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Dawsbn,' ieaying n^fiin abouH*1^^\n' \u25a0'jftstjjiw^'ft'' of Deeenib^r::'-ffn. '.th^'6'00-\nvnlie dash for Fbr'fc \"MbisPhersoh*' at\nthe' moiith of thb Madkehfeie rlvdj*.\n\"From^,'that point, connecting ter\nJays will go through to \"Rp.tni>iirt\nHouse nnd HerscHel island, where\nthe latest news will be obtained\nfrom the whaling fleet aiid Arctic\nexplorers frozen In, for*\\ the Winter.\nThe Dempster party is expected to\narrive I h Dawson a'giila. about ?Mfi.tch.\nStake Claims on Kono\nDAWSON, \u25a0y.'*f.,..Dee. 7.\u2014Dr. A.\nJ. aniis ahd '.i-V il Short, aitthage]*\nof , tfio . Yukon Gold Company's ri^h\n.silver properties lh the' 'hew Kefl'o\nHill district, i left here on guhday\ntot tho coast The cothpany Vlll;,\nship 300Q. -tons' of ore this^wintef; It\n1s now boing hauled to Mayb' 'Landing. Latest ireportB say the veins are\nopening larger \/and much richer as'\ndevelopment -proceeds.      .\u25a0-\/..\nNeiirly. a, v thousand qialhia havo\nbeen  staked  oh   Kono   and  adjourn-*\ninffihillis,*;yh^v,*Y\u00bbk(*in -^&^J^W,\nhas taken over six claims in fheiieh-;\n.trftl group and has options on four\niy more, ijany\/bth^r rich ^rOPeri-fesi;\nare held by various paritps.\nAutos for Whit* House Trail\nDAIWSON, pec. 7.*\u2014A Royal mail\naeVlvco from Whit*? Horse ao Dawson, ho-*v being handled witb niito-\nniobiles and relays of horses, la ex-;\npeeled to brin\u00a7: official Canadian\nadvices from Ottawa and other mail,\nto connect at Dawson for the trip\nto\/the Arctic coast. There has been;\nan Incorrect impression, -it la stated,:\nthat the Dominion government had\nsuspended the- winter Royal mail\nservice to Dawson. Under contract\nmail leaves Dawson and White \"Horso'\nonce *i week, 'and the contractors\nalso are handling private parcels and\npassenger   business  both   ways.\nRailway Officials Meet Board\nof  trade Transportation\ners.\n\/\nMONTREAIi, Dec. 7\u2014A confer-,\nence was 'held today in the offices,\nof 'the Canadian Freight' association\nwith respect to tho application made\nio' the board of railway commission-,\nere .for ah enquiry, into the d.ties-;\ntioji of the equalization' Of freigKt\nrates as between western arid, east-\nrn Canada. \u2022\n\"A. number of ieading railway 'officials were' present with, for the\nCanadian 'Manufacturers' association\n'.' E. Walsh, general, manager, toilet, and S. >.. Brown, assistant'\nmanager of the transportation department of the board.''.ot- trade,\nrbronto, W. S. Tijston, transporta-\nlon manager of the' Montreal board\ni{ trade tod thdmas Marshall,\nrtmspqrttttlon mapager. of tlie To-\n\u25a0o'nto 'board oi. trftSJe. The \u00abon'fer-\nirico' will  continue   tomorrow.\nProposes Treaty for\nProtection of Salmon\nFisheries   in  Pacific\n\"WASHINQTQN, Dec. 7.\u2014Under a.\nesoluflbri introduced today by Sen-\nJor, . MoNary, Republican, . Oregbh,\n-lesldent Wilson would be asked to\n|gdtlate -fi treaty 'with, (treat _Mt*i\nni providing rfof Operation iletweea\nifnada and the United States for tho\niotection \u25a0 of salmon, 'fisheries Ih;\nSiolfic .waters. Wasteful methods\nif. inking' fish, particularly Jn tho,\nerrltory of Alaska, made such a\nrsaiy--\u00bbeeessary,  the resolution cald,'\nCALLS COM\nNATURAL gg.(\nOTTAWA, Dec. 7^It sViss definitely announced tonight 'that the\nconference- In regal*''to1 the natural i\nresources of the VAhMo pralrlet 'tfrov-!\ninces 'will be held ;-ih: t*8e- prime\nminister's offices, Ottawa,-\"at 'three\no'clock, Wedhesday' afternoon. Dec.\n15. This'date hid Wen 'tentatively arranged;' -but it wofe not known\nuntil today that It Would be satisfactory -.'to ''everybody' 'concerned.\nPremiers Norrls, of Manitoba, Martin of Saskatchewan, nnd Stewart\nof Alberta. Vflt ail;'be here to* par-\ntlclpate in the discussions with Premier'Meighen and his colleagues.\nWai Never Yield Right to De\ncide.  Declares   Sw\u00abs|i\nens\n1 CENEVk, Dec. 7.\u2014(Assembly)\n1?H* 'comfhiesloh On ecpnoni-y- of the\nLeaguo of Nations assembly Unanimously decided that no. member ot\ntho league shall .be ^permitted \u25a0 to.\nblockade an . offending member\nwithout 'the rconaent *bf the league of\nnations, but that -it -'may reject the\ndecision of the council if it believes\ntt 16. be, unjtttst. This action canto\nat the'c18bo of a ihree-Hour debate\nat a session of the cdmthisslon, which\ndeVelbpCd two definit* \u2022divisions of\nopinion among ihe states. \u25a0 One1\ngroup led by, Slgnor Sohanaer, of\nthe Italian delegation, took-the view\niWat'St Wbuld be fatal if each power\nwere permitted to1 coftimence\nblockade whenever it considered its\ncourse.right, and without a'.ae'clsion\nby-the jWiracil.\nThe other group, the spokesman\nbf which was HJalmer Brantlng, of\nSweden, who is chairman of the\ncommission on disarmament, block-\nades and mandates,'-, opposed the\nplacing of the decision in the hands\nof the council.\n\u25a0 \"My \u25a0 bbuntry 'will\" never lyield^.to\nth* oouneil tho right to deoide when\na blockade ' shall'- be instituted,\nBrantlng asserted. '\n;Lord Robert Cecil, representing\nSouth Africa, .-'suggeMed - a -bohipro-\ni-nlse permitting states to. reject- u\ndecision by; the council of tho' states,\nffioilgh the decision was -not right,\nH. A. Fisher, of the British , delegation, emphasized the ! necessity of\nsetting tap at onee some sort of tern\nporary machine which could, \u25a0 and\nprobably Would, be altered .at the\nnext session.\nThe report of- the commission now\ngoes to .the league assembly.\nLord Lee Threatens Resignation if Polity Not Adopted\niti Substance.\n, LONDON; j>ec. 7. (Canadian* Associated Press).\u2014The houee of'dbrda\ntoday resumed 'the second .reading of\ntbe agriculture bill, which- is rousing-\nmuch.hostility. It Is certain *q he\nmaterially amended.'' thbugh' It ,1S\nregarded as unlikely that the bill;\nwill be thrown out.\nLord Lee, president tot the board of\nagribuiture and fisheries, -has 'threat-\nehed to i resign if the polioy of the\ngovernment, as foreshaCowed in the\nbill, Js not adopted, at .Wast in substance.;  -  ' .'-V\nBag Stolen in Transit at New\nYork; Part Contents Are\nFound at Hotel.\nNEW TOItK, Deo. 7-\u2014A 'sack ot\ncommetmlal mall from1 Japan for\nthe -British Isles, by way of New\nYork, \"was stolen here \"last'-month\nwhile in transit from'' the Grand\nCentral' terminal to. the foreign station ,of the post offico, it' was learn-\neoday. The pouch Was,; believed, to\nhave contained no diplomatic \u2022 correspondence. '\nSomo registered letters,and pack*\nages it 'contained were found lit a\ndowntown hotel, -roorit after a;couplo\nregistered as .A. TSdWardB and ivlfe\nhad oeupled .it,, post office\" inspectors ihhodhceu.\u25a0\u25a0'. THe date Of- the\ntheft wtoplaced at Nov.-  IS.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nfiergensiflbrd 'at SeV-s?on--fro'm New\nTork. \"\"' >\nNew Amsterdam at. Rotterdam from\nlNsw--'Jr\u00bbf_-~-''-\"' -\t\nNELSON B. C, WEDNESDAY- M0RNING^^bECI!lM\u00bbEB''',:ia29-,\ni iWnnif A\".f :''\"\nN0.1-2..\niresiaent Of TBe League or fiatiOftS\n7\nR\u00bbITSi)lEpm)S1)F\nMONTREAL POLICE\nMontreal;   Deo. * V.\u2014The' city\nha\u00ab ;rhe\\-flr'-recdenizedy a union in\nany of itH.deiia'rtniehts, and it does\nniit \\iAtenb\\\\ to .recognize a union\nnow.: na,iich leiss to .Jsfrant to one\n*J-**^rtr**\u00bbn;t tho privilege of a closed\n\\t'$thlB wa_*ithe declaration of E. B,\n'D'ArSy,. <rlra.!ifman of th\u00a9 admlnistrii-\nilbh comtoisbioji^ this morning, in\nreAl^\" t(j;,,a i-nEthimous i3tat_me*pt oh\ntheUpait pf tli&-,big.,buB'ineasl,organ-\nifcations of* ..the : .city .aga-inet -the\nolpgftd shop demand**- of: thfe- pollcfe\nfore...\nPaul, flymana, of Beigluim, c.lcr'ed I're\nRt the opening-.lesplon in Geneva. Jjo ins\nBelgium and is well-known lntc-rn;i;!on\u201el*].v.\nidnflt o|' ths Veaf|fuebf'Xa1*io-^.-\n3*>iv(jd a\u00ab Foreign Ministf-r.of\nOTTTAWA, Dfec. 7.\u2014(Canadian\nPreflfl)\u2014in a communication handed\ntd 'the presfl tonight, .Sir Robert\nBorden, fbrffler prime mtpistpr, and\niibad of !the Canadiab delegation to\ntho. peace conference-, explain-a the\nchief objections of Canada's dele-\ngatep to Article, X of the peace\ntWB1s[ty,''*,w'hich. T?erfe set fbfth in a\ntneniqraijdiim prepared by \"Sir Robert Borden ip consultatlo nwith, his\ncolleague?. \u2022 * ,.,\n'. \"Sir, ffo'bpft\" in his statement, sum\"-'\nmorlzed the chief objections in\npoint of principle raiBed by the\nmemorandum, whidh pointed out\nthat AHicle X involves' an pndfertak-\ning hi\", the high contracting Rar*tie9\nto preserve .the territorial Integrity\nand existing political independence\nof all atitea, inembeta of the league,\nIt further observed that \"the. un-:\ndertakink .seems to involve-ih,itinUy.\n11, careful anrvey,i coiisideratibn- and,\ndetecpiiiiation of nil territofl.ar quea-\ntionp : between the VarioUa states.\nand decjares that even ,if auch a\nsurvey,..were, practical, it., Would be\nImp'oeHlble  to  forecast  the   future.\nSir   'Robert's   statement   follows: .\n.\"Reference has recently \"been made,\nto a'.jn'emorandum prepared by me,\nin cb^ultation with my colleagues,\nand iti' which certain observations\nand oriticisms were made * wltH respect to ;tho first draft of -\"-he covenant of !the Leagti-e of Nations. In\nthe firgt instance, the covenant -was\nrather..*. hastily drafted and many of\nthe abaervations.were ;desl*sned fqr\nthe p^trpose of removing defects in\ndraughtsmfehShip. -These defects'\nwere cortticted in the subsequent\ndraft, \u25a0 Which , Was finally . approved,\nThe ifle'ittOittpaiimi \u2022wa''-i',efr6ftlBt*!*;o*\nthe-iUhvof iWarah, ^^id: thp,mei*n,-;\nberH'Ur the' iferiMsh''empire: delegation artd afterwards -Jt, we.e. CJFeiiiat*\nfed \u2022td|the members of the committee\nWhich *W*is cha-rg-SU With 'the vdat\"y\nof -tirVrtaring the*, '-covenant,\"\nIrivkvefl   TeWftOlrial   Integrity,\nThe chief objection in .point of\n\u25a0principle which was raised, by the\nmemorandijnv related   to4 'Article X\nob.\n08   to   which     the     following\nservatlons wero made:\n\"It was submitted^that,, this 'or\ntide should bo struck otif or ma\nterially amended; . It invo,lve**|, an\nundertaking by. the high contracting\nparties , to preserve the territorial\nintegrity . and existing, political'*--\/independence of all Ktates, members of\ntho. league. ' The signatories ,' to\nthp, covenant are called upon to. de1\nClare;\n\"(A)-r-jThat all existing territorial\n'delineations are ^ just and expedient.\n,, ..\"tB)\u2014^That they Jrt'tlJ. continue indefinitely-to' bo just\" and expod^e'nt\n\"(C)\u2014That the, signatories ^ijj be\nresponsible  therefore. , \u25a0<   \\\nNeeds Cfti-ofiil Survey.\n\"\"The undertaking seems -to*. \u2022*'* involve initially, a careful .survey, consideration '.and determination of.* all\nterritorial questions by. the ' ^various\nstates who become parties ; to t^e\ncovenant. If. even such, a survey\nWeirs practicable it' is tfrrtposslme to,\nforecast the future. Th6re(may be\nnational aspirations to -whieli the\n\u2022brovisions. of. the peace'.treaty..\"(Vlil\nhot do justiOe and. Which ^annot he\npermanently'repressed, y \u2022'\u25a0\n\"Sl^liHefluent. articles contemplate\nthe possibility : of war'bet.weert\/vtwo\nor more signatories under\/-condiilons\nthat the other signatories, are'Vnot\ntailed upon to participate .antiVely\ntherein.. -If,- as a result-'.of:,.sU0h\nWr-... the nation attacked oocttpjes,\nand proposes to annex... (possibly.\n\u25a0Jvith the .consent of a *iiaiority'rpt\nthe population), n portion of 'the\nterritory of the aggressor, what is\nto he the operation of this a^iittilk ?\nIndeed, the article seems .iftcohaist-'\nent.^ith :the provipiona oil; AiftiOiefl 12,\nto j'7 inclusive. \"Obviously, a. -dispute as to . territory. Is \u2022 wjthin.\u25a0'-' the\nmeaning ah-^ competence of. the- six\nArticles last 4roferred to, under which\nii. disposition: of the dispute jfl^tei'l-\n*^lly different from that'-propw;*}ffv*b5,;\n\u25a0ArtioleoX, might be reached,' \"'Article ; 24 dogs pot seem to ^.rettiove'\nthe difficulty.\" \u25a0<   ,..\nThe view 'expressed.-In -th^ <ibse*fva-\ntlons did; not prevail and Artjclo X;\nJms em^bdied m the, .\u00abnalx;-\u00a3ext* ofr\nhe covenant.Jn practicaliy tho-'luime\nierxns as the Original draft.\njPine Sh(wm*{ of Pewheron\nStali\u00bbi\u00bb_s arid Hmlord\ntjfAns at Gttdph.\nV\"\"-''' \"'-; i '' ''\nGy:EtPH, v6nt.',   Dec. ' 7.\u2014Pereher-\nv.--8tallionB\\,and Hereford \u2022 cowa\nahftre'8 tn\u00ab honors vin' the : Judglhg.\nring at fthe winter'- fair here'to-\ndaj-, . the1* auallty : In' both classes'\nbeing o't:, an exceiitloiially high or-*\nder;t\"Pdr \u25a0 the \\ championship honors;\nIn   'tile , Hereford.. classes,    OntaMol\nled Wltli ,Al6erta, WHICH result-'\ned in\u25a0'tho^Jfnlyerslty of AlBerta\nCapturing. the\\h'oribr,,:fOr the champion 'Hereford ' steer,\" with-\u00bb*-reeii-'\nwood.'OdV \u25a0 taa, While 'the' chainjjioh;\nHBre'p& 'bull.'and\" <i>tampion .heifers,'\nare^retained 'for Ontario with DUry'\nDonald-, and-'Perfection Lass, the'\nforiiter owned toy. O'fTelH, brothers,\nof J)0nfield',\\ond the latfer tSef prop-\norty.df X. 0. Cllfltord, ,of Oshawa.,\nThe' entire, showing 'Of' tne'Hero-''\nford classes is .as\\gd0d Ns 'I .have\nSeen fnatde a' show ring,\" was \"the\ncpmmont of the Judge,' John, Wtl\u00abm,\noj InkBtWV'Atta.\"V \u25a0\". , ' \"  *\"\u25a0':',.\nIndians in North Maniti .\nTurn to Fishing; Weather\nWealhter, Too Mild,'\u201e*'\nTHE PAS,'Mah'.,vDec. t\u2014\u00ab-'\u00bb.f*fUl,:\ntur hunt- ln the north has* -neon a\ndismal -failure. JHld wti-tther- and\nrlio lowj prices contributed ;U> -..thej\nnon-suocess of the 'hunt. Tiu^dredai\nof 'IndlanB ; turned to fishing. ,ln-j\nstead,' and i reports from the fleh-'i\ning grbunde soy that ?at\u00a3h \u25a0oiitfijjfii'lpaj\nmargin. White fish are .principally\ncaughr andJor ith'ej first, ttmo.. sttlr.\ngeon\/. fishing is bnlnR done on - the.\nChurchill *l,ver. :: _.-\u2022-;\"'\u25a0:\nAnother North Dakota\nBank Pats tip Shutters\nBISM'AWC,.; K. 'h\u201e Dec. , 7.\u2014Tlrli\nStato I'.imk of Lorraine, In .-RenitiUo'.\nCounty, dosed* today .due* to -depleted\nreserves, according to wnrd;'reV'e|ved\nat the stato Bank examiner's .'.-of-\nt*lcn here'; This m^k.ea; 88. staietniid'\none national. bank to ' close. 'In 'jess.\nShan a month.\nCanadian Council  oi Agriculture Coordinating Kg-\n^tftfiiny.''-': \u25a0\nWINNTPBTt, 'Dee. 1 (Canadian\nPfe^fii.T-Tffhfi.establi'Shing of--An ipter-,\npcostiflcial ., political party composed\no-t jjfefltmer ..orffani-Httiohs. with' (the\n.Caa?j>tMan Councillor -AgrieulUtre as,\n\u25a0t^4^bo*ordinating argent,, woti dia-\n(jljfe^H*:iat,\"l\u00abtgth at the. meeting.-to\n\u2022^ay.: No deolslon was reached and'\n-fchfr dlfichs*?ipn wl\\l be continued -to--\nfeiorrbw\/ , \"\n\u25a0 .,A'_.the outset, according to officials\nof-^be.eounpil, five provinces, Mberta,\nS^Uatcbewan. Ontario,,Manitoba, and\nJjew*,- ^ijhswielti will. come imWitho\nl^eyir \"Pftfty, if It is organised, and an\neffort, .made to bring in later the\n-trtHer' tn'ovihe-es of ilio Dominion.^\ni-iprain problems* are also scheduled\nM*T'.discussion tomorrow. A plan for\n-\"iK^erative marketing of next year's\ngrain crop will be put .forward. \\\n.; The delegates in attendance are:\n*: R.W. -tV. Bnmsaby, jpresident, Jefferson\/ 6nt.:> R. \u25a0JlcKenaie, \u25a0 vice-\npresident. Winnipeg.\n-; Aib-erta\u2014i-r, V,'. Wood, P.. Baker,\nH. Higiginbotham. Mrs. .A. M. Sears,\nS.- S. ..Sears, K, Oreenfield imd.-W,\nV).  Tregb.\n\u25a0 Saskatchewan\u2014-Hon. Geo. langley,\n\"W. .T. Orchard, ,T. B. Mu-sselnv\u00abi, R.\n'ty.--Johnson, V. W. Riddeii, J. Robin-\n'9on-,7-J.. A. Mahaorg, M.P.;-H. CFleming.- W-.-' C.'MJllB,' T. \"Sales and. Mrs.\n^. ,-M. McNaughton.        ;\n:\u25a0 Ontario\u2014J. J. MorriRon, W. L.\nSn^th, G.. A. Carbon find Mrs. iFrank\n\u2022Wi.b'st'ei-.\n\u25a0 MAnitoba \u2014 J. li. Bro\"nm, \"W- H.\n\"WhOid^-.Mira. -i.' H. Parlor, D. G.\nMcKehzIe; 'Peter WH*p*ht ianct C- M,\nHmery.'. ,.'\nMew Brunswick\u2014Q, T. Caldwell, S.\nC, Jiagerman and G, Qt.. Archibald.\n6-ain -Qro^vers, Ouide\u2014^C. C, Chip-\nman, J..M. Pratt, J. T. Hull and John\nWard; '\nU-nVted.Cirain Prowers. Ltd.\u2014Hon. T.\nA. Crerar. J. T. -Rfeid, MJ?.;, F. ,T.\nColiyei:   and   J.   j.   McT_eMan.\nImportant Debate on English\n\u2022  Nationol Economy Expect-\nrf; CtitsiPrtiAfeiiied:\n'\u2022\"LONDON, Bee. 7 ..(.Canadian. Asso-;\neiated Press)-,\u2014Government supporters\nIti' hie house of commons today Were\nbrought i-ntft, line .for the. second\n-\"teailing of the Dye-stuffs bill agaipat\n\u25a0jpihloh * irreconoUable freetraders are\nmaking a dfcad set.\n\u25a0 Thursday will witness the debate\nin national expenditure \u25a0which, in\nylew of the outcn-- for economy must\n*) Je Important It is oxpected- that the\ntestiiiaates will have to be .cut all\nAround ond.the government is beihg\np*p^RS-\u00bbd tn prevent any freiih sehellflOs\nm'frblving further expenditure.\n.-(Atiaten Chamberlain, chancellor of\nthi\u00bb -''exchequpr, replying to a question on ihe sn-biect today, -said that\n(feep\u00a9 waa as yet' no reason, tto-*an*;\ntloip&a any material variation froba\nhis estimate of' \u00a3234.000,00^ stated\nt)o be -the balanceon the year's rev.\nenue, and expepdlture.\nstroyer\n_ Fiume\ns D'Annunzio\nItalian\n\u2022WrtftSTlB,    Dec.  . 7.\u2014Tho.1 Italian\n. -JstTbyer   ProhZotti,   blockading   Pl-\n*\u00bbhe* p-ift   several   yenr-v-hy. a  wideS-^.   ;h_. t     [ned    th_    iyAnnimi\u201eo\nmftrcfn.   White   fish   are .Drlneinallv   vET*J     \u25a0\nAght Cruiser Chatham\nMURDERING\n.\nIrish Republican Army Commander Is JJaughly; Says There\nis No Agreement for Peace With England; Fears Ill-\ntimed Action; Lords' Drastic Am(| iments to Home\nRule Bill Not Likely to Smooth Proff ;ss: Report Stiffr\nMonday; Third Reading Tuesday,  \"f\nWsai*\nBELFAST,. Dec. 7.\u2014Michael Col\nHns,.: comfnan der-in-chief of the\nJrish republican army- referripg in\nstatement today to ..a report that his\n\u25a0safety would be assured in the nro-\nposed peace tefmh- b'etlveen the Sinn\nfibtners and the British government,\nfjajd:\nr .\"There has been no .such agree-\njfnfent. NO.person in Ireland or any\nWftere -jlse'had an-j- authority to use\nmy name. My personal * safety does\n\u25a0n0\"t matter and ao'e** hot count as\na ;_actor In the question of Ireland's-\n\u25a0fights. ,. I thank no one for refrain\ning from  murdering me.\nf'At tho present time, there\nVery grave danger that- the cdi\nmade statements on false promisi\nand that theTe may -be foolish;; and\"'\nUl-rtimed actions. , My 'advice, to the\n-p-jpple is to hold fast.\"\nilt is reported the police-are endeavoring to discover whence C61-\nline* statement emanated, but that ia\nhidden.\nLords', Amendments are Drastic*-.\nLONDON, Dec.7.\u2014-(Canadian Associated Press)\u2014The house of lords\ntoday concluded the committee stage\nOf \"the home rule bill. It is not\nthought sthat tljeir drastic, amendments of the bill will smooth the\nyffyy to further progress on the alterations made in the constitution\nin, the  house  of commons, \\\nThe report stage iyil] be taken- on\nMonday and. the third reading of\nthe bill  is scheduled for Tuesdny.\nNo Coripro-miso With England,\nPARIS.-..DI-8C, 7.\u2014Sean O'Caliaigh.\n\"envoy of the Irish republic .in\nFrance,\" denies in art bffiOlal. fltate-\nmanf Lssued today that, :the \"Bail\nElreann,   Or'its  ministry lias   made\nany overt nj; , vfor peace with     fttiif-\nland. v.\n\"Trojand eject**- whh soorn,\" Pm*i\nthe Htate^. fit,, \"all suggpRtions ;Of\ncompromi,'^, '\u25a0 with Kngiand, on the\nbrfslF- of l,\\ r latent so-ntiiiert *'hrtffi|*\nrule bill,\":-She will roftiHR to ha-\ngotiate with Knglanrt e*^ept ftp one\nfree   nation   with   another.\"\nRohnts   Fnthor   ^'Flanagan.\nDUBLIN, Dec* 7.\u2014Patrick, O*-\nKeefe, member of parJiament .for\nthe West division of Clare, \/infl eec-\n\u25a0yetary of-:^r;*R!nn,??*aMl--;haa ^suiA.\n\\ stktement''in co*nj_ecllon with Fd-\nher'v O'FIfibagfe-h's-* message to-y Ptfei-\n'miei'. Lioyd-George on the mtftfer ot\nfin Ikish- settleippnt.\nFather O'lHanagan is vice .'preai-\ndent of the. Sinn Fein and has bdjto\ndefcribed- as- the \"acting . president-*1\"\nbut is not recognized as having official auihority by Secretary 0'-\nKeefo,  who sayp. In his stateih'enti\n\"Since the arrest of Arthur prife-\nflths, acting president, there-, \"lifth\nbeen no meeting of the a'tanflttlg\nI'Ommitteo and,'* therefore, -^athfe*1\nO'Flanagan's telegram is aimftly,*^\nstatement of his personal opinion.\nand has not the j-hnction 0_'the :StH^.\nFein executive! Only the Dail Etf-\ne.*i-nn- thc accredited reptee6iit\"it\"iffe\nof the Ij*ish people, has authority ;tO\nspealt on behalf of Ireland,'and rtil\npublic bodies and 'individuals ,*W6hl9i\nbe weH advised tb steer cslear tit!^-*\nsnares ' of the British government\nuntil the Dail* lllreann has BifOk^n.\"\nAwost Anothei' Sinn Poin M. P\u00bb,\n* DUBLIN,   Dec,    7.~Dr.     *^ie\"^a?d\nHayes,   Sinn   Fe.ln   member   ottlfp\nhouse   ot   commons*, was -  nrt*es-&Bd\nfContinued on Page Seven.1)  . -\nComing   lo\nJhrouxh Panama Canal\nVICT6PJA, Dec. 7.