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C, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1927\nNo. 176\n\/3Ss\nMAN ATLANTIC FLIGHT IS A FAILURE\nIRES, PANIC GRIP CHINESE CITY OF HANKOW\nMACEDONIAN MOUNTAINEERS THREATEN TROUBLE\nIN BALKANS FOR CRIME THREE YEARS OF AGE\nE\nL\nWer has Been on for Two\nlys; Army Headquarters\nFired\nat \t\n3 ANQ-FRENCH LANP\nTROOPS FROM VESSELS\nsh Troops Ready, but Not\nMoved; General Tanj?\nin Full Retreat\n r\u2014\n\u00a5KOW, Nov. 13.\u2014The vloleht dls-\nthat broke out ln the native\nsr or Hankow yesterday when the\nry dictator, General- Tang Seng-\nfled before the approach of the\nng Nationalists continued today,\nlOth diminished intensity.\nmany tremendous fires that were\n1 by the fleeing soldiers were\nlly under control and some sem-\nt of order replaced the panic that\ned the outrages perpetrated by\nof leaderless soldieVs and civf-\nooters.\n.eral Tang Seng-Chi and his fol-\ni are retreating westward.\ny are entrenching at Hanyang.\n\u25a0Ql  VRTKRS\n|  headquarters,  sltuxted   ln   the\nBritish  concession,  set  on  fire\nblazed     hr,    three    hours.\ndamage    was    done    to    the\nhouse next door.\nBritish. Oerman and Russian con-\nr were stwongly- t barricaded\nte occupying the Ruiwian oonets-\nittempted to repulse the soldiers\nIvlliah looters, Hut without great\na.\nJapanese anv* French landed ad\nal forces, but up to this morning\nrltlsh had not acted. Tang Seng*\ndeputy commander, seekjng to as-\nIs authority. Issued a proclamation\nlug that \"aa the commander ls\n, I with the 30th army, will main'\nirder and safety at Wuchang.\"\nattention was paid to the! procla-\na and the outlook ls most un\nl.\n\u00bbng other buildings set on fire\nooted by the followers of Tang\nDhl and the civilian mob was the\n,1 labor union building. A guard\nin the air, hoping thus to dls\nthe rioters, but their action was\nAU persons ^within the building\nie guards themselves were stripped\nir valuables and clothing.\nidly Invasion on Armistice\ny Kiffgest Event Ever at\nWashington\nA*5HINGTON, D.C., Nov. 13. \u2014\nada's friendly Invasion of the\ntal of the United States this\nc has been the biggest event of\nseason In Washington.\nle travelling Of the Canadian\naortal to cltlaeiyj of the United\n-es, who fought in the Canadian\njditlon^ry forces, attracted itnore\nntlon ln  the press and among\npublic  than  all  (he  Armistice\nexercises put together, and Catena figured largely In practleal-\nivery ceremonial.\nt   the   Canadian   soldiers    who\nie to do honor to the occasion.\nStar says:\nNo finer looking body of young\n1 has ever drawn up in or near\nnation's capital,\"\nThree Feet and\nreaks Spine; Now Is\nParalyzed Below Waist\nKING ALEXANDER,\n\u00bb     <P JUGOSLAVIA\nTDDOP. ALEXANDPOrr a\nTAKES A LIFE\nCause Unknown Says Montreal\nReport; Passenger Vessel\nSinks on St. Mary's River\nCANADIAN \u00a3HIP IS\nSUNK IN CANAL\nStorms Sweep Great Lakes; and\nNearly All Vessels Are\nTied Up\nA restless, troubled spirit from another world ls beating the war drums\nIn the bloody Balkans again. It Is\nthe spectre of Todor Alexandvoff, the\nfamous Macedonian comlpadji chief,\nwho was' assassinated at the instigation\nof Moscow three years ago. The murdered chief ls sleeping forever on top\nof the highest mountain in southwestern-Btilgaria, with a guard of honor\nstanding watch over his grave day and\nnight, but the clandestine war machine\nthat he reorganized ln order to free\nMacedonia by force of arms ls ominously tugging at Its leash all the time,\nas witness the present outbreaks.\nAlexander bequeathed his successors\nft force of 100,000 grim, hardy, desperate, snapshooting comttadjls, who are\nready to, fight at a moment's call. The\nstrangest side of this mysterious guerilla, which may drag all Europe Into\na new Armageddon some day, ls that\nif   these   Macedonian   mountaineers   go\ninto battle against Jugo-Slavla and\nGreece, the present possessors of this\nformer Turkish province, they will\nmarch to the tune of \"John Brown's\nBody Lies A-Moulderlng in the Grave,\nBut His Soul Goes Marching On.\" For\nthe \"Internal Macedonian Revolutionary\nOrganization.\" has taken \"John Brown's\nBody,\" as Its war song in memory of\nAlexandra!!, and the Bulgarian version of this song In dofttfi jnore than\nanything else to stir up the warlike\nspirit of the people.\n.T\nHad Been III for Some time;:\nTwo Sons Survive; Burial\nat Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13. \u2014 Percy Reid.\ngoid commissioner for Yukon Territory,\ndied today In Toronto, according to word\nreceived here tonight. His death occurred in St. Michael's hospital, where\nhe had undergone an operation.\nBorn In Shannonvllle, N.B., 55 years\nago, the late Mr, Reid went to Dawson\nCity in 1898. He became mlrting recorder for the territory, holding the position\nfor 14 years. In 1914 he went to Ottawa\nas chief controller of Chinese immigration. In 1924 he was transferred to Vancouver as immigration officer, and later\nln the year was appointed gold commissioner for the Yukon. A few months ago\nhe went to Toronto for medical treatment. Two sons survive him, one attending Toronto university, and one\nresident in Vancouver. The body will\nbfe brought here for burial next Saturday.\nObregon Unhurt\nAs Bomb Blows\nNear His Anto\nGeneral's   Cheek\nby Flying\n*\u2022 \u2022\"    Glass\nCut\nIS\nBY THE OCEAN\nSays   She   Will   Not   Attempt\nNonstop  Atlantic Flight;\nWill Fly in Hops\ndCOUVBR. No*. 13.\u2014Filling from\nop of a wagon loaded wtth wood\nit roadway, l distance or three\nPr*Dk Hyde, aged 24, broke his\nSaturday, and lies in th* hospital\n(*ed from the waist down. He\narrived from -the old country two\n\u2022go.. He has no relative* It)\n(la.\nWOMAN SUICIDES\nitVILLE, Ont., -Nov 13\u2014While\nIne from A mental aberration,\n(,jk AlkensV wife of a well known\nrrosperous farmer of Sidney town*\nended' her' life Saturday 'by\n[Ulatlon. - The unfortunate woman,\nwa* 41 year* of *ge, had placed\nr twice and:also placed* sweater\nher neck,\naddition to th* husband, fin obU-\naUaflT*.\nGET HIE GIFT\nCanadian  Swimmer Will  Quit\nCalifornia; to Start\nToronto Business\nMEXICO CITY, Nov. 13.\u2014An tin-\n-.iitrt'sshil attempt was marie here\ntoday to assassinate (ieiieral Aivaro\nObreRon, candidate for the presidency of Mexico.\nOhregon's cheeck wus cut hy glass\nfrfmi the windshield of Ihe unto\nIn which he wus riding. The\nwindshield was shattered'hy the explosion of two bombs thrown this\nafternoon as Obregon piiksed near\nIhe lulled  States embassy.\n(f'ongiiiniiins of, Obregon. i*i nn-\nnlher auto, shot anil st-^ioiisl.v\nwounded two of the hotnhefs ml\nthe other was arrested.\nPolice started an investigation to\ndetermine whether political conspirators were responsible for the\nnttenipt.\nObregon and an attor\/i\\v by the\nname of Orel were driving to a bull\nflcht when the attempt to assassinate him was made.\nObregon, displaying perfect calm,\ncontinued to the bull fight nnd witnessed the performance.\nThe names of the men making\nthe bomb attempt were not given.\nLand Plane Carries\nMail From Rimouski\nto Port of Montreal\nTORONTO. Nov. 13.\u2014The Star says\ntoday that Oeorge Young, long-distance\nswimmer. Is to get the house in Toronto\nfor which a fund was started after his\nvictory In the Catalina channel swim\nlaat January-\nNo w that George Young and his\nmother have decided to return from\nCalifornia and make their home ln their\nhome-city, the conditions of the gift\nare fulfilled and the $6000 or $6000\nheld ln trust will be devoted to the\npurpose.   ,\nIt ls also stated that George may be\nstarted In bualness here.\nCONSERVATIVES PAY\nHONOR TO CAHAN\nMONTREAL, Nov. 13\u2014Conservatives\nof Quebec province gathered here, 600\nstrong, Saturday night, to attend a \"banquet given in honor of Hort, C. H. Cahan, federal member for St. Lawrence-\n8%. Oeorge. who attended the recent\n-CoiMenwtlvc \"OOnvgpUon at Winnipeg\nand ww a candidate for the leadership\nof the party to federal politics.\nOTTAWA,' NOV. 13.\u2014The first air mall\never, carried* by a land flyir;r machine\nin Canada was relayed Friday from\nRtmouskU, Que., to Montreal.\nThe ' experiment was an outstanding\nsuccess and landed the (\\*ll\u00bb * **uU\nday earlier than If It had been handled\nover the regular route.\nWELL-KNOWN BUSINESS\nMAN DIES AT CALGARY\nCALGARY, Nov. 13\u2014Joeeph Dennis\nO'Connell, manager and buyer ln the\nmen's and boys* clothing department of\nthe Hudson's T!*y company in Calgary,\nand well known from Toronto, Ont., to\nVictoria, B.C., as a business man. Ro-\ntarian an* Knight of Columbus, died\nBt 7 a.m. Sunday after an illness of\nthree months. A man of many friends\nand exceptional talents, his passing at\nthe age of 42 years brought widespread regret.\nDISS BY POISONING\nWAWOTA, Bask., Nov. 13.\u2014Drlnkmg\npoison ln error, Hormisdas Fllteau,\nDumas district farmer, is dead.\nBERLIN, Nov. 13.\u2014Mrs. Prances Wilson Grayson\/ who was compelled to\nabandon an air flight from Old Orchard,\nM\u00ab-, to Copenhagen because of bad\nweather and motor trouble, has no desire to make any nonstop flights across\nthe Atlantic.\n\"No nonstop flights acrosS the ocean\nfor me,\" she told the Associated Press\nSaturday, upon her arrival in Berlin\nto confer with Mrs. Mabel Ancker of\nCopenhagen, her financial backer. \"It\nwas my Idea from the beginning that\nwe should make stops en* route from\nthe United States to Denmark, but my\npilot overruled me. Studies of air and\nocean currents while I was crossing on\nthe Majestic convinced me more\nthan ever that the development of\naviation can only be served by flying\nover the Atlantic ln several hops.\n\"I am Just as determined as ever to\nfly my airplane, \"the Dawn,\" to Copenhagen.' Our three attempts provided\nexcellent lessons, from which I profited\na great deal.\n\"I hope to start for the United States\nIn eight or 10 days and on arrival there\nI'll begin preparations for another\nflight.\n\"H Is nonsense to say you cannot\nfly In winter.\"\nTo Prosecute Hunters\nFound Careless When\nAccident Occurs\nVICTORIA, Nov. 13.\u2014Pour cases of\nmanslaughter have been launched ln\nthe courts of British \u2022 Columbia as a\nresult of shooting accidents this year.\nThese ctses are being conducted as\npart of the determination of the provincial poljce and the game conservation board to reduce carelessness with\nfire arms in ine wood*.\nAll officers of the provincial police\nhave been instructed^ to proaecute ln\nsuch cases where any doubt about\ncarelessness exists.\nLong Chin Is Found\nDead; Prdice Believe\nHim Victim of Murder\nVANCOUVBR, Nov. 18.\u2014Lying ln bed\nwith his throat severad and a razor and\nsmall axe beside him,- the body of\nLong Chin. Chinese, val found ln a\nrooming house today. Neither weapon\nwas used and from the wound the police declare he was murdered.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 13.\u2014Second Engineer CaUen of the Dutch freighter Ryn-\ndljk, ls dead, and the chief engineer ls\nin hospital at Qubec suffering from severe burns as the result of an explosion\nthat occurred in the steamer's bunkere\nlast Thursday when she was off Father\nPoint, en route to Montreal.\nThe explosion was attributed to spontaneous combustion.\nSHIP SINKS\n8AULT STE. MARIE, Ont., Nov. 13.\u2014\nThe local passenger and freight steamer\nWacouta, which plied between the Boo\nand Bruce Mines, was sunk in 35 feet\nof water ln Wilson channel, 260 yards\nout from the Richards' Landing dock,\nduring the severe storm on Bt. Mary's\nriver early Saturday afternoon. The ves\nsel had Just unloaded Its six passengers\nat the landing, when its cargo of 40\nbarrels of gasoline and oil shifted and\na squall upset the boat, which was val\nued at 16000. A lifeboat was quickly\nlowered and the crew, consisting of\nCaptain Percy Kent, owner of the boat,\nEngineer Charles Harrison and the cook,\nMiss Dorothy Maltman, got away in\nsafety.\nDOWN IN CANAL\nBUFFALO, N.Y., Nov. 13.\u2014Word has\nbeen received here that the steamer\nRosemount, of the Canada Steamship\ncompany lines. Bank ln the Welland\ncanal below Lock No. 25 at Thorold. Ont.\nThe boat was en route from Buffalo to\nMontreal with 80,000 bushels of grain.\nIt is not ln the channel, and the canal\nnavigation will not be blocked.\nNearly all steamers at this end of Lake\nErie have been tied up during the past\n12 hours on account of heavy westerly\ngales.\nSHIPPING  TIED  ITP\nPORT ARTHUR. Nov. 13, \u2014 Gftles\nwhich lashed Lake Superior during the\nweek-end tied up shipping at the head\nof the lakes, and Thunder Bay Is dotted\nwith grain carriers at anchor. Most of\nthe boats had taken on their loads.\nVESSEL ABANDONED\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13\u2014The Union\nSteamship company announced, Saturday, that they had abandoned their\nsteamer, Catala, to the underwriters in\nLondon. i\nOld Country Money\nIs Available for the\nP.G.E. Extension Work\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13.\n\u2014Old country capital to\nthe extent of $35,000,000\nis obtainable to complete\nthe Pacific Great Eastern\nrailway, from North Vancouver to Edmonton, according to Alexander Phillip, former magistrate and\nmember of the board of\ntrade, North Vancouver.\nMr. Phillip said that he\nhad been negotiating for\nsome months with English\ncapitalists. He announces\nthat a concrete offer of\n$35,000,000 has been received. It is estimated,\nMr Phillip states, that\ncompletion of the line as\nproposed will cost approximately $30,000,000, leaving\nan additional $5,000,000\nfor contingencies.\nMr. Phillip will not discuss full details of the offer at present.\nSalmon Fishing\nConditions WiU\nBe Investigated\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13\u2014An Investigation of salmon fishing conditions on\nthe British Columbia coast will be made\nby W. A. Found, federal director-general\nof fisheries, who will arrive in the city\ntomorrow from Ottawa.\nALVARO   OBREGON\nNOGALES, Ariz., Nov. 13.\u2014An attempt was made ln Mexico City today\nto assassinate Aivaro Obregon, sole remaining presidential candidate, said a\ntelegram received ln Nogales, Sonora,\nMexico,  tonight  by  Obregon s  wife.\nThe telegram received by Senora Obregon said that a bomb exploded close\nto the automobile in which Obregon and\na party of friends were riding. No one\nwas injured.\nEIGHT DIE IN\nThirteen   Injured;  People   Are\nTrapped on Upper\nFloori\nINDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 13.\u2014An early\nmorning fire that trapped occupants\nof third floor rooms ln the Grayson\napartment hotel here today resulted\nIn the loss of eight lives.\nThirteen persons suffered injuries\nand one of them, a city fireman, may\ndie.\nThe fire, originating from an unknown cause ln an elevator shaft, apparently ate its way slowly to the third\nfloor and suddenly spread out, cutting\noff all  means of escape.\nThe dead Included six women, a\nyoung girl  and  a young boy.\nThe victims: Miss Alice Furr, Miss\nStella Klmberllng. Mrs. Jessie Campbell, Mrs. Emma Russell, Miss Elizabeth Russell, Roy Zimmerman, aged 14,\nand Ruth  Rawlins, aged  13.\nOn unidentified woman, and William\nWeisharr, the fireman, were the two\nwho suffered Injures that may prove\nfatal.\nThe Grayson hotel, a three-story brick\nstructure is located on Illinois street.\nnear New York street close to the\ndown town district. It housed a num\nber    of    inexpensive   apartments.\nNIAGARA FALLS IS\nTwo Distinct Shocks; Windows\nRattle  and  Pictures  Fall\nFrom  Walls\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont,, Nov. 13.\u2014\nThis city was distinctly shaken twice\nSaturday evening and the only reasonable supposition is that the cause was\nan earthquake. The shocks were so\nviolAit ln some sections thaf occupants\nrushed out into the street as windows\nrattled and pictures fell from the walls.\nThe two shocks were closer together.\nRECORDED  AT  VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, Nov. 13.\u2014On the Gonzales\nobservatory seismograph a small quake\nrecord was obtained at 2:02 p.m. Saturday, showing an earthquake of moderate\nIntensity distant about 640 miles.\nThe record continued for half an\nhour.\nFELT  AT  WASHINGTON\nWASHINGTON. Nov. 13.\u2014A sharp\nearthquake, estimated to have occurred\nabout 4700 miles from Washington, direction unknown, was registered on the\nseismograph of Georgetown university.\nDirector Tondorf said the tremors began\nat 6:18 p.m. and lasted more than an\nhour.\nSENTENCED   TO   HANG\nv\nPARKERSBURG, W.Va., Nov. 13. \u2014\nConvicted of assaulting a 5-year-old\ngirl, Wesley H. Swain, 42, was sentenced\nto be hanged February 3, in the state\npenitentiary by Circuit Judge Walter C.\nMcDougall yesterday.\n[\nPlane Engines Suddenly Stop\nAfter Takeoff From Azores\nfor America\nFLYERS RESCUED BV\nPAPERMEN IN LAUNCH\nTwisted Plane Towed to Port;\nCause of Disaster Is Not\nRevealed\nHORTA ISLAND OF FAYAL, Azores, Nov. 13. \u2014 The\nHeinkel hydro airplane D-1220\nlay a mass of twisted wreckage\nin the harbor of this port today as a result of the latest of\na series of accidents that beset\nher since taking off from War-\nnemuende, Germany, October\n12, for the United states via\nthe Azores. The crew were\nrescued uninjured.\nTaking advantage of almost\nperfect flying weather, the\nD-1220 in command of Horst\nMerz, took the air at 3 o'clock\nthis morning with Haroor\nGrace, Newfoundland, as its objective. After circling around a\nfew times, the engine warming\nprocess, the plane headed for\nthe open sea and almost immediately the engines stopped\nsuddenly and there was a terrific splash.\nA motor boat with an Associated Press correspondent wu ln at-\ntendance at the take off and rushed\nfull speed to the scene, where the crew\nwas found swimming uninjured ln the\ngasoline-covered water.\nIS   TOTAL   WRECK\nA launch succeeded ln Betting the\npartly submerged plane ln tow and\nreached shore, where lt wos found to\nbe a total wreck.\nThe commander of the Ill-fated\nplane and hts companions, William\nBock, radio operator, and Frits Rhode,\nmechanic, have not yet decided what\ntheir next step will be. It wu announced, however, that the Junker*\nseaplane, D-1230 which also has been\nat Horta awaiting favorable weather to\nhop off tor the United States had postponed further attempts to hop off.\nBoth the D-1220 and the D-1230 are\nbacked by the Hamburg-American\nSteamship line ln an effort to demonstrate the practicability of transatlantic   flying.\nInability to Open\nOxygen Valve Cause\nof Balloonist Death\nSCOTT FIELD. 111., Nov. 13\u2014Captain\nH. c. Oray, Scott field engineering officer, apparently lost his life in an attempt to break the world's altitude record, not because of oxygen supply\nfailure, as first supposed, but because\nof sheer physical Inability to open the\nvalve of his second oxygen cylinder.\nLieutenant-Colonel J. A. Pagelow,\nScott field commandant, announced\nyesterday that of four cylinder* of\noxygen, three were full when tbe contents of the buket of his balloon were\nexamined. The body wu found ln the\nbasket last Saturday near Sparta, Term.\nProm the Dominion Meteorological\nOffice,   Victoria\nSATURDAY  WEATHER\nMln. Max.\nNELSON     jo 29\nVictoria       35 gg\nVancouver     33 30\nKamloops M ia 34\nBarkervllle     , 4. a\nEstevan   40 48\nPrince   Rupert     33 46\nDawsor,  I** 10*\nSeattle   \u201e 43 46\nPortland   ...._    44 48\nSan   Francisco    _ 13 74\nSpokane     33 38\nPenticton     33 30\nVernon _ \u00ab so 24\nOrand Forks   25 38\nCranbrook       1J 31\nCalgary      a* 4\nSwift  Current    18\u00bb It\nPrlno* Albert      3 14\nQu'Appelle       _..... 18\" 8\nWinnipeg  \u201e..._ < 10\n* Below aero.\n Tan TwT\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14,  1927\nTWO ABB  A8MIYXlATIil>\nINDIAN HEAD. Soak.. Not IS\u2014Two\nMen met death ln \u2022 gaa-fMed pump-\nhouse on * f*rtn near ber* Saturday\nnKht.\nThe victim* were A. H Mayhood, aged\n(84. * farmer, formerly of Napanee, Ont..\nand hi* hired man. John Kovock.\nFume* from \u00bb pumping engine killed\nthe men.\nZZZ3E2\nThe Purity of Cuticura\nMake* It Unexcelled\nOver a Foot of\nSnow at Week-End\nThat winter ls really here was emphasised with cold facts over the weekend, when over a foot of snow fell in\nthe city.\nSnowing from about fl o'clock Friday\nnight, all day Saturday and Sunday, a\ntotal of 13.2 inches had fallen up to\nS p.m., yesterday. Snow fell all last\nevening. In the 24 hours ending 5\np.m. Saturday exactly six Inches of snow\nhad fallen, while 7.2 Inches fell In the\nfollowing 24 hours ending 5 p.m.\nyesterday.\nOn Saturday the mercury never rose\nabove 29, with the low point at 20.\nYesterday the temperatures were higher, the high point being 33 and the\nlow point 25.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\n-1     '   'IL\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 $1.00 ROTARIAN HEADQUARTERS\nThe Most Comfortable Rotunda tn the City\nHUME\u2014N. C. Ttmmins, L. H. Tlm-\nmins, Montreal; C. Smith, B. C. Moore,\nJ. Craham. J. Wufresne, J. B. Wood-\nworth, M. Kevile, J. Clark, N. M. Star-\nbuck, W. S. Richardson, P. W. Milton, C.\nThompson, Vancouver; W. 8. Herron, P.\nC. Barnes, D. Cooper, Calgary;  M. Ger-\nnaey, Penticton; W. Frampton, Trail;\nMr. and Mrs. H. E. W. Green, Toronto;\nMr. and Mrs. P. Black Jr., Winnipeg; J.\nV. Lougloro, Montreal; Mrs. E. D. Rogers, Kimberley; W. M. Kannawin, Q. E.\nAdams, E. J. S. Brown, Toronto; R\nSenll, Vulcan; A. J. Shaw, D. StDenls,\nSpokane.\nSAVOY\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\n. Heat. Hot and CoM Running Water in All Row\nRoi        nth Private Baths or Suojrers.\nA. KE ^H   Peep.\nSAVOY \u2014 C. R. McCharlie, Nakusp; 8.\nBartholomew, Castlegar; A. J. Davis,\nRossland; M. A. Miller, Calgary; J. M.