{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-03","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1926-11-15","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0403325\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \t\n\"\n_____\n\t\nQueens Beats\nVARSITY RUGGERS\nSee Page 7\nVOL. 25\nNELSON, B. C. MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 15,~\"1926\nNo. 166\n0IO\u00a7     taHMl\nfNUVINCIAL   LIMA* I A*\nVICTORIA   \u25a0  C\nUnveil Stone\nTO FAMOUS INDIAN\nSee Page 5\nSOSSIP-CRAZED PASTOR KILLS FAMILY\nPEACE REIGNS AMONG COAST CONSERVATIVES\nwinich and Oak Bay Conservatives to Call New Election   of  Delegates\nNDERHAND CHARGES\nARE ALL WITHDRAWN\nrouble Arose Over Omission\n1 of Notice in Daily Paper,\nExecutive Learns\nAlaska Experiences\nHeavy Earth Shocks\nCORDOVA, Alaska, Nov. 14.\u2014\nAn earthquake of unuiual violence was felt here at 8:20 o'clock\ntonight, Pacific coaat time. Tha\ntremor waa accompanied by a\ndistinct       rum bl inn. Buildings\nshook and antenna mittt of the\nUnited States naval radio station,\n14 mile* from Cordova, swayed\na   foot.\nAs is usual in Alaska, where\nbuildings are mostly- of one story\nanti wall built, no damage was\nreport ad.\nIndications that tha earth disturbance waa' widespread were\ngivfm whan th* naval radio station, at Kodiak, 325 mites southwest of here, on Kodiak island,\nreported that a severe shock was\nfelt   there   at  ths   same   tim*.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14.\u2014Irregular\nrtiees allegedly used ln Saanich\nd Oak Bay districts ln the election\ndelegate** to the forthcoming Con-\nrvatlve conference at Kamloops,\niftre supporters of Leon Ladner,\nP., for provincial leader, were various, were not substantiated hero\ns*errtay at a meeting of the execu-\n* of the Conservative party.\nAfter the meeting, the following\nMoment was Issued:\n\"Ai a well-attended meeting of the\nrjttiah Columbia executive of the\nberal-Conservative 'party, the petl-\n.iivi in respect to the election of\nlegates to the Kamloops convention\n-Saanich riding and at Oak Buy,\nctoria district, charging irregularis in connection with such elections,\narte considered.    The meeting started\nJ o'clock and continued until\np.m., during which time much ovl-\nnpte was heard and considered.\nWithdraw   Charges\n\"T%e    following    resolutions    were\ntosd:\n'After full pfrjwesaion had been\n\/en before the SXecutlve, the delates supporting the Saanich petition\nthdrew any charges of underhanded\njthods having boon employed, -ind\nth   parties   Interested   agreed   that,\naccount of the notice of the nr;-\nirles having been inadvertently left\nt of the Victoria Daily Colonist, a\nw meeting would be held after two\nvs' not left of such meeting being:\n\u25a0ven In the Dally Colonist of the\n\u25a0ne and place of such meeting.\n'The British Columbia executive (x-\nessos  the opinion that the omlsslo i\ngive notice in the Daily Colonist\nis through no fault of the Saanich\necutive,\"\nAfter making such expression of\ntalon, the executive considered the\ntition against the election of delate* from Oak Bay. The following\nsolution  was  passed:\n'That this executive ^oes on record\nstrongly disapproving of the terms\n-ed in the petition, which were nn-\npported by evidence, but are of the\ndnion that proper ndtice of the\nee\/lng was not given, and that the\nak Bay executive be requested to\nrange for a new meeting Immedi-\n\u00ably by giving two days' previous\nitiee of the time and place of Htich\nveting\"\n, \u25a0>. \u2014      \"\u25a0       WMBJ' \t\nloroccans Bum\nPlane and Mail and\nHold the Aviators\nTO Dl\nARMAMENT\nT\nWill Take Up With States Violations of Great Lakes\nAgreements\nTORONTO, Nov. 14.\u2014A special din-\npatch to the Toronto Star Weekly\nfrom Washington   said  in  part:\n\"Vincent Massey, new Canadian\nminister to Washington, who arrived\nhere early in January, is expected\namong the first official acts to seek\na revision of the Rush-Bigot agreement of 1817, which limits naval\narmament   on   the   Groat   Lakes.\n\"This ls the most important of five\nmajor Issues between the two countries which await Mr. Massey's diplomatic guidance.\n\"The revision of the Rush-Bagot\nagreement Is raised because the United States violated It \"during the war\nin training naval reserves on armed\nvessels on the Great Lakes. Canada\nhas also been asked- to allow armed\nvessels built on the lakes to pass out\nthrough the St. Lawrence, and, although she Had acceded to this, she\nbelieves that either she should be\ngranted similar privileges or that the\npractice should be absolutely prohibited in future.\n\"The other Issues which Mr. Massey\nis expected to take up with the department of state are a revision of\nthe fisheries agreement, which has\nnever been ratified by the senate; a\nrevision of the four-power convention\nrelating to fur seals In the Bering sea,\nwhich Japan has asked to have\nchanged; the settlement ot the Fraser\nriver salmon dispute between British\nColumbia and the state of Washington, and finally the Chicago drainage\ncanal and the St, Lawrence waterways.\"\nMost Interesting Display Opens\nEyes of Conference\nDelegates\nONE-MAN TO HUGE BATTLE\nTANKS     IN     MANEUVERS\nCrash    Trees,     Force     Way\nThrough Brick  Walls;\nFire Blank Charges\nCASA BLANCA, Morocco, Nov. 14.\n-Two French postal airplanes which\ntade a forced landing near Cape\n.otfador were attacked by roving\n(oors. The Moors burned the air-\nlanes and mailbags and took the\nHots, Gourt and I* Salle, prisoners.\nSB \u25a0UICIDE\nFORT QU'ABPBXLE, Sask. Nov. 14.\n-With his throat slashed by the blade\nf a safety rasor, the dead body of\nwen Weren an employee of the fanl-\n'-\u2022ijrlum, was found, Saturday, near his\nJJtne.    He bad been In Ill-health.\nMft\nA. Wallach, secretary West Koote-\nay Poultry and Pet Stock asaocta-\non\u2014The graat poultry show at Ot-\n.wa next July, at the time of the\norld poultry congress there, will\ninsist of birds selected from all\nfat the country by the depart-\nents of agrieulture, and not of\nrds entered by Individual breeders\nf their own bat, I gather from a\ncu.ar just received.\nB. <1. Hunt, district horticulturist\u2014\nlis la1 the month to clean up on\nte , blight before starting tn on\nilfii Winter pruning. Cut out the\nIfht .cankers and blight limbs, dls-\niectlnf cuts and tools using one\nirt ot bichloride of mercury and\nie part of cyanide of mercury to\n)$ parts of water, for no known\ntftyy can control this disease. Moat\nthe Kootenay infestation is con-\n\u25a0ef to pear trees, though some\n>ple trees have been attacked.\nI_\nWindsor  Bandits  Whisper\nCashier to Hand Over\nCoin; He Does\nto\nWINDSOR, Ont., Nov. 14.\u2014One of\nthe most daring holdups that the\nWindsor police can remember, occurred during the busiest hour Saturday night when a chain grocery\nstore was robbed of $300 by armed\nand masked bandits. The store was\ncrowded with customers when the\ntwo bandits sauntered In and up\nto the cashier's register where the\nmanager was standing. \"Keep quiet\nand hand over the money and be\nquick about it,\" one of the pair\nwhispered across the counter, displayed *at the same time a revolver.\nArchibald complied and th\u00a9 two\nturned their  backs and walked  out.\n    m \u2014\nCalgary Taxi\nDriver Brutally\nAssaulted. Robbed\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 14. \u2014 Brutally battered robbed of his loose cash, gagged\nand fastened to his car by tire chains.\nWill Kenney, taxi driver, was left more\ndead than alive In a dark lane by a\ncouple of thugs early this morning.\nKenney told the police that he had\nbeen hired by the men, who had Instructed Mm to drive down the lane as\na short cut to their destination. As the\ncar approached the exit to the lane,\none of the men reached over and\ngrabbed him by the neck and beat and\nthrottled him into submission. The\nthugs secured $8 in cash.\n  m   \t\nDENY BETROTHAL\nLONDON, Nov. 14.\u2014On the heather-\nclad hills of west Surrey, the dominion premiers who are attending the\nImperial conference Saturday saw a\ntank demonstration which bewildered\nin its efficiency. There were one-man\ntanks, which darted hither and thither\nlike walUers on skates; there were\n\"honeymoon\" tanks for two, which\nseemed to be everywhere at once,\nand there was the latest tank of all,\nthe battleship of the land, which\ncheerfully climbed huge obstacles of\nfallen trees, crashed through wire entanglements, and then, turning in its\nown length, Jumped a trench nnd\nswept through the nine-inch brick\nwall as though it were nothing but\npaper.\nIt was a fascinating demonstration\nof new methods compared with old,\nalbeit terrifying ln its illustration of\nwhat may be expected should thi\ndogs of war ever break loose again.\nDriving    Rain\nThe demonstration was carried out\nIn a driving rain which *p!asterod\neverything with mud.    It opened wltn\ncouple of the tanks which created\nso much consternation when they fim\nappeared on the western front in\nSeptember of 1916. The leading tank\nwadtlled like a grandfather among so\nmuch lhat is new.\nTanks of all types and kinds followed in a bewildering succession.\nThere was one type which could do\nSO miles an hour on the road and can\nbe converted from wheels to tracks\nin 60 seconds. Horse-drawn artillery\nunits passed by in all their panoply,\nsucceeded by the mechanical type\nwith the same guns hauled by tanks\nover road and field with a mobility\nwhich no horse could possibly equal.\nTwo   Collide\nThe tanKa went into action. From\neverywhere and nowhere apparently\ntanks appeared, their guns crash'ng\nand spluttering till the air vibrated,\nand one wondered what would happen\nto the vlaltors' marquee If the men\nhad not been firing merely blanks.\nA couple of the tanks collided. A\nwhippet dashed away with a damaged\nturret. The mimic war ended, Then\nthe tanks showed what they do in\nclimbing and passing obstacles. Th^\ndragons raced down the hillsides with\nthe guna and swept lightly up the\nother side of the valley.\nOne tank crossing a thicket we-it\nstraight through a tree. The tree\ntoppled. Unchecked, the tank went\non. The thicket had been cleared\naway for the troops.\nTomorrow the Imperial conference\nwill  discuss  Empire  defence.\nDomestic Help Get\nFavorable Offers\nby London Homes\nLONDON, Nov. 14. \u2014 No nagging, 10 weeks' vacation, plenty\nof fresh eggs and bacon, radios,\nsnd the use of an automobile are\nall inducements Offered by wealths London women in search of\ndomestic help, so difficult, to get\nthese days. Here are a few\n\"want ads\" from London newspapers:\n\"Housemaid\u2014Teh weeks' holiday in the year, with board and\nwages.   Use of car now and then.\n\"Maid \u2014 Good outings also\nwhole day and nldht every three\nweeks. Plenty of fresh eggs and\nbacon.\n\"Cook-general \u2014 Good outings\nand week-end ones a month. No\nnagging.    Use of radio.\n\"Cook-help\u2014Given good wages\nand outings. Own .bathroom, heat\nlight and radio.\n\"Upper housemaid\u2014Dress materials and valuable presents\ngiven. Own room furnished to\nsuit.\"\nWIPED OUT IN\nFather and Three Children Die;\nFourth  Child  Seriously Hurt\nRENFREW, Ont., Nov. 14.\u2014Gar\n\u25a0field Humphries, 87, farmer, and two\nof his children, were InBtantly killed;\nmother child died IttfW, and a fourth\nwas seriously injured, in a level\nTossing accident ln Cobden village\ntoday at noon. The dead: G-arfitM\nHumphries, 37; Edgar, 8: Nina, (1;\nOeorge, 4.   The Injured: Mabel, 7.\nMr. Humphries was returning homo\nafter attending service at Cobden\nchurch. At the level crossing the\nautomobile, driven by Mr, Humphries,\nwas struck by a C. P. R. freight\ntrain, traveling east.\n.Little 7-year-old Mabel will recover,\nthe doctors believe. She had slight\nInternal injuries, a broken shoulder\nand   was   suffering   from   shock.\nIt is believed the Humphries did not\nhear the train whistle, as there was\nconsiderable noise. The car was\nstruck in the center and hurled about\n125 feet. The car was completely\nwrecked.\nMrs. Humphries had stayed at home\nto prepare dinner and look after the\ntwin  babies.\nOSLO, Nov. 14.\u2014Highest court\nsources today deny any knowledge\nof the reported betrothal of Crown\nPrince Olov of Norway to Princess\nMartha, sister of Princess Astrid,\nwho recently waa married to Crown\nPrince Leopold of Belgium.\nReports Huge Fortune\nSHU Hidden Off the\nFamous 'Treasure He9\nCLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 14.\u2014\nDoubloons, pieces of eight and treasure of the Spanish Main He buried\non a South American treasure Island,\nready for the person who Is willing to\ndig for $50,000,000.\nGeorge Finley Simmons, curator of\northonology of the Cleveland museum\nof natural history, said upon his return from the island that the treasure,\ntaken from the Inca Indians, lies undisturbed where It was burled a\ncentury ago by two pirates on the\nisland,   Off   the  coast   of   Brazil.\nBight expeditions were made to\nfind the treasure between 1800 and\n1892, Simmons said, but most of them\nnever reached the desolate coast of\nthe island. \u2022\n\"Robert Louis Stevenson used tbe\nIsland as the scene of 'Treasure\nIsland,'\" Simmons said, \"but Uhc\nswag found in fiction is still there in\nreality.*'\nDominion Convention\nof Conservatives\nto Meet in Spring\nOTTAWA, Nov. 14.\u2014Authentic re\nports are that a Dominion Conserv\native convention will be held In Winnipeg In tha early spring.\nThe time and place will be set most\nlikely the day after parliament meets\non December 10.\nT\nexpose ran\nCalmly  Hands  Gun to Police\nman After She Murdered  Man\nNEW YORK, Nov. 14. \u2014 Betraying\nno emotion when charged with killing\na man last night, Mrs. Catherine Den\nino 16-year-old Evnnston 111., girl, was\narraigned In police court today and held\nwithout ball  for homicide court.\nShe had killed the man whose threat\nto expose an attack he made upon her\nwhen she was 12 years old had caused\nher husband of a year, to put, her out\nof their home, she told police. Homeless she went to Chicago, bought a\ngun' and came to New York, Friday.\nShe visited the haunts of the man who\nhad written that he would expose her\nunless paid for his silence.\nFreshly shaved, Louis Fino a tile\nsetter, stepped out of a Bronx barber\nshop iast night. Mrs. Denlno was waiting. She fired twice. He fell to the\nsidewalk. She stood over him and fired\nagain. A policeman came running up.\nThe girl's gun. still aimed at Flno.\nJammed. She handed lt to the policeman, and was arrested on a charge of\nhomicide.\nF\nHere to Find Out How the Fire\nToll Can Be Cut in\nInterior\nFIRE EDUCATION\nGREATEST NEED\nMinister Says  Timber  Export\nTwenty Times That\nof 1916\nNotwithstanding the great timbered\nareas at the coast and on Vancouver\nIsland, four-fifths of the money spent\nby the provincial government In\nfighting forest fires the past season\nwas spent in the interior, Hon. T. D.\nPattullo, minister of lands and forests, revealed yesterday. The minister arrived from Grand Forks Saturday night, to resume here this\nmorning the forest fire Inquiry, and\nto receive representations on the need\nof the interior lumber industry for\nassistance.\n\"The great need of British Columbia,\" Mr. Pattullo stated, \"is\neducation in forest fire prevention.\nThis year the government spent\nabout $500,000 in fighting, forest\nfires. About $100,000 of this was\nspent on the coast and $400,000 in\nthe interior.\nLightning Cannes Half\n\"Most of the fires in the Interior\nhave been caused by lightning,\" he\nsaid, \"but the public should be\nmore  careful  than   It  is.\"\nMr. Pattullo stated the object of\nthe fire Inquiry was \"to discover,\nthrough suggestions by men who are\nIn the business, what can he done to\ncut down British Columbia's loss of\ntimber through fire.\"\nIn 1916 British Columbia exported\nby water 46,000,000 feet of lumber,\nwhile last year the province exported 700.000,000 feet to all parts\nof the world, 20 times as much, the\nminister pointed out. The United\nStates was the province's biggest customer   for   this   timber.\nIS NAMED BISHOP\nOF RIGHTEOUS HELL\nDENVER. Colo., Nov. 14. \u2014 In a\nseven-hour ceremony the Liberal church\nof Denver today ordained William Ben\nCollins as \"bishop of righteous hell.\"\nOfficials of the church declared that\nthe ordination took place as the result\nnf a rising tendency in this country to\nabolish hell. A rejuvenated hell, they\nclaim is necessary for the welfare of\nthe country.\nBack to Nature' Tribe\nSent Back to Shelter\nby Snow Flurries\nPARIS, Not. n.\u2014tjit first mow\nflurry snooeeded Ha patting clothee\non a \"back 1\u00bb nature\" colony which\nduring the summer had for Its\nhabitat a mountain about 90 miles\nnorth of Nlc*, a task which th*\npolio* hod been trying to achieve\nfor lereral mouths.\nHigh School Girl\nMurdered Brutally,\nSeattle, Coroner Says\nSEATTLE Nov. 14. \u2014 A coroner's\nautopsy tonight found that Lett la\nWhitehall, 14-year-old high school girl\nof Klrkland. across Lake Washington,\nwhose body was found half submerged\nin a muddy slough 10 miles from her\nhome today, was brutally attacked,\nknocked unconscious by a blow on the\nhead, and thrown into the slough.\nCABINET PREPARES\nFOR HOUSE SESSION\nNew Wage Scale in\nFord Plant Coming\nInto Effect Now\nDETROIT, Nov. 14. \u2014 Raises In pay\nto offset the reductions brought about\nthe five-day week, have been granted\nto 92.4** employees of the Ford Motor\ncompany, and are gradually being put\nInto effect throughout the entire organisation, officials of the company announced today.\nBy spring, officials indicated, they\nexpect that every employee ln the organisation will have been brought under the work plan.\nIt Is the contention ef the organisation that with two days' leisure In esoh\nweek workers turn out more and better work.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 14. \u2014 Preparations\nfor the next'meeting of the provincial\nlegislature scheduled to get down to\nbusiness in January are under way at\nthe parliament buildings now. As\nusual, the government will meet the\nhouse with Its legislative and budget\nproposals well in hand.\nGovernment departments are busy\nwhipping into shape their estimates for\nthe next fiscal year, always a matter\nwhich requires careful consideration,\nnot only by Individual branches of the\nservice, but by the cabinet as a whole.\nThe estimates as drafted by'the departments will go before the government   shortly  for consideration.\n'Holbrook and Salter'\nLatest Drink Called\nFor by House Members\nLONDON, Hot, 14. \u2014 Or. Alfred\nSalter, Laborite K.P., who rectutly\nscandalised th* house of oommoni\nhy accusing members of drunktn-\nnea*t and Mr Artffcur Holbrook, th*\nConwrvatWe, who** motion of oen-\n\u25a0 ure Of th* doctor for \"letting th*\neat ont of th* bag\" warn carried by\nth* hon**, ar* all nnooa-aoloosly\ngoing flown ln posterity a* th*\njoint names-* of a new drink, or*\nrather, an old dtlnk under a nesr\ngnli*.\nProm th* day Or. Salter's\ncharges were made the eubject of\na debate, members of th* hooee of\ncommons bar hare bs*n \"Mlitf for\na \"Holbrook and Salter.\"\nThen Suicides; Gossip Believed\nCause  of the\n\u2022 Deed *   ft?\n\u25a0 .   ' 'n ^f;\nWIFE KILLED WITH\nSHOTGUN IN BED\nDeath Penalty Does Not Apply-\nto   Foreigners   in\nItaly\nROME. Nov. 14.\u2014The law for the\ndefence of the state meting out death\nfor attempts on the life of Premier\nMussolini and heavily penalizing any\nopposition to the regime does not\napply to foreigners visiting or resident\nin Italy. This was officially announced by the government today.\n(This removes the fears recently\nexpressed that Violet Ablna Gibson,\nsister of Lord Ashbourne, of Great\nBritain, who tried to kill Mussolini by\nshooting at him. April 7 last, might\nbe '.rled and executed under the law.)\nThe announcement today also states\nthat tourfsts are free to cross the\nborder at the Liberty frontier, the\nClosing applying only to Italians.\nSimilarly article 5. inflicting Jill\nterms on Journalists sending false or\nexaggerated news from Italy, applies\nonly to subjects of the  kingdom.\nChildren Die by Revolver Bullets; One Son Survives Family\nSOUTH TORRINGTON Wyo., Not.\n14.\u2014The Rev. J. B. Mlnort, 45, pastor of\nthe Baptist church here, early today\nshot and killed his wife, aged 40, and\nfour of his five children, ranging in\nage from 4 to 16 years. He then committed suicide. One son, John 80, survives. He is attending school at Liberty, Mo,\nMrs. Minort was shot to death with a\nshotgun while she lay in bed. The\nchildren were slain with a revolver aa\nthey slept, with the exception of Hubert, who was shot to death in his\nmother's bedroom-\nThe motive for the deed has not been\nestablished, but it Is supposed that gossip and domestice troubles are responsible.\nIn addition to his duties as minister,\nthe Rev. Mlnort was police court judge\nand manager of a grain elevator. Some\nyears ago he was humane officer in\nthis town.\nSIX DROWN AS\nI CAPSIZES\nRaid by Police Leads Nine to\nPile Into Boat in Attempt Escape\nST. PAUL, Minn., Nov. 14.\u2014Six\npersons were believed by police to\nhave been drowned in the Mississippi\nriver here, shortly before midnight\ntonight, when a small boat capsized\nand sank. The accident occurred when\nnine men and women leaped into the\ncraft as police raided a houseboat on\nthe river after the authorities had received complaints of a liquor party.\nThe boat proved too small for the\nheavy burden suddenly imposed upon\nit, and sank in the swirling current.\nPolice rescued one man and two\nwomen and sent them to the hospital. Two men were captured in the\nhouseboat and locked in the city Jali.\nA short time after the small boat\ndisappeared, two bodies were recovered.\nHall-Mills Murder\nCase Reaches the\nStopping Place\nSOMBRVILLE, N. J., Nov. 14.\u2014A\nshowdown in the Hall-Mills case may\nbe just around the .corner. As Som-\nervllle presented the appearance of a\ndeserted village today, awaiting the\nopening of the 10th day of the trial\ntomorrow, there was a conviction\namong observers of the trial that the\nstate has reached the point where, to\ncontinue, It must have the testimony\nof Mrs. Jane Gibson, sick In a Jersey\nCity hospital.\nCARRY   GUNS\nNOGALES, Arte., Nov. 14.\u2014Machine\nguns are mounted on trains leaving\nthe International boundary here, to\nprotect travelers from the depredations of rebellious factions in interior\nMexico. Military escorts on the trains\nhave been doubled from 50 to 100\nmen on each train.\nLYLE AWAITS\nTRIAL FERNIE\nLodged in Jail Unable to Get\nBail Required; Charge\nIs Perjury\nFERNIE, B. C, Nov. 14.\u2014John l.y\\o,\nwho was arrested ln Cranbrook on\nFriday evening, was brought into\nFernie late Saturday afternoon under\nescort ot Corp. James Smith of Cranbrook provincial police detachment.\nOn Saturday evening he appeared before Police Magistrate O. Q. Henderson in answer to the charge of perjury\nlaid by Sergeant Greenwood, in charge\nprovincial police district headquarters\nhere, and remand for preliminary\nhearing was made for eight days.\nLyle, who is not represented by\ncounsel, personally made application\nfor bail to be allowed. After hearing\nSergeant Greenwood in reply to this\napplication, Sergeant Greenwood acting as prosecuting officer, the magistrate fixed the bail in the sum of\nJ5000, made up by two sureties of\n$1500 each and the accused in his own\nrecognizance for J2000. Lylo waa returned to the cells in the city Jail,\nfalling to furnish this amount ot hall\nas yet.\n -atta-\t\nGets Three Years\nin Pen for Bank\nRobbery, Violence\nTORONTO, Nov. 14.\u2014Three years\nIn Portsmouth penitentiary waa the\nsentence Imposed on Gordon Simpson\nby Mr. Justice Lennox, in fall assises\nyesterday. Simpson was yesterday\nfound guilty by a Jury of robbing wit*i\nviolence a local branch of the Bank\nof Nova Scotia three years ago.\n         em\t\nDIES  SUDDEBIaT\nSASKATOON, Nov. 14.\u2014Rev. N. Me-\nPhedran pastor of the Westminster\nUnited church Humbolt, died Saturday\nmorning of heart trouble.\nThe Weather *\nRICH   HAUL\nNEWARK, Nov. 14.\u2014Five gunman,\nafter beating a special -policeman Into\nunconsciousness and holding at bhy\ntbe proprietor and his clerk, tonight,\nlooted the deposit boxes of Hubar'J\nTurkish Baths of $50311 cash and\nJtwalry.\nSixteen Drowned\nWhen Towns Flooded\nby Torrential Rain\nHAVANA, Cuba, Nov. 14.\u2014Sixteen persons hava basn drowned\nin Orients province, where torrential raina flooded tha towna of\nBan**, Chaoarra, Puerto, D*4>cias\nPadre and   Santa   Luoia.\nTha waltr in Santa Lucia flooded tha town to a tfjpth of 10 fee*.\nSavers material damans it reported   from   tha   atrlcktn   region.\nSATUBDAYS W\u00abATD\u00bb\nNelson   and  vicinity  \u2014  Clouds\nmild.\nMin.\nar.\n44\nn\nn\n4S\nm\nAtlln        48\nn\n41\nin\nss\nSan Francisco     64\nSi\nM\nIViitlcton          tt\nVe\u00bbnon         4\nGrand  Fork.        tt\nKaslo         J J\nCranbrook*     \u00ab\nKdmonton          \"\nSwift Cua-xa*       \u2022\u2022*-*\nPrll><\u00bb AH\u00bbrt        18\nQa-Aw.Ua     22\n61\n411\ntn\n47\n47\n2\u00ab\nSll\n33\n24\n \u2014\u25a0*\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\t\nPage Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 15, 1926\n. Owen    Sound   will   hold   an   Old !     Mme.   Kollantay,   Soviet   diplomat,\nHome Week celebration In HIT, wu   refused   admission   to   tha  U.S.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nraaaatf\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms  with   Running  Water,   Private  Baths  and  en  Suite.\nHeadquarters   for  all   Travelling   Men,   Mining   Men,   Lumber   Men\nand  Tourists,\nSPECIAL,   SUNDAY   PINNER,   $1.00. Jtotarian   Headquarters.\nThe  Most  Comfortable  Rotunda  In   the  City.\nHUME \u2014 J. McDonald, C, Swan, Sandon; Mrs. E. H. McLean, Nakusp; T. R.\nMacKenzle W. K. .Johnson O. R. Jones,\nB| W. Watt H. N. Smith, W. A. English H. Day R. Stewart, Vancouver;\nMr. and Mrs! T. McNeil. Slocan City;\nW. T. McDowell Spokane; H. Garnett,\nCalgary; R. D. Hearn. Kimberleji; L.\nGodboit Montreal; A. E. McCormack,\nToronto: H. S. Dulton. Port Elgin; Mrs.