-^\u2014Temporarily\n'd^ptached (. from the British Nprth\n'American squadron, the British light\n;OrTifeer ,Ch&thtuh ia now qn the P;i-\ntiific(coait'and may soon b&..je)cpect-\n\u25a0ed,.Kt   the   Esquimau,   naval   onto.\nThe Chatham-came from the Ber-\nmn-l-i bnso, (hrough the Panama\ncanal and' Is v now. reported to be\nat San Diego \"mi the Southern Call-\nfornian coast.\nFORT WILLIAM. Dec. 7.\u2014(Canadian PreSs)\u2014While the United\nStates has .been talking about an\nembargo on Canadian wheat, ei;-\nportere-*** have quietly moved over\nth^e border 45,000,000 bushels of-\nWestern  Canada hard.\nThe record wheat rush, culminated in th*e depnrture from* this port\nio the past 24 hours of 16 ships,,\nall laden with wheat and all bound\nfor United States ports, notably\nBuffalo, practically defeating v any\nmove southern growers may take\nto save their home market from\nthe Canadian grown pro.ducts.\nOpemte Smoothly..\nOf 72,5,8-\u00bbo6o, bushels received at\nelevators in Fort. William and Port\nArthur, 45.420,000 have been shipped\nto, the'States, more than 20 times\nthe amount '-jsen^.ylast, year, which\nftieans that Ca'hadlan farmers, and\nbusiness men have -ucpessfuHj'* marketed a vast nmbuht of their farm\nproduct despite restrictions , In. - JEJiit\nrbpean   markets. >r.\u25a0,*\nAl-fhough the United States house\nof representatives is today considering a., 45. icients, per bushel import\nduty'6n; wheat from this country,as\npresented in the fbi'm of a hill yesterday, together With an import\nduty of $1.80 per barrel on flour,\nUie move In response to American\nfarmers' demands, comes too late\nfor  this   year.\nGot  Under  Bari'ler.\nN. M. -Patterson, of this city, who\nwas a member .of the Canada wheat\nboard during its operation and who\nip regarded throughout the west as\nan authority on grain marketing,\nsees in ,the. unprecedented, movement\nof wheat from Fort William to %u?-\nfalo, a ^hurried effort to get under\nthe. barrier, and dispose of as m^ch\nCanadian, .wheat to the American\nbuyers, as the traffic will bear before the long talked of embargo is\nput on.  or a duty bar raised.\nThe . 45,000,000 buBhels . already\ndispatched, to Buffalo or other\nSouthern ports, takes no account of\nihe enormous,, shipments that have\ngone forward since Dec. 3. up to\nwhi,ch data the records wero available. ,But Fort William and Port\nArljhur. loaded 16 vessels in the past\nU .hour's,-^lth 4,485,000 bushels of\nwheat. r*.        \u25a0'*''\u25a0_\nAdd to that the huge clearing,\nthe'five millions which oan still be\nplaced aboatd < vessels now lying in\nthe harbor, nad before ha\\*igntion\ndoses, Canada will have eehi to tho\nUnited StatW pprts .through ,eleva-\ntora. here about 58,000,000, busheis\nof Wheat.\n\/two-thirds of Canada'a expo'rtfr-'o*?\n;\\v.fieat h-ad been vhtoiitth UnitOfl' Wmii\nports. During the war \"this wa\u00bbI *^bt\nposstble. Wheat shipped io Buffalo\nand other Unite-d States pWn-t*^ Resigned for export to- \"fciufope, fhi(flitl\nlater 'on be lakbn -out Of TionA dftft\nsold  to  .-Vmerican  fleeQeve. \u25a0     >'\"'?\nLindsay Crawford ^\nLeaves   Moncton   \u00ab!  ,\nWestbound Ocean Car\nMONCTON,   NiB.,   Dec.   7.\nLindsay    Crawford,    president   Of,\nIrish       S'olf-De'termin'-t'O'ii-\nt\\\ntho\nLeague of C-ir,ada and Newfound*\nland, who was  refused .\u00ab  hear'triB',\nhere last niWHt, left  Moncton  thip;V\nnfternoon on the w_atbbtind Oeetirt  .'\n, Limited.*-NHf was everted* **fc \"th%\n' t^iVbjj a M-jy of frifeaW I 60*'\n. jlepa^urtefwil-j-'.auiet !kwlwiltipt\n>p_bf*l'tnfeiti.M. ..   *   v   y\" *\nTHE WEATHER\nRush Not Unusual\nTOSONtTO, '6\u00abv T,^-A member of\none of, ihe, lairgest Canadian grain\nexi)ort\u201ehous\u00abi stated tonight that .thece\n*aa n\u00abthlhg ; u-nsfecedented at: this,\nseason 'in'.the .very las\/ge Bhlpments;\nof MioAt now taklhg place from thei\nheal!, of'1., lhe. JalfeS, . It, Was .maturil\ntp suppose that under existing con^\nditions, n considerable portion \u25a0 of it\nihiglht' 'be \u2022 Bold, \"tos American flealere,\n'ttut on the other. hartMt'Tnw to ;be\nremembered   Uiat \u25a0 in  normal; tinies,\niC^lson a.rtd.-Vi-\ncitilty:.   Generally    .fair,,,\nnhnngein tempc-rntnre..\nm>ti*h\nMln.\nMSX\nNelson\t\n...'.   28\n30\nVictoria.   \t\n...-.   40\nii\nkamloops   \t\n     K2\n38\nGrand Forks   \t\n     30\n'\u00bb\nCronbrook   \t\n....    1*\n3'    '\n'Of\nPrince   Rupert    ...\n    86\nDawson    +'-\t\n...... \"14\n, \u00abJ '1 \u25a0\n\u25a0jVinnlpeg    \t\n....     0\ni%- .\nVancouver    ....,.,\n     38\n42\" \u25a0\nPenticton\t\n.... te\n40   i\nfearkerville   \t\n....    24-\n2S:\n6ejl'W*\/rv\t\n....    14\n44 \u25a0\u25a0,\n\u2022Beit\u2122 mo. \u25a0\n\u25a0~4\n TPafe 2.\nTflt^H-N UaTLT NEWS.  WEDNESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER H, 192(5.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhera the Travelling  Public May Obtain    Superior   Accommodation\naft \u2122E\nPremier Hotel\nx\nOf the Interior\nSERVICE    UNEXCELLED\nA ta Carte Tabla  D'Hata\nSPECIAL  SUNDAY   DINNER  {1.00\nINCOMPARABLY THE   FINE8T TEA   ROOM( IN   B.   C.\n\"Open   Rally 10 a.m.  to  Midnight Music  and   Dancing\nThe Latest Sundaes, ice Cold Drinks and Ices\n-**> Afternoon. Tea  (2 p.m. to 5 p.m.  -, 25o.\nHeadquarters   For   All   Travelling   Men,   Mining   Men   and   Tourists\nEUROPEAN   PLAN      \u2014      \u2014       ROOMS,   $1.00   UP\nmTM32~-\"FYfiii   H.   Shoemaker,   Tmir;\nlingshpad,   Winnlppff;   Mrs.   Paul   Un\nA.   J*   MoPhee,. Slocan i   it.   S.   Power,\ncoin,   Sandon;   R.   W.   Dawson,   D.   H\nVftrnoti;    .). .  P.    McCall*um    -fid    wife.\nBayley  and   wife.  Willow Point;   M.  C\nGrand Forks;   A.  C,   MeBfe-fh    .Midway;\nDonaldson   and   son,   Salmo;      W.     H\nWm. Maclntyre, A. Kelly, (,. Splaln, J.\nShiill,   Waneta;   W.   H.   Browning,   GJ\nHyser, J.  Sanderson, Calgary;  P. John\nvan,   Wash.;   ti.   Y.   Russell,   Montreal\nson,   Mips   A.   HaRPil,   Wynndel1,   Chas.\n.1.   P,   Goilin-,   Ymir; >C.    *\"\u25a0*.   Rankin\nAlbert   Cook,   Criuibroolt;   \\Ml   H.   Hol-\nM.   tl.   Doble,   Vnnciouver,\nWell Lighted Sample Rooms\nAmerican Plan\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nA Home for those away from home. Most comfortably\nfurnished rotunda in the interior.\n\u2022 Afternoon tea served from 3 to 5 p.m. in Tearoom.\nSpecial winter rates to boarders by week or month.\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS HOTEL  ....\nArrow Lakes, now under same management.\nH. W. SHORE\nSTRATHCONA-\u2014.Tames Smith, Cvhii lirool\"; It. A. Solly, Summerland; H. L.\nMackenzie and wlf**, Grand Fori;;?; Tlio mas Grepji, Kelowna; C. H. King,\nGrand Forks; prank Uleliardson, p.epttct'ph; R Hnrdy, Spokane; .Ins. \"McNeil, Vancouver; F.  sterling,  Calgary.\n\u25a0QUEEN'S HOTEL\nEuropean    and   American    ritm\nSteam   Heat   In   Every   Room\nA.   lAPOINTE,   Proprietor\nQUEEN'S\u2014.1. .May, Frank May, Tag-\nhum; P. Carrie, Vancouver: J, Mac\nl-iioo, P. Stevenson, Fred Smith, city;\nA. Sherman. South Sliicdri; \u25a0'\u25a0 G. Bradley, Qkahftgflh: Mx.* and, Xlrs. Finch,\nFrultvale; ,1. Kevier, Salmo.\nNEW GRAND  HOTEL\n616    VEBNON    ST.    EAST\nComfortable Rooms, Hot nnd Gold\nwater. Dining  Room  in\nConnection\nRates fl  and  Up.\nMADDEN HOUSE\n_.   3.   MADDEN,   Proprietress\nSTEAM HEATED\nCor. Baker and Ward Sta. Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014.1. <\\ Rady, (lerrard; J,\nHallinger, Robert tlanley, Salmo: A.\n'(,. Dnw^on, Merritt; T. P. Palmer,\nTrail; Jack Olson, Nnku*p! A. l.emnn,\nE. V. NelBOn, ciiy.\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nMrs.   Mallette,   Proprietress\nA hame for the world at  reasonable rates.\nOpen    night   and    day.    \u25a0 First-\nclass    dining-room.       Comfortable\nrooms.\n315 Vernon St.      Near Past Office\nKOOTENAY\u2014John J. Holeltln, H.\nSlcKenzip, Trail; 18. J. fJoltlngtj, Jiimes\nCourtney, Phil Deslllo, Nelson: Paul\nJasmin; Fred Todd, \"Edwin Colllngs,\nAlbertn; Fl. Warren nnd wife, H.\nOlnirch,   Cranbrook.,\nTREMONT HOTEL\nF.    NILSON.    Prop.\nBAKER     STREET\nFurnished   Rooms  by   Day,\nWeek  er   Month\nT11l*:MONT\u2014 Pal Nelson, Louis-Hanson, J. Dunbar; \"Meadows; Jack Roll-as,\n.7. Nash, Tony Batch, Ham Rostenlpk,\nG. S, Hamilion lilholi; George Blane;\nBeaverdell, . .\nH. W.  8HORE,  Prop.\nH.  E.  SCANLAN,  Mgr.\nHalcyon Hot Springs Hotel\nARROW   LAKES,  B.  C.\nUnder   entirely   new   management\nRenowned throughout the west\nfor the water's wonderful cure of\nRheumatism, Sciatica. Urlnic Conditions,   Metallic   Poisoning.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nIn a most beautiful climate.\nLarge hot water swimming pools,\nPor rates apply Strathcona Hotel,\nNelson,  or  Halcyon  Hotel.\nAmerican plan, $3.50 and up\nper day, $24 per week.\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nHOTEL   MARTINIQUE\n1176 Granville Street\nCosy,    bright    rooms.   Just    the\nplace    for   your   vacation.    Rates\nmoderate.    \"Writo   for   particulars.\nMRS. A. PATERSON\nLate of Royal Hotel, Granville St.\nLETTERHEADS of'\nDISTINCTION\nIt pays to have distinctive\nstationery, especially when\nthe     cost     is     reasonable.\nA business is often Judged,\nperhaps unconsciously, by its\nletterheads. Good paper and\nfirst-class printing count for\nmuch more than Is sometimes\nrealized.\nOur large stock of papers,\nIn white and eight or nine\ncolors, enables us to meet the\never-increasing demand for\n-letter-heads of quality.\nTHE\nDaily News Job Dept.\n\"The  Home of  Good  Printing\"\nNEL80N,   B.C.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320 Baker Street, Nelson, B. O.,\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n12 tn 2:30, Special i(imcli. 40c\nPhont 154\nTasker L. Oddie\nFormer Governor, of Nevada, who\n\"\u25a0.*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 been elected U. S, Senator on the\nKepubllcah ticket.\nSHOW IS\nHigh Average of Good Birds\nIf Subject of Judges' Com-\nm-pts.\n\"With a large variety nf breeds\nshowing\" eiich\"' an nil round high\naverage;'_\u00bb._ classy birds as to draw\nvery *,f%YO**\"\"*bl#ei- comment from the\njudge,.y. ,S.*Ainundson, thn District\nNo. 8 Poultry, show, now being held\nin trie. f_Lir\" building under the auspices -of -\"the'\"West Kootenay Poultry\ni^nd ,Pet'l Stock association, opened\nyest'ercR-ts*\"-\u25a0\u25a0 afternoon, and drew a\nlarge; attendance of interested visitors at both the afternoon and evening session. The judging is only half\nfinished yet, btit Mr. Amundson, who\nie \" hanging * the ribbons, expects to\nbe through iVlth  the  work  today.\nThis. afternoon, the show will be\nthrown open, admission free, to the\npublic again for their inspection of\nthe birds and their attendance at.\nthe demonstrations and lectures. Tonight, there will he a Poultry Men's\nsupper at the Nelson Cafe, after\nwhich the .diners will adjourn to tho\nshow building for tho public lecture and demonstration hy Mr. Amundson on \"Egg Production and\nFitting Birds for the Show Rooms.\"\nTomorrow afternoon the lecture will\nbe on \"Culling the Flock.\"\nHUNDREDS THRONG\nST. PAUL'S BAZAAR\nWhat probably -.constitutes a record for nny affair of a .'similar nature was attained by thc Ladies'\nAid of St. Paul's Prcbytcrian church\nat their annual bazaar yesterday afternoon, when the receipts reached\nthe' >magnificent total of $n\"''.\nThronged to its capacity, the bazaar\nwas the . mecca of hundreds of\nChristmas shopper, who within iho\nspace of a few hours denuded tho\nseven   wonder-stocked   booths.\nThe conveners were: Mrs, .!. A,\nAllen, Mrs. F. R. .lolfs, Mrs. R. A,\nPeebles and Mr*. H McKeri*_je. Tho\nC. G. I. T.'booth wns in charge o\u00a3\nDr Isobel Arthur, assisted by Miss\nB. McKenzle. Mrs. Alex \"Lcilh was\nin charge of the refreshment tables.\nHOW WEAK\nWOMEN ARE\nHADE STRONG\nMrs. Westmoreland Tells in\nthe Following Letter.\nHarrison, N.Y.\u2014\"When my first\nchild w\u00aba born I did not know about\nLydia E. Pinkham'fl\nV orre table Compound and bad a very\nhard time. I read in\nthe newspaperabout\nthe Vegetable Compound and when my\nsecond child came I\ntook it and was well\nduring the whole\ntime, and childbirth\nwas a hundred times\neasier. Ever since\nthen I have used it\nfor any weakness and would not be\nwithout it for the world. 1 do oll-my\nWork ana am strong and healthy. Z am\nnursing my baby, and 1 still take the\nVegetableCompoundasitkeepaawoman\n'it good health. You may publish my\n'.eatimoni\u2014forthe good of other women,\nT you choose to do so.' '\u2014Mrs. C. Westmoreland, Harrison, N.Y.\nWomen who suffer from displace-\nneiits, Irregularities, inflammation,\nilceration, backache, headaches and\nlerrousness should lose no time in giving\nhis famous root and herb remedy,\n.ydiaE;. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-\nmund, a trial, and for special advice\nvrile to I.ydia Ii Pinkham Medicine\nio , I.ynu, II ass.\n$\u00ab* Throat,\nClucked By Hamlln'a\na,     Wln-lou\nS*r\u00bb threat and chest colds\nahoalil went, be neglected. Fev.\npeople realize how often they re-\nnit wrieusly if not promptly\nchecked. ' Hamlin's Wizard Oil ii\n\u2022 Hit, \u00bbjm|>le and effective treat-\nnut UKi*\"\u2014 a gargle for soro\nthr oet it brints quick relief. Rubbed\nen tbe chest it will often loosen up\n\u2022 hards-deep seated cold in one\nnight   Keep a bottle on the shelf.\nW\u2014sri. Oil ll . good depeildubte prep-\n_\u00abU.D te Ha.. In Uie raedi.'ine chest for\ntnt al. when th. dodor i\u201e.-,y t... fur\nevay. H*w .\"011 .l.i i.iii... bniisos, cut.\neat Irenu sccur In ...r, tamilr. as wall\nM Uttle trenMes Ilk. .aracbe. io-..:!.... h-\n\u00abelfe earm. tanker .area .tiff n\u00abck, itutl\nttpte ac&tae I..t. Sootlilntr. tisallnv wi>\n\u2022re Oil will .IK.re brine quick idler.\n, UM-n. WM bettla' \u00abe.\n'IC.ree an Ir.nbled with eonsttpatlt,\ner Klik kMiacb. on Ilamllu's VVIssn-\n1mm Hum J_t plaaaaut Intl. i.h.i.\nmm a, Ms- I\u00bbr l\u00bbc    Quarantae.l.\nCanadian Jewry Relief\nWorkers Operate With\nMoscow   Commission\nLONDON, Dec. 6.\u2014(Jewish Telegraphic Agency)\u2014The bureau established in Reval by the relief\nworkers of Canadian Jewry, is now\nin a position lo guarantee lhe transmission of monies and letters to\nSoviet Russia, afcorrllng to a dispatch from that city. In its work,\nthe hui*eau will cooperate with the\nSoviet relief commission ot Moscow and the relief commission in\nSoviet Russin representing the joint\ndistribution for American-Jewish re.\nlief funds. The Canadian .relief\nworkers are now extending their ac\ntivities  to   Ukraine.\nSHAFT WIYSTERY\nPUZZLES BOARD\nToronto Harbor Contractors\nPromise Huge Sum for getting Contract.\nTORONTO, Dec. - 7,\u2014The letter\nfrom J. f\\ StPtviu-t, of Lhe C'lnarlian\nStewart compivny, promifiinief Colonel\nBoyd \"Ma gee finfi.onfl for services\nin connection with n Toronto har-\nhor contraet, in descrihert by mem\nliera of the Hnrhor hoard as a com\nplete surprise to them. This document. WWtth, yesterday led# Justice\nLatchfordto ask: \"Isn't this Kraft?'\nis doted \"Nov. 18, 1*013, and purports to he a formal tr'unscript of\na pencilled momnnindum agreement\ndated .7tine  30  of thnt year. The\nrem;.rkahlo feature of the\" whole affair is Lhat on .rune 30, the Riowarjt\ncompany knew that their tender was\nthe lowest submitted and that they\nwere getiilt\"\"** the contract on that\nbasis.\nThis had been revealed to them\nthe   day   previous.\n\"What services Col. Magee could\nhave performed in ffettinp: the contract are described as a mystery by\nthose   In  1uoch   with   the  situation\nTl wan \u2022drWlgin*** with n Knarnntee\nminimum (\"p\" \"ff_.oO0.OO0 and a guaranteed yearly minimum of one-sixth\nof   that   amount   per   year   for     six\nrs.\nARRESTED WOMAN HAS\nCOMPLETE DOPE OUTFIT\nTHE PAS, Man., Dec. 7.\u2014Though\nto he acting as a clearing agent for\ndope, Mrs. Stirling was urrestecl\nhere nnd a complete \"dope layout'',\nincluding an opium pipe, cookers,\nneedles, cocaine, morphine and stry-\nchine wore found in her possession,\nTelegrams found in her place led*\nthe police to think that she was the\ncenter of supply for Northern Sia's\nUa.tehewan and  Manitoba.\nMagistrate   \"Wales   fined  her   $400\nor    six    months,    and    ordered    th\neijnipment    destroyed.\nLUMBER COMPANY\nWILL BUILD CITY\nQUKl*'.Ef\\ Dec. 7.\u2014A. city, whose\nname \"Saguenay City,\" Is already incorporated, Is to be built beginning\nnext spring near Lake . Kenogami.\nSt. .lohn county,' by the Price Brothers Lumber company. The firm\nintends to establish there a large\npulp plant. The contractors say\nthey will need al least 4.OO0 men\nnext spring.\nFRUZETTI    BEATS   VALGAR\n\"BOSTON. Pec. 7. \u25a0\u25a0-Jlmmifi Frit-\nKette, of Brocton, New England\nlight champion, was awarded tho\ndecision over Benny Valgar, of Now\nVork. in [fl rounds here tonight.\nValgar had a. swift left hand punch\nbut met a two handed response from\nl-Yuzctli that ho could not niatch.\nThe Brockton hoy floored Valgar\nin the third round for the count\nof nine nnd rocked repeatedly dur\nIng   the   rest   of   the   botu.\nSandal wood trees have no odor,\nbut when\" cut the wood la decidedly\nfragrant.\nI Coughs and colds\nsneezes and sniffiesl\nquickly  yield   to|\nBAUME\nBENGUE\nThe relief ir. most {-ratifying and\nso refreshing.\nI BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES!\nfl.VO a tube.\nTHELEEMIN-MltESGO-LTD.I\nMONTREAL\nAgents for Dr. Jules Benf-\u00a3 |\nRELIEVES PAIN\nLIVESTOCK GROWS\nHen and Dairy Cow Coming\nInto Their Own Says Minister of Agriculture.\n(U'KLPH, Bee. 7.\u2014Premier Drury,\nHon. Manning Doherty, minister of\nagriculture for Ontario, and Hon.\nDuncan Marshall, minister of agriculture for Alberta, were the chief\nspeakers at the luncheon today given\nby the city to the breeder*! an_\nprincipal visitors at the winter fair,\nAH of them congratulated the directors on the success of the fair\nand. emphasis was placed on tho efforts that nre being put forth to\nget Great Britain to lift the embargo,   against   Canadian   cattle.\nHon. Duncan Marshall referred\nt;o the high prices now prevailing.\nConditions on the farms were very\nserious at the present time, he said,\nand the farmer was the one who\nwas heing hit first. He got it\nboth   coming  and   going.\nThere were many things needed,\nMr. Marshall said, and one was better training and better education.\nThe farmer of the future must be\n100 per cent efficient. \u25a0 Both''the\nhen and the dairy cow were gradually coming into their own, as they\nshould. He was of the opinion that\nduring the coming year the live\nstock industry would play a more\nimportant part than ever before. He\nalso referred to the cattle embargo,\nand was certain, he said, that steps\nwere being taken to have It removed.\nHe suggested th<\\r the Dominion\nparliament he asked to' pass a resolution demanding that the em\nbargo be removed as this thing had\nbeen going on too long. He sj\nbe fell that If such action were\ntaken, good results would at onoe\nfollow,\nCommissioner Reserves Judgment ; Brotherhood Regards Steps as Retrograde\nOTTAWA. Dec. 7.\u2014(Candian\nPress)\u2014Quite a lengthy argument\naa to the relative values of cowcatchers and steps on the front of\nfreight engines engaged in road\nservice, was heard by the railway\ncommission today in the application\nof the New York Central railroad\nfor u. modification of the board'i\nregulations regarding safety appliances*. The company wished to\nuse n step construction on its freight\nengines running intp Canada, instead\nof the pilot construction.\nRepresentatives of tho railway\nbrotherhood, Galvin Lawrence and\nW. Ii. Best, fought against tho application determinedly, the former\ncharacterizing it as the most retrograde step lie had observed in 42\nyears   of   railroading. Judgment\nwaa  reserved.\nHELPJF ALLIES\nCurrency Depreciation Serious Handicap; Suggests\nBarter.\nST. .TOHN, N: B., Dec. 7.\u2014Unless\nthc allies, come to tho help of Ru-.\nmania, the central powers will soon\nhave complete control of her markets, wns a. statement made th-8\nmorning by I. C- Tonldu, manager\nof Hut oredit interests of Rumania,\nof Bucharest, who was one of the\npassengers on the Corslcan, which\ndocked   this   morning   from   Havre.\nMr. lonldu was sent to Canada\nsomo time ago as a special dole-\ngate by Queen Marie of Rumania\nIn Rumania's Interests, and was also a member of the Rumanian legation  at \"Washington.\nSpeaking of conditions in Rumania\nho said that the depreciation in the\nvalue   of.  their   money   was   one   of\n^ho    most   ; series    handicaps    ,to-\nwards  re-establishment.\nHo believed the best way would\nbe for Canadians to export their\ngoods to Rumania and receive goods\nlu exchange  of  money.\nThe Corsican ' brought 295 cabin and 853 other passengers. Some\ni\u00bb00 are for United States points.\nCATHOLIC ARCHBISHOP\nARRIVES AT EDMONTON\nEDMONTON, Dec. 7-\u2014His grace,\nArchbishop 0'J_eary, the new head\nof the Roman Catholic, church in Alberta, arrived in the city this afternoon from Charlottetown, to take up\nhis residence here. He ,was ' wel-\nnomed by a large concourse kt the\nstation, who greeted his arrival with\ncheers.      \u2022\nAn address,011 behalf of the city\nwas pre.^eftted by Mayor Clarke, to\nwhich his grace replied, briefly. He\nthen proceeded to the blBhop'e palace on the South Side' where a reception was held to. the clergy and\na number of prominenb citizens.\nTomorrow there will be a number\n'of religious functions and a banquet by the Knights of ColunabUB\nIn the evening,\nTIME TO SELECT Gin BLOUSES\nWhile Stocks Are Complete\nDelightful models in all shades ia\nCrepe de Chines and Georgettes, price\n$7.50upto $25.00\nCamisoles\nA dainty gift* fashioned of a bit of.\nCrepe de Chine, Georgette or \"Wash\nSatin, in flesh and white, fine laces\nand  ribbons.    Prices   ..\n$1.75 up to $5.00\nMen's Ties\nBach year to accommodate our lady\npatrons we stock.the choicest se3eb-\n'tion-of Men's Ties'that the market\naffords for XrnaA . Oiffcs. T-hia -year\nour  selection   is   perfect    Prices: '\n$1.75 to $2.75\nI\nOur Millinery at Half Price and Our Ready-to-Wear\nDeeply Cut in Price Suggest Gifts of Great Economy\nSmillie & Weir\nLadies' Wear Specialiitl\nDebs, Hoclnlisi candidate for president last electoin reOiVed 070,-\n000 votes, the greatest number of\nvotes polled by a Socialist candidate\nfor the presidency in the 'history, of\nthe United States, and approximately twice   the  Socialist  vote  in  1916.\nFIREMEN HURT\nSAN JOSE, Cal., Dec. 7.\u2014Five\nfiremen were overcome by smoke\nand two of them seriously injured\nin a fire tonight which damaged a\ndrygoods store and ts contents to the\nextent of $20*0,000..\n:   \"Sometimes you* talk to me as if\nmy head was solid ivory.\"\n\"Charley, dear,\" breathed young\nMrs. Torkins, \"do.you think It as\nvaluable as all that?\"\u2014Washington\n'Star.\nSOCIALIST    POLLS    HIGH\n.NE\\V YORK,   X>ec 7.\u2014Eugene  V.\nWHEN MEALS\nDON'T FIT\n\"Pape's   Diapepsin\"   is  the\nquickest Indigestion and\nStomach Relief\nWhen meals hit back and your\nstomach is sour, acid, gassy, or you\nfeel full nnd bloated. When you\nhave heavy lumps of pain or headache- from indigestion.. -Here is instant relief!\nJust as soon as vou eat a tahlet\nor two of Pape's Diapepsin all the\n'dyspepsia, indigestion and stomach\ndistress caused by, acidity ends.\n1'hese pleasant, harmless tablets of\npape's Diapepsin never fall to neutralize the harmful stomach acids\nand make you feel fine at once, and\nthey cost so little at drug stores.\nRUBBERS\nFOB DRESSY WEAR\nRubbers for  Hard   Wear        \"\nln Black.  Brown and Whit*\nCm ROMANO\nTHE SHOEMAN     . '\nVernon Preparatory School\nN..w building, dlrithg hall, dormitories etudlos, class room, .gymnasium,\netc., are being erected to accommodate\n20 more boarders. Numbers sextupled\nsince war. Boys '7-14. Trained nurse'.\nProspectus.\nAUGUSTINE  O. MAOKIE\nB.P..M.A.,  (Cental)) Headmaater\nDRINK\nNelson Bte wing\nCompany's\nBeer and Porter\nH.althful an*. ,r(vl|ora\u00abln(,\nMad. with oryatal olaar mountain wattr tram pun malt an*\nnape.\nNelson  Brewing\nCompany, LimitecT\n\u2022BLtON. J.JO.\nA Modern Up-to-therMinute\nPlant. Operated on the\nBasis of\nPrinting Service\n^With the largest printing and ruling establishment in\n\/ the interior of British Columbia, equipped with modern\nmachinery and conducted by a staff whose constant endeavor it is to turn out printing only of the highest\nquality, the Daily News Job Department is ready to fill\nyour orders promptly, efficiently and economically.  .\n\"\"\u25a0[_ It carries the largest stock of papers, cardboard, cover\npapers, cards and other material between Calgary and\nVancouver.\nMay We Supply You With Any of the Following\nRULED OFFICE STATIONARY\nLEDGER SHEETS  OR   FORMS\nLETTERHEADS\nNOTEHEADS\nBILLHEADS\nSTATEMENTS\nENVELOPES'\nSHIPPING  TAGS\nBUSINESS   CARDS\nDISPLAY CARD8\nLEGAL FORMS\nBLOTTER8\nHANDBILLS\nPOSTERS\nWEDDING   STATIONERY\nIN  MEMORIAM  CARDS\nSTOCK  CERTIFICATES\nVISITING  CARDS\nINVITATION  CARDS\nMEAL TICKETS\nLETTER  CIRCULARS\nNOTE  CIRCULARS      \u00bb\nLODGE CONSTITUTIONS\nBYLAWS\nBOOKLETS\nPRIZE LIST8\nAUDITOR8* REPORTS\n^T If what you want is not in this list, write or telephone the News Job Department.   We are always glad\nto discuss printing problems with you.\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPARTMENT\nThe Home of Good Printing.\nBAKER STREET NELSON, B. C.\n 6esi Cbpj\n.'.flraJS T313LSOH WlLI NEWS. WED:*Ti3'L\\\\y Mck-IINu, rZCEMBER 3, l9%}.~\nHappily Stopped When He\n\"    I'fifctives\"\nS Ottawa St., Hull, P. Q.\n. '\"\"For a year, 1 suffered, with Rheumatism, being;forced-to stay ia bed\nfor fire months. I tried all kinds of\nmedicine without relief and thought\nIwould never be able to walk again.\n'One day vrtiile lying in bed, I read\ntioifi^Fftytiih-Uiies\" the greit 'fruit\nmedicine; nnd.it .seemed just what I\nneeded, so I decided to try it.\nThe fast box helped tne,. and I\ntook the tablets regularly until every\ntrace of the Rheumatism left me.\"\nLORENZO LEDtfC.\n50c. a hoi, fi for $2._0, trial size 25c.\nAt all dealers or sent postpaid by\nFruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.\nAuditor Wil! Examine Books\n. of Aibcrta asKJ-British Columbia Coal Operators.\nAdvlce-H  tbat  IJaviaJ^fc'-jtii;^1\nili:ui- of Montreal,  lym$$&\\%Q$'io\naudit, tho book-- of .cpjapiilih^.lfcirpo\" col-\nllerlps   iu   AJIicrut^iinir-'Brilish *-Co-\nlumbln,   toiyo^tn^.Jr YenifAst  by   tbe\n\u2022 Associat'-U\/UoarOs' of.?Frad_ of* Eastern rriUsb'-;Go'lunibiu for an . Investigation Into' the*: rise In [bo\nprices of coko ami coal, have bcon\nreceived by I'Vetl A. ' SLrfrkey, of\nNelson, the, commissioner. \"Premier\n\"MeiRhen, and tlie Dominion minister\nj'of labor, ..-Tion. Gideon' p, Robertson, have both 'advised*  Mr. Starkey-\nI to   U-yri.. tiffee,. , -\nIleqefiWy;:  tbb \u2022.Associated    Boards\nI of Trade (jent a resolution' to Coal\nDirector Arnist^on\"**\", calling attention\nto the . Ti^rdsHTp inflicted on the\nCon.spli,d.-ited. Mining,. -& Smelting\ncompEtii^* oi\" Trial. 'Tbat company,\nwith 'A' (Tally consumption of 2&Q\ntons of, cotce wa's hiii'd hit by the\nI ner ease \"To f- (10, cents;;*?, ton . on coke,\niind SI.00 la. ton on-, coal, plus the\njadditional advance In freight rates\njf 35 per ct'nli on coke \"and 20, cents*\nton -on. coirt. -.The price dt Trail\nfor coke waa $13.J**-.****,. p,pr. ton. or\nlouble   the   PYC-wmt\" price.\nIn reply to the resolution, a copy\nbf Coal Director Armstrong's report &^Wfee^B'vt.yai-i^]V^^.fbM>i -V\"-\nleivojj; %y-.. WonVin'lfeaiouer * Stai'key, It\nita'tes;.' that .-fojlowing.,.,11^ advance in\nWages to miners hi Contiguous districts in the United States, a long\nLerm. agroemca-t 6\u00a3 aa advance to\nliner's In- Alberta*.', antl. British Co-\nuihbia was -entered into by the,\nnihers ami cplUery 'operators. Con-,\n| icqucnily,., an,- advance 'in the price\nit' coal--,jind. .coke was authorized\ncy the coal director, a part of tho\nigreemcnt, being that the colliery\niperators* WOuld submit thoir books\nI or Inspection if required, and that\nhey would\"*: abide by the decision of\nhe \"toal ^'[rector.   V\nLegal Notices\n'\"'   \"i ;r*__.i*'D\"\n.      Komi   No.   II.\nForm of Notice.\nNELSON    LAND    DISTRICT.\nDistrict of PaHsmoro,\nTAKE . notice    that   Henry   Charles\nJlchols,' bf -.PasBmorej cteculiatloh IFar-\nHucr,   Intends;- to. apply   for.   permission\nlo. purchase    the   follow^ig   described\nlands:\u2014\n1 ttommencliiB\" ' at a, 'ftiost. planted. S.\nJV.' corner-of L%. '^21 Jt, -th'o^cc South\n10 [ chains, theifcV *fi)tu*t, ' fit) ' chains,\n\u25a0hence North 20 chains, thcilcii West\nIO    dhalns. \u25a0'\u25a0\npate:!    NoVeinbor  13,   1920. v{ '\nMENUY   CHAIILES   NICHOLS,\n....   Name of Aliltllcant -(Ih -full)\n \" -, \u25a0 110717)\nP0VB^'-*9F BBVISlte\u00ae *OB tSS\"*\niS-V.    VOTEBS'  'U9K\n'--\"'\"por tho, y'eat -'Wai. \u2022\"\n(NO-i'ib'ia-1 is lio'rcljy ..(riven (lm't; tlie\nrst slttiiia; of the minimal Court of\nevlskm l'dr the revising anil con-ect-\ner, of tho! Voters' Lls't for tlio. year\n121, for- the City of Kaslo and Kaslo\nx.tra Municipal School District, will\nheldl ih'the Council Chamber. City\n\u25a0all, Kaslo; 3,- C, on FrltlnV the 10th\nliy of December, 1920, at the Hour of\nIn; o'clock in thc forenoon.,\nI Dated at K. S., S. '-\u20ac., 'tfhls 25t'li 'day\n! 'November,   1920.     ^     .\n:W...yiDIJ,ElX 'PArWOUTII.   -\n|0989) ' '#\u25a0' .'    . .. , City  Clerk.\nboRPOBATiON  op \u25a0*__   oiTTpoi\"\n\"        SLOCAN.\nCOU11T OF REVISION\nISublicliotlce.,to hereby given unit\nif first ,'Wttlng ''of the Cotlrt Of Be-\nsion - will bo held ln the council\nainbir\"6f the city hall on Friday,\no- 10th day of- Decejinbcr, at 7 o'clock,\n.in.,''Tor the 'purpose of; correcting!\nId revising.. tho voters', list tor the\nlar   1921. '    w.\" E.    GRAHAM,\nTocan, ;-6j; C,   \u2022:. - City   Clerk.\nTlec.  X   1920.        -   ' . (10916)\nIobfoba'tion op >rni; city or\nOBANBBOOK.\nCOURT \"O*. IjBylSlON\n!E%4j(ic noticb Is 'hereby given that\n1 first sitting of the Court of Tto-\nifon.'will be held^l'ti \"tlio olty hall on\nIJay the 10th 'day ''St December at\no'clock p. ni., for the purpose of\n-reeling and revising tho voters'\nt* for   the \u25a0 year- 1921.\n.    \u25a0 -,     T.   M.   ROBERTS,\nt\u00bbbrb6k,\"B.   C. City  Clerk.J\npecembcr *4,   1920. (10973)*\nOBPOBATIOH   OF   THE   CITY   Or\n.'..,-lJBllSOH.-\n::J2ourt:qrhevi'c-ion:'        i\nl-uhlio notice is hereby \"given that\n1 first sitting of the COnrt of Rej-\nliou , will- be held ln the council\nlimber of tlie olty Hall dn Friday,\n10th    day    of    December    nt    8\nfock p. hi.,- for the purpose of cor-\ntltieY-^-ami\u2014*t\u2122Js4h^-^~the'JjvoterBt-tH\u00abt-\n'the ,yoar   1921.'\nW.   E.   WASSON.'-  \u2022\n\u25a0Ison, .B. ,C, City- Clork.\npeg. 3, 1950.    '    ,      ' \\kmtl\nA Great Caitadian Mining\nONE GAME.WiLL-DECIDE I\nBOWLING TOURNAMENT\nThe decision as to whi ,ii Ituim <\not the two playing in tho \u25a0'\u2022-.wiiu^i:\nclub tourjnatnent at tbe Y. .,*,\u25a0 (_*.]\nA. shall pay ?2 per member toward**']\nfttrn\"ii*hlAg thc alleys with ni>w e^u'|ij*H\nment, now rests on the prowress ofi\none individual. 0f. '<-. H. Gan_iiR:r,\nwho with one game to bowl, must I\neither score upwards of> 195, or seel\nhis nitre, the Highballs, Buffer * \u00ab,]\nBportitit and fiiumeial  reverse. !\nTbe tournament. tii%p been runninp;\nfor six days with twu teuiria of 17\nrpe'ji   eacJi   :ih   oj)poii-3nts,.\nClosfj scoring all liirough Ijas \u25a0:.re-\nHtiltod and In-A -niglii the Crawlers\nthe Hlighballa hy J*J5. H ie safe\nto nny lhat Dr. Gansber's form will\nI.\". tho bubjttet of niii'.-h comment\nwhen he 'hiUcs thn al!-y:i f(jr tin-\nfinal   game.\nTit-, i'fofiA*, \u25a0';..\nStop Thi^\n.;    StHtt.iijjlit.-AiW-S-i.\nh'A'BftfJ.CC     .\nTho Province o_ British Coiuxabia1\nIb fifty per cent larger than the state*\nof Texas; and, Kootenay is a 30,000;\niequare mile block. It Is covered:\nWith mountains throughout, there are\ndozens uf iieakfi excecaini:.10(lii)'J -t'.;.:l.'*\nin.height And.these.moi_ntains.are:\nalive with wealth; nearly all the lead?\nahd zinc and much of the silver and'\ngbld of Caaadft come from Kootenay,\nand it is the loading.bltumihous coal-\nproducer, ol ^\"Western Canada. But*\nthe surface haa only been'_c*fr_tched;\nit will sometime produce\" \u25a0^\"\u25a0hundredfold what it at present, produces.\nKootenay has tho minerals, the\ntimber, and the \"pulp, and it.has the;\nwaterpower to turn thh wheels of a\nthousand mills. On the Pend d'Oreitle\n200,000 horse power can be developed, and on the lower Kootenay\n100,000 horse power, with half a'million more^scattered throughout the\ndistrict- Many mountain streams are\npower generators.\nTho district is well supplied with\nrailroads. Tbe main line of the\n. Canadian Pacific crosses the north\npart of tbe Kootenay and the Crow's\nNest line of the :*ame railway crosses\nthe southern part. Tbe Lake Windermere Branch, running north and\nsouth through the beautiful \"Winder-\nmare region, connects two lines in\nEast Kootenay; while in \"West Kootenay several rail-and-lakejoutes connect Revelstoke on the main line with\nNelson on the Crow's Nest. Oar ferries operate on the Lakes. Branches\n. of the Great Northern, crossing tbe\nAmerican border, connect with fhe,|\nCrow's Nest li'ie at Grand . Forks,\nTrail, Nelson aud Fernie; a branch\n\u25a0 of the Crow's Nest ruaA^ff^Yahk\n\u2022across the border to Rp;.i'an?.'     '\nThe leading industries of Kootenay\nare lumbering\/ mining, and fruit\nraising. At present, other \"lines of\nIndustry are in their infancy.\nI Kighty per cent of the total area is\n\u25a0covered with forest Tho question of\n^vood-piilp. is intimately associated ' with the lumber industry.\njf\\vs demand for pulp and tho\n\"tcarcity of paper are felt in Canada and elsewhere. Canada has 83\n_**iilp mills, but there is not a mill\nbetween the ' west coast of British\nColumbia and Rainy River, a distance\n\u25a0fti'ovcr 1,60n miles. **\"\ni    For the purpo.sB o\u00a3 mining, Koote-.\n(1) Trail Sinelter, __.C.\n(2) One of the Mine Buildings\nnay is divided mto two distinct parts;\nthe coal mining field ami the metal\nmining field. The coal measure!* aro\nlimited to the extreme eastern part.\nof tbe district, and there are no metals there. Tho re-st of tho district\nis rich in. metals, but has no coal.\nThere are three known bituminous\ncoal areas in Canada, two of them on\nislands jat the ertremeties. of the\ncg-intry, Cape<~Bretoh Island at the\noa&torn end of'tiie country and Vancouver Island at the western end,\nand between these two islands no lii\ntuminous coal is produced save on\nthe slopes af the main chain of the\nRockies, the- great bulk coming from\nthe Crow's Nest field. >\nThe mines, of tho Crow's Nest were\nopened in ISOS, since which lime\nthey have produced millions of tons\nof coal. The annual .production is\nnow in'.excess of 3,000,000 tons. The\nfollowing figiiree, giving tho exports\nto the United States alone, will give\nsome idea of the present production\nand potential resources of this real\nfield: ' In 1916 the coal exports to\nthe United States amounted to 585,187\ntons, valued at $*L277,<in: in 1917,\n341,518 tons, wor'i-h \u25a0J1,*_00.<M0; in\n1*118, 507,22!)-tons, valued *t $1 93(1,-\n863; and in 1019, 53-1,075. worth ?2,-,\n11(!,G52. :-   \u25a0>\u25a0 .\nThis great coal field has 'been\ntapped only at a few points where\nrailway facilities ara available.\nat Fernie, B.C.\nAt Trail the Consnlidal^d Min'-v,\nand Smelting Company posse;*res ijiii\nnecessary racllitlw Xfil* reduving lijii-X,\nzihe', copper, and gold, and il*\"*, SU-n-\nvah mine at Ki!ul)cr'.ey is tli.- itH-at-\nest zinc producer in the f'(.,:::nion.\nPractically ull th.-- lend and \"Inr* pijo\nduced in Cauaila conic trbni tii'-\nKontenay, The district also po'.ufoH'ic'J\nrich deposits of fluorite and manga*;i-\ncse..\nAgriculture takes a secondarS p:\"d-\ntion in the Kqofbhay. Only alttr.; 'h?\nriver and tho shores of'lhc laJ^'ti IV;*- -\ncultivateablc; nrit S'.OOO r.riuarr- in!\"*\".\nout of lhe '\"A000 can ever be brou^'.t\nben-alb the ploW,\nAt the pre-joht nenrl.v all of 'M\ncultivated land is devdlc^J- to frh'ft\nraising, anfl.traiuloads o! fctiit \u25a0:'.\"\u25a0\u25a0\npies, peai'Sr plums, 6%&i~le$i '\u25a0'.;\u25a0 1\nstr-awberries- aro fehlppcd rrt\"\"m '',''o\nneighborhbnd of Net-on. Creston lipd\nGrand F6rksatb the prairie pro\/fn-*\"')!.\nTho Koi)tcn:i.y is ;i sport;-;tnan's\nparadise. All the streams of {.hut i\"v-\ngion' teem with mouni-tin trout iiA3\nihe mouataimi arc. alive with \u25a0;fri:'.**\u25a0\u25a0\nfooted gain'o. Tiie district is fuTm1\nfor ifts hig*n;amei the .nounIain's art-\nfull of deer, mouuf.ain goqta, p)a(\u00b1\ntiear, and smaller game of piltny \u25a0\n;*,orts- Bighorn and gri?.Kl,v boar r:*c-\nquent tbe lapuntain tops.. \u00ab.r>d o'}\"-. -.'re\nexWem-lj plentifbl in the upV-r\nreaches of tbe Elk VixUey,      '.      *' ,\nMust Now be Adyerliisqd jwo\nWeeks; If Cajrie'd, \"RfcnS'h\n,|la5iseS'Ere Cabin'et Acts.\nPurauant lo tin- cloolBloii Uilcen liy\nthe city council Monday niKhl, I iy -\n'law No. 3211 providloK lor lit.- c]\u00a3\ntension of thi> ciiy'Ilnril!j* to.\"lnt?JtHio:\n\"the areas commonly, known ' as\nffnIt-view.\" wil] be snumitlon to-\"tlie\nvote ol' lhe electors of Nelson, at\ntho apprqacliin^ civic eleetvuns.   .\nBefore heing voleil upon. Hie measure must he' advertised fur l-.vo\nweeks. - If Iho electors carry il.\ntbo council will have to pass, a resolution bused- on it, asking lor Un-\nextension of lhe. city's boundaries\nas    proposed. Kiiially.    after   'Ihe\nfurther lapse of q full month, tlie\nlieutenant - Kovornur-in-oolincl! run\nproclaim Ibe extension, fixing He-\ndate on \u25a0 which it comes into  force..\nThe, council ' hns put'lhe bylaw\nthrough all the stages preliminary to\nits'submission tn tile voters, and it\nis  now .ready, lo  be .advertised.\nIts  full 'texl   is as  follows:\nText jil'lBylhw.\nCORPOKATIOX .()!\u2022'  THK   c'l'I'V   V1''\nNELSON.\nBy-Law  No.   3\u00bb.\nA Bylaw to provide for the extension'of the limits ot the City of\nNelson hy including wilhln said limits thc area commonly known- as\nFail-view. '    -\nWHEREAS tlie owners of nioi\"\nthan one-half in value of the lands\nhereinafter described have consented *in writing that thc said lauds\nbe Included within lhe limits or\nthe Glty of Nelson:\nAND WHEREAS it is expedient\nto extend the limits of the Municipality of thc City of NcUson to include   the   said   lands\nTHEREFORE       the municipal\nCouncil of the City of Nelson enacts as follows:\n1. That the limits ,of tho. Municipality of -the City of Nelson bo\nextended to .include therein -Lot\nFifty-eight A (68A) in Group One\n(\u20221)' of the District of Kootonuy ill\nfhe-Province of British'Columbia, as\nshewn on the Official Map of said\nj District of Knnteuav.-and. that uoi--\ntion of Lot Nrnety-six (96) in Group\nOfle (1) of said District or Kootenay,\ndescrib-ed as fellows: Commencing  at   t)io  Northwesterly   coruor   of\nsaid' Lot !IC; Uienee Easterly along\nIhe Northerly limit of said Lot 9,6\nto the intersection thereof with the\nSoutheasterly llmfi of View Slrect\nlis slicv.u'on the .'.lap of subdivision\nof pari, lot' said Lot 96 deposited in\nthe Land Registry office .at NelSon\najjl there numbered' ?84; thence\nS\u00abilhv,'osl.orly along lhe Sonlheast-\n.erly bonndacy of said Vriew Sstreet\nlo the intersection iherctif with the\nSoutherly boundary of' Selv.-yn- streei\nas .shewn on said .Map produced\nKaslerly; (li.-ne.-, . Westerly along\nlb.'' said (tSuullicrlv bouiulary ot said\nSelwyt) titri'et Jo-tlie, Easlerly boun-\nilur.v' ' of _ Lot Nlnely-'fiye (llfi) in\nHttijP'JyHb (1) 'd' said 'District of\nI'ix.irliii,-'-; beiiig Ibe Easterly, limit\nof Ijhe said-Cily of Nelson; liieoee\n.Vortherlv along lhe\", sold, Kasterly\nlihl'it of ..said   Let   115  to   Ibe  point  (if\n2. This Bylaw; shall bo known\nfor all purposes as \"t'iiy of Nelson\nKxtension  Bylaw, 3!)2ti.\"\n-DONE   AN'l\"   I'ASSI-ih   In   t'oun.-il\nnshijmliled - ibis day   'of\nDecember.   A.   I).,    I1I2D.\n'   Oily Clerk\nThe  bylaw  si.mils  in   the   name  or\nAid.   Mr,;.   W.   G.   fo:-l.-i..\nII1EI1. IS \u25a0\nNOW fl SHIPPER\nFive Cars of Ore Roll to the\nNoridhpost Smelter; Six\nMonths' Development.\nShip menu? to- the- 'mm\" Iter .'it\n\"Northport, \\yhsh.-, li'ivo been 'ue&an\nby tiiivTt*-i;iK-Vank(*(! Girl f<uld.niiiie\nnt  \u25a0Vinfr,   aiul   within   tho   lhat    lew\nilays   Civ-'   oars   of   ore   ijav.o   rolk-d\nsquthWr-l.\nTin- M'jiiin*? Clitr\/ini-iition of Cau-\nnrtn lias thiK' eroup uf pro]n*rti<?s\nuhdor :i \\eaaie' nnd bond tr'bm the\nI'bxasrXhn'hoe Girl Alining'1 doijipn,riy,\nand i'i)r the lust Mix months has\nliron (iii-ryiiiK i\"it a prnKram of de-\nv-elopm-ht   oh   various   levels, ,i.\n!.-'.   Collin::   is   super In t_n_eiit  of   .he\nT_ri year's ago Lho Yiuikoo' Girl\nwas 'ono \u25a0 of tho steady Bhippers.\nJSarly In lho iy.*e_ent year llie Hob-\nson Silvoi-.f_-.--ad company- owners of\nlho: Yanl.ee Girli and the Texas\nAlinintv oompany, owners of tho'-.Texas, oonibined-l-hoir interests for the\npurposes of (he deal with the ilin-\nIng   Corporation   ot   Canada.\n, . .\u00ab_\u25a0\u00a3--\t\nThe i'nlted Stales lias- 150. makes\nof   [jftHfioitger   automobiles;   .\nMOTHER!\n\"Californi,a Syrup of Figs\"\nChild's Best Laxative\nfctff   ^\nAccept \"California\" Syrup of Figs\nonly\u2014look for lho nauul California\non tho package, then you arc sure\nyour child is having tlie. beat and\nmost hantih--**-- physic for\/ the little\n\u25a0jtomi\/eh, liver aud howols. Children\nlovo its fruity taste. Full directions\non each bottle. Yon must say \"Calii\nCornia.\"\nlhe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co\nOF CANADA, LIMITED\nOfflcew, Smelting and  Refining Oeparinianll\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS OF  GOLD, SILVER.  COPPER  AND  LEAD  ORES\nF'r\u00abduci(r> at Cold, Silver, Capper, Bluettene, Pi( Lead and Zlna\n\"C- TADANAC   BRAND\nTIOLKGRAPHtr  llOH'LlW\n!ix>xi(;llT.\nA llirt-u-itui'ii'iri'd telcffrrilJhlc\nKami' will be pltiyod uitiiKlit 'k.--\nliveen tcjini.s of ten iiifn.i Sl'dr*, rep-\nrosi-iililii; llonli'l.ii:.