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C, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1927\nNo. 185\nPoultry Show News\nSee Page 10\nHOLD MILITIAMEN IT BAT\nHAMBERLAIN TAKES BLAME GENEVA BLOWUP\n\u25a0S DEBUTE\nrites   Bring   Up   Geneva\nestion With Severe Crit-\nicism to Government\nWOHTHY WOULD\nMEET UNITED STATES\nI,George  Takes  Slam  at\ntish Peace Cries; Bridge-\nman Defends Stand\nMinisters at Contrast in Censure Debate\nDISTRICT HEAR\nKootenay and Arrow Lakes Men\nHear  Chambers,  Squires,\nDean, Vanee\nCHAMBERS DISCUSSES\nTHE  NEW  CONTRACT\nWork of Inspectors Is Highly\nCommended; Hope Extend\nTheir Work\nHON.   M.   C.  BRIIK1F..UAN\ngovernment\nthe   cause\nthe\nthe\nDOM,   Nov.  Si.\u2014Pear   that   any\ntlon for preparatory conversation. SIR    AUSTEN    CHAMBERLAIN\ngrellmlnary to the Oeneva naval\n\u2022net would be miaintrepretateii!     Labor's   vote   of   censure   of   the\ncnitrt state, i. uie British an-1 Britjgh    house    yesterday    for    being\na criticism  that  (allure   ol  the   , ., \u2022-      ....      _.. . r,\nwas uue to inadequate prepara- failure or the tripartite conference at Geneva was\nrejected by the house of commons by a vote of 316 to 105. The\n(\\mten chamberlain, foreign see- debate wag notable for a curious contrast between two ministers\nof the crown. Sir Austen Chamberlain, secretary for foreign\naffairs, took some of the blame oh himself for lack of preparation, and W. C. Bridgeman, first lord of the admiralty, strongly\nmaintained that the British government had done everything\npossible for success and that no blame could be laid on the\nBratiano Dies\nassumed t(e role of official\nlit during the debate ln com-\npreclpitated by the persistent\nte criticism of the Oeneva break-\nHa admitted that he himself\nrrtly to blame, and offered aa ex-\nhla  own   fear   that   the   United\nmight read into a invitation for shoulders of the British delegation.\n[nary discussions, a desire of the\ngovernment to avoid partlclpa-\ntoget^er.\n'ABIMIC TALK\nrge part of Sir Austen's speech\nvotrKL to an. academic talk about\nprotocol and arbitration.\nntiMned that even if Oraat\ndid not slsd the protocol, the\nthe nations to have recourse\nItratlon for ! the ' settlement of\nrtlonal disputes,\ndebate waa Interrupted for\nan hour by the failure of the\n( lights.\nT!\n.i_\nFIVE MISSING,\n\u2122.nd.r Kenworthy argued that Seven Others Trapped; No Hope\neernment should have announced\nentlon to drop the building of\n.Users before Instead of after the\nconference, and declared that\nBritain's   position   was   Intoler-\nIt was going to stand out for\nright of capture at seat and re-\nll approaches from the United\nto reorganize and agree to a re-\nlvent of the maritime law on\nbjeet.\na^nnot afford a navy that will\nabsolutely secure at sea,\"\nommanjler   Kenworthy,   \"and   I\nthat* we should meet America\niy la this matter. We want a\nic Locarno, and I would like to\npan   taking   the   initiative   ln\nanother  conference   at  Tokyo.\"\nGKOKGE\ner Premier Lloyd George dilated\nown familiar theme ' of the\nto Europe through there being\n00 men In training for war. with\nent such as tbe world had never\nefore ln Its capacity for horror\nfcvastatlon. The two countries\n(had done the most \"blathering\"\nj peace\u2014Great Britain and the\n[States\u2014were the only two which\ntheir expenditure on\nMiti, and people would say, \"be\nstart lecturing us, cut down\n|wn expenditure.\"\nfirst lord of the admiralty. Hon.\nBrldgemah, said the British\nhad decided to adhere *to the\ngun limit, Uecausc If it chn-\n[to eight-inch guns, it would not\ning an agreement for limitation\nlaments, but for their increase,\nsblpet took the decision, for\nill the minister* \u00bb\u00abre responsible,\nwas a vital decision, from which\nvas no intention to depart.       \u2022\"\nKl)  ON\nng wtth the allegation that the\nnent hid lost tlie chance of a\ncompleted agreement with Japan\nIt insisted on six-inch guns,\nIdgeman said:   \u25a0\nin we discussed with the Amer-\nhe prospective    agreement   with\nthey did not turn it down on\nut on tonnage, and that was the\nwe had from start to finish.\"\nsndlng that no other country was\nprepared for the conference than\nBritain, the flrtf lord declared:\ntie conference .broke down on ac-\naf unpreparedness, wa ought not\n)lamed.\"\nmost Important proposal of Great\nat, Geneva, he explained, was\nDn in the st.se of battleships and\npf their llf\u00ab, and he did not\nderatand why Uie proposal was\njeptable to the United States. It\nKttly accepted toy Japan and he\nln hope that the United\nmlfcht eventually accept lt.\nIridieman repeated that he had\nrilling to sign ft partial agree-\naltti the united States on tbe\nthey agreed td, but the United\ndeclined until ft full agreement\nfor\nFive Believed Dead\nin Arizona\n81PER10R, Ariz., Nov. 21.\u2014Two\nmen were burned to death and five\nothers believed to have lost their\nlives In\" a shaft fire today In tbe\nmine of the Magna tfbpper company\nhere. Two bodies, have been recovered.\nThe  fire  was   under  control  tonight after burning from the rr.o-\nfoot level of the mine to the 1600-\nfoot level. \"\u25a0*\nThe fire, according to mine officials,\noccurred in the No. 2 shaft, which Is not\nused for the normal removal of ore.   It\nbroke  out  at *l  o'clock  this  morning.\nWhile   officials   of   the   company   have\nnot Issued a statement of the workers,\nit was learned that seven miners were\ntrapped in the vicinity of the blazing\nshaft.\nOne was said to be an Indian, and the\nother ate Mexicans.\nHope  for   the   five   unaccounted   for\nhad been practically abandoned tonight.\n[\nRath Canning, Eight, Brought\nto City  FVom  Sheep\nCreek District\nCRANBKOOK, B.C., Nov. 24.\u2014\nWhat Is pronounced by the doctors\nto be a case of infantile para lysis\nwas brought to Cranbrook Sunday\nfrom sheep Creek, about 40 miles\nnorth of the city. The putient Is\nRuth Canning, 8 years of age,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nCanning. Symptoms did not develop until Wednesday and several\nlittle friends of the patient had\nbeen allowed to visit her. The\nparents of these children hare been\nnotified to keep them from school\nand from contact with others until\ndanger of contagion has passed.\nSpokane Youth Is\nShot Dead When He\nAttempts Holdup\nSPOKANE, Wash., Nov. 34.\u2014Merle\nNlms, aged 30, was shot and killed\nhere tonight when he and an unidentified companion attempted to hold\nup H. I. Davis, a grocer, In his store.\nYoung Nlms covered the grocer with\nan unloaded pistol and commanded him\nto hold up his hands.    Davis whipped\nUnited States Gives\nThanks for Another\nYear Divine Favor\nWASHINGTON, DC. Nov. 34.\u2014\nIn keeping with the call of President Coolidge the nation gave\nthanks again today for another\nyear of divine favor.\nIn Washington, as elsewhere,\nthe people assembled in their\nchurches for appropriate Thanksgiving day religious services.'The\npresident and Mrs. Coolidge participated In those of the First\nCongregational church.\nReturning from the Thanksgiving- day- services. Mr. Coolidge\nwas serenaded by the army band\non the front lawn of the White\nHouse, several hundred having\ngathered there for the performance.\nAs at the executive offices,\nother government, departments\ngo^e themselves over to the holiday. Many Waahlngton people\nspent the *f ternoo\u00a7 at the George\nWashington-CarthoUc university\nfootball  gafne.\nWIT Tl VESSEL\nJap Steamship Hard on Reef at\nCopalis,  Washington;\nTugs to Pull\nCOPALIS, Wash., Nov. 24.\u2014The crew\nof the disabled Japanese steamship Ten-\npalsan Maru, fast aground on a sand\nreef here, refused aid tonight.\nWhen coast guardsmen succeeded ln\nplacing a line aboard the stranded vessel, members of the crew of 40 were\nseen to throw the llnp overboard and\nIndicated their desire to stay with the\nship.\n0 The vessel, which was driven on the\nsand bar ln a gale this morning was\nsettling rapidly tonight although she\nappeared ln no danger of breaking up.\nTugs were en route here from Victoria,\nB.C., and Seattle. Wash., and will try\nto pull the Bhlp off the reef.\nYouth Charged With\nManslaughter After\nDeath of Aged Man\nVANCOUV\u00abR. B.C., Nov. 34.\u2014Struck\nby an automobile driven by a boy of\nJuvetille age late this afternoon, James\nYoung, aged 86, died tonight, The\nyouth   ls   charged \"with   manslaughter.\nSEINE BOAT IS NOW\nBELIEVED TO BE LOST\nVICTORIA, Nov. 34\u2014According to a\nspecial dispatch to the Colonist from\nBamfleld on the west coast of Vancouver Island, fears are felt there for the\nsafety of the seine boat, Trapp, which\ncleared from Port Renfrew, November\n18, en route from Vancouver to Hecate\nchannel. She has not since been re-\nout an. automatic pistol and shot Nlms ported., The vessel was In command of\nln the face. ] Captain Levi with an engineer and cook.\nA well-attended meeting of the Kootenay and Arrow Lakes Fruit Growers'\nassociations, with morning and afternoon sessions, was held In the city yesterday commencing at 10 a.m. Addresses\nwere delivered by E. J. Chambers, Penticton, president and general manager\nof the Associated Growers; C. S. Squires\nof Robson, associated director for Arrow\nLakes district; F. Dean, associated inspector; and W. M. Vance, manager for\nNelson sub-central.\nPROPOSED  CHANGES\nAmong other matters, Mr. Chambers\ndealt with the proposed new growers'\ncontract, which will be made necessary\nby the explratlod of the present contract on March 31 next. Mr. Chambers\nalso outlined a proposed change ln the\nnumber and methods of election of the\nassociated board of directors, and made\nsome recommendation with tegard to\nfuture cooling arrangement.'\nMr. Squires, who has Just returned\nfrom a visit to the principal prairie\ncities, gave an interesting account of\nthe trip and his Impressions of the\ncomparative merits of the shipments\nfrom the different districts as they\ncame under his observation.\nMr. Vance dealt with the 'operations\nof the sub-central for the past season,\npointing out that while the short crop\nmftde marketing comparatively easy,\nthere were other difficulties peculiar to\nthe season to meet.\nSEVERAL   RESOLUTIONS\nA number of resolutions on matters\nof vital interest were passed. The work\nof the government and the Associated's\ninspectors was highly commended, and\nan effort will be made to have their\noperations still further extended to apply, if possible, to all fruit leaving the\ndistrict. The meeting, while debating\nwith some knotty problems, was characterized throughout by the fullest and\nfrankest discussion of all matters that\ncame before lt.   \u2022\nThose present were: E. J. Chambers,\nPenticton; W. M. Vance. E. Norman, W.\nJ. McKim, E. C. Hunt, F. Dean, Nelsqn;\nH. G. Greenwood, Creston; O. N. Brown,\nMajor Turner Lee, Bonnington; O. B,\nAppleton, E. c. Francis, Sunshine Bay;\nH. W. Herrldge, Nakusp; A. F. Mitchel,\nC. S. Squires, Robson; W. J. Clarldge,\nBurton; J. Kerr, W. J. McConnel, Harrop; H. Johnson, Boswell; E. Ginol,\nGinol's Landing; W. Fraser, Crawford\nBay; E. J. Campbell. J. D. Macdonnel, E.\nN. Doyle, Willow Point; B. Brenllson,\nBalfour; D. Epp, Renata; J. J. Campbell\npresided.\nKILLED IN PITCHED BUTTLE\nThe Rumanian premier. Lionel Bratiano, who underwent an operation\nWednesday afternoon for an abcess of\nthe throat, died yesterday at Bucharest.\nThe surgeons had to perform tracheotomy to relieve the difficult breathing;\nthey Inserted a silver tube In the windpipe. The premier experienced some relief after the operation, but there was\nconsiderable pain, making him restless.\nThe physicians diagnosed the trouble as\na certain form of tonsillitis. M. Bratiano\nhad for some -..me been suffering from\nInfluenza, wtth chronic disease of the\nkidney. He Insisted upon granting, an\nInterview to the correspondent of the\nAssociated Press. Later he went out in\ninclement. weather, which aggravated\nhis condition. Four physicians were In\nattendance.   \u2022,\nGiles Threatens to\nQuit Flight Unless\nBucker Apologizes\nSAN FRANCISCO, Cal., NoVj,\n34\u2014Captain Frederick A. Giles,\n^British aviator, will resign as pilot\nof the proposed flight from the\n.United States to New Zealand unless W. H. Rosewarne, his wealthy\nDetroit backer retracts scolding\nstatements reflecting on Giles1\nability to get started on his flight,\nhe told the Associated Press tonight.\nPATCHED I'F\nDETROIT, Nov. 24.\u2014W. H.\nRosewarnp, financial backer of\nCaptain Frederick A. Giles on the\nproposed flight to Wellington,\nN.Z., Is \"unconvinced\" that the\nBritish airman Intends to call off\nthe project.\n\"He ls going through with the\nflight,\" Rosewarne said, \"there ls\nnothing to the report.\"\n\"Have you mode a retraction?\"\nhe was asked.\n\"All I wish to Bay Ib that the\ncaptain is going on with the\nflight,\" he answered.\n\"I have been assured of that.\"\nPrisoners Armed Hold Celt\nHouse   Stormed   by\nTroops and Guards t\nMILITIA, ARTILLERY,\nTANKS SUMMONED\nRiot Breaks Out Prior to\nThanksgiving Service;\n18 Known Wounded\nSTER DIES;\nBratiano   Fails  Recover  After\nOperation; Titulescu, Minister Finance, III\nHon. R. B. Bennett to\n\"\"Spend Christmas at\nSister's, Vancouver\nVANCOt'VER, Nov. 24.\u2014Hon. R.\nB. Bennett, new leader of the Conservative party, is coming to British Columbia to spend Christmas\nwith his sister, Mfss Mildred Bennett, here.\nHon. Robert Forke\nIs Not Impressed\nin Meeting King\nTORONTO, Nov. 24\u2014\"I am a real\ndemocrat. I have no use for royalties,\"\nsaid Hon. Robert Forke, Dominion minister of immigration, speaking here today. Tl^e minister made this statement when he was telling his hearers\nof his meeting with tbe king of Norway\nduring a recent trip abroad.\nMr. Forke described his Interview\nwith the Norweglon king and how he\nhad expected* perhaps to come before\na man on the throne, a blue-blood\nwtth a crown on his head. Instead\nhe found the king Bitting in a swivel\nchair at a roll-top desk and giving the\ngeneral appearance of a country gentleman.\nVancouver Woman Is\nCharged Driving to\nthe Common Danger\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 24.\u2014Charged\ndriving to the common danger, Mrs.\nMarie Harmon was arrested after her\nauto had run down and seriously Injured i. mn.\nBUCHAREST, Nov. 24.\u2014The Rumanian\npolitical crisis created today ' by the\ndeath of Premier Bratiano ls further\ncomplicated by the serious Illness of\nNicholas Titulescu, minister of foreign\naffairs, who has double pneumonia.\nThe will of Premier Bratiano, opened\ntoday, gives a life interest in his. fortune to his widow. After her death the\nfortune posses to their son, George\nBratianp. The will relates only to family matters.\nFUNERAL SI'NIi.VY\nBtJCHAREST. Nov. 24.\u2014The funeral of\nPremier Bratiano, Rumanian premier,\nwho died early today, has been set for\nSunday. Although Bratiano's dying\nwish was that he should be accorded the\nsimplest funeral, the cabinet decided today upon a full national funeral.\nTonight guards In the catptal were\ntrebled, and troops throughout the\ncountry were standing by, but no trouble had been reported.\nWoman and Her Four\nChildren Are Found\nDead From Coal Gas\nMAUCH CHUNK, Fa., Nov. 24.\u2014Mary\nUctzura, 45, and her four children,\nGeorge, Mary, Annie and Frank, ranging\nIn age from 9 months to 15 years, were\nfound dead today at their home tn New\nColumbus, near here, from the effects\nof coal gas. Michael, 7, a fifth child,\nwas alive, and is in a critical condition\nat the hospital.\nSeveral Cattle Killed \u2022\nWhen P, G. \u00a3. Freight Is\nDitched on Wednesday\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 24.\u2014Several cattle\nin 12 cars were killed when a Pacific\nGreat Eastern mixed train was derailed\nner 100-Mile House on Wednesday, It\nwas learned today. None of the passengers or train crew wefe hurt. Some of\nthe cattle cars were said to hare been\nhurled on their sides, and lt was necessary to cut away the roofs to free the\nimprisoned beasts.\nHON.\nMR. FIELDING\nIS SEVENTY-NINE\nmmm\nVictim Asks Police to Withdraw\nCharges as Will Injure\nHis Studies\nOUELPH, Ont., Nov. 34.\u2014Crown Attorney Kearns had ordered Issued summonses for the appearance tn court on\nMonday of six Cmtarlo Agriculture college students, believed to have taken\npart in the hazing of Edward Beddoes\non Tuesday night. The charge Is assault.\nRepresentatives of the freshman class\nmade a statement of their actions,\nclaiming tthe first reports were Inaccurate and placed them ln a wrong\nlight. Their statement, addressed to\nthe Guelph Mercury, says ln pert:\n\"The action taken by the student\n(Beddoes) in question over the minor\noccurrence of the upsetting of his bed\nwas the cause of six of his 'pals' being\ndealt with lu a severe manner by the\nfaculty.\n\"We admit he was put Into a pig\ncrate, but he was not roped nor\ndrawn through any pig wallow, nor was\nthe crate Into which he was put\nfilthy.\n\"It Is true he was drawn through\nthe street in a cart, also, that he was\nauctioned off by the curb. After he\nwas helped out of the crate he was\nsubjected to no 'shameful' Indignities.\"\nBeddoes Is anxious to drop the matter\nand expresses regret at the police court\naction. He ls also laid to bo averse\nto appearing as a witness, adding that\nthe case will interfere with his studies\nat the college.\nMining Body Sends\nCongratulations to\nBlaylock of Trail\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 34.\u2014At the\n.convention of the British Columbia division Canadian .Mining and\nMetallurgical institute. It was decided to sepd ii message of congratulation tu S. G. Blaylock of the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\ncompany, the occasion being the\nfact that Mr. Blaylock had received\nthe Douglas medal from the American institute of Mining Engineers\nfor merit oro us and outstanding\nservice   to   the   mining   Industry.\nOTTAWA, Nov. 34.\u2014Rt. Hon. W. 8.\nFielding, former minister of finance of\nCanada, celebrated hts 79th birthday\ntoday. Mr. Fielding, who has been confined to hts bed for nearly a year.\n\u25a0pent the day quietly.\nExpress Clerk Is\nKnocked Out by\n\\      Believed Robbers\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 24.\u2014Sixty hours after an attack on him had been made by\npersons unknown, Sidney Otley, an express clerk here, Is still unconscious and\nunable to give police any Information\nthat might aid them In their search for\nthe guilty ones. Otley, police state, was\nattacked by robbers, who uaed ft 18-\nInch spike as a weapon ln their effort\nto rob the man. Hope is held out for\nhis recovery.\nSALINAS, Cal., NOV. ,14.\u2014Two\ntanks of the 40th tank company\nof the United States army were\nloaded on trucks here tonight and\nstarted | for   Folsom  prison.\nFOLSOM PRISON, Cal.,\nNov. 24.\u2014With two guards\nand five convicts dead, and\nthree guards, the warden's\nsecretary, one police officer\nand 17 convicts wounded,\nFolsom prison's riot tonight settled down into a\nbitter siege between revolting convicts, variously estimated to number from 1200\nto 2000 desperate men, and\nmore than 500 militiamen,\ndeputy sheriffs, state traffic officers and Sacramento\npolice.\nTwenty-five rioting prisoners were wounded tonight by the gunfire oi national guards in the first\nassault on 1400 convicts,\nwho had converted their\ncell house into a fort and\nattempted to return the fire\nfrom the forces of the law.\nPRISON DOCTOR\nADMITTED\nThis i information was\nobtained by Dr. L. L. Stanley, prison doctor at San\nQuentin, who went inside\nthe cell house and was welcomed by the wounded convicts.\nDr. Stanley, in a message\nrelayed outside,  said that\nrichoting    bullets    played\nhavoc inside the cell hous^p.\nThe first outbreak came\nshortly  before  noon  with\nsuch speed that the guards\nwere taken captive in the cell\nhouse and  held there tonight,\nunable to communicate a connected   account   of   the   proceedings.    The  convicts   turned   upon\ntheir   guards  at  a  prearranged   signal,\nshooting   and  stabbing  one   to   death.\nAnother guard, an aged man, dropped\ndead from excitement.\nAfter overwhelming the guards the\nprisoners had planned, those familiar\nwith the surroundings said, to make a\nrush for the prison yard and out Into\nthe hills. One section of the prison\ncontains no wall. But the foresight of\nthe prison officials prevented this.\n(Contlnueo   on   rage   Two.)\nThe Weather\nFruin the Dominion IlotMraloftoal\nOffice,   Victoria\nMln. Max.\nNELSON            83 37\nVictoria    a   41 63\nVancouver     43 48\nKamloops       34 42\nBarkervllle     33 33\nEstevan    40 63\nPrince    Rupert       33 36\nAtlln   \u00ab t 8\nDawson    ,  '33 \u00ab38\nSeattle       43 66\nPortland       t\u00bb 64\nSan FVinclaco     46 80\nSpokane     84 62\nPenticton    39 60\nVernon     34 42\nGrand Fork.     32 43\nCranbrook     33 40\nCalgary       10 83\nEdmonton \u201e   10 38\nSwift Current     14 83\nPrtnoe  Albert      14 34\nQu'Appelle     14 80\nWinnipeg    34 M\nPoraeaM\u2014NeUon and rtotnMy: Partly\ncloudy and mud with ononatoptl nastex\nor rain.\n Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25,1927'\nTry This Wonderful Ointment\nFull Siza Package of \"Sootha-Salva\" FREE.\nWs want more people, to know\nftbout Sootha Salva, and to make it\npossible for every skin sufferer to\ntry it, we have furnished leading\ndruggists with a limited number of\nfull use boxts to give away absolutely free with purchases of SOc.\nboxes of our famous fruit medicine\n\"Pruft-a-tivea\".\nSootha Salva brings instant relief\nfrom all affections of the skin. It\nis made from a prescription of the\nphysician  who  discovered Fruit-a-\ntives. Sootha Salva is pure, antiseptic and a mlrveilous healer.\nEczema, piles, boils, ulcers, chapping,\nwill soon heal and clear if you use\nthis cooling, soothing ointment.\nDo not suffer pain or embarrassment longer. Sootha Salva will do\nfor you what it has done for thousands of others*\nGet it from your druggist to-day-.\nMade by Fruit-a-tives Limited,\nOttawa, Ont.\nJudge Congratulates\nCouple Harried Upon\n\"Companionate\" Terms\n.CHICAGO, Nov. 24.\u2014Former Judge\nBen Llndsey of Denver, who coined the\nexpression \"companionate marriage,\"\nmade public today a letter be had written Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Roselle, whose\nmarriage along companionate lines took\nplace this week at Girard, Kan.\n\"My hearty congratulations upon your\nmarriage,\" he wrote Roselle and the\nformer Josephine Haldeman-Jullus. \"My\nstill heartier congratulations upon your\nhonesty ln entering upon a companionate marriage. That ls what modern\nmarriages are as they are performed by\nall the clergy ln all the churches, but\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Bf Obtained\nfew of them are as frank to admit It as,\nyou are.\"\nMr. Llndsey said his chief aim ln tbe'\ncompanionate, marriage ls to legalize\nbirth control along with voluntary divorce. \"My whole aim,\" he said, \"ls to\nhelp marriage, not to hinder it. I don't\neven say that lt ls new, because the\nconditions I would bring about under a\nlegal status already exist ln modern\nmarriage under a clandestine and Illegal\nstatus.\n\"The majority ot present-day marriages are companionate marriages, because the practice of birth control ia\nsteadily growing and will continue to\ngrow, and lt cannot be denied that the\ngreat majority of divorces today are voluntary divorces, both parties acceding\nto the desire to part. I would have\nthe government legalize the dissemination of knowledge of birth control under\nproper auspices. I would have the sllty\ndivorce courts done away with. I would\nestablish s bureau of scientists and psychologists, to whom each couple applying for a divorce would have to apply\nand present their cases.\"\nOFFTD\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor ,\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nBooms With Running Water, Private Baths en Suite.\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men, Lumber Men\nand Tourists.\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER WOO ROTARIAN HEADQUARTERS\nThe Most Comfortable Rotunda ln the City\nHUME\u2014A. D. Morrison, Grand Forks;\nT. A. Bell, J. M. Shepley, J. Barlow,\nVancouver; Mr. and Mtb. L. L, Robinson.\nRoss'  Spur;   O. B.  Appleton,  Sunshine\nBay; H. Mclntyre, Winnipeg; F. G. Wln-\nspear, Calgary; W. M. Archibald, Rossland; M. A. Sukarow, Cowley, Alta.; Miss\nP. Shekoff, Harrop; Mrs. N. Jepson,\nCranbrook; N. D. B. Larmouth, Trail.\nSAVOY\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nII at; Hot and Cold Running Water in All Roi\n\u25a0 a.- ,-. iii l'i '.::\u2022.   Hat!'- or Showers.\nSAVOY\u2014C. V. Rlesterer, Penticton; 8.\nI. LaBelle, Kaslo; Mrs. B. Cook, Mrs. C.\nThorndale, Mrs. G. B. Holllngton, Mrs,\nT. Alty, Mrs. C. J. Wilson, Mrs. O. Scott,\nMrs. A. Marshall, Mrs. H. White. Mrs.\nD. Downle, Mrs. H. Simpson, Mrs. B.\nSimpson, Mrs. P. Morrlsh, Mrs. P. Part\nridge, Mrs. C. H. Bird, Mrs. C. J. Murdock, Mrs. J. GlbBon, Mrs. R. Letcher,\nMrs. A. Howard, Mrs. W. J. Spooner, Mrs,\nC. Curtis. Mrs. J. Balfour. Mrs. M. P.\nMorris. Mrs. D. Williamson, Miss Q\nChristopher, Trail; J. Entwlsle, Vancouver.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water In every room.\nSteam Heated.\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nQUEENS\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Gallo, Grand\nForks; N. Lazrlch, Trail; J. Breau,\nYmlr; Mrs. D. C. McEwlng, Salmo; S. O.\nStoochnoff, Brilliant.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA Modern Brick Building.