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C, SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1927\nNo. 186\nWalker, Risko Win\nSee Pa\u00bbe 7\nALIFORNIA JAIL INMATES SURRENDER\n'OUKH0B0RS TALK EDUCATION AT VICTORIA\nReorganize   Whole   Con-\nSchool System Under\nNow Leader's Plan\nENCOURAGE YOUTH\nN HIGHER EDUCATION\ntt   Councils   WiU   Super-\n; Means Building Additional Schools\nCTORIA,   Nn.  M.  \u2014  A  new\nI la ta prev.il between the\n(k.bor comraanltles In the In-\nr ami th* British Columbia au-\ntles.- Following the visit or\n' Verlgln it. to the various dls-\nIn the Kootenay and Bonn-\ndistricts and the announced\n' for tbe expansion of tbe cumin an Industrial war, deaf which were published this\n. the community has tent a\nalien to Victoria to discuss\nthe government the plans for\n(it, and to five official\nof a chanced spirit In\n\u2022a to education.\n\u25a0dint the party Is Haul Blru-\nwho has been Introduced from\n(l te take charier of the educa-\nderelopment of the eom-\nUes.\nU\u00ab8 OUT\nCRT)\nIs  to  carry  out  the  policies\nlewn hy Mr. Verlgln In a series\nkMtlms  held   recently   In  the\n\"' ns \/ta the  Christian\n\u25a0unity  of   Universal   Brother-\nis tbe organization Is ufflcl-\n. education Is to be given,\nooeuradeinents to the pupils to\nI throUth tbe lower and middle\nto higher education.   This will\na number of additional primary\nIn, the localities.\nBlrukoff said lt was proposed to\nie   district   council, among  the\nnlties.  composed of a president,\npsldent and secretary, with rep-\ntlves of the sll departments ln-\n:h their activities are divided.\nI councils would be charged with\nIng   the   Industries  operated  by\n\"rkhobors, which Include 17 wood\nplants, and make lt possible\nJoukhobora to *ork In commun-\nBlements.\nD III FERNIE\nSought   Since   January,\n|S2, for Alleged Crime,\nstums to Old Haunts\n\u25a0IB, B.C.. Nov. IS\u2014Charged with\n\" and sought by police since\n1113, a man said to be James\nlea, alias A. wUhart Oakes. alias\njjameron. alias James W. Mclfally,\nrested today by Chief of Pence\ntin after he had attempted, police\nI cash a forged check.\n. signed ln blank by the then\nE. J. Roberta, of the Flathead\ncompany, operated by the Corrals, limited, at corbin. were\nland amounts aggregating some\n(ere cashed under tbe name ot\n|W.  Oakes.    When arrested the\nwas going ulder the name ol\nhart Oakes. He will come up for\nfrly next Week.\nKootenay Misses\nass the CM Service\n'xams for Stenographers\n \u2014\nORIA. Nov. JS\u2014ninety-seven\nrtes from all parte of British Co-\nwere successful ln the civil serv-\nnlnatlons for stenographers, held\n---\u25a0\u00bb.    They Include the fol-\nJrook  Junior\u2014Miss X. Kennedy,\nWeston,\ne Junior\u2014Miss A. Halgh.\nJunior\u2014Miss L, M. Burkltt.\ntt Junior\u2014Mis* A. B. Pollock,\nn Junior\u2014Mlsa p. Smith,\noton Junior\u2014Muws I. R. Cham-\nd I. M. Manery.\nHas Ended the\nBreaking of Ships\nto Curtail Arms\nADELFHIA. Nov. IS\u2014The United\nwill .\"never again break up ships\niperty while other nations build.\"\ntrtatlve Thomas Butler, chairman\nnouee naval affairs committee.\nI today in discussing the naval\nm he expects te come before the\nassembling -on  Decem-\nhave broken up our last public\n\u2022 r said . Congressman Butler,\nter limitation of armaments will\nrled out by tiurtalllng existing\n\u00bb and not by hauling American\nof war out Into the Atlantic and\nthem.\"\nYukon Plane Is Believed Lost\nJTJNEAU, Alaska, Mot. M.\u2014Wort was\nreceiYed here tonight by the Empire\nfrom Skagway that the plane \"Queen\nof the Yukon\" piloted by Major Cruickshank, Canadian aviator and carrying\none passenger, wu overdue at Mayo,\nY.T., from White Horse. The plane\nleft White Rone yesterday for Mayo,\n900 miles northeast, and has not since\nbeen seen. Gasoline for five hours\nwas said to have been carried.\nMajor A. D. Cruickshank recently\ntook bis plane north from Vancouver\nto engage in a passenger and mail\ncarrying service between White Horse,\nMayo and Dawson. His machine ls a\nsister ship to the one used by Colonel\nC. A. Llngbergh in his transatlantic\nflight. The \"*ueen of the Yukon\"\nhad caitying capacity for four passengers and a pilot, Including 800\npounds  of mall.\nLady Godiva on White Horse Thought an\nImproper Pageant So Arts Ball Committee\nin New York Decides Eliminate the Horse\nCHICAGO, Nov. 25.\u2014Having determined that an unclad woman riding a white horse constituted an\nimproper pageant display, and so\nfor the sake of the proprieties deciding to omit the horse, the arts\nball got under way tonight with\n3000 persons awaiting the appearance of a horseless horsewoman from\nDetroit in the role of Lady Godiva.\nMiss Rosalind Hlghtower, who\nflew from Detroit to Chicago to\nportray the part of the English,\ngentlewoman who rode -unclat*\nthrough Coventry, spent the evetilhg\nwondering how she was going to\nlook like a group all by herself\nwithout even a milk-white steed for\ncompany. For the committee tn\ncharge, being of the opinion that\nthe traffic congestion would not admit of the appearance of a horseback rider, decided that Lady Godiva should appear rh a gilt picture\nframe.\nEMBARRASSED? \u2014 NO!\nLady Godiva, announced the committee, as ticket prices Jumped\nfrom 13 to #15, will wear nothing\nexcept long blonde tresses, and possibly an embarrassed expression.\nMiss Hlghtower, in private life Mrs.\nMelvyn Hesselberg and the mother\nof a child, haa told curious reporters, however, that she ls an artist,\n, and that a nude causes her no more\nembarrassment than an unclad cow.\nLady Godiva was the climax of a\npageant Intended to portray things\nas they were ln the year 2000.\nLady Godlva's \"group\" was preceded by the entire ballet of the\nChicago Opera company, and 85\nother persons trying to look like\nnine different events ln 2000 A.D.\nTrotzkyism Is\nStalin Party\nPlatform of the Opposition Is Voted\nDown\nMOSCOW, Nov. 25.\u2014An overwhelm'\ning defeat for the platform of the\nopposition led by Leon Trotzky, has\nbeen recorded by the Communists' com\nmittee. The newspapers state that \u2022\u25a0\nvote In Communist local units, in the\ngreater part of Russia, on the platform\npresented by the central committee and\nby the opposition resulted ln only 3600\nvotes for the opposition's platform de\nagainst 020,000 cast for the program\npresented by Joseph Etalln, the Communist leader.\n\"The workers and bolsheviks met the\nheroes of the second party with a hall\nof ridicule and a storm of proletarian\nwrath,\" says Pravda. \"They settled accounts with Trotzkyism in true proletarian fashion, annihilating lt politically.\"\nHOPES YET FOR\nMine   in   Arizona   Begins   to\nClear; Officials More\nHopeful\nSUPERIOR, Ariz.. Nov. 26.\u2014A ray of\nhope for five miners missing ln the fire-\nswept recesses of the Magna Copper\ncompany workings here was voiced tonight with the report of rescue crews\nthat the airfwas clearing and the heat\ndiminishing fn the mine.\nAlthough veteran miners felt certain\nthat the five could not have withstood\nthe fumes from 'the blase which swept\nup shaft No. 2 yesterday and claimed\nat least two lives, William Koener, general manager of the company, declared\nhe believes \"there was some hope\" for\nthe men.\n\"Everything depended,\" he said, \"on\nhow the men kept their heads.\"\nHe believed that with the knowledge\nof the mine ther might have been able\nto retreat to some recess, barricade,\nthemselves In, and withstand the with-'\nering flames And suffocating flames. Two\nbodies were recovered yesterday. '\nMiss Bealby Shines\nin Nursing Exams; Two\nOthers Are Successful\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 25.\u2014Most of\nthe nurses who wrote for the title\nof registered nurse at the annual\nexaminations of the Graduate\nNurses' Association of British Columbia, held in September, were\nsuccessful, 74 of the 70 candidates\npassing. Results were announced\ntoday.\nThe following Nelson nurses\nwere successful:\nMiss Olive Bealby, first class\n(above 00 per cent).\nMiss Myrtle Pynn and Miss\nEmmallne Burgess passed (60 and\n70 per cent).\nLady Bullock Is\nSeriously Hurt\nWhile Hunting\nMELTON MOWBRAY, Eng., Nov.\n25.\u2014Lady Victoria Bullock, daughter of Lord Derby, who was Injured\ntoday at a hunt attended by the\nPrince of Wales and Prince Henry.\nwas still unconscious tonight, and\nIt was feared that her skull had\nbeen fractured. ,,\nNo one was with Lady Victoria\nwhen the accident happened, but\nshe was found afterward by her\nbrother, Lord Stanley, lying unconscious under a low archway which\nhad apparently caught her head.\nLONDON, Nov. 25.\u2014Revolutionary\nactivity ,ln Ukraine, accompanied by\nsevere fighting, was reported today ln\ndispatches from Bucharest, Rumania,\nbut tonlfht had failed to receive confirmation * from continental news\nagencies.\nMoose Jaw Youth\nGets Eighteen Months\nTerm on Theft Charge\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., Nov. 25\u2014Robert Campbell, local youth, waa sentenced by Judge Buckles ln district\ncourt here this afternoon to 18 months'\nImprisonment for his part ln the robbery of Carruthers Hide & Fur com*\npany on December 28, 1026. Campbell\ncreated a stir ln local police circles,\nfollowing his arrest a year ago, when\nhe broke\" from the custody of a constable at- the very door of the station,\nmade good his escape and remained\nat large until October 9. 1927, when\nhe  was rearrested.\nJack Cfoss, an accomplice, was\nsentenced , ln January, 1027, to four\nyears' tn Jail, a term later reduced\nby  the. appeal  court  to  23   months.\nCanada and Cuba\nComplete Agreement\nfor Intertrade\nOTTAWA, Nov. 26.\u2014Hon. James Robb,\nminister bf finance, announced today\nthat negotiations had been completed\nwith the government of the republic of\nCuba whereby Imports Into Canada\nwould bt > admitted under the general\nrate for a' period of a year unless \u00bb per\nmanent trade convention ls concluded\nearlier.\nCanada. In exchange, grants to Cuba\nthe benefits of the intermediate tariff\non products originating In and coming\nfrom. Cuba.\nThe new arrangement cornea into\nforce today ln both countries.\nDR.BORDENIS\nAPPLAUDED AT\nConservative Nominee for Nelson Addresses Ney Westminster Association\nPRAISES WORK OF\nLADV CONSERVATIVES\nHon.   Dr.  Tolmie  Opposes  Increment Tax; Urged Dollar\nfor Dollar Spent\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Nov.\n25.\u2014Round after round of applause greeted Dr. L. E, Borden,\nConservative candidate In the recent Nelson hy-elect Ion, when he\nentered the big Conservative meeting here tonight, and Chairman\nMacDonald told of the Conservative\nsuccess In cutting more than 300\nvotes off Ihe former Liberal mn-\nJortty In Nelson, reducing It to 28.\n(JAINS  APPLAL'SE\nDr.   Borden,   In   a   sperrli   which\nwas  frequently   Interrupted   by  applause, paid a great tribute to Hon.\nS.   F.   Tolmie,   Conservative   leader.\nHe told his audience that Kootenay\nConservatives   were   solidly   behind\ntheir   leader   and   were   organizing\nfor  a  sweeping  victory  in  the  general\nelection.     Wtth   such   a   leader   as   Dr.\nTolmie,   he   said,   a   leader   true   and\nfaithful to the best and highest traditions of the party, lt was a pleasure to\nwork.\nPRAISES   LADIES\nHe told New Westminster Conaerva-\ntlves of the splendid wogkjphloji had\nbeen done ln Nelson b'y^K* 'members\nof the party, and particularly by the\nladies. Nelson had, said Dr. Borden, a\nladles' Conservative organization which\nhad no superior anywhere in the province.    It was perfection.\nIn his address, Hon. Dr. Tolmie, who\noutlined his policy for the redevelopment of British Columbia's resources,\ninstanced the Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting company as an example of\nthe benefits which accrued to the province from the sound and businesslike\ndevelopment of mining and smelting.\nHe quoted the Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting company's output. Its payroll. Its expenditures on supplies and\nIts profits as proof of the energy and\nenterprise of its management and of\nthe value of manufacturing as far as\npossible of British Columbia's natural\nresources at home.\nDevelop British Columbia's resources\nby encouraging capital and enterprise,\nsaid the Conservative leader, and the\ngovernment would be In a better position to provide the public services\nwhich were required But extravagance\nand waste must be abolished and \"a\ndollars worth of value received for\nevery dollar spent.\" He opposed the\nIncrement tax and other encumbrances\nto enterprise.\nU.S.C0NSTIT0TI\nSTANDS IN W\nPresident Favorable to Binding\nPeace, but Says It Is Up\nto Congress\nWASHINGTON. DC, Nov. 25.\u2014Anxious to discuss with world powers proposals for the outlawing of war, President Coolidge feels, nevertheless, that\nthe constitution of the United States\npresents a serious difficulty ln the way\nof a binding treaty.\nIt was recalled today at the White\nHouse that the constitution places with\ncongress the responsibility of declaring\nwar. Mr. Coolidge believes congress\ncannot, therefore, be deprived of this\npower by any treaty, but he thinks a\ntreaty expressing a declaration of policy\nls possible.\nIf treaties are to be negotiated, he\nthinks they should be mode separately\nbetween governments. In this connection, Chairman Borah of the senate relations committee, today advocated that\nthe principle of the proposed treaty to\noutlaw war between France and the\nUnited States be extended to negotiations with all leading world powers\nThere are Indications that a general\nconference of these nations on this subject would be desired by some congressional leaders.\nCaptain Bernier of\nExploration Fame is\nHonored by Willingdon\nOTTAWA, Nov. 25\u2014Captain Joseph\nBernier, veteran arctic explorer, who\nserved for many years with, the Canadian government ln Its endeavor to\ndevelop the northernmost ,section of\nthe country, was today presented with\na medal by his excellency the governor-\ngeneral. JThe presentation took place\nIn his excellency's office, In the presence of Major B. L. McRean, assistant\ndirector of the Northwest .Territories\nand Yukon branch of the department\nof the Interior.\nHe Is Cheered\nDR.   L.   E.   BORDEN\nConservative nominee of Nelson, who\nwas loudly cheered and applauded when\nhe spoke at a meeting of the New\nWestminster Conservative association\nlast   night.\nDEEP RESPECTS\nIM PREMIER\nPolitical     Issues     Forgotten;\nPublic Flock to View\nBody\nBKIIAREST, Nov. 25\u2014The executive committee nt the National\nLiberal party tonfvht named viii-\ntHa Bratiano party leader ad interim until confirmed by a general\nparty congrrsN an successor to his\nbrother, Premier lonel Bratiano,\nwho died yesterday.\nBUCHAREST. Nov. 25.\u2014Amid every\nsign of national grief and mourning the\nbody of Premier Bratiano was removed\ntoday to the Athenaeum Palace, where\nIt will He in state until his funeral\nSunday.\nDespite wintry weather the public\nflocked reverently to view the remains\nof the dead patriot, for he is recognized\nas a great patriot even by newspapers\nthat opposed his general policy.\nTranquillity remains undisturbed everywhere, a sort of political truce being\ntacitly observed until after the funeral.\nThis means only that no active steps\nare being taken to reorganize the government, but this does not prevent\nmany Informal talks and conferences by\nthe various party leaders and organizations on the subject of the future, which\nseems to be shaping ln the direction of\na coalition government.\nThe dead premier's younger brother,\nVintlla Bratiano, meantime, ls carrying\non the necessary duties of the administration, and told press representatives\nthat negotiations for a national cabinet\nwere progressing favorably.\nDr. Julio Manlea, leader of the opposing National Peasants* party, has demanded dissolution of the parliament\nand a new election, which he believes\nwill terminate the domination of the\nincumbent Liberal party.\nLIB WM\nMi\nOnly Name for Nomination in\nSaskatchewan; Stir After\nNominations Close\nREGINA, Sask.. Nov. 26.\u2014William O\nBock, Liberal, was this afternoon elected\nby acclamation as a member of the\nhouse of commons for the Maple Creek\nseat made vacant through the resig\nnation of George Spence, who ts now\nSaskatchewan minister of railways.\nWlitle there had been some talk of opposing Mr. Bock when the nominations\nwere closed at Scotsguard this afternoon, no one had filed papers to contest the election. Some excitement waa\ncaused shortly before the nominations\ncloaed when a man named Cole from\nSouth Fork walked Into the office of\nthe returning officer and asked to be\nnominated. He had no nomination\npapers and had made no provision for\nthe election deposit. Bock has been a\nfarmer ln the East End district for\nmany   years.\nConservatives Hold\nCanterbury Seat But\nMajority Is Reduced\nCANTERBURY, England. Nov. 25.\u2014\nThe Conservative party retained Its\nhold on the Cantey&ury constituency\nat a by-election, but with a much reduced majority.\nThe figures made public today showed\nthat Sir W. Wayland, Conservative, waa\nelected, 13,657, against Colonel D. Carnegie, Liberal, 10,176. The Conservative\nmajority at the last election was mora\nthan 9000.\nThe by-election was necessitated by\nthe elevation of Donald McNeill to tha\npeerage.\nMILITIA SNIPERS HI\nIHTO CELL HOUSE WHERE SOME\nTWELVE HUNDRED BARRICADED\nPoUsh Situation\nIs Watched With\nMuch Uneasiness\nPARIS, Nov. 26\u2014The French\nforeign office ls watching developments of the Pollsh-Llthuantan-\nRusslan situation with the sharpest Interest.\nDispatches received from lta legation at Warsaw today Indicated\nthat the Polish government la\nmaintaining a moderate attitude.\nPoland ls described as having no\npurpose either of making war Itself or of committing any act\nwith relation to Lithuania or\nRussia which would provoke those\ncountries to acts of violence.\n(Dispatches from Moscow today\nstated that a friendly remonstrance had been sent by the\nSoviet to Warsaw pointing out\nthe danger to world peace of any\nPolish act against Lithulanla.)\ni France's -alliance with Poland\ndoes not bind France, lt was said\nhere, to give military aid to Poland, but only to examine the\nquestion of whether lt would be\nthe duty of France to support\nPoland ln a war which might be\nforced upon her.       '\nEleven Dead, Score Injured\nIs Result of Attempted\nBreak\nVfarring Political\nFaction* Compromise ;\nWaldemars Replaced\nr BERLIN, Nov. 25.\u2014A\ndispatch to the newspaper\nVoerwaerts from Kovno,\nLithuania, says that warring political factions have\nagreed to a compromise,\nand will reconstruct the\ngovernment on liberal lines.\nColonel Merkys, governor of Memel, is slated to\nsucceed Augustine Waldemars as premier.\nPlacards urging armed\nresistance to the present\ngovernment are reported tb\nhave been- posted throughout Kovno.\nBerlin Fears Certain\nOutbreak on Frontier\nPoland and Lithuania\nUIKI,IN, Nov. 25.\u2014Ihe situation\non the Polish-Lithuania frontier\nstirs the Berlin press us being rilled\nwith alarming possibilities. The\nVossl.Lche \/.HIunit's correspondent at\nKovno reports that the position of\nPremier Wuldemars Is precarious, as\nhe Is uncertain of the loyalty of a\nlarge number of military officers.\nLithuania polltlcans who fled\nfrom Riga to Vilna are reported to\nbe preparing, with Polish assistance,\na new coup d' etat.\nCollisions have already occurred\non the frontier, says the dispatch,\nbetween police and revolutionary\nbands from Vilna.\nTHREATS OF FLOOD AND\nSTARVATION  ALSO AID\nSix Leaders of Uprisisf ia\nSolitary Confinement;\nFace Murder\nFOLSOM   PRISON,   Cal.,\nNov. 25.\u2014Hopelessly beleaguered by a force of national guardsmen and civil\nofficers equipped with\nweapons of war, revolting\nconvicts at the state prison\nhere meekly surrendered\ntoday, ending a mutiny in\nwhich 11 men were killed\nand more than a score\nwounded.\nThreats by Warden\nCourt Smith that the cell\nhouse in which 1200 of the\nprisoners were barricaded\nwould be flooded and that\nthe rebels would be starved\nout contributed to the collapse of the mutiny. 9_ut\nthe deadly accuracy bf\nriflemen stationed on a hill\noverlooking the prison was\nthe principal factor in the\ncapitulation.\nNine convicts and >two\nprison guards lost their\nlives in the pitched battle\nwaged yesterday between\nthe rebellious prisoners\nand the beseigers. Seventeen convicts were wounded\nand four guards injured.\nIN SOLITARY\nCONFINEMENT\nSix convicts declared by\nthe warden to have been\nthe ringleaders in the uprising were placed in solitary    confinement.      Murder    charges\nwill   be   filed   against   them,   Warden\nSmith  said.\nThe six Included:\nWalter E. Burke, Sacramento theater\nbandit, serving from five years to life\n(Continued   on   Faffs   Two.)\nLithuania's Neighbors\nUneasy; Ask Waldemars\nStrengthen Government\nRIGA. Nov. 25.\u2014In connection with\ndisquiet at Kovno over the Lithuanian\nsituation, representatives of Sweden,\nFinland and other friendly states today visited Premier Waldemars, and\nare reported to have advised him to\nestablish a more acceptable form of\ngovernment as soon as possible.\nUnstable conditions, coupled with\nthe aggravated Vtlna question, lt wae\nstated, are causing grave anxiety to\nLithuania's neighbors.\nWaldemars also conferred with his\nmilitary chiefs, who consider the position as threatening.\nWoman Sentenced to\nYear in Jail for\nKilling Husband\nQUEBEC. Nov. 25.\u2014Hilda Nelml, who\nwaa accused of having murdered her\nhusband by hitting him with an axe,\nwas sentenced at the Amos assizes to\n13 months In prison. The death of\nher husband took plast last summer\nand she was charged with murder. At\nthe trial, which concluded yesterday\nwith Judge Camlle Poullot of the superior court presiding, evidence was\nbrought forward showing that the worn\nan killed her husband In self-defence,\nand she wu persuaded to plead guilty\nof manslaughter, for which she waa\ncondemned  to a  year ln Jail.\nCARDINAL SINKING\nROME. Nov. 25.\u2014Grave fears were ex.\npressed tonight for the recovery of Car-\ndlnal Bonzano, who underwent an operation on Saturday.\nTruck Load of\nPerfume Stolen\nin New York City\nNEW YORK. Nov. 25\u2014 A truck load of\nperfume, valued at $15,000, was stolen\ntoday at 15th street and 10th avenue by\nfour armed men who escaped In a maze\nof traffic. The driver waa overpowered,\ntransferred to a sedan, and freed at a\ndistant spot In the Bronx.\nGAS FUMES TAKE\nLIFE OF BRIDE\nKIRKLAND LAKE, Ont., KpV. 25.\u2014\nOas fumes which escaped from a coal\nfire to an adjoining room caused tha\ndeath of Mrs. O. R. L. Hewwn, a bride\nof lew than a year, while she slept\nlast night. Her husband had a narrow\nescape.\nFrom the Dominion Meteorological\nOffice,   Victoria\nMln.\nMax\nNEIJJON\n    33\n40\nVictoria   \t\n    41\n46\nVancouver   - -\n    40\n44\n     32\n34\nBarkervllle   \t\n     12\n32\n    3d\n46\n  to\n38\nAtlln \t\n      \u00bb\u2022\n    \u00ab\u2022\n34'\nSeattle    _\t\n    44\n46\n    4S\n66\nBan   Francisco   \t\n..._.   50\n64\n    48\n52\n    33\n40\n    34\n40\nOrand Forks \t\n    H\n51\nKaslo    _\t\n    M\n48\nCranbrook    \t\n    3\u00ab\n42\n    30\nEdmonton    _\t\n      1\n34\nSwttt Current\t\n    \u00ab4\n40\nPrince Albert \t\n     10\n24\nQuAppeUe   \t\n  to\n44\n* Below aero.\nForeeast\u2014Nelson   and\ntwnlty:\nF\u00bbrt\nly  cloudy and  colder.\n Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1927\nThe Discovery That Brought\nPeace of Mind!\n\"IT WAS YEARS before I knew the\none best way to conquer sluggishness.\nNow, I can do so with the comfortable\nfeeling that I'm removing all taint to\nraspiration, too. That's the big virtue\nsee in the candy laxative\u2014\nCASCARETS\n| Corrects the Chemistry that\nMake One's Pores Offend\nDo you know why thousands of\npeople   who  never  have  to  take  a\nlaxative, do eat a candy cascaret\nnow and then?\nThey have lound that cascara\nsweetens the whole system\u2014brings\nan Immaculacy of person that\nmeans everything. \\t prevents bodily chemistry from ever making one\nunconsciously offensive to others.\nAnd what a perfect regulator of the\nbowels!\nSalts affect the lining of the bowels. Mineral oils leave a coating\nthat the blood must carry off\nthrough the pores. How much better to cascarlze the system, and\ncause the bowels to expel everything by normal muscular contraction! To say nothing of the cleaner, sweeter condition that lasts for\ndays\u2014a wholesome condition that\nmakes the use of deodorants quite\nunnecessary in January or July I\nMen and women whose years have\nbrought on sluggishness often find\nthat a cascaret only once a week ls\nall tbe tonic they need.\nCascara ls splendid for children,\ntoo. and they love the taste of this\ncandy laxative which every drug\nstore has for 10c and 26c,\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Bt Obtained\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nBooms with Running Water, Private Baths en Suite.\nHeadquarter, for all Traveling Men, Mining Men, Lumber lien\nAnd Tourists.\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER \u00bb1.00 ROTARIAN HEADQUARTERS\nThe Most Comfortable Rotunda In the City\nHUME\u2014O. C. Fleming, Willow Point;\nP. Oreen. Calgary; T. Marshall. D. Shln-\ngarman. J. R. Bayne. M. H. Blrktnshaw,\nO. K. Towers, J. M. Shepley. W. C. 8.\nHobklrk. H. Benthum, W. Q. Metcall,\nVancouver; W. M. Perry. Montreal; B. L.\nJamieson. Calgary; A. Harvey. Victoria;\nW. Everett, Trail; O. Jones, Rossland;\nMr. and Mrs. O. C. Marshall, Nelaon; J.\nL. Layson. Granite Road; H. H. Layson,\nKettle Palls. Wash.; J. Brown. Peach,\nWash.; J. O. Whitemore, R. B. Lamb. A.\nH. Scott. Toronto; L. B. Hood, Nelson:\nR. Chelohens, Ymlr; W. Some. Seattle;\nR. G. Malcolm. WLnnlpeg: Dr. and Mrs.\nJ. E. Atteck, Penticton; P. L. Coys. Ottawa; C. E. Curran, Tacoma; T. A. B\nFerris. Victoria.\nMILITIA POURS\nLEAD INTO THE\n(Continue!  From PM* One.1\nfor robbery, said to be a fugitive from\nTexas.\nAnthony Brown.  16-year term  for  a\nSan Francisco robbery.\nRoy   E.   Stokes,   serving   for   a   Loe\nAngeles burglary-\nJames Oleaaon, serving live years to\nlife for robbery.\nAlbert  Lewis  from  Los  Ang.les.   for\nforgery.\nJames H.  Gregg, serving a life  sentence for murder from Fresno county.\nSI KKK.MIKK   IN\nMORNING\nOnly a few of the 1300 prisoners ln\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nTHE GOLDEN GATE\nOPEN  DAT AND NIQHT\nTasty meals at reasonable\nprices. Fresh oysters ln season.\nPrlgldaire and soda fountain\nconnection.\nPHONE  681\nWa^iflgfimiHittiffluaK'.1\nTHE L D. CAFE\nflnee* Equipped Restaurant in the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice Cream, Soda Water\nand Hoi Drinks Nice, clean, furnished rooma, hot and cold water\nWe Cater te Privat. Pertiae.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\nJ20   Baker   8tr*tt,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nOPEN   DAV   AND   NIQHT\n11:30  to  2:30,   Speolal   Lunch,  S6e\n5:80   to    8:00   p.m.,    Supper,    85c\nPHONE   IM\nROYAL CAFE\nClaaaio Restaurant\nRefinement    and     Delicacy     Prevail.\nOPEN  DAY  AND NIQHT.\nLuncheon,   11:30  to 2 lie\nSpecial Dinners 6:20 to I  lie\nWe   specialise   ln   Chop Suey    and\nNoodles\nPHONE   182\nthe cell house were actively Involved\nln the outbreak, which started late\nyesterday morning, the warden aald.\nThe others were intimidated by the\nleaders.\nThe surrender came this morning\nafter Warden Smith bad communicated\nover the telephone with two spokesmen for the mutineers.\nWhile 000 National Guardsmen,\nequipped with machine guns, tanks,\nsawed off shotguns, tear bomhs and\none-pounders, and 200 heavily armed\ncivil officers commanded the cell\nhouse, the convicts surrendered their\nweapons to four guards, who had been\nheld as hostages.\n<il AKI.S   l NINJl Kill\nThe guards had not been Injured\nand came out of the building laden\nwith weapons, including two pistols,\nan axe and a number of knives. In\nquick order the convicts then were\nsent to their cells.\nThere had been no hostilities during\nthe night, the fighting having flared\nout after the ammunition of the con\nvicts ran low and the attacking forces\nhad turned a hall of machine gun bullets  Into  the  cell  house  yesterday.\nState officials, fearing that the ira\nprisoned guards would be killed and\nfeeling that the mutineers were weak\nening, withheld further attacks on\nthe building but warned that they\nwere ready to resume action ln -the\nevent of further overt acts on the part\nof the convicts.\nPRISONER   MAKES    TEAMS\nWarden Smith was called on the\nphone from the turnkey's office by\nan apparently well educated prisoner,\nwhose identity he did not learn, but\nwho wanted an agreement that If the\nconvicts surrendered they would not\nbe abused. This was agreed to. Then\nthe spokesman asked assurance that\nthe ring leaders would not be hanged.