{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2022-05-26","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1938-11-03","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414529\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Cranbrook Proposes ta> Build\nOwn Power Plant\n- Pags light .\u2022;, '>..,\u25a0: j\n\t\ndon for Nelson fa\nTransportation:\n1 Council's Problem,\nPags Rvs  -\nVOLUME 87\nPl\\l CENTS PER COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA- THURSDAY MORNING. NOV. 8.1938\nCHAMBERLAI\nSPANISH VESSEL SHELLS AND SINKS\nFREIGHTER JUST OFF ENGLISH EAST\n(OAST AS SCORES SEE GUNS FLASH\nTo Replace DaW?\nIn a message to \u25a0 General\nFrancisco Franco, commander of\nthe Spanish nationalist forces,\nFrank G, Tinker, above, Ar-\nkansss aviator who fought on\ntoe government side in the\nSpanish civil war, and who\nnow Is back home, has offered\nto take the place of Harold C.\nDahl another American flier,\nto Francisco's prison if the nationalist general will ypermit\nDahl to return to his beautiful wife. Tinker told Franco in\nh)S letter that he brought down\nmore nationalist planes than\nDahl..\n\"OUT OF ORDER\"\nVICTORIA, Nov. \u201eJ \u2022 (CP) -\"R- L,\nMaitland, KX, leader, of toe otft-\n' del Conservative opposition in toe\nBritish Columbia jertldatote  was\nman Whltakker today when he rose\nto draw attention of njernbers to a\nstatement issued yesterday by Premier T. p. Pittdllo.  *\nMr.. Mfitland, member '.tar Vancouver-Point Grey\/ tiding, held before him as,;he rdse ta toe-leglsla-:\ntore a newspaper which carried the\nstatement to which -Mr.- Pattullo\nreferred to toe \"impropriety of a\njudge of-one of -our higher cou-rts\"\ngranting an tajunctlon.,wlthout*first\nnotifying toe government ajppllcS-\ntlon had been made for it\nMr. Pattullo jumped to his feet-\nand asked: 'What has the honorable gentleman in mind.\"\t\nThen toe speaker ruled.Mr. Malt-\nland out of order for referring to a\nnewspsper report.  ;\nCa\u00bbtlegar I.O.D.E.\n\/Chapter Announced\nTONONTO, Nov. I (CPj-For-\nnation of four primary and two\niunlor chapters was announced\naday at a national executive committee meeting of the Imperial\nOrder of the Daughters of the\nEmpire. They Included the Lillian\nKillough chapter at Castlegar,\nB.C.\t\nPigs Attack Child\nNAICAM, Sask., Nov. 3 (CP).-r-\nAttacked by vicious pigs, three-\nyear-old Gerald Villers was taken to\nMelfort, hospital today in critical\ncondition. All his clothing, the calf\nof one leg and some flesh from his\n'side were eaten by the pigs that\nattacked him on a road about one\nhalf, mile from his home.\nSinks,  Afire,   After\n-  , Three Hours of\nPounding ,\nPASSENGERS AND\nCREW TAKEN OFF\nCROMER, Norfolk, England,\nNov. 2 (AP)\u2014The Spanish Insurgent motor vessel Nadir shelled end\ntank tha Spanish government\nfreighter Cantabrla, a few miles\noutside ths territorial waters off\nthe English east coast today.\nSurvivors of the government\nfreighter reaching Cromer near\nwhsrs the one-sided fight started\nsaid the Cantabrla defied the\n\"surrender or fight\" order signalled from the Nadir about 2\nP The Nadir than sent ihell after\nshell Into tha shuddering framework of the Cantabrla for about\nthree hours and battered her Into\na hulk before the freighter caught\nfire. The crew and passengers\nthen wore taken, off.    -\nA coastal > lifeboat took off the\ncaptain, his wife and their two\nchildren and the second steward.\nThe'captain, speaking through an\ninterpreter, said therewere 21 members of the crew and passengers,\nincluding three women snd five children. Most survivors were taken\noff by. the Nadir and ten or 11 by\nthe London-bound steamer, Fatter-\nsonlsn.\nThe captain said he knew ot no\ncasualties but said the Cantabrla\nsank just after he left the ship. She\nwas of 9840 tons with her home\npart at Santander, now insurgent-\nheld. The vessel was owned by the\nMtdatlantlc Shipping company of\nLdndon. ;    .\nHe described the Nadir's armament as five guns, which fired\nbroadside after broadside into the\nCantabrla.\n11 OTHERS' LANDED,,\nThe Pattersohlan, a 315-toh steamer front Newcastle, later landed 11\nof the Cantabria's crewmen trom\n\u25a0IHebgatsyat^Great Yar*ou\\h.r ..-'\ntaxis\n\u201ei waa\nfnjurW although \"all \"were suffer-\nin!! from exhaustion. . ','>\u25a0\u25a0\nThe disposal of toe persona token\naboard the Nadir from lifeboats\nwas hot, knowjn, as the Nadir dte-\nappeared lh the' mists of the North\nSea from the bombardment.\nThe. freighter was overtaken and\nshelled just outside the three-mile\nlimit and the rolling thunder of\nguns was easily heard on shore,\nflashes of the firing and smoke rolling from the merchantman..\n' The location Just outside the territorial waters, however, prevented\nwhile scores of persons saw the\nthe admiralty trom sending a warship to toe scene, though scores of\nfishing trawlers and other ships\ndrew ss near as they dared. Tlve admiralty followed reports of the uneven encounter closely.\nFARM LABORER\nFOUND IN WELL\nMELVILLE, Sask., Ifov. % (CP).\n\u2014Police tonight were Investigating\nthe death of Tony Skochkowski,\nfarm laborer whose body was found\nto a well today on the farm of his\nemployer, John Grabowsky of the\nBrewer district, eight miles northeast of Melville. Skochkowski had\nbeen missing etace Sunday night\n111 CHINESE FINED\nVANCOUVER, Nov. J (CP) -\nOne hundred and eleven Chinese\npleaded guilty in police court today to charges of being Inmates of\ngaming houses and were fined $5\neach by Magistrate H. S. Woods.\nBail of $15 each was forfeited by\n15 others who failed to appear for\ntrial. \u2022 \u25a0\nINION NATIONALE GOV'T. WINS TWO\nIUEBEC SEATS; ONE RECOUNT LIKELY\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP) - Quebec's Union Nationals government\nsnatched the Montreal St. Louis\nlegislative assembly seat from the\nLiberals and held the Stanstead\ncounty seat against a Liberal challenge tpday in two byelectlons that\nEerved toe two-year-old admln-\ntion's unbeaten record at the\n\" Louis Pitch. K.C., carried the metropolitan riding by a scant 69 votes\nover Raoul Trepanler, Labor leader\ncampaigning as a \"Liberal-Demo-\n, crat\" with official Liberal support;\nand Henri Gerin, lawyer from\nCoatlcook, was returned by 812\nvotes over Dr. E. C. Cabana of Ma-\nfog to Stanstead, both on the basis\nt unofficial tabulations.\nTrepanler, president of Montreal\ntrades and labor council and a vice-\npresident of toe trades and labor\ncongress of Canada, said he would\ncall for a recount If tomorrow's official check upheld his lawyer opponent's majority, \"The fight Is not\nover yet,\" he said.\nThe vote from the 47 polls In St.\nLouis wss 1539 tor Fitch and 1490\nfor Trepanler.\nThe individual count for the.two\ncandidates was not available tonight\nfrom Stanstesd's 44 polling precincts.\nIn the turbulent St. Louis voting,\nmarked by 20 arrests, toe Liberal\nparty's representation tor the city\nriding was broken for toe first time\nIn 22 years. Peter Bercovltch had\nheld the seat all that time, until\nhis recent resignation to contest a\nfederal constituency.\nA. D. Wheeler, Ainsworth Pioneer,\nPasses in Sacramento,Age 84 Years\nAlfred D. Wheeler, Alnsworth\npioneer, who trekked into the Kootenay from Montana with pack-\nhorses in 1804, completing the lake\nportion of the trip in a small boat,\nand who for many years past has\nlived in retirement with nls son,\n< Charles S. Wheeler, at the Cl\\mie\nhotel, Sacramento, Calif., died to\nhis sleep October 25, aged 84 years.\nIn sending this information to The\nDally News, Charles Wheeler writes\nthat his father spent his last days\nlargely in thoughts of \"His Koote--\nnay,\" as he termed toe district;\nwhere he lived tor nearly half a\ncentury. It having been his ambition to pay It one more visit;\nwhich he had fixed for next year.\nTo the last Mr. Wheeler was quite\nactive, to such extent as his heart\nwould permit.       ' ...   '   'i\nNUMBER 169\nPACT\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii.\nPrisoners    Pray    f*|\nCondemned Man's\n7'':yr.U(e:7-\n\u2022 POTSBHRGH, Nov.'2 (AP)\n\u2014The prisoners \u2022to Allegheny ,\ncounty's jail knelt to prayer tonight ih an unique demonstration seeking to save the life of\nWilliam McKlnley Blackwell, a\nfellow Inmate scheduled to walk\nthe last mile to toe'electric chair\nnext Sunday night.\nAnd 468 of them signed a petition to Governor George H. .\nEarle pleading for a commutation of sentence for toe man\nconvicted of toe murder ot E;\nRichard Parker, a rival, tor the\naffections ot his common law\nwife. \u25a0'\u25a0 a' \u2014 ' '\n:\u25a0 Warden John McNeil Joined\nto signing toe petition.;\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilliiiiiiiniilli\nDOMINATION OF\nCHINA PART Of\nJAPANESE PLAN\nTO RECONSTRUCT\nJapanese-Dominated\nCentral   Gov't.\nAgreed on\nNEW OBJECTIVE\nIS SALVATION\nTOKYO, Nov. * (AP)-Japan\ngave notice of her Intention to\nforce China Into a solid bloc with\nManchoukuo and tot Japanese\nempire for the political and economic domination of East Asia.\n\" Extension of domination over\nChina to carry out Japan's \"Immutable policy\" tor far eastern\nreconstruction after too present\nwar with Chin's was announced\nIn,a format statement In eoijnae-\ntion with tomorrow* national, Holiday on the birthday anniversary\nof the late Emperor Meljl.\n10, and .._\npire created\nconquest in\n,^\u00bb.\/ baa been\ndoubled by. toe-present, war which\nstarted July 7, 19S7, and thus far\nhas brought 575,000. square miles of\n13 Chinese provinces under at least\nnominal Japanese rule.\n- Only those nations, \"which are to\nsympathy with-us\"\u2014 apparently,\nGermany and Italy with .whom Japan is allied In an anti-communist\npact\u2014were singled out for .Japan's\ngratitude to the government statement Other western powers were\n\u2022itoored. '        .      , . \u201e.\n\"What Japan seeks Is establishment ol a new order which will ensure permanent stability in East\nAsls,\" said the statement. \"In this\nlies the ultimate purpose of our\nmilitary campaign.\n\"This new Order will have writs\nfoundation a tripartite relationship\nof mutual aid and coordination\namong Japan and Manchoukuo and\nChina in political,, economic, cultural and other fields. The object is\nto secure international Justice, to\nperfect a Joint defence against communism, to create a new culture and\nto.realise close economic cohesion\nthroughout east Asia.\" '. \u2022\u25a0*\nAGREEMENT DRAWN\nSHANGHAI, Nov. 3 (Thursday) (AP) \u2014 ChlnSie officials of\n\u25a0 the Japanese-guided governments\noVPaipIng and Nanking were reported today to have agreed on\nestablishment of a Japanese-dominated central oovernment of\nChina \"based on the will of the\npeople,\" ,\nDomel, Japanese nsws agency,\nwhich published the report, said\nseparate local administrations under Japanese auspices, would be\nest up at newly captured Canton\nand Hankow before final amalgamation of ona oovernment.\nThe new central government'*\nobjective was described at \"salvation\" of China through \"stamping out of Communism and establishment of Chinese-Japanese cooperation.\"\nCameron Goes to\nNorth Vancouver\n'NORTH VANCOUVER. B. C,\nNov. 2 (CP). \u2014 Constable John\nCameron, former police chief to\nVancouver who has been serving\nwith the British Columbia police al\nZeballos, B. C, today took over his\nnew duties with the provincisl\npolice detachment here.\nPresbyterian Synod\nFinances Are\/AHe'ad'\nVANCOUVER,, Not,. 2 \u25a0 (CP) -\nThe financial position of the Pros-\nbyterian synod of British Columbia\nis \"about $2100 ahead of this time\nlast year,\" A. C. Wiihart, convener\nof the home missions committee,\nsaid at the synod's annual meeting\nhere today.\nHe said that, despite serious problems, he could report \"good hope\nend an optimistic spirit\" :\u25a0\u25a0\u2022... \u25a0\nWARNS AGAINST FRAU6\u00bb.\nWASHINGTON, Nov. I. (AP). -\nThe United States senate campaign\nAsks Regulations On\nLabor Be Applied\nHi| District \u2022\nVICTORIA,   Nov.   2   (OP)M\nSouthern British Columbia, despite itt Industrial activity and\nsteadily growing population; Is\nworts, off for roads than any\nother portion of the province, R.\nR. Burnt, (Llb.-Rosalahd'Trall),\ntold the legislature In the debate\nOn the throne speech todiy.\n\"Tha road over the summits\nfrom Rossland to' Cascade should\nbe put Into condition toat win\nmake It e safe, highway. The\npeople of my riding need the fruit,\nvegetables and meatt of the Okanagan and the Boundary country,\" Mr. Burnt tald. \"Th%y need\nour business. But owing to tht\nrough state of the road the goods\nart So damaged by dust tnd bruiting that competition with Washington state It out of tho question.\n\"Front a tourist standpoint alone\nwe should have better Highways to\nthe southern Interior. Hundreds of\ntourists, both Canadian and Americans have told me they would like\nto come to toe coast via Canada,\nbut they can not be Induced to suffer toe bodily discomfort to themselves, or damage to their cars toat\nfollows a trip over the 'hump' from\nRossland to Cascade City.\n\"There are only 25 miles remaining to be done and all my constituent) ask is that the road be\nexpenditures committee, reporting\nIt had found evidence Indicating\nthe likelihood of election frauds\nIn Jersey City, stronghold of Mayor\nFrank Hague, warned New Jersey\nsenatorial candidates today they\nWduld flue a Congressional investigation if corrupt practices were un-\nearthed.   \u2022 -,,\u25a0 *T'.'.',:T \u25a0\nrns Urges Safe Road\nto Cascade; Bridge Need\nR. R, BURNS\nwidened and a surface put on so\nthat it can be. graded, switchbacks\neliminated and a decent driving\nsurface laid.** '*  ' .   \u25a0\n.(CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO)\nSTEEL STRIKERS\nRETURN TO WORK\nCLEVELAND, Nov, a (AP). \u2014\nA group ot Committee tor Industrial Organisation \"\"little \u25a0 steel\"\nworkers returned to work at Republic Steel, Corporation's Upson division, today over protests of a plant\nunion claiming to represent a majority-of the\nPolice \u25a0\u25a0'\nas\npresented cards from the company\nauthorising their entrance.   >\nVOTE ENMTRIKn*\"j j    \u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u2022\nMffiDUHOWN. 0,,'Nov. 2 (AP).\n\u2014Committee for industrial Organisation organizer Sam Sponseller announced tonight that members of\nthe Pioneer Workers union had voted to call of their month-old strike\nat toe P. Lorillard, Co., tobacco\nplant here, at midnight. The vote\nwas 577 to 1, he said.\ni _,..,  ,,; \u2014.   \u25a0       ..\nTemperature Soars\nBy The Associated Press\nSouth winds bringing heated air\nfrom the Eiilf states sent temperatures' in the middle west yesterday\nto new highs for this late in the\nyear, while heSvy snow fell to\nsouthern Idaho and northern Utah.\nReadings were 20 degrees above\nnormal jn most of the midwest In\nChicago, toe temperature reached,\n76,4 degrees, breaking the previous\nlate season record\"of76 on Nov. 5,\n1924.     i        ' ,- \u25a0\nIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\n$1000 IN CASH AND\nJEWELRY TAKEN AS\nFAMILY HELD UPy.\nNORTH VANCOUVER, B. CL\nNov. JMCP). \u2014 .Two.i*iiiikt3 .\narmed bandits entered the-home\nof J. T. Summerfield in nearby -\nLynn Valley tonight and fled\nwith. $1000 Worth of Jewelry\nafter binding and gagging the\nrealtor, his wife and two ser-\n'ate.safe after \"threatenini to\nshoot him and kidnap his grandson, who lives next door. '\n-Police learned that ttfe men\nconfronted Summerfield when\nhe walked in the house trom\nwork and had tied him up with,\nhis wife and the two servants.\nOne of the men smashed the\nmiddle aged businessman twice\nwith his. fist and forced him to\nopen,the site. \u25a0\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nNational Service\nWould Be Glory to\nYounger Generation\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (CP-Havas)-\nSir Arnold Wilson, right-wing Conservative who long has championed better relations between Great\nBritain and Germany, today appeal.\ned for compulsory universal service for all.men of military age\nfrom. It upwards. \"I believe the\nyounger, generation would glory to\nnational service,\" he said.\nTHOMAS MORAN, WIDELY KNOWN\nPROSPECTOR OF NELSON PASSES\n74 Years Old, Veteran\nMining Man Sick\nTwo Months\nAnother Nelson old timer, Thomas\nMoran, died at 8:12 Wednesday night\nat Kootenay Lake General hospital,\nfollowing a sickness of two months.\nHO had been admitted to the hospital about six weeks ago.\n\u25a0 Mr. Moran-was born 74 year\u00bb\nago in Guelph, Ont He worked as\nstationary engineer tor numerous\ncompanies in The fast before mov-\ntogwest to Nelaon in Im.\nWhile Jn Nelaon He has worked for\nthe Kooteftay Breweries, He hat\nbeen employed at Blrchbank in the\ndistrict and at tot sawmill at West-\nley. At one time he acted es foreman at the Relief-Arlington mine\nat.Erie.\nPROMINENT PROSPECTOR\n' Mr. Moran* used 'to do a great\ndeal of prospecting to the Kootenays. His numerous mining properties include. the Big Boulder at\n49-mile' creek; He .held stock in\nmany mines.\nHe used to work tor the C. Pi R.\nIn the Crow's Nest district His various interests carried him into Montana and Washington.1\nFor toe past 20,yeers he has lived\nat the Madden hotel in Nelson.\nI Mr. Minn-was a single man, his\nonly survivors being his brothers\nPatrick at Appledale and Robert of\nPortage la Prairie. They are now In\nNelson.- ,'..., >\nSATISFIED\nIS\nARSON QUEST\nMayor Groutage Sums Up Opinion After\nEvans Writes'RefusIng to Give\nEvidence; Nd iGuh Porm^      ,\nTRAIL. B.C., No*. \u00bbr\"We are\nfully satisfied with toe reports of\nChief Laurie and also the provlncl.\nal police and reports sent to us by\nChief Campbell ist Tsdanac,\" declared Mayor E.L. Groutage, chairman, at the'monthly meeting ot the\nTrail police commission this aft.\nernoon, after reading.a portion of a\nletter tram Arthur H. Evans, mine,\nmill and smelter .union organiser,;\nas follows!       .  \\   .', .\n\"After a serious consideration of\nthe decisions made by the members\nof your commission October 28 in\nregard to the procedure to be followed for the presentation of information and evidence to support\nsny charge of 'laxity of desire on\nthe part of Mr. John Laurie chief\nconstable of Trail to apprehend\nthose pasties responsible for toe\ntheft and arson of my ear October\n5th, 1038', I wish to inform you that\n1 will submit so information or\nevidence before your commission.\n.\u2022\u25a0'-*,, \u201e .      T.     \u2022     T\n\"Tbe rest of the letter,\" toe mayor\ntald, \"deals only with personalities,\nand,Isn't worth bothering about\"\nCOMMISSION MET' V\nEVA(S8 FRIDAY ;,...       .\n\"! feci that everything has been\ndone that, is possible to do and\nthat the' chief received the foil\ncooperation of the Tadanac and\nprovincial police\", Mayor Groutage\nssid. \"I dont think toe charms\nmade could be substantiated by Mr.\nEvans,-and that is why he didn't\nsubmit them In writing.\"\n(Continued on Page Ten)\niiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiii\nPartners   Use  Tricky\nf    Methods, Grain\nThieves\nCALGARV, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nSouthern Alberta farmers with'-,\ntop-filled granaries are on guard\nagainst wheat thieves.\nProven systems are being used.\nThe modern grain thief uses a\ntruck. As straw covered planks\n. spike-studded   are   placed  to\nfront of granary doors and truck\ntires are sure-to be punctured.\nTo assure identification of'\ngain, farmers are mixing con-\ntti, earning an identification\nmark with their wheat Others\n. - use rice and email beans.\nllllllilllillllllllliillililllliilliliniiiiiili\nBOUNDARIES OF\nCZECHOSLOVAKIA\nREMAPPED FOR\nHUNGARY CLAIM\n,-;;:   7     \u00bb-' f,'.:    '';-;   . ..:     *\nEstimated Gain  of\n4875 Square Miles\nfor Hungary\nOCCUPATION WILL\nSTART ON NOV. 5\nBy MELVIN K. W.HITELEATHER\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nT VIENNA, Nov. 2 (AP)-German\nand Italian mediators todty remapped the boundaries of Cseoho-\nilovakla, awarding Hungary tha\nmajor portion of land and population the claimed from the thinking republic.\nThough   official   flguret  were\nlacking, It wat ettlmatod' Hungary gained 4875 tqutrt  mllei\nand 860,000 Inhabitants at tht ax-\n;   pense  of  Ciechoslovakla  which\nalready hat lost Sudetenland to\nGermany and the Tetchtn region\nto PeJ\"W;' ';;\"\nto negotiations before Rome and\n.Bfrlto wore-eaHed-ii. to medlate,\nCzechoslovakia had agreed to cede\n3800 square miles without arbitration but, toe rest of Htogary's original demands\u2014estimated as high\nes 8000 square miles at first-were\nput up to the totalitarian powers tor\nfinal decision..   -,      \u2022\nForeigSi Ministers Count Clano of\nItaly.and JoaChim von Rlbbentrop\nof Germahy to a short meeting today gave Hungary a wide strip of\nthe territory she demanded including\nUzhosod, capital of autonomous Ru-\nthenia, the only railway connecting\nRuthenla with Slovakia.\nIn toe disputed region only Bratislava, on toe Danube near toe Juncture of Czechoslovakia, Hungary\nand Germany, was left to the central Prague government along-wlto\nthe city of Nltra to southwest Slovakia. ;, ', \u25a0 ) \\ '\nBoth Csechdelovskla and Hungary\nagreed to accept the award as final\nand to start fulfilling it at once.\nHungarian occupation-of the territory is to be started November 5\nand completed November 10. A\nHungarian-Czechoslovak oommittee\nwas provided to work out stages of\noccupation,\nB. C. POLICE AID\ni  TRAIL OFFICERS\nIN CAR CHECKUP\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Nov. 2 \u2014 Cooperating with city police in a checkup\nof motor vehicles and drivers in\nTrail and district provincial police\nhighway patrolmen are working In\nthis district\nthis, district. .Reckless driving,\nbrakes, lights, tires and licences\nare to be checked by the officers.\nMembers of toe highway patrol,\ntaking part in the checkup, are\nConstable Ralph A'. Lies, Nelson;\nConstable W. McCulloch, Penticton;\nConstable John Henry, Castlegar;\nConstable W. T. Armson, Grand\nForks; Constable Frank Slater,\nCranbrook; and Constable R. P.\nFrayn, Pernle.\nNELSON\nVictoria   ..\nNanaimo\nVancouver\nKamloops   \t\nPrince George\nEstevan Point..\nPripee Rupert\nftfi-r...::::::\nSao Francisco\nSpokane .....\nlibs Angeles ..\nPenticton   \t\nGrand Forks ..\nCranbrook ......\nCalgary   _\t\nEdmonton\n48\n40\n42\n20\n4\n45\n42\n54\n50\n58\n36\n36\n30\n36\n25\n30\n30\n24\n26\n24\n22\nSwift Current .u-i.__.\nMoose- Jaw ...... .....  26     34\nPrince Albert .   24     84\nSaskatoon- ..-.....   22     33\nQu'Aopelle    \u25a0..-.   24     80\nWinnipeg .-..:  34     48\nForecasts \u2014 Kootenay: Moderate\nto fresh cast to southeast winds,\npartly cloudy and mild with show.\ners St night    -\n-  V >    \u25a0'  A '   H\nRECOGNITION OF ITALY'S CONQUEST\nOF ETHIOPIA ALSO APPROVED; VOTE\n345-138 AFTER A DAY-LONG DEBA1\nDictator's Pinch-\nHitter\nDuring the Illness ot Kemal\nAtaturk, president-dictator of\nTurkey, toe reins of government lit that country- are held\nto toe hands of Abdul Halik\nRenda, above, president of toe\nnational assembly, who called\na council of ministers recently\nto discuss \"constitutional problems,\" during which he pointed\nout that toe constitution of Turkey provides toat the president\nof the national assembly shall\nassume the\/ interim presidency\nin the event of reslmation, prolonged Illness or death of toe\nSresident President-Dictator\ntaturk is still to* a critical\ncondition.\n'\" faffi%f^:?'(i&:-\u00a3fm&\nbllfty eif tSraatoent meeting before\nChristmas appeared more remote\ntonl&t \"with toe state \"of Rt.Hon.\nErnest Lapointe, minister of,- Justice and*acting prime minister, that\n\"prospects; are it wlU-toeet at the\nbeginning of the new year,\"\nFollowing a cabinet meeting late\nthis afternoon Mr. Lapointe said\nonly routine matters had been dealt\nwith. While there was no decision\nas to the calling of parliament, he\nsaid it was unlikely to be summoned before Christmas. Earlier it had\nbeen reported the date would be\nchosen today.\n\"We are not sure It. would expedite matters if we were to meet be-\nfor Christmas,\" Mr. Lapointe said.\nHe did not know what date the\ngovernriient Would aim at for, prorogation and the government had\nnot been advised the exact date for\nmonth the Kiflg or Queen would\nvisit Canada next year.\nAnother  Surrender\nto Force Charges -M\n\u2022 Opposition       9\nWITHORAWALOF\nTROOPS STRESSED\nBy J. F. SANDERSON   '\".S\nCanadian Press Staff.Writer   j\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (CP Cable)-\nThe house of commons tonight\nendorsed Prime Minister Chamberlain's Intention of putting Into;\neffect the  Anglo-Italian agreement and British recognition of\ntht conquett of Ethiopia by Italy,\n-At tht end of a, day-long debate, the teal of approval waa ,\nattached by a vote of 345 to 138\nwhile off the east coast the Spanish   civil   war,   much   discussed\nduring toe  debate, wat  being\nbrought olote to  England at a \u2022\nSpanlh    Insurgent    naval    oraft\nshelled and tank a Spanlih merchantman. ,..\/\nLabor and Liberals pitted their\nstrength against \"the government\nforces in the house, with only a\nsmall group ot. Conservatives abstaining from voting. !\\j\nThe opposition based their- casffL\non the charge the agreement wall\nanother surrender to force and an-i;;\nother bad bargain with the totall.\ntarian states, the cumulative effed|,,t\nof which might become disastrous to ,\nGreat Britain in the future.      ,\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nc.\nDead at Procter\n< Death claimed another Kootenay\nresident when Carl Ludwlg Owesen\ndied near his home at Procter some\n mm^m\n.   marping lytoi?\ndead a short distance inside his gate.\nMr. Owesen, who was 08 years\nof age, was born in Norway, He,\ncame to Procter about 15 years ago,\nliving by himself. \u2022 \u25a0  ' ' \u25a0\nLittle could be learned about him\nexcept that an aunt, Mrs. Fred Cagle\nof Procter survives him, He had no\nfamily in this district. \u2022       ' * 1.9\nNo burial date has yet been set,\nbut it is believed toat he will be\nburled at Balfour.    '- -;,*'.    j\nNazaroff Will Goto\njail for Failure to\nPay Fine, Trail Court\nTRAIL, B.C, Nov. 2 Falling to\npay $19 tine and $4.50 costs, M. K.\nNazaroff, Crescent Valley, will\nspend 10 days in Jail, the alternative of jl sentence given by Stipendiary Magistrate Donald. MacDonald to provincial police court\ntoday after Nazaroff was convicted\nof driving in a reckless manner.\nIt was charged that he passed another car on a curve on Schofield\nhighway Tuesday afternoon, almost causing a serious accident\nSPANISH BATTLE\nHENDAYE, France, Nov. 2 CAP,\"\n\u2014Insurgent military dispatches reported today the insurgent-offen*.\nsive had developed info a broad\nfrontal attack on governmental lines I\nIn toe Eriro valley region of East*\nera Spain.\nThe drive which first centred on\nthe line toward Mora de Ebro 'fan-1\nned out along both flanks extend-'-\nIng the battle along a sector nearly\n10 miles long.'\nThis battle has been raging inter*\nmittently since July 25, and is pet*\nhaps the greatest ot the war.\n\u25a0 DERELICT ABANDONED '     j\nSEATTLE, Nov. 2 (AP)-^The mystery derelict hUlk of a 45-foot fish-;\ntog boat was abandoned to ths\npounding seas on reefs near Polni\nHugh light in southeastern Alaska\ntonight by the coast guard cutter'-\nHaida. \u2022  I\nThe Haida said ft was unable tesjjj\nraise the vessel.\nDR. WEIR CHALLENGES MEMBER\nDEFENDS GOV'T. HOSPITAL POLK\nbudget  Speech  Mc\nBe Heard Next\nWednesday\nRoosevelt Radio\nAddress Arouses\nPolitical Pitch\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (XP).-\nPolitical Interest to the radio address President Roosevelt wUl deliver from Hyde park Friday night\nis rising to fever pitch in Washington. The impression is growing it\nranks in political importance in the\npresident! own Judgment with his\nacceptance speeches in 1032 and\n1936 snd the inaugurals ot 1933 and\n1887.        j\nTwo Sentenced\nin Coast Theft\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nAngus Cameron and John Beckett\nwere each sentenced to one year's\nimprisonment today after Cameron\npleaded guilty to holding up John\nRobertson and stealing tm and a\n$175 watch on a downtown street\nFriday night and Beckett admitted\nhe knew the rohbery was )>eing\ncommitted..\nThe holdup was staged while\nRobertson was walking with Beckett's wife. Beckett said he had gone\nwith Cameron at first but stayed\naway when he realized Robertson\nwas with his wife. Beckett forced\nthe women to take the money from\nCameron and band It over to him.\n'   \u2666  '\nVICTORIA, Nov. 2 (CP) - .Itfi\nspeakers contributed to the debate!\nof the throne speech in the leglsle**\ntore today and whips of all three\nparties' expect to exhaust their list\nof speakers by Monday or Tuesday^*;\nwith Hon. John Hart, finance min-*\niater, bringing down his budgetf\nspeech next Wednesday,\nToday's list of speakers was. dls<*.I\nrupted when Hon. G.M. Weir, prov- |\nincial secretary, arose after Dr. I,\"\nD. Hunter, (Cons-Victoria), con?*,\neluded trr. Huntet*B comments on\nhospitals brought quick retort from\nDr. Weir Who quoted statisttcaV\nwhich'he challenged the Victoria,\nmember to deny. .   .58\nR. R. Burns, (Llb-Rossland-TraU)}-.,\nTom King, (Lib-Columbia) and D\".\nW. Strachan, (Lib-Dewdney), were:\nother speakers of the day with E. T.-.-:\nKenney, (Lib-Skeena), adjourning.\nDr. J. D. Hunter, Cons. Victoria;\ncriticized the government for' lta'j\ntreatment of municipalities and hospitals, its failure to Implement the\nhealth insurance scheme, and to\nmeet all the cost of education.\n' Immediately Dr. Hunter sat dswnjv\nHon. G. M. Weir, provincial secretary arose and charged the Victoria\nConservative  member  with  maki1\ntog    \"mlsstatemhnts,    inslnuatioi\nand casting aspersions.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\n m\n ..... ..\nPAGE TWO.\nWINERY TEAM\nWINS TRAIL CUP\nFOR FIRST AID\n: >TRAIL, a C Nov, 2 - The La-\nr Day sports committee cup, post-\n\"i year for the ConsoUdated\n4 Smelting Company . ol\nyear tor the Consolidated\n\u201e & Smelting Company.of\n, ^Ja Limited TraU first aid open\njompetition was presented to the\nISflery No. 2 team by R. W. Dia-\n\u2022ttond, assistant plant superintendent, after 18 teams competed ,at\n\"tooflal hall tonight. The handi-\ncempetitlon was won by the\nterv shop team, the S 0 2\n, team being awarded second\nllcap price. The refinery team,\nV comprises A. J. Burwash,\n, D. J- Teek, H. B. Qualn,\n_. Yotmg and C. S, McArthur,\nient will meet the winner of\nKimberley open competition\n.Intercity contest'\n\u201ee hundred clUzens lammed the\nnorial hall to witness the con-\n\u25a0ponsored by the St John's\ndance association, Trail com-\ni little comedy was added to the\nv when Jim Curtis and Palmer\nedge took the part of two, in-\nsated motorcyclists who pro-\nj, Interference for the first aid\n\u2022ms as they worked on two pants who were supposed to be\nind lying at the side of a high-\n1$ fft^i^t-fe'.-a'as to render\n' aid to a man who had fallen\ni a scaffold and who was lying\nground with his back over\n__j. The man was conscious and\nild answer questions. The third\niblem was identifying bones of\nbody, rendering first aid for\nne poisoning, extracting a for-\nsubstance frdms- the eye and\nlaging a hot water bottle to\nshoulder'---   -.   '\u25a0\u25a0\ntie teami ttfllow:\nnonia plant: T. S. Harrison,\nUh, G. Webb, J. G. Milligan,\naterson and J. ..Craig, patient.\npentes shop: A.- Lane, captain,\nAgonizing\n(Salt Rheum),\nNo rest, day or Bight, for tfcoso\n\"doted with.that awful skin dis-\nlei eczema, or salt rheum as it is\nntBonly called. -\n,The intense burning, itching aad\nting, especiaUy at night, or\ni the affected part is exposed to\nng heat, or hot water, are almost'\ntable, and relief is gladly\nmeil.\nTo get rid of euema It is noccs-\nr te have the blood cleansed by\nuse of a thoroughly reliable\nmedicine  such   as Burdock\nI Bitters which during the past\nI years has net with great success\ni relieving such diseases by its blood\n\u25a0f sad purifying properties.\ni T. MUburn Co., Ltd., Toronlo, Ont,\n\"\u25a0-TyT's^-'>*^Advi*\nObjects\nWhen Capt Angus Walters,\nof the Bluenose, most famous\nof fishing schooners, gets married he will be through with\nsailing... or so the bride-to-\nbe, pretty 22-year-old Mildred\nButler, above, says. She doesn't\nwant Capt. Welters to take his\nfamous craft around Bermuda\nin a $5000 challenge race with\ntiie Gertrude L. Thebaud, perennial Bluenose rival.\nT. Woods, W. G. Bruoe, C. Haggarty\nand M. F, Glover, patient\nElectric shop: M. C. Clarke, captain, I. D. lanson, S. By, H. Odell,\nand W. Robinson, patient\nFire department: A. 0. Woodrow,\ncaptain, F. L. Wagner, S. McKenzie, H. Folvik and J. P. McCabe, patient\nRefinery team No. 1: A. Baldaisl,\ncaptain, M. Gordon, J. A. Callen,\nG. F; F. Sinclair, and T. Parry, parent,\nRefinery team No. 2: A. J. Bur-\nWash, captain, D. J. Teek, H. B,\nQuain, P, B. Young and C. S. McArthur, patient\ni SO 2 Plant: J; C. WUliams, captain, A. C. Blckerton, D. Haggarty,\nA. Frame-and H. A. Oliver, patient.\nSmelter D & L'si J, E. Powell,\ncaptain, E. Jurick, T. B. Couch,\nFrank Hudoklln and M Lillejord,\npatient\nMachine shop: C. F. H. Jenkin,\ncaptain, A. Colonello, W. A. Forrest D, McDonald arid A, Shutek,\npatient, W. Page span.\nStorage plant: J. E. Longstaff,\ncaptain, S. Stephenson, H. Conn, L.\nGrimard and H. Campbell, patient,\nW. Lightbum, spare.\nPlumbing shop: A. Shrubsole,\ncaptain, T. M. Kringhaug, R. McNeill;-M. Hodson and H: Nuttall,\npatient\nSmoke plant: E. V. McGauley,\ncaptain, J, Randall, R. Kirby, R.\nDeane and F. E- Boss, patient,\nZinc plant: A. J. Edlund, cap-\ntail), L. ., GlMivffle.- E. Smith, ,T.