\nSmith, Q. M. Llttleman, Spokane; M. F.\nKeery Trail; E. M. Swordor, South Slo-\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE   CENTER OF CONVENIENCf\n4ot and oold  water ln every room\nSteam Heated\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nNELSON. B. C\ncan; R. G. Parker, Vancouver: R. J\nDouglas, New Westminster; R. P. WU-\nmot, Victoria; R. Orth, H. C, Willis, T\nB. Blakely, Vancouver; A. Pear, J. Grler-\nson, Calgary.\nMadden Hotel\nT.   MADDEN,   Prop.\ntttam Heated   Rooms  by   ths  Da>\nWeek or Month.\nCvary   consideration   shown   te\nguests\nCor   Baker and  Ward 8ts..  Nelsor\nQUEENS \u2014 A. H. McNlel. Salmo; A. i\nSimmons. Cranbrook; W. Donaghy. No- |\nfclefoid, Alta.; F. A. Johnson. J. West- f\nman, A. Anderson, Boswell; j. McKenzle. Kimberley; J. C. Gray, Moose Jaw,'\nSask.; Pearl Rolland, Evelyn Lopez, Sandon; E. A. Thompson. Vernon; Mr. and\nMrs. E. Monaghan, Prince Edward\nIsland; H. E. Doucest, J. M. Labrosse,!\nKopeeskasing, Ont.; C. Nlelson, Cranbrook; MrB. W. Commando. Ontario.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA  Modern Brick Building\ntil   Vernon   Street   Nelson.   B.  C\n\u25a0ot and Cold Water and Telephones\nIn Al) Rooms    Steam Heated\nThroughout\nJ. Blombere. Prop.    European Plan\nNEW ORAND\u2014O. J. Moarund, Bonnlngton; Mrs. W. A, Weatherhead and\nfamily, Mrs. F. McPhatter and son, city;\nE Rees, Mrs. A. Rees, Burton; Mrs. E. D.\nRogers, Kimberley; R. V. Wilcox, Salmon\nArm; J. Flnkelsteln, Regina; Mr. and\nMrs. W. A. Andrews, Kimberley; H. G.\nHunter. Toronto; P. H, Watson, Ymlr;\nMr. and Mrs. J. J. Mclntyre, Vancouver.\nMADDEN \u2014 R. Violettl, M. Campbell,\nSalmo; F. TruBcott. W. O. Kum, J. A.\nEethler, C. Madden, E. McNeil, South\nSlocan; 8. Wood, Verwood, Sask.; S. McLean, Fife Lake, Sunk.; R. Morgan, T. J.\nLePage, Q. Hurry, Nelson: V. Geraux, J.\nGreenwood, Slocan City; W. Denlln, J.\nHarvey, Trail; A. Jacobson, K. Sirekrest,\nN. Anderson. Cranbrook; R. Gracey, J.\nHamilton, Toronto; L. L. Ford, Cada-\nmon, Alta.; Wing Sing, Cascade.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nUNDER   THE   MANAGEMENT   OF\nWILLIAM JONES\nOOOD,   CLEAN   ROOMS,  REASONABLE\nRATES\nPHONE 76 516 VERNON ST.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\nt*\/a   Block*   East   of   Poet   Office\nMlmm boated. Hot and oold water\nRooms   by   day   or   week.\nAlao Furnished  Suites.\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA**C. TOWNER, Proprietor\nThe Home of Plenty.\nFifty  rooma  of solid  comfort.\nHeadquarter* for Loggers and Mine\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT\nDr. Kannawin Tells Presbyteri-\nan.s 100,000 Children in Their\nSunday Schools\nAt the morning service of the First\nPresbyterian church yesterday the pulpit\nwas occupied by Rev. W. M. Kannawin, D.D., general secretary of the\nboard of Sabbath schools of the Presbyterian church ln Canada.\nMr, Kannawin, whose headquarters\nare In Toronto, is making a trip from\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\n, rill :-.nr.-.;x:.:\\XM:.t *..*\u2022* \u2022.::VK\nYOL'R  CAFE\nTHE GOLDEN GATE\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nTasty\n\u25a0\u25a0:t\nmeals    at     reasonable   '\u00ab\nprices.    Fresh  oysters  in  season.\nFrlgldaire    and    soda    fountain\nconnection.\nPHONE  081\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest Equipped Restaurant In tho\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT\n8PECIAL\u2014Ice Cream, Soda Water\nand Hoi Drinks Nice, clean, fur\nalshed rooms, hot and cold water\nWo Cater to Private Parties.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320   Baker   StreM,    N*l\u00bbon,    B.    C\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIQHT\n11:30   to   2(30,   Special   Lunch,   85c\n6:30   to    8:00   p.m.,    Supper     36c\nPHONE   164\nROYAL  CAFE\nClassic Restaurant\nRefinement     and     Delicacy      Prevail\nOPEN   DAY  AND  NIGHT\nLuncheon,   11:30  to 2    85c\nSpecial  Dinners 6:20 to 8    86c\nWe    specialize   ln    Chop    Suey    and\nNoodles\nPHONE   182\nHalifax to' Vancouver, visiting all nine\nprovinces, getting first hand information about the work of ihe young people tn the church. He stated that at\nthe present time there are over 11,000\nSunday school teachers and officers and\nover 100,000 children in Sunday school\nand that the jgumber was growing\nfast.\nHe has been to Vancouver and ts\nnow returning east.\nIn his sermon, Mr. Kanlawin dwelt\non the fact that Canada ls potentially\nwealthy in minerals, timber, field products and fisheries, but lta greatest asset\nis its young boys and girls.\nRev. R. J. Douglas, D.D., synodical\nsuperintendent of missions, occupied\nthe pulpit at the evening service, his\nsermon being centered ci the young\nboys and girls of Canada.\nThere was a very large attendance at\nboth  services.\nFARMER HELD FOR\nKILLING FRIEND\nHULL, Que-., Nov. 13.\u2014 Esdras Olroux.\nmiddle-aged Mu\u00bbm. tjue., farmer, and\nfather of 10 children, was held criminally responsible for the death of hlg\nneighbor and Melons friend, Charles\nProulx, by a coroner's Jury which on\nSaturday Investigated the circumstances\nsurrounding the latter's death by shoof-\nIng on Friday, November 11.\nOlroux, who inflicted self injuries\nwhich may prove .fatal, will be removed\nto hospital here and placed under guard\nuntil he is able to appear ln the Hull\ncourt to answer-a charge of murder. A\ncoroner's warrant for the arrest of Olroux was issued following the finding of\nthe Jury.\nMrs. Cook Again Is\nHead of the Grand\nForks Hospital Aid\nGRAND FORKS, B.C., Nov. 13\u2014At the\nannual meeting ol the Orand Forke\nHospital aid held In the hospital on November 10, the following officers were\nelected: Mrs. William J. Cook, president (reelected); Mrs. O. B. Garrett,\nfirst vice-presided ( (reelected); Mrs.\nGaw, second vice-president; Mrs. Jeff\nDavis, secretary (reelected); Mrs. Don\nMalney. treasurer (reelected); Mrs. Dan\nMcKlnnon, member executive; Mrs. At-\nwood and Mr*. Garrett, reappointed purchasing committee.\nSPINS A BIT EVERY DAY\nMrs. Mary Honkancn who recently | spins a bit every day. sitting before\ncelebrated ,her eighty-sixth birthday.' the kitchen stove, or when it ls warm\nMrs. Honkanen, who came to Canada j weather, taking her spinning wheel\nfrom    Finland    ceventoen    years    ago, | out  into  the  garden.\nBLACKHEADS\nBlackhead simply dissolve and\ndisappear by this one simple,\nsafe ami sure method. Del\ntwo ounces of peroxlne powder from\nany drug store\u2014sprinkle it on a hot,\nwet cloth, rub the face briskly\u2014every\nblackhead   will   be  gone.\nTrail Hotels\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA   P.   LEVESQUE,   Prop.\nCompletely Renovated and Refurnished\nHot   \u00abnd   Cold   Running   Water European   Plan\n8te\u00abm      Heated Centrally      Loc*t*\u00abJ      ,\nRotary\nHeadquarters\nSample    Rooms   in\nConnection\nHot *nd Cold\nW*t*r\ntt**m Hearted\nThroughout\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nE.   L    AND   A.   GROUTAQE,   Prop*.\nBan  6M        Phon* 263        Trail,  i.e.\nTh* Old Rell.bl.\nCROWN    POINT    HOTEL\nA. McDERMOTT\nEvery Courtesy Extended to Tourists\nand Others Visiting TraU\nThe Farther You Send\nYour Dollars Away\nthe Longer They Take\nto Come Back\nA gentleman called the other day,\ncarrying an illustration cut from\na mall order catalogue.   It was\nA  MACKINAW   WIND-\nBREAKER     $4.75\nHe asked us what we could do\nthe nearest for\u2014what happened'\/\nNothing much! We brought forward the identical garment as described and our price, plainly\nmarked, was $4.75\nDEFENDS SELF\nSpends Two and Half Hours on\nStand; Admits Collecting\nfor Alarm System\nWINDSOR, Out.. Nov. 13.\u2014Admitting\nthat he had taken ln $350 In checks\nfrom various city firms for the installation of burglar alarm systems and\nhad neglected to notify the city police\ncommission of these receipts, Chief\nDaniel Thompson yesterday told the\ncommission Investigating charges of\ngraft and Inefficiency against him, that\nhe had used the money to purchase information from blind pig and gambling\nhouse  frequenters.\nThe chief, who is under suspension\npending completion of un Inquiry that\nis rounding out its third week of hearings, took the stand in his own defence.\nHis direct examination occupied two\nhours nnd a half of explanation, rebuttal and denial of charges contained\nIn a mass of evidence produced by the\nprosecution.\nMAY COME BACK\n\u00bb  ' ' --\u2666\nPresent Shipment of\nHorses Merely Part of\nOriginal Purchases\nOTTAWA, Nov. 13\u2014No further arrangements have been entered Into by\nthe department of agriculture and the\nSoviet trade commissioners with regard\nHON.   H.   II.   MAULER\nFormer minister without portfolio ln\nthe King government, may return te\npolitical life by contesting the constituency of Stanstead, Quebec, ln the\nevent of w. K. Baldwin's resigning\nthat  seat,  which  is  now  rumored.\nto extending the purchase of Canadian\nhorses. It was stated by departmental\nofficials today that the shipment of\nanimals now en route to Russia ls\nmerely a part of the original purchase\n<;f 4000 horses, arrangement for buying\nwhich were concluded p'rlor to the expulsion of the Soviet, trade commission\nfrom  Canada.\nWas Subject to\nBRONCHITIS\nEvery Winter\nMrs. Win, Healey, 524 Hill Street,\nLondon, (int., writes:\u2014\"My daughter,\naged fourteen, was subject to bronchitis\nevery winter.\n\"She would cough until she was sore\nfrom the exertion.\n\"Last winter a friend advised me to\nget a bottle of your\nDr. Wood's\nNorway\nPine\nSyrup\n\u2022o I got a email bottle to try and waa\ndelighted to find that before sho had\ntaken half of it her cough waa rom-\npletely relieved.\n,(I certainly feel justified in recommending it to those suffering from\ncoughs and colds.\"\nPrice 35c a bottle, large family Biie\n60c; put up only by The T. Milburn\n\u25a0Co., Limited, Toronto, Out.\nIS\nLatest Paralysis Victim \"Fine\";\nNo New Cases Reported\nto Dr. Arthur\n\"Pine!\" This ls how Dr. J. H. Bennett last night described the condition\nof Eunice Moore, 14-year-old daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Moore, 415\nCedar street, Nelson's latest infantile\nparalysis patient. This case was diagnosed Thursday.\nRita Weatherhead, 7-year-old daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. W, A. Weatherhead, 816\nPourth street, second last patient, ls\nmaking   good   progress.\nAsked last night If there were any\nnew case* of paralysis in the clly, Dr.\nE. C. Arthur, city medical health officer,  stated  none  hada been reported.\nNoah    Timmins,   of   Holling\nFame, Finds Where He Ran\nStore  Here\nSAYS HE IS HERE\nONLY ON HOLTDJ\nLeaves With Frampton to\nspect Associated Mine at\nGinol's\nWalking about Kelson's streets fi\nurday, trying to Identify landmarks\n30 years ago, when he was a Nat\nbusiness man. Noah Timmins of fl\nlinger mine fame, and the man af\nwhom the town of Timmins in nor\nern Ontario was named, met ml\nold-timers with whom he was acqual:\ned   in   the   roaring   '00s.\nThe   man   who   is  now  one   of\ngreatest  mining  figures  In  the  oot\ntry,   was, a   partner   with   A.   Peril\nin the men's outfitting business, th\nstore  being where Brown &  Co.,\nare.\nThis was one of the few points\nNelson that Mr. Timmins was able\nreadily Identify. At first he was i\nat all sure of Baker street.\nHEBE   WITH  PABTT #\nThat  he  was .not  here  on   buala\nbut  on  a  holiday,  was  stated  by\nnorthern Ontario magnate.\nIn the party were also Leo H. Tl\nmins,   W.   S.   Herron   of  Calgary,  I\nJ.   B,   Woodworth   of   Vancouver.   1\nlast   named   left   Saturday   night\nthe ooairt. ,\nThe two Timmins were guests at\nHume of W. Frampton, field manager\nthe Associated Mining & Milling co\npany   of   Olnol's   Landing.   The   pa\nleft by the boat yesterday morning\nGinol's to Inspect tbe company's ml\nji\/ei\\Jou\u00a7\nffeadache\nTHE   GUMPS \u2014IN  TRANSIT\n________-1 MH vWS, \\'UE WOR\u00abtA> For ALMOST EVEVIS\nFAMJLM m --.NE CrtS-   \\F \\ TOV* NOV UJMAT IME  PUT \\>*\nVWH VN  MN MME   VT   WOOU> MAKE NOUS. \u00abvlofc f>\u00abSl\ncov<>- VH TV* km* of A ovst who vwtAs wswt^tc am\nt>t>ES \\T- \\  OVUM'S 6AN \"Sou lit 1*1\u00bb, WORK-W\u00bb\nf5   THE   \u00ab.TChVto T^   f**K\nCFRONT GATE-\nNOW \"THAT 6ENERAU HOUSEWORK \u00bbS \\M\n:t>MMANb   OF THE   KITCHEN  MMWON'THME\nANS  MOPE   WpftSM  THAN   IF   SWE   WAS UCKEb\nIM A, BtSWN^ HOUSC- \\ CAH TEV.V. GM \"WAT\nSERVANT'S FACE THAT SHE SPENT M0ST OF^K\nUFE     PACKING  HEG. SUVT CASE-  Sue\nldovas uke the t?tM of- ^ dese^,\nPtt Bevsne ciWMfcs travelers\"\nW\u00ab0\u00abANCE -\nWEAK MEN\nand   for   all   Diseases   of   Men\n*ak\u00bb  ow simi BsmsdtM\nBook on Bkla Diseases, aew'\nTreatise on Chronic Diseases by\nHerbal Remedies. Pamphlet oa\nLoss of Manhood and Diseases r-f\nmen. Booklet on Female Ills; and\nadvice, free by mall; 30 years'\n\u2022xperlence. Without criticising or\ndisparaging your local dootors,\nwrite us before losing hop*.\nTreatment by mftil our specialty\nEBTGLISH    KXXB*U*   DISPE\u00bb-\nBABY    LTD.\n1359 Davie, Vancouver, B.O.\nThe Oldest  Herbal Instltutloa\nlie will #ve you a lift\/\njr will pay you to get acquainted with the Confederation Life Agen^. in\nyour vicinity.\nHe has information, freely at your disposal of a\nplan that will be a sure\nhelp in time of trouble, a\nreal benefit to you and\nyour family.\nTo be assured of a Guaranteed Monthly Income\nfor the full term of life,\nsecured by very moderate\ndeposits in your productive years, is surely something much to be desired.\nGet acquainted with a\nConfederation Life Agent,\nand find out all about this\nplan:\nAll    u*r*r**tiraf   pmmphlei,    \"A\nMonthly Irteom. for Lit..\" from.\nIy  aartt  ar\/M\nConfederatio\nLife\nASSOCIATION\nHOWARD FARRAN*\nDISTRICT MANAGER\nSogers Bldf. Van\u00abvuT\u00ab7 B.C\n '\",\t\n\t\n\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0b\u2014\n\u25a0\/357\nTBI NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1927\nServices at War Memorial and\n,n \u00ab*e Armories Well\nAttended\nROSSLAND. Nov. ,3._The Roland\n&\u201e?\u201e T' mdU* t0 \u00ab\" \"oor. last\n\u00ab\u00bbmbled to commemorate the ninth\n^T rr*0.^ \"\" \"\"nln* <* \"\u00bb *\"\nKhool children, y.terana and a num-\nMr of the dtlMns withered around\nthe soldiers memorial, where tha national   anthem   and   O   Oan*lal   were\nOmu Blay. The program a*, th. Ar-\n\"orlea .tarted with the natlon\u00bbl anthem, followed by the Hymn, \"o Ood\nOur Help In Ages Past,\" and a prayer hy Captain Wlaeman of the Salvation   Army.\nAnbhem \"What Are These?\" by the\ntaawed choira of the city, first scripture lesson by Rev. Cecil Blay; solo,\n\"In Plandera' Fields\" by Mrs. John\nSchmidt; hymn, \"For All the Saints,\"\n\u2022nthem \"The Radiant Morn,\" second\necriptur* lesson by Lleutentant Bray\n\u2022olo. \"The Trumpeteer,\" hymn, \"From\nOcean Unto Ocean,\" \"Ood of Our Fath\n\u2022re,\" anthem. \"From Egypt*' Bondage.\"\nvine sermon was preached by Rev. C. H.\nt>aly, of St. Andrew's United 'church!\nWho called on his hearera to remem-\n\u00bb*r the real meaning of Armistice day.\n\u2022fid to see to lt that the noble dead\n\u25a0hall not have died ln vain. Bugler S.\nW. Forteath sounded tha \"Laat Poet,\"\nand the program concluded with trie\n\u2022Inglng of 'O Canada,\" the benediction\nbeing pronounced by Rev.  c. H. Daly\nP.ige Tfirw\nNELSON MOTOR COACHES\nMELSOH-BLOCAM    COT   \"PATJUOIA\"\nLt. Slocan City connections for\nTrail    7:11 ^n\nL*. Peebles  Motors,   Nelson 4:1* p.m\nWELBOBT-TJtAIL   \"HAJbJOBXB\"\n' Lv. Nelson,      connections      for\nRossland     8-10 a m\nK*. Tnui    connections   for   Blooan CltT   1:01 un\nt      HELBOK-TMIK-BALMO   \"50-BO\"\n*>\u00bb. ettimu\u2014o.uu am.\ntvr. Nelson\u20143:80 o,m\nKELflON-YMIK-SALMO-ERLE\nt\u00bb. Nelson (Madden Hotel)   ....10 am\nv. Salmo     1 D.m.\nTrail News of tbe Day\n. T5u 52lumn '\" oonduot*tt by Miss\nS.\u2122' ThomI),?'i \"' TuUnae. All\n2SU..of * \"J1*1 P\u00bb,u\"r ih'ludlng\nreoeptions, *ntert*indi*nt*, Beraonal\nTr\u00abJl and Tiaanao, will appear In\nThompson at her residence. She\nf_ijHj\u00b0 h\"\"01' \u00bbn\u00bb advertlsementa\nappearing under TraU News of the\nDay.\nTRAIL, B.C., Nor. lJ_Th\u00ab tut\nTrail branch of th* Women's auxiliary\nmet Friday afternoon at the home of\nMm J. H. Owep., Second avenue. During the afternoon refreshments were\naerved by Mra. J. H. Owen, assisted\nby Mra. T. Daweon and Mr*. A. A.\nDawson. Those present w*r* Mn. D, A.\nBell, Mrs. J. Coupland, Mra. J. Wilkinson, Mrs. s. J. Kltohen, Mra. L. Barrett. Mrs. J. B. Stainton, Mrs. 0. A\nNewman, Mrs. H. Oumt, Mrs. B. M.\nLandsdown, Mrs. T. Dawson, Mrs. A. A.\nDaweon and Mrs. J. H. Owen president.\n\u2022 a    a\nThe East Trail branch of the Junior\nWomen's Auxiliary met at the home of\nMrs. J. H. Owen seoond avenue. A\nvery successful meeting was held with\nMrs. J. H. Owen, superintendent ln\ncharge. The members present were:\nLily Rowe, Evelyn Allen, Oladys Allen,\nEdith Allen. Kathleen Dawson, Vera\nShlmmel, Rose Shlmmel and Patricia.\nCondy,  a  visitor.\na   a   .\nMrs. H. o. WeJJter received for the\nfirst time since her marriage, on Friday\nafternoon at her home on Mllligan\nhill, wearing her wedding dress of white\ncrepe de chine. She was assisted ln receiving by Mrs. Monty Davidson. The\nreception room was decprated with\nrose chrysanthemum* while ln th* dining room the tea table waa centered\nwith a silver vase of yellow chrysan\nthemums. Presiding at the urns were\nH. B. Fuller and Mrs. P. Mclntyre,\nwhile Mrs. L. O. Mowatt, Miss Jean Me\nCallum and Miss Oladys Jagger, assisted   ln   serving.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. Thomas Jenkins entertained at\nthe tea hour at her home on Friday\nafternoon ln honor of Mies E. Slater,\nfrom England, who ls vliltlng with her\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. J. Slater. Among the invited guests\nwere Mrs. M. H. Manson, Mrs. W.\nBrady. Mlas I. Kier, Mrs. Annandale.\nMn. A. J. Slater, Mrs. O. Thompson\nand Miss E. Slater.\n\u2022 a    ,\nR. Retlly of Nakusp was a vlsltot\nin the city for the week-end.\na    ,    a\nMrs. J. Adamson and son arrived ln\nthe city  from  Scotland, Friday  night\nwhere   her   husband   Is   employed   by\nPlan Your\nChristmas Music Now\nBrave Storm to Attend a Union\nService in Commemoration\nof Event\nREV. MR. YOUNGSON BAYS\nDIVINE HAND IN VICTORY\nGives Instances; Legion Mem\nbers Parade; Special Music\nIn Feature\nTRAIL, BC. Nov. 13. \u2014 Braving a\nstorm. 600 Trail people plodded through\nthe Bnow tonight to attend the impressive Armistice Sunday union servloe In\nth* Liberty (neater aid ts hear t atir-\nrtnt address oy H*V. James YoUngson.\nreaailltlg the heroism of the grim war\nperiod, and attributing the ultimate\ntriumph of the allied armies of Ood.\nWith rolling drums and skirling pipes.\n80 members of the Trail branch of the\nCanadian Legion, eommanded by ' B.\nChalmers, pre,ident, marched from the\nMemorial hall headquarters ln the wake\nof the Caledonian Ftp* band.\nGITABD OF HONOR\nThey were met by a guard ol honor,\nIS boy scouts ln charge of Assistant\nScoutmaster p. Palmer, at the theater\nentrance, and ushered to seats reserved\nIn the oenter. On their left sat the\nladles' auxiliary, and on their right\nmembers of the Arthur Chapman chapter, I.O.DA\nThe servioe, conducted by the ministerial association, was presided over by\nRev. H. P. Humphreys of the Baptist\nchurch. Rev. W. 8. Beames of \u00ab. Andrew's Anglloan church and Ensign\nChalk of the Salvation Army gave the\nscripture readings. Rev. W. c. Mawhlnney of Trinity United. Nelson, led in\nprayer.   Rev. N. D. B. Larmonth. rector\nNothing gives more lasting\npleasure than the gift of a\nmusical instrument. Our selection is always complete, including smaller instruments\nas well as the famous Mason\n& Risch and Henry Herbert\nPianos and the poplar\nOrthophonic Victrolas, all at popular prices and offered on Very Easy Terms.\ngftftlllt\nOtiW\nMASON & RISCH, Ltd.\nFactory   Braaeh\u2014Aanablt   Block,    413    Ward    Street\n, NELSON,  B.C.    P.O.  Box  SIS\nteacher Says She's\nProudoffte\nHIGH standing on her exams.; perfect\nattendance ; bright and obedient.\nYou, Mother, can build up in your children\nthe health which is the foundation of these\ndesirable qualities \u2014 by the foods you give\nthem to eat. One food was deliberately;\ndesigned to this end\u2014Grape-Nuts.\nGrape-Nuts, made from gums, which doctors and\ndentists stress so strongly.\nGrape-Nuts is very inexpensive: four teaipoonfuk,\ncosting less than one cent,\nis sufficient for each per.\nson. Serve Grape-Nuts just\nas it comes from\nthe package\u2014at\nthe side of a bowl\nof milk or cream.\nAt all grocen\u2014or\naccept the free\noffet below.\nwhole wheat and malted\nbarley, supplies in deli-\nciously-appetizing and\neasily-digested form, the\nfive essential elements of\nnutrition.\nAnd Grape-Nuts\nhas a delightful\ncrispness which\ninduces chewing,\nthus giving the\nexercise to facial\nmuscles, teeth and\nMA0E\nIN\nCANADA\njrapesNuts\n{for Deliciousnourishment\nSend your Name tnd Addrm for Two fret Trial\nPackage, of Grape-Nut, and \"A Book of Bttttr Brtak-\nfattt.\" Addrtu Canadian Potinm Cereid Co., Limited,\nDept. G)9- 71   , Metropolitan Building, Toronto 2, Ont.\nthe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\ncompany.    They  will  reside  ln  Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nC. McLeod of Nakusp arrived in tht\ncity last evening to spend a tew days\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nThe Rev. and Mrs. B. L. Oaten were\nat home to all members of the Knox\nUnited church at their home oa\nPine avenue on Friday afternoon fron.