-. Cnuil.'fii.ik nnd\niNelson. Thi' locn'i [on, ivilb will l\u00bb'\ntlii> ton .slaniliiiB Wglicsl In ilnr.-luli\ntbul'nby .tlmt is all bur cdmpBliid,\nwill .'lino up al lho Y. M. i.'. Jt. u.1-\ni ul   7:Sti -this evening-.\nKtOMIES  f'OAS'l'.\nTlniuyb tlie lljjbt SMnu(-.,il s-juu\nnnsHi'd vester.tiajt' ilowtitowfi',, mi lho\n\\\\oo(i\"\"n siilomilks nt tin- ur>;>'.-\nstroo-.K ai^il of Kuirviow* il perelsted\nsnffii-'i'ii'tly to Iii'Iiie oul tbo 'sltfls,\nAni.'- -t'lio fll-i.l  tlmo.'fliis  .soiison.\nNitre. Substitute .*c\nir.-\nB>m -. f.-'?teaih\nand get rid of the annoying hdckirfg-Mfee irK-Bfetfthroai\n\u2014the tight feeling jn the chest-\u2014the restless sleep and\nstuffy feeling in'Ihe head. :' ' -      -        ^     .\nNADRUCO SYRUP OF TAR with COD d\"-M* OB.\nCOMPOUND stops the cough because it heatstfieihroat\nand bronchial tubes, and driyeslthe cold out of the system,    j\nAgreeable to the taste.   ExcelTerit^oir children. *Keep a    '\nbottle handy.  SoM By All'BrusStiet.' ' *<\"\u25a0'' ?'(**f\nPrepared hyV.mm\\ iftrfil atid Chemical Co-afHafol: Glfi-i? IsMeS.\ni--c__-__t-_'i'^t_a\u00abl_!._gt-iKsO iiifi\u2014miiii-iUi winl iii\u00ab-i ills.\n\u25a0\u25a0ancS Seal\n^\nI\nNothiilcJ  -else \"will   do\nMo oilirr c-ncoinprirc with Seal' Dr.ina.\nWade on!)- from the (mast m6m*\"*_in-\"\ngrown bears, which lirtve developed\n\"Bitftfly, absorbing goodneffii from the air,\nthe sun and the Inxitrious sci\\ or the\ncool woncierful Tropic Uplr.n--^. *\nPcrfcrtlj- Blended and R6n**ted, the ric!\nflavour SMllcd into thc Ti|is.  ;   [\n\"UO.-'TUa, I\"*.-\u00ab:. 7.- - l.'il _. -*m*k~\n(ails, '.im ;i Ku'btit'iafe \"f ir ; ir. \"'otjev\npoiAilar l_rd'nx, have :ojno i'fi'fo\nfuvor Blnei* the ailveni of prnhUji-\ntion, fi'ccpi\"*attfg to Information 'jlvon\nout \\p.' Willliini S. Bi-iry. dirt'ctoi*\ni'l' nr;islr;i;!iin in the sl;tt \u2022 tfopiu-i,-\nrficnl (U* ilrulr cnmrol. II'** Mjilcl h:t!ho\n(XepSrHtionl hud n.pUccO -i IrlWijrt-\ncljtjti'fi Ihero i.sc in ' the ealo ol frweet\n*.-j)Jrii!i 'of 'iil-fp, nnd had found that\nthe flrii*; -.yan Ih-Iji;*; uncd :\\\u00bb :i \"\u25a0\u25a0nh-\nsittut' Tor iiqu'or \"among ilii; h-.-lh-t*\nej-ij-Bt-s. He culloij attention to* Llie\nd*atig_er in the practice a; lie hAlO.\nthe ilrtig* oontaina itlcofiul. Hodjurn\nnitrate nnd :;u 1 phtii-ic iirid, wlTic'i\niti a solvent  of metnU*. '\n;_ f -,(.\u25a0 .,.'   -.-\u25a0.     .''''',''*-\u25a0   i*-'fWnd( i-;ji fir.(*-*T<yjii^. Ac-j(l'[T\"0Vi^t<>c-6\u00bb.   \u25a0<\n- ' '..Vifi- i:,-',w...  \u25a0 \u25a0 ..    ....   ':'.   Va^V^l.l\u25a0^^^^j^\u25a0f\u00ab^-Vn^,f.\u2022'^uw^   \"\"\n]     cA'A^S o_. SAxnoKy,.    mONTR^.iL-;\nb-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiif\nJ-\n:i'(*   in   irregular ihasoH   in\nhnr-i 'ue'alo known atv jet  roc!-..\nChiropractic\nCORRECTS    \".\nDISEASES\nof  tlio  following:\n\\ brain\u25a0'\u25a0;\u25a0' -\nEHf.HH^.C -'\"\ntHMAx,\nftlttSp\nHEAfiT\". -.'\";\nLUNGS\nLIV_ft   ..\nSTOMACH\nSPLEEN '\u25a0-\u2022'   |\nKIDNEYS     I\nPANCREAS j\nBOWELS\nAPPENDIX   i\nBLADDER    j\nLOWER\nLIMBS\nSl'INE, OP MAN\nConsultation is free.\nDr. Chevalier, Chiropractor\nALLEN   BLOCK. PHONE   619\nHOW TO 'BE FIT\" AT SIXTY\n*BV DU. 1.B.1! HEBBISBX HM1TH. .       .1.\n\u25a0As our boys \"came marc'l-;\ning home,\" they brought a certain red-blooded doctrine, ariA\nshoiced its the glory ci*\"_ perfect\nbody. They-vv-l'sfcow^ttB'-oHfr\nto \"keep fit,\" even -if we-haVe\npassed middle life mi are b\u00ab>\nyohd the atliletic-stage. For\nthe tired business mart, tliti\nman who feels 'the daily grirfd\nand the nightly fag\/haBine^fjeiP\nappetite, headaches, inetves\nunstrung, is gloomy, ending ia\na soggy brain, try thev right\nway. Get out of bed, ppen the\nwindow, breathe deeply, exercise the army \"settmg-tfpW\nexercise or use -duinb bells^\nuntil in a warm glow. ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0:\u25a0\nBefore brealcfast take hot\nwater, and occasionally castor-\noil or a pleasant laxative made\nup of May-apple, aloin, jalap, and sold by all druggists as\nDr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets.\nAs Prof. Strauss says, \"The excretion of uric acid we\nare able to effect by exciting diuresis.\" Drink copiously of\nsoft rain or distilled water, six or eight glasses per day, hot\nwater before meals, and obtain Dr. Pierce's Anuric\nTablets, for GO cts., at the nearest drug store and. take'\nthem three, times a day. If you want a trial package send\n10 cents to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.\n\"Anuric\" (auti-uric-acid) is the recent discovery nl\nDr. Pierce and is much more potent than lithia\" '\"\"\"; -v>itl\ndissolve uric acid as hot tea dissolves sugar. .. .. -\u00bb:\nr^s^agmmmmaaaaamm^igmfi^amJiifH! i.hi mi ji.ihhii\n__.\n fgpl.\nr*THE NELSON DXU-T NEWS,  WEDNESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 8, 1$Z0^\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except\n\u2022Sunday by the Newa publishing Com-\nosny,  Limited, Nelson, B.C., Canada.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nend checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Com-\nK-.ny, Limited, and In no case to\ndividual   members   of   the   staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C.\netatements of circulation mailed on\ninquest or may be seen at the office\n0- any advertising agency recognized\nby   the  Canadian   Press  Association.\nSubscription rates: By mail (country), 60 cents per month; $6 per year.\nOutside Canada, a month, 75c; a year,\n\u20227.50. Delivered, 75c per month; ?4\nfor six months; $7.50 per year, payable\nIn  advance.\n\"Member   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulation.\nWEDNESDAY, DEC. 8, 1920.\nEfficient\nbuseke\n_\u00bbup%.A.Kbr*n>\u00abn\nmixture. Add 1 cup dry bread\ncrumbs, one-quarter cup < tomato\nsauce and 2 teaspoons salt. Blend\nand shape in a mould. . Turn out on\nthe roasting pan 'und bake one\nhour. Serve with either brown or\ntomato   sauce.\nMORE~ONE-DISH    DINNER   MENUS\nHave Three\" Official\nLanguages\nWhile in some parts of Cannula there is the bilingual question, Palestine comes into the\nlimelight as a tri-lingual country. There English, Arabic and\nHebrew are recognized as the\nofficial languages. All government ordinances, official notices\nand forms will be published in\nthese languages. Correspondence may be addressed to any\ngovernment department in any\none of these languages. Correspondence will be issued from\ngovernment departments in\nwhichever language is practically convenient Telegrams may\nbe sent in any of the three languages. All railway and road\nnotices will be in the three languages.\nIn municipal and rural areas,\nwhere there is a considerable\nJewish population, the three\nlanguages will be used in the\noffices of the district and sub-\ndistrict governors of the municipalities and of other official\nbodies in the same manner as\n\" in the government departments.\nSuch districts will be termed\ntri-lingual areas. They will be\n' specified by the high commissioner- The present tri-lingual\nareas are: Jerusalem city, Jaffa\ntown and district, subdistricts\nof Tiberias and Safed, Hamleh\ntown and subdistrict, Haifa\ntown, Zimmarin subdistrict.\nOther areas may be added from\ntime to time, the guiding principle being the presence of a\npopulation of not less than 20\nper cent of Jews in the population of the area.\nThe official announcement\nprovides that in courts of law\nand land registries of a trilingual area, every process,\nevery official copy of a judgment, and every official document shall be issued in the language of the person to whom it\nis addressed; and written and\noral proceedings shall be conducted in any of the three languages.\nThe government, it is reported, is sending its official translations to the Hebrew Language\nInstitute for correction.\nTlie demand for one-dish dinners,\nsoftened with several rows of cording,\nstarted during tlie war, has never\nabated\u2014and let's hope it never will.\nFor the one-dish dinner stands for\neconomy of money and labor, and that\nIs what we housekeepers aro seeking.\nBraised Liver\nwith Peas\nCoffee    individual Cornstarch Puddings\nBraised Liver: (Use calf's or lamb's\nliver.) To 1 1-2 pounds of liver allow 1-2 pound salt pork, 3 turnips, II\ncarrots, 3 onions, 2 stalks of celery,\n2 cups hot water, 1 bay leaf, 2 cloves,\nand 1-2 teaspoon salt.. Cut the vegetables   and   the   pork' into   dice  and\nBY LENORE\n\\m\/ )\nplace them In a baking pan. Put\nthe liver on top of them, add .the\nhot water with the slices and seasoning. Cover with another pan and\nlet hake for two hours in a moderate\noven, hasting frequent!*.'. Serve on\na large platter surrounded with the\nvegetables from thc pun and also pour-\nins over H 1 can of peas heated and\ndrained of their liquor, and the following   sauce:\nSauce for Braised \/i-tver; Melt 2\ntablespoons butter, adding 2 tiible-\n'spooris of flour and blending well;\nwhen brown add the liquor from the\npan in which the liver was baked (If\nthis has dried considerably, add a little boiling water to the pan and stir\nwell). When this sauce is thick season it with salt and pepper and pour\nit over tlie liver on the serving platter.\nSteamed Moulds of Left-6ver Meat\nCoffee        Individual   Tapioca   Puddings\nSteamed Moulds of Left-Over Meat:\n(Use beef, lamb or veal). To 1 pint\nof flnelv-rhopped, cold, cooked meat,\nadd 1-2 \"cup of milk, 1 egg, 3-4 cup\ndried bread crumbs, 2 tablespoons butter, 1-2 teaspoon salt and 1-4 teaspoon pepper. Put the milk In the\nsaucepan, add the- bread crumbs, ami\nlet cook until t-mipofn. Then take\nfrom the fire, add bUtier, cool slightly, add the eggs (well beaten) and tne\nseasoning; next stir In th* popped\nmeat, turn the mixture Into tfuuerea\ncups or romeklns, put these cups XO a\npan containing hot water and bake for\n1-2 hour\u2014or steam for the same length\nof time. Serve, turned out of their\nmoulds, on a largo, platter with a can\nof hot peas turned over them. If\ndesired, the peas may be put in a\nthick cream sauce, seasoned with salt,\npepper and  soup stock.\nAda C, Answer: The words for your\nChristinas charades might be \"Mince\nPie\" (act out \"mint,\" then \"spy,\nthen the wholo word) and \"Thanksgiving\" (first act out \"thanks,\" then\n\"giving.\" then the whole word.) *\u2022\u00bb\nthink vour idea is a splendid one for\nthe amusement of elderly people; old\nage is always delighted by a pretty\npicture of Youth, and young people\nnever look sweeter than when taking\npart in lhal quaint, old-fashioned\ngame- Charades.\nYou will not need an Improvised\nstage tor Ibis. Simply have the el-\nderlv people sitting in one room facing a doorwnv and the young people\nIn tin* other room (where they will\nhave such garments and \"make-up\" as\nthoy will need to act out the charades). When tho young actors are\nready to make their appearance, they\nwill simply step Inside the doorwaj\nand do their acting. Make sure that\nany deaf persons are near enough to\nto sec, and all chairs in the \"audi-\nhear, any with poor sight near enough\ninee\"   commanding  a  good   view.\nTon>orniw--A Christmas   Party   for\nYour Child   That   Costs   But   $1.50\nIn a shop which prides itself bt}\ncreating \"clothes with personality,\"\nwas found this interesting ,frock. Certainly free from the commonplace is\nthe novel cut of tlie bodice, girdled\nwith a belt of metal plaques und jado,\nand the arrangement of the monkey\nfur trimming is decidedly different\nfrom   tho   usual.\nTlie dress is developed in soft duvetyn in a golden tan color, becoming\nalike to dark-eyed brunette or grown\neyed blonde. Tightly fitting wrist\nlength sleeves are favored as stylish\nand   comfortable   for   midwinter   wear.\nMonkey fur also trims the tan duvetyn hat, the cavalier turn of the brim\nDAILY   RECIPE\nTEN YEARS AGO TODAY        |\nThe annual bonsplcl of the British\nColumbia' Curling a\nheld at Ci'-nbrooU,\nbe Jan. 1-5. This\nyesterday'** annual\nprovincial associati<\nHotel, which was :\ngates from' both 1\nKootenay.\na. tion will be\nmd the date will\nwns decided ut\nnit-King or thu\nM at Che Hum-?\nUGftded by del-\n[as,     .md     Wea\\\nThe Ymir gold catnip\nlight this week for a i\nclass reasons. Tho Di\nDundee mountain. rm'O\nant strike\u2014a week or\nmeeting   of   the   aire\n\u25a0the Hint\nr o\u00a3  fir*\nDd.ee min-*, on\n\u2022ds an import\ntwo ago at a\n\u2022.torn   in *Ne\\v\nYork,   thp   Yankee   Olrl   Cold   Mines.\nLtd., was retoiftl*\u00bbized.\ncreek to Kaslo. On this occasion the\nKaslo boat carried off the honors,\nbeating the Kuskanopk four- minute.**-\non the run. fjie crew of the Kasla.\nsay their boat is faster than anything -else on the lake, which they art-*\nready to' demonstrate whenever occasion   offers.\nThe first wreck on .the new route\nto Spokane accurred on'\"Wednesday\nevening between Creston and Kuskan-\nook. The afternoon train was spec-dint? along at thirty miles- an hour\nwhen the engineer saw a rock-slide\nahead, lie applied the air and jumped\nsustaining d scalp wound, while the\nfireman, who $bo leaped, escaped\nwith a   bad shaking.\nSteamer Brings More\nBullion from Britain\nTWENTV  WARS  AGO  TODAY\nThe  steamers   Kasl\nhad   anollKT   brush\nevening un  lhe run\nand   KoUaniM\nWedn.iSiUij'\nWoodbury\nNEW YOHK, De-'.'.. 7\u2014 The steamer\nKinlund, arriving ' hern today from\nAntwerp and Southampton, brought\n$2,700,000 in gold for Kuhn, Loeb\nand company. The consignment mas\nport of a supply which Iho bankers\nhave bucu rciwiving trom London tor\nseveral months and which now totals\napproximately  $70,000,000.\nMECHANICS' TOOLS\nWe have on hand one of the finest lines of Mechanics'\nTools in the interior of B.C., consisting of\nPlanes, Saws, Chisels, Squares, Rides, Bits, Grinders,\nBraces, Lathes, Hammers, Wrenches, Etc.,\nManufactured by\nStanley Rule and Level Co. f THESE STAND\nGoodell, Pratt & Co. | c~\u201e\nSimmonds Saw Co. | -'''>\nWhitman & Barnes [\nQUALITY\nNelson Hardware Co.\nDRAWER  1050\nNELSON,  B.C.\nCALORIC\nJohn Burns & Son\nThe Original Pipeiem*. Furnac*\nOne Register Heat* the House\nMad nr ate    Priced\u2014Economical\nVernon Street,\nMfilROTl,   Tl. ft\n*\u2022?-\n-^\n(Paste this in Your Cook Bunk.)\nIii due)  lAini.\nSouk t cui soy hcana over night,\nin morning drain ami recover with\nfresh Water. Add one chopped and\nemail union, one-half teaspoon salt,\n2 clove's, one-quarter teaspoon thyme\nand. one bay-i-a,, Bring to the\nboiling point and simmer slowly until tender (or cook in fireless cook'\ncr.) When tender, boil until liquid is almost all gone. Trim and\n\u25a0\u2022Wipe a beef kidney antl run through\nthe food-elifjpitei', with 1 small onion, ) a littlr; piece of salt pork, half\na green pepper and tlie cooked bean\nThe Finest and Purest Tea Sold\nEditorial Notes\nL\nDo your Christmas Shopping\nearly.\n\u00ab . \u2022\nThe Germans appear to regard the treaty of Versailles in\nabout the same light as they\nregarded the treaty guaranteeing Belgian neutrality.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nPaper money is blamed for\ncarrying grip germs in France\nand causing an epidemic. Paper\nmoney, when there is too much\nof it, will cause a worse disease\nto  the  body politic  than  la\ngrippe.\n. \u2022 \u2022\nIs Kerensky, once hailed as\nthe Moses who would lead Russia to true liberty, but who failed so signally, to \"come back\"?\nHe is reported as having been\nchosen to lead a big new offensive by Poland, Hungary and\nRussia against soviet Russia.\nThere is genuine and unmistake&ble\npleasure in its daily use.\nBlack\nor Mi\ni - Green, i Try a packet from your grocer,\nixed I but: be sure it's \"Salada\"     ,\u201e,\nflu \"Perfect Qift\narge\nSterling Silver Coffee ScU\n$50.00 to $700.00\nWHAT \\\namount of money\nis spent upon ephemeral things, things that\n,with the passage of\ntime lose their beauty\nand are forgotten!\nSilver always remains\nbeautiful. Time's only\neffect is to add to its\ncharm. Beauty, utili'.y\nand.above allowability, these are the three\nessentials of the perfect gift '\nDiamond\nMerchants\nGoldsmiths\nSilversmiths\n.-**\nHenry lii, L. \u25a0.,\u25a0 Son* Limited\n-Vrlclo <9f *Voss*3Ssiot\\\ns\nAdam\nM 41\u2014Mahogany\nO all who own a McLagasi Phonograph comes the pride of possession\u2014a lasting, satisfying pride,\nfor the McLagan is an artistic creation of talent and rare beauty. It is built\nto fit an ideal. Its reproductions are\nastonishingly faithful, the tone mellow,\nfull, and pure. In appearance it is an\naristocrat, an exquisitely carved gem of\nart in the Period Styles, carried out in\nich, fl\nnc\nawless woods.\nThe\nGgat%\ngraph\nPL\nQueen Anne\nM 25\u2014Mahogany of\nBlack Walnut\nMahogang\nono\u00a3\nnumbers, among its most appealing and exclusive features, lhe\nMcLagan-Fletcher Reproducer, a scientific triumph. It brings out\ndetail from a record that cannot be heard when played by instruments equipped with ordinary reproducers. ' The volume' and\nrichness of sound ^reproduced by this little device is astonish-big.\nAnd the tone is so much more mellow, full and truthful. It\nbrings out the velvety soft tones; while the vast torrent of sound of\na great orchestral finale or operatic selection bears not a trace of\nthat unpleasant blast so often heard. There are no screws in the\nMcLagan-Fletcher Reproducer\u2014nothing to work loose, rattle or gel\nout of order. It is the harmonious co-ordination of the Reproducer\nwith the McLagan-Fletcher Tone Arm, and the sound' chamber\nthat has made the McLagan famous for its perfection of tonal\nreproduction.\nThe McLagan range covers a variety of twenty-two models\u2014\u25a0\nfrom those of moderate expense to instruments that would grace\nthe most luxuriously furnished homes. Any McLagan dealer will\ntake pride in showing'you this instrument in, its many different and\nlovely designs.\nTHE McLAGAN PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION\nLIMITED  ,\nSTRATFORD ONTARIO\nWtkltspeal<$ for if self\nHEAR THESE' UNDISTURBED IN ONE OF OUR SOUND PROOF,\nVENTILATED DEMONSTRATION ROOMS\nWILLIS PIANOS, LTD.\nm\n304 Baker St. (The New Store)\n h\nTBB NELSUN DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 8, \"1520.\nPage 5.\nSmart Evening\nSlippers from .\n$7.50 to $14.50\nFor Those Evening\nOccasions \u2022\nOne simply must have .1 pair of charming slippers\u2014and \"those evening occasions\" will he bo frequent during tho holidays. This store\nis ready to outfit you 'with evening and party slippers of elegant\n\u25a0style\u2014slippers that will give tho necessary touch to yotir evening\ncostume.\nR. Andrew   <&   Co.\nLeaders in Foot Fashion\nS? 11 \u25a0 c..-cfflitkjM;:cM:vr.<iSi\nCOPY RIGHT. KEYSTONE .VjEWJlOjKEW.YORIt\nSTAR  FLIER QUITS ARMY AIR SERVICE   *  -\nCaptain Schroecler, holder of thc world's airplane altitude record and\nthe only man who ever fell live miles and lived to tell thc tale has befn\nhonorably discharged from the army air service and will re-enter business\nin Chicago.    Schrocder is at right of photo.\nNothing Refreshes\nLike Lifebuoy\n The fine cream-like  ingredients make\na quick, velvety lather at once cleansing\nand soothing in its effects. The mild\ncarbolic solution present is a grateful skin\ntonic and disinfectant. ,\nThis hygienic health-odour vanishes in\na few seconds after use, but the feeling of\ncleanliness and glowing health remains.\nLifebuoy is sold by all grocery,\ndrug and department stores.\nyoY\nHEALTH iO-AP\nLEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO\nHave you tried\niFDUOY SHAVIMi Ittta\"?\nTONIGHT\nTontot*rowAlriih,t|\n\"','.CetcAJ5fB,b)e; ,' ,-*!\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO., NELSON, B. C.\nJust received a carload of\nSECOND CUT .WASHINGTON ALFALFA\nCar of Green**Oat.Hay expected this week\nWashington' and Alberta Timothy in Stock\nThe Ellison Milling & Elev. Co.,\n\"LIMITED\nSuccessors to the Taylor Mfg. Co.\nNELSON, B'C;     '\",\nKootenai) and Boundary\nss\nTE\nSouth Slocan Women's Institute Entertains with Song\nand Dance.\nSOUTH SLOCAN, Dec. . 6.~The\nWomen's Institute held a concert\nand dance in the hall on Friday No. 26, the object being to\nraise funds for the Red Cross appeal for tho war stricken districts\nin Europe and a very generous response was made, the hall being\nfilled wilii a large and \u25a0 representative\ngathering of the whole district, who\nwere not only made h tippy by holding\nin such a worthy cause, but were, repaid by having the tithe of their lives\nin   an   evening's   hearty   enjoyment.\nThe program was most del IitM fullv\nvaried, with songs und dances intermingled. The vocalists, who all acquitted themselves in splendid fashion\nwere Mrs. Hugiird, Mrs. Russet, . Miss\nBrown and Mr. Lamb. The latter\ncontributed several songs after oft-\nrepeated   applause.\nThose who took part lh Jho instrumental music were Mrs. Moore antl\nG. N. Brown, who each rendered classical pianoforte solos; Mrs. Nash,- who\ncharmed with her lively dance music\nand a four-piece orchestra composed\nof Miss \"Watts, Miss- D. Brown, Mr.\nLamb   and   Mr.  E.   Watts.\nSouth Slocan Women's Institute Votes Sixty Dollars to\nRed Cross.\nLadies9 Aid Bazaar\nPays Off All Presbyterian\nDebts and Leaves Sutplus\n' KASr.0, \"Dec. 7.