\nThe warden told him this was ridiculous that those placed In solitary confinement would not be kept on bread\nand water, but would be given one\nmeal a day.\nThe warden demanded to speak to\none of the leaders and eventually another prisoner came to the telephone\nand made arrangements for surrendering the weapons of the convicts.\nWith AU Divisions Complete His\nMajority Is 7025\\Over\nMcQueen\nTWO BYLAWS SEEM\nTO BE DEFEATED\nHas Had 12 Years' Public Service; Labor and Communists\non Council\nWEAK MEN\nand   for   all   Diseases   of   Men\nwake  On  ttntoal  BemetUee\nBook on 8kln Diseases, aew\nTreatise on Chronflc Diseases by\nHerbs! Remedies. Pamphlet on\nLoss of Manhood and Diseases r'.t\nmen. Booklet on Female Ills; and\nadvice, free by mall; 30 years'\nexperience. Without criticism; or\ndisparaging your local doctors\nwrits us before losing hope\nTreatment by mall our specialty\n\u25a0HGLIBH    HERBAL   DXftFSS-\n\u00abAI7    I.TD.\nLI6t Davis. Vancouver. B.O.\nThs Oldest   Herbal   Institution\nTrail Hotels\nSAVOY\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nS(   .    [Ii at, Hot and CoM Running Water in All Roi\nMi :\u25a0\u25a0 Rooms with Pm'at* Bnths or Shower*.\nA.  KERR   P'or\nSAVOY^A. J. Davis, Rossland: Mrs.\nW. Whiteley, South Slocan; A. B. Clever,\nMrs. H. Clever, New Denver; Estelle Tay\nlor, Slocan City: C. Llndow, Salmo: N.\nD. Glass. J. A. Bray, T. Purvis. Vancou-\n, ver; H. Williams, A. Wallace, Cranbrook.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water ln every room.\nSteam Heated.\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nQUEENS\u2014M. Sgackula. K. Skanseng,\nT. P. Hersen. Slocan City; J. Brore, Ymlr;\nO. E. Anderson, E. Laggunts, oalmo; J\nT. Stevenson, Harrop; Mrs. H. Downing,\nRoseburg, Ore.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA Modem Brick Building. '\n616 Vernon Street, Nelson, B. C.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephones\nIn All Booms.    Steam Heated\nThroughout.\nJ. BLOMBF.BO, Prop. European Plan\nNEW GRANI>\u2014P. Morkmaeter, Vancouver; T. O. Humphrey. Grand Forks;\nDr. O. T. Hemwood, Deer Park; I. A.\nHarris, Boulder; W. J. Richards, Granite\nRoad; W. V. Jackson. Creston; W. Her-\nrlck. Shaunavon; H. H. Thomas. Princeton.\t\nSTIRLING HOTEL\nev>  Blocks East of Post  Office\nSteam heated.   Hot and cold water.\nRooms by day or week.\nAlso Furnished Suites.\np. H. BUSH, Prop.\nMadden Hotel\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nSteam-Heated   Booms   by   the  Day,\nWeek or Month.\nEvery consideration shown to\nguests.\nCor.   Baker  and   Ward   Sts.,  Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014N. McNally. cltv; L. Olbney,\nTen-Mile; Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Dorey.\nSalmo; C. O. Newman, F. Verzuh. J.\nKanie, -J. Goodwin. Kimberley; J. Stud-\nley, Mrs. A. Hourth, Mrs. F. Newsley\nSpokane.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nIINDEB  THE  MANAGEMENT   OF\nWILLIAM JONES\nGOOD,  CLEAN   ROOMS,   REASONABLE\nBATES\nPHONE 18 B16 VEBNON ST.\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, BC\nA   P.   LEVESQUE,   Prop.\nCompletely Renovated and Refurnished\nHot   and   Cold   Running   Wat.r\nSteam     Heated\nRotary\nHeadqusrl.rs\nEuropean  Plan\nCntr.lly      Located\nSanipl.   Rooma   In\nConnection\nHat and Cold\nWatar\n\u2022taam Haatad\nThroughout\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nE.   l_  AND   A.  GROUTAQE,   Prop*.\nB.x  CM Phon.  MS        Trail,   i.C.\nTha OK Reliable\nCROWN   POINT   HOTEL\nA. MoDERMOTT\nEvery Courtesy Extended to Tourlata\nand Otbera Visiting Trail\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nA. C. TOWNEE, Proprietor\nTbe Home of Plenty.\nFifty rooma of solid comfort.\nHeadquarters for Loggers and Miners.\nProtect Your\nPocket Book\nWith These\nValues\nJU5T OUTSIDE THE RICH REST 1\nMen's Broadcloth Shirts.\nDouble Cuffs, d\u00bb-| rn\nseperate collarV AatJU\nNew Arrivals in Knitted\nTies. Special OKf\u00bb\npurchase. Each-ifciOC\nMen's Silk-and-Wool Sox.\nAttractive Shadings. Exceptional value PA\u00bb\nat, Pair     DDL\nBoys' Jerseys.    Polo Collar.   All shades.    22 to\n,     32.   Great\nValue \t\n$1.25\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 25.-\u2014\"Dan\"- McLean, with a record of 13 years public service in Winnipeg, aa a former\nalderman and former member of the\nManitoba legislature, was today elected mayor of Winnipeg for 1928. He\ndefeated a Labor opponent, John\nQueen, a member of the Manitoba\nlegislature, who * was the nominee of\nthe   Labor  party.\nWith complete returns for the 220\nsubdivisions, Lieutenant-Colonel McLean\nhas a majority of 7025. The-vote was:\nMcLean, 23,362;  Queen.  16.237.\nIn the mayoralty election of 1926,\nColonel Webb had a majority of 7000\nover F. J. Tipping, an independent\nlabor candidate.\nColonel McLean succeeds Colonel\nRalph Webb, who after serving a two-\nyear term refused re nomination, ae-\naepUng a' portion of publicity manager of the Winnipeg Tourist and Convention bureau. Colonel McLean Is a\npioneer resident of Winnipeg*, having\ncome here 36 years ago from Ontario.\nHe li 66 ye*ra 0f Bfe.\nLABOB    INCHEANEH\nWhile Labor party lost out in the\nmayoralty contest, It wiU have additional strength ln next year's council and the Communist party alao\nadded to lta representation. Voting to-\n-day was under the proportional rep*\nresentatlon system Aid definite results ln some wards will not be known\nuntil morning.\nIn the aldermanic contest, l\u00ababori\nadded one new member In S. J.\nFarmer, M.L.A., former mayor of\nWlnnipng and reelected two of laat\nyear's aldermen\u2014T. Flye and John\nBiumberg. There was also a possibility of Arthur Cherniak, nominee of the\nindependent Labor party being elected\nIn North Winnipeg, though J. Fred\nPalmer, nonpartizan candidate held a\nslight lead late tonight,\n(OMAiiMsT i;.j;< :TSD\nArthur Popovlch, a Communist candidate was elected in North Winnipeg\nto aldermanic office. He is the second Communist to be elected to the\ncouncil, one having been successful ln\nthe 1626 election. Two Labor and one\nCommunist candidates were definitely\ndefeated   tonight.\nWith returns incomplete, the defeat\nof two bylaws was thought probable\nlate, tonight. One bylaw would have\nauthorized the construction pf % $B00,-\n000 public auditorium and the other\nthe Instituting of daylight saving in\nWinnipeg.\nBARROW GOES TO\nTHE OKANAGAN\nTo Slop a\nCold in\nOne Day\n\"Mar\"1\nrUxtrHve\n\\Bromp\n.Quinine}\ntablets\nThe  tonic   and   laxative   effect  of\nLaxative   BHOMO   QUININE   Tablets\ning from a Cold.   Price 30c.\n(Made in Canada.)\nThe box bears this signature\nl\u2014Proven Merit since 1889--\nVANCOUVER, Nov., 26. \u2014 Hon. E. b.\nBarrow, provincial minister of agriculture, ls in the city today on hia way to\nthe Okanagan, where he will gather\ndrta relative to amendments to the\nmarketing act, which will be introduced\nby the government at the next session\nof the legislature.\nHon. Mr. Barrow .stated that operation of the marketing act had been very\nsuccessful this year, particularly In the\nOkanagan.\nCanadian Club at\nVancouver Ashs\nBennett to Speah\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 25.\u2014The Canadian\nclub has invited Hon. R. B, Bennett,\nleader of the Conservative party in\nCanada, to deliver an address on his\nvisit here at Christmas.\nForty Carloads of\nB. C. Apples Shipped\nFrom Vancouver Port\nVANCOUVER, Nov 25.\u2014When the\nsteamer. Montcklm sailed from here\nyesterday for Europe, she carried 40\ncfer loads of BritlBh Columbia apples,\nthe largest shipment of this kind ever\nmade. All except two cars came from\nthe Associated Growers.\nInfant Care\nNo mother In this enlightened age\nwould give her baby something Bhe\ndid not know was perfectly harmless\nand reliable, especially when a few\ndrops of plain Castoria will right a\nbaby's stomach and end almost any\nlittle ill throughout the system. Fret-\nfulness and fever, too; lt seems no\ntime until everything ls serene.\nThat's the beauty of Castoria; Its\ngentle influence seems Just what ls\nneeded. It does all that castor oil\nmight accomplish, and without shock\nto the system. Without the evil taste.\nCastoria is delicious! Your own tongue\nwill tell you why \"Children Cry for\nIt.\" Being purely vegetable, you can\ngive lt'as often as there's the least sign\nof colic; constipation; diarrhea. Or\nwhenever there's need to aid sound,\nnatural sleep.\nOnly one word of warning: the above\nIs true of genuine Castoria.* Fletcher's\nIs the original. Other preparations\nmay or may not be as pure, as free\nfrom a  single  doubtful   drug.    Physl\nclans tell parents to get Fletchet's\nCastoria, and no child of this writer's\nls going to test any other kind. I'll\nsave a dime  some other way.\n\u2022 SPECIAL NOTE: With every bottle of genuine Fletcher's Castoria ls\nwrapped a book on \"Care and Feeding\nof Babies\" worth its weight in gold to\nevery mother or prospective mother.\nChildren Cry for\nICastoriA\nT-\nTHE  GUMPS-LET  THE RAINY DAYS COME\nPLEASED \\m\nNegotiations for Flin Flon\nand  Smelter  Make\nProgress\nSASKATCHEWAN ASKS\nSAFEGUARD INTERE\nPremier    Gardiner   Says\nProvince Will Be Absolute!\nj Square\nOTTAWA. Nov. 25.\u2014Repreaenta\nof the Whitney interests, interrl\ntonight, expressed satisfaction\nthe progress of the negotiation*\nthe federal government regarding\nlarge mining and smelting dew\nmuit contemplated at Flin Flon.\nThe   railway   discussions,   they\nhad   reached   a   satisfactory  conch\napd the syndicate was prepared to\nsecurity td the minister of railways\nthe   works   would   be   completed,\nenabling the construction of the\nway to be commenced Immediate^\nAsked regarding the negotiation*\nSaskatchewan, the representatives\nPressed confidence that the provi\ngovernment would cooperate fully .\nall the factors could Oe discussed\nthem.\nDETAILS   SHOBTLY\nIt Is understood  that the detail\nwhatever  railway  settlement   has\nreached  will  be made public  with\nfew days.\nIt ls generally understood that\nwhole question was before the cat\nthis afternoon. It has been iutlrr\nthat the question of the 20-year ro;\nexemption has been satisfactorily\nranged with the province of Saskat\nwan. Beyond this no Information\navailable  tonight.\nThe Flin Flon project is a ml\nproject of northern Manitoba.\nThe Harry Payne Whitney lnte\nof New York are the promoters,\nvolves the building of a railroad\nthe area, the leasing of water po\nand the building of a huge smelte\nthe Manitoba-Saskatchewan boun\nThe company has been seeking an\nemptlon from the payment of rdyi\nfor a 20-year period. The whole set\nis said to involve the expcndltiu'\nsome 930,00,000, Including 112,00\nfor a smelter and 16,000,000 for ar\npower  developments.\nGARDINER   COMMENTS\nREQINA, Sask., Nov. 25.\u2014In cor\ntlon with Flin Flon mining negotla\nPremier Oardlner tonight declared:\n\"The government feels that the\nsources of the north should ncrf\nalienated In such a mVinar as to i\nImpossible the collection of . reasoi\nrevenues from any company fcenefl\nfrom the exploitation. At the:\ntime, we recognize the important\nthe development of the north to\nprosperity of Saskatchewan and 1\nitoba. While the opening of the\nFlon will indirectly benefit Saskat\nwan, the greatest Immediate d\nbenefit will go to Manitoba. We\nquite satisfied that this should be\ncase, more particularly since 1\nrecognized that development i\neventually take place from the\nFlon west. Because we recognize\nimportant bearing of the Flin Flon\nvelopment upon the opening ui\nnorthern Cganltoba and Saskatche\nwe sent the following telegram to\nStewart yesterday:\nMIS   \\\\l\\V.\n\" 'Difficult to conduct satiafai\nnegotiations with \u201esuch haste and\ngrottable that discussion of matt*\nroyalty exemption was left until\nlast minute. Bugs-fat that deal\nclosed and that company be\nthat if the subsequent negotiation!\nsatisfactory we can be satisfied ths\nwill get our fair share of any pr<\ncial taxes which company may\nln proportion that value of ore\nln this province bears to thai\nManitoba, then, we will at that\nconsent to extension of exem]\nalready granted. Company\nagreement for 10 years under pre'\noption. They should be prepare\nacknowledge our right to safes\nour interests, and, at the same,\nrealize that we will be absolutely\nwiht them regarding further ex\ntlon.'\"\nGATHER 1DD\nOver  Hundred  Expected  1\nPart  in  Convention  at\nVancouver\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 25.\u2014Approxlmi\n100 Conservatives of British Colui\nwill hold a convention common\nSaturday. All Conservative mew\nof the legislature will be in attends\nas well as delegates from every rl(\nJ. E. Carpenter, secretary, states\n140 delegates ln all are entitled tt\npresent, and it is expected that\nover 100 will be on hand.\nAt the morning session Preal\nNell Lougheed will deliver an add\nReports of the secretary, treasurer\nvarious committees will then be\ncalved.\nAll sessions of the convention\nbe private. At tha afternoon sei\nHon. Dr. Tolmie will be the i\nspeaker. Organization work will\ncupy the attention of the delej\nduring most of the afternoon sea\nIt has not been decided aa yet wh\u00ab\nor not an evening session will be ]\nPASSENGERS RESCUED\nFROM GROUNDED SI\nMEXICO CITY, Nov. 26.\u2014AU,\nsengers aboard the Ward liner Ms\nagrodnd .three miles off Vera <\nhaVe been removed safely, says a\negram from that port to the X\nquarters of the Mexican railroad,\nvessel was still believed In da\nAnother telegram said that a tl\nnorth wind made ber position i\nprecarious.\n -iamm.\t\nContract haa bean awarded by,1\ned States for 84\u00ab airplane engines.\n \t\n\u2014_____\n^\u2014^\u2014^~^\u2014^\u2014^\u2014'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 26, 1927\nPage TK:\nSalvation Army at\nTrail Has Successful\nSett of Wdrk, Tea\nTHAiL, B.C., Nor. 25.\u2014With a tastefully displayed sale of home cooking.\nfancy work and Christmas novelties.\nthe home league of the Salvation Army\ndrew such patronage Thursday afternoon that by 6 o'clock all booths were\npractically denuded, and a handsome\nSMm had been raised for the army's\nrelief and general work this winter.\nAfternoon tea was served by Mrs.\nT. Thatcher, assisted by the Misses\nPolly Aitken and Cathie Laurie at decorated Individual tables.\nMrs. T. Barrett presided where tempting home cooking was displayed, Lieut.\nN. Amos and Miss I. Chalk were fancy\nwork sales ladles, Mrs. W. H Rutledge\nsaw to It that none were \"success\" at\nthe fish pond, and Ensign J. Chalk\nwas general convener.\nST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN\nCHURCH\nStanley and  Silica streets\nAdvent Servlies      7:30 pm.\nSunday School    10:30 am.\nSunday School at\nShirley    11:30 ajn.\nServices in German  9:00 a.m.\nCtKL C. JANZOW, Pastor.\nSt. Paul's Church\nBKV. F. K. G. DREDGE, M.A.,\nMinister\nPhone 784    Manse, \u00bb1S Silica\nMr.   F.   E.   Wheeler,   Organist\nand Choir Master\n,*.. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER M\n11:30 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\nSfto p.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n4.00 p.m\u2014S. T. Bible \"Class.\n7:80 p.m.\u2014Evening Worship.\nAll strangers are cordially Invited.\nMONDAY\n4.00 p.m.\u2014Mission  Band.\n8:00 p.m\u2014Excelsior  Club  meets\nwith Mrs. L. E. Pascoe. Kerr\nApartments.\nWEDNESDAY\n8:00 p.m.\u20148. T. Club.\nTHURSDAY\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Session  Meets.\nFRIDAY\n13*6 p.m.\u2014Annual Christmas Bazaar of Ladles' Aid.\n7:00 p.m.\u2014C.O.I.T.  meets.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Choir practice.\nFIRST PRESBYTERIAN\nCHURCH\nCorner of Victoria and Kootenay\nMinister\nRev.   J.   Youngson,   M.A.,   B.I).\nAnnable Block\nPublic Worship  11a.m.\n(Holy Communion)\nSunday School  2:30 p.m.\nNo  Evening  Service.\nBoaid of Management Meeting\nIn Church Parlors, Saturday, 26th,\nat  0  p.m.\nPrayer Meeting at residence of\nMrs. McCallum, 810 Hall, Thursday, at 8 p.m.\nTRINITY\n\u2022UNITED CHURCH\nHev.   W.   C.   Mawhlnney,   Pastor.\nRes. 709 Josephine St., Phone 105\nMr.   F.   L.   Irwin,   Choir   Leader.\nMiss ina Steed, Organist.\nSUNDAY, NOV. 27th\n40:00 a.m\u2014Sunday School.\nfl :00 ajn.\u2014Morning Worship.\nW. M. S. service\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Young   People's   Bible\nClass.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Ivening  Worship.\nMONDAY\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Service   Club   at   the\nhome of Mra. A. C. Emory,\n320 Victoria street.\nTUESDAY\n7:30 pjn\u2014Young   People's   Fellowship.\nWEDNESDAY\n7\u00ab0p.m.\u2014Prayef Service.\nTHURSDAY\n7:00 p.m.\u2014Trail  Rangers.\n8:00p.m.\u2014Choir Practice.\nFRIDAY\n7:00 p.m.\u2014C. O. I. T.\nN.B.\u2014W.M.8.    Bake   Sale,   Annable   block,   Today,   \u00bb:30  a.m.\nBAPTIST CHURCH\nPaator,    Rev.    E.    O.    Turn.r.\nMorning Worship at 11. Subject, \"The Sound of Life.\"\nSunday School at 3:30.\nEvening Service at 790.    Subject, \"The Silence of Life.\"\nSPECIAL MUSIC\nA Cordial Invitation to All.\nY. P. Society, Monday, 7:30.\nThe People's Meeting, Thursday, 7:80. Speaker, Rev. J. W.\nUtch, D.D.\nC.O.I.T. Groups. Friday, 7:00.\nFull Gospel Mission\n411   HALL   ST.\nPastor John  E.  Barnes\nSunday School  10:00 a.m.\nSunday   Morning   Devotional,   11\nSunday Evening Evangelistic. 7:30\n\"The   World's   flreatest   Magnet\"\nTuesday, Thursday and Saturday,\nSpecial   Messages   will   be   given\nat 8 pjn.\nOood   Mnslc   and   Singing\n411 Heartily Welcomed\nFull House Greets Presentation\nin Aid of Christmas\nFund\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 25.\u2014A foil house\ntonight enjoyed the really good variety\nshow put on by the J. Allen company\nfor the Knight* of Pythias' Christmas\ntree fund in the K. P. hall.\nIt waa sprinkled with numerous\nlaughter-making turns, some fetching\ndancing, and some instrumental and\nvocal   offerings  of   real  merit.\nMiss Carlton-Wilkes, Eric Brown, and\nT. Ewlng detailed fn a humorous skit\nthe troubles and trials before and after\nmarriage. .\nSeveral tuneful numbers were given\nby J. B. McLean and O, M. Mllligan,\nHawaiian guitar players of ability. They\nwere encored repeatedly.\nEric Brown as the simpleton In\n\"Gee Whiz,\" doled out a humorous\nline of Jokes and patter ln monologue.\nJock  Allen, a burly singer of  sentiment, and his \"Four Wee Lasses\" sang\nand danced Scotch numbers and made\na popular number.\nMUCH   FUN\nMrs. Pat Patridge and Eric Brown\nprovided much merriment with sidelights on married felicity tn a five-\nminute wait, \"Between Trains.\" The\nlady, resorting to tears, was victorious.\nTwo numbers of a particularly different character, were the solos of\nMadame B. Purdy, a contralto with a\nclear rich, prime control, and big reserves of power, ln her singing of \"My\nTreasure,\" and \"I know a Lovely\nOarden,\" were markedly sympathetic.\nEveryone got a shock when. In a\nrather gruesome setting \"Herbert (Eric\nBrown), assistant to Professor J. Al*\nlen, an electrical wizard, rescUsltatlng\na corpse successfully with electricity,\nstepped on the wires and killed the\ncorpse and the professor ln the moment\nof success, in the sketch \"The Fatal\nBlunder.\"\nB. Harwood was the young, happy\ncorpse and T. Ewlng an Interested orderly.\nMr.  Allen  as  an  aged  father  enter-,\ntalned   with   old-time   songs   in   tableaux.\nDAINTY NUMBER\nA dainty number was a ballet dancing act by Miss Alice Manlago and a\nchorus of graceful and charming girls,\nwho were the Misses Marlon McDonald,\nAlice Simpson, Dolly White, and Hilda\n\u2022Barnee.\nMyles Locke, the Spanish Kid, did his\nstuff with flare and spirit ln a Charleston  act dance, one of  the best.\nJudicious mortal \"Raps\" will assist\nthe -.Spirits\" with their Job, lt was\nshown by Jack Allen, who was almost\ndiscovered with a stolen watch ln a\nhumorous skit, \"Spirits.\"\nLaughter was a continuous accompaniment to \"Henry and John,\" in\nwhich John (Eric Brown) found the\ndrama composed by Blossom (Mrs. Pat\nPartridge) too full of hardships and\ndangers, and the heroine .a nightmare,\nTiny Betty Barchello and Helen Vel-\nluttine. the \"Charleston Twins,\" couldn't\ngive enough of their dancing to satisfy the audience. Nor could their\ngargantaun parodists whose grotesque-\nries were comical  in the  extreme.\nHumor of the heavy variety was\nabundant In a one-act farce, \"John's\nReform,\" ln which John (Jack Allen)\noverhearing the tearful recital of his\nown demise and funeral arrangements\nstaged by h:s wife and the pastor to\ncure him of tippling resorted to violent\nmeasures.\nThe whole show was produced by\nJ. Allen, and a management comm**\ntee consisting of C. J. Simpson and\nE. Brown.\nROSSLAND NOTES\nROSSLAND. B.C., Nov. 36.\u2014William\nF. Doubt of Trail ls relieving at the\nlocal llQuor store this week. Government Vendor A. T. Collls being confined\nto the Mater Misercordise hospital.\n\u2022 a .\nPostmaster William Wadds returned\nlast evening from a visit with friends\nln Renata.\n...\nJoseph   Kloman   of   Paulson   18   renewing   old   acquaintances   here    this\nweek.\n...    a\nEric McKay-White has returned from\na short trip to Vancouver.\n...\nE.   Cherry   of   Nelson   has   succeeded\nWilliam Tucker in a local butcher shop.\n...\nJames Ewing-of Tratl was in {he city\nthis morning.\n...\nRev. Canon F. X. Teck of Trail, who\nhas recently returned from an extended Visit to his old home ln Belgium.\nls the guest of Rev. A. K. Mclntyre,\nV.Q.\n...\nH.   A.   Hill   spent   the   day   ln   Brilliant.\n...\nW. A.  Humphry, of Trail  ls spending the day ln this city.\nReal Steppers and\nFlappers Lead in\nTraU Hoop League\nTRAIL, B.C., Bdv. 38.\u2014Showing considerable Improvement ln their play\nand If anything more eager, the Central school basketeers finished the\nsecond round of their league games this\nweek, with the Flappers leading the\nsenior girls, and tbe Real-Steppers the\nJunior girls, ln these divisions, and the\nRed Heads and Pontiacs tied for first\nplace ln the senior boys. Three teams\nare tied In the Junior boys' race.\nThe   league   standing   is:\nSENIOR (URLS' LEAGUE\u2014\nP.     W.     L.    D. Pts.\nFlappers        3    \u2022 3       0       0       4\nQueens        3       110      3\nShebaa      3       110       3\nReal-Steppirs   .31103\nSallies     3      0      3      0      0\nJUNIORS   GIRLS'   LEAGUE\u2014\nP.     W.     L.    D. Pts.\nReal-Steppers    .33104\nMidgets         3       10       13\nSophomores       3       110       3\nOo-Getters       3       0       111\nSENIOR BOYS' LEAGUE\u2014\nP      W.     L.    D. Pts.\nBed Heads        .3       1       0       1       3\nPontiacs       9      1*     0      1      3\nMohawks        3       1       1       0       3\nCrescents       3      0      3       0      0\nJUNIOR  BOYS'  LEAGUE\u2014\nP.     W.     L.    D. Pts.\nGulch Sheiks   .1110      3\nTigers       1       1       0      0      8\nLions          110       0       3\nBeavers    1      0      I      0      0\nTrail News of the Day\nThis column la conducted by Mist\nI. A. Thompson of Tadanac. All\nnews of a social nature, including\nreceptions, entertainments, personal\nItems, marriages, etc., occurring in\nTrail and Tadanac, will appear ln\nthla column. Just 'phone Miss\nThompson at her residence. Bhe\nwill also handle any advertisements\nappearing under TraU News of the\nDay.\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 25\u2014Piles of fancy-\nwork and useful personal household\nutensils disappeared ln short order\namidst the furo of shopping when\nKnox United Church Ladles' aid opened\nIts annual bazaar ln the church parlors this afternoon. The aid did a roaring trade and raised over $500 which is\nto go toward lifting the church mortgage. Afternoon tea waa served at\ndaintily decorated tables. Mrs. A. Campbell, general convener, was assisted by\nthe following committees: Home cooking\u2014Mesdames T. Brown, O. Shaw and\nD. Chalmers; fancywork booths \u2014 Mesdames J. R. Anderson, O. J. Wilson and\nA. Guniy Tadanac stall\u2014Mesdames B.\nA. Stimmel, B. M. Stiles, J. Buchanan\nand R. J. Anderson; plain sewing stall\u2014\nMesdames H. O. Hlnch and W. Douglas.\nTea tables were presided over by Mesdames W. A. Burton, D. Forrest, D. For-\nteath, J. W. Dwyer and R. Wellwood.\nThe ladles preparing refreshments were\nMesdames A. MacMillan, A. Jory, W.\nRamsay and C. D. Stewart. Mrs. W. F.\nMorton was cashier.      ,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Dorothy Flngland was hostess to\na number of her friends at the tea hour\nat her home at Tadanac on Tuesday\nand Thursday afternoons. The tea\ntable, which was presided over by Mrs.\nJ. J. Flngland, was centered with a silver vase of pinx carnations and silver\ncandlesticks with pink tapers. Miss\nAudrey Baxendale, Miss Oladys Jogger\napd Mrs. P. Mclntyre assisted tn serving. The Invited guests were Mesdames\nR. O. Anderson, J. Akwell, T. H. Weldon, D. McDonald, L. O. Mowatt, F.\nForward. P. Mclntyre, O. H. Norman.\nW. Cameron, McCallum of Grand\nForks, H. C. Walker. K. Berry, Hewatts,\nMisses Connie Davies, Jean McCallum,\nK. Kirby, Sally McCallum, Hazel Nelson,\nMary Burne, Florence Rutledge, Margery Beckwith, Connie Whlttaker, M.\nEdwards, Miry Anderson, Oladys Jogger,\nEthel Moody, Netty Llngle. Audrey Baxendale, Ella Thompson, Olive Barron,\nEthel Ritchie, Margaret Wllkie.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThe St. Andrew's Women's auxiliary\nmet on Thursday afternoon in the Parish hall. A very successful meeting was\nheld. Plans for the patronal festival,\nwhich le to take place next Wednesday,\nwere discussed. Arrangements were\nmade whereby Mrs. Applewalte, president of all branches of the women's\nauxiliary in this district, would give an\naddress atthe meeting next Thursday\nafternoon. During the afternoon tea\nwas served By Mrs. E. Crowe, Mrs. Broad-\nwood, Mrs. Irwin and Mrs. B. Warden,\nconvener,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA party of the Canadian Pacific railway officials paid a visit to Tadanac\nFriday morning. During their visit they\nmade an Inspection of the Consolidated\nMining & Smelting company plant ln\ncompany with S. O. Blaylock. They left\n'ntdanac for South Slocan, where they\nwere to visit the new plant of the West\nKootenay Power & Light company, under construction. From there they proceeded to Nelson and Procter en route\nto the east. Those present in the party\nwere W. G. Neal, general manager of\nCanadian Pacific railway western lines;\nC. A. Cotterell, general superintendent\nof British Columbia district; R. Armstrong, superintendent of Nelson divl\nslon; Mr. Lindsay, assistant superlnten\ndent of Nelson division; Captain Brown,\nsuperintendent of British Columbia lake\nand river service; Mr. Sturrack, superintendent of mechanical department,\nBritish Columbia lines; Mr. Lee, district\nengineer of British Columbia lines; Mr.\nAlexander, dlstrlftt engineer of Winnipeg.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2666\nFor sale cheap\u2014Gramophone In good\ncondition. Apply Mrs. W. Barnes, Bay\navenue, Trail (opposite Victoria Annex).\n(317B)\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\n\u25a0      LEARN TO DANCE\nLATEST BALLROOM STEPS, FOX\nTROTS. WALTZES. ETC. PHONE FOH\nAPPOINTMENT.    GRACE BRETT\n;    (    . (3130,\nDon't forget the Anglican Bazaar on\nDecember  10. (3135)\nKnox United Church Ladies' Aid Annual Bazaar. Friday, November 25, 3 to\n6. Fancywork, Novelties, Plain Sewing,\nHome Cooking and Candy on sale. Fish\nPond for children. Afternoon tea serv-\n\u00ab*\u2022 (3155)\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nThe East Trail Junior W. A. will hold\nafternoon tea, sale or children's work,\nSaturday, November 26, at the home of\nMrs. J. H. Owen. (3133)\nSheiks Battle the\nHockeyists Tonight\nin Trail Basketball\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 25.\u2014The Hockey\nclub basketeers and the Sheiks, leaders and runners up, respectively of the\nsenior basketball league, are due to\nmix matters at the Memorial hall tomorrow night. Hartley ls the appointed referee.\nThe Pirates and the Bulls, are\nmatched for the Intermediate league\nwith   J.   Demidoff   refereelng.\nTrail Man Is Fined\nfor Taking Automobile\nWithout Owner's Consent\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 25.\u2014Pleading guilty\nto taking an automobile out of garage\nstorage and operating lt without the\nconsent of the owner on November 23.\nHerbert William Davis was fined \u00bb10\nand costs, the minimum, by Magistrate Noble Binns, Wednesday afternoon\nIn a verbal reprimand the magistrate\nwarned Davis his action made him\nliable to a fine of *500 and 12 months\nIn Jail, and that a second offence would\nbring a severe sentence.\nMerchants Trim\nRoyal Purple;\nTransportation Wins\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 35\u2014 Merchants No.