\n3 to 6 o'clock and ln the evening from\n8 to 10 o'clock. The reception rooms\nwere prettily decorated with pink bot-\nton chrysanthemums while the tea\ntable was centered with a sliver vase\nof the same and silver candle sticks\nwith pink tapers. Presiding at the\nurns in the afternoon were Mrs. Man\nCampbell and Mrs. W. H. Morton.\nwhile Misses Eda and Gladys Randall\naaslste din serving. Presiding at the\nurns ln the evening were Mrs. Mrs. W.\nC. McKenzle and Mrs. Arthur Burton\nwhile Miss Ruth Dovey and Miss Marjorie McKenzie assisted ln serving.\nDuring the afternoon and evening several interesting program Items were\ngiven. Miss Eva Horwell charmed those\npresent in her UBual way with a song,\nMiss Doris Eckles a recitation, Miss\nHope a song, Robert Duffy a reading\nand Aubrey Philips a song.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A, T. Eyton of Trail was a\nRossland visitor Friday afternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss E. Thorn, who for many years\na resident of Trail has undergone a\nserious operation at the Trall-Tadanac\nhospital. She ls reported to be doing\nnicely.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. B. A. Stimmel, Miss\nJ. J. Fingland and Miss Dorothy Flngland, who have been attending the\nhome coming week at Pullman, college,\nwhere Miss Harriet Stimmel and J.\nA. Fingland are students, are expected\nto return to the city Sunday.\n\u2022 *   *\nWib Manson spent the week-end at\nhis   home   ln  Nelson.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nDenis Thaln spent the week-end at\nhis home in Nelson.\n\u2022 *   *\nMlas Kathleen Cairns was the guest\nof her parents for the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJames Vipond of Rossland was a city\nvisitor  Baturday.\nMrs. James White returned to Trail\nThursday, after spending a few days\nvisiting with friends in Nelson. She\nwill be the guest of Mrs. Newman,\nBay avenue, for a while before returning to the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA. J. Martin, who has been ill for\nthe last week, was moved to the Trall-\nTadanac hospital Friday morning for\ntreatment.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe weekly meeting of the Women's\nauxiliary was held 'Thursday afternoon\nin the parish hall. A very successful\nmeeting was held, about 28 being present. Tea was served by Mrs. Bruce\nWarden, convener, assisted by Mrs.\nMitchell and Mrs. William Devltt.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nA^ quiet, but pretty, wedding took\nplace on the evening of November 6,\nat the parsonage of Knox United\nchurch, when Miss Mary E. Dovey,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Dovey\nof Trail, was united In marriage with\nWilliam James Spooner, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Spooner, by the Rev.\nBeverley Oaten. The bride looked\ncharming ln a gown of dark blue crepe\nde chine, with a close fitting hat to\nmatch, and carried a bouquet of gold\nchrysanthemums. She was attended\nby her sister. Miss Ruth Dovey, who\nwas attired In a gown of black satin,\ntrimmed with white, while Reginald\nOriffln supported the groom. After\nthe wedding the happy couple left for\na wedding trip to Spokane. On their\nreturn they will reside ln Trail.\nTRAIL MIMICAL SOCIETY\nThursday, November 17, musical program and dancing, 8:30 till 12:90. Trail\nMale Voice Choir the guests of the evening, (3045>\nLady Orange Order\nls Formed, Rossland;\nTrail Ladies Lead\nROSSLAND, B.C.. Nov. 13.\u2014Golden\nCity lodge, No. 788. L.O.B.A,, got away\nto a good start Friday night, when, In\nspite of the inclemency of the weather,\na goodly number ot those interested ln\nthe work ol the order assembled ln the\nOrange hall to Institute a local branch\nof tht association. Mrs. u. Emsley of\nTrail aoted as Instituting officer, as-\nsieted by Mre. J. Doughty, Mrs. w.\nKoUston and Mre. J. McLim, also of\nTrail. The following officers were Installed:\nW. M, Plorenoe V. Armstrong; D.M\nBessie B. Ferguson; recording secretary,\nMaude Armshaw, financial secretary\nand treasurer, Jennie Henderson; DO\nBeatrice Blomfleld; first lecturer, Margaret Finney; second lecturer, Margaret\nTweed; chaplain, Elizabeth Kerr; OO\nR. I. Ford; guardian, w. J. Weir.\nSupper was served at the conclusion\nof the instituting csremonles end fun\nand good cheer resigned supreme\nT\nT\nTrail   Sees   Speedy   Basketball\nClash Climax in Odd-\nPoint Win\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 13.\u2014Beating the\nSheiks by an odd-point, the Hockey\nclub boys won their second city basketball league match h\/> 25 to 24 before a crowded gallery in the Memorial  hall  Saturday night.\nThe game was played at furious\nspeed, with the Sheiks opening the\nscoring in two minutes, and the Hockey\nclub taking the lead of five minutes\nand retaining it for the rest of tht\ngame.\nPassing the ball as If it were hot\nthe Sheiks forced the speed of th'.\ngame and had their passes apd their\nshooting been effective they would\nhave won hands down.\nOustason, a whole team in himself\nrobbed them mercilessly at short rang?\nand Jackson, loafing under the Sheiks\nbasket, lobbed ln eight field goals\nMackle accounted for three and Brennan, center, one field and pne penalty\nLefevre   played   good   defence.\nFor the Sheiks, A. Demidoff, who\ncame on late ln the second, made\nthree points, Evans made seven, all\nIn the second, Burrows made eight,\nand Baillte made si x. Sammons and\nChandler   played   well   at   guard.\nE. Perkins handled the game ln\nsnappy  style.\nThe Pirates were given a good work\nout by a pickup team ln lieu of an\nIntermediate  league   match.\nAUXILIARY BAZAAR AT\nROSSLAND IS SUCCESS\nROSSLAND. Nov. 13.\u2014St. George's\nchurch hall was gaily decorated Thursday afternoon, the occasion being the\nannual bazaar of the women's auxiliary.\nCrowds surged ln and out all the afternoon, or sat chatting at the tea tables.\nThe booths, filled with pretty things,\nwere quickly emptied, something over\n$200 being realized for the church\nfunds. The dainty doll resplendent in\nyellow satin fell to the lot of Miss\nHilda Toogood. The following committees were in charge of the affair:\nAfternoon tea\u2014Mrs. William A- Turner, Mrs. R. J. Portman, Mrs. E. McKay-\nWhite, Mrs. W. H. Blair and Mrs. T. L.\nBloomer; candy booth\u2014Mrs. Sidney\nSimcock and Mrs. F. H. Ashfield; home\ncooking\u2014Mrs. A. E. Jewell, Mrs. W.\nBlackwell; fancy work\u2014Mrs. J. J. Wilson\nand Mrs. H. Flood. MrB. H. W- Atkinson was general convener of the bazaar.\nMrs. Frances Demo\nPasses Away, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 13.\u2014The death occurred here yesterday of Mrs. Frances\nCaroline Demo, mother of Mrs. Arthur Sherman of Bay avenue, at the\nage of 87. Mrs. Demo lived In Trail\nfor 11 years.\nof St. Andrew's, led in silent prayer and\npronounced the benediction.\nVoluntaries were played by the Veterans'   orchestra   under   E.   W.   Hall.\nMadame Beatrice Purdy, contralto, sang\na solo, \"Father In Heaven,\" by Boun.\nMANIFESTATION OBVIOUS\nNever before in history was divine\nmanifestation so obvious as during the\ngreat war, declared Mr. Youngson ln his\naddress.\nAs an instance, he recalled the retreat\nfrom Mons\u2014a handful of Britishers opposed by five enemy army corps, by all\nthe chances of warfare due to be utterly\nannihilated, yet retreating unabashed,\nreturning to the attack and to bold the\nenemy. Troops who took part In that\nengamement, recalling their Impressions\nof Invisible hosts fighting for them, said\nMr. Youngson, ascribed their deliverance\nto divine power.\nAnother Instance he gave, the miracle\nof the Marne\u2014Paris at the mercy of the\nHuns had they gone forward, but. Instead, the greatest tactical blunder oi\nthe war, committed by one of the ablest\nGerman generals, who exposed his troops\nto a flank attack and thus permitted\nthe Allies te force the enemy to dig ln.\nTo what could one ascribe that colossal\nblunder, but to divine Intervention? he\nasserted.\nSPIRIT VANQUISHED MATTER\nAgain, the Instance of the German\nthrust for the channel ports, massed\ntroops, displaying great heroism, bringing everything possible to bear on the\nthin British line, and yet unable to\nbreak lt. Why? Because the divine will\nprevented.\nThe war, though lt left much unsettled, did settle for all time the relative strength of the material and spiritual, and proved that time will inevitably give victory to the spirit. German\nmaterialism, he said, was answered ln\nthe armistice. It wae a confession of\nGermany's error In believing ln the supremacy of the material.\nSUPPORTERS ME\nWORKERS. TRAIL\nSoccer  Banquet  and  Social  Is\nWell Attended and Excellent\nProgram Heard\nTRAIL, B.C.. Mov. lS.-Making it\n\"ladies' night,\" 20 soccer supporters\ntendered a complimentary banquet and\nsocial in Orange hall to as many ardent\nsoccer sUDpottere of the fairer sex on\nSaturday night, lxl recognition of numerous little services given for the good\nof the game.\nA. (Sandy) Aitken, presiding, complimented the ladies on being soccer\nsupporters and for really supporting.\nand welcomed thwn to the banquet and\nsocial diversion provided. It Included\nsongs, instrumental selections and brief\naddresses.\nJohn Balfour, Curlte Disaplo. W.\nHouston, spoke boosting the game. W.\nMilne, J. Leckle, Mrs. George Aitken,\nJ. Anderson. W. Llghtbody, Oeorge Watson and J. McHardy all entertained. W.\nThomson both sang and recited, Dave\nStewart sang, told stories and gave an\nexhibition of step dancing. Mrs. James\nLeckle entertained tflth piano solos.\nPipers Nell Henderson and, J. McLennan gave selections on the pipes, the\nlatter also playing for the square\ndances. W. Kilgour, formerly of Kimberley. another piper and songster, declared he had helped Kimberley win\nthe Blaylock cup from Trail and was\nnow out to help win it back for Trail.\nA pea-guessing competition intrigued\nthe ladles. It was won by Mrs. W\nMilne. Miss Janet Aitken was awarded\nthe  booby  prize.\nPreparation and serving of the splen-\nild repast were undertaken by Mesdames James Weir. W. Milne, G. Alt-\n'u'ii and Miss Janet Aitken.\nAmateur Athletic association as a representative of the Jffeit Kootenay branch\nof   that   organization.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. H. W. Atkinson left this morning to spend the next few weeks ln\nSpokane.\nJ. X. Kelderman and H. A. Hill are\nspending today ln Nelson.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMies Mae Armlshaw has returned to\nNelson after spending a few days at\nher home in this city.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nGordon Cobb has returned from spending the last two months with friends\nin Manitoba. I\n' morning   to   inflicting   grievous   bodily\n\u25a0 harm on Ben Henschell.\nIn   a   statement   to   the   magistrate\nl they   submitted    that   Henschell    had\nI struck their wives ln an altercation and\nthat they beat him up for lt.\nHenschell, who had been ln the\nhospital since* the beating on Tuesday\nnight, and unable to attend court because of tt. ls still suffering from\nsevere head and face injuries.\nHEAVY SENTENCES\nFOR TRAIL PAIR\nEtfinger   Brothers   Get   Three\nMonths and Are Fined $100\nApiece\n< AMI KO\\   PROMOTED\nMONTREAL. Nov. 13\u2014The appointment of Junes Cameron as general\nfreight agent. Canadian Natlonal-Oraad\nTrunk railways, with supervision over\nlines ln the United States, west ot Detroit, and St. Clair rivers, 1* announced\ntoday. Mr. Cameron's office will be at\nChicago.\nAbout 60 Junior Farmers of Durham county took part In annaal Judging competition held at Bethany.\nTRAIL. Nov. 13\u2014Sentences of three\nmonths' hard labor and fines of 910O\nand costs, or. In default, an additional\nthree months, were imposed by Magls- I\ntrate Noble Binns on each of the\nbrothers. R. W. Ettlnger and 0. C.\nEttlnger,   who  pleaded  guilty  Saturday\nAlter telling two hundrMt\nmillion poun*\u00bb of\n\u2022'SALADA\" Tea In tho\nthirty-five yean of lta existence, the Salada Tea\nCompany has )uat established a new record hy\nselling over two million\npounds in the last seven\nweeks.\nROSSLAND NOTES\nROSSLAND, B.C., Nov. 13..\u2014Lyall\nChambers, who has been the guest of\nBentiey Dodds, has left for his home In\nKamloops.\n\u2022 a     \u2022\nMrs. O. E. Cobb and Mrs. H. H.\nJohnstone entertained the sewing circle\nof the United church Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Cobb on Columbia avenue, east.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nDr.    and    Mrs.    C.    L.    Manning    of\nChester,   N.S.,   are   the   guests  oi   Mrs.\nManning's sister,  Mrs.  Samuel  Irwin.\n* \u2022    \u2022    *\nJ. C. Urquhart left Thursday night for\nVancouver, where he will attend the\nannual meeting of the British Columbia\nWinter Battery Storage\nPHONE 8 AND WE WILL CALL\nDELIVERY IN  -I'HIM. SATISI.1<TION  GIARANTEEI1\nDill's Super Service Station\nPHONG K. NELSON. H.C.\nI'.  O. Ill)\\ 401\nGALT   COAL\nLUMP, per ton $11.50\nSTOVE, per ton ,.* $9.5\u00a9\nBURNS ALL NIGHT\nWEST TRANSFER COMPANY\nWholesale and Retail Coal Dealers I'hone S3\nfar your sweetheart- QUALITY\nThe ways of a maid with a man ut\npassing strange. She loves and yet\nshe doubts. And how quickly\ndoubts are dissolved by a token of\naffection\u2014Chocolates by Moirs.\nMoirs will give her a thrill of\npleasure and, by their quality, they\nwill subtly convey the quality of\nyour feelings.\nThe endless variety of Mo,rs fillings\nsatieties the most fastidious taste and\nwins for Moirs a place in the best\nhomes.\nOn the bottom of every Chocolate\nthere is stomped the hall mark of\nQuality\u2014Moirs.\nCHOCOLATES\nm\nOIK\n: \u2022 CANADA'      K*J t\u00bb\n.PANADA' ft. rA N D Y\n\u2022HALIFAX\n Page four\nTHE NELSON MIL* NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 192T\nfHE   DAILY   NEWS\nPublished *v*ry morning except Bua-\nKf by Th* Hews Publishing company,\n\u00bbitp<l, NelMKtBC.\nBusiness letters should he addraased\nid   checks   aft   money   orders   made\nsyable to Thi  News Publishing com-\n\u2014any,   limited, Ind   ln   no  casa to  tndl-\nrldaal members of the afaff.\nAdvertising Hits cards and ABC.\nRatements of circulation mailed on\n\u25a0qaest, or may be seen at the office\nf any advertising agency recognised\n\\f tha Canadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\nIy mall   (country),  per month...$    .$$\nPer year       $.00\nBf mall (city), per year  11.00\nUt'lrie Canada, per month 75\nPer   year    \u2022   T.SO\nUlvered, par week $5\nPar  year    11.00\nPayabla la Advance\nTt tin be* A ndi t Bursa a of Olreala tl oa\nMONDAY.   NOVEMBER   14,   1037\nKootenay Women's Parliament\nTomorrow the Women's Institutes of\nKootenay district, 29 ln number, If all\nflva.l themselves of their privileges,\n\u25a0assemble, by their representatives, at\nKaslo,   for  their  annual   \"parliament.\"\nProbably no conference that ls ever\nheld in the Kootenay has a broader\nactual influence than this conference,\nor an Influence that touches the life\nrf the Faotenay at so many points.\nCrippled children\u2014ever hear of the\nSolarium? Dental clinics, hot cocoa\nfor noontime lunches, sanitation, school\nsjnrroundings, play facilities, the dinner\ntable, all the household arts, home Industries, legislation affecting the\ntoother, the child, and the home, nursing\u2014\nThere is simply no end to the subjects that our Women's institutes of\nthe Kootenay, among them, touch $md\ndeal with, the conditions that they\ngive their attention to and transform, the leadership that\u2022 they take in\ncommunity  Improvement.\nWherever a Women's institute is\nplanted, there ls developed a center of\nIntelligent community effort, that\nspreads   beneficently   In   all   directions.\nKaslo will royally welcome the ln-\netltutcs, has in fact been making great\npreparations for their entertainment. It\nwill be the general wish that the two-\nday conference opening tomorrow will\nbe successful In a marked degree, and\nhave the usual result of giving a new\nImpetus to the hundred useful lines\nof endeavor that our Institutes follow.\nMinistry ot the Snow\nWhile proverbially appearances are\ndeceptive, it certainly looks at present\nai if winter has arrived In the Koote-\n' nay. a month or ao, more or less,\nttheitd of its average advent. If it really has, lt ls only carrying on the program of coolness and wetness that the\nweather man has favored us with the\nwhole year. In company with the rest\nof   the   continent.\nToday Canada ls white from Quebec\nto the Pacific, and the marltlmes may\nperhaps now be making it unanimous.\nWinter adds to the joy of life. It\nadds a tang to the air, a tingle to the\ntouch, an Impulse to the blood, that\ntogether add a zest to life. It calls for\nthe swift flight of skate, ski or bobsled, the exchange of compliments with\nzipping snowballs, the breaking of\ntratl by booi, mocassin or snowshoe.\nIt seals up the earth and heals the\nwounds of Nature, it sends vegetation\nInto dormancy, it kills off the insect\nhordes, it prepares the soil for a new\ncareer   of   usefulness.\nIf for a change we are to have a\nlong Kootenay winter, instead of our\nnormally short one, there will be no\nrepinlhg among the curlers, the skaters, the ski-jumpers, or the coast-\nI ers.\nIn   Canada,   In   the   Kootenay,   we\n;  have   the   blessing  of  a  summer  and\na   winter;   ln   some   muchly-advertised\nstates they have only  a summer.\nThe \"cool blood of the north\" borrows from the Canadian climate. It ls\none of the beet parte of our heritage.\nThe Stranger Within American Gates\nThe\nLighter Side\nReaders of The Dally News\ncontribute many of the best Iteiaa\nto thla column. Just sign your\naame or initials, or nom-de-pluma,\nand send in your brightest Idea*\n\u2014Bdltor,  Lighter  Side.\nAUNTHET\n\"Sue Hanson makes the best\nlemon pie I ever saw, but she's\nso stuck up about her cooking\nthat I won't give her the satisfaction of asking for her recipe.\"\nThe world really grows better. It Just\nseems awful because some people still\nsay \"as lt were.\"\nA night club ls a place where you're\nsupposed to get woozy enough not to\ncare  what  a ginger  ala  cost?\nThe thing that enables other states\nto sneer at Indiana In tneir self-righteous way Is a short memory.\nThe flying age will be even worse.\nAir speeders never will stop when they\ndrop their things on a poor pedestrian.\nSOME FAMILIES GO RIGHT ON\nSPENDING MONEY FOR BREAKFAST\nSPENDING MONEY FOR BEEFSTEAKS\nAND FLOUR WHEN THEY HAVEN'T\nA FUR COAT ON THE PREMISES.\nCanadlanlsm: Inability to have a good\ntime without spending money.\nPeople are funny. We know a bachelor who thinks marriage a lottery and\nwon't take a chance, and he just\nbought a used car.\nIt takes a lot of mmlest optimism to be a reformer and expect to\nmake people as good as you are.\nStill, if there never were any strikes,\nthere would be some other good reason to charge too much for coal.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy   LAURA   A.   KIRKMAN\nNEW DISHES THIS WEEK\nTOMORROW'S MENU\nBreakfast\nOrange Juice\nCereal\nCreamed Lamb Left-Overs\nToast Coffee\nLuncheon\nI\nBaked Macaroni and Cheese\nMixed  Fruit Salad\nButterscotch Biscuits\nCocoa\nDinner\nTomato Soup\nBaked Tomatoes       Spinach\nSteamed Raisin Pudding with\nHard Sauce\nCoffee\nTo prosecute for trespass the man who\nentered upon one's property to put out\na fire In one's house would be unthinkable   to   moat   of   us.\nTo hand over to the law a fugitive\nwho came within ones ken by rescuing from danger and bringing home\none's lost child would be beyond all\nbut the  most callous of us.\nThe man who placed himself in our\npower for the purpose of doing ua a\nnotable service would be considered\nour  honored  guest,  his person sacred.\nIn times past, monarchs. prime ministers and others have granted safe-\nconducts to enemies, and then ln some\n. cases cold-bloodedly violated them.\nBuch history holds up to the world's\ncontempt.\nAfter having had two years and nine\nmonths to come to a final concluaion\nln the matter, the great United State*\ngovernment nas secured the committal\nto prison for two years, of the stranger\nwithin Its gates, the sea-captain who.\nhaving a load of liquor, disapproved of\nby United States laws, yet ventured\n\\ itnln American territorial waters to\nrescue the crew of a foundering American  vessel.\nEven the rudest of peoples, In all\nages, have recognised the law of hospitality. Often it haa been almost\ntheir only law. The United States\ngovernment, by this vindictive prosecution, has put Itself In a class that the\nBushmen would consider it a stigma to\nbe   assigned   to.\nIf husband and wife have a Joint\nchecking account, you know who runs\nthe   joint.\n\"I think she's a fright with It\nbobbed,\" In Just the feminine way\nof saying: \"I never did like the old\n\u00bbat, iinyway.\"\nA writer on Japan speaks of the\n\"national habit of suicide.\" A fellow\nshouldn't keep at it long enough to\nget   the   habit.\nAT A WINTER RESORT THERE\nARE TWO KINDS OF PALMS: ROOTED\nONES. AND THOSE YOU ARE EXPECTED   TO   PLACE   A   QUARTER   IN.\nThe chap who runs about \"looking\nfor opportunity\" usually is Just trying\nto run away from the fact that he's a\nfailure.\nCorrect this sentence: \"When I go\nmy car back from the garage,\" said he,\nall of my tools were in lt.\"\nPork Chops en Casserole: Buy the\nlarge shoulder chops and cut them ln\npieces. Sprinkle with salt and paprika,\nroll in flour and brown quickly ln a\ntablespoon of drippings ln a frying pan.\nNow place the meat in a casserole with\nthe following sauce: Melt two tablespoons of butter and into it rub two\ntablespoons of browned flour; slowly add\none-half cup each of elder and strained\ncanned consomme. Season to suit taste\nwith salt and celery salt and add one-\nhalf teaspoon each of powdered sage\nand poultry seasoning. Cover the dish\nand bake in a moderate oven\u2014376 degrees F.