\u2014St. Andrew's Pfcs-\nbyterinn church .Ladles' aid held their\nannual bazaar on Friday afternoon,\nDee. 3., in the Eagles' hall, There\nwore tables of sewing work of useful\nand fancy articles; home cooking;\nhome made confectionery, etc. Ice.\n.cream, tea and coffee, cake and sandwiches were served; and also luncheon    to   a   limited   number.\nTn the evening nn impromptu concert was put on, in which Miss\nTwlss, Mr. Jones, Mrs. Hewt.r, jr., Mr.\nSherwln. Mr. McPhee Mrs. .Tones, Miss\n\u00a3111 no and others delighted a 0011-\nsidi-raltle audience. Mr. Hunter presided.\nThereafter Mr.' Kane put on thr;\nscreen bis beautiful series of natural\n\u2022polor photographs of Kaslo old-\ntime figures and scenes of charming\nInterest and information-\u2014also British\n.Columbia scenes\u2014altogether a most\nvaluable and Instructive collection, the\nseeing of which was 'Im'Cense!y enjoyed. Altogether the receipts to the\nLadles'^ id treasury amounted to over\n$4X5, and when all the payments are\nmade   it    will   excued   $r>0(\u00bb.\nThe entire arrangements were a\ncredit to all concerned. The Manse\nextensions and alterations cost between ?I_00 and ?J300, and it is gratifying to have to state thut now the\namount Is all paid, and a surplus left\nover.       Why.   shoudn't   there   be'.'\nAPPLEDALE NOTES\nAFTLKDALJfi, Dee. 7.\u2014Mi' Harding\nwent   Into   Nelso   last    Monday.\nMiss C, Elliott is homo'from. Cranbrook   on   a   visit.\nSeveral land seekers from Salmon\nArm   were   in   at   the   week   end.\nAl tho business meeting* of the Ladle:\"' Prbgri'ss.lve asspolntiion held on\\\nWednesday, It was decided to send a\ndonation to the Empire Kuiid, and to\nhave a booth for the sale of home\nmade* candy, ice cream, etc., at tho\ndance   on    New   Year's    eve.\nMr. and Mrs. C. j. Stainton are visiting Mrs: StalTiton's parents while Mr.\nStainton is recovering from aa operation   for    appeiidicits.\nA pleasant time was spent on Saturday night at the ball, wlfen the\nMen's progressive club held their social   club   night.\nHAkfcOP NOTES\nHARROP, Dec. 7.\u2014Mrs. Stevenson,\nof Sunshine Eay-, arrived Sunday\nnight after a six months' visit in\nScotland and England. Mr. Stevenson\nleft he-re several days ago and met\nhi-r   In   Calgary   on   her   return   home.\nMrs. OKilvio caught a 12 3-*. pound\nclyir   lu   the   lake   on   Sunday.\nIt has been suggested that life preservers ]><.' placed at the approach ra-\nth-RV than   at  the bottom   of the  wharf,\nSOUTH SLOCAN, Dec. 7.\u2014The Women's Institute held their monthly\nmeeting in the hall on Wednseday\nlast. Mrs. Ashley was in the chair.\nAfter the business of the meeting a\nsocial time was spent. Mrs. Parker\nand Miss Watts played a duet. Songs\nby Mrs. Martin and Miss Brown nnd\na comic recitation, by* Mrs. Ashley\nwere rendered. Tea was served by\nMrs.    Yeatman.\n\u25a0 A collection was taken In aid of\nthe Red Cross appeal, the amount realized being $3.75, social $34.25 and tlie\ntagging done by Mrs. Humphrey and\nMrs. R. Georges $24.00; total, $1*2.00.\nOf this amount $00.25 has been sent\nlo headquarters in Vancouver and\n$1.75 goes to the cbildrens' fund, for\nwhich Miss Brown Is arranging a\npantomime.\n\u2014: .   mm i\nSouth Slocan Women's\nAuxiliary Hold Annual\nSocial and Sale of Work\nSOUTH SLOCAN, Dec. fi. \u2014 The\n\"Women's auxiliary held their annual social and sale of work on\nSaturday evening No. 20, it was not\nonly tiie most .successful, but one\nof the most enjoyable variety entertainments tSiat has been hold for\nsometime^\nTlio needlework and candy stall\nwas a centre of attraction and realized the sum of $40.00.\nOno very interesting feature, of the\nprogram was an advertising contest, the advertisement being arranged round lho. walls. The prize winners were Mrs., R. It. Long and R,\nC.   Passmore. \u25a0\nMrs. Ashby recited in her usual\nch*inning   manner.\nMiss Drown contributed a musical\nmonologue and completely captivated' the audience with her artistic interpretation  of  tlie  spring dance.\nAn execelleiit sit down supper wa\u00ab\nserved followed by a dance. The sum\nof $75 was realized for tho Womana\nauxiliary   funds.\n_ The conveners were Amusements,\nMrs. WattS, Stall, Mrs. -Humphry;\nSupper,   Mrs.   Yeastmun.\nThe committees were compased of\nMrs. Gansner, Mrs. R. Georges, Mrs.\nMelneriok, Mrs. Anderson, Mrs. Parker.  \"Mrs. 'Fen-wlck,  Mrs-  Ashby.\nWomen's Institute at\nHarrop   Entertains\nWith   Whist   Drive\nHARROJPi Dec. 7. -\u2014'One of the\nmost enjoyable evenings this\nyear was spent Friday night at\nMrs. Ogilvlea' homo; wi.ere tlie Women's Institute gave a whist drive,\nthe proceeds to be. devoted to a\n.Christmas treat for the children at\nthe school entertainment. AL curd*\nMrs. .Harrop was ..successful in winning firs prize, the booby was captured by Mrs. W. Drltton. The mens'\nprizes were won by W. D.'Ogilvie and\nLee Ogilvie anil tho booby was then\nauctioned by the winner, bringing in\nan   additional   $1.45.\nTo dale $i_.ZQ has been raised for\nthis    fund.\nSOUTH SLOCAN NOTES\nSOUTH SLOCAN, Dec. 7.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. if. w. Tbriug, or Vancouver.\nivbo have been oil a motor trip through\ntin: interior and tbo guests of Mr. and\non Monday last oa their .return trip,\nMrs. 1<\\ D. Yeatman for a. time, left\ngoing   via  -Pert tic ton*.\nMr. Dowuie, who left here three\nyears ago to reside in tlie east, 1ms\nreturned. Mrs. Downle is expected\nearly iu the Now Year. Mr. Downle\nIs accompanied by his brother, who\nalso   Intends, to   settle   bore..\nMr. aud Mrs; Frank Walts and baby,\nof Evans Creek, Slocan, have been\nspending a week here, returning Monday. ,\nas to the\nBEST CORN FLAKES\nwhen you have\nyour first taste of\nPOSTlbASTIES\nThese flakes bear a dis- Af.\ntinctive name because of f :\ntheir distinctive 0^1^ fifi.\nThey are meant to-aaid^ -'\ndo .excel in _very way\/\/,' ,j\nJAat is why PostToasties are the\/\nPOPULAR CORN FLAKES ?||\nIN\/CANADA ':;^f||||\nSold by grocers everywhere!\nMade hy  ',    ,    \u2022\nCanadianBsstuiiiCeieal G_IIt4.,\"Win_sor,Ont'\nThe Store for Quality\nChoose Your CHRISTMAS PRESENTS\nFrom These\nWednesday Morning Specials\nWomen's KID GLOVES at $2.50\nTail.  Mode  and Black  Kid aioves, all guaranteed  makes  ln  sizes\n\u25a0^ 1     5>_  to 714.    Wo are .selling* these at ahout half of  manufacturers'\n  $2.50\nWednesday Special, the  pair\t\nWomen's FIBRE SILK HOSE at $1.00\nA   Christmas  Special   worth   taking   advantage of.    They conic  in\nBlack,   White,   Tan  und   Navy   Fibre   Silk   with   Hale   tops.     Sizes\n,   *Vj to 10.   An excellent gift.\nj  , At per ^>air  \t\n\"I1.00 ii\nEmbroidered Linen Handkerchiefs 3 for $1.00\nAlways a pleasing Christmas Gift. They aro sheer, fino\nlinon, with band embroidery;, in white or colors. . Fitly\n.dozen in  tbo  lot, tf\u00bb-*|   AA\nWednesday Special, three for         \"tOXtUU\nHair RIBBONS at 49c yard\nEvery conceivable color-in wide Taffeta Ribbon, A splendid\nquality ribbon, much under-priced. Get the. little girls a\nsupply for Christina.*-. yflG\/i\nWednesday Special, per yard  Tt\u00ab7C\nWomen's SWEATER COATS at $15.00 Each\nslyl\npure\n$15.00\nA worth-while bargain in -sweaters.    Made in  Goat or Tuxedo styles, with\nbelts   or   Hashes,   ami   with   roll    or   square collars.  Mado of pure wool  in\nall the best culors.   Sized u> -11.\nWednesday  Special, each\t\nv    Fine TABLE CLOTHS at $4.95\nGood duality Table Cloths in famous \"Colleen\" Brand.   Several' patterns to\nchoose from.    Size 08*03  Inches.    Values lo J7.00. tt>\u00bb  QfT -\nWednesday   Morning  Special           \u00abD_.I\/tl\nTABLE CLOTHS ai $3.75\nSiKP   rt-lxM'.ln'ctf-ihj;   for   small   tables;     Pretty   desigli\nWednesday    Morning   Specie*.',   each\t\n611 Baker Street\ntabling!   Values 10 si.so eacii. (jj>n rrr\nPhone 200\nROSSLAND NOTES\n. DOOSSLAND, Due. \"**..\u2014Miss pearl\nHayden has left for Qranbrbok, where\nshe lias accepted a position with W.\nD.   Hill's   atorc.\nDick Egell and A. Nuthcrson, of th.;\nBind; of Montreal staff at Trail, were\nguests    in    the   ctly    last    eveiUng,\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Wright, of\nTrail, are guests hi tbe city over the\nweek-end..\n.lames Iloode, of- tbe -ConsoHdatea\nstaff at Trail, was in thi? city, last\nevening.\nMiss Ib'lene Degagne, speiil . the\nweek-end in the city from Trail, thp\nSliest or.'her'' sister, Mrs. J. H. Dcs-\ncliampy.\nBert Gordon and Fred McNeill are\nquests in the city this afternoon from\nTrail.\nTlie first dance of the season of the\nISiit're Xous Club, \\yas belli last evi-n-\ning In lhe Oddfellows' Mil, and rt\nmost enjoyable time was bad hv all.\nSupper   was   served   at   midnight.\nC'oimly Judge Uuugi they pleaded\n'that ihe. bride was no longer Thornton's mother-in-law after he obtained\nbis divorce. .IiuTgo Lang said thero\nmight be something in that and took!\nthe   CI .-. '\nthe eounthry ns anny one.\"\u2014Passing\nSin\nider   advisement.\nTlie   puff   adder   of   South   Africa\nusually   glides   along    partly   buried\nMJsl\n1'1-ks:\n\"How    do    you    do?    Ho\nguod.\nat  yl\nni   io   eoni'*?\"\n. The\nNew\nCook:   \"Don't   mintU.u   it\nSure.\nI'm\nas   fnml   ;;v   a,   wak-ijul   in\n\u00bb**.M'';.';. *\u2022*<\u2022*\u2022\u2022;.\u2022'..*'.}.\u2022*...$..*< '.\"K* \u25a0*.\u00ab*h>.*h***Km**'\n%      Home-made Remedy\n%     Stops Coughs Quickly\nAfter the \"Flu\"\nI'lll'lt CHILOIIICX HAD\nWhooping Cough\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\norgl\nMU'CAN' CITY, Dec. l! \u2014 Mr:\nB. Garrett, of flrand Forks,\ntown on Friday on her way to visit\nFriends in New 'Denver. Mrs. Garret\nwus tho guest of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nMadden   while   in   town.\nT.   (..  Carter,  principal  of   lhe  public\nschool,   spent   the  week   end   In   Nelson;\nMrs.  H,  L.  Reynolds and children  returned  home   from   Nelson on   Friday.\nPatrick   Maguire spent   tbe   week   end\nin    Nelson.\nI?\nDivorces Wife, Marries Her\nMother; Judge Queries\nRelationship.\nLOUISVILLE,    Ky.,    Dec.\n-(By\n! Canndia\ns)~-Walter   Thornton,\na Buducah  cooper,  married  his  mo\nil tbcr-inlaw- on Thanksgiving, and\nthe 'honeymoon \"iiisted four days.\nThey were arrested 'on a charge of\nviolating the Kentucky statute which\nsays \"that a man shall not marry\nthe   mother   of   his   wife.\"\nThornton inarricr Miss May Hale\nfive years ago. Recently Thornton\nobtained a divorce on the ground of\ninfidelity, and he and \u25a0 his young\ndaughter 'continued to live at tho\nhome of the mother-'iij-Iaw, Mrs.\nkittle Hale. Thornton is\" 32 and\nthe    bride .-4$.     - ArrsU^p.ed , before\n^rhoi)pbf& Cc-tii**!], although specially n disc,.so.'of childhood, is.by no\nmeans confined to that period, but\nitnay occur at any time of life. It\nis olio of the most d-iufi-Tuus diseases\njof infants- and yearly causes more\ndeaths than scarlet fever, typhoid or\n'diptheria, and is' more common in\nji'onialo than mate children.\n| Whocping Cough' starts with\nisiiefj-rjig, watering of the eyes, irri-\njtation of lhe thi*uat, fevorishntvis and\ncough.\nDr. Wood's .Norway Pine Syrup is\nhighly recommended by mothers\nj everywhere for the relief of this\ntrouble as it helps to clear the elog-\nged-up air passages of the' mueou*--\nand phlegm that has cotlectud, and\nin this way bring on the \"whoop\"\nwhich brings lhe 'so-nnndi-soiigli't-for\nrelief and heals and soothes the\nlungs.\nMrs. ,1. M. House, Imperial, Susie,\nwrites:\u2014\"After the 'flu,' \u25a0 last fall,\nmy four children took whooping\ncough .md one of them developed\nbronchitis- After using two or three\nbottles of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine\nSyrup they' were greatly relieved of\nthoir nasty coughs. It Is an especially good remedy for children, and is\nso. nice they take it readily, and ask\nfeY   more.\"\nDr. \"Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is\n3Iic nnd (JOc a bottle at all dealers.\nPut up only by The T. Milburn Co..\nLimIted,   Toronto.   Oni,\n\"t4       Tbo best enir-b mcdi'-lno ti>ii rver      w\n<\u00bb li.,r<!.   .11 ji-.-ijrB-T-*\u25a0\".\/c-_;iyr -tl        *\n* tLUickly _.ia_e.   tJuTes a^oat ifr-, *\n\u00bb\u00bb- \u25a0\u25a0H\u00ab\"H*-^\"^<-l,H\u2022 *i*n> \u25a0*?\" 't* \"-m* \"H* *\u25a0;- \u2666\u2666 *h+*h- v\nYou ffiifflit be surprised to know that\nthe bet-t tiling you can use for a scvero\ncoujjk, is a remedy which is ca.-'ily pre-\npnred ut home in just a few moments.\nit's ciieap, but for prompt rei'iilts it\nbeut-j anything else you ever tried. Usu-\nally stops tlie ordinary cou'ib or cheat\ncold in -4 hours. Ta-itea pleasant, too-^*\u2014\nchildren liho'it\u2014and it is pure and good.\nPour ii'\/j ounces of l'lnex in a lG-o\/.\nboUls; then illl it up with plain prunu-\nhi ted su^ar syrup. Or use clarilied dvi-\nlasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of\nBU^ar syi'iip, if desvred. Thus you make\n1G ounces\u2014a family supply\u2014but cost-\ni.i^ no move than a small bottle of\ni'oady-iaade cou^h syrup.\nAnd as a coiiffh medicine, there fs\nreally nothing bettor to ba had at any\nprice. It kocs right to the spot and\nciyes quick, lasting relief. It promptly\nItesils tlie inflamed niembranes thnt lino\ntho throat nnd air passages, stops the\nunnoyin*:, throat tickle, loosens tho\nphlegm, and soon your coup-h stops entirely. Splendid for bronchitis, croups\nhoarseness and brohch'al asthma.\n\u2666Phicx is a highly concentrated compound oE Norway pine extract, famous\nfor its henlintr effect on the membranes.\nTo avoid disappointment ask yom1\ndrue-sist for \"2Vs ounces of Pine:-':,' with\ndirections nnd don't accent nnythlnc\nelse; Guaranteed to eive absolute satia-\nfnction or monev refunded, Tho Pinox\nCo., Toronto, Ont.\npoultty Supplies\nBEST\nHADE\nLowest\nrounti, JTiulerf, Dry Hub\nHoppers, Shell and Grit\n\u25a0Boxes, Food Troughs and\nOat Sprouters. Anything\ni ln  1UU1 made  to order.\nKWfQIflS\n(GRANULES)\n_S INDIGESTION\nTnRtc good, do good,; dissolve\ninstantly on tongue or in water;\ntake as needed.\nQUICK  RELIEF!\nMADE BY SCOTT* IOWNE\nMAKERS OF\n_COTT'S  -MULSION\n \u25a0^\nrfwn\nTHE NELSON DAILY N1JWS,   WEDNESDAY MORNIHG, DECEMBER 8, 1920.\n\u25a0\u2022.\u25a0ii' i i in    i\ni-i-L-ji\"V-_.'n>lnw\nOils and Rails Strong; Raw\nSugar and Silver touch\nNew Low.\nNEW TORK, Dec. 7.\u2014Oils and\nrails of the better class were lho\nonly redeeming feature's of today's\nirregular to heayy stock market,\nthose shares displaying*' occasional\nstrength, while specialties of the\nmiscellaneous variety were under\nconstant pressure. Weakest stocks\nwero those comprising food, tobacco,\nchemical AnA motor groups* particularly certain issues whose financial\nrequirements and dividend status\nhavo recently been the subject of\nlively discussion in speculative qlr**\nvies.\nTexas and Pacific' Coal and Oil\nwere \u25a0 in demand at a net gain of\nHMt .-\"\"Joints, and Willys-Overland preferred represented the other side of\nthe account, losing 9\"-_ points, or* a\ntotal of -0 points in a Uttle more\nthan a week. Nominal losses exceeded gains at the uncertain close, with\nsales of 750,000  shares.\nGreater interests was manifested\nby local financial interests in the additional bank failures repotted ' from\nNorth Dakota, commodity markets\nagain being nerveous and new low\nprices were recorded for raw sugar\nand  bar  silver.\nSeveral of the leading transportation systems announced further curtailment of their working forces, the\nNew England Textile stiuation developing more unfavorable aspects,\nand a leading Canadian silver mine\nsuspending dividends-\nNo deviation from its recent course\nwus shown by the money market,\nbut foreign exhange on London and\nall centers of continental Europe\ncontinued to weaken, The Chinese\nrate also was breaking sharply on\nanother drop in London sfU'er market. Canadian funds sold down to\n$80,25 per JlliO.\nBonds were mainly on diversified\ndealings, international being more active. Total sales, par value, $16,300,-\n000.\nOld United States twos and fours\nregained yesterday's loss of -\u2022% per\ncent on call\nHigh   Low   Close\nChino         ISM-      18%     18*1,4\nC.   P.  R   11534    115 '     115\nInt.   Marine        15%     .      14%\nPierce  Arrow   ...   -28 &    22U,    --\u2022\u25a0_\nStudcBaker          45%     44%      45\nU.   S.   Steel  Com., 8*. 14      81%      81%\nWillys    Overland.     7 6%       5%\niSSILltl\nNEW  YORK.  Dec.   7.\u2014Silver,   do\nmesttc, 99%: foreign 65%.\nLONDON.  Dec. 7.\u2014Sliver,  J3%d\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE\nCANADIAN.  DOLLAR   SLUMPS   IN\nNEW  YORK\n.DOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG. Dec. 7.\u2014Offerings yesterday- were s.1598 cattle. 330 hog's-\nandt.41 sljeep. Receipts up to 9 o'clock\ntliis morning were 1H0 cattle, 240\nhogs and 60 sheep, with 98 cattle on\nthrough   hilling.\nQuotations: \u2014\nSteers\u2014Choice, S9.00 to JIO.OO;\nfair to good. S7.00 to \u00bb8.50; medium, $0-00 to $0.50; common, -(5.00\nto to.50.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice. $7.25 to\n$8.00;   fair   to   good.   $5.50   to   $7.00.-\nButcher cows \u2014 Choice. $7.00 to\n$7-50; fair to good. $5.50 to $6.75*.\ninerium $4,50 to $5,25; canners and\ncutters.   $3.00   to   $4,25.\n'Bulls\u2014Good, $4.75 to $6.75; common,. $3.75  to  $4.25.   ..\nOxen\u2014Good, $0.00 to $4.50; medium, $4.50 to $5.50; common, S3.50\nlo   $4.50.\n'Feeders\u2014Choice, $7-00 to il.i.r;\nfair to good, $5.25 to $0.75.\nStocker steers\u2014Choice. $5.00 to\n$5.50;  fair to good, $4.25 to $4.75.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice, $4.75 to\n$5.25;  fair to good, $3.75 to $4.50. .\nCitlves\u2014Choice. $7.00, ,to $8.50;\ngood. $5.50 to $6.50; commo.ll, $4.00\nto $5.00.\nSheep and lambs \u2014 . Good sheep,\n$5.50 to $7.00; common, $3.00 to $4.00.\ngood lambs. $8.00 to $10.50; common, $3.00 to $7.00.\nHogs \u2014 Selects. $12.23; heavies,\n$10.25; lights. $11.60 to $12.50; sows,\n$6.25;  stags,  $5.00  to $6.00.\nTORONTO. Dee. \\,\u2014Cattle receipts\n1356. The cattle trade is slow. One\nload of 22 steeds of 13G0 pounds sold\nfor $11.50.\nCalf receipts 182. Slow, top $15.00\nto   $1\u00ab.00.\nSheep receipts 1570: steady; good\nsheep $7.50.\nHog receipts 1379; prices unchanged.       '\nEGG MARKET\nOTTAWA, Dec. 7.\u2014The.egg nmr-\n-\u25a0ketB In Great Britain reported quiet\nwith Canadian eg^s in good supply.\nNo. further export \"business is anticipated. The outlook is not good for\nthe export .of poultry due 'to costs\nhere being. high, industrial conditions\nin Great Britain unsteetefl, ahd the\nexchange  altila'tion.   \"\/\"\nMONTREAL -PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Doc. 7.\u2014Eggs strong;\npotatoes uriphanged; butter< steady;\nCheese  quiet.   Quotations.       \u2022\nCheese\u2014Finest easterns 17 to 18\n<ients.\nButter\u2014Choicest creamery 50 to 52\n.cents. \u25a0 - ,   \u2022*,\nEggtf\u2014Fresh   *87   to   72   cents.\nPotatoes\u2014Per bag. carlots ?1H5\nto   S1.H0.\nNEW YORK, Dec. 7.\u2014Bar silver,\ndomestic';   99'^*;   foreign   65%-\nCanadian dollars, 88-25, as against\n87.00 yesterday and 88.00 a week ago.\nFrancs,   demand   5,86;   cables   >.88.\nhire,  demand  3.48;   cables  3.50.\n\"Marks,   demand   1-30;    cables   1.31.\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\n-NEW YORK, Dec. 7\u2014Sterling exchange weak at $3.38% for 00-day\nbills, and at $3.4354 for demand.\n-OJUJON,  Dee. .7\u2014$3.94-7.. ,\n. CANADIAN BONDS\nMONTREAL. Dec. 7.\u2014Today's bond\nprices;\n. War    loans;\u20141925,    90;    1932,''  89;\n1937,   95.\nVictory loans; \u2014 1922, 97; 1927,\n979i; 1937, ,98; 1923, 95%; 1933. 95;\n1924,   94; '-134,1 -SI'S,      ',   .\nMETAL MARKET\nNEW TORK. De\u00ab. 7. \u2014 Copper\nsteady, electrolytic, spot and nearby 13% to 14; first quarter 14 to\n14'4.  Iron   nominally   unchanged.\nAntimony, 7.25 to 7.87%. Tin. firm,\nspot and nearby 35.25: futures 36-25\nto 30.50. Lead quiet, spot 5.00. Zino\nsteady. East St. Louis spot 0.15 to\n6.30.\nLondon \u2014' Standard copper, spot\n_S0, 12s, Od; futures \u00a380, 2s, Od.\nElectrolyte, spot \u00a390; futures \u00a39i.\nTin, spot \u00a3223,* 16s; futures \u00a3227,\n17s, 6d. Lead, spot, \u00a3%, futures \u00a326,\n15s. Zinc, spot \u00a331, 15s;; futures\n\u00a333.     . h ;-\nMONTREAL LIST\nAlOXTRKAJ.. \"Dec. 7.\u2014In today's\nlist on the local stock exchange\nSmelters was .the only weak stock,\nopening 1*\u00bb4 points down from yesterday's close and selling off two\npoints ftet loss to 10. The deferred\ndividend decision at the annual meet-J\ning yesterday doubtless caused the\ndecline.\nBoth the Spanish River issues were\nstrong, the common adding 1\"^, and\nthe preferred _\u25a0**\u2022<\u00a3. Brompton continued firm, finishing at a fractional advance at -58. Abitibi was irregular\nwithin a narrow range and closed\n-unchanged at 56'\/,.\n\u201e Elsewhere in the list, stocks prominent by reason of their Strength\nOr weakness were Canadian Car\ncommon, which moved up 4\\'\u00bb tf.