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P. in Control\nSee Page 2\n\u00aej)*e lailjj \\Wt\nB  C\nLIBRA!* I;\n\/3V7\nBritish House News\nSee Page S\nPOL. 27.\nNELSON. B. a,\nFRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1928\nNo. 176\nACTORY EXPLODES; 16 DIE\n'lorence Tunnel Runs Into Ore\nIra\nd   Rock   and   Ore   Found\nrowing Cavern* When Experts Make Inspection\nHoover Majority Continues Mount\nas Late Returns Come in; Has Lead\n97,492 in New York; He Is Resting\nLACEMENT ORE IN\nLIME IS DESIGNATION\nrests  Near   Present  of  a\nlin Ore Body; Width Not\nYet    Determined\neralded by lead sulphides\nied out by the gushing\n\u00bbr draining from an under-\nind lake, a significant in-\nbt that suddenly centered\n[\u2022est on the Kootenay Flor-\n, an important shoot of\njiramatically disclosed it-\n; Wednesday  night in the\nworkings of the Florence,\ni the chamber in the rock\nenterecf for examination\noses.\nith the water still running,\nneck of the chamber was\nrged to man-size, and what\nseen within its walls re-\nL In a call to Nelson, and a hur-\nnlght   motor   trip   to   Alnsworth\nB. Lamb, engineer of tho Stoble,\niff interests, who happened to be\nB. W. W. McDougall, consult-\nnglneer. and other staff members.\ni midnight inspection disclosed to\ntxperu a chamber about 100 by\n\u00bbt, strewn with rock debris, across\nbly 12 feet of which lead ore\nfound. Some huge chunks of\nl were obviously hundreds\nHinds ln weight. Massive green\nis of floor-par were fbund ln\natlon with the ore.\nyet, owing to the caved condition,\nrock and ore mixed, width of\n>re shoot Is undetermined, and\nivern will have to be further ex-\nI before the dimensions of the\nrill be known.\n[ NEW  OK*.\nZON\nt ore body has been Identified\nmprlslng replacement ore ln the\nand still more significant that\nM_nage It may provide Is the fact\n1t shows the Florence definitely\nwe ln quantity on this new low\nan.\nwas on the night of October 30.\nsome hours after thc commence-\n' of the -new crosscut from the\nr point of the 100-foot lime bed\nie Josephine formation to plok\ne intertwining vein that has often\nd the long lake-level tunnel, that\nae third round of drill holes, a\ni of wAer was tapped by one of\nt At first It was thought od-\n-e to swihg the new tunnel around\nit by the pocket of water, but\nIt was decided to drain It, and\nSunday work was discontinued at\nparlous faces on No. 9 level, tho\nwere withdrawn, and a few shots\nIn to make a large opening for\nWater. The rush of water waa\nireat tbat, discharging from thc\n.unnel, It swept away the dump\n* the portal, for a day or more\nIng the Nelson-Kaslo highway.\nfl Uie crosscut to catch the vein\nstarted a foot or two further\n, the pocket of jvater might not\nbeen tapped, and this particular\nof ore might have been missed\nli later stage In the development\nte mine.\nit the Intertwining vein, which\n_rlous places has shown ore, 1b\nFlorence vein, Is now strongly\nkited. The areas In whloh It has\nopened by either the main tun-\nt laterals driven for the purpose\nxplorlng It. however, have not\nareas considered favorable to oc-\nnce of big ore. On the other\nthis white lime bed Is the pre-\nklnd of ground considered most\nvole, and after It was completely\nby the main tunnel. It was\nsd the time and place had come\neelng what the nearby vein was\nn ground In which concentration\n. could logically be looked for.\ncovery of this body of replace-\nore Is considered to be a strong\nice of the existence of a malm\nody on this horizon, and It also\n|sts the proximity of such an ore\nwhich very likely might belong\ne vein the new crosscut la seek\nNo. 6 level, lowest of the upper\nngs of the Florence, It is re-\nreplacement ore bodies added\nlerably to the tonnage from shoots\nie Florence vein. H might be,\nore, that the ore body Just opened\na of a series.\nides the possibilities when the\n[crosscut shall intersect this vein,\nInterest   attaches   also   to   the\nm of the main tunnel through\necently entered quartette belt, as\nto. 5 level such a belt was the\nraor  to important ore.\nWith returns being slowly tabulated\nin the missing election districts of the\ncountry, Herbert Hoover todoy continued to Increase his presidential\nvictory with Its greatest electoral majority and the largest popular vote in\nthe nation's history.\nThe compUatlon of the missing votes\nIn many cases, especially ln southern\nand border districts, leads for the Republicans. There was little likelihood\nof any shift of electoral votes of any\nstates from either Hoover's column or\nof Alfred. E. Smith's, his defeated\nDemocratic opponent, as a result of the\nvote from the districts yet untabu-\nlated.\nAmong the returns today from southern and border states Hoover showed\na gain of 1000 ln Texas and a majority of 17,396 from 251 out of 263\ndistricts.\nVirginia, a 24.142 majority with\n1624   out   of   1665   precincts   reported.\nOklahoma, a majority of 199,531\nwtth only 224 precincts missing.\nNorth   Carolina,   a   28.000   lead   with\nT\nF\n300  precincts   unreported.\nMissouri, a 163.446 majority with 158\nprecincts missing.\nIn New York, Oovernor Smith's state.\nHoover registered a plurality of 97,-\n492 with only 22 districts  unreported.\nHe was swept ln by a record breaking majority of 262,016 In Indiana on\ncomplete returns while on virtually\ncomplete tabulations in Illinois he received a 421,160 majority and ln Iowa\nmore   than  225,000  lead.\nThe president-elect plans to recuperate from his arduous campaign\neffort during the remainder of the\nweek at his home in Palo Alto.\nCalifornia, while Senator Curtis, the\nvice-president-elect, also plans a short\nmt.\nTabulation of scattered additional\nreturns from 21 states haa pushed\nHoover V national total past 19,376,000\nand Smith,- over 13.700,000.\nWith the votes on Tuesday's polling\nstill far from complete the unofficial\nstanding  last  night  was:\nHoover,   19,376.449;   Smith,   13,717,604.\nCity of 10,000 Population Wrecked by\nLava From Etna; Pathetic Scenes as\nPeople Flee; Birds, Animals Victims\nMISS GILCHRIST'S\nBROTHER KILLED\nWHILE HUNTING\nLocal School Teacher Bereaved;\nMan Is Mistaken for\na Deer\nHANEY, U.r.. Nov. 8.\u20141>. <;.\nGilchrist, an rmpki)re ot a. IorrImk\ncompany, died In a honpltal this\nmorning as the result or Injuries\nsurrered   In   a   shooting   accident.\nAccording to tlie \\-r-\\Swi to the\npoller, Mr. UUrhr-M nan mistaken\nfor a deer und shot by .lose--.ii\nMacdonald while I hi' two were\nhunting on   Tuesday.\nThe dead niun was the only son\nof Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Gilchrist of KusklN. A si-Irr. Miss\nDorothy, Is a teacher In a Nel_-on\nscliool.\nNun   Concepcion   Also   Guilty\nbut Sentenced to 20\nYears\nSENSATIONAL TRIAL\nOF A WEEK IS ENDED\nBoth   Receive  Sentences  in\nCalm Manner; Jury Requests a Guard\nSurgeon Grafts Part\nof Another's Eye Into\nEyeball; Patient Sees\nNEW YORK. Nov. 8.\u2014Several\ndays ago the dexterous hand of\na surgeon grafted on the falling\neye of Bert Ferguson the cornea\nof another man's eye which had\nbeen removed because of a tumor.\nWhen thc bandages came off\ntoday Ferguson could discern objects 10 feet away. The cornea\nappeared healthy, but doctors said\nanother two or three weeks must\npusa before they could definitely\ndetermine whether It would continue to adhere to thc eye ball.\nThe operation was performed\nby Dr. Ben Wlthkey, at thr New\nYork  eye and car  infirmary.\nFei*Kim_h has one glass eye\nand had been gradually losing the\nsight  of  the  other.\nCoast Guards Rush\nto Aid Ship Held\nHoquiam Sand Bar\nH_\n.HOQUIAM, Hash., He*. .'.\u2014An\nunkittvnn craft, apparently u large\nrishinx vessel, was In rtMr-fw* on\nGrey's Harbor hur in ;i heuvy surf\nhere early t his morning, .'oast\nguardsmen who \u2022.mil to her aid\nreported they dhl not believe the\nvessel was thc ftTMHhfti Cricket\nof Nan iTaiH'isto us they luid at\nfirst thought.\nThe size of the bout Imll.ated\nthat it was a \u2022fMiinx imnI that\nhad been caught lu the heuvy\nstorm. Two Kteumers were stormbound inside the harbor. The\nnames of both uere tinkiutan ex\nthey pulled Into the open harhor\naiter It was too dark for tl|r lookout to signal them, one of them\ntried to pass the bur but was\nforced back.\nU.S. A. MINISTER\nTO CANADA MAY\nGO TO CABINET\nWashington Humor Says Hoover May Call Him; I'hillips\nSays It Unlikely\n;'\nMalcolm to Look\nInto Shipping\nFrom B. C. Ports\nMONTREAL. Nov. 9.\u2014The Montreal\nGazettes carried the following Ottawa\ndespatch   today:\n\"Hon. James Malcolm, minister of\ntrade and commerce, will leave for\nVancouver next week to examine the\npossibilities of a direct steamship service between western Canada and Australia and New Zealand. He will also\nlook into the advisability of subsidizing a service to the,, west coast of\nSouth   America.\n\"It Is believed trade with all these\ncountries can be substantially Increased. British Columbia lumber merchants feel they could secure a larger\nshare of the Australian business lf tlie\nCanadian National Steamships would\nrestore the direct service formerly\ngiven between Vancouver and thc\nAntipodes, especially as there Is a\npossibility of the trade arrangement\nbetween Canada and Australia being\nextended. At the present time lum-\n\u2022ber Interests In .Washington. Oregon\nand California have an advantage over\nthe British Columbia lumber men. both\nby reason of better steamship services\nand the Australian tariff which favors\nthe redwood of California against\nBritish   Columbia  cedar.\"\nWASHINGTON. Nov, 8.\u2014When President,-elect Hoover chooses hia cubinet\nhe may go to Ottawa for his secretary\nof state. One of thc possible appoln-\n.teas to thc highest cabinet post under\ntht president in Hon. William Phillips,\nUnited States minister to Canada.\nMr. Hoover positively declines to\ndiscuss his cabinet plans. He probably\nhas no definite cabinet plans yet.\nMr. Phillips Is being talked of because of his qualifications and* hit, lack\nof iiiiiKiicup:, In thc political point\nof view. His connection with politics\nbus been nil. Before he went to Ottawa lust year he had represented the\nUnited States In Belgium, the Netherlands. Luxemburg and China and had\nacted as first secretary in tbe American\nembassy at the court of Saint James.\nHe has also had experience ln thc state\ndepartment at Washington, was assistant secretary of state during the war\nand has represented Che United States\nas delegate to several International con-\nfrences.\nOTIIIJt  POSSIBILITIES\nOther possible appointees to the\nstate portfolio are Owlght Morrow,\nAmerican ambassador to Mexico and\nformer partner tn the J. P. Morgan\nfirm; Alanson B. Houghton, ambassador to London, until he contested the\nNew York senatorshlp In this week's\nelection and wns defeated and Senator\nWilliam E. Borah, the Progressive Republican who gave Hoover strong support in the election this year.\nOf thc three diplomats mentioned\nfor the state portfolio. Phillips Is probably as likely as any other to get It\nlf he wants it.\nNAVh   |T   IS   AMI 110\nOTTAWA. Nov. 8.\u2014\"It is ulterl> absurd,\" was the cohunent of Hon. William\nPhillips, United States minister to\nCanada, to the report from Washingtoi\nthat he was one of the possible appoln\ntees for the position of secretary o\nstate when President-elect Hoover selects  his  cablnt.\n\"That means that you expect tc\nstay here?\" Mr. Phillips was asked.\n\"I hope so,\" was the minister's reply.\nSAN ANGEL, Mexico, Nov 8.\u2014The\nJHO' returned a verdict of jrullty\nfor both -Jose Dr Leon Total and\nthr nun, Concepchm. at the con-\neluslon or thrlr trial at 4.50 p. in.\ntoday. The Jury was only out one\nhour   inn!   -10   minutes.\nToral and tkmcepclon have been\non trial for the past week on\neluirxrs growing out of Toral'a\nwml-*-**) nation ot President-elect\nobregon on July 17. It was the\ndefence contention that the crime\nwas of a political nature and us\nsuch, under Mexican law, could\nnot draw thr death penalty. The\npniHecutlim asked only life Imprisonment for thr nun t'onerprion,\nwho huh chargrd as \"the Intellectual   author\"  of  the crime.\nT he Judge pronou nerd u sen-\ntenee of death for Toral and of\n\"ii years* Imprisonment for the\n\/un Concepcion. Thr defence an-\ni.iiiinciit that It expected to appeal\nto the Mcxlcau -supreme court*\nBOTH   CALM\nToral's only motion as the Verdict\nwas read was to wet\" nis lips with\nhis tongue; Mother Concepcion dropped\nher eyes and sat motionless. Both\nwere   calm.\nThe court allowed the defence five\ndays  In which to perfect its appeal.\nWhen the verdict had been announced everybody in the court room\nstood and officers In the room saluted\nwith their swords, the blades flashing In the late afternoon light, while\nUol Icemen stood at attention and\nsaluted with  their hands.\nMore guards formed around Toral\nand Mother Concepcion as from the\noutside could be heard the cheers of a\nthousand or more who had gathered\nthere   awaiting  a  verdict.\nA spokesman for the Jury asked thc\nJudge to give them guards to escort\nthem home. The Judgo answered\nthat this was unnecessary, butt the\nJuryman Insisted with the words.\n\"there are. lots of fanatics around.'\n\"You have performed your duty\nand returned a fair verdict the\nJudge answered him. The nation\napplauds you und you do not need\nguards.\"\nTlie Juryman reluctantly accepted\nthc Judge's decision and departed without guard, although some of them\nwore pistols they carried In the latter\npart of the trial.\nMeanwhile soldiers and policemen\nmade ready to remove Toral and Mother Concepclcn from the room. The\ntwo walked through double rows of\ntroops bristling with weapons and\nstanding elbow to elbow to the outside. Toral ww bundled Into\nautomobile in which were packed army\nofficers. The nun was placed in an\nopen truck with other guards about\nher. Tho automobile and the truck\ncarrying the condemned man and\nwoman started from the courthouse\ntoward the jail, other cars loaded with\nsoldiers grouped around them. Soldiers\nwere also stationed on the roofs of\nhouses along the way, but the precautions   seemed   unnecessary.\nThe defence attorney, Sodi. was\nheavily guarded as he left the courtroom, but this, too. seemed superflous.\nThe   crowd   dispersed  quietly   .\nCATANIA. Scilly, Nov. 8.\u2014Thc volcanic activity of Mount Etna appeared\nto have lessened tonight and there\nwere indications that the worst was\npast after three days which, lava from\nthe mountain has wrought destruction\nln the villages and towns about Its\nbase.\nAlthough the principal stream of\nlava from the volcano now Is flowing\nin the direction of the railroad station\nat Mascalt and la only about 250 yards\nfrom the roadbed, rail service Is proceeding.\nEven shipping service was resumed\nlate today with the arrival of boats\nfrom Messina and Syracuse.\nAlthough heavy property damage has\nbeen caused In the overflow of fertile\nfields and several small villages, tbe\nloss of life was small, only three death.-,\nbeing reported. These were in thc\ntown of Mascali, where three men, a\nfather, son and grandson were overwhelmed in their home while their fellow townsmen were hel\u00bbleia to to, aid\nthem, watching death overtake them\nfrom beyond the lava lake. The men\nhad returned to their doomed house to\nrescue various goods. They slept there\novernight and morning found them\ntrapped.\nMAN8 OF LAVA\nMascali. one thc home of 10,000\npersona, Is now a mass of lava and\nshooting   flames,   nothing   being   left\nL\n1BY   SOUND,   Ont..   Nov.   8\u2014 MlS-\nfor a deer, Herbert Simpson, 01,\nir, Out., was tilled yesterday 1ft\n[ 'at Pickerel  when  he  was  shot\nof Wo Hunting companion*-.\nSalvation Army Is\nWeU Represented\nMayors' Event\nLONDON. Nov. 8.\u2014The Salvation Army\nwill be prominent tn the traditional\nMayor's day ceremonies in London tomorrow for Bir Kynaston Studd. incoming lord mayor, has had a life-long\nconnection with, and is a great upholder of the Salvation Army. Two\nhundred members of the organization\nwill march In the lord mayor's procession along with regular and territorial troops. The procession of a\nbalvftUoi. Amiy band a*d a float emblematic of the army's Immigration\niOttyMw,\nbut wreckage. Simple folk of the\ncountryside have been so stunned by\nthe disaster that gendarmes and firemen rushed there from Catania some\ntimes found it necessary to use force\nto drive them from the scene of the\ntragedy Into places of (safety.\nANIMALS DESTROYED\nThe spectacle of the relentlessly\nflowing lava seemed to exercise a terrible fascination for men and 'beasts. A\nnumber of adventurous cats, lured Into\nMascali by the fiery sight, were destroyed ln their pathetic efforts to extricate themselves from the molten\nmass. Birds also fell victims. Flocks\nof them hovered over the river of lava\nand many, often venturing too near.\nwere caught by the fumea and fire to\nflutter down to the fiery bed below\nlike  dead leaves.\nPathetic incidents in Masoall were\nnumerous. Last night two poor peasant\nwomen tearfully begged permloblon of\nthe authorities to disinter tue body of\none of their relatives in order to bury\nit in a safer place. The advance of tlie\nlava, however, nude It necessary that\nthe request be refused as time had\nbecome too precious.\nProfessor Ponte, director of the vol-\nment for an airplane In order that he\nmentfor an airplane in order that he\nmay fly over tbe volcanic region to\nstudy the eruptions more closely.\nSeven Persons Carried to Hospital and Are in Serious\n* Condition\nTWELVE ARE KILLED\nOUTRIGHT BY FLASH\nRear Wall of Box Toe Factory\nBlows Out. Wrecking\nHouses in Rear\nSkaters and Hockey\nPlayers Cranhrook\nHave Been Out Week\nCRANBROOK, B.C.. Nov. 8 \u2014\nPractically every afternoon this\nweek skaters and hockeytats have\nbeen enjoying the first ice of thc\nseason.\nThe ice has become quite thick\non MacKenzle's pond, about a\nmile and a half from Cranbrook.\nand several other ponds In the\nvicinity, although no snow has\nfallen since the first, about a\nmonth ago, which lasted for only\na few days.\nFOUR CHILDREN\nAND MOTHER DIE\nIN AN EXPLOSION\nFather and Another Child Are\nSeriously Injured; Factory\nBlows Up\nASSOCIATED APPEAL\nDISMISSED AT COAST\nWill Be Heard at Later Day;*\nInvolve Shipping Contrary\nto Marketing Act\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 8.\u2014So as to facilitate a hearing at the present sitting of the court of appeal, Mr.\nJustice Gregory ln supremo court, with\nthe consent, of counsel, dismissed appeals of Assuciatcd Orowcrs of British\nColumbia, limited, and Sales Service\nlimited, of Kelomna. for convictions\nunder the Produce Marketing act. by\nMagistrate  E.   Wed dell.\nThe appeals provided the court of\nappeal approves, will be heard at the\nsame time as three other cases Involving the constitutionality of the\nproduce  marketing  act.\nThe Kelowna cases Involve apples,\nas distinguished from potatoes, which\ncornea within the scope of the three\nlower mainland  appeals.\nThe Kelowna Associated Growers of\nB. C-. limited, waa convicted of selling\napples'at a price less than that fixed\nthe Sales Service limited had shipped\nby the committee of direction; and\nIt was alleged, apples on consignment\nwithout   any   price.\nLYNN, Moos.. Nov. 8\u2014A happy day\nWith his nine grandchildren was tr.e\nexpectation of John B. Barney ot\nMarblehead, when he started from\nhome today to spend the day with\nthem In East Lynn. On his arrival he\nfound four of the children and their\nmother dead and the father and another child tn a serious condition ln\nthe   hospital.\nHarry Blaney and his family lived\nln a dwelling adjoining the plant\nof the Preble Box Toe company.\nWhen an explosion knocked out thc\nrear wall of thc plant today thc\ndwelling was torn from its foundations\nand a sheet of flame burst through\nthe broken windows. The Blaney family was at breakfast.\nMrs. Blaney and her children, Thel-\nina. Helen, Dorothy and one whose\nname could not be learned, were\nkilled. Vivian aud her father were so\nbadly burned that It was said at the\nhospital that their condition was critical. Harry Jr. and Norman were able\nto leave the hospltul after treatment\nfor minor Injuries. Lillian and EUu\nwere   unharmed.\nToday Election\nDay for Mayors\nin Old England\nWoman Shoots Skip's\nWorker at Party on\nBoard Liner, Portland\nPORTLAND. Ore.. Nov. 8.\u2014While\nthousands of Portlanders ware aboard\nthe Matsson liner Malolo late today,\nbeing csscorted through the sshlp. Ollbert J. Pinto, 30, San Franoleco, wos\n\u25a0hot to death by a woirsnn who gave\nher name aa Muse Dora De Selva of\nPortland., Pinto waa yeotsusn to the\nchief steward of tbe liner.\nThe lulling. Inspired It la believed,\nby Jtsstlouey. .Look, plaoe In the dining room aa a party of approximately\n100 quests war* entertaining.\nAlbany Gives\nAl Smith Huge   -\nWelcome Home\nALBANY. N.Y.. Nov. 8.\u2014Albany welcomed Governor Smith home tonlgh;\non his arrival from New York city\nwith all the gusto it showed him while\nhe was running for president on the\nDemocratic ticket.\nA crowded union station greeted the\ndefeated candidate, the cries of _,\"A1,\nAl\" and \"Welcome home, Al\". and \"We\nare with you Al.\" were heard In the\nstation and at the entrance where the\ncrowd milled about.\nThe governor appeared deeply affected by the greetings. Tears were\nseen to till his eyes and roll down his\ncheeks.\nTaxi Driver Was\nShot in Back, It\nIs Shown, Calgary\nCALGARY. Nov. 8.\u2014That lYrnle\nBourne, commonly known as James\nStewart, whose body was found near\nthe city last Sunday, was shot In the\nback by some person or persons unknown, was the verdict of the Jury\nat a coroner's Inquest tonight. Bourne\nwaa a taxi driver and answered a call\nat D pjn.. on the night of October\n30, his taxi was found the following\nday, blood-stained, and bearing the\nmarks of bulleto lh a suburb of the\ncity but his body was not discovered\nuntil two days later in some brush\nnear Calgary- The deceased undoubtedly was fernie Bourne of Vancouver,\nsaid his brother to the Jury. Their\nparents, he said, were early settlers\nof Calgary and he thought his brother\nwaa working his way back to Vancouver. He had lost trace of his\nbrother, said Ernest Bourne, since 1824.\n-Other evidence went to detail the\ncall received by Ferule which he answered with his car. the finding of the\nbody and  medical evidence.\nWall Street Has\nNew System  for\nRecording Sales\nNEW    YOHK.   Nov.   a tsjrred   by\n(steadily IisstssuhIisss volume of business to Usui some ssew way Isnstse-\ndlately is, farllls-te ticker reotsrd-\nlssjt of stock siuot-tlsms, ihe Ness\nYork stock rxchassge will shortly\nput Into effect a new system\nwhereby record of the volume of\nsalts will be omitted on all traui-\nisclloiss of less than 600 Blurt-,\nexcept at  the oswulnf.\nTHADKN   IMOX   RESOLUTION\nTORONTO. Nov. 28\u2014Thc All-Cassa\ndlan trade and labor congress today\nadopted a resolution declaring its basic\nprinciple of organization was Indus-\ntrial trade unionism. The resolution\nalso placed the congress as In favor\nof unification or parall.l organizations\nwithin various Industries until there\nshould be one powerful tndustrlsd union\nIn each Canadian industry.\nI-sndon. Nbv. 8.\u2014Tomorrow la the\naiusuul day for clrcUsm. of iscw mayors\nthroughout England. Iu most cities\nand towns It la tho custom for the\nprincipal political parties to take turns\nIn selecting the chief magistrates whose\noffice Is thereafter regarocd as non-\npolltlcal  one.\nThc new lord mayor of London. Sir\nKynaston Studd. president and secretary of the polytechnic, on Institution with a losig and honorable record\nIn  educational   and  cultural  endeavor.\nOther lord mayors who will take office tomorrow are:\nBirmingham\u2014Councillor Wilfred Ken-\nrlck, Conservative, whose mother wns\nsister of the late Joseph Chambcrluin.\nBristol\u2014Councillor w. H. Eyles, Liberal.\nCardiff\u2014Alderman W R Williams.\nLiberal.\nLeeds\u2014Aid. T, B. Foster. Labor.\nLiverpool\u2014Aid. H. M. Millar. Conservative.\nManchester\u2014Councillor O. Weetcott.\nConservative.\nNorwich\u2014Councillor H P. Oowon.\nLiberal.\nPortsmouth\u2014Councillor J. E. Smith.\nLiberal.\nSheffield\u2014Aid.   H.   Bolton.   Conservative.\nNEW   MAYORS   MH\nBath\u2014Aid. (3edrlo C-ilvm\nLincoln\u2014Aid. Pearce  Mllncr.\nCarlisle\u2014Councillor    Charlton.\nBlackpool\u2014Aid. J. Potter.\nDurhom\u2014Councillor Walter Wilkinson.\nOrautham\u2014C. H. Turner.\nGloucester\u2014Aid.  Owen   Roberts.\nHartlepool- Aid.  W.  8. Olbb.\nHereford\u2014Coujsclllor T.  W.  Ooodwlu.\nHalifax\u2014Aid. John Lai.\nLeicester\u2014Aid.  H.  Hand.\nMorley\u2014Aid.   T.   H.   Marshall\nNewark\u2014Councillor   William    Dale.\nPlymouth\u2014Cosinclllor Ambrose Ass-\ndrew.\nRetford\u2014Aid. O. H. clay.\nSt. Helen's\u2014Aid. T. Boscow\nSouthport\u2014John Brook.\nWakefield\u2014Aid.   Hardy   Richards\nIIIRKEMIUMS   ACCEPTS\nLONDON, Nov. 8.\u2014The directors ol\nImperial Chemist Industry, limited, announced today that Lord Birkenhead,\nI former secretary of state for Indlls,\nwould become a member of the board\nof (ha oompauy.