\n616 Vernon Street, Nelson, B. C.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephones\nln AU Rooms.   Steam Heated\nThroughout.\nJ. BLOMBEBG, Prop.  European Plan\nNEW GRAND\u2014C. Hansen, Salmo;  R\nMcCulloch, Vancouver.\t\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2tt  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   Rooms   by   the   Day,\nWeek or Month.\nEvery consideration shown to\nguests.\nCor.  Baker  and   Ward   sts.,   Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014M. Campbell, Salmo; F. M.\nMarenson, Marcus; H. G, Clark, Winlaw;\nT. Fraser, Stoughton.\nYOUR CAFE &\nTHE GOLDEN GATE\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nTasty meals at reasonable\nprices. Fresh oysters ln season.\nFrigldalre and soda fountain\nconnection.\nPHONE  681\nTHE L D. CAFE\n\u2022finest Equipped Restaurant In the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice Cream, Bode Water\nand Hot Drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms, bet and oold water\nWt Cster to Privets Parties).\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n120   Baker   StrMt,   N.l.on,   B.   C.\nOPEN   OAY   AND   NIOHT\n11:30  to  2:30,   Special   Lunch,   88c\n6:30    ta    8:00    p.m.,    Supp.r,    35c\nPHONE   IM\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic Restaurant\nRefinement    and     Delicacy     Prevail.\nOPEN   OAY  AND  NIGHT.\nLuncheon,  11:80  to 2 \u2014\u2014\u2014.tec\nSpecial Dinners 6:20 to 8 \"\u00bb\nWe    specialize   In    Chop   81107   and\nNoodles\nPHONE   183\nClosing Session Will Be Held in\nCoal Mining Center; Banquet at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 24.\u2014British Columbia division of the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy cloaed\nIts two-day session here tonight at a\ndinner at the Hotel Vancouver. Tomorrow the members proceed to Nanaimo for the closing session of the\ndivision.'\nThe Nanaimo meeting will be of particular interest to residents of that center, aU the papers dealing with the\ncoal Industry. Dr. Victor Dolmage ls\nto speak of \"The Microscopic Examination of Coal\"; Professor R. H. Clark\nof the University of British Columbia\nwill deal with the production of liquid\nfuel from coal and Professor Joseph\nDaniels ot the University of Washing\nton will talk on the subject \"Recent\nAdvances In Utilization and %enefaction!\nof Coal tn Washington.\" A picture\nscreen will shown brown'\"coal mlnjng\nand   brlquettlng   ln  Australia.\nTbe annual meeting will close with\na dinner at Which the Hon. William\nSloan,  minister  of mines,  will  be  the\nEnlarged\nProstate\n**ka on KatfMi aWtnaRlaa\nBook on Skin DlHeas... a.\u2014\nTreatise on Chronic Dlcea.es by\nHerbal Remedies. Pamphlet oo\nLobb of Manhood and Diseases r,f\nseen. Booklet on Female Ills; and\nadvlc, treat by mall: 80 year*\nexperience, without criticising; or\nllsparaglng your local doctora.\nwrit, ua before losing hop.\nTreatment br mall our'.peolalty\n\u25a0>3li>i kexbu. suna-\nIUT   I.TD.\nUM DtTla. Tnoonna?, a.0,\nTh. Oldaat   Herbal  Institution\n\\ Banish Pimples\nBy Using\nCuticura\n< Soap to Cleans*\nOintment to Heal\ntvf oo? w\u00bbawtna auofc.\nTrail Hotels\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA   P.   LEVESQUE,   Prop.\nCompletely Renovated and Refurnished\nHot   and   Cold   Running   Water ,      European  Plan\nSteam     Heated Oentrally      Located\nRotary\nHeadquarters\nSample    Rooms   in\nConnection\nguest of honor. Dean R W, Brock\nof ths University of British Columbia\nwill give a talk on the situation ln\nChina. \"1  |\nAt this afternoon's session the members heard more about electric prospecting this time from s. P. Kelly,\nwho dealt exclusively with the Schlum-\nberger methods, ln which direct current\nis used as opposed to alternating current ln toe' system described at the\nmorning   session.\nThe speaker declared, that the skepticism of six years ago In regard] to\nelectrical prospecting in America had\ngone and now mining companies\nthroughout tbe continent were employing it as were companies in various parts of Europe. Exploration*\ncount be carried to a depth of between\n300 and 400 feet, he said, and it was\npossible to prospect two square inllas\nof territory ln a month's time at a\ncost ranging from I2JJO to $6 an acre:\nThe electrical survey, t)e declared, did\nnot supplant the geologist or the diamond drill. Rather It supplemented\nthe  work of both.\nCanada's WheatExport\nDropping in Quality\nCALGARY, Nov. 24.~Bad tiding were\nconveyed to the delegates at the 'Ajlber-\nta wheat pool convention Thursday when\nRELIEF FROM   p| L^\nITCHING\n!\u25a0 so quick when PAZO OINTMENT (a\napplied, it will aurpria* you, Druvgiits\n\u2022re keenly inttreated in the remedy end\nare recommending It to their customers.\nAsk your dmssiit about PAZO OINTMENT.   In tubes with i''\nin tin box, 60c\ni pile pipe, 75c; or\nChief Inspector J. D. Fraser of the board\nof grain commissioners, told the gathering that \u00abaw quality of Canada's wheat\nexport had dropped considerably ln the\nlast 16 \u2022years.\n4'Wifcfc so many grades developed,\" Mr.\nFraser stated ln answer to a question\nfrom one of the delegates, \"certain sec-\ntlofts of the west are showing definite\nsigns of wearing out.\"\nHie question fired at the chief inspector at the conclusion of his address on\n\"Some Aspects of Grain Growing,\" was\nto whether there had been tightening up\nof grades.\nMr. Fraser was definite lh his reply\nthat tn grades one, two end three the\nquality of wheat was not nearly so good\nas lt was In 1913. The different kinds\nof wheat were becoming polluted, he\ndeclared.\nThe delegates were not disposed to\ntake all Mr. Fraser told him wftheut reply and many complaints were fired at\nhim to the effect that inspectors were\napt to forget the farmers' side of the\nquestion and that carelessness ln grading had been experienced.\nMr. Fraser came oack with the reply,\nthat grading was in any event a matter\ngraded up exactly alike,\nof opinion and that no two cars of grain\nAsked how grading of out-turns from\nterminal elevators to the snips was ac*\ncomplished, the inspector said men were\nposted at the spouts and took out samples from time to time. Out-turns from\nprivate terminals, he said, were not allowed to be lovser than those public\nterminals.\nARRESTED FOR ROBBERY\nVANCOUVER, Nov. . 24.\u2014Alleged to\nhave broken into and robbed the K.V.\ncabin at Ioca, H. Carrodua was arrested\nhere today.\nThis Great Healing Oil Must\nBanish Eczema and Skin Troubles\nOr Your Money Back.    That's the Plan  on  Which  Emerald\nOil Is Sold by All Good Druggists\nMake up your mind today that you\nare going to give your skin a real\nchance   to   get   well.\nYou've probably been, like a lot\nof other people, convinced that the\nonly thing to use was an ointment\nor salve (some of them are very\ngood) but ln the big majority of\ncases these sticky salves simply clog\nthe pores .and the condition primarily remains the  same.\nGo to any good druggist today and\nget an original bottle of Moone's Em-\nerald   Oil.\nThe very first application will give\nyou   relief   and   a   few   short   treat\nments will thoroughly convince you\nthat by sticking faithfully to lt for\na short while your skin troubles will\nbe a thing of the past.\nDon't expect a single bottle to do\nlt all at once but one bottle we know\nwill show you beyond all, question\nthat you have at last discovered one\nway to restore your skin to perfect\nhealth.\nRemember that Moone's Emerald\npil ls a clean, powerful penetrating\nAntiseptic OU that does not stain or\nleave a greasy residue and that lt\nmust give complete' satisfaction or\nyour  money  cheerfully  refunded.\nr\nHot and Cold\nWatar\n\u2022taam Haartad\nThroughout\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nE    L.   AND  A.  GROUTAGE,   Prop*.\n6.x  60*.        Phon. M3 Trail,  t.C.\nTha Old Rallabla\nCROWN   POINT   HOTEL\nA. McDERMOTT\nSvery Courtesy Extended to Tourlata\nand Others visiting Trail\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nUNDER  THE  MANAGEMENT  OF\nWILLIAM  JONES\nOOOD,   CLEAN   ROOMS,   REASONABLE\nBATES\nPHONE 75 916 VERNON ST.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nA. C. TOWNER, Proprietor\nThe Home of Plenty.\nFifty rooms of solid comfort.\nI   Headquarters for Loners and Miners.\nMen's\nOvercoats\n$18.50\nYes, sir! and they are\ngood buying, too! Look in\nour window, you will be\nsurprised at the 'value\u2014\nbut then, they are really\nTwenty-six Fifty garments. The suppliers had\nfive hundred to get rid of\nquickly\u2014hence the price\n$18.50\n\u202233M WEAR  \u00abp\nJUST OUTSIDE THE HIGH RENT OTSTfilCT\nKRUSCHEN\nVERSUS\n^DIGEST\/Oa\/\nFor pity's sake \u2014 and\nyour friends' \u2014 don't\nmope around muttering\nharsh words about your\nstomach. Probably\nyou've been eating things\nyou shouldn't \u2014 or\nhaven't been exercising\nenough.\nIn any case, Kruschen's SIX\nsalt) will toon fix you up,\nridding you of poisons,\nsoothing your digestive\ntract, purifying your blood\nand bringing back the old\nenthusiasm for life.\nOne salt could never do\nwhat Kruschen's SIX do.\nSo, tomorrow morning, begin taking the little \"daily\ndnneful'', tasteless in your\ncoffee or tea. Get that good\nold \"Kruschen feeling\".\nABSOLUTE\ntmmr\nThe proprietor* of KraMaeo\nSalts pssrasue its absolute\nparity. Each fagndient attain*\na \u25a0taadard of purity iar \u00ab\u25a0\u2022\nreeding that demanded by the\nBritish Pfasmacopcria.\nWHAT KRUSCHEN IS\nNot one salt only\u2014but six!\nSODIUM SULPHATt\nVery vilttable medicinal aalt\nAperient. Diuretic. Purifies the\nWood. Prevent* absorption of\ntoxin*.\n1.\n\u25a0ODIUM CHLOR1DK\nMedicine and food. Improves\ndigestion. Maintains alkalinity\nof the blood serum. Antiseptic.\nPrevents fermentation.\nMAGNKSIUM SULPHATE\nA most valuable item la medicine. Bitter tonic improves\nappetite. Useful ia all goaty\nconditions. Eicdlent remedy for\nDropsy and Gravel.\nPOTASSIUM IODIDE\nAffects favourably every orgaa\nand tissue, fortifies body gad\nhrain. Many governments put it\nin drinking water, tabic salt, etc.\nPOTASSIUM CHLORIDE\nOf peat benefit In caaes of high\nWood pressure.    ~'~~   ~*\nand Meumatia\nPOTASSIUM SULPHATS\nSimilar saline action to Sodium\nSulphate. Dissolves Uric Acid.\n3.\n5.\n6.\nASK YOUR DOCTOR\nKruschen Salts.\nPREVBNT CONSTIPATION AND RHEUMATISM.\nSOLE IMPORTERS: MiGHXIVRAY BROS, LIMITED, TORONTO, ONT\nfc!-^\u2014\u2014aa.\u2014-^_____^\u00bb\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014^^\u2014\u2014\u2122\u2014___\nTHE GUMPS\u2014THE BIG  PARADE\nVTH    THf\nEARNEST\ntO-OPE RATION\nOF GOVERNMENT\nSTATE  ANb\nCITY OFPICIAU-\nANOX iUCUEbS\nIN MOVIN& AN\nENORMOUS\nARMY   OF\n*250,0OO,O0O\nFROM   THE\nVARIOUS NATIONAL\nBANKS TO   nt\nNEW CAMP IM\nTHE  &0MP\nCharities inc\nwithout a\nllN&Lf CASUAUTY-\nAPTER A SKORT\nREST THIS ENTlRf\nDIVISION WILL\nSE ORDERED\nINTO THE FRONT\nLINE To BE6IN\nIHE BWTLE JkMINST\nPOVERTY Mtb SUFFERING-\nFI CONVICTS\nDIE IN RIOTIHI\n(Continued From Fsge Ous.)\nThey had ordered the key to the <\nnouse removed after the door had b\u00abl\nlocked and- the prisoners vere pi\nparing to enjoy a motion pictJ\nThanksgiving day treat. B^^^\nANSWER WITH LEAD\nThe.   wardens'  secretary  was  shot\nthe hip early in the evening as an\ntejnpt was made to dislodge the n\nby tear gas bombs.    The prlaoners i\nswered the bombs with bullets, strik\ndown  the prison officials and  graz\nthe   arm   of   a   policeman.    The  fl\nopen   barrage   of   tbe   prisoners   fn\ntheir  barricaded   cell  house  brought\nreply   of   more   than   300   shots,   fli\nthrough   the  windows  by  the  depi\n^sheriffs, prison officials and traffic 1\nnlcers.    The guardsmen held their n\nhaving been under  orders nut to fl\nuntil a given signal. ^^^^^\nThe five convicts killed and the\nwounded   are  reported  by   prison ofl\nclais to have been struck down by d\nvolley fired through the windows.\nSTABBED TO DEATH\nTl^e dead guards are Ray Single*\nstabbed, and Charles allies, oldest gut\nat the prison, who dropped dead ni\nthe prison gate. Traffic Officer Boa\nface was grazed by a bullet. 1\nothers suffering from bullet and st\nwounds were Barrett Hughes, the w\nden's secretary, and Walter Nell,\nDealy and Charles Gorhamson, guar\nWarden Court Smith, who had b*\na   tirtual  prisoner  in  his  own  oat\nall day,  made  ms  escape  at dusk\nthe  earnest  Insistence of B. B.  UeJ\npsisonal representative of Governor I\nC. Voung at the prison.   Smith, at tj\ncoming of dusk, made his way out I\nthe   building   to   tbe   wall   and   cal\naround ln the shadows. ^mm\nForces repulsed\nin the first attack about 4 p\ntbe forces of the law were repul\nand one of their number fell sllgb\nwounded.\nThe national guard was expected\nany moment from Sacramento and \\\nbe used to batter down the cell ho\ndoorB and pave the way for a mas\nattack of the armed forces.\nThe   governor's   qfflce   was   notll\nfrom the prison that a note from\nconvicts was thrown out of the ft\ndow  of  the   cell   house   appealing\nrelief   on   behalf   of   those   not   lnt\nested  in the  riot.\n\"Why   punish   all   of   us,\"  read\nnote, \"when only five men are respl\nslble?\"\nThe note declared that the five idj\nhad the  others  covered with  guns.\"\nThe contradictory statement i\nwas made that the convicts had \u25a0\none tine ana that the ammunttl\nfor   lt   was   running   low. ^^\nFEARED  A  TRAP\nThe governor's office was lnclll\nto the belief that the purpose of J\nnote was to mislead the attack!\nforce.\nGovernor Young sent a call to\nRafael for James A. Johnston,\nFrancisco banker, and former wal\nen of Folsom and San Quentln pa\nons, to ruBh to Folsom and take col\nmand of the situation. Johnston!\nchairman of the state crime col\nmission.\nAdvancing under cover of tear boil\nwhich wafted Into the cell house, I\narmed forces outside the prison wl\nwere halted ln the first attack. fJ\n200 rounds were fired In the\nnous*.\nA  United  States army  airplane\ncled   low   over   tha   prison.\nTwo men in the cell house v\nseen to fall when the armed ft\nopened fire on, the prisoners.\nEight guards were ln the .cell ho\nat   the   time   the   riot   broke * out.\nwere  captives  of  the  rioting  convl\nbut  presumably  were  alive.\nThe power companies , rushed ci\nto the prison to Install floodlights\nanticipation of an all-night siege.\n ! satBS*.\t\nGREAT   ADVERTISEMENT\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 34 \u2014So far as\nprovince knew, there had been ns j\nto placing the sample of Reward wt\non exhibition at the Toronto Wii\nfair, Hon. Albert Prefontalne, provln\nminister of agriculture, stated today\nhts return from tlie eastern city, wl:\nhs attended the exposition. He thou\nthat the award of the grand champ!\nship to Manitoba-grown wheat wat\ngreat advertisement for the province\nListen! Skinny Folks\nWhy Not Put on Flesl\nWhere Flesh Is Needi1\nTens   of   thousands   of   exceedlnl\nthin   men   and   women   have   put I\ngood  healthy  flesh  with  McCoy's C\nLiver Extract  Tablets\u2014and  put lt\nwhere it was most  needed.\nThere's, nothing ln McCoy's that i\nhurt you\u2014They will not only h\nyou to take on weight you need, l\nwill make you stronger, more energy\nand  vigorous.\nMcCoy takes all tbe risk\u2014It\nthis Ironclad guarantee. If after t\ning 4 sixty cent boxes of MoOj\nCod Liver Extract Tablets or 3 <\ndollar boxes any thin, underwel\nman or woman doesn't gain st II\n5 pounds and feel completely satlsl\nwith the marked Improvement\nhealth\u2014your druggist ls authorised\nreturn   the   purchase*\" price.\nAsk the City Drug & Book Compi\nor  any good  druggist.\natarrlh\nOf nose or throat ia\nusually benefited by\nsnuffing up nostrils,\nand inhaling vapon\nICrlS\nw*t Vapor ul\nOre^wMttsVOrY^a\\mMs\u00a5ee$}9^akx\n \t\n\t\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1927\niHt\nPythian Sisters at\nRossland Enjoy Most\nSuccessful Roll Call\nR088LAND, B.C., Nov. 24.--Tbe annual roll-cajl of Maple Leaf temple,\nNo. 4, Pythian Sisters, held last evening, was one of tbe most successful\nln the history of the local temple.\nTwenty-tyve sisters answered the roll-\ncall ln person, while from far and near\nletters came in from absent members,\nexpressing their regret at, not being\nable to attend and reiterating their interest and love for the order. The officers and^ members of Rossland lodge,\nNo. 21, together with their wives, were\nthe guests of the temple for the evening, and at the conclusion of the roll-\ncall a pleasant hour was enjoyed with\ncards. Tbe first prizes were won by\nMra. W. D. Willson and Prank Bray.\nHER LITTLE GIRL\nCAUGHT COLD\nPLAYING III THE SNOW\nMn. A. Coakley, 29 Yale Bt., kali-\nfax, N.8., writes:\u2014\"My little gxr]\ncaught a terrible cold through getting\nwet while playing in the snow. Every-\nthing I did for her did not seem to\ngive her any relief.\n\"I then went to the drug store and\nasked the clerk if he knew of some\nthing good he could give me. He told\nme about\nDr. Wood's\nNorway\nPlna\nPage Thres\"\nDefsat Churchmen by 244 Pins*\nin   Trail  City   Bowling\nLeague Game\nSyrup\n40 I decided to try it.\nil \"After tha bottle was nearly used\nI noticed that the cough was gone, and\nby the time the second bottle was used\ntheicold had gone.- Now I will never\nbe without it in the house.\"\nPrice 35e. a bottle, large family sue\nWcj put up only by The T. Milburn\n_\\t__ Limited, Toronto, Out.\nHELP KIDNEYS\nTake  Salts  to  Flush   Kidneys\nand Help Neutralize Irritating Acids\nKidney and bladder Irritations often\nresult from acidity, says a noted authority. The kidneys help filter this\nacid from the blood and pass it on to\nthe bladder, where it may remain to\nIrritate and inflame, causing a burning,\nscalding sensation, or setting up an\nIrritation at the neck of the bmcide.,\nobliging you to seek relief two or\nthree times during the night. The\nsufferer is In constant dread; the water\npasses sometimes with a scalding sensation and ls very profuse; again, there\nIs difficulty ln voiding lt.\nBladder weakness, most folks call lt\nbecause they can't control urination.\nWhile lt Is extremely annoying and\nsometimes very painful, this ls often\none of the most simple ailments to\novercome. Begin drinking lots of soft\nwater, also get about four ounces of\nJad Salts from your pharmacist and\ntake a tablespoonful in a glass of\nwater before breakfast. Continue this\nfor two or three days. This will help\nneutralise the acids ln the system so\nthey no longer are a source of irritation to the bladder and urinary organs,\nwhich then act  normal again.\nJad Salts ls Inexpensive, and is made\nfrom the acid of grapes and lemon\nJuice, combined with JHhla, and ls used\nby thousands of folks who are subject\nj* to urinary disorders caused by acid\nirritation. Jad Salts causes no bad\neffects   whatever.\nHere you have a' pleasant, effervescent lithla-water drink which may\nQuickly relieve your bladder irritation.\nTRAIL, B.C., No. 34.\u2014Nip, and Tuck\nbeat the Churchmen by 246 pins ln the\nonly city bowling leage hutch ployed\ntonight. Napier was the star aggregate\n.performer at 607.* W. Weir rolled 202\nfor the high Individual. The scores\nwere:\nChurchmen-\nMarks            169    139    197\u2014 495\nP. R. McDonald Ul    112-  101\u2014 824\nSammons 192   908   120\u2014860\nLow  score .     119    124    180\u2014 873\nNapier          168    151    188\u2014607\nTotals  689 634 736\u20142059\nNip and Tuck\u2014\nSlmonson     161 155 157\u2014 473\nLauriente     184 145 130\u2014 459\nSmith     16t> 134 196\u2014499\nW.  Weir    186 124 150\u2014 409\nJ,  Thompson   119 202 165\u2014 476\n'     Totals       768   760   787\u20142305\nTrail News of the Day\nThis column in conducted by Miss\nE. A. Thompson of Tadanac. All\nnews of a social nature, including\nreceptions, entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc., occurring in\nTrail and Tadanac,. will appear in\nthis column. Just 'phone Mtss\nThompson at her residence. She\nwill also handle any advertisements\nappearing undfr Trail News of the\nDay.\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 24,\u2014At the home\nof Mrs. Yonge on Monday evening the\nNurses of the Trall-Tadanac hospital,\nsurprised Miss Sutherland, alao of the\nhospital staff and a December bride-\nelect, with a miscellaneous shower. The\ngifts, which were all wrapped In white\npaper and tied with orange ribbon were\nconcealed in a basket very artistically\ndecorated In orange white crepe paper.\nDuring the evening dainty refreshments\nwere served. Those present were: Misn\nJean McCallum, Miss L. Morrison, Miss\nO. M. Wheeler, Miss Jean Mar, Miss E.\nWilson, Miss Mona Foggo, Miss M. Dome, Miss K, Orey, Miss Marguerite Curtis, Miss P. Howard, Miss Sutherland,\nMrs. A. L. McCallum, Mrs. R. Leonard,\nMrs. S. Angus, Mrs. o. Holmes, Mrs. H.\nClarke, Mrs. B. Mitchell, Mrs. J. Calls,\nMrs. W. E. B. Moneypetlny, Mrs. F. E.\nDockerill, Mrs. E. R. Rock, Mrs. K. Kobt,\nMrs. Yonge, Mrs. G. dimming.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMiss J. Clarke of Victoria, who is visiting with her sister, Mrs. Binns ln Trail,\nls spending a few days in Nelson, as the\nguest of her brother, Mr. Clark.\n* *    *\nMrs. Eyton of Trail ls visiting for a\nfew days In Nelson.\n* *    #\nMrs. N. D. B. Larmonth was at home\nto her friends for the first time since\nher marriage, on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon from 3 to 6. Mrs. Larmonth received her guests in her wedding gown of fawn silk lace. She was\nassisted by Mrs. W. R. Baxendale while\nMiss Helen Warden opened the door.\nThe tea table was covered with dainty\ncloth of cut work while a sliver basket\nvase of yellow chrysanthemums and silver candle sticks with tall yellow tapers\nPresiding at the urns on Tuesday were\nMrs. J. H. Owen and Mrs. M. D. Cllthero- Those assisting ln serving were:\nMiss Jean McCullum, Mtss Barbara Caldlcott. Miss Audrey Brady, Miss Marguerite Curtis, Miss Edith A. Thompson, Mrs.\nH. Ollls. On Wednesday: Mrs. H. Caldlcott assisted Mrs. Larmonth In receiving the guests. Presiding at the urns\nwere: Mrs. B. Warden and Mis. H. Tug-\nwood. Those assisting in serving were:\nMrs- Vickers, Mrs. R. Devltt, Mrs. L. G.\nMowatt, Miss Mary Caldlcott, Miss Doris\nNewell, Miss Doris Mitchell, Miss Dorothy\nDockerill, Miss Mary Caldlcott, Miss Audrey Baxendale.\n* *    *\nMr. and Mrs. W, Sullivan have returned\nfrom a seven weeks' automobile tour on\nwhich they visited Seattle, Portland,\nSan Francisco, Oakland, Los Angeles,\nand\u25a0\u2022ther points in the south. For the\npresent they will make their home with\nMrs. J. Hurley of Cedar avenue.\nTRAIL SUPPORTS\n(Big  Crowd   Attends  Teachers'\nDance Given in Aid of\nLibrary Fund\n\u2022 r*\nTRAIL, BJC., Nov. 24\u2014The teaching\nstaffs of Trall-Tadanac public schools\nwere hosts tonight to a merry crowd\nof dancers ln the K.P. hall. The dance\nwas |lven as the teachers' effort toward forming a library of general literature at the schools for the use of\nthe students. It was highly successful. A table supper was served by a\nlarge committee of tbe lady teachers,\nwhile all the men were kept busy ln\nvarious  activities.\nTRAIL  Dili\nTiL HEARTS\nGive Firfet of Series of Entertainments Planned to Hold\nthe Club Together\nTRAIL,   B.C.,   Nov.   24\u2014Trail   Hearts\nSoccer club tonight entertained about\n120 of its supporters with a delightful whist drive and dance ln the\nSwartz hall.' H. Ferguson, club president, presided. Twenty-two tables were\nIn the drive, The winners were: Mrs.\nJ. C. McCallum. ladies' first; Mrs. Jt\nFerguson, consolation; D. Robertson,\nmen's first; J. Howship and J. McKinnon, consolations.\nChoice refreshments were served by\nMr. and Mrs. H. Barr, Mr. and Mrs\nJ. Bingham, and Mr. and Mrs. J.\nThomson.\nThe event was one of a series planned\nto hold the \"gang\" together until tbe\nnew soccer season, and to increase the\nclub's   finances.\nr\\ONT leave it to a friend to remind\n^ yoo of that bad cold I Don't go\nabout spreading Infection among your\nbusiness friends and maybe in your\nOwn family circle. To banish colds\nand chills in the direct and mott effective way, yew must take PEPS.\nAa they dissolve in the mouth Peps\ngVve off powerful healing and getml-\n. oidal fumes.     These you breathe into\ninstant direct contact with the Inner\nmoat recesses of tbe chest and lungs.\nPeps soothe, strengthen and Invigorate the entire breathing system.\nTbey clear the throat and air-passagei\nof mischievous germs, remove soreness\nand inflammation, and end the danger\nto cheat and lung*. Make no mistake I\nYou must have Peps, the breatheable\nmedicine in tablet form.\nPeps\nNow obtainable of all druggists and tier**\nits Ha boxes, contminin* 3, tiivtv-jaekettd\ntmhlsH, Mmmi \u00bb*BiH*m+*dm wrqtotiri\nFor sale cheap\u2014Gramophone ln good\ncondition.    Apply Mra. W. Barnes,  Bay\navenue, Trail (.opposite Victoria Annex).\nr317tf>\nI.EARN TO DANCE\nLATEST BALLROOM STEPS, FOX\nTROTS. WALT2BS, ETC. PHONE FOR\nAPPOINTMENT.    GHACE BRETT.\n{3130)\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nDon't forget the Anglican Bazaar on\nDecember  10. (3135)\n\u2022 *    *\nKnox United Church Ladles' Aid Annual Bazaar, Friday, November 26, 3 to\n6. Fancywork. Novelties. Plain Sewing.\nHome Cooking and Candy on sale. Fish\nPond for children. Afternoon tea served. (3166)\n\u2022 r   \u2022\nThe East Trail Junior W. A. will hold\nafternoon tea, sale of children's work,\nSaturday, November 26, at the home of\nMrs. J. H. Owen.   _ (3133)\nTRWffilG\nRossland Young\nPeople Hear Fine\nLantern Lecture\nROSSLAND. B.C., Nov. 24.\u2014\"Drums\nof Darkness\" was the subject at the\nmeeting of the Young People's league\nof the United clutch Tuesday evening,\nthe service being in charge of the missionary committee of which Miss Irene\nCoombes ls chairman. It took the form\nof a lantern lecture by Rev. C, H.\nDaly. A large map of Africa was the\nfirst picture shown, the other views\nshowing the various mission stations\nin the care of the United church- and\nother points of interest, including\nstockades built to keep out the evil\nspirits abroad in the darkness, boats\nnarrowly escaping the crocodiles infesting the narrow rivers and the headdresses which mark the various secret\nsocieties and tribes. Of special interest\nwas the burning of the tribal fetishes\nby those who had become Christians.\nCanada's Birth Rate\nDown Every Province\nbut That of Quebec\nOTTAWA, Nov. 24.\u2014In every province, with the exception of Quebec, Canada's birth rate is down. Figures for\nlast May were Issued by the bureau of\nstatistics today and gave the Dominion\na birth rate of 25.1 per 1000 population,\nagainst a rate of 26.1 for May of last\nyear. Quebec's rate of 34.6 against 33.6\nfn the previous May wan the highest ln\nthe Dominion.\nNew Brunswick had the next highest\nrate, v4th 26.8 compared with 27.7 for\nMay last year.\nTrail Business Girls Beat Fair\nOpponents  by  Odd Point;\nScore 17-16\nROSSLAND SENIORS\nWALLOP THE  PIRATES\nMost Interesting Match of Its\nClass in Piay to Date;\nDance After\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 24. \u2014 Trail and\nRossland barffceteers again divided the\nhonors ln return matches played here\ntonight. Victory in the ladles' match\nrested with Trail. The Rossland senior\nteam won from the Trail Pirates in the\nlast two minute-s of a fast and interesting match.\nShowing a very fair brand of combination, the Rossland boys, thought outpointed ln the first half, played a cool,\naggressive game, and overhauled the\nPirates to contest the game basket by\nbasket, causing great excitement tn the\ncrowded galleries. Much of Rossland's\nscore was earned by Tailor, who made\n13 points. This youngster, who with I.\nHendrlckson and Fox, played at times\na brilliant combination game, was an\nelusive marvel. Fox with four. Lefevre\nwith six, H. Hcndrickson with four, and\nI. Hendrlckson ana CTalltiuitl, guard,\ndid the work.\nTRAIL   S(OKI lis\nFor the Trallltes, W. Young was tlie\nreal goal getter. He was elusive both\nin attack and defence, and a deadly\nBhot. His flying shots we.* remarkable\ndimming, his partner, with 10 points;\nEvans 'With  2,   Miles   with   2  and   Mc-\nFor Quick\nSale\nFive lots, four blocks\nfrom post office, for sale\nat sacrifice. Improved,\nwith large building which,\nat small cost, could be\nturned into nine-room\nresidence. Seterar outbuildings, good soil, ideal\nplace for chickens. Present owners making good\nliving from bees. For\nquirk sale\n$900\nH. A. Hill\nRossland\nPhone 39        Box U7\nI Leary with 2, made the aeon.    Bsaa-\nbury and Shaw were spares.\nBy long odds this gams, played openly, with lota of good team work, snappy\nchecking and clever shooting, was the\nbest intermediate match contested In\nTrail this season. R. Campbell waa\nreferee.\nGIRLS WIN BY POINT\nThe Trail Business girls nosed out\nthe visiting ladies by 1 point, with a\nfinal smore of 17-16. Their play was\nmoat strenuous. One period saw a pon-\nstdecable amount of roughness, but\nwhen they broke away and settled down\nto combination again, these teams put\non a very fair brand of ball.\n'Evelyn White was the star goal getter, wtth 18 points, for Rossland. Bhe\nwas at all times too near the basket for \u2022\nthe home defence, and could drop them\ntn from any angle. Marguerite Cobb\nmade 2 points, and Irene Coombs 1.\nFor  Tratl,   Gladys  Maudsley   wtth   10\npoints accounted for more than half the\nTrail   score.    Marie  Matthews   made  6,\nand Isabel Leckle 2.\nDANCE   AFTERWARD\nThe teams were:\nRossland\u2014Marguerite Cobb, Dorothy\nBlsson. Irene Coombs and Grace Newman, forwards: Evelyn White and Fren-\nces Simcoofc, centers; Esther Berg and\nGoldle Watersheet, guards.\nTraU\u2014Marie Matthews, Isabel Leckle\nand Peggy Morris, forwards: Gladys\nMaudsley and Sybil Smith, centers; Rene\nBalfohr and Amy Adams, guards.\nAfter the games the visiting teams\nand the Hockey club and Sheiks, with\ntheir best girls, were the guests of the\nTrail teams at a delightful dance ln the\nOrange hall. Choice refreshments were\nserved by the girts' team. Mrs. James\nCummings was chaperon.\nBig Liquor Raid\nand Seizure Made\n! liquor,  valued at  between $300,090 aa4\n; 1300.000. selred  In  three bouses aloot\n' the  waterfront  at    Platon,    Lotblniere\n111 Quebec  Area ' county  Tuesday, by customs official* of\n. I the province of Quebec, arrived hero t\u00bb-\nday aboard tbe barge Lemay. The story\nof the raid and seizure wae made known\ntoday    No arrests were made.\nQUEBEC.   Nov.   24.   \u2014  Approximately\n0000  eases   and   barrels  of   contraband\nHealth  Committee  of   Council\nInvestigates; Up to the\nGovernment\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 24\u2014A movement\nto Inaugurate a system of health insurance for the people of this province,\nadministered by the provlnchO- government. Is being investigated by the\nhealth and relief committee of the city\ncouncil.\nRecently a gathering of citizens In\nKamloops adocated such a scheme and\nprevailed son the Kamloops city couhcll\nto Indorse a petition to the government\non these lines. A request has been\nreceived by Trail council to cooperate\nIn the movement. Insufficient data\nreceived so far, however, has left Trail\ncouncil in the dark regarding the definite alms and scope of tbe scheme\ndesired.\nGive the Gift Worth While-A\nMason & Risch Piano\nCanada's finest piano is\nwithout exception, the\nMASON & RISCH, durable,\nbeautiful in tone as well\nas design, and sold direct\nthrough our own stores\nonly at a big saving in\nprice to you.\nA small deposit will secure one now for Christmas\ndelivery.\nMASON & RISCH, Ltd.\nnotary   Mt__\u2014 Ann.bl. s Blook,    413    WtK\nnuo>, >.&   f.o. aa> (it\nFATALLY   WOUNDED\nWINNIPEG. Nov 24\u2014Peter Burtneak.\naged 11, received fatal Injuries when\nhe fell from a tree, alighting on his\nstomach across a fence.\nSaturday\nAU Day\nSpecials\nLadies' Heavy Weight Silk\nBloomers\u2014In all sizes\nand a large range of\ncolors. Regular $2.50\nfor  ?1.95\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\nSee our range of Dresses ln\nsilk-and-wool anil all-woo).\nJersey*^ also. In satin crepes,\nliititonN,  etc.    Reasonably   priced.\nJAMES WEIR & SON\nTh*   Exclusive   8tor*\nWard   Rt.,  Opposite  the  New\nCapitol TheaPfr.\nGALT   COAL\nLUMP, per ton  - SJ11.50\nSTOVE, per ton   SJ9.50\nBURNS ALL NIGHT\nWEST TRANSFER COMPANY\nWholesale and Retail Coal Dealers Phone M\nComfort is a Large\nPart of Charm!\neHARM is a positive quality. Yet it is eaner\nto describe what charm is not, than what it\nis. It is not nervous, it is not stolid. It it\nnot boisterous, it is not self-conscious. Probably\nits most decided affirmative quality is serenity\nTruly charming women give an impression ot\nphysical and mental comfort. They have learned\nthat a beautiful gown will not hide a harassed\nexpression. Experienced women wear comfortable\nunderwear in the cold weather. They have found\nthat the peaked, stiff-limbed appearance produced\nby cold is fatal to charm. The fastidious woman\nknows a warm undergarment that is daintiness\nitself. Lavender Line is tailored to fit snugly and\nenhance the slender figure. It can be had with an\nopera top to conform with a decolleti gown. It\nis made of the finest botany wool, or silk-and-wool.\nParticular attention is given to its elasticity and\nshrinkage, so that it comes from the wash as serene\nand, smiling as charm itself.\nSmart shops all over Canada sell WOODS LAVENDER LlS|E hosiery and underwear. Finding thi\nshop in your vicinity unil be worth your while.\nWOODS UNDERWEAR CO, Lwrm>\ne_ 70 Crawtord St., Toronto\nOp\nUntterwear and Hosiery\nFeel uke a Winner\nat the beginning\nof EVERY DAY\nJ.T depends on breakfast. The right breakfast gets you to work in good humor, full of\nenergy, with a clear brain.\nQuaker Oats is tlie world's greatest breakfast.\nNearest to perfection in food balance. Contains 16% protein for bone and muscle, 65%\ncarbohydrates as energy producers. Vitamines\nand bulk to make digestion easy.\nQuaker Oats \"stands by\" you during busy,\nmorning hours. It sustains. No listless or\nnervous waiting for lunch time.\nHot, appetizing Quaker Oats with milk appeal*\nto every taste. You never tire of the flavour.\nEconomical  too\u2014posts  btit  a cent  a  meal.\nSee that the Quaker's figure is on every package of oats you buy. Wrapped, sealed, dust-\nproof. If you want speedy cooking get Quick\nQuaker same superiority of quality\u2014but\ncooks in t_ to 5 minutes.\nQuaker Oats\n- you have always known.\nQuick Quaker\n\u2014cooks in 2l_ to 5 minutes.\nCollect this Beautiful China\nQuick Quaker packages, marked\n\"China\", each contain a handaonw\npiece of pure white china, prettily\ndecorated in blue and gold. Y\u00ab\u00ab\nwill be proud of them on jour table.\n 1\n Page Four\nTHE NELSON D3QTY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25,1927\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS\nPublished every morning except Bun-\ny by The News Publishing company,\nImMed. Nelson, B.C.\nRiiFi'neBS letters should be addressed\n\u00abd   oherka   and   money   orders   mads\n.yat'te to  The   News  Publishing cornier,  limited, and In ao case to lndl-\n4uh1  members of tbe staff.\nAdvertising    rate   cards    and    A.B.C.\nVtatementa   of   circulation   mailed   oa\nrequest, or mar be seen at ths office\ntf   any   advertising   agency   recognised\nIf tb* Canadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\nPf   mall   (country), per month...!    .19\nL r#r   year        t.M\nBy mat)  (city), per year  IS.01\nputrid* Canada, per month 75\n.   P\u00bb*r   year    \u25a0    T.50\n^lu^t'rt, per week 25\nf 9%t   year    11.00\nPayable in Advance\natemhet Amtlt \u00bbwreaa of QlrealaHesi\nFRIDAY    NOVEMBER   25,    1927\nChoice of Dr. Borden Logical\nChoice of Dr L. E Borden by Nelaon Conservatives, at their nominating\nconvention Wednesday night, as candidate to contest Nelson riding in the*\niuv:i. provincial general election, was\nlogical,  and   polltlcaly  a  sound   move.\nBy hts feat ln being the medium of\nreducing the Liberal majority from\n;S38 to 28, Dr. Borden became provln-\nrlally   known.\n, The qualities that made him an exceptionally strong candidate ln the recent by-e.'ectlon will make him a\n\u25a0fafJal and a surely winning candidate   in   the   general   election.\nThe honor paid him, of an uncontested nomination, shows the secure\nplace he holds in the regard of the\n, party.\nPoultry Is King\nOne of the best district poultry\nshows for many years, In point of view\ni of  entry   lists,  of  number  of   varieties\n* shown, and of number of points ln\n: the Kootenay participating, ls to be\n[seen today ln the poultry building.\nThe show, in fact, ls very much\nlike an all-Kootenay show, and from\nthe number of varieties shown and the\ngencnil high qualities of the exhibits,\nii  also is educational.\nLocal poultrymen give much of the\ncredit for securing this breadth of\ncompetition, to Poultry Inspector Lang-\ndon.\nSome way should be found of having\n\u2022 the poultrymen of the Kootenay associated In a general Kootenay organization. After all, in spite of its mag-\nn if lc lent distances, and ln spite of\nthe fact that lt ls equal In area to\nmany Swltzerlands, it has one consciousness, and is one great geographical,   Industrial   and   social   community.\nWhore . such an organization\nformed, and the leading poultrymen of\nthe entire district get together for\nthe pood of the Kootenay poultry industry, new and marked progress may\nbe   expected.\nAir Full of Small Helicopters\nWhirling through the air like teetotums, the maple keys, tn glittering\nclouds, rise and ride on the errant\nwinds, and settle down on Btreet and\n.sidewalk and lawn. The maple leaves\nhave carpeted the ground for the past\n\u25a0U weeks, but It took the recent snow\nto tell the maple seeds that their\nday   to   fly  had  come.\nHalf ft block from Its parent branch\nthe   spinning  key  may  settle,  suggest\nI ing the rate  of advance that a maple\nforest  might  make,  If  conquering  new\nland\nThe maples, tbe great majority of\nthem, still are shaggy with golden\nclusters of these keys, but now that\nthey have started to fall, we may expected the trees soon to be almost\ndenuded. M\nEvery whiff of wind separates some\nof them from their twin keys, and\nfrom the stems that bore them, and\nthey start their earth spin, the object for which they were evolved and\nformed, perhaps to rise for half a\nminute or so and tower high above\nthe tree tops, but eventually to settle\nto earth, there to lie till spring, when\nthe   warmth   will  waken  them   to  life.\nThe\nLighter Side\nReader! of Ths Dally News\ncontribute many of the best Item*\nto this column. Just sign your\nname or initials, or nom-de-pluma,\nand send In your brightest Idaaa\n\u2014Editor,  Lighter Side.\nAUNTHET\n\"I've never done anything very\nwicked, but I'm glad that when\nmy time comes to be Judged for\nthe deeds done ln the body, the\nJudge won't be a female.\"\n=\u00a3>\nA mistrial seems to be the result of\na small body of men surrounded by\noil. '\nPersonally, we favor even better\nfunerals for gangsters\u2014more and\nbetter.\nPROGRESS IN FEMININE ATTIRE\n1890, KNEE SWELLS; 1927, SWELL\nKNEES.\nAn old-timer is one who can remember when girls weren't supposed\nto propose except during leap year.\nMiddlemen serve a useful purpose.\nSomebody must buy the hlghprlced\ncars, and the producers \\ and consumers can't.\nHusband and wife must agree to\nget a divorce in France. Over here\nthe ability to agree Is proof tllfft they\ndon't need a divorce.\nYOU CAN DRESS AND MAKE UP TO\nMAKE f HE WORLD THINK YOU AB\nYOUNG AS EVER. BUT YOU CAN'T\nFOOL  A   SLICE   OF  MINCE   PIE.\nThe only unusual stunt In the spotlight now consists In repairing political fences while sitting astride one.\nA hick town is a place where the\ndoctor ls such a friend of the family\nhe's ashamed to ask for his money.\nTwenty Years Ago     |\n* , \u2666\n(From The Dally News. Nov. 25. 1907)\nW. H. C. Allison of Port Perry, Ont.,\nhas succeeded W. J. Vanstone, who has\nleft for Mexico, ln the drug department\nof the Canada Drug & Book company.\nPauline Johnson, the Iroquois entertainer, and Walter McRaye gave an entertainment In the opera house recently.\nBorn, at Slocan City, to Mr. and Mrs.\nRobert E. Allen, on November 21, a son.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nAn Inch pipe, an extension of the\nFairview water system, ls being laid on\nPine street.\nTen Years Ago\nmm The Dally News, Nov. 25, 1017)\nlarenee Cunningham of this city has\nI aa his guest his sister, Mis* M. A.\niningham of St. Paul, Minn.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nn evening course ln commercial sub-\nis may now be taken In Nelson high\nool. according to a new plan adopted\nthe board.\nM;\ndaughter was born, November 20,\nand Mrs. T. W. Slader of Nelson.\ndins M. A. Harvey, district traffic su-\nvisor of the British Columbia Tele-\nore company, ts spending a few days\nRossland on business.\nBarn    near   Fredericton,   owned   by\nMrs.   Emma   P.   Glasgow,   was   burned\n\u25a0ja ihe ground with its contents, supposedly by incendiary.\nJ^H;\nTime heals all wounds, and eventu\nally Canadians will agree on everything except the definition of good\ncoffee.\nHow can pro-British histories corrupt\nAmericans? English grammar seems\nto have  little effect on them.\nCorrect this sentence: \"I'd love you\nJust the same,\" said the sweet young\nthing to the rich old guy, \"if you\nhadn't a dollar.\"\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\n\u25a0y   LAURA   A.   KIRKMAM\nWhatDoYoDThink?\nPI.aNKED    STEAK\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nLeft   Over   Apricots\nCereal\nCreamed   Dried   Beef\nMuffins Coffee\nLuncheon\nBean  Soup\nCroutons\nCole   Slaw j\nDoughnuts Tea\nDinner\nCream of Celery Soup\nLamb Chops\nPotatoes Corn\nLettuce\nFloating Islands\nCoffee\nThe Dally New* invites letter*\nfrom readers upon mattern o.\" public Interest. A nom-de-piume may,\nif desired, be employed, but every\nletter must be signed by the writer\naa 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 correspondent*. Letters\n# which contain advertising matter,\nor propaganda whloh Is classed as\nadvertising, will not be accepted\nunder any circumstances.\nB-\nSays Manipulation Affects Compass, Power, Cleanliness, at\nInconvenient Time\nThere ls no reason why planked steak\nshould not appear as often on the home\ntable as on the hotel menu. It ls quite\nas easy to cook a steak\u2014Indeed, fish\nor chops also\u2014ln this delicious manner as by the ordinary methods* Of\ncourse, lt takes a few moments to arrange the potato border and the garniture of vegetables, still, when one\ntakes into consideration that this is\na one platter dinner and will eliminate two or three diBhes from the washing up process, the labor by this method of cooking is no greater than if\nthe meat were cooked and served as\nit ls customarily.\nThe most Important thing about\ncooking a steak ln this way ls to use\nonly a hard wood plank and to be\nsure that either shortening or vegetable\noil Is thoroughly rubbed into the wood\nbefore placing the meat upon lt. (I\nreserve a special plank for planked\nfish, for, no matter how well I clean\nthe board a Blight fish odor clings to\nlt). All department stores sell, ln their\nkitchen wear sections, boards about\none inch thick and of various sizes,\nfor this purpose. Heat and season\nthese boards well before using. They\ncbme made with groves to hold the\nJuices from th'e meats.\nTo prepare the steak, wipe It with\na clean cloth, remove superfluous fat\nand parboil lt for seven minutes. I\nuse either porterhouse steak or a\ncross cut of the rump cut one and\nthree-quarters of an inch thick. Butter the plank and arrange a border of\nduchess potatoes close to the edge all\naround, then lay the parboiled Bteak ln\nthe center of the board and slip the\nplank into a hot oven to bake till the\nsteak is cooked to the stage preferred\nand the potatoes browned. Of course,\nif one likes planked steak very well\ndone, lower It In 'the grooves under\nthe broiler and give lt an extra five\nminutes or so of cooking.\nAs a garnish, use glace onions, a\nborder of peas, saute mushrooms, buttered carrots, or stuffed peppers. If\nyou do not own a pastry bag with\nwhich to pipe on the potato border,\ndrop the potato from a spoon in dabs.\nTomorrow\u2014Requested Fancywork Directions.\nAddress inquiries to Miss Kirkman,\nsnd Inclose stampe-d-addressed envelope\ntor reply.\u2014Editor.\nB. C. E. Railway Delegate\nDisagrees With Report\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 24.\u2014Disagreeing\nwith the finding of Mr. Justice D. A.\nMcDonald, chairman, and A. G, Mc-\nCandless, who represented the British\nColumbia Electric Railway company,\nPercy B. Bengough, employees* representative, will prepare a minority report on\nthe recent British Columbia Electric\nrailway wage dispute arbitration.\nThat Body\nof Yours\n\u25a0y JAMES W.  BARTON.  M.D.\nRegulating Juices\nWhen the tissues of the body decide\nthat they cannot take sufficient sugar\nfrom the blood to keep themselves\nbuilt up properly, this sugar comes\naway ln the urine and we say that\nthis Individual has what ls known\ndiabetes.\nNow the tissues in the cells of the\nbody depend entirely on the blood\nthat flows to and from them, and they\ntake from the blood what they need,\ngive back to the blood any material\nthat has been used and Is* of no further use to them, and the blood carries It away to the skin, kidneys, lungs\nand intestines, where It ls thrown out\nof the body as perspiration, urine, the\nbreath,   and   the   intestinal   waste.\nIf you are normal your tissues will\nmaintain themselves dally and will\nneither Increase nor decrease ln sin\nor weight to,any extent.\nNow the cells of the body are very\nvery small, and have been compared\nto very tmall animals or little boats\nthat   float  about  ln  liquid.\nThey have a certain amount of ac\ntlvlty of their own which they use to\nkeep themselves built up, and as mentioned above, they throw back Into the\nblood the waste which results from\ntheir   activity.\nHowever, tt has been shown that the\nsecretion of the pancreas. Insulin as\nIt nas been called, has the power of\nmaking these cells hungry for sugar,\nand If there Is not enough Insulin\nmanufactured then these cells are\nnot so hungry for sugar, and do not\ntake enough from the blood to main\ntain themselves properly* This, of\ncourse, means that the Individual fl\nnally begins to lose weight and grow\nweak.\nAnd another fact that enters into lt\nIs the action of some oi the ductless\nglands.\nFor instance the Juice from the\nthyroid gland so affects these tis\nsues that they work too fast, so that\nthe individual gets the material into\nhis cells in shorter time than If the\nTo the Editor of The Daily News:\nSir\u2014In common with many of your\nreaders I was much interested ln your\nreport on the board of trade discussion of the Nelson bridge. I think\nwe may safely leave the matter of\nlocation in the hands of that able body\nof men. \u2022\nI am tempted to comment, however,\nupon the frequent reference to the\n\"hinged smoke staci.\" We learn from\nMr, Biker and others that \"there is\nnothing to tbe hinged smoke stack,\"\nthat they give.no trouble on the Mississippi,  etc.\"        **\nAs one who has taken part ln the\nunhappy task of lowering a smoke\nstack on the* Clyde, I would like to\nstate some of the difficulties as I see\nthem in the case of Nelson.\nTHREE  DETRIMENTS\nThe distance between the proposed\nbridge and the wharf is so short, that\nthe crew would be lowering and raising the smoke stack, nt a time when\nthey should be preparing to land.\nThe safe management of tbe steamer\nIs affected, due to the deviation of the\ncompass, caused by the altered angle\nof the smoke stack. Most people are\naware that ln thick weather the\nsteamers run on compass bearings,\nfrom point to point. This deviation\nwould never be the sairiC unless the\nsmoke stack were lowered and raised\nat precisely the same time (to a minute).\nAgain, lowering the smoke stack effects the steaming of the boiler, and\nthereby the power, which should be\nkept at maximum, if there is a stiff\nwind, until the steamer ls made fast\nOne can Imagine that the outlook from\nthe pilot house would be black indeed,\nif lt were necessary to fire up when the\nsmoke stack were down.\nDANKER  OF FIRE\nThis brings us to the point that the\nsteamers ln question are passenger\nboats, and are required to be kept\nclean. Also there ls the danger of fire\nfrom sparks on the upper deck. Personally, I cannot recall any passenger\nvessels that lowered their smoke stacks.\nI can see reasons why this ls undeslr\nable;   But maybe  on  the  Mississippi a\nCONSTIPATION\nIS THE ENEMY\n.   OF HEALTH\nKoang Bank Teller\nGets Heavy Term\nfor Cash Shortage\nTORONTO. Nov. 24.\u2014George O. Webb,\n25-year-old bank teller of the Standard\nBank of Canada, was sentenced to IB\nmonths ln the reformatory by Judge\nCoatsworth here today for a shortage of\n$5546.31 ln his accounts. An additional\ntwo years' sentence was added.\nthyroid Juice were  less ln amount or\nstrength.\nHowever, the thyroid Juice at times\nmay make .all the tissues of the body\nwork too fast, the heart beat foster,\nthe lungs breathe faster, the stomach\nJuice flow faster and so forth, so that\nthe individual does everything so fast\nthat he  ls  like a  \"bundle  of  nerves.'\nIt ls then that the Juice from adren\nnal glands on top of each kidney comes\non the scene and \"slows\" everything\nup to a considerable extent. So\nnormal individual ls one whose tissues\nhave Just the right appetite for sugar,\nand regulated when necessary by the\nJuices from the thyroid and adrenal\nglands, even as a watch ls regulated\nby moving the lever forward or backward.\nNature Is truly always ahead of our\nneeds.\nKellogg's ALL-BRAN\nbrings prompt, natural\nrelief!\nKid your system of constipation\nand help yourself to health. Headaches, bad breath, insomnia, muddy\ncomplexions are only a few of tha\nsymptoms of this widespread evil.\nConstipation is the actual cause\nof more than forty diseasoV No\nwonder good health is impossible\nwhen it is present. Guard against\nit! Protect your health! ,\nKellogg's ALL-BEAN h guaranteed to relieve constipation. Two\ntablespoonfuls eaten daily\u2014in\nchronic cases,.with every meal. Doctors recommend Kellogg's because\nit is 100% bran. Because it works\nas no part-bran product can do.\nDelicious with milk or cream\u2014\nand add fruits or honey. Mix it with\nother cereals. Use ln cooking. Sprinkle over soups. Recipes on the package. Made by Kellogg in London,\nOntario. Served by restaurants,\nhotels, cafeterias. Sold by all\ngrocers.\nDoor Mat Special\nWe have received a large consignment of special\nCocoa Door Mats\nWhich we are offering at (* Q_\nEach OJ7C\nQUALITY RIGHT.    ACT QUICKLY.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON, B.C.  .\nlittle  more  blackness Is neither  beret\nnor there!