\n39l_, following a rise of five points\nyesterday, a movement not followed\nby the preferred, -which lost one\npoint  of yesterday's   7%   point gain.\n\"Winnipeg railway sold seven points\nabove a previous last sale some time\nago; Wayagamack gained five points\nat 95 and Cement and Brazilian\ngained  a point ea^h.\nThe victory honds continued active and strong. The most active\nwas the 1034 issue, in which dealings\nran   into   4110,950,   par   value,\nTotal sales, .. listed 0356; bonds\n$312,500.  \"\n,C\u00abNT\u00abHJ\u00ab*!,PHaTO_l\u2122V-eI..N\u00abW.-YOPt'(. '\nPRESIDENT-ELECT HARDING'S VISIT TO TEXAS\n' With coat 'and straw hat, President-elect W> G. Harding.   Barehcan*\nis F. E. Scobey, of San Antonio, Texas.   Ladies are:   Mrs. R. B. Creager\nand Mrs. Scobey, let^to right.\nwill\nCHICAGO, Dec. 7.---Wheat underwent a sharp decline in price* today,\nowing largely to an apparent halt\nIn export business and to misgivings\nbout the banking situation in tho\nnorthwest, Closing qugtations were\nheavy, 7\\\\ tp 'J cents net lower,\nWith    December    $1.70    and* March\n$i.67*.,i to n-&~%.\"\nCorn lost two to 3*^ cents and\noils   t l'n   to   l\\u   cents.\nIn provisions .the outcome \/varied\nfrom 0 cents decline' to 12 cents advance.\nTORONTO BOARD\nMINNEAPOLIS FLOUR\nMINNEAPOLIS, Dee 7\u2014l-'loa'r.\/fiO\ncents higher:'Iti uurload.10t.s- family\npatents, d'uoted ui $9.no u'jj 'td' S'ro.OO\na barrel in 98.-poiind cotton sacks;\nshipment  10,212   barrels, '*\nUi-an\u2014}28.00.\nWheat, -cash \u2014 No; 1 Northern\nJ1.09-K. il.7H4;' December $1.01%.\nCorn\u2014No. '3 yellow 73 to .74 cents,\nOats\u2014>*o. \u25a0 3 white 45?S to 40%\ncents.\nl-'lax\u2014No.   U2.22   lo   $2.23..\nBILLIARD CHAMPION\nDEFEATS COCHRANE\n.MOW YORK, Dee. 0\u2014Willie Hemic,\nworld's 18.2 balk line blliurd. player,\ndefeated Walter Cochrane, of San\nFrancisco, 100 to 370, In the second\nsame ol' the final round of the titular\ntourriamen't   tonight.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nOpen High 'Low Close\nWheat.\u2014\nDee is it isst iso isoh\nMay         ISO 139 181 181*14\nOats.\u2014\nDec.     .....    54'4 54-14 53'\/i *\"*\"\u25a0\u00bb%\nMay          59% 60' 57% 67%\nBarley.\u2014 ^\nDec     84 85*4 88% 8_%\nMay      \"84 84i\/y 82 81%\n. Flax.\u2014\nDec.        214 i'l7 2-12Vj 217\nMay        -22 228 222 228\nRye.-\u2014\u25a0\nDec l.av. 174 um IC!t\nMay     ..'.  36-.\nTOI'.ONT.Q. Dec. 7. \u2022-- Decided\nstrength by victory honds on the;\nlocal exvhange overshadowed all\nother iluv'-lopmi'iuis in \"the Canadian\nstock market,  today.\nThere was a Keen remand \u25a0 which\nkept prices firm all day. Five of\nthe seven victory issues made advances, as compared with Monday,\nofte \u00bbas unchanged, and one was\nlo.wer. In a total of over IttlHI.-\n000, a lie*!*.1 leadership rang up in\nthe 1833. with a turnover of $J!>0,-\n'000. wiih lhe '193-1,' next at $133,-'\n000.\nAlthough not all the sains we.'e\nheld at the close, there was a 'greater approach in the level of pri:es\nat, the end of the committee's control\nthbn   has   previously   \"been   seen.    *.\nThere was an active general market, in which one of the tra-'tions\nWere 'ccnHpiciii.u.s. Winnipeg .railway\nshowed slgii-s of marked improvement, followiriK the recent remarkable showing in increased earnings. A\ngain of 2% was registered at 35.\nToronto railway was also higher by\ntwo points. Brazilian likewise\nstrengthened, ami was in fact, the\nmarket leader in the general Hut,\nclosing at 33, it gaining half a\npoint. - ,\nConsolidated Smelter, despite the\npostponement of the dividend, cloH-\ned   1%   higher   at   U%.\nCanada Cement. Consumer's Gas\nand C. P. R., were other stocks\nthat sold higher. \"Standard Bank\nclosed unchanged at 212. although\nfairly active after the news of a\nnew stock issue. Commerce, Ham-\nlltLon, Union and Royal all made\ngains- The paper group had' little\nmovement   on   this   market.\nThe Cecil .Rhodes scholarships include fi\\;o for students of German\ndescent. .....\nHUS.:.'.\nSmall Ads That Bring Quick Returfts\n56\nBirth\ns\nBORN\u2014December ' 7th, to Mr. ' anil\nMrb. W. llrowp,. Hall and Inilis\nstreets, at Kootenay Lake hospital,\na   son. I   . (lloni)\n10   Male Help Wanted\nWANTKD\u2014Clark.\nhotel.\n(11033)\nWANTED\u2014Tie    makers.       Howland   &\nWalls*,  Ka-540,  13.  C.' \"CU007)\nWANTED \u2014 Working men to. keep\naiyay from Blue Bell mine and Slocan district. Btriko stltl on, One\nBig  Union. (M00K)\nOTIS STAl'DES \u25a0 MILL starts December 27th. Old 'eftiplOyees wishing to\nrettn'n or other mlllmoji ' wanting\nemployment communicate with Otis\nStaplis Lumber Co., Wycllt'fe, R C.,\n..at \"QPfi'M   f., r    \u25a0 \u25a0*-. ,,.->.   \u25a0\u2022. .. ..(IPHW)\n13 ^t^tioni^antd\u2014Male\nMA^T^VANTS    WOIlK^aTrnnfr^voTi^\nor   any   -other   kind   of   work.       Apply\nBox   31010,   Daily   News. (11010)\n'IwiTduo h l v    coai Detent    man\necok and wife want work together;\ncamp or hotel. Apply Box 11030,\nDaily    News. '    (11030)\nENaTNEER-VThli-d class, well exiierl-\nencod, wishes situation as engineer in cliiirgo. Box 10303, Dhfly\nNews.    .             \u25a0      ,      \u25a0.. (10803)\n11 Female Help Wanted^\nWvVNTUD\u2014Ar oncergh\"!   tot  tea room.\n* Hume .Hotel.    , (1I03!>>\nNI3W.   GRAND   HOTI'.'L\u2014Dining   room\nLgirl   wanted. -      \\jr \u2022(101)83**;\nWANTED\u2014Ex pe rto need '\u2022\"\"stefio-*^'4*(m*i_r\n-for coaiitry town, oue. oxjjerinenced In\nI dm\"(jm* business preferred, . du-t-1*-1*\"\nto commence at once. \u25a0 %, Write '\/ital;\ning age,- experience' and salary expected to The CANVON CITY LUTit-f\nBor  CO.,   LTD.,   Creston,   itf.   C.\n'    \u00bb -,   (100(19)\nWANTED\u2014Dining room girl, also do\nupstair work. Apply Outlet Hotel,\nProctor. \"\u25a0;'-..- v (100-15)\n12 Situations Wanted Female\ngentleman, hotel or inf5*itui.io*n. Best\nof re'ferencjes. \u25a0 Bpx 11052; * \"Dally\nNews.\/'; ' (11052)\nFIRST OLAKS COOK wants position\nin hotel, boarding house or 'camp\npreferred. Excellent bread niakfii*.\nUp* .l_G53i   Dally   News. illpGIi)\nEXRB RI ENCBlP STENOGRAPHER,\ndesires \u25a0 position, Trail preferred.\nApply   Box   11001,   Daily   News.\n(11001)\nWANTED \u2014 By middlo aged woinan\nposition ns housekeeper to widower\nor    bachelor.       Box    1094\u00ab,       Dally\n...N.ftffs- ...  - ._ ,        (10946)\niu;tiues  at ninety-fi\\e.\nHAMILTON, Dec. ti. \u2014 Adam\nBrown, Hamilton's grand old man.\ntoday annonced his retirement from\nthe .position of postmaster, after\nnearly thirty years' of service. life\nla 95 years of age.\nAUK GKNEUALIiVOAUSKD  BV\nCONSTIPATION\n'i'hiiro aro tow, il any complaints\nlHoro uonntloci tlvtn 'honiorrliouls, or\npil'oa, as they uri;' liqmmonly callufl\nanil scarcely any, which cause more\ntrouble,   annoyance  and -miHery.\nNinety per cent, are troubled  with\nthem at some  lime or other,   owin\nto allowing tin.- bowels lo become In\na   constipated   condition.\nPiles are classed tiniler tin-\nheadings, 1. e., helling, bleeding aiid\nprotruding, and the., excruiclaling\npains which accompany them cause\nmisery whicli is beyond description.\nOintments and l;su'ppusiloi'ics may\nhelp and relieve fur a while, but to\nget rid of thotn, 11 is necessury to\nhave a tree, easy and natural motion of the bowels; at least once Or\ntwice a day, and by-dolus this the\ncause   will   lie   quickly -removed-\nMilburn's Laxa-Liver l-llls regulate the flow of hlle to ail properly on the liver and bowels, thus removing the constipation and all lie\nallied  troubles.\nThey contain no calomel in- drastic mineral ingredients, being purely\nvegetable. They are small and easy\nto take, and do not gripe, weaken\nor  sicken.\n.Milburn's Laxa-Liver 1'ills are\na vial at all druggists ur dealers,\nmailed direct on receipt' of price by\nThe T- Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont- ...\n22       Miscellaneous\t\nGRAHART^IrsV-^CaT'typewrltors, repairs and supplies. 312 Fertdor .St.,\nWest. Vancouver, B. C. (11012)\n14 Furnished Rooms to Rent\nli-Ort   RKNT\u2014Kuralsliiill   rooms, Tiriiak\nfast  if desired.        013  Ward   stfrel.\nU10-1S)\nHOUSEKEEPING    SUITE\u2014 Campbell's\nArt   Gallery. (10843)\n21    Livestock Wanted\nWAN^fTOL)-^DurotP^lei'Sey pure, bred\nboar, ready for service. Age, pi'ice\nand full particulars first letter.\niMIdiliemas Bros, lioclt Island, Arrow Lakes,  B.  C. (11011)\nthe Royal Bank of Canada\nHEAD   OFFICE,   Montreal\nLONDON,    Eng\nPrinces   St.,   E. C.\nBARCELONA\nPlaza   De   Cataluna   II\nNEW   YORK\n[08   William.   St..\nPARIS, Franco\n38 Hue du Quatrc-Scptembfe\nPRINTED ENVELOPES cost little\nmore than plain envelopes and they\nglv\u00ab a much better Impression' to\nyour customers:- Write The Dally\nNews Job Department for samples\nand prices.\n23xJ^peHy:ForSde\nINSURE\ntoday \"With\nC.W. APPLEYARD\nLifer-Fire\u2014Accident\n(1(01188)\n20   Livestock For Sale\nF01,t .S^Lf'i-i-Jc't'sey'.lieifer, 30.months:\nAyi-cslilre lieifer, 31 months; both\nin fine eanilitlou and from godd\nmilking stock. Compelled to sell at\nmice. $100 'foi* the two.- H. \u00a7..'\nj'   Curtis, - Sloean,   B.   C. - (UOOIJ)\ni KlNis IIMlPEIt\u20141(1 montlis ola!    grade\nSljorTliorn   ihtm\u2014and-n-, firsir   class\nmllkei'.      Powell,   Perry ' Siding.\ni.c-: \u25a0-;.-    '      \"t \u25a0'\u2022:     '    (10948.)\nFIRE, \\m, HEALTH aiid\nAUTOMOBILE INSURANCE\nH E.\n508 Ward St.\nPlione 180.\nI:     \u25a0.-       (10087)\nKEGISTHKED VOHKSH1RH BOAtt.\nthree years. Good natui'etl, \"verV\nrallable. ?Dlt. Young ])lg, ?7. YounK\ngrade dliry Shprtliorn cow, frcslich.\n. .Mai'eli, ?90: grado Holstein, freshen\nI l.'ebraary, *!I5. 3oWe(t Bros., Edge-\nwood. -. WWl)\nPOR SALK\u2014Pure  .lersey cow, milking\n0 qaarts; in'lCe reasonable. ' R. Halts,\nHarrop,   B.   C. t        (10985b\nj:i AC\nIMS   FOR\nSALE   iu\nWeill\nsettli\n.1\npart\nof Sll\n.\u25a0an\nH'alleV.\nlash\nor pa\n\u25a0t\ncash\nami\ntel\nms.     For\npa\nticulars\n\u25a0write\nBox\n11045,. Daily\nNews.    .\n(1101\n)\nFOR 'SALl'.~-!!-ro6m lioiis.', Iwfi-storey,\nbatli, hot lind cold water, plaslei'cd,\ngood enndltiiin. .1-t'ooni liuoso. until,\nhot and cold water, plastered,' good\nrendition, 310 Victoria. Hargaius.\nEimiilre Mary Pain, Roola -10, HumV\nHolel. . (11025)\nORCHARDS, Arabic, , uncleared ' land,\nwater frontage.. \u25a0 Willow Point,. Bon-\nhiiigtpn Falls, Perryjl. ,' Some great\n^bargains. ,. For. partlcalara ,wrtta,.or\n\u25a0see ownor, J. J. Campbell, K.R. Nn.\n,1,  Nelson.   ' . (11010)\n\u25a0W\nl'8i i Articles for Sjbtej,\nwood' pop!b  BO\u00bbiift- oyijrrfi.rjfii-\n' .Bale.      Box 11005, Bally..Kaws. ,-\u25a0 , , ,\n-_\"  \u25a0   v^'-i^-\"-   C|i|P\nFOR SALK\u2014Two sets, of sleighs, wagon,   horses,   cooking   utensils.  \u25a0 $270\n\u2022   for tli.' outfit. \" TVpWy'J'. St. Denis,\n-Nelsoii.    ... OOPS)\n-j-\nLOOSK\"11aY. FOR SALE^-Oool quality,\nS3^) per ton at shed. Could deliver.\nS. Bai'kley,  Urnton Slillng, B.  C.\n(10951)\nONE    English    Lachenal      Concertina,\n\u25a0   liew, leather boand,'48 keys, in rosewood t'ase, -lock and key.      Cost ?I50,\nh  bargain,   ??40.   ,   nox   10930,   Dally\n.   News. (109.10)\nFOIt   SAMC\u2014Two    fine   Aneotm    cat'k-\nctcIs.        Apply    T.    tJ,.,Des    Urisuy.\n. __J    Ritb.son   St.,   city. .(\"IIOSO)\nKOR. KALI'*;\u2014Two   reg latere il   Galloway\nbull   Ciil'vcu '    One' onfe  'yc'y.'r-oia', J'aiat'\nMay.  'One a July eitlf.    Tlils stock\nmuat bo seen   to be appreelated.' For\n' particulars   .   ad-Jre^H ' J. \"E. *> Ydder,\n\".  Northport    WiJ.8liini;l-qn; ((10883)\n3S\nFor Rent\nFOR    KENT\u20147-room    house:        Apply\n014   Vernon   street.     , (11000)\n;IHAR STANO to rent. . Doing JEirst\nclass Imsiiiess,.in Kelson. Box.11034,\nDally   News'. ..', '.    .;,- ;'<ij034>\nTO   RENTv-Ofho'e.1 ' un   upuer. Iloor   sX.\n:i    C-   block.     Apply   A.   Msvidonald\n...po.     ;   .   ..\"..        .r(iiii.ii)\n54     Articles Wanted\n\"W^TFn5*3A*--*c7\u00a3d*\"-womr-^^\n\u2022'\u25a001,' C'h- p' engine in^good .order,'\"Give\n\u25a0.'lifuir partlcu'larB,'tnl.\u00bb'A.' Tayldr, 'Box\n\u25a0.,\u25a0>'. .TWI^^^^,.,,,,..^,)\nmdWMessiikal\n~m | .'\u201e.,..;.; %\u00abdSry ,'.T .or.te.M-i\n.^^a^e^eyyaaa^a^rsr^. i\nLodge Notice\nB.   V-'.   O.'\u25a0\"_.   Meets   In.  Magllo'  tilocH\n1st and 3rd Tluii'Silny.;  ,      (11014)\nBoots & Shoes\nME   KEE  &' COMPANY \"M   '\nBoots '& siroos made to Order, Repaired\n612 1-2 ISOHI K'l'. (11015)\nFlorists\nWtfUTE LEGHORNS\u2014Have 15 real\nchoieo cockerels for. diappsal, reasonable.       F.   J.   'HOTblnaon,'   Crhh-\n34    Teachers Wanted\nTEACHER    WANTEB'\u2014Mifl   ' llivlsion,\n.   Frocler   school.      Salary \u25a0 (1,000. Apply   F.   .1.   Sammons,   sec.    \"Proctor\nSchool   Board, ..        (11032)\nTEAIMWt~rU_UJJ_l5U-J::oL..JUlll';u'.\ndivlskgi.     Kiinln'rley _|iufjl|c. ...school.\ncoiumtmciiig   '.laimary.': tcrin,     Ajiprj-\n' N.   **V.'' Burdott,  sab.-'J   '        (UOOSJ\/\nTEACHER WANTED-^ii-dr-Waaklyri\nschool, near Cranbrook. Apply Kenneth Greene, seefotar.y' Waaklyn\nschool board, Box.: 884, Cranbropk,\nB.   C. -' \"..'.' (11000)\nWANTED\u2014An  experlbheed  teacher  for\n'   Crawford   Bay   school.      Apply -.Mrs.\nL. Lytic, Fort Crawford\".:;   (10950)\nREQUIRED\u2014Teacher for next school\nterm. Apply secretary school board.\nFerry   Siding,   B.  C.  \u2022 - (109S4)\nPRINTED ENVELOPES cost .' litttji\nniore than  plain  envelopes Tapd they\n, give a much better > Impression to\nyour   customers.     Write   The   Dally\n. News Job Department for cample:;\nand   prices.\nWith our chain of 710 Brandies throughout Canada, Newfoundland,\nthe. West Indies, Central and South' America, we. offer a complete\nbanking service to exporters, importers!* manufacturers and ol'Hers\nwishing to extend their business in these\" countries. Trade en-\nonirics are solicited. Consult our local Manager or write direct to otlr\nFOREIGN   TRADE   DEPARTMENT.   MONTREAL,   QUE.\nCAPITAL- PAID  UP   and  RESERVES    $ &$o\\,Oos,\nTOTAL ASSETS   '....'.     .'.-... \u00ab86:00t>,0\u00bb\n0-rder Now Your\nChristmas M\n1\nThe finest and most varied stock of hi\ngrade Christmas Cards in the interior of\nI.\nPrinVed with your.own Personal Greeting\nIt will soon be time, to mail for overseas.   Qrders-delivered\n,    day following receipt.\nThe Daily News Job Department.\n* * ,y-- ,,    ...-.NELSON,, 6. \"S. \u25a0.>.:,..,\nGRKZELUSS     GREENHOUSE,  .. N61.\nson.' Cut   Flowers   and   floral    a*e-\nI  -.'ig'llSy. ...   \".-      \u25a0      \u25a0     -     ' (11016)\nAssaycrs\nE.',;W. WIDDOWSON, Box\" AUDI\nNi-ljMon, B. C. Standard westeVn\nellai'gcs. \u25a0' ' \u25a0' (11017)\nWholesale\nv. MACDONALD Sc-ao:, WHOLESAIATI\nGi-pcers and Provision-Merchants, Importers    of    Teas,    Coffees,    Spices,\n\u25a0-&Hert\"3ia-uHs'\/'.3l.Tple- ttnd-<Fancy\"Gr6-' '-\njiei'le8r->..-\u00abll'o,baccoa, g..Oigars,^..Bytt_r.\nEg'g'a; Oheese^'and' t-ackirijg House\nProdticts. oif'oea, and warehouse.,\ncorner 'of Fftint aftd Hall Htre'ets. vPj-'\n'O.   l?ox 1095:  Telephones '28  and 48',\n,W.,.|..'. ''\u25a0(IHlfl!)\n\u25a0*=\nSecond Hand Dealers  :-i\nTHE ARK paytf.ca'sh  for second   hand\nfurniture', stoves;- '.6Q6 Vernfin, J'holfe\n.051.'  ' \u25a0   .  -(111)19)\nCommission   Merchants\nHANCHHRS- PRODUCE sold' on  commission.\"   'G'.\u2014W.'- Bartlett,  William's\n\u2022\" - \u25a0'\u25a0'.   .-: (11020)':'\u2022\nArchitects\nIT.   EMMS    BEAU,   M.B.O.S.A.       I\n'  ' '\u25a0 ARdHITECT\nBay  Avonao * Trails  B.O,\n...,.     .   \u2022    (11021)\nEngineers\nH.   D,   DAWSOH,   B.C.L.B.\nCivil   and   Mining   Eaffinoor\n(11022)\n\u2022\u201e.-,. \u00bb\u00bb*\u201e ^\nL. W NBI.SON.   B.   0. ,       ''V*\nfc_~>**A'nii' trtistma tssaatzEsip}'''\nBi^CR, jMheita   and   Dominion ;ii -\n\u25a0:   Vt^ntfy-B-wkyicoieB\nCrown   Grant' _r_*)t. \"_lne   PrlnMn\u00ab ,\n,,\"  .., \"-\u25a0 ,S '- ;\u25a0\"    '(110*4!)'\n\"-'   A.   II.   MeOHl.fi001T,\nHyiUanllc Enginoor\nProvmolal   -mid ;StiWeyor\u00bb)    .\nBaker St: Nelspli   B.CS \u25a0\n.   \u25a0 ..:.in .,   '.:\u25a0;,. v.  ,.;- dio34).\nAuctioneers\n-  - Vf.    CU'flER\n'Atiofioiio'er,  'App'ralsar,  Talnntpr '\u25a0''\nGpods   sold   privately': or   \u00abvt\".Auct|dn\n319 Ward Street Mono '\u00ab\n - ... : \u25a0:\u25a0*; -\u25a0-\u25a0  -(.U025)\nBarristers ,\n. H.   O. ,_ATTB_W , .\nBarrister,   Solicitor,   Notary,   Etc.,\nIdx  1078. Alan* Bldok, _\u00bbl\u00abo_ Ph. SM\n\"-       .\"- '    1)028)\nFuneral Directors\nD.   J. .ROBERTSON,   F.D.D.  _.._.,   303\n1 Victoria   Street,   ftone   262;'   Night\nPhono   157-J. (itq-JJ)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McManus\nYOU MS.KFC ME -blCK-YOU\nnever brimd an-< one hone\npor. Dinner- -wiw ,% the.\nOiE Or XOU^SELONCINCTO\n*\u25a0 *=V\/ELl.\nCLUB.-.\nhun<rv;\nI iN&l-aJ ON vou BRiNCiKpi\nbONE ONE HONE TO DlUNEfj.\nTHEKEM^E AT UEA'jT rive\nDUKE'S  IN NGUlV C.LU\n TIE NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY MOKMTMC, DECEMBER S, 1*520.\n\/3\/D\nHad Suffered Two Years Before She Started Taking\nTanlac, Says Miss Arna-\nson; In Best of Health\nNow.\n\"I know I owe my present splendid\nhealth -to Tahlac and to nothing else,\"\n\u25a0said Miss Alice Arnason. a weiu\nknown business woman. Mfss Arila-\nson lives at 381 Balmoral St., \"Winnipeg, Man.\n\"I can hardly realize t*he wonderful\nchange In my i condition, for it was\nonly two months ;igo that I was in\nsuch bad health I was on tho verge of\ndespair. Por two years I had been\n\"arradually growing weaker; in fact,\nI havft never been strong since having\ntho 'flu.' I practically had no appetite and the wee bit I ate gave me\nso Uttle nourishment that I grew\nthinner day by day. Just when I\nwas   feeling  bluest   I  determined   to\ntry, Tanlac,' which I heard had benefited, so many'Winnipeg people.\n..\"The results from the very first\nbottle were a big -surprise to me, for\nI began to Improve right away, and\nby the -time I had taken the second\nbottle I was like a new womarf.\n\"My health has been completely\nrestored. I eat heartily and have no\nmore trouble with indigestion. I am\nnot bothered with headaches tnat used\nto make life miserable' and Z sle-ep\n\u2022like'.a- ch'ild -all.night.   \\\n\"Prom the ''bottom of my ;heart I\nam grateful tbat such a medicine aa\nTanlac exists. ' Nobody, I don't care\nhow rtin down they may be, should\ngive up hope until they have tried\nTanlac.\n\"I don't believe anybody could feel\nany worse than I did, and 1*C Tanlac\ncould bring ' mo* health and strength\nI'know it can do the same for others.\"\nTanlac la sold in Kelson by Canada\nDrug _c Book Store, and by the lead-\nin\",   druggist  in  every, town.    Artvt\n1 SPORT\nt\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb \u00ab\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab,\u00bb\u00bb,ta..,.,.a a\nWW Try to G*t the\nDempsey-Carpentier\nFight Held at Boston\nCHICAGO. Pec. 7.\u2014Ployd Fltzslfn-\nmons; promoter of-the Leonard_Whlte\nand the Dempsey-Miske championship fights, left tonight for New to\nship fights, left last night for New\nYof-k to have the fight between Jack\nDempsey and Georges Carpentler\nBtrtged in his open ntr area at Benton\nH>\"i rbor,' Mich.\nWILL NOT PLAY TIGERS\nTORONTO, Dec. 7.\u2014Acting Secretary \"Billy\" Poulds, of the Canadian\nFofahnll Union, states that the Ham-\ndlton Tigers' intermediates have'* not\nchallenged''.'for* the Dominion Championship, and iit'caae -they i do \u25a0 so;\nwill ,not be accomodated. .Torontos\nwere beaten by Argonauts and- incidentally the series was delayed one\nweek whon Torontos .-protested the\nfirst game.\nThe University-, of Toronto.team, i?\nfar too* powerful fpr the Tigers, crit,lc_\ncontend, and there Is no demand for\nsuch on engagement.\nOTTAWA SECURES NIGHBOR\nOTTAWA, Dec.; 7.\u2014Officials of the\nOttawa Hockey club denied today a\nreport that Frp.rik Nlghbor would\nplay with* tho New Canadian Hockey\nasFoclatfon, Nlg-hbor. they say, will\nreport for duty with the Ottawa team\nas soon as private business' will permit him ,to. ' Officials of the Ottawa\nteam are nuotcd* today as -saying that\nthe Canada Hookpv association, has\nnot signed one player from'the Va-\ncific coast' league. ' Rickey, who was\nconstdered their first star, will ha\nbade. ty-Hh Seattle when thb western\nrace gets under way,\nPatrick, Who Attacked Pro-\n. fessionaiism, Keeps Away\nFrom Winnipeg.\n\"WINNIPEG, Dec. 7.\u2014Despite his\nthreat to carry the. war against\n\"veiled -professionalIsm' in hockey\nin Saskatchewan and Manitoba; and\nco'ntrary to his avowed intention of\nattending the annual meeting of the\nC. A. H. A., Frank Patrick, thc\ncoast hookey mogul, who made startling disclosures against In* Alberta\nBig Four circuit,' will not be a visitor In Winnipeg during the -coming week-end, when the representatives of all provinces gather at\nthe annual meeting of tho A. A,. U.'\nof   C \\\nWord to this effect was received\nby wire from Vancouver today, the\nsuggestion heing that Patrick had\nleft sufficient iik1 rimInating evidence\nbehind him In Calgary to ' direct\nthe attention of amateur authorities\nto the necessity for immediate action, protective, alike to \"straight\"\nplayers and the public Further, ho\nIs quoted as slating that he Is\nsatisfied to leave tlie matter iti the\nhands of the Alberta union, which\nhe think.