\nLYNN, Mass., Nov. 8\u2014\nSixteen persons were dead\nand seven others were in\nserious condition at the\nLynn hospital tonight, as a\nresult of an explosion and\nfire which destroyed the\nplant of the Preble Box\nToe company and damaged\nsix nearby buildings in\nEast Lynn today.\nFiremen were continuing\nsearch of the ruins, although they expressed belief that the bodies of the\ndead had been recovered.\nTwelve of the victims\nwere killed outright by the\nexplosion or burned to\ndeath in the fire which followed it, while four others\ndied after being taken to -\nhospital.\nSix of the dead and one\nof those now at the hospital tvere members of the\nfamily ol Harry Blaney, who lived In\nis -wo-npsirtmmt building 10 fa*t to\nLilllsus Blaney and four of their chtl-\nthe rdar of the plant. His wife, Mrs.\ndrcn. were burned to death In the fire\nwhich swept their home after tha explosion. Assothcr Blaney child, Vivian.\n16, was rescued from the burning\nhouse while still ullve. but died a few\nhours later at the hospital. The\nfather tvrsa In a serious condition at\nthe   hospital   tonight.\nEMPLOYEES  DIE '\nThe others who tost their lives were\nemployees of the plasst. a one-storey\nbuilding- The plant manufactured box\ntoes for shoes, issing celluloid and\nother explosive materials In the process. The plant employs abous 20 but\nseveral workmen had not reported that\nday.\nThe employees klllctl were Lewis Puller of Ssvastspcott. foreman William\nClsmcssls. John Wilson. Percy H. Smith.\nAlfred P. Harris. John Cotjrder and\nCharles Mitchell. \"II ot Lynn. Three\nothers. Joseph McCarthy. Everett Lewla\nand Israel Clements died after being\nremoved  to  hospital.\nPlve other employees were taken to\nthe hospital where their condition 1\u00bb\nsrlotis  tonight.\nThe explosion blew out the rear\nwall of the factory ns a section ot the\nriKsf collapsed IIiiiims 111 the nelgis-\nborhsxsd were shsiken and artndows\nshattered. Six of these dwellings\ncHtsght fire but the flames w\u00bbn>\nchecked.\nGovernment Freighter\nIs Forfeited; Claims\nAgainst Her Are High\nSAN FRANCISCO. Cul.. Nov. 8\u2014Tlie\nCanadian government merchant marlnl'\nfreighter Caiusdlun Rover, which recent,\nly collided with the Calmar line\nsteamer Cnlmur uiscl ninth is now III\nport here. Is to be surrendered to the\ncourt. It wiss leiirned locally today.\nThc Cusiauhin Rover, which had her\nbow seriously damaged In the collision,\nput tsp a bond utter being libeled fol-\nlowissg the collision ami proceeded >o\nnorthern ports where she discharged\nher cargo. It wus staled by ebipplug\nauthorities that a trustee will be named\nfor the vessel atid that she will later\nbe sold at public auction. The proceeds from the sale will apply to ward\npaying for the damage Us she Calmar.\n11,000,000   lot 111 sis\nTORONTO, Ont., Nov. 8\u2014More than\n11.000,000 tourist- visited Ontario during WJ8 and spent about sjlOO.000.000\nacoordlug to figures obtained at the\nprovincial parliament building today.\nThis la an Increase of over 30 per\norat over tbe record made laat you.\nThe Weather\nfrom     the     Dorsdnlon    Met\u00ab|sioltajts)\u00bbl\nOffice. Vlctort\u00bb\nMia Mas.\nNELSON                                   *\u00bb M\nVictoria          *' M\nVancouver                          \u25a0\u2022   48 82\nKamloops                          -36\nBnrkervllle    28 06\nEstevon Point -   44 82\nPrince   Rupert                 ..   44 48\nDawson  -     0\nSeattle     48 64\nPortland                 48 62\nSan   Francisco     -   60 84\nSpokane        28 44\nPentlcton       81 41\nVornon   .               28 ,37\nOrand Forks                            18 40\nKsurto   .                   28 40\nCranbrook        14 33\nCalgary     -   24 IsO\nEdmonton               -   20 48\nSwift \u2022 Current,          \u2014.   24 48   .\nPrince   Albert        18 40\nQu'Appelle                      22 40\nWinnipeg     88 3*\nForecast\u2014Nelson and vicinity Uu-\nscttleu with occaaiomU sleet or ram.\n\t\n\t\n_\n \"\u2022\"\"\"\u2022'ss*1\nIhee Tern\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1928\nSnow Covers Mountains\nWhile Rein Falls City;\nSalmo Car Brings Snow\nSnow covsred the tops of the mountain*    surroundlM    Kelson    yesterday\nwhile \u2022 drlrallru rain fell  throughout\n. the  day.\nT_e    mlBUntn    was    three    degrees\nhtllur    than    that    of    Uu    prsvlou*\nLett.\nj .   Tha   mercury   climbed   to   38,   one\ndegree above the month's lowest maximum.\nA car coming Into Nelson last night\nfrom Salmo carried over an Inch of\nsnow on Its top.\nMAYOR   IS    BANDSMAN   '    '\nLONDON. Nov. 8\u2014Councillor J.\nSmith, who assumes tha mayoralty of\nPortsmouth tomorrow. Is conductor of\nthe City's leading Salvation Army band\nhi whsTeh hrs wife, four sons and six\ndaughters all play Instruments.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\n\u2014%\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms With Running Water.   Private Baths en Suite.\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists.\nSpecial Sunday Dinner $1.00. Rotarian Headquarters\nThe Most Comfortable Rotunda in the City\nHUM-\u2014Captain and sits. Holmes.\nCrawford Bay; i. 1. Tharfleld. Dell\nPartti J. A. Toley, Toronto: 1. J.\nAllsUre, Oray Creek: W. E. Smith. Retallack:    W    O.   Metcalf.   Vancouver:    J.\nBinns, KmIV H. B. Menard!. Lob Anodes; D. Dawaon Calgary; W 8mlth,\nSan Francisco; Mr. and Mrs. Mltchel.\nWinnipeg; A. MacMlllan. Calgary; Mr.\nand Mrs. Taylor. Rossland; J. Chisholm.   H.   Smith,   Vancouver.\nThe SAVOY\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel\nWhere the Quest Is King\nSteam Heat   Hot and Cold Running Water in All Rooms.\nMANY BOOMS WITH PBIVATE BATHS OB SHOWEBS\nJ. A. KERR, PROP., NELSON, B.C\n8AVOT\u2014W. Daniel-, P. Hudson. Nel-1 kane; O. A. Creeon. W. McKtbbln\neon; I. Petenon. S. Lemmon, A. E. B. C. Allden. Vancouver; Mrs. Baldock\nBrewery. Kashlo; J. H. Hard. Proc-1M. Greenlow. Lardo; J. A. Lambert\nter;   T.  Allan,  Hall;, W.  E.  Sellx,  Spo-   A.   Martin,   J.   Virgo.   Calgary.\n\u2022Queen's tlotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water ln every room.\nSteam Heated.\nA. LAPOINTE, PROP.\nQUEEW8\u2014O. K. Poulin. Ymlr* O. W.\nMunro, Vernon: L. Poloney, Trail; R.\nP.   Clark   Jr..   Vancouver;   W.   Nlchol**.\nC. Kuhn.    BcmwcII:     H.    P.    AUeraon.\nClafary;  Mrs. Stewart  and family, Mrs.\nD. M    Eurtng.  Salmo.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nMean   Heated  Booms  by  the  Day,\nWeek or Month.\nBeery cos\u2014deration shown to guests.\nCar   Baker anJ   Ward  gts..  Nelsssn\nMADDDf\u2014R. Harphaw. Boimlssgtoss;\n!) PesUnkoff. Mrs. Wildes. R E. McCain. Spokane; R Reeves, F. E. Cross,\nVancouver: T. Sheik. A. Flammlnton,\nSlocan City.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nThe Home of Plenty\n1\u00bbl VersM*  St. Phossr   58TL\nB. WASSICK  AND O.  Ill ATII'K\nfifty Rooms of Solid Comfort.\nBeadqnnrter* for l\u2014ggens and Miners\nNEW GRAND HOTE\nA Modern Brick Building.\n(16 Vernon Street, Nelson, B.C.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephone\nIn All Rooms,   steam Heated\nThroughout.\nP. KAPAK, Prop.     European Plan\nNEW GRAND\u2014Mrs F. Horton, Edge\nwood:; V. Nightingale. L. Merla. Miss\nH. Msscrherson. Mrs. C. J. Mac-\nPheswsn, JCaslo; W. J. Demmon, W. A.\nDemmon.   Kamloops.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n37, Blocks East of Post Office\nSteam Heated, Hot and Cold Water\nRooms by day or week.\nAlso Furnished Suites.\nP. H. BI'SII. Prop.\nRIGHT IN\nTHE SHOULDER\n'Trnit-a-tives\" Did Stop\nHi* Rheumatism\nGRAIN MOVEMENT\nUNPARALLELED\nWestern Canada Storage Taxed\nto Capacity; Elevator\n. Facilities Aid\nMR. FLOYD\n\"Fruit-a-tira\" soothed hia kidneys\u2014\nfreed his system of excew acid and\npoisonous waste\u2014regulated his bowels\n\u2014purified his blood\u2014and this is why\nMr. S. Hoyd of 'Nanaimo, B.C., is\nnot bothered with Rheumatism any\nmore.\n\"I suffered with Rheumatism in my\nshoulders and, as most of my friends\nwere taking 'Fruit-a-tives\/ I decided\nto try them. In a short time the\npain disappeared and I had relief\nfor the first time. I think this medicine really marvellous.\" i\nIf you are bothered with Rheumatism\nPains ia the arms, legs or back, or with\nNeuralgia or Headaches, get \"Fruit'\na-tives.'' 25c. and 50c. a box\u2014at\ndealers everywhere.\nImmediate grain shipments, however. Is\nnot quite aa brisk at tne moment and\nrates are slightly easier.\nThe export niovement. while of good\nvolume, has not been satisfactory to\navoid the stead accumulation of stocks\nat all lower lake and seaboard ports.\nThe movement eastward at the moment\nIs largely dependant upon these, but\nloading ot cargoes for storage afloat at\nports of destination Is expected to\ncommence  shortly.\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 9.\u2014Fire In the\nRedwood block, an apartment dwelling\non north Main street last night, forced\nmany persons to wacate their living\nquarters and coused property damage\nestimated at 17000.\nFORT WILLIAM, Ont., Nov. 8\u2014A\ngrala movement unparalleled in the\nhistdry of western Canada, which has\ntaxed the capacity of country elevators\nand loading platforms and created the\ngreatest demand ever experienced for\nshipping cars, la commented upon ln\nthe monthly report of E. A. Ursell.\nstatistical to tbe board of grain commissioners.\nA factor, however, which aided ln\nthe marketing of the grain without\nserious congestion, Is a large Increase\nthis year ln elevator facilities at all\nCanadian terminal points. Handling\nand storage facilities have been Increased at Port Arthur and Fort William, where during the month of October, receipts averaged slightly more\nthan three million bushels dally. Storage capacity also has been increased\nat Montreal and new elevators have\nbeen opened at the Port of Vancouver.\nDuring the month of October receipts totalled 88,891 curs of all grains,\nan increase of 24,480 cars, as compared\nwith October, 1937. At a couple of\npoints receipts totalled more than 250.-\n000,000 bushels of wheat, while there\nalso was a heavy volume of coarse\ngrains loaded at country elevators and\nplatforms.\nMr. Ursell, In his report, notes a\nvery substantial all-rail movement from\nthe head of the lakes to Quebec for\nexport, while st Vancouver receipts far\nexceed those of other seasons at this\ndate and the export movement via\nthat route continues steadily. Ocean\nrates from Vancouver and Montreal\nshow an increase over the previous\nmonth.   Chartering of lake tonnage for\nVANCOUVER HUNTS\nFOR TARCHUK; HE\nIS IN JAIL HERE\nTrail Youth Is Returned to Nelson to Serve Remainder\nof Term\nCONGRESS AND\nSENATE UNDER\nG. 0. P. CONTROL\nSenate Has 55 Republicans and\n39  Democrats,  With\nOne Seat Empty\nREPUBLICANS HAVE\n100 LEAD CONGRESS\nVirginia Wins Republican Recognition; Jones Washington May Lead Senate\nYou Can Quickly Limber Up\nSore, Stiff, Swollen Joints\nEven Chronic Rheumatic Swellings in Knee, Elbow, Shoulder\nor Finger Joints Yield to the\nMighty Powerful Influence of\nJOINT-EASE.\nIt's here, right in town and every\nlive  druggist has It.\nIt's a low price remedy, to be sure,\n,but that doesn't stop It from taking\nthe kinks, lameness or torture out of\nyour troubled Joints.\nJoint-Ease Is the name, so-called because It Is compounded solely for the\npurpose or relieving all Joint ailments.\nJust rub it on the  tormented, lame\nJoints and In Just a few seconds It\nwill penetrate to the bone and blessed\ncomfort comes quickly.\nIt obsorbs Instantly and is so clean\nand stainless that you can rub It on\noften and get thereby results much\nmore quickly, when the Joint is inflamed and  the  agony  Intense.\nBeing such a powerful counter Ir-\nrintant. it cannot help bringing speedy\nand helpful results in congestion, sore\nthroat, chest cold*-, lumbago Hnd neuralgia much quicker than utmost any\nremedy you can buy.\nBut you must remember that It Is\nfor Joint afflictions that It Is mostly\ndispensed and Its helpfulness will astonish you after all ordinary liniments\nand other treatments have failed.\nWhite Vancouver officials searched\nthe highways and byways for Willlar.i\nTarchuck, who was sentenced early this\nyear to serve 21 months In Jail at Nelson for a robbery at Trail, and whose\nrelease from Oakalla prison, at Vancouver, was ordered by Mr. Justice W.\nA. Macdonald, the object of the search\nwas philosophically resigning himself\nto serve the remainder of his term at\nNelson, having enjoyed a free trip to\nNelson.\nSpurred on by J. R. Nicholson, Tar-\nchuk's lawyer, the hunt spread far\nand wide. And though they didn't\nlaugh at him officials smiled slyly at\nMr. Nicholson's dtscomfeiture, for they\nwore not altogether in the dark as to\nhis  whereabouts.\nThat coast newspapers Joined enthusiastically ln the hunt was indicated\nby the following dispatch to The Dally\nNews:\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 8.\u2014Where is William Tarchuck of Nelson? Freed by\ncourt order on the ground \u25a0 that his removal to Oakalla prison here from the\nNelson Jail on orders of Hon. R. H.\nPooley was Illegal, Tarchuck disappeared Even his own lawyer here was\nunable  to find  him.\nReports arc that on Mr. Pooley's order\nthe prisoner was immediately spirited\naway from Oakalla and taken aboard\na train for Nelson before his lawyer\ncould have the court order executed\nOne  thing  is certain\u2014he  Is  no  longer\nNelson s Best Cafes\nROYAL CAFE\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevail.\nOPEN   DAV  AND   NIGHT\nSpecial Dinners,  11:30  to 3:30 95c\nSupper,   6:30  to  8\u2014 36c\nWe Specialize ln Chop Suey and Noodles\nPhone 182\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\nS20  Baker  street,  Nelson,   B.C.\nOPEN  DAT  AND  NIGHT\n11:30   to   2:30,   Special   Lunch   _ 39c\n1:30 to 8:00 p.m.,  Supper   850\nPHONE 134\nTHE L D. CAFE\nPinest Equipped Restaurant ln the Olty\nOPEN  DAT AND  NIOHT\nBpeclal\u2014lea Cream, Soda Water and\nHot Drinks. Nice, clean furnished\nrooms, hot and cold water.\nWe Cater To Private Parties.\nPILES!\nI guaran\ntee, In\nwriting, u\ncure your piles or refund\nthe fee. Nurse in attendance for Women. Write foj\nfree booklet, Prank Rose\nM.D.,   rectal   -specialist,   404\n Zleglr r    Building,    Howard\nIverslde. Spokane\nOet Rid of Dandruff\nBy using\nCnticui'a Soap\n.Hll-ttril   hv\n< uti< lira Ointment\n-\u2022old tmrrwberr. Soap 25c. IHniaunt 23 A 50..\n_____-t-----A-AA_    >\u25a0*\u25a0  _\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0-\nTrail Hotels\nSteam Heated\nThroughout\nBet and Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\n8. la, AND A. OBOUTAOE, Props.\nBox 806 Phone 263 Trail, B.C,\nKOOTENAY HOTE\nUNDEB TUE MANAGEMENT  OP\nWILLIAM  JONE8\nOOOD,  CLEAN  BOOMS.    SEASONABLE\nBATES.\nPHONE 7.1. 316 VEBNON ST.\nRead the Advertisements\nKNOW WHAT IS BEST\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. P. LCVESQVE, Prep.\nCompletely Renovated and Rc\/inis\/ied !\nHot and Cold Running Water European Plan\n-  Steam Heated Centrally Located\nRotary\nHeadquarters\nSample Rooms in\nConnection\nBREAK up coughs and\ncolds quickly with\nOWBRIDGE'S-the sterling old British remedy for\nthroat and chest affections.\nHere Again\nUnderwear\nWeather\nWe invite you to make\nthis your\nUNDERWEAR\nHEADQUARTERS\n(.'iuiiidian-niaile \u2014 Advertised Lines\u2014Pop-'\nular Prices.\nWe Stand Back of\nYour Purchase.\nr_i\u00a3kl MENS h___.\nWEAR\n\"Sto\nLTD\nBOYS\n^WEAR   ^rcl\nJUST OUTSIDE THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT\nWASHINGTON. D.C., Nov. 8.\u2014Republicans have established clear majorities in the next congress, in both'\nsenate and house, but have failed to\nkeep full pace with the record-breaking sweep of their party leader, Herbert\nHoover.\nAlmost ' complete returns tonight\nshowed that the new congress, going\ninto office after March 4, would be\ndivided as follows:\nSenate\u2014Republicans 55, Democrats 39,\nFarmer-Labor 1, vacant  1.\nHouse\u2014Republicans 267, Democrats\n167, Farmer-Labor 1.\nRepublicans held all of their 13\nsenate seats at issue ln ths election\nand captured seven of the 20 Democratic positions at stake. The senate is\nalmost evenly divided at present.\nIn the house election with all 435\nseats involved, the Republicans won\n276 seats and replaced the one Socialist,\nVictor Berger, Wisconsin, and one of\nthe two Farmer-Labor members* Wm. L.\nCass of Minnesota.\nWIN  THREE  SEATS\nDemocrats succeeded In capturing\nthree seats now held by Republicans,\none ln each, Indiana, Rhode Island\nand  West Virginia.\nThese are made with returns ln from\nall but five districts ln North Carolina. Two Republican .scats in the\nhouse arc still in doubt, these Texas\nand Pennsylvania. While Herbert\nHoover went into the south and captured North Carolina, Virginia, Florida,\nTexas and Tennessee, these states\nyielded only a half dozen seats to Republicans of their almost solid Democratic repuatlon in the house. Republicans were elected In some of the\nstates. Kentucky and Missouri were\nsubjected to the major raids of the\nRepublicans for Democratic seats, each\nstate replacing six of ltn present Democratic members ln the house. Missouri\nalso elected a Republican senator to\nsucceed the Democrat, who had retired.    *\nFor the first time in years. Virginia\nwill have Republican representation ln\nthe house, the member being elected\nfrom that state. North Carolina also\nelected a Republican from the north\ndistrict and close contests were still on\nln some others.\nRepublicans picked up three Democratic positions ln Ohio and two in\nNew York. The party's other gains\nwere one each in the states of Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Minnesota, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, West\nVirginia and Wisconsin.\nLKAJHftM   NOT  KrKATrHt.n\nVirtually none of thc leaders In\neither party were scratched by the\nelection, but Representative Garret of\nTennessee, the Dmocratlc leader in the\nhouse, goes out of office after running\nunsuccessfully for the senate nomination in that state. Senat Republicans\nalso must find a new leader. Senator\nCurtis of Kansas, who now holds that\npost, becoming the next vice-president.\nThis will Involve a contest with\nSenators Watson. Indiana, Moses of\nNew Hampshire. Jones of Washington\nund Reed of Pennsylvania, mentioned\namong the possibilities for leader. Senator Curtis has not decided whether\nhe will continue his position through\nthe approaching short session of this\ncongress, but It is expected he w:ll\nretire about the first of the year. Thc\nRepublicans added an eighth scat to\ntheir senate gains in filling one of thc\ntwo vacancies. Otis F. Olenn of Illinois defeated his Democratic opposition\nthere for the seat of Frank L. Smith,\nwho resigned. A vacancy still exists In\nthe senate which has refused to administer the oath of office to Wm.\nVare, senator-elect from Pennsylvania,\npending a hearing of the contests\nagainst him.\nMakeYourOwn\nSOAP\nand Save Money!\nAH jrou need is *\nwaste fats and\nGILLETrSl\nPURE I VC\nFLAKE Lf t\nfull Direebons WiHi fiery Q)n\nYOUR 0R0CER SELLS IT!\nSKt Jl'MP FOR VERNON\nVERNON.  B.C..  Nov.  8.\u2014The Vesn\nakl   club   svlll   hold   a   akl   Jump\nyesir.     A   site   Iss   being   securest   :\n\u2022he city.\nIncrease Your Weight\n5 Pounds 30 Days\nOr Money Ba<\nReal pharmacists and chemists eve\nwhere know that McCoy's Cod Ll\nExtract Tablets contain Just the proi\nessential Ingredients that incre\nweight, create appetite, build up\npower to resist disease and puts g(\nsolid flesh on skinny men and worn\nSo now men and women who ki\nup with the times are taking )\nCoy's Cod \u25a0 Liver Extract Tablet\nrich ln health building, strength ere\nIne: flesh producers and as easy\ntake as  candy.\nSo why not start today? \"Why\nfill nut those deep hollows ln ne\nchecks and chest? Why go on throu\nlife with sunken cheeks and nan\nchest when you ran take advanti\nof  this  straight forward  offer.\nTry  them for 80  days  if  you\nto   gain   five   pounds   or   more,\nbear this ln mind,  lf they don't h\nyou in that time your money will\nrefunded.   60   Tablets    60   cents\u2014Bi\nomy   Sti-c   li.oo.   At   City   Drug   a\nBook  Co.. and  druggists  everywhere\ntn  Oakalla.\n\"As fur ;*.*\u2022, I am concerned, once\nTarchuck was released my work was\nfinished.\" said J. R. Nicholson, his lawyer. \"I have not heard from him\nsince and do not expect to. Just the\nsame I think the police and Jail au\nthorltics here were discourteous when\nthey took Torchuck out of Oakalla before I arrived there. It seems they\nJust drove him around until late\nnight, when they telephoned me to\nsay the order of the court had been\ncomplied with, and the man released\nThey said nothing about the rearrest.\"\nMeanwhile Mr. Nicholson Is awaiting\nfurther instructions from Tarchuck's\nrelatives at Trail before making any\nmove. They were mostly concerned ln\nsecuring his return to Nelson so that\nthey could Bee him when they wanted\nto.\nTarchuck   arrived    in\nescort  Wednesday  night.\nNelson    under\nTHE  GUMPS-\"MANY  HAPPY  RETURNS'\nhow the olb .iris fall for\n\/\\   THIMt.   LIKE   TWAY \u2014\nTHEY  LOVlr   fcYTENYION \u2022\u2014\nand twere's. a bird i'd like to\n-seno some  flowers to\nin   The   Shape of a wreatm-\n|T\"i  TOO  SAb   *TOU   FOR6.0T\nTO   LEAVE   YOUR   ADDRESS \u2014\n*40 THAT I   CAW   SEND   YOU\nAN   INVITATION   TO  A   UTTLE\n*EDDm_   TMATtABOUT^YAKI\n(cSVNEAR   FUTURE'\nw,\nIM So HAPPY  OVER THESE\nI    COULD CRY-    NOBODY   BUT\nMR  AUXSYINN   WOULD.   BE  SO\nTHOUGHTFUL-    TO-THIN*\nme remembered my\nbirthday- the first\nFlowers sent to me since\nI'VE    BEEN\nMARRIED-\nWHERE  IS\nTom Carr?\nDATS\nSince he\nVANliHED\nAS IF FR0CA\nTHE  FACE\nOF THE FARTTH\nANU THE\nSHERIFF'S\nOFFICE\nIS CHAFINfa\nUNDlR THE\nCRITICISMS\nOF  THE\nCITIZENRY-\n&\nTHOSE\nVaricose\nVElfMS\nNo sensible person will continue\ntt suffer from dangerous \"Micosje\noj swollen veins and bunches Mir\nth* ankle or knee when this powerful p.netratsng healing oil on\nreadily b\u00ab obtained at an> well raced drug store.\nThis Simple Home Treatment\nGiving Amazing Results\nAsk your drusgist for an origin-i\ntwo ounce bottle of Moone's Esner-\nafd Oil and apply night and morning\nto the swollen enlarged veins rubbing gently upward and towards the\nheart as the blood In the veins flows\ntbat way.\nIn hundreds sJ eases Meonfs\nEmertldOilhtuglcenblessed reUaf.\nGet a bottle today-Its wonderful\ntor Ulcers, Old Sores. Broken Veins\nand Troublesom. cases ol Eczema.\nyou musf gel complete tcMsfac-\ntion or your money wUlbtcheertuhj\nrefunded.\nMOONE'S\nEMERALDOU\nBare ron hear!\n\u2022bout Pepsi Peps Is *\n\u25a0rlenllAr  preparation pat\nup In paitlilo form, wUek\nfironldes an entirely new and \u00abf-\nectlrt treatment for cotifhs,\ncolds, chest and throat troubles.\nTeps contain certain medicinal\nlasjredlcnts, which, whan plaeast\nnpoi thc touffae, Immediately\ntarn Into vaptr, and ar* breathe*\ndown tbe air passages to tha\nlungs. On their Journey, thar\nsoothe the Inflamed and irritated\nmembranes of the bronchial tubes,\ntbe delicate walls of the air passages, and finally enter and carry\nrelief and healing lo the Innga,\nWhile no liquid or solid can get\nto the Issnsrs and air passage*,\nthese FCps fumes get there dlrsiet,\nand  healing commences.\n\u00a3fiUX___\u00a3U':,\u00a3\nacrote It the, name and dat* of (kll\n?\u00bbP_r, aad mall n (with le. \u25a0ta*y\na pay roturn pottage) to P\u00abp_ Oe..\nToronto. A free trial paolrrt Win\ntin* ba \u25a0\u2022nt r<m. All di-i\naad atoree uli Papa, 25 o bos.\nftps\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER- 9, 1928\nFags Tfires ^\nr.H. Waters &Co.,Ltd.\nBuilders and Contractors\nPhone IM p. o. Boi 838\nNELSON, B.C.\nPrices Submitted On Any Kind of\nCONSTRUCTION WORK\nLIME      . BBICK        CEMENT\nTRAIL DAUGHTERS\nDONATE A MEDAL\nHISTORY CONTEST\nConsolidated to Make Trophy\nfor Competition in\nGrade VIII.\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 8\u2014With a Tlew\nto encourssdnt tile study of Canadian   history,   a  decision   was   reached\nIts\nDelicious\nBlue\nRibbon\nAlways Reliable\nSevere colds\nAlways Ended In\nBronchitis\nMm, John Wilson, 143 Mamelon St.,\nLondon, Ont.. writ**.\u2014\"I have always\nbeen troubled with severe colds which\nalways ended in bronchitis, but since\ntaking\nI have no fear of this trouble, as it\nacted like msjfir, \u00abnd the desire to cough\nwas entirely gone. The soothing feeling\nit imparts to the bronchial tubes is\n\u2022imply  wonderful.\n\"One day my husband came home\nwith a heavy cold, but after * few doeei\nhe was entirely free of it.\"\nPrice &k. ii bottle; large family size\n00c. at ntl druggists and dealers.\nPut, up only hy The T. Milburn Co.,\nLtd., Toronto, lint.\nyhefuxurtj^oap ofthfj\/j\/orld\nLovely faces frsuped in the windows of sedan\nchairs of sk generations ago gained their\nsatin-smoothness from the pure, rich lather\nof Yardley's Old English Lavender Soap.