\n1 trimmed Royal Purple boys by 359\npins ln the only bowling league match\nplayed tonight.\nMolr starred with 627 aggregate, Wilson rolled high Individual at 194.\nTransportation won their match from\nMerchants No. 3 by default..\nASYLUM INMATE MAKES\nESCAPE IN HIS SHIRT\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 25.\u2014Wearing only\na shirt, John Czonson, Russian, today\nescaped from Essondale hospital for the\nInsane.\nFive Erie. Pa., firemen were Injured\nwhen their truck collided with a trolley\ncar,\nIII DADS IRE\nFED AT TRAIL\nSecond  Annual  Banquet  Held;\nSpeeches,   Song    and\nStory\nTRAIL, B.C., Ne--. 25.\u2014Trail boy\nscouts. Wolf cubs an\u00a3 their dads, numbering 100 all told, gathered about the\nfestive board ln the Memorial hall tonight for the scouts second annual\nbanquet. It was a delightful function.\nTables had been set out very tastefully\nand a number of lady volunteers served\na splendid supper, down to the ice\ncream.\nB. A. Stimmel, presided, as president\nof the local scout council.\nA program of speeches and musical\nnumbers was given. J. H. Owen, who\nproposed Sir Robert Baden-Powell, chief\nscout. Rev. N. D. B. Larmonth responding, urged three points, determination to be a real rood scout, willingness to sacrifice and to value honor.\nWOKLll  WIDE\nfl. Stiff, troop leader, proposed \"boy\nscout associations, brother scout troops\nand wolf cub peeks,\" pointing out that\nthe movement was world-wide and one\nto be proud of. F. C. B. Sara, provincial field commissioner, responding,\ngave a few facts to show that the\nmovement was world-wide, with 61\norganizations having scout movements.\nHe discussed the three promises of the\nscout to show that the movement was\ntoward world-wide brotherhood. He\nurged the fathers, as well as the scouts,\nto be loyal and to take an active interest ln the boys and the  movement.\nJ. Clitherow and P. Clitherow, both\nscouts, entertained with vocal numbers.\nH. W. Hawkins proposing and \"Dolly\"\nMcArthur responding to the toast, \"the\nlocal council and the parents,\"\nLater two Clitherow boys. F. Clark\nand Scouts Hinton and Klnnis showed\nhow the scouts 'kept cheery with their\nsongs ln camp by vocal demonstration.\nTOAST  QUESTS\nMr. Hi wklns also proposed \"our\nguests,\" to which A. T. Reid and D.\nChalmers responded.\nMrs. T. Jenkins, one of the local\ncouncil, thanked the parents and\nfriends for the assistance, financial and\notherwise, given to the scouts.\nH. C. Caldlcott, responding to \"our\ngUests.\" declared there was an obvious\ndifference ln the demeanor of a boy as\nsoon as he bod Imbibed a little training in a scout troop. It was a spirit\nhe highir commended.\nAmong the representatives of the\nlocal council were Mr. stimmel, J. H.\nOwen, D. E. McDn.'iiels, Mrs. Miller\nLayson. Mrs. T. Jenkins. Mrs. E N. Stiles\nrepresented the I.O.D.E. and D. Chalmers   represented   the   J anadian   Legion.\nThe ladies serving fhe banquet were\nMesdames M. Mason, H. C. Caldlcott.\nH. P. Klngwell, M. D. Clitherow, J, H.\nOwen, T. Jenkln and A. C. Clark.\nPrecipitation\nfor November\nNears Five Inches\nA rainfall of .03 inch yesterday and\n.15 inch of rain and 3.6 inches of\nsnow on Thursday boosted the precipitation for .the month of November to\ndate to learly five inches, the exact\nfigure  being  4.88  inches.\nYesterday's temperatures showed a\nfairly wide range, the highest being\n40. while  the  lowest was 33.\nGYROS TO DIVE\nTO\nE\nEntire Proceeds One Night of\n\"Keep 'Em Smiling\" for\nFurniture\nEntire proceeds of one night of the\nOyro show, \"Keep 'Em Smiling,\" which\nwill be produced here shortly, will be\ndonated to the Kootenay Lake Oeneral\nhospital to aid In furnishing the new\nnurses' home, the board of dkpaaa*\nof the Oyro club, In special meeting\nyesterday afternoon, decided.\nOne of the most attractive choruses\nof the show is that of the office men\nand stenographers, who open acts\none aftd two with songs\u2014\"Keep On\nSmiling,\" and \"Tie  Up.\"\nA chorus of guests ably supports the\nprincipals   ln   the   third   act,   opening\nwith the song.   \"Look at the World and\nSmile,\"\nMANY CHORV8ES\nThe \"Dizzy Dancers,\" appearing ln\nnatty orange and black, do a peppy\nswagger step dance, each girl being\nanried wtth a \"swagger stick\"\nThe group of girls which will be\nfeatured in the \"Black and- White\"\nballet is composed of the same girls\nwho, as the Charleston group, won\nsuch applause  tn \"Oh!  Oh!  Katchoo!\"\nThe Benson Slsiers Introduce a song\nand dance number, \"Shaking the Blues\nAway,\" which is danced by eight snappy\nCollegiates.\nA demure chorus of maids in quaker\ncostume, grey and blue, usher ln the\nsecond scene of the first act. This\ngroup entertains delightfully with both\nsong and dance In a number called\n\"On the Road to Love.\"\nCRINOLINE   DAYS\nFashions of yesteryear will be recalled by the \"Crinolines,\" a group\nof girls who trip the dainty measures\nof a minuet.\nOne of the most appealing numbers\nof the entire production will be the\ndance by the tiny tots appearing as\nrose buds.\nWith specialty numbers featuring\nconcert soloists and solo dancer, the\nmusical program of \"Keep 'Em Smiling\"  promises  a  lot  of  entertainment.\nEARLY RANCHER\nTO\nIS\nREST\nVilliam  James  Wilson,  Victim\nof Runaway Accident, Is\nBuried\nWilliam James Wilson, pioneer Kootenay rancher, was yesterday laid at rest\nin the city cemetery. He died on Monday In the Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital of a spine Injury received when\nhis team of horses ran away on October 16. A* wealth of beautiful flowers\nwere sent.\nRev. Carl Janzow, pastor of St.\nJohn's  Lutheran   church,   officiated  at\npftffflffsV\n. and at\nthe     Standard     Undertaking\nwhich were filled to overflowing, i\nthe graveside.\nPallbearers were W. Hansen, C. Backer, V. A. Graves, T. w Slader, Fred\nWilliams and 8. Barkley.\nVancouver. Nov 35\u2014A reduction\nin commercial and domestic electric\nlight charges from 4 1-3 to 4 cents a\nkilowatt hour ln Vancouver was announced today by the British Columbia\nElectric Railway company.\n\"Good Good, at Gray V\nRemember friends in the\nold land this Xmas with\ngifts that laat.\nAll That's Best and\nNewest in Jewelry\nWe will prepare for\nwaiting any gift you may\nselect.\nJ.   B.  GRAY\nWatchmaker\u2014Jeweler\u2014Optician\n707  BAKER  ST.      PHONE  333\nSaturday\nAll Day\nMatinee\nSpecials\nLadies' Heavy Weight Silk\nBloomers\u2014In all sizes\nand a large range of\ncolors.     Regular   $2.50\nfor   f 1.9S\nIn order to make room for\nXmas displays, we are offering our hats at about\nhalf  price.    Up to  $5.00\nfor $2.95\nUp to $8.00 for $3.95\nS\u00ab* our runic, of DressM In\n.Mk-anrt-wool and all-wool.\nJerseys, also. In satin crepes,\nrontons,  .Or.    Reasonably priced.\nJAMES WEIR & SON\nTh*   Exclu.lv.   Stor*\nWard  St.,  Opposite the New\nTapltol Theater.\nIS PHI OF\nKilmer   Club   of   St.   Joseph's\nDeals  With  Works   of\nthe Poet\nKilmer Literary club of St. Joseph's\nacademy spent \"an hour with Tennyson\"  yesterday afternoon.\nOutstanding among those contributing to the program were Katherlne Cole,\nOlive Reid and Cellna Foley.\nThe program was \"The Gentle Tennyson,\" paper. Teddy Romano; \"Crossing the Bar,\" reading, Margaret Rahal:\nprologue from \"The Princess,\" reading,\nCellna Foisy; \"Sweet and Low,\" chorus,\nOlive Reid, Kathleen Cole, Cellna Folsy.\nIsabelle Rahal and Margaret Rahal: \"Sir\nGalahad,\" paper and reading, Margaret\nWodlls; \"Break, Break, Break,\" boIo,\nKathleen Cole; \"Klg Oama's Denunciation of Ida,\" Isabelle Rahal; the higher\neducation of women as expressed by\nTennyson in \"The Princess,\" paper,\nKathleen Cole: piano duet, Olive Reid\nand Cellna Folsy.\nJoe Vlngo was piano accompanist\nand critic. Mary Barnet presided, and\nRosie Dumont acted as secretary.\nKeep Your Radio\nSet at Maximum\nEfficiency.\nby replacing the tubes\nonce a year.\nWhen the service man\nit checking your let, ask\nhim about the\nUX-20I-\nVWsttnghouse\nRADIOTRON\nThey consume but half\nthe current required by\ntubes of equal power.\nSAAtXK IN CANADA *Y\nsWiiir^irijitf:\nPtOTtfiCRS IN RADIO\nWASHINGTON, D.C., Nov. 25. \u2014\nThe British embassy will take no\nofficial notion upon the request of\nrapt. F. A. Giles, British aviator,\nthat an official Inquiry he opened tu\ndetermine whether the weather conditions last Tuesday when lie abandoned his .San Francisco-Ha wall\nnight.\nMany people, two hours after eating,\nsuffer indigestion as they call it. It ls\nusually excess acid. Correct lt with an\nalkali. The best way, the quick, harmless and efficient way is Phillips' Milk\nof Magnesia, It has remained for 50\n[ years the standard with physicians.\ni One spoonful ln water neutralizes many\nj times Its vqlume ln stomaoh acids, and\nat once. The symptoms disappear ln\nfive minutes.\nYou will never use crude methods\nwhen you know this better method.\nAnd you will never suffer from excess\nacid when you prove out this easy relief. Please do that\u2014for your own\nsake\u2014now.\nBe sure to get the genuine PhlUlpe*\nMilk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years In cogitating excess\nacids. Each bottle contains full directions\u2014any  drug store.\nEXERCISE NO. 12\nAn exercise for developing and\nstrengthening every muscle from\nhead to heel, that helps one\nhold the body erect for proper\nCarriage.\nFREE\nEXERCISE BOOK\nTo help promote the good\nhealth of Canadians, Penmans\nhave prepared an attractive\nbook on home exercises which\nwill be sent to you free on\nrequest. This book illustrates\n15 body - building exercises,\nwith detailed explanations of\neach.\nWrite for ii to-day.\nPenmans ^5\nCanada's Leading Colil\u00bbweather Garment\nJUST before the cold weather sets in\nthousands upon thousands of winter-\nwise Canadians regularly order thit\nfamous underwear. They know from experience that it gives the qualities they\nneed\u2014healthful warmth, comfort and\nmonths and modths of wear.\nPenmans 95 is a light weight garment\n\u2014yet provides all the health protection\nof heavier underwear.    Fits like a glove!\nSold in both two-piece and union\nsuits for men, women and children.\nPENMANS LIMITED\nParis       -        .        Ont.\nHEALTH UNDERWEAR\n '\u2014\u2014\u2014'\nPage Four\nTHE NEESON D30EY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1927\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS\nPublished ev\u00abry morning except 8un-\niay Mr The News Publishing company,\nlimited, Nelson, B.C.\nBimineas letterg Should be addreased\ngad checks and money order* made\nMyaMo to Tbe News Publishing company, limited, and In no eaa* to Individual members of tbe staff.\nAdvertising rate carda and A.B.C.\nabatements of circulation mailed oa\nrequest, or may be seen at the office\n\u2022f any advertising agency recognised\n*y tbe Canadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\nBt  mall  (country), per month...$   .11\nPer   year        IM\nBy mail (city), per year  II.08\nChitride Canada, per month Tl\nPer   year    \u00ab   T.W\nf>ltvered, per week IS\nPer   year      11.0*\nPayabla in Advance\t\nKexttber Audit Bureau of ClrenXatdoa\nSATURDAY.   NOVEMBER   26,   1927\n77* Child Can Make Up Usi\nTime\nA year of school lost ln adolescence\nls v. great and genuine loss. Ordinarily\ntt  can't  be   made   up.\nP. il | loss of a school year in the\nI very curly grades la often Immaterial.\nA weak child, raised ln the open air\na young barbarian, will at nine or\n10 tackle the simple studies of early\nchildhood and take them ln hlB stride.\nThen, abo. many a child of slow mental development merely drags through\nthe early years as a reputed dullard, to\nUncover great latent powers later.\nOne classical instance Is Gladstone.\nDcritlned to develop one of the greatest\nminds of hts age, he was so dull ln his\nearly school years, one biographer relates,\nthat his schoolmaster stated he had some\nhopes of all his other boys, but none of\nGladstone.\nA new Instance Is to hand with the\nNew York TlmeB Book Review of November 20. dealing with the Ray Stannard\nBaker biography, the official biography,\nof Woodrow Wilson, of which the second volume ls just out.\n\"He v:as fond of play,\" we read, ln\nthe Times' Review, \"but rather lazy and\nbackward ln taking to study. Until he\nva*; nine years old he did not even\n'learn his letters,' and he was 11 before\nbe could read  readily.\"\nThe child that loses a year in the early\ngrades need not really lose lt. The far-\nsighted and determined parent can arrange so that the ground is made up,\nand the child brought to his difficult\nHudiei ut the average age.\nA Fighter's Epitaph\nA negro fighter named \"Tiger\" Flowers la dead.\nOno Tunney, champion heavyweight\nboxer of the world, himself a straight\nfighter and a war veteran, pays hkm a\ntribute as clean and straight.\nIf \"Tiger'' played the game of prizefighting straight, fought to win under\nthe rules, and played fair with the public, he was closer to morality than many\nwhite man in many a different pastime who has appeared before the public to earn money.\nThe\nLighter Side\nReaders of Tha Dally News\ncontribute many of the best It*ma\nto this column. Just sign your\nname or initials, or nom-de-pluma,\nand send in your brightest Idea*\n\u2014Editor,  Lighter Bide,\nAUNTHET\n\"Flxln' a roast duck is a sight\nof trouble, but I always feels repaid when Pa asks the blessln' ln\nthat enthusiastic way.\"\nNi=\nIt's still safe to take a flying trip\nln Chicago. When the boys shoot up\nthe  town,  they don't shoot up.\nYou aren't definitely middle-aged\nunless you wonder at times If that\npain Is caused by a cancer.\nRadio waves penetrate the remotest\nJungles, but the savage has no set\nand   lt   Is   strange   that   he   ls   savage.\nOnce girls wore many unmentionables. And now they wear nothing\nworth mentioning.\nThe office woman-hater likes to recall that the only deity ever named\nMut was an Egyptian goddess.\nParent-Teacher Associations\nAnother school year is well begun, another winter season, with its opportunity\nfor discussion, is beginning.\nThis Is the logical time for organization of Piirent-Teacher associations.\nA Parent-Teacher association does not\nhave as its function showing teachers\nhow to teach, nor yet showing parents\nhow to conduct their homes.\nIts function ls to discuss the problems that arise from the fact that Johnny and Mary are attending school\nTeacher's problem with Johnny may become no problem at all when mother sees\nhow she can second teacher. Mother's\nproblem with Mary may suddenly come\nIn sight of solution when Teacher sup>\nplies some missing Information.\nNo school district ought to be without\ntta Parent-Teacher association, organized\nor unorganized.\nA POLICE OFFICIAL SAYS MUSIC\nWILL DECREASE THE DIVORCE EVIL,\nBUT HE PROBABLY DOESN'T INCLUDE  CHIN  MUSIC.\nThe average man does his best work\nafter 60, but this doesn't mean drinks.\nThe hard thing to decide while read-\nilng a. detective novel ls whether you\nhre madder at the detective's dumbness\nor the author's.\nDoubtless most of our fire-eating\npatriots have already picked out the\nkind of desks they will use in the next\nwar.\nLIVES OF GREAT MEN OFT REMIND\nUS IT ISN'T DIFFICULT TO SEEM\nGREAT IF THERE ARE ENOUGH\nDUMB  BOYS TO  AFFORD CONTRAST.\nThe reason a republic Is governed by\na few ls because only a few know what\nthey want.\nThe most comfortlnif bedside\nmanner a doctor can have Is an\napparent Indifference to collections.\nOne reason why the good are more\nnumerous than the wicked ls because\nthe classifying is done by the good.\nCorrect this sentence: \"When I go to\nchurch,\" said she, \"I never notice what\nthe   other   women  have  on.\"\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy   LAURA   A.   KIRKMAN\nREQUESTED    FANCYWORK    DIRECTIONS\nTOMOBROH'S   MENU\nWaffles\nPears\nCereal\nCoffee\nSirup\nDinner\nRoast  of  Pork\nPotatoes Brussels   Sprouts\nApple   Sauce\nCole   Slaw   Salad\nOrange Meringue Pie\nSupper\nEgg   Salad\nJam Sandwiches\nCake Preserves\nCocoa\nFoster's Weekly Weather Bulletin\nTemperature for Month  of December,  1927\n1\n*\n\u00bb\n1 4 S\n* * *\n. a\na \u201e ..\n.. e ..\ns\n*\n-7\ns\ni\n*\n111II 12 1114 IS 14 17 11 is tt 11 B tl M 15 U\n \" \" \u2022 .. .. '.. '.'. a \"\n e\t\n * _ ...'.....'.\n. .  . \u00bb  e . ..\n******.********\u25a0**\u25a0*\n  - a .. \u00ab|\t\n** \" a \".  ..\t\nI\"\"\n* *\nm*ii\n\" \u2022 .'.\n\u2022 -...\n* **\nCenter line of small stars represents normal temperature for the month, while round dots Bhow the predicted\nvariations.\nSeveral of my readers have asked\nfor directions for a tatted square inset\nfor a luncheon set. The following\nare for both a large and a small square\nSmall Square for Napkins and Dollies\u2014Use number 30 cotton, and two\nthreads. Use thread on shuttle for\nmaking rings, and for chains doubles\non second thread. Starting at upper\nleft hand corner, on shuttle thread\nring \\ 8 doubles, pleot, 2 doubles, pi\ncot. 8 doubles, close. Tie on second\nthread and \u2022 \u2022 chain, 2 doubles (plcot\n2 doubles), 10 times, ring 8 doubles;\nJoin first plcot to last plcot of first ring\nmade, 2 doubles, plcot. 8 doubles,\nclose. (AU rings are made the same)\nChain, 2 doubles, picot. 8 times, 8\ndoubles, ring *, Joining first picot to\nsecond ring of group, chain 8 doubles,\nring 8 doubles, plcot, 2 doubles, plcot,\n8 doubles, close, chain 8 doubles,  ring\nchain 8 doubles, Join to plcot of second long chain (2 doubles, picot), 8\ntimes, ring \u2022 Join first picot to last\npicot on preceding ring.\nRepeat chain ' \u2022 and follow directions.\nLarge Square for Runner of Luncheon Se\u00bb>-Two threads. Shuttle threads\nfor rings and second thread for chains.\nBegin at the upper left hand corner\nand on the shuttle thread, ring 8\ndoubles, plcot, 2 doubles, plcot, 8\ndoubles, close, chain on second thread,\n2 doubles (picot 2 doubles) 10 times,\nring *, Joining first plcot to last plcot\nof preceding ring, chain 2\/doubles, 9\n(plcot, 2 doubles) 8 times, 8 doubles,\nring. Joining first plcot to last plcot\nof second ring, chain 8 doubles, ring,\ncTialn B doubles, ring, chain, 8 doubles,\nJoin to picot of second long chain (2\ndoubles, plcot) 8 times, ring Joining to\nfirst ring of this group, chain 2 doubles\n(plcot, 2 doubles) 8 times, 8 doubles,\nring. Joining to second ring of this\ngroup, chain 8 doubles, plcot, 2\ndoubles 5 times, 8 doubles, ring, * Joining to third ring, making -a group of\n4. chain 8 doubles and follow directions. >\u2022\nEdge\u2014Two threads. On first thread\nring 8 doubles, plcot, 2 doubles, plcot,\n8 doubles, close, a tie on second thread\nand chain 2 doubles (picot 2 doubles)\n10 times on ring on first thread, 8\ndoubles, Join to last picot of preceding ring, 2 doubles, plcot, 8 doubles,\nclose, chain on second thread, 8 doubles\nand repeat from beginning.\nAddress inquiries to Miss Klrkman,\nand Inclose stamped-addressed envelope'\nfor reply.\u2014Editor.\nNEXT BOARD MNCHEON\nIn DDE DECEMBER 8\nThe next monthly luncheon of the\nNelson board of trade will be held\nThursday, December 8. By an error,\nthis was referred to as due to be held\nyesterday.\nA storm wave of moderate intensity\nIs expected to cross continent during\nweek centering on November 25 and to\nfollow central transcontinental storm\npath; this storm wave will occur during\na period of below normal temperatures; weather features of this period\nwill be extreme and more than usually\nsevere on central and northern Pacific\nslope, on north Atlantic slope and in\nvicinity of Great Lakes. Precipitation\non north Atlantic slope during last\nhalf of November will decrease from\nthe heavy amounts received in period\nJust previous, but this decrease ls expected to be only temporary. Cold\nwave is expected to follow storm wave\ncentering on 26, but will not be so\nsevere nor extreme a\/ cold wave pre-,\nceding that storm center was expected\nto be. Last week of November will\naverage much better weather for outdoor activities than week of 14 to 21,\nas precipitation and storm force are\nboth to be on a downward trend, but\nbelow normal temperatures are expected to be the general average for\nthe continent during 21 to 30.\nDECEMBER WEATHER\nFEATURES\nIn the northern hemisphere, December crop weather is of comparatively\nlittle importance, excepting severe extremes that occasionally kill much\nwinter grains and semi-hardy plants\nand the receiving or not receiving of\nsuch moisture as may be essential to\nthe welfare of general crop conditions\nfor the following spring. In the southern hemisphere, however. December\ncompares with our June and its crop\nweather is of greatest importance;\ntheir wheat ls reaching harvest period\nand their corn Is Just getting started,\nbeing harvested  in  March.\nIn   North   America,   December,   1927,\nwill be expected to average closer to\nnormal temperatures and precipitation\nthan has been experienced during November. Weather will be very changeable, but extremes not so great. Warmest period will be 1 to 6; 1 to 14 will\naverage' above normal temperatures.\nColdest period will be 18 to 22; 17 to\n30 will average well below tformal\ntemperatures. Precipitation will average about normal for .,the month for\nthe continent; most precipitation will\nbe expected during weeks centering on\nfl and 20, heaviest near 20- Periods\nof moderately severe storms near 17\nand 24; a cold, stormy Christmas with\nmore than usual snow In snow country.\nModerate stornj wavei centering on\" 10;\nmild storms 4. Cold wave near 22 expected to reach to gulf. Heaviest precipitation will be expected along and\nJust east of Atlantic coast: heavier on\nnorth than on.south Atlantic coast of\nNorth America.\nA tolal eclipse of the moon will occur on December 8, visible from northern parts of North America as earth\npasses between sun and moon. A partial eclipse'of sun will occur December\n24, but will not be visible rrom points\nin North America; this phenomenon\noccurs as moon passes between gun\nand eaiV.h. While little importance is\ncredited to an eclipse by scientists of\nthe present day, lt is my belief that\nmany Important discoveries relative to\nfree force and Its movements will be\nmade from observations during these\nphenomena. It has been established\nthat there ls a considerable difference\nin the strength of electro-magnetic\ncurrents during the contact of an\neclipse, but few scientists will admit\nthe possible influence this may have\nupon earth weather.\nWhatDoYouThink?\nThe Daily NewB invites letters\nfrom readers upon matters oi public Interest. A nom-de-plume may,\nif desired, be employed, but every\nletter must be signed by the writer\nas a guarantee of good faith,\nthough not necessarily for publication. Letters' should be brief,\nand must avoid personalities. The\nDaily News does not hold Itself,\nIn any way, responsible for the\nviews of correspondents. Letters\nwhich contain advertising matter,\nor propaganda which Is classed as\nadvertising, will not be accepted\nunder any circumstances.\nThat Body\nof Yours\n\u25a0y  JAME\u00bb  W.  BARTON.  M.D.\nEffects of Cold\nIt ls not hard to prove that more\npeople are sick, and that more people\nactually die, during the cold weather,\nthan during warm weather. There is\nno question but that cold weather ls a\nstrain on older folks who are shut ln.\nAlso, as most people are Indoors more\nduring cold weather, the general condition of the body becomes lowered,\nan appetite, digestion and the removal\ncf wastes are less active. However, If\nfolks moved about in the cold weather\nand got more of the outdoors, there\nwould be less illness and fewer deaths.\nBut can the cold weather, can \"cold\"\nreally interfere with the natural processes?\nYou have heard the expression \"your\nb.u< cl Is your life,\" and lt ls only too\ntrue that the ability of the white cor-\nputxlei of the blood to fight Invading\nt.ganlsms Is what keeps you free from\nmany infections. The strength and\nnumber of these white \"warriors of the\nblood,\" is then an Indication of your\nresistance toward disease. And, likewise, the red corpuscles of the blood\nare the food carriers and their riches\nin Iron and other building elements Is\n*.;iat gives health and strength to\n\u2022very tissue in the body. Because you\nwill remember that lt Is the blood\nbathing the tissues that keeps the\ntissues ln a normal healthy condition.\nNow, what has this to do with\n\"cold?\"\nA Japanese scientist, Yamaguitlc, asserts that cold causes a distinct lessening tn the power and number of the\nwhite corpuscles in the blood. Also,\nthat the red corpuscles are unable to\nTen Years Ago\n\u2014\u2022\n(From The Dally NewB, Nov. 26, 1917)\nRev. C. A. Meyers of Toronto, Rev. J.\nP. Westman and J. W. Storey of Calgary have arrived ln Nelson to attend\nthe conference of the Canadian Higher\nEfficiency  Test organization.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nSergeant William Pascoe, who has been\ntwo years ln Canadian Expeditionary\nforce, has reached Quebec on his way\nhome to Nelson.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nDr. Gilbert Hartin was a visitor to\nSandon this week.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nFrom Seaford, Sussex, comes word of\nthe birth \u00abf a daughter, October 24, to\nLieutenant and Mrs. Albert Sullivan. Mr.\nSullivan, before going overseas, was for\nyears principal of Nelson Central school,\nand later provincial high school inspector.\nGay as a Posy and\nDainty as a Ball\nof Fluff\ndo their work properly when they are\n\"chilled.\"\nWhat does this mean?\nThat during cold weather the white\nand red corpuscles are Incapable of\ndoing their work as well as during\nmoderate or warm weather. Of course,\nI have only one suggestion ln the\nmatter, and you likely know Just what\nit is.\nThat you \"keep moving\" ln the cold\nweather, which, together with the\nextra food eaten, will keep the red\ncorpuscles richer and moving faster\nand the white corpuscles, or fighters,\nwill likewise be strengthened. We all\ncannot get away from cold weather\nwith i\\i chilling effects upon the\nbody, but we can take exercise, eat\ngood food, keep our homes well ventilated and add a little moisture to the\nair.\nIt is ^eating heavy food. In an ill-\nventilated house, with less activity of\nthe body, that really gives \"cold\" a\nchance to lower the body's resistance\nto colds and other ailments.\nA botjtant thing, spirited and de-\nbonnaire, this dance dress with its\nseductive bodice and the piff-paff-\npouff of its full skirt is just dedicated\nto the good tines around Thanksgiving season. And\u2014as far as that goes\n\u2014it can be worn all through the\nChristmas holidays and earn its \"overhead\" in sparkle and fascination right\nup into the Easter dances. Tbe six-\ngored skirt is scalloped and dips in\nback to one's heels, \"Peacock\" style.\nThe little bodice, not to be outdone\nby the skirt, repeats by shirrings the\nscallops below. Add to this tbe V\nneck back and front and two handmade bouquets and you will have a\nRobe de Style ss unusual as it is\ncharming. Georgette, silk voile, chiffon, crepe de chine or sheer metallic\nfabric all lend themselves to the soft\nfluttering grace of a dance frock. Tbe\nflowers of mousseline de sole or organdie may have leaves of greea or\nmetallic ribbon. (Copyright, 19V, If\nButtnwick) .  \t\nMother Shipton's End\nof World Prophecy\nForgery, He Says\nTo the Editor of The Daily News:\nSir\u2014With reference to Mr. J. T. Bealby's letter which was ln The News on\nNovember 12, he speaks of Mother Ship-\nton's farrago of anticipations, and about\nthe end of the world in 1881. I have\nheard from a good many people that\nMother Shipton prophesied the end of\nthe world in 1881.\nNow this appears to be a mistake. If\nanybody has the Encyclopaedia Brltan-\nnica, eleventh edition, Volume 24, look\nat pages 988 and 989. and .you will find\nthat this was one of a series of forgeries, to which Charles Hlndley, who re\nprinted ln 1862 a garbled version of\nRichard Head's life, confessed in 1873,\nI am not writing to uphold Mother\nShipton, but Just to correct a mistake\nif possible, nor do I say she had divine\nInspiration.\nGOD'S WAYS\nNOT  MAN'S\nBut I believe that bod speaks ln\nmany ways strange to man's way of\nthinking, as he did when he spoke\nthrough a dumb ass, speaking with a\nman's voice (II. Peter, chapter 2, verse\n16).\nBecause the foolishness of God\nwiser than men; and the weakness of\nGod ls stronger than men. (I. Corinthi\nans, chapter 1, verse 25 )#\nI hope I have not taken up too much\nof your valuable space.\nA READER  IN  SASKATCHEWAN.\nGull Lake, B.C., November 21, 1927.\nwas the basis of my argument. I am ln\nno way responsible for the heading of\nthe article that appeared In the Cranbrook Courier, and the report of my\naddress appearing under it was very incomplete. I hope Mr. Tlmms will read\nmy answer to Mr. Mulholland which I\nsent you some days ago. If he does, I\nbelieve he will find that we are\nagreement, and that the difference he\nimagines is the result of Mr. Mulhol\nland's gross misrepresentation of what\nI said.