and\npracticed true Christianity our national problems would disappear.\nBut after all, in a democratic\ncountry our public institutions, laws\nand government measures are the\nresponsibility of the Individuals ol\nwhich the nation Is made up and\nshould express their Ideas ol what\nIs right and Just It must surely,\ntherefore, be part ol the duty of\nthe individual to see that this is\nso. .\nWithout presuming to criticize\nor even wishing the Oxford Group\nto direct part ot their efforts Irom\ntheir special sphere, in which they\nhave obtained such wonderful results, it would seem there is room\nIor others to strive to shape public\noffering to conform to a better\nway of life. \"Each to his task.\" And\nall honor to the Oxford Group in\ntheir chosen field,\nBut it would not be consistent\nif everyone adopted their high\nprinciples in private and,personal\naffairs and no one worked to extend those principles to national\nmatters. Systems and lawi do not\nchange themselves. They must be\nchanged by people, Ior it is the\npeople who made them and are\nresponsible lor them.\n, Ii is certain the vast majority ol\nindividuals who make up the Canadian nation do not approve the\nlaw that sent 130 \"tin canners\" to\nOakalla. As the Vancouver Daily\nProvince puts it: \"Hungry men asked for bread and they were given\nstone walls.\" And ss Harold Winch\nfold the house at Victoria, these\nmen had broken a social law, but\nIn putting them In jdl the government had broken a law of Nature\nwhich said a man must eat to\nlive..    *\nThese men had whatever slight\nsatisfaction they may have found\nln drawing attention to their plight:\nand a feeling they had many sympathizers; but many a lone man\nhas been arrested on the charge of\nbegging in our smaller towns, or\nhas been put In jail and there given\nby force, work, which wai all he\nneeded to keep him out of jalL And\nall the notice this attracts consists\nof a abort newi item in a local\npaper. ,\nSome government men have advised such men to Join our defense,\ncorps and light Ior the country that\ndoes not want them and tor tiie\npeople who put them in JalL Perhaps some ol those who are tit\nand able'might even be willing to\ndo that. But what right have we to\nexpect. such men to measure up\nto the standard required ln patriot-\nlam, loydty and heroism?\nIs this state ot affairs expressing\nthe will of the people? As Butterfleld has put if;'\"The only way\nthe Democrades can be saved is\nto make them democrades.''\nWhile such things continue, what\nIs the use ot calling for unity in\nCanada? Might as well tell our\nchildren to love their home, and\nyet deny them a place In it\nAs the last Prince of Wales said:\n\"Alter all, who are the unemployed?\nJust our fellow countrymen and\nwomen, the same as ourselves, only'\nfar less fortunate.\"\nIt is not true that the world owes\nevery one a living. But it is our\nduty, through our representatives,\nto see that no one is debarred from\nmaking his own living. II we fall\nto do that, what right have we to\ncall Canada a Democracy or to call.\nourselves Christians?\nTrail, B. C.   , ,    .\nDec. 6,1938. R. B. W.\nSERIAL STORY . . .\nROMANCE INC.\n(Continued From Pige Five)\nat church. She be sorry she miss\n\u2022you.\"\nIt was just as well that Bob had\ntaken Sara Sue to church. He had\nslipped in ahead of T. J. Sanders\non that detail, and had by luck\nenabled Sara Sue to escape the\n'press ol early callers. They went\nlo the Baptist church, and Thornton Holgate saw them there.\n\"Great to see you up and about,\nDr. Holgate,\" Bob assured him.\n\"But Sara Sue's stealing your thunder today,\"\n\"I beg pardon?\"\nBob laughed. \"She's in bigger\nheadlines than you were. See-the\npaper?\"\n\"Oh, yes.tyes, to be sure. Such\nuntoward publicity is most lamentable, isp't It?\"\n\"I don't know. What harm Can\nit do? Might as well advertise her\nbusiness.\"    -\nSara Sue expressed herself there,\n\"I think you are quite right, Thornton. The paper wrote me up out\nof all proportion to my importance.\nI'm alraicl Bob->\"\n\"No, no, madam\u2014Ah, Sara Sue.\nNot that I meant\u2014well, the bathing pose' and all, would seem\u2014\"\nDr. Holgate was floundering.\n\"I get It Doctor,\" said Bob. \"Sara\nSue's too sweet to be ballyhooed In\nthat particular way.\"\n\"Qultel Yes, Indeed!\"\n\"You boys hush,\"- Sara Sue ordered. But she blushed pink as a\nrch, something she didn't often\nany .more. ''Come on in the\nchurch, the organ's starting.\"\nAll told, the day was busy for\nSara Sue. And distracting.\nShe was pleased with the generous attention given her by the\npaper, but embarrassed by it, too.\nShe was no stage or movie star;\nshe wasn't used to publicity's spot\nlight.\nTherefore, she welcomed the rain\nthat put a halt to most ot her-callers toward sundown\u2014she was glad\nthat Thornton Holgate came quietly\nover, under his green umbrella,\nto visit for a hall hour at 9:30 p.m.\nMother Davis retired, leaving them\nalone.\n\"It Is time Ior coffee and cakes,\"\nthe girl declared, serving them.\n\"How is your love affair progressing? Seen, Peaches any more?\"\n\"I \u2014 ah\u2014no.\"\n\"No? Why? Don't let your modesty Interfere npw, Thorny! You\nmade a grand impression at Galveston. You are a campus hero.\nFollow it up.\"\n\"Um\u2014the fact is\u2014\"\nThe fact was that Dr. Holgate\nh|d thought of the matter a great\ndeal. He had done almost nothing\nelse but think about it, since he\nregained consciousness In John\nSealy hospital.' In that Interim he\nhad managed to minimize Peaches'\nshortcomings, and to idealize her\nagain. But he hadn't dared seek too\nmuch contact with her in person,\nleit this Ideal vanish!\n&S$S$SS& SSSSSKWSSSWWWSSSSSSS\nJut yoWiMAf\nWSSttSSS**\nt&SSX&SSSi\nONE MINUTE TEST\n1. When wai the first naturalization act passed In the United States?\n2.Which is the busiest canal in\nthe world?\n3,Whlch is the smaller an atom\nor an electron?\nTODAY'S HOROSCOPE\nThe planets favor sympathy and\ncongeniality for those born on this\nday, so interest yours :lf In others\nand make new friends. Keep part\nof your birthday for pleasure and\nmake the most ot the affection of\nyour family and friends. However,\navoid Jealousy and over-pessessive-\nness, Or you may antagonize one\nyou wish to attract.\nONE MINUTE TEST AN8WER8\n1. It was passed by the lirst congress In 1790, March 20. It established a rule for the acuisltlon of\nUnited tatea citizenship by those\nof foreign birth,\n2. The Soo-Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan.;\n3. An Electron.\n\"\u2014Hie fact Is, I am unworthy\nof her. That is\u2014well, she likes to,\ndrink. And to smoke. And even\ngamble a bit I lear. \"And I\u2014lhave\nbeen reared with conflicting moral\nstandards. If I could convince her-\nSara Sue understood. Or thought\nshe did.\n\"Thorny, you must be prepared\nto, do some changing, however.\nEven though you're attracted to\neach other you must remember that;'\nonly one standard can exist between you. Peaches undoubtedly\nis a Uttle bit wild. But you have\nbeen a little bit tame, too. Remember I told you that you used to\nact like a sissy?\"\nHe nodded, gazing at the blaze\nIn her fireplace. Nightmare, the\ndog, was sleeping nearby.\n. The morning paper had emphasized that Mrs. Davis operated no\ngigolo service, but that she sought\nyoung men and women about their\nheart affairs. Thornton was impressed again with her general .\nacumen, veriljfc Mrs. Davis was a1\nremarkable woman, as the paper\nhad said.\n\"You have developed your personality wonderfully since you first\ncame here,\" she went on. \"You look\nsmart fashionable, distinguished.\nYou learn last, Thorny. You were\nalready a brilliant conversationalist when you were at ease, All\nyou need now is to develop a little\nmore gaiety. Laugh and sing a lot.\nMake small talk. Be sociable. Seel\"\n\"Yes, thank you. Thank you, truly\nSara Suel\"\nHe left her cottage much happier for the call Always a visit\nwith her $eemed to stimulate him,\nhe realized. He respected her not\nfor her personal charm, but for\nher keen mentality as welL He\nwould take her counsel, as originally agreed, >\nIt Peaches Pomeroy wes ol a\ngayer, faster sodd world, then he\nwould try to adapt himself to that\nHe wasnt sure exaotly how\u2014he\nwould give It some detailed thought\nbut he would do It He would Impress Peaches.\nHe had been an old stick-in-the-\nmud, as Sara Sue told him, but as\nsoon as opportunity with Peaches\npresented itsell \u00abgdn, he would\nconsciously go a little bit wild, A\nlittle bit wild.      . \u25a0\nOr maybe & considerable bitl   .\nTO Bt CONTINUED\nImprovement\nCover your cracked plaster with Cottonwood\nPanels. You will beautify\nand insulate your home.\nDISTRICT DISTRIBUTORS\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nThen Was\nPacific\nMade a\nBetter\nMilk\nThe day the vacuum Beal was\nplaced on Pacific, Pacific was\na better jnilk. The can was\nclosed In better' ind a new\nday for better milk commenced.\nPeople lound this out and the\ndemand increased. When you\nuse Pacific you have chosen\nthe purest milk.  ,'\u00ab.'..\nPacific Milk\n\t\n  ^\u2014-\u2014'\nTrail Blazers Triumph Over\nLeafs, 6-4, in Christmas Game\nNelson   Finishes   in\nBlazing Rally to\nCut p-1 Lead\nSTIFF BODYING\nHIGHLIGHTS GAME\n, TRAIL, B. C, Dec. 26 -- Trail\nI   Blazers came Close to paying Nel-\n. son Maple Leaft In their own\ncoin when the two teams tangled\nMonday afternoon In a Kootenay\nHockey league Dame here. They\nwon 6-4; but up to the time Leafs\nsent four and five men Into an\n- attack that netted three last period\ncounters they had the game completely In hand, 6-1, with Nelson\n. completely disorganized.\nI Thera was holiday spirit in the\ndisplay. The boys Used hips, knees\n-and sticks with a fine disregard\nlor the social amenities. One of the\nresults was a penalty  parade  in\n. each period, a total of 17 for a time\ntoss ot 34 minutes. Neither team\nwas spectacularly successful with\npower plays,.hut Trail was smoother\nand had better control.\nRUGGED CHECKING\nBlazers played a rugged man to\nroan game and fought for the puck\nall over  the  Ice.  They  lost  no\nDICK BURGESS\nTrail Blazer's reserve goaHe,\nmade an Impression on fans In\nhit Initial appearance at Trail\nMonday afternoon. He was formerly with Saskatoon Quakers.\nopportunity to pound Seaby. and\ntheir repeated rushes behind a\nsieve-like Nelson defence made a\nlarge evening for the goalie. Maple\nLeafs showed they had been working on attack plays, but the timing\nwasnt all It might have been and\nattackers frequently weren't where\nthey should have been to pick up\npasses. But it was in the checking\nand defence departments that the\nvisitors slipped most, and until the\n.final gong it appeared Blazers could\ndo just about what they wanted.\nBurgess, making hit bow In\nthe Trail net, put up a steady\ngame and robbed Nelson repeatedly. Both teami played under\nthe handicap of lots of regulars\nthrough Illness and Injury. Trail\nlaoked Len Wade and Nelton was\nwithout' Len Bicknell, both defencemen. \"Red\" Carr, Nelion\nwing left the Ice with a limp\nduring the game and did not return.\n8TRETQH.MARGIN\nTrail opened the scoring at 13:30\nwith the only goal of the first period\nbottu\nt'AtniticU Of\nCO-OPERATIVE\nWINE GROWERS ASSOCIATION\nOF SOUTH AFRICA\nThla advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by\nGovernment of British\nColumbia.\nand stretched tbe margin to 4-1 in\nthe second. Up to that time Blazers\nhad complete command ->nd when\nthey scored two more less than\nthree minutes after the faceoff in\nthe third It looked like a complete\nrout. Leafs started to go then, however, and rammed home three good\nones as their passlBg clicked.\nThe close checking f the final\nperiod, plus the speed of the game,\nbrought tempers to the ragged edge\nand conflict threatened repeatedly.\nTripping, using the knee and boarding were common. At one \u25a0 stage\nNelSon. was reduced to three men\nand Trail to four, Shooting up the\nice to-relieve pressure, used first\ntb break up power plays, was a\nweapon that .Trail continued to use\neven when at full strength as Nelson sent four and five men up to\nhunt for goals..\nHEADY CENTRE\n\u25a0 Bud Hammond showed as a heady,\ntricky general In the final drive,\nJack Kilpatrlck working well with\nhim. Jimmie Anderson, sparking\nthe Blazers, had a big hand in Trail's\nwin, both defensively and offensively, as did Christensen and Wanless.\nLineups:\n.Nelson \u2014 Seaby; Atwell, J. Smith,\nDuckworth; Hammond, Shannon\nand Neilson, Kilpatrlck, N. Smith,\nCarr and Moody.\nTrail \u2014 Burgess; Anderson, Norrls, Jones; Wanless, Calles and Martinson, Appleton, Cowland and\nChristensen.\nReferee was \"Curly\" Wheatley\nand linesman, Jack Annable.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period \u2014 1 Trail, Norris\n(Christensen) 15:30.\nPenalties \u2014 Anderson, Jones, Nick\nSmith, Wanless, Johnny Smith.\nSecond period \u2014 2 Trail, Anderson (Wanless). 5:55; 3, Nelson, Carr\n(Kilpatrick) 8:40; 4 Trail, Appleton\n(Anderson) 16:30; 5 Trail, Cowland,\n19:30.