\nLadies of to-day use this same world-famous\ntoiletry to cleanse and purify their hands and\nfaces and to leave them delightfully perfumed\nwith the lingering lovable fragrance.\nJ l per box of 3 Urge <_kc, >t sll best druggists\nsnd  department stores   throughout   (\u2014\u2014sis.\nYU-DIEYfc.\nOld ffnqlioK\nLavender Soap\nYARDLEY, 8, New Bond St., LONDON, En*\n358-362. Adf U,i. Strati. W\u201e Tsronti, 2. Om.\nUSAi  N_diwn Sn-_we. N-*Y_rU.\nat a meeting of Arthur Chapman\nchapter T. O. D. E. to put up for\ncompetition in grade VIII a silver\nmedal. Ths msdal will be made by\nthe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\ncompany and will be for annual competition.\nAt the request of the Canadian\nLegion, the chapter wlH take charge\nof and conduct a sale of popples.\nThis work has been undertaken by\nthe chapter ln former yean. Mrs.\nC. w. Guillaume was appointed general convener.\nAn excellent report was received from\nthe relief committee, showing an active    program    during    October.\nA motion was carried to send a\nset of books to the public school\nat  Park  Siding:\nMra A. McKie was elected a member of the chapter.\nTht members of the chapter voted a\nsubstantial sum toward the community\nchest  fund.\nORE TOTAL TRAIL\nIS 544,730 TONS\nIN YEAR TO DATE\nWeek's Rece^ts 12,713 Tom:\nCustom Total Now Up\nto 84,893 Tons\nReceipts of ore and concentmtes at\nthe Trail reduction plant of the Consolidated Mining _ Smelting company\nswelled to 544,730 tons at November 7.\nReceipt- during the week ending on\nthat  date  amounted to  12,713  tons.\nAddition of 11,201 tons in the week\nbrought the company mines total up\nto  459,744.\ntTustom receipts gained 1512 torss\nin the week, making the total of the\nyenr to date 84,083 tons.\nCustom receipts ln the week follows:\nCopper concentrates \u2014- Iron Msssk.\nKamloops, 76.\nLead ore\u2014Sally, Beaverdell, 33.\nLead concentrates\u2014Dnthle, Smlthers.\n41 ;Hewitt, Slivwtoti, 29; TVhltewater,\nRetallack, 49.\nDry ore\u2014Insurgent reaction, Republic, 50; McAllister, Three I-orta, 41;\nMolly Hssghes, Denver Canyon, \u00ab3;\nPearl, Republic, 366; (Jullp, Republic,\n447.\nZino concentrates\u2014Oalena Farm,\nSUverton. 129; Hewitt, Silverton, JO;\nLucky Jim, Zlncton, 42; Paradise, I*ke\nWindermere, 34; Whitewsster, Retallack, 93.\nROAD SIGNS IN\nWEST KOOTENAY\nNOW IN PLACE\nSeveral Highways Are Logged\nReedy for Signs Next\nYear; Work in Crow\nHighway signing in the Weat Kootenay district and road logging In the\nsame territory carried on by the Automobile Club of British Columbia is\nnow completed. D. R. Whltaker, highway signing engineer, tn charge or\nthis work, left yesterday for East\nKootenay and Crow point to put up\nslgn\u00bb and log road until the weather\nmakes this work Impossible.\nIn the Nelson and Trail territory\nMr. . Whltaker stated that about .300\npointers had been placed at strategic\npoints on the highways.\nSigns are now in prominence along\nthe Trail-Nelson highway, and from\nNelsqn to Salmo to Trail. The road\nfrom Nelson by the way of the Slocan\nto Kaslo, recently completed, was logged\nand a few signs placed as was the\ntoad   from  Kaslo   to   Nelson.\nBy logging Mr. Whltaker and his\nassistant, A. Adair, cover the roads,\ncheck mileage and pick points where\nsigns should be placed,\nSigns of logged roads will be made\nover the winter and put in. place next\nseason,\nMr. Whltaker, who was formerly\nchief highway sighing engineer for\nWashington, has covered over 2000\nmiles of  interior  road  since  August.\n\"When the foad Is completed and In\ngood shape between Nelson by way of\nMouth Slocan and New Denver, it will\nafford the motorist one of the most\nbeautiful trips in British Columbia\nfrom a. scenic viewpoint.\" said Mr.\nWhltaker. He emphasized the excellent condition of the local branch\nof the auto club and stated that all\nthe territory needed now was thc\nKuRkanook road.\nSince starting their season's work thc\nparty have erected signs along the\nCariboo highway by way of- Kamloops, Merrltt, Princeton, Revolstoke\nand other points. All primary and\nsecondary highways have been signed\nor logged.\nCar Plows Into\nTree at Trail;\nBadly Damaged\nTRAIL,     B.C.,    Nov.    8.\u2014Aptferebtly\nattempting to turn down Spokane\nstreet as he was proceeding along\nBay avenue toward the Columbia river\nbridge, a car plowed into a tree ln\nfront of the Bank . of Commerce at\nabout 9:65 tonight. The front axle\nwas bent from the impact and tbe\nwindshield broke, radiator cavedin\nand considerable other damage caused.\nIt Is not known whehter ot not the\ndriver, whose Identity was not known\nat a late hour last night, carried insurance.\nThe tree hit was a large one standing\na considerable distance out from .lie\ncurb on the west side of Bay avenue,\nat Spokane street.\nfamily, Slocan City; members of K. ot\nP. lodge No. 38, Nelson; Miss Ina Nelson, Vancouver; Mr, and Mn. D. Nelson and family. Alberta Nelson. H\nBourgeois and family, Mr. and Mrs.\nWinstanley, Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Gardner of Crescent\nValley,  E. Walgren, Ed. Bergstrom and\nMildred, A. H. Oreen Co., Nelson; R\nCarter. Ml*, and Mrs. o. D. Lund. Mrs.\nO. Wilson and Family of Trail, Mr.\nMrs Olson, Mr. and Mrs. Hanson,\nand Mrs Christenson of Castlegar,\nand Mm. D. Olson ol' Slocan Park. Mr.\nand Mrs. B. Anderson and Mr: and Mrs.\nJohn Anderson  at South   Slocan.\n;\u00ab\n10. D. L CONCERT\nPATRIOTIC THEME\nVocal and Instrumental Numbers; \"War\" and \"Peace\"\nTableau\nHARROP NOTES\nPRICELESS\nMrs. Wharton and\nE. Campy Win\nBadminton, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 8.\u2014Mrs. S. T.\nTOTiartosi and S, Campbell msestod victorious In the Memoriisl hall Badminton\nclub's season opening American style\ntournament, which was completed at\nthe Memorial hall tonlrht. Their score\not 131 for 10 lamas won Br \u00bb small\nmargin over Mrs. H. T. Klnnwell and\nMiss P. Rutledgt, who were second with\na score of 130 for 10 gamel.\nA same was 31 points, the winning\ncouple Irt a game being the one to\nwin the greatest number of points.\nMrs. Wharton and Mr. Campbell went\nthrough, the series with on average of\n13.2 points a game.\nElks' Carnival\nTrail Opens for\nThree-Day Run\nTRAIL, B.C., NOV. 8.\u2014Trail Elks'\ncarnival opened today With a hang for\na three-day run, over 300 attending\ndespite the rainy weather. Considerably more Trallltes attended the dance\nin the evening, where refreshments\nwere   obtainable  continuously.\nPerhaps the outstanding feature of\nthe day was the \"gold digging\" contest, in which winners will be chosen\non Saturday. Many claims were staked\ntoday.\nC. Butcher is chairman of the committee in charge of the carnival. He\nwas assisted in some way today by\npractically every member of the Elks'\nlodge.\nHARROP, B.C., Nov. 8.\u2014Mrs. H. Fairbanks was hostess Tuesday afternoon\nat three tables of progressive whist in\nhonor of Mrs. F. F. Meadows. The\nprize for high score wag awarded to\nMiss Helen Quin, the consolation going\nto Mrs. A. Flynn. Tbe invited guests\nincluded Mrs. L. O. Serres, Mrs. W. S.\nAshby, Mrs. F. Sparks, Mra. R. Quin,\nMiss Helen Quin, Miss Jessie Harrop,\nMrs. E. Harrop. Miss Sadie Mcintosh,\nMlsa L. E. Orant, Mrs. K. D. Serres,\nMrs. **. Andrews, Mrs. W. J. McConnel\nend Mrs. A. Flynn.\nCapt. B. D. Leslie Smith and Mrs.\nLeslie Smith and son, Kenneth, Mrs.\nL. O. Serres and Miss Rosina D'Amorie\nmotored to Trail Thursday with Everett\nBrasch of Procter.\nF. Andrews returned Monday night\nfrom Divide, Sask., where he spent\nihe past three months at his farm during harvest operations. He was accompanied by Herbert Symonda, who will\nspend the winter here.\nMr. and Mrs. S. Course left Tuesday\nmorning for Boswell.\nMr. and Mrs. F. F. Meadows and little\ndaughters, Jean nnd Alison, left by the\nCrow boat Wednesday morning for San\nFrancisco to return to Guatemala,\nCentral America. They will salt from\nSan Francisco on the City of Panama,\nNovember 30,\nLEAVE\nYOUR PLATE\nIN MILTON\nWHILE YOU\nSLEEP OR\nWHILE YOU DRESS\nYou can't dean false teeth as a woman deans a floor-\nby scrubbing and brushing. It's crude, costly and\nineffective. Much better let Milton make a perfect job\nof them while you're sleeping or dressing. Either vnj\nthey're cleaned as nothing else can dean them. No\nharm to thc denture and every germ lulled\u2014ask your\ndentist. Both these methods are explained in the little\nbook you'll find with the bottle.\nSold by your dealer\u2014351\/, 65.\/, and $1 a bottle.\nattune Aeentt \u2022 HAROLD F. RITCHIE tt CO. LIMITED, TORONTO\nMAKE A POINT OF READING THE BOOK WITH THE SOTTlfc\nArmistice musical concert and tableau to be presented at the Capitol\nSunday night by Kokanee chapter\nI.O.D.E. will be painstakingly produced\nthis year in commemoration of the\ntenth anniversary of the suspension\nof hostilities ln the Great war on November II 1018.\nPresented by the Nelson branch of\nthe Independent Order of Daughter*\nof the Empire, which was one of the\nmost prominent organl rations in Canada during the Oreat war, the program\nwill conclude with a tableau ln two\nsemen, depicting the period when war\nheld the world in leash, and the\nperiod following when peace held sway.\nLocal talent, except for one contributor, Mrs. Ronald Grayson of Bennington, will provide the entertainment\nwith vocal and Instrumental selections,\nand will present the tableau.\nPiano, violin and vocal solos find\nduets, and a recitation, will comprise\nthe program preceding the tableau.\nFINED   $1000   WHEN    F(>r\\l\u00bb\n(UILTY   CRIMINAL   KBGUOKHCt\nCOBOURG, Ont., Nov. 8.\u2014John L.\nCorkum, Toronto, was found guilty\non a charge of criminal negligence by\na Jury at the fall assizes of the supreme court here today. The chtirge\narose from the death of Mrs. A. I.\nSymonds of Morriss, Ont., who was\nkilled when the buggy ln which she\nwas riding was truck by Cork urn's car,\nSeptember  17.    He was fined  $1000,\nTrail Scout Council\nArranges for Annual\nFather, Son Banquet\nTRAIL, B.C.. Nov. 8\u2014Arrangements\nwere made tonight by the Trail Boy\nScout counsil, at a meeting in Me-\nmoral hall, for holding the annual\nfather and son banquet In the near\nfuture.\nThe program was arranged and It\nwa* announced that the scouts and\ntheir fathers would be assured of a\ngood time.\nThe council approved of the formation of a third Trail troops, of boy\nscouts.\nThose present at the meeting were\nMrs. R. C. Fry. I.O.D.I.; C. H. Wright,\nToe H club; E L, Hodge, Rotary, and\nother members of the  council.\nEast TraU Anglican\nAuxiliary Is Host at\nSuccessful Whist\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov, 8.\u2014The East Trail\nWomen's Auxiliary to the Anglican\nchurch entertained at a delightful\nwhist drive in the Mission hall Tuesday. Fifteen tables were in play\nunder the supervision of Mrs. J. H.\nOwen and T.  Penney.\nAfter a sumptuous lunch served by\nthe ladles, dancing was enjoyed until\nthe midnight hour. Music was provided\nby   Misses   Owen   and   Alice   Hopkins.\nPrize winners at whist were: Mrs.\nKitchen, ladles' first; Mrs. T. Cor is.\nladles' consolation; J. Oliver, men's\nfirst;    J.    Lauder,   men's   consolation.\nThe committee in charge was composed of Mrs. J. H. Bond. Mrs. J. B.\nStalnton, Mrs. T. Hlnton and Mrs. T.\nWilkinson.\nCanada's Apples\nAre More Popular\nin Great Britain\nAndrew Life a\nLate Resident\nof Slocan City\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Nov. 8\u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. John Life and family have returned from Nelson after attending\nthe funeral of Andrew Life, brother of\nMr. Life, who was accidentally killed\nnear Kaslo October 39. The late Mr.\nLife was at one time employed here\nat the Llngle & Johnson saw mill.\nAmong the many who cent floral tributes were the following: Molly and\nFred.    Mr.    and    Mrs.    J.    Life    and\nSTAGE\nVERNON-EDGEWOOD\nMeets  all   Arrow   Lake  Boats.\nLeaves Edgewood\u2014TueBdays, Thursday?\nand Saturdays at 6 a.m. Arrives Vernon  11:00.\nLeaves Vernon\u2014Mondays, Wednesdays\nand Fridays at 10:00 a.m. Arrives Edgewood  3:30  p.m.\nExpress  and  small freight handled\nAUCTION\nSALE\nBUSY BEE\nSecond-Hand Store\nTHIRD AVKM.-K,  EAST  TRAIL\nNuu-mlssT >th and 9tls, les*\nrssmniFiK'lnr 2 o'clock Afternoons\nand 7 o'clock Evenings.\nA larsje stock of Articles for\nsale, Includlsig Gentlemen's Chest\nof Drawers. Victor Orthophontc,\nDresses,   Linen,   etc.\nMr. M.E.Harper\nAuctioneer\nPHONE 49V\nCanmore\nBriquettes\nTHE 100 PER CENT\nFUEL\nContains no rock, slate\nor bone. No clinker\u2014no\nwaste.\nPrice $15 per ton de-\nlivered.\nWest\nTransfer Co.\nPHONE 33\nOTTAWA, Ont., Nov. 8\u2014Canada's\napples are becoming more popular ln\nthe British Isles. Exports so far this\nseason, according to figures published\nby the fruit branch bf thc department\nof agriculture, amounted to 183.083\nbarrels and 616,323 boxes. ThU is a\nsubstantial Increase over the totals\nof 143.012 barrels and 211,943 boxes\nfor 1037 and 160,144 barrels and 403,036\nboxes for 1986.\nMcintosh apples are selling at an average of 82.54 a box ln Liverpool an\ncompared with 83.73 for 1027 and\n83.02 for 1926. Jonathan apples arc\npriced at an average of 82.06, as compared with 83.83 for 1927 and 62.91\nfor 1998. Kings apples. No. 1 grade, are\n\u2022oiling at 88.IT a barrel as compared\nwith 67.35 for 1927 and $0,20 for 1028\nShipments ot Ontario apples are stated\nto be light and reports are not available.\nOne man was drowned end Wbman\nrescued when their automobile plunged\ninto feservtflr at BrooMlne, Mftss.\nQuick\nQuaker.\numS \u25a0 hf\n\\ A Breakfast\nYou Never\nTire Of\nC\u2014e* he aVt f 5 minutes\nCHASE & SANBORN S\nTA\/\nj*f DUS-.'Mhbmm\n\\_V*JJB    r\u00bb \u00bbi\u00ab\u00bbTEA\u00bb'\u00bbf\nT\\ 7E promise nothing\nW for our teas that they\ndo not deliver. They are\nteas you will enjoy\u2014that\nyou can depend upon\u2014\nthat you will buy again\nand agajn.\nIn poodd, half-poors- astd s|s\u00bboer.posss\u2014\nsealed aa*-tight packafas.\nM Beet Gnseer* Everywhere     tm\n: S3,\nj SEAL BRAND ORANGE PEKOE f\nJj AND\n\/       SUPERIOR  BRAND\nQuick Service\nON\nI    \"His Master's Voice\"\nVICTOR\nRECORDS\nMake Ideal Xmas Gift. Thousands of double-sided\n10-inch Records only 75c each. Ask for any record In\nthe big catalogue\u2014or\nGET THE LATEST\nWaltz\nOne Step or\nFox Trot\nOur clerks will give you prompt, courteous service.\nRecords mailed same day as order js received\u2014we\nguarantee safe delivery and prepay postage on orders\n$5.00 and upwards to out-of-town customers.\nASK FOR THE BIG FREE CATALOGUE\nSENT ANYWHERE.\nMason & Riscti, Limited\nV.  O.  nOX   41S  \u2014  413   WARD STREET, KELSON, B.C.\n\"The Home of the Victrola\"\nPOWER\nW-^stinghoiise\n_   Genuine\nI^_DIOTRONS\nUX-20KB\nUX-I2I-B\nThe new Tubes\nYou should have\nin your set\n\t\n_____\n Page Pont\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 5, 1-928\nTHE   DAILY  NEWS\nPublished every morning wrcept Bun-\n\u00abay by The Newi Kub.l-hlntf com-\nptrty,  limited. Nelson. B. C.\nBualneRs letters should be -fiddreq-ted\nM*d eberki and memev orrlers made\npayable tn The New* Publish.nt company, .tniited. and ln no caw to intfl-\nTtrtu-M members of the staff.\nAdfertlalng rate cards and AJB.C\nat ti. te\u00bbien ta of circulation mailed on\nraqnaat. or may Da seen at the office\nof any advertlslnK agency recognized by\nthe   Canadian   Pn ss   association\nBTJBSCRIP^'ION   RATES\nBy_ mall  (country), per month I    flo\nPer   rear\nBy mall  (city), per year.\t\nOutside Canada, per month...\nPer year\nDeJ'Ttfed, per week\nPer   year\nego\nIS 00\n.76\n7i?\nts.on\nPayable In Advanoe\nMemtser   Audit   Bnrean   of   Clrenlatlnr\njTRIDAY.   NOVEMBER  0,   1M8\nPend ifOreitte Power\nDevelopments\nIt has been known for some\ntime that the West Kootenay\nPower & Light company, Consolidated^ giant power subsidiary, intended to develop the\nhydro-electric potentialities of\nthe Pend d'Oreille river, but\nthe definite announcemsjnt of\na new 80.000-horse power plant,\nto cost $4,000,000 has come\nearlier than expected.\nIn addition to its Pend\nd'Ortille developments, the company has tentative plans for\ntwo or more additional plants\non Kootenay river.\nDevelopment of the Pend\nd'Oreille will be fruitful of suggestion to those who have already envisioned Consolidated\ndevelopments far in excess of\nany plans which have been announced, developments which\nai. the logical result of the\nopening up at a more rapid rate\nthan at any time in the past of\nlarge new bodies of ore in the\nterritory from which the smelter at Trail draws its raw materials.\nThe\nLighter Side\nAUNTHET\nThey Get the Big Body at\ntke Florence\nDiscovery of the big ore body\nin the Florence mine at Ains-\nworth is of importance because\nof the proof of depth which\nit gives, the new tunnel in\nwhich the discovery has been\nmade having been driven in\nf l-om the lake level.\nBut physchologically it is\nperhaps of more importance\nstill.\nIn many respects the Florence new development at depth\nwa\u00bb a key operation, in that\nit was the first big development to be undertaken in the\nnew era of mining development\nwhich began a couple or so of\nyears ago.\nThere will be many other\noperations equally fruitful of re-\niBnlts, but the Florence success\n\u25a0will arouse exceptional public\ninterest and will further strengthen public confidence in the\n-mineral resources of the district, confidence which is being\nsteadily built up not only by\nthe large operators but by the\n.promising results which arc\nbeing attained by many smaller\ncompanies.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy  LAURA  A.  KIHKMAN\nCONTRIBl'T-n   REfirES\n\"People ought to move once\nln a while, Juat to cct rlst ot\nthe half empty medicine bottles\nthey've  been  savin'.\"\nA campaign tent over until the\ndirt settles.\nAll are weak, and the man who hates\nhypocrites will tell Willie to look up\nthe word himself and he'll remember\nIt  better.\n'   Simile for today: As hard to get\nrid of as the laat house fly.\nOne law for the rich, one for the\npoor, and two million for the rest of\nus.\nNo matter how It goes, the few who\nremained  loyal  to  the  old  party will\nhave   a   better   chance   at   the post\noffices.\nBOARD OF TRADE\nINDORSES MUSIC\nFESTIVAL MOVE\nFleming Asks Support; Archdeacon Sees Nelson as\nAesthetic Center\nTOMORROW'S  MENC\nBreakfast.\nOrapes\nCereal\nFried Eggs and Bacon\nPop Overs Coffee\nFish   Balls\nLeftover Cote Slaw\nRolls Marmalade Tea\n* I. In ner\nVeal   Loaf\nBaked Sweet Potatoes\nSpinach\nSliced cucumber Salad\nApple Betty Hard Sauce\nCoffee\nPROTEST AGAINST\nTRAIN CONNECTION\nThrelkeld   Wires   Cotterell   of\nC. P. R. When Train Fails\nWait for Arrow Boat\nGlare:    Brilliant   light,   also the\nlook  a  woman  rivet,  you  ir you\npull    out    too    slowly    when she\ntootH to paw*.\nA formal church prayer for Independence day can't do any harm, but\nit might do more good on election day.\nThere ahould be an annual prize\nfor the author who doesn't aay of hia\nworld-weary heroine: \"She was tired\nof  It  all.\"\nBut why punish a drunk driver and\ndo nothing to the one who drives the\nsame way because he hasn't any sense?\nModernism: Hiring a man because\nhe can do something you haven't brains\nenough to do; feeling superior to him\nbecause you pay him for his work.\nWhen a man is at peace with himself, he's at peace with his Ood. This\nis especially true of Mussolini.\nEven a good party man may at\ntimes regret that his party's lies aren't\nas convincing  aa  the  other aide's.\nWell, the campaign managers who\ndon't get appointments can get nice\nJobs writing  resort  literature.\nReader friends have kindly sent me\nthe following recipes In response to\nother reader's requests:\nMy Olorlfied Rice\u2014Wash three tablespoons of rice and cook it rapidly\nIn boiling water till each grain stands\nalone and is soft. Drain and pour cold\nwater through the rice, then shake well\nand set ln a warm place to dry. Whip\ncue-half cup of heavy cream stirf. Sift\na little confectioner's sugar over the\nrice, then fold the sweetened rice into\nthe stiff cream. Mould daintily ln sherbet cupt, let become firm, and serve,\nMra.  C. M.  H.\nSpanish Cream (this happens to answer Mrs. I. B.'s request for this recipe)\u2014Soak one and one-half tablespoons of granulated gelatine ln three\ncups of cold, sweet milk, then scald\nthe milk. Add to it one-half cup of\nsugar, cool slightly, then stir ln three\negg yolks beaten stiffly. Now cook\nthe mixture in the top of your double\nboiler over rapidly boiling water till\nthickened slightly, then remove from\nheat, add a pinch of salt and one\nteaspoor! of vanilla, and pour It onto\nthree stiffly whipped egg whites. Turn\ninfo Individual moulds and let become\nfirm before serving. (If you prefer to\nmould It ln a large dish increase the\namount of gelettne to one and three-\nquarters tablespoons,) This makes fine\npudding.   Mrs. C. C.\nSteamed Fruit Pudding\u2014Mix together one-half cup of butter, one-half\ncup of granulated sugar, one beaten\negg, two-thirds of a cup of molases,\none cup of sweet, cold milk, and two\nand one-half cups of flour sifted with\nfive teaspoons of baking powder, one-\nthird teaspoon of salt, one teaspoon of\nground cinnamon, one-half teaspoon of\nground nutmeg, and a pinch of ground\nginger. Beat well, then stir In two\nsups of figs put through the food chopper, and one-third cup of dried currants, dredged with one-half cup of additional flour. Turn the mixture into\none large or two small buttered molds,\ntie on corners, and steam from one to\ntwo hours before serving, with any\ndesired hot liquid sauce. Mrs. R. O.\nTomorrow\u2014Stain Removal..\nAppealing for support of the Nelson\nboard of trade ln prompting a Kootenay music festival, Ross Fleming conductor of the Nelson Symphony orchestra, addressed the board at Its\nluncheon yesterday at the Canadian\nLegion building. The board passed a\nresolution   of   indorsement.\nVen. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham,\nwho seconded Mr. Fleming's motion of\nindorsement, saw In the proposed festival an opportunity to create musical\nsentiment ln Nelaon, and to make Nelson outstanding aa not only the economic center of tha Kootenays, but\nalso as the Intellectual and aesthetic\ncenter of the interior.\n<r. Fleming asserted It was necessary\nthat business men should Interest\nthemselves in the festival organization because It was necessary that a\nneutral Influence should exist. It wu\nnot fair to musicians to govern each\nother.\nDIHTBICT MOVEMENT\nThe movement would draw many\npeople to Nelson, Mr. Fleming asserted.\nChildren would be the life blood of\nthc festival, and when they came\nhere to compete, their parents would\naccompany them. Thla meant additional benefits to Nelson.\nDescribing Mr. Fleming as an excellent citizen, and as one to whom the\ncity owed a debt of gratitude for his\nservices, Archdeacon Graham ndded his\nplea for support.\nWhile it was important to develop\ntalent In the district, and while It\nwaa also Important to bring district\nresidents to Nelson, It was more important to establish Nelson aa the\nIntellectual center of the interior. It\nmust be remembered, he Bald, that\nmusical talent ln Nelson had often\nbeen developed In spite of and in the\nface of a serious apathy toward music.\nThe board should support any move\nwhich would create a musical sentiment In Nelson, he declared.   *\nTEN YEARS AGO\nWednesday night the eaatbound Kettle Valley train did not 'wait for the\nboat at West Robson, which was late,\nand 14 paasengers, including several\nwho had intended going east on the\nCrow boat, had to spend the night at\nCastlegar.\nYesterday J. J. Threlkeld of Deer\nPark, who was among the delayed\npassengers, sent the following complaint to C. A. Cotterell, , general\nsuperintendent of the C. P. R. at\nVancouver:\nC. A. Cotterell, Esq., General superintendent   C.   P.   R.,   Vancouver,   B.C.:\nFor your Information and earnest\nconsideration with hope of preventing\nthe repetition, 14' passengers, including\nwomen and children, from Arrow Lake\nboat, November 7th, one hour after\narrival of boat as Castlegar compelled\nto remain there until morning train\nto Nelaon missing connections. Additional expenses treatment dtfeply resented and will be remembered. Mailing copy of wire to Vice-President Coleman. J.  J.  Threlkeld.\nNelson, B.C., November 6,  1926.\nGas Boat Burns on\nGeorgia Strait; Loss\nAmounts to $10,000\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 8.\u2014The vessel\nseen burning In Georgia strait Monday night was the 83-foot gaa boat\nTuladl, owned lu Vancouver, It has\nbeen revealed. The vessel caught fire\nwhen her engine backfired and her two\noccupants, T. Malahals and Tom -lata,\nwere forced to abandon her and row\ntwo and a half miles to shore In a\nskiff. The Tuladl was valued at\n\u202210.000.\nDOUBLE DROWNING\nON LAKE ONTARIO\nHAMILTON, Ont., Nov. 8.\u2014A reported double 'drowning ln Lake Ontario this afternoon esat of the Burlington canal piers la now believed to\nbe false. The supposed overturned\ncanoe tb which two men were said\nto have clung for 30 minutes la declared to be a stump of a tree, -it\nwas learned when the harbor patrol\nboat reached the scene thla afternoon.