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Full leeaed wlro _-a\u00abi_>B k\nof Canadian Frees, Limited.\n--BUB .j,\\ -\n7?i^_^'X-\n___.\nJtiELSON;_B.jC, iRJP'4f M0RMN6,.\n'i c_,    |lgrr\n\u202211,  1920.\nNO. 164.\n=*\u00ab*\u00bb\nlarding Tops Four Hundred\nMark; Captures Oklahoma\nMissouri and Tennessee.\nJENATE MAJORITY\nEXCEEDS A SCORE\ndemocrats Lose Eight House\nSeats in Harding's Own\nState.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 4\u2014A record\nimashlng vote for Senator Harding\nopplng tho 400 mark and republican majorities of moro than a score\nmn tho ebnnte and 150 in tho house,\n[ftvore assured from virtually oomjilcto\n\"S-eturns tonight from Tuesday's elections. .      \u2022\njf   With    the   democratic   strongholds\nSoil. Oklahoma,  ^Usspnri   and  Tennes-\njfcqo definitely swept into tho Republican   party's   ranks   by   tho   crushing    victory,    the    Harding-Coqlidgo\n(ticket has 390 votes, exclusive of tho\njfivo from'-Mont-ana, where tWRepublican    stato-   ticket    was    victorious\n\u2022rand the presidential ticket ahead.\nft.   The   Republican    landslide   toplght\n%&n\\  given  the  Republicans '58 'senate, seats as against 37  for the Democrats, with lato returns undormin-\npg   tho   seat   of   Senator   Beckham,\n\u25a0Democrat,   Kentucky.       His   fiepub-\nicftt.    opponent,   Richard   J   33,rnst,\norged    ahead   In    a   nip   and   tuck\n[ight   for  the  only  senate fight  left\nnsettled.\nCapture Nine Senate Stjats\n\u25a0Qf the 34 sonate contests, tho Ro-\nlubllcans captured nine from tho\nicmocrats and eloctod all 15 of their\n[jindjdates. Among the Democratic\nnators who today went down to cleat wore Senators Chamberlain, of\n\u2022bgori, former chairman of tho iriili-\nry committee, Senator Smith of Ar-\n>na, who lost to former Represent.-*\nro Ralph Cameron and Senator\nsnderson of Nevada, who' was doited by former governor Oddlc.\nPinal returns from a few congros-\nini&l districts still were belated to-\n?ht, some due to close races which\n(set a few previous announcements\nothers from isolated sections;\nith these, missing districts, tho Rob-lean roll in the house has clim-\nd past 285 to 135 for the Demons. Among house members whoso\n-election\" was \u25a0'reported definitely\nnight, was Reprsontative Volstead\nMinnesota, author of tho Vol-\n\u25a0)itt prohibition enforcement act,\nid chairinan bf tho hoiwo judt-\niry  committee.\nSweep Ohio In House Contests\nin the.house contests, tho Republi-\nsweep gave Ohio an alpiost\nlid Republican delegation, only one\n;rict heing Iij doubt, in this\" tho\nimq state of Senator Harding and\n>vernor Cox, the Republicans gain-\n(Contlnucc]   on   Page   Two)\nay Not Attend\nLeague of Nations\nGeneva Conference\nLONDON, Nov. -i. (Canadian As-\njlated Press)\u2014Premier Lloyd-\niorge stated in the house, of com-\nns today that he had not yet deled whether he would attend, tho\nague of Nations, .conference in\nineVa, Ho announced that a new\nenslng bill would be introduced\nxt week. \u2022'        ,\nLabor Organizer\nPremier Defends Scheme f<>r\nRe-establishment of Soldiers.\nAGRICULTURAL POLICY\nNOT BEING NEGLECTED\nAppropriations Three Times\nGreater Than When King\nWas in Pqwer.\nKRLOWNA', Nov. 4.\u2014Premiur\nMeighen delivered his fifth speech\nSince entering the Yale constituency\nhero this afternoon before a large\naudience. He vigorously tlef ended\nth government's soldier '\u25a0 rc-s'.ahlish-\nment scheme and dealt with tho agricultural policy.\nHe said tho opposition had charged that tho government had not\nexpendod enough in developing agricultural affairs, but this ' year's\nappropriation, under Dr. Toimie's\ndirection, waB about $5,000,000, as\ncompared will, $1,700,000 when Hon.\nW. L< Mackenzie King was a member of the government, Since 1011,\nthirteen new experimental farms had\nbeen esyihlishpd. In addition to\nthis, expenditure on soldiers' seltle-\nmonf, railway oonstractio,*., and shipbuilding -was . of benefit: to agricultural   interests.\nThe government's legislation f,or\nthe returned men Was far more liberal in every particular thnn In any\nother country, and Canada was ihe\nfirst country fo act on behalf of tho\nveterans.\nIndicates New International\nAssociation for Peace and\nJustice.\nMARlpN, NQy. 4\u2014Making his first\nspeech as presidentelect,' Warren G.\nHarding declared at an election col-\nbra tion of home folks here tonight\nthat the Versailles league of nntions\nwas .\"now deoeosed\"; although tho\nnow administration intended to seo\nthat tho natioh played its part, in\na new international association, fottn\nded on peace and justice.\nINDEPENDENT ONLY\nOPPOSES TOWNSHEND\nLONDON, Nov 4. (Canadian Associated Press).---Tho coalition parly is not running a candidate in the\nWrclciti district, vacant through the\ndeath of Charles Palmer, journalist. Tho fight; therefore, will be between General Townshend, the defender of Kut, and an Independent\ncandidate, Charles Duncan- The\nLabor coalition vote is .expected to\ngo to General Townshend.\nQuebec Legislature\nAssembles January\nQUEBEC, ..or. 4\u2014The date' of\ntho opening of the season of tho\nporvineinl -legislature was spt for\nJan. Hi nt tho meeting of the cabinet   today.\nEXPLAINS FflEE FRUIT\nif\nVERNON, Nov.. 4\u2014Speaking to an\n.dlence of 2000 persons here this\nen ing, Premier Meighen critlzed the\ntfprm of Colonel Edgett, a candi-\nte who is endorsed by four par-\ns; including the Liberals. He said\nwould mako very little difference\nColonel Edgott's platform declarator, sufficient protection on fruit,\n. by his vote* hi parliament, ho\nied in driving tho govormpent out.\nther Mr. MacKenzie King or Mr.\n\u2022erar would come in and both de-\n*:ed for abolition of duty on fruit.\nReferring to a, clause in the can-\nOppingIlightly\nFALLS IN MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Nov. 4\u2014Shipping re-\nrds tor tho port of Montreal to\n,to show a slight falling off in.\no number of ships and the tonnage\nat has como hero during the pre-\nnt' season as compared with the\n,mp pel'iod' last .yoar. The drop\nIb   season   is   chiefly   duo  to   the\nt of thoro having 'heen fewer\naln   ships.\"   However,   the   amount\ngrain   passing   through   the  port\nheader this 5'car,   than last, \u00bb>b-\n\u25a037Mp,10&   bushels   against   29.-\n(7B1. ''Eggs export  suffered a dl-\nnution . and   butter   is   less   this\nur.\nApplo   exports   are   much   greater\nIs year,'.''comparing  120,090 barrels\nalnat   411,0:19   barrels   ship-fed   last\nMon,    f  ___\t\ndldate's platform providing for 100\nper cent re-establishment for returned soldiers, tho premier remarked\nthat ho knew of nobody who did not\naim at such an achievement. Not only\nthe government, but all the members of ithe house had worked hard\nand  faithfully on the matter.\nWas it thought, he asked, that\nthose who resisted every step the\ntho cause of tho workers and were\nfor tho soldiers' now than the government. Tho opposition would not\nlend a hand to aid tho. arm of the\nlaw in^tho enforcement of conscription.\nELEVATOR STOCKS IN\nDOMINION INCREASE\nOTTAWA, Nov- 4.\u2014According to\nreturns received at .the Dominion\nbureau of statist ies, for the week\nending Oct. 20, 1020, the quantity\nof grain in store in thd different\npublio elevators throughout Canada\nhas increased by 23,lpO.\"\"Jl-ifl bushels\nin nil grains, as compared with the\nprevious week. Increases are shown\nin wheat of 15,411,1-58 bushels; oats',\n5,S>02,102 bushels; b.rley, 942,888\nbushels; flax, -018,026 bushels and\nrye, 25,525 bushels.. * Briefly the\nsitunlion of grain In store is as\nfollows:\nIn the western country elevators\nthe quantity of grain In store is as\nfollows; wheat, 15,51.7,083 bushels;\noats, 5,548,34-; barley, 981,025; flar\n828,944. .':\u25a0'\u2022?.\nW.   H,  HOOP\nYeterar.   of   Winnipeg   Trades   Union\nmovement,    has    recently    analyzed\n15   years   of   labor   progress.'\nDiscover Plans for Counter\nRevolution; Arrest Many\nof Former Czar's Officers.\nCOPBNHIA0EN, Xov. 4\u2014The Ber-\niingsko Tin deride1 Kovno correspondent says today that Moscow newspapers received In Kovno record tho\nannouncement or the discovery by\ntho Soviet of plan^i for a big counter-revolution. Precautions have been\ntaken and thousands of persons aro\nlining arrested daily, the newspaper\nsays, and tlie general staff has detained 3,000 of tho former Czars officers who have been interned In Orenburg,\n.According to the Moscow Pravda\nas quoted hy the correspondent, Leon Trotsky, tho Bolshevik minister\nor war and marine, in a. speech in\nPclrograd  declared;\n\"I know danger is coming, I\nrealize the possibility of a severe\nwinter, but. though three fourths oE\nIho population die of hunger, tho re-\nma indor will survive to carry through\nto victory, world revolution.\"\nNorth Dakota Elects\nNon-partizan Senator\nFARGO, N. b\u201e NOV. 4\u2014Dr. E.\nP. Ladd, chemist, economist, and president of tho \"North Dakota, Agricultural college, will'-be the first nonpartisan league United States senator, in view of the admission today\nby S. Johnson. Democratic stato\nchairman, that Ladd had won tho\nsenatorship over H. IT, frerry, his\nDemocratic  opponent,\nIDr, Ladd if-, known in North Dakota, mainly for two things, his fight\nfor a better grain grading and marketing system, and his campaign against adulterated food,' paint and\ndrugs. |.;\nSaskatchewan Russian Settler Strangled Wife and\nCut Her Thrqat.\nSWIFT CURRENT, aSsk., Uov.\n4.\u2014r-John Kobitz, 'of tho Russian\nsettlement, north of Maple Creek,\nwho was arrested Tuesday' and\"\nbrought to this city, today confessed\nto inspector Stewart of the provincial police, that he murdered his\nwife by frst chokng her and then\ncuttng her throat, throwng the body\nnto Fsh creek.\nThe story s one of a forced mar\nriage in North Dakota, about a\nyear ago, and the couple havo\nnever' lived together as man and\nwife. Kobitz has been farming in\nthe district since 1017. and his wife\ncap.o over last spring \u201etp join him\nagainst his wishes. Quarrels were\nfrequent and in \"September last, Ros-\nle Kpbit-z was tried and acquitted\nIn the court here on a charge of\nattempting to murder tier husband,\n. Aftei'tthe trial she went to work as\na domestic servant. On Oetober\n10, Kobitz interviewed his wife and\nshe agreed to go out to the settlement with him to discuss their\nstrained 'affairs- That was the Inst\nseen of tho woman, and suspicion of\nfoul play being aroused a week or\nso later, the provincial police investigated and arrested tho husband\non  suspicion.\nEndorses Attitude pf\nBritish  Government\nOn Hunger Strikers\n\u25a0 HALIFAX, Nov. 4.\u2014AVmounce-\nwns mado loclny by Archbishop Worrell, president ol\" the Ministerial association tor Halifax and Dartmouth,\nthat at a meeting of that body on\nMonday last, a, resolution was passed endorsing the attitude of the\nBritish government towards the hunger striko of the late Lord Mayor\nMiwSttlney.\nNaval Department\nDistributes   Checks\n(ot Naval Prize Montfy\nOTTAWA, Nov; 4\u2014(Can. Press)\u2014\nThe department of the naval service Is now distributing checks for\nnaval prize money to men having\nserved with the j R. C. N. and B.\n-. X. V. R. Ai large number of\nclaims, have bee|t paid out, but a\ngreat many chetks are still held\naa the addresses! of the recipients\nare not known and the department\nwould be glad of advice aV to the\naddress of any man entitled to Jrlze\nmoney who has not been paid.\nBest Way to Stop Reprisals\nIs to Stop Murders, Says\nGreenwood.\nLONDON, Nov. 4\u2014In tho hoilao\nof commons today, T. P. O'Connor\nraised a debate by attacking what\nhe described as the, authorities- policy of frlghtfulness In Ireland, which\nhe declared was addlg new faatta-\nlino to the Sinn\" (Fein army and he-\nsmirching  Brltains   good   name,   .\nPoseph Devlin. Belfast, and other\nmembers strongly denounced the reprisals   in  Ireland.\nSir Hamar greenwood, chief secretary for Ireland, replying, gave\nstatistics showing that the military\nand police were not faltering in\ntheir ondeavor to maintain tlie strictest discipline. The constables wero\nplaced-under, qxrest, two of them\ncharged; with (murder. General Sir\nNeville MacReady, commander of the\nforces, had inquired inlo every char-\ngo against tho troops, and disciplinary action had been taken In ten\ncases. Trials had been ordered iu\nother case*, including seven mon for\ncomplicity in tho destruction of property at Hallow.\nThe secretary!' denied emphatically\nthat there was any government lm-\nprimaturc  on tho reprisals.\nIt was the government's duty to\ndefeat tho organized and armed nt-\n(Contlnued From Page Two)\nLiberal Leaders Speak\nat Minnedosa Meeting\nHlN.S3SOD^\/>Ian,,. ,Noy,..4\u2014T.hi>\nleartof cSf tlie'Liberni party arrived\nhere litis morning shortly after noon\nto be mot by th mayor of the town\nand a deputation of citizens who\nextended n. forpial welcome' to -Mr.\nKing and his lieutenants. The afternoon was spent quietly in confer-'\nence. with local liberals. In the ev-\nning the armories wore filled with an\naudience which applauded tho hard\nh|tting of the Hon. Dr. Beland, and\nlistened attentively to the. exposition of Liberal principles by Mr,\nKing. W. (-. Kennedy, tho member\nfor North Essex, also scored a. success with his brief and pungent \u2022summing up of present political conditions  in  the  province.\nLow Tariff Advocate\nCOLLECTS VAR!\nJ. A. MAHARG, M.P.\nFormer    member   for  . Maple    Creek,\nwants  ths  wheat  board   reinstated,\nto  maintain tho price of wheat.\nCoroner at Murder I Inquest\nBlames City for Dearth of\nPolice. \u25a0\u25a0'\nMONTREAL, Nov. 4.\u2014Another\nunsolved murder was this morning\nofficially added to .Montreal's list',\nwhen a coroner's jury returned a\nverdict killed by person unknown at\nlhe inquest held into death of Louis\nAntolnc Horner, formerly night clerk\na drug store, who was fatally shot\nfew days ago while struggling with\nyoung man-who had entered the\nStore and tried to rob il. In his\naddress lo ihe jury Deputy Coroner\nPrince stated thai morally the city\nof Montreal was criminally responsible for the murder and that It\nihould he brought to trial. Thero\nwere only iwo policemen on duty,\nhe said, in the district with Is one o'f\n\u25a0the rilhest. in the city.\nRegrets Premier Should Align Farmers With Vancouver\nand Winnipeg Seditionists;  Claims Misrepresentation;\nDisagrees With Many of Mackenzie King's Statements;\nRepudiates Eastern Claim to Equity in Western Natural\nsources.\nRes\n.1\nCOMPLAIN AGAINST\nJAPANESE CONSUL\nWASHING-TON, Nov. 4\u2014Citizens\nof Los Angeles mado formal complaint lo the United States state\ndepartment today that. Ujiro Oyama,\nJapanese, consul al that place, had\ndisplayed \"pernicious activity\" in advising voters lo oppose ' tho anti-\nJapanese land law in the elections\nin  Callforenla Tusday.\nIt was announced al tho 'stato\ndepartment that the complainants\nhad been informed that proof of\ntheir allegations should bo presented.\nFEIMIS\nDenounce Moderates \"Government Control\" Agitation in Alberta.\n- EDMONTON, Nov. \u25a0_\u2014 Believing\nHint' tho glear will' of the people\nof the pi-oyincc has heen expressed\nin the recent referendum, on the\nimportation of liquor, the Prei-fbyter-\nInn synod of \"Rdmo-1*0\"- at ita\nmeeting tonight, emphatically de-\nelarjtl that tlje government should\nmake effective legislation on the\nquestion and not to take heed of\nthe \"government control\" agitation\nthat, is now heing ma-de by the\nmoderatlonists; that, the abuses of\nmedi-jal prescriptions should be corrected nnd-tha tthe ' presbyter lau\npeople of the province should be\nvigilant to take such measures as\nwill denote strong plans Jjelng* made\nto subvert present prohibition legislation.\nA strong resolution urging enforcement of the present law on the liquor question as against any system of government control by yon-\ntor^ or dispensaries, was passed\nand will be forwarded to the provincial   government.\n1PE||CEPE\nMajority Votes for No\nChange; Dries Have Only\nEighteen Districts.\nLOiNDON. Nov. 4\u2014(Can. Assd.\nPress)\u2014No further results are as\nvol available in the Scottish prohibition poll.. Ho far only eighteen districts have voled for \"no license;\"\n19 are for a limitation -which means\na reduction of 26 per cent In licenses issued: and 115 are for no change.\nThe \"Westminster -Gazette, which\nfavors the temperance movement,\nsays ihe defeat of tho temperanco\nparty h rather more striking than\nthe simple figures would sugegst,\nfor in the main, it is tho residential\nand less crowded districts which\nhave declared against the public\nhouses and the areas \"Where there\nare tho most drinking facilities That\nhave decided  io keep all  they  have.\nFirst Merchantman\n\u00bb   Flying German Flag\nArrives at New York\nNEW YOfiK, Nov. -l.-^The first\nmerchant sleamship flying the Gorman flag to come to the port of\nNew York sinco July, 101*1. arrived\nhere   today.\nSTIRTSJSIfil\nYoung Driver in Coal Mine\nPeeved Because Denied\nFavorite Horse.\nCii.ACr-. RAY, N. S., Nov. 4.\u2014Because he could not have his favorite\nhorse which was required in another\npart of the mine, a young driver\n'yesterday caused a striko in the\nEhalten colliery, which tied up one\nSection of th'e mine, kopc fifty mon\nidle and reduced coal production by\nscores of tons. The boy was hauling\nfrom two miners and for this purpose was given another horse. The\ndriver first took the horse he wanted away from the man to whom it\nwas assigned. Then, when the\nmine officials interfered, he caused\na strike in his section. The men are\n\\vorkng today and union officials are\n'invest Igatng wth a view to disci-\npllnng the persons gulty of the outlaw   strike.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nKioonlnnd al Southampton from\nNow Tor...\nTtavci'fnrd at Liverpool from Philadelphia.\nSusquehanna at Mew- York from\nDanzig* --\nPRINCE ALREJtT 2 Nov. 4. \u2014\nLaunching into an es -j iation of the\nprinciples of the new'3, tional policy.\nthe Hon; T. A. frerr H. eader. of'-typ\nProgressive party in lada, (tonight\ncriticized' Premier Me tj ;n for statements made in the pr 3 cr'a speeches\nat Truro. Shorbroot f and Granby\nrecently, in which :\\i ? ^eighen bad\nreferred to \"dangt r doctrines\ntaught by dangerous ti n,\" tbe \"extreme farmers' free t\"_\u00bb i party,\" etc.\nMr. Crerar quoted t',' .cerpts from\nthe Canadian Press report*! of 3.Tr\nHeigh en's speeches\" and asked, \"i-\ntilts tbe type of new statesmanship\nwe are going to hove in Canada?\"\nHe charged tho premier with \"misrepresenting wilfully, or \"-not. people\nwho were as loyal ns any citizens\nin tho country.\"\nHe declared that the prctent government was allied to tbe big interests and that what Canada needed\nwas honesty'in -administration equality in education and toleration for\nthe whole of the people of Canada.\nReviews   Reciprocity   Queation\nWith reference to tbo result of tbe\nUnited States election, Mr. Crerar\nstated that he would like to be informed of* the policy of the present\ngovernment should tlie reciprocity\nproposals be revived, as was again\nin tbo realm oi' practical politics with\nthe return of a \"Republican administration  in  the Tlnlted  States.\nAs 1o tbo tariff Mr. Crerftr urged\nmore attention to the development of\nthe basic, industries, rpthcr than artificial stimulation for industries ask-'\ning protection. The tariff commission had gathered a mass of contradictory evidence, and the progressive\nleader advocated that the industries\nneeding protection would place thoir\nclaims in the open before a committee of the house of commons. Tie\ninstnnr-ed Great Britain's recovery\nafter tho war as an ins-tajice of what\nfree trade bad done, as compared with\nprotectionist countries suck ns Germany.  