\nJ.   L.  Holt.   Latta   Lake;   S.   -tl.  Carron,\nMeoicine Hftt; I. E.\nCourhiU. Victoria;\ntoria; A. C, Mesker,\nsy,' Cranbrook; K.\nBay; A. M. Frith\nFord A. H. Clark,\ngrave D. R. Hand,\nver; J. A. Huntley,\nMitchell Toronto;\nCampbell, Montreal\nCatharines.\nFornelll. Fife; P. 2.\nHon.   Pattullo    Vlc-\nMirtw.-iy; J. Fennea-\nBoorlBa,    Crescent\nH. Bennett R. B.\nA, G. Ward, I. Har-\nJ. E.  Dve   Vancou-\nG. Morrison. W. C.\nW. Wyndow. F. G.\n;  J. H    Bennett, St.\nNew Grand Hotel\n616  VERNON   ST.   EAST - 8.   E.  MILLS,   PROPRIETOR\nHeadquarters for Everybody. Hot and Cold Water.\nTelephones in All Rooms.\nFREE BUS FROM STATION AND BOAT\nNEW GRAND \u2014 It. B- Kennedy,\nLethbridge; O. H. Fisher Montreal; J.\nKeid Castlegar; E. ]J. Sullivan, Salmo;\nB. Larrod. Trail; S. Peterpnn, Procter;\no. Maarsund Bonnington; J. Bosham,\nWest Bank; R.  G. Parker, W. Reap, A.\nAllsasser E, W. Langstaff, Mrs. Lang-\nstaff, T. Beilly N. Carlson. C. Olson, O.\nBystfom M. Larron, Vancouver; G.\nHandle E. M. Olsen Golden; P. Ander-\nstrad, Wynndel; Mrs. R. A. Brown, Midway.\nSAVOY\nNELSONS FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nCold Running Water in A!! 1\nth i'i ivat\u00ab Baths or Sltowers\nTh*?   .tonework  on the Britlih Horn-1\nj  ot  Parliament   Is   crumbling   \u00bbnd\nthe work of restoration will take 10\nyears, at a cost ot  \u00a31,000,1X10.\t\nOpposes Godfrey\nCRUEL   PILES\nDr.  Van  Vleck   Found   Genuine  Relief\nWhich   Is   Healing   Thousands\nSend   Postdl far   Dollar   Trial   FREE\nTo anyone suffering from Piles we\nmtikf this unlimited offer: Send us\nyour address and\nreturn mall will\nbring you a regular\nDollar Package of\nDr Van Vle-CTS J-\nf o 1 d Absorption\nTreatment for Itching, Bleeding, Pro-\ntrudlnr Files, -and\nucij    IMle   trou\nble\u2014all   jn   plij_m\nwrapper    -\n'apPer    \u2014    TO\nIT  TREE.   I>r.\nVan Vleck. ex-\nfoirgeon I-'. B.\narmy spent forty years pi i t . i-\n1 n g h i s now\nworld fam-ms Abvsrptlco. Method. N>\nknife, no pain, no doctor bills \u2014 Just a\nHimplc hum, treatment that run be trlcil\nby anyone without cost. Then, after\ntrying If you are lully satisfied with\nthe relief and comfort It gives you, stud\nus One Dollnr. If nut, it oetfrr you nothing. Vou decide, and wc tike your\nworo. We ii'.n'i know how we ooald\nshow more unbounded faith in our remedy. It Is relieving almost every stage\nand condition <>f Itching. Bleeding, Protruding Piles, even after whole Uptimes of misery. We huve rccelv.i! hundreds of letters telling us of the success of this rentarU:-r*!y effective system after everything else. Including\ncostly and dangerous operations had\nfailed, even after :f0 .\u2022'nd 40 years of\nsuffering The milder ca**-es are oftam\ncontrolled in a single <!*y. Won't you\ntry lt at our expense? Address Or Van\nVleck Co.. Dept, JK-K Jackson Midi.\nSend no money.   Send today.\nDR.   J.   R.   SERSON\nLiberal candidate, who is opposing\nHon. Dr. C.odfrey in West York in\nthe province In the pending Ontario\nelections. \t\nNelson s Best Cafes\n\"golden gate cafe\nOnly White Cafe Open Day and Night.\nOyiter.   Our   Specialty.\nElectric    Friflid-Air   Cooling   System\nSODA FOUNTAIN IN CONNECTION\nK  trial  will convince you\nPHONE   6S1 BAKER    ST.\nROYAL CAFE \"\nClassic   Restaurant\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevail.\nOPEN    DAY    AND    NIGHT.\nLuncheon,   11:30   to  2   36c\nSpecial   Dinners,   r.:30   to   8    35c\nWe  Specialise  in   Chop   Sucy  and\nNoodles.\n\u2022 \u2014PHONE  182\u2014\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nFinest-Equipped Restaurant In the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice Cream,.Soda Watet\nand Hot Drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe  Cater tu   Private  Parties.\nSAVOY \u2014 Mr. and Mrs C. E. Clark\nMr. and Mrs. P. L. Nichols Slocan; B.\nL.tramt, Ymir; M, ft McLellan, Bonnington; F. Decue, Nakusp; A. Dosen-\nlw\/per. Procter; H. Anderson Calgiry;\nWi   B.   Hunter,   Trail;   A.   Innes    Grand\nForks: W. Allen, W. J. McMillan. Van-\nt'ouv.-i; Mrs. I*. Webher, Kimberley; H.\nL Devlin Lethbridge; G. B. Clark.\nClarketon; Mrs. M. Beninger. Mrs. T.\nItced Creston; W. A. Hufty Brilliant;\nT. Boyd. Nakusp.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water ln every room.\nSteam heated.\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.\nQUEENS -^ Mrs. J. Xyman, H. Hes-\nloff New Denver; E. Lalonde Ross\nSpur; D. MeKllJop. Lethbridge; Mrs. M.\nDuniop, Vancouver; C   Brett,  Rossland.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nSteam-Heated   Rooms  by the  Day,\nWeek   or   Month.\nEvery consideration shown to guests.\nCor.  Baker and  Ward  Sts.,  Nelson\nMADDEN   -\n-   O,   E.\nClark\nWinlaw;\nE.  McNeil\nBe\nnnington\nH\nMr\nPatterson\nit.\nJ.   Patterson\nH\nPotter.\nCranbrook\nT\nE.   Brasher,\nHa\nrop;   W.\nMcFaddtn,\n\\ aneouver.\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA.   C.  TOWNER,   Proprietor\nThe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty   rooms   of   \u2022olid   comfort.\nWe serve  the best meals ln Nelson.\nIt's  the  cook.\nSHERBR00KE HOTEL\nNear  C.   P.  R.  Station.\nRooms at Reasonable. Rates.\nH.   DUNK,   Proprietor\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2*\/2   Blocks   East  of  Post  Office\nSteam heated.  Hot and cold water.\nRooms  by  day  or  week.\nAlso Furnished  Suites.\nP.   H.   BUSH,   Prop.\nTrail Hotels\nWhen   in   Trail.   Step   at   the\nHOTEL ARLINGTON\nA.   (PETE)   LEVESQUE,   Prop.\nCompletely    Renovated    and    Refurnished\u2014Hot and Cold Running Water\n\u2014Steam    Heated\u2014Centrally    T\/Ocated,\nSample   Rooms   in   Connection.\nTha Old   Reliable\nCROWN POINT HOTEL\nA.   McDERMOTT\nEvery Courtesy Extended to Tourists\nand   Others   Visiting   Trail.\nSTANDARD CAFE\n320  Baker  Street,  Nelson,  B.  C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT,\n11:30 to 2:30, Special  Lunch      35c\n5:30  to  8:00  p.m.,  Supper   35c\nPHONE 154\nTeach Children\nTo Use\nCutieura\nSoothes and Heals\nRashes and Irritations\nCnriciir\u00ab Soap Ke*y the Skin \"(3e*r\nM others especially like it for chU-\nd ren as it takes\nthe place of inter*\nnal medicines.\nLocal Druggists Have\nModern Remedy for Colds\nA Vaporising Sal.e which ia Rubbed\nOrer Throat and Chest for Colda.\nWhen Vicks VapoRub the \"external\"\nmethod of treating sore throat, bronchitis, deep chest colds, or croup, is\napplied over throat or chest, the ingredients are released as vapors by the body\nheat\nThese vapors, inhaled with each breath\ncarry tht medication directly to the\naffected air passages, loosening the\nphlegm and relieving the congestion.\nAt the same time Vicks acts as a couc**\nter-irritant, stimulating the skin and thus\nhelps the vapors inhaled to break up the\ninflammation.\nColda are usually relieved over pight.\n\u25bc  VAPORUB\n0m2IMlWONjArrSUsEDY\u00a3ARLr\nMOTHERS I\nAND THEIR CHILDREN\nCONQUERING   CHILDISH   PEAR\nOne   Mother   says:\nMy little daughter suddenly developed a fear of th.-1 dark because a\nstrange little playmate told her wild\natones learned from her nurse. I\novercame this almost at once by telling her that she might take her own\n\"sun\" along with her whoft she wept\ninto a. dark place. The \"sun\" was a\nbright flashlight. \"You see,\" I explained, \"that sometimes you take\nyour sun and sometimes you may noi\nhave It, but things In the room look\njust the same always.\" She grew so\nInterested in lighting up the dark\ncornerfl herself that the temporary\nfear   soon   passed   away.\nIE MURRAY\nIS A PRINCESS\nrakes 'Fourth and Last' Husband ; He Is Prince\nDivini\nTO Uf HERS\nPattullo Work$ Out Way for It\nto  Revert to  the\nProvince\nSOLVES  DIFFICULTY\nGRAND FORKS AREA\nReverted Land Subdivided and\nSold Ag-ain to Any\nPurchasers\nEjgcgpomy that Counts\nA big item of the household budget\nis the fuel consumed by old methods!:\nThat'swhysomany in small homes,bungalows, offices, shops, etc., of not over 6000\ncubic feet contents, are turning to the\nIdeal VECTO. This scie:'.;\u00a3c heater gives\nthem a greater amount of warmth at less\ncost. The cold air drawn in at the base of its\nhandeome porcelain jacket, panel over pleated, inner-ribbed surface*,, uwarmed\nto a mild, comfortable, healthful degree, and circulated throughoui every room.\nThe Ideal VECTO requires no cellar. Price $99 (freight extra). If not ready to\nmake the larger inveatment in IdealHotWater Radiator Heating, VECTO iithe\nbestWarmAirHeatermoneycanbuy.Soldbyalldealera.\n|JPNlDNpWilR011IRrPAIu:ll\nDOMINION BANK BLDG,\nTORONTO, ONTARIO\nH EATE\nNEW YORK, Nov. 14.\u2014Princess\nDivini of the roynl house of Georgia,\nRussia, known to the movie multitude aa \"Mae Murray,\" watf on the\nbriny dpep today with her .latest,\nfourth, and (so he asserted) her last\nhusband.\nPrince David Davlnl, one time a\nirlller's helper in Harry Sinclair'*\n:>il company in Oklahoma, was\nGeorgia-bound to see> what could be\ndone about getting the royal permission for him to go into the movies\ntoo.\nAt sailing time. Miss Murray was\nasked if she wis happy with the\nprince.\n\"I never knew what happiness was\nuntil now,\" she .replied. \"All the\nrest was merely training.\"\nHon. T. D. Pattullo, minister of\nlands, was in conference at Grand\nForks on Saturday with the trustees of the Grand. Forks Irrigation\nproject. With him were Major J. C.\n\u25a0MacDonald, comptroller of water\nrights, and Major J. A. Clarke, an\nexpert  agriculturist.\nRelieved  of  Extra Burden\nThe minister stated here last\nnight that a scheme had been evolved\nto relievo water users in the Grand\nForks irrigation district. \"Under the\noriginal scheme, when one man failed\nto pay the taxes on his property, the\nother interested holders were required to pay extra to make up the\ndeficiency,\" he said. \"As a result,\nthe project was in danger of collapsing. But now, If a man, falls\nto pay the taxes, the land will revert to the government. It will be\nsubdivided and sold again.\n''This scheme is to De applied to\nall irrigation districts in the province,\" Mr. Pattullo concluded, \"and\nI think it is the solution of the difficulties we have had since the projects  were   launched.\"\n'SOLDIER' JONES\nIN CANADA NOW\nQUEBEC, Nov. 14.\u2014Horace (Soldier) Jones, well-known Canadian\nheavyweight boxer, arrived at Quebec wllh his 19-year-old bride today\non the S.S. Minnedosa from England. Jones said he is going to\nWork In the woods on the farm\nwhere he was born at Gaspe, during\ntho next six months, to put himself\nin fighting trim. He will retire after\na few more fights, he says.\nFred Kinokin Brought to Ymir\nFrom  Erie;  Thihk\nSpine Hurt\nSees No More Brain*\nSIR   ARTHUR   KEITH yf$\nNoted physician and scientist, In\nlecture recently before the Royal institution, declared the shape of Bng\nlishmen's heads is changing, by*\n\"there is no evidence of Increaaa ii\nbrain   capacity.\"\t\nTIEDTlTUATION\nd\nQueens  Victory  Alters  Schedule; Means Week Later\nfor Final\nFred Kinakln, a Doukhobor teamster, was seriously injured Saturday\nafternoon when a log he was hauling rolled over him. He was working on the Erie Lumber company's\nlimits near Erie.\nHe was hauling a log on a side\nhill when the log started to slide\ntoward \"his horses. He was on the\nlower side of the hill and lt slid\nsideways, rolling over him before he\ncould   get   out  of  the   way.\nIt is feared his spine Is Injured. The man was taken to Tmlr\nfor   treatment.\nSteam   Heated\nThroughout\nHot and Cold\nWatar\nRead tho Advertisements\ntXNOWWWfsT IS BBsST\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\n|    E. L. ANO A. GROUTAGE, Props.\n, Box 6M Phone 283 Trail. B.C.\nMENS\nWEAR\n\"\"\"\"\u25a0Mb\nNew Store\nAppeals to\nNewcomers\nBOYS\na WEAR  p\nJUST OUTSIDE THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT\n\u2014though it's surprising how quickly they assume the status of\n'\"Old-Timers\" ln our home-like sh op. And since our valued customers, many of whom have loyally traded with us since the days of\nthe first small store, still visit wi th us when requiring Men's and\nBoys' Wear at Popular Prices, we   are well satisfied with our move.\nDODDS 0\nfKIONEY;\nm pills\n\u25a0!k   **lra5UM-*'T<*Wrf\ntefflEPg\nInsurance Value\nAn Ordinary Life Policy for $1000\nbecame  a claim  ln  November,  1924.\nIn the 33 years in which the policy\nwas in force the insured had paid in\n$811.80 in premiums.\nDuring that period the insured's\nprotection was stoadily increasing', for\nat his death his wife received a\nchock for $1760\u2014^760 more than that\nguaranteed.\nDOMINION    LIFE    ASSURANCE\nCOMPANY\n8. C. Latornell  \u2022 District Manager\nOffiea:   220  Baker  St,   Nelson,   B.  C.\nWillow Point and\nFairview Clubs\nto Play Badminton\nNeact Friday night the badminton\nclub from Willow Point will play the\nFairview club at the Hume school.\nThe challenge was received and accepted, by Mtss Greta Curwen, secretary of the Fairview Badminton\nclub.\nOTTAWA, Nov. 14.\u2014The finals fo\nthe Canadian rugby title, betweai\neastern and western Canadian cham\nplons, will be delayed one weeei\nowing to the remarkable sltuatioi\nwhich has developed in the inter\ncollegiate lea-cue through Queens win\nning from Varsity on Saturday.\nThe intercollegiate league now t\na triple tie, with Queens, Varsfty. am\nMoQlll having each won two game\nand lost two. McGill and Varsit\nwill meet In .Montreal, November 20\nthe winner to play Queens\nronto  November 27.\nThe champions of the Intej\n'cial league, Ottawa Senator*^\nthe Ontario Rugby Football'!\nBalmy Beach, will meet in Otttirih\non November 20. November 27 i*|t\nthe date set for the eastern final, bu\nthis game will have lo be j^^^H\nuntil tho following Saturday, owiju\nto the delay In the college' league.\n\u25a0\nBadminton Clash\nPut Off Fortnigh\nBonnington badminton players dla\ncovered Saturday they would be vs\nable to come to Nelson for the Sat\nurday night date with Fairview, an\nby mutual consent their return mate!\nhere was postponed for a couple\nweeks.\nMra. Dick Burge is the directini\ngenius of boxing in England. Sh<\noperates a big arena located at Black\nfriars, near London. - One of her idea,\nis to please her patrons. At one ax\nhibitlon '.he spectators razzed th\nfighters, and they let her know abott\nit. She got up In the ring and agree\nthat the performance was terrible ani\naaked the audience to stop at the bo:\noffice on their way out and have thei\nmoney returned.\nENGLAND'S WOMEN  MINISTERS\nLONDON, Nov. 14.\u2014The Rev. Joyce\nDaplyn, secretary of the Union of\nWomen Voters, and youngest of\nBritish women prewchera, is thie\nmoving spirit among women ministers.\nEngland now has 10 fully qualified\nwomen ministers in the Baptist, Congregational and Unitarian churches,\nthe only denominations which so far\nadmit women to their ministry. In\naddition there are six women who\nhave not formally qualified as ministers, but are in charge of churches.\nBRITISH   BOB COSTLY\nLOMD,ON, Nov. 14.\u2014British women are organising long-hair clubs\nas a protest against ,the high cost\nof shingling. Even the very ordinary\nhairdresser who charges about 18\ncents for cutting masculine hair will\nnot shingle a woman's hair for less\nthan   about   60   cents.\nThis is denounced by women as unfair, but If they turn to Women\nhairdresser* the charges arc even\nhigher. A hair-cut, shampoo and\ncurling costs a working woman at\nlea*t $1.25.\nConvicted Winnipeg man, allowed\nfreedom for five\" years for turning\nKing's  evidence,   was  sent  to   jail.\nTHE  GUM PS \u2014THAT'S  A   GOOD  GIRL\n\u2022*\u00bb*\u00a3VC,  'J,**'** VViVA.'SD WW   OUT\nviOVT   -,*\u25a0\u00bb   T\\W\\*& -   *A*5   >NNi -S-O^K\nCVetKR  -50   WS   VMeC*.  \\*H\n-avyaCY.SMaio <\u2022\u2022*\u00ab> xve v\\M>\n-to vi'W N te-wwev*;-\n8M*t  WOVKaWT  TV\\\u20ac\n\/   A*M> TO   HEM* \\UrA.   \u25a0\u25a031*l*-s--i,- WE VNiVS. MNHyNCX\n\/   NROUHb -*t-.TA N -*IWTC  -rUMU  Vf*  EKCA -ANvAO \u2014   \\\nTW?< \\N-Wt    V\\0U.*ER\\N6 , * *\/*aM> V>0*6, 1_ -r\\*,E>C Hf-sD   '\nwv<*A w -ft\\t fcofit CKtcv-EWs ^^>^^aO\u25a0H \\nw^ sv\u00ab\n\\nEHX 0\\J*c\u00ab. TO -WE  -POWtt. N\u00bbK> 60\",  WNV. OUT-\n-vv\\*fc ohw \\n*v< sv>e Cjouuj vAvvtixe uw\\ nm-ns \"to\n6-eT TWM -SENV. ESTOaVe WISH TO COMt CNER ANO\nW< V>V*&  SM'&WY-aVO'N -\nvifc'u. w-y-jt, *-*i\\*\u00ab*4\nTfcfsTS J*. S,>*WT WIFE-\"WE  <*aOOS Of   \\\nPWTOHt  VWST   WINE \u2022*\u00bb*\u20ac\u20ac\u00ab VWCVWHGt N\nwo-as-\u00a9 \u2022siwre* [>a <*\u2022\u00bb\u2022% \"WE W< W-E yvM-SYTO J\nFor Cystitis\nTake Oar Ksrbal Remedies\nBook on Skin Diseases, new\nTreatise on Chronic Diseases by\nHerbal Remedies. Pamphlet on\nLoss of Manhocd and Diseases\nof men. Booklet on Female Ills*\nand advice, free by mail; 30\nyears' experience. Without crttl- ,\nciting or tiisparaging your local\ndoctors, -write us before losing\nhope. Treatment by mall oar\nspecialty.\nENGLISH   HERBAL   DISPEH-\nSA RY   LTD.\n1359  Davie,  Vancoarpr, B.C.  i.\nThe Oldest Herbal Institution\nFor Half a Century\nthe Standard.\nSuccessful  Treatment\nD.CHVSES\nOINTMENT\nPiles Go Quick\nWithout Salves or Cnttfnr\nThousands who have piles have na\nlearned that quick and permanent relie\ncan only be accomplished with Interna\nmedicine. Neither cutting nor an;\nimount of treatment with ointment\nand suppositories will remove thi\ncause.\nBad circulation causes piles. T*-i#re 1\na complete stagnation uf blood Tn t&<\nlower bowel and a weakening of th\nparts. Dr. J. 3. Leonhardt was tltpt I\nfind the remedy and called his prefer!p\ntion HEM-ROID. Dr. Leonhatf^HH\nIt In 1000 cases with the marvelous rec\nord of success in 98 per cent and thw\ndecided it should be wold by <iru\u00bbgli|ti\neverywhere under a rigid money-WMl\nguarantee.\nDon't waste any more time with out\nside application. Get a pacfckn o\nHEM-ROID from Canada Drug \u00a3 Baal\nCo. today, lt has given safe and Wat\nIng relief to thousands and will idSA\nlame for you,\n_\n\u2014\n_____\n \t\n1\n\t\nIcW\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 15, 1926\nPage Three\nJunior High Girls Beat Teach-\nera  Too;  Demidoff\nSuspended\nASSAULTED REFEREE\nFOIt ALLEGED 'R^W DEAt,\nGames Close Throughout; Spec-\ntators' Room at a\nPremium\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 14.\u2014Two very\nfeloae games hi the men's league arjd\nbi easy victory for the Junior high\nschool girls over the teachers In the\nladies' league featured Saturday's\n'jasketball tjiPl* header at the Memorial hall. Spectator room waa at\npremium. *\nThe town .team, nosed out the\nImelter boys with' a single field\n>asket and a score of 34 to 12 in the\nIrst game. The Miners, after draw-\n\u25a0ng with \"the City Hall team 26 all.\nthe en# of the second, cinched the\nIctory by converting three penalties\nigaihst the City' Hall's lone field\nfoal. The score was 29 to 28.\nAt the close of thla game, which\nM rough all through a City Hall'\n)layer, P. perafdloff, assaulted the\n[\u25a0eferee, W, BctHHe, for an alleged\naw decision. JEJiis inexcusable action\n\u00bbccurred after the game, and with-\n)ut preceding argument, or warning.\nt wa,a observed by a number of the\neague. executive, who immediately\neclared P. Demidoff suspended from\nhe Igague for the rest of the sea-\nion.    \u25a0 ; *\n,   Games   Clow\nBoth men's games were strenuously\nontested, although the Smelter vs.\n'own match was relatively clean.\nPhese two teams were drawn at 18\n.0 18_at half timo and alternated al-\nost basket by basket for leader-\nihip   during  the  second'.\nPlaster waa the atar basket getter\nwith 22 points from field goals. Ha\nplayed a waiting game and tipped\nthem through aa fast as W. Evans\nand Bulfner, 10, could heave them\nto him. Bulmer waa off his shot,\nthough playing briliantly otherwise.\nA. Hall, alternating with Evans at\ncenter, played a clever combination\ngame and alto materially assisted\nFleeter at the hoop. J. Demldoff\nand WlUiams played a good covering defence game.\nAnderson   SUra\nAnderson, star shooter for the\nSmelter, made nine field goals, but\nwaa often unfortunate ln his shooting. He played his old dashing\ngame with Weldon, 8, and Firth, 4,\non the wing getting away with many\nstrategic plays. Shesser, two behind\nhim frequently outguessed the opposing forwards and scored a pretty\nfield goal from a bouncing return.\nBryden, checking vigorously and\nshadowing was too affectionate with\nthe ball and once released it to no-\none.\nThe Miners made a determined bid\nfor victory at the start of their game\nwith the City Hall. They led 16 to\n12 at half time.\nLefevre, guard, scored a pretty\nflying goal in the first half for them\nand late in thei second slipped forward to score -^three more, before\nthe City Hall boys were wise to his\nmaneuver. He converted two penalties in the overtime. Martello, also\nguard, scored two field and one\npenalty. His playing all over 'the\nfloor frequently left Lefevre embarrassed by tlu attack of the opposing\nforwards ana1 (centers. Dewar, 8, an\nelusive artist, -with Pratt two behind\nhim at center, the wisest player of\nthe bunch, at center,, and Pox, 4,\nforward, made some snappy combined plays and were very aggressive. *\nP. Demidoff scored eight field\ngoal* and with A. Demidoff, who\nscored four, made most of the City\nHall's tally. He was the most aggressive player on the floor and\nshould have been penalized many\ntimes for fouling. M. Demidoff,\nplaying guard with J. ID.emidoff in\nfine style, dribbled the length of the\nfloor, to score a Held basket In the\novertime. Ritchie put two behind\nand at center played a good com\nbinatlon game with his wings though\nhe had not their speed.\nGood   Workout\nIn the ladies' match the Juniors\nwere quite too much for the Teachers, In better physical shape and\npractice they obviously knew more\nof  the   game than   the  new  league\n'JUDY'S MAN'\nWashington's Social  Whirl and Official Life Are  the\nBackground of This Fascinating Love Story\nBy HELEN BERGER\nCopyright,  1926, by the Penn Publishing  Co.\nentrants. They scored almost when\nthey would; and gave the Teachera\njust enough opposition to give them\na good hard workout The teams\nwere:\nJuniors\u2014Gladys Maudsley, Amy\nAdams and Mary Matthew, forwards;\nJeanne Butorac and JBUsabell Leckie,\ncanter; Rene Balfour and Bessy Plester, guards.\nTeachera\u2014Stel|a Coris, Alice Tork\nand Hasel Nelson, forwards; Mary\nBalfour, center; Theraa Rossman and\nHelen   Johnson*   guards.\nSOCIAL BRIEFS FROM\nTRAIL AND TADANAC\nThis column is conducted by Mrs.\nThomas Weston of Trail. Phone\nher of all social eventa in Trail-\nRossland territory-\nShe was more than half afraid of\nhis strange young man. Some-\nhere in her heart there was a little\noor and -some day someone would\nmie along confidently carrying the\ney to* that door. Was Tommy the\n\u25a0mn? And what would he say to\nie strange little ghost, hidden away\nehlnd the locked door, the poor,\nitlful ghost of a little boy of long\ngo?\nSuddenly Tommy smiled at her\neasauringly, almost as though he\nead her .'thoughts. \"Ever since I've\nnown you. we've done nothing but\n>ke. Let's talk a little while, Judy,\nor a change!\"\n\"What shall we talk about?\" she\nsked. . :\n\"Let-Jp talk about ourselves. Touj\n\u25a0egin.\"\nJudifjt, shook her head. \"There's\nlOthinf to talk about when you talk\nbout me,\" she said;\n\"Wl^at did you want most, when\nou wpre little?\"\nFor an instant Judith looked away\nbsently. Her mind ran baok alonfr\nhe yearp. What had she wanted\nnost out of those careless, shabby\nrearB?. What had that funny child\nTlth hpr thick mane of hair and\nter wide eyes wanted, so long ago?\nleautyj Oh, how passionately she\n,ad wanted beauty!\nTo see jbeauty, to make beauty, to\nlve beauty. She thought of the thin\niprlng green of {he Darien garden.\nhe thought of little sickles of moons\neen over the dark housetops. Beauty!\nlhe drew a deep breath. She could-\nI't tell Tommy that! What else had\nhe wanted? From far off her glance\name back to htm filled with the\n;hoet of an elfin memory. Around\nler   mouth  waa  a  tiny smile-\n\"I wanted silk stockings and a\n\u25baInk dress,\" she said and there was\nomething still childish and wistful In\n,ier tone.\n\"And did you get them?\"\n\"Of course not! It was really very\nfunny how I came to want those\nthings.\" She stopped and laughed\nsoftly. \"Dabs and Honey uaed to\ntalk about what we'd do when they\nmade good. They didn't really knowj\nwhat I'd want because they didn't\nknow so very much about me. So\nthey used to say they'd get me silk\natogklngs and a pink dress. And the\nmore they talked about them the\nmore I wanted them.\"\nHer softly affectionate glance rested upon the group across the room,\nUpon the shining loveliness of Honey's head and the dark keenness of\nDabs'   eager   face.\nThis was all the world she knew,\nand it was a pleasant, generous\nworld. But \u2014 a funny world!\nDaisy Wells, leaning forward\nto stare into Dabs' face with hot\neyes. Betty Lord, tilting in one of the\ncrazy chairs. Why couldn't they ever\nseem to get the right sort of\nchairs ? Harvey Metz, peering at\nHoney with one eye closed over the\noily smoke of his cigar. Her glance\nwent beyond the unconscious group.\nLong, limp, torn curtains at the\nwindows. Soiled wallpaper. Enough\nmoney went into the apartment to\nmake it clean ahd cool and beautiful.\nAnd yet it was none of those things.\nToo bad!\nTommy's voice recalled her. \"Why\ndidn't they Sot them for you?\"\n\"Get what?\" she asked bewildered,\nand then caught the thread of conversation. \"Oh, you mean the pink\nfrock and the silk stockings? Why,\nthey didn't make good! If they had\nmade good they'd have got them for\nme.\"\nSuddenly her tone ran on, softly\nconfiding, \"And do you know, I've\nhad lots of silk stockings since then\nand two or three pink dresses, but\nthey don't make up for those that\nHoney  and   Dabs   promised   me?\"\n(To Be Continued.)\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 14.