\n^sv&'ahd A. McDonald, patient\nGlasses on 10-Day Trial Fffif!\nM DON'T SEND A PENNY-JUST MAIL COUPON\nJust try them, prove at our risk bow greatly out fine glasses will\nImprove your appearance, enable you to tee far or near,\nread the smallest print or thread the finest needle.,\nPerfect satisfaction guaranteed, or the 10-day trial costs\nS)u nothing.   - \"'\u25a0 < !\nIRiCT FROM THE FACTORY TO YOU-When you get\n.' glasses from us, you are dealing direct with one of the\n'   largest optical laboratories in Canada. You - save the I\nmiddleman's profit. Glasses in latest styles for. as Uttle as I\nPAY NOTHING UNLESS\nSATISFIED\nTry our glasses 10 days and\nnights at our risk. If not\namazed and delighted, they\ncost you nothing. Mail free\ncoupon todayI\nVictoria Optical\nCompany\nSept. SN-38, 273 Yonge St.,\n\u25a0\u25a0\"-\u25a0'.'\u25a0. TOROlWO, ONT.     T\n\u2014-\u25a0FREE COUPON\t\nVictoria Optical Co.,\nDept SN-38, 278'Yonge St,\nToronto, Ont.\nI would like a pair of your\nstylish glasses on 10-day Free\nTrial.. Knot perfectly satisfied,\nthey cost me nothing.\nName \u201e\nAge .\nAddress\nP.0\t\n. Prov..\n(Mile for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\n...Nelson, B.C\n.   GEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   E?<tEUENT DINING ROOM\nmttymtu^mmmtmrnm^^memt^iv^m'^^ewmtimtmammm^m\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\ntame-F, W, Hawe, R. P. Win-\nId, J.-N, Hyland, D. Lawler, C.\nMartin, E. J. Hargraves, Mrs.\nThompson, Miss K. f. Sanderson,\nP. McGoldwIch, Vancouver; L.\nHeal,D. B. Butchart Armstrong;\nCTTMesker, Midway; Mf. and\ni. J. Donkin, Fernie; H. S. Law\nrence, \u25a0' PenUcton; P. W, Eldrldge,\nPrinceton; R: E. Miller, Penticton;\nMiss G. E. Johnson, Nakusp;' L.\nRoberts, G. C. Jtartln, ,W. H. McVeigh, A. H.. Soby. Calgary; J. M,\nPrice, Winnipeg; A. Anderson, C.\nM- Wards, Medicine Hat; A. C.\nVan Dessel, H. M, Petty, Spokane.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER  MHIt,\"   Newly Renovated Throuah-\nDuff erin Hotel\t\nM0 Seymour. It, Vancouver, 9,0.\nA.   PATERSON,   late   of\nColeman, Altai, Proprietor\n\u25a0fes\n1*10\nSPOKANE\/WASH., HOTELS\n\u2014\u2014\nWhen In SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at ths   .\n410 Riverside  ||M4A| VAf MITV      0\u00abf\"\"n*\n.Avenue      IIOI-W J VUnG I \u2022 Pulna Bldg.\nEVERY COURTESY SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\nNelson Customs\nReceipts Total\nTotal customs and Inland revenue\nreceipts tor Nelson district were\n$13,009.50 In October, 1838, figures\nat the Nelson office show. Receipts\na year ago were $12,494.72, showing\na gain this year of 8814.87.\nNelson receipts this year were\n(8813.14, and receipts a year ago\nwere $10,721.82. Figures in Uie whole\ndistrict this year except for Nelson,\nwere up generally over last year.\nReceipts for October followi Nelson, $0613.14; Nelway, $1887.03; Midway, (280.74; Cascade, $129.04; Carson, $63.44; Waneta, $926.20; total,\n$13,009.59;\nSpokane Tumbles\n5-0 In '31 Opener\nSEATTLE, Nov. 2 (CP)-Seattle\nSeahawks downed Spokane Clippers\n9-0 tonight to inaugurate the 1938-\n30 Pacific Coast Hockey league season here.\nRon Moffatt scored the lone first\nperiod goal, and added another in\n(he second to scores by Hal Tabor\nand Dave Downle. Tabor wound\nup the scoring in the third period,\nThe game was marked by a third\nperiod fistic display which finally\nwound up with Referee Bill Shaver\nannouncing he would report Connie\nKing and Dave Gllhooly of the\nClippers to League President Fred\nTaylor for \"Pushing and arguing\nwith the referee.\",\nPat Egan, formerly of Nelson,\nassisted \"on Ron. Moffatt's second\nperiod score. Penalties\u2014Egan, the\nteoond period box score read.\nSpokane: Timminsi Gilhooly, Kenny; McAdsm; Ripley, Roche, Subs:\nKing, Lennon Lcswick, Merrill, Arbour.\nSeattle: Venne; Houbregs, Egan;\nDownie; Moffatt Doraty. Subs;\nDaley, Blyth, Tabor, Tomson, Jerwa.\nReferee\u2014Bill Shaver, Seattle.\nTrail Community\nChest Starts'38\nDrive for Funds\nTRAIL, B.C,, Nov. 2\u2014The sum of\n$6000 Its objective, the Trail Community chest today embarked on Its\nannual fund-raising campaign.\nDisbursements for the year June\n1, 1937 to May 81, 1838 totalled $8,-\n058.80, some $61.84 over the total receipts of $5,996.95, R. W. Diamond,\npresident reported. Demand on tbe\nfund increases each year, he said,\nand since the' chest's organization\n10 years ago yearly expenses have\njumped from $2,080.79 to $6,058.80.\nOver 100 Children\nat Sheep Creek's   *\u25a0\nHallowe'en Party\nSHEEP CREEK, B.C.\u2014A splendid\nHallowe'en party arranged by Mrs.\nMay, Mrs. C. Lane and Mrs. H. Lar-'\nsen-and to which every child at\nthe Creek was invited, took place\nat the Sheep Creek haU October 31.\nOver 100 children were present.\nParents were Invited spectators,\nGames were played during the\nevening and prizes were awarded\nfor costumes, the Judges for these\nbeing Mrs. Jensen, Mrs.- V. McDowell and Mrs. Peter Martin.\nA delicious supper was served\nto all, after which each child\nreceived apples donated by J. May\nand a generous sack ot candy. The\nladies of the community supplied\nthe supper. E. Branch accompanied\nsongs. The prize winners were:\nNational costume, Irene Rudd;\nSpanish lady, Joyce Austin; Red\nCross nurse, Vivian Henderson;\nTramp, Norman Cosnett; Comic\nLady, Ronald Mclntyre.\n(toiDtdl\nHOTEL\nSPOKANE\nSpecializing  \u25a0\nIn Genuine\nCHINESE FOOO\n-in iks Ham .1 tettmt'\n, ._   \u00abw li. ttTMt (Mb* lh.\nUP5> Ontl Ngruw*. Uri.. P.-\n.- Ap*. llfir \"d A*U-I\u00bbWI'MB1M\n\u00bbj\u00bb   A     OstiBi,   Mn. Ham> Co.ls.\n1   \"*\"\u25a0 Rates from (1.80.\nSpecial\nFares\nTRAIL AND\nGRAND FORKS\nto NELSON\nand Return\nGoing Nov. 4 and 5\nReturning Up to Nov. 7\nCOACH CLASS\nReturn fares te Nelson fwiro\nGrand Forks \u201e\u201e\u201e....\u201e....(?(4ti.\nCascade...\u2014:...,.;..,+,.*&%\nCastlegar \u201e...;~\u00bbj..to.*K.W\n?rllIlant ........_._,^...-\u2122->7\u00bb\n-Trail ^\u2122\u201e_,_ii.\u00a3|2i';JT.1\u00bb-\nCorrespondingly    lew    fares\nfront intermediate points*\nMinimum Fare TSCsntt,\nChildran 8 and\/Under 18 half\nfare. No baggage cheoklng\nprivileges,    ,\n38 Cases Tried\nOctober Trail;\nFines Total $190\n-TRAIL, B. C, Nov.' \u00bb-Flnes col-\nlected during October by the Trail\npolice department amountedto (180.\n$80 of which, representing\nnosed under the Radio act,-\nout .to the minister of tr-\nrequired by the act, aci\nthe monthly report of CI\nlice John Laurie, submitted\npolice commission todajf.\nDuring the current month, 38\nwere disposed ot in city police L\nthe summery of them being aa\nlows:\nCriminal Cede ef Canada:\nAssault, common, li Assault, causing bodily harm, 1; breaking, entering and theft, 1; false pretences; 3;\nforgery. 1; fraudulently obtalhlng\nboard, 1: reckless driving, ***\u2022 theft,\n3; uttering forged documents, 1;\nvagrancy, 10, Total\u2014M\nDominion Statutes of Canada:\n.Radio, ict, 12.     .\nProvincial Statutes of B. C!\nIndustrial Conciliation act, 1\nThe magistrate's disposition of the\nabove cases was as follows:  .'.;\nPaid fines, 16; served time in gaol.\n12; suspended sentence, 6; withdrawn, 1; dismissed, 3.\nNelson Adams'\nHeadquarters\nJoseph B. Adams, district representative and branch manager of\nthe Finning Tractor & Equipment\nCompany Limited, has returned1 to\nNelson after a residence of <% years\nin Vancouver, o'ut of which dty he\nworked seling in this territory.\nHe previously lived In Nelson for\nfive years, from 1828 to 1934. During that time Mr. Adams Avas actively associated with Nelson Scout\nwork and he states that he will be\nin It again.    ......    . , , .  \u2022 '\u25a0\"\u25a0\nMr. Adams is married and has\nfour -children. He and his family\nnow reside at 2M Vernon street\nURGES 6WEEP8TAKE8\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 2 (CP). -\nCity council tabled a resolution by\nAlderman H. J. De Graves asking\ntt to urge amendments to the Canadian criminal code that woifld ftty.\nmlt the provincial government to\nconduct sweepstakes in aid of hospitals and otner charitable Institutions.    '. . ' ' .... :\nNELSON DAILY NEWI, NELSON. B.C.-THUR'SDAY MORNING. NOV. 3,1938\nThespians Announce\n' tryoutf for Parts\n..  in Rossland Plays\nROSSLAND, B. C Nov. 2-Can,\ndldates for posts In two out of three\nplays which the Bossland Thespun\nAmateur Drama group' Pl*ns te\nStage before Christmas, were named\nat a meeting In the high school\nauditorium tonight,, and will1 be\nconsidered by the board of directors.\nCasf for e.'pley directed by Mrs.\nH. Mellor-Langdale, was chosen to-;\nnight, while actors for parts of a\none-act comedy-to be directed by\nGeorge Johnstone, will be announced Monday. George Dyson has\nyet to choose characters for his play.\n\u25a0 *     i .,' . i        a.   ' i\nEssay Contest for\nRossland Students\nROSSLAND, B. C, Nov; J -\nStudents of Rossland school! will\nbe given a chance to win 27 prizes\nIn an essay contest of 250 words on\nthe adventures of Robin Hood.\nThere will be Wrte elasses of essayists, elementary, Junior high and\nsenior high students,    '\nThe contest dotes November 18.\nMemberi of the teaching staffs of\nthe MacLean public and Rossland\nhigh' schools are to be Judges.\nForesters Stage\nSuccessful Whist\n3. Looming and Mrs. Austin Moore\nwon first -{due honors In a successful whist dwehald In the Cana-\ndlan Legion building Wednesday\nnight under the auspices of the\nCourt Hlen, A, O. IV\nFrank Eberle and Mrs. A. W. Lee\neach won consolation prizes for\nmen and women respectively.\nThe refreshment committee included Chairman Mrs. Fred Foster,\nMrs, L. Dunk, Mrs. William Hazel\nand Mrs. J, T. Brown.\nTrail Collection!\nDrop During Year\nTRAIL, B. ,C, Nov. 2 \u2014 Customs\nand exdse returns received at the\nTrail collector's office during the\nmonth of October just closed, to-'\ntailed 112,183.08, compared to (12,-\n838.71 for the same month of last\nyear, according to Theo Padbcrg,\ncollector.      .       \\ \u25a0'\nComparative figures follow:\n1838       1837\nPert of TraU (8044.68 (18,198.66\nOutport   Paterson 3387.76     2614.87\nP. CS., Rossland -   41,88      30,28\n1L484J0   12.83B.7t\nP.C.S.\u2014postal collection station.\nFlNKrS\u00bb**\"\u00bb\n1000 Canadian Nurses Volunteered\nfor Service in Crisis, Nurses Told\nMiss  K.  Sanderson-\n-.... Descril^sMMge)   \u2022\nConvention  \"\nA call sent out by, the departnent\nof national defence at Ottawa during\nthe recent war scare had seen over\n1000 applications aent in by Canadian nurses for overseas duty. Miss\nKathleen 8>nderson of the travelling\nuplt of the Registered Nurses' association of B. C. told a meeting of\nthe Nelson Registered Nurses' association at the Nurses' Home Wednesday night     \/..,    ,   7.\nThat nurses valued being In tne\nassociation was evident by the large\nincrease ih membership, Miss Sanderson said. The medical association\nof Canada had taken a great interest In the education of the nwses,\nand had recently given a (1000\ngrant for that purpose. \u25a0\nSpeaking of the 1938 Canadian\nNurses' convention at Halifax, where\nsome 879 nurses from all Canada\ngathered, Miss Sanderson said the\nexchange of nurses from country\nto country and province to province\nwas meeting with favorable response\nthe world ever. A group of 20 Canadian nurses had been sen| to\nstock a new hospital at Cape Town,\nSouth Africa, and though hurried y\nchosen, the mines had thoroughly\nsatisfied tho hospital officials.\nSpeaking of the Health Insurance\nplan. Miss Sanderson said that a\nbrief prepared by a national committee had been submitted to the\nconvention. Financial prptecuonfor\nthe nurse Was a major section of the\nbrief, she said.\nDominion registration for nurses\nwas an aspect deilt with at the convention. Attempts were made to\nform plans whereby tiwea wild\nbe registered with a, national association u well as the: provincial\nassociation, as at present 3\nSEE CANADIAN\nNURSE\nAn interesting section of the convention was the display of the Canadian Nurse, the national nurses'\njournal. Complete steps In the formation of the journal from crude\nnewsprint to the finished product\nwere shown, including the type\nused, typesetting machines and so\non. SuBscrlptlona to the Journal\nwere particularly poor bt-.BHtlm\nColumbia, Miss Sandeiwn reported.\nOut df more than 2000 registered\nnurses In the province, only 193\nsubscribed to the Canadian Nurse.\nA real \"thrill\" was to \"rub shoulders\" with nurses from email luro-\npean countries, such as Latvia, Llthu.\nania, Poland and others, and bear\nof the terrible hardships in nursing through which they must pass,\nCanadian nurses had comparatively\nno hardships as compared with tbe\nnurses from these small countries,\nNELSON IN LEAD\nMiss Sanderson stated she was\nglad to hear that Nelson was up\namong the leaders In the Registered\nNurses' associations of the province.\nShe had also heard that Nelson was\nin the lead In organlxlng Its unit\nof the Canadian Society for the Con-\ntrol of Cincer. \u25a0 _\nMrs. C. Thompson of Vancouver,\nwho addressed an afternoon meeting of the nurses, told of several\nnew acids that' were taking their\nniece in medical science, and,the\ntreatment of disease. She described\ntheir uses and methods of application.\nTrail School Board Oilers $300\nfor Rink on Saturday Mornings\nAsks Use of Market for Gym Classes; Will\nDiscuss Bus Transportation of\nAnnable Pupils to Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. \u00bb-Resl*roa-\ntlons of Miss E. N. \u2022f\u00bbnsnef',fenSiJ\nscheol, and O, S, Aujtlo, pf .ihe high\nschool staff, were accepted by the\nTrail-Tadanac and Dwrlot sdiO'il\nboard here tonight The appoint\"\nment of Thomas fl. Nlven,.to toe-\nceed Mr. Austin, wap lM-*ft\nBoth teachen' rMlgMtl^i \u00abUtt\u00bb*f\neffect at the end of the fall term.\nMiss Gansner plans to study in\nEurope, and Mr. Austin already has\nleft for South America,\nHALLIDAY\nHOTEL\n::*^ju\u00abui.i;*t\u00bbTiyiN\u00ab;;\nIPOKANf, W\u00ab*ih.\nCentrtlly Itmi\nOppoflte'CIt*\/ Ramp OHttt*\nljR4\u00abrNtw\n;    Management\nRIASONAItl RAT**;\nAl Young, caretaker of the high\nschool for the last 1* years. Informed ths board through A,-E.\nAllison, high school principal, that\nhe wm forced to resign due-to illness. High tribute to the fine ser.\nvlc\u00bb,af Mr. Young, who is 78. was\nnaiS by Mr. Allison. S. tf McDiarmid, secretary, was authorized to\nadvertise for .a man to fill the job.\nQUADES MOVE *    .,     A\nJADlUAftY .        ,   ,\nProgress oh the high school addition was such that (Trades VII. and\nVIH. of .Central, school would be\nable to move Into the building at ihe\nfirst of the year, W. C. Aston, building Inspector, reported.\nPermission to use the city market\nbuilding in the mornings for physical training-classee will be asked of\nthe city council.'\u201e-''\nAbplicetlon will be made d the\ncouncllto have a- non-perking area\ncreated around' the high school\nbloelt. \u25a0' \u2022     \u2022   ,       -\nTh8 bosrd will fnitoevor tojrt-\nvide ufc of the ria-onySahirto\nmornings during tha winter \u00abg\nstudents tt baa been the custom for\nwere instructed to interview WllMm\nRimuiy, rlnky mtrtw-ftr, thAmtt\n(380lot tha season.   -   * - .;! '\u25a0\nAfter a lengthy discussion on the\nquestion of providing transportation to Trail for students residing in\nthe Annsble-Warileld district the\nhoard decided to have a conference\nwith Inspector jr. A. Jewetfimd Cor-\n\" \", lock of the provln-\nFor Verities XJneqpiolfeJ\nH||8DAY'     FRIDAY      SATURDAY\nCOATS\nFur Trimmed\nAll wool cloths. Warmly interlined.\nTwo season guarantee linings. Luxuriously furred. Green, black, navy,\netc. Sines 16 to 44. Formerly to\n$19.95. Special T ~: \u25a0\n.95\n$12\nUntrimmed    Informed\ni\nAll wool tweeds and fleeces.\nWarmly interlined. Just the\ncoat for colder days. Blue,\nbrown and camel. Sizes 15 to\n20. Special\n.95\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\n\u25a0\nI\nI\nI\nSmart new arrivals in taffeta \u2014 puffed sleeves,\nflared skirts \u2014 ankle\nlengths In shades of wine,\nrose, green, teel blue, red,\netc. Sizes 14 to 20.\n$3.95\nFOOTWEAR ilKATiNG\nGOOD SHOES FOR WSS     I   JACKETS\nfySNINq-rAFTERNOON^-STREET\nShoe designed to make the feet look small,\nEvery pattern a new one. Black, brawn,\nblue, green. Suede or kid in\nthlg outstanding range. High *\/\u2022% ne\n.gore ties. Oxfords. Widths !p*\u00bb7 J\nAAA to D. Sizes 3 'A to 9. At.     >J\nNew two tone jackets. All\nwool cloths with plaid trims.\nZipper jackets for . \"A Wm\nstyle jackets. $X95\nGreen, blue, scar- x J\nlet, nevy. 14-20. TT\nMMfe\n'SWEAR\n;    $Naw suits\nAll wool cloths. One piece style;* w'^\nhelmets. Red. blue, green.\"   (f O AC\nHi*?''-\nPile^l^^l\nGIRtS' SKI SUITS\n2 piece With zipper jackets. Smartly\nstyled. Two tones. Creen, brown, blue.\nSizes 10 to 14. -MQA\nSuit i... eJOeiW\nSNOW SUITS\nTwo piece s?ts with helmet. AH Wool\ncloth;. Green, wine and blue. fl\u00bb A AC\nSlMS-StO,8 years. ,...\u201e,,,.,'fWl*.\nPYJAMAS\nFlowered flannelette. Neatly tailored.\nGreen, maize or blue. d>1 AA\nSizes4to6. ..-W.\u00abW\nLUCKY DRAW NO. 9972-9941 -4i2-S16r-M9\nLADIES^ WEAR\nFOOTWEAR\nCHILDREN'S WEAR\nTo Test Creston Children for\nTuberculosis, Trustees Decide\nCMSTQH, a-'C - Trustees of\nCreston Consolidated School district, at a special session Monday\nnight decided to have a .medleal\nexamination of the school pupils\nfor the detection of tuberculosis.\nTho examination Is entirely voluntary and wiU be held shortly.\nReeve Mallandaine waa present,\nrepreientini the village which had\nInstalled the sewer, syste***!, which\nserves both the new high as well as\nthe public school. The work is complete and has been finished at the\nestimated- cost of less than $900.\nX. Dupyron-was appointed a bus\ndriver. Hi teplae* R. tt. Boebuck,\nwhose tHo* Itaoweomwetely taken\nup witlV'W-i work as' supervising\nJanitor and general superintendent\nof maintenance, at all schools tn the\nuistrict,.   i. :.\nIt was agreed to put in a cement\nplatform to be \\ised as a wash rack\nin connection with the buses. It was\nalso agreed that aU insurance on\nschools will be carried with a board\ncompany. Companies holding policies tliat have not expired nave\nbeen notified of the change, When\nthe new high school is completed\nand fully protested, the district will\ncarry Insurance totalling almost\n$160,000.\nTrustee Guy Constable, who Is\non the executive of the B. C. Trustees association, reports that, the\nCreston . resolution, submitted at\nthe convention at Kamloops in Sep.-\nlembcr, asking that the province\ndeal more generously with schools\nIn the matter of finance, if pot take\nthem over-completely, haMWW discussed with th? cabinet yat- Victoria by the executives of the Trustees association and Union of B, C.\nMunicipalities, and there, is every\nlikelihood of the matter receiving\n-serious consideration at the present sitting of the legislature,\nNelson Badmjntpp\nClub to Orgah.a&\nfor Year tbhffiiht\nOrganizing for another season as\ntbe principal body in Nelaon badminton the Nelson Badminton' dub\nmm hold its annual meeting in Nelson civic centre tonight Election\nof a new slate of officers and other\norganization details Willi be attended to. \/ \u2022,.*\u2022\nMORS ABOUT\nR.R.BURHS\n(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)\nPositions bail been found in Trail\nduring the past year for. 688 workers from Alberta and Saskatchewan\nas well u 66 U. B. C, students, continuing the member, discussing employment conditions in his riding.\nThese-800 odfl.-worker* were given\nemployment iohly after local re\u00bbi-\ndents were taken care- otv   \u25a0\nThe heupng problem jn Trail is\nrapidly being solved, *\u00bbid Mr. Bums\nwith moS\\thap JM n*w homes al.\nreadout 'dulrSS tSe part yAr\nand 150 bsing erected under the\nConsolidated M. m S. Co., bulldlrt*-\nstjucUd .under the Doihlnlon Hous-\nPetWle lit hii fldini- wett nnxiout\nfor a^bridge at Caftlegsr, even a\ntoll bridge, the Trail member Went\non. The eight-car ferry now in operation'Is wholly Inadequate and\none day last summer bad to handle\n1100 ears.\nl Concluding, Mr. Burns urged the\nminister of labor to have all labor\nregulations apply to his district as\nwell as the coast areas. Doukhobor\ncontractors will not pay more than\nthe minimum wage for artisans unless forced to, be said.\nAwarding of contracts to outside\nfirms alio proved a hindrance to\nmechanics In his riding. An established minimum wage of 76 eents\nan hour tor carpenters had been\nnulliiied by two ntalHe firms who\nunderbid British Columbia contractors, obtained a government contract\nand cut Wages to 65 cents an hour.\nImmigration to\nCanada Topic of\nRowland Y.P.J.\nBOSSLAfJP, B. C, Nov. 2 -An\nSSHwS\nbig crowd of j*0ung people at the\n\u25a0\u25a0*- wMatM St'Pffew'*! so-\nTuesday night.\n-itf-wr* Mr. and Mrs.\ng,,qbura Morrow. Anp\neien Davis, Arthur\n_..pp, Rank Blackwell, Sob Kky,\nWayne Hadley and Reginald Lang-\nman,      _   - - ,'      ;\nNext Tuesday, group 4 under\nMiis a*tsldln\u00ab Bryden and Miss\nBernice Donaldson will stage a discussion night:\nDISTURBED AT NIGHT?\n\u2022^ aUmtiiantiHWcli\nas - Dr. . Pierct's\nA-nurle la often hi-\ndicatcd and usually\nit is sufficient to re>\n1io\u00bbo-minor kldmjriimg-\nnliriUa. The* i\u00abw\u00bb\nT\u00bbbl\u00ab\u00bb pot tn.bi.Dr.\nPierce .nd .old brjixtis-\niUu an. si SH \u00a5&\nI to \u00abtifl jnd bi\norer to tie\n. CHECK THE FEVER\nTiter act quickly to iHky\nfever\n. RELIEVE THE ACHES\nEtie the ichlni hen\nrelieve the pain in hv.\n\u2022nd lefts.\nOPEN THE BOWELS\nTheir Untivt tctiba\nhelps rid the eyjteni c'\npoitoitoue weitet.\nTONE THE tVSTEM\n.TUM (MUM ta.\ntablets heit> forti\nfltlutpnlaiicdamt\nM<\u00abtd|\u00ablnii\u00abte\u00ab\u00bb*T\nLook lee IheTllftCot\nan Ihe IM. Set Bar.   a\n \u2014\n'.ifWIIi^'^pilllll^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNINQ. NOV. 8.1888\nCanada's Military Chiefs Split\nOn Arms Manufacture Policy\nRYE WHISKY\nBottled In Bond In Canada\u2014\n12 Years Old\n18 ox. 81.70    '\u2022-'\u25a0\u25a0; 2Sot.t2.tt\nThis advertisement is not published\nor'displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by tbe Government of\nBritish  Columbia.\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)-In the\nlight of Canada's present impoverishment in military equipment,\nparticularly large calibre guns and\narmored fighting vehicles, the national' defence department continues to study \"every possible angle\"\nof a longTrange program for manufacture in this country of armaments, it was authoritatively learned today.\nThis country's chief difficulty in\nthe matter of equipping her defence forces arises from the fact\n-that Canada entered the armament\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundstrand Adding: Machines\nOFFICE SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliott Fisher Ltd..\n636 Ward St. Phone 99\nSlcture long after other countries\nad started. Those from .' hom it\nwas formerly possible to purchase\nthe ordinary routine needs of the\nCanadian defence tones are now so\ncompletely occupied filling their\nown requirements that little, .if\nany, attention can be paid to Canada. ..'.'.';\nDefence minister MacKenzie testified before the Bren gun commission recently that while government- ownership ot armament production was the Ideal system, it was\nnot at present feasible. The government, he said, had never abandr\noned the policy; it had been only\npostponed. Financial stringency had\ndictated a temporary policy of\nprivate manufacture, m\nWithin the department itself two\n\"Schools of.thought\" obtain. The\ngeneral staff, headed by major gen-\neral E.C. Ashton, contends that armament manufacture should be\ndone in a Dominion arsenal. The\ncivil administration, directed by\nMajor General L.R. Lafleche, and\ndeputy minister, concedes the propriety of government controlled\nproduction, but favors the temporary policy of private manufacture\nin order to overcome quickly the\ncountry's lack of equipment ,\nTokyo Expects\nFriction With\nwith the new\nRCA VICTOR RADIO\nELECTRIC TUNING\nHigh Fidelity Model 916I1F\nMttchlnst a symphony orchestra In glorious perform.\nanc\u00ab, this luxurious Superheterodyne brings you th,\nvery finest domwtic ind world-wide reception possible.\nWith every new 1039 ndlo feature, including tht famous\nRCA Victor Electric Tuning, Model 916HF Is truly a\nwonder In radio perfecUon..................................  $307.00\nRCA Victor\nTablo Model 95T-2\nA topnotch table model in\na compact and ultra.\nsmart cabinet. Marvellous\nrecepUon on domestic and\nforeign broadcast bands \u2014\npluB police, aviation - and\namateur calls. Improved\nElectric Tuning, on fi ita-\ntloni. Utmost RCA Victor\njalue................    (67.00\nThe hour strikes. The radio scene changes. Your programme ends \u2014 and far down the dial on another\nstation, your favourite radio star is on the sir! From\nyour easy chair you casually reach out \u2014 with one finger\npress a button \u2014 and instantly, accurately, with the\nspeed, precision and silence of an arrow that finds the\nmark, your new 1939 RCA. Victor Electric Tuning radio\ntunes in your station!    '   \u25a0\u2022   i\nGone is thetedlbus turning snd twisting \u2014the fumbling, faulty, old-time tuning by eye snd hand! Through\nthe magic of RCA Victor engineering, instant, accurate\nelectric tuning of your favourite stations is now placed\nwithin easy reach of your fingertips, snd priced within\neasy reach of your budget.\nSee the brilliant ne* RCA Victor models for 1939 st\nyour dealer's now. Select from the sdperb array of new\ncabinet designs the model styled to yoUr tsste\u2014the\nElectric Tuning model of your price and preference.\nWith the new RCA Victor you get radio reception and\ncabinet luxury that sets a new peak of perfeoion for\ntoday\u2014a new standard for tomorrow.\nPlay Records\nThrough '\nYour Radio\nJoin the Victor\nRecord Society\nSave 59,00.   Oat SlUt       Vicirola Attachment plays\nValue lor only $72.50 t-A       records through your Radio\nRCA Victrbla attachment (that play* records\nthrough your radio)    .  \u2022  - *19.50\nVictor records to the value of ->....  .    9.00\nOne year's subscription to the Victor Record\nSociety Review    -   \u2022 S.00\n,       TOTAL VALUB   -   - \u202231.80\nPlus the opportunity to earn St.50 In record dividends.\nRCA VICTOR'S\n40th ANNIVERSARY\nSet your RCA Vktor dealer fot\nspecial demonstrations\nEXCLUSIVE NELSON RCA VICTOR DEALERS\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\n;        , A ^Mt.iMtr PHONE 585 NlLSON, |. C.\n:TOKY6; Nov. 2 (AP)-Ths news:\npaper Kokumin climaxed t series\not editorials In several Japanese\nnewspapers against the open' door\npolicy In China, with a suggestion\ntoday that' the British ambassador be called heme.' ' '\u25a0; ' '.\nKokurain charged the ambassador. Sir.Robert Craigie, \"deliberately misrepresented Japan's\nstrength and resources, thereby leading the -British government to\nhold erroneous concepts regarding\nJapan,\" and. said \"hii presence is\nharmful to good relations between\nBritain and Japan.\" \u2022\n. Some observers believed Japan\nexpects friction with the. three\npowers, Great Britain, France and\nthe United States, over their, interests in China and the editorials\nwere designed to prepare the nation in advance.\nKelson Nurses\nUpon \"Diabetes\"\nr At 2:30 p.m. Wednesday afternoon Mrs. C. Thomson B. N., of the\nNurses' Travelling Unit addressed\nthe Graduate Nurses' association of\nBritish Columbia in the Nurses'\nHome.\nMrs. Thomson chose, as her subject \"Diabetes\", discussing the causes\nand giving a general outline of the\ntreatment.\nContributing factors .to the disease she stated,-were art hereditary\ntendency, obesity. Infection and\nglandular disturbances. Some of\nthe symptoms-easily discernible.\nWere an unquenchable thirst, resulting from the loss of fluid in tho\nbody and great* appetite. Sugar was\nalways-present in the blood in dia-\nbctic C3SCS '\nIn treating diabetes, cases were\nclassified, into three* groups: Mild\ncases, to be treated through diet,\nmoderate, with diet and Insulin:\nand severe, with measured diet and\nincreased' insulin. General health\nrules snd care to avoid infection\nwere points for the diabetic to remember. '\u25a0'-,',''\nMrs. I,. Gustafson, president of the\nassociation was in the' chair, and\nMrs. H. T. Glover extended a vote\nof thanks to Mrs. Thomson. Refreshments were served later.\nCanned Fruit\nHelps Hospital\nCRESTON, B.C. \u2014 The annual\nfruit and vegetable shower has\ngenerously stocked the shelves of\nCreston Valley hospital for another year. \u00ab.     >    -   - \u25a0\nSponsored by Creston * Hospital\nWomenls auxiliary Saturday afternoon, the shower was responsible\nfor donations of 314 Jars of canned\nfruits, Jam, jelly, marmalade, pickles, etc., along with apples, potatoes and other Vegetables, a 100-\npound sack of flour, and some cash.\nThe list shows 60 donors, and\nSaturday's receipts do not include\n30 Jars of similar commodities turned in earlier in the year by the hospital committee of Wyhndel Women's institute.\nTea- was served by a committee\nof Mrs. Gib Sinclair. Mrs. H. B.\nJohnson, Mrs, J. P. Macdonald, Miss\nM, Hamilton, Mrs. Hayes, Mrs.\nGeorge Jacks and Mrs. W. M. Archibald. There was a postoffice booth\nwhich sold) out early in the afternoon and was in charge of Mrs. F.\nC. Rodgers and Mrs. Thomas H.\nWilsoh. The receiving of the goods\nwas taken care of by Mrs. H. - H.\nWHks and Mrs. A. L. Palmer.    ,\nMiss Flora Shaw\nWeds Trail Han\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-A quiet wedding was solemnized on Oct 30 at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. T. W.\nMathieson of Chapman Camp when\nFlora iFarquharson Shaw became\nthe bride of Charles Willoughby\nTyson, both of Trail.\nRev. S. T. Galbraith performed\nthe ceremony and Mrs. Mathieson,\nsister of the bride, was the bride's\nonly attendant Mr. Mathieson stood\nup with the groom.\nThe young couple left for the\ncoast for a honeymoon before they\nreturn to Trail to reside.\nHave You Read The Classified?\nCOAL\nWestern Gem.     Ton $10.50\nWilliams Transfer\n613 Ward Si.      Phona 106\nSOOTHE\nSIMPLE\n*Z.\\   THROAT\nI   PREVENT\n.'\u25a0\u25a0     COLDS\n'*\u00a3\u00a3***' with\nDR. THOMAS'\nECLECTRIC OIL\n-.ROP A, LYMAN\nW&7\n-i-PAO E f K\nHUM\nTfyntomfy *B$\u00a3 &tmim^>\n)NgOKr*OKATlD  agf MAY I67Q.\nHERE ARE SAVINGS THAT WILL CAUSE REAL.BUYING FURORE\nSALE OF\nMEN'S\nSUITS\n15 only mart's suits taken from our higher price range and\ndrastically reduced. Included in the lot are fine worst-\nted; and all wool tweeds. New\nsnappy models, colors grey,\nblue, fawn and brpwns, A good\nassortment   of   sizes \u2022 \u25a0 from\n36tp44.\t\n-Main floor HBC\n*iS'9*\nMen's Warm    \\\nWinter\nOvercoats\nWe can show you one of\nthe best buys of the season. Feel the fine texture\nof these all wool materials. Examine the careful,'\ntailoring and up-to'tfje-\nmlnute styles. These coats\ncome In a host of new\ncheck patterns, as well as;\nplain browns and blues.\n\u2022Models for men ahd\nyoung men. Sizes 36:44.\n$19-95\n-Main Floor H1C\nUSE OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET\nPLAN\n.'.-1\nPay Vt cash at time of\npurchase and tha balance in 5 equal month-\ny payments.\nMen's White\n.60 only silk finished English broadcloth\nshirts. Neat fitting collar and button\ncuff, fused collars in collar attached\nstyle. Sizes 14Vi to 17Vi\t\nMEN'S FINE SOCKS\nSlightly imperfects. 600 pairs'men's fine all wool dress\nsocks. Imperfects from higher ranges. A good QC-\nassortment new patterns. Sizes 10-12.   5 pair VuC\n-Main Floor HBC\nMEN'S WARM PYJAMAS\nBetter quality flannelette pyjamas in neat stripe patterns. Coat has silk frogs, the pants elastic        (jl yjQ\n\",\" -Main Floor HBO\ndraw string. Sjzes 36 to 44,.\nMen's Medium Weighs $L00\nB. C. to Extend\nIts Moratorium\nVICTORIA, Now 2 (GPl-At-\ntorney-General Gordon S. Wismer\nannounced today the legislature\nwould be asked to extend the provincial moratorium on real estate\nmortgages and agreements for another year.\nOFFERS EYE TO\nSAVE SON'S SIGHT\nWENATCHE1!,  Wash.,\n(AP)-L.C.   Snyder,   54-\nNov.'J\near-old\n    - i-yt\u201e\nlaborer, appealed for funds today\nto transfer one\nthe head of his\nhis eyes to\n18-year-old son\neyes\nyear-olt\nwho is slowly going blind.\n\"I'm past the prime of life,\nnow,\" he said; I don't mind jgivins\nGlenn one..of. my eyes. P wonM\nneed It as long as he will.\"\nBritain and France Will Become\nSecond Rale Powers Under Hitler\nFour\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014David*?\nLloyd George in a caustic reply\nto Prime Minister Chamberlain's\nImplied rebuke for his recent broadcast to the United States declared\ntoday \"the prime minister seems\nto me to be acquiring dictatorial\nairs from his associations.\"\n\u2022 The speech to which Mr. Chamberlain was believed to have referred in his remarks i the house of\ncommons yesterday was made be-\n-fore the free, church federation\nand broadcast to the United States\nOctober 26. In It he predicted the\nMunich Peace would lead to a\n\"war without friends\" for Great\nBritain and said Britain had descended the \"ladder of dishonor\nrung by rung.\"\nUNDEMOCRATIC,   IS  CHARGE\nMr. Lloyd George tooK exception\nto Mr. Chamberlain's remarks in\na statement th the press, although\nhe said he was not sure whether\nthe prime minister had referred\nto his speech or to a previous address by Winston Churchill October\n16.   '\nDeclaring the broadcast was\nonly incidental, he said, \"1 was-not\ndelivering a- speech to America\nbut to' the free churchmen and 1\ndo not withdraw one sentence or\none phrase of it.\"\n\"It is new doctrine for democracy,\" he said, \"that you cannot\ncriticise a government without being open to a charge that you are\nfouling your own nest.