France and Italy.\nRepudiates   Eastern   Claims\n.Mr. M.-'ighpn had spoken of a, .TieVi-\nsure' \",.<]' adequate prolfletlon,* said\n\"Air. Crerar. The question arose jis\nio what was adequate protec'ion.\nCream separators had always been\nfree in Canada, and yet'the industry\nhad thrived and Canadian separators\nwere competing in 4he markets of the\nworld. Plows and pumps wero easier\nto make, yet. had  to be protected.\nCanadian trade commissioners were\nsent all over the world to drum up\nbusiness 'tar- Canadian Industry, yh\nimports, which would pay for exports, were chocked by customs duties. The natural resources should\nnot only he returned to the prairie\nprovinces, stated Mr. Crerar, hot the\nwest should he compensated for alio\nresources already usd. The east\nclaimed an equity in tho western\nlands, mines and forests. Ife repudiated this claim of the east. The\nresources should i.e hnnded over and\nif -the east bad any real claim for\ncompensation, it could get it i*t tlio\nproper manner, hy carrying the claim\ninto \\ho courts (0 be properly.'.dej.lr\nwith, Mr. Crerar stated' no' would\nlike to hoar tiu- prime ftitni.-it\u2022*.\u25a0\u25a0,\u2022 before he returned to Ottawa giv*< the\nwest ii. pronouncement on this \u25a0>iio't<*r.\nBad   Roads   Check   Attendance\nHon. T. A, Crerar faced a large\naudience when the meeting opened.\nThe  bad slate of  the road's followl;--.*;\non recent rains -checked tho uttend-\neheo of the farmers, most lYKtfli*' be-\nIntr almost   impassable. $   ;\nA, Boynton. of CnrMon. rtlstiM-',t\ndirector of the Grain Growers' oh*^o-\nciation. presided, the -first '.-pwiitPr\nlining Andrew Knr,*x, M-P. f>M' Vrijjr.b\nAlbert.\nMr. Knox dealt, chiefly with. Itje\nnecessity for the 'completion of' tl^e\n-Hudson's'ritty ra.ilway. He deolac-iiil\nthe road was necespary for the ririj-\ngress of the west, but the present\ngovernment was not very - synj^ia-\n\"thetic to The -west, n[tiS that pari Of\nthe road alrendy .\u25a0ompl'TitCd was\nrapidly going .to ruin..\nTn introducing Mi\\ Crerar, ftlr.\nBoynton referred to him as the i_jan\nwho had stepped out frpm the government rather than .betray bis principles, lie .was the le^-der of a paK>*\nin the mpking---a party wWch had\nboen so busy as to lje almost without\ntime to choose Us own name. ;bojtgh\nat present, it was knowx. as the I^ro-\ngrosslve i),*ii-t,y. ITe referred to Mr.\n.Orerar's record as minister\" of agriculture during the war, organising\nthe greatest production f**arnpal*5n e^er\nput over ar a time when th^ world\nneeded it \"most,\nMr. Crerar paid a \".tribute of !re-(\nsped\" to the local member. Mr.'\nKnox, declaring that, (n the coim^ons\nMr, Knox looked after tho interests\nof his constituency a-s welt .as fttiy\nmember in the house, > Beyond tfc'at,\nMr, Knox liad also had an interest\nin the larger anil broader duty. of\nHiding -tbe welfare of Canada as a.\nwhole.\nWar Magnifies Problems\nCanada had many problems before\nthe. war, said Mr. Crerar but the\nwar had magnified and intensified\ntheso problems. For instance, \"nc-\nfore tbo war, the pubh-\"'. dobt w\u00bbR\n?\"*(!) 3.00 0,001*\u2014 now it is \u00a72,2r>0.000,pO,\nYet. nobody in Canada beg-rtid-afed tbat.\nincrease.   (Applause).\nThere was\" n\\sa U10 gnat problem.\nof .taxation. History shows that it\nis not the amount of taxation, but\nthe manner of imposing ' taxation\nwhich counts-*..  ...... . ,--\u201e    .,-\nThere is also the question of Canada unity. A groat problem. Tor\nCanada is mado up of a cosmopolitan\npopulation nun: is a cnxuury 'of vaftt\ndifferences. . ff Canada, is to be Ktlit\nup, harmonized , and . unified, there\nmust be n. broad spirit of toleration.\nThere are evidences in '.tho past -that;\nthis has been UicklnS\". . There waci\nthe great French-Canadian population, to which the speaker paid; .\u00ab.\ntribute nf respect. There was jjl-w.\nIho Anglo-Saxon population wb*i<m\ncame from tho old land. The tp-Plt\nwns to build up a distinctive -Canadian people who would put Canada\nfirst and last, and it was the d^js of\nevery Canadian citizen to take*: an\n-merest in the welfare of Canada. .\nThe prosperity,' the administration.\nthe business of the country re-fe-ted\nupon the citizen. One ot tbe fiiiasf.\ncontributions the fa,rTn?rs havo tnade\nto Canadian progress ;was the stij-Jdti-\nhuiori of open discussion.       \u2022 '\"\nQuote? ' Premier's Criticism-\nSome cr.HIeism bad been direct-ed\nagainst tho. farmers' organization. $ko\ntfeehiration of pbutlolal principles\nlaid by the farmers before <t*he pe-dplo\nwas not the product .pf a few'-Tteh,\nhut was produced.', by, .-groan conv^-\ntions in many .proving -and in suC-\nceerling years. Yet this platf-Qrm Waa\n\u25a0 (..Continued   on \"Page Seven)- '\u25a0';\nFS FR0MTBMIE3\" S\nAMD LKBOB COUNCIL; WAflM OTHEBS\nTORONTO. Nov, -t\u2014Tom Moore,\npresident of the Trade and I_abor\ncongreKp of Canada, gave the extremists in the Labor movement in\nthis city a. dressing'down at a meeting of the Toronto district trades\nand labor council tonight and delar-\ned that, hftelicri by the industrial\nbanner of this city, thoy were wording in the intercuts of the One. Big.\nUnion, and for the disruption of tho\ninternationals.\nPresident More said the extremists\nin tho local unions were traitors to-\ntho cause of th workrs and were\nfollowing tactics similar to those\nwhich preceded the biff strike in\nWinnipeg. He scored the Industrial\nBanner for publishing articles which\nled tho public to believe that a serious feud existed in the ranks of\norganize! labor in Toronto, whereas\nIhis was not. the case.\nProvlotts to the address from provident Moore, the trade and labor\ncouncil dealt with refractory union\nrepresentatlveos pi-esentat tho meting. Delegates from the Butcher workers union and the Retail Clerks\nunion were expelled as extremists\nwho wore not wanted in the trades\ncouncil. At the same time a warning\nwas issued that similar action would\nbe   taken   towards   other   delegates\nregarqdfd as R^d,' if ocasion. sbQUld!\narise. \u25a0  ' * *   .\u25a0'\u25a0 .\nI'toym*\n%...\n_____>\n F Page' 8\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY. MORNING,'' aStfg-Mrii, 1920.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nI        Wa.an Ut\u00ab Travttftnt MBit Mat Ofcuin Saaariaa Aaaammaiatlaa.\nTHE        ^\nPremier Hotel\n%OJ\/* Of the Interior\nSERVICE   UNEXCELLED\nA..La Carte Tabls   D'Hots\nSPECIAL   SUNDAY    DINNER   $1.60\nINCOMPARABLY  THE   FINEST TEA   ROOM   IN   B.   C.\nOpen  Rally 10 a.m.  to  Midnight  _ ^Music  and   Dancing\n~' '\"'        The' Latest Sundaes, Ice Cold Drinks and  IceB\nAfternoon Tea   (2  p.m. to 5 p.m.   -, 25c,\nHeadquarters   Por   All   Travelling   Men,   Mining   Men   and   Tourists\nEUROPEAN   PLAN       \u2014      \u2014      ROOMS,   $1.00   UP\nITI'ME\u2014.1. n. Mni-lienzle, Mrs. TT.\nKlrk. Vancouver; ,T. Scott, Montreal;\nX A. Krlth. Geo nnlisou, Vancouver;\nA. lnnes, Midway; T. Brown; J. R.\nSplain, Mi-, nnd Mrs. Graham, Now\nDenver;* Mr. and Mrs. T. K. Bever-\niripe. \"BaKour; F. H. Pox, rity; Hnhert\nTurner,   rtandon;    V,'.    G;   Ward,    Van\ncouver; P. _. Smith. Klmberly; O.\nBurton, Noelle. Rask. Mr. and Mrs. H.\nBiecs. Balfour; John Keen, Kaslo;\nMr, and M>s. J. M. Carney and children. Marcus; Mrs. ClauRhton an daughter, Vancouver: Mrs. M. Thomson,\nQttstoE S; Koist. New Denver; R. M.\nflaxley. Toronto; W. IT. Rhomherp,\n<!.    Helly.   Hall.\nREPUBLICANS\nIN\n(Continued From Page One)\ned   and   the   Democrats   lost   eight\nseats.   In',Missouri   the   Republicans\ngained  another block of eight.  -\nFATK30, N. D.. Nov. -I^-Returns on\npresident, United States senator and\ncongressman in North Dakota, still\nwere meagre today, the whole election returns handling machinery in\ntho state being devoted to the single\ntask of determining the  outcome  of\nAmerican  Plan\nI\nWell Lighted Sample Rooms\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nA Home for those away from home. Most comfortably\nfurnished rotunda in the interior.\nAfternoon 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\n.iT'HATHCONA\u2014M.        f.       liiiulliU-r,    ''reston;  A.   It.  Jones, \\\\\\   U.   Mitchell,\nVancouver; ' .1.   IS.    C.   \"Mnxwon,    Cfipt.   .1.    A.    P.    Compton,   C_o_toni    H.   ,f.\n\u00b0-Jtt* ii TT* Tifc-i.JiffflPPYi   Vancouver;   F.   Hardy, Spokane; .1. Beeton,  Vancouver;\n. J.   ti.   Nelson,   Vancouver.\nQUEEN'SHOTEL\n(Surojyonn    and    American    IMan\nStoam   TTral.   in   Every   Hoom\nA.   I.APOIXTE,   rroprictor\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nDye It Right!\n\"Diamond Dyes\"\nDon't Risk Material  in Poq'r\nDyes that Fade or Run\nEach package of \"Pi-ninond Dyes\"\ncontains direction-^ _o simple that\nany woman can diamond-dye a new,\nrich, fadeless color into worn, whabby\ngarmcntH, draperies, coverings, whether wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed\npoods. \u25a0\nBuy \"lUimond J\\ves\"\u2014no other kind\n\u2014 then perfect result;-, are pun rn mend\neven it' you havo never dyed hel'ore,\nDrugfftet   has  color  card.\nthe gubernatorial contest whlclj held\nfirst interest! 7\/lth ihe etata\nBr. I.add, republican, for Unitei*\nffljliMlI.senator, had 25,577 in 371\nt8liP^P,9it\u00bb91 precincts, and N\". 3.\nPerry, democrat, had 17,*558. The\nDemocrats concede Dr., Ladds election.\nIn the first congressional district\nO. B. Burtness, Republican, had _\">-\nS77 and John M. Baer, Nonpartisan,\nrunning as an independent, has\n9,571. -,\nIn the second congressional district, totals staled this afternoon\ngave George 2-i. Voting, 8,812 and\nOlo -Olson 8700. The largest vote avail\nable on governor is trom 1\/G3_ out\nof 2,001 precincts, giving Lynn Fra-\nzier, Noil-partlpai,, 01,828 and J. F.\nT.   O'Connor,    Independent,    f)6,608.\nHELENA, Mont., Nov. 4\u2014Senator\nHardin gs lead in Montana on returns from 1,150 out of 1,482 precincts climbed today to 43,20s. Former Senator .1. M. Dixon, Republican\ncandidate for governor, on the face\nof the same returns, had a lead of\n34,888 over B. Kj Wheeler, Democrat,\nThe count:\u2014Harding. 02,080: Cox,\n40,472: Dixon, , 98,141} Wheeler, 68,-\n553.\n\u25a0 ' Senate\nOregon\u2014Robert  N. Stanfield,   (ncr-\nroct), Republican.\nNevada\u2014Odd ie, Republican.\nAriKftna\u2014Cameron,    Republican.\nCOLUO.IBTJK, Nov. 4\u2014Robert Taft,\nson of former president \"Wm, IT. Taft\nwil lhe a me.mhor of the Cincinnati\ndelegation in the Ohio house of\nrepresentatives in the new legislature elected  Tus'day.\nSteal Ballot Box\nLOL^SVILLE, \u00a3&,, Nov. 4~The\nresult at the voting in one precinct in Kentucky-probably will not\nho known. A. fight onsued at the\npolls, and the ballot box was stolen,\n'aororclfnfe io,. telephone reports \u2022 Were\ntoday.   ' ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u2022.'\u2022.'''\u25a0\u25a0I '\u25a0-'\nQL,J-:i-.N'H--A. .1. Harris, Kaslo; A.\nBrenmer, Riilmo: \\V. .1. Wilson and\nWife,     lOrie.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n610   VEBNON    ST.    EAST\nComfortable Rooma, Hot and Gold\nwater. Di___8|5H-tfom  in ^\nCoutiecUph\nRates $1  nnd Up.\nMADDEN HOUSE\n.If.   J.   MADDEN',   Proprlclross\nS_G_M HEATED\nfor. Dnkcr anil Ward Sis. Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014Mrs. Willforil, .1. Is. Kcl-\nby. Wlnlawi Mr. ami Mrs. V. M.iUio,\nCalgary; T.oo C. LommiH. Castlegar;\n\\V. West. Castlegar; W. .1. neorec\nThonws OambzKl, John Catelll, Ymir;\n\"Wilfred    Devlin,    Winnipeg;;  C.    Mcln-\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nMrs.   Mallttfj,   Proprietress\nA  home for 'JfeffflWy  *$. feasor.-\nOpen    night ^fjlf|\u00bbSay.      First-\nclass    dining-ro'otoC'VComfortame'\nrooms.\n315 Vernon St.\nNear Post Office\nKOOTENAY\u2014Pred Jones, Calgary;\nII. Robinson'. A. Bcckisli, A. Cox-\nworth. Brilliant; J. Mooney, Orand\nj'orlcs\nTREMONT HOTEL\nF.   NIL80N,   Prop.\nBAKER     STREET\nFurnished   Rooms   by   Day,\nWeek   or   Mor.th\nHOTEL   MARTINIQUE\n1176 Granville Street\nCosy,    bright   rooms.    Just    the\nplace    for   your   vacation.    Rates\nmoderate.   Write   for    particuli.rs.\nMRS. A. PATERSON\nLato of Royal Hotel, Oranvllle St.\nWhere to Spend a Holiday\nENJOY   A   VACATION   AT   THE\nHOTEL GRAND\nNAKUSP\nFrank   Hughes   &   Son.   Props..\nOn the beautiful Arrow Lakes,\nSplendid fishing and boating. Nice\nrooms, good meals, pleasant surroundings. Splendid sample rooms\nfor travellers.\nHERE  THE  F18H1NG   IS  GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTOR\nFishing,   Boating,   Bathing.   Golf,\nTennis  Courts\nFishing   Tackle,   Supplied.   Grocery\nStore  in   Connection\nW. A. WARD,  Prop.\nRates  Reasonable Good  Meals\nTHEMONT\u2014- .John Burdette, P. Ool-\nAndersort, R. Zeinchkovski, Salmo. .\ntosh, n. Pean, A. Johnson, Salmo; E.\nmniok, J. Jtelhnis. Sato1 Jereitke, J.\n\"Parson, E. Jt'ur.son. city; W. & l-'ranK,\n\"Fernie;   It.   Rattan,   Fernie.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320 Baker Street, NeLson, B. C,\nOPEN\"   OXX   &$T>   NIGHT\n12  to Z'.aiO,  Spcc__l LuiiulJ,   _0c\nPhont 1B4\nAKNIGHT COOK  A\\T>  HER\nGENERAL\n', lioldor.s of the coveted ribbon of\nthe Legon of Honor are found\nt'mio'iir? <^n classes. How finely this\nis borne out a wJ.ory about n French\ngeneral nnd his female cook is worth\ntelling. The general, not in a good\nrtiood at his meal, vented bis anger\nupon the cook, declaring that her\nmeal, well, was \"not a. perfect success.\" \"Yon are wrong to speak so\nseverely,\" my general,\" replied the\ncoo'-.. \"I am a Knight of the Legion of Honor.\" An investigation\nfollowed, and ii. was discovered that\nthe cook had been a nurse at the\nfront, where she had shown such\nbravery t,hat the red-ribbon docora-\ntion had been awarded to her- On\nthe torminafiion of the war she had\naccepted dismissal from the service\nwithout complaint, and having to\nearn her own living, became a cook,\nwearing the decora tiion only on\nSundays. The Echo de Paris,\nwhieh prints the story and vouches\nfor -It, adds: \"And since then the\ngenoral has nor allowed himself\nto make remarks when llh_* dish has\nhoi been  a.  perfect  success,\"\nH.  W.-SHORE,  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, Urinlc Conditions,   Metallic   Poisoning'.\nGrand scenery around the estate\nIn a most beautiful climate.\nLarge hot water swimming pools,\nFor rates apply Strathcona Hotel,\nNelson, or fialcyon  Hotel.\nAmerican    plan,    $2.50    and    up\nper day, $24 -per week.\n1 ; .\nA \"Dead Man's Club\" Is being organized, from the more than 2000 ex-\nservice men officially' listed\" as killed, although living.\nBest banjo heads are made 'of wolf-\n'Baby'sChvnSoap'\nA Sanitary wash\nA Soft healthy skin\nA lingering fragrance\n\"Us Best for Baby\nand \/test for }'oii.\"\nAlh.rtSnBpj.r.lmlteJ.'Mrri, Moll_W,        _1\nNOT APPREHENSIVE\nOF COAL SHORTAGE\nOTTAWA,'Nov. 4 (Canadian Press)\n\u2014With the arrival of colder weather,\nofficials of the railway commission,\nwho are handling the fuel control and\ndistribution are not apprehensive as\nto the supplies if the early winter\nweather proves reasonably good. Pro\nduetlpn in tho United States mines\nhas been speeded up tn n gre.;u p^'\nlent and the gain in tonnage is being kept up. i\nThe American bituminous mines\nhave the largest output of any *'u'{'\nober -since the wt^r year of .'-l^-\nThorn Is alsp a steady \u2022 net ease -n\nthe output   of anthracite.\nINSECTS CARRY  DISEASE\nDestroy them with Kealing's,\nEvery Insect you allow in tbe house\nspreads disease Germs. Sprinkle\nKeating'- and kill them \"Before they\nhill you. Keailng^s is unrivalled, and\nIs sure rlenih to all insects. Sold\nin  cartons  only   nt  all   doalers.\nSuits and Coats\nAttractively priced, offer a fine opportunity to secure your winter outfit. The\nrange of materials, the striking styles,\nthe workmanship, will induce you to\nmake your selection here.\nHATS\nOur special prices for high class\ntrimmed and pattern hats still prevail\nSpecial at\n$7.00 AND $12.00\nWe Carry Full Lines of Fall and Winter Goods\nSmillie & Weir\nLadie.' Wear 8pecialiiti\nGAS IN THE STOMACH\nIS DANGEROUS\nKecununeudB Daily Use of Maguetila to\nOpercoiao. Trouble.    Caused,by '\u25a0 v\nfermenting \"Pood and \"Acid    .\n' In.t_igestiou.\nfins and wind, in the stomach, ac-\ncompnniori liy that fug, bloated feeling\nafter eating are almost certain evidence of the presence of excessive\nhydrochloric acid in the stomach, creating  so-called   \"acid   Indigestion.\"\nAcid stomachs are dangerous because loo much acid irritates the deli-\nCRte llninp of the stomach, often leading to gastritis accompanied by serious stomach ulcers. Food ferments\nand sours, creating the distressing\ngas which distends the stomach and\n.hamper?! the normal, functions of the\nvital internal orgruis, often affecting\nthe heart.\nIt is the worst oT folly to neglect\nsuch a serious condition or to treat\nwith ordinary digestive aids which\nhave no neutralising effect on tbe\nstomiaui. acids. Instead get from any\ndruggist n few ounces of Ttisuratod\nMagnesin -rud lake a teaspoon fill in .1\n'lunru-r glass of water right after\neftt-li.\u00a3; This will drive the rhs, wind\nnnd hioRi right out of the body, sweeten the stomach, neutralize the excess\nicid and prevent its formation and\nthere is no sourness or pain. Bisur-\nated Magnesia tin powder or tablet'\nform\u2014riever liquid or milk) is harmless to the stomach, inexpensive tt>.'\ntake and the best form oL' magnesia\nfor stomach purposes. It is used by\nthousiinds of people who enjoy their\nmeals with no more fear'of indigestion. \u00bb\nM\nHAVE A CLEAR\/,,\nVELVEIY SKIN\n\\  ._\nLet Stnart'B Calcium Wafers Clear tlie\nComplexion, f Pimples and Such\nBlemiGlms   aud   Note   Kow\nBeauty   Comes.\nAll   girls  realize   that   today  we.  are\nJiving in  an nRp of beauty.      A  olenn,\n. Camels begin to lose their strength\nwhen about twenty-five years old,\nThey begin to work when five yenrs\nold, and live to hn forty.\nBRINK\nNelson Brewing\nCompany's\nBeer and Porter\nH.nlthfut and InvlBor.tlng.\nMid* with oryital olnr mountain wa_r from puro malt and\nnopa.\nNelson  Brewing\nCompany, Limited\n;jglion, >.c.\n(Continued from Pago Ono)\ntempt lo ititimidnto the government\nitito graixtfRK -tligt; independence of\nIrbland. If, the government failed\nin this,1 the' polio?' of assassination\nwould   spread   1o, England.\nThe best way to put a stop to\nwhat \u2022 wero called reprisals, said\nlhe secretary, was to stop tho campaign of murder against the police\nnrii.l  mlliinry.\n'Mr. O'Connors motion of adjournment was defeated 133 to 51,\n-viFiflhtiug at Ballynaree\n\u25a0\u25a0IiL^lN Nov-., <]\u2022\u2014A raiding par-\n'.y^pfj Uniformed bicn and nine lorries >Jmot Willi' disastrous defeat\nIn * ali attack 'early this morning\non the village of \u25a0Ballynaree, which\nis \"bdjaccnt to- the small town of\nGranard,, afcjput 60 miles from Dubr-\nlin. After the sacking of Granard\nlast night, the residents of Ballynaree gathered in defense of their\nhomes against an attack which they\nfelt certain would come. At 2 oclock\nin the morning, the lorries arrived, a 15 minute fight ensued in\nwhich three wore killed ana at least\nsix wounded, according to estimates\nof local correspondents. The attacking* forces xhen retreated.\nPolitical Crime Decreases\nDUBLIN', Nov. 4\u2014The outrages in\nIreland during tho last week shows\n\u25a0t .steady decline in political crime,\naccording to a statement issued by\ntho Dublin castle authorities, but\nthe campaign of guerilla warfare\nagainst the armed forces of the\ncrown is being* waged with increasing intensity.