\nBe that as It may, the public de-1\nmand safe travel, and should the Cans-,\ndian Pacific railway, decline to hinge\ntheir smoke stacks, I would not regard lt as unwillingness to unbend, but I\nsimply a desire to stick up fof \"Safety\nFirst.\"\nD. 8. SCOTT.\nRlondel, B.C., November 23,   1927.\nKenneth Campbell Says His\nSympathies Were Liberal and\nHe Did Not Write to Contrary\nTo the Editor of The Dally News: \u2022\nSir\u2014It has been reported to me on my\nreturn to Nelson that I had written certain persons or person to the effect that\nmy sympathy in the last provincial by-\nelection at Nelson did not lie with the\nLiberal candidate.\nI wish to publicly state that any such\nrumor Is without foundation, and that\nat any time that I might see fit to\nchange my political allegiance I should\nnot seek to do so but ln an open manner. I wish, however, to say that while\nI have always had and still have the\ngreatest respect and friendship for Dr.\nBorden, the Conservative candidate, that\nJust as I would not have expected him\nto vote for me ln any election, so I am\nsure that had I been In Nelson during\nthe byelection he would not' have expected me to vote for him.\nAs a matter of fact, the first news\nthat I received of this election was on\nmy return home from Scotland, long\nafter the election was over, while I was\npassing through Winnipeg.\nI'l IIM.Is ALLEGIANCE\nTO PARTY\nThrough your columns I wish to\npledge anew my allegiance to the Liberal party of this province, and to state\nthat the present member for Nelson has\nnjy very heartiest support, arid that had\nI been in Nelson during the election he\ncould liave counted on no more energetic or Interested person In hts campaign than myself.\nI would also like the people of Nelson\nto know that I shall be ready at all\ntimes to be of any assistance both to\nMr. McDonald and to themselves, and at\nany time ready to glvt to the member\nelected for Nelson the benefit of any\nlittle experience which I may have acquired from having at one time been a\nmember for this constituency.\nFurther,1 and for the more effectual\nshowing my good faith, I am leaving\nwith my solicitors, Brown & Dawson, a\ncheck for $50, with Instructions to them\nto turn the same over to any person who\ncan satisfy them that they have letters\nfrom me to the purported rumor or that\nstatements to this effect have emanated\nfrom me.\nKtiNNETH CAMPBELL.\nNelson, B.C., November 24, 1927.\nDouglas Fir Will\nBe Used in C. N. R.\nShip Construction\nVICTORIA, Nov. 24.\u2014P. A. Pauline,\nBritish Columbia agent-general ln London, has advised the government that\nthe Canadian National railways have\nspecified Douglas fir to be used as decking ln five ships to be built In Great\nBritain for 'the Canadian-West Indies\nservice.\nYou Can Jump on\nSemilite Plates\nWithout Breaking Them\nThe teeth will not break\nout as they occasionally do\nin a rubber plate. Semilite\nPlates are a recent new\ndiscovery\u2014a substance far\nstronger and more durable\nthan a rubbeV plate. Lighter in weight and more\ncomfortable in the mouth.\nGuaranteed not to shrink,\nthereby assuring a perfect\nfit.\nDr. Cowen will gladly\nshow you the new samples.\nrreo   PainlMS   Extraction,\nScorns   305-6-7-8-9-10-11-12\n2d Floor Jamieson Bldg.\nOver  Owl  Drug Store\nSpokane, wash.\nGuard the children's health)\nSHREDDED\nWarmth for frosty mornings\nProtects against stormy weather\nKind to little stomachs\nI nr I  I Hi  I j_Wm^k,\ns\nDrink Ovaltine -sleepsoundly\nOVALTINE soothes and\nnourishes \"fretty\"\nnerves, promotes normal\ndigestion and brings sound\nrestful sleep. Bodily vigour\nfor tomorrow's demands is\nrestored.\nOvaltine contains no drugs\nor sedatives. Its action is entirely natural\u2014the result of\nripe barley malt, fresh eggs\nand creamy milk scientifically\nblended into a perfectly balanced tonic food. Delicious.\nEasily digested. Readily assimilated.  Ask your doctor.\nOVMLTINE\n^\u2022j^^^^TO^roOTfwvXRACX\nENSURES SOUND, NATURAL SLEEP\nMada in\nEngland by\nA. WANDER\nLIMITED\nDrink Ovaltine for health the\nyear 'round. At all druggists,\n60c, 90c, |1.30, and J5.25\nspecial family size. It'i economical to buy the larger tins.\nTht coupon ii your opportunity te ttf\nOvaltine at out expease.\nA. WANDER LIMITED,\n415 Kins St. We\u00ab, Toronto,\nPlease send sample of Ovaltine.   10 centa\nia enclosed for pecking and pottage.\nName\t\nStreet .....\nQty Prav ....\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nMaterial   john burns & son\nBuilding\nCONSIDER A JOINT!\nACCOUNT\nA VERY real service is of*\n*\u25a0\u25a0!*\u25a0 fered by Joint account\nprivileges. Two people may\ncheque and deposit through\none account, and this makes\na very convenient family\nbanking arrangement.\nAny branch oj the bank will be glad to\nopen joint accounts and explain\nparticulars.\nIMPERIAL BANK\n0FCAKAEA\n#\nNelson Branch \t\nCranbrook Branch\nCraston Branch  ,\nDid you get your tin of\nBlue Ribbon Coffee?\nVacuum\nPacked\njfclflERIBBOM\nPccTffeP\nI'll,.. w\" >\"\"'p.'\n\u25a0  \u00bbUJ GAIT LIMITED\nSteel\nCut\nThe Most Delicious Coffee in the World\nH**\" Special Price Expires December 1. \"Ta^|\nOrder a poured from your grocer today and save Ten Cents.\nROASTED AND PACKED BY THE PACKERS OF THE CELEBRATED\nBLUE   RIBBON   TEA\na^a^a^a^M\n\u25a0alaMB\n \u2014\nr\u00a5HE NELSON DAILY NTWB, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1927\nPage Ffot-';\nAfter the\nHour of Six\nSmarter and more delightful than ever are the\nEVENING SLIPPERS\nDisplayed exclusively at\n;his Shop\u2014Patents, Satins,\nGold and Silver Kid and\nBlack Kid.\n$6.00 TO $11.00\nR. Andrew & Ct.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nRV  A  CLASSIFIED  AD.\nKASLO NOTES\nKASLO. B.C., Nov 34.\u2014Mrs, J., M.\nHarris of Sandon passed through town\nTuesday on her way home from a trip\nto the prairies\nJ, Foy of Procter paid Kaslo a visit\nMonday.\nJames Anderson was a visitor to\nNelson Monday.\nMrs. A. W. Anderson was a tea hostess\nTuesday,\nMiss Olga Swan passed through town\nTuesday on her way borne to Sandon\nfrom Nelson.\nTuesday afternoon Mrs. E. H. Latham\nwas a tea hostess honoring Miss Jean\nRoss the invited guests were Mrs. William White, Mrs. S. J. Reuter, Mrs.\nRobert Watt, Miss Betty Barkley, Miss\nIda Perkins, Miss Violet Perkins, Miss\nDalla Perkins, Master David Watt and\nMaster Archie Reuter.\nR. P. Wllmot of Victoria was a Kaslo\nvisitor Tuesday.\nF. L. Harbour came ln from Mirror\nLake Tuesday to meet his brother, C.\nH. Harbour of Rosalia, Wash., who arrived ln the city Tuesday.\nH. Lakes, M.E., of Nelson, was a Tuesday visitor to town.\nTuesday evening Mrs. J. J. Binns was\nhostess at a bridge in aid of St. Mark's\nWomen's auxiliary. Eight tables were\nln play. The first prize was won by\nMrs. Lanpe Hiliman. Those playing\nwere Mayor and Mrs. W. H. Burgees,\nMr. and Mrs. H. C. Olegerich, Mr. and\nMrs. R. A. Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald\nHewat, Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Dawson, Dr.\nW. A. and Mrs. Allen, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nH. Latham, Mn. Trail, Mra. J. B.\nStubbs, Mra. R. B. Milne, Mra. Lance\nHlllman, Mrs. H. L. Batten, Mrs. T. P.\nLane, Mra. Everett Zwickey, Mra. M. S.\nDavys, Mrs. Oeorge Stott, Miss Mabel\nHamilton, Miss Ruth McWiulams, Mlsa\nElsie Merger, Miss Elsie Cadden, F. T.\nAbey, Harry Abey, Oordon Bowker,\nFred  Weir,  Philip Trail,  Rev.  Chriato-\niOUTH SLOCAN AND\nBONNINGTON BRIEFS\nSOUTH SLOCAN. B.C., Nov 24 \u2014\nrhe Women's auxiliary met at the home\nof Mrs. W. W. Bell for their bi-monthly\nmeeting pn Tuesday afternoon, when\nMrs. Murray presided. Final arrangement* were mads for tbe Christmas\nbazaar, to be held ln ths middle of\nDecember. Mrs. Bell entertained the\nmembers to tea.\nBONNINGTON FALLS\nMrs. O. Noel Brown was hostess for\ntea at the Badminton club on Thursday, when the St. Mary's branch of tbe\nWomen's auxiliary bad a table of useful and attractive articles on sale.\nwhich were easily disposed of. In the\nabsence of Mfc. Turner Lee, the president, the* majority of the members\nhave decided to give a certain sum to\nthe funds Instead of having the usual\nChristmas sale of work and tea.\nKenneth Metcalfe, who has been ln\ncharge of the apple packing for the\nBonnlngton orchards, haa. returned to\nWillow Point.\nMajor Turner Lee and Miss Nancy\nLee, who propose leaving ln the course\nof a week to spend the winter ln\nEngland, where Mra. Lee ls now visiting, are ln Nelson making arrangements for the trip.\ntj^OCElY\nINVERMERE NOTES\nIVALSPAR BRUSHING\nLACQUER\nValspar Brushing Lacquer is the ideal product for\nfinishing those intended Xmas gifts. Dries with a hard,\nwear resisting surface, made in a large range of delicate\ncolors. Also Bronzing Powders in Red, Dark Blue, Dark\nGreen, Pale Gold, Deep Gold and Aluminum.\nIIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.\nLook   for   the   lied   Hardware   Store\nPHOKUi,497, \u25a0 80X414\n5\nome expert opinions-\nTHE experienced judge\nof cheese says, \"I have\nfound nothing finer than\nthe richness of KRAFT\nflavour.\"\nThe careful buyer says,\nKRAFT is the most\neconomical cheese in the\nW\u00bbrld.\"\nTrie cook says, \"I'U^iave\nno other because KRAFT\nkeeps so well and is io\nconvenient to use in a\nthousand recipes.\"\nThe grocer who is in business to stay says, \"My customers, in the long run,\ncannot be put off with a\nsubstitute \u2014 so I stock\nKRAFT, the genuine\narticle.\"\nYou can trust KRAFT\u2014\nand the grocer who recommends it \u201e\nKRAFT!\nKraft-MacLaren Cheese Co. Limited\nMontreal\nINVERMERE, B.C., Nov. 84.\u2014Oeorge\nWatt of Westlake ranch ls away off on\na visit to hts people In Scotland.\nMr- and Mrs. H. L. Fuller are ln Spo\nkane attending the International western potato snow. Mr. Fuller Is looking\nafter the local exhibits.\nCommander Gerald Houlgrave of Wilmer paid a hurried visit to the coast,\nreturning last week. He ls arranging to\nhome out there to live for the present.\nMra. Padgett of Orand Forks, B.C\nwho baa been visiting her daughter,\nMlas F. A. Padgett of Wilmer for some\nweeks, returned home last week.\nMiss Isobel O. Hamilton of Toronto ts\nvisiting Mra. Basil Q. Hamilton on her\nway home from Japan, where she has\nbeen touring for over seven months\nProm here she will later accompany her\nfather to spend the winter at his Florida\nhome.\npher Reed and Mrs. Reed were also\npresent.\nWednesday afternoon Mrs. Robert\nWatt was a tea hostess honoring Miss\nJean Ross, the invited guests were Rev.\nD. W. Scott and Mrs. Scott, Mrs. John\nStrachan, Mrs. S. J. Reuter, Mrs. E. H.\nLatham, the Misses Ida, Dalla and\nVtlet Perkins, Miss Edith Coombs and\nMasters Bobby stratchan and Archie\nReuter.\nMiss Violet Perkins returned Tuesday\nevening from a two weeks' holiday ln\nPortland, Ore.\nIf Your Wife\nobjects to you smoking in the house,\ntry our Special Mixture and she will insist on your doing lt. Bee Cee Cigars\ngoing strong.\nBUSH'S\nProtect Your Piano\nDon't make your plauo a convenience for the tuner. What\nelse have you In your home\nthat ls so valuable, and costs\nso little for its yearly upkeep?\nDelay is costly, and sometimes\ndisastrous not only to the Instrument, but to the musical ear\nof your child you are trying to\ndevelop.\nAre you aware you have a real\ntuner living in your town of\nNelson?\nL.   SINGLETON.\nExpert  Piano Tuner.\nMason & Rlsch, Ltd., Nelson.\nEd.  Hall's Music Store, Trail.\nThis column is conducted by Mrs.\nM. J. Vlgneux. All news of s social\nnature. Including, receptions, private\nentertainments, personal Items,\nmarriages, etc., will appear la this\ncolumn. Telepnone Urn. Vlgneux at\nher bona* on Stiles street.\nWednesday night Mr and Mrs. Ferguson Wilson, Josephine street, entertained a number of their friends at\nbridge, when the honors of the evening were won by Mrs. Ronald Brown\nand W J. Oerbracht Those playing\nwere Mr. and Mra. J. Ramsay, Mr. and\nMrs. Carl A. Larson, Mr. and Mtb. R.\nWilliam Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald\nBrown, Dr. and Mra. Roy Maurer, Mr.\nand Mrs. Archie Donaghy, Mr. and Mrs.\nFred H Dill, Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Bennett, Mr. and Mra. W. J. Oerbracht,\nMr. and Mrs. F. F. Payne and Mr, and\nMrs. D, D. Townshend.\n\u2022 * \u2022\nWilliam Fraser of Kootenay Bay spent\nyesterday in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Peverill of Procter, who, with\nher family, will be leaving shortly to\nreside in Medicine Hat, spent yesterday\nin  town on  business.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nA. E. Richards of Tarry's has made\narrangements to sail December 22 on\nthe Mellta for England.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFather Flnnegan of the Slocan district spent yesterday ln town, the guest\nof Rev. J. C. McKenzle. pastor of the\nchurch of Mary Immaculate, and leaves\nthis morning for Slocan City.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Archie Blaney was operated on\nfor appendicitis at the Kootenay Lake\nOeneral  hospital  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Maybe, who has been spending\nthe summer months at Willow Point,\nhas left for Trail, where she will reside with her sister, Mrs. Percy Hallett.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nS. P. Larson, supervisor of assessors\nand collectors with headquarters in Victoria, was in town yesterday and left\non  the  afternoon   boat  for   Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nR. A. Grimes, who has been ln Sllverton, leaves this morning for Cranbrook and Kimberley.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nW. J. McConnell of Sunshine Bay\nspent yesterday ln Nelson.\n\u2022 *    *\nMrs. W. A. Ward, who has been visiting friends In town for the past few\ndays, left on the afternoon boat yesterday for her home th Procter.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMrs. R. Howard of Trail spent yesterday tn Nelson.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJohn Toye of Crescent Bay was a\nvisitor  ln  the  city   yesterday.\n\u2022 *    *\nDr. Corsan, who has been in town\nattending St. Saviour's church synod,\nleaves this morning for his home ln\nfernie. ',\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss Jean Rose of Nakusp expects to\nsail December 6 on the Montclalr for\nEngland.\nsea\nMrs. P. Norris of Trail spent yesterday\nln the city.\ness\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar B. Appleton and\ntheir son. Herbert, of Sunshine Bay.\nwere   visitors   to  Nelson   yesterday,   the\n$U Baker Street.   Phone tOO,\nNovember Sale\nWOMEN'S COATS\nAT 20 PER CENT LESS\nCoats for the larger women in sizes 38 to 45. Beautifully tailored of all-\nwool Broadcloth, Duvetine,\nNeedle-Point and Velours.\nt Crush or shawl collars of\njrood quality rur. Lined\n\u25a0 throughout with fancy\n\" Rayon or Silk Crepe. All\nwanted colors, including\nNavy and Black.\nRegular $30.00  Coats\nfor  $24.00\nRegular $39.00 Coats\nfor  $31.00\nRegular $47.50 Coats\nfor  $38.00\nRegular $59.00 Coats\nfor  847.00\nRegular $75.00 Co\u00bb,s\nfor  $60.00\nSpecial\nClearance of\nAfternoon\nDresses at\n$16.95 Each\nFlat Crepe and Crepe-\nback Satin Dresses in all\nthe new colors and Black.\nSizes 16 to 42* Values to\n$39.00. SALE PRICE,\n$16.95 EACH.\nSpecial Value\nLADIES'   WKIST  WATCH\nWhite  and   Green  Oold  Cases.\nSatisfactory movements.\nS12.00\nA. T. N0X0N\nYOCR   JEWELER\nThe secret of\nelever Cooks\nBOVRIL\nIs the wonderful flavour\nof the foods they prepare.\nMany thousands of the\nbest cooks daily find that\nadding a little Bovril to\nany meat dish, does not\nmerely colour it, but\ngives it that delicious\nflavour that \"tickles the\npalate\" and proves that\u2014\nBOVRIL\nPuts BEEF\nin it\n%^ See the name on the bottle\n' and refuse substitutes.\n78\ntwo latter returning to their home,\nwhile Mr. Appleton leaves Nelson tonight for the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\"\nMr. and Mrs. J. P. Burns, Silica street,\nhave had as their guest Mrs. Clarence\nShannon of Willow Point, who left\nyesterday for her home.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs, Leonard Murdock of Trail spent\nyesterday in the city.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJ. G. Whlteacre, a former resident of\nthis city, arrived in Nelson Wednesday\nnight   and   left   for   Trail    yesterday\nmorning on business.\n\u00bb   *    \u2022\nMrs. A. Dozenberg and her son, Nick,\nwith Mrs. William Soles of Sunshine\nBay, motored to Nelson to shop yesterday. t\n\u2022 *    *\nHarry Johnstone of Boswell spent\nyesterday in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMlas Blnnle of the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital nurse-In-training\nschool, has left for the coast on a\nholiday.\n\u2022 %   I\nWilliam Murray of Fruitvale ls spending a few days ln the elty.\n\u2022 \u2022   #\nMrs. J, Turner, Baker street, and Mrs.\nJ. Hoogeworth left last night for a\nfew days to be spent ln Grand Porks.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nW. Glnol of Sanca spent yesterday in\nthe city.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. G. Noel Brown of Bonnlngton were Nelson visitors  yesterday.\n\u2022 *    *\nMrs. M. McOuire of Willow Point\nspent yesterday shopping in the city.\n\u2022 \u00bb   *\nMr. and Mrs. Otto Becker of Tarry's\nwere visitors to town yesterday.\n\u00bb   \u2022   *\nMrs. E. H, Boyer and her son of\nWillow Point expect to sail December\n18 for Italy to spend the winter on the\nRiviera. They will sail on the Cedrtc\nfrom   Boston.\n\u2022 *    *\nHomer Moon of Frultvale is a city\nvisitor,\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nJ. F. Stevenson of Sunshine Bay\nspent yesterday ln Nelson on business.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Ronald Greyson of , Bonnington\nwas a visitor to the city  yesterday,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Coo, who spent\nyesterday in Nelson, leave thla morning\nfor the Crow district,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Thomas McLaughlin * of Bon*\nnlngton was a visitor to town yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nT. A. Mills of WUlow Point spent\nH'sterday in Nelson shopping.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nRobert C. FothergUl, traveling pas*\nbenger agent of the Cunard Line with\nheadquarters In Vancouver, was a visitor   to   Nelson   yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. L. Hanna, Cedar street,\nhave as their house guest Mrs. Sam\nHunter of Kaslo.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Irene Serres of Harrop is a\nvisitor ln town.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. F. Thomllnson of Willow Point\nwas in Nelson shopping  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. W. Bennett of Bonnlngton\nspent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. J. R. Choyce, formerly\nof Nelson and who now reside ln New\nDenver, are contemplating a trip to\nEurope, when they will sail December\n14 on  the  Montnatre.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMr. and Mrs. Samuel Fawcett. Fair-\nview, returned to the city this week\nafter a holiday spent at Vancouver,\nVictoria and other coast points.\nCRESTON NOTES\nSENATOR McCOIG\nIS LAID AT REST\nCHATHAM, Ont.. Nov. 24.\u2014Senator\nArchibald B. McColg, who died on Monday, was burled today In Maple Leaf\ncemetery here after hundreds of friends,\nincluding several cabinet ministers and\nparliamentarians, Joined ln a tribute\nto his memory at a service tn the\nFirst Fresbytwlnn church.\nCRESTON, B.C., Nov. 24\u2014Dick Randall Jr., who left here about 14 months\nago with his parents to reside In Spokane, Is back again.\nRoy Huscroft left at the first of the\nweek for Goatfell, where he will be\nemployed   all  winter.\nHarry Beeson and Ted Bucknell are\nIn from the Calgary district and arc\nvisitors with A. Stewart Evans at\npresent.\nA. R. F. Bernard was in town on\nMonday. He has been at his ranch at\nCamp Lister for a few days and his\nreturned to work for the winter at the\nParadise  mine  at  Invermere.\nMiss Vera McGonegal returned today\nfrom a visit at Kitchener with Mr.\nand Mrs. G. A. Hunt.\nMiss Mlnne Strong left on Tuesday\nfor a short holiday visit with relatives\nand  friends  ln  Spokane.\nJohn Dixon and W. Dunbar of MacLeod, Alta.. are holidaying in Creston.\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. Winch-\ncomb.\nMrs. Armstrong of Nelson, who has\nspent almost a month here at the\nhome of her son, Charles, has returned\nhome.\nMr. Collins of Vancouver was in\nCreston   on   Tuesday   on   a   visit   with\nhts   son,   Harry,   cashier   at   the   Bank\nof Commerce.\nMiss Lily Wilson, who has been here\nthe past month with her sister, Mrs.\nGeorge Mawson, left yesterday for her\nhome at Olds. Alta.\n| P. H. Watson of Ymlr ls spending\n, a few days here at present with his\n; father, W. S. Watson, J.P., who Is In\nj rather poor health.\nj Henry Vaness, who has been a hos-\n\u25a0 pital   patient   at   Cranbrook   the   past\nlew   weeks,   arrived   home   on   Monday\n: MM  II leaving this week on a visit in\nthe Okaganan.\n|     Mrs.  W.  B.   V-vrtln  is  another  Cres-\n, tonite who has undergone an operation\nj at St. Eugene hospital, Cranbrook, and\nts  making  a  very satisfactory  recovery.\nRobert  Stark,  who  suffered  a  slight\nj stroke   almost  six  weeks  ago,   is  down\ntown  again,  his  first: appearance  since\nthe mishap.\nBLACK FOXES ARE\nOUT ON THE FARM\nINVERMERE, B.C.. Nov. 24.\u2014MPS, E.\nM. Sahdllands of Wilmer, B.C.. has recently purchased an extremely flue pair\nof  silver   black   foxes.\nHarold  Holmes, Henry county farmer,\nwon Illinois corn husking championship.\nFour Grades Sold\n\"SALADA\"\nTEA\nAll packed in Black, Green and Mixed.\nSAVE MONEY by looking over\nourWEEK-ENDlPECIALS\nSHOULDER and LEG ROAST PORK from\nchoice select grain fed ALBERTA HOGS\nLOCAL FRESH KILLED FOWL\nSIRLOIN STEAKS\nPOT   ROASTS\nBOILING BEEF\nSee our windows for reduced prices.\nTry our Tomato and Standard Sausages,\nalso Head Cheese, made by our experienced\nSausagemaker.\nQV\/UJn-CLEANLlNESS-SERVlCE\nP* Burns & Co*, Ltd\nNELSON, B.C\nPHONE   ML\nWEST KOOTENAY BUTCHER CO.\nPHONB  I\nDELIVERY   ANY   PART   Of.   CITY\nu j*sm-m\u2014mi..\u00bbi\"<\nMas\n \u2014\n\t\n-\n\u25a0\u25a0\nr**ge Six\nTHE NT5LSDN D5IEY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1927\n_\nI   JOY    I\nBy BARBARA WEBB\n*   MrOKY  OF LOVE, TRIAL. TEMPTATIONS  AND TRIUMPH**\nSYNOPSIS\nJsgeo Daring Ik left homeless\nWhen her parents separate. She\nlata a Job as a telephone operator\nIn a hotel. Then her mother disappears mysteriously, after being\nshot by \"Butch\" Seltzer, a liquor\ngang leader, who ls mad about\nJoyce. Henry Deacon, a wealthy\nadmirer, returns to college and his\nolder friend. Carter Deland, a\nbachelor clubman, rushes Joyce,\nand Introduces her Into a. circle\nof society girls. Joyce has been\nro\u00abmlng with Gladys Warner, check\ngirl at the hotel, who riffl a terrible tragedy behind a breezy manner that had won the younger\ngirl's heart. Gladys has Just bad\na telegram revealing her secret,\nand she shows lt to Joyce.\nCHAPTER XXVI.\nTHE   STORY   OF\nGLADYS   TRAGEDY\n\"Tour husband?\"\nJoy's voice was full of surprise. Bhe\nfait as though some one had dealt her\na Mow.\nOladys' sobbing stopped. She looked\nstraight ahead.\n\"Now I ain't got nobody,\" she said\nln 'a dull tone. \"I been working and\nkerning him in a sanitarium two\nyear! now. They told me last spring\nhe needed an operation. That's what\nX Sorrowed the money from you for,\nNow  he's   gone.\"\nJoyce went to her friend. \"Tell me\nabout it.\" ahe said softly.\nPresently Oladys sat up and pushed\nback  her  tangled  hair.\n\"I got to go after him,\" she said.\n\"But I won't let his mother know.\"\n\"I'll have to raise money somewhere. I'll be all the rest of my life\npaying   for   this,  his  funeral   and   all.\"\nShe stared straight ahead again for\na few minutes. Then she squared her\nshoulders as though her mind were\nmade up. \"You find out when I can\nget a train to New York,\" she directed\nJoyce.\nStill mystified Joyce went down to\nthe telephone. At the station they\ntold her there was a train at midnight, .^yce reserved an upper berth\nfor Gladys, keeping in mind the need\nlor money. Then she went back to\nthe room.\nGladys was unlocking a drawer in\nthe dresser which Joyce had never\nseen open before. From lt she took a\nheavy sterling sliver brush and stiver\nmounted comb. There were other toilet\narticles to match. To them Gladys\nadd{d a dlny4ejet hair pin. a string\nof lovely (^Wiiif- Jade, a platinum\nwedding ring and a large diamond\nand  sapphire engagement ring. '\n\"He r^ve me all of these,\" she said\nsadly, indicating the little pile to\nJoyce. \"Now I suppose I'll have to\npawn them for his funeral. Sit down,\nJoyce,   and   I'll  tell  you  a\",  about  it.\"\nShe was more collected now and not\nonce ln the course of her story did\nher emotions get the better of her\nagain.\n\"When I was a kid,\" she began,\n\"I was a mighty pretty kid. Lots\nprettier than I am now. We didn't\nhawa-tnuch and I didn't get no schooling to speak of. But I loved to\ndance t,and I used to sneak out and\ndance whenever I could get away from\nthe old man, for he made an awful\nrow If he caught me doing tt.\n\"Well, when I was sixteen I ran\naway from home with a show that\nhit Pittsburgh. I had a good time\nfor the next three years, riding around\nthe country with that show. But I\nnever fell for the men much because\nI loved to dance so, see?