\nLucien Lelong Is stressing the sheath\nsilhouette.\nSuggest Boards\nTrade Kootenays\nJoin Hands Often\nForged Pilot's\nLicence Is Sent to\nthe Department\nOTTAWA, Nov. 8.\u2014A forged pilot's\nlicense, decorated with all the flourishes of a stock certificate and filled\nwith quaint misspellings has been forwarded to the department of national\ndefence by air force officials In Vancouver for such action against the\nholder   as   appears   advisable.\nTlie extraordinary document which\nla stated to be a palpable fraud, was\nfound on the person of J. J. Perdue,\naccording to the letter from Vancouver, but Is made out In the name\nof F. N. Fraser. It was alleged by\nthose finding the document that the\nholder was using It to obtain financial assistance. Information obtained\nat Vancouver Indicated that the license came from Chicago and from Its\ncurious construction officials here be\nlleve that it Is the product of i\npress used for t|ie production of\nspurious   liquor   labels.\nWilson of Cranbrook Addresses\nNelson Board; Chapman\nIs Guest\nA hypocrtt la a hotel guest who\ntiM-s the bath towels to dry hia\nhands to fool the chamber maid.\nThe only reasonable objection to our\npresent prosperity Is Its devotion to\nthe huddle system.\nBUDDING IS NOW THE USUAL WAT\nOF PROROGATING FRUIT TREES,\nBUT GRAFTING STILL SERVES TO\nESTABLISH   FAMILY   TREES.\nThe election will at least determine\nwhether people like their liquor served\nby  a  bartender  or  a  bootlegger.\nHow irritating to hear youth complain that the day of opportunity la\npast, when there may be a vacancy\non Philadelphia's police force any day.\nCorrect this sentence: \"I don't care\nIf It la patched, mother,\" said the\nflapper,  \"the patch won't show.\"\nFear of Mental Ailments in\nthe Family\nA member of a family ia afflicted\nrtt\u00a3 a mental ailment, and when the\namlly begin to investigate matter*\n\u25a0Mr find that an uncle, a cousin, a\nrrandparent or other relative or rela-\nfUves has also suffered with some\nmental condition.\nThe  question  naturally  arises  as  to\nwhv Uaet  the ailment is  hcrtdttary,  la\nlelns handed  down In  the  family.\nDr.  H.  C.  Solman  tells us  that  \"if\n\u25a0m  ancestry   of   a   group   of   patients\nJtth severe mental disease Is  studied.\ntt   will   be   found   that   some   mental\n\u25a0acrder or  'pcrulinrrty'  win  be found\n|in  about  60  to  70 per cent  of  their\n^^\u25a0of previous generation.\nHowever, if one takes a random group\nordinary   well   peraoru   and   search\nancestry   ln   the   same   fashion,\nwill find evidence ot mental  dls-\ntha eexae variety  aa  In  the\ngroup.   In  almost  the  same  per-\nalthough  not quite so high.\"\nsays   further   \"when   there   has\nconsiderable   amount   of   mental\nlease    ln    several    generations,    the\nobability  of  tht  coottnuttiou of  ft\nKenneth P. R. Neville, M.A., Ph.D.\nwas appointed dean of arts at the\nUniversity of Western Ontario when\nDr. W. Sherwood Fox, who has been\ndean since 1010, waa elevated to the\npresidency of the  university.\nAn 180,000 extension to the General\nMotora of Canada stampln* plant which\nwill double the capacity of that section\nof the buslnesa at Ashawa, will be\nerected In the near future.\nmental disorder ln future generations\nIs fairly great\". When, however, there\nIs Just a few cases occuring, that Is\nskipping a generation here and there,\nno regularity at all, there la little\nreason to be fearful of the result of\nthe continuation of such a family\nstrain.\nNow as heredity Is no such a big\nfactor, then environment must be\nimportant.\nAa Doctor Solomon defines environment, It means \"every Influence that\nbears upon the Individual from the\ntime life starts until death, Including\nvarious disease conditions, poisons with\nwhich he oomee ln contact, living conditions, and mental stresses and experienced What Is the lesson from\nthe  above?\nThat the matter of heredity ahould\nnot distress or discourage you lf a\nmental ailment affects a member of the\nfamily, but proper mental and personal hygiene for the patient and other\nmembers of tho family should be the\nflrat thought.\nAnd lf any Uttle peculiarity begins\nto assert Itself, see your family physician and have It Investigated.\nIf there la an organic reason for\nit, he can be of tome help, lf there\nla no organic reason for it, then he\ncan, with your aid, help to control\nthe  surrounding  circumstances.\nThU helpful information ahould be\nreassuring to all of u*.\n(The Dally NewB of November 9, 1918)\nNelson's victory loan quota was surpassed yesterday. Early in the afternoon canvassers reported that a sum\nof 925,000 was needed to reach thla\nmark so A. W. McCune. New York\nmining magnate, readily agreed to put\nup the money. Later reports state that\nthe total amount has now reached\n1428,000.\nHarry Gibbs, who haa been seriously\n111, waa reported to be Improving laat\nnight.\ni   \u2022 . \u2022\nA severe storm hit the city unexpectedly yesterday afternoon and the\nsubstation was effected for a short\nwhile but no other serious damage was\nreported.\ne  \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. William Douche will take charge\nof the hospital during the Illness of\nthe matron, Mlas Sadie McCullum.\nThe matron'a condition was reported to\nbe serious laat night.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. F. C. Ingram, who is HI with\npneumonia, waa reported to be steadily\nImproving last night.\nSuggesting that the boards of trade\nln the Kootenays might well get together more often, and that such\ngatherings would be for mutual benefit, W. J. Wilson of Cranbrook. a guest\nof the Nelson board of trade at a\nluncheon meeting at the Canadian\nLegion building yesterday, complimented\nthe Nelson board on its activity.\n\"The Kootenays are all one,\" he\naald. \"When you get your bridge here\nand the road along the east side of\nKootenay lake is completed, It wiU\nbe a few hours drive only between\nNelson and Cranbrook. They're not\nfar apart, lf It wasn't for Kootenay\nlake,\" he asserted.\nW. C. Chapman, Nelson's newest\nbusiness man, complimented the board\non Its activity and described it as the\nmost reprcaenetatlve gathering of business men he had yet seen.\nN\\\\\\\\\\,\nDODD'S '\nKIDNEY\n;,  PILLS.\nNever travel\nwithout Eno\nAny change of climate, great ot small,\nis apt to disturb the inner system. So\nthe experienced traveller makes sure\nthat whatever else he forgets to pack,\nit is not his bottle of\nENOS.\n-FRUIT SALF\nPimpled\nCleared\nQuickly\nSoothes &Cledrs\nRash\nHealed\namBuk\nEnds\nIrritation\nSore.Troublesome\nSkin\nExpels\nEczema\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJohnB\nurns<\n)on\nTWENTY YEARS AGO i\nh ________ *\n(The Dally News of November 9, 1908)\nTom Cunningham is building an 18-\nmile an hour motor boat for q resident of Alnsworth. It Is to fitted with\na 15-horsepower engine.\nCharles Lewlston, manager of the\nQueen's mine, brought in two gold\nbricks yesterday valued at $9000 and\n18000.\n\u2022    \u2022*    \u2022\nP. R. Fleming, an old Nelsonitc who\nwho   now   represents   the   C.P.R.   boat\npassenger   service,   has   arived   In   the\ncity on a buslnesa trip from Winnipeg.\na   \u2022   \u2022\nF. Richardson is seriously HI ln the\nHome hospital but Dr. O. W. Rose, who\nis looking after the patient, expects\nhim to recover shortly.\nThe school girl collar has been revived even for evening frocks ln a\nrecent Jenny model.\nCONSTIPATION CAUSES\nMANY A SLOW UP\nBut you can protect yourself\n\u00abT\u00aby meal- Doctors lecommend\nALL-BKAN because it is 100%\nbran\u2014100% effective.\nHealthful and deliciouswith milk\nor cream, or with fruit or honey\nadded. Sprinkle into soups. Recipes on package. Sold by all grocers. Served everywhere. Made by\nKellogg in London, Ont,\nHT ALL-BRAN\nNo man ean do justice to his job\n\u2022\u2014no woman can remain vivacious\nand happy \u2014 with constipation\ndaily undermining health and\nstrength. Aching heads, painful\nmuscles, nervousness, blemished\ncheeks\u2014these are just little things\nthat constipation brings on. In\nthe end, it causes more than forty\ndreadful disease-\nBegin now combating constipation. Kellogg- ALL-BRAN is\nguaranteed to relieve it More\u2014\nto prevent It. Just eat two table-\nspoonfuls   dally \u2014 chronic   cases.\nFURNACE TIME\nNow is the time to look into your\nFURNACE NEEDS\nFurnaces, Stoves, Heaters\nPriced Right\nNELSON HARDWARE GO.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON. B.C. BOX 1050\nf   Another Big, New Shipment of\nI Christmas Cards\n} Has Arrived\nPrinted With Your Own Name and Address\nBeautiful New Designs at Wonderfully\nI Attractive Prices\n[       $1.50 for Two Dozen and Up\nf We have never had a more beautiful selection of cards and they have\nI never been sold at such low prices.   We give you TWO DOZEN FOR\nf THE PRICE OF A SINGLE DOZEN.\nThe prices are low, but the cards are of the highest quality.   All are\nnew cards, just arrived from the east and from England.   Ask to see the\nB English hand-tinted cards in pastel shades.   They are artistic enough to\nframe.\n5 These are the prices, including printing of your name, etc.:\nk Two dozen for \u201e $1.50\n5 Two dozen for _. $1.75\n\u00a3 Two dozen for _ .$2.25\nR Two dozen for ..'. $2.50\nTwo dozen for .... $2.75\njj Two dozen for  $3.00\nI Two dozen for  $3.25\n1 Two dozen for  v $3.75\ni Up to two dozen for $6.75\nTO OUT-OF-TOWN CUSTOMERS\u2014We will be glad to mail samples.\n{ Order Early; Last Year We Sold Out\ni Long Before Christmas\nL When 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.\n' Phone 144\u2014Two Lines\nPRINTING RULING BOOKBINDING\n TUE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1928\nPi|in?fl^\nRubbers\nALL   STYLES\nALL   SIZES\nAT\nR. Andrew\n&.CO.\nLeaders in Footfashion\n[Honor Rolls at\nFernie Schools\nAre Announced\nPBRNW, *C\u201e Nov. 8\u2014The tollow-\nBng pupils of the Fernie public schoola\nlare on tho honor rolls for proficiency\nIfor the month of October:\nI Division 1.\u2014Unda Smith, Thelroa\nloamour, Helen Telenko, Kate Jaku-\nIblec.\nDivision  2.\u2014Joe  Smollk,  Prank  In-\nIiram, Bobby  MUM Margaret  McOlad-\nwy.\nDivision 3\u2014 William Green, Irene\nIjones, Annie Audla, Isabel McCallum,\nI\u2014ssl Dufour, Nellie Buchanan.\nDivision 4\u2014Oeorge Lancaster. Agnes\nPetersen. Emll Ehrler, Arthur Karale-\nlawa,  Marlors  Insmott.\nDivision 5.\u20141*ter Mlnchuk. Erman\ne-lorlllo. Mlchell Hanna, Mary Boubllk,\nMike Pero.\nDivision 8\u2014May Parker, Wilfred\nHughes, glimbeth Jakubleo, Jot mill\u2014, Percy  Burr.\nDivision 7\u2014Oarth WmUs, Bernard\nMuffatt, Teddy- Kadzlelawa, Eunice\nBushell, Morris Owen, Eileen Stone.\nDivision 8.\u2014Frank Baker, Constance\nBoden, Gordon Wade, James Oam-\nwath, Hazel SkllUng, Paulina Dasnour\nDivision 0.\u2014Norman Immott, Victoria\nPerrt, Jack Owen, Ronald White, Elvira Slrlannl.\nDivision IB \u2014Grade IV. A: John Mls-\nura, Sybil Fitzgerald, Jessie Britney;\nGrade IV. B: Florence Bean, Kate\nTtmchuk, Morris Duncan.\nDivision 11\u2014Grade III. A: Mona\nAese-tlne, Elsie Woods, Janet Walker:\nOrade III B: Hilda Jones, Minnie Mulrhead.   Josephine  McNally.\nDivision 12.\u2014Betty Starr, Katrlna\nMarasco, Dlvlna Rasmusoen.\nDivision 14.\u2014Grade I. A: Jack Been.\nFrank Guarajlo, Jim McLean; Orade\nI. B: Jim Alton. Joy Alstead, Willie\nEaston, Willie Vcrkerk, Bob Alexander.\nDivision 18.\u2014Orade IV. A: Hilda Mc-\nAndrcw, -Walter Woodbpuse. Jbmssa\nMellor; Grade IV. IT: Allan Peterson.\nGrade III A: Clarence Luke. Agnes\nPodblelanclk; Orade III. A: Nina Slav-\nlnskl, Margaret Brown, Allan Baker.\nDivision 16.\u2014Grade n. A: Quida\nBeale, Peggy McAndrew: Grade II B:\nMargaret Flemln?, Mabel Mellor: Orade\nI. B: Irene Eckorsley; Albert Beaatall,\nFred Baker.\nDivision 17\u2014Grade IV. Al Catherine\nRoes; Orade IV. B Peter Plaonl, Ken\nneth Wilson, Annie Btockwell; Orade\nIII. B: John Adamskl, Doris Bell. Mike\nJakublec; Orade II. A: Eileen Williams,\nOerald  Ross,  Alfred Bonnuto.\nDlvisionw 18.\u2014Grade II. B: Robert\nFrearaon, Sophie Zuffa. Pauline Star-\nnovitch; Grade I. A: Elslt Drew, Vln\ncent Adamskl, Gladys Raven; Grade\nI. B: Frank George, Victoria Marasco,\nVictoria   Puppln.\nKELOWNAENTRY\nLEADS IN FORKS\nLAYING CONTEST\nBrown's Pen Has 24  Points;\nNelson and Barton Pen-\nTied in Third\nPRODUCTION IS LOW IN\nFIRST WEEK OF CONTEST\nDROWNS THROUGH ICE\nPORT ARTHUR. Ont., Nov. 8\u2014Kenneth, Ross, 17, was drowned at Schrleb-\ner after falling through the ice of a\nsmall lake here while skating today.\nOnly teas grown 4,000 to 7,000 feet above sea level\nare used In \"SALADA\" Orange Pekoe Blend\u2014\nthe flavour Is therefore richer, more fragrant and\nmuch more delicious than other teas. Only 43c\nper .-lb.\u2014Buy it at any grocery store.\nT_A\nset\nBathroom    I\nFittings\nWe have a full line of Solid Brass, Nickel Plated\nBathroom Fittings.\nSOAP DISHES, SPONGE RACKS, SOAP RACKS,\nCOMBINATION SOAP AND TUMBLER HOLDERS,\nCOMBINATION SOAP AND SPONGE HOLDERS,\nTOWEL REELS, TOOTH BRUSH HOLDERS,\nTOWEL HOLDERS, RAZOR STROPS, TOILET\nPAPER HOLDERS, GLASS SHELVES.\nHipperson Hardware Go.    I\n[Umlfd       ^^^\nLook for the Red Hardware store\n\u00bbX 414\nIt Won't Be\nLong Now!\nTurkey, Chicken\nFowl\nFor Your\nThanksgiving Dinner\nPRIME ROAST GOOD STEER BEEF\nCHOICE VEAL. CHOICE LAMB.\nPRIME YOUNG PORK\nFresh Eastern and\nOlympic Oysters\nCRABS SHRIMP\nBurns & Co., Ltd.\nPHONE SO\nIU Kill STREET. Nl\u2014ION, B. ('.\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co.\nrllONK  !i. WARD  STR1 IT\nDue Mostly to Moulting; Grand\nForks and  Kelowna\nEntries Second\nPen of single comb White Leghorns\nentered by a H. Brown ot Kelowna\nled the Orand Forks egg laving contest at November 7, the end of the\nfirst week of the newly-lnstltuted contest. The Brown pen had a total of\n24 for the week,\nTwo pens, entered by K. R. Wood\nof Grind Forks and the Braemar\nPoultry farm ot Kelowna, had 91.\nBirds owned by H. L. Howe. Nelson,\nand Paul Ouldon, Burton, were tide at\nthird with It.\nProduction ln the contest 19 low,\ndue mostly to moulting. Fifty pens\nare entered ln the contest.\nOwner Address Tl. Eg|\nWHITE PLYMOUTH BOCKS\nJohn Virgo, Frultvale    7\nBARKED   PLYMOUTH  BOCKS\nRobert Kidd. Frultvale  - -   0\nOeorge Capell, Orand Forks   14\nA. D. Morrison, Orand Forks  10\nWilliam McAlplne, Creston     7\nR. V. WUcoi, Salmon Arm   10\nWHITE  WYANDOTTES\nJohn Moston, Arrow Park    4\nAndrew Cant, Appledale    3\nA. C. Webeter, Fruttvala  14\nF. J. Powell, Perry Siding  \u00bb   0\nLIGHT SUSSEX\nVlllers Brothers, Duncan, V.I  It\nSINGLE  COMB  WHITE\nI.EOHOBNS\nMcKlm Poultry Farm, Nelson   10\nJohn Virgo, Frultvale  15\nT. W. Oreen, Wlnlaw _   .\nN. V. Moxham. E. Arrow Park ...._   1\nR. H. Balrd, Naksosp   11\nPaul  Ouldon, Burton   10\nPeter Finch, Frultvale     8\nH. L. Hoye. Nelson   10\nJames Oartslde, Cranbrook      1\nWilliam Lidcllcoat. Orand Forks .... 12\nJohn Oraham. Orand Forks     0\nA. D. Morrison, Grand'Forks   16\nK. R. Wood, Orand Forks   01\nR. W. Chalmers. Thrums  10\nJeAn Mante,  Burton    17\nPeter Smith. N. Westminster     7\nFarrlngton Bros.. Central Park    ..   9\nW. M. Falrweather. Pt. Hammond ..   3\nJoseph Hall, N. Westminster     6\nHodgson - Buahuy, Mission City ..   4\nMaple Leaf Farm, N. Westminster   5\nW. Forsyth. N. Westminster   10\nPrank Appleby. Mission City    17\nA. A. Adams, Victoria      1\nF. c. Evans. Abbotsford   10\nH. Bolivar. Cloverdale .10\nM. Herrllsgton. Langley  Prairie  .... 18\nR. H. Brown. Kelowna   04\nJohn Chalmers, Port Haney  - 10\nMr. Coulter, Pentlcton     6\nF. J. Dyaart. Orlnrod     4\nBraemer Poultry Farm, Kelowna \u201e 01\nJesse Tompklrsson, Orlnrod      0\nVlllers Bros., Duncan\t\nA. w. Schofield, Central Park .....   0\nUOE  COMB WHITE \u00ab\nLEGHORNS\nW. J. Cos. Wycllffe     4\nEXCHEQUER  LEGHORN.-.\nA. D. McRae. Mission  ~   t\nROSE COMB ANCONAS\nWilliam Ridley. Orand Forks     a\nMrs. J. L. Manly, Grand Forks     0\nIS COMMITTED\nTRIAL FORGERY\nCHARGE NELSON\nMrs. Munro Has Choice Speedy\nor Assize Trial; Held\nProvincial Jail\nMrs. Janet L. M. Munro was committed for trial yesterday at her preliminary hearing before Police Magistrate William Brown on a charge of\nuttering a false cheek for 15.95, payable to Dunlt St Conway and signed\n\"A. BurgeBs.\" She Is now held In the\nprovincial  Jail.\nC. B. Oarland of O'Shea <fc Garland\nprosecuted and Archie Donaghy acted\nfor the defence.\nMrs. Munro was arretted on Monday\nnight by Chief of Police Thomas H.\nLong and brought to Nelaon the same\nnight.    Bail was set at 11000.\nA. Burgess of Ymlr testified that\nthe signature on the check was not his\nwriting.\nA. McLeod. manager of the Nelson\nbranch of the Royal Bank of Canada,\nstated that A. Burgess had a current\nwith his bank. If the signature on\nthe check had been regular It would\nhave been paid, but tbe ledgerkeeper\nnoticed the Irregularity of the signature\nMr. McLeod also stated that Mrs.\nMunro had a savings account at the\nbank. Tlie bank manager showed the\ncourt a forged checks dated July 26,\n1036, drawn on A. Burgess' account. He\nstated that the check had been paid.\ni'i in ll wn LINEN\nMlsa Mary Muraro, sales clerk at the\nDunk St Conway store, gave evidence\nthat Mrs. Munro came into the store\nsome time between 2 and 4 In the\nafternoon and purchased a linen luncheon cloth. She called Mrs. Dunk,\nwho priced the article at $2.25 and\nreturned to her office at the rear of\nthe store.\nThe customer also bought a pair of\npillow slips and other merchandise\namounting to 15.95. The woman then\nasked for a pen. She wrote a check\nfor the full amount, signing it \"A.\nBurgess,\"    stater    Miss    Muraro.\nMiss Mollis Mosses gave evidence\nthat Mrs. Munro was in the Singer\nSewing Machine company store before\nlunch, and that she returned about\n3 p. m. and waited some little time\nfor a parcel of goods she left in the\nstore before  lunch,\nMrs. Dunk, a partner ln the firm\nof Dunk A Conway, stated she had\npriced the linen luncheon cloth at\n$8.25 as stated by her employee, Miss\nMuraro, and then returned to her office.    This was between S and 4 p. m.\nWhen the check was returned by\nthe bank marked Irregular, Mrs. Dunk\ninterviewed Mr. Burgess' son and described the accused to htm. On hearing the description he smiled, she\ntestified, and asked lf the lady lived\nat Ymlr. To this Mrs. Dunk responded affirmatively.\nIt waa reported late yesterday that\nnothing could be done until today ln\nrtgwfj   to  jwtlne  $all\nThis column tb conducted by\nMrs. M. si. Vlgneux. Ai! news oi\na social nature, including reoep\ntlons, private entcruiiunents, personal iteq&s, u_<*rri\u00ab_u*s. etc.. will\nappear tu this column. Telephvu..\nMrs. VI gneux ut her home ou\nSilica street.\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson\nleave this morning by motor via Spokane for California, where they will\nspend several weeks.\nColonel and Mrs. B. A. Smith of\nLongbeach were visitors to Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Ernest J. Hacking left for her\nhome ln Kaslo yesterday after a few\ndays' visit to Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. John Kay of Beasley. who has\nbe spending some time with her son\nand daughter-in-law iu Chicago, has\nreturned- She was accompanied homo\nby her son, Homes.\ns    \u2022    \u2022\nNelson Peterson, foreman ot the Yankee Olrl mine at Ymlr, was a city\nvisitor yesterday.\n* \u00ab   *\nJ. Kepp of Spokane left for his home\nyesterday after  a brief  visit  to  town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nI. T. Coleman of Valllcan spent yesterday ln the city shopping.\n# \u2022   \u2022\nE. Harrop ot Harrop paid-a visit to\nNelson yesterday.\n* \u2022   *\nMrs. Douglas Fisher of Kootenay Bay\nwas a visitor to town yesterday. She\nwas accompanied by her little daughter.\ness\nMrs. H. L. Butchard of SUverton and\nformerly of Nelson Is a ctty visitor.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThomas O'Neill of Gray Creek paid a\nvisit to Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   s\nY. J. Kosiancic of Crescent Valley\nspent yesterday in town.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nOn Wednesday afternoon Mrs. W. E.\nMarquis, 702 Third street, Falrview,\nwas at home to a number ot her\nRebekah friends. Pink and green\nstreamers and yellow chrysanthemums\nwere used for decorations. Mrs. Annie\nR. Peters presided at the tea table\nwhile Miss F. Row assisted In serving,\nMrs. Marquis' guests Included Mrs. J\nBrassfleld, Mrs. J. Draper, Mrs. 6\nNlchol, Mrs. Annie R. Peters, Mrs. J,\nWood, Mrs. Joseph Bradshaw, Mrs.\nLemmon. Mrs. W. Oraham, Mrs. C. R\nHanna, Mrs. T. A. Treves. Mrs. John\nLundie, Mrs. T. Dolphin, Mrs. Percy\nOoggln, Mrs. eOorge Wharton, Mrs. J\nBrown, Mrs. Harriett. Miss F. Rowe,\nMiss M. Carlson, Miss M. Harkness,\nMiss H. Hull, Miss May Ramsden and\nMiss E. Hawes.\nR. Burge of Orey Creek paid a visit\nto town yesterday.\n* \u2666   *\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Young left\nWednesday night for Kamloops en\nroute to Prince Rupert, where they expect to make their home.\nRev. J. C. McKenzie has as his guest\nRev, Leo Hobson.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nGordon Irving, who has been employed at Bonnington, hau returned lo\nNelson.\n* *   *\nW. T. Wickham. merchant of Robson,\nspent yesterday ln the city on business.\nI  i. j\n\u25a0 W. J.     Crutchflrld  of Salmo   was  a\nvisitor to Nelson yesterday.\n\u00bb    \u2022   *\nMrs. Charles Peterson of Harrop (-.pent\nyesterday In town shopping\nT. Kuntz of Boswell is a city visitor.\nMrs. H. H. Horn bt Appledale paid\na  visit to Nelson .vcitrrday.\n* * . \u2022\nJ. K. Afchman. lonnrrly of Oo&af\nPoint who ha_ ixtMi la Nelson for tha\npast week on Iwilnf. left last nlu'.t\nfor Rock Creek.\n\u2022 \u2022,'.\u00bb' \u2022 \u2022\n611 Baker Street, Phone 200\nStore oJ^Cews ^D\nLittle Women's Coats\nS35-\u00b0\u00b0 to 859'00 Each\nCoats for the short woman who ia hard to fit. They came in Pure\nWool Broadcloth in Wine, Navy, Black and shades of Brown, Lined\nwith fancy Rayon or Crepe de Chine, and interlined throughout.\nShawl collars of Black, Grey or Brown Oppossum and are perfectly\ntailored throughout. Sizes 15Va to 24 Vi. The Coat that fits without altering. MODERATELY PRICED AT 93&, **3\u00bb.00 TO\nS59 EACH.\nLittle Women's Dresses\n\u25a0\ns20001\u00b0 s3900 E-ch\nThe Dress that fits without alteration. Made for the short stout\nfigure. Slenderizing, youthful lines. Developed of Flat Crepe, Satin\nor Gecrgettee in a range of styles and colors. Sizes 16'--. to 24^>,\nand will fit up to 44 bust.   PRICED AT ?20, $25 TO ?39 EACH.\nJersey Dresses\ns12,5\u00b0 \u00ab-<*\nSizes for Misses and Women. Made of heather mixed Silk-and-\nWool Jersey in a range of styles and colors. Sizes 15 to 42. Perfectly tailored and smart styles. UNUSUAL VALUES FOR THE,\nMONEY AT 912.50 EACH.\nNew Fall Hats\nsg.oo to l\n.00\nEach\nV\nNew later Fall und Winter models. They come in Imported\nFelts, Silk Velvets, and New Metallic Hats in all the new\nshapes. Assorted head sizes. REASONABLY PRICED AT\n$5 TO $15 EACH.\nMrs. Fourier nf Crawford Bay spent\nyesterday  ln  the  city.\n\u2022 \u2022\u00bb   \u00bb\nMre. C. 8. Squires, accompanied b_\nher daughter and sister, all of Rob-ion,\nwere Nelson visitors yesterday.\nS. Hunter of Kaslo paid a visit to\ntown Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. W. Krueger of Kaslo\nwere city  visitors  yesterday.\n\u00ab   *    \u2022\nT. D, Prances of Cultus Creek spent\nyesterday  shopping   tn   the   city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. H. F. HarditiK of South Sinewn\nwas a Nelson visitor  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2666   *\nC K. Soharev, Slocan City, spent\nyesterday ln town.\nMrs. A. J. Lewis of Gray Creek b\nin Nelson to spend  the  week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. J. Hawkins Sr. of Bonnington\nwas-among visitors to Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nB. Sherman of Robson spent Wednesday in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThe pupils of St. Joseph's academy\nheld a reception concert Wednesday\nnight  tn the   library  of  the  academy\nI\nYou can buy a Heintzman Piano on easy terms.\nLet us send you illustrations and prices.\nHeintztnan&Co,\nLlMiTi:n\nPhone -\"\u25a0!\u00bb Till linker Str.i-t\nNelvm, B.  C.\n!u>nnrinK Rev. J. C. McKenzie, pastor\nof the Church of Mary Immaculate.\non the occRfllon of his return from the\n\u25a0est, where he has been spending the\npan few mouths. He entertained the\npupUl with an Interesting description\nol  his holiday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. A. Major and son. Colin, of\nSunshine Bay paid a visit to town\nyesterday.\n* \u2022    t\nMrs. Hnnry was tn Nelson yesterday\nfrom  South  Slocan.\nCARPENTER STRIKE AT\nVANCOUVER AT END\nVANCOsJVER.   B.C.,   Nov.   8\u2014United\nthroats\nQuickly relieved\nby rubbingon\nc-nTm'siiMi-iiPMski\n\u00bb%tf\nmwrnmrnmrnmimm\nThe New\nLegacy Pattern\nIn 1847 Rogers Bros. Sliver Plate.