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Mining Weathering Storm\nof Depression Well\n\u2014 Page Nine\nmmm\nWheat Markets Recover Some of\nLoss, Chicago, Winnipeg\n\u2014 Page Nine\nI VOL. 29\nNELSON, B. C.    THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1930.\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNo. 182\nft _>\ni.\"\nf \"'<_,\nFun _ ii COAL\"\nHOrf. A. GORDON TO VISIT THE CROW\nSEEKSSOiVE\nTROUBLESOF\n|Dickson  Urges  Use   of\nCoal Instead Imported\nFuel Oil\n)IL CONSUMPTION\nALMOST DOUBLED\nItoal Way Down; Gordon\nto \"Get Line On All\nAngles\"\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 19.\u2014What\nsteps the Dominion government\nmay take to old the coast dlvi-\nslon of British Columbia's coal\nIndustry, ls one of the principal\nmatters which will occupy fhe\nattention of Hon. Wesley A.\nGordon, federal minister of\nmines and minister of immigration and colonization, during\nhis present visit to Vancouver.\n\"I want to get a line on all\nangles  of  the  situation  to  see\nif   the  department   can   render\nany  -assistance\/' said  the  minister In speaking of coal mining.\n\u25a0 \"Particularly. I want to -find out\nthat   the   operators   are   ding   to\nKelp, themselves.\"\n1 The Interest .of, the minister of\njnlnes'lfi\" the coal industry is em-\n_| hasiaed by two tacts. He will visit\n\u25a0he Crows Nest district on his way\nlast and he has brought with him\n\u25a0tank Neate, secretary of the Dominion; fuel board, . >\nI Talklne-of ^the coal* industry, tbe\nJilnistw pointed cat that the gov-\nfrnment Is already giving assistance\n|o the Crows Nest mines. He would\npot indicate * what measures they\nInight. be ready to take, to assist\nJ.oai mines until, he has made his\nInvestigations.\nHCKSON MAKES PLEA\nVANCOUVER, B; C, Nov, 19.\u2014\names Dickson, chief inspector of\noal mines, described tho difficult\n-Oblero facing the coal industry\nif British Columbia by reason of\nuel oil competition In an address\nefore the British Columbia division.\n'anadlisn institute of mining and\niietallurgy, today. Last year coal\nroduction fuel 310.000 tons, large-\n\/: from this competlon, he said.\nIxport coal trade also shows a fall.\n(Continued   on  Page   Five)\nMNORSOF\"\nNOVA SCOTIA,\nP. El NAMED\n|0alton Is Lieut.-Govenor, P.\nE. I.; StanfieW of\nNova Scotia\n_ OTTAWA, Ont.. Nov. 19.\u2014(OP)\u2014\n\u25a0rhe appointment of Churles Dalton\nI>f Tigniah, P. E. I., to the post of\n\u25a0leutenant-governor of Prince Ed-\n\u25a0vard Island waa , announoed this\n\u25a0evening. Mr. Dalton succeeds Lieut.-\n\u25a0ttovernor P. R. Hearta. The transfer- will be made on November 29.\nOfficial announcement was also\n.dado of the appointment of Prank\nBtanfield to the lieutenant govern-\nJwship of Nova Bcotla. Mr. Stan-\n\u25a0rield will assume his new office on\nlOeoember 2. He succeeds Hon. J.\nTory.\nJHODES TO RETURN\nIN SPRING\nI VANCOUVER, B. C Nov. 19.\n3trong opposition was voiced by\n3rttish Columbia fishermen to proposals for an increase in the num-\n\u00bbr of fish traps in northern terrl-\n;ory. limitation of licenses and\nn-ohibition of the transfer of fish\nrom i one territory to another, nt\n>. meeting of the B, C. Fishermen's\n\u25a0rotectlve association whicn was\nittended by Hon. E. N. Rhodes, minster of fisheries, and W. A. Found,\nleputy minister, today.\nMr. Rhodes, in a brief address,\nnformed fishermen he had come to\n3ritlsh Columbia to learn some of\nsho problems which confronted the\nndustry here. He declared he had\ninly a brief time to spend on the\n\u2022oast on this visit, but added that,\nvhen the federal house rises in the\nipring. If, is his intention to return\nind spend from a month to sever\nveeks in\u00ab---\u00bbtto* all territories in\nhe  province. \u2014<\u2014*\nIHOCKEY\nDOPE\nNATIONAL\n, Tonight\nIter,  vs.  can.\nWor. vs. Amer.\n\u25a0oet. vs. Chicago\nTet.   \u2122.   Ottawa\nI'litl. Bang., Idle.\nvjr Standing eee\npage seven).        u;  ||||ju\nCANAMAN-AMEMCAN\n(Results hast Night\nProvidence  6.  New  Haven   1.\nINTERNATIONAL\nSyracuse a. PlttotwjgU  _,\nIN THE NEWS\nED OF 568 LIVES\n535 Savedfrom Ship\non Rocks, Portugal;\n28> Newfoundland\nLEVTNE ON BAIL\nTODAY\nCHARLES   A.  LEVINE\nVIENNA, Nov. ' 19.^(AP)\u2014Attorneys for Charles A. Levine, American, who is under formal charges\nof having prepared to counterfeit\na foreign coinage, said tonight\nthey believed they- would be able\nto obtain his release on bail tomorrow.\nThey said Levine was auite confident bis innocence would be demonstrated.\nOn their side, the police asserted\ntonight they had enough evidence to\nsend Levine before the superior\ncourt tomorrow, charging he had\nittemptod to buy from an engraver\n90 dies at a cost of $13,000.\nAROUSES INDIAN IRE\nIn a tense atmosphore of clashing British and Indian ^interests\nPrime Minister' Ramsay MacDonald\nwas called upon Tuesday to soothe\ntho ruffled Indian delegates who resented remarks of* Lord William\nPeel, shown above, former secretary\nfor India, whose criticism of Indian\naspirations was outspoken.\nBluntly he told the Indian delegates the Dominion status for which\nthey are \u25a0 clamoring was not _\npromise but a - goal ,to be attained\nby progressive stages. He criticized\nstatements Indian delegates made\nMonday and Tuesday, and at one\nPOInt he was interrupted by one\nof the princes of the east.\n-l^..-^\nINSTITUTES ABOLISH BOARD,\nDISTRICT ORGANIZATION IS\nLIMITED TO ADVISORY HEAD\nRoll of Institutes Will be Taken on Matter of Re-\nAmalgamating Districts; Edgewood\nMay Get Meet\nFERGUSON DOES\nNOT.DENY MAY\nBE COMMISSIONER\nTORONTO, Ont., NOV. 19. \u2014\nQueried through an exchange\nof wireless messages hy a local\nConservative organ, Premier G.\nII. Ferguson did not deny today that he may assume the\n. office of Canada's high commissioner   to   London,\nMr. \u25a0 Ferguson was reached\naboard the Empress . of Australia, now ln mid-ocean on her\nway to Canada. Tlie messages\nfrom the Ontario premier inferred Premier K. B. Bennett\nmust be free to make some announcement before the head of\nthe provincial government will\ndiscuss the high com missioner-\nshlp,\nHOPKINS GETS\nTHREE MONTHS\nTRAIL. B. C. Nov. ID.\u2014Leonard Hopkins, charged as a hit\nand run driver, was sentenced\nIn county court at Rossland this\nafternoon to serve three months\nIn jail of which a month has\nalready  been   served.\nHopkins was found guilty this\nmorning by Judge W. A. Nlsbet.\non a charge that tltrongh wilful\nneg'ect he caused bodily harm\nto John Hockley. There was\nno defence  evidence.\nBENNETT AGAIN\nHONORED\nEDINBURGH, Scotland. Nov. 19.\u2014\n(C. P. cable)\u2014The prime mlnlstera\not three of Britain's dominions added to their list of university de-\nTecs today when the University of\nEdinburgh conferred its honorary\nleBrce of doctor of laws upon Rt.\nHon. R. B. Bennett ol Canada; Rt.\nHon. James Scullln of Australia., and\nat. Hon. G. W. Forbes. New Zealand.\nmercurTtakes\nanother plunge\nAnother cold dip was recorded\nTuesday night, when the temperature went down to 16 degrees, or\nwithin two decrees of the record of\n14 degrees recorded Monday night.\nThe high point up to fi o'clock Wednesday afternoon was 3 a degrees.\nVOLCANO ACTIVE\nHILO, Hawaii. Nov. 19.\u2014(AP.\u2014\nPresaged by a slight earthquake in\nHalemaumau, flro pit of Kilaupa\nvolcano crater, eruptions began at\ntbe pit at 1:30 p.m. today.\nDr. Howard Powers of the volcano\nobservatory staff reported that soon\nafter half of the old floor of the\nolt. whloh averages 1200 foot in\ndepth, was covered by molten lava,\nDr. Powers said Indications pointed\n-to Increased activity in the fire\nPit, aulet Blnoa July, 1929.\nLarge and radical changes * In the\ndistrict organization of. ,the Women's Institutes of the Kootenay\nterritory are being effected or are\nseemingly Impending, at the Joint\nconference of the Kootenay and\nArrow Lakes, which enters on Its\nthird day today.\nABOLISH   DIRECT   BOARDS\nOne of these changes, given effect yesterday afternoon, was abolition of the district board of directors, or, if the division of the territory is persisted in, of the two\nboards, as a measure of economy,\nand the substitution of a board or\nboards to be picked by the institute\nor Institutes that will be entertaining the conference or conferences.\nThe financial problem in connection with holding of the conferences forced this issue, and many\npresent or past district- directors\nconcurred With Mrs. W. Rutherford\nof Nelson in the contention that\nthe sole function peformed by a\ndistrict board, that, of drawing up\nthe program of the conferece, was\nnot worth the heavy expense of\nbringing the board together from\ndifferent parts, especially as the\narrangements so expensively made\nwere invariably extensively modified\nwhen the evept arrived.    The sug-\nSestion that the preparatory task\ne left to the entertaining institute emanated from Mrs. V. S. Mac-\nLachlan, provincial superintendent.\nONLY A HEAD LEFT\nEnactment of this revolutionary\nchange, from the system of district administration adopted seven\nor eight years ago at the time tho\nthen four existing districts ln he\nprovince were federated, leaves out\none district officer, outside the\nlocal committee of five to be named at leisure by the local institute\nconcerned, this officer being the advisory board representative for the\nKootenay aS a whole, nt present\nMrs. H. H. Pitts, president of the\nprovincial advisory board as well as\nof the Nelson institute. Tlie machinery for electing the advisory\nboard representative was not mentioned in vestcrday's discussion.\nTWO   DISTRICTS   OR   ONE\nOne of the burning question with\nthe delegates is whether the division\nof the territory into two districts,\narbitrarily made by the authorities\nlast year at tho same time they\nwere dividing thc other institute\ndistricts of the province, is to continue, The Aitow lakes district\nset up by the government has.now\nII institutes in the Arrow lakes-\nSlocan area and while some' of\nthese institutes are known to favor retaining a sepamte atatus,\nothers havo passed resolutions favoring re-amalgating tlie districts. Delegates from that district who expressed themselves yesfcerrday op\nthe Issue were practically a unit. In\nfavor of having ono large district\nas before. So far as the 18 institutes in the reduced Kootenay district\nare concerned, while their spokesmen\nsaid Uttle or nothing in. the debate, leaving the queston with the\nArrow lakes delegates. It seems Improbable that there is an Institute\nIn favor of the division.  ,\nMrs, M-acLachlan, as provincial\nsuperintendent,- refused to admit the\nright of various Arrow lakes delegates\nto act for their institute* on this\nmatter, olalmlntr, it was ono for\neach, looal institute to vote upon\nspecifically, the decision of a majority   of  the   Institutes, being   final,\n(Continued on page ton)\n24 ARE KILLED\nAS A TORNADO\nSWEEPS STATE\n23 Killed in Small Church\nColony in Oklahoma\nState\n100 HURT; 100\nBUILDINGS DOWN\nOne Killed, Half of Town\nIs Destroyed in\nArkansas\nOKLAHOMA CITY, Nov, 19, (AP)\n\u2014A tornado of terrific force today\ncut a swath of death and destruction through the little church colony of Bethamy, seven miles west\nof   here.\nTwenty-three persons were killed;\n100 were injured and approximately\n100 buildings were destroyed\nStriking during a Heavy rainstorm, the tornado lovelled a 200-\nyard wide path through the eastern\nedge of the town, burying many\npersons in the splintered wreckage\nof   their   homes.\nAll ambulances in Oklahoma City\nwere rushed to' the scene. Red Cross\nand Salvation Army workers rendered first, aid, i - (\n*\u25a0 Five coiftpaniesof Oklahoma National Guardsmen went Into the\narea to protect scattered valuables\nfrom   vandals.\nDropping flmt a fow miles south\nof Bethany, the twisting funnel of\ndeath wrecked the Camel Greek\nschool house, killing four pupils\nand Injuring the teacher and 10\nother   children.\nThe tornado whipped on north\nthrough the eastern side of Bethany state, headquarters of tlie Noz-\norene church and home of Bethany Penial college, a denominational\nschool.\nThe first organized relief workers Into the wreckage waa the\nfootball team of the nearby Putnam Consolidated school.\nWhen Mrs. W. L. Burton saw\nthe storm approaching ahe caught\nher baby ln her arms and sheltered It as the house collapsed.\nHer husband found her shivering In\nthe rain, the child still clutched in\nprotection. .   .\nThe baby escaped with minor\nscratches, but Mrs. Burton was\nbadly lacerated.\nHALF    BUSINESS\nBUILDINGS   GONE\nOLA. Arkansas, Nov. 19. -~ (AP)\n\u2014A storm of tornadio proportions\nstruck here tonight, killing a city\nofficial and injuring other persons.\nIt destroyed half the business buildings in this town of nearly 10,000\ninhabitants.\nD. D. Powell, olty recorder, was\nkilled instantly when . his home\nwas blown down. Both of Mrs.\nPowell's legs were broken, and her\nniece, Mias Josle Page, waa seriously   hurt.\nPhysicians were treating other injured,   believed   to   number   10.\nThe storm blew in from the\nsouthwest, demolishing a number\nof homes, a bank, two grocery\nstores and other business establishments.  Debris blocked most of the\nBy a freak the storm blew down\nbuildings on all sides of the Albert\nPike hotel, leaving that structure\nintact.\nLEVllRlD\nINT MASTER\nAREFAVORED\nLONDON. Nov. 19. (C P cable)\u2014\nThe- Victoria club call-over for tho\nManchester November meeting, of\nwhich the big day ls on Saturday, ls as follows: Lo Veleur, Mint\nMaster, nine to one; Saragen, 100\nto nine: Trenoheon! 100 to seven;\nPromptitude, 100 to six; Redeswood,\n20 to one; Flange, 2fi to one; Em-\nplro Builder, and Ox and Ass, 50\nto one; Ocean-Wide and North\nDrift, 40 to one; Doura and Rich-\nborough,   50   to   one.\nDYE~PROTECTION,\nBRITAIN TO GO\nVANCOUVER. B 0.. Nov. 19,\u2014During the 16 months prior to July 31\nof this year, & period when, he\nsaid, thoughtful men must havo\nknown that the country was heading toward a period of deflation.\nupwards of a quarter of a milHoft\npersons were encouraged and assisted to Immigrate to Canada, Hon,j\nWeslev A. Gordon, minister of lm-l\nmigsflWon. said ln addressing the\nCanadian club here today. During\nthe four months immediately prior\nto July 31. when- he added, there\nwas no doubt about conditions,\nsome fifteen thousand persons were\nbrought in.\n\"That ls what I call undisciplined\nand uncontrolled immigration,1' declared the minister, \"and I assure\nyou that so long as I am in control\nof this department it shall not occur again\/'\n\"I have been criticized about the\nseverity of some of the Immigration laws which I have evoked.\"\nsaid Mr. Gordon, \"I accept full responsibility -for the course I am\npursuing. Along with every man In\nI Canada who believer that this coun-\ntrv must be kept clean, I have a\ncommon object. Our settlers must\ni be' chosen ' With the greatest care\nand when we accept them thev\n[must be * received\" in & . spirit af\nfriendliness and with a willingness\nto take ihem into our national\nlife.\"\nLONDON. Nov. 10\u2014(AP)\u2014Tlie dye\nstuffs lnu>arto;tilon regulation act,\nunder whloh a measure of protection haa been afforded the British\ndvo trade, will be allowed to lapse\nafter January 15, It waa announced\nln the house of commons today by\nWfllam Graham, president of tho\nboard of trade.\nHe sadd his action was decided\nupon by the government as the\nresult of a report by tho dyestuffs\nlevelopment committee which held\n'hat the industry was on a substantial footing and able to take\ncare  of   ltaelf.\nTWO HUKT, FIRE\nP6RT ANGELES, Wash.. Nov. IS.\n(AP)\u2014Two men were slightly injured here today in a fire the* rtn-\natroyed a two-stotey frame building occupied by the Oity ^urn.taro\ncompany and Alaska hotel. Owners of. the building osttmated tho\nloss at I between #15,000 and 920,-\n000, covered by Insurance,\nHOPES HIGH.'OP\nSAVING LIVES\nOP 34 KIDDIES\nMEDELLIN. Columbia, Nov. 19.\n\u2014(AP)\u2014Medical authorities had\nhigh hopes today of saving the\nlives of 34 children accidentally\nInoculated with diphtheria germs\nInstead of antl-taxln. Previous\nInoculation with anti-toxin may\nhave created sufficient Immunity to prevent their deaths.\nIt was established today that\n15 children who received the Imp*\nproper Inoculation were dead, instead of 16 as was previously reported. Dr, Antonio Pena of the\nNational Laboratory of Hyrieno\nhas come from Bogota to direct\nefforts to repair the error.\nGORDON TO KEEP\nCLOSE CHECK ON\nINGRAM NOW\nUndisciplined and,Uncontrolled Immigration Will\nCease\nFLOOD CLAIMS\nTEN HONOLULU\n20UNMED\nMany Oriental Children\nAmong the Dead and\nMissing\nPROPERTY DAMAGE\nESTIMATED HIGH\n9835 UNEMPLOYED\nREGISTERED, COAST\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Nov. 19.\u2014\nAs a result bf the announcement\nthat unemployed registration\nwould cease on Tuesday and\nthat lists at thc relief office\nwould form tho basis of work\nprovided under the ^million\ndays work\" scheme, registration on tho final day, Tuesday,\nbrought the total to 983K.\nOf thc total on the departmental list, 4468 are married\nand 523!> single. Of these 111)8\nare at work and 30 more will\nstart shortly. Women registered\nnumber 128.   .\nSUIT AGAINST\nBROKERS WILL\nRESUME TODAY,\nVANCOUVER. B. O.. Nov. 19.\u2014\n\"'The way of tho transgressor is\nhard and lonir, but the end will\ncome,\" remarked Mr. Justice Gregory facetiously in suoreme court\ntoday, when adjournlnz to Thursday an application to enter judgment* against Solloway, Mill;. &\u25a0,\nCo., Ltd.. for 8389.000.\nWilliam li. M&ckee claims #37,000\nfrom the brokerage firm, and the\nTrustee of Theo. Frontier & Co.,\nLtd., of Kamloons claims $252,000.\nPlaintiffs' counsel have moved to\nhave the defendants' 5t?*\"*nenta of\ndefense struck out for alleged failure to compiv with an order of\nMr. Justice Fisher reauiring production in Toronto of books and\nrecords relating to the claims.\nAfber remainirur ln Toronto eight\ndays. a. h. Fraser. plaintiff's solicitor, has returned to Vancouver\nwithout havlnir obtained a. glimpse\nof the defendants' documents.\nNO COMPULSION\nIN COAST PLAN\nOP RELIEF FUND\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Nov. 19.\u2014\nCriticism by the Trades and Labor\ncouncil on Tuesday night of the\ncitizens' committee campaign to\norovide 1,000.000 davs* work \"for\njobless ln the cltv seems to be the\nresult' of a, misunderstanding, according  to Mayor  W. H. Malkin.\n\"Thore is no idea of compulsion\nIn the soheme at all.\" says the\nmayor. \"What we will try to do is\nto have industrial firms ln Vancouver comnnence work which they\nwould otherwise delav.\n\"If any man in steadv work wishes to give one day's nay a month he\nmay. but there is certainly no suggestion that anyone will be compelled to help out,\n\"We plan to form an organization\nwhich .will act as a means of obtaining employment, for thoso out\nof work ln  Vancouver.\"\nIDAHO EDITOR\nIS DEAD\nBOISE, Idaho,; not. 10.\u2014(AP)\u2014\nOhnri\u2122 E. WrDdvt. 86. for seven\nve_a teenraDh editor and oltv editor, oi the Idaho Statesman, died\nsuddenly here todav o_ heart failure.\nDeath camo Just tlm*. hours after\nhe left the Statesman In good\nspirits. He often had expressed a\nwish to \"die ln the harness.\"\nA former legislator from Bear\nLake county, he edited a weekly\nDaper at Montpellor. Idaho, for several years after oomlnjt to this\nstate from Bloomlnfrton. Iowa.\nWright also edited a newspaper\nat Bloomlnffton and Mountain\nHome and Focatcllo. Idaho.\nStreets Piled High With\nDebris; Houses Tom\nOut\nHONOLULU, Nov. 19. (A_P)\u2014With\n10 bodies recovered and at least\n20 reported missing today, the death\nlist lengthened as workers searched\ndebris piled up by the flood, which\nswept northern Honolulu Jate yesterday. Most of those drowned were\nOrientals, others were Hawaiian and\nPortuguese.\nAmong tho dead and missing\nwere many children. Japanese\nmothers said the children were\nswept from their homes by water\nwhich swept through the buildings\nbefore they were able to remove\nthe   children   to  safety.\nProperty damage by the sudden\ntorrent from the mountains above\nthe city was estimated at $160,000\nby the Honolulu engineering department. The entire island of Oahu\nwas drenched with rain yesterday,\nthree inches falling within a few\nhours.\nLate ln the \u25a0 day the flood crasli-\ned down the Kalihl valley, through\nthe Kalihl district of the city into the ocean.\nNorthern King street, main artery leading to Fort Shatter, was\nInundated several feet and many\nhouses were tossed from their foundations. One structure was deposited in the middle of King street,\nwhich, with Queen street, was^Uled\nwith   wreckage.    , '\u2022    *.\nThe main pipe supplying water\nto Pearl Harbor navy yam was\nwashed out. The hospital was supplied with water today from a\nsmall reserve tank.\nMany bridges on roads i outside\nthe Honolulu city limits were destroyed The flood in Kalihl valley drowned 860 hogs, in addition\nto   two  carloads  of  live   stock.\nProud Ship Highland Hope, With 135 First Class\nPassengers, Pounds to\nPieces in Fog\nMAGIC OF WIRELESS IS\nLIFE SAVER, HUNDREDS\nOnly Two Lost; Women Hysterical;  Mauretania\nand Three Others Race to Help,\nNewfoundland\n<By  the  Associated  Press)\nThe magio of wireless, plus tbe traditional heroism of the hardy\nmen of tho sea, saved the lives of 568 persons on storm-tossed seaa\nyesterday.\nTwenty-seven men and one woman followed the ancient code of\nthe ocean and rowed half a mile t-hrough raging waters to reach the\nliner MauTetanla, summoned by the 8.O.S. after tbey liad abandoned,\nthe distressed Swedish freighter Ovldla off tho Grand Banks of Newfoundland.\nFar to the other side of the Atlantic 585 men and women were\ntaken safely off the liner Highland Hope ln lifeboats and lodged In\nLisbon after their vessel crashed on the rocks off the Portuguese coast.\nOnly   two   casualties   were   reported.\nUp in the North sea five seamen drowned after a collision of\nthe British steamer ''Continental Freighter and the British steamer\nHebble. The Continental Freighter sank, but five others of her crew\nwere  rescued.\nShipping olrcles were concerned for the small Swedish steamer\nTanja, which dropped out of sight ln the south Baltic after she left\nDanzig   10   days   ago.\naussie minister\ntocomm:anada\nMarkets,  Transport   Official\nto Head Trade Commission Here\nLONDON, Nov. 19. \u2014 (By Thos.\nT. Champion, Canadian Press Staff\nCorrespondent) \u2014 \"There ls room,\nfor improvement in the provisions\nof * the Canada-Australian trade\ntreatv of 1025,\" said Prime Minister\nJames Henry Scullln of Australia,\ntoday in announcing that Hon.\nParker Moloney, Australian minister\nof markets and transport, would sail\nfor Canada ou December 3 as head\nof an Australian trade oommlsison.\nHon. Mr. Moloney is now ln England\nwith the Australian trado commissioner to Canftda.\nAs far aa Australia is concerned\nthe balance of trade with Canada\nhas been adverse every year since\nthe treaty came Into effect, said\nthe Australian premier. Finding new\nmarkets for Australian products was\nan urgent necessity. Hon. Mr. Moloney wished to study the possibilities on the spot, and he would also\nexamine the whole question of\nCanadian trade with Australia, tlie\nprime   minister   explained.\nDIRECTORS OF~\nPUBLICITY AT\nCOAST NAMED\nLISBON, Portugal, Nov. 19^\u2014\n(AP)\u2014The proud ship Highland Hope stuck fast ln the\ntreacherous rocks not far from\nthe village of Penlcbe tonight\nwhile the sea broke her to\npieces, and 535 men and women, taken off her Just after\ndawn (orfay. were sate . in\nhotels here.\nShn had lost, her course in a\nheavy fog and at A 'o'clock, this\nmorning ran upon tne. rock\/j vith\na shock which shook tho pasaenpers\nout of their bunks. Lifeboats were\nlowered quickly, and S.O.8. screamed\nthrough tlie morning and- thp officers and crew stood by \"until the\nlast passenger waa safelv away.\nTwo Spanish emigrants, one of\nthem a child of four, represented\nthe total casualties of tho wreck.\nThey were reuorted missing and it\nIs feared they were drowned.\nJ. N. MacKay, on his way to Bio\nde Janeiro In the Highland Hope\nwas one of the tralnlood of castaways brought here this evening\nfrom Penlche.\n\"That first shock when tho vessel\n\u25a0struck  threw  ma  out  of bed,\"  he\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nFARMERS SUPPORT\nPREMIERS' PLANS\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Nov. 19.\u2014\nDirectors elected today to guide the\ndestinies of the Vancouver publicity\nbureau during the ensuing year Included O. B. Allan, Harold Darling, Brenton S. Brown, T. H. Kirk,\nMJ\\P., E, H. Adams, Fred Crone,\nOscar W, Peafeon and Dr. J. H.\nWorth ington. W. J. Blake Wilson\nwas appointed honorary president,\nand Hon. W. C. Shelly honorary\nvice-president   for   the   next   year.\nBRIDGE CONTRACT\nIS LET, VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 19.\u2014\nTho city council todav awarded the\ntender for the Burrard street bridge\nto Hodgson. King and Marble and\nDawson. Wade & Co.. at, a price of\n$1,739,547.\nThe contractors will make use of\nMajor J. R. Grant's official design. The .alternate design, submitted by Dr. C. A. P. Turner, was\nrejected on thn advice of Charles\nBrakenrldge. city cnKineer.\nTlie contract provides for Canadian re-inforced steel, and fabrication and erection in Vancouver\nof all structural steel.\nGRAVES LEADING,\nCALGARY ELECTION\nCALGARY, Alta., Nov, 19, \u2014 A\nvery heavy vote was polled today\nIn the Calgary civic elections and\nIn consequence the first count\nwas very much delayed. The first\nsummary on the ballot for commissioners stated that, with 27 polls\nheard from A. G. Graves, seeking\nre-election wes heading his opponent M. C. Costello, former mayor\nof  Calgary 1658  to 988.\nMore than 300o ballots wero oaafc\nat the special poll which accommodated those whose *namcfl had\nbeen loft off the lists\nPORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man.,\nNov. 19. (CP)\u2014Organized agicul-\nture on the prairies stands foursquare back of the premiers' pilgrimage to the east to seek Dominion government aid for the west.\nIn annual convention today, United\nFarmers of Manitoba gave their\nendorsation to the premiers' mission to gain Dominion assistance\nln restoring confidence and in ameliorating   conditions   in   the   west.\nAlready United Farmers of Alberta\nand United Farmers of Canada, Saskatchewan section, have taken a\nstand in favor of fixed prices for\nwheat by means of Dominion intervention, admittedly the object\nof the prairie premiers' Journey to\nOttawa.\nTlie Manitoba body, however, erased all mention of prlco fixing\nfrom the resolution which It approved   unanimously.\nRHODES MEETS B. C.\nFISHERMEN\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 19. \u2014 .Continuing his Intensive study of conditions in tbe fishing industry of\nBritish Columbia, Hon. E. N. Rhodes\nminister of fisheries, spent tlhs\nmorning in individual interviews.\nThis afternoon the minister attended a meeting of the B. C. Fishermen s Protective association, along\nwith his  deputy  w. A.  Found.\nTomorrow morning tho minister\nwill meef Fraser river flBhermen and\nln the afternoon he will Inspect tho\nharbor.\nHe will leave for Victoria Friday\nmorning and plans to return here\nMonday evenina in order to take the\nnight   train   east.\nB. C. MAN AGAIN\nGETS SCHOLARSHIP\nVICTORIA, B. C. Nov. 19.\u2014Frank\nSolkirk Mortoy. B.A.. has been\nawarded the annual _1600 I. O. D. E.\npost-graduate overseas scholarship\nbv tbo British Columbia committee\nof selection. Mr. Morlev Is at present at Edinburgh university holding\nthe 1930-31 scholarship and his is a\nre-appolntment by the I. O. D. E.,\nsuch oppolntment being within the\ndiscretion of the committee.\nMr. Morlev took his degreo of\nB.A. at the University of British\nCoiuraba with honors in history in,\n1030.\nFIVE YEARS FOR\nHOLD-UP\nSASKATOON. Sasfc.. Nov. 19\u2014\nWithholding tho penalty of tho lash\nowing to the prisoner's mental and\nDhvslcai condition. Police Magistrate\nBrown todav sent John Batting,\nalias Hope, Hoed and John Wesley\nKidd. to the penitentiary for five\nyears for tho robberv under armR\nof the weet side branoh of the\nBank of Nova Bocrtla on October 33.\nBatting had confessed to tho coup,\nin which he obtained 43000.   Ho la\na   narcotic  addict.\nABOABD B. A. AMERICA, Nov.\n10.\u2014(By Rates Fi.an.cy, copyright 1930, by The Associated\nPress\u2014The unwritten code of\nthe sea today caused \\Vt men\nahd one woman, already physically exhausted from hours of\nbattling to save their sinking\nship, to clvoose the hardest\npath of rescue after the Swedish\ncargo steamer Ovtdia Mad foundered off the Grand nante of\nAr**vft>undland. -   .     ?\nThrough  most  of   v.\\-t   night\nthe British Cunnrd   vessel Mauretania   and   the   United   states\nHner   Amenea   and   the   United\nState*,    shipping    board    vessel\nI'mlicni I,   ltad   raced   to aid  the\nstricken vesel before It sank.\nAlthough all   three  ships sighted\ntbe ovidi.i within approximately an\nhour  of   one   another   shortly   before   noon   today,   tlie   Mauretania\nwas tho first to   reach   the  scene.\nThe sailor's code demands that the\nfirst vessel to arrive shall save the\nlives and-salvago the cargo, if \"possible, from anv sinking ship.\nTHREE  STAND   CLOSE  BY\nAll  three stood   close  by for an\nhour   beforo   Captai n   Ca rlsson   of\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nTHOMAS DEFENDS\nIMPERIAL MEET\nLONDON, Nov. 19.\u2014 (By Thos. T.\nChampion. Canadian Press staff\nCorrespondent) \"Probably you have\nbeen told the government failed to\nmake an effective proposals, possibly you bave heard the conference\ndid nothing important. Neither statement is true, declared Rt. Hon.\nJ. H. Thomas, secretary of state\nfor the Dominions, in an address ou\ntho imperial conference's economic\nside. The minister continued: \"I\nneed only say there wero necessarily\ntwo opposed policies and we adopted tho common-sense, traditionally\nBritish method of examining whether there was not some alternative\npolicy, it was not surely to be\nexpected that in six weeks we\nshould produce a fully developed\ninter-imperial scheme of cooperation. Tho difficulties and dangers\nwern too greas for settlement in\nshort period. It was not to be ex-\nfected that we f_ho_.Jd do more\nhan make a preliminary exploration.\nBARCELONA   STRIKE\nIS ENDED\nBARCELONA, Spain. Nov. 19, \u2014\n(AP)\u2014The Slndlcato Unico, which\nproclaimed the strike that has caused disorder in Barcelona for two\ndays, tonljht ordered its members\nto abandon the walkout and return to work tomorrow morning.\nLEADING    MUSICIAN\nIS DEAD\nQUEBEC. Que.. Nov. 19.\u2014Gustave\nGagnon, prominent musician and\norganist at the Basilica for 40 years,\ndied hero todav a_:e<t 81. Mr.\nGagnon was one of the examiners\nof tho Dominion  Collect of Music,\nThe Weather\nForecast   for   Thursda-\nand     vicinity-\u2014Partly     c]\nmoderately    cold    with\nsnow.\nNELSON    \u201e..\nNanaimo -....\u2122-\nVictoria   ,\t\nVancouver   \t\nKamloops    .\nPrinco GeorKo\nEstevan Point\nPrince  Rupert\nAtlln    \t\nDawson   .._. _\nSeattle    -..\nSan FranclHca .\nSpokano    _.\nLos   Angeles   ...\nPentlcton    -\nVernon    _\nGrand Forks ...\nCalgary     _...\nCranbrook   \t\nEdmonton   \t\nSwift Current\n.Prince  Albert\n1 Gu'Appclle   \t\nWinnipeg   .._...\ny\"     Nelson\nla ud y    and\noccasional\nMin. Max.\n:.::_:*>:\nia\n... 43\n... 42\n... 38\n... 38\n... 30\n... 40\n... 88\n... 38\n...-12\n... 40\n... 48\n-. 18\n... 48\n._ 24\n.... 20\n... 13\n._ -3\n\u2014 I\n.._ 8\n.. 18\n. 8\n.- -2\n... sa\n32\n43\n43\n4(1\n34\n34\n40\n40\n38\n6\n4B\n62\n34\n84\n38\n34\n28\n38\n25\n34\n34\n24\nIR\nS3\n Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       THUBSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1980.\nI MAY NATIONALIZE\nTHE C. P. RAILWAY\nOTTAWA, Out. Not. 10.\u2014Tho ad.\nI Usability of nationalizing the Can-\n\u25a0 ___ Pacltlo rallwav will likely he\n| discussed when the house ot com\nmons next convenes. A resolution\nDlaced on the order w-oer o. tne\ncommons at this early date by\nRobert Gardiner. hou_ leader or\nthe Un'*--' Farmers ot Alberta\n(srouD. reads: .,,__. __.. I\n\"Thai .\u201e is the roi__. of this\nhouse that, the uovernment take\n'nto consideration thB advlsabl'lty\nof nat!n\".it___K the Canadan Pa*\nolflo railway.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. G. Hotels\ni^VVW^-WVWV-*^^\nRooms with\nrunning ivater\nPrivate baths\nX\n1\nNELSON, b. c.\nThe best hotel and dining accommodation\nin the city.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHOMB-J. E. Kowden, Miss H. H.\n! Hall' L. B. Robe, D. H. Ellene.J.J.\nWood,  J.  P.  Laskeg,   P.   O.   Eraser,\n2   M. Collins. W. Ford-Kaye,  O. L.\n%p.  0.  H, Partridge,  P.  W.  Mut-\nMrs. R. W. Hannlngton, G. P.