\nI look forward with much pleasure ti\na visit to the Slocan country when I re\nturn from New York next spring. I\nwant to Bee that country, and I particularly want to meet Mr. Tlmms. A man\nwho writes as courteously as he does,\nwhen he believes we are ln opposition,\nmust be a very pleasant man to know\nwhen we are agreed.\nWILLIAM A.  DRAYTON.\nFort Steele, B.C.. November 23, 1927.\nDrayton Writes That\nKaslo Prospector and\nHe Are in Agreement\nTo the Editor of The Dally News:\nSir\u2014In your issue of November 19 you\npublished a letter from Mr. E. F. Tlmms,\nof the Kaslo Prospectors' association,\nThis letter Is that of a sincere and courteous man expressing a difference of\nopinion, but giving and taking no offence. After the letter Mr. Mulholland\nwrote, lt Is a real pleasure to hear from\nsuch a correspondent, even though he\nimagines a difference of opinion exists\nbetween us.\nLet me hasten to point out to Mr.\nTlmms that I agree with all he says of\nthe mineral resources of the Slocan\ncountry. If Mr. Timms will read over\nthe report of my address In Cranbrook\nI think he will be forced to admit that\nI never said anything at all expressing\na lack of faith ln the mineral resources\nof the Kootenays. On the contrary, I\nhold exactly the opposite opinion,\nwhich opinion\u2014shared by Mr. Timms\u2014\nENGAGEMENTSHERE\nTwo Dates St. Saviour's, One\nRedeemer, Thref Trail, All\nWithin One Week\nRt. Rev. A. J. Doull, bishop of\nKootenay, will spend the ensuing week\nln this district. Sunday morning he\nwill officiate at an ordination service\nat St. Saviour's church here, when two\npriests will be ordained, and Sunday\nevening he will hold a confirmation\nthere.\nMonday evening he will be the guest\nof the Church of the Redeemer at a\nreception.\nWednesday, St. Andrew's day, he\nwill participate ln the patronal services\nof St. Andrew's church. Trail, which\nwill take place morning and evening,\nthe evening service merging Into a\nsocial. Thursday he will hold a confirmation service there.\nHis lordship will officiate some time\nin the near future at the induction\nof Rev. C. Blay, now at Enderby, as rector at Rossland, but the date for this\nhas not yet been set.\nSoviet Does Not Refuse\nto Resume Diplomatic\nRelations With Britain\nMOSCOW, Nov. 25.\u2014The Soviet government \"does not refuse\" to resume\"\ndiplomatic or trade relations with\nGreat Britain on basts of*mutual noninterference ln each other's affairs.\nAlexin Rykoff, president of the council\ncf  people's  commissaries,  said   today.\nBut, added Rykoff. it is necessary that\nthe British government should not place\nresponsibility on the Soviet for the action of organizations for whloh lt cannot ln any way be responsible.\n(Tbe Soviet frequently bad disavowed\nthe activities of third Internationals,\nwhich* It claimed, ln no way a\u00bbn be regarded as part of the Soviet government.)\nRHEUMATISM\nApply Minard's Liniment\nto the aching spot and gat\nquick relief. The remedy\nSour grandmother used.\no thing to equal it\n^1\nWill Appeal for New\nTrial for Condemned\nYouths, Westminster\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. Nov. 25.\u2014\nAn appeal for a new trial will be entered against the sentence of death imposed upon two Vancouver youths,\nGeorge Burgess, 18, andJOohn McKenzle,\n17, found guilty by the New Westminster assize Jury on a charge of murder\nof Otto Bosch on a freight train at Ruby\nCreek, July 22, it was announced today\nby Alex Henderson, K.C, who, with Stuart Henderson, ls acting as counsel on\nbehalf of the condemned youths,\nDivorced 20 years ago, Captain John\nKeen, aged 69, arid Mrs. Anna Halbert,\nwere again married in Philadelphia, Pa.\nBABY S\nOWN\nSOAP\nbwlFChristmQS\nCANADIAN PACIFIC STEAMSHIPS\nSAILINGS\nTwenty Years Ago\ntt    i\u2014   n , ...  \u2014  \u25a0   \u25a0 '-      \u2014\u2666>\n(From The Daily News, Nov. 26, 1907)\nD. 0. McMillan and D. Kennedy, late\nof Chicago, have opened a photographic\nstudio ln the Allan block.\nA gang of three men are being employed by the city at the present time\nfixing up the sidewalks where they are\ndefective, for the winter.\nIt has been decided to proceed at once\nwith the flooding of the rink, so as to\ntake advantage of the first real frost,\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nThe road between Thrums and Slocan\nJunction has been completed within\nhalf a mile of Slocan river.\nOver Seventy-five\nThousand Autos Are\nRegistered in B. C.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 25. \u2014 Automobile\nregistrations ln British Columbia up to\nOctober 31, totaled 75,482 as against\n67,012 for all of last year.\nITIIIIIlIIIIIMITfl TTT>\n\"Build  B.O.\"\nPacific\nMilk\nLocal\nHere\nMr. George Maxwell of this city\nhas written a very pleasing letter ln reference to using British\nColumbia products. He says Pacific Milk is pointing in wie\nright direction, and singles out\nUnited States as a country made\nwealthy by local patronage.\nTariff,  he says, made the States.\nPACIFIC MILE\nFeotono.  at   Ladnar   and   Abbottfor*\n\"BUILD   B.   C.\"\nI I 1 I I 1 1 I 1 I I I I I I 1 I 1 1 I 1 1 1 I I .\nDoor Mat Special\nWe have received a large consignment of special\nCocoa Door Mats\nWhich we are offering at \/JA*\u00bb\nEach  OUL\nQUALITY RIGHT.   ACT QUICKLY.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON, B. C.\nz\nM\nFROM MONTREAL AND QUEBEC\nMELITA   * NOV.\nto Belfast, Greenock and Liverpool'\nFROM ST. JOHN\nMOINTCLARK _. DEC.\nto Belfast, Greenock and Liverpool\nMONTROSE   t DEC.\nto Belfast, Greenock and Liverpool\nMONTNAIRN \\ DEC.\nto Cobh, Cherbourg and Southampton\nMONTCALM   ..., DEC. 15\nto Belfast and Liverpool\nMELITA   ....: DEC. 22\nto Greenock nnd Liverpool\nCABIN\u2014TOURIST HI.\u2014THIRD CLASS\nI\u00ab'\u00bb   Round  Trip  limes:  Tourist  III.   Cabin  and Third Ctasa.\nr-rcdi   Reservations   can  now bo made.  Details and Uter-\naturb  from  any Agent or Write\nS   J. S. CARTER, DISTRICT PASSENGER AGENT\nIt NEL80N,   B.  C.\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nMaterial   john burns & son\nBuilding\nFailed to\nDissuade Him\nNE pleasant summer evening I wu\n'discussing Mutual Life Insurance,\nwith a fanner, seated under a tree in\nfront of his house.   The farmer's wife\nkept coming to the door to call him.\nShe was averse, he told me, to hia taking\ninsurance, having other and, in her opinion,\nmore pressing uses for the money.\nFortunately, his own better judgment pr*>\nvailed. Two years later, he died of pneU'\nraonia, leaving his widow with a mortgaged\nfarm, several small boys and a fair \u00abied\nPolicy in The Mutual Life of Canada.\nThat Mutual Policy was the anchor which\nsaved the farm and kept the family from\ndrifting apart. By its aid, she was able to\nkeep the farm and educate the boys.\nLet a Mutual Agent show you how to\nsafeguard your family's interests.\nHttJTUAL LIFE\nof CANADA SS&JfS\nI. D. BRACKET!, Dtst. Manager, Cranbrook, B.C\n1AMES   SKINNER,   Representative,   Trail,   B.C.\n r\n_\n\t\nr\u00a5HI NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1927\nI Hid\nCosy\nSlippers\nFOR\nMEN\nWOMEN\nCHILDREN\nOUR LINEUP IS COMPLETE IN COSYS\nMoccasins, Felts, Leather, Satins and Patent, Leather\u2014\ni's  81.65 to 84.00\nWomen's $1.25 to,$5.0\u00a9\nChildren's 96* to fS.00 4kfp\nR. ANDREW ft CO.\nLeaders in Footftshion\nW^^___H\nKASLO NOTES\nCASLO, B.C., HOT. 25\u2014Wednesday,\nJames Anderson entertained a\nmtoer of friends to luncheon, honpr-\nMrs   Penny, who  haa recently  arid ln Kaslo to make her home, and,\nW. A. Allen, who is leaving shortly\nmake here home at the coast. The\ner guests were Mrs. R. A. Chester,\nH D. Dawson, Mrs. J. H. Stubbs,\nT. P. Lane1, Miss Elizabeth Oleger-\nand Miss Helen Bennett. Later,\nAnderson took her guests to the\nbalntoh club,, where she and Miss*\ninett were the tea hostesses.\nJol. H. YuiH has returned 'r(>m *\n)k spent tn Vancouver. He was ac-\nipanled by Mre. Yulll and their son,\nlaid, who will make their home here\nthe   winter.    They   are  taking   up\nir residence) ln the apartment ln the\nzander  block.\nlex Erlckson ls down from the Day-\nk for a few days.\nr. and Mrs. Oliver Harris were Nel-\nvlsitors during the past week.\nPllllsm  Myers  and  Oeorge  Johnson,\nPLEATED SKIRTS AND\nDRESSES CLEANED\n\u00a3  H.K. FOOT\nHigh-Class  Dyer  and   Cleaner\nFairview, Nebon,  B.C.\nwho have been leasing the Monte\nCrlsto at Blaylock, have arrived In\ntown to spend the winter.\nArthur Lakes, Mil., of Nelson, was a\nKaslo  visitor  Wednesday.\nMrs. S A. Hunter ls spending a few\ndays ln Nelson this week.\nBobby Laughton of Nelson is a visitor In the city, the guest of Mr. and\nMrs. A. T. Oarland.\ntl. McNally of Vancouver spent\nThursday in town.\n. 3. H. Tlnkeaa lias returned from his\nmuch in Saskatchewan, where he has\n\u2022pent the past few weeks.\nMrs. M. S. Davys was Joint hostess\nwith Mrs. J. X\" Binns at the recent\nbridge held at the home of Mrs. Binns\nla aid of St. Mary's women's missionary\nfunds.\nJames Foulds ls down from the Silver Bear  for  a  few days.\nOwing to the church bazaar being\nheld in the drill hall the next three\nSaturdays, the Badminton teas will be\ngiven Wednesday afternoons instead of\nSaturdays.\nL. 8. Bradley and Jack Adams of\nNelson  spent Thursday ln town.\nA. J. Harris is down from the Charleston mine at Retallack and will spend\na few days ln the city.\nM. J. Baker of Sllverton is a visitor\nin town.\nE, Holm of Kettle valley was a visitor to tha city Wednesday.\nW. F, Trant, Inspector of post offices, arrived from Vancouver Wednesday and ia making Inspection of post\noffices in Kaslo and immediate district.\nF. E. Archer has presented a piano\nto the local Orange lodge, lt being\nrecently Installed In the lodge rooms.\nVotive Daughters\nEntertain at Cards\n*       and Dance, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK. B.C., Nov. 25.\u2014At the j\n:ard party and dance held by the Na- j\n:ive Daughters of Canada ln the K.\n)f P. hall Wednesday evening honors\nn whist were carried off by Mrs. W.\n.Mtchard and Don Dallas. The con-\nolatloii prizes went to Miss Hasel\nBowley and F. J. Harbinson. Tbe\nbridge wss won by Mrs. Stewart Mc-\n'ntosh snd W. L. Rutledge, and tbe\nconsolation by Mrs. Rutledge and W.\nC. Thompson. Twenty-five tables were\nfilled for cards.\nDancing was Indulged in after the\ncards were finished and during an intermission Dr. J. W. Rutledge presented\nminiature cups to 14 of the boys who\nhad participated in the senior lacrosse\ngames during the season. Oeorge T.\nMolr, on behalf of the Amateur Athletic association, gave a strongly appealing address on behalf of amateur\nsport.\nCreston Institute\nIs at Home to Its\nMembers and Friends\nProtect Your Piano\n#\u25a0<\nft make your plasse a convenience for the- tuner. What\nelse! have you in your home\nthajt ls so valuable, and costs\nso little for its yearly upkeep?\nDel^y ls costly, and sometimes\ndisastrous not only to the instrument, but to the musical ear\nDf your child you' are trying to\nlevelop.\nAre you aware you have a real\n,uner living in your town of\ntelson?\nL   SINGLETON,\nExpert Piano Tuner.\nMason & Rlsch, Ltd., Nelson.\nEd. Hall's Music Store, Trail.\nEIGHTEEN-POINT BUCK\nFALLS IN CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK. B.C., Nov. 26.\u2014Fred\nRyckman of the Indian department,\nhunting with his brother, near Kitchener, on Monday, killed a white-tail\nbuck with the most beautiful set of\nhorns ever brought Into Cranbrook,\nThe horns were eighteen points and\nperfectly symmetrical.\nSore, Tired and\nBlistered Feet\nBathe them*, in bet watea,\nKv.\nwall with MINARD'S\n\u2014 T.   II will ntara fans.\n\u2022ritkoatafcsttk.      10\n\u25a0eenT-^i,::j.*>\nWinter Protection\nfor Your Car\nFIREPROOF\nAND\nFROST PROOF\nSTORAGE\nDEAD   STORAGE  %_  PER\nMONTH\nLIVE   STORAGE   $5   PER\nMONTH\nIN OUR NEW STEAM-HEATED GARAGE!\nEvery car brought in for winter storage is thoroughly washed and cleaned before being put\naway.\nYour battery is taken out and\nput on charge every 10 days for\nthe small sum of $1-00 per\nmonth.\nPHONE US FOR SPACE\nNELSON  TRANSFER  CO.,   LTD.\nDor, Vernon * Stanley Sta,\n.\nPHONE 36\nNebon, B. 0.\nUse Pasteurized Milk\nfor the Children\nIt is particularly necessary for the milk\nused by children to be safeguarded by\npasteurization.\nFor adults, too, it is equally necessary\nthat- the milk supply should be guarded\nagainst impurities. ,\nPhone 290 for guaranteed delivery by\n6 a.m.\nCURLEW CREAMERY CoMLtd.\nBUTTER ICE CREAM\nAil Perfectly Pasteurized Products\nMILK\n1  '\nCRESTON, B.C.. Nov. 24.\u2014Creston and\nDistrict Women's Institute had a dozen\ntables of players out Wednesday night\nfor the first of the season's bridge parties given for members and their escorts at which the winners at cards\nware: High score, Mrs. Ernest Driffil of\nKitchener and C. H. Hare; consolation\nprizes went to Mrs. A. Manuel and Mrs.\nMcQonegal. The at home was staged ln\ntbe Parish ball, which was nicely decorated for the occasion. Mrs. Llllle was\nat the head of the committee handling\nthe refreshments, and provided a very\nsUmptuous lunch. The prizes were\ngiven out by the president, Mrs. R.\nStevens.\nPage Fft*\n\u2014a>\nContractors Boyd and\nCraig Busy on Walks\nin Creston Village\nCRESTON, B.C., Nov. 25.^-Although\nthe weather is none too favorable, Contractors Boyd St Craig are malting great\nheadway at putting down sidewalk extensions on Barton avenue, and on* the\nnew stretch of Vancouver street that\nhas Just been opened between Victoria\nand Barton avenues. Contractor L. N.\nLeamy has four teams on the gravel\nhaul from the Laermonth pit for road\nbetterment on Barton and Victoria avenues, Vancouver street and Hillside\nroad, and it now looks as If his undertaking to place 626 yards will be completed by December 16. He is averaging\nabout 30 yards a day.\nCRESTON NOTES\nCRESTON, B.C., Nov. 26.\u2014Mr, and\nMrs. T. C> Dickson are having a visit\nthis week from their son, Arthur, and\nhis bride, formerly Miss Helen Rae\nBeards of Vauxhall, Alta., who were\nunited in marriage by Rev. Mr. Villett at\nTaber, Alta., United church on Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Allan arrived home\nMonday from their honeymoon visit at\nSpokane and Calgary, and for the present are occupying the furnished house\nof Frank Staples. H. Cummings, who\nhad been in charge at the Imperial\nbank ln Mr. Allan's absence, left for\nVancouver on Wednesday.\nMrs. E. Driffil of Kitchener is spending the week ln town, a guest of her\nslater, Mrs. Oeorge Young. Mrs. Howard\nis another Kitchener visitor this week,\nstopping with Mrs. James Carr.\nMiss A. Doyle, accountant with Creston Growers, limited, got back on Tuesday from a few days' visit with her sister, Mrs. Donneau at Fernie.\nThe curling enthusiasts had a well-\nattended bee on Wednesday afternoon,\nwhen things around the rink were put\nin good shape, and flooding can take\nplace Just as soon as the weather takes\nthe turn for the colder.\nCreston Milk Prices\nGo Up Owing to the\nShortage of Feed\nCRESTON, B.C., Nov. 35.\u2014The sho'rt-\nage of hay, due to. Inability to harvest\nthe crop on the flats, and higher prices\non other feedB, ls responsible for a second advance in the price of milk In the\nlast three months. Jersey milk ls now\nretailing at 16 cents a quart, with a second grade milk going at 11 cents.\nMrs, Nancy Turrentln, aged 100, of\nPana, 111., has smoked dally for 60 years.\nIf Your Wife\nobjects to you smoking ln the house,\ntry our Special Mixture and she will Insist on your doing lt. Bee Cee Cigars\ngoing strong.\nBUSH'S\nThis column is conducted by Mrs.\nM J Vlgneux. All news of a social\nnature. Including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal Items,\nmarriages, etc., will appear In thla\ncolumn. Telepnone Mrs. Vlgaeuz at\nher home on Slllcastreet\nMrs. Francis Wilson of Vancouver was\nthe guest of honor yesterday afternoon\nwhen Mm. Archie Donaghy. Kart- apartments, entertained at a charmingly ar-\ntanged bridge tea. Mrs. Donaghy chose\nyellow chrysanthemums for her floral\ndecorations. Miss Helen Murphy was\nthe winner of the prize for top score,\nwhile Mrs. E. O. Matthew won the consolation. The guests were Mrs. Wilson,\nMrs. K. Q. Matthew, Miss Marion Blackwood, Miss Alolse Wragge, Mrs, Arthur\nLakes, MISS Toots Miller, Mlsa Mildred\nIrvine, Miss Phyllis Church. Miss Dorothy Armstrong, Miss Margaret Arthur,\nMrs. Oeorge O. MacAfee, Miss Telen\nMurphy, Miss Alleen Mansfield and Miss\nMhora McDonald.\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nA. E. Collins left last night for Penticton.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nRev. Norman Larmonth, rector of St.\nAndrew's church, Trail, and rural dean\nof Nelson, left on the noon train yesterday for his home after attending the\nsessions of the diocesan executive.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThursday afternoon Mrs. O. L. Landon\nand Mrs. C. Darough were hastes sos to\nthe members of Mrs. Alex Carrie's circle\nof St. Paul's United church, when those\npresent were Mrs. T. F. McKechnlo, Mrs.\nH. E Dill. Mrs. D. Boyd, Mrs. M. Maloney, Mrs. A. J. Dill, Mrs. G. B. Russell,\nMrs. William Stewart. Mrs. Percy Bates,\nMrs. Archie Donaghy, Mrs. James Brodie,\nMre. J. A. Curran. Mrs. E. Obetnchaln,\nMrs. McCallum. Mrs. William Ramsay\nand Mrs. Carlton J. Currier.\ne    e*  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. T. 3- Jerome, Victoria\nstreet, have as their guest Mrs. .Jerome's\nmother, Mrs. A. pcott of Ainsworth.\nMrs. Campbell of Salmo spent yesterday in town shopping\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nMr and Mrs. R. A. Peebles, Latimer\nstreet, have as their house guest Alex\nDow of Vancouver, who formerly reside, in the city.\nMrs. W. Whlteley of South Blocan\nspent  yesterday ln Nelson.\n\u2022 , \u2022   *\nMiss Florence Evans, who has been a\npatient in Kootenay Lafce General hospital, left last night for her home In\nNakusp.\nMrs. D. McEwing of Salmo waa a visitor to Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Irving. Hoover\nstreet, have had as their guest for the\npast couple of months, Mrs. Irvlng's\nmother, Mrs\/J. R. Stewart, who left last\nnight for Summerland, where aChe will\nvisit a few days with friends en route\nto Vancouver.\nMajor Turner Lee of Bonnlngton was\na visitor to the city yesterday. He and\nhis daughter, Miss Nancy, expect to\nleave from Saint John, December 0, on\nihe Montrost for England.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Haggart, Mill street,\nhave had as their guest Mlsa E. A.\nThompson of Trail, who has returned to\nher home,\nCharles F. Sherwln of Rlondel spent\nyesterday ln town, shopping.\nL. w.- Sells with hit daughters, thu\nMisses Constance and \"Dorothy of New\nDenver, expects to leave on December 9\non the Montrose for England.\nW. M. Archibald of Rossland arrived\nin town Thursday night from Kimberley.\nMrs. Roy Pollard. Mill street, entertained informally at the tea hour,\nThursday.\nT.   Powell   leaves   December   14   for\nAuckland.  N.Z., and   anticipates  sailing\non the Niagara from Vancouver,\na   a   a\nD. Jones of Rossland was a visitor to\ntown yesterday.\nKenneth Campbell, ex-M.P.P., who\nhas recently returned from three months\nabroad, left last night for his home In\nVancouver,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. C. Gray of South Slocan spent\nyesterday ln town.\nMrs. J. McCallum of Kootenay Bay arrived in the city yesterday to be the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. McPherson, Gore\nstreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs, G, S. Mears and child left last\nnight for Penticton.\n\u2022 *    a\nW. Everett of Trail spent yesterday in\nthe city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThe members of Mrs. Thomas Gibson's\ncircle of St. Paul's United church met\nThursday at the home of Mrs. W. M.\nMyers, when she and Mrs. A. M. Young\nwere   the   hostesses  of   the   afternoon.\n<m*&mvnw%Q$vwwwQ\nYour home should come first\u2014music makes the home\nChristmas\nPianos\nThe Willis\nThis Christmas let DAD make the one SUPREME present\nto the whole family!\nA small payment now will hold any piano from -our stock;\nthe balance can be arranged on convenient monthly payments.\nWe are prepared to make a very attractive proposition to\nanyone intending to buy a piano for the family.\nKootenay Music House\nHI Baker Street.  Phone too.\nNovember Sale of Ready-to-Wear\nUnusual values in Women's and Children's Readv-to-Wear for Saturday.\nEvery article is up-to-the-minute in style and our usu^l standard of\nquality.\nWOMEN'S COATS\nAT SAVING PRICES\nFur-trimmed Coats of soft rich materials, with crush or shawl collars of fur,\nand lined throughout. Sizes 36 to 4i.\nRegular values $35.00 to $95.00 each.\nSALE PRICE 825.00 TO $76.00\nEACH.\nSPECIAL  CLEARANCE OF AFTERNOON    DRESSES\nAT $16.95 EACH\nFlat Crepe and Crepe-\nback Satin Dresses in\nall the new colors and\nBlack. Sizes 16 to 42.\nValues to $39. SALE\nPRICE, 816.95\nEACH.\nMISSES' COATS\n$5.00 TO $15.00 LESS\nMade in sizes 15, 16 to 20.\nFor Misses or small women.\nDeveloped of all-wool Duvetine, Needle-Point and\nBroadcloth. New fall colors\nand with shawl or crush collars of rich, furs. Regular\nvalues $25.00 to $75.00.\nSALE PRICE, 820.00 TO\n860.00 EACH.\nSPECIAL SALE\nOF MILLINERY\nAT 20 PER CENT\nLESS\nSmart tailored Hats\nof Imported Felts or\nMetal and Velvet\ncombinations. Small\nor Medium headsizes,\nand in a range of colors. Regular $5.00 to\n$15.00. SALE PRICE,\n$4.00 TO 812.00\nEACH.\nLYSIS V!GT\nIS Li TB REST\nFuneral of Lou Jean Robinson\nIs Private; Many Floral\nTributes\nThe fune\/al of little Lou Jean. 2-year-\nold daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louts\nRobinson of Benton Siding, who died\nThursday after suffering for eight .days\nfrom Infantile paralysis, was held yesterday afternoon from the Standard\nUndertaking parlors. There were many\nbeautiful floral tributes.\nRev. W. C. Mawhlnney of Trinity\nUnited church officiated at the parlors\nand at the graveside. The funeral was\na private one, only a few relations and\nintimate friends attending.\nSLOCANCITY NOTES\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Nov. 25.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. L. Larson, who spent the\nsummer at Evans creek, where Mr.\nLarson was employed by Llngle &\nJohnson, spent a few days In town\nduring  the  week.\nThomas Choate of the CPR. dispatcher staff in Nelson was in town\na few days ago to \u00abe his friend, W.\nA. Jackson, who is in very poor health.\nMrs. E. Marshall erf Sllverton was In\ntown for a few days, the guest of Mrs.\nWalter Clough.\nH, D. Lea and B. Carter who have\nbeen employed at the Sovereign mine\nat Sandon for Borne time, arrived home\non Monday.\nChair Warmers in the\nVienna Coffee Shops\nWill Be Charged Tax\nVIENNA, Nov. 26.\u2014\"Chalr^warmers\"\nin Vienna's numerous coffee houses\nare to be taxed\u2014about five cents an\nhour.\nThe tax has been decided upon by\nMinister of Finance Kienbeck, who\nhas been searching for new sources\nof  state  Income.\n(WM. H. RAMSDEN)\nAustralia Is on the\nLondon Market for\na Large Money Loan\nLONDON, Nov. 25.\u2014Australia once\nmore ls In the London market lor\na big loan. This time lt Is Tor \u00a37,000,-\nooo ($35,000,000) five per cent Interest\nat 97 _\u2022 The loan ts Issued under the\nnew arrangement of central borrowing\nthrough the Australian Loan council,\nand Is on behalf of tbe Commonwealth\nand four Australian states, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australian   and   Tasmania.\nAustralia raised 935,000,000 in London in July last, and in August raised\n140,000,000 in New York.\nThose present were Mrs. David Laughton, Mrs. T. Olbson, Mrs. Donald McLeod, Mrs. J. Long, Mrs. J. H. Argyle,\nMrs. Robert Armstrong, Mrs. Dan Mc-\nEachern, Mrs. A. J, Miller and Mrs. D.\nMcLean.\nE. H. McKay left last night for Nakusp.\nMiss Eleanor Rowett and her brother\nexpect to leave Nelson shortly for the\neast, whence they will sail on the Mont-\nclalr for England.\n\u2022   *   *\nYesterday afternoon Mrs. J. A. Gibson,\nVernon street, entertained at two tables\nof bridge, when her guests were Mrs.\nJohn Cartmel, Mrs. L. V. Rogers, Mtb.\nA. D. McLeod, Mrs. James O'Shea, Mrs\nW. M. Walker, Mrs. J. O. Bunyan and\nMrs. E. O. Smyth.\nJudge J. A. Forln left last night to\nhold court in Oolden for Judge G. H.\nThompson of Cranbrook, who has been\ncalled to Toronto on account of the\ndeath of his mottrr.\nK WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT\nSUGGESTIONS\nFOR YOUR\nCHRISTMAS\nGIFTS\nNo need to wonder what to get that appeals as a genuine useful gift. Just leave\nyour wants to us. For instance, here are\na few articles. Our stock will satisfy the\nyoungest to the oldest in the family. What\nmore can we do for you? Yes, we can save\nyou money, too.\nChesterfield and\nChairs to match\nOdd Easy Chairs and\nRockers\nlibrary Table\nLady's Writing Desk\nMusic Cabinet\nPiano Lamps\nLibrary Lamps\nCard Tables\nMagazine Stands\nCenter Tables\nGate-Leg Tables\nDinner Wagons\nPictures\nDown Comforters\nGenuine Wool\nBlankets\nRugs\nTinker Toys\nDolls, the best made\nDolls' Carriages\nDolls' Cradles\nDolls' Swan Cart\nDolls' Beds\nTeddy Bears\nKiddie Kars\nBoys' Wagons\nVelocipedes\nBoys' Autos\nBoys' Sleds\nCutters\nRosking Horses\nChild's Desk and\nChair\nShoo Fly Rockers\nKindergarten Sets\nHigh Chairs\nRockers\nSEE OUR DOLLAR TABLE.\nEVERY ARTICLE $1.00\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers    -     Nelson, B. C.\n \u25a0towe-Sh'*5,\nr\u00a5HE WETSTO DA1LT TOWS. SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1927\nJOY\nBy BARBARA WEBB\nA STORY  OP LOVE. TRIAL, TEMPTATIONS  AND TRIUMPHS\nHssacz\nSYNOPSIS\nJoyce Daring ls left homeless\nwhen her parents separate. She\n\u25a0sta a Job as a telephone operator\nln a hotel. Her mother disappears\nmysteriously, and her lover, Henry\nDeacon, returns to college An old\nfrlebd of his. Carter Deland, a\nbachelor clubman. Introduces her to\na circle of society girls, and rushes\nher himself. Joyce turns her attention to her roommate, Oladys\nWarner, who ls revealed as the wife\nOf Forrester Maltby, scion of a wealthy family, whose death uncovers\ntheir tragic marriage. While Gladys\ngoes to New York for the body, she\nleaves Joyce to break the news to\nMrs. Maltby, who has opposed the\nmarriage bitterly.\nCHAPTER  XXVII.\nA Mother's Tragedy\n\u2022Joyce spent a wakeful night.\nShe felt that the problem Gladys had I\nleft her was one that was too much tor\nher to cope with.   True, she might telephone the message to Mrs. Maltby, or,\n\u2022he; might send a written note by a messenger.   But she longed to perform the\nserfice  in person,  that she might de-\nfenp piadys as far as possible from her\nmother-in-law's   resentment.\n' Ap ihe was turning the matter over In\nher. mind the thought of Deke's mother\ncam* to her.    Mrfi. Deacon might even\nknqw'Mn. Maltby.   Joyce could tell her\nthe; story  from Gladys' point of view. .\nMrs. Deacon could advise Joyce.\n'\u25a0perhaps she'll even go with me,\"\nthought Joy.\nape hurried down to the telephone,\nand a few minutes later was talking to\nDele's mother.\n\"ires,, Indeed, Joy, I can see you this\nmorning, right away if you wish,\" said\nth\u00ab   kind   voice.     \"Can   you  come   up,\nhtJhef\"\n\"That's just what I'd like to do,\" said 1\nJoy. \"You see, It's something conflden- :\nttat. and I want to talk to you and ask \\\nyour advice.\n\"Then let me Bend the car down for 1\nyou. Can you be ready ln half an\nhour?\" j\n\"Ye*. I can,\" said Joyce gratefully.\n\"That is awfully kind of you, Mrs. Dea-\ncor-\"\nChile she waited she thought over the\nstory she had to tell, and decided to\ntell it without any reservations. I\nMrs. Deacon had sent the family motor after Joyce, and was waiting for her\nln her own little upper sitting room, a\nroom that she loved, for In it were all\nthe treasured old pieces of furniture\nthat had been her's, and her mother's,\nand h|er grandmother's before her.\n\"Cin the child have become Involved\nwith Carter Deland?\" she wondered. \"Or\ncan it be that she has some further\nbad word from her mother? At any rate\nshe herself is a dear girl and I feel very\ngls-ri that she has turned to me.\" j\nShe was writing at her old-fashioned '\nwalnut desk when Joy was shown In.\nSh* made the girl sit In a low Martha\nWashington rocker, while she settled\nhernelf on an old-fashioned sofa at the\ngirl's side. !\n\"Now tell me all about lt,\" she said\nereoiiraglngly.\nJoyce   plunged   into  her   story,  first\ntelling Mrs. Deacon tjie history of her i\nfriendship with Gladys. \u2022        !