{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-12-01","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1934-11-09","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404732\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \u2014\nMines South of Nelson ti . r ov'i nci al li MAR i\nUp to New Power   mTom ' C\n\u2014 Pa&e Eleven\n&S\\\nToronto Leafs and Chicago\nHawks Win Games\n\u2014Pa_e Nine\nVOLUMIM\nNELSON. BRITISH CbLUMHA. CANADA-FRIDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER >, 1934\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNUMBER  171\nMANSLAUGHTER, SUNDQUEST VERDICT\njuryoutfour\nHOURS-SEEM\nLENIENT TERM\nKootenay Farmers Move\nAid the Primary Producer\nA UNITED VOICE\nIN FARM AFFAIRS\nIS ULTIMATE AIM\nWould Embrace Fruit, Poultry, Stock, etc.;\nHaskins Outlines Idea; V\/est Kootenay\nFarmers Gather in Nelson\nROAD CONDITIONS, FERRIES, GAS,    ,\nFORESTS SUBJECTS FOR DEBATES\n-\nProtest at Gas Tax; Ask Conditioning of the\nMain Highwavs; Grand Forks Asks\nSeed Regulations; Many Speakers\nWhat mav prove to be the embryo of a provincial organization to\nrepresent and voice the opinion! and wishes of all primary producers\nand possibly a Dominion organization for the aame function, took form\nat this aeml-annual convention of the West Kootenay Central Farmer's\ninstitutes h) the city hall Thursday. Preliminary arrangements Were\ndrafted following an address made by Mr. Haskins, chairman ot the tree\nfruit botrd of British Columbia, and the farmers went as far aa instructing\nthe advisory board to name a representative to act when an organizing\nconvention ia cAUed. Mr. Haskins stated that an effort would be made\nto set tbe organization of the new body in motion before campaigning\ncommenced for the next federal election, ln order that the producers\nwonld have something to present tor the candidates. The central\norganization would be in contact with all primary producers including,\nfruit growers, poultrymen, cattle men, vegetable producera and others,\nand ln this way create a united voice in matten vital to the Industry.\n*  *   In conjunction with th* plan, a\nresolution was passed placing the\nconvention on record as disapproving of th* practice of giving confined areas the power to establish\nmarket oontrol, and of approving of\na plan to bring all products under a\ncontrol board with a provincial wide\nscop*.\nMr. Haaklna alao outlined the new\nmarketing get The ipeakera of the\nj_$xnJs^wS.a\nPutnam. M.PJ, for f&leon-Creiton.\nThe delegates disposed of r great\ndeal of business, including resolutions, degllng with forest protection,\nroad improvement, marketing control, and other topics.\nMAYOR OFFERS WELCOME\nMayor S. H. Smythe opened proceedings with a word of welcome\non behalf of the city. It was the\nsecond tlm* he had had the oppor-\nHUGE LAKE IS\nSUDDENLY DRY\nBottom Falls Away\nand Fish Wiggle\nin Florida Mud\nTALLAHASSEE. Fla., Nov. ,8\n(AP).\u2014Nature today completed one\not her tricks and Lake Immonia,\nWhich at normal level covers an\narea of approximately 20 square\nmiles, went dry. .\nFish by the thousands were left\nto die In the sun, while other thousands were captured by hand and\nwith garden rakes ln the tiny pools\nthat remained aa thc lake < ained\nout through a \"sink hole.\"\nOwners ot plantations bordering\nthe lake saved thousands ot bass\nand bream by lifting them out of\nthe shallow pools with nets and\ntransferring them in tanks to other\nlakes.\nIt is no new thing for big lakes\nin this area to go dry as suddenly\nas did Lake Immonia. A few years\nago Lake Jackson drained out with\na roar, and its bottom was cultivated\nfor one crop year.\nLater lt partly filled up again.\nWhen the lakes refill, curiously\nenough the water rises through the\nsame sink holes where It drained\nout, and fish of various sizes return\nwith it\n(Contlnutd en Ptgt Twe)\nCOAST PRINCIPAL\nDEAD\nVancouver Welfare\nFund It Clote to\n$306 Thousand\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 9 (CP).-The\nVancouver Welfare federation's annual financial campaign was closed\ntonight with $305,554.74 : bscribed.\nAlthough short of the objective\u2014\n$355,000\u2014this was an increase of\n$10,622 over last year's total.\nBurnaby Expenses\nExceed Income\nBURNABY, B.C., Nov. 8 <CP)-\nAn official statement ot receipts\nand expenditures in Burnaby municipality during October, submitted\nby Treasurer R. Bolton to Commissioner Hugh M. Fraser, shows income ot $65,068, Including $34,471\nfor direct relief to be paid by the\nSrovlnclal government, and expen-\niturea of $111,766.\n\u2022PENCE,\nPIONEER\nC.P.R.\nMAN,  DIES\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 8 (CP) -\nThomas T. Spence, 69, well-known\nfigure ln western Canada railway\ncircles until his retirement, died\nhere today. He wu for 20 years\ngeneral car foreman with the Canadian Pacific railway ln Vancouver. John Spence of Winnipeg is a\nbrother.\nVANCOOVTR. Nov. 8 (CP)\u2014William Oeorg* Oourlle, 88, principal of\nCentral school and for more than\n25 years a member ot the Vancouver\npubllo schools teaching ataff, la dead\nattar a lingering Illness.\nCastlegar and Trail\nMen Named J.P.'s\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CD-Appointment of Joseph Speakman of\nCastlegar, B.C, and James Skinner\nof Trail, B.C., aa Justlcea of the\npeace was announced today.\nGOLFBALLIS\nWEAPON USED\nBY STRIKERS\nTeed and Driven at\nFactory Windows\nin Mill Rumpus\nHUNDREDS SOAR\nTHROUGH THE AIR\nWint 9150,000\nEight Arrests; Riots\nSerious and, Many\n\u2666     Are injured\nLUDLOW, Mass., Nov. I (AP).\n\u2014In tha midst of a riot here today\nhundreds of golf bills wer*\n\"fired\" in a bombardment by\nstriking workman.\nUnabl* to attaek th* Jut* twlnt\nmill of th* Ludlow Manufacturing\nAssociates from en* sld* because\nIt fronts on the Chicopae river,\nstrikers Improvised tees on th*\nopposite lid* of th* stream and\ntrovt tb* btll* across tht river\ntt the mill windows.\nOrd*r was restored to the strike-\ntorn -town tonight by 38 state do-\nllcemtn after sevtra rioting between polle* and tha workman.\nEight parsons wert arrestedj on\ncharge* of rioting. i\nThe fighting tonight waa the sec-\n(Contlnued on Page Twtlvt)\nMarkets at\na Glance\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks irregularly higher.\nTortnto mines\u2014Closed higher.\nNew York\u2014 Stocks lower and\nheavy at close.\nWinnipeg\u2014Whett down *\/, to a\ncent.\nToronto\u2014Bacon hogs off car unchanged at 7.50.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver, tin and lead\nhigher; copper unchanged; line\nlower.\nNew York\u2014Bar sliver tnd tin\nhigher; lead and zinc unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Cotton, rubber and\ncoffee lower; sugar higher.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar down\nH to 1.02 7-16.\nULM TO SHIP\nPLANE\nPORTSMOUTH. Bngland, NOV. 8\n(AP)\u2014Captain Charlea T. P. Ulm.\nAustralian filer who holds the former speed reoord from England to hla\ncountry, -will ship a plane to Montreal Saturday (or an 8000-mile\nflight to Sydney.\nLLOYD GEORGE ENVISAGED BOERS ON\nBRITISH SIDE 2 YEARS BEFORE WAR\n-*\nDay After Christmas\na Legal Holiday\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CP)-Pto-\nplt of British Columbit wlll htvt\ntwo full holldaya at Christmas\ntimt thlt yttr. Undtr tn amendment to the Interpretation aot last\nsession, December 28 better known\nas Boxing day, wtt specified ai a\nholiday and this htt now bttn\nprocltlmed by tht lieutenant gov-\ntrnor-ln-etuncil, making It t non-\njuridical day for tht purposes of\ntht Btnkt and Exchmgt tot All\nthspt and places of business will\nclose at It Is a statutory holiday\nhow.\nSIX MONTHS FOR\nFRAUD\nVANCOUVER, Nov. I (CP) -\nFrancis Cooke, charged with promoting and seeking investors for\nan imaginary airplane service, pleaded guilty to obtaining money by\nfalse pretences in police court today\nand was sentenced to six months in\njail. He was given a similar sentence\nin Burnaby a few days ago in connection with the same fraud.\nMacMillan Appeal In the Brownlee\nCaee May Be Heard, Calgary Court\nEDMONTON, Nov. 8 (CP).\u2014Adjournment until December with a\nchange ot venue to Calgary ln the appeal of Vivian MacMlllan and her\nfather, A. D. MacMillan, against the judgment of Mr. Justice C. W. Ives\nin disallowing the Jury verdict for 815.000 damages against J. F. Brownlee, former premier of Alberta in an action for seduction, was believed\npossible today.\nNeil D. Maclean, counsel for the MacMillans, ts ill ln hospiUl In Toronto and it is believed the application for adjournment will be made\nSaturday. The appeal was scheduled to be heard next week but will\nprobably now go over to the appeal court sittings opening December 10.\nGranting  of  Constitution   to\nAfrica Result of 10-\nMinute Speech\nBY THOMAS T. CHAMPION\n(Canadian Preaa Staff Writer)\nLONDON, Nov. 8 (CP ctble) .\u2014\nHow David Lloyd George, a year\nbefore the Great War broke out,\nenvisaged the possibility of driving\nthe Germans out of South Africa is\nrecounted ln further pages of the\ndiary of the late Lord Riddel to be\npublished tomorrow by Country\nLife.\nLord Riddel, the well-known\npublisher, also noted that the granting of a constitution to South Africa\nwas the result ot a 10-minute speech\nin the British cabinet by the late\nSir Henry Campbell-Bannerman,\nwhich moved tt least one of the\ncabinet members to tears.\nREMARKABLE SPEECH\nThe diary records a talk Lord\nRiddell had with Lloyd George,\nwho spoke of Campbell Banner-\nman's speech. \"The result of 'CB's'\npolicy has been remarkable,\" Lloyd\nGeorge said. \"It haa captured both\nby lta magnanimity Just as all great\nmen tre impressed when you display confidence in them.\n\"If we had a war tomorrow Botha\nand 50,000 Boers would march with\nus, sic'i* by side. He would, if nee\nessary, drive the Germans out of\nSouth Africa.\"\nThese remarks were made to\nLord Riddell, and recorded by him,\nin 1913. As a matter of record, when\nthe war came, Louis Botha, the\ngreat Dutch statesman ot South\nAfrica, at once declared himself for\nBritain and completed the conquest\nof German Southwest At \"lea. then\norganized a force to assist in the\ncapture of German East Africa, as\n(Continued on Page Twe)\nA. CAMPBELL MACKENZIE\n\"It was my lucky day,\" said Alexmder Campbell Mackenzie (above)\nas it was announced that he had won\n(190,000 on the first sweepstake ticket he had ever bought. The Scottish-\nCanadian it a resident of Toronto.\nLOCATE $4000\nRANSOM CACHE\nUrschel Bills Found in\nWoodshed; Schott\nIII But Is Held\nMEDFORD, Ort., Nov. 8*(AP).-\nA tiny scrap of Btper, clinging to\n1.rafter in \u00bb .woodshed, led off leers\ntt flit Mdlnl plac* of th* $4008\ntfttcfid* ranttnT'taone* rtcdvereff\nhere lut nlfht.\nFederal agents, state police and\nsheriff's deputies tonight announced\nthat no further sums of the money\nhad been found at the property of\nAlvin H. Scott, but .the search continued.\nScott layi critically 111 at Rose-\nburg, Ore., more than 100 miles\nfrom here, and is charged with\nconspiracy in concealing money paid\nas ransom for Charles F. Urschel,\nOklahoma oil man kidnapped in\nJuly, 1938.\nSTAGGERED WHEN\nCRASH OCCURRED\nCALGARY. Nov. 8 <CP)-Oeorgt\nHarbour, crown witneu tt the trial\nof R. C. Phillips on a charge ot\nmanslaughter arising from an automobile collision here Aug. 10 whtn\ntwo persona were fatally Injured.\ntestified todsy that Fullllps staggered\nwben he left the aoene of the accident. Mrs. Edith Clemest Toronto,\nand Patrick Beach, Calgary, died as\na result of Injuries auffered ln the\ncrash.\nHarbour, who lived near the scent\nof tht tragedy, said he offered to\ndrive to their homes. Mist Christine\nStrlck, a passenger in the car driven\nby Philips, and Phillips. Harbour\nsaid Phllllpe declined assistance and.\nas Miss Stride waa leaving to go to\nHarbour's garage, wltneaa aaid he\nheard hor aay to accused: \"Be sure\nyou call me ln the morning so we\nwill get our stories straight.\"\nNumerous witnesses wen called\nby tbt crown today to testify as to\ndetails tt tht tcene ot tbe crash.\nThe eaat la expected to. conclude\nlate tomorrow.\nC.P.R. Payroll Is\nUp With Earnings\nNumber of Employed Cains;\nFreight Traffic* Lighter\nOTTAWA,. Nov. 8 (CP) .-Canadian railways earned $25,201,460 in\nAugust as against 823,730,041 for\nAugust last year, the Dominion\nbureau of statistics reports today.\nOperating expenses increased\nfrom $81,144,478 to $22,946,651, which\nreduced the net operating revenue\nfrom $2,589,563 to M.254,808. and the\noperating income from $1,678,516 to\n$1,179,773. Freight traffic wu slightly lighter than in 1933, but passenger traffic, measured in passenger\nmiles, increased by 18.8 per cent.\nToUl pay roll increased from $13.-\n085,897 in August 1983, to $13,627,-\n387, and the number of employees\nfrom 117, .08 to 125,180. For January\nto August gross revenues were $190,-\n600,718 in. 1934 and $187,772,122 ln\n1933 and the operating income\namounted to $15,715,897 in 1934 and\n$4,973,182 in 1933, the bureau says.\nIi Killed at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 8 (CP) -\nWerner Kahn, 19-year-old deckhand\not the Vancouver, Is dead here from\nterrible injuria suffered when he\nwas crushed beneath a falling sllng-\nload of lumber while working In\nthe shlp't hold at Balltntyne pier\nyesterday.\nDEMOCRATS IN\nUSA. CONTROL\n30 OF STATES\nHave All Offices in\n18 States After\nthe Election\nEASILY CONTROL'\nHOUSE, SENATE\nHave 38 Governors to\n\u2022 10 in Opposition;\nRoosevelt Busy\nBy W. B. BAGSDALE\nAssociated Press staff Writer\nWASHINOTON, Nov, t (AP)\u2014\nThe emphatic strokes with ninth\nthe United Slates electorate nailed\nthe new deal flag to the Washington mainmast on Tuesday echoed\ntoday In white bouse talks designed\nto mold Into permanence some of\ntbe policies It represents.\nA Democratic victory ao tumultous as to give tbem, rougnly\nfour-fifths of the major electoral\noffices In the country, late today\nleft  the* atandlng:\nHouse: Democrats Iti; RepubM-\netna IM; Farmer Labor li Progressives 7; uhdeclded 1.\nSenate: Democrats 88; Republicans 84; Farmer Ubor 1; Progressive 1; undecided 1.\nOerernors: Democrats 18; Be-\npublicans 8; Farmer Ubor ll\nProgressives 1.\nOut of a popular vote of 38.400,-\n000, the Democrats had  15,380.000.\n(Contlnutd on Ptgt Twtlvt)\nFATHERK\nOUT A FAMILY\nWife, Tot of Two and\nBabe 12 Days Old\nHis Victims\nSTONEHAM, Mass.. Nov. 8 (AP).\n\u2014An 'entire family of four waa\nwiped out today when a father\nturned killer, police said, ln a fit of\nJealous anger.\nThe dead tre: Joel E. Lldquist, 27:\nhis wife Corrlne, 26; and their two\nchildren, Syrenie Ellen, 2, and a 12-\ndty-old infant boy. The children\nwere stabbed to death tnd the\nmother strangled, police said, by\nthe father, who then hanged him-\nself.\nMrs. Lidquist returned only two\ndays ago from a Melrose hospital\nwhere tbe baby was born.\nMr. and Mrs. Darough\nBoth Die at Mission\nUncle and Aunt of Nelsonites\nNever Conscious After\nCrash\nMISSION CITT. B. C, Nov. 8 (CP)\n\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Darough\nof Chilliwack, B. C, are dead here\nfrom Injuries suffered late Tueaday\nwhen tbelr automobile was ln collision with a Cinadlan Pacific railway passenger train at Dewdney.\nThe car waa totally wrecked and\nMr. and Mrs. Darough suffered fractured skulls. Ths huaband died ln\nthe hospital here laat nlgbt and Mrs.\nDarough died today without regaining consciousness.\nMr. and Mra. charlea A. Darough\nwho died at Mlaaion City after their\ncsr crashed Into a train, were uncle\nand aunt of Miss K. Darough, C. R.\nDarough and D. A. Darough of Nelson.\nCranbrook Grant\nIs for Half the\nMaterial's Cost\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CP)\u2014Hon. F.\nM. MacPherson confirmed today a\nprovincial grant of 82100 to the city\nof Cranbrook under relief statutes.\nas half ot the cost of materials and\na number of projects to be carried\nout by relief labor.\nThe grant, it was explained, is in\nrecognition of special circumstances\ntt Cranbrook, In view of relative\nabsence of provincial works in that\narea.\nRickenbacker Is\nHolder of a New\nAir Speed Record\nNEWARK, NJ, Nov. 8 <AP)-\nCapt. Eddlt Rlcktnbacker't big\ntwin-motored transport pllnt\nlanded at Ntwtrk tlrport tt 8:48\np.m, E.8.T., todty, ttttlng a ntw\ntranscontinental reoord of 12 houra\nfour mlnutet for transport planet.\nThe old record htld by himself\nwat 13 houra two minutes.\nCheer Doumergue*\nBut Flandin Forms\nNew French Qov'nt\nFigures In the\nFrench Crisis\nGaston Doumergue, retiring\npremier.\nHenri  Petaln,  retiring\nmlnltter'of war.\nAndrew Tardleu, vice-premier un*\nder Doumergue, who* It retiring.\nJAPAN WIU NOT\nTAKE NAVY TERMS\nLONDON, Nov. 8 (API-Japan\ntonight stood as firm as ever on\nher demajgd for equality on the\nhigh seas.\nJapanese delegates here tor trl-\npower naval conversations have decided tentatively not to accept informal BriUsh proposals intended to\nbreak the existing deadlock, even\nthough these proposals went far toward embodying Tokyo's scheme for\nnew methods of limiting navies, it\nwas learned authoritatively. A formal reply may be delayed until\nnext week, however, and it was indicated the refusal would be so\nworded as to let the conversations\ncontinue.\nTHE WEATHER\nMin. Max.\nNELSON ...\" 37 55\nNanalmo  39 82\nVancouver  42 54\nVictoria 44 63\nAtlln  28 38\nKamloops    38 42\nPrince George  28 42\nPrince Hupert 40 48\nEstevan Point 42 52\nSpokane  48 52\nPortland, Ore  48 54\nSeattle  , 48 52\nSan Francisco 80 74\nPenticton      34\nGrand Forks  36 50\nSaskatoon  24 42\nCalgary  28 48\nEdmonton  28 48\nQu'Appelle 22 48\nVernon      38\nWinnipeg   26 32\nMoose Jaw    26 56\nDawson          14 18\nForecast for Nelson and vicinity\u2014\nGenerally fair with frosts at night.\nFrance Faces Gravest\nCrisis Since the\nLast Big Riots\n***%\nRETAIN, THE WAR\nMINISTER, IS OUT\nMrs. Sundquest .Says.\nShe Didn't Perform\nIllegal Operation\nCROWN CALLS FOR\nMANSLAUGHTER\n50 Arrests Made as Judge Pays Tribute,\nCrowd Shouts the        to Constable for\nDeputies Down Excellent Work\n\u25a0y JOHN EVANS\nCopyright 1934 by the Associated\nPress\nPARIS, Nov. 8-Whlla crowds In\nPtrlt, Nancy tnd elsewhere cheered \"Ptpt\" Gaston Doumergue and\nerltd \"Down with parliament.\"\ntowering Pierre Etltnnt Flandin,\nDoumergue. successor at premier,\nlttt tonight finished tht work of\npitching together (nether \"truce\"\ngovernment.\nTht tlx-ftot Flandin, apurrtd\nby tht gravest crisis France haa\nknown since tht bloody riots nlnt\nmonthi  tgo  that  brought   Doumergue to power, needtd only 10\nhoura to put together tht placet\nof tht ublntt wrtcktd  by  Ed-\noutrd Htrrlott's Radical Socialists.\nMembers of the new cabinet went\nImmediately to the Elysee palace to\nbe sworn in by Prealdent Albert\niebrun.\nFlandin's cabinet swung slightly\nfurther to the right tban did the\ngovernment which it replaced, by\nthe inclusion of- Georges Mandel,\nminister ot communication, arch-\nConservative and right-hand man\nof the late George Clemenceau. The\nrightist* tendency was carried a\nstep farther by the exclusion ot the\nformer Socialist minister of labor,\nAdrieri \"Mat-quit, who refused to\nthe new government becauie\n\"i sramct.\nOlTS TWO POSTS\n.. Radical Socialist! gained\ntwo posts, bringing the numbet' of\ntheir portfolios to eight. Included\nItt the new cabinet are 13 deputlet,\nfour senators, two military men and\none civilian,\n(Continued on Ptgt Twtlvt)\nFOUR MEN ARE\nVICTIMS IN FIRE\nTwo Million Dollar Blaze\nDestroys Big Grain\nElevator\nNEWPORT NEWS.iVt., Nov. 8\n(AP).\u2014Four men burned to death In\nthe $2,000,000 fire that levelled the\nmammoth Chesapeake & Ohio grain'\nelevator here late today.\nThe dead: George Martin, Jacob\nEllis, George Thomasson and\nCharles Shelton, all workmen in\nthe elevator.\nSeven men were In the elevator-\nwhen the fire started, presumably\nfrom a grain dust explosion.   \u25a0\nThe fire was still burning tonight,\nbut waa under control. Firemen,\nrealizing it was useless to attempt to\nput out the fire within the elevator,\ndirected their efforts toward preventing the spread of the flames.\nVERNON, B.C, Nov. 8 ICP).\u2014 >\nA verdict ot guilty of manslaugttr\nwith \u25a0 strong recommendation fop I\nmercy was returned by an assist 1\ncourt jury tonight, bringing  to *\nan end the four-day trial of Mra.\nQrlttje Sundquest of tha  Boundary country, Mrs. tundqqast wtt\ncharged with having performed -\nan Illegal operation on Veronica\nKuva,   18-year-old   Grand   Fork*\n(Contlnutd on Ptgt Twtlvt)\nSMiTHIE FREE\nCONTINUEHOP\nLegal \u2022 Fetters Around!\nPlane Unknottted;\nto Hop Atlantic\nLOS ANOIUSB, Nov. 8 (AT)--\nlegal fetters which* bound hit\nmonoplane   to  tbt  ground  **\nSir  Charles  BUngsford-Smlttt\ndisclosed plant to conquer nt*\nUl worlds.\nTht daring Australian pilot, tn,\nrecently spanned tht Pacific for tin\nsecond time disclosed to a trait I\nof motion picture officials whoa\nluncheon guest he wat tbat U\naoon will begin a 17(000-mlle fllgh >\nhomeward via New Tork, tht At\nUntie ocean and Europe.        ,\nThomaa Catton, a promoter wha\nIn 1928 unsuccessfully undertook td\nobtain financial backing for the noil\nfamous flight Ot tbe \"Southard\nCroes\", attached the flier'e new sbt}\nat the municipal airport hart ooa**\ntending the Australian pilot owed\nhim 11780 tor \"servlcee\" and Int\ncldental expenses.\nToday, however, Klntsford-Smltbl\nlegal counsel announced* tbt attach*\nment had been lifted after t cona\nference with catton'a lawyers.       ,\nGets Six Months ond\n$200 Fine for Drugs\nEDMONTON, Nov. 8 (OO-JNggt .\ncue of several charged under the\nOpium and Drug act as I result of\na determined drive by membera ot\nthe R.C.M.P. narcotic squad waa\ndisposed of here today when Alept\nReid was ordered confined to. Po\u00bb\nnoka mental institute for six monthi\nand a fine ot $200, with an additional\nthree months in default of payment\nby Magistrate Primrose. Reid pleaded guilty to illegal possession oi\nm.rphlne.\nIS \"RIDICULOUS\" THAT KING GEORGE\nSHOULD BE NAMED IN ARMS PROBE\nMennonite Brethern\nChurches of B.C. May\nBe Joined in One\nREEDLEY, Calif., Nov. 8 (AP).-\nA possible union of the Mennonite\nBrethren churches of British Columbia with the west coast conference of the denomination is under\nconsideration, it became known following the adjournment of the annual four-day session of the conference here.\nAt tbe final business meeting Rev.\nJ. H. Rlchert was elected conference president, Rev. G. B. Huebert,\nvice-president, O. J. Ewert, secretary with A. A. Schroeder and D. L.\nSchellenberg, assistants. All are\nfrom here.\nThe next conference will be held\nat The Dalles, Ore.\nSir'John  Simon'Cheered  Irtj\nHouse; Labor Motion on\nManufacture Lost\nLONDON, Nov. 8  (AP),\u2014A Lab\nmotion for tbe abolition of prlvatj\nmanufacture   and   trade   ln\namenta was defeated ln tbe hou\nof commons tonight. The vota waal\n970  to 68.\nSir John Simon, foreign secretary*i\nmade It clear that the BrltUh\ngovernment will not permit an In*\nqulry after the fashion ot the ra.\ncent. United states aenate commit*'\ntee's  Investigation  Into  armament's\nLiberal speakers urged aucb an la*\nqulry today but Sir John aald\nmethods uaed ln the United Statin\n\"would not commend themselves ti\nBrltlth practice.\" Labor membera aM\n(Continued on Page Nlnt)\ni\nHanden's New \"TroceGovernment\" Finds\nHerriott and Laval Among Its Membership\nPARIS, Nov. 8 (AP).\u2014The membership of the new prench cabinet,\nanother \"truce\" government, Is m\nfollows:\nEtlenne Flandin, premier, without\nportfolio.\nKdouard Herrlot, minister of state\nwithout portfolio.\nLouis   Msrtln,   minister   of   state\nwithout  portfolio.\n'Pierre Laval, foreign affairs.\nGeorges Pernot, Justice or vice\npremier.\nSenator Marcel Regnler, Interior.\nOenerai   Louis   Philip   Thomas\nMsurln, war.\nFrancois Pletrl. navy. .\nOenerai  Victor  Densln, - air-\nPaul Mamhandeau, commerce.\nGermain Martin, finance.\nAndre Mallarme, education.\nSenator Henri Roy, public work*',\nWilliam Bertrand, merchant mat\nlne.\nDeputy Paul Jacquler, labor.\nAndre Rlvollet, pensions.\nHenri  Quievllle, public  health.\nDeputy Georges Mandel, communications.\nSenator Imlle Canes, agriculture\n*-**-\nIfgjyyk\n_________________\n \t\n. A3E TWO-\nMORE ABOUT\nI.K.FHS\n(Contlnutd From Page Seven)\ntunlty of addressing the association\nand declard tbat he vat clad to see\nthat the farmers were still carrying\non the good cause. There was an\nevidence of cooperation and it was\nthrough cooperation that they would\nsucceed in their efforts. The farming business was an uphill fight\nbut, by pulling together, the farmers\ncould expect to ajcomplish considerable, he said.\nIt was only at tbe recent munlcl-\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C\u2014FRIDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER t, UJ4-\npalitles convention at Kamloopi\nthat the burden of taxation had\nbeen forcefully brought home to\nhim -in donveraations with various\"\nfarmers of lhat territory. The la\/id\nimprovement taxation and the various other taxes seemed stifling to\nthe.mayor, but on top ot it all they\nseemed to be prospering. It wat one\nevidence of the results brought\nabout by cooperation. The farmer\ncould not hope to do anything for\nhimself except through the Influence\nexerted by the association and the\nwork that the body was carrying\nOh njerited considerable praise.\nKenneth Wallace of Boiwell. secretary-treasurer, gave the minutei\nof the last meeting and was thanked\nfor his comprehensive report\nMONASHEE ROAD\nH. Kershaw of Nakusp, dealing\n4 VICTORIA B.C. *\n2fy? iampB $at} ifot?I\nNEW LOW WINTER RATES\nOFFICIAL HOTEL, AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF B.C.\nProprietors: Major and Mrs. ). E. Mathews\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nThe HUME HOTEL\nPHONE 787\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nluncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c ond 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nFree Bua Service Nelson B.C. George Benweil, Prop.\nW. R. Lawrence.. Pentlcton; S. I\nI Bailey, IJenver, Colo.; G. H. Hobbs, |\n* Alnsworth; W.'E. Haskins, Kelowna;:\nA. Watoff, A, Bramey, C. O. Allan,\n, Vancouver; Geza de Krera, Harry\n. Adaskln, Milton Blackstone, Boris\nHambourg. Hart House String Quar-\n1 tet, Toronto; J. E. Moore, A. LeSage,\nCalgary; Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Smyth,\nLethbridge; C. Hovait and ton, Nakusp; G. L. Famhacu, Spokane; V,\nRead, Erie; Mr. and Mrs. A. J,\nLewis, Gray Creek; J. E. Lawrence,\nB. Salmon, Montreal; T. Garceau, H.\nG. Norris, G. A. Stone, F. F. Burpee,\nJ. Buskgrd, Ottawa.\n31fe Samy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is King\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Rote).\nMany Rooms With Private\n.Baths or Showers.\n124 BAKER ST.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n PHONE 19\t\nNELSON, B.C.\nSAVOY - D. Mowat, Winnipeg;\n\"Jlel,   Snowden,  A.  Cronie, Trail;\n.Walter Miller, Nakusp: Miss Ander-\natad, Wynndel;  J. O'Connor and\nson, H. S. Walker, Vancouver; R. S.\nNewton, T. B. Mitchell, Tbronto; F.\nMills, N. S. Lovewell, City; Tommy\nFletcher, Cretton; % McDiarmld,\nRevelstoke,\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nUt  E. MADDEN\nComplete!;   Remodelled\nHot  and Cold  Water\nIn the HEABT of tu* City\nNew Grand Hotel\nV.   L.   KAPAK.   Prop.\nWeekly and Monthly Ratea\nBot  and Cold  Water\nSingle too np     Double si.su up\n810 \u2022 Montb and Up\nOccidental Hotel\n10S Vernon St. phone MIL\na WASSICK\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nMiners' Head .uartert\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA. LAPOINTE, Prop.\nRooms from SOo to $1.50\nMonthly $10 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and cold\nwater In every room\n609 Baker St. Pbone at)\nVancouver, B. C, Hotels\nnewly       'VM VANMUVM H6M!\u00bb      pH0_M\nRENOVATED Dllf fettll  HOtCl     'LEVATOR\nA. Pstsrson, late of Colcmin, Alta., Prop.    800 8eymour St., Vancouver\nTRANSPORTATION-Freight ond Possenger\nI\nREMEMBRANCE DAY EXCURSION\nFIVE-DAY ROUND TRIP EXCURSION AT\nFARE AND ONE QUARTER\nTickets on Sale November 9, 10, 11 and 12.\nReturn Limited November 13, 1934.\nOne Day Round-trip Excunion st Regular One-way Fare\nNovember llth.\n. \u2022      \u25a0\u25a0 ' -   * -     ' ,\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines Ltd.\nNELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND\n\u00b0%^    FREIGHT LINfc\nPhone\nJ. C. \"SCOTTY\" MUIR. PROP.\nNelson      prompt   efficient  service\n7?     *. AT  ALL TIMES\nLeaving Ntlton\nat 9 i.m.\nPhone\nTrail\n13 or 101\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday.\nTraU\nPhone\n135\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nM. H. McIVOR, Prop.\nNelson\nPhone\n35\nHENDRICKS\"  K A SLO - N E L SON\nMOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE\n\u2022    LEAVING KASI.O AND RETURN-MON., WED, and FRl.\nLEAVES KASLO 545 AM       LEAVES NELSON 11 AM.\nNelson -Pipol-Wllliami' Transfer, Phone IM - Kaalo. Phone SI\nPROMPT   EFFICIENT   SERVICE\n* \t\nwith the reeolutlon regarding the\nimprovement! to the Monashee paat\nrotd, declared that the institute of\nhis district had gained prompt action In the matter through cooperating with the Nelson and Vernon\nboardi of trade. O. B. Appleton of\nSunshine Bay advised the meeting\nto send its most important resolutions direct to the alrectloiis committee of the deptrtment of agriculture. If left in the hands of the\nadvisory board they might stand a\nchance of being pigeon-holed.\nCorrespondence included a letter\nfrom E. S. Jones, district public\nworkt engineer of Cranbrook. dealing with the agitation of road improvements and new road construction in the area between Wlnlaw and\nCrescent Valley. Mr. Jonei stated\nthat the construction of a road on\nthe east side of the river, south from\nAppledale, was being contemplated\nand that possibly a survey would\nbe made .with a view of correct\ngrading, etc.\nAGAINST ROAD RELOCATION\nP. C. Green ln answering to the\nletter stated that there had been\nsome agitation for a relocation of\nthe road on the other side of the\nriver but that It was an unfair and\nunwise proposition. First the construction of a new road would be a\nbig item as far as expense was concerned. Secondly onlv the few families lived on that side of the river,\nfive or six families at the most,\nwhereas 90 per cent of the oopu'n-\ntion of that district wat on the side\nwhere the present road exists. If\nthe government could not afford to\nkeep the present road in anything\nlike good condition, lt was unlikely\nthat it could afford the upkeep of\ntwo roads. In considering tha road\nthere were a number of things that\nthe association would have to keen\nin mind. Including the effect that lt\nwould have on the farmers on the\nVallican side who would automatically be placed on a aecdntjery road.\nThe bus lines would not consider\nrunning on a branch line and they\ncatered to the largest population.\nIt was a case of a few who wished\nto enhense the value of their property with the view of selling.\nThe department of public works\nwill be asked to commence standardization work on the Lower Slocan Valley highway at the earliest\nmoment, and that the existing highway be standardized before a new\nroad is built\nA letter was received from J. C.\nMacDonald, controller of water\nrights, who announced that resolutions asking for a change in the\nWater Rights act had been turned\ndown, and that the application (or a\nchange where there was a shortage\nin the supply of water, could be\ndealt with under the present act\nThe secretary also read a letter\nfrom W. K. Ealing. M.P., Kootenay\nWest who acknowledged a ..resolution on freight charges in connection with the movement of Jam\nfrom the McDonald Jam company,\nand on sugar and other supplies\nshipped into Nelson, together with\nthe unfair competition that exitted.\nA committee composed of Major\nTurner Lee, P. S. Green and A. H.\nNoakes, was appointed to draft a\nMen's\nOvercoats\nthat give a smart\nappearance ...\nModeli Print\nBond       $14.95 $21.00\nGuard      $22.50 $25.00\nHow About a New Hat?\nCHARLES\nMORRIS\nNOTE NIW ADDRESS\n511 Baker      Phone 147\nREUEF CAMP MAN TO SUE FOR THE\nRIGHT TO VOTE IN FEDERAL POLL\nWinnipeg Man in Coast Camp\nTwo Years Takes Case\nto Court\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 8 (CP) -\nQualification of person! living in\nrelief camps for the federal voters'\nlist for the electoml district In\nwhich the camp it located will be\ndecided in a test caie to be placed\nbefore the county court.\nThe caw in point Is that of an\nunemployed man for Winnipeg who\nhas been resident in the relief camp\nin the University of British Columbia area for the past two years.\nThe enumerator did not take this\nman's name and the apnllcant appealed to Registrar W. G. Stlekney\nin Vancouver South for Inclusion\nin the list. Mr. Stickney, sitting In\ncourt of revision, ruled that under\nthe Franchise act he could not consider the relief camp as a domicile.\nThe applicant, whose name was\nnot revealed, will take an appeal\ninto county court, it'Is understood.