\n\"Then after three years of road\nshows they told me I was good enough\nfor the big city, so I went to New\nYork. I didn't have much trouble\nthere getting a place with one of the\nrevues and for a while I paid strict\nattention to business and got along\nfine.\n\"But after a while I began to get\nlonesome with all the other girts\nchasing out for good times so I thought\nI'd  take  on a  gentleman  friend   myself.\n\"One of the other girls knew I was\nlooking for a steady, so she told me\nher friend knew a fellow, Just come to\nNew York from Cleveland who was\nready for a good time every minute.\n\"So the next night I went out with\nher and there was this guy she went\nwith,  and  Forrester,   my  husband.\"\nThere was a suspicion of a sob In\nher voice, but she hurried on Ignoring\nlt.\n\"We went out night after night and\nwe had all kinds of fun, dancing,\neating, drinking, specially drinking.\nBut all the time I couldn't go quite\nas far as the others went.\n\"When they stayed all night at the\nroad house I made Forrester take me\nhome, because my Irish mother had\ntold me pretty plain what happened\nto girls who didn't go straight.\n\"Forrester was a hard drlnKer. He\ndrank, twice as much as anybody else,\nand* he was queer, too. When he'd\nhad a lot he'd get very quiet and\nbrood, and once when he was terribly\ndrunk he asked me if I'd go way out\nwest to a ranch with him where he\ncould get over this terrible drink habit\nand we could both live clean.\n\"One night after we left the others\nand Forrester'd drunk an awful lot\nwe got lost. Then the car stalled and\nForrester went to sleep, sitting right\nthere in the car behind the wheel.\nI couldn't budge him and I couldn't\nwake him. And there we sat until the\nsun came up and woke him.\n\"Well, I was pretty near killed. I\nknew that no one would beleive the\ntruth about lt and that they'd kid\nme forever, because I'd always told\nthem what I thought about this business of going too far.\n\"So I cried and carried on fit to kill\nand  matV  Forrester feel pretty  rotten.\nI     \"Finally  he  says,  'See  here,   Glad,  If\n1 you   feel   that   way   about   It,   let's   go\n| get married, right now.'\n\"I honestly didn't lc<e him and I\nI didn't  have, no right to take  him  up,\nIbut I did and we went and got married that morning. After the ceremony\nhe looked at me sort of funny and\nBald, 'Well, where shall we set up\nI housekeeping?\"\n\"Then I got scared, for you see\n' even with all thiB experience I was\nan awful greenhorn and I was Just\nplain scared, and then I didn't really\nlove him. I guess a lot of this must\nhave showed in my face for he said.\n'We'll go get sdme breakfast, and\nthen we'll talk about lt some more.\nIf you don't want to live with trie now,\nyou can go back to your old rodm, just\ni as   though we weren't married!\"\n\"You can see how white he was.\"\nHere Oladys paused to show Joyce a\npicture in a silver frame. It showed\na rather heavy set young man with a\nhigh forehead, a weak mouth, and a\nsort of  steady charm about him.\n\"He looks\u2014kind,\" said Joyce, hesltat-\n> lngly.\nj     \"That's It,\" said Gladys eagerly.   \"He\nI always   was   kind.    You   can   see   that\nj when   I   tell   you  that  after  breakfast\n' when .Jie asked me again where I wanted to go and I said, I wanted to go back\nto my own room, he didn't say a word,\nbut took me there and gave me a kiss\nJust like he always did.\n\"We saw each other a lot, of course,\nj but  we didn't tell the others  that we\nwere married.    And then one night he\nwent off on a party without me and\ndrank some poison hooch.\n\"I heard about it the next day, from\none of the girls who knew a friend of\nhis, how terrible sick he was. And sud\n, denly lt Just seemed like something\n| went cold inside of me. I went right\nover to his rooms. They weren't going\nto let me in, but I finally persuaded\nthem that we was married, and then\nthe doctor let me by.\nI \"Poor Forrester. He was half blind\n' and clear out of his head, except that\nI he remembered marrying me. He kept\nasking for me, but when I come he\ndidn't know me. He was like that for\ndays. They was afraid to move him to\na hospital and so I Just stayed there.\nr***_\/r\n^3\nflip\u2014-\u00bb-^fil\n, (\nlit\nIII?\nIfjlfk\nGood luck in\nbaking is usualltf\ndue to good judgment\nin mini\nMAGIC\nBAKING\nPOWDER\nHe didn't know me, but he was somehow quieter when I was there.\n\"Then along about the fourth day I\nheard the nurse arguing with someone\nout ln the living room and I went out\nto see, because I had sort of taken\ncharge of things.\n\u2022There in the living room I see one of\nthose tall, thin ladles that look like\nthey'd never had a sinful wish ln their\nlife.\n'Whd are.you?* she says, giving me\nthe once over. 'I'm Mr. Maltby's wife,\nMrs. Maltby,' I says.\n\"Well, she wouldn't believe it and I\nfinally had to show ber my marriage\ncertificate and have the nurse tell her\nhow Forrester kept asking for me.\nIt turned out tbat she was his\nmother, and she had heard about his being sick and had come to Cleveland to\nsee. She hated me right from the first\nbut with Forrester bo sick there wasn't\nmuch she could do.\n\"She went to stay at a hotel nearby\nand come over every day waiting for a\nchance to see Forrester. Well, I didn't\nlet on, but I was pretty scared. I'd lost\nmy Job by being away from the show\nso long and If Forrester woke up and\ntold her how I'd never really been hU\nwife, why I didn't know Just what she\ncould do to me.\n\"Finally, one day Forrester opened his\nejes and knew me. I gave him a kiss\nand told him his mother was here. He\nlooked scared, too. 'Don't let her take\nme home. Glad,' he begged. 'She's awful good to me, but she makes me good,\ntoo, and I never get a drink there,\never.'\n\"So I promised him, and pretty soon\nI had to let her go ln to see him. She\nwas all for moving him back to Cleveland right away, and ln spite of what\nhe said and what I said, she went right\nahead making plans. It seemed that she\nhad something to do with his money,\nand told him If he didn't do' what she\nsaid she'd hold back some money she\nhad been letting him have.\n\"We got all ready to go, for he said\nhe wouldn't go one step without me.\n\"Then, the very morning of the day\nwe all was to start, he got so nervous\nover It that he had a relapse and t\nstroke. The doctor said there was nothing for it but to put him ln a sanitarium for treatment. He said it would\ntake two years to make him well enough\nto get around som\u00a3.\n\"Then his mother said she would pay\nhis expenses in the sanitarium If 1\nwould promise to come away from New\nYork, where I'd always be having temptations to go wrong. You see, she heard\nme promising Forrester to wait for him,\nand I guess she figured If I was going\nto wait, I'd better try to keep straight\naway from New York. I had to give up\nthe show business, too.\n\"It was this, or else she wouldn't see\nForrester through this course of treatments. So I agreed to everything Bhe\nsaid. We went down and put Forrester\nln the sanitarium. He could hardly\nspeak, but he begged me the last few\nminutes we had together to send him\nmoney secretly so he wouldn't have to\nfeel dependent entirely on his mother.\nI promised, and I told the doctors, too,\nthat if there was anything extra he\nneeded to let me know, not his mother.\n\"I think she was kind of sorry about\nthe way she acted when he came away.\nFor she asked me to come and live with\nher until Forrester was better. But I\nsaid no. She had made me promise to\ncome to Cleveland, where she could\nknow what I was .doing.\n\"I had to get a Job, and this one at\nthe Statler paid me better, counting the\ntips, than anything I could do. So that's\nwhy you've never seen me stepping out\nnone. I always sent Forrester part of\nwhat I made. I saw him once, about a\nyear ago. and he looked awful bad, but\nhe kept hoping he would get out and he\nhated his mother terribly for keeping\nus apart. It seemed the more he thought\nof me the more he loved me.\n\"I found out. then, that his mother\nhad had herself appointed his guardian\nbecause his sickness was affecting his\nbrain. And lt seemed to me the more\nI thought of him and the white way\nhe'd treated me the more I ought to do\nfor him.\n\"So I Just kept on here, and now it's\nno use, It's all over. But, by God,\nJoyce, I'm going to get his body and\nbury him and let him rest where his\nmother can't bother him any more.\nEven if I have to sell everything he\never gave me.\" She glanced at the pile\nof finery on the dresser.\nJoyce was thoughtful. In spite of\nGladys' tears, and ln spite of her unwavering devotion to duty, her crushing\nof all her Instincts for gaiety and good\nfun, she could, not be convinced that\nGladys loved, or ever had loved, the\ndead man.\nSo she said, \"I think his mother ought\nto know, Gladys.\"\nBut Gladys shook her head stubbornly.\nJoyce went down with her to the dingy\nrailway station. Just at the entrance\nto the ticket gate, Gladys spun around,\n\"Joyce,\" she said solemnly, \"you're\nright. She ought to know. Here's her\naddress, she lives up on the heights\nsomewhere. You go up there the first\nthing In the morning, tell her I sent\nyou, and tell her I've gone to bring him\nback to Cleveland.\"\nThen she disappeared through the\ngate, leaving a moist kiss on Joy's cheek\nand a slip of paper containing an address in Joy's hand.\nTOMORROW: Herself homeless and\nwithout the support of her parents,\nJoyce Daring ts left to handle a delicate\nmission for her roommate, who suddenly reveals ber tragic marriage, and asks\nJoyce to tell her husband's mother of'\nhis death. Fate seems to push Joyce Into circles of society she had never\ndreamed of penetrating. Read tomorrow's absorbing chapter of \"Joy,\" the\nlove story of an American girl.\nCREAMERY FOLK\nASK A TARIFF\nTO BE OMITTED\nExecutive   So   Decides   Unless\nSpecial Reason; Cut Mission Grants\nFUNDS VOTED  FOR\nITINERATING PRIESTS\nBishop   Will   Issue   Letter\nChildren Asking Aid for\nSchool by Post\nto\nit.\nDeclare Australian Treaty Needs\nRevision in Order Save\nIndustry\nUnless unforeseen events demand\nno synod of the diocese of Kootenay\nwill be held during 1928. This was determined yesterday by the executive\ncommittee of the diocese, meeting here\nin Memorial hall, under the chairmanship of Rt. Rev. A J Doull, D.D.,\nbishop of Kootenay. The constitution\nrequires an annual synod, at a time\nand place to be named by the bishop,\nbut the executive committee Is construed to have power to vary from this,\nand ln recent years the diocese has\nbeen having Its synod bic\/nially.\nFinancial discussions consumed the\nclosing day of the committee's sessions. The first of these related to the\nquestion of financing the mission van\nand the Sunday school by post which\nIt has developed, this latter costing\nabout $1 per year per child. It was\ndecided that the bishop should send\nout a letter to the children of the\ndiocese, asking them to give an offering on Christmas day, to provide part\nof the cost of taking the Sunday school\nthus to children tn Isolated sections.\nPROVIDE FOR\nTWO PRIESTS\nAnother question was that of providing an additional number of itinerating\npriests. It was considered that seven\nwould be needed to mark the diocese\nproperly, but that they would have to\nbe provided gradually. In the meantime funds were voted to provide one\nof these for East Kootenay, and another\nln one of the other districts, which was\nnot definitely settled.\nVarious loans applied for by parishes\nfor  building  purposes,  were discussed,\nand one was made to Trail parish for\nerecting a mission hall in East Trail.\nTO  REIU'CE\nSOME GRANTS\nFinally, the mission grants were made\nto the different missionary parishes. In\nmaking them, ln a large number of\ncases the executive felt obliged to give\nsix months' notice of reduction, owing\nlargely to the necessity of opening up\nthe new work already referred to Vn connection with Itinerating clergy,\nWhile no report was received on the\nmatter, it is understood that the laymen's order for the diocese is going\nsteadily ahead, under the promotion\nwork of H. Waring Oiles of Vernon. The\norder Is engaged ln an effort to raise\n\u2022 1000 a year for the episcopal endowment fund.\nThe next meeting of the executive\nwill take place ln the beginning of June\nand will probably be again in Nelson.\nTORONTO, Nov. 24\u2014Addressing the\nCanadian Creamery association of Ontario, at the final session of the association's annual convention here, J. A.\nCaulder of Regina. Sask., president of\nthe national dairy council, \u2022 declared\nthat the complete abrogation of the\nAustralian trade treaty with Canada, or\nat least Its revision, was necessary to\nthe progress of the creamery industry.\nThe sentiment expressed by Mr. Caulder\nwas approved by the association in tlie\nform of a resolution passed later In the\nday.\nMr. Caulder pointed out that the\ntreaty had been effected when Canada\nwas an ^exporting country and that\nsince then conditions had changed,\nCanada becoming an importing country.\n\"The tariff was cut as an experiment,\" said the speaker, \"lt failed.\nNow lt \"should be put back.\" Creamery\nproduction In the prairie provinces, he\nsaid, had been reduced by 10,000,000\npounds last year, and It was necessary, ln order to prevent further decrease ln production, to replace the\ntariff on Australian and New Zealand\ncreamery products.\nNEARLY ENTERS\nMayor and 10 Aldermen to Be\nElected; Webb's Term of\nOffice Expires\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 34.\u2014Tomorrow the\nelectors of Winnipeg will elect a mayor\nto succeed Colonel Ralph Webb, whose\ntwo-year term ends January 1, 1928.\nDluitel McLean, a pioneer alderman, ls\nseeking the mayoralty and ls opposed by\nJohn Queen, candidate of the Independent Labor party.\nTen aldermen will be elected. Six\nLabor candidates. Including S. J. Farmer, former mayor, are seeking election\nas aldermen, as also are two Communists, members of the Manitoba branch\nof the Communist Party of Canada.\nThere have been no outstanding Issues In the campaign which closed to<-\nnlght, although a bylaw to raise 1900,000\nlor a public auditorium caused a controversy.\nThere will also be a referendum on\ndaylight saving. Voting wiU be under\nthe system of proportional representation.\nSANKEY GRANTED\nCHANGE OF VENUE\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., Holt. 34.\u2014\nIn assise court here today.-J*. J%Ja-\ntlce w. A. MacDonald granted the\napplication of J. t. Bird, deftawe\ncounsel, for change of venue to the\nspring assizes of New Westminster for\nthe trial of Joseph Sankey, charged\nwith the murder of Loretta Chlsholm.\nPeter Whitewash, Bella CooU In*\ndian, charged wtth attempted murder of\nConstable Williams,' was found guilty\nof unlawful wounding. He will be sen*\ntenced   tomorrow   morning.\nLONDON, Nov. 24.\u2014The Duchess of\nHamilton, speaking at a meeting of\nthe Women's Freedom league today,\nquoted Pope Plus XI. as approving Of\nwomen voting and taking part ln afV\nfairs of government.\n\"A woman who recently had an audience with the pope,\" the duchess saM,\n\"asked him for his opinion of women's\nsuffrage. His holiness replied: *Mjr\ndear lady. It ts not only women's right\nto vote, but lt is their duty to take part\nIn every aspect of government.\"*\nCRESTON MASONS TO\nHAVE NEW QUARTERS\nCRftSTON, B.C., Nov. 24.\u2014Finding tjie\nquarters they have for four years occupied exclusively on the top floor of the\nMallandalne building too cramped for\ntheir steadily Increasing membership,\nCreston Masonic lodge has taken a lease\non tbe former Speers' hall at the corner\nof Wilson avenue and Sirdar street, and\nare now at work fitting it up for their\nexclusive use. It will be very elaborately furnished, and lt ls expected the\nInstallation night exercises on December 27 will include an elaborate opening\nof the new quarters. On his official\nvisit here last week J. C. Reynolds, D.D.\nG.M.. made the official inspection of\nthe proposed new home of local Masons.\nMrs. Spence Heads\nLady Curlers in\nCranbrook Area\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Nov. 24.\u2014Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock the annual\nmeeting of the Ladles' Curling club\nwas held In the ctty hall, with the\npresident, Mrs. W. F. Cameron, in the\nchair. The election of officers for the\ncoming year, the principal business before the meeting, resulted as follows:\nHonorary president, Mrs. (Dr.) MacKinnon; honorary vlce-preBident, Mrs.\nJ. M. McCreery; president, Mrs. C. T.\nSpence; vice-president, Mrs. E. H. McPhee; secretary-treasurer, Mrs. W. F.\nDoran.\nExecutive committee \u2014 Miss Mae\nWhitehead, Mrs. John Taylor and Mrs.\nGeorge  .Tartar   added   to   the   former.\nMembership committee\u2014Mrs. Cliff\nThompson, Miss Madge Kler, Mrs. Q\nBrown, Mrs. N. R. Park.\nCRANBROOK NOTES\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Nov. 24.\u2014At the\nOdd Fellows lodge on Monday night\nthe degree team, composed of past\ngrands, was defeated by that of the\nthird degree members, ln exemplifying\nthe initiatory degVee of Odd Fellow\nship. The winning team Is to be the\nguest of the losers at a supper to be\nprovided by the past grands.\nA. C. Bowness left for California\nWednesday afternoon, where he\npects to spend the next three weeks\nvisiting his son, Arthur.\nWord has been received from C. J\nLittle that his father, Joseph Little,\ndied Sunday morning at Campbellvllle, near Guelph, Ont. All his family\nwas at his bedside. [\nCRESTON TRUSTEES\nLET WOOD CONTRACTS\nCRESTON, B.C., Nov. 24.\u2014At the No\nvember meeting on Monday night with\nFred Lewis ln charge, Creston board of\nschool trustees let the contract for 20\ncords of four-foot wood to J. O. Martin,\nand a 10-cord supply of 16-lnch wood\nwill be filled by T. Harris. This year\nthe Christmas vacation will see school\nclosed on December 22 and reopening on\nJanuary 3. With the exception of Division I., all the classes are assembling\nat 9:30. but \"Principal McLellan's Grade\nVIII. scholars still go on duty at 9.\nBODY OF HUNTER\nFOUND tit BUSH\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., Nov. 24.\u2014\nThe body of Stanley Smlthson of\nPontrllla^ who has been missing since\nNovember  16,  has been found tn the\nFine granite  memorial  to Chatham, bU8h   neftr   hlB   home     ***   **\u2122\"^\nN3., soldiers, erected by Midget club, | httd 8on< B*me hui\"lng aud failed to\nScion   of   German   Millionaire\nDies Penniless in St.\nLouis\nST. LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 24.\u2014Only the\nintervention of friends saved the body\nof Conrad Hintz,*43, scion of a German\nmillionaire, from a pauper's grave, it\nwas revealed today.\nAlong with the request that his body\nbe cremated and the ashes sent to his\nmother, Mrs. Frederick Hlnte, Koenlge-\nberg, East Prussia, comes a story which\nrivals fiction.\nHlntz, son of one of the largest lumber dealers ln Germany, found family\nopposition to a love affair. Because he\nwould marry one of the stenographers\nof his father's firm, he was banished to\nSouth America and put ln charge of\nthe hardwood branch of the company.\nFor nine years the branch prospered\nunder the youth's management, and at\nthe end of that period he again asked\nfor permission to marry the girl of his\nheart. Meeting refusal, he resigned and\ncame to the United States, settling ln\nSt. Louts.\nHere he found there was no call for\na hardwood lumber expert. Life became\na series of discouragements, with only\nhis mother's occasional aid to help. Accidental death from gas asphyxiation at\na boarding house brought an abrupt end\nto his troubled career.\nElectrical Method\nof Prospecting Is\n*     Subject of Speech\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 24.\u2014Members of\nthe British Columbia division of tb\nCanadian Institute of Mining and Metal'\nlurgy, ln annal meeting at Vancouver\nthis morning, heard an address on \"Re\nsuits of Modern Electrical Prospecting.1\nHans Lundberg, a former member of the\ngeological survey of Sweden, was the\nspeaker. He explained that electrical\nprospecting could be conducted despite\nsnow. Geologists 'assistance ls necessary ln the successful operation of the\napparatus used.\nElectrical prospectors, lt was pointed\nout, could only study the structure, the\nsame as geologists, but they could go\nfarther in having the sub-structure\nmapped.\nTake   Whack   at   Government\nControl System in Force\nin Ontario\nTORONTO, Nov. 24.\u2014The liquor traf\nfie under the Ontario government control system Is condemned In a resolution prepared by the resolutions committee of the United Farmers of Ontario, for presentation at the annual\nconvention of the U.F.O., to be held here\non December 7.\nAnother resolution prepared by the\ncommittee says:\n\"Whereas It ls claimed that Canada\nhas reached the status of a nation,\ntherefore be lt resolved that we go on\nrecord believing an appeal should be\nmade to the Canadian people for a ver\ndiet before entering any foreign war.\"\nWat-\n\u25a0on't Toale\nStoat duIim\na n excellent\ndrlrSt m well\nM \u2022 Tonic. Wa\noften wanted to\nget aomethinr\nthat woeld\ncome op to th*\nfood fid Ear-\nIsh atont.\n\"It to good te\nbe able to make\n\u25a0p the One old\ndrink .via.!..'\nwas formally unveiled.\nreturn.   An Inquest has been ordered. I\nBruntwick\nPtfuUrope\n\"GERONA\"\n$111.00\nU\/)e\nPanatrope\nThe Entire Musical Scale     \u2022\u00bb\nChallenges\nComparison\nEveryone - - - without exception\nwho has heard a BRUNSWICK\nPANATROPE played side by\nside with other makes of record-\nreproducing instruments - \u00bb \u2022\nadmits that its tone qualities are\n^ar superior, more life-like and\nthat, beyond question - - \u2022 the\nPANATROPE is the best home\ninstrument \u2022 - - It challenges\ncomparison.\nModels Priced from $115. at Yom-\nBrunswick Dealer!*,    *\nThe Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company\nof Canada, Limited\nTORONTO. MONTREAL, WINNIPEG, CALGARY, VANCOUVER\nTHE MUSIC OF THE PANATROPE IS THE\nSTANDARD WHICH IMITATING MANUFACTURERS ARE STRIVING TO ATTAIN.\nThe Sjgn of Musical VrtsHgl i\nPANATROPES - ELECTRICAL RECORDS\nBrunswick Agents in Nelson\nKootenay Music House\nPHONE 585\n304 BAKEE STREE1\n< i\nLet Us Demonstrate the New Brunswick at\nYe Olde Firme\nHEINTZMAN & O., Limited\nMr. Noxon in Charge 511 Baker Stree\n '\u00a5H1 NBXBOn DUCT NEWS,     FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25.1027\n\u00a3D !\nf^PORT^wm\nIIRLERS FULLY\nmittees and Referees Are\nframed; Delegates to B. C.\nAssociation Named\n|Jelson  curlers  are   all  ready  to  30;\nHi   now   await   only   the   necessarj\nther  to make Ice.\nfhelr foresightedness  has  even  gone\nfar  as  to  cause   them   to   appoint\nto the annual meeting of the\n|tlsh   Columbia   Curling   association,\n:h will meet  tn  Kimberley   during\nassociation's  annual   bonsplel   this\n.ter.    A. D. McLeod and Alex  Lelth\nfill this role, with C. D.'Blackwood\nR. Andrew as alternates.\n[EL\n\u25a0hmittee\nBhe appointment of a bonsplel com-\nJthe appointment, oia  bonsplel  com-\ntee consisting of Dr.  E.  O.  Smyth,\nD.   Blackwood,   Roy   Sharp.     Their\nwill  be  to  form  as  many   rinks\n\u25a0possible to send to the Curling as-\nlation   'spiel  ln  Kimberley.    Curlers\n1, thfoughout the season, decide they\nlid  like  to  play  ln  Kimberley  will\nasked  to  give  their  names  to one\nBthese committeemen.\n[elson   schedules   during   the   season\nbe the same as last winter,    The\nm   will  open  with  an  elimination\n1,  the  big  prize, being   the   presl-\n's cup, and the club championship\n\u25a0tons.    This will be followed by the\ndown  for  the   annual  supper,\n|tf MITTEES\nimmlttees appointed for the season\n\u25a0embershlp\u2014 J. H. Long, C. E. Mans-\nAlex Lelth,  R. E.  Horton,  T.  W.\nKngham. P. E. Poulin, W. J. Ger-\nht, E. H. Hanley and Howard Bush.\nlies and classification\u2014Dr. E. G.\nth, Howard Bush, C. D. Blackwood,\n:e Douglas,  R.  Andrew and  A.  J..\n-H.   W.   Robertson   and   W.   M.\nJ\u00ab\n\u25a0bv.  James  Youngston  will  be  club\nilaln.\nferees will  Include A,  G.#3ush.  R.\nJames,   Roy  Sharp,   T.   W.   Ledlng-\n\u25a0t, Dr. H. H. MacKenzie and B. An-\nTHREE BASKET\nCaptains   Responsible   for   the\nFloor; Players Must Wear\nRunning Shoes\nThe basketball card in the city league\nagain includes three games today, a\nJunior girls', an Intermediate boys' and\nan  intermediate  girls'  game.\nIn the Junior class, High School \"B\"\nwill tangle with the Convent girls at\nthe Parish hall after school, At 7\no'clock at the high school Nelson Business coMege will battle with High\nSchool girls ln an intermediate league\nmatch, followed by an. Intermediate\nboys game between Wolves \"A\" and\nSkokum Tilllcum boys at 8 o'clock.\nThese games will complete the schedule drawn up recently and a further\nschedule has bee\u00a3 drawn up by Jimmy\nCarter, secretary of the Nelson Basketball association, and has been handed\nto Fred L. Irwin for his approval.\nJimmy Carter has posted a notice ln\nthe auditorium of the high school to\nthe effect that the captains' of the\nteams playing are responsible for the\nfloor while they are using lt and\nshould sec that no one without running sht\/d be allowed on the floor.\n\u25a0nor    Basketball    Match\nWon b\u00a3 Score of\n33-5\nIs\nigh  School  Cadets  romped  to  vic-\n!' over Fairview Athletic olub ln a\nlor league basketball game at the\n1 school last night, winning by a\ne of 33 to 5. Despite the large dif-\nnce tn the scores, the Cadets did not\nJe an easy task on their hands. They\nned to be more sure of their shoot-\nand scored on nearly every shot,\nle FalrvieWs ^hooting was rather\nr.\n\u25a0 uck may have had a little to do\nt Fairview not scoring, for several\n1 the ball rolled around the hoop\n, then, dropped off the wrong side.\n;en as a whole the game was not at']\none-sided as the score would lead\nto believe.   Fairview having posses-\nBof the ball as often as the Cadets.\ncLean proved the star scorer for the\n;ts copping 17 points while Harri-\nnetted   three   points   and   French\npoints for Fairview.   Personal fouls\ncommitted by stirzaker   <2),*Mc-\n., Muraro, Stewart (2), Horswlll and\n\u25a0iualg (2) on the Cadets, and Harri-\n(2), Skinner (S), Bishop and Ren-\non Fairview.\ne teams were:\njadets\u2014-Stlraaker, C. McLean (17), J.\n||faro (6), L. Stewart. (3), P. Sand, B.\nwill OS) and McQualg-\nInlew\u2014F. Harrison (3), L. Skinner,\n[elneczuk, T. Bishop, A. Langlll, M.\nich (3), H. Renwick, H  Curran.\nIntermediate   Basketball   Game\nIs Won by Close Score\nof 6-3\nTrinity Young People went down to\ndefeat by the score 6-3 at the hands of\nHigh School girls ln a hard-fought intermediate league basketball game at\nthe high school last night. Aa the\nscore shows, the teams are fairly well\nmatched, and the game was all that the\nmany fans could desire, ln sportsman\nship, cleanliness and speed.\nJean Coles opened the scoring for\nTrinity with a nicely placed basket,\nwhile Helen Mills dropped ln two baskets and Doreen Bunnett netted one for\nthe High School ln the first half.\nWith the resume of play ln the second half, both teams tightened up on\ntheir checking, and neither were suo\ncesaful in scoring u baske(. Jean Coles\nadded a point for Trinity when she\ndropped the ball 10 on a penalty shot.\n\"Deacon\"  Hanna   refereed.\nThe teams were:\nTrinity\u2014Rose Jeffreys, Rdg Graves,\nJean Cotes (3), Annie Wardale, Jean\nMassey and Edna Fraser.\nHigh School \u2014 Doreen Dunnett (2),\nShirley Bloomer, Edna Buchanan, Helen\nMills (4), Grace Shield, Margaret Cotter and Paula Gansner.\nTITLE AT STAKE\nBalmy   Beach   and   Hamilton\nWill Decide Issue on\nSaturday\nTORONTO, Nov. 24. \u2014 Formulating\nplans and line play's with the purpose\nof smothering the effectiveness of Lead-\nley occupied the attention of Coach\nHobbs as he drilled his Toronto Balmy\nBeach rugby squad at top speed through\na lengthy workout here today ln preparation for their game against the Hamilton Tigers here on Saturday for the\neastern Canada championship.\n\"Stop Leadley\" ls the Beach battle-\ncry. The Ontario Rugby Football union\nchampions' completed ther training\ngrind with today's workout, while the\nTigers did likewise at Hamilton. The\nlatter team rule topheavy favorites to\nwin the championship, owing to the absence of several Beach stars through injuries.\nGold ring was found imbedded tn the\nshoe of a horse at Henniker, N.H.\n[Use an Extra Color for\nLETTERHEADS\nA second color brightens a letterhead and\nstrengthens its advertising value.\nGet our prices on printed envelopes.\nm DAILY NEWS JOB DEPARTMENT\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nPfaNTING\u2014RUWIG-BOOKBINDINC\nONLY ELEVEN AT\nA. A. A. ME\nExecutive Officers AU Present;\nCan Do Nothing Without\nSupport\nSports organizations of NsAson, which\nannually call upon the Amateur Ath'\nletlc association for financial aid, seem'\nlngly are not Interested- ln the association except when wanting money, for\nat the annual meeting ln the city hall\nlast night Just 11 people turned out.\nThe association has over 260 members.\nEven the hockey club, which really\nfinances Nelson sports, was unrepresented.\nIn the face of this lack of support,\nthose present did not feel ln a position to go ahead with \"the election of\nofficers and other business, so the\nmeeting was adjourned for a week.\nThose present were President J. S.\nCarter, Vice-President D. D. Townsend,\nSecretary J. H. Long, Treasurer Jack\nMorris, Rev. W. C. Mawhlnney, E. C.\nHunt, R. Smlllle, J. S.-Donaldson, A.\nM. Banks, R, Burns and R, Bell.\nT\nDarlington,   Bradford,   Lincoln\nExpected to Win; London\nSuffers\nLONDON, Nov. 24.\u2014Association football enthusiasts on Saturday will see\nthe first round proper of the football\nassociation cup competition staged In\nEngland. The teams engaged will be a\nnumber of the small clubs, who have\nadvanced through the qualifying stages\nand the clubs ln the* third division of\nthe English league.\nJhe best games will doubtless be those\nln which third division teams meet.\nThey are: Darlington vs. Chesterfield,\nNelson vs. Bradford, and Accrington\nStanley vs. Lincoln City.\nDarlington, Bradford and Lincoln are\nexpected to win. The draw turned out\nbadly for the .little amateur teams.\nSeven were concerned, and five of them\nhave to play away from home. Leyton.\nthe holders of the amateur cup, must\ntravel to Northampton, where they meet\nthe team which Is at present leading the\naverages ln the southern section of the\nthird division. A win for the amateurs\nls not expected.\nClapton, another fine amateur club,\nhave a better thance as they meet Luton Town, just now in the cellar of the.\nleague table. The professional London\nclubs have also suffered in the draw,\nCharlton Athletic, Crystal Palace and\nQueens Park Rangers all playing away\nfrom home, though against mediocre opponents.\nClowns at Home\nin Big Tent\nBy    AL    UEM.VREE\n(Former   Pitcher   New   York   Giants.)\nNick Altrock ts about the only\nbig league ball player I ever knew\nwho got money for being a clown,\nalthough plenty of clowns have come\nup to the majors and some of them\nhave   stayed   there   for   years.\nThey used to Bay that Altrock kidded Washington Into Its pennant several years ago, and, of course, pennants have been lost because of \"clown\"\nball players, so it Is obvious that the\nclown ls pretty Important ln baseball.\nI have lined up here an all-star\nclown team of the funniest men I\nknew  in baseball.\nlb\u2014Charlie   Grimm.\n2b\u2014Rollie    Zelder.\n3b\u2014Heinle    Zimmerman.\nss\u2014Rabbit  Maranvllle.\nrf\u2014Steve   Evans,\ncf\u2014'\"Christy\" Christianson.\nIf\u2014Cozy   Dolan.\np\u2014Nick  Altrock,   Rube  Waddell .and\nI Bugs Raymond.\n!     c\u2014Larry McLean.\nIf any reader can make up a funnier team than that\" I wilt be glad\nto   give   lt   publicity.\nMinneapolis Defeats\nKansas City Team\nMINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 24.\u2014With speedy\ncombination play and a defence showing\nmid-season form, Minneapolis defeated\nKansas City 3 to 1 in the opening gam- j\nof the American Hockey association season, hart tonight.\nGRID RESULTS\nIN THE STATES\nUNITED STATES FOOTBALL RESULTS\nPenn, 35;   Cornell, 0.\nPittsburgh, 30; Penn State, 0.\nJefferson, 8; West Virginia, 6 (tie).\nGeorgia.  29;   Kentucky, tj.\nTexas Aggies, 28; Texas University. 7\nSouthern Methodist, 28; Texas Christians, 6.\nNebraska, 27; New York University. 18.\nColgate, 0;  Brown, 0\nNorth Carolina States. 34; South Carolina, 0.\nColumbia,  14;  Syracuse, 7.\nNorth Carolina, 14; Virginia, 13\nWashington, 7;   Oregon,  0.\nMarquette, 34; Iowa State, 0.\nUniversity of Detroit, 38; South Dakota States, 0.\nNorth Dakota Aggies. 21;  St. Paul. 0\nFlorida, 2; Washington and Lee, 2.\nKansas Aggies,  IB;  Okalohma  Aggies\n\/\n25\nTORONTO LEAFS\nDEFEAT YANKS\nScore Is 2-1; Yanks Have Not\nYet Won a Contest in\nNational Play\nMADISON SQUARE GARDEN, New\nYork, Nov. 24<\u2014In a Thanksgiving day\ncontest, the Toronto Maple Leafs gave\nthe* New York Americans their third\ndefeat in the National Hockey league by\nthe score of 2 to 1, and the Americans\nare still ln the rankji of the wlnless.\nThere was little to choose between\nthe teams on the night's play. Day gave\nthe Leafs a goal advantage in the first\nperiod when the puck went into the\ngoal under Miller's arm on a long shot.\nMartin, Barry, Montreal recruit, tied\nthe score half way through the second\nperiod, but after Lionel Conacher had\nretired with an Injury to his eye, received tn a collision with Duncan, Bailey\nslapped the puck Into the American net\non a pass from Cox.\nThe Americans had a big margin ln\nthe third period, but were unable to\nscore.\nWhen McCaffery was given a minor\npenalty for loafing behind the blue line,\nthe referee objected to hts back talk.\nand the Toronto defence star had the\npenalty raised to a major.\nLIN El P\nToronto Position Americans\nGoal\nRoach       Miller\nDefence\nDay       Simpson\nGorman     Conacher\nCenter *\nCarson .\u00ab*... \u2022 Hines\nWings\nCox   McKlnnon\nMcCaffery       R.   Green\nSutw.\nRamsay   Bouchard\nDuncan       Barry\nBailey   W. Boucher\nPatterson       \t\nKeeling    \t\nReferees\u2014Mickey Ion and Bill O'Hara.\nSIMMARY\nFirst period\u20141, Toronto, Day, 4:40.\nSecond period\u20142, Americans, Barry,\n10 #7;  3, Toronto, Bailey,  6:18.\nThird period\u2014No score.\nPenalties \u2014 McCaffery (major), Gorman, Patterson, Conancher, Green Batley, Gorman, Patterson, Boucher (2).\nKeeling, Day.\nBRfCKER l!i\nMARATHON RACE\nIs   Second   Successive   Victory\nfor Gait Runner in International Event\nBERWICK, Pa., Nov. 24.\u2014Showing hts\nheels to a field of 37 starters, including\nsome of the best distance runners in\nthe United States and Canada, Clifford\nBrtcker, Gait, Ont., mechanic, won the\nBerwick marathon today for the second\nsuccessive year.\nHis time for the 9'4-mlle, mountain\ncourse, was 48 minutes 23 seconds, 25 *\/_\nseconds behind the record established\nby Willie Ritola ln 1922. In view of the\nrain-soaked and muddy course. Brick -\ner's performance was considered remarkable. John Bell, St. * Bonaventure college, finished second, and Bill Cox, Pennsylvania State college, third.\nJohnny Miles of Sydney Mines, N.S.,\ndid not start In the race. Cox set the\npace for the first two and a half miles,\nbut he could not stand the clip set by\nBrlcker and Bell going up the first of\nthe two long hills and both passed him.\nBrlcker gradually pulled out in the lead\nand retained lt to the end of the long\ngrind. Ten of the starters failed to finish\nT\nElks and C. P. R. Are Winners\nin  Rowling Matches at\nSemaphore\ntins 30 of their points, while McVicar\nran up a total of 17 point, (or his team.\nL. Vance showed up well (or the Cadets,\nwhile the whole team did very well.\nThe teams were:\nBankers\u2014Jimmy Carter (30), Fish, A.\ng|renholtz, H. Farenholtz (5), Realya\n(8), Jones\nCadets\u2014L. Vance (8), D. (Deacon)\nHanna (3), Ted McVicar (17), B Vance\n(1); Horswlll 3), McQualg.\nElks romped to victory over the\nWholesalers last nlgflt ln a City League\nbowling match at the Semaphore, having 139 plna to spare at the end. The\nvictors led all the way through. Increasing their lead a little each (rame.\nNick Cassios. bowling (or the Elks,\nran up the high aggregate of the match\nol 528. and also the high single o( 301.\nThe match between the Wholesalers\nand C-P-R-. whloh was not completed on\nthe night scheduled (or lt, was (lnlshed\nlast night, with the Wholesalers on the\nshort end of a 3003 to 1898 score.\nC. W. Tyler rolled the high aggregate\nln this match o( 5(58 .and also the high\nsingle ot 313.\nThe scores were:\nElks\u2014\nCassios        185    163   301\u2014 538\nLanglll        183    158    145\u2014 483\nDill        189    164    148\u2014 601\nMaber       181   133   193\u2014 506\nTotals     717 614 688\u20143017\nWholesalers\u2014\nFotherlngham     168 163 143\u2014 445\nMcCallum     160 131 117\u2014 398\nBam(orh     138 189 136\u2014 443\nHamson     178 154 184\u2014 498\nHandicap    \u201e.\u2014 104\nTotals     639 698 559\u20141888\nC. P. B.\u2014\nTyler     173 173 313\u2014 668\nHlnitt     143 167 177\u2014 488\nBrake     146 174 131\u2014 477\nAllan     190 180 131\u2014481\n\t\nTotals     660 674 678\u20143003\nWholesalers\u2014\nFotherlngham     133 150 154\u2014 436\nMcCallum     146 138 143\u2014 416\nBamtord        157 173 165\u2014 494\nHamson     169 128 157\u2014 454\nHandicap    \u2014 104\nTotals       603   578   619\u20141898\nTHE HIGH CADETS\nClose   Intermediate   Rasketball\nGame   Ends  With   the    ,\nScore 33-30\nIn the hardest, most strenuously\nfought, fastest and, perhaps, cleanest\ngame so far In the city basketball league,\nthe Bankers defeated the High School\nCadets, 33-30, in an Intermediate league\nfixture at the high school last night\nThe game was crammed full of speed\nfind action from the ffrst blast of the\nwhistle and created lots o,f excitement\nfor the large crowd which witnessed it.\nThree times the score was tied and it\nwas Just the Cadets' bad luck that the\nend should come when the Bankers had\ngained a three-point lead.\nPersonal fouls were few and far between, only six being committed by the\ntwo teams. McVicar, Fish, Freno and\nRealya each offended once and McVicar\ntwice In this respect.\nCarter starred for the Bankers, net-\nAIR RAIDERS MOP\nCORNELL RUGGERS\nPHILADELPHIA, Nov. 24\u2014 Launching\na series of bombs that came out of\nthe sky with particularly devastating\neffect ln the second period, Pennsylvania's Air Raiders mopped up Cornell today by the one-sided score of\n36 to 0 before a colorful Thanksgiving\nday   crowd   of   76,000.\nPennsylvania scored five touchdowns,\nfour of them ln a second period drive\nthat had Cornell's defence completely\ndemoralized.\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL RESULTS\nLONDON,   Nov.  24.\u2014Results  of  football games played today were:\nSOCCER\nCambridge  University,  0;   Arsenal,  4.\nRUGBY\nOxford   University,   14;   Trinity   College Dublin, 8.\nCOUNTY   CHAMPIONSHIP\nEastern   Counties,   3;   Hampshire,   6,\nat Wastead.\nDULUTH HORNETS\nBLANK MAROONS\neluding flatlcuff.* during Um third period.\nIn the laat period, Johnson and Range\nwere the principals ln a miniature boxing bout. They each got 10 minute penalty and after the gong renewed hostilities, but were quickly separated.\nGULTY SER10LS OFFENCE\nOSHAWA, Ont., Nov. 24\u2014Harvey W.\nElliott, former official of the Oshawa\nChildren's SheRer and Children's Aid\nsociety, was found guilty of a serious\ncharge concerning a young boy who had\nbeen under hts care, by Judge Ruddy ln\npolice court here today. Elliott originally faced 13 charges of misconduct, but\nwas acquitted on one of them yesterday. He waa remanded in custody until\nnext Monday. There are still 11 charges\nto be disposed of. Notice of appeal waa\nentered by his counsel.\nFive rabbits are limit for one day during hunting season ln Ohio.\nDULUTH, Minn, Nov. 24.\u2014Duluth\nHornets, American Hockey association\nchampions, defeated the Wlnnlpef Maroons 2 to 0 ln the opening game of\nthe 1927-28 season here tonight. It was\na fast match with plenty of thrills, In-  \\^\nCHRISTMAS\nGIFT\nSUGGESTIONS\nFOR THE\nSMOKER\nPipes, Clgafs, Tobaccos, Cigarettes, Cigarette Cases and Tabes,\netc.. etc.\nBILLIARDS\nBOWLING\nIf tjou're hard\nto please,\nOVIDO\nCONGRESS 10<\ngj CLUB SELECTION 2 for25^   SP0QTSMAN 15<\nAustralian Ruggers    H\t\nWitt Try Welshmen;\nBeat the helanders\nLONDON, Nov. 24.\u2014Having conquered\nIreland the New South Wales rugby\nteam on Saturday will advance on Wales.\nThe match will be played at Cardiff. The\nWelsh team chosen to meet the Waratahs will be:\nT. Reese, E. Pinch, Roy Jones, John\nRoberts, Rowe Harding, Tal Harris,\nWindsor Lewis, L. Dowdier, A. Brough -\nton, T. Holltngdale, D, Jenkins, E. Jenkins, Iypr Jones, Yorwerth Jones. H.\nPhillips.\nChildren's Aid Society\nDraws on Coast Business\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 34.\u2014Ten thousand\nlocal business men today received\nthrough their banks draft* for 81 each\nsent out by the Children'! Aid society\nseeking  funds.\n \u2014.\u2014 a\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb^((waa^\u00abaa^aws.....aaswawa.aasaaaaasaaMassaaaBsiBswas\u00bbaaaSBMaasM\u00abaBaassl\nThis advertisement is not published-or tfesy rayed by the Liquor Control Board or by th\u00ab\"\nGovernment of British Columbia.\n 'Page Eight\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1927\nIt it important to get rid\nof a cough or cold\u2014it\nis just as important to\nprevent its return.\nOWBRIDGE'S does\nboth. Get a bottle today.\nITS ROMMTIC\nSTORY\nA World  Search for Rare\nMedicinal Herbs.\nIt is not commonly known that\ncountries so far apart as China\nand Spain, Japan and England,\nand Tasmania and France have\nto be searched for the fpecies of herbs\nused in the manufacture of that world'\nfamed healing balm ZAM-BUK. These\nherbs are. many of them, rare and costly.\nThey need tobe(jath#red just at the riftht\n' season when their juices and medicinal\ncontents are at tiieir very best.\nC<sthiriiig medicinal\nherbs tn   Tasmania\nZam-buk is tlie irue successor of the\nherbal healing balms of Ancient Rome;\nwith this important advantage Zam-buk,\nin addition to us rare herbal composition,\nhas twentieth-century medical knowledge and manufartuiinn skill, to bring it\nto a pitch of perfection, probably never\nequalled in the annals of healing.\nThe different medicinal qualities In\nZam-buk are beautifully balanced. The\nhealing side with tlie antiseptic, tbe\nsoothing with the germicidal; it is\npenetrative yet not too stimulating, and\nhas just the right lubricity for removing\nsuperficial swellings, sprains and pains.\nThus Zam-buk is a useful, reliable,\nand highly-concentrated, medicinal\ndressing always ready to instantly soothe\npain, swiftly allav swelling and inflammation, expel deep Res:ed disease, and\ngrow new healthy skin Moreover, users\nof Zam-buk have parfscl iontidence\njwhich alone comes from the knowledKS\nthat it is a relined herbal preparation and\nnot an artificial omtr.ient lomposed of\npore-clogging fats and crude drugs.\nZam-bult is invaluable ifl all itching.\nInflamed, and diseased conditions of the\nskin, whilst its swift antiseptic healing\nmakes it the ideal tirsi-aid dressing fot\nburns, scald', cuts, etc. It is also the\nsoothing remedy for piles Of dealers\neverywhere 50c the bo* : 3 for Jl 25, or\nZam-buk Co,, Dupont bt.. Toronto.\nB\nEXPECTANT\nMOTHERS\nRead Mrs. Menard's Letter.\nHer Experience May Help\nChatham, Ontario.\u2014\"I want to tell\nrou how much good your medicine\n^jhas done me. Before my baby\nj came 1 felt so\nweak and run-\n' down that I could\nhardly  do my\nj work.    My head\n\\ ached continually\nj and I was so dis-\nI couraged that I\n1 could cry from\nmorning till night\nJ I had another\n I baby just one year\n1 audit gave me a lot to\ndo. Bo I thought I would try Lydia\nE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,\nas I had read so much about it in the\nlittle books. I found a difference right\naway as my head was relieved and\nmy tired feelings gone. My sister\nhad been doing mjr washing and she\ncontinued doing it, as she said it\nmight set me back if I started to do\nit again. It sure did help me and I\nhad taken just two bottles when my\nbaby came. He is a fine big boy,\nnow nearly fire months old. I am\ntaking your medicine again and I am\nable to do my work all by myself now.\nI always recommend tbe Vegetable\nCompound to women, and especially\nto expectant mothers, as I believe\nthey need help at those times.\"\u2014\nMrs.Ouvxa MenajU), 24 Harvey St.,\n..ftim Ontario. c\nS*   l  \u2014 \u25a0\nTECK HUGHES\nYERR IS LftRGE\nOperating   Profits   on   Ontario\nProperty   Over   Million\nand Half\nThe Teclc-Hugbes report lor tbe year\nended October 31st shows operating\nprofits of (1,058,363 against (751,633 the\nprevious year. Total surplus account ls\nIncreased from $1,626,069 to (1,929.062.\nProduction for the year was $2,105,545\nfrom 114,765 tons, or an average of $18.35\nper ton against $1,461,367 from 79,564\ntons the previous year, or an average of\n$18.37 per ton. Costs, however, were cut\nfrom $8.80 to $8.41. Indicated earnings per share are roughly 21 cents\nagainst 16 cents the previous year,\nBroken ore reserves have been doubled.\nFK1 SlllKM'S    ADDRESS\n\"The policy to be pursued Is one\nof exploitation of deeper levels through\nthe sinking of the central shaft,\" said\nPresident Charles L. Denlson, \"and as\na result of the building and development\nprogram cited and now hearing completion, the net Income from operations\nshould show a further substantial Increase ln the immediate future.\n\"The central shaft, commenced over\ntwo years ago, has been carried to the\n19th level (2350 feet below surface)\nDevelopment has proceeded without Interruption at levels 11,' 12 and 13, and\nlt Is gratifying to note the size of the\nore bodies and the grade of ore encount\nered. During the year stations have\nbeen cut at levels 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 and\n19. ao far, development work of any\nconsiderable extent haB been confined\nto drifting at levels 14 and 15. Little\nmore than station cutting and equipping the same has been accomplished\nat the lower levels. All of this work\nhas been completed with little delay\nand closely on schedule.\n\"Above ground, during the period\nof this report two new mill units of\n150 tons each have been completed\nand put Into operation, one ln February\nand the other ln August. They have\nworked to perfection, are economical to\noperate and are accounting for a great\ndeal better recovery than was possible\nwith the old plant. The further enlargement of the mill by 300 tons daily\ncapacity, authorized last spring, has advanced to such a point that I may safely predict its completion and readiness\nfor operation by the end of December.\"\nAt August 31, 1927, the mine had\na combined total of 43,273.8 lineal feet\nof workings, according to Mr. Forbes.\nDEVELOPMENT WORK *\n\"Development work produced 7052\ntons of ore that was treated In the mill,\n188 tons of ore that was stockpiled and\n19,175 tons of waste rock that was\ndumped on surface,\" he continued. \"The\ngreater part of this work was In connection with the central shaft.\n\"The experience of the flrBt 1600 feet\nof depth has proven the presence of\npoor horizons alternating with good\nones, consequently the safest provision\nfor the future lies In extensive development and exploration work done ln\nconjunction with a scale of operation\nthat will permit the prosecution of such\ndeep level work without unbearably\nheavy expense having to be apportioned\nagainst the tonnage mined and treated.\n\"About all that can be said, pending the development of the new levels,\nis that the intersections Bhow excellent\nwidths and grades near the shaft on\nsome of the levels and not so good on\nothers, but the presence of a 12-foot\nwidth of high-grade ore at a depth of\n2230 feet from surface ls very encouraging and undoubtedly means that the\ndepth at which good ore will be found\nis considerably greater than that of the\n19th level.\n\"New ore of fair grade and tonnage\nwas found In the western part of the\nmine on the 11th, 12th and 13th levels\nand also on the 6th and 7th levels. No\nfurther considerable quantity of new\nore, ls expected on any of the levels\nabove the 9th.\nORE EXTRACTED\n\"As a result of the year's mining operations, the tonnage of ore extracted\nwas more than replaced ln reserves of\nblocked and broken ore, while the quantity of broken ore ln reserves was approximately doubled.\n\"For the $561,091.63 spent on plant\nand other construction work during the\nfiscal year, the entire operation has\nbeen greatly Improved ln efficiency and'\nmore than doubled ln capacity. Half of\nthe first 300-ton unit of the new mill\nwas placed in operation last February,\nwhile the full unit went into operation\nin August. The construction of a second 300-ton unit was commenced last\nMay and is expected to be finished before the end of 1927. A 10-ton capacity\npilot flotation and cyanide treatment\nplant is also under construction and\nwill soon be ready for test work on high-\ngrade ore from deep levels.\nORE TREATMENT\n\"The existing method of ore treatment ln the new mill, which Is based\non extremely fine grinding In cyanide\nsolution, has given remarkably good\nresults, but it ls possible that even better\nresults might fee obtained by some modification of the existing process and the\npilot plant is designed as a means of\ntrying out new processes without disturbing the regular mill operation. By\nthe end of the year the total milling capacity will be Increased to 850 tons per\nday and continue at this rate on mine\nore until the upper level ore tributary\nto No. l shaft and the old mill ts exhausted. This ls expected in about one\nmore year. The old mill will then be\nadapted to the work of retreatment of\nthe richer tailings discharged from It\nand Impounded during the past five\nyears.\"\nAll of the above statements, of course,\nrefer to the period ended August 31.\nSince that time, reports coming from\nthe mine have been most encouraging,\nand lt ls rumored locally that the interim review of progress to be given at\nthe annual meeting, which will be held\nat Buffalo at 1:30 p.m. on December\n2nd, will show that results have been\nbetter as drifting proceeded.\nGet Weight on Your\nSkinny Body\nNew YEAST\nwith IRON adda\npounds of\nweight\nQuick results\u2014'\nor pay nothing\nPrize Cattle at\nToronto Sells at\nExcellent Prices\nData,  and\nTORONTO, Nov. 24.\u2014Today's sale of j\nmarket cattle and swine which was the\nconcluding feature of the agricultural |\nend of the Royal Winter fair proved a j\ngreat success.\nAll prices for market cattle were\nshattered when the grand champion:\nsteer of the show, a Shorthorn Choice j\nU. A. bred and exhibited by the Uni- j\nverslty of Alberta, went to the T. Eaton company for $1.60 per pound or at\ntotal   of $2219.25.