\"\n, Without mentioning any names,,\nMr, Chamberlain said in his speech\nto the Commons: \"I do strongly\ndeprecate statements made by persons in responsible or even irresponsible positions who take, opportunities to broadcast to the world\nor to other countries- in particular\nthat their own country is in a\nstate of decadence.\"'   ,.   ,\n\"NAVE AND RASH\"\nPertlnax, the noted French writ-,\ner on foreign affairs viewed as\n\"naive and rash\" the British House\nof policy made in the British House\nof Commons yesterday $>y prime\nminister Chamberlain.       \"   r.\n\"He refuses to see that Chancellor Hitler will, as far as. his\nstrength permits, exploit \u25a0 central\nEurope in order to fulfill hU- four-\nyear (self-sufficiency) plan which\nwas in such an unfavorable status\nlast summer,\" Pertlnax wrote In\nthe newspaper L'Ordre. \"In this\nfashion he will strive.'-to achieve\neconomic domination and, through\nthat, military domination,\n\"Great Britain and Franca will\nJoin the ranks of the, secondary\nstates if his program takes form\nand shape.\"      .'.'*.'\nFREED ON CHARGE OF\nSHOOTING AT EDMONDS\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C., Nov,\n2 \u25a0 (CP)-Joe HaU, charged with\nthe attempted murder of Magistrate\nII. L. Edmonds October 22, was released from custody today after\nCrown Prosecutor H. Norman Lid-\nster said at his preliminary hearing: \"The crown,does not propose\nto offer any-evidence at-this time.\"\nBRITAIN HAS\nWORLFSBEST\nAIRCRAFT GUN\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (CP-Havas)-\nThe Dally Express (Independent)\nannounced, today that a report\nby parliament's select committee\non estimates\u2014the budget-drafting\ncommittee\u2014revealed existence\nof a 4.6-Inch British ordinance\npiece described ll; \"the world's\nmost powerful anti-aircraft gun.\".\nThe newspaper. Mid this gun\nwas known to be superior to tha\n3.7-Inch gun which flrat 12 rounds\na minute with a maximum range\nof 20,000 to 30,000 feet.\nBURNS HEADS CIVIC\nCOMMITTEE, VICTORIA\n, VICTORIA, Nov. 2 (CP) - The\nmunicipal committee ot the British\nColumbia legislature, meeting for\nthe first, time today, arranged to\nmeet the executive of the Union of\nBritish Columbia Municipalities on\nFriday morning to discuss proposed\nchanges In the Provincial Municipalities act.\n, R. B. Burns (Lib., Rowland-Trail)\nwas named chairman of the committee and R. H. Carson (Lib., Kamloops), its secretary.      .\nEXTRADITION WRONC,     1\nMILLER GOES BACKf\nVANCOUVER, Mov. J (CPy-Oatl\nSr Orr, Vancouver's city prosecutor, :\nId today he had received.initruc\u00abi\ntlons to return C. E. Millar to tha\nunited States authorities because\nthe man was improperly extradited\nfrom Lexington, Ky., to face a $89.-'\n000 conspiracy chargehare.-'.-  -JS\nJohn Fan-is, counsel-for Miller,!\ncharged at a.police court hearing\nsome time ago His client had been\n\"practically Tddnapped\"' wm tn\u00abl\nLexington prison. \u2022I\nHONOR CAMSELL\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2 (CP)-]\nCharles Camsel, federal deputy mur\nister pf mines and natural resources\nlast night was made an honorary fellow of St John's Anglican College\nduring ceremonies making the 72nd\nanniversary of- the' Institution*\nfounding. He is a graduate of the\ncollege.    .'.*-,\u2022 -\nEconomixo with a\nSAWDUST\n'BURNER\nFor quotation call or write  \u25a0\u25a0,\nB. C. Plumbing & Healing Co.\nFish\nerman s\ntuck!\nTuna fishing calls for nerve and s lamina and skill \u2014\nbut what sport these big game fish provide!\nMaybe it's proverbial \"Fisherman's Luck\" that leads\nso many.anglers to Old Chum '..\u25a0: but whatever it\nis, once a man takes to Old Chum, no other tobacco\nwill do. It has something that will appeal to you\nright from the start\u2014you don't have to cultivate a\ntaste for a tobacco that is as mild and mellow na\nOld Chum I Cut coarse for the pipe\u2014cut fine for\nrolling your owit\nThere is no other tobacco Jutt like Old Chuml\nRemembrance Day November 11.    a\nGive a llttl* more for your\n. poppy this year.\nrhe\nD CHUM:\nTobacco of Quality\nV\n.........\n\u25a0sfl,afr^**-a^\n'   ^A^' -\"-*\"-'\u25a0' iiiiiiif-Iii\nmtihmmmmmm\n \t\n*' 7\n\"\nl-m&mmmW^\niippiiiiuy-\n*\u00b0 y\nOlfOUR-\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNING, NOV. 8,1938\nmm WOMEN NO LONGER UNDER HUSBAND'S THUMBS\nProtection . . .\nHands (all For\nlira Care In\nWinter Months\n(By DONNA GRACE)\nWith the approach of cold weath-\n', wa find it advisable to give the\nnds and nails more care and\nprotective   treatments.  The\ner sun- and outdoor sports\nhave left the hands dry and\n. _jh and the nails tomawhat the\nirorse for wear.\n| The hands' need plenty of lubrication and soma stimulating massage and exercise, and now Is the\n\u25a0be to give our handi some luxurious treatment that will help\ncombat, the problem of chapped\nBinds,\nIt is so annoying to have our nice\nwhite, smooth little hands take on\nrough or ruddy appearance,\n_ jclally during the festive season'\ntholiday parties and.formal tunc-\nte hands, you know, arc not so\n\u2022well padded with th* natural oils\n1 we would Ilka them to be. The\nt, chubby little hands ate more\nnerously endowed with It, but the\nder and somewhat bony hands.\n1 e great deal of oils and creams\nJ supply this lubricant\nThere are some very good hand\nlotions and creams but'the hands\nmust be thoroughly cleansed first, soever. This doesn't go down with\nThey must be washed or scrubbed\nwith a rich, creamy soap lather.\nThen rinsed until every trace of the\nsoap li removed. Thll thorough\nscrubbing will remove any loose\nparticles of dry tissue. Then they\nare dried and the lotion or cream\nis rubbed on generously^ and large,\nloose-fitting yrtiite cotton gloves\nmay may be worn comfortably at\nnight\nAvoid strong alkaline soaps, and\nwhen out of doors protect the hands\nwith (food warm gloves, \u2022\nWhen the fingertips and nails are\nquit* dry, Wrap them In little strips\nof cotton that have been dipped in\noil 'before putting,on tha gloves.\nTwice a week is enough for the\nnail treatment\nWhen the hands and nail are In\na nice smooth condition, you will\nwant to wear the new shades of\npolish that blend so beautifully with\nthe fashionable colors just now.\nFifty-Fifty\nNot the Cause\nDear Miss Chatfield!\nNobody seems to hit the nail on\nthe head regarding this matter of\nthe rising divorce rate in this country. I believe it is because so many\nhusbands hold the money, allowing the wives no partnership what\nFPublic Services , .\nipreme Court Justice Praises\nju.'.M.  m:A.m.ee.%A   -\\     JuMM**.' mete,   m, -.\"       '\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D.\n. Some time ago tha following let-\n- came to ma front .Carl V. way-\ndt, chief Justice ot tha Supreme\nirt of Ohio.\nDear Dr. Myars: \u2014 Tor sotoe\nitle I hava meant to write to com-\nnd you on your syndicated col-\nin to parents, which I have read in\nJlumbus and a number of other\nV  ,, .....    \u25ba\u00ab.-*-\u00ab\u00bb-   -\nIs gratifying.to observe tha\n- you lead your readers to the\nfusion that citizenship begins at\n- ne, that the basis of good citizen-\niip is regard for the rights, ot\n\"iers, and that this attitude la\nUded best in the child from his\n' r years, by understanding,'sym-\nctic parents who co-operate,\nHOME RESTRAINTS\"\n\"I like the way you emphasize the\nsed of reasonable home restraints,\nnecially ot the young child. \"Properly, you also recognize the contrl-\nI Bntlon to good citizenship by char-\n' r-building agencies, church and\nol.\n'You appeal to the right persons.\nTiere is no substitute for parents of\nproper sort.\nHO matter how much we may\nIslike to admit it, the fact is that\n! present young generation is just\nOut as bad and just about as good\ni we parents have trained it to b*.\n\"Sincerely,\n\"Carl V. Weygandt\"\nAs you can imagine, I was nappy\nas I read this letter. 1 didn't sup-\nI Mill any state supreme court Justice\nwould take the time to read this col-\n|umn. That-Chief Justice Carl V.\nWeygandt, whoaa public services\nand example as parent have so appealed to tne for years, should commend anything I write has surpassed my fondest dreams.\nPRACTICAL IDEALISM\n' I had the honor to meet Judge\nWeygandt a-number Of years ago .in\na small discussion group of which\nwe were members. I remember the\nprivilege I had, on several occasions, to. chat with him there, first\nwhile ha was a member of tha Ohio\nState Legislature and later while he\nwas judge of the common pleas\ncourt at Cleveland. His practical\nidealism gave me a new vision ol\nwhat a public servant can ba. .\nOur conversation usually center:\ned about parents, children and\nyouth. He was very enthusiastic\nabout such character\" buUdlng agencies as the Y. M. C A, K; of C\nscouting and the like. For years he\ntaught a large bible class of boys\nevery Sunday morning. He. gave\ngenerously of his time to youth\ngroups and for many years retereed\nhigh school and collage football\ngames. I have often wished my boys\nmight have come directly under his\npersonal influence. We parents are\ngrateful for such men among our\npublic servants.\nTry Salada Orange Pekoe Blend\nAldsDIognosis. . .   .,      ^   A.\nAmount of Oxygen Consumed is\nBy. LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\nIn discussing the central function\nof the body last week, nutrition\nor metabolism, which is the. process in the tissues of converting\nfood and Oxygen into energy we\nreviewed:|he specific action;.of the\nvarious foodstuffs in the body but\nWe did not hava apace to* discuss the\ngeneral basal metabolism of the\nbody, the total sum at all their activities.\nIt must be evident that there is a\nbasal metabolism which is the sum\nof all the changei made by the conversion of food. This Is manifest in\nthe maintenance of a level of the\nbody temperature, It the food ts\nburned Id the tissues, which it Is,\nthere must be some heat generated.\nThere lr and that is why your body\nremains at the temperature of 08\neven on the coldest day of winter.\nThe-study of tbe basal metabolism\nhas been found very useful in studying certain cases in clinical medicine. \u25a0 y -        '\u25a0 v -,\nMEA8URE ALL FOOD       \u2022       '\nNominally tha way te .study It\nweald be to measure exactly all the\nfood that goat into the body, then\ncollect all: the by.jiroducta-rthe\namount of nitrogen ahd,. ether\nsubstances in the urine and feces,\nthe perspiration,-the breath\u2014then\nmeasure tha amount ot heat the\nbody has formed ahd given off in a\ngiven time and the weight-of the\nbody before and attar. In that way\nwe can measure the amount ot energy that Is furnished by any food.\nAs a matter of record, exactly all\n, thlt tedious work was done in the\n.early  experimels on  the subject,\nand wa learned the most exact details about the energy value of\nfoods, details which have made dietetics today one ot tha most scientific  branches of medical knowledge.\nDELICATELY BALANCED\nThe amount of energy the body\nexpends and the amount taken in\nthe food are very delicately balanced and regulated by the appetite. Sometimes this regulation falls\nand food Is stored in the body in\nthe form ol fat:: <\nMeasurement of basal metabolism nowadays, Is carried on in a\nmuch simpler manner than that Indicated above, It Is done by simply\nmeasuring the amount of oxygen\nthat is consumed by the body at\ncomplete rest The facts thus gathered are very valuable in the diagnosis of disturbances of the thyroid\ngland.\ntwentieth century wives. There cannot be a real partnership between a\npair where the wife doesn't hava a\nsay-so about the money that's spent.\nWhen she signs the. marriage eon-\ntract lhe thinks she's a fifty-fifty\nparticipant In-everything, worldly\npossessions included. In this day ol\nwomans' independence, she won't\nstand for being dependent on a man,\nwhich she is when she's \u25a0 denied\nequal rights to the bank account I\nwould like to know if other women\ndon't agree with me that money Is\nat the root Of most divorces, I am\naura you do not accept this theory,\njudging by w-hat you have written\npreviously on the subject.\nFBOTBSTER.\nANSWERi-No, sister, I can't agree\nwith you that our high divorce\nrate is due to money-hog husbands,\nrevolting though they be. With the\nexception ot a tew contemptible\nUtUe-souled, stingy citizens, every\nhusband was once wiling to play\nthe game fifty-fifty. And when he\nhas folded up the pocketbook and\nput It ih his pocket, double daring\nhis wife to touch it a lot of mm\nwater has flowed over their marriage\nmill The gesture laying \"The money\nis mine\" Is meant to he a last word,\nending (11 words. If It brings on\ndivorce it may be called the occasion\u2014but not the cause ot the final\nparting, according to my Views..\nAll agreed a wife should have full\npartnership tn her husband's\" possessions and no doubt the law will\nsome day give It to her. Yet without\nbenefit of law she.can heve.lt by\nbeing to her husband after marriage\nwhat she was before marriage,' nit\nbest gld that he loves, confides in,\ndeters to and 'dlvles' with. She can't\nget partnership by standing on her\nrights and howling lor fifty-fifty\nparticipation.\nWhy, during engagement days a\nman doesn't mind doing without his\ndinner to buy his best girl a bunch\nof flowers. He can't find pn the\ncalendar enough anniversaries, holidays and festive occasions to satisfy\nhis yen to give her gifts, He sees his\npay check as;a means to an'end\u2014\nSerifllStpry . , .\nAFRAID\nMARRY\nBy HELEN WELSH1MER\nCHAPTER 84\nYou can do many things while\nyour heart Is breaking. You can eat\nyou can sleep, you can smile and\ngesture and talk. - Sometimes, you\ncan do it so well that no one guesses that you are a marionette, per.\nforming on a lot ot invisible strings.\nThat was the way it was with\nJudy during the next few days.\nOnce more she was acclaimed.\nThiae same reporters who had\nbeen so quick to seize her picture\nwhen she had bean connected with\nthe Danceland story, welcomed the\nopportunity, to herald the design\ncontest They told the public that\nshe would be an assistant to JCor-\ndellE. They dlscoveredher XpteJ'\naddress, printed it, and -telephone\ncells, I notes, invitations, flowers\nfrom Old friends who had not\nknown where she.was, came in. -..\nJudy was too-tired at sight to\nthink. Now and then a crooked\nsmile and the flash of a pair of\ngray eyes-would puncture a dream,\nand she would awaken, remember\ning.\nJu\nthe end being to please I\nher suj\u00bb\nilease her, marry\nher and assume her support This\nIs how love works on him and It\nis in this mood that he gets married.\nFrankly, I think this business of\na wife's yelling tor independence is\nperfectly ridiculous. If this is what\na woman wants she'd better remain\nsingle, since mutual dependence Is\nthe cornerstone et a good marriage.\nIt's a yoked together, double harness\ntandem pushing and pulling affair\nand when either partner decides he\nwants independence, the jig is up.\nBefore the other women have their\nsay, let me add this one line. A wife's\nway to her husband's .pocketbook\nis through the heart and, even, if\nwe had laws to give a woman flfty-\nf if ly right to all her husband's possessions, there would still be grief\nand maybe divorce lor wives who\nlose their way to their husband's\nhearts.\nA good substitute tor cream in\ncoffee may be made by beating up\nthe yolk of sin egg with a teaspoon\nof sugar and a very little water and\ndividing It among, the cups before\npouring in the coffee.\nBOYS! GIRLS! Join tlf\nMAPLE LEAF BANTAM\nUfifltCV rillD 'Officially Mi,ted\u00bbitl,To,onto\nudy had a pile of clippings ot\nher own venture. She paid no attention to her father's come-back.\nthough the stories sometimes linked that event with her ownsuCcess.\nHe had pushed her away when she\nhad needed him. She Would not\ngo home.\nShe did move though. This time\nshe chose an apartment in an old\nred brick house in the lower\ntwenties, east of Fifth avenue. She\nhad the top floor rooms\u2014a great,\nbeamed living 'room with a fireplace that was flanked by book\nshelves, dormer windows that\nopened on the street a smaller\nbedroom, end a kitchenette. She\nhad been given the bedroom suite,\nthe. chaise lounge, the desk and\nlounging chain at her own room\nat her apartment as a gift, so aha\nsent for them with no twinge pt\nconscience.\nCoralee came over and helped\nhem the cushions, hang prints and\ndraperies, arrange furniture. -\nWhen: everything was ready,\nJudy went down the street to a\nflower stan-Pand bought lavishly-\npurple violets whose blooming was\nlimited to a night; fragile yellow\nroses; an armful of old-fashioned\nflowers. She bought candles, too.\nShe had a home.\nNot a place to stay until It was\ntime to join her mother In some\nhotel abroad. Not a room in an\nAmerican hotel where she could\nremain until her credit waa ex-,\nhauated. Not a bed in somebody's\nhouse for a span of days. A home,\nA home, woife, . peace\u2014these\nwere the crying needs of the human heart and they were hers.\nShe did not mention love, though\nshe knew that the term waited,\njust out ot reach. She must work,\nwork, Twork-r   -\nThe bell which announced visitors rang, and aha nrcsssed the button which released the great Iroat\ndoor, tour flights down. She\nleaned over the railing, looking\ninto the dim well of the stairs, and\nsaid: \"Who Is It please?\"\n\"The press!\" a cheerful voice\nanswered.\n\"In battle formation. We want\npletures.\"    _\n\"Pictures! WhyT*\n\"Editor's orders. The public wants\nto see how you're doing.\"\n\"The public doesn't care a hoot!\nYou pack up those picture-taking\nboxes and right about face\u2014\" She\nlaughed as she said it.\n\u2022\"\u2022fijo late, honey! We're In. Nice\nway to talk to a lot of people Who\nwant to give you a house warming.'\nThere were five young men In\nthe group, two of them reporters,\nthree of them cameramen.\nThey came in. They took pictures, and Judy entered the spirit\nof it\nThere was one tell boy, with\nrust-brown hair and gray eyes oddly like Ronald's. He was the merriest of the group.\n> \"You haven't had a house warming?\" he asked. \"That will never\ndoi I move we undo that damage\nat once. Peter, there's a delicatessen over on Sixth avenue-get Cold\nchicken and ham and potato salad\u2014\nyou know the menu, Jimmy ...\"\nHe gave orders, and presently\nJudy and the tlve were facing a\ntable fled With food..  ''  \"\"\u25a0-\nIt was all ao gay, so comfortable, so Informal, that ahe relaxed.\nIn that Park avenue world you\ndressed for every party. You wore\none frock to a tea, and rushed\nhome to change to a dinner or a\ndance ensemble.\nJudy sat in a deep chair as the\nlogs burned in the fireplace, One\not the reporters had known a firewood station, at the edge ot Greenwich Village, where a quarter\nwould buy enough timber to keep\nthe tire going for a couple ef evenings.\n\"You'll learn,\" he explained.\n\"Never buy green -wood, either. It\ndoesn't burn\u2014\"\nSuddenly someone gave a whistle of complete surprise,\n\"The countl*\ndlbdL folt\ndhiiMwivsiL\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nToronto Maple Leaft N.H.L. Champions\nHI7-8, ill est delicious, nourishing\nQUAKER OATS\/\n\u25a0ah hi \"Thiamin\"...Vital Health Food!\nWow! What a thrill! ALL FREE $ Your Official Membership\nBadge $ Membership Certificate $ Swell Hockey Book\n{shows how to git autographed pictures tf your favourite Mapli leaf\nplayers... Gifts and Valuable Hockey Equipment)\n....    tee ten te fMe-tm ter Buy ****iatHtl 7.\nBcihefititofrourfin\u00bbtovvc\u00abtlieMtmb\u00absliipIlBdjeofiIieMBpIe\nU.I Bianm Hoctov Clul>...offiriillv if\u00a3li\u00abed with tHe hteou.\nN JUL Toronto tuple {Mb. CSmcU Chip Hn for UtiW DWrioo).,\n(3ttiMembmliipCetti6c\u00bbteil\u00abntdbrConnSlorthe,hiiiiKlf,tohiii\u00ab\nalnr-mrtotira.G\u00abth\u00ablt\u00abtn\u00abwhodcerbookthBtliuptannlof\nt*M*Bli|>l\u00abI,i^p|lTMI^lWw\u00bbj>OMIl\u00abl itivto sethudiomti\ncoapoob\nultteMipleU.fplivmindikowijrouineuywiviostOmdiomo\naifti\u00abiid\u00abtiKihotkt\u00bbe<iuii>ment.UM coupon below.\n\u00bb1>\nToronto Maple Leafs know how important\nfa food for energy and strength. That's\nwhy they all eat delicious Qnajcer Oati\u2014\nCanada'! If. Health Breakfast that provides\nenergy aplenty.\nIt is now known thst oitmesl is die richest\n' thrifty source of thst precious health and\noerrefood-ThUmio'lVltaminBi). Perfect\nhealth is not possible without it. You should\nhare \"Thiamin\" daily became it is not stored\nin the body. Qoaker Oats contains more\nprotein, too,\u2014the element thit builds ru(t-\nged muscles. ThegenerousarbohydrMM in\nthis ftmouscerud give \"energy-dnve\". And,\nieoieraber,\u00abii(rQuikerOto<;onttin\u00bbheilth-\nQokk\nQuaker Oats\nMOTHER!)   Gl i \u00ab PACKAGE 0 ICK QUAKE\noats Ar vouh GROCERS roDAV\nTear (hit Tins Coupon NOW!\nGet these 3 Gifts FREE!\nHWhUJfl|im> T\\m\\\u00a5i Pea Pru iiyT '    ' \"-\"\u2122\"\u2122,\u2122BJ-\nBwilimJ It em lip froni a i  *       *\"\"\ntolte.MdatM.pki\n0&\nAsUmi_\nTODAY'S MENU\nBy BET8Y NEWMAN\nOrange or Tomato Juice\nCooked Oatmeal with Dates\nMuffins Marmalade Tea or Coffee\nMaybe you won't think much of\ntOmafo juice for breakfast. I didnt\nat first But if you by. it once or\ntwice I'm sure you'll like It One\ngood thing about it: It is usually all\nready to use, so that it takes no time\nat all to prepare; lust pour it out of\nthe can, after chilling It overnight,\not course.\n. OATMEAL WITH DATES\nCook quick-cooking oatmeal or\nrolled oats until done, then edd\nOne-halt cup chopped and seeded\ndates, You can buy seeded dates, it\nyou prefer.\nMUFFINS\nSift into mixing bowl two cups\nflftur, one-half to one tablespoon\nsugar, ope-half teaspoon salt, three\nand one-half teaspoons baking powder. Make hole in center of mixture. Beat one whole egg, add to it\none cuj* milk, pour into center ot\nflour mixture and mix smooth, adding two tablespoons melted butter\nPour Into greased mtiflin tins and\nbake about 20 minutes in a medium\n(350 Ti oven.\nOr \"rou can beat the egg In the\nbowl, add milk, and the sifted dry\nIngredients, then the butter. In this\nway you save washing a dish.\nJutt now, when apples are ripened to a mellow perfection, is the\ntime to set busy and make an apple\npie. .We \"Know there are Worei of\nrecipe* for:this ftOst popular pies,\nbut iu\u00abt the same,, here we come\nwith still another.\nPINEAPPLE PIE\nHer* it Is. Three-quarters of a\ncup of shredded pineapple, two cups\napple sauce, one-eighth teaspoon\nsalt, and one and one-half tablespoons gelatine, softened in one-\nquarter cup water or pineapple\nJuice, make the filling for a 10-inch\npie that Is decidedly different In\nflavor from the usult \u25a0\nDrain the pineapple and combine\nWith apple tauce. Add the salt. Dissolve the gelatine over hot water\nand add to fruit mixture. Pour into\nbaked* pie shell of graham cracker\ncrust and chill thoroughly before\nserving.\nTot an excellent graham cracker crust for a 10-inch pie, take two\ncups of finely-rolled graham\ncracker crumbs, one-half cup sugar, one-quarter teaiopon cinnamon one one-half cup butter\n(melted).    \u25a0\nBlend the Ingredients together\nlightly with a fork. Press firmly\ninto pie nan to makes crust one-\neighth oi an inch thick. Bake in\nhot oven (400 F.) for about 12\nminutes. When cool, pour In\nfilling\u2122\nBANANA CAKE RECIPE\nWhile we are dealing with such\nsweet subjects, here is a grand recipe when a party cake is in order.\nThe recipe calls for one end one-\nhalf cups sugar, three-quarters cup\nbutter, two eggs, two and one-half\ncups cake flour (sifted before measuring), one teaspoon soda, one tea*\n 1 vanilla, One and one-half cups\nbananas (forced through po-\nrloer, then measured), oqe-\nuarter cup lour milk or butter-\n\"'- and one-half teaspoon baking\nCream butler, add sugar; cream\ntogether until light and fluffy. Add\nwhole eggs, one at a time, beating\nwell after the addition ot each. Sift\ntogether flour, soda and baking\npowder. Add sour milk and vanilla\nto bananas. Add alternately the\nbanana and flour mixtures to the\nfirst mixture.\nBeat until smooth and well mixed.\nDivide evenly into pans. Place in\npreheated oven and bake at 376 T.\ntemperature for tS to St minutes.   ,\nFR08T1NG\nTo stake the fronting there must\nbe twO egg white*, one cup white\ncom syrup, one-half teaspoon vanilla and one-quarter teaspoon al-\nCombine eft whites and corn\nay-rap la IttM^pleM^m \u00abJ-\ntary egg beater until mixtun itandi\ncc\nMatters Granted at Last\n\u25a0QUEBEC, (CP). \u2014 Commenting\non the law recently signed by\nPresident Albert Lebrun of France\nby which the French married woman no longer will be treated as\na minor, Emil Lengyel, writing\nIn the New York Hearld-Trlbune,\nhalls it a long step taken by the\nEuropean- republic i'toward the\nemancipation of her women from\neconomic bondage.\" V\ni *^t*.afcentury-Wd-|i-\"hrif after\nthe declaration at the Rights of\nMen,\" this writer says, \"France has\nbegun to define the Eights of Women.\" No longer will the married\nFrenchwoman need the authorization of her husband when she ap*\npiles for a passport, deposits her\nown money in a bank, buys and\n\u25a0ells property, accepts gifts and estates.\nThll recalls that under Quebec\ncivil law, based on that of France\nunder terms ot the British North\nAmerica act, a married woman hi\nthis province still is regarded as a\nminor, unable without her husband's consent to buy or sell property, sign a lease or other contract,\nor take court action. But under\nfederal law she may deposit money\nin a bank and issue cheques.\nUnless a marriage contract or a\nseparation as to property,exists,\nthe husband controls the property\nof both partners and can sell without her consent. He cannot authorise her to act for him during his\nabsence. \u2022 .\nQuebec women are eligible as\nvoters and .candidates in federal\nelections but not In the p-vlncial\nfield, despite 13 attempts '.tain\nlegislative approval of a % hise\nbill. Women candidates fi aebec\nfederal teats have been i'jre and\nts yet none has been elected.\nAi the law says nothing .to the\ncontrary, presumably women with\nnecessary   property   qualifications\n. \"KtltimAt W n'dockr\n\"Goodby, Judy, we'll see you often!\"        -    \u2022!\u25a0    \u2022 , '.       ' '\n-The count?\" she repeated. \"Not\nCount Phillippe Alexis von Gund-\nerfWd!\"      j\n\"Ott mot. Do you know him?\"\nThey were putting on coats, ad-\nJusting cameras and papers.,\n\"Very slightly. What has he\ndottat\"\n\"He's marrying a pretty widow\nthis evening and sailing away on\nher yacht through the wintry waters to Bermuda.\"\nIta; Bedford?\" asked .Judy.\n\"Yeah! Where did you leant so\nmuch?\"\n\"I heard about it.\"\n\"There was an heiress but that\nplopped, and he and the widow\nB\u00abford seem made for each other.\nThe Boland child Is making eyes\nat the attorney in the Griffith Steel\nJamboree.\" The boy who resembled\nRonald said that His name was\nBob Cushing and he gripped Judy's\nhand as he left He was a special\nassignment man.\n, \"I want to see you soon-and\noften.\"  I *\u25a0.*;-'. \u25a0:,*\u25a0\u25a0 ,- :'-'   p\nLater Judy -wondered why he\nhad come, along that night. She\ndid not know then that he had\nbeen at Tonl's, one ot the newspaper-hangouts, when Uie four\nothers came in, wondering where\nand why to lind Judy Rogers before they went after the count\nThrough much telephoning around\nthey obtained her address. With\na loose evening on his hands, Bob\n(Continued on Page Plve)\nare eligible to serve on municipal\ncouncils. Actually, the question has\nnever been put to a teat\nAmong the professions, law Is\nstill closed to women. The Quebec\nBar association refuses to admit\nthem to membership although its\nconstitution makes no ruling on the\nsubject They \u25a0 are permitted to\ngraduate from law schools,\nSTILL AFTER VOTE\nIn France the old law was very\nstrict in financial matters. Pension\nmoney tor the wife was handed over\nto the husband. The wife had no\nlight to rent her own apartment\nAnd, not long ago, a Paris court\nheld that a woman exceeded her\nauthority by buying a radio tor\nthe family.\n\"The women ot France also are\nwithout the vote. Five timet the\nFrench legislature has been called\nupon to decide the fate of bills to\nenfranchise women. The last three\ntimes the bills have provided for\nfull political participation.- The\nChamber of Deputies voted in favor\not these bills, but the conservative\nSenate turned them down.\nWhile the gates of the national\nlegislature remain closed to women,\nthey have been allowed to drift\ninto the municipal councils and\nboards of aldermen, even though\nthe law sayi nothing about their\nrights to serve on these bodiei.\nAlthough women have been kept\nout of the polling booths, they have\nconquered one profession , after'\nanother. There now are women\ntheological students in France, and\npossibly one or two women pastors. Since the beginning ot the\ncentury women lawyers have been\nallowed\/to plead In all courts.       \u25a0\nThe principal tight at present,\nas leading French feminists see\nit, Is to \"shame the conservatives\nof the French senate Into action.\"\nOta newspaper advertising Ant\nAnd reach the tARCTST   .\nNUMBER of buyers.\nMake*\nlinoloum\nsparkle.\nJust apply\nand lit dry,\nBrighter tuirre...\nlonger meet,\nBYTTCMAKHKOP\nJOHNSON'SWAX\nfcciiiMmimm.\nWHEN BUYING YOUR\nFUR GOAT\nConsult Your Furrier\nNo. 1 MUSKRAT juc.oo\nvlade from the backs of skins only at    I V\u00abal\nNo. I\nFinest quality heavily furred pelts.\nAlso cheaper line of seals. Made to your measurementi\nat no extra cost. Trade In allowance and terms.\"'\nMalcolm's Furs\n659 BAKER ST.\nAU RIGHT.\n^\u25a0Af-THBISCREftM-\n'-'\u2022WOKSOIfKlttHT-\nTftSTtSDIFftREKT,\n;-TQO.\/ifflfiT.\nOWTMUCH?\nJ\nTHAT, MY DEAR, \u00ab$\nCARHATIOHMIIK-\nAT ABOUT ONE-i\nQUARTER THE\nC05T0FCREAM.-\nnce VOU TRY Carnation Milk\nfor creaming coffee, cereals,\nfruit, you'll continue because of its\nsmooth, rich flavour. But you'll like\nits real economy, too. And you'll\nlike the way it improves the flavour\nand smoothness of cooked dishes-\nsauces, ice cream, puddings, cake*,\nsoups. Carnation Milk is double-\nrich milk, -with cream in every drop.\nAnd it is so convenient to keep it\nalways on hand.\nFor bottle-fed babies, there is no\nfiner milk. More digestible, always\nthe same, with an added amount of\n\"sunshine\" vitamin D. Send\nfor beautifully illustrated\nCarnation Cook Book. A host\nof ideas and recipes for 15**\n(postpaid). Carnation Co.,\nLtd., Abbott St., Vanfcouvtt.\nCANADIAN PRODUCT\n\"from ConfonfedCowif?\nI\nIRRADIATED\n wm.mw.m-m^kmm!imv\nwM\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-THtlRSDAY MORNINO. NOV. 3.193S\n-   .'   :;\nGEORGINA\nFOR THE LADY\nWHO WANTS A\nSHOE\nWhen a -woman buys\nGOOD,'shoes, she-looks for\nsomething more than novelty and color. Fint and\nforemost, she -expects- \u25a0\nPERFECT fit, a. wo know\nfrom' dally ; experience.\nNext, she wants stylss such\nas she sees In the good\nmagazines. Last, and by no\nmeans least, she looks for\ncomfort and WILL NOT-\nREPEAT on uncomfortable\nshoes.   !:.....,:,'..\nR. Andrew\n* COMPANY\nLeaders in Footiashion ,','\u25a0'.\n-\nFuneral\nlor Mrs. D.\nRev; Foster Hilliard conducted funeral services for Mrs. David Bain,\nwife of David Bain, 301 Houston\nstreet, from the Davis Funeral parlors Wednesday afternoon.\nMrs. Bain, who was born 60 years\nago in northern Ireland, died Sunday nifeht at her home following an\nIllness of two years.\nThe hymns \"Rock of Ages\" and\n\"Abide With Me\" were sung. There\nwere many floral tributes, ,\nPallbearers .were .AG! lane, ,C\nV. Riley, H. E. Thain,, V, Graves,\nR. D. Hickey and Alderman George\nBenwell;\n! IJOS ANGEEES, Nov.-2 (AP)-\nThe movies' best know sourpuss,\nNed Sparks, a native of St..Thomas',\nOnt., fold the federal hoard of tax\nappeals today false teeth were the\ntools of his trade, and that be paid\n83900 for special-set which eliminated the hiss when he used thd\nletter \"s.\"\n\"1 bought two sets,\" Dead Pan told\nJudge Ernest Van Fossan, \"Just In\ncase something happened to one.\nBy buying these teeth I was able\nto earn $172,00, as a movie actor.\n\u2022H I did not have them I might not\nhave been able to make $10.\"\nI Sparks asks a reduction of $8,187\nin his income tax bills from 1934 to\n1936. He claims this amount was\nspent for entertainment, tips, automobile expenses and such necessities\nas the false teeth.\nFor Eve***\/ Occasion\nCootenay Flower Shop\n\u25a0' Baker St Phona OK\niiiiiiiiiiiiimtmiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiilin\nNew ^Winter Coats\nUntrimmed and. -fur trimmed\ntweed coats arriv- (POO KA\nIng dally. Up from wAwU\nSdilk Cl.CaMolheM.\n669 Ward St.\u2014Opp. Capitol Theatre\niiiiiiiillliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nGENERAL   ELECTRIC\nAiriFlbw Cleaners\nNelson Electric Co.\n674 Baker Sb\nPhone 260\n\u00abS\u00bbtt\u00ab\u00ab3&$W\u00abS*3**$aw\nHOME COOKED MEALS\nT IN DOMESTIC ATM08PHERE\nGrenfell's Cafe\nOpp. -CIVIC THEATRE\nmmsststt&tWtWimmMMtt*'\nKOOTENAY VALLEY\nChocolate Milk\nRich in Vitamins A, B, C\n.SS*\u00abS\u00ab\u00ab\u00abSSS\u00bb5\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00abM\u00ab5**S*:\n\u25a0\nSTREET RAILWAY REPORT REVEALS\nCITY MUST EXPECT LOSS OH ANY\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNIUX\nExhaustive Report Is\nSubject Study by\nCouncil \u25a0\nFaced with the necessity of extensive repairs to the city's electric street railway, or with substitution of trackless trolley, dlesel or gasoline buses, Nelson olty\ncouncil Is deeply Involved In a\ndiscussion' of the relative merits\nof each, the' cost of each, .both for\nInstallation and operation, and ths\nservice obtainable. ,'\u2022*> \",'\u25a0\u25a0,\nAn exhaustive report dealing\n' with ths* cost of repairing the\npresent system and of Installing\nand operating both trolley buses\nand gasoline buses was presented to the city council Monday\nnight by Alderman A. G, Ritchie,\n' chairman of the'street railway\ncommittee. Into It Went data gathered by Alderman T. H. Waters\nIn ths course of. a trip through\neastern Canada, and the United\nStates and to'England; and Information gathered by R. E. Potter,\nolty engineer, from equipment\ncompanies of North America, and\nGreat Britain.