\nPenalties \u2014 Kilpatrlck, Norrls,\nCarr, Jones, Jones.\nThird period \u2014 6 Trail. Christensen, 1:89; 7 Trail, Calles (Wanless)\n2:35; 8 Nelson. Kilpatrick 3:10; 9\nNelson, Atwell (Kilpatrick) 7:55;\n10 Nelson, J. Smith (Hammond)\n11:30.\nPenalties \u2014 Neilson, Anderson,\nJones, Shannon, Shannon, J. Smith.\nAppleton. -\nBRITISH SOCCER\nRESULTS\nLONDON, Dec: 26 (CP Cable).-\nResults   of   Boxing day   football\nmatches played in England follow:\nENGLISH  LEAGUE-Dlv. 1\nArsenal-Charlton Athletic (postponed).\nBirmingham 2, Middlesbrough 1.\nBlackpool 1, Huddersfield Town 1.\nBolton Wanderers-Preston North\nEnd (postponed).\nBrentford - Portsmouth (postponed). '\nEverton 2, Derby County 2.      *\nGrimbsy Town 2, Wolverhampton\nWanderers 4.\nLeeds United 1, Chelsea 1.\nManchester United 3, Leicester\nCityO.\nStoke City 3, Liverpool 1.\nSunderland 1, Alton Villa I.\nENGLI8H LEAGUE-Dlv. II\nBlackburn Rovers 1, Bury 0.\nBradford 0, Chesterfield 0.\nBurnley 1, Tottenham Hotspurs 0.\nCoventury City 1, Plymouth Argyle 2.\nFulham-Sheffleld Wednesday,\n(postponed).\nMffiwall-West Ham United (postponed).\nNorwich City-Newcastle United\n(postponed).\nNotts Forest 2, Luton Town 4.\nSheffield United 5, Southampton 1.\nTranmere Rovers 3, Manchester\nCity 9.\nWest Bromwich Albion-Swansea\nTown (postponed).\nDIV, 3\u2014Southern Seotlon\nBournemouth-Bristol Rovers (postponed).\nBristol City 2, Brighton 0.\nCerdlf f 1, Queen's Park Rangers 0.\nClapton Orient-Torquiy United\n(postponed).\nCrystal Palace 3, Aldershot 0.\nIpswich Town 5, Mansfield Town 1.\nNorthampton Town 2, Port Vale 0.\nReading 1, Walsall 1.\nSouthend United-Exeter City\n(postponed).\nSwindon Town ' 8, Newport\nCounty 0,\nWatford 0, Notts County 7.\nDIV. S\u2014 Northern Section\nBarnsley 4, Accrlngton Stanley 1.\nBarrow 2, Bradford City 1.\nDoncaster Rovers 1, Rotherham\nUnited 1.\nGateshead 0, Darlington 2.\nHalifax Town 2, Lincolft City 0.\nHartlepools United 2, Chester 5.\nHull City 3, New Brighton 0.\nOldham Athletic 0, Stockport\nCounty 1. (abandoned after 63 minutes\u2014fog),\nSouthport 4, Rochdale 1.\nWrexham 2, Carlisle United 5.\nYork City 4, Crewe Alexandra 1.\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE-Dlv. 1\nClyde 2, Falkirk 4.\nRangers 3, St. Mlriren 0.\n(Only games played)\nIRISH LEAGUE\nDerry City 4, Glentoran 0.\nBallymena United 4, Coleraine 0\nCliftonville 1, Lame 4.\nGlenavon 5, Distillery 1.\nNewry Town 1, Ards 1.\nBelfast Celtic 1, Llnfleld 2.\nBsngor 4, Portadown 3.\nHawks Beat Lions\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 26 (CD-Seattle Seahawks nosed out a 5-4\novertime victory over Vancouver\nLions in a Pacific Coast Hockey\nleague game here tonight, featured\nby a second period free-for-all that\nended with five minute penalties\nhanded out to Seattle Goalie Em-\nmelt Venne and Morey Rimstad,\nLion Winger.\nLoren Mercer Scored for Vancouver Just after the opening faceoff\nbut Dave Downle tied the score for\nSeahawks before the period ended.\nBel Tabor, Frank Jerwa and Ralph\nBlyth sniped a goal each early in\nthe second before Jack Adams and\nTip O'Neill counted for Lions. With\nDownle subbing for Venne ln the\nthird Lude Palm scored the Vancouver goal that forced the extra\nsession where Johnny Houbregs\ncounted the winning goal\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-TUESDAY MORNING, DEO. V. IM.\nW\nWB\nJhiL WttikL Oosjl\nCanada's Senior Hocftey Champions Now In Europe After \"World's Title\"\n. Now in Europe Trail Smoke Eaters, winners of tbe\nspring, and seen here aboard the Canadian Pacific liner, Duchess\nof York, on their way over for exhibition games and the tournament\nthat decides what is somewhat facetiously referred to aa tha \"world's\nawmr mn\u00bbej uuo.\" In the picture are, left to right: front row-\nDick Kowcinak, Dave Buchanan, Duke Scodellaro, Jim Morris, Johnny\nMcCreedy, Mickey Brennan. Back row\u20140. H. Nelson, Bunny Dame,\nJoe Benoit, Benny Hayes, A. C. Johnston, Mel Snowdon, Jimmy Haight,\nand Playing Coach Ab Cronie. .    \u25a0\u201e\nMONARCHS WHIP   '\nTRAIL BOMBERS\nTRAILI-B. C\u201e Dec. 26*-Monarchs\nbeat Bombers 4-1 ih a public sohool\nleague hockey game at Trail rink\nSaturday morning. Isn McLeod paced the Monarchs with three goals,\nMalcolm Serres nabbing the other.\nIvo TOffolo was responsible for preventing a shutout of Bombers. The\nteams were:\nBombers\u2014Frank Turik. Isadore\nMcLaughlin, Ivo Toffolo, Art Allan.\nFerro and Mike Sammartino.\nMonarchs \u2014 Malcolm Serres, John\nGaul, Ian McLeod\/ Erasmo Truant,\nMacKinnon and Webster.\nEnglish Rugby\nLONDON, Dec. 20 (CP Cable). -\nEnglish Rugby league matches played today resulted as follows: \u2022\nBatley 9,,Dewsbury 1        ,\nBradford Northern 29, Bramjey 7.\nBroughton Rangers 16, Barrow 12.\nCastleford 6, Keighley 2.\nHuddersfield \u00a7 Halifax- ll.\nHull 5, Hull Kingston 2.\nHunslet 8, York 2.\nWidnes-Liverpool (postponed \u2014\nfog).\nOldham-Swlnton (postponed \u2014\nfog),\nSt. Helens 4, St. Helens Rees 8.\nWakefield Trinity 4, Leeds 5.\nWarrington 8, Leigh 6. (Abandoned after 53 minutes\u2014fog).\nWlgan 0, Salford 11.\nLONDON, Dec. 26 (CP Cable). -\nMany   scheduled   English   Rugby\nUnion matches were postponed today due.to frost-bound grounds.\nResults of games played included:\nAberavon 0, Bridiaend 0.\nNeath 21, Abertillery 6.\nNewport 6, Watsonians 3,\nSwansea 14, University Athletic\nUnion 6.\nGODDARD BOWLS ENGLAND INTO\nCOMMAND OF TOUR TEST MATCH\nJOHANNESBURG, Dae 26 (CP\nCable). \u2014 A holiday crowd of\n25,000 spectators law England assume a commanding position In\nthe second dsy's play of tha opening test orlckat match against\nSouth Afrloa today. Tha touring\nteam completed Its Innings for\n422'runs and at adjournment the\nSpringboks had lost flvs wickets\nfor 106.\nRemarkable bowling by Tom Goddard, Gloucestershire veteran,\nbrought about collapse by tha home\nplayers after they had posted 160\nfor two. Tha 38-year-oldbowler performed the hat-trick near the close\nof play, dismissing Dudley Nourse,\nN. -Gordon and W. W. Wade with\nsuccessive deliveries.\nWith their score ol 320 runs tor\nsix, the Englishmen continued this\nmorning and X 3. Valentine, Kent\namateur, made 97 runs before he\nwas caught by Wade behind the\nwickets oft N. Gordon's bowling.\nHe batted two hours, 20 minutes and\nin aa aggressive display hit 11 fours.\nValentine's total was the second\nhighest tor his team. Edward Payn-\nter made 117 In Saturday's play,\nbeing closely followed by Peter Glbb,\nYorkshire amateur, with 23.\nTHE SCORE-CARD!\nEngland\u2014First Innings:\nEdrich, c Dalton, b Mitchell .... 4\nP. A. Glbb, c Melville, b Mitchell   93\nPaynter, b Mitchell   117\nW. R, Hammond, b Gordon ..- 24\nAmes, c Wade, b Mitchell  42\nN. W. D. Yardley, c and b Mitchell  7\nB. H. Valentine, c Wade, b Gordon      -  97\nVerity, b Dalton \u2014 26\nWilkinson, Ibw.b Gordon      2\nK. Fames, b Gordon .....      0\nGoddard, not out _.    0\nExtras        10\nTotal       422\nFall ol wlckets-1-4, 2-188, 3-234,\n(-278, 5-292, 6-294, 7-378, 8-388, 9-415.\nBOWLING:\nP   M  R W\nX Q. Davies     19    0  102  1\nA. B. C, Langton ....  27    5    74  0\nN. Gordon   88.4 3  103  8\nB. Mitchell     22    2    78  J\nE. L. Dalton    10    1    42  1\n0. Bond  ,   2   0   16 0\nSouth Africa\u2014First innings:\nB. Mitchell, not out     72\nP. Van Der Byl, lbw, b Verity     4\nA. Melville, c and b Verity      0\nD. Nourse, c and b Goddard ....   78\nN. Gordon, stpfd Ames, b Goddard    .....\nW. W. Wade, b Goddard\t\nK. 3. Viljoen, not out \u2014\u2014\nExtras \t\nTotal (tor 5 wickets)\n0\n0\n0\n17\n166\n? 1-41, 2-44, 8-160,\nFall of wickets-\n4-100, 5-160.\nBRADMAN STARS\nADELAIDE, Australia, Dee. 26 \u2014\n(CP Cable) \u2014 A masterly double\ncentury by Don Bradman. featured the Sheffield Shield' cricket\nmatch between South Australia and\nQueensland today. The home team\ncompiled 462 runs In reply to the\nQueenslanders' first Innings score\nThe Australian captain hit up 228\nruns in five hours, 29 minutes,\nmaking 15 boundary strokes.\nAt Melbourne, Victoria amassed\n504 runs after New South Wales\nfirst Innings had closed 294. Going\nin a second time the home team\nhad made 215 for three at the close\not play.\nWesterners Continue Victory Run\nas Trip M.R.K\/S 3-0; Scouts Win\nMonday's olty league hookey\ngame scores were:\nBANTAM  LEAGUE\nWesterners 3, M.R.K. 0\nF.A.C.  (No. 3)  2,  F.A.C.  (No.\n2)  1.\nMIDGET LEAGUE\nF.A.C. (No1)7,F,A.C. (No. 2)0\nJUVENILE  LEAGUE\nScouts 5, F.A.C. 4\nWesterners, T. A. C. Bantam No.\n3 and F.A.C. Midgets No. 1 all\nwon in Monday morning games.\nThe Westerners tifrnsd ths tablet on the M.R.K.'i this time and\nwent down to the dressing room\nwith a 3-0 win In the flrtt bantam\ngame of the morning.\nThe Westerners enjoyed a slight\nmargin of play with both teams,\nshort ot reserves. Jack Prestley\nscored the first goal on a pass trom\nJackie Gallicano. John Lang and\nConnie Cassios scored the other two\ngoals. Frank Doyle and Con Cassios\nof the Westerners and Harold Ron-\nmark and Paul Hielscher of the\nMR.K.'s were sent to the penalty\nbox. On .Hielscher's penalty Jack\nGallicano was given a penalty shot\nbut Reid Sahara saved it. Richie\nWassick was the outstanding M.U.K.\nplayer. The referees were Red Wassick and Slim Porter. Time keeper\nand scorer was Bobby Ludlow.\nF.A.C. I.O, 3 VICTOR\nThe second game was between the\ntwo Fairview bantams, No. 2 apd\nNo. 3. The No. 3 won 2-1. Both of\nthese teams were short handed and\nit looked as though a lot of the boys\npartook of too much turkey and\nother good things, as they were\nall a little slower than usual. Len\nAppel and Gordon Buchanan scored for the winners, and Bob Ludlow tor the losers on a pass from\nDon Buchanan. Gordon Buchanan\nand \"Pee Wee\" Thain served time in\nthe cooler. Red Wassick was the\nreferee; John Lang, the timekeeper\nand scorer.\nThe third, game again saw two\nFairview Athletic club teams tan-\n8In. This time tbe No. 1 midgets\ncreated No. 2, 7-0. Tha game was\nby no means as one-sided as the\nscore might indicate, and No. 2\nshowed Improved form over their\nprevious game against the \"1's\".\nWally Matheson, Bob Hunden,\nGeorge loanln, Frank Christian,\nJohn Milne, Art Smith and Dick\nHornett all scored a goal each. Assists went to loanln, Riesterer and\nBud Smith who got two. All the\nboys on No, 2 worked hard to keep\nthe No. 1's Aom running up a large\nscore, and missed several sure\nchances of goals by over eagerness.\nThe game was very clean, as Referee Wassick handed out only one\npenalty, and that to Jim Riesterer\nof No. 1 squad,: Time keeper was\nGordon Buchanan, and scorer, C.\nHeighton.\n8COUT JUVES NOSE     .\nOUT  F.A.C.\nThe Scout Juvenile team squeezed out a 5-4 victory over tha F.A.C.\nin the only game played in the\nCity league Monday afternoon.\nHeavy penalties and a lax defence\nagainst the better passing of the\nScouts accounted for the Fairvlew\nloss. Leo McKinnon with two goals,\nMatheson, Presfly and Beland with\none each were uie scorers for the\nScouts. Art Matheson snd Ernie\nBeland were credited with assists.\nFor the losers Dave Dunlop and\nCecil Maloney divided the honors\nfor the Fairvlew boys, with two\ngoals apiece, one of Maloney's being scored on a penalty shot. Maloney was good tor an assist, as was\nGeorge Milne. Penalties were dished out to Leo McKinnon, who made\nthree trips, and to Art Matheson\none. Ot the Scouts, Dunlop and\nMilne were off twice, Denny George\nand Emmet Anderson being off once\neach for the FAC's. George Russel and Art Bradshaw handled the\ngame, with Ben McCrelght as timekeeper and Chuck Lihdsay scorer.\nMetal Kings Climb\nin Trail Hockey 8-1\nTRAIL, B. C., Dec. 26 - Metal\nKings continued their march toward the top of the junior high\nschool hockey league as they walloped the Beavers 8-1 in the Trail\nrink Saturday morning.\nFor the Metal Kings Jack Page\nscored three, Hodge three and 'Brick'\nEdmunds two. Albert Cavallin scored the only counter for Beavers.\nThe teams were:\nBeavers \u2014 Qscar Lanarotto, Mc-\nKerns, Jim McLeod, Albert Cavallin, Archie Martin and Joe Monaldi.\nMetal Kings \u2014 \"Brick\" Edmunds,\nJimmy Twaddle, Jack Page, Maitland, Hodge, Ken Devlin and Barss\nDimock,\nMike Welykochy refereed.\nBargains In tha 'Classified\" Today!\nFOR GAS, OIL,\nLUBRICATION\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714 Baker St \u2022    Phone 171\nCelebrate the Holidays\nwith HIRAM WALKER\n, \u25a0_.'.\u00ab.-___\n010^5\n\u00bb\u2022tl\u00b0!\n;>\nThla advertisement la not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nNOVA WILL FIGHT\nJAMES BRADDOCK?\nNEW YORK, The. V (Tuesday)\n(AP) -The Naw York Dally\nNews uid today Lou Nova, promising California 'heavyweight, has\nagreed to meet Jimmy Braddook\nex-world's heavyweight champion, In a 10-round bout at Madison Square Garden March 31,\nIf Nova wins he will meet Max\nBaer outdoor! next summer, according to the News,\nLewis His Chance\nSays the Hammer\nBy ALAN RANDAL \u2022\nNEW YORK, Dec. 28 (AP)\nIt  looks  now  as  though  New\nYork's major league ball teams\nwill realize something like $V\n000,000 from broadcasting of their\ngames next seaon.\u2014Maurice\nStrickland, tha New- Zealand\nheavy who fights Gus Dorazio\nhere Jan. 13, Is something of\nforgotten man of the ring\u2014he's\nbeen trying to get a tight here\nabouts for nearly a yean\u2014no\nbody wanted to tackle him.\u2014\nHenry Armstrong says he\nthinks John Henry Lewis has \"a\nchance\" against Joe Louis next\nmonth\u2014Johnny Gottselig, Chi\ncago Black Hawks' stlck-hand-\nllng sniper\" frbm Regina. Is more\nthan a hockey player\u2014Johnny\nplays a mean mandolin\u2014at one\ntime he was quite some shakes\naa a baseball pitcher, a basket-\nbailer and a rugby player\u2014he's\nstill a nifty bowler.\n-PAOE SEVEN\nFROST AHD SNOW SPOILS SOCCER\nPLAY; EVERTON AND DERBY TIE\nLONDON, Dec. 26 (CP Cable)-\nHighilghted by tha Everton-Derby\nCounty 2-2 draw on the former's\npounds, English - football league\nBoxing day matches were played\nin adverse weather conditions. Ot\ntha 88 matches carded, 10 were\npostponed owing to frost and snow\nand one contest abandoned after\nS3 minutes' play. ,\nTwo games were played ln Scottish league\u2014both ln Glasgow. The\nleague-leading Bangers entertained\nSt. Mirren at Ibrox Park and won\n3-0. Clyfe, at home to Falkirk, lost\n4-2. Fog forced cancellation ot these\nscheduled matches Saturday. Rangers' triumph now gives the Light\nBlues a five point lead over Celtic\nand Hearts, tied in second place.\nOne of the biggest surprises of\ntoday's games was the overwhelming 8-0 defeat Inflicted by Swindon\nTown over Newport County, leader of the third division, southern\nsection. Before today's encounter,\nNewport played the tightest football of any team in England, having\nonly 10 goals scored against them\nIn 19 games.\nIn the first of home-and-away\nholiday games, Everton was host\nto Derby County, first-division\nleader, and played heads up soccer\nto split points. The second-place\nclub plays at Derby tomorrow.\nWolverhampton Wanderers, victorious 4-2 at Grimsby went into\nthird place, five points behind Everton, and one up on Charlton Athletic. The Arsenal-Charlton match\nwas postponed\nBlackburn Rovers split a first-\nBlaoe tie with the Idle Newcastle\ntotted eleven In the second group\nwith a hard-fought 1-0 victory at-\nhome over Bury. Sheffield United\nchalked up its 11th triumph In 20\nCes\u2014a 5-1 verdict at home over\nhampton\u2014to take over tha runner-up spot, one point up on Newcastle,\nNewport's lead tn the southern\nsection was cut to one point when\nCrystal Palace downed Aldershot\n3-0. Up-to-date compilation shows\nNewport with 30 points and the\nPalace 20.\nVictory 4-1 over Accrlngton Stanley, Barnsley held its five-point\nmargin over Southport ln the northern group. Southport defeated\nRochdale 4-1 to break a second-\nplace deadlock with Doncaster Rovers who were held to a 1-1 draw\nby Rotherham United.\nTranmere Rovers, promoted tram\nthe third division, northern section\nto the second league this year, suffered a serious blow when right-\nback McDowell fractured his right -\nleg ln the game with Manchester\nCity. The Rovers, in laat place, held\nthe city to a 1-1 score until the accident occured early ln the first-\nhalf. Manchester tea riot and ended\nahead 9-3.\nSmokies Flail Germans, 9-15-1\nBERLIN, Dec. 2d (CP-Havai)-\nTrall Smoke Eaters tonight defeated a picked German hockey\nteam 9-1 In their, second match In\ntwo days at the Sportpalast. Sunday night the Canadians won 6-1.\nTommy Johnston and Jimmy\nMorris starred with efficient defence work as tha Canadians were\nsuperior throughout.\nMany fans, disappointed by ths\nshowing ef their team, booed and\nwhistled throughout The Germans soored their Iona goal In tha\nlast period.\nJoe Benoit, right wing, scored\nthree for Trail. Dick Kowcinak\nand Johnny McCready netted two\neaoh and Bunny Dame and John?\nston each scored one.\nBenoit scored twice last night\nOther goals were by Ab Cronls,\nKowcinak and Jimmy Morris,\nRANGERS END BRIMSEK RECORD\nTORONTO,   Dec.   26   (CP) -\nFrankie Britnsck's great shutout\nrecord was brought to on end 05\nNew York Rangers defeated Boston\nBruins 1-0 Sunday night ln the\nfeature game of the holiday weekend National Hockey League program.\nCentre Phil Watson biased a shot\npast young Brirnsek at 5:08 of the\nsecond period, the first score on\nhim ln 220 minutes apd 20 seconds\nof hockey. It was not the goalie's\nfault Bruins didn't win their eight-\nstraight game for Brirnsek was\nmore than brilliant ln holding\nRangers to a single goal.\nHe amazed 16,000 Boston fans\nwith his 24 stops, most of them\nfrom short-range as Rangers broke\naway repeatedly from Bruin ganging attacks late in the game.\nAMERK8 WrllP HAWKS\nNew York Americans whipped\nChicago Black Hawks 5-1 ln New\nYork. The teams were tied 1-1 at\nthe end of the first period on goals\nby Johnny Sorrell and Paul Thompson but from then, Americans were\nsuperior.\nLorne Carr and old Nels Stewart\neach scored two of the other four\ngoals and Sweeney Schriner, Calgary flash, picked up three assists.\nOnly team te seo action twice\nduring the weekend, Detroit Red\nWings split They lost 2-0 to\nToronto Maple Leaft Saturday\nnight, then returned home to\nwhip Montreal Canadians 4-1.\nAt Toronto, Pep Kelly shot Leafs\ninto the lead midway through the\nsecond period while Jack Stewart\nserved a Detroit penalty. Goaler\nTurk Broda played a great game to\nkeep Wings scoreless while Gord\nDrillon and Syl Apps combined far\nthe final tally in the game. Drillon\nfired the goal\nAt Detroit after a scoreless opening period, Alex Motter soored tho\nfirst of his two goals and Hoc Kilrea\nmade it 2-0 by the end of the aecond\nperiod. Motter and Fete Kelly added\nto Detroit's margin before wings\nsettled back and played safe hockey,\nallowing Canadlens a late goal by\nJohnny Gagnon.\nHopes   for   Biscuit,\nWar Admiral Race\nSoon Fade\nCOLUMBIA, 8.C., Deo. 28 (AP)\n\u2014Chances for another masting\nanytime soon between Seablseult\nand War Admiral appeared slim\ntoday when tht 'Biscuit's trainer revealed ht wat taking his\ncharge \u2014 the outstanding race\nhone of the year\u2014back to California.\nFINE QUALITY\nShihlL\nBy B.V.D., Tooke and Arrow\nJACK BOYCE\n514 Baker Style Shop Phone 160\nDISTILLED   AND   BLENDED\nThis advt, Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Govt of British Columbia\nj^_:v_\nJ.._\n^.,,,,^^^\n '..- \u25a0:,   ,\"\nBBBpK*K,\nA^     PI\nmv\u00bbm\"m\nJPHUjb\nPAG-   EIGHT-\nNELSON  DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C-TUESDAY  MORNING, DEC, 27, 1938.\nAN^Y^rls^\nSANTA PAYS VISIT TO SHIRLEY\nPart of the Christmas festivities of the Granite\nRoad area, or Shirley, just out of Nelson, were a\nChristmas tree and program last Wednesday night\nin Shirley hall, arranged by the Shirley Ladies'\nclub, In front ot the Christmas tree is shown Mrs.\nRobert Pickering. In the background Mrs. Wesley\nCalbick is standing, while Mrs. Harold Ronmark is\nleaning over in conversation With Mrs. Carl Anderson, and little Lorraine Ronmark' is in the foreground.. .George Keeling-is playing Santa.\t\nMrs. R. Williams, portraying Grandma at-thi spinning wheel, lri*ohe\nof the numbers at the Shirley Christmas concert. Daily News photos.\n\u25a0; ON THE AIR\nJfet fiul Joaty.\nP.M.-\n5:30\u2014Information, Pldase; Quiz\nProgram\n6:00-We, the People\n6:30\u2014Benny Goodman's Swing or.\n6:30\u2014Fibber McGee, Donald Novis,\n\\enor\n*7:00-Dr. Christian; with JeanJier-\nsholt\n7:00\u2014Bob Hope, comedian, singer\n7:30\u2014Jimmie Fidler; Movie gossip\n8:30\u2014Edward G. Robinson and\n-   Claire Trevor; Drama\n8:30\u2014Johnny Presents; Russ Morgan ahd his orch.\n9:00\u2014Al Jolson's show\nP.M.-\n6:00-\nNBC\u2014Music of aU Countries\nCBS\u2014Ross and Yeo\nCBS\u2014\"Big Town\" newspaper drama\nEdward G. Robinson; Claire\nTrevor\nNBC\u2014Californians on Parade\nNBB\u2014Gilbert k Sullivan music\nNBC\u2014Russ Morgan's orch.\nDL\u2014Airliners\n6:15 P. & T\u2014\nNBC-Sons of the Lone Star, drama\nCBS-Howie Wing sketch\nDL\u2014Adventures  of  Gen.   Shatter\nParker\n5:3p P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Information Please\nNBC\u2014For Men Only\nCBS\u2014Dick Aurandt's orch.\nNBC\u2014Three Cheers\nCBS\u2014Al Joison Show\nDL\u2014Dick Tracy, sketch\n6:45 P, 8, T.-\nNBC\u2014Ricardo and his Violin\nDL\u2014Little Orphan Annie, sketch\nCBS\u2014Dick Aurandt's orch.\n8:00 P. 8. Tr-\nNBC\u2014Battle of the Sexes\nNBC\u2014With Finesse ,\nNBC-What's the Big Idea?\nCBS\u2014We. the People\nMBS-Don't You Believe It\nDL\u2014Jack Armstrong, sketch\nNBC\u2014Mary and Bob's True Stories\n6:15 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC-What's the Big Idea?\nDL\u2014News Drama\nMBS\u2014Piano Series\n6:30 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Fibber McGee & Co., Donald\nNovis, tenor\nDL\u2014Morton Gould's orch,\nCBS\u2014Benny Goodman's orch.\nNBC-Eugene Conley, tenor, orch.\n6:45 P. S. T\u2014\nMBS-Gabriel Heatter\nNBC\u2014Eugene Conley, tenor\nDL\u2014Morton Gould's orch.\n7:00 P. 8. T.-\nMBS\u2014True Detective Mysteries\nNBC-Bob  Hope\nCBS\u2014Dr.   Christian,   drama,   with\nJean  Hersholt\nNBC-If I Had the Chance\nDL\u2014Diary of a Young Woman\n7:15 P. 8. T\u2014\nMBS\u2014Inside of Sports\n7:30 P. 8. T\u2014\nNBC\u2014Uncle Ezra, sketch\nCBS\u2014Jimmie   Fidler's   Hollywood\nGossip\nNBC\u2014Ferry Boat Bleacher's coaches' Convention\nNBC\u2014Rhythm School\nMBS\u2014Green Hornet, drama\nCBSr-Jack Berch, songs\n7:45 P. 8. tr-\nNBC-Be sensible \u2014 talk\nNBC\u2014Jimmy Kemper k Co.\nCBS\u2014American Viewpoints\n8:00 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Amos 'n' Andy\nCBS\u2014American Viewpoints\nNBC\u2014Dance orch.\nNBC\u2014World on Parade; News\nNBC\u2014Lee Shelley's orch.\n8:15 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Vocal Varieties; Jerry Cooper,\nbaritone\nNBC\u2014Benny Walker's Amateur Hr.\nDL\u2014Don't You Believe It\n8:30 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Johnny Presents Russ Morgan's orch.\nNBC\u2014Joe Rine's orch.\nCBS\u2014\"Big Town\" newspaper drama\nEdward G. Robinson; Claire\nTrevor\nNBC\u2014Lou Breese's orch.\nMBS\u2014Salute to Cities\nCBS\u2014Glenn Miller's orch.\n8:45 P. 8. t^-\nNBC\u2014Joe Rine's orch.\n9:00 P. 8. T.\u2014\nCBS\u2014Al Joison Show\nNBC\u2014Good Morning Tonight\nNBC\u2014Joe Sudy's orch.\nCBS\u2014Sammy Kaye's orch.\nMBS\u2014George Hamilton's orch.\nDL\u2014News\n9:15 P. 8. T.-\nNBC\u2014On with the dance\nNBC\u2014Joe Sudy's orch.\nMBS\u2014George Hamilton's orch.\nCBS\u2014Sammy Kaye's orch.\n9:30 P. 8. T.\u2014\nCBS\u2014Buddy Rogers' orch.\nNBC\u2014Rudy Vallee's orch.\nNBC\u2014Les Brown's orch.\nMBS\u2014Paul Mattel's orch.\nDL\u2014Skinnay Ennis' orch.\nNBC\u2014Voice of the Farm\nCBS\u2014The Grouch Club\n9:45 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014University Explorer\nNBC\u2014Ted Traver's orch.\nNBC\u2014Rudy Vallee's orch.\nCBS\u2014Buddy Rogers' orch.\nDL\u2014Elias Bruskin, Violinist\n10:00 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014News Reporter\nCBS\u2014Harry Owen's orch.\n|^BC\u2014Fran Eichler's orch.\nNBC\u2014Paul Burton's orch.\nMBS\u2014Ray Herbeck's orch.\nDL-Phil Harris' orch.\n10:15 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Paul Burton's orch.\nNBC--Wanted by the Law, drama\nCBS\u2014Nightcap Yarns\nDl^-Phil Harris' orch.\n10:30 P. S. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014The Wanderer\nNBC\u2014Shop Fields' orch.\nMBS\u2014Keith Beecher's orch.\nDL\u2014Chuck Foster's orch.\nCBS\u2014Westerners k Erwin Yeo\n10:45 P. 8. T.\u2014\nCBS\u2014Clyde McCoy's orch.\n11:00 P. 8, T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Jack Winston's orch.\nNBC\u2014Paul Carson, organist\nNBC\u2014World on Parade; News\nMBS\u2014Jose Manzanares' orch.\nD*U-Jack McLean's orch.\nYuletide Concert\nFills Slocan Hall\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C.-Those who\nattended the. Christmas concert in\nthe I, O,- O. pi hill Thursday evening put on by the pupils of the local\npublic and high schools under the\ndirection of the teachers enjoyed a\nvery pleasant evening's entertainment and the hall was filled to capacity. Harvard Warner, a pupil\nof the high school, ably undertook\nthe duties of chairman. The program\nincluded:\nSpelling Bee, Div. It; recitation,\n\"The Whooping Cough\", Freda Stor-\ngard; song, \"A Christmas Welcome,\"\ngirls, Div. I.; monologue, \"Dorothy\nEntertained the Minister\"; Song,\n\"Jolly Old St Nicholas,\" boys of\nDiv. II.; recitation, \"When Pop\nShaves,\" Allan Warner; dialogue,\n\"Laying a Ghost\" Div. I.; drill,\n\"Chrlstrhas Hours,\" Dlv. Hi; Motoring in\u00ab Model T.; play by the high\nschool pupils.\n\u25a0 The balance of the program consisted of a dramatic play entitled \"It\nHappened in Paris,\" put on by the\nSlocan City Uttle Theatre association, the cast of characters being as\nfollows: ,.-\n\"Peggy Langdon\", Enid Graham;\n\"Corneia Armstrong,\" Rita Paterson; \"Virginia Kelly'' Mrs. F. Elliott;\n\"Marie\"; Beatrice Zagic; \"Don\",\nCooky Hurst; \"Miss Monroe\" Vel-\nma Clough; \"Bill\", Constantine\nRindler; 'Mrs. Armstrong,\" Mrs.\nD. Ewing; 'Professor Parkinson,\"\nFrank Hill.\nSanta Claus appeared on the\nscene heavily laden with presents\nand aU the children -of the town\nreceived gilts. Supper was served\nand dancing was indulged ln. Music\nwas supplied by Mr. and Mrs. H,\nC. Nye.     ,\nSocial...\nVALLICAN\nVALLICAN, B.C.-Miss Marie\nSoucey,, resident of St. Joseph's\nacademy In Nelson, is spending the\nholidays, at her home here.\nMrs. S. Reid of Slocan Park was\nthe guest of Mrs. W. lnnes.\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Strong and\nLeRoy visited Nelson Saturday.\nMis Johnson , who teaches here,\nis spending- the holidays at her\nhome in-Nelson.\nPay Honor lo\nMiss Hope Taylor\nNiSW DENVER: B. C, - Mbnday\nafternoon Dec, 19, the Legion hall\nwas artistically decorated, in true\nChristmas style with holly, baskets\nof evergreens, etc., and was the\nscene-of a most enjoyable and successful tea, honoring Miss Hope\nTaylor, retiring matron of the Slocan\nCommunity hospital, prior, to her\nmarriage to E. Munn, of Nakusp,\nwhich is planned to take place some\ntime In January.-\nThe guests were recieved by the\nhostesses, Miss Nellie Alywin, Mri.\nF. M. Brady,-and Mrs.. J, Taylor.\nThe tea table, covered' with a\nbeautiful lace cloth, was centred by\na lovely poinsetta plant, on which\nblossomed three large red flowers,\nbanked with holly. This was flanked\nby -four tall, illuminated red 'tapers\nin silver holders.- S   \"<\u25a0\u2022\u2022-,\nPresiding.' at the tea urns- were\nMrs. A. M.-Ham, and Mrs. A. L.\nHarris. The Misses' Willa-nnd Ruth\nAlywin, Miss Gladys Reynolds, Miss\nGladys.: Coombs, and, Miss Anne\nBrady acted as serviteurs. \u2022\n. Mrs.V. Dewar made the presentation of a silver tea Service, including\ntea pot hot. water jug, cream and\nsugar and tray. The tray-: was the\ngift of the General Construction\ncompany. A,silver tea strainer to\ngo with the set has been ordered\nalso. .   - \" .\nMiss .Taylor thanked everyone for\nthe lovely presentation,\nGuests Included Mrs. J. Dewar,\nMrs. J. Greer, Mrs. F. Broughton,\nMrs; A. Francis, Mrs. K. Scatchard\nMrs. March!-and Mrs. McNeish of\nSlocan City, Mrs.' A. Ham, Mrs. C,\nSchmidt, Mrs. G. T. Ironsides, Mrs,\nT. H. Wilson, Mrs. H. Dewis, Mrs.\nW.- E. Marshall, Mrs. R. Fairhurst,\nof Silverton, Mrs. M. DuMont, of\nHunter's Siding, Mrs. F. Browne,\nMiss Dacey Brown, Mrs. O. V.\nWhite, Mrs. H. H. Pendry, Mrs. H.\nS. Nelson, Mrs. C. W. Aylwin, Mrs.\nH. B. Nelson, Mrs, E. Butchhart, Mrs.\nC. Clifford, Mrs. J. C. Harris, Mrs.\nA. L. Harris, Mrs. G. Burkitt, Mrs\nH. Walbaum, Mrs. H. George,'Mrs.\nE. M. George, Mrs. J. Tejr, Mrt.\nT. E. Teir, Mrs. H. Gunn, Mrs. A. H.\nSanderson, Mrs. N. C. Tattrie, Mrs.\nJ. -Depretto, Mrs. D. T. Shannon,\nMrs. T. Avison, Mrs, W. R. Workman\/Mrs. A. Coombs, Mrs. J. Nyman,\nMrs. C, Isaacson, Mrs. L. R. Campbell, Mrs. O. Enockson, Mrs. A.\nTrickett, Mrs. F. L. Beggs, Mrs. W.\nJeffrey,. Mrs. C. R. Kennett, Miss\nHelena, Tarron, Miss B. Bell, Miss\nHope Taylor, R. N., Miss Gladys\nReynolds, R. N, Miss Frances\nWheeler, R. N-. Miss Joyce Johnstone, Miss M. Butlin, Miss A. Kennett, Miss H. Williamson, Miss G.\nSinclair, Miss Willa Alywin, Miss\nRuth Alywin, Miss Annie McKean,\nMiss Rose Zadra and Miss J. Coombs.\nCBC NETWORK\nCJCA\n730\nCFGN\n1030\nCJAT\n910\nCBR\n1100\nP.M.-\n4:00-G.\nR. Markowskl and orch.\nNelmin Satlij Heuia\nMember ot the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association'\n..,..'   TBLEPHONI'VW\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll   Departmenti\n:   Subscription Rates\nSingle copy A\u2014*-\u2014*\u2014'$ *6\nBy carrier, per week y__- ' .26\nBy carrier, per year, .\u201e' .  13.00\nBy j mail to Canada to Sub.\nseribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas,' per 'month 60c;\nthree months $1.80; six months\n53.0Q; one year $6.00.. '   , ,\nUnited Statei and Great Britain, bne month 75c; six months\n$4,00; one year S7.50.\n-Foreign; countries, other than\nUnited States, same as above\nplus any extra postage,.\nGlassiifiel\nAdvertising Rotes\nlie a Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, pei insertion \u2014\n3 lines. 6 consecutive   -\ninsertions\n(6 tor Uia price of 4)\n3 lines . per Insertion \u2014...\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions Laid \u2014\n2 lines. 1 month _ 1\n3 lines, 1 month ,.,,, ;   ,\n| 32\n.8b\n.33\n1.32\n2.86\nFor   advertisements   ot   more\nthan three lines, calculate\non tha above basis.\nBox  numbers  Lie extra.  This::\ncovers any number of\nInsertions. .\nALL   ABOVE-   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL   LO**   RATE\nSituations Wanted, 26o for any\nrequired number of lines for\nsix days, payable In advance.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nMINING, PROPERTIES\nBOUGHT - SOLD - FINANCED,\nWrite details to William Field Co.,\nRadio Central Bldg.. Spokane, Wash,\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n2 GIRLS WANT HOUSEWORK IN\ncountry. Good cooks. Helen and\nMary Posnkoff, Shpreacres.\nCOOK WANTS WORK, FIRST OR\nsecond position. Free alter Dec.\n6th. Box 4224 Daily News,.\nSocial...\nFRUITVALE\nFRUITVALE, B. C-Mrs. W. Murray and children were recent visitors\nto Salmo.\nF. M. Barrett, who has been visiting . Vancouver and Washington\npoints for several weeks, returned\nTuesday. \u25a0;\nMr. and Mrs, Oliver Grieve spent\nthe holidays at Vancouver.\nMrs. Glen Wick who has been\nthe-house guest of her mother, Mrs.\nA. Rushton for several months, has\njoined her husband at Vancouver.\nMel Barrett and Hugh Ingraham\nleft by motor for Vancouver to'\nspend the holidays with friends.\nMrs. A. Rushton and son, Orland,\nare spending the Christmas vacation at Nelson, guests of Mr. and\nMrs. R. Morrison.\nMr.' and Mrs. R. Vyse of Nelson\nare guests bf their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. D. Knowles,\nfor the holiday.\nMiss M. Skilling and Buster Skilling of Grand Forks are guests- of\ntheir grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Frit, for the holiday.\nGifts Presented at,\nSolvation Army\nParty at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C-Franl. Constantine acted as chairman, of the\nSalvation Army Christmas Concert\nin the haU Tuesday evening, when\na splendid , musical, program was\npresented and gifts were presented\nto all the children. Several songs\nwere presented \u25a0 by the Sunday\nschool. Vocal solo's we're rendered\nby Miss Ruth Veeburg, and a violin solo by Eunice Carson. Miss\nMary Guthrie recited and Miss\nFeme Simpson' rendered a piano\nsolo. Action songs - and short skits\nwere presented by, school members\nFRUITVALE PUPILS\nCONCERT  DELIGHTS\nFRUITVALE, B. C.-The. Christmas -concert put on by the pupils,\nof Miss. J. 'Stcnvold was a huge\nsuccess, and much enjoyed by parents and friends. The schoolroom\nwas. prettily decorated; t\nChristmas carols, recitations, plays\nvocal and piano solos were well\nrendered by the pupils, who received great applause from those\npresent. Santa \u25a0 Claus .distributed\ngifts and treats from the'We.11 laden\ntree. Miss R. Dewdney assisted Miss\nStenvold ln training the pupils.\nPERSONAL\nOur Reconditioned JOYCYCLES\nand wheel toys look and run like\nnew. Write for particulars.\nKiddie Kars and Pedal Kars\nfrom $1.25 to |3.?5. Tricycles ahd\nsidewalk cycles from $3.05 to $9.50.\nAutos, wagons, doll cabs, scooters\netc. at about Vi price of new goods.\nClub orders ?2b,00 vie pay freight.\nHASKINS k ELLIOTT LTD.   '\u25a0\n27 W, Hastings St, Vancouver, B.C.\nHALOETTES.(REGISTERED) OCR\nnew method of enlarging single\nfigures from groups. Unwanted\nbackgrounds removed. Write for\nlow: prices on this work. Krystal\nPhotos, WUkle, Sask,\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD.\n25 for* $1.00 or; jiffy prepared ,18\nfor'81.00. (free catalogue) National\nImporters. Box 244, Edmonton^\nAN OFFER TO EVERY\" INVENT-\nor, list of wanted- inventions-and\nfull Information sent free. The\nRamsay Company. World;Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St, Ottawa.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n'\u25a0(Section 28), . \u25a0'\"\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nA BEER LICENCE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that on\nthe 9th day of January .next the\nundersigned intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for. a licence\nIn respect of premises- being part\not a building known as Pinehurst\nInn, situate at South Slocan,, British\nColumbia, upon the lands described\nas part ot Parcel No. .1. of sub-lot\n\"B\" of, Lot 303, according tq Map\nnumbered 872,, Group 1. Kootenay\nDistrict Nelson Land Registration\nDistrict, In the Province of British\nColumbia; lor the sale- of beer by\nthe glass or by the\" bottle for consumption on the premises or elsewhere.      'I.\\ ' \u25a0\u25a0 \">   ,      ..\".\nDATED this Oth day ot December,\nA. D; 1938.\nWilliam James Gordon Oliver,\nGrace Lillian Oliver.       \u2022\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR'SALE OR RENT SUBURBAN\nhome East df and adjoining Nelson\n\u2014near lake. Four' room modern\nhouse:and small summer home,\nbarn. Fruit trees. Rent $22,00 per\n\u2022month or will sell on reasonable\nterms, g, F; McHardy, 554 Ward St.\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy t terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to, 908 Dept, ot Natural\nResources. C, P R\u201e Calgary. Alta.\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND APARTMENTS\nONE AND TWO ROOM' HOUSE-\nkeeplng suites. Newly redecorated. Clean, warm and comfortable.\nReasnble. Strathcona Hotel, Ph. 12,\nFOR RENT 3 ROOM SUITE CLOSE\nIn. Will supply range and beater,\nand some furniture to suitable\nDartles. C W Appleyard. Baker St.\nPARTLY FURNISHED HOUSE, 3\nbedrooms, close in. $25 month.\nApply Appleyard,      \u25a0    \u25a0    ..\nTO RENT-6 ROOM HOUSE PART?\nly-turn. 7th St, Fairview. Ph. 572X\n5 ROOM HOUSE. APPLY TO D.\nMaglio. Phone 808-s;-    \u2022'\u25a0        , '\nF U R NIS H E D*HOUSEKEEPINO;\nrooms for rent, Annable Block.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modem\nRAl\n!ldi\nfrigidaire equipped suites-\nsuites. Kerr Apartments.\nFURNISHED SUITE. K. W, C. faJL'-.:\nFOR SALE\nDOCS. PETS, FOR SALE\nLIVER COLORED COCKER SPAN-\niel pups, male 4 months old $8.00,\nFemales $6,00, T, .Roynon, Nelson.\nWIRE HAIREDTERRtER PUPPIES\nRegd. stock. Ph. Harding, Nelson.\nAn Ad Here Is Your\n6est Agent\nPIPES, TUBES; FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED     '\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ' PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\nVancouver, B C.\nr?iPE AND FITTING   ,\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd.I\n250 Prior St       Vancouver, B. C\nFOR SALE -BARRELS. KEGSI\nSugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam,\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C. A\nPOULTRY. SUPPLIES, ETC.\nGOOD    RHODE    ISLAND    RED I\nbreeding cockerels at reasonable\nprices. Booking orders now for*,\nspring delivery of baby chicks.\nTriangle Poultry Farm, Armstrong\nWant to Sell Something?\nPHONE 144   . %:\nRAZOR BLADE HOSPITAL, 336 W.\nHastings) St., Vancouver. Wilkinson\nsharpened, 15c. Rolls'or Darwin,'25c.\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel. Opp. C. P. R. depot.\nWANTED  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOURf SCRAP METALS\nor Iron, any quantity. Top prices\npaid.' Active Trading Company\n916 Powell,SU Vancouver, B. C,\nLIVESTOCK\nFOR SALE ONE GOOD AYRSHIRE\ncow, thd calf. Cruickshank, Mea-\ndows Spur, Erie\/ B. C. \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0'\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\n, , PHONE NUMBER\nRossland Social. \u2666\nROSSLAND, B.C.-Members of\nRossland branch, Canadian Legion\nthe Women's auxiliary and their\nchildren enjoyed a very , pleasant\nsocial evening in the Armories,\nWednesday evening. Supper was\nserved, the children being served\nfirst and the grown-ups later. Just\nas the table was being cleared, Santa Claus made his appearance, accompanied by the music of sleigh\nbells. All of the kiddies under' 12\nreceived a gift from the tree, and\nthe older ones a theatre ticket.\nMaster William Dorey left Thursday for Chapman Camp, where he\nwill be the guest of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Deschamps.\nBy MRS, B. B. FERGUSON\n3. Fleury. of Nelson has arrived\nin the city to take .over his duties\nat the high school.\nMrs. E. Munday and Miss Frances\nWard, are the guests of Mrs. F.\nRansom,\n\"Boots\" Rossi, John McKay, Ernie\nCleverly, Clyde Nyman, Irvin- Martin, Lorne Robertson of Rossland\nand \u2022 \"Ace\" Mucha of Trail, spent\nFriday,. Saturday and Sunday in\nSpokane, Wash.\nArmando Rossi, 'Irvin Martin and\nJohn Harry of Rossland motored\nto Procter over the-week end, Mrs.\nJohn Harry, who has been holi\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nC. R. HIGGENS, Bookkeeping, Accounts, Correspondence Income\nTax Returns. No accounts too\nsmall, Reasonable. Phone 980.\nAasayers,\nE. W. WlDDdWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Ass.ayer. Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents for\nTrail Smelter, 301 - 305. Josephine.\nSt-.-Nelson, B.C.\nGRENVILLE H; GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 4.0\nFall Street, Nelson,' B.' C, P O\nBox No. 9. Representing shipper's Interest, Trail, B. C.\nHAROLD S\u201e ElMeS tiOSSLAND.\nB C- Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representatives for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\t\nChirppr-tctors\nJ.TTmcMILLAN, d. c, NEURO-\n' calometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk\nW. J. BROCK, B. C, 16 years' Ex-\nprnc. Ph. 969 Gilker _>lk.. Nelson.\nCorsets\nSPENCER CORSETS. MRS. V. M\nCampbell. 370 Baker St Ph, 668-\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYDC. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B. C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg, Professional Civil Engineer.\na D.DAWSON, Neisori.\"B. C.\nEngineer & Surveyor\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n       ,   ..... .... .     702 Baker St. 'Phone 252\ndaying at Procter, returned to her I Cert. Mortician   '   Lady Attendant\nhome at Rossland_with the party. .     Modern Ambulance Service v\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD.\n\u25a0Real Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\n347 Baker St. Phone I\nCD  BLACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph.\nSEE   D.  L.   KERR.  AGENT FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates.\nJ   E. ANNABLE,, REAL ESTATE.\nRentals  Insurance. Annable Blk.,,\nCHAS F McHARDY. INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, In-\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes bt Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene .\n,  Welding    -, .;'..,\nTelephone 59? y 324 Vernon Street j\nH. E. STEVENSON.llachinists.\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders, Expert workmen. SatWac?\ntion guaranteed.,Mine k Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98.708-12, Vernon St., Nelson.\n=\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTORY.-\nHardwood merchant; 273 Baker St.\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,'SELL  &-EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 53,4.,\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY, SELL.\nExch. Rpr. Upholster. 413 Hall St.\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLANp repairs your\nwatch It is on time all the time.\n345 Baker St., Nelson.-\nErie School Packed\nfor Christmas Party\nERIE,. B.' C,\u2014The Erie school-\nhouse was the scene ot the annual\nChristmas concert amid gay decorations December 15. The school room\nwas packed to capacity by a crowd\nassembled Irom Meadows; Granite\nCity, Erie and Salmo. The program\nwas as'follows:\n'O Canada,\" recitation, \"Greedy\nPiter,\" Sherman McDonald; playlet, \"Sales Resistance,\" Melba McDonald, Marlon Hanson, Sherman\nMcDonald; recitation, \"A. Present\nfor Santa,\" Marlon Hanson; song,\n\"Bethlehem Lullaby,\" seven girls:\nrecitation, \"I'm Waiting for the 26th\"\nJackie Hanson; recitation \"Christmas Bells,\" June Shcrbikn; Christmas Acrostic,' the school;- recitation,\n\"The Sandman,' Margie McDonald;\nsong, \"It Came Upon the Midnight\nClear,\" the school; recitation \"The\nMoo-Cow-Moo,\" Jackie McDonald;\nolay, \"The Time Machine,\" Kathleen Dchnke, Melba McDonald,\nJackie Hanson. Colleen Dchnke,\nMona McDonald; playlet \"School\nDays,\" Marlon Hanson, Mona McDonald, Kathleet Dchnke. Colleen\nDchnke. Sherman McDonald: recitation, \"Christmas,\" Richard Crookes;\nrecitation, \"The Little Christmas\nTree.\" Mona McDonald; song. \"Santa Claus Is Coming to Town.\" the\nschool: \"God Save The King.\"\nA. Cheyne was chairman and Jack\nHanson and Frank Crookes operated\nthe curtains,'\nShortlv after the program Santa\nClaus distributed many gifts and\ngoodies. A dance was later enjoyed.\n4:15\u2014Major BUI\n4:30\u2014Magical Voyage ,\n4:45\u2014Law and the Citizen\n5:00\u2014Big Town\n5:30\u2014Al Joison show\n6:00\u2014Spotlight   parade\n6:30\u2014Christmas Oratorio\n7:00\u2014Jamboree\n7:30\u2014Uncle E\u00aba\n7:45\u2014Sombrero\n8:0O\u2014Newi and weather\n8:15\u2014Building Canadian Homes\n8:30\u2014Minstrel Jamboree\n9:00\u2014Al Joison Show\n9:30\u2014Cannington Manor\n9:45\u2014News and-weather\n10:00\u2014Musical Mirror\n10:30\u2014Epilogue\n(>\n      '\n'      '      '      *-\n rn^mm\nUpwp\npost\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY  MORNINu, DEC. 27. 1331.\nWinter Hatti Charms on Nelson Waterfront\nA group of nurses and ex-nurses of Kootenay\nLake General hospital, seated on a log after a\nround of skating, the log being one of the cotton-\nwood logs in the temporary boom of the B. C.\nVeneer Works beside the city Wharf. Left to right,\nMrs. Arthur Gibbon, Miss Vera Haydon, Miss Jean\nJohnston, Miss Evelyn Higginbotham, Miss Ethel\nSmith, Miss Joyce Weaver, Mrs. James Forbes and\nMiss Bessje Haydon.     \u2022\nA group of news writers making a pretence of knowing how to glide on the steel blades.\nMiss Bessie Haydon, left, and Miss Evelyn Higginbotham stroking\nout together. Nole the length of their shadows in the early afternoon\nsun, and the city wharf in the distance. Daily News photos.\nPupils and Adults\nConcert Vallican\n' VALLICAN,   B.C.-The   annual\ncommunity Christmas tree and concert was held in the school under\nauspices of the Vallican Improvement society, T. D. Edgar acted as\nchairman. The program was as follows;    O   Canada;   carol,   \"Holy\nNight\", by the children; recitations,\n.'. by Mlml Soucey, Rubby Dirdall,\nMaureen lnnes and Ernie Willford;\nrecitation, \"A Child Training Hint\",\nBob   Willford;   pantomime,   \"The\nWatch\",  five boys'and one girl;\nrecitation, \"What Would You Say?\"\nPolly Verlgin;  song, \"Mince Pies\nfor Christmas,\" seven little  girls;\nI recitation, \"He Could Help,\" Harold\nWillford; sketch, \"One Prays for\n.-Just Dessert, the Other Just for\nI Dessert,\" Mrs. Ward and Bob Wlll-\nI ford;    Song   of   the   Christmas\nI Greens,\"   the  children;   recitation,\n: *The New Brother,\" Bstty Benton;\nI song, \"If I Only Had a Home Sweet\nHome,\" Nellie Willford; recitation,\n\"The Reason,\" LeRoy Strong; play,\n\"The Strike In Santa Claus Land\";\nrecitation, \"Gee Whiz,\" Mary Ver-\nigin: pantomime, \"Tommy Goes to a\nChristmas Party,\" Bob and Nellie\nWillford;. song, \"Mr. Rat,\" Polly\nVerlgin; recitation, \"The Present He\nWanted,\" Grant Flynn; song, \"A\nChristmas Goodnight,\" the children.\nFollowing this a short program\nwas. presented by the grownups:\nSilhouette, \"An Emergency Operation\"; sketch, \"In a Cemetery.at\nMidnight\";pantomime, \"Oft In the\nStilly Night\"; sketch, \"Now and\nThen,\"\nThen \"Major Bowlegs\" presented\nan amateur hour which included;\nComedy by \"Charlie and Earl\"; song\nby Miss Eleanor Coleman; tap\ndance by \"Zeke\"; vocal duet by\nMarry and Julia Verlgin;, song by\nMrs. Cecil Willford,\nThen Santa distributed toys and\npresents to the children. Supper\nwas served and dancing was en-\nJoyed by the adults.\nFind Your Job In the Want Ads\n\u2022KASLO Social,\u2666 .\nKASLO, B. C, \u2014 J. A. Syddall has\nreturned to Shutty Bench from\nNelson and Willow Point.\nDr. and Mrs. D. J. Barclay were\nvisitors in Nelson Tuesday.\nHenry Larson was a' visitor to\nNelson. He was accompanied by\nJimmie Strachan.\n*   C E. Holland has left to spend\nthe holidays at Victoria.\nMiss Elizabeth Giegerlch was a\nvisitor In Nelson.\nCharles Idle left for Trail Thursday after a tew days In town with\nfriends.\nBob Westman of Meadow Creek\nwas a visitor ln town while en\nroute to Peticton where he will\nspend the holidays.\n, George Marquis of Nelson was a\ncity visitor Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. George Mclnnis\nvisited Nelson.\nMrs. W. H. Driver has returned\nfrom Blewltt where she has been\nrelieving on the school teaching\nstaff.\n' Capt and Mrs. G. A. West of\nShutty Bench are spending the holidays with relatives at Boswell.\nH. South was a visitor to Nelson.,\nDavid Abey of Nelson Is spending\na few days visiting Kaslo and Mirror Lake.\nMiss Peggy Dryden who has been\nattending school in Fernie has arrived ln Mirror Lake to spend the\nholidays with her parents..\nRoss Whittaker of thelCastlegar\nschool teaching staff is here to\nspend the holidays with his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. William Whittaker.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Andrews have\nas their holiday guesl their daughter Miss Violet Andrews of Trail.\nMrs. Percy Amas was a visitor\nin Nelson.\nMrs. Clarence Garrett of Retallack\nwas a visitor In town.\nJames McCallum of Danville, Que,,\nis the holiday guest of his sister,\nMrs. A. McQueen. It is about 28\nyears since uie brother and sister\nhad met.\nMrs. Leonard Garland of Retallack\nwas a visitor in the city.\nThe usual \"White Gift Service\"\ntook place ln St. Andrews United\nchurch last Sunday evening. The\nartist, contributing to the program\nwere Mrs. John Paterson and Mrs.\n3. X Tinkess who gave readings;\nMiss Kate Riddell gave a pleasing\nsolo and Jimmie Riddell' a recitation. Special music was rendered\nby the intermediate and junior\nchoirs. Two large hampers ot\n\"white gifts\" were presented by\nthe congregation. These will be\ndistributed among Kos'o's needy\nfamilies. ,\nThe dance arranged by the Kaslo\nbasketball teami In Canadian Legion\nhall Wednesday was well attended\n'and proved to be an enjoyable affair and will net a neat sum. Dainty\nrefreshments were served and a\nlocal orchestra provided excellent\ndance music\nMore Lake Ice\nHard weather brought in by\nChristmas was popular with the\nskaters. .  \u2022\nOwing to over a week's skating\natop it, the ice in the vicinity of\nNelson wharf had become badly\ncut up and long cracks had spread\nacross its length and breadth. Then\nthe heavy fall of snow rotted the\nice beneath a few days later, and\nthe rain and thaw that followed\nmelted the ice altogether. \u2022\nWith clearing skies. Christmas\nDay, the mercury dipped 'to very\nlow levels that night, with the result that a wider expanse of ice\nthan ever formed along the Nelson\nwaterfront. Monday many of the\ncity's ambitious youngsters as well\nas many adults took quick advantage of this and had a full day's\nskating in natural ice.\nSnow again began to fall yester\ndaly afternoon, but up to evening\nwas not heavy enough to hinder\nskating.\nSocial...\nROBSON\nROBSON, B.C-Mr. and Mrs.\nF. E. Oborne of Robson announce\nthe engagement of their-daughter,\nPhyllis Mildred, to Alan Jolly of\nLancashire, Eng., the wedding to\ntake place Jan. 2.\nMrs. Ray Berry and family have\nleft to spend three month! with\nMrs. Berry's mother in Wynndel.\nMiss Adeline Boothby has Teturn\ned to Edgewood after visiting Miss\nViola Quance.\nMiss Jean Ballard is spending\nthe holidays with her parents, Mr,\nand Mrs. 0, B. Ballard.     ;   ',    .\nMiss Viola Quance gave a:'party\nTuesday evening at her home for\nMiss Adeline Boothby. Games and\ndancing were enjoyed followed by, a\ndelicious supper.\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP).-Leslie\nMcDonnell's fall into a nine-foot\nwell wss fatal to a neighbor, Mrs.\nMaude Schwartz, 60, who died from\nshock. The 16-months-old boy Was\nsaved by Its mother.    '\nRossland\nOldtimer\n-PAGE NINI\nSome of Nelson's Early Day Tonnage\nJohn\nhigh school janitor, can\nsome good yarns about the \"good\nold dayi\" of the golden city. He\nlives in retirement, Daily News\nphoto.-\n.\nThis group of Nelson oldtimers assayed 10 men to the ton, or fewer. The picture\ntaken about 1907 on the lawn of the Hume hotel, during an oldtimer gathering, Is lent\nby Mrs. James MacDonald of Victoria. None ot the 27 men in the group weighed less\nthan 200 pounds, and the average was far above that figure, with \"Big Bill\" McCandlish the top man, at 265 pounds, and \"Big John\" Linebaugh, next at about 250.\nThere was close to three tons of prominent citizen in the party. Most ot them have\npassed over.\nFront row, left to right, \"Big John\" Linebaugh, George Bartlett, Melville\nParry, Harry E. Douglas, L. V. Roberta. Middle row, Belville Tompkins, Tom G.\nProcter, George Johnstone, J. Hansen, W. B. Laggan, Sheriff Samuel p. Tuck, Charlei\nF. Olion of Alnsworth, \"Big Bill\" Mftandllsh, W J. (Blake) Wilion, David S. Carley.\nBack row, Charles Walmsley, James MacDonald, E. F. Gigot, Thomas Draper, Jim\nHardy, W. M. Walker, Jamei Gilker, George W. Steele, C. L, (Barney) Archibald,\nA. A\/Pitchford, G. W. McBride, J. A. Gibson.\"\nCRANBROOK Social-d.\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-Followlng\nthe business session of the regular\nmeeting of the Caledonian society,\nwhen plans for their annual Hog-\nmany supper were laid, a social\nevening was held. Games and dancing were arranged and music was\nprovided by Miss Betty McLeary.\nSanta  Claus distributed  presents.\nMiss Irene Countryman, who attends Normal school at Victoria,\nis spending the holidays with her\nparents here.\nMrs. D. E. Lee and daughter of\nEdgewater are visiting in the city.\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Birch and\nMr. and Mrs. Haynes and son, Paul,\nof Wynndel, are spending Christmas with Mrs. L Baxter.\nMiss Patricia MacDonald arrived\nfrom Victoria to spend the holidays\nwith her parents nere.\n. Miss Reta Thurston left by way\nof Spokane for her home ln Chllll-\nwaok to spend the Christmas week.\nMrs. W. Dlnkwater and daughter,\nPeggy, of Kelowna, have arrived to\nspend, the holidays with Mr. and\nMrs. W. S. Johnston.\nMrs. A. Graham and Miss Anne\ndraham have returned after a few\ndays In Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Brown and\nfamily have left for Vancouver\nfor the next two weeks.\nJim Ashworth, who attends high\nschool here, has left for Invermere\nto spend the holidays' with his\nparents.\nMr. and Mrs. E. S. Jones and son,\nEvan, have returned after spend\ning a few days ln Nelson.\nMiss Laura Henderson has left\ntor Victoria to spend Christmas at\nthe home of her mother.\nMr. and Mrs. J. G. Cummings\nhave left for Victoria to spend the\nholiday season with their son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. M.\nCummings.\nMiss Cameron has left for Victoria to spend the holidays the\nguest of Miss McLennaghan.\nMiss Shirley Hill of Trail has arrived to spend the holidays with\nher grandmother, Mrs. J. Beech.\nMiss Jean Glendinnlng and Mrs.\nGlendinning have left for Nelson\nfor the holidays.\nMiss Helen Gilroy, who attends\nNormal school at Victoria,' is spending the holidays with her parents\nhere.\nMiss Isobel Pattinson of Meadow-\nbrook is spending the holidays with\nher parents here.\nMrs. A. W. Hazlehurst of Deep\nCove, Vancouver Island, who has\nbeen the guest of Mr.' and Mrs, A.\nB. Smith for the past 10 days, has\nreturned to her home.\nMiss Delia College has returned\nfrom Victoria where she attends\nNormal school.\nMiss K. Soames has left for Graham's Landing for the Christ_naa\nholidays. _,    ,\nMiis Mae Volsey of Sand Creek\nhas arrived to spend the holiday\nseason with her parent! here.\nMiss Olga Belecky\" is spending\nthe week visiting her parents in\nFernte.\nBlueberry School\nHas line Program\nROSSLAND, B. C, \u2014 A successful Christmas program was held at\nthe Blueberry school by the students recently, and was attended\nby a large audience. The students\nwere assisted by their teacher, Miss\nAnna Holoboff, formerly of Boss-\nland.,\nThe program consisted of plays,\nrecitations, vocal and musical, instrument solos and carols.\nAt the conclusion of the program,\nrefreshments were served by the\nstudents.\n. Those taking part were Cora Dawson, Olive. Babaeff, Shirley Collinson, Ethel Dawson,.Rose Dawson,\nTena Babaeff, Marceline Lalonde.\nClara Dawson, BUI Konkin. Denis\nLalonde, Lyle' Parker, Kenneth\nDawson, Carl Salhstrbm and Harold\nDawson.\nCranbrook Girl\nond Bonnington\nMan Are Married\nCRANBROOK, B. C. - A quiet\nwedding was solemnized at. the\nUnited church manse -Thursday\"\nmorning when Ethel Alice,'daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Parn-\naby of Cranbrook, was united In\nmarriage to Wilfred Getrge Wal-\nford of Bonnington, B. C.\nRev, R. W. Hardy officiate,*. Witnesses were Mrs, Hirt of Coapman\nCamp and Ray Parnabv.\nThe bride was borh ln RIpon,\nEngland, andhas lived with hen\nparents on their ranch near Cranbrook for several years. Following\na wedding trip to Washington they\nwill reside In Bonnington.\nNakusp Board Talks\nMoving bf Cenotaph\nNAKUSP, B. C. - At a meeting\nof the Nakusp board of trade discussion centred about the question\nof moving the cenotaph to a more\nsuitable location, as it ii felt by\nmany that It is now dangerously\nplaced. The secretary was Instructed to write to the traffic officers in\nNelson for a report regarding the\ndanger of this intersection. A committee of A. Stanley and M. Barrow waa appointed to meet the\ntrustees of the war memorial, ,0.\nKeys, H. W. Herridge and H. Thur-\ngood.to discuss the situation.\nThe subject of radio interference\nwas broached and the meeting went\non record as favoring the purchase of radio filters by users of\nelectric motori. It was pointed out\nthat tor a nominal sum a plug-In,\nwhich shields tha motors on vacuum cleaners, electric razors, etc.\ncould be purchased thus eliminating considerable' interference,,\nA report from the department of\nIndustries Was heard' and the sec-.\nrotary was asked to write for more\nspecific information with regard\nto establishlM lorne industry In the\nNakuip district    . ,,\nSocial...\nNAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C. - Captain Trimble of Vancouver was in town en\nroute to his home for Christmas.\nH. Norberg of Silverton was a\nmotor visitor to Nakusp.\nN. Tattrie of New Denver was a\nvisitor to town.\nA. Mlddlemass was in town from\nArrow Park Thursday.\nJ. Sanderson and J. Burkitt of\nNew Denver attended a turkey\nshoot in Nakusp.\nH. Williams, S. Williams and P.\nWilliams of Grahams Landing visited Nakusp Thursday. . \u2022\nH. Bowes returned from South\nSlocan to spend Christmas here.\nMr. and Mrs. G. H. Gardner have\nleft for Trail to spend' Christmas\nat the home of their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. L. Hughes.\ners'. LearyM.L.A., arrivedfrom\nVictoria to spend Christmas at his\nhome here.   '  '\nB. Robertson of Burton was a\nbusiness visitor to town.\nMiss Hope Taylor, matron of Slocan Community hospital, visited\nNakusp Wednesday.\nMrs. E Nelson, Miss Hazeldeane\nNelson, Sam and Clifford Picard of\nNew Denver visited Mrs. Nelsons\nparents, Mr; and Mrs. T. Harvey,\nhere Wednesday.\nMrs. L. Ott left to spend the winter months with her husband on\nVancouver Island.\nMiss Betty White has returned\nfrom Nelson and Trail where she\nspent several days holidaying.\nMr. and Mrs. 0. Keys left Wednesday for Trail to spend Christmas\nwith their son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr.and Mrs. H. M. Keys.\nMiss Eileen Leary arrived from\nVancouver to spend Christmai with\nher parents, Mr. and Mn. C. S.\nMri! E. C. Johnion returned\nTuesday from Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. D. Rogers of\nArrow Park were motor, visitors\nto Nakusp. \u25a0'\u2022 ,\nMrs. J. .Robins ot Arrow Park\nwas  among out-of-town shoppers\n\"n. \\loxham of Arrow Park wai\na business visitor here Thursday.\nMiss Betty Gardner\/who has for\nthe past month been visiting her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. H- Gardner, Sr., left for Trail.\nR. White, T. Mewton and A. Cawley of Salmo, Guy Cawley of Rossland and Clarence Cawley of Nelson visited ln Nakusp, guests at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. White.\nMiss E. Shannon of Salmo visited\nNakusp this week.\nCRESTON INSTITUTE\nNETS $25 ON QUILT\nCRESTON B.C.-The Women's Institute netted about $25 on a quilt\nthe members had made under the\ndirection of Mrs, James Maxwell\nfor Christmas cheer purposes. It\nwas won by J. T. Oakley.\nGreston Valley Post Canadian Legion drawing winners were; dressed\nhog, W. Piper; half sheep, Dick\nSmith,' turkey, G. Donald&dh'of\nProcter; 50 pounds of flour, W. J.\nTruscott; 20 pounds of sugar, W. J.\nCraig; box chocolates, T. Wood.\nTen pens of the 34 ln the new British Columbia laying contest at fhe\nDominion experimental farm at Agassi, are credited with 300 points or\nbetter at the end of the seventh\nweek, and the leading one, W. J.\nSchiebler., bettered its position\nsomewhat to attain practically an\n18-point margin on Its nearest competitor. The six leaders stand as follows; Schiebler, 360 points; F. C-\nEvans, 342.4; D. Russell, 337.1; M. H.\nRuttledge, 327.8; C. Headey k Sons,\n326S; John Burgess, 325.6. The Russell and Burgess birds were Rhode\nIsland Reds, and the four other\nleaders, White Leghorns.\nSeventy-two hens out ot the 340\nwere not credited with a single .egg\nfor the week, but nevertheless production for the 34 pens was 56.64\nper cent of full. ,\nFollowing is the standing at the\nend of the seventh week, omitting\ntho  day-by-day  record  and  the\nweek's eggs;\nBreed and Wks, Tot Tot.\nOwner Pts. Eggs Pts.\n8. C. Rhode Island Reds;\nAllen, A. M. 28.1 135 104.\nArnould, H. K. A 53.5 281 274.1\nBrown, Miss A. G. 54.2 226 249.9\nBrown,  Jack   44.5 264 277.fr\nBurgess, John 56.3 298 325.5\nFinch, Lewis H  40.5 298 263.4\nGame, Geo. W 49.2 269 278.8\nGoodman, John 30.2 227 228.6\nRussell, D 48.8 337 337.1\nStaverman, F. H:.... 36.5 179 199.6\nThomson, R. Grant 47.6 225 206.7\nBarred Plymouth Roeki:\nBrown, Miss A. G. 27.8 103 93.3\nCram,  Jack  31.4 152 151.3\nGolding, C. G 34.7 201 187.\nBarncveldcrs:\nFitz-Herbert, H. G.   9.3 63 70.2\n8. C, White Leghorns:\nChalmers, J 50. 311 315.7\nCorlett Mrs. Eva K. 27.1 256 255.4\nEvans, F. C 55.2 300 342.4\nFairweather, W. M. 49.6 302 308.8\nGolding, C. G    7.7 91 70.5\nHeadey, C. k Sons 58.5 332 326.5\nHenke, Ulrich 43.4 297 286.5\nKerfootW. D 26.8 196 174.'\nLawson,  M 40.1 313 269.3\nPollok, G. L. H. .... 49.7 255 231.\nRuttledge, M. H 48.4 326 327.8\nSchiebler, W. J 58.5 328 360.\nSchofield, A. W 52,2 319 309.5\nSmith, T. Jv  48.3 280 271.5\nSmyth, Jas. 32.5 181 168.8\nSwensson, P 48.4 240 237.1\nVroom, C 48.8 317 300.6\nWatson, A. G 43. 307 299.8\nWindermere Exp.\nStation  43. 266 268.8\nKaslo Enjoys\nSchool Concert\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Thursday evening\nI the Kaslo school auditorium was\nI filled to capacity with friends and\nrelatives who assembled to en-\nJoy the splendid Christmas concert\nstaged by pupils of the school. The\nprogram included \"Greetings\" by\nthe senior boys; play \"Snow White\nand, the Seven Dwarfs\" the primary room; play \"Cousin Imogene's\nDinnner\" Intermediate room; dance\n\"Minuet\" Pauline Riley and Gladys\nGopp; recitation \"The Night Before\nChristmas\" Jimmy Riddell; group\nof selected songs by grades 1 to 4;\nplay \"Miss Prim's Gift Exchange\",\nprimary room; action song \"The\nBand\" primary room; play \"The\nBoy Who Played Santa Claus\", intermediate room;, group of selected\nCarols Grades 1 to 4; Operetta\n\"Topsy Tuwey Christmas\" Junior,\nhigh school.\nFRUITVALE CLUB\nENJOYS A PARTY\nFRUITVALE, B.C.-The. Ladles'\nFriendly club held the annual\nChristmas party, at the home of\nMrs. Arthur Wagner, with Mrs, A.\nFredericks al hostess for the occailon.\nChriltmai decorations ware ln\nevidence, the table being, centred\nwith a miniature Christmai tree,\naglow with tiny electric lights,\nGamei and contests were enjoyed\nsnd an exchange ot gifts was made,\nMrs. A. Wagner drawing the numbers.\nDelicious refreshments were en-\nJoyed, the hostess bein_ assisted in\nserving by Mrs. A. Wagner. Those\npresent were Mrs.-A. Hanson, Mrs,\nHarold Mason, Mrs, Harold Anderson, Mrs, F. M. Barrett, Mrs, B. E,\nJohnson, Mrs. J, B. Doig, Mrs. W.\nMurray,-Mrs. Walter Veitch, Mrs,\nA. Fredericks, Mrs. Carl Wagner,-\nMrs. A. Endersby, Mrs. Arthur Wagner and Mrs, T. Grieves.\nmm\n\u00bba.A_&i>-w_.^_____.,_ \u25a0-;.'..-\u25a0'\u25a0    -   ''..    '.     .\ni*\nCRESTON Social,...\nCRESTON B.C.-Dec.-26.-<;iar-\nence Christenson left for Moscow,\nand Lewlston, Idaho, to ipend the\nholiday week with his mother and\nfriends;- ' '\u25a0 \u2022_, .\nr Roy Jackson, student at University, of British Columbia, arrived\nSaturday, to spend the vacation\nwith his parents,,Mr. and Mrs. Walter V. Jackson. 'A....AZ\nMisses Marion Cooper and Maisle\nFerguson have left for Vancouver,\nwhere they will be remaining for\nthe next few months.\nL. W. Nowlini wheat pool:ele?\nvator supervisor, with headquarters\nat Hanna, Alta., Is here to spend\nthe Christmas holidays with Mrs.\nNowlin and the children.\nLloyd MacLaren, studen at University of Alberta, is home for the\nYule holidays with, his parents,\nMr. and Mrs,; H. W. MacLaren.\nG. L. Salter of Vancouver was a\nvisitor at the', week-end. He is interested in the rehabilitation of the\nReclamation farm' dykCi and inspected rebuilding operations during his\" stay, j     \/-.,\u2022   v\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Speers and\nson, of Lethbridge, arrived Saturday for .ttieyjigefereildihaliday. with\nthe former's parents3tr. and Mrs.\nS. A. Speers.\nW. Piper,' one of the operators\non Reclamation farm, is at Adams,\nOre., for the holidays with Mrs,\nPiper 4nd family.\nJ. L. Rogers jr. was a visitor at\nSpokane a few days.\nMr. and Mrs. R. A; PaUreyan and\nEdith and Winnie, spent the weekend in Nelson, a guest of Mrs. H.\nCotterUl, former- Creston resident\nGeorge Connell is home from University of Alberta for the holidays\nat'tha home of his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. G. Connell\nMr. and Mrs. B. B. Stallwood of\nNelson are here tor the holidays, a\nguest ot the latter's parents, Col.\nand tylrs. Fred Lister, at Camp Lister.\nJack Young ts here from Trail to\nspend holidays with his mother,\nMrs. G. A. M. Young.\nGlen York of the consolidated elementary school staff is at his home\nat Invermere for the holidays. Arthur Rutledge, another staff members is at Fernie for the vacation.\nRev. A. S. Partington was a visitor\nat Camp Lister Sunday for an Anglican carol service.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Peck are\nspending the holidays at Regina.\nR. G. Brunskill, of the Bank of\nCommerce,. was at Swift. Current,\nSask., for the week-end vacation.\nReeve and Mn. E. Mallandaine.\nleft Saturday for a two weeks' visit\nat Vancouver, Victoria and Nanaimo. While at the eapital th\u00ab reeve-\nwill look after some village business.   , ,   ,\u25a0:\u2022,  ._\nHarry Lewis for the past four\nmonths in charge of the wheat pool\nelevator has gone to Vancouver on\nan extended holiday., His health hss\nbeen poor!    -,       '\nH.C. Carne, federal fruit Inspector left Saturday for the holidays\nat his home at Sunshine Bay;\nMr, and Mrs. Thomas H. Wilson,\nare spending the Yule holiday! with\nthe latter's parents at Vanoouver.\nHerb Legg, editor ot the Creston,\nReview, visited his parents at Calgary for the Christmas week-end.\nFred Martello Of the high school\nteaching staff slid'Mrs. Martello\nand, Kathleen are spending the holidays at Rossland and Trail.\nMrs. 0. Davidge has returned to\nWynndel after, a .week-end visit\nwith her sister, Mrs. H. S. Smith,\nat west Creitom ,.,'..-'.'\nMr. ..and Mrs. W. L. Bell and\nLorna visited Spokane a few days\n!th\u00bb Mter part of the week,',Mia,.&\nM. Tel(ord of Erickson' accompanied\n[wfifflT. _\"\u25a0 \/\u25a0 - A77r***.&A-'' ...\nwii. Lahgdon, -who- has been\nvisiting here for a few weeks, has\nreturned to Winnipeg.\nMiss Helen Goodwin is a visiter\nat Yahk, with Miss Mary Burch.\nMr. and Mrt. R. G. Penson are\nholiday week'visitors of Mr. and\nMrs. Jeff Knott, North Bend, Wash.\nW, Rldd is home from tha Bay*\nonne mine for the holidays.    \u25a0\".\nNOTICE OF DIVIDEND\nKOOTENAY BELLE COLD\nMINES LIMITED\n(N.PX.)\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN\nthat a Dividend of four cents per\nshare and a bonus of one cent per\nshare has been declared tor the\nquarter ending the 16th day ot\nJanuary, 1939 and payable on the\n23rd day of January, 1939 to shareholders of record at the close ot\nbusiness on the 16th day of January, 1939.\nThe register of members will be\nclosed from the 17th day of January, 1939 until the 22nd day ot\nJanuary, 1939, Inclusive.\nBy Order of the Board,\nJ.   A.   CLARK,\nVancouver, B. C, Secretary.\nDecember Wth, 1938.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ii \u25a0 \u25a0 im i ii \u25a0 i it iii 11 iii 1111 mi \u25a0 11 cmi 1111 \u25a0 i tt mil 111 ii iii \u25a0 111 in mss i\nTO EVERY\nPRINTING PROBLEM\nTHERE ISA\nSENSIBLE ANSWER\nWE MAKE IT OUR BUSINESS TO KNOW\nTHAT ANSWER WITH\n\u2022 DESIGN, COPY AND LAYOUT\nASSISTANCE\n\u2022 SKILLED  and TRAINED  CRAFTSMEN\n\u2022 MODERN, EFFICIENT EQUIPMENT\n\u2022 ORIGINALITY IN PRINTING IDEAS\n\u2022 EXCLUSIVE ILLUSTRATION\nSERVICE\n\u2022 ATTRACTIVE and EFFECTIVE\nDISPLAY\nAll work is done in our own modern\nplant.\nPHONE 144\nOur Representative Will Call\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiniiiiiiiiiii\niiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiHMiiuasiiiniMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiisiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'i^\n PAGE TEN\nMMM\n~\"~\t\nToday and\nWednesday\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 8:59\nCLARK GABLE MYRNA LQYI\nlatt, 7:12 9:41\nA \"QUIZ\" HIT.\nPrices: Nite 15c-35c\nPLUS-CARTOON, MARCH OF TIME AND NEWS\nJ; A. C* Laughton\nOptometrist\nfUTTE 206, MEDICAL ARTS BLDG,\nTAKE HOIUE SOME\nFISH AND CHIPS\n25c per\"Order\nThe PERCOLATOR\nX W. KOPECKI -09 BAKER\nRepairing \u2014 Remodelling\nand Relining\nMalcolm's Furs\n699 BAKER STREET\n\u25a0\nGO PARTY-INQ LOOKING YOUR\nBEST! A new coiffure style\u2014\nsmart, flattering.\nBEAUTY\nPARLOR\nmiadifi\n677 Baiter St\nPhone 244\nCompliments of the\nSeason to ALL\nFrank A. Stuart\n677 Baker St., Nelson, BXL. Ph. 981\n'BUY A LOAF OF\nMsalik fiteatL\nOr Old Stone Meal Bread\nMade from finest Canadian\nIngredients\nHOOD BAKING CO., LTD.\n1936 Terraplane\nDeLUXE SEDAN\u2014        fijCAA\nLooks like new  9\u00ab>W\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson) Ltd. Phone 117\nm&QSf$t&S&&&$SiSSSSSS&Sbp&!\nTHE IDEAL GIFT FOR THE\nMORTORIST\nCnrysjer Auto\nAccessories\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker St.     Limited     Phone 119\nFUEL BARGAINS\nPINE 12\" and 16\" .\ntm\n.WM\n.   PM\n .  4.00\nBIRCH WOODr-Per cord _ 8.60\nBIRCH WOOD-ria\" and 16\" .  9.50\nMILL ENDS\u20143 loads\t\nCORD WOOD-Per cord .\nSAWDUST-Per unit\nPHONE 973 OR 434RI\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H* M ARER\nPhone 686    610 Kootefiay St\nAfternoon Tea\nIS NICER AT THE\nSTARCAFE\nPHONE 25\nProscriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Arts Block\nPLAY SAFE      .\nProtect your Home and Business\nproperty with Fire Insurance\u2014your\nCar with full coverage\u2014your income with Accident and Sickness\ninsurance. Consult us. No obligation.\nH.E.DILL\n832 Ward SL Opp. Madden Hotel\nGet Your Job In tha \"Want Ads\"\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nMATCH BLOCK WOOD\nW. W. POWELL Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\" '\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\n*\nREMEMBER THE NAMES!\nGREENHILL COAL\nFOR 8TEAM  OR HOT WAT^R HEATING\nBELLEVUE COAL\nFOR HOT WATER OR HOT AIR HEATING\nThese coals heat most of the larger buildings and homes In Nelion\nPhone 53 - Today\nAND ORDER YOUR WINTER 8UPPLY\nWEST KOOTENAY AGENTS\nBurns Goal & Cartage Co.\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHardware Company, Limited\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nSHELF\u2014HEAVY HARDWARE\u2014MINE SUPPLIES '\nMILL SUPPLIES\u2014SPORTING GOODS\u2014BUILDING\nMATERIALS\u2014ZONOLITE INSULATION\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR BAPCO PAINTS       -\n\u00bb\n.'.'\nPrescription\nSpecialists\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPhone 81    ., Nelson, B.C.\nNEUON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-TUESDAY MORNING, DEC. 27,\nPatients Cheery as Santa Visits\nHospital; Turkey Dinner Highlight\nMORE ABQUT\nHUNGERFORD\n(Continued From Page One)\nthree new fflectras, ordered In April.\nOrders lor lour Super Jllectras were\nplaced with the Lockheed Aircraft\ncorppration. \u00bbt the same time,' and\nIn December six more were ordered.\nContracts for construction ot a\nhangar and offite building at Winnipeg and for a hangar at lethbridge were awarded in November.\nBy that time, pilot training was in\nfull swing. Chosen for \u2022ability, .experience and character from a large\nfield of applicants, the men were\nput through a rigorous course ln\nsix stages, and very few failed to\nmeasure up to the standards demanded of .them. This is a tribute,\nt think, to our Canadian airmen.\nAt the end of the year, 1987, there\nwere 16 pilots, three, in the Vancouver-Seattle service, two assisting with instructions, four in- advanced training, and seven ln training. The maintenance and repair\n\u00abtaff,. divided between Winnipeg,\nrtegina, Lethbridge, Vancouver anc\nSeattle, consisted of 22 men, and\nthere were 14 in the communications and dispatch department The\ntotal number of employees' at the\nend of 1937 was 71.\nLast December, a daily (except\nSunday) training schedule was\nflown between Winnipeg and Lethbridge. In January ot this year,\nadvanced pilots began flying from\nVancouver across the . Rockies to\nLethbridge.\nThe department of transport, hi*,\nstalled a 24-hour meteorological service at Winnipeg, Hegina, Lethbridge and Vancouver, and a 16-\nhour service at Intermediate points,\nin February. We were enabled to\nundertake some night flying, and\nin March We began carrying malls\nbetween Winnipeg and Vancouver.\nWhile the movement was on regular schedule, it was by daylight and\nin good weather only, and the\npostal matter was picked at random\nfrom the ordinary malls. In March\nwe flew 38.464 miles on the ronte\nbetween Winnipeg and Vancouver.\nThe following month the flying\nmileage was increased to 82,176. Occasional night flights were made\nbetween Winnipeg and Regina.\nTEN SUPER ELECTRAS\nThe first two of the Super Elec-\ntras or \"Fourteens\" were received\nln May and by September we were\nin possession of the complete complement of 10.\nPreliminary surveys had been\nmade of the route across northern\nOntario in Ferbruary and by ls^e\nsummer we were making daily\nfamiliarisation flights over this section.\nThe Trans-Canada hangar at Winnipeg was occupied in August and\nthe Lethbridge Building completed.\nSeptember, 1938, was an important month in the history of Canadian transportation. Taking advantage of the coming.of the T.C.A., the\nCanadian National Express began\nsending shipments by air between\nWinnipeg, Regina and Vancouver,\non Uie \u25a0 16th. This service was extended to the branch between Lethbridge and Edmonton in October,\nand, on.the 17th of that month,\neast to Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal. Arrangements were made for\ntraffic by rail ta and from points\nnot on the air line, for combined\nair and rail shipment:\nRegular over-night air mail schedules went into effect between Winnipeg and Vancouver on October\n1, The experimental mail service\nbetween Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto\nand Winnipeg was begun on December 1.\n\u25a0A year ago the total staff consisted of 71 officers and employees. Today,' the number Is 330, including\n37 pilots (18 captains and 19 first\nofficers); 3 stewardesses; 178 men\nare employed in the engineering\nand maintenance department; -65 in\ncommunications and. dispatch; and\nofficers, members of the traffic department, the stores and the clerical staffs account for 47.\nIncluding the branch from Van'\ncouver to Seattle (122 miles) and\nthat from Lethbridge to Calgary\nand Edmonton (288 miles), the total distance covered by the Trans-\nCanada Air Lines is 3528 miles.\nUp to the end of December, we\nshall .have flown nearly two million\nmiles,\nTHROUGH PASSENGERS 800N\nThe   inauguration   of . complete\nKeeping step with a custom as\nold as the hospital itself, patients\nand nurses pt Kootenay Lake General hospital observed Christmas\non Sunday, as much. like other\nfolks as their abilities or 'disabilities would allow them. They .had\ncarol singing, Santa's visit, turkey\ndinner, Christmas trees, and as many\nof theh other joys as possible that\ncan come to one bedridden and\nconfined within four walls,   4       '\nCA'ROLS ARE SUNG 1  '\nfestivities started Christmas eve\nwhen Miss Eileen Mackenzie's St.\nPaul's Girl's Choir sang Kir the\npatients. Some 25 girls, led by Miss\nMackenzie, rendered, carols and\ngeneral Christmas songs and hymns.\nChristmas morning,' as early as\n6:19, the nurses, led by Miss Ert id\nEtter, of St. Saviour's chair, sang\ncarols and hymns, and then at\n10:00 a.m. came one ofthe biggest\nevents of the day,' especially' {or\nthe children. Santa Claus, with a\nbin .bag of gifts of all sorts, arrived and went from ward tp ward,\ngiving a gift to every patient.\nAna none the less important was\nthe turkey dinner.at 11:00*o'clock.\nLed. by, H. M. Wnlmster, hospital\nboard president, four board direct\nors took up their \"tools\" and carved\nthe big birds. J. R. McLennan, Jack\nSmith, P. C. Richards and Mr. Whimster did the carving. The nurses\nhad their dinner at 12:00 o'clock.\nThe Salvation Army, carrying on\ntheir cheer-bringing work, entertained with carols and hymns outside the hospital in the morning.\nSOROMPTOMIST* \u00bb     '\nDECORATE TREE\nFeatured by a large tree supplied\nand decorated by the Soropiomist\nclub In the children's ward, the hospital took on a Christmas air with\nIta' decorations. Large, decorated\ntrees were in the men's and women's\nwards, and smaller trees were in\neach private or semi-private ward.\nEvergreens, colored papers and tinsels lent a cheery air to the wards\nand halls. Mr. whimster, as president ot the board, went from patient\nto -patient,, wishing them as merry\na Christmas as possible'under the\ncircumstances. \u25a0.      \u2022' \u25a0;\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_\nNurses received their gifts Christmas eve, when' they; held open\nholise at the Nurses' Home. A large\nnumber of I visitors attended, and\nSanta Claus, played by Dr. W. K.\nBlair, handed Jt present to. every,\non*. '; \u2022'\u25a0'\u2022\u2022-.:     ., ;'\u25a0\npassenger, mail and express service\nbetween Montreal and Vancouver,\n\u2022will .take place early in the- coming\nyear. Later,' as the ground facilities\nare, prepared, the Mpntreal-Monc-\nton' section will be included.\nIn the period under review, work\nhas been proceeding on many fronts.\nThe department of transport has\nbeen busy perfecting the airway,\ninstalling radio ranges, extending\nthe weather service. Improving the\nflying fields.' Municipalities have\nbeen developing their airports. The\nWork Is still going'on and there is\nmuch to be done on the ground before complete passenger and mail\nservice across Canada can be put\ninto effect.\nIt is-with profound regret that I\nrecord the >cciderit which occurred\nnear Regida in November when a\nplane was destroyed and two pilots\nkilled. Official inquiry was made\ninto the circumstances by. a board\nappointed by the minister of transport and the findings have been\nmade public. While it does not diminish the seriousness of the happening, I think it might be home in\nmind that it was the first major\naccident in nearly two million miles\nof flying, during a period of intensive training and of experimental\nwork- over a new airway with new\nequipment\nThe T.C.A. planes are equipped\nwith the latest instruments and other devices for the elimination of\nhazard, the pilots are well chosen\nand scrupulously trained in the\nhandling of the equipment and before the take-off every flight Is\nscientifically planned.\nI need hardly say that the first\nword ih the policy of the Trans-\nCanada Air Lines is safety. Our\nLockheed Super Electees are fast\nenough to give transcontinental service as rapid, as that of any other\nair line. But before speed and regularity, of schedules comes the comfort of passengers and before that,\ntheir safety. All our efforts are\nbent toward this end. Notwithstanding the encouraging eagerness of\nthe Canadian people to see their\nnew transportation system in full\noperation as quickly as possible,\nwe could not feel -justified in beginning until we were ready, until\nevery cog in the machine was perfectly adjusted.\n$25 Tadanac Fire\non Christmas Day\nTRAIL, B. C, Dec. 25-A small\nfire in the oxide leaching plant,\ncaused by hot flue dust, was extinguished by the Tadanac fire department at about 5 o'clock Christmas day. About $25 damage was\ndone.\nlo See District\nA. J. Wishart of Winnipeg, president of the Canadian Junior Chamber of Commerce, Is expected to\nvisit Trail and Nelson shortly.\n3. G. McKay,, Kootenay representative on the executive of the\nnational body, has been advised by\nJohn Melville of ;Yancouver, national vice-president, that Mr. Wishart will be going through the district shortly, His letter stated: he\nhad informed the president that\nvisits to Trail and Nelson -were on\nhis \"must\" list; ,'     T \u25a0\nMORE ABOUT\nU.S. DEFENCE\n(Continued From Page One)\nFrom usually well-informed administration and legislative sources\ncome reports of these' developments:\nThese proposals are expected: ,\nOrders for thousands of'additional army and navy warplanes in the\nnext two years. (Each, service has\nabout 2000 first line craft now).\nUnder plans already announced,\nthe civil aeronautics authority and\nthe national youth, administration\nare to assist in schooling upwards\nof 100,000 -pilots and 125,000 mechanics as a military \"backlog\".\nNew air bases are contemplated.\nA key objective is expansion ot\nthe United States aircraft industry's\ncapacity, through commercial and\nexport as well aa military1 orders,\nto keep pace with developments\nabroad.\nArmy (troops)\u2014prompt measures to remedy deficiencies in antiaircraft artillery, tanks and other\nweapons and munitions for the regular army and national guard. Also,\na material increase in the air corps\npersonneL\nNavy\u2014continuing the present expansion with funds to start work\nIn two additional battleships, expected to be of 45,000 tons, tho\nworld's largest, and a score of other\nwarships.\nIndustry \u2014 various measures io\nreduce the time \u2014 now estimated\nat eight months \u2014 required ln an\nemergency to switch factories from\npeace to war production.\nSalvation Aiiy Serves Dinner\nand Homeless\nThis Function Monday\nFollows Sunday\nof Cheer\nDirecting all their own Christmas\ncelebrating to their efforts to make\nothers happy, the members of the\nSalvation Army's Nelson corps' spent\nthe week-end' in spreading the\nChristmas spirit about the city.\nCommencing their worthy work\nearly Sunday morning, they went\nfirst to the provincial jalT, where,\nnuts, candies and other Christmas\ngoodies were given to the 60-odd inmates. During their visit there they\nheld a special service.\nAt 10 o'clock,. for three-quarters\nof an hour the Salvation Army\nband .played at Kootenay Lake .Gen\neral hospital.  ,'\nHOLD SERVICES IN HALL\nFollowing this,- a meeting was\nheld in the Salvation Army nail.\nIn the afternoon irt the hall, \"The\nLife of Christ\" was displayed,in\npicture form on a screen, using\nlantern slides. Thii program was\nfor the benefit of.Sunday school\nchildren of the-Salvation Army.\n\"The Wise Men,\" a pageant, and a\nsong service featured the evening's\nprogram at the hall. ,  ,\nWith funds largely collected by\nthe \"Salvation Army pot,\" Adjutant\nD. Hammond, and his workers held\na special Christmas dinner for Nelson single unemployed, and other\nhomeless persons who were at that\ntime ln the city. This took place in\nthe hall at Monday noon.\nArab Village Demolished for Acts of Terrorism\n' ^^M^SS^SkW^Mm^^^^^msmammmmammm-^mmsm^i^^m^^\n\u25a0fil\n:    ' ':        '   A\nPictured above la the result of the punitive expedition sent out against the village of Miiar, in the\nbills ot northern Palestine, by the British army for\nActs of Arab terrorism in-the Arab-Jcwish crisis in\nthe Holy Land. In the course of tb\u00ab bombing all the\nhouses were demolished., '\n__\nDr. McKay Reported\nas Having \"Good Day\"\nDr. D. W.'McKay, ill at his home\nin Rosemont, was reported Monday\nnight as having had \"a very good\nday.\".';.-.'.; ..   ,.- {;\nTadanac Plant\n617r807 Figure\n564,074  Tons   Froiti\nCompany, 53,733\nV    Custorn\nTotal receipts of ore and' concentrates at the Tadanac plant of the\nConsoUdated Mining k Smelting\ncompany for the year up to December 21 reached (517,807 tons. These\nfigures are not corrected to dry\nweight. Of this total. 564,074 was\nfrom company properties and S3,-\n733 tons were custom ore and con.\ncentrates. ,'      l .:\u25a0\nDuring the third week of December custom properties sent 1015\ntons of ore and 191 tons of concentrates to the Tadanac plant for\ntreatment; and company mines\nshipped 10,919 tons, making the total\nfor the week 12,125 tons.\nThe custom shippers were:\nOres \u2014 Athabasca, Nelson, 25;\nCalifornia, Nelson, 10; Clubine\nComstock, Boulder Spur, 39; Den\ntonla, Greenwood, 49; Eureka, Republic, Wash, 456; Hewitt, Silver-\nton, 51; Highland-Bell, Beaverdell,\n91;' Inland Empire,- Paulson, 61; Kalamalka, Lavington, 59; Midway,\nMoyle, 34; Molly Hughes, New Denver, 42; Motherlode, Salmo, 6; Number Seven, Boundary palls, 55; Ottawa, Slocan City, 6; Silver Moon,\nPrinceton, 1; Twin Lakes, Penticton, 30. Total f~ 1015.\nConcentratee ~ Ottawa, Slocan\nCity, 6; Yankee Girl, Ymir, 138;\nYmir, Ymir, 47. Total 191.\nLEAFSBLANJT\nRANGERS 2-0\nNEW YORK, Pao. M (CPH\n\u25a0 With Geor.e Parsons scoring one\nfoal tnd: assisting on the other,\noronto Maple Leafs tonight shut\nout New .York Rangers 2-0 In a\nNational Hockey league game be\nfora.a crowd of 13^48.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: 1, Toronto, Met*\n(Parsons) 15:08.\nPenalties: Shibicky, Horner.\nSecond period: Scoring, none.\nPenalties: M. Colville, Horner.\nThird period: 2, Tbronto, Parsons\n(Ajjps) 12:14.\nPenalties: None:\nBUFFALO, N.Y. (CP)\u2014The boss\nln the home\u2014the person who mak\\\nthe decisions and \"wears the pants\"\n\u2014is he or she who has the widest\nhead-above the ears, contends Harvey Stowers, a sales expert, who\nhas studied the question 13 years,\nSHEEP CREEK\n^TONIGHT 7:00\nROBERT TAYLOR and\nIRENE DUNNE In\nMagnificent Obsession\"\n\"\nfOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWANTED 2ND.HD. THREE-QTR\nbdstd. and spring. Good condta.\nOld fshd. sdbd. orblase, Ph, S5SR2\nFOR' SA__!1 \u2014 JUMPING SKIS.\nHarness. 209 Victoria St\n. Compliments of the Season\nB. B. TAXI\nWanted\u2014Experienced help, house\nwork, part time. Ap. 312 Latimer St.\nCompliments of the Season\nBU8H!8.\nCHILDREN'S SKATING TODAY\n2 TO 4.\n8MART NEW SWEATERS\nJACK BOYCE STYLE SHOP\nCall McKAY A 8TRETTON for a\ndemonstration of the new\n1939 ROGER8 Radio.\nGuaranteed typewriter from- $15.00\nup. Phone 362, D, W. McDerby, \"The\nTypewriter Man,\" 654 Baker Street,\nNelson, B, C.\nR. C. A. Victor Electric Tuning\nRadios, priced to suit your budget\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\nI will not be responsible for any\ndebts incurred by anyone except\nmyself. W. W. DULEY,   '\nErie, B.C. Dec. 22,1938.\nOLD TINIER8 BOX SOCIAL AT\nHUME HOTEL, ON WEDNESDAY,\nDEC. 28, 7:30. ALL RESIDENTS OF\nB. C. FOR 30 YEAR8 ARE WELCOME. GENTS 60. LADIES BRING\n8ANDWICHES OR CAKE.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nTURNER\u2014Passed away at Trail-\nTadanac hospital. Sunday, December 25. Thomas Turner, in his 68th\nyear. Funeral service will be held\nat Clara's. Funeral Chanel, Trail,\nWednesday, Dec. 28 at 1:30 p.m. No\nflowers by request.\nNELSON\u2014TRAIL\ntoDAIlY\nLv. .Nelson .... 9:*0 a.m., 1:00 p.m.\n'\u25a0 .   \/   \u25a0\u25a0    .        4:45 p.m., 7:30 p.m.\nLv. Trail 7:00a.m., 1:00 p.m.\n6:00 p.m, 7:30 p.m.\nFor Curthsr Information Phone\nNelion 800 Trail 642\n.REY\/HOUND\nPrescription\nSpecialists\nT. Turner, Pari\nOwner of Perrier\nMine Dies, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Dec. _fr-Thomas\nTurner, pioneer of the west, died ln\nTrail-Tadanac- hospital Sunday afternoon lh his _8th year.\nBom in England, Mr. Turner first\nwent to Ohio. He soon moved to\nLethbridge, travelling by covered\nwagon and requiring six months to\nmake the trelt\nHe then moved on to Cardston,\nAlta., where he homesteaded tor a\nwhile-\nArriving in Nelson ln 1806, Mr.\nTurner, a builder and contractor by\ntrade, was one of the original owners of the Perr-ier mine about four\nmiles south of Nelson. At the time\nof his death he still had a large interest in the property.\nHe eamq to Trail 22 years ago and\nerected several of the city's buildings.\n. On Saturday, the 17th ot this\nmonth, he and his wife* celebrated\ntheir golden wedding anniversary.\nSurviving are his wife, Ruth; two\ndaughters, Mrs. J. W, Turner of\nTrail, and Mrs, Delrol of Wallace,\nIdaho; fivesons,Albert, Edward,Alfred and Harold of Trail, and Johnny of Cranbrook; two brothers, Ernest and Arthur of Wallace; two sisters, Mrs. Noble and- Mrs. Beck of\nCardston, Alta.; and his mother, aged\nawssssswasssw^tassssswaasess.;\n44 TAXI\nCON. CUMMINS\nSOe up to 5 passengers\nAny place In the city\n8EE JACK HOOGERWERF\nStandard Electric\n\u25a0tot    ..\u25a0\nElectrical   Contracting\nPHONE 838     617 VERNON ST\nAcross from New Grand Hotel\nBUY A NEW 1939\nDODGE\nFOR AS LOW AS\nF.O.B. NELSON\nSowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nBAKER STREET PHONE 79\nFACIALS        MANICURES\nSHAMPOOS   PERMANENTS\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhone 327       425 Baker St.\nPHONE 815\nfor better anil prompter service In plumbing repairs and\nalterations.  > -\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 128 FOR COMPLETE\nLaundry Service\nKOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\n3\u00bb3\u00bb\u00ab0tt\u00abmK3&$\u00bbSS&&&-Ki\nGrenfell's Cafe\nEXTRA SPECIAL\u2014       CO -\nCHICKEN DINNER ...\u00abJUC\nK*\u00abSW\u00ab$\u00abJ$SS\u00ab$5\u00ab\u00ab$M\u00abSS\u00ab$$\u00abS:\nEXCLUSIVE ACENTS\n7      \"'Tlfa'T\/TTy\nteUhman\nFoshioivCraft\nCook Clothing\nSUITS, ANDyTOK-OATS\nMade to Measure\nTf  Limited m\n\"ThtUanetStoffiXX\n98. at CranhrookJ\nFuneral services will ba WL\nWednesday at 1:30 pjn. at Clark's.\nFuneral chapel. The family requestsi\nthat no flowers be sent.\nNEW YORK   (CP)- Madeleine\nAvletenaite   has   been   appointed.\nCommissioner General for LlttnSJ\nania to the New York World's fil*\nof 1939.   ,\nTrrriiiinuiinsn>ia*a<i'Miaww<|\nWillys Overland\nONDISPLAY       T\nKline's City Service\nJack McDowell    Howard Ttiurmaitl\n-niTHimnnniimtiniiaiamiiinianiMii\nAnd All Its Products\nThus You Will Help the\nCausa of a Suffering China,\n\u25a0 Lamberts'\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nI\nin MEN'S      'i\nDRESS GLOVES\nLINfD OR UNLINEO :\nCharles Morris\nC I \\ :.\n.. -' \u25a0. -\u25a0\nTIMES TODAY\n;    Showtlmes 2:00-7:00-8:30\nMATINEE TODAY AT 2:00 P.M.\n-PLUS-\nmmmm\n'   MYSTERIOUS\nA MR.M0T0 j\nfeiA..\nALSO-Cartoon-Wsekly News\nStarts Tomorrow\n\"THANKS FOR THE MEMORY\"\nAND\n\"ILLEGAL TRAFFIC\"\nk!#A_Aft_A_t\ni\n5\n\u25a0:\nKeep Your Bin\nlm\"\"nm'1   Full of These\nReally Good\nCOALS\nCalt Lump   $10.50 Ton\nRegal Lump      10.50 .Toil\nCalt Stove ,.,      9.00 Ton\nHillcrest Furnace Lump ..    10.50 Ton\nHillcrest Pea      8.00 Ton\nCompany\/limited\n35-PHONES-36\njltiaitoiiiidaiftihM^togrjftj.\n... ,.u,.^tL^, \u25a0'^\u25a0^\u25a0-IMtmmM\nmM\n____.\nj\u00a3\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1938_12_27","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0414478","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1938-12-27 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1938-12-27 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}