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. J. Hurst of Columbia Heights,\nwere the guests of honor at an enjoyable surprise party given them\nby numerous friends. The surprlsers\nemerged in tactical order from the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. J. Jewell of\nTopping street, and descended like\nan avalanche on Mr. and Mrs. Hurst\nto indulge In dancing, games and\nrefreshments. The surprlsers were\nMr. and Mra. Ben Diekaon, Mr. and\nMra Joe Jewell, the -Misses Ava and\nGladys Ogilvle, the Misses Ethel and\nViola Doughty, Rosle Richardson,\nViolet Haywood, Gertrude Eyerw,\nMargaret Goldsworthy, Mrs. G.\nMeikle and Frank Hilt, C. Bumess,\nCliff Milne, Stan Alibone, R. J.\nHughes,    Alderman   Jewel    and    C.\nBurness   and   T.  Wilson.\n\u2022 \u2666   *\nRay Berry of Robson was in the\ncity Friday to have the cast removed from hla knee which was Injured on the ferry at Castlegar a\nfew weeks ago.\na   a   \u2022\nR.   Blnnle   of   East   Trail   left   for\nVancouver by auto, where he  plans\nto reside.\nass\nMrs. C. Berry of Robson arrived\nFriday morning and is visiting her\ndaughter, Mrs. D. Calder of Spokane\nstreet. *\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. McDermott of Bay avenue plans to leave here Monday\nfor Seattle to spend a short holiday  with   her  daughter,, Mra.   A.   O.\nBarth.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nW. Frampton returned Friday after\nspending a few days at Ginol's Landing.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss D. McKay and Miss M\u201e McPhail\nof Rossland schools staff were weekend visitors ln Trail.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. F. Morrish and Bon Hurry, of\nRiverside spent the week-end as tr\u00bb.\nguests of' Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Acorn at\nRossland.\n\u2022 *   *\nLloyd Humphries of Bay avenue spent\nthe week-end with friends ln Nelaon.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Lois Wall of Roasland is visiting friends ln the city.\n\u00bb   *   *\nMrs. Arthur of Portland street left\nyesterday for Spokane, where she will\nspend a few days with her husband returning from Tacoma.\n\u25a0m \u2022 *\nR. Gordon formerly of the material\ndistribution clerical staff at the smelter, has been put in charge of the workmen's compensation board office at tbe\nplant to succeed W. J. C. Cleave, who Ik\nnow paymaster at Kimberley.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nLieut. Doris Thatcher, Salvation\nAymy of Calgary, left on Saturday to\nresume her duties In Grace hospital\nthere after spending three weeks' holiday with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. J.\nM. Thatcher of East Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nt Mrs. T. Barrett and son, Leonard, arrived in the city tonight from Vernon,\naccompanied by Mr. Barrett, who met\nthem at Castlegar. They intend to reside In East Trail\nDHL\nTO HIT Wi.\nSt.   Andrew's   Day   Will    Be\nMemorable One for Trail\nChurch and Rector\nwould be bought by next year's\ncouncil were not considered tenable\nexcuses. The small garbage truck\nnow used waa criticised as having\na body part installed in view of the\nrelative large bulk and small weight\nof household garbage.\nThis subject was at length dropped\nwith peculiar comments. \"We've got\na good council and city engineer and\nthey've had their hand's full. I'm\nnot   kicking.\" ,\nTRAIL,    B.C.,    Nov.    14\ndrew'a day, November 30,\n-St.    An\nwill   have\nINQUIRIES TODAY\nextraordinary interest thii year, for Various Organizations Will Be\nthe members of St. Andrews' Angll\ncan churcj) here. It will be observed with a patrunal festival with\nthe presence of thf Rt. Rev. A. J.\nDoull, bishop of Kootenay; and will\nsee the induction of Rev. N. CD, B.\nLarmonth to the rcctorate, by his\nlordship.\nTho festival will open with communion service at 6 o'clock in the\nmorning. Two other communion\nservlres will be held at 8 und 10.\nThis day is tho day of annual communion for all members of the Women's auxiliary of the Anglican church\ntn Canada.\nThe Induction service will be conducted by the blahop at 7:30 in the\nevening. Aflerward there will be\na conversazione, an opportunity for\nthe church mem-Jota personally to\nmeet the bishop.\nDuring his visit the bishop will\nalso, confirin a large class of adult\ncandidate*. ;\nRepresented;  Open\n10 o'Clock\nJ\nTALKED IN TRRIL\nEast Trail Residents Think Expression  of Public  Opinion Should Be Made\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 14.\u2014Residents\neast of the river as represented by\nthe East Trail Improvement association are of the opinion that the\n'.ime has arrived for this city seriously to consider construction and operation of a municipal Incinerator in\nthe   interests  of  public   health.\nThis matter and the whole question of garbage collection for that\nsection of the city was warmly discussed on rYiday night. It resulted\nIn a motion that will be sent to\nthe city council.\nNe-eds Public Expression\nThe fact that tiie city recently\nmade overtures to the Tadanac\nmunicipality for a jqinly owned\noinerator was considered prdbf that\nthe city dads a:so regard it as\nnecessity. An expression of public\nopinion would hasten construction,\nit was thought.\nMuch dissatisfaction was expressed\nover the lack of adequate garbage\ncollection. The city had promised\nweekly collections. \"But they had not\nbeen made, it was complained. One\nman had no collection for 17 days.\nAnother reported he had to pack his\nin a sack to the river every week as\nhe had done for the last two years.\nOthers   reported   similar   conditions.\nThe statement that the city had\nbeen hampered by a truck out of\ncommission and that another truck\nneeded    and   almost    certainly\nSalvation Army\nOfficial Vkits\nTrail Young Folk\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 14.\u2014Salvation\nArmy young people here enjoyed a\nvisit by Col. Ernest Sims of Winnipeg, territorial secretary, who is in\ncharge of all Salvation Army young\npeople'rf. work from Alaska to the\nGreat Lakes.\nColonel Slnfe, with novel object\nlessons, conveyed the idea of human\nsoiling by sin and reperfecting of a\nlife through salvation, to his young\nhearers in an Interesting lecture in\nthe   afternoon   at  the   citadel.\nAt a well attended service in the\nevening for adults he showed, in\nsimple vivid word pictures, how\nNaaman's humbling of himself to\nbathe in the Jordan won his release\nfrom leprosy. \"So must we sink\nourselves and become bumble to\nobtain the life God has for us,\" he\nsaid.\nColonel Sims is returning from conducting the Toung People's councils\nIn Victoria. He will proceed to\nNelson Monday. ' He will return\nshortly to Winnipeg where the foundations are being - laid for a new\ntraining college to be opened this\nfall.\nAt 10 o'cluck this morning, ut the\ncourt house, Hon. T. D. Pattullo.\nminister of lands and forests, will\nopen what Is expected to be the\nmoat important of the four interior\nhearings on the subject of forest\nfire prevention and control, and on\nthat of relief of the lumber industry  In  the interior.\nP. Z. Caverhill, chief forester, and\nR. V. Stuart, Vancouver district forester,   are   with   the   minister.\nThe Mountain Lumber Manufacturers' association, the Associated\nBoards of Trade of Eastern British\nColumbia, and the Nelson and Trail\nboards of trade will be represented\nthe hearing, while various individual lumbermen, and others affected by the questions under examination, have stated they would be\npresent.\nIt is understood some written submissions will also be sent in, including one received from J. W. Cockle\nof Kaslo, on the relation uf beaver\ntu  furest conservation.\nOver Two Hundred\nDollars Realized\nin Poppy Sale, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 14.\u2014With well\njver $200 received as the protoadl\nfrom tho three-day eale of Armi-stlce\noop pies, Arthur Chapman chapter\nI.O.D.E., las; night wus highly gratified over the cooperation uf townspeople In purchasing these mementos of the fallen and aids to the\nIncapacitated ex-service mtn of this\nprovince who made them. It was\nalso full of praise for Mrs. F. &\nKollmar and Mrs, C. W. Guilluume.\n.he permanent conveners, Mesdames\nT. H. Busby, R. H. Devitt, H. W.\nHawkins and E. M. Stiles, who were\nably assisted hy a volunteer corps\nof high school girls.\nVtmi   from   tin* cares  ut'  Canadian  sex,   England,  witb  Lady  Byng. % The\nfamous general look* decidedly care-\nstate here ,s Lord Bit* l11\"'1 '''\"\"\",- ,**,, ,,\u201e! contented hi a lounge suit\nly governor-genera,] ot Canada, - nj0f comfortable tweed und with a pair.\nIn his estate ;u   Thorpe !\u00ab\u25a0 Soken,   Ee- j ot heavy hub-nulled boots on his feet.\nClosing Hearing\non Rates Soon,\nBoard Advised\n\u2022   Just Drink\ndALADA\nTEA\nt% bA\nIts superb flavour satisfies.\nAdvice has been received by th.\nNelson bourd of trade that the final\nRearing and argument on the general\nfreight rates investigation, and un\nmany scores of submissions made by\nvarious organizations, businesses find\nmunicipalities on various ptatM of\nthe freight rates question, will Dpen\nat Ottawa, November 20, before the\nfull board of railway lumniissiurii rs,\nDuring the hearings held throughout the west on the matter this year.\nthe Nelson board submitted no evidence, and the hearing set for Nelson\nwas cancelled.\nCANMORE   BRIQUETTES\nThe Fuel You Have Been Waiting For\nNo  Rock,   Slate   or   Bone.\nNo   Clinker.    No Waste.\nNo Trouble.     No   Regrets.\nGreater    Heat   Than   Anthracite.     Price   $15.00   p*r   Ton.\nWEST TRANSFER COMPANY\nPHONE  33\nSir   Henry   Thornton   predicts    45\nmillluns profit for C.N.R., this year.\nSAM HILL'S 'FOLLY'\nFor the right kind of breakfast\ncrisp, delicious food!\n...0   .<    \u00ab\"\nthi\nIS\nOne of the prime objects ot Queen Marie's visit to this continent was to dedicate the Rumanian roum of Mar:.\nUll museum ln the state of Washington.   The building, show i  at  tho left,  was built  by  Samuel Hill,  the railroad\nright, ln sumptuous style, with the object of receiving   the   King   und   Queen   of   the   Belgians   during   their\nThis not being realised, the structure, erected ll oest *nd  with-great attention lo ar.istle detail\nft  to as \"Sam Hill's Felly.\" und  until  tht   vladt of ','ueen Mai .-. was lying in a state of seml-rutn\nPRESENT-DAY lyeakfasts have a great deal to\ndo with present-Ay nerve* and present-day malnutrition. Dietitians warn us to beware of the hasty\nbreakfast I\nOnce you think about it, you realize bow reasonable\nit is. Nothing to eat all night\u2014the body ready and\nwaiting for food to supply ail its varied needs\u2014and\nwe give it a skimpy, hurried breakfast, frequently\n\u25a0deficient in some of the vital elements of nutrition.\nThen we start out to do the hardest, most nerve-\nracking work of the day, on this kind of meal]\nProbably you don't want a big breakfast. Your\nappetite may not be at its best in the morning. But\nif you choose t small breakfast wisely, it can give\nyour body all it needs until Juncbtime.\nYou could find no more nourishing and delicious di.-h\nfor breakfast than Grape-Nuts. This famous food is\n(\u25a0made from wheat and malted barley, prepared by\nspecial milling and baking processes It has a delightful, nut-like flavor alt its Own. It is remarkably easy\nto digest. And a single serving\u2014four tcaspooniub\u2014\n'eaten witb milk or cream, gives your bod? an abundance of varied and balanced nourishment\nGrape-Nuts furnishes dextrins, malt-% snd other\nr-gj-bohydtates for beat and earrgy,   iron for the\nblood; phosphorus lor teeth and bones; protein for\nmuscle and body-building; and the essential vitt-\nmin-B, a builder of the appetite.\nAnd Grape-Nuts is crispl It encourages the thorough\nchewing which is necessary for perfect digestion and\nfor tbe health of teeth and gums. .Ask your dentist\nwhat he thinks of modern soft-foot! diet! He'll tell\nyou that it is ruining the teeth of this generation\u2014\nand he'll advise you to cat plenty of crhp food.\nMake the tempting, nutritious single serving of Grape-\nNuts a daily breakfast habit. Grape-Nuts comes in\nwax-wrapped packages ready to eaf. Very economical, for four teaspoonfuls, costing less than one\ncent, is sufficient for each serving. Your grocer has\nGrape-Nuts\u2014or you may wish to atcept the tollow*\ning offer;\n\" A Book of Better Breakfasts\"\u2014and two\nservings of Grape-Nuts, free 1\nMail the coupon and we will send you two individual\npackages of Grape-Nuts free. We wilt send, also, \"A'\nRook of Better Breakfasts\", which a former college\nphysical director has prepared'for us. You will find;\n(he delightful menus which this book contains a nal\nhelp toward better health.\nMAIL THIS COUPON NOWU\nCANADIAN   POSTUM   CEREAL  CO.. LTD..     IM\n45 FRONT ST. EAST, TORONTO :, ONT.\ntitma s-tikI mr. (rce\nNlIU, together with '\nby a fiymer college physical director.\n[wd   npl   I'atkjres   uf   GfW#\u00bb\nHook  ot  Better fircaktato'*\nI\n........ n\n Page Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 15, 1926\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by The News Publishing company,\nlimited. Nelson. B.C.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders mad.\npayable to The News Publishing company, limited, and ln no case to individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A.B.C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest or may be seen at the office of\nany adv-artl.lng arenoy recognised by\nthe Canadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy m.U (oeuntry), per month....*   .\u00ab\u00bb\nPer year     too\nBy mall (city), per year  11.00\nOut.Id. Canada, per moath 75\nf*r year      7.50\nDelivered, per week it\nPer  Ttar     11.00\nPayable In Advance   \t\n*asa)emAsLU\\ sssataus of OU-cmJatton\nMONDAY.  NOVEMBER   10,   1926\nAfter Houdini'$ Ghost\nHoudini, the greatest of magicians,\nhaa passed on, and now hia Implacable\nfoes, the spiritualists or \"spiritists.\"\nwhose manifestations he duplicated\nby physical means, and whom he always denounced as fakes, are planning to have their turn with him.\nThey are announcing they will locate him in the spirit world and havo\nhim speak through human mediums.\nAmong those on his trail Is Conan\nDoyle.\nOf course the spirt tun lists will materialise Houdini at seances, and\nbroadcast his recantations. They arc\nnow  safe  from  his  come-backs.\nThe curious thing Is the way Sir\nConan Ooyle is associating himself\nwith the determination to hound\nHoudinl'B ghost. It Is said that Sir\nConan has alienated, one by one,\nmany of his ablest friends, or rather,\nalienated himself from them, by forcing them to attend seances upon\nwhich he wanted them tu pass their\nunbiased opinions, and then accepting their unfavorable reports as mortal   Insults   to   himself.\nToward the end of the war and\nafter the war, the great author of\nadventure stories was prominent in\nthe London papers with his claims*\nfor spiritualism, and to have experienced convincing demonstrations; and\nmany Kootenay soldiers, doubtless,\nwhen on leave In London, heard\nMaskelyne, the great London exponent of magic, nightly in his theater\nchallenge Sir Conan to produce an\nalleged spiritual manifestation that\nhe could not subsequently reproduce\nand   explain   on   his   own   stage.\nSir Conan steered clear of Maskelyne, as he did of Houdini. Tn\nwait until they become disembodied\nand then go afUr them does not se^m\nvery heroic on Sir Conan's part.\n'Uncle Joe' .lost of the Czars\n\"Undo Joe\" Cannon, the last of the\n\"caars\" in the speaker's chair of lhe\nUnited States house of represents -\ntlves, has departed this life. The\nways of speakers, traditional through\na long line of them, became summel\nup in the specially coined word, \"Can-\nnonism.\" \"When the Democrats came\nln with President Wilson, lhe speaker's power was trimmed down with\nan axe, and the old days will not\nreturn.*\n\"Cannonism\" did not signify anything very wicked; It just meant sn\nextreme form of dictatorship, practically the same dictatorship that hart\nexisted all along in that office. A\ngradually gathering revolt against the\nRepublican .party, which finally can:e\nto a head when Roosevelt split off\nand the Bull Moose or Progressive\nparty was formed, took advantage of\nthis easy head to hit, and so the\nrules were modified.\nIn the United States house of representatives the speaker is the boss,\nHe forms all committees, great and\nMirill. arranges the order of legislation, decides which ones of the many\ndesiring to debate shall have the\nfloor, and is the head and front of\nthe machine of tiie party in control.\nIf the speaker be adversely inclined\ntoward a measure or aversj to hearing the voice of a certain member, it\nU next to Impossible for them to set\na hearing.\nThe same condition does not exist\nln the United States senate, whose\ncommittees are more or less continuing and are made-up on a seniority basis, and whose presiding officer\nis the vice-president.\nWhile \"Uncle Joe\" for a time wap\nalmost anathmia with the oft-\nreferred-to \"common people\" In the\n\"United States, probably no one ever\naccused him of a pergonal unkind\n\u00bbct, and the congressional district\nr<*presented by Danville, 111., kept him\npractically its perpetual representative.\nThe\nLighter Side\nReaders of The Dally News contribute many of ths best Items to\nthis column. Jusi sign your same\nor initials, or nom-de-plume, and\n\u2022end lu your brightest Ideas. \u2014\nEditor, Lighter Side.\nAHNTHET\n\"It ain't no sin to gossip.\nThe wicked part is bein' thrilled\nby what the folks done to make\nyou   gossip,*\nEicient\nHousekeeping\nBy IAVBA A. TTBTMiW\nNBW  DISHES  TMM\nTOMOiaOW'8 BTBHTJ\nBreakfast\nBananas\nCereal\n\u25a0Scrambled   Eggs\nToast\nCuffee\nI*un*ih\u00ab'3a\nSweet   Potatoes Supreme\nGraham Bread\nCelery\nJain Cocoa\nDLmaer\nLamb   -Stew   with   Potatoes,   Carrots,   Peas\nDumpings\nLettuce   French Dressing\nMince Pie   ' Coffee\nIf only Ford could give ua a 865-\nday spring.\nA bad coid is much like a wif-e.\nIt never kills you unless you neglect it.\nJ\nTh;Te are numerous preparations\nto take the hurt out of a burn, but\nso few of them are suiable as\nchasers.\nTOU'D LIKE TO CALL ON YOUR\nSUPERIORS? WELL,        THAT'S\nWHAT    ANIMATES    THE     BORES\nWHO CALL ON YOU.    CHEER UP.\nFunny world! When one gangster\nkills another, there's no medal for\ndistinguished   service.\nIt isn't probable that any man ever\nwrote a love story after 40 without\nthinking   himself  an   ass.\nThe whi.e man's chief burden are\nsorry whites who give him a bad\nreputation  ln alien  lands.\nThe MOSS one t-onUinylut*s\ntbe world, tiie better one umlcr-\n\u25a0Ptanrt* why new-born Infants are\nred In the facie.\nAlien gangsiers haven't u new idea.\nThe first aliens in America felt free\nto   be  mean   to  the  natives.\nMODESTY ISN'T OBSOLETE.\nOBSERVE THE MAN WHO MUST\nFIX A GARTER ON THE STREET.\nIt takes some experience to distinguish between a dominating personality   and   bad   manners.\nYou can spell instalment with one\n\"1\"* or two. It contains \"l\" enough\nln   any   case.\nDr. Wiley says open-throat frocks\nmake for health. Now dad needn't\nworry about that thin place In his\npants.\nNow they say baldness stimulates the thyroid and develops\nbrains. But alas! a euUe doom't\nknow anything aboUt thyroids.\nCorrect this sentence: \"She's a\nfreshman now,\" said the man, \"but\nshe doesn't put on airs when she's\nhome   for   a   week-end.\"\nSweet Potatoes Supreme: In a large\nbaking dish mix together two pounds of\npared diced sweet potatoes and one\npound of'chipped smoked beef. Cover\nwith boiling water, dot with one tablespoon of butter broken iM bits, and bake\ntender\u2014about one hour. Serve hot.\nThis makes a very nourishing luncheon\ndish.\nBread Pudding (Requested by Mrs. L.\nM.>: Soak two cups of stale bread\ncrumbs in one quart of hot sweet milk\ntill the milk is cool. Now turn it into\na baking disii and stir in two heaping\ntablespoons of granulated sugar, two\ntablespoons of butter melted, two eggs\nwell beaten one teaspoon of vanilla extract, and a pinch of salt. Mix well together and slip the dls(i into a slow\noven to bake for an hour or slightly\nover. If crusts are not used in the\ncrumbs, the pudding will be more delicate. Serve it hot, with a cold hard\nsauce made by creaming together one\ntablespoon of butter, one cup of confectioners' or powdered sugar, one-third\nteaspoon of ground cinnamon and\nenough cold sweet milk to form a stiff\npaste.\nCreole Cake (Contributed by \"A. L.\nB.\" ln response to a request for this\nrecipe made by another reader): Beat\none cup of granulated sugar, slowly, into two well-beaten eggs. Add three\ntablespoons of melted butler and two\nounces (or squares) of melted bitter\nchocolate. Then add one-half cup of\ncold, sweet milk alternately with one\nand one-third cups of cake (pastry)\nflour which has been sifted with two\nand one-half teaspoons of baking powder, one-'ialf teaspoon of baking powder one-half teaspoon of ground cinnamon, and one-fourth teaspoon of salt.\nBake the mixture In a pan measuring\n7 by 11 inches for about 25 minutes in\na good oven. Frosting: Stir together\ntwo tablespoons of strong black coffee\n(boiled), two tablespoons of dry cocoa\npowder, one-half teaspoon of vanilla\nextract and one cup of confectioners'\nsugar. Spread this uncooked icing on\nwhile the cake Is still hot.\nTomorrow\u2014Answers   to   Inquiries.\nAddress Inquiries to Miss Klrkman\nand Inclose stamped-addressed envelope for reply.\u2014Editor.\nCATHOLIC DIGNITARIES\nfind persons bearing such family\nnames as Helfmann, Lundstedt, Walker, Martin, Edwards and 'OfBrlen\nand O'Reilly, who cannot speak\nEnglish.\nThe German and English colonies\nare large and their Influence Woe had\nnoticeable effects. The army ts German trained and Is uniformed In\ntypically German style. The navy,\non the other hand, ia a miniature\nreproduction   of   Great   Britain's, .\nThis Editor Writes\nNews Heads in Rhyme\nWEBSTER, S.D., Nov. 14.\u2014There\nls an editor ln Webster, who has\nconnived with the muses. Will A.\nWells, of the Journal, writes his\nheads In rhyme.\nFor all ordinary stories, Mr. Wells\nuses a rhyming head of three decks\n\u2014a single cross-Jlne, followed by two\npyiamlded banks. Where a head in\nverBe ls no; appropriate, Editor Wells\nresorts to a prose caption which\nflows   in   continuous   thought.\nWhen the owner of an Illlcity operated still was arrested, the Journal\nsaid:     \"A  great big still and a hot\nDignitaries of the Roman Catholic church photographed as they were\nattending the convention of the Ca'hollo Women's league, held in Toronto.\nLeft to right, His Grace Archbishop Alfred Sinnott of Winnipeg and Rt. Rev.\nM'jjr.  Blair, president  of  the  Catholic Church  Extension  society,  of  Toronto.\ndepend upon all this knowledge, wh'cli\nthe physician now must have.\nThe physician docs his beat to bring\nthis to the attention of the publfce, but\nhe should really go further ind enter\npublic life   the political field.\nIf he' did, then this necessary progress in civilization would go ahead by\nleaps and bounds, whereas it has only\nbeen by the loss of thousands of lives\nthat necessary ittfcdio&l and sunlDry\nlegislation  has come  Into  force.\niMttttswoananaai\nTen Years Ago\nWILL   WEAR  COTTON   HOSE\nDALLAS, Nov. 14.\u2014Flappers of the\nsouth are to \"flap\" in a new garb\nIf suggested remedies for the ailments of King Ojtton are carried\nout. Shining silks and short skirts\nare to be replaced by cotton clothing\nand the dresses are to be longer in\norder to boost the cotton market, a\nnumber of southern girls and women\nhave decreed. Schoolgirls at Ennls,\nTexas, and El Paso have voted to\nwear cotton hosiery to school.\n -+.\t\nBarred From States\nThat Body j\nof Yours\nBy JAMBS  W.   BABTOV,  M.D.     j\n7r^;^:.;i^l:iciiL.a^xr'^.iiidiJ*J.ii:iill*ivimi^aiTi*^\nAil-Around Knowledge Necessary in Medicine\nThe idei behind the practice of medicine Just a few years ago was that It\nWas to have a knowledge of the body In\n(ilekness, bo that sick folks. could bo\nproperly treated.\nIn dally practice the physician\nlearned that there were certain ailments that he wjn una'jle to help, and\nwhen the diagnosis was made, the patient aud physician simply awaited the\nend.\nThis applied to tuberculosis, or con-.\nsumption as tt was called, and hundreds\nof thousands of victims died \u201e yearly\nbecause hope was abandoned.\nSimilarly with heart disease and diabetes. \u25a0\nNow, tuberculosis Is prevented is arrested,' : ml actually cured.\nAlso wllh insulin, the majority of\nthose suffering with diabetes can now\nlive comfortably with the defintte assurance that they can go about their\ndaily duties, and live the ordinary life\nby simply taking their daily dose of\ninsulin.\nIn heart disease, while no cure has\nbeen attained, once the individual is\nmade to realise that his heart Is simply\nmuscle, under nerve control, of course,\nhe can also go about his dally work,\njust ss long as he does not overdo\nthings, mentally or physically.\nAnd so medicine has reached the\npoint now where lt uses all the knowledge of the other se'epces, that Is, electricity chemistry, study of animal organisms, proper drainage for homes.\nheating, ventilation, and so forth, al]\nwith Just the one idea, not that of curing the sick, but of preventing sickness. '\nProfessor Van Hook of Chicago\nstates that the destinies of the nations\n(The Daily Newt, November   15. 1910.)\nA   brief   atatement   wus   given   out\nlast night, from  the  prime minister's\noffice   officially   announcing   the   re\nUrement of Sir 8am Hughes as mln\nlater uf militia.\n*     ___*\nA contract, calling for 1000 feet of\ndiamond drilling in the Comfort\nmine at Ainswoith, has been let by\nA. D. Wheeler, owt\\*er of the property, to a Spokane company.\n*****\nHarold Wells of Phoenix today\nwon the Douglas-to-Phoenlx automobile road race. His time for the 245\nmiles was   7  hours 20   minutes.\nNordic Blood Is\nChanging Ch'leans\nas a Race, Is Said\nSANTIAGO, Chile, Nov. 14. \u2014A\nfurther infusion of Nordic blood Into\nthe Chilean race will be brought\nabout If plans now under consideration by tliu Guman colony here are\ndeveloped.