\nPolice resignations are decreasing\nand the recruiting of police from\nIreland itself ' is increasing. Tills\nis pointed to as a, sign of renewed\nttiJlc that the government will overcome the opposition forces1,\nO'Callahan Succeed MacSwiney\nCOHK, .Nov, 4\u2014Deputy Lord Mayor\nO'Callnhghnn  has been  elected  Lord\nMayor   in    succes.slon    to    1 he    late\nTerence MacSwiney.\nPeat  is   found  in   many   par\nLithuania.\nNOTICE\nWANTED   BY   THE   NOBLE   FIVE\nMINE,    SANDON,    B.C\t\nTIMBERMAN, $6.25\nMiners,- $5.75; Muckers, $5.25 and\nFour Horse Teamster, $6.25 per day;\nBoard $1.50 per day; good cook;\nmodern Hotel Bunk House, steam\nbeat, electric lioht, bath, hot and cold\nwater. Bring your Blankets.. No\nO. B.  U.  NEED APPLY.\nvelvety skin Is n sure stepping stone\nto success. Unsightly faces filled\nwith pimples, discnlonitions, blackheads, etc, are out of tune. They\nare a dincord and are nothinb but unhealthy faces due to blood, impurities,\nClennse the hlood with Stuart's Calcium witters and the facial blemishes\n.disappear,\n(Stuart's Calcium Wafers show their\ninfluer.cr- In the skin where they improve and clearj the blood.\" And\nyou'll never have a good complexion\nuntil   the  blood   la   improved;\"\nNo matter hnw bad your complexion\nIs, Htunrt's Calcium Wafers will work\nwonders with It. You can get these\nllttlu wonder wafers at your druggist's\nfor 60 cents a package,\nSore Throat, Colds\nWeWy CfecM By Hamlin's,\nSon throat > and chest colds\nfthotild never be neglected. Few\npeople realise how often thev rr-\n*h\\t seriously tf not promptly\nchecked. ^HwaHn's Wizard Oil is\n* Mute, simple and effective treatment. Used ai i gargle for sore\nthroat it brings quick relief. Rubbed\non the chest it will often loosen up\na hard, deep, seated cold in one\nnight.   Keep a bottle on the shelf..\nWtaaM OU te m rO-_#<l_pendfib1\u00ab prep-\n\u2022ration to liui-s in tbe ni\u00ab_icliia cheat for\n\u2022*r\u00bbt _id when th*'doctor may >,.- far\n-fr\u00aby. Hsw. \u2022fter. rrfrraini!, bruleoa. cms\nand burns odi-iir. In *_\u00abry family, aa weit\nM littl*..troubles Ilk*, enracha, tuotbacbf\nwit) Mr\u00aba, canker' aoraB, mitt n.t-i :1 \u201e,\u25a0\ntired aohinr f\u00ab*t; 8.othingf, hwilinif W!-,*.\n*_rd OU will alwaxB'br.nK (fuk-k t *-\u25a0\u25a0;.;\nt Oaiara.! oU-a h\u00abuia Uo.\nu j-u ara'troovted with coo.t'patiui\nS-t '\u00bbtel__h')*'a\u00bbch#:\"'*rjr Hiinlin*. WU-Bj.i\nMtm* TVbtpa. Joit pleaaant uuit pii-V\n$m ba Anifltta ft Ko,    Uuwaa'-or-'.\nSLIPPERS AND TIE\nFOR    EVENING    AND    STREET\nWEARING\n'n  Paten!   lioiithpr. 'plack  Kid, WMtg\n;i(l,   (ln>y    Klij   nllll    Ill-i.-i;    Siloilo.\n\"jt-00 to $15.50 \u25a0,\n6;  ROMANO\nThe   Shoe   Man\nlILOH\n30\u00a7Rr8?XOUGHS\n9**itr\\\u2122\nOliltt&e Supplies\nBEST\nMADE\n,lohV5t\nfount*, feedera, Dry\t\nHoppora, Shell ana Grit\nBoxes, Feed Trougba and\nOat Sproutera. Anything\n. in -betel made to order.\nHelpYoursdf\nAs a builder ot strength or\nprotection against weakness\nScott's Emulsion\nhas stood the exacting '\ntest of time.   Help your- *\u2022\nself to renewed strength,\ntake Scott's Emulsion!  -;\nScoUABowii^.lVirmjIo.ont    ,. lo^Sb.\nMASON & R1SCH, Lt(\n513 WARD STREET\nThe Home of the Victrola-\nNELSON,   1\nHEAR THESE UNDISTURBED IN ONE OF OUR SOUND PROOF,\nVENTILATED DEMONSTRATION ROOMS\nWILLIS PIANOS, LTI\ns ' I\nOI^.^MHK:\n304 Baker St. (The New Store)\nHear the Latest Victor Records on the\nBRUNSWICK PHONOGRAPH\nAT THE CITY DRUG COMPANY     \u2022.\nbjWa*fel^C<\n T\n' THF^-NELSON &\u00bbr_r' MWb,1 ^ftibm WMm,\n_9_o.\nPresident Hunter Says Public\nShou!--}.... be    Protected;\nj?frtl\u00ab$:B*_t^#iaWr,\nr\n;-TJiat the. Wrd Aqf \u25a0 trade, r8_ipul_j\njqonslder it \"^ parti of .-.its *ttuty;: to,\njxpoao -awlbdlfers, w^ts -.a- suggestion\n:dyiuiped ?b%. \"Pri^sldiejit JJ.&. \"Hunter\nwatei^a^.-j^te^noon.^at the .monthly,\nesstbn t()f ,-the bp^rd, of- trade,..coun-;'\n_Jii -president H-unier'B,- contention\nwaa tbat it oiignt to be\/possible tPi\nUcviso 'means stoUpioteai, the\/com-\niriijuzdty frqm notorious 'delinquents.\nj \/!W*hUe the.memhera #resopt. \"werq\njail fjytftpathetip^ -jiV. wa&.^point'e'd ouft\n[th'at- &il&'}maHer. ^fce ti \"very diffipiilt\npric to. deal -with, and thift the laws\n[on itbel were very 'ieVere.., \u2022 in eases,\nwho^e' a 'than, made.- misrepresentations in order to'.'bWajn money, t^\nvictim had. recourse under the law.\nL PreKflorit Hunter said {hfe-^ood\nnam,e-of.the C(J(nmynitx was.involved\nm any cases..where.-.-persons from a\n{distance '.were' victimised, and a \u25a0\"Wax\nouglit tb 'be found to reduce \u25a0pier\ndctlvittes'bt, -persons 'who r'rnlglit tid\nJwlthln the'.,'law.' and. yet.wefe,\nkentiaHy.i;brealt;in_; ^Itsln^pnt..    ,\n, Brtlirbiir.SHuatlon.\ni',-; In,. connection iyttih 'the situation.\nlat the Baifour S-fthatoriiim, it -yfai\ni-riaportotl :\u00a3hat 'quite a :nu'ni_er 'of\nIjpatients, two or throe at a. '.timej\nmere being, moved tp .other ii-jBtituij\n,tions, but ttiat this -aiipUed only to\njirten. willing to be. hiby^eo^ dndi ihtiii\nthe :mep \"wfto, hdd .pr-testqa orgttlnst\njremoyal tot- TranquillejiVere, 'given* ta\n'lyxderetftji-ij..that another month would\nelapse, b.fore the move would 'bo,\nenfolded. '   *' \".\nIt Was stated that the departmental\ninvestigation, into the reqjiest^ o_ the,\nsoldier, pittlehts for , the >6terition tbij\nthe \u25a0 _tthatbrium Would, be cOnxtucted'\nit j Ottawa. \", \u25a0. V - \u2022\u25a0y-\n; j President Hunter, Fred A. *Stttrk\u00aby4\nind Secretary $, F 0igot were*- dp-)\nj-,.o^ij.t_ed a! aominl-tee to Mook into tho\n\u25a0\"Htuatlon, and make* any*- furtHer\nepr^stntatioiYS tb \"the government\nm the matter , that..might in., any\nVay hid tHe, patients to secure 'Uiofc\n\u25a0desire..\n[.j.M th \\ tUral \u25a0 \"awu-TC fk. . \u25a0\n\u25a0 |i Th question of making. \"repre_erit_;-!\n\u25a09ns tp the  federal government, on\nle-'-subjoct of. .extending the powers\n'\nthe railway tomrr.f-S.on ''to eover\nke. antl river service, iWherp eUcli*\nrViegs were links';-in-v railway eys-\nina, !.^vas raised, hiit it. wa-?.'decided\nIjfpaye this  weighty matter, to  be'\nitep*; tip (it'tho next \/gerie-ral meets'\"' ot (he bbard.,v\n^joae > ftr^nt -were>'I?cesident\"',lJ. 'It.\nigtej,.'3$\u00a3gtary, $:;\u2022\u25a0'$> Gigot, Fred\nH?.rkey^ .'G. A. Br_w\u00bb, A. L. Mc-\nllloch, j. E. Annable, J. A. Irving,\nvV. \"Widdowson. and \"W. H.; Jones.\n\u2022SB.\np'os'id   on  Mr.   Mazerall.      His  \u00abar,\nwh ^ch    had    also    been   coiiflSdated,\nreturned   lo   him,   his  counsel.\nwo **\nPi Jfed\nFine Three Men for Breath\/\nof liquor laws; Confiscate\ned Auto Is Returned.\nSALMO, Nov. 4.\u2014Four cases ht\nlontravcntibn of the ' liquor la'Ws\njveVe heard here before Stiiiendi; iry\nMagistrate John Cartmel, of Nel ion\nkhd JuWce bt the Peace, -W. j VI.\nSalisbury,    today. \/\nCharles Mazcrall faced the do \u00a3_lc\ncharge o'f driving an auto while\/ under. :tho influcuce of,-.rink, and ,_mjv-\ning i^quor in his car unlawully. \/ According to the story o the 'p'otfee,\nMr.'-iiazerall had been, suspec\/ed of\nUnlawful practices in regard 'j to\n\"qupr for some time. A. \/Al.'d.n;\nprovincial constable of \\ Sixln>oJ had\nsought, to obtain a botUe lot liquor\n\u2022from Mr. 'Mazerall at a dancie last\nnight. Mr. Mazerall accedjr\/ed to\n.the request .and leaving the \/ dance\nhaft, 'drove off in his car .witu Oscar\nPeterson in the direction \/of the\njl-tte'r's shack on the Erie rpad.\n.ftho. constable standding \/ olif the\njroad waited for the return of the\near, which reappeared in \/about an\n\u2022hour.,' Constable McL'aren {flashed a\niiocket torch\/on 'tho c.u* :<|s it ap-\n:proached. Wild coinmaudcd .(he driver\nto stop* \u25a0\"T'hb car. slacken* -d. but a\nfeet &yi$y.. from . lhe coiui.abje, the\ndriver, ^ 'Mr. Mazerall, priesspd the\naceeleralfh\", pausing u littile hurried\nside^tepiJing^for the coiisltuble, who\n\u2022grtibbtid the.'car as it prq;se'd. and\nswung abottru- ^ At the pairte tiipe\nMr\/^q^erBonJ in \"tlie.'Jack tof ihe car.\ntossed' a* hka& *jot liquor 'overboard,\nuiia^ifetlf_ *-Hat vonstabl'e .Ardcn was\nat liand to 'SiScK ft up.\npoth -oc-Qupiiijits, of the cart were\n,placed, undjer arrest and ai search* of\n\"Mr. Petersrfn'e. shack \u2022jva.a made,\nWH^n- several 'eases of riquor were\ndisclosed. Holme \"of the, cases were\ncifrisI-gEned to '%ir. Peterson, \"while\nottiqrs Were consigned ; to Gunner\n\"^ricltsop^of Erie, wji.ose shack adjoined' that o'f Mr.; Peterson. He\nafsjo'r'.was arrested.\nAi f-ftte bf '$(50 and cost^ find the\ncbn(ti6oatl6n; Qf > hie \"^bottle - was   im-\nd O- Moffatt, of Nelson, proving\ntl iat the case of liquor in the car\nTially belonged to Mr. Peterson.\n\/ A fine of $100 and costs and the\nconfiscation of the liquor was imposed on Mr. Peterson, for being irt\npossession of liquor in a place other1\nthan his private dwelling.\n. On a similar charge Mr. Erickson\nwasflncd $50 and costs and his'liquor confiscated. The argument,\nadvanced by him was that the liquor consigned to him had been\nplaced in his neighbor's shack fo?\n\u25a0safety. Ho stated he Intended tq\ntd the dance, and that as the\nJock on his deor was insecure and\nit was known.that lie had Hqtior in\nhis- shack, he feared to lea-ve^it\nthere and stored It for. tho l night\nin  Mr.  Peterson's  shack-\nALLEGED SLAYERS ARE\nLODGED IN JAIL HEftE\nWilliam Kcholter ana Charlie Chi-\nnoiird, both of whom are alleged to\nhavo been Implicated in the Wiling\not Caihl Singh, a Hindoo, brutally,\ndono Xo death at Fernie, eqmo weeks\nago, are. now ln| the provincial jail\nin tliis city awaiting trial at the\nspring assizes on a charga of mnr-\u201e\nder. Mr. Scholter was arrested near\nPernio shortly after the outrage,\nbut Mi: Chinourd mad his ,'escape\nacross te border whero In enlisted\nin tha United States army. He waa\ni'ocently brought back to llrltish Columbia. JJoth men wore sent up for\ntrial by II. J, Simpson. ] of Eerrile,\nlast week and were brought to'this,\ncity on  Wednesday  night\nGET-TOGETHER CLUB\nHAS ENJOYABLE DAN\u20acEt\nThe Kelson Get-to-gether club\" held\none of its enloyable monthly dances\nat the liagle Hall last evening. About\n125 pooplQluUbndod. Excellent music\nand sociability featured tlio affair,\nat which light refreshments were par-'\ntakeji of in the Veterans' hail adjoining.\nThe iongest pendulum ever made\nwas swung from the second platform\nof Eiffel tower; . It- ..was 1 ^7.7 feet\nlong.   \u25a0'\u25a0'- \u25a0:\u25a0 1 ,\u25a0, :i    , .- \u25a0_',(.;   ..'\u25a0; \u25a0'\n\"WEDDINGS\nDUOtfALE\u2014GILMOUR\n\u25a0 The wedding was 'solemnised on\nTuesday morning, of Miss Annie\nDugdale, Tor two years a member\nof'the Balfour sanatorium staff,'and\nTdbhlas Gilmour, a patient of the\n;;!iinn 'of the same Institution at\ntho .'Wesbyt'erian manse In this c)ty.\nRev. D. \u2022_  McCHntock officiated..\nMIsa, Bertha Keith, as bridesmaid,\nattended' the bride, who was attired\nih'. a .n'avA-. b'u'e.. costume and carried\na  bouquet   of \u25a0 carnations.'  E,   G.  A.'\nHarrison gave the bride nwayr The\nbest man was J. S. Dugan. Mr.\nind Mrs, B. &\u25a0 A. Harrison were\nthe witnesses. Mr. and Mrst Gilmour\nwill return  to Balfour to reside.\nWithdraws in Favor of\nSoldier-Labor Candidate\nVICTORIA,   Nov.   1.\u2014With   intent\nto -)B*.reJ*Ethe'n .tfie\nOrr\u00bb>rd'->fn  fra_<ffcT_\nAriros.  this' '.JDffl\nthe'.. Withdrawal' oi\ncandidature ;and has,*\nport  to {tlje' Soldljri:\nWOMEN OF\nMIDDLE AGE\nMtytu. tie Critic.1 Period Safely\nand  Comfortably  by  Taking\nLydia E.Piskbam'i Vegetable\nCompound.\n^^rwMeoine through\nid \"irafiei-ed for two\nyearswith headache,\nnerVousneas, >\u00ableep-\nlesa nighta .and general weakness. Soma\ndaya I felt tired and\n.unfit to.do my \u00abVbrk.\nI gave Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetable Compound a\ntrial and found good\nresnlti,. and I. also\n,Bti(i it aVery helpful\nSpring tonicanduse-\nful for'constipation\n-much. Ihaverec-\nommended Vegetable Compound to aev-\nefal Wlii,ih,'_l\u00ab'\u00bb_'willittg you should\ntnihlish thli. r*-Mrs.- MahthaW. Lindsay, 810 Robinson St., Regina, Sask.\n, If you hare Warning eyroptoms such\nas a sense of suffocation, hot flashes,\nheadaches, baeVtacKe, dread of impending evil, timidity, 'sounds in the ears,\npalpitation of the heart, sparks before\nthe eyes, irregularities, constipation,\nvariable appetite, weakness, inquietude, and dizziness, get a bottle of Lydia\nE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and\nof Womanhood\nelson Branch of Retail Merchants    Body    Confirms\nSpecial Action.\nNo .\/further   ruling   has   been   re-\nIveiJ -from Ottawa-on the methoij ol\";\nlledtlilg the  luxury  tax,   according\nthe latest letter received fro^m, the\n'ovin-.i--*. b6ard. of  tho Retail  Mer-\niaii^s, association,     by     the     local\nJaflCh.. ,     ...       \u25a0     . ...      -...\niThe.'loc^l   branch,  ,at   a 'general\n(oetilig.. ,)\u2022 has    endorsed,   the    action\n[ken at a special meeting last, \"fteeltv\nj'ging. retention  of  the- old  System.\n1i coliqctliig. the, tax,. instead  of the\n|!w, methbd by cancellirig stamps.\nj'Efforta   are   being   made   by   the\n'\u25a0j'jlson' branfch., to  secure  a visit  by\nI--  W..  J.  liinOJcy,  director  of  the\nj reau;.'Of. tuucation.of the \"Washliig-'\ni n ji?tate Llt_tailer-j association.      Dr.-\n' >ii^I.ey ' ia': 4.   particul'ar-y    c'apiable\n\u25a0j eaker b'ri litislhess topics, and will\nremembered fpr:\" his notable  ad-\nl ess \u25a0 at   the   first,  \"mining   conven-\nlm\u201e held here three 'years ago.--\n-Yellow is  the-cdlor\"<^, royalty \"In\ntiTia.- .      '-\"\"L _,^,'\nLegal NoticIes\nI TIMBXiR SALE X2717.\nJqalfciTv tohdya will be ' received \"by\n'., District Forester -not later \\ha,n\n1 \\n 'pnNtl1*2,' i3th. day Of Novdhbcr,\nio, for tti'o ' ijurclia'se f. \u25a0'Licence\nLfl7, -ne&i* \"Kaslo. to cut, 4.00 \"Lineal\nV'.'bt Poles aiid  75 \"Cords  of  Cord-\nbdr - -,-,. . , ':\u2022'\u25a0\u2022\nine   year   will 'be   allowed   for   re-\nV*al, of ; timber.    . -_.ii-\nhurtherv, particulars   of   the   District\nf l_ster,'Nelson, ?B.- C; (10G41)\nSlocan Mines Declared\n':'.\u25a0\u25a0 *w\u00bb4yr\"':- '\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\njroijoso rjtmnlng wo\n,riv.^.\u201e,\u201e\u00ab\u201e\nTlio tiuaMSlsned MUlns; Oonipau-\nUr-'\n'jiB|t:tljt'-W\u00ab|\nlato-  si  'w.';fcG''nliU,.^&r^:''_|5\nit-\u00abja thetejtirwiaBij. th\u00ab- aiocn\nraKohss ol;_(\u00bb Intarnittonil .oSjoa\n: Mine, Mill & Smelt\u00ab - Wbrln!r\u00bb,\nhloli wsfS  seals provldon for an\nZTJ? ^i&aof **\u00ab\u25a0&\u00a3\n__!-\u25a0   ....'_. .\u25a0\u25a0',\u201e\u201e     ...\n.ofsnassti  apply to roprflsentatives\nr tne International TJnion of Mln.,\n'    ^:M^;,am^, ;(#!.-\u00ab,-\u00ab|k\nsentatives ; of tne aata Mining\n\u25a0osenery Surprlio    ___tg\numnler-Oarlliob'Mlnlno; Com-\nIhi Honlo Plvo Uinlna- company.\nXaa Omal'>t!>\u00abnMoisMat;:.- ..\n\u2022The MoaUUster _Mlh-\u00ab-   Company.\nnod)   A. SBH.-AND,\nOf 'tne Intermatlonal\nr aklne, MUI fc llniel-\nis ffl^i^rlt'vtod.     But'maijy women  face   tlie, ordeal  of\nmate'roityCi'^^ preparation.    A^'sueh times\nand i _>t*'r-ra_te 'ttother,\nshould take a vegetable\ntonic, js6ld - by; * dttiggists\nand known inialmost eveiy\nhome as Doctor Pierce's\nF a v tf ritS \"l?!f*Sc^-_b_.\nThousands   of   women\nHave testified as  to its\nefficacy  as  does tbe\nfollowing:\n\u2022TiLLSOH-if'io, Omt.\u2014\"I\nfound Doctor Pierce's Favorite\nPreemption very beneficial\nd_rin_ expectancy. I felt\nquite poorly, was ___eated\nand sick, could not eat anything and I wis < extremely\nnervous and weak. I took\n\"Favorite PreBcriptton' and \u201e\nsoon Btopped the naoaea, my\nappetite   returned,   also   my\ndtreneth, and I waa soon feeling fine and strong. My baby was\nstrong; and healthy, and has always been so._ I consider 'Favorite\nPrescription' a great,help to the expectant mother^\nrecommend it,\"\u2014Mrs. Amos Mills, Box 238.   ,;j|j^\nfyour\n3lf_TOlP^ \u25a0 to''\"'___:,''-_cidi\u00abjfyb\nUXafli M stomach can digest food\n-jwu'are-proof^^a^nsfrindigestion, -'l-fe'mosf\nimportant digestive work is done by the\nbo*\u00abels, live-f snd;kidneys.. Uriels theste, are\nactive and work in harmony, you are in danger\nof self-poisoning.        ::\nt help the bowels to functionate\nproperly, and influence the liver\nand kidneys to act very efficiently.\nbegin takinf the medicine et onco. W\u00ab\nknoV itwiD halp you aa it did Mra,\nLindiiw.\nWhen you buy Carnation;}^i\\\nyou are i&fe of its purity.,, .For\nit is sterilized in its he*fi^tic^\nsealed container. Such purity,\n*4ong with its undeniabfeecon1-\nomy apdconv^rilemSfe, is mak-\ning Carniation the fe_fc-usiv_\nmilk in thousands of homes\nevery where. Buy, it regulafly\nfroni yburgroqer.\n100 teste) recipes free. Write\nCitnation Milfc Prodtrcts Co., Limited, AyJmcr, Ont..*..\nCoaienacrlef at ArlavVr and Sprintfid.], Ont,.\nr\ni\n\u25a0a'\n& Smelting Co\nOffices, 8moltin9'atid  RofininQ  Departmonta- J-\nTRAlU   BSttlSH   CdtUMBIA      v   v'\n\\\nAND REFINERS\nPURCHASERS OF  GOLD, SILVER,  COPPER  AND, U-AD ORES\na   Producbr\u00ab of Gold, 8ilvdr, C6p(ibr, Bluostono, Pig Load and Zlne\nTADANAC   BRAND\n\u2022\u00bb>\u2022>\n-^^i_uiiyiy.iai_ai_^_j*^^\n:\n%a+ I %M sPk w\u20ac Wm   I \"I I .KbiaW\nM\n7- ..,\u00ab'   .\nme\nfm? $w35*\nTh_ <P^I_ITY of Player's is the\noutcome of years of study and\n*_jEperiffleiits in the blending of\nthe choicest Virginia Tobaccos!\n$\n\\\\\\*n\n \"Page 4\nfHE BAIIY:NEWS\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRTDAY MOKNTNC.\n1920.\nPublished every 'morning except\nBunday by the News publishing Company. Liifilted,  NeI_on,  B.C.,  Canada.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand cheats and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing Company, Limited, and in no case to\nIndividual-  members   of   the   staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest or may be seen at the office\nof ' any Advertising agency recognized\nby   the . Oanadfan, Press  Association.\nSubscription rates: By mail (country), 60 tents per month; $6 per year.\nOutside tyaluida, a month, 75c; a year,\n$7,150. Delivered, 76c per month; $4\nfor six months; $-7.50 per year, payable\ntn   advance.\nMember   Audit   Bureau   of. Ciwulfttio'-i\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1920.\nNot Fatal  to Joining the\n|     League\nThe flection of a Republican\npresident in the United States\nmay not prove as serious a\nblow to American participation\nin the, league of nations as\nDemocrats have made out.\nSenator Harding stated his\nviews on the league in such\ngeneral terms that he can still\njoin the league, with sufficient\nreservations to make a showing. There is nothing in the\nleague covenant or the sentiments of the league to stand in\nthe way. And the league needs\nthe United States to give it the\nfull strength and influence it\nshould possess. ,: .   .,<  ;\nSenator Harding and his\nRepublican supporters were far\nmore wrongly opposed to Wilson and Democratic policies\ngenerally than to the league itself.   ';\nWfkient\n(ousekeei\nUfturftA-KirKman\n\"CAN \u25a0     TWO    WOMEN      RUN\nHdMBl t-TOGBTHKH?\n'I wish you -would -writ** your views\nupon tho subject of whether or not two\nwomen can run n. home tot-rfither and\nboth bo entlrelv sat'Rf>d with the ar-\nfancepif-nt,\" wr'tt-af- n reft'-^r of this column. \"T. sm trying to make a biff de-\ncistr-.n   in   my   life*\u2014Irvine;   ta   rnak'1   up\ny m'rrl to ts1{6 n Tt+lo cot-face Inint-\nly with a sistT-in-lnw. who. liltp me.