\nAymot, D. L, McDougall, Vanoouver;\nE. A. Garton. Rosebery; P. 0, Kllng,\nSeattle; J. MacDougall, G. Nasecroffc,\nCreston; P. Andeslad, Wynndel; A.\nRuzlcka,   Kettle   Valley.\nWhere the Guest Is King\nThe Savoy\nWSLBON-  NEWEST  AND  MOTET  HOTEL\nMANY ROOMS WTTK PRIVATE\nBATHB OR SHOWBRB\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n5g8SH^ie!M*5!^SI?ll\nSAVOT\u2014O. Eon. Nelson; Major\nD. J. Perry. Christina Lake: R. V.\nWtlca*.  Salmon  Arm;   W.  M.  Kau-\nmrnmiwm\nmaum,   Toronto;    P,   B.   Winshuk\nMontreal.\n-4-i-\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nHot and cold water In every room\nSteam   heated\t\nQUEEN'S\u2014W. McPaydon, J. Glen-\nton, Nelson; Mr. and Mrs. J. R.\nHunt and family, Calgary; H. Hayes,\nCrescent Bay.\nMadden Hotel\nXX   A.   McDONAIJ_\nMan   Heated    Room*    by   the\nDay, Week or Month\nJDwv consideration shown\nto   guests.\nOor. Baker and Ward Streets\nNelson\nMADDEN\u2014B. Anderson, J. Harm*\nstead Macleod* A. Wilson, Macke-\nlln;   J.   Bfcudley,   Spokane.\t\nNew Qrand\nHotel\nHot and Cold water In all rooms\nWeekly  or  monthly  rates\nP.  L.  KAPAK, Prop.\nPhone 503     P. O. BOX 1061\nNEW GRAND\u2014J. Hoe, Cranbrook;\nM. Analdo, File; Mr. and Mrs, W.\nDixon,   Sirdar.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n705 Vernon St. Phone 5371\nH. WASSICK\nFifty Rooms of Solid Comfort\nHeadquarters for Loggers and\nMiners.\nDetachable lace sleeves for dinner\ngowns havo appeared in Europe.\nTrail, B. G.\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C\nA. P. LEVESQ:UE, Prop.\n?.\u00a3$$333$S33$$3$$,,_'$*S$*?S333^^\n\u2022 BORING UNDER THE HEART OF VANCOUVER\nH : Z' '    '\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0''    ivy-'    m  *-_.\nHOUGLAS\n\u25a0'hotel**\nRooms and Baths\nE.  I* and  A.   GROUTAGE\nProp*.\nSteam Heated Hot and Cola\nThroughout Water\nBox 608 Phone 263\nTrail, B. G.\nThe House\nWant!\nYon\nTo eliminate the surface line connecting Its main Burrard inlet yards and\nterminal*} with Its storage yards, Industrial sidings and shops on False\nCreek, and level crossings affecting seven cross-town thoroughfares,\nnotably Hastings and Carrall streets, the Canadian Pacific Railway ' soon\nwill start work on a tunnel boring for nearly a mile under the heart of\ndowntown Vancouver. Tenders for tho project were called recently by\nC. A. Cotterell, general superintendent, and close December 1. It will\nbe 4809 feet long, varying in width from 18 to 10 feet and 32 Va feet higb\nand It is estimated 86,000 cubic yards of excavation will be necessary in\nconstruction work which perhaps will take more than IB months to com\nplete.   The project, it ls figured, will provide work for about 300 men\nduring the winter.\nAbove drawing shows how the tunnel will affect the lay-out of Canadian\nPaclfio facilities on Burrard Inlet and False Creek properties. The heavy\nline is the route of the bore through the center of the city. Above, alongside 0. P. R. piers A, B, O and D is the company's new liner the 26,000 ton\nEmpress of ^apan; inset photo of downtown Vanoouver showing the new\nMarine building (left) and Royal Bank building (extreme right) and\nbottom 0. P. R. shops and False Creek sidings with a close-up view of\nLocomotive No, 6919, one of the new monsters of the rails which operate\nin British  Columbia,\nDEMANDS FULL\nINDEPENDENCE\nINDIA CONFAB\nMuhammed Ali Says He\nDoes Not Ask for Dominion Status\n\"FREE AND HOTTED\nSTATES OF INDIA\"\n\"Give  Me  Grave   Here\nUnless I Go Back With\nFreedom\"\nLONDON. Nov. IJ.\u2014(BV Gears*\nHambleton, Canadian Press staff\ncorrespondent)\u2014India's round-table\nconference todav heard a voice from\nIslam ln a demand for complete Independence.\nI do not come to ask dominion\nstatus.\" exclaimed Muluunmod All,\none of the famous All brothers and\na leader of the all-India Moslem\nleague. \"I do not believe In the\nattainment of dominion status. The\none thine to which I am committed\nIs complete independence.\"\nToday the Hindus and. the Mos-\nems alike dial mured the Conservative view expressed by Lord\nPeel yesterday, when the former\nsecretary of state for India declared dcmilnlon status had not\nbeen promised as an immediate\nTift, but had merely been pointed\nas a goal bv the present viceroy oi\nIndia. Lord Irwin.\nI want to go back to my own\ncountry,\" Muhammed Ali declared,\n\"only if I can go bach: with tho\nsubstance of freedom ln my hand.\nOtherwise! wlli not ao bacfc to the\nslave country. You will have to\n:lve me a grave here.\"\n\"We will be satisfied with nothing less than full responsible gov-\n-rnmont,\" Insisted Dr. B. 8. MoonJe.\nhead of the Hindu !____b_, or\n\u25a0Section society.\nAs Muhimmed All prepared to\nspeafc therp occurred a slight, but\nnost slimlftcant Incident. Buffering many Infirmities, the Moslem\nleader (once an aeeoolote of Gancihl.\nbut now onposlnsr the civil disobedience   movement)   claimed   the\nprivilege ot an invalid, namely, to\nspeak while sitting.\n.\"bom chaib of Iondt.\nBut All's seat was ln th* outer\nring of deaegates hence he could\nnot be _vd effectively. Immediately MSu-cund Jayakar, Hindu end\nerstwhile leader of the Bombay\nBwarjlsts, offered his chair near\nthe center at the conference room-\nAll accepted and. for a time, the\nold religious rivalries had passed,\nand the conference heard a voloe\nfrom Islam from the chair ot a\nHindu. \" '\u25a0'\u2022   \u25a0 \u25a0\n\"India.\" he said, ''has nut on 60\n'league boots. Wo an making farced\nmarches whloh will astonish \u00abho\nworld and we will not go back 'to\nIndia unless a new dominion Is\nbora. If we go back to India,\nwithout (*e birth of a new dominion we shall go back \u25a0 to a lost\ndominion.\"        \"       \u25a0\n\"We shall go back.\" continued\nAll, \"to an America. Then you will\nwitness\u2014not within the British\ncommonwealth or the British Empire but outelde It\u2014you will witness with the Indian winces, with\nDoctor Moonie. with Mr. Jayakar.\nmv brother and myself, a tree and\nunited steitee of India. It will, too,\nbe  something  more than  that.\n\u25a0'In India we shall, have something better than an America because we shall not only havo a\nunited states, but we shall have\nunited fallhs. faiths not like to\nilkerbut like In difference, self-\nreverent each and \u00abJ\u00ab*ha,te\"}H?J\ndistinct In individualizes, but Mkj\ne_oh other even as those who Ian.\"\nTO CARRY GOSPEL\nOF INSTITUTES TO\nTRAILWSSLAND\nLeaderJs  i v\u201e   j.'lu\u00bbe  Cities\nWould Like It; Visit\nTrail Friday\nA suspicion  long  entertained  by\nWomen's   institute   lesneri   ln   \u2666*\u00ab\nKootenay, that the Principles that\nha?e won encomiums Tn 29 KMtonay g\ncommunities   ought   to   be   oauaUy \u201e\neffective lh the cases -of Ws_U'-an*\nRossland,   is   about   to   1*   *\"*\u00bb\u2022 \u2022\nand  after  the  oloee  of  the   great\n. hTAa   dav   lolnt   conference   here,\naf which\" W lnstl-tes  have been\nrepresented,   the   campaign   wlU   be\ncarried to the two cities named.\nMrs V 8. MaoLachlan, moylnolal\nsuperlntebdenf1 of   WomeiA   \u2022*\u00bb\u00ab\u00a3\n\".   and   Mrs.  H.  H.. Pitts,   head\ni the district and chairman of the\nterence concluding today, have\narranged to address the ladles of\nTrail Friday afternoon at. 3 \u00abolook,\non the- Principles of the ^men's\ninstitute. There ls a 1 keiaiood that\nthe Trail meeting will be followed ,\nby one at Bosland Saturday, though\nthS later has not been aotually arranged. .       \t\nCONSTRUCTION\nOF SIX HOUSES\nIS AUTHORIZED\nTotal    Cost    Estimated    at\n$17,800; Total for Year\n$232,050\nBuilding permits for the construction of -six houses have been\nissued ln Nelson during the past\n20 days for a total of $17,800. AU\nthese houses were specified aa being\nframe   construction   on   cement.\nTotal permits iBeued during the\nperiod in question amounted to\n$18,276 increasing the total for the\nyear to $332,050.\nPermits issued were E. Walgren,,\nCarbonate, frame house with concrete basement, 4350; Jfi. Waljren,\nCarbonate, frame house with concrete basement, $3500: E. Walgren,\nford, small house, $800; H. J. Murphy, Latimer, frome house with\ncement basement, $3000: p. E. Howell, Baker 6treet, addition to garage $150; T. A. Dyke, Cottonwood\nstreet, frame house with concrete\nbasement, $3000; W. A. Jones, Victoria, verandah on house, $25; T.\nH. Waters, Hendryx, frame house\nwith   concrete   basement,   $4800.\n\\yirETHEH you're a pros-\n\" pectlvc buyer or owner\nof a house, you'll find the\nClassified   Columns   worth\nwhit*,\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nNelson, B. C. Cafes\nThe Standard GaSe\n820 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nOPEN  DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11.80 to 2.30  Special Lunch   35c\n8.80 to 8 p. ra.       Supper   85c\nPHONE 154\nKootenay Cate\nVERNON   SXBEEX\nDtantt.  11*30  to 2.30  -   35C\nSupper,   5.30 to 8 p. m.     35c\nShort Orders a Specialty\nQuick  Service\n-Nf,(t Koottoay Hotel, Kelson\nthe Royal Cafie\nCLASSIC -RESTAURANT\nRefinement and Delicacy  Prevail\nOPEN   DAY AND  NIGHT\nSpecial Dinner 11.30 to 2.30   35c\nSupper  5.30 to 8 .\u2014     35c\nWe Specialize ln Chop\nSuey and Noodles\nPhone 182\nRev. C. r. Spencer, reotor of Shanty Bay and rural dean of Bant 81m-\nhaa  been, appointed   rector   of\nSt.. John's   Anglican\nmanviue.\nchurch,   Bow-\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nCORRA LINN\nFLAG STOP\nFor Passenger Trains\nCommencing at once following trains will stop at\nCorra Linn Camp. W.K.P.\nand L. Coy, on signal to\npick up or put off passengers and express.\n\"Westbound  from  Nelson\nTrains Nos. 11, 701, 841\nEastbound  to  Nelson\nTrains Nos. 700, 842\nJ. S. Carter, D.P.A.,\nNelson, B.C.\nDOGS THOUGHT !\nTO HAVE BEEN\nPOISONED HERE\nTo the consternation ol resident's\nin the upper reaches of the town\ntheir dogs, prized as household pets,\nhave died recently from what Is\nthought to have been the effects\nof  poison.\nAmong those who have lost their\npets are W. O. Leno, Mrs. G. Massey\nand   C.   D  Blackwood\nIt has been reported that other\npersons have lost their dogs which\nsill showed similar symptoms. Source\nof the poison has no ,j.i ae.er-\nmlned.\nNO DOxNii\n3_\nIJ.^.\nARE RECEIVED\nAT HOSPITAL\nThe depleted state of working\nlinen still existed yesterday at the\nKootenay Lake General hosiptal\nwhore no donations had been received since the recent statement of\nexlBting   conditions.\nDriW sheets, sterilized towels and\nsimilar linen In the kind most needed at the hospital, it is stated,\nNew Goitre Remedy\nSeen in Limestone\nLOUISVILLE, Nov. 10\u2014Limestone,\nonce advertised by Kentucky distillers aa producing water peculiarly\ngood for making whiskey, now promises to Join the anti-goitre campaign. This rock contains small\nquantities of iodine, the goitre\nremedy, says a report of thB Kentucky agricultural experiment station and ls useful in making\nfertilizers.\nWhen these fertilizers are used\nIn growing important farm crops\",\nsays the report, \"the iodlno content of the latter is apparently\nenriched and foods better suited\nfor nourishment of animals are\nthus  produced.\"\nSarnia Matron Has\nBeen Good to Tots\nSARNIA, Ont., Nov. 18\u2014 (By the\nCanadian Press) \u2014 For past years\nIn tho summer months, Mrs. W, J,\nHanna has provided free trips to\nthe beach for tho children of\nSarnla Now the city must assiuno\nthe responsibility, for ln a letter\nto the council Mrs. Hanna points\nout that over 24,000 children were\ngiven free trips, and she can no\nlonger undertake the oaro of so\nmany children, Bhe offers, however, to pay $600 towards the expense each summer, * What action\nthe city.will take is problematical\nbut*, service clubs will likely be\naaked to assume- a share of the\nexpense.\nMiss Madonna L Newcomb Tells\nHow Cuticura Healed Pimples.\n\"First my face began to get sore, then after a short time pimples\nbroke out all over it They were very red and festered. The pimples\nitched causing me to scratch, and the irritation prevented me from\nsleeping. The trouble lasted about two months and disfigured my face.\n\"Other remedies were used without succbbb. I beflan using Cuticura\nSoap and Ointment and they helped me, and after using four cakes of\nCuticura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was completely\nhealed.\" (Signed) MIbs Madonna L. Newcomb, Murphy's Cove,\nNova Scotia.\nSoap 25c. Ointment 26 and 50c. Talcum 25c. Sold everywhere. Sample each tree.\nAddress Canadian Depot: J. T. Walt Company Limited. Montreal.\n535 PERSONS SAVED FROM SHIP\nAS IT RUNS ON ROCKS IN FOG,\nPORTUGAL; 28, NEWFOUNDLAND\n(Continued From Pago One)\naid. \"I ran up to the decks, which\n\/ere already crowded, and saw the\nhip's bow was fast on the rocks,\n.\"omen were running about in\n.ysterics, shivering hi their night\n:Iothe_.\nHROWN AGROUND AGAIN\n\"Sho seemed to work herself loose\nfrom thc rocks, then a sea pioked\nler up and threw her aground\ngain. The men were getting the\n,oats over and the women piled in.\n_>no boat was shoved off when\nsome Spanish omlgrants. paulc-\n,trlcken, jumped ln and tho boat\noppled over. I was in It.\n\"Six of us struck out while the\n;rew saved tho otheara. Wo swam\n.lalf a milo until a fishing boat\nncked us up. All tho time the\nchip's siren was screeching, and\n(Shine boats were all about us. Our\nescuers bundled ua up In warm\njlothes and gave us brandy and put.\nas ashore at Peniche.\"\nOne of the heartiest of the pas-\niengera was the 70-year-old Duchesa\nof Hamilton, who was bound for\n3uenos Aires. Bhe was generous in\nler praise of the Highland Hope's\n\/fleers and crew and said she had\njeen the aklpper on hla bridge as\nthe lifeboat in which she was a\n_ssengcr pulled away fxom the\nvessel. .j\" .,,\n\"The ship's lights were still blazing,\" she said, \"as our men rowed\njward tha shore, and wo lost\n.ight of tlie ship in the heavy\nJog. I am glad to know ttiat tho\ncaptain and his men had been\ntaken off before they were lost.\nThe Highland Hope was on the\nway from London to Buenos Aires\nwiLh 136 first class passengers, Including many representatives of British business houses en route to\nBuenos Aires for the British trade\njxposltlon to be opened next year.\nBOYSTBOIROF\nREDEEMER CHURCH\nIS ENJffiAlNED\nSee   Show  and  Treated  to\nDinner; Stanley Horswill\nIs Best Member\nChurch of Redeemer choir boys\ncelebrated tehlr annlveraary of inception Saturday at a social evening and dinner. Before, dinner tho\nboys attended the matinee at the\nlocal  theater.. _     .       ,   ,\nIt was an Armistice. Sunday, last\nyear that the boys mado their first\nappearance as a vested junior choir.\nAt that time their number was\nnine, On Saturday 16 enjoyed tho\ntreat. Mrs. J. Burgess assisted by\nMrs E F \u25a0T-'\u2014's and Mrs B. Ogden\nwere In charge\nVicar Rev. .v. J. Crlok. spoke to\nthe boys on the work of the past\nyear He congratulated them on the\nservice they h&d rendered to tho\nchurch by their regular and punctual attendance at both the practices and at the services.\nHe spoke of whet might yet be\naccomplished In the future and\ntouched on their \"\u00absprlt da corps\".\nDuring the course of the evening\n\u25a03t:nnley Horswill was voted as\nbest all-round member for the past\nyear and received a gift fom Mr.\nCrick. Games were enjoyed after\ndinner.\nA vote of thanlw was tendered\nMrs. Burgess and helpers for their\nwork,\n(Continued From Page One)\ntho Ovidla decided to abandon the\n1898 ton freighter. Then, although\nlie America was the closest and lay\nto the leeward side\u2014whero It would\nhave been easier to drift down with\ntho wind\u2014Captain Carlsson and bis\ni cw laboriously manned the oars\nof their two lifeboats, pulling half\na mile against wind and wave to\nthe Mauretanta.\nTlie Ovidla was listing dangar-\n\u25a0\u25a0usly to starboard when tho America\n.\"cached her at 11 a_n. (ifl.S.T t\n-oday at a position between 300 and\n400 miles' south by southeast of\nJape Race.\nHer dockload of lumber appeared\nto have shifted and Captain Carls-\nion radioed that his vessel was\nleaking badly, with the pumps unreliable, but he Intended to try to\nrearh St. Johns. Nfld., under tow\nby   the Endicott.\nBut ho weatner grew worse on the\ntossing ocean and the fast mall\nrescue ships could not wait, so\nCaptain Oarleson held a council of\nthe crew and decided to abandon\nthe freighter.\nAe the next act In the drama\nthe figures of 27 men and one\nwoman were seen clambering into\nlfeboats and heading for the Maur-\ncntanla.\nThe Ovidla. meanwhile became\nwaterlogged and was expected to\n_ink shortly.\nRheumatism So Bad\nCould Hardly Walk\nMra,  Wm.  Knenzig, B.B. No. 5,\nGnelpli, Out., writes:\u2014\"For y_i\u00bb 1 '\nsuffered  with  rheumatism,  and  my I\nhands  and  feet  used  to. swell so, 1\nat times, I could hardly walk, and j\ncould not sleep or rest for the josl\nI used different kinds ef modicii\nbut got nothing to do me any good]\nuntil a friend told me to take Burdock\nBlood Bitters.   Now I have no more\npains   and   the   rheumatism   is .all |\ngone.\"        .' \u201e\nFor _al\u00ab st all drag Ind general stona; j___n__et_ad, _r _l peat 51 y\u2014ra, c_r or 1\n\u00bb T. MMmra Co., Ltd., Toronto, Ont.\nASK CHURCHILL\nBE FREE PORT\nPORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man.,\nNov, IB. (CP)\u2014Proposal tho Church-\nIll, the west's sea harbor on Hudson's bay, be declared a free port\nof entry for British 'goods, waa\nmade tonight by Hon. R. A. Hoey,\nacting premier of Manitoba, at the\nannual convention of the United\nFarmers of Manitoba. He considered that such1\" a move would tend\nmeasurably toward the establishment of tho wes t's agri cui ture on\na   permanently   profitable   basis.\nMr. Hoey's suggestion ls tnat the\nplan be approved at the next session of parliament, permitting the\nfull use of tho Hudson's bay railway to Churchill and the Bay route\nnext year. Ships, he stated, would\nthen be able to carry wheat to\nBritain and be assured of a return cargo, whllo northbound trains\nwould not be called upon to return empty.\nA bronze eagle, measuring seven\nfeet, four Inches, from tip to tip oi\nwing spread, and one and a hal:\ninches from head to tail, was ahot\non the Bonedlot ranch, Bheerness\ndistrict  near  Hanna.\nThe polka remains a great fav-\norilo tor general wear frocks. |\nBladder Weakness\nTroublesome Nights\nSwiftly Relieved\nIf you are troub'ed with.a burning sensation, Bladder Weakness,\nfrequent dally annoyance, gettlns-\nup-nlght\u00ab dull pains in baok, lower\nabdomen and down throuah groins\n\u2014you should try the amazing valU'\naf Dr, Southworth's \"TJratabs\" and\nsee what a wonderful difference they\nmake! If this grand old formul*\nof a well known Physician bringR\nyou the swift comfort it has\nDrought to othere, you surely Wll.\nbo thankful and very well pleased\nIf It does not satisfy, the drugglet\nthat supplied you le authorised\nto return your money an first\nbox poirchaeed,\nCHMSTMAS TIDE\nby sending a\nWe sell in Two dozen lots at exceptionally low\nprices, including printing of your.own name and\naddress.\nFrom $1.50 to $9.00 for 24.\nLet us show you samples, or we will send them\nby mail.\nMs-Jttiaugtas!\nJob Department .\nNfiLSON, B. C. J\n THB NELSON PAIL\"? NEWS       THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1930.\nPage Three\nSCIENTIST TRICKS CROWS INTO\nREVERSE MIGRATION\nWASHINGTON,  Noir.   IB. \u2014 Why group of crowe so'far as day and\npirds fly north in spring and south* nttfht wire concerned. Released from\n_\u201e  \u201e\u201et    .\u201e_,\u201e  ....   \u201e,..._.   \u201e\u201e -.vthelr \u25a08peciany_.equipped  ttViftryi  tne\nbirds, for tha most part, - took an\nopposite route from that followed\nby ' another group of \"crows' held\ncaptive under natural conditions and\nset free a few hours earlier.\ni III autumn may bo answered us a\nrresult   of   tricking   crows   into   a\ni reverse migration.\nDr. William Rowan, of the tJnl-\nverslty  of Alberta, in reporting to\n[,_he -national   academy   of   sciences\nhis   experiments   with   crows.. says\n| the supposedly invariable migratory\nI instinct appears - due to eome hormone.    Xhla  ie an  extremely  im-\nI portent chemical substances released\nin tho blood stream by one of the\nI glands  of  internal secretion whloh\n| Is believed activated by the length\n[ of day..\nThrough   uae   of  artificial   lights\n[ihe  changed  the\nA centre of great histqrlo interest\ntn New Brunswick is the oity of\natt> John, on tho shores of the bay\nof Pundy. On tihe city's outskirts*\non a high hill over-looking the bay,\nla the -rite-of'Old Port Howe, Near\nthe shore is a tablet erected by the\nNational Parke of Canada branch,\ndepartment of the Interior, commemorating the landing of the United\nfor. the Empire Loyalists In 1783.\nDelicious SalacSa quality\nis ail inexpensive luxury\nAll AIJ A\n. TEA\n'Fresh Ir\u00abm the gardens'\nMove Will Make the\nBannockburn Field\nNational Memorial\nHEROIC SEAMEN HONORED\nEDD__tC_, Nov. 16^-COP)\u2014An\nappeal lor: t.l2_,000 haa been\nlaunched by the field of Bannock-\nburn National Committee to enable\nthe oommlttce todpreserve the Ban-\nnocfcbum battlegrounds as a national memorial. The committee\nreoently formed for thlp purpose\nwith Lord Elgin at Its head.\nThe committee haa obtained an.\noption on tho property, Lord Elgin\nstates, but negotiations with regard\nto the question of price have not\nyet been concluded though It Is estimated that S125.000 will cover the'\ncost of the preservation of the, hla.\ntorlo field of Bannookburn, The\nScottish banks have indicated their\nwillingness to cooperate In the appeal for funds, according to Lord\nElgin, and Lord Balfour of Burleigh has undertaken to solicit the\naid of banks abroad.\nLondon's Birth Rate\nLowest on Record\n, LONDON, Not. 19.\u2014(OP)\u2014London\nlatest birth-rate return ln the lowest on record, but there la a \"vast\nImprovement ln general intelligence,\" according to the Medical\nOfficer of Health of the London\nCounty council. The environment\nof the child today, he adds, ls\nIncomparably better than at the\ntime of Dickens. There are about\n80,000 basement dwellings in Lon-,\ndon whloh are considered unfit\nfor human habitation. Not all of\nthese are separately occupied, and\nthey are housing 100,000 people,\nThos.   whitehead,   a   commercial\ntraveller   who   represented   British\nfirms fn Western Canada for over\n40 years, died at Winnipeg.\n[SeeM Hear it! check it!\n... for things that determine VALUE\nShown above is. Mayor W. H. Malkln, of Vancouver, B. o., presenting to\n[\u25a0ship's carpenter Tom Elworthy (left) and Fourth Enginer D. R. Dean,\nof .the Canadian Paclfio liner Empress of Russia, medals of the Royal\nCanadian Humane Society for their heroic rescue of a drowning woman\noff the China coast. Elworthy leaped Into a heavy sea, infested with\nsharks to save* a demented Russian woman who had leaped from the\nEmpress of Russia ln the China sea off Shanghai and was evading efforts\nof a small rescue boat,to reach her. When the woman, a former swimming\ninstructress, seized Elworthy In a death-grip from which he was powerless to free himself, his shipmate Dean swam to the rescue, finally, saving\nboth Elworthy and the Russian woman.\nWsTBML\nmMsm\nwith the\n001_DE_f VOICE\nNo more thrills in radio ?\nHear the new Atwater Kent. Thrill\nto the rich, true Golden Voice.\nGive Vent to your own self-expression with the perfected Atwater Kent\nTONE CONTROL ... it gives yon\nfour distinct variations in the balance between bass and treble.\nOperate the new Quick-Vision Dial\n\u2022.. note how quickly and easily you\nselect your station. All station markings always in full view, as easy to\nread as a clock.\nSee the new models... four of them,\nall finished in genuine No-Mar. Ask\nyour dealer today.\nMalcolm and Hill Limited, Kitchener\nOntario, Canadian Licensees .\nlicensed by Genxllan Radio Patent* Ltd. '\nRADIO SALES SERVICE, LTD., Distributors\ns \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 -\u25a0\/\"\"' Vancouver, B. 0.\nSold in Nelson by\nPEEBLES MOTORS, LTD,\nMODEL 70\n.\"Vein matched walnut lowboy I\nFinUhedin. genuine NOMAS. \\\nComplete with Tubes,\n$239.50\nSOCIAL CONTACTS OF BIG-SHOT\nGANGSTERS SHOW MANY OF THEM\nARE LIONIZED; THE TYPES VARY\nSome of tho U. 3. gangsters who^> scandal over recorded in sport;\nare shooting their way Into I the\nfront pages are being increasingly\nsought after by the \"best society,\"\nwhloh is aiding tlie social ambitions of the racketeers.\nTho general Impression of the\nordinary oittzens is that gangsters\nare well dressed and vulgarly moneyed toughs who may he found, if\nat all, engaged In blazing away at\neach other in non-deslrahlo residential  district.\nThe fact Js that gangsters'\npower in Vnany U. S. cities Is not\nfar from the citizens elbow and\nin somo communities it is approaching the citizen's neck. Por\nrackets, political corruption, trade\nIntimidation, prohibition antics\nand sporting siculldudgery on\nthe grand scale are aU aimed at\nthe  ultimate   consumer.\nWithout doubt, the strangest factor In the entire business la that\nthe gangster,. as . such, ls making\nsocial strides, says Edward Dean\nSullivan, author of \"Chica\u00ab0 Surrenders,\" in Rodbook, For ft Is i\nfact that the successful gang leader of today has passed through\nthe era of curious toleration and\nhas become a factor in racing,\nsporting, political, theatrical and\neven literary Bohemia In the\nneighboring republic\nLionizing  the  Gang  Moguls\nIn many instances such characters havo not ''edged la\" to acceptable social contacts\u2014but, rath\ner, havo been Bought after. Some\nof these gang moguls\u2014representing\ncrime, graft and murder\u2014 have\nbeen lionized in recent years\nmuoh as a champion pugilist was\nlionized twenty years ago.\nUsually they are not\u2014as most\npeople suppose\u2014merely an amalgam\nof fiend, viper and gorilla. . Their\ntypes vary as do types in any group\nor stratum). Quito apart from\ncasual social contacts the gangsters,\nwith their. fingers ln booze, politics and union rackets, with this\npolitical power and great wealth,\nhave becomJo Increasingly useful\nto respectable and essentially honest people who must meet conditions as they find them ln tho\nbusiness, political or even, social\nworld. People In? business and\npolitical life have been forced\nthrough expediency to make social\nconcessions to those useful to them\nin  either  sphere.\nFor years In Chicago secret tax\nassessment have been one of the\nprincipal sources of twisted political influence. Some precinct captains have welded a terrific power\nover tho tax payers bv being able\nto set tho tax whloh was paid\ntoy any individual at anynotch\ntheir canny political hearts desired. Persons of wealth and prom-\nInenco got to know first the political precinct captain and then other political notables. And in that\ngang-ridden town there would automatically be gangsters among\nthem.\nIn countless instances, thero and\nelsewhere, leading property owners\ncould save themselves from $10,000\ntb (100,000 by merely being nice\nto the right\u2014or wrong\u2014people, A\nsimple method, indeed, of giving a\ncorrupt machine the confusing\natmosphere of Bemi-repeatability.\nTho Individual, however righteous,\ncan do littlo about it, and that\nlittle at tremendous personal sacrifice.\nDevious Ways of Getting; In\nThere are countless other ways\nfor the racketeers, crooked politicians and their kind tn move about\nsocially, Rothstein, in New York,\nwas an example. He Ultimately\nknew countless men of stellar social and officiil position. One of\nthe factors that aided Rothstein In\nthis soclai easing was the notable\nWhort memory of the public of\nany typo regarding details of criminality.\n-Rothstein was known to tho police as a \"cop-shooter\"; Jo big\nthloves as a \"fence\"; known to\nWall Street as the backer and planner of the only $5,000,000 bond\ntheft   in   financial   history;   known\nto   gamblers   as   the   greatest   crap \u00ab100% B< c> owned and Controlled\"\nshooter of all time; known to baseball as tha instigator of .the .worst K!S\nknown to prohibition enforcers as\nthe largest individual banker of\nbootleggers ln the country; known\nto county and Federal District Attorneys as the braln behind the\nswindling of thousands of poor\npeoplo ln one of the most flagrant\nknown as the largest and most\n\u2022unethical bettor in all turf history up to the time of his death,\nRothstein used everybody. He\nprized his social contacts for gain\nas well !'.-, for glamor. They meant\nmoney, for ho could get to tho\n\"key\" people through these unsuspecting social figures, whom he\nused for conductors for criminal\nlightning. As ls true of most crm-\ninals, he classed his soclai superiors as mental inferiors, merely boo\nlions to be teamed with underworld tigers for definitely established ends.\n\"Scarfaco Al\" Capono, Chicago\ngang' leader, has no particular social illusions. Yot a couplo of years\nago he wns rushed with a fairly\ngood' social grade of persons at\nMiami, including many celebrities.\nThe mansion he leased was not far\nfrom that occupied by Mr. Hoover,\nthen President-elect.\nCapon's Parties at Miami Homo\nPeople either, like Oapone oi\nwant to kill htm. As a newspaper\nman, Mr. Sullivan has known him\nfor eight years in various contacts.\nHe ls the sort of a person that\nyou never see nt the edge\ncrowd. During the 1928 Miami\nseason, when events In the beer,\nbooze and bullets business were\nfavorable to him, Capone had tho\nleisure to play around, and obviously did not lack interesting company\nfor his house\u2014or yachting parties.\nHo not only enjoyed the remunerative holiday, but attained a certain Wzalrro social standing thereabouts. As this is written, he has\ncontracted tor a $375,000 perman-\nen  homo ln Florida,\nCapone has certainly traits that\nmight mako him endurable socially\nfor the thrill-seeker, Ho has a\ngreat habit of speaking only when\nlie has something to says. Then,\ntoo, ho would bo generous host,\nfor ho ls actually as spectacular\na spendthrift ai tho sporting world\nknows. Capono figures hla gambling losses at $4,000,000. And\nthough he haa worse traits, doubtless, he Is n0 boaster. His gan-\nland associates figure his losses at\nthree times that sum.\nThe gangsters have money, and\npractical politics cost money. The\ngangster ,who Is presentable, has\npower, and who wants to bulge\nsocially, can usually get as far as\nhe cares to go for social surrounding satisfactory to himself, far\nabove the limits of acknowledged\ngangland.\n\"BUILD    B.    C.   PAYROLLS\"\nThis\nInspires\nConfidence\nA mother living at Merrttt\nraised three children to v__-'\notoub health on Pacific\nMlllt. Tear after. year Pacific\nMilk goes Into homee of this\nprovlnco \u2014 rich, fresh and\npure. Its virtues never change.\nIt will be the preferred milk\nof happy families In the\nnext   generation.\nPacific Milk\nFactory at\nABBOTSPOBD,   B.   C.\nCANNY CAPTAIN\nSAVES EXPENSE\nFOR HIS OWNER\nHews Rudder From Timber,\nMakes Repairs and Completed Trip\nBOSTON, Nov. 10.\u2014The men who\nfollow the sea must not only bo\nbravo and hardy but they must be\nresourceful enough to outwit it\nwhen it threatens by one of its cap-\nrioes to carry away the profit of the\ntrip. From this follows tho story\nof Captain William Kelson or the\ntimber carrier Adams.\nLast summer the Adams sailed\nfrom Portland, Maine, for Gaspe,\nP. Q. Including her captain and\ncook the schooner's crew numbered\nsix men. She ran into heavy weather and while she wad still far away\nfrom her loading port, an ugly\ncross sea swept away her rudder\nleaving her wallowing helplessly in\nthe trough of the sea. Anchors were\ndropped overboard and the next day\nwhen the blow had abated a little\nher crew was able to manoeuvre\" by\nmeans of her canvas to a dock at\nPort Daniel.\nPort Daniel was formerly the site\nof extensive lumber mills which\nhave passed and tho town is now\npopulated by a few fanners and\nfishermen, Thei. were no facilities\nthere for making the needed repairs\nand the nearest dry dock wa3 230\nmiles distant In Plctou, N. 8.\nThe situation which confronted\nthe, men. of trie Adams was that of\nmaking the necesaary repairs as\nquickly and as cheaply as possible.\nHad it been' necessary to tow the\nschooner to Plctou where tho work\nwould have been done by the competent shiprlghts, the job probably\nwould,have cost $500.\nFORMER HELPS\nCaptain Kelson canvasses the\ntown and finally Inveigled a fanner into contracting for cutting and\nshaping thc necessary timbers.\nHardwood was necessary for a part\nof the construction and spruoe\nsufficed for the rest. In order to\nget the wood the men had to go\nfive miles back in tho hills and on\none of tho return trips a team\nof horses fell off tho side of a\nmountain and was killed. No broad-\naxes could bo found in tho town\nand tho men were cutting and\nshaping tho timber had to do It\nwith ordinary axes. <\nWhen th0 original rudder was\ncarried away by the sea the heavy\n\"irons\" which aid in holding the\nsections of timber together went\nwith It. These \"Irons\" also held the\nrudder to the eyes fastened to the\nstern of the boat.