\nImportation of 2000 additional German families to settle In the rich\nagricultural regions of the south of\nChile  hia been suggested.\nThe Chilians already are more or\nless a race apart as German and\nEnglish blood has been mixed, to a\ngreat extent with the Latin during\nmany  years.     It  ls  not   unusual   to\ngin mill were found the other day-\nSam and Sot. made quite a haul* aad\nput the man away\/' At the beginning\nof school: \"The class of 1888, a bonny bunch of kiddles fine\u2014The ritart\nto school, which Is the rule; <you\nought to see their faces shine!\"\nFEMININE   DAIL   MEMBERS\nBERLINTtfov. -.U.-JThe dall'now\nhas only one woman. member, a\nsister of the late General Michael\nCollins. At the next election H has\nbeen declde*d to try \u2022 ahd - lrffcreue\nthe representation of women, t'and a\nnotable new candidate will -be Mrs.\nNoel Guinness, a member of - the\nfamily of which the Earl of iveagh\nIs the head. Bhe has; had mufch i\u00ab:\nperience In the fork of local bodi\u00ab\nand will stand, as an Independent\ncandidate interested In social reforms.\n SB \u2022    \"-\n\"Prince\"\/of the team of fout white\nhorses which used to draw- King\nGeorge's coach on state \"occasions,\nhas given up the favors of the ^royalty and gone on the road as a.circus\nperformer.\ntoday\natyoiirGrocers\nNABOB\nT E\nriresk\nfiugram\nDirect\\from the plantations of India and\nCeylon to British\nColumbia, comes the\nfinest of all teas-\"\nNabob. Your grocer\nreceives fresh supplies every few-days.\ni\nTwenty Years Ago\n-^\nI\n(The Dully Kows,    November 15.1906.)\nBorn ut Wan eta   to   Mr,  and  Mrs.\nA.   G.  Lung,   u   sou.\n'.    .    .\nWilliam Impcy and Mis*- Ma.ln'Uhl\nKowuleivsky werd married yesterday at the home of the biidt'a i,ar-\nenta by ]U*v. II. .*S. Powell,\n.a a\nThe Nelson Iron Works has\nshipped lo the Dominion Copper\ncompany at Greenwood the first copper breast-jacket made ln British\nColumbia. Tho intricate casting\nweighs   \u00a350   pound.\".\nTALKING  TIRES   WOMEN   LEES\nBRUSSELS, Nov. 14.\u2014Talking\nfatigues women less than it does\nmen, a Flemish scientist saya In a\ndry objective way. without enterl\u00bbg\nJnto tho controversy as to whether\nthe female i\u00ab more talkative than the\nmale.\nThe acientlst explains his statement by two facts: First, that the\ngreater the length of the vocal\nchorda, the more energy Is required\n\u2014duce a Bound; second, that\nSa of women art short-\not  man.\nGerman Is Father\nol Eighty-four\nChildren All Alive\nBERLIN, Nov. 14.\u2014The story of\na. man who twice married, at 76 la\nthe father of S7 children, 84 of whom\nare living, is reported by a Viennu\nmedical  association  Journal.\nBernard Schelnberg, living near\nths German border, had 69 children\nby his firsv wife who died ut the uge\nof 66, the Journal Bays. Not one\nwas a single birth. There were\nfour quadruplets, seven triplets and\n16 twins. Sixty-seven of the children are living, but he admits having lost count ot the grandchildren.\nScheinberg's second marrlage*.at the\nage of. 57 waa blessed with 18 children, including two sets of triplets.\nHis second  wife  is still  living.\n \u2014 -r^ ts\\ \\   *~\u2014* ' '--\u2014\"\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nMaterial   john burns & son\nBuilding\nMME. ALEXANDRA  KOLLANTAY\nSoviet Russia's only woman diplomat, has been forbidden by the United States to enter that country while\n\u2022n route to Mexico, where she has\nbeen appointed Soviet ambassador.\nWashing Machines\nThere are a great many kinds of Washing Machines on the\nmarket, but when you examine a nd test out the different ones you\nwill  be convicted  that  the\nEasy\nhas  an   ndvunlafje  over  them  all, and the price no higher than the\ninferior machines.\nPERFECT  RUNNING PERFECT  WASHING\nPERFECT SATISFACTION\nLat   Us  Demonstrate Oh; to You\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nBUAUB       ft*\nNELSON\nPHONE    21\nB.   C.\nYour Girls Deserve\nGood Candy\n<T'VE taught my girls to make good candy at\nX home. What fun they have with friends\nwhen candy-making night comei 'round !\nCarnation Milk takes all worry and uncertainty away from candy-making. One reason\nwhy our candy's always good. Good, too,\nbecause Carnation adds that rare -creamy\nsmoothness and truly delicious flavor.\"\nCarnation is just pure, fresh milk, evaporated\nto double richness, kept safe by sterilization.\nDiluted, it takes the place of ordinary milk.\nAs it comes from the can, it takes the place of\ncream. Order from your grocer several cans\nor a case of 48 cans.\nCREAM TAFFY.\u2014Two cupi sugar, 1 cup Carna-\ntion Milk, 1 tsp. vanilla, >. cop corn syrup (light),\n%. cup water. 1 tbsp. butter.  Put sugar, corn lyrup\nand water into a sauce pan, stirring until sugar is\ndissolved.   Cook until 248\u00b0F. is reached.    Then\nadd the Carnation  Milk and butter and cook\nslowly, stirring constantly until 258\" F. is reached.\nRemove from fire and pour on a greased platter.\nWhen cool enough to handle, pour vanilla in\ncenter of mass.   Pull up the corners, lift from\nthe platter, and pull until light in color and\nporous.   This yields 1 1\/5 pounds.\nSend for a free copy of Mary Blake's Cook Book.\nAddress   Carnation   Milk   Products   Company,\nLimited,   1S4  Abbott,   Strest,   Vancouver, B. C.\n_______________\n_______________\n -\nTHE NELSON BMLY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, N0VBJWEE 16, rMfr\nWinter\nFootwear\nDon't delay buying your\nwinter footwear.\nWe have Rubbers to fit\nevery type of shoe, from\nthe smallest to the biggest.\nThe Famous Zipper\nOvershoe for Men and\nWomeri.\nR. Andrew \u00a3 fa.\nLeaders in Footfashion-\nI\nIN\nEast  Kootenay  Discoverer\nSt. Eugene Mine Gets\nOutstanding Honor\nof\nGRANITE SHAFT IN\nMISSION  CEMETERY\n\"Brighter\" burials have been determined upon bjr the Brltl\u00bbh Under\ntaker's Woodwork association. New\ncasket deslmi-'ire tor * beautiful and\ngraceful wdBmaifshlp.\nCatholic Priests Take Part in\nCeremony; Old-Timers\n^Attend\nCRANBROOK B.C., Nov. 14. \u2014 An\ninteresting ceremony occurred Sunday\nafternoon when a monument waa unveiled at the grave of Plelle Cronin,\nfamiliarly known in this vicinity as\n\"Indian Pete,\" to perpetuate the memory of the Kootenay Indian the original discoverer of the St. Eugene mine\nat \u25a0 Moyie. The ceremony wae at the\ncemetery at St. Eugene mission. Indian Pete, who died on May 17, was\nburied.\nThe monument .consists of a granite\nheadstone about five feet high, on the\nface of which there is an Inscription.\n\"To the memory of Plelle Cronin, Kootenay Indian discoverer of the St. Eugene mine Moyie, June 30th, 1R93, who\ndied May'17th, 1826. aged 80 years.\"\nGreen decorations were placed each\nside of the stone. There were between\n200 and 300 people present, many from\nCranbrook and Kimberley. from Wasa\nFort Steele and elsewhere. .\nFather Lepln. mission priest, \\\nescorted from the mission church where\na service had been held to the graveyard, by a procession of Indians   who\nFor busij people\nBOVRIL\nand Biscuits mil\nmake an excellent\nstandbij until ijou have\ntime for a real meal\nformed around the grave. It wae thip\nchurch which is an unusually attractive edifice, which was erected largely\nwith the proceeds of the money which\nthe deceased Kootenay Indian received\nfor the discovery. The service opened\nwith the singing of \"Nearer My Ood To\nTbee\" by the Indians, following which\nFather Ehmann of Cranbrook gave an\nInteresting address. He spoke of the\ngradual discovery of the resources of\nthe district, and recalled that the discovery of the St. TEugene mine had\nmeant a great deal ln the development\nof the East Kootenay. Plelle had expressed a desire to Father Coccnla.\nthen laboring at the mission, to s<\u00ab a\nchurch erected for the Indians and\nwas urged by tbe priest to search out\nsome of the wealth of tbe district In\norder to make this possible. Some time\nlater he went to Father Coecoia with a\nspeelmen of rich ore, who. while not\nknowing a great deal about mining, was\nsagacious enough to follow lt up and In\nthe company with the Indian and James\nCronin. who later became actively identified with the famous mine, they went\nto look over tbe rich find and the\nclaims were staked on which in a few\nyears a rich mine was to spring up on\nthe shores of Moyte lake.\nFnUm* Iluasnii Speaks\nFather Ehmann rtr-w fon>\u00ab vnlunble\nlessons from the life of the Indian,\nwho seemed to have been brought from\nobscurity to thus have his name preserved. He also lauded the Consolidated Mining ft Smelting company tW\nwhom the memorial has been erected,\nfor thus perpetuating the humble Indian's part in bringing the big mine Into\nexistence.\nFather Ehmann also read messages\nfrom Hon. R. R. Bruce, great chief of\nthe Indians and Hon Dr. King, and also Dr. Oreen. who 'had left for the\ncoast.\nFather Lepln carried out the dedication of the stone reciting the prayers\nand sprinkling it with holy water. Following this Chief Adrian delivered an\nexhortation ln the Kootenay dialect, ln\nwhich he drew attention to the exploit\nof his fell oW- tribes man and also mentioned what the erection of the church\nhad meant. '\nIndian Gives Talk\nHe seemed to npeak quite eloquently, and It was an impressive sight, even\nto the whites only one or two of whom\ncould follow the native sneaker at all,\nan Indian pong and the Lord's Prayer\nclosed the proceedings.\nSeveral' representatives of the company- were present among the spectn-\ntors, to whom Indian Pete was very\nwell-known. He had been for many\nyears a pensioner of the company, and\nfor two or three years had been given\nan honored place In the parade at Klm-\nberley on Dominion day.\nAlthough It is many years since the\nRt. Eugene was actively worked It gave\nup hundreds of thousands of dollars In\ndividends to early owners, beside giving employment to many men. Ultimately the lead seemed to have been\nlost ,and Its rediscovery is something\nthat mining men still strongly believe\nis a probability sooner or later. In the\nmeantime the old mine had come Into\nprominence once more from the fact\nthat the Consolidated company has\nspent upwards of $500,000 in a concentrating pl.in't to treat the discarded\nore on the dumps from which the earlier\nregimes could take no profitable values,\nand are now making further heavy expenditures for a coarse crushing plant\nthere. The town of Moyie Is being rejuvenated.\nBadminton Rackets\nSlazenger's Rackets\u2014Models X.L, Buckley,\nCheltenham\nJefferies' Racket    Model Ace\nWATERPROOF  RACKET  COVERS\nRACKET PRESSES\nHIPPERS01N HARDWARE CO.\nLook for the Rod Hardware Store\nPHONE 497 BOX  414\nGreet Your Friends\nat Christmas\nWith a\nPERSONAL\nCHRISTMAS CARD\nBeautiful cards, printed with your own name and\naddress, (rom $1.50 a dozen.\nTHE DAMNEWS JOB DEPT.\nPhone 144 (Two Lines)\n*\nPRINTING-RULING\u2014BOOKBINDING\nSchool Children Have Banquet;\nConcert and Dance\nFollows\nSOUTH SLOCAN Nov. 14. \u2014 Armistice day celebrations were held in the\npublic hall to which all the veterans\nand repidents of the district jrert? invited. The women's Institute was the\nsponsor ot-the gathering, with Mrs. O.\nW. Humphry as convener of arrangements.\nThe hall was attractlvelv decorated\nwith black and red festoons with the\nflags or the allies in panels and surmounted with poppies and leaves on a\ndisk of black. The platform was very\nstriking With quantities of popples\naround the base, and vases of popples\non the platform. The supper tables\nwere Invitingly arranged with chrysanthemums and popple favors, The school\nchildren representing Bonnington.\nSouth Slocan. Crescent Valley and\nShoreacres, arrived at 5 o'clock and\nsat down to a daintily served repast.\nMrs. J. Norrles and Mrs W. T. Jones\npoured tea. assisted In serving by Mrs.\nR. O. Long Mrs. W. C. Motley and Mrs.\nF. Ellison. Afterward the children\nwere entertained with games until their\nparentH arrived for the entertainment\nat half-past 7. A splendid and varied\nprogram was given, the school teachers, A. B. Boyer of Bonnington and J.\nStreet of South Slocan, having trailed\nthe children In singing patriotic songs.\nThe program arranged by Mrs. Q. K.\nAshby, who also played their accom-\npunlmentB, was opened hy the singing\nof the Maple Leaf. W. J. Oliver a\nveteran of the great war made a Tery\nable chairman. Homer Defieux recited\n\"In Flanders Fields,\" and Robert Bell\ngave \"The Answer,\" both giving fine\nrenderings. Mrs W. C. Motley's song.\n\"The Sunshine of Your Smile,\" was\nvery pleasing, followed by a recitation\nby Ethel McLeod \"The British Flag.\"\nR. G. Long's songs. \"Anchored\" and\n\"Mother Machree,\" were heartily applauded. Mrs. F. H Russel rendered\n\"Land of Hope and Glory,\" the school\nchildren Joining in the chorus. Kipling's \"Recessional,\" recited by Haroft\nRhodes in fine style. Other recitations\nvery well rendered were \"What a Wise\nChild Should Do\" by Ruth Wilier;\n\"Here's to the Land,\" by Will Mclntyre,\nand Juniors Norman and Stewart McLeod \"The First Pair of Breeches.\"\nMiss Edith Hull of Nelson sang \"An\nOld-Fashioned Town\" and \"In the\nDusk\" very charmingly. Mrs. P. H.\nRussel rendered \"My Dear Land\" in\nsplendid style. Alex. McDonald touched\na warm chord with his song \"Irish\nLullaby.\" Erik Th. Fiehn the noted\npianist and composer attended and delighted the audience with his wonderful\nrendering of Stravinsky's \"Allegro In\nE Flat\" and \"Concert Francaiee.\" The\nprogram concluded with the singing of\n\"O Canada\" and the national anthem.\nThi? was followed by a dance, the lecal\nJazsateer orchestra kindly giving their\nservices) Supper was served under the\nchage of Mrs J. Murray Mrs. Turner\nLee, Mrs. E. Anderson Mrs. R. J. Cunningham and Mrs. T. A. Wheildon. The\ndecorations were arranged by Mrs. J.\nD Yeatman Mrs. J. Murray and Mrs.\nM. Downie. C. Fisher was master of\nceremonies.\nSOUTH SLOCAN, Nov. 14.\u2014Misses\nEdith and Hairel Hull of Nelson were\nthe guests of Mra. M. Downie over\nThanksgiving day.\nMiss Julia Potosky Ig spending the\nweek-end at Castlegar, the guest of\nMiss Lily Eremlnko\nOpen-Ait Memorial\nParade Held by\nCoast Militi\nVANCOUVER,  Nov. 14.\u2014:\n2000 militia men, ex-service\nlors   and   members   of   auxlj\nganisa'tlons formally particl]\ngarrison   armistice   mehiorial\nheld In the open here this afternoon,\n-and 10,000 persons attended.\nlMaJ. the Rev. C. C. Owen and Capt.\nthe Rev. M. H. Jackson conducted the\nservice, following which a military\nparade, headed by Col. H. 8. Tobin,\nbrigade commander, marched past the\ncenotaph in Victory square.\nThoroughbred Airedale saved maijy\nother dog! when fire broke out ln the\n* Thla column is being conducted\nby Mrs. M. J. Vigneux. All news\nof a social nature, including receptions, private entertainments,\npersonal Items, marriages, etc.. will\nappear in thla column. Telephone\nMrs. Vigneux at her home.\nYesterday afternoon Mlaa Ann McArthur matron of Kootenay Lake General hospital, and the head nurse. *JM\nM Connolly who leaves that Institution tomorrow were tea hostesses when\nthey were assisted by Mrs. Gilbert Hartln who poured, and Mies Parkinson.\nR.N. who served. The guests were\nMrs' Joseph Sturgeon, Mrs. William\nWaldle Mrs. J. B. Gray. Mrs. W. F.\nVellacott Mrs. Arthur Lakes Mrs. C\nV Gagnon. Miss Sutherland, Mr*. Gilbert Hartin, Mrs Robert Thompson,\nMrs. Heath Mrs. Fltxpatrlck. Mrs. W.\nJ Meagher Mrs. George Motion. Mrs.\nIan CaihpbeU of Willow Point MJss\nParkinson Mrs. Thomas OlbSon, Mra\nW. O. Rose and Miss Agnes Cant\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. E. S. H, McLean of Nakusp. who\nwith Mrs. Foster of Vancouver has been\ntn Nelson and district in connection with\nEastern Star affairs returned to Nelson Saturday morning from Trail. Mrs.\nFoster left Saturday night for the coast\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022      rt\/'\nSaturday. Dr.  and Mrs.  S. O. Smyth\nentertained at dinner when covers were\nlaid for 10, who Included Mr and Mrs.\nJames O'Shea, Mr. and Mrs. John Cartmel, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. McLeod and\nMr. and Mrs. J. G. Bunyan.\ness\nMrs. J. Campbell of Taghum spent\nSaturday shopping ln town.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\n-j. McDonald of Sandon was a visitor\nto Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. W D. Ridge of Bonnington spent\nSaturday In the city.\ns   %   s\nR.   G,   Holmes   of  Vancouver was *\nNelson visitor over the week-end.\n.    *    .\nA. G. R Strickland of Balfour left\nyesterday morning for Montreal to sail\non the Montcalm for England.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nGerald Rees lpft Saturday night for\nPenticton.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. E. Eraslie of Trail spent Saturday ln Nelson on business.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. E. Creed Johnston of Bonnington was a city shopper Saturday.\n\u2022 a    *\nThe home of Mr. and Mrs. C. I. Archibald was the scene of a gay gathering\nFriday evening when the high school\ngirls' basketball team entertained the\nTrail high school girls' team at an Impromptu dance and social evening, after\nwhich the party returned by motor to\ntheir homes In Trait Present were\nMisses Betty Bruce-Warden Jlna Van-\nnucchl Margaret Blaylock, Agnes Ross-\nman Maranda Laurlente. Marie Matt-\nnews Jean Butorac. Betty Kerr, Dorothy Hall, Alma Smillle, Merle Archi\nbald, Juliana Melneczuk, Queenle Ger-\nmalne Mildred Martin Mollle Forln.\nMarv ' Phillips Gertrude Milne and\nPhyllis Archibald.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. W R. McDonald of Bonnington\nwas a city visitor Saturday.\n. \u2022   \u2022    \u2022\nRoy W. Hunter, who wsb called to\nVancouver last week by the seriouB illness of his mother has returned to\nNelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMajor and Mrs. F. E. Glossop of Kettle Valley left yesterday for Montreal,\nwhence they will sail on November 19\non the Montcalm for England.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nClRrence Goepel. formerly a resident\nof Nelson and now of Vancouver Is a\nvisitor here.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. F. H HIU of Kelowna\nhave taken a suite lh the Kerr apartments.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nW. J. Farmer of Castlegar was a visitor in town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. W. O. Rose was a bridge hostess Saturday evening at Tier home when\nshe entertained the members of the\nPythian Sisters' Past Chief club honoring Miss Edith Ross a bride-elect of\nnext month. The honors for high score\nin bridge were won by Mra. T. A. Traves\nand the consolation by Mrs. David\nLaughton. The guest of the afternoon\nwas presented with a souvenir from\nthose present, who Included Mrs David\nLaughton, Mrs. E. H. S. McLean'of Nakusp, Mrs. David Wade, Mrs. William\nLacey, Mrs. A. A. Johnson Mrs J. R.\nRelsterer, Mrs. T. A. Traves,' Miss\nOrace Laughton, Mrs. Frank Goucher,\nMiss Frances Rowe. Miss Winnifred\nLogan, Miss M. Johnson MrB G. E.\nKeatley. Mtss M. Mlchelso'n Mrs. Hugh\nRobs. Mrs. Robert Andrew. Mrs. G. B.\nMatthew and Mrs Robert Thompson.\nThe hoBtess was assisted at the tea\nhour by Mrs. David Laughton, Miss\nMadeline Johnson. Miss Frances Rowe\n;md Miss Winnifred Logan.\n\u2022 \u2014*    \u2022\nA. Willey of Bonnington  spent' Saturday m town.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Truswell Vernon street has\nreturned from a week's visit in Nakusp.\n\u2022 *    *\nMiss Rosie Severn of Procter spent\nSaturday in the city.\n\u2022 %     9\nMr. and Mrs A. B. Fleener of Kaelo\nwere Nelson -shoppers Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nL. Y. Burnle of Medicine Hat an old-\ntimer of Trail, Rossland and trie Boundary district  spent Saturday In\/town.\nA. Defieux of Bonnington was a city\nvisitor Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss   Creina   Horstead    leaves   this\nmorning for Spokane to visit friends.\nSaturday evening Mrs. M. J. Vigneux\nentertained a number of the younger set\nat bridge at her home on Silica street,\nwhen those holding high and second\nhigh scores were Miss Marlon Blackwood. Miss Joan Hamilton Dr. D. W.\nMcKay and A. Hutchison. The players\nwere Miss Phyllis Church Miss Mhora\nMcDonald Miss Aloise Wragge Miss\nLillian Hunter. Mlsa Jean Hunter, Miss\nHelen Oigot, Miss Kilts' Johnstone, Miss\nAlia Johnstone. Mlso Margaret Arthur,\nMiss Violet Hamilton Miss Joan Hamilton Miss Creina Horstead Miss Nancy Gracey, Miss Gwen Scott-Lauder,\nMiss Mary Madden Miss Aileen Mansfield. S. Smith, A. Hutchison Dr. D. W\nMcKay, A. B. Gllker, Evans Wasson,\nCharles Hamilton, Dr. Qussln Mr. Frederickson. Major Cecil Coates Philip\nTrail Capt. Percy Coates ana W. J.\nSturgeon.\n\u2022 .\u2022 , \u2022\nOn Friday evening Mr.  and Mrs. P\nG. Morey entertained at three tables of\nbridge when the players were Mr. and\nMrs. W. J. E Biker Mr. and Mrs -G N\nDouglas, Mr. and Mrs. B. T O'Grady,\nMr. and Mra D. O. Thoftias, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. M. Walker, Mr. and Mrs. E C.\nWragge and Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Garland.\nMrs. S. S. Fowler of Riondel who has\nbeen visiting in the city for the past\nfortnight, has returned td her home.\nBONNINGTON NOTES\nBONNINGTON KAI4.S Nov. 14.\u2014Th\u00bb\nBonnington social clui \u25a0had their tint\n\u00abvenlng'\u00ab \u00abnt\u00abrtsinm.ftt fbr the winter\nseason on Wednesday when progressive\ncourt, whist was plated. The ladles'\ntlrtt prise was won by Mra. E. c. John-\n\"\u00bboh, and the men's by O F. Chapman.\nConsolation awards went to Mrs. Beaver and Arthur Lambert Dainty refreshments were served at the tables\nafter the games. Mrs A. R. Defieux\nand Mrs. W. O. Elsdon were the host-\n~~ for the evening.\n\", Chapman motored to Trail to\nthe Armistice day banquet.\n, _y Graham and W. Rodgers, wlio\nleft here for Vancouver a year ago on\nthe completion of No. 1 hydro-electric\npower plant have returned for the construction work of No. 8 plant\nSll Baker Stre*.  Phon* SOO\nNovember Coat Sale\nJ*-***\nThese savings come jus^ at the time  you need your Winter -Gout, Mgyfeoae\nwho have waited untrt ndto to purchase their Coat can profit by this Sale. ,;1\ngarment is from our regular stock an d is up to our usual standard of J\nWe have added to this sale many items f rom other departments at worth-,'\nreductions.\nCOATS FOR THE LARGER WOMEN\nAt $10.00 to $15.00 Leu\nA splendid assortment of larger women's Coats. Perfectly tailored of all-wool Velour, Duvetine or Needle-Point. They come\nin Brown, Navy, Cracklehead, Bokhara, Castor and Green. All\nare richly fur trimmed and are lined and interlined throughout.\nSizes 38 to 44. SALE PRICE, $27.00, --\u00bb3i.o\u00a9 TO S60.00\nEACH.\nWOMEN'S SILK HOSE\nAt $1.29 the Par\nA wonderful Hose value, and one that we will not repeat.\nThere are Penman's and Holeproof makes in the lot, and they\ncome in a big range of colors and in all sizes. SALE PRICE,\nf 1.29 THE PAIR.\nWOMEN'S FLANNELETTE GOWNS\nAt $1.25 Each\nMade  slip-on style,  of good  quality White  Flannelette,\ntrimmed and full sizes.   SPECIAL, -S1.25 EACH.\nNicely\n54-INCH DRESS FLANNEL\nOn Sale at $1.59 the Yard\nImported Flannel. Made of pure wool yarns in all the wanted\ncolors.   Full 54 inches wide.   SALE PRICE, -f 1.59 THE YARD.\nWOMEN'S AND MISSES' DRESSES\nAt $19.95 Each\nDresses for Women and Miases, in a range of smart styles. Made\nof Satin, Georgette and Flat Crepe. All wanted colors in the lot,\nincluding Black. Sizes 15, 16, 17 to 40. SALE PRICE, $19.95\nEACH.\n_ 1\nPAY DAMAGES\nJoy Ride in Fernie Car; Apprehended, They Get\nin Collision\nFERNIE Nov. 14. \u2014 The Information\ncharging Ed. Shlmmln and Joe Mill-\nburn of Coal Creek on Friday night\nwith the theft of an automobile, the\nproperty of Thomas Furneaux, manager\nof Trltes-Wood oompany branch at the\nname place, while It was parked in\nfront of the Fernie Canadian Legion\nhall when the veterans' banquet was In\nprogress, was withdrawn by Chief Anderson on application to th\u00ab police\nmagistrate. Following discovery of the\nloss of the car, it was reported to the\npolice, and later Constable E. Davles of\nthe provincial staff here who had been\ndetailed to patrol eastward from the\ncity, found the car at Hosroer with the\ntwo'accused in charge of it- They were\nordered to drive to Fernie, the constable following In his car.\nAt a turn on the outskirts of this city\nthey met ln head-on collision a car\ndriven by one Alex. Caldwell. Arising\nout of this Incident the provincial authorities laid another charge against\nShimmin and Mlllbum for reckless\ndriving. On this charge following withdrawal of the more serious offence,\nthey appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate E. T. Cope and ware, fined. The\ntwo young men have also undertaken\nto pay all expenses necessitated in putting both cars in good state of repair.\nFORMER FERNIE MAN\nDIES AT NANAIM0\nFERNIE. Nov. 4. \u2014 Telegraphic word\nwas received from Nanalmo Friday of\nthe death of George Edgar, who lived\nin Fernie some 20 years ago. Death\nwaa In a raining accident. He waa\nabout 40 years of age. and unmarried.\nHt leaves a mother In England. Mr.\nAnd Mrs. C. Edgar and Mr. and Mra. J.\nEdgar left for Nanalmo and will arrange for th* burial of their nephew\nthere.\n&OKOMACX VOTM\nLONGfiEACH. Nov. 14.\u2014On Armistice day the first meeting this winter\nOf the Longbeach Women's guild was\nheld at tbe home of Mrs. Robert HIU.\nAH ths members, with one exception,\nwere present The president, MrB. Leg-\ngatt, brought forward the subject of\ntin health nurse, and It was agreed to\naccord her all the cooperation possible\nlh her useful work In tne district. Mrs.\nSmith was voted for delegate at the\nforthcoming meeting to he held at Procter on this subject. Mrs. Smith, as\noon\\ener in this district, read several\npapers she had received setting forth\nthe work of a health nurse.\nChatrlk Kenntls at Winnipeg.\nWhile complaints are general of\nbusiness depression In Japan, the\ntheaters apparently are prosperous.\nMore than 400,000 persons attended\ntheatrical performances In Tflg-w _Qsh]__.  jjffl\/]gt.   \"How to  Kj+'P WeU,\" t\nrng September, ~or KtWUt 'M*W \u00ab*>t sfcHfr,\"tt *J)ftfaft\nof the population.\nFASCISTS BREAK OUT\nPARIS, NOv. 14.\u2014Revolver shots\nwere exchanged tonight between Royalists and French Fascists at the\noffice of the Royalist newspaper,\nL'Action Francalse. A band of Fascists had gone to this place demanding to be received toy the editor so\nthat they might obtain retraction of\nan article published by the paper.\nWeek's Rainfall Is\nNearly Half-Inch;\nto Clear Today\nExactly equal amounts or fain\u2014\n.14-lnch\u2014fell ln Nelson Saturday and\nyesterday, making the total precipitation since last Tuesday, when the wet\nspell began, .45-Inch, or nearly half\nan Inch.\nSaturday's minimum and maximum\ntemperatures were, respectively, 37\nand 44. Yesterday's minimum was 38\nand maximum was 44.\nThe barometer was rising last night,\nwith   clearing\ntoday.\nweather   forecast   fo#\nJoseph Kaln, deranged from hftt\nwife's death, killed his two small\nchildren and committed suicide.\nBrig.-General Nelles narrowly escaped death when hla gar w\u00abs struck,\nby an electric train near at. Kit to.\nSURPRISING VALUE\nin   * \u2022 Beautifully * Mounted\nDiamond Ring\n950.00\n' It's  a   Special!\nA. T. N0X0N\nYour Jeweler\nHELPING   THB   SICK   AND   AGED\nTHROUGH   THB   WINTER\nNothing helps the Aged and ailing\nthrough the Winter like proper foods.\nThe properly fed cannot well be sick.\nFifteen years ago Dr. Robert G.\nJackson was a sick, old man, although\nonly 5J. Today at 67 he ls a marvel\nof youthful vigor, preparing for years\nof accomplishment and never sick;\nnot even ft cold since 1012. The\ncause lg natural foods\u2014living largely\nupon nuts, frttts, vegetables, Roman\nMeal, milk.\nThe chief cause of sickness Is acid\naccumulation in the blood through\nExcess acid\" foods. Dr, Jackson's\nfloods, mentioned above, prevent acid\nAccumulation.\nDr. Jackson Is dietetic adltor,\n\"Archives of . Therapeutics,\" New\nYork, a physicians' journal, advisor\nto \"Defensive-Diet League,\" a !phy-\njjloians'    association.     Send-   for   hla\nAvenue.  Toronto 9. Ont'\nhr everything in the\nJamilijlkshuse LUX\nCILKS, cottons, woollens or\n^ mixtures\u2014all deserving of\nLux laundering.\nLux is so thorough and so safe to use,\n. and things laundered in Lux last so much\nlonger, that Lux for the whole family\nwash is teal economy.\nBe sure you get the genuine Lux.\nonly in packages\u2014never in bulk.\nSold\nisvm mothus imnrsD, toi onto\nuna\nmm\n rPsge Six\nTTB_ NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 15, 1926\nKEY, MITE CUP.\nM KOOTENAY\nMIS SKIP ORE\n\t\nAnother New Trail Shipper Ia\nthe Prosperity Property oi Stewart\nt'.*flro new Efeuat* ICbotenay ore shlp-\n\u2022^ are on tha current  shipping list\n*JiCT**-all smelter. The Key mine, Toby\narapk, shipped 10 tons of lead ore.\natYNs< property has been opened by\n.WfcAaAMor Drayton, the New York\nnoafftaltst,   who   is also  hydraullcklng\ntor cold ln another part ot the Winder-\n\u25a0Mare.    A. Lake Windermere property,\ntbe White  Cat,  shipped  35   tona ot\n\u2022Je^d ore,\n,., A-third new snipper was the Proa-\n**beray of Stewart, the fourth Portland\n'Oliial mine to ship to Trail.\n' fliceipts for the first week of No-\n*-*Y*T\u00abiber were:\nCopper\u2014Allenby   Copper   company,\n-Allenby,  7M.\n'.'\u2014SjeeaM\u2014Bell, Beaverdell, 44; Beaver,\n.a\u00bbf\u00bb\u00bb*verdell,   15;   Molly   Hughes,   New\nPe\u00abv.r,   41;   Prosperity,   Stewart,   31;\nKey,  Toby  creek,  JO;   Sally.  Beaver-\n4et|.  M:   White  Cat,   Lake   Wlnder-\n^Ulfling ore\u2014Cork-Province. Zwicky,\nWr Duthie, Smlthers, 68; Enterprise,\nEnterprise, 134; Homestake, Louis\nmill. 115: Lucky Jim, Zlncton, 11<;\nMetallic, Sllverton, 47; Paradise, Lake\n'Windermere. 28; Silver Cup, New\nHweKon. it; Van Rol. Sllverton. 52\nWhitewater, Retallack, 244; Wonder\nJM,. Sandon,   59.\n\" Dry fire\u2014 Last Chance, Republic,\nMi <3ul,lp. Republic, 28?; Yankee\ni_,  Ymir,   in.\nconcentrates\u2014Metals Recovery\n[lack,   17.\nHtceipu, tor the year to date are:\nConsoiidsted\n.porapjmy  minis    349,774\nNolwn-Arrow   Lakes\n[JUIOS, Creston  (lead)   \t\n'Bluebird. Deer Park (milling) .\nBrserald.   Salmo   (lsad)     .\n(Emerald, Salmo (tine)  \t\n.Goodenough, Ymir (dry)  \t\n'   \"lenough,   Ymir   (lead)    ...\nenough, Ymlr  (milling)   ..\nIta, Taghum (copper)  ....\n* Gibson, Klttos  (lead)   ..\n.  Adon.  Revelstoke  (lead)   ..\nflCuklpIelt,  Cambourne\n!j  (milling)   \t\ni#il*\u00bb\u00bbr Hill, Crawford Bay\nj,  (toad)    \t\n\u25a0 fcllw Reef, Nelson (milling)  ..\n[Queen, Salmo  (lead)    _.\n{IQusen  Victoria, Beasley,\n(oopper)\nCENTERS IN MURDER TRIAL\nCable Ships Make\nRecord Time on the\nPacific Cable Work\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14.\u2014Traveling\nan average distance of 200 miles\neach day for 17 $aya, the Pacific\ncable board ocean i cable laying\nsteamer Domlnla, which left Barn-\nfield, Vancouver island, on October\n28, arrived this morning at Fanning\nisland ln mid Faclftc, relaying station for the board's cables linking\nCanada and the antipodes.\nWhile the Domlnia was laying a\nduplicate cable between Bamfleld\nand Fanning Island, a distance of\n3448 miles, a second steamer, the\nFaraday, was linking up a second\ncable between Fanning Island and\nFIJI. With the Joining of the two\nthe duplicate service between th*\ndominions will be Inaugurated as .the\nSydney-Auckland-Fiji links of the\nsecond cable are already In use.\nThe four-year-old Hall-Mills crime Is now before the courts. At the left, Mrs. Frances Hall Is shown as she\narrived, at the Somervllle, N. J., courthouse, to answer a charge of murdering her husband, Rev. Edward Wheeler\nHall, and Mrs. Eleanor Mills, four years ago. At the upper right Is Charlotte Mills, daughter of the murdered\nwoman, who ls writing a series of newspaper articles on  the case.   In the circle below Is her father, James Mills.\nBoundary  Mercantile   A   Equipment\ncompany,      Greenwood      (copper\ncleanup)      16\nBounty,   Beaverdell   (lead)    ... 6\nBrooklyn,   Greenwood    (copper) tl\nCrescent, Greenwood  (lead)   ... 14\nElkhorn, Greenwood (lead)  .... 12\nEureka,  Nicola   (lead)   ........ 1\nGold Pick, Greenwood  (lead)   . 3\nImperial, Rock  Creek\n(milling)  187\nJ. S. Logle, West Summer-\nland    (lead)      1\nMerritt,  Coyle   (copper)     41\nOkanagan  Mining Co.,\nBeaverdell    (lead)    _ ,. 80\nOliver,  Oliver   (dry)     88\nPenticton  Mining  Co.,\nPenticton   (lead)     6\nProvidence,  Greenwood  (dry)   . 33\nPlanet, Nicola  (dry)  84\nRenfrew,  Penticton   (lead)   .... 28\nRevenge, Beaverdell (lead) .... 14\nSally,    Beaverdell '(lead)     .... 824\nThelma,   Merritt    (lead)      1\nWellington,   Beaverdell\n(lead)     146\nYankee Girl, Grand Forks\n(dry)      m 11\nSlocan -Ainsworth-Lardeau\nAlamo, Alamo (lead)\n>*\u00bbkee Girl, Tmlr (lead)        \u00ab4  Alpha,   Sllverton   (lead)\ntJMtake* Girl.  Ymlr  (milling)   ..       117   R,a',k   Pnlt    h\u00ab\"^\"    \"\n(tfasikee Olrl, Ymlr  (dry)     18,744\nRowland\nVelvet,   Rossland, (copper)    ...      164\n'   Boundary,   OkaAgan,   8imilkame\u00abn\n'.All*nby Copper Co.. Allenby\n;t   popper)       29,788\nJVws   Co.,   Rock   Creek\n'J (milling)      -\nver,   Beaverdell   (lead)\nfell,  Beaverdell  (lead)   \t\n^ouijdary Mercantile & Equip-\nl|  mfcnt Co., Greenwood (dry)\ny\nlit\nI Coughed So Hard\nCnM Not Sleep\n; \u00a5\u00ab. Daniel Dlekej*, Lya, Out,'\nerriU\u00bb:\u2014\"Latt January I had a ttrfl\n\u2022mi* told aad coughed so hard II\ncould not sleep nights. I tried every]\nthtaf, including doctor's medicine,'\nbut nothing gave me relief until I tried!\nwit recommended to ms.bj rt\nI will nsTer be without if ln thai\njhsuss again.\"\nTon don't eip-sriment wh\u00abn you buyi\n\"Dr. Wood's\" as it has been a house-!\n' 1 remedy for the past 38 years.    \u25a0 '\nPries 86c. a battle; large family rriie\n0*.; put up only by Tha T, MUburnj\nCo., Limited, Toronto, Ont I\nDuthie,   Smlthers   (dry)     M\nDunwell, Stewart  (milling)   .... 10\nEsperanza, Alice Arm (lead) .. I\nHomestake,   Louis   Creek\n(milling)  1.S61\nProsperity,  Stewart (lead)   .... II\nPorter Idaho, Stewart  (lead)   . 89\nStiver Cup, New Hazelton\n(milling)       \u00ab0\nStewart, Stewart   (lead)     46\nSilver Star. Chopaka  (lead)   .. 1\nRhode   Island,   Kamloops\n(milling)     II\nTredway, Doreen (dry)    63\nW. L. Bell, Louis Creek  (milling      120\nWashington\nKnob HIU, Republic (dry)     IK\nLast Chance,   Republic   (dry)   . 3,318\nLone   Pine,  Republic   (dry).... 180\nOld Hickory, Republic (dry)  .. II\nSubmarine,  Oroville  (dry)   .... 4\nTrevltt,  Republic   (dry)     1,8*23\nQullp,  Republic   (dry)     8,587\nQullp, Republic  (lead)     117\nQueen Marie Cancels\nTour in South; K'mg\nAsks Her Return Home\nCHICAGO. Nov. 16. \u2014 King Ferdinand has asked Queen Marie to return\nto Bucharest oy Christmas, and ehe has\ncancelled most of her southern tour ln\norder to sail from New York on December 11 instead of December 24.\nArmed Men Raid\nand Shoot Police\nin Cork Barracks\nCORK, Ireland, Nov. 14.\u2014Sergeant\nFltzslmmons, in charge of the civic\nguards barracks at St, Lukes, a\npopulous residential district of Cork,\nwas shot dead soon after dark tonight by a party of armed men.\nThree other police barracks' in the\ncity were similarly raided arid there\nare rumors that others in 'Cork\ncounty were visited by .raidlrig\nparties and bundles of documents\nrei-noved.\nB. C. APPLES WIN\nIN ONTARIO SHOW\nTORONTO, Nov. 14.\u2014British Columbia's success In the apple tar-rowers section of the roynl winter fair\nproved one of the sensations of the\nday. At 4:30 with judging practically complete the western province\nhad taken first place In every class\nln which it entered.\nProved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for\n^WARNING!\nBeware ol Counterfeit!\nHeadache  Neuralgia\nPain Neuritis\nColds       Lumbago\nToothache Rheumatism\nDOES NOT AFFECT\nTHE HEART\nThere- is only one genuine\n\"ASPIRIN\" *f*ibleL It a tablet is offered u \"ASflRIN\"\nand is not stamped with the\n\"Bayer Cross\"-refuse it with\noontempt-itisnot\"ASPIRIN\"\nall I Don't take chances I\nTt\nAccept only \"Bayer\" package\nwhich contains proven directions.\nHandy \"Bayer\" txa.it of 12 tablets\nAhp bottles of U' and 100\u2014Druggists.\nMU> is the trad, mark (reri.ter\u00ab6 to CsM-la) o\u00bb Bww HanulKtur. el '_<raeMs-\n\u2022etdnlrr ot SiUierlioiWa (Ai^trl SlUicrlle Acid \"A. !._\u25a0_ _}\u00ab. II to we\"*\"\"*\nthai Aroirii, mean. Bwer gnwuf-KtunMe *\u2014.\u00ab lb. miblto stale* iirtUUMMto TMsU\n.1 Brarer Company will be stamped with Iheir reberal trade mark, tha   Barer UroM.\nSELL\nFurniture\nYou Don't\nNeed\nfcy Advertising It in the\nWant Ads\nIMc a word, It consecutive Insertions for the -twice of four\nciuh   accompanies   order.\nBlack   Colt,   Sandon   (lead)    ..\nBlack Colt. Sandon  (milling)   .\nBlue   Bell,   Riondel   (lead   concentrates)      \u00ab9\nBlue Bell,  Riondel,   (lead mtdd\nlings)             62\nBlue Bell, Riondel (milling) .. 13,884\nBlue   Bell,   Riondel   (zinc   concen-    J\ntrates)        1W\nBosun, New Denver (milling) . 179\nBosun, New Denver (zinc) ... 82\nCanadian Group, Sandon (lead) 80\nCharleston,   Retallack   (zinc)    ,        31\nColonial,   Sandon   (lead)    88\nColonial, Sandon (milling) ..,\u00ab-, 70\nCork-Province, Zwicky\n(milling)       2,184\nCork   Province,   Zwicky   (zinc   concentrates)              40,\nCork Province, zwicky (zinc)  .        37\nDaybreak,  Zwicky   (lead)   \t\nDaybreak. Zwicky (milling) .. 62\nDougherty,  Sandon   (l*a,d)   .... 8\nEcho,  Sllverton   (milling)     26\nEnterprise,  Enterprise   (milling)     ,..,....,       614\nGalena   Farm,   Silverton   .\n(milling)     1,199\nHewitt,   Silverton    (milling)    .. 37\nHewitt,  Sllverton   (lead)     86\nLucky Jim, Zincton (milling) 16,276\nMcAllister,   Three   Forks\n(dry).        6.014\nMetallic,   Sllverton   (lead)    .... 24\nMetallic, Silverton (milling) \u2022 47\nMetals Recovery, Retallack\n(zinc) ;       464\n\u25a0Metals    Recovery,    Retallack    (lead\nConcentrates)    \u201e       26\nMetals Recovery, Retallack\n(milling)   \t\nMetals Recovery, Retallack  (zinc\nconcentrates)  i.\nMolly Hughes, New Denver  . .\n(lead)\t\nMolly Hughes, Zlncton  (milling   \t\nMonitor, Three Forks (milling)\nMountain   Chief,   New\nDenver   (lead)   \t\nMountain Chief; New\nDenver    (milling)    \t\nMultiplex. Sandon (milling) ..\nOttawa, Slocan City (dry) ....\nQueen Bess, Alamo (lead) \u00ab...\nRainbow,   Keen   (lead)   \t\nRamb:er-Carlboo,  Rambler\n(milling)   \t\nRambler, Rambler (lead) ....\nRambler, Rambler (milling) ..\nRosebery-Surprlse,  New  Denver\n(lead)\t\nRosebery-Surpfisfl, New Denver\n(milling)   ...'... '.       78B\nRuth Hope, Sandon (milling) . 960\nRuth Hope, Sandon (lead) .... 99\nSilver Hoard, Alnsworth (lead) 89\nSilversmith, Sandon (lead) ... 2,838\nSilversmith, Sandon (zinc) ... 1,776\nSilversmith, Sandon (lead concentrates)\t\nSilversmith, Sandon (zinc concentrates)      i\nStandard, Sllverton (lead) -...\nStandard, Sllverton (xlnc) ....,\nStandard, Silverton (milling) .\nSovereign, Alamo (milling) ..\nSurprise, Howser (copper) .....\nSurprise,   Sandon   (lead)    \t\nSurprise, Sandon (milling) ...\nTrade Dollar, Sandon (milling)\nTariff, Alnsworth (milling) ..\nVan    Rol,    Sllverton    (milling)\nVictor,  Bandon   (lead)   ....\t\nWhitewater,  Retallack   (lead)   .\nWhitewater, Retallack\n(milling)     8,184\nTotal     489,229 '\nTwelve Peasants Die\nWhen Spade Explodes\nBuried Wartime Shell\nThe Nelson Daily News\nTRENT,    Italy,   Nov.    14.\u2014Twelve 1\npeasants,   ranging   from   18   to\nyears of age,  Including three worn- }\nen, were killed and two were serlqus-\n]y  wounded   today  by  the  oxplosfon\nof a shell  left  over from  the world\nwar.    One of the peasants accident- J\nly struck the shell with a spade.\n*. \u00ab*J,\nDISTRICT\nNEWS\nMARKETS\nNEWS\nBRICKLAYERS GET\nPAY BOOST, COAST |\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14.\u2014Effectlvel\non Monday approximately 400 brick- j\nlayers, masons and tile setters, em-1\nployed in Vancouver,' will receive I\n$10 per day for an eight-hour day.\nThis  Is  an  Increase  of  $1  per  day. |\nArtisans  concerned  gave   60   days'\nnotice   that   they   would   expect   the |\nnew   scale   by   Monday   and   no   objection   was   raised   by   the   General I\nContractors*    association.\nYOUNG MAN VICTIM\nHUNTING ACCIDENT!\n116\n92\n-41\n12\n158\n38\n125\n64\n26\n41\n\u25a05\nSS,\n85\n227\nn\n240\n47\n22\n26\n49\n2*5\n<\nse\n121\n29\n135\n62\n46\n20\nHUNTINGDON, B.C., Nov. 14.\u2014Ed- |\nward Coulter,  aged 22, died ln hospital   here   today,    the*  first   victim I\nof  hunting accident reported  In  the j\nKumas   Prairie   district   thi.   season-\nHe   was   found   near   here   by   hlfl I\nbrother a few days ago, lying on the |\nground with a bullet -which had entered his Jaw, lodged near his brain. I\nWhitewater, Retallack (line)\nWonderful,  Alamo   (milling)   ..\nEatt  Koottnay   .\nAut-Ori, Aldrldg* (milling)   \t\nDelay, Lake Windermere (lead)\nKey,   Toby   creek    (lead)\nParadise,  Lak\u00ab  Windermer.\n(load)     ...;\t\nParadise,  I>ake Windermere\n(milling)     \t\nSil.er  Spray,  Lake Windermere\n(lead)     \t\nSimmons, Galloway (copper) ..\nStar, Windermere (lead) ...._,\nStemwlnder,   Kimberley       ,\n(milling)             14,194\nWhite Cat   Lake Windermere\n(femd)        36\nOther   District.\nAtlln, Atlln  (lead)         IN\nDuthie,  Smlthers  (lead)       1,241\nI Duthie,  Smlthers  (milling)   ....    1,112\n2(1\n6S4\n1,633\n1\n30\n717\n28\n\u2022\n36\n3\nChinese Convicted\non Assault Charge\nPrince Rupert Assize\\\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., Nov. 14,\nTwo of the cases hfard at the assizes\nbeing conducted by Mr. Justice D. A.\nMacDonald, were disposed of this morn\nIng.\nCapt. H. Hanson, charged with the\ntheft of approximately 14000 from the\ncash box of the Canadian Fish & Cold\n8torage company vessel of which he\nwas master, waa found not guilty by\nthe jury.\nLee Foon. alleged to have attacked\nChang Bo, a fellow Chinese, with an\naxe at a cannery near here, was found\nguilty of assault and sentenced to four\nyears' Imprisonment In the New Westminster penitentiary, i\nContract Is Let\nfor Nanaimo Hotel\nNANAIMO, Nov. 13. \u2014 The contract\nhas been let to the E. J. Ryan Construction company of Vancouver for\nNanaimo new community hotel, costing\n$110,000 to be completed by May 20.\nThis action was taken Friday night at\na meeting of directors of the new hotel,\nwhich will occupy a conspicuous portion on Nanalmo's waterfront, overlooking the Gulf of Georgia.\nBODY OF MAN FOUND\nRIDDLED WITH SHOT\nHERRIN, 111., Nov. 14.\u2014The\nbody of Claude Craig, aged 16, shot\nthrough the heart with revolver\nbullets and through the right side\nwith buckshot, was found early today Just north jof the Herrln city\nlimits near a roadhouse operated by\na man known only as \"Big Swede.\nAuthorities believe that the slaying\nhas no connection with recent gang\nwarfare here aa t Craig wall not\nknown to be affiliated with any faction.     '-*';'\nMine disaster at ishpeming, .MIcJi.,\nrobs community of almost every\nmale resident.\nWORLD    SPORT\nNEWS,,,,. NEWS.,\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nNEWS\nThe Daily News Is Proud of the News Service Which It\nIs Supplying Its Readers\nCable and General News\nIt is proud of its Canadian Press leased wire service, which gives it every day, in\ncommon with the largest papers in Canada, a complete 15,000-word service of foreign, British, Canadian and British Columbia news;\nDistrict News\nIt is proud of its corps of cprn-jspondents who cover the news of Trail, of Cranbrook,\nof Rossland, of Fernie, of Grand Kirks, of G reenwood, of Kaslo, of Creston\u2014of several\nscores of cities and towns and villages thro ughout the two Kootenays and the Boundary\n\u2014every day. , :_ .:-.^_.. j .*\n\u25a0   -    ' . '\"\u25a0\u25a0   t.   .       \u25a0 -ol' .\nThus do Daily News'correspondents* give the pepplfe of this district a, news service\nwhich they can get in no other \\vay.   It Costs money to bring in news from all over this \u2022\nwide district day after day by telegraph and telephone, but it,pays.   It pays in the ^improved service to Daily News readers\u2014which brings more circulation, mere advertising.\nSport News\nThe Daily.News is proud of its sport page, which is one of the best in British Columbia.\nMarkets Page\n'       The Daily News is proud of its financial, market and business news page, which it, believes to be the best in the west.\nBright Features\nThe Daily News takes pride in its features. \"The Lighter Side,\" \"The Gumps,\" \"Jiggs\"\nand \"Aunt Het\" are read by more people on this continent than any other features which\ncan be purchased. They cost more ;tnoney th an others, but The Daily News' policy is to\ngive its readers the best. , \u2022\nWomen's Special)Features\nIt believes its special women's features^\u2014such as Laura  Kirkman's Efficient House-\n_ keeping, and Mothers and Their Babjes, to be of unusual value to women readers.\nDr\/Barton's Health Article\nEveryone recognizes the excellence of Dr. Barton's health column, which is one of the\nmost regularly read columns of The Daily News.\nThen there is the daily serial, chosen always for its strong human appeal and compelling interest.\nGet the Paper Daily\nTo obtain the full value of The Daily News, it is necessary to receive it every day.\nOrder it from your local agent, or send in a subscription direct. Delivered by carrier,\n25 cents a week.   By mail, outside Nelson, 60 cents a month, $8 for six months.\nThe Daily News\n\"ALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\"\n\"Wliill    f\n\\ssssssm\n Ic2%\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 16, 1928\nw fap Seven\nStudents, Regina in Western Rugby\nEMIM IS\nLEADER IN THE\nFlfiSTilSIt\nurnley Defeated at Bintiing-\n'ham; Bad Day lor\nLeaders -\ntt.\nM)NDON,, Nov. 14.\u2014League foot-\nlil' yesterday was played in many\nises on fields that resembled quagmires apd ln several districts, notably\nlose within the Juri-sdlctlon of the\nwathern section' ot the third dlvl-\non, the referees were .obliged to de-\njere several of the ground's unfit for\njay. Elsewhere,     there   . waa\nidle merry mud-larKing on bogged\n\u25a0elds, the games often being fought\n*t* in the teeth' of violent hurricanes.\n|iis  brought   the  usual  harvest  of\nMis.  \u2014\t\n'The players showed themselves to\n| much keener than the spectators,\nr.at all league gapies only 80)000\nailk braved the furies. These were\ns smallest gates this season.\n' Spurs te Top\nOut of all this wslter a new leader\nose in the first division, when,\nking advantage of their victory\ner Cardiff city at White Hart\nme, and also of the defeat of\nirnley at Birmingham, Tottenham\nMspurs climbed into the honored\n'sltlon after the beat game they\nits played this season. It was an\n|0\u00bbllent day for the metropolitan\n.lbs, for at Upton park, West Ham\nalanched Aston Villa by 5 to 1,\npile at Huddersfield, Arsenal drew\nth the champions.\nIt, was a had day for the leaders,\nt not only did Burnley faM btrtrso\n\u00ab> did Newcastle Urtlted, who buc-\n*bed to Bury by the add goal in\n',\u201e \u2022 .,....*\u25a0\nSunderland  Up\nSunderland came up Into grips with\nie leaders,    as   a   result   of   their\ntfifV over Liverpool. .\nBirmingham's win.over Burnley was\ne'. only redeeming ' feature ot the\n>t by the Midlands . district, for\nith,.Aston Villa and West Brom-\nIch were severely handled at West\nam and at home, respectively. These\n*o. teams are now reposing at the\nttom of the cellar stairs.\nA, surprise was occasioned at Lei-\nsffr when lhe home team went\n<*n before the onslaught of Man-\nester   United.     .\nIn, the second division tbe game at\n|TOnsea  ended   In  a  scoreless  draw,\na result of which Preston  North-\nd  lost  their  place  aa  runners up,\nildlng  It  to   Manchester   Olty,   who\nfeated Wolverhampton.\nThe feature game in the third  dl-\nton,   northern   section,   saw   Stoke\nty,   the   leaders,   take   the   points\na  Rochdale.\nALMY BEACH WINS\nOVER VARSITY ST.ARS\nTORONTO, Nov. U\u2014Balmy\nach finished their senior Ontario\ngby football union schedule ln a\nase of \u00a7 glory at Varsity Stadium\nturday. Playing steady, cautious\nd nt times thrilling football, they\numphed   over   Varsity   seconds   4\nThe Ontario Rugby Football union\n\u25a0amplons took ,the field without\nvertl of their star performers. It\nts- not considered, good policy by\ne, Beach management to risk In-\nrles to the mainstays ot the team\na game which had no material\nIpct on the championship.\nVI\n-j-**-\nPacific, Coast\nWhitman,   7;   Montana,   67.\nStanford,, ft; Washington, 10,\nNevada, \u00ab;  California, 20.\n\u25a0St. Marys, 67; Pacific, 7.\nColorado,   0;   Colorado   Aggies    I.\nDenver,   7;   Colorado  college,   16.\nWyoming, 0;  Montana State. 10. I\nUtah,   40;   Brighanv Young,   7.\nArliona, 7; Occidental, \u00bb.*\nKllensburg   Normal,    81;    Cheney\nNormal. *7.       *\u25a0*- ,' \u2022 \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0\nIdihoVroah, 28; Montana Frosh,* 6.\nOregon Frosh, 14; O.A.C., Frosh, 0.\nU. of  California  Southern  branch,\n26; Redlands U\u201e* 8.\nLoyola  college,   28;  Christian col-\nlege,   0.\nNew* Mexico   IT.,   6;   New   Mexico\nAggies,   6.\nMid-mat *\nMichigan, 17;  Ohio state, 16.\nIo#a,  10;  Wisconsin, 20.\nFranklin, 0; Purdue. 44.\nIndiana,  It;  Mississippi Aggies,  6.\nWabash,   18;   Illinois,   27.\nChicago, 7; Northwestern, 88.\nButler.'O; Minnesota, 81.\nNebraska, 81; K.naas Aggies, 0.\nDrake,  7;  Iowa State, 18.\nCarleton, 8; Co*, 0.\nCase,   0;   Baldwin   Wallace,  0.\nWlttenburg, 16; Cincinnati, 18.\nDayton,  21;   Ohio  Northern,  0.\nDetroit,   7;   Quantlco   Marines,   24.\nKnox,   6;  Cornell college,  ?.\nMissouri,  46;  Washington, 6.\nMiami,   14;   Oberlln,   6.\nVlllanova, 7; John Carroll, 0.\nOhio  Wesleyan,   18;  Western  Reserve, 7.\nSt.  Xavler,   48;   Kentucky Teachers',  0.\nHiram, 6; Otterbeln, 18.\n... Orinnell,   0;.Oklahoma  A.ani M\u201e.\n10.\nGeneva, 0;  Oroev City, 8.\nEorlham.   8;. Rose   Po|y,   6,.\nIndiana normal, IS;  Hanover, 0.\nWooster, 41; Akron, 18.'   '\u25a0 i*\nTransylvania, 7;. Western Kentucky\nnormal, 3.\nIndiana  normal,   13;   Hanover,   0.\nDanville    normal,    14;    Evansvllle\ncollege, 86. \u2022\u2022},\nMornlngatde,   68,;; W\u00bbyn\u00ab,,,0.   J.\nMarquette,   lt;   Auburn,  I.\nCreighton, 8; South Dakota state, 8.\nSioux Falls college, 9; Eastern normal, 26.\nNorth Dakota Aggies, 20; Concordia college,  0.\nHamllne, It; St. Olaf, 0.\nWinona    Teachers,    0;,   Rochester\n(Minn.) Junior college, 0.\nSt.   Cloud   Teachers,   7;   Mankato\nTeachers,   6.\nMacalester, 19; St. John's, 6.\nEast .\nTale, 7; Princeton, 10.\nArmy, 0; Notre Dame, 7.     .\nBrown,  81;  Harvard, 0.\nColumbia, 0; Pennsylvania, 8.\nCornell,   24;   DdrflnoUth,   28.\nGeorgetown, 1; Navy, 10.\nPittsburgh,    0;    Washington    and\nJefferson,   0.\nBucknell;  0;   Penn  State,  9.\nWilliams,   6;   Amhei-st.   26.\nHaskell, 21; Boston coUege, 21.\nGetlVsburgh, 88; Mt. St. Mary's, 0.\nColgate, 10; Syracuse, 10.\nFordhara, 7; New Tork college,  8.\nGeorge Washington, 27; Randolph-\nMacon, ;0.\nSwi(rthmore, 9; Franklin and Marshall,   0.\nUnion, 86; Hamilton, 0.\nUnion,     86;    Hamilton,    0.\nHoly. Cross,   14;   Cathollo   university,   6. *\nSt. John's, 0;  Johns Hopkins, 34.\nLafayette,   68;   Susquehanna,   0.\nRutgers,  0; Lehigh,  14.\nSchuylkill,  32;  Blue  Ridge, 31.\nMaine, 7;  New Hampshire,  14.\nVermont,  0;  Middlebury,  18.\nDickinson, 0; Muhlenberg, 18.\nNew York, ,1ft;  Davis-Elklns, 0.\nAlleghany,  12;  Canislus,  0.\nSt. Lawrence,  8; Clarkson, 0.\nBowdoln, 20; Wesleyan, 7.\nSpringfield,   t;   Norwich,   7.\nConnecticut Aggies, 38; Rhode island    state,   0.\nManhattan, 20; Upsala, 6.\nWorcester  Tech.,   6;   Lowell  Textile, 6.\nBt. Bonaventure, 0; Niagara, 21.\nPenn.  Military,  29;  Uralnus,  7.\nRochester, 49; Rensselaer, 6.