\n\"Maybe I'm wrong,\" she said, \"but I\nJust somehow felt that Gladys herself i\nwould be sorry If she didn't let his\nmother know in time to do her part in ,\nthe funeral and everything,\"\n\"You are very right, my dear,\" said\nMrs. Deacon. \"I remember the story\nwell. It was ln all the papers several\nyears ago, how Forrester Maltby had\nmarried this chorus girl, how his people\nobjected. Then they all rather dropped\nout of sight. My own Impression was\nthat the girl had lost interest in him\nwhen he went Into the sanitarium. I\nknow Mrs. Maltby slightly. She ls a\nvery distant woman. She was Intensely\nproud of her son. The family has a\nhistory of alcoholism and she nearly\ndied of shame when Forrester was expelled from college because of drunkenness. > I\n\"Then when he had this stroke in\nNew York and she found a chorus girl\npresiding over his apartment, I can see\nhow it was a serious blow. I think that\nher husband left all his money to her\nln trust for Forrester because of this\ntendency to alcoholism. That would\nacqpujnt for his not having any Income i\nof his own.\"\n\"Do you think I should go to see her\nmv-ielf?\" Joyce asked.\nMrs. Deacon looked at the brave Uttle\nIntense Pains\nin the Back\nThis remedy gave great\nrelief\nRecommends it to hundreds\nof people\nWm. Hollis, Birmingham. England, learned of Gin Pills in Montreal, ten years ago. He suffered\nintense pains in tne back, caused\nby deranged kidneys. Gin Pills\nwen recommended to him. He\nwrites:\n1 had gnat relief from kidney\ntrouble after using Gin Pills. I bat*\nrecommended   them   to  hnndredi  of\nKple ln England and Scotland. 1\ni given many Gin Pill* to people\ntroubled with their backs, and everyone hat given them ths beat of\nrecommendation-..\n\"A friend of mine, Wm. Oabund,\nof Birmingham, suffered a long time\nwhb rhenmmUcm and swollen fast I\nKt him twelve Gin Pills and for tbe\nyear he has felt no pain.\n\"Thanking  you and Gin  Pills for\nttw   relief   given   me   and   aeons   of\nothers that I recommended them to.\"\nIf you have pains in the back,\nswollen feet or hands, brick dust\ndeposits, constant headaches, failing appetite, suppressed or too frequent urination or feel dizzy, look\nto your kidneys. Deranged kidneys\nlead to sciatica, rheumatism, lumbago and other painful maladies.\nGet a box of Gin Pills at once. SOc\nat all druggists. National Drug A\nChemical Company of Canada,\nLimited, Toronto, Canada. i:a\nfigure before her. willing to face ao\ncomplicated a situation for the sake of\nher friendship. \"She's as genuine as\nthe sunshine,\" she thought. \"Would\nyou like me to go with you?\" she asked\naloud.\n\"Oh, Mrs. Deacon, if you only would!\nI've been wanting to ask you, but I\ndidn't quite dare. I didn't know how\nyou'd feel about lt.\" Joy clasped Mrs.\nDeacon's hand in her gratitude.\nThey left the house presently and\nMrs. Deacon gave the chauffeur the address of the Maltby home.\nThe drove up a fine driveway, bordered with tall trees, and Mrs. Deacon\ngave the chauffeur her card to send ln\nto Mra. Maltby. In a few moments a\ngrave and ancient old butler admitted\nthem to a high reception room where\na small grate fire was doing its best to\ndrive off the morning chill.\nThere was the rustle of a Bklrt and a\ntall, thin woman entered the room. She\nwas dressed in black silk, and had about\nher an air of gloomy sternness. Joyce\nfelt her heart sink.\n\"Good morning, Mrs. Maltby,\" said\nMra. Deacon, rising and extending her\nhand. \"This ls my young friend, Miss\nDaring.\"\nMra. Maltby took Mrs. Deacon's hand\nand bowed frigidly to Joyce.\n\"It has been some time since I received any caller in the morning,\" she\nsaid. \"The old custom of calling or\nleaving cards seems to have died entirely.\"\n\"Yea, it has,\" Mrs. Deacon agreed.\n\"And perhaps lt isn't fair to let you\nthink any longer that we have come\non a socfU call. Miss Daring, who has\nlived for several months with your\nson's wife, has something to tell you.\"\nAt this mention of her Bon's wife.\nMrs. Maltby became more frigid than\never. Joyce was honestly frightened,\nbut a glance from Mrs. Deacon, steady\nand kind, cheered her and she began\nher story.\nWith all her young ardor, she tried\nto make Mrs. Maltby see Gladys' devotion to Forrester. With all her power\nof sympathy she tried to# soften the\ngirl's decision to go after her husband's\nbody without notifying the mother.\n\"Truly, Mrs. Maltby,\" she concluded,\n\"I believe that Gladys cared very deeply\nfor your son. So much so that she ls\ngoing to sell the engagement ring he\ngave her to help pay for the expense\nof bringing him here.\"\n\"I shall certainly do nothing so undignified as quarrel over my son's body\nwith this young woman,\" said Mrs.\nMaltby after a pause. \"The news of\nhis death ts no surprise to me. I have\nbeen expecting lt for some time as I\nhave kept closely ln touch with conditions th\\^e. There is a family burying\nground in the park about the house\nhere. All the Maltbys for several generations have been laid to rest there.\nMay I ask you to use your influence\nwith this girl to persuade her to let\nme place Forrester's body there\u2014beside\nhis  father?\"\nThere was a quaver in her voice and\nJoyce for the first time felt a certain\nfear of the woman leave her. \"Why,\nshe's lonely, and terribly sad,\" thought\nJoyce.\n\"Why not ask her yourself?-\" Joyce\nsuggested, \"I am sure that If you\nmake' her see how much lt means to\nyou, she will be glad to do It.\"\/\n\"I sho\\d never expect to have this\ngirl understand my point of view,\"\nsaid  Mrs. Maltby stiffly.\n\"I think the thing that would count\nmost with Gladys would be the feeling\nthat she t might have some part with\nyou ln keeping her husband's memory\nalive,\" said  Joyce.\n\"And I think the thing that would\ncount most with her would be the\nknowledge that If she can prove that\nmy son made his marriage while of\nsound mind she Is heiress to half a\nmillion dollar,1;,\" said Mrs. Maltby with\na certain cold passion.\n\"Half a million dollars?\" said Joyce\nfaintly.\n\"Under the term of his father's will.\nForrester was to Inherit half a million\ndollars unconditionally on his thirtieth\nbirthday. He was thirty last month,\nJust ten days before he died.\"\nMrs. Deacon made a^ slight movement.\n\"Do you intend to contest the marriage, Mrs. Maltby?\" she asked.\n\"I fully Intend to prove that my\nson married this girl while he was\nunder the Influence of liquor. Understand that they have never lived together as man and wife. I have no\nIntention of surrendering any part of\nthe Maltby fortune to an adventuress,\"\nMrs. Maltby spoke wi?*i cold finality.\n\"Then I think you have done all that\nIs necessary for you to do, Joyce,\" said\nMrs. Deacon, rising. \"But you cannot\nexpect Mrs. Maltby to let her husband\nrest where she ls not welcome to visit\nhis grave,\" she added to the older\nwoman.\n\"Walt.\" Mrs. Maltby motioned her\nguests Into their chairs again. For\na time she sat thinking, her lips\nmoving from time to time as ln pain.\n\"Suppose I agree in writing to make\nno effort to keep\u2014my son's widow\"\nshe spoke the words with effort, \"to\nkeep my son's widow from her share of\nhis estate. Do you think she would be\nwilling for me to have a mother's\npart in this last rite that any human\ncan perform for him?\" She made no\neffort to control the slow tears which\ncoursed down her face.\n'\u25a0I think that all you need to do Ib\nto be a little friendly to her,\" said Joyce\n\"She doesn't really hate you. And right\nnow ahe ls all ready to let you do whatever you think Is your part ln caring for\nhim.\" dftftal\nMrs. Deacon sent a glance of approval\nat Joyce.\n\"Then I shall send her a wire at once\nasking her If she will let me meet her\nwhen she arrives with my son's body,\"\nsaid Mrs. Maltby. \"And although I shall\nnot mention lt now In time I shall tell\nher that she will come Into an estate\nof five hundred thousand dollars. May\nI ask you both to accompany me.\"\nShe rang a bell. \"Let me offer you\nsome refreshment.\" she said.\nPresently the butler appeared with\na tray on which stood three glasses of\nthin sweet old wine. There were tiny\nEnglish biscuits on a plate. He offered\nthe tray gravely to the three women.\nThey made their farewells, promising\nto meet Mrs. Maitoy at the station Monday evening.\nGladys, wan from weeping, and the\nstrain of the Journey, cast a glance of\n[\nT\nT\nCommittee of  Direction  Finds\nItself Popular as a\nConsequence\nBLACK PAYS VISIT\nTO PRAIRIE CENTERS\nSays on New Buying Deal the\nBuyer  Entitled  to the\nStrict Grade\nThe weekly letters of the committee\nof direction have been omitted for the\nlast few weeks owing to the absence of\nO. W. Hembllng at the coast on potato\ncontrol, and the absence of the chairman on the prairies investigating conditions there.\nThe potato situation presents innumerable difficulties, due to the oriental\naspect of the business. The committee,\nhowever, through Mr. Hembllng, has\nbeen very persistent in enforcing the act\nwherever possible, and the result is that\ntha white growers In the dry belt are\nunderstood to be more completely behind Its operations than ever before. Indeed, some of these contend that, but\nfor lt, Interior potatoes would have been\nselling as low as \u00bb8 per ton. The advent\nof winter weather will in all probability\nchange the situation somewhat.\nThe chairman visited the cities of Calgary (twice), Moose Jaw, Regina (twice),\nWinnipeg, Saskatoon and Edmonton on\nhis trip. In each city he interviewed\nall the brokers and Jobbers which time\npermitted, and ln Winnipeg and Calgary\nmet the Jobbers collectively in meetings\nlasting for several hours.\nPRAIRIE'S  CRITICISM\nIn all places he found sentiment favorable to the committee because of\nmore stabilized conditions, although\nlikewise difficulties were reported. These\nhad to do chiefly with the condition of\nfruit and vegetables on arrival, and the\npassing of claims ln regard thereto. Indeed, this matter of claims and their\nadjustment cut a large figure ln the\nvarious discussions. It is not at all\nImprobable that the attitude of the\ncommittee In lpprovlng claims before\nfinal settlement will be found to have\neffected a material saving to the Industry.\nIt ls more now than ever the contention that nothing except products of unquestioned worth should leave British\nColumbia, and quality In fruit must be\nbeyond question if the shippers are to\nhave the support of the trade on the\nprairies to the full extent. Remember\nthat conditions are now vitally changed,\nand that Jobbers put their money into\nsupplies f.o.b. points in British Columbia, whereas formerly, the shippers\nwere consigning and rolling their goods\nto be dealt with according to conditions\non arrival, and the type of market experienced. Subject to unforeseen conditions in weather or transit, a purchaser\nof a car of specified vegetables and\ngrades ls entitled to receive quality as\nordered, just as much as if he were buying biscuits or cast Iron pipe.\nThe fruits and vegetables of British\nColumbia are ln a position which they\nhave not commanded for some years\npast, but lt ls only by the conscientious\nefforts of all connected with the Industry that the happy condition of f.o.b.\nselling will be maintained.\nWhile it Is conceded that the committee has, this season, met with a measure\nof success, lt is frequently given as a\nreason that the crop has been a small\none (though lt ls a question If the\n1927 apple crop is not more than fully\nequal to normal) and the question ls\nasked, What will be done ln a year of\nheavy crop?\nPRAIRIE WOMEN\nENLISTED\nIt was with the Idea of partly answering this question that the chairman conferred with the leaders among the women's organizations on the prairies. The\nmost promising channels appeared to be\nthose of the local councils of women,\nand he was able to have lengthy Inter-\nCANADA'S HONOR TO AMERICAN TROOPS\nREMOVE   LANDMARK\nST. LOUIS, MO., Hov. 35.\u2014When t\nrambling brown-stone mansion of the\nlate H. Clay Pierce, oil magnate at St.\nLouis and New York, a show place of\nthis city In the late 80s, is sold and dismantled under a probate court order,\nanother landmark of tlie city's first\nartstoaracy wiU pass.\nWhen the Pierces lived there, 22 servants responded to pearl push button*\nduring the dinners and social function*\nat tha home. The only sign of activity\nnow ls the ticking of a grandfather\nclock whloh la wound by the caretaker\neach Saturday for 40 yean.\n ,\u2014,\u2014 lil,         -*\u00bb\nCanada's gratitude to the thousands\nof men from south of the border who\nanticipated America's participation ln\nthe war by fighting ln the Canadian\ncorps, was expressed In enduring form\nwhen a granite cross, the gift of the\nDominion, was unveiled ln Arlington\nNational cemetery at Washington ln\nconnection with Armistice day memorial services. Between 30,000 and\n40,000 Americans Joined the Canadian\nforces before the American declaration\nof war on Germany. Of these, it Is\nestimated, that between 5000 and\n6000 lost their lives ln battle. The\n'exact number Is not -definitely known.\nsince all enlisted as Canadians. \"The\nCross of Sacrifice\" ls the official name\nof the memorial which Canada presented, but lt is more generally called\nthe Canadian Monument. The granite\ncross, nineteen feet high, bears upon\nlt a conventtonallbel bronze sword,\nThe   Inscription   on  jthe   base   reads:\n\"Erected by the government of Canada,\nln Honor of the Citizens ot the United States, Who Served in the Canadian Army and Gave Their Lives In\nthe Great War, 1914-1918.\" The simple,,\nbut Impressive shaft, Is seen in the!\nillustration. Standing beside the Cross)\nof Sacrifice are seen Hon. Vincent\nMassey, Canadian minister to the\nUnited States, who made the presentation, and Hon. William Phillips, United\nStates   minister.\nWAS VERY WEAK\nlEIVOISMIMELMCMiT\nMrs. Geo. McKenzie, CamphaDforL\nOnt., writes:\u2014\"A short time ago I\nwas troubled wry bady with my heart\nand ner.es, the came of it, I think,\nwu my going through the chanfa of\nWe.\n\"I wu rery weak and melanehory,\nand so nervous I could hardly bear\nto hear-a clock ticking, and I did Hot\n\u25a0jpep well.\n\"I WU advised to try\n^aaaaa-^gjmw so I lent at 0M*\n*SVJ ^a for a  box;   took\nrl\\T. a3w\"T \u00bb*__*<*_,\u2014\u25a0\nlauJsH BBWstVs        ' beforn\nUg Kf they were all gona\nwMB  WKw I  felt  good,   t.j\n^mRi* \\V__T nerres **\u00bb *\u00bb*, %\n^\u25a0ttOSjir      do not mind ajrjr\n^\u25a0^^^r noise,  and  I  eau\n^S^ sleep wall   I can\nnot  recommend  them  too highly  to\nthose suffering u I did.\"\nPrice 50c a box at all druggist! tat\ndealers, or mailed direct on receipt nt\nprice by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,\nToronto, Out\nNEW WAY TO STOP FITS\nWonderful results are reported by\nEpilepsy Colonies using a new remedy\nthat stops the most stubborn cases of\nEpileptic fits or spasms and Is not habit\nforming. Any reader who sends name\nto Phenoleptol Co., Dept. 3S8D. Box 71,\nPt Johns Place Station, Brooklyn, N.T.,\nwill receive a free booklet explaining\nthis new guaranteed treatment. Write\nthem tod*y. *\u25a0\nviews wlty the presidents of the local\nand provincial councils in Winnipeg,\nSaskatoon, Regina and Calgary. They\nexpressed their willingness to cooperate\ntn fruit distribution if properly advised\nfrom time to time.\nIn addition, the chairman was Invited\nto  address a  gathering  of    some    800\nteachers and normal students who were\nassembled in convention In Regina. The\nstory of British Columbia, its fruit and\nits fruit industry, was thus brought to i\nthe attention of influential represents- j\ntives from all districts in southern Sas- i\nkatchewan.\nThe field for educational work of this j\nsort Ib unlimited, and lt was the contention of all interviewed that the pur- I\nchase of British Cqlumbia fruit would \\\nbe greatly stimulated If housewives were j\nauthoritatively Informed as to the time J\nwhen each of the varieties of fruit should\nbe bought.\nIt would be idle, of course, to claim\nthat fruit will sell ln quantities regardless of cost, and the principle of modest\nprices In years of plenty will naturally\nhave to be observed.\nHEAVY  SHIPMENTS\nTo conclude with a matter of figures,j\nit may be said that altogether nearly j\n1,750,000 boxes of apples have been mar- ;\nketed ln Canada alone up to date, of\nwhich approximately 146,000 have been |\nsold in Ontario and 105,000 In the east- i\nem provinces. It is further interesting |\nto note that Prince Edward Island and i\nNewfoundland imported both Jonathans\nand Mcintosh, while two personal\nfriends of the chairman Inquiring for\napples ln Halifax. N.S., were both offered fruit from British Columbia.\nWorld's Largest\nX-Ray Machine Is\nUsed Treat Cancer\n\\      SHE IS VERSATILE\nsuspicious surprise at her mother-in-law\nwhen she saw her with ooyce and Mrs.\nDeacon, though she kissed the offered\ncheek promptly enough. The little party\nof four women made its way through the\nstation to the Maltby limousine and\nrode silently out to the great pile of\nstone, that had housed three genera\ntlons of  the  Maltby family,\nJoyce left at noon to go to work.\nThe brief funeral services were to be\nheld late that afternoon and Forrester\nMaltby would rest beside his father and\nhis grandfather, his short and unhappy\nlife at peace,\nWhen she got home tnat night she\nfound Gladys huddled on the bed, her\neyes red with crying, her whole aspect\nwoebegone.\nJoyce kissed her sympathetica^.\n\"Poor Glad.\" she said. \"You've had a\nhard  time.\"\n\"I had the worst time of all today\nwhen she was so good to me,\" aald\nOladys. \"What did you do to her,\nJoyce? She sent me a $1000 by\ntelegram when she wired she wanted\nForrester burled ln the family burying\nground. She asked me today to wear\nmy rings,\" holding up her thin white\nhand to show Joyce the solitaire and diamond set wedding ring. \"An. she told\nme,\" here Oladys stopped for breath,\n\"she told me I would Inherit five hundred thousand dollars.\"\n\"Bhe told me that, too. It's rather\nwonderful, Glau, though it doesn't\nseem right to think much about lt with\nForrester Just dead,\" Joyce said soberly.\n\"I suppose I'll be losing you soon.\"\n\"No you won't,\" said Gladys. I'm not\ngoing to take that money.\"\n\"Not going to take it?\" Joyce repeated.\n\"Not a penny of lt,\" sala Oladys.\n\"First, because I never really was Forrester's wife. I was fond of him and I\ndid what I thought was my duty to him,\nbut I never loved him. But most *of all\nI can't touch t.~\u00bb money, Joy, because\nfor two years I've been desperately tn\nlove with another man.\"\nTOMORROW\u2014A sweet wholesome girl\ncan penetrate the chill of the coldest\nhostess, Joyce Daring learns when she ls\nplaced accidentally in a position to be 1\nof service to one of the society leaders\nof the town. How does this friendship\naffect her future hie? Read tomorrow's\nfascinating instalment of \"JOY,\" the\n| love story of an American flrL |\n\\   ' ^Sg^      *\nDawn Assheton, beautiful and versatile English girl, now visiting ln Canada with her fiance. She sings, paints\nin oil and does black and white work\nas well.\n\"Gimme a Match9'Will\nSoon Be Thing ot the\nPast, Says Inventor\nLONDON, Nov. 23.\u2014An Englishman\nhas Invented a self-lighting cigarette\nfor persons who never buy matches.\nA tiny disc of touchpaper ls fixed to\none end of the cigarette. Centered on\nthe disc ls a fragment of the Igniting\nmaterial about the size of a plnhead. A\ngentle touch of this end of the cigarette\nagainst the prepared side of the cigarette packet, and the trick ts done. The\ntouchpaper glows for an Instant, and\nthe cigarette Is lit.\nThe tobacco is not affected by the\nprocess, the lighting material and touch-\npaper being completely odorless. The\ninventor Is taking out world patents on\nthe device.\nCHICAGO, 111., Nov. 26.\u2014A gigantic\nX-ray machine, weighing more than\nfour tons and costing $500,000, has been\noperated successfully In the research\nhospital of the University of Illinois\nhere. _\nThe huge piece of mechanism, probably the largest of Its kind ln the\nworld, pours 250,000 volts of rays\nthrough the human body, performing\nln from 8 to 12 minutes a treatment for\ncancer or carcoma which formerly required from one to two houip.\nIt has destroyed cancer in'5 Its early\nstages, and retarded old growths, officials of the hospital announce.\nSo powerful are the penetrating rays\nthat flow _ from the apparatus that lt\nhas been necessary to cool the great X-\nray tube, the largest tube ever assembled, by a constant flow of water.\nThe problem of devising a way to\nkeep the tube cool held back development of the machine for years. Engineers in the employ of the company developing the apparatus finally conceived\nthe Idea of Insulating the water from\nthe sourse of current, thus preventing\nit from acting as a conductor and carrying off some of the current vibrating into the tube.\nThe, control apparatus of the machine\nlooks like the power house of a light\nplant. To operate the machine it was\n.ycessary to install apparatus occupying three large rooms. A transformer\nroom houses a huge electrical generator which \"steps up\" ordinary electric\nlight current to 250,000 volts. Measuring devices control the force of the ray.\nAn operator's booth contains a control\nboard, and in a treatment room are the\nmachine Itself- and other devices.\nThe X-ray was developed to give\ntreatment in shorter time to patients\nsuffering from deep-seated cases of cancer or sarcoma. To prevent overexposure to the skin the rays are projected\nthrough several surface portals, allowing an extremely powerful ray to penetrate the body without harming the skin\nof the patient.\nMrs. Geneva Hill, school teacher from\nSmith Center, Kan., resents a spanking\ngiven by her husband and asks for divorce.\nCARE WOULD ELIMINATE\nMANY   CHILD   DISEASES\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 25.\u2014Within five\nyears, according to Or. M. Stuart Fraser of the provincial board of health in\nan address recently at a convention\nof 400 school teachers from southeastern Manitoba, smallpox, diphtheria and\nscarlet fever could be wiped out\u2014if\nproper precautionary measures were\ntaken. In that case, he said, only the\nfoolish need take any of these diseases.\n\"Idealism ln the life of a child\" was\nDr. Fraser's subject. He made a strong\nappeal to the teachers to safeguard\nthe little lives entrusted to their care,\nso that they might grow strong in\nmind, body and  soul.\nDuring his address, Dr. Fraser spoke\nof the so-called various children's diseases, which, according to the belief\nof many, every child must have. Il\nis the duty of the teacher, he declared,\nto correct this wrong Impression and\nso protect the children, for every one\nis a heritage of God. The teacher has\na three-fold duty to perform, to the\nchild's mind, body and Its soul. The\nfirst duty ls to the body, for lt ls\nthe body which contains the mind\nand soul.\nCAUSE  FOR  DIVORCE\nTRENTON, N.J., Nov. 26. \u2014 Sleeping\nsickness, when concealed prior to marriage, has been added to the grounds\nupon which annulment may be obtain-\ned ln New Jersey.\nA preliminary decree has been grant\ned to Mrs. Kathleen Dry McAlvey setting aside her marriage to Vincent McAlvey, a former army officer. She\ncharged that her husband was a victim\nof the disease, but had not Informed her\nof the fact.\nSafe Speedy Relief\nSCIATJCA\nPoiaons along sciatic nerve\ncause stabbing pains in thifh.\nFor quick relief use        TO\nT-o\u00abC's i\u2122\u21221\nat***     *4V CACSULlS\n60c and $1 at all druiglsts\nCuticura\nHeals Irritating Rashes\nDon't suffer wtth rashes, edemas or Irritations when Cuticura Soap and Ointment\nwill quickly relieve and heal. Bathe with\nCuticura Soap and hot water, dry end\nanoint with Cuticura Ointment. Nothing\nquicker or safer than Cuticura Soap and\nOintment for all skin troubles.\nSaatpU Eftck Frts *t \u25a0US- Address Cansdisn Depot:\n\"Stslfcaass, Ltd., MoatrsaL\" Price, Soap 2Sc. Ointment\n26 snd 60c. Tslcum SKe.\nMT* Cuticura Shaving Stick 28c.\nSPIRIN\nThe whole world know* Aspirin as an effective antidote for\npain. But it's just as important to know that there is only ont\ngenuine Aspirin. The name Bayer it on every tablet, and on the\nb*c. If the name Bayer 'appears, it's genuine; and if It doesn't,\nit is not I Headaches are dispelled by Aspirin. So are colds, and\nthe pain that goes wTth them; even neuralgia, neuritis, and rheumatism promptly relieved. Get Aspirin\u2014at any drugstore\u2014witl)\nproven directions.\nPhysicians prescribe Aspirin;\nit does NOT affect the heart\nAsplria is the trade mark (registered In Canada) Indicating Barer Manofacrau    While it\nla well known that Aspirin mans Barer m\u00ab nurse ture, to assure tht nubile uafctt iadta.\nlions, tbe Tablets will be stataeed with their \"lirer Own\" itwtmu^   ^^\n \/0.\n'THE NELSON DUET NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING.\"\"NOVESrBl?R 28. 1927\nPage Se^aP\nffQ^PQRT^ffiii\nALKER CIS\nA\n1\ndcey   Does   Everything   but\nTack on a Kayo at\nChicago\n30LISEUM, Chicago, Nov. 26.\u2014Mickey\nlker, world's middleweight cham-\nn, failed to knockout Paul Berjerr-\nih, one-time world's light-heavy-\nIght champion, but had no trouble\nning the decision in 10 savage\n,nds   tonight.\n'he match fought ln the Coliseum.\nw  OOqp  with   gate   receipts  of   $52.-\nWalker, conceding 1H4 pounds, in\nsight,   gave   Berlenbach   an   unmercl-\nbeating,   winning   every   round.\nIe floored  Berlenbach in the fourth,\nling on  top of him, whloh  he  folded    through    on    his    terrific    left\nok to  the chin.\n!\"he title was not at stake and  the\night at catch  weights.\nValker started in to give a demon-\n>.tton of plain and fancy slugging ln\nfirst round by nailing Berlenbach\nh a vicious right and left to- the\nid, but failed to upset him. He\nik three hard lefts to the body Just\nore the round ended, slowing Ber-\nbach  up.\nlerlenbach kept driving his left hook\n'the   body   at   close   quarters.\nBODY,   TO   CHIN\nTalker   dropped   left   hooks   to   the\nly and then shot-hooks to the chin\ntbe second round. Berlenbach\nnely absorbed \"these punches, twice\nwding Walker to the ropes and\nhlshtng  him  with  left  rips   to   the\n[lie pace slowed up a bit ln tbe\nRI round with Walker opening up\nh a hard right and left to the Jaw.\nlenbach then chased him to ropes,\nring both fists to the head and\ny. Walker was again forcing the\nnt as tbe round ended.\nValker    boxed    more    cautiously    in\nfourth, hooking hie left to the\niy.    Berlenbach refused to bacK up\ninch, however, and was severely\nilshed for his gameness. Walker\nbed Berlenbach to the ropes, floored\na with a left hook, falling down on\nof   him.   Berlenbach   was   groggy\nen   he   got   up,   but   reeled   around\nil   the   bell  rang.\nLKER    DELIBERATE\nfolkei'   was   deliberate   in   the   fifth\nnd ln trying to measure Berlenbach\na K.O.    He never failed with a left\nk   to   the   body.    The   pace   slowed\nm somewhat in the next couple of\nndj.\nfalker   landed   lefts   and   rights   to\nchin as the seventh opened, but\nto be tiring. -Walker haa\nlect for Berlenbach's left which Paul\nd to good advantage in the clinches,\nthe eighth Walker sunk a left\nk to the body that almost doubled\nlenbach up. Paul drew blood from\nkey's mouth with two hard lefts,\nirlenbach stepped Into a hard right\nthe chin that knocked him back on\nheels    just    before    the     session\nled.\n'he ninth round started out slowly,\nMickey opened up with two rights\ntwo lefts to the Jaw. The tenth\nnd found Walker continuing the at-\nhe began ln the first round.\ni Berlenbach taking it on the chin\non tho body.\nLeague Basketball  Games Not\nPlayed; Central, High\nFloors Repaired       *\nOwing to repairs being done to both\nthe Central school and High school auditoriums, the Intermediate boys' game\nbetween S. T. club and the Wolves, and\nthe Intermediate, girls' game between the\nHigh School and Nelson Business Col\nlege, scheduled for last night at the\nhigh school, were postponed.\nArrangements were made late yesterday afternoon by Rev. W. C. Mawhlnney\nafter the word had been given out that\nthere would be no games, to have the\nWolves-S.T. club game played at the\nHume school, but tbe teams preferred\ntc postpone the game*.\nNo arrangements have been made for\nplaying the games, and they will probably be left till the end of the season's\nschedule. \u2022\nJunior League Match Ends With\nScore 2-2 After Two Overtime Periods\nIN U. S. FOOTER\nmy   and   Navy   Classic   Is\nFeature of Games Scheduled for Today\nEW YORK, Nov. 25.\u2014Three major\nir-sectional battles, headed by the\nre Dame-Southern California game,\ncago and several traditional tussles\naired  by   the  Army-Navy  classic   in\nYork, furnish a climax to the Na-\nial college football season tomorrow.\n\u25a0he Intorsectional contests also in-\nfle two on the Pacific coast, one\nween Drake and California and the\ner between the Oregon Aggies and\n*negle.