\nThe reserve grand champion, a Here'\nford, exhibited by M. J. O'Brien, Renfrew, Ont., brought almost as much,\nbeing sold to the Canadian packing\ncompany who bought him for the Mc\nCann company, Pittsburgh, Pa., for $1.56\nper pound or at a total of $1700.40.\nThe Aberdeen-Angus champion, exhibited by the University of Alberta,\nweighed 1485 pounds and sold to the\nsame buyer at BO'\/fc cents. No first prize\nanimals Bold for less than 15c per pound\nThe grand champion Barrow of the\nshow, a Yorkshire, exhibited by J. E.\nBrethout and nephew, of Burford\nbrought the top price when the William Devles company, bid 29e.\nThe three big groups of market swine\nthat gained second, third and fourth\nprizes ln the car lot, for the Manitoba.\nNew Brunswick and Saskatchewan Swine\nBreeders' association all sold for  ll%c.\nW;:*i:\nfooads underwticbt, save a\n'-1-rxion, tue easily and bar*\n\u2014 you need thtjood solid\n_ beslthfal Tifor that JKmZBg\nYEAST can *fw. With IKONIZBD YEAST\nrtkmMndi of mm and women hart built them-\nMlrca up fren skinny weakling* to atronf,\nhealthy ptopft.   tt can do the warn* foe yon.\nyon Nfd Ymtut to Gain Weight\nIRONIZED YSA.ST it two ionics tn on* -\nweight-buUdiac Yeast and atrenitheaiof boa.\nThe yeast la fib* mine used in makiu malt,\ntod which aukatSMlt bo beneficial.\nThis yaaat is treated wtth iron taken from\nmat*\nIn this\nbody,\nTcweteblas\u2014*pinach, lettuce and diary.\ns form Iron U easily asilmilated by tha\n' rich, red blood tad tonins na\nINHTANTLYL   hill III\nWINNIPEO, Nov. 24.\u2014CharleB Pier-\nson, employed at the gravel pits near\nHigh Bluff, Man., was Instantly killed\ntoday by a premature explosion of a\ncharge of dynamite.\nDODD'S \\\n^KIDNEY;\nOnly whan Ymst is Iramiad ia Una way ia\nit mart eaectlrw\u2014for Iron ia needed to bring\nout tha WakhtbwfldlLU valuer of Yaaat. By\nthitlormuU mONKED YEAST tin* von\ntfsahs in half th* time required by ywur\nand iron taken separately.\nNo wonder yon get pounds of solid flesh in 2\nter 3 weeks aad look more attractive aad\nyouthful Begin to get this new waiabt today by\n(.ntting IKOftUKD YEAST from tha dnwjst.\nSee how it toast n> the blood, brings itranfth\naad ricamaa tota\u00ab blood. Ugly pimplei wu*\niand yon ftt a oka, healthy color. DtORIZKD\nYEAST tablets are piea&ant-taatinf\u2014SO to a\n[bottle.   Safe for everybody.   Dom not apeat\n'tbe stomach, mot cause gas or bloating.\nResults from flrat treatment\n\u2014or your money back '\nGet just a single com\ndruggiat today.   II   y<\nsatisfied with the weight and health\nmoney for tbe bottle will b>- promptly r\nIf inconvenient to buv at the rlruggj\ntreatment from your\nnot absolutely\n1th benefits,\nrefunded.\n|US to the CANADIAN   IfcONTZgE YEAST\nCO.. Ltd, fort Km. Out., Desk   ll0a\nCANADIAN I,. PACIF.L\nSAILINGS\nFROM WINTER PORT, ST. JOHN\n.CHRISTMAS SHIPS\u2014\nI December 6\nI December 8\n| December 14\nj December 15 .\n..Montclare\n.Montrose\nMontnalrn\nMontcalm\nto livkkpool\nDecember 22*    Melita\nDecember 30* \u2022      Minnedosa\nJanuary     6*    , Montrose\nJanuary   13    Montcalm\nJanuary   20\" '\u2022    Mellta\nJanuary   21**    Minnedosa\nFebruary   3'    Montclare\nFebruary 10\"     Metagama\nFebruary 17*   .   .  Mellta\nFebruary 24* Minnedosa\n*\u2014Calls at Glasgow  (Greenock).\n\u2022\u2022\u2014Calls at Belftftt.\nAnd regularly thereafter\nI Use Canadian Pacific Express Travellers' Cheques Papable Everywhere. ,\ni     Berth reservation  can now be made.\nI Ask about the new Tourist Third Cabin.\nFull details with lutes from any Agent,\nor write\nJ. S. t  \\KTI.K\nI   District Passenger Agent. Nelson. B.C.\nyhrisfinas\nathome\nv\nSEE again the green hedges *\nand clustered copses of the Old Land, i\nthe spreading oaks, and the wolds, moors\nand downs so dear to native sons.\nSpecial Christmas Sailings\nFrom Halrfaa ANTONIA Dec.   5 To Ply, Havre, London.'\n\"    St. John, N.B. ATHENIA Dec. It \" Belfast. L'po.1, Glaa.\n\"     Halifax ATHENIA Dec. 11 \" Btlfast. L'pool, Glaa.\n\u00ab    H.lifai ASCANIA Dec. 12 \" Ply., Havrt, London.\n,    . Return ocean jares from S15S\nFor farther information ask nearest agent or writ.\n'SERVICE\nand\nCf   CANADIAN*I\n*8g8eW*\u00bb\nTHE   CUNARD    STEAMSHIP   CO..   LIMITED\n622   Halting.  St.  W..  Vancouver,\nor  any steamship agent\nClassified\n1I Advertising\nHelp Wanted\nPositions WuteJ\nUst tnd Font\nUiuteck\nFaurn Product\nTimber ud VEam\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant and Clawtfled Adrarttsun' \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per insertion. If paid it; advance, 6c per word\nper week, or 22 %c per word per month.\nTransient ed\u00bb accepted only on a caah-\nin-advance basis. Each Initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc., counts as ous word.\nMinimum 25c, if charged 50c.\nXsocal Ksadlnr Hottoas \u2014 Three cents\nper -word each Insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4e per word.\nBlaokface capitals 6c a word. Twenty-\nfive per-cent discount If run dally without change of copy for one month or\nmore, -where advertisement Is set out\nIn short lines the charge is 16c a line\nfor Roman type, 20c for blackface and\n26c for blackface capitals, . Minimum\n36c, If charged 60c.\nCards\u2014Three cents per word; 50c minimum.\nBirth .WotJoetv-Free.\nHelp Wanted\nWANTED\u2014A nursemaid.   Apply Room 4,\nHume Hotel. (3020)\nWANTED\u2014Men, mechanically Inclined\nwho would like to work at the world'*\ngreatest paying Industry, Auto mechanics, garate work, electrical ex\nperts, welding, battery and vulcanising. We guarantee to train you to\nqualify for trig pay positions. Only a\nshort time required. Write or call\nHemphill's Auto Engineering School\n10 Hastings St. B., Vancouver, B.C.\nt (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 10, Zlnoton P.O.\n(3131)\nCOOK WANTED\u2014Victorian hospital of\nKaslo. Wages $60.00 per month and\nboard.    Apply  B-   F-  Palmer,  Secre-\n' tary, Kaslo, B.C. (3147)\nWOMAN  WANTS  WORK  BY HOUR \u2014\nPhone 668L, mornings. (3156)\nWANTED\u2014Oood  general help.    Address\n14, Rossland, B.C.  (3172)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's   Apartments._ (1805)\nFURNI8HED   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOMS\n\u2014Over Poole Drug.    (3064)\nLive Stock for Sale\nPOR SALE \u2014 Holsteln -Ayrshire cow,\nheavy milker. Just freshened; T. B.\ntested.   Oansner, Taghum.        (8111)\nTHE BRITANNIA PUR FARM will have\nsome nice young foxes for sale in the\nspring for fall delivery. Book early\nto avoid disappointment. Reasonable\nterms arranged on application to\nCommander Powles, or the manager,\nMr. Bertram Rutherford, Wilmer, B.C.\n(3163)\nGRAND BREEDING BOAR, eighteen\nmonths, York Berk; alss one brood\nsow. bred; 6-weeks-old piga, Alex\nChcyne, Erie. (3173)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\nNOTICE   OF APPLICATION FOR  DEER\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 Pinehurst Inn, situate at\nSouth Slocan, B.C., upon the lands described as Parcel 2 of Block \"B\" of Lot\n303, Group 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.\ne\u00bbm\nProperty For Sale\n.\"it;\nThat depends. Suppose we say\nat 60. How much will you have\nsaved  by   than?\nOnly three men ln 100 save\nenough to retire comfortably at 60.\nAnd about two out of three do lt\nbecause they have put part of\neach year's earnings slnto 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(3138)\nTHE GREATEST PRODUCING STRAWBERRY FARM ln Kootenay at bargain price. Sickness and old age compels owner's retirement. Bare opportunity for profitable Investment and\nan Ideal home for a large family.\nFrom five to ten thousand dollars\ncash would handle It. For particulars,\naddress O. J. Wlgen, Wynndel, B.C.\n(3069)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nFOR SALE\ni SILVER BLACK FOXES\u20143 registered, 3 not registered, together\nwith 4 pens and kennels. The\nabove will be sold cheap. Apply\nW. McKav, Rossland, B.C., Box 742.\n(3144)\nFOR SALE\nBird, Cage and Stand, Chesterfield and\nChair, Wicker Table, Ruga, Light\nFixture, Curtains, Stoves, Refrigerator, Gas Plate, Gas Top Oven,\nCongoleum Rugs, Dishes, etc.,\nSimons Walnut Bed and Spring.\nApply Box 3169, Daily Ncwb, or\ncall at 30& Carbonate street.\n(3169)\nBARRELS, KEG8 AND EMPTY  sacks\n\u2014McDonald Jam Company, Neliion.\n(1306)\nPIPE\u2014We have a quantity of one-inch\npipe for sale; In new condition, Nelson Iron Works, Ltd. (1307)\nGAS AND COAL COMBINATION RANGE\n\u2014Some furniture. 120 Hall Mines\nRoad.      * (31*D\nMOVING TO NEW PREMISES \u2014 We\nhave several slightly used machines\nto be Bold at snap prices at \u00bb3 per\nmonth. Singer Sewing Machine Company. (3137)\nFOR SALE\u2014One Watrous boiler, 60 x 14,\n120 lbs. steam pressure, with stack\nand fittings, 1500 f.o.b. cars. Apply\nto Chas. O. Rodgers, Creston, B.C.\n(3164)\nFor Sale or Rent\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u2014012 Edgewood\nAvenue. Most desirable location. One\nof the most comfortable homes In\nNelson. Three bedroomB. Bathroom\nJust done over. Apply Sheriff's Office,\nCourt flouse. (3121)\nAutomobiles\nFOR 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 1026, Nelson News.\n(3168)\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\nSteam Laundry.  (31S9)\nLOST \u2014 Watch, between Hendryx and\nSilica on Ward street. Finder please\nreturn to Daily News.   Reward. (3171)\nLOST\u2014Airedale pup, 7 months.\n309R2.\t\nPhone\n(3176)\nFor Rent\nFURNISHED   OR   UNFURNISHED\nHOUSE \u2014 Hot water heated.     Phone\n\u2022 79L,  (8015)\nFOR   RENT   \u2014   Rooms,   private   home.\nPhone 669L, mornings. (3167)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nSELL OR EXCHANGE, good house, 106\nacres, cheap. Want live stock, machinery or other property. Box 3008.\nDally News,        (3008)\nLive Stock Wanted\nGOOD AYRSHIRE COW\u2014Quiet; give\nmilk record of last milking period.\nFisher, Port Crawford. (3090)\nRoom and Board\nWANTED\u2014Room    with    piano.    Appfl\nBox 3128, Daily News. (310T\nMiscellaneous\nWANTED\u2014Clean   cotton   raga.\nDaily News.\t\nAppi\nIrmrt\nSchools\nMOLER BEAUTT COLLBOB\nMOST SUCCESSFUL COLLEGE ON\nTHE CONTINENT\nExpert Instructors In all branches \u00ab\u25a0\nBeauty Culture, Including Water Was\nIng and Permanent Waving. Terml\nMoler, 10 Hastings St E., Vancnuvel\nX USltf\nMEN AND WOMEN LEAJtN BARBEI\nING\u2014Expert Instructors in one of O\nbent  paying  businesses.     Earn   wal\n?ou   learn   and   become   lndependen\nall   or   write   Moler   Barber   Collesj\n10 Hastings St. E., Vancouver. B.C.\nTELL your wants  through  The Dftt\nNews class!fled  columns.\nPoultry and Eggs\nFOR SALE\u2014Two splendid purebn\nbronze turkey gobblers, hatched Mi\n10th. $10 each. Bertie Qarr, Cresto\nB.C. . fSllI\nBusiness Opportunities\nMUSKRAT AND BEAVER FARM\u2014Or\nhalf share ln the above. About\nacres enclosed by solid galvanized Ire\nfence. Next winter expect about 70(\nrats and some bejswer. Apply to J. i\nPowles, R.N., Britannia Fur Fan\nWilmer, B.C, Well worth lnvestl*\ntlon.  . ; (3l3|\nGREAT BARGAIN\u2014For  sale, apartmei\nblock,  center  city  of  Revelstoke.\nrooms,    furnished    throughout.    Bf\nbuy In B.C.   Price only $6750.   Terra\nOwner, Arthur Jones, Revelstoke.\n (3141\nCLASSIFIED ails bring results quick\nand economically,    l'^c a word.\nProperty Wanted\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014Small farm, Krtl\nrunning water If possible. Apply Bt\n3132. Dally News^  (3H\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nAssayers\nE.   W.   WIDDOWSON,   Box   A1108,   Nl\nsod, B.C.    titandara western charm\n(131\nAccounting\nCHARLES T. KTTHXSS\u2014\nAuditor,    MacDonald    Jut    BulKta\nBox 1191. Nelson, B.C. (13J:\nPiano Tuning\nEXPERT   PIANO   TONER\u2014L.   Sinfl\nton; Phone 201; Mason at Kiscb.\nTransfer\nWH.1IAKS'    TrIhSPEK\nCoal  and Wood.   Phone  106\nBaiMa\nWood Working Factory;\nUWMI \u2014 Baker  St.  Carpenter al\nJoiner. Screens and Hardwood.    (131\nInsurance and Real Estat\nB.  W.  DAWSON\u2014\nB.al E.tat., Xninranc, Bwitalp, An\nable Blk. P.O. Box 733.  Phone 197.\n(191\nVI, DIXT.\u2014IBTSmtAjrOE,\nTASK AWD   CITY PBOPEBTY\n 608 Ward Street. (131\nChiropractors\nTOX. OBAY, OI1KBB BXX. \u2014 Phone\nOff. 116, Res. 5J1Y. Hrs.: 10-12 ai\n2-5.   Saturday. 9:30-13. (181\nFlorists\nauniLin   obeerhouses,  n<\n\u25a0on.  Cut flowera and floral design!\n(181\nWM. I. JOBKTSOM\u2014\nPhoae   342.      Cut   Flower..    Pott\nPlants and Floral Emblems.      (131\nWholesale\nA. MAODOMAI.D k CO.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers end ProTl.lc\nMerchants, Importers of Teas, Cot\nfees. Spices. Dried Fruits. Staple at\nFancy Crooenes, Nelson. B.C. (18ft\nEngineers\nA. H.  OBEBN  CO.\u2014COBTBACTOB*\nFormerly Oreen Bros., Burden,  Nelso\nCl.ll ud Mining- EnsinMn\nB.C., Alberta and Dominion Land\nS. DAWSON\u2014Land snrr.Tor,\nMinlnr and Civil BnfflnMV\nKaslo. B.C. (18J1\nFuneral Directors\n0m\n\u2022Standard Famltan\nCo. \u2014 Undertakeri\nAuto Hearse, up^t<\nlate chapel. Bei\n-wj services. Price\nW reasonable^ (BM1\nreasonable.     (1SH<\n ll>15\n^MHH\n \t\nTHB NELSON DULY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 26, 1927\nPagiJtfiar<\nMarkets\nI [Teck Hughes in Stamp;  Hollinger Gains; Wright Har-\ngreayes Is Unchanged\nTORONTO, Nov. 34.\u2014Trading on the\nStandard Mining exchange got back to\nnormal levels today and the volume ot\n\u25a0alts at 3,307,000 shares. waa more in\nlint with what hod been transacted prior\nto the flurry of last week. ^^^~\nSeveral of the Kirkland Lake issued\nwen very weak, although impressive re*\ncoveries were made during the laat hour.\nLake Shore dropped to $26.50 and finished at \u202225.80, off 96c. Teck Hughes\nslumped to 910.7S and rallied to 111.18,\n27c lower. Wright Hargreaves closed at\n\u26667.08 unchanged. ,\nHollinger made up a gain of 18c to\n\u202217.46, but Mclntyre eased SOc to \u00bb27,60.\nVipond lost 7Hc at 80c. Crown Reserve declined 3^c to 01c and Barry\nHollinger 10c to \u2022120. Amity Copper\nwas steady at 44'^c.\nToronto Mines\nBid\nAsked\n1 4.80\nAconda .*.      .84\n.88\nSift\n.40\nCutis         .80\n.84\n.91\n4.70\nCapitol    _       .2014\n.21\n14.00\nOold Hill          38ri\n.18\nHolly      17.30\n17.88\nKirkland Lake    , 3.48\n2.60\n.80\nMclntyre   ,    27.00\n27.60\n4.25\n6.80\nUlplssln*         8.80\nNoranda      28.00\n2.40\nTeck Hugb.es     11.10\n11.20\nTlmlskamlng    09\n.12\n7.1B\n.17\nCent. Man. Mines       1.77\n1.79\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPEO.   Nov.  24\u2014 Dominion   war\n| Issue prices:\nWar     loans\u20141931,    8101.75;      1937.\n18108.10.\nVictory     loans\u20141927.     |J0O; .    1933.\n18105.95;   1944.   1104.68b.   8104.85a;   1937,\n8110.78.\nWar loan renewals\u20141922. 8103.35.\nRefunding loans\u20141928. 8100.16:   1943,\n(8104.55b. 8104.80a: 1844. 8101.60b,\n8101.70: 1940. 8101.70b, 8101.75a: 1946.\n(101.60b, 8101.76a.\nBrazilian Mounts and Closes at\nGain; British American\nOil Leads\nTORONTO, Nov. 24.\u2014Witt the New\nYork stock exchange closed operations\non the Toronto stock exchange today\ndisplayed an uneasy tone wtth regard\nto  many  Issues. \u2022\nBrazilian went to a high of 214 vi\nand cloaed at 218, up 1%. Canadian\nCanners had a gain of four to 90,\nthough the preferred stock dropped\nV, to 111 Vs. International Nickel\nshowed very light trading, but closed\nup   Vi   at   87%.\nBritish American Oil led the oil\nsection in activity, the closing sale\nwaa at 36. MoColl Brothers closed\ndown ay. at 67%. Imperial OU closed\ndown  Va   at 69%.\nAlberta Pacific Grain closed V, ddwn\nat 68. The high for the' day was\n57% and the low 56.\nDominion Bridge bad a gain of 2Vs\nto 88%. Goodyear Tire common showed\na gain of 4 to 129. while the preferred\nstock closed Vi up at 104 V,.\nSeveral   Issues,  Including  Dominion Bridge, Close at\nNew High Levels\nTORONTO. Nov. 24.\u2014Following are\nthe bank clearings for principal Canadian banking centers for the week\nending today with a comparative statement for the same week a year ago\nWeek. 1926   Week. 1927\nHalifax  8.2,836.763   8 2.977.965\nSaint  John        2.432.204       2,426,929\nMoncton          889,331 997.740\nSherbrooke 822.278 975,273\nQuebec         6,460,541       7,482,617\nMontreal         117,612,114    147,076,485\nOttawa         6,855,100       8,174,902\nKingston             775,414 889,280\nPeterboro 802,664 886,632\nToronto 109,847,384    153,269,681\nHamilton            5,839,585\nBrantford        1.094,873       1,279.391\nLondon 3,142,140       4,642.209\nChatham 727,538      \t\nFort  William  . 905,413        1.208,702\nWinnipeg      76480,905     88.332,692\nBrandon 747,509 387,484\nRegina        a 6,268,545        7,268,808\nMoose   Jaw           1,895,714        1,948.435\nPrince  Albert   ....      436,144 562.801\nLethbridge         912,382\nEdmonton 5,240,107        0,981,876\nCalgary        9,491,800     14.385.132\nMedicine Hat        364,373 662,319\nNew     Westminster           711.807 769.466\nVancouver     18,189,800      18,365,363\nVictoria        1,806.936       2,59\"4,414\n ^\t\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Nov. 24. \u2014 Eggs and\ncheese firm, butter easier.\nCheese \u2014 Finest westerns 20 ^c to\n21 y4 c.\nButter \u2014 No. 1 pasteurized 37^c to\n38 y, c.\nEggs\u2014Storage extras 45c to 46c, firsts\n42c to 43c, seconds 39c to 4Qc, fresh extras 73c, fresh firsts 00c.\nKOOTENAY BOND & INVESTMENT CO.. LIMITED\nINVESTMENT   SECURITIES\nGOVERNMENT BRITISH  COLUMBIA,\nMUNICIPAL  AND ONTARIO,  MANITOBA\nINDUSTRIAL AND QUEBEC MINING\nBONDS STOCKS\nHOME OFFICE, TRAIL, B.C.\nmovement of values was carried on in\ntoday's trading on the Montreal stock\nexchange, with* several issues being\nelevated to new high levels, forced\nsome recessions from the hlghs of the\nday, but prices generally closed higher.\nBrazilian reassumed the active leadership. It closed at 211ft (ex-dlvldend)\nfor a net gain of %, after having sold\nup to the new high of 214 <ex-divl-\ndend). Dominion Bridge closed at the\nnew high of 05, for a net gain of\n3% points. National Breweries closed\nat 109 for a net loss of Mi after having\nsold at tbe new high of 110)<j.\nOgilvie was the strong feature, closing at 142 (ex-dlvldend) for a net gain\nof 17*4 points. Ths greatest loss was\nsuffered by Consolidated Smelting\nwhich closed at 201% for \u25a0 net loss\nof   3ft   points.\nAlberta Grain reached a high of\n67% on early trading but receded to\n56%, a loss of lft; Fraser preferred\nreached tbe new high of 183 and closed\nat that price, up seven points; Spanish River closed at 138 ft, up one\npoint.\nTotal sales 61,703 shares; bonds, 149,-\n200.\nClosing Quotations at Montreal\nBank, of Montreal  *  328\nRoyal Bank  \u201e  313\nAbitlbl  Power &  Paper    XV%\nAbitibl power &  Paper, pfd  124\nAsbestos  Corporation       85ft\nAsbestos  Corporation,   pfd    94ft\nAtlantic  Sugar    98\nAtlantic   Sugar,  pfd    90\nBell Telephone    151\nBrit. Columbia Fishing      14ft\nBrazilian  T-  L.   H  Power     811%\nBrompton Paper    57ft\nCan. Car &> Foundry     48\nCan. Car & Foundry, pfd!     88ft\nCan.   Converters    \"... 106\nCana. Industrial Alcohol     42\nCan.   Steamship   Lines       38\nCan.  Steamships, pfd    95%.\nCons. Mining & Smelting ..,..\u00bb.  251*4\nDominion   Bridge -    04%\nDominion Glass    137\nDom.   Textile     129\nDom.   Textile,   pfd  123%\nHollinger Mines   17.45\nMassey   Harris       36%\nMascey   Harris,   pfd  708\nImperial Oil'     60ft\nMontreal   Power *...'.    90ft\nMontreal Tramways   196\nNational Breweries   108%\n,Ontarlo Steel Products    120\nOttawa L.  H.. &  Power   ..... 140\nPeter   Lyall       49ft\nPrice  Bros \u2022    69\nQuebec  Power    76%\nShawlnlgan      85ft\nSherwln Williams   106\nSpanish   River     136ft\nSpanish   River,  pfd  164\nSteel Co. of Canada   178\nSt.   Lawrence   Flour   Mills       89%\nSt.  Lawrence  Flour  Mills,  pfd    90\nTucket Tobacco ,   93\nTuckett Tobacco, pfd   .V Ill\nWabasso Cotton  126\nWayagamack    \u2014 116\nWestern Grocers - \u25a0    18\nToronto Mining\nBrokers Fail to\nAgree, Timmins\nTORONTO* Ont., Nov. 23.\u2014Toronto\nmining brokers today expressed strong\ndisagreement with tbe statements of\nNoah Timmins. president of Bollinger\nConsolidated that the present mining\nboom would result ln harm to a, lot\nof Investors when the reaction came.\nThey assented that an active mining\nmarket aided the development of the\nmining Industry.\nDominion Live Stock\nCAL0AR7. \u00bbOT. 24\u2014Receipts\u2014Cat\ntie 278. calves 88, bogs 499, sheep 295.\nSteers\u2014Choice 87.50 to 88.50, fair to\ngood 88.50 to 87.26. ^^~\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice 88.85, fair to\ngood 86.26 to 86. ^^~\nButcher oows\u2014Choice 85.60 to 88.'fair\nto good 8476 to 86.25.\nBulls\u2014Oood 84 to 84.50, common 83\nto 83.75.\nStocker steers\u2014Choice 86 to 88.76, lair\nto good 86.26 to 85.76.\nStocker heifers\u2014Cliolce 87 to 87.76,\nfair to good 88 to 86.75.\nCalves\u2014Choice 87.75 to 8840.\nLambs\u2014Fair tp good 810 to 81140.\nSheep\u2014Pair to good 86 to 810.\nHogs\u2014Select'89.50, thick smooth 88.76.\ninnipeg Grain\nWheat\u2014        Open\nNov ., 187).\nDec  184\n. May     13814\nJuly   137!4\nOats\u2014\nMot    608,\nDec    67H\nMay     69H\nJuly     67\u00bb\nBarley\u2014\nNov    88H\n. Dec    801.\nMay     BHi\nFl\u00bb\u2014\nNov  183\nDM  183\nMay   193(4\nRye\u2014\nNov\t\nDec  102%\n.   May   108V4 \u25a0\nCash  wheat\u2014No.\nNo. 2 northern,  144\n12814:   No.  4,   1161,.\n(i, 9514; feed. 8814;\nHigh     Low Close\n13714    13614 138)4\n134        132T4 133\nliiV,    137H I37t4\n18714    18644 136>4\n60%      60 SO\n67%     88% 87\n69%     59% 59%\n58         67% 68\n83?,      83 83%\n80%   79% ts\n81%     80% 80%\n183       182V4 182%\n183(4    18214 182%\n193%    191% 19114\n  104\n102%    102% 102%\n10614    10814 10S%\n1   northern, 160%;\n!\u00bb;  No. 3 northern.\nNo.  6.  102%;   No.\ntrack,  143.\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, Nov. 24.\u2014Egg prices are as\nfollows:\nToronto\u2014Dealers are quoting country\nshippers: Extras 58c to 63c, seconds\n35o to 37c.\nMontreal\u2014Market strong with fresh\neggs scarce and tending higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Extras 52c to 60c, firsts\n45c to 55c, seconds 36c to 40c.\nSaskatoon\u2014Dealers are quoting country shippers: Extras 43c, firsts 41c,\nseconds 37a\nRegina\u2014Extras 38c to 42c, firsts 35c\nto 38c, seconds a to* to 83c.\nAmerican  markets\u2014Closed.\nVancouver Stocks\nBid        Asked\nB. C. Silver   8 1.20      6 140\nBig   Missouri    28 . '       .27\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada. Limited\nOfHoo  Smoitlng   and   Refining   Dm\nTRAIL,   BRITISH COLUMBIA\n'       Smelters and Refiners\nPnrchasera of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zine Or*s.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig > Lend and Zine.\nTlSiM.r''Toiir\nTADANAC,'-TRAIL\nCork Province ..\nDunwell  \t\nGlacier  \t\nIndependence\nIndian Mines ....\nInter. Coal \t\nLucky Jim  \t\nMarmot Metals\nPremier \t\nPorter  Idaho  ....\nRuth Hope \t\nSelklrks   \t\nSilver  Crest  \t\nSilversmith   \t\nRichmond   \t\nNat. Sll. O. B.\nCoast Copper ....\nB. C. Mont.\nBrit.   Petr\t\nTrojan  Oil\t\nSunloch   \t\n.11\n.12\n.04\n.05%\n.24%\n.26%\n3.33\n.38\n.29\n.01%\n.05\n.16\n11%\n10%\n5.00\n.00 1-16\n.06%\n.13\n.18\n.05*\n.05\n.06\n.25\n.27\n.10%\n3.35\n.3D\n.31\n.20\n.11%\n.11\n18.60\n.00%\nMETAL MARKETS\n.71\n.01%\n.79\nC. P R. EARNINGS\nSHOW DECREASE\nMONTREAL, Nov. 24.\u2014Canadian Pa-\nclflo railway traffic earnings for the\nweek ending November 21, 1027, were\n84,790,000. as compared with 14,037,000\nIn the corresponding week of last year,\nbeing a decrease of $137,000.\nDOMINION OF CANADA\nVICTORY LOAN BONDS\nMATURING 1st DECEMBER, 1927\nTHE BANK OF MONTREAL, at all of its Branches in^Canada, is prepared\nto accept the above bonds for redemption at maturity.\nFor the convenience of owners of ti?e bonds, the Bank of Montreal will accept the\nbonds at any time prior to December 1st, and will make payment in each case\non December 1st, either by issuing a cheque or by placing the amount to the\nowner's credit in the books of the Bank, as the owner may desfce.\nLONDON, Nov. 24.\u2014Standard copper,\nspot,  \u00a358   Its;   futures,  \u00a359  2s   6d.\nElectrolytic\u2014spot, \u00a364 5s; futures,\n\u00a364   15s.\nTin\u2014Spot, \u00a3265 hs 6d; futures, \u00a3263\n17s   6d.\nLead\u2014Spot, \u00a321 7s Od; futures, \u00a321\n\\b\u00a3.\nZinc\u2014Spot, \u00a328 10s; futures \u00a326\n2s Od.\nWool. Cotton Trade\nin Precarious State\nNow in Old Country\nLONDON, Nov. 24.\u2014The position of\nthe wool and cotton trade ls engaging\nparticular attention at the presept time.\nRecently the employers ln the wool textile Industry notified the workers that\nthe expired wage agreement would not\nbe renewed. The employers declared\nthat lt would be Impossible to restore\nprosperity to the industry unless wages\nwere reduced.\nThe industrial council has been trying to effect an amicable settlement of\nthe difficulty, but the negotiations have\nbeen fruitless so far. The notices sent\nout by the employers that the wage\nagreement would not be renewed will\nbecome effective at the end of this week\nbut lt Ib not probable that there will\nbe an Immediate wholesale stoppage of\nwork.