\nhas been.left alone in the world. I Ikfi\nher extremely\u2014but would T continue\nto !i*ke ber if w\u00ab did our housoVeepinp\n\u2022^-\"ther, day in pn'd -rlnv out? T know\nso maiiv ppsps of confl'ct'ntr , tastes\ni>nd fin unconscious \u00abjtrutTG*le for riuthor-\nty where two women are doine: their\nhousework together\u2014such cases are\nnil about ue, we > see them every day.\nTt makes one fear to take a step liko\nthis. What would you do? It would\nhe a financial convlenco to us both and\nthat is our main reason for ponsiderlnR\nit. Neither one-;of- us can afford? a homo\non   her   individual'   income. \u25a0\u00bb.-'\nThis is an age-old problem. It Is Is\none of those nuestions .whicli must be''\nanswered by that aggravating retort.\n\"Yea and ilo.\" For the \"answer to it\ndepends wholly upon the ' individuals\nconcerned. Hardly two cases can 'be\nfound   that  are  exactly  similar.\nAny- woman who has ever tried to\nrun a*houso with another woman\u2014no\nmatter how dear that other woman is\nto her, no matter* how close the relation\u2014knows this, .that because no two\nhuman minds think quite alike, there\nmust be at least a little friction; that\nall the fun goes ut of a task when\none has to do a thing another person's\nway; and thirdly, tbat-it wounds one's\npride just the feast mite to have to\n\u25a0jhnnge one's own way of doing things\nand \"knuckle under\" to another person's.\nSo if the reader-friend who wrote\nthe above letter hoped that I would\nreply, optimistically  and  say   that   the\nsten   sh\u00ab\".-  is.   contenr'b''^\nnil r-ii-nshlr-e nnd no sh*i'^\nT\"ltl   b*   dJsarmointed   wh\n*Vs.   Yet    nerhnoH   tbe\nm1'   cT,',\u2666'   \u00abf'v\u00a9  h\"r heart,\npiid all I nm win \u2666\" a-.\n:M-nipen?i\u00bbnt.    Tb<*    r<*st\nbe -f-r-tbP   nrnnt'cT'-iH*\nthp   \"TnM'Tcpic-nt   w}if}   f'n\nmnko H rt-enwHnr*' frt\n       that the navigation  companies  have\nl  TWlteT YEARS AGO TODAY j^coralled  most^of^ Iho  buslnes-V\n'8^~^ ' ' \" All the parses KeM rallies in,their\ncommittee rooms Saturday lUffntf\nThe Conservatives confined \\helr\noratory to appeals on b'ehiiif of   the\n(From,  the   Daily   Tribune   of   Nov-\n ember   5,   1\u00bb00.) \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nThe' stealer  Anger una,   owned  by j\nI   .(Paste  this in\nlies in six feet of water, with the\nfunnel and a puritan of the upper\nworks   exposed.\nTwo rahroad men from the Nelson district have been advanced to\ntho grade of passenger conductors\nand placed in charge of trains on\nthe Boundary branch. One of these\n!ls   James   G.   lrvii.se.   who   formevly\ntn\n,.r M-ntdd be\nw. I fpar she\nin she reads\nremaiitder of\nFor I have\n-.- n^n'\u00abst the\nThot^Sf firNS  un '-freight  between  Robson und\ninl condi-;this   city.       The   second   passenger\nwomen, run   rj>n   to   the   lot   uf   A-   Cf*5Jes-\nto   havo\n,ker,   -who  has  been   on   the   NaKusp\nt-i   \"ioln   forcei\nThe s-idd\u00abst word in ih<- Knffllnh Uin-l'H-anch , for   some   years.       The\nrri*n'g> \u00bb*s   \"h^nielpss.\"   And   In   order  to cancy   in   the   local   service   has   not\nhnve a homo, a woman should he will- iK,en   finfi(|  as  yot,       joe   Kinny and\nX\u00ab\u00ab\u00abta^ Sto \u2122 Funk are moiHloncd in. this con-\nwotnttn jetiter  llito a  joint  hnmp  agree- npction.\nirpnt  tbcv  should  suv  frankly Ito  each I *    \u2022*    *\nothfr: ' \"YfS.   we   know    then-    may   be . ,,\u201e,.,,,.\nlifta but lien  of will.   It   i*  quite pos-1    fno work on lhe C. P.-R. between\nslble.  that  one  or  the  other  will   have .Five-Mile*  point and-Lhe citv .will  be\nio   give   in   over  ninny   questions.   But \\ completed   next   w\nlet   up   try   to   be   as   fair   as   possible |\nrand   take   turns   in  giving   in.   And   we'll\nconsider   our   little   periods   of  friction j\na    part    of    the    price    we    must   pay1\nfor   our   home.\"\nOnly by facing tlie facts squarely\nand calling spndcs spades, can two\nwomen run a home together and yet\nrenia.ll. friends. There must be concessions on both sides. And these things\nmust be talked out and decided upon\u2014\nnot locked in vengeful looks and chilly   alienees.\nHut \"a little bird has told me\" that\nthere are* women who are big enough\nof soul and religious enough and human\nand kindly enough to get along without any friction at all, in the joint\nrunning of their \"homo And do you\nknow, \"..am wondering if all women\ncouldn't become like this if thoy wanted  to?\nTomorrow\u2014A   meat   Pie   That   Tastes\n.    -    .      Cold Than Hat\nThe steamer Marlon, owned by tlie\nLode-Star Mining company of Kaslo, has been taken off the Craw\nford Bay run, her service proving a\nfinancial   failure,   one   reason    being\nBY LENORE\nVtf&r.   ,.\nThey Paid High Interest in\nThose Days.\nIf the descendants of II Sin-\nnutum- can make a round-up of\nthose who can trace back their\nancestry to Bur-Mama, the\nwidely known business man of\nNippur of the year 1962 B.C.\nthey way, as the lawyers: say,\nlearn Something to their advantage. For it has now been\nproved by legal records that\nBur-Mama did borrow in that\nyear from II Sinnutum the sum\nof four shekels in silver, and\nso far as the records show he\nnever got a receipt. The' note\nwhich he made at the time of\nthe transaction in the presence\nof four witnesses is still in existence.\nAs nearly as experts in Babylonian, vajue.can figure, a shekel in the year 1962 :B,C;,i was\nworth at leasfe^j3u(ivalmj|)Of\n$100 in Canadian mQ^y'nQW.'\nBusiness men and speculators\nalike protest today when they\nare required to pay more than\n8 per cent for loans, but Bur-\nMama willingly agreed to pay\n20 per cent interest for six\nmonths; or 40 per cent a year.\nAnd he did this not because\nhe had definitely made up his\nmind i$o^e..;B.ay,..but because\nit was- the prevailing rate of\nhis day and generation, and he\nhad to meet the terms imposed.\nIt :has been estimated by\nsomeone at the Museum of'the\nUniversity bf Pennsylvania who\nis good at figures that at compound-interest the amount due\non this note today, says a Boston paper, would be enough to\npay the national debt of any\ncountry in the world. The note,\ninscribed on a tablet of clay\nand marked indelibly with the\nofficial seal cylinder of the notary public, was one of the first\ntranslations made on his arrival\nat the museum by'Dr. Leon Le-\ngrain, the young French so1-\nd.ei'-pi.iest, who is now curator\nof the Babylonian section.\nThe stout woman is tavorcd in' this\nmodel adapted -from Renee, as U*e- vertical parallel lines of the semKdraped\npanels in front offset heaviness and\ncreate  nn   illusion  qf< height. , i \u25a0\nDark' brown crfejie ue chine is' used,\nand the clever neckline, discldses a\nbla,ck! satin waistcoat;-, with a girdle of\nbn\u00a3 jsanie material. This Is low and\nloosely fitted, an arrangement always\nreconvmended  for the heavy  woman.\nIn ithe tucked-under skirt there is\na hint t tlie harem, which aids in the\nsuggestion of sleliderness, and the flat,\nflowerlike rosettes of fringed crepe de\nchine which trim sleeves and neckline\nare   exceedingly   original.\nThe hat Is of black velvet with a\ngraceful sweep of gliccrined ostrich\nflues.\nTOX YEARS A(iO TODAY        ]\n(From the Daily New\u00bb: or- ''Nov.\n- \u25a0 .    \u25a0 i-.B,' 1310.-,: \u25a0>!-.'      -  <\u25a0  j.\nThe Nelson-' Conservative association lasl night appointed Dr. \\V;, p.\nlose, .George .lrerguson, M. h.'aic-\nQimrrie, W. R. McLean, J. A. Irving:, Phil Wade, if. w. Robertson,\nJ. 33,, Taylor, 0. D. Blackwood and\nC. A. Hunter, delegates to the provincial .'Cohsei(vatlvo convention, to\nopen here on Nov. 1*7. W. H. flul-\nlook-Webster, Sheriff S. P. Tuck,\nGeorge Horstead, P. J. Ulcazer, Alfred Jeffs, William Closncll and \u25a0 w.\nT. Choate  were chosen  as alternates;\n...\nFrom the Ymir gold camp comes\n.word that the Dundee mine Is finishing building operations. ' The\nWilcox is starting a new bunkhouse\nwhich will be located at the upper\nworks near the new tunnel.\n...\nRecent certificates of work on\nmineral claims Issued by Recorder\nStephen H. Hoskins, Include the Boston, on Hall creek, by E. Peters, and\nthe Molly S., on Evening mountain,\nby John  Disireau.\n. * .\nThe October brick -tins arrived,at\nthe Hume from the Nugget gold mine\non Sheep creek. It is valued at\n$8,000, and represents the bullion\ngathered on the plates during '20\ndays.\ns      .      \u00bb\nDoucette and Lawson have been\nawarded the contract for a two-\nstory addition to llle residence of\nP. J. Gallagher.  Silica  St. -\nTowels and\nBlankets\n50c\nCream Colored Crash.   Size\n18x36ln.     Pair ' ...........\nColored  Stripes.    Sties'\n18s;iGhi., pair   ,\\ .....'........\nCroA Bath Towels jj>-%   \/JA\nS2|lliln..    Pair    J. 7,_rjJ..U'U\nWhile -'-Turkish     Towel*'''\"hormne,d'.::\nPnlr\\.            Sl.OOt\nWhite   * Turkish\n2_x4$n.\nPair\t\nHommed   Linen   Dish\nTowels, J pairs \t\n2.X-14 Colored SLripu  path\nTmvel-.     Pflia-   \t\nGrey - \"Blankets,    per    pair\nTowel.1*,     hemined.\n$1.50\n$1.00\n$1.50\n$9.50, $12.50\n$12.50\n$16.00\n$20,00\n.$22.50\nWhite   Union   Blankets\n00x80' In. - Pair,- ..\n04x801n.\n. Pair\t\nAll-wool; White Pb.nkets\nOOxSOin.     Pa'ir\nO-lxS-lhi.\nPair   \t\nCambric covered cpmforter, large size,\n$4.00, $5.50, $6.50\nDown  OumforttTH,  salt-L-ii  cuv.'cU\n: STANDARD\" '\u25a0\u2022\nFurniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers\nNELSON,   B.   C. . .\nSunlight Soap j\nCOLD    HTOBAUB\n \u00a7\nny\nm-.  - -\nLlglit   Iilt-urature.\nThe   anglor\u2014I've     bought\nbook  for  each  of us-'\n- The .novice\u2014Du  you  suppose  we'll\nhavo  any  time to  read  them?\nSisterly  Love.\n\"For goodness sake, Minnie, whose\nsocks   are   you. darning?\"\n\"They belong to Willie . Sharp.\nWhen I refused him I said I'd be a\nsister to him and he took me at my\n\"word .*'\nQli Ue    \u25a0\nai,- -What!     i'ou and  your wh't\n..tj.ei   QuaneiV\n\u25a0 W injj,--vv en,   we   havn't   quarreled\nfor three  weejts.\nBing\u2014How'\"s:    that?*\nWing\u2014We're      not . on    speaking\nat ms.\nA Trade Advantage.\n\u2022'You   look, disgn in tied,\"   said   the\nsli.e.   man.-\n_es,\". snapped the hatteij.  \"I had\na  J.ttle .rush  just  now  and  a  couple\n,1 prospgctlve  customerfl  walked out\nithout being waited on-\"      ,\nSentence Former\nVermont Governor\nlor Embezzlement\n<\u00a7 y\\M\n1\ndo tbe it\"\nShe Rests while Sunlight Works\nWhy not? That's v\/hat Sunlight's for. How\ndocs this happen? Very simple. Sunlight's\ngentle purity is alone sufficient to cleanse the\nclothes without wearisome rubbing. Of\ncourse, this is easy on the clothes, too. How\nis it done ?   Just read  the  directions.\nh.iisl on getting the Soafi you ask for\u2014\nSUN LIGHT SOAP.\nLEVER BHOTHERS LIMITED,   TOftONTO\n4>--\nI i \"nri|i.i,|,tL   _.\u201e\nDAILY   RECEII'E\n^^\n\u2022$ir.Vgiand,'_.halt ot-cr\u00abaij\u00bb\nI Boil thiclt and pour \"over\n-ftl -^ \u00bb\u2014,\u2014\nr n\nyo^ii*. cook  book)     j    London-'StreeJ-s,    said;  t&t^'' \\M\nCREJAMED 'BACON\u2014Fry  slices of'minister  Qoroner,  at an iia-^uestl\nbacon  crisp   and  remove  to   a    hot other   da\"yj   are   no   longr\/ safej\nCapt.  Busk.^who is abroad,  Bank at:\u00abry  that  came  from llugh  John'. In\nher   mo\"_rinKs   Saturday   night,   andjBrandon, where he Is grappling *yth\n\u25a0\"    \"     a man named SiftoriV .'A number \\of\nthe  boys  expressed  a.willingness  to\no all the way to Brandon at ttoettr\nown expehaea and they said that Candidate  MacNeHJ   was already  elecUi-d\nthis   constituency   and -he   collid\nwell   spare   them.      At   tho   Liberal\nheadquarters  the  old  guard  listened\nto   words   of   political, wisdom   from (\nS.   S.   Taylor,   (}.   C   and  the   can-J\ndtdate of the party himself.'    In thop\nback  chamber   JamcH   \"McPhee*   and\nJohn  Aylon  Gibson were  adding up\ncolumns of figures.      Tho spellbind-\nng at the Conservative  and  Liberal ]\nmeetings was as noLhMig when com-1\npared with the oratory that floodedl\nthe  Labor   headquarters   in   tbe   old\nHudson   Bay   Store.       .Inmos   Wicks\nwas   there;   so   wero   Pat   T.>uty.   Bob\nand   Old   Man   LocKey.       Mr.   paly\nsaid  the  worklngnifu  of   Ymir  wero\nnot   Unu*warm   in   their. suppdrt   for\nChris    fc'oley.\nplatter.       Stir   into  the   hot   grease bicyles,    owing   to   tho\nin   the   pan   a   tablespoon   of   flour automobiles'and     the\nand   when   well   blended   turn   in   a traffic   fijehQi'ally-\"\nhuhiberl\n'increase 1\n.__\nNOTICE\nHaving sold out the O.K.\nBakery to Mr. J. Kelderman,\nwe wish to thank our : many\ncustomers for the liberal patronage which we have received during the years we have\nbeen in business.\nE. B. HAY & CO.   .\n\\m\nItHE CORRECT\nSYMBOL\nENGAGEfi.!'. '.\u201e' _.  ' \u2022'\nThe stgnlficint occasion marked by the giving of tli^'; beat\npossible symbol\u2014one accepted\nthroughout Canada as being\ncorrect because ot its perfection\nand extreme beauty\u2014the symbol that stands -. best., for-\nstrength, purity and steadfast-\n.tiess\u2014\nA  BILKS'   IUNd.\nTou   may   pay\nthe quality is e*\nIn  each   -is so\n15   or   $25110\u2014\nctly tlie same\nVANCOUVER,   B.C.\nCoughs are\nNature's danger\nsignal\u2014Nature's\nway of telling you that in throat or breathing\ntubes there is something wrong\u2014something needing attention. Perhaps the delicate membranes\nhave been chilled and are inflamed and sore.\nDisease gerraamay have lodged there and may be\nsetting up ir$tation, which if not checked will\nbring on acute1 bronchitis, asthma, or even worse\nlevils! So neverignore a Cough.\nii Peps kill coughs because they remove the\ncauses. As soon as a'Pepis dissolved in tlie mouth,\npowerful, but pleasant, medicinal vapors are,\nliberated, \"-these\" h'tfaliiig fumes bathe the lining\nmembranes of the throat and breathing tubes, kill\ndisease germs, allay irritation and soothe the\ninflamed parts.       '      .\u00ab\nPeps enable you to end coughs and colds in\nNature's wsy, by breathing, in the medicine the\nsame way jis the-<4iS|fase g-sjijfi. causing the trouble\n-were breathed i-4Lf\u00ab&^^\nthe swallowing of mixtures into your stomach-r\nwhic|is:imtSuxtei?-*m >\u00abJ\u00bb'S'W'.tA srsvi;>!    if.1?\nfat- aibughs, colds, bronchitis, asthma, sort\nthroat, \"ight cough and-all troubles, of throat\narid^ chest, try Peps. Best for children because\npleasant to take and free from opiates, etc. All\ndealers, 50c. a box.\nmoRic\nThe : Original   Pipelew    Fyrnac\u00bb:\/|\nOne  Register  Heats  the  Houae\nModerate    Priced\u2014Economical\nI    -CAM       Verribtf Stree-j\nis ,\u00ablUfl r4fllson.  R\nWhy is this sheep\n,i\"3\u25a0\u2022\"\u25a0 Because he feels cold\n''*   without his \"CEETEE\"\nunderclothing. USB'\/\/.      '&&\u00a3\u00a3$\u00a3\ntE-'-l\nERCLOTHINtS\n'ALL PUSE WOOL - GUARANTEED UHSHRINKAflt^\nhums ECONOMY plus COMFORT   .a, j\ntnade from only the very fines.tj,,Australian Merino sReep's wocBv \"j\nv combed and scoured; to absolute puiity and cle^jqliness, aid\\u\",..\n\"kni|-.^:flt\" tlie form aiid.gig|lasting cornfort. .    ' \/'\" *\ntM^fm: Bu| the :_test\n\"CE|T__!\" the pure wooli und|klotli^i| that wilt not\nshrink, may cost more:-than' other makes, but it'\nwears, looks, feels and satisfies beyondthe powers\nof other makes. \u2022'\n\"CEETEE\" underclothing is knit on special machines, and knit full-fashioned to fit the body.\n\"CEETEE\" has no seams, all joins being\nknitted together,  hot  sewn  as  inordinary underwear.\n\"CEETEE\" *ill give you more genuine\ncomfort than  anything you htyv'e\nevci^ worn\". ' There is nothing to\nm\nii\nF\nKomtfna used music to cure t:out\nand   aclatica.\nA Parisian charworrian, 83 years\nold, recently made an airplane flight,\nusing' her life's savings to flnan-ee the\ntrip. ' '    .\nPELIKR, Vt., Nov. 4.\u2014H'or-1\nGraham, formor governor of\n*.!. fTtui toda, sentenced In the\nSupreme court to not leas than five\nand not more tlian^- eight years in\nState prison for embezzlement of\nstate funds while he was auditor of\naccounts.\nThe Americas produce two-thirds of\nthe world's sponges, but^.he quality\nIs far- below JJmt produced in the\nMe-di^^ \"\"\"    ''\n,     MECHANICS' TOOLS\nWe have-on hand one of the finest lines of Meclianics'\n* Tools in the interiot. of B.C., consisting of-\nPlanes, Jaws, Chisels, Squares, Rules, Bits, Grinders,\nBraces, Lathes, Hammers, Wrenches, Etc.,\nManufactured by\nStanley  Rule and Level Co.        j ,   THESE STAND\nCoodell. Pratt fcCo. ' FOR\nSimmoncln Saw Co. ' rulx\nWhitman & Barnes\nNelson\nDRAWER  1050     -\n.   QUALITY\nHardware Co.\nNELSON, B.C.\nequal it for warmth, comfort and\nlong life.\n\"CEETEE\" wears wonderfully^\nwell and is soft as down.\n\"CEETEE\" will save\nmoney, for you.\nas an\nunderwear\ninvestment,^\nthe best moderately-priced underwear for\n\u25a0 ladies, 'meh and children in ribbed and\n\"plain styles.   It is made under the same\n..skilled'   supervision    as   the   famous,\n^CEETEE\" underclothing.    The raw\nmaterials used are of the best and the \u25a0\nfinished garments as  perfect  as it is\npossible to make them.\nREMEMBER---lf you can't buy ,\nf'CEETEE\" be sure to buy \"TUflNBULL'S\"\n\u25a0 For sixty years, the C. Turnbull Company .of _alt, Limited,\nhas been making, superior underclothing for men, women.ana\nchildren. The Turnbull Trade Marks are known and looked\nfor by thrifty people who consider quality and long wear,\nrather than the initial purchase price.\nSold by the best dealers.     Worn by the best people.\nMANUFACTURED\n. >ONLY BY ,.'\u25a0\u25a0:\n'\"fail     ^J '.:\u25a0,\u25a0:\u25a0.\n ;THE NELSON DAILY l^WS, FRlt\u00bbAY MO_NTilG^ 'ovtWmv'ri, 1920.\nPage\n_e o \u201e\n=S-T*r\nThrift in\nFootwear\nKootenai) and Boundary\nHere are 'shoes' .tiiat\neay. \u2014thrift\", all over;. >\nFine: quality Russian\noalf. ' Dark tain or'\nblack.\n$12 to 112.50\nThe   man -who. yto.nt.f'^o.   practice   real\nthrift lu shoes, should get.shoes that mean\nspending money slowly. ;Of\u25a0 course,.you pay,' \u25a0'.-.\nfor yotir'. shoes ail _t once; but the thing      '.'.[\u25a0\nto  consider is   how   sooft .that  iooneyVia. . ,\u00bb,::\nactually gone;   how  long the shoMu-w\u00bbar.      -'\u2022\n\u25a0'.'\u2022-''    K m\nLeaders in Footfashion\nTTtATL, Xov. 1.\u2014Tho regular meet-\nim? nf the city council wns held' on\n\"Wdlirifiy t'Vftnine*, there being present\nMayor Dockerlll, and Aldermen \"Martin.    Stone,   Daloise,   and   Williamson.\n\u25a07-etters were read from D. A. Mc-\nl>un -requesting permission to transfer the house built by bim under\nlhe returned soldiers' housing scheme,\nto .Mr. J. ft Harrison also a returned\nsobller,   permission    granted.\nFrom G.'A. \"White in reference to in-\n\u2022mnltary coiwlition of property: referee'1 to city superintendent.\nf From R. \"0.' Macponald ro payment\n'\u25a0nr* house being\" built for R. Jones for\na further grant . of, $-70.00 for. ;ex-\ntr*ft- work- on ,- his house: amplication\n\u2022granted.   \u25a0-*>    \u25a0 sft!?K,\n\"Rills, and accounts amounting to\n16039.61 were approved . by tho finance  committee and  orrled  paid.-     i\nThe monthly report of the city superintendent -was . rjubmltttM... aiid jor-\nler-?d filed.\nPuptallons on material for sewer\nf.npBtructibn were read and laid on\n'he, table.\nThe matter of team supplies was\n>nnsldered and left in the hands bf\nMd, paloise and City Clerk Money-\nnenny.