\nTho captain made a sketch of the\nrudder to enter the bottom of the\nhis men make wooden molds of\nmetal work he needed to complete\nthe job. He then took his models\nand \"fliwercd\" 30 miles down the\ncoast to a pulp company mill where\nho was able to get his three bronze\ncastings made.\nMeanwhile the timbers had been\nhewed into shape. The metal fasteners were applied after careful\nmeasurements had been made by\nthrusting a polo down the rudder\nwell. Then the schooner was hauled\nto a point off the breakwater where\nthere was 25 feet of water. This was\nhardly enough water to handle the\nmassive rudder but It had to suffice under the circumstances. By\ndriving staples into the top and\nbottom of the rudder and reeving\nlines through them, Captain Kelson and his men were able to lash\nheavy stones to the bottom of the\ndevice and thus sink it far enough\nto allow the rounded head of the\nrudder to enter the battom of the\nwell beneath the ships counter.\nOnce this was accomplished the\nlashings were cut so that the stone;\nwould fall off, Working from sma\nboats the men were able to get th\nfoot of the rudder into Its socket\nIn the shoe which runs from the\nkeel.\nThe next task waa to put In\nplace tbe heavy metal collars on\nthe rudder to which the tiller ls\nconnected. Thie was quickly accomplished, the wheel and housing\nreplaced a*nd on the same day the\ncasting hod been: received the Adams\nwae ready to sal] for Gaspe where\nshe arrived after a total of 13 days.\nMRS. RUDD WAS\nCROWPIONEER\nWynndel    Lady    Passes at\nAge of 68; Leaves\nFamily\nCRESTON, B. C, Nov. 19\u2014In The\ndeath of Mre. J. B. Rudd -of wynndel. which took place at St. Eugene hospital, Cranbrook. on Friday,\nafternoon, a familar figure In the\nearly-ninety life of Southern Alberta and the Crows Nest Pass has\nbeen removed at the age of SB*\nyears.\nMrs. Rudd was married at Clare,\nMichigan, in 1183, and after three\nyears at Baden, Ontario reached\nLethbridge in 1889: was a resident\nof Pitcher Creek lu 1896, Moyle ln\n1899 and from. 1904 to 1\u00bb18 was at\nBellvue, Alberta, at which point,\nthe Rudd'a operated probably the\nbest hotel ln the Pass, only to lose\nIt by fire prior to 1918. at which\ntime they moved to Wynndel, where\nfrom logged-off land they have developed on* of the beet fruit farms\nin that well known distriot.\nTlie funeral took place on Sunday afternoon from Trinity Church\nahd was ln charge of Rev, Carl\nBaase, Lutheran pastor, who also\nofficiated at the cemetery, with\nGeorge Nickel, W, A. Pease. B, Os-\ntrensky, Sam Moon. John Wittman.\nand H. Botts as pallbearers.\nThere was a large turnout of\nfriends to nay a last tribute of res-\npeot as well as many floral remembrances.\nMrs. Rudd leaves a family of two\ndaughters, Mrs. Richard Dalbom or\nWynndel, and Mrs. Boutnw of Bellvue. Alberta: and three sons. Andrew of Wynndel: John of San\nFrancisco, and Gus of Pincher\nCreek.\nIn the passing of Mrs. Rudd a\nrather unique family ohain has been\nbroken, ln that, she ls survived by\nher mother, Mrs. K__di(t of Lethbridge, and for at least the past\nthree years Mrs. Rudd was a great\nR-randmother ln the family that included a great-great grandmother.\nTREATMENT FC-B BLUB M?A_N    '\u2022\nIt  ls  estimated   that  blue   stain;\ndeteriorates the value of white Pine\nin the lumber market by from 8300,-'\n000 to $1,000,000 per annum, according to the degree of blemish.    The\nForest Products Laboratories of Canada, department of the interior, are\nmaking a study of  the  causes ot;_\nthis stain and of methods to prevent .\nIt developing while the wood is beta*\nseasoned.\nIf Your Ears Ring\nWith Head Noises\nIf you have catarrhal deafness or -\nhead noises go to your druggist and\nget   1   ounce   of   Parmint   (double\nstrength), and add to it Vi pint of \u2022\nhot water and a little sugar,   Tak\u00bb\na tablespoonful four times a day.\nThis will often bring quick relief\nfrom the distressing head noises.\nClogged nostrils should open, breathing* become -pasy and. the mucous\nstop dropping into the throat. It\nlo easy to prepare, costs little, and\nis pleasant to take. Anyone who\nhas catarrhal deafness or heed.\nnoises should give this prescription\na trial.\nHow To Reduce\nVaricose Veins\nHuh Gently and Upwnrd Toward the\nHeart as Blood in Veins Flows\nThat .Way\nMany people have become despondent because they have been\nled to believe that there is no remedy that will reduce swollen, veins\nand bunches.\nIf you will get a two-ounce arig*-\nlnal bottle of Moone's, Emerald Oil\n(full strength) at any first-class\ndruggists and apply it night and\nmorning as directed, you- will, quick- '\nly notice an Improvement which will\ncontinue until the veins and bunches\nare reduced to normal. .-\nMoone's Emerald Oil ls a harmless, yet most powerful germicide,\nand two ounces last a very Ions,\ntime. Indeed, so powerful is Emerald OU that old chronic cases of\npiles are often entirely absorbed!\nany anyone who is disappointed\nwith its uoe can have their money\nrefunded, City Drug Co, sella lots\nof  it.\n?&$*ifty\nOther Branches at  Winnipeg,  Yorkton,  Saskatoon,  Edmonton,\nCalgary, Lethbridge, Vancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria\nHARVEST SALE\nLadies' Wear\nKIMONAS. Made of good quality\nBeacon cldth. Trimmed with\nsatin ribbon or silk cord. Pock-\nerts. \u2022 Pretty blended shades of\nRose, Blue, Red and Mauve. Sizes\nsmall, medium and large. Exceptional values  __  $4.95\nCHILDREN'S FLEECED DRAWERS. Sizes 6 to 12 years. Regular values 95c. Sale price 590\nSuitable for snowy weather.\nCHILD'S VESTS. Natural fleeced\n\u2014short and long sleeves. Sizes 2\nto 14 years. Prices 250 to 750\n.HEAVY FLEECE BLOOMERS\u2014\n490.\nHATS. Made of felt or velvet\nShades are Fawn, Brown, Blue\nand Black. Regular values $6.95.\nSale price  83.95\n\u2014Second TWor\u2014H.B._\u2014\nHOUSE\nFurnishings\nBED SET, COMPLETE, Walnut\nfinish Steel Bed with round fillers. Coil spring and mattress,\ncovered with art ticking. Three\npieces complete. Harvest special,\n$21.00.\n\u2014Second Hoor-__B.C\u2014\nBoys' Suits\nand\nOvercoats\nBOYS' SUITS. New fancy tweeds\nwith two pair long trousers.\nGood serviceable suits for school\nwear. Sizes 28 to 36. Sale pries\n$12.50 and  $15,00.\nBOYS' OVERCOATS in all wool\nwith wool linings. 87.95, $9.95\nand $12.50.\n\u2014Mali.   Ftoor\u2014IUJ.C.\u2014\nDry Goods\nODDMENTS AT HARVEST\nSALE PRICES\n4 ONLY BABY COT GOl%.\nFORTERS. Covered with\nheavy quality Sateen. Fissured designs with self colored panel. Regular values\nup to $4.75 for, each 91.95\nLINEN AND UNION ROL-\nLER TOWELINGS for 150\nand 200 yard.\nBUFFET RUNNERS, lace\nedges. Assorted colors, for,\neach    _  200\nCUSHION COVERS. Figured\ndesigns on heavy cretonne.\nLess than half prices, for,\neach   __ 490\n \u2014Main   Floor\u2014n.B.C\u2014\n Page >Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1930.\n[LUCKY' GIRL\nBY Hazel Livingston\n^\u00bb__im_fflim\u00ae\nWHAT HAS GONE BEFORE\nCathie Paige marries her\nwealthy, elderly employer, Alfred\nFarnsworth. He ls a kind and\nIndulgent husband, hut Cathie\nIf lonely In the gloomy family\nmansion. Chinese servants, under the direction of Cheong,\nhave their quarters ln the base-\nment. and a sullen maid, Marguerite, In possession of nn-\nwholesome family secrets, has a\nroom on the third floor.\nBcarorty    realizing    it, Cathie\ndepends   more  and   more   upon\n. the friendship of Gordon Moore\na business associate of her husbands, Chester. Farnsworth's son\nwho hates Cathlo watches this\ninnocent  friendship   with   mu.ll-\nI  dona Interest,\nNOW GO  ON WITH THE  BTORY\nCHATTER   TWENTY-EIGHT\nWMnga like that, little things\nthat Ruth let Blip oocaelonly worried Oathle a Uttle. , .you'd almost think that Ruth hated her\nfor all she had been able to do\ntor the family , . .but that was just\nRuth's way . . it didn't mean anything. . .oathle managed to laugh.\nThe family's funny ways . , .\nEnld'a snubs, . . .Chester's meanness . . .even the dark 'and gloomy\nhoiue had little effect on her these\ndays- One fact blotted out ell the\nothera. Gordon Moore was coming\nto San Francisco, Kg would arrive\nany day now. There was a new Irrigation project coming up. He and\nFarnsworth  would   plan   It  togeth\ner. It would take weeks . . . perhaps months . , .they'd see each\nother often. . .\nCathie began looking for letters.\nHe'd write, her, of course. He'd\nwant her to know of it in his own\nwords. . . ,\n\"Any mall for me, Marguerite?\"\nCathie asked the question, over and\nover.\nAs time grew shorter and the\ndate of his coming drew neared and\nnearer her whole being waited upon the postman. Ho waa afraid ta\nleave the house, lest a letter come\nIn her absence.\nThe flower-petal look began to\nfade. Oathle waa getting anxious.\nGordon Moore didn-Tj write and\nhe declined Farnsworth's urgent invitation to make their home his\nheadquarters  on this trip.\n\"Thanks a lot, but I've made all\nthe arrangements at the hotel. Bent\nmy stuff there and everything,\"\nhe said.\n\"Then. well sac*, you often for\ndinner,\"    Farnsworth    compromised\n\"Oh, 111 bo around under foot a\nlot!\"\nHe did come to thc house often,\nand after the first trying, uncomfortable meeting, with Chester and\nEnid there too, and not a ohanoe\nto see him alone, It seemed natural and right to see him sitting in\nthe library in tho eveninjs with\nFarnsworth,.-He had little to say to\nher, or ahe to him, but sometimes\nhe would- forget to listen to what\nhis host waa saying, and hla eyes\nwould rest on Oathle. . . .oh he still\nloved her . . .she knewl\nAYLMER,\nQ&eLAMP\nthat saus\"We8c0ine\"\nIET your home bid a cheery greeting to your\n- guest. Light up with Edison Mazda Lamps . .\nthey help friends to distinguish your home and they\nadd warmth to your welcome. Use Edison Mazda\nLamps in every room. Their light is free from glare\n. . and they give full calue for current eon-\ntamed I For convenience, buy them by tho carton.\nL-30\nEDISON MAZDA\n_____________________\nLAMPS\n,A CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC PRODUCT\nMay We Supply Your Lamps?\nGUY'S ELECTRIC STORE\nOtJR STOCK OF EDISON MAZDA LAMPS\nIS ALWAYS COMPLETE\nColumbia Electric, .Ltd.\nJ^elsoa and Kimberley, B. O,\nThe ' surety of it made her bold.\n\"Need we be eo distant with'each\nother?\" she asked, a little wistfully\none evening when he waa going. \"We\nwere suoh good friends when you\nwere   here   before.\"\n\"I know.\" %e looked down at hla\nshoes. \"I'm so damn self-consciousl\"\nhe burst out boyishly.\n\"But that's wrong,\" she eaid\ngently. \"Besides if there's anything\nthat will make people think . . .\nthink . . .what you're afraid of\u2014\nIt's that. Couldn't we bo\u2014sort\nof pals\u2014-like we were before?\"\n\"You darling!\" he said slowly.\nHa smiled, and readied out a long;\nbrown hand, deliberately ruffling\nher neatly colffed hair.\nShe laughed too, and the awk\u00ab\nwardnesa that had bfaon between\nthem was gone, never to oorae back\nagain, They talked and laughed as\nthey used to do. They had dollc-\nious, foolish Jokes, and hot arguments over things they really cared\nnothing about. They sat side by\nside on the huge, down-filled cuah*\nlong of the davenport, looking at\neach other, finding excuses for their\nhands to touch, content just to bo\ntogether.\nFREQUENT   VISITOR\nChester was there moat of the\ntlmo, and always Farnsworth. Cheater had taken to dropping in for\ntea . ..well, what of It? It waa all\nopen and abovo board, waant it?\nWhat could Cheater say? Besides\nIt made ParnBWorth happy to see\nhim a frequent visitor and Cathie\nhad fallen again Into that beatific\nsate that had been hers In the\nmountains. She loved everyone und\neverything in the world. She wanted Everyone to he happy, She klaa-\ned the primroses and tulips Cheong\nbrougth to her to arrange in the\nflower bowla, 6he overlooked tho\nmost flagrant laalnoes and unexplained absences on the part of tho\nhalf-crasy maid. Marguerite.\nThat the girl was really mentally\nunbalanced Cathie was sure of at\nlast. How else to explain her mournful head-shaking long ratling sighs,\nand cryptic warnings about un-\nseon, nameless enemies whom (disclaimed were plotting Cathie's end?\nA few months ago Cathlo would\nhave been frightened, would $bave,\ncarried the tales to her husband\nbut it all seemed absurd now, and\nshe was so used to th\u00a9 woman's\nwhite strained face and burning\neyes that they no longer seemed\nsinister and tragic. . .It was Just\npoor Marguerite.\nThe gu*i shouldn't be allowed to\ngo out bo .much at night\u2014Cathlo\nknew that, but sho put off speaking\nof It. Besides sho had grown used\nto the creaks and taps and elghs\nthat she heard In the old house\nat night. All old houses are spooky,\nand that monotonous walliug of a\nfar-away flute wasn't anything to\nbe afraid of . . .probably one of the\nChinaman playing on some flute-\nHko instrument ln one of the honey   comb   of   basement  rooms.   .   .\nIt terrified her once . , .threatening, trying to tell ber of dark\nthings it knew. Well, Cathie wasnt\ngoing to be afraid of that old house\nany mora. It couldn't scare her.\nIt couldn't eigh and whisper to her\nof anything that mattered . . .for\nwhat can touch you when you're\nloved?\nstill . . .Marguerite ought to come\nin earlier. . .\nMarguerite, fs that you?\" she\ncalled waking In the small hours,\nhearing stealthy footsteps1 on the\nthird  floor  steps.\nSilence. Then Marguerite at her\ndoor, \"Did you call, madam?\" Marguerite wearing her most stupid\nexpression lashes heavy with mascara, eyelids smudged with bluelsh\npaint.\nIsnt it very late for you to be\nout alone?\"\nMarguerite's soft, weak'mouth\ntrembling. \"I wasn't alone.\"\nCathie hesitated, After all, waa\nIt her business?\nWhen     Marguerite     had  slipped\n......   touyin; whfM a t.nl] of that\nstrong perfume she used'. Cathie\nber pillow. Poivaps\nit was just aa well that she hadn't\n_-:d BBytt}lng, Her uusoanU surely knew all about the girl. He had\nhinted as much on that first day\nhe brought her homo. And if, for\nreasons of his own ho cho&s to\noverlook It, why shouldn't she?\n(To be continued \u2022\nTO.BE DEPORTED?\n)Mg\u2122agj-iaWMW_a_Bm__-BBI_B\n\"CAnswershy Beatrice\" . \u00a7\nBEtl\u00abl8tt_^^\nAlexander Laird, counsel for Mrs, Lim Fat Chung, 19-year old\nVancouver Chinese mother, shown, above, who was recently ordered\ndeported to China by immigration officers, announced that he had received a telegram from the department of immigration at Ottawa\ntha,t local immigration officials have been advised to defer further\naction  until   tho  case   is   thoroughly   investigated. .\nThe telegram, signed by. the deputy-minister, was in reply to one\nsent  by  Laird  to  Hon.   W.  A.  Gordon,  minister  of  immigration\nMrs. Urn Fat Chung, horn ln China, was brought to Canada six\nyears ago by her foster-father, Wong Chung Fong, who is said to\nhave bought her from hor parents for $100. Some time ago ehe married Llm Fat Chung, and sh now has a flve-montha old baby. Her\nhusband  Is a British-Columbia born Chinese,\n\"Unfunush\" Your Home\nIs Expert's Advice\nDon't Litter the House With Bric-a-Brae, Warns Lady\nMendyl\u2014Living Room Should Look, Lived-in\n...sa cream soaps,\nfor creaming vegetables, for m_m\nand gravlea, In\nbreads and cakea,\nwherever tha radpe\nsail* for milk, St.\nCbarlct w_. anure\narieher, _e_nt_\nresult.\n....\nMnfloroix\u2014to-iyfa.\nFRBB RBCII-BOOK\ncontaining nearly 200\nttatxdndpe*.\nTHB BORDBN CO., LIMITED\nBomer Aroule, V_oo__\n\u00a3*__ I,.. *_<P\u00bb Soak to, ,\nUrns m\nYour home should be \"beautiful\nunfurlshed\" If It Is to be really\nsmart this winter, according to Lady\nMendl, a famous authority who lead,\nan extremely busy double life.. beln_\nElslo de Wolfe, lntorlor decorator\nabroad and here, and Lady Mendl,\nsocial celebrity, known as one of the\nbeat-dressed women on the continent.\n\"Don't have that souvenir look\nabout your home,\" Is Lady Mendl's\nilrst bit of advice to the woman who\ncares enough how her home looks to\ndo something about It.\n\"Go In for elimination rather than\nover-decoration, Don't litter your\nhouse with bric-a-brac, just because\nyou have heard that home decorations, like fashions, havo _ono back\nto the more romantic and ornamental agos for their Inspiration. It\nIsn't true. Tastes In homo decorations may change and do. Bug restraint and the elimination of- tho\nunnecessary still are tho yardsticks\nof smartness.\"\nLight, air and comlort are the\nthree things Lady Mendl under-soores\nas first considerations in any ana\nall rooms. Sines tho living room\nls the meeting place of the whole\nfamily, It Is tho most importan'.\nroom ln the average home. Hor\ndefinition of a living rooms runs\nomethlng like this:\n\"A living room should look as If it\nhad been loved nnd lived in for\nyears It should bo big and restful,\na little shabby here and there, perhaps, but all the more satisfactory\nfor that, Uko an old shoe that goes\non easily. It should have big, welcoming, rathor sprawly chairs and\nsofas, simple decorations and no\nJunk. Even If It is small, thero\nshould be one grand-father chair,\nfor it gives more dignity to a room\nthan a dozen inferior ones.\n\"A living room needs' a certain\namount of order because thore is no\nrest ln a disorderly placo. But no\nformality should be thero. The llvlnx\nroom should reflect a certain flavor\nof the famlly'6 main hobby\u2014books,\nmusic, sports, or whatever tt is.\nEverybody should have a placo In\nthe living room's scheme, even the\npeta, or \"little people\", as Lady\nMendl calls them. In a smart room\nohe once was doing she made an old\nOhlne_e lacquer box with a canopy\ntop and little gold bells Into a perfect 6pot for tho family pet Poke.\nApartment homos have rules all\ntheir, own. Some of them are as\nfollows:\n'Never buy any v\/allpaepr because\nit Is 'new, \u2022different', or 'pretty.\nIf you do a small apartment ln\nivory, cream, gray or soft green for\nwoodwork and walls, every single\nroom will look bigger than pattern\npapered walls and imitation grained\nwoodwork. It Is unwise to work\nout a cut-and-dricd color scheme In\nsmall apartments. If you keep your\nfloors and walls neutral, you can Introduce dozens of soft colors Into\nyour home. Beware of big figured\nhangings ln small spaces. Why not\nuse plain coarse linen or raw silk lln\ndull blue, orango, brown or whatevor\ncolor you select for your key tone\nand get tho figured complex out of\nyour system by covering the arm\nchair with gay chintz?\"\nBedrooms aro a law unto thom-\nselVes, even in apartments, according to Lady Mondhi. You can use\nfloral paper on their walla whon tho\nentlro rest of the apartment or house\nIs plain. The bed should dominate\nthe bedroom. Besides the bed the\nImportant neoeseltles in a bedroom\nare a lounging chair or chaise\nlongue, a bedside table,' god lighting to read ln bed and a clock.\nEither in tho bedroom or If you have\na dressing room too. there should\nbe high-powered lights and good\nmirrors all round.\n\"Every woman should dress by a\nblaze of electric lights and be seen\nonly In tho soft luminosity of\ncandle glow,\" Is Lady Mendl's reolpo\nfor feminine loveliness. Her advice\nis to make' Sure your own home affords you this opportunity.\nA fit of sneering oan be stopped\nby swallowing three or four table-\nspoonsful of milk slowly.\nu' 111II 11 11 U'l 11 I rmrii\n\"j The Beauty Box \u2022\"\n: B Y Helen Follett E\n\"mi 11 in i in i iiiiml-\nWants Her to Give Up\nHer Children\nDEAB MISS FAIRFAX: i     '\nI am a young widow of 24\nand have two darling little\nchildren, whom I love dearly.\nThc gentleman to whom I'm\nongagod wants me to put them\nin a home beforo our marrlago,\nwhich is to take plaoe in January. His first wife divorced htm\nfor cruelty, but he says she\ndidn't lovo him. I feel badly\nabout giving tbo children up,\neven though he says I may\nhave them to visit me sometimes, and ne has no objection to my going to,see them.\nI love htm dearly\u2014all but tho\nway he feels toward my ohildren.\nThe other night ho whipped my\nlittle Blrl, aged 2, severely be-\noause sho cried when sho woke\nup ln tho dark.   What do you\nthink of my case?\t\nWIDOW\nYou woudln't like  It  a  bit if I\ntold   you   what   I  really   think   of\nthis man and the attitude he. seems\nto have forced you to take ln re\ngard\/to your ohlldren. It's a Question in my mind ii a man who\nwould beat a child of two really Is a\nnormal person.' Aa for marrying him,\nplease consider. well what you'ro\nletting yourself in fori A woman's\nfirst duty is toward - her children,\nand you've only to read tha papers\nto seo what happens to poor Uttle\nones who aren't wanted by cruel,\nInhuman people. The person to be\ncongratulated is. the first wife, who\ndivorced hlrtt. .\nTo Cure Ham\nSugar Curing   and    Curing\n\u2022 With Brine\nMany persons like to cure ap ham\nshoulder and several pieces of baoon\nthemselves. It's really very little\ntrouble to cure the meat, and\nhome-cured ham 1b lite a vegetable\nfrom \"our own garden.\"\nLaid, too, can bo tried out in one's\nown kitchen to good advantage, Jf\neconomy le an important factor the\nhousewife will find that' these tasks\nare well worth her while.\nOf course the smoking can't\nbe accomplished at home, but aa\nmost butchers have their own arrangements for smoking meats the;\nare wllllnj to look after this part of\nthe curing for their customers.\nThere are two common methods of\ncuring pork, \"Sugar cured\" meats\nare usually considered tho finest,\nalthough those oured ln a brine\nare preferred by some people.\nIf a girl considers It worth while\n\u25a0to. bo pretty and popular she must\nnot let hor laugh engine get rusty.\nThere is nothing eiluer than balng\n-to serious and women who never\nsmile are dull company. Tho world\nnee4 galctv and nonsense, which\nhoii' it to forguc \"a loo 01 things\nmat are beat forgotten. Laughter\niighiB up the eyes, tickles the\n.tver, aids digestion, fills out the\nchest ami washes ths lungs. Good\n.aughers don't run around blubbering about grievances and  troubles.\nEnlarged pores are supposed to be\ndue 'to poor circulation, although\nner.. ls a notion that a diet too\ni'lch ln fats makes the texture of\ni,ue skin unlovely. Treatment calla\nfor light PiLttuu with me finger\ntips, when the skin surface has been\nweii lubricated with a heavy cream.\nManage should be given at night.\nKvery morning dash cold water on\nthe face; dry gently and app.y\n, witch hazel or any reliable astringent.\nA combination of boric acid and\nbakina: soda forms a powder tbat\nIs highly recommended in treatment\nof blackheads and pimples Batho\nthe face at night with a bland soap,\nwarm water o.nd a,complexlon brush.\nRinse with warm water and. while\nthe flesh Is still moist, pat ln the\nboric end soda mixture. Go to bed.\nIn the morning sprav the face\nwith cold waler. Any treatment*.\nthat rouBes the blood streams ls\nbeneficial.\nTO SUOAB  CURE POMS.\nTwo and one-half pounds salt, 2%\nounces pepper, i\u00a3 ounce salt petpe,\n1 oup molassess, 60 pounds pork,\nRub about l tablespon salt\naround the bone of ham or Bhould-\nor. Rub well with molasses. Mix\nsalt, pepper and salt petre thoroughly and rub well Into tho meat.\nUse about one-third of th\u00a9 mixture\nand let stand three days.\nRub two more times at three-day\nintervals making three rubbings J,n\nall. Let stand in a cool, dry place\nfrom four to six weeks. Then have\nsmoked.\nTO CURE. WITH BRINE\nFirst rub each ham or shoulder\nwith 1 tablespoon powdered salt\npetw. Rub around the bone with\n1 teaspoon pepper. Mix Hfc pounds\nbrown sugar with 2 cups salt and\nrub meat well with thla. This quantity is enough for 50 pounds of\nmeat. Put a layer of salt in the\nbottom of a tub. Put in meat, skin\nside down. Sprinkle with salt and\nadd more meat. Let stand in this\nsalt for eight days. Take out, wipe\noff all tbe salt and wash the tub.\nCombine 6 ounces salt petre, 8 cups\nmolasses, 2 cups salt and 2 gallons\nbf water. Boll and skim. When cool\npour over meat in tub. The brine\n.-.hould cover the meat. Let stand ln\nbrine four or five weeks, turning\nm at once a week to be sure it ls\ncuring evenly, Bacon will cure in\nthree' weeks. Remove from the brine\nand smoke.\n\"Leaf\" lard may be bought in any\nbutcher shop or market and tried\nout at home. Cut fat in small plecea\nPut into a lave kettle with Just\nenough water to cover the bottom of\nthe kettle. This prevents scorch-\nnig when fat Is first put over flro.\nOook t slowty, -stirring frequently\nuntil the pieces of fat are orisp\nand crackly. When thes? \"cracklin\"\nMsttle to the bottom of the kettle\nthe lard ls done. Remove from\nthe fie and strain into a sterilized\n:;tono Jar or crock. When cold, tie\n1 clean cloth and several thicknesses of paper over the top.\nWould Like Them aB\nFriends\nDEAR\" MISS   FAIRFAX;   .\nX have a dear friend with\nwhom I am deeply In love. I\nwish for him many times when\nhe is not with me and am so\nhappy   when   wo   are   together.\nWhen 1 am vetting ready to go\nsome place with him, my heart\nsings a paean. Surely, this ia\nnot infatuation, because we have\nbene going together for two. and\na half years. When we.broke up v\nfor a abort while on aooouat of\n. differences of opinion. I was\nheart-broken. Now I'm happy\nagain, though tho difference*\nstill exist.\nThere are two or three other\nyoung  men  whom I like  very\n. much and want to be friendly\nwith, but I do not like thai*\nlove-making, and avoid It, HoW\ncan I explain this ln a Way to\nmake my loved\" one understand? .\nOf course, I could, and would, if\nnecessary, give them all up for\nhim, but I don't think that it\nought to be necessary. Won't,\nyou please advise me? _\nDon't you think the simplest way\nie always the best? Why not teft\nyour friend how things are, tbat *\nyou'd like to'have these young man.'\nas pals, to see sometimes and to\ngo about with, and ask him if ha\nobject*? Aa a matter of fact. If\nyou're not engaged, he haa no right\nto object. But as you're so deeply in\nlove with him, his displeasure would\nbe the laat thing you'd like to\nincur.   '\nDeveloping the bust is a long\nurooess, but pcrfilatenoe wll accomplish wonders. Massage every nlnht\nwith cocoa butter. Every morning\nuse the oold epray. Do deep breathing exorcises, All exercises that.\nnull hajd on tho muscles of the\ncheat and upper arms tend to fill\nout the ''rigger.\" Vocal culture is\nconsidered  effective.\nCoiffures aro inclined to be fluffy.\nLittle curls about, the oars are no\nlonger glued down flat, but are\ncombed out and known as \"foam\ncurls,\" like the foam on tho crests\nof the ocean waves, or sumpln Ilka\nthat. New millinery allows a larger\ndisplay of hirsute loveliness.\nTIPS ON TABLE TOPS\nClean llnons are the foundation\nof an attractive tablo. it ls better\nto use runners of linen or lace, doilies, or place mixta, than a tablecloth\nthat ls spotted or soiled.\nThis type of table covering demands a well-cared-for table top. A\ntablo made . of unpainted - wood\nshould be frequently washed with\nsoap and water, then polished with\nwax. Painted, varnished, or enameled surfaces also need an occasional cleaning with a oloth which has\nbeen wrung out of mild, lukewarm\nsoapsuds. The surface should be\ncarefully rinsed with a clean, damp\ncloth, end polished with a piece\nof flannel or chamois. A lustrous\nfinish may ho obtained by following\nthe washing w^h.an application of\nfurniture polish.\n.SOUND   ADVICE\nA woman writes to a. nowskmper\ndoctor inquiring the cause of swollen lips. \"Could K be caused by\nkissing or by pomade?1' she wants\nto know. And the doctor who seems\nto be humane and full of wisdom,\nsuggests that, she discontinue the\nuse of pcniniade for a whllo glrst,\nand seo  what happens.       fc\nPOT OF PAINT\nDOES MUCH TO\nCHEER KITCHEN\nHow much more fun it is to prepare meals in bright, colorful klfcch-\nns than it used to be In the old-\nfashioned room wltb the black cook\nstove, ''dingy walls and curtalnless\nwindows. Nowadays the kltchon tools\nhave blossomed Into more colors\nthan tha hollyhocks know and tbe\nwhite enamelled stove adds the finishing touch \u2022 of cleanliness ahd\nbeauty.\nWith an ivory white kitchen and\npretty chintz or muslin curtains of\nblues, pinks and mauves, It is. an\nadvisable plan to havo the kitchen\nutensils with matching handles. All\nthe knives, forks, spooD*. spatulas and cake heaters havo had' gay\n\u25a0colors for-some time, but now even\nthe good old general utility grinders\nhave painted handles of many hues,\nWhat a difference to thc cook and\nhence to the cooking!\nTiles or porcelain tops on small\ntables have proved ao practical that\nall the kitchen helps have them\u2014\ncabinets with tile tope, small tables with drop leaves of porcelain\nand the kitchen cabinet has its\nshelf of hard white aurfaoe.\nTo go to the garden varieties of\ncolors, ono must not. forget the, gay\nooreai shelves. Bets of spice boxes,\nbottles for vinegar and oil, and covered Jars for rioe, etc., are painted\nto match. It ls the littlo things that\ncount In the. beautifying of ,the.\nevery day implements, there is no\nexcuse for the cUnginess of the up--\nto-date housewife's work-roqm. With\na Jar of paint and a brush wonders\ncan be worked. Try it and see for\nyourself.\nTHE   POTATOES    SAVED\nIf you find the dinner is going\n;o bo delayed for some time and\n'he potatoes .will have to stay ln\nshe boiling water too long, either\nmash or rice them and they will be\nmuoh more palatable -than water-\nfiogged boiled potatoes.\nOtGOOtiOMt-\nCUBES\nlit Tins ol 4 and 10 Cnfees\nM>\n^iiaiilliilliiiiHuiiu\"\nWiiiiiiii'iiiiiii\/nuiiiw\n\"I'se in Taw, Honey'i\nuckwheat Days\nare Here Again\nEyes brighten at these\ndelicious Pancakes so\nquickly made\nThere's something in the crisp-'\nair of frosty mornings that suggests the inimitable tang of\nbuckwheat cakes for breakfast:\nWith  Aunt Jemima prepared\nBuckwheat Flour, they are made\nin an instant.   Simply stir with\nmilk or water and then cook\non a moderate fire.\n\u2022 No waste, because you mix only\nwhat you need and the buckwheats will be ready while\nthe coffee is boiling.   Fit for a king; yet cost only a\npenny a plate.\nAunt Jemima's recipe was famous throughout the plantations of the Old South. Her own ingredients, ready\nmixed, come to you to-day just as she used them, and.\nyou get the same golden-brown, delicious pancakes.\nServe whichever you prefer ... buckwheats or southern\npancakes. Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour comes in\nthe red package ... Aunt Jemima prepared Buckwheat\nFlour in the yellow package. Keep both on hand and\nbe ready for all-demands.\nAunt Jemima\nprepared\nBuckwheat Flour\nProduct ot the Quaker Mllla, Peterborough and Saskatoon last\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS        THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1930.\n4\/_\nPage Fiv\u00ab\nRubbers\nTo Fit   All Feet\n, Whether small''or.\nbig or' in between,\nbetter buy them\nnow. Do not take a\n$hanee.'Wet feet may\nlead you to the\ndoctor.\nR.ANDREW\n& CO.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nIS. T. CLUB MAY\nSPONSOR PLAY\n' Jkt a meeting of the Skookum\n\u25a0runcum olub of \u25a0 St.' Paul's church\nIn the school-room We^nes','>y eV\n\u25a0ilng members planned' for and'\n\u25a0>ractlced -'a' play entitled \"Sylv\nIvhich they may put on ln the\nluture. A-fair number wad present.\nTired and    . :\nRundown\n\"Before taking. Lydia R\n| Pinkham's Vegetable Com-\n[ pound' I was always feeling\ndied, weak and rundown and\nI worried over things. Since\njcaklng the'Compound that\nfeeling has left me. I can work\nnow and not get so tired. I do\nmy wash and take care of my\nhouse and three children. I\neat and sleep better. In fact, I\nfeel better in every way. I will\nanswer letters from interested\nwomen at any time.\"\u2014Mrs.\nH. C. FletcKer, 127 Smith St.,\nTetaboro, Ontario. \u25a0\nLytjia ErPinkliaiii's;\nVegetable'Gdmp.ojind:\nSociety\nTkis column is conducted by\nMrs; M. J. Vlgneux. AU news\nof. a social nature, including receptions, private entertainment,\npersonal items, marriages, etc.,\nwill ' appear ln this column,\nTelephone Mrs. Vlgneux at her\nhome. 619 Silica street.\nA charmingly arranged bridge party\nwas given by*\"* iSxs. A. L. McCullooh yesterday afternoon at her\nhome on. Mill street when she\nchose yellow and bronze chrysanthemums for her floral decorations.\nMrs. McOufltoeh'B Invited guests\nnoluded Mrs. Peters, Mrs. B. E. L.\nDewdney. Mrs. W A. Nlsbet, Mrs.\nJames oShea. Mrs. C. B. Appledale,\nMrs. William Waldie, Mrs. Alex Lelth.\nMrs. H, H. McKenzle, Mw, W, M\nWalkor.Mra W. B. Orubbe, Mlas M\nJameron, Mrs. J. A. Gibson, Mrs. W.\nM Cunliffe, Mra. D. A McParland,\nMrs E C Wragge, Mrs. Paul Lincoln, Mrs. Leslie Craufurd, Mrs. H.\nRoallng of Willow point, Mrs. Hugh\nW. Robertson, Mrs. A. D. McLeod,\nMrs. L. V. Rogers, Mrs John Cartmel,\nMrs W J. Grove. Mrs. W. E. Keyt.\nMrs F C Whitehouse, Mrs. Harold\nLakes, Mrs. E. Gk Matthew, Mrs, W.