\nClaim    your    legacy    of    new\nsilver beauty now.\nA. T. NOXON\nVOIR JEWELER\ns*=LTrxrrrrnn*.**xr*nx-ErrEj(\n| THEY'RE DIFFERENT\nSapp's Chocolates are different\nfrom other Chocolates. Skilled\ncandy-makers who use only the\npurest of ingredients are responsible for the unexcelled quality\nfor which Sapp's Chocolates are\nfamous.\nTry  a   Box  Today.\nV1\nroole Dn\u00bbr Co. \u201e Nelson\nHunt  Bros Trail\nII. ('lien-lngton  Jtosuland\nCranbrook Drug Co.  Cranbrook\nMln!i>ii'.i riiarmaey  Ferule\nVftttmnn ft Co,  South Mucin\nBrotherhood of Carpenters members,\nwho have been on strike here since\nOctober 8, will return to work tomorrow tt was announced following conferences between the brotherhood and\nthe General Contractors' association.\nUnder the agreement there will be no\ndiscrimination against union or nonunion men and the wage scale will be\none dollar an hour.\nThe   dispute  arose   when  men   from\nanother  carpenters'   union   were   hired\non city construction Jobs.\nJust arrived. Peterson Patent Pipes.\nBest value on the market at #2.00. Wc\nhave  a  splendid  lighter at  50c.\nBUSH'S\nBEAUTY TREATMENT\nthat hee\/is your I\nstove young   \/\nITS-\u2014IT\n_       II\nKeep your stove looking as well\nas it cooks! Learn this new and\neasier way to keep stoves glossily\nblack through years of service.\nApply a little ZEBRA, in its new\nliquid polish form. Let it dry...\nPolish... that's all! Clean and\nquick\u2014and a lasting shine.\nZEBRA\nSTOVE POUS\nIN BOTTLES\nPar thoee who prefer it. Zebra Paste ie ettti\nobtainable In both Past* and Liquid the\n.Zebra is the sign of a good t)tova polish.\n\\\n re.pm\n\u2022THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,  FJllDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1928\ning With Fire\nThe Story of a Social Climber\nBy LUCILLE VAN SLYKE\n'Concerning the Joys and sorrows\nROBAUX BLANCHARD, a pretty\nlittle country school ma'am who\nhaa many ambitions and\nCHARLES FERGUSON, her fiance,\nwhose only ambition  seems to be\nto marry her. and\nEUNICE FEROUSON, bis middle-\naged cousin, who is a teacher ln a\nfashionable boarding school for\ngirls.   A sudden attack  of  appen-\nGoodCbokiiig\nBetter\/ a\n*, \u25a0 *\nThtfeVthe concentrated goodness of\nprime, lean beef in 0X0. No wonder\nit gives soups and gravies such added\nflavour and enlivens casseroles and\nleft-overs so delightfully!  ((Try it\nfor that last professional touch that\nmakes good cooking better. And find,\nlike mothers all over the world, how\nhealthful and nourishing 0X0 is for\nlittle ones\u2014and grown-ups, too!\nIn tins of\n4 and 10\ncubes\nJltt Qoodness of Beef\ndlcltts makes it Impossible for her\nto return to the school so Rosalie\neagerly offer- to substitute for her\nuntil she recovers. Soon after Rosalia's arrival at Pendleton hall\nshe meets\nR. SUYVESANT CONVERSE, a\nbachelor cousin of Mrs. Stuyvesant\nPerry, who is entering her 11-year-\nold grand-daughter at Pendleton\nhall. Converse is a squire of dames\nbut generally speaking, rather elderly dames\u2014and he finds Rosalie-\nyouthful prettlness and pertness\ndecidedly  refreshing.\nShe goes to dance and have supper with him at a smart little\ncountry restaurant, known as the\nFoxes' Nest, though she 1b Quite\naware the school principal. Mrs.\nHartswell, would disapprove lf she\nknew about It. At the Foxes' Nest\nDick begins to make love ln a\nlight-hearted fashion. Fred Patterson, a number of the party. Invites\nRosalie outside to get a little\nfresh air and Is attempting to kiss\nher when Mrs. Fred Interrupts.\nRosalie has two portions of a very\nstiff punch in which she does not\nrealise there Is considerable intoxicating  liquor.\nCHAPTER  X.\nA .Wk of verses'and a Jag and tlioii\nThe chubby little man who had been\ndancing with the angular Mrs. War-\ndell chortled with glee at that lady's\nInsinuation that the charming little\nperson she was making fun of was em-\nbarked on her first Jag. He said so\nnoisily. Nobody bothered to present\nh\\m to Rosalie, but he helped himself\nto Dlok Converse's chair when that\nrather sulky bachelor arose in answer\nto Mrs. Warden's abrupt demand that\nhe dance with her at once.\nThe chubby man, who looked even\nchubbier than he was because cf the\nvoluminous plus fours that hung about\nhis gay golf stockings, was a new\narrival.\n*'Are you really woozy?\" he asked\nRosalie, \"I tio hope so. Nothing I Like\nbetter than a pretty peppy kid Just\nlittle   bit   woosy.     Tbey   giggle   so\nRADIOTELEPHONE\nML BE PUT TO\nUSE IN PROVINCE\nB. C. Telephone Company Has\n'   Plans Under Way to Serve\nOutlying  Districts\nSEPARATE COMPANY\nTO OPERATE PLANT\nnicely and they always\u2014'\nThe matter-of-fact-man came to her\nrescue.\n\"Oh shut up. Upham,\" he growled.\n\"Wardy makes me sick talking like\nthat. Miss Blanchard hasen't had a\nthing to drink and that punch wouldn't\nhurt a baby. Don't let 'em scare you.\"\nhe reassured Rosalie, who was looking\ndecidedly  frightened.\n\"But It did make me feel awfully-\nlightheaded\u2014and nice,\" she conrided\nnaively.\n\"You're feeling bucked up from that\nsteak. Jag\u2014nothing. You really are\nthe only sober person ln this tipsy\nbunch.\"\n\"And I did so hope she had a Jag,\"\nthe chubby man insisted on staying in\nthe picture. \"Because I have a nice\nlittle book of verses along with me,\nBook or verses and a jag and thou\u2014\nhe added chuckling. .He dragged a\nlittle hock from his pocket. Pasted\ninto It were scores of inane limericks,\nHe began reading one, \"There was a\nyoung man from peru\u2014\"\n\"Turn your back on him.\" the matter\nof-fact man groaned. \"If you don't\nhe will read you a thousand of those\nthings. Tell me,\" he asked hed, \"Were\nyou ever tn a Joint like this before?\"\nShe shook her head. She hadn't\nexactly turned her back on ttje chubby\nman but tixe was (-taring at the other\nman, suddenly aware that he was not\nat aU like the rest ol the men In the\nparty.\n\"I tMought,\" he mused. \"Well, what\ndo you  think of It?\"\n\"I think It's awfully noisy ind\nsmcky,\" she faltered. \"But thc music\nis fun to dance to and\u2014\"\n\"Wsnt to dance?\" he growled.\n\"Oh. no, I wasn't hinting, really.\nMy shoes are new and they hurt and\nits  so  crowded  out  there.\"\n\"Wise child. Where are y\u00bbu from?\nWhom are you visiting?\"\nHe evidently did not mean to be\nImpertinent for all that he put his\nquestions so abruptly, Indeed there\nwas a rlstlnctly friendly tone ln his\nnasal voice.\nShe hardly knew what to answer.\nIt would sound too silly to say \"I'm\nfrom a town called Emsvllle, and I'm\nnet visiting anybody, I'm working\nat  Pendleton Hall.\"\n\"Mr. Converse really told you the\ntruth,\" she managed to drag out something. \"I am Just a simple country\nmaiden,' only I'm not from a farm.\"\n\"I am,\" he said tersely. \"So don't\nknock farms.\"\n\"He's a nut about his.\" the chubby\nman told her. \"It's back ln the hills\nhere a couple of miles. He only comes\nup to the surface a couple of times\na year.\" He ruffled the pages of his\nbook, \"I got one here about a, larmcr,\"\nhe told them. , *\nThere was an oUI  farmer named Si.\nWho went tn a village lo buy\nHome feed   for  his chickens\u2014'*\nThis   time   the   matter-of-fact   man\nreached cut and grabbed  thc limerick\nbook and stowed it lu his own pocket,\n\"Mine le a fruit farm,\" he went on\ntalking as quietly as though there was\nno Jazz in this world. \"I  think you'd\nlike my young orchards\u2014Waller, bring\nus some black coffee,\" he added. \"I do\nbelieve you are a bit dizzy.\"  he said\n-olicltlously.\nShe was. and faint from the smoke\nand the- racket. Utterly daaed by the\nnoise and confusion but terribly conscious of the people about her. These\nwomen, who calmly ignored her, And\nthe men who either didn't look at her\nor  looked  at  her  too  much.\nThe matter *of -fact man was the\nonly one who treated her like a fellow\nhuman being and she didn't even know\nhis name. She said stammering a\nlittle\u2014\"Mr. Converse didn't say your\nname   very   clearly\u2014\"\nBefore   he   could' answer   her\nWardwell and Dick Converse had dance\nback to the table.\n\u25a0\u25a0Everyone is bored to tears with this\nhole,\" she announced loudly, \"Polly\nheard they were running a roulette\nwheel over at that new bathing club-\nwere going over there.\"\nThe whole table waa in confusion\nnow the men calling for their checks,\nthe women moving toward the cloak\nroom. Ttosalle was aware that Dick\nConverse   was   frowning   slightly.\n\"You're not going to take this kid\nthere, are you?\" she heard the\nmatter of fact man ask Converse.\n\"Well I bate to quit the crowd,\nconverse aald. \"Kinda feel I've got to\nrun of luck too-I-w*nt to go along\nMlsa Rosy l*e?\" . m_\nShe didn't and she said so, stammering and bluahlng like the Inexperienced\nyoungster   that  she   waa.\n-rd rather not.    It's late, I'm sure.\n'\"mTotng home from here- Hi take\nher wtth me.   You run along, wtth the\n\"^e^Uying   at   \u00bb\u00bb^\\\u2122!.\nrtld    \"Sure you don't mind, Rosy Lee?\n*&. md mind, horribly. She knew\nit^aa beastly rude of him to bring\n\u201eer\u2122t and hand her over to another\nwoman, bothered \u00bb B>~ snobbish\nllniswj forlornly wstting lor a saomw\nWill Enable Man in Woods to\nTalk to His Home Via\nRadio and Telephone\n, VANCOUVER. Nov. 8.\u2014Believing that\ntht only feasible way to give longdistance telephone service to many of\nthe ontlying Parts ..of .British Columbia\nIs by means of zadtottlephouy. George\nH. Halae, chairman of the board of\nthe B. C. Telephone Company, announces that plans are under way for\nthe formation of a asperate company\nto   enter   the   radiotelephone   field,\n\"Under if* charter the British Columbia Telephone company has no\nPower to go Into the radiotelephone\nbusiness,\" explained Mr. Hslse in a\nstatement.\nSEPARATE    COMPANY\n\"It has become obvious to the executives of the company, however,\nthSt the radiotelephone offers the\nonly practical method of giving service to many outlying points and con-\n; aequently we propose to form a separate\ncompany to carry out this work. The\nname of the new company will be the'\nProvincial Telephone company, and\na charter will be sought at the next\nsession of the provincial legislature.\nThe necessary advertisements to comply with the legal requirements are\nnow being published.\n\"During the past summer I visited\nthe weat coast of Vancouver Island\nfor the purpose of studying the question cf giving telephone service to the\nmany industries scattered along that\nlugged shore. Through un arrangement with the Dominion government\nit hss been passible to give telephone\nservice of a .sort to some of these\nplaces ever the governmnt telegraph\nlines, after telegraph hours, and we\nhave further plans for Improving this\nservice, but still it will not take care\nof a great number of points which\ncannot be reached by wire.\nCondi-Ions that prevail on the island\nexist also on the mainland coast, where\nwe find such points as Ocean Falls,\nPrince Rupert, Anyox, Stewart, etc,\nIncapable of being .reached by telephone\nwires from the south owing to the\nobstacles which make the coast prohibitive. Other examples ore the Queen\nCharlotte islands and the Peace River\ncountry.\nBOON  TO BARREN  AREAS\n\"The executivo of the B. C. Telephone\ncompany have been watching carefully\nthe development cf radiotelcphony, and\nwe believe that ln this branch of the\ncommunication art lies' the solution for\nour problem of serving such communities as I have mentioned.\n\"Our plan Is to operate radiotelephone service in ^iniwicUon with\nour present wired ASrvlce, |So that a\nparty in one part of the pro-vines may\nbe able to pick up tys telephone receiver, ask for a p^rty in another\npart of the province, and talk to him\nby a combination wired telephone and\nradiotelephone circuit, as is now being\ndone across the Atlantic ocean.\n\"This would mean that men in isolated logging camps, for Instance.\nwould be able to \"ring up\" Vancouver\nbusiness men in their own offices and\nhold conversations with them Just\naa If the calling parties were right\nin the same city. .It is net difficult\nto imagine what a boon such a\nservice would be. Another development\nwould be the giving of the same service to coasting vcssles plying iu British   Columbia   watrs.\n\"These are our plans. There are\nmany problems to be solved before we\nattain success, but we feel that there\nare no people in a better position to\ndevelop a communication Bervlcc for\nthe outlying districts than the men\nwho arc at present supplying most\nof the telephone service in British\nColumbia. Our project will be carried forward with the cooperation of\nboth' tho provinctpl and federal authorities.\nGeorge Rahal and His\nPassengers Escape When\nCar Over Bank, Fernie\nFERNIE, B.C.. Nov. 8.\u2014Although the\ncar was badly smashed when It went\nover the bank Wednesday night when\nhe was returning from Michel with a\nparty of friends. Oeorge Rahal and his\npAasenters escaped without .serious\nInjury.\nEGAN-HEARING\nCHARGE CUTTING\nBRIDGE STARTS\nSeven Witnesses Testify; Several Saw Him Cutting\nthe Stringers\nCold-day Breakfasts\n[Can be Simple\nSHREDD\nNo extra werk for hot breakfasts\u2014W\nbiscuits ta taw ovoa and servo with\nmilfc-. Wan-tfc! Energy! Protectta-!\nForwholewfcsottawole-to-M  lu HUSCUU\nUhU by Tka Ceo_4i_m 8kt\u00abUm. Wk-ut Co\u00bb lUd.\n\u2022I\nPreliminary hearing of Michael Egan\non a charge of destroying a bridge on\nthe Silver King cutoff of Bird's Eye\ntrail near the Silver King mine on\nToad mountain, opened yesterday before Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel. Seven prosecution witnesses were\nheard, and additional witnesses are to\nbe called today. Staff-Sergeant E.\nGammon Is prosecuting, and E. C.\nWragge of Hamilton, Wragge & Hamilton  is  defending.\nJohn i polovnekotf Jr., and John\nPolonekoff Br-, of Rossland testified\nthey saw Egan cutting the stringers\nof the bridge on October 10. Other\nwitnesses, including Andrew Nelson of\nFrultvale, and Oust Enqulst and Oscar\nEnquist of Nelson testified to the\nstringers being finally cut on October 38.\nWilliam Ramsay, district government\nengineer, was called to establish the\nownership of the bridge. He produced\na letter stating that money had been\nallotted for construction of the. bridge,\nbut he could not state definitely\nwhether it had been used, as the bridge\nwas  built  befory - he   came   to  Nelson.\nR. H. Hassard. provincial police constable, testified that he saw the bridge\nwhen the first stringers were eut, and\n\u2022aw it again when the cutting had\nbetn completed.\ntt Is alleged that Egan cut the\nbridge to prevent loggers working the\nvicinity using It.\nPROCTER NOTES\nPROCTER, B.C., Nov. 8.\u2014Mrs. Percy\nBennett of Procter spent Monday ln\nNelson.\nC. Blossett was a visitor Monday ln\nNelson.\nRev. C. Harvey was ln Nelson Monday.\nAt an. afternoon tea at the home of\nMiss J. MacLean on Wednesday afternoon the invited guests were Mrs. A.\nMncKlunon. Mrs. 0. H. Schulze. Mrs.\nJ. I1Ic.i_.ij. Mrs. O. Kinney, Mrs. A.\nRitchie and   Rev.  C.   Harvey.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Major and son, Colin,\nmotored  to Nelson  Wednesday.\nMrs. H. bchulz.p ond daughter, Esther,\nmotored tn Nelson Tuesday.\nW. I, Afihley of Nelson is In  Procter.\nH. Anderson of Plncher Creek Is visiting in Procter.\n\u2022    M.  Adams of Elescora, Alta.. Is visiting at  Procter.\nN. Imbter and Everett Brasch motor-\ned io Procter from Nelson Thursday,\nH. ti Hchuk'e and John Bonnacci\nhave left t_n a hunting trip to Dutch\nHarbor.\nMrs. George Robinson was a Nelson  visitor  yesterday.\nMrs. h- MacXinnon spent yesterday\nin   Nelson.\nt-\n. ..ouaands of radio owners all over Canada\nhave taken the guess and uncertainty out\nof \"B\" Battery power by standardizing on\nEveready Layerbilt \"B\" Batteries.\nThree sizes now available\u2014the large 45-\nvolt size for all loud speaker sets; the\nmedium size (45 volts) for low drain lets,\nand the 22Vj-volt Layerbilt for long service\nwherever a battery of this size is required.\nYour nearest radio dealer can supply\nEveready Layerbilt \"B\" Batteries in the\n\u2022iie you need; also, Eveready \"A\" and\n\"C\" batteries.\nCanadian National Carbon Co., Limited\nCsImst TnanuTr, MossSt\u2014I\nVasstossw TORONTO Wssssslfu\nOwning Eveready Balltry Station CKNC,Toronto\nr:o\u00ab\nBsVTTEKir\nMJSMSMM1S0NM.CMMS.Ca\n! . WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.\nMatthew Brown,\nPioneer, Dies\nHospital Here\nMatthew Brown, old-timer of the\nWest Kootenay and Boundary districts, died at the Kootenay Lake General hospital Wednesday morning aft-\nr>r an illness of a few days. Mr.\nBrown was found seriously 111 at the\nearly part of the week In his lonely\ncabin on the waterfront by Dr. O. W.\nRose, who had him removed Immediately to the hospital,\nMr.   Brown,   who   waa born   in   New\nBrunskick   ln   1858,   followed   the   example of many of his fellow eastellers,\n. coming  out west  In  the &0s.    He re-\nMrs, j sided   in   or   around   Nelson   for   the\nlast 30  years.\nMrs. William Madill of Gladstone.\nMan. Is dead, being GIsdatone's oldest\nwomen pioneer. Bhe was 76 years of\nage and was born In 1832. coming to\nGladstone in June, 1872.\nmaid to unearth her shabby old top\ncoat. A miserable livtle figure moved\ntoward the portico on the aide where\nthe cars were whirling ln to collect\nthe noisy party. Some of the cars\nwere driven by uniformed chauffeurs.\nSome of them the owners sat tbe thc\nwheels, Dick Converse seemed to have\ncompletely forgotten her existence. He\nwaa singing. The fancy Wardwell woman\nwas at his side and she waved her\nhand  at  Rosalie.\n\"Sweet dreams.\" Her taunting voice\nfloated   back.\nHer new escort's car was the next tn\nline. Not a swanky car like Dick's\nbut a comfortable looking affair for all\nthat. He stepped out, helped her in,\nand turned the car into the main highway.\nNeither of them fpoke during tbe\nhalf   hour's   drive   to   Pendleton   Hall.\nShe felt shamed and humllltated.\nAnd she hadn't a remote Idea that\nthe man at her side waa furiously\nangry\u2014not at her, but at her scatter\nbrain  escort.\n\"Don't drive ln the gate,\" she stammered.   \"They   didn't   know   X\u2014would\nbe out so late\u2014\"\nTomorrow\u2014Gratuitous Advice.\nLEST WE\nFORGET\nA Public Service in Commemoration of Armistice will be held in\nCapitol Theatre\nSunday, November 11th\nat 3:30 P. M.\nAuspices Nelson Branch\nCanadian Legion.\nEverybody Welcome.\nNo Collection.\n,.^~-'-      \u00ab.--#-\u201e7F     if*    #tni   \u25a0-\u2022'\n_\n _\ntbtV\n-HE NEESON' DAILY 'NEWS, FRTDXY MORNING, NOVEMBERX1528\nish School Athletes\nWillMeetinU.S.A.Next\nMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 8\u2014Track\nfield athletes of Oxford aad Cam-\ne universities will visit tlie United\nI next summer to compete against\ncombined forces of Yale and Har-\nt 1029 meeting will be held at\nird stadium.\naard    Montgomery    *oi\npostmaster   at   the\n:tock.  Ont.,  Is  dead.\nover\nvillage\nNEW\nBrumwick\nECORDS\n)n Sale To-day\n3707\n1'SHIMME-SHA-WABBLE\"\n\"Tha Naw Twister\"\nFox Trots bv -*\n|TR- ORIGINAL  WOLVERINES\n4002\n\"BLUE GRASS\"\n\"Lonely Little Bluebird\"\nbx Trot, by VINCENT LOPEZ sssd\n_S CASA LOPEZ ORCHESTRA\n4040\n\"ANYTHING YOU SAY\"\n\"Mississippi Mud\"\nal  Duet with   Guitar   assd   Violia\nCOTTON sssd  MORPHEUS\n404S\nf'MfMORIES OF FRANCE\"\n\"Out  of  ths  Dawn\"\n'    T.ssor Solos\nHENRY  BURR,  with  Orchestra\nSPORTS\n.Jtamssmi\nr::!\"\"\"-!!P*\nI\nJ\nBLACKBURN HAS\nCHANCE REGAIN\nITS LEADERSHIP\nAre  at   Home   to   Bury,   the\nBottom Team, Saturday;\nDerby Meets Leicester\nfor they meet Falkirk, who do not\nseem to be going anywhere in particular\nJust now.\nPitchers Have\nTrouble Making .\nGood Managers\nBOSTON BRUINS\nHAVE FASTEST\nLEAGUE TEAM?\nSo\nLaONDON, Nov. 8\u2014Blackburn Rovers\ncup holders and dispossessed of the\nleadership ln the averages of the first\ndivision of the English football league\nlast week, will have a chance to get\nback again next Saturday. They are\nat home to Bury, the bottom team in\nthe table, while Derby County, on\ntop just now, meet Leicester City,\nwho are contenders for leadership.\nLeeds United also near the top have\nii harder task than the cup holders,\nbecause they must travel to Bolton.\nSheffield United, whose win over\nBlackburn last Saturday caused their\ndemotion, will have a chance to show\nwhether their improved form means\nanything. They meet Arsenal ln London.\nNotts County and Hull City, leaders\nin the second division, both will be\ntourists on Saturday and both have\ntough opponents. Notts County travel\nto Clapton Orient where a warm welcome awaits them. Hull City play\nBradford and- this 6hculd be the feature game of the division. Chelsea\nire at home to Preston Northend and\na capacity house will doubtless watch\ntham   perform.\nHearts vs. Motherwell is the headliner ln the Scottish first division though\nhardly less attractive will be the\nmeeting of Aberdeen and Celtic. Rangers,   league   leaders,   have   a   soft  spot\n2' Good  Selections on\nEvery BRUNSWICK Record\nRELEASE    EVERY   THURSDAY\nLet your Brunswick Dealer\ndonionstrste the new\nUNSWICK LKMIT-SOOKET RADIO\nbuilt to tbe high MUSICAL\nstandards of the PANATROPE\nTOR SALE BY\n[otenay Music House\nThey Display\nQood Taste\nSelect; any Piece of material we\nhave and you can't go wrong in\nordering a tailor-made Suit from\nThere is character and quality in every piece cf cloth we\nshow you. Your personal choice\nsimply indicates your individual\ntaste Let us take your measure\nand make a Suit from the pattern you select. You will be\nmore   than  pleased.\nL S.JONES\nHIGH   CLASS   TAILOR\nRimpson  Block Nelson. R.C-\nr*_\"__!_.!____!_____  '   \"\" \u25a0-\u2022*'* \u25a0\"-\nk^*\u00a3*^\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab*S^*\u00a3'*\u00ab\u00ab^*6*^\u00ab-\u00ab\u00ab^-\u00a3^\u20ac-\u00abS-C-\u00abS-!\n^rnieFChrisbniis\nCANADIAN-PACIFIC STEAMSHIPS i\nSAILINGS\nFROM MONTREAL-QUEBEC\nMINNEDOSA\nNOV. 28\nto Glasgow, Belfast, Liverpool\nFilOM SAINT JOHN\nMETAGAMA   \u2014\u2014 DEC. 7\nto Cherbourg, Southampton, Antwerp\nMONTCLARE    DEC. 7\nto Glasgow, Belfast,  Liverpool\nMELITA   DEC 14\nto St. Heller, Channel Islands, Cherbourg,\nSouthampton, Antwerp\nDUCHESS OF ATHOLL DEC. 12\nto Glasgow, Liverpool\nMONTROYAL   DEC. 21\nto Glasgow, Liverpool\nCABIN-TOURIST III.-THIRD CLASS\nLOW  Bound Trip Bates:    Tourist ui. and Third Class.\nBerth BosertmUons can now be made.    Details and  Literature\nfrom any Agent or Writ*\nJ. S. CARTER, DISTRICT PASSENGER AGENT\nNELSON, B.C.\n|\u00bbj\u00bb>^\u00bbJ'1\u00bbj-52i*3Sj>\u00bbJ>_*j^\u00bbj>_^\u00bbj^^\u00bb^\nThinks   Art   Ross,   Their\nManager; All Old Team\nBack in Line\nFAST SUBSTITUTES\nBUILD UP LINEUP\nManager Will Have Time Thinning Out Team; Practicing\nin  Providence\n\/\/A\"^-~\nNelson Curlers\nAre Getting Ready\nfor New Season\nNelson curlers are beginning to\npolish up their rocks and flex, their\nthrowing anna In preparation for another curling season. Officials of the\nNelson Curling club are already securing lists of itendlng players, and a general meeting of the club is is the offing, although It probably will be more\nthan a month and a half before the\nseason opens.\nAs successful as the season was last\nyear, it Is hoped by members of the\nclub to make this year an even greater\nsuccess. Plans are being discussed for\ntournaments and matches to allow\nthe maximum of competition.\ntheir way around the difficult golwood\ncourse hers today and ended an 18-\nhole exhibition match with Johnny\nrvr-i. United States tltlehotder and\nbou Bum   flfit ranking Baattla ama\nteur, all square. The match was played\nIn a steady downpour of rain. Hsfen'\nand Parrell toured the layout tn 1Ssv\nthree above par, while Llnehsm had a\n78 and Stein an 80.\nLetters of Credit\nBY  AL   IH'M Vltl.i:\n(Former  IMtclier  Iff*  York  Giants)\nWhen Walter Johnson makes his bow\nto the fans as manager of the Washington Senators next year he will start\nbucking one of the most potent jinxes\nof the game.\nIt is the history of modern baseball\nthat this persistent jinx has stalked\nthe steps of all former pitchers who\nsought managerial aucctss and glory\nln the big leagues.\nYou can almost count on thc lingers\nof one hand and certainly on both,\nthe names of former pitchers who became managers. The only ones I can\nremember are \"Wild Bill' Donovan,\nChristy Mathewson. Jack Coomb-;,\n\"Hank\" O'Day. Jimmy Cnllahau and\nClark Griffith. And none of i,v*n were\nsuccessful or saw long service with the\npossible exception of Callahan and\nGriffith.\nCatchers seem to have the best\nchance of becoming successful managers, with inflekiers. outfielders and\npitchers following In the order mimed.\nHowever, there is always the exception that proves the rule and if\ngood character, knowledge of the game,\nrespect of both players .and fans and\nthat ancient Jinx, \"old Barney\" Is the\nother sterling qualities can overcome\npitcher-manager to do It.