\n.. \"The city clerk advised the council\nthat the special appropriation for\nstreet imtfrovemetit had been over-ex-\n\u25a0tendjul. It Was decided to have- a\nstatement in detail of expenditures\nup to date prepared by the city superintendent   a-nd   city   clerk. -\nMotion to Boduood Staff\n', It   whs ' moved   by   Aid.   Martin   and\nseconded  by   Aid.   Stum*  that  the   pub-\n\u25a0itci writs   staff   be   reduced   to   seven\nmen. . j\nMoved ,iii a'mendent by Aid. Williamson secondsd by Aid. Kerr that 'tho\n-\"taff remain as at present until Dec.\nst. The- City Superintendent slated\nhat it would require all the present\nstaff. to. prepare the . roads for the\nwinter weather. The amendment carded. \u25a0 ' - . -.\u25a0.-) i\nj City supt. suggested procurring 'ah\n\u25a0lectric pipe thawing outfit before ilho\n'\u25a0jold   weather .ItegliaU\nAid. Martin !- drew .attention to. a\ns.tupdplpc on ' Baiv Ap'eiluu ,which needs\nsome attention: referred- to* city sup-\nTliitendeut,'\nBoys  Uama-iro   Piro  Outfit       *' -\nCity Superintendent referred to tho\ndamage done .to the fire fighting apparatus ou Hallow'een by boys and\nyoung meli. The .mayor slated that tbe\noffending parties are to be brought\nbefore  the' city   it'iagastrate,\nlu reference- to repeated requsls\nfor extensions of sewers In various districts ,the city .engineer and superintendent' will be asked to submit, a\nreport of all sewers required to consider .Which a special meeting of fhe\ncouncil   will. be. -called\nK\nEEP in tune with the\nbright   new morn by\ndrinkingfi^theme\nofHealth that lies in\nFRHIiSAltf\nNow ti tli: tmic \\6\n. begin taking ENO\u2014\n--tlit \u25a08t-mpl:e6t\u2014and\n-.ple-fsantcct    way..- to;\nmaintain (hose clean\n' and,order.ycon<iit.ohs:\n.whicli'arc inseparable\n, from  perfect   health.\nYajfcc, ''i^P'- iw*v;\nm-rning and-you -'-will\nw-in-thc-tense of w_l.- - -\nbBing -and happiness,\ntint UNO has brought\nto'.millions dl\" folk\ndaring'tht'pafl'fifty\n* \u25a0 yeara.' ! *\"V \"\n*T#\ntt\\*wtntiH\/fr*if Sm.'l' mrtn^rt\/lit^Tf^Ma^sailt\nhsaninnbwvrt\/er half-m^mhirf U mtm* ths +rt\/rava&i* a\\f\n'' *  ENO, LTO.a avsd *\u00bb\u2022!&*\u25a0..       4;   -j*\nPrfpMoJ ofllr fcj*- \" \"'   i *\"\u25a0'\"'\"\"\n\"Vnut   Sab\"    WmU,   LcaJol,   S._- ^\n' .fait\"Agents f    \u25a0   \u201e   .-'  r. \\ \u25a0 *\"\nK.   RITCHIE   ft   -O.,   Lii-    ;\" -\nTOI^OMTO     .       Sr-W J\nJ...C.  '\"\".no.  !H.\nIIA1.01.D\nNew Yor\"\nmms^m^m\nAs we have Elevatojg atiall the principal,Grafia^poiii^g'ln'\nSouthern Alberta, We are in ;the position of being ablejib\nobtain the pick of the wheat for the miljing of':\u25a0\n['OUR BEST FLOUR'\n: To ty ;t once, means yoji will use; it always.\n!   ;\u25a0 ,    -Ask Your Grocer ,\n\u25a0    '       \u25a0\u25a0-'\u25a0>: .Manufacturetlby,' ! - ,'\nTh. Eltom Milling & Elev. Co.,\nI.IIVIITED\nEilTY FftTHERS\nMotion to Reduce Public\nWorks Staff Stands Over\nTill December.\nPioneer Schoolmaster\nof    the   Kootenays\nDies at West Demurs\nNAKUSP.' fcov. 3.-\u2014One of the real\nold -timers of Kootenay,' in the person\nof James Sutherland, died at West\nDomara yesterday after\" \\V\\ long illness. '. -Mr. .'Sutherland was the first\nbcIiooI teaoher in Kootenay, having\narrived frm CalKary in J885 to take\ncharge -of the first -school1 at Donald duilhff the time of the C. P. R.\nconstruction., lTfcvious to thai* he had\nbeen an army school master for the\nBritisl* Government in {India. He was\nsucceeded in Donald by *Wesley Blair,\nnow secretary to the agent general\nfor British Columbia; in London Eng.\n.Mr. Sutherland has taught in -various\nschools throughout British Columbia\never since, and before coming to. TjVest\nDemars last year was, \u25a0 In \"change Qf\nthe Meniionite 'school ' at* -TVjhatBhau.\nami later at Renata. on iho'-'Arrow\nLakes. He was *&. iriembcr; q_ llm Ma-\nsouic fraternity,'- apd \u25a0jeavesia\/widow\nand tlireo daughters. t mourn his loss.\nThe interment .will ' t&ke\u00a3l-.gfla#e- \u25a0 ht\nNakusp   cemetery   on  THurBdaiy. \\  '.\nSLOCAN CITY NOtES\nSLOCAN CITY, Nov.\"\"?'-r\u2014E. Weston\nof Goldenr B.* C,'- waa .'a.-'yhsitdr .in\ntown on Monday and waa''!!-!- \/guest\nof Mr.  and Mrs. It.. I* Reynolds.\nMrs, A. E. Gage afid. two. daughto.fi\nwere viaitors to New\" Denver on Monday. \u25a0 ;\nMiss L. M. NUson lyho la\"here from\nVictoria, the guest* of Mrs. ;It.\" L.\nReynolds, spent a few. days- w.lth\nfriends   in   Nelson   this   week.  \u2022 .   i\nDr. E. E. Topliffe .'of Sandon, who\nlias taken Dr. Keares' place,'' 'Is paying\na   professional   visit   iu   town,\nBALLOTS THROWK\nI wane what I want\nwtien I want it\u2014\nand. thiitsK        \u2022\n\u25a0M\nIMISTIES\nany old time\nir.\nAffKAPPLES\nRush   in  Winter  Varieties  fast'\nus   possible    .\nALL    KINDS\n\u2022      LAST CAR   LOADING\nFRIDAY,   NOV.   6th.\nf\nKOOTENAY FRUIT GROWERS\n-, UNION,\nNELSONr\nPHONE  180\n.Mi-EOPtE :;;:\nSOTDTAKE\n\"Ajhreeft .:tm\u00bbt  .'_n*_D_.' Bltro-ffliOiphftte\nhelps   to   build -, strong   nerves   and\n'    - put   on   firm   healthy   flesh.\n\"Feed' your nerves plenty of phos-\nnhate with-enough left over to give\ntin! btood J.iid bone cells a generous\n\"h-slping and you should quickly note\na --ireturiu to old-time vigor with- a\npower of endurance that will, surprise\nyou;\nSo say two prominent New Tork\nphysicians. Thinness, weakness and\nlack of ambition arc in most cases\n.due..to..under--d nerves, and this is.so\nsimply because modern foods are la-\n1nent;ably weak in phosphoric elements,\n.Over 40 \\mv cent of the people of\nA\u00bb.'iei-'.i:a need more phosphate, and\nabopt the. only, way ! tiiat many .thin\n\u00bbepfe call take on more pounds of\nVn-n, \u2022vlg'-Tous \u2022flesh' \"Is fb' \"feed th(j\niheTvei-j 'direbt VHb UBItro-Phospliate,\na '\"trfitht;\"' ord^arr^'ofi^ixlc-'phosphate\nthat d.'ugglMts know t %\\\\ about. 1. -;\nicate.   filair(i'^rt.der\\veJgbt  .p_ople-.    lfc.v\u00bb\nTeris of \"r^usands of run-down, del-\nlearned the ''iwyjklB.^ better health\nthrough Bitro-PhofipJi'At-.', \u00bb It was juqt\nthe one element- -laBkln^-^to put on\nmjich. desired flesh vaud bring tliein\niiuai.n, happiness and a mind free fl'om\nclaUnc-s.   ,. ']^ i\nNo.Soap Better\n\u2014-For Xour Skin\u2014-\nThan Guticura\nDefective Ballots Exceed the\nVoters; All Polling Officials Subpoenaed.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 4.\u2014All poll\nclerks, election inspectors , mid thu\nboard of canvassing Inspectors In.the\n13th electoral district of \"-fife forth\nassembly district, \"^nhattfthj wi-re\nsubpoenaed tonight -by JJiatrlDt AtV\ntorney \u00bbvvann.-lo-'ajppifja'fral Ws office\ntomorrow in connection witli tlio finding of 2C ballols to.fiay.at Lhe open-,\ning of a sewer'ut OrchartlVand'^anion streets, . \"The .,baU*p,t3 are ijald\nto have been marked {pr,M.r.,,ISwann.\ntho district attorney,.^wji6 is a candidate for supreme court juatioe and\nappears ito have been defeated an the\nface  of  present roturri\".. '\nBoard of election records show that\n58G voters regi-tered in fthe oleet.lon\ndistrict* while the* r.et^rii- s^eet from\ntho district certifit'd'tft^re Avoro (*94\ndefective ballots, or more than ono\ndefective ballot for <_v<3r3\"** yegi^t_reU\nvoter, \u25a0 -\\:, '.: Lv.-l*-$\nPrince Edward Island Claims\nProtective Tariff Not Suit\ned to Province.\nCHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. I,\nNov- 4.\u2014A memorial .claiming; that\nprotective policy wag not.,suited to\nthe prqyince of Prince; Edward Inland, was submitted to -the tariff\ncommission when it opened, a session\nhere-by J. A- Dcwar^ Mr P.,-of- Now\n-\"\u25a0ertli, president of.tho United Far\niners', association. \u2022 It claimed the\nprovince was almost entirely agricultural.    Senator McLean of Sourts,\nn behalf of' seven potato - starch\n'.nanufacturers of tlie island, filed\nmother memorial pointing out that\niwing to the competition of cheap\nJapanese starch,., tapioca flour and\njage flour coming into Canada, it is\nvery difficult for the island mills to\nsarry on. -It was suggested in the\nmemorial that Iho importation of\nJapanese starch, Which., is , being\ndumped into Canada, should b'e pro\nhibited.\n\"The commission was asked;-'tb give\n_ome measure of relief to the starch\nindustry of Prince ^Edward, Island\ntyfach\"' means a horjie market for\n-about three, hundred tlvousand' busli*\nits of potatoes yearly.\"' ' ' \" \u25a0\n..The  mills **wero' not .running- thi*]\near -as\" the mftnnfacturejre..\u00a3P__ld: not'\n,my tho price asked by the favmejrp\n.'or. potatoes. 7\/    \u25a0<\nEvidence was also-^ve=n;-;.b-y..JIon.\nWilliani Lea, coriiin.feslotier I'of- .^gri:\n3ult;u*re, foi' the (Ji'tivinee. 'lie ad-\n\/ocated  lower diitle^ on'^grUfHHurul\nmplements.\nThe Store for Quality\nFRIDAY BARGAINS\nSACRIFICE SALE\nSate Prices on Suits, Dresses, Underwear. Hose and\n\" SUITS at $24.95\nTwenty-five good, serviceable SUITS, the best we. have ever offered for the,\nmoney.   Good all-wool Serges   and Tweeds used in the malting.   Coats are. well-tailored, mostly in belted styles, with convertible collars, and are lined with good satin\nor fancy linings.   Skirts are plain-tailored and belted.    Sizes 16 to 38.    Values-to\n$47.50.\nSale Price $24.95\nMISSES' SERGE DRESSES At $19.95\nWell-tailored DRESSES of fine Botany Serge. Mostly in straight-line and\ntunic styles, in sizes 16 and 18 only. Some trimmed with braid. Others plain.\nValues to $35.00. !\nSale Price $19.95\nWOMEN'S FALL COMBINATIONS at $2.50\nExtra fine knit Combinations, with short or long, sleeves, and ankle length.\nSizes 36 and 38 only, worth today $4.00 the suit.\nSale Price $2.50\n'   HOSE at 75c\nI Ladies'  Cashmere-finish Hose, made of fine yams, seamless, and good weight.\nBlack and white.   Sizes 9, 9<\/j and 10. Sale Price 75c Pair,\nTRIMMED HATS CLEARINB at $8.95\nExtraordinary vSlues in smart tailored and dness Hats, in\na range of styles and colors.   Best qualify- silk velvets and\ntrimmings used throughout.   A splendid selection, and values   1\nup to $13.50.\nOn Sale at $8.95\ned their cohesive policy and started\nan orgy o fprice cutting today.\n, It was announced independently\ntoday by the Atlantic Sugar Refinery\nhere that they had reduced their\nprice list of grafiulated sugar to 15V_\ncents a pound .whilst it was reported\nthat t\\W other refineries here were\nselling as low'as H and 14.70 cents,\ner-store. The Dominion Sugar refinery is selling at Toronto down to\n13.71 c^nts'v.and.- the... Acadia Sugar\nRefinery'is stated to be selling at\nToronto at 1   .cents not.\nSTEAMER ON ROCKS IN\nST. LAWRENCE RAPIDS\nOODBNSBUHO, N. Y\u201e Nov. 4\u2014\n.The Canadian sfeainshfp Stormouut,\ngrain laden from Port Arthur for\n;Montreal, lies in a serious position\non the rocks in the St. Lawrence\n\u25a0river rapids near tho west entrance\nvof the Morrisburg, Ont., canal, it\nis feared she may be a total loss.\n[NT\nCrosses Over to Opposition;\nIndignant Over Alleged\nIrish Reprisals.\nLONDON, Nov. '4.-\u2014Much interest\nhat* been aroused by the Secession\nof Lord. Henry Cavendish Ben thick\nfrom the ministerial to the opposition side of lhe houso of commons-\nLord Henry's faiijily has high Conservative traditions- He was returned at the general election as a\nTory-Democrat-Coalitionist, but has\nalways shown on independence , of\nparty whips. With the Cecil family, he hns exhibited indignation\na gainst   the   government   concerning\nthe    alleged      Irish   .reprisals'\ntreated the other evening'when fyij\nwords   passed   between  him ' and',\nHamar  Greenwood,   the  chief sets\ntary  for  Irland,  when  they  enca[\ntered  each other in  the  lobby.\nThis explosion, in its personal -Jfe\npeet evaporated, in a few mlnufft.\nOswald Mosely also nccompnnwl\nLord Henry to the other side :*on\nthe   same -ground.-   ^.V:*v       v^^fti1\nLIFE IMPRISONMENT\nFOR MANSLAUGHT!\nPERTH, Ont., Nov. 4\u2014John Neate,\nfound guilty of the manslaughter\nof Miss May Casey, of\" Ottiw^a,\nnear the village of Althorpe, lft&t\nAugust, was sentenced hjeri*, yeateF***\nday.  to  life  imprisonment, \";\n\"Women prompters' voie'es are more\ndistinct ou the stage and less audible\nin the auditorium' than aro men's\nvoices. , sf\\\\\n\u25a0I\nf^^^^^r^r^i1-^^^1^^^^^\n___ZX^^Q^\u00a3^S\nBig Refineries Selling Where\n\u2022 and How They Can{ Orgy\nof Price Cutting. \\\\\nj  MpNTKl-AL, . 1$0\\:    ^.-^Demorali-t\nSatfon\" reigns  supreme  in' the sugar\ninaTket today, and no one,- \"refiner or\nwholesaler,   seemed  .to -know   what\nwas, going   on.   Leading \u25a0 wholesalers\nBttjte ,d(.hat, following repealed ijrops\nIn the \u25a0 raw sugar* markef, \u25a0\u2022 at^\u201e     N^w\nYork,  w,ithv tlie persistent \"^cqurso  of\nthe    Dominion    Sugar    R-fihery    of\nToronto,  which deals in  beet sugar;\nin underselling the aCari-j ,-au^ar refineries   that   the   four-big   cane  sugar\nrefineries    here   had 'broken,  away\nfrom  all  agreements   ts  to   stabaliza- i\ntion of prices and wero selHug'where\n'ahd how they could. ..... j\nAccordingly, the big wholesale\nhouBes. here,. who in the.^past, have:\nstood   fairly  well  together;   abandon-\nWHY EXPERIMENT?\nFood scientists claim that the leavener is largely\nresponsible for the flavor, texture and whole*\nsomeness of your home baking. That on no\nother one ingredient does so much depend. It is\n-important, therefore, to use a baking powder\n-Chat you know possesses the necessary leavening\nBR'i i\nqualities.\nMAGIC BMONGPOWBER\nContains No Alum\nand is the only strictly high class baking powder\nin Canada selling at a moderate price. Its reputation is built on purity and highest quality.\nThe only well known medium priced baking\npowder made in Canada that does not contain\nalum and that has all its ingredients plainly\nstated on the label.\nMade in Canada ,\nJ_l \u00ab|a____iiMl__l_.J.I____JJi.^LJilLAtl\u2014\u2014.J-' -I\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014LH'J'J \"  _\u2014J   _l . __> I UU__T\n\u00ab\u25a0    i\n___\n (3es+ &py\nTHE NELSON* _\u00bbA__YJ_-'e\"#S,' fftll^.'^RNmG, *0\u00ab\u00a9BeR 51, 19.0.-'\nSS\n9-E\nPeorta,    III.,\n'believes   the\nwoman on \"ei^*^;\ncompletely\nRegains.\nuX-fc-A   IftWriSfc.. .f\nwho   says   she\n\u25a0   the   happiest\nit Tanlac  so\nhealth:\nwjilcfi.\n\"I1 believe i .am.'the happiest wtmi-\nan in the world,-and it is all-because\nuf what Tanlac has . don\u00a9 tor tne,\"\nsaid Mrs.* Laura Rari.k, 403 Meid-\nroth St., Peoria, 111,, a Well known\nand highly respected resident of that\ncity. .-.\"\u25a0' -i   '\n''I never dreamed that 1 would ever,\nfind anything that would' do for mo\nwhat Tanlac has done,\" she said.\n\"I was in a wretched .atiite of health\nand was down, in bed so lpng that\nI lost fifty porifls in weight, but I\nhave gained back every pound I lost\nand I now feel as 'well as I ever\ndid in my life. The indigeestion and\nother troubles that, made life a burden for eleven years -have entirly\ndisappeared and I y^n like a ..-\"\"tew*\nwoman. .\n\"Jfy stomach was so disordered\nthat'even liquid foods and 'plain water caused ..me to\\ H-Wft jdreadful\ncramping^ ,sm*ils that'lasted $>r h-burs.\nAly ki'Uh'eys,!,ive're disordered and I\nhad pains across my back almost\nconstantly. I had severe headaClkes\nnearly every day and became so dizzy I *_6uld hardly stand. ,1 vfOs .so\nnerocus that it was impossible for\nme to get a good night's sleep.\nI tried every conceivable medicine\nand was treated by specialists but\nnothing helped me, and finally I waa\ntold   I  would   never   be  Well   again.\n\"But Tanlac\u201ehas made me a perfectly well Woman in every way.\nI can now eat and sleep like other\npeople and I haven't a pain about\nme.\n\"I am glad to give this statement, for I want to do all I can\nto let the world know about this\nwonderful   medicine.\". . .'\n'Tanlac is sold';iH '-Xeisoli by*'- Canada Drug & Boole Store- and bv tho\nleading druggists in every town. Adv.\nSIS\u00abI\u2014II! \u25a0la.lllJ'   \" V\" '\u2022      '\"l-'lte\nMarMs and Finance\nxm\nSterling Touches Low Record ; Other European\nMoney at Minimum.\nNUW TORK Nov. 4\u2014\"fixt-emeiy.\nconfusing price changes characterized todays session of the stock exchange, 'the erratii; Movement being\naccompanied by $ turnover, approximating'J;2000,(M)0 'shares, the larr\ngest total of any .da.' since :\\he early autumn, 'period.\nThe constructive side of tlie market was again .upheld by the railway division,, al-hbugh sortie' of \"that\ngroup, notably \"Tteailing ami Canadian Pacifi<o,,-,.as wqll as many minor\nissues, were '\"Subjected to varying\ndegrees of pressure.\nSouthern Paqific retained Its re-\ncent leadership, 'transactions in ttttit\nstock far exceeding any other, but\nits further advance 'of 3% was reduced to a mere fraction at the\nend. Included amo,ng I the others\nwhicli   were   strong   were  ^Northern\nSlid RISES\ni\nNEW YOKK, Nov. 4\u2014Silver. Wed-j\nncsday, domestic 99%:. foroigjn 8S.%.f\nThursday,  domestic  99 Vy.   foreign  8a'\n%. \u2022\u25a0-';\nLONBpr*, Nqy. 4\u2014Silver. jTuosjjaji\nW%: Wednesday 53%; TJiursdaa\n54   .,\n\u2022 NfiW YOfiK. Nov, 4\u2014Copper etea-\n-J%i$rcfcl'rjjlyti,- and spot'fourth yuar-\n' ts*.;'>H*i\u00ab'to uli; iron, nominally\n' .ni|eSm!)i9^,. tin easy, spot 39.00;\nfUWres 40.23; antimony 6.S-3; load\nsteady spot C.6.\",: zinc steady, Bast\nSt. I*iuis spot  5.73 to 7,40.\nLONDON- Nov. 4\u2014Cdpper, spot\n'i?2..128 Cd; futures, \u00a391 15s.; tin\nspot, 4\u00a33a)2.10s; futures \u00a3263 15s; cl-\ne:;troly,tic spot \u00a3100; futures \u00a3102;\nlead.,. 8pot.\u00a333 13s; futures \u00a335 2s\n6(T; \"zinc,   spot   \u00a33S:   futures '\u00a339  7s.\nAi>OITK>l<iAL    MARKETS^-PAGE    7\nDiscount on Dollar is\nNine and Three-Quirtters\n\u25a0   NIS   WYOBK,    Nuv.\n^domestic   99%;   foreign\nCanadian dollars '90.2;\n\u2014Bar\n82%.\nsilver;\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW    YORK,    Nov-.    4\u2014$3.37    for\nSO day bills;   |3.4iy. for demand.\n.   NELSON\".   Nov.   4\u2014$3.78.\nBANK CLEARINGS\ni WINNIPEG, Nov. -Jr\u2014 TJ.fa fort'ow-\n;ing aro the bank cleu_*in\u00abs for,, tho,\n\u2022-principal  cities  of the '-Dominion--, for;\nand.-Great    Nbrthern..  tho   \u2122*k. ending today* as compared iwUb),\nPacific\nformer   making   a.   net   advance . of\n3%. \u25a0 '  ^\nOne of , the disquieting .features\nwas the general weakness of foreign exchange. The British rate\ndropped to the lowest quotation in\nseveral weeks. French bills were at\ntheir minimum for almost six months\nahd - Italian remittances registered\nan absolutely new low level J with\nrates on Greece.\nStrength of Southern Pacific .'convertible five's again over-shndWed\n'all other dealings In llle'\"\"fli,m *to\nstrong   bond   market.    \t\nTotal sales, par value, aggregated\nS14,S75,000.   ,\nf\nOld 'Uhltell States bonds were\nchangdd on call.\nHigh\n25>i\n127V,\n.18\n311.4\nChino  Copper\nC.    P.    R.\nInt.    Jfarine\nPierce  Arrow\nStudebaker     .58\nUtah   C6pper   i.f.HV\nU.  S. Steel   Com.  88-,,\nU.   S.  Steel  Pfd.   100%\nWillys    Overland    10%\nLow\nUlOse\n25%\n\u25a024%\n12514\n125T4\n1B%\n17\n31\n31V,\n57\n57\n\u25a0 SOW\n\u00abo%\n80S\n87 \u00ab,\u25a0\n100_\n\u25a0 m%\n10%\nl<Hi\n\"ilunti-eal -.\nToronto .. \u25a0 \u25a0\nWinnipeg ..\nVancouver .\nOttawa ,.:..'\nCalgary\nHamilton\nQuebec  \t\nKdmonton\nHalifax   '.ij:.\nLondon    \t\nRegiim\t\nJohn   ...;\nVictoria\nSa._ka,toun\n\"Moose   .law\nBrant Cord\nBrandon    \u2014\nFort   William\nLethbridge   ..\nMedicine, Hnx\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWliNWlPEG. NOV. 4\u2014 Yesterdays\nsales In the yards were \u20223,344 cattle;\n1,127 hogs and 1.047 sheep. Receipt-\nup to -9 a. m. this morning were\n7,000 cattle. 500 hogs and -lOftO\nsheep. '\n\u25a0^trotatlbns: ,'; \u25a0\nSteers, choice y.oit to 10.00; fair,\nto' good 7.00 to 8.75; medium 5.7?