\nMiddlebury,  13;  Vermont,  0.\nProvidence.   14;   Alfred,   10,\nBethany,   10;   Thlei,   0.\nBuffalo, 16; Hobart. 42.\nHaverford,  39;  Drexel,   0.\nPenn   Military   college,   29;   Ursl-\nnus,   7.\nPhillips Andover,  3;   Phillips  Exeter,   20.\nSooth\nAlabama,   49;   Florida,  0.\nCenter, 0; West Virginia,  21.\nCitadel, 16; Clemson, 6.\nGeorgia,  14;  Georgia Tech.,  13.\nV. M- L. 1\u00b0; Kentucky, 9.\nMississippi,  0;  Louisiana State,  0.\nDavidson, 10; North Carolina, 6.\nFurman,     10;      South     Carolina\nState, 7.\nVanderbilt,  20;  Tennessee,  8.\nSllane,    1J;    University    of    the\nh', '7.\nMaryland,  6;   Virginia,  6.\nArkansas, 7; Texas Christian, 10.\nBaylor, 8; Southern Methodists, 81.\nLoyola,   13;   St.   Louis  U\u201e   6.\nHampden Sidney, 20; Richmond, 7.\nWaahlngton and Lee,  13;  Virginia\nP.  I\u201e  0.\nChattanooga,    61;    Georgetown,   0\nKing callege, 12; Lenoir Rhyme, 0\nWI)lIam  and   Mary,   8;   Lake  Forest, 6.\nLouisville, 26; Wesleyan,  12.\nTexas Mines, 0; Ross State Teach\ners college,  21,\n.     PROFKSHIONAL  FOOTBALL\nNational League\nFrankford Yellow Jackets, 10; Du\nluth. .0.\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL RESULTS\nHULL, England. Nov. 18.\u2014England\n\u25a0\u2022feated New' Zealand In a rugby\n-otball test match here today by\nscore of 21  to 18.\nLONDON, Nov. 14.\u2014Football\nmes played Saturday ln Great Brl-\nln. resulted as follows;\nENGLISH LKAt.l'i;\nFirst   DIvMon\nBirmingham,   1;   Burnley,   0.\nBlackburn    Rovers,    8;    Sheffield\nnlied, I. , ,\nBury, 3; Newcastle United, 2.\nEverton, 2; Derby County, 2.\nHuddersfield  Town,  8;  Arsenal,  8.\nLeicester     City,     2;      Manchester\nnlted,  3.\nTne Wednesday, 2; Bolton Wan-\nrers, l.\nSunderland,   2;   Liverpool,   1.\nTottenham    Hotspurs,    4;    Cardiff\nIty;   1.\nWestbromwlch    Albion,    2;    Leeds\nnlted, 4.\nWestham Unltsd, 6; Aston Villa, 1.\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nSecond Division\nBarnsley,    1;    Hull    City,    2.\nBlackpool, 3; Bradford City, 0.\nDarlington,   4;   Notts  County,   2.\nFulham, 6; Port Vale, t.\nGrimsby Town, 0; Southampton, 1.\nManchester City,  2;  Wolverhamp-\nn Wanderers, 1.\nNottingham Forest, 4; South\nilelds, 8.\nOldhem Athletic, 2; Mlddlesbor-\nfh,  1.\nPortsmouth-Clapton Orient, post-\nned.\nReading, 2; Chelsea, 1.\nSwansea   Town,   0;   Preston  North\nid,   0.\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nThird Division\nAshlngton, 8;  Halifax Town, 0.\nBradford,  3;  Stockport County, 1.\nChesterfield,   8:   Barrow,   1.\nDoncaster    Rovers,    4;    Tranmere\nivers.. 1.\nKelson, _ 7;   Crewe  Alexandra,   1.\nNew  Brighton,   1;   Lincoln   Coun-\n1.\ntotherham United, f, Southport, 3.\nWoke City,   8;   Rochdale,   1.\nWalsall,  2;   Hartlegools United,  2.\nWIganboro,  3;. Durham City, 1). , .\nWrexham,    6;  \u2022 Ac'cringt'on    Stanley, 0- ,  _   '    '\u25a0'\nthird Division\u2014Southern Se-ctfon\nBournemouth and Boacombe-Bran-\nford, postponed.\nAberdare   Athletics-8windon  Town,\npostponed.\nCharlton      Athletlcs-Brlghton      at\nHove, postponed. - . . * ' ^OKs%\nBristol City, 4; Northampton, 3.\nCoventry Cl.y.  4;', Luton Town,  1.\nCrystal Palace, fc .Southend U., t.\nOilllngham,   8;   Exeter City,  t.\nNewport County,  1; Bristol R\u201e 1.\nPlymouth Argyle,  1; Mlllwall, 1.\nQueen's Park R\u201e 4; Norwlth City, 7.\nWatford, 4;  Merthyr, 1. '\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\ntftrst 'IMvWbn\nCeltic,  1;   Hearts,  0. '\nCowdenheath,   tl   Clyde,   0.\nDundee United, 2; Aberdeen, 2.\nFalkirk,   6;   Morton,  1.\nHiberlans, 2;-Rdngers, 2. .   n\u00bb I   \u2022\nKilmarnock,   8;*  Dtiirt-Je,   t..,.,\nMotherwell, 6; St. Johnstone, 2.\nPartlck Thistle, 6; Alrdreonlans, 1.\nQueens park, 4; Hamilton Academicals,  0.\nSt. Mirren, 4; Dunfermline, 0.\nSecond Division\nAlbion Rivers,  2; Clydebank, 8.\nAlloa,   2;   Armadale,  0.\nArthurlie, 1: Nlthsdale, 1.\n\u25a0 Ayr  United,   8;   East  Stirling,   2.\nBathgate, 6; Arbroath, 6.\nDumbarton, 1; Third Lanark, 1.\nEast Fife. 6; Kings Park, 2.\nForfar,  2;   Raith  Rovers.. 2.\nQueen   of. South,   8;   Stenhousemulr, 0. i . \u2022\nSt. Benorde, 2; Boness, 6.\nLONDON,  Nov.  18.\u2014Bad weather\nprevailing  in   parts  of  England  and\nWales   yesterday   caused   the   postponement of several football matches.\nRugby   Union   Results\nLlaney t, Maoris 0.\nBlackheath   0,   Cambridge   University 8. .     .\nRichmond 8. Hartequlns I.\nSt. Barts 8, Mosely 8.\nU.   C.   S.   Old   Boys   0,   Merchant\nTailors -6. .\nNeath 10, Aberavon 6.\nBristol   8,   Bath  0.\nCardiff 14.  Newport 8.\nCoventry  18,  London Irish 6.\nGloucester     12,     Devonnort     Sor-\nvices 3.\nLeicester 6.  Oxford  University  t.\nPlymouth  t,   Old  Bluet 8.\nSwansea 82,  Skewen 8.\nStewartonlans   8,   Hercetonlans   lt.\nWatsonlanon  8.  Glasgow  High  1.\nWest   of    Scotland   21,   Edinburgh\nAcads 0.\nHawick 21, Edinburgh Wanderers 0.\nRoyal  High 0, Hill  Headlans t.\nCounty Championship\nCumberlsnd 16, Lancashire 8.\nNorthumberland  t,  Yorkshire 11.\nRugby League\nBarrow 7, Old Ham 6.   j\nHramley   0,   Bailey   11.\nDewabury 10. Huddersfield 6.\n'   Featherstone Roverp 82, WMneas *.\nHalifax t, Hull Kingston I.\nHunslet 16, Castleford 6.\nKelghley  9, Leeds  6.\nLeigh   16,   SwlntOn   5.\n8Miord 8,  St. Helens  0.\nSt. Helens Rees 21, Broughton 6.\nRochdale Hornets 3, V*^in 16.\nWan-lngton  13,  Wakefield  0.\nWigan High 0, Ponty Prldd 0.\nSORTS OF\nmSDRis\nThe American Olympic association\nls represented by 55 sports organ\nteations.\nJack Dempsey and Benny Leon\nard have made more than 11,000,000\neai'h irom boxing.\nAirplanes will sow rice ln Man\nitoba marshes ln an effort to In\ncrease . the   number   of   ducks   and\nmusk rats.\nSalaries paid to football coaches\nat some of the American universities\nrun from $8000 to $16,000 a year.\nBy double-decking the present\ngrandstand the seattng -capacity of\nthe Cubs' park. In. Chicago, will be\nIncreased  to  60,000.\nGrover Cleveland. Alexander, hero\nof the 1926 world's series, was once\na telephone lineman in Nebraska.\nHis first baseball Job paid him $60\nper month. * -\\w^t_\nOf the 617 members of the freshman class at Princeton all except\nsix are actively engaged In athletics,\nshowing a pre fere. A for tennis and\nfootball.\nTRIMMING FRONT\nT\nUniversity of Alberta Ruggers\nWin Right to Meet\nRegina\nVANCOUVER, Nov. H.--Pr\u00absar.tiiifc\na stonewall defence and a powerful\nattack, University of Alberta smothered Victoria 21-8 and advanced to\nthe final of the Western Canada\nRugby union championship here yesterday afternoon, and therefore will\nmeet Regina for the title next Saturday.\nThe Albertahs rolled up six points\nIn the first period as the result of a\ntouchdown after O'Brien had sprinted\n80 yards and a kick to the deadline,\nfive more ln the second quarter when\nSeines skirted the Varsity left end to\nrun 30 yards tor a touchdown, six\npoints in the third quarter try virtue\nof an unconverted touchdown and a\nrouge, ahd four ln the last quarter by\nkicks over the line. Victoria gained\ntheir two points early in the first\nquarter when an Albertan was pushed\nover hla own line trying to run oat\ni punt after making a pretty catch.\nSuperior work on the line gjt\u00ab\u00ab* .ft.\nVarsity boys their victory, ' though\nthe battle was much harder foujht\nhan the score would Indicate. Victoria only made yards once during\nhe afternoon, when they got through\n>n two plunges In ths last quarter.\nThe British Columbia champions\nleld well for the first half, but wilted\n<omewhat under the heavy battering\nif the Alberta back division in the\nhird quarter.   .\nKiokinfl  a Treat\nThe kicking of Hess, Alberta halfback, was a treat for the U00 enthusiasts, many of them watching\ntheir first Canadian rugby game. This\npunter * used good Judgment - in . Uia.\n'ticks and got splendid distance.\nO'Brien and Seines on the back divi-\ndori are two powerful fellows who\ncombine speed with weight, and they\ncarried the heavy work of the team,\nVictoria could not make headway\nigalnst the determined tackling tff\nthe ' prairie boys, who broke through'\ntime and again to get the man on attempted end runs and criss-cross,\naoodacre did some nice punting, \"th.\nIslanders were outweighed and lacked\nthe polish of the college youths.\nThe most outstanding men on the\nAlbert*.:*..-*' roster were Captain Seines\n,t right middle; Ualbralth, snap back;\nHess  and  Pulllshey.\nSummary\nFirst quarter\u20141, Alberta, Hess, kick\nto deadline, 1:2, Alberta, Hess, touchdown, 6;  8, Victoria, Oow, safety, 2.\nSecond quarter\u2014-1, Alberta, Seines,\ntouchdown,  5.\nThird quarter\u20145, Alberta, Walker,\ntouchdown, 5; 8, Alberta, Pulllshey,\nkick to deadline, 1.\nFourth quarter\u20147, Alberta, Pulllshey, kick to deadline, 1; 8, Alberta,\nGoodacre, rouge, 1; 9, Alberta, Hess,\nkick to deadline, 1; 10, Alberta, Good-\nacre, rouge, 1.\nLineup\nAlberta. \u25a0 Victoria,\nHalves\nf-ullljihey    -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0    McMillan\nSPORTITIS\nBy  JINKS\nO'Brien\nHess\nFlying   wing\nStanyer\nGoodacre\nHome\nQuarter\nSnap  back\nMcDonald\nWalker \u2014\nD.   Wihon\nA.  Lewis\n__ R. Ryan\n\u2014 A. Grant\nBelnes\nAgnew\nR.   Wil* in\n_ J. Foster\nLaverty\nGourley\nMitchelt\nLewis \u2014\nSubs\n Hall\nMcDonald\n... Fraser\n. Putman\nMiss Frances Rlieinlander, of Manchester, England, has a Record of\nlifting 106 pounds above her head\nwith her little finger and 104 pounds\nwith one hand.\nJohn \"Stuffy\" Mclnnls, new manager of the Philadelphia Nationals,\nhas been a big league player since\n1909. He has worn six different\nmajor   league   uniforms.\nThe boxing championships ln the\nheavyweight, light \u2022heavyweight, middleweight, welterweight and lightweight divisions have changed hands\nsince the beginning of this year.\nThe new Canadian Professional\nHockey league has a compact circuit pf five cities. Hamilton, Niagara\nFalls, London, Stratford and Windsor. The schedule calls for a session   of   12   games.\nPlilllip Ostf, captain of the Haskell\nIndian school cross-country team and\na Pima Indian, Is recognised as one\nof the greatest runners in the United States. He won the six-mite junior A.A.U. title last summer and the\nnext day won the senior cbamplon-\nSlebert\nPowers   \t\nMcKenzle\nWilliams  -\nWatson\n_... Cook\n...  Buhis\nship   with   at  new  American  record\nof S1.S2.\nIn the belief that a college golf\ncourse is solely an athletic affair\nand not an educational feature of\nuniversity life, the board'of assessors\nof New Haven, Conn., have decided that an assessment should be\nmade on tiie 1000 acres. of wooded\nland used by Tale for its golf course.\nThe  property  is valued  at   $100,000.\nMadame Jane -D.ebrey, foiteidqred\nthe most expert horsewoman ln\nFrance, has challenged any or all\nAmerican women, excepting professional circus riders, to compete\nwith hei* ln fancy riding or ln a\nsix-furlong race on any American\ncourse. She won the first prise In\nthe Paris horse show In 1925 and\nwill participate In tha New Tork\nhorse   show.\nWell, who won the big fight?\nDo you think the decision was\nright? These and many more\nquestions were asked over Friday and Saturday, while , the\nTunney-Dempsey motion picture\nfilms were displayed at the Star-\nland. Many varied opinions can\nbe heard on. all sides, but the\ngeneral opinion is that the fight\nwas a good one and that the\npictures were excellent.\nIn carefully going Into the bout,\nlt would seem that the official\ndecision which awarded Gene\nTunney the crown was right True,\nthere was no great superiority\nshown by Tunney, but he waa at\npractically all times Dempsey's\nmaster, as far as punching and\neluslveness were   concerned.\nTunney fought a runaway fight\nall through. He repeatedly kept\nout cf Dempsey'e way, and after'\nall, why should he have gone after\nDempsey when the former champ\nwas coming to him all through\nthe bout.\nTunney's footwork was superior\nto that of bis opponent Dempsey was on his toes all the way,\nbut time and again Tunney fooled\nthe champ by getting Into a\ncorner and then by suddenly getting out and putting Dempsey ln.\nThere was a great difference in\nthe style used by the two battlers. Dempsey's crouch waa In\nevidence all through and he repeatedly used his bobbing attitude to make an opening which\nnever came. ' Tuftney, on the\nother hand, fought in a straight,\nupright position. His left hand\nworked in perfect order throughout the bout, and several good\ncrosses were made with his right\nBoth boxerfl missed repeatedly.\nDempsey, contrary to reports at\nthe time of the fight, seemed\"\nthrough the pictures to strengthen\nas the battle went on. H6 seemed\nto get more pep and weight Into\nMs punches ln the last few\nrounds, and he certainly Carried\nthe fight to hie challenger. Reports at the time of the battle\nwere that the ohartp was all in\nand on his last legs as the final\ngong sounded. Evidently he was\n| not, and evidently Mr. Tunney\nknew It Dempsey no doubt lost\nthe battle,' but not In such a decisive manner as enthusiastic\nwriters, seeing a new champion In\nthe offing,  made  out\nThe bout was a good one, but\nfor a bout of its class, should\nhave had a lot more action. The\nSlattery - Loughran preliminary\nshowing was fir better and pep\npier   than   was   the   title   match\nwith so much money at stake.\nIt was quite easy to follow the\nbattlers all through the fight.\nGene's broad shoulders and upright posture was a direct contrast to the crouching, springing\nattitude of Dempsey. It was a\ngreat fight, and the best man won,\nbut the margin between the two\nwas slight\nIt Is hard to give any exact\nopinion on the fight as seen on\nthe screen. Blows that may have\nbeer* only taps look quite heavy\nor vice versa. It ls almost Impossible to tell If a man ls a\nlittle'groggy, and there are many\nother things which have to be\nseen before an accurate decision\ncould be made. A closeup .of\nDempsey after the fight would\nhave been good. Tunney apparently was unmarked following the\nbout\nNick Altrock and Al Schacht, the\nfunny men of baseball, who have\ncaused millions of fans to laugh,\nhave joined the ranks of professional football and are now doing their\nstunts on the sidelines of the New\nYork Glints.\nBEAT ESKIMOS\nClose Battle Waged on Snow-\nCovered Field at\nEdmonton ,\nEDMONTON, Nov. 14.\u2014The Regina Pate took a big stride forward\ntoward tbe western Canada Juajpr\nrugby championship here on .Saturday when they defeated the Edmonton Eskimos on a snow covered\nfield by a score of 9 to 7. Retfina\ntrotted out a snappy looking aggregation of pigskin chasers and were\nfull value for their win, although\nthey were forced to fight every minute of the way.\nThe score was deadlocked at 7 to*7\nat half time and remained that way\nuntil well on Into the last quarter\nwhen a rouge and a kick to the\ndeadline gave the Pats the points\nnecessary to  win.\nConsidering the condition of the\nfield and the fact that -tha ball\nbecame slippery and hard to handle,\nthere were few fumbles and the fame\nwas a good exhibition of rugby.\nEach side scored a touchdown,\nGlasgow following through to fall\non the ball behind the Regina lli^e.\nDr. Otto Pettier, the German\nchampion mldddle distance runner,\nhero of record of covering 1990\nmeters In 2 minutes and 27.4 seconds. A\nLAST SAILING FROM ST. LAWRENCE, 1926\nMoatnal\u2014>or.M.MkllmiMaM   .. to Uwrpool\nFuture Sailing! From Winter Port, St John\n\u2014 Special Christinas Sailings \u2014\nM. -fobs\u2014Sw. i,\u00bbAM-\u00bbuta   ...toChe-Aouf, afentlumptom, Am-tamp\nM.  Jobn-SM.   7,\u00ab.\u00bb.*Moatroral to Mfeit, U-nrpool\nIt.  John\u2014Dee. 11,\u00bb.\u00bb. HiUfami to Olaarow, UTemool\nttt, Jolui\u2014KM. 15, \u00ab* Bti-atm to PH.Ax-.iur, Southampton, Antwerp\nIt.  John\u2014-*. 15,1.S. Montoalm   toaeUart, LlTerpool\n\u00bbt  John\u2014O-M.U.I.a.Ifontoalni toOlaarow, Xirmpool\nR.  John\u2014Dm.31, \u25a0 M. MontoUr. toUnrpool\nLARGEST and  FASTEST SHIPS  TO   and   FROM   CANADA\nAak about new tourist third cabin accommodation, berth re.erva-\ntlona, literature, fares and full details from any agent, or write\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent\nNelson, B. C.\n\u25a0_%&' \"*V\nFrosty Betere, successor of \"Had1\nGrunge on the University ot Illinois'\neleven, Is working his way through\nthe school. Because he was unable\nto dig up sufficient fundi to pay\nfor a room, he will sleep at the\nquarters of the Champaign fire department. He Is employed aa a fife-\nman and Is on night duty at the\nfire, house. Peters, a running and\ndrop-kicking star, refused all Overtures  to  Join  fraternities.\nArthur and \"Chuck'.' Born, brothers,\nwill meet when the Army and Navy\nfootball teams clash at Chicago In\nNovember. Arthur ls rated .. tie\nbeat guard on the Navy team, rend\n\"Chuck.\" of the Army, is one or the\noutstanding ends of the United fltat-u.\nPERSONALITY\nf Printing\nPANTING is _\n4      *\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u2022 in type   \u00a5*** \u00b0f your\n* Can? the fuj, ZL   ,y\u00b0U Wantit-\n***\"\u2022. you Ms     '^ reader\nwh^Wled7ofcodpnnter- One\nP0*r*P% is Zrtll mP08khn> ^ ty.\n0t. **\u00b0 We^r Wh\u00b08e \u00abcord\n^ther it be blotter m_\n08 take \u00ab\u00ab\u2022 of 3 \u00a32. ttd let\n^eDai\/yJVewsJobDept\n144 (Two Lines)\n '\n11 \t\nP\u00ab*e Eight\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 15, 1926\nIN SEI-FIL\nRoughridera Tie Score in Last\nMinute and Win in\nOvertime\nKBG1NA, Nov. If\u2014Tying the score\na minute before full time and launching a 'brilliant offensive in the -10\nminutes' overtime session, the Regina\nliou-ghrtders downed St. John's college of JOTnnlpeg 13 to 5 here Saturday itfftrnoon, in the western Canada senior rijgby semi-finals. The\ngame waa played on a snow-clad field\nbefore more than 500 fans.\nWinnipeg trotted out a hard-fighting\" squad that held' Regina's team,\nthe-best since 1922, well In check for\nthe- greater part of the distance. But\nafter Erikine's touch ln goal nad\ntied the score at 6-5 Just before the\nregulation 60 minutes expired, the\nlocals playi-d like an inspired team\nand 'continued the good work in the\nextra frame with a safety touch, a\nkick to the deadline and a touchdown\nby Milne on an onside Kick.\nRegina obtained eight of their 13\npoint's by kicking. Duncan's touch ln\nthe third was Winnipeg's only score.\nIn the win from the Winnipeg\nSaints, Regina wiped out the 11-1 defeat sustained a year ago on the\nflame field from' the Tigers of Winnipeg, fidmonton will meet the\nRoughriders here next Saturday in\nthe final of* the western championship.\nSeries     Tied    Before    10,000\nKingston   Fans;\nScore 3-1\nKINGSTON, Ont., Nov. 14.\u2014In the\ngreatest game ever played In the\nRichardson stadium in Kingston,\nQueens defeated Varsity Saturday by\n3 to 1 before more than 10,000 fans.\nIt was a wonderful victory with the\ntri-Color tleing up the series when\nthey held back the heavy hard battling Varsity team. The tri-color\nwer\u00a3 never fought harder and in\nthe- face of Trimble's great 70-yard\nrun, in the dying moments of the\ngartl'e, ^Queens never wavered. Var-\natty buttle (I hard in the fourth quarter. Monohan and Batsone were\nQutens outstanding stars while\nTrirbbl'e and Carroll were the best\nfor Varsity.\nThe Queens' victory tied up the\nintercollegiate series as McGill and\nthe locals have each won on their\nown grounds and lost when playing\nawaV   from   home.\nDemaree Lines\nUp Crack Team\nof Cuckoo Nuts\nFRENCH HORSE SPORTSMEN\njt.J.\nAbove are shown three French cavalry officers, who are practicing with\nthree Belgian colleagues, at Oakville, Ont., In preparation for the Royal\n\"Winter fair jumping events at Toronto this month. They are, left to right\nLieutenant Clave,  Lieutenant  Fremonvfile and  Lieutenant  de  Folongue.\nHe's Coming to Nelson; Wants\nto  Meets  Trail  Man\nHere for Belt\n15.\nNEW LEADER IN\nsera puy\nRangers and Edinburgh Draw;\nSt. Johnstone Loses to\nMotherwell\nGLASGOW, Nov. 14.\u2014Keeping in\ntune with the changes that were\nrung in the English league yesterday, the first division of the Scottish league saw another leader enthroned when Motherwell clambered\ninto top position by virtue of their\nhandsome victory over St. Johnstone.\nWhile they were doing this the\nRangers were drawing with the Edinburgh Hibernians at Easter Road\nand by the margin of the odd point,\nMotherwell gained the ascendancy.\nThe race for command of the league\nis still close, with only four points\nseparating the first from the sixth\nteam. Already five teams have had\nturn at leading the division In\nRangers, St. Mirren, Dundee, Aberdeen  and Motherwell.\nScoring was heavy throughout the\nleague, the sudden grounds and\nheavy wintry winds being responsible\nfor this. Aberdeen were held to\ndraw at Tanadlce Park wnen Dundee\nUnited, tne lowest placed team in the\nleague, made it two-one. It was u\nbad day for visiting teams, not one\nof   which   emerged   victorious.\nTake two Out of Three in the\nSaturday Afternoon\nContest\nThe C.P.R. 10-pinners defeated the\nTravelers two games out of\u25a0% three\nin a schedule game In the City Bowl-\ning league Saturday afternoon at\nthe Semaphore alleys. J. B. Conway of the Travelers had high individual score with 210, while L. S.\nBradley, of the same team, took high\naggregate score  with   525, '\nThe score:\nC.P.R. team\u2014\n1st.    2nd.\n160    144\n185    189\n181      99\n168     158\n151     178\n.  30      SO\nA,  Scanlan  .-.\u00bb\nF. H. Hill  ......\nC.  McKinnon   \u00bb-\nLeo McKinnon\nE. T. Brake ...\nHandicap    _.,\nSrd. Ttl.\n145\u2014 449\n177\u2014 601\n152\u2014 S73\n190\u2014 516\n152\u2014 481\nTotals    825 740 846\u20142S22\nTravelers team\u2014\n1st. 2nd. Srd.    Ttl.\nh. Bradley \u00ab.~198 153 174\u2014 525\nJ. *McAdam  \u201e..130 109 127\u2014 366\nMiller    -..132 129 127\u2014 388\nC.  H.  Stark   -..124 181 140\u2014 395\nJ. B. Conway  ..210 146 128\u2014 484\nTotals\n.834     698     726\u20142158\nTo the Editor of The (Daily News:\nSir\u2014I am going to send you another challenge to have you publish\nagainst Ernie Arthur, and I hope\nthat you will publish it as I thlpk\nthut he has showed a l>a*k slide right\nnow. He was matched to meet me\nln Cashmere, the 11th, but failed to\nshow up, and I had tu have the promoter substitute another wrestler,\nfinding out that he went to Portland\nto   meet   Plnkey  Gardner.\nJ try to be a man of my word,\nand I like to have a wrestler be the\nsame with me, and when a wrestler\nsends his cut and then falls to\nshow up I think that he is showing\na little yellow.\nNow I am coming up there, and\ngoing to locate In Nelson, and ^1\nhope that thia will get something out\nof him. I hear that he claims that\nhe has a belt showing that he is the\nmiddleweight champion, and I want\nhim to put this belt up, and we will\nsettle it to see who is going to hold\nthe title, and the winner will take\nthe belt.\nEither Nelson or Trail\n1 would rather meet him In Nel\nson, but of course, I will meet him\nin Trail if he don't want to come\nto Nelson. All I ask is to get\nfair and square deal, and X think\nthat if he has got any sporting\nblood and gameness in him he will\nexcept this challenge and meet me\nfor the  championship title.\nHoping that I may hear from the\npromoter soon, as I am ready to send\nmy cut right now, and if I don't hear\nI will be there booh, and it will\nbe rather hot for him till he does\nmeet me.\nMERVIN   BARACKMAN.\nCashmere, Wash., Nov.  12, 1926.\nI\n'\n\u00ab*--i\nUsed Articles\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nClassified\nAdvertising\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\n\u25a0^-ff\u2014*\u00ab?\u25a0\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant and Classified Advertising \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per insertion. If paid ln advance, 6c per word\nper week, or 22Ho per word per month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a cash-\nfn-advance basis. Each Initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc., counts as one word.\nMinimum 25c, if charged 60c.\nLocal Beading !TotIc\u00abc \u2014 Three cents\nper word eech insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4c per word. Blackface capitals Be a word. Twenty-five\nper cent discount if run dally without\nchange of copy for one month or more.\nWhere advertisement Is Bet out in short\nlines the charge Is 15o a line for Roman\ntype, 20c for blackface and 25c for\nblackface capitals. Minimum 35c, if\ncharged, 50a\nBirth Bottoea\u2014 Free.\nLists of Wedding Presents, u4 Plural Tribute* at knnerals\u2014Ten cents per\ncharged 60c.\nXanlagM, Deaths and In Mamorinm\nCards\u2014Three cents per word, 60c minimum.\nBirths\nLIGGETT\u2014At the Kootenay Lake General Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. C. Liggett of Kootenay street a daughter,\nNovember 13.\nMrs.\nSCAIA\u2014Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Don\nBcaia, at Port Coquitlam, on November 12, a son.\nSituations Wanted Male\nSTEAM   ENGINEER     WANTS     POSITION.   Apply Box 411  Nelson. B.C.\n(5817)\nMAN WANTS WORK \u2014 Some Investment fflven, security. Apply Box\n6B00. Dally News, (5600)\nFemale Help Wanted\nHAMILTON TIGERS\nGIVEN A BEATING\nAssociation  Sets  Aside  Funds\nfor Kimberley, Enderby and\nPrince George Teams\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14.\u2014Jamea P.\nWatson of Victoria was unanimously\nreelected president of the British Co\nlumbia Amateur Hockey association,\nat the eighth annual meeting, held\nhere on Saturday night.\nA. R. Dingman, Vancouver, and\nL. H. Tweedle of Victoria were reelected vice-president and secretary\nrespectively. Lieut.-Go v. Randolph\nBruce was named honorary preeicUnt,\nand A A Archibald of Victoria, H.\nMartin of Vancouver and A. O. Cochrane of Vernon, honorary vice-presidents.\nIt was decidrd to set aside $330\nfrom association funds to toe divided\nbetween Print* George, Enderby and\nKimberley, intermediate teams which\ncompeted ln the tournament In Van\ncouver last season.