**! will make thorough Investigation of the evidence submitted by him.\nFred Roberts is In the ctly from tht\nTmir ranch. ,\nP. Johnson, the 'Wynndel rancher,\nwits, among arrivals yesterday.\nCharles A. Cock, the Cranbrook\nrancher  Is  registered, at  the  Hume.\nFred H. \"Shoe-maker, the Ymir lumberman   is   registered  at  the  Hume.\nC,-H. King, \"of,' Grand Forks,' lnspc-\ntor-.of Dominion \u2022police, was among\narrivals yesterday..,        ,  \u25a0\nA., L. McPhee'\" onfe of \"the partherfl\n\u25a0i\u00bb>... the\" Ottfiwa \"iMnes, , Ltd., '\u25a0\u25a0came* in.\n\"Trom .'ftlocan' 'yesterday. * \u25a0'.\u25a0' \"\n,. Jf,. I* MacKe-nil\"*-,. the Grand Forks\nbarrister, and Mrs. MacKenzie, are\nregisterd'at .th fltrathcpnU.\nSome   of   the   mountains   on   tho\nAntaptlc    continent   are -  1*3,000    feet\nNelson News of the Day\nThe Gilker block Is now completed\nand there are still Home offices foi\nrent. J.   A.   GILKER.  ,      (10962)\nPythian Sisters aro holding a whist\ndrive Dec, 9th. Cards; 8 o'clock. Admission,   35c. (11029)\nSee the  Christmas bargain     window\nin J. J. Walker's Store. (11047)\n' Daughters  of Scotia meet  tonight  at*\n8   o'clock.  *    Initiation. (11054)\nCOME TO THE LADIES' AID BA-\nZAAP. IN METHODIST i CKURCH\nON   SATURDAY,   DEC.    11,   FROM   2\nTO 6. \u25a0 (114049)\nShop early this morning and take\nadvantage of tho Christmas hargii.ni:\nip: J. J. Walker's f& window.      (11047)\n' CAHD OF THANK3*\nMj\\ D. S. Belts desires to express-\nheartfelt thnnks to all friends wh \u25a0\nhaVe* shown such kind sympathy during his late bereavement, mentioning\nparticularly Nurse Watts and ,her untiring devotion, Mrs. Hamilton, ol\nCreston, and those who sent the bau-\ntlful   flowers   on   the   6th   inst,   (11056)\nThe meeting called for tonight of thi\nEagles   is   postponed. (11055\nMrs.   Robert   E    Lee   waa   Martha\nWashington's    gnat-grand -daughter.\niiiiiiHiiiiiiimiiimim\nOF FlfpSSE\nItalian Regency of Quarnero\nto be Recognized; Evacuation of Islands.\nROZilE,   Dec.   7.\u2014The   Fiume   controversy   is  nearing   a. solution,   a*.\ncording to the! Uome newspapers to-\nday.   The   new^papjsrs .give   the   following   as   the   basis   of   settlement,\n1 . The Italia^ regency of Quarnero\nshall  be officially recognized.\n2 Tho Quarnero regency and ju-\ngo-Slav-la will discuess dollmita-.\ntion of1 the eastern frontier of the\nregency, acknowledging as a technical npcessHy.. that Porto' Baross,\nund thc estuary of the river should\nlie   Included   in   the   new   state.\n3 Evacuation, of the Island of Ve-\nglla and Arb bj^D'Anniinizo's troops,\nas their annexation to Flume would\ngive a preponderance of Slavs in\nthe new state, but the nationality of Italians living in the islands\nshall b.c carefully guaranteed and\nprotected. Closo commercial relations shall be maintained bowtecn\nFiume and these islands, both Flume and the islands giving full\neommecial guarantees with customs\nexemption lo Jugo-Slav traffic\nthrough   Porto   \"Raroas.\nRESERVES JUDGMENT IN\nDOMINION TEST CASE\nLONDON, Dec. 7.-\u2014(Canadian Associated Press).\u2014The privy coun-ril\ntoday reserved judgment In the teat\n-mse as to whether Dominion companies should be subject to prov-\nvlncial legislation requiring registration as a condition of exercising\ntheir powers,\nWallace Nest-ill, who appeared on\nbehalf- of the governments of the\nprovinces of Ontario and Manitoba,\nrespondents in the case, argued concerning a decision In the John Deer\nPlow- case given some time back,\nthat the deilsiqri did not cover the\npresent case under review, that of\nth'e Great West Saddlery company\nversus thi? King, and referred to\nremarks then, made by Lord Sumner.\nLord Ifaldanc said it was rather\nalarming to think thut remarks made\nwero being reported and might at\nsome other time be referred to as\nauthorities.\nLord Sumner said that that waa\nwhy he- had' hot said anything during tho present hearing, a remark\nthat   aroused   laughter.\nCut Brier\n|j More Tobacco for the Money\/Jj^^M\nCut'Brier\nPackages 15*\nfclbTlhs$5*\nSMOHINC\nTOBACCO\nWm\nmm\n[ \u25a0flnfiiMiMioiMi-fuMi^iw^VjiwwHii*'-^^\nWttCO \u2014\"srVTvVO.* V\nS)a\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Prefer Form\n. hi i\\,.   i .')   ....   ,    1.\"'    ,'!\u00bb      -;'i   I j}\\... \u25a0 '    ', '' ,]-, \" '     .      .\nUee   this  blink  on   which  to   writs  your  cpnd onset! od., ono word in each space.    Enclose monoy    ,\norder or chock snd mail dira-ct to th. Oilly Newt, Nefson. 1B.C, ~      .\n. Rote: On* and a half cent \u00bb word eaoli Insertion, oix consecutive insertions for prico of four\n-when cash aoca'mpanlas order. Minimum 25c. Each initial, figure, dollar oign, etc., counts as ono word.\nNo charge  leas than  60 cents.  '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 <\\',',- ...';\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0    -. ..\n\u2022'         (''\"'\":\".\n, '\u25a0}.            *\n. '.'\u25a0 \".'.;; :v\ntH:\n'*'\u25a0,'.'.'\n\u25a0' :\u2022.*.-..- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\n.-' '   y. '\n. i -\nv. :'\"'-::.\n' \u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0 ->.       ',:''\u25a0\n..'<\".^.oc.iimftt -for which t enclose 9.\nPlease  publish the above \u2022dvertit\u00bbm\u00bbn*...,.......\nv Name   .....................................\nAddrtM     \u2022 . . .\"'.' . I'. \u2022 . . , ...........t..i.a'..\\.ai\nIf desired, replies may be addressed to Box Numbers \u00abt The Daily News'Office.   If replies are te\nbt mailed enclose 10o extra -ba cover co\u00abt of poaU^e and allow five words extra for box number. '\nShipping Shortage Delays\nScotch Farmer Immigrants\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 7\u2014Rev. .1. Knox\n'Clark, immigration chaplain, Wlnni\npeg, asked the \"Winnipeg Presbytery\ntoday why there is such an easy\nentry into Canada for undesirables\n\u2022.vhen the most desirable of all settlers, Scotch farmers, are. unable to\nget transportation for' the coming\nsummer into Canada. Ho declared\nthat he had heard thero were 15,000\nScotch farmers ready to leave for\nCanada at once, but that they had\nto defer thcih departure on account\nof shortage of shipping accomodation. The Presbytery was unable to\nfurnish any .satisfactory answer\nbut .some inquiry is to be made\nin the proper quarters without delay, s\nTwo recommendations were adopted by the Presbytery. One was that\nRev. J. ALr-qartnoy Wilson, of Calgary, bo made professor of syacm-\natlc theology at Edmonton College\nand the other that Rev. Thomas A.\nAlltchelf bo appointed to a professorship in Westminister Hall, Van-\ncouver. \u2022 ,\n1000 EGGS\nin Every Hen\nNew   System   ot   Poultry   Kwpln-?\u2014\nGet Dollar a \"Dozen  Ekss\u2014famous\n\"PouUr.ynian\nTELLS HOW\n\"Tho grout trbuble with the poultry\nbusiness hns nlw:iys been that the laying life of a hen was too short,\" snys\nHenry Tnifford, Interniitionnl Poultry Expert and Breeder, for nearly\neighteen years Editor of \u25a0 Poultry\nSuccess.\nTho average pulled lays 150 t-ggft.\n\u2022If kept the second year, bIto may lay\n100 more. Then she goes to market,\nYet, It has been scientifically established that every pullet is born or\nhatched with over ont! thousand minute egg germs in her system\u2014and\nWill lay them on a highly profitable\nbasis over a period of four to six\nyears'   time  if given   proper  care.\nHow to work to get 1,000 eggs from\nevery hen; how to get pullets layint,'\nearly: how to make the old hens lay\nllko pullets; how to keep up heavy\negg production all through cold winter months when eg-****, aro highest:\ntriple egg production; make slacker\nhens hustle; JB.OO profit from* every\nhen in six Winter months. These aiid\nmany other money making poultry\nsecrets are contained in Mr. Trafford's \"1,000 EGG HEN\" system of\npoultry raising, ono copy of which will\nbe sent absolutely free to any roader\nOf this paper who keeps six hens or\nmore. Eggs should go, to a dollar or\nmore a dozen this winter. This means\nbig profit to the poultry keeper who\ngets the eggs. Mr. Trafford tells\nhow. If y\u00b0u keep chickens and want\nthem to make monoy for you, cut\nout this ad and send it with your\nname and address to Henry. Trafford.\nSuite 603R Tyne Bldg,, Bingham ton,\nN. Y., and a freo copy of \"The 1,000\nEGG .HEN\" will be> sent by return\nmall.... \u2022   '\nWILSON'S MESSAGE\nCHIEFLJfpSTIC\nDoes Not Touch on League oi\nNations in Address to\nCongress.\nWASHINGTON, \"Dec. ,7. \u2014 Both\nhouses of congresH were in brief\nsession today to hear President\nWilson's annual message. ; It was\nread by thc clerk, Mr. Wilson heedr\ning tho advice of his physfcnn not to\nappeared in person to present his recommendations.\nGalleries in both senate and house\nwere crowded. Both were drawn by\nthe chance that his message might\ntouch on the League of Nations\nquestion or his own approaching re-\nretirement to private life, and were\n,disappointed.\nMr. Wilson confined himself almost wholly to domestic questions.\nOnly by Inference dW his . message\nrefer to tho nearing close of his\nadministration, and that, was in the\nconcluding paragraph. The proposals ho presented, tho president\nwrote, were hot bo much a series of\nrecommendations as a \u25a0\u2022 confession\n\"of the faith in which I was bred\nand which it is my solemn purpose\nto stand by until my last fighting\nday.1'\nF0R1WERCAPTAIN IS\nSELF-CONFESSED SPY\n- NEW YORK, Dec. 7.\u2014 Sensational\ndisclosures of his .mission to' the\nUnited States as a \u00abpy for tbe. German goycrnnirtnt'i .worn given in an\nallegcd: confos'sio'iv of: Joht) j-Willcrs,\nformerl^ captdin -in thc \"18t^ ,U. S.\nInfantry, alleged thief ami deserter,\nafter his arrest here tonight, charged with absconding with $5,000 of\nhis company fund on Dec. 1!), 1!U8.\nWillers, the polico said, recited in\nbrazen fashion how lie was sent to\nto the United States as one of 300\ncadets trained in the art of cspoion-\nnge, to enlist In the United States\narmy.\nOn his arrival in the United States,\nWillers went lo Albany where he enlisted us a private. He quickly advanced to the rank of captain but\nwas never sent across the ocean.\nMAHGHURIA\nAnti-Bolshevik General Arrives at Port Arthur After\nDefeat.\nTOKIO*. \"Dec. 7.\u2014Press dispatches\nrecol'ved today slate that General\nSome.noff, former leader of the An-\n'.i-lio'shcvik forces along thc fron-\ntles between Siberia and Mongolia,\nhas arrived in Port Arthur, Manchuria where it is expected he will\nfind asylum. General Semenoff gave\nlip tlie struggle against the Bolsheviki when his- men, defeated by the\nSoviet hordes, deserted in great\nnumber.\nStore Closes Today at 12:30\" p. tn. J\nTHE STORE WITH THE XMAS SPIRIT\nTime to Buy Petticoats\nYour Street Petticoat may not need a successor just\nnow, but examination of Petticoat Stocks just now discloses the fact that you can replace it at prices so advantageous as to discourage delay.      Here are lovely\nNew Silk Moire Petticoats\nThe range\n$3.50\nwith deep flounces appropriately trimmed,\nof colors include Black, Green, Navy,\nGrey and Purple, Special \t\nSecond Floor, Phone 456\nBARGAINS - BARGAINS - BARGAINS\nFor 10c\nWhen down town drop into the Bay (New Store) and\nsee the values offered on the table of 10c Bargains,\ni Regular values to 39c\u2014Filled up with new odds and\nen\\ls daily \u2022. New Store\nS-I-M-M-O-N-S\nQUALITY MATTRESSES AT REASONABLE\nPRICES\nSleep on an \"Ostermoor,\" the \"Best\" (fQA AA\nMattress        .        -J>-JU.UU\nMattresses well filled with all felt and covered with strong\ndurable ticking, i ...\n     $15:50 to $22.50\nMonarch Floss and Down Arrived Today\nMonarch Floss\nIn shadna of white pink, flesh\npink, Orior.'tnjj Jade, old rose,\nist-iirlot, cardinal, emerald and\nenpon.   \u25a0 Ounce, balls.\n40c\nMonarch Down\nIn  shades  of  emerald,  old  rose.\nrose,   Oxford,   heather,' cardinal,\nficarlet and white.    2_oz.\nballs.    Special  ...,\n75c\nOrnJei* Early as Supply is Limited\u2014Phone 2    \u2022\nm \"t\nffl (Hie Jjudsorts Bat* (fbmpuj \"Ml\nLiberal, a majority of 77 .over Oat-cy,\nIndependent. Four of five Isolated\npoint** remain to Ijo heard from.\nTlie totals now stand: Kergln, I_ibev-\nitl, '50S; Hows, Cons-rrvi-livc, 212,\nHush, Independent, 15, Casey, In-\ndependent, 281; Daley, Independent,.\n21;    King, 'Independent,    71).,     ,\nliquor for iriedWirial' . pftrpo\\%e&Vi'\u00a3he-\nreport states, adding: \"During the\nepidemics of influenza dectors were\nfrantically    endeavoring   to    procure\nI whisky for their patients seriously\nIII with pneumonia, and it is claimed\nI that   many   lives   could   have   been\n'saved    had    whisky   been    available\n'during  the   emergency.\"\nRESERVE POSTS\nReiurned Men Only Eligible\nfor Sedentary Work of the\nSettlement, Board.\nOTTAWA, Dec. 7.\u2014(Canadian\nPress)\u2014In view of the present unemployment situation among returned men, the soldier settlement board\nof Canada is taking steps to see that\nits declared policy, that only returned men be employed at clerical\nund   record   work,   is   carried   out.\nAll district officers have been instructed to furnish a certificate to\nthe effect fhat * no female staff if*\ni-ngaged in classes of work mentioned, except In case where individuals\nare epiployed, or kinship to deceasing soldiers by virtue of war service,\nii' where no returned soldiers are\nbtainahle at the salaries available\nfor the positions.\n* Ma.ii r Barnett, chairman of the\nboard, states that this procedure\nis merely to cheek up the various offices, to 'iscertul'n if previous instructions   are   being   carried   out.\nEXPLORE FAR NORTH\nBY MEANS OF PLANES\nOTTAWA. Dec. 7. \u2014\u25a0 (Canadian\nPress).\u2014If plans now under .way\nhy lhe Dominion. Air Board for\nconsideration, are matured Canadian\ngeologists who, every summer make\narduous trips to far northern regions\nto' carry on field work, will next\nsummer be spared much effort and\nsaved several weeks of valuable\ntime by being carried in airships,\nThe first attompt to utilize the flying machine' for this practical purpose will be made in the Ma-***-\nkenzie river basin and the flight\nwill prob.ably be made from Peace\nIMver Landing, In Northern Alberta,\nto Fort Norman. The first man to\nadvocate the air mute for geologists\n-vas Dr. Alfred Thompson, member\nfor thc Yukon, who discussed the\ntime saving possibilities, of this\nplan in the house of commons two\nyears  ago.        ,\nATLIN RETURNS\nLIBERAL MEMBER\n.^.NCOUViER, Dec. 7.\u2014Belated\nreturns from four additional polls\nin   Atln   constituency   give   Kergin,\nLUXURY TAX PROVES\nCHEAP TO COLLECT\nOTTAWA, Der, 7. \u2014 (Canadian\nrre.ss).\u2014-The cost of collecting the\nluxury and sales lax Is proving\npleasingly low, according to a statement made to tin- C'inadian l>i'ess,\nLtd., this evening by Hon. R. W.\nU'teniore, minister of customs and\ninland .revenue. When the annual\nstatement of the department Is issued, covering the operations of the\nyear. In*. Wlgmpro stated, it will\nshow that the cost of collecting\nthese taxes iu well within three-iiunr-\nlers of one per cent. When the estimates ol' tin* cost of collection were j\ndrawn a [J- it was expected tbat It\nwould have, proven mere costly'\nthan one per cent to make the\ncolIeMious.\n''Your husband is simply a slave\nU)   money.\"\n\"Well, t\"pere are\" lots of would-be\nemancipators, You ought to see the;\nw'-uen*-* schemes that are mailed to\nii;tii \"\u25a0\u25a0\u2014Boston     Transcript,\n' 'i -\".-.ing lempcrature has never\n:-een' kno-.n  at   Key West,  Florida.\nJapanese War Office\nReports Casualties in\nSiberian Engagements\nTOIilO, Dec. 7.\u2014Casualties among\nthe UitpafteSe troops in ;the Siberian\nfighting to date Include 1,437 men\nk lieu in action and 580 deaths from\nsickness, it was announced by the\nwar   office   today. The     records\nShow I;622 wounded ih action.\nQuebec Boiler Explosion\nKills One, injures Eight\nKOKT COULOGNE, Que, Dec. 7.\n\u2014One man was killed ' and eight\nothers were Injured when a small\nIjoiler used for heating water in\n. --iine'-iiou with operations of the\ncooperage factiry, exploded wrecking the boiler room of the building\nand sending flying debris and scalding- water into a crowd of workers-\nThe explosion occurred yesterday\nafternoon Hut owing to the break\ndown in tbe telephone and tele- j\ngraphic serives, duo to the storm, j\nIt- was impossible to communicate !\nwith the outside world until today. The factory belongs to tho\nSutherland-Irinls company, Limited.\nThe dead man Is Duncan McKay,\naged 30,  uf this city.\nIS PERU\nWEI? PROMISE \u25a0\n\"uimued from Page One) |\n:.ere today and taken to Wellington   barracks.\n.Labor Commission Sees   Disorders.':\nCOH   .    Dec-    7.---The   members   of\nthe   I abnr   commissidh.   who   arrived\nin   Cork  for  what  they  intend -to  be\n.   iveck's   investigation   of   the  -situation,   have   already   witnessed   num-\nrrni---   disOnlers.     There   was   consid_\n.-li'l-Ic   shooting   and   window   smash-\n!]\"\u25a0-?   during   the   night.     An   Irishman-\n.v.':*;*- stepped  up to  the commissioners\nt   -he   entrance   to   their   hotel   an,d\n\u25a0    --ff&t-'d   them   to \u25a0 inspect   a   jowelr*\/\n\u2022  re   nf rby   which   had   been   pai>\n^recked,   wag   arrested   by   a\nind   Tim   after   rough   treaty\n'the   eommissioners   also   sa-vj\n\u25a0\\   of   auxili-irie-s   bonding   up\nir-hlng   pedestrians   and   -the\nts   of   vehicles.\nThe   commission.,    after     returning\nfrom   \"RaniVm   this .afternoon,   visited\nthe   'boos   wrecked   last   evening  anH\n-i,ii*-*.L.u-:\\l the proprietors.    Later thb\ncommission   obtained   the   release  of\ntlie  Irishman  who  bad asked  the in-,\nvestIgii tors to inspect the damage to\nho   jewelry    store.     Two    adjojnirig.\n11\/\n-ind\nup!\nALASKA WILL HAVE\nLIQUOR SUPPLIES\nWASHINGTON, . Doc. 7.\u2014(By\nCanadian Press)\u2014Liquor is finding\nUs way into Alaska territory from\nBritish Columbia, according to the\nannual report of the department of\nthe interior, which.was issued today. Evidently tho enforcement of\nprohibition in the far northern state\n13 a difficult matter. Not only\nare supplies of Canadian ' ' liquors\nbeing sold by bootleggers, but, according to the report, \"distillation\nprocesses are becoming well known.\"\nThe governor recommends more\nliberality in  the law in the case  of\nbuildings wore completely wrecked,\nono of which was occupied by a\nwoman and hor invalid htisband. ant)\ntbo other by a woman and her seven\nchildren.\nAmong those held up in the streets\ntoday by the auxiliary police wus the\ncaptain of a United States steamer\nlying in tlio harbor and lho stenographer  uf   tho  Labor  commission. . .\nltaids today by the Black and Tans\nleft tho city tonight in a state of\ntense excitement. A (laborer was daril\ngerously wounded by firing trom two\nWiies  loaded  with   auxiliaries.\nTho village nf Blarney, near Cork,\nwas invaded yesterday by armed and\nuniformed men who raided and\nsonrelifd all houses.\nWidespread   Desire   for   Truce\nLONDON', Dec. 7.\u2014Arthur Hender.\nson, of the Labos commission, which\nrecently investigated conditions in\nIreland, and William Adamson. chadiM\nman of the parliamentary Labor pari\nty. had an interview with Lloyd-\nOeorge tonight, and presened to him\nthe report of tho commission's inquiry in Ireland as to the state of\npublic feeling in Ireland concerning\na possible truce.\nMr. Henderson had previously m\u00ab*r,\nthe parlhuientary Labor party and,\nexplained how impressed tho commission had been by the. widospreatl\ndesire for a truce and a conference\nto   negotiate  & .settlement\n ft*\nTHE ARK\nMORE REDUCTIONS\nMen's Heavy Mackinaw Pants,\n$7.50: Heavy Gray Tweed 86.00:\nKhaki Pants 33.00; very heavy\nBlue Bib Overalls $3.00: Gray\nFlannelette Sheeting, very heavy\nv\/eight, 7\u201en\u201e 31,20 yd-1 Men's\ntlined MuHSBkln Gloves 31,00 I\"ld\n31,25 pair; Men's Strong Work\nShirts 31 .T.V Men's Sweaters, to\n\u25a0ilear, $2.50. \u00bb3.00. 34.00\nWool Socks, 50^ aI>d 75^ Pa'r'\nAll goods by the .yard at' sweeping\n\u25a0reductions. Hugs, Linoleums, Heaters and ranges at .bargain prices; also.\nto jm^bTtifsKfmmm, mpimbkv urnm, December s, 1920.\na piano.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone  65L.\nf_\n806  Vernon   Street\nCHRISTMAS\nCARDS\nWe have a very large\nstock bf cards. The designs and texts are of the\nvery latest.\nPrices very reasonable\n\u25a09 -a\nCanada Drug & Book Co\nProtcrlptiene    Carefully    Compounded\nPhen. 81..\nP.O. Box 1067\nAnnouncement Extraordinary\nI; ICE CREAM WEEK \\ I\n'.j From Pecemner llth to December\niiSth inclusive this space will have a\n!\u00bbBAL VAMP IN MONEY to you.\n-#e itre -going .to sell ONE THOUS-\nIJA.KD BRICKS OF ICE CIIEAM at\nijreduced prices, will you get yo.lr\nShare?\nI too Cfcam in the ideal dessert fbr\nSuncheon- or dinner and in rood value\n.is much cheeper than nny, you can\nlet-ve.