\nto   _:75,   common   _.O0  to   5.50.\nButcher heifers, <iholm G.75 to f<G0;'\nfair to  good   5.00  to  6.50;.\nButcher cows, choice 6,25 to. Y._5,.\nfair to good 5.00 to '6.00; medium.\n4.50 to 4.7-5; canners and cutters\n2.*5-0: to  4\".O0. \"\nBrills.,good .4.50   to   5.-00;   common\nvJJ.7,6   to .4.2&...  .\n;, ;.Sien,..-good  :_.uo   to   7.00:\n4.75   to   6.50;   common   3.50\nFeeders,  choice   8;00   to   8.\nto good  -5.50  to   7.215,\nStocker    steers, .. choice\nU.OO;.   fair   to   good   4-JT5   to\nStocker heifers, choice 5.25\n'fair  to good 4.50 to 5,00.\nCaJyeS.. -choice- 7.00 .to, 8.00; good\n5 \"50   to\"   6.50;   common   4).00   to   5.00..\nSheep ahd lambs, good sheep 4.50\nto 5.50; common sheep 3,00 to 4.00;\ngood lambs 7.00 to 8.50; common\nJambs 5.00  to 6.001\nHogs, selects 16.50; heavies 13.50;\nlights 13.00 to 15.00; sows 9\/50; stags\n8.00.\nmedium!\nto 4,50.\nfair\nto\nto\nTORONTO, Nov, 4--eattlc receipts'\n,050. The catle market had a stron-.\n^er. tone today and receipts wero..\n.nearly all cleaned up. Demand for'\ncommon and medium grades was\n4better than it has been some time.,\nSeveral cars of western cattle .ar-;\nrived about noon.\nCalf rceiptsS3. .Tops sold,as high.\nas  18.50, ..%ith .bulk  selling  at  17.50.*\nSheejwi^&ei-pitr- A&^v^-oipts of\nlambs were cleaned up'at'iiVbn.' Ma-j\njority went for l'2% cents1.\nHog \"__\u00abeijits 1,425. '\"^aok-ers buy-'\ning  fori 17.25 fed and watei*ed.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTRI-jVL., Nov. . 4\u2014The . local\negg mai'ket 'was-..steady- tbdhy.\nQuotations:.,    , t ,' ..\nCheege, fJiife-t ^at-ei'Ws7**^-^;, fieuts.\nButtibr.' choicest . creamery, 52 to\n52% -contg,        '       ,       -\nEggs',( freshv 65   to   66  cents, ;\nPota^fes, -pVr -btagtv-car lots i,T5.\nGRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS. . Oct: 4\u2014Ijour uu'-\n.changd ^c, in csltta lon-cr; -In -Aurloa-\n.iobs, family patents quoted at 10.00\n\"to 11.50 % aiarrl^in 88- pound, cot-.\nton sacki 'aDlptiienta JSiitei bin'islo.i\n,, Bran,   32.00   to  32jO0.\nWheat, caar No. 1 Northern 1.9*\n\u201e to S.Wil: Decemoer 1.93%: March,\n1'9*_i,: ;    '\n.\u2022_ Coip N. 3 Yellow, 87. to 9fl cents.\n* Oata.   No. 3  White, .49%   to' 6(fii\n<:ents.       '. ' \u2022.       .   ..'\u25a0-:\n-Plax,   So. 1,   2.KS -to   S.iii'\nWheat\nNov.\nDec.\n'May\nOats\nNov\n. pec\n-May.\nBarley\nNov.\nDec.\nHay\nFlax-\nNov.\nDee.\n, May -\n-_ye'\nNov\nDeo.\nOpeli'  High    Low    Close\n\u25a0 l-l-Wi\n.211\n.217\n\u25a0 61U\n. 03%\n'} 6SK .\n.ii*\n.100\n.102%\n2-%\n217\nU%\n63%\n68* .\n114\n102 y,\n103 V,\n278\n287\n-'21,%\n205%.\n218%\n\u25a063 \u201e\n62%\n*7S4 i\n112\nSt'A\n101%\n274\n273M.\n284\n222%\n208\n218%\n64>4\n62%\n07%\n112\n99%\n10a\n,272\n273 %\n179%\n170 V,\niiin iirn'ii.li   Till\nof Commerce\nSir   Edmund   Watlk.r,   C.V.O.,\nLL.D.,  D.CU  Pr..id.nt.\nSir  John  Aird, General  Mgr.\nH. V. F. J\u00bbn\u00aba, AM't\/.Gin'l. MBr.\nCapital   Paio   Up .'116,000,000\nR\u00ab\u00bberv. Fund ..... \u25a0 \u25a0 .|16,000,00t\nMining Development\nThe dcvclopnicnt ol the. inlii-\netal deposits throughout' Canada Is of paramount Importance\nto the country.\nThere are many waye In which\nthis. Bank , enn assist miners.\nCall upon us and let un explain what a complete banking\n'service  means to you.\nBranches tn Kootenay and\nBoundary -at \/IPfelrion, Fernfe,\nCranbrook, Creston, 'brand\nForks, Greenwood, Nakusp,\n\u25a0Kill.   ,\n&\u25a0\u25a0 jiWLWtiPtnmmi \u25a0\u25a0}\u2022\nF. C. WHITEHOUSE, M\u00abn\u00bbfler >\n:oi-responuing week   last  year\nWeek Ending .Correspolwl;\nNov. 4 1920 week, 1919\n\u00bb152,3u9,594'S13l, 143,978;\n122,520,645 95.0081 D30\n99.525.J26 75.198,532-\n18,060,389 15.438,250\n12,312.183 l4,10li229\n12,217.248 11,23S.'S07;'\n8,713,534 -8.179,183\n0,607' 41HI Not gfven\ntlioaMW:    -6il82,SS2;\n5.833;11S , SotiirgI*ett\n.\u2022..4-,340,4ri\u00ab    . 3.3C1,04&\n. 6.47.\u00ab011\n:i.276,0V9\n2,r_.2\u00ab2\n3.353,570\n2,733,238\n... I l,00Si'53S\n1,265.549\n1.282,605\n1,'456,8*2\nSSMSjji\nNew' WeBtmin.fter :-4'08,322\nPrince Albert 531\n7,234.690,\nNot  given\n-'   2^72)1,226-\n2.7-33,975\n-'.480,94_\n1,348,218\n' ' 1.3_d,9_7j\nJ,372,71-'\nNot  g'iven\n, -'   72a4.tr,\n''   7-<8'f51:\nNot glyett\nMARKETS\nThe -Presbytery .of 'GirffttoV ut its\nIqjjC rhi.'^tjng refp-spd tu receive a pe-\ntiUdu Wkihg. \"that u cominlUoe be\nappbinttfd tu enquire into pyschi-\nplien.menU, \"that is spintualisrn.\nHEARTBURN\nOVER TROUBLE\n* When tho liver becomes torpid and\ninflamed, Jt cannot furniah sufficient bibj to tlie bowel\u201e. thus causing them lo become constipated.\nI The stomach is also affected. In\ntlio case of heartburn, there- is a\ngnawing .and burning pain, in the\nstomach, attended by great acidity.\nWhenever too much rood is taken,\nit' Is ' liable to ferment, and become\n\u2022JsxlrenVely so<ur, vomiting often occurs, and what is I brown up, is sour\n-itTid sohiethncs bitlcr.\n*' ptljer'* liver trouble symptoms uro\npain hndt'r the right shoulder; yellowness of tlio skin, and eyes, floating   spe'eki-i -' before   tlie   ej>;es,   coated\ntoiigue^ -Wait, iasir\nfoul breath, wate\nconstipation,   etc.\n'Keep   your   liver\nJtfilbuiri.s   i^rxa-l_i\\\nin   the\nbrrf-h,\nmorning,\njauntdico\netivo   by\nBiila   and\nusing\nyou\nwill have no heartburn\" 6r other Ji-\nvcr trouble^ , ticing1 'purely vi'^etafele\nthey. do wqt Mrln<; Veakbh or.'hIcU-\n6)i like the .old TaHhibheti purgative^\ngeneialiy:^do. .\nMrs. Mury SLrtHiioj^ilasileviii, Wask.\nwritesirT-'t; have imed 'Miioiirn^ 1_a-\n_;a,-Liver piils and thoy have cleared\nme of heartburn and liver trouble.\nJ dCnt -'th-uk they can. be beaten\nby any other medinice und i can\nhig.il3*' feiommeiid   them.\"\nPrico UGc a vial at ull ' dealers\n(>v:: inixlUAl -dU-ect* on receipt ofi..pri(;o\nby -*-(\u25a0**_., T.^ -tallljitrn -CO Uniitea,\nr-jtbuto    t)nt\nSmall Ads That Bring Quick Returns\n?&*B.\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant and Clai-ified Attvertiilng\u2014\nOne and a ;half cents per wprd per\ninsertion. Six cents 'per word per\nweek, or j 22 ->_c, per -word 'per month,\ncash in advance. If charged l%c a\nword .straight,: - Transient ade accepted- onIyron a cash-ln-advanco basis.\nEach Initial, figure, dollar sign, etc.,\ncounts as one word. Minimum $5c.,\nIf charged 50c. Display typo double\nabove  rates.\nLocal Bending Notices\u20143c per word\neach insertion... In blade 'faco or\nmachino capitals 4c per word. Black\nface capitals Gc..i word. 25 p.c. discount if run d&ily without, change of\ncony for one month or mora. . Where\nadvertisement is \u00abct out in short lines\ntlie charge is l-'.-.c a line for Roman\ntype, ir,r- for black face, and 20c for\nblack face capitals, Minimum Zic,\nIf   charged   50c.\nBlack faco capital headline 2Gc.\n. .Noticea^\u2014Birth of Marriage \"Notices,\nDeatli Notices, Funeral Notices, Card\nof Thanks, 3c a word. Minimum GOc.\nUh of \"Wedding Presents or Floral\nOiTorinpTB.   10o  n   line.   '   ,\nFrofeBitonal Card- and Lodge Notice.\n\u2014$1.00 per line per month. Minimum\nspace _  lines.\n10   Male Help Wanted\nCEDAR MAZERS  WANTED\nSTEADY   work.     Good   camps\nPAULtfUN-MAKON', LTD.\nKitchener,   B.C.\n(J 03112)\nWANTED\u2014Polo makers, tie makers and\nftost.makers; good timber and mostly\nevel ground. Ilowlaud & Waltz -fJo.,'\nUd-  jvdslo, ,13.  C. (10DJ8)\nMEN aud wonum to learn barber\ntrade. Our method of expert 'instruction and practical w.ork in shop\nqualifies you in eight Weeks. Positions guaranteed on completing courso\nSon'd for catalogue. Moler Barber\nSchool, 30C Main St,, Vancouver, B.C.\n.....  (10171)\n11 Female Help Wanted\n\\VANTED-T7\\\\''aitres\nApply   St rath con*,!\nhelp   in   hotel.\nHotel. (105-17)\nCllAMBtfK'WAlD   wanted\u2014Sow   Grand\n\u25a0H'ot-t. (10510)\nWANTED\u2014DonieHlio help on ranch.\nThree   in   family,    Pochin,   Erickson,\n'' H-   \u00ab-\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u201e.!' \u2022\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0>-j     (10503)\nW'ANTI'ID\u2014Slehograplier in the office\nof Government Agent, Nelson. Applications, will- bo received by Government Agent, Court House, Nelson, up lo iiooii,' Friday 5th. W. H.\niVIaclnnc-, ;*t_Lvil Service Commisslon-\ncr\u201e    ,      \"\u00bb >; \u201e\u2022     , (10487)\n12 Situations Wanted Female\nWANTED\u2014Position as clerk. Three\nyears' experience in purchasing\ndepartment of large Western city.\nBox   1Q33'J,   Dally   News.      ;   (10539)\nWANTED\u2014Housekeeper for batclielor.\nApply stating references and qualifications.      U  B.  DeVober,   Bank  of\nMontreal. (10491)\n23    Property For Sale\nFIRE INSURANCE\nMAIL   ENQUIBIES   PBOMPTIY\nATTEHDED    TO\nI am agent for tho Phoenix Assurance\nCo.,  of London,  the  London Annuratice\nCorporation   and   many   of   the   Inrce\nCompanies. 104B8\nC W. APPLEYARD\nBox'02G Phorio  2G9 -   -   Nelson.B. C.\n(10498)\n22      Miscellaneous\nGRAHAM Hirst Co., typewriters,\npairs and .supplies. . 312 Pender\nWest,  Vancouver,   B-   C.   \u2022\u25a0(\u25a0J05\"\nFOtt SALE\u201410 H. P,,-Judson gaaol\nengine with Icrcular and dra!g sa\nI-'or sale or \/hire to suitable pa\nheavy   bbick   team   In   Al   ponditl\n* \"Levy & Watson, New De,nver, B.\n'.'\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0;.     . ;     ,(105\nFOR -3ALE\u2014*-Kootenay Hotel, Vernon\nSt., Nelson. Up-to-date, modern\nhotel, doing good business. Call\nand   inspect   at  any   time.       (10544)\nUANCH\u2014piirtly cleared, dwelling\nand five modern poultry buildings;\nsixteen and 'one-half acres, some\nbush, mostly birch, no rockr no\nhill. Situated between the Columbia River and the C. P. Ry. Nel-\nson-Koaslnnd line; six miles north\nof Consolidated emclter and convenient to Birchbank station.\nWagom road; 'telephone line and\nelectric power line. Logging\ncamp, saw mill, and planing mill\nnear by- Price thrty-three hundred dollars. Address owner, \"W.\nT. Crispin, Birchbank P. O., B. C.\nn\u00ab542).\ncan find a buyer  for  your  u\ncar by advertising: in Tlie Daily Ne\n^UnNISHl3D\"_tOOMa_fo\"r\u00bben~Ph\nIMPROVED RANCH\u2014 ft.270\u201440 acres,\n14 acres cleared land, -200 frult'trees.\nlarge variety of wmali fruits, C-room\nhouse, cellar; fire place, bathroom,\netc. Water piped. Barn, large\nchicken houses. Closo to school,\npostoffice and store.\nPrice JC000.00 on terms. Hugh W.\nRobertson, LAND AGENT, Ward\nStreet,  Nelson, B,  C. (10457)\nORCHARDS, Arable, uncleared land,\nwater frontage. Willow Point, Bonnlngton Falls, Pcrrys, Some great\nbargains. For particulars write or\nsee owner, J. J.' Campbell, R.R. No.\n1,  Nelson. (10521)\n35\nFor Rent\nFOR    RIONT\u2014if-room    house,    close    in,\nalso   furnished   rooms. J.   E.   An\nnable. (10492)\nTO RENT\u2014For winter months, ite..\nfurnished bungalow in Ifairvlew. All\nmodern conveniences, including fur-\nnace. J'hone   58SL1.        . .      (jjli-9)\nBENT TREE\u2014'I'u li nractieal .niaii. No,\n521 Victoria'St... back ,\"of Pq'qIc iDrug\nCo., for one year. \u25a0 'House1 'needs a;\nUttle* fixing. Apply '.;C.-' W. Applfe-\n. yard for'particulars, orCrR, WnlR.\ner,  owner. (10474)'\n18    Articles for Sale\nFOrtT^ATd'.\u2014Large- sli:e\"^prize \u2022^t'e^vart\nheater. Can be sut-n in use by appointment. Widdowson's Assay Office. (10506)\nFUR SALE\u2014 A bargain, a wonderfll'y\nfine pair of diamond earings. Pure\nwhit- stones, stfghtly o%r a carat\neach. Doalt-rs need not answer.\nApply Box 10501, Daily Nows. ,,-\n(1Q501)\nFor thirty-five years Giant Powders have j\nbeen ma^in^ Canada.    They \\yerc the\nfirst Tij.ijh 'eXplbsiyes manufactured in the\nDominion. ,\nFoc.years the Giant chemists studied the\nn.eds'of Canadian l_nd clearefs.    T*hey4\nprepared  a  special   explosive  fyr stump\nblastinei in   Canada\u2014-Giant   Stumping\nPowdc^ the tirst of. its class.\nOrdinal explosives arc sometimes called\nGiant;'' .-Besure tpJget'thc'ge'd'tHri^'Giarit.;\nft :'g6bs!furtticr. aiid: br'ealcs 'Up' the'strimps,\nbetter than ordinary explosives.   .Foryour\nprotccti^ri it is always markcq,\nW1LLJS PJANO. pnly, in use, for two\nmouths, and 'cannot be told from\nnew, lor sale at a discount. A\nsplendid opportunity.\" Easy terms.\nCall in , and. .see it, at Willis Piano\nStore,   _04_Hriker\"Ht-._  (10470)\nP6R SALE\u2014One KdisonTOpcra- Cylinder Phonograph with 180 records.\nThis machine is an good as the day\nU Ifft factory. Cost S280. $150\ntakes machine and records. . Box\n,10173,   ..\"pally    Nthvs. (10473)\nVAtUAnLE BOOK\nSENT .PBEE\nMai_ And mail the coiiiion\niu_ny   n_[l \u00ab'C \"111 KKnd\n' ]\/w our valuable illto- \"\n.rated booVwuicli shonn\nliowjo cut do'qi tlie cos*.\niH&liBB out Uie stumps.\n*lT^icfarhicf;1,'say-iTi1of:G.iR. Bs^il^y. \"^iiiiuld\nuse an'explosive iir^'pated especially \"(or .lii-jjvork;\n' '.;i_nc *.riiAt ;)sfa)i(ts all \"ordhian;;>linck,s of'^iand'hig\n\u25a0 'and-thins^ortatioii and does \\\\6i cayly ffac\/.p'.4* ] t '\n: '-Thousands of Catia_liatirfan'iiers'navc taken tJiia.,\nadvice   and   have.\/fotihd .that;.-,Oiant ,',St,tlni'ping,\nPowder always \u00a3ave_,theni nioncy,'tiinc rnid-ta\"bor.\nGiant Powder Co, of Canada, Ltd.\n\u25a0\/--. \"PuTtr.ing'\/ur rjldsllnn\"\n^VANCOUVER,   -   B.C.\nBranch Office,, Naisori, B. C: Prince Rupert, B. C;\n':'i' Edmbnton, Albert. '   t\nGIANT POWDER COMPANY OF CANADA, Limited, Vnncouvcr, B. C.\nSend me your book, \"Better Farming with Giant -Stumping; Powder,\ninterested in the subjects\n'   : D Stump Bluting\nO  Boulder Blartin'e\nO Rond Matkirij\nwhicli I have marked X:\nQ  Tree Bed Blnalinn\n\u25a1 Ditch Bleating\n' D Mfhmg\u2014QlierVying,\n103\nName\t\nAddren\nf,\nFREE  BOOK\nCOUPON\nFQR SALE\u2014Well .oured nnd fh-st-\nclab-B qunlitj' Timothy, Alfalfa and\nJllxed Timothy and Alfalfa Hay;\ncar loliv-, Arijily Keith Bell Hay and\n(iratt'i GO-.S-Kirkhani \u25a0 Block, ,Loth-\nhl-klge. <aftefefencfl Union  Bank.\n\u25a0- -:t'-';' '\"    \u2022 - \u25a0 \u25a0       ftor,i7)\nFOR. SATj-^-HSmpty gratn eaclta.    Box\n8, Trail,  B.C. (10090)\nSHINGLES, eood quality, clionji. Na-\nkuip Shingle Mill. Box 1, Nnkuro,\nBv. C.        .... ,'.:      .      .   ,(10530)\n28 Misscellaneous Wanted\nPLAIN   sewing  ^Qno.\nSt\u201e. side doo|-.L,,',;.\nCll   Cai-honato\n .    (10207)\n13^ituation-l Wanted\u2014Male\n\\VA!fjTli;i3\u2014Poaition .o*rtL\"ranch for' tlie\n, winter by\"' expeyifenbed stockman,\n\u25a0>. Oood, ^e^renccs.,. Writp L. A. Mc-\n\u2022   EldomV.'-paily  Nctvh   office.   (10447)\nTO  RENT\u2014Off-o-a  on  uDP-|r  tiobr   KI\nW.   O.   block.     Apply    k.   _ft^\"\",n',\u2022?1-*\nn,C0. ;.,   .    . ^ (1^22%\n54     Articles Wanted\nSAWMILL ivn'nti'd. jlust 'Ijo froih\n25,000 to 00,000 ciLpuclty. \"Write\nBox 10303 t-iiily Newa. (_91i03)\nWANTED\u2014Horse, *=iet of lliirneHH,.. and\nwagon Hiiltiiolc for 'delivery inir-\nposes. Write statintr price and full\nparticulars to Box 10493. Dully News,\nWANT.--]}\u2014To   purchase     some   -heavy\nloffR-hiff sleigtis,      Apply Howland   &\n\u25a0 Waltz   Company,   Ltd.,   Kaslo. (101,1)\nFOR SALE\u2014Two fine heifers. Will\nd('0p second calves in February. Address   N.  Wolverton,   Nelson. (10511)\n\"FOR   HALE\u2014Oood   work   horse.     -Homo\no.w'o*-^    white ;.Leghorn . and    bapred\n\u25a0 rock   cockerels,     Chalmers.   Thrums.\n. . (10-171V\n_\"OR    SALE\u2014Pony     mare,    S    years,\nsuitable    driving    and    farm    work,\nalso  2-year  old   colt.      Would   trade\n...for    young   cattle.      John    Graham\n\u2022 'Perry  Siding.  (104-14)\nHjPumished Rooms to Re\n'rO^RENT\u2014For    wiiiteT^rmUhsT .\nfurnislied \"bungalow   in -fedlrvlew,\nmdern'  conveniences,    including    f\nnaBe,    '''Phone    tiSSLl.     '        (106\nrou\nTELL your wants through The Da\nNewa classified columna; *\u25a0\nFOR   ItKNT\u2014 Uedrooih.   with- board-\nre-^uired.. ..jilO   Cedar   ^t.        \u2022 (1041\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnislied housekeepl\nrooins. Ap*piy Mrs. Irwin, con\nFront and  High* Sts, .    t6     (10441\nBusiness and Professiona\nDirectory'\nTaylor   the   Tinker\n-3.   TAYLOR\nGeneral   Repair   Shop.\nOpposite Queen's Hotel \u25a0 (10'M\nReliance Electric Co.\n: D. \"W.'Guy, Mgr.,\nG04V_   BAKER   ST,\nPhono    601        -        -        - ' - Box\nFor   Electrical   Sdpplles,\nContractor   for   tlie   hew   Oilkcr   au>\n'\u25a0]' Chimney Cleaning\nChimney _.-cleanlilg;     stoyjpri     tlyn\nPlione l'8':or 60Jf_.   !Wm..'Fbwlea. (978\nLodge Notice\nP   p. ,B.   Kw\u00abt\u00bb-*Jri  Maglle  Blw\n. 1st and irfi Thursday ;i \"<(105\"\nBoots & Shoes\nr.__ _s_ \u201e coixeiDVi\n>.*ihoei.Mad. to Order, <**tw\\I.\n' tfiat\u00ae ...'Tw \"fl\u00bb\u00bb2\nORIZZELI\/E-S     GBIlBNHOBBB,    .\nWBi    Cut    (lower,    and    flo'-t\n(ml\nAitayeri\n,    ... '^lt>DtJ\\(\u00abs3K(    _\u00ab\nNelson.     B.C.      Stanr&fd'   w\u00ab*\ntbargiia..,'.   ..' ...   '.>\u25a0\u25a0. '; :.; (10B.\nWholeiale\nA. MACDONALD ft CO., WHOliBB\/\nQrocers and Provision Memhanti,\nportere of Teas, Coffees, Bnlcoa, I\nFruits,  Staple   and  Fancy   an\nTobaccos, Cigars, Butter. Biggs, I\nand Paoking House Products.\nand Warehouse, corner of Front\nHall  streets.     v,0   Boa   10.1*'  T\n3--honL's US and  23.\n(105\nSecond Hani Dealen\nTHE ARK pays'casn tor seoond h\n'urnlturo, stoves;  (Ot  Vernon   Ph.\n\u00ab\u00bb\u25a0 .      ... ..-  (106\nCommissioa Merchaitt\nRANCHERS'   PRODUC_^o_TK_T'\t\nralsalon.    O.   W.   Bartlott,   Willi,\n  \u25a0' '\u25a0; <i0B\nArchitects\nFOR SALE\u2014M White Wyandotte\n.Pullets. May hatched,, $2; '0 Rocks,\nJune hatched. $1.50. Lot, $_5, ,T.\nDoyle,     Edgewood. (1031-1)\nI-'OR' SALE,\u2014Barred Rock Cockerels,\n'$4.'each. These are a good utility\nstrain.      Apply    Box    10403,     Daily\nNewa. '(104A3>\nLATE hatched Barron Leghorn pul-\nlots. One Dollar Fifty'each. A good\n-chance to secure valuable birds at\nreasonable price; Appleton Bros.,\nProctor. (10114)\nFOJt SALE\u201410 Plymouth Rock pullets, $27.50 for. tho lot. One cockerel,\nprice   $0.00,      E.   F.   GJgot. 1044.0)\nPOULTRY    BREEDERS    be    efficient.\nKeep records. Got tho B. C. Poul-\n..ti'y  Association  Kecord. and Account\nBoole sent post free on receipt of\ntkir.ty-.ive  centp  in .-stamps, or  postal\nnote. Three copies for dollar. J-\n, J\"!. .Terry, Department of Agriculture,\n.Victoria. '   Start   the   'Poiiltry   Year\nright. (10442)\nm\nLIHLE SBIPHaNY\nOne of America's Leading Orchestras\nAlso Vocal Numbers\nNELSON OPERA HOUSE\n\u25a0 on *-'\nMonday, November 8th\nAt 8:30 pirn.\nReseiTed Seat plan at City Drug Store.   Note\nthe prices':\u2014Adults, $1.10 and'\"'85c.   Children^\nany seat, 85c.    General admission, 55c.    Tax\nincluded.   - .. \u25a0'_,\u00ab- \u2022\"\u25a0\nEMMB   BEAD,   M.B.O.B_.\n. afiCHITECT     ',   ' T\nBay Avonuo. -__, h\n\u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0'  -:        - ,.- xJoo\nas\nH.  D\u201e DAWSON, B.C.I..S.\ncivil and Mlniaar Engineer\nKASLO,   B.C.  '.'\u25a0;{;\nNelaoa, B. O,   .,;_\nOIVIZ,    AND    HININO    _aT-a_l_1\nB.  O.,  Alnerta   ml  DomUlm\nBAUD  BDBTETOWi\nOro-n   Srsna   Agents.   Bim.   Mil\n(1M\nA. _. Btcotj-Loom,\nHyrnnllo Engineer\nar\u00bbTino_l   -a-d  \u25a0_-\u00bb.\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\n\u25a0aker  Bt.  Nelson \u25a0.  0.\n. .Anotlonecr,\nAictioieers\nw. uliT_i_\n(1001\nAppraiser,   .\naoods   sold   privately   or   St\nI *\u00abra Btioot\n-\u2022iMtao\n..\"turn\n10M1\n(100\nBarriiter*\n\u2014fS*\u00bb--^^\u25a0f>'^>\u00ab^>^^^\u2014|,,__^--_r-l''_*i^^_Q^^^a,>a'>>^<a^^,\nBarrister,' BoUoltoj, HotaJT, Mt\nBox 1078. Alan Blook, Kelson.\n(100\nFuneral Director!\nrt~r^Sssmss6rir^irW^ma<ri\nVloortla   Street,   rhone   III'   nil\n\u25a0Phone-l-W.