\nO, Rose. Mrs. R W.Hlnton. Mrs B T\no'Grady, Mrs. W. T. Potherlngham\nand Mrs. 0. B. Garland\n* *   \u2022\nMajor and Mrs J. Hamilton Stubbs\nof Kaalo were visitors to town yes-\nterday,\n* \u2022 * * f .\nMrs. L. 3. DeGans of Edgewood\nIs spending a few days In the city,\n* Mrs. J. A*. Pear of Gold Hill, in\nthe Lardeau, was a recent visitor\nIn town at the home of Conductor\nMid Mrs. J. Bird, Viotoria street.\nShe has now left for a few weeks\nvisit to Spokane.\n\u00ab   \u2022   *\nCaptain and Mrs. Walter Wright,\nTerrace apartments, have as their\ntruest Mrs. S. S. Leary of Nakusp\nwho ls a delegate to the Kootenay-\nArrow Lakes joint Women's Institute\nconference.\n\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0;.* \u25a0-\u2022-.\n* Mrs. J. H. Blcham of Procter ls\nIn the city the ijuest for a few days\nof her sister, Mrs. A. E. Jerome\n* \u2022   \u00bb.\nMr. and Mrs, Pred Spiers of Kaslo\nwere recent  visitors  to  town.\n\u25a0;\u2022*,*_.\nMr. and Mrs. A. G. Monkhouse\nand son Melville, of Moyle have\n\u25a0\u25a0iiken up residence at 816 1-2\nBaker street.\n* \u2022   *\nMrs. J, Bird, Victoria street, is\nvisiting Revelstoke at the home\nof her son-in-law and daughter\nMr. and Mrs. T. R. Galllcano.\n* \u2022   \u00bb\nYesterday afternoon Mrs A, E.\nJerome entertained at the tea hour\nwhen she was assisted by Mrs J.\nH. Blcham and Mrs. J. Massey,\nTnvited guests included Mrs. J. Ryan,\nMrs. Rex Little. Mrs C. Uplnskl.\nMrs. D. Do Blousa, Mra. W. Jeffs,\nMrs G. Massey, Mrs. *A McPherson,\nMrs George Scott, Miss K. Scott, Miss\nIda Ryan. Miss Annie Blewltt, Mrs.\nW. Williams, Mrs. E. Kline, Mm.\nJ. H Blcham, Mra E. H Merrlfleld of\nProcter and Miss Eleanor Merrlfleld.\n* _   \u00bb\u25a0\nMrs. Hugh Ross, Silica street\nhas left for Pasadena Califi, where\nshe'will visit for the next few weeks\nwith her son-in-law and daughter\nMr, and Mrs. Leslie Bedford, formerly of Nelson after which she\nwill return to viotoria and spend\nChristmas with another son-in-law\nand daughter Mr. and Mrs. Ernest\nKeatley. Mrs. Ross made the trip\nas far as Seattle by motor with\nfriends,\n* *   \u2022\nBecause of the illncsa of her\nmother, .MTs. R. D. Barnes hae been\ncalled to Pettaplece, Manitoba. She\nwill leave on the boat this morning,\n* *   \u2022\nMrs. J. T. Andrews and her two\ndaughters Prances and Betty Jane\nhave returned from a weeks motor\ntrip to Spokane. They were accompanied by Mrs. W. A. l^urman who\nmotored down with her and also\nHoward Thurman recently of St.\nPaul. Minn.\n* *   *\nThe home of Mrs. D. C. Praser on\nVictoria street was a bright scene\nTuesday night when the Graduate\nNurses association met to mako\nplans for a benefit bridge to be\nheld shortly, A soclai hour was\nthen spent when those present Included Miss Agnes Cant, Miss Alberta Cook, Miss Archer, Miss Toots\nHouston, Miss Mary Madden, Miss\nDorothy Brown, Miss Joyce Leslie,\nMiss Helen Wharton, Miss Christina\nAllan, Mrs, Anthony Banks and\nMrs.   Dyke.\nColored footwear for the street\nwill be TXme Pashlons's demand in\nhe spring,\nNESON ROTARY\nCLDR IS GUEST\nOF TRAIL CLUB\nWomen's Musical Club Entertains Joint Gathering;\nScores Heavily\nTRAIL, B. 0., Nov, IB.\u2014Nelson\nRotarlans snd Rotaryannee . were\nguests of the Trail Rotary olub at\na banquet and musical program\nthis evening, at which the Women's Musical club of Trail made\nIts premier appearance of the season, scoring heavily. Mrs. S. B.\nMcDiarmid conducted, with Mrs. C.\nWright accompanying at the piano.\nSoloists for the evening were\nMm.. Jeff aires, Mrs. R. Cook, Mrs.\nBergeson and Miss C. Whlttaker.\nDr. C. S., Williams, president of\nthe Trail Rotarlans, welcomed the\nguests. W. J. Meagher responded on\nbehalf   of   the   Nelson   visitors.\nW. A. Porteous and S. S. McDiarmid entertained with memories of Trail 50 years ago, > Mr. Porteous reading numerous clippings\nsupposedly from Issues of The Nelson Dally News and the Trail Times\nof 1931 to 1980.\nOu behalf of the Rofarians H.\nClark presented Mrs, S. 8. McDiarmid with a basket of roses.\nThe remainder of the evening was\nspent ln dancing.\nSEEKS SOLVE\nTROUBLES OF\nTBE INDUSTRY\nBasement Clearance\nSALE\nCosts Are Forgotten Values\nThat Tell\u2014\nLLOYD LOOM tPHOLSTEEED CHAIRS AND\nROCKERS. Spring scats. ,811.95, 815.75,\n$16.85,  $17.50.\nTHREE ONLY SOLID OAK DINING ROOM\nSUITES. Old English finish. Buffet, Oval Table,\nand 6 Chairs. Leather'slip seats. $112.00,\n$116.50 and $104.50.\nSOLID OAK OLD ENGLISH FINISH CHAIRS\nAND ROCKERS. Genuine Leather Spring Cushions. $24.50, $19.50. Tapestry covering, Walnut finish  ,  $13.75\nBED ROOM ROCKER. White enamel finish,\n$6.50.\nOak and Walnut finish    $0.50\nNURSERY ROCKER, Golden finish  _. $2.75\nBOSTON ROCKER     $8.50\nKITCHEN  CHAIRS,  double rung.  Only  2 to a\nv customer   . .\u25a0_.,.;   $1.23\nStandard Furniture Co.\nTHE STORE 0_\", QUALITY AND SERVICE\n(Continued Prom Page One)\nlnz off ln the past 20 years, he\nsaid, as many vessels reverted from\ncoal burning to oil.\nThe speaker pointed out that\nin addition to fuel oil competition\nthe British Coluraba coal operators also suffer from the Importation onto the province of Alberta\ncoal. In view of all theso circumstances, he continued, 2,600, coal\nminers have been displaced ln tho\nprovince. If It were not for these\nthings there would be no unemployment In the coal centers of the\nprovince, even In times like the\npresent,  he  added.\nConsumption of fuel oil ln British Columbia has almost doubled\nln the past five years. Mr. Dickson\nsaid, but despite the increase ln\npopulation, and increased uses for\npower, coal consumption has fallen\nfrom 3,100,000 tons in 1911 to 2,-\n250,000 tons ln 1028.\nAnother factor helping to decrease the use of coal for power is\nthe development of hydro-electric\npower, tt was stated. Coal at present\nproduces less than one-third of\nthe power used In the province.\nManv firms using coal do not\ngive It a fair show. Mr. Dickson\ncontinued,. ln that They are using\nthe oldest of plants. More modem\nplanrts nnd uP-tol-date methods\nwill give increased efficiency from\ncoal,   he   stated.\nIn closing, the chief inspector\nargued that as the ooal mining\ncenters \"of Vancouver Island spent\ntho bulk of their money in Vanoouver. Vancouver citizens should\neive the coal industry a fairer deal.\nHe pleaded with. owners of new\nbuildings to use coal, a product\nof the country, as opposed to fuel\noil from the United tsates.\nMr. Thomas Qroham of Comox\nstated that there is no tax on fuel\noil  imported  for  refinery  purposes,\nANCIENTCOSTUME\nIS PREFERRED BY\nGIRLSiOFAFGHAN\nThey Discard Modern Dress\nand Return to Native\nCostumes\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Nov, 19.\u2014\nStriking a note of- confidence in\nthe future _ of British Columbia,\nhis honor Lieutenant-Governor R.\nR. Bruce voiced the belief that the\nadversity of business depression,\nnow evident throughout the world,\nwould prove a1 blessing In disguise,\nduring an address as guest of\nhonor at the annual meeting of\nthe Vancouver publicity bureau\ntonight.\n\"I find It bard to realize.\" said\nMr_ Bruoe during his talk, \"as I\ntravel through British Columbia,\nthat there is a depression in trade.\nL have seen the wonderful hydroelectric plant at Ruskln, and at\nTrail I saw 1200 men at work constructing a huge new fertilizer\nplant. It renews one's faith to\nsee suoh propects under way at a\ntime when  there  is  a, depression.\"\nCiting Mayor Malkln and O. B.\nAllen, president of the bureau, as\nexamples, his .honor declared they\nhad not waited for something to\nhappen when they were v\/mug m-*1^\nin British Columbia. \"They took\nhold and made something h-op:\nho declared, \"and that Is what we\nwill have to do  in this crisis.\"\nGAMES AND\nINTELLIGENCE\nPESHAWAR, India, Nov. 19\u2014Remnants of Amanullah's attempt to\nmodernize Afghanistan, 18 unveiled Afghan girls trades their smart\nEuropean frocks for native costumes\nhere. They had been sent to Turkey\nlate in 1928 by Amanullah for training as physicians, nurses and-chemists and passed through here, on\ntheir way back to Kabul, the \"Afghanistan capital, to take up life\nas it was in the days before Amanullah's first trip to Europe,\nIt. ls understood that the young\nwomen were recalled by King Nadir\nShah through pressure put on the\ngovernment by the orthodox who are\nagainst the* Europeanlzatlon of girl's\neducation. This was one of the chief\ncauses, of Amanullah's unpopularity\nwhich led to hla downfall.\nAt the frontier the girls, who had\nbeen wearing European clothing\nnearly two years, were met by relatives who had brought with them\nbundles of native costumes. Without a murmur the travelers cast\naside their modern skirts and high-\nheeled shoes and slipped again Into\nthe Afghan attire tney had known\nfrom childhood.\nAnd at the border line tho girls\nthrew away their lip stocks and\npowder puffs and agreed that the\nold garments were quite comfortable,\nafter all.\nLADY LIBERALS\nPLAN FOR ANNUAL\nMEETING, NELSON\nFlans   for   the   annual   meeting\nnext   month   took   up   the   greater\nSait of a business meeting held\ny the Ladles* Liberal association\nhere Tuesday evening. Several members ' were received into tho association at  the  meeting.\nBRUCE POINTS TO\nTRAIL PLANT IN\nTALK, VANCOUVER\nSays  Hard Realize Depression When 1200 Men Work\nNew Plant\nWOMEN'S VOTES\nAID REIIGIUOS\nPARTIEUONDON\nLondon   Paper   Draws   Deduction From Statistical\nRecord\nOur psychologists tell us that the\nbrain power of an individual can-\npot be Increased; be ls born with\na normal intelligence, 100 per cent,\na sub-normal, 90 per cent, or above\nnormal, 110 per cent.\nThey tell us that nothing we can\ndo will Increase this degree of\nintelligence.\nHowever, I want to point out that\nIf you will not only let your children\nplay, but will see that thoy do play,\nthat whether or not you Increase\ntheir intelligence, you will certainly make available the 00, 100 or\n110 per cent of intelligence they\ndo have.\nAn Individual with 90 per cent\nintelligence, who is taking his placo\ntn the family and community life.\nIs certainly exercising a greater influence on life than tho 110 per\ncent who may have the intelligence\nbut has not these other qualities or\nqualifications that make a real man.\nAnd so a boy who plays or exercises\nmakes the blood making organs do\nmore and better work, the circulation\nof this good blood Is increased, and\nthe brain is nourished by this better blood and more of It. Ho will\nthus be better mentally and physically for this exercise,\nBut what about the other things\nthat will mako him an all round\nman?\nHe will have to meet other men\nIn mental or perhaps physical combat when he becomes a man, Aa\nProfessor Gallerani, Italy, points out\n\"the knowledge of one's own\nstrength, the rapid sizing up of any\nsituation, the actual sizing up of an\nopponent's strength and ability, are\nall given a tremendous stimulus by\nplay or athletics.\"\nBeing able to como to \"attention\",\nor be attentive to everything about\nyou in a game, ls tho first and\nforemost thing that is learned ln\ngames. To not do tho right thing\nat tho right time ls something that\nyou can scarcely forgive yourself.\nYou not only have to act aulckly\nbut you have to think quickly, a\ncombination of brain and muscle\ntbat makes for completo development.\nSo don't worry about your youngster's intelligence. See that he plays\nfootball and other games that make\nhim have to taks his place, and\nplay his part, whether he likes it or\nnot, He not only looks after his own\n'rights', but he learns to respect\nthe other fellow's rights also.\nAnd the spme applies to girls'\ngames; the group games \u2666hat are\nnow so helpful and popu*i'\\\nSEEKING CHURCH\nUNION\nLONDON, Nov. 19\u2014(By the Canadian Press)\u2014The votes of women in\nGermany have given increased -support to the moderate clerical party\nand to the Fascists, extreme right\nwingers, points out an editorial in\nThe Observer which used statistics\nof the sex vote to show that religion\nbenefits from women's suffrage while\nthe fair sex are not so reluctant, as\nis popularly supposed, to support extreme parties.   The editorial says:\n\"Before women won the vote there\nwas a current theory that their enfranchisement would, in some obscure way, transform party politics.\nEven now the British parties are\neach apt to claim that their program\nhas a peculiar attraction for women.\nBut in Germany, where in many\ntowns the men and women vote on\ndifferent colored cards, there is actually a statistical test of the direction ln which tbe sexes vote. The\nfigures we give today are taken from\nCologne and Wiesbaden, but where\nthe statistics fro mother towns are\navailable they give substantially similar results. >\n\"There Is only one tendency which\nmarkedly differentiates the women\nfrom the men voters. Tho parties\nwhich are definitely religious In basis . are supported predominantly by\nwomen voters.' In Cologne, for instance, tbe number of women who\nvoted for the great Cathollo Centre\nparty was nearly double that of its\nmale supporters. There is one other\nnotable feature, The common view\nthat women tend to vote for the\nmoderate parties and avoid the extremes has not very much to support It, True, comparatively few\nwomen1 voted for Communist candidates at tho recent election, but\nthe National Socialists, or Fascists,\nhave been almost as popular with\ntho women as with tho men.\n\"In general the parties have been\nfairly equally supported by both\nsexes. After all tho Influences which\ninduce men to vote for one party\nrather than another tell equally with\nwomen, and the notion that the\nelectorate would vote according to\nsex is a relic of a time when women were temporarily united by a\ncommon objection to not having the\nright to vote at all.\"\nSignally honored by the Pope, Rt.\nRev. M. J, O'Gorman, parish priest\nof the Sacred Heart ohurch in Edmonton was invited with the robes\nof a domestlo prelate and title of\nmonslgnor. \u25a0\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Nov. 19.\u2014\nChristians throughout the world today are seeking church union more\neagerly than ever before, declared\nthe most reverend A, TJ. Depencler,\nM.A., D.D., D.B.E., archbishop or\nNew Westminster, speaking today at\nthe fourth annual conference of\nthe clergy and laltv n* Ms diocese,\nln St.  James  church hall.\nHis grBice and the Right Reverend Charles D. Schofield, M.A., D.\nD., hlshop of Columbia, were tho\nonly speakers at the afternoon session of the conference. Both dealt\nw#h aspects of the Lambeth conference. Bishop Schofleld gave a comprehensive sketch of the background of the conference, and his\ngrace dealt In detail with the work\nof the committee on n*Hristlanlty,\nof  which  he   Is   a  member.\nCANADIAN\nCHRISTMAS\nExcursion Fares\nto Eastern Canada\nON SALE DEC. 1 TO JANY. 5\nRETURN LIMIT 3 MONTHS\nFARES FROM NELSON\nToronto S106.B5\nLondon 108.B6\nWindsor 106.58\nHnrnln. 106.95\nFeterboro (108.65\nOttawa 113.05\nMontreal 117.20\nQuebec 117.30\nSherbrooke $118.35\nBt.   Jobn 185.35\nSydney 146.66\nHalifax 141.26\nAsk for rates to or from any point\nDetails,  Tickets,   Sleeper  Reservations  from  any  Con. Pac.\nBy.   Agent,   or   write\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent,\nNelson, B, C.\nPRINCE OHO OF\nHUNGARY ATTAINS\nMAJORITY TODAY\nWill His Mother Renew Efforts to Have Him\nCrowned King?\nVIENNA. Nov. 10\u2014 (AP)\u2014Speculative eyes throuffhout Austria and\nHungary today were turned toward\nBolgulm where, at tho caatle ot\nSteenokerzeel, Prince Otto, the laat\nmonarchial hope of tho toppled\nhouse of Hapeburg. attains his majority on Thursday.\nCelebrations, consisting, of masses\nbanquets and parades, but all of a\nsome what subdued nature, have\nbeen arranged throughout the two\ncountries, tn honor of the young\nprince's 18th birthday.\nWhether hla coming of ago will\nadvance the aspirations of his\nmother, the former empress Zita, to\nhave her son ascend the Hungarian\nthrone was generally discussed, but\nthere seamed no lmmedlatn answer.\nThe Hungarian government, a\nmonarchy under rule of a regent,\ncontinues impartially to penalize\nboth those who call the country a\nrepublic and those who call Otto\nking of Hungary, at the same time\nthe country continues to postpone\ndesignating a member of any other\ndynasty new or old, as tho future\nHungarian soverign.\nPrince Qfebto remains virtually the\nlone contender for the crown of St.\nStephen whioh his father Carl I put\naside in 1918 when he abdicated\nand fled with his family to Switzerland, two years after hts ascension upon tho death of Emperor\nFrancis Joseph.\nThen the exiled king died in\nPunchal, Madeira, in 1922 and sJ^-tq\nthen bis widow's ambition has Ktft\nto see her son on tho throne.\nThe field was o.oared for him lost\nAugust. when his cousin. Archduke\nAlbrecht, took the oath of Blteg-\nlance to Otto as the head of \u25a0a*e\nfamily and contracted a \"morganatic marriage with Madame Irene Do\nRudnay,\nWord from the castle Q,t Steen-\noKerz:el. where tbe young i-rlnce resides with his mother, is tbat the\ncelebration of his coming of age will\nbe observed quetly with only members of the former royal family and\nnear relatives present.\nGREAT BUILDING\nTO DO HONOR TO\nSIR A. C. DOYL*\nLONDON, Nov. i-\u2014(By tho Canadian Press \u2014 Lady Doylo has an-\nannounced that the m* mortal to ber\nlate husband will take the form\nof a great building In London to\nbe a world centre for the epirlt-\nWillst movement. Letters from all\nparts ot the world havo reached\nLady Doylo suggesting various\nforms for a memorial. An American Admirer of Sir Arthur' wrote\nsuggesting a tower with a permanent light at the top. \"I should like\nthis memorial building to have\n11 dome with a naked flame burning day and night at the top\nt0 symbolise the burning faitAi and\noverlastingneso of our belief,\" said\nLady Doylo. \"We hope that the\nwork ln connection with the proposed memorial will begin shortly,\nand that peoplo of all countries\nwill respond t0 tho appeal whloh\nis about to bo issued.\"\nIt. will be some time before the\ntotal value of tho estate la assessed. The figure of $160,000 has\nboon mentioned, but Lady Doylo\nsasys tbat this ls entirely conjecture. \"Sir Arthur,\" aald Lady\nDoylo. \" would have been a much\nricher man had he kept to hla\nlegitimate work and not expend**'\nhis time and energy in the cause\nof    spirltuallwn.\"\nS1LVEB tOX BREEDING\nCanada waa the first to develop\nthe breeding of silver foxes in captivity and she has so maintained her\nposition in this respect that she is\nregarded as a world-leader by all\nother countries, whose representatives periodically visit the Dominion\nto 'seoure breeding stock and in\nsearch of knowledge and advice in\nthe conduot of similar imdertakings.\nIO,100WODS\nWRITTEN UPON\nONEJOSTCARD\nBolton Miner Regains Miniature Writing'\nRecord\nBOSTON LANE. Ens.. Nov 19\u2014Bert\nPasqull, 35, tne _uoinpioyed Bu.\u00abun\nminer, haa smashed all miniature\nwriting records by \"compressing\"\n10,000 words onto one side of a postcard.\nHe it was who a fortnight ago\nbroke the record of 3687, set up by\na German. In hts first attempt Mr.\nPasqull, who resides at 24 Rutland\nSt., succeeded in writing 4929 words.\nBut this figure was the record of a\nfew days only. jMr, James Tierney,\n34 Hastings Rd., Bolton, wrote 7351\nwoids.\nThat served to provoke Mr. Pas-\nquill to do better. After a week's\n\"microscopic penning\", he produced\nat th\u00a9 \"Journal and Guardian\" office on Baturday morning a postcard on which he has written a\nfootball report In addition to nearly\ntwo storlea-10,000 words in the space\nof 3 7-18th Inches by Bfa inches.\nAnd Mr. Pasquill can read It with\nthe naked eye.\n\"It ls my last 'do' at it\", said Mr.\nPasquill, admitting that he was\n\"jaded and weary\" towards the end\nof his ta&k.\nSupporting tho assurance that he\nhad done the work without tbe use\nof any instrument other than a\nmapping pen, he added, \"A magnlfy-\nIn^ lass is no use to me\u2014It only\ngets In my way.\" To anyone who\nchallenges his word ho la prepared to\ngive a demonstration.\nIn tho first 2 6-16th inches he\n\"only got 6037 words in\", eo ho resorted to smaller writing, \"and In\nthe remaining lft inohes he put\n4063 words. Not only eo, but In the\n3 7-ieths ho accomplished the feat\nof writing 184 lines, the majority\nof which contain over 60 words,\nwhilst two contain 71 words. And\nthe lines are wonderfully straight.\nIn formed that his record had\nbeen easily eclipsed Mr. Tierney told\na \"Journal and Guardian\" representative that ho would probably\nmake another attempt. \"I don't\nwant to boast, but 1 think I shall\nbeat the new record,\" he added,\nA Mississippi breeder paid $25,000\nfor the Jersey bull. Pioneer of Oak-\nlands, from the farm of tt. H Bull\nand ftoy.i  at Brampton, Ontario.\nIncreased Her Weight\n15 Pounds In Few Months\nMcCOY'S\nCod Liver Extract Tablets\n\"Your tablets have not only Increased my weight 16 pounds In a\nfew months but made me oheerful\nand more animated,\" so writes a\nprofessional organist She closes by\nsaying\u2014\"My case was difficult \u2014\nstubborn\u2014your tablets are wonderful\" Now you know how to gain\nweight. Get 60 tablets for 60 cents\nat   any   druggist anywhere \u2014 Just\naek for  MoOoy'B,        t\\\nAncient Whitehall\nChanging ShortI}\nLONDON. Nov. 19.\u2014(CP)\u2014Changes\nwhich Whitehall may well cousiuer\nrevolutionary are to tako place on\nNew Year's Day, wnen, by order of\nthe London county council, the\nportion of Charing Cross hi line\nwltlj Whitehall Is to be inccrporited\nln It. The Charing Cross numbers\nare from 9  to  40.\nWhitehall, which now runs northwards from Parliament street (at\nthe cenotaph) to the admiralty on\none side and the war office on t_io\nother, will be extendod right to\nTrafalgar square. This will meaJi\nthat a big re-numbering operti-\ntion affecting both Whitehall and\nCharing Cross must be carried out.\nBy far tbo greatest number of\nbuildings In Whitehall are, of\ncourse, government offices, and as\nsuch are so well known that they\nnever had a number allocated to\nthem. Whitehall, of course, will no\nlonger retain 'fs almost exclusively\nofficial character.\nPrank C. McOlory, town engineer\nof Brampton, was burned to death\nwhen he was trapped in his ear,\nwhich caught fire on the Dundas\nhighway near Cooksvllle,\nHusband and Wife Both Relieved\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n, PILLS ^\n1 Kidney *V\n'VHP\nAll Credit Goes lo Dodd's Kidney Pills\n\"I have used Dodd's Kidney Pills for\nbackache and they sure did me a lot of\ngood,\" writes Mrs. J. A. Kunze, Box 233,\nHerbert, Sask. \"My husband used them\nlast winter after he had tho Flu which\nleft him with such a backache that he was\nunable to get up. After taking two and\none-half boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills\nhe was completely relieved.\"\nDodd- Kidney PU1* heep the kidney, in goad condition\nto do their work of cleanioa and purifying the blood*\nBound kidney, mean pure Dlood. Pure Wood mean.\ngood health. Weak, nervod*. run-dovvn women ahould\nglve Dodd'. Kidney Pills a trial at once. t,_\nEach\npackage\nmarked\nChinaware\ncontains a\npiece of fine\nEnglish ware,\nold    ivory\ntint, new irregular\nborders.\nAFTER ILLNESS\nBOVRIL\nSaves You\nWeeks of Weakness\nQuick\nQuaker Oats\nCOOKS Di 2>\/_ MINUTES AFTER THE WATER BQILS        130\n Page Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1930.\nPublication every \"\"\"m exgept Sunday by lb* News Publlsb-\nInt   Company,   Limited   Kelson,   B.   O. \u2022\nBusiness letters should be addressed and checka and money\norders made payable to Tbe Nows Publishing Oompany, Limited,\nand ln no case to individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate oards and A. B. G. statements ot circulation\nmailed on request, or may be seen at tbe office ot any advertising\nannoy   recognized   by   tbe   Canadian  Dally   Newspapers  Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION BATHS\nBy  mall   (country)   per  month\nPer   year\nBy  mall   (olty).  per  year\t\nOutside   Canada,   per  month\nPer year\nDelivered, pet week\nPer   year   .    ... ...\nPayable In advance.\nMember Audit Bureau of circulation.\n_\u00bb   .00\n_ 6.00\n_ 13.00\n_ .\u00ab\n.. IM\n, M\n- 13.00\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1980.\nWater Power Development;\nDown the river at Corra Linn the West Kootenay\nPower & Light company is working upon a new power\ndevelopment for Kootenay river. Within a few years\nKootenay river will be developing a total of 202,000\nhorse-power, all by the same water, something\nunique in Canada's history.\nAt present the West Kootenay has three plants in\noperation which produce, all told, 167,000 horsepower,\nThe new Corra Linn plant will be built to produce\n30,000 horse-power and the Nelson City plant at Upper Bonnington, producing about B0OO horsepower, will\nbring the grand total with completion of the new plant\nto 202,000 horsepower.\nCanada's total waterpowe* development today is\nabout 6,000,000 horsepower. Kootenay river is certainly doing its share through activities of the West Kootenay company and the City of Nelson, for one-\nthirtieth of all the power development in the Dominion\ncomes from but a few miles of this rapidly moving\nwater.\nIn taking stock of Canada's position during the\npresent period of world-wide economic difficulty, one\nof the most inspiring features is the fact that the\nDominion's water-power resources furnish a seemingly irrepressible impetus to national progress. In the\nface of all the buffets of business cycles, water-power\ndevelopment continues to forge rapidly ahead.\nSince 1910 Canada's water-power installation has\nrisen from less than 1,000,000 to nearly 6,000,000 horsepower. The record of growth has been a marvel of\npersistency. . , ,    ,\nDuring the past 20 years, water-power development has maintained a sureness of advance through\nall obstacles\u2014through the pre-war slump, through the\ndisruption of the war itself, and through the drastic\nups and downs of the last decade. And today, m the\nmidst of world-wide depression, there is being carried\nforward the greatest program of hydro-electric installation in the history of the Dominion.^\nThis ability of water-power development to hold\nits forward course in the face of the recession in almost every other major field is one of the most fortunate and favourable factors affecting Canada s economic position and progress.\nAttractions for Tourists\nSeen and Heard in\nNELSOJN\nBY  J.   B.   C\n.Stock- and their long decline have\nkept many Nelsonltea ln materia,\nupon whloh to talk when some\nother subject does not present Itself. While many residents have\nalmost lost interest In the market,\nothers still watch tbo fluctuations\nquite closely.\nFollowing Is a little Pleco of\npoetry taken from the New York\nSun that will be ot Interest to\nNelsonltes whether thoy are playing  the market  or  not.    it  goes\nUke this:\n...\n\"GOING DOWN\"\nThe province of British Columbia, by its name\nand early day associations, is definitely earmarked as\nBritist Toasts coming to ^e country particularly\nfrom the United States, expect to \u00ab\u00ab* X&Le\ndistinctive character to indicate to them that they aie\ninTdifferent country. This is largely why   tourists\ntraVThorSe tTar has neglected this great Belling ffi. in the architecture W1 design of her buddings\u2014hotels, Madhouses, gas stations, etc\nWere we in British Columbia to have a typica\nnviern-h villaea of the Tudor or Elizabethan style, It\nSSdlbeiSf Meccifor all tourists on the American\n*8___. &\u00ab****\u00ab?\u2022 ^ attraction for them\n\u2022 sli %Jmi Tale, is Stratford-on-Avon, because it\nm w,~\u00abT. ffnriSi idea in its black and white style\n\"rfc hotel men  and people building roadhouse9 in\nadopt dM1^orofXIswc0nuu in^ea^e our tourist bus-\n_3&_S\u00a3 SL?S ISS be something en-\ntely different from what they see at home.\nTOe Interior handing and *jftU^4gg^\nings could also be carried out m style without any\nZtZl expenditure of money This ****?\u00ab\u00a3\nit would be well to point out ^ t^ose who are renovating old buildings, or contemplating bulling new\nones?Vat they sho_d as far as possible adopt this\nThe province has in recent years spent manymil-\niions of dollars on improved roads, and we are attracting a very fair proportion of the tourist travel, but &y\nattending to little matters of the kind suggested above\nwe can still further increase the attractiveness of the\nprovince to those who wish to come to us as visitors.\nFruit growers of the Kootenay district will soon have\nan opportunity to show their attitude towards a central\nmarketing proposal made by F. M. Black, chairman\nof the committee. Growers will meet in Nelson, December 4. It is the duty of every grower to attend\nthis meeting and others being held in their 'districts.\nThis duty is not only to the grower himself but to\nthe fruit industry and to the whole district in general. Every grower will have a voice in this marketing matter from which might come great benefits\nto the grower, the people and the province.\nOne of the arguments used against Governor\nRoosevelt of New York, in his recent campaign for reelection was that he imported his clothes from London. The tailors of Bond street take part in politics\nfurther afield than did their famous colleagues. of\nTooley street.\nBead me today's lows, mother,\nGive me the bottoms new;\nHell me If \"Steel's\" ntlll auotod.\nIs there a chip called blue?\nWhat of the ol__ and railroads?\nIs there a stook called Penn?\nTell me, ls New York Central\nYet down to five and ten?\n\u2022 .   *\nGo through the table slowly;\nI will be brave, I vow;\nWhat are Glllettr, and Carbide?\nHow cheap le _____i now\nIs there a quote on Blchfleld?\nIs there a bid for ..Nash?\nWhat can I get of Chrysler\nIf I've a dollar  c_h?\nWhat hss became of BVors?\nWhat Is It now nor pound?\nHow low Is Coca  Cola?\nWhat price Ib old Howe Sound?\nGon'ral Eleotrlo\u2014tell me\u2014\nIs   a   dime   per   load?\nWhat la the price per bucket\nNow for New Haven Road?\nTell me ln gentle whisper\nHow did the coppers close?\nIs It tsroe that  Anaconda's\nLower than  Gotham  Hose?\nIa A. Ss T, now celling\nTon points below Budd Wheel?\nSpeak!   Is the quote on Eastman\nCheaper than Newton Steol?\n\u2022 *   .\nDont hesitate to tell mc\nWhat price Ravbostos Man? .\nWill eli or seven dollars\nBuy full oontrol of \"Can\"?\nIs J. L Case still  sinking?\nAnd do the tables show\nU. 9. Tobacco lower\nThan Brlggs or Radio?\n\u2022 *   .\nRead on and spore me nothing-\nIs \u00ab'Motors\" down to three?\nAnd  Is \"Gas\" selling under\nRumely   or   Armour  B?\nOh, tell me whore ls Timken,-\nAnd what of Alcohol?\nThen you may bring the DOlson\u2014\nPor I possess them olll\n\u2022 *   \u2666\nProbably Fred Ewing has reBd\nthis littlo piece before. Anyway,\nITed, late last week, took all the\nstock ho has bought Heoenti,y,\nbought a safe deooslt box in a local\nbank, and thero ho hid them all\naway. He told his frlonds he wns\ngoing to forget about them all.\nPretty wise at that.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nIt la pretty tough on the farmers,\nstill speaking of tlie market, to\ndrive to town with a wagon load\nof barley and, at yesten_u_ s quotation, reoeive about S13.07 for his\nload of 60 busholn.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFigure It out for yourself. If he\nwanted two pair of galoshes, zipper\nstyle, one for himself and ono for\nhis hired man, ho would receive,\nafter disposing of a who'.e wagon\nload of barley, f'.i.av ln change.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nBut the fellow who is dabbling in\nstocks says now ls the time to buy\ngrain. It haa to rise eometlme.\nTrue enough, and it cannot go\nmuch   lower   at   that.\n\u2022 .   .\nNelson residents laat week buttoned up their coats a little tighter\nand with heads down bucked a\nstrong cold wind that blew off tho\nwest   arm.   It   was   tho   first   wind\nThat Body-of' Yours\nBy MS.  W.  BABION, M. \u00bb.\nCOLDS\nThe question la naturally asked\nwhy colds'are mote common during the oold weather if ool_ are\nnot due to the coldness of the air.\nAs a I matter of faot what are\ncalled \"colds\" may be due to a\nnumber of iJauaea\u2014overeating, .un--\ndefeating,'exposure to dampness, exposure to oold, overwork, underwork\nand other causes.\nYour family doctor will teU you\nthat he finds colds amongst children who are not getting enough to\neat, and In other children where\ntoo muoh has been eaten. Factory\nphysicians report the same oondltlon\nln adults.\nIn tho esse ot.__.'-\u00ab food the\nblood is not Vtch enough to ward\noff the orgaailsma that attack the\nmucous membrane of. nose, throat,\nand lining of' bronchial tubes.\nOverwork likewise weakens the\nresistance of the blood..