\n\"he prospect is that only the cham-\nnshlp races in the southern and\nlflc coast conference will remain\nbe settled after tomorrow. Four al-\n,dy have been decided, while a fifth,\nthe Rocky Mountain conference,\nely will be sttled when the two\nders, Colorado Aggies and Colorado\nillege,   meet.\nBORKSHIRE CRICKETERS\nDO WELL IN AFRICA\nBLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa. Nov.\n. Holmes and H. Sutcliffe, York-\n.re cricketers, now touring with, the\nglish eleven ln South Africa, cel-\n\u25a0ated their birthdays today by scoring\nsir 42nd first wicket century ln first-\nm c\/l^ket.\nFhe Orange Free State, fcolng ln first,\ni up a total of 1B2. v\/hen stumps\nre drawn, the English score stood at\n.' for one wicket.\nGoing into two two-minute overtime\nperiods, the Junior league girls' basketball match between High School \"B\"\nand Convent yesterday afternoon ended\nin a deadlock, wrth the score 2-2,\nneither team having the necessary\nsuperiority to break the tie.\nOlive Reid opened the scoring, dropping In the ball for the Conventt to\nFcore their only two points Hi the\nfirst bIx or seven minutes of the game.\nFrom then on play was fast, with the\nchecking of both teams so efficient\nthat neither scored again till the last\nfew minutes of the game.\nIn the last five minutes of the game,\nMargaret   Wooderough    dropped    in   a\nneatly placed basket for High School to\ntie up the game.\nCAN'T BREAK TIE\nTwo two-minute overtime periods\nwere ple\/ed, but so \"Veil matched are\nthe teams that neither could break\nthe tie and the game was called a\ndraw.*\nHazel McCartney and Olga Yakom-\nvitch showed up exceedingly well In\nchecking, while all the players of both\nteams played fine combination and\nportrayed fine sportsmanship. These\ntwo teams show promise of being close\nrivals for honors ln the' Junior girls'\nleague a^i whenever they .meet a good\ngame may be expected.\nBilly Vance refereed yesterday's game,\nwhich was played at the Parish hall\ndirectly after school.\nThe teams were:\nConvent\u2014Captain Olive Reid (2). Mae\nHalpin, Stella Bellch, Olga Yakomovitch, Hazel McCartney, Violet McDougall, Margaret Woolls, Kathleen\nCole,  Olga Mucha.\nHigh School \"B\"\u2014Helen Martin. Elsie\nSmith, Helen Porter, Katherlne McLeod. Margaret Wooderough (2), Ruth\nOrr, Eileen Otway.\n! Castlegar Man\nAsks Settlement\nof Crib Dispute |\n(.j \u25a0         *\nEditor Dally News:\nKindly give the correct number of\npoints in cribbage to settle this dispute.\n\"A\" has in his hand two 3s and two 6s,\nand a 6 turns up; 3-3-6-6 is the hand\nto count.   Yours truly,\nF. JENKS.\nCastlegar, B.C., Nov. 24, 1927.\nWe will suopose Mr, Jenks' hand consists of the three sixes of Hearts, Clubs\nand Spades, with a three-spot of Clubs\nand a three of Diamonds. Then, counting, we have: * <\nSix of Hearts, six of Clubs and\nthree of Clubs    15\u2014 3\nSix of Hearts, Six of Spades and\nthree of Clubs   15\u2014 2\nSix of Spades, six of Clubs and\nthree of Clubs.  15\u2014 2\nSix of Hearts, six of Clubs and\nthree of Diamonds   15\u2014 2\nSix of Hearts, six of Spades and\nthree of Diamonds  16\u2014 2\nSix of Spades, six of Clubs and\nthree of Diamonds  15\u2014 2\nOne pair of three-spots (for two) 2\nThree six-spots (for six)  9\nTotal  20\n\u2014Editor.\nSTANDING OF THE\nNATIONAL TEAMS A\nOTTAWA, Nov. 36\u2014The standing of\nthe various teams ln the N.H.L. follows:\nINTERNATIONAL   SECTION\nW. L. D. P.A.Pt.\nOttawa       3   2   0 10   7   6\nCanadlens       a   0   1 11   a   S\nMontreal       3    1    19   8   8\nToronto       3   2   0   8   8   4\nAmericans       0   3   0   3 10   0\nAMERICAN   SECTION -\nRangers      3   1   0 12   9   6\nBoston    a   0    1   7   3   6\nChicago      13   16   3   3\nDetroit       '13   0   9   7   3\nPittsburgh       0   I   0   1 13   0\nRISKO BEATS\nPAULINO IN A\nGREAT BRnLE\nOne  of  Most  Furious  Heavyweight Bouts Ever Witnessed\nin New York Ring\nBetter\nThan\nThree Stars.\nmnnnmmmiiL\nThis  advertisement  is  not published  or displaved  bv  the\nIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B. C.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 25\u2014In one of the\nmost furious and bruising heavyweight\nbattles ever staged ln Madison Square\nOarden, Johnny Rlsko of Cleveland tonight battled his way to the front ranks\ncf title contenders with a cleancut 10-\nround victory over Paulino Uzcudun of\nSpain. Uacudun weighed 199. Rlsko\n182.\nFor almost every minute of the struggle, a slashing combat that found both\nexhausted at the close, Rlsko, the baker\nboy, met the Spaniard at his own game\nand outslugged him. There were no\nknockdowns, but Paulino, victor over\nHarry Wills, Tom Heeney and Hansen\nduring his American invasion, was groggy and reeling at the close.\nIn each of the 10 rounds Rlsko chose\nto stand toe to toe with the Spaniard,\npouring ln a steady volley of rights and\nlefts to the head, while Paulino concen-\ntrated( his fire on the body, and 15,000\nfans rocked the Oarden with their roars.\nThere was no question of the winner at\nthe close, a majority of the ringside\ncritics crediting Rlsko with seven\nrounds, two for Paulino and one even.\nPatsy Pollock, Canadian welterweight,\ngained the decision ln a six-round preliminary. The Canadian triumphed over\nHeavy Andrews of Erie, Pa.\nAll Is Not Right\nThat Is Upright\nBy  AL   DEMAREE\n(Former    Pitcher   New    York   Giants.)\nBob Zuppke, Illinois coach, says\nthat \"the hands are the eyes of the\nlinemen,\" and this story O. Herbert\nM'Cracken, Lafayette coach, told me,\nshows that some fellows can see about\nas well with their hands as with their\neyes.\n\"We had a speedy good young substitute halfback,\" says M'Cracken, who\nwas put in a game ln the last few\nminutes ln the hope that he would\nbreak loose for a long run for a\ntouchdown and thereby break the tie\nand win the game.\n\"He succeeded in breaking loose, but\nhe was being pursued so closely by\ntwo of the opposing team that he forgot his direction while he continued\nto look back at them. Finally with a\nlast effort and a long dive he shot\nthrough the uprights and planted the\nball firmly on the ground H trM\npanting  for air.\n\"Instead of great cheers as he expected, he heard moans and groans.\nUpon looking up he found that he had\ncrossed the side line and had planted\nthe ball beneath the uprights of the\ntackling dummy Instead of the goal\nposts.\"\nTIGERS FAVORED\nTO BEAT BALMY\nTORONTO, Nov. 25.--On the eve of\nthe nihil for the eastern Canada rugby\nfootball championship to be played\nhere tomorrow at Varsity stadium between amilton Tigers, \"Big Four\"\nchampions and Toronto Balmy Beach,\nOntario Rugby Fonbatl union title-\nholders, the Tigers arc prommr.ced favorites   tc   wlu   the   honors.\nThe Tigers repo.vcd at full strength\nfor the first time thli season while\nuncertainty ruled in the looal camp\nat a late hour DOtfffhi M to tneir provable lineup iitt'.n! to several players\nstill nursing injuries, while :hroe star*\nare   certain   abseiueao.\nThe weather prob<i.).!it:<*8 indicate fair\nweather for the clash and a large crowd\nis certain to witness th.: gridiron battle.\nSome 3000 fans will accompany the\nTiger  team   here  from  Hamilton.\nBalmy Beach possesses a slight advantage in weight over their opponents\nThe average of the Beach team ls given\nas 174 Mi \u25a0 Points compared with\naverage weight of 164 Vi pounds for\nthe   Tigers.\nDandurand Refuses the\nOffer to Operate the\nNew Montreal Studium\nMONTREAL, Nov. 25.\u2014Leo Dandurand. managing director of the Canadian\nHockey club, has decided not to accept\nthe offer to manage the Montreal\nstadium, home of the new International Baseball club, this coming summer. Mr. Dandurand found that this\nwould interfere with his other Interests.\nDempsey Is Denied\nPreference Motion\niri Court Action\nNEW YORK. N.Y., Nov. 35.\u2014Counsel\nfor Jack Dempsey today was denied a\nmotion for a preference which would\nresult tn immediate trial of the W33,-\n333.33 suit against the former heavyweight champion by Jack Kearns, once\nbis manager.\nFive Others Conferred on the\nJuveniles; All Sections\nPartake\nHARBINSON LEGHORNS\nEXHIBITION  CHAMPS\nUtility  Honors Divided;  Show\nCloses Doors After Two\nBig Days\nGenaro Arrives in\nToronto for His\nFight With Belanger\nTORONTO. Nov. 25\u2014 Frank le Genaro,\nformer flyweight champion of the\nworld, arrived here today with his manager, trainer and group of friends from\nNew York. He Is to fight Frenchy\nBelanger here on Monday night ln a\nworld's title elimination contest. The\nwinner meets Ernie Jarvis, British\nchampion, ln the title bout. The\nOenaro-Belanger bout Is probably the\nmost important ever staged In Toronto\nand more than 10.000 are expected to\nsee lt.\nBoth fighters are reported ln the\nbest of condition tonight.\nCanada Will Send\nEntries for the\nDavis Cup Play\nMONTREAL. Nov. 25.\u2014Despite the\nfact that many believed the early play\nln the Davis cup competition this coming year might keep Canada out of the\nseries, this country will again officially\nsend ln her challenge to the French\nmerchants of pavie cup committee, lt was today stat-\nyesterday    for   pd by vice-president John M. Miller of\nNo  fewer  than  77 specials,  contrtb\nuted    chiefly   by   Um\nNelson,    were    awarded    .\nprize-winning   fowls  at   the   big   poul-   the Canadian Lawn Tennis association,\ntry show of district 8, and five other.        \u25a0*\u00bb\u2014\nspecials   that   were   not   won   in   the BALANCED FIELD\nclasses  for  which  they  were  provided \t\nwere   bestowed  in the  boys'  and  girls' |    MANCHESTER, Eng., Nov. 25.\u2014A well-\nsection,   which   was   particularly   good,  balanced   field   of  high   class  handicap\nIn many cases Judge Roes Wallace thoroughbreds will contest the forty-\nof Calgary had a hard time making seventh renewal of the Manchester No-\nhis decisions. The most strenuous vember handicap to be run here tomor-\niudging he did in the two' days of the row *l a distance of a mile and a half,\nshow was in placing in their proper *<>\u2122 Aslnorium, with Jockey Winter\norder for special prizes, sis pens of named as \u00abie probable rider, rules favor-\nfour White Leghorn pullets each, vrhfch Ite in the betting at odds of 7 to 4\nwere competing for the specials for \u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab.\nfour lightweight pullets.  \u2022        \t\nAll through the show, but especially\nIn tbe utility section, there was keen\ncompetition.\nJudging of the utility section was\ncompleted yesterday, with the placing\nof the Barred Rocks, and the geese,\npigeon.-,, rabbits and eggs were also\njudged.\nLast night the show closed, and the\nbirds   were   taken,  or  shipped,   north,\nsouth, east and west.\nMISCELLANEOUS   AWARDS\u2014\nBoys' and Girls' club classes\u2014Thomas\nMoOn, Frultvale, first male; first female, first pen and most points, with\nWhite Wyandottes; Jack Maber, NelsoV,\nsecond male, second female, second\npen, second most points, with White\nLeghorns.\nUtility Barred Plymouth Rocks-\nJames Benton, Fruitvale, third cockerel, first pullet; Thomas Roynon, Nelson, first pen; Mrs. W. H. Rlxen, Nelson, first cockerel; Jean Mante, Burton, second cockerel.\nEXHIBITION   HPECIALS\u2014\nBest male ln show, best pen ln show,\nbeat white bird In show\u2014F. J. Harbinson, Cranbrook, with 8. C. White Leghorns.\nI\/3t female in show, best black-col-\n\"TRY A Nl? TONIGHT\"\nBEST PROCURABLE\nphooucs   or   scotlaud   \\^\nThe Original Label \u2014 look for it at the Vendor's aad insist om\nGRAftfT'S \"BEST PROCURABLE\"\nThis advertisement la not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nKanquet  at   Nanaimo   Follows\nStudy of the Coal Mining\nIndustry\nored bird in Bhow\u2014G. G. Sawyer, Fernie,   with   Black   Minorca   pullet.\nBest partl-colored bird in show\u2014W.\nJ. Richards, Nelson, with Brown Leghorn  cockerel.\nBest display in American class\u2014A. D.\nMorrison, Grand Forks, with S. C.\nRhode Island Reds.\nBest display ln Mediterranean class\u2014\nJ. F. Stevenson, Harrop, with R. C.\nWhite Leghorns, S. C. Anconas. and\nR.   C.   Anconas.\nLeghorns\u2014Beat male, best female,\nbest pen, F. J. Harbinson, Cranbrook,\nwith  8.  C.  White Leghorns.\nAnconas\u2014Best    male,     best\nNANAIMO, B.C.. Nov. 25. \u2014, Some 50\nmembers of the British Columbia division of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy met ln Nanaimo this\nafternoon and evening and wound up\ntheir three-day session, two days of\nwhich were spent ln Vancouver, with a\ndinner, wtth the Hon. William Sloan,\nminister of mines, as the guest of\nhonor.\nThis afternoon moving pictures were\nshown of the mining of coal at Yell-\nourm, Australia, where 30 square mlleB\nore being developed, with six billion tons\nof coal In sight. The process of mining\nand briquetting the product was depicted, after which papers were read on\nthe coal Industry, principally dealing\nwith new processes for obtaining liquid\nfuel from coal, other byproducts and\nthe utilization and beneflcitton of coal.\nWhen the facts presented were digested, it was made plain that all known\nprocesses for the obtaining of byproducts from coal are as yet far from a\ncommercial possibility on the American\ncontinent, where fuel oil is so easily obtainable.\nProfessor Daniels of the University\nfemale iof Washington, presented a lengthy paper on \"Recent Advances ln Utilization\nbest  pen,  J.  F.  Stevenson,  Harrop.\nRhode  Mud Rrfo-Bast  ma.e.  be.t'jn\u00ab,.Blnf\u2122''\u2122  \u00b0' ?\u00b0\u00ab> .\"\u00bb\"h1\u2122:\nfemale, best pen, A. D. Morrison, Grand\nForks,  with  S. C. Rhode Island  Reds.\nMlnorcas\u2014Best male, best pen. A.\nWallach, Nelson, with Black Mlnorcas;\nbest female, G. G. Sawyer, Fernie, with\nMlnorcas.\nPlymouth Rocks\u2014Best male, best\nfemale, best pen, Ralph Hale, Nelson,\nwith  Barred  Plymouth  Rocks.\nAny other variety\u2014Best male, best\npen, Clarldge & Robertson, Burton, with\nJersey Black Giants; best female, Dr.\nF. S. Eyton, Trail, with Light Brahma.\nI TILITY   SPECIALS\u2014\nBeat utility pen in show, best heavyweight male ln show, best utility male\nln show\u2014F. J. Powell, Perry Siding,\nwith White Wyandottes.\nBest lightweight male ln show, best\nheavyweight female ln show\u2014James\nBenton,   Frultvale.\nBest utility female ln show\u2014W. J.\nRichards, Nelson, with S. C. White\nLeghorn.\nBest four lightweight pullets\u2014First,\nJean Mante, Burton; second, W. J. McKim, Nelson; third, H. Gerrlsh, Nelson;\nall with s. C. White Leghorns.\nBest four heavyweight pullets\u2014First,\nJean Mante, Nakusp, with Barred Plymouth Rocks; second, Andrew Cant,\nwith White Wyandottes.\nBest pen \"Record of Performance\"\nbirds, advanced records\u2014W. J. McKim,\nNelson,  with  8.  C,  White  Leghorns.\nPlymouth Rocks\u2014Best female, Mrs.\nW. H. Rixen, Nelson; best female,\nJames Burton, Fruitvale; best pen,\nThomas Roynon, Nelson; all with\nBarred   Plymouth  Rocks.\nWyandottes\u2014Best male, best female,\nbest pen, F. J. Powell, Perry Siding,\nwith  White Wyandottes.\nRhode Island Reds\u2014Best female,-best\npen, W. Wood, Nelson; best male, O, H.\nFraser, Nelson; both with 8. C. Rhode\nIsland  Reds.\nLeghorns\u2014Best exhibit in Leghorn\nclassee, best female, W. J. Richards,\nNelson: best male, best pen, James\nBenton, Fruitvale; both with 8. C.\nWhite Leghorns.\nOTHER SECTIONS\u2014\nGeese\u2014G. H. Fraser, Nelson, first,\nsecond young gander; first, second\nyoung goose. Thomas Roynon, Nelson,\nfirst old gander; first old goose.\nSaddleback pigeons\u2014Nelson Roynon,\nNelson, first pair. Thomas Roynon, Nelson,   second  pair.\nBelgian Carneaux pigeons\u2014Dr. F. S.\nEyton,  Trail,  first, second,  third pair.\n\u2022White eggs\u2014W. J. McKim, Nelson,\nfirst and special; Mrs. J. B. Miles,\nNelson, second; H. Gerrlsh, Nelson,\nthird.\nBrown eggs\u2014F. J. Powell, Perry Siding, first; G. H. Fraser, Nelson, second.\nOTHER   SPECIALS\u2014\nBest pair bantams\u2014W. J. McKim\nNelson.\nBest pair geese\u2014Thomas Roynon,\nNelson.\nBest pair pigeons\u2014Dr. F. 8. Eyton\nTrail.\nBest   pair   dressed   poultry\u2014Thomas\nRoynon,   Nelson.\nBABBITS\u2014\nBest collection of rabbits\u2014Mrs. J. E\nBennett,  Nelson.\nBest meat rabbit in show, and best\nFlemish  doe\u2014H.  Benson,  Nelson.\nBest fur rabbit in show and bent\nChinchilla buck\u2014S. B. Lawrence, Orand\nForks.\nBest Flemish buck\u2014w. Williams, Nelson.\nBest Chinchilla doe\u2014A. Wallach, Nelson.\nBest buck any other variety\u2014 W. J\nMcKim,   Nelson.\nBest doe any other variety\u2014Mrs. J\nE. Bennett. Nelson.\nBesrs have been climbing apple trees\nto get the fruit near German Hill. Pa-\nton.\" which dealt exhaustively with the\npulverized coal industry.\nMcCallum Nominated\nas Prog Candidate\nTEES WATER, Ont., Nov. 25.\u2014A. McCallum of Brantford, Ont., former member for South Bruce ln the Ontario\nlegislature, was today nominated by the\nProgressives at their convention here to\ncontest the seat again, in the coming\nelection, the date of which has not been\nannounced.\nFollowing an election trial in Walker-\nton last summer, Mr. McCallum was disqualified and unseated on the ground\nthat he had been a party to an agreement whereby he consented to the payment of the campaign expenses of his\nLiberal opponent, provided the latter\nwithdrew from the contest.\nWindsor Hornets Win\nOver Ravinas in Fine\nComeback; First Win\nWINDSOR, Ont., NOV. 25.\u2014Buzzing\naround the Toronto cage like in lariated\nbeeb in the final period. Windsor Hornets ran in five goals to score a 7 to\n4 win over the Toronto Ravines, their\nfirst victory of rhe current Canadlan-\nProfe^Ional   schedule.\nTRACKS MAY  CLOSE\nTORONTO, Nov. s\u00a3\u2014The Toronto\nStar says today that the Hamilton,\nWindsor and Fort Eris racetracks may\nnot operate* meetings next year, unless\nthere ls some further relief from the\nOntario government, by means of a reduction of the dally licence fee of $5000\nand also ln the 5 per cent percentage\ntahjen by the government from the\nmutuels.\nRADIO\nDue to recent drop in\nprices of Atwater-Kent\nRadios, we can sell you a\n6-Tube Set for less than\nthe average 5-tube set.\nModel 20, 5-tube set SSO\nModel 35, 6-tube set $75'\nModel 30, 6-tube set f 10O\nModel 33, 6-tube set $11*\nModel 32, 7-tube set $139\nIt will pay you to look\nthese over before buying.\nLet us give you a demonstration in your own home.\nPEEBLES MOTORS, Ltd.\nFord Dealer*, Nelson and Trail\nMontreal Outfit Is\nPurchasing the New\n'Jersey Ball Rights\nNEW YORK. Nov. 25.\u2014Negotiations\nfor the purchase of the Jersey City Internationals by a mllllor dollar Montreal\ncorporation have been completed, John\nConway Toole, president of the league,\ndisclosed today. The transfer of the\nfranchise, effective for the 1928 season,\nis expected to be ratified at the meeting here next Monday.\n*5\nPAST, West, North and South\u2014in every\n\u25a0*-' country of the world \u2014 you will find\nconnoisseurs of good whisky, demanding\n*\u00a3viamahGbs\". To have achieved such\nworld-wide fame, is indeed striking tribute to\nthe exceptional quality of this fine old whisky.\nHIRAM WALKER & SONS LIMITED\nDISTILLERY AND HEAD OFFICE | WALKEHVIU-C. CANADA\nESTABLISHED    1 858\nWRITE TO OUR MONTREAL OFFICE, 5.7 PHILLIPS SQUARE. POR\nFREE COCKTAIL BOOKLET\nCanadian (hro\nWasted\n*\u00bb\nc\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by  Um\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B.G.\nTIk King of Clubi now smiles with glee\nFor quickly saving 43,\nAwl 9 more \"poker hands\" says he\nWill bring a pack oi cards to me.\nt  \\\nX^>\nTURRET\nMILD VIRGINIA\nCIGARETTES\nSave the \"POKER HANDS\"\nthat are paoked with\nTURRET Cigarettes\n Page Eight\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING,   NOVEMBER 26, 1927\nChinese Appeals\nConviction Under\nthe Marketing Act\nKAMLOOPS, B.C.. Nov. 25. \u2014 A. C\nSkating, counsel for Mah Chong, Chinese, convicted recently under the new\nMarket Products act and fined S50 by\nMagistrate E. Fisher, today lodged an\nappeal at the provincial courthouse.\nINDIGESTION\nTroubled Him\nFor Two Years\nMr. H. 0. Harvey, Novar, Ont.t\nwrites:\u2014\"I have been troubled with\nindigestion for the last two yean.\n\"I hava taken everything I have\nseen advertised, but have never had\nany of them do me so much good aa\n\"I have taken six bottles and haven't\nhad an attack since. It is the finest\nmedicine you can take for the blood.\"\nManufactured only \\v The T. Jfilburn\nCo., Limited, Toronto, Outl*\nIf your hair won't ^eep the simplest\nwave for several days, there ls probably\ntoo much acidity. A condition that\ncauses hair to be stubbornly straight\nand stringy, and to lack all lustre.\nAeld scalp.\nProm the hour you check this excessive acidity your hair will act and appear very different. It will arrange\neasily in any style that becomes, for\nlt will have lovely softness, and all\nthe sheen all healthy hair normally\nhas. Danderine will neutralize the acid,\nand actually dissolve every particle of\ndandruff scale. Your hair won't need\nanything else to keep lt fresh, wholesome, and free from the least objectionable taint trui* Ir too often noticed\nln   otherwise   fastidious   women.\nDanderine sells for only thirty-five\ncents at any drugstore, and as only a\nfew drops on comb or towel will do the\nwork,  a  bottle  lasts  for  weeks!\nfi\nhdicfesfioji\nGETS IHE BEST\nI\nMrs. MacLachlan Says Only One\nOther Point in 115 So\nAided by Council\nSUPERINTENDENT GIVES\nAN INFORMING ADDRESS\nSuggests New Activities; Mrs.\nBerry Reports;  Crockery\nShower Success\nDreadful Eczema\nThe awful Itch, the unceasing-,\nburning torment of this skin\nScourge, unbearable. To obtain\nrelief you've probably tried\neverything under the sun\u2014except D. D. D. Prescription, the\npOre-penetrating, healing, antiseptic lotion for all skin diseases. The moment you bathe\nyour sick skin with this powerful liquid. Itching and burning\ncease Careful, persistent use of\nJi, D. D. from then on conquers\nthe disease. Your druggist haa\nX>. D. D., $1.00 a bottle. Try\nD. D. Soap, too.\nCity Drug ft  \u25a0tntljnrry Oo.\nRutherford Drag Co.\nThat Nelson was one of only two\ncenters out of the 115 ln which there\nare branches of the Women's Institute,\nln which there was a spirit of coopera\ntlon between the local institute and\nthe city council, was a statement made\nby Mrs. V. 8. MacLachlan, superintendent of Women's Institutes, ln an\naddrea\u00bb to the Nelson and District\nWomen's Institute yesterday. The only\nother center ln which there wae such\na splendid spirit of cooperation between the local authorities and Tne\ninstitute was Peachland,  she  said.\nMrs. MacLachlan commended the\nfine work of the Institute in contributing at various times a total of \u00bb350\nto the -nursing service on Kootenay\nlake, ln obtaining the fine Institute\nrooms on Victoria street, in establishing the baby clinic, and tn connection\nwith the isolation hospital.\nPROVINCIAL   EXECUTIVE\n8he referred to the fact that Mra,\nH. H. Pitts, president of the Nelson\nInstitute, was now representative of the\nKootenay board of directors of the provincial institute. This board, explained\nMrs. MacLachlan, has succeeded the\nformer advisory board, which had only\nadvisory powers and not executive. She\nsaid that when provincial organization\nwas completed there was need for an\nexecutive body with power to receive\nmoney from and expend money for\nthe Institutes.\nMrs. MacLachlan Informed the institute that at the last meeting of the\nprovincial institute at Victoria in October the board in conference outlined\nan active working policy which will\nbe submitted to the Institutes for their\nInformation and  approval.\nShe spoke of the progress of the\nQueen Alexandra Solarium, describing\nthe method of treatment, mentioning\nthree cases, that of Othoa Scott being\nfeatured. Leading on from this she\nexplained the Othoa Scott endowment\nfund with the objective of $10i000,\nthe interest from which would maintain two crippled children in the solarium.\nNEW   HOME  INDUSTRIES\nPor home Institutes Mrs. MacLachlan\nmentioned the making of hand-made\nrugs, old-fashioned patchwork, balsam\npillows, hand-made gloves and crystallized fruits aa something of comparative value to country women. In this\nconnection, through the efforts of Mis.\nM. L. Murray, lt ls hoped to establish\nat the coast a branch of the Canadian\nHandicrafts guild, which would be\neligible for a grant from the federal\ngovernment for educational purposes.\nIt would also be a distributing center\nfor home crafts.\nThe commercial growing of chrysanthemums was urged by Mrs. MacLach-\nland and the names of seven varieties\nwere given to the institute. She also\ninformed the meeting that pamphlets\nof chrysanthemum growing are sent\non request by the federal department\nof agriculture.\nMuch discussion and questions followed Mrs. MacLachlan's Interesting\ntalk, and Mrs. Pitts made a speech\nthanking her ror ner address. Mrs.\nPitts said that Mrs. MacLachlan had\ngiven the members new inspiration, and\n^a id she hoped lt would not be long\nbefore she visited Nelson again.\nMRS. BERRY   REPORTS\nMrs. A. W. Berry, official delegate\nto the district conference of the Institutes at Kaslo last week, gave a\nsplendid report of the conference, glv\ning those who had not attended a very\nclear outline of the work accomplished\nthere. She made special mention of\nthe hospitality of the Kaslo Women's\nInstitute and of Mrs. John Keen, the\npresident.\nThe institute rooms on Victoria street\nwere packed, and chairs were at a\npremium. Several new members were\nenrolled, and the cup and saucer shower was a huge success.\nRefreshments followed the meeting,\nthe fine electric stove In the kitchen\nbeing used for the first time. The\ncups and saucers received by the shower were used, Mrs. A. W. Berry, assisted by Mrs. J. Ryan, Mrs. J. C.\nHooker, Mrs. A. Terrlll and other, serving.\nQuestion: Why does baby\nparticularly need emulsified\ncod-liver oil?\nAnstoer: Baby's progress\nIn health, growth and bone*\ndevelopment depends upon\nvitamins. An abundance oi\nessential vitamins is provided\nin pure, pleasantly flavored\nSCOTTS EMULSION\n'S SHOW IS\nBIGGEST 1 BEST\nTotal of 11,500 Head of Cattle\nEntered;  Canadians Have\nProminent Places\nCHICAOO, Nov. 28.\u2014The largest and\ngreatest international live stock show\nif history opened Its gates here this\nmorning, with more entries and  with\nentries of a higher. class than ever\nbefore. All records are expected to be\nbroken.\nManager B. H, Helce. said this morning that every one of 11,500 head of\ncattle, horses, sneep and swine and\nthe 5000 samples of hay, small seeds\nand grain entered In the International Hay and Grain show, which ls\nruti ln conjunction with the exposition,  was  ln place.\nThe Intercollegiate judging contest\nwas the feature of today, 109 boys\nand one girl students from 22 colleges\ndoing the work. The girl ls MIbs Mary\nWhelan from the University of Wyoming, the first girl ever to represent\na college team ln the Judging. Tbe\nOntario Agricultural college is again\na competitor.\ni win V WELL\nREPRESENTATED\nYesterday, youths from the farms\nof \\Q states competed ln the noncol-\nleglate Judging contest, as a preliminary feature. The boys, from 12 to 15\nyears old, nicked with vim and vigor\nall day long and Judges were still figuring which was the winner early\nthis morning. Canada shows a great\nrepresentation ln sheep and horeei,\nand a fair one ln cattle. Twenty-one\nof the 20 exhibitors in the Clydesdale\nhorse class are from the Dominion\nand five Canadians are showing Bel'\ngians.\nAlexander Oalbralth of Edmonton will\nonce more be the judge in tbe Suf-\nfolk ho.-.--.;  class.\nThere are three or four Canadians\nentered which are considered possibilities as grand champion steer of the\nshow. Walter Bigger of Delbeattie,\nScotland, chosen foreign Judge, this\nyear as he was ln 1924, will select the\ngrand champion steers. Canadian entries won this In 1912 and 1\u00bbB, but\nnever  since  then.\n\u2014              \t\nUsed ArtidM\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTeRenf\nBoats an3\nAutomobiles\n 1\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\n<                     .    f\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nlinStock\nMarfci\u2014y\nFarm Prodnc*    <\nT\u00abber and Kan\n.                  \u2014\u00bb\nClassified Advertising Rates\nNEW WIRELESS\nMEET APPROVED\nWASHINGTON, D.G., Nov. 25.\u2014A new\nwireless convention which will regulate\ninternational radio for five years beginning January 1, 1929, was approved\nhere today. It was drafted by the\ninternational radio conference which\nadjourned after signatures of delegates from 79 nations and territories\nhad been attached to the document,\nIn addition to the convention, which\nhad been under negotiation since the\nconference convened here October 4,\napproval was given to two sets of regulations.