-Jv. \u25a0-.  \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0 -, <\u25a0 VU053\nSTANDARD 7UKNITUR- COMPAN1\nC. J. Carlson, Undertaker, Undertsi\nand _mbalmers and Funeral Direot\nThe Finest and most up-to-date. _u\ntaking parlors and chapel In inter\nB. C. Lady attendant lor woman \u25a0\n||,  Nafta*   Phi\nchildren.  Da\u00bb Phone\n262   and   64.\n(1063\nPRINTED ENVELOPES 'boat 'lit\nmore than plain envelopes.', aind tb\nglvo   li   niuqh   --jotter   Impression\n; your uUHtoin'ors. Write Tho iDal\nNews Job Department for samp]\nand  prices.\n . im\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, CS_^BH\u00bb**_, 1320.\nVane 1\nH. C L.\nTHESE initials are engraved\non everybody's pocltetbook\nand on about everything else we\nown nowadays.\nBut not on the Ingersoll Maple\nLeaf watch. For the Maple Leaf\nis busily erigagedin cutting down\nthe High Cost of Living.\nFigure it yourself.\nAMapleLe.afcosts$3.25\u2014lasts\nfive to ten years. We'll lean back-\nwards and say five.\nFive years of dependable time-\ntSeptriH service for $3.25 \u2014 260\nweeks at a cent and a quarter a\nweek. ,\nWhy, $3.25 i3 often less than\ntin annual upkeep of an expensive watch, les3 than interest on\n* high priced watch investment.\nAnd If you're doing rough\nwork, or ''rcughing it\", the Maple\nLeaf is tha watch that goes with\nyou\u2014and keeps going.\n,Yet the Maple Leaf is a seemly,\npressntable time-piece. It isn't\nrough eixept on H. C. L.\nMARKETS AND FINANCE\n(Continued from Page G.)\nCANADIAN BONDS\nThe following were the' bid prices\nfor Dominion bonds at the cose\nof the markeet today:\nWar loans\u2014llfto, 92; 1932, 89%;\n1937,   94%.\nVictory loan\u20141922, 97; 1927, 96;\n1937, 97; 19231 97; 1933 951,4; 1924,\n98; 1934, 92.\nI locieU irom $3.25 to $14.50\nv    TORONTO BOARD\nTORONTO, Nov. 4\u2014Another slump\noccurred on the Canadian exchanges\ntoday, considered by locnl brokers\nas iho largeBt since tho \"break early in August The turnover here\n\u25a0was, if'anything, below normal Paper stocks, and National Breweries\nwere the ohlof su Cfercrs and the\nscaling down amounted to several\npoints in some cases. The floor\nof the exchange was tonse with\ninterest, while brokers with Montreal\nconnections had crowded offices with\ntraders eagerly watching the downward movement of prices.\nThee reslstanoe shown by several\nutilities to the reactionary movement of the day was a noticeable\nfeature, and wns thought to be an\nindication of the turn towards that\ndnss of securities. The strength\nof Canadian Tacific waa also a gratifying incident This slock sold\nup tn 1-10%,* a gain of H_. Rior-\n\u25a0dans loss of 18 points shows the\nchange of one week,- Wayagamnck\ndropped to 121; Lauren tide lost\n2-14; Spanish Rlveer common, V\/%;\nSpanish River preferred .I1\/,; Ablti-\nhi 2%, .all examples of tho days\nchanges. Brompious loss was only\ny2   point.\nIn the utilities, Brazilian gained\na fraction.Barcclona was unchanged,\nwhile Quebec railway lost %,\nWeakness in National Breweries\nresulted In a flvo point- loss, to\n55, and, was ascribed to tho recent\nvotes against importation of liquor\nInto    several   Canadian    provinces,\nWHEAT UNDERGOES\nMATERIAL SETBACK\nCHICAGO, Nov. 4\u2014Wheat underwent a material setback In price\ntoday, owing, more or less, to talk\nthat country offerings-were \u00bblarger.\nThe market closed nervous,'3U cents\nto 6i\/i cents net lower, with December 2.00% to 2.01 and March \\M*i\nto   1.-5.\nCorn finished one cent down to\n%   cents  up.\nOats off % cents to % cents and\nprovisions caried from 10 cents de-\n.-line to 5 cents advance.\nSPOKANE STOCKS\nEHtflUEGIS\nBid\nUtica    \t\nSilversmith        22\nFlorence     2_ . -\nMcGlllivniy         42\nStandard     \t\nMONTREAL LIST\nAsked\n7\n27\n40\n25\nPROCLAMATION OF RETURNING OFFICER\nPROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nIn the Slocan-Electoral District\nTO WIT:\nPUBLIC NOTICE is i hereby given to the Voters of\nSLOCAN\nELECTORAL DISTRICT that in obedience to His Majesty's\nWi it to. me directed and bearing date the Twenty-third day of\n|;'Oc'dber, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred\nand twenty, I require the presence of the said Voters at*f\nNe-.T Denver (Gov. office), on the Tenth day of November, 1920,\n^at twelve o'clock noon, for the purpose of nominating and\neTe'cting one person to represent them in the Legislature of\nthis Province.\nTliE MODE OF NOMINATION OF CANDIDATES SHALL\nBE AS FOLLOWS:\nTho candidates shall be nominated in Writing! the writing\nt-liair be subscribed to by two registered voters of the district as\nproposer and seconder, and by ten other registered voters of the\nsaid (district as assenting to the nomination, and shall be\n(leliveved to the Returning Officer at any time between the\n1 ilatc, of this Proclamation and one -p.m. of the day of nomination. In the fiv-fin-of a poll being necessaiy, such poll will be\n\u25a0open on the First clay of December, 1920, at\nMONTREAL, Nov. 4-\u2014Liquidation\nwas the keynote of the local stock\nexchange market today and priceH\ntumbled in all directions. Follow\ning a continued period oi! weakness\ntoday's shako-out \u25a0 was tho most\ndrastic of ail. Onjy ono Issue showed an advance, Cement preferred being up l'\/i points, and in the banking group, \"Merchants gained two\npoints.\nPapers were shot to pieces. Wa-\nyagnmack was down seven points,\nat 123. Riordari at 191 loat six\npoints; Laurentlde H% at 9-1, Spanish River common <i\u00bb_ at $2%', Pre*\nferred a1\/, at 97'; Rronvpton _\u25a0\">_ at\n6<S}_; Abitibi l% at fiii. The rest of\ntho list In like ease. Breweries\ntho most .active, was down 5'4\npoints at 64% J\" Penman's down 6 al\nIL'0. Ontario Steel down three at\nG3: Asbestos common down % at\nSO; Sugar, which touched a new\nlow at. 72, lost V\/i,', Converters lost\nIV,; Dominion fctlass 2; and <Tron\n1%.\nA few stocks which wero quiet\nheld firm at yesterdays close, These\nwere Boll Telephone, Brazillani Cement, Smelters, Howard-Smith Mac-\nDonald, Royal  Bank, .\nTotal pales, listed 1^,-filS; bonds\n$17,160.\n(Continued   from   Page   One)\ncriticized as a class policy and all\nthe old bogies were raised of class\nagainst class, This criticism came\nfrom those who were Interested in\nkeeping the common people down to\nthe level they had held heretofore.\nMr. Crerar declared ho wns surprised to see ^eyen the prime minister\nmake statemefits such as this: On\nAugust _r.th, Mr, Meighen had spolo\nen at Truro In the Colchester bye\nelection \"contest. Upon that .occasion\nMr. Meighen said:\n\" Does any one In front of me\nthink that the strongest group among\nour foes, and the strongest by far\nis tho free trader, tho tariff destroyer! joined, unfortunately and;foi-.\nnaturally, to the free wrecker, whq\nwants everything also destroyed ns\nwell. I do not speak the -words of\nnrcsumption. I can only do my part,\nhiit there is the combination that the\nrest of tho country is pitted against\nArrow'Park'   ,    ..\nOrnham's Landing\nRosebery\nBurton:\nii Nakusp -\n\u25a0 Sandon\nBrbu_e   \"           '\n\u2022    Needles.\nSilverton\nDeer Park .\nNew.Denver\nSlocan\nJJast Arrow Park\nPassmore\nThree Forks\n\"Edgowood\nPerry's\nWest Demars\nFauquier\nRennta\nWin law      #\nof \\vhich every person is hereby required to take notice and\ngovern himself accordingly. *\nGIVEN under my hand at Nakusp, this 20th day of October,\noAe*thousand nine hundred and twenty.\n(Signature) HERBERT W. HERRIDGE,\ni Returning, Officer.\nIt has since been reported that\nan .American-Dutch company has\nbought tlio Emperor's summer palace at Ischl, in ,tlie Tyrol, for hotel purposes. Tho hunting estates\nand lodges of the late emperor in\ntho Tyrol were advertised for salo\nin ..January last. Francis considered\ntheso the finest  in \"Europe.\nFifteen Germans who had been, in\nSouth America since 1914 wero arrested in a Peruvian ship at; Bristol\nand sent to Harwich lo be forwarded\nto Germany.\nYou want him good and healthy.\nYou want him big and strong.\nThen give him a pure wool Jersey.\nMade by hls'frlend. Bob Long.\nLet him romp with all his vigor\nHe's the best boy la the land.\nAnd he'll always be bright and\n: smiling,\nJf he wears a Bob Long Brand.\n.\u2014Bob Long.\nBobLopg\nBOYS'  PURE WOOL\nWORSTED JERSEYS\nKnown from \"Count to Cooot.\"\nfOR HARD WEAR, COMFORT\nAND SMART APPEARANCE\nR. G. LONG & CO. Limited\nTORONTO    .    .    CANADA\n145\nLook for the Label\n\u25a0 .lo.\nii.itiiiiiiiimimiiiiiiii\nm\nMACDONALD'S\nCut Brier\nMore Tobacco for the Money,\nPackages 15*\n^lbTansSS*\n\u00a7*>?\nAnd Inter on in lhe same address;\nhe.  mado   this   statement:\n\"Dangerous doctrines -taught by\n\u25a0angerous men\u2014enemies of the -state\n\u2014poison and pollute the air. \"We are\n\u25a0\u25a0sked to helleve, not An w> many\nwords, hut in fact, -that we should\nhave class domination instead of a\nrue democracy with government of\n'11 classes and for all classes. They\n-re by no means few numerically\nwho would so order things In this\ncountry tha t afl men be placed nn\nthe same plane, irrespective aZ brain\npower, energy* and industry. who\nwould havo men on a dull drab.\ngreV level, whieh would be dfstruct-\n'vo to all hope, ambition and human\nprogress.\"\nAnd latere nn, in bis speech nt\nShcrbronke, this sta-tcment was made\n;\\bout what Mr. \"Meighen termed:\n\"Tho extreme farmers' free trade\nparty,\" and  then proceded to say:\n\"It demands' lo be placed in power\nin Canada. It has gathered imder its\nbanner and trails behind it every\n\u2022dnss of thenrlsts and malcontents,\nind today, beyond all doubt, It con-i\n^titutes the most numerous and\nstrongest organization opposed to the\nnresent government.\"\nAnd further on (his statement was\nmade: *\n\"I do not way that the leaders of\nthe farmers' party, much lens their\ntollowers, want to overturn responsible government, hut I do say that\nthose with whom they havo aligned\nthemselves, a\u00bb for Instance, the Winnipeg and Vancouver seoltfonlsts\nhave, as their goal the iipse^ti^fj* of\ntbo government in Canada.. .They\nalmost achieved success In their- efforts and correctly I -say'.. that ,-.t.Ke\naddition of that group to tho farmers'\nparty constitutes the party which is\nthe most formidable -antagonist of\nthe   present   administration,\"\n\"Now,\" said 'Mr. Crerar, \"ft that the\ntype of new Klatesm&h_h.*&.we. are\ngoing to have In Canada .aX-it time\nliice\" this?   ' ' \u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0 .:\n\"'Tho prime minister, \\vtlrully or\nnot, misrepresented people-.who were\nas loyal as any citizens in ''this country. I repeat I regret tbat -the prime\nminister -should make-such . statements,\"\nDisagrees With Liberal Leader\n\"M r. Mackenzie King, speaking in\nWinnipeg, made many statements\nwiLh which I do not agree,\" said Mr.\nCrerar, \"but I do ngreo when he\n, said: 'the efforts, Cat political organization) of _h> farmers, .''the labor\nmen and tho returned soldiers of this\ncountry, were to be welcomed rather\nthan discouraged'.\"\nMr. Crerar thou went into a discussion of tbo tariff question. The\ntariff for tho past 42 years had been\na protective tariff. Tile argument\nfor a protective tariff was that it\nwas necessary to shut out foreign\ngoods to encourage home production\nand build up home industry,\nThore had' naturally bean a wide\ndifference of opinion on . this matter.' Personally, he did not agree'\nwlt*h the principle of a protective\ntariff. If trade, was good for a country, then why interfere with -it? \"The\ngreater trado did, the bigger progress.\"   .;    \"',        \u25a0\nThe policy of the present government on the tariff question had\nnow emerged from the clouds as a\npolicy of adequate protection. It\nhad been stated by Mr. Meighen and\nrecently also hy Mr. Calder. .'Mr.\nCalder had been having rather a severe tlmo  latly,  but  he  had  finally\ngone to the political penitent bench\nartd - confessed to -Jtae principles ct\na.   protectionist  tariff.\nChallenges Protection Basis\nMr. Meighen had stated that the\nprotection given would be only sufficient to give Canadian industry\ndrily the protection it needed. On\nwhat principle could such adequate\nprotection   be  based,   said  Mr,  Cre-\nI-l.C.   .\nA protection . which would enable\nan industry in one part of the\ncountry jo \"pUe up dividends, might\nstrangle   it  In   another.\nCream separators, for instance,\nAad been free since 1857, \"yet\nCanadian cream separators were being sent to all ports of the world,\nCanada had a big cream separator\nindustry,' On tho other hand what\nof plows? If the cream separator\nindustry could thrive without protection why could not plows and\nruimps? Why could not pumps be\nmade and their manufacture thrive\nIn the samo way? Yet thero wero\nduties on both plows and pumps.\nSympathizes with Tariff Commission\nMr. Crerar referred to the tariff\n.ommisslon and extended his sympathy to any commission, which had\nto make any recommendations on\nsueh a mass of ' contradictory evidence as had been gathered. The\nprotection granted in Canada had\nbeen based on whatever influence\nthe industry concerned could bring\nto boar. He. deeclard that if any\nIndustry needed protection, it should\nplead Its case openly boforo a committee of the house,\nQuotes Comparative Statistics\nReferring to Mr. \"Meighcns statement at the coast that Canada had\ntho lowest tariff in the world excepting Great Britain, Mr. Crerar denied thi*. He quoted the following\ncomparison, baaed on the trade returns   of   1!>1|8,\nSilks, Satins\nGEORGETTE AND DRESS GOODS AT\n$1.98 per Yard\nTHIS COLLECTION INCLUDES\nFANCY  SILKS\u2014Plaid  and Check Designs.\nPLAIN SILKS\u2014 In Brown, Paddy, Reseda, Dark Green. Slty, Copen,\nand -Black. '. , .  p   '\nGEORGETTE   CREPE\u2014In   Pink Biscuit,   nose,   Navy!  Dark  Creen\nand Copen.   .\nCREPE de CHENE\u2014Apple Green and Brown.\nAlso several Bolts of Colored Dress Fabric Reduced to.    \u00bb-j   QQ\nPer yard\nBEWARE OF\nnotions\nBronchitis is generally caused by\nneglecting a cold, 'or oxposure' to\nwet\" and inclement weather. It begins- with a tightness, across the\nchest, difficulty in breatMi\"^*- and\na wheezipB sound confcs,'. 'from tihe\nlungs, * Thcree ia a^r&lsing of\nphlegm, especially, the flrs't\" thing\nin tho morning. This is at first\nwhite, but later becomes' of a greenish or yellowish color \u25a0 and is occasionally  streaked .with  blood.\"\nOnL tho first. slgju.-.Vt^hranchitia'\nyou should check it \"\"Jmrnodlately - by\nusing Dr. \"Woods Norway Pine Syrup,, thereby prevent. It becoming:\nchronic, and perhaps .developing into some  more serious lupg trouble,\nMrs. Prico Culhanv; Sheffield* Jpnt.,\nwrit,cs:\u2014\"In December^ \"T^i*!), V >wa,s\nvery sick with broriclt(tis,\",and,Ivhad\nto stay in the house all '.winter. One\nday I saw Dr. Wood's Norway \"pJHo\nSyrup advertised, so I feob; a small\nbottle which helped me vkiy much;\nI then got a 60c size, and it completely relieved me. I cannot praise\n\"Dr. Wood's enough for what it did.\nTwo of my neighbors are now using\nit for colds.\"\nDon't accept a substitute for Dr.\nWood's Norway Pl\u00bbo Syrup; the genuine is put up in a yellow wrapper;\nthree pine trees the trade mark;\nprico 35c. and fiOc; manufactured\nonly by tho T, Milburn C*p., Limited\nToronto,  Ont. -    - \u25a0   -    -\u2014\nTotal imports,  (dutiable)\u2014\nUnited    States\u2014$827,460,031\nCanada\u2014j\"543,$-1.6--*.\nV\nFreo goods\u2014 . \u25a0 '      ;\n\u25a0United States^2,118,59n,372.\nCanada\u2014420,202,224.\nTotal   duty  collected\u2014\nUnited   States\u2014179,998,383.\n\u00bb Canada\u2014 lfil.577,,600.\nAverage duty on all Imports goods-\nUnited  States\u20146.28   per cent.\nCanada\u201417,79 per ont,\nAverage   duty   on   dutiable   goods-\nUnited   Slates\u201421,75   per   cent..\nCanada\u201429,7 per cent.\nAverage   duty   per   capita\u2014\nUnitid  States\u2014$1.70.\n.Canada\u2014? 19.32.\n:tn' considering these figures, the\ngreat difference In population should\nbe taken into consideration, said Mr.\nCrerar.' The average duty, of 29.7\nper cent had been slightly reduced\nlast\u25a0 ye-ir,\".    '       '. \u25a0.\";\nThse figures, Mr. Crerar declared,\nrefuted Mr. Meighen's statment. With\nreference to Oruan, Britain Mr. Crerar stated that aftr Great Britain\nabandoned the principle of protection in the \"customs, tttriff aa*. fit'-existed in the MO's\" and' adopted free\ntrade, there was great progress.\nCites   Britain   aa   Example\nThis difference was shown during\nand after the war. Britain was the\nonly freo trade country, yet sho recovered from the war more quickly\nthan any other country, But where\ndid Germany, Prance, Italy, and tho\nother protective countries stand?\nWhere did the German mark, the\nt-'rench franc stand ? Therein la y\nthe answer,\n, The policy of the Canadian council\nof agriculture on this matter was\nthat the basic Industries natural to\nthe country should first no built\nup\u2014agriculture, mining,\" the forests\netc. The farms produced 250,000,000\nbushels of wheat last year. Was It\nnot better to build up these industries rather than the artificial industries* which needed tariff protection. J\nCanada was bringing people to de--'\n*eiop her agriculture. Was it, there'\nfore, feasible to bring them in and\nthen put duties on the implements\n-ney must us& in that industry;\nme. same thing ' applied to mining\naid forestry.\n\"We- may be wrong,\" said Mr.\nCrerar, \"but we want our opponents\n.0 come out and discuss tbe matter\nin the open.\"\nMr. Crerar declared that Massey-\nHanis company btid,' told the tariff\ncom, mission at Winnipeg it could\n.hrivo without tariff protection. Canadian farm machinery is competing\nstrongly in the Argentine, the United States and other countries with\nAher machinery. Why could it not\nbuipete lu Canada with other ma-\n-hinery?\n'Trade is the life lood of the\n.ountry,\" said Mr. Crerar, \"and 1\n\u25a0annot ae\u00a9 tho u_e of .putting 'bars\n\u25a0i\u00a3ain_-t tlie importation of goods\n.md at the same time sending trade\njommi-sioners all over the world,\n^to. drum up trade fur Canada; Im-\n'porLs pay for expmla. Why ah-ck\n'Import*.! und hope to build up to_-\n:.po_*tB? \u201e ...\nft was just aii feasible for every\nfarmer to ask the government for\nii bounly ou every bushel of wheat,\n[;ay fur the. manufacturer to ask for\na. protective tariff, declared Mr. Cro-\nva.r.\"\";1_ this was done in other industries, where would it end? Where\nwould the money come from to pay\ntor it? \u25a0\nSays  United  States  best Market\nAn to^ reciprocity, Mr. Crerar said\nthis question had been revived toy\nthe.eTection of a Republican administration to replace the Democrats.\nThe new admin 1st ration^ might bring\nthe matter forward again, and the\nspeaker said he would like to know\nthe policy of the government on the\nquestion of reciprocity, should the\nquestion again co*mo into tho realm\nof practical politics, as it ^very\nwell might.The best market for Canada's hard wheat had been in tho\nUnited States,- the best market for\nher potatoiss apd  other products.\nNatural Reaourceo ViUl ttf West\nTho matter of the natural resources, Mr, Crerar spoke of as being\nof_ vital   Importance   to   the   west.\nNO TWO MEN TAKE THE SAME STAND!\nViews differ when it comes to Clothes. So in order to\nsatisfy the man who desires\nA MEDIUM WEIGHT OVERCOAT\nNot too heavy for  street wear we  present  this  exceptional offering of Black or Grey Chesterfields.\nSmartly   tailored and well  lined.  They're  good  value  at  twice  tbe\nmoney\nSpec!.-,1\t\nStep  this   way   for  Clothes   Contentment.\nOur   Men's  Own  8tore,   Phone   13\n$13.50\nNEW SWEATERS FOR LADIES\nStill another Shipment received.