\nBy   AL   DEMAREE\nFormer    Pitcher,    New    York    Giants\nStar major league ball players\nusually are as temperamental as grand\nopera stars, thu only difference beinj\nIn the outward manifestation of then\neccentricities.\nAj a general rule the eccentric ball\nplayer possesses that Indefinable\nsomething  called  \"color,\"\nDuring my 17 years aa u profej-\nnional ball player, 1 played with and\nagainst and roomed wiih many of\nthe odd characters of the game, and 1\nhave been asked to name a u am ol\neccentric players who by their qualm\nactions on and off the field and their\nodd viewpoints on Hie in general, have\n-been loved by the fans. Here's my\nselection:\n\"Bugs\" Raymond, George Chalmers,\nFerdinand bchupp, Phil Douglass, p.;\nlArry McLean, tiAri -Smith, c.; Hai\nOhane, lb.; Johnny ttvers, itoiiu\n2fcider, 2b.; \"Rabbit' Alaruiiville, as.,\n\"Jleinie\" Zimmerman, 3b.; \"Cosy\nDolan, If.; Christen sen, cf.; \"Uy\nSeymour, rf.\n-Pretty good team at that, but tu\nMake ii a complete success 1 woulu\nmake Oeorge tttallings manager ami\nwatch him rave trying to nandie tiiai\ngang.\n \u2014^i\t\nA new eight-oared metal racing\nshell is being built at the Philadelphia navy yard of the same material,\naluminum alloy, with which ' the\nframework of airships and airplanes\nis constructed. The craft will be\nused by the oarsmen uf Annapolis\nnaval acadpmy next year in their\nraces againat the University of Pennsylvania varsity and other college\ncrews. It will weigh from 175 to 2UU\nas compared  with  tho cedar\nArbour Goes to\nPlay in Detroit;\nTigers Sign McTier\niSMJaARY, Nov. 14.\u2014Jack Arbour.\nPembroke athlete, who has played\nhockey for Port Arthur, Calgary ancl\nSeattle, left tonight for Detroit, whi*a\nhe will report to Art Duncan's\nN.H.L.  club.\nThe managenifiu ol Calgary Tigers\nreport having signed Archie McTier,\nconsidered to be Calgary'* greatest\nall-uround athlete.\nThe University of Southern California, winner of the United States\nA. A. U. and collegiate track championship, meets this year, is consider-\ng favorably an invitation extended\nby Japanese officials for a 20-day\ntour of Japun and Manchuria. They\nwill send a lu-man team to the orient\nif favorable action Is received from\nthe university authorities.\nHAMILTON, Ont., Nov. 14.\u2014After\nbeing outplayed tn the first two\nquarters, Camp Borden came to life\nin the last two Saturday and outplayed Tigers in all departments of\nthe game. The final count was 8 to\n2 in favor of the Airmen.\nThe combined attack of Harding,\nGibb, and Ault waa too good for the\nTiger team, the trio of \"birds\" carrying the ball from midfleld to Tiger\nterritory repeatedly. Harding accounted for the -points scored by\nCamp Borden. He kicked two ln\nthe third period and made the day\ncomplete by crossing the Bengal\nline for a try which he failed to\nconvert.\nThe new contest board of the\nAmerican Automobile association Is\nIn favor of motor speed races which\nwould enable women drivers to exhibit their skill behind the wheel\nand to promote greater interest in\nracing and driving among the million of women car owners in the\nUnited States. Such contests, lt is\nbelieved, could be conducted in various sections of the country and\nwould result in the crowning of a\nchampion woman racing driver to\njoin her sister titleholders in the\nfield   of  golf,   tennis  and   swimming.\nLADIES \u2014 We pay $7 per hundred for\ngliding greeting cards; pleasant, easy\nwork; -write immediatflv. King Card\nCo., 156 East 42nd St.. N. Y.      (5635)\nHelp Wanted Male or Female\nEXPERIENCED   KITCHEN   HELPER.\nmale or female.    Apply Grill.    (6584)\nSituations Vacant\nMAKE MONEY AT HOME\u2014Men and\nwomen can earn $1 to $2 an hour In\nspare time writing showcardB. No\ncanvassing or soliciting. We instruct\nyou, and supply you with work.\nWrite today. The Menhennltt Company Limited, 60 Dominion Building,\nToronto. (5429)\nMining, Timber, Lumber\nWANTED \u2014 Cedar poles. Please mail\nus your stock sheets. Will pay casfi\nfor desirable lengths. A. C. Toder\nCedar Co.     ((5566)\nLive  stock sells  quickly when  lt Ib\nadvertised in these columns.\t\nFor Rent\nFURNISHED COUNTRY HOUSE, easy\ndistance Nelson. Trail. Telephone.\nSuit elderly party. Easy payments,\nApply Bos 5632, Daily News.    (5632)\nPOR RENT\u2014924 Edgewood avenue   six-\nroom house.   Phone  271R. (5626)\nLive stock sells quickly when  lt is\nadvertised in these columns.\t\nFor Sale or Rent\nFOR SALE\u2014Heavy team young geldings. W.U matched. Cheap. H.\nBruce, Ketlle Valley   B.C. (66(2)\nTwo Teams Are\nStill Unbeaten\nin City Bowling\nThe standings of the various teams\nIn the Nelson elty bowling. Including\nSaturday's games, are*.\nP.\nMerchants     8\nLelt   Overs    8\nElks    3\nC.P.R \u00bb\nGyros    8\nTravelers    3\nW.K.P.&I. I\nCanadian  Legion    8\nW.\n3\n3\n2\n1\n1\nI)\nMcGILL    WINS\nMONTREAL, Nov. H.-nMcOlll\neasily defeated Dartmouth university (N.li.) In an lnlern-itlonal\nsoccer game Saturday hy a score of\n11  to  3.\nCONDENSED WANT' ADS ORDER FORM\nUse thi\u00bb blank on which to write your condensed *d\u201e one word in each space.\nEnclose money order or check and mail direct to The Daily News, Nelson, B. C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word each insertion, six ec-nsecotive insertions for\nprice of four when cash accompanies order. ICntoum, 25& Each initial, figure, dollar\nsigns, etc., count as one word.   No charge less than 60 cents.\nPlease publish the advertisement below\n.times, for which I enclose f.\n' 1\n1 s \u2014-J\n*-\u2014 !\n'                    '\n --\n1\nB -*jj\n\t\nj\t\n r+t*\t\nIf dMlrid, rwlk* may b. \u00abd< I t. b\u2014 .urn-bar. at Th. D.IV Mm Offie*    K -**\u00bbi:\u00bb er.\ntp b. m.iled, .ncton lOo txtra to terete ao-at of postage and allow flv. word, atxtra for box  mimbor.\nMiscellaneous tor Sale\nFOR SALE \u2014 'Fourteen-foot counter,\nvarnished, for sixteen dollars. Fleming's Store. (557-4)\nBARRELS,  KEGS   AND EMPTY  sack.\n\u2014MacDonald  Jam Company,   Nelson.\n  . * (6(11))\nPIPE AND FITTINGS,\nBARBED WIRB, ETC.\n80,000 feet IK-inch Pipe, Special, 10c per foot. Full stock other\nsizes, also Fittings, at low prices.\nNew Galvanized Barbed Wire,\n14.00, Black 83.00, per spool. Roofing Felt, 1-ply 81.80, 8-ply J2.00,\n8-ply 82.65, per rotL- Extra heavy\nMineralized Surface, 90 lbs., per\nroll 83.00. Mixed Wire Nails,\n82.00 per keg. Wire Rope, Canvas, Logging Supples and all\nkinds of equipment.\nB.   C.  JUNK   CO.      '\n135 Powell St Vancouver, B. C.\n(6450)\nFor Rent Unfurnished\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOMS-\nada Drug Co. \t\n\u25a0Over   Can-\n(5497)\nFurnished Rootas to Rent\nTWO-ROOMED FCflNISHKD SUITE\u2014\nMrs. Ryan.Jll Silica street.      (5505)\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's   Apartments.   (6426)\nFOR RENT\u2014In Annable Block. Single\nfurnished room. Also two and three\nroom suites. Hot and cold water,\nsteam heat and light. (5423)\nKerr Apartments\nFURNISHED SUITES (5)25)\nBusiness Opportunities\nWILL PAY 10 PER CKNT for one\nthousand dollars for ten years; first\nmortgage security. Country property, good house buildings, land and\nwater.   Box 0628, Dally News. (5628)\nFOR SALE\u201483500 cash. The Pacific\nHotel. Greenwood, B.C.; fully furnished; a going concern. Twenty bedrooms, drawing rooms store rooms,\ndining room, lunch counter. pool\ntable, etc.. new heating plant, electric\nlight and all modern conveniences.\nSituated on the Pacific Highway;\ngood tourists' hotel; owners wishing\nto retire from business. Full and\nfurther particulars applv to Charles\nKing Greenwood. li.C. (5638)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nFOR SALE\u2014Cheap. Cash register and\nadding machine. Wilt sell either or\ntrade.   Apply Box 5634 Dally News.\n (5634)\nBirds for Sale\nROLLER CANAKIES out of Imported\nSt. Andreasberg and Harts Mountain\nr^at singers guaranteed, at $6; females 81. M. A. Woyna Appledale,\nB.C. (5633)\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED\u2014To rent for the winter\nmonths 6-room furnished house 2\nor 3 bedrooms; close in preferred.\nApply R. w. Dawson, Annable Block.\nP.O. Box 733.    Phone 197. (5610)\nLive stock sells  quickly  when  lt\nadvertised in these columns.\nBicycles\nFOR SALE \u2014 English 3-speed bicycle.\nSpotlight ball handbrake. Used three\nmonths; cost ninety dollars. What\noffers?    Apply H. It   Kitto.        (6580)\nMachinery for Sale\nONE KIRSTEN HAND STUMP PULLER, very little used $76. One ten-\ninch Cockshutt plow with rolling colter, cheap at 825. E. Hardy Burton,\nB.C. *    (6591)\nPoultry and Eggs\nFOR SALE \u2014 46 White Leghorn hens,\none   year   old.     Each,   60   cents,     S.\n(5665)\nBoon,  Slocan  Park.\nOpportunities\nCoustaijUy Presented\n-IHTHE-\n'lOdtdddSecHoa\nLive Stock  for Sah\nFOR BALE\u2014Good work liorne 1200 lbt*.\nApply Dally News Box 5630.      (SM0>\nJERSEY HOLKTlilN HEIFER over two\nyears. br\u00abd to Reg Jersey Bull. A\u00bbt,\nply Gray. Syrlnga Creek. (5681)\nREAL PIGS\u2014Yorkshires bIx weeks o!\u00a3.\n17 each  f.o.b.  Trocter.    Mifjor Pro?.,\nProcter.  (5 0 \u00bb )'\nhorse,\n(5619)\nFOR   SALE    CHEAP\u20141200   lb.\nApply  Dominion   Dairy. \t\nPURE BRED JERSEY HEIFER. fre\u00bbJj-\nenB January, from heavy milking\nstrain $100. Pure bred nlne-montha*\nold Jersey bull, M&- E. Hardy Bui>\nton, B.C. (Bflljr)\nFOR BALE \u2014 One hoavy team yottnw\nReldingH well matched cheap. H.\nBruce. Kettle Valley   B.C. (5592')\nFOR SALE \u2014 Well-developed, thrifty\nAyrshire bull. 8 months old; dam.\nEvergreen Maid's Dora 2nd. two-yefeF-\nold record tt.156 lbs. milk; sire, Alta\nCrest Non Skid, bred by Alta Crept\nFarms Spencer Mass. D L. Doyle,\nR.R.  No,  L  ' (5694)\nMiscellaneous Wanted\n~.. .......... . \u25a0\u25a0..I.,^.  ... i i .a, i.ii^\nWANTED \u2014 No. 1 Plr \u25a0 and TaniaraO\ncordwood. Trail Livery Co. Trail,\nBC. (5808)\nRoom and Board\nYOUNG OIKL WISHES BOARD IN return for services while attending\nNelson Business College. Box 6625,\nDaily News. (5625)\nROOM \"AND BOARD\" FOR-GENTLE-\nMAN.   507 Carbonate atreet.     Hill)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.    l%c a word.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nAccounting\nF.       HOWTEK\u2014\nV^   Auditor, MacDonald Jam Bolldinr.\nIlox   1191,   Nelson,   B.C. (5433)\nTransfer\nATXXinOir   TRANSFER\u2014Ooal,   Wood\nand  baggage.    Phone  174.     (6434)\nWILLIAMS'      TRAKSFM\u2014Baggage.)\nCoal and Wood, riione IPC- (5436)\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSOV\u2014Below   market.    Carpenter\nand   Joiner.     Hardwood. (5436)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR.\nAnm\nH\nDAWSOH-\nRtal   Estate,   imnraact,   Bamtala.\nAnnable Blk. P.O. Box 738. Phone  lW.\n        __  (5487)\na.  dill,  lastnujroa,\nAITS   CITY   PBOPIKTT.\n 608 Ward Street. (5438)\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL     tt\nMENTAL  CO.\nRITCHIE,     MOVT7-\n-P.O. Box 865.  Nel-\nTelephone  164. (5488)\nChiropractors\nDR. B. E. QRAT\u2014Chiropractor. Ollka:\nblk. Phones: Office, 115. Res. 621Y.\nHours: 10-12 and 2 to 5 Evenings by\nappointment. Sat.:  9:30 to 12 m.  (5440)\nFlorists\nGRMZELLE'S OREXWHODSES, WRL.\nson. Cut flowers and floral designs\n     (6441)\nW\"\n*.   S.  JOHNSON\nPhone  842.    Cut flowers.    Potted\nPlants and Floral Emblems. (5448)\nWholesale\nA MACDONALD ft CO.\u2014\n\u2022 Wholesale Grocers and Provision\nMerchants, Importers of Teas, Coffees,\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and Fancy\nGroceries, Nelson,   B.C (5443)\nEngineers\nGteen Bros., Burden Co.\nCIVIL\nB.C\nNELSON.   B.C.\nAND    MININO    BHOINEBRC,\nAlberta   and   Dominion\n Land Snrvayors. (5444)\nH\u00bb.    DAWSON,-Land    Snrra-ror,\na   Mining and Civil Engineer.\nKaslo,  B.C. (5446)\nAssayers\nP   W. WIDDOWSON, Box A1108, Nel'.\n\u2022*-'\u2022 son, B.C. Standard western charges.\n(6(T4\u00bb)\nFunfiral Directors\nD. J. ROBERTSON,\nF.   D.   9.   ft   B.\nSanitary Parlors and Baal Motor HMria.\nPhon. SM  Day;  Bight   167L.\nSERVICE\n, (6447)\nPj \u2022,-*>;*\u2022\u00ab.\u2022\nStandard  Fnmltara\nCo. \u2014 Undertakers.\nAuto Hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Best\nservices. Prices\n,a'*-w   reasonable.      (5448)\n'WHAT HA.PPEMED\n| TO DiNTYS CAR\n[LAST MIGHT? IT'S\nI THE FUMN1EST\nTHING   T\nMO, HE SAID HE\n\u2022WAS QONWA\nGET IT FBOM THE\nFACTORY SOT I\nDIDN'T KNOVW IT\nCAME,\nill!\nHE. LEFT IT\nOUTSIDE OF GROGANS1\nBOOST AMD SOMEONE SWIPED  ALL\nTHE. CUSHIONS!\nh\/w-j'. ha\\aj! u\n\\and dintv knows\nwhat a tough\ngang holds out\n.THERE\n ld&\nI\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 15, 1926\nNine\nram motors\nSELL DOIMO\nPrice Trend  on  Wall  Street,\nHowever, Is Up; Baldwin Features\nNEW YORK, Nov. U. \u2014 Although\npUnctuated by sporadic outbursts of\nselling price movements ln the stock\nmarket Saturday were mainly toward\nhigher levels. Most of the activity represented professional operations, with\ndealings enlivened by a vigorous\nsqueeilhg of short interests ln some\nOf the volatile rtiotor shares.\n* The prevalent irregularities of business, emphasized in the weekly trade re-\n\u25a0\u2022 view's, caused some scattered selling of\nprominent   industrial   Issues,   such   as\n\u25a0 United States Steel' Woolworth, Araer-\n|i$an Can., Allied Chemical and Pullman,\nwith General Motors dipping 5 points\nMow yesterday's high mark.\nInterspersed with these losses were\nsubstantial gains In Assorted .Copper,\ni Public Utility, Food and Gfeemlcal\nM$res, while Dupont was strengthened\nBy indications that it would pass on to\nltt stockholders Its share in the recent\nextra dividend by General Motors.\njj     Baldwin   Locomotive  gave   the   most\n\u25a0 striking Individual performance of the\nI day.    After  an  early  wave  of  profit-\ntakfng had carried lt down to 134 the\nstock rallied in spirited fashion to a\nnew high price for the year above 138.\nHudson Motors lumped 3 points and\nPierce Arrow preferred 5, with W. C.\nDurant credited with a drive against\nthe shorts ln these Issues.\nThe closing was steady.\nMrw Totfk Stock axohange Quotation*\nHigh      Low     Cloi\ni    Allird   Chem.    . ..\nU4%\n131\n18814\n1 Amer.   lapcn.    ...\n108\n108%\n108\n*. Amer.  Tobac.   ...\n\"j Ana.   Copper   ....\n119*14\n119\n119\n\u2022!\u00bb-*\n41%\n49\n138 It\n18414\n13614\n! Bait,   & Ohio   ...\n104\n10314\n103%\ni Can.   Pacific   ...\nin**\n16414\n164\nCerro  de   Pasco..\n64%\n6414\n64\nChile Copper   \t\n.12\".\n8214\n3214\n[ Chrysler Corp.   . .\n3T%\n8614\n3614\n, Corn Products   ..\n11 Dodf e \"A\"  \t\n50%\n4914\n5014\n2JTi\n2314\n23%\ni    Dupont    \t\n17014\n1(8\n163%\nGen.   Motors   ....\n141\n14614\n146%\nGranby  Cons.   ...\n84 tt\n3414\n34%\nHove  Sound\n42tt\n42\n41%\nInsp.   Copper    ...\n21%\n27%\n2714\n\u00bb Int.   Nickel    \t\n88%\n38\n38\nr. Kenne.  Copper   . .\n63K,\n62%\n62%\nN. Y. Central   ...\n137 it\n136%*\n136%\n-1 Nor.   Pacific   .. -a.\n79*4\n79\n79\n.. Pacific   Oil   \t\nltt\n114\nltt\nV Phillips  Petr.   ...\n_ ,Rkdio   Corp\t\n\u00bb Shell Union  Oil..\n52\n6114\n51%\n59M\n68 tt\n58%\n30tt\n30'A\n\u202230%\n1.1 Sou.   Pacific   ...\n107tt\n10714\n10714\n3l \u00aban.  Oil Cal.   ..\n; | Shn. Oil N. J.   ..\n60%\n69%\n59%\n42tt\n42\nV\n\u201e Stan. Oil N.J. pfd\n' S(ude.   Corp.   \t\nrJ tfex.   Gulf   Sulph.\nn Union Oil Cal.   ..\n>\\ ijnlon Pacific ...\n11614\n116%\n116%\n5054\n50\n6014\n48\n46%\n47\n5414\n53%\n53%\n164\n16314\n163\n\u2022*| U. S. Rubber  \t\n6814\n62%\n62%\n,) U. S. Steel  \t\n151%\n14914\n149%\ni Willys Ovid\t\n2114\n2014\n2114\n\u2022   Vancouver Stocks\n*\nJHarkets\n[\nCloses Strong; Nickel Is Active\nLeader; Brazilian\nRallies\nTORONTO, Nov. 14. \u2014 British Columbia Fishing and Packing Shares\ncontinued their upward course, establishing another new record at 86 during Saturday's session of the exchange.\nIt closed strong at the high price. Int.\nNickel was the active leader of the\nday and another high for the movement\nwas established at &$%. The close was\nat the top   a net advance of H-\nBrazilian Traction rallied after Its\nsharp break of Friday. The high was\n104 and the last sale was 103%. a net\ngain of \\y_.\nWinnipeg F.lectric lost most of its\ngain of the preceding day when it\ndropped back 1\\,  to 80%.\nExchange Rates\nNEW TORK, Nov. 14. \u2014 Sterling exchange Irregular at $4.80% for 60-day\nbills and $4.84 11-16 demand.\nForeign bar silver\u201464 %c.\nCanadian dollars\u20149-84  premium.\nFrancs\u20143.3014c. \\\nLire\u20144.1214c.\nNelson approximate rate sterling.\n$4.86%.\nBid Asked\nB.  C.   Silver          1.75 1.85\nDunwell         1.11 1.13\nGlacier     0614 07\nGladstone             .29 .3014,\nGranby          34.50 36.00\nHowe Sound        42 00 44.00\nIndian   Mines 0414 -0614\nInt. Paper 16 .18%\nLucky   Jim    1514 .1614\nMcGillivray     .80\nPremier          2.01   , 2.05\nSelkirlm      .03\nSilversmith    38 .40\nLeadsmith 09 .10\nNat   Silver    1514 .1714\nAthabasca  .10\nB. C. Mont    0014 .0014\nB.  Petr 07% .08%\nMaple Leaf    .30\nTrojafl Oil 12\nUUim COIUKBIA EQOS\nBritish   Columbia   fresh   extras   55p.\nfirsts 49c, pullets 42c.\nI'fl\n)\nGrain Market\nLetter\nWe find l( necessary to maintain a large staff of telegraph\noiperators to receive continuous\nquotations on Winnipeg and\nChicago Grain, New York and\nMontreal Stocks.\nOur weekly Grain Market Letter containing Current News\nwill 'be sent on application.\nVictory  Bonds Bought and  Sold\nR. P. Clark & Co.\nLIMITED, VANCOUVER\nNation   Branch\nPhon.   100\nSpokane Stocks\n(Reported by C. W. Appleyard)\nBrazilian   $104\nWinnipeg       1 B0\nSmelters       $234 %\nA.   Loco. $108\nC. P. R $164\nHowe  Sound    $ 41%\nQ.   Northern    $ 79-V4\nDodge  Bros $ 23 %\nAbltlbl        $ 91\nI.    Nickel     , $ 38\nSilversmith          38c\nLead-smith           10c\nLucky   Jim         15K\u00b0\nRichmond            8%c\nGoldsmith           16c\nSteamships pfd    $93\nGranby ...$ $4%\nDupont     $188%\nInt. T .& T $118^\nCanada S.  8. common    .$ 41\n \u2666 '\nToronto Mines\nMakes    Gain   of    Over    Two\nPoints; Lake of Woods\nAdvances\nBid Asked\nPremier  1.97 \t\nHollinger      18.80 \t\nAmulet     1.40 \t\nMining  Corpn  20.05 \t\nWest Dome 21 \t\nKlrkland     ...'....t... .78 \t\nLake   Shore  14.61 \t\nMclntyre   '  24.00 \t\nTeck   Hughes     4.92 4.95\nVipond      1.63 1.64\nNlplsHng      5.75 6.95\nCastle Trethewey    1.12 \t\nKeeley     1.66 1.58\nNoranda       18.90 \t\nFRUIT CABLES\nLIVERPOOL, Oct. 25. \u2014 S. S. Montrose. British Columbia apples\u2014Mcintosh fancy fl.94 to |2.55; C 81.70 to\n$2.18; Jonathan extra fancy' $2.43 to\n12.67; C, (2.18 to 82.55.\nNEWCASTLE, Oct. 27.\u2014 S. S. Calm-\nglen. Mcintosh extra fancy, |2.43;\nfancy J2.1S*. Jonathan fancy 81.91 to\n82.48.\nOLASOOW, Nov. 3. _ S. S. Montcalm. Jonathan extra fancy $1.82 to\n$2.30; fancy, $1.57 to $2.06; Cox Orange\nfancy, $3.76; (Initios Golden fancy,\n$1.70; Northern Spy fancy $1.57 to\n$2.06; Mcintosh fancy. $2.18 to $2.43\nKing David extra fancy $1.S2 to $2\nfancy  $1.82.\nSOUTHAMPTON, Nov. 4.\u2014S. S.\" Em\npress nf Fr.inci'. Jonathan extra fancy\n$2.30 to $2.43; fancy   $2.18.\nLONDON, Nov. 4. \u2014 S. S. Arlana.\nJonathan extra fancy $2.43; fancy\n'$2.18; Mcintosh extra fancy, $2.43; fan\ncy, $2.18; Mcintosh extra fancy, $2.18\nfancy, $1.94.\nWI1CM1PEQ   GRAIN  Qt'OTATIOHS\nWheat-\nNov.\nDec.\nMay\nJuly\nOats\u2014\nNov.\nDec.\nMay\nBarley-\nNov.\nDec.\nMay\nFlax\u2014\nNov.\nDec.\nMay\nRye\u2014\nNov,\nDec.\nMay\nOpen\n140%\n137\nHO\n13814\n59%\n56H\n57 \u2022*\u25a0-*,\n641,\n64 H\n189\n189%\nHigh\n140%\n137\n141\n138'*,\n69 tt\n56%\n!,-<-\n64%\n61%\n66%\n190iA\n190%\n199%\nLow\n139\n136tt\n55%\nHis\n641,\n63%\n66 >6\n189\n188\n197\nClORP\n139%\n135%\n1S9\u00ab\n138\n6\u00bbtt\n65'*\n57%\n64%\n64%\n66%\n190%\n190%\nIJ'I*';\n92',      92%\n       93%\n98 '4      99\nJ. R. GAVIN & CO.\nBROKERS\nSTOCK8\u2014 BONDS\u2014 MINING  INVESTMENTS\n\u2022$01-2  Jamioion   Bldg.,   8pokan\u00ab,   W.th.\nSpecialists   In   ail   approved   mining  and   oil  Issues.\nWrite for Information  or  quotations   on   any   slock.\nOrders Executed on All Markets\nMEMBER STANDARD STOCK   EXCHANGE   OF   SPOKANE\nIII POPULAR\nLOCAL MARKET\nVeal Sells Out; Beef and Pork\nSell Well; Box Apples\nin Demand\nGRANBY PROFIT\nWfth the oolder weather, meat salee\nat the local market have been heavier,\nand perhaps In consequence a new meat\nstall was opened at the market Saturday. This makes four meat stalls In\nthe Vernon street market area, three\nof them in the market hall.\nMeat waa the most popular commodity at Saturday's market. Veal at 15c\nto 30c a pound was sold out, and beef\nand pork were in good demand. There\nwas a good demand for chicken, and the\nlimited eupply was cleaned out. Fowl\nsold well at 30c a pound.\nApples, selling from $1 to $1.50 a\nbox, were nearly sold out. p Mcintosh\nRed and Jonathan were the varieties.\nEggs and butter were unchanged.\nIN\nOperating Income. .$   608,133    $   3S8.654\nOther   income   ....        &8.36S 9,870\nTotal   income\nInterest    \t\nMONTREAL, $Jov. 14. \u2014 Saturday'.\"\nbrief session of the local stock exchange was a recovery of over 2 point*--\nmade by Brasillan, which had developed\nweakness toward the end of the week.\nThe traction stock closed at 104\u00bb4'for\na net gain of 2%. it was the most active issue on the market.\nLake of the Woods scored the greatest advance of the day, closing at 160\nfor a net gain of 9_.\nDominion Coal pfd. was up 2, and B.\nC. Fishing up 2 to a new high of 85%;\nWoods Mfg. coined 1 point.\nWinnipeg Elec. -sustained a loss of %,\nclosing at 6fl'4- Montreal Power gained % at the cio.se of 78.\nThe greatest loss of the day was suffered by Montre.il Trawway, which\ndropped 5 points  at 165.\nTotal sales\u20148869 shares; bonds \u2014\n$93,450.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Nov. U.\u2014Flour unchanged at J7.80 to 18.10 a barrel; shipments\u201446.590.\nBran\u2014123.\nWheat \u2014 No. 1 northern $1.38% to\ntlAH%; May. ,IM*1; ' December,\n\u00bb1.39%.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 yellow, 70c to 71c\nOats\u2014.No. 3 white, 40*54c to ll'fcc.\nWHEAT PRICES\nAT LOWER LEVEL\nCHICAGO, Nov. 14.\u2014Incoming crops\nfrom the southern hemisphere and a\nbig surplus in Canada did a good deal\nSaturday to bring about lower prices\nfor wheat. Closing quotations were\nheavy, He to lT-fcc net decline, with corn\nunchanged at %c up, oats %c to %c\ndown and provisions unchanged to a\nsetback of 2c.\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, Nov, 14. \u2014 Toronto, dealers paying extras 58c, firsts 48c to 50c,\nseconds 33c.\nMontreal extras 52c to 57c, firsts\n42c to 45c, seconds 30c to 33c.\nWinnipeg, extras 42c, firsts 40c, seconds 30c.\nSaskatchewan, extras 42c, firsts 40c,\nseconds 30c.\nEdmonton, extras 40c, firsts 35c seconds  28c.\nVancouver, extras 48c, firsts 43c to\n44c, pullet extras 35c to '36c.\nChicago, spot 45c to 50c December\n34 He.\nNew York, extra firsts 53a to 88c\nfirsts 46c to 51c, December 35%<\\\nTRADING MODERATELY\nHEAVY AT TORONTO\nCopper Output Grows;  Profit\nGives Stockholder Earnings of $5.06\nSPOKANE, Nov. 14. \u2014 Oranby Consolidated Mining Smelting & Power\ncpmpany, limited, for quarter ended\nSeptember 30, 1826 reports profit of\n$595,565, after expenses and Interest,\nbut before depreciation and depletion.\nThis compares with $461,833 in preceding quarter and $33),473 in third quarter\nof 1925.\nProfit for first nine months of 1926\ntotaled $1,486,997 before depreciation\nand depletion, against $925,326 in same\nperiod of previous year.\nCompany has outstanding 844,(103\nshares of stock.\nComparative Aooount*\nIncome account for quarter ende^\nSeptember 30, 1926 compares as follows:\n.     1926 1925\nOrosri    $1,409,532    $1,352,752\nExpenses           803,399 964.098\n.$   664,501    $   398,524\n68,936 64.05)\n\u2022Profit      $   595,565    $   334,473\nNine months ended September 30:\nGross    $4,032,988    $4,050,670\nExpenses       2,479,652      3,000,021\nOperating income. .$1,563,386    $1,044,649\nOther   income          142,091 81,829\nTotal   Income\nInterest\n.$1,695,427    $1,126,478\n.      208,430 201,152\nProfit     $1,486,997    $   925,326\n\u2022Before depreciation and depletion.\nOranby Consolidated Mining, Smelting\n& Power company produced from Its\nHidden Creelc properties 10,182,03*\npounds of cftpper in the third quarter\nof 1926_ a monthly average of 3,394.013\npounds, compared with 9.519.032 pounds\nan average of 1,173,011 pounds a month\nIn second quarter, and 9.390,890 In first\nquarter monthly average of 3,130,296\npounds.\nProduction Cost Oat\nJ. T. Crabbs, president, in report for\nthe third quarter says that average\ncost of producing copper for the quarter including all operating and general\nexpenses with precious metals and\nsmelting credits deducted, but before\ndepreciation and bond interest and\nwithout any credit to copper from miscellaneous income, was 7.8\u00bbc a pound\ncompared with 8.495c in second quarter\nand 9.24c in first quarter.\nAllenby, Granby's subsidiary jn the\nthird quarter milled 174,261 tons of ore\nand produced 4,641,584 pounds of copper against 153.949 tons of ore and 4,-\n^74,177 pounds of copper in tho -second\nquarter. Operating profit In the third\nquarter was $116,335 against $86,633 in\nthe second, with copper carried at 14c\na pound. These profits as well as the\nproduction of copper are not Included\nin the figure for Oranby proper.\nWith Allenby earnings included Granby showed earnings of $5.06 a Share before depreciation and depletion, but\nafter all other charges.\nEVERYBODY'S HAPPY\nI   I   J?\u2122^_1**~~.\nHon. ErnfHt Lapointe  (left),  Canadian  minister of Justice,   and   Premier, Mackenzie   King   (center)   are shown\nlbove,  on  their  way  to  the  British  primfe  minister's  residence   In   Downing   street,   London,   for  ft   session of  tne\nimperial f-nnferonre.    At  the  right ls Hon.  Vincent Mfissey.   Canada's  future   minister   plenipotentiary   to Washington.\nataxa WLD\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 14. \u2014 Sale of\nthe Independence Oold> mines on the\nPortland canal to the Durrwachter interests of Seattle was put through Its\nfinal stage of ratification at the formal meeting of directors Friday afternoon.