\nThe convention itself set out In\ngeneral lines the scope of the agreement and the duties devolving upon\nthe signatory governments for its observance.\nThe first set of regulations, ln addition to the allocation of wave lengtiis\nto the various services, includes a provision for the operation of radio communication. Land, ship, aircraft and\nall other kinds of wireless activities\nare contemplated and standard procedure ln each case is set up. Licencing of stations and operators also Is\ndefined.\nThe second set of regulations was\nagreed to by all* countries except the\nUnited States, and consisted of such\nregulations as the United States con-\nsldered infringe upon the private management. These articles deal mostly\nwith  the fixing  of  radio charges.\nThe next conference will be held in\nMadrid in  1932.\nBad Backache Relieved\nAfter Seven Years\nJohn Hallahan fVon> Praises\nDodd's Kidney Pills\n\"I have been subject to a bad\nback for tbe last seven or eight\nyears\/' states Mr. J. Hallahan, a\nwell known resident of Princeton,\nNfld. \"I have tried all kinds of\nmedicines but have found them\nno good. My wife was reading\nyour Almanac and found where\nlots of people were relieved of\ncomplaints like mine, so I got two\nooxes and now I am feeling much\nbetter. I recommend your Dodd's\nKidney Pills to all who suffer with\nbackache like I did.\" Other sufferers tell of pains relieved and\nhealth restored through the use of\nDodd's Kidney Pills.\nDODD'S\nKIDNEY\nWant  and   Claeetfled  Advertising-   \u2014\nOne and a half cent* a word per insertion. If paid It: advance, 6c per word\nper week, or 22 Wo per word per month.\nTransient ads accept'] only on s cash-\nin-advance basis. Each initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc,, counts as one word.\nMinimum 25c, if charged 6flc.\nXjoc\u00ab,1 Beading Votices \u2014 Three centa\nper word each insert.mi. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4c per word.\nBlackface capitals 5c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent discount if run dally without change of copy for one month or\nmore. Where advertiwem\u00b0nt la set oot\nin short lines the charge is lfic a line\nfor Roman type, 10c for b'ackface and\n25o for blackface capitals. Mlnlmun\nHe, if charged 60c.\nCard*\u2014Three cents per word, 60o minimum.\nBirth  WoOoaa\u2014Free \t\nHelp Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Men, mechanically Incline**\nwho would like to work at the world's\ngreatest paying Industry. Auto mechanics, garage work, electrical ez\nperts, welding, battery and vulcanising. We guarantee to train you to\nqualify for big pay positions. Only a\nshort time required. Write, or call\nHemphill's Auto Engineering School.\n10 Hastings Bt B., Vancouver, B.C.\n(1304)\nWANTED\u2014Woman about 50 years old to\nlook after home and cook for one.\nThis is a first-class home for some.\nDon't apply If afraid of snow or lots\nof solitude.   Box io, Zlncton P.O.\n(3131)\nWOMAN   WANTS  WORK BY HOUR \u2014\nPhone 669L, mornings. (3156)\nWANTED\u2014Good general help,    Address\n14, Rossland, B.C. (3172)\n00 MEN WANTED\u2014 Ambitious, inexperienced men wanted for clean,\nsteady Inside work. Wages,. $25.00 lo\n$50.00 weekly, city or country towns.\nYou can learn the Barber Trade and\nearn while learning at Hemphills, tbe\nonly Dominion Government chartered\ncompany teaching this trade in Canada and United States. Diplomas Issued, tools supplied, Write for free\ncatalogue. .Hemphill Trade Schools\nLtd., 808 Centre Street, Calgary.\nBranches: Edmonton, Kaskatoon, Regina, Winnipeg. (1295)\nAMBITIOUS WORKING MEN WANT-\nKD\u2014Men mechanically inclined, and\nanxious to earn $125.00 to (300.00\nmonthly. We guarantee to train you\nin our shops und<-r experts until you\nare placed! tn a position at above wagt\naa auto or electrical expert engineers,\nchauffeurs, salesmen, vulcaniiers,\nwelders or battery experts. Also\nbricklaying, plastering. Enquire today, write or call. State position desired. Hemphill Trade Schools, Ltd.,\n808 Centre Street, Calgary. Branches:\nEdmonton, Saskatoon, Regina, Winnipeg. (3038)\nW6utD Y6U LlKft TO* iNcftfeAse\nYOUR SALARY and fit yourself for\na better position by studying at home\nln your spare time? If so. write Mr.\nFrancis Cuiren, Box 851, Trail, B.C.,\nrepresentative . of the International\nCorrespondence < Schools Canadian\nLimited,   for  further Information.\n (3099)\nWANTED \u2014 Experienced lady teacher,\nJunior room, superior. Duties commence new year. F. Carne. secretary.\nProcter  School  Board.         (3192)\nAgents Wanted\nPORTRAIT AGENTS\u2014Write for 'catalogue, United Art Limited, 4 Brunswick, Toronto. (1298)\nftlOO WEEKLY EASY\u2014Either sex, selling our cleaners and clothes pin bags.\nUnusual high commission. Free samples. P. A. Lefebvre & Co,, Alexandria,\nOnt. (3186)\nCASH IN ON THE CHRISTMAS TRADE,\nselling perfumed flower bead necklaces. Big profits. Easy sales. Write\nfor particulars. California Flower\nBead  Co.,  Windsor,  Ont. (3188)\nFor Sale or Rent\nPOR SALE OR RENT\u2014912 Edgewood\nAvenue. Most desirable location. One\nof the most comfortable homes ln\nNelson. Three bedrooms. Bathroom\nJust done over. Apply Sheriff's Office,\nCourt House.  (3121)\nAutomobiles\nPOR SALE\u20141926 Essex Coach, only run\n11,000 miles; ln good shape; new tires:\nnew battery: $600.00 takes It, cash or\nterms.   Apply Box 102C, Nelson News.\n\u201e  (3158)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nSELDOM SEE\na hip knee like this, but your ho. se\nmay have a bunch or bruise on his\nankle, hock, stifle,   knee or throat.\nABSORBINE\n*^ TRADE MARK BEG. J.i.PAT CFf\nwill dean it off without laying up\nthe horse.   No blister, no naif\ngone.  Concentrated\u2014only a few\ndrops required at an application.   $2.50 pet\nbonk delivered.. DncrltM four cite lor wcclil inffructlohH\nand Book S R free.   ABSORBINE, JR., the mil.\nKptic tlnlneat tor mankind, reduce* Painful Swellinn,\nInUrred (.lindi, Wen*. Sruitet. Viricwe Vcinti titan\nfiln and inflammation. Price SI.2* a bottle at druiiltf* of\ndrli*erfd     Liberal tris} bottle postpaid for 10c\nW. F. YOUNG. Ue..   4S Lt-.., BJ\u00abV. MmKuL Co..\nJjftorbloe ud Abwmine. jr.. uc aide Is CiudLj\nSELL OR EXCHANGE, good house, 106\nacres, cheap. Want live stock, machinery or other property. Box 3008,\nDaily News. (3008)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nProperty For Sale\nFOR SALE\n6 SILVER BLACK FOXES\u20143 registered, 3 not registered, together\nwith 4 pens and kennels. The\nabove will be sold cheap. Apply\nW. McKay, Rossland, B.C., Box 743.\n(3144)\nFOR SALE\nBird, Cage and Stand, Chesterfield and\nChair, Wicker Table, Rugs, Light\nFixture, Curtains, Stoves, Refrigerator, Oas Plate, Gas Top Oven,\nCongoleum Rugs, Dishes, etc.,\nSimons Walnut Bed and Spring.\nApply Box 3168, Dally News, or\ncall at 300 Carbonate street.\n(3169)\nSLAB:\nWe have a car load of really Dry Slab-\nwood for your kindling. Get your\norders In early for this wood.\nNEWCASTLE  NOT  AND   LUMP\nGIVES MORE HEAT\nPHONE 1\u20140\u20146\nWILLIAMS\nTRANSFER\nBARRELS,   KEGS AND  EMPTY   sacks\n\u2014McDonald Jam Company, Nelson.\n(1306)\nPIPB\u2014We have a quantity of one-Inch\npipe for sale; ln new condition. Nelson Iron Works, Ltd. (1307)\nOAS AND COAL COMBINATION RANGE\n\u2014Some  furniture.    120    Hall    MtneB\n_Road1_ (3141)\nMOVING TO NEW PREMISES \u2014 We\nhave several slightly used machines\nto be sold at snap prices at \u00bb3 per\nmonth. Singer Sewing Machine Com-\npany.  (3137)\nFOR SALE\u2014One Watrous boiler, 60 x 14,\n120 lbs. steam pressure, with stack\nand fittings, $500 f.o.b. carB. Apply\nto Chas. O. RodgerB, Creston, B.C.\n(3164)\nIF YOU REQUIRE sanitary rubber\ngoods, write for catalogue and prlcw\nlist to Safe and Sanitary RubbPp\nWorks, Dept. 69, 4906 Wellington St.,\nMontreal. (1361)\nBAKER'S OVENS \u2014 Write for catalogue and list of used ovens. We\npay freight to Winnipeg and Vancouver. Hubbard Oven Company,\n1100 Queen West, Toronto. (1360)\nROLLHR CANARIES\u2014Out of imported\nSt. Andreasberg and Hartz Mountain.\nReal singers, guaranteed, at (6; females, $1. M. A. Woyna, Appledale,\nB.C, (3193)\nLost and Found\nLOST OUT OF WAGON\u2014Monday morning, one sack of linen. Finder please\nleave at Laundry Office and receive\nreward.    R.    D.    Wallace,    Kootenay\n_Steam Laundry       (31S9)\nLOST \u2014 Watch, between Hendryx and\nSilica on Ward Btreet. Finder please\nreturn to Dally News.   Reward. (3171)\nFor Rent\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically,    ljjc a word.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\nNOTICE   OF APPLICATION FOR  BEER\nLICENCE\nNOTICE is hereby given that on the\nthird day of January next the undersigned Intends to apply to the Liquor\nControl Board for a licence ln respect of\nthe premises being part of the building\nknown as Plnehurst Inn. situate at\nSouth Slocan, B.C., upon the lands described as Parcel 2 of Block \"B\" of Lot\n308. Oroup One, Map 872, Nelson Land\nRegistration District in the Province of\nBritish Columbia, for the sale of beer by\nthe glass or by the open bottle, for consumption on the premises.\nDATED this 17th day of November,\nA.D.   1927.\nALBERT GIBBON.\n(3082) Applicant.\nWE HAVE THE FOLLOWING HOUSES TO RENT:\n712 Carbonate St.\u2014Six  Rooms.\n820 Mill   St.\u2014Four   Rooms.\n715 Cedar St.\u2014Five Rooms.\n715 Silica  St.\u2014Six  Rooms.\nCHAS.  F.  McHARDY\nReal   Estate,   Insurance\nPhone  1S5 Nelaon.  B.  C.\n(3160)\nFURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED\nHOUSE \u2014 Hot water heated. Phone\n79L. (3016)\nFOR   RENT   \u2014   Rooms,   private   home.\nPhone 669L, mornings. (3157)\nLive Stock for Sale\nGRAND BREEDING BOAR, eighteen\nmonths, York Berk; also one brood\nsow,   bred;   6-weeks-old   pigs.      Alex\n_Cheyne. Erie. <3ll3.}\nYOUNG COW FOR SALE\u2014Good milker:\ngentle; easy to handle. Will sell on\naccount of sickness. For particulars\nwrite  Box  67,  Rossland,   B.C.     (3185)\nNursing\nPRIVATE NURSES frequently earn |30\na week. Learn by pergonal correspondence. Catalogue No. BO free.\nRoyal College of Science, Toronto 4,\nCanada.\nThat depends. Suppose we say\nat 60. How much will you have\nsaved  by  then?\nOnly three men In 100 save\nenough to retire comfortably at 60.\nAnd about two out of three do it\nbecause they have put part of\neach year's earnings Into Endowment  Insurance.\nWrite or see us today for particulars of this plan.\nTHE IMPERIAL LIFE\nASSURANCE CO.\nR. W. DAWSON, Agent,\nAnnable   Block\nPhone 197 P. Box 733\n(3129)\nTHE GREATEST PRODUCING STRAWBERRY FARM In Kootenay at bargain price. Sickness and old age compels owner's retirement. Rare opportunity for profitable investment and\nan ideal home for a large family.\nFrom five to ten thousand dollars\ncash would handle lt. For particulars,\naddress O. J. Wlgen, Wynndel, B.C.\n(3069)\nThree bedrooms, new plumbing,\ncement foundation, three level\ngarden  lots,\nFor $250 Cash\nAnd the balance as rent, we will\nsell the above at a price of (2300\nto a  responsible  party.\nFor Rent\nSteam heated apartment; gas\nrange; newly decorated; close In;\n(35.00 a month.\ne\nINSURANCE        STOCKS BONDS\nCITT PROPERTY\nBaker  Street  Office\u2014Phone  lis\nC. W. Appleyard H. E. Appleyard\nBRANCH OFFICE, STANLEY STREET\nF. A.  Whitfield.  Mgr.\nNELSON, B.C.\n(3063)\nCompany Ltd.\nSACRIFICE SALE OF RANCH\nOwner obliged to leave district\nhas decided to offer his 9-acre\nfruit ranch at tremendous sacrifice.\nDescription\u2014Property all cleared\nand cropped; about 7 acres of orchard, apple, cherry, plum and some\npeaches, fully bearing. Owner estimate of 1928 crop at least 2000\nboxes. Irrigation system installed;\nlake frontage, close to school. Post\noffice and shipping point. Small\nhouse, barn, chicken houses and\npacking shed; ln a good fruit district. All farm tools and working\nequipment Included In sale price.\nWe have not had listed for years a\nbetter buy. Owner will be in town\nfor a few days and will show\nproperty. Price 13500.00, and good\nterms can be arranged with owner.\nCompany, Ltd.\n414 Ward Street\nPhone 6\n(3184)\nFOR SALE\u2014Six acres, buildings, water,\nfruit; close school, store. Wm. H.\nScott, Nelson, B.C. . (3182)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's  Apartments. (1S06)\nFURNISHED   HOUSEKEEPING    ROOMS\n\u2014Over Poole Drug. (3064)\nRoom and Board\n.,   WANTED\u2014Room    with    piano.\n(1362)'    Box 3128, Dally News.\nApply\n(3128)\nLivp Stork Wantpd\nOOOD AYRSHIRE COW\u2014Quiet; fl\nmilk record of last milking perlo\nFisher, Port Crawford. (3QQ(\nMiscellaneous\nWANTED\u2014Clean   cotton   rage.     Add\nDully News.        *t\u00ab\nWANTED TO BORROW\u2014Pifteen hUl\nfired dollars on Kootenay ranch proi\nerty. Excellent security. Apply^ Bi\n3183, Dally   News. (318\nSchools\nMOLER  BEAUTY  COLLEGE\nMOST   SUCCESSFUL   COLLEGE   ON\nTHE   CONTINENT\nExpert   Instructors  in   all  branches\nBeauty Culture,  including Water Wai\ning   and   Permanent   Waving.     Term\nMoler.  10  Hastings  St.  E.,  Vaneouve\nX  (1311\nMEN AND WOMEN LEARN BARBEI\nING\u2014.Expert instructors in one of tl\nbent paying businesses. Earn whl\nyou learn and become Independen\nCall or write Moler Barber Colleg\n10 Hastings St. E., Vancouver. B.O,\nx (1311\nPoultry and Eggs\nFOR SALE\u2014Two splendid purebrt\nbronze turkey gobblers, hatched Ma\n10th, $10 each. Bertie Carr, Crestoi\nB .C, < 3111\nBusiness Opportunities\nMUSKRAT AND BEAVER FARM\u2014Ol\nhalf share in the above. About '\nacres enclosed by solid galvanized lro\nfence. Next winter expect about 70(\nrats and some beaver. Apply to J. <\nPowles, R.N., Britannia Fur Farn\nWilmer, B.C. Well worth lnvestli\ntlon. (31*\nGREAT BARGAIN\u2014For sale, apartmei\nblock,   center   city   of  Revelstoke,\nrooms,    furnished    throughout.    B\nbuy ln B.C.   Price only \u00bb6750.   Term\nOwner, Arthur Jones, Revelstoke.\n (314\n\u25a0Ml1.-   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0\u25a0ii-L'-l L-L \"\u25a0'.^g11^.\"\nProperty Wanted\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014Small farm, wit\nrunning water if possible. Apply B<\n3132. Dally News. (SIS!\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nAssayers\nE.   W.   WIDDOWSON,   Box   AUDI,   Ne\n\u25a0on, B.C.    Standard western charge\n   (Hi:\nAccounting\nCHAKI.ES  T.  HDNTEB\u2014\nAuditor,    MacDonald    Jul    Bulldlm\nBox 1191, Nelson, B.C.     (181!\nPiano Tuning\nEXPERT   PIANO   TUNER\u2014L.   Slngl\nton: Phone 261; Mason & Risen.\n (1301\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'    TRANSFE*   \u2014   Baggag\nCoal  and  Wood.   Phone  108.    (131\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON  \u2014 Baker  St.  Carpenter ai\nJoiner. Screens and Hardwood.    (1311\nInsurance and Real Estat\na. W. .AWBON\u2014\nHani Batata, Imuran:., BMitali, Anl\nable Blk.  P.O. Box 733.  Phone 197.\n(1311\nx. a. nut\u2014nesuaABOB,\t\nTAJIK AND  CITT PBOPBBTT\nSOS Ward Street. (131\nChiropractors\nDB. OKAY, Slim BXiZ. \u2014 Phon.\nOff. 115, Ree. 521T. Hrg.:10-ltai\n2-5,   Saturday, 9:30-12. (131\nFlorists\nQBiBnx.x.B'a   axBEBxovna,  Ne\neon.   Cut flowers and floral designs\n(131\nWH. B. JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone   342.      Cut   Flower*     Pottr\nPlants aud Floral Emblems.      (131\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD * OO.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers and Provlstc\nMerchants, Importers of Teas, Cof\nfees. Spices, Dried Fruits, Staple an\nFancy Crooerlcs, Nelson, B.C. (132\nEngineers\nA. M.  mill  CO.\u2014CONTBACTOBS\nFormerly Green  BroB.,  Burden,  Nelsoi\nClTil ud Mining IiHimti\nB.C., Alberta and Dominion Land\nSurveyors       (1821\nS. DAWSON\u2014Land Surveyor,\nMining and Civil EnflntMt\nKaslo, B.C. Ji2_j\nFuneral Directors\niWnW   Slrl\n.Standard rum!tux\nCo. \u2014 Undertaken\nAuto Hearse, up-to\nlate   chapel.      Bta\n\u2022- y iervlcee. Pr 1 oei\nreasonable, (fitttl\nreasonable.     (1824\n \u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u2014\u25a0\nfHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1927\niHr\nPage Nine\nMarkets\n\u25a0B\nft TO NEW GROUND\nSells to New High and Gains\nOver Three; New Dominion\nBridge at Peak\nMONTREAL, Nov. 35. \u2014 BrMlllan'i\n\u25a0harp advance Into new high territory\nIn a fairly heavy turnover of shares was\nan outstanding feature In today's trading on the Montreal Stock exchange.\nStrength and activity of New Dominion\nBridge, which also reached a new peak,\nattracted considerable attention.\nBrazilian closed at 214Vi, ex-dlvldend,\nfor a net gain of 3H points, after having sold up to a new high of 314%, ex-\ndlvldend. Dominion Bridge closed at 67\nfor a net gain of 3 points. National\nBreweries closed at 110 for a net gain\nof 1 point.\nFraser preferred was the strong feature, closing at 140 for a net gain of 7\npoints, after having sold up to the new\nhigh of 141.\nWinnipeg Electric opened at 104, advanced to the new high of 104%. and\nclosed at 104, Va up from yesterday's\nclose. St. Lawrence Flour closed at\nv 44V4, up 4% points, after having sold to\nthe new high of 48. Montreal Power\ncloaed at S3, up 1%; Quebec Power was\ntt up, to 78, and Twin City was up 4,\nto 53.\nTotal sales 54,530 shares, bonds 436,-\n700.\nClosing Quotations at Montreal\nBank of Commerce     268\nImperial  Bank    34\u00ab\nBank of Montreal     337\nBank of Nova Scotia     361\nRoyal Bank   ~ ~    313\nAbitibi Power & Paper      138\nAsbestos  Corporation          35%\nAsbestos Corporation preferred....     93V6\nAtlantic  Sugar        33\nAtlantic Sugar preferred       84\nBell Telephone      151tt\nBritish Columbia Fishing       14tt\nBrazilian T, L. to Power        314%\nBrW. Emp. Steel Corp         %\nBrompton   Paper      59\nCanadian Canners         W\"\nCanada Cement      346\nCanada  Converters       105\nCanadian Industrial Alcohol       43tt\nCanada  Cottons       135\nOan. Oeneral Electric preferred..     60%\nCanada Steamship Lines       37%\nCanada Steamship Lines pfd \"    95\nConsolidated Mining to Smelting   252%\nDominion Bridge        67\nDominion  Glass      137tt\nDominion Glass preferred      120\nDominion   Textile        129\nDominion Textile preferred     123%\nMassey-Harrls         36%\nMassey-Harrls preferred      108\nHoward Smith Paper       72%\nHoward Smith Paper preferred...    116\nImperial Oil  \u201e      60\nLake of the Woods      178\nLake of the Woods preferred     119\nLaurentlde    _     109\nMackay  preferred        69%\nNational   Breweries        lOOtt\nOgilvle Milling       380\nOgilvie Milling preferred      140\nOntario Steel Products     120\nOntario Steel Products preferred   120\nPenmans   Limited      93\nPeter Lyall  .\u201e\u2022      46\nPrice Brothers       69%\nQuebec  Power        77%\nShawlnlgan         85%\nSherwln  Wiljlam     185\nSouthern Canada Power     110\nSpanish  River       137\nSpanish River preferred      163\nSteel Co. of Canada  \u201e     178\nSteel Co. of Canada preferred     166\nSt. \"Lawrence Flour Mills       44%\nWayagamack    -     UOtt\nAlberta Pacific Grain        54%\nAlberta Pacific Grain preferred..     96\nU.S. STEEL ISSUE\nMARKET FEATURE\nHeavy Buying Sends Stock Up;\nContinental Motors Are\nHeavily Bought Up\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 26\u2014Dominion war\niisue prices:\nWar loam\u20141931, 1101.75b, \u00ab102.25a;\n1937, f.108.\nVictory loans \u2014 1927, 1100; 1933,\ntloeb, 1106.20a; 1934, 1104.65b. $104.80a;\n1937. \u00bb110.76b.  \u00bbllla.\nWar loan renewals\u20141933, 1103b,\n\u00ab103.70a.\nReiunalnj loans\u20141938. \u00bb100.15b,\n\u2022100.30a; 1943. \u00bb104.60b. 1105a: 1944.\n\u2022 101.55b. \u2022101.66a: 1940. \u2022101.65b,\n\u2022101.76a;   1946, \u2022101.60b, \u00bb10I.70a.\nIlKIIIMI   ('((1.1 Mill A  BOOS\nifreah extras, 67c to 58c; firsts, SOc to\n61c; pullets, 44c to 45c; peewees, 34c\nNEW YORK, Nov. 25\u2014Heavy buying\nof United Stat*. St*el common which\nrallied from a low of 142 y, to a high of\n146%, up 2% opt. gave the \"bull movement ln Btock prices a .new lease of life\ntoday. So great waa the volume of orders pouring into the market ln the laat\nhour that the ticker waa 20 minutes\nlate ln recording the last quotations.\nCall money waa ln plentiful supply at\nthe same renewal of aVa per cent.\nWeekly mercantile reviews continued\nto report bualness conditions aa \"spotty\".\nReports of further trade Improvement\ncame to hand from the steel and copper Industries.\nPools were again active ln a number\nof specialties and succeeded ln attract\ning a large publio following, new hlghs\nfor the year or longer were registered by\nBrooklyn, Edison, Detroit, Radio Corporation, Anaconda Copper, Calument and\nArizona Refining, Stewart Warner and\nseveral others.\nContinental Motors was heavily\nbought on merger rumors which also\nInvolved the Peerless and Jordan Motor\nCar companies. Oeneral Motors was un.\nder pressure most of the day although\nlt rallied from a low of 126 tt to a high\nof 127%.\nIn the rail group, Northern Pacific\ncrossed par for the first time ln years.\nSales 2.557,100 shares.\nNEW  YORK\nCLOSING   QUOTATIONS\nHigh    Low    Close\nAllied Chem    163       151       153\nAmer. Loco    108       107(4    107!4\nAmer. Telephone ..   180',,    178V.    179V.\nAmer. Tobacco    178)4   17614   176%\nAnaconda         53        61%     63\nAtchison          192%    102        183'\/,\nBaldwin       262       25114    252y4\nBait.   ft.   Ohio      11814    117\",    118\nCan.  Pac    200%    197       199%\nCerre de Pasco       67%      66%      66%\nChile Copper       38        37%     38\nChrysler       57%     67        57%\nCorn Products   . ..     6714      68%      66%\nDodge       20%     18%     19\nDupont     319%    31614    319%\nOen. Motors     128%    126%    127%\nOen. Electric     131%    129%    131%\nGt. Nor. preferred     101%      99        100%\nHowe Sound       41%     40%      41%\nInspir. Copper ......     20%     19%     20\nInt. Nickel       67%     66%      66%\nKenne. Copper       81%     80%     81%\nNational P. & L.       23%     23%     23%\nN. Y. Central     164%    162%    163%\nNor. Pac     100(4     88 99%\nPhillips Pete       41%     41%     41%\nRadio Corpn      94%      89%     03%\nShell Union Oil   .       26%      26y4      26%\nSin. Cons      16%     16%     16%\nSou. Pac-     130%-   119%-120%\nStand.   OU   Cal. 40%      40 40%\nStand.  Oil  N.  J.        56 55%      56\nStudebeker         57%      56%      56%\nTexas  Gulf.  Sul.        73%      72%      73%\nUnion Oil Cal      4414     44%     44%\nUnion Pac     194%    192%    194\nU. S. Rubber       54%     53%     54\nU.  S.  Steel       146%    142%    146%\nWillys Over      1814     17 17%\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, Nov. 25,\u2014Toronto\u2014Dealers\nquoting country shippers extras 58c to\n64c, firsts 48c to 53c, secondB 35c to 37c.\nMontreal\u2014Fresh extras 70c, firsts 54c\nto 65c, seconds 47c to 48c.\nEdmonton\u2014Fresh eggs selling to retailers extras 58c, firsts 52c, seconds 38c.\nVancouver\u2014There is no change ln the\nprices on this market.\nAmerican markets are unchanged and\ntrading ls reported dull.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Nov. W-- Sterling ex\nchange firm at 4.83% for 60-day bills\nand   at   $4.87   9-16   ior   demand \u25a0\nForeign   bar   silver\u201466%.\nCanadian dollars\u201411-64 premium.\nFrancs\u20143.93%.\nLire\u20146.44%.\nNelson    approximate    rate    sterling\nMJNft.\nMarks\u201423.87%.\nKronen\u201426.94%.\nCENTRAL MANITOBA\nISSUE FEATURES\nGoes to New High for AU Time\nand Closes at Gain of 28\nat Toronto\nTORONTO, Nov. 25\u2014Trading on the\nStandard mining exchange was active today, sales totalling 2,515.288\nshares with advances outnumbering\nrecessions   br   two   to   one.\nCentral Manitoba was the most spectacular feature ln the list selling up\nto a new high for all time at \u00bb2.25\nand finishing at \u00bb2.08, a net gain of\n28c. Grenada waa tbe leader ln activity, with a turnover of 291,350\nshares and an advance of 4% cents\nat  32%c.\nHowey moved up to 81.64 and from\nthat point gradually eased to \u20221.48.\nup 18c from the previous close.\nBidgood advanced to \u20221.58, a gain\nof nine centa. Teck Hughes was up\n17c   to   U1.35.\nThe higher priced Porcupine Issues\nwere very soft. Hollinger dropping 30c\nto 81725, while Dome waa off 36c\nto \u202213.60, after reaching \u00bbI4.20. Mclntyre dropped back to $27.10. a lose\nof 40c. Vipond was an exception and\nJumped   to  87%c,  up  7%c.\nInternational Nickel was off 81 to\n\u202267 and Treadwell was 25c lower at\n\u202231.50.\nTRADE REPORTS\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelling  \u2022-\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOftloe   tmeltinc   anil   Refining   Or?ertmeavt\nTRAIL,  BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zine Orm\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pi* Lead and Zine.\nTADANAC, TRAIL\nLETTERHEADS\nOf Distinction\nIf you want a letterhead that will lend\ndignity to your business or your profession\nphone or write our Job Printing Department\nOur sales and mechanical staff will be\nglad to cooperate with you in every way.\nPHONE 144\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPT.\nWINNIPEG, NOV. 26. \u2014 The weekly\ntrade report of the Canadian Credit\nMen's Tnut association for the week\nending November 28, reads as follows:\nHalifax\u2014A continued improvement in\nthe wholesale and retail trade ls reported.   Collections good.\nSaint John\u2014The wholesale trade continues to enjoy a good volume of business. Retail trade satisfactory. Collections 'normal.\nMontreal\u2014A little more activity ls reported In sales of wholesale groceries,\nclothing, gents' furnishings, etc. Both\ncity and country retail merchants have\nexperienced rather a quiet week owing\nto the exceptionally wet weather\nthroughout .the province. Wholesale\ncollections are only fair; retail somewhat slow.\nToronto\u2014There has been an Increased\ndemand in all seasonable lines, owing to\nthe continued cold and rather wet\nweather.\nJVinnipeg \u2014 A very good volume of\nbusiness ls being transacted by wholesale grocers, dry goods and ladles' wear.\nBoots, shoes and rubbers are ln great\ndemand. The retail trade has been\nvery active in seasonable lines, and\nChristmas goods now beginning to move.\nSaskatoon \u2014 The colder weather has\nincreased sales In all lines of dry goods,\nboots and shoes. Wholesalers report\nsales of groceries and hardware very\nbrlBk.    Collections improving steadily.\nCalgarV\u2014Clothing, shoes and rubber\nbusiness exceedingly brisk, almost all\nlines continue active, and show a substantial increase over the same period\nlast year.\nEdmonton\u2014A very good volume of\nbusiness is being transacted by whole'\nwilers and retailers generally. Collections good.\nVancouver \u2014 Manufacturers report\nbusiness fair. A good volume is reported by wholesalers In hardware and dry\ngoods. All other lines, however, are\nrather quiet. Retail business, both city\nand country, ls fair. Collections are \\m-\nproving.\nToronto Mines\nBid.\nAmulet  $ 4.55\nAconda  35\nArgo  36\nArea          ,47 Vi\nBeaver        2.11\nCastle     85\nCan. Lorraine   - 21\nConlagas      .40\nCapitol , 19\nDome         13.55\nDon Rouyn    21\nOold   Hill    37\nHolly       17.00\nIndian    06 Vi\nKirkland  Lake        2.53\nKeeley 80\nLake   Shore        25.55\nLaval     22\nMclntyre     *.   27.50\nMining  Corpn      4.35\nNlpisslng          6.00\nNewray    _ - 49\nNoranda     S *...    25.0*\nPioneer \u00a35\nPremier          3.35\nRouyn     ....>           .03^4\nStadacona     18\nTeck   Hughes        11.36\nTimiskaming    09\nTough Oakes 74\nWright  Hargreaves         7.09\nWest  Dome Lake 16\nCent.  Man.  Mines      2.08\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK. Nov. 26.\u2014Copper mm;\nelectroyltlc   spot   and   futures,   (13.75.\nTin\u2014Firm; spot and nearby and\nJanuary   958.75.\nIron\u2014Steady    and    unchanged.\nLead\u2014Steady spot New York, $8.^5\nEast  St.   Louis,   98.10.\nZinc\u2014Steady; East St. Louis spot\nand futures,  95.85  to  96.90.\nAntimony\u2014Spot,   910.75   to   910.87.\nAt London\u2014Standard copper\u2014Spot,\n\u00a359 2s 6d;   futures, \u00a369 7s 6d.\nElectrolytic\u2014spot, \u00a364 6s; futures,\n\u00a364   15s.\nTin\u2014Spot. \u00a3266 7s 6d; futures, \u00a3264\n12s 6d.\nLead\u2014-Spot, \u00a321 7s 6d; futures, \u00a321\n16s.\nZinc\u2014Spot, \u00a326 12s 6d; futures, \u00a326\n6s.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWheat\u2014 Open High Low Close\nNov.       . 135)4 13614 13*\\ 135\nDec  132', 133% 181% 133V,\nMay   ... . 137 137(4 135V, 136%\nJuly 136 138% 135% 135%\nOate\u2014\nNov. 50% 80(4 58(4 60%\nDec. 56% 58% 58(4 66%\nMay 50(4 69% 58% 59%\nJuly 57% 57% \u00bb7% 57%\nBarley\u2014\nNov. 83 83% 83% 83%\nDec. 79(4 80% 79 80%\nMay 80(4 81% 80% 81%\nFlax\u2014\nNov 183 183% 181% 183%\nDec. 183% 183% 181% 183%\nMay     ... 