\u2014till the pork is tender and\nthoroughly cooked\u2014two hours at least.\nThan serve hot, from the same dish.\nButterscotch Biscuits: Sift together\ntwo cups of ordinary bread flour, five\nteaspoons of baking powder and a pinch\nof salt. With the finger tips work ln\nfour tablespoons of butter, then stir ln\nseven-eighths of a cup of sweet, cold\nmilk. Toss onto a floured board and\nroll thin. Spread with one-third cup of\nbutter previously creamed with three-\nquarters of a cup of light brown sugar.\nRoll up like a Jelly roll and cut off ln\nslices. Place these Inch-thick Uttle pin-\nwheels on a greased pan and bake 15\nminutes ln a hot oven\u2014about 450 degrees F.\nPotatoes Geneva: Into a baking pan\nput a piece of butter ;the size of a large\negg. Upon this, slice pared, raw potatoes. Sprinkle with salt and pepper,\nthen cover the vegetables with cold,\nsweet milk and bake till potato slices\nare tender, ln a moderate\" oven\u2014375 degrees F.\u2014for about two hours. Serve\nhot,\nMoorish Beets: Sliced peeled, cooked\nbeets Into a saucepan and over them\npour enough thick cream to keep them\nfrom burning on the bottom. Season\nwith salt and pepper generously and allow to simmer for several minutes, then\nremove from fire and stir in the beaten\nyolk of one egg to thicken the cream.\nServe at once.\nDevils' Food Cake: Cream one cup of\ngranulated sugar with one-fourth cup\nof butter. Add four beaten egg yolks,\npreviously mixed with another cup of\ngranulated sugar. Now, add one cup of\ncold sweet milk alternately with two and\none-third cups of pastry flour which ls\nsifted with four teaspoons of baking\npowder and one teaspoon of ground cinnamon. Add one-half cup of melted\nbitter chocolate and one teaspoon of\nvanilla, then fold ln lour stiffly whipped\negg whites, before baking in loaf form\nfor 40 minutes in a moderate oven\u2014376\ndegrees F. Spread ordinary fudge frosting on top.\nTomorrow\u2014Answers to Inquiries,\nAddress inquiries to Miss Klrkman,\nsnd Inclose stamped-addressed envelope\nfor reply.-\u2014Editor.\nThat Body\nof Yours\nIy  JAMES  W.  BARTON.  M.D.\nNeglecting Indigestion\nYou have perhape seen one of your\nfriends gradually growing so thin that\nyou have taken it tor granted he was a\nvictim of tuberculosis, or consumption\nas lt ls commonly called.\nYou learn, however, that he Just has\n\"Indigestion,\" that li nothing really\nserious.\nHowever, you learn a little later that\nhe has an \"ulcer\" of the stomach, and\nthat the matter ta really serious.\nNow, an ulcer here la the same aa an\nulcer anywhere else, that is an actual\nhole is being worn In the lining of the\nstomach or Intestinal wall. And, of\ncourse, Just as an ulcer on the skin of\nany part of the body will not get better\nIf lt ls kept Irritated, ao the ulcer of\nthe stomach has a difficult time trying\nto heal with food and the digestive\njuices irritating It.\nBy means of the barium meal and the\nX-ray, the exact location or the ulcer\ncan be located.\nTwo British physicians report the effect of medical treatment ln 17 caaea,\nwhich they followed by the above means\nfor two years, and as the ulcer began to\nheal the X-ray would show the spot\ngrowing smaller and smaller, until lt\nfinally disappeared.\nSometimes when the symptoms grew\nsevere again, It was found that the ulcer\nhad retturned.\nHowever, that they can heal completely, and thus enable the Individual to\navoid an operation, has been proven ln\nthousands of cases.\nDr. R. Lynch of Montreal analyzes the\nrecords of 944 cases of stomach and intestinal ulcer, and shows that 62% per\ncent of stomach ulcers, and 79 per cent\nof the intestinal ulcers, were cured by\nmedical treatment alone.\nThe point, then, ls that where \"indigestion\" becomes a constant condition\nthe possibility of an ulcer should be\nImmediately considered, because a\nsmooth diet may be all that Is necessary\nto enable the ulcer to heal.\nA neglected ulcer may mean many\nmonths of careful dieting with the possibility of an operation later.\nSo don't neglect, then, to consult your\nfamily physlclon when your \"indigestion\" fails to clear up in a few days.\nOWNER STEALS HIS OWN BOAT\n[\nI\nLoss to United Body Is About\n$100,000; Defective Wiring\nBelieved Cause\nTORONTO. Nov, 13.\u2014Erskine United\nchurch, situated in the western section\nof the city, burned Saturday, entailing\na loss of $100,000.\nThe fire ls believed to have originated\nfrom defective wiring near the organ,\nthough the police are investigating a\nreport that a man was seen coming\nfrom the church about an hour before\nthe blaze was discovered. Insurance\ntotaling $84,200 was carried on the\nedifice.\nOne fireman was Injured by a falling\n[ brick striking him on the face. An-\nj other casualty was that of Stephen\nHembrow, aged 82, who fell when carrying a ladder at his home, breaking\nhis right arm and receiving Injuries to\nhis head. A flying ember had started\na fire on the veranda of his home.\nThirty Years Ago\nREV.    FATHER    DEVINE\nOf the Society or Jesus, who Is\ndead. He was an outstanding authority   on   Canadian   history.\n(From The  Weekly  Tribune, November\n13,    1897.)\nThe banquet tendered by the citizens\nof Nelson to Hon. Clifford Sifton at\nthe Phalr hotel on Wednesday, was\na very enjoyable affair.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAt a session of the city council recently, action was taken to secure a\nsuitable ground for cemetery purposes.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nAll tenders for the work of grading\nLatimer street were turned down by\nthe city council ana the work will be\ndone   by   day   labor.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nDuring the past week there was entered at the port of Nelson for' export 822 tons of ore and 114 tons of\nmatte with an estimated value of\n$100,537.\nCANUCK INVENTOR\nOver 1800 acres of flue-cured tobaccoi\nlands in Norfolk county were recently\npurchased by Montreal and Toronto\ncapitalists.\nPhoto above shows the principals in\nthe latest tangle over the Verna,\nformerly the Roaella, which baa become Internationally famous aa a result of last week's trial at BellevlUa.\nOnt., in which Dr. Hedley Wellbanks\nwas acquitted on a charge of theft at\nthe boat. On the left la Dr. Hedley\nwellbanks, original owner, who seised\ntbe boat when it put Into a, Canadian\nport atfer it had been seized by United\nStates custemcj authorities and sold to\nthe Palmer Fish company or Rochester.\nOn the right above ls the Verna, more\nwidely known as the Roaella, and below Jack Roblln, who stands on' guard\ndeclaring that he will not release tho\nboat to Dr. Wellbanks until he receives\na  court order.\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally News, Nov. 14, 1917)\nA. McDonald of Nelson ls reported to\nhave been gassed overseas.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPte. William H. Priest, well known local high school boy and Nelson's youngest volunteer, arrived ln the city last\nnight from overseas on grant of leave.\nHe will return overseas when he receives\nhis notice.\n* *        at\nWord has been received by his mother\nthat Pte. D, Danlelson from Nelson, who\nwas gassed and wounded ln action on\nSeptember 6, ls doing well ln a hospital\ntn England.\n\u2022  a \u25a0 e\nFour tons of Christmas presents from\nrelatives and friends ln Nelson and district have been forwarded to those tn\nFrance from the city post office in the\nlast few weeks.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Dally News, Nov. 14,  (1907)\nGerald 8. Rees returned from Vancouver last night.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGeorge Alexander Macdonald Young\nof Creston was married to Miss Louie\nMay Arrowsmlth, also of Creston, by\nRev. Fred H. Graham, in St. Saviour's\nchurch, here yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHarry Wright Ib spending today up\nthe lake inspecting the various sections\nof the wagon road along the Arm,\nwhich have been constructed during\nthe past few months.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJafnes Biake, C.P.R. engineer, has as\na visitor his brother, L. M. Blake of\nWlngham, Ont.\nContracts for 25 bombing planes to\ncarry 2000 pounds of explosives have\nbeen awarded by N. D.\nSALADA Tea Company\nof Canada Limited sold\nits two hundred millionth\npound of tea on September\n16th last This is enough\ntea to supply the whole of\nCanada for five and a half\nyears.\n\"SALADA\"\nTEA  -\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nMaterial   john burns & son\nBuilding\nM.   OEALE\nCanadian Inventor, of an Illuminated\ntelephone dial, on the Indirect lighting system, consisting of two bulbs.\nHe says it would cost only 50 cents a\nyear.\nWon. Mr. Stewart Looked\nInto OU and Coal Work\nWhile Visiting Europe\nOTTAWA,  Nov.  13\u2014The  treating of\ncoal by low temperature  processes and\nthe  recovery   of  oils   from   coal   were {\nstudied   by   the   minister   of   interior,;\nHon. Charles Stewart, during his recent;\nvisit to Europe, and h\u00a3 had many opportunities  of  observing  expansion of\nthe coal Industry ln the development\nof by-products, lt was learned In an Interview here Saturday.\nLeslie Bailey of Welland, aged 14,\nalighting from an auto before lt\nstopped   sustained   a   fractured   skull.\nWarm\nAir\nFurnaces\nWhy not have our furnace expert go\ninto the matter of a new furnace with you\nbefore the real winter comes?\nWould be glad to. figure with you on a\nheating system.\nPRICES REASONABLE\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON, B. C.\nPlain Mr. York makes a hole in one!\nb\nSold\neverywhere\nAlao in lorjer six\"\n '\u00a5HE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1927\nPage FIvi\nFor Evening\niVear\nSmarter and  more  de-\nghtful   than    ever   are\n1 hese    Evenijrf    Slippers\nisplayed   exclusively   at\nhis shop.\nPatents, Latins, Silver\nind Gold Kid, in a gener-\nus selection.   Priced from\n$6.50 to $10.50\nI. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nAssociated Certain\nof Chasing Off Use\nApple Crop Balance\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13.-\u2014Conditions are favorable for clearing off\nthe balance of the 1027 apple crop\nat satisfactory price*, declared E. ..\nChambers of the Associated Growers.\nSo far this season the association\nhas shipped 2700 cars of frtilfc and\nvegetables and has 500 more to\nmove.\nIn Mr. Chambers' opinion, apples\nwill average the grower* a dollar\na box.\nDULUTH JUDGE TAKES\nOWN LIFE WITH GUN\nDULUTH, Minn.. Nov. 13.\u2014Sjfcncer\nJ. Searls, pudge of Duluth's conciliation court and former assistant county\nattorney and representative ln tbe\nlegislature, committed suicide in hla\noffices here today,4\u00bbJMJMDting himself\nthrough the head with a .38 caliber\nrevolver.    He was 41 years of age.\njudge Searls was a world war veteran\nand had been despondent for some\ntime because of old wounds which he\nreceived   during  the war.\nCHAMBER MEETS\nMONTREAL, Nov. 13.\u2014An Important\nmeeting of the national executive of\nthe Canadian chamber of commerce\ntakes place here tomorrow under Jthe\npresidency of A. M. Dollar of Vancouver. Other national councillors from\nthe various provinces will be in at'\ntendance.\nWinter Sports\nTAKE ADVANTAGE OF WINTER'S EARLY ARRIVAL AND ENJOY YOURSELF\nWE HAVE A FULL LINE OF SKIIS AND SLEDS.\nSELF-STEERING SLEDS, IN FIVE SIZES.\nROUND HUNNER SLEDS, IN THREE SIZES.\n'a GENUINE TELMARK SKIIS, IN 4 FT., 5 FT., 6FT,\n' Kl- M0DELS'\nSN0V;jlQVELS, D AND LONG HANDLES.\nHIPPERSOf* HARDWARE CO.\nLook   for   the   RfflPllii^.\nB497 ^V* box \u00ab14\nThi* column is conducted by Mrs.\nM. J. Vlgneux. All news of a social\nnature, Including receptions, private\nentertain men te, personal items,\nman-leges, etc., will appear In this\ncolumn. Telepnone Mrs. Vlgneux at\nber home on Silica street\nThe engagement is announced of Miss\nDelta Florence Bmett, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Bmett of\nthis city to Hubert Melville Parry, eldest\nson of the late Lieutenant Melville Sims\nParry, 1906 Trafalgar road. The wedding will take place at an early date-\nVancouver Province. Mr. and Mrs. Melville Parry and family were for many\nyears residents of Nelson, Mrs. Parry being very well known ln musical circles\nMiss Jean Waldle entertained at a\nvery jolly dance on Friday evening at\nher home on Stanley street. Multi-\nshaded chrysanthemums were effectively arranged throughout the rooms where\ngaily and brilliantly colored balloons,\nlater use In a balloon dance, added to\ntbe festive atmosphere. Miss Phyllis\nChurch was the winner of the elimination dance. The guests were Miss Ruth\nCraufurd, Miss Jean Lambert, Miss Irene\nEdmondson, Miss Beryl Oraham, Miss\nDorothea Oraham, Miss Crelna Hor-\nstead, Miss Aloise Wragge, Miss Dorothy\nAtrey, Miss Ena Hunter, Miss Dorothy\nArmstrong, Miss Gladys Gammon, Miss\nMhora MacDonald. Miss Phyllis Church.\nMiss Helen Murphy, Miss Jean Gilker,\nMiss Gwen Scott-Lauder, Miss Alleen\nMansfield. Miss Lillian Hunter, Miss\nJean Hunter, Miss Marlon Blackwood,\nMiss Alia Johnstone, Miss Kitty Johnstone, Miss Mollie Green, Miss Gladys\nFotherlngham, Mlsa Violet Towgood, Miss\nSybil Towgood, Miss Gladys Dando, Miss\nEileen Dill, Miss Margaret Arthur, Miss\nGwyneth Vincent, Arthur Gilker, W. J\nSturgeon, Jack Thomas, Jlmmle Carter,\nW. Jones, Dr. J. P. Oussln, Alan Gilroy,\nW. Hebenton, Harvey Wallace. Charlie\nHamilton, Bill Bunyan, Roger Cornish,\nMr. Tarwood, Douglas Forin, Arthur\nLambert, Cecil Lambert, Alfred Noxon,\nFrank Meagher, George Pease, Bob Hall,\nPercy Coates, Cecil Coates, T. R. Wilson,\nDr. D. W. McKay, Jim Gagnon, Gilbert\nAnderson, Jack Aylwln, Jerry Towgood,\nIrwin Cuthbert, Arthur Foster, Tom\nSturgess, Reginald Dill and Bill Waldle.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nN. A. Timmins and his eon, Leo H.\nTimmins of the Hollinger mines ln Ontario, who, wtth W. 8. Herron of Calgary and J. B. Woodworth of Vancouver,\nwere week-end visitors ln the city, have\nleft for the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Harold Lakes has returned from\na visit in Edgewood.\n\u2022 e   a\nW. Frampton of the Associated Mining 9b Smelting company, Ginol's Landing, was a week-end visitor ln the city\nfrom Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. E. D. Rogers of Kimberley ls\namong the visitors ln the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTea hostesses at the Nelson Badminton\nolub on Saturday afternoon were Miss\nAloise Wragge and Mlsa Phyllis Church.\nJlght up for Pleasure\nAt a trifling cost, light will add to tht- succewi\nof your party \u2014 and to the charm of your\n' home. Let the new Inside Frosted Edison\nMazda Lamp* radiate a cheerful glow in every\nroom. ,..47\nEDISON MAZDA\nINSIDt      FR05TED\nLAMPS\nA CANADIAN  GENERAL  ELECTOIC   PDODUCT\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS\nARE  SOLD  BY\nDILL'S SUPER-SERVICE STATION\nCOB.  VICTORIA  AND   STANLEY  STS. PHONE  8\nSHIPPING TAGS\n. Printed in one or two colors.\nAny size from No. 3 to No. 6\ncarried in stock.\nPRICES ARE LOW\nTHE DAM NEWS JOB DEPARTMENT\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nPRINTING-RULING-BOOKBINDING\nboiler Inspector for the\nJohn im \u201ev    D j,\nCanadian PacW\n\u00ab the  city  from ^!S^ ^  \u00a3e\nweek-end.\nif mines; O. D. Frith, Percy Coatee and\n.'acil Coates leave this morning for Spo-\n:ane to attend the annual banquet of\nt.he Northwestern Mining association\nthis evening, and tbe annual meeting of\nthe association, which takes place tomorrow.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. W. 6. Ashby and her daughter,\nJoan, were among the visitors in tbe\ncity from Harrop during the week-end.\nAmong the Bonnington visitors ln\nNelson over the week-end wae T. McLaughlin.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. John Campbell of Taghum was In\nNelson during the week-end on a ebon-\npi ng trip.\nset\nMlsa Lorna McLean, who ie teaching\nat Harrop, was a week-end visitor in the\ncity, the guest of her parents, Mr. and\nMra. W. R. McLean, Edgewood avenue.\n\u25a0   \u2022   \u25a0\nHon. Mrs. R. A. Scott-Lauder was a\nvisitor ln the city on Saturday from\nQueens Bay.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2666\nAmong the out-of-town shoppers ln\nNelson over the week-end was Mrs. Alex.\nF. McDonald of South Slocan.*\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMlsa E. Thomas of Bay View ranch,\nwho has been the guest of Wss F. Ogllvle at Harrop for the past week, left Saturday morning for her home Id Medicine Hat, Alta.\n\u2022 \u2022    <\nP T. D. Celle, for some years a Nelson resident, ls a visitor In the city from\nVancouver.\nRev, W. C. Mawhlnney spent yesterday in Trail.\n\u2022 \u00bb    \u2022\nJ. Knauf was a business visitor ln the\nrlty from Harrop during the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNelson Winlaw leaves this morning\nfor Duck creek.\nMiss Gladys Fotherlngham. who is\nteaching at Shoreacres this term,\nspent the week-end ln Nelson, the guest\nof her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William\nFotherlngham,  Silica  street.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nW. Muirhead   was a  business  visitor\nin   Nelson   from Procter   during   the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. J. Clinton ls again In the city,\nafDer   a   visit   In   Spokane.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJess Saunders and Ben Haxnann have\nleft  for   Kettle   Valley   on   a   hunting\ntrip.\n\u2022 *   *\nCity  shoppers  on  Saturday  Included\nMm.  W.  R.   McDonald   of  South   Slocan.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. J. 3, Allan's circle of St. Paul's\nLadles' aid met at the home of Mrs-\nJohn Mlnnis, Edgewood avenue,\nThursday afternoon, those present being Mrs. J. S. Allan, Mrs. G. A. Brow-\nell, Mrs. A. G. Richie, Mrs. John Bell,\nMas. A- T. Park, Mrs. Orr, Mrs. Jack\nBell, Mrs. Bob Bell, Mrs. Sutherland,\nMrs. James Talt, Mrs. James Ferguson, Mrs. J. Will. Mrs. W. Jardlne,\nMrs. W. Gow, Mrs. William Thompson.\nMrs. D. McLean, Mrs. William Seam-\nman, Mrs. L. C. Hooker, Mrs. David\nLaughton  and  Mrs.  NoWoD\n$11 Baker Street,  Phone $00,\nWOMEN'S COATS\nMODERATELY PRICED AT $25.00 TO $59.00 EACH\nThese Coats are unusual value for the money. Made of fine quality Needlepoint, Suedine, or Broadcloth. Richly fur-trimmed and\nlined throughout with fancy Rayon or Crepe de Chene. Crush or\nshawl collars, and plain or fur cuffs. All are well tailored and\nwill keep their shape. Colors, Navy, Black, Copen, Brown and Grey.\nSizes 16 to 44.   EACH, $25.00, $29.00, $35.00 TO $59.00.\nINEXPENSIVE FALL DRESSES\n$15.00 TO $39.00 EACH\nThe cut of these Dresses and the clever style touches, give no\nhint of their low pricing. The fabrics are the newest, the colors\nare the newest, and there is a wide variety of models, in one- and\ntwo-piece styles for afternoon, business or sport wear. Crepe-\nback Satin, Flat Crepe, Georgettes, Jersey and Georgette combined with Velvet. Flared or pleated skirts\u2014new sleeves\u2014new\nnecklines and unusually clever trimming treatments. All new\nshades of Brown, Tan, Blue, Green, Navy and Black. REASONABLY PRICED AT $15.00 TO $39.00 EACH.\nWOMEN'S CORSELETTES\n$1.50 TO $7.50 EACH\nA Corselette for every figure.\nSilk Brocade or Fancy Silk.\n$2.00, $2.50 TO $7.50.\nThey come in a splendid quality\nSizes 32 to 42.   EACH $1.50,\ngS^\nAmong the visitors In U- clty th'6\nweek are Mr. and Mrs. H. E. ^reen oi\nToronto.\n\u2022 \u2022   #\nMiss Helen Dlmock ls a visitor ln the\ncity this week from New Denver.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nO. C. Thompson of the Porcupine\nGoldfields Mining Development & Finance company at Kimberley, was a\nweek-end visitor In Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nAmong the business visitors ln the\ncity over the week-end was M. C. Donaldson of Salmo.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nL. H. Cooper of Calgary Is spending a\nfew days in the city on business.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nAmong the Bonnlngton shoppers in\nthe city during the week-end were Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Bennett.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nMrs. W. O. Rose entertained at bridge\nat her home on Vernon street on Saturday afternoon In honor of Miss Lillian\nHunter, who is leaving this week for\nCalifornia. The daintily appointed tea\ntable was presided over by Mrs. George\nA. Hunter and Mrs. Gilbert Hartin. Miss\nElva Hanna and Miss Zella Manning\nassisted tn serving. Miss Jean Gilker\nwas the winner of the first prize, the\nconsolation prlre going to Miss Margaret Arthur.      .,\nMr. and Mrs. S. E. Lehr, who arrived\nrecently in Nelson from San Francisco\nand have been the guests of Mr. and\nMrs. A. Q. Lambert, Elwyn street, Fair-\nview, are now residing at 814 Nelson\navenue.\na e. e\nMiss Kathleen Brodie, who ls teaching\nthis term at Tarry's, spent the week-end\nIn the city, the guest of her parents,\n&fr. and Mrs. James Brodie. Stanley\nBtreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2666\nMrs. J. J. Potosky of South Slocan\nwas among the out-of-town shoppers in\nNelson on Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Glndys Dando has returned from\na visit in Kamloops.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Quin were among\nthe week-end visitors in the city from\nHarrop.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong the out-of-town shoppers ln\nNelson over the week-end was Mrs. A. S.