\nStill more Styles from which to select your Sweater\nAmong the Newest is a Chic Model with Tuxedo Collar\nand White Vest and comes in Kelly, Green, Rose and\nTurquoise.   Priced  $10.75 to $13.50\nMany other Styles in every wanted shade.\nSECOND FLOOR PHONE 45G\nSPECIAL SALE OF ODD LINES IN\nLADIES SHOES\nOnly  2*5  pairs in  the lot and values running as high  as  $10.50, pair\nIncluded   you   will  find   some  Imitation   Brogue   Oxfords,   Black   Kid\nOxfords, and Pumps and Gunmetal Dress Shoes.\nWhile  they  last.\nPer  Pair   \t\nMAIN   FLOOR   PHONE   13\n$6.95\n3jhe~Bui.50i\nTho three prrtirlo provinces had not\nreceived the samo treatmnt as the\nother provinces taken into the con-\nCderatlon. Thy had heen given sub-\nJ\/cles, but year in and year out,\nthe west had demanded its resources.\nThe matter had been cornphcated\nby the assumption by the other \"provinces of an equity in the western\nresources. Mr. Crerar repudiated this\nclaim of tlie east and declared that\nthe west was entitled to the resources that wero left, and in addition,\ncompnsation for those already disposed of.   If tho rest of Canada had\nWILHELW! STILL\npin\nFull Allowances Also Made\nto Formers Princes by the\nPrussian Assembly.\nLONDON, Nov, 4.\u2014More than 6ii,-\nany real claim, it should be settied 000,000 Dutch florins have been paid\naa other questions of compensation to former Emperor Wilhelm of Ger-\nwcre-ln the courts. He hoped the ma\"y as kln& of Prussia \u00b0y the\nprime minister, before returning to EK&S? I^KffifS! I\"\u2122?6 ?JRu*}\nOttawa, would give tho west some\ndecision, oh  this  matter.\nDeplores Aloofness\nIu conclusion, Mr. Crerar stated\nthat there was a great deal of\nehtiijisiastlc efiort being given by\nthe western farmrs to the principles\nof  the new  naUuljal   policy,   and   in\nfume places  there was a disposition time\nni' the p;irt ot' Some ot the tanners   itnty\no    ho.u    aiuof.   He    depiureu    this, adds\n_ner.e   were   tho-usundsI     ot.  people  been\nuroBfho.ut. ua'naua'\u25a0 who   stood   for\nteeeney, lienor,  equity and. fair deal-\niig -in. government, and triese should\njc woicwmeei.\"\nJul. crarar paid a\" tribute to Ca-\n-ami\\n .iijsni.ug - it-i'etfs anu ui_ peop-\n_ who made s-erifices itc home, Ail\nLbbse ..sabrmefls siiouid' nut. ue niaue\n,n yam, no said, and every Cainiu.uu\njii.u.u rosuivo to make a better Ca-\n\u25a0iauu-1 a Canada for square dealings\nUnd,   a  Canada   all   might   be   proud\nHolland, according to an official\n'Statement to the legal committee of\nthe Prussian assembly Wednesday,\nsays a London Times dispatch from\nBerlin; The former Emperor also\nreceived money for the building, of\nhouses at Doom while various sums\n.vere paid to Count Bentinck, owner\nij    \u25a0 .eiuinck   castle,   where   the   one-\nmonarch   first   made   his   resl-\nni    Holland.       The    dispatch\nthat   full   allowances   also   have\nmade   -to    the    former \u25a0 royal\nprinces.\nThe Dutch florin in normal times\nw_s valued at about 40 1-2 cents\nCanadian  money.\n\"GSE BOOTHS FOR\nINVALID SOLDIERS\nuf.\nMr. Crerar leaves tomorrow for\nNorth-Battlefdrd, where he will deliver nn address at a mass meeting\nio be heid thre tomorrow night.\n-i .ih undrstood that further iinport-\n.uil questions will be taken up by\n.\u2022j.r. Crerar) questions which time\n^\u25a0j.ii.i'.eu ids taking up at t-iiight's\nacetlng.\n.fusing troblem Bill\nlimes Second Heading\nm uouse oi Commons\nLONDON, Nov. 4\u2014-(Can. Assd.\nPressj-pfThe bouse of commons today\ntook the secanji reading of the bill\nempowering tiie. local authorities\nu hire  empty  houss  compulsorily.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 4.\u2014At last\nnight's meeting of tho Victoria Liberal executive It was decided to ask\nthe government to place polling\nbooths in all tbe hospitals, or else\nmake arrangements for securing the\nVotes of both returned soldier and\ncivilian invalids. It was recognized\nth. ; the protest voiced by returned\n: m *.. r-i -.vlicn the ' referendum vote\nva s hejr.g taken . was basd on ex-\n\u25a0 .ill   Kvoundfi,\nmmm SALT\nGOOD     FOR     CHILDREN;\nCORRECTING\nBACKACHE\nThere\n'wbieh\nluavy\nways,\nand   If\nKl'ilKll   ti\nbinbiigi\n\u2022 13-i.eka\nagam-t\ni-_ a form of backache\nfollows sprains . .from\nit ting or -many other\nfhe result is backache\nallowed to go without\nI'ju.sLim'ivtH may develop\nor sciatic rheumatism.\n:ho  is   Nature's   protest\npinched    nerves.    The\nmoveable joints of tlie back-\nIjoi.o tiro s^r.-ined out of alignment, and the result is a\n\"choked nerve\" which can only\nbe relieved by a CHIROPRAC-\nTHJ SPINAL ADJUSTMENT\nwhich frees it of pressure allowing nerve vigor to flow\nagain.\nDR. CHEVALIER\nChiropractor\nALLEN  BLK.     NELSON, B.C.\nBRAIN\nEYES\nEARS\nNOSE\nTHROAT\nARMS\nHEART\nLUNGS\nLIVER\nSTOMACH\nPANCREAS\nSPLEEN\nKIDNEYS\nSMALL BOWEL\nLARGE BOWEL\nGENITAL ORGANS\nTHIGHS & LEGS\n9FIN- OF MAN\n___\n TK__BTT\n\u25a0'4I__S \u00ab_LSUN  UA11.Y N-WS,  Klill\/AYTIORN'TNG,;\n3 92(1.\nTHE ARK\nHeavy Dark Flannelette 60o yd;\nIK Ftaftoetlette WanlJtm \u2022*\u00bb.\u00bb pr.;\nGray'Wool Blankets,W.50 pr.: Men's\nHeaVy Socka, 40o to 95c pr.; |^en'\u00bb\n, Maece-lloed Underwear \u00bb2.J5 suit;\nLadles; Winter Hose Wc to |l_5 pr.;\n. taatea' Winter Underwear $3.50 to\nfSHJO jVer; si\\lt; Men's Overalls,' heavy\nwelght.SS.SS pr.; Older Mills, $35.\nRugs,' ! Linoleums. Ranges, Heaters,\nFnfn(htHi. ani, eifefytmng W \u2014afce\nthe   home   comfortable.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhono or,!,.\n806 Vsrnqn gtrcet\ni-.y.  I.    1\n;Pjr *\\\u00bbfk is large;\nour assortment it complete; our prfees are\nright\nCall and let us show\nfoil.\nCURLEW\nICE\nCREAM\nand your guests will surely appreciate your thoughtfulness. \"When\nthey know that our cream la coming,\nthey certainly ait up.and take notice!\nEverybody knows how delicious and\n\u25a0uperlor Curlew ice ereatp.Teally la,\n5W CPAMElOr ca,\n'    LIMITED      '!\nMullen, B. C.       Grand Fork* B. C\nPHONE 44\nPHONE 44\nCUMMINS'TAXI\n4t youf  Service' A.M.  and  P.M\nSpecial Arrangements for long Trips,\nU'WII    ,    _-^_-_\u2014     \" .  1\nSTAR GROCERY\nPHQfcJB 10\nSnow.eap1 Compound ' (fi-|   Qff\nLard. 5 lb. tins ... tM.OD\nWashington -Bacon by     \/\u00bbA\ntho piece   '.\"...'.  OUC\nSliced CKl\/\u00bb\nper lb  ODC\nApples, :Delldous        A J Aff\nNo.   1's       tJKt.AU\nDO YOU SEE\n: W,HAT:VOU  ARE  DOING?\nG.laases ;.vpJU  heln  you  tp   read and\nsew. ' \"\nGlasses   will   remove   a   great   percentage  of Headaches.\nGlosses will Stop  eye strain' of all\nkinds.\nGlasses can  be had at a very rea-\n' sonable   price.\nDo not put It off.   It Is a risk.\nJ. Ol PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and Optician.\nPURS\nI  have  a  verse  _ne  selection  or\nhigh-class Furs\u2014Black; White, Taupe,\nCross and Silver Fox Mink Alaska\nSable; \"Marten: Beaver; W.pft in all\ncolors; and 'many others, \"AH of\nbeat, quality and' finish, at manufacturers' prices.\nRE-MODELING A SPECIALTY\nG. GLASER\nManufacturer Furrier\nfch6)i# Hi-'-     .     \u25a0 . N\u00bbl*on, B.C.\n\u00a3&\nGood Glasses\nWill Save Your Eyes\nYour eyesight is too precious\nto taJke chanc.es with it. j\nI_et nie prescribe glasses\nwJjl.Cl} will remedy the. weak-\nriess'.\nJ. J. WALKEE,\nJewclor and Optic-*\nNelson, B. C.\nJOHN DALY\nCABINET CIGAR STORE\nMail orders attended to\n..promptly\nSmoking Tobacco, Snuff, Pipes nnd\nFull   stock   of   Cigars,   Cigarette?,\nOtrtir Shmkcr's' Supplies !'\nN\u2014\nThe Adventures of Ruth\nPopping the Question\nH9TE\u2014OvjiM to another book-\ning having been made too close\n' \u00bbn'\"Tfie Kid'Is Clever,\" we are\ncompelled to 'discontinue -this\npicture after; tonight, therefore\nwith the exception of the serial\nthere will be a complete change\nof nrioorarn tomorrow.. The fea*\n%t wfll'W\nThe Cinema Murder\nA   Stirring   Melodrama\nTwj.rwl   Sunshine  Comedy\nThe Son of a Hun\nAnd   the   Serial\nThe Adventures of Ruth\nm\ntsestssc\ni-.:.\u25a0.. Eat\nMOTHER'S BREAD\nMade in pre-war quality.\nDelicious .\nWholesome \u25a0\nNourishing;\nW0' 1 ye--the; sole makers.\nBaker Stare.\nSEE OUR STOCK OF\nFancy Buttons\nWhen Making up your Winter\nGoods.\nFleming's Store\nFAIRVIEW\nDRY    GOODS,    GROCERIES,    ETC\nPLUMBERS' BRASS GOODS\nFIXTURES AND SUPPLIES\nTILE   AND   8EWER   PIPE\nB.C. Plumbing & Heating Co,\n'. NEXSON, B. 0.\nPYJEX\np HpepBiT 01N WARE'\"\n-5 Pyrax is the most .lasting: baking: ware ever, made. It never chips\nor flakes even after .y,e4rs of use. It r.-mnot rust burn or discolor\n'mi:tf^lxsa'-jutft. totffei. ' '$\nWo have a; line acsoMment  lo enooaa from.\nB_KS-t sTiti:i-r\nNKtSQN, B. O.\n9p>Ct Take\nMvm 1\n...^ trlfHng injuries, unless prp>\n.. erly (Mated, arc likely to start\nfestering and poisoned sores. Keep \u25a0\nZam-Buk always handy. It healsiike\nmagic ih'cutsi burns, and scalds. Jn\nsores and old Wounds it cures thoroughly by driving out poison .md disease.'\nZam-BuHis a unique healing substance derived from a scientific blending and concentration of certain herbal\noils and essences of high medicinal\nvalue iii'skin, affections. Zam-Buh\ncontains nfl' trace of animal fat, nor\nof any mineral like zinc, mercury, etc.,\nfound I'd ordinary ointments.\nSo pure arid refined la Zam-Buk. that U Penetrates to the underlying tissues wUere it\ndestroys the germs of ecs-.ema. ulceration and\noillerskindlsease. Heady for any emergency\nZam-Buk is the or., safe, antiseptic first-aid\n.011 c.nnot .fiord |o be without. Call on your\ncbemiat today and\nm-Buk\nWets Lead in\nReferendum at\nMassachusetts\nMassnelui setts led by 19,000\"in tho\nreferendum on 2.75 per cent beer\n\u2022find' vi-int*. In  -TUi|3daj''a Vl&cLIon.\nHerbert   Hoover's   mother   was   a\n\u25a0Quaker preacher.        ;t-\nThirty, returned men met Dr. \"W.\nRose, if.F.P., in conference last evening, completely filling the board\nroom of the board of trade, and discussing for an hour and a half, in\nroundtablo conference, the problem\nroundtable conference, the problems\nand grievances of the returned men\nWithin   the   provincial   jurisdiction.\n\"Our tooling,\" said Dr. Rose. \"is.\nt,hat \"as !far a.s the ability of the\nprovince goes, these men should\nnot  have lost by their service.\"\nCapt. F. P. Armstrong raised lhe\nmatter of appointments to the civil\nservice, remarking incidentally thai\ntho resolution of Dr Rose had read\ncovered' sub.stnnt.ial]y ihe feeling of\nthe people of ihe province toward\ntheir returned men. There were\nriot ns. many appointments given to\nreturned men ns should be the case,\nCapt. Armstrong also referred 10\ntho proposal of the provlncinl gov\nernment to train prospectors, but\npoimeil out how limited the he\nginning   wasthat   was   made-\nDr. Rose said this work of train\ning prospectors should he greatly\nenlarged.\nAnother important phnse of encouragement of tho mining industry,\nhe said, was that of establishing an\nore testing and .\u2022afhplhig plant. The\npresent zinc plant in Nelson, that\nhad cost the province $70,000 and\nthe Dominion $100,000 could ho utilised, to work out the problem o the\ntreatment of complex ores. This\nwould Incidentally provide employment for she nssnycrs ihe Dominion\nwas training.\nIn connection with appointments,\nDr .Rose read a list, of some 20\nfiends of depnr linen is, bureaus and\nbra lichen appointed recently, only\nthrcoof whom   were  returned   men.\nDr. Rose said ho had the welfare\nof the returned men very keenly :u\nheart. He had not been able to\naccomplish as much in the past\nas ho would have-. li|tod to 'ite.f-om-\nftiisli. If- ''eletttpiii\u2014howtvft^;' he\nhoped this time\" to be in a postioh\nto exert greater influence. He,, had\ngained valuable points* of view in\n\u25a0_\u2022___\u25a0\u00a3 _\u25a0__-,..\u201e k\nthe    present   discussion,    which   he\nhopet}   tp. he  abl? in  the  course of\nthe returned men.\ntime to  utilize to  tbe  advantage  of.\nOn beha,lf of those present, R. A.\nHowe briefly thanked Dr. Rose for\ncalling the conference, and for the\nictive interest he had shown In the\nreturned   men's   problems,\nAV. Holmes raised the matter of\nindustrial* loans, stating that he had\ngone into the question of a loan on\nthe Arlington mine with an official\nat the Hume last February, and that\nhe had not yet had a lino from\nthe coast to indicate the fote of\nhis  application.\nDr. Rose slated that, so far as he\nknew .none of the appropriation\nmado by the legislature fo^ the\nstarting of new enterprises under\nthis head, had yet come this way,\ni hough he believed one grant of\n:M'.'>,000 was on the .myy.\nIn connection with the general\nsubject of the treatment of the relumed men. Dr. Rose read the resolution on the subject passed by\nthe' proviiiciJi] Conservative convention in si year, which endorsed the\nroestablishment and pension plans\nof the O'deriL government, and declared that the utmost that the produce could do for Hs returned men\nand ihe dependents of those who\nhad fallen, would not he too much,\nand that tho financial recompense\nto the men would be in .iccordanco\nwith ihe  province's ability  to pay.\nSocial ana Personal\nAV. II. Ithomberp, the J rati lumbft'-\nmnn.  is   registered nt the  Hume.\n.1. 10. C. .U\"axw<;ll. the Creston fruit\nrnncher, wns among nrrivnls last\nevening.\nCapt. C. A. V. Cromptoh, the r.incli-\nnt of Creston, Is registered nt the\nStrathconn\nC. IT UobiMHon,\nluis returned frm\ndiiry   country.\nfisheries    overseer,\ntrip   to   tlie   noun-\nHi\nNELSON OPERA HOUSE\nSATURDAY EVENING\nSPEAKERS:\nThe Hon. John Oliver, Premier.\nThe Hon. Dr. King, Minister of Public Works\nMr. Jas. O'Shea, Liberal Candidate\nChair, at  8:30\n, Seats specially reserved for the ladies.\nOrder Now Your\nChristmas Greeting\nCqrds\nThe finest and most varied stock of high\ngrade Christmas Cards in the interior of\nBritish Columbia.\nPrinted with your own Personal Greeting\nIt ivill soon be time to mail for overseas.  Orders delivered\nday following receipt.\nThe Daily News Job Department\nNELSON, B. C.\nAid. Mrs. W. 0. Foster hns re.turneil\nlYom Grand Porks;! where she went\nto   meet   Premier   Meiglieh.\nW, .1. Aslley linn reeelved hta 11111-\n1015 star, from the Orlfisb war office, for service with th. Army Service corps.\nW. II. Cnwlcy, the Ktilnio meiichant.\narrived In the city yesterday by auto,\nhaving made tlie trip via Trail. He\n.till-'leave   foi-   bis  lime   lotlay.\nThese Cold Mornings there's nothing\nTOUCHES THE SPOT\nlike a good, hot dish of \"B.&K.\"\nRolled Oats.\nTHE BRACKMAN-KER MILLING CO Ltd.\nNELSON\nLIBERALS\nSpecial meeting of all Liberals,\nand supporters of Jas. O'She^\nTO-NIGHT\nO'Shea's Committee Room\nMcCulloch Bldg.\nAt 8 O'clock\nLadies specially invited.\nWe beg to notify the public\nthat we haye purchased the\nbusiness of the\nO.K. BAKERY\nand   solicit  a   continuance   of\nthe patronage which has been\nextended to the business.\nMotto:\u2014Quality   and  Service.\nJ.   KELDERMAN.\nSamuel Goldwyn and Rex Beach)'\n. Present.\nGouverneur\nMorris'\nFamous   Story\nTHE\nPENALTY\nBLIZZARD, the most remarkable, the . most fascinating\ncharacter over presented to\nphoto-play followers dominates\na picture that ranks among the\n-greatost ever produced.\nDon't   fail   to see  it.\n\"Kiss the Bride\"\nChristie 'Comedy.\nCanadian\nPictorial\nHecla\nInstal the Hecla Pipeless Furnace\nIn Your Home\nTho   mo,st   economical   a.n<i   . efficient     typa\nEstimates given.   *\u2022\nR. H. MABER\nBOX 618.        NELSON, B.g-        PHONE 4S8X\nHOUSE FOR SALE ON GORE STREET\n... Five rooms, All IVIodern1 Conveniences, Fireplace,\nCement Foundation, Front and Back Verandah, Good\nWood Shed, Fully: Furnished.\nPrice $3200.00\nCharles;-P, %1-gM^r^y\n\u00a3\u00a3__, ESTATJj * .     '\u00a310__S _2-      ' JM_MNCE\nIdeal Cash Grocery\nBaker St.     Phone 265\nSpecial!\nTea Sale\nOF\nGreatWest\nTEA\nThese Delicious Blends\nof Tea are offered to\nyou 10c below regular\nprice.\nThese Teas are the Pick\nof the Finest Gardens of\nCeylon and India.\nThey are Blended by a\nTea Expert who has made\na life-long study of Tea\nBlending.\nWe are asked to place\n500 lbs. this month in Nelson and District. In order to do this we have cut\nour margin fine.\nConfident 'that when\nyou try the tea you will\nwant more.\nSold in Air-tight Sealed\nPackages only.\nNever in Bulk\nRED LABEL\nRegular 75c   Ib.\n\u00ab-'\u00bb>\u2022 '   QK\/.\nNow ....:    OOls\nNow  .',    OOC\nGREEN LABEL\nRegular 85c\n*\u00a3 '  4ttc\ni-ib. \\.    rjK\nNow     1 OV>\nSave 10c\na pound m\nYour Tfea\n500 Sample Packages\ngiven away free. Each\nsample contains enough\nto make 20 cups of tea.\nIDEAL CA_l?G.$eERY\nUMiTEp\nPHP.NE 2^5\nn T'i 11-nil i      li   mrr-g-T\nm\nYowls  Laflies!  tJo'iioi   overlook  this\nLrgitln.      I   will   make   you   a -j^iUc\nparty    tlress,    any    color,\nattendance not required.\nyour    measurements    and\nfaction  guaranteed.1\nNelson News of the Day\n$25.00;- \"four\nSimply send\nstyle. Satis-\nM.   Poprizlan.\n(10507.\nClan   Johnstone   No.   212   will   moot\ntonight   in  EftKlPs'   HA.I1   at  8   P.   M,\n(10512)\nSend all hills into tlie a rami Ceii-\ntrnl    Hotel   for   payment. (10511!)\nFOR SALE\u2014Kootenay Hotel, Vernon St., Nelson. Up-to-date, modefti\nhotel, doing* good bu-ineo-. Call and\nInspect  nny  time. (10543)\nTlio bis tea sale at the Ideal Cash\ngrocery is in full swing. Three cases\nemptied yesterday. 7G0 satisfied cus-\ntomers recommend this delicious tea to\ntheir  fronds.    . - (10540)\nFancy dress Dokle Dance, Nov. 11,\nat Eagle Hail-\u2014good eats. Prizes for\nbest   costumes.^ Admission   $1.(10.\n(104251\nWorking men keep away from Blue\nRoll and Slocan District Strike -still\non.       One  Big  Union.       \u25a0    (1.0516)\nA   tea   in   the   afternoon   from   3   to\n6, folio wed by a whist drive--In the\nevenlntv al 8, will bo held at St.\nSaviour's  rectory  on Wednesday,   Nov.\n7, under the auspices f the Daughters\nbf   tho   King. (10545)\nBuckskin Glove\nTry a Pair of My Workinj\nGloves\nJOE HOLLAND\nHarness Maker\nP.O. Box 811.    Phone 1\nTwo Real Money Save\nWo  offer  today  New ..Zealand  fa\ngrass hutler, 2 lbs. for  jglj\nNo. 1 dairy butter, per lb fl\nDelivery eleven a,.d five o'elocM\nClose flvo o'clock. Sniurdaya ;\no'clock. .,\nMail orders promptly attended\";\nM. CAMPBELL j\nPhone 101\u201491.1 Stanley Ste\nP. BURNS & CO., L\nSpecials Today Only\nLOCAL  SRRING  LAMB\nLogs and loins, per lb.  . .45<>\nShoulders,   per   lb. - 35a?\nLoin  Chops,   per   lb 50<-\nStewlng Lamb, per lb. ..20a?\nChoice Shoulder Roats lb. 20a?\nPot Roasts, per lb 20\u00ab?\nPhone Your Order to SO\nSATISFACTION 0\nBoiling Beet, i per lb \"tJSli\nPrime Rojled Itoasl, lb.  ..35^\nCHOICE  LOCAL VEAL\nLegs and Loins, por lb.  .. _OCr\nShoulders, per lb  32t?\nStewing Veal, per 11). 18<r\nSERVICE\nmm.\nChecl- This List of Things\nYour Fall Wardrobe\nProbably Needs\nHandkerchiefs\nNeckwear\nSoft Shirts     .\nHose\nSuits\nFall Hat\nGloves.\"\nMuffler\nCollars\nUnderwear\nPajamas\nOvercoat\nMackinaw\nSweater\niTheji bi-ing the. list to our store and, let us put\n'ourselves and our store at your service.\n'Kfew. stock is pretty, complete in all above lines\nnow.\nPlenty of Suits to choose frorn Below the tax\n$32,50\u2122 $45.00\nEmory & Walley\n...    ,.-^a^M_IIMr___<l>\u00bb_a__.M_____-\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1920_11_05","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0396467","@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":"1920-11-05 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1920-11-05 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\/1.0396467"}