\nMUST EXPECT LOSS\nThe report revealed that the present system was, being operated\nat a loss of $11,000 to $12,000 a year:\nthat trackless- trolley buses' could\nbe operated at an estimated loss of\n$15,520; and gasoline buses at an\nestimated loss of $8695 a year. It was\npossible that with a new system,\ngiving 20-minute service over a\nmore popular route, the annual loss\ncould be reduced,       ',';, >,.A\nWhile the report pointed out that\nnone of these systems would pay\nIts way, aldermen agreed that the\ncity should retain some form of\ntransportation i because the ' street\nrailway had in the past a good deal\nto-do with the manner in whioh the\ncity was built up,   \u2022'\u25a0'     .      I\nThe: report In full follows:\nThe street railway has reached\nthe point where it must either be\nabandoned or entirely revamped to\na modern system, while the cars\nhave been maintained in a safe condition, and the road bed. kept In\nrunning: order, the steel has worn\nout and must be replaced. The provincial inspector of railways states\nthat this must be done yearly so\nthat'all will be renewed during the\nnext four years, The passing tracks\nand curves must be done immediately as We are experiencing increasing difficulty keeping the cars on\nthe track at these points. At least\n$20,000 will have to be expended in\nthis Connection during the coming\nyear. This, with the, continued yearly loss as shown below means the\ncity must face an expenditure during the coming year of roughly.\n$35,000 to keep the street railway in\noperation, all of which sum should\ncome from current revenue as it is\nnot advisable that expenditures of\nsuch a nature should be financed\nby a bond issue. This would eliminate any street improvements unless\nsame were carried out by a money\nbylaw for street work, '\nThe street railway has played a\npart in the building of the city, but\nits use is decreasing constantly as\nautomobiles are becoming more\ncommpn. Over, the period of the\nJast twelve-months the total revenue has been $16,019. Thi expenses\nduring this time are approximately\n$27,000, or a net loss of $11,000 for\nthe year. This only takes into Consideration, as in previous years, the\ndirect loss as shown'by tbe city\nannual statement and makes no\nprovision for expenditure cutting\naway ahd clearing ice at crossings,\netc., to make them passable smother traffic; and further, the excessive cost of street building and\nmaintaining owing to the, existence\nof the rails. This figure, however,\nIncludes $6,000 for power at 1 cent\nper kilowatt hour. The sum of\n$27,000 represents only a small\namount of car and track maintenance and wages. No interest or depreciation is charged. Which on the\ntotal value of about $175,000 would\nbe a large sum. The yearly cost from\nnow on must Include the relaying\nof steel, replacing overhead trolley,\nand if the system is to be retained,\nthe purchase of new modern cars.\nRAILS CUT UP STREETS\nThe greatest drawback to the\nstreet railway,' other than its cost,\nis the presence of the rails in the\nstreets. In - the summer concrete\nand the roads are flush with the\ntops of the rails, but winter oper?\nation requires the rails to be raised clear of the surface.of the road\nand to be clear on both sides so that\nthe sweeper can keep the snow well\nbelow the track. If the rail is set\ninto the road like on Baker street\nand Latimer street, it must b* continually dug out by hand; and it\nhas been shown on Latimer street\nthat the water gets below the ties\nand track, andfrost- heaving ruins\nthe pavement, if a paved road is-to\nbe kept it is only satisfactory on a\nconcrete slab below the ties. This\ntype of-track is worth abput $150,-\n000 per mile. It isuut of all question\nto consider concrete streets to the\n\u00abU\nCtfrtfitmaa\nVOU t\nGREAT BRITAIN\nWe will deliver for you to any address in England,\nScotland, Wales, or Northern Ireland, a box of specially\nselected and packed OK, Apples. These are picked and\npacked while in their prime and cold stored until\nshortly before Christmas when delivery will be made.\nMelNTOSH RED ....\nDELICIOUS\t\nNEWTOWN \t\nJONATHAN  .......\nESPECIALLY PACKED\nOrders must reach our olfico not later than Nov. 15th,\naccompanied by remittance at par in Nelson. Names\nand addresses should be typed or plainly printed.     \u2022\nAssociated Growers of 8. C Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\nliu*-*-**-!-!-!--**'^^\nextent of the route covered by the\nstreet raUufay,'.     '    . ,: \"\nOwing to the width of our main\nstreets, the. existing tracks are becoming a traffic problem with the\never Increasing auto traffic, and\ncongestion sit: times is already taking place. Modern street traffic has\nto take care ot the automobile\nprimarily, and except in such thickly populated districts as ths centres\nof large cities, the street railways\nhave given away to tired vehicles\nwhich do not interfere with traffic\nto the same extent\nThere is another, factor, to be\nconsidered! when discussing tne\ntransportation system, that Is' the\npresent electrical system. The peak\nload is about-2500 K.V.A; and tha\nlarge turbine installed in 1020 is\nrated at 2680 K.v;a. full load.,\nThe other two- total 1750 K.V;A.\nThe street cars sre responsible for\na peak load of approximately 480\nK.V.A. An addition to t^e power\nplant under present conditions will\nbe\/required fn the next yept or two\nat a' cost of $250,000 and an annual\ncharge of approximately $20,000.\nPOSTPONE ADDITION\nIf the railway load, Is taken off\nthe system, the addition to . the\npower plant can. be put off for\nprobably five years leaving $100,-\n000 available for road work,and\ncity development During the next\nfive years the following bonds\nwill be written off:\n1939 ..: $ 15,387.44\n1940    :...  17,581.04\n1941    17,962.68\n1942 _ \u201e   12,005.00\n15,000.00\n1943 \u201e...: .....\u201e\u201e\u201e...\u201e  80,000.00\n40,000.00\nTotal   .....  ..:..... 197,936.16\nThis will relieve the-city of the\noutlay at present necessary to carry\nthem ana the power plant addition could be built with little interference to the city's financial setup.\nThe cost, inconvenience and obsolescence of the street railway indicate that it should be replaced by a\nsuitable system that would not have\nits objections. The, city having its\nown power plant naturally leads to\na careful consideration ot electrical\nvehicles, which consist of the street\ncsr and tbe trolley bus. The trolley\nbus has electric motors and operates\nfrom two trolley wires overhead.\nTrolley buses are considered, the\nfinest type bf municipal transportation where the system can be adopted. Among its advantages may be\nmentioned quietness\u2014practically no\nnoise othor than the sound ofthe\ntires. The absence ofvlbration gives\nit great riding comfort There are\nno fumes or odors. There is practically no danger from fire, and another distinct advantage of the trolley bus is the complete independence of sources of oil supply and\nprices which are subject to variations and possible shortage, especially In times Of Strikes- or emergency, this being one of the\nreasons that some of the large.oper-\nators are turning to electric trolley\nbuses from'.the gas bus. There can\nbe no doubt if Nelson wishes to retain an electric system of transportation the trolley bus is the only method that can be considered\nat this time.\nESTIMATED COST\nThe cost of a system using two\nregular buses and one spare is as\nfollows: ... \"\n3 buses at $18,000 \u25a0_,!...\u201e:.... $ 54,000\nOver head trolley\u2014$10,000\nper mfle ..^.a.      40,000\nThe present substation \u2022\nequipment is very old\nand nas given increasing\ntrouble during the pest\nfew years. If a new electrical transportation system . is installed new\nequipment will be re-\nquired at a cost of      15,000\nTotal ..a am     109,000\nThe annual <ch$rges on this system\nwould W:      ;;...-\nOperating:               \u2022'.,,'.\nSalaries for driver, mechanics, etc. $10,500\nInterest at 4 per cent,     wty\nSinking fund 3V, per cent for\n12 years .\nMaintenance     WOO\nPower:      \u25a0   ' , .\nThe mileage of the buses to bo\napproximately twice that\nof the street cars the pow-        .\ner is estimated at the same    6,400\nTotal '-....-..\u2022\u2022- 1 \u2022\u2022  81'520\nRevenue:\nSame as at present..\nLoss\n....   16,000\n $16,620\nIt wili be observed that the above\nfigures are based on'revenue as at\npresent. * However, with . some\nchanges In, the route, such as passing the Civic Centre and the hospital, it would-be reasonsble to assume that a greater revenue would\nresult and an increase.of only. 10\nper cent would remove $1,600 from\nthe loss shown. There is also the\nquestion of a higher fare as the existing fares are too low. . ;...-\u25a0\n\u25a0 The trolley bus has certain disadvantages. First, its high cost.Second, it would not relieve the present\npowei! situation. Third, stout wooden or Steel poles must.be erected at\nevery 100 feet on both sides of the\nroute to carry the double troljey\nwire, which must be strung, muoh\ntighter than a street csr trolley. .\nGA8 AND DIESEL BUSES\nOwing to these reasons' consideration waa given to internal combustion motor buses. These eohsle.\nof the gasoline and diesel bus. The\ndiesel bus is cheaper to operate\nthan the gas bus, depend ngon the\nprice of fuel, but this would he partly offset by the increased cost of\nlubrication, maintenance \/and repairs. In'addition to this the dlesel\nfuel has a distinctive and unpleasant oder,'and the-engines: are\nmclined to become noisy, .both-ot\nwhich are unpleasant-ina bus. For\nthese reasons the diesel bus Is not\nconsidered In this report.     *;--\nThe gasloine bus is the low-otmst\ntransportation, unit. It <\u00bb>.^ffi5\nin any desirable size and to price\ntom*8000 up; The Jomrtat W\u2122\nareTbised on a truck drtvtol^tth\nfour wheels, with a modernd*y\ntransit body, spec al seats, Mating,\nlighting sind ventilation: ...\u25a0 \u2022:.\nUrte buses at $8t\u00bb0--S28,M0.\nOperating:\nSalaries .......\nInterest at 4\nSinking Fund\nsix years\nMaintenance\n... $10,800\n\u21220J0\n*r cent..;.\u2014\nIS per cent for,\n2900\n2500\n\u2014   BEATTY   \u2014\nATTACHMENT IRONER\nFITS ALL $49.$0\nWASHERS ,-..- Ti   ,\u25a0\nSee  It at Your Local .Dealer;,\nBEATTY FACTORY BRANCH\nPHONE 91 321 BAKER ST.\n\u2022 Miss M. H. Cameron and her\nsister, Mrs. A. Gordon Mackay, High\nstreet, hive.returned from a couple\nof weeks' motor trip to Victoria.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. Bell was in town from\nSheep Creek yesterday. - ' ,\n\"\u25a0'\u2022 Mrs. Bruno LeRose of Trail is\nin the city to attend the funeral ot\nher sister, Mrs. D. DeFerro, this\nmorning. ,       -,;       \\ -\n\u2022 Mrs. Gibson of Longbeach\nspent yesterday in town.\n> Mr. and Mrs. H. Cecil Grizzelle\nand daughter, Miss Genevieve, Miss\nK. Manahan and Miss Muriel Smith\nwere resent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. K. Scatchard in New Denver.\n\u2022 Mis. J. G. Bunyan, Kerr apartments, has returned from visiting\nher niece, Mrs. W. Kuhn, in Spokane, ahd her sister-in-law, Mrs. B.\nN. Ouimette, in Mujlen, Idaho.   '\u25a0\n; \u2022' Captain and Mrs. J. Ferguson\nand daughter Lorraine of Sunshine\nBay spent yesterday In tile city.\n.*-. Mrs. George M. Clark. Cedar\nstreet, leaves today oh an extended\nvisit to her Son, Harold Clark, in\nNakusp.\n\u2022 ! Mr. and.Mrs. Howard Frizzell\nhave returned from their honeymoon\nspent in Portland and other coast\ncities. They have,taken up residence\nin the Kerr apartments.\n. \u2022 Mrs. S, Martin and Miss Kathleen Riesterer motored to Trail yesterday. - \u25a0    ..--'.,   S\n'\u2022>. S. A. Williams and daughter,\nMargaret, who spent a fortnight in\nNelson and district; have left for\ntheir home In Vancouver.\n\u2022 lbs. Trlckett was in town\nfrom New Denver Tuesday,\n\u2022 Mrs. C. J. Jaegar ana daughter Pat of Spokane were recent Nelson visitors. ; \u25a0' \"\u2022\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Clayton,\nObservatory street, announce the\nengagement of their daughter, Iran*,\nto Andrew Robert \"Bud-Allen, son\nof Mr. and Mrs, Andrew Allen, Vie-\nSoria street the marriage to take\nlace in St Paul's church November\n2. by Rev. Foster Hilliard.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. Harrop was In town\nfrom Harrop yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. James May, Richard street, have as their guest their\ndaughter; Mrs. F. G.  StDenis of\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Sewell of Sunshine\nBay was in the city yesterday, the\nguest of her daughter, Mrs. A. Fletcher, Mill, street\n\" t. and Mrs. J: Ovette, New\nYork City, were week-end guests\nOf Miss M. Riddell, 722 Baker Street\n\u2022 W. H- Chisholm entertained at\na supper party at Grenfell's date recently, on the occasion of hia birthday. His Invited guests were:Uid\nA. T. Stewart J. Sumners. Miss E.\nDavis, Oeorge Shorthousc, Miss Florence Bridgetnan,- Thomas Johnstone, Miss Consuela Minyard, and\nC. Carlson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Kerby Grenfell\nattended the Navy ball at Spokane\nrecently..       :       '   .\nBoth Drivers Finedr Result Aulo\nCollision on Nelson-Nelway Road\nSame Witnesses \\ri, Two frlolls' but Roles\nReversed; Reynolds and Sumner Each\n:,-:'\u25a0\"\u2022\".,' Convicted;;F-ihedv$25\nAlbert Van Reynolds of Ymir, and\nJohn Sumner of Sheep. Cretis, were\neach fined $25 by William Irvine,\nstipendiary magistrate, to' provin-\nclalioliCe court here Tuesday, when\neach faced a charge of driving in\na manner dangerous to the public,\narising outi of a collision between\ntheir cars on the Nelson-Nelway\nroad, near Apex, October 22. Dam-\nage .to Reynold's car totalled $89,\nand damage to Sumner's, $225.\nTESTIFIES UNDER\/-\nPROTECTION\nTaking1 tiie stand as a witness for\nthe prosecution in Reynolds' trial,\nSumner was granted the protection\nof the court under the Canads Evidence act at the request of his\ncounsel, H, C. Irving, as he wss\ncharged with a similar offence ot\nthe collision. T   - -'*'.\nSumner testified he saw Reynolds' Car about 150. feet away,-and\nthat when Reynolds drew- neir.\nhis.Car swerved over to the right\nof the road, causing a head-on collision, He said Reynolds was on tho\nwrong side ot the road as he round,\ned a curve. >\nConstable Ralph A. Lees of the\nB.C. provincial police highway patrol, who laid the Information, testified he found the point of impact\nto be in the centre of a road 17\nfeet wide. He said the visibility for\nmotorists, at this point was about\n300 feet but admitted in cross-\nexamination there were no speed\nrestriction sighs near, and that It\nwas a dangerous part ot the road\nWhere the accident, occurred.\nREYNOLDS SAYS     '\n8LOWEO DOWN\nReynolds, the accused, testified\nhe was on-the extreme right side of.\nthe road, and had slowed down to\nabout 20 miles per hour but that\nSumner had Mt him head-on. He\nadmitted he was In the centre ot the\nroad before.the accident\nFour passengers in the Reynolds\ncar, Mrs. Reynolds, Annie Troyan,\nStephen Troyan, and Mary Oswald,\nall testified their car was going\n\u2022bout 20 miles ah hour, and that\nthey'were on theright side of the\nroad. Oh cross-examination, however, they admitted they might have\nmade some mistake in their Judgment.\nConstable C, A. Cohoon, Ymir,\ntestified that he had Investigated\ntiie accident as well-as Constable\n' Magistrate Irvine Said that to view\nof the evidence of Sumner and the\npolice, he believed Reynolds was in\nthe centre of the road at the time\nof the collsion. He accordingly convicted him and fined him $25.\nIn the esse against Sumner, of\ndriving in a manner dangerous to\nthe public, Reynolds bacaine a witness for the prosecution. He testi-\nfield he saw Sumner's car coming,\nand turned out to avoid hitting him,\nbut Sumner hit him head-on. '\nAll toe other witnesses who had\ntestified in the previous case, repeated their evidence. - ;  t;  -\nSUMNER SAYS HE\nTURNED OUT ,\nSumner stated that if he had\nturned out about three teet farther\ntowards the outer edge of the road,\nthe accident could have been avoided.   \u25a0 \u25a0'-\u25a0 \u25a0'-'\u2022 'j   '\nThe magistrate found him guilty,\nand fined him $25.\nR.' D. MacAulay -appeared -for\nSumner.       \u25a0' ,.   \u25a0\nSergeant J. W. Hooker of the\nprovlhclal police prosecuted.\nFuel\u2014167,000 miles at 7 miles per\ngallon\u201422,500 at.29c ....     6475\nTotal annual cost ......\nRevenue\u2014Same as at\npresent _\t\n24,695\n16,000\nNet loss per year ..'\u2014,....--' 8695\nSAVE AT 8UB8TATHON\nWith either the trolley bus or\ngasoline bus it Is expected to be able\nto operate the city ejeotrical system\nwithout the presentnight operators\nin the substation. This will mean\na substantial saving, probably $2400.\nThis phase is-still under, consideration. -There Is slso, as mentioned\nwith the trolley bus the possibility\nof increased revenue lowering the\nloss as shown for the operation of\ngas .buses by some $1600.\nThe above mileage- represents a\n20-minute schedule frOm 6 a.m. to\nmidnight If this is reduced the costs\nwill also be reduced, but It,is\nthought that the additional trips\nwill pick up enough extra passen^\ngera to pay the additional cost and\nwill be a more satisfactory service,\nIt is apparent frpm the above that\nno type of transportation Byatem\nwill pay its own operating cosls but\nmust be subsidized by the city. The\nstreet railway loss over recent years\nis $11,000 to $12,000 per year, not\nincludipg interest sinking fund or\ndepreciation, and if maintained the\ncity Is faced with a large investment for replacements and , also\nmust face the fact .that streets cannot be paved satisfactorily fhere\nthe rails exist. .   '\n\u25a0 The rubber tired vehicle requires\ngood roads, but money spent this\nway is used by nearly everyone.\nMedium and low cost paved roads\ncan be used on the routes. Snow\nplowing and road maintenance in\nwinter will be much less expensive\non the bus routes and no deep ruts\nwill be fofmed as with the ralU\nThe gasoline bus is most adaptable and can be run On any desired\nroute. If installed, not only the\nstreets are improved but all of the\npoles and overhead of the trolley\nis Temoved, improving the look of\nAnother point worthy of consideration in the gasoline bus Is the\nfact that the city now operetes a\nconsiderable number of motor vehicles and it should be possible to\nmaintain a staff of .otio or trw\nmechanics who would serves the\ntransportation eoulpment with the\ncity's other equipment <\u2022*-toller\nnature-at Considerable saving, from\nthe exiting method of Walrs of\nthis nature, In this,case toe charge\nfor operators w|H bo somewtart lew.\n, tt gasoline buses are used tor-toe\nnext five or six years, by the time\nthey are Written oft tholwwej plant\niMUon'wlU have.b-mjnade and\nextra power Will be available, If\ntraffic justifies the increased cost,\nc?the public-so desires, to trolley,\nbuses.ooUId then-be lnstoU^Jlow;\nwer, toere Is no question but what\nmodern city transit type, gasoline\nbuses will.give a satisfactory- ser-\n'\u2014ratthepres-\nower cost to\nvice, better than\nent tine, at a mi\n\u25a0It mayAe Interesting to note that\n.with the gasoline buses money is\nspent for interest on bonds. Canadian fuel now being avalable, all\nspent for Interest on bonds. Canadian fuel now being available, all\nof the money Will go to Canadian\nindustry.   ,        : ,,'\" ' ,  * ,   \u2022\nDEATHS\nBy the Canadian Press\nLONDON \u2014 Dr. D. B. S. BrUce-\nJones, former senior-surgeon on\nseveral-liners of-Canadian Pacific\nfleet \u25a0\u25a0'.'\u2022\" ',\u00bb'\u2022\u2022'\nNEW YOftK\u2014Mortis Rothenb\u00abg-\ner, 50,.retired member New York\ncurb exchanie; >.-,    ,  ,*   -_.\nBAYONNE, France - Francis\nJames, 70, author of several novela\nand plays, an-1 best known for his.\nverse\/ ''  --'\u25a0'.- . ;.: :'    >-. >\u2022\nSAN DIEGO, Calif..- Rear Admiral Yancey S. Williams, 62, former commander special service sauad-\nTOn-ln Central American waters.\nSAN FRANCISCO - Major Gen-\nerel George S. Simonds, 64, former\ncommandant 6th Corps area.\nTORONTO\u2014Sir John Daniel, 68,\npresident of the brokerage firm of\nJohn Daniel & Sons, Ltd.\nLANDIS, Sask.-Henny C. Clay,\nI, believed Canada's oldest newspaperman,\nFOTIEY-ON-THAMES, England\n-IJeut-Gen. Sir Charles Knox, 92,\ncommander in South African war,\nwho helped defeat Gen. Cronie\nand pursued Gen. De WtSt covering 800 mijes in 43 days, wounded\nat Paardeberg..\n. PAGF   CIVS\nMJOER\nDRESSES\nA DRESS SALE OF THE FINEST\nVALUE'S WE HAVE EVER HAD\nBeautifully made Dresses in smart styles and. wonderful materials. Made by some of the bitt manufaiturert\nin the country. Queen and Sapera qualities included.\nYou'll need a new dress now at this low price..\nRegular to $27.75\nSixes 14 to 42\nind many half sixes\n$5-95\nFLASH! NEW EVENING DRESSES JUST IN\nREADY - TO r WEAR\n596\nBAKER ST.\nDRYGOODS\nMbthisi** Registere4 ;\nv Herself as'Dead\nedegbj^k, bitC'rtov.-.-a -\nEmma Larocquc was supposed to\nbe dead but she appeared In police\n. court here for trial on a charge\nof false registration ot a birth.\n. It took Magistrate E. R. Tucker\nsoma time to straighten out the\nmatter but when he did the woman, shown on Cochrane's vital\nstatistics records to be dead. Was\nconvicted and fined $25 and costs.\nThe- evidence disclosed Mrs.\nLarocque gave birth to a child\nrecently and failed to register the\nbirth. The baby died and the woman made a declaration to the official registrar that it was the\n..child's mother who had'died. .\nSerial Story\n(Continued From Pete Four)\nCushing decided to Join the party.\nHe had seen Judy's pictures and\nliked the tilt of her nose, the upward slant 'of tier laughing eyes.\nHere was a girl who -could take\nwhat life dished outl He would\nl(ke to know her.  .\nHowever, he wanted to see Count\nPhillippe before he sailed SO he\ncould not remain with Judy When\nhis confreres left He held her\nhand a second In leaving and his\namused eyes surveyed, the remains\nofthe feast- .,\n\"There's enough for breakfast\nand dinner tomorrow night It\nyou'll wait, I'll drop by and help\nwith the dishes.\"      -\nJudy did not think be would.\nShe was amazed the next evening\nwhen his shining head apeared on\nthe stairs, in answer to her release\nofthe door catch.- ,   t     v,\n\"I came, you sec,\" he said. \"I\neven : brought some tea towels. I\ndidn't think you had any.\"\n\"You wiote the kindest story\nabout me that anyone ever did,\nshe greeted him. \"I'm so grateful I'll fry you-two.eggs and a\nrasher of bacon. YOU gave me\ncredit for being a person, with a\ndesire to esm my way, instead of\nsomething that glitters to reflected\nlight\"     \u25a0'\nBob Cushing.was.not writing e\nbook. He had no wish to do a play.\nHe might delve Into biography\nsome day. He took life as it came,\nlaughed a great deal more than\nmost people ot his age or profession, and fell a little in love with\nJudyv ,.    ;\nBut he did not mention It, and\nshe divined it in. small things, only.\nHe sent her a flower a day in a\nsmall red bo:o-onc morning a\nsnow-white camellia; another, when\nhe had just been paid, a purple\norchid; once a nosegay of sweet\npeas.\n1  He introduced her to others ot\nON THE AIR\nCJAt\n319.6 m.\n1000 w,\n910 k.\nTreii\ni Ai'Mr-'.\n7:00-Good Morning   -   ,\n7:16\u2014AH request program,' n\n8:00\u2014Morning bulletin board\n8:45\u2014Getting the most out of lite\n9:(\u00bb-Orgah Melody\n9:15-Waltz Time -\u25a0'. . ;\n9:30\u2014School Broadcast    \"      .\n10:00\u2014Happy Gang - -.-\n10:30-Vlrginia Fair Entertalhs\n10:45\u2014Romance of Dan and Sylvia\n11:00\u2014Big. Sister ..    ,\n11:15\u2014Roundup\n11:30\u2014Morning Varieties   \u2022\n11:45\u2014Modern Melody\n12:00-Mary Marlln \u2022\nP let,** ' \u25a0'\u25a0\"\".\u2022\n13:18-Mi Perltow,':\nll\u00ab^^ulainrl?\n1:00\u2014Club matinee\nl:45-4*nd me your eats\nS;0O-rT? to\u00ab ladles    '.\u25a0 ;,-\n2:45\u2014Closing stock quotations\n3:00\u2014Norman Cloutler's orch.\n3:15\u2014Beverly Lane '   1 \u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0   \u25a0\n3:30\u2014Up-to-the-Minute .\n8:46\u2014Old Time Frolic \u201e-\n4:00\u2014Theatre news      \u2022\n4:15\u2014Announcement time\n4:30\u2014Songs of Today    .\n4:46-rHobby Horses.\n5:00\u2014Sport pane of the air\n5:15-Guess What ',\n5:30-Chandu   '\n5:45\u2014Crimson Trail,\nLi^\n6:00\u2014Good News ...   \u2022-,.\u25a0-..\n7:00-MusliS HSU\n8:00\u2014News and weather\n8:15\u00bb-\u00a3lsten   A   '   n\n8:30--Menlorles of Hawaii   '.'    ,\n8:45\u2014Easy to Remember j\n9:0O\u2014Story behind the song\n9:15-Theatre Time \"\u2022'\u25a0\n9:30\u2014Book Review\n9:45\u2014News .and weather\n10*00\u2014Concert trio   ',\".'\t\n10:30-Paclflo-Goodnight\nCANADIAN   BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION NETWORK\nCKOV WOjCJCA CHWK CMC\n880      690     780      m     840\nCFJC  CJAT .CKY. CFAC  CJOC\n880\n010..    ,910\nw\n930\nCBR\n1100\n850\np.m.-     y.T        ',.  *\n4:00\u2014WilfridJSsasette's orch.\n4:15-Ma'or Bill .\n4:30^News and Weather\n4:45\u2014Hobby -Horses   .'\u2022\u2022'\u2022\u2022.'\n5:00\u2014Montreal Orchestra\n6i00-Go\u00aba*Mws \u2022\u2022 \u25a0,'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\n7:00-Muslc Hall\n-7:a\u00bb-'SlumUr bo\u00abt     ,    \u25a0\ntltOO\u2014News and weatoejj\n8:15\u2014Introducing tonight\n8:30\u2014Familiar Music\n9:00\u2014Theatre time\n9:30\u2014Book Review\n9:45\u2014News .and weather\n10;0O-Concerttrto. . .'.<-.\n10:3O-Pacltic Goodnight. \u00ab\ntmim\nOf Antagonistic Tissues; Hope so\ni, Banting\nTGRONTO, Nov. J (Cf )-Some\nchickens in which cancerous\ngrowth were transplanted during\nexperiments at the Banting Institute resisted the disease without treatment Sir Frederick Banting told the Royal Society of\nMedicine at London, Oct. 11. Sir\nFrederick's address was \"Resistance to Experimental Cancer,\"\nCancer experimental work\nahbWed.the disease could not,\nWith -few exceptions, be transmitted outside the species,\" Sir\nFrederick told the gathering.\nj Cancerous growth called rous\nsarcoma were transplanted into\n1768 Chickens at the Banting institute In Toronto during toe six\nyears from 1928 to 1984. Seven\nbirds \u2014 1 to 164 \u2014 developed\nstrong resistance to the transplanted disease and the \"well-\nestablished tumor regressed,\";\n' \"The question wu whether the\n. regression, was brought about bathe development of Immune bodies which destroyed the virus, or\nwhether-it,was a more.complex\nprpoess,-:an Interplay'of various\nfactors determining either an unlimited growth of the.tumor or\nregression\" the report ssld.;\nTTbei balance- of evidence sug-\n\u2022estod.tiiat what-h'e called-resistance Was a laboratory phenomenon unrelated to'cancer-of\nspontaneous nature. It might be\nsimply an indication of reaction'\nbetween host and tumor cells\nIf this were the ^completed ex*\nplanation of the phenomenon of\nresistance, it could scarcely be '\nimagined that toe forces which\ndestroyed a transplanted tumor*:-1\ncould ever operate to natural can.\ncer, in which the malignant cells\nhad necessarily the same genetic\nconstitution as the host (cells).'\n\"But after some of these ex.*'\nperiments there lurked In his\nmind the notion .that'the force*\nwhich effectively rid an animal\nof a spontaneous tumor might be\na combination of intra-cellular and\nanti-viral Immune bodies.\n\"The spontaneous cure of natural cancer was vet-y rare. The 4\nquestion was whether tbe regression wss brought about by ,\nthe development of Immune bod. :\nles which destroyed the virus or\nwhether It was a more complex j\ne:sss, an interplay\u25a0 of various-'\n)rs determining either an united 'growth df the tumor or \u25a0\nregression. ' \u25a0 \u25a0 ' I\n\"The opinion derived from this\nwork was that antigenic differences between host and malignant j\ntissues might be sufficiently great\nto stimulate antibodies adequate\nto \u25a0 ensure the: disappearance ot 1\neven spontaneous cancers. It was\nalong these lines that the'-greatest\nhope of cancer;therapylay.\"\nhis own gtbuj*r Who Welcomed her\neagerly. She was busy with her\nwork. Cordelli was considerate and\nappreciative. Her home, was real,\nrafter and wall and hearth. She\nWas a person in her own. right ,\nIt was Bob who gave her toe'\nnext news of Ronald. , ,'.-'>\n(To Be Continued)        '\nCoast Com. Chest\nSots New Record\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2,'(CP)^-\nNinth annual community chest campaign of tiie Vancouver W.elfare\nFederation collected a total; of\n$858,118 in cash and pledges. All\nformer records wore eclipsed.\nDunneft iri Hospital ]\nqt Spokane, Reportec\n'Coming Along Nicely'\nA. J. Dunnett of Nelson, a patient,:\nat St Luke's hospital, Saokane.-if\nreported to be \"coming along nice\nly?' \u25a0;:,: \u25a0,- '\u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0' '\nLONDON, Nov. S-<CP'Ceb*-\nA -Buckingham Palace .spokesn\t\ntoday denied a report printed by the\nLondon Daily Herald that the Ktog.-\nhad sent a letter to president Roose-.\nvelt accepting an invitation to- visit\nWashington  after - their - visit  to I\nCanada next year.      ,  ' -; \"j\nBargains In the Classified Today!\nMystery Manr Memory Loslr Asks\nAid of Vancouver City Polk\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nVancouver police today were faced\nwith the problem of solving the\nIdentity of a man who said he had\ntost Ws memory and from \"Whose\nclothing and personal effects all\nidentification marks had been removed. \u25a0      \u2022 -       .'\nThe unknown man brought th?\nproblem to police himself last night\nwhen he walked into headquarters:\ne club bag in one hand, and said;\n\"I have lost my memory. Who am\nIt\"'\nThe man, estimated by police to\nbe' about 56 years old, was five feet\n10 inchea tall, well built and of\nruddy complexion. He spoke with\na French-Canadian accent and told\nthem he could speak French. His\nbrown hair is greying, his eyes are\nhasel and he wears a close-clipped\nmoustache. -\u25a0 \u25a0 -\n' Later Investigation showed all\nidentification marks had been removed from his clothing. In one of\nhis pockets police found a war-\n\u25a0time post card picture ot a man\nresembling their problem subject.\nOn thebsckof the picture was\ns -.inscription: \"Regimental sejet-\ni*br,'S7th overseas battalion, Val.\ncamp,\njut a, corner of the,\nclipped, mutilating a faf\nwhich now rseds: \"\u00ab*\u00bb **'\n.was\n\u201e address\nMr. Joseph Land.;\nSALT-'-\",-'*::      ..':';\", I**'\n7 lb. Sack it i ^..-.-\u2022\u2022W'\n; \u00ab   HILLYARO'S\nFairway-Srocery\nPhone 264        Via Crawford, Mor!\n\u2022*\u2014\u00ab----\u00ab-\u00ab-\n\u00aby, 57 New street North'Ada.. M. I.\"\nA message in small, clipped writing on the card reads: \"A photo\ntaken in front of my tent in my\nregt sergt. * ihAjor's uniform. Helmets are worn on account of warm\nweather. Notice a floor in my tent,.\ndresser and chairs, desk which you\ncannot see and cot  I have an I\norderly to clean any clothes; . . .1\nShoes in far.. iMy work. .-.\"\nPart ot the message was cut off,\nGet Wise to\nConstipation!\n:\nWhen you're constipated, It's a\ngreat temptation to be satlsfisd\nwith Quick relte\/. But physics\nmay become a habit ibid they\ndont keep constipation from returning. It's so much better to get\nat tiie cause of the trouble.\nIt you est what most people do,\nchances aro tho only thing the\nmatter Is voti don't get enough\n'\u2022butt.\" And \"bulk\" doesn't mean\nhow much you eat It means a\nkind ot foot! that isn't consumed\nin the body, but leaves a soft\n\"bulky\" mass In the intestines\nand helps a bowel movement. -\n: What to 40? Bat a little Kellogg's All-Bran for breakfast\nevery day and,- drink' plenty of\nmtm. This crunchy toasted cereal is not only rich in \"bulk\"-\nit also contains tho natural intestinal tonio, vitamin B,. All-\nBran Is made by Kellogg In Lon-\ndon.Ontorlo.Boldbycvcrygrocer.\n \t\n_\n\u2014\n\"-\"\u25a0\t\nPAQB BIX -\nEstablished April 22,1902\nBritish Columbia's Mott MtrttMng Newspaper\nj>t Sun\n266 Bafc l3teeet;\"\"Nei\u00abbnr \"Brltlih Col\nPubliihed   every  morning  exci\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COIV\nJ*bone 144, Private, exchange Connecting AIT Departmente,\ni'    >i'\"..','i) \\    \u00ab-   '\"  \u25a0\u25a0 l'111       '.   ',\"  \u25a0    !- '        \u25a0   ')'! ... .    '\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS  AND\nTHE  AUDIT  BUREAU  Or  CIBCULATIOSi\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER S, 1988\nBETTER QUIT PRICE-FIXING    \/'\u2022\u2022'\nEXPERIMENTS\nThe sooner the British Columbia legislature abandons\nthe attempts to fix retail or other prices the better.\nLast session one act provided that food stuffs might\nnot be sold at less than a certain percentage above cost.\nAnother act gave manufactures and some classes ef\nmiddle men the power to fix the selling price of their products\/If a merchant or dealer sells to the public at lower\nprices he can be punished in the courts.\nUnder this act oil refiners gave notice to retailers of\na fixed price to sell gasoline. Retailers were threatened\nwith the law if they sold below this price, though it is\npretty generally admitted to be too high; \u25a0\n'Under the third1 act British Columbia's government\ntook powers to fix gasoline prices, Operating under this\nlegislation the government set a price below that established\nby the refiners under the law which had, in affect, invited\nthe refiners to keep prices as high as they could.