\n.;. Will tell  you  more  tomorrow.\nWATCH THIS SPACE\u2014IT WILL BE\n' VALUABLE\nview Creamery Company\nLimited\n;\"The   Home   of  Quality   Ice  Craam\"\nCLASSIFIED    ADS.    BRING    BE-\nSUMS  EVERY  TIMW.\nIN\nThou Art the\nSnubb   Pollard   Comedy\n\"Raiie the Rent\"\nFOX NEWS\nMUrr&JEFF\nTopics of the Day\nTOMORROW\nHAROLD LLOYD\n' ': ' HN~   '\nCaptain Kidd's Kids\nPHQNE 10\nJUST ARRIVED\nJap Oranges d\u00bb-|   rtA\nper.box   <D_L\u00bb_i-U\n\"Norwegian  Stock  Fish     CA\/\u00bb\nper lb.     OUC\nMolasses Snaps QA\/\u00bb\nper lb    Q\\)L\nComb Honey P\\F-\u00bb\/\u00bb\n\u25a0per comb     dOis\nCRAB BAG SALE\nA free ticket with every purchase,\neven if it is only a collar button\nGood for the drawing*; of a prize\nfe'Very Saturday night, Three valuablf\nprizes to bo drawn on Ohristmaa Eve\nFirst   Price*\n$60.00.\n-Diamond    Ring,   valuo\n8ocond Price\u2014Silver Te.i-Sot, value\n$26.00.\nThird   Prize\u2014Pendant,  value $16.00\nAU    Bags    con tain ing    exceptional\nvalues.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist & Optician ,\nWEDNESDAY, 8th DEC.\nAt 10:30 A.M.     '\nHaving received instruction**, from'\nMr. A. N. Taylor, I w*ill offer at\nPublic Auction The Windsor HoteJ,\nSilverton, B.C., and the ., contents,\nconsisting of 19 bedrooms, with bed,\nDresser, Washstand, Chair and set of\nware In each room;% quantity of Bed\nLinen, Blankets. Comforters, Sheets\nand Blips, Bar Counter, Mirror, Half|\nSafe, Glasses, Floorcloth, Long Rubber Rug, Dining Tables, Chairs,\nKriives, Forks, Spoons, Large Kitchen\nRange, Kitchen Utensils, Heating\nStoves, Washing Machine. Plates and\nDishes, and all the outbuildings, etc.\nTERMS CASH.\nW. CUTLER\nLOOK!\nTHE 0, K. BAKERif\nAre making a Specialty of their\nXmas Cakes and Puddings\nOrder Early\n01 BAKERY\nStanley Street.\nPhone 165\u2014Quality Only\nBEST CHURN ON THE MARKET\nMakes 'B'trtter in  One  Minute\nAt  the\nB. C. PLUMBING AND\nHEATING COMPANY\nNelson, B. C.\nED. MASON'S\nNOTED\nXMAS\nDRAWING\nON THURSDAY, DEC, 2?r4\nAt the Same Old Price\nAt the Same Old Place\nIn the Same Old Way\nGet in on this\nDon't Say No\u2014TED\nbear in Mind\nThat  during  these  days  of  readjust\nment   of   (prices   and   advertising   of\nlower   prices    THIS   STORE   WILL\nALWAYS   FOLLOW   THE   MARKET\nwith   high   quality   merchandise\nFleming's Store\nFAIRVIEW v\nDRY    GOODS,    GROCERIES,    ETC,\n-^iffiy\nCOLEMAN \"QUICK-LITE\"\nLAllff\nIs recognized as.the leading gaspline lamp\non the market and is the universal Home\nlamp where electric light is nofc. available.\n\"VVe h&Ve two varieties to choose from\nPrice* $13.00 and $15.00\nAlso Lanterns at $11.00\nVaUance Hardware Company, Ltd.\n___\u00abB''tn-_-i\nN_LSON, B. a\n_M\nCommittee of Eleven Chosen to M)eet With Delegates From\nLocal Organizations and Select Seven Candidates; Report to be Submitted (or Ratification to Another Public\nlileeting; Formation of a Ratepayers' Association is\nProposed.\nAt a large and representative citizen**\" meeting in thc ciiy council\nchamber last night, after three hours\ndiscussion, a comlttee of 11 ratepayers was named, to act jointly with a\ncommittee consisting of three delegates from each public or seml-\npubllc organization In Nelson, in\nsecuring a slate of seven candidates for xhe city council, this slate\nto- be presented to\" another public\nmeeting of citizens on Dec. 20 for\nratification   or  alteration.\ntho original ratepayers 10 mimed\nwero Alf Jeffs, J.* G. Bunyan, Charles\nH. Sewell, I. G. Nelson, J- E. Annable, J, A. Irving, Alex Leith, f.\nJ. Boles,- C. D. Blackwood, and J.\nW, Holmes',- T. J. Scanlaii, who occupied the chair, was subsequently added to thfc committee In ^he\n\u2022-\"apaelty   qf   convenor.\nUnanimity reigned over the gathering, as to the\".desirability *6t assuring the ^election of the best possible slate for the council, and\nfor the first hour, of the discussions (lho-. opinions expressed wero\n\"\"hiefly in'support of the plan outlined in The Daily News by A. T..\nWalley, C. D- Blackwood, and W. J.\nMeagheV, which provided for a nominating cbm-mlttee' representing various specified organizations. Divergence then began to .-appear, as \"to\nwhether this was the ideal method\nof securing: the object 'sought, and\nJ. G. Bunyan fathered a_ plan for\na public meeting, at whieh all elec*\ntors present should 'ballot on names\nto he submitted. The Bunyan plan\nwas outvoted by a narrow margin, hut In the end was practically\nadopted, \\Vhen It was decided that\nthe work of the big nominating committee must \"be submitted to a meeting of the electors  for ratification,\nl\\lr. Walley opened proceedings\nby stating that the meeting had been\ncalled wiih but one object in viejv,\nto secure the best possible representatives for the alderman ic board,\nthe one issue before tho citizens\nbeing that of asusuring the progress\nof the. city during the coming .year.\nT.   J(.   Scanlaii   v\/nn   voted   to   the\n*_hair   on   motion   o\u00a3   George   H'or-\ntoad and  J. W.  Holmes,  Mr.'Horstead was later installed as secretary.\nOri-ji.ti--.tors Outline  Proposal\nM.r. Walley read the letter in The\nDaily News calling the meeting and\nsetting --.forth the proposal for a\nnominating committee .composed of\nrepreaenlatives of various organizations. He said the scheme did not\nprofess to he perfect, and perhaps\noould be Improved. 'TVe have not\nbeen pushing our city as much as\nwe should,\" he said. \"This is one\nyear when \\\\*e should jjush.'\nMr. Meagher urged that tho time\nto get a good mayor and aldermen\nwas  now, and not later.\n\"Mr. Blackwood, the third joint author of the letter, claimed it embodied \/'a mighty good idea,\" though\nit\" was only intended as a suggestion. Nelson's '\u25a0 civic elections, he\nsaid, were the greatest farce, in the\ncountry. Personal differences shquld\n\u25a0bo forgotten, and a man 'should ho\nchosen for his abilities,\nChairman Scanlan said those who\nhad good ideas in \"the* tops of their\ndomes should not be stingy with,\nthem, but trot- them out.\nj Called upon as the oldest man\npresent,. William \"Ebbs declared It\nwas an inspiration to see a largo\npublic meeting -take up this issue.\n\u2022The civic administration was a \"mat-\ntor   of   dollars   tvnd   cents. 'A   man\nshould he hired to conduct the\ncity's business because he could make\nIt pays dividends, not because of\nthe   color   of   his   hair.\nJ. Fred Hume expressed full accord   with   the   idea   outlined.\nJ. A. Irving. , referring to ''the\nbest council Nelson had ever had,\"\nof which he and Mr. Seanjnn had\nbeen members, snld the custom had\nb\u00bben io wait till five minutes before the election, and then get .together a slate- it was not a question of avoiding a fight, he said,\nbut of getting the bos'*, men, whe\nwould \u2022 accept nomination ' If they\n\u2022knt\u00bbw the citizens were  behind   Iliem.\nMr. Lelth was in sympathf* with\nthc plan outlined by tho three \"coconspirators.\" Sometimes namee\nwere put .In at the closing 'minute. The municipality should be\nrun as a business, He would not\nsuggest \"Nelson had net been well\ngoverned In the past, for he was\nproud o'f the city's good - financial\nposition. Anyone who knew anything about \" a. balance-sheet knew\nthat, But ,1s was possible to improve ithe method of selecting those\nwho were to be on the council- ^   \u2022\n- Aid. C. F. McHardy, who Was\nleaving to catch -tho coast train,\nsaid if a family was selecing one\nof its members for an important\nmission, the individual most fitted, everything considered, would\n\u25a0be choosen; Civic life was.just one\nstop above.the home, and, the same\nprinciple   should   be   followed.\nFavors  'Contests\nA plea, for contested elections was\nmade by TV. IT. Jones, .who stated\nthat as soon as he saw --.the letter\nhe felt' at once this wa*, not the\nproper way to go about the matter. When the voters divided into\ntwo parties, the principles were usually well defined, Shcl there were\ngood men lo uphold the principles-\nA candidate's costs, in an election\nwere small, and he shoifld be willing\nlo spend the necessary amount. Citizens who' had lived ln \u2022 Nelson for\na substantial portion -of their lives,\nand done Wol\\ here, should be ready\ntfo donate sonic -''time to the city.\nIf not, they twere poor fish.,\nMr. Blackwood asked what Mr.\nJones considered the issue beforo\nthe   citizens.\n- Mr. Jones replied by asking Mr.\nBlackwood to go Into details as to\nthc matters not elaborated In the\nletter, under the head of the city's\nadvancement.\nThe chlilrman commented that\nWhile Mr. Jones said citizens should\nbe patriotic aiid do their bit, some-\n'times they didn't do it. \"Don't sit\nthere like a lot of dummies,\" he admonished those present.\nE. W. Widdowson thought the\nmethod of choosing candidates suggested was not feasible. He suggested that lho pi'esent meeting, or\nanother specially called, should nominate candidates, and name a committee to ask them, to. run,\nMr. Walley said Mi*. Jones had\nnot taken a very active part in\nmu nlclpal affairs, and perhaps did\nnot realize the difficulties there\nhurt been in the last 10 or 15 yeai'\nin getting good, candidates.\nA Ratepayers'. Association;\nThe formation of a ratepayers',\nsociation was advocated by .Henry\nWaters, as the logical way to keep\ntab on civic affairs. The nomination\n\u25a0should be hy such an'*tisSoclation.'He\ncriticized the proposal -befdre the\nmeeting as \"too nebylpus.\"\nMr. Ebbs referred to\"the ratepayers' association '.-*\" he had once\n'Started,  that had later, rnerged with\nThe Store With The Christmas Goods\nDrake's New Variety Store\nGreat Variety of Xmas Goods Now on Display\nSpecial showing of Dolls and Carriages, Shoo FJies,\nKiddy Cars, Pianos, Sleighs, Friction Toys, {Guns;. Tricycles, Tops, Toy Tea Sets, Xmas Stockings, Handkerchiefs, Books, Brushes, Cqrnbs and Mirrors, Hand Bags,\nlarge assortment English Cups and Saucers, Dinner Sets,\nFancy Tea Sets, Water Sets. Also a full line Glass Sets.\nLarge assortment of Boxes of Chocolates.\nLittle Store Still Doing Business \u25a0\nFormerly Ewert Jewelry Store.       Open Evenings.\nAT YOUR OWN PRICE\nStore and residence property on Waftr street.\nThe original cost was $2500.00.   Will start it at,\n$860.00 and accept $50.00 bids.\nCharles F* McHardy\n\u2022Seal ss*_a_\u00a3.      WoS! M.      mati-Afto...\nthe* Nelson Improvement association.\nMayor J. A. McDonald, called u*^-\nby the chairman, said the proposal\nwas a good one. He also approved\nthe suggestion for a ratepayers' association. Before a man ran for\nmayor, he should be required to give\na pledge that earth would not simply he carted from one point to another on street work. There had\nbeen years when (30^000 was spent\nthe streets, with not a square\nyard ofmacadam laid,.\nAid. Mrs. W. G. Poster, also called on, said she much 'enjoyed hearing vleWs expressod as to the defects\nof thf past council year, and Only\nwished that more citizens had exorcised the privilege of being present\nat fr\\e council sessions, and lending\nsupport. Quite a number of the\ncouncil, she said, f.ivoi'ed having ;\ntown manager, as .') move fpr Qffi\ncloncy. She believed lhat would he\na good departure; ,and would save\ntile city money through better co-\nrelation of ihe work. With reference to tho questions exchanged by\nMessrs. P. hick wood and Jones*. she\nsuggested that the issue before ihe\ncity the coming year might be whether rfjplsou should be a tourist con-\n.ter first and an industrial center\nsecond. The cl*y might inquire f\ncontentious mayor ,to fight at Vic\ntoria for the  Ymir road. *>\nAid. McHardy, \"Mayor McDonald\nami Aid. Foster all were applauded.\nT. 8.. King said Nelson hod im\nproved materially In the five years\nhe had been a resident, and the district immediately adjacent had secured many desirable residents from\noutside. If the city could continue\nits progress 'it was probable that\nthe surrounding residential district would also continue to develop.\nAid. C. H. Bean thought the proposal a. ktep in the right direction,\nUsually tickets had be-eft filled at the\nlast .mhiute,. with candidates whose\nelection \"followed If they were popular enough. Street construction,\nhe added, depended on how much\nm_ney the citizens wero willing to\nhavo spent.\nExrMaypr Koefe referred humor\nously to the Prohibition and Moderation parties being asked to send\ndelegates for the nomihatUng com\nmlttee, while the ^Bootieggers' as\nsociation was invidiously overlooked. Ho expressed tho belief that a\nrepresentative nominating committee\nwo.uld succeed in inducing good men\nto' stand,\nComlni? Ychr CrlticmJ.\nEx-Mayor ,T. IS. Annable Bftld the\nticket system in the past had been\ntho- .city's bane. He suggested the\npayment of aldermen, ori a scale of\n$5 per meeting. Mr. Annable refer\nred to various new Industries under\nconsideration for Nelson by the industrial committee of the board of\ntrade, including a. match-block Industry-, a match factory, and a pulp\nmill, and predicted that next sum\nmer .would rsee Nelson at a critical\nstage of career, both industrially,\nand from a tourist standpoint. He\nstated that ho was not in the field\nfor mayor, but might consider \"stand\ning for the .city council if he were\nwnnted. He incidentally paid\ntribute to Mr. .tones' work on the\nboard of tmde and in other'organiza\ntions.\n\u25a0 Aid. J. O. Patenaude endorsed th*\nproposed ratepayers' association. He\nsaid he had deVotod 'much effort\ntoward increasing the city's sale of\nelectric power, wanting, aB. a business\nman, to see the city secure \"fevenuo\nfrom   its   assets.\nA   Municipal   Association.\nAid. A. -A. Pei'rier' Bald';he had\nbeen preachtn& a municipal aflsocia-\ntion for a long time, to include both\nratepayers and * householders, and\nhad asked -H. W. Robertson last\nspring to try and get a bunch together to start one. He 'uVfefed sup\nport of tho city council in'1 dealing\nwith the civic problems, kelson, ho\nsaid, had pow^r, scenery, and water,\nand could become both an industrial;\nand 'a tourist city,\n\"Tho ratepayers have not all the^\nbr'ains---the householders have some,\ndeclared J. W_. Holmes, In tellin-ff\nof what the Improvement association\nhad accomplished in the past. *\" :He'\nproposed a ballot to secure seven\neligible   names,\nAt this stage it was decided to deal\nwith the various proposals before th'e'\nmeeting. \u25a0-.<-\nMessrs.- Walley and, Meagher moved and seconded a resolution embodying the original plan fpr a lio-'\nminating committee from .'\"tho vapl-.J\nous   organizations,    .empowered   to''\nfind seven  candidates,  the enudidntes\nthemselves   to   decide   \u25a0\u2022which   one.\nshould,-offer for maybe.,,\n\u25a0On-.'the suggestion of Mf. Irving,\nthe Prohibition and Moderation pat*-*\nties were dropped from the rhblioh..\nas belonging to the pai**t,\" and the\nRetail Merchants' assoclatfbn ^was\nadded.\nMr. Biuiynn's Amendment. ,\nIn amendment, Mr. Bunyan moved-\nthat a public meeting be called, and\na ballot be there taken, in the na-i\nlure of a primary, to secure seven\nnames. He said \"there had never^\nbeen any trouble in securing the first\nslut,-'. ' It was the seepp-d slate to\nbuck the. first that was hard to\n\"get.,\nMr. \"Waters secojided this motion,\nthough .holding that a ratepayers'\nassociation was the idQal body to\nmake tho nominations.\nChairman Scanlan suggested that\nthe committee made up from delegates of the organisations could, add,\nto their number 10 ejectors not as-'\nsoclated with any of the* organizations. -\nKenneth Campbell pointed oilt that\nthe board of trade was debarred by\nits constitution from participating\nin the proposed proceeding.\nT. H. Waters favored action at an?\nother public meeting, or else at tl*jp\npresent one, at which every church,\nand lodge, as well as publlo or setf*-,!-\npublic organization was already, represented.\nMr. Blackwood $\u00bbJd there was a,\nlot of 'detail work that it public\nmeeting, could not. do, and that only\na committee to do,\n!<\u2022 H, Choquette \u25a0favore.'* calling,\nanother meeting; Somo of the organizations named, he said, might choose\nthoir delegates in the light of past\nIssues. If the present plan were carried* through, somo might my it was\ndictated  by   n   clique,\nMr. Holmes said the public meet-**,\n*)ng plan would give a final choice,,\nfor  the  yotets   couW  hAnxe   saVeral'\nHAV\nNo. 1 Timothy; No. 1 Alfalfa;\nMixed Timothy and Alfalfa\nMixed Redtop and Wild Hay\nWheat straw expected very soon\nThe BRACKMAN-KER\nMILLING CO., LTD.\n^ *<**\nPreferences beyond seven. If some\nof the highest seven would not accept, others coud be taken in order.\nThe Bunyan motion for\" a public meeting ballot\" \"was seconded by\nIt.   D.  Barnes. -.\nStraw   Vote   By   Ballot-Box\nA brand new proposal was put\nforward by Mr. Annable, who suggested taking a straw vote of 'the\npeople, on some specified after-\nboon, employing a returning officer and ballot-box, with every person  on  the voters list participating.\nMr. Bunyan\u2014All that will not be\nnecessary if we have. the public\n\u2022meeting.\nChairman Scanlan ' suggested' a\ncommittee to devise a scheme for\nthe selection of candidates, this\neon^mittee to report to ** a public\nmeeting.    *\nMr. vBbles said it would be waste\nof time trying to* select candidates\nat a public meeting^ unLeSs It wns\nknown In advaneo who .were) willing\nto   stand. ,;;   '-i(\nHenry Waters suggested tlie ap.-,\npoint of a committeo to tfeilort to\nthe publl-p, meeting the -names to\nI*be  voted' on.\nAid. Perrler's solutiojj was| to enroll every ratepayer and hOusehdld-\n'e.r in a municipal association, arid\nthon   nominate.   , '- \u2022\n'   Mr. Hume seconded Mr. Anhable's\nmotioy  for a ballot-box  straw vote.\nVexed  Questions  Settled\n\u25a0Chairman Scanlan took a vote ot\nthe meeting on the general question\nof getting a good slate, and found\nihe   opinion   unanimous.\nAftor somo more discussion, and\nthe 'withdrawal of1 the Annable proposal, the question finally came to\na vote, 14 expressing a preference\nfor the Bunyan'\" plan' of a 'fm-KHc\nmeeting, while 10 fayo^ed tho plan\nof a. committee of delegates, reinforced 'by 10 appointees . of the\npresent meeting. Tho vote was taken after a numbor had  left.\nAfter the 10 had been appointed,\nCharles Shaw objected that nearly all of them belonged to some organization that would have a voice\non   the  othcj> commijttee.\nTo, meet.. this objection, it was\ndecideflrph motion df MesS-r-h.JEyipc\nhnd Holmes, to have the slate -flrawn\nup and submitted for rntiff-cation to\na public meeting, to .be. held pn.\nDec.\" 29.      .  \u25a0\/ ;.. \"'\u25a0\u25a0\"      :;:'':' \u25a0''.\nIt was also decided to\" take in*\nall public or' semi-public'.-.organiza--\ntions\", -Inliulliig tKfe A$PBp'\u25a0\"febor '.unions.\nMr. King, before adjournment, expressed the belief tfifct some tcbtr*.\ncrete results. -foi,v, the -benefit, of the\ncity woul'fl tlojtf from' thils'.WeUtit,\n^part from the, making ofn'Pmina-,\ntions.\nAS USUAL\nChodue'tte's have a large\nassortment of\nChristmas Cakes\nIn .:.various sizes\u2014all of the\n..highest* quality. Y.ou -will\n\u25a0enjoy them.\nBaker Street\nCan  the  Ghost 'of the  Past  be\nEluded.      Let\nKatherine\nThe American Beauty\nAnswer the question for you in\n\"The Notorious\nMiss Lisle\"\n\"Oh, BUI, Behave!\"\nCapitol Comedy\nRed Hot lea\nBruce Scenic\nI Have a Good Selection of\nHorse Blankets\nJOE HOLLAND\nHarness Maker\nP.O. Box 811.    Phone 1941\nj      JOHN _ A11T\nCABINET CIGAR STORE\nMAIL   ORDERS   ATTENDED   TO\nPROMPTLY    ( ,\nQ.moklng Tobacco, Snuff, Pipos and\nPull   Stock   of   CI gam,   Cigarette*,\nOther Shmkers' Supplios    '\nImproved Ranch For Sale as\nGoing Concern\u2014104 Acres\nAll good land; .,1'J, Aijlpared ahd\nplant _d,' 100 fruit *ltree*9: And _ina?l\nfruits j.' godd '\"flog house, '&ood barft\n\u25a040x50; neyer \"failing sptirig, besides. .. rurininjff wfitor through\nplnee. All kinds of outbulldinj^\"\n10 head of-^caCtlo, mostly Jferi^ey;\ngood \"hoi'ste, wagdns,, 'Melghfl;' *ftil\nngrictilt'uVfil irffnlCTflttht-s* to' Work\nplace.\nD. A. McFARLAND\nInsurance, Greonhill Coal. Real Estate.]\nRoom 6 K.W.C.  Block.  Phono 49.\n' I have a very fine > selection oil\nhlgh.clasg Fnrs\u2014Black, White; Tttupe,I\nCross aha Stiver Fox; Mink; Ala*kail\nSable; Marten; Boaver; Wolf In alll\ncolors; and many others. All of |\nbeat quality and finish, at manufacturers' prices.\nRE-MOlDELING A SPECIALTY\nG. .LASER\nManufacturer Furrier\nPhon. 106 N.litn. B.Cj\nKNOW THE' SIZE\nOF HIS GLOVES?\nHAT'S all you need ito know.\nYou'll -find, it very easy\"\"to select\n'coirept gloves from \"this aj-Jsort-\nment of fine \u25a0servlceoibl\"*** leathers.\nThey nre splendidly made. and good\nfitting.\nT\nEmory & Walley\nSil-iiHBiii'-u\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1920_12_08","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0396463","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1920-12-08 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1920-12-08 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0396463"}