\nWhere there haa been overeating\nthore la so muoh waate In the .blood\nfrom the unnecessary, food , eaten,\nthat again' the. blood is not able\nto fight off the organisms, and so\ntlie cold starts.\nNow although simple oolds cause\nmore loss ofitlmp. from employment  .\nthan any other ailment, the serious clear\u2014eat lightly.\n\u00ab>thing to be considered Is what tesM\ndevelop or follow from.< a slmpll\ncold. f\nInfluenza, broncho .. pneumonia\npneumonia Itself, may ail develoi\nfrom a simple cold; and that Is whl\na oold should not be treated llghtf\nly^-ehovud never be negleoted.\nAnd the way to got, ahead of\ncold,  to beat  pneumonia or othd\nserious condition, It' to build up thf\nnatural resistance bf. the body.\nThere are two things to do and i\ndo  Immediately. ..'First get rid  i\nthe wastes, the poisons in the blool\nby a good purgative medicine\u2014c_or\nmel followed by epsom salts,, castoj\nall, and sometimes the use 'Of ehe]\nmas.   Second, give the body, psi\ntlcularly  the  heart,  as much\n_ possible by getting right to .1\nAs a matter of fact It will be youi\nheart that will flghtroff the ailment\nIt will be your heart that you mi-\ndepend on to save your life if pneu]\nmonla sets In.  And lying down outj\nIts work down tremendously.\nWhat about food?.\nStrength must be maintained, i\nwhile the . stomach ' ana intestine]\nmust not ibe given much work fol\na couple of days, real good fooda\nconcentrated foods\u2014meat Juicer\neggs, milk\u2014should be given.\nDon't   neglect   a- ..cold.    0}et  of|\nyour   feet   at   once;   get   Intestlt\nNew Radio Wonders\nr^^^-'\n^f^JJkP\n\"Those engines seem to be having a hard time of it.\"\n\"Yes, indeed, Ann.  Why don't you get out and walk up this n_U\nAustralian Trouble Seems\nan End\nLabor movement, always aggreBBivc\nand at tho moment dominant in\n.ertcral and state politics, against\n.he drastic measures of economy\nwhich Australia will sooner or later\nhavo to put into effect, are the\nforces in an intense battle which\nwill end elth\u20acr In a serious financial crisis, or will put Australia\njack on tho road ot economic recovery. The outcome Ib awaited\nwith Interest and sympathy in the\nsister nations ot tho British Empire and Indeed throughout thc\nworld.\nPrime Minister Jnracs Scullin,\nwhose hair turned white within thc\nfirst year he held office; who was\n,*. sick man when ho left Canbom\nfor the Imperial Conferenco ln London, hns taken a Irish lot of burdens on hla -already heavily-taxed shoulders with the now tone\nadopted by Australian Labor following the victory of thc Labor\nparty in New South Wales at the\nend of October. Mr. Scullln lias been\nbalancing th. duties of prime minister and treasurer since Hon. E. G.\nTheodore was forced to resign office\nas federal treasurer some months\nago,   following    charges    connected\n ._ with  purchase of    mines    by    the\nthat has conveyed that\" weU \"known' QucensIand    government    which  he\nfeeling   of   winter's   fast   approach. hei?cd ^m 1910 to 1925.\n\u00bb-\u2022\"\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u00bb Thero was talk, in tho New South\nWales    campaign,    of     repudiating\nTho   demands   of   tho   Australians .v_i._j.oiit   leaving   his   seat   nt   the\ntable;\nNow ls it apparently up to brtr\u00ab\nLabor into line and Impress the\n\"high standard of living\" faction\nthat drastic economy, governmental, induetrlaiand jlersonar, must be\ncarried out If Australia ls ever to\nj,et baok on a Bound financial\nfooting. What success will ho havo?\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nThe editor of the Desewnto, Ontario, Post, announced the other day publication would be discontinued\nfor two weeks to permit him to go deer hunting.\nHis looks like an almost perfect employment.\nIn order to keep up with the slanguage of the\nyounger generation the grown-ups will just hate to\nread tfee funnies every day, too.\nMiles P. Cotton, construction\ncontractor. Just finished with bis\nsection of tho Kootenay Landing-\nProcter branch line, recalls when\nJust such a wind saved his life.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nIt wae oyer 30 years ago, and\nMr. Cotton was ln Nelson ln connection with tho railroad being\nbuilt into the city to connect from\nthe west. He was then on construction work  ln  Nelson.\n\u2022 t   .\nMr. Cotton remembers it was\nbitterly cold. Snow was on the\n| ground. Ho wea crossing the yards\nwhere a switch engine woe shunting cars. Of course, ho stated, he\nwas adorned ln heavy winter clothing and wae wearing a cloec-Ilt-\nttng cap with ear muffs.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n\"I wes crossing the yards, head\ndown, bucking the wind. As I had\nfaced the wind for some little\ntime ana my nose was badly\nnipped I decided to turn around\nand walk backwards.\nUpon turning about Mr. Cotton\nwas stwtled to see, not 20 feet\naway from him, a freight c\u00bbr coming down tho line at terrific speed.\nIt had been shunted by an engine.\nMr. Cotton recalls that he had to\nthrow himself headlong upon some\nbridge timber that was being assembled to escape being run down\nby the car.\n\u2022 ,   \u00ab\nThut ourltng soirit must be ln\ntiie air. On a street car last night\nArt Bush, ice-maker last year, and\n\"Mick\" Micflielson. on* of tho\nmost entbuslastlo of local curlers,\nwere discussing prospects for the\nseason. All theso two men want,\napparently, Is a little cooler weather\nso that the loe might bB formed\nand the stones a-movlng.\n\u2022 \u00bb\u25a0',.\nSpeaking of. curling, it was loam-\ned at tile anual meeting that the\ntoo-a had been stolen from tho\nrink. It was bard to believe that\nsome industrious soul had walked\naway with the shovels, brooms, etc..\nso neoessary ln a curling rink. But\nI learned that the moro important\nsmaller tools had disappeared, suoh\nas wrenches, bammsrs. saws, etc.\nWell, Art Bush will have a now\noutfit this year. He'U have to put\nup the beet lee for that.\n\u2022 *   *\nSaw 3. A. Btobo, superintendent\nfor shipyards In the B. 0. Lake and\nRiver service, working hard yesterday. He was oulllmr ropes and\nchain), handling a maul, tearing\ndown ecaffoldlni. and making himself generally useful with his men\nj working on tiie tug Hoemer whloh\n| slid into the water about S o'clock\nafter \u00ab___*\u25a0 repairs.\ndobts.. Prom London Premier Scul\nlen gav_ this assurance: '\"Since\nthe election,\" he ssld ln reference\nto thc victory of Prcmter-plcct J.\nT. Lang, \"he has emphatically an-\n-utlocd that all obligations will\nho met. That principle is generally\naccepted by all tho Australian _ov-\nernmonta.\" But the fact that Prime\nMinister Scullln thought it advisable\nto give this aa.urancc Indicates the\nextent to which thc depression had\nspread.\nTlie victory of labor in New South\nWales, whore Mr. Lang was stoutly\nOppoBed to thn economy measures recommended by Sir Otto Nel-\nmey.r, Bank of England expert, gave\na strong fillip to the whole trades-\nunion movement, which thought It\nsaw a threat of a reduced standard\nof living if tho proposals were carried out after the election that the\nBank of England had no Interest\nlu Australian finances other than\na desire to servo tho publlo Interest by averting notions financial dlf.\nficultles. He was Invited by the\nAustralian government, nnd all Australian premiere ln conference substantially  accepted  hts findings.\nThc Australian parliamentary Labor party, following tho Now South\nWales result, openly expresSEd its\nopposition to tho Nelmeycr proposals and thc government's allied\neconomic reform programme. With\nPremier Scullln away in London,\nthe acting prime minister and acting treasurer, Hon. J, E. Fonton\nand Hon., J. A. Lyons, bore the brunt\non an aggrcslvo attack by. the Lab'\nor back-benchers and trades un.\nIon supporters. At the moment there\nls every prospect that the house\nof representatives will bo adjourn\ned until Premier Scullln can get\nback from London and take tho\nrolns ln his hands.\nLittlo more than a yenr figo the\nhouse listened to the fiery oratory\nof Mr. Scullln, loader of the opposition. But since the Labor party\ndefeated the Nationalist-Country\nParty coalition in Oct. 1920, Mr.\nscullln has been a different man.\nPate took away the fodsral treasurer, Mr. Theodore, at a dlffloult\ntime. Worried by thc Increasing\narmy of unemployed, disillusioned\nby persistent attacks from within\nhis own party, harassed by endless\ndeputations, demanding-radical -work\nwhore Mr. Theodor: had left off.\nWithin a few days he had mastered the details of the most sensational budget In Australian history. It moant worklnj for 15 and\n16 hours a day. Long- sittings In the\nHouse .demanded his prestnee almost continually. In his few spare\nhours he had to meet deputations\nby the dozsn, and hold interviews\nwith business men and jwlltloal\nlisntders who wero objecting to\ntho budget proposals. During the\nall night sittings on the Bales Tax\n(From Tho Dally News of Novcm\nher 20, 1010)\nAfter two years of steady development tho Aurora mine at\nMoyie will start operations this\nweek and will probably bo one of\nthe heaviest shippers in the district. It is now operating under\n' management of H. H. Dim-\nmock, j |\n\u2022 \u2022 .\u00ab\nThat tho Bank of Vancouver is\nconsidering tli* establishment of a\nbranch in Nelson, ls the statement\nof A. A. Croweton who is now in\nNelson.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThc Varsity team was tho only\nteam to finish the season with a\nclean record, not having been beaten once. Mcaill and Queena tied\nfor second place in the unlvensity\nrugby league.\n.   .   .\nThc now Molly-Gibson tram line\nwill be oompleted within tho next\nfew days and will run four and a\nhalf miles to the lako, which will\nenable the mine to ahlp during the\nwinter  months.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThat A. w. Davis, superintendent\nof thc Molly Olbson mine, A W.\nWlddowson, M. S. !<Ilddleton,\nsistant provincial horticulturist, W.\nH. Jones and w. Anstie will give\nevidence for tho board of trade\nbefore tho Dominion commission\non technical training, which sits\nhore this week, was the announcement of Fred A. Starkey, president of the board of trade.\nAUNT HEX\nx^nC^\n\"I hated to leave my handkerchief on the floor, but I couldn't\nsquat on account o' my lame knees\nan' I couldn't otoop without epll-\ntin' this old blue  taffeta.\"\nThe Lighter\nSide    .\nNEWS ODDITIES\nThis isn't such a humdrum, commonplace old world after all.\nA young man in Richmond, Va.,\ndesiring to make hla girl a birthday present, gave her a fire extinguisher ho had stolen from a church\nPerhaps she needed it to suppress\nthe flaming youth of her acquaintance.\nQerald Peak of Newberry, Mich.,\nrecently but a police dog that bowled him over and tho Associated\nPress flashed the information ell\nover tho country. Thero ls an old\nsaying ln newspaper shops that If\na man bites a dos it's a first-\npage Item.\nIn Sparta, another Mlohigan town\nwhero wheat is selling for 67 centB\na bushel and a hair cut is valued\nat 40 cents, barbers are accepting\na bushej a wheat ln payment for\nhead trimming and jiving 27 cents\nchange. It ls tho. only kind of farm\nI'eiief yet advised which seems to\nwork.\nFor thc second, time this year\na. Chicago man's house was struck\nby an automobile, hurling two girls\nout of bed, and injuring them.\nA Minneapolis Judge\/would not allow the $76 damages sued for a girl\nwhose boy friend hugged her so hard\nthat he broke two of her ribs,\nbut Judgment was given for a S3\ndoctor's bill. \"A good squeeze like\ntihat in worth $72,\" remarked his\nhonor.\nAll of which goe\u00bb to prove' that\n_r novel entertainment blase people should read the dally 'news.\u2014\nLos Angeles Times.\nA  OOOD  TIME WAS HAD BY ALI,\n\"We were sitting on a piano bench\nat a party given by Lawrence Tib-\nbets. Ramon mado eome little remark and I gave Him a push. Then\nhe gave me a push. Wo fell off\nthe bench and I had him down,\ntoo, and was setting on his stomach' and threw me off on my shoulder. Even then it wouldn't have\nbeen so bad.' I, wouldn't say I was\nhurt and he kept pummellng me\nuntil my shoulder waa completely\ndislocated. I hate to , toll this on\nRamon, beaouse he wouldn't really hurt anybody. He's a gentle,\nman.\" From lss Elsie Janls's story\nof-a recent injury at a Hollywood\nparty. , ,\n'Is your wife having any successs\nln learning to drive the oar?\"\n\"Well, the road ls beginning to\nturn whon ahe does.\"\nWell,\" eaid the visitor to the\nlittle eon of the famous motorist,\nand how are you getting on at\nschool?\"\nFine;\" said tho litis ohap, \"I'm\nnow learning words ot five cylinders.\"\nruinous Itttst Words\u2014\"Father\nnever needed a coniio false face\nwhen   l\u00bbc  wafl  a  boy.''\nJuBt a run-of-the-mill house\nparty, you understand.\nMy work, ls, ana will Be, mainly\nthe propagation of waves, bo that\nthese travel over more reliably. All\nthe other things\u2014\"wonders\", as\nthe press calls them \u2014 will follow   of  themselves.\"\nHardly any grayer or older looking than when I last, met -him\ntwelve years ago, Senator, the Mar-\nqulB Marconi modeetly outlined his\npresent and future work.\nWith the popular boons and usages whloh emanate from his work\nhe. the scientist and first unple-\nmentor of the Hertzian waves th\n1886. is not actively concerned.\nThat Is for others. Marconi works\never at the core, the dull (to lay\nminds), but oltal core. That ls\nwhy today he is working all the\ntime unepeotacularly on the .wave\nlengths. ,\n\"Up till now the ldwest wave\nlengths have varied between fourteen and sixty meters^ Wo are beginning t0 use wave lengths of\nUnder ten meters for commercial\npurposes between Rome and Sardinia.\"\n'\u2022Did you foresee all the wonderful developments of wireless, and,\nif so, when?\"\nSenator Marconi thought a while\nthen, with quiet emphasis: \"Yes,\n. did. All except television. I knew\nof course, of the theory, but it\nis the work and study of others\nWhen I spoke from Cornwall to\nAmerica ln 1901 I had the utmost\nfaith; I knew tbat wireless would\none day cover the world. And how\nit would d0 it. You must not forget that we had Broadcasting of\nnews to liners at sea before the\nwar. What brought llstenlng-in into eo many homes was the telephonic   addition.\n\"At present the two most urgent\nImprovements required concern the\nexpense of transmission and absence\nof Beorecy. I foreseo very great\nchanges here before 1840 \u2014 perhaps several yearB before. My concentrating on the beam system, by\nwhioh waves are projected In a\nspecific direction, canalized aH you\nmight say, experts wll succeed more\nln keeping transmtesion to narrow\nchannels In the ether \u2014 Instead\nof as at present, when waves are\nflung out all round ln a quite\nuneconomical manner. Suoh diffused transmi_slon requires muoh\ngTeater power \u2014 that is to say,\ncoste much more than would messages directed straight at their\ngoal.\n\"Tho exploration of very short\nwave lengths la partly the solution. Also, their sure guidance\nthrough space. Thus sent, commercial messages will cost so little\nthat everybody will bo using wireless transmission Just as today\nthey use tho telegraph office. It\nwill speed up the life and the interrelationship of the world immensely. The ether will be packed\nwith messages proceeding:' like\nlightning along selected paths \u2014\na myriad of the latter Heretofore\nwo have had to send out messages\nsimply Into spaoe. That will no\nlonger   be , the   case.\n''As regards tho secrecy required\nfor commercial messages, I think\nthat ln a few years' time I shall\nbe able to speak to anywhere or\ntransmit without being heard save\nby the person I am in touch\nwith.\n\"Another coming benefit will bs\na great, reduction in the price of\nwireless sets. Before the end of\nthis decade the poorest cottage\nfamily will be able to afford a\nset. The poor will have the world\nat their door, and education should\nbe rendered simpler and less expensive and illiteracy gradually vanish.\n\"Television? This may not r_oh\nIbs full development for many\nyears, but not far aheed many\nhouses \u2014 as many as .those whloh\ntoday possess wireless sots\nshould be able to see the . day's\nnews and theartical shows on the\nls   the   case   with   current   telovil\nslon, There Is no reason why, ull\ntinnitely,   our  children  should  no]\nsit  back  ln  their  armchairs af'\ndinner   and  watch -Und   listen\na ftrist night ln the theatre.\"\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From The Daily  News of. Nova\nber-,20, 1820)   i,i\nNelson bowlers camo out Wltj\nsurplus of 117. over Revelstoke\ngreater lead over Cranbrook,\\.i|\na three-cornered telegraph bowj\nlng fixture last night,\n\u2022 *   \u2022',\nThe. Canadian dollar took anotb]\ner drop on the Now  York forcls\nexchange market when it was -duoi\ned at 68.75  cents.  -\nt   *   \u2022\nTwo Junior basketball teams ha<i\nbeen organized here and have fa\ntheir captains Cadet Don Wll\nof the Thunderbolts and Haro|\nJeffs for the Lightnings. . .\n\u00bb   .   .\nA farewell smoker was. jiven\nRossland last night for G. A. Lafl\nferty who has for a number'1 J\nyears been manager of the Ros.<\nland branch of the Bank of Mont|\nreal, '  ' \u25a0\n\u2022 at\nBodies  bf   men    went    throug|\nDublin yesterday arid Visited hon)\nafter   home-  murdering . their\noupants,   No   lees  than' 14   Dubll\ncrown officials were slaughtered.\nmils, Mr.     Scullln ate his supper Star.\nIMPORTS AND EXPORTS\nThose who Bay we should buy\neverything at home and exclude Imports do not stop to consider that\nif we even attempt it we may teach\nother nations to cease buying from\nus. They forget that the exports\nwe send abroad constitute an enormous part of all -that we grow and\nmake. We have eight or time times\nas much wheat to sell abroad as we\noonsumo   at   home.\u2014The   Toronto\nTHIRTY  YEARS  AG<i\n(From The  Nelson  Daily Miner\nNovember   30, ,1900)\nA telephone, message from C**d\ntain Gilford at the Silver IClnl\nmine this morning gave the tomtr\nerature up there as 12 below zer<|\nand enow -falling heavily.\n' *   \u2022   *\nTiebden   brothon*   liave       b*\nawarded     the    contract    for    th|\ncontract .for  plumbing  ia the nei\ngeneral   hospital   cottage   und   Will\nHam  Laws  the  plastering  contracl\n* *   *\nA   committor   consisting   of\nS. L. Lester, Mrs. B. Bmlth, Mr\u00bb..-\nLaing Stocks and Mra. 1.. B MoDorl\nmid   is   busy   completing   the   ar|\nrangement  of  tho  Baptlat  contatt\nentitled    \"Tho Crowning of Ch\nmas\" which will be--staged hore li|\na few days\n* *\u00ab *\nThere will be no ekatlng iu thl\nrink tonight but a good sheet i|\nexpected by tomorrow night, Thf\nstroet car service to the rink\nalso be established by tomorro*.!\nevening.\nDr. fc, T. Machell died at \u25a0Toit_\nin his 81st year. * He had been\nprofessor on the staff of tho Unll\nverslty of Toronto.\nDoes Your Roof I\nLeak?\nTOLD IN RIME\nHETIREb  .'AltMEB\n(A Small-Town Portrait)\nHe bought a house across the strcot\nfrom us       \u25a0\nAnd moved In from the farm.   He\nand his wife\nHad  worked   from, sun-up time to\ndarlc for years.\nThey'd   saved,   and   how   they   felt\nthey'd spend their life\u2014\nTho rest of It at least\u2014ln town, and\nhave\nAn easier time.\nHe brought his horse and cow,\nAnd she her chickens and the old\ntomcat. ,    '    ,\nThey have their garden, too, quite\nlarge.\nAnd ndw , . ...\nI see them In the morning, out at\nfive\nOr so.   He hoes among the peas, and\nshe \u25a0      ,\nHangs out her wash.   He milks the\ncow and takes\nHer to-the pasture.   Later on, maybe\nHe hoes some more, or cuts the lawn.\nShe bakes,\nAnd sews, and irons once a week,\nand .skims\nTho milk, and churns.   He putters\nround a bit.\nAnd  neighbors  with  us acrow the\n' gate; or trims\nThe roees by the porch\u2014not. much\nto do.\nBut she\u2014well, anyhow, doesn't seem\nto find\nMuch time to visit.\nHe says he ls glad\nThey   left   the   farm.    It  was   an\n' awful grind,\n' \u2014Harry times Pratt\nWATERPROOF\nFIREPROOF\nB. C* PlumbingJ\n& Heating Co\u00bb\nDistributing   Agents\nNelson, B.. C_\"\nmuch more clearly, naturally, than ~*r>^~=t>i^~*'i^'^n'**\\\nWEATHER\nSTRIP\nNow is the time to keep out the\ncold by using Weather Strip around\nyour doors ahd windows.\nCALL AND SEE US.    V\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail .  Quality Hardwar*\n.     Nelson, B. C.\n <#'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS    ; THURSDAY, NOVE*MBER 20, 1980.\nPage Sbv\u00ab|\n[MCLARNIN WILL\nHAVE NO WIGHT\nADVANTAGE NOW\n[Goes in Against Billy Petrolle at New York Tomorrow Night\n_ ITBW YORK, NOV. 19. (AP) \u2014\nI Bu ineas is due to boom .again Fri-\nI day night In Madison Square Gar-\nI oen, where the trade has been\nI none too brisk lately, for Jimmy\nI McLarnln, ' favorite fighting son of\nI the metropolis, cornea back to work\nagain,\n[    McLai-ntn, socking Celt from Van-\ntoouver,   B.   0.,   who   has   plastered\n(New York rings with some of the\n| best   of   the   lightweights,   usually\npacks  the  garden.  The  ticket  Bale\n| already ls booming for Jimmy's 10-\nround  go  with  Billy  Petrolle.  the'\nr Fargo Express, in  the main go of\n[the   Garden's  weekly   show.\n,' . Jimmy will bo without tho weight\nadvantage   that   has   been   his   ln\n[most . of   his   recent   fights   here.\nPetrolle plans to weigh  about  140\npounds,' Jimmy's    favorite    weight.\nMcLarnln is a 2  to  l favorite.\ni FID THREE DEAD\nPLANE WRECKAGE\nBTJBBANK. Calif.. Nov. lfr.\u2014(AP)\nI\u2014Plunged nose -first Into a gently\nI sloping plateau In* the Tehachapl\nI mountain foothills n. Pacific Air\nI Transport night mail plane was\n\u25a0 found today, its three passengers\n\u25a0dead.\nI Discovery of the wreckage ended\nla 43-hour search. The wreckage\nI had not burned. Tbe plane, piloted\nI by- P. A. Donaldson and carrying\nI Miss Jean Markow, 16, of Los An-\nI steles, and Oeorge Rogers, Its mech-\nI ante, left United airport here Mon-\nI day ' nMdnlght and became lost ln\nI fog. snow and galea over Tejon. 80\nI miles north.\nI ' The end of the Ill-fated flight\nIcame approximately half' way be-\nItween Tejon and Antelope valley\nI emergency airports. t.h<* farmer tn\nIthe Tehachapia and the latter In\nIthe flat at the edse of the Mojave\nI desert.\nI The 319 pounds of mail the plane\nI waa carrying to Oakland and Fort-\nI land. Ore., waa found Intact. -\nHigh Lights Have\nTheir'Pet Peeves\nYOORC R0UNPIN6\njuto SHAPe 30 FAST\nYou ought to have\nYOOR 5T0MflC^TAPPfpJ\nHA! HA!\nHAW!!\n^7\nI LINDRUM WITHIN\n2137 OF LEAD IN\nBILLIARD PLAY\nBy, AL  DEMAREE\n(Former Pitcher New York Giants)\nSome of the smartest ball players\nX know wear small hat sizes and\nsome of the dumbest wear large\nones, but the lat_ George Stalling*\nthought'differently. The sight of a\nplayer Wearing a cap with a safety\nPin in tho bock or a pleat sowed ln\nit to make it fit, made him froth\nat the mouth.\nOnce a certain pitcher who wore\na particularly small-Blzed cap, complained that the cap given to him\nin the spring was too small.\n\"Go over and stretch it on the\ndoor knob,\" advised Stalllngs.\nThe late Enoch Bagshaw, former\nfootball coach at the University of\ni Washington, had an antipathy\nagainst fat or plump candidates for\nhis elevens and never overlooked a\nbet to tell them about It.\nJohn McGraw never bawls out or\ntakes to task a first year man\u2014but\nwatch out the second year.\nBabe Ruth takes hie tee shot ln\ngolf more seriously than he does his\nhome run swing. You can kid him\nabout his baseball but don't-try to\nbe funny about his golf.\nLONDON, Nov.  19.\u2014(O. P. cable)\n\u2014There were four breaks of more\nI than 1000 points made today in the\nI fourth  match   of  the  International\nI billiards tournament,\nI*   Walter  Lindrum.   who  made  two\nIsuoh breaks yesterday, repeated to-\nIday.   His first netted him 1054: his\nI second  one,  the   best  seen  during\nI the   last   few   weeks,   yielded   1876\nI points,     Joe   Davies.    the   English\nJ champion,  made   a   break  of   1063.\nJ and   Tom   Newman   ran   up   1070\nI points ln an  unfinished  break.\n1     Lindrum   closed    the    day    with\n21,909   points    against,   a   comparatively meagre 13T741 for his oppon-\n| ent.   Glarko   McConachy,   also   of\nAustralia.\n-   Davies closed with 24.046 and his\nopponent, Newman, had 20,343. -\n\u25a0   With   the   close   of   the   fourth\nmatch scheduled for Saturday. Lindrum,  who  gav_   the   other   three\nL players a handicap  of  7000 points\nf each, still has a chance  to over-\n['take. Davies,\t\n\u2022. Japan's rice crop this year broke\nI all records.\nSAILINGS\nT0THE-'#^7\nHOMEf\nlandI\nFROM MONTBEAL-OTEBEC\nNov. _  - -   Moi:calm\nTo Che.boure-Soutli__!>t_\nFBOM   SAINT   JOHN\nDeo. 5  Duch\u00ab_ of York\nTo G____w-__.r_t-Llve.pool\nDeo 12 .._  Duchess of Richmond\nTo al____ow-Belfast-Liverpool\nDeo.  13      -  Montclare\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton\nDeo. 18 ...  Duchess of Atholl\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\n\u25a0 Dec   24  -_  Montcalm\n\u2022     To Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\nJan. 2   Duoheas of Yorlc\nTo  Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\nJan. 9  .  _ _. Mlnnedosa\nTo Glasgow-Liverpool\nJan. 16 \u25a0  ..-  Montclare\nTo GlMgow-Bolfost-Liverpool\nJan. 28  .'1  \u2022>\u2022\u2014 Montcalm\nTo  QIasgow-LlVerpool\nJan. 80 ...\u201e  Duohess of York\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\nFeb. 6 \u25a0  ., -   Mellta\n'  To Glasgow-Liverpool\nFROM VANCOUVER TO\njlAWAU-JAPAN-CHINA-MANILA\nNov. 27 Empress of Canada\nDeo. 8 . _- Empress of Russia\nDeo. 20 _. Empress of japan\nJan. 8 1 ._. Empress of Asia\nASK I'OR SAILINGS  JO HONOLULU\nFull details with rates and Passport Information from any agent or\nJ   S.  CARTER\nDistrict Passenger Agent, Nelson, B.C.\nBRITISH NET\nSTARS ARE AT\nWINNIPEG NOW\nWINNIPEG, Mon\u201e Nov. 19. (CP)\u2014\nTouring British badminton stars tonight arrived ln Winnipeg, led by\nSir George Thomas, They aro scheduled to meet looal players tomorrow afternoon ' and evening and\nFriday. Prominent Winnipeg court\nstars will include Charlie Jones,\nManitoba   singles   champion,\nCOMMITTEES ARE\nNAMED, ATHLETICS\nTORONTO, Ont., Nov. 19.\u2014The\npresident of the women's amateur\nathletic federation of, Canada haa\nmade the following appointments\nof committees:\nChampionship \u2014 Hrs. W. J. Dales-\nandro, Ontario (Cahirmon) Mrs. L. M\nClarln, Alberta, Miss Irene Wall,\nQuebec.\nRecords \u2014 Myrtle A. Cook-McGow-\nan, Quebec, (chairman); Miss y.\nGignac. British Columbia, Miss Thelma McKelvey,  Ontario.\nConstitution \u2014' Mrs. W. E. Stirling, Maritime ( chairman); Miss\nWayne, Quobec; Miss V. Balllss, British   Columbia.\nRegistration \u2014 Mrs R J Foster,\nAlberta, (chairman); \"- Miss Ha:el\n\"Tony\" Conacher, Ontario; Miss Eleanor Day, Marltlmes\nSAWYER WINS AT\nSEATTLE , .\nSEATTLE, Nov. 10\u2014 (AP)\u2014Frankle\nWarneke. Portland, and Jack Hanley.\nSeattle light heavyweights, fought\na smashing draw in a six-round\nmain event boxing bout here tonight. Hanley scored the hardest\nlong distant punches while Warneke\nbroke even in tho watch with his\ntorrid  infighting.\nTiny Lamar, Tacoma heavyweight\nand Frank Sawyer, Vancouver, B 0.,\nstole the show for aotion with\nSawyer winning in the fourth and\nlast round on a technical knockout\nwhen Lamar's manager threw in\nthe towel. Both boys battled toe\nto toe until they were so tired\nthat neither could hardly stand\nui*.\nTRAIL LADIES\nBEAT ROSSLAND\nIN BASKETBALL\nRossland Men Beat Pirates,\nSons of Colombo Beat\nTrail Times\n. TRAIL, B. 0.. Nov.-.\u2014-In 11 continuation of the Trail basietball\nschedule here tonight the E- HlRh\nheat Eossland 38_. In the ladles\nsection, tho Rossland men beat the\nPirates 29-10 and the. Sons of\nColombo beat the Trail Times 23-\nThe teams were: Ex High\u2014S. Kennedy. (21), M., Owens, (21, M. Leckie,\n(8). Y. OuUlaume, (3), M. Williamson, 2), C. McAiley,   (2).\nRossland ladles\u2014 . T. Perkins, B.\nWright, E. Berg (2), E. McDonell\n(2), M. Blmcock.\n_ Rossland .men \u2014 W.- Lee. (2), H.\nLefevre (\u00ab,__, Perkins 'J. Mcrion-\nnell J Curtlss, (6), B. Anderson,\n(12),  H.  POX,  MVNaughton,   (2).\nPirates _ Roderick (2), Rotherv\nSI \u25a0 \u00a3nAheri. ** _ ti), Bailey,\n(6), Evans, Popl\u00bb, Gripplch.\n. .Sons of Colombo \u2014 Muzzln (2).\nAnserllli (2), Merlo I (7). Martin\n(6) Batesello (2), Zlnla, (2), ohrls-\nta,S_e.  \u201e)\u25a0\n\u25a0\u2014 J\"ty ,iimes fr- Cummlng (4), Har-\nrod, Balfour, Hawkshaw (8), Groves.\n(4), Anderson,   (6),  Gray.\nINFOffiTiONIS\nSOUGHT ABOUT\nS0LD1MAVES\nOTTAWA, Ont.. Nov. 20\u2014CP)\u2014\nThe graves of 14 Canadian soldiers\nwho are burled In the Russian Naval\ncemetery at Churkin, on the outskirts of Vladivostok, Siberia, are\nengaging the attention of the Canadian section of the Imperial War\nGraves commission and Colonel H c\nOsborne, the director in Canada' of\nthat organization, recently despatched a message to London, requesting\ninformation on the subject While\nmachinery for the preservation of\nthe graves and of the memorial\nwhich was erected in the cemetery\nhas ben continued for many years,\nits direciton has been more or less\ncircuitous in view of Canada's relations with Soviet Russia and particularly since Great Britain severed (and subsequently resumed)\ndiplomatic relations with the Union\nof Soviet Socialistic Republics\nSOME DIFFICULTIES\nDuring the period when, there\nwas not direct diplomatic contact\nbetween the United Kingdom and\nthe Soviets British affaire were\nhandled by the Norwegian legation\nat Moscow. Questions of accounting\nln connection with expenditures on\nthe graves of the Canadians at\nVladivostock presented some difficulties, while the engaging of a\ncaretaker was also a problem. At\npresent the cemetery is being looked\nafter by Mme. O. A, Sergreeve, a\nRussian woman of Vladivostock, at a\nsalary of 10 yen (the equivalent of\n86.00) a month. This woman volun.\ntarlly undertook the duty wheu tho\nprevious caretaker, a Siberian named\nZabouretsky, abandoned his task\nearly in 192B. Mme Sergreeve rendered her accounts to the Norwegian\nlegation at Moscow and these were\nduly paid, the Canadians being\nbilled for and liquidating the\ncharges.-\nThe fourteen Canadians are Interred ln the British section of the\nRussian Naval cemetery at Churkin\non a hillside overlooking the city,\nand alongside the British ls tho\nCzecho-Blovakian section.\nSo long as the British mission\nremained ln Siberia the cemetery\nwas well cared for, but after the\nabandonment In 1927 many administrative difficulties arose. The British vice-consul, G, P. Paton, who\nhad handled all communications on\nbehalf of tho Canadians was also\nwithdrawn. The appointment of another consular officer would greatly\nfacilitate matters.\nThe majority of the Canadians are\ninfantrymen pf the 259th and 260th\nbattalions.\ntwoHreTs.\nplanes to help\n0TTAWAN LEAVES\n$8,000,000   ,      .\nOTTAWA. Ont., Nov. 19.-\u2014An es\u00bb\ntate valued at slightly more than\n$8,000,000 is disposed of in the win\nof the late Pred J. Booth of\nOttawa, filed for probate today.\nTho former .vice-president of the\nJ. P. Booth Company, limited, died\non   August-.   6   lost.\nThe large estate is divided into\nfour equal parte, for the widow\nMrs. Prancla A. Booth, and hor three\nchildren.\nThe children are Princess Eric of\nDenmark, formerlv Miss Lois Booth.\nJ. R. Booth and Pred H. Booth.\n\"See MOORE for MdRE Value\"\nFree Winter Storage\nOur offer submitted a few days a_o still holds (odd,\nprovided you make arraniements now to have a complete\nBO0O re-tnUh Job done to your car at the usual price.\nRemember, we also take care ot your battery beside giving\nyou FREE STORAGE. Ibis Is your ohance to have your\ncor cared  for during the winter months.\nMOORE\nFENDER & BODY WORKS\nSEATTLE. Nov. 19.\u2014(AP)\u2014With\ntwo United States navy planes hero\nbeing prepared for flight from Seattle to Ketchikan. Alaska, tomorrow, two more were reported at\nMedford. Ore., on their way northward to aid ln the search for six\n\u25a0nlsslng aviators. Pilots of the two\nlowerful amphibians which reached\nSeattle from San Dieno, Lieut.\nCharles P. Gerber and Chief Radio\nElectrician Olaude G. Alexander,\nvera reported to have conferred today with Oapt. Zeno E. Briggs, acting cora*G*_andant of the Puget\nSound navy yard, afber which they\nsaid ''We hor>e to be in Ketohlcan\n.omorrow night.\"\nFour other naval fliers accompany\nthem.\nCONACHER BACK\nfour teams in\nladybOwlers*\nwinter tourney\nOharlie (Chuck) Conacher, reported to the Maple Leaf's of tho N. H, L.\nat Parry Sound weighing 198 pounds and apparently as strong as an\nox. He appears to have fully recovered from tho effects of the operation\nlast summer when he had a kidney removed. There le only one man\n\u2022Ut the squad heavier than Conacher and that Is Art Duncan, the coach\nof the team.\nHOW THEY STAND\nNATIONAL\nLEAGUE\n(Canadian\nGroup)\nW   L\nD Pts.