\nLike Bill Bernhardt. Red Ames and\nOeorge Wlltse, Johnson left the teague\nwithout an enemy and Is returning to\nit with alt the players and fans pulling\nfor his success.\nBOSTON, Nov. 8.\u2014The Boston\nllrulns have the best looking hockey squad Ln the National Hockey\nleague, according to Manager Art\nRoss, who has storied his fifth\nyear tn charge of the team. Dave.\nGUI of Ottawa Is the only manager\nIn the leogue who lias iieen located\nIn the same city and with the\nsame rlnb for a longer period tlutn\nRoss.\nThe Brufiu have a  naruleus of\nveterans   from    last    year's   team\nwhich won the Prince of Wiife* cup\nand  the  American  division championship,  only   to  lose  out  in  its\nright with the New  York Kan*er\u00bb\nto enter the play  for the Stanley\ncup and the world's Htl.r\nJDEFKN-CE  HTRONCl\nThe Ross team's defence with  Eddie\nShore,   Captain   Pred    Hltchman    and\nGoalie Hal.  Winkler,   looms about the\nstrongest in the league.    Winkler  had\nmqre shutouts than any ether net man\nIn   the  circuit   last   season,- and   Row,\nto protect the team more fully in the\ncage,   purchased    Cecil   Thompson   of\nMinneapolis,   the   best   goalie   In   the\nAmerican   association   last   season,    to\nact  as  Winkler's  undeistudy.\nThe team's defence spares, bit Clapper and Lloyd Klein, appear top grade,\nClapper  Is  a  20-year  old   youth.\nRLRVBN  FORWARDS\nThough Ross haa but a few more\ndays to develop a scoring punch before the Bruins open the season with\nPittsburgh, he has a wide selection of\n11 forwards to build his first line.\nThe team has been practicing on a\nProvidence rink because the Bruins'\nnew home, the Boston Madison Square\nGarden, has not been completed. During most of the sessions, Ross seemed\nto favor his last year's first string.\nPercy Galbralth, left wing; Prank\nPredrickfion, center, and Harry Oliver,\nright wing.\nThese reliables were expected to\nstart the season as the regular forwards.\nThe combination of Erik Pettlnger.\nNorman Gainer and \"Red\" Oreen |\nworked well and the spores, Cooney j\nWelland. and a small but fast center.\nBd Roddeu, Pred Gordon and Mar-tin\nLauder, have been flashing eo impressively that Ross has been pretty\nmuch in the air about their status on\nthe team.\nJudge Fuchs to\nDirect Boston's\nTeam on Grounds\nAN Imperial Bank Letter ei\n. Credit in foreign countries\nii convenient and time-tevinj when\ntravelling. It eliminate* the riik ot\ncarrying large iumi of money about\nyour person.\nNo matter what currency you t\u00bb\nquire\u2014franca, marks, lira or kronen\n\u2014an Imperial Bank Letter of Credit\nmakes it as easy as banking at hone, aa\nIMPERIAL BANK\nOr CANADA\nNELSON BRANCH. \u25a0\nCRANBROOK BRANCH.\nCRESTON BR\u00ab NTH.\n __:\nJ. H. D. BENSON, Usasdst\nW. R. CRUBBE, M-Mf-r\nC. W. ALLEN. ti**sslm     TOf\nBOSTON, Mov. 8\u2014Judge Bmll E,\nFuchs, who waa a New York City\nmagistrate before he became president\nof the Boston Braves, has returned\nto the bench\u2014In the National league.\nAfter selling Rogers Hornsby. his\nlast season's manager, and thc leading\nbatsman ln the National league to the\nChicago Cube for five young ball players and some cash, the Judge, who received his early baseball training on\nNew York sand lots, was prevailed\nupon by his associates to emulate 5ohn\nMcGraw of the New York Giants and\nbecome managing director.\n: Judge Puoh's statement that he intended to run the Braves ball club on\nan off the field, was received with\namnzemcut.\nAfter announcing that he had engaged Johnny EVers, * \\yl)0 helped to\nbring a world championship to Bostcn\nin 1614, when he was captain of the\nBraves, as his chief assistant. Judge\nFuchs expressed the hope that Ever*\nwould Inspire the team with his aggressive   and   hustling   spirit.\nCanadian Badminton\nChampionships  Will\nBe Played at Coast\nTORONTO, Nov. 8.\u2014Officials cf the\nNational Badminton association announced today that the championship\nmatches would be held tn Vancouver\nFebruary  28,   March   1   and  2.\nNo Allotment Is\nMade of Floors\nfor Basketball\nTeams Have Not Practiced Yet;\nFirst Game Scheduled\nfor Monday\nMERCHANTS BEAT\nELKS TO WIN A\nBOWLING SUPPER\nTake   Second   Match   by   238\nPins;   Series  by   356;\nScores Are High\nWood Butchers\nBeat Diakonias\nHoopers, Trail\nCardinals Beat Central School;\nthe Indians Lose Out\nto Boat Club\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 8\u2014Taking a firm\nlead early tn the first period, the\nWood Butchers came out on the long\nend of a 38-2 score when they tangled\nwith the Dlakonlas in the second round\nof the basketball schedule at the Memorial hall Wednesday night. The ladles'\ngame, between the Central school and\nthe Cardinals was of a more even\nnature. The latter team winning by\n10 to H. The Arrow Boat club won\ntheir first game of the season by defeating the Indiana 44 to 36. This\nwas probably the most flashy contest\nof the evening. The second inter*\nmediate game, between the K. of C.\nand the Pirates, ended ln a 24-10 vlc-\nadvertisement is not published or displayed  by the\nkUOR      YX#0L BOARD or the Government of B, C,\nNelson basketballers are beginning to\nbecome wonfed over the non-allotment\nby the school board of the school\nauditoriums for practice. With the\nfirst game of the senior B men's division of the Nelson Basketball assoe-\nclatlon set tot Monday, between the\nWolves and OW-Timers, neither, team\nhas yet  had  a practice  this year.\nIt was decided at a meeting of\nthe school board some time ago that\npreference should be given to the school\nteams in allotting the floors, and\nsince then the older teams apparently\nhave received no word from the school\nboard.\nAfter hoping for an early start this\nyear, It Is expected now that the\ngame for Monday will have to be postponed, for neither team is in favor\nof playing without first having at\nleast  one practice.\nRolling up a score of 3476, Merchants\ndefeated the Elks by a margin of 338\npins ln the second and final match\nto take the series by a margin of\n366 pins, and to win a supper when t\u00b0ry for the Pirates\nthey battled on Oelinas' alleys last\nnight. The Merchants took the first\nmatch of the series Monday by a margin of 118 pins.\nThe Elks' score of 3238 last night\nwas eight pins better than they score\nln the first match, but the Merchants\nImproved greatly to roll up 128 more\nthan on Monday night.\nIIIOll  BINOU\nWith 234 In the fourth game, J. B.\nGray of the Merchants copped the high\nscoring honors for a single game. R.\nBrown of the same team carried off\nthe high aggregate of 758. Gray waa\nsecond ln the aggregate with 788.\nGray's single was seven pins more than\nthe high single set in the first match\nby J. Bell of the Merchants. Brown's\naggregate was 24 pins short of Bell's\nhigh aggregate of 782 on Monday.\nThe two-match tourney was for a\nsupper which the Elks must now pay\nfor. It was the opening play of the\nseason on Oelinas' alleys.\nCREIGHT0N REFUSES\nTURN PROFESSIONAL\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 8.\u2014Reports that\nJimmy Crelghton, start center forward\nof the Brandon hockey club, had\nsigned a contract to play with the\nKansas City Plamora of the American\nHockey association are premature. Jimmy today said the terms offered by\nthe Kansas City club were unsatisfactory and that he would probably play\nwith Port Arthur in the senior amateur\nleague this Beason.\nA Winnipeg player of two seasons ago.\nBarney Stanley, has been signed by the\nMinneapolis Millers, of the American\nHockey association, He will play defence. Last year he was with the\nChicago club of the N.H.L.\nMilks and Darragh\nCome to Terms But\nWorters Has Quit\nPITTSBURGH. Pa.. Nov. 8.\u2014Hlb. Milks\nand Harold Darragh. stars of the Pittsburgh team, came to terms wtth the\nmo nntteme.it    tonight.\nRoy Worters. sensational goalie, now\nthe lone holdout of thc club, failed\nto adjust his salary differences with\nthe hookey officials and said he would\nleave tomorrow for his home In Toronto. Club officials said Joe Miller or Vernon Forbes would be here\nln a day or so to take _0s place.\nSCORCH\nTht scores  '\nwere:\nMerchants\u2014\n1st.\n2d.\n3\n4th.   t.\nH. 8. Watson....\n158\n144\n151\n189    662\nJ.   Bell\na io\n153\n1W\n193   730\nR.  Brown\n314\n183\n165\n193    755\nJ. 8. Ooul-lns\n138\n175\n148\n153    611\nJ. B. Qray  \t\n148\n230\n136\n334    738\nTotals\n888\n874\n766\n070 3471\nElks\u2014\nN. Cassios \t\n147\n131\n156\n180   683\nR.  H.  Maber\n141\n177\n16-\n194   676\nO.   Dill   \t\n188\n147\n136\n191    853\nA.    Choquette\n. 140\n134\n163\n180    597\nJ.   Allen\n176\n181\n110\n181    638\nTotals\n793\n810\n731\n916 3338\nJ. Barnes starred for the Wood\nButchefs.\nThe teams were:\nDiakonias\u2014Harris. Minton, Robb,\nNotlle, Gibson, Harrod, Stanley, and\nCslder..\nWood     Butchers \u2014 Green,     Perkins.\nBarnes.   Lauriente.   Robb,   Condy,   Wil- \u25a0\nHams and Webb.    A. Bailie refereed.\nln the ladles' game, Bella Van Horn\nwas outstanding for the Central school\nand -M.  Matthews for the Cardinals,\nThe teams were:\n\u25a0Central school\u2014B. Van Horn. M.\nOwens, R, Peeney, L. Kalre, E. Sam-\nmens, L. Yunskl  and  M.  Drapawa.\nCardinals\u2014I. Leckle, M, Matthews,\nS. Landuccl, R. Balfour. M. Marttnelll,\nand J. Brown, 8. J. McDonald and A.\nBailie  refereed.\nThe Indiana and A. B. C.'a set out\nto win the moment they took the\nfloor. Westwood for the Indians and\nCurtis for the A. B. C. set a pace which\nwas closely followed by the other boys,\nH. C- Wright and 8. J. McDonald refereed.\nThe teams were:\nIndians\u2014Carter, Westwood. Hargraves\nPiper and Woodford.\nA. B. C'b\u2014Anderson. Hartley, Curtis,\nHastings,    McTeer    and    Shaw.\nTeams in the second intermediate\ngame were:\nK, of C\u2014Tier, MeOee, Basso, Klrwln,\nSherry,  Grlffen  and  Trie.\nPirates \u2014 Bradbury, Sommens, W.\nEvans,  Grlplch  and  Murdock.\nLarochelle of the\nCanadiens Loaned\nto Pittshurghers\nMONTREAL, Nov. 8.~W!ldore I*ro-\nchelle, sub right winger wtth Canadlens\nduring the past two National Hockey\nleague campaigns, has been loaned to\nthe Pittaburgh Pirates for this season\naccording to announcement made here\ntoday.\nFarrell and Hagen\nPlay Golf in Rain\non Victoria Course\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8.\u2014Walter Hagen,\nBrftlsh open golf champion, and Harold\nUneham,    Victoria    amateur    stroked\nD0RATY SIGNS WITH\nT0R0NT0JPR0 TEAM\nTORONTO, Nov. 8.\u2014Ken. poraty,\nformerly of Regina, and repute*} to he\none of the fastest skaters in minor\nprofessional league hookey, cams to\nterms today wtth the management of\nthe Toronto Millionaires of the Canadian professional league. He played\nfor Kitchener last year.\nHarvey L. Smith, South Ber.d. Ind,\nprivate detective in oonnecVon with\nthe murder of Mrs. Genevieve Stulte,\nMlahawaka, Ind.. beauty shop operator, was arrested ln Atlanta, Q.    Mrs.\nfltults   disappeared   March   M,\nYou can improve your\nplay by\nBowling\nAT GELINAS'\nEverything modem and\nstrictly up-to-date in the\nway of equipment will enable you to play a better\ngame.\nGELINAC\ntq\u00bbacconi\u00abt\u00bb   IjJJ\nTins is se \/<ju.|Ij sWaMi \"MSSS\nj\/sttnu**tseitffLi sms\\C\n(li&mcU D.'Muo\/rfcs Vawofis'\npf s\"<\u2014. is At sssspssr\" -'\n.... \u2022\niuf_Sii',fS Of BnMia\nl'i!..n'\u00abi\n(\"7** HERE were two children,\n,_) healthy and strong, who\nwere climbing the ladder\ncf learning\u2014 learning that life\nholds forth a promise to faithful\n.-dents, rewarding them vWth\n\u25a0 nportunitiesandsotnetimesfame.\nNow these two children dreamed\ndreams and made wishes as they\naw the end of schooldays and\nlooked  into  the   years  ahead.\nTheir country was prosperous,\nbecause the products of the land\nand factory were the first choice.\nof all the people. All the land and\nits   industries   prospered   and\nabounded with opportunities for\nthe children of the people. Each\nchild began the battle of life with\nthe occupation cf his choice, and\nfew there were who failed   n\n\u00bblter years.\nThere's a moral to\nthis story\nThe children of today are the\nnation of tomorrow. Every dollar:\nyou spend for a B.C. Product\nhelps certify the ndustrial progress and prosperity of British\nColumbia. Your dollar spent for\nB.C. Products helps provide opportunities, and careers for your\nchildren in the industries, ot\nBritish Columbia. After all, tis-t\nis where \"life\" begins.\n-\nBE PR01DT0 BIY^J PRODUCTS\nV\nBURNETTS\n_\u00a9NNE)\u00aeKl [DOT.7 ff I N\n13-01., $1.90; 26.6-ox., $3.50\nESTABLISHED 1770\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B. C.\n ^^\u25a0^^^^\u25a0\u25a0^^H\nPsge Rgfil\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY1 MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1928\nEMPLOYMENT IN\nGREAT BRITAIN\nMAY BE AIDED\nChurchill   in   House   Outlines\nMeasures to Aid Those\nOut of Work\nEMPIRE SETTLEMENT\nIs-TOKE OF PLANKS\nWould Train Miners for Work\nin Canada; Extend Export Credits\nCDITIT   -Nn   UCrCTARt EC' \u00bb>\u2022 fanc\u00bb- W'.\u00ab0i C. Orade, lift\nraUII    AIW   VCULIABIX-     Montreal-Brltls- Columbia, box Mc-\n\u00ab,\u00a5>KW??I'\u00bb'\",V' 8-8,lt \u00ab*\u2022\u00ab>*\u2022* by\nWUIch the British government wiu en-\noeavor to reduce us.eihployment In\n\u25a0rttaln were outlined In the housse or\noommons tsjnlght by Rt. Hon. Winston\nChurchill, chancellor o. the exchequer,\nThe measures were outlined by Mr!\nChurchill In replying to a I_bor party\nme'utlon. put forward by Rt. Hon.\nJ R. Clynes. Labor, censuring the\ngovernment on Its haridllng of the problem of unemployment. The amendment\nl-esjretted that the country was \"bur-\nsJewd with unemployment in the most\n\u2022cute form\" and declared ln many\nmining areas appalling conditions pre-\nTsUled.\nPROPOSALS\nThe government's proposals for relieving the unemployment situation are:\n1. Rating relief or removal of the\nlocal tans on agricultural and Industrial and transportation problems.\n3. Empire settlement of men from\nthe Industrial districts, who receive\nagriculture training under the government. \"Under this plan 9O.000 miners\na year will *5e given agricultural training  for settlement In  the dominions.\"\n3. \"Safe guarding\" of Industries by\ntarllf   protection   In   special   cases.\n4. Extension of the scheme of expert   credits.\n6. The operation of the electricity\nschrm,'. and.\n6. Special measures for absorption\nof the surplus miners Into industries.\nHII'I HI. RATES\nRegarding the second propose], empire settlement, the chancellor declared tt was hoped arrangements would\nlie shortly concluded with the shipping\ncomranys In the North Atlantic service\nwhereby they would be able to quote\nlargely reduced third class rates to\nCanada   for   British   immigrants.\nMoreover the government was glad\nto hear from the Canadian government\nthat the Canadian Immigration department syould for the purpose of\ntheir regulation, regard persona paying this reduced fare as If they svere\nfull fare passengers. This was an important  step.\nMr. Clynes ln moving his resolution\n\u00absf censur. complained the program for\nthe session cont-tned nothing to lessen the despair ot hundreds of thousands of people He suggested the\n. dole should be Increased and turned\nInto a wage tor acfusl work, and\nuiyecl upon the government aa one\nsolution, to reconsider opening trade\nrelations with Russia.\n. Mr Clynes said It was estimated\nthist at least M.OOO.OOO weekly was\nreceived by those persons who were\nforced to be idle in order to keep\nthem sllve.\nIn opening his reply. Mr. Churchill\ngald. \"The price of 1926 must be paid.\"\nIn referring to the general strike and\nCoal strike of that year he declared\nresumption of trade relations with\nRussia would not make the slightest\ndifference to the problem of unemployment. The industrial history or\n-   -  -\u2014-  \u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u2014   \u201e.\\\u201eih   he   ssimmed\nVANCX)OV_R. Hov. \u00bb.\u2014Vancouver-\nBritish Cchsmbla apples, Mcintosh, fey,\n33 to 13.10: C. \u00bb1.65; hotisehold, \u00ab1.35;\nJonathan, fancy, 91.70 to 11.75; household, 81.26 to 11.30: Newton, fancy.\n\u00ab.2_5; Delicious, fancy, 82.40 to 13.80;\nWinter Banana, C. 91.70 to 91.75; house\nhold. 91.50; various, fancy. 91.05 lo\n91.70: household. 91 to 91.10; peers,\nD'AnJou, fancy, 93.75 to 93; C, 93.35;\nBosc, fancy. 93.65 to 93.75; various,\nfancy, 91.75; household, 91 to 91.25;\npeppers, green, pound, 8c; red, 7o to\nB0; eggplant, pound. Be; tomatoes,\nfour-basket crate, hothouse, No. 1,\n93.50; Field, staked, No. l, 91.75 to\n93.50; No. 2. 91.36 to 91.50; hothouse\ncucumbers, dozen, 93.40 to 93.76; onions\nOkanagan, s-ack, standard. 93.60 to 94:\nlocal, standard, 93 to 99.40; pickling\nsilver skin, pound. 6c: potatoes, sack,\nB grade, local, white, 91; Oems, 91.10;\ndry belt Gems, 91.56 to 91.70; parsnips,\nsack. 91.75 to 93; beets. 91.10 to 91.35;\ncarrots, 91: turnips. 9165 to 91.00;\nlocal celery, dozen, 78c to 11.16: cabbage, pound, I%c to 374c; Savoy cob-\nbsge, dozen, 70c: lettuce, 4-5 dozen\ncrate, -91.40 to 9176; citron, pound,\n27,c; pumpkin and squash, pound,\n27_c: sprouts, pound, 13c; cauliflower,\ndozen. 9150 to 9176.\nCalgary\u2014British Columbia apples,\nbox, Delicious, extra fancy, 93.90 to 93;\nfancy. 93.45 to 93 50: C. 92.10; Mcintosh, fancy. 91.85 to 9336; C. 91.60;\nhousehold, 9125; Wealthy, C, 9150 to\n91.60; Winter Banana, fancy, 92.05 to\n93.10: C, 9185; househacld, 9136 to\n91.40; Jonathan. 91.40 to 91.50; bulk,\npound,  37,c  to  27.C:   Ts-agener,  fancy.\nIntosh, extra, 113.60 to 99.75; faney.\nextra. 9360; fancy. 43 to 9336; Wealthy\n92.75 to 93.35; C 93 to 93.36; Jonathan.\nRESIGNS CAPTAINCY\nINVERMERE GUIDES\nSENATOR STARS ON\nINJURED LIST\nMiwi  Bodecker   Succeeded   by\nMiss Mar pies; Province\nSecretary Talks\nJNVERMBaE, B.C., Nov. 8.\u2014The annual meriting cf the local company\nof girl guide- took place thla week at\nthe VrWr.uia' memorial hall. Mlsa\nWilliams, the provincial secretary, from\nheadquarters at Victoria, sddreased\nthose present.\nMiss Dora K. Bodecker, who has been\nthc captain of the guides for the past\nfive years, aud who wm practically the\norganizer when thc good work first\ncommenced, staged that circumstances\nhad arisen wh.ch compelled her to\nresign from active work in the organization. In surrendering her certificate\nshe ealrt that tine did so with great\nregret.\nFollowing the presentation of the\nreport* came the distribution of prizes\nand badges. Oa behalf of the company. Elizabeth Walker was presented\nwith a handsome book on the fauna\nof British Columbia. She prepared\nan exce__ent exhibit for the lieutenant'\n\u00bb2;   C,  11.80;   household,   11.40;   Kings.. Mvmior.f commnition\nhousehold. M.40. Grimes Golden, fancy, | T^   nZ   ^    '\n$1.90; C, $1.66: household. 11.35 to\n91.40; pears, box, Anjou. 13.28 to 18.50;\nC, \u00bb2.75 to *3; crabs, box, Hyslop, fancy.\n11.26 to 81.50; potatoes, cwt., B. 81.90\nto $2; onions, yellow, standard, pound.\n4c tp 4V_c; celery, pound, 5'^c to 6c.\nEdmonton\u2014British Columbia apples,\nMcintosh, fancy. $2.15 to 82.25; C, 81-75\nOther prizes In this local contest\nwere given by Miss Bodecker to Miss\nMarple_ and to Mary and Edith Mac-\nLean. Jessie Prater and Carmen Da\nCosta also received badges of proficiency\nMiss Marples succeeds Miss Bodecker\nwith  tjie  rank  uf  lieutenant.\nThe officers for the ensuing year\nare:    Honorary president Miss Dora K.\nExchange Rates\nMarks\u201423.80.\nKronen\u201426.72.\nthe last four years could be summed\nup in one word, \"Coal,\" he sold. De*\ngpite the large number of unemployed\nminers at present, the coal issue without employment of another man, could\nprobably be 30.000.000 tons of coal\nmore than Britain could sell any*\nWhere.\nNO TARIFF\nPROTI^TION\nAs for safeguarding, Mr. Churchill\naald there would be no general system\nof tariff protection.\nMajor O. M. Klndersley. Conservative\nmember for the Hitch in division of\nHearts, who was a member of the Empire parliamentary association, which\nrecently visited Canada, said the experiment to Canada was entirely Justi\nHad. Of the 8500 men sent to Canada\nbetween 5000 and 8000 were going to\n! Mttle in the Dominion. There was no\ndoubt he said that Canada desired to\nget migrants of British stock. The Do-\nmln'on was somewhat alarmed at the\nnumber of central Europeans entering\nthe country.\nF\\KI-   TOO  HIGH\nMajor Klngsley suggested that the\nfare of 800 was too much for the\nBritish settlers desiring to go to Canada to pay. He suggested that the government subsidize the shipping companies to enable them to reduce tbe\ntare to $30 or 840, The natural flow\nof  emigration  would   then   be  secured.\nDealing with unemployed immigrant\nminers he held that the only safe\nmethod or dealing with the situation\nwas under a system of a company and\ngroup scheme. The government should\ngive the material consideration it had\nbeen given so far. The Peace River\n-district ln Alberta would provide ample\naccommodation for a large number of\nIntending migrants and others Intending to go to Canada.\nSir Oswald Moseley, Labor, Smith-\nwick, aald the Dominion policy of the\nLabor party was to establish agencies\nto buy food and raw materials from\nthe dominions through such bodies as\nthc various Canadian corporation\nagencies. It might also be possible\nhe added, to create selling agencies ln\nthe dominions to stimulate the sale of\nBritish goods.\nThe debate was adjourned.\n?JK\u201e0: ^Th0ld' _,15\u00b0 l_. \u2022^^i^^errpresidentriirs. F. F. Coy;\nJonathan.   Wagener,   fancy.    814)0    to   vlce  ph;slt,\u201elt   m^   P   c   GrMn. VZ.\nto SaT^T fETEio'T''J\u00a3 ^-S^,r.IS_s.PF. W.mEcorn-\nto 82.50. Spy, fancy. $2.10 to 62.25; mittee-Mesdamc. Arthur J Walker.\nRome   Beauty,   Winter   Banana,   fancy,   j   j^  c _    P   b_11   0   H   Cart-\nties,   household.   61.28   to  $1,35;   Jona-   H   H   p{ fl   p   w   ^k\nthans,   Wagners,   bulk,  ungraded,   cwt.    \" _!______\n$2.75 to $3; crabapples, Hyslop, fancy.\n$1.50 to $1.60; C, 20c less; pears, D'AnJou. fancy. 83.25 to $3.60: Clalrgeau.\nDuchess, fancy, 82.60 to 62.75; C. 26c\nless; tomatoes, four baskets, hothouse\nNo. 1. 65 to $6.60: cukes, fancy, dozen.\n82.60 to 83: celery, crate, 66.50 to 67:\nonions, yellow, standard, cwt., 64 to\n64.50.\nSaskatoon\u2014British Columbia pears\nAnjou. box, fancy. $3.50; C. $3,25; other\nvarieties, fancy. $2.75; C. $2.50; applee.\nDelicious, fancy, box, $2.90; C, $2.40\nto $2.60: household. $2; Newton. Wine-\nsaps. Spitz, fancy, $2.70; C, 82,36 to\n62.60; household. 6175 to 6186; Spy.\nBanana. Mcintosh. Snow, Homes, Wtfg-\nner, Jonathan, Grimes, faney. 6230 to\n$2.60; C. $2.10 to $2.20; household. $1.65\nto 61.75; Jonathan, open boxes, ungraded, $1.25 to 6136; tomatoes, hothouse, four baskets, $6; onions, standard, cwt., $4  to  $4.50.\nRegina \u2014 British Columbia boxes,\napples, Mcintosh. Delicious, Spy, fancy,\n$2.76; C. $2.25; househnM. 50c less;\nJonathan. Grimes, Rome, Banana, Snow\nfancy, $2.50; household, SOc less; pears,\nD'AnJou, $4; various, $3; celery, pound,\n10c; cabbage, standard, sacks, cwt. j\n$5: crates, 25c more; cauliflower, dozen -\n$2.25;   cucumbers,  hothouse,   doz.  $3.\nWinnipeg\u2014British    Columbia,    pears.\nD'AnJou.  boxes,  fnncy,  $3.75;   C,  $3.25;\nKing   Carol,   fancy,   $2.75;   apples.   Mc- ;\nIntosh, Jonathan, fancy, $2 25 to $2.50:\nO,   $1.80   to   $1.90:    household,   $1.00;\nSnow. Banana, extra fancy. $2.75; fancy I\n$2.50;    Spy,    $2.65:    household,    $1.75:\nDelicious.,   extra,   $3.50;    fancy,   $325; !\nJonathan, bulk. $3 to $3.25; cwt  onion\nyellow,  standard,  $4.50 cwt.;   celery.  60 !\npounds, 63.50.\nToronto\u2014British Columbia. Delicious .\nextra fancy, 63.25; fancy, 63; Jonathan,\nfancy,   62.25;    Mcintosh,   extra   fancy. !\n\"King\" Clancy and Milt Halli-\nd\u00aby Injured in Practice,\nNot Seriously\nOTTAWA. Nov. 8.\u2014Injuries again\ncrept into the ranks of the Ottawa\nNational hockey league team at tonight's practice tn preparation for\nthe opening professional puck attraction here next Thursday night against\nthe New Tork Americans.\n\"King\" Clancy, whirlwind defence\nman, wns assisted off the Ice when a\nshot from the stick of Alex Smith\ncaught him ln tne groin and he went\ndown In a heap. Milt Halllday. young\ncenter ice relief m8n. followed him\nt o the dressing room shortly after\nwhen he stumbled when carrying the\npuck and waa aaddehtally cut on the\nback of the head by George Boucher's\nskate. Three stitches were required\nto   close  up   th*  wound.\nBoth men are expected to return to\ntlier training grind by the week-end.\nUNITED CHURCH AID AT\nPROCTER PLANS SUPPER\nPROCTER, B.C., Nov. 8.\u2014The ladtea'\naid of Bt. Andrew's United church\nmet at the home of Mra. H. Donaldson, making final arrangements for\na   Thanksgiving   supper   and   concert.\nThose attending were Mrs. J. Sew-\nell. Mrs. W. Mulrhead, Mm. Hlghton.\nMis. M. MacKinnon, Mrs. Angus MacKinnon. Mrs. Land Appleton, Mrs.\nMacon thy. Mrs. J.  Hurst and Mrs. O.\nDEMAND FOR CORN\nPUTS GRAINS UP\nCHICAGO. Nov. 8.