\nMorley of Slocan City.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. John Maloney and her children,\nAlfred and Clarice, were among the\nweek-ena visitors In the city from Har-\nf  a ' e *\u2014*\u2022\nMies P. Foxall, who has been apple\npacking at Willow Point and at Cedar\nPoint, was a visitor In Nelson during\nthe week-end. Miss Foxall leaves this\nmorning for her home in Wynndel.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Jessie Hanoi waa among the\nvisitors in the city from. Harrop over the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nRev. B. L. Oaten of Trail was a weekend visitor ln the city, conducting the\nservices at Trinity United church yesterday.\ne   \u2022  a\nJ. W. Mulholland, representing the\nChamber of Mines: Brian T. O'Orady.\nassistant district mining engineer, representing Hon. William Sloan, minister\nNoah A. Timmins and Leo H. Timmins of Hollinger mines were the\nguests of W. Frampton at the Hume\nSaturday.\nKASLO NOTES\nKA3LO, b.c, Nov. 13.\u2014Thursday afternoon Mrs. h, B. Milne was a bridge\nhostess at her.^ome, Crescent road.\nThose playing wert Mra, Qeorge stott,\nMrs. S. A. Hunter, Mrs. William English, Mrs. Robert Hendricks, Mrs. Everett Zwickey, Mrs. Lent\u00a9 Hlllman, Mrs.\nD. J. Barclay, Mrs. W. H. Burgess, Mrs.\nA. W. Anderson, Mrs. J. J. Blans, Mrs. J.\nW. Power and Mrs. E. J. Racking. Mis.\nH. C. Glegerlch was a tea guest. Mrs.\nPower was winner of first prize, while\nMrs. English carried away the second,\nthe consolation falling to Mrs. killman.\nMr, and Mrs. H. L. Batten an* children have returned from the Windermere and will Bpend a few days in town\nprior to going to the coast. \\\nDr. W. A. and Mrs. Allen left Wednesday for New Denver where they will\nspend a few days.\nMrs. E. J. Hacking wae a tea hostess\nto a number of friends Friday afternoon.\nVen. Archdeacon H. Beer has returned\nfrom a short visit to Trail.\nFriday morning Mrs. Robert Hendricks, Mrs. Everett Zwickey and Mrs.\nWilliam English started by motor for a\nfew days' shopping ln Nelson, but owing to the ley condition of the road\nabandoned their trip at Woodberry.\nMra. D. J. Barclay, Mra, W. H. Burgess and Mrs. 3. A. Hunter spent Friday\nln Sandon, the guests of Mrs. O. Strathearn.\nMrs. J. J. Strelt left Friday morning\nfor a fsw weeks' stay at Halcyon.\nMrs. F. S. Rouleau was a visitor to\nNelson, Wednesday.\nDr. D. F. Patterson of Sandon motored tn from Nelson Thursday, leaving\nFriday morning for his home.\nMn. U. B. Lester of Ottawa, Ont., was\na Kaslo visitor Thursday.\nMrs. J. Vallance and Miss Marguerite\nVallance of Nfew Denver were Kaslo visitors Thursday.\nMrs. James SIme passed through town\nThursday on her way to her home in\nSandon, after having visited friends ln\nNelson.\nMrs. H. M. Strelt and Mrs. j. J. Binns\nwere Nelson visitors Tuesday.\nH. D. Dawson is spending a few days\nIn Nelson.\nJ. J. Binns has arrived In town and\nwill spend a few days at his home here.\nAlex Grant and W. H. Dunn were Nelson visitors Thursday.\nMrs. A. Sutherland and children have\nreturned from a visit to Nelson.\n\u2022ii s i   initn rn\nA nice line of moderate priced\nLightning Opener Tobacco Pouches.\nCome ln and look them over. You are\nnot getting the best value If you are\nnot  smoking  our   SPECIAL  MIXTURE.\nBUSH'S\nBUY B. C. GOODS\nGet full value for your money and make jobs\nfor your children in B. C.\nWALTHAM AND\nLONGINES\nPocket Watches\nTWO OP THE FINEST\nMAMTACTUBaW\nA. T. NOXON\nl'OCn   JEWELEB\nA dozen personal gift problems\nsolved\u2014send your photograph.\nGood old friends mil appreciate\nit because it's you\u2014a gift that\nmoney can't buy,\nGEO. A. MEERES\n(LATH   CAMPBELL   ABT   QALLIRY)\nPhone 46 715 Softer St.\n \"THI! NT!rJDN\"uTIIT'!WwirM0NI5AT MORNING, NOVEMBER Ii, 152?\nSMILES ALL AROUND\nAnd   ot   course   the   Prince   takes   to , admiring group of youngsters, was the \u25a0 Bournemouth, where he is shown above\nthe kiddles.    He wae the center of an. Prince of Wales, on his recent visit to   descending  the  dais  at   Meyrlck   park.\nJOY\nBy BARBARA WEBB\nORY Of LOVE,  TRIAL, TEMPTATIONS  AND  TRIUMPHS\nSYNOP$8\nThe second tragedy of her life\nhas befallen Joyce 1 Daring. First\nshe is made homeless when her\nparents separate. After she gets a\nJob at a hotel, and Is beginning\nto taste of life's Measures, she\ndespairs of happiness when her\nmother    Is    shot    and    her    lover.\nHenry Deacon, collapses ln a fight\nwith \"Butch\" Seltzer, gangster who\nIs mad about Joyce. She watches\nanxiously at Deke's bedside, while\nher mother hovers between life and\ndeath In the surgery room.\nCHAPTER XVI.\nGATHERTKa CLOUDS\nDeke was not dead.     He roused from\nBanish These Specters\nEven the thought of weeks or months in a sick bed is\nhorrifying. Whether your health will fail today, tomorrow or within the near future no one ever knows.\nFurthermore, accidents are about as uncertain as the\nweather.\nWhile the physical pain resulting from sickness or accident may not be terribly severe the thought,- \"What\n~wiirmy family'do when I am; laid up or dead?\" often\nbrings the more terrifying mental anguish.\nAn insurance policy is the barrier dividing both physical and mental pain. You are provided for during your\ndays of incapatjity.\ni\nFor Fire Insurance\nAutomobile\u2014Life\u2014Accident and Sickness\u2014Plate\nGlass and All Other Forms oi Insurance\ni\nI. E. ANNABLE\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nC. D. BLACKWOOD\nR. W. DAWSON\nG. A. HUNTER\nC. F. McHARDY\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON\nH. E. DILL\nP. E. POULIN\nFor Life Insurance\nC. W. APPLEYARD, Sun Life Assurance Co.\nC.  D. BLACKWOOD, The Great West Life  Assurance Co.\nR. W. DAWSON, Imperial Life Assurance Co.\nE. H. HANLEY, North American Life Assurance Co.\nS. C. LATORNELL, Dominion Life Assurance Co.\nC. F. McHARDY, Monarch Life Assurance Co.\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON, Canada Life Assurance, Co.\nH. E. THAIN, Monarch Life Assurance Co.\nR.  C.  NAIRN,  Griffin   Block;  Manufacturers'  Life\nAssurance Co.\nJ. ROSS FLEMING, Sun Life Assurance Co.\nP. E. POULIN, North American tife Assurance Co.\nMirawmw^^\nhis faint in a few minutes feeling very\nmuch ashamed and very, very weary\nand sore. Dr. McDonald, whom Deke\nhad known for a long time, was grinning down at him. Joy was sitting\nweekly on a chair near his bed.\n\"For crying out loud!\" said Deke disgustedly, Bitting up and wincing at the\nremainder of bruised muscles.\n\"You're a sweet one,\" mocked Dr.\nMcDonald. \"Vaint away like a la do\ndah Victorian \\ and scare your young\nlady here half Into eternity.\"\n\"Oh, please!\" Joy's Boft voice was\nbeseeching. \"Don't make fun of him.\nHe's been awfully brave tonight.\"\nMcDonald smiled at her. Deke\ngroaned a little and got to his feet\nthrowing off the cover  of the  bed\n\"See here, Mac, I want to talk to\nyou, privately.\" he said. He stopped by\nJoyce a moment. \"Do you want to\nstay here tonight to be with your\nmother? I think they tan arrange it,\ncan't they Mac?\"\nThe two men went out into the corridor and Joyce sat waiting. Presently\nthey came back.\n\"Deke's got everything fixed up,\" said\nDr.   McDonald   cheerfully.     \"Now   you\n( stay here with him until I come back\nfrom the surgery.\"\n\"It's all right, Joy,\" said Deke sitting\non the edge of the bed, \"I fixed it so\nthe papers will have a hard time getting\nany kind of story, even if they do smell\na rat. You stay here ton'l.ht and If\nyour mother is better in the morning\nyou can go back to Mrs. JenkinsV\n\u2022Won't she think  ifs funny  that  I\ndon't come in all night?\" Joyce asked.\n\"That's so.\" Deke thought a minute.\n'I'll call her\u2014no, I'll get my mother to\ncall her.   That will sound better.\"\n\u25a0Deke,\" hesitantly, \"Deke, will they\nwake me early enough to go to work in\nthe morning?\"\nDeke could not help laughing. \"You\nprecious baby,\" he exclaimed. \"Are you\nworried about that?\"\n\"I've got to go,\" said Joyce seriously,\n\"unless of course, unless Motherdear\nshould, should, get worse. It's more\nimportant than ever now.\"\nDeke had too much respect ftn: her\nresolution and good sense to try to\nmove her. \"Tell the nursS or who-\never's around when you go to bed that\nyou want to get up early\u2014six o'clock\nisn't  it.\"\nJoyce nodded. \"Deke,\" the Bame\nhesitant tone. \"Deke, must I tell Dads\nabout this?\"\nDeke whistled. \"I hadn't thought or\nthat,\" he said. \"I've thought tt best,\nsince she wants to be known as Mrs.\nMartin, to have the admission blank\nmade out that way. So even if it\ngets In the papers It doesn't need to\ntell your father anything. But then If\nshe ls really hurt badly I suppose you\nshould. I don't know Joyce, I honestly don't. You'll have to decide that\nfor yourself.\"\nDr. McDonald came ln, looking professionally cheerful.\n\"Your mother has a good chance Miss\nDaring.\" he said. \"She's hot out of the\nether yet. but the signs are good. They\ngot the bullet and it's a clean wound\nShe'll be pretty weak from loss of\nblood of course. But I think you may\nhope.\"\n\"Thank you,\" said Joy gratefully\n\"What time ls it?\"\nDeke looked at hU watch and  gave\nan   exclamation   of   surprise.     \"Would\nyou believe.\" he aald, ''that lt ls only\nten  thirty?\"\n\"No!\"   Joyce waa amazed.   \"It sen\nlike a century since we\t\n\"Since we nearly staged va petting\nparty,\" finished  Deke  with  a smile.\nJoyce felt tears rising to her eyes.\nShe choked back a sob and pressed\nDeke's hand. \"Good night,\" she said.\n\"and thank you.\"\nPresently a nurse came and, called\nher. \"You may see your mother for\na few mtnutes If you wish,\" ahe said\n\"I doubt if she will know you yet. But\nit may cheer you to see that she is\ngetting on.\"\nMrs. Daring lay white and inert with\na nurse ln attendance. Her eyes were\nclosed, her face waxllke.\n\"Joy, Joy, Joy, Joy,\" she wae moan-\nW'liiM'a^'a^:\t\nShe la speaking my name. Does ahe\nwant me?\" Joyce aaked.\n\"She's not ootwcUua yet. She won't\nbe fully conscious for hours probably,\nfrom shock and the ether. Tou might\nspeak to her. It might quiet her a\nUttle.\"\nJoyce approached the bed. \"Mother-\ndear,\" ahe said eoftly \"Motherdear.\nIt ls Joyce, speaking. Joy, your Uttle\ngirl.\"\nThe painstricken woman moved a\nUttle \"Joy, Joy, forgive me,\" the words\nwere distinct. \"Forgive me. Let me\ntell yott everything. Surely you wiU\nforgive me. I did lt all t.: you. Joy,\nJoy, Joy,\" and ihe lapsed back into her\ndelirium.\nJoyce leaned over and kissed her\nmother's white cheek, then she went\ndown the long bare hall to the room\nassigned her for the night.\nSomeone shook her awake at daybreak.\n\"Tour mother ts conscious now\nand  wants  to  see  you,\"  said  a  voice.\nJoyce sprang to her feet. \"How is\nshe?\" she asked.\n'Doing fine,\" said the nurse. \"I don't\nthink you ht*ve a thing to worry about.\nBut she's pretty restless and before we\nput her to sleep again we want her to\nsee you.\"\nMrs. Daring, whiter even than the evening before, it seemed to Joyce, smiled\nfaintly at the girl.\nMother dear I\" Joyce was bending\nover the high hospital bed. She kissed\nher mother tenderly. \"Don't try to talk\nnow,\" she whispered.\nMrs. Daring pressed Joy's hand feebly.\n\"Your father.\" she said weakly. \"Mustn't\nknow.   Promise.\"\nJoyce looked pityingly at her mother.\n\"I won't tell him. Mother, dear,\" she\nsaid.\nThe nurse, hypodermic needle ln hand,\nbent to gave Mrs. Daring her release\nfrom pain and shock, Joyce left the\nroom, and went to her work.\nNear noon Marian called Miss Scanlon. \"Seven forty-three Just made a\ndate with a man In the lobby to come\nup to her room,\" she said.\nMiss Scanlon nodded 'Call Hop,\" she\nsaid.\nMarian plugged In a call. \"Whenever\na woman staying here invites a man up\nto her room we notify the house detective,\" she explained. \"He goes up and\nif they have their door closed he tells\nthem they must leave it open.\"\nPresently Jim Hopkins, the house detective, came in.\nMarian repeated her information, and\nthen said: \"Here's a new girl you want\nto meet Hop. Miss Daring, Mr. Hopkins. And you want to watch your step,\nJoy. Hop's the regular thing when lt\ncomes to detecting.\"\nWhen Joyce went out at noon he was\nlounging ln the lobby. He came over to\nher.\n\"Say, I saw you last night over at\nLakeside,\" he said.   \"Somebody sick?\"\n\"My mother,\" said Joyce, a Uttle fear\nclutching at her heart.\n\"Went over there to try to pick up the\ntrail of a lady bootlegger I've been hunting two or three weeks,\" went on the\ndetective. ,\n\"My mother wae hurt quite badly,\"\nsaid Joyce trying to tell herself that lt\nwas all nonsense to be afraid.\n\"That so? Accident?\" Hop took a\nquick look at tbe girl.\n\"Yes, an accident,\" said Joy.\n\"Didn't notice her on the admission\nsheet,\" he went on. \"Never forget a\nname. Daring's yburs. Ought to be\nyour mother's, too, but I didn't Bee lt.\n\"Mother doesn't live with my father\nany more,\" said Joyce, seeking for an\nescape from this tete of tete. She calls\nherself Mrs. MarUntf\n\"Mrs. Martin?\" Hop's face was alive.\n\"She was shot, wasn't she?\"\n\"It was an accident,\" protested Joyce\nmiserably.\n\"There, there, never mind now. It's\nnone of my business. I didn't mean to\nfret you about it,\" said Hop sympathetically. \"Run along now. I hope she gets\nbetter right away.\"\nSomeone called as she went bacJk*\nthe board. It was Oladys wearlp* \"er\nuniform and looking anxiously ^c Joy,\n<flth\nNELSON, WOMAN SLAYER, GOES BACK TO CELL\nPhoto shows Earl Nelson, doomed Winnipeg after his arraignment 'on af car and back to bis cell In the pro-\nstrangler (Indicated by arrow) being murder charge. Two guards hustled thej- vlnclal jail while' crowds throngeo\ntaken from the law courts building at I prisoner   down   the   steps   to  a   police I about .the  entrance,\n\u00ab*e\u00ab\u20ac%\u20ac\u00ab\u20ac\u00ab\u20ac\u00ab\u20ac\u00ab\u20ac%\u20ac%*^<\u00ab\u00abtC\u20acte\u20acte\u20acte\u20ac(C\u20ac(C\u20acte\u00abte\u20ac(\u00abj\nEverything all right *ltn your\nmother?\" she asked.\n\"As well as we can expect,\" answered\nJoyce, wondering how much Gladys\nknew.\n\"Say. that's s e\u00ab\u00abl fellow you got.\nAnd his mother's the real thing. They\ncame In to s*e Mrs. Jenkins last night\nJust as I Was getting home from work.\nThe way Mrs. Deacon spoke of you she\nmust be strong for you!\"\nDeke and Deke's mother! How good\nof them.   Jo)*e flushed with gratitude.\nPromptly at 3 Joyce hurried toward\nLakeside. It seemed queer that \u25a0 she\nhadn't *eard from Deke. She was taken\nstraight to her mother's room. It was\nfragrant, with flowers and the nurse\nhanded her a note.\n''Dear Miss Daring,\" lt ran. \"Henry\nwas bruised a good deal last night, and\n1 ain keeping him ln bed today. It ls\nnothing serious, but we gave him an opiate to keep him asleep. I hope your\nmother ls progressing nicely. You will\nhear from Deke Just as soon as he Is\nable to get to the telephone. Cordially,\nSarah Deacon.\"\nThe nurse looked uneasily at Joyce.\n\"Dr. McDonald said for you to come in\nto see him as soon as you arrived,\" she\nsaid.\nJoyce hurried down the corridor to\nthe resident's office.\n\"Oood afternoon, Miss Daring,\" he\nsaid quietly. \"Your mother's condition\nls very serious. I advise you to notify\nyour father or any other relative she\nmight wish to see.\"\nJoy's knees turned to water. What\nmust she do? Mother dear had said to\ntell no one. Yet surely her father had\nstill some rights.\nResolutely she took up the telephone\nbook. An hour later she was facing\nMm ln an ante room of the ward where\nher mother lay, still sleeping that deathlike sleep. 9\nWithout reserve she told him all the\nstory.\n.When she had finished John Daring\ntook his hat firmly ln hla hands. \"I'll\nhave naught to do with the works of\nwickedness,\" he said. \"And I bid ye\ncome with me, away from the evil of\nthis woman.\"\nHe took Joy's arm.\n\"Father I\" she cried.\n\"I mean lt, lass,\" he aald, \"I'm going\nfrom her and her slnfu' ways. I bid ye\nfollow me!\"\nTOMORROW: First the detective,\nand then her father, cast doubts about\nour heroine's mother, and she Ib more\nmystified than ever. But her mother\nneeds her. Read tomorrow about .a\ngirl's devotion In \"Joy,\" the love story\nof an American girl.\n5\n_\nm\nONLY   ONE   SUPPLEMENTAL\nThe wire from the coast reporting\nthe results of the pharmaceutical examinations inaccurately reported H. H\nPitts of Nelson as being conditioned\nin two subjects. Hla papers, received\nyesterday, show that he has but one\nsupplemental to write from his first\nyear work, ln materia medlca.\nGHPI9TMA9 GBtfTINGS\nExclusive\nPersonal Greeting Cards\nPrinted With Your Own\nName and Address\nState of Oregon pay* a bounty~of\n$7.60 on seals and sea lions, as they\ndestroy valuable fish food.\nBlind for 38 years. Mr*. W. Dunagan\n, p{ Denver. Colo., regained her eight after extraction ol an abscenwd tooth.\nWe have never had a more beautiful selection of cards and they have\nnever been sold at such low prices. We give you two dozen for the price\nof a single dozen.\nThe prices are low, but the cards are of the highest quality. All are\nnew cards, just arrived from the cast and from England. Ask to see the\nEnglish hand-tinted cards in pastel shades. They are artistic enough to\nframe.\nThese are the prices, including printing of your name, etc.:\nTwo dozen for  $1.50\nTwo dozen for  $1.75\nTwo dozen for  $3.25\nTwo dozen for  \u201e:'...: 82.50\nTwo dozen for $2.75\nTwo dozen for  $3.00\n\u2022   ' Two dozen for  ......$3.25\nTwo dozen for $3.75\nTO OUT-OF-TOWN CUSTOMERS\u2014At these prices we are unable to\nsend out samples, but if customers will state the price they wish to pay\nand give an idea of the style and card, we can assure satisfaction.\nOrder Early; the Cards Are Selling Fast\nWhen buying from us, you can depend on an exclusive design. No\none else can purchase the same design as you select.\nThe Daily News Job Dept\nPhone 144-\"-Two Lines\nPRINTING RULING BOOKBINDING\n!&H9*a*&Stt*ah9a*^^\n li\nTUB NEISON DHL? MEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1927\n*\u00bbn\n\"wa* l r( )R I Am.\nEGIU RUGGiERS\nI\nwept Vancouver Terms; Rug-\nlv Championship for West\nWU Be Battled There\n'AWCOOVBB,     Hot.     13. \u2014 Regina\n\u00abh  Rldsrt,  prairie  champions,  will\nUnlwattj of Brltlih Columbi* here\n\u2022 w***; for the rugby championship\n\u00bb*stem Canada.   The Bough Rider*\n* leering Regina tonight for the coast.\ni-Mng accepted an offer of the BrltUh\n(lumbla Rugby union a* to guarantee\n\u2022 1300. billets for 60 per cent of the\non. and to par cent of th* gate re-\npts. Official* of the union today were\nslilttX of Regina'* acceptance, and\nm also Informed that th* team would\n\u00bbve the Saskatchewan capital tonight\nr Vancouver, to play the first game of\n* series on Wednesday afternoon, and\ne aecond game on Saturday.\n'estern Ontario Rugby\nSquad Defeats Loyola\nMONTREAL. Nor. 13.\u2014ttnlvwalty of\n\u2022tern Ontario supplied further lndl-\ntlon of their claim to recognition to\naior rank* whan they defeated Loyola\nliege. 6 to 3, Saturday afternoon at\n\u00bbUon Stadium, to win their first Do-\nWon intercollegiate Intermediate\notball title. The score on the round\ni* 13 to 3.\nWestern deserved their victory. Pl*y\nr the greater part of the game was ln\n\u00bbola territory, but the Purple and Blue\n**d the punch to put across a touch-\nTouchdowns In Last Five Minutes of Play Beat Princeton's Six-Point Lead\n(By ALAN I, OOULD.)\n_ NEW HAVBN, Conn.. Nov. 13.\u2014Tale\nsnatched victory from Princeton yesterday 14 to 6 with a sensational last\nperiod rally that turned the tide\nwith dramatic swiftness Just when it\nseemed that the big blue football machine wa* stalled and powerless to score\nwithout the aid of lta ineligible cog.\nBruce Caldwell, came from behind\nwith a display of aerial fireworks scoring their touchdowns with not much\nmore than five minutes to go and with\nPrinceton seemingly putting up a\nstonewall barrier to keep the six-point\nmargin gained ln the second quarter\nwhen Eddie WIttmer dashed over for\na touchdoyn.\nWith an electrical suddenness that\nsent most of the vast crowd of 76,-\n000 tn the Yale bowl into a delirious\nfrenzy, Johnny Heben, standing on\nPrinceton's 40-yard line hurl\u00bbd a long\npass to Dwlght Flshwlck, giant end,\nwho raced 36 yards for the first Blue\ntouchdown.\nDunpen Cox, fuUback, booted the\ngoal that put Yale Into the lead and\nclinched the game,.but the Ells, now\nrampant, rushed over another touchdown as Charles Worth recovered a\nfumble on the Tiger 30-yard mark and\nBill Kammeraley, ln Caldwell's post,\nreeled off the remaining distance to\nthe goal line ln a series of short thrusts.\nTri-Color   Gets  Victory   From\nTwo Fine Touchdowns by\nCaptain  Howard\nMcGILL LEADS FOUR Nit\nIN FIRST PERIOD PLAY\nFinal Score Is 11-5 and Game\nMost Spectacular and\nExciting\nLaat Day for Discount:\n18th\nKINGSTON, Ont, Nov. 13.\u2014\nQueen's university won the championship of the Beulor Intercollegiate union from McOlll by the\nscore or 11 to 5 here Saturday in\none of the most spectacular and\nexciting games ever played here,\nthe trl-color winning victory when\nCliff Howard, captain of the team,\ncrashed over tbe line for two touchdowns.\nOn the play, Queens ware vastly\nsuperior the greater part of the\ngame and deserved their win and\ntbe championship. Led tlie tnde-\nfatlguable \"Bed\" Batstone, the tricolor stage run after run which\nculminated In the Queen's captain\nhurling himself twice over the\nMcoili line for major scores. Even\nthough Batstone was badly crippled\nIn the first quarter and limped\nbadly throughout the game, his\ngeneralship and his courage led his\nteam to a glorious victory.\nMcO 11,1*   LEADS\nThe game was remarkable ln that\nMcOlll more than dominated the play\nin the first quarter. In a very short\ntime after the start Tremaine drove a\npunt over for a score and then electrified the crowd when he sent over\na perfect placement kick, making the\nfirst  quarter  4  to  0.\nThe second quarter saw Queens slowly rounding into form, but fumbles\nproved costly and the crowning blow\ncame when Tremaine rushed through\nto grab his own kick on Queen's 30-\nyard line. From there It was a comparatively easy matter for him to drive\nthe ball to the deadline for the fifth\npoint for McOlll. After that McOlll\nwere outclassed all along the  line.\nThe failure of Ralph St. Germain, the\n\"galloping ghost\" of rugby, to show\nanything like the form expected of him\nhad a disastrous effect on McGlH's\nteam.\nWINDSOR   WINS\nWOODSTOCK, Ont., Nov. 13.\u2014Windsor defeated Woodstock 17 to 4 In the\nsemi-final for the Junior Western Ontario   secondary   schools   Saturday.\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL RESULTS\nLONDON, Nov. 13\u2014 Results of soccer games played ln the British Islee\nSaturday.\nENGLISH    LEAGUE\nFirst  Division\nArsenal,   3;   Middlesborough.   1.\nAston Vllle. 1; Tottenham Hotspur, a.\nBurnley. 3; Birmingham. 1.\nBury. 1; Newcastle United, \u00ab.\nDerby   County,   0;    Everton,   8.\nLeicester City, 4; Bolton Wander\nen, 3.\nLiverpool, 5; The Wednesday. 3.\nPortsmouth. 3;  Blackburn Rovers, 3.\nSheffield United, 1, Huddersfield\nTown, 7.\nSunderland. 4; Manchester United, 1\nWestham  United,  3;   Cardiff  City,  0.\nSecond Division\nBarnsley, 0; Southampton, 1.\nFulham,  1:  Stoke City. 5.\nHull City, 3:  Clapton Orient, 3.\nLeeds   United,   \u2022:   Reading,   3.\nManchester City, 0; Chelsea. 1.\nNottingham  Forest,   4;   Blackpool,   1\nFort Veto, 1; Oldham Athletic, 0.\nPreston North End, 3; West Brom-\nwlch   Albion,   9-.\nSouth Shields,  1;  Grimsby Town, 3,\nSwansea Town, 1; Bristol City,  1.\nWolverhampton Wanderers, 3; Notts\nCounty,   3.\nThird Division\u2014Southern\nBristol Rovers 3, Northampton 3.\nCharlton 3, Norwich 3.\nCoventry 4, Luton 3.\nOtlllngham 3, Brentford 1.\nMerthyr 4, Brighton and Hove 3.\nNewport 1. MlllwaU 3.\nPlymouth 8, Southend United 3.\nQueens Park R. 0, Exeter Olty 1.\nSwindon 3, Crystal Palace 3.\nWalsall 3, Bournemouth 8.\nWatford l, Torquay S.\nThird division\u2014Northern\nAccrlngton 3, Durham Olty 0.\nAshlngton 3, Tranmere Rovers 0.\nBradford City 0, Nelson 1.\nCrewe Alexandra 3, Stockport 0.\nDarlington 1, Bradford 3.\nDoncaster 4, Chesterfield 0.\nHartlepools 3, Southport 1.\nLincoln 4, Rotherham 1.\nNew Brighton 3, Rochdale 1.\nWigan 3f Wrexham 0.\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE\nFirst  Division\nAberdeen,   0;   Bo'ness,   1.\nAlrdrieonlans,   3;   Patrick  Thistle,   0.\nClyde,  4;   Dunfermline  Athletic,  0.\nCowdenbeath, 3;  St. Mirren,  4.\nDundee, 7;  Kilmarnock, 0.\nHamilton Academicals, 3; Queen's\nPark,  1. -  -\nHearts,   3;   Celtics,   3.\nRalth Rovers. 3; Falkirk, 3.\nRangers, 4; Hibernians, 1.\nSt.  Johnstone,   1;   Motherwell,   4.\nSecond Division\nAlloa,   3;   King's  Park,   1.\nArbroath, 3;  East Fife,  1.\nClydebank, 0; Albion Rovers, 3.\nEast Stirling, 5;  Dumbarton, 0.\nForfar Athletic, 0; St. Bernard, 2.\nLelth Athletic, 5; Armadale, 0.\nMorton, 2; Bathgate, 3.\nQueen of South, 1;  Arthurlle, 0.\nStenhouse Muir, 6; Ayr United, 3.\nThird  Lanark,  5;   Dundee  United,   1.\nIHIMH LEAGUE\nPortadown 1, Llnfleld 4.\nThe unforgetable\nvacation\no\nNCE to everyone there comes the vacation that touches\nthe high-water mark of human enjoyment.\nIt may have been a trip to Niagara Falls, or a whirlwind\nround of gayeties in New York, or an automobile tour of Yellowstone, or a week in the Canadian Rockies, or a camping trip\nin the Maine woods, or a boat journey to Bermuda, or to the\nold world, or a priceless January in Florida.\nWherever it may have been\u2014and the list is endless\u2014the\nmemories of that vacation will brighten your life forever.\nYou planned the trip, of course, but don't you remember\nreading the travel advertisements and sending for the \"detailed information regarding accommodations, rates, etc.\"?\nRemember how undecided the family was until almost the\nlast minute when one especially attractive booklet settled the\nwhole thing? Remember how the advertisements helped you\nselect the right kind of clothing and baggage and letters of\ncredit and travelers' checks and fishing tackle and camp equipment and cameras, and a veritable host of other things that\nmade the whole affair so exciting and so enjoyable.\nAdvertising helped you to do the right things and to have\nthe right things with which to do them.\nAnd don't forget this\u2014if you haven't had your unforgetable\nvacation yet, you'll find the way to it through the'advertising\ncolumns. Because if a vacation isn't one of the unforgetable\nvariety, it won't be advertised and if it is, it will be!\nRead Advertising Regularly\nas\ns\nTO HOLD LEAD.\nBRITISH PLAY\nDean Again Comes Through and\nDerby Defeated; Huddersfield\nDefeats Sheffield United\nLONDON, Nov. 13.\u2014A fine Individual\nperformance by Dean, who helped Everton maintain their position at the head\nof the standing of the English league,\nfirst division, was again tbe feature of\nsoccer achievements on Saturday. Dean\nbagged a brace of goals ln his finest\nstyle. Derby County, although at home,\nwere blanked. Other fine efforts were\nthose of Raid of Liverpool and Halllay\nof Sunderland, both of whom performed\nthe \"hat trick.\"\nThe highest score of the day was that\nof Moore of Bradford City, who made\nfive goals playing against Nelson.\nBuchan got a couple and materially\nassisted his team, Arsenal, to trim Middlesborough.\nImpressive Win\nThe most impressive victory was that\nof Huddersfield Town over the once\ngreat Sheffield United. Huddersfield\nscored seven to Sheffield's one. W. H.\nSmith. Jock and Brown all scored two.\nThe attendance record for the day\namong the major clubs was the crowd\nof 40.000 who turned out to see Tottenham Hotspurs defeat Aston Villa at Birmingham. Osborne got the winning goal\nfor Tottenham.\nPlaying for Bolton Wanderers against\nLeicester City, Pym broke his right\nwrist.\nMlllwaU administered the first defeat\nsuffered by Newport County on their\nhome ground, and also annexed the leadership of the southern section of the\nthird division. The Wtllwall goals were\nscored by Chance, Landells and Collins.\nGRIDIRON SCORES OYER UNITED STATES\nVARSITY   SECONDS   WIN\nHAMILTON, Ont,, Nov. 13.\u2014Varsity\nseconds came from behind In the final\nquarter to defeat Hamilton Cubs in the\nlast senior O.R.F.U. fixture here yerfter-\nday. 14 to o.\nColoralne 5, Olentoran 4.\nNewry 6, Barn 3.\nLarne-Cliftonvllle, unplayed.\nQueens Island 3, Olenavon 3.\nBangor 2, Belfast Celtic 6.\nDistillery 2. Ards 0.\nPACIFIC COAST\nOonzaga 0, Montana 0.\nWashington 6, California 0,\nSanta Clara 13, Stanford 8,\nU.C.L.A. 13, California Tech. 0.\nColorado Aggies 37, Colorado Mines 8.\nColorado College 33, Western State 8.\nUtah 30, Brigham Young 0.\nU.SC. 46, Colorado 7.\nIdaho Frosh 26, Cheney Normal 0.\nSt. Charles 60, Butte Mines 6.\nOregon Frosh 10, OJS.C. Frosh 6.\nLoyola College 18, at. Regis College 20.\nEAST\nArmy 18, Notre Dame 0.\nYale 14. Princeton 6.\nPittsburgh 21, Nebraska 13.\nPenn State 13, New York U. 13.\nRutgers 12, Lehigh 6.\nPennsylvania 27, Columbia 0.\nHarvard 18, Brown 6.\nDartmouth 53, Cornell 7.\nTufts 32. Bowdoln 0.\nSpringfield 26, Rensselaer Poly Tech 0.\nExeter 0, Andover 0.\nOeorgetown 47, Boston College 0.\nNiagara 13, St. Bonaventure 8.\nRochester 7, Wesleyan 0.\nSyracuse 13. Colgate 18.\nHobart 49, Buffalo 0.\nHamilton 6, Union 6.\nWashington and  Jefferson   10,  Buck-\nnell 36.\nWest Virginia 16, Davis and Elklns 12.\nGettysburg 13, Mt. St. Mary 0.\nAmherst 7, Williams 6.\nSchuylkill 26, Albright 28.\nLafayette 71, Susquehanna 0.\nOallaudet 7, Delaware 12.\nMuhlenberg Q, Dickinson 6.\nUrslnus 21, Swarthmore 0.\nAggies 7. Cooper Union 0.\nUpsala 0, Manhattan 65.\nClarkson 33, Alfred 0.\nAllegheny 7, Oeneva 39.\nPenn Military 12, Franklin and Marshall 6.\nOeorge  Washington 40, St. Vincent's\n19.\nBoston    University     15,    St.     John's\n(Brooklyn) 0.\nMaine 13, New Hampshire 6.\nTemple 75, Washington College 0.\nLoyola 6, Juanlta 0\nRhode   Island   State   14,   Connecticut\nAggies 0.\nVermont 13, Middlebury 7.\nWestminster 25, Thlel 13.\nSt. Francis 0, Grove City 30.\nJohns Hopkins 33, St. John (Annapolis) 0.\nMIDDLE WEST\nMichigan 27, Navy 12.\nOhio State 61, Denlson 6. iJ\nIowa 16. Wloconaln 0.\nCatholic 18, St. Xavier 3d,\nIllinois 16, Chicago 9.       m\nKenyon 6, Mount Union lv.\nOberlln 7, Wooster 0.\nMiami (Ohio) 7, Dayton 6.\nWittenberg D, Ohio Wesleyan 7.\nOhio \"U\" 7, University of Cincinnati\n7.   (Tie.)\nCarroll 0. St. Viator 0.\nAkron 46, Baldwin WaU#oe 13.\nIndiana 18, Northwestern 7.\nPurdue 46, Franklin 0.\nMarquette 12, Holy Cross 6.\nWabash 6. Butler IS.\nWashington \"U\" 10, GHnnell 7.\nMinnesota 37, Drake 9.\nCreighton 14, South pakota State 0.\nDepauw 10, Central Normal 14.\nEarlham 13, Rose Poly 8.\nLoyola (New Orleans) 0, Haekell 8.\nSt. Mary's 12, Washburn 7.\nSt. Mary's (Winona) 40, Depaul 6.\nRlpon 19, Belolt 0.\nNorthwestern College 13, Lake Forest\n6.\nCarleton 13, Coe 12.\nSt. Johns 0. Gustavus Adolph us St.\nIndiana State Normal 12, EvansvlUe 0.\nMuncle Normal 13, Hanover 0.\nManchester 7, Indiana Central 0.\nParsons 0, Des Moines 0.\nAugsburg 6, MacAlester 0.\nSt. John 0, Bethel 13.\nSOUTH\nGeorgia  University 83,  Clemeon Col'       \\   .\nlege 0.\nGeorgia Tech 23, Louisiana State 0.\nChattanooga 53, Southern College 6.\nVanderbilt 7, Tennessee 7.\nNorth Carolina 37, Davidson 0.\nKentucky 36, V.M.I. 0.\nOklahoma 36, Kansas 7.\nMississippi A. 6c U. 7, Auburn 6.\nSouthern Methodist 34, Baylor 0.\nVirginia 21, Maryland 0.\nRichmond 7, Hampden-Sidney 6.\nVirginia Poly 21, Washington and Lee\n0.\nFurman 34, South Carolina 0.\nSewanee 12, Tulane 6.\nGeorgetown College 13, Kentucky Wesleyan 0.\nArkansas 33, Oklahoma A. Sc M. 0,\nWofford 6, Citadel 6.\nFlorida 13, Alabama 6.\nCentre 7, Transylvania 6.\nMarshall 33, Fairmont State 6-\nLouisville 31, Eastern Teachers 13.\nPRO FOOTBALL\nFrankford   Yellow  Jackets  33.  Cleveland Bulldogs 0.\nNow you can get them\nAnd they OUTWEAR\nany tire chains you ever had\nEvery motorist remembers\nthe furore\ncreated last\nseason by the\nintroduction of\nGoodyear rubber tire chains.\nEverybody\nwanted them.\nFew could get\nthem.\nNow everybody\ncan be supplied.\nSupplied with\ntire chains with\nunique features.\nQuiet! Rubber\ncross links take\nthe place of metal.\nNo banging on\npavement or\nfenders.\nLong-wearing!\nWill   outwear\nseveral sets of\nother chains.\nLeave them on!\nThey can't injure the tire and\nthey're quiet\neven on dry\nroads.\nBut how they\ngrip! How they\npull through\nmud or snow!\nThey have the\nscientific design\nof the famous All-\nWeather Tread,\nmagnified for\ngreater effect\nGoodyear Selected Dealers have\nGoodyear rubber\ntire chains for all\nsizes of cars.\nMade by the Makers of Goodyear Tires\niiiiiiiiiiium\n \u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u2022\u2014\nPif\u00bbE!|il\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1927\nGUAYULRSHRUB YIELDS RUBBER FOR AMERICAN RUBBER PEOPLE\n\u2022*\u2022*\u2022>*\u25a0\nOtWArtkk*\nIsalEiMi\nTs\nBntasdl\nAatomobikt\nClassified\nAdvertising\nHdpWutoJ\nPosition Wasted\nI*wt nd Fond\nLmstock\n\u25a0\u25a0fttwy\nFirm rroonco\nTimber tnd Mines\nClassified Advertising Rates]       Property For Sale\nOuayule has recently come ln proml- ] rubber.   On the left, Mexicans picking  grade plantation rubber, and the right.  Mexican desert before being sent to the\nnence through the efforts ot the United i the guayule shrub, from which ls ob-  the   primitive   methods  by  which  the       ,       ,     reflnlno\nState* to break Britain's monopoly on i talned   rubber,   Inferior   only   to   first. guale   rubber   plant   ls   baled   ln   the    a tory Ior reIlnm*'\nHits Ain't What\nThey Used to Be\nCanadian-American\nHockey Matches\nAT BOSTON\nBoston a. Providence 0.\nAT NEW HAVEN\nSpringfield 3, New Haven 3 (tie game,\nfive periods).\nRETAIN   TITLE\nKITCHENER, Ont., Nov. 13.\u2014The\nKltohetver-Waterloo rugby club retained the Intermediate O.R.P.U.. championship when they defeated 8t. Catharines 33 to 1 Saturday. The Saints\nwere never in the hunt; the Twin\nCity opened up with a heavy attack   ln   the   first   period.\nEIS\nBy THE\nf\nScore Is 18-0 in Biggest Upset\nin  Season; Princeton and\nTennessee Defeated\nBy   AL  DEMAREE\ndormer Pitcher New  York <Hants)\nBase hits and errors aren't what \\hey\nused to he ln big league baseball.\nIn the old days if an Inflelder got\neven one hand on a grounder and muffed the ball, it usually went for an error.\nSince the big league began capitalizing\non the ballyhoo value of high batting\naverages all plays like that go for base\nhits.\nThe score board at Cubs Park, Chicago, used to flash a big H or \u00a3 whenever\ndoubtful drives were made. This has\nbeen discontinued, however, I believe\nbecause of occasional discontent It\ncaused among the players who thus\nlearned during the game whether cer-\ntln smashes of theirs went for hits or\nerrors.\nAlong In the twilight of Dode Pas-\nkert's career, when he was going mad ln\nthe outfield for the Cubs, he couldn't\neven buy a base hit for about three\nweeks. Then one day he connected with\na hard smash which the center fielder\nJust barely got one hand on, and lt\nwent for a three-bagger. Dode pulled\nup at third and happened to glance toward the score board. There he saw a\nbig I flashed, and Dode nearly fell over\nin a faint. The fellow in the press\nstand who operated the score board by\nelectricity had decided to play a little\nJoke on Dode. The official score, of\ncourse, gave him his hit the next day.\nRIDEAUS BEATEN\nOTTAWA, Nov. 13.\u2014Montreal Amateur\nAthletic association Juniors smashed Ottawa hopes of a 1927 rugby championship here Saturday when they ran away\nfrom Rldeaus by 22 to 2 ln the eastern\nCanada semi-final.\nON AN ICE CAKE\nFisherman Cut-Off From Boat\nRescued After Night on\nLake Winnipeg\nBORDEN BEATS BALMY\nTORONTO. Nov. IS.\u2014Camp Borden\nwound up the Ontario Rugby Football\nunion senior series in a blaze of glory\nwhen they defeated Balmy Beach 15 to\n11 ln the final league game of tbe season here yesterday.\nST   THOMAS   WINS\nLONDON. Ont., Nov. 13.\u2014St. Thorns*\ndefeated Woodstock 17 to 4 In the\nsemi-final for the Junior O.R.F.U.,\nchampionship   Saturday.\nPOSTAL  ROBBER TAKEN\nREADING, Pa., Nov. 13\u2014State police\nannounced tonight that they had captured Frank Glass of Plowville. wanted\nin connection with the $32,000 postal\nrobbery at Blrdsboro last Thursday.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 13. \u2014 Canadian National won the intermediate championship of the Quebec Football Rugby\nunion by defeating Westward 14 to 4.\nOlder  Boys'  and   Leaders'   conference\nfor Grey, Bruce and Dufferln counties,\nheld   at   Hanover,   was   great   success.\n .    \u25a0\u00bb \u25a0\nSeventy-eight . persons were committed to Bruce county Jail, \"Walkerton,\nduring past year. Of these, 74 were\nmen.\n(By  ALAN J.  GOULD)\nNEW YORK, Nov. 13.\u2014Of all the embattled college gridiron legions from\ncoast to coast and gulf to border, the\nUniversity of Georgia stands out today\nas the only major eleven neither defeated nor tied.\nPrinceton and Tennessee stood along- i\nside Georgia with spotless slates before !\nyesterday's frays, but when they were j\nover the Tigers had yielded to the spectacular finishing spurt of Yale, 14 to 6, j\nwhile Tennessee had its march checked ;\nby a 7-7 deadlock with Vanderbilt, as j\nthe Georgians easily disposed of Clem-1\nson.\nArmy's smashing 18-0 victory overj\nNotre Dame was probably the biggest i\n\"dope\" upset of the day. But not far |\nbehind lt was Stanford's Jolt at the j\nbands of Little Santa Clara on the Pacific coast by a score of 13 to 6.\nYALE'S WIN DRAMATIC\nYale's dramatic last period triumph\nover Princeton shoved the Elis into a\npreeminent position in the eastern fold.\nIllinois, brushing aside Chicago, ts undisputed leader of the western conference, and needs only a triumph over\nOhio State this Saturday to clinch the\ntitle.\nMissouri, disposing of a rival, Iowa\nState, holds the Missouri valley conference peak. In the southwestern conference, the Texas Aggies, adding Rice to\ntheir victims, have an edge over Southern Methodists and Arkansas in the\nstanding.\nThe Pacific conference still finds\nSouthern California and Stanford as\nrivals for the title.\nThe Rocky Mountain conference leader. Colorado Aggies and Colorado College, kept pace by defeating tall-end opposition.\nWINNIPEG. Nov. 13-After being marooned on a large cake of ice ln Lake\nWinnipeg for many hours, Dan Maas,\na fisherman of Winnipeg Beach, w;\\s\nrescued late Saturday by the S.S.\nWolverine. Winnipeg Beach is 60 miles\nnorth of here.\nMaas was in an exhausted condition\nwhen rescued. He spent all night Friday on the ice cake after a vain attempt to reach shore and was twice\nimmensed in the cold lake waters.\nWhile fishing he became separated\nfrom his boat. The boat waa caught\nin drifting Ice and carried away. Stormy\nconditions with an exceptionally high\nwind prevailed at the time and his attempts to reach shore or the boat\nproved ineffectual. During the night,\nMaas drifted five miles on the Ice cake.\nFarmers Ask for an\nExtension of Marketing\nCommittee Jurisdiction\nNEW WESTMINSTER, Nov. 13. \u2014\nFurther approval of the steps Initiated\nby the Delta Cooperative Growers association to combat the oriental invasion was obtained when district \"E\"\nfarmers Institute, representing 30 branch\nInstitutes with a membership of about\n1400 farmers, unanimously passed a\nresolution instructing the advisory\nboard to press for legislation to further\nthe removal of the oriental as an agriculturist in British Columbia.\nIt was stated that the Dela cooopera'\ntlve had requested Hon. E. D. Barrow\nto enlarge the area of control by the\nInterior committee of direction to Include the lower mainland, as far as\nfruit and vegetables were concerned,\nand the minister appeared favorable\nto the proposal.\nBusiness Opportunities\nWILLIAMS'   TRAMSrER   \u2014   Baggage\nCoal  and  Wood.   Phone  106.    (1314\nFOR SALE\u2014Quantity of potatoes and\ncarrots, one dollar per cwt.; cabbage,\ntwo dollars per cwt.; and onions,\nthree dollars per cwt. Forward Creston. R. Stewart, Alice Siding, Creston, B.C. (1397)\nA SMALL INVESTMENT should make\na fortune for a few people who have\nenough nerve to back their own Judgment after investigating carefully the\nproposition I have to offer. For full\nparticulars write R. G. McLeod, 628\nEast 70th street. 8eattle,^Wash.J_1390)\nLADIES' HAIRDRES8ING\u2014Good class\nbusiness, showing excellent profits, for\nsale ln Victoria, B.C. Cash desired,\nbut will consider terms. Further particulars, apply Miss M. Locke, Jaffray,\nB.C. (3005)\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON   \u2014   Baker   St.   Carpenter an\nJoiner. Screens and Hardwood.    < 1313\nInsurance and Real Estati\nR.  W.  DAWSON\u2014\nBaal Estate, Insurance, mental*, Ana\nable Blk.  P.O. Box 733.  Phone 197.\n(131*\nSituations Wanted\nM.  DILL\u2014INSURANCE,\nFARM AND  CITY  PROPERTY\n506 Ward Street- < 1316\nARGOS WALLOP THE\nTIGER CHAMPIONS\nTORONTO, Nov. 13.-Displaying totter football than they have at any\nother time this season Toronto Argonauts, at Varsity Stadium Saturday\nafternoon vanquished the mighty Hamilton Tigers, champions of tlie Interprovincial rugby football union, 13 to\n1. The game meant nothing to the\ntitleholders and consequently they\nwere not spurred on to any great ef-\nrots. The champions were beaten In\nevery department of the game.\nFOR SALE\u2014Book of Knowledge, 20 volumes; Winchester carbine, 30-30; Winchester, long barrel, 30-30; 12-gauge\nB.S.A. double-barrel shotgun; Dayton\ngrocery scales; Ramsay biscuit rack;\nTaylor safe. All of above are ln first-\nclass condition and cheap for cash.\nBox 52, Creston, B.C. (1363)\nWANTED\u2014Position as housemaid, cham\nbcrmald ln hotel, or waitress ln cafe.\nApply Box 1373, Daily News.       (1373)\nYOUNG LADY WANTS WORK \u2014 Address M. O. H., Nelson, B.C.\nChiropractors\nDR. OKAY, Cinm BLK. \u2014 Phonej\nOff. 115, Res. 5BIY. Hrs.: 10-12 an\n2-5.   Saturday,  9:30-12.    (1317\nFlorists\nHouses Wanted\nWILL PAY CASH FOR SMALL HOUSl\nif price right.   Box 1081, Dally New*\n(1081.\nQRIWELLBTS     GREENHOUSES,    Nel\n\u25a0on.   Cut flowers and floral designs.\n(1318\nWM.  S.  JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone   342.      Cut   Flowers.     Potte\nPlants and Floral Emblems.      (131B\nUniversity Team\nBeats Vancouver to\nWin Rugby Title\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13.\u2014University of\nBritish Columbia won the provincial\n\"Big Four\" Canadian rugby championship by defeating Vancouver 8 to 5, Saturday.\nWholesale\nA.  M'ACDONAXD   ft  CO.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers end Provlslo\nMerchants, Importers of Teas, Coif\nfees, Spices, Dried Fruits, Staple an<\nFancy Groceries, Nelson, B.C. (1320\nEngineers\nCANADIAN Li I.. PACIFIC\nA. X.  GREEN CO\u2014CONTRACTORS\nFormerly Green  Bros., Burden,  Nelson\nCivil and Mining Engineers\nB.C., Alberta and Dominion Land\nSurveyors (1321\nLAST SAILINGS\nFrom St. Lawrence Ports,\nMontreal-Quebec\nTO LIVERPOOL\nNot. \u00bb\u2022    Montcalm\nNot. II* o  Mellia\n\u2022Calla at Greenock for Glasgow.\no Calls at Belfast.\nTO OXXBBODBG, SOUTHAMPTON,\nNot. II    Montnairn\nFuture   Sailings   From  Winter\nPort, 8t\u201e John\nUse Canadian Pacific Express Travel-\ntea' Cheques.    Payable Everywhere.\nBerth reservations can now be made.\nAak about tha new Tourist Third Cabin.\nVnll details with rates from soy Agent,\nor write.\nJ. ft, CARTER,\n,\u00bbi#tji*\u00bb ref*\u00ab*f\" ***** ****** \u25a0*\nWant aad Classified Advertising \u2014\nOne* and a half cents a word per Insertion. If paid ln advance, 6c per word\nper week, or 22Vic per word per month.\nTransient ads accented only on a cash-\nin-advance basis. Each Initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc., counts as one word.\nMinimum 25c, if charged 60c,\nXaoal Beading Notices \u2014 Three centa\nper word each Insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4c per word.\nBlackface capitals 6c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent discount if run dally without change of copy for one month or\nmore, where advertisement la set out\nId short lines the charge is 16c a line\nfor Roman type, 20c for blackface and\n26o for blackface capitals. Minimum\n3f\u00bbc If charged 60c.\nCard*\u2014Three cents per word; SOc minimum.\nBirth Nottoea\u2014Free.\nBirths\nWEBBER-At Kimberley hospital, to Mr.\nand Mrs. Fred Webber of Kimberley,\na son, November 11.\nHelp Wanted\nWANTED\u2014A nursemaid.\nHume Hotel.\nApply Room 4,\n(3020)\nWANTED\u2014Men, mechanically Inclined.\nwho would like to work at the world'*\ngreatest paying Industry. Auto mechanics, garage work, electrical experts, welding, battery and vulcanising. We guarantee to train you to\nqualify for big pay positions. Only a\nshort time required. Write or call\nHemphill's Auto Engineering School,\n10 Hastings St. E., Vancouver, B.C.\n(1304)\nWANTED \u2014 Smart woman, about 60\nyears of age, to look after home and\ncook for one. This is first-class home.\nFor same, address Box 10, Zlncton,\nB.C. (1378)\nAMTUTTOl.S WORKING MEN WANT\nED\u2014Men mechanically Inclined, and\nanxious to earn $125.00 to $300.00\nmonthly. We guarantee to train you\nin our shops under experts until you\nare placed in a position at above wage\nas auto or electrical expert engineers,\nchauffeurs, salesmen, vulcanizers,\nwelders or battery experts. Also\nbricklaying, plastering. Enquire today, write or call. State position desired. Hemphill Trade Schools, Lid.,\n808 Centre Street, Calgary. Branches:\nEdmonton, Saskatoon, Regina, Winnipeg. (3038)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nA REAL\nHORSE, WEIGHT ELEVEN HUNDRED\nPOUNDS, WILL WORK SINGLE OR\nDOUBLE; ONE SET HARNESS. ONE\nDELIVERY WAGON WITH SHAFTS,\nAND ONE SLEIGH IN GOOD CONDITION, WITH SHAFTS, FOR SALE\nCHEAP.\nAlso Stx Sleigh Rugs ln good shape,\neach (5.00; one Black Fur Rug\nat \u00bb7.00.\nSEE MY BARGAINS IN\nSTOVES AND HEATERS\nSECOND HAND STORE\nWARD STREET NELSON\nLOST\u2014ftg ln bills, between John Burn\nand   Ferry.     Reward,     one-third;\nDally News.  , L30\u00ab\nCompany, Ltd.\nMONEY TO LOAN\u2014We have $1500.00\nto place on first mortgage, Nelson\nresidential property.\nOFFICE FOR RENT\u2014Two double offices In Aberdejn block, steam\nheated, $33.50 and $25 per month.\nSmall offices ln Orlffin block, $8\nand $5 per month.\nHOUSES FOR RENT\u2014Two  houses, 6\nrooms, $30 each.\nHOUSE FOR SALE\u20148-room house\nwith 4 bedrooms, double living\nroom, bathroom, etc., on 3 good lots.\nA good home for large family.\nPrice $3300 on easy terms, $500 will\nhandle. - .\nBAKER STREET STORE OR OFFICE\nFOR RENT\u2014At $45 jwr month, possession Dec. 1.\nWARD STREET STORE OR OFFICE\nFOR RENT\u2014At $35 per month. Immediate possession.\nINSURANCE\u2014We make a specialty of\nall kinds of insurance, get ouf rates\non Fire, Automobile, Accident and\nSickness, Life and Burglary Insurance.\nSURETY AND FIDELITY BONDS\u2014We\nwrite surety bonds all kinds, get\nour rates.\n414 Ward Street\nPhone 68\n(3030)\nFor Rent\nIMPROVED RANCH FOR RENT\u2014Suitable dairy, swex, nay and vegetables.\nJohn Graham, Perry Siding.      (3006)\nFURNISHED OB~U N~F U R N I S H E D-\nHOUSE\u2014Hot water \u2022 heated. Phone\n79L.   (3015)\nFOR RENT \u2014 Nicely furnished house,\nfive rooms. Phone 727L or apply at\n710 Josephine street. (3042)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nSELL OR EXCHANGE, good house, 106\nacres, cheap. Want live stock, machinery or other property. Box 3008,\nDally News.  (3008)\nNursing\nPRIVATE NURSES frequently earn $30\na week. Learn by pergonal correspondence. Catalogue No. 60 free.\nRoyal College of Science, Toronto 4,\nCanada.      (1362)\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014Bracelet.   Ir\nBuilding, Friday.\nCanadian    Leg*\nFinder Phone 568\n (30\u00ab\nSchools\nMOLER BEAUTX CULUEUH\nMOST SUCCESSFUL COLLEGE ON\nTHB CONTINENT\nExpert Instructors In all branches _\nBeauty Culture, Including Water Wa?\nIng and Permanent Waving. Termi\nMoler, 10 Hastings St. E., VsncouvW\nx   (131V\nMEN AND WOMEN L.EARN BAFtBEn\nINC\u2014Expert instructors ln one of tl\nbest paying businesses. Earn whft\nyou learn and becom\u00bb indeprnden\nCall or write Moler Barber Colle^f\n10 Hastings St. E., Vancouver RO\nx  (1310\nFurnished Rooms to Ren\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's   Apartments. (UM\nFURNISHED       HOUSEKEEPIW\nROOMS\u2014Over Poole Drug. (XOff\nTWO-ROOM FURNISHED, STEAM\nHEATED SUITE for rent, Sterling Ho\ntel.  <____\nLive Stock for Sale\nFOR SALE\u2014Young white pigs. 7 weefc\nold. $5 each f.o.b. Edgewood.    Caa\nwith order.    John Egloff, Edgewood.\n(13M\nONE BLACK TEAM OF HORSES\u2014Wsl\nmatched, weight 3350 pounds. .\nDosenberger. Procter, B.C. (3001\nFOR SALE \u2014 Ayrshire bull calf froi\nR.O.P. cow by Class A bull, 2 month-\nL. Clark. Gray Creek. (3017\nYOUNG RIGS \u2014 Price $6.60.\nberg, Slocan Park.      \t\nSam :\n(301ft\nFOR SALE\u2014Five high-grade cows, tw\nrecently freshened; four 1-year-ol\nheifers; three heifer calves, one pui\nAyrshire bull, mower, rake, horse for\noutfit, harness, stock saddle, chalni\netc. John McCallum, Kootenay Baj\nPhone Rock Glen Ranch. (30111\nTELL your wants through The Dall\nNews classified columns.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nAssayers\nWIDDOWBOM, Box A1108, No\nB.C. Standard western charge;\n (1911\nAccounting\nCHARLES  r.  HUMTER\u2014\nAuditor.    MacDonald    Jam    Building\nBon 1191. Nelson, B.C. (1312\nTransfer\n_     -Land Surveyor,\nKtnlng and OlTil Safin***\nKaslo. B.C. (1322:\nHATWABD   q.   XraOKOaUa-   \u2014   To*M\nEngineer.  Cranbrook, B.C. \u2014 Tlmbei\nestimates and logging maps.   Report,\non timber land properties. (1328]\n \u2014\n\u2014\n-*\n\/&>L\n' THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 14, 1927\nT~ Pag* NlnfT\"**}\n\u00a9Markets\nB. -A. OH. LEADS   I PULLET EGGS\nTO LIST FIFTY CENTS AT\n'   LOCAL MART\nTrading for Saturday Is Light,\nbut Prices Maintain Levels\nIncrease\nor\n1\nTORONTO, Nov. 18.\u2014Though trading\non the Toronto \u2022took ezotung* Saturday wu comparatively light, prloea were\nwell maintained and lncreaaed ln maay\nInstances. British American oil was\nonce again the leader, closing 1, up,\n*t 3d ft. Closing sate* of other oils\nwere a* follows: Imperial Oil, up K. to\n(81; International Pet*, up to, to 34;\nand McColl Bros., up to. to 53.\nHiram Walker closed unchanged at 63.\nOther closing sales ln the distillery and\nbrewery group were as follows: Gooder-\nham tz Worts, up to, to 68to; Seagram,\ndown to, to 31 to: and Canadian industrial Alcohol, down to, to 42; Canada Malting, down to, to 81 to: and\nCatling Brewery, up to. to 36%.\nCanadian Canners pfd. advanced to.\nto 110, and the common advanced to\n63. Northern Bakeries closed at 40to,\nup *4; Christie Brown wa* up 1, to 70;\nOlty Dairy down 1, to 197; Hamilton\nDairies down \u25a0',. to 43 to: Maple Leaf\nup 1, to 103; Western Canada Flour\nMills up 3, to 86; Shredded wheat up\n1, to 68.\nInternational Nickel went up to, to\n66%, while Massey Harris was down to,\nto 36to, though the pfd. was up v..\nto 108.\nVancouver Stocks\nBid\nBig  Missouri   34V4\n* B. C. Sliver   t 1.25\nCork Province \t\nDunwell    16\nGlacier    \t\nIndependence\t\nIndian  Mines        .06 to\nInternational Coal ....       J6to\nMarmot Metals \t\nPremier      2.34\nPorter Idaho       .32\nRuth  Hope   30\nSelklrks   01\nSliver Crest  05to\nRichmond    11\nNat. Sll. O.S 10\nCoast   Copper        12.26 13.00\nB. c. Montana  001-16    .OOto\nBrit. Petroleum   07 .07to\nTrojan OU   .01 to\nAsked\n.26 to\n\u00bb\t\n.09 to\n.17\n.05,\n.0414\n06\n.28\n.10\n2.37\n.33\n.32\n.02\n.06\n.14\nOthers 60 Cents, but Only Obtained on Order; Squash and\nTurnips Gone\nFor the first time ln six weeks a few\ndozen pullet eggs were on sale to the\ngeneral public at the local market Saturday. They sold at 50c a dozen, while\nthe other eggs, selling at 60c, were only\navailable by those who had ordered ln\nadvance.\nThe meat stock was plentiful and sold\nwell.   There were no price changes.\nHubbard squash and turnip* are off\nthe market for this season.\nTHE   PRICES\nFollowing are the prices quoted\nEggs,   doz   :_....\u201e  |\nPullet eggs, doz\t\nButter,   lb\t\nBeef, lb loc to\nVeal, lb 16c to\nPork,  lb      36c to\nFowl, lb:\t\nCheese,   lb\t\nMarmalade, lb     \t\nHorse   radish,   lb\t\nCream cheese,  lb\t\nCurd,   dish   \t\nCarrots,  6  lbs\t\nCelery, bunch\t\nParsley,  bunch\t\nSpring chicken, lb  ah\nPotatoes,  10 lbs      _&\nPotatoes, sack      a.oo\nGravenstein apples, bi. up from   1.35\nMcintosh apples, bo*       1.75\nHeadcheese, lb      .20\nDry onions, 6 lbs        21\nSwiss chard, bunch 10c, 16c and     .26\nEndives,  head    5c,   10c     .15\nGarlic,   lb  ,2\u00a9\nScotch  kale,   bunch     '10\nParsnips, 3 lbs.  ...    to\nBeets,  7 lbs 25\nCabbage, per lb      .06\nAnjou Pears, 4 lbs 25\nCabbage, by sack, p\u00abr lb 03\nPerns, per pot    2.00\nChristmas   berries,  per  pt.   up\nfrom  '     .78\n60\n.50\n45\n.36\n.30\n.30\n30\n.35\n.30\n.20\n.38\n.30\n.25\n.10\n.05\nMEW PRICE PEAKS\nValues Move Forward With Na:\ntional Breweries Leading\nthe Way\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL,    Nov.    13.\u2014Butter    and\ncheese   firm;   eggs   stronger.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns 20c to 20,\/1.c.\nButter\u2014No,   I   pasteurized,   37%c   to\nton*\nEggs\u2014storage extras, 44c; firsts, 42c;\nseconds, 38c. Fresh specials, 75c; extras, 66c to 70c;  firsts, 5Bc.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 13\u2014Stock values\nmoved robustly forward ln Saturday's\nbrief session of trading on the Bloat-\nreal stock exchange, with four new\npeak levels established ln a broad\nlist.\nNational Breweries closed at 103, for\na gain of >\u00a3, after having sold at the\nnew high of 103it. Brazilian came second and closed at 1D7, for a gain of I.\nCanadian Alcohol closed unchanged\nat 41%.\nLake of tha Woods showed the great-\neat gain in the list, closing at 181%,\nfor a gain of 7% Points, after having\n\u25a0old at the new high of 183. Bank\nof Toronto off \u2022%\u2022_, to 372'\/a. was the\nweak spot in the list.\nTotal sales, 10,374 shares; bonds,\n\u202281,300.\nClosing Quotations nt Montreal\nBank of Commerce    380\nBank of Montreal ...._    333\nBank qf Nova Scotia    381\nRoyal Bank      311\nAbitibl Power & Paper     131ft\nAbitlbl Power & Paper preferred   124\nAsbestos Corporation .'.      37\nAsbestos  Corporation preferred-     03\nAtlantic  Sugar        33\nAtlantic Sugar preferred       89\nBell Telephone      14*%\nBrazilian T. L. ac Poyer     107\nBrompton Paper       57\nCanadian Canners       70\nCanada Car & Foundry preferred    80\nCanada Cement    347\nCanada Converters     100\nCanadian Industrial Alcohol       41s*\nCanada Steamship Lines       37%\nCanada Steamship Lines pfd      03\nConsolidated Mining <fc Smelting   248\nDominion  Bridge    283%\nDominion Textile      130\nDominion Textile preferred     134%\nMassey-Harrls      95 ft\nMassey-Harrls preferred       107J4\nMontreal Tramways    100\nNational   Breweries        102%\nNational Breweries preferred     134\nOgilvie  Milling      850\nOntario Steel Products     116\nOttawa L. H. & Power    141\nPenmans   Limited         MH\nPrice Brothers  _      67ft\nQuebec Power      76%\nShawinfgan         83ft\nSherwln Williams      173\nSouthern  Canada Power      115\nSpanish  River   ,\u201e,    131ft\nSteel Co. of Canada      166\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills      33\nTooke  Brothers       JO\nWabasso  Cotton       127\nWayagamack       111%\nWestern   Grocers        18%\nWinnipeg  Railway          87\nNew issue: subject to prior sale and change in price:\nwe offer and recommend our participation:\nNORTH GERMAN LLOYD\n20-Year 6% Sinking Fund Gold Bonds\nDue November 1, 1947\nNet earnings over 3<\/8 times net annual interest charges.\nPrice  $94  to  Yield  6.55',\nThis issue has been oversubscribed so that immediate action is necessary.\nR. P. Clark\nHELSOKT   BBAHCH,   FTIOKJE   100\naXLMO  AT   VANCOUVEB  AaTD   TX9TOXIA\nINVESTMENT   BANKERS\nft CO.\n'VANCOIIHH)\nLTD.\nte-       \u25a0 BS\t\nBUY\nBONDS\nWe Own and Offer:\n\u202221,000 Burnaby   \t\n2,000 Medicine  Hat   \t\nWe have a few shares of General Steel Wares,  Ltd.,  7% %Pref.  left,\nprice $100.\nROYAL FINANCIAL CORPORATION LIMITED\nVANCOUVER\n,  R. J. HEWITT, DISTRICT REPRESENTATIVE\nTelephone 269   \\                             NELSON                                   Pont l!((v  ci.-.t\n\u25a0 :\nKOOTENAY BOND & INVESTMENT CO.. LIMITED\nINVESTMENT   SECURITIES  '\nGOVERNMENT\nMUNICIPAL  AND\nINDUSTRIAL\nBONDS\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA,\nONTARIO,  MANITOBA\nAND QUEBEC MINING\nSTOCKS\nHOME OFFICE, TRAIL, B.C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting ,\nCompany of Canada. Limited\nOfflo*   Smraltinfl   and   Refining   DertartltarMrt\nTRAIL,   BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiner*\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zine One.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pic Lead end Zine.\nTADANAC, TRAIL\nToronto Mines\nBid Aaked\nAmulet       $ 4.86 $ 4:90\nAconda                                    .34 .35\nArgo 37% .38\nArea              40% .41\nBeaver         3.38 \t\nCastle     84 .85\nCan.  Lorraine   18%      \t\nConlagas           4.10 4.50\nCapitol     90 ft .21\nDome    10.95 11.10\nDon Rouyn   20 .21\nGold  Hill    29% .30\nHolly     l..    17.50 17.65\nIndian           .04% .07\nKirkland Lake       2.91 2.95\nKeeley      80 .81\nLake   Shore       2630 26.50\nLaval     36% .37\nMclntyre        27.80 28.00\nMining  Corpn       4.05 4.10\nNlpisslng            6.50 6.80\nNewray     _ 49        \t\nNoranda        25.00 25.50\nPioneer      56 ,60\nPremier      2.38 2.40\nRouyn    03 \t\nStadacona  18 .18%\nTeck   Hughes        10,75 \t\nTlmlskaming    07 .07%\nTough Oakes  *....       .57% .58\nWright Hargreaves           6.95 7.00\nWest Dome Lake ...          .16 .17\nCent. Man. Mines       1.80 1.82\n .*\u00bb\u25a0. ,\t\nSpokane Stocks\nPound Sterling\nGoes to Highest\nLevel Since War\nNEW YORK, Nov. 13.\u2014Contlnu\nIng lta advance on an active turn\nover, tbe British pCund, relieved\nthla year of the usual pressure\nfrom grain and cotton bills be\ncause of heavy dollar credit\nfinancing, moved Into new high\nground Saturday at the opening\nand before the close had reached\n1487 1-18, with rumored sales at\n\u20224-87 7-16, the highest level since\nprewar   days.\nTfcis   advance   established   the\ncheck rate at $4.87 for the first I\ntime and the volume of buying'\nindicated that, should the present J\npace be maintained, the point at\nwhich gold would move from this'\ncountry to England might be at-^\ntalned soon.   This level is theo-*\nretlcally   84-60   for   cable   remit-1\ntances, byt lt Is no secret tnat\nshould   the   rate  go  fractionally\nabove $4-88, there would be, under\nfavorable   conditions,   \"some   en- *\ngagements   of  gold  for  London.\nBecause of unexpected  drains  to\ncountries like Argentina, the Bank\nof   England   doubtless   would   be\nglad to get gold from this country,\" says the Sun.\nIN II, I, STOCKS\nGeneral Motors and U. S. Steel\nIssues in Brisk Demand\nand Lead Advance\nBY THE POLICE\nOne of Biggest Swindles Ever\nPlanned Is Believed Unearthed\nPOSED AS AN AGENT\nOF EUGENE DUPONT\nMaintained  Imposing  Suite  in\nMotors Building; Planned\nTownsite\n(Reported  by c. W. Appleyard)\nAmerican   Locomotive    $196%\nChrysler  $ js^\nDodBe  I 14',\nOreat  Northern   $ 991;,\nInternational  Nickel   $ 66%\nStudebaker   $ 58%\nPhilips Petroleum $ 42%\ntt s. Steel  1130\nBrazilian Traction  $197\"2\nMassey  Harris   $ 38%\nSeagram  | 22\nGoldsmith    03Hc\nBethlehem Steel  $ (4\nWHEAT GOES UP\nAND CORN DOWN\nCHICAGO, Nov. 13.\u2014Wheat prices\nwent up with a rush Saturday and\nthe corn market came down equally\nfast. Canada's government crop report, extreme cold weather over the\nCanadian prairies and fresh word of\ndamage by rust ln Argentina lifted\nwheat. Washington official crop figures were the ruling force in the corn\ntrade.\nClosing   prices  on   wheat   were  firm\n2c to 2%c net higher with corn 2%c\nto 2%c off, oats %c to %c to %c down\nand  provisions  unchanged  to  50c  up\n \u2022*,*\u2022\u00bb--\t\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1\u00bb.\u2014Toronto\u2014Dealers quoting country shippers extras 52c\nto 55c, firsts 44c to 47c, seconds 33c to\n37c, pullet extras 42c.\nWinnipeg\u2014Firsts 4lc to 47cr seconds\n36c to 37e.\nSaskatoon\u2014Extras 40c, firsts 36c, seconds 32c,\nVancouver\u2014Prices to producers are\nunchanged, but the market Is firm and\ntending higher.\nChicago\u2014Spot unchanged, Novembers\n33%o, Decembers 34%c.\nNew York\u2014Unchanged.\n m   \t\nBRITISH COLUMBIA EGGS\nExtras, 60c to 51c; firsts, 42c to 43c;\npullets, SOc to SSo.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 13.\u2014Spirited buying in the stock market Saturday carried the general level of prices upward.\nSome week-end profit-taking ln the\nImt hour of the half-day session\nchecked the advance somewhat, but\nnevertheless many of the leading Issues closed 1 to 3 points or more above\nyesterday's final figures, some of them\nnt their peaks for the day.\nProspects of good business was again\nreflected by buoyancy of mercantile\nIssues, such as Montgomery Ward, Wool-\nworth. Sears Roebuck, Munsingwear and\nArnold Constable, all of which reached\ntheir highest prlceH of the year.\nSuch leading issues as V. S. Steel\nand General Motors were In brisk demand, the former closing at ls day's\nhighest, but Motors fell back a little\nln the final dealings. Leadership furnished by steel common was instrumental in running up several Important\nshares Into high territory, including'\ninternational Harvester, which sold as\nhigh at 242 before reacting to around\n239%.\nThe last half hour was featured by\nstrength of some of the carriers,\ntably Atchison and Delaware & Hudson,\nwhich attained their best prices of the\nday in that period. New York Central\nadvanced more than a point, closing\naround 164.\nSome of the specialties provided much\ninterest. American Can common and\npreferred. Corn Products, Burroughs\nAdding Machine and Mathlesen Alkali\nestablished a new maximum figure and\nColorado Fuel. Crucible, Pierce Arrow,\npreferred, nnd Shattauck were among\nthe issues which gained 2 or 3 points\nor more.\nNew  York  Stork  Quotations\nHigh       Low       Close\nAllied   Chem     151%    160%     151%\nAmer. Tele.    . 177*6    177       177%\nAmer.  Tobacco 183%    181*4 .181%\nAnaconda 48'.*     47%     47%\nAtchison 102%     188%    192%\nBaldwin     251        251        250\nBftltl. & Ohio 119%    118%    HO\ncan. Pac. 196       195       195%\nCerro de Phsco     .      62 V4      61%      62\nChile  Copper 36%      35%      35%\nChrysler      50%     56%     56%\nCorn  Products 65%     64%     64%\nDodge  \u25a0 14*      W%      14%\nDupont    ... 320        317%    319\nGen.   Motors        .,   132%    131%    131%\nGen.   Electric   . 131        129%    130\noranby      35%     35        35\nGr. Nor. Pre       99%      98 99%\nInt.  Nickel          66%      66 66%\nKen.   Copper         79 78%     78%\nNat. Pow. & Light      23%      a3%      23%\nN. Y. Central      164       163       162%\nNor. Pac.  . -07 98%     97\nPhillips  Pete 42%      41%      41%\nRadio   Corp. 79%     78%      78%\nSin, Con. 15%      15%      15%\nSou. Pac         ..    121%    120%    121%\nStan. Oil Cal. .      55%      55%      56%\nStan. Oil N. J. 40%      39%      40\nStudebaker 56%      55%      56\nTexas Gulf Sul 74%      73%      74\nU. Pacific-..     192%    101%    192%\nU.  S. Rub. .49%      48 48%\nU.  S. Steel    .      139%    138%    139%\nWillys Overland   ...     15%      15 15%\nDETROIT, Nov. 13.\u2014What police believe to be the largest single attempt\never made at swindling in Detroit was\naverted with the arrest last night of\nCharles V. Knightley, alias Allen Forbes,\n55, who, since his arrival here last February, has maintained an imposing suite\nof offices in the General Motors building, where he has been posing as a personal representative of Eugene Dupont,\nthe Walter Dupont estate, and the American Home Foundation.\nThe police believe Knightley had planned one of the most extensive swindles\never conceived ln the country, and had\ndone most of the groundwork. They expressed belfef that if he had not been\ncaught, within the next two months he\nwould have swindled Detrolters of more\nthan 81,000.000.\nOPTIONS ON LANDS\nKnightley obtained options on hundreds of acres of land near the Yellow\nCoach company plant in Pontiac, Mich.\nHe said he planned to build 500 homes\nlor workers in the Pontiac automobile\nplants. He carried on an extensive ad\nvcrtlsing campaign. Another of his\nplans was the consolidation of all coal\nund building supplies for cooperative\nmarketing. He represented himself as\nan official of the General Motor corporation, ponce stated.\nA firm of architects prepared extensive surveys and plans that gave specifications for docks, sea walls, buildings\nand golf links. They have not been paid\nfor the work.\nThe specific charge against Knightley,\nand the one on which he was arrested.\nIs obtaining $14,000 from a New York\ndentist under false pretences. He Is\nheld here for New York police, and has\nsignified hts willingness to return to\nNew York without requisition papers.\nKnightley lived with hts wife and two\ndaughters at Calvert avenue here.\nHAS POLICE RECORD\nBOSTON, Mass., Nov. 13. \u2014 Charles\nV, Knightley, arrested ln Detroit as a\nconfidence man, has a police record\ndating back to 1894. Boston police officers said tonight. He has been in the\ntolls of the law in Massachusetts on several occasions.\nIn October,  1910. Knightley was sen\ntenced ln Toronto, Out., to a tarm of\nfour years for forgery.\nIn June, 1022, he was arretted at Bye,\nN.Y., for the Boston police for tho tneft\nof $6000 collected for Armenian relief,\nand theft of Liberty bonds. His last\nknown exploit ln this state was ln November, 1024, when he used the name\nof Edsel Ford, automobile manufacturer,\nin launching a 87,000,000 project to\nturn the Lynn and Saugus marshes into\nIndustrial plants and to transform Lynn\nharbor and the Saugus river Into deep\nwater ways. The scheme collapsed when\nit became known that Knightley wu an\nex-convict.\nCOOK'S ARMY IS\n'Rebel\"   Song   Will   Be   Sung\nThrough Streets of London\nby  Marchers\nTrading   Exceptionally   Heavy\nfor Half Day; PotterDoal\nMost  Active\nTORONTO, Nov. 18\u2014Further record*\nfor volume of trading were set up on\nthe Standard mining exchange on Saturday, when the highest total for ths\nshort session was reached at 1,937,208\nshares, and the sales for the four and\none-half day* that the market was open\nwas carried beiony the highest figure\never reached for a whole week.\nPotter-Doal was the most active issue.\nreaching 23c, an advance of 8% cents\non a turnover of 193.050 shares. Columbus Kirkland gained a cent, at 12c;\nBarry Hollinger climbed to 5c, up 3%c,\nand Bidgood was 2c better, at $1.14.\nHowey advanced to 81.61, while Jack-\nSWINDON, Eng., Nov. 13.-The march son Manlon *\u00bbined 3'^c' t0 *>*c- **A'\nof the unemployed was halted today! lflnd u*e Gold was up llc- * ****'\nand the marchers spent most of Sunday I Wrl*ht Hargreaves lost 14c. at $7.\ntaking it easy and practicing marching' Crow\u00bb Reserve Consolidated was \u201e\u00bb\nsongs, which they will sing through the ! Prominent feature with a Jump to 64c.\nLondon streets.   One. the \"Rebel Song,\" I a \u00abaln of 7c-    Hollinger gained 15c. to\nwas supplied  in  printed  form  to  each\nhiker.   It opens thus:\n\"Come, workers, sing a rebel song,\nA song of love and hate;\nOf love unto the lowly.\nAnd of hatred to the great\u2014\nThe great who tread our father down,\nWho steal our children's bread.\nWhose hand of greed ls stretched to rob\nrob\nThe living and the dead.\"\nAfter their long tramp over the country roads, the marchers were more interested   today   in   giving   their   feet   a\nrest than ln doing any sight seeing.\n817.45.\nCentral Manitoba  scored an ad vanes\nof 6c, to 81.82.\nCoast Firm Will\nBuild Bridge for\nWardner Road\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13-\u2014Steel superstructure of a giant bridge over the\nKootenay river at Wardner, BjC.. will\nbe erected by John Douglas & Co.,\nlocal ship and bridge builders, ths con-\n'The army\" will continue tomorrow | tract having been awarded from Victoria, B.C.\non toward the gerat metropolis.\n' Exchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Nov. 13.\u2014Sterling exchange firm at $4.82 1-16 for 60-day\nbills and at $4.87 1-16 for demand.\nForeign   bar   stiver\u201457%.\nCanadian dollar\u20145-32 premium.\nFrancs\u2014$3.92%.\nLire\u2014$5.42%.\nNelson, approximately rate sterling\u2014\n$4.89   1-16.\nNorth German Lloyd\nBond Issue Is Being\nOffered in New York\nNEW YORK, Nov. IS.\u2014The new issue of $20,000,000 North German Lloyd\n6 per cent sinking fund gold bonds ls\nbeing offered by a syndicate headed\nby Kuhn, Loeb 8c Co. The securities\nwill be priced to yield about 6.85 per\ncent to maturity.\nCustom collections at port of Woodstock for October show an Increase\nof over $5000 over same period last\nfear- ...a*\nPopulation of the Welland jail was\nonly   slightly    decreased    during the\npast 12 months, according to the annual report.\nThe Butcher\nThe Baker, the Candlestick Maker\u2014yes, all\nthe trades and profession read over the\nSituations Wanted Columns of The Daily\nNews. That's why your ad appearing in\nThe Daily News will bring you the job you\nwant.\n)^T}i.ho..'\/$fi% (fomuing.^jf\nINCORPOHATtO   MV*   MAY   l\u00abTO.\nI Other Bnuicbe* at Wlnnlpef, Torkton. Saikatoon, Edmonton,  Oalc*r>.  Letbbrtdce.\nVancouver, Kainloop*, Vernon and Victoria\nDepartment Manager's Sale\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear\nFUR COAT SPECIALS\u2014Northern muskrat skins designed up and down, diagonal or round.   Sizes assorted.   Lined with heavy satin. Regular price $197.50,\nsale price $125.00\nRegular price $275.00, sale price     8235.00\nRegular price $295.00, sale price  $250.00\nBLACK SEAL COATS\u2014Trimmed American   Oppossum,   lined  throughout   with\nheavy satin.   Sizes assorted.   Regular price $195.00, sale price  .8175.00\nRegular price $395.00, sale price  $359.00\nCORSETS, D. & A., GOSSARD\u2014Sizes assorted. Made in strong Pink Coutil.\nSpecial        $1.00\nCHILD'S RACK OF DRESSES\u2014In voil and silks. Sizes assorted, ages 1 to 5\nyears.   Special  $1.95\nHATS\u2014Large assortment of felt and velvet hats. All greatly reduced. Assorted\nshades and shapes.   Prices  $1.95 to $4.95\nCHILDREN'S  HATS\u2014In velvet.    Special  39f*\nMISSES' HATS\u2014Felt and velvet.   Special  $1.50\nSecond Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nDry Goods\nJoin In the rush for Bargains in the Dry Goods Department! Our tables\nand counters are piled with merchandise from every section of the department.\nTHE   NOTION   DEPARTMENT  offers you many useful articles at throw-away\nprices.   Regular selling price 50c each.    Sale price while they last, each  5ep\nOutstanding among the many Bargains is the big demand for Stamped Linens,\nof which we have a very large variety, such as Linen Centers, Cushion Covers,\nBuffet Sets, Girls' and Ladies' Aprons and Dresses, Bedspreads and Pillow Cases.\nMany articles at less than HALF PRICE. \u25a0\nHOSIERY\u2014We have a special table offering you an assortment of girls', boys'\nand ladies' hose in all sizes, in wool and silk.   Look for the half-price table.\nChildren's socks from, pair  254\nGirls' and boys' wool hose from, pair  65<\nLadies' wool hose from, pair  75nf\nMain  Floor\u2014H.R\u00bb.\nMEN'S KHAKI SHIRTS\u2014All wool, fine flannel shirts, army officers quality,\nwith separate collar.   All sizes.    Sale price  .   $1.95\nMEN'S BLUE PICK AND PICK AND BLACK SATEEN SHIRTS\u2014Regular $2.,\nsale price   $1.49\nMEN'S  CHECK  FLANNEL  LUMBER JACKS\u2014With knitted bottoms, all-wool.\nRegular $5.50, sale price  $4.95\nMEN'S LEATHER JERKINS\u2014Lined wooi, sleeveless, army supplies.\nSale price   $3.25\nBOYS' MERINO UNDERWEAR\u2014Unsh rinkable shirts or drawers.   Regular 85c,\nsale price __ qq*\n\u25a0gsa1 'ai' \u00abu\n\u2014-\"\naaaaa^H********************^\n 'fiSTY-T\nthe msrm hitey mm: monexy morning; November 13\/1927\nThe Ark\nSFBCIAL&\u2014Heating   stoves   to   clear,\n\u00a3 to 0X5'   Cupa  aruI  Saucers,  doz.\nK.80;   Ladles' Bilk  Hose,  all  colors,\n, 50^; Flannelette Blankets, pair,\n8.25,    92.50,    93;    Comforters,\nsites.   J>J   to   $g   each:   Bed-\ns. each. $2.75: Turklsh Towels,\n0O*|t:   Linoleum  Rugs,  Furniture,\nting   Utensils.   Staple   Dry   Goods,\nvest  in  the  city.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nINIM 606 VERNON ST.\nLIVE DOWN TOWN\n'(Bi save time and street car\ntires.   You get real comfort\nin the\nKERR APARTMENTS\nITY DRUG CO.\nelson's Dispensing Chemists\nFilms, Kodaks. Drill*. Stationery\nMall   orders   propmtly   despatched.\nKX 1063 NELSON. B.C.*       PHONE 14\nne  In  and  Oet  Your   Weight   Free\nSmedley Garage\nCompany\nNothing   Is   Too   Uood   for   the   Hick\nSmy the's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION    SPECIALIST\nIn   business   for   your   health     Let   us\nfill    your    prescriptions.    Mail    orders\npromptly executed.   Call and wait for\nyour car.   Phone 1.\n| Sunday hours: 1 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.\nViviani  Products\nSpecial Sale\nat\nCanada Drug & Book Co.\nfor which certificates have been issued has\nbeen\nPostponed\nDemonstration dates will be announced in\nThe Daily News.\nHold certificates.    They will be valid at the\ndemonstration.\nHAVE YOU TRIED OUR\nNELSON BRAND\nPineapple Marmalade\nNELSON BRAND\nIS JUST A\nLITTLE BETTER\nTHAN\nTHE REST\nIf not you have\nmissed a treat.\nA delight to the\nchildren, it will add\nzest to their moining\nafpetite. The grownups, toS, will enjoy its\ndelightful flavor.\nMade in Nelson by\nMcDonald Jam Co,, Limited\nr\nNOTICE\nIN FLOOD-STRICKEN AREA\nWaters In the stricken flood area of   ed   up   debris.     Tlie   crisis   has   been   sides of lt and  In this valley He the\nthe   New  England  states   continue   to i passed in the valley, however, and from j towns   of   Montpeller   and   Watertury.\nrecede,  the  situation  rapidly  returning   now on  it will be a matter of rehab-: __ __-\u25a0*, _\u00ab,.>\n, , , ,    .       . .     ' ,.-. . __.      ____,       _____   _ j The    panorama    shows    the    Camels\nto normal ln many formerly inundated   nitation.     The   Wlnooskl    is   a   com- \u00ab\ndistricts, but in the fertile Wlnooskl; paratively small river running from | Hump 0f the Oreen Mountains, ths\nvalley, a view of which ls shown here, j east to west, emptying Into Lake | Wlnooskl river, which ls now a rag-\nthe populace ls still struggling against] Champlain <\u00bbt Burlington. The Oreen Ing torrent, and Montpeller Junction\nstubbornly   swirling   waters   and   heap-    Mountains   of   Vermont   rise   on   both | railway   station.\nI I\nSOUND THEORY,\nTRINITY IS TOLD\nRev. Mr. Oaten, of Trail Says\nIt Is a Marvellous Life\nBackground\nCHURCH HAS\nANNIVERSARY\n\"Christ Is Power\" Is Morning\nSermon; Special Music\nIs Feature\nclared, and Instituted a plan.    Physics\ni could not explain away that plan.\nI    Mr. Oaten also traced the evolution\n, of Ideals through the ages, from lawless\ni revenge    to    forgiveness    of    enemies.\n; From the golden rule there led, he said.\na path ln which, as far as one could\nfollow,   he   would   find   that   \"Jesus   Ih\nright.\"\nCHRIST IS I-OUI It\nThat Christ was the power today was\nthe message of his sermon at the morning service. Men today, were gaining\nmore and more power over the forces\nof nature, but they were falling down\nin their control of the higher things.\nThe economic system was full of\nevils, the International system was full\nof hatred, and individual lives were being broken through lack of control.\nChrist had the power to rectify and\nsolve all these problems.\nIncluded ln the special music at the\nevening service was \"Recessional,\" by\nthe choir, with Paul Pltner as soloist.\nAn anthem, \"Abide With Me.\" had Mrs.\nLawrence McPhail and Mrs. T. E. Hlg-\nglnbotham as soloists. Mrs. McPhail and\nMrs, C. W. Tyler also gave solos.\nCAST SELECTED\nFOR GYRO'S\nMUSICAL COMEDY\n\"Keep *Em Smiling\" Is Title of\nProduction; Miss .Jones\nto Supervise\nFinding the scientific theory of evolution \"a marvellous background for\nlife,\" Rev. Beverley Oaten of Knox United church, TraU, stirred Nelsonites when\nhe preached at Trinity Unlted's anniversary commemoration  services yesterday.\nThe power of Christ was his subject\nat the morning service.\nSpecial music, Mr. Beverley's sermon\non evolution, and a benediction pro- j\nnounced by Rev. F. R. O. Dredge of St.!\nPaul's United church marked the eve- j\nning service.\nOOB (-AVE LIFE\nOivlng the scientists' theory that in:\nthe beginning the world was formed\nthrough the attraction of molecule to\nmolecule, and electron to electron. Mr.\nOaten traced the volcanic ages and the\nrock ages.\nFinally the Jelly fish came into being. It savored so little of life that lt\nwas hardly distinguishable from a dead\nthing; but Ood created its life. Then,\nthrough various steps came man, with\nhis superior, God-given mind.\nScientists stated that man was controlled by instincts which evolved with\nhim, and that if one understood the instincts of a .Jelly fish he understood\nman.\nKVOM'TION OF ll>EAI.s\nBut man could not be considered on\nthe same basis as the Jelly fish; one\ncould not compare the highest with the\nlowest.    Ood  gave  life,  Mr.  Oaten  de-\nHOCKEY POSIS\nBlaylock Honorary and Willis a\nVice-President of B. C.\nAmateur Association\nVOTERS' LIST\nTransfers of property must be registered prior to the\nend of November, to enable the owner to be placed on the\nCity Voters' List.\nUse COKE for FUEL\nCoke is a clean and economical fuel. $11.00 a ton\nf.o.b. gas works.\n-The City of Nelson\nIson\nSawmill Supplies\nAxe*\nSaw*\nChain\nCordage\nWire Rope\nPeavies\nCant Hooks\nCotton Watte\nEngine Packing\nLubricating Oils\nRubber Belting, All Sizes, Etc., Etc.\nPROMPT ATTENTION TO MAIL ORDERS\nWood, Vallance Hardware Go., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON. B.C.\nRETAIL\nNelson News of the Day\nLAMES' HOSPITAL AID meets today,\n3 o'clock, Board of Trade Rooms. i3041>\nDaughters and Maids of England will\nmeet tonight In Memorial Hall at 7:30\nsharp. (3037)\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13.\u2014A. R. Ding-\nman, Vancouver, was elected president\nof the British Columbia Amateur Hockey association at the annual meeting\nof that body here Saturday night. Other\noffices   elected   were:\nHon. President, Hon. Dr. J. D. Mac-\nLean, Victoria; Hon. vice-president,\nS. O. Blaylock. Tratl; H. C. Martin and\nG. S. Oyles, Vancouver; vice-president,\nFrank Willis, Trail; secretary-treasurer.\nStan. B. Smith, Vancouver; executive,\nL. H. Tweedie, Victoria; J. C. Urquhart.\nRossland; Oeorge I. Warren, Victoria;\nA. E. Farthing, Revelstoke; two others\nto be appointed by the Vancouver\nleague.\nThe meeting set aside $900 to financially assist Intermediate clubs pro\nrata on their season's deficits. The constitution as submitted by retiring\nPresident Watson was Indorsed and instructions given that 500- copies be\nprinted  In booklet  form.\n\"Keep 'Em Smiling\" is the title of\nthe musical comedy the Nelson Oyro\nclub ls to produce, under the supervision of Miss Estella M. Jones of Chicago, early ln December. Miss Jones\nwill be remembered as the producer\nof the Oyro club's great comedy success, \"Oh! Oh! Katchoo!\" She Is expected to arrive any time now.\nW. Nicol, who ls in charge of the\nOyros* end of the production, stated\nlast night the cast and choruses have\nbeen selected. Well known Oyros are\ncast In of the principal roles and many\nof those who took part ln last year's\n\"Step Lively\" will be seen again ln this\nproduction.\nDOMMfM   EXTRAVAGANCE -\nThe comedy, adapted from Sidney\nDrew's famous \"Keep Her flmlllng,\"\ngives a story of extravagance on the\npart of a young wife whose husband\nls given a position, ln name only, as\ntreasurer of a big corr t ration. The\nlibretto ls a little heavier than in the\nusual musical comedy, but this insures\nmore complete continuity.\nTwelve characters make up the cast\nand the choruses will be composed of\neight groups of girls.\nDEVELOPING\nPRINTING\nENLARGING\nFRAMING\nJ* H* ALLEN\nPicture   Frapiing\nAmateur   Finishing\nBANFF OHCIIEKTKA (seven pieces)\nwill hold a DANCE In Eagle Hall on\nWednesday, November 16. Popular\nPrices.   Everybody welcome. \u00bb3036i\nA general meeting of Conservatives of\nNelson Riding will bi held In the Board\noi Trade Rooms this evening at fl\no'clock. An Invitation is extended to\neveryone Interested. (3029i\nAnnual meeting WcBt Kootenay Poultry and Pet Stock Association, Tuesday,\nNovember 15. 8 p.m.. office of Poultry\nInspector. (1303)\nW. B. A. Bridge and Whist tonight at\n8 o'clock. K. P. Hall. Refreshments, and\na good time furnished. Everyone welcome. (3043)\nThe funeral of the late Charles Jefferson will take place tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock from Robertson's undertaking Parlors, (3044)\nMilitary Whist and Dance. Memorial\nHall, tonight, 8 o'clock sharp. Laurie's\nOrchestra. Admission 35 cents. Everybody welcome. (3047)\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysician  and  Surgeon\nSuite   SOS   to  SOS   Rookery   Building\nOver Whitelious*.\nSPOKANE,   WASH.\nCorner Riverside and Howard\nIncrease Your Salary\nEvening Classes\nIndividual Tuition\nNelson Business College\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nSpecializing    In    Correcting    Deftctivs\nSight  by   Proper   Glaew\nQuick Repair Service.\nomrnn blk.\nMis.  Snyder  Fined  $100,   Disorderly House; Other Woman*\n$25; Man Discharged\nRaiding the house of Mrs. Oertrude\nSnyder about 9 o'clock Friday night,\nunder a search warrant. Chief of Police Thomas H. Long and Sergt. Alex.\nStewart arrested Mrs. Snyder, Margaret\nMorris, and a man, Gayl  Hollopeter,\nIn police court Saturday morning\nbefore Magistrate William Brown, Mrs.\nSnyder pleaded guilty to a charge of\nkeeping a disorderly house and was\nfined \u00bb100. Margaret Morris, charged\nwith being found in a disorderly house\nwithout lawful excuse, pleaded guilty\nand was fined 126.\nHollopeter pleaded not guilty to the\nlatter charge,\" and it was dismissed. He\nclaimed that he had been called to\nthe house as a woman was sick. He\nsaid that he phoned for the doctor\nfrom the bouse Just before the police\narrived.\nArchie Donaghy appeared for all\nthree accused, and C B. Garland prosecuted,\nREBELS   ( (I'll RED\nNOGALES, Ariz., Nov. 13.\u2014Special\ndispatches to the Herald report that\nthe rebel general, Jesus Satieties, ivnd\nhis aide, Felix Machuca, were captured\nand   executed   by   federal   troops   At\nPHONI IM  Flaxlaco, state of Oaxaca.\nGrocery Specials\nTODAY'S SPECIALS\n12 lbs. Sugar  (granulated)\nSl.OO\n4 cans Tomato Soup  504^\n2 lbs. Choice Creamery\nButter   80\u00ab->\nChoice Breakfast Side Bacon, by\nthe piece, about 7 lbs 40*\u00a3\nSelected  Alberta Eggs, per\ndoz 50*\n1 lb. Blue Ribbon Coffee     7()<*\n2 pkgs. China Oats   TR<*\n3 pkgs. Corn Flakes  3o*if\nFresh Pork Sausage, per lb. \u00a35*\nSmoked Haddle Fillets, per\n\"\u25a0 30*\nFOB    SATISFACTION,    QUALITY\nami si:nviru PHONE 110\nTHE SUGAR BOWL\nGROCERY\nBlue Serge Suits\n$35.00\nEvery man needs a Blue Serge Suit and\nespecially at this time of year. This is one\nof the best values we have ever shown, being a very heavy serge, silk-lined body and\nsleeves and absolutely guaranteed fast color.\nIn both single or double-breasted models.\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nNelson Lady Rents House\nThrough Want Ads\n\"KKNT  STARTS  COMING   IN\"\nMrs. C. C. Rhodes of Nelson,\nrented her house by running\nan ad in the \"For Rent\" column\nof The Daily News Classified.\nThe house was rented after one\ninsertion of the Want Ad.\nSMALL FURNISHED HOUSE FOR\nRENT \u2014 Stanley street, close to car\nline.   Phone 455R alter 8. (3011)\nYou can also rent your place\nif you place your, ad before\nDaily News readers every day.\nTHE DAILY NEWS REACHES THOSE YOU\nWANT TO REACH\nPHONE 144\nand Ask for an Ad-Taker\nFilms, Cameras, Developing\nSEND  US YOUR FILMS FOR\nDEVELOPING\nCareful   Work. Bait   Finish.\nMall   Orders   Filled  Promptly\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\n\\f\nC. PLUMBING -\nHEATING CO.\nAgents  for\nALBERTA   CLAY   PRODUCTS,\nSEWER  PIPE aV  DRAIN TILE.\n306   Baker   St.        \"Nelson,   B.  C.\nW. G. HUNTER\nOptra llxmse Hlock, Nelson\n\"THE HOME OF GOOD\nLIGHTING\"\nA further consignment of new\ndesign- Lighting Fixtures just In.\nThey will appeal to the eye and\nbeautify the home and the prices\nare quite moderate.\nHot-Point Electrical Appliances.\nHeaters, Toasters, Grills, etc., always ln stock.\nAny article can be purchased\non the easy payment system.\nYOU   CAN   GET  YOUR\n0. K. BREAD\n\u2022t th*  following   8tor*ai\nIn Nelson\u2014Star Grocery, Kandy-\nland. Campbell's Grocery, Bio*\nBird   Store.\nIn Fairview\u2014Fleming's \u25a0tor*,\nMr*. Peake, Fairvi.w Filling\nStation.\nT     UDICIOUS  USE\nI      OF YOUR EYES\nf5SSm<ans that you\n\"\u25a0**^*TviH enjoy good\nPi eyesight longer.\n^^ One of the first\nthings you should do\u2014and\nnow before it is tooNate\u2014\nis to consult us and have\nyour eyes examined. You\nmay not.need glasses. If you do,\nslaases prescribed now will enable you to enjoy better eyesight from the moment you start\nwearing them.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nExpert    Optical    Service\nRead the Advertisements\nTHEY LIGHTEN ^OHfT\nTONIGHT\nHarry Willis\nTHE VERSATILE VENTRILOQUIST\nHE DOES EVERYTHING, AND DOES IT WELL'\nPAY NITE\nON THE SCREEN\n\"Rolled  . .\u201e\nTHE PARAMOUNT JUNaOR STATU\nJAMU HALL \u2022 LOUISE BROOM\n[UCKAP.D AluLlH -NANCT miUJPjl\nELtFUNDEl\n-m,.\u00ab- ......t.uu-i,..\\u,nt\nG GhramouM Qjctwej\nA comedy of rolled stockings and short skirts.\nCOMEDY\n'FIND THE KING'\nPATHE NEWS\n\u25a0\u25a0>__\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1927_11_14","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403477","@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":"1927-11-14 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1927-11-14 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\/1.0403477"}