\n2     0\n1     1\n1\na\n0\nSI.  Y. Americans ..\n4\nMontreal  Oanadlens\n1     1\n0\n2\n_ 1     1\ni\nH\nMontreal Maroons\n..0     3\n0\nI)\nAMERICAN\nGROUP\nDetroit   \t\n.. 0     0\nn\n4\nN.  Y.  Rangers  \t\n_ 1     1\n2\n4\nBoston      .\t\n_ 2      0\n1)\n\u00bb\nOhlcago   \u2014.\t\n...1      0\n0\n1\nPhiladelphia\t\n_ 0     3\n1\n1\nTRY NEW METHOD\nIN EMIGRATION\nYorkshire Will Send Young\nMen to Embark on Mixed Farming\nVANCOUVER B. C Nov. 19.\u2014\nTwo United bua-tes navy planes, according to advices from Seattle tonight, are expected to hop off from\nthere tomorrow en route for Ketchikan, Alaska, -where they will Join\nthe search In northorn British Columbia for planes piloted by Capt.\nE. J. A. Burke, lost in the Llard\nriver country, and Robin \"Pat\" Ren-\nhan. lost ln the vicinity of Prince\nRupert.         ^\nDO-X ON TO SPAIN\nTODAY\nBORDEAUX, Franoe, Nov. 10.\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Departure of the German\nflying boat DO-X for ,. Corunna.\nSpain, tho next lap of lta projected flight to New York, was tentatively set tonight for 8:30 a__L,\ntomorrow. ___       ..\nOaptaln Christiansen, who returned to thla city this evening after\nspending tho greater part of the day\naboard the ship, sain the boat was\nsafely anchored from a ..freshening\nsouth-westerly breeze, which earllor\nIn the day sent huge waves over\nthe ship when It waa anohored closer to shore.\nBROWNS OBTAIN\nCATCHER\nLONDON. Nov, 19.\u2014(CP)\u2014Lord\nMlddleton, who recently toured Canada as Chairman of the Yorkshire\nVoluntary Migration Committee,\nsays the schema for a co-operative\neffort for settling young men in\nlargo groups to embark on genuine mixed farming was received in\nConada with warm approval. One-\nwell-known head of an organization which has settled somo thousands of young immigrants on ithe\nland, said: \"The scheme strikes\nexactly the right nt***; (a) proper\nsupervision; (b) community life; (c)\nopportunity of ownership under the.\nmost favorable circumstances; (d) a\nchance of matrimony reasonably\nsoon; (e) a right sort of f_rmin_\nrather than a gamble and land starvation.\"\n\"If the first try-out meets with\nthe success that we confidently expect,\" said Lord Mlddleton, \"then\nthere is no reason why it should\nnot be expanded to any extent, A\nsubstantial area hi Canada would\ncome Into cultivation, and wo would\nhave a first-rate outlet for the best\nof the youth of our country whose\nprospects in England aro moderate\nin the extreme.\n\"Let . Is pot be thought that I\nam decrying existing schemes of\nland settlement. I am satisfied that\nthe great majority of those whom\nwe have sent out In the last f\u20acw\nyears are happy and prosperous, and\nIn far better case than they would\nhave been at home.\" Lord Middle-\nton expresses the opinion that the\nprestige of British settlers has risen\nconsiderably ln Canada In recent\nyears.\nCommander J. B. Adams, and Mr.\nI Charlesworth, a coal owner, both\nof whom have intofpstsd themselves\nin the scheme for emigrating boys\nfrom Yorkshire'to Canada, made an\nInteresting 'Joint talk which was\nbroadcast, Mr. Charlesworth paid a\ntribute to the type of Ontario farmer with whom most of the boys\nmade their homes. In almost every\ncase he found the boys treated as\nmembers of the family, and being\nwell taugnt ln practical farming.\nHe could not help reflecting\non the physical improvement of\nNorth Country boys after sometimes\nonly a few months of Canadian fare.\nHe mentioned the case of a Yorkshire mining family who had previously lived In a dilapidated cottage, with two boys and a girl out\nof work, and the father on short\ntime, and contrasted that life with\nthe happy state in which they wore\nliving now at Ivanhoe, Ontario. Another, point mentioned was the Interest'shown by all sorts bf Canadian ' people that the boys on their\nforms should save money, and so\nQualify for a government loan by\nthe aid of which they could buy\ntheir own farms,        ,\nPHONE 45\nNELSON, B. C.\nST. LOOTS, NOV. 19. (AP)-Tho\nSt. Loula Brawns of the American\nleague have obtained catcher Russel Young from tho MUwaukeo\nolub of tno American association,\nIt was announced today, In return\nthe    Browns    have    released    four\nRlayers, catchers Manlon and Hung-\nng, pitcher Holshauaer and out-\nfWrier MotE-ler, ia the M*Uwaukee\nfton. - '\n25 YEARS AS THE\nEDITOR OF PAGE\nIN QUEBEC PAPER\nQUEBEC, Nov, 10\u2014(OP)\u2014 Miss\nGeorgia Lefalvre, of thlB olty, a\nmember of the Canadian Women's\nPress Olub for the past 10 years,\nhas completed 25 years as editor\nof tho woman's Pago ln Lo Solell,\nof Quebeo Olty. under the pen-\nname of \"Olnevra.\" She personally\nanswers letters on her page, and\nhas also Instituted a e\"ildr\u00bb-'..\nand a dally home page. Bhe aleo\nwrites editorials as \"Oousine Av-\nette\" In \"Lo Bulletin de la Perme.\"\na rural paper. MIbs Lefalvre has published two books. During her 25\nyears of toi'\"-J,,sm she has tr\u00b0v-\nellod c\u2014___*__. '        '    '\nBRITISH RULE\nABOLISHES WAR\nAMOE TRIBES\nPeriodical Warfare Used to\nProvide Outlet for Fighting Instinct\nOTTAWA, Ont., Nov. 19\u2014 One\nthousand miles in Nigeria's Interior\nis a primitive African trlbo called\nthe Tahgalo, which Inniunerablo\nyears ago put Into practlco tho\nidea of periodical warfare to provide outlet for man's fighting Instincts. The pecul tar custom followed ln regular cycles\u2014seven years\nof warfare and seven years of peace,\nBut all that Is now ended. Tribal\nfeuds aro almost unknown under\ntha present day British rule, relates\nRev. John Hall, who jifter 14 long\nyears of missionary work among the\nTangalea is in Ottawa enjoying a\nbriof vacation at tho homo of a\nbrother. When Nigeria came under\nthe protection of the British government 30 years ago and administrators were sent Into the various districts of the vastly populated territory. The tribal leaders among\nIts population of eighteen millions\nnow take their troubles to these\nadministrators for peaceable arbitration.\nAn insight Into the history of\nthe Tangoic given by Rov. Mr. Hall\nwas thorough and colorful, Tradition, he pointed out, has it that tho\noriginal quarrel which led to development 'of tho cycles of warfare\nstarted over a woman. A brave\nof East Tangale eloped with a maid\nof the West Tangale trlbo without\npaying for her the standardized\nbride-price of eight goats and 110\nhoc heads. Bloody warfare followed.\nELABORATE CEREMONIES\nThe custom was that at tho end\nof the seventh harvest, war was inaugurated with elaborate ceremonies.\nFighting and skirmishing between\nthc neighboring tribes continued\nfor the next seven harvests. Then\nIt come to an automatic end with\nceremonies equally as pompous as\nthose which marked its beginning.\nThere was always an official, hereditary war lord to lead the people and\nthe high ranking hero was he who\nreturned with the largest number\nof enemy* head.t. Battles were fiercely fougljt for capture wna worse\nthan death as tho Tonagales have\noven yet cannibalistic tendencies.'\nNow that the Tanagaio has been\nled closer lo civilization ho engages mainly in agricultural pursuits\nsupplemented by a little hunting.\nThe only inatnunent for cultivation\nis a roughly formed hoe made of\niron which they mine themselves.\nSmall replicas of the hoe heads form\nthe basis of a coinage system which,\nwith tho flocks and land titles, is\nthe hereditary wealth of the tribe.\nTheir chief crops are of guinea corn\nand millet.\nAfrtca ifl not becoming rapidly\ncivilized ln regard to customs, Rev.\nMr. Hall declares. It Is tho desire\nof the British government to pre-\nserye whatever ]s of worth In the\nnative customs and not to create discontent by Icadint the poople to civilization too 4Ufa3iy as, he believed,\nhad been daw) ia the case of India.\nThe Affioo-n gmrrnment ruled the\npeople m\u00abpe3tly through their native ctdrKi and interfered in local\naffaire only when a tribe engaged\nIn inhuman practises, By these\nmeans Britain was governing effectively and was laying the- groundwork for a stable nation in the\nfuture. '\nA schedule of 18 matches, providing nine engagements for each\nof four teams and extending to\nJanuary 26, will comprise the wlri-\nter program of the Nelson Ladies'\nBowling club. The teams were\nchosen and the -schedule drawn up\nat a meeting of the club at the\nalleys of Gellnas' Recreation club\nfollowing a series of practice\ngi>mes, Monday,\nPlay gets under way next Monday with Mrs. T. E. Levasseur battling Mrs. a. L. KBmmerllng at\n2:15 p. m. and Mrs. H Lakes clashing With Mrs. Carl Larson at 3:15.\nTHE   TEAMS\nThe correct teams, skips mentioned  first, ln  each   cose,   are;\nMrs. T. E. evasseur, Mrs. H, McTier,   and  Mis, F.  Bamford.\nMrs. G. L. Kemmerllng, Mrs, T,\nE.   Willits   and   Mrs.   J.   Bell.\nMrs. H. Lakes, Mrs. W. Desjar-\ndlns   and  Mrs.   D.   D.  McLean,\nMrs. Carl Larson, Mrs. A, G, Gellnas and Mrs. G. Wright.\nTHE   SCHEDULE\nFollowing  ls  the schedule\nNovember  24: i\n2:15\u2014Mrs. Levasseur vs Mrs. Kemmerllng.\n3:15\u2014-MrB,  Lakes  vs  Mrs.  Larson.\nDecember   1:\n2:15 \u2014 Mrs. Levasseur vs Mrs,\nLakes.\n3:15\u2014Mrs. Kemmerllng va Mrs.\nLarson.\nDecember 8: *\n2:15\u2014Mrs. Kemmerllng vs Mrs.\nLakes.\n3:15\u2014Mrs. Levasseur vs Mrs. Larson.\nDecember 15:\n2:15\u2014Mrs, Levasseur vs Mrs. Larson.\n3:15\u2014Mrs. Kemmerllng vs Mrs.\nLakes.\nDecember 20:\n2:15\u2014Mrs. Kemmerllng ts Mrs.\nLarson.\n3:15 \u2014 Mrs. Levasseur vs Mrs.\nLakes.\nJanuary 5:\n2:15\u2014Mrs.   Lakes  vs   Mrs.   Larson.\n3:15\u2014Mrs. Levasseur vs Mrs, Kemmerllng.\nJanuary   12:\n2:15\u2014Mrs, Levasseur vs Mrs. Kemmerllng.\n3:15\u2014Mrs.  Lakes va Mrs.  Larson.\nJanuary  19:\n2:15 \u2014 Mrs. Levasseur vs Mrs.\nLakes,\n3:15\u2014Mra. Kemmerllng vs Mrs.\nLarson, ,\nJanuary   28:\n2:16\u2014Mi's.    Kemmerllng    vs    Mrs.\nLakes.        .\n3:15\u2014Mrs. Levasseur vs Mrs. Lar-\nVANCOUVER LADY\nDIES OF WOUNDS\nVANCOUVER, B. 0., Nov. 18,^-A\nwoman, registered at a rooming\nhouse in Hastings street east as\nMrs. Nellie Orldale. was shot and\nfatally wounded tonight in her\nroom, allegedly by a Japanese, who\nwas later found with bullet wounds\nln the- throat and ln tho chest,\nacoording   to   a   police   report.\nShortly before 8 o'clock tonight\noccupants of the building heard five\nshots fired. Mrs, Ortddle ran out of\nher room, screaming, into an adjacent room, and dropped dead,\nwith several bullet \"Wounds In her\nbody. Police were summoned and\nwheu the entered the dead woman's\nroom they found a Japanese lying\non tho floor with a bullet wound\nIn the,, vicinity df the hearty and\nanother\" ln too throat, He was\nrushed to hospital, where it was\nstated he could nob recovftn,   -\nSchedule     of     IS _, Games\nDrawn Up for Play,\nGelinas* Alleys\nScoring his fourth straight victory\nin a Canadian ring, Dick Sharpe,\nEngland, shown above, Monday decisively outpointed Vlxgll Klncalde,\nBuffalo, middleweight, in an eight-\nround feature bout of the Shamrock\nAthletic clubs weekly show at Toronto. Sharpe weighed 162 & and\nthe loser lBS'^.\nIn Manitoba numerous brlno\nsprings are found ln the area west\nof lake Wlnnlpegosl... and brine has\nbeen encountered in drill holes in\nthc district between Winnipeg and\ntho boundary of Saskatchewan.\nWINS AGAIN\nWHALERS LEAVE\nFOR ANTARCTIC\nCAPS TOWN. South Africa, Nov 19\n\u2014By the Canadian Press)\u2014There\nii.i:; been a steady exodus of whal-\ne r s. The 1929-1930 Antarctic,\nwhaling season, which ended during May, was tbo most extensive\nsnd ambitious in the history of\ntho whaling Industry. During the\nseason 2,532,455 barrela of oil were\nobtained, an increase of 55 per\ncent, over the previous season. The\nNorwegian share of tho total waa\n1,720,775 barrels and that of other\nvessels 811,680  barrels.\nThree Norwegian and three other\nshore whaling stations were in operation during the 1929\u20141930 season, and 28 Norwegian whalers em'\nployed ln whale catching. Tho lat\nter totals - are double those of tho\nprevious season. Tlie Norwegian\nshore of lust season's work was\napproximately $35,000,000. Acoardin3\nto the Norwegian \"'Journal of Commerce,\" between il and 12 million\nkroner (approximately $3,250,000 lias\nbeen spent on building new whaling\nships In Norwegian yards during the\npresent year. Tills total includes\nthe    annual   refitting   of   ships.\nCANADIANS AT\nOXFORD WIN IN\nHOCKEY BATTLE\nOXFORD, England. NOV. W.__T\n(Canadian Press Cable) \u2014 An Oxford University ho_ey team. \u00abo\u00bb\u00bb\nposed entirely of Canadian student*\nbeat tbo German hootey team In a\ngame bere tonlgbt, tnree goala\nto one. H. G. Lefleur and \u201e O.\nBennycastle scored the oxford gaau\nBennyoastle finding the net twice;\nCOCHRAN LEADS\nBY 916\nNEW TOBK, Nov.  IS.   (AP>\u2014Ooti-\ntlnulng mi* great play to win tbe\nsixth block ln succession. 300 to\n70. tonight, Wetter Cochran ot\nHollywood, Calif., took a lead of\nlaoo to 884 over Willie Hoppe,. at\nthe half-way marl- In their 13-\nblock match for tbe wortd's lt-\nbalk   lino   billiards   championship.\nSTRIBLING WINS\nAGAIN\nGRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Nov. 19.\n(AP)\u2014W. L. (Young) Strlbllng. of\nMacon, Ga., heavyweight, knocked\nout Whltey Gosllne of Brown Oity,\nMich., Tn the third round of a\nscheduled 10-round bout here 'tonight. (\nfHave $5000\nBy Saving S32.S0 a Month\nOUR 36.ye_r.old Plan of\nmoney-building li used by\nmore (hen 190,000 Investor).\nWrite for free descriptive\nbooklet, \"Enjoy Money.\"\nINVESTORS\nSYNDICATE\nfOUN0ID 18 W\nLocal O.Re\u00ab\n6t8onBIoe((_,eal(\u00abrSi.j\nHON, B.'\nCLEAN RADIATORS\nClean your radiators before tho\nheat Ls ln them, if possible, as t_ioy\nwill he much onsior to handle. A\nradiator brush u an absolute necessity, as It ts tho only way you can\nget Into those dusty crevices and\nremove  tho accumulation.\nNelson  HI strict  Agent for\nInvestors' Syndicate:\nR. W. Dawson\n333 Baker Street Phono 19?\nDistrict Manager for West Kootenay\nand Okanagan:\nA. A.-Milligan\nK.P. mock   Trail, n. c.   Phone 37s\n1\nComfort-Fit Helps on the Worlds Busiest Comers\nNumber 3200\u2014\nWinter weight.   Natural color,\nble.\njnd very durable\nper lull $3.00\n5\nSTREAMS of cars rolling by in endless procession i i i a deluge of questions!\nCrowds of people; Your Traffic Officer ac a busy intersection has a mighty\nstrenuous job.\nOut in all kinds of weather\u2014pouring rain\u2014hail\u2014sleet\u2014fog\u2014and blistering son\n\u2014if ever a man needs the comfort that's built into Stanfield's Underwear, be does*\nUnshrinkable, it goes back and forth to the laundry tub time after time\u2014giving\nlonger service by many months\u2014and giving greater satisfaction every day. \u2022\nButtons that won't come off! Snug fitting cuffs that will not \"bell.\" Shoulders\ntailored so that the seam stays on top\u2014instead of dragging down off the shoulder\nlike a 10-ton truck.\nBut why go on?\u2014All you have to do is go to your favorite\nstore, and see for yourself. Five minutes with a Stanfield's\ngarment will show you why we dare claim it to be tha\nfinest underwear value ever offered. There's a style and\nweight to meet every need\u2014and a price to suit every\npurse.\nPOINTJOF\nJTANFIELDX\n'\/UPEfilORITV\n_\\   Accurate measure-\n* merits . . superb\ntailoring.. perfect\nfit.\n_Y Exclusive easy-fie-\nting closed croCch.\n* Non-rip cuiFseams\n*\u2022*\u25a0*... smooth and\nelastic.\nA Always toft 11 i\nr   always warm ;i ;\noutwears them i> I!.\nft  Buttons thn* won't\n** come off.\nOnirfViitifeaMt,\nS.OFT-WARM-DURABLE\nA QUALITY TO MEET EVERY NEED\nTHE BEST VALUE AT EVERY PRICE\nGaannteed tofit~$2<i\u00b0to$10W\n ^.HUi.\n*?$\u00a3 .feWant Ad\nTHIS GENERATION WONT NOTICE IT\nBUT THE OLD WORLD IS WARMING UP\n&.' ffijfl\n_!L*i t*\nWASHINGTON. Nov. 1ft\u2014The world  the   world  vas   a   whole   is   very\nIb growing warmer. That scientific\nfact, hor.ever, need not agitate those\nwho dread scorching summers like\nthe 1930 record-breaker.\nDr. J. W Humphreys, physicist of\nthe weather bureau, says the trend\nIs toward a hAJer earth\u2014but the\nworming up prdjfcss is bo slow there\nIs no cause for rearing that tbe heat\nwill torture this generation or several to come. In fact, Mr. Humphreys says, next summer may be\ndelightfully cool. It may, of course,\nbe hotter than the average summer,\nbut lt'a a good bet it will be considerably cooler than the recent season, the hqttest in 70 years of official weather recording,\n\"There ls evidence, however, that\nslowly growing wanner,\" he said.\n\"The evidence ls that glaciers In\nall parts of the world have been\non the average slowly retreating\nsince the culmination of the ice age,\nand they are -etlll slowly retreating.\n\"We do not know, of course, the\nprecise <\\ete ot the ice age,\" he continued, \"We do know that the Ice\nsheet left Stockholm, Sweden, about\n9000 years ago and left Niagara Palls\nabout 25,000 or 30,000 years ago.\"\nThere always will be temporary\nflurries of high or low temperature\nfor a season, for a year or for a\nperiod of years, but the average over\nany consecutive period of 20 years ls\npractically the same as over any\nother 20 consecutive years of which\nthere   ls   official   record.\nFERNIE 1.0. D. I\nGIVES PRIZES\nAT COAL CREEK\nStudents   Who  Stood  High\nin Exams Given Order\nAwards\nFEME. B. C\u201e Nov. 19. \u2014 The\nMount Pernie chapter I. O. D. E.\nwent to Coal creek on Friday afternoon to present the prizes given\nby the order to boys and girls\ntaking highest standing last year ln\ntrades VII. and VIH. in Canadian\nhistory.\nThese went to Roy Taylor for\ngrade VIII.. who made 83 per cent\nin the governmental exam, and\nJoseph Chester, who was highest\nin   grade   VII.\nMrs. Jeffreys, principal of Coal\nCreek school, introduced the visitors   to   the   students.\nEegent Mrs. J. L. Gates, in presenting the prize books, congratulated tho pupils on their high\nstandings. Part of Mrs. Gates' address   was   aa   follows:\n\"These books are selected especially for presentation to school pupils. They are carefully selected by\nthe I. o. D. E. educational committee, with a view to help boys\nand girls in their school work.\nFrom them also you will learn of\nmany of our brave men and women of our Empire, who have left\n*us a wonderful legacy of lessons\nin ideals of right, justice, courage\nand devotion to their duty, which\nwere the mainsprings of thc Uvea\nof our heroes\" and heroines. And\nanother idea is- to cultivate in pupils   a   taste   for   good   reading.\n\"This order to which we belongls\nvery interested in education. Tlie\nPlacing (jJ libraries and pictures in\nschools; secondary education and\nbursaries. We also strive to keep\nbefore the children a lovo of Can-\nAda and  our Empire.\n\"Tlie    twenty-fourth   of    May    is\n?articularly observed ns Empire day.\nTiis was the birthday of Queen\nVictoria and one of the most popular   holidays   of   the   year.\n\"We strive to furnish a bond of\nunion amongst the children of the\nEmpire and to strengthen the ties\nbetween Canada and the motherland.\n''We in Canada have much to be\nthankful for and wc bave everv\nreason to be m*oud of our country.\nWe stand high among the nations,\nenjoying their respect and confidence. So you boys and girls have\nsomething to livfi un to. Learn all\nyou can at school for with a good\neducation you will be better fitted\nto uphold the high Ideals of your\nforefathers in Canada, which will\nbe yours to carry on,\n\"Another aim of our order Is lo\nkeen allvP the memory of brave and\nheroic   deeds.\"\nEARL  ROBERTp\nMrs. Gates then went on to out-\nlinn tho contribution of \u25a0 one of\nthe Empire heroes, Earl Roberto.\nAnd also held up to ber hearers\nfor  emulation  such  child  succesees\nDundee's \"Tree of\nLiberty\" No More\nDUNDEE. Scotland. Nov. 19.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014Dundee's \"'iTee oi Liuerty,\" dating\nback to the f-Tencn fevolutlon, is no\nmore. It bad stood four-square to\nall the winds that had blown for\nmore thou a century, but recently\nit was ruthlessly uprooted from Its\nplace in Be.mont grounds, where it\nwas planted by sympathizers with\nthe revolution.\nThe tree marked the day when\neven in Dundee they were strong\nand fierce believers ln the revolution. It was originally planted In\nDundee's High street by these enthusiasts to mark the success of\nthe French antiz-rayalls-s. The\nprovost of that day, one Alexander\nRiddoch, waa himself a bitter antl-\nrevolutlonist, but for all that be\nwas made to dance round the tree\nchanting: \"Liberty, equality, fraternity.\"\nNELSON PASTOR\nAT CRANBROOK\nCHURCH EVENT\nRev.   T.   J,    S.   Ferguson\nSpeaks; Large Crowd at\nAnniversary Dinner\nCRANBROOK, B. C. NOT. 19\u2014Thc\nfirst anniversary services of the new\nUnited Church in Cranbrook were\nheld on Sunday. Nov. 17, and on\nMonday evening, when a banquet\nand program were enjoyed in tbo\nsocinJ hall of thc church. The\nchurch was beautifully decoraled\nwith chrysanthemums combined\nwith ferns and palms loaned bv thc\nEast Kootenav Greenhouses, these\nbeing used for the tables and stage\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson, B. A. of\nfor Monday  evening.\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson B. A. of\nNelson was the speaker at both\nservices on Sunday, hla subject ln\nthe morning being \"The Head of\nthe Church' and in the evening\n\"The Church.\" The music ln the\nmorning was furplshed by tho Junior choir with Miss Wanda Fink\nat tho organ and with Sherman\nEvans as boy soprano soloist. In tho\nevening Mr. Parker and choir song\n\"He Shall Dwell in tho Land\" and\nthe choir rendered \"He Shall Magnify Thee.' David Morgan, choirmaster, sang \"Total Eclipse' from\nSampson and Delihah, Mrs, Young\npresided at thc organ.\nOn Monday evening a banquet\nwas served to over 200 guests, the\nmeal being one outstanding in the\nhistory of the church. It was arranged by a committee selected\nfrom the various woman'B organizations of thc chut-ch. While second\ntables were being served ah organ\nj recital was enjoyed Jn the church\nok Willie West, tha boy actor. She ] auditorium with Urn. 3. S. Young\nalso   outlined   to  the   students   thc   at the Instrument. This was follow-\nWANT   AND ciAttSTPlkh\nADVERTISING\nOne Insertion 10 cents a line\nSix insertions 40 cents a line\nOne month 81-30 a line.\nMinumua two lines\nNo extra charge if charged.\nBirth notices free of charge.\nDeaths,    marriages   and   cords   ol\nthanks 20 cents per line.\nFuneral flowers i5 cents per Uno\nNews   of   the  Day  items  20   cents\nper  line.\nNO EXTRA COST IF CHARGED\nWOMAN MAY BE\nAtW s&KrfARY\nOF M TREASURY\n_LEGAL NOTICES\nTHE CORPORATION OF\nCITY OF NELSON\nTHE\nDEATHS\nLONDON. Nov. 19\u2014(CP)\u2014By passing iui e.\\aunnation ua. _.<-\u00bb_\u25a0 bsuvvn\nother women a girl has put herself,\nthe road that leads to the | BIRTHS\nhighest positions in Whitehall. It\nwill be possible for her ultimately\nto become secretary to the treasury\nwho gets $17,600 a year, and who\nls the official head of the Civil\nService. She is Miss Lorna C. Watson, and she has won one of the\n22 vacancies offered to successful\ncandidates In the recent examination for Class L Administrative\nGrade,   of  the Civil Service,\nThe examination is so severe that\nnone of the 16 wotnen who entered last year was successful. It lasts\na month, and imposes a great physical as well as mentai strain. The\nlimits ore 22 and 24. Candidates\nwithout an honors degree at a university have little chance of success, highly specialised study b_ln_\nrequired. ,<\nFor those executive posts which\nrank next to Class I, 326 women\nentered the recent examination, and\nfor the inspectorship of taxes examination, which Is of university,\nbut not of honors standard, the\nnumber of women candidates was\n65.\nNO-TIGE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nthe Corporation of the City of Nelson Intends to apply to the Lieutenant Uovernor ln Council at the ex-\nuration of one week from the date\nhereof for approval of By-law No.\n61)9 Passed bv tho Municipal Council\nof the sold City, which amends * Bylaw No. 693, extending the limits\njf the said City to include all foreshore and land covered by. water in\nfront of Lots- SfiA and 95, Kootenay District, by more particularly\ndescribing the area so to be Included aa follows:\u2014\n'.'Commencing at the northeast corner of Lot 68-A, Kootenay District; thence northerly\n: along the production of tho .\neast boundary of Lot 68-A to\nmiddle of tbe * West Arm of\nKootenay - Lake: thence southwesterly along the middle of\nsaid West Arm to a poltft on\na line drawn north 45 degrees\nwest from W_e south-west corner\nof Lot 95. Kootenay District:\nthence south 46 degrees east to\nthe south-west corner of said\nLot 95; thence north-easterly\nalong the high water mark of\nsaid Lots 96 and 68-A to the\npoint of commencement.\"\nDATED this 18th day of i November.   1930.\nW. E. Wasson,\nOlty Clerk.\n.     , (2702)\nJ}>\nThe first steam fog horn to be\nconstructed in the world was the\nwork and Invention of Robert Foulls\nat St. John, New Brunswick, in 1854\nOn tho outer wall of the Customs\nbuilding in St. John is a bronze\ntablet erected by the National Parks\nof Canada branch, department of the\nGALLICANO\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. T.\nr, Galltcono at Revelstoke, Novenr-\nber 9,  a son.\nGEE\u2014Gay, age 63 years passed\naway suddenly. Body will rest at\nthe Howell Funeral Home until\nWednesday. November 26. at 10 a.m.,\nthence to the Chinese Free Mason\ntemple on Lake street, where ser-\nvlcee will bo conducted at 2 o'clock\nIn the afternoon. Interment Nelson.\n(2910)\n(11)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nALL AROUND BLACKSMITH WANTS\nwork, go anywhere. Apply Box\n2782. Dally NeWB. (2782)\nFLOORS WAXED AND POLIBHED\nby Expert, 75c per hour. Phone\n208Y. (2770)\nSILICATE OF SODA GLUE\nIn setting tip paper boxes, a min\nerol glue\u2014silicate of soda\u2014 is of\ngreat utility, and, Jin connection\nwith this, a number of experiments\nare being carried out by the Forest\nProducts Laboratories, department of\nthe interior, Ottawa.\nPeguls post office in Manitoba\ntakes its name from Peguls, the\nSaulteaux Indian chief, who was a\nfriend of the Red river settlers and\nwell disposed to the whites in their\nInterior, commemorating that epoch-' efforts  to  found   a   colony   ln   tho\nal even*\nLEGAL, NOTICES\n\\Ooni..inuea.\nM1NEB.U, ACI\nU \u201e_a f)\nCertificate of- Improvement,\nNOTICE\nPRINCE ana i_uu___ Mineral\nClaim*, situate _ uie Nelson Mining  Diviaiou  oi  __uul_li__   u_juiui.\nwhere located:\u2014 \u201e\nBetween __ hoaxing and . Goat\nElver.\nTAKE NOTICE that .\nI, E. G. Montgomery,\nFree Miner's Certiiluato 1.0. 18035-D\nIntend, si__ (says uuni the. date\nhereof, to apply to tne -lining Recorder ior a Cerclticate ol improvements, for tne purpose 01 obtaining\na Crown Grant of tne above claim.\nAnd tuiunur uKe uou_ cnat action, under section 85, must he\ncommenced before .the issuance of\neuch Certificate of Improvements.\nDated this 8th day of October,\nA_D.  1.30. 12109)\nHELP WANTED\n.ANTED\u2014FIRST    CLASS    PASTRY\ncook.   Pltnere Cafe. \u201e (2776)\nWANTED AT ONCE\u2014GIRL TO\nwork in dining room and help\nupstair.';. Good wages. Apply\nLeland Hotel, Nakusp. (2766)\nWOMAN WANTED! POR GOOD\nCountry house. Kaslo District as\ngeneral help. $_o per month.\nBox 2731 Daily News. (2731)\nWANTED\u2014MAN AND WIPE AS\ncaretaker for winter months. Small\nsalary. Vegetables, coal and light.\nMust have First Class personal\nreferences. Apply R. D. Boyer,\nWillow   Point.   B.  C. (2779)\nUOOSES FOB KENT\nFOR   RENT\u2014FURNISHED   CABINS.\nApply Singer Sewing Co.      (2807)\nFOR    RENT  \u2014 'i'.-lREE    ROOMED\nhouse.    Phone   D.   Maglio,   483R.\n(2725)\nCOTTAGE AND SHACKS FOR RENT,\nSouth Slocan. O. W. Humphreys,\nSouth   Slocan. (2759)\n;.!'!:j3:,!::-;\"''T:;T:\";:i!!a;!;:,;,;i,,,;i-:;,:;i!ii!iiii!ii!iiiai\nFURN1SHEU ROOl'13 For  Kent  (15)\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS POR\ncouple, no children. Mra. McLean,   opposite   (Sao   Works.\nFURNISHED  ROOMS\u2014Wanted    (10)\n.MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE\u2014(Con)\nFOR SALE\u2014ONE MOVING Picture machine.* 1928 model,' m\nfirst oiass comdltlou. used about\nton months. A.real bargain. Sam\nBacc_nni, Prooter Pavilion, Prooter.\nBTc. (2802)\n(34)\nWANTED \u2014 FURNISHED      APART-   j_oi_RTV   FOB   BALE\nm.nte  or  house  about  December  \u00ab*\"\u2122\"\u00bb  *\u00ab\u00bb  \u25a0\"\u00bb\u2022\u00bb'\n1.   Mrs. R. Smillle. Phone 288.L.1.\n(2796)\n 5li![lli;ii[!,!liilil31S:l[l!lii,ll!lljl!ii!ai!iliaiiiBII!|i!i;ili] Iliilllita\nCosy Bungalow\nLIVESTOCK   FOB   8AIJG _;\u00bb\nFOR SALE\u2014HOfSe, 10 TTEARS OLD.   I One    story,    lull     concrete I\nabout 1200 ibs\u201e good worker. $40.   j basement.    Living room, -two I\nit. iial\u201e_i. oilman -\u2022ark.       (2786) , | bed   roDmS|   kitchen   pantry j\nrnnn   wri. \u00abite_n   COW    COMING ' 1 Bathroom.   Close In.                h\nQf\u00a3,\u00b0   yfa_.    mllkS   and   toei!   | MO   .2000.00.     Cash   pay- g\nAlso sheep  and   cream separator.   =5 ment   .    8600.00.          Balance\nF. Galney. Harrop.,\n12785)\nSIX WEEKS PIGS. 84.50; SEVEN\nweeks pigs. $6. F.O.B. Kaslo.\nC.  F.  Young.  Box  531.  Kaslo.\n(2301)\nmonthly payments.\nJRADE AYRSHIRE COW. FOUR\nyears old, due to freshen about\nNovember 25. Very fine cow.\nPrice 890.00, Write or phone\nThomas Wall. La France Creek.\nNelson. <2780)\nPOULTRY   AKD   EGGi\u00ab (26)\nTWO LANSHAN PULLETS AND ONE\nRooster, 84: also Giant pullets.\n$1.75.    H.  C.  Derrig,  Wlnlaw.\n. (2783)\nCEL-O-GLAS AND MICO GLASS\nCloth for warmth and health-\ngiving   light   ln   poultry   houses.\n' and Cod Liver Oil to offset lack\nof sunshine. Tlie Brackman-Ker\nMil _.  Co..  Ltd.  (2791)\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES        (3D)\nI Seven  room   house   on 1\nHouston street.\n|      $30 per month.       1\n| Chas. F. McHardy 1\nPHONE 135\n(2520)   |\narty\"years \"of the nineteenth century'.II|B1I\u00bb1^\nFOR RENT\u2014BUILDING KNOWN AS\n\"Grill Reff.aurant.\" Baker St..\nNelson, from December first. Apply P. O. Box 47. (2768)\n._ DESIRABLE CORNER SUITABLE\nfor store, gas and service station\non main highway. Close to\nhydro-electric construction works.\nCare of Dally News. (2760)\n!IISCELLANEOC>  ror,  unit (27)\nOHRISTMAS APPLES\u2014COX OR-\nange, $1.35 per box. G. H.\nFraser.   Nelson.   .-, (2762)\nFOR SALE\u2014GIRLS' COAT, SKATES\nand boots. Apply 715 Hendryx\nSt.    (2735)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS, KEGS, BUR-\nlap sacks, white sugar sacks. MacDonald   Jam   Co. (2586)\nMASON Ss RISCH STUDIO PIANO,\nnearly new. $226 for quick sale.\nApply  Box  2781   Dally  News.\n(2781)\nH.E, DILL\nFire   Insurance   Agent\n508 Ward St.\nPnone 180\n;(2707)\nLOST AND FQtap\"\n, (81)\nLOST\u2014OFF TRUCK BETWEEN NEW\nDenver   and   Ncson.   one  carpet, 1\n0   x   12.     Finccr   please   Pnone I\n348jj. Nelson, or Jim Motherwell, 1\nNew  Danver.    Reward.       (2733)\nI ABM AND  DAIKV rBODUCE  (M(.|\nBAL_ON ARM D_Y AND, ALFALFA. J\n.Write for current prices to G. A. 1\n1 'West. Kasio, B. 0\u201e Kootenay I\nagent for bauwjn ARM __.ai-1\nEUS'   EXCHANGE. .   (2424)1\n_t__t\nAUTOMOBILES  FOB SALE\n11)28   PONTIAC   LANDEAU   SEDAN. 1\ngood condition.   Owner willing tol\nsacrifice.    Box .2806. Dally  wows. 1\n\u25a0 i.'  \u25a0     ' 138W I\nJNAP\u2014FORD   TOWN  SEDAN.   1930;\n8700.   spiendld   condition.    Apply I\nHanson   Garage,    cranbrook.    or I\nHarry Howe, Khnber_ey.       (2784) f\nNUKSEUY  PBODLCTh\n_<_\")\n..    ::    :.,::\",.:..;: i.\t\nRTVERSipB    NURSERIES,    'GRAND I\nFORKS, are giving better satisfaction than ever.   Pnce lists from I\nG.   A.   West,   Kaslo,   agent   fori\nKootenay Lake District.       (2423)\nBUSINESS AND PRQFEbiSIOJ.AL DIRECTORY\nAccounting Dentists\nCHAS, F. HUNTER\n?ubllc  Accounting and  Auditor\nMcDonald Jam Bldg., Nelson   .\n12650)\nArchitects\nCHAS.   MOORE,   c.   E,\u2014Architect,\nLaud Surveyor, Revelstoke.   (2551)\nAssayers\nE W Wlddowson, Box A1108,. Nelson.\nB   C.   Standard western charges.\n(2662)\nAuctioneer\nSECOND HAND PIPES AND FIT-\ntings for _le. when you are ln\nneed of used Pipes and FlttingB\nany size Blaok or Galvanized,\nwrite to Swartz Pip? Yard. 220\nFirst Ave. EaBt. Vancouver, B. O.\nThe largest exclusive dealers in\nReconditioned Pipes and Fittings.\n(2340)\nMercantile  auctioneer.    A.  Raymer,\n613V.  Hall St.    Box  1175.    (2663)\nBeauty Parlors\nSociety Beauty Shop.    Gilker Block.\nMrs. E. Haigh, Phono 17L_ (2554)\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY. GILKER BLK\u201e NELSON.\n(2656)\ndrTIiittuNi x-ray, cranbrook.\nUM' (2566)\nEngineers\nD%,'*_  At_.\u00b0'   WALLET  \u2014  Orlttttil\nBlock,   x-ray.   Nelson, B.^T?*1\n .     '        _(2567)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON-. Heal Estate _ul\nE_PM' Rentals. Next Hlppersoof\nHardware, Baker St. (8M8) \\\nPhotographers\nGEORGE   A.   