\nCtnpany of Canada, Liimted\nem-M SimMIng  and   Refining  Departr*****\nTRAIL,  BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPuxehMers ot Gold, Silver, Copper, }***\u2022&* \u2122_ \u00b0**\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig I*\u00bbd \u00abno Zinc\nTAOANAC, TRAIL -\nTORONTO, Nov. 14.\u2014Price changes\nwere negligible during the closing seB*-\nslon of the Standard mining exchange\nSaturday. Trading was moderately\nheavy. A number of fractional advances were recorded. Tough Oakes advanced another point, at 58; and Dome\nfirmer 5c. at 19.80. ' Klrkland climbed\nltt. at 28; nnd Keeley 4, at 1\u00ab0; Mclntyre eased 3   at $23.98.\n       et \t\nGrenville Channel\nHas Miniature Gold\nRush Following Strike\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., Nov. 14. \u2014\nDiscovery oferleh free milling gold ore\nat Klewnugget. near a lake not far from\nthe entrance to Grenville channel, about\n7(1 miles south of here, has started a\nminiature stampede. Location of the\nstrike is reported to easy of access.\nCHICAGO BEATS\nDULUTH TEAM\nDULUTH. Nov. 14.\u2014Coming from\nbehind with two tallies in the third\nperiod Chicago Black Hawks of the\nNational Hockey league defeated\nDuluth Hornets of the American\nHockey league in the season's opening practice game Saturday. It was\nthe first professional game of the\nlocals.\nWELSH RUGBYISTS\nDEFEAT THE MAORIS\nLLANELLT, Mfcles, Nov. 14. \u2014\nFourteen thousand spectators hero saw\nthe New Zealand Maoris go dowrt to\ndefeat before the local rugby team by\nfc score of three points on Saturday.\nThe nntlpodean.s went down fighting.\nIn the first 20 minutes, Parker had\nscored  a try  for Llanelly.\nGBAXK  INBPBOTIOlfB\nFORT WILLIAM, Nov. 14. \u2014 Receipts at terminal grain points are reported well- below those of a year ago,\nbut deliveries at country points almost\nthe   same  as  last  year.\nInspections for October were: Wheat\n65.612 cars, oats 154S, barley 6128, flax\n551, rye 1060; for October, 1926 they\nwere wheat 48,320, oats 2779, barley\n4213, flax 647, rye 449.\nGrain Pours Through\nPort of Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14. \u2014 Grain\nships are carrying away the wheat that\nls pouring Into Vancouver as fast as\nrailway trains can bring it along, according to a statement made by port\nofficials tonight. In the last few days\nfive vessels have loaded cargoes of\ngrain aggregating more than 1,000,000\nbushels. .Six or seven vessels are expected to arrive this week to load full\ngrain cargoes and, according to marine\nauthorities, November promises to be\na record month since Vancouver became\na grain port.\nKILLED IN8TAXTLY\nBRANDON, Nov. 14.\u2014Charles\nCook, aged 45, C.P.R. engineer was\nInstantly killed last night when he\nslipped ln the snow and fell beneath\nthe wheels of  a  moving  locomotive.\nBEATEN  TP BY  BANDITS\nTORONTO, Nov, 14.\u2014When he attempted to beat off two men who\nheld him up in his store here last\nnight, J. H. G ibson was struck on\nthe head four times with a revolver\nand rendered unconscious. The men\nthen took $130 from a safe In the\nstore.\nDIE8    AX   GAME\nKINGSTON, Ont.. Nov. 14.\u2014Excitement over the pl*y at the Queens\nvarsity rufrby game here Saturday\ncaused the death of Albert Aber-\nnethey of Kingston, a show salesman,\nwho was a spectator. He collapse!\nIn the grandstand, and upon examination was found to be dead.\n 1\u2014       o   \t\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL. Nov. 14. \u2014 Butter and\ncheese firm, eggs sternly.\nCheese \u2014' Finest westerns, 1TK<* to\n154c; finest easterns,  17c.\nButter   \u2014   No.   1   pasteurised,   35r   to\nEggs \u2014 Storage extras 45c, firsts\n41<\\ seconds 16c.\nFresh eggs specials 65c extras 60c.\nfirsts 50c.\nARGOS BLANK THE\nSENATORS' TEAM\nTORONTO, Nov. 14.\u2014Argos, playing ft cool, steady game, outplayed\nOttawa Senators, here Saturday and\nwon the final game of the interprovinclal gchedulc by 24 to 0.\nArgos, tackling better, the line had\nan edge and the double blue back-\nfield was Jusr a bit better than the\nchampions. The Senators used\nsubstitute   team   throughout   most  of\nthe \u2022 game. Argos outpointed the\nchampions but the latter took no\nchances   on   receiving   injuries.\nLONDON, Nov. 14.\u2014The Imperial\nrugby-football conference got under\nway on Saturday, when delegates\nfrom the- rugby unions of England,\nScotland, Wales, Ireland, New South\nWales, New Zealand and South Africa, sat for four hours deliberating\nthe state of the rugby game throughout Jhe Empire. In the abs<5n<'e of\nany national body In Canada, that\nDom in inn   WM   unrepresented.\nMONTREAL CAPTURES\nQUEBEC RUGBY TITLE\nOTTAWA, Nov. 14.\u2014Montreal's.\nA.A.A. .iunlora captured the Quebec-\nRugby Football union championship\nand removed a threat In their quest\nof a second consecutive Dominion tl-~\ntie by trouncing the Ottawa Rideaus,\n13 to 12, here Saurday, The victory gave the Winged Wheelers the\nQuebec tUio by 11 points margin\nafter two games.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 14.\u2014Royal Mil- I\nItary college of Kingston, Out., won :\nthe Intermediate Intercollegiate rug- \\\nby championship Saturday defeated i\nLoyttla of Montreal by a score of\n11 to lt.\n(, INCORPORATED **s7 t\" MAY l\u00ab70 \\\\ wv\nDry Goods\nHudson's Bay Company's Genuine\n\"Point\" Blankets\nWorld-famous\u2014unrivalled for warmth and service. Made of all pure wool and\nfast dyed, Hudson's Bay Company's \"Po int\" Blankets are acknowledged the finest\nof all outdoor blankets. They are witho ut peer for home use too. Splenaid for\nthe camp, for motoring, for travel.\nA WARNING\u2014Insist on seeing the \" Seal of Quality\" tab on each and every\nblanket. None are genuine H. B. C. \" P oint\" Blankets without it. They come\nin the following sizes and colors:\nColor:\nGrey,     scarlet,\nkhaki,    green,\nwhite ...*\t\n3-Point\nlbs.   Size 61x74\n31-i-Point\n10 lbs; 63x81\n$13.50      $15.50\n4-Point\n12 lbs.; 72x90\n$18.50\n$21.50\nStripes     \t\nThe colored stripe \"Point\" Blankets  are shown only in 4-Point size.\nLadies' Wear\nA rack of broken ranges in Coats, all specially reduced, in some good smart colors\nand   serviceable  materials.    See  them today.\nWOOL TOQUES, in plain or fancy patterns. A large assortment. Colors of\nscarlet, white, brown, sand. In all sizes suitable for girls and boys; also Baby\nToques.    Prices ranging from  *$65<f*>   to   $1.50\nFancy China\nNEW ALBERT ENGLISH CUPS AND   SAUCERS,   in  several  new  colorings.\nWide open cups with gold fluted line.    At  $1.00 and $1.25\nNEW TEA SETS of 21 pieces, in tan and   blue   with   floral   decoration.     The\n\u00bbet   $9.75 and $10.75\nDinner Sets for Xmas\nWe regret to say that owing to the coal situation in England, there will be no\nmore deliveries till next year. We auv ise early selection now, and delivery can\nbe made next month if desired. \u25a0\n97-Piece Dinner Sets, the set  $25.00,  $31.50,   $32.50  to  $39.50\nCAKE PLATES, for prizes.   Smart Chi na  Plates  in  some  new  colorings.    At\nprices of  $1.0\u00a9, $1.25*, ETC.\nA SELECTION OF FANCY COMPOTES AND CHINA TRAYS, in canary and\nblue.    At  98\u00abS $2.00, $2.25 and $3.5\u00a9\nThese make splendid pieces for prizes.\n____-\n Page Ten\nr THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 15, 1926\nThe Ark\nSPECIALS\u2014We are overstocked\nwith Comforters. Until stock It reduced we will Rive 25% Discount.\nOur Bargain Table la stll! well supplied with goodi at 25<^ Per yard.\nJlen'a Work Shirts, good quality,\n$1.25. Overall*, heavy, $2.25\n\u25a0pair. Men's Winter Underwear,\n03.00 D\" \">tt.\nJ. W. HOLMES\n14 tM V.rnm  St\nNOW!\nis tho time to give your eyes\ntbe attention they neel.\nLong winter nights made\npleasant when your eyes are\ncomfortably fitted with proper\nglasses. Let a good lens do\nyour work.\nWe use ZEI88 PUNKTAL\nLENSES.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and Optician\nEnlargements\nfrom your negatives make personal gifts which your friends\ncannot buy.\nAny  of  your  good   negatives\nwill yield good enlargements.\nJ. H.  ALLEN\nAmateur Finishing\nPiclur.  Framing\nRsad th* Adv-trtlsementt\nOsV OF WITH PROGRESS\nNelson\nOpera House\nTUESDAY\nNOVEMBER 16th\nOne Night Only\nWilliam Reap presents\nLincoln's spectacular production of Harriet Beecher\nStowe's famous masterpiece,\n'Uncle\nTom's\nCabin'\nIn Four Acts\nSEE\nling     escape\n\u2014Eliza's     thrill\nover  the  ice.\n\u2014The cabin of Unci* Tom.\n\u2014The transformation.\n\u2014Eva in the heavenly realm.\nSPECIAL\nThe   first   25   children   at   the\nOpera   House   Tuesday   evening\nwill be admitted Free if accompanied  by their parents.\nReduced   Prices\u2014 Adults,   60c;\nChildren,   25c.\nHENS BEAT HER\nWorld Record University Layer\nLaid 'Em Tiny; Agassiz\nBird Best\nStock Reducing\nSALE\nWe Are Receiving Daily Large Shipments of\nChristmas Gifts\nTo make room for displaying these, we arc holding\na Three Days' Sale.\nWatch for our large ad in Wednesday's paper.\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nOut-of-Toum Orders Given Particular Attention\nWARD AND BAKER STREETS    -    NELSON, B. C.\nPHONE  81\nThat the world-beating British Columbia hen that laid 351 eggs in a\nyear in the late Agassiz laying contest, nearly one a day, thereby setting a new world record for number,\nmust have turned out cute Uttlo eggs\nsuitable to a pullet ln Its first week,\nIs the deduction Kootenay poultry\nraisers will make from the final returns issued by the management of\nthe contest. While the summary floea\nnot go Into Ihe matter, references to\nthe Individual records of the 460 birds\nthat composed the 46 competing pens\nshow thnt the world-beating layer sot\nonly 288.2 points for her 351 accepted\neggs, and that 116 hens boat her In\npoints. Further than this, her ratio\nof points to egg total Is so small thai\nscores of still other birds had her\ncompletely distanced on average points\nper dozen eggs. In her own pen she\nwas one of the r>oorest point winners,\nbeing beaten by six of her mates,\none of her mates who beat her ln\npoints having laid 90 fewer eggs than\nthe world beater. Taking her points\nas representing that number of eggs\nweighing 24 ounces per dozen, their\naverage weight works out at 13.7\nounces per dozen, which is below the\ndeadfine of 20 ounces. Thus, If considered by themselves, instead of\nweighed ln with the other eggs from\nthe university pen, they must have\nheen excluded under the rules.\nAgassiz    Bird    Weight    Layer\nThe real contest winner Is No. 10\nbird In the Agasslz Experimental farm\npen, which, for It! 326 eggs, got 409.1\npoints\u2014112.9 points more for 25 fewer\neggs.\nIn prolific egg -production\u2014that Is\nto say, number\u2014the contest set a new\nrecord, 86 hens laying 300 eggs or\nover. It is only 12 or 13 years Hlnce\nLady Show-You, the Missouri White\nPlymouth Rock, with her 303 eggs,\nmade her world record, being the\nfirst hen record as passing the three-\ncentury mark. Lady Show-You's mark\nwnuLtMLE   AND   RETAIL waH exactly duplicated In-this contest\nYou   Mutt  Havo  It .     ^y a Kootenay hen, belonging to H.W.\nFor   Porftct   Toast   in   tho   Morning | Chalmer\u201e   of   Thrums.    In   point   of\nfact, many of the hens that passed\nthe 309-mark in this contest, and that\nwere close to the university leader in\nnumber, made splendid showings In\npoints.\nLeghorni   Laid   Most\nBeside the 36 in the 300-egg class,\n86 hens laid from 275 to 299; 85 laid;\nfrom 250 to 274; 111 laid from 225\nto 249, and 74 laid from 200 to 224.\nThis leaves 68 that were under the\n200-egg mark.\nThe breed average was fairly close.\nThe White Leghorns averaged 237.9\neggs per hen; the Barred Plymoifh\nRocks, 210.6; the White Wyandotte,\n204.C; the Rhode Island Red, 204, and\nthe Anconas, 202.\n0. K. BAKERY\n714   Stsnley   St\nPhono  166\nPrincess Marlha of Sweden, shown\nabove, Is the oldest sister of Princess   Astrid    and    was    one    of    the\nbridesmaid^ at tho royal wedding between Princess Astrid and Prince\nLeopold  of   Belgium.\nIN\nSlocan District\nBoard Wdl Meet\nMissionary From India the Anniversary Speaker at\nSt. Paul's\nI\nNOTICE\nTo Car Owners\nCommencing Sunday, November 14, all garages but two will close\nall day Sunday, nnd on week days at 8 p.m. Cooperation of the public Is solicited by the garages of the city. Notices will be posted on\nclosed- garages, stating those open.\nSunday, November 14, and week following, Kootenay Garage and\nFairview  Service  Station  open.\nMrs. Ward  Avoids Two  Cars\nbut Third Hits Her; Goes\nto Hospital\nRev. Mr. Harcourt, a missionary\nin India, spoke briefly at St. Pauls'\nchurch here yesterday morning on\nthe occasion of the anniversary of\nthe church, on the tremendous influence of the gospel in the lives of\nconverted   natives.\nHe said God was stirring up a\ndivine unrest. Men and women\nwere not satisfied with their lives,\nand were facing problems which\nstirred them to the very depths of\ntheir souls.\nIndia was a tremendous country\nIn which there were about 320,000,-\n000 people of many different tribes\nand castes.\nIts fertility ond beauty made lt\none of the greatest drawing cards in\nthe world, and the temperature\nranged from equatorial heat In the\nsouth to frigid on the heights of the\nHimalayan    mountains.\nSome Tribes Turned  Criminal\nMany of the. old original tribes\nhad been subdued. Others had been\ndriven from post to post, always\nfighting for existence. These wanderers were known as the criminal\ntribes, and they carried their natural fighting .spirit into their churcl^\nwork.\nMr. Harcourt spoke of the Ghoork\nas, a group of tribes numbering\nabout 12,000,000 people, which had\nnever been conquered. They held\nJnige tracts of land, and when the\nmissionaries penetrated into the\ndepths of their cuuntiy they sometimes found tha natives worshipping\nthe forces of nature.\nFred A. Starkey, commissioner of\nthe Associated Boards of Trade of\nEastern British Columbia, has been\nadvised by Andrew Sbilland that\na mooting of the Slocan district\nboard of trade will be called in the\nnear'future to deal with Important\nbusiness.\nMANY    APPLY\nTORONTO, Nov. 14.\u2014Applications\nfrom Canadian footballers sufficient\nto form half a dozen soccer teams\nare reported to have reached the\nDominion Foo.ball association, for\nplaces on tho Canadian team which\nis  to   tour   New   Zealand.\nNelson News of the Day\nTODAY \u2014AKNIVERSARY D1KWXR,\nST. PAUL'S CHURCH PAH-LOSS, AT\n6 P.M. OOOD EATS, OOOD MUSIC.\nADMISSION   BOc. (-56*0)\nHons of Bngland moots tonight at 8\no'clock in  Memorial   Hall. (5629)\nWednesday November 17th in the K.\nP.   Hull,   Liidles  of   Co\u00abrt   Ellen.   A.O.F.,\n\u25a0Hilt of work, Know and useful urticles,\nhome cooking and candy, Ten will be\nserved  Irom I!  to 6. (r-836)\nHerbert Wood  Receives  Term\nfor His Assault on\nTrain Crew\nHerbert Wood, who elected speedy\ntrial and plea\/.ed guilty before Judge\nJ. A. Forin, last week, to a chargp\nof throwing stones at a moving Canadian Pacific railway freight train on\nNovember 1, was sentenced by Judge\nForln Saturday morning to serve .\\\nterm of two months in Jail.\nCn November 1, Wood was charged\nin the city police .court with trespassing on the C. P. R. yards. He was\nreleased on suspended t\/.ntence .ind\nordered to leave Nelson. He went to\nBrilliant, stealing a ride on a passenger train. At Brilliant he was thrown\noff and became Incensed against the\ncrew of a freight train which was on\na siding there. When the freight\ntrain pulled out he threw stones at tt.\nC. P. R. Constable B, J. House arrested him at Castlegar that night\nand he was brought into Nelson.\nHe came before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel on his preliminary-\nhearing and wag sent up for trial.\n -^\t\nDr. J. R. Hayes, aged 95, personal\nphysician to Abraham Lincoln, died\nin   Washington.      \t\nEfficiency\nIs    very\ndesirable.     Is   your    motor\nefficient?\nSatisfaction    and    Workmanship\nGuaranteed\nSMEDLEY GARAGE CO\nThe New Blue\nOvercoats\nIF YOU'RE choosing a\nblue overcoat\u2014and who\nisn't this year?\u2014you'll\nwant it in one of these\nnew patterns. They give\na look of character to be\ngained in no other way.\nThe fabrics are warm,\nserviceable, exclusive. And\nof course, when you choose\nan Emory coat, you can be\ncertain your. coat has the\ncorreft cut.\n$35, ?40, *4S\nNelson Business College\nEVENING CLASSES\nIndividual  Tuition\nIncrease Your Salary\nNelson's Disponing Chemists\nCITY DRUG CO.\nFilms,  Kodaks,  Drum Stationary.\nMall    Orders    Promptly    Despatch ad.\nBOX 1083     Nelson. B.C.     PHONI S4\nColonel K Sims will conduct special\nMfeting.s at tin- Hiilviition Army today,\n4 p.m. Meeting for Children, in which\nihe  Colonel   will  give   chalk  talks and\nnbJtCt   lessons;  8   p.m.\u2014Special  Meeting\nAll   welcome.       . (-5637)\nMarcelling \u2014- Mrs.  \\V.   Swannell,  (103\nKootenay street, or Phon* HIT, (5610)\nIf your paper is not delivered by 6:30\no'clock every morning, please telephone\nThe Doilv News. You are entitled to\nreceive your paper by this time.    (4106)\nReserve   Tuesday    16th    for   the   Rebekah Whial  Orlvs and Daaee,    (5686)\nSt. Andrew's Night Tuesday November -10th. \u25a0 I'ian MeLeary Whist Drlw\nand Danoa. Admission 75 rents. Cards\n8 p.m.    Dancing until  1 a.m, (550B)\n\u25a0Mrs. TV. A. Ward of Procter was\nshocked and bruised when she was\nstruck down, in Nelson about 0\no'clock, last night, by a car driven\nby Marian Brown, negro taxi driver,\nat the Baker and Ward streets intersection.\nFollowing the accident, Mrs. Ward\nwas rushed I* the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, but Dr. W. O. Rose,\nwho attended her, could find no\nserious   hurt.\nMrs. Ward stated In the hospital\nlast night that she avoided two cars,\nbut a third, coming around the\ncorner, hit her before she had time\nto move.\nYour Teeth and Disease\nThere are a great many diseases the origin of which has\nbeen traced directly to the tee th. Guard yourself against disease by having sound teeth. i\nLet us examine them regularly.\nDR. KEELEY\n4W\/a BAKER ST.\nDentist\nNELSON, B.C.\nSaw Mill Supplies\nAXE*\nSAWS\nPEAVIES\nCANT HOOKS\nLOGGING   TOOLS\nRUBBER    BELTING-\nCHAIN\nCORDAGE\nCOTTON WASTE\nENGINE   PACKING\nLUBRICATING   OIL\nALL   8IZE8\nPrompt Attention to Mail Orders\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, B. C.\nRETAIL\nPublic Health Work\nan Institute Topic\nPublic health work wilt be one\nof the topics at the two-day gathering of Kootenay Central Women's\ninstitute, which opens in Nelson\ntomorrow, and Miss M. Garrood.\nProcter, district public health nurse,\nwill give an address tomorrow afternoon. .Mrs. James Johnstone will\nbe one of tha convention speakers\nWednesday afternoon.\nWANDERERS WIN\nUltra-Violet Rays\nMake Taller and Fatter\nBoys in England\nSMETHWICK Kng., Nov. 14.\u2014Taller\nand fatter schoolboys are being devel-\nopen here by the simple expedient of\nequipping classrooms with a kind of\nwindow glass that allows ultry-violet\nrays to pass into the room,\nDr. J. B. Ferguson, the school medical officer, han reported that during a\nnine-months' teat in a classroom so fitted, the boys grew half an Inch taller\nand three pounds heavier than colleagues in an adjoining room lighted by\nordinary glass, which, the doctor says,\ncuts out the vital ultra-violet rays almost completely.\nWednesday November 24 \u2014 Trinity\nChurch,    IWIlal  by  Erik   Th.   Fit-tin.\n(5597)\nTODAY\u2014ANNIVERSARY SINNER\nST, PAUL'S CHURCH PARLORS, AT\n6 P.M. GOOD SATS, GOOD MTTRXO,\nADMISSION  50C. (f>\u00ab40)\nHowe Electric Co.\nNELSON,\n\"The   Home  of  Good   Lighting\"\nElectric  Light  Plants and Gasoline Lighting  SystemB\nfor Country Homes.\nWe   have   a   large* selection   of\nArtistic and Up-tn-Date Lighting\nFixtures.\nB. C. PLUMBING k\nHEATING CO.\nAgents for\nALBERTA   CLAY   PRODUCTS\nSEWER PIPE * DRAIN TIL!\n306 Baker St. Nelaon, B. C.\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nSpecializing    In    Correcting    Defective\nSight   by   Proper   Glasaea.\nQuick  Repair Service.\nGRIFFIN    BLK.    -    .    PHONE   125\nNothing is too good for the sick\nSmy the's Pharmacy\nPrescription Specialist\nTn business for your health. Let ns\nfill your prescriptions. Mall orders\npromptly executed Call and wait for\nyour car.    Phona 1.\nSunday hours i   1 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.\n\u25a0=:\nThe gift-making custom was\ninspired by sentiment. Express\nthe true sentiment of Christmas\nin gifts to those, you love\u2014send\nphotographs.      \t\nArrange now for an aarly\nsittinfl and solve twelve or\nmore of your personal gift\nproblems.\nreqor\nTUDiO\nANNABLE   BLOCK\nP. O. Box 641\nPhone 224\nMarcels, manicures and ficlals at\nyour home or nt 810 Cedar street. AIpo\nwater waves, sbalp treatment*. Phase\nH83L.    Mrs* Beeles. (fill!)\nFREDERICTON, N.B., Nov. 13.\u2014\nThe Halifax Wanderers doubled the\nscore on University of New Brunswick yesterday winning 12 to 6\nthereby taking the home and home\nEnglish rugby series by 20 to 6.\n\u2014 m \u2014\nMRS.   BOTHA   CEMENTS   UNION\nLONGUEVAL, France, Nov. 14.\u2014\nMrs. Lou,\/ Botha, wife of the late\nOaneral Botha, played tho principal\npart in the unveiling of the Delvllle\nWood memorial to the South African\nsoldiers who fell in tbe world war.\nHer presence meant the temporary\nburying of the political hatchet between the two opposing parties in\nSouth Africa.\nIt was through General Hertiog-,\npremier of the South African union,\nthe most prominent political adversary of her late husband, that Mrs.\nBotha received her invitation. Gifted\nwith a remarkable capacity for politics, Mrs. Botha has always delighted\nIn bringing together conflicting interests and elements, and played a great\npart in the achievement of the Union\nof South Africa-\nHolds Thirty-Dollar\nBill Issued Many\nHundred Years Ago\nNEW BBITA1N, Conn., Nov. 14. \u2014 A\nbona fide J30 bll) Is held by Bernard\nL. Hoppe of this city. Local banking\nhouses pronounce it authentic, and\nHoppe has refused many times its face\nvalue.\nThe note, dated September 26, 1778.\nand signed by \"A. Lawdence, secretary\nof the United States treasury,\" is numbered 217,305. It is, about one-fourth\nthe size of a modern dollar bill. Bank\ners Bay it is still legal tender.\nMr. Alvln E. Perkins un old Helms-\nman & Co. tuner, is in the elty, Orders\nmay be phoned to New Grand Hotel.\nMr. I'erklns knnws his business, and\nmakes good, and comes strongly endorsed by many leading piano manufacturers, and others of highest authority.\n(*T>\u00ab10)\nComing\u2014Len   Pavls   and   his   Arcadians   for   a   retutrn   engagement  at   the\nKagle Hall    Wednesday   November  17.\n(5611)\nThere will he a special practice for\nmen members of the Nelson Operatic\nSticlety in the Strathcona Hotel on Monday   November 15th   at 8 p.m.        (5613)\n(5430)\nTHE    QUILL   18   OPE2T.\n.Annual    Meeting    Women's    Conatrv-\nativa Association this afternoon at 3\no'clock. 007 Vernon street. Election of\nofficers. Address by Mrs. E. H S McLean. Afternoon tea. (5641)\nWAT-\n(5431)\nWomen's     Soles,     fl.25    AT\nSOWS.\nDUCHESS PREFERS  HORSES\nLONDON\", Nov. 14.\u2014The Duchesa\nof Buckingham never uses a motor\nbecause she prefers her stately carriage and pair of fine bay horses.\nROYAL   HAIR   SHEARED\nPARIS, Nov. 14.\u2014The \"Modern-\nlser of the Gotha\" Is the latest title\napplied ln France to Queen M.irie\nof Rumania for being. the pioneer\nreigning queen to have her hair\nbobbed.\nHer example has bean followed by\nseveral princesses of the royal families in Europe, among whom Is the\nformer Princess Astrid Of Sweden,\nPrincesses Ingrld, Marguerite and\nMartha of Sweden; Princess .Marie\nJose of Belgium; Princess Helen of\nGreece, wife of the former Crown\n'Prince Carol of Rumania and Princess Irene of Greece.\nNone of the Italian princesses have\nsacrificed to style. They have beautiful hair of which they art very\nproud.\nForthcoming Events\nWhen arranging for any affair of\na public or astai-pubUo natui* in\nNelson, it is advisable to-Hacarrala\nthat no oompetfng event has besn\narranged for the date contemplated. Two events of a similar\nnature on on* ev*ning may spoil\nthe attendance at both. It ls alio\nvary desirable, when a date has\nbeen decided upon to let the public know of lt, so that no oilier\nOMupeting affair may be arranged\nfor the same evening,\nTo meet this situation. The Dally\nHows is commencing a \".forthcoming Events\" column wfrich will appear below \"Nelson Mews of the\nDay.\"\nThii oolumn will be confined to\nnotices of affairs a week or more\ndlrtant. Events arrangad for ear*\nll*r date* wi|l be advertised nnfier\nthe \"Kelson Hews of tha Day\"\nheading.\nThe charge for the first insertion will be 25 cents for one line\nand 15 oents for each additional\nline. Host announcements In this\ncolumn con be couf!*\u00abd to one line.\nAdditional insertions will he\ncharged at 15 otuts a Una.\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysician   and   8urgoon\nSuit.  60S   to   609   Rookery   Building,\nCorner Riveralde and Howard.\nOver  Whit.houaa.\n\u2022 POKANF.    WA\u00bbH\nTonight\n7 and 9\nmmim\nTonight\n7 and 9\nNicola   Chorny,   Auitrlan,   walked\noil a Soo dock and waa drowned.\nBEB\nIELS\nCLARENCE BADGER\nQretucttcm\nWARNER BAXTER\nFORD STERLING\ni.ioT*\u2014,\",. auuaa\nQQnmmatniQlcbi-\nSHE had to squander a million\nin three months.\nCome and watch bewitching Bebe\nburn up the town.\nA de luxe comedy and a gorgeous\nfashion parade combined.\nCOMEDY\n'His Wooden Wedding'\nNovelty Reel\nPathe News\nPAY NITE\nBetter than Bonds\nSCRIP BOOKS\ncult the CaMueJv\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1926_11_15","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403325","@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":"1926-11-15 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1926-11-15 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\/1.0403325"}