\n' ' Now we have an injunction, attacks by the premier on\na member of the judiciary and a law suit which will last\nfor months before It is finally settled by tiie privy council.\nWhat a men.\nBut what, other than a mess, does any body of legislators get into when it attempts to fix prices? Greek republics, Roman dictators, the Florentine princes, French\nmonarchB, Elizabeth of England, with her damnable system of monopolies, tiie French revolutionists\u2014all through\nthe ages such price -fixing hat been tried and always has\npalled.:.\"';.,- 7 -TT   .', 'TTTT.\nIt injures the public. It ultimately injures tho mer-\ne\u00ab6tile interests it iii designed to protect*\u2014the cooperative\nmovement in British Columbia is growing\u2014and it piles up\nnothing but hopeless political trouble for the short sighted\ngovernment which attempts it.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C^-THURBDAY MORNINO. NOV. 8,1M8\nSALLY'S SAtUES\nteJtmOS.t.Km0em\nThe road to success isn't crowded because so many\npeople get lost trying to find short cuts;\nCHURCHILL PLEADS WITH;   .\nUNITED STATES  TO JOIN ,\nBRITAIN BEFORE IT ISTOGMTE\nLOUI$CYR\n\"Some day he strong as Louis Cyr.\" In some such\nds the \"old grandpere\" of Dr. Drummond's famous\npoem predicts the future of \"Leetle Bateese\". Just how\nstrong Was Louis Cyr?\nHe was \"the strongest man of all time\" according to\niter Bailey, a prof essionalweight-lifter, in a magazine\nScle. He credits Cyr with having lifted as much as 4,800\nyPOflndg.    -: < A\nCyr was a Friaich<!anadlan' born In Montreal, and\nin the Montreal Herald Elmer Ferguson writes: [\n\"His hair was long, curling; hung In ringlets down to\nI shoulders. He was a Gargantuan man, with Gargantuan\nappetite. He was the strongest, man who ever lived, at\nleast in the after-Samson era. He'was the Samson of modern\ntimes, even though he never pulled down any temples.\nThirty years ago, they were still selling at old Sohmer Park\nlittle statues of the mighty Louis Cyr, and people were still\nbuying those plaster casts of the man with the enormous\nmuscles, of the curling hair that fell in ringlets, this last\nlink with another generation of athletics.\n\"Louis Cyr> feats of strength were nearly unbeliev-\n| abtoi but they are not mere legend. They were.performd\nI a* a time when weight-lifting, testa of straight -muscular\n\u00abt\u00bbe\u00bbgth, were in high popularity.\n\"This we find in printed records: At St. Henri town\nhaH in 1869, Cyr met Barre in a weight-lifting contest and\n\u25a0 reaords of that day say Louis first lifted a bell weighing\n>66 pounds. Then a platform weighing 100 pounds was\npjawa* oji the stage, on it were placed seven dumb-bells\ni(metal) weighing 798 pounds, then a barrel of flour weigh-\nkg 249 pounds, and then four men weighing in all 619\npounds. Cyr lifted this enormus load of 1,766 pounds, but\nBarre failed. It was apparently just a work-out for Louis\n.Who asked for three more men on the platform, which added\n562 pounds, or 2,328 in all. 'Putting his brawny arms\naround the platform, Cyr essayed to lift' the heavy burden\n\u25a0 and did so with apparent ease,' says the chronicler. AJEter\n\\ that, Louis lifted 600 pounds of dumb-bell with one finger.\n\"He once did a back-lift of 8,686 pounds at Berthierville\n; in 1888.\"\nI\ni\nWAR-EXILED*RATS\nMany queer ramifications of the British emergent\npreparations for the war that was averted are being recorded.   ;\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nIn the New York Sun appears the following item regarding laboratory rats: -\nA cargo pf laboratory rats arriving at Columbia university from England toward the end of the.recent Czechoslovak-crisis gave a dramatic clew to the tension which was\nthen prevalent In London, it was revealed today by Dr.\nLeslie C. Dunn, professor of zoology, in the Independent\nJournal, publication of the Columbia Graduate School of\nJournalism. T\nProf. Dunn, at a loss to understand word that a consignment of live animals from London awaited him at the\npier, saw the mystery dissolve when he receive*! a letter\nfrom a colleague in London which read in part:\n\"We are taking the liberty of sending you for' safekeeping a stock Of rats' containing a ne* and unique\nhereditary variation. Our laborjttory is rituate4 near the'\nbig railway termini which will be among the first targets\nfor raiding airplanes and we would like to be sure that\nsome of the most important of our scientific materials are\nout of harm's way.\"\n,. .^ A year ago. according to Prof. Dunn, a similar cargo\nWinston Churchill, who was Britain's fint lord of the admiralty in\n1914, made a worldwide impression with a speech on October 16 In\nwhloh he appealed to the United\nStates to join Great Britain In\nworld affairs \"before it it too late.\"\nTBXTOP\nCHURCHILL'S SPEECH\nTho complete text ot Churchlll'c\nspeech follows:.\n\"I avail myself with relief of the\nopportunity of speaking to the peo-\n>le ot the United States. 1 do not\nnow how long such liberties will\nbe allowed. The stations of uncen-\nsored expression are closing.down,\nthe lights are going out, but there\nia still time for those to whom freedom afid parliamentary government\nmean something to consult together.\n\"Let me speak jn truth and earnestness while Ume remains. The\nAmerican people have, it seems to\nme, formed a true judgment upon\nthe disaster which has befallen\nEurope, They realize,, perhaps more\nclearly than the French and British\nEublics have yet done, the far-reach-\nlg consequences of the abandonment and ruin ot the Czechoslovak\nRepublic.\n'<I hold to the conviction I expressed some months ago that if,\nin April, May or June, Great Britain\nFrance and Russia had jointly declared that they would act together\nupon Nazi Germany if Herr Hitler\ncommitted an act of unprovoked\naggrtsslon against this small state,\nand if they bad told Poland, Yugoslavia and Rumania what they\nmeant to do in good time and had\ninvited them to join the combination ot peace-defending powers, in\nthat case I \"hold that the German\ndictator would have'been confronted\nwith such a formidable array that\nhe would have been deterred from\nbis purpose. .\n\"This also would have been an\nopportunity tor all the peace-loving and moderate forces in Germany, together with the heads of the\nGerman army, to make a great effort to reestablish something like\nsane and civilized conditions in their\nown country.\n\"It the risks ot war, which were\nrun by France and Britain at Uie\nlast moment, had been boldly faced\n111 good time, and* if .plain declarations had been made and meant,\nhbw different would our prospects\nbe today!\nWEAKENED BY DEFEAT\n\"But all these backward speculation! ere useless. It Is no use using\nhard words among friends about\nthe past and reproaching. one another tor what cannot be recalled.\nIt la the future, not' the past, that\ndemands our early and anxious\nthoughts, We must recognize that\nthe parliamentary democracies and\nliberal peace forces have every,\nwhere sustained a defeat which\nleaves them weakened, morally and\nphysically; to cope with dangers\nwhich have vastly grown.   -\n\"But the cause of freedom has In\nIt a recuperative power and virtue\nwhich can draw out trom misfortune new hope and new strength.\nIt ever there waa a time when men\nand women who cherish the Ideals\nof the founders of the British and\nAmerican Constitutions should take\nearnest counsel with one another,\nthat time is now, All the world\nwishes tor peace ahd security. It\nit their heart's desire. -\n\"But have we gained It? That\nis what we ask. Have we gained It by\nthe sacrifice ot the Czechoslovak\nRepublic?\nThat republic was the model\ndemocratic state of central Europe,\na country where minorities were\ntreated Better than anywhere else.\nBut it was deserted and destroyed,\nand now It Is being digested. The\nquestion' which Is of interest to a\nlot of ordinary people, the common\npeople, is whether this destruction\not the Czechoslovak Republic will\nbring up to the world a blessing\nor a curse.\n'We must all hope It will bring a\nblessing. We must all hope that,\nefter we have averted our cue for\na while from the forces of subjugation and liquidation, every one\nwill breath more freely, that, if the\nload Is to be taken off Our chest,\nwe shall be able to say to ourselves:\nfWMl, that is, out of the way anyhow. New let's get on with our\ntegt-V daily life?  y  \u25a0\n\"l8THRBiM0aV\nTO COME?''- ;-,-.,  r    ;\u2022;     '.\n\"tint iri these hopes well founded? Or are we merely malting the\nbeit of what we have not the: face\nand the Virtue to stop? That Is the\nquestion that. the English-speaking\npeople In all our lands must ask\nthemselves today. And they must\nask themselves thla question: Is\nthis the end or Is there more to\ncome?'\"\n\"And there is another question\nwhich arises out ot this: 'Can peace,\ngood will and confidence be built\nupon some mission of wrongdoing backed by force?' One may put\nthis question in the largest form:\n'Has any benefit or progress ever\nbeen achieved by the human race\nthrough submission to organized and\ncalculated violence?'\n\".That is put In the largest way.\nAs we look back over the long\nstory ot the nations we must see, on\nthe contrary, that their glory has\nbeen founded upon the spirit of resistance to tyranny and Injustice.\nEspecially when these evils seem\nto be backed by heavier force.\n\"Since the dawn ot the Christian\nera a certain ray ot life has slowly\nbeen shaping itself among the West-\nem peoples and certain standards\nof conduct and government have\ncome to be esteemed. After many\nmiseries and prolonged contusion,\nthere arose into the broad light of\nday the conception of the right Ot\nthe Individual, his right to be consulted in the government of hia\ncountry, his right to criticize or oppose the government of his country,\nhis right to invoke the la*, of, the\nland; even against the'state Itself.\nIndependent courts of justice were\ncreated, the law enforced, and thus\nwas assured ot course, throughout\nthe English-speaking world, and In\nFrance by the stern lessons of the\nrevolution, what Kipling called \u2014\n'leave to live by no man's leave\nunder the law.'\n\"Now it seems to me.and I dare\neay to many of you, that this experience make's existence precious to\nman,, and that it confers honor and\nhealth upon the state,. s     \".   \u25a0\nOUT OF THE DARK AOE8-\n\"But we are confronted with another theme. It is not a new theme;\nit leaps out upon us from the Dark\nAges\u2014racial persecution, religious\nIntolerance, deprivation of free\nspeech, the conception of the citizen as a mere soulless traction ot the\nstate.      - . ,\n\"To this has been added the cult\nof war. Children are to be taught\nin their earliest schooling the delights and profits of conquest and\naggression. A whole mighty community has been drawn painfully by\nsevere privations into a warlike\nframe of mind. They are held in\nthis condition; which they relish no\nmore than we, by a party qrganlza-\ntion several millions Btrong, which\nderive all kinds of profits, good ahd\nbad,, from the upkeep of the regime.\n\"Uke the Communists, the Nazis\ntolerate no opinion but their own;\nlike the Communists, they feed on\nhatred; like the Communists, they\nmust seek from time to time and\nalways, mark you, at shorter Intervals, a new target, a new prize,\na new victim. Tho dictator in all\nhis pride Is held In the grip of his\nparty machine. He can go forward-\nhe cannot go back. He must blood\nhis hounds and show them sport\nor else, like Actaeon of old, be devoured by them. All strong without,\nhe is all weak within.\n\"As Byron wrote a hundred years\nago: These pagan things of sabre\nsway, with fi-onls of brass and feet\nof clay.' No one must, however,\nunderrate the power and efficiency\nof the totalitarian state, where the\nwhole population of a great country,\nan amiable,, good-hearted, peace-\nloving people, are gripped by the\nneck and by the hair by a Communist or Nasi triumph. For they\nare the same things spelt in different ways.\n\"Rulers, for the time being, can\nexercise power for the purposes of\nwar and extermination before which\nordinary, tree parliamentary societies are at a grievous practical\ndisadvantage. We have to recognize\nthis. But then on top of all comes\nthis wonderful mastery ot the air,\nwhich our century has discovered,\nbut of which, alas, mankind has so\nfar shown Itself unworthy.\n\"THE M08T\nMONSTROUS MENACE\"\n\"there-Is this air power with ita\nclaim to torture and terrorize the\nWomen and children, the civil ponu.\nlation ot neighboring countries. This\ncombination of medieval pa\u00bbslpn, a\nparty caii6us, the weapons of modern science and lhe backmalling\npower of air bombing Is the most\nmonstrous menace to peace, order\nand fertile progress that' has appeared In the world since the Mongol Invasions of the thirteenth century. ..-.'.'\n\"The culminating question to\nwhich I have been leading Is whether the world as We have known\nfthhdqSL\nShepard Barclay\nTell* How to Bid\n, .*rtd Play,\nMl* A BUZZ SAW AIsONB\n. A PRE-EMPTIVE GAME bid,\nsuch as four spades or Ave clube, is\nlike a bun saw \u2014 usually a bad\nthing to monkey with. Unless you\nhold a couple, ot.asw apd \u00bb king or\nvoid la the three off-suit*-, you seldom can hope soundly for. a slam.\nRemember that your partner is purposely over-bidding for defensive\npurposes because hie hand is weak\ngenerally, and he needs s, good bit\nof help from you to make the\namount et his bid. ,\n..'\u2666\"'iitus;,\n,  >...-\u00a3y.II j: ,y\n410 2\n\u2666 A 9(142\nWfpA\n\u2666 0 8842\nt} Q1081\n652\nf\n-T. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Mi' ::    i'\n,    \u2666At.*JJJ7\u00abB8\n(Dealer: East. Both sides vulnerable)\nEast passed on this deal and\nSouth pre-empted with i B-ciubs.\nNorth bid B-Dinraonds, which South\ntook out to 6-ClUbs.\n, West laid down the spade A with\nthe hope of bidding the trick and\ngetting a look at the dummy. Seeing live diamonds there and flvo In\nhie own hand, he fervently hoped\nhia partner might be void lad an\nextra trick could be found there.\nInstead he was agreeably surprised\nto discover that East held the A.\nBut came back with a heart but\ndeclarer waa able to claim the remainder of the tricks. Any other\nreturn' by Weit tX the second trick\nwould \u2022 have made It possible for\nSouth to score his slam.\nNorth had no just excuse for\ntouching South'a original bid. His\ncontention was that be had a very\nfine hand but he tailed to remember\nthat by urging South to the dam\nthat -only one trick could be lost\nand his hand offered no first round\ntricta.   -\n\u2022 ,* *'*'--.\n'' \u25a0''.-*   ' T,.\nTomorrow's Problem  -'\u25a0'\n.''*.,%.*1-I-JB. :,\n' *_3iJLr\nftfjii  \u25a0[>'\u25a0'!\u2666 an\n\u00bbQ\u00bb7\u00ab\u00bb   ,       , tKsTU*\n\u2666 98\u00bb ' \u2666Q108\n+ K8 LA-U**>\u00bb\n\u2666 AKQJ\n*) A 5\nMM\nh A10 0 4\n(Dealer: South. Neither side vulnerable) \u2022'..,'\nWhat ii the correct defense\nagainst South's contract ot 3-No\nTrump?\nComiIiW, Wt, Kbi'Fortvut. Sjcdlale, !o<.\nit, tho great and hopeful world ot\nbefore the war, the world Ot increasing hope and enjoyment tor\ntho common man, the world of honored tradition and expanding science, should meet this menace by\nsubmission or by resistance,\n\"Let us see then whether.the\nof refagee,rodents^arrived at Columbia from London with\n'a note from PM. Haldane sayinfc that since borhbs would\n\"undoubtedly fall on th\u00ab city some day, he felt It wise to dis-\ntribij^'some of the rare stocks tobe safeguardect\ns of resistance remain to us\ntoday; We have sustained an Immense disaster. The : renown ot\nFrance is dimmed. In spite of her\nbrave and efficient army, her Influence is profoundly diminished, No\none has a right to say that Britain,\nfor all-her blundering, has broken\nber word; indeed when it was too\nlate, the was better than her word.\n\"Nevertheless, Europe lies at this\nmoment abashed and distracted before the triumphant assertions of\ndictatorial power. In the Spanish\npeninsula, a purely Spanish quarrel\nhas been earned by the Intervention\n\u2014Or shall I say tiie 'non-Intervention', to quote the current jargon\u2014\not dictators Into the region ot a\nwprld cause,   .-\u2022\u25a0\n\"But It li not only in Europe that\nthese oppressions prevail, China is\nbeing torn to pieces by a military\nclique of Japan; the poor tormented Chinese people there are'making a brave and stubborn 'defence.\nThe- ancient empire of Ethiopia has\nbeen overrun. The Ethiopian were\ntaught to look to the sanctity of\nthe public law. 'They wera even\nprevented from buying weapons\nwhile time remained. They were\nreferred to the tribunal of many\nnations gathered in majestic union.\nBut all Med.- They were deceived\nand now they aro winning hack\ntheir right to live' by beginning\nagain from the bottom a struggle\non primordial lines.     -       '\n\"EVEN IN SOUTH AMERICA\"\n. \"Even in South America the Nazi\nintrigue begins to undermine the\nfabric of Brazilian society.'\n\"Such la the scene. \u00abar away,\nhappily protected by the Atlantic\nand Pacific oceans to you, the\npeople of the United States,- to\nwhom I now have the chance to\nspeak, you are the spectators and,\nmay I add, the Increasingly involved spectators, ot these tragedies and\ncrimes.\n\"We are left in no doubt Where\nAmerican Interests and sympathies\nlie. But let me ask this, since I\nhave the moment, let me ask you\nthis: WUl you wait until British\nfreedom and Independence have\nsuccumbed and then take up the\ncause wheh It Is three-quarters\nover, and take It up, as you will\nhave to, when tt la yours alone?\n\"I.hear them eay lh the United\nStates that, because England and\nFrance have failed to do their duty,\ntherefore, the American people can\nwash their hands of the whole business. This may be the feeling of\nmany people, but there Is no sense\nin It If things have got much\nworse, all the more must We try to\ncope with them. For, after all, there\nare the remaining forces ot civilization. They are overwhelming. If\nonly toey were united In a common conception ot right and duty,\nthere could be no war.\n\"On the contrary, the German\npeople \u2014 industrious, faithful, valiant, but, alas, lacking in the proper spirit of civic Independence\u2014\nthe German people, if liberated\nfrom their present nightmare, wiU\ntake their honorable place in the\nvanguard of human society.\n\"Alexander the Great remarked\nthat the people of Asia were slain\nbecause they, had hot learned to\npronounce the word \"no'. We cannot let that be the epitaph of the\nEnglish-speaking. peoples, or ' ot\npafllamentary democracy, or ot\nFrance or of the many surviving\nliberal states of Europe.\nThere. In one single word, la\nthe resolve which the forces ot\nfreedOm and progress, of tolerance\nand good will, there is the resolve\nwhich they should take. It is not\nwithin the power of one nation,\nhowever formidably armed; still\nless Is It within the power ot a\nsmall group of men, violent, ruthless men. who have always cast\ntheir eyes back over their shoulders. It i\u00ab not within their power\nto try to better the forward march\nof human destiny.\n\"We have the thundering world\nforces- Upon our side. They have\nhut to be combined to be obeyed.\nFrance must start, Britain must\nstart, America must, atari It,\nthrough an earnest {desire for peace,\nwe have placed ourselves at a disadvantage, we must make up for\nIt by redoubled exertion and if\nneed be, by the fortitude of suffering. .     ,i\n\"We shall no doubt arm. Britain,\ncasting away the habits of centuries, -will decree national service for\nher citizens. The British people\nwill stand erect and will face whatever may be coming. y \u25a0\nOUOTE9 WILSON :,'..'\n\"But, my friends, these Instrumentalities, as President Wilson\ncalled them, are not sufficient by\nthemselves, we mutt add to them\nthe power of Ideals.\n\"People eay we oujjht hot to allow\nourselves to be drawn into a purely\ntheoretical antagonism between\nNazidom and democracy, but the\nantagonism ii here, now. It governB\nour ltvei It, Is thii very combine'\ntion of spiritual and moral ideas\nwhich gives free countries a great\npart of their strength.     -\n'-You see these dictators on their\npedestal, surrounded by their soldiers and the truncheons of their\npolice. On all sides they are guarded\nby masses around them and airplanes, fortifications and the like.\nThey boast and vaunt themselves\n-before the world.\n\"Yet In their hearts then li an\nunspeakable fear. They art afraid\nof words and thoughts. Words spoken abroad, hopes stirring at home,\nall the more powerful because forbidden. These terrors \u2014 a little\nmouse, a., Uttle tiny mouse of\nthought appears In the room, and\neven the mighty potentates are\nthrown into panic. Thev make frantic efforts to bar out thoughts and\nwords, They are afrAld ot the workings of the human mind.\n\"Airplanes\u2014they can manufacture\nthese in large quantities. But how\ntie they tO quell the natural\npromptings of human nature, which\nafter all theso centuries 'of trial and\nprogress has become the armory of\npotent ahd indestructible knowledge?\n''Dictatorship, the fetish worship\nof one man, against which the British and American Constitutions\nhave' elaborated their provisions,\ndictatorship can but be a party of\nany state ot society where men may\nnot speak their mind, where children denounce their parents to the\npolice, where a busmess man or\nsmall shopkeeper ruins his competitor by telling tales about tali private opinion. Such a state of society\ncannot long endure If it is brought*\ncontinually- In contact with the\nhealthy outilde world;\n\"The life of civilized progress,\nwith Its currency of co-operation\nand with Its dignities and joys, has\noften, as history shows, been blotted\nout; but I hold the belief that we\nhave now, at last, got far. enough\nahead of barbarian to control it and\navert it, It only we realize what ll\nafoot and make up our minds In\ngood time. Of course, we shall do\nit in the end.1 We shall surely do It.\nAnd how much harder our toll tor\nevery day's delayl\n\"ttat Is what I have to say to'you\non this occasion, and, let me ask Is\nthis a coll to war? Does any one\npretend that preparations tor resistance agalnit aggression amount\nto unleashing of War? There Indeed\nis a lorry tale.\n\"I declare It to be the sole guaranty at peace, the finest and the\nsurest prospect, of peace\u2014swift or-\nsnlzed gathering ot forces to con-\n\u2022ont not only military but moral\nagression,. the resolute and .'sober\nacceptance of their duty by the English-speaking peoples and by all the\nnations, great and small, and they\nare many, who wish to walk wlht\nthem. Their faithful and zealous\ncomradeship, armed, effectual,\nwould almost between night and\nmorning clear the path of progress\nand banish from all our uvea the\nfear which already darkens God's\nsunlight to hundreds of millions ot\nmen. , ,\nAUNTHET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"No wonder Jennie gives way\nto temptation. She hangs on to\none and studies about it until\nihe haa to give in to get it oft\nher mind.\"\n$5&msoet9SoP5SPSi\nfitmoitama.\nA Very Capable Ctnt\nd\u00ab&c.%1rtfc,*btao?\n\"I shouldn't think so\u2014not one ot\nthem believes \u2022 word he says.\" \u2014\nDie Grune Post.\nElephant! on a Butt\nElephants, like some human beings, are mOst dangerous When\ndrunk. The elephant's tipple ii) the\nfruit of the morula tree, which\nis used also by natives ot toe\nTransvaal to brew a potent Intoxicant. Elephants have a strong\nliking for toil fruit and when it\nli in season they trek to the places\nwhere marula trees grow and fesst\non it; -*.'.\u25a0*.\u2022::  -: x\\'<;,'\" A-\n4 tew hours later most of them\nbe staggering about, Some\ngive vent to noisy bellows, and\noil show signs of annoyance. When\nthey are Intoxicated elephants will\ntolerate no Interference and will\nkill anyone who approaches them.\nThere seems to be no OMUtW\ndrinkers in the elephant world\nwho can take their favorite beverage ahd remain good-n.atured.\nUnemployment Spectre\nin British Background\nMr. Chamberlain has given us\npeace, temporarily, at any rate. Can\nhe now find JoW The total of u**t-\nemployed, according to the latest\ncrease of 39,376 during September,\nand 458,414 more than in September,\nUnemployment has Increased In\nthe building trade, In iron and steel,\nin engineering and In cotton. ,\nThere ar* more at work in the\nwoollen and worsted industry, in\npotteries, making boots and shoes,\nhosiery and carpets,\n' This Is the brighter side to t\ngrim picture, the rise In unemployment has Men fairly steady since\nSeptember, W87. \u2014 World*! Preu\nWhen Premier\nWalpolt Want Home   ,\nSurrounded, therefore, by h\nWa, Urd H(*WW, Brl*\u00abt\nChurchlll, his son Edward, two Or\nthree more friends tnd two ser-\nvants, he presented himself to these\nrioters, who made so great a! disorder, notwithstanding the protection of this circle Immediately\nround him, and In spite ot a lane ot\nforty or fifty constables, who were\nSlaced there to secure every mem-\ner a tree and unmolested pass-\nSe, that between the pressings of\ne mob to insult bun, and the zeal\not the civil magistrates to defend\nhim, there waa such jostling and\nstruggling, that had anybody fallen\ndown they must have been trampled\nto death,\nThe oaken sticks and constables'\nstaffs were so flippant over the\nbeads of friends and enemies, without any possibility of distinction,\nthat many blows were given and\nreceived at random. But nobody\nof the Walpole faction -wai hurt or\nWounded excepting one, Mr. Cunningham, a Scotchman, Mr. Nel\nWalpole and Lord Hervey. on the\nforehead. With much difficulty\nSir Hobert at last got into his coach\nand went home.\u2014From lard Her-\nvey'i Memolri.       .\n*S*SP&StoOSS#PS3mOHM\u00bb#**&&*\nV* Questions tl\nANSWERS\nThla column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader df\nthe. Nelion DaiU Newi. In no\ncase wUl tha name of the penon\nasking toe question be published.\nA. T. J., Nelson-I wish to stiffen\nsatin'by using sugar and water.\nWould you please tell me-the\nquantities to Use? Should\", the\nmaterial be ironed while damp, '\nor dried tint and dampened, then\nIroned?\nWould advise you to take a\nsample of the material and try several strengths of toe solution. A\nfairly weak solution is required\nfor most materials, about a desert-\nspoon of sugar to a quart of warm\nwater. To iron, cover with a cloth\nand press on the wrong side While\nslightly damp, \u25a0'\u25a0\/>\nC. D., Bossland-Who won tho No-\nbel Prize in 1932?\n- John Galsworthy.\nD-.T, Trait-Why do pine treei*\nstay green all .winter?\nI  Pine leaves are to, reality leaves,\nand contain chlorophyU u other\nleaves  do., Tht surface  of  pint\nneedlei., is tougher than that of\nother- leaves. Thus toe chlorophyll \u2022\nti protected during tot winter anil \u25a0\nremains green.\nJ. W. McD., Nelson-Do tot Great I\nLakes freeze in tht winter?\nThe Great Lakes do not freeze\nentirely in the Winter, but the harbors, and often the. connecting rlv-.\ners are closed by ice, The navigable I\nseason at the Sault Is about seven-\nand one half months, and at Eric\nsomewhat  longer. Lake  Superior\nfroeae! only In the shallow water\nalong,tht-shores. The northern '\nreaches of Michigan are frozen but I\ntot -Hid let stops well north of\nMilwaukee.\nS. C. W. Trall-I have a coin dated :\n1733, in the reign of King George\ntt Could you teU methe value\nof toll coin or could you tell me\not a coin collector I could write?\nThe Value of th> coin should be \u25a0\n(\u2022\"-\"\u2022Wherepom&rte m,toe exact\ndepending o\u00bb taaivfcjutl :.'\nGOOD ADVICE\nUnited States, corn grower! will\nti* to market \"\"cornon the hoof\"\nby feeding low-priced grain to hogs\nand other livestock. WWeh li a reminder of- the good farmer's advice to his son \"Never, sell anything\noft the land that cant walk oft\"\u2014\nBrantford Expositor.,        :\u25a0   \u2022\nPROGRESS\nBvery worth-while aspect of civilization has developed through four\nphases ot progress. First, people believe it to be ridiculous; ften the\u00bb\nsay It Is marvelous; later, they think\nthey could not live without it, and,\nJui yjDUMlrffr\nOne-Minute. Tut\n1. What book ll necessary in\nevery trial court room?\n2. In what direction does Havana He from New York?\n3. What Is meant by the phrase,\n\"Old army game\"?\nToday's Horoscope\nImpulsive, energetic, independent\nand extreme Is the person bom on\nthis date. He is easily discouraged\nif things go, wrong, however, and\nneeds to be loved and encouraged.\nHe loves to- Investigate all things\nand Is fearless.\nOne-Minute Test Answers\n1. The Bible.\n2. Approximately southwest.\n3. To take advantage Of inexperience or gullibility in some one.\nW. C. Fields called It \"never giving a sucker a break.\"  .\nEXPENSES\nIn his campaign expense report an\nArkansas candidate listed an item\nof $127.50 for pies and another 30\ncents for headache tablets. The vot-\ntk. would-jraant you\n' of the following: Wii-\nar\" mK^Vi eMketoon! ,$m\nStamp^ coin oomnany, Sw, 47to\nitreetNtw YorkirOnritlc CoiS\npany of Texu, fort Worth. Texaa,\nWS    (\nunderwood'\nland Bottled In Canada\nS1,M; -\u00bb ea. wtt\nThis advertisement is noi i\nBoadrdPl8yed b'T \"\" UqU\n-   \u25a0.'OR  *T\nMINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood   -\npanels are suitable for\nall mining and other\ncamp buildings. They\n,   aw itrong. waterproof,\nlight and very easy to\n\u25a0    handle.    ', <~y ,  ,\nDistrict'Distribute\u2122\nWood, Vallance\nHARDWARE CQ,, trp;\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nfinally, they are quite certain they ers Who ate his pies must haxe\nnever wanted it anyway.\u2014Washing- paid for their own indigestion tab-\nton Star, 'lets.\u2014New Orleans Times-Picayune.\nLooking Backward. -\u2022. *\nTWENTY-FIVE YEAM AQO\nFrom Dally News of Nov. 3, 1013\nIn tot Italian general elections\nyesterday, the Liberals or Materialists, electing 940 memben, won a\nsmashing victory,\u2014At Arrowhead\nthe Forest Mills Lumber, company\nwill employ ISO men In their new\ncamp during the winter.\u2014Edmonton\n:imos defeated Calgary Tigers\n11-8 yesterday to win the Alberta\nrugby championship in the Dominion playdowns.\u2014 Receipts at the\nTrail smelter last week were tar\nabove average.\u2014Charles S. McDonald of Nelson died yesterday.\u2014\nMrs. M. R. McQuarrie, accompanied\nby her sister; has left for a visit to\nPortland.\u2014Born at the Kootenay\nLake Maternity hospital to Mr. and\nMrs. H.\na son.\nG. Parker, Stanley street,\nFORTY YRARf AG|0\nProm Dally Miner of Nov. 2, 1898\nIn a bad accident at toe Sunset\nNo. 2 mine at Rossland, two. miners\nnamed William Cain and Patrick\nNolan died due to gas.\u2014Typhoid\nfever is very prevalent lh the North\nWest Territories.-Dr. Malloch-has\nbeen annotated medical health officer of Revelstoke.\u2014A new opera1\nhouse is being built st New Denver.\n\u2014The next sitting ot toe supreme\ncourt at Nelson will be on December B.\u2014The steamer Nelson was delayed last night and missed the outgoing C. P. S. train.\u2014John Keen of\nKaslo, provincial assessor, il viliting\nin town.      \t\nDelightful\nas ....*;\nWhipped\nCream\n\"I use Pacific Hfflk all the time, at -\nour family Uke t whipped,\" writes ;\nMra. 0. IS,' C. \"It comes up to ft\ndellcloui cream, and taken with\nlelly for dessert it looks so attrao\ntlve in a dish and so appetizing that\nmy ehlldren delight fn taking itJ\nThe letter is full of compliment and\nshows how Pacific Milk is appw\u00ae.1\nQtCQ. .    .       \u2022 '\u25a0 r , I'.,'\nPacificMlk^\nIrrsdlsted^ybf Course .\n\u25a0\u2022^\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00abBM\u00bbM^\u00aby\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab_\u00ab\u00abg\u00bb.\nHove You Any\nUs-jd\nGramophone\nRecords\nWhy Not Turn\nThem Into CosK\nA WANT AD\n\u2022 \u25a0: -Will Find a\nPMrch&W\n'     '-!'\u25a0',     '\u25a0\u25a0.':>\nTwo (2) lines 0 times 80c net\n' two tZ) lines once 20c net . j\nNelson Doily Newi\n\".        PHONE 144\n\t\n\u2014\n Boss of the Bronks   \u2022 -   By Vf alt Ball\nCoach op\nSa\u00a7t*y \u00ab?conks\n29.W  TH6.T THE\nCarl is a\n\u2022product OF\nHOTtee Dftme\n- amj> n\"S\nrumored\n\/ apo^Rwi-erta\n'    co-etw-i.    \\\nAcademy Girls\nFast Rounding\nInto Hoop Team\n\u2022With Miss Rosa Stewart holding\ntne coaching reins, a group ot St.\nJoseph's academy basketball eo-\nihusiasts are fast rounding. Into a\nteam for Inter-school competition.\nThe girls, all new to the game,\nwent through a careful drilling in\nCathedral hall .Wedneiday. while\nthey showed..a great deal more\nwillingness than form, there was\nraise of better things to come.\n\"\u25a0he practice turnouts Include\nMolly.Klrkpatrick, Shirley Lund,\nJoan Mclnnes, Peggy Coates, Marie\nSoucey, Lillian OTool, Dorothy\nTrainor, Kathleen Trainor, Mary\nMcDougall, Edith Smythe, Rita Colettl, Ruby Jarbeau, Susy Vecchio,\nVirginia Kuntr, and Mary Singleton\"\ningland Gains Inter-League\nioccer Title From Scots, 3-1\n525,000 See English Reps Bring Back Title Lost\nLost Season; 11 th Title Triumph Since 1932\nWOLVERHAMPTON, Eng. Nov.\n2 (CP Cable)\u2014Scotland surrendered Its Inter-league soccer title\nto England today. Playing before\n25,000 spectators on Wolverhampton Wanderen' ground the English league eleven won 8-1. ,\nTha victory was England's 24th\nover Ita northern rival, successful\n11 times ilnoa the Inter-league\ntournament was started In 1892.\nNina matches hava been drawn.\nLast year at Glasgow the Scots\nWon 1-0.\nScoring thro* goala before Tommy Walker, Heart of Midlothian\n\u2022tar, nffluoed tha margin from a\npenalty, the homo players had a\ncomparatively easy victory. The\nScottish leaguers were Incllried to\nhold the hall too long and were\neasy prey for their robust and\nquick-tackling opponents,\nRonald Dlx, Derby County Inside-left netted two goala after W.\nBoyes, Everton winger, opened\n\u2022coring after 18 minutes, Playing hia flrat representative game,\nDlx proved a source of trouble\nto the Scottish defenders throughout and was the best Individualist\non the field.\nSt Matthews, Stoke Olty outside\nright, got In ume dazzling runt\nand paved tha way for tha flrat\ngoal.\nAlthough held scoreless In tha\nopening half the visiting forwards\nwere at their best In that period.\nTommy Walker, A. Venters, Rangers and J. Delaney, Celtic, were\nthe pick.\nJPORT TIPS\nJapan will sand only a small team\no the 1840 Olympics-expenses for\nifull team would be too high and\ndes they are not eager to make\n) big a thing ot It after cancelling\ni game* In Tokyo.\u2014rate receipts\n. - The Notre Dame-West  Point\nI football laat Saturday were $308,000\nI \u2014sweet sugar\u2014Bucky Harris, signed\n1 to manage Washington Senators in\n11939 has 18 consecutive seasons as\na blgtlme manager to his credit\u2014\ntther?11 lot of hickory coming Cal-\njaiy way shortly and apparently a\nJot of hockey for the prairie city\n[juniors\u2014Frank   Boucher   recently\nordered 290 hockey sticks for the\nEdmonton Junior Athletics \u2014 New\nI York Rangers are backing the Ed-\npiwnton squad. .\nBUY IRVINE\n^KANSAS CITY, Nov. 2 (AP) \u2014\nWilliam Grant, president of the\nKansas City American' Association\nSockey dub, said today the Grey-\nlounds had acquired Knucker Irvine, left winger and centre, from\n:he National Hockey league.\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nDistilled, Blinded and Bottled\nIn 8cotland\n'    28 2-3 oa. \u00ab3 \u25a0\u00bb\nI This advertisement is not published\nI or displayed by tha Liquor Control\nI Board or by the Government ot\nBritish Columbia\nICE MAKING TO\nSTART AT ARENA\nHERE SATURDAY\nIce makers will begin their I\nson's work at the Nelson. Civic\nCentre arena Saturday, preparing\nthe big sheet for the coming hockey\nand skating season.   -\nFloor boards put down for the\nboxla season were completely removed Wednesday and today and\nFriday will be taken up with levelling the ground under the pipes.\nTha boards are being stored under\nthe Recreation grounds grandstand, I .\nThe pipes and other equipment\nare all In good condition, Denis St\nDenis, Civic Centre secretary-manager reported.\nJames Milne and Ernie Bead will\nbe ice makers again this season.\nTabor of Victoria\nHead of Loyalists\nJohn H. Tafior of Victoria, well\nknown In the Kootenay district as\na traveller for a candy manufacturing firm and as a visiting Rotarlan, has been elected president\not the British Columbia branch of\nthe United Empire Loyalists. Mr.\nTabor is noted among Rotarians for\nnot having missed a meeting, despite being on the road, since he\nbecame a member of the Victoria\nclub several years ago.\nHe Is the father of Mrs. Victor\nCrawford of Nelson, and owner of\na grocery business at Nelson.\nFollowing his election he gave\nLoyalists attending an Interesting\ntalk on personal Interviews with the\nIndian poetess, Pauline Johnson.\nSHANNON IS INJURED\nTORONTO, Nov. 2 (CP>-'\"'Cbuck\nShannon of the International-American league Syracuse Stars is.In\nhospital here today with an injured\nleg tendon suffered last night in\nan exhibition hockey match at\nMidland between the Blues and\nWhites, chosen from the,. National\nleague Mule Leafs and their tarn\nclub. The leg is in a cast and he\nwill .be Inactive for a month. ;,\nBuy or Sell With a Want Ad.\nBJBBBB^BB9\u00a5mm1^^^B]mim^\nNELSON DAILY NEW*NIMON. \u2022.C^THURBOAY MORNINB.NOV.\u00bb. 1M\u00bb       ','   ' ;i'''\u201e',u' ,'\"' \"\u25a0   '\".'\n143?\nHostak Savagely\nSEATTLE, Nov. 2 (AP)-SoIly\nKrleger, scowling ; bomber from\nBrooklyn, - was the,new middleweight champion of the world today after beating Al Hostak so sav-\nagely he sent the SeatUe Slav to the\nhospital, temporarily blinded, paralyzed, bones broken In both hands\nand without the use of one arm.\nKrleger, the third man to win\nthe middle title in a Seattle ring\nin the last 28 months, fought a\ncagey, crouching battle. He chopped\nHostak to pieces with left ond right\ncrosses before 9000 spectators. Al\nhad been a heavy local favorite.\nHostak was a delected nd broken\nbattler when he left the ring for\nthe hospital. He was game to- the\nend\u2014too game for his own good-\nstaying the full 18 rounds even\nwhen he had only his right hand\nleft for both oifence and defence.\nWhen it was over his right eye was\nswollen- shut, his left almost dosed,\nhis face bloody and gashed, his\nleft' side welted and paralysed,\nand his hands badly injured.\nQueen of the\n'.vjiHeyi^..'\nProminent Sport Executive\nFairvlew Athlctlo club president, \". '\nNelson Amateur Hockey association registrar-treasurer,\nNelson Junior Lacrosse association registrar-treasurer,    ,\nNelaon Basketball association secretary-treasurer, \":\u25a0'\"\u25a0\u25a0''..\u25a0..\nNelson Junior Baseball association secretary, \u2022\nNelson Softball association secretary-treasurer,\nNelson Lacrosse club, N.A.H.A. and N.B.A. .official scorer,\nB.C. Track and Field association oxeoutlve member and B.C.\nBranch of the Amateur Athletic union\u2014Is all that and mora to\nNelson and district sport, .\u25a0'.-' *\u25a0\n\u2022 For the past ten yeirs Slim has bean connected with the Fairvlew\nAthlctlo club, and for the past three has been oh the executive of\nnearly every amateur sport association. Most of these offices he has\nheld for flyn'yaws or tppttti  \u2022 r\\ ,\u25a0.,\u2022'':.\nSllm's big Interest Is In bantam, midget and Juvenile'sports to\nwhich he gives a great deal of his time as coach and referee..\ntin his spare time\u2014whenever that Is\u2014Porter specializes In railing\ndahlias and tweet peai and It a member of the American' Dahlia\n\u2022oclety. He alio hai connections with the honey Industry In the\ndiitrict, being.wall versed In apiculture. ;.\nLOUIS VS LEWIS\nFORJANUARY27\nOUT BY ATHLETIC COMMISSION\nH^$ ojtifliSarcia Wi II,\nMix in Title Bout'\n' ,\u201e, November\u00a3$\" . i\nAroSTOUCORIETT\nTO  FACE  KREIGER\n, : r, ,     ;,;\u2022.. - y..- ...\nNEW YORB,iN0v. 2 (AP)-'The\nNew Yortf state Athletic oommis-\nsion, Promoter Mike Jacobs and\nother Interested parties went jlifyy\na series of huddles today and more\nor less, straightened out the championship brackets to tbe welterweight\nand middleweight boxing divisions.\nFrom their'deliberations came the\nstatements:\nMRS. J. H.CHAMPMAN\nbtsloved ''Ma\" of the.'Legion\nBowling .club- and oft-ymes referred to as the \"Queen of the\nAlleyi\" by Nelion ten pin bowl-\nen.      \u25a0    \u2022\u25a0'': '\u25a0*>\u2022< ex   .*  y\nTo Mrs. Chapman goes the honor\nfor rolling the highest individual\nscore made by a lady in competl-\nin the Kootenays\u2014at least as'\ntion\nthis advertisement Is not published m'tm^mtbt by the Liquor Control\nBoard or bit the Government of Brltlih Columbia, ,. -\nfar as records can ascertain. While\ntaking part in a Cassios cup competition in the 1036-37 season sho\nrolled a neat 200. Individual. Her\naggregate score for the three games\nbowled tn that Match was 545.\n\"Ma\" Chapman is always high\namong the cup winners when the\nseason closes and she Is seen here\nnosed with two of her large collection \u2014 the Cassios' cup and Larson high aggregate cup.\nYearly at the season a ending, the\nLegion Bowling club members make\nsome special presentation to the\nlittle 62-year-old lady \"who -Jan* still\nshow the men some tricks\" as a\ntoken of their esteem for her sportsmanlike attitude and cheerfulness\non the alleys. '-,'\nAn anonymous poet oi tha Legion\nclub has written a poem about the\nlady .who has so won her way into\nthe heart! ot- the bowlers. It follows: . , \u25a0\u25a0 \"?,-.  .       -,  \"'\u25a0\nThe Queen bf tbe\u25a0....\nHer actions are viv\nShe loves to send th* sphere\n\u2022rolling\nAad give the maples a fright.\n.    '   '   \" ,'\u25a0    ' \/ \u25a0*-' ':\nWatch ai she .runs to deliver,\nLithe is her body, then tense,\nAs she watches- the pins do a\n\u25a0 .,'\u2022 \u25a0  shiver   , '\"-...\n.Then laughingly ends tha   ,\n\"     suspense, \u2022\nWhen the Queen makes a \"split\"\nthere's no howling.\nShe soon makes It up with a\n\"spare.\"\nWhen the Queen of the Alleys is\nA \"strtke''from h\u00abr roll Isn't\ntut..'.'\",'. -' A\nLtmg may she keep the ball rolling,\nAnd put h\u00b0r opponents to\nWhen the'Queen of the Alley ts\n' 1. Henry Armstrong and Cefar-\n' Ino Gorola .will tangle In their\npostponed welterweight title bout\nNovember 25.\n2. Solly Krleger, Who won some\nclaim to tha 160-pound laurels by\nwhipping Al Hostak In Seattle last\nnight, probably will try to gain\nuniversal recognition by meeting the winner of the November\n18 go between Fred ApoiWII and\nYoung Corbett, California' chat-\ntensers. The title match wai tentatively slated by Promoter, Jac-\n\u25a0obi for January... 13 In Madlion\nSquare Garden.\nHENRY CAN\nFIGHT NOV. 28\nHuddle No. 1 came when Arm\nstrong visited Dr. Oeorge Washington Riley again for treatment for\nthe joint in his back which he\nloosened during his final training\nsession yesterday. Both the ostco.\nSitb and Henry announoed the lit-\n\u00bb champion'was doing better than\nexpected, and..expressed confidence\nhe would be able to go to the post\nNovember 28. The athletic commission sanctioned the new date.\n* As for tha middleweight business,\nthis class has been somewhat beclouded around here since Freddy\nStasia vl\u00ab*t. hie crown to Hostak in\nSeattle last July. At that time, the\nlomlTOtle fathers withheld recog-\n'nitibn of Hostak because Steele had\nturned his back on a challenge from\nApoitoli\u201e filW here. The commission previously had 'AetlmtoA the\nSan  Francisco bellhop ts No.  1\nchallenger.   'A'.- \"\nJANUARY..187 V.T     '-.' '?\nKRIEGEK FltiHT        ..\nSlhce-Krieger, a heavy-hitter from\nBrooklyn whp;-had fought up.and\ndown the mld*ll*weig)if ladder '\u2014\nand back again last night\u2014disposed\nofythe.'.'unreotlgnljed\" tltleholder in-\nHostak, the commission decided he.\ntoo, would have to take on the Apos-\ntoli-O^ett'tyinntr.   \u25a0\u25a0\u2022..\u2022-\n'Armed with that Information,\nJacobs talked to Hyraio Caplin,\nKrieger's manager, offering him the\nJanuary 18 date. He said he had\ntentative, acceptance .from-Caplin.\n.Thftnew Arrhstrong^Garcia date\nforoed Jacobs to fieirrahge his Garde* schedule by setting the- heavyweight bout hewree-fc GUiinar Barlund of Finland and BoB'Fastor of\nNew York back from November 25\nto January S-- *.. \u25a0 \"-'\u25a0.'\n1 ','. . \u25a0'   .        .   '',\n4    INCtiSH RUGBY\nLONDON,Nov.2 (CP).-English\nRugby'Union matches today:-'\nGuy's Hospital It, Cambridge Unl-j\nMflnfyi . .'-..- \"\u201e\u25a0-\nOxford' University   16,   Oxford\nCjrejrhottnds 14.' ,.:  ,\nSt. Barfs Hospital 8, the Army 31:\nMJddlesex 10, Surrey 10.\nDorset 8, Hampshire 0. '\nGAGNON TAkES ROBERTS\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CPWoe\nGagnon of Montreal scored-a convincing five-round decision tonight\nbeforo about.5000 over Tony Roberts\nof Winnipeg) Canadian amateur\nbantamweight bpxing champion. It\nwas the third meeting between the\ntwo, with toniriit's victory giving\nGagnon a two-to-one edge, won by\ndecisions.   . .   \u25a0\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (AP) -\nMlka Jacobs announced tonight\nha had signed Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis to defend hit till* .against John Henry Lewis,\nnegro light-heavy weight tltleholder, In Madison Square Garden\nJan. 27. It will be Loull' flrtt\nfight ilnce ha knocked out; Max.\nSohmallng last Juno. , ,\n.' John Henry Lewis, Who fights\nout of Pittsburgh but who comes\nfrom Phoenix, Aria, 'will arrive\ntomorrow morning to ilgn formally with Joe.   y  ...\nThe fight is'the first all-Negro\nheavy weight titlo battle since Jack\nJohnson, then champion, outpointed\nBattling Jim Johnson in Paris In\n1813. \"\nJacobs' office wade; It' plain the\nfight in no way 'would interfere\nwith negotiations for a bout between Louis and Max Baer On the\ncoast in April, providing Louts wins\nthis .one. \u25a0.   \u2022\u25a0\u25a0; -. '\nImmediate reaction to the bout\nin New. York was astonishment. If\nthe Lewis-Gainer bout is any criterion, a fight between two Negroes\nfor a title will not draw. There Wars\nless than 4000 in an arena seating\n11,00 when they aiet In New\nHaven.   \u2022;\u25a0' '\u25a0 ; \u2022\u25a0 \u2022:\nJimmy Foxx\nled American\nBy BID FEDER\nAssociated Preu Sporti Writer\nv NEW Y\u00abR|i!. Nov. 2 (AF)-For\nthe year's most gallant comeback\nIn'baseball, Jimmy Foxx today\nwas selected tha American league'!\nmost valuable player of 1938 by\na landslide vote of tha Baseball\nWriter*' Association of America.\nThs likeable \"Double-X\" dynamited hit. way to the batting and\nruns-batted-ln championships of\nthe league.\nIt wai him big bat that enabled\nBoiton Red Sox to finish In IM-\nond place In the Junior circuit after their pitching staff came apart\n..\u25a0et..*htttf\\m-:f.. \u25a0':..\nThus, Jarring Jimmy, who polled\n305 points of a. possible \"perfect\nscore' ot 336, becomes the first\nplayer ,in history tp. win the most\n-valuable award three times during\nhis career. As a member of the great\nPhiladelphia' Athletic*'team dfk\"a\nfew years ago, he won the award In\n1032, and repeated in 1833 when he\nbatted .364 and .356 respectively.\n.This year, his, 14th in.the American league, the 81-year-old husky\nhit for ,349 and.cTroVe in,a near;\nrecord total of 174 funs. .'\n,      \u25a0   -\u2014-  -\u25a0\u25a0 .. , .\nN. H. L Referees\nCost Ov\u00abr $33,00\nTORONTO, Nov. 2 (CP)-Cohny\nSmythe dug into a mass of statistics today and came up with the information referees' cost more than\nhalf the $63,000 needed to run the\nNational Hockey league during.\n1037-38 season.\nSmythe was commenting on the\nnew system of tfefereelng to be Introduced at the opening games tomorrow night. Instead of two full-\ntithe referees for each game, tha\nN.H.L. will, experiment with one\nlineman and a referee,-: hoping to\nsave, expenses by drawing the linemen from trifles where the games\nare played. .  \u00ab\".-\u25a0\u25a0\n$100 A.GAMH    , .; V\nSmythe revealed the .league paid\n$19,800 in. referee fees, $1800 trans-\n-ortation and 13700 trawjlllng and\njotel expenses last season.-He compared the $33,100. total to the $63,000\nwhich represented total operating\nexpenses of the league, Including\nlhe president's salary.\nCANADIAN   POLO   HANDICAPS'\n.   '\u25a0    \u25a0 RAISED\nNEW YORK,'; Nov. 2 (CP). -\nThe board ,of governors of the\nUnited States Polo assoclfUon tonight made public the polo, handicap listings' for 1939, effective In\ntwo weeks and raised two Canadian\nplayers from no handicap to one\n,tua. Canadians were'Harold J.\nCrane and.-J.-G. Laidlaw, both of\nthe Toronto Polo club. :>\u25a0    ,:\nRiddle Ready to Have Seabiscuit\nFace Admiral Again; Conway It Not\nbowling\n\"     i\nAll the-fans are filled with\ndelight.\n(iARS  RUN   BETTER  WITH\nAMAUE0IL\nShorty's Repair Shop\n714. BAKER   ' NELSON, B.C.'\nBALTIMORE, Nov; fc:(\/(P) -\nSeablseult, king. Of,\u00abie United\nStates turf but no (MutipiBTod darling pf tho paddqoki, will keep\nright on running after a p\u00abt of\ngold biggar than Sun Beau'i record of $378,744 and Is willing to\nrace all comers to; get Hu       -\nHe's willing even to \u00abioet W\u00bbr\nAdmiral agiln In Wothar m\u00bbt*b\nrace! buLthe Admlrali beaten by\n.  l^-*Vthan thrae length! yastor-\n'day.hnt Intereitad.;   -.-.,. ....\nENTERlD IN  ^ '' ':'\" \",'\/-'  \"-,\u25a0\nirMP''-'  v. \u2022 ..\nWei Saturday th\u00ab Blicult wUl\nmake his next hid tor a big chunk\nof the $36,264 he needs to equal\nSun Beau's record. '*.,\n. Ha wUl go to the pott In tha $10,-\n000 added Rigg's Memorial handicap at Pimllco, which he won last\nyear with a record burst of;, spefd\nsurpassed since only by' Pomppon\nand Seabiscult's own new record of\ni:B8 8^5 to his great vl<itoty over\nWar Adnftal-        ,-     \u201e    ,\nWafr Admiral isn't eligible lor the\nRiggs in Which nine, starters, Including two conquerors of Seabi6cuit\nare entered.  A-\nHOWARDWILLiNG\nWith the-end of the Pimllco In\nsight\u2014Nov.- 15-ptMid Vsilons Of -another \"Duel of the Century\" in mind\nAlfred Gwynne Vanderbllt started\netforts for a second matoh race but\nthe vice-prwident of the Matytind\nJockey club didn't g\u00abt tut,''\n\"We're ojAti to engagsmants,\n\u25a0aid Charles 8. Howard, owner of\nSeablseult ''Another race under\nthe same condition! would ba entirely satisfactory to us.\" t\nCONWAY NOT   ,\n\u25a0Over in the Riddle stable, however, George Conway, the Admlrali\ntraincr.ireplied to Vanderbilt's suggestion with a laconic \"ho chance.\"\nHe Minted out War Admiral is\nentered in the $28,000 Rhode Island\nhandicap at Narragansctt Nov. 12.\nPlans, he said, couldn't be changed,\nand besides, Seabiscuit is eligible\ntof the handicap, so why not meet\nthere. ;-.'.,'-\n-PAOESEVEN\nTHOMPSON AND HOLDOUT SHORE\nMAY BE MISSING WHEN THE BRUINS\nFACE LEAFS IN THE OPENER TONIGHT\nNew \"Kid Line\" for'\nToronto Attock;\nPrgah to Play:\nPLAN TO PRESENT\nCUP TO DRILLON\nfi\nREMEMER WHEN?\n(By The Canadian Press)\nBaseball's \"Georgia Peach,\" Ty\nCobb, resigned as player-manager\nof Detroit Tigers 12 years ago today.\nJoining- the American League Club\nin 1905, Cobb cracked out a double\nIn his first, appearance and from\nthat date started on a record-smashing career that is baseball history.\nHe ended his baseball career with\nPhiladelphia Athletics in IMS.    '\n5.6 in Junior High\nSchool Bird Club\nFifty-six young racquet-wielders\nhave added their names to the Nelson junior high school badminton\nclub Since its organisation last\nmonth. The cliib Is one of, the most\npopular ot the school snorts units,\nand has done considerable In developing some of the stars of Nelson badminton today.\nTORONTO, Nov, 2 (CP)-Bos-\nton Bruins probably will ba without two' standout per for men when\nthey meet Toronto Maple Laafi\nhere tomorrow to open tha National Hockey league Season, but\nManager Art Ron hai hia flngeri\ncrossed and li hoping for the\n\u25a0.beat.' '-.';-.: .\nREPLACEMENTS READY\n' Two youngsters will take tha\nplace of veterans, according to present plans. Holdout Eddie Shore's\ndefence position will be handled\nby Johnny , Crawford,, former Toronto amateur who played with\nProvidence, Bruin farm club, last\nseason, while another Providence\nperfprmer, 22-year-old Frank Brim-\nsek, will be between the goal posts\nin place of Tiny Thompson.\nRoss said Thompson suffered a\nfive-stitch gash over hia right eye\nin practice at Boston Sunday and\nthe injury was not healed. The veteran netminder took part ta practice today.\nShore, colorful veteran, took part\nta training but failed to show up\nas the team left Boston for Toronto. Ross said he would proclaim\nthe western Canada wheat farmer\na holdout it he did not show up\nin time for the opener here. Shore is\nnot satisfied with his contract\nRoss announced a new \"kid lino\"\nof Pat MoCraavy, Mai Hill, and\nRoy Conacher, brother of Charlie\nand Lionel, would form ona of tha\nattacking divisions against- tha\nLeafs, and that another youthful\nUna would be made up of Bobby\nBauer, Parky Dumart and Milt\nSchmidt, former Kitchener amateurs.\nLeafs went through t fait practice today,' a few hours before\nBruins. Turk Broda, regular Leaf\ncustodian, will be ta goal against\nthe Bostonites and Coach Dick Irvin probably will start his ace forward line of Syl Apps, Gordle Drillon and Bob Davidson. Harvey\nJackson, Buzz.Boll and Bill Thomas will be a second attacking division and the veteran Red Horner\nand Jimmy Fowler will line up on\ndefence.\nMusic from a pipe organ\u2014an Innovation In the Toronto rink\u2014will\neet the fans as they crowd Maple\naf Gardens tor the opener..\nJust before tha battle begins,\nDrillon, Leaf right winger, will\nbe presented with the Lady Byng\ntrophy by Lieutenant-Governor,\nAlbert Matthews of Ontario. Drll-\n' Ion was awarded the trophy lait\n. season as tha most gentlemanly\npl-U-erJp^.jHjiuo- i --\u00ab\nHAWKS-AMERKS CLASH\nCHICAGG,*Nov.,2   *CP).-Chl-\ncago Black Hawks, long-shot winners of the Stanley Cup last winter,\nopen-defence 01 the-National Hoc-\nkey'Leaguei trophy tomorrow\nnight agafitstWew York Americans\nas a.two-game-program gets the\n1938-30 N.H.L. season under way.\nBoston Bruins meet the MaplO Leafs\nat^TorontdTsT^-'i,\n-the H*wka;hope'to get off to a\nflying start with a team that looks\nconsiderably stronger than last season's. Chief addition is a' complete\nforward Jfe*v_ composed of Buss\nBlinco, Karl Robinson and Baldy\nNorthcott, who played last year tor\nthe disbanded Montreal Maroons.\nManager BUI Stewart ot the\nHawks rates his team, together with\nthe Bruins, Leafs and New York\nRangers, as the. four top contenders\nin* the revamped seven-team circuit,\nWAR ADMIRAL MAY\nGET ANOTHER CHANCE\nBALtTMim NOV. 2 (An--*\"\nAdmiral,: Waton by three lengths ta\na match race with Seabiscuit yesterday, may haVe another chance.\nAlfred. Gwynne Vanderbllt, vice-\npresident of the Maryland Jockey\nchib which staged the match race,\nsaid today he had started attempts\nto arrange a. new contest\n'tt VafijerVilt's plans should be\nearrted through the, Admiral and\nSeabiscuit would meet on the final\nd*y of'the current Pimllco meeting,. November IB.\nDETROIT, (CP) \u2014 Dentists lead\nalf professions In betting on horse\nraces, says Gene James, veteran\nLouisville race-track follower. He\nsaid dentists for some reason were\nfairly lucky at the game.\n'ADELAIDE, (CP)\u2014 Clarrie\nGrimmctt, South Australian and\ntest cricket, bowler, has been offered a job as private cricketing coach\nto lu> Indian, potentate. He is one\nof the cleverest slow bowlers In the\ngame today.\nBftlSTOL, England, (CP) - Bristol City football club's manager was\nsuspended fdr the season, the club\nfined.\u00a3100 ($483) and tour amateurs declared professional after ^a\nleague Inquiry Into payments to\namateurs and bonuses\nAmerican Ita\nuMostYal\nFINE QUALITY\nby, B.V.6., Tooks and Arrow\n* JACK BOYCE\n\u00abv T i BTVLE SHQP\u201e\n838 Baker   i Phone 180\nJIMMY ?OXX\nwho Wedneiday wai announced aa ths first man In baseball\nhistory to gain the Baseball\nWriters' association of America\n\"most valuable player\" vote for\ntha American league for a third\ntime.\nSix yeara ago while with tha\nPhiladelphia .Athletics, tha\ndynamite batsman won tha\noovetted reward and repeated\nl\u00bb\u00bb88.\niHAVIHG COMFORT\nIN EVERY\nC)MFORT and economy ara\nthe chief reasons why men\noverwhelmingly prefer tha\nGillette method tor tha steady\nchore of shaving. Gillette alone\nhas the equipment and experience to produce tha heavy-duty\nGillette Blade with the keenest\nedges ever nut on steel.' It la tha\nonly blade that is precision made\nto fit tha Gillette Razor exactly.\nAnd the reason is that Gillett*\nhu invested more millions in\nplant facilities, spent more years\nin scientific research and made\nmore blades than all other manufacturers combined;\nThat is why quality Is always\nuniform in Gillette Blades\u2014way\nthey give you more and better\nshaves for your money! Demand\nBlue Gillette Blades and get the\nworld's cleanest, most comfort,\nable shaving performance!\nGILLETTB SAFETY RAZOR\nCO. OF CANADA LTD.\nWHEN   IT'S COCKTAIL TIM\n(TTTTJ) J\u00b0onc\/on2)ru\/\ni*\nPjU -klvsrtlMiirfen. I\u00bb not published or displayed by ths Liquor Control Bbsfd Or by tht\nh       Govern Wit of British Columbl*.        i-,\\   ''\u25a0-'   \u2022 .'\u25a0       y\n' \"'*   '\"\u25a0-'     \u2022'     i   \u2022* '''.'\".''   r.    \u2014'\u2014 \u25a0   '   ' \u2022      .   i\n-*\u00bb-\n mmwm^^mmmmm^mmm\nWmaaaaam^emmmmmji!\nmte^ammmt\nPAGE SIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY Nt\\'.'8, NELSON, B.C-THURSDAY MORNINQ, NOV. 3, 1938\nem\n'\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\u2022 \u25a0' \"\u25a0'\u25a0' \"     '        \u25a0    \u25a0   \u25a0:\nALL THRIFTY PERSONS USE THE mASSITOD ADS EVERY DAY\n:ranbrook city proposes to\nbuild its own power plant\nCBANBRPOK, B. Ci - Preliminary survey work has been completed by the olty works,staff for\nihe construction of a,hydro-alec-\ntrie power plant on tha St. Mary's\n\u2022river near Wyellffe, and they\nhave found tha project feasible.\nThe city hat filed an application\nat Victoria for a loan from the\n\"government for the purpose of the\nproject  -i \u25a0\u25a0 ' \u25a0'\nAdvertisements will oall to the\nattention of the publlo that application will be made to use 450\nC. F, 8. of water from the 8t.\nMary's river and to ttofe ap-\nproximately 90,000,(10(1 gallons In\n.\u2666ha proposed reservoir tohlel) will\nflood approximately 30 acret of\n. land.        \u25a0  ' ;--\u25a0\" \".. '.. .\n. The site for' tha plant will be\nat the bridge at Wyollffe S mllei\nfrom 'Cranbrook. The. water for\nwhich application Is being made\nwill be diverted there, utilized\nfor power and returned to the\n. stream. \u2022;#\u2022..\nShould the loan be granted and\nthe project completed the power\nwould be' \u2022 distributed and .sold\nwithin the City of Cranbrook and\nschool district, Cranbrook power\nIt now supplied by the East Kootenay Power A Light company at\nBull River.       *'\".', \u2022 V\nHitler's Own\nNear Completion\nBERLIN, Nov. 2 (AP)-Ger-\nmany's great chain of fortifications along Itt western frontier\nwill be completed before winter,\nthe authoritative Military Review\nDie Wehrmacht, asserted  today.\nAn article on the nature of the\nfortlfleatlont by Major-General\nSpeich, Inspector of the western\nline, which Chancellor Hitler hat\nnAned the \"Llmet\" line, painted\na vivid picture what any Invader\nwould find on Germsn ' territory. * -..-\u2022''\n.Steel and cement barrlert would\nblock all key points, General\nSpeich, tald, Beyond the visible\ndefencei would lie the Invisible-\nhidden tankt, machine gun nests\npoison gats armored can; all\npouring out death and destruction.   .\nMemorial Fund\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014The\nUniversity, of Biitish Columbia^\nboard of governors has directed\ntrustees of the Brock Memorial fund\nto make an accounting to the University's student council, Carson\nMcGuire, student council president\nsaid today.\nThe council at a recent meeting\nhad asked for control of the fund\nunless giveiTan immediate accounting,, It also asked for a. 10-\nyear period to build up the fund.':',.\nThe fund is for-a student union\nbuilding whtc*h will be built on'\nthe University campus in memory,\nof Dean and Mrs. R.W. Brook, kill-'\ncd in an airplane accident at Alta\nLake, B.C., several years ago.\nSnow Again Seen\non Mountain Tops\nShow again made its appearance\non the mountains surrounding Nelson after a brief storm late yes-\nterday afternoon. Snow could be\nseen particularly well or\/ the old\nSilver King tram line south of\nNelson.,\nIn the city itself only a trace of\ntain felt although it was storming\nin the immediate district.\nThe maximum temperature was\nthe lowest of the season yesterday.\nthe mercury only rising to 46. The\nday's low was 33 degrees.\nJohnstone Asks\nSidewalk Repair\nRequest of Thomas H. Johnstone\nthat the city repair the sidewalk* on\n, Baker street in front of the Johnstone block so as to drain properly\nwas referred by the city council\nTuesday night to the public works\ncommittee.\nMIKING MAN SUICIDE\nNEW YORK, Nov. 3 (CP)-Police today listed as suicide the\ndeath by a revolver shot, of Mor-\nltz Rotoenberger, retired member\nof the ,New York curb exchange\nwho had large mining interests in\nCanada.\nl&th F1EID\nBATflSRY R.C.A.\nROSSLAND, B. O.\nROSSLAND-TRAIL, B. C.\nBattery Orders by Capt. W. H. Taylor, Officer Commanding.\nPart I, Orden No. 38 for Weekend-\n' I     Ing November 6, 1938\nDUTIES:\nOrderly officer, 2-Lieut. A. D.\nGreenwood. Next for duty, 2-Lieut.\nJ. C, McDiarmid.\" '\u2022'\u25a0'\u25a0(.\nOrderly Sergeant, L-Sgt. Taylor,\nV. B. Next for duty, L-Sgt. Binks,\nG. W.\nPARADES; -\nThe battery will parade Thursday,\nNovember 3, 1938 at 1960 hours in\nthe Rossland Armory.\nTraining syllabus:\n1950 hours, fall in and inspection.\n2000 to 2030 hours, footdrill.\n2030 to 2100 hpilrs, Rifle drill.\n2100 to 2200 hours, rifle practice,\nminiature range.\nDRESS:\nDrill order.\nTRANSPORTATION:\nThe battery will provide half the\ncost of transportation up to. Nov. 11.\nROYAL CANADIAN SCHOOL\nOF ARTILLERY, WINNIPEG:\nThe following officers and noncommissioned officers have been\naccepted for attendance at the marginally noted school.\n\u2022 Lieutenants and N., C, O.'s will\nleave Trail for Winnipeg on Friday,\nNovember 11, 1938 at 1815 hours.\nCaptain W. H. Taylor, Lieutenant\nF.P. Haszard, 2-Lieut A, D. Greenwood, 2nLleut. J. C. McDiarmid,\nI,-Sergt. V. B. Taylor, Bombadier\nJ, D. lanson. \"_' .\nPeriod' of course. November 14\nto December 17, 1038.-    ,\nNOTE: '\u25a0\u00bb    -*-\",\nAll rinks .are requested to make\neverv effort to attend'these last two\nparades before Remembrance D^y.\nA. D. GREENWOOD, 2-Lieut,\nfor O. Ci-lOBth Field Qattery,\nR; C. A.\n\u2014\u25a0 \u25a0,:- ! .*.   \u25a0\u2022 !\nChamberlain Speech  :\nPleases Stock Market\n. LONDON, Nov.- ,2 (APl-Tlie\nstock market, was favorably impressed on-the whole'-ftlth Prime\nMinister Chamberlain's1.'speech in\nparliament Tuesday and prices today held steady. Gilt edge' Issues\nwere especially in demand. Transatlantics were well sustained, inquiry for Kaffirs'featured a quiet\nmining group; domestic rails sagged on receipts of disappointing traffic figures while industrials were\nneglected.\n212 UNEMPLOYED MEN\nWERE CALLED TO FIRE\nVICTORIA, Nov, 2 (CF)-Reply-\ning to questions asked by Samuel\nGuthrie (CCF-Cowichan-Newcastle),\nHon. A. Wells Gray, provincial minister of lands, informed-the legislature that 212 unemployed - men\nwere taken from\" Vancouver'..to\nCarnpbell .River,'.B.C.-te.help fight\nVancouver Island's 100.QOO acre'forest fire last July. \"The 'cost, was\n$1,035.20. '\u25a0-.-' .\"   vy\nMrs. Goulding Says\nRadio, Gave Ring; Girl Forged (hecks\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP)-Mrs.\nAndrew Goulding went back to the\nwitness stand today to explain under cross-examination why Mrs. Eva\nP. Huntington, 82-year-old woman\nfrom whom Mrs. Goulding and her\nhusband are accused of conspiring\nto steal, purchased various articles\nfor their nursing home.       '\u2022    - '\nThe middle-aged matron - who\nsoent most .of yesterday denying the\ncharges against her often declared\nshe could not remember circumstances of the, purchases\u2014from a\ndairy, a laundry, a newspaper and\nseveral stores.\nThe prosecution has attempted to\nshow in evidence that the Gould-\nIngs arranged forging of checks in\nlhe name of the aged patient who\ndied in their nursing home last\n;Mav. and of substituting a cheap\nring (or the gold wedding ring on\nher finger when she died.\nMrs. Goulding testified that Mrs.\nHuntington had supplied- the nursing home with an electric refrigerator and a radio.\nBOUGHT REFRIGERATOR\n\"Mrs. Huntington said she liked\negg noggs\u2014ice cold\u2014and I only had\nan ice box.\" she told the court. \"So\nMrt. Huntington said I should get\none of the electric refrigerators.\n\"Those are only for millionaires,\"\nI replied, and Mrs. Huntington'said\n'Well. I'll give you one for a present'.\"\nMrt. Goulding said she then arranged the purchase of a $250 refrigerator.\nAnother check made out by Mrs.\nHuntington, she recalled, was for\npayment for a radio on which she\nturned in an old one,\n\"Yes, that check was for a radio\nexchange.\" she said. \"Her's (Mrs.\n. Huntington's), was squeaking pretty\nbad.\"\nShe said, however, it was not Mrs.\nHuntington's radio she turned in\nfor the new one but hy own.   ,\nThrough yesterday, -she tried to\nexplain various tjuestlons put to\nher, often answering in a voice so\nlow Mr. Justice Dennis Murphy\nasked her to Bpeak louder.    .'\nBLAMES FORGERIES\nON GIRL\nShe was confronted with a series\nof checks, which Lillian Crawley,\n18-yfettr-bld hospital patient who|\nformerly was a maid' in the nurs-!\ning home, had said she-forged in\nMrs. Huntington's, name' at Mrs.\nGQUlding\/s request \/      \u25a0   ;' '\nFor those, she placed-all'Wsponsl-\nbility on tne-.glrl, decBirlng \"she'was\nmy secretary and took charge of all\ncorrespondence and checks.\"....    '-\nQuestioned about cheeks endorsed\nby, herself and then placed to her\ncredit In a bank, Mrs. Goulding expressed inability to remember the\ncircumstances..\n\"I don't want to lie,1'-ahe said, \"I\nwant to tell the truth, but I don't\nremember.\" \u25a0*     , - -   .\nCrown Prosecutor A. T. -Branca\nthen asked her to' explain details\nof the sale of a gold yiedding ring\nbelonging to Mrs. Huntington. She\nadmitted the transaction and-said\nher husband obtained $9.50 for it.\n\"You know you had no right to\nthis wedding ring,\" she was challenged. But she refused to admit\nthat and declared the woman hod\ngiven It to her.  . \u2022*.,\n\"What did you' do With the\nmoney?\" she was. asked. She' replied she had put it in a drtjwer\nend two days later found it iti Miss\nCrawley's purse. .She declared the\ngirl stole the money and then\ncharged Mrs. Goulding's son With\nthe theft.\n\"I turned him from Uiy home because of that,\" she said.\/\nMsm\\ Hailg Nma\nMember ol the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\n\". T fBLBPrfONi;M4\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\n^11 Departmenti   ,     '---j\nSubscription  Rates\n. Single copy a..,'1.,','..i''''.,i; I' -M\nBy carrier, per week _ .25\nBy carrier; per yeer _ 113.00 !\nBy mail In Canada to, subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier- areas, per month aoc;\nthree months 51.80; six months\n$3.00; one yeir $8.00;, T\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year 57.50.\n- Foreign countries, other than\nUnited States, same as above\n'tMua.any extra postage.\nAdvertising Rdfies \u25a0\nire\u00ab Mm\n(Minimum 2 Llnei)    ,< .\n2 lines, per insertion ....... $22\n2 lines, o consecutive\n-  insertloiis   _is_i A-.-A .-88\n,   (6 for the price it 4)   .\n1 lines, per Insertion ~A-.' i33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive      '\u201e'    '\u2022'\n\u25a0insertions Ka ,*\u25a0 \u201e*, ,- XS2 -\n2 lines.-,! montK, .~n~ 2-88..\n3 hae-tyr-month:;,,,,,,.!,,.:\u201e\u25a0 uEBS\nFor   advertisements   ot   more\nthan three lines,- calculate'\non the above basis. ,;.'\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of    ....\nI   Inser^on*. \u2022'       .-\u25a0 \u25a0\u00bb\nALL\" ABOVE: 'SATES \u2022 LESS\n10*%. 1*08 PROMPT PAYMENT\n\u2022SPECIAL. LOW'r^tSE;. '.'\nSituations Wanted, 25c tor any\nrequired numbe*-' of llnet for -\nsix dayi, payable' In advance.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED MATRON FOR SLOCAN\n' Community hospital, New Den-\n' ver. Wages $80,00 per month; duties to commence Dec. 15. Apply\nSecty, Box 7, New Denver, B. C.\n(3766)\nSITUATIONS  WANTED\nLOCAL, CONFIDENTIAL, FIRST\nclass ledger-keeper, accountant,\nwith office- and phone desires\nwork by day, month or by the\npiece. References provided. Box\n382ft Daily Neto, (3828)\nYOUNG MAN, SCANDINAVIAN-\nCanadian, total abstainer, desires\nwork. Experienced driver. Excellent references. Phone SIR or\nwrite W. 3., 540 Josephine street,\nNelson, B. C. . (8784)\nMIDDLE iAGED MAN WANTS\nwork doing chores or looking after place for smell remuneration.\n' Trustworthy. Give particulars to\nBox 3848 Daily News.        (3848)\nEXPERIENCED ENGLISH PRAT-\nrle woman, neat and clean, desires work by day or month, ph.\n81R or write W. J, 540 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B, C,\n(3785)\nGIRL WANTS GENERAL HOUSE\nwork. Sleep put Ph. 892X.   (8882)\nAirmen in Canada\nGet New Posts\nOTTAWA. Nov. 2''(CP)-Appolnt-\nment of group captain, A.E. Godfrey of the national Canadian air\nforce station at Trenton, Ont, to\ncommand the training station at\nToronto was announced today by\nthe department Of national defence.\nWing commander.A-A.L. Cuffe is\ntransferred frftq* the. Vancouver\nair station to assume command at\nTrenton and wing commander E.L.\nMacLoed assumes command at Vancouver. Other transfers are:\nFlight lieut. \u00a3H. Evans, Trenton\nto Calgary; flight lieut ,D.M. Smith\nOttawa to Trenton; flying officer\nKJ.M. Smith, Camp Borden- to\nKamloops, B.C.'; squadron leader\nA.'Lewis and flying officer J.D.\nBlane, Ottawa to Calgaryi'squadron\nleader A.H. Hull, flight lieut E.W,\nSpringall and-flying: officer'M.G.\nDoyle, Trenton'.toVancouver.\nU. S.-Canodo-G. B.\nTwotybyNovJI?\nWASHINGTON,.Ney. * (AP)-\nUnlted Btatet negotiator!, spurred\nby secretary of State Cordell\nHuil't appeal to put \"redoubled\nvigor Into \u00bbe- reciprocal trade\nprogram, expretted 5 hope today\nof having the,*;British and Canadian ptott'ready by Afmlttloe\nday.   .     -.'   ' \u25a0\nKept\nTitle Secret\nfor Many Years\n. TORONTO, Nov. 2 (CP)-Slr\nJohn' Daniel, who for teveral\nyeart- after coming to Toronto\nfrom Walei wat able to keep his\ntitle secret, died yetterday at hit\n\u2022 home here-jHe wat TS. Sir John\ncame to Canada In 1928 and opened n small bakery business under\ntho name of John Daniel.\nJAPANESE POLICE\nQUESTION SKIPPER OF\nGROUNDED VESSEL\nYOKOHAMA, Japan, Nov. 2 (AP)\n-r-Captain Beddie Stephen of the\nBritish - freighter ' Antigone ws\nreleased tonight after questioning\nby police 'because his ship grounded\noff Cape Fultsu, a military area,\nFEAjt FIVE CANADIANS\nV EXECUTED IN SPAIN\nTORONTO, NOV. 2 (CP)-Officials\nof the Friends of the MacKenzie-\nPaplneau battalion, made up ot\nCanadians fighting oh'the government aide in the Spanish.civil war,\nsaid today they feared fivo Canadians had been executed by Insurgent firing squads.\nCanadians held prisoners by the\nInsurgents according to a list made\npublic by the Friends', Included:\nFrank IJlackmari, Vancouver; Harry Bowialo, Edmonton; Arthur\nHoffheinz. Vancouver: Percy Hii*\nton, Vancouver: Jfeive Martilla,\nSointula, B.C.; Ernest Miller, Vancouver; Frank Wood, Vancouver;\nNeils'.Kadaeik, Vancouver; Isaac\nMattson, Vancouver; Walter Sidney, Vancouver; Percy M James,\nVancouver. ...' *\nCRAWLS YWO MILES  '\nWITH BROKEN LEG\nMISSOULA, Mont., Nov. 2 (AP)\n.\u2014A hunter who dragged himself\ntwo miles along an abandoned logging trail after breaking hit right\nTeg wat under treatment today\nIn Mlttoula hoipltal.\ni The hunter, Ltenard J. Hall of\nQreenoUgh, Monk, wore hit left\nknee to the bone while making\nhit painful way along the trail.\nUritish TO EXECUTl\nFIVE REBEL ARABS\nJERUSALEM,'Nov. 2< (AP)-A\nmilitary court today sentenced to\ndeath five Arabs arrested by a\nScottish Black Watch Patrol October10.- '.\nThe Arabs were charged with\ncarrying rifles and ammunition.\nThree others were acquitted.\nPERSONAL\nREMODELLING \u25a0* SPECIAL\nRelining (2 year guarat)t?ed'satin,\nminor, repairsj foops ;and buttons,\ncleaning and glazing). . .     '\n.-AUfol ;. $15 .\nWrite to Viking\" fur Co.* ,\n1047 Granville St\u201e- Vancouver, EC.\n.   .- ,\u2022\u25a0'\u2022       ,.        .-      (3808)\n**=\nMEN -OF 80, 40i 501 WANT VIMf\nVigor, for rufidown ,'body? Try\nOST&EX Tablets of. raw oyster\n\u2022stimulants and general body build,\ners.. If not delighted-with results\nof first package, maker, rounds\n.its low price. Call,*write, Mann-.\nRutherford'ind all good druggists.1\n-.   \u25a0     -. '-,'\u25a0.\u25a0 '.,    \u25a0* ,.-Vy,(2187)\nAN OFFER TO EVERY. W\u00bbW-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull .Ihfortnatlon sent free, the\nRamsay Company. World-Patent\nAttorneys, 273' Bank St, Ottawa.\n......    1 (3327)\nRHEUMATISM OINTMENT, 50,\nAsthma Treatment 75c; Backache\nKidney-Pills 50c; Try Heath le\n\u2022 Heather Herbal Remedies. World's\nlargest herbalists. MaiI t0 Heath\n\u2022 le Heather Products; 678 Howe,St.\nVancouver.; - (3707)\nCHRISTMAS QARDS FROM YOUR\nown snaps. These cards are getting moro popular each year. If\nyou Have not seen them, send\n.ten cents and. a negative,' for\nsample. Wa taiov\/ you will want\nmore. Krystal Photos, Wilkie,\nSaskatchewan.1       ' (205)\nGEN1HNE LATEX-SPECIAL GTD.\n25 for .$1.00.or jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue) National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton.\n, \u00bb; \u25a0        ;     (214)\nMARRY? CANADIAN MEMBERS.\nMany -with means. Particulars 10c.\nLadies: free. Western Social Club,\n.  Sub. 23,.Edmonton,,Alta.   ;,(3550-\nMEN'S SUPERFINE SANITARY\nrubbers, 18 for $1.00, also Latex\n23 fori.Jl.OO. Burrard Specialty,\n4116 McGill St, Vancouver.\" (2610)\nWftEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel, Opp;-C J. R. depot.\n'   '\u25a0'.\u25a0\u201e' :   :.- 7'-' ' (M84)\nExpects Another\nVinter\nSAN JOSE, Cal., Nov.' 2:\"(Al?J\u2014\nThere w.dn't be a shortage of rain\nthis winter if the prediction, of\nDr.; Albert J., Newlin; University:\nof Santa Clara sun spot- expert,\ncomes true,'   * -\"   *  -   -.   ..'-V\n\"We are still-at .the peak of the'\nwet cy.cle','\"Dr. Newlittsald today.,\n\"This wkttei;; will. be. aimilar. to-last.\nwinter-with an abundance of rainfall, partjculiiMy after, the fast.\nof the yeer.\" tfs\nLIVESTOCK\nWANTED HORSE, 1400 TO 1500\nlba Give age, price, etc. In answering. G. Bar wis, R. R. 1, Nelson\n(3822)\n7,m;OLD PL-\nAble W do hard work. Goodtond;\nH. Holmes R. R, 1 Nelson (Harrop)\n' ,     . Ai,   . \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022';'\u2022'\"*\u2022    (3784)\nYORKSHIREPIGS, ():WEEK3iaS\n$4.50. F. 0. a i Needles, ,B. 'C,\nF. G.^ShleU. .        \u25a0 , (8780)\nFOR SALE GOOD RANCH HORSE\n1300 lbs. T. )\u25a0 Oliver, Gray-Creek.\n(3812)\nWANTED 4.GOOD MILJf* COWS:\nBox iWM-.lSily News, -; J3856)\nDairy.\nso ras,\n\u25a0 Ymir,\nB. C.'\n(3810i\nGARDEN. AND NURSERY\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-77 PRODUCTS'  .;      *\nFOR FALL PLANTING - LLOYD\nGeorge Raipberry SOc doz.; Cory\nThomlese Blickberries 80c doz.;\nBlack and Red.Currant*,.1 year,\nlOc'eaclv, 3 year, 23c each; Enf\n,'lish   Gooseberries\nRoynon, l*(eltoli''\n25c\neach.  T.\n(3665)\nLEGAL NOTICES\n'    WATER NOTiCE   \\ .:\n,' DIVERSION and USE '\u25a0'\u2022\n. TAI3! NOTICE THAT Gold Belt\nMinihg Company Ltd. (NPL) whose\naddress :'s Sheep Creek, B. C, will\napply foi \u2022\u00bb Jicenca to take and use\n15J.O0O gallonspeiHay of water out\nof Sheep. Creek vfititm flows westerly and drains Into Salmon River\nabout 4 miles south ot the town of\nSfilmo, B.'.-C.        ,\nThe water ivill be diverted at a\npoint about4000 feet south westerly\nfrom the Junction pf Curtis Creek\nand Sheep Creek and. will be used\nfor'Mining (Milling) purpose upon\nthe mine- described as Gold Belt\nMine.\n\u25a0ftis -'Hotice was posted -on the\nground on the 12th day of September. 193?..' '.   ' . y   .     \u25a0:. .>...'\nA copy of this notice and an application pursuant thereto and to\nthe ''Wliter Act\" will be filed in the\noffice of the Water Recorder at\nNelson, B. C; ' '     .\n. Objections to. the- application,\nmay . be filed with, the said\nWater. Recorder or w\"h the\nComptroller of Water Rights, Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B.' C,\ny?ithih thjrly days after the first\nappearance of this notice in a local\nnewspaper, \u25a0 . \/ \u25a0* ' \u25a0. .\nGOLD. BELT MlNtNG COJfPANY\nLTD. (N. P.L.),\n'\u2022<\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 'Applicant.\nBy H. E. DOELLE, Agent'\nThe date of the first publication\nof this notice is October 13th, 1938.\n(3544)\nCORPORATION OF THE CITY\n.<        OF NELSON\n\u2022\u25a0    COURT-OF REVISION '\nPublic notice is .hereby given that\nthe-first sitting of the Court of Rt:\nvision;will be held ia. the council\naber ot the,city hall on Thursday, thclOth day of November at 10\no'clock a.m., far the purpose of cor.\nrecting and -revising die vdters list,\nfor, the ensuing year. ' .'\". ?. '\n,     ?      - W. E. WASSON,\n.'     City Clerk,\n\u25a0    Nelson\u201eB. C\n, \u25a0: \" . *        November 1st,. 1938.\n(3824)\nCORPORATION OF THE CITY\n\u00ab;.'.        OPSLOCAN'\n;   \":  COURT ^OF REVISION\nPjibllc Notice is hereby given,\nthat the Court of Revision will be\nheld at the City Hall on Thursday,\nNovember 10,\u00abt 7 p.m.,.forthe purpose of correcting and revising the\nvoters list for the ensuing year.\nW. GRAHAM.\n\u25a0   .---.        City Clerk.\n'     \u2022-     \u25a0'-.-.      . (3842)\n(Continued in Next Column)\nLEGAL NOTICES\n-   (Continued)\n;- LANP.^tpiSTRY ACT    .\n>','.\".    (SeVUon 160)\nIN THE MATTER OF ALL MIN-\n(SAVE COAL AND PETROLEUM)\nIN (m:UlTOErLOTS* 8083, 5084,\n5085, 5960, 5061, 5962, 5968, 5967, 6887\nond 6888, RESPECTIVELY KNOWN\nAS \"BAYONNE\", \"OXFORD\",\n\"MARYLAND\", ,!DELEWARE\",\n\"COLUMBUT, O RIO\". \"K E N-\nTttCKY\", 'NEW JERSEY\", \"VIRGINIA\" AND \"ILL1NOISE\" MIN-\nERAL.CLAIMS, KOOTENAY DISTRICT.'-\"  ;;'-..;' ?*\u2022 \u25a0'.\nProof .having been filed In my office of the loss of- Certificate of Title\nNo. 4028-A to the above mentioned\nlands in theT name of BAYONNE\nGOLD MINES LIMITED and bear-\ninn date the 8th of December 1904,1\nHEREBY GIVE NOTICE of my intention at, tbe expiration of one\ncalendar month from the first publication hereof to issue Provisional\nCertificate of Title in lieu of such\nlost Certificate,-Any person having\nany information with reference to\nsuch lost Certificate of Title is. requested to communicate with the\nundersigned.   \u25a0    . '\nDATED  AT  NELSON, :B, C,\nthis\" 19th day. of October, 1988,\n.-\"A. WvJDIENS,\n. . \" Registrar.\nDATE of first publication, October 27th, 1938.   . -\nX.V .  '.' * (3743)\nFOR SALE\nAuction Sdle\nEstate ofl.E. Marchildori\n(Deceased)      ,\nAuction Sale of Goods and\nChattels In the above estate\nwill be held.,8' Procter on\nFriday November 4th at 2\no'clock.\n<-   Terms Cash\nIVi. E.Harper\nOfficial Administrator\n-'- \u2022  '   ' .-    (3845)\nPIPES, TUBES, FITTINGS\n'! , NEW AND USED\nLarge'.stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD  .\n1st Avenue ant) Main St\nVancouver, B. C\n(218)\n. PIPE AND FITTING\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd.\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B. C.\n'-,.\u25a0'.., (218)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nC6.,Ltd,NelBon,.B.C,        (217)\n2000 FT. i INCH PIPE FOR SALE\ncheap. Empire Machines, - 620\nFront Street (3881)\nBEAUTY SHOPPE WITH BQUIP-\n- ment and supplies. Box 492, Kaslo.\n(3789)\nBELL PIANO, GOOD CONDITION\ngood tone, particulars Ph, B82R1.\n\u25a0 WTO)\n775 ACHES LAND, 3 MILES TB&M'\n-4U\n(3884)\nNels\u00abn.,$275 an acre. Ph. 474.\n**ts=B|M*^\u00ab\u00abiiaa*s\nLOST AND FOUND\n7-7 \"to Flndei?    '\nIf you find a cat or dog, pocket-\nbook, jewelry or fur;- or anything else ot value, telephone the\n&ilytNews. A \"Found* Ad. will\nbe Inserted without cost, to you.,\nWe will collect from the owner.:\nLOST-SfcEEPING BAG ON ROAD\n'between Bonnington and South\nSlocan. Reward. Bob Long, Bon-\n. nlngton. Notify office No. 1 plant.\n-      .,-   '      - _\u25a0       (38\u00bb)\nLOST - TOP    PLATE    FALSE\ntoeth Thurs,1 ijt, Nelson-Castle\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nGbOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\nbta easy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept. ol Natural\nResources, C. P. R\u201e Calgary. Alta\n\u25a0      -.      -.   ,        ,, *\u25a0    (228)\n2 LEVEL CORNER JXJTS IN CITV\nlimits for sale, 1 block bf pavement. Ideal location, Ph. 611L1.\n.(3800)\nTOR .SALE 5 ROOM HOUSE, 5\nlots, fruit trees and large garden.\nApply- 221 Robson St,, Nelson, '\n.-\u25a0,'- (3829)\nWANTED  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US,YOUR SCRAPiMETALS\nor iron, any'qdariltty. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n916 Powell St, Vancouver, B. C.\n(3564)\nWANTED. - D. C. GENERATOR,\nabout 15 K. W. 125-or 220 <>olts, 1st\nclass condition. Mirror Lake Electric Light Co., Mirror Uke, B. C,\n  (3806)\nWANTED. COUNTER SHOWCASE.\nGive full details and price to Box\n3839 Daily News.  \"'\nAUTOMOTIVE\nQUICK SAli '28 ESSEX COACH,\n1st class running cond. 3 new tires\n$130. Ph. J21X. D. B\u201e Crowther.\n(3823)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND APARTMENTS\nRESIDENCE,   CLOSE   IN,   MADE\n, Into two 3-room suites. Suitable\nfor  light  housekeeping.   Newi}\n.  decorated, rent $20 per snite. r\nW. Appleyard, Baker St   ((3753)\nTO RENT-8 ROOM HOUSE PART\nly turn. Ith St., Fairview. Ph. t\n(3322i\n8 ftOolrf \u00abJW fc^'RIW AB&WL\nNelson Grocery 398 Baker, Ph. 89. ^\n(3738)\nFURNISHED aOMBKEBPlSra\nrooms tor rent Annable Block.\n< cm;\nFOR RENT FURNISHED HOUSI.*\nApply 203 Kerr Apartments.\n\u2022 (3788) \u25a0\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modefhS\nfrigtdalre equipped suites,    (221)\nDUPLEX APT., 131 CHATHAM ST.\n0889)\nHOUSE   KEEP!\nroom, K, W, C, Block.       (r\nFurn. or unfurnished,\nFURNISHED\na\nFURNISHED    HOUSE   KEEPING\nrooms, 711 Vernon Si       (3888) I\nFOR RENT. PARTLY FURNISHED\nhouse. Phone 628X. (3777) 1\nFURNISHED SUITES. KERR APW.,\n\"   ', (220)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\nWANTED  TO  BUY   YEARLING\nhens, Box 3850 Daily News. (3850)\nBusiness ond Professional Directory\nAsiayers\nE W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer, Sampling Agents for\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C.  (182)\nGRENVILLE H, GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 420\nFall Street Nelson, B. C P. O.\nBox No. 9.  Representing ship-\n\u25a0 per's interest, Trail, B. C.    (183)\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND,\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual   Representatives   for\n- shippers at Trail Smelter,    (184y\nChiropractors\nJ. R MCMILLAN, D. C, NEURO-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk.\n(185)'\nW. 3. BROCK D. C, 18 years' Ex-\nprnc Ph. 969 Gilker Blk, Nelson.\n(186)\nCorsets\nSPENCER CORSETS. MRS. V. M.\n. Campbell. 370 Baker St Ph. 668.\n(3227)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n, (188)\nH. D.DAWSON. Nelson. B.C.\n.Engineer le Surveyor\n(1922)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert. Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service .\n(190)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTX CO., LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\n347 Baker St., Phone 88.   ,(191)\nC D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph 90.\n(192)\nInsurance and Real Eitatt\n(Continued) - '\nSEE D. L. KERR, AGENT FOB\nWawanesa Fire Ins, For better rates.\n\u25a0          (194)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATt-i\nRentals, Insurance.  Ami'Me BjOfr\n(IM)\n:. Phone 185.        (lDW\nCHAS. F. McHJ\nReal Estate. \t\nR W. DAWSON, Real Estate, In.\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. Phono 197.\naim\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor al) Classes of. Metal Work, Lath*\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding. :,1\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(199)\nH. E. STEVENSON. Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen.. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine A Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98. 708-12 Vernon SU Nelson.  (281)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S    SASH    FACTOrWj\nHardwood merchant, 27? Baker {\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,  SELL  &  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store, Ph. 534.'\n(207)\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY, SELL.\nExch, Rpr. Upholster. 413 Hall St\n0578)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch it Is on time all the time.\n345 Baker St, Nelson. (209)\nWant to Sell Something?'\nPHONE\n144\n.. ^.all'.Aj\u00bb..i.. It.  ^^\u00ab.r-|-^|||iiifi|ft|i*Jjy\n mMmaajammmmM^e^^\n\\HW\nWALL STREET\nTRADING DULL\njfEW YOBKi Nov; 2 'AP) - The\nstock market settled deeper into a\nrut today and prices drifted unevenly in the quietest trading since\nlate September.\nLeading shares stiffened in the\nafternoon ahd some climbed  for\ngains of a point or so. But minor\n.advances and declines ruled in most\nMssuea.-'  ,\nTransactions, approximating 700,-\n000 shares;.were less than half the\ntrading pace before the market recently entered a stalemate. In bonds\nand commodities, decisive trends\nalso were lacking as speculators\nwithdrew from dealings.\n\u2022ALT PRODUCTION UP\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP) - Canadian salt production in 1937 totalled\n458,957 short tons valued at $1,799,488\ncompared with 891,318 at $1,773,144\nIn MS;-the Dominion Bureau of\nStatistics said today.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Nov. I (API-Closing,\ncopper, standard spot \u00a348 8s, future \u00a349 10s, both off 16s 3d; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a351 15s, off Ss;\nasked \u00a382 15s, unchanged, Tin spot\n\u00a3211 5s, future \u00a3212 8s, both oft\n\u00a32, Bids: lead spot \u00a315 18s 6d, future \u00a316'2s 8d, both off 3s 6d. Zinc\nspot \u00a314 18s 9d, unchanged; future\n\u00a314 13s Od, off 8s 9d,\nBar gold 146s Id, off 2V, pence.\n(Egulvalent M4.77J Tf?\nBar silver 19%-i off 1-18.\nMONTREAL\u2014Sliver futures closed steady and unchanged today. No\nsales. Bid: Nov. 41.\nBar goid in London down two\ncents at 834.99 an ounce In Canadian\nfunds; 146s Id In British. Washington price $3520 in Canadian.\nSpot: copper, electrolytic, 12.70;\ntin 48.76; lead 4.80; zinc 4.50; antimony 15.\nNEW YORK\u2014Copper steady; electrolytic spot 11.25; export 11.21. Tin\nbarely steady; spot and nearby 46.10;\nforward 48.15. Lead steady; spot,\nNew York 6.10-18; East St. Louis\n4.05. Zinc steady; East St. Louis\nspot and forward 8.08. Quicksilver\n73-75.\nBar silver 42%, unchanged.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nmines;\ni.'Afton Mines\n.04\n.56\n.14\nAldermac Copper\t\nAmm Gold _.\nI Anglo-Huronian        3.30\n^Arntfleld Gold      .14\nAstoria Rouyn Mines 04V1\nAltec Mining      -06*A\nfBegamac Rouyn 12\nBankfield Gold 36\nBase. Meteli Mining  32\n.-Bifattje flaM *Pnes _\u25a0\nBidgood Kirkland \t\nBig  Missouri   \t\nBralorne Mines \t\nSBnettTrethewey \t\nBuffalo Ankerlte   \t\nBunker Hill Extension....\nCanadian Malartic  _\nCariboo Gold Quartz\t\ns CasUe-Trethewey   .\u2014\n1.41\n.28\nM&\n.02\n14.25\n.11\n.85\n2.35\n1.05\nlitrtl Patricia    \u2014   2.45\n\u25a0\u25a0 Jo\nMm\n2.80\n1.39\n64.74\n.07\n32.78\n.12\n217\nsutsini;     \u2014\u25a0.. \u25a0 \"\u2022\u25a0     r*?I\n10 Gold,..,..,.-...-.,.    2U\njau    .\n. 7M & S .\nMot* Copper\t\nContaurum Mines .....\nConsolidated M & S\nKDaftwntar    -\u25a0-\u2022\u2022\ni-Dom* Minea \u25a0-.,\t\nI Dorval-Siscoe\t\nHast Malartic,\n\u25a0falconbrldge Nickel\nFederal WjWWd \"\n\u25a0&?&*==\nGod's Lake Gold ...\t\ngald Belt  \u2014\nranada Gold Mines\t\nGrandoro Mines \t\nGunnar Go|d_ . , *\t\nRock Gold \t\nGold\n8.90\n.07*4\n.24\n.12%\n.38\n.48\n.10%\n.086\n.61\n1.78\n.10\nESidM'*S-\u2014  33!\nSt?mationSl Nickel   58.00\nIBrOonsolldattd      \u25a0\u00bb%\n(Jack Waite _\njacola Gold \u2014\nKerr-Addison\nTSkland Lake ..\n3 ShoreMines\ntaque Contact\nmvt Cadillac \t\neitchGold .\n.37\n.12%\n1.70\n1.28\n50.65\n.02%\n.34\n.70\n.11%\n2.83\nItVimm.aiS^\\D t v:     an\nMacLeod Cockshutt      -    3.25\n \u00bbBed Lake Gold .....\nndy g-- -\nJcentle Bed Lake \u2014\u2014\njgmtie-Graham    \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022\nPTatteia Gold\nnto\n.48\n.18\n61.00\n1.30\n.11%\n.85\n2.35\n,   .03\nPorcupine _     1-23\nReeves MacDonald \t\nReno Oold Mines\t\nRoche Long Lac   \t\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nShawkey Gold      \t\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt Gordon ...__\t\nSiscoe  Gold      \t\nSladen  Malartic  \t\nStadacona Rouyn \t\nSudbury Basin\t\nSullivan Consolidated\t\nSylvanite\t\nTeck-Hughes Gold \t\nToburn Gold Mines \t\nTowagmac         \t\nVentures       : :\nWaite Amulet    \t\nWhitewater   _.\t\nWright Hargreaves \t\nYmir Yankee Girl\t\nOILS:\nAJax \t\nBritish American \t\nChemical Research \t\nImperial ;\t\nInter Petroleum  \t\nTexas Canadian  \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power A \u201e.^...a.\u201e\nBell Telephone  \t\nBrazilian T L te P .\nBrewers 8c Distiller! , ~\nBrewing Corporation\t\nBrewing Corp Pfd _..._\nB C Power A       \t\nB C Power B     \t\nBuilding PrOdHcti ,\t\nBurt F N      ..... ,.,.-,\nCanada Bread     \t\nCan Bud Malting .\n.40\n.28\n.06%\n1.23\n.04%\n.88\n1.55\n1.63\n.69\n.56\n2.80\n.97\n3.25\n4.70\n2.00\n.43\n5.80\n8.70\n.05\n7.78\n.16\n.15\n21.00\n.70\n17.60\n27.00\n1.35\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-THURSDAY MORNING. NOV.\"8.1988\n-PAGE NINI\nIn Labor Law\nVANCOUVER, Nov. I (CP) -\nResolution dealing with unemployment, with a strike ot employees of\nthe Pacific Lime company at Blubber Bay, B.C., and with various\nprovincial statutes were endorsed\nlast night by the Vanoouver, New\nWestminster and district trades and\nlabor council..   \"     \u00ab! \u25a0-\u25a0 \u2022   '\nA reMlutlon protesting' provincial government proposals to create\na prison camp at Squamish for 150\nunemployed arrested on city streets.\nThe council placed products of\nthe Pacific Lime company on Its\n\"unfair\" list ~-'.   \"   '\nDelegates upheld tbe provincial\ngovernment's Commodities Retail\nSales act by voting down a request\nof the Housewives League of British\nColumbia to condemn the act\nThe council decided to seek an\namendment to the'Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration act, providing that trades unions or their\nduly chosen officers will be made\nbargaining agents for workers who\ncome under the statute. At present,\ntheact provides that employees may\nbargain collectively through representatives duly elected by majority\nvote. Delegates expressed belief\nthe act as it now stands, permits\nemployers to Impose company unions upon employees,\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY. Nov. 2 (CP)-Re-\nceipts to noon today: Cattle 436;\ncalves 57; hogs 140.\nCattle market continued moderately active. Medium butcher steers\n3.75.4.25; good heifers 4: medium\n328-8.80; good cows 2.75-3; good\nveal calves 4.50-3; good stacker and\nfeeder steers 3.78.\nNo hog sales: Tuesday's close, selects 8.10; bacons 7.65; butchers\n7.10.\nWorld  Exchanges\nNfcW YORK, Nov. 8 (AP)-Clos-\ning rates, Great Britain in dollars,\nothen' in cents: Great Britain\n4.75 11-16; 80 day bllli 1.74 15-16;\nCanada, Montreal in New York\n99.37%; New York in Montreal\n100.62%; Belgium 16.01%; Czechoslovakia 3.44%; Denmark 21.23;\nFinland 2.11; France 2.86%; Germany 40.07, benevolent 19.50, travel 22.00; Greece .88; Hungary 19.85;\nItaly 5.26%; Yugoslavia 134; Netherlands 54.43; Norway 23.90; Poland\n18.84; Portugal 4.32%; Rumania .75;\nSweden 24.50; Switzerland 22.69%;\nArgentine 31.72n; Brazil (free) 5.90n;\nMexico City 20.50N; Japan 27.75;\nHong Kong 29.84; Shanghai 16.10.\nRates in Mot cables unless otherwise indicated. N-nomlnal.\nWheat Prices\n. Fractionally Up\nCHICAGO, Nov. 2 (AP)-Asser-\ntlons that because of persistent\ndrought a short crop of United States\nwheat Was in the making -led to\nfractional upturns of prices late\ntoday.\nEarlier, prospects of some snow or\nrain throughout much of the domestic belt caused values to average\nslightly lower, Expert business In\nNorth American grains continued\nmeagre.\nAt the close, Chicago Wheat futures were % of t to % up compared\nwith yesterday's finish, Dec. 63%,\nMay 68%-68, corn %\u2022% down, Dec,\n44%-%. May 48-48% In and oats\nat % decline to % advance.\nOILS DULL\nCALGARY, Nov. 2 (CP)-In an\nextremely dull session, oil shares\nmoved within a narrow range on\nthe Calgary stock exchange today.\n. Corporation\nGold\nris-lUrkland\nsuing Mining\n.06\n1.75\n80.00\n.80\n2.80\n.56\nMtmeta!    \t\nBrien Gold\t\njega Gold\t\nmour Porcupine    4.55\nIpreM  -08\n,jnaster Coin  \u2014._ .56\nmd OMille    2.05\nn Gold    1.35\n\u201ei Crow Gold..  8.05\nmeer Gold  23t\n1 Rouyn GoM  125\n n Bait Dome _ 2.30\nuebec Gold  ......... 1.48\nI-Auftlisf     .82\nCan Car & Foundry ....\t\nCan Cement         \u201e\t\nCan Cement Pfd .....\u201e,\t\nCan Dredge  \t\nCan Malting  \t\nCan Pacific Railway\t\nCan Ind Alcohol A\t\nCan Ind Alcohol B \t\nCan Wineries\t\nCarnation Pfd ,._\t\nCons Bakeries  \t\nCosmos    ,\t\nDominion Bridge ...\t\nDominion  Store*   \t\nDom Tar & Chem\t\nD Tar & Chem Pfd\t\nDistillers Seagrams ........\nFanny Farmer    \t\nFprd of Canada A\t\nGen Steel Wares .....\t\nGoodyear Tire \t\nGypsum L & A .....\t\nHarding Carpet  __\nHamilton Bridge  .._-\nHamilton Bridge Pfd\t\nHinde Dauche  \u2014\nHiram Walker\t\nIntt Metals    \t\nIntl Milling Pfd.\nImperial Tobacco \t\nLoblaw A  _\t\nLoblaw B  \t\nKelvlnator     \t\nMaple Leaf Milling ..\t\nMassey Harris ...\nMontreal Power\t\nMoore  Corp   .'....\nNat Steel Car  \t\nOnt Steel Prods\t\nPage Hersey\t\nPower Corp \t\nPressed Metals \t\nSteel of Can\t\nStandard Paving\t\n104\n35%\n7\n7\n78\n22%\n21%\n22%\n9%\n67\n7\n3%\n7\n32%\n15%\n49%\n<%\n102%\n15%\n22%\n22%\n14\n2\n7%\n30%\n88%\n63%\n8%\n101\n13%\n21%\n74\n2%\nRemember Your\nFriends Overseas\nThis Festive Season\n-    SEND THEM A CHEERY\nChristmas Card\nT GREETING\nAnd choose from our selection . . . Etchings, Religious Cards, Snow Scenes, Modernistic Designs.\nEach order exclusive\u2014No two alike.\u2014In lots of two\ndozen only.\nBy placing your order early you can be assured that\nthey will reach your relative! and friends in ample\ntime. . . bring back happy days by sending home a\ncheery Creeting Card .....\nPHONE 144\n*   Ami o\u00abr rapreuentath-e wtt eatl parwmaHy.\nifelaim latig Stoa\nCommercial Printing Dept,\n266 BAKER ST.. NELSON, B. C.\nDow Jonei Averages\n80 Industrials\n20 rails\t\n15 utilities ._\n40 bonds \t\nHigh\n152.64\n31.80\n24.10\nLow\n150.88\n31.35\n23.66\nClose Change\n152.22   up .82\n31.88   up .16\n23.00 oft .04\n10.05 off .05\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh Low\nAm Can     102 101\nAm For Pow ..      4% 4%\nArt Smt le Bef    54% 53%\nAm, Tel        143% 147%\nAm Tob       89 88 \u25a0\nAnaconda   .....   37% 38%\nBaldwin       13% 18%\nBait* Ohio,:.     8% 7%\nBendlx Avi ..    23% 22%\nBeth Steel ...    68% 86%\nCan Dry  _    17% 17%\nCan'Pac \u2022      6% 8%\nCerro de Pasco    80 49%\nChrysler         83 81%\nCon Gas NY..82% 81%\nC Wright Pfd.     \u00ab% * j%\nDupont      145% 145%\nEast  Kdd      \u00abI% 180\nFord JSig      3% 8%\nFord of Can..-    22 22\nFrpt Tex ......   27 . 27\nGen Elec .......   48 45%\nGen Foods     88% 38%\nGen Mot      50% 49%\nGoodrich  \u2014   25% 24%\nGranby    ..._     7% .   7%\nart Nor Pfd ...   25% 24\nHowe Sound ..    48 47%\nHud Mot     9% 9%\nInter Nick  ....    88 55%\nClose\n101\n4%\n84%\n148%\n89\n37%\n13%\n49%\n82%\n32%\n6%\n145%\n181%\n3%\n22\n27\n45%\n<8%\n49%\n25\n7%\n25%\n47%\n9%\n55%\nHigh Low Close\nInter TeJ& Tel 10 9%     9%\nKenn Cop   48% 45% 45%\nMack Truck .. 27% 27 27\nMont Ward .... 80% 80% 50%\nNash Mot   10% 10 10%\nN Y Central.... 19% 19% 19%\nPack Mot   8% 5%     8%\nPenn R R ..... 21% 21% 21%\nPhillips fete'., 39 38% 39\nRaTcorp      8% 8%     8%\nRem Band ..... 16% 16% 16%\nSfwy  Strs  ... 28% 24% 25%\nShell Un ..... 18 15 15\nS Cal Ed   24 23% 24\nSi\u00abnOilotNJ 54 53% 53%\n1%x  Corp  42% \u00ab% 42%\nTex Gulf Sul.. 31% 31% 81%\nTim Roller .... 82% 82 52%\nUnder  Type 62 82\nUn Carbide .. 86 84 85%\nUn Oil of Cal.. 19% 19% 19%\nUnited Air ..... 85% 34% 34%\nUn  Pac  94% 94% 84%\nU S Rubber.... 82% 81% 52%\nU S Steel  65 83% 64%\nWarner Bros .     7% 6%      7\nWest Elec ..... 120% 118% 119%\nWest Un   28% 26% 26%\nWoolworth    .. 81% 50% 51%\nYel   Truck  .... 20% 19% 19%\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain ,.\t\nAssoc Brew of-Can\nBathurst P * P \"A\"\u2014\t\nCanadian Bronze \t\nCan Car & Fdy pfd \t\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese pM\t\nCan North -Power .\u201e\t\nCan Steamship\t\nCsn Steamship .pfd:.\t\nCockshutt Plow -\t\nCon Min te Smelting\t\nDominion Coal pfd .....\u2014\nDom Steel it:Coal \"B\" ,....:..\nDominion Textile ..*.\t\nDryden Paper-..,....\u2014\t\nFoundation O of C ...... ..:\nGatineau Power : ~\t\nGatineau Power pfd '..\u201e...\u2014\nCurd Charles ...\nHolt Benfrew\t\nHoward Smith Paper\t\nH Smlth'Peper pfd\t\nImperial OU   \t\nInter \u25a0 Petroleum\t\nInter Nickel of Can .\u2014:\t\nLake of the Woods\t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nNational Brew. Ltd\t\nNat Brew pfd .\nOgilvie Flour new\t\nPrice Bros\t\n3%\n16%\n9%\n40%\n29%\n14\n91\n17\n2%\n11%\n9\n64%\n17\n11%\n65\n7%\n18%\n14%\n89%\n6%\n14\n15%\n97\n17%\n27\n66%\n17\n7%\n41%\n43%\n29%\n20%\nQuebec Power\t\nShawnigan W A P\t\nSt Lawrence Corp ....\nSt Law Corp pfd\t\nSouth Can Power\t\nSteel of Can pfd\t\nBANKS\nCommerce _ _.\nDominion \t\nImperial   \t\nMontreal  _\t\nNova Scotia .....\t\nRoyal  _..\nToronto _ \t\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pM. \t\nBathurst P& P \"B\" ...\nBeauharnois Corp\t\nBritish American Oil.\nB C Packers\t\nCan Marconi\t\nCan Vickers\nCons Paper Corp\t\nFairchikf Aircraft\t\nFraser Co Ltd \t\nInter Utilities \"B\" \t\nLake Sulphite ...\t\nMacLaren P Is P\t\nMcColl Frontenac pfd .\nMitchel Robt\t\nRoyalite OU\t\nWalker Good le W\t\nWalker Good pfd ....:\t\n. 17%\n. 21\n. 8%\n. 17\n. 12\n. 68\n. 179\n.207\n.214\n.215\n.300\n. 187\n.235\n. 28%\n.. 3%\n.    3%\n. 21%\n. 13\n. 1.10\n. 10\n.    8%\n.    6\n. 19\n.     .85\n.    3%\n. 14%\n. 95\n. 17%\n. 41\n. 49%\n. 19%\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nMINES:\nAztoe\t\nBig Missouri   \t\nBluebird   \t\nBralorne    \t\nBrldae.Riv Con ...\nCattfoo Gold\t\nDentonia  \t\nDuh*ell  \u2014\nFairvlew Amal\t\nFederal G41d\t\nGoleooda \t\nGold.Belt \t\nGold Mount\t\nGiandvlew   \t\nGruU-Wihksne ...\nHedley Mascot \u2014\nHome Gold \t\nIndian Mines  \t\nInter Coal 8c Coke\nIsland Mount \t\nKoot- BeUe ...*\nLucky Jim \t\nMak Sic Gold\t\nMeGiBlway ;~~\nMetaline M le M ..\nMinto Oold -a...\nNiWaM-kM\t\nPiSitc Ni&el\t\nPend Oreille\n\u25a0Vrt\n\u2022JBMd*t\\\n tor-GeU'...\nQuatslio    .. .....\nRedHa-rtOolii\"\nReeves MacD....\nRelief Art \u2014\nReno Gold\t\n.Reward    ...\nRufus Argenta .\n*3ally Mines \t\n' Salm6n Gold\t\nBid\nSSI\n.28\n9.40\n.03\n2.30\nj62%\n.02\n.05 :\n.01%\n.06%\n*\n)%\n.02\n1.25\nmy,\n.25%\n121\n1\u00bb%\n.01\n.23\n.78\n.03*\n.03%\n.08%'\n     281\n;:.:. 2.5\n-  1\n2*r\n.03%\nf,\nJl\n.12%\n' M\n.00%\n.04\n\u2022isk\n.29\n.01%\n9.55\n.03%\n2.41\n.02%\n.08\n.08%\n.01%\n. \u25a0%*\n.89 ,\n.04 ,\n-.00..\n.02%\n1.28\n.01%\n.29\n1.25\n1.38\n.03\n.02\nXI\n.04\n.03%\n.03%\n'2$8\n.01\n2.35\n.04\n.01\n2.35\n.04\n.11\nM\n.13%\n30\n.05%\n.09\nSheep Creek .......\nSilbak Premier ......\nSUver Crest .\u00ab(\u201e_\u00a3.\nSurf Inlet 4. 4\nTaylor BIT ......\nVidette Gold  1\nWav*rly T \t\nWellington' .,..\u201e.\u201e..\nWeSko Mines \t\nWhitewater -.\t\nYmir Yank Girl \u201e.\nA P Con ...\t\nAmalgamated   ......\nAnaconda    \t\nAnglo Can\t\nBaltac     \t\nCalgary & Edm\t\nCalmont        \t\nCommonwealth   ...\nCrows Nest \t\nDalhousle     \t\nFirestone  Pete  ...\nFour Star Pete\t\nFreehold Corp\t\nHargal     \t\nHighwood Ssrcee .\nHome  .-\t\nMadison    \t\nMar .Ion  ...\nMcDoug Seg \t\nMercury\n.89 \u00a31\n1.60       1.88\n.01%      .02\n11.80 12.00\n.02%      .03%\n.06\n.00%\n.01%\nfll%\n.08\n.89%\n.16\n.01\n.05%\n1.17\n.02\n2.31\n.28\n.23%\n.00%\n.10\n.04\n.25\n.09\n1.10\nam\n.08%\n.12%\n.06%\n.04\n.06%\nx\u00bb%\n.02\n.01%\n\u202208%\n\u202211%\n.18\n.01%\n.06%\n120\n.03\n2.38\n.00%\n.40\nmm\n.05\n1.17\n.07\n57 Certificates\n01 Work Issued;\ni Hear Kitchener\nOf 87 certificates ot work Issued\nat the Nelson mining \u25a0 recorder's\noffice for work on mineral claims\nrecently, eight were granted- to\nHarry Redmile for work on claims\nIn the Kitchener area, His claims\nwere the Butterfly, Donald, Juliette\nLucky Strike, Romeo, Roney, Ruby\nand Sunrise.\nOlaf A. Haglund, with claims on\nthe Salmo river; Godfrey \u25a0BlrtJCh,\nwith claims on the Salmo river and\nRover creek; J.W. Mulholland, with\nclaims at Porto Rico ahd Arkansas\nmountain; and O.M. Harris, with\nclaims on Canyon creek, were each\ngranted certificates. \u25a0\nHaglund's claims were the Queen\nMary, Copper King, White Rock,\nGold Bug and Sunset. Birtsch's\nclaims were the Lucky Strike,\nGlory Hole and Reward, dn the\nSalmo river, and Float Stone and\nGold Coin on Rover creek.\nMulholland's claims were the\nSouthern Belle, at POrto Rico, and\nSan Jose, Shian, Virginia and Hollywood faction, on Arkansas mountain. Harris' claims were the Bone\nHead, Hill Top, Haiton, Harris and\nHuron, on Canyon creek.\nOther certificates issued were to\nThomas Wilkinson for Uie No. 1\nB.C. fraction, No, 3 B.C. fraction,\nYnot fraction and Plover fraction\non Wild Horse creek; Oscar Anderson, for the Iron Cap, Snow Shoe,\nand U.S., on Porcupine creek; J,\nSapples, tor the Lucky Jim and\nLast Chance, on Bear creek; B.\nFeeney, for the VaUey View and\nStag Leap on Marble mountain;\nHarry Park, for the Graney D and\nZenith, on Quartz creek; Mike\nConnelly, for the Queen Victoria,\nand Mill Flat fraction, in Alpine\nBasin; A.L. purdy, for the Henry\nfraction, on Wolf creek, and Nevada fraction, at Sheep Creek; O.\nArrowsmlth, for Uie Evergreen, on\nMiddle Sister mountain; John De-\nslreau, for the Josephine, at Wynndel; p.C. Thompson, tor Uie Canada,\nat Wynndel; H. A. Faulkner, for the\nLittle McPhee, on Little McPhee\ncreek; S.A. Herman, for the Island\non Porcupine creek; Alex Johnson,\nfor the In Between fraction, on\nPorcupine creek; F. O'Genski, for\nthe Modern, at Apex; H.E. Doelle,\nfor the Henry fraction, on Wolfe\ncreek; Charles Mazerall, for the\nSecond Chance, at Park Siding;\nEdward Emilson, for the Ethel S.\non Jubilee mountain; A. Burgess,\nfor the Midnight, on Porcupine\nereek; and Albert Shaw, for the\nDuck Creek No. 2, at Wynndel.\nLondon Close\niXNDON. Nov. 2 (AP)T-Closing;\nC. P. R. $6%; Int Nick. $58%;\nU. S. Steel $67%; Cent Mining \u00a323;\nConsol Gold Fields 72s 6d; Crown\n\u00a317%; East Geduld \u00a312%; H. B. C.\n25s; Metal Box 74s 6d; Mex. Eagle\n8s; Mining Trust 2s 6d; Springs\n28s l%d.\nBONDS: 2% per cent Consols \u00a371\n%; 3% per cent War Loan \u00a399\n4s; 1960-90 \u00a3108%.\nQUESTIONS ABOUT\nBLUBBER BAY STRIKE\nVICTORIA, Nov. 2 (CP)-Colln\nCameron, Cooperative Commonwealth Federation member for\nComox riding, filed motions asking for information concerning the\nBritish Columbia police and their\nactivities at Blubber Bay. B.C.,\nwhere a strike is In progress at\nPacific Lime company's plant\nMr. Cameron asks for investigation by the public accounts committee of the expenses of Police Sergeant T. D. Sutherland, the logbok\nof the police patrol boat Morci and\na report on unemplyment relief administration in Mackenzie constituency, where Blubber Bay la located.\nHEAVY INDUSTRIALS\nARE UP AT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nHeavy industrials were favored with\nCi In today's stock market while\nmain list followed mixed trends.\nNational Steel Car ran up more\nthan Mo to around 68%. while fractional improvements came out for\nCanadian Car common and the preferred. Dominion Steel slipped narrowly..\nNickel and Noranda were sllghUy\nhigher but Smelters sUpped to\naround 64%, off about %. Down\nfractions were Imperial Oil, Montreal Power and Price Brothers.\nSEES BENEFIT OF\nCANADA-U. S. TRADE\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014The\nmutual advantage of a United States\ntariff policy that permitted Canada\nto enjoy a balance of trade over\nher southern neighbor ws stressed\ntoday by Rene Morln of Montreal,\nvice-president of the Canadian\nChamber of Commerce, at a Canadian luncheon. V\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG. Nov. 2 (CP)-Graln\nfutures quotations;\nOpen\nHigh\nLof\nClose\nWHEAT:\nNov.: U<\n57%\n57%\n67%\n87%\n87%\nDec.\n87%\n87%\n86%\nMay\t\nOATS:\n60%\n61.\n60%\n81\nDec.  .\n\u2022 21)4\n28%\n28%\n\u202228%\nWay ....\nBARLEY\n.27%\n28\n27%\n27%\nDec,  \t\n' 34%\n34%\n33%\na*\nMay .....\nFLAX:\n35%\n88%\n35\n38\nNov. ....\nV' <*\u2014'\n\u2014\n\u2014.\n29%\n429:\n\u2014\n\u2014\n129\nMay  \u201e..\nRYE:\nDec.  ..,\n180%\n\u2014\n\u2014 .\n180%\n18%\n38%\n38\n\u202238%\nMaj ....\n.40%\n; \u2014\n\u2014\n40%\nFarm Products Prices Almost\nUnchanged for Months in U.S.\nCHICAGO. Nov. 2 (APJ-Ma)or\nfarm commodity prices In Uie United States.are in on eof the longest\nperiods of general \"stabilization\" on\nrecord, a market survey showed to-\nWlth Stocks of. Important com.\nmodities piling up In warehouses\nand on the farm, markets have been\ndeadlocked tor weeks.\nDuring the past three months\nwheat has stuck eto a price ranee\nof 7.cents; corn haa fluctuated only\nS cents, oats 5 cents, rye 8 cents and\nbutter % cent.\nAltough grain prices are \"stabilized\" near the lowest levels In five\nto six years and butter is the lowest\nIn three years all prices are comfortably above the record lows\nreached in 1932. '\nGrain trade experts attributed tbe\nsteadiness of commodity . markets,\nin part, at least, to the accumulation\nof suppUes tending to depress prices\non one and and widespread government efforts to raise prices on the\nother.\nCASH PRICE8.\nWHEAT - No. 1 hard 58%; No. 1\nnor. 58%; No. 2 nor. 88; No. I nor.\n61%; No. 4 nor. 43%; No. 8, 88%;\nNo. 6, 32%; feed 31%; No. 1 Garnet\n49%; No. 2 Garnet 48%; No. 8 Garnet 42%; No. 1 durum 44%; No. 4\nspecial 87%; No. 6 special 35%; No. 6\nspecial 33%; track. 87%.\nOATS - No. 2 C. W. 27; No. 8\nC. W. and Ex. 1 feed 24%; No. 1\nfeed 23%; No. 2 feed 22%; No. 3\nfeed 19%: track 26%.\nBARLEY - Malting grades: 6-\nand 2-row Ex. 3 C. W. 84%: others:\nNo. 3 C. W. 38%; No. 4 C. W. 81%;\nNo. 8 C. W. 80%; No. 8 C. W, 29%;\ntrack 33%.    \u25a0\u25a0 '  ' \u2022  X\nFLAX - No. 1 C. W. and track\n129%: No. J C. W. 128%; No. 3 C.\nW. 113; No. 4 C.W. 108.\nRYE - No. 2 C. W. 88%\nCOASTFHtMS\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nLate trading 011 Vancouver stock\nexchange today wiped out the ma-\niority of early losses and the rear-\n:et closed with a firm trend. Transactions totalled 84,485'shares.\nPioneer gold topped active stocks\nand finished unchanged at 2.34 after\nselling down to 2.26. Hedley Mascot\nfirmed 3 at 1.28 and Geld, Belt added\na cent at 49.\nRoyal Canadian oil was fractionally lower at 18 and Okalta eased\nsix cents at 1,30. Base metals were\ndull.\n\u2014 -    \u25a0\nCanadian National\nRevenue Increases\nMONTOEAL, Nov. 2 (CD-Increase ot 838,892 was shown today\nin Canadian National Railways'\ngross revenues of $6,522,880 for the\n10 days ended Oct 31, compared\nwith 86,484,188 for the corresponding period of 1987.\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.78 19-32;\nU. S. dollar 1.00%; franc 2.67%.\nAt New York-Pound f.7B U-16;\nCanadian dollar .99%; franc 2.66 3-16.\nAt Paris-Pound 178.76 fr.; V. S.\ndollar 37.85% fr.; Canadian Hollar\n47,88 8-16 ir.     .\nIn Gold-Pound lis 8d: U. S. dollar 59.07 cents.   .\nDOLLAR SUPS\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014Final\nquotations for the United- States\ndollar In foreign exchange trading\ntoday was $4.75% to the pound, a\nnet decline of 5-16 cent in terms of\nsterling.       .<\nFrench franca ended net unchanged at 178.75 to the pound.\nExchangee\nMONTREAL, Nov. t (CP)-Brlt-\nish and foreign exchange closed\nhigher today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, 2981.\nDenmark, krone, 2189.\nFrance, franc, .026706.\nHolland, florin, .5478.\nHungary, pengo, .1993.\nIndia, rupee, ,1888..\nJapan, yen, .2797. *\nJugoslavia, Ulnar, .0288.\nNorway, krone, 2408.\nSweden, krone, .2469.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2285.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nAustralia Buys\n50 New Bombers\nCANBERRA, Nov. 2 (AP) -\nPremier Joseph Lyons announced\nIn the House of Representatives\ntoday that Australia Immediately was ordering 80 bombers similar to 200 planes ordered by\nGreat Britain from the United\nStates.\nHe also said tht Australian\ngovernment wu doubling the\nvolunteer militia to 700,000 and\nadded further steps would be taken to strengthen the country's\ndefence.\nMARKETS AT A\nGLANCE\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto \u2014 Base metal shares higher; other Index groups lower.\nMontreal \u2014 Industrials higher;\ngolds lower.\nNew York-fltocks closed sllghUy\nhigher.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Wheat % to % cent\nhigher.\nToronto\u2014Bacon hogs off truck\n10 to 15 cents -higher at 8.15 to 8.28.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver and other\nmetals lower.\nNew York\u2014Silver and other met-\nals unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014SUver unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Cotton higher; rubber\nlower; coffee and sugar unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar unchanged.at 99%.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Nov.*2 (CP)- C*.\nnadian commodity exchange: spot:\nButter, Quebec fresh 22%-%; cheese,'\nOntario white, 13%-%; Ontario col-\nored 13 0-10-%. Quebec white 13\n5-16-%, Quebec colored 13%-%.\nEggs, Ontario A large 42A. Sales:\nButter 800 Quebec fresh at 22%.\nCheese 400 Quebec white at. 13\n8-16; 325 Quebec colored at 13 7-16.\nButter futures steady and unchanged. Dec. 22%-%, Jan. 22%-\n%. Sales: One Nov.-Jan. contract\nexchange at %' cent spread.\nWheal Reaches\nNew lows, 'Peg\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2 (CP)-No-\nvember and May Winnipeg wheat\nfutures dropped to fiveyear lows In\nnarrow trading today but near the\nclose revival of export and mill\ndemand for cash wheat gave ths\nmarket a strong undertone. Final\nvalues wer %-% higher, ;\nCanadian wheat export sales were\nmoderate and much higher than\nduring recent sesUdns.    :'\\:',}'\u25a0 '\nPrecipitation in western Canada\nfailed to cause bearlshness here,\nLiverpool sagged %-%d. Buenos\nAires advanced.%-% cent at noon.\nImproved demand from exporters\nand mills featured cash Wheat operations. Durum spreads advanced\nsllghUy.\nCoarse grain transactions continued slow with prices showing little\nchange. '\nPRICES FIRM\nAT TORONTO\nTORONTO, NoV. 2 (CP)- Quiet\ntrading and barely firm prlcei\nmarked today's proceedinis on Toronto stock exchange. Volunft waa\noff to about 678,000 snares:\nDome, Pickle Crow, Kerr-Addlson,\nBralorne, Hard Rock, Perron, Mac\nLeod-Cockshutt Pioneer and Read-\nAuthier golds all weakened moderately. Big Missouri dropped about\n%to28. \u25a0   %>\/$.\nKILL NEW LAW TO    .\n\u2022CONTROL CAR DEALERS\nFLINT, Mich., Nov iiCP)-A\ncity ordinance to license and control used-car dealers here wan\nheld invalid in a circuit court\njudgment Just delivered. Tho court\nheld the ordinance- gave the city\nmanager power to refuse a license\nif he considered the applicant unfit. ..,,', .\nBottled In Bond In Csnada\u2014\n10 Years Old\n16 os, 81,40; 28 or, 82.15; 40' or, (BJO\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government ot\nBritish Columbia.\nr.,tj.-:^it:\nTon Will Find Us\nIn A Score of Ways\n-        31\nPacalta\nPrairie Boy :..-...,\nRoyallte      :\t\nSouth End Pete\nSpy HiU Roy ..:\nUnited    -.j .-.,...\nVanalta     \t\nVulcan        ;   ...\nINDUSTRIALS:\nCapital Est\t\nCoast Brew\t\n.08\n20%\n40.00\n.02\n.02%\n\u25a039%\n.05\n.60\n1.30\nmt\n32\n.08\n.03%\n.10%\n1.00    .    \u2014\n1.28       UK\n7 BROKERS CONVICTED\nVICTORIA, Nov. 2 (CP)-At-\ntorney-General Gordon S. Wismer,\nin reply to question, today told the\nlegislature 10\"members of British\nColumbia brokerage firms-had been\nprosecuted during the current year,\nand seven convictions had been obtained, s\nRETAILS SALES'UP OVER\nAUGUST\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)-General\nindex of retail sales, as compiled\ntrom composite figures for 12 lines\nof business, gained 16 per'cent in\nSeptember over August .but was\nthree per cent lower than In September, 1937, the Dominion bureau\nof statistics reported today.. :.   ..\nMotorists and other highway users\nin tho United States paid an estimated $980,000,000 \u2014 a record high\nand an increase of more than 100\nper cent since 1929\u2014 in gasoline\ntaxes during Uie -fear ended June\n80, 1938,\nWOODSTOCK, Ont (CP)-White-\nwash as a tire extinguisher has\nproved successful. Fire broke out\nin a truck here but when firemen arrived they found the driver\nextinguished the. fire by spraying\nwhitewash on it\nFind Veur Job In the Want Ads\nSend for a free copy ot' our booklet,\n\"Your Bank and How You May Use It.\"\nESTABLISHED 1817\nNtlwa Branch: E. E. L. DEWDNEY, Manages\nTrail Branch: A. H. CARSON, Manager\nRoulind Branch: ,\" J. N. CRAN, Manager\nNew Df-nver Branch: F. M. BRADY, Manner\nKailo Branch: W. WRIGHT, Manager\nMODERN, EXPERIENCED BANKING SERVICE ...the outcome tf lit years' successful operation\n \u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2014-\n\t\nWJHRPU      '\nUimj-u.Wlliiitp* '\" W'tmtm^^r^mtiwLit'mtiimmijMfm.\nPAQI TIN\nNlLSON DAILY NEWS. NIHON. fcC-THURSDAY MORNINO. NOV. 8.1M\u00bb\nPalmolive Shave Cream 40c\nWardonia Raxor ... $1.00\nWardoni** Blades ....V 13e\nRegular value $1.53\nALLFORONtY\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nLawyer Annoyed Bill Sent Defence\nDepartment lor Inglis Co. Expenses\n[Record Attendance\not Kimberley Baisaar\nMORE ABOUT\nCHAMBERLAIN\n(Continued From Page One)\nThey insisted that Ethiopia had\nnot been conquered\u2014natives were\nstill In control of vast areas\u2014 and\nto recognize Italian sovereignty was Inglis Coi\nsimply to approve, the principle of \\ the groperti\nunprovoked sggression.\nDuring the debate, Richard Butler, foreign under-secretary, an-\nnounced the British government\nhad no intention of granting belligerent rights to -Insurgent General\nFranco without prior acceptance of\nthe British plan to withdraw volun-\nteers from both sides of the Spanish\ncivil war.\nOTTAWA, Nov. J (CP)-Harbert\nA. W. Plaxton, Toronto lawyer, said\ntoday he waa annoyed when he\nlearned an extract trom a bill tor\nlegal services submitted to John\nInglis Co. by his firm had been\nsent to the National Defence department for payment as part of the In-\n\u2022dis Company's expenses under the\nBren gun contrail\nHe made the statement under\ncross-examination by L. A. Forsyth,\nassociate government -counsel, at\nthe inquiry before Mr. Justloe H. H.\nDavis into the contract under which\nthe Inglis company, is to make 7000\nBren guns for Vpe department on a\ncost plus basis.\nThe inquiry follows criticism of\nthe contract by Lieut-Col. George\nDrew in an article in Macleans\nma'gastne. Mr. Plaxton is a shareholder in the Inglis company and\na partner to the law firm of Plaxton\nand Company which acted as solicitors to organization of the present\ny, to the purchase of\nNO DATE NAMED\nMr, Chamberlain has not mentioned a date for the agreement to\ncome into effect but it was expected\nto be NOV. IB. Although signed in\nApril, it had been pigeon-holed\npending withdrawal'. of sufficient\nnumber of Italian troops f torn Spain.\n. In recommending the agreement\nto the house, Mr. Chamberlain\nstressed Premier Mussolini's withdrawal'of 10,000 infantrymen from\nPLUS\u2014MARCH Of TIME NO, 11 With a\nNOVELTY   and   PARAMOUNT NEWS\nei)i^petppesss^^^^^^^^S!S^iSSS!S^.\nProscriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nFteury's Pharmacy\nMedical Arts Block\nAFTER THE SHOW\nA delightful snack at\nthe\nSTAR CAFE\nSpecial\n1937 Chevrolet\nCoupe\nRADIO, HEATER. LIKE NEW\nPeebles Motors\nBaker St.      Limited      Phone 119\nFURNACES\nInstalled and \"Repaired\nR.H. MABER\nPhone 885    SID Kootenay St\nSEE JACK HOOGERWERF\nStandard, Electric\n'.      tor -\nElectrical   Contracting\nPHONE 838      617 VERNON ST.\nAcross from New Grand Motel\n1933 Chevrolet\ncoupe- caoe\nToday's Special  \u201e. 9iw3\nKline's City Service\nJack McDowell    Howard Thurman\nFrank A. Stuart\nInsurance Service\nWriting All Classes of Insurance\n577 Baker St., Nelson, B.C., Ph.\n\u201e of a former company\nwhich had gone into receivership\nand negotiation of contracts for\nmanufacture of Bren Guns for toe\nCanadian and British governments.\nMr. Justice ' Davis declared he\nwould not attempt to interpret a\nclause in the contract which allows\ntoe company to charge Its preliminary expenses in connection with\nthe contract up to a maximum of\n$20,000 as costs to toe manufacture\nof the guns..\nMr. Forsyth's questions related to\nan item of $6500 tor tend services\nrendered by Plaxton and Company,\nincluded In a statement of preliminary expenses submitted to toe government last July and soon after recalled by the Inglis company.\nEarlier evidence was to the effect\nW. J..West, secretary ot the com.\npany, had extracted this Item from\na bill received from Plaxton and\ncompany.\n\"Has Plaxton and'Company ever\nrendered a bill of any kind to the\ngovernment in connection with\nthese matters?\"-asked Mr. forsyto.\n\"No\", said Mr. Plaxton.   ,\n\"When did you first see this Sheet\nof paper which purports to be a\nbill?\" asked Mr. Justice Davis, holding up the statement from the Inglis\nCompany,\n\"At this moment\" ssld the witness.\n\"I knew of its existence before this.\nI learned Mr. West had made an\nextract from our bill ad had sent\nIt on and I don't tolnd saying I\nwas. a little bit annoyed.\n\"It's rather unusugV remarked\nthe commissioner.\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. \u2014 The United\nchurch Mission Band held its annual bazaar Saturday afternoon\nwith a record attendance.\nA table of sewing, aprons, holders,\nc, and two tables of home cooking\nwlto four tea tobies kept the girls\nbusy.\nThis band ot 20 members, ranging\nto age from six to ten, is ready\nwith its allotment to send to one\not' toe church hospitals at the\ncoast.. \u25a0\u25a0'.'..        -Jh\nThe bazaar'brought them $25,\nB. Miller and Mr;\nMrs. W.\nGlanville I are\ngroup.\ntoe\nIrs.j 3.\nleaders ot this\nWWKNKW.\nWE SPECIALIZE IN\nWEDDING,  BfRTHDAY,\nANNIVERSARY   AND\nCHRISTMAS CAKES.\nEXPERT DECORATING\nHOOD BAKING CO., LTD.\nTAKE HOME 80ME\nFISH AND CHIPS\n25c par Order\nThe PERCOLATOR\nE. W. KOPECKI 509 BAKER\nFind Your Job In the Want Ads.\nPOPPY DAY\n. i, . .     \"\nThe blood red Poppy is the symbol of Remembrance\nof those who died or suffered permanent injury in\ndefence of that glorious liberty which today is ours.\nOn 'Poppy Day' throughout the Empire, Britons will\ndon that little emblem of 'Forget-them-noV\nWEAR A POPPY\nThe Canadian Legion will be tagging with Poppies\nmade exclusively by Disabled Veterans in the Jet-\ncraft workshops of British Columbia.\nSPECIAL FOR 10 DAYS ONLY\nHalf Dry Millends: load ?3.00\nSlab-Wood: 3 eords \u00a710-!?12\nSawdust: Unit $4.00\nPHONE 973 Of 434R1\nSpain; his pledge all troops would\nbe taken home when the non-intervention committee's withdrawal\nplan goes into operation, and his assurance no more men will be sent\nto war-riddled- Spain.\nThe prime minister also stressed\nassurances given him at Munich by\nChancellor Hitler and Premier Mussolini that Germany and Italy had\n\"no territorial ambitions in Spain.\"\n\u25a0 The Anglo-Italian agreement, the\nprime minister emphasised, would\nimprove prospects of peace as a\nwhole.\n\"I say, let us put an end here\nand now to any idea It is desirable\nto keep any state at arm's length,\"\nHe declared. \"Let us remember\nthat every- advance we make toward removing a possible cause ot\nfriction upon one subject makes it\neasier and more probable we can\ndeal satisfactorily with those which\nremain still unsettled.\"\n\"In my mind,\" Mr. Chamberlain\nsaid at another point \"It is perfectly clear the Spanish question is\nno longer a menace to the peace of\nEurope.\n\"Consequently, there is no valid\nreason why we should not take a\nstep now which obviously would\ncontribute to general appeasement\"\nTRAIL MINISTER\nHEADS PRESBYTERIANS\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP)-\nRev. F.J. St Denis of Trail today\nwas moderator of the British Columbia Synod of the Presbyterian\nchurch, succeeding Rev. David A.\nSmith of Vancouver.\nRev. Samuel' Lundle ot Sooke\nnomiated the Kootenay. minister\nand the election was by acclamation,\nDIGBY, N. S. (CP) - Miss Mar-\njorie Cossett of Smith's Cove was\nannoyed when her teeth grated\nagainst something while eating a\nclam, but her feelings were aa nothing, compared to her reactions\nwhen she found the large pearl she\nhad been biting was worthless because the clam had been cooked.\nLAMBERTS'\nFOR\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nYour mirror will show the difference in your looks before\nand,after you've been to toe\nHai&h Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nPhona 327 425 Baker St\nMORE ABOUT\n(Continued From Page Ons)\n\"In 1929, when the Canadian\nMedical association and toe Canadian Nurses' association looked for\nsomeone to investigate health conditions in Canada,'7 Dr. Weir Said,\n\"they did not invite the Hon. member who has Just spoken, to do the\nwork. They Invited me and I made\na survey of 14? hospitals and other\ninstitutions. So much tor his. refer-\nPrescription\nSpecialists\nom\nCITY\nence to doctors of pedagogy who\nstand little,  if anything  of\nie practical side of the question.\"\nReferring to conditions at Tran-\nunderstand\ntoe\nquille, Dr. Weir said on two occasions Dominion tuberculosis officers had reported no similar Institution in Canada was better conducted.    - ,        \u2022    \u25a0\nThe provincial secretary then\nwent Into a review of conditions\nbeginning with 1933 when hospital\nnts. were cut to 45 cents per\ni. The present government had\nIncreased the grant to 70 cnts which\namounted to an additional $290,000,\nDealing with ihdlgents, Dr. Weir\nsaid there had been confusion between \"welfare cases\" and bona\nfide patients.,The criticised hospi.\ntal regulations had brought about\na segregation into two classes.\n\"Grants to hospitals have been\nillegally paid In many Instances,\"\nhe charged, \"and these Illegal grants\nhave been stopped. Weuare patients are now not confused with\nthose suffering from bodily diseases.\n\"Some patients have been kept\nin hospital in violation of the Hospitals act Many of these cases have\nbeen moved to infirmaries and foster homes at a saving of from $1.50\nto $2 a day to hospitals.\n\"This government\n$250,'\nMOREABOUT\nTMPOUCE\n(Continued From Page One)\nAt the.request of Mr. Evans, toe\ncommission held a meeting wlto him\nlast Friday when he was told\nby the commission toat if he had\nany charges to make he could do\nso in writing.\nHe asked for a copy of the minutes of that - meeting,, which were\nrefused him.\n\"I think that everything has been\ndone to find the culprits who burned toe car,\" said Commissioner C. A.\nNewmaij, \"I move the letter from\nEvans berecelved and filed,\"\nThe  motion   was  seconded  by\nCommissioner   Robert   Somervlllt\nand carrledi l\nGUN PERMIT REFUSED\nThat Evans had applied to toe\nattorney-general's department tor\na weapon permit was told the commission by Chief of Police John\nLaurie. He stated that Evans had\nbeen Informed he would be issued\none if it were \"OK. with the Trail\nmunicipal authorities. The chief\nagain referred toe matter to the attorney-general's department which\nagain stated toe matter rested with\nhim.\n\"I replied,\" said the chief, \"toat\nconditions in Trail didn't warrant\nanyone needing a permit and Mr,\nEvans has not been given one.\"\nAsked by the commission about\nHallowe'en night Chief Laurie replied that  \"the kids  were  very\ngood\". The oply complslnt received\nwas that three small panes and one\nregular sized window pane had been\nsmashed at Central school\nMr. Newman asked if the city\ngot anything out ot the radio fines\nimposed by toe Dominion department of transport and Chief Laurie\nexplained that toe dty supplied toe\nforms which toe department's man\nmade out and which the city police\nserved. They were obliged to do\nthis under Dominion statute. The\nfines were turned over, to the\ntransport department. Whether the\ncity received anything depended on\nthe magistrate ordering costs to be\npaid,\n\"It ddesn't look lust right to me,\"\ncommented Commissioner Newman.\naas\nRepairing \u2014 Remodelling\nand Relining    ,\nMalcolm's Furs\n059 Baker Street\nWindbreakers\nYou should own; a\nwindbreaker. If you get\nout In the open you\nsurely need it. They're\nthe finest, Warmest,\nmost comfortable cold\nweather garment that|s\nbeen devised. Plain colors, plaids, and checks,\nzipper styles or buttoned.\n$$.9SM$9.5d\nPMORY'S\nLIMITED\nJeAsClaughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205, MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.\nCharles Morris\nWINDBREAKERS\n: $2.75\nSuede with\nilpper .\u201e...\u201e\nBROWN-BLUE-GREEN\nPhone Atkinson Transfer for your\nWinter fuel supply. ^mv\nSAFETY AND SERVICE\nPHONE 93  B. B. TAXI   PHONB 93\n(2321)\n3,000\nin one year\nabove the costs of\nf*ld   .\nree services by hospitals. We are\npaying $70,000 a month to hospitals\nand more will be paid,\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H. S. ALLEN\n1935 PACKARD\nConvertible\nCoupe\nExcellent Condition \u2014 Bargain\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson) Ltd.  ,       Phone 119\nEVEREADY\nFlashlights\nSee AND BE SAFE\nCases Are Guaranteed\nfor Life\nBUY ONE TODAY AND SAVE YOURSELF\nTROUBLE AND INCONVENIENCE\nPriced from 85c** to ?3.75\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 2 \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. P. R. McDonald who have been\nvisiting in Calgary, Vancouver and\nother coast cities for the past 14\nmonths have returned to their home\nhere.\nThe Junior choir of the First\nPresbyterian church and friends\nwere guests of honor at a merry\nHallowe'en party Tuesday evening, when F. Lookman, conductor,\nand Bert Bruce, organist, entertained. The guests, which numbered\nabout 35, spent a happy evening\nplaying games and contests, prizes\nBeing awarded to the winners. Refreshments were served at the close\nof the evening. Mrs. S. Young, Mrs.\nJack Murray, Mrs. J. T. Henderson\nand Miss Thomaslna Carter were in\ncharge of toe refreshments, while\nJ. T. Henderson and Ltyod Groutage supervised the games.\nMrs; J. Burden has had as her\nguest for the past month her\nuncle, A. Stead, who left for his\nhome in Vancouver Wednesday\nmorning.\nAfter spending toe past 10 days\nto toe City' the guest of Mr. and\nQILKERS' LTD.\nNOVEMBER SALE\nMEN'S CLOTHING\nAND FURNISHINGS\nOpens Tomorrow,\nFriday, Nov. 4th\nfor 10 Days\nMrs. L. B. McLean, Gordon Rowan\nleft Wednesday for his home in\nVictoria. ,\nAt toe Pythian Sisters masquerade\nball Monday evehlng toe prize\nwinners for best dressed couple\nwere Mrs. M. P. Norrls and Mrs.\nO. 3. Wilson, one representing a\nwell known cigarette maiden and\nthe other \"Matches.\" Mrs. S. G. Hill\nand Mrs. R. L. Carlson Were second, being attired to \"Drum Major\"\ncostumes. Gerald Thompson won\nthe gentleman's comic as \"Alley\nOop.\nMiss Ola Dale arrived to the city\nby plane Sunday, and has.been the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gill,\nWarfield. She left Wednesday, for\nKelowna, where she will visit before proceeding to Goldflelds, Sask.,\nwhere she is matron ot the hospital. Miss Dale was formerly on the\nstaff of the Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nThe Ladles' Service club of Knox\nUnited church held its weekly meeting at toe home of Mrs. Harry\nSmith, Fourth . avenue, Tuesda;\nevening. At toe close of toe bust\nness session a social hour was enjoyed during which Mrs. Smith\nserved dainty refreshments, Mrs.\nCallander and Mrs. W. K. Lyons assisting in serving. Mrs. A. R. McCarthy Invited the club to meet at\nher home in Annable Monday evening.\nA number of friends surprised\nsurprise-\nonjThlrt-\nGordon Scott, teacher of modern\ndunce piano, 720 Baker 8t Enquire\nDewlck's Rsdlo 8tore. (88M)\nHURRY - HURRY - Vogue Stu\ndlo Christmas Special held over tor\ntwo weeks. Phone 46 today.  (3932)\nTry a 8TROMBERG-CARL80N\nradio. You'll like Iti JOHN DEWICK,\nFink Blk, Phons 818      >\n(2729)\nGeneral meeting of Nelson Ama\nteur Hockey association Friday\nnight Place and time to be announced later. (3BM)\nFor sale\u2014Mahogany piano and\ngood household furniture. Cheap\nfor. cash. Mrs. Slader, Hall Mines\nroad after,6 p.m. <\u00bb3!\u00bb\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nAll members are requested to attend Lodge tonight 8 pm. sharp.\nFirst Rank to be conferred.   (3887)\nROGERS.for 1929 - Super-value\nseries of Automatic Radios.\nMeKAY A 8TRETTON\n44 TAXI\nCON. CUMMINS\n50c up to 5 passengers\nAnyplace in'the city\nmssststtsssa9mssxtssmm&s48\nNAILS are an Important part\nof women being well groomed.\nBEAUTY\nPARLOR\n577 BAKER ST. PHONE 241\nvrukdifi\nPHONE 128 FOR COMPLETE\nLaundry Service\nKOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nMOTOR OIL\nEric's Motor Service\nWt Baker St        .     .Phone 75\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\niterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nRetail Lumber\nlAmSHlNGLES   \"\nMOULDINGS\nMATCH BLOCK WOOD '\nW. W. POWELL Co., Ltd.\n\"Ths Horns of Good Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 . Poot of Stanley St.\nDID YOU EVER FEEL LONELY?\nIf so come to the partner whist\nand new oldtlme dsniei at Eagle\nhall 8 p.m. Tonight ArfmlNlon Me.\nORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS\nCARD8 FOR OVERSEAS NOW.\nOUR STOCK l8COMPLm-NEL.\nON DAILY NEWS. PHONE 144 FOR\nAN APPOINTMENT.\nSee us before you select your\nbeater, wa have all types and they\nare priced rfght-At Hlpperson's.\nNOTICE-Boya wishing to act as\n\"lee Cleaners\" during winter months\nat Arena, aoply to Arthur Brand\nForeman, Clvle Arena, before November 10. (3M\u00b0)\nNOTE CORRECTION OF DATE\n1A8T NOTICE\nRenewals   for  membership   for\nNelson Skating Club must be arranged tor by TODAY (Nov. 3r*D\nC\" ' \\J I\nToday\nCOMPLETE AT 7:00-8:40\nAn Excltinf Story of toe Manhattan Underworld\nFriday\nPRICES 25c .15c\nm6k^>:^.t^ijiffllti.l\\.-i.iAll, rittfjitii.\nMr. and Mrs. 3. T. Henderson,\n.avenue, Monday evening when they\ngathered for a Hallowe'en party,\niressed in fancy costumes the happy guests enjoyed an evening of\ngames and singing, Mr. Henderson\naccompanying the Singers on the\naccordlan. A dainty supper was\nserved Bt midnight. Those enjoy ing\nthe evening were Sir, and Mrs.\nPatterson, Mr. \u00bbnd aVrK R. H.\nScott, Mr. and Mrs. TfHJnton, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Harrison, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Johnson and, Mrs. B-' O. Fletcher. .'-I\nThe sports committee of toe\nShaver Bench Improvement association sponsored a night of gaiety for\nthe children of their community\non Hallowe'en night Commencing\nwith a parade during which prizes\nfor costumes were awarded, the\nearly part ot the evening was given\nover to the amusement ot the children, a large bonfire being lighted\nand games and singing enjoyed. A\nfireworks display was another interesting event The children were\nthen presented with large bags ot\ncandy, oranges, peanuts and apples. After the children returned to\ntheir homes, toepsrents enjoyed\ncommunity singing and supper. The\njudges, Mr. and Mrs. J. Deeran\nand Mrs. C. Bonnie, awarded the\nfollowing prizes to the happy children: Yvonne Cogue, clown: Gordon McGhee, shelk; Kenny Woods,\ndevil; Joyce Hawkley, Mickey\nMouse; Maxie Campbell, gipsyjand\nRaymond Llndgren, Indian. Those\non the sports committee were Mr.\nand Mrs. T. Hayes, Mrs. J, Burner,\nJ. McCabe, E. O. Hullett, W. A.\nMann and J. Deegah. \u25a0\nMrs. I. K. Brlnson and Uttle son\nBmmett left Wednesday for Penticton, where the latter will visit\nrelatives, while Mrs. Brlnson will go\nto Vancouver to attend the wedding\nof her brother, which takes place\nSaturday. . <\u00a3\nConcert and Dance-in aid Iron\nLung and local Christmas Fund, Frl-\ndav, Nov. 4th in Procter Community Hall, 8 p.m. Good singing. Tap\nDancing, etc. Procter Women's In-\njtitote. Adm, 38c each. (8860)\nMusical Instruments of every description and a complete stock of\naeoeatorles.\nKOOTENAY MU8IC HOUSE\n(708)\nPHONE 144 FOR THE VERY\nBEST IN CHR18TMA8 CARDS.\nA8K FOR OUR REPRESENTATIVE, MISS MARGARET ARTHUR\nWHO WILL BE OLAD TO SHOW\nSAMPLES\nClearlnq- house slippers \u2014 values\nto SS.95 for 78c.. Phantom hosiery,\n$1 value for 85c Remainder of\nblouses to ao at 11.00.\nGINGHAM 8HOPPE\nOpp: Dally News.\n(3858)\nNELSON-TRAIL\n4 ROUND\nTRIPS\nLv. -Nelson\nLV.'Trill _\nDAILY\n. 9:40 a.m., 1:00 p.m.\n4:48 p.m., 7:30 p.m.\n. 7:00 a.m, 1:00 p.m.\n. 6:00 p.m., 7:30 p.m.\nFor: Further. Information' Phone\nNelson 800 .     Trail 642\nPRICE SMASHING\nGREY\/HOUND\nThese cars have come tQ us qs\ntrade in On our .939'models.\n1937 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Terraplane Sedan\n1936 Chevrolet Sedan\n1937 Chevrolet Sedaii\nand Many More to Choose From\nNELSON TRANSFEI\nCompany, Limited\n35 -PHONES -36\nc\nft 23\nCOT\n.UUllLla\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_11_03","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0414529","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":"1938-11-03 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1938-11-03 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}