MEERES\u2014Artlsf ' nWri I\nPhotographer.   716   jStaJ<i\\\",u^.|\n(2581) I\nWILLIAMS*  TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE   COAL ANL W00D\nATKINSON    TRANSFERZri^, , \u25a0\n\u2022   Wood. . I__.____r_S3ta,',.B\u00ab|\n \u2014\u2014____    <*ea> I\nWood Working __ctohr\nLAWSON\u2014Baker St.. Carpenter ZZZ* I\nJoiner.    Sash  and  Ha\u00ablwo5dM<1|\n     tiw.,\\\nFlorists\nH   D. DAWSON\u2014LAND SURVEYOR\nMining and Civil Engineer,; Kaslo.\n (2660)\nA H. GREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS.\nFormerly Green Bros., Burden\nNelson. Civil and Mining Engineers, B. O,, A'berta and Dominion\nLand   Surveyors. (2560)\nGrlz-ello's Greenhouse, Nelson Out I\nflowers and floral designs.   (256S)|\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. __ll I\nline cut flowers at all times' I\nfloral designs.   Phone 233    (2666)1\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSE\u2014Phone 1\n342. Cut flowers. Potted Plants!\nand Floral t_mbi_m_. '3667)1\nTHE  GUMPS \u2014WHAT  A  PITY\niflne tribute pa-ld. recently to Great\nBritain by V. S. Senator Fn. and\ntold to what extent. Britain was\nprepared to ko to protect her citizens.\nIn conclusion Mra. Gates Bald,\n\"This chapter will offer prizes In\nthe oomiiiK year for the hlsrhest\nstanding ln Canadian history. We\nhope- you \"will make juat as Rood\nmarks next year aa this.\"\nThe delegation from the Mount\nFernie chapter went up on tho\ntwo train' to Coal Creek and came\nbarclt on thc four ln the afternoon.\nALBERT, BELGIAN\nKING IS GREAT\nMOUNTAIN HIKER\nTKENTO. Italy. Nov. lfl.\u2014Albert\nKing of the \u25a0 Belgtuns, has Just left\nthis Dolomite district after several weeks of Alpine sporU, leaving\nbehind him records of mountain\nclimbing equalled, by few if any\nof   the   crowned  lteads   ln   history.\nAlbert, with his guides, brothors\nfillvlo Mario and Agostinl, ascended six or more cloud piercing peaks\n\u2014Brenta summit, East Brants Wail,\nLower Castle, Refuge Cross, Lower\nBrenta, and Low Tower, During\nthe clim*) of Brenta's summit,\nwhich ls 11,000 feet hlgk. ^n* Albert performed a heroic fete for\nwhich he has received the sincere\nthanlfia  of  his  guides.\nAs he stood on a rock Jutting\nfrom a perpendicular side' of tho\nmountain one of his guides shout'\ned to him that the rock was giving\n\u2022way. Albert moved quickly to another rock but with great presence\nof mind continued to support the\ntumbling rock with his breast and\n\"hands, leet it should fall on the\nguides below. Only when th\u00a9 guides had moved out of the way did\nAlbert release the rock which\nplunged like a projectile Into the\nvalley  below.\nKing Albert, who lias been etay-\nlng here Incognito as Dr. Redy departed with the statement, \"I am\nsorry my age has not permitted\nme to profit to the utmost from\npoaslbilltlfis offered by my incomparable  guides.\"\ned by C. G. I. T, choruses bv tho\ngirls under Miss Gertrude Patmore\nand a playet, \"Shakespearian Hash\"\nby members of tho Young People's\nSociety. David Morgan sang \"Come\nto the Pair\" and \"A Devonshire\nWedding\" In excellent voice. Vincent\nFink delighted the audience with a\nmasterly rendering of the adante\nmovement from \"halo's Symphonic\nEspagnle\" followed by the \"Old Refrain.\" He was accompanied by Miss\nWanda Fink at tlie nlano. Mlas Fink\nalso accompanied the other musical numbers of the programme\nRev. T. J. s. Ferguson's lecture\nrecital ''The Big Jdea\" completed\nthe programme and was heartily ,\nenjoyed by young and old. Mr. Fer- :\nguson veers so readily from the\nScotch to the Irish dllaect that the\nfact that he was born in Scotland\nwould not be known by anyone not\nacquainted with the fact. He tried\nto tell something of the big idea\nbehind the social structure of the\nworld of today, taking three headp:\nthe family, the community and the\nnation. Each of his points he hung\non an amusing a Btory, maklnc the\nlecture an entertaining combination of the amusing and the worth\nwhile. Financial proceeds from tho\nanniversary efforts were excellent\nexceeding tho expectations of the\ncommittee..\nNEW BRUNHWICK   HILLS\nThe Geodetic Survff of Canada,\n\u2022 department of the interior, in the\nt course pf its work on tho triangula-\n.' tlon of the Maritime Provinces, has\n' accurately determined the geograpillc\n'_ positiohB and elevations of a num-\n.* ber of prominent hills ln northern\nNew Brunswick, suoh as, Mount\nt Carl-ton, 2890 feet; Costigan, 2197\nj   feet; Bald l^ak, 20B6 feet.\nMan Aged 82 Takes\nOut Citizen's Papers\nWINDSOR. Ont.. NOV. 10.\u2014i'CP)\u2014\nWhen Judge 'McMahon opened his\nnaturalization court Jn Sandwich\nthere were 228 applicants for Canadian citizenship. Of this number 113 have recently come to the\nborder from western provinces ln\nCanada. Some have been in the\nwest only a few mouths and others\nfor years. One man had stayed ln\nWinnipeg only nine days before\ncoming here. The list sho-ws from\nManitoba 39; Saskatchewan, 45;\nAlberta, 24; British Columbia, 5. In\naddition there are 18 applicants who\ncame here from Quebec and seven\nfrom United States.\nThe oldest applicant is a man\naged 82. The oldest woman applicant ls 70 and anothor gives tho\nago of 71. Three men give tho\nages of 77, 74 and 71. These aged\npersons have believed that they\nwere Canadian citizens and havo\nbeen residents of the Dominion for\nmany years and, only when some\napplied for old age pensions did\nthey discover that they were etill\nrecognized as citizens of the land\nof their birth.\nAtTTOMOBILKfl  ENTERING   CANADA\nIn 1919 the number of touring\nautomombiles entering Canada was\n238,000. In 10 years (1929) this\nnumber grew to 4,609,000,\n m\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS        THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1930.\nPage NIm\nNews\n_ C. MINING INDOSTRY HAS\nWEATHERED THE DEPRESSION\nBETTER THAN WAS EXPECTED\n3o States  J.  D.  Galloway,\nProvincial    Mineralogist,\nVancouver\nMINI'S TO RENO  .\nMINE PRODUCTION\nfertilizer  Plant,  Trails  and\nPend Oreille Plant,\nGood Signs\n_ VANCOUVER.- ,B.   C.   Nov.   19-~\n\u25a0Chat British Columbia's mining ln-\nIlustry. haa weathered the storm of\nllSpreeslon better than might have\nIwen expected - was tho opinion cx~\nfwessed bv J. D. Galloway, provincial\n__,._'nera_oglst.   in   an   address   today\n|>efore the convention  of  the Bri-\nElsh Columbia division. Canadan Institute  of  Mining' aud   Metallurgy.\nI{e felt the Industry was on tho eve\njit better things. -\n_ While figures aro not yet avail-\nJtble. Mr. Galloway said that, he helmed this year whl see increased\nTutputs of 'silver, lead and zinc and\nfeoreased   production   of   gold ' and\ntopper.    Coal will show a decrease,\n\u25a0to believes that in dollar  production the  1930  outnut\" will  show a\nIncrease   of  20   ner  oent   as   compared with tho preceding year,\nI The   province's   main   gold   pro-\n\u25a0i*.cr?r.   Premier,   will   show   a   de-\n\"iase,    continued    the    provincial\nneraJoglst,   but.   as   aealnst   the\n\u25a0loneer mine' will  turn in an ln-\nTreaite and the general returns are\nwelled by contributions from Union\nJad   Reno   mihes.   both   probably\n\u25a0lowing a slight Increase over tho\n1)20 figure  of. 6118.711.\nI Mr.  Galloway  said  that  there  is\n\"1 probability  that silver will es~\n_jbllsh a new high record of pro-\n\u25a0uction   ln  British   Columbia   this\nIwr.    The   Drosnect   ls   for   promotion of ll.ouO.000 ounces,   con-\n\u25a0ibutlon of  1.600,000  ounces  from\nlie Prosperity mine at Stewart,, a\nlew shipper this vear. is largely re-\n\u25a0wnsible for the Increase.\nTin reviewing the Drooable output\nJ should bo mtnembered. continued\n\u25a0r. Galloway, that fewer mines have\nmen operated and fewer mon em-\nlioyed   in   the   industry.    BmaJer\nlines have been closed in some In-\n-       and big planta have prao-\n_.._.\u201e economv. '\n|OAL PICKING UP\n1 While-poal  mining  will  probably\nfiow. a decrease as compared with\n1)29, he said, the last four or five I\nl.onths of this.year are expected to\nlake a favorable showing as com-\nired with the corresponding period\n\u25a0 last year.\n\u25a0 '\/There ls coal in British Colum-\nJa   for   every   purpose.\"   declared.\n\u25a0r. Galoway, \"and those who pat-\n\u25a0*'\"* imported   coal  aro  in  most\ni paying a higher brlce for heat\nbits   than   when   buying   British\n\u25a0jlumbla   coal.    Much   remains   to\n\u25a0j   done   in .educating   the   publio\n\u25a0iw.coal can be handled efficiently,\n\u25a0>t onlv  in steam plants,  but  ln\n\u25a0eldences, and how. under efficient\n\u25a0uidllng.   coal   can   even   compete\nTlth   fuel   oil   and   freedom   from\naagreeable   features.    I   may   add\n.at ln safety and ln certain other\nattires, coal is superior to oil.\"\nI Whiln development hae been cur-\nlled this year, he continued, cer-\n'\"   enterprises   have   gone   ahead\n Illy.'     Consolidated    Mining   &\nsiting Co. is proceeding with the\npnstructlon of chemical fer.ilizer\nTints at Trail, an enterprise which-\njeans the establishment of a new\nlidustrv.\nI Development of 176,000-hornepower\nlydro plant on Pend d'Orellle river\na direct result of tlie fertiliser\nant. said Mr. Galloway. He men-\nBoned the erection of a 100-ton\n\u25a0lot mill at Bla Missouri, the ad-\n\u25a0\u2022nt of Prosperity mine as a new\n\u25a0\u25a0oducer, Increased ooductloen at\nloneer mine and the steady profess  of   prospectlntr.\nCANADA BONDS\nJ WINNIPEG. Man.. Nov. 19.\u2014Quot-\nkIoue on Victory bonds for $1000\nIre as follows:\nIWar loan:\n11B31. 5 por cent, 100.75 to 101.10.\n11887,' 6 Der cent. 104.68 to 104.06.\nI Victory loan:\n11033, &V> per cent. 103.25 to 103.55\n11034, 6V_ Per cent. 103.15 to 103.45\n11337, 6Va Per cent. 108.40 to 108.85\nI War loan renewal:\n11832, II V_ Per .\"\u2022> .t. 101.75 lo 103.10\nI Rofundlua loan:\n11943. 5-per cen.. 10150 to 103.86.\n11940. 4.'_ DOT cent. 100.25 to 100.50\n1944, 4V_ per cent. 100.90 to 100.80\n1946, IVi Per cent. 100.50 to 100.60\n|T.H.Waters&Co.,Ltd.\n\"Everything in Building\nMaterials\"\n| Builders and Contractors\nNELSON, B. C.\nJOGAN tic BRYAN\nDRAIN\nfjTOCKS,  BONDS,  COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nlew Vor_, Montreal. and Vancouver\nStock Exchange-,' Chlcajo Board, of\n\u25a0Trade, Winnipeg Grain Exchange\n\" and  other tradlni  exchange..\nrarvATE WIRE\nOFFICES:\nVancouver, Spokano and Seattle\nBALDWIN HOLDERS\nRATIFY NEW DEAL\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 19\u2014Shareholders of tho Baldwin oil company at\nthe general meeting last night, ratified the deal, with Atlantic Keystone\nPetroloums Ltd., entered ln to recently by Baldwin dlroetors. Tho\napproval by shareholders was unanimous,\n_, , Under the terms of tho deal\nBaldwin shareholders receive a cash\ndividend of 20 per oent: on the\noutstandln   stock   of   the   company,\n\u00a7?>IH..-lnt0 Jf\"* , Baldwin treasury\nBaldwin continuing as an aotlve\nstock company. ,\nN.Z1DJTERB\"\nMELD BECAUSE OF\nIHEJJDW PRICE\nSuoh Is Statement at Meeting of Board of Fanners\nInstitutes\nVICTORIA. B. 0., Nov. 19\u2014 Largo\nshipments of New Zealand butter\nlr,..cil01 ,held_,ln \u00b0oW stoarge In\nSwSS1 S85W1* awaiting Vtiee recovery,  and by  reason  of  the ab-\n3*A_H.- Ule, Pro\u2122\u2122* of the antidumping clauses of tho tariff act,\n\u2122__.W,M ?*ated >>_*>'\u25a0\u00bb the present\nmeeting here of the advisory board\nof farmers' Institutes of the province.\n, The British Columbia butter market was now depressed fax below\nSPA.-00? _ ?' Production, it waa\n;_ted largely because of the Australian trade treaty, a secondary\nagS_*\u00bbSL K^\"4 Immediate Imnort-\nSSSJ \u00ab B the. \"cent importations\nfrom  Now Zealand.\n-JiJ? \"\"\"\"..Passed a resolution\n?m__.nB \"P\u00b0rt?<l negotiations be-\nK}?m.__.'he Cwadlan government\n_._.   )____ i?vofhment\u00bb   of Australia\nminister   of   trade   end   commerce\n.55U^v**a\u00a3.rteM b\u00b0 \"on to\nprotect the dairy, sheep and al.\nTied Industries from what mff described as demoralization\nCONlUlTiTs\nDP8J0NTREAL\nMoves  to  150;   Met   Gains\nLead Losses Throughout the List\nMONTREAL, Que., Nov 18\u2014 A\nspirited upward, movement' ln Mont-\nKSi__2.*?\u00a3_ st'nmlated tho eto&\nexchange today, and aided further bv\nfS JSPWed lone ln New Von,\"iffi\n_ft>,S__W 5_\u00ab*\u00ab'\u00bb. closing prices here\nshowed net gains with a substantial\n\u00a7_.SI_?,_0VW uet I.os8eB' Consolidated\n?in.i-      .*_\" afsln a  v>iB  niover.\nWJ. el8h.' po'nts !>'*\u00ab at 150.\n-_nJS.ng \"naI Prtces,. with net\nSSfSWi' rre: Dominion Bridge, a\nFion6-ffl8rSeriat._66i Brazllan \"Sac.\ntlon, off % at 26Vi; Dominion Steel\n$n\u00a3ml 5'^S\" Vs at W,; Canada\nPower and Paper, Ji higher at 8*_-\nCockshutt Plow of_*u at 127 wh2i\nMassey Harris eased \\% to 16; Can!\njdlan Car unchanged at 17: National\nBreweries, up yt at 2S\u00ab,; CanSdlkn\ng\u00bbSBW .petrio prefer?e_ i% towe?\nat 60: ShftWlnUan Power up ff at\n?S}'LSt- Lawrence Paper preferred,\noff four at 31. a new low level.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBank of Commerce ... 224\nDominion Bank    224\nImperial   Bank    . \u25a0\u25a0 21Bl_\nBank  of Montreal  . .....  .. 280\nBank of Nova Scotia  316\nRoyal Bank  obi\nBank  of Toronto   _\"\"'..\" 249\nAblltbi Power &, Paner .       afi\nAtlantic  Suear . . 7]\/\nBell  Telephone ' 1473?\nBrazilian T L & Power Z'.'Sl 26 &\nBritish American Oil     flfft\nBrompton  Paper       2. 10\nCanada Bronze    _. giii\nCanada Car & Foundry   172\nCanada Cement    14??\nCanada Cement pfd    91\nCanada  Converters ._, 02\nCanada Indus.rial Alcohol ....      3\nCanada   Cottona   .\u201e\u201e  , 50\nCanada Gen Hlectric pfd ,  210\nCanada   Power \u201e._      \u00a7 14\nCanada Steamship Lines       6\nCons Mtniiut & Smeltimt , 149%\nDominion Bridie    56\u00ab\nDominion   Glass    ,  101\nDominion steel Corn nfd .... 35\nDominion  Textile \u25a0  7934\nA.   P.   Grain   ..._         y*\nHiUcrest   Colliers     50\nboko  of tho  Woods     28\nMassey  Harris  t .  Hy.\nMontreal Power . .... . 5734\nMontreal  TeleKraoh  :_\u201e ..... 49'\nMontreal  Tramways   173\nNational   Breweries   , ,\u201e asVi\nNational   Steol  Car     33*\u00ab\nOgilvle   Mlllinc    _..^_.. 260\nOntario  Steel  products    18\nOttawa L: H. & Power   99\nPenmans Ltd   63\nPower   Corporation   _..\u201e.....,  53%\nPrlCfi   Bros   ..._  _,_ 43\nuebec Power  _..-,  44%\nShawlniiran     _\u201e_.... 60^4\nSo   Canada  Power   _\u201e 28\nSteel   of   Canada     40%\nSt. Ijawrenco Flour MUls   17\nViba^ao   Cotton   .__   35\nWeetern   Grocers     17\nWlnnlpca; Rni.wav  _  20\nWinnlpeff Railway pfd  .... 95\n\\Building\n\\M,CLtexicH   John Burns & Son\nLet us figure your bills on\nBuilding Material.    Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting \u20ac0. o\u00a3 Canada, Ltd.\n'-'-,  Office, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL,.BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC TBAIL\nMEXICO TO TAKE\n200,000 BUSHELS\nCANADIAN WHEAT?\nCHICAGO, Nov. 19. -~(AP) \u2014 fte-\npovts received at the Chicago board\nof trade today from Mexico City\nsaid, the Mexican government had\nan-anged for purcha&e ' of 200,000\nbushels of Canadian wheat from\nthe Canadian pool.\nTlie purchase was said to have\nbeen arranged bv the Mexican commercial attache at Ottawa and was\ndUB to the Insufficiency ol the\nMexican crop for home use,\nAERIAL TRAM TO\nBE ERECTED AT\nEUPHRATES MINE\nWill Be 3700 Feet Lon&From\nTunnel to G. N. Track;\nEquipment Is Arriving\nThe first shipment of material\nfor an aerial tram to be constructed\nat the 'ohrates mines. elKht mllea\nsouth * Ne.son, arrived here last\nFriday. The tram lino will bo\n3700 feet long and will eirtend from\nthe portal of No. 2 tunnel to the\nGreat Northern tracks below.\nThe first shipment of material\nconsists of 4000 . pounds of cable.\nThe balance of the cable and machinery will arrive before the end\nof the month. It is expected.\nTho rlght-of-wav for the tram has\nbeen prepared a_ the lines ls surveyed g\u00a3j c.oared and the terminals are under construction. Foundations for. the towers are laid.\nTimber used In tho construction\nof ' the towers and terminals was\ncut by the comoanv mill on the\nproperty. The mill has again been\nout into commission to cut an\n.dded supply.\nI'OKAMi FIRM DOING\nERECTION\nThe machinery arid cables are being supplied and the erection supervised by a Spokane firm, with the\nunderstanding that all available\n.naterial bo purchased In British\nJa umbla.\"\nIt la expected by E. Ferguson,\nvice-president of the company, that\nconstruction will be completed early\nIn the new year and that shipments from the stoplna ground of\n100 feet between No. 1 and No. 2\nunnels an Ell Tee vein will bo\niiarted at thatt lme.\nAn adit to crosscut two parallel\nveins has been started 1046 feet ln\non No. 2 tunnel.\nMr. Ferguson states tha* thpre are\n20 men now employed at the mine\nand that such work will help to\nsolve some small part of tho unem-\noloyment  problem.\nNEW _UKK STOCKS\nHleh Low Closo\nAllegheny       10 9V4      0%\nAiled   Chemical 210 204 209_\nAndes    -    IB% \u2014 18%\nAm Can  ..._.._ 117% 116 117'4\nAm   For   Power   42(4 38% 41%\nVm Smelt Ss R   63 V, 62 !\u00bb\u25a0 6314\nAm   Telephone.. 191V, 187._ 190J5\nAm Tobacco  .... 108.S, 106% 107%\nAnaconda    38 36% 37\",_\nAtchison     194K, 192*_ 194l_\nBaldwin        24V, 22% 24\nBait   _   Ohio  ..   76% 74% 76\nJondlx  Aviation   18% 16.i 18%\n*ith  Steel      66.i 62.i 65i_\nCan Pacific     43% 42% 43%\nJeno  de   Pasco   30%\" 30 30\nChes  Ss Ohio  ..   43'A 42% 43 V,\nJhryslor        18% 17 18%\nCon Gas N Y ..   91 87% 00V4\nCorn   Products..   81% 79U 81\njunont   _    9414 90% 92%\nEastman   Kodak 170 166 'A 170\nErie        29% 28% 29%\nord English ....   \u2014 \u2014 15%\nFord  of  Canada   \u2014 \u2014 21'A\nFirst Nat Stores   44 ' 43 43\nFreeport  Texas..   33% \"\"U 33%\nGen Motors     36'A 35.4 36%\nGen Eleotrlo ....   61 48V_ 50%\nGen Foods     62Vi 50% 62\nGold  Dust      34 32% 33%\nGranbv        18'A 18 18!_\nOt. West Sugar   10% 10% 10%\nHowe   Sound   ..   25% 25 26\nHudson    Motors   28% 23% 26%\nIns  Copper     11% 10% 11%\nInt  Rapid  Tran   \u2014 \u2014 29%\nInt.   Nickel       18% 1814 18%\nInt Tel __ Tel ..   30 28% 29%\nKe.ly Spring     2% 2._       2V_\nKenn  Copper  ..   29% 28% 29%\nKresgo  S S      27% 28% 27\nKroegg   Ss   Toll   24% 23% 24%\nMaok Truck ....   46% 44. 451\/3\nNas'a  Motors  ....   20% ' 28 29%\nNat  Dairy  Prod   44% 43% 44%\nN Paw Sc Light   \u2014    \u25a0   \u2014 38\nN   V   Central   .. 135'A 133% 135\nPacific Gas Ss E   50'A 48'A 50%\nPackard   Motors     9'A 9V5       9%\nPenn R B     61'A '   60% 61'A\nPhillips   Pete   _\u2022 20'A 19% 20 Vi\nRadio  Corp       18% 16% 17%\nRadio Keith Or   23 21% 22V6\nRem   Rand       15% 14% 15%\nRook Island     67 66 67\nSafeway   Stores..   81% 49 51%\n3  Louis & S F   68 Vi \u2014 66'4\nShell Union Oil     8% 8%       8%\n^Jnclair Con  ....   13% 13 13%\nSo Calif Edison   48V1 47 48%\n'\u25a0_   Paolflc     108 102 103\nStan Oil of Cal   51V4 50Vi 61%\nStan OU of Ind   \u2014 \u2014 36%\nStan OU of N J   64% 53 54%\nStewart   Warner   20% 19% 20%\nStudebaker        23% a Hi 23%\nTexas  Corp      39% 38V:, 38%\nTexas  Gulf  Sul   63 52% 62Vb\nUnion   Carbide..   62% 60% 63%\nUnion   Oil  Calif   27% 27% 27%\nUn Paclfio   190% 187,(5 lOOVj\nUn Alroraft     \u2014 \u2014 28%\nU  S  Rubber  ....   16% 15 15Vi\nU  S  Steel    148 146 147%\nWest  Electric   .. 104% lOOVi 103%\nWMys  Overland    4% 4%      4%\nYellow Truck  ..   11% lOVi llii\nWIWMl'EG GiiAIN\nFLOUR, ROLLED\nOATSDECLINE\nLOCAL MARKET\nChristmas Novelties Arrive;\nFlour and Feed Rolls\nInto City\nA decline in the nrlce of both\nflour aiid rolled oats and the receipt of a shioment of Christmas\nnovelties, . featured the recent\nwholesale market movement hero.\nTuesday the Drice of flour declined 20 cents a barrel, and the1\njrtce of rolled oate 10 cents per\n80 pounds. A mixed car of flour\nand feed, one of timothy, and two\nof alfalfa, were unloaded last week.\nTho timothy was shioDed from tho\nOkanagan and the alfalfa from\nGrand Forks and Ashcroft. one car\nfrom  eaph  place.\nA car of oraiiKes, the first of the\nNavel crop, and a half car of\ngrapes were received here last week.\nA car of bananas and a half car of\nfcrape fruit aro expectod today.\nBoth of theso commodities-, have\n.held a steady trend in regard to\nprico.\nA shipment of Christinas stocking\nand Christmas crackers featured the\nnovelty movement.\nCanned nood3 are reported to be\nmoving freely, peas In particular are\nbeing handled In fair ciuantitles.\nShipments of soaps and eoap products recently rolled from Nelson\nfor district points. The price of\npork and beans Is showing a slight\ntendency to ease off. Sugar prices\nremain  unchanged.\nWho.esalers report that the full\nsupply of Christmas commodities,\n.ncluding fancy wrapped cigars, cigarettes and tobaccos, fancy boxed\nchocolates and fruits, all In store.\nMEATS   AND   LABD\nIn the meat line, the prices of\nlard arid smoked meats are easing\noff slightly but butter and egg\npricea show no change. A small\nshipment of fresh eggs rolled to\nMeson from' the coast last week.\nThe egg receipts are now pxception-\nally light. Tho demand for local\nfresh eggs is- still greater than the\nuroductlon.\nThe butter market remains steady,\nthn most recent shioment to be received here waa a consignment of\n\u00ab;00 boxes from Edmonton. A, similar consignment ts received weekly,\nPork is now selling at between 18\nand 17 cents carcass weight. Last\nweek a decline of one oent wae\nreceived In this oroduco.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nWINNIPEG, Man., Nov. 19.\u2014Grain\nquotations:\nWHEAT\u2014\nNOV > 6994 60% BBK 00%\nDec    69 593,4 674* 6UV4\nMay     04 64Mi 02% 04\nJuly     05^3 66!i 64U 65,%\nOATS\u2014\nNov     26% 26?o 20.J, 233-4\nDec    25 Tfc 26% 25Vb 35%\nMay     28 28^ 27& S8ft\nBARLEY\u2014\nNoV     81% 22(4 '22V4 22\nDec.  .._.. 21(4   aavfe   ai>_    siau\nMay         27\u00bb4      27%      36%      37$\nPLAXr-\nNoV.   \u00ab 101        101 99        100*14\nDeo.        96 88    ,   96 D8\nMay    ...... 103      104%   103       104%\nEYE\u2014\nNov.    .    29 39 38 39\nMay    .....   33%     35 83 H     36\nJUly   ......   34%     36%     34%     36%\n'CASH  PRICES:\nWheat: No. 1 bard, 61; No. 1\nnor..* 60^; No. 3 nor;, 68%; -No.\n3'nor;, 56; No. 4, 52%; No. 6, 46%;\nNo. 6; 41%; feed, 8fi%{ track, 59%;\nacreenlngs,   per   ton,   M.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPO\u2014B.' M-nn... Nov. 19.\nWour unohanned. SUlomeiita 40,411\n______ unohwutwd.        .^\nWheat:    No.  1  liorthem 70H\n7314;   No.   1   red   durum   61 _   t>\n6_%-:   December 08V_:   March  68%\nMay  70%. D<  .\nCorn:   No. _ uellow 61 to 66>4\nOate:    No. 3 white 37'i to 28V4\nFlax:   No. 1 1.65.i .to 1,   \"\nAbana    \t\ni,conda    .\u2014\u25a0\nArno   \t\nAJax     _._ \u2014\nAmity     \u00bb\u2014-\nA. P. Consolidated ....\nAssoolated    \t\nArea     \t\nBaltic   OU    \t\nB. A. Oil  \t\nBase Metals  \t\n_:edrord    -\t\nBldgood \u2022\u2022\u25a0\nBarry  Holllnger ......._\nBig   Missouri _\nCalmont   \u2022\u25a0\u2014:\ncentral Manitoba ..._.\nClwrnlcB'   Besearch   ..\nClorlcy    \t\nDome      \u2014\u2022\t\nr_ho_ie   --.\t\nDuprnt     -\nl, ...Lei est    \u2022\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\nPalconbrldBD   Nickel\n(.codfish.     -\t\nHomo  Oil    .\t\n..arkpr Gold, ask \t\nHowey      -\t\nHolllnger     \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInternational   Nickel\nteetly    \u2014 \t\nLake  Shoro  \t\nKirkland   Lako   \t\nKootenay   Florence   ..\nMacassa    -\u2014\nvlandy     '\t\nManitoba Basin \t\nMclntyre   \t\nMining Corporation ..\nNewbeo     _\t\nNew Imperial Oil \t\nNlpjsslnir    \u2014.....\nNoranda    ._..\nPeterson Cobalt\t\nPend    Oreille     \t\nPremier Gold, ..._\t\nSherrit  Gordon   \t\nSudbury  Rasln   \t\nSlscoo     _\u2014;-*-.\u2014\n; adacona    _ \u2014\nTech Hughes \t\nThompson  Cadallac  ..\nVlpond    \u2014:\u2014\t\nVentures    \t\nWright  Hargreaves  \t\nWalte   Ackerman   \u2014\n.. .22\n. .01 Vi\n.. .03 VS\n.. 1.33\n. .02 Vi\n. .32\n.. .24\n.. .01 VS\n_ .13\n.. 15.00\n.. 1.40\n.. .13\n.. .03 VS\n.. .03\n.. .51\n.. .32\n. .05\n.. 2.96\n. .05\n. 8.10\n. .49\n. .01\n. .71\n. 1.40\n. .03 Vi\n. 2.15\n. .01\n. .16\n. 5.90\n. 5.25\n. 18,50\n. .27\n. 21.25\n. .40\n. .01\n. .06\n. .09\n. .03\n. 17.7S\n. 1.30\n. .07\n17.35\n, 1.16\n. 18.60\n\u2022 .04 V_\n. .70\n. .75\nWHEAT PRICES IN\nMOVE UP, CHICAGO\nANDATWINNIPEG\nOvernight Sale Help. Canadian Market; Good Demand Until End\nWINNIPEG, Man., Noy. 19.\u2014(By\ntho Canadian Press) \u2014 Encouraged\nby favorable export news, with overnight sale of 1,000,000 bushels of,\nthe Dominion's wheat, traders expressed their optimism today by\nrunning values up 1V4 to 1% cents\na bushel.    .\nAs Western premiers sought aid\nfor the agriculturists of the prairies\nand to stabilize grain prioes, market news from all centers was more\nhelpful. Higher values ruled ln Unit,\ned States, Liverpool and Buenos\nAires markets, and at the outset\nthis started au upward swing In\nthe  local  pit.\nShipping interest became active\nbuyers of all futures, and there was\nsut-lclont speculative trado to tako\ncare of the fairly liberal offerings\nthat developed as unwinding of\nspreads. Tile cause of Tuesday's slash\nin values, between Winnipeg and\nChicago  continued,\nThe good demand continued right\nto. the final gops whloh found all\nfutures with the exception of December, above the 60 cent mark as\ncompared with yesterday's low of\n56 cents a bushel. At the finish,\nNovember was firm at 80Vi oents:\nDecember 59 Vi to \u25a0,(,, May 64 to 64V4\nand July 65% to %.\nThe firm tone of the futures was\nreflooted ln the cash market and\ncoarse grains were a more active\ntrade dovelopod as values swung upward Rye led the coarse grains,\nshowing substantial gains while\nothers closed fractionally higher.\n\u25a0 -(B,y _Joha p- Boughan)\u2014 Aatoc-\nlated Press Market Suitor)\u2014\nCHICAGO, Ills.. Hot\" 19\u2014Graln\nyaluos tilted moderately upward to-\n_*. SSfiSS \u00b0LweI1 tlmetl purchasing\nfor United states farm board al-\nr\\f\" nJXl\u201e,a'so J37, .concerted action\nor Canadian banks. It was announced that wheat price stab 1-\nlzlng operations of United State*\ngovernment-sponsored agencies were\nnot confined to Chicago, but ei-\n_____\u00a3 u\u201et0 & domestlo markets.\nMeanwhile reports were current that\nCanada s banks would protect msr-\nfl>fB\u201eb' wheat, holdings ot the cSL\nadlan  growers   pool\n,\u201eS.cag0    \u00b0>\u00ab1_    auota*ions    on\n2W *_ Iove'' Vi - IH a bushel\ntt? P^n yesterday's finish. Cora\nclosed 1-1% advanced; oats at .\nJ\u00ab up and provisions unchanged to\nBROKERS'ARREST\nDOES NOT INJURE\nMININOINDUSTRY\nSo States G. C. Bateman of\nOntario Association,\nSpeaking, Coast\nVANCOUVER, B. c. Nov 19 _\nAS._of ? ,number of prominent\nCanadian brokers docs not constitute a permanent setback for the\nmining Industry of the Dominion-\nI.ro_i,erUy of mining , depeS*i on\nthe merit of properties! not brokers\nor tho government, declared George\nC Bateman. secretary of Ontario\nMilling association, at s luncheon\nheld today In connection with the\nannual convention of B c d\"\nvision, Canadian Institute of 'Mining  an   Metallurgy.\n\"The prosperity of mining does\nnot depend on either brokers or\ngovernment, any more than toe\npronixrlty of thc country as a\nwhole depends on them. What the\nprosperity of mining doee depend\non aro properties of merit, but.\nunfortunately, during the past few\nyears, there have been too few\ndiscoveries.\n\"To offset this lack of discoveries, artificial stimulation was tried\nbut the only acceleration we reailv\nneeded was new discoveries to foster\nprospecting and new properties of\nmerit   to   promote   exploration.\"\nVANCOUVER  LIST\nMcDERM\u00a9 HEADS\nBOND DEALERS\nVANCOUVER. B.. C. Nov. 10.\u2014\nE. B. McDerrald, managing director\nof the Royal Flnahoial corporation,\nwas oleoted president of the British Columbia Bond Dealers' association, at the annual meeting in\nVancouver today.\nCol. A. M. Brown, manager of\nVictor W. Odium. Brown Ss Co., was\nchosen for the position of honorary\npresident, and O. G. Fullerton or\nA. E. Ames _b Ool, was mado vlco-\norosldent, Members of the executive from Vancouver were selected as follows: General Victor W.\n_ura: _ P. Smith. Pemberton _c\nSons. Vanoouver. Ltd.. bond de-\nartment: and P. Whitehead, Paclfio\nstock Ss Bond Cdrooratlon Ltd,\nGRAIN EXPORTS\nFROM VANCOUVER\nSHOWBIG JUMP\nHave    Reached    22,203,162\nBushels Compared to\n9,462,401 Last Year\nVANCOUVER, B. O., Nov. 19 \u2014\nGrain exports through the port of\nVancouver at 8 a. m. Wednesday had\nroaohed 22.203,162 bushels, compared with 9,463,401 bushels on the\nsame date last year.\nShips are in port to load 1,143,999\nbushels, and bookings for the balance of the month were 3,006.632\nbushels. The stocks ln elevators,\nIn terminals and cars total 12,801 -\n676   bushels.\n.h?5___ !rearJ\"\u201e \"Torts have been\nshipped as follows:\u2014 To the United kingdom and Europe, 17,024,703\nbushels. To the Orient, 4,360,371\nbushels. To Central and South\nAmerica, 718,813 bushels. To other\ncountries,  201,376  bushels.\nsaiStoIm\"\nDROPSJORONTO\nConsolidated Smellers Gains\nPoint to 142; Nickel\nIs Up\n.65\n.82(4\n.02\n5.60\n\u25a0_2%\n.86\n.46'\n1.71\n2.60\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK. N. Y., Nov. 10. \u2014\nSterling exclwngo firm at S4.83 3-16\nfor 60 day'bills and at M.85 0-16 for\ndemand.\nForeign bar sliver 36 cents.\nCanadian dollars 9-64 cents prem.\nMarks 23.81 li   cents:\nKronen   2S.V2V4   cents.\nFrancs 3.92..  cents.\nLire   6.23 ((,   cents.\nNelson approximate sterling ,. exchange  rato   84.87  9-16.\nA..50 gallon still operated by two\ngirls was discovered within a stone's\nthrow of police headciuarters at\nSalt Lake .city.\nTORONTO, Ont., Nov. 19\u2014 The\nmost significant feature of trading\non the Toronto stock exchange today was the fact that total volume receded to 13,778 shares. Gains,'\nlosses and, unchanged prioes were\nabout evenly divided.    .\nBell Telephone was up *i to 148\nand Brazilian traction was unchanged at 26%. c. P. R. gatned Bio\nclose at 43 Vi and Consumers Gae\nwok on 1V4 to close at 185(4\nMontreal power olosed at 58, un 3\npoints, and Power Corporation followed ln the movement with a\nraise  of  %   to close at 83%.\nPage-Hersev was unchanged and\nSteel of Canada lost % to 40_T\nPord of Canada \"A\" closed at 31\nwith a gain ot  %.\nCockshutt plow olosed at 12 with\noff \"tt  at % \"mi MrjMe'*-\u2122tTls was\nConsolidated Smelters was up 1\nto 14_2 and International nlckol at\n18.\u00ab up vi. Noranda lost 35 cents\nto close at $17.80. British American\nP'l ijalned Vi to 15% to 14%\nMcColl-Frontenac lost V_ to 21\nand Service Stations was down \", to\nPRICES COMPLETE\nTHEIR RECOVERY\nON WALL STREET\nSpeculative    Sentiment    Is\nAgain Cheerful; Specialities Move Up\nNEW YORK, Nov.' 1&~-(AP) \u2014\nSpeculative eentlment took a cheerful turn ii'iaiu today end the .stock\nmarket, completed its recovery from\nMonday's   reaction.\nThe market's net gain of 1 to 4\npoints on a turnover of 3,418,410\nshares Indicated the day to day\ntraders foresaw profits on the long\nside.\n, Motor, motor accessory; railroad and Tjflllty Bhaxes were favored althoiEgii representative Industrials   did   well.\nA few specialities . moved up\nbriskly.\nActivity is well distributed\nthroughout the session although tne\nbeet display of strength came In\nthe late hours. Prominent Industrials like U. S. Steel, Bethlehem\nsteel. General Electric, Dupont,\nWestlnghouse, American Can and\nJohns:\u2014 Manvllle closed one to two\nhiKher while In the rails ' thero\nwere net advances of one to nearly\nfour in New York Central, Baltimore\nand Ohio, Pennsylvania, Southern\nRailway, Southern Pacific, Northern\nPacific, New J_aven and Atchison,\nMYLANDJAST\nCREST DOWN 6\nVANCOUVER, B. 0.. Nov. 19.\u2014Unaccountable drops of six centa each\nIn Mayland Oil and East Brest, od\na four cent advance In Big Missouri featured today's trading session of the Vancouver stock exchange. Mayland and East Crest\ndropped to .88 and .60 respectively\nwhile Bis: Missouri sold up to .61\nOn a fair lncerase In activity. Otherwise the market wae dull, with prices\nfmerally moving in narrow ra :are.\nome Oil sold as high as 2.23 during the day but the closing bid was\nat 2.16, or one cent higher than yesterday's   final   quotation.\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, Nov, 19.\u2014Copper-\u2014\nQuiet. Electrolytic, spot and future\n11-12.\nTin\u2014Steady. Spot and nearby,\n25.90.   Future   26.12.\nIron\u2014Quiet,, unchanged.\nLead \u2014 Steady; spot New York,\n5.10;   East   St.   Louis,   4.96.\nZinc\u2014Steady. Beat Bt. Louis, spot\nand   future  4.30.\nAntimony\u20147.25-7-25.\nAT   LONDON\nStandard copper\u2014Spot and future \u00a345 10s; electrolytic, spot \u00a350;\nfuture \u00a351.\nTin\u2014Spot. \u00a3113 17a fld; future\n\u00a3115   6s.\nLead\u2014Spot and future,  \u00a310  2s 6d.\nZinc\u2014Fnot \u00a314 12s 6d; future\n\u00a315   2s   6d.\nVANCOUVER. B. C. Nov. 19 \u2014\nTho stock sales this afternoon at\nthe Vancouver stook exchange were-\nA.  P.  Con.\u2014200 at  .33\nC.    E. Corp.\u2014200 at .55: 60 at .58\nDalhousie\u20141250  at  .50\nEast Crest\u2014500 &_\u25a0 .70.\nPabyan   Pete\u2014170o   at   .03.\nFreehold\u20141000  at   .17\nHome   Oil\u2014350   at  2.20.\nMayland\u2014500 at .86: 700 at .87;\n700 at .88; 500 at .00; 100 at ,01\n2o at  .95.\nOkalta new\u2014100 at .41.\nSpooner\u2014100   at   .46.\nMINES\nBisr Missouri\u20142100 at  .51^.\nPend Orelllo\u201450 a*. .70.\nPioneer Gold\u201460  at  .90.\nPorter Idaho\u20144000 at .07|_; 4000\nat   .07%.\nVANCOUVER CURB\nCork Province\u20145000 at .01.\nCrow's Neet\u2014600 at .08.\nNordon  p-m \u20141300 at .68.\nEASTERN   MINES\nInter.  Nickel\u20143  at  18.00.\nTurner Valley production for 1030\ndefinitely parsed the 1,000,000 barrel\nmark in October.\nBusiness as Usual\nOpen  roads  in   Winter\u2014Well   maintained   reads   in   Snmmer-\n\"CaterplUar\"   Trie-ton;   and   modern   road   machinery   db   both.\nA>k *for   booklet,   \"AH   Year   Roads\"\u2014FREE.\nMORRISON\u2014An Institution Built on Service.\n\u2022 '\u25a0'\u2022j        \u25a0 ;';'\"'   .'      Sole Distributors   for' DC\nII MDRRI5PNTRACT0R & EQUIPMENT CO-LIMITED\n..Warehouse.;'.Niinpimo.'\nPrince George'\nEGG MARKET\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\n-But.\nEggs\nOTTAWA, Ont.. Nov. ID. \u2014 finr\nprices: ^\nToronto\u2014Prices  unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Market is atrons. British Columbia eggs are soiling on\n\u25a0spot at extras 60c; firsts 57c; pullet extras, 50. The weather is mild\nand this is interfering with the\nmovement   of   storage   eggs.\nChicago \u2014 Spot 36; Nov, 20%;\nDec.   20%.\nMONTREAL, Que., Nov. 19.-\n*er and cheese unchanged,\nlower.\nCheese, finest westerns 13U.\nCheese, finest easterns 12%.\nButtor, \u2022 No,    1    Quebeo   39>_.\nKc*gs,  storage  first  39.\nEg_B. storage seconds 86,\nEggs,   fresh   specials   68,\nE_gs,   fresh   extras   65.\nEfrge. fr^b firsts 55.\nABSORB LOAN CORPORATTON\nLONDON. Ont.. Nov. 19.\u2014It is\nofficially announced that negotiations le?d!ng up the o *w f\nthe Peoples Loan and Saving* Corporation of London hy the Huron\nand Jfr'e Mort^iT' Oo**^~\ndefinitely concluded today bv the\nboards of or l\n\u2022M--\"*T5. Th* a^\"n!:r\"-\"i \"*\" \u2022 -\nOhass   ls   to  bo   submitted   to   th*\n_..vi'eho_dei(_ j*.  ..  _ .._*..\nJ,000,000 TONS\nWHEAT ARE LOST\nBUENOS  AIRES.  HOT.   18\/-A.W-\nort lsaued {onmM bv the MmsUm\ncause ot rust,   The rtaWnwom sMs\nllntstry ol wioultute esttmsMS\nthat 2.000.00n tons ot wheot wiU *\u2022\niost   irom   the  next   harvest,   os-\nauso of rust. The statement \u00aba<_\nthat the area affected contsjbs\naoout 6,000.000 heotars at.830,000\nacres).\nDOMINION CLEAR\nON AGRICULTURAL\nP0UCU0R0NT0\nFour  Points  Announced  in\nNational Agricultural\nPolicy\nTORONTO. Oat.. NOV. 19,\u2014(CP)r\u2014\nA Dominion agricultural policy was\ntonight prc-lalmed bv Hon. Rober-\nWeir. Dominion minister of affrt-\nciUture. On th\u00bb occasion of tha\njpenthg of the Royal Winter fair,\nthe minister enunciated important\n.alleles, adapted after three, .days'\ndeliberation of thfi provincial mm- .\nliters of aerieultiu> and to bo\n.nown as tho \"national agricultural\njoilcy.\"\nDeclaring tluu. at the' present\nperiod, of depression now and drastic\nlitens in tho right direction should\nbe takon. _____ Insisting on tha '\nnecessity of coopeiutlou throughout*\nagricultural Canada, tbo minister\nintroduced, four measures designed\nto l-emedy tlie .\u25a0iu.ai.on aud bolster\n'Canada's   chief   industry.\"\nThey -are:   '  \u2014\n1\u2014The Introduction of better\njlood  in herds.\n2\u2014The scientific use of home\ni-own products for herd feeding\nurposes.\n3\u2014Careful study ot tha science\n>f  marketlnff.\n4\u2014The prevention of fcm-planta-\ni.iuu and. spread of poultry diseases.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nHINE8\nBayrtsv. __\nBig Missouri \u2014^_\nBlusblrd\nGeorgg copper _\nGeorgia    River   ...\nGolconda   ....:\t\nInt. O. Ss 0.\t\nNational   SllvBr   _\nNoble Five  \t\nOregon  Copper ....\nPremier    \t\nPend   Oreille   \t\nPorter  Idaho \t\nWoUtngton ....\t\n.01\n.01\n.03\n.33\n.13\n.03\n.oi\n.79\n.86\n\u25a0on\nOILS\nA..  P.   Consolidated '\t\nCommonwealth   \u201e\t\nDalhousie    \t\nFreehold     ,\t\nCalmont      ,\t\nCulmont   ....\t\n'Si.*4\n.03\n.03\n.03\nI\"\n.08\n.01\ns\n-GO\n.17\n.33\n.34\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG. Man- Nov. lBv-^Ufa-\nstock receipts: Oattln 1195: ca!vaa\n110:   hose 2060:  sheen 630.\nSteera. up to 1060 lbs.: Good\nand   oholcn   $6.45   to   &8.50.\nSteers, over 1060 lbs.: Good and\ncholoe   $5.50  to  P.6.35.\nHeifers: Good and ched-ee S5J50\nto   $0.35.\nCows; Good $4.00 to ai.BO; oan-\ntiers and cutters $1.80 to $3.36.\nBulls:     Good  $3.00   to  $3.50,.\nStocker and feeder staecra: Good\n$4.60   to   $6.36.\nStock cows and heifers: Good\n$3.60   to   $4.76.\nVeal calves: Good and Choice\n$7.00 to $9.00.\nHogs: Select bacon \u00bb! ner head\nnrcmlum: bacon $9.36: butcher*\n70 cents per head discount; Ilffhte\nand  feeders $9.60 to $10.50.\nLambs: Good haiulvwiNiErht W00;\n-\"\u25a0d heavies $7.0o to $8.00; buaks\n.\u25a0.,00 to $7.00.\nSheep:     Good   heavies   $3.50   to\nl.OO;   (rood   handywekUt   t4%00   to\n,5.00.\nA NEW STANDARD OF PERFECTION\nCool \u2014mild\u2014fragrant, a\u00ab\ncaptivating after months of\nacquaintance as at the first delicious\npuff.\nMade from selected Virginia leaf-\nblended by experts\u2014rolled right so\nthey smoke right\u2014Canada's pleasure\nsmoke\u2014the cigarette that puts a\nnew joy in smoking.\nDIXIE\nTHE BETTER CIGARETTE\nSAVE   THE   VALUABLE   POKER   HANDS\n J__e Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS ,    THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1930.\niiinrii'MniiiiiiiiiimiiiiTiiiiiiiiiiimi'.\nFiction\nFrom The Following\nFamous Authors\nPRICED at $1.00\nJeffrey Farnol\nSabatieni\nEdgar  Wallace\nOppenheim\nEthel M. Dell\nJoseph Hocking\nWarwick Deeping\nFrederick Niven\nRalph Connor\nPeter T. Kyne\nJames Oliver Curwood\nConingsby  Dawson\nH. Rider Haggard\nJoan Sutherland\nPackard, Cody\nand others.\n: Mann-Rutherford Co.\nZ Druggists and Stationers\n1111111111111111111111 M 111111111111111 i 1111111\nINSTITUTES DROP\nDISTRICT BOARD;\nTO AMALGAMATE?\n(Continued From Page One)\nJACKAL MEETS FALCON\nFOE HUNTING\nZless Binoculars are the -Inert\nPrism Binocular made and\nthey can be had ln all sizes.\nCome ln and let us show you\nthem.\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nOptometrist   and   Optician\nExpert Optloal Service\nOxyacetylene\nWELDING\nand\nCUTTING\nBENNETTS\nLtd.\nBhe  stated   the  department .would\ntake a poll of the institutes In the\nnew   district,   and   abide   by   th*\nwish of the majority.\nALL INSTITUTES TO VOTE\nLater on atention waa drawn \u2022\u25a0 to\nthe fact that the Institutes m the\nKootenay dltsrlct had an equal right\nto pronounce upon division, and\nMrs. MacLachlan said the poll would\nbe enlarged 'to testude all the Institutes in the combined districts.\nIf the department acts on this later\nplait it is taken as a foregone conclusion that the two districts. .will\nbe reunited.\nTbe argument that weighed with\nArrow lakes delegates, and apparently with those Arrow lakes Institutes\nthat have favored a re-united district, was that with a single district, delegates to the conference\nhad the advantage of hearing reports from 30 institutes, more or\nless, against approximately 10 in\nthe smaller district. Against thla\nview Mrs. MacLachlan urged the\nargument that the department was\nswayed by, that division enbled two\ninstitutes to benefit by entertaining conferences, ln place' of \u25a0 may\none.\nPending settlement of this question, which will take a month or\ntwo, as 29 institutes will have\nto vote on it, the conference was\nln no position to take final action\nas to the place for the next conference or conferences.\nEDGEWOOD   FIRST   CHOICE\nBy general consent, under the\nspecial circumstances prevailing, it\nwaa left to the department to\nselect the place for the conference\nor conferences, with the understanding that the Edgewood institute,\nwhich made preparations to entertain the Arrow lakes conference before the Joint one was decided on,\nCanadian Greyhound\nCoaches Limited\nNelson-Nelway Division\nTIME TABLE\nDaily Except Sunday\nRead down Read up\nIM.               STATIONS ~YM.\n11:15      Lv.     NELSON Ar.   8:50\n11:40 GOLDEN AGE JCT. 8.25\n11:45 HALL 8:20\n11.55 PORTO RICO 8:10\n12:10 YMIR 2:55\n12:20 ROTTER'S SPUR 2:45\n12:80 BOULDER 2:35\n12:45 SALMO            \u2022 2:25\n12:55 RENO MINE JCT. 2:15\n1:10 SOUTH FORK 2:05\n1:30 NELWAY 1:45\nP.M.  PJffi.\nWe handle express\nTel. No. 800\nMORE HEAT PER DOLLAR\nCOAL and WOOD\nIdeal Fuels for Heating and Cooking\nGALT LUMP\nThe   best   coal   on   the   market\nfor cooking, heating; starts eas-\n. __. ._\u00bb ily, high heat, no clinkers, large\n$11.50 per Ton \u25a0*'>\u25a0> \u2022\"\"\u2022\u00bb\u2022\nClean,  small  lumps. Beady size\nfor kitchen stove.\nGALT STOVE\n$9.50 per Ton\nJEWEL LUMP \u25a0N*>m **-\u2014 \u25a0or^vr. *3?.__\n'furnace. High heat\u2014low usli. The\nall-night  coal.\nI\nI\n$11.50 per Ton\nMCGILLIVRAY Vou   should   try   thla  for  yonr\n_ __\u2014 ___ _. _ steam plant.  Not slack\u2014we use\nLUMP $10.50     It  ourselves.\nWe Have Mine   Run in McGillivray at $9.00\nby Carload Lot\nCOVER DRIED WOOD IN ANY LENGTHS\nNelson Transfer Co.\nPHONE 35\nWe Have a Fine Stock of\nSleighs, Skis\nand Skates\nGenuine \"Flexible Fliers\"\n\"Strand\", Pine and Ash Skis\n\"Starr\" Skates\nMail Orders Receive Prompt Attention\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCO., LTD.\nWHOLESALE   - Nelson, B. C. -   RETAIL\n4.TAXIAND44\nTRANSFER\nI_UL __ BOSSLAND\nI'UIilUUT AND EXPRESS\nSchedule\nDally to Trail, leaves 10 A. M.\nTAXIS DAV AND NIOB1\nSmythe's\nLinseed. Licorice and Chlorldyer\nCouch  Syrup  for that severe.\nobstinate   cough.\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription   Specialists\nPHONE   1\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton R. O.\nOPTOMETRIST    and    OPTICIAN\nBoom 3 \u2014 Griffin Bloolc\nNEW TAX RATE\nIS STRUCK BY\nASSESSOR HERE\nJ. A. Stewart, Nelson,, Complies Rate, District Decides Expenditures\nThe photograph shows a night prowling Jackal ot- North Aerica ana a\nfalcon,''both deadly enemies of the small animals of that region. These\ntwo meet for the first time on the grounds of thc Biskra hotel, at Biskra,\nNorth Africa, where they are kept as pets.\nwill ho given first choice in case\nthere ls to be a single conference.\nIn case Edgewood should not extend\nan invitation, New Denver, which\nwas a contender for tlie Artow lakes\nconference will be afforded an opportunity to invite the conference,\nA   large   number   of   resolutions\nreported by the resolutions committee  were deferred  to this  morning\nfor action  by  the  conference,\nRESOLUTIONS   COMING   UP\nAmong resolutions so fax in hand\nENTERTAINMENT OF\nINSTITUTE LADIES\nBY MANY EVENTS\nare   ones   asking   the\" province   to   t_\u00abi__.__4_._,     rpu_,\u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab     rt L.\nconsider .a  souWn road, outlet Delegates   Theatre   Guests,\nat Two Luncheons, a\nfor the Arrow lakes, requesting the\nbonding of companies in,the motpr\ntransport business to give year-\nround service of a satisfactory character, asking publicity for Kokanee\nGlacier national park, proposing a\nper   capita   tax   for   financing   the I\nSocial Evening\nEntertainment   of   the   Kootenay-\nLg       __     _\u201e_     \t\nannual conference urging action to Arrow   lakes   district   conference   of\nprevent  indiscriminate   tree  cutting Womens Institutes, \u25a0 now in its clos-\nalong the highways, and petitioning lng sessions, has been Incessant, and\nfor maklnc November 11 a national lias  included  to date  four  distinct\nmemo-rial day. A proposed per capita functions, in addition to incidental\ntax for financing the  annual  con- entertainment  at  the  business  ses-\nference will also come up for dec- sions.\n^2&*                  _._.__      ,    >_ One   of  the  most  pleasurable   of\nThe program for today  is heavy, those    functions;   \u2122   Z   thltw\nand defeats are doubting whether JJg$    E    by    Mriii    Hush\nhZl\u00a5iiTdDRESSES TODAY jjgy  ^elSteS\\oXTof3-Se  Sfn*\nThere will be* two addresses on .\"f aiJJ- P,ne showing of The King\nhealth subjects. Dr. Amyot will take DI \u2122n**' ___ .\nthe place of Dr. H. E. Young, provincial health officer, and Dr. E\nL. Reld of Nelson will speak on\n\"Nose and Throat In relation to\nHealth\". Dr. Eeid is on the program\nfor the morning, and Dr. Amyot for\nthe   afternoon.\nPhone Taxi\n77\nFreight    Schedule\nDally to Rossland\nand Trail, 10 a.m.\nBUD      STEVENS,\nProp.\nTrail Phone 135\nST. ANDREW'S\nCHOIR STAGES\nBRIDGE, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 19. \u2014 St. Andrew's church choir held a bridge\nhere tonight ln support of the organ fund at which Mrs. W. Bonier-\nAt noon Tuesday the visitors\nwere the guests of the Nelson Women's institute at luncheon at the\nCanadian Laglon. Mra, H. H. Pitts,\nas president of the local institute,\nbeing in the chair. During this\nevent music was furnished by Mrs.\nPred Blakeman with the mandolin, Mrs. G. K. Ashby on the piano,\nand Miss Margaret Graham with\nviolin numbers.\nBOARD   OF   TRADE   HOSTS\nWednesday noon the Nelson board\nof trade entertained tho delegates\nat a Blmilar luncheon ,at which\nPresident H. M. Whlmster was in\nthe chair, other members of the\nboard of trade party being Ven.\nArchdeacon Pred H. Graham, A,\nBrowne and Secretary D. A. Mc-\nFnrland. President Whtmster welcomed  \"the Kootenay  women\/s  par\nProvincial Assessor J. A Stewart of Nelson has completed the\nstriking of rates for 1931 in school\ndistricts In the Nelson and Fort\nSteele assessment districts ln his\njurisdiction.\nEach year the ratepayers in the\nschool districts meet and decide\nwhat moneys they will expend for\nschool purposes. From these figures which havo been submitted to\nhim Mr. Stewart has compiled the\nrate of taxation that should become effective in each school district.\nThe mill rates struck in the various  districts  are:\nAnnable, 16; Alice Siding, B.3;\nBalfour, 7.7; Belford, 6.5; Blueberry\nCreek, closed; Bonnington, nil- Boswell, 5.2; Brilliant, 6; Camp Lister,\n9; Canyon City, 14; Castlegar, 8;\nChampion Creek, 7; Columbia1 Gardens. 7.7; Crescent Valley, 0.5; Creston, 12.2; Creston West, 6; Deer\nPark, 4.8; Erlckson, 6.5; Fauquier,\n3.8; Fruitvale, 15; Gibson Creek; 9;\nGlade, 18; Harrop, 3.7; Huscroft, 7;\nKinnalrd, 9; Kitchener, 7.6; Longbeach, 7.6; Krestova. 18; Meadow\nSpur, 4.2; Parks Siding, 6.2; Pass-\nmoro, 0; Pass Creek, 20; Renata, 4.8;\nProcter, 15; Robson, 13.5; Salmo,\n12.5; Shoreacres, 11; Slocan Junction, 2; Slocan Park, 9; Sirdar, 10.7;\nTaghum, 7; Thrums, 7; Willow\nPoint, 6.2; Wynndel, 12; Ymir, 14.5.\nFORT STEELE\nASSESSMENT     DISTRICT\nBaynes Lake, 27; Big Sand Creek,\n18; Bull River, 0; Coal Creek, 9.8;\nCokato, 12.5; Corbln, 33; Crow's\nNest,\" 11; Curzon, 7; Doit, 12; Elk\nBridge, 8.5; Elko, 4; Elk Prairie,\n6.2: Flagstone, 4.6; Fort Steele, 12.5;\nGalloway, 6; Grasmere, 4; Hosmer,\n7: Jaffray, 6.8; Kimberley, 10;\nKiugsgate, 17.3; Larchwood, 4.8;\nLumberton, 1.5; Mayook, 9.3; Marys-\nvllle, 13; Meadowbrook, 11; Michel\nand Natal, 25; Morrlssey, 4.4; Mo-\nyase, 4.5; Moyie, 3; Newgate, 6;\nRoosvllle, 5.7; Waldo. 10; Wardner,\n3.5;   Wycllffe,   6.7;   Yank,   7.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nW,R. CAMPION\nGROCERIES\nDON'T   WALK\u2014TALK\nOur Phone No. Is 121\nHothouse Tomatoes, lb,\nBanana-, Z lbs. for ....\nGrapes,- lb,\n_ _c\n_ 250\n BBS]\nNew Na_l OraateB, d_. .\u2014 SBO\nHome made Balaln Cookies,\nlb  ,  25\u00b0\nFresh Raisins, Currants ana Peel\nfor your' Christmas CaKes and\nPuddings.\nChristie's   Cake,   Sultana,   Fruit\nwid Cherry. Lb. .'.\u2014 .\"60c\nVegetables ot all kinds.\nMince Meat, per lb  2So\nDELIVERIES  TWICE DA-IT\nUPHILL AND FAIRVIEW\nB.C APPLES WIN\nAT WINTER FAIR\nAssociated , Growers    Take\nFirst, Second, Delicious,\nat Toronto\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nWe carry Elizabeth Arden\nToiletries.\nI Call   and   set  your   weight   free\nPHONE  34 BOX   1083\n\u00ab\"\u00bbe TAXI\n_Bk \u00a3__k rbe  BMt  \u00b0'   Senlce\n^B    \u25a0__  Careful,   courteous\n_-***' _**r Drivers\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nMcintosh\nThe Premier Dessert\napples\u2014the finest dessert\nfruit at this season\nOrder O. K. Macs\nat your dealers\nAssociated Growers of\nB. C Ltd.\nNelson, B.C.\nLAST MINUTE\nADVERTISEMENTS\nBoltz was the winner ot the ladles' _    \u2014  \u201e     __\nfirst prize and Mlsa Mary Anderson Uamcnt,\" while Archdeacon Graham\nwas the winner of the consolation oaid eloquent tribute to the Koot-\nprlze. W. Jones won the men's first nnay a the most wonderful scenic\nprize and J, O. West the men's I territory he was aware of, to Its\nconsolation. i well  balanced  climate,. to its  great\nresources, and to the magnificent\nwork of the Women's Institutes for\nthe development of Kootenay homes.\nand thereby for the development of\nthe wondorful Kootenay heritage.\nMrs. V. S. McLachlan, provincial\nsuperintendent ot Women's Institutes, dubbed by President Whlmster \"the premlerette,\" replied for\nthe ladies with well pointed Scotch\nstories. Mesdames Blakeman and\nAshby again provided music,\nSOCIAL   EVENING\nWednesday   evening,   apart   from\nan   address  by  F.   T.   Champion   on\n,\"Buy   B.   c.   Products,\"   waa   de-\nSTOP\u2014LOOK\u2014LISTEN\u2014HAVE   YOU! voted   to   a   social   evening   at   the\nradio trouble?    If so send them  institute rooms, entertainment num-\nReoelved   too   late   to   go   on\nClassified   Page\nAGENTS TO SELL THE WELL-\nknown Merit Hosierv and Underwear direct to consumer. Merit\nMills. 126-130 Wellington St. West,\nToronto. (2812)\n-to M. w. Brown. 517 Vernon Si\nor call 613L. (2811)\nNews of the Day\nPAPAZIAN'S   ENTIRE   STOCK   AT\nHALF PKICE. (2050)\nBuv your Christmas presents at\nSt. Paul's Yulctldo Bazaar, Tuesday. December 2nd. (2803)\n\u00a9lite favak&l)\nPastryShoppe\nTWO  SHOPS\nBaker and Vernon Streets\nIf you buy\nBREAD\nwhy not get the\nBEST\nWe sell it at\n3 Loaves\nfor 25c\nPhones 53 and 214\nHave your afternoon tea at the\nExcelsior Club Bazaar Saturday. November 22, at St. Paul's Church.\n(2808)\nRebekah Lodge\u2014Sale of Home\nCooking, Candy and Fancy Work.\nTea 3 to 5. I. O. O. P. Hall, Friday,\nNovember 21st. 12745)\nTonight\u2014Salvation Army special\nmeeting. Major James Merrlt. also\nofficers Irom Fernie, Rossland,\nTrail and Cranbrook. -.2814)\nRev. G. Kinney will give a movinp*\nDlcture entertainment tomorrow\nevening, 8 o'clock. St. \"Paul's school\nroom. Admission 25 cents. Children 10 cents. (2803)\nTRAIL, B. C. Nov. 19.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Percy E. Taylor entertained\nlast evening at their home on Topping street in honor of tnelr daughter. Constance, the occasion being\nher birthday. Games, music and\ndancing were greatly enjoyed by the\n.ues.s. Mrs. Taylor assisted by Mrs., Jonathan,\n.1. Hendry served dainty refresh- '\n:nents. A birthday coke made by\nMis Taylor's uncle and surmounted\nwith candles had a place of honor\non a side table. Those present\nwere Mrs. R. Hendry. Mr. and Mrs.\nP^rcv E. Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. A. E.\ni'aylor. Mr. and Mrs. W. Cameron,\nMy. and Mrs. B. E. Smith, Miss\nKitty Page, Miss Constance Tay.or,\nMiss Edwin Smith, Miss Nellie\nihomdale. Vernon Taylor, Wilfred\nTaylor. Clifford Grvlls. Roy Quln-\nstrom, Charles Hesketh. Ronald\nj\u00a3cclcs and R. Radcliffe,\nTORONTO. Ont.. Nov. 19.\u2014Competition from both British Columbia\nand Nova < Scotia failed. to stop Ontario from carrying off the bu.k of\nthe apple awards at the Royal\nWinter fair. W. L. Hamilton of\nOolllngwood, Ont_. \u00abn.n*ii\u00bb_d \u25a0 the\nbulk of the honors. *w_nnlnfl; among\nother things the sweepstake single\nbox on a sample Mcintosh, silver\ncup for best 60-box lot and a whole\nstring of firsts. It waa the single\nbox lots that the keenest competition came. In Delicious, first and\nsecond went to thn Associated\nGrowers of British Columbia in\nFameuse; the some wins went to\nthe Woodlands orchards of Bronte,\nOnt.\nW. L. Smith; Bur'JnHton, Ont.,\ncame first in Golden Russett with\nBordon Fruit company of Canning,\nN. 3., second.\nIn Greening, one and two went to\nGallagher farms of Aldersbot, Ont.,\nwhile the Associated Growers took\nsimilar places ln Jonathan. Colin\njmlth, Burlington.' led ln Kings,\nwith C. R. Terry. Oiarkson, Ont,,\nsecond. Terry won first ln Baldwin\nclass with W. E. Murray, Centre-\nvllle. N. S\u201e second. Hamilton had\none and two In Mcintosh and the\nAssociated Growers the sam\u00ab on Spy.\nC. C; TyreJ of iaorkham, Ont.,\nled the T-olman clas. Winning were\nabout the same ln the larger lots\nOntario Growers winiu__\u00bb in Mcintosh throiurhout the show, and\nalso Spy and other not so competitive varieties, while British Co-\n.umbla   scored   ln   Delicious   and\nMrs. P. Phillips, Mrs. R. Cooper,\nMrs. D. W. Forteath a:**! daughter.\n.vnnabe.le, C. A. Phillips and J. A.\nPhillips leave tomorrow morning by\ncar for a short holiday ln Spokane.\nbers succeeding each other in rapid\naud pleasing succession. The early\npart of tho evening, was opened by\npleasing piano solos by Miss Owen\nLowery, followed by a -vocal solo,\n\"I Passed by Your \u2022Wndow,\" by\nMrs. E. Marsden. Miss Margaret\nGraham gave two violin solos,\nSouvenir,\" and Bardlne's \"Serenade.\" Mesdames F. E. wheeler and\nF. Murphy sang as duets \"Barefoot\nTrail,\" and \"Lullaby Time.\" accompanied by Mrs. Percy Craven. The\n\"Grandmothers,\" then appeared in\na pleasing sketch, after which Miss\nMary Ja\/\/ls rendered the concluding solo of this stage, accompanied\nby   Mrs.   Nelson   Ball.\nAfter Mr. Champion's address Mrs.\nCrowther, a 73-year old grandmother,\nreopened the program with a recitation of \"Mary Had a Littlo Lamb\"\nIn character costume, Mrs, A, L.\nLevy of New Denver gave two pleasing piano solos, and Mrs. J. Mark-\nwlck followed with two vocal solos,\naccompanying herself .these being\n\"Dear Heart\" and a Spanish song.\nTlie Nelson institute choir rendered\n\"You'll Shoot Us and Catch Ub.\"\nand the final numbers were piano\nsolos by Mrs. R. Hambley of Sllverton.\nMiss L. Schofield entertained the\nmembers of the Business Girls' auxiliary of St. Andrew's church at her\nhome on Daniel street last evening.      Dainty    refreshments    were\nserved.\n\u2022 #   *\nMrs. A. P. Levesqu*\" and Miss\nJeanne Levescmo returned yesterday\nafternoon from a holiday spent In\nVancouver, Victoria, Seattle and\nSpokane.\n\u2666 \u25a0 -#   \u00ab\nThe members of th* East Trail\nAnglican Wo.ruen's auxiliary met yesterday afternoon at the home of\nMrs. J. H. Owen. Second avenue,\nMrs. Bucknoll. Rev. a P. Kirksey's\nmother, was a (ruest. Mrs, Owen\nserved afternoon tea.\nNICKEL, NORANDA\nGAIN ATT0R0NT0\nGeneral List Receives Little\nAttention; Prices Are\nFirm\nWinter\nUnderwear\nin*. Every* Size\nIf you are short and\nstout Or long and lean\n\u2014or if you are just a\n\"regular'.* fellow, our\nunderwear has been\nbuilf for your individual requirements. Un*\nion suits or separate\ngarments. All priced\nreasonably.\nSTANFIELD8\nHATCHWAY-NOi   .:\n\u2022SUTTON j\nCEETEE;\n$2.50 to $8,003\nTORONTO, Ont., Nov. 19.\u2014Specialized trading in six stocks on\nthe Standard Stock and Mining exchange today accounted for two-\nthirds of the total transactions Involving 163,135 shares. The general\nlist received little attention, while\nthe higher priced group reverted to\na trading state bordering on stagnation. Prices showed more firmness.\nBoth International Nickel and\nNoranda registered price gains. Nickel moved up 65c to close at 18.75,\nwhile Noranda advanced 65c to\nclose at $18.65. Hudson Bay moved\nln a contrary manner, dropping 35c\nto $5. Other base metal stocks\nshowed little activity as regards\ntrading   and   price   movement.\nDome advanced 5c to $8.20. Teok\nHughes fell 5c to $5.65 and Wright\nHargreaves  lost  3   points   to   $1,70.\nChemical   Research   advanced   60c\n1 to    $3.15;     Imperial    rose    30o    to\nAn operation UDon Miss Dorothy ] $17.35.  British American moved  up\nPattawav at Trall-'I*Ma'nM_hoBpttal\n' Women who are a bit too plump I\nshoud avoid deep fur cuffs on|\ntheir coata.\nStill More ProoE\nA lot of novelties\nfcnd art goods. Values\nup to $3.00. Now\n25^, 45^ and 70*.\n1,5 jewel nationally\nadvertised ladies'\nLOEIE Watches. Values up tp $27.50.\nNow  $8.95.\nCombination Lighter' and  Watch,  reliable 15 jewel movement. Regular $25.00.\nNow $9.95.\nA small deposit will\nhold any . article' till\nChristmas \u2014 Buy your\npresents now at tlieso\nspecial   prices.\nPapazian's\nNext door to Queen's\n'Hotel\nNELSON   DINNER   DANCE   C_CB\nFirst dinner dance, Hume Hotel.\nNovember 22. Dinner starts at\n7:30 p.m., and all members aro requested to bo on time.         (2813)\nA. O. V.\nCourt Star of Kootenay meets\ntonight at 7 p.m. Court Royal\nNelson at 8 p.m. All members requested to attend. Soclai and\nSmote. (2805)\nIBEAIITIFCL CHRISTMAS GREETING CARDS PRINTED WITH YOUR\nOWN NAME AND ADDRESS. TWO\nDOZEN CARDS FOR $1.B0 AND\nVARIOUS PRICES UP TO $7.50.\nCAEI, AND SEE THEM. THE DAILY\nNEWS   JOB DEPT. (2627)\nToo H to Visit Falrvlew\nThe members of Too H will entertain the parlshoners of Falrvlew\nand others at a Social Evening tonight at 8 ln thn Parish Hall. All\nwelcome. Conw 'jnd spend a good\ntime with Too H. (2804)\nTRAINMEN HAVE\nA SUCCESSFUL\nDANCE^NELSON\nGrand March Is Feature of\nEvening; E. Y. Brake Is\nMaster Ceremonies\nwwstwwsiwsiwsnnimapSrw^rsnfwwenrsi\nORDER YOUR\nCOAL\nand\nWOOD\nfrom ' \u2022\nRenwick's\nPHONE 797\nFor Prompt Delivery\nAbout 150 Nelson people attended\nthe fourth annual dance staged hy\nthe Ladies' Auxiliary to tho Broth-\norliood of Railway Trainmen ln the\nEagle  hall  last  night.\nOutalde  the  hall   on  Baker  street  \t\nwas the traditional engine headlight mal  back to hla  den.\nand two blue lights, whilo the  or-     The year's capacity for ginger ale,\nthis morning was entirely successful.\nTrail News ot the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS. IN-\nsurance. Notary. J. D. Anderson.   Trail. , (2808)\nBROWNBEiW S\nLOVE OF POP\nIS DOWNFALL\nHOPE, B. C., Nov. ID\u2014(By the\nCanadian Press)\u2014A brown bear's\nfondness for ginger ale led to his\nrecapture  near   here  recently.\nEscaping alter four and a half\nyears of captivity at an automobile\ncamp, the bear sought the seoluslon\nof the woods ln the vicinity ot tho\nFraser river.\nBut the old haunts, with the absence of friendly tourists and his\nginger ale, did not seem the same\nas the exiled bear had pictured\nthem; and after a day or two of\nwandering tho fugitive returned to\nthe outskirts of the camp.\nTho camp attendant, hearing that\nthe bear was near, armed himself\nwith half a dozen bottles of pop\nand was soon able to entlco. the mil-\n15c to $15.15 and Nordon Improved\n6 points, closing at 69c, Acme rose\n4>__ to close at 33V__c.\nPROGRESS MADE\nIN DISARMAMENT\nGENEVA. Nov. 19. (AP)\u2014Tho preparatory \u25a0 disarmament commission\nmade good progress today, adopting\na major part of the draft agreement for limiting \u25a0 the world's\nfleets.\nThree articles approved today and\none yesterday are parallel to the\nprinciples' embodied in the Washington ahd London treaties. They\nprovide a general global limitation\nof warship tonnage,, additional limitation by classes of 'Ships, right\nof transfer of a portion of the tonnage from one class or category to\nanother, and limitation of displacement and gun armaments of battleships.\nDeclares Lack of\nMedical Women to\nFill All Vacancies\nchestra in the hall played from\ndais representing the observation\nplatform of a railway coach. The\nhall was tastefully decorated with\nred  and white streamers.\nOne of the high lights of the\ndanco was the grand march Just\nbefore supper, led by Superintendent J. Ivan MacKay and Mrs.\nMacKay. _ .\nE. Y. Brako acted as master of\nceremonies for  the  evening.\nMembers of committees were:\u2014\nWars. T. L. Marquis, Mrs. W. 8.\nJackson, Mrs. D. D. McLoon. Mrs.\nH. J. McLean, Mrs. C. Beltner,\nMrs. Price, Mra. H. Stant, refreshments; Mrs. W,. Lutes, Mrs. A. Oliver, Miss Vera Klrby, advertising\nand entertainment; Mrs. D. Maloney, Mr3. N. McKay, Mrs. P, Jeffries,   Mrs.   F.   A.   Beck,   decoration,\nDurlns' dancing several novelty\nnumbers made up an Interesting\nprogram.\nMlsfi Annie Wallach won the\nlucky number prize with ticket No.\n116, and tho prize waltz was won\nby Mrs. J. I. MacKay and Percy\nCoulter. Mrs. F. A, Beck presented\nthe  prizes,\nHaving spent only $300 so far this\nyear for charitable relief, and finding no acute unemployment conditions, the Ridgetown,  Ont., council\nwhich he drinks through a small\nhole punched in the metal cap, is\nabout two dozen bottles a day, but\nbeing unusually dry when he returned from his wanderings, he\nbroke all previous records by consuming 117 bottles ln 48 hours. Most\nof the pop was bought by tourists.\nDR. KNIGHT LEAVES\nTO EXAMINE CATTLE\nIN BOSWELL AREA\nDr. A. Kniffht, chief veterinary inspector of the province, who spoke\nhere Tuesday at the Women's Institute convention, left Wednesday\nmorning for Boswell where he\nwill examine a number of the\ncattle  of the  valley.\nHis visit waa uue to petitions\nwhich wero received from the farm-\nera by K. Wallace of tho West Kootenay Central Farmers' Institute. Mr.\nWallace took up the mater some\ntime a\u00abo when It was understood\nthdt Mr. Knight would visit Nelson,\ntktM wrota to thc coast invltlnx him\nto -.sit at Boswell. Other points are\nexpecting a visit from. Mr. Knight,\n\u201e._._,,  \u2014 \u2014T    _        Hate  that   achieve      a carelessly\nhas decided not to make application  placed   air   must  be  put on  with\nfor any grants from tho government  tho  greatest   of   care,   if they  are\nrelief fund.                                          I to bo smart.\nLONDON, Eng., Nov. 19\u2014CP)\u2014\nThere are not enough qualified\nmedical women to fill vacant post-\ndeclared Lady Barrett, dean of tho\nLondon School of Medicine for\nWomen. On this account, she welcomes to thfe new session of the\nschool tho largest entry it has had\nsince   1920.\nMiss Chadburn, senior surgeon.\nSouth London hospital for women,\nspeaking of the need for more women doctors, said marrloite is a\nvery real part of women's work,\nand women played the more important part in married life. \"I think\nIt Is a monstruous injustice and an\ninsult to women to say that on\nmarriage a woman must retire, or\n'no married women need apply.'\nSuch a dictum should produce a\nstrike of all women,\" says Miss\nChadburn. \"There ls medical work\nwhich can be done equally as well\nby married women, as by single\nwomen.\"\nFIRST WEDDING\nROME, Nov. 19\u2014(CP)\u2014The first\nwedding to, be solemnized ln the\nPapal state since its ^constitution was celebrated in the Chapel\nof the Noble Guard; The brlde-\n,room wore received in audience\ntuti Castelvetrl and the bride was\noljjnorlna Adriana Prompolini, After\nthe ceremony, the bride and brldq-\n^room wre received in audience\nov the Pope, who gave the bride a\nmagnificent rosary.\nTHEATRE\nT-O-D-A-Y\nThe Laughing\nPANIC\nYou .should have\nheard the audience\nlaugh last night. It\nwas Just one laugh\nafter another, and\nthen roar after roar.\nWhat a scream of a\npicture!\nClutching the handle of a motorcycle with one hand, while pressing\nthe region of his appendix with the .\nother, Otto Reinfrandt rode 21 miles\nto tho hospital at Quesnel, B. 0., to\nhavo his appendix removed.\nMarie Dressier\nand\nPolly Moran\nwith\nAnita Page\n'Caught\nShort'\ni Hold tight ln your\nseats and get ready\nto enjoy the funniest\nof nil stook market\ncomedies. Take a tip\nand see It.\nYou'll   get   more\nlaughs  in,\n\"VACATION.\nLOVES\"\nwith\nANDY  ULYIJE\nand\nBsnry boto\nFOX NEWS\nMovlea of Nelson,\ntaken during Prosperity week, and pupils of Nelson and\nHume schools.\nTwo   shows   nlshtly,\n7-9   p. m.\nMatinee at 2 p. m.\nTomorrow:\n\"THE BISHOP\n. MURDER CASE\"\nHisMifc!\nW ill\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1930_11_20","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0400650","@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":"1930-11-20 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1930-11-20 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\/1.0400650"}