\u2014Brisk demand for\ncorn, together with a decided falling off in country offerings of the\nyellow cereal turned all grain values\nupward late today. Closing quotations on corn were unsettled, V_ to\nV.c higher. Wheat finished -ft to %c\nup; oats showing >\u00ab to *'_ to \\_o gain\nand provisions varying from 6c decline  to  an  equal  advance.\nTickets for Dances\nand Entertainments\nThey don't cost very raueh, but we like\nto make an attractive set-up, so that purchasers of tickets from our customer--: will\nreceive a good impression of the datice or\nother entertainment concerned.\nIt's* only a little thing, but nevertheless\n.[uite important. Possibly it is one reason\nthai \u00bbt print so many tickets every month.\n<&ne\nDaily News Job Department\nPhone 144 (Two Lines) Nelson, B. C,\nClassified Advertising\nClassified Advertising Rates\nLocal Reading Notices-\u2014Three cents\nper word each insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals -4c per word.\nBlackface capitals 8c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent, discount lf run daily\nvitliout change of copy for one month\nor more. Where advertisement Is set\nout ln short lines the chgrge Is ISc\na line for Roman type, 20o for blackface and 2So for blackface capitals.\nMinimum  35c, if charged GOc.\nWant and Classified advertising\u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per insertion. If paid ln advance. 6c per word,\nper week, or 33Vie per word per month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a\ncash-ln-advance basis. Ea?h Initial,\nfigure, dollar sign, etc., counts as one\nwort.     Minimum  36c, lf  charged  60c.\nBirth Notlret*\u2014-Free.\nCards\u2014Three cents per word: 60c\nminimum.\nHelp Wanted\nSupervisor for large, well\nestablished Life Insurance\n.Company. Previous experience not necessary. Attractive contract to right\nparty.\nApply Box 6281, Daily\nNews.\n(6281)\nWANTED on Monday, November 12,\nfour women for waiting on tables (snd\nwashing up. Apply Mrs. Lutes, 409\nSlllca street, Saturday afternoon or\nevening. (8256-2-176)\nSituations Wanted\nOIRL wants housework or chambermaid. Marguerite Stratton. Greenwood.  B.C. (8213-8-176)\nWIDOW, age 41, Bnd her daughter, age\n20, wants situation either togethe?\nor separate. Just out from England\ngood references. Apply Martha\nPoster, care H. Stewart, Creston. B.C\n (8274-3-176'\nFor Rent\n\u25a0\u2022'URNISHED rooms.\n507 SlUca street\n(6248\n;'-OR     RENT\u2014Large     front     bedroom\nGentleman preferred. 411 SUIca street\n(8261-12-184)\nTWO-ROOM   suite.\nSlUca.\nMrs.   Ryan.     711\n(6209-8-176>\nSIX-ROOMED furnished hourse, furnace, fire place, olano. No children\nApply    Box    6200.    Dally    News.\n(8200-tf)\nPOR RENT\u2014Apartment over Gallagher\nBlock. (6232-6-177.\nALL SOULS' GUILD AT\nPROCTER PUNS SALE\nPROCTER, BC Nov. 8.\u2014The All\nSouls' Procter Anglican guild held a\ncombined work and business meeting\nat the hosrie of Mrs A. Major. Ar-\nraitgements were made for a sale of\nWork\nMembers present wrre Mrs. A. Ritchie.\nMrs. Oeorge Robinson, Mrs. H, Msc-\nOarthy, Mrt. W. Soles. Mrs L. Apple-\ntoss. Mt*. A. Mayor and Mrs. A. Merrl-\nfleld\nTea was served by Mrs. Major, assisted  br Mra. Robinson\nCONDENSED'WANT ADS ORDER FORM\nUse thii blank on which to write jotr conden.\u00abed ad., one word in each space.\nEnclose money order or check and mail direct to Thc Daily News, Nelson, B.C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word each insertion, six eon-ecutif* insertion* for\nprice of four when cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25c Each initial, figure^\ndollar sign, etc, count ai one won!   No charge leu than 50 cents.\nPl_m publish th* ad-ertlsement below times, for which I enclose f\ni I i   sal i a\nV 4setre4. troves ins; ka sitreeeei Lo boi inntoi at The DnUy Newt.    If  replies  ar. U s.\nesstd, enema loe titra t* cover eosst af poastasre and sJsew seven word, txtra for \u00bboi nnsnker.\nBusiness Opportunities\nl\u00bbOR RENT OR LEASE\u2014Palace Hotel,\nTrail. 35 furnished rooms and pool\nroom.    Apply  Savoy Cafe, Trail.\n  6062-tfi\nLive .Stock Wanted\nWANTED\u201413 young pigs, 6 to 8 weeks\nold.   Apply Lucky _Jlm Lead _u>d Zinc\nCompany,' Ltd..\nZlncton,   Bfr\n(6862-I-I50)\nWANTED\u2014Cattle.   State age, breed and\nprice.     K.   Popoff,   Slocan,   B.C.\n(6201-9-178)\nFor Sale or Rent\nFOR   RENT\u2014Furnished   house.     Apply\n712 Josepblsse streeL (6210-6-176)\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014One tire chain to fit 32x47',\nlire on Nov. 3 between Nelson and\nPop Inn. Finder will oblige by leaving same at Peebles Motors, or\nnotifying where it can be picked up.\n(8344-3-175)\nLOST\u2014November 5. wrist watch. Reward. Return to Daily News, Box\n6240. (8340-3-174)\nLOST\u2014One 3-ton Blue Boy Jack.\nFinder will be rewarded. Return to\nSouth Slocan Garage.     (6216-3-173)\nPOUND\u2014A valuable fishing rod; four\nlengths, two 6-ft. points. Found In\ncity limit\u2014. Owner may have same\nby. paying for ad and calling nt\nDally_ Newr (6264-tf)\nProperty for Sale\nFOR SALE\u2014A new house of two rooms\nIn RoMmount with furniture and an\nacre of land  all fenced and cleared.\nPrice,  1700  cash,     Geo.  G.  McLaren.\n(6083 -6-170)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nFOR SALE\u2014B-Flat clarionet. High\npitch. Albert system. Buffet make.\nGood condition. P. o. Box 714,\nNelson. (82M-\u00ab-'\u2014\n9-6-178\")\nFOR  SALE\u2014Player  piano,  issod  condition   with   80   records,    8400.     Box\n1007. Nelspn.\n(8245-8-1,767\nFOR SALE\u2014One 4-tube radio oet.\nCandlan Westinghouse Radlola III-A.\ncomplete with tubeB, ear phones\nand \"Superspeaker\" loudspeaker.\nOriginal cost 1100. Will sell for\n$40 cash. Apply Box 6236. Daily\nNews. (6336-1-173)\nREAD MARGARET SANGER'S BOOK\u2014\n\"Family Limitations,\" Sex Hygiene,\n11. N. Winston, 3871 Euclid Ave.,\nVancouver. (8161)\nSHEEP\nFOR SALE\nof Good Quality\nAgaa one to five yeara old. Also\nEwe Lambs and Feeder Wether\nLambs and 400 Pure Bred Ram-\nboullet Rams. In lots to suit\npurchaser.   Apply\nOffice Res.\nPhona <J_ RABY Phone\naM*     LethbridRe, Alta.     *\u2122\n816 7th St. 1004 6th\nSouth Are. South\n(5850)\nFOR SALE\u2014eixteen-foot mahogany\nstep hydroplane hull, five foot beam,\nvarnished.    H.  Thorpe,   Falrview.\n(6233-6-177)\nSEVEN cars of good dry fir and tamarack 4-foot wood cut green last\nMay. W. H. Anderson, Perry Siding.     B.C. (6275-3-176)\nMiscellaneous\nMAN   MOTORINO    to    Arl2ona \u00ab*\ncompanion;    shore    expenses. \\M\ning    Rossland    Saturday,    or wol\nwait   day    or    two.      Phone Petl\nOtwell  Sotei,  Rosfond.\n10289-11\nWANTED foi- three months beglnnj\nDecember l, board nnd loom <!\nstrong, willing boy of 16 ssttend!\nJunior high school. Place where J\ncau earn part board essential,\nply   Harry   Johnstone.   Boswell.\n(636S-2-l'|\nPiano Tuning\nGerard Hoekstra. specially appoint-,\nby  Heintzman \u25a0&  Co.,   Ltd.\nPhone,  write  or  (tail.\nPHONE 290 511   BAKl\nLive Stock for Sale\nFOR   SALE\u2014Fresh   cows.    Also  heJ\nhorses.     Telephone   48F,   Kaslo. j\n(6186-6-11\nHAY   FOR   SALE\u2014No.   1   timothy,\nper   ton   f.o.b.   Lumby.    George   II\nviolette. Lumby,  B.C, l6272-li|\nTELL   TOOR   WANTS   THROUOl-   tl\nCLASSIFIED  COLUMNS. f^T^\nBUSINESS, PROFESSION^\nDIRECTORY\nPhotographers\nOEOROI! A. MF.LKE.S\u2014Artist and PI*\ntograoher.  715  Baker  St. (61j\nCabinetmaker\nl.   II.   CHAPMAN\u2014Baker   St,    Cabins!\nmaker  -  upholsterer.    Phone  3SB'\nDentists\nOR.  O.  A.  C.  WALLEY\u2014Griffin  Blosl\nNelson,  B.C.  {tl%\nAccounting\n'-IIAR1.KS  F.  IH'NTEH\u2014\nAI'ISITHK.     McDonald   Hm  llsjIMlH\nBox   1911,   Nslson,   B.C. (6141\nThis Week\nWe   offer   for   this   week   only   a\nOerard   Heintzman   Piano   ln   good\ncondition.    Terms  or  Cash.\n$295.00\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\nPhone 586 Nelson, B.C.\n(6284-6-180)\nPoultry and Eggs\nFOR SALE\u2014Exhibition S. C. White\nLeghorns, three pullets, cockerel.\nW.  J. Richards. Nelson.        (6247-tf)\nRoom and Board\nROOM and board; gentleman preferred.\nApply 714 Hoover. References ex-\nchanged. (8211-6-176)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nTnke notice that William Partrldfre\nof Eduewood (Farmer) Intends to apply\nfor permission to purchase the following described lands: Commencing at a\npost planted on the easterly boundary\nof lot 0144. Kootenay District, about\n1E> chains from the N. T. corner thereof; thence south 20 chains, thence east\n20 chains, thence north 20 chains,\nthence 20 chains to point of commencement and containing 40 acres,\nmore or less.\nWILLIAM  PARTRIDGE\nDated Sept. 10th, 1028,\n(5040)\nlilil'Ji\n'_!___\nyour\n^t^eWJL_^\nthe     1\n|4ff|\nmS\nWATER   NOTICE\nApplication   for   Llcnise  to   Take  and\nIV Water\nNOTICE is hereby given that the\nWest Kootenay Power and Light Company, Limited, of Rossland. B.C., will\naDDly for a license to take and use\n6000 c. f, \u2022- of water out of Pend\nd'Oreille River, which flows westerly\nand drains into Columbia River about\nWaneta, B.C.\nThe water will be diverted from a\nstream at a point about 1500 feet\ndown stream from the Bast Boundary\nof Lot 5127. Kootenay District, and\nwill be used for power purposes for\nthe distribution of power throughout\nthe territory of the West Kootenay\nDistrict as granted by the charter of\nthe  applicant.\nThis notice was posted on the ground\non the 15th day of October,  ltt-28.\nA copy of this notice and an application pursuant thereto and to the\n\"Water Act\" will be filed In the office\nof the Water Recorder at Neinon. B.C.\nThe petition for approval of the undertaking as per Section 28 of the Act\nwill be heard in the office of the Board\nof Investigation at a date to be fixed\nby the Comptroller, and any Interested\nperson may file an objection thereto\nIn the office of the Comptroller of\nWater Rights, Parliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B.C.. or the aald Water Recorder, within thirty days after the\nfirst appearance of this notice ln a\nlocal  newspaper,\nWEST   KOOTENAY   POWER   At\nLIGHT   COMPANY.  LIMITED\nC. B. SMITH.\nAgent.\nThe   date   of   the   first   publication\nof this notice Is October 26th. 1928\n\u25a0 emi)\nAssayers\nTHE    CROSSLEY    ENGINEERING    C\nP. O. Box 568, 624 Front St., Nels<\n(62C\nE.  W. WIDDOWSON. Box A1106. Naiad\nB.   C.  Standard   western  charges. J\nMonuments\nIsi.o'll \\\\V     MAIUII.K     -     (IRANII\nWORKS\u2014Nelson,   B.   C.     Write\nprices. (6t4|\nTaxis\nYellow Taxi fo. State leaves WI11H\nTransfer, every morsslsif ot 9 o'clock 1\nYmlr,  Salmo  assd   Botlnslary  Line.\n (IM\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS-   TRANSFER\u2014Baggage,   Od\nand   Wood.     Phone   106. (814l\nWood Working Factory ]\nLAWSON  \u2014 Baker St..  Carpenter aJ\nJoiner.     Sash    and    Hardwood.\n(814|\nInsurance and Real Estad\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Fsstate, IsssuranJ\nRcsitsils. Next Hipperson Hardwai\nBaker  Street. |615|\nH. E. DILL\u2014INSURANCE\nFARM  AND  CITY  PROPERTY    .\n508  Ward   Street <IU5|\nD.    A.    MrFARLAND.      Real    Exlal\nInsismisce, Coal. Board of Trade Roozd\nTelephone   40.     P.    O.    Box   24.\n (6181\nChiropractors\nDR.  GRAY,  GILKER  11I.K.,  NEL80N.I\n(616*1\nFlorists\nGRIZZFI.I.E'S    GREENHOUSES.   NelaoJ\nCut  flowers  and   floral  designs.\n(616|\nWM. S. JOHNSON\u2014 ^H\u2014\u2014\nPhone 842    Cut Flowers, potted Planl\nand Floral Emblems. (6151\nWholesale\nA. MacDONALD A CO.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers and Provision Mel\nchants. Importers of Teas, Coffee]\nSploes. Dried Fruits. 8taple and Fan!\nGroceries, Nelson. B.C. ...i?16*\nEngineers\nCHA\". MOOBE. B.C.L.S.. A.I.B.C.\nJ. P. COATES, C.E., AMTHC, M.P.E.;\nR. W. HINTON, Ms\u201els. En\u00ab., M-MS.I\nCivil.   Mining,   Mechanical   Englnees-ld\nB.C. Land Surveying, Architecture, f\nDrafting   and    Blue   Printing.\nP. O. Box 671, Phone 283. Nelson. B. .\n(61>1\nA.  H.  OREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS\nFormerly   Oreen  Bros.,  Burden,  Ne_os\nCivil   and   Mining   Engineer,    f\nB.C.. Albert* and  Dominion 1\/ind I\nSurveyors (616f|\nD.  DAWSON\u2014land   Ssirveyor.\nMining  and   Civil   Engineer\nKaslo, lie. (61 fill\nFuneral Directors\n$**\nStandard Pumltu\nCo. \u2014 Undertake!\nAuto Hearse, up-t\ndate chapel. He\nservices. Prlj\nreasonable.     (818\nGovernor Ed Jackson of Indiana\nIwued a pardoa for Dr. E. S. Schu-\naurher superlnUndent of the Indiana\nffetl-raloou league wl.'> had bten sen-\nttnofd to serve 00 d.ys for contempt\nOf tbe Indiana supreme court. Dt.\nBehumarher will, however, have to\npar Um MM una.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1928\n'tfags MImI\n1\nMarkets and\nGENERAL MOTORS\nDECLARE EXTRA\nCASH DIVIDEND\nAmounts to $250 on Present\nIssue; Plan Change Par\nValue Common Stock\nNEW YORK. Nor. 8\u2014Directors of\nOtneral Motors corporation proposed\na common stock split of 2!', shares for\none today and declared an extra cash\ndividend of 82.60 on the present Issue\nIn I addition to the regular quarterly\npayment of 81.25. A special meeting\nof stockholders has been called for\nDecember 10 to act on an amendment\nproposing a change In the par value of\nthe common stock. In the event of\nthe adoption of this amendment, 274\n\u2022hares of the newly created stock will\nbe exchanged for each share of tha\nIssue now outstanding.\ntt was stated that, barring any unforeseen contingency, the news stock\nequivalent to \u00bb7.B0 on tha present\nwill be placed on a 13 annual basis,\nIssue which has been paying $6 regularly.\nVancouver Stocks\nBid\n- \u00ab 1-0\n.61\n3i\n.13\nOeorge Copper .-      3.TO\nO. Silver ...\nBig Missouri ...\nCork Province\nDUnwell \t\nOlasalr\nGlacier \t\nGladstone \t\nGolconda    -\t\nOrandvlew  \t\nIndependence \t\nIndian  Mines  \t\nInternational Coal\nKootenay Florence\nKootenay King ....\nLucky Jim \t\nLeadsmith   \t\nL. A-  L\t\nMarmot Metals\nNational silver \t\nNoble Five\n.\u00bb\n.02\nAsked\n\u2022 1.40\n.6174\n.26\n.17\n4.00\n.86 7i\n.6674\n.1074\n.05\n.38\n.2174\n.32%\n.26\n.0174\n.07 it\n.08 74\n.1374\n.40\n.05\n.8775\n.66%\n.11\n.40\n.2374\n2.28\n.60\nPend Oreille      10.70\nPremier    \t\nPorter Idaho \t\nRichmond \t\nRuth-Hope  \t\nRufus-Argenta   ...\nBllvemdo \t\nBUversmlth \t\nSlocan  Rambler  .\nSunloch \t\nTWlttewater \t\nWellington  \t\n.5074\n.2074\n.65\n1.45\n.16\n.0774\n.07.\n.137.\n.4074\n10.76\n2.29\n-1\n.11\n.19\n2.45\n1.48\n.IS\nTWO BANKS MAY JOIN\nASSETS IN CHICAGO\nCHICAGO, Nov. 8.\u2014The Haily. New*\ntoday reported another huge merger\nwas in prospect lor Chlcngo with the\nFirst National Bank and Union Trust\ncompany, the two concerns mentioned\nln  the  proposed   consolidation.\nCombined assets ol the two banks\nwould   amount   to   nearly   *460,000.000.\nASSAY SUPPLIES\nCHEMICALS\nCrushers,     Furnaces,     Crucibles,\nGlassware, Porcelain, Adds,\nQuicksilver,   Etc,\nCAVE and COMPANY\nLIMITED\nM7 Hornby Ht., Vancouver, B.C.\nFormerly\nTHE   B.C.   ASSAY  A   CHEMICAL\nSUPPLY CO., LTD.\nAconda      |\nAmulet\nArgo\nArea\nAtlas   \t\nBeaver\nBarry Holly\nBldgood\nCastle\nCan. Lorraine  \t\nCent. Man. Mines .\nConlagas\nCrown Reserve\nCapital\nDuprat\nDome   ..\nqold   Dale\nOold Hill\nOranada\nGrover Daly\nHolly\nHudson Bay\nIndian\nJackson Manion\nKirklake\nKirk   Hunton\nKeely\nKootenay Florence ,\nLake  Shore\nLaval\nMacassa\nMcDougall\nMclntyre\nMcKlnley\nMoneta\nMining  Corp.\nNewbec\nNoranda\nPend Oreille .\nPioneer\nPremier  \t\nPotter Doftl\nPreston\nRlbago \t\nSan  Antonio\nSherrltt-Oordon\nStadacona\nSudbury Basin\nSylvanlte   \t\nTeck Hughes\nTough Oakes\nTowagamac .\nVlpond \t\nWright Hargreaves\nWest Dome Lake\nBEARS IN RAID\nAT NEW YORK AT\nEND OF MARKET\nSTOCKS TAKE ON\nAN EASIER TREND\nDominion Glass Strong Feature\nat Montreal; Nickel Active\nbut Off; Abitibi Down\nTickers Over Hour lute: Montgomery-Ward Closes Off\n20; Sales Over 5,000,000\nTORONTO SHOWS\nFLORENCE GAIN\nStock Up Three Cents; Bathurst Leads Market; Teck\nOutstanding Issue\nTORONTO. Nov. 8.\u2014A further sharp\nadvance ln Bathurst mines and strength\nIn Teck Hughes were the most outstanding events of the Standard mining exchange today. Trading ln Bathurst amounted to 382,250 shares and\non thc wave of accumulation thc price\nof the stock moved up to 40c, for a\nnet gain of 3%c. Teck Hughes moved\nup to $8,25, an advance of 25c. Wright\nHargreaves was off 7c to $2.53. Kirkland Lake gold off 2c to $1.08 and\nBeaver off 5c to 60c.\nNoranda sold up to $55.15, dipped to\n$54.25 and ended at $54.30, a decline of\n20c. Porcupine stocks were quiet. Holllnger easing 20c to $9, while Mclntyre\nmaintained Its former mark of $30.\nDome was 10c stronger at $8.50.\nMINING CORPORATION\nACTIVE\nMining Corporation was much more\nactive and closed at $3.18 with the\npeak  for the day at  $3.20.\nMandy Mines was the only one of\nthe Manitoba stocks to display strength\nand the issue moved up six cen* to\n$1.32. Hudson Bay was down 45c to\n$18.55 after an early rise to $19.25.\nSherrltt-Oordon was 10c weaker at\n$0.75, Central Manitoba off a cent\nto 81c and San Antonio steady at 25c.\nKootenay Florence showed marked\nimprovement during the past few days\nand a gain of 3c was recorded at 23c\nPremier was 5c firmer at $2.30 and Big\nMissouri  moved  up  to  62.\nVancouver Electric al Works\nOffer you Quality and Service to the utmost. Our\nProducts include:\nELECTRICAL\nMotors, Generators, Panels,\nTransformers,  Meters.\nMECHANICAL\nBall Mills, White Iron Balls,\nOre Cars, Aerial Tramways,\nManganese Liners.\nRepairs\nIs. MORRISETTE, Local Sales Engineer     NELSON, B.C.\nHead Office\u2014VANCOUVER. H.  it. SMITH, M.I.E.E. Oen. Mir.\nCANADIAN HYDRO-ELECTRIC CORPORATION Ltd.\n6',; Cumulative Preferred Stock.   Price 197.50. Yield 6:15.\nQuarterly dividends payable 1st March, June, September and December, at any Branch of the Bank of Montreal.\nThe Corporation owns and controls the Gatineau Povyer\nCo., the Gatineau Electric Light Co. and the St. John\nRiver Power Co.\nGENERAL STEEL WARES, LIMITED\nI',   Cumulative,   1st   Preferred   Stock.\nPrice $102.50.   Yield 6.83.\nRoyal Financial Corporation, Ltd.\nPHONE 209\nVANCOUVER\nR.  J.  HEWITT,  DISTRICT   REPRESENTATIVE\nr. o. box 11.11\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Ltd.\nOffice Smeltltur and Keflnlni Department\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA .\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zino Qr\u00ab.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC,  TRAIL\nNEW YORK,  Nor.  8,\u2014The Mock\nmarket tore d-rlly  forward ln re-\nsrertae  to  a   flood   of   extra   dividend, today and turned a isamer-\nssanR   when   .struck   a   fltatessleully\nttsssed bear raid In the flsml hour\not trading.   The total aaless crossed\nthe ,1,0<l(j,0\u00bbs>  mark   for the second\ntime ln history and tho ticker was\nso contested that It did not record\nthe final tranaactlsm until an hour\nass.l   a   quarter   after   the   ekwtns;\ngonft, the longest  delay on record.\nThere was a rush to sell out before the dose with the result that\nfinal    quotats-i\u2014     were     Irregular.\nboth  gains and  losses   running  to\nabout 10  points  In  some cases.\nThe   late   reaction   sent   Montgomery\nWard down mora than 20 points from\nIts  high record  price  of  372  recorded\nearlier.    It then rallied, however, closing   with   a   net   gam   of   T.     Wright\nAero soared about 12 points, was sent\ntumbling about 19 points, then rallied\nfor   a   net   gain   of   about   \u2022   polnta.\nOne, utilities and coppers encountered\nheavy   profit   taking,   although   nearly\na dozen new high prices were achieved\nby   the   coppers   and   oils   before   the\nsetback.     Greene    Cananea    shot    up\nabout   7   points,   then   lost   about   5.\nKennecott   dropped   6   points.\nOILS ACTIVE\nIn the oils. Standard of New Jersey\ncrossed Its previous high and closed\nnbout a Joint up. Marland suffered a\nnet loss of about 2 points after extending its gain while Sinclair last 3.\nGeneral Motors mounted to within a\nfraction of its previous high, but was\ncarried down for a net loss of about a\npoint. Chrysler laat about a 3-potnt\ngain and Graham-Paige eased,\nBrockway Motor, however. Jumped more\nthan  two.\nCoty was ss istrong point, retaining\nmost of Its gain of about 12 points.\nAmerican Express, General Electric\nLiquid Carbonic. Otis Eelcvator, PIllB-\nbury preferred, nnd Vanadium gained\n3  to  10  points.\nCurtis Aero fell about   10 and  Wsr-\nner   Bros.'   issues   and   Woolworth   re-\nsscted around 8 points.\nTotal sales, 5.022,200 shares.\nNEW  YORK  STOCK   QUOTATIONS\nHigh.   Low.    Close.\nAllied    Chemical   . 2347,    230'\/.    23074\nAmerican Can 110H    108       108V.\nAmer.   Pgn.   Pow.       62 51 51l2\nAmerican   Loco. 967a     go        96\nAmer.   Smelt..   Ret. 2787,    27374    275\nAmer.  Stl.   fndy.       5874     68 587,\nAsnerican Tele. ... 1B\u00bbJ, 187'i 1877,\nAmer.   Tobacco      . 17474    1717,    173\nAnaconda          97 84*4     05\nAtchison 1947,    18174    192\nBait.    _    Ohio 11374    1117,    112',\nBethlehem    Steel       70',      687,      69\nBunk. Hill _  Bull  132\nCanadian Paolflc 223 221., 221 >i\nCerro  de  Pasco 108',    104        104 la\nChile   Copper   . 85 >'.      63 6374\nChrysler lsWTi    124',    12874\nCorn Products 8774      86',      86',\nDodge 25        28        26\nDupont 439       436       437\nPlelschman   Co. 83',      81'4      8174\nGeneral Motors 224 219 219'4\nGeneral Electric... 1737, 171'4 173t,\nGranby 83'\u00bb     av2     81'.,\nHowe Sound       71        69'\u00bb     68\",\nHudson   Mtors        .83 82 V,      8274\nInspiration Copper 34'4 32H 33',\nInter.  Nickel 195       188*4    189\nMack Truck .99',     97        97%\nMarland Oil 47'-,     MM     44'i\nMiami Copper 27',      2674      20H\nKennecott    Copper 139       133 s,    IMU\n?\u00ab\u2022\u00ab\u2022   S.   S     823J,      80\",      81\nNat   P.  _   L. 42',      41',      417,\nNash   Motors   ..     .    9474     93 93\nNew York C*n. . 17574 174', 1743s,\nNorth. Pacific .... loat. IOj \u00abmS\nPackard Motors . 977. an os,\"\nPhillip,   Pete .   477,     47',     47'4\nRadio   Corp  23874    228       229\nHock  Island     13*7.4    133'.,    12214\nSchulte       6434     54        54\u00ab?\nShell   Union   Oil...   My,     3i\\     34s;\nSinclair Cons    417,     4074     (IS\nSouth.   Pacific 12314    12a%    12J%\nStand.  Oil   of  Cal.    6814      85 65\nStewart    Warner.     107*    loot,    W|\nStudebaker         78'.      77 771.\nTexas Corp.      . 7914     Nl      \u25a0 \u25a0',.\nTexas   Oulf   Sul     74 73 73,?\nUnion Oil of Cal..   54        537.     64\nUnion Pacific 211      207',   211\nU.  S.  Rubber 39i,      371,      377,\nU-  8.  Steel 16374    160',    181\nWest. Etoctrlc u.a,    n.,,,;    11674\nWillys   Overland 2874      27',      27'\nYellow  Truck       38%     3514     38 '\nWEEKLY CLEARINGS\nTORONTO, Nov. -.-Following are\nthe bank clearings for principal Cssna-\ndlan banking centers for the week ending today with a comparative statement for the same week a year ago:\nNov. 10 1927 Nov. 9, 1928\nHalifax (    3.284.035    $    4.438.887\nSaint  John 2.187,627 3,860.174\nMoncton 864,423 1.220,218\nQssebec 7.595,003        10,131,777\nMontreal 141,576.834      199,422.215\nSherbrooke 900,392 1.323.868\nOttawa 9,238.509        13,508,208\nKingston 919,389 1.182.430\nPeterboro 1.031.936 1.210.662\nToronto 131.805,937 188.317,SB9\nHamilton 5.951.831 7,313.471\nBrantford 1.089,673 1.594.672\nLondon 4,328.831 4.608.430\nSarnla 622,297 1,112,680\nKitchener       ... 1.228.009 1.547.025\nWindsor 4,786.848 6,083.453\nChatham 696,598 996.405\nWinnipeg        .... 79.761,160 102,378,680\nBrandon 887,791 1.540.104\nMoose  Jaw zl.749.537 2.164,858\nTaskstoon 2,776,064 3,793,237\nPr. Albert      ... 449.927 821.110\nCalgary      1,2,741.323 15,442.198\nLethbrldge 1,035,420 1,034.823\nSdsnonton 6.264.410 8.188.268\nHedlclnc   Hat 669,202 824.029\n\/ancouver        . 18.495,569 24.024.786\n\u2022J.  Westmster 725,018 991.762\n'Ictorta     2.569,099 2.858.229\nn.  William 1.248,893 1.564.854\nleglna      7.109.339        \t\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA,  Nov.  8.\u2014Eggs\u2014\nToronto\u2014Dealers are quoting country\n(hlppers for ungraded eggs, extras, 56\nto 57c; firsts, 48 to 53c; seconds, 32\nCO 85c.\nMontreal---The Jocnl og-jr market continues firmer.\nChicago\u2014Spot, 37 to 4flc; December.\n&*%\nMONT-UEAL. Nov. 8.\u2014Stock* turned\ngenerally  easier  in today's  trading on\nthe Montreal market. International\nNickel new stock had a turnoved of\n21.801 shares and closed at 3-'_ for a\nnet loss of 1%. Brazilian with sales\nof 21,776. closed at 70U for a net\ndecline of 1 %. Interna tlonal IN Ickel\nold stock came third in activity and\nclosed at 188 for a net decline of 6\npoints.\nDominion Glass was the strong feature, closing at 134 for a net gain\nof four points with trading in only 8u\nshares. The greatest loss was suffered\nby Wabasso, which closed at tho new\nlow of 70 for a net loss of  10.