\nIS\nTotal Receipts Wet Ore to Date\n|t Trail  837,389 Tons;\n11,242 in Week\nWith the receipt of 9296 tons of company mine ore ln the week November\n15-21, total company mine receipts to\ndate this year at the Trail plant of the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting company passed the 400,000 ton mark, the\ntotal wet ore figure being 406,875 tons.\nWith custom ore, the total receipts for\nthe year amount to 537,889 tons. On\ndry ore, these totals will be much less.\nDuring the week 1940 tons of custom\nore was received, and 296 tons of company mine ore, making a week's total\nof 11.242 tons.\nFollowing  is a statement of ore received at the Trail smelter for the period November  15  to November 21, inclusive ;\nCOPPER\nAllenby, Allenby, 790 tons.\nLEAD\nBell, Beaverdell, 41 tout.\nMILLING\nDaybreak, Zwlcky, 40 tons.\nMammoth, Sllverton, 47 tons.\nStandard, Sllverton, 32 tons.\nWhitewater, Retallack, 48 tons.\nWonderful, Sandon, 07 tons.\nYankee Olrl, Ymlr, 80 tons.\nDRY\nGoodenough, Ymlr, 89 tons.\nLone Pine, Republic, 112 tons.   *\nMountain Lion, Republic, 58 tons.\nQullp, Republic, 458 tons.\nSurprise, Republic, 100 tons.\nZINC\nDuthle, Smlthers, 29 tons.\nTotal custom ore, tons  1,948\nCompany  mines,  tons \u201e.. 9,290\nTotal receipts,  tons 11,242\n\u25a0<>\t\nNO MARKETS IN STATES\nFOR    TJIANKngivim;    DAY\nNEW YORK, Nov. 24.\u2014Owing to today being Thanksgiving day ln the\nUnited States all markets were Inactive.\nP. R. EARNINGS\nINCREASE CAPITAL\nLONDON, Nov. 24.\u2014The British Columbia Electric company at Its forthcoming meeting proposes to increase the\ncapital of the company by one million\nshares valued at one pound sterling\neach share. The net profits of the company are increased from \u00a3393,000 to\n\u00a3431,000. The final dividend amounted\nto six pounds and four shillings for tbe\nyear, tax free. A sum of \u00a3130,000 has\nbeen transferred to reserve.\nWheat Pool Reelects\nAll but One of Its\nFormer 'Directors\nCALGARY, Alta, Nov. 24.\u2014Directors\nof the Alberta Wheat Pool with one exception were reelected when the delegates from the seven pool districts Into\nwhich the province ls divided held their\nseparate meetings following the afternoon session of the annual meeting\nThursday. The one exception was ln\nNorth Calgary where the retiring director has gone to England with D. L.\nSmith of Winnipeg to open the London\noffice   of   the   Canadian\nhere waa deferred.\nThe directors elected ate:\n\u2014 George Bennett; Camrose\u2014Lew Hutchinson. Red Deer\u2014H. W. Wood! South\nCalvary\u2014Ben Plumer. Clarasbolm\u2014<J.\nJeese Strang.    Lethbridge\u2014C. Jensen.\nExpectations are that the annual meeting will finish Its business Friday.\nOVERHAUL TECK MILL\nWHEN NEW ONE STARTS\nKIRKLAND LAKE, Nov. 24 \u2014 Whan the\nnew 300-ton unit of Teck Hughes goes\nInto operation early next month the old\nmill will suspend until It as given *\nthorough overhauling. This wprk will\ntake about a month. It will be tbe fin*\nreal overhauling this plant has had\nsince 1922. A number of new devices\nwill be added. During first 10 dags,\nof current month, production at Teck\nHughes ran up to around $100,000.\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   EOOS\nFresh extras 57c to SOc, firsts 50c to\n51c, pullets 44c to 46c, peewees 34c.\nUnited States army used about 40.000\nhorses and mules during last, fiscal year.\nWE OWN AND OFFER:\n$15,000\nTrail Apartments, Ltd.\nFirst mortgage, sinking fund, 6% Gold Bonds, dated\nSept. 1, 1927, due-Sept. 1, 1947.\nDENOMINATIONS $500 AND $1000\nPRICE 97.16, YIELD 6.25 PER CENT\nSecurity for this issue of $40,000 is a modern apartment house in Trail, erected at a cost of $80,000.\nDirectors\u2014R. C. Crowe, S. G. Blaylock, T. W. Bingay,\nE. M. Stiles, H. F. T\u00a3edjc and J. H. Schofield, M.P.P.\nROYAL FINANCIAL CORPORATION LIMITED\nVANCOUVER .\nB. J. HEWITT, DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVE\nTelephone 269 NELSON Post Box \u00ab51\n^T^teon*Baii dompane .^f\nINCOBEOWATIO   *\u2022>  MAV  |(\u00bbTO.\nOtter Branches) an Winnipeg, Yorkton. Baikatoon.   Edmonton.  Cigar,    Lethbrldft.\nVanoou.er, Kamloops. Vernon and Victoria\n\"RUBBERS\nWear better when they are\nnewly   made\nOur stock ia all fresh this\nseason and complete in lines\nfor men, women and children.\nWatson Shoe Co., Ltd.\nTerms Strlotir Oa*ah\nHudson's Bay Company's\nGenuine Point\nBlankets\nWorld-famous, unrivalled for warmth\nand service. Made of all pure wool and\nfast dyed. Hudson's Bay Company's Point\nBlankets are acknowledged the finest of all\nout-door blankets. They are without equal\nfor home, camping, motoring and boating.\nA warning: Insist on seeing the seal of\nquality tab on each blanket. None are\ngenuine H.B.C. Point Blankets without it.\nColors include.\nGrey, 3-point      $10.50\n31\/ij-point $12.50\n4-point    , $15.50\nScarlet, Khaki, Green and White, 3-point, 8\nlbs. 5 oz.   Size 61x74.    Price $13.50\n31\/2-point, 10 lbs.   Size 63x81.\nPrice  $15.50\n4-pbint, 12 lbs.   Size 72x90.   Price $18.50\n4-point multi-stripes  $18.50\nMain Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear\nCHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS\nSILK CREPE, QUILTED SILK AND SATIN AND JERSEY KIMONAS\u2014In\nbright shades of Rose, Candy, Pink, Sky Blue, Peach, Lipstick, Mauve, Japonica.\nBlack and Cerise.   In assorted sizes. (\nPrices   $4.95, $5.05, $8.95, $12.95, $14.95\nSILK SETS\u2014Consisting of vest and bloomers, lace trimmed with lace panels inserted, in Maize, Mauve, Peach, Japoni ca.   Sizes 36, 38, 40, 42.\nPrice, per set  $4.75\nWOODS' SILK UNDERWEAR\u2014\"In slips, vest and bloomers, in assorted shades,\nincluding Green, Bluebeard, Cinnamon, Pink, Marie Antionette, Malmaison and\nCandy, Pink.   Sizes assorted.   Each with a Lavender sachet.\nVests   $1.95     Bloomers $2.98, $3.59\nSlips $4.50, $4.75\nRAYON SILK PYJAMAS\u2014In Peach, Green, Mauve, Black, Sky, Powder Blue,\nLipstick, Japonica, each trimmed contrasting shades.\nPrices   $4.95, $5.95, $6.95\nWATSON AND MERCURY SILK VESTS, BLOOMERS AND SLIPS \u2014 In assorted shades and sizes.   Vests  $1.25, $1.50\nBloomers  $1.50, $2.25     Slips $2.75, $3.50\nSecond Floor\u2014H.B.C\nMen's Wear\nCanada's Greatest Value\nMade from all pure wool fine Botany Serbe in Navy or Grey $27.50\nWith extra pants $35.00\nAlso in a heavier quality serge with silk linings in Navy or Grey $35.00\nWith extra pants $42.50\nThe ideal suit for business wear.       Main Floor\u2014H.B.C\n tVe$en\nrfHE KELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 25, 1927\n*i\nThe Ark\nSPECIALS\u2014Heating stores to clear.\na% to \u00a315; Cups and Saucers, doe.\n1.80 ladles' Silk Hose, all colors.\n(Jr. 5QaJ: Flannelette Blankets, pair,\n2.25. $2.50. 83 Comforura.\nrg. sizes. g3 to *A each; Bed-\nMwtt. aadh, $2.75^rurklsh Towels.\n\u25a0^ Q0#: Linoleum Rugs, Furniture,\nlag Utensils. Staple Dry Ooods,\nMapest   tn  the   city.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nMONE U4 606 VERNON  ST.]\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\n*pe\u00abialiiif\u00abQ   In   Correct in *)    Defsetlve\nSight   by   Dron\u00abr   GImi*\u00ab,\nQuick Repair Servioe.\n3RlF*i.\\'   BLK.     -     \u2022     PHONE  Ul\nNothing   Is   Too   Good   for   the   Sick\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION    SPECIALIST\nIn   business- for  your* health    Let  us\nfill    your    prescriptions.    Mall    orders\npromptly  executed.    Call and  wait tor\nyour car.   Phone 1.\nSunday hours: 1 to 4 and  7 to 9 p.m.\nBEST\nE,\nSheep for Sale j -\t\n.900 Yearling Ewes. II\n1500 Ewes, 4 and 5 years\nIK\n100  Black Faced 'Ewes,\n, 2 and 3 years old.\n;600 Ewe Lambs.\n150 Pure Bred Ramboulett\ntains.      '\n400 Ag#d Ewes.\n~ All these sheep are priced\nlight to make a clean-up.\nI Smart\nI Blue\nI Overcoats\nI\nI\nBlues are favored most by\nfashion this year.  'Our se- I\nlection, in either double or \u25a0\nI single-breasted  effects,   is I\nrmmnlnfa Tit.a.    n wa    ...nil \u25a0\n=\nC.RABY\n3hone 2322       Lethbridge\nI  1004 6th Ave. South\n?\nSPECIAL OFFER\nWith e\\-;ry dollar purchase of Daffodil Bulbs, we will give, FREE, two\nDiftodll   Bulbs   or   one,. 36c   Hyacinth\npulb.\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\nincrease Your Salary\nEvening Classes\nIndividual Tuition\nNelson Business College\ncomplete.    These are well\ntailored and have art satin I\nlinings.\n$18.5.0\n$25.00\n$30.00\n$35.00\n$40.00\n$47.50\nI\nNew Afternoon and Evening\nDresses at a Discount\nWe have to move a lot of merchandise this next week\nto make room for the piles of Christmas goods pouring\nin, and, by the way, you should not fail to see'these Xmas\nGift Gcods. We are going to do this by offering some\nexceptionally good values.   This week end:\n10 PER CENT OFF ALL AFTERNOON\nAND EVENING GOWNS\nThis means every silk dress in the store, including our\nImported French Model Gowns which have aroused universal admiration. Priced from $13.\u20ac\" to $78.50, less\n10 per cent discount.\nThis is your opportunity\u2014IiE BETTER DRESSED\nFOR LESS.\niRams&cn  Juros.\nSECOND   FLOOll\nJCOKE!      COKE!!\n$12.70 Per Ton\nDelivered to Your Home\nAn excellent, lasting, economical fuel. Order a ton\ntoday and try it out. A product of the City of Nelson\nGas Department.\nL\nPHONE YOUR ORDER TO 37\n-The City of Nelson\nIson\nHEADQUARTERS FOR\nWinter Sporting Goods\nWe have a splendid assortment of\nGENUINE FLEXIBLE FLIERS\nAlso Fleetwing and Steel  Racer Sleds, Regular and\n:Bear Paw Snow Shoes and Skiis for kiddies and grownups.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd\nWHOLESALE\nNEL^pN. ac\nRETAIL\nNine Outside Centers Prize Win\nners in Judging* as Far as\nCompleted\nMORE VARIETIES\nTHAN SINCE WAR\nHarbinson   Leads   White   Leg\nhorns, While Richards Tops\nThem In Utility\nAU who visited the annual poultry\nshow of district 8, at the poultry building yesterday, conceded immediately\nthat it was the bast poultry show held\nln Nelaon for many years. There are\nmore varieties than have been seen\nhere slnoe' the war, and more centers\nare represented.\nWIDELY   DISTRIBUTED\nAs Judge Row Wallace of Calgary has\nplaced the cards, the outside centers\nnave tha great bulk of the awards,\nthough Nalaon held up Its end creditably where competing. Fernie, Cranbrook, Grand Forks, Trail, Frultvale,\nHarrop, Burton, Parry Siding, Apple-\ndale,  are  all   In   the   list   of   winners.\nThe severest competition, as usual,\nwas ln 'the White Leghorns, and ln\nehe exlg)bltlon classes of the favorite\n-Whites,\" F. J. Harbinson of Cranbrook\nwas far ln the lead. In the utility\nclasses, however, honors were fairly\nevenly divided between four breeders,\nof whom W. J. Richards of Nelson\nmade the heaviest winnings.\nDainty Hamburg*, of both the Oolden and Silver varieties, were present,\nlordly Light Brahma*, solid mahogany\nhued Rhode Island Reds, part Brown\nLeghorns, Mottled Anconas of both sub-\nvarieties. White Wyandottes, as well as\nthe Black Mlnorcas, Barred Rocks, and\nthe inevitable White Leghorns, which\nmake up the bulk gf the ordinary show.\nTHREE   lll\/NUKED-EUG   HEN\nOccupying a sty^tegtc position was\na 300-egg ben. a White Leghorn bred\nby W. J. KcKlm, that, after completing\nits first laying year about 10 days\nago, won't admit that It ought to\nquit. \"This ls cooped with Its sire, a\ncockblrd bought by Mr. McKim about\nthree years ago, the son of a 302-egg\nhen. All his daughters have been distinguished egg producers in the Mc-\n*.lm trapnests.    '\nJudge   Wallace   has   not   yet   completed the Judging of the fowls, while\nthe geese, the heavy rabbit section, and\nthe eggs are also sUll to be Judged.\nAWARDS   TO   DATE\nAwards so far announced are as follows:\nEXHIBITION  SECTION\u2014\nBarred Plymouth Rocks\u2014Ralph Hale,\nNelson, first, second cockerel, first, second, third pullet, first young pen.\n6. C. Rhode Island Reds\u2014A. D. Morrison, Orand Forks, first, second, third\ncockerel, first second, third pullet, first,\nsecond young pen. John Notman, kelson,\nfirst hen.\nJersey Black Giants\u2014Claridge & Robertson, Burton, first cockerel; first, second, third pullet; first young pen.\nLight Brahmas\u2014Dr. F. S. Eaton, Trail,\nfirst cock; first, second, third hen; first,\nsecond cockerel; first, second pullet;\nfirst old pen.\nBlack Mlnorcas\u2014A. Wallach, Nelson,\nf;rst, third cock; second, third hen; first.\nthird cockerel; third pullet, first old\npen; first young pen. A. A. Sawyer, Fernie, second cock; first hen; second cockerel; first, second pullet; second old pen\nsecond, young pen.\nBrown Leghorns\u2014W. J. Richards, Nelson, first cock; first, second, third hen;\nfirst, second cockerel; first, second, third\npullet; first old pen; first young pen.\n8. C. White Leghorns\u2014F. J. Harbin'\nson, Cranbrook, first cock; first, second\nhen; first, second cockerel; first, second,\nthird pullet; first old pen; first young\npen. Peter1, Finch, Frultvale, second\nold pen. Ralph Hale, Nelson, third\ncockerel; third old pen.\nIt. C. White Leghorns\u2014J. F. Stevenson\nHarrop, first cock; first, second, third\nhen; first, second third cockerel; first,\nsecond, third, fourth pullet; first old\npen; first, second, third young pen.\nS. C. Anconas\u2014J. p. Stevenson, Har\nrep, first cock; first, second, third hen;\nfirst old pen.\nR. C. Anconas\u2014J. F. Stevenson, Harrop, second cook; first, second hen;\nfirst, second cockerel; first, second.\nthird pullet; first old pen; first young\npen. Mrs. Joseph L. Manly, Grand Porks,\nfirst cock; third hen; second old pen.\nGolden Hamburghs\u2014A. D. Morrison,\nGrand Forka, first, second, third cockerel; first, second, third pullet; first,\nsecond, third young pen.\nSliver    Hamburgs--. f.    j.    Harbinson\nCranbrook, first cockerel; first pullet.\nUTILITY SECTION\u2014\nWhite Wyandottes\u2014 p. J. Powell. Perry\nSiding, first cockerel; first, third pullet;\nfirst young pen. Adrew Cant, Apple-\ndale, first cock; first, second, third hen;\nthird cockerel; second pullet; first old\npen. Thomas Moon, Frultvale, second\ncockerel.\nS. C. Rhode Island Reds\u2014W. Wood,\nNelson, second cockerel; first pullet;\nfirst young pen. G. H. Fraser, Nelson,\nfirst cockerel; third pullet; second young\npen. John Notman, Nelson, third cockerel; second pullet; third young pen.\nPred Chapman, Nelson,  first hen.\nS. C. White Ughorns\u2014W. J. Richards,\nNelson, first cock; first, second, fourth,\nhen; third cockerel; thlrd.'flfth pullet,\nfirst old pen; third young pen. James\nBenton, Frultvale, first cfltkerel; first\npullet; .first young pen. Mrs. R. Raymond, Nelson, second cockerel; second\npullet; second young pen. W. J. McKim,\nNelson, third hen; third cockerel; fourth\npullet;  second old pen.\nDAVE WADE TO\nT\n\"TiUie\" Can't  Tell  Him  Any.\nthing in Gyro Show; Jack\n1 Morris Explosive\nDaw. Wade has 1TUile the Toller\"\nskinned a mile.\nWhen the Oyros preaent \"Keep tm\nSmiling\" at the opera house early ln\nDecember, Dare win appear as a gum.\nchewing stenographer. Jsclt Morris\nplays with hla as tt- office boas, a\nconfirmed, women-hating bachelor, and\nthe two of them are a riot.\n\"If You Don't Like Mr Apples. Dont\nShake My Tree\" ls tha title of a' song\nDave will give. Mo one ls saying anything about the title oi the song Jack\nwiU render when, as he pounds his\ndesk, he pounds Dave's gum. There\nis quite an explosion.\nPreviously the stenographer's part\nin \"Keep 'Em Smiling\" has been taken\nby a girl Dave Wade proves,this was\na mistake.\nTO CO HI TIL\nWill Attend en Masse Trail Ice\nCarnival; Rossland, Trail to\nPlay Hockey\nNelson Rotarians yesterday completed\narrangements to run a special train to\nTrail on December 3, when the Trail\nRotary club will officially open the new\nTrail artificial Ice rink with a huge\nice carnival.\nFeaturing the carnival will be a\nsenior hockey entanglement starring\nthe Trail and Rossland teams of the\ncoming (teason.\nAnother feature which will probably\nprovide as much or more fun, will be\na hockey match between Trail and\nNelson Vttartans, ln which brooms\nwill be used as hockey sticks, a football for a puck and barrels as goal\nposts.\nMasque'rade costumes and a hundred\nother entertainments will be Just part\nof the program,\nTO PMULTSIS\nLou Jean Robinson, Aged Two,\nDies After Eight-Day Bat*\ntie for Life\nLou Jean, 2-year-old daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Louts Robinson of Benton\nSiding, succumbed In the small hours\nof yesterday morning to Infantile paralyse, after an eight-day battle for\nher life. She was brought to the Nel-\n\u2022jon Isolation hospital 'eight days ago,\nand though the case was even then regarded ?b & most serious one, no effort\nwas spared In the fight. Funeral arrangements are being made,\nNelson doctors last might stated all\nparalysis patients now under treatment\nare  progreftng  well.\nBEAVERDELL BRIEFS\nTHREE INJURED\nPEMBROKE, Ont., Nov. 24.\u2014Three\nmen were injured, one critically, ln a\nhead-on   collision   between   a   forestry\nBEAVERDELL, B.C., Nov. 24.\u2014Mis. C.\nE. Nordman has returned from a few\ndays' vslt to Greenwood and was accompanied by her aunt. Mrs. Anderson,\nC. D. Collen was saying goodbye to\nhis many^ friends around town on\nWednesday! having finally finished up\nhis business here and returned to\nOliver.\nJohnny Bell has a splendid showing\non his claim, the Highland Lass, and\nexpects to be able to ship from aame\nln the spring.\nW. Phillips and C. Ferarro have arrived from Cascade and are busy\ngetting their camp at the Titanic claim\nIn shape for winter working. ThlB\nclaim was formerly owned by the late\nMr.  Ketchum.\nTom Henderson, working on the\nDuncan claim, reports a nice showing\nand Is well \"pleased with the look of\nthe .property.\nMr. and Mrs. M. W. Smith have returned from a 10-day visit with friends\nin Penticton.\nMrs.. Ted Clarke has returned from\na Week's holiday spent ln Spokane.\n9=\nAWARDS OF YEAR\nLieutenant-Governor's   Cup   to\nMrs. Stanley; Society Is\nCongratulated\nPresenting garden competition prises.\nMayor J. A. McDonald. M.P.-elect, told\nthe Nelson Horticultural society at lta\nmeeting ln the city hall last night, that\nthe society wu doing a good work tor\nNelaon, congratulated lt on the fine\nshowing of flowVrs at the fall fair, and\nhinted that next year there might he\na much better building for the show.\nPrizes were the first, second and thud\nawards of the garden competition. The\nfirst prize, won hy Mrs. W. S. Stanley,\nwas the Lieutenant-Governor Nichol oup\nand a sliver basket. Mrs. Stanley's)\nname will be engraved on the shield to\nbe mounted on the base of the cup,\nwhich ls In perpetual competition, but\nthe silver basket will be hers.\nTO REVISE RULES\nSecond prln. another sliver basket,\nwaa given to W. R. Blanchard, and the\nthird prize, still another silver basket,\nwas presented to Mrs. M. Michelson.\nMrs. Hugh Ross, Miss L. Wlghtman.\nA. Wood, Alderman Samuel Barton and\nW. H. Ramsden were appointed a committee to revise tbe rules governing the\ngarden competition, with a view to Interesting more people.\nFATHER SUES HIS SON\nFOR BOARD AND LOSES\nBRANDON, Man., Nov. 24\u2014The unusual case of a father suing his son for\nboard and lodging was heard In court\nhere today, and the son was the victor.\nRobert Kandel of Forest, Man-, sued his\nson, George, for 960 ln payment for\nthree months' board and lodging.\nJudge Clement \u2022dismissed the case and\nassessed tha costs, plus counsel fee of\n110, against the father.\nNelson News of the Day\nDaughters of Scotia meet tonight ln\nK. P. Hall at 8 o'clock.   Flower drill.\nThe funeral of the late W. J. Wilson\nwill take place this afternoon. 2 o clock.\n.'rem the Standard Undertaking Parlors.\nx   (3171)\nI).  OF It.  IL.\nSpecial meeting, Sunday, November\n27, ten o'clock.   Important? (3177)\nBAKE KALE. Annable Block, Saturday morning, tjovember 26, Trinity MIs-\nilonary Auxiliary, (8179)\nThe forthcoming production of the\n\u25a0Babes In the Wood\" pantomime re-\nlulres chorus ladles and gentlemen. Ap\n2...    ,. .      i .....    n..rr,ln.      Wi-Mtui\njurres cuurue  miner,  tun.  iniiiv.u.... ..\u00bb\u2022\nply  Canadian   Legion  Building,  Friday,\nthe 36th, from 7 to 8:30 pm. (31*8)\nWINTER DANCE  III 11\nFIRST DANCE, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER\nUth, AT 8 P.M, IN EAGLE HALL.\n(3184)\n111   l(TII.KTI.KI\\   SPECIALS\nBACK  BACON\nCOTTAOE ROLLS\nPICNIC  HAMS\nA   BIQ-MONEY-SAVING\n,     SALE\nSTARTING THURSDAY\nMORNING\nSEE   OUR  WINDOWS\nFULL   LINE  OF  CHOICE  FRESH\nMEATS AND FISH (3181)\n* O. O. F. Whist DrlVe and Dance,\nFriday, November 26th, 8. o'clock sharp.\nAdmission 35c. Everybody welcome.\nGood music. (3148)\nDance. Eagles' Hall. Saturday night:\n(tood music; accordlan. Gentlemen,\nLI 00;  ladles, 36c. (3146)\nBlae Bird Beauty Shoppe. expert work.\n304(,4 Baker Street.   Phone IIS.     (3087)\nFlowers,\nland.\nPlants.   Orlzzelle's.\nKandy.\n_____my\nPBONE\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysician and   Surgeon\nSuite 503 to SOD Rookery Building\nOver Wbrttehonse,\nSPOKANE.   WASH.\nCorner Rlvenaldo and Howard\nMISSIONARY SOCIETY\nMEETS AT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B.C.. Nov. 24.\u2014The\nWomen's Missionary society met at the\nhome ot Mtb. P. M. MacPherson Wednesday afternoon. Mre. A. W. Hodgson\nand Mm. W. Wells received at the door,\nMrs, Chester and Mrs. Bryce Wallace\npoured and Mrs. R. A. McBurney. Miss\nRita McBurney and Mrs. W. B. MacFarlane served. Vocal numbers were\ngiven by Mrs. MacPherson and Mrs.\nStewart Macintosh and piano selections\nMacLaren and Master Marshall Mac-\nby Mtss Sdlth Wells, MlU Margaret\nPherson. fc The meeting was well attended and netted a handsome amount\nfor the Missionary society.\nNORSK*   ARK   SOLD\nTORONTO, Nov. 24.\u2014Horses, ponies,\ndraft horses, traps and harness were\nsold at auction at the Royal Winter\nfair today, realizing some 110,000. Prices\nrailway car and a aectlonman's motor as a rilfc were low. Patchem, a chest-\nspeeder on the Canadian National rail- I nut gelding, an Imported Irish hunter\nway near Kathmore, 30 miles west of ! said to have been purchased ln the old\nhers today. H. Jenks of Pembroke was country for 16600, was knocked down\nseriously Injured. Two other men fpr 13000 to the Boulals stock farm.\nJumped clear before the crash. | Montreal.\nCITYDRUG CO\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nFilms, Kodaks, Drags, Stationery\nMall   orders   propmtly   despatched.\nBOX  1083  NELSON, B.C.        PHONE  34\nCome  In and  Oet  Your  Weight  Free\nYOU  CAN  GET  YOUR\n0. K. BREAD\n\u2022t   the   following   Stor.s;\nIn Nelson\u2014Star Grocery, Kandy.\nland, Campbell's Grocery, Blue\nBird   8tore. \u2022\nIn Fairvi.w\u2014Fleming's flora,\nMra. P.aka, Fairview Fllllnf\nStation.\nGive Sight\nto Father and Mother\nFor Christmas\nA most, precious gift from sons\nand daughters. Eyes that have\nlatfered long hours for the comfort of children should be given\ncare  ln their declining years.\nNow is the time to get their\neyes examined in order to have\nthem ready. Bring father and\nmother ln -and they will receive\nour very best attention.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nexpert   Optical   Servlee\n\u25a0a^awBkwMBBMMMMH.\nThe Gift That Pleases!\nHOSIERY\n75c to $1.00\nMEN like attractive Hose.\nThey make good, practical\ngifts that are sure to be much ap.\npreciatea. We are offering- some\nbeautiep at 75c and $1.00\u2014silk*\nwools, lisles, and mixtures in many\nchoice color combinations. Packed\nin gift boxes.\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nLIVE DOWN TOWN\nAnd save time and street car\nfares.   You get real comfort\nin the\nKERR APARTMENTS\nThe Corner Grocery\nIs Closed\nToday\nMK8. W. 1. WILSON.\n(MKU'W.   \u25a0\u00ab\nW. G. HUNTER\nOpera House Ble<*, Nelson\nIHE HOME OF OOOD LIGHTING\nIt you let us do your electrical\nInstalling, alterations or repairs,\nyou will be assured ot expert\nservice and reasonable entries.\nGROCERY SPECIALS\nWEEK-END\nBAKER'S COCOA\u2014Vi-lb.\n\u00abn\u00bb 25\u00ab*\nPUMPKIN\u2014a^s. choice. 3\num \u25a0   35*J\nCOFFEE\u2014Fresh ground, 3\nn\u00bb - 850\nD  9 Uf\nGRQCERTERIA\nPHONE 235\nPlumbers' Brans Ooods   fixtures\nand Supplies, Tile and 8ew*r Pipe\nB. C PLUMING &\nHEATINGCO.\n308 Baker St        Nslsen, B. 0.\nGrocery Specials\nFor Friday and Saturday\nDeckajulle Tea, par lb H54\n'Malklns' Best Collee  fQf\n3 large cans Sliced Pineapple  ., mo4\n8 1-lb. cans St. Charles or\nNestles' Milk   I'\n3 12-oz. tins Baking Wttwitg\n3 cans Choice Bartlett Pears\n1 lb. sliced Premium Bacon\n1 lb. sliced PeameaAeeJ BrWJc\nNew Laid Eggs, per doc\t\n4 lbs. Raspberry Jam \t\n3 cans Peas or Corn  604\nSweet Pickle Hams, about 4 lbs.,\nper lb  M_nt\niiLi.m.KiKN VA*. *0 r\u00a53l.\nI'HONE   lit\nTHE SUGAR BOWL\nGROCERY\n\u25a0v.\".';\n=\"!\u2022**\u00ab\n\u2022*\u25a0\u00bb\nCOUNTRY STORE\nttfmtm^mammmi^mmm^^^mm^mim^fmissmsm\n15   Prizes; to   be   given   away.\nDrawing   at   end   of   first   show.\nCOME EARLY\nON THE SCREEN\nThe Flaming Frontier'\n\u2022\nA Big Western, built on the same\norder* sik   \"The   Covered   Wagon,\"   .\nshowing as a climax Custer's Last\nStand, the most famous incident of\nIndian warfare. \"\nThe Collegians\nINTERNATIONAL NEWS\nI\nI\nI\n'at\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nCOMING IrfONDAY, FOR 4 DAYS\nFrancis & Hubert    I\nThe Two White Jays\nBig Time Vaudeville Start \u25a0\nX\n\u2014\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1927_11_25","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403445","@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":"1927-11-25 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1927-11-25 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\/1.0403445"}