191(4 191% 190% 191%\nRye\u2014\nNov  103(4 103% 108% 103%\nDec. 103 103% 101% 103%\nMay 106% 106% 106% 106%\nCash wheat\u2014No. 1 northern. 149; No.\n3  northern, 143:   No. 3  northern,  137;\nNo. 4. 114%: No. 6. 100; No. 6, 93; feed,\nS7; took, 1*\u00bb*.\nBreak Occurs in\nWheat Values in\nthe Chicago Pit\nCHICAOO, Nov. 25.\u2014General wiling,\nprompted largely by bearish crop advices from Argentina, brought about a\nmaterial break today ln wheat valuer\nhere.\nClosing Quotations on wheat were unsettled, lc to l%c lower, with corn at\n%c to %c advance, oats a shade off to\n%c gain .and provisions unchanged to\n16c down.\nSEJCliTEl\nT __\nBreweries   Are   Features;   Oil\nStocks Busy; Winnipeg\nRailway Gains\nUnique among November nuptials was | In Toronto, Ont., Miss Alleen, left cen- . the best men were both brothers of the\nthe double weddings of Misses Alleen j ter, wed Ernest, left, while Miss Kath- , brides. The services were perfonfled\nVeronica and Kathleen Mary O'Con- j leen, right center, became the bride of j by Rev. Father Arthur Enrlght, brother\nnor, sisters, to Ernest J. and Norman | Norman, right. Attending the brides of the grooms. Two of the ushers wen\nT. Enrlght, brothers.    In the ceremony j were  the  sisters  of  the  grooms,  while | brothers of the Brooms.\nTORONTO, Nov. 25,\u2014Heavy trading\nln beverage stocks, with Seagram ln the\nload, featured operations on the Toronto Stock exchange today.\nSeagram closed up Vs. at 24, the trading for the day ranging from a low of\n23 Vi and a high of 24' 3 Carling Brewery opened at 343\/4 and declined to a\nnew low of 34, the closing sale down Vi.\nCanada Malting closed up Vi, at 33 K-\nGoodyear common was a strong spot,\nselling up to 132 V It closed at 129%,\nup %.\nThe usual market attention was given\nto the oil stocks, McCall Brothers leading and reaching a high of 60, though\nthe close was only \\'_ up from Thursday's close at 58. British American Oil\nclosed unchanged at 36. Imperial Oil\nwas dpwn Vi, to 59%.\nTwin City made a surprising gain of\n5V4, to 62V4. Winnipeg Railway also\nhad a gain of 4Vi. to 104Vi. The rights\nwere up 1, to 15.\nOther gains included Brazilian 2Vi, to\n214Vi; Canadian Canners preferred Vi,\nto 111%: Canadian Oil Vi, to 37Vi; Canadian Pacific Railway 4, to 200; Steel\nof Canada Vi. to 178; Beacon Oil Vi, to\n14Vi.\nOther losses Included Alberta Pacific\nGrain common down Vi, to 54Vi, and\nthe preferred down 1, to 95. International Nickel Vi. to 67.\nVancouver Mocks\nBid Asked\nB. C. Silver   \u2022 1.33       \u2022\t\nBig Missouri         .37%     \t\nCork Province 11% .13%\nDunwell         .18(4 20.\nIndependence  04% .05\nIndian Mines  08 .06(4\nInt. Coal 24 .35\nLucky Jim        .25(4 -26(4\nPremier         3.34 3.35\nPorter Idaho         .39 .43\nRuth Hope   .31\nSelklrks 01(4     \t\nSilver Crest   05 .06\nSilversmith    15 .17\nRichmond    11(4 .12\nNat. 811. OS 11(4 13(4\nCoast Copper  16.26\nBrit. Petroleum  06% .07\nTrojan Oil   -01V4\nSunloch    .79\n   m  \t\nSpokane Stocks\n(Reported  by  C.  W. Appleyard.)\nAmerican Locomotive 9108\nC.  P. R 9119%\nChrysler 9 57Vi\nDodge    . 9 19\nGreat  Northern    9150'\/\u201e\nInt. Nickel ..   9 68%\nStudebaker      ...    9 66%\nPhilips Petroleum .9 41%\nUnited States Steel        ............       9 46Vi\nSmelters \u201e 4262\nBrazilian  9314 Vi\nMassey-Harrls        4 36Vi\nSeagrams        9 23 Vi\nAsbestos Preferred           9 94\nWinnipeg Electric   ..........       *     9 104\nLucky Jim 26Vic\nSilversmith 15c\nNoranda     925.00\nOoldsmlth     04C\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Nov. 25.\u2014Eggs firm; but\nter unchanged;   cheese dvil.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns, 203ic to\n21 Vic.\nButter\u2014No. l pasteutlzed. 37!4c to\n38 >\/4c.\nEggs\u2014Storage extras, -15c to 4fic; flrets,\n42c to 43c; seconds, 39c to fl'.ic; fresh\nextras, 72c;  fresh  firsts, 80c,\nNEW YORK MARKET\nSEAT SELLS HIGH\nNEW YORK, Nov. 25.\u2014Value of mem'\nbershlp on the New York curb market\nrose to new heights today with the\npurchase of a seat for 946,000 by William \\%. Edmonds Jr., from Donald S.\nPuch, an increase of 95000 over the\nrecent high record.\nStudents who smoke, chew or drink\nwill not be eligible for three scholarships at University of Illinois.\nRUBBERS\nWear better when they are\nnewly   made\nOur stock is all fresh this\nseason and complete in lines\nfor men, women and children.\nWatson Shoe Co., Ltd.\nTerms Strictly Oaeb\nPRINCIPALS IN UNIQUE WEDDINGS\nTRAVELERS' HEAD\nHenry L. (George) Wlllmot, reelected\npresident of the Commercial Travelers'\nAssociation of Canada at their general\nmeeting.\nthe management thinks it is no longer\ndecorous for them to work ln shirtsleeves\nThey are being served out with lightweight grey gabardine jackets.\nDominion Live Stock\nCALGARY, Nov. 25.\u2014Receipts\u2014Cattle\n308, calves 52, hogs 174.\nSteers\u2014Choice 97.50 to 98.50, fair to\ngood 9650 to 47.25.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice 46.25 to 96.75,\nfair to good 95.26 to 96.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice 95.50 to 96, fair\nto good ,94.76 to 95.26.\nBulls\u2014Good 94 to 94.50.   s\nStocker steers\u2014Choice 96 to 96.75, fair\nto good 95.25 to 95.75.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice 97 to 97.75, fair\nto good 96 to 96.76.\nCalves\u2014Choice 97.75 to 98.50. good 97\nto 97.50.\nLambs\u2014Fair to good 910 to 911.\nSheep\u2014Fair to good 96 to 910.\nHogs\u2014Select bacon 99.25, thick smooth\n98.75.\njurymen when the petit jurors were\nsworn for the November term of the\ncourt of king's bench here. There\nwere the usual tales of'woe, deafness),\nchort-sightednese. all sorts of physical\ndisability and claims Chat to serve on\nthe Jury would mean serious business\nloss. A few exemptions were granted;\nbut in most cases the requests were\nrejected.\nAmong the Jurymen was Hon'. Herbert M. Marler. former minister Without portfolio in the federal government,\nMONTREAL  JUDGE\nItLHt KKS    Jl KYMK,\\ '\nMONTREAL, Nov.  26.\u2014Justice Wilson\nhad    occas.oii    to    re\"ju::e    recalcitrant'\nTRANS-OCEAN   PHONES\nNEW YORK, Nov. 26. \u2014 The social\nImpulse which causes housewives to\nchat over the back fence and men to\nstop each other on the street for\nfriendly word ls responsible for almost\nhalf the business on the transatlantic\ntelephone.\nAbout one-third of the conversations,\nthe statement continued, relate to financial business among bankers (and\nbrokers and the remainder included\ntalks dealing with mercantile, newspaper, theatrical and miscellaneous\nmatters.\nRAILWAYS  KEEP  IP  APPEARANCES\nLONDQN, Nov. 26.\u2014\"It is particularly\nundesirable that those members of the\nstaff who come In contact with the public, or who can be seen by passengers in\npassing trains, should carry on the com-i\npany's business with pipes or cigarettes !\nIn their mouths,\" writes Sir Felix Pole,\ngeneral manager of the Great Western\nrailway, In the company's magazine.\nThis solicitude for \"the looks of\nthings\" seems to have spread to the\nUnderground company, for now that\nthe ticket clerks can be seen in their\nglass  offices  at  the  subway  entrances,\nKOOTENAY BOND & INVESTMENT CO.. LIMITED\nINVESTMENT   SECURITIES\nGOVERNMENT\nMUNICIPAL   AND\nINDUSTRIAL\nBONDS\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA,\nONTARIO,   MANITOBA\nAND QUEBEC  MINING\nSTOCKS\nHOME OFFICE, TRAIL, B.C.\n^l^smf\/Baji (SoniDnnn.^f\nrNCORPORATtO   t\u00ab\">  MAV l\u00abTO.\n1\nOther Branches ai tVlnnfpef, Yorkton- Hatkatoon.   Rdmonton.   Oalg&r)    Letiibriditft\nVancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria\nMen's English All-Wool Socks\nFINE CASHMERE, ALL-WOOL\u2014Our \"Beaver Brand,\" in Black, Tans and\nGrey   '.  60.*\nFINE CASHMERE, ALL-WOOL BOTANY YARN\u2014Our \"Otter Brand,\" Black,\nTans and Grey  85*\nRIBBED WOOL, HEATHER SHADE SOCKS 60.+, 85<* and $1.00\nFANCY CASHMERE, ALL-WOOL SOCKS in new patterns 85*, Sl.OO, $1.25\nMain Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear\nCOATS\u2014Marveilas, Needlepoints, Broadcloth, Velours, lined throughout with good\nquality sateen and satin interlined with Grey Flett.    Fur collar and cuffs in\nMandle, contrasting shade to coat.   Sizes assorted.\nPrices .., $19.95, $22.50, 25.00, $29.50, $39.50, $45.00\nSILK DRESSES\u2014In silk, crepe de chine, crepe back satin, georgettes. Sizes and\nshades assorted.   Regular prices up to  $35.00, special  $16.95, $19.95\nLARGE ASSORTMENT OF FLOWERS FOR EVENING DRESSES\u2014In wonderful variety of colors, large and small sizes, suitable for coats as well.\nPrices ranging 95*, $1.25, $1.50, $1.95, $2.25\nHAND PAINTED SCARVES\u2014In shades   of   Nile,   Blue,   Peach,   Pink,   Green,\nWhite, Fawn, Sunset.    In two widths, with ends painted in floral or birds and\nbutterfly and ship designs.\n18 inches wide, price $5.95      10 inches wide, price $3.95\nSaturday Specials at Reduced Prices\nREMNANTS AT THROW-AWAY PRICES\u2014Specially reduced for Saturday selling only. A large assortment of dress fabric ends in ginghams, prints, silk and\ncotton crepes, broadcloths, woolen dress goods, representing every weave. Silks,\ncottons, flannelettes, etc., etc. Lengths from 14 -yard to 31\/2 yards. Many fine\ndress lengths at amazing prices.   On sale from, per length IO* to $2.95\n3 ONLY, BED COMFORTERS\u2014Full size, in good bleached cotton batting with\nnice heavy cretonne coverings of floral designs in Blue and Pink. On sale today for   $2.69\nSPECIAL FOR TODAY ONLY, LADIES' BROWN WOOL HOSE\u2014\n3 pairs for         98*\nREMNANTS IN LACES AND RIBBONS\u2014From 3 yards to 6-yard lengths. Regular prices from 50c, $1.00 per length, today for less than HALF PRICE\nMain Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nShoe Department\nSLIPPERS\u2014Our new English slippers for this season are one of the finest\nselections that we have ever been able to offer. Dainty boudoir slippers for women\nin smart styles and appealing colors.   Warm, well-lined slippers for children in\nmanv pleasing styles.\nCOMFORTABLE SLIPPERS FOR MEN\u2014Selling as low as  95\u00bb*\nThere is a slipper suitable for each m ember of the family and at a price that\nwill meet with your approval. Main Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nGrocery Specials Today\nFANCY BISCUITS\u2014Per lb.  354\n3 lbs. for ,   $1.00\nGRAHAM WAFERS\u2014Per lb  25*\nBANANAS\u20143 lbs. for    4Z.\nPEARS\u2014D'Anjou, 3 lbs. for   25*\nFLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT\u2014Each ia*\nMIXED CANDIES\u2014Per lb. . 25*\nDOLLAR SODA BISCUITS\u20142 boxes Z...ZZ'.'. 95*\nMain Floor\u2014H.B.C.\n1 l_\nJ-i\n (age Ten\nTHE\nNELSON DAILY NltwS, SATURDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1927\n\"The Ark\n\u25a0\u00bbC1A1' Heating atovee to clear.\n1 to %X_: Cups aad Saucers, dors.\nUA: Ladle.' Silk Host, all colors,\nr. 50<* Flannelette Blankets, pair.\nMB. S2.50. S3: Comforter..\n\u00bb \u2022*\u25a0\u2022\u00bb. S3 \u00ab<> $6 \u00ab\u00ab*: \u25a0\"\u00bb-\nsrads. each. $2,75; Turkish Towels.\n9 eO^; Linoleum Rugs, Furniture,\nHtUaC Utensil.. Staple Dry Oood*\nlatwtt In tbe  city.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nMre 534\nSM VERNON RT\n1TYDRUGC0\nikon's Dispensing Chemisti\nfilms. Kodaks. Drats, Stationery\nHIMI   orders   propmtly despatched.\nB 1(KM NBLSON, B.C.        PHONE M\n|j\u00bb In and net Vonr Weight  Free\n; A. C. Laughton, R.O\n\u2022alalia) ng    In   Correcting    Defect, vt\nSiqM   by   Proper   Gfasset\nQuick Repair ftervlo*.\nIIFFiN   BLK. PHONI   12B\nf' \u25a0     '    . ' ,   i.      \u25a0  \t\nincrease Your Salary\nEvening Classes\nIndividual Tuition\n| Nelson, Businpsa CnlWe\n%eep for Sale\n,$00 Yearling Ewes.\n3,500 Ewes, 4 and 5 years\nE\n400  Black Faced  Ewes,\ni 2 and 3 years old.\n;500 Ewe Lambs.\n80 Pure Bred Ramboulett\nEarns.\n400 Aged Ewes.\nAll these sheep are priced\night to make a clean-up.\nC.RABY\n*one 2822       Lethbridge\n\u25a0   1004 6th Ave. South\nSN|AP\nINCARS\nSTAR\nCOACH\n1926 Model\n$550\nAPPLY TO H. A. HILL\nPHONE 39\nROSSLAND, B. C.\nOr\nCAPITOL MOTORS\nGEORGE   W    PEASE,   Manage,\nOpp. Poet Office Box 7S3\nPhone  65 Nelaon,  B.C.\nWISHES TD LIST\nWHILE THEY LAST\nXmas Tree Sets\nS1.9D a*\nExtra Lights, each   10>\u00a3\nFrosted Shades, each  15>f)\nBENNETT'S, LTD.\nThe   Home   of   Electrical   Uoods\nLIVE DOWN TOWN\nAnd save time and street cat\nfares.   You get real comfort\nin the\nKERR APARTMENTS\nON DISPLAY MONDAY\nBigNewAssortment\nof Christmas\nCards\nOwing t: the exceptional values we are offering in\n\" Personal Greeting Card, it haa been necessary for us to\nobtain a further large and exclusive stock.\nThis is the seventa consignment we have had ta order,\n- which, in itself, indicates the wondeifi'l values we are of-\n; fering.\nWe offer vou 24-hour delivery, and there is vet\ntime for the Old Country mans.\nPresent Lists, Though Producing Many Deals, Insufficient\nfor Inquiries\nASKS PARTICULARS\nFROM EVERY OWNER\n\u25a0 etc.\nThese are the prices, including printing oi your name,\nTwo dozen for $1.50\nTwo dozen for  SJS1.75\nTwo d;zen for $2.25\nTwo dozen for  ^.S1)\nTwo dozen for S2.75\nTwo do\u00bban for S3.CO\nTwo dozen for $3.25\nTwo dozen for $3.75\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPT.\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nPRINTING\u2014RULING-BOOKBINDING\nTo the  Editor of The Daily  News-\nSir\u2014The Chamber ot Mines of East,\nera British ^Columbia was lormed t\nfew years ago with the object of\nbringing together the prospective buy\ner and the owners of mu.eral claims\nand to further the interests of mining  In eastern British  Columbia.\nDurhag the past summer wo had a\nconsiderable number of int\u00bbutrie. for\nmining properties of various descrip'\nlions from prospects to well developed\nmines, and we found that the number\nlisted with us was Inadequate to fill\nthe requirements although we brought\nquite a number of both parties together with fair prospects of success.\nThe executive of the Chamoer of\nMines have decided that during the\ncoming winter season they will try\nand get tn touch with every prospector and mine owner ln the whole district who wishes to sell his property,\nand ask them to list the same with\nus, letting us have the fullest particulars they possibly can about their\nclaims and mines, ln this way we\nhope that next season we will have\na large number of mines available to\nplace before those seeking properties,\nand also to be able to advance prospective deals during the winter so\nthat the properties can be examined\nby engineers as early as possible in\nthe  spring.\nNoting the Interest which the edl\ntors of the local press have In the ad\nvancement and success of the country we are asking you to devote effi\nclent space In your next Issue to draw\nthe attention of those ln your vicinity who have mining properties they\nwish to dispose of, and ask them to\ncommunicate with our office In Nelson\nwith as little delay as possible. We\nmake no fee or charge of any kind\nfor these services as the Chamber ls\nsupported by voluntary subscriptions,\netc.\nWe believe that eastern British Columbia ts a mining field equal to any\nin Canada, which by careful handling.\nshould come Into its own within the\nnext   few   years.\nThanking you in anticipation of your\npublishing   this letter.\nJ.  W. MULHOLLAND,\nSecretary,\nNelson. B.C., February 24,  1927.\nT\nHUT NIGIII\nSix men of international prominence,\nwith their staffs, will arrive ln Nelson\nMonday night\u2014the members of the International waterways commission, who\nwill sit here Tuesday on the applications of the Creston Reclamation company and the West Kootenay Power to\nLight company, In respect to uses they\ndesire, respectively, to make of water of\nKootenay river.\nThe American members of the commission are Hon. Clarence D. Clarke\nHon. Pred T. Dubois and Hon. P. J. Mc-\nCumber, W. H. Smith being their secretary; while the Canadian section consists of C. A. Magrath, H. A. Powell and\nSir William Hearst, Lawrence J. Burpee\nbeing their secretary. Others of the\nparty are Oeorge W. Relt and Oeorge\nSimpson. Reservations for all have been\nmade at the Hume.\nPoultry Exhibitors and Others\nEnjoy Banquet at\nLegion\nDECLARE SHOW GOOD;\nTALK OVER PROBLEMS\nEgg Inspector Fisher Says Per\nCapita Consumption\nDoubled\n;A.S.HorswiU&Co.\n4-fitrlng Brooms, special  2J>\u00ab*\nBananas, 3 lbs. for ...* 35^\nRolled Wheat, 8 lbs. for 25}\nHeinz Tomato Soup, 2 for 25^\nSpinach. 3 lbs. for  7. 25f>\nNew Batata* Currants. Sultanas\nand Mixed Paei Shelled Walnuts,\n6 lace Cherries.\nTobacco, Cigarettes, Cigars. Box\nof Matches free with  each par-^\nchase,\ni *       Ol R  PHONE  NO.  IS  131\n>    Deliveries   morning  and   afternoon. Fairview and uphill.\nFEAR FOUL PLAY\nIN COAST DEATH\nStark County, Illinois, corn husking\ncontest was won by A. Seibenthal, who\npicked 33.49 bushels.\nNelson News of the Day\nWE CARRY A FULL LINE OF\nCooking Utensils\n\u2022 That will help the housekeeper to make kitchen work easy.\n,'. TINWARE, GRANITEWARE AND ALUMINUM IN\nGREAT VARIETY.\nTry us when you need anything in this line.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, feC\nRETAIL\nST,   MAVIOIRN   CHI IK II\nAdvent Hunday, November 27\n8:1)0 a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion.\n10:30 a.m.\u2014Ordination Service and\nChoral Eucharist.\n7:30p.m.\u2014Confirmation   Hervice.\n9:00 p.m.\u2014Churchman's  Club.\nThe Bishop of Kootenay will be\nthe Guest of the Club.\nAll   men  welcome. (3191)\n=-_]\nMothers' Club Christmas Sale, Tuesday. November 29, Memorial Hall. Tea\nserved from 3 to 6 p.m. Needlework,\nHome Cooking, Candy, Dolls' Clothes and\nsmall Fancy Articles. Fish Pond. Admission free. <3190>\nKnights   of  Pythias  wilt   hold   Whi3t\nDrive and Dance in K. of P. Hall. Thursday,  December  1.    Admission  35  cents.\n(3180)\nDominion of Canada Victory Bonds\nmaturing 1st December, 1937, ntay be\nlodged with us for redemption without\ncharge. The Canadian Bank of Commerce, Nelson. (3187)\nWatch for date of Paintex Demonstration at D. C. Art Shoppe. (3189)\nMrs. W. J. Wilson and family wish to\nthank the staff of tlie Kootenay Lake\nOeneral Hospital and all who sympathized  ln their bereavement.'       (3179)\nThe Church of the Redeemer. A reception to meet the Bishop of Kootenay\nwill be held in the Parish Hall on Mon\nday, November 38th, 8 p.m. All Parish\nloners are cordially Invited to attend.\n(3181)\nB.  OF B.  T.\nSpecial   meeting,   Sunday,   November\n37. ten o'clock.   Important (3177)\nDance, Eaalos' Hall. Saturday night;\ngood mustc; accordian. Gentlemen.\n\u00bbi.o0;   ladies, 36c. (3148)\nBlue B'rd Beauty Shoppe. expert work.\n604Mi Baker Street.   Phone-118.     (3067)\nFlowers,   Plants.    Orlzselle'e,    Kandy-\nland.  J.30M)\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysician and  Surgeon\nSuite   BOS   to  KM   Rookery   Hull.ling\nOver Whltebooae.\nSPOKANE.    WASH.\nComer Riverside and Howard\nOne of the things that the 1937 district poultry show at Nelson will be\nremembered by wiU be the poultry\nbanquet at the Canadian Legion, under the auspices ot the West Kootenay Poultry to Pet Stqck association,\nwhen nearly 50 persons interested tn\npoultry raising, had .three hours of\nenjoyment and profit, Thursday evening, as a climax to the first day of\nthe show. It was unanimously agreed\nthat the banquet was tn keeping wtth\nthe show, certainly the best since the\nwar. W. J. McKim, president o( the\nassociation, made - his maiden appearance as toast master.\nJudge Ross Wallace of Calgary, declaring the show to be a very ffcie\none, and to have some good quality\nbirds, expressed the hope that the association would keep up tbe standard It\nhad set.\nPOINTERS   ON   EXHIBITING\nHe gave many pointers on fitting\nbirds for the show room, mentioning\nthat exhibitors should look carefully\nfor stubs on the foot, sldesprlngs on\nthe comb, crooked toes, deformed feet,\nroach back, crooked breastbone, short\nkeel, wing feathers lacking, and the\nlike, and reject birds with them, as\nthe Judge would either set back the\nbird some points or throw lt out, according to the seriousness of the departure from standard. A white bird\nshould be shown white. Proper feeding would produce a gloss on the\nplumage. Judge Wallace said the\nWhite Leghorns of F. J. Harbinson of\nCranbrook had an easy win, their qual\nity being reenforced by the birds being perfectly laid down here. He\nalso noted that the competitors ln the\nboys' and girls' class had their fowl\nIn excellent shape. Tbe show officials\ngave him splendid cooperation, he said.\n\"LIVING   WITH   POULTRY''\nMrs. V. S. MacLachltn, superintendent of Women's Institutes, who ls ln\nthe district on Institute work, but who\nhas several hundred Rhode Island\nReds, denied that the cock bird, when\ncrowing, was taking all the credit for\nthe egg laying. She portrayed the\nhen as cackling frantically and shrilly.\n\"I've laid an egg, I've laid an egg,\nI've laid an egg,\" to which her apouse\nencouragingly replied: \"I know you\ndid, do It again!\" She said there was\nnothing more enjoyable than living\nwith poultry. Mrs. MacLachlan was\nwarmly   applauded.\nW. Coleman drew great applause with\nhis entertainment number, which em-\nplowed a guitar, a harmonica, and his\nvoice, sometimes separately and sometimes in combination. Among his half\ndozen selections were the particularly\nappropriate ones of \"Turkey in the\nStraw\" and \"I went to Rob a Chicken Roost.\"\nA. D. Morrison, representing the\nOrand Forks' Poultry association, characterized the show as \"splendid,\" and\nmade humorous reference to the young\ncrow exhibited  by President McKim.\nAnother entertainment number consisted of pleasing vocal solos by G. A.\nSim.\nBOYS'   AND   GIRLS'\nIMPORTANT\nA. Wallach, former secretary, declared \"the show was good and the\nstuff, high class,\" but regretted that\nthere were not more exhibition birds.\nHe classed the boys' and girls' section\nas of the utmost Importance, and\nnecessary   for  building  for  the  future.\nMrs. H. H. Pitts, president of the\nNelson and District Women's Institute,\nconfessed her Interests in poultry raising were not personal, and said she felt\nflattered at being Invited to be present at such an assembly of experts.\nI.\\MMIN   s Ws SHOWS\nNECESSARY\nO. L. Landon, prolncial poultry Inspector for the district, who ls given\nthe most credit for the great success\nof the show, was given a warm reception. He declared people got out of\na poultry show Just what they wished\nto get out of lt. li poultry raisers\ndidn't have shows as a guide, conditions ln breeding would soon become\nchoatic. The Canadian poultry industry, he declared, owed a great deal\nto the American Poultry association\nfor Its steady support of the fanciers\nwho maintained and improved the\nbreeds and varieties, and for its \"Standard of Perfection,\" which was the\nstandard which govern '.d exhibitions\non this pntlnen..\nPresident McKim, to the question\n\"What ls the use of a poultry show?\"\ngave the further answer, that while\nadding to human knowledge, It alao\n\"effged on the other fellow.\"\nLen Webb was introduced Here, with\npleasing   vocal  numbers.\nJohn Notman gave remtniscenes of\nhis early days as a poultry raiser, and\nattributed the success of most successful poultry,, raisers in. part to their\n\"hard head edness.\"\nGRADA^G   DOUBLES '    J\nCONSUMPTION\nJ. M. Fisher, Dominion egg Inspector\nfor British Columbia, gave an address\non egg grading, and on the new regulations that came In force in 1933. As\na result of them, he said, people n\u00abw\nbought with confidence in what was\noffered to them, and the average per\ncapital consumption ln Canada per year\nhad come up from 15 dozen to 30\ndozen eggs.\nE. C. Traves, a former poultry in\nspector for the Kootenay, said lt was\nnot necessary to Increase the flocks\nto get sufficient eggs to supply the\nlocal wants of the Kootenay. There\nwere enough hens here now to give\nevery person ln British Columbia two\neggs a day the year around, If \"you\nfolks would only do what Mr. Landon\ntells you to do.\"\nOne of the last speakers was Alderman Ross Fleming, who was able to\nspeak from the storekeeper's point of\nview. He said he had not had any\nstorage eggs ln recent years, and expressed the belief that foreign eggs\ncould be kept completely out of the\ncountry. If the home product was In\nsufficient supply. _\nExplosion of a gasoline stove destroyed tbe home of W. Oennexich, Cedar Lake, Wis.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 35.\u2014Because of a\ndiamond ting, money and other per-'\nsonal effects missing, police suspect foul\nplay ln the death of Thomas Bennett,\nwar veteran and One Big union or-'\nganiZ'V. found dying tn a gas-filled\nroom of a local' boarding house.\nB. C. IN FIELD FOR\nPEARL INDUSTRY\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 35.\u2014Nsw British\nColumbia Industry has received an\nImpetus In the shipment from Nanaimo\ntb New York of pearls made from scsJm.\nof herrtnfs, whloh previously used to\nbe thrown Into the tea.\nA  OREAT BARGAIN IN\nLADIES' HAIR CLIPPERS\nUseful for trimming the neck or under\nthe arm. Oet a pair now and save\nmoney.\nSPECIAL PRICE \u00bb\u00abc\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\nChristmas Cards\nCalendars, Oil Colored\nLocal Views\nJ. H. ALLEN\nPICTURE  FRAMING\nAMATEUR FINISHING\n1\nWHITE\nTRUCKS\nOne- to Ten-Ton Models.\nDetailed     Specifications\nand Prices on application.\nSmedley Garage\nCompany       \u2022\nAGENTS  FOR  NELSON  AND\nDISTRICT\nGold\nFillings and\nInlays\nOold fillings and, Inlays require great cere if they are to\ngive   long   and   efficient   service,\nIn addition to that you want\nthem  to  look  well.\nWe make a specialty of this\nnature of work and every filling\nor Inlay that we make carries\nwith It our personal guarantee.\nDR. KEELEY\nOENTIST\n4061\/,   Bak.r  St,   Nelson,   B.  O.\nAND    AT   TRAIL\nThe Gift That Pleases!\nHOSIERY\n75cto$1.00\nMEN like attractive Hose.\nThey make good, practical\ngifts that are sure to be much appreciated. We are offering some\nbeauties at 75c and $1.00\u2014silks,\nwools, lisles, and mixtures in many\nchoice color combinations. Packed\nin gift boxes.\nService\nSatisfaction\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nREAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE\nCorner  store   ln   the  Annable   block\nand  Housekeeping Rooms ln Annable\nblock  for  rent.\nCLA88IFIED    AD8    BRING    RESULTS.   , .\nNothlni   Is   Too   Oood   for   the   Sick\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION   SPECIALIST\nIn   business  for   your  health    Let  ua\nfill    your    preaartptlona:    11*11    ordess\npromptly executed.    Call and wait for\nyour ear.   Phone 1.\nSunday hours: 1 to 4 and 7 to I P.m.\nFor\nService,\nPrice and\nQuality\nPhones 10 and 193\n\\\nGive Sight\nto Father and Mother\nFor Christmas\nA most precious gift fspm sons\nand daughters. Eyes, that have\nlabored long hours fpr the comfort of children should be given\ncare In their declining years.\nNow is the time to get their\neyes examined In order to have\nthem ready. Bring father and\nmother in and they will receive\nour very best attention.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nExpert   Optical   S.rvice\nBraxDa3effi\u00abnoxnTB\u00bbiBii9xiniin\nMORE VIVANI SETS HAVE\nARRIVED\n\u2022H0.0O value at $1.99 for today only\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nDoctors'  Praeorlptloa.  Out\nlp.cl.ltj\nOut-cf-To.ro Older* SeoetT. Out\nMoat   Csrafnl   and   Prompt\nAttutaoa\nHave\n\u25a0\nYour Money\nReady for the\nCarrier\nHe has to pay in advance for his papers.\nIt will help him in his\nbusiness if subscribers will\nalways pay him promptly\nwhen he calls each Saturday. ,\nSaturday\nSpecial\nBeaver Toasters ...|3.SS\nElectric Hair Curlers \u00a95f\nElectric Soldering\nIrons ;....!? 1.T5\nWe stand behind every\nsale.\nGUY'S ELECTRIC\nSTORE\nBAKER ST., NBJtT F. *  W.   '\nGROCERTERIA\nriiiiiDT'T\nH       \u201e\/->.._,.M-.    I   en__J-_it\n\"Quality and Service\"\nCHRISTMAS GOODS\nARRIVING DAILY\nWe have a large stock from\nwhich to choose your Xmas\ngifts.\nCall ln and see If we can\nsupply your needs lor Xmas.\nWe will be pleased to show\nyou goods.\nE. COLUMN\nJEWELER\nEXPERT WATCHMAKER\nC.P.R. and O.N.R. Time\nInspector\nMATINEE 2(31\nNIGHT 7 AND 9\nThe Flaming\nFrontier'\nCOMING MONDAY\nFOR FOUR DAYS\nFrancis &\nHubert\nThe Two Mack Crews\nON THE SCREEN\n\"Captain Sahratioa\"\nUSUAL PRICES\n\u25a0\u25a0\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1927_11_26","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403382","@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":"1927-11-26 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1927-11-26 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\/1.0403382"}