\nAbltlbl   was   down   3',.   aL   38;   Dominion   Bridge   at  91,   a   net   loss  of\n23_;  Lyall at  01. a loss of t%;  Lake\nof  the  Woods down  1 at 53.\nCLOSING QUOTATIONS\nAT MONTREAL\nBank of Commerce  298'.\nDominion Bank  ..j.   800\nImperial   Bank    _  205\nBank  of  Montreal _ \u201e  87?\nBank of Nova Scotia  397\nRoyal Bank   - _..  377\nBank of Toronto   382\nAbitibi Power & Paper     38\nAsbestos   Corporation       21\nAtlantic Sugar     13\nBell   Telephone         164\nBrazilian T. L. Sc Power     70',*_\nBritish American Oil     52\nBrompton   Paper        33\nCanada   Bronze     134\nCanada Car * Foundry    $9%\nCanadian Converters  101'A\nCanadian  industrial  Alcohol  ..,...   41>4\nCanada   Power          _L*   _8&\nCanada Steamship Lines      37*^\nCons. Mining  At Smelting    291\nDominion Bridge    HVi\nDominion   Olass     1331\/.\nDominion  Textile    106\nA. P. Oraln      65\nMassey   Harris           ..    56 H\nMontreal   Power  lo_Ji\nNutonal Breweries       145\nNational Steel Car         0-t'.\nOntario Steel Products         31\nOgilvie    MlUlng      .... 450\nOttawa  L. H. & Power   120\nPenmans, Limited     BB\nPower  Corporation    79\nPrice Bros    68',3\nQuebec Power .       86\nShawiniean            85'.\nSherwln   Williams    *....   180\nSouthern Canada Power    170\nSteel of Canada   211\nSt.  Lawrence   Flour  Mill-    .     .       SOtft\nWayagamock    -     73\nWestern Grocers 32-\nWinnipeg Railway 100\nFresh FinfcAre\nWorth 45 Cents\non Nelson Market\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWheat\u2014      Open    High    Low Cloae\nNov    118       11874   117 117%\nDec     117       1H74    116% 11774\nMay    ...    113       12474    122% 12374\nOata\u2014\nNov      5174      5374      5174 8274\nDec      50         6074      50 5074\nIM;\/          54         54V4      54 6474\nBarley\u2014\nNov      6774      8874      67y. 68\nDec      M74      <T7         6874 67\nMay         7074     7174     7074 7114\nFlax\u2014\nNov     193       19214    192 19274\nDec     190       190       189 189a\nMay     1967.    196%    19874 19874\nRye\u2014\nNov     102       10274    102 10214\nSec _     \u00bb97\u00bb    10074     9974 10074\nMay         10474    105V,    10474 10574\nCash  wheat\u2014No.   1   northern, 12174;\nNo. 2 northern.  IK7.:  No. 3 northern,\n10914; No. 4, 10574; No. 5, 89%; No. 6,\n\/,>4; leed, 7374; track, 120'\u00bb.\nTRADMACM;\nVOLUME IS LOWER\nOils Record Losses; Nickel Is\n?  Active but Eases; C. P. R.\nUndergoes Decline\nTORONTO,  Nov.  8\u2014Trading was ac-\nttve on the Toronto Stock exchange today but values were generally lower,\nparticularly  ln  i\\e oil  issues.\nB. A. Oil closed for a net low of 2\npoints at 52. International Petroleum\nended with a net loss of % at 61*v_\nond Imperial OU finished with a loss\nof  1-k  at 97 Vj   .\nW.ilkcra opened fractionally stronger ot 84 and went to 86-^, closing thc day with a gain W at 85.\nInternational Nickel was fairly active\nbut eabed after opening at 103, it\nfirmed to 193'-^ but later sold off to\n187 %, closing with a net loss of 4\nat   189.\nNew International Nickel flnl-hed\noff ;,4 at 38. Brazilian Traction was\n\u2022safer, declining 2'-j to TO1*. British\nColumbia Power \"A\" made a further\ngain of l'i polnta lo 52H- C. P. R.\nsuffered a decline of 2^ points to 221.\nCanadian Canners first preferred closed\nat 90Vi, a decline of one point.\nCalgary Oils\nClose.\nAdvance I   .45\nA   P. Ctmssol 48\nBr.   Dom. . ..     .40\nEevenleh ............ .28\nDalhouste 155\nIll=.-Alla  53\nM.D.   Segur les.)                             2 10\nMcLeod 4 75\naoyallte 64 oo\nSpoosser. .                l 1.1\nirsslted 157 \"4\nVulcan 2 00\nFLORENCE HRMS\nUP AT VANCOUVER\nSells Up to 23; Snowfiake Under Further Selling Pressure;\nPend Oreille Down 30c\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 8\u2014Kootenay\nFlorence was the strong feature on\nthe stock exchange today, selling up\nto A3 and Closing at 21%, up 3*r_c on\na trade of 63,000 shares.\nSnowfiake was Under further selling\npressure, 142,000 shares changing hands.\nOpening at 40, on overnight loss of\n3c. this issue was rapidly forced\ndown touching 25c. with the close\nat  26.  a  net  loss  of  IQVa-\nPend Oreille sold around 110.76 with\nthe closing bid $10.70, down SOc. Premier advanced 3c to $2 28, Orandvlew\nwas steady at 67c. Noble Five was\nbought freely around 40c, 15,500 shares\nchanging hands.\nFabyan Petroleum, on a trade of\n20,000  shares.  Improved   l'Ac   to   16%c,\nDominion Live Stock\nC-t_OARY, Nov. 8.\u2014Receipts; Cattle,\n81;   calvee.  3:   how,   636.\nSteers\u2014Choice, \u00bb8 lair to good, 7.60\nto 17.76.\nButcher heifers\u2014choice, 7.50 to 68;\nlair to good. 7 to \u00bb7.35.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice. 6.50 to 67;\nlair to good.  6 to 6640.\natockcr steer\u2014Choice. $7.50; lair to\ngood.   6.50   to   $7.25.\nStocker hellers\u2014Choice, 6.50 to 67:\nfair   to  good,   6  to  $6.25.\nI\"eedcr steers\u2014Choice, 7.50 to $8; fair\nto good. 7 to $7.25.\nCalves\u2014Choice, 0 to $9.25.\nHogs\u2014Selects, 9.16 to $0.35; thlcsc\nsmooths,  8.75  to  $8.85\nLambs\u2014Fair to good, 10 to $11.\nSheep\u2014Pair  to  good. 0 to $9.20.\nCanada Bonds\nWINNIPEO. Nov. 8.\u2014The Dominion\nwar laeue prices;\nWar loan*\u20141931,  $100.30;   1937. $103.\nVlctosir loans\u20141933. \u00ab102.70b.\n$102.60a: 1034. $102.Mb, $102-6a; 1M7,\n$106.30.\nRenewala\u20141932.  $102.\nRefunding loans\u20141043. $103; 1*44,\n$9506; 1940. $99b, $99-0a; IM6. $09b,\n499.15a\nIIKlTlsu COLUMBIA Es30\u00bb\nFreeh extraa, 58c; -rata, Kfc; pullets. 42c Price to produces\u2014, 6a to\nits under.\nALL STOCKS\nbought and sold and carried oa\nmargin through members of tha\nMontreal, Toronto and New York\nstock     exchanges.       Telegraphic\nquotations.\nC.W. Appleyard\nINSURANCE      STOCKS     BONDS\nClTTf   PROP-RTT\nC. W. Appleyard   H. E. Appleyard\nr. A. Whittles-\nBox 6_6 Phone Mi\n10 YEARS IN BUSINESS\nLogan & Bryan\nPrlraU Wlrea\nMOCKS,    BONDS,    COTTON,\nmrntSSM\nMEMBERS\nNew York, Montreal and Vancouver Stock Exchange*, Chicago\nBoard of Trade, Winnipeg. Oraln\nExchange and other leading ei-\nchanges.\nOFFICES!\nVancouver,   Spokane  and   Seattle\nToughness\nEconomy\nDurability\nH*BsA\nParagon Supplies, Ltd.\n843 Hastings Eaat\nVancouver\nB.C.\nDealers I'ay Producers 12 Cents\nfor Pullet Eggs Advance\nof Two Cents\nNelson dealer* ore paying ps-oduccrs\n42c'a dozen for pullet eggs, and 45c\nfor fresh firsta. A fortnight ago they\npaid 40c for pullet eggs and fresh firsts\nwere  very scarce.\nPrices quoted yesterday were:\nEggs: Fresh firsts, doz g   .46\nPullet...  doz 42\nChicken:     Live,  lb 25\nDressed,   lb      .27\nFowl: Live, lb s 16\nDresi.ed,  lb 18\nPork.  lb. 15\nMetal Markets\nNEW   YORK,   Nov.   8\u2014Copper   (Irm;\nelectrolyltlc,  spot  and futures.  16.\nIron\u2014Steady,   unchanged.\nTin\u2014Steady;    spot,    49.87;     futures,\n$49.50.\nLead\u2014Steady;   spot,  New York.  6.50;\nEast   St.   Louis.  6.32.\nZinc\u2014Steady;   East  St.   Louis,   spot,\nand futures. 6.26.\nAntimony\u201410.25.\nAT   LONDON\nStandard   copper\u2014Spot.   \u00a338   6s,   futures.,  \u00a368  12s tiri\n\u00a375;\nfutures,\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot,\n\u00a375 6s\nTin\u2014Spot.    \u00a3231    13s    6d;    futures,\n\u00a3224     16S.\nLead\u2014Spot.    \u00a321    2s    6d;     futures,\n\u00a321   7s  Od.\nZinc\u2014Spot.   \u00a324  5s;  futures,   \u00a324.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL. Nov. 8.\u2014Butter and\ncheese  easy;   egKs  firm.\nWeotern cheese\u201430U   to 30%c.\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurized, 39 ;i4 t o\n40c;    No.    1   creamery,   38l^c\nEgga\u2014Storage extras. 45c; firsts, 41c;\nseconds. 37c; freeh extras. 69c; firsts,\n60c.\nOvershoes\nFor Ladies\nWe   have  the  latest   in\nSnappy Gaj tees for women.\nFawn and Black.\n$3.00 and $.50\nWatson Shoe Co., Ltd.\n- Terms   strictly   rash   \u25a0\n\/Iff1\n^1u>#m#T^!t ftompnitg.^f\nmeemmemevrto en mav \u25a0\u2022-_.\nOther Branches at Winnipeg, lorkton. Saskatoon, Edmonton, Calgary, Let-bridge,\nVancouver. Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria.\nHarvest Sale\nDRY GOODS\nOUTSTANDING OFFER IN STRIPED FLANNELETTE\nA complete shipment of English Flannelette. Over 30 pieces to choose from,\nof lovely quality, in a range of pretty stripes. Nice, soft quality; close, even\nweave.   Free from filling.\n36 INCHES WIDE-SPECIAL, 29c YARD\nOLD BLEACH PURE LINEN GUEST TOWELS\u2014H\/S Damask borders. Regular\nprice fl. each.   Today, 1 pair fur   98\u00a3\nliUFFET RUNNERS, SETS AND TABLE CENTERS in heavy Oyster Linen,\ndaintily edged with narrow edging.    Crash Linen 3-Piece Buffet Sets in new\nembroidered designs.   All one price, per set  $-.25\n\u2014Second Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nLADIES' WEAR\nSKIRT   SPECIAL\u2014Skirts   of  good   material   suitable   for   the   cold   weather.\nBlack, Fawn, Navv,    Values to $5.95, for ?_.95 AND $1.95\nCHILDREN'S  HATS OF PLUSH\u2014For little boys or girls.\nSpecial at  39< AND 5\u00a9<--\nBOBETTE BLOOMERS OF RAYON in  shades  of maize,  peach,  pink,  orchid,\nwith cuff in black.   Regular $1.95.   For   $1.25\nONE RACK OF COATS for misses or small women.    Regular to $25.\nPrice  $10.95\nGOSSARD  CORSETTS,  CORSELETTES, WRAP-AROUNDS and BRASSIERES.\nOdd sizes.   At less than half price.\nWOMEN\"-  FLEECE LINED VESTS\u2014All  sizes.    Short  sleeves.    Comfy  cut.\nat   1 49<, 60s* AND 79s-*-\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nBOYS' SUITS\nBOYS' TWEED BLUMEU SUITS at prices   far   below   cost,   with   two   pairs\nBloomers.    A few odd sizes left.    Clearing at  $5.95\nBOYS'  BLOOMER  SUITS  in  All-Wool Tweeds with two pair Bloomers.    Sizes\n32 to 36. Regular value $15.50.   Clearing Price  $9.95\nBOYS' TWEED BLOOMERS\u2014Good strong Tweeds.    Sizes 32 to 36.    Clearing\nPrices      $1.19, $1.98 AND $2.59\nBOYS' MERINO SHIRTS AND DRAWERS\u2014Penman's quality.   Sizes 24 to 32.\nRegular 85c.   Clearing Price   59^\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\n$2.95\nSHOE SPECIALS\n$3.45\nWOMEN'S SHOES\nRemarkable Bargains at Four Popular Prices\n$4.45 $5.45\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\n____\u25a0\nme*\n \u2014\n\u2014\u2014\n\t\nPm* l>n\n\u25a0THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1928\nBlue\nOvercoats\nBlue Chinchilla Overcoats\nstill hold first place\u2014there is\nno color as dressy for any oc-\ncasion.\nWo Stock Thorn at\n$XS, $30 & $35\nIE\nCWtOCER KILLED\n\\-%ttm   Y<fl_K.   ^Y..   Nov.   i.-^acob\nrtts, ta-yesr-old grocer, was shot\nand killed today in his store on Fifth\nstreet when he refused to obey the\ncommand of a youthful armed bandit\nto turn over his money. The killer\nescaped.\nEDAY\n71\nOn Sunday, the tenth anniversary of\nArmistice Day, it is my earnest desire that\nevery citizen will cooperate in paying tribute\nto the glorious dead who paid the supreme\nsacrifice in the Great War.\n_=_\n.\u2014\nR. D. BARNES, Mayor.\nJ\nSaw Mill Supplies\ntsm\nCHAIN\nSAWS\nCORDAUE\nf-AVIIM '\nCOTTON  WASTE\nCANT HOOKS\nENGINE PACKING\nLOGGING  TOOLS\nLUBRICATING OILS\nRubber Belting\u2014All Sizes\n\u25a0 Prompt Attention to Mail Orders\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESAI- NELSON, B.C  .      RETAIL\nFOURTH DIVISION\nHEADS LIST HUME\nFOR ATTENDANCE\nLacks Only .89  Per  Cent of\nPerfect; Honor Rolls Are\nAnnounced\nLacking only .80 per cent of perfect.\nDivision 4 led the Hume achool ln October attendance with a pecentage of\nM.ll.\nDivision 5 was low class with 92.53\nper cent.\nClass Honor noils and attendance\nfigures follow:\nDivision I, grade VI.\u2014Attendance,\n97.35 per cent.\nProficiency\u2014Ted Anderson, Wilman\nMilne, Jack Bishop. Lyall Hawkins.\nDick Mclnnls, Mildred Smith, Elvera\nMatheson, D'Arcy Hughes, Lucy Hoehn,\nByron Blake, Dorothy Bastatsle, Roy\nBobler, Pred Horllck: Oeorge Cooper,\nGeorge Scott and Audrey Smith, equal;\nEddie Rothery; Elsa Dinney and Violet\nPorter, equal: Annie Scott and Blaze\nGolac. equal; Alfred Vyse: Howard\nHunt and Isabell Brodle, equal; Nettle\nJamieson; Lawrence Mathews and ancy\nSmith, equal; Roy Anderson; Eleanor\nBuyzat and Ruby Morgan, equal:\nSteve Smith, Ruth Heath, Oeorge Fox,\nLEARN TO EARN\nat\nNelson Business College\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nSpecialising    In    Correcting    Defectlve\nSlght by Proper Olaasea\n Quick Repair Service\nGRIFFIN  BLOCK PHONI  US\nA. D. Papazian\nWATCHMAKER,    JEWELER\nAND GRADUATE OPTICIAN\n413 HALL STREET\ncnr DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nFilms, Kodaks, Drags, Stationer?\nMall orders promptly despatched.\nBOX 1063      NELSON, B.C.      PHONE U\nCome In and Oet Your Weight Frea\nPlumbers'  Brass Goods   Fixtures\nand Supplies. Tile and Sewer Pipe\nB. C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.\nIM Fakes-  St        N.l.on,  B. 0.\nElks Taxi-Transfer\nPHONE  77\nTout  car for \u00bb drive Is 6 or 7-Paaa\nSedans.    Ride ln comfort.\nCareful drivers.\n421 BAKER BUD STEVENS\n:\nStanley Heighten and Emily Leemlng.\nDivision 2. grade V.\u2014Attendance.\n90.70 per cent.\nProficiency\u2014Winnie Jardlne John\nDoncaster, Margaret Burnett, Margaret\nMacLeod, Florence Murray, Connie\nBurgolne, Donald Fleming, Jean Browne.\nPaul Hooklngs, Oeorge Helghton, Bill\nOughtred, Cecil Davles. Helen Marapodl,\nEdna Massey, Albert Lindsay, Leland\nJones, Viola Cherry, Albert Brown,\nEvelyn Lundie. Arthur Aherns, Bert\nMatthews, Hazel Tally\u2014, Gertrude Cooper and Jordan Jones.\nDivision 9. grades IV and IIIA\u2014Attendance, 94.62  per cent.\nProficiency\u2014Caroline Westley, Raymond Burgess, LeBile Montgomery.\nRobert Andrew. Edna Nelson, Josephine\nWood, Roy Matheson, Shirley Reld,\nHarry Procter, Davln Reld. Robert\nFleming, Verdon Scott. Margaret Anderson, Oeorge Htnson, Morley Burnett,\nLeslie Bastable, Willie Jones. Richard Johnston. Freda Middleton, Edward\nWanstale. Orade IIIA\u2014Winn Ought-\nred, Frank Oliver. Norman Anderson,\nDoris Habegard, Ruby Olbbon. Kenneth Smith.\nDivision 4, grades III and II\u2014Attendance, 99.11 per 'cent.\nProficiency:\nOrade III\u2014Annabelle McLeod, John\nMusfelt. Home. La Polnte, Doris West-\nley, Joe Maripodl, Beverley Oreen,\nEllen Johnston. Blllle McPlusttes, Harry\nEade,   David   Bundle,  Charles  Llndsey,\nOradell, senior\u2014Blllle McEwan. Bill\nStlllwell, David Burgoyne. Pauline\nWright,   Stanley   Morria.\nOrade n. Junior\u2014Rosemary Fleming,\nBob Sangren, Jack 'Burnett, Floyd\nWaterers, Frank Eade, Elva Johnston,\nCynthia Nichols, Emmett Anderson.\nMarjorle Howe, Jack Dawson, Tom\nAlbion, Claude Dinney, Edith Smith,\nJack Brown, Hughie Browne, Muriel\nSmith. Paddy Oeorge, Margaret Matthews, Jessie Heath.\nDivision 5, grade I\u2014Attendance, 92.63\nper cent.\nProficiency:\nClass IA\u2014Ruth Wright, Oraham\nReld, Bessie Langll, Pred Reddock,\nOlen Weatherhead, Don cherry, Louise\nCherry.\nClass IB\u2014Margaret Smillle, Isabelle\nYoung, Wesley Turner, Charles Oreen,\nArthur Currier. Kenneth Mclnnls, Louis\nBuytat, Arthur Matheson, Jack Mor-\ngon, June Morgan. Gordon stllweli,\nDenis Oeorge, Betty Albion, Oeorge\nMilne.\nFROCKS\nCopies of Original\nParis Models\nSURPRISED you will be' to see these\nWonderful Gotvtis so reasonably priced,\ni at f 16.75  to $35.\nThe Exclusive Madame Arnot and Doris\nBarratt Evening Gowns. These high class\nGowns represent the most exclusive Dresses\nproduced in Canada. Reasonably priced\nat $38.75 to $85.\nI RAMSDEN BROS.\nINSTITUTE WHIST DRIVE\nNETS $10, PIANO FUND\nA whist drive held' at the women's\ninsltute rooms last night Increased\nthe piano fund by about 110. Six\ntables were in play.\nLadles' first prise waa awarded to\nMrs. J. Wallach, ladles' consolation to\nMrs. Helsher. Olentlemen's first to J.\nRyan, and consolation to Mr. Arm-\nshaw.\nMrs. H. Thorpe, Mrs. A. Jeffs, Mrs.\nF. E. Wheeler, Mrs. A. s. Oellnas.\nand Mrs. S. Horswlll, members of the\nways and means committee of the Institute, were ln charge for the evening\nAfter whist refreshments were served\nby Mrs. M. Jones.\nYMIR NOTES\nYMIR, B.C., Nov. 8.\u2014Mrs. 8. A. Curwen entertained a few friends at the\ntea hour Tuesday. The guests were\nMrs. N. Peterson, Miss E. Thompson,\nMrs. H. Stevens, Miss M. Burgess and\nMrs,   w.  B.   Mclsaac.   \"\nA. Burgess waa a business visitor\nto Nelson on Tuesday.\nThe directors of thc Vmlr Women's\nInstitute held.a meeting at the honor Mrs. W. Clark on Wednesday. Those\npresent were Mrs. S. A, Curwen, Mas.\nN. Peterson. Mrs. W. Clark. Mrs. A. B.\nClark and Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac.\nMiss M. Anderson and Miss M. Orton\nmotored to the Wild Horse camp on\nWednesday.\nNEW BENCH UNDER\nCONSTRUCTION AT\nCITY GAS PLANT\nSt. Louis Engineer Is Installing\nIt; Will Cost $2500\nto $3000\nFifty thousand feet of gas will be\nextracted from 3400 pounds of coal tn\n24 hours hy the new gas bench being\ninstalled at the city gas plant here by\nE. K. France, installing engineer for\ntbe Missouri Fire Brick company, St.\nLouis,  Mo.\nLocal men have started laying tht\nfoundations for the bench, which will\nbe 111 feet high, 14 feet long and 13\nfeet wide. The bench, which la to be\nbuilt of fire clay, Is the second of Its\nkind to be constructed ln the city\nthis year, and will cast the City of\nNelson  $3500  to  13000.\nMr. France expects to complete the\nwork In a fortnight. A third bench\nwtll be built ln the city next spring,\nit  Is expected.\nHunter Electric\nOPEBA HOUSE BLOCK, NELSON\nNew distinctive designs in\nCeiling and Wall Lighting Fixtures\nfrom  ,  ..$2.50 UP\nTable Toasters ...,80f UP\nFloor and Bridge Lamps\nat       .....$8.75\nBoudoir and Table Lamps\nfrom  $3.25\nHanging Bed Lamps, Percolators, Curlers and other\nElectrical Appliances all at\nRemarkably Low Prices.\nMrs J. Oansrer. Mrs. J. Ward and\nMiss Dorothy Bowmun and Mrs. Paul\nPitner will appear on the program\nSunday   night  at   Capitol   Theater.\n(8286-1-176)\nWe wish to thank our friends for\ntheir kindness and floral offerings ln\nour    recent   bereavement.\nLILLIAN OANTHIER AND FAMILY\n(6280-1-176)\nFresh killed beef, pork and veal at\nJ. Nlven, stall top end of market.\nSaturday. (8282-2-178)\nFIRST I HI R(li OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, Nelson, will hold a TIIANKSfilV-\nINO AND A DEDICATION SERVICE\non MONDAY, November 12th. at 11\na.   m.    All  are  cordltslly  welcome.\n(0283-2-7m-177)\nHear the Instrumental solos by Nel\u00ab\nson favorites. Mrs. L. McPhall on\npiano and Mrs. Louis Rose on violin\nat the I. O. D. E. concert Sunday\nevening. (8286)\nThanksgiving\nSpecial\nFOR YOUR\nMINCEMEAT\n4-lb. Pkg. Seedless Raisins\nfor   50*\n1-Lb. Mixed Peel  35<\nCurrants pkg 2Qf\nApples, 6 lbs _&}*\u2022\nPUMPKIN PIE\nFresh Pumpkin, lb. 2e>\nCanned    Pumpkin,    solid\npack.    Two sizes,...15<\nand  20-**-\n1 Tin Nutmeg\n1 Tin Cinnamon\n1 Tin Cloves\nfor  35*\nCRANBERRIES  35*\nGraptfruit, 2 lbs 25*\nSweet Potatoes, 2 lbs. 25*\n(       NEW NUTS\nBrazils, Almonds, Filberts,\nWalnuts, lb 30*\nCorn for popping, lb. 15*\nMarsmaliWs, Moonlight\ns   quality, lb 40*\nThe\nIdeal Grocery\nClothing\nfor\nThanksgiving\n$35\nSee our range of $85 Suits\nand Overcoats. Men who\ntake pride in their appearance will find our clothing\n. for fall truly fine garments\nof correct style, beautifully\nand skilfully tailored.\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nprfpsTsr-rr-T-TT-nri.m rl I I'm-f-r-n-T- :\u25a0;::;; za_y_T_tBaMaafi\n:\nBig\nCoat Special,\nFor Friday -St Saturday\nColors mostly Navy and Black. Material Broadcloth, Opossum Fur Trimmed. .Some ladies exclaimed and asked\nthe question, \"How can you do it?\"\nWe wired the makers and got these\nCoats at a special price, their season\nbeing well advanced. This, combined\nwith our low overhead tells the story.\nPrice $39.   Only about 25 Coats left.\nAll our Metallic Hats for $5.05.\nOther Hats up to $6 for $3.95.\nr.ff txcius\/ve sro,?r\nWARD   ST.   OPPOSITE   CAPITOL   THEATER'\nc_c_air.t__xa_xxa3^\n44 Taxi & Transfer\nSEDAN  CABS  FOR HIRE\nDay and Night Service\nReasonable Rate* Careful Driven\nCON CUMMINS. MANAGER\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION    SPECIALIST\nHas Moved To\nOPPOSITE   BANK   OF   COMMERCE\nWinter Dssnre Chili first danre Eagle.\nlusll  tonight, !i p. m.    Program disuse.\n(8288-1-178)\nRemember Court Ellen sale of work\nln    Institute    rooms    November   28th\n(6287-1-175\nDANCE   EAOLCS'   HALL   8ATIRDAY\nNIOHT.     THE   THOI'RADOt'RS.\n(6276-2-176.\nPvthlan Sisters sale of work, home\ncooking and candy ln K. P. hall Thursday,   November   IS. (6263-2-ts)\nNew and second hand clothing and\nfurniture bought and sold. Phone Mrs.\nTurner. 460R. or apply Nelson Auto \u2014\nWrecking  Shop.   Water  St. (6268)\nTICKETS FOR SECOND ANNUAL\nHILL       LADIES'       AUXILIARY       TO\nlllmllll lllllliih RAILWAY TRAINMEN\nNOV. 13 ON SALE AT SMYTHES DRl (1\nSTORE. (6241-2-wf-177l\nKOOTENAY     MUSIC     FESTIVAL\u2014A\nmeeting to consider plans for the organization of a Kootenay Music festival wtll be held at the city hall\noti Friday at 8 p. m. Mayor Barnes\nwill be tn the chair. AH music teachers assd members of musical organizations and others. In terested in the development of u district musical festival are Invited to attend,    (6262-8-176)\nATTENTION    ALL    sW-KERVlUE    MEN\nALL KX-s';RVI<ir~snEN ARE RE-\n<|l ESTED TO MEET AT CANADIAN\nLKOION III H.ISIM. SUNDAY, NOV. 11,\nAT 111:1,-, A. M. SHARP. PARADE\nAM. DEPOSITING OF WREATHS AM.\nATTENDING SPE( IAI. ARMISTICE\n.OMMKMOHATION       SERVICE. OR-\nOANIZATIONS AN IS OTHERS WISH\nINO TO DEPOSIT WREATHS HE-\nSPEl'TFIT-Y III sm I -TED TO RE AT\nUENATOPH AT 10:80. DRESS: UNIFORM IF 1-OSSIIH.E. OTHERWISE!\nMUFTI   AM)  MEDALS.        (6273-3-176)\nPares-ts with foresight provide\ntheir children and themselves\nwith glasses to insure good eyesight, good work and good scholarship. We examlise eyes, design,\nmake and fit glasses for all agee\nind for all uses.\nExpert Service\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nOnOMITRlST   AND   OPTICIAN\n\u25a0mauu s\nSLASH!      SLASH!      SLASH!\nSo successful hub our Sale been that we will be able to move\nmost of our  fixtures to the BIO STORE.\nEverything ln the store at COST PRICES with the exception of\ncontract goods, Items that we bought as price protected or on\nwhich a standard selling price Is understood. We value too highly\nthe friendly relations which have always existed between ourselves\nand our competitors to have them disturbed at this time.\nHere are a few Items picked at random from the many that\nwe offer: Regular   Sale\nPrice   Price\nColumbia   Gramophone  $135.00   174.60\nColumbia  Gramophone   86.00     49.60\nPortable   Gramophone    a 35.00     19.60\nDJERKISS Powder and Perfume Set   1__5        .64\nTooth   Brushes    60        .33\nTooth   Brusiies    \u201e \u201e     .35        .18\nPace   Powder    76        .43     \u2022\nFac\u00ab   Powder    \u201e....-. 60 .34\nTalcum  Powder   p. .. 37        .17\nCold  Cream  - 60        .34\nVanishing   Cream    -      .50        .34\nPar Shaving Cream  60        .38\nHair  Clippers   1.38        .67\nHair  Clippers      3.00       1.75\nVacuum Bottles  , 75        .48\nPlaying   Cards    ...\" 76        .41\nToilet  Paper      .15\n8 for\nBusiness Envelopes  10\nBeautiful Christmas cards printed\nwith your own name and address from\n61.60 to 16.73 for TWO dozen. Tht\nmost wonderful values ever offered.\nBee our big selection early. We were\nsold out last year. The Dally News\nJob   Department. (6830)\nForthcoming Events\nTwilight   recital,\n(02(10-1-178)\nNo.    28\nTrinity   chureh.\nLinen   Envelopes   \t\nInk\nInk, pints ...\nInk, quarts\nWriting   Pads\n.16\n.16\n.78\n1.26\n.16\nWriting   Pads,   ruled 16\nWriting Pads        at\nPapetrles    1.25\nPapetrlea     _>\nPapetrles 75\n.22\n.06\n.Dm\n.08\n.66\n.92\n.10\n.09\n.18\n.73\n.62\nPapetrles          m        .31\nPapetrles         ,33        ,ig\nOut-of-town customers wishing to take advantage of these\nopportunities will please enclose sufficient cash to cover amount of\norder and postage.   We will enclose change with goods.\nMANN, RUTHERFORD CO.\nDispensing Chemists\nDRUGS BOOKS STATIONERY\n_\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0 1 \u25a0 1 \u25a0__\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 1 1 1 \"\"*\" 1 \u25a0 1 \u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0'- na 1 1\nTRY A CLASSIFIED AD.\n, Tonight 7 and 9\nBuutr-v\nHTVWflCH\nMystifying Love Story of\nthe Sea.\nTremendous Sets! Big Scensw!\nAll as a background for Billie's\nexquisite beauty.\n'THE HALF PINT HERO\"\nM. G. M. News\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1928_11_09","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403855","@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":"1928-11-09 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1928-11-09 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\/1.0403855"}