\nOn decision of the appeal will hang\nthe fate of many similar cases\nthroughout the province.\nAt some relief camps, registrars\nhave permitted namet to be enumerated on the grounds that the\nmen are domiciled within the electoral district ln which the camps\nare situated In that they were definitely residents of the area before\ngoing into relief camps.\nresolution aiking that the Dominion\ngovernment allow farmen apd pouW\ntry men to voice their own opinions. The retolution was prompted\nby a letter from Winnipeg for the\nendorsation of a resolution asking\nthat the Dominion government not\nfavor a pool of the lour western\nprovinces. The letter wai passed on\nfrom the Nelson board of trade.\nASK SEED PROTECTION\nAnother resolution dealt with In\nthe morning was one from the Grand\nForks District institute asking that\nan act for the protection ot Beed be\npassed by the legislature of the\nprovince similar to the act repealed\nchapter 71, 1922, and further that if\nthere were any objections to such\nan act covering the whole of the\nprovince, that the act be made applicable only to those districts re*\nquesting its application. Tht plan\nP\nhas been approved of by C. Pi\nnoyer, A. H. Pennoyi\nwood, Claude S. leaven, Alan R.\nennoyer, C. A. S. At*\nMudie and Herbert C. Heaven. C.\nV. Meggitt Grand Forks represen\ntative. declared that a profitable\nseed business was being built up\nin the Grand Forks valley, but that\nit would be seriously handicapped\nif tome steps were not taken to\n.prevent the indiscriminate planting\nof seed. Cross-polenization was ruining some cropi. In one instance a\nracket had developed. A Doukhobor\nrancher had planted one row of\nonions alongside of another variety\nplanted in his neighbor's field ad-\nJoining, and had demanded sufficient seeds of the same variety to\nseed his whole patch, to pull up the\nrow, Several cases of a similar\nnature had developed. The resolu\ntion carried. -\nFORE8T PROTECTION\nThree resolutions regarding forest\nprotection were submitted by tbe\nRobson institute. The first asked\nthat the protection of watersheds be\nof prime importance in the fire\nfighting program. The loss of water\naupply would completely wipe out\nranchers depending on that supply.\nIt waa stated. D. Carter spoke ot\nthe resolution, pointing out the importance of the Mater supply to the\nfarmers. In the past the tame old\nquestion of funds had been offered\nwhile the sheds were being threat*\nened. A. H. Noakes of BaUour de*\nclared that the forett branch was\ndoing all In its power. Timber owners were providing through taxes,\na big portion of the protection costs,\nand it was hardly fair to assess\nthem for the protection of other in-\nterests. There wai a constant war\nbetween the branch and the department for fundi and the department\nwas doing all in its power, he said.\nMajor Turner Lee declared that the\ngovernment must show the tame\nsympathy for ranchers who had\nlived ln the district for many years\nas for big, timber holder! who, in a\nThe Honorable T. D. PATTULLO\nPRIME  MINISTER OF  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nWill   speak   from   the      \t\nt Parliament Buildings at I\n*   Victoria, B.C., over the\nBRITISH COLUMBIA NETWORK\nFRIDAY, NOV. 9, 7:30 TO 8:00 P.M.\nCRCV Vancouver: CFJC Kamloopi; CJAT Trail;\nCHWK Chilliwack; CKOV Kelowna.\nMORE ABOUT\nLLOYD GEORGE\n(Continued From Page One)\nwell   -bs   raising   contingents   for\nFrance.\nWAS A BIO THING\nLord Riddell asked Lloyd George\nwhether Campbell - Bannerman,\nprime minister from 1905 to 1808, or\nthe late Lord Asquith, who succeeded him in the premiership, was\nresponsible for thl (ranting of the\nconstitution to South Africa which\nresulted in the union three years\nlater, in 1910. Lord Riddell considered that the constitution given the\nTransvaal and Orange River colonies wu one of the biggest things\naccomplished in many years.\n\"Oh,\" replied Lloyd Gcarge, \"CB.\nIt was all done ln a 10-minutc\nspeech at a cabinet the most dramatic and moet important speech\ndelivered in our time. In 10 i_.inutes\nhe brushed aside all the checkt and\nsafeguards devised by Asquith, Winston (Churchill) and Loreburn\n(Lord Loreburn, lord chancellor). _\n\"At the outset only two of us\nwere with him\u2014John Bums and\nmyself. But the speech convinced\nthe whole cabinet It was the utterance ot a plain, simple and kindly\nman, and it moved one at least of\nthe cabinet to teart.\"\nCHANGE TRADE\nIDEAS IF THE\nWESTTOMOVE\nOttawa Hand Outs of\nNo Help for the\nFuture\nBYRON JOHNSON\nCOAST SPEAKER\nCANADA\nToo Much Making of\nGoods Not Enough\nTrade Is Fault\nnumber of cases, only held the timber and made no attempt to operate.\nThe farmer depended upon the\ncreeks for\" their existence and after\nall they paid a large proportion of\nth. taxes and were entitled to aome\nconsideration. The resolution carried\nAnother resolution on forest protection was one calling for an honorary fire warden in each district\nwith authority to act on hit own\ninitiative. It was pointed out that\nthrough prompt action in stamping\nout a fire before it spread to large\nproportions, many thousands of dollars could be laved. Under the plan\nthe honorary wardens would have\nthe -authority to employ upward to\ntlve men. This resolution also carried.\nTin third resolution asking for\nthe conatructlon of trails waa thrown\nout and another substituted. Tbe\nresolution recommended that each\nranger be allowed to.employ fire or\nsix men durlni the fire season, for\nthe purpose of clearing and con\nstructlng of trails. Theae men oould\nbe Instructed .In fire fighting and\ncould then act aa a flying squad\nor be foremen ln the case ot numerous fires.\nThe meeting adjourned at noon\nand opened again at 1:30 with :\nfurther discussion of the fire pro*\ntectton situation. One delegate sua*\ngested that the fanners oould do\na great deal to lessening the fire\nhazard and to protect their own\nproperties by slashing out survey\nllnei and creeks on tbelr.land dur*\nIng the winter months, when there\nwaa Uttle to do. ,\nASK  BETTER  ROWS\nThe Balfour Institute brought forward a resolution vigorously protesting the apparent lack of Inter-\neat in road conditions in the district and urging that Immediate\nsteps be taken to Improve tbat\nsection of the transprovlnclal highway lying between East Robion and\nBalfour. The resolution itated that\nthe whole of Britlah Columbia, especially the district bordering the\nUnited States, waa losing heavily\nthrough the conditions of the arterial highways. The legitimate Canadian tourist trade from tbe provinces to the list was being diverted\nthrough the States via Yahk.\nThe past governments had promised the people of tbe eouthern portion of the province that thl Crow's\nNest route would be completed in\npriority to any other transprovlnclal\nhighway, and further promised the\nstate of Waahlngton that lf the\nstate would complete a good highway to the International boundary\nat Nelway, the province would oon*\nstruct an equally good highway\nnorth to Nelnn, the resolution\nadded.     .\nA. H Noakes speaking to the mo*\ntlon declared that the roada were\nln \u2022 ihocklng condition tnd ln i\nnumber of places unsafe. The Mel\nway-Nelson road was exceedingly\ndangerous ln a number of places,\nand accidents had been frequent\nThe government could at least make\ntbem safe. Many of tbe Isster used\nroads ln the district were belter\nthan some of the main arterial of\ntravel.\nCOIH.D  VHT,  BRIDGE  MONEV\nAs sn after thought Ur. Noakes\nadded that some of the three and\na half million dollan tbat would\nbe necessary for the construction\nof the proposed New Westminster\nbridge might be spent on interior\nroads. A toll bridge had been planned but once traffic was held up\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 8 (CP) \u2014\nWeitern Canada cannot hope to\nprosper unless a definite change is\nmade in the method of trade, Byron\nJohnson, M.L.A. for Victoria, declared today in an addreaa to the\nVancouver real estate exchange on\nthe effect of tariff regulations rn\nbusiness In British Columbia.\nMr. Johnson said confederation\nwould not exist in the future if\ngovernment representatives of western Canada continually have to go\nto Ottawa for \"hand outs\" to keep\n\u00a7oing. We hear much talk these\nays of monetary reform but it is\nmy firm belief that our problems\ncan only be solved through trade.\"\n\"Although the establishment of a\nnational bank does not help British\nColumbia greatly, It doet, however,\nobtain a better hold on our credit,\nwhich Is a good thing,\" he laid.\nNEW AUTOS\n\"During this year 5534 new automobiles were sold in this province.\nIn the past five Or six years, we\nhave hot sold enough lumber to pay\nthe subsidy on the automobile in\ndustry alone in this province.\" h\u00ab\ndeclared in dealing with British\nColumbia's trade position.\n\"If our production is aa Premier\nR. B. Bennett says it is, there must\nbe something wrong if we can produce 10 billion dollars worth of new\nwealth in 10 years and still find\nourselves in our present condition.\"\nMr. Johnson said that during a\nrecent visit to England, he asked a\nprominent London importer why\nmore British Columbia applet were\nnot told in Great Britain. He aaid\nthe man replied, \"The truth la our\nexperience with Canada it that we\nfind it difficult to get a dollar's\nworth of goodt Into the country.\"\nThe Victoria member tald he felt\nthat when a country like Great Bri\ntain buys nearly $15,000,000 worth of\ngoods from Canada in eight months,\nCanada ln return should buy from\nthem.\n\"One of our greatest difficulties Is\nthe fact that we attempt to manufacture goods which we should have\nbeen trading tor with our own pro*\nducts,\" he said.\nACROSS THE HALL\nACROSS THE CONTINENT\nWE ARE MOVING PEOPLE\nyylLwl**\nTRANSFER CO.\nLOCAL 4 LONG DISTANCE MOVING\nPACKING SHIPPING STORAGE\nPHONE\nFURNITURE   VAN\nFOR   LOCAL  AND\nLONC    DISTANCE,\nHAULINC\nWest Transfer\nCompany\nEstablished for 35 Yean\nHOUSEHOLD    EFFECTS    MOVED\u2014\nCRATED\u2014 STORED\nAND SHIPPED\non buty days, then would won\nbe an agitation for fru aervlce and\nthe bridge would automatically be*\noome a publlo encumbrance.\nAnother resolution dealing with\ntransportation faculties ,waa one\ntrom Boswell on tbe ferry aervlce\nwhich serves tha territory from\nKuskanook to Deanshaven. Tbe residents who are forced to pay aa per\ntruck while the ferry service la given\nfree ln other parts of the Interior,\nare asking for free passage. The\npoints which are accommodated by\nthe aervlce Include Deanshaven,\nKootenay Bay, Port Crawford, Craw\nford Bay, Oray Creek, Boswell, Sanca\nand Kuskanook.\nThe reeolutlon polnta out that tbe\nNelson ferry gives a 34-hour service and la free aa are tbe Castlegar and Arrow Lakes ferries, and\nthat thi dlitrlct ln queitlon is\nwithout rail aervlce. Shipping pro*\nduco out of that area, they contend la exceedingly costly and\nleaves them st a disadvantage. >\nA. H, Noakea moved an amendment to take tn Balfour, but the\namendment waa lost and tha reeolutlon earned.\nAfter a lengthy discussion a Orand\nForka resolution asking tor tht return of levin csnt gat tax exemption was lost. It wta felt that thi\ntwo centt that farmen were paying\nfor clerical work in connection with\nthe tax adjustment, wai too gnat.\nAt pruent farmers are receiving a\nfive-cent refund on all. gaa used\nfor farm Implements and an pay\ning two oanta tor clerical work in\nconnection with applications for re-\nfunds. Fnnk Putnam M.P.P. for\nthe Nelson-Creston riding, and W.\nB. Haskins pointed out tbat the\nnew system was devised to pnvent\ntha abuse of the exemption. Farmers\nwen selling tbe cheaper gas as well\naa using It ln their own cars and\neven gas station proprietors had secured their supply ssven cents cheap,\ner by declaring themselves farmers\"\nMr. Putnam stated through this\nabuse the government waa losing\nconsiderable revenue. *,\nO. B. Appleton brought up the\nsuggestion that surplus applea be\nshipped to the drought area in the\nnorthern section of the province and\na reeolutlon asking the mlnlater of\nagriculture to try and make arrangements with the railways to\nsecure fne transportation of nllef\nsupplies to the drought stricken\nareas of B.C., similarly to those\nnow ln force ae between B.C. and\nSaskatchewan was pused.\n.c V. Meggitt of Orand Forka\nasked IK Doukhobors, who lt was\nrumored planned to sell out, would\nbl admitted to British Columbia.\nRe was told that they could not\nbe stopped but that the rumor had\nno foundation.\nVotes of thanks were passed to\nMr. Haskins, Mr. mint, Mr. Putnam.\n(S. L. Landon, dlitrlct agriculturist,\nand 8. R. Bowell Dominion egg Inapector.\nBakery Induitry\nUndtr Work Act\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CP)-The\nbakery-Industry of the province wai\nbrought officially under the schedule of the Hourt of Work act ln an\nordar ot tha induitrial relationi\nboard publlihed today in the British\nColumbia Gazette. The effect of thit\nruling hat already bean explained.\nThe minimum wage order affecting\nthe iflduitry was gazetted at tha\naame time at wai that covering\nshingle manufacture.\nNothing  Is  so burdensome\nwoman aa a secret.\nto   a\nWINNING\nTABLE AT WHIST\nF. A. C. Begins Series Whist\nDrives at Parish Hall\nSixteen tablet were in play for\nthe opening night of the fairview\nAthletic club whltt drive at tha\nFairview parish hall Wednesday\nevening. Canada wu tha winning\ntable and those at lt were Misa S.\nSmith, Miss Helen Pochin, Mrs. A.\nD. Pochin and George Fawcett. A\nlarge crowd stayed for the dance\nafterward.\nBud Cooper and Bert Walton ware\nin charge of refreshments, Alex\nIoanln and Wilfred Chrlshop were\nIn charge of cards, and Russell\nFrench was matter of ceremonies.\nA Bad of Lead in Stomach\nIF you're troubled\nwith distress from\nitomach, gas, and\nyour blood becomes\npoisoned, there it\nnothing so good at\nDr. Pierce's Golden\nMedical Discovery.\nRead what Mrt.\nHilda Magnuson of\n541 Alexander Ave.,\n_ Man., has to Hy: \"Two \u2014tr, aaa\nmy -to-uK-i troubled me. I would become\nbloated wttk au. and there wu such a\nhuvy feeling ln the pit of my atomach. like\n\"e was poor and 1\nI used c-aly otM'\na bail et lead. My appetite waa poor nd I\nfait ao tired and weary. I used oaly >\nbottle of Dr. Pierce'a Golden Medical Dm.\n: fek \u00abna la every way''\nite Dr. Pierce'a Clinic,\nNew attt, tablets !0 cta.,\ncovary ud It rid na et tha itomach t\ndt *    \"\nDr. Pkreaa Clinic __\nlqak)U.0a Urn,\nlc, BuBalo, N. V.\n., kqald ll.M. Larg\nUx, tabku or liquid, J1.15. All druniata.\n'._*> V A\nENO'S\n\"FRUIT\nSALT!'\n\u25a0^ m _.\n*\u25a0\u25a0.\u2022**&. t*t\nFOR RESTFUL SLEEP\ni Eno relieves indigestion\nBEST TIME OF THE YEAR\nHarvests gleam rich gold from crowded storage\nbins\u2014-euch basket and barrel hides a fruit more lusmus\nthan the last\u2014shelves bend with the weight of plentiful\npreserves. Tht air is filled with predictions of roaring\nfires and steaming meats and baked apples. By these\neigne we know that November is really here, that winter\nand snow will toon be upon us with, chestnuts by the fire\nand turkey drumsticks in our fingers.\nLILLY ANNEt\nYour new gownl Just a frothy\nbit of youthful loveliness that putt\nyou a tten or so ahead ot the othera at any o..j of the dozen parties you'll be dashing to this winter. If your lucky star guides\nyou to the D. A C. DRES8\nSHOPPE, you'll find gownt of\nshimmering moonlight or twinkling starlight of deep black midnight, of rosy dawn or flaming,\ngolden sunset. Can you bear to\nbe without it?\nAnimation \u2014 movenent\u2014and\nsparkle\u2014characterize the new fashions assembled for the fall opening of MEAGHER'S tIMITED.\nYou will see al) the new forward\nmovement for daytime and the\nbackward flung evening creations. You will see versatile\ntweeds and tailleurt, the smartest\nand warmest coats, the most decorative lingerie and the cobweb-\nblest stockings \u2014 and above all,\nyou will iee the advantage buv-~\ning your winter wardrobe ln thit\nttore, where for evening wear,\nfor formal wear, for distinctive\nwear, the beauty of their styles lt\nunsurpassed.\n4\"     \u2014 *pr-\nBlack more than ever is\nthe important choice of a\nformal gown. Black velvet\nwith pleatings of taffeta,\nseems to be making its appearance , and black bag-\nheera with trimmings of\nlittle gold sea shells.\nTwinkle, twinkle, little accessories! for by their brilliance ihsll\nyou be known. It'i the very new\nand very smart little cocktail cape\nof sequins, the tiny beaded bag\nfor your compact the pearl ana\ndiamante clips and bracelets, the\nshoulder-length, glittering earrings, the sparkling tiara for your\nhair that are the nail marka for\nwhat's what for evening fashion.\nAny set of these from BLANCHE'S\nSPECIAtTY SHOP wlll make\nyou shine brighter than ttie stars.\nThey're very inexpensive, too.\nlf your first hat was a\nberet or a Tyrolean, your\nsecond may be a toque as\nRussian as the height of\nyour head will take. These\nare particularly suited for\nwinter when wind breaker\ncollars are turned up. Some\nof the new toques have a\ntouch of fur, and some a cir.\ncular veil fringe.\n*_~ fr>\nCHRISTMAS\nGREtTINGS\nAnd when you are choosing a\nsporty, clever, gad-about little\ndress for every dry occasions,\nyoull find them a November\nspecial at the O. A. C. DRESS\n\u2022HOPPE.\nFragrance from a springtime\ngarden or perfume with an oriental tang, when preiented ln a\ndainty bottle of cut and tinted\ncrystal, hat twice its romantic\nvalue. It's a gorgeous gift tor the\nGirl Friend, for Sis, or Mother.\nThose handsome little beauties at\nFLEURY'S won't last long to ttep\nup and buy lt now. You'll ba astonished at their inexpenslveness.\n\u25a0*>\nAnd to, until next week, Adieu\nLilly C4nn* j\n\"Hire and There With Lilly\nAnna\" topein tvery Prlday In\nThe Nilton Dally Nawa. ,\n -THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER t. UM-\n19&'\n-PAGE THREE\nSaturday\nand\nMonday\nBIG DAYS\nAT THE\nBAY\nA Special Value in\nMEN'S SUITS AND OVERCOATS\nSUITS\nONE AND 2 PANTS\nEACH  \t\n$\n19-50\nIn this group is a complete selection of\n_ colors and sizes, suits to satisfy any\ny^-j man's fancy, in blues, greys, browns and\nW checks. All new styles and fabrics.\nOvercoats\nNo need for us to sell you - \u2014    _\none of these coats. Just 9 J^*\u00bb95\ntry one on and you're sold. \u2122\nLots of styles and fabrics to choose from.\nMEN, MINERS AND LOGGERS\nHere is your chance to stock up and save money!\nSTANFIELDS RED LABEL COMBS\nMACKINAW STAG SHIRTS\t\nHUMPHREY'S WOOL PANTS\nWOOL AND FLANNEL WORK SHIRTS\nHEAVY WOOL SOCKS\t\nHORSEHIDE PULLOVERS\t\nALL-WOOL WORK SOCKS\t\n$3.19\n$4.50\n$3.95\n$1.95\n. 50c\n$1.00\n.. 35c\nNew\nDunhill Shirts\nMade from fine English\nbroadcloth and guaranteed not to fade or\nshrink. A perfect cut and\ntailored shirt. Cellophane\n?AcpHped: $1.00\nBoys' Work Shirts\nFlannel work shirts in\ngood heavy quality.*>QC*f.\nEACH    it J\nDress Gloves\nMen's lined cape skin\ngloves. Dome fastener at\nwrist,  neatly cut and\nsewn.\nPAIR\n.00\nBoys' Gauntlet\nGloves\nBoys' cape gauntlets with\nstar and fringe C(_\\tp\nPAIR  Vll\nMen's Silk Scarves\nMen's silk scarves made\nby Forsyth, the latest in\ndress wear. Values up to\n$3.50\nfor\t\n$1.95\nBoys' Mackinaw\nBreeches\nBoys' blue heavy, all-wool\nbreeches. tl OC\nPAIR  t~l.*ld\nMEN'S UNDERWEAR\nSeveral lines of combinations grouped in at one price   Stanfield's\nbuttonless, medium weight, Mercury medium weight, Watson's but-\ntonless combs.\nGARMENT    '\t\n\u2022l-ts\nMEN'S HIGH-TOP BOOTS\nMen's Menenite calf, high-top hunting boots with full bellows tongue,\nleather soles and heels.                      \u2022\n6-inch tops:               ffP QC      12-inch tops:\nPAIR  tBd.VO     PAIR \t\n$5.45\nBOYS' AND YOUTHS' STURDY SCHOOL BOOTS\nBoys' and youths' high-\ntop, one-buckle blucher\nboots, cut, sewn and\nnailed, leather sole and\nheel.\nSizes 11\nto   13'\/2   .\nSizes  1\nto S'\/i\nBoys'  and youths'  ankle boot,\nblucher cut,  sewn  and  nailed\nleather  sole  and 'rubber  heel,\nknown as the Hudson's Bay\nTrapper.\nSizes 11 to (O OP\n13Vi   \u00abJ>JX0\nSf.1:.? $3.50\nGROWING GIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES\nA complete line of sizes and styles in growing girls' school shoes,\nwith medium low heels and solid leather bend outsoles. Width A to E.\nPAIR\t\n'\nJ.95\nCOTTON SHEETS AT SALE PRICES\n72x90 Wabasso sheets. Only a limited quantity to sell.\nEACH    :\t\nFRINGED SUPPER SETS\nPure linen in gay plaids in reds, greens, golds. Size cloth 52x52 with six matching\nnapkins.\nSET, BOXED \t\n$250\nLINEN LUNCH CLOTHS '\n52-inch cloths in all linen crash, with colored borders in all shades.\nSPECIALLY PRICED, EACH\t\nSTRIPED TERRY TOWELS\nHand  size  towels.  Stripes\non cream grounds. Special \\   \u00a3\n8:30 am SPECIALS\nSaturday Morning\nON SALE ONE HOUR ONLY\n NO PHONE ORDERS\t\n8:30 SPECIAL\nWOMEN'S OVERSHOES\nA manufacturer's discontinued line of\nwomen's rainette overshoes in\nblack and brown, high and\nlow heels. Lightening fasten- $ % #95\ners. Regular $2.75     *\nDOME FASTENER. Regular $1.75 ffl OQ\n8:30 8PECIAL\nFULL-FASHIONED SILK HOSIERY\n200 pairs pure thread silk hose in semi-\nservice and chiffon weight. Full fashioned, ^MWi\npopular shades. Sizes 8Vi to IOV2. Sub- -\u25a0**-*\nstandards of our $1.00 quality. PAIR\n5*\nSPECIAL\nMEN'S COMBINATIONS\nWhite rib combinations, made by Mercury\nin   long  sleeves  and   long  legs.   Regular\n$1.39 suit.\nSUIT  \t\n98'\n8:30 SPECIAL\nHOUSEDRESSES\nOnly 50 of these figured print dresses,\nin small and medium sizes.\nONE HOUR ONLY\t\n49'\n1000 Yards\nFlannelette Millends\nSensational Value!\nThen represent 1 large Mill \"Cleanup\" end Include pyjama itrlpee In\nall widtht, amall itrlpee for children', wear, All the belt qualities\nup to 35c yard, regular value,\nLength* from 5 to 15 yardi.\nAll One Price\u2014Yard\n19'\nHBC Pare Food Specials\nFREE  CITY  DELIVERY\n193\u2014PHONES-094\nSOAP:\nPearl White\n5 cakes 14c\nMarmalade\u2014Aylmer;       MQA\n4-lb. tin  \u2022*-*>\nCornflake!\u2014Kellogg's;     }H\n3  pkga *****>\nNatural Bran-\nQuaker; large pkg. .\nChocolate  Eclairs\u2014\nPer  lh\t\n200\nM0\nMAPLE SYRUP:  21\u00a3lony\u2022      Bottle 45c\nBeans\u2014Green cut, Bee    13fi\nCee 2s; per tin  *-W\nPeat\u2014 Aylmer, sieve 4,   19 A\nNo. 2 tin; per Un   **m-\\*\nPork 4 Beans\u2014Libby's, ]M\n28-oz. Una; 2 for  mmfr\nMuihrooms\u2014Grilled in MfE\nButter; Birks'; per tin    \u25a0*\u25a0#\u00bb\u2022\nPANCAKE FLOUR: ooubui, ^ Higgle\nFrench Castile Soap\u2014 \\C-\nImported, Is; per bar -*m*Jt*'\nFrench Castile Soap\u2014Imported,\nlarge tabs.; 2Cl_\n3 cakes  m-*r\nFrench Castile Soap\u2014 *Ut\u2014\nImported, 2s; per bar     m**wY\nLux Flakes-\nLarge size pkg.\nJam \u2014 Raspberry,\n230\n.,  Strawberry,\nNelson Brand; Ctrl\n4-lb   tin   \u2022***)*\nMuihroomi\u2014Creamed,    \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb,*\u25a0\u00ab\nBirks'; per tin   *SV\nBUTTER:  \\\\*L*\u00a3*.Z. Per Ib. 26c\nPeanut Butter-Butter    CCtk\nNut, 4s; per tin -~**T\nFree Demonstration\nSaturday Only!\nFORT GARRY TEA   f.Ct*\n-Per Ib.    *\u25a0**>**\nFORT OARRY\nCOFFEE-Per Ib.\n500\nPurex Toilet Tissue\u2014    -JC**\n3 rolla     **\u25a0-*>\nLettuce\u2014\nPer head  \t\nSpinach\u2014\n3 lbs.\nSweet Potatoes\u2014\n2 Ibs\t\nCranberries\u2014\nPer lb\t\nGrapefruit\u2014Large\nsize; each\t\nAlways Refreshing \"Fort\nCarry\" Tea  and  Coffee\n290\n100\nEvening and Sunday Nite\nFROCKS\n\u00bb10-95 to \u00bb14's\nAnkle length dresses of velvet, moire or crepe, cut on softly \u00ab-\ndraped lines. Their styles reflect the elegance of higher priced ~~\ngarments and you will  enjoy wearing  these  new glowing\nshades. Sizes 14 to 40.\nWomen's Fur-Trimmed Coats\n\u00bb12-\u00bbs \u00abo *%<***'\nWe have still got a smart range of winter coats to select\nfrom, made of rough crepes or diagonal woolens. Generous\nfur collars and cuffs in flattering styles. Lined and warmly\ninterlined. Many shades.\nSMART MILLINERY\nAt this price you can always do with an extra\nhat. There are velvet or satin berets, and hats\nof fine grade felt. Good color range.\nPRICED \t\n$|.oo\nWOMEN'S AND MISSES' WOOL SWEATERS\nChoose from cardigans or pullover style with or\nwithout collars, short and long sleeves. Two-tone [\nor solid shades.\nEACH    ,\n\u25a0\u2022!\u2022\u00bb* t\u00bb*2,f5\nINFANTS'PASTEL SUITS\nwool two-piece knitted suits in sky, pink and white. Sizes 1,2    e 1 OC\nFine a\nand 3 years. EACH\nWOMEN'S WOOL AND RAYON COMBS\nA popular seller becauss they are light in weight, yet warm.  Made with\nsleeves and knee length. Sizes 36 to 44 (PI AC\n \u00abP1.JJ\nshort\nGARMENT\nHosiery Day at The Bay\n\"PERFECT\" SILK HOSIERY\nAll first quality in full-fashioned, light service weight, beautiful wearing hose. All new\nshades. Sizes 8V2 to lOVi.\nPAIR\t\n\"VAN RAALTE\" SILK HOSIERY\nNew Shipment-Just in.\nIn heavy service weight, beautiful hose\nfor everyday or dress, wear, neat fitting ft \u2022tf    AA\nand good wearing, new range of colors. ^ M ,ww\nSizes 8'\/2 to 10ft. PAIR    ' m\nWOMEN'S SILK AND WOOL HOSIERY\nSplendid everyday hose in fine silk and wool. Fashioned to fit perfectly. t\nColors, fawn,.brown and gunmetal. Sizes 8V2 to 10.\nPAIR\t\nNEW HANDBAGS\nNew shipment of stylish handbags in calf and Morocco leathers. Con-\nveniently fitted with mirror and change purse, some with zipper fas- 8^.9$\nteners. Colors, navy, brown and black. _&\nEACH    ~\nChildren's\nHandkerchiefs\nREAL VALUE\nLinen handkerchiefs with\ncolorful printed borders.\nUseful and service- C4\nable.  EACH    O\nWOMEN'S CAPESKIN GLOVES\nA very smart glove that will give\nchic to any Winter costume. Plain\nor trimmed cuffs. Slip-on style.\nGood selection of\ncolors   Sizes 6\nto V\/i.\nPAIR ,.,;..,\nqso\nCARD TABLE COVERS\nMade of fine quality rubber with assorted colored stripes in corners. Fits\nregulation size table. Colors, blue, orange, rose and green. CA<*\nEACH \u00abW\nSTAMPED PILLOW CASES\nStamped on heavy snow-white cotton in\nassorted designs. Complete with embroidery, threads and chart, QQl\nPAIR .'. .....\nBRIGHTEN UP THE HOME FOR CHRISTMAS\nA remarkable value in English felt linos. New and different patterns.        ...\nSuitable for any room. All 2 yards wide. Specially priced for quick M_W*\\t\nselling. 47\nSQUARE YARD  ~*-~ w\nCUPS AND SAUCERS\nThe finest value ws have ever offered at this price. Three gold lines on\nIvory ground. All perfect goods.\n6 for  :\t\nvalue.\nEACH\n15\n5*\nFLASH LIGHT \"SPECIAL\"\nReliable Flashlight complete\nwith batteries.\nEACH   \t\n59\u00ab\n 1\nPAOI POUR *\nMust Make Time for Love\nIs Discovery of Russians\nWltWiWi    1'\nOnce Sneered at by Young Revolutionists\nNow It Is Taken Seriously\nTbto to tht third sf I aeries on\n\"Levi, Marriage tnd Divorce In\n\u2022evict Ruaala\" written from Moi*\natw by Mri. van Paassen,\n\u2022y OORALII VAN PAAItIN\nCtntral Press Canadian Wrlttr\ni Nov. 0.\u2014The Russians\nng that there Is such a\nthing as'love, after all. For several years lovt had\nbeen at a discount\nI among tbem. The\ncivil war had\nthrown lift up-\nalde down. But\neven after that\nstruggle had come\nto a close the\nsexual anarchy\ncontinued. Love,\n\u2022aid the novelists,\nthat's Just moon-\ncall sentimental-\nCORALII ity, an Illusion.\nVAN PAAItIN We have no time\nfor It We are\nbusy building a ntw world and we\nart in a terrible hurry about it, because we are much behind. So we\netnt wute time in gating at the\nmoon and holding hands.\nLova does,not exist for us, said\nother ittlotrof the new regime. Ev-\ntry intimate relationship between\na man and a woman li to be Uken\nas a mere episode to which wc\nihould attach no more significance\nthan to drinking a glass of water.\nLove btlongs ln tht dream world.\njltllllllllllM\"' 'IIII.'IIIIIIIIIIIIIH,\nI\nThe Best\nChristmas\nGift...\na PORTRAIT\nGeo. A. Meeres j\nMake Appointments       1\nEarly Pleue\nPHONE 4$\nfiiiiminiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim\nWt are realist). Anyone seeking In\nlove more than something physical\nIs ridiculous.\nAll this was what you may call\nsmart Alecklsm of young revolutionaries. They saw clearly enough\nthat a new society was being born\nand they wanted to destroy as much\nof thc old as possible. They were in\nthe debunking period and imagined it wu their duty to show tbe\nworld how terribly emancipated\nthey were. But they had figured\nwithout Lenin. When the father of\nthe revolution finally took time to\ndiscuss the matter of sexual relations in the new society, his words\ncame like a thunderclap.\nLENIN SPEAKS\n'\"J am an old-fashioned conservative,\" he said. \"And to my way of\nthinking that theory of the glass of\nwater is the craziest nonsense I have\never heard. That theory has become\nI fatal trap tor tens of thousands of\nour young people. They think it is\nMarxistic. I will have nothing to\ndo with that kind of Marxism. They\nthing lt is socialistic, but I say it is\nan old bourgeois notion; they want\nto turn the country into a huge brothel. We will have none of it. We\nwant to bring joy of life, a healthy,\nnormal life and a satisfactory love-\nlife. We don't want monks, nor Don\nJuans, but no Philistines either.\n\"Our youth needs a healthy sport,\ngymnastics, swimming, physical exercise, a diversity of intellectual activity, study, research, in common,\nin company, in a comradely spirit.\nThis will be of much n.ore benefit\nthan all that sickening talk and discussion of sexual matters.\"\n\"These simple words of Lenin\nhave had their effect. The change\ndid not come overnight. For that\nRussian life was in too chaotic a\nstate, after four years of war, four\nmore years of civil war, and com-\nfjete economic and moral isolation\nrbm ftt rest of the world. Under\nsuch abnormal conditions in which\na people, held in bondage for centuries auddenly had its chains broken, there wss bound to be abuse of\nthe newly found freedom. But\nslowly the river, which had spread\nover Its shores, began to return to\na rartltr channel, but it was not the\nold channel.\nTIME TO PALL IN LOVI\nEducation again brought about\nthe change. Pedagogues, sociologists and-sexual hygienists were mdb*\nilized to preach a new theory, the\ntheory pf the complete equality of\nthe sexes. This differed from both\nthe old notion about women that\nthey wtre merely slaves to be handled with the whip and the knout, but\nalao from that other conception\nwhich came with the years of chaos\nand revolution and according to\nwhich women Belely existed to satisfy man's instincts.\nThe appointments ot women to all\nI sorts of responsible   positions did\nmore thtn anything else to bring\nLenin's ideas to fruition. There are\nTHI NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION, B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO, NOVfMBIR 1.1M4-\nWomen HaU Probe\nGood\t\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARV MORTON\nMenus, Recipes and Hints\nMENU HINT\nTomato Juice or Fruit Cup\nSwiss Steak        Sailboat Fotatoes\nCreamed Cabbage\nCelery Food Cake Ice Cream\nThis menu was served for a birthday supper for a child. You can\nmake pretty favors for each place\nby using toothpicks, animal crackers and wafers. Harness the animal\ncrackers two abreast with picks,\nuse two round wafers for wagon\nwheels, secured by more picks, and\nlay oblong wafers across for the\nbody of the wagon.\nTODAY'S RECIPE!\nSailboat Potatoes\u2014Bake large potatoes of uniform site. Remove from\nskins, mash, season and replace In\nskins. Put in oven until heated\nthrough. Just before serving, stick\nsails-into potatoes, The sails are\nmade by running long carrot strips\nthrough two slits in the crisp lettuce\nleaf and sticking the end of the carrot into the potato. These sails are\nrelished as salad, and add interest\nto the plate.\nFACTS ANO FANCIES\nFloating Island\u2014For the custard\npart, scald two cups milk, stir slow*\nly Into two whole eggs and one egi\nyolk which have been beaten wltr\none-fourth cup vinegar and a dash\nof salt. Cook over hot, not boiling,\nwater, stirring gently until the mix*\nture coats the spoon. It is Un> ortant\ntn the making of all custards that\nthe water in the lower part ot the\ndouble boiler be kept just below\nUie boiling point and that It be\ncooked just until tht mixture coats\nthe spoon, not a second longer. Remove from the fire and turn into\nthe serving bowl. Stir in one teaspoon vanilla. Now beat the egg\nwhite until still, adding two tablespoons confectioner's sugar during\nthe beating. Drop spoonfuls of the\ntgg white onto boiling water, cover\nand cook five minutes, drain carefully and remove to the top of the\ncustard.\nHOME CLEANING TIP\nPeople who clean th^lr own\nclothes at home with gasoline\nshould beware of the perils of the\nprocess. It is best to do the cleaning\nout of doors and the i isoline itself\nshould be kept in the garage or shed,\nquite protected from the rest of the\nhouse.\nIAVI EYELETS\nIf your Ironing board cover with\nthe laces wears out, do not throw\naway those laces and eyelets. Cut\nthem off In a band and stitch them\nonto your new muslin edge. Then\nyou can have a new cover with ali\nthe conveniences of the old.\n_y[_dhe these 3 tests\nYOU'LL KNOW WHY ST. CHARLES\nEVAPORATED   MILK   IS   BETTER\nat present 50,000 female presidents\nof village Soviets and mayors in the\nSoviet union. One million women\nhave entered the teaching and the\nmedical profession since the revolution. There are 18,000 women\ndirectors of various industries in the\ncountry and the percentage of female delegates to important union-\nwide gatherings, social, industrial or\nscientific stands at present at 20.\nWith the completion of the five-\nyear plan, the feverish rush and\nroar of life has diminished. There\nis time again to fall in love. And\nthey are falling in love by tht thousands, as thc vital statistics show\nconclusively.\nNO WILD PARTIES\nPeople on the other side of the\nAtlantic will scarcely believe this,\nbut wild parties are actually frowned upon in Russia. They don't care\nwhat foreigners do in the big hotels. But any Soviet citizen behaving\nlicentiously is bound to get a ringing reproach and if he persist! he\nis liable to lose his job,- \"We want\nmen and women who are conscious\nof the fact that they are collaborators in a vast, serious and nobie\nlan to build a better society.\" said\nfladame Alexandra Kollontal to\nme. Madame Kollontal Is Soviet\nambassador to Norway and has written extensively on .the,subject pf\nthe \"new morality.\"\n\"We cannot use philanderers in\nour work, or people with whom sex\nis uppermost ln their minds. The\nwork we are engaged in requires\nall our energy, all our brains end\nall our devotion. Men and women\nwho seek divorce, who are flippant\nin love affairs and change partners\nevery once in a while are of no use\nto. ug. Their attention, is diverted\nfrom the real thing we are trying\nto do.\n\"Our young men ne learning to\nrespect women u comrades and\nthat is the first important step to'\nward a nobler and higher conception ot sex life and married life. Our\nyoung women are learning not to\ntolerate the sexual nihilism of thc\nperiod we call war-communism.\nThey are taught, not merely by fine\nwords In books, but in fact by the\noccupation of, the most responsible\npositions from police officer to director of state farms, hospitals,\nfactories and even positions of importance in the army, navy and air\nforce, that they are the full equals\nof the men.\n\"These things take time,\" added\ntxt this: Optn scan txt THIS: Have a cup try this: Mike muh-\nof St. Charles Milk, of   codec   \"creamed\" ,i potatoes with St.\nMota the creamy color with St.  Charles.   It\nCharles Milk.   That\n\u2014the smooth consist- blends so  smoothly,\nency-the pure freah tastes rich and fresh, pure fresh flavor gives\nSavor. And saves you money, greater dellcioutlneos.\nWhy is St, Charles Evaporated Milk different . . .\nbetter? The reaaon begins way back on the farm\nwherfe it comes from! Cows, barns, milk?rs, equipment are carefully inspected. And when the milk\narrives at the spotless Borden plants, tests are made\nfor flavor, purity, richness and body\u2014the most rigid\ntuts ever evolved in the industry.\nThat's why\u2014for your coffee, or your cooking, it\npays to insist on St. Charles.\nIt's Better\u2014And\nyou can prove it.\nMadame Kollontal, \"but we havt\n[one a long way already, further\nhan any other country, in fact,\"\nWIN PRIZES AT\nKIMBERLEY\nKIMBntLEY, B.C., Nov. 8.-At a\nMoose Whitt Drive here Mrt. C.\nClark tied with Mrs. M. Swann for\nflrtt prise; Mrs. Clark winning the\ncut. Mrs. J. Crossley won the ladles\nconsolation. Mr J- 0. Pearson won\nmen's flrtt and Mr. Claire consolation.\nTht winners of the costume prizes\nat tbt mttquerade sponsored by the\nKtaotrlay Players Club were:\nLadles eomio\u2014Mrs. Caldwell and\nMn. Cristord as nurtt and child.\nMen's comic\u2014F. Carlson as Chef.\nLadles' home made\u2014Mrs. Louis\nDesaullnier and Mrs. Charles Des\nchamps as colonial maidens.\nMen's home made\u2014W. E. Leaman\nas little Willie.\nBest representative lady \u2014 Mrs.\nKadin as Brittanie.\n\u2022est representative man \u2014 Mr.\nMorrison as Scotch Guardsman.\n1,500,000 LOST\nUMBRELLAS SOLD\nLOXDOK, (OP).\u2014Tba latest Hit\nof unclaimed baggage lost by pw*\neeageri on the Soutb R&llyway ltd\nH. A. flower, auctioneer, to recall\ntome of tbe strange things left at\nWaterloo station during hla 30 years'\nexperience of railway auctions. During tbat tuna, ba aays, ba has aold\nnearly 1.500,000 umbrellas and 760,-\n000 pairs of gloves. A coffin wai\nonca laft with tbe usual accumulation of suitcases and trunks.\nA bstch of loat luggage during\ntha war years Included tbe skeletons of two elephants, unloaded at\nSouthampton docks and never claimed. On another occaalon a pair of\nelephants' tuaki waa put up and\nsold for $140.\nCRESTON HOSPITAL\nSHOWERASOCCESS\nTotal    of    240    |grs    Fruit,\nPickles, Vegetable!; $40\nin  Cash\nCHI5TON; B.C.. Nov. 8- Mem*\nbers of Creston Hospital Women's\nauxiliary had a busy afternoon in\nconnection with the annual hospital\nfruit shower which was held in\nMIh Jeannetta Rankin and her pt tet tutt; top right,   Mlsa   Louis*\nWltr; btlow, ltft, Mlat Dorothy Detier.\nproved an outstanding success both\nIn the matter of donations of canned\nfruit, jam, pickles and so on, as\nwell as revenues raised at the usual\nvoluntary tea, post office booth and\ndrawing contest, tha cash intake\nrunning to about $40.\nSome 204 Jars of can..ed fruit\nand so on wert turned in by dona-\ntors who numbered 81. In the collection wer* 113 Jars of canned\nfruits, 43 of Jam, 22 of Jelly. 34 of\npickles, ty of canned vegetables, a\nJar of honey and a couple of Jars of\nmarmalade. Also received were\nthree packages of groceries, butter,\nand eight sacks of vegetable...\nAn airplane ride was won by W.\nH. Crawford, and a lamb by Mrs-\nR. C. Wells of Winnipeg, Man., who\nis spending tha winter in Cieston.\nThe post office booth was in charge\nof Mrs. W. L. Bell and Mrs. T. V.\nStaples, and accounted for an intake of $17.\nMrs. S. A- Speers and Mrs. Jai.\nCook were in charge of the fruit\nbrought In. The tea was in charge\nof Mrs. Cherrington, who was assisted by Mrs. McLaren, Mrs. Gop-\nlin. Mrs. f\\. E. Davies, Mrs. G. G.\nMcKenrie, Mrs. J. W. Avery, Mrs.\nE. Johnson and Mrs. Maxwell.\nThose contributing to the fruit\nshower Included Mrs. W. K. Brown,\nMrs. Bevan, Mrs. Cherrington, Mrs,\nA. E. Hackett, Mrs. J. G. Abbott,\nMrs. Jas. Cook, Miss A. Hanson, Mrs,\nJ. Maxwell, Mrs. E. Johnson, Mrs.\nR. Stevens, Mrs. W. M. Archibald,\nMrs. W. L. Bell, Mrs. T. Staples, Mrs.\nC. Murrell. Mrs. T. Lacey, Mrs. G.\nG: McKenzie, Mrs. Speers, Mrs. W.\nBy FLORENCE SLOWN HYOI\nCentral Prate Correspondent\nWASHiy_5TON, D.C.-The tectorial investigation of the munitions\nindustry, now in full swing, end the\nstartling revelations that are being\nbrought to light, are hailed by women peace workers who long had\nsought to bring about such an In'\nqulry.\nAlthough many organizations lob.\nbied for the measure, it was the\nWomen's International League for\nPeace, whose leaders prevailed on\nSenator G-rald F. Nye to introduce\nthe resol'l'on authorizing the Investigation. Miss Dorothy Detzsr\nexecutive secretary of tht.,United\nStatet branch of the leagut,' too): t\nprominent part in enlisting the interest of the young radical from\nNorth Dakota, who is chairman of\nthe special committee of senators\nin chargt of the probe. The General\nFederation of Women's Clubs and\nthe National Y. W. C. A. were among\nthe important national woman's\ngroups that endorsed the measure.\nAmong tha peace organizations\nwhich lobbied actively in behalf of\nthe Nye resolution, was the National Council for the Prevention of\nWar, whose legislative chairman is\nMiss Jeanette Rankin, first woman\nmember of congress. It will ba re*\ncalled that Miss Rankin won much\ncensure and scant praise when she\nvoted against this country's entrance\ninto the World war, sobbing out the\nprotest, \"I love my country but I\ncannot vote for war.\"\nINAUGURATES CAMPAIGN\nNot content with its Important\nrole in helping to bring about the\nfresent investigation, the Women's\nnternational League for Peace has\nBuy the JBest Tea\n\"SALADX\nTEA\n\"Freih from thc Girdeni\"\nTHE QUAKER METHOD OF EASY BREAD BAKING\njust inaugurated a nation-wide preelection campaign to focus attention on what they call the \"munitions racket,\" and the part that they\nbelieve this industry plays in war\nscare propaganda and the present\nworld-wide armaments race.\nA \"Flying Squadron\" of organizers sent out by the ltague Is to vis-\nIt principal cities in every state,\nholding conferences and forming\ncongressional committees composed\not representatives of women's clubs,\ncivic groupa and churches. Mtss\nLouise Wier, acting campaign chairman of the league, is in charge of\nthis campaign.\nMiss Mary Moss Wellborn of\nStarkvllle, Miss., is visiting the cities in the western portion of the\ncountry. Mrs. Sherman Barnes of\nIthaca, N.Y., will tour the southern\nstates, while Miss Lyn Smith of\nNew York City is to visit the north\ncentral and New England states.\nSouth-eastern states have been assigned to Miss Helen Fuller of Tuscaloosa, Alabama.\nFollowing the visits of the national' organizers, \"Congressional\nCaravans\" will tour each state under the direction of state branches\nof the league. These caravans will\nhold open air meetings and organize\ndistrict committees, which will in\nturn form delegations to interview\ncongressional candidates. *\nMrs. Hannah Clothier Hull is national chairman of the United States\nbranch of the league, which maintains headquarters on 17th street, a\nblock distant from the White House.\nOddly enough, the old brick structure which nouses the league and\nother ptace organizations Was at\none time used as military headquarters by General U. S. Grant\nV\n\"L\nPORCELAIN\nENAMEL\nTILE\nMARBLE\nCOPPER and BRASS\nPOTS and PANS\nREFRIGERATORS\n8TOVES\nWINDOWS\nMIRRORS\nFLOORS\nLINOLEUM\nPAINTED WALLS\nSINKS\nDRAINS\nALUMINUM\nCROCKERY\nSTONEWARE\nFALSE TEETH\nSEPARATORS\nPAILS\nMILK CANS\nMETAL FITTINGS\nWOODENWARE\nand CUTLERY\nDOESN'T\nSCRATCH\n^^^ DotdmA\nST. CHARLES MILK\nMADE IN BRITISH COLUMBIA AT\nOUR CONDENSARY-SOUTH SUMAS\nARE yoa using Old Dutch\no\\ fot all tht varild clewing tasks it ctn perform?\nCheck over the list of articles\nmentioned in thit id \u2014thty\nrepresent only a ftw of itt\nmtny uses.\nWhy it Old Dutch to efficient? The ttcrtt is thia\u2014it'a\nmada with pure \"seismotite''\n(pronounced als'-mo-tlte), a\nfint, flaky cleaning and polishing material of volcanic\norigin.\nOld Dutch will cat yoar\n\u2022 cleaning eott in two wtyt.\nFirst, irs tht only deinttr\nyou need becauae it'i Ideal for\nany surface on which water\nmay be died. Second, its flaky,\nflat-ahaptd particles cover\nmora surface and do more\n' iquirt yarda of icrtteblltl\ncletning. Furthermore, Old\nDutch dotm't tcrttch because\nit dotm't contain harah,\ntcratchy frit or crude tbra-\nilvta.\nTrv Old Dutch today. Yon\nwill find that no other cieana-\ntr can do io much it to little\ncost, nor to well at any price.\nFerguson, Mrs. J. W. Avery, Mrs.\nG. Young, Mrs. F. H. Jackson, Mrs.\nC. W. Alltn, Mrs. MallandUne, Mrs.\nPowell, Mrs. A. E. Davies, Mrs.\nHayes, Mrs. Goodwin, Mrs. J. W.\nHamilton, Mrs. W. H. Cartwiight,\nMrs. E. J. C. Richardson, Mrs. J. H.\nWebster, Mrs. Haskins, Mrs. F. Putnam, Mrs. Canute Anderson, Mrs.\nNess, Mrs. W. J. Craig, Mrs. J. W.\nDow, Mrs. H. Truseott, Mrs. R. A.\nPalfreyman, Mrs. P. MePhee, Mrs.\nStapleton, Mrs. G. Jacks, Mrs. Oliver. Mrs. (Rev.) Walker, Mrs. W. H.\nMorrow, Mrs. D. Butterfleld, Mrs. C.\nOgilvie. Mrs. Fransen, Mrs. M. Hagen, Mrs. Kinkade, Mrs. T. Dickson,\nMrs. McLaren, Mrs. W. H. Crawford,\nMrs. Mlllen, Mrs. A. L. Palmer, Mrs.\nA. L. Palmer, Mrs. Forbes, Mrs. F.\nC. Rodgers, Mrs. D. Lear-month, Mrs.\nV. Mawaon, Mrs. McWllllams, Mrs.\nG. R. John, Miss A. Lewis. Mrs. W.\nE. Barner, Mrs. F. Bunt, Mrs. R. E.\nWells, Mrs. Hilton, Mrs. F. W. Ash,\nMrs. G. Cartwrlght, Mrs. D. Bradley, Mrs. Edmondson. Mrs. H. S: Mc-\nCreath, Mrs. Dickinson, Mrs. J. M.\nCralgle, Mrs. R. M. Telford, Miss\nEdith Cook, Mrs. J. P. Ross, Mrs. A.\nCorrie. Mrs. H. H. Wilks and Mrs.\nJ. P. MacDonald.\nYmir School Report\nIs Announced\nYMIR, B.C., Nov. B.-Mr. and Mrs.\nN. Peterson were Nelson visitors.\nNew Ymir school is rapidly near-\nlng completion.\nR. Jarvls of Nelson has returned to\nhis work here.\nRev. C. Janzow of Nelson held\nchurch services here. He was accompanied by Mrs. Janzow.\nSCHOOL REPORT\nYmir school report for October Is:\nGrade VIII\u2014Harry Stevens, Jack\nGrant. Elmer Peterson. Annie Kales-\nnikoff; unranked\u2014Woodrow Andersen. Sam Verlgln.\nGrade VII\u2014Frances Hansen. Mike\nPoznlkoff, Lottie Anderson; unranked\u2014Annie Nord, Gus Flagel.\nGrade VI\u2014Evelyn Emilson, James\nGrant.\nGrade V\u2014Shirley Stevens. Alvin\nSlattery, Eddie Flagel, Polly Veri.\ngin. Tom Clarke.\nGrade IV\u2014Tom Slattery, Vera\nHarris, Florence Slako, Walter\nClarke; unranked\u2014Vernon Chrysler.\nGrade HI\u2014Sigrid Nord. Perry Anderson, Lena Fressu; unranked\u2014\nDorothy Chrysler.\nGrade II-Mary Nord, Elsie Blatter- Eunice Chrysler, Roy Fresu.\nEvelyn Harris, Elsie Anderson, Lawrence Bond.\nOrade I\u2014Marjorie Harris, Gloria\nMcKay, Kenneth St. Dennis. Katie\nHarris, Leonard Brown, Helen Anderson, Elmer Nord.\nMoistened baking soda will take\nthe fire out of an insect bite or\nburn.\nWYNNDEL BRIDGE\nPARTY SUCCESS\nWYNNDEL, B.C., Nov. 8. - An\nafternoon bridge drive held at the\nhome of Mrs. Abbott was a splendid success even though the weather was unfavorable: The free-will\noffering amounted to $3.75 and is a\ndonation towards an X-ray for the\nsolarium at Victoria. High score\nprize went to A. F. Rudd and consolation prize fo Mrs. Towson. Refreshments were served by the\nhostess, assisted by Mrs. E. Uri, Mrs.\nOgilvie, Mrs. Towson, Mrs. Andest-\nad, and Mrs- Hackett.\t\nAmong the local boys returning\nbome from the prairie, where they\nwere employed at the harvesting,\nwere Lester Martell and Percy\nCbckle. ^_~\nMrs. S. Bennedettl, tnd two children are visiting the former's father W; Gillett in Nelson.\nMrs. E. Url is a visitor in Nelsoh\nfor a few days.\nMIX BEFORE LUNCH-\nBread or Rolls before Supper\nNOW \u2014 with  Quaker cake\u2014without kneading\nFlour and the Quaker \u2014and without setting the\nmethod of easy baking, sponge overnight Send\nyou can make bread or coupon below for particu.\ntolls almost a* quickly as Ian and full information.\n\u25a0\nQuaker Flour\n^_MP Always the Same   \u2022 Always the Best\nfor Bread, Cakes aod Pastry\nValuable Baking Book FREE\n. The Qtukir Oata CocajHUW\nSuluittoa, Btik.\nPleeie tend me copy of booklef'Tht Quaker Method\nof Easy Bread Bating.\"\n'   Unttf\nAddrtit  , \t\nDtalir'i Nttm, !~'\nSOLD BY\nOVERWAITEA LTD.\nNELSON\nB.C.\nI FEEL LIKE A \"TWO YEAR OLD\nSHREDDED WHEAT\nTHI; picture of health... dear-eyed, vigorous, alert\n... all ttt fot I hard day's work . . , thanki to\nShredded Wheat! These crisp, golden-brown biscuits,\nready-cooked, ready-to-serve, supply energy food your\ni body needs ... the carbohydrates, proteins, minerals\nand vitamins found in wbolt wheat. Two Shredded\nWheat Biscuits with milk or cream make the ideal\nmeal for brain-workers... for breakfast, for lunch,\nat all times . . . light, nourishing, easily digested.\nthi Canadian shkiodid whut company, ltd,\nNlasars Fills, C.nM.\nSHREDDED WHEAT\nMADE IN CANADA\nOF CANADIAN WHEAT\n12 bit bin ttm it tvtrj box.\n__________\n___________________________________\n_____________________\n \t\n-\u2014\u25a0\nFERNIE PASTOR\nGIVES TRIBUTE\nRev. Frank Saunders\nPays honor to\nSoldiers\nFERNIE, B.C., Nov. 8.-The following message is from the pen of\nRev. Frank Sanders, miniiter of\nthe United church, here:\nNovember 11, 1918.\u2014At 5:00 a.m.\nere dty had dawned, a drizzling\nrain and a cold, driving wind. Down\nthe street came running men, excitedly passing on the news as they\ncame \"Armistice.\" Juit ont word\nbut a word that lifted t load from\nmany t heart. Particularly (ltd\nwas the news to thoae loved ones,\nhusband, father, brother, friend\nwere still oversets. How readily\none ctn recall tbe day ud wbtt\noutbursts of Joy and gladness there\nwere. Bon-fires, church bells tnd\ncannon expressed thc relief of city\nand hamlet. Canada, weary of the\nlong conflict and the heavy drain on\nher youth and manhood, breathed\nmore easily, and across the yeara of\nbitter struggle wu taking toll of\nher dead and counted the awful\ncost.\nWhtt a price she had paid. Today,\nsixteen yeara later, the is still paying! A new generation of Canadians\nhas arisen, to whom Vimy, the\nSomme, Paschendale, are simply\nnames, an yet Canad? and the Em\noire continues to pay the fearful\ncost. Sanitariums and hospitals still\nminister to the bodies of those who\ncarry with them the evidence of\ntheir share in trench and field. A\nTHE NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. \u00bb*.-FRIDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER t. 1884-\n^jbepfeMiZ.\nDRINK\nBOTTLED ENERGY\nMILK\nNATURE'S OWN PICK-UP\nDo your suffer from fag? Here's the\nremedy: Drink a refreshing glass of\nCurlew Milk. Taste its delicious\n. flavor and notice how quickly you\nfeel like your old self again ... fit\nand fresh and clear-headed. That's\nbecause it's a perfect blend of vitamins, minerals and proteins ...\nnatural life-giving substances which\nforemost scientists say do most in\nrestoring you to your normal self. -\nAsk for Curlew Milk and you ask\nfor \"bottled energy\". Begin today!\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nPalm Dairies Ltd.\nBUTTER \u2014 ICE CREAM \u2014 MILK\nALL  PERFECTLY  PASTEURIZED   PRODUCTI\nSALE!\nAIX OUR HIGH-GRADE\nAtlas Racquets\nGOING AT SLAUGHTER\nPRICES\nO\nF\nF\nAll these racquets are made in 3-ply\nconstruction of highest quality seasoned white ash.\nThese racquets are fresh season stock.\nMade by England's foremost racquet\nmakers.\nSEE THESE RACQUETS AND BE\nCONVINCED\nHlpperson Hardware\nCompany Limited\nLook for Ihe Red Hardwan Store\nPHONE 497 BOX 414\nshortened limb, an empty sleeve or\na shattered or diseased body, still\nattest the fact that Canada is paying the price. Many of us know of\nthose wbo patiently endure and suffer today tbe effects of their loyalty to Canada, and the Homeland.\nBrave souls who flung themselves as\na living wall into the breath and\nthereby stemmed the foeman's onward marcb. Veterans! Canada salutes you!\nRemembrance Day! Remembrance\nof what? That great army ot grave\nmen'who nobly gave thtlr all on\ntbe altar of sacrifice and never\ncame back. Those also who just as\nfreely offered as mucn as these, and\nyet came beck througl. that awful\nwelter of agony anu death. Those\nmen who today atlll bear with grim\ncourage and tightened lips the physical disabilities that resulted from\ntheir service to king and country.\nCanada is the poorer for the loss of\nthe very flower of her manhood, thd\nhosts who sleep ln Flanders fields.\nBut she is rich beyond words ln the\nvalor of her sons who blazoned her\nname on the ramparts of the world.\nTruly Canada's baptism Into nationhood was one of blood. The vintage\nof her victory not of wine drunk,\nbut of wine poured forth. Never\nshall the heroism of her sons be\nforgotten or their glory fade. As\nlong as courage, patriotism and nobility stir in the human breast her\nsons shall be remembered.\nRemember? Yes! tet us remember all who mourn the loss of loved\nones gone. These, too, are paying\nthe price, sharing for us in the great\n\u25a0sacrifice by which Canada's name\nis forever inscribed among the immortals of history.\n\"We name today, our glorious\ndead\n\"Who went their all to give.\n\"In France their valiant spirit\nfled;\n\"Gone home! Not dead! They live!''\nSchool Report of\nWynndel Is Given\nWYNNDEL, B.C., Nov. 8.\u2014Ranking of puoils at Wynndel school for\nOctober \/,:\nDivision 1:\nGrade V\u2014Bosemarle Wolfrum,\nRonald Wood. Louise Butterfleld.\nGordon Ogilvie, Donald Uri, Ray\nDavis, Hans Steiner.\nGrade VI\u2014Denis Huscroft, Isabel\nHagen, Frank Hagen, Thelma Johnson, Helmut Patall, Folf Hindley.\nAlice Glacier, Allan Davis, Eileen\nDalbom.\nGrade VII\u2014Sidney Davldge, Sydney Wlgen, Jennie Pearson, Gordon\nMartel, John Markin, Gustao Steiner.\nGrade VIII\u2014Nesta Huscroft, Olive Uri, Ronald Wall, Lillian Johnson, Elsie Davis, Winnie Moon, Oswald Uri, Elmer Hagen.\nMiss E. Sutton, teacher.\nDivisoin 2:\nGrade 4\u2014Peter Elasoff:\nGrade 3A\u2014Mary Marken.\nGrade 3B\u2014John Rumsey.\nGrade 2\u2014Rosaleen Moon.\nGrade IA\u2014Bertha Lachat.\nGrade IB\u2014Stanley Metelskl.\nPerfect attendance\u2014Thelma An-\ndestad, Donald Benedetti. Irene Ben-\nedetti. Tommy Butterfield, Paul\nElasoff, Peter Elasoff. Ruth Glacier,\nBernice Gustavson, Gudrun Gustav-\nson, Fritz Hess, Emanuel Hess, David Hindley, Doris Huscroft Bertha\nLachat, Rene Lachat, Mary Marken,\nNick Marken, Rosaleen Moon, John\nRumsey.\nMrs. L. R. McGregor, teacher.\nPremier of B. C.\nto Place Wreath\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (OP).\u2014Premier\nPattullo will lay a wreath of the\nmemorial plague ln the rotunda\nof the legislative buildings commemorating civil servants who tall\nIn the Onat War, at a ceremony\nto take plaee at 12:45 pm. on\nSaturday. Rev. Cannon A. E. de L.\nNunns will conduct a brief service,\nbefore asaembled staffs ot the province,\nPattullo on the\nAir on Friday\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (OP).\u2014Premier\nT. D. Pattullo will conduct the\nfirst broadcast from the prime minister's offloe at the legislative bulldlnge ever staged over the air, when\nhe takea over tbe microphone of\nCRCV by remote control Friday\nevening at seven-thirty. The premier\nwill speak for balf an hour, and la\nexpected to discuss the record of\nthe. administration during lta first\nyear ln Tfflce.\nBuescher\nALTO SAX\nBrass, lacquered\u2014similar to\ngold  flnlah\u2014durable.\nComplete with caaa\n$168.50\nPHONE 685\nKOOTENAY\nMUSIC HOUSE\nNATALYOUTH\nLAIDTOREST\nLouis   Homan   Dies,\nAccident in Coal\nMine 'Chute'\nNATAL, B.C., Nov. 8. \u2014 Louis\nHaman of Natal, who was seriously\ninjured working on afternoon shift\nNov. 1 died shortly after before 8\npjn. next day at the Michel General hospital without gaining consciousness.\nMr. Haman who had been employed as a motorman for the past\nthree years by thc Michel Colliery\nMines, had his head jammed between the scaffold of the big chute\nin \"B\" seam, mine No. 1, and 15\nloads. He was trying to couple up\nhis load to remove them from the\nchute. The force of the impact stunned him and lt was some time before his absence was notic.d as he\ncould give no warning. The motor\nwas finally coupled to tbe 15 loads\nand they were removed there by\nreleasing the victim.\nIt was believed he' sustained a\nfractured skull or concusaion of the\nbrain.\nMr. Haman was 20 years old. He\nwas born in Michel April 6, 1814.\nThe funeral was held November 4.\nThe procession was from hii. home\nto the Roman Catholic church where\na high ceremony was conducted by\nRev. Father Craig. Thc procession\nleft the church and proceeded to\nthe cemetery where the final ceremony was conducted by Father\nCraig and H. Saunders who represented the B. C. Miners' association.\nMany of his friends paid their last\ntribute by laying wreaths on the\ngrave.\nHe is survived by bis mother,\nthree sisters and two brothers.\nThere were many wreaths and\nflowers.\nThe pallbearers were John Galla.\nAndrew Billy, Paul Chala, Celester\n\u2022Gris, Joe Kattichak, John Letasy.\n12,161 on Lists\nin East Kootenay\nTotals for Each Polling\nDivision Are Given\nA total of 12,181 names registered\non the federal preliminary lists of\nvoters from rural enumerators in\nEast Kootenay, Is reported by McL.\nNorton, registrar of electors for East\nKootenay.\nFollowing is a complete list by\nDlv. No.   No. of\nNames\npolling divisions:\nPolling Division\nCorbin         1\nCrow's Nest  2\nHarmer   S\nNatal  4\nMichel   5\nHosmer   8\nFernie North  7\nFernie  _. 8\nFernie  - - 9\nFernie  10\nFernie   11\nFernie  12\nWest Fernie  13\nCoal Creek  14\nElko   15\nBaynes   18\nGrasmer   17\nRoosville .._.  18\nFlagstone  19\nNewgate   20\nWaldo   .'.  21\nJaffray _  22\nWardner   23\nMayook   24\nBull River  25\nFort Steele  28\nWasa    \u25ba  27\nCanal Flats   28\nCanal Flits Camp 6 29\nFairmont Springs.. 30\nWindermere    31\nAthalmer   32\nRadium Hot Springs 33\nEdgewater   34\nLeancholl   35\nField    38\nForde      37\nDonald        38\nMiddle River   39\nCummins Creek  40\nBeavermouth  41\nMoberly  42\nGolden\nMcMurdo  .\nParson\nCastledale\nGalena \t\nBrisco   \t\nWllmer\t\nInvermere .\n43\n44\n45\n46\n47\n48\n49\n50\nTa-Ta Creek     51\nKimberley     52\nKimberley     63\nKimberley     54\nChapman Camp    55\nMarysville     58\nWycliffe        57\nCranbrook     58\nCranbrook  -   59\nCranbrook    60\nCranbrook  -   61\nCranbrook     62\nCranbrook     63\nLumberton       64\nMoyie       85\nCamp 2 B. C. Spruce   66\nYahk    67\nKingsgate     68\nCampListp* -    69\nKitchener     70\nCanyon     71\nErickson  \u201e....   72\nCreston North    73\nCreston South   74\nWynndel     75\nSirdar   :   76\nTotal \t\n3.9\n401\n64\n155\n273\n259\n232\n301\n29\u00ab\n294\n138\n64\n49\n51\n29\n26\n33\n85\n136\n118\n36\n47\n12(1\n49\n147\n75\n74\n50\n49\n11\n289\n39\n19\n136\n126\n32\n17\n452\n58\n55\n82\n33\n159\n71\n319\n565\n585\n234\n77\n98\n381\n287\n317\n335\n313\n251\n97\n80\n20\n177\n39\n98\n121\n180\n212\n511\n319\n210\n96\n. 12,161\n^SOCl ETY\nThis column Is conducted by\nMrs M J Vlgneux Al' newi of a\nsocial nature, including receptions,\nprivate entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc will appear\nin this column Telephone Mrs\nVigneux at her home. 519 Silica\nJ. Strelt of Kaalo was in the city\nyesterday en route to Salmo.\nA. E. Mann was among those\nfrom Nelson attending the Gyro\ninitiation in Rossland last night.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nCharles Webster of Kaslo visited\nNelson yesterday.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nArthur Lakes, ME., of Vancouver,\nIs a city visitor.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. C. S. Leary and the\nlatter's sister, Mrs. W. H. M. Hakeman of Nakusp, are in the city.\n.  .   .\nOscar B. Appleton of Sunshine\nBay waa among city visitors yesterday,\n* \u00bb   \u2022   . \u2022\nC. W. Tipping of Slooan City spent\nyesterday in Nelson.\nS. H. Watson was among Gyros\nattending the initiation in Rossland\nlast night.\n* *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Teddy Applewhaite\nof Stewart, who are visiting at the\nhome of the former's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. H. H. Applewhaite, at\nWillow Point, leave this morning\nvia Yahk for their home.\n.   .   .\nJ. Law Bell of Park Siding visited\nNelson yesterday.\n* *   \u2022\nAmong shoppers ln the city yesterday was J. D. Bacon of Gray\nCreek.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nG. L. Landon of Grand Forks was\na city visitor yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Dufour have\ntaken up residence at 905 Stanley\nstreet.\n.   .   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. M. Archibald of\nhaving eorpe Wednesday to attend\nCreston were in the city yesterday,\nthe maritimers' banquet that evening.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2666\nP. W. Green of Wlnlaw visited\nNelson yesterday.\n* *   \u2022\nHarry Abey of Kaslo spent yesterday In town.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nC. W. McBaln, C.P.R. official of\nVancouver, visited Nelson yesterday, i\n* \u2022   \u2022\nAmong shoppers in Nelson yesterday was Major Turner Lee of Bonnington.\n*\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Russell Tinkess of Kaslo\nspent yesterday In town.\n* *   \u2022\nR. B. Morris motored to Rossland yesterday, where he went to\nattend a Gyro initiation.\n* \u2022 .*\nMrs. C. G. Richardson, 409 Latimer street, entertained yesterday\nafternoon the members of Mrs. J.\nA. Curran's circle of St Paul's\nchurch. Those present were Mrs.\nW. G. Stewart, Mrs. H. E. Dill, Mrs.\nF. Lind, Mrs. A. Carrie, Mrs. M. E.\nWatts, Mrs. J. Simmonds. Mrs. A. T.\nRichards, Mrs. C. Kelman, Mrs. D.\nH. Ball, Mrs. H. H. Kingzett, Mrs.\nJ. A. Curran, Mrs. C. G. Richardson\nand Mrs. J. H. Staples,\n* *   *\nMr. and Mrs. W. W. Brltton of\nHarrop were among visitors to Nelson Thursday.\n\u00bb   \u2022   *\nJack Crowe of Slocan City bas\nbeen spending a few days in Nelson.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nVery Rev. J. C. McKenrle is confined to his bed with pleurisy. .\n* .   .\nMrs. Harold Clark and ion Bobby\nand Miss Jennett Yurick, matron of\nNakusp hospital, are guests ot Mr.\nand Mrs. George M. Clark, Cedar\nstreet\nLongbeach Lady's\nFather Is Dead\nLONGBEACH, B.C., Nov. 8 -\nWord has been received by F. H.\nChanter* in a cable from Bristol,\nEngland, that H. Waltham. father\nof Mr?. F. H. Chanter, died November 8.\nMr. and Mrs. Waltham visited\nthis district eight years ago. Mrs.\nChanter, who left here October 15\non account of her father's illness,\nhad reached him 12 days before his\ndeath.\n\u2022PAOt Fl\nFERNIE SCHOOL\nREPORT IS OUT\nrERNIE, B.C, Nov. 8.\u2014The public school hopor roll lias been announced aa follows:\nDiviiion 1 \u2014 Violet McKenzie,\nJoan Marsh, Olba Lenardon.\nDlvlaion 2\u2014Donald Logan, Frank\nVanlerberg, William Henry Bruce.\nDivision 3-Kenneth Whitelaw,\nHarry Wilson, John Perri, Mary\nGates, A'\u00bbTt Beastal).\nDivision 4\u2014John Coles. Jean Paterson, Victoria Puppln, Albert Pln-\ncotti.\nDivision 5\u2014Donald Walker, Jack\nStainsby, Frank Augustynek, Helen\nBelecky, Sandy Sanborn.\nDivision   6,   Grade 6B \u2014 Irene\nHalgh, HUda Herchuk, Muriel Robaon, Jessie Muirhead, Irene Giacom-\nazzi.\nDivision 6, Grade SA\u2014Sam Marasco, Tom Phillips, Mildred Hughes.\nJean dowers.\nDivision 7\u2014Jean Logan, Hike\nBorisuk, David Pepper, Mary Mc-\nOladrey.\nDivision 8, Grade 4A\u2014Lorraine\nDuthle, Edith Fointon, John Sprlak.\nDlvialon 9, Grade 3A\u2014Mary Bos-\nsio. Colleen Boese, Jessie Easton.\nDivision 8, Grade 4B \u2014 Phillip\nBenn, Victor Cataldo, Sybil Dunn,\nBillie Uphill.\nDivision 10, Grade 3B\u2014Catherine\nBroster, Lois Logan, Mary Wasie-\nwicz, Lucy Goralski, Betty Gibson.\nDivision 11. Grade 2A\u2014Loretta\nLatak, Gay Reid, Josephi*-   Perri.\nDivision 11, Grade 2B-r* Donald\nStainsby. Bobbie Edgar, Karl Hurler, Alice Lees.\nDivision 12. Grade 1 A\u2014Audrey\nCoop, Pearl Morris, Mike Melnik,\nVirginia Bossio,\nNELSONITES ON\nSLOCAN WI\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.. Nov. 8-Mr.\nand Mrs. Wilcox of Nelson were\nguests ot Mrs. Wilcox's cousin, Mayor\nP. Swan.\nGeorge Mawson of Abbotaford,\nB.C., was a guest of his brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. R.\nCook and family.\nR. L. Reynolds, one of the engineers on the Okanagan steamboat\nservice, is spending a holiday at\nhis home here.\nMr. and Mra. R. L. Reynolds\nspent a few days In Nelson.\nDivision 12, Grade IB\u2014Helen\nLamer, Lillian Waskevich, Irene\nLatak, Betty Slalne.\nDivision 13. Grade IB\u2014Oscar Erickson, Angelo Glgliottl, Verna Up-\n\u2022hill, Ellen Chapman.\nPHONE\ncMeahbr's-\nTHE MOST IMPORTANT COAT\nEVENT OF THE SEASON\nFEATURES TWO SPECIAL GROUPS OF\nLuxuriously'\nFurred\nCOATS\nThe new slimmer, straight-\ner silhouette . . . with furs\nput on in new ways. And\nevery coat is of such fine\nwoolens, with such rich,\nthick furs that you wogld\nexpect it to cost far more.\n$21.50\nA new shipment just received especially for this event\u2014-all included at this\nprice. Beaver, raccoon, opossum, taupe genet, wolf and seal trims. Some with\na detachable cape or fur. Sixes 14 to 40.\n$39.50\nPersian Lamb, Jap.Mink, Kolinsky, beaver, Russian Caracul trims on such\nwell known makes as Langbourne, Del Monte Hickey and Hurlingham. Sizes\n14 to 40.\nOther Fine Coats at Regular Prices From $65.00 to $165,00\nEACH AT SALE PRICES NOW\nSATURDAY BASEMENT COAT SPECIAL\nFinest quality Fur Trimmed Coats. All sizes Each $9.95\n\"MY\ndre one\nPioneer of B.C.\nNow 83\nSAVONA. B.C., Nov. 8 <CP)-\nJames Bule Leighton, known to\nthousands throughout the Cariboo\ndistrict during the early gold rush\ndays and regarded as one ot the\noutstanding pioneers of British Columbia, today celebrated his 83rd\nbirthday.\n\"Jimmy\" Leighton has been store\nclerk, express agent, telegraph operator, hostler, race horseman, stage\nline manager, rancher, historian and\npolitician.\nBorn In the village of Yarmouth,\non the River Spey, Scotland, he\nwent to California with his parents\nat the age of 2. Left an orphan at\n12, he Journeyed to Victoria in 1863\non the steamer Sierra Nevada. When\nstill a youth he went by stage and\nsaddle to Barkerville to reside with\nan uncle.\ndear, you don't have to talk\nabove a whisper. Stockings\nthing I'm fussy about.\n\"Why, yes! I've been wearin3 'Mystery' Stockings ever\nsince they brought them out.   Just think! 51 Gauge!\n\"Close-clinging?\u2014I'll say! And are they extra dull? And\nsheer! What I like most about'themlstheirquality look;\nbut at the same time, I just love the way they outwear\ncheaper stockings.   That's where the economy comes in.\"\n\"MYSTERy\" Stockings excel in cloudless beauty\nof  fabric and tailored  smartness of styling.\nAll tht new shades\nit leading stores\nSUPERSILK HOSIERY MILLS LIMITED\nLONDON, CANADA\nSupersilk \"Mystery\" Hosiery Is Sold by FINK'S LTD.\n_________________________\u25a0\n T\u2014\n\u2014\n, PAGE SIX -\nBOSWELL DISTRICT INSTITUTE\nASKS FOR FREE FERRY SERVICE\nNelson Board Gives\nAccord; Haskins\nSpeaks\nI    After discussion at tha luncheon\nIn   tbe   Hume   hotel   allver   room\nThuraday, ln which man; favored a\n' start modified request >n the belief\n, tbat tuch a ont would have more\n\u2022 Stance of being granted, tht Nelaon board of trada went on record\n\u2022a being ln accord -With the resolution retarding tree terry aervlce for\nthe Boewell dlatrlct. The resolution\nwu forwarded to the Nelson board\ncf trade from the Boswell and District Varmers' institute.\nlUt retolutlon aaked that resl-\ntSente ln the district from Kuskanook to Desnshaven. dependent\nJ in the Kootenay lake ferry aervlce\nOr tervloe to and from Nelson, be\ngranted free service on the ferry for\n- all motor freight trucks, motor\nvehicles and passengers. The majority of lerrtea are free throughout the\ncountry, lt waa pointed out; and yet\ntbey were called on to pay an extra\ntai, the ferry being really part ol\nthe   road.   The   resolution   will   be\n\u2022 forwarded to the honorable minis-\nt ter of public works, P. M. Macpher-\n: aon  at Victoria.\nW. E. Haaklns, president of the\ntree fruit board of B. C\u201e wat a\ngueat at  the  luncheon  and  spoke\n' briefly on the Natural producta Marketing act, and urged that the welfare of farmer and the welfare of\n. the city people were dependent.\nSHOULD  HAVE  IT\n\u2022 Kenneth Wallace, ot Boswell, de-\n. elared that  it might  appear as lf\nthe Boswell and district lnsttute was\n\u2022 asking for aomething unusual. But\nI tie pointed out. some of the resl-\n> dents ol thst area had been there\n\u2022 for  35  years.  For  yeara  they  had\n> cried for a road and now thty lwd\nI the road they found another dlfll-\n| eully.  They  had  to  pay for fruit\n\u2022 transportation across the like, to\nh aay  nothing  ol   paying  for  trucks\nand cars. He thought the district\nwhich he represeiJed was entitled to\nthe ferry free snd thought the Nelaon board of trsde should support\nthe resolution. He did not wish to\nbribe the board In any wsy but he\ndecalr.d the cost of ferry service wss\ndriving business away lrotn Nelson.\n' W. R. orubbe declared the re-\nQuest was a reasonable and declared he thought residents within\n10 or as miles of Boewell should\n' bave the privilege of free transportation. They would have to ba\nbona fide residents, however.\nW. M. Cunllffe pointed out the\nfact that no answer had been received from the government with re-\nyarda to reductions on ferry charges\nmade by the board some time ago.\nBe thought lt might be better to\nhalt until an answer was received.\nPOBWELL lESOLCTION\nR. D. Barnes stated the resolution\nEnder discussion waa from Boswell\nnd the Ntlson board did not know\nanything about thla prevloua to tbt\nmwtlng. In view ef uut he thought\n|t thould be forwarded, with the\napproval of the board, alto. Nelson\navaa the distributing center ot the\nKootenay and the Boswell district\n'tetldenta ahould have ready access\n|o Nelaon without tha ferry ooat.\nMr. Wallace stated that the men\n%rho were preaent at the meeting\n(When ferry reductions were discussed\nmrtat trom Crawford Bay. The Boa-\njaell district had refrained from\nprint up tbe matter before because lt waa realised times wert\nbard. But thay were harder now for\nthe district residents. Cars were idle\nbecause they did not have the\nmoney to run them. If, however,\nthey could get free transportation,\nft would be posslble__to run the\ncan. That would mean more money\nfor the government.\nSunshine Bay and Harrop enjoyed\npee ferry aervlce, decltred J. R.\nHunter, and how could tha Boswell\ndistrict begin to compete with them\nIf they had to psy for transportation.\nCalllhg for free transportation\nWas a large order, suggested H. W.\nRobertson. He lt would he better to\nask for a rate op cars and freight,\ncomparable to the rate given oa\npassengers.\nVSK  KELOWNA  ARM'MENT\nVen. Archdeacon Fred H. oraham\ndeclared lt would be better to ask\nfor something reasonable than to\naak for something thsy could not\nget. If they appealed for something\nbaaing their argument on conditions\nprevailing elsewhere, they would\nnave an excellent opportunity ot\ngaining their objective. He would\nendorse the resolution but he\nthought there waa less chsnce of\ngetting It than If a more modified\nrequest wu made, in the latter\ncase they would have the argument\n\"DODDS '\nKIDNEY\nPILLS\nof the Kelowna ferry to aid tbelr\ntame,\nMr. Barnet disagreed with Mr. onham. He atated the conditions were\nnot the same. Further, bow were\nthey to know they were going to gtt\nanything. It would be better to tend\nln thla resolution and lf lt waa refused they could go back wltb modifications.\nH. K. Kershaw, of Nakuip, voiced\nthe opinion that Boswell wtl entitled to the free ferry equtlly u\nwell u residents of the Arrow\nlakes were to the free ferriet there.\nThe resolution wu then put to\nthe mee'\/ng and carried unanimously. \u2022\nOLDEST IN B.C.\nMr. Haskins expressed hit pleuure at being able to talk to the\noldest board of trade In Brltlth\nColumbia. He atated that the board\nmight net have been the flrtt one\nsUrted In the province but it was\nthe oldttt active board.\nHe  wanted,   he  laid,  to  tpeak\nbriefly on friction between farmers\ntnd city people. Friction wu the\ngreatest lost value In mechanics.\nWithout friction cars could go along\nat a speed of almost a thousand\nmiles an hour and arplanes could\nincrease their speed tremendously.\nBut friction was not found only in\nmechanics. It also existed in business, sometimes between the business man and the customer. Thit\nhad a detrimental effect on both\nbusiness man and customer and resulted in a lou to both. Therefore,\neach  one  wu   interested  ln  the\nother's story.\nNOCUOUS RUMORS\nA short time ago, he continued,\nthe Natural Products Marketing act\nwas passed and since then, like most\nnew things, it had been branded in\nvarious nocuous ways. Howev.., the\nact was a most beneficial one, despite harmful rumors. The act wu\ndrawn with the aim of bringing\nprosperity to the fruit growers, who\nwould conduct their business in a\nbusiness-like way. The time had\ncome when it was known that the\nfarmer must be prosperous or else\nthe city would not prosper.\nThe board appointed to effect the\nrulings of the act were merely directors and their duty was to run the\nfruit marketing in a business-like\nway.\nMuch friction had been set up ot\nlate by various boards, governments,\npress agencies, and other institutions, designed to set u| a wall between the producer and consumer.\nAnd according to the picture they\nhad drawn lt would seem that people ln the ctty did nothing but eat\nwhile the country people did nothing but produce.\nWhether people lived in the city\nor in the country, and they aided\nln the selling or distributing, or\nservicing of goods, thev were producers in equal tense with the farmers; likewise the farmers were consumers. But If the cities were to\nprosper the fanners must first be\nDrought to the prosperity stage.\nAbove all, he declared in conclusion, the Natural Producta Marketing act should not be \"monkeyed''\nwith, no matter which government\nwas in power.\nPresident R. W. Hinton stated the\npleasure of the board in seeing so\nmany farmen and district residents\npresent.\nSTATESMEN ALL\n0. B. Ballard, of Robion, In\nreplying for the vltlton, declared\nthey were pleated to attend. On\nreturning home with a man en a\nprevious occasion, afttr thty had\nvisited the board, the latter had\ntold him that the mtmbtn of the\nNelton board of trade wtrt more\nllkt ttatttmen than anything elte,\nbecause thty conaldered thl welfire of the whole community\naround.\nCHESSER HEADS\nTRAIL CURLERS\nTRAU, B. C Nov. a-A. M. Chester, first vice-president of thc Trail\nCurling club last year, was elected\nPresident and K. A. Margeson, retiring president, wu elected honorary president, at a meeting of the\ncurling club Thursday night. J. J.\nWsrren was elected patron, other\nofflcera elected were. J. a. MacKinnon, first vice-president: s. S. McDlarmld, second vice-president: Rev.\nL. A. Morrant, honorary chaplain*\nW. R. Wllllamaon, T. H. Weldon, R.\nSomervllle, L. F. Tyaon, James At-\nwill and oeorte Shaw, executive, a.\nMcKay and H. E. Wade are delegates to the B. C. Curling association convention and A. B. Rltchv\nand O. A. Klnnla alternates, a. C.\nMcKay, j. Buchanan. H. E. Wade,\nL. F. Tyson and w. F. Truswell form\nthe selections committee.\nANDERSEN FOUND\nAT CRANBROOK\nAccording to word received by\nSergt. C. G. Barber of the provincial\npolice force at Nelson, Hans Edward Anderson, who disappeared\nfrm work nt the CM. It S. line\nplant at Tadanac Friday, was found\nat Cranbrook Thursday. Andersen\nhas refused to return to Trail and\nis being held pending the decision\nof his friends.\nFruit Growers to\nMeet in Nelson\nFruit growen in the Nelton district will meet in Nelton next week\nto choose a delegate to attend the\nconvention at Kelowna at which the\nnew fruit board will be chosen. The\ndelegates to the convention will not\nonly name the new board but will\nalao set the ularies -f the members.\n200ATTENDTHE\nANNUAL DINNER\nCatholic Ladies\nHave Fine\nEvents\nThe Catholic ladies added another\nsuccess to their long line of excellent suppen when they were hostt\nThursday night to over 200 guests\nat the parish hall. When the hour\ncame for the supper, all places were\nfilled, and one hour and a quarter\nlatef, guests were still coming.\nThere was seating acommodation\nat three large tables extending the\nlength of the hall, and as quickly aa\nguests left, others took their places.\n' Vases of chrysanthemums were\nused as a decoration for the table\nand during the coune of the dinner\nradio music provided entertainment\nfor those who were silent, but occupied.\nFEDERAL ACTS\nAIDS FARMERS\nW. K. Esling Describes\nFarm Loan and\nOther Acts\nVarious phases of marketing legit-\nlation, brought down by the federal\ngovernment with the view protecting the producen of British Columbia and of Canada, were described\nat length Thursday afternoon for\nthe benefit of delegates attending\nthe semi-annual convention of the\nWest Kootenay Central Farmen\ninstitute, by W. K. Esling, M.P. for\nKootenay West.\nOne of two plecet of legislation\nenacted for the district benefit of\nthe man on the land was the Farm\nDebt Adjustment act. It wu devised for the purpose of relieving\nthe man on the land, who by reason\nof the depreulon and other economic lilt became so Involved in\ndebt that he could not keep up with\nhis payments. The procedure taken\nin securing this aid was described in\ndetail.\nSome five million dollan had\nbeen allotted to this work and later\nan additional 30 million. Direct interest seasonal duties were alto described. These duties were designed\nto prevent the dumping of produce\ninto Canada. The United States had\ndumped her surplus apples on the\nCanadian market in 1929 to the extent of 190.000 barrels. Last year\nwith the tariff in effect only 65,000\nbarrels had been marketed here, a\nsaving of 700 can. The history of\nthe Ottawa agreement, following\nthe tariff wan, and the resulting\nmovement for British preference,\nwere also gone into fully. Trade\ncreated through the Empire preference was given renewed hope and\nMr. Esling stated that he hoped that\nthe man on the land, through the\ntnde. would realize tome financial\nbenefit for his labors.\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER S, 1H4-\nDESCRIBES\nMARKETACT\nHaskins N. P. M. Act\nWill Put Money in\n, Farmer's Pockets\nTht Natural Producta Marketing act, dttlgned to regulate thi\nfruit mtrket ef British Columbli\n\u2022nd brought forwird following lut\nfill's   blockade  agalnit   independent ihlppert, wat described In Itt\nvarious phuei by W. E. Haiklni.\nchairman ef thl tnt fruit boird\nof Britlih Columbia, at a mettlng\nof  thi   Wut   Kootenay   Central\nFarmen lmtitute In thl city hill\nThurtdiy tfternoon, on his wty\nbick from Cretton. Mr. Haiklni\ngive in Interesting iccount of tht\nact whleh, he uld, wai deilgned\nto   put   money   In   the growtr'i\npocket ifter yean of handing It\nout. He also outlintd a plan to\norganlzt ill primary producer! to\ncreate a contact for them through\na central body, and to creatt for\nth m a united voice.\nThe farmer had been In a bad\nway. He had not made money for\nyean.   The  speaker   himtelf  uid\nthat he had lost money every year\naince 1920 with the exception of the\nyean that there had been control\nmeasures.    In  the  Okanagan  the\nfarmer waa wone than in a bad\nway. Not only had he failed to make\nmoney for a number of yeare but he\nhad lost practically all of his capital. Many had come out from tne\nold country well fixed, today they\nwere badly in debt.\nFARMER THE BACKBONE\nIt was the tame right down the\nline, wheat fanner, cattle rancher,\nfruit rancher alike. There wu more\ntruth than poetry ln the saying\nthat the farmer was the backbone\nof the country. When the farmer did\nnot prosper the elty man did not\nprosper. He had a lot ot bad debts\non hii booki. It wu a case of one\nsupporting the other and if tht\nneeds of the farmers was to be met\nthey would have to put them for\nward, one way wu through con*\nventions. In telling the government\nwhat was wanted more satisfaction\nwould be received by larger repreientation. The government would\nthen know that the whole of the\nInduitry wanted it.\nIt wu no good poking fun a) a\ncandidate by stating that they wanted votet. \"Of course they want\nvotes, that it the only way they are\nelected. They are auigned to office\nby the expression of the people,\nhe said.\nFor the succeuful operation ot\nthe Natural Produce Marketing act,\nevery producer in the province\nwould have to be -enlisted. Then the\nJob would be only half done. The\ncity man would have to be enlisted.\nHe knew that money in farmen'\npockets spelled prosperity to htm\nand would naturally back the\nscheme. Then the idea muit b_\ncarried on all over the Dominion.\nIf everyone in Canada uked for\nlomething they would be sure to\nget It.\nNOT VISIONARY\nIt wu not a visionary idea, but t\npractical one. Poultry, cattle, fruit\nand vegetable organizations would\nbe represented by one central body.\nThe time was ripe to call theie\norganizations together. Such a body\nwould be divorced from politics.\nThe bualneu of the producer and\npolitics would not mix. It would\nbe a good idea, the tpeaker thought,\nto start the organization early so\nthat when campaigning itarted next\nyear for the federal election the\nfarmen and producers could say to\ncandidates, \"We want so and so.\"\nThe Natural Products Marketing\nact, put on its broadest terms, was\ndesigned to \"put money in your\npockets.\" \"It Is a fine Idea, you\nuy, you are all for lt but how ts it\nFlashes From the Wires\nSTOCKHOLM. SweSen\u2014Lulgl Pl-\nnndeiio. celebrated Italian dramatist, author of \"Mx Characters In\nsearch of an Author\" and other\nfamous plays wu today awarded\nthe Nobel prlu In literature tor\n1\u00bbM.\nHAVANA-Carloi Machado, brother\nof the former prealdent, expect! to\nbe released from Cabani prison soon,\nbut he li unaware of a rude shock\nwhich awaltt the day of hla liberation. For weeka Machado. former\nsenator, hu been giving lmtructloni\nto servtnta to prepare hla many\npropertlea for hla home-coming. But\nhe la virtually without properties\nrevolutionist! having dutroyed most\nof hli holdings.\nMKLBOt'RKE, AUStmlll \u2014 The\nAustralian government li consulting the meat Industry with a view\nto learning whether cooperative\naction Is possible on the proposal\nunderstood te bave been advanced\nby the British government\u2014that\nAustralia withhold exports of froi-\n1*11 beer and veal to England for\nUo months starting NOV. It.\nthe Bank of Montreal, u president,\nthe slate ot officers ol the Cinadlan Banker's association wu reelected at the annual general\nmeeting.\nTIMMTNS, Ont\u2014The aklll that a\ntew years ago made or. Lou Hudson one of the star players of a\nworld-champion hockey team, wu\ndirected towards combatting ons of\nthe rarest diseue ln Canada. Hi is\ntreating a caw of tularemia, * disease usually conveyed to human be*\nIngs from rabbits.\nMINNEAPOLIS \u2014 Montreal Maroona outplayed New York Rani-\nen in their final exhibition match\nto win 4-0.\nSARNIA, Ont.\u2014Sarnia presbytery\nof the prubyterlan church forwarded a call to Rav. J. M. Micoullvray\nof Central Presbyterian church, Vancouver.\nTHE HANDY REMEDY FOR\nLCuts, Bruises, Burns, Pimples, Eczema, Rashes,\nBoils, Abscesses, Ulcers, Bad Legs,'Poisoned    A\njggm    Wounds, Piles, Scalp Diseases, etc.    *\/\u00a7\n..\nCALLANDER, Ont. \u2014 The private\ntelephone line from the office of\nDr. A. R. Dafoe to thi hoipital home\nof the Dlonne quintuplets, now 23\nweeki and three dayi old. wu In\noperation today and the physician\nwu able to find out the condition\nof hla little charges betore he left\non bli morning vlalt.\nNEW YORK\u2014Arrangement! were\nmade for the shipment or *3*i,-\nnoo.ooo mon gold from Eufopc to\nNew York, bringing the total on\ntha preient movement to sisn.tmu.-\n000 or more. Moit of todaj'\u00bb transactions were carried   out in Paris.\nIONDON. (Friday)\u2014Bitter opposition by a handful of labor peers\ntd the government's Incitement to\ndisaffection btll todty gave the\nhouw ot lorda a la-hour ilttlng. extending until 4:19 am. It wu believed to he the longest teuton of\nthe upper house linos tht debtte\non homi ruli for iMind In lilt.\n\u2022 WEST VANCOl VEE\u2014Dr. Frederick c stalntby, tl. a resident\nof British Colombia for more than\nto years and one time known\nai the \"flying doctor\" ln the Yukon, died suddendly.\nLOS AN0XLE8\u2014Yount love found\nthe way u Mln Ellin Wilson McAdoo. 19-year-old granddaughter of\nthe late president woodrow Wilson,\nand Rafael Lopes de Onate. Spanish\nmotion picture actor, filed notice of\nIntention to wed.\nMOMTBBAtx \u25a0lleaSel by Jackson\nDo-lti**,  Joint   general   iii;'tiiu-rr   or\nNEW YORK\u2014The Nul rejlme\nhu \"too many little Hitler!,\"\nCharles (1. Norrli, novelist, said\non his nturn from Europe, asserting the German masses were \"disillusioned\" and that \"only fear\"\nkept (hem In line.\nVANCOUVER\u2014Condition of Arch,\nblahop A. U. de Pencler, ln general\nhwpltal recovering from Injuries received In an automobile accident\nlut Sunday, wu nported \"allghtly\nImproved.\"\n1\\INMl-Wl \u2014 Cloilng of many\nbakeries appeared a possibility here\nns a \"bread war\" broke out.* Iiras-\ntle reductions In bread prices were\nmode by most dealers, breaking a\nrecently-established agreement for\nHied   prti-i.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Although establishment of a oentral bank of Canada\nwis destined to make a sharp break\nIn the evolution of the Canadian\nbanking system, there need be no\nfear Canadian bankers would not\ncooperate with the Btnk of Ctntda,\nJackson DOdds, Montreal, preildent\nof the Canadian Banken' uaocla-\ntlon, told tht innual giMrtl meeting of that organization.\nNEW YORK\u2014Failure of the assistant radio operator tn transmit\nhli order promptly, acting capt,\nWilliam F. Warms of the Morro\nCastle chirgea today, wai responsible fer the delay In Hashing an\ns.o.s. wben the Ward Une luxury\nship burned off the New Jersey\ncoaat with a loss of 134 llvu.\nto operate? The set hai been termed\nunconstitutional, socialistic and even\nworse than that, communlitlc.\"\nThere wu nothing ln the B.N.A.\ntet declaring tuch act unconstitutional. Nothing could be more democratic u the will of the majority\nmust prevail. The speaker alto answered other charges agalntt the\nlet. Answering a charge that it\nwould interfere with personal lib-\nertiec, ht declared that actually no\none had pereonal liberties for years.\nThe individual had to conform with\nthe wiehet of the majority for the\nwelfare of the majority. A grocer\ncould no longer sell und In his\nsugar because his customers did\nnot object, even though it wu his\nown sugar. All though his explanations the tpeaker injected humorous\nparallel thoughts.\nMADE MONEY\nOne reaion for believing that lt\nwould put money in the hands of\nthe people wu the fact that since\n1920 the growen had lost money ln\nevery year except the yean when\nt similar control was In existence.\nThere wat an argument that financial conditions made the difference,\nbut conditions would not create a\nspread of from $1.80 a box In U27\nto 20 centt in 1032.\nLut year conditions became io\ncritical that the growen had to take\nthe law Into their own handi in\nstabilization efforts. The plan was\nunlawful, It -had been flimsy and had\nbeen full of loop holes, but there\nhad been a big difference In the\npricei obtained for the fruit. The\nnew act would supplant thli measure and would give lawful stabilization.\n\"When you had similar laws you\nmsde almost double the money you\ndid bafore. This Is in itself a good\nreason to believe that the marketing\nact will put money ln your pockets,\"\nhe declared.\nDealln- more fully with the cen\ntral plan, he declared that there\nwat a great danger of more than\none board in the province. The officer! of each board would naturally try and make the beat ihowing\npossible for hli district and consequently chiselling would enter into\nit It must be done by one central\norganization, he concluded.\nTAKES PRAYER\nAS HIS TEXT\nNearly 40 people attended the joint\nweekly meeting held in St. Saviour's\nchurch Wednesday evening* when\nRev. M. M-Clean wai the speaker.\nHe chose Vs his text, \"Call upon\nMe in the day of trouble and I will\ndeliver thee, and thou ahalt glorify\nMe.\" Miss Grace May sang a aolo,\n\"Unanswered Yet.\"\nIn opening his address Mr. McClean drew attention to the simplicity of prayer. It wat a simple\ncall. It wu not the conglomeration\nof words that a lawyer wat prone\nto use when pleading for a client,\nit wat not the multiplicity of words\nu. used by the Pharisees, nor the\nfutldious, nicely-worded prayer of\nthe formalist, but a passionate cry\nfor help, as simple as the call of a\nchild for itt parent.\nContinuing, Mr. McClean pointed\nout the promise given. \"Call ... 1\nwill deliver thee.\" The very promise\ncarried wtth it the powtr to perform,\nGod would keep His word.\nGLORIFY ME\nThe objectivity of prayer should\nalto be noted, \"Call upon Me ... I\nwill . . . (lorify Me.\" God should\nbe the object ot faith. Jesus, the\nmanifestation of God, uid, \"Whosoever ye atk 'in My name,\" and\nalao \"Tnere Is none other name.\"\nOne should direct one's prayer as\nstraight to God from one's heart\nu Uie arrow is ln itt flight trom\nthe bow.\nAnd lastly, concluded Mr. McClean, there wu the responsibility\nof prayer. \"Thou shalt glorify Me.\nBONNINGTON WINS\nBIRD GAMES, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 8\u2014The Trail\nMemorial Hall Badminton club wai\nboat to memben of the Bonnington\nclub at the Memorial hall Thursday\nnight when 10 gamea were played\nafter which refreehminti were en-\nJoyed. The Bonnlngton club won\nthe io games with 310 polnta against\n119 for the Trail club.\nCLERK GETS EIGHT\nMONTHSFORTHEFT\nJamea Whalley, a clerk in tho\nemploy of the Comolidatcd Mining\ntt Smelting company at Kimberley,\nwho pleaded guilty to a charge ot\nstealing, was brought to Nelson to\nserve an eight-month term. He appeared before Judge G. H. Thompson.\nWhalley wu charged with stealing the sum of $898.13 from thc\ncompany.\nJAIL FREIGHT\nRIDERS, NELSON\nSix freight riden are in. Uie Nelson jail to serve 'one month's hard\nlabor. They were arrested Thursday\nby C.P.R. Constable Brown and\nProvincial Constable R. H. Macintosh on a west-bound freight.\nThey appeared before Stipendiary\nMagistrate John Cartmel and pleading guilty were sentenced to pay a\nfine ot $10, or ln default to one\nmonth's hard labor In the Nelion\njail. They wert Donald Alexander,\nRichard Chrittie, Robert Watson.\nJamei O'Connor, Harry Taylor and\nThomaa O'Connor.\nRARE TREAT AS\nHART HOUSE IS\nHEARD IN CITY\nFull House Thrilled\nby Wonderful\nProgram\n. Tht fimtd Htrt Houit ttrlng\nquartet, touring muiicltm frem\neutern Ctnidt, gava one of their\nwonderful performincei before a\nfull houu at thl St. Piul'i church\nThunday night, thl concert being\npreiented under the autplctl of\nthe Nelion Rotary elub.\nPor thote who had'httrd tht\nquartet en previoui ocoitlont, It\nwii mother treat of unparalleled\nexcellence, and thote who heard\nit for thi flnt tlmt litttned to\na program that drew from them\ngreet applaute at tht concert and\nlavish praise afterward. It was\nrare entertainment at tht muilc-\niculpton mouldid the vtrlout\nnumben in their repertoire and\nthe tudience wu highly appreciative.\nSeldom, if ever, hai mu.tc of to\noutstanding a character been to\nwell attended in Ntlson and the\npraise that the artists drew wu\nample evidence of the patrons derived. It will long be remembered.\nPLAYED FOR CHILDREN\nIt was the second occasion the\nquartet played Thursday as they\ngave a performance at the junior\nhigh school in the afternoon when\n488 pupils heard them. Adam Barton\nacted a chairman at the school.\nDr. L. E. Borden was chairman for\nthe evening concert. Speaking\nbriefly during one ot the intervals\nof the program, Dr. Borden stated\nthe audience had done two things;\nit had shown appreciation for tna\nmusic which had been given and it\nhad ihown appreciation for the\nwork of the Rotary club In aiding\ncrippled children.\nThe work with the crippled chll*\ndren wu one ot the main objectives\nof the club in Nelton and already\nthe club had accomplished considerable. It could carry on, however,\nonly so long as the people supported\nthe club in its acUvlUes, for In reality the club wu simply a group\nof trusteea taking care of the people'! money for the crippled work\n$100 A MONTH\nFrom July 1033 to July 1934, the\nNelion club had ipent on an aver*\nage of $100 a month and it was particularly gratifying to tee the work\nthat was accomplished. Could others\nvisit the ctub at tlmu when tome\nof the children, who were being\ntreated, were in attendance, they\nwould,-too, be amazed and pleaaed\nat the fine change medical attention had brought about.\nIn concluding. Dr. Borden gave a\nihort resume of the work done by\nthe club.\nThe program wu u followi:\nQuartet ln G Major, Opus 3, No.\n3 by Joseph Hayden; Folk Song\nSuite, by trie Thiman; Quartet in\nA Miner, Opus 41,-No. 1, bf-fcobert\nSchumann.\nPOLZUN GIVEN\nSECOND YEAR\nKick Polzun, of Nelson, pleaded\nguilty ln provincial police court\nThuriday befor* Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel on a charge\not being in posaesalon ol stolen\ngoods and was sentenced to a year\nlh  JaU.\nPol-tun waa given a year several\nweek* ago In tbe Nelson olty police\ncourt when be was charged wltb\nbreaking, entering and stealing from\ntbe Imperial CHI office. The terms\nWlll  run   consecutively.\nThe goods which were found In\npolzun** bome belonged to C. W.\nWalton, of Falrvlew, and consisted\not tools that were atolen from Mr.\nWalton's boat bouse about a year\nsgo.\nRAIL COMMISSION\nHERE TODAY\nMembers of the railway commission are sitting in Nelson this morning. They will hear representations\nfrom Nakusp regarding freight on\nlumber to prairie points and also\nfrom the Lardeau whose residents\nare petitioning for better railway\nfacilities over the branch line there.\nMayor Groutage\nto Seek Mayor\nReelection, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C. Nov. 8-Mayor E. L.\nGroutage today announced his intention to stand for reelection as\nmayor in the forthcoming municipal\nelection.\nThe civic election Is Warming up\nearly thlt yeir, J. A. Wadsworth\nis expected to be a candidate for\nalderman.\nTO START ICE\nMAKING, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 8,-The making ot Ice at the Trail skating rink\nwill be itarted next week, itated\nJimei Buchanan at a meeting of\ntha Trail Curling club Thunday\nnight. Approximately $2000 It being\nexpended to put the rink Into ihape\nfor the homing teason.\nCURLING CLUB\nTOPAYSHARE\nTrail Club Hblds Faith\nin Rink Finance .\nMovement\nTRAIL B.C., Nov. 8-The Trail\nCurling club, which hu abandoned\noperating the Trail rtnk, will rent\nIrom the Trail Rink company, which\nhas taken over its operation!, that\nportion of the skating rink containing the curling theets with full\nprivileges for $3900 for this year, it\nwas decided by the Trail Curling\nclub Thursday night after many of\n\u2022the approximately 150 member!\npresent enthusiastically and thoroughly discutted thc club't part\nconcerning the future of the rink.\nA board partition will separate the\ncurling sheets from the large sheets.\nTo cover the $8600 the membership\ntee was raised to $15 from $10. There\nwere 270 membert last year and 233\nwould be necessary to cover this\namount.\nThis ium was arrived at after C.\nw. Guillaume on behalf of Trail\nRink company explained the budget\nwhich must be adhered to to operate\nthe rink on a tound business basis\nand showed that the sum of $8895\nwould be necessary to meet all expenses. This amount Includes the\nfollowing: $2750, maintenance and\nrenewal; $800 loan, and $2805 for\noperating expeniei (for winter onlyl\nAs thl curling theets comprise\n38.4 per eent of the total ice area,\nthe rink company conaldered that\nthis percentage of $8856, which is\n$3400 should be the amount from\nthe curling sheets to meet expenses.\nThat is, to pay the dividend on the\nloan, meet the overhead costs and\ncontinue operating. Any revenue in\nexcess of this amount would be\navailable for the redemption of\nitock. The large ice aheet which is\n11.8 per cent of the Ice area, on this\nbasis costs $5455 to operate.\nMr. Guillaume pointed out that\nthe curling club ihould figure on\napproximately $4000 as the. sum\nnt essary to take care of the curling portion of the rink\" and that it\nwould not be fair for thc main sheet\nto have to pay for the redemption\nof the curling side. He did not believe that this amount could possibly be attained thit year, but that\nan effort should be made to raise\nan amount over the bare running\nexpenses in order that tome of tha\nstock could be redeemed each year.\nHe suggested that $3600 would be\nacceptable by the rink company.\nWhich statement was corroborated\nby James Buchanan of the rink\ncompany.\nA letter from* Jamea Buchanan,\nchairman of the \"save the rink\"\ncommittee, explained how the Trail\nRink company came to be formed.\nThe \"save the rink\" committee believed the best method by which to\nrun the rink would be to form the\nlimited liability company to operate\nthe rink on a sound business basis.\nThe company had set out to sell\n2000 sharei at $10 and that $16,880\nhad been received to date, there\nbeing only 332 shares unissued.\nAt regards to a suggestion that no\none could become a member of the\ncurling* club unless a shareholder\nIn the company it wat considered\nthtt when the total shares were sold\nIt would prevent thoee Joining who\ncould not ponlbly obtain them, so\nthe suggestion wu dropped.\nThe financial atatement of the\nTrail Curling club for 1933-34. which\nshowed a deficit of $18,680 was\nadopted as read. On motion of S. S.\nMcDiarmid, tha assets and liabilities of the club will be donated to\nthe Trail Rink. It wat moved that\nthe executive have power to deil\nwith new applications. Ladies' dues\nwere placed at $3, rental for lockers $1, and no rental rocks. Secretary was instructed to write a letter\nof appreciation to T. W. Bingay,\nwho had turned his rocks over to\nthe club after leaving the city.\nTo enquire aa to what Is to be\ndone concerning the McDonald\nBrier competition tills year, the secretary was initructed to write the\nsecretary of the British Columbia\nassociation. He was also Instructed\nto write a letter of condolence to\nthe Rossland club which has lost\n\"BUlie\" Baker, who died recently.\nLLOYD ELLIS OF MERRITT\nVISITING   NELSON\nPERRY STANDS\nTRIAL NOV. 10\nFrederick Perry, of Fernie, who is\ncharged. with theft by conversion,\nwill appear to face thai charge\nNovember 10.\nMotor fuel of high anti-knock\nvalue is being produced from coal\nand tar by the British Fuel Research\nBoard.\nIf I Hacking Cough\nNearly Chokes You\ntiki Dr. Wood's Norway Plai Bynjp. Al\nmost instantly you feel Its penetrating\neffect. It oozes slowly through the inflamed\nmembranes, loosens germ-laden phlegm,\nclean the bronchial tubes and brings relief,\nId severe coughs. Easy to take. Good for\nchildren.\nVANCOUVIR\u2014The northwest professions! hockey league's represents.\nUvea adlournrd without ret* chirr\" a\ndecision on the league's composition\nthis sesson.\n1. HOlWff\n\\   PvN*\u00ab   STRIKES^ tk.ROOT\n> SYRUj_J^COLDS a,.\/COUGHS\nLloyd Ellis, of Merritt, B.C., is a\nvisitor here. His father was well\nknown in this district at a former\nnewspaper editor at Rossland.\nDISTRIBUTION\nREALPROBLEM\nProduce Question\nSolved\nFrank Putnam, M.P.P. for Crei-\nton-Nelion riding, at a meeting ot\nthe Weit Kootenay Central Farmen Institutes ln the city hall Thursday afternoon, declared that the\nqueitlon of production had been\nsolved and that now the efforts ot\nthe producer and consumer would\nhave to center on the queitlon of\nreasonable dlitribution.\nMr. Putnam wai a guett tpetker\n\u2022nd decltred that the farmer! meeting hid been exceedingly lnterett-\ning and educational. Through listening to the argument! he would\nknow more of the need! and wants\nof the farmers when he went down\nto Victoria. He said that he had\nbeen instrumental in a small way\nIn getting the Natural Products\nMarketing act started. There wat\nitlll lots to finish up. however. Voluntary cooperation had failed and\nhe said that failure of the present\nplan would be disastrous, but that\nhe thought with careful consideration it would eventually work out to\nthe best interests of the farmers.\nAFTER\nSMOKING\n5W\n\u25a0X-*\nm\nYOUR\nMOUTH\n\"Copyright WrlgliyV IIS-P\nInsist en \"GRANT'S HST MtOCURABLE\"-The Original\nFor Sab .t Vtmaer. or ilreet tea -Mail Old. D-*.\" Urn*\"\u2122\nControl  Board, 847 Boot*  Start,  Vukou\u2014.TIc.      *^\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the liquor\nControl Board or the Government of British Columbia.\n_________________________\n \\dS]\nSIECK PLACED\nON TRUCKS IN\nFRUIT HAULING\nMovement by Truck Is\nAgainst Law if\nNo Permit\n| J. COE IS IN\nCHARGE, CRESTON\n\u25a0#. E. Haskins Tells\nNeed of Strict\nRuling\nCRESTON. B.C., Nov. 8.-W. E.\naskins of Kelowna, chairman of the\n, C. Tree Trult Board, and W. J.\n9* are in Creston to deal with the\nucking of fruit from the Creston\natrict, Mr. Coc having been ap-\ntinted to look after the interests\n' the board in this matter.\nW. G. Littlejohn. who was elec-\nd to be the representative of the\nreeton district to the B. C. Tree\nrult board, had reluctantly been\nduced by the board to act as Its\nRresentative here ln' connection\nh the trucking of fruit Both\nr. Littlejohn and the board de-\ndad that the two dutis were not\ninsistent with one another and\n\u2022t Mr. Littlejohn should be entlre-\n' tree to act as representative of\n\u00ab district to the board, as orig-\nally intended under the scheme.\nId Mr. Coe it appointed to take\nrer the work in connection with\n\u2022trucking.\n\"The situation can be easily under-\nDod by anyone,\" said Mr. Haskins.\na talk with the Nelson Daily\ntwt representative. \"Th* board\nembers are all growers having;\ne same interests as the other grow-\n1. Their aim is to make more mon-\n' for growers. Any regulations pas-\n4 by tho board have that purpose,\nie board being in a position to\nillect all the information concern-\ng the total crop, the condition\n| the market, the crop movement\neek by week, and other necet-\niry data,, are in a better position\ni make decisions than those who\njve not the facilities to obtain such\nformation.\n[\"After studying the matter for\n\u00bbrly two months the board de-\nDtd that the only remedy to cor-\nlet the market losses caused by\nline growers, shippers and truck-\n\u25a0 was to prohibit the movement\n'tree fruits to market, by truck,\nId ao ordered. One exception was\ntit, however, fruit may oe moved\nmarket in a truck operated sole-\n* aa a freight line, lf a permit has\nten issued by Mr. Coe showing\nat all other regulaUons of the\nlard have been complied with.\n\"No truck hauling fruit can pass\nIt police constables on the road\nlttl they have shown such a per-\nIt,\" aaid Mr. Haskins, \"and any\n3t tfrtver who may get past\n. ik will be picked up at Cran-\nook or some other* point, so it\nfoolish to try to beat the law. Any\njck driver who hauls fruit without\npermit will be prosecuted.\n\"The board knows that these reg-\nItions seem harsh and unfair to\nne growers, but they are made\nlely with the view to make money\nr growers, including those to\ntorn they seem unfair. If those\nio do not agree with these regu-\nlons were on the board, and had\n. the Information the board has,\nay would see the necessity of them\nid, would, no doubt, make exactly\n) same decision themselves.\"\niner Returning\nto Ship-Breaker\nL6ND0N, (CP)\u2014The Canadian\nicific liner, Empress of France,\njich frr the past three years haB\nan lying in the Fairfield basin at\navan, is to be removed to the\nilmuir shipyard to be broken up.\nRather curiously this vessel, as\nAlstian, was built at Dalmuir\nBeardmores In 1913. so that she\nill be broken up in the shipyard\nhere she was built. She had a gross\nrmage of 18,800. and in her day was\ne of the most noted of liners,\nrrylng more than 16.000 pasengert.\nirlng the war the Empress of\n\u25a0ance was flagship to the patrol\ntween the Shetlands and Iceland,\nd Intercepted and examined no\nnr than 18.000 ships.\nIs understood that the price paid\nr the ship for breaking-up purpos-\nwas about $150,000. There was\nlen competition for her from Jap-\neee buyers. Three other large Brill linen\u2014the Baltic, Lapland and\nbertlc\u2014which have been sold a!\nrap during the past two years,\nb'rokn up in Japan.\nHleress Prefers\nAunt\n-THE NILION DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO.. NOVIMBIR I. 1134-\nOLORIA  VANDERSILT\nAppearing in New York aupremc\ncourt where her mother, Mrs. Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt, sought to re-\n8aln custody of. her, 10-year-old\niloria Vanderbllt, above, heiress\nto $2,800,000, Is reported to have said\nshe preferred living with her aunt,\nMrs. Harry Payne Whitney, to life\nwith her mother. Gloria was\nbrought to court by Mrs. Whitney,\nwho has been caring for the girl at\nher Long Island estate.\nCranbrook Curlers\nShowing Interest\nMore    Members    Expected\nRelief  Collection  a\nSuccess\nHIOH TEST\nGEM\n100*\n_sg_\nSAFETY PACHAS-\nGEM\nLYE\nOpens Clogged Drains.\nKeeps Drains Optn.\nAT ALL SHOCKS\nFrench Fear Nad Triumph in Saar Voting\nTURN ff ITALY\nIN CRISIS FOR\nSOME SUPPORT\nRome Virtual Capital\nof Europe During\nCritical Time\nCONCESSIONS\nTO MUSSOLINI\nFear Win for Germany\nWill Be.Buta\nStart\nBv J. C. OESTREICHER\nCentral Press Canadian Correspondent\nPARIS, Novo. r-.-With a tiny, loz-\nense-shnped piece of territory one\nof the chief pawns at stake, the diplomacy of Europe is undergoing a\nprocess of reorentatlon t lay.\nNew friendships and new enmities are bound to result. The eventual outcome either of thc readjustment or of disposition of the territory cannot be predicted.\nThe land in question is the Saar\nvalley, probably richer and more\ndensely populated per square mile\nthan any other territory in Europe,\nbnd the decision of its own people\nwith regard to its future nationality\npromises to have a profound effect\nupon the status of Europe as a\nwhole. -\nTor the last fifteen years, the\nSaar valley has been administered\nby commissioners appointed by the\nLeague of Nations, and its valuable\noutput of coal and Iron have gone,\nby virtue of a clause In'the Treaty\nof Versailles, to France.\nIn January. 1939, the 800,000 Inhabitants of the Saar. who are packed so closely in their little territory that they stand 1.150 to the\nsquare mile, are to go to the polls\nand decide their own political future.\nHAVE CHOICE AT POLLS\nThey can, lf they wish, remain under protectorate of the League of\nNations. They can become Frenchmen, and thus permit the fruits of\ntheir labors underground to enrich\na flag they can call their own.\nOr they can become Nazis.\nUpon thlt latter possibility, which\nat present constitutes th: most likely development, hinges much of\nFranco's present-day diplomacy.\nIt accounts in large measure for\nher feverish anxiety for a rap-\nproachment with Italy. It is responsible In no small measure for Mussolini's nationalistic stiffening; for\nhis receqt series of sharp and firm\nwarnings to Germany; for his virtual ultimatum to Jugoslavia to\ncease fo.Miwlth lta provocative\nnewspaper attacks upon the Italian\nnational honor.\nFor there is grave fear in Europe that for Germany the Saar will\nbe merely a jumping oft place for a\nnew policy of Nail aggrandizement\nthat would undermine if not blast\ncompletely thc already shaky structure ot European peace.\nReichsleadcr Adolf Hitler,\nthrough his emissaries in the Saar,\nhas promised there will be no forcible seizure of the territory, no in\ntimidation of voters at the polls to\nenlist the Saarlanders In the Nazi\nranks by means more foul than fair.\nHe has promised that Nazi Germany will abide peacefully and\nLawfully by the Saarlanders own\ndecision. The hysterical fears of a\nNazi \"putsch\" in the Saar aroused\nwhen league commissioners charged Hitler with training atorm troops\nfor an armed invasion have died\ndown.\nThe fear today Is not that Hitler\nwill attack the Saar, but that the\nSaarlanders 'will vote for him and\nencourage him to make good his\nboast that \"Germany will regain all\nin the world that is German.\"\nHe has promised to do lt by legal\nmeans and within the structure of\nexisting treaties, but except in the\ncase of the Saar Inhabitants themselves, there Is no legal provision\nmade for Nazi embrace of all the\nTeuton colonies, wealth ahd (lory\nloat ln the world war.\nSo far as the Saar Itself Is concerned, the treaty provides merely\nthat the inhabitants shall decide\ntheir own nationality. The millions\nof dollars ln annual wealth represented by the output of the coalmines will continue to go to France\nregardless of the outcome of thc\nplebiscite, until such a time as Germany can buy them back for hard\ncash. And thc French government\nhas made it clear it will accept no\ndepreciated currency\u2014no \"baloney\ndollars\" or Inflated marks. Gold\nalone, up to and Including the full\nvalue of the mines and property\nwill be demanded.\nBefore the Nazis came into power,\nsentiment ln the Saar waa predominantly pro-German. Nazi propagandists nave attempted to see to it\nthat this sentiment did not change.\nFRANCE, ITALY OPPOSED\nBut before the rise of Hitlerism,\nFrance did not much fear the loss\nof the Saar.   The rich revenue de\nrived therefrom would still be\nforthcoming until Germany could\npay for the mlnea, and it was this\nrevenue that impelled France to\nask for the Saar after the war rather than the mere acquisition of national loyalty.\nBut today it Is a different matter.\nA Germany bulwarked by 800,000\nSaarlanders with the weatern extremity of their territory touching\nupon the French province of Lor\nralne, it a vista unattractive to\nFrench eyes. A Germany encouraged by a pro-Nazi vote ot 800,000\n\"outsiders\" who just as easily could\"\nvote to be Frenchmen is a matter for\ngrave concern in the Qua! d'Orsay.\nThus Paris asks Rome for Franco-Italian collaboration against the\nthreat of Nazi aggrandizement on\nthe horizon. Thus France bends the\nknee to Italy for the first time, and\nRome truly becomes the capital of\nEurope because France fears a Ger*\nmany bolstered by the Saar.\n-PAOI SEVEN\nKASLQSENDS\nDRAUGHT AREA\nA LOADED CAR\nVegetables ond Fruit\nWelcomed by Sask.\nCommunity\nMANY GETTING A\nBARE EXISTENCE\nBuffalo  Gap  Suffers\nCrop Failure of\n100 Per Cent\nKASLO, B. C, Nov. 8.-The Young\nPeople's tociety of SL Andrew's\nUnited church in co-operation with\nKootenay Farmers' institute and thc\nCity of Kaslo recently thlpped a\ncar-load of fruit and vegetables to\nthe Commissioner of Public Welfare at Buffalo Gap, Sask. The car\ncontained 402 sacks and 320 boxes\nof apples and approximately three\ntons of vegetables.\nTbe car arrived at lta destination\nOctober 29 just in time for Hallowe'en. The commissioner of public\nwelfare hat written:\n\"The car arrived in excellent condition, in fact, it has arrived in\nmuch better condition than any\nwe have received at this point ln\nthe past four years. Upward! of\n350 families were served and thc\nrecipients art indeed greateful to thc\nresidents of Kaslo and those who\nwere responsible for sending us\nsuch a very acceptable gift. I might\nfurther add that recipients would\nbe In no position to* purchase fruit,\nat this district is located in perhaps the worst section of thc\ndrought-stricken area.\n\"You will also realize what a\nGod-send this fruit was when you\nknow that our municipality suffered a 100 per cent crop failure;\nan early frost destroyed what prospects ther were for even a small\nyield of vegetable produce. So bad\nis the situation here, that many\nof our residents are existing on thc\nbare necessities of life. However\nwe are living in strong hopes that\nProvidence will smile more kindly\nupon us during the coming year.\"\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Nov. \u00ab.\u2014A\nmeeting of the executive of thc\nCranbrook Curling club was held\nand the date of the annual election\nof officers and general meeting was\naet for . later in November. President W. J. Barber was in the chair.\nConsiderable interest in the sea-\ntons curling is being manifested and\nan lncreue of members over last\nyear is looked for. The matter of thc\nball usually held by the club on\nSt. Andrew's night was left for\nfurther discussion.\nR. J. McDougall was guest speak-\n* at this week's session of the\nCranbrook Rotary club, taking for\nhis subject the minei ot Western\nCanada. The workings of the Alatka\nJuno were particularly described,\nthe enormous tonnage taken from\nthe mine being cited. The mine was\nworked by steam shovel and for 27\nyears, the speaker stated, the mine\ncontinued to pay dividends of 91\ncents a ton.\nThe annual house to house collection for the Cranbrook Relief tociety was held on Wednesday under\nthe direction of the Rotary and Gyro\nclubs assisted, by many citizens with\ncars. Those in charge express themselves at pleased with both the\nquantity and quality of the donations. The goods will be sorted and\nready for distribution next Monday.\nThe relief rooms tre in charge ot\nMrs. W. H. Wilson, her assistants being a committee representing the\nvarious churches consisting of Mrs.\nPritchard, Mrs. Flynn, Mrs. Bartle\nand Mrs. F. Parks, and officers of the\nrelief society.\nMrs. Wright is a patient in the St.\nEugene hospital, recovering from\na recent operation.\nMrs. Simon Taylor of Flagstone is\na Cranbrook visitor a guest of Mrs.\nW. G. Morton. .\nEleanor McKowan underwent an\nappendix operation at the St. Eugene hospital.\nMln Amy Offin was hostess at\nthis week's meeting of the Anglican\nGirl's W. A. at Mrt. Mile't home.\nMrt. G. Sinclair of Creiton was\na visitor in the city, guest of Mrt.\nR. L. Harrison.\nMrs. C. Kerr underwent a major\noperation in the St. Eugene hospital Tuesday.\nTbe winoup of the season's activities of the Boy's Calt club took\nthe form of a social evening com*\nprising a program, presentations of\nprizes, refreshments and dancing.\nW. H. Wilson acted as chairman for\nthe evening, those contributing instrumental or vocal numbers to the\nprogram wtre Miss Margaret Mc\nCrindle. Miss Evelyn Gartsidc. J.\nLittle, Miss Margaret McLaren, Miss\nMargaret Leonard, and J. Blggatini.\nJoe Taylor, president of the club,\nspoke on behalf of the boys and C.\nB. Twlgg, district horticulturist addressed the gathering. Prizes were\npresented by Mrs. F. B. Miles, the\nrecipients of the judging awards\nwere; Arthur Hern, thc swceps-\ntaket cup; Bub Stevely, cup. Bob\nand Cecil Morrison were winners\nof a cup ss a team of judges.\nBrother and Sister Chained In Hame\nYOU WILL ENJOY THE\nDELICIOUS GOODNESS OF\nBOVRIL\nTHOSE WHO DRINK IT-KNOW\nA weird family drama was en-1\nacted in Pittsburgh, Pa., when po-,\nlice encountered Grace Gutawski\nhobbling around with a broken\nchain dangling from her ankle, and\nthen went to her home wTiere her\nbrother, Alec, was discovered chained to the floor in a cell-like room.\nTwo other brothers were arrested\nby police after one, Stanley, allegedly admitted fettering tne pair\nbecause, he said, they were insane.\nLEFT, Grace Gutowski sitting in\nthe police auto as she was removed\nto a hospital; right, alec (indicated\nby arrow) being carried out after he\nhad been freed by police.\nExperiment Gives\nBetter Poultry\nIn a recent radio talk prepared\nby the Dominion Poultry Hutband-\nm&n lt vu pointed out that both\nthe producer and the oonsumcr\nthould realise it la poor buiiness\nto sell or buy poultry which Is thin\nIn flesh. To fell a bird not properly\nfinished does not pay the producer,\nfor he mleees his best opportunity\nto make a profit. It Is false economy for the consumer to buy such\na bird even though the price per\npound may be lower, for he gets\ntoo little flesh and too much waste.\nThere are two main differences ln\nthe eating of the thin bird nnd the\nfleshed one: One is the increased\nproportion of edible meat on the\nrat bird compared with the thin\nbird and tha other ts the better\nquality of that flesh. An ordinary\nthin or range bird st 10 oanta a\npound la dearer than a well-fleshed bird at IS cents per pound, because the difference ln weight that\nthe fleshed bird hu Is made up\nalmost entirely of flesh, the wute,\nsuch u bones, head and feet, being practically the same whether\nthin or flashed. There Is also a\nnotable difference ln the quality\nof the flesh, the flash on tho thin\nbird U tough and dry, and what\nlittle oil or Juice thera may be,\nhas a tendency to dry out ln cooking.\nThe   producer   Is  evidently   father\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN  RADIO\nCOMMISSION NITWORK\n6:00 Gentleman Jim\n6:15 Tribute to a Song\n\u00ab:30 Up to the Minute News\n7:00 Melodic Strings\n7:30 Dance Orch., WXYZ, Detroit\n7:45 News and Weather Forecast\n1:00 Woodwind Duo, Winnipeg\n8:15 The Futbyt\n8:30 News (B.C. Net.)\n8:30 Sarah Bachun, pianist, 'Moose\nJaw (ex. B.C.)\n8:45 Cherie, Rod and Dick\n9:00 Nelson McMurdo, violinist\n0:13 Sidelights on Music -R.J.\n9:30 Woodhouse and Hawklnt\n9:45 Rhapsodies in Rhythm.\n10:00 Padburg trio; Peggy Cook\nN.B.C.-PO NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\n590     620     M0     (80     920     970\n6:00 Let's Listen to Phil Harris\n6:30 Phil Baker. Martha Mears\n7:00 First  Nighter        i\n7:30 One Man's Family\n8:00 Amos V Andy\n8:15 Gene and Glenn\n8:30 Intimate Revue\n9:00 Concert; vocalist: orch.\n9:15 Night Editor (KPO)\n9:15 Orchestra\n9:30 Ted Fio-Rito's orch.\n10:00 News Flashes\n10:15 Red Davis\n10:30 Tom Coakleys orch.\n10:55 Press-Radio News\n11:00 Fio-Rito's orch. (KGO to Net)\n11:00 Tom Gerun's orch. (KPO)\n11:30 McElroy's orch. (KGW to Net)\n11:30 Organ Concert (KPO)\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI    KFRC    KOIN    KSL    KOL\n570       610       940      1130      1270\n8:00 March of Time\n\u00ab:30 Hollywood Hotel\n7:30 Kate Smith's Swanee Music\n7:30 Friday Frolic  (DL)\n8:00 Myrt and Marge\n8:15 Human Side of the News\n8:30 Court of Human Relations\n9:00 Jacques Renard's orch.\n9:00 Police Band (DL)\n9:15 Hobbles (DL)\n9:30 Orchestra\n8:45 Reflections of Romance\n9:00-: 15 News Reporter\n9:30-:43 Purple Ray, drama\n10:00 Orville Knapp s orch.\n10:23 Northern Lights\n11:30 Till Tomorrow, Reed\n1050 k KNX 283.5 m\nHOLLYWOOD 50.000 w\n6:30 Your Dinner Dance, E.T.\n6:45 Jlmmle Allen't Air Adven.\n7:00 Watanabe and Archie\n7:13 Rajput,   E.T.\n7:30 The In-Laws\n7;45 King Cowboy\n8:00 Homer Canfield\n8:15 Electrical Trantcriptions\n8:45 Song of Songs\n9:00 Newt\n9:15 Amagon\n9:30 Musical Headlines, E.T.\n9:45 Stadium Boxing\n10:45 Pete Pontrelli's orch.\nA UTTER ATMOSPHERE\nJust because lt is colder out of\ndoors, doft't neglect to ventilate\neach room in your house every day\nfor at least a little while. It means\na sweeter atmosphere ln the home\nand the fresh air will heat much\nmore quickly than the stale.\nOFF COLOUR?\nHOW IS YOUR UVER?\nWake op yonr Liver Bile\n-Without Calomel\n*Y\u00abw Hat's a vsry.Bnaa erasa, but.lt -w-\nItltlr ett put -nor die***,****** aad tlmiaatm\nor i.m out ollilW. to nliMim to pour out 111\ndub' two pounds ol liquid Ult into -four towels\nYou won't completely correct euoh a conditio\nby Uiinie>lu, oil, nuncnl wrter, husU-i-oN-idr\nor chewing cum. or rouahoge. Whoa they're\nmoved your bowels they vs through\u2014and you\nneed i liver stimulant.\nCkrtsr's little lira Mb will toon Wat taak\nthe noshiae Into your Ult. They're purely tm-\ntsble. Sale. Sure. Aik lor tbem hy nami. Befuto\ntubeUtutti. Kent all drains. tk\nTEACHER RETIRES\nTO BE CLERGYMAN\nLONDON. Nov. 7.-(CP)-Alfr*\u00abd\nWayment. for 21 years head-mast-i*\nof Archbishop Temple Central\nschool. Lambeth, is shortly to retire,\nand though 60 years of age he will\nimmediately enter an ecclesiastical\ntraining college. There he will study\nfor two years Before being ordained,\nthus realizing an ambition he has\nhad since the age of 18. -\nLEEDS, England, (CP). \u2014 The\nlargest works canteen in Europe,\nand designed to serve needs of 8,-\n500 operatives, was opened recently\nby Princess Mary and named after\nher.\nTi as tasy to so,\n\"DEWAR\nsty* Scotch\"\n\u2022id lt MW >o mttk mar* I\nNe Plus Ultra    Extra Speoial Liqueur\n95.00 SM-75\nSpecial Liqueur\n$4.00\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by tbe Oovernment of British Columbia.\ntoo willing to market his poultry\nwithout finish, and the consumer\ntoo often has no choice In the\nmatter, becauae there Is not enough\nof the quality product to to around\nThe producer la working against\nhis own best Interests every time\nhe markets an unfinished bird, lt\nIs this last pound or two put on\nIn the finishing that Is the cheap*\nest to produce.\nAt the Central Bxperlmental Farm.\nOtUwa, It haa been shown that\nIt takes 414 pounds of mixed grain\nto produce a pound of chicken.\nWith grain at one cent a pound,\ntherefore, the extra pound of fleah\nis developed at a.'cost of about five\nrents rountlna tbe milk that Is\nused. This extra live cents mesne\nfrom two to live eent* a pound\nmore  for  the  whole  bird.\nIncidentally the feedlnj ol mixed\ntrain to poultry provides a good\nmarket for coarse grains. In recant\nyeara mixed grain haa sold as low\nas 50 cents per 100 pounds at the\nelevators. Had thla pain bees fed\nto chickens of good type, and tbe\nchickens sold at even 10 oents per\npound. 100 pounda tjr (rain Instead\not bringing the farmer 50 centa at\nthe elevator would have brought\nhim over tJ.OO per cwt. through\ntha fat chicken route.\n600 k CJOR\nVANCOUVER\n6:00 Real Life Drama\n7:00 Club Gladstone\n115 Don Pedro's Sextette\n7:30 Dr. Lyle Telford\n8:00 News\n8:15 Trio\n8:30 Don Flynn, pianist\n8:45 Prairie Drifters\nOther  Perlodi;   Rtcordt\n500 m\n500 w\nKGO\nLONDON, (CP).\u2014Rumor that Sir\nH. E. Avory of the King's Bench\nwas to retire on account of poor\nhealth has been denied, though he\nis 83 years of age and a judge since\n1910.\n790 k\nOAKLAND\n6:00 Tive Cardi\n6:30 Ricardo and His Violin\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Barbara Merkclcy, harpist\n7:13 Chester Rowell\n7:30 Comedy Start\n7:45 Mickey Gillete's Musi.\n8:15 College Date\n6:30 Orchestra Pit Echoes\n9:00 Crime Clues, E.T.\n9:30 Pick and Pat, E.T.        ,\n10:00 Reflections,  orch.\n10:30 Press-Radio News\n10:35 Orchestra\n11:00 Ted rio-Rito's orch.\n11:30 COle McElroy't orch.\n970 k KJR\nSEATTLE\nKiOO Newt Reporter\n6:15 To be anounced\n6:30 Hollywood on Parade\n7:45 Air   Adventure!\n7:00 The Song Bag\n7:30 Lotus Land\n7:45 Artistic Trio\n8:15 Carefree Capers\n8:30 Melody Race\n309.1 m\n500 w\nEVEREADY\nPRESTONE\nYour cir ia a valuable Investment. Ian_\u00bb\nit worth thit tmali aam to protect it\ncompletely againtt freesing?\nEVEREADY Prettbne glvet you PULE\nprotectlon-wlth the first filling your\nwinter worries are over. It never boila\noff, to your flrtt eott it your lett one.\nalnca ene filling lasts sll winter. It a\nSAFE, cannot damage cooling tyatem, u\nodorlest and non-infiemmable, and tas no\nmore effect on your car finlih than wster.\nSoli by t***- itil'ti ewywiera.\nrs\nCOMPLETE ALL-WINTER\nPROTECTION FROM FREEZING\nF0RA$L0WAS...^3-W\nOi,\u201e~      CANADIAN NATIONAL CARBON CO. LIMITED   Montrssl\nVancouver TORONTO Wlnnlpej\n\t\n PAGE EIGHT-\nMm\\\\ flailg Newa\nEstablished April S. 1902.\n\u25a0\"Interior of British Columbia'* Family Newspaper\"\nALL THI NBWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPubUthtd  every  morning  except  Sunday  by\ntht NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANV  LIMITED,\n211  Baker   Street,  Nelaon.   Britlah  Columbia.\n' Phone 144. Private Exchange Connecting all Departments\ni\nMtmber of Ihe Audit Bureau of Clrculttioos and\nTht Canadian Pratt Letted Wirt Ntwt Service.\nFriday, November 9,1934.\nNEW RACKETEER RISES\nThe gossip is always with us\u2014has been, no doubt,\nsince the pyramids were a-building. But it has remained\nfor present-day United States to put gossip on a paying\nbasis and make a racket out of an ancient failing.\nReporters for the New York World-Telegram recently dug up news of one of the oddest businesses ever\ninvented.\nThey found that there are in New York certain\nfirms, some of which have branches in other cities, which\nwill circulate rumors for you, for a price; rumors about\nyour competitor, about yourself, about some individual-\ninsidious whispers that will spread from mouth of mouth\nall across the country, untraceable and unstoppable.\nThey have trained operatives who go about circulating such rumors. Some of them pose as house-to-houSe\nsalesmen, and drop their-propaganda in the ears of housewives. Others filter about through hotel lobby crowds\nand travelers in railroad\" stations, dropping a word here\nand there to help the cause along. Anybody, apparently,\ncan hire their services. \\\nOne large corporation has lost thousands upon thousands of dollars because rumor-mongers have persuaded\npeople that employees of the firm were suffering from\nleprosy: Another has taken huge losses because it has\nbeen whispered about that the firm has made big donations to the German Nazis.\nThis sort of work has been found useful in labor\ntroubles. A strike in a large Connecticut city was broken by sly propagandists who spread the jvord that the\nunion leaders were crooks. A middle-western strike failed after gossip-mongers let it be known,that the plant\nwould be moved to another city if the strikers were victorious.\nPlots of this kind are impossible to trace. The victims may attempt to spread the truth, without success.\nFor there is a perverse streak in human nature which\nmakes many people believe such rumors tenaciously, no\nmatter-how many denial&_are broadcast.\nYet lt is only through refushl to take any stock in\ngossip that this vicious kind of propaganda can be\nchecked.\nA WORLD'S RISE-AND FALL\nWords, like individuals and peoples, have their\ndowns and ups and then again ups and downs. According to a commentator, in the Boston Transcript, the\nword \"kid\" offers a splendid illustration. At first appearance it was used only by persons of a low order, but\nit served even this* class a comparatively short time to reappear in the late nineteenth century only with the exception for the stealing of persons either out of Spite or\nfor a ransom in the form, \"kidnap.\"\nThe researcher finds, however, that in 1841, Lord\nShaftsbury made an entry in his Journal which reads:\n\"Passed a few days happily with my wife and kids.\"\u2014\nand so it was given \"a badge of respectability.\"\nThe word was not popular in Mayfair drawing\nrooms, although sueh a man as Lord Shaftsbury found it\nconvenient and succinct.\nWith \"the turn'of the century,\" the writer continues,\n\"the words Tad' and 'kids' have come into general use\nboth in England and this country (U.S.A.). The English are more disposed to use 'kiddie' and 'kiddies' but\neither way the term has fairly well driven 'child' and\n'children out of colloquial speech even though among the\nmore straightlaced of writing folks it is still looked at askance as the offspring of slangdom.V    ' v\nThe events of the past few years which have been\nfraught With so much suffering and concern, to private\nindividuals and the publicin general\u2014the wave of kidnapping: is likely to set back the words \"kid\" and \"kids\"\nto the level it held when, in 1699, Massinger associated\nit in one of his plays with low and vicious characters.\nEUROPEAN SITUATION TODAY DIFFERS\nFROM THAT OF 1914\nIn the recent, conversations between France and\nBritain on the subject of Burope, some observers see a resemblance to the situation that existed before 1914.\nThere is a surface resemblance, but there are essential\ndifferences. Today the cards are on the table. Before\nAugust 4,1914, it was not known whether Great Britain\nwould go to war on any grounds. Today, under the Locarno pact, she is definitely pledged to take action in certain circumstances.\nThese were stated by Premier MacDonald in May\nlast, in the News-Letter. They are: If Holland is invaded;\nif Belgium is invaded; if the Germans fortify the demilitarized zone on the left bank of the Rhine; if the French\ninvade Germany; if the Germans invade France.\nThe pledge looks perilous, but it may make for safety. All the nations concerned know in advance what\nBritish action will be, and war will not be undertaken\nin light-hearted ignorance. The knowledge acts as a-\ncHeck and there is already a change in the situation.\nThe Nazi fire-eaters are drawing in their horns.   It is\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nByJ.B.C\nA SHARP LETTER\nABOUT A FLAT\nThey say that I. G. Nelson received the following letter:\nDear Sir\u2014We want some linoleum\nfor our parlor, that is we have alwaya had this room for a parlor,\nbut now think of making a den of\nit My husband thinks his music\nsounds better in a room without a\ncarpet and over-stuffed furniture.\nMy husband is leader of a male\nquartette which meets ih this room\nand they use straight chairs for\npractice.\nIf you ever come here, drop in on\nus, tho you could advise us about\nthe color of the linoleum, and you\nmight just be lucky and come when\nthe quartette meets. Yours truly,\nMRS.G T\t\nTRY CASTOR OIL\nAnd George Fleury this one:\nGentlemen\u2014Every week people\nbuy less, so every week I buy less\nfrom you. I have Idea. Suppose you\nsell me drugs tor less than lt costs\nyou and have little less, and I sell\nfor less than cost us and have little\nless and then we all do a big business and because we do big business, we make profit.\nI always read in fine business\nbook Where if you sell big quantity\nof things, you soon make big profit.\nVery trul*\/ yours,     Mrs. G.L.\nLOVE 'EM AND LEAVE 'EM\nThe Dionne girls squalled lustily\nbecause they were kept indoors.\nThat's the way it goes\u2014feed 'em,\nclothe 'em, love 'em, and then they\nwant to leave home,\nsat\nWHAT'S IN A NAME?\nDear J.B.C.\u2014Similarity of names\nsometimes leads to difficulties, as\nthe following incident will demonstrate:\nA Swede went into the loggers'\nemployment office in Vancouver in\nsearch of a friend named Ole Olson.\nHe asked the attendant at the desk\nif Ole Olson ban vorklng for the\ncompany. The attendant explained\nthat their agency represented 18\nlarge logging concerns and that it\nwould be necessary for him to return in the afternoon and a thorough search ot the books would be\nmade meanwhile. Upon his return\nhe asked lf the information bad\nbeen procured. He was Informed\nthat there were 879 Ole Olsons\nworking for their companies. Whereupon he exclaimed: \"I want to see\nthe one that chews snooze.\nNORSKA\n*   \u2022   *\nSOME Q08SIP\nHere and there\u2014R. A. Aldersmlth\nplaying baseball\u2014E. C: Wragge,\nhands In pockets, wending his way\nup the hill\u2014Harry Ramsden doing a\nboy scout act\u2014By driving H. L.\nTHI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILION. B.C-FRIDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER (. 1B4 \u2022\nMahaney Quadruplets of St. John\nReceived No Extraordinary Care\n(By Central Preu Canadian)\nST. JOHN, N.B.-The Mahaney\nquadruplets of this city will soon\nbe 11 years old. The arrival of these\nfour children at tha home of Mr. and\nMrs. William Mahaney on a frosty\nChristmas night in 1923 was heralded throughout the world. For\nseveral years they were objects of\ncuriosity for visitors, but that curiosity has died and the children, Lyda\nChristine, John Douglas, Edith May\nand Edna Louise, are living the lives\nof ordinary children, with public\nschool activities taking about all\ntheir time.\nThe lot of the Mahaney children\nhas been very different from that\nof the Key quadruplets, of Hollis,\nOklahoma. Those four have been\nexploited to bring revenue to the.\nfamily treasury and finding lite\nquite an easy matter. Then, too,\nthe Dionne quintuplets, of Cornell,\nOntario, have had things much\neasier. For them private nurses\nand special doctors have been employed.    A  private  hospital  and\npublic funds have b;en used in\ntheir behalf.\nNO UNUSUAL AID\nThe Mahaney children have had\nnothing out of the ordinary done\nfor them. Mr. and Mrs. William\nMahaney are plain people, whose\nambitions for their children are\nhigh, but the family Income is not\nadequate for more than the plainer\nthings ot life. The four desire to\ncomplete \u25a0 high school course. Further than this no plans have been\nmade for their future. John Douglas\nshows a marked liking for baseball,\nbut his health at times has been indifferent.\nThe three girls take an interest\nIn everything that other girls do.\nThey do not have ambitions to go\non thc stage or even be movie stars.\nThey are content with life as they\nfind it and are quite willing to be\nknown as individuals and not as\npart of the Mahaney quadruplets.\nWILL NOT EXHIBIT\nMr. and Mrs. Mahaney have refused several offers to have their\nSt John, N.B., received some free\npublicity when they wera born.\nNews valua declined as they grew\nand St. John forgot tham. Not for\nthese four children of Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Mahaney, did governments\nsend public aid or protection\nagainst exploitation. For them no\nunusual amenities In life. Their\nparents were their sola support declining to make money from the\nunusual occurrence of a multiple\nbirth. Left to right they are: Lyda\nChristina, John Douglas, Edith May\nand Edna Louise. At the right Is\ntheir mother, Mrs. Wm. Mahaney.\nchildren publicly exhibited for\ngain. They have no ambition to\nmake a great sum of money through\nsuch means, though the father is a\ncarpenter and Is not always at work.\nThe parents have been the sole support of the children and no generous\ncontributions have been received\nfrom governments or individuals.\nThe mother has had almost the sole\ncare of the quadruplets during the\n11 years, although another child has\nbeen born since the birth of the\nquadruplets.\nBIRTH NOW FORGOTTEN\nSaint John received much free\nadvertising once, but the wonder\nof their birth has passed. Few\npeople today in the old seaoort on\nFundy's shore give even a thought\nto the Mahaney quadruplets, and\ntheir welfare causes no public concern, probably they will settle\ndown in Saint John and become\nlust \"good citizens\" as their parents\nhave been.\nHowe to his home on the north\nshore\u2014I looked on the voters' list\nand found my name there okay-\nWatched Cecil Sharpe and Jesse\nDavenport weilding a'paint brush-\nHeard Jim Bennett was looking for\nhia war medals\u2014must be a parade\ncoming up\u2014Like the improvement\nDode Dill las made to his place of\nbusiness\u2014Was interested in Jake\nLudwig juggling a kitchen stove\u2014\nMEAT OR VEGETABLES\nBY JAMBS W. BARTON, M.D.\nIt la Interesting and sometimes\namuslni to hear the arguments of\nthe meat eaten and the vegetarians and tbe raw food enthusiasts\naa they argue about the proper\nfooda for man to eat.\nIt la generaUy admitted among\ntr-lned food experts that a raw\ntood diet doean't quite fulfill the\nheat o* caloric requirements of the\nbody, not ao much becauae the\nfood Isn't nutritious but because of\ntts bulk or slu enough is not\nusually eaten.\nThis means that not enough proteid (body builder and repairer) la\ntaken Into tha body dally.\nHowever all trained food experts\nagree that most of us should eat\nmore trult, vegetablea and salads\nthan at present.\nDr. Walter Alvarez, Mayo Clinic,\nwho haa done a great amount of\nwork upon the Intestine aays, \"Man\naeems to have been designed to oat\nall kinds of foods aa Is shown not\nonly by the pattern of his teeth\nbut by the nature and size of\nhis digestive tract. In the herb ot\nvegetable eating animals the bowel\nla from 96 to 100 times the length\nof the body, while ln the cat and\ndog, meat eaters, lt Is from 4 to\n8 times that length.\nIn man, the length of the digestive tract Is about 5 tlmea tho\nheight sitting (comparing lt to the\nbody length ot an animal).\nA giraffe who lives on rough tree\ntops haa an Intestine 100 times\nIts body length. A oow has an Intestine 27 times Its body length.\nWhat lesson can we get from\ncomparing the digestive tract of\nman with that of a meat eatlne\nanimal like the dog or cat, and\nalso with that ot herb eating animals like a giraffe or a cow?\nThe lesson would seem to be that\nman waa meant to eat meat, eggs*.\nflah and other animal foods and\nlikewise the foods eaten by herb\neating animals\u2014fruits and vegetables. That Is aa man's digestive\ntract la longer than the meat eating\nanimals and shorter than the herb\neating anhnaLs, his present diet of\nmeat, cereals, vegetablea, fruits, and\nfats is really best suited to his requirements.\nHowever it would bo weU for us\nto remember the advice of Prof.\nMeCollum, Johns Hopkins University, that we all try to eat aom.\nraw 'fruit or raw vegetable every\nday.\nICEBERGS LIKE\nROCK\nWhy can an ice-breaker force its\nway through thick ice, while collision with a berg will wreck a\ngreat liner? '\nCapt. John L. Reed, of the icebreaker Charlottetown, has made\nthe explanation to \"Bob\" Davis,\nwriting in the New York Sun. His\ncraft can plow through three feet\nof field ice at six knots an hour.\n\"Bergs,\" says Capt. Reed, \"are\nformed of pressure ice, that is to\nsay, ice made solid as glass, solidified by incalculable weight, before\nit is forced into the sea. It possesses\nthe solidarity of rock, whereas field\nice, comparatively new lie, frozen\nbut not subjected to solidifying pres\nsure and still carrying a high percentage of air, can be broken up.\nThe thickness of the forward plates\non the Charlottetown will not exceed one and one-half inches. Wc\nseldom have a puncture. However,\nin ,1913 on Hudson's Bay a piece of\npressure re, not more than twelve\nfeet square, rolled a steel plate off\nthe Minto under the port bow and\nmade it look like a piece of tin.\" i\nRANSOM PAYMENTS\nIt must be galling to the American people to read of another payment of ransom for the safe return of a woman kidnapped by a\nhoodlum, after the police had been\ncalled off. Every successful crime\nof this kind makes repetition more\nlikely and the kidnappers more\nbold.\u2014Niagara Falls Review.\nsignificant that the recent speech of Rudolph Hess, Hitler's lieutenant, treated of a war of defence. The war of\nrevenge and recovery has been put into the background.\nThere are other differences. The League of Nations,\nwhatever its weaknesses may be, affords a place for\nconsultation before catastrophe comes. It has been said\nthat if a conference of the powers could have been arranged in 1914 the war could have been averted. Sir\nEdward Grey proposed such a conference, but the proposal was rejected. In his memoirs, Lloyd George intimates that it was rejected because the proposed meeting\nplace was London. There can be no such objection to\nGeneva.\nThere are, finally, two factors to be considered\nwhich did not count so much in 1914. These are fear and\nlack of money. No nation today has money to spend on\nsuch luxuries as war and every day makes it more apparent that the war of the future is not going to be a luxury for anybody. Remembrance of the past and realization of the possibilities in the future may yet secure the\npeace that at present seems so precarious.\nAUNT HET\n\"Bill is one o' these broad-\nminded men that would think\ncannibals first-class citizens if\nhe got a profit out of 'em.\"\n| . 10 YEARS AGO   j\nI From Nelson Dally News Flies 1\n(November, 9, 1924)\nAn address on 'Socialized Recitations\", with class demonstrations,\nwas given by Miss Mildred Irving,\nlocal teacher, at the first day of the\nWest Kootenay teachers' convention\nhere. Miss Enid Etter gave a talk ort\n\"Supervision of Writing in Grade\nSchools\" with demonstrations in two\nclass rooms.\n\u2022 *   \u00ab\nFor the first time since Protestantism was restored to England by\nthc accession. of Queen Elizabeth,\nthe Lord Mayor of London and his\ntwo \"sherrifs, installed yesterday,\nare all Catholics. They are Sir\nAlfred Bower, wine merchant, Lbrd\nMayor, and F. W. Barthorpe and\nH G. Downer, sheriffs.\naas\nMaster George Tyler entertained\na number of young'friends yesterday at a birthday party at his home\non Stanley street.\n\u2022 ;\u2022'\u2022\nJohn T. Pierre has left for Spokane and may go as far cast as St.\nPaul.\n20 YEARS AGO\n! From Nelion Dally News Files I\n\u2666 *\nNovember *9, 1914)\nDrilling of the \"home guard\" here\nwill start tonight, it has been announced by C. J. Archer, secretary\nof the Nelson and District Veterans' asociation, who is in charge.\n\u00ab   .   .\nMiss Nellie Richardson is leading\nin a local popularity contest with\n2430 votes. Miss Lillle Larson Is\nsecond with 2387. ,\n.   .   .\nBorn, Nov. 8, to Mr. and Mrs. C.\nW. Tyler, 1623 Stanley street, a son.\neaa\nA wage scale of 30 cents an hour\nhas been announced by Mayor J.\nJ. Malone for local relief work for\nthose ln actual need of assistance.\n30 YEARS AGO   *\nFrom Nelson Dally Newa Files I\n<J>-\n\u25a0i\n(November 9, 1904)\nBorn, in Nelson, to Mr. and Mrs.\nJames MePhee, Mill street Nov, 8,\na daughter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Lottie Rees, Tommy Annable,\nMiss Arabella Sullivan, Mrs. Calder\nand Peter Rammelmeyer were\namong contributors to a program of\nthe Young People's society of the\nMethodist chuTh.\n* *   \u00ab\nKing Edw.-ird of Grcrt Brlfcln\neelebrrtes his sixty-third birthday\ntoday. In accordance with the custom initiated on the king's acceslon,\nthe official celebration takes place\nMay 24 when thc weather is more\nfavorable for a general holiday.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nLETTING.OPPONENTS DOWN\nWhen unable to bid higher with\nsafety, it is of small consequence if\nopponents make a part game score\n\u2014much less important than many\nplayers seem to think. Letting opponents go down instead of doing so\nyourself is fine. The following\nhand shows how East and West\nstopped bidding just in time, letting\nopponents go down.\n\u2666 10 3 2\n\u2666 A J 10 t t i I\n+ 7 6\n4965\nf AQ58\n2\n\u2666 K7\n*K10 2\nN,\nH    **\n\u2666 AK8\nV 10 8 \u00ab 4\n\u2666 095\n+ Q96\n\u2666 QJ74\nf K JO\n\u2666 3\n+AJ84S\nBidding went: West, 1 heart;\nNorth, 2 diamonds; East, 2 hearts*\nSouth, 3 clubs; had West stretched\nhis values and rebid, East would\nhave carried the contract to game,\nand they would have gone down\nvulnerable against a pair who were\nnot vulnerable; West passed; North,\n3 diamonds, ending the auction.\nIt is good policy to lead off a K\nfrom A, K, before leading partner's\nsuit and East did so, then shifted\nto his fourth-best heart when West\ndiscouraged continuation of spade\nleads. Dummy's 9 forced West's Q.\nWest led back his 9 of spades. Declarer's 10 covered. East's ace won.\nEast led his 9 of clubs, losing to\ndummy's ace. The lone trump was\nled from dummy. Declarer's 10 lost\non a finesse to East's Q. The 3 of\nspades was returned. Dummy's Q\nwon the trick, but when the J was\nled from dummy, hoping that the\ndeclarer might discard his last club\nthereon, West ruffed with his K,\nleaving a dead dummy and causing\nthe declarer later on to lose a club\ntrick, and putting down the contract\n2 tricks, because the ruff and over-\nruff of the spade lead from dummy,\nmade East's 9 of diamonds good.\nOf course the declarer could have\nmade an extra tr(ck by foregoing\nhis silly lead of the thirteenth spade.\nIt is odd what foolish things players\noften do.\nNote that West would have lost\n1 trick in spades, 1 in trumps, and\n1 ln each minor suit if played at\nhearts.\n\u2666 9 8 64\n\u2666 864\n\u2666 974\n\u2666 AK5\n\u2666 Q\n\u2666 AKJ9\n3    -\n\u2666 A 10 6 2\n\u2666 10 8 4\n-V.\nM\nsst,\n\u2666 \u25a0IT\n\u00bbQ10 7\u00bb\n\u2666 KQ\n\u2666 QJ7\u00ab\n3\n\u2666 A K 10 5 3 2\n\u00bb\u00ab\n\u2666 J868\n\u2666 9 2\nSouth played the hand at 4 spades\n*' ubled. The opening lead was the\nK. followed by the ace of hearts.\nSouth went game and his opponents\nwere unable to prevent it. How\nwas it accomplished? Think it over\nuntil to-morrow.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nwriter.\nAll letten to the editor must be algned with tbe name of tht\nter.   A nora de plume may ba uaad for publication U desired.\n'FARMER' REPLIES\nTO J. C. HARRIS\nEditor the Nelson DaUy News:\nSir\u2014The letters of your correspondent, Mr. J. C Harris of New\nDenver are alwaya interesting and\nthat appearing in your-issue ot the\n5th instant *as wholly characteristic of the writer. He polnta a\nvery gloomy picture of present\nsocial, economic and political conditions but his hope for the future\nis quite equal to his despair of the\npresent. The remedy Has ready to\nour hands if only we had the sense\nto grasp and use it aa it appears,\nSoviet Russia has already done.\nA critical n i 1 might find something slightly astray in both his\ndiagnosis and his prescription. But\nno shadow' of doubt -appears to\ncross the clear sunlight of his conviction. So happy is he in his sublime assurance,--so firm is he in his\nconviction thtt he bur. _ into a\nsong of exultation at the conclusion\nof his remarkable letter.\nNow as a practical farmer I muat\nplead ignorance* of Soviet Russia\nand indifference to poetry divine as\nit may be. But as the owner of some\n480 acres mt prairie land right in\nthj center of the drought area I wish\nto plead \"not guilty\" to the charge\nof having helped to ruin the climate ana bring about soil drifting\nwith consequent loss of fertility. As\na free-born Canadian citizen I wish\nto protest against the monstrous\nsuggestion that I be compelled to\nplant trees on land where wheat,\nfor lack of sufficient rainfall has\nfailed to mature for four successive\nyears. Such, an experiment is foredoomed to failure as past experience\nhas abundantly proven. But may I\ncommend to your readers in general and to Mr. Harris in particular\nan article appearing on page 14 of\nthe Country Gentleman for November. In this article the author, L. R.\nWaldron, gives a negative or very\ndoubtful answer to the question,\n\"Can Trees Reclaim Weather?\"\nIt is not my purpose to weary\nyour readers with Quotations from\nMr. Waldron's article. But as one\nvitally interested, who has lived\nmany years on the prairies and who\nhas carefuUy read and pondered\nevery well written article ne could\nfind on the subject let me state a\nfew general conclusions that I have\nforemade.\nIn the first place there is no basis,\nneither in fact nor figures, for the\npopular belief that denudation of\nforests leads to lack of rainfall or\nthat extensive tree planting has any\neffect in producing a .more abundant supply of rain. Trees thrive\non the Atlantic and Pacific slopes of\nNorth America because rainfall is\nample to support them. The rainfall watering these regions and the\nsouthern and central states has its\nsource in the Pacific and Atlantic\noceans and in the Gulf of Mexico.\nThe causes, inducing rain are to be\nfound in the interplay of wind currents from arctic and tropical regions. The source of supply would\nbe just as ample\u2014the causes Just\nas potent\u2014were the whole continent denuded of forests. Close observation of conditions on the prairies has convinced me that the\nplains are treeless because of cycles\nof dry years that from time immemorial have come at irregular intervals, and that the recurrence of\nthese cycles would prove fatal to\nany extensive planting. Thera I\nproof that such is the case. Frog\n1874 to 1891, the homestead laws o\nUie United States allowed a paten\nto be issued to the homesteader fq\n180 acrea on hia furnishing proof e\nhaving planted thereon 10 acres t\nforest. This appUed to certain stati\nin what la now recognised u th\ndrought area. Under this law ov\u00ab\n400 square miles of forest was plan\ned and of this only scattered patch\nremain for the inevitable dry yea\ndid their work so effectually tkl\nin most cases, not even the stum\nremain. I myself have aeen Itt\ngroves of  trees, planted at ce\nsiderable labor and expense with\nup and perish in the dry years ai\nI can assure my friend Mr, Han\nthat I do not relish the thought\"\nbeing compelled to repeat such t\ntiUty on my own land. There\nbut one way ln which trees ta\nInduce greater rainfall. Trees abtoi\nfar more moisture from the grout\nthan they can possibly assimila\nand the excess moisture is tran\npired as  vapor through the le\npores. In (hia way the humidity\nthe air is increased. The air, twj\never, may traverse the length\nthe continent before this moistu\nis again precipitated. Were lt posi\nble to cover the whole drought ttl\nwith a dense forest, close studra\nof air currents say it might rest\nln a slightly increased rainfall ot\nHudson s Bay.\nBut I must draw this letter tt\nclose lest I become wearisome. Pt\nmlt me tr say in conclusion that 1\nf'rime causes of rain are evspoi\nIon on the surface of the oca\nttrength and direction of air et\nrents, and even such remote ctvii\nas sun spots and that man has lit\nor no control over these conditio\nThe drought area once had go\ncrops and ample rainfall and it 1\nas treeless then as now. I belli\nthe fruitful years will return agi\nbut these happy years cannot 1\nhastened by squandering govtl\nment money on doubtful expa\nmenta.\nAt I said before, I am ignon\nof conditions in Soviet Russia. B\nwith all due respect to Mr. Hai;\nI suspect he is as wide of the ma\nin regard to social and political ce\nditlons as he is in regard to ag\ncultural problems tnd that his ra\nedy for our economic ills wiU pro\nno more effective than his rent\nfor drought conditions. As to I\npoetry\u2014aU true poetry is divine a\nits author worthy of applause..*\nFARMEI\nNelson, B.C., Nov. 8.\nTHI REAL SOLUTION\nThe plan of curing scarcity ln\ntime of abundance by crop restr\ntlons has met some staggering bio\nin the United SUtes. It is the pi\nto equalize production with a\nsumpUon, which also has Its st\nporters at' Ottawa, when it is so I\nvlous that the only real soluU\nmust be to bring consumption up\nproduction.\u2014Moncton Transcript\nFROM   KINO  TO  DICTATW\nMany monarchs have been\nmoved by force in the last tty\u00ab\nyears, but it is hard to find'an I\nstance where they have been\nplaced by anything much betl\nGovernment ha. passed for the mi\npart under more despotic authorf\n\u2014Ottawa Citizen.\nFour Hour\nService\nFor those who have forgotten to date\nto place their order for Christmas\nCards we have inaugurated this special service ...\nDon't let this opportunity pass of remembering\nyour friends this festive season. The cost is small,\nbut fond recollections are prized by all. Make\nsomebody happy this Christmas!\n2 DOZEN CARDS PRINTED\nWITH YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS\nFOR $2.00\nPhone 144\n$*tam9ailg\n(Enmmrrrtal\n^p^\u00a32fc  Printing $bpt\nWHAT?\nAbout that furnace of yours, does it\nneed repairing before the cold weather? Get our Expert to look it over.\nHeaters ot All Prices\nNelson Hardware Go.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelion, B.C.\n____________________________\n \u2014\u2014\n\t\n\u2014\n(SSS\nPOLOISTS\nTheie polo playera at Cheitar, Pa., ara Pann Military college cadeta.\nBowling - Badminton - Hockey -Basketball - Boxing - Wrestling\nlaihj\nSPoRT\u00bb\nUmt.\nLacrosse - Rugby - Soccer - Skiing - Horse Racing -Indoor Sports\nPAQE NINE-\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER 9. 1934-\nAT SPRINGS\nPAGE NINE. Golfers at Hat Sprlnga: 0. Madlenar, f. Millar,\/. Budlong, W. Madlanar.\n[EN DORATY IS\nTHE BIG RUSH\nFOR THE LEAFS\nbston Penalized and\n'Ken Makes Plays\nto Beat Them\n'Big League'\nBOWLING\nBAPLE LEAF GARDENS, TOREK). Nov. 8 (CP).-The midget\n\u25a0Wait of the Boston Bruins\u2014Ken\nlaty\u2014leaped Into the pinch for\nronto Maple Leafa tonight and,\nItaly through hia heady play-\n\u25a0tag, the Leafs finished with a\n.victory in the opening game of\nI National Hockey league season,\nreading 3-2 with four minutes to\nBoston penalties paved the way\n> Doraty's star role. Babe Seibert\nPtr a major when his stick cut\nl Thorn's eye and Marty Barry\nlowed him with Andy Blair for\n\u25a0fling, leaving Boston a man\nirt, and the stage was set.\nJieraty drew the defence out of\nltion with the aid of Harvey\nkaon to let Buzz Boll in for tho\nlg goal, then duplicated the play\nkr seconds later for the game-\nnning goal hy Charlie Conacher.\nLREA CINCHE8 IT\nIee Kilrea made lt sure in the\nt minute when with Andy Blair\nrl penalty box, he broke away\nBusher Hollett and took the\ntoceman's pass for a scoring shot.\nas to 11.000 turned out for the\nlb' tint home game.\n^Booth-working Bill Thorns had\nee stitches taken ln his injured\nI but it is not expected be will be\nIt out of the game. It was he who\nKthe Leafs a first-period lead\nthe only goal of the session\nsr to see lt wiped out by second-\nSod goals by Barry ond Dit Clap*\n\u25a0 of the Bruins' ace line.\nUng Clancy tied it up on Buzz\nil'a pass in the first minute of the\nrd period. Dit Clapper was on\nI scoring end of a play with Barry\ndway through the period to reil to Boston a lead they held until\nbert's penalty and Doraty's bril-\nIt play spelt defeat,\ncafs were without Joe Prlmeau,\nitor three weeks with an injured\njmb.\nMMARY\n'Met period:\n\u2014Toronto. Thorns 14:05.\n'enalties: Conacher, Beattie.\ntcond period:\n-Boston, Barry 3:26.\n-Boston, Clapper (Beattie) 9:52.\nenalties: O'Neill, Day.\nhird period:\n\u2014Toronto, Clancy (Boll) :50.\n\u2014Boston, Clapper (Barry) 11:13.\n\u2014Toronto,   Boll   (Doraty-Jack-\ni) 16:01.\n\u2014Toronto,   Conacher   (Jackson-\nratyl 16:05.\n-\u2022-Toronto, Kilrea (Hollett) 19:35.\n'enalties: Seibert (major), Barry,\ndr (2).\nineup:\nronto Goal Boston\ninsworth ..   Thompson\nDefence\nmer  ...  Shore\nincy   Siebert\nCenter\nioms     Barry\nWing\nRU      Clapper\nIrea     Beattie\nToronto subs.: Hollet, Day, Blair,\nincy, Cotton, Conacher, H, Jack-\nDoraty,   Kelly,   A.   Jackson,\nat!2*\nJoston subs.: Pusie. Sands, Stew-\n, Gagnon, Savage, O'Neill, Motter,\nroux, Emms.\nOfficials: Mike Rodden and Billy\n11.\nBIS UASUE\nPOWUNGTIP-\n- -.IWAY9 MOVE\n..#ll\/NTHf SA*~-\nmm^t-oriro\nl\\ \\i\\\\ \\A\\\\]WHICHTHEBAU\n18 BREAKING\nITSKtfS 5IUY \\0VBffC0ME\nTo MOVE To The ^Brcak\nBALL 60 MORB\nTo THE LEFT'\nNfvwThELES*\nITa\u2022AFAOT.?-,\nln|;eOFFTHEHI6Hl\nHCetartNDTRY\/\nKl'-y\nft\nr.mt*mwy.*)fmtm-\nHAWKS DEFEAT\nST. LOUIS 3-1\nIN BIG RALLY\nGet Two Goals in Last\nFive Minutes on\nSt. Louis Ice *\nTilden Hands Out\n\"Puffs\"\n5UEBEC, Nov. 8 (CP).-\"Bob\"\nirray. Quebec's ranking No. 1\nmis player and Laird Witt, sec-\nd ranking provincial player, were\nigled out for nr -tlon by \"Big\nII\" Tilden here today before he\nled on the liner Empress of Bri-\nn for the old country. \"They are\n\u25a0fully good tennis players, the\nteran racket-wieldcr said, \"and\nimpionship players in the mak-\nl\"\nVith Bruce Barnes, Tilden is\nading for the tournament to be\nlyed ot the Wembley Pool, Lon-\nn, November 19-24.\negina on Way to\nMeet Meralomas\ntEGINA, Nov. 9 (CP).-More\nDfident than they have been in\nirs, Regina Roughriders. tonight\nre Vancouver-bound. At the coast\ny the eastern prairie sectional\niners will engage Vancouver\nl-alomas, British Columbia titUsta\ni conquerors of Alberta Varsity\na two-game series for the senior\njby championship of the west.\n\u2022 first game will be played Sat-\nlay and the second, Monday.\nBy AL DEMAREE\nMany bowlers are at a loss as to\nwhat u> do when their ball breaks\ntoo much or does not break enough.\nAlways remember to move in the\nsame direction your ball is breaking in order to overcome it. If\nyour ball is breaking too tar to tho\n\"Brooklyn\" side on the left, move\nto the left. The beginner should\nkeep it in mind to do just the opposite from what his lack of experience tells him to do.\nIt is the same principle as overcoming a \"slice\" in golf which cor'\nresponds to a \"back-up\" ball in\nbowling. If a golfer wishes to \"hook\"\na ball, he closes his stance and di-\nects his ball to the very spot he\nwishes to avoid.\nIf your ball Is hitting the pins\ntoo far to the right lay your ball on\nthe alley farther to tho right and\nvice versa.\nAnswer to yesterday's question-\nRobert Woll of Montana ran 95\nyards from scrimmage in 1933.\nToday's question\u2014who made the\nlongest scoring forward pass in football history? Answer tomorrow.\nAl Demaree has prepared an illustrated leaflet called \"Spares\" which\nhe will gladly send to any reader\nrequesting it. Address Al Demaree\nin care of this paper and be sure to\nenclose a self-addressed stamped\nenvelope.\nDETROIT, Nov. 8 (CP).-In a\nfast rough game which kept about\n600 spectators on their feet through\nthree periods, Detroit Olympics tonight opened the International\nHockey league season here by defeating Windsor Buldogs 3-1.\nDetroit took the lead in the first\nperiod on goals by Ron M-ffatt and\nWill Starr of Winnipeg. Sta* r scored\non a pass from King. Windsor tallied in Ihe second on a shot by Cain.\nIn the final period Modere (Mud)\nBrunetau, last year with Winnipeg\nFalcons, scored Detroit's last counter.\nBoth goalies played well. Earl\nRobertson having 34 stops and being brilliant when his teammates\nwere off the ice.\nTomkins for the Olympics stopped\n27 shots.\nBullodgi Goal Olympics\nRobertson   Thompkins\nDefence\nRockburn   Moffatt\nStarr    Foster\nCenter\nFields   Schultz\nWing\nGillie  Bruhcteau\nSteele    Gross\nWindsor subs.: MacKenzie, Marker. Cain. Convey, Swenson, Brou-\nillard, Wolotka.\nDetroit subs.: Lederman, Roulston,\nKilrea, Wiseman, W. Starr, King,\nWalker.\nOfficials: Clarence Btfah and Clarence Jamieson.\nYankee Pitcher\nQuits Baseball\nBOSTON, Nov. 8 (AP) .-Charles\nDevon.1*. New York Yankee pitcher\nand former Harvard university\nbaseball and football star, today\nsettled any and all rumors about his\nquitting baseball with tho statement, \"It's a fact, I am quitting profeuional baseball.\" Thc Yanl.ee\npitcher is leaving baseball to embark\non a career in banking and is soon\nto marry Edith Prcscott Wolcott of\nMilton.\nST. LOUIS, Nov. g (AP)-Major\nleague hockey came to St. Loula\ntonight as 12,622 persons watched\nChicago's world champion Blackhawks stage a last minute rally to\ndefeat the transplanted St. Louis\nEagles 3-1.\nWith the score tied one-all and\nless thon five minutes to go In the\nfinal period, Tommy Cook, second-\nline Hawk center, dived between\nthe Eagle defence men and scored.\nOne minute later Louis Trudoel\ncompleted Chicago's winning drive\nby curving into center ice to knock\none past pudgy Bill Beverldge,\nEagle gollie.\nEarly in the game the Eagles\nmanaged to hold the Hawks on even\nterms. Chicago's defence, weakened\nconsiderably this season by trading\nof Lionel Conacher to Montreal\nMaroons, was knocked out of position several times.\nChicago drew first blood when\nJohnny Gottselig, taking a pass from\nspeedster Howie MoKnz fired the\npuck into the net in the aecond\nperiod.\nEarl Roche, Eagles' fighting winger, tied the count four minutes later\nwhen he lifted a whistling shot into\nthe corner of the net. Lome Chabot,\nHawks' veteran goalie, didn't even\ntouch the rubber.\nLineups:\nSt.  Louis        Position       Chicago\nGoal\nBeveridge  Chabot\nDefence\nBowman   Burke\nWilliams Coulter\nCenter\nKaminsky  t  Morenz\nWing\nFinnigan   Gottselig\nShannon Couture\nSt. Louis subs\u2014Howe, Frew. Cook,\nVoss, Brydson, E. Roche, D. Roche,\nAyres, Cowley.\n\".hlcago subs\u2014Cook, March, Locking Thompson, Goldsworthy, Kenny,\nwleve, Kendall, Trudel.\nOfficials\u2014Bill Stewart and A. G.\nSmith.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u2014No score.\nPenalties\u2014 Shannon 2, Coulter\n(major).\nSecond period\u2014(1) Chicago, Gottselig (Morenz) 10:30; (2) St. Louis,\nE. Roche (Bowman) 14:35.\nPenalties\u2014Trudel, Burke, Voss, D.\nRoche 2. _   ,\nThird period\u2014(3) Chicago, Cook\n(Burke) 15:45; (4) Chicago, Trudel\n(Cook) 18:45.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nStops\u2014Chabot 11. 12,14\u201434; Bev\ncridge 13, 14, 13\u201440.\t\nnichmMott\nplay thb season\nSuspended for Taking Money\nLast Winter in Playoff\nGames\nFight Promoter\nWho \"Ran Out\" Is\nDetained in Texas\nREGINA, Nov. 8 (CP). \u2014 Earl\nNicholson and Les Cunningham,\nmembers of the Saskatoon Elites in\nIhe Northern Saskatchewan Hockey\nleague last winter have been indefinitely suspended by the Saskatchewan branch of the A.A.U. of C.\nCharges Nicholson and Cunningham accepted money from Elites in\nthe playoff series with Prince Albert Mlntos last spring were substantiated to the satisfaction of the\namateur union and suspension took\neffect Wednesday when it was announced by Jack Hamilton, Reglna,\npresident of thc Saskatchewan\nbranch of the A.A.U.\nEdmonton Juniors\nAre Off to Winnipeg\nEDMONTON, Nov. 8 (CP).-Six-\nteen youngsters making up the Edmonton Kinsmen junior rugby team\nand primed for the greatest effort\nin their youthful rugby careers,\nboarded a train here tonight for\nWinnipeg where on Saturday they\nmeet Winnipeg Deer Lodge for the\nwestern Canada junior rugby championship.\nVancouver Island\nMan Dead\nNANAIMO, B.C., Nov.' 8* <CP)-\nFound in his cabin at Dashwood,\nnear Parksville, B.C., Wednesday\nafternoon with a .22 rifle bullet\nwound in his head. George Dove, 21.\ndied in an ambulance en route to\nthe hospital here. His death is believed to have been the result of\nan accident.\nAjed, blended and bottled in\nScotland. . . . Popular\nthe world over, becauae it is\nALWAYS reliable.\n3\nl^cScmtrtck'\nWhisky\nBROWNSVILLE, Tex, Nov. 8\n(AP.)-William T. Holifield, fight\npromoter, was detained here today\nat the request of Mexican authorities for ellegedly \"running out\"\nwith part of the receipts of the\nArizmendi \u2022 Armstrong fight last\nSunday night ln Mexico City. Flood*\ned with counterfeit tickets, Holi\nfield said he was returning to the\nUnited States to raise money to pay\nthe fighters.\nARSENAL HAS\nJOB ON HANDS\nExpected to Have Bit\nof Trouble Beating\nGrimsby Town\nLONDON, Not. I (CP Cable)\u2014The\nchampion Anenal club will have a\nstruggle on Its handa Saturday endeavoring to stay on top of tbe\nfirst division of the English football league.\n- Saturday the Gunners go to Orimaby Town to meet the recrulta from\nthe second division, who have been\nmaking a gallant atand.\nThe leaders will ba handlcipped\nby loaa of Beaaley, right-winger\nwhose knee waa badly cut a week\nago, but the fishermen are in fine\nform.\nAnother feature mateh brings together Sunderland and Manchester\nCity.\nOnly two polnta aeparate the first\nfive teams, stoke Olty, holding third\nplaoe, travels to Lelceeter City, and\nit Is possible the Potters may again\nget into the top berth,\nOeorge Camsell, famoua England\ninternational centre-forward, has recovered from a serious operation and\nwill play for tbe first time thla\nseason tor Middlesbrough against\nthe Spurs.\nIn the second division Bolton Wanderers meet Fulhsm, and Manchester United engage Bury,\nMARITIME HOCKEYSQUADSFIND\nMANY STARS FAR FROM HOME\nEastern Teams Bristle With Player From\nOntario, Quebec and the West\nBEAVERS WIN\nSCHOOL IT\nTrounce   Blackhawks\n30-2 in Fast Hoop\nGame\nTRAIL. B.C.. Nov. I. \u2014 Beavers\ntrounced the Blackhawks 30-3 ln a\nfaat game of the Orade 9 Schools\nleague, boys' division, played ln the\nCentral school gymnasium Thursday\nafternoon,\nVincent Outdone starred for the\nBeavers, scoring 18 polnta while his\nteammate Tony Borsato tallied the\nremaining 13.\nBilly Dimock, captain of the Black-\nhawka scored the tean* lone field\nbasket In the first quarter.\nThe score by quarters was: t-2;\n26-1:   30-2:   30-2.\nThe teams were:\nBeavers\u2014Vincent Outdone, captain, 16; Tony Borsato 12; Arthur\nOrl, Eddie on, Lome Doubleday,\nMartin McLennan and Armando Ca-\nvalllm.\nBlackhawka\u2014Billy Dimock, captain. 2; W. Rae. M. Johnaton, Oarth\nBarnes, A. Wagner and Nello Mela-\ntint.\nH. M. Parker refereed.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by ihe\nGovernment of British Columbia\nMORE ABOUT\nARMS INQUIRY\n(Continued From Page One)\nDarently abandoned demands made\nseveral weeka ago for the Inquiry.\nSTATE  PBODUCTION\nThc debate centered around the\nLabor resolution demanding abolition of the private manufacture and\ntrade In armaments, and a provlalon for state production of such\narmaments \"aa considered necessary.\"\nThe high point of the debate\nwas reached when Sir John rapped\nthe United States system which allowed the king's name to be linked\nto the arms traffic \"na though ln\nevidence.\"\n.SIMON    IS   (lIKIJllll\nHe was cheered as he mentioned\na telegram produced during the\nWashington hearing \"which was\nread as though It were evidence\nasserting no less a person than his\nmajesty the king had sent for the\nPolish ambassador and Impressed upon him the Importance of purchasing whatever he wanted from\na British firm.\n\"Of course that la perfectly and\nentirely rldleuloua,\" Sir John aald.\n\"All of us. to whatever part we\nbelong, know hla majesty to be perfectly Incapable of having eny connection with this silly story.\"\naiBPBIMNO   ALLEGATIONS\nSir Archibald Sinclair, Liberal declared: \"Tbe reporu of tbe American Inquiry wera full of surprising\nallegations sglanst British firms,\nwhich certainly were not proved,\nbut certainly ought to be probed.\"\nSir John also warned of the \"1m-\nmenae cost Involved ln the training and maintenance of stuffs required for designing and building\nstate  armamenta.\"\nHe said the government believed\nthe remedy \"lay ln sn international\ntreaty negotiated at Oeneva, and\nsigned and observed by till states\nfor strict regulation and control,\nrather than a state monopoly.\"\nReports from Halifax, N.S., to\nthe effect that the Maritime\nHockey laague would open lu\n1984-36 schedule aa an organized\nprofessional or semi-professional circuit, hava been current in\nthe east Executives from each\nof tha affiliated clubs, Moncton\nHawks, Halifax Wolves, Charlotte-\ntown Abbles and St John Beavers\nemphatically deny this possibility.\nDifficulty In securing C.A.H.A. approval of player transfers was reported responsible for the suggestion. With numerous player additions to maritime clubs thia year,\na ban on Imported playera It Is\nfelt would materially weaken eastern competition In amateur ranks.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2666\nBy VICTOR SERVICE\nCentral Prase Canadian Sports\nWriter\nST. JOHN, N.B., Nov. 7.-H the\nCharlottetown, P.E.I., Abbies do not\noust Moncton Hawks from leadership in the Maritime Hockey league\nthis winter. It will be a reflection\non the quality of hockey played in\nOntario and Quebec. AU but one\nmember of the Charlottetown 1934-\n33 ice edition, hail from these provinces. The solitary exception is a\npermanent resident of Charlote-\ntown.\nBackers of the Abbies, who built\nan artificial ice rink and assembled\na hockey machine four years ago,\nwith the Allan Cup as the objective,\nhave failed to attain that goal. Not\nonly Moncton barred the way. Halifax Wolves stood higher in the\nleague percentage and in the playoff ratings each season than did the\nAbbies.\nA wholly new defence has been\ncollected ior the current season's\naggregation. Leo Sargent, of Ottawa, has replaced Kick McCann of\nOttawa in the Abbie net. Sargeant\nwith Halifax for the past three seasons previously was with the Truro,\nN.S. Bearcats for two seasons. He\nwu (he first goalie imported into\nthe maritime provinces from the\ncentral or western provinces, being\na member of the original trio of imports, Chuck Jemmett, of Toronto,\na center, Reg. Shields of Ottawa,\na winger, and Sargeant, engaged for\nthe Truro Bearcats six years ago.\nBarring the way to the Abbje goal\nare: Des Smith, Jerry McCaboe and\nYvon Renaud, all of Ottawa.\nHARD ON COACHES\nFor the offence the Abbies have\nBrenneman, Getliffe ond Desilets,\nall of Straford, Ont., where they\nformed a junior line last winter;\nPete and Jimmy Kelly, of Montreal;\nJackie Kane, of Hamilton, Ont.;\nFrank Currie, of Montreal and Ivan\n(Hickey) Nicholson, of Charlottetown. Pete Kelly was with Abbies\nlast season, and was their most ag-\nfiressive and consistent player. He\ns again pairing with his brother\nafter a lapse of a season, Kane was\nwith the Hamilton Tigers, when that\nteam won the Allan Cup in 1920,\nand has been with the Abbies for\nthree seasons. Last fall, he was reported as one of those to be discarded, but the Abbie backers must\nhave experienced a change of attitude.\nCharlottetown has proved a graveyard for hockey coaches. First it\nwas Jimmy Gardiner, of Montreal,\nonce a star in the National Hockey\nleague who was received with a\nbrass band and then deposed within\nsix weeks of starting on his coaching Job. Chuck O'Connor, of Ottwa,\ncamo next on the casualty list. He\nhad transferred the Ottawa Shamrocks, virtually en bloc from the\ncapital to Dalhousle. N.B., and won\nthe maritime title the first season\nat the scene of transplanting. Stan\nJackson, of Fort Erie. Ont, for\nmany years a player in the National\nHockey league, Canadian-American\nand international hockey circuits,\nwas the next to fall by the wayside\nsitcr some trumpet blaring. He was\nfired before the Abbies were half\nthrough last Beason. Chester Gregory, of Stellarton, N.S., went Into\nthe breach for Jackson, and finished\nthe season. Gregory is an old-line\npuck-chaser.\nST JOHN STRENGTHENED\nFor last season the Abbies had a\nsizeable deficit as well as league\nelimination in the playoffs. Rumors\nsay players this season will not get\nmore than $80 weekly, at best.\nMeanwhile, sick of taking it on\nthe frontlsepiece from thc league\nleaders, the St. John Beavers are\nalso out this winter to present some\nformidable resistance. Last winter.\nthe St. John entry in the Maritime\nHockey league finished a hopeless\nbasement occupant. Thc only game\nthe Beavers took from the Moncton\nHawks was handed them, but only\nafter Hawks, in making (he gift,\nwere forced to look thc part of\nphilanthropists.\nNot onlv did Hawks smear the\nice with the St. John delegation,\nbut Halifax Wolves, and Charlottetown Abbies were superior to the\nBeavers. The only team eliminated\nfrom playoffs in the maritime route\nis the tailender, and last spring that\nwas the Beaver group, ln assembling the team, economy, it Is assured, had been a vital factor, and\nIf so. results were on a par with\noutlay.\nAcquired for this season's edition\nare Hawes Marsh and Red Farrell.\nof Hamilton, Out.; Hutili O'Leary.\nof Toronto and Fort William. Ont;\nCroslev Sherwood and Joe Shields.\nof Ottawa; Walter Monson, of Winnipeg, Man.; and Bobby Beaton, of\nNew Glasgow. N.S.\nBENEDICT IS COACH\nMarsh, goalie, and Farrell, e de-\nfenceman, were with Hamilton last\nwinter, and in the Tiger unit met\nMoncton Hawks in the Allan Cun\nsemi-finals. On the strength of iheir\nperformances in that series, they\nwere booked for the 1934-3.. Beavers.\nO'Leary is a hockey product of\nSt. Michael's College, Toronto. Last\nwinter, he was with Fort William\nThundering Herd, and It was his\nefficient work in the finals of the\nAllan trophy against Moncton that\ninfluenced tho Beaver moguls in\ngetting his signature. He is favored\nfor the wing, but has also played\ndefence at times.\nThere are eight residents of Ontario on the roster of the Beavers,\nwhose coach, Clint Benedict, for\nmany years star goalie ln the National Hockey league with Montreal Maroons. Benedict started hia\naffiliation with the Beavers last\nwinter. With him he will have at\nleast five, and probably six Ottawa hockeyists, this season.\nFRICK HEAD OF\nTHE NATIONAL\nNewspaperman Takes\nHeydler's Post; Is\nYoung for Job\nNEW YORK, Nov. 8 (AP). \u2014 A\nyoung newspaperman from the farm\nlands of Indiana, Ford Christopher\nFrlck, was named today the ninth\npresident of the National league,\nsuccessor to John Heydler, and the\nmost youthful man ever to attain\nthe post.\nIn unanimity, the owners of the\neight clubs In baseball's senior cir\ncult elevated the 30-year-old head\nof the league's aervlce bureau to\nthe presidency, honored Heydler by\ncreation of a new office for him\nfor life as \"chairman of the board,\"\nand appointed Harvey Traband aecretary and treaaurer.\nHeydler announced unexpectedly\nlost Friday that 111 health waa forcing him to relinquish the presidency after 17 years, At Frlck's\nrequest hla term was aet at one\nyear.\nThe new president Is the aecond\nyoungest major league head ln baseball history. Only Dan Johnson, who\norganized and became prealdent of\ntbe American league ln IMl, was\nyounger at the time he took office, 36.\nIn 1916 Frlck began writing\nsports on the Colorado Sprlnga Gazette, took over rehabilitation work\nfor the army ln Utah, New Mexico,\nWyoming and Colorado ln 1918, and\nreturn to sports writing on the\nColorado Sprlnga Telegraph In 1919.\nFrlck Joined the staff of the New\nYork American ln 1922, moved over\nto the sports pages of the New\nYork Journal ln 1929, and wrote\nbaseball, as well as other sports, until he was appointed head of the\nNational league aervlce bureau last\nFebruary.\nGOLF FACTS\nNOT THEORIES\n\u25a0y ALEX. MORMCON\n{\u2022JOLFBK.\nLOOKS OP\nOFTCNCR\nOM POTTS\nTk4.Nl ON\n-m\nSt. Louis Hockey\nWar Postponed\nST. LOUIS, Nov. 8 (AP)- The\npromising legal war for supremacy\nof hockey in St. Louis has been deferred.\nFrank (Doc) Walnwrlght, owner\nof the St. Louis Fliers of the American Hockey association, last week\nsaid he would file a $200,000 damage suit against the St. Louis Eagles\ntonight.\n\"Our president,\" said Walnwrlght,\nspeaking of William F. Grant, president of the American Hockey association, \"passed through St. Louis\nlast night on a tour of the new\nleague circuit. He asked that I hold\nup my personal suit against the\nNational league team and also said\nthat he would go into further details\nwith me before the league started\nany action.\"\nWhen you see a player raise his\nhead and look in the direction his\nball has flown you think nothing of\nIt, pvtlcularly if the player happens to be driving oft the ice.\nYou're also accustomed to seeing\nhim look up on shots out of the\nrough or bunkers. But, you don't\npay much attention to what he does\nwith his eyes and head on the putting Men.\nMaarplayers look up or turn their\nheads in the direction of the ball\nmore often on the putting greep\nthan with any other shot ln the\ngaine. The point about it la this: If\nyou're out to cure 'yourself of looking up you must eliminate the fault\nfrom all swings, long or short.\nYou can't be successful being good\nwith Just a few of the easier snots.\nST. JOHNSTONE\nHASHARDJOB\nMust Beat Aberdeen\nin Tomorrow's\nSchedule\nGLASGOW, Nov. 8 (OP Cable) \u2014.\nSt. Johnatone faced a tough assignment Saturday In their efforts to\nhang on to a allm lead over the\nfirst division of the Scottish football league, the schedule oalllng tol\na vlalt to Aberdeen,\nRangers, the champions, deadlocked\nwith Hamilton for second place, pay\na vlalt to Albion Rovers. Hamilton\nentertains Queen's Park.\nKing's Park, second division leader, la playing away at Morton and\nwill have no easy tuk.\nHORNETS LOSE\nTO ROCKETS\nSingle Basket by Miss\nCorrine Baillie Is\nGame Winner\nTRAIL, B.C,. Nov. 8. \u2014 Rockets\nwere only able to light a single\nflare when they played tbe Hornets\nin a game of the Grade 7 and 6\nSchools Basketball league, glrla' division ln the Oentral achool gymnasium Thursday afternoon, but lt\nwaa sufficient to defeat the yellow-\nJackets for It was the only basket\nmade ln the entire game. Corrine\nBaillle made the field basket ln the\nfirst quarter.\nIvan Jeffreys refereed.\nThe teams were:\nRockets\u2014Hszel Weir, captain:'Ev\u00bb\nYonker, Corrine Baillle, Annie Robertson, Lilian Maze. Patricia Dobbs,\nElla Walker, Elsie Fowler and Eileen\nMarshall.\nHornets\u2014Jean Hood, captain; Margaret Leckle, Helen Vellutlnl, Merle\nWeir, Molly Sutherland, Edna Barnes\nand Agnes Deans.\nTRAIL LEGION\nTOURNEYS FIRSTS\nPing  Pong Team  Challenges\nAll Comers From\nAnywhere\nTTIAIL, B.C., Nov. 8.\u2014Winners of\ntbe various tournunents stated in\nthe Canadian Legion quarters by\nmembers, bave been announced for\nOctober as follows: R. Livingstone,\nbilliards; Rev. L. A. Morrant, crlb-\nbage; and H, A, Davison, ping pong.\nA team of Legion ping pong\nplayers bas sent out a challenge to\nany four players who wish to go\nto tbe local headquarters to play.\nMeralomas Ready\nto Meet Regina\nVANCOUVER, Nov. S (CP) -\nCoach (Hammy) Boucher tonight\nput his Vancouver Meralomas\nthrough their final scrimmage before the orange and black grldders\nmeet Regina Roughriders here Saturday ln the first of the two gamt\nseries for the western football title.\nOVERCOATS\nCHINCHILLAS\nMELTONS\nTWEEDS\nPlain or Belted Backs; tingle\nor  Double-breasted.\n$14.95 and\n$19.50\nHATS\nAll-wool  Felts  In tht\nPopular\nSNAP BRIM STYLE\n$1.95 and\n$2.50\nOut-of-Town Customers\nwill find their mall ordtr needs attended to promptly.\nCharges  Prepaid\nGodfreys' Limited\n\"The Home of Greater Values\"\n318 BAKER STREET\nOpp. STANDARD CAPE\nPHONE 370\nRYE WHISKY\nThis advertisement not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by th\u00ab\nGovernment oi British Columbia.\n___________\n PACE TEN -\n\u2014\u2014\u2014___________________________\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER I. 1984-\n\t\n.-m;i_-Xm*imX*t}*SS*^^\ntUmmX\nThe Blonde Countess\nBy-HERBERT 0. YARDLEY\nREAD THIS FIRST:\nJOEL CARTER, young and\npretty, Is secretary to NATHANIEL GREENLEAF, chief of the\ndepartment of chemical supervision, which, in reality, is the\n\"Black Chamber,\" where enemy\ncodes are unraveled and spies\ntrailed. COUNTESS THORLUND,\nwife ofathc Scandinavian ambassador, comes to see Greenleaf and\nasks to work with him as a spy as\nshe once did in the past She is\naccompanied by CAPTAIN ANDRE DUVAL.\n(NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY)\nCHAPTER 26\nThe countess leaned forward and\nlaid an arm on Greenleaf's sleeve.\n\"You'll let me work with you\nthen?\"\nHe laughed.\n\"I can't deceive you, can I?\"\n\"I hope not.\"\n\"I know I can't Yes. if I can |et\ntheir consent you will work with\nme. I need your help very much.\"\nHis voice was grave. \"You see\nthere's a clever woman about and I\nneed a cleverer one lo catch her.\"\n\"And you know who\u2014\" she asked\nin a low tense voice.\n\"No. I don't know who she is. I\nonly knew that she's here or soon\nwill bo here. That's oil the British\ncould tell me. They know who sh*.\nis only by number, the famous J-37.\nThat means nothing to you?\"\nThe Countess slowly shook her\nhead.\n\"No. I have been put of the game\ntoo long. Five\u2014six years. Is it so\nlong ago?\"\n\"You were scarcely more than a\ngirl then.\" said Greenleaf.\nThe Countess smiled.\n\"Yon should be a courtier, Mr,\nGreenleaf. You do those things so\nwell, the pretty, graceful compliment and at the same time you do\nnot insult my intelligence by cxpec\nting me to believe it.\"\nGreenleaf said seriously.\n\"I would never underrate your\nintelligence.\"\nNow why should he say that so\ngravely, Joel thought frowning. She\nmust think that the greatest compliment of all. And if so she is very\ndangerous indeed, for she values in*\ntelligence more than beauty. Not\nmany women do that. I don't do\nthat myself, Joel thought, in a burst\nof self-knowledge. I'd rather be\nbeautiful than highly intelligent.\nI am rather good-looking, too,\nthough not a raving beauty like that\nwoman. And I'm*only passably Intelligent.\nThe Countess glanced at the little\nplatinum wrist-watch set with sapphires.\n\"You will let me know as soon as\npossible?\"\n\"As soon as possible,\" Greenleaf\npromised,\"\n\"And meanwhile I'll keep my\neyes open. You have nothin-j to go\non. not the tiniest clue?\"\n\"Not the least,\" he said. \"I can\nonly watch everyone, especially\nthose in important places. That will\nbe your |ob. The diplomats' wives\nand, especially, the diplomats' lady\nfriends.\"\n\"Especially the lady friends.\" she\nagreed. \"But for them ours would\nbe an impossible game.\"\n\"And so much less interesting,\nhe said.\nStanding she smiled at him.\n'To hear you talk, one would\nthink you the most susceptible of\nmen.\"\nHe looked at her, and Joel could\nnot keep her eyes off them both. He\nwas carried away by the woman.\nShe had never seen him look like\nthat.\n\"I'm not wholly unsusceptible,\" he\nlaid .and there was the faintest quiver to his voice as of emotion crushed back and mastered.\nThe Countess drew a shade away\nfrom him and said in a still voice,\n\"Surely, Andre must be here.\"\nShe gave Greenleaf a swift inscrutable glance and offered him\nher hand. And at that moment Captain Duval, punctuality itself, was\nannounced.\n\"I corrjpletely   forgot,\" said   thc\nCounlest opening her bag. \"On next\nWednesday night we have.a reception and dance at the Embassy. You\nwill do mc the honor, you\u2014\" and\nher smile included Joel, \"you and\nyour so charming secretary?\"\nIs it my official duty?\" Joel inquired, looking at Greenleaf.\n\"Oh surely, no,\" the Countess protested. \"A kindness to me. I will\nfind you the most charming officers. Captain Duval\u2014\"\nCaptain Duval bowed like a mechanism.\n\"May I have so great a pleasure?'\nhe asked.\n\"And others,\" said the Countess,\n\"scarcely less beautiful.\"\n\"Mis Carter,\" Greenleaf said, \"has\na fatal weakness for beautiful of\nficcrs, and they for her. I'll accept\nfor her.\"\nWhereupon the Countess gave\nhim cards from her little jeweled\nbag, and she and the handsome Captain disappeared from the office,\nleaving it as empty as a parrot's\ncage robbed of so much brightness.\nGreenleaf placed his feet on. the\ndesk and inelegantly bit the end\noff a cigar. Then he looked at Joel\n\"Why don't you like her?\"\n\"I haven't said I didn't like her,\nshe said stiffly.\n\"You looked it In three language\nincluding the ScandinavwK\" ht\nsaid. \"I suppose it's the age-old battle of the beautiful brunettes with\nIhe beautiful blondes.\"\nJoel felt her face flushing.\n\"I don't trust her.\" she said, catch\ning her breath and looking at him\ndefiatnly.\nHe raised his eyebrows.\n\"No? Why not?\"\n\"Because\u2014\"\n\"The good old logical answer,\" he\nsaid, addressing some unseen au\n'ditor. \"You see her excellent reason\u2014because.\"\nJoel flared.\n\"A women senses those things.\"\n\"Oh, she does, does she?\" he said\nin pitiless irony. \"Sure judge of\ncharacter and all that. Let me tell\nyou, young woman, that I know\nmore about women's characters\nthan you will ever know. I've an\ninstinct for it. I've not been fooled\nsince I was twenty-eight\u2014um-ah,\nseveral years ago. 1 won't tell you\nhow I acquired the instinct. But 1\nlearned.\"\nShe looked at him pityingly.    .\n\"And now you\u00abknow,\" she said,\n\"God help you. And so you trust her\nand tell her all these secrets. And\nshe admits she wants money.\"\n\"Oh course,\" he said. \"That's why\nI trust her. If she'd laid she wanted\nto help me because of love of me,\nbecause of her undying love, Td\nhave been skeptical.\"\n\"You wouldn't have believed\nthat?\" Joel asked in innocent tones.\n\"Not wholly. Combined with the\nfinancial interest. Each reinforces\nthe other, you see.\"\n\"Oh!\" said Joel passionately.\n\"Hoy\/ can you be so foolish and frivolous and take such awful chances\nwhen there are thousands of lives\nat stake: men going over the sea,\nand those horrible submarines waiting, and\u2014and all!\"\nHe wrinkled his nose at her.\n\"It does sound impressive the way\nyou put it, doesn't It? So I'm not to\ntrust the beautiful blonde, even\nthough I've worked with her before\nand found her very efficient and\nquite trustworthy?\"\n\"I'm sorry I spoke,\" said Joel\ncoldly. \"You asked for it, but still\nI shouldn't have spoken.\"\nShe put on hat and coat and took\nher purse preparatory to going to\nlunch, and he watched her the\nwhile, grinning like a cat\n\"Always count five before speaking.\" he said. \"A good rule. Never\nthe hasty word that cannot be recalled.\"\nShe banged the door after her.\n(TO BE CONTINUED)\nNelson Satlti Htm\nMember of the Canadian DaUy\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connecting to\nall Department!\nWESTMINSTER, England, (CP).\n\u2014City Council has decided all future appointments of women officers shall be terminated by\" marriage. No action will be taken with\nregard to those already in thc service.\nBirds Have Hospital\nMollina  Routlodg e and bird patient.\nBy Central Press\nWhat happens to a little bird in\nPortland. Ore., when it breaks its\nleg or wing, or has a tummy ache?\nWhy, it goes to thc bird hospital,\nto be sure, said to be the only ono\nin Ihe United Stales.\nFifleen hundred birds are hate\ntreated every year, for every known\nailment In bird land, from broken\ni legs to loss of voice.\nIn  repairing a canary's  broken\nleg toothpicks arc used for splints,\n. and rubberized gauze for bandages.\ni Thc bird's leg will heal in   three\nweeks.\nTliis hospital is in charge of Mollina Rotillodge, who has doctored\nj sick  birds  from all  parts of  thc\ncountry,\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy   .... 1  .05\nBy carrier, per week       2o\nBy carrier, per year, 13.00\nBy mail in Canada^ tn subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per mouth, 60c;\nthree mouths, $1.80; six month'\n$3.00; ona year, $6.00.\nUnited \"tates and tpreat Britain, one month, 75c: tix mon'.hs.\n$4.00; one year. $7.50.\nForeign countries, t'.her than\nU.S.. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\niiilliiiiiillilliiiiilillllliiililiiiilliin\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\n11c a line\nMinimum 2 llnet\n2 Unit, once  I -22\ni Unit, once   .33\n4 llnet, oneo .\"  M\n2 llnu, etlmei  AS\n3 Unit, e.timei  1.32\n4 Unit,! timet  1.7\u00bb\n2 Unit, 1 month  tM\n3 lines, 1 month  4.29\n4 llnet, 1 month  6.72\nAll tbovt leu 10% for prompt\npayment\nilllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nAdvertiaera who desire may\nhave replies addrejsed to a box\nat the Nelion Daily News and\nforwarded dally to their address. A charge of 10 cents is\nmade for this service. In this\ncase add four words (Box \u2014\nDaily News) to the count for\nthe number of words.\nOut-of-town subscribers -\/ho\nwish to answer advertisements\nin which only the telephone\nnumber of the advertiser is\ngiven, may mall their replies to\nthe Nelson Daily News, and they\nwii. be communicated to the\nadvertiser.\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelson Daily News endeavors to print only truthful classified advertising and will appreciate having its attention called\nto any advertising not conforming to the highest standards of\nhonesty.\nBIRTHS\nMcDONALD\u2014To    Mr.    and    Mrs\nStephen   McDonald,   Annable   Block,\nat the Kootenay Lake General hoi-\npltal. November 6. a daughter.\t\nkELLOOG\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Roy\nKellogg ot Taghum. at the Kootenay Like General hospital. Novem-\nber 8. a daughter. *\nLEGAL NOTICES\nCiUVEHNMENT I.IQIOR ACT\nMiller   of   application\nto Tranafer of Beer\nfor\nLit\nconsent\ncence.\nNotice la hereb] given that on the\n4th day of Deoember next the uu-\ndersigucd Intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for consent to\ntransfer of Beer Licence No. 2874 and\nissued ln respect or premises belnt\npart of a building known aa Midden\nHotel situate at 507-9 Ward street\nCity of Nelson upon the lands described as Lot One Block Five Official Plan City of Nelson Kootenay Laud Registration District. In\nthe Province of British Columbia\ntrom Floyd M. Barnett ot Argenta,\nB. C the transferor.\nDATED at Nelson. B. C. this 3rd\nday of November, A. D- 1934.\nA- SHUTTY.\nApplicant and transferee. '\n(47381\nPERSONAL\nASTROLOGY: WHAT DO YOUR\nStars decree? send date, place and\ntime of birth with 12-00 for Special Individual Delineation; or. tl 00\nfor General Reading. Slurman Old-\nfield, 1188. Newport Ave., Victoria.\n146061\nGENTLEMEN. SAVE 50*.',-. BUY YOUR\nSanitary requirement! by mall.\nStamp brlnga catalogue. 8anl-\nTes Company 70fl Dunsmuir atreet.\nVancouver,  B.  0.      (4844)\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR\nList of wanted Inventions ind full\nformation sent tree. The Ramsay\nCompany, world Patent Attorneys\n273 Bank Street. Ottawa. Canada\n14864)\nOROW   MUSHROOMS   FOR   US   AT\nhome. Bla demand; excellent profits, write for free booklet to Domestic   Mushroom   Growers.   Ed-\n_mqnton, Alta. (4748)^\nEczema itch Piles Ulcers. Try Geo \"Lees\nChina Remedy at Hudson's Bav Co\n(4885)\nDon Lucas Relieves\not Kaslo Bonk\nNelson Daily Newi\nClassified Ads bring\nquick results \u2014 try\none.\nKASLO. B.C., Nov. 8.-D. Doddlng of Nelson waa a visitor in town\nMortday. Tuesday he visited Argenta, returning later to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. L. H. Sammons of\nPortland, Ore, are spending a few\ndaj*s here.\nMiss M. Jesty who had been a\npatient in Victorian hospital,\" is\nconvalescing at her home at Shutty\nBench.\nJ. A. Jones of Retaliack spent the\nv 'ek-end in town.\nMrs. D. J. Barclay is a patient\nin Victorian hospital.\nMrs. M. Murphy has left to visit\nher sons-in-law and daughters, Mr.\nand Mrs. P. L. Trainor and Mr. and\nMrs. G. Trainor of Nelson.\nPage Robinson, teller in tho local\nbranch of the Bank of Montreal,\nis on holidays. He left Tuesday\nmorning to visit Kelowna and Vancouver. During his absence lie is\nbeing relieved by Don Lucas of\nNelson who arrived in Ihe city Sunday. Mr. Lucas was formerly on the\nbank staff here.\nBert Canniff of Retaliack spent\nthe week-end in the city.\nCecil Pangburn was a Nelson, visi-\nTfce\nNelson Daily\nNews CLASSIFIED\nCOLUMN\nFOR RENT\nwill help you to find a reliable tenant for your house,\napartment or rooms.\nto get your pick\u2014Pick from  the Nelson  Daily\nNews Classified Page.\nFor Service Phone Jean Robertson at\n144\nOut, of Town Readers\u2014Prompt Attention Given\nto Mail Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nLargest in the Interior\nUSED MORE READ MORE\nHELP WANTED\nWAN'IID-A YOUNO OR MIDDLE\naged woman to assist a family of\ntwo in houae work, modern home\nan conveniences. Apply Box 4774,\nDally News. (4774)\nHOUSE-KEEPER FOR MOTHERLESS\nhome. State age. 410.00 per month.\n_Box_47?7, Dally News._ 14797)\nWOMAN OR OIRL POR GENERAL\nhousework. Must, be, used to chll-\ndren. Box 4819. Dally News. (4819)\nQIRlTTbR GENERAL WORK. MUST\nbe experienced. Write Box 1769.\nTrail, B. C. 14809)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWANTED - POSITION AS TRUCK\ndriver 13 years experience, or\nMechanics work in garage. Reference If necessary. Box 4793. Dally\nNews. (4793)\nYOUNG LADY STENOGRAPHER\ndesires position ln office or etore.\nBox 4747, Dally News.        (47471\nFOR SALE\nUSED CASH REGISTERS Wl GUAR-\nantee   suitability    snd    accuracy\nWrite  NaUonal  cash  Register  Co\n67o Seymour St.. Vancouver. B- C.\n(4818)\nPIPE   AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd..\n950   prior   Bt..   Vancouver.   B.   C.\nT (4\u00ab60i\nPOR SALE- BARRELS. K P f * S\nsugar aacka, liners McDonald Jam\nCo.,  Ltd. (4770)\nFARM  LANDS\nINVESTIGATE CANADIAN PACIFIC\nRailway Company's Land Settlement plan\u2014good farm lands available In Alberta and'Saskatchewan.\nVery easy terms. Full Information\non application to Department of\nNatural Resources, 908 1st St.,\nEaat,  Calgary,  Alberta.        147431\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED\nOOOD CLEAN  RAGS WANTED-AP-\nDlv   pally   Newa   Office .3368)\nWOOD  PULP  EXPORT\nThe export of wood pulp and\nscreenings In September was 1,024,-\n471 cwt. of the value of $2,123,673\ncompared with (1,261.667 at $3,372,807\na year ago. The pulp wood export\nwas $1,037,350 compared with $792,-\n168.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST OR STOLEN. HALLOWITB\nnlgbt, wblte-palnted rowboat\nRanee Blanchard\" ttlt*\nTo Finders\nIf rou tlsd a cat or a dot. a\npocketbook lewelrv or fur ot\nanything else of value, telephone\nTtu Diuv News A \"Found'' Ad\nwill bs inserted without coat to\nvou Wt will collect trom Uw\nowner.      \t\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALI\nTWO YOUNG GOVERNMENT TIM\ned cows One Guernsey fresh at\none blsck Jersey freshens begil\ning of April. Apply Box 4775, Dai\nNewa. (4TJ\nPROPERTY FOR EXCHANC\nNELSON   7   ROOM   HOUSE.   VAU\n\u00bb1600. Exchange for Victoria pro\n_crty._C._W. Appleyard. (4H|\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANCI\nWANTED DONKEY TRADE TO\nMilk Goals, or slate price. API\nBox 4796. Dally Ntwi. (479\n DOCS\nFOR SALE\u2014DOBERMANN-P1NBCH1\nimps, pull blooded and reglataf\nstock.  Address:   F.   Rayraer.   139\n38th Ave., W. Vancouver. B. C.\n___\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountant)\n.     A.   t\nand Commercial Audita\nCHAS F HUNTER. 8 F\nMunicipal and Commercial\nP. O   Boa 1191. Nelson. B   O\nAiiayers\ntor Tuesday.\nErnest Alexander has returned\nfrom a visit to Spokane and Hayden Lake, Idaho.\nR. Gilker was a Nelson visitor\nTuesday.\nJ. N. Murphy was a recent Nelson\nvisitor.\nFelix Schroeder of Nelson was a\ncity visitor Wednesday.\nH. Beck was a Tuesday visitor in\nNelson.\nThomas Cottingham of Lardeau Is\nspending a few days here.\nEric Bacchus of Birchdale visited\nKaslo  Tuesday.\nRoy Green was a Tuesday visitor\nin Argenta.\nLockie MacPherson and Andrew\nJardinc, Jr., are spending a few\ndays in Spokane.\nJean Brochier has returned from\na visit to Argenta.\nMr. and Mrs. E, Garrett were recent visitors ill Nelson.\nMiss Mary Surina of Shutty Bench\nis spending a few days in town.\nMr. and Mrs. S. 3. Mayzes were\nvisitors in Nelson.\nFOR RENT\nHOUSES, ETC.\nTHREE AND FOUR ROOM HOUSES.\nApply D. Magllo. Phone 808L.\n14773)\nSEVEN    ROOM    MODERN    HOUSE.\n.garage, near schools. Phone 560R.\n              (4810)\nFURNISHED HOUSE. 3 ROOMS AND\nbath. Five garden lots. 830 month.\nPhone 65ix: P. O. Box 976. (4817)\nFURNISHED     HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms tor rent. Annable Block\n(4688)\nFUR     ROOMS.     STEAM     HEATED\nshower, terms mod  Can   Legion.\n (4686)\nFURN.    OR    CNFURN.    APTS     BY\nweek or month Medical Arts Bldg\n (4687)\nN THE KERR APARTMENTS\nfurnished and unfurnished suites.\n(4670)\nTWO    ROOM    FURNISHED    SUITE\nfor   rent.   Stirling   Hotel.   i46S9)\nFURNISHED     TWO-ROOM     SUITE.\nK.W.C.  Block. (4740)\n3  ROOM  SUITE  813.   PER  MONTH\nUnion Rooma.  (46901\nSIX ROOM HOUSE NEWLY REN-\novated. Phone 488L. 14760)\nFOR RENT\u2014MODERN HOME. GOOD\nlocation. Phone 33. t4683)\nTERRACE   APTS    Beautiful   Modern\nFrlgidatrc  equipped  eulles.   (4691)\nA hungry man is a man ot anger.\nE w WIDDOWSON established 1900\n305 Josephine St. Nelson. B C\n (4693)\n(.RENVILLE h. otiblWooi*\n618 Baker St., Nelson. Box 736\nCustom snd Control assays. Chemical analysis. Representative at\nTrail for Shippers' Interests. (4694)\nKOOTENAY   LABORATORIES\nAssayers it Chemists\nBox   1343                   Trail.   B C.\n (4696)\nChiropodiiti\nDr. Mildred slmonds Foot Specialist\n405  ptrnweil  Bid*. Spokane,  waah\n14696)\nChiropractor!\nE.   M.   WARREN.   D.   C.   BOX   873.\nPh. 115. Gllker Block. 613 Baker.\n(4648)\nElectrical\nJ.  F   COATW Tbe  Electric  stort\nSupplies snd Installations\nPhont 766 P O Box 116\n(4697)\nEngineer! and Surveyor!\nA   H   OREEN CO    LTD    516 WAR\"\nSt. Phone 364, Nelson, B.C. (4698)\nH.  D   DAWSON -NELSON\nENGINEER  AND SURVEYOR\n(4699)\nBoyd C Affleck. Fruitvale. B C-\nLands. Mineral Claims Waterworks\netc. Surveys. Flans and Estimates\n (4700)\nFlorists\nPAPER    WHITES.    HYACINTH    and\nGIANT DAFFODIL BULBS\nJust  Arrived\nNELSON   FLOWER   SHOPPE\nPhone 233 or 289R3.\n(4702)\nIniurance and Rtal Eitafc\nROBERTSON REALlY CO, I!\nRea. eatate. Insurance, rent\nAberdeen block. Baker St.  (471\nDO   NOT   LET   LACK   OF   REj\ncash   deprive   you   of   Insure!\nprotection,  see T.  D.  Rosling.\nRoyal  Bank Bldg. (Ml\nR    W    DAWSON.   Real   Estate\naurance    Rentals   Next  Hippen\nHardware, Baker street. Ht\nC    D    BLACKWOOD    Insurance\nevery description. Real Est Ph i\n(47(\nH.  E.   DILL.   AUTO  AND  FIRE  I\nsursnee. Resl 'Estate. 608 Ward\nJ47I\nJ     E     ANNABLE'   REAL    ESTAT\nrentals. Insurance. Annablt  blu\n(471\nLIFE, FIRE At AUTOMOBILE MSU\nance. P. E. Poulln, Ph, 70. (47l\nCHAS    P   MCHARDY    INSURANC1\nReal Estate\u2014Phone 135.       (47t\nMachinist!\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal work Ut\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grlndt\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene weldli\nPhone 693.\n334 Vernon. street\n(471\nMusical Tuition\nVIOLIN     AND     THEORY     P-H\nMary Heddle. Phone 31IR3. (471\nSash  Factory\nLAWSONS SASH  FACTORY   HAR\nwood merchant 317 Baker stre\n  (471\nSecond Hand Stores\nKITCHEN SINK8. WINDOWS. PIP\nstove boards. Mrs. Radcltffe's.\n(471\nTHE ARK. Liberal allowance on <\ncook stoves for new ones.  (47!\nTHANA, India, (CP).\u2014Cha-Jj\nwith kidnapping a minor girl w\nintent to marry ner against her w\nIsmail Ahmed of Bandin, was st\ntenced to 2<_ years' imprisonmer\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nNOW U-pTEN-l HIRED\n\u25a0<OU TO ACT UKE A\nCOUNT AMI MUST\n%AV YOU'RE DOIN'\nPRETTV -WELL UP\nTO' NOW*\nVEH'. BUT I WI-&H\nTHEV WOULD SERVE\nBIGGER CURS OP\nCOFFEE-1 SWALUOWEt\nTWO OF THEM     _,,\nSMAU- CuPVLaS'\nNIGHT\nOH.HELLO. VES'. WS\nHAVE. A COUMT\nSTAVING HERR WITH\nU-b- WMV,YES. I'D\nWOVE TO HAVE VOU\nMEET HIM- WHAT\"*b\nTHAT?\nTHE CHIEF OF POLICE*\nVES- BRING HIM\nALONG WITH VOU\nCOME RIGHT OVER-\nSTAV IN THSRE\nUNTIL THEV GO\nr lu tbLl me\nwife vou m*d\nTO GO\nDOWN-   1      ,\nTOWN-   I  Ft\nLISTEN-DON'T\nLET VOUR WlFfi   u\nPLAV WHILE I'M IM\nHEREM HEWOHER\nVi,, __\u201e,.   PLAY\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Westover\nSJZEAT  SCOTT,'\nTHIS  IS TERRIBLE'\nthis socibtv cruy,\nFish, is ooimo* To\nBftlMS   SUIT   -AOAIIOST\nME Be-,\n\u2022CAUSE\n! Mac\nI WILL OVERLOOK \"THIS VaIHOLE i\nMA-TTEE. IF VOO ACCEOE TO THE !\nVMISHCS OF A PEtt'SON VA1HO VJILL.1\nDELIV.EB* A MOTE TO yCOTHIS AFttR.;\nMOOM - **5)UCCK._E._Y\n**-OV(t ~\nTHE GUMPS\nTHE GLAD TIDINGS\nBWBO'YOU NAUCrHTY BOY-\nWHAT OM EARTH HAS SEEK! KEEPING\nVOotwEN\/B BEEN S1TTIN& HERE WITH\nOOR COATS ON POR OVER AN HOUR\nWAITING* TO TAKE VOU TO SEE .THAT\nWONDERJSUL AWkRTMBMT-THB REAL\nESTATE MAN\n> OUTSIDE\nNOW-\nIT\u00ab TOO'LATE-OARUNKr-CVE ALftBAD.\nRENTED THE CUTEST UTTLE COTTA&E\nXOO EVER SAW-AWAY OOT IN THE\nSUBURBS-1 CAN'T WAIT TILL\n, VOU SEE IT-FRONT PORCH\"\nWTCHENETTE- GARDEN\nVND ALL-IT'S T\u00ab_iCO-\n, THIN* | EVER LAID EVES\"\n. COZIEST\nON-APERFBCT\nI PARADISE FOR\nyWOMEY*V\u00bbOK|\u00bbE5-\nt-l. C_ _wi_\u00abi.1\u00bbvV IK fttHgT-*\".\nk-k..'&r\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\n[om\n\u2022THI NELtON DAILY NEWI, NEHON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNING. NOVIMBIR 1. 1134-\nAPERSTOCKS\nSOAR IN EAST\nlove to Prohibit Sale\n\u20226t Less Than Cost\nIs Factor\nMarket and Mining .News\nIONTREAL, Nov.* (CP)-Spur-\nI forward by possible government\nion to prevent export of news-\nlit at a figure below cost, paper\nEtt held the spotlight during toft session of the Montreil stock\nfcange.\nIt Lawrence Paper preferred rose\n.points, St. Lawrence corporation,\n-tents at 1.50, the preferred a\n\u25a0 at 6%, Howard Smith pre-\n\u25a0d a point at 73 and Bathurst\nMr up ft at 5. Associated Brew-\nI preferred Jumped four points\nnew peak at 101 and Bell Tele-\nma rose 2v_ points to 124V4.\nbnsolidated Smelters scored a\ni of six points at 136.\nIckel, Hollinger. Brazilian Trac-\ni, CP.R. and Canadian Industrial\nphol A and B were off fractions.\nlies 15-912 shares; bonds 110,050.\nIL SHARES IN\nTORONTO Gl\n|3teONTO,    Nov.    8     (CP) \u2014 Oil\nstepped out smartly today In\nI industrial section of the Toron-\nLtchange. mterllsteds were weary.\ntM A eased '\/. to 24Vi. Braslllan\nMed  \u2022_  to 11%, C P R  >*,  to\nand Nickel % to aai*,. Smelt-\nleetalned a gain ot a point\n\u25a0\u2022sillers   at   14%   was  down   \u00ab4\nWalkers common lost % to 26>\/*,.\n1Mb  Imperial  Oil   and   internals! Petroleum eloaed at new highs\nttie   year,   the   former   at   ie***,\nthe latter at 30%. up Ii to Ji\nUve day.\nmet ot a point or more came tor\nOoodyear   issues,   F.   It.   Burt,\nhda Bread B and Westons pfd.\nbe Metals Corp.\nProfits Are $65,630\nTotal  for Three  Months,\n^Ithout Deducting Taxes,\nDevelopment\nORONTO, Nov. 8 (CP)-Three\nJjths ended September 80 last\nlight Base Metals Mining cor-\nfiuon an estimated net profit,\nve taxes and deferred develop-\n|lt, of $65,030, equal to 2 8 cents\njjhare, the company's quarterly\nfcrt states.\nInduction for the period, less\n|gjit and realization, was valued\n~\"t trom which was de-\n. 12,875 for development, admiration and general expenses\n$28,462 for depreciation.\n\u25a0 the quarter 25,724 tons of ore\nB milled and approximately 1000\n\u25a0 added to broken ore reserves.\n\u25a0Suction totalled 2713 tons with\n\u25a0 per cent lead and 31.336 ounces\npilver and 5010 tons carrying\nper cent zinc.\nExchange Rates\nIW TORK, Nov. 8 (APl.-^Ster-\neichange ealy at 84.99% for\nlay bills, and at 15.00\", tor de-\ninadlan dollars today 7-16 per\npremium, yesterday a 9-16 per\npremium, week ago %i\\ per\npremium.\nfane 6.58% cents.\nIre   6.88%   centa.\nruguay 80.80 cents.\nExchanges *\n(DOT-REAL, Nov. 8 iCP)\u2014British\nforeign exchange ln relation to\nCanadian dollar as compiled by\nRoysl Bank of Canada, closed toes follows:\nJmtlna, peso    Mil\n\u25a0train, pound -  3.8861\n\u25a0tna, achllllna   1850\n\u25a0ium.  belta  .2181\nKll, mllrela _    .0718\nTta, Bonn Kona dollars 4087\nmark, krone    .2184\n-\u00ab, franc    .0644\nny, reichamark     tlti\nBritain, pound   4.8868\nland, florin     ttat\n\u25a0tary. pengo  -....   .2929\n\u25a0a, rupee -...   .3700\n*\"\\ lire 0836\na, yen - 8865\n\u25a0sHavta. dinar         0223\nZealand, pound ...:.  3.9016\n\u00bby. krone      .2468\nid, tlot|   1887\na Africa, pound  4-8751\n1, peseta - 1333\n ian. krone 3533\n\u25a0xerland, franc 3181\n1 States, dollar, 3 6-16 per cent\nnt.\nMINES HOOK UP\nTO NEW POWER\nReno, Kootenay Belle,\nNow Operating\nWith It\nPower from the Kootenay river\npower plants is now being delivered\nby the West Kootenay Power &\nLight company to tht company's\nSheep creek transformer station,\nover the newly built transmission\nline, and is being made uae of\nby the Reno mill, and mine, and\nby the Kootenay Bell mill and mine.\nThe company turned the 60,000\nvolt current into the new transmission line from Ymir to Sheep creek\nat the end of the week, and the two\nmines mentioned started using the\npower this week.\nIn the case of the Reno, it means\nfull operation of both mine and mill,\nwhich for the last few months bave\nbeen obliged to operate alternate\nweeks, on account ot power shortage.\nFor the Kootenay Bell, It starts\ninto action the newly built mill.\nSILVER HIGHER\nMONTREAL, Not. g (CP)\u2014In Increased transactions, ellver futures\non the Canadian commodity exchange finished three to 15 points\nhigher. Bales were 33 Contracts, comprising 380.000 ounces.\nDecember closed at 52.50 ln comparison to yesterdays final bid of\n62.40. Final bid of 94-00 was 15\npoints higher, March on the close\nwas 53.45 In comparison with 53.42\nbid yesterday.\nU. S. DOLLAR IS\nUP 5-32\nMONTREAL, Nov. 8 (CP)-The\npound sterling, United States dollar\nand French franc all advanced on\nMontreal foreign exchanges today.\nThe pound gained 5-16 of a cent at\n$4.88 11-16 while the American dollar was up 5-32 ot 1 per cent at 2\n5-19 per cent discount. The franc\nrose .02 of a cent at 6.44 cents.\nPRODUCE STEADY\nMONTREAL, Nov. 8 (CP)-Quo-\ntations held firm on the Montreal\nproduce and dairy market today.\nEggs, graded A large 46, A medium 42, A pullets 35. B 23, C IW.\nButter, No. 1 fresh 20, solids 20%,\nprints 22.\nCheese, No. 1 Ontarios 10!'\u00ab, Quebecs 9%.\nPotatoes steady, t-iuebecs 40, N.B.\nMntns 45.\nChanges Made in\nFiled Staffs of the\nMine Department\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CP)-Minor\nchanges in.the field staffs of the\ndepartment of mines were confirmed by provincial prder-in-council\ntoday. John Fleming replaces W. G.\nCrisp a*, deputy mining recorder at\nDease Lake; Thomas A. Pefry replaces George Edgar as deputy mining recorder.at McDames Creek and\nDuncan Miller replaces A. R. Hunter at Boundary, B.C.\nONE-CENT DROP\nIN BAR GOLD\nMONTREAL, Nov. 8 (CP).-Bar\ngold in London off 1 cent-at $33.95\nan ounce ln Canadian funds; 139s\n2d in British funds. The :ix 1 $35\nWashington price amounted to $34.11\nin Canadian.\nCalgary Live Stock\nCALGARY, Nov. 8 (CP) .-Receipts Wednesday: 448 cattle, 92\ncalves, 336 hogs and 326 sheep and\nlambs. Thursday up to noon, 26\ncattle, 21 calves, 448 hogs and 171\nsheep and lambs.\nThe cattle market was barely established, sales being mostly of leftovers. Prices were unchanged. Hogs\nwere steady, selects $6.85, bacons\n$6.35 and butchers $5.85 off trucks.\nCattle: Medium butchers steers $2\nto $2.50; common to medium butcher\nheifers $1.75 to $2; good butcher\ncows $1.50; medium veal calves $2\nto $2.25.\nMONTREAL SILVER PRICES\nMONTREAL, Nov. 8 (CP).\u2014Silver futures were steady\nJ the Canadian commodity exchinge at the close today.\nes were 33 contracts: Dec. 14; March 9; May 10.\nOpen        High      Low        Close\npember    52.45B      52.72      52.72      52.50B\nbch    53.70        53.10      53.65      53.45B\n[y    64.10B      \u00a34.20      54.20      54.00B\nBids. Jan. 52.75; Feb. 53.10; April 53.75; June 54.80;\nfcr 54.60; Aug. 54.90; Sept. 55.20; Oct. 55.50\nMtnt, Orttirt i. Cmttmii.. tt\nAmrnt\u2014DHmtnilutlitrr,\nMONEY ORDERS\nSterling Money Orden sold\nby this Bank -nay be cashed at\ncurrent rates of exchange in\nall countries.\nUte Imperial Bank of Caaada\nMoney Orders for safety and\nconvenience.\nImperial bank of mm\nHBHD Office TORONTO\nNELSON       .       .      .       W. R. CRUBBE, Managtr\nBranches at Revelatoke, Cranbrook, Fernie.\nDow Jones Averages\n80 industrials    97.26 off .24\n20 rails    88.46 off .41\n20 utilities    19.85 off .26\nVancouver Stock -Exchange\nA P COS \t\nAmal   Oil    -\nB C Packers ...\nBeiver   Silver   .\nBradlan  \t\nBralornt   Ool<H^______________\nBridge River       .00%\nxn\n.OtH\n1600\n.08\nllf\nB R*X OOld\nCariboo Cold\nC tt t Corp ..\nCoast Brew  ..\nOold Bait \t\nHome Oil \t\nfnt Coal  \t\nMak   Blcear *\nMcCeod  OU\nMercury \t\n..-\u25a0Tldlan   \t\nMetaline   \t\nModel OU .....\nMorning Star\nNat Silver   ....\nglcola Mines\nkelta\n.36.\n1.18\nJtt\n10.75\n.10H\nm\n.13\n:!S*\nPioneer  -Oold     1\u00bb40\nPremier Sold \t\nPremier  Border  .\nBeno   Oold\t\nSail; Mines \t\nSpooner  OU   \t\nTaylor Bridge ....\nVanalta\t\nWayside\t\nCUM\nAlexandria   ..........\nAnaconda\t\nBayvlew  \t\nBluebird   \t\nB C Nickel \t\nBig Missouri ......\nButte I X l \t\nCan   Rand    \u2014\nCongress     \t\nCrows  Nest\t\nDalhousle      \t\nDalhouale OIU .._\nDentonia\t\nDictator \t\nDunwell  _.\t\nPacalta  '.\t\n1-16\n.00H\n1.14\n.33\nM\nft\nM*.\n.01\nJ)_\n.45\nMVt\nttl\n80.00\n.07\n2.30\n13.35\n\u202209%\n39\nIJO\n.6*\nUM\njj\n-M\n.34\n.13\n-10H\n.03 %\n.05\n13-15\nU7\n.01\n1.16\n.35\ni\n.08\nWi\nS3\na\nttl\n.30\n.07\n30\n-05\nOlacler Creek _....\nAtlln Pac \"'I........'\ngairvltw %\n%\nfreehold\n.07\nJOI\n.17\n.31\n.08\n40\n.17\nS*\n.06\n\u2022>?\nT\n_ = r\niloonda            tt\nOold  Mountain-      \u2014\nOeo fater. 01\nOrandvlew ...._.,     .01U\nOrSl   WUttint\"\"7-1    {4%\nHalda oold       .04\nHediey Amal  18\nlerculee Con      .OS*\nllgbwood jSaroae   ..     .1314\njSoe OOld  11\nHomatttad    01\nIndian -.*....    .01\nIndependence   _>     .01%\nKoot BeUe 49\nKoot Ilor       .00%\nKoot King       DO%\nLakevlew      .01\nMar Jon  -      \u2014\nMerUnd    .....    JO\nMcOUUvray  14\nMIU City     .10\nMlnto Gold 18%\nMorton Wol      .01\nNobl. Kvt     ttl\npavilion         _    .40\nPend Oreille     .48\nPilot       ttl\ntorm, Idaho  08\nKward    -    .o\u00bb%\nnltte  _ 16.00      15.40\nRutua   Argenta         \u2014        .01\nRuth  Hope     ttt        .03\nRuth  Hope\nSalmon Oold\nSllvercrest   .....\nSUveramlth \t\nTaylor wind ...\nunited Empire\nUnlttd QU !.\nVldette Oold .\nViking 0014 ...\n.1014        .IS1\n\u25a0-**\u25a0     n\nVulcan\nWai\nKerioo   \t\nwW-V**...\n.18\nit)\n.13\n.06\n.01\n.04%\n.0114\n.13\nf\nJ37\n.0\u00bb\n.06\n15.40\n11*\n1314\n.08\n\u2022ii*\n.05\n.60\n.04(4\n.08\nttl\nI\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexindrta \u2014\nAlgoma  \t\nAmity   \t\nAahley Oold \t\nBarry HoUlnger .\nBan U laid\nSoblo \t\nBradlan _\t\nBralorna        \t\nBrett  Trethtwwy\nB R X Oold   \t\nBrownlee ,.\t\nBut can Oold \t\nBunker Hill  \t\nCan Klrkland \t\nCan Malartlc \t\nCariboo Oold Q   .\nthet\nCentral Manitoba\t\ncentral Patricia\t\nChlbougamou  \t\nClerlcy \u2022\t\nOout Copper  .....\nCobalt Contact \t\nColumarlo  _ _\t\nConarlum  \t\nCons M *. S :..\nDome      - ...--.\ngoa Btplor  \t\nEldorado\t\nFalconbrldge\t\nGod's Lake  - -\t\nGran-da     \u2014 \u2014\nHardrock    -\t\nHoUlnger    \u2014........\nHowty  \t\nHudson   Bay   \t\nInt  Nickel      \t\nKlrkland Lake \t\nLake   Maron\t\nUttle Lont lte  -.,-.-\nLake Show      \t\nMcLeod  cockahutt\t\nMclntyre   \t\nMcVlttle   orahamma   \t\nMcWattera Oold\t\nMact-ssa \u2014\nMalroblc     *. \t\nMaple test ....\nMtntnt Corp -\t\nMoffatt   Hall\t\nNlplsslna -\t\nNoranda   - -\nParkhlU    - -\t\nPaymaster    ..,-..\npend  Orellle\t\nPioneer OBld  ,\t\n.01*\n.06\n.01\n.36\n.0)\n.71\n.73\nS*\n.35\n3J6\n18.06\nT\n.03\n.03 y,\n.73(4\nlttt\n133.00\n37-50\nISO\n3.40\n3.18\n39\n.65\n90.10\n1.16\n13.60\nMS\u00a7\n.04\n5J6\n\u00bbS'\n47.00\n.33\n,:8\n.03\nii?*\n\u00bb\u00ab*\n\"S\n11.86\nPremier Oold  \t\nRano Oold   \t\nSan  Antonio   \t\nSherrltt Oordon  \t\nSlscoe \u2014\nSmeltert Oold  \t\nSouth Tlblemont \t\nStadacona    \t\nSt Anthony  \nudbury Baaln \t\nSylvanlte \t\nTeck Hughta ....._.\t\nTowtuamao   \t\nTreadwaU  _. _..\nVentures  \u2014\nWalte Amulet\t\nWayside        \t\nWhite Eagle    \t\nWright   Hargrtaytt  ....\nOILS\nAome\t\nAJax\t\nA P Con \u2014\n| A Oil ~\t\nBaltao      \u2014\nCalmont   \t\nSand t Corp  \nhemical Research\t\nDalhousle, Otis\t\nHome OU \t\nHomestead O and O -..\nImp.rial Oil  ...\nInfer rett  -\t\nLowery * ......: ....\nMerland    ...\nNordon -.\nOH  -Wtcttone \t\noiga\t\nRoyalite  \t\nSarnia\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeauharnols     \t\nBell' Telephone    _...\nBraalllan ..\t\nBrew A Mat \t\nCan Bread  ...\nCan Cement .\n125\n1.10\n*'i%\n3.83\n.32\n9\nS3\n1.17\n3.40   *\n406\n1\nCan Car and foundry .\ncan Ind Al A   -\nCan Dredge\nCan Pae Rsllway\nOona Bakeries \t\nDUt Seagram \t\nDominion Storea ...\nrord of Can\t\nOoodyear  Tlrt  \t\nHiram walker \t\nImperlsl  Tob  \t\nMaaaey   Harris   ..\nStandard Paving ...\n,31\ns*\n.16\n.80\nttl\n41\n.03\n.05\n.65\n1,65\nJ4\nflag*\n.18\n.0414\na**\n.06\n18.00\n.04%\n      6\n77^\n...       .68\n...     3\n::: ?*\nZ3\u00a7*\n::::: i$\n::: 13\"\n...   34V4\n='!\n1.00\nQuotations on WaU Street\nAllegheny   _\t\nAll   Chemical\nAmerica   can   :\nAm  For  pow\nAm Ma 4 Fdy\nAm Smelt tt Re\nAm Telephone\nAm  Tobacco ...\nAnaconda -\nAtchison \t\nAuburn Motora\nBaldwin   \t\nBait   It   Oblo\nBendli  Avla  ....\nBeth steel \t\nOanada   Dry   \t\nCan Pacific ...\nOerro De psaco\nChas  It  Oblo\nChrysler \t\nOom it South\nCon  Oas N T\nCorn Prod\nc Wright pfd ....\nDupont   \t\nEastman Kodak\nElec Pow It U\nErie    \t\npord English ....\nFord of Can ...\nFirst Na Storea\npreeport Texas\nGeneral Electric\nGeneral Fooda\nGeneral   Motora\nOold Dutt \t\nGoodrich  \t\nOranby    \t\nOrt North Pfd\nOrt wst Sugar\nHowe Sound  ....\nHudson Motora\nInter   Nickel\n1\n<4H\n108\n\u00a5\nl\\%\nInter Tel ft Tel *%\nJewel   Te\u00bb     83\nKenn Copper  I7H\nKreage SB   18\n  88\nw.\nMont Ward   88\nNash   Motors 16H\nNat  Dairy Prod **\nN  Pow  *  U on\nN   T   Oentral 93\nPac Gas tt tlee 16\npackird Motors 3'i\nPenn  R R    8314\nPhilips Pete   wK\nPure   QU      7)4\nRadio Corp    614\nRadio Keith Or 2\nRem    Rand   814\nSafeway   Storea 45\nS Louis It S F 1J1\nhell union  .... 6*\nSoutb   pacific 18 %\nSUn Oil of Cal 33 H\nStan Oil of ind 36\nStewart   Warner 714\nStudebaker    3\nTexas  Corp     31}4\nTexas   Oulf   Sul 36%\nTlmken   Rollers 311,\nUnder Type ..._\nUn   Carbide   ...\nUn  OU of Oal\nUn   Aircraft   ....\nUnited Bla   38 \u00a3\nUn   Pacific     ior\nU S Pipe  * \u201e\nU S Rubber .... 16)1\nU S Steel  8414\nVan Steel  17\nWeet Electric ... 3334\nwoolworth  5114\nWrltley     75\nYellow Truck .... 3\n8.4\nH\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBall Telephone\t\nBrazilian   \t\nB C Power A \t\n\u00a7C Power B       \nundine   producu\nCan Car Fdy\t\nCan Cement   ........\nCan Cement Pfd \t\nCan Oen Electric ..\nCan Gvpsum\t\nCan Ind Al A \t\nCan Ind Al B .....\nCPR        \t\nCan Steamers  _\nCockshutt ..    \u2014\nCons M tt 8 \t\nDom Brldgt  .....\nDom   Olasa\t\nDom  Textile  \t\nOen   SWe|   warea   .\nHamilton Bridge \t\nintNlckel \t\nMassey Harris  \u2014\nMontreal Power  -\nSst Brewlr-\nat Steel\nOgilvie\nPowar corp \t\nprice Broa \t\nQuebec Power \t\nShawlnlgan  \t\nSua!   of   Cantda\net Kits\nAss'd Brtw \t\n:::= J\nwing  .\u201e...-\nH Car\t\n194\nii*\n*&\n: J*\n150\n6V4\n: ?*\n. Ji*\n.    8\n133\nIV-\n88\n3%\n\u00bb<%\n3r\n3814\n17\n170\nBli,\n\\h\n3D 14\n11\nBrew it Dist  68\nB A Oil     14\nean Dredge  _  33\nCan  Malting   3014\nCan Vlckera   _  1\nCan  wineries ._  6\nCosgrave Brew  _  4\nDist geagram  lttl\nDom Engineer  33\nDominion  Tar    3\nHdme QU , - .65\n.GnptrltT OU  1614\nImperial \"ftb Oan ..._  11%\nint Petrol .. _...  8014\nMcColl FronUnae  18H\nNoranda  ~  33 .\nmr** \u25a0\u25a0- M*\n8anadlenna \u2014  13614\nommerce  -. _  158\nDominion    -  18014\nImperial  188\nMontreal     -   300%\nNova SCOtlt  _  36814\nRoyal \u2014  166\nIM-l\u00b0mLANE6l'S\t\nDOm Stores  18\nFord Can A     3414\nGoodyear Tire   -  133\nLaura Secord      88\nLoblaw Orocerlea  1714\nWeat can Flour  614\nWalker Brew  .J  8\nWALLSTREET\nPRICES EASE\nCanadian Issues Are\nDown; Lake Shore\nAdds y4\nBy FREDERICK GARDNER\nAttocltttd Press Financial Writer\nNEW YORK, Nov. 8 (CP)-Post-\nelection demand tor stocks slacked\ntoday and the market sold ott a\ntrifle after a four-day advance.\nAmerican Can, American Smelting, Du Pont, Bethlehem Sttel,\nMontgomery Ward, Sears Roebuck,\nSanta Fe, Coca Cola and other\nshares prominent on the preceding\nrally eased for net losses of tractions to a point.\nBuilding and motor shares held\nwell. Eastman Kodak touched a new\npeak above 108, finishing fractionally highr.\nU.S. Smelting lost 214 as enthusiasm for so-called inflation stocks\nclosed.\nCanadian Issues generally were\nfractionally lower. Lake Shore added \u2022* point\nPRICES SKID\nAT WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG. Nov. 8 (CP)-Bear-\nlshness of Chicago more than offset\nthe bullishness of Liverpool in deciding the price trend on the Winning grain exchange today.\nWheat futures skidded sharply in\nthe late dealings to close 1 to %\ncent lower, December at 7814, May\n8314 and July 84V4 cents, the day's\nlowest levels. Export sales today\ntotalled only 300.000 bushels.\nThe cash grain market was slightly higher.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR\nOFF V*\nNEW YORK, Nov. \u00ab (CP)-De-\ncllnet of the smallest proportions\nwere recorded by leading currencies in the foreign exchange marketa today.\nThe Canadian dollar's premium\nwaa reduced from 2 8-16 to 2 7-16\nper cent Sterling finished the day\nV, lower at $5.00%, while the French\nfranc, closing at 8.58*14, showed a\nloss of .0014 of a cent\nNew Companies Are\nIncorporated\nI VICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CP.-New\ncompanies covering a variety of activities were incorporated ln the\nprovince during the last week, including:\nHamilton Creek Gold Mines, Ltd.,\n.N.P.L.) 2,000,000 cmarea no' par\nvalue, Vancouver.\nCkookumchuck Gold, Ltd., N_P.L.,\n$50,000, Skookumchuck, B.C.\nInvermay Annex Mining company, Ltd., 100,000 shares no par\nvalue, Vancouver. \u25a0\nMunson-Monashee Golds, Ltd.,\n(N.P.L.), 5000 shares no par value,\nVancouver.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS. Nov. 8 (API-\nWheat, No. 1 northern 1.1014-1414;\nNo. 1 red durum 1.1514-1614: Dec,\n1.0614;  May 1,0214.\nCorn No. 3 yellow 78-8014.\nOaU. No. 3 white 56-66.\nFlax, No.  1  1,7614-8314.    _\nFlour unchanged. Shipments 19,-\n086. Bran 33-50-24.00.\nEASTERN SALES\nTORONTO, Nov. 8 (CP)\u2014Sales of\n100 or more shares on the Toronto\nstock exchange, industrial section,\ntoday were:\n200 Abltlbl. 866 Brazilian, 100 B C\nPower A, 405 C I Aleo, 465 CPR,\n2997 Ford, 1020 I Nickel, 265 Mass\nHarr, 840 ft Walker, 2880 Dist C\nSeag.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 8 (CP)\u2014Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Montreal stock exchange today were:\n200 Bathurst A, 190 Brazilian, 110\nB C Pow A, 820 Can Cement, 325\nInd Al A, 669 CPR, 121 Smelters,\n830 Intl Nickel.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Nov. 8 (AP) .-Closing\nquotations: Brazilian Tract $1114;\nCan Pac $1214; Inter Nickel $23%;\nBrit Amer Tob \u00a3614; Courtaulds\n47s lHd; Distillers 92s 9d; Dunlop\nRubber 48s 7M,d; Hudson Bay 24s\n9d; Imperial Chemical 36s; Imperial Tob 135s 6d; Mining Trust Ltd.\n2s 6d; Rand Mines \u00a36%; Rhodesian\nAnglo Am. 10a 6d; Rhokana Corp.\nWi; Crowns \u00a31214; Springs \u00a3814;\nBast Oeduld \u00a3814; Rio Tintos \u00a31314;\nVickers 10s 4Hd.\nBonds: Canadian 4 per eent loan,\n1953-58, \u00a3112; Brituli 214 per cent\nConsols \u00a384%; British 314 per cent\nwar loan \u00a310514; British funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a311714.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 8 (CP)\u2014Futuree\nO-Uoutlons:\nOpen   High   Low    Close\nWheat:\nDee    TOJ4     7914     7814     7814\nMay       84\u00ab     841*5     8314     8314\nJuly     ...   8614 8514     84%      84V4\nfe :::: li$ 1$ fl|  iig\nJuly    .    .   4414     4414     43',      43%\nBarley:\nkei 1 Hil HS\nDee.   .... 137 18714   13414   13414\nMay      143 143      140       140\nRye: ^^^^^^\n-PAOI ILIVEN\nHOLLINGER IS\nOFF 40 CENTS\nDrops at Toronto as\n.Bralome, Pioneer\nScore Gains\nTORONTO. Nov. 8 (CP1.-A half\ndoeen aaoondary gold aharea and\naome of the penny stocks occupied\nthe spot light today on tbt mining\ndepartment ot the Toronto exchange.\nVolume waa cloae to 700,000 aharee.\nBollinger, allghtly erratic, lott 40\noenta at 30.30, Bralorna and Pioneer held to the up aide by 10\ncenu each.\nSilvers wert narrow. Nlplaslng loet\n13 oenU.\nNoranda waa soft, dropping al\nto 833.25 but Hudaon Bay gained 65\ncenU to 412.55. Ulnlng orporatlon\nadded 16 cenu and Baloonbrldga 6.\nIn the medium-priced gold Issues\nLittle Long Lao lott 36 to 88.36,\nOoda Lake 7 to 83.18, and Gunnar\n614 to 88.\nIn the penny group Thompaon-\nCadlllac closed at 88 for a ntt\nloss ot 7 oenU. Othtr aoft apoti\nin the group wen Canadian Malartlc, B.R.X., and Boblo.\nWHEAT PRICES\nSLUMP AT CHI\nCHICAGO, Nov. 8 (AP)\u2014Abatement of Inflation Ulk appeared to be\nlargely responsible for all-around setbacks ot wbeat prloea today to btlow 81 a bushel.\nWhat dosed unstable 114-114 cenu\nlower, May 9814-14. oorn 14-14 down,\nMty 8014-14 and oau 14-14 off.\nManchukuo Exports\nin September Down\nDrop in Soya Beans; japan Is\nBest Customer; China\nSecond\nHSINKING, Mandhurlt, Nov. 8\n(CP).\u2014Manchoukuo's exports for\nthe month of September, 1934, totalled $35,175,000 and Imports totalled $51,114,200, making total foreign trade returns it $86,289,200,\naccording to official figures issued\nby the department of finance. The\ntotal trade of September compares\nunfavorably with that of August, a\ndecrease of $3,500,000, due to a decided decline in tht exports of soya\nbeans and soya bean products, being\nrecorded by the department.\nJapan continued to bold first\nplace in Manchoukuo's foreign trade\nby exporting $9,818,665 and importing $38,923,030 worth ot goods during September. For this same period China occupied second place-\nexporting $5,495,704 and importing\n$6,137,801.\nManchoukuo's Imports for September were headed by iron and\nsteel\u2014$5,557,887 worth\u2014and tecond\non the Ust came machinery and\ntools, totalling $4,316,516. Wheat\nflour, white and dyed cotton textiles, and cotton yarn occupied third,\nfourth, and fifth placet, respectively,\nB.C.TRYINGTREAT\nALL IN FAIRNESS\nNot Seeking to Codify* Industry But to Bar Unfair\nPractices\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CP)- The\nBritish Columbia government was\nnot seeking to codify industry, but\nwould bar unfair practices, Hon. G.\nS. Pearson, minister of labor, stated\ntoday in outlining the difficulties\nof fixing arbitrary minimum wages.\nHe was speaking before a service\nclub.\nRulings of the industrial relations\nboard concerning wages became statutory when gazetted, the minister\nexplained, and will be enforced by\nlaw. Firms that would not cooperate\nnow, might have to \"crawl\" later.\nBetween the two fires of labor\nand capital, the government was trying to deal justly with all. Labor\nwanted a flat minimum wage of 50\ncents an hour throughout. If that\nrate were set, \"half of the Industries of the province would go down;\nand the other half would also suffer.\".\"\nVancouver Sales\nMetal Markets\nNIW YORK, Nov. 8 (API-Copper quiet; electrolytic, spot and future, blue eagle, 9.00.\nTin firm; spot and nearby 51.40\nto 51.50; future 51.50 to 51.60.\nIron quiet, unchanged.\nLead steady; spot New York 3.60;\nEast St Louit 3.45.\nZinc dull; Eaat St Louis spot and\nfuturt 3.75.\nAluminum 19.00 to 22.00.\nAntimony, tpot 11.00.\nBar allver firm, 14 higher at S8V4.\nAt London\u2014doting. Copper, standard spot \u00a327 5a; future \u00a327 10s;\nelectrolytic, spot \u00a330 10s; tuture\n\u00a3\"'.\nTin, spot \u00a3221 2s Id; future \u00a3229\nII\nLead, spot \u00a3 10 5s; future \u00a3 10 10s.\nZinc, spot \u00a312 dt 6d; future \u00a312\n7s M.\nBtr silver firm, 14 higher tt 23\nHM.\nPIONEER GOLD\nUP AT COAST\nIs Exception as Most\nIssues Turn\nDownward\nVANCOUVER, NOV. 8 (OP).-Aupport wii licking on tbe Vancouver\nstock exchange today and loaaaa of\nfrom one to 6 cenu were general\ntn all sections. Pioneer Oold wa*\npractically tbe only exception and\ngained at 12.00, ln fair trading.\nBradlan and Cariboo Oold each\nloat 5. B, R, X, Nicola and Vldette\nwtre all off 3 and Dnlted Empire\nwaa down li etnt it 1314 ln light\ntrading. Rtno waa tha most active\nIssue and dosed unchangtd. Other\nsharea wera oft around a cent or\nleai.\nB.C. Nickel waa active and dropped 3 cenU to 81, Pend OrtlUt was\ndown 6 and Oolconda lost 4 cenu.\nBeiver Stiver md Noble Five each\ntiaed li cent.\nRoyallU sold at 15.26 and eloaed\nwith a net loea of 78 at 15.00.\nHome OU wu off 7 at 56 and\nCalgary asd Edmonton waa unchanged.\nTo Bring Shippers\nhto Court\nVERNON, B.C., Nov. 8 (CP).-In-\nformation will be laid against certain Okanagan valley fruit shippers\nfor infractions of regulations laid\ndown by the British Columbia Interior tret fruit board, O. W. Hambllng, stated today on behalf of th^l\nboard. ^\n\"We've tried to be lenient up to\nnow,\" he said, \"but there is a limit\nOn the contrary, some of the shippers believe there is no limit to the\nway in which they can deliberately\ndisregard the board's orden.\nChris Spencer Is\nVice-President of\nP. G. E. Railway\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 8 (CP).-Ohrlt\nSpencer of Vancouver today waa\neltcUd vice-president of tbt Pacific\nOreat Eastern railway at a directors\nmeeting here, succeeding the late\nW. J. Blake Wilson, who died earlier ln the year.\nHon. John Hart, minister ot flnanos, read a letter trom Premier\nT. D. Pattullo, president o( the\nrailroad board, suggesting tbat Mr.\nSpencer bt appolnUd ot tbe vice*\npresidency.\n\"For many yeara he haa given of\nhis time ind attention without\nemolument for the benefit of the\npubllo tarvlot,\" Mr. Pattullo said In\nsuggesting tbe appointment. He alao\npaid tribute to the service tendered\nby the lltt Mr. Wllaon.\nDominion Live Stock\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 8 (CP)- Receipts: Cattle 60, calves 100, hogs\n430. sheep 255.\nSteers, up to 1050 lbs, $4.\nSteers, over 1050 lbs, $4.\nHeifers $3.50.\nFed calves $5.50.\nCows $1.85.\nBulls $1.75.\nStoeker and feeder steers, $2.50.\nStock cows and heifers $1.75.\nVeal calves $5.\nHogs: Select bacon $1 per head\npremium, bacon $6.75, butchers $1\nper head dlscourlt, heavy $655, extra\nheavy $5.50, lights and feeders $6,\nsows No. 1 $5.50, sows No. 2 $4.75.\nThree-fourtht of the power now\nused throughout the world is developed frqm coil and pll.\nALBERTA 1\nTAX ILLEGAL?\nClaim Leases Subject\nto Renewal on the\nSame Basis\nCALGARY, Nov. t (CP)-Impo-\nsition of a higher royalty on government oil leases in the Turner\nvalley field may ba disputed on\nlegal grounds it waa Indicated today,\n^ttu^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n.he Alberta government I\t\ned recently the present royalty of 3\nper cent a barrel would be increased\nto 10 per cent January 1, 1885.\nAt a meeting of the Alberta Oil\nand Gas association last night Hon,\nHugh W. Allen, minister of lands\nanil mines, explained provision tor\nthe upward scaling of the royalty\nhad been provided for in 1920 by\norder-in-council when the natural\nresources were under federal Juria-\ndlction.\nA legal challenge to the lncreaaed\nroyalty may be oased, it wu ex-\nSlained by oil men, on the ground\nnt most of the leases were granted\nbetween 1910 and 1913, providing an\noption for renewal on the same\nterma at the end of 21 years. It haa\nbeen contended that a royalty provision enacted In 1920 could not override* the earlier agreements.\nTha Oil and Gu association members are preparing a protest to tha\nprovincial government, and the legal\nquestions may be dealt with when\nit Is presented at Edmonton.\nHerbert Greenfield, former premier and later agent-general for\nth.* province of Alberta ln London,\nwu elected president of tht association.\nTO INVESTIGATE\nNICOLA COMPANY\nBooks  of  Mining Company\nOrdered Seized by the\nAttorhey-general\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CP)-Opera-\ntlons of Nicola Mines Sc Metals. Ltd.,\nare being investigated under tha\nSecurity Frauds Prevention act, 11\nwu announced today from the British Columbia attorney-general's department. It is understood the company's books are under seizure for\nuse in the probe.\nJohn A. Russell, Vancouver lawyer, has been retained by the attorney-general to conduct the IB-*\nvestigatlon. The company hu properties near Kamloops, B.C., wlm\nhaad office in Vancouver.\nAnother investigation under tha\nact, Into the operations Of Wayside\nConsolidated Gold Mines, Ltd., haa\nbeen held up under injunction pro*\nceedings.\nBONDS QUIET\nNSW TORK, Nov. 8 (AP).\u2014Thi.\nbond marktt wm quiet and fatri|\niteady today ln a fractional range. ,\nThe foreign department waa duU.\nMoney\nBy TBB CANADUN FM\u00abf\nClosing exchange rttee:\nAt Montreal: Pound 4.88H; U \u25a0\ndollar 498 U-16: frano 6.48*.\nAt New York: Pound 6-J014! C**\nnadian dollar 1.02 7-16; frano 6JJ8H.\nAt Paris: Pound 76.05 ft; Oanadlaa\ndollar 15.58 fr; U 8 dollar 15.18% tr.\nin gold: Pound 19a 8d; Canadian\ndollar 60.88 centi; XJ B dollar 88-16\ncents.\nVANCOUVBB, Nov. 8 \u2014 Mining\nsharea aold on the Vancouver stock\nexchange   today:\nListed: Bradlan 700:' Beaver 8\n3900; Braiorne 369: B R Oon 13,500:\nB R X 13,000; Cariboo 430; Oold B\n1400; Mak Slccar 1000: Meridian\n2000; Morning 8 7300; Nicola 6805;\nPioneer 260; Prem B 2000; Prem o\n300: Reno 6600; Tsylor B 2900;\nWayside 5800.\nCurb: Atlln P 1000; Big Miss 300;\nB C Nickel 10.950; Can R 3600; Con-\niress 3500; Dalhouale 1000; Dentonia 13.460; Falrvlew 3900; Olacler\nCreek 6600; Oolconda 3000; Oold\nMountain 300; orange 300; Hediey A 2000; Herculei 30,600; Home\n3300; Koot B 2100; Mlnto 6500; Morton w 760; Noble Plve 8600; Pend O\n600; Pilot 1000: Porter I 3600: silversmith 1000: United B 300; Vldette\n3350: Waterloo 1700; Waverley 3000;\nVlklnt 3500.\nMANY NEW MARKETS\nFOR THE  DOMINION\npec\"'   87'i  67V4  66\nMay .. . 61*14  61*{  80\n58\n60\nJuly     62   63   61%  61%\nCash prlcu:\nWheat: No. i hsrd Sl'l: No. 1\nnor. 79%: No. 3 nor. 75>i: No. 3\nnor. 73H: No. 4 nor. 9711,: Nos. 5 and\n6 63H: feed 61',; No. 1 durum\n84%: No. 1 A. R. W. 73\"*: track\n78-v screenings S8 per tou.\nVICTORIA, Nov. 8 (CP.-Mar-\nkts for red cedar In specific sizes\nin Britain; for canned goods and\nacrap metal tn Denmark; for milk\ncured aalmon In Sweden; canned\nsalmon and paper in Holland; dried\nfruits and flourspar in Germany;\npaper and palnta ln Java; cement\nand heavy papera in Ecuador; Canadian honey in Scotland; seed potatoes ln Cuba; paints and lumber\nln Peru; newsprint In San Domingo;\nand for many other products are\nsaid to exist in recent trade advices\nfrom Ottawa received by the provincial information bureau.\nDURANGO GOLD\nMINES LIMITED\n(N. f, L.)\nFORMERLY KNOWN AS\nTHE HOWARD MINE\nLOCATED IN THE YMIR GOLD AREA\nNow Offering Sharea to the\nPublic at\n25c Per Share\nFor particulars write the Fiaeal Agents\nHallberg & Sykes Ltd.\n712 Standard Bank Bldg. Vancouver, B. C.\nor Apply to\nP. E. POULIN\nSTOCK and BOND BROKER\nWard St. Phono 70 Nelson, B. C.\n**^*_\n \u2022AOE TWELVE-\nCOLLY RIUM\nAn excellent eye wash!\n7-oz. bottle with cup\n*       75'\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nMORE ABOUT\nSUNDQUEST\n(Continued From Page Ont)\nJlrl, which resulted In the girl's\nttth list month.\nTht jury retired at 420 p.m.\nThe verdict  wat  returned  four\nhourt liter.\nImmedlitely tfttr tht Jury hid\nretired,   Carl    Schwartzenhauer,\nREX JARVIS\nElectrical Contractor and\nEngineer\nRepalra and Supplies\nFor Service Phone 844\n602 Josephine Street\nformer Orand Forks baker, it-\nlegtd to hivt idvlsed Mra. Sund-\nquttt to perform tht operation,\nwtnt on triil on a similar murdtr\nchirge. Hit caw wtl tdjourned\nuntil tomorrow tfter brief tvldenot htd bttn glvtn.\nN-5 INTENT TO KILL\nw. C. Kelley, crown proiecutor,\nln reviewing the charge against\nMrs. Sundquest, indicated that he\nwaa pressing tor a manslaughter\nconviction rather than one on the\nmurder charge aa laid.\nMr. Justice D. A. McDonald, in\nhis charge to the Jury, explained\nthat quite apparently there had been\nno Intent to kill, in the event that\nthe woman had actually performed\nthe operation In question, and he\nuked that this point be borne in\nmind.\nHis lordship commended Consta\nble J. W. Hooker ot the Grand Forks\nprovincial police detachment for\nthe way in which he had carried\nout his duties in connection with\nthe case.\nMrs. Sundquest, in giving evidence earlier in the day, denied\nthat she had performed the operation.\nA SAFE  PLACE\nA spring clothespin wired on the\nInside of the porch railing and an\nunderstanding with the paper carrier that that lt where the paper is\nto be put will keep the morning or\nevening paper in its place and not\nscattered all over the porch when\nthe housewife goes to tiring it in.\nMELBOURNE, (CP).\u2014House-to\nhouse \"share-hawking\" will be prohibited by an amendment to thc\nVictorian Slate Companies Act.\nFor Safer and\nBetter Winter\nDriving\nQUIT guessing at the amount of\nanti-freeie or tho kind of oil your\ncar needs for winter driving. The\nbest way to solve these and all\nothar problems about your car\nthis winter is to hava tho Nelson\nTransfer give it a wojkly tuning\nand check-up. And whop wo say\n\"Your Car needs This\", your car\nneeds just that and only that.\nBatteries, Greasing, Oil,\nOverhauling and\nRepairing\nNELSON\nTRANSFER\nCompany Limited\nPhone 3$\nWinter\nOils\njj_S ^V      A ktltel, mm. im-\nMiuIaN    -mr l2~-t\"el '. '.\nMUM IM,.. wlll\naat riiow backi..,\nQuilityMops I   75c lo $1.75\nUtthk*\nO-Cedar\nFAMILY\nmake your home shine tnd\nsparkle with radiant cleanliness.\nProtect, beautify and restore\nyour funiture, floors and woodwork with O-Cedar product!.\nEvery member of the O-Cedar\nfamily is just crammed with\nquality\u2014the quality thtt has\nmade O-Cedar famous with\nCanadian housewives from\nCoast-to-Coast.\nAOtlml......\ntolM. Smm-Dt . . .\nvelvety iaa Intrant\nWQfweffw Fof tenw*\n... and retry kind\n\u2022lbi*. WlHMlte\nvow tm look llkt\nFREE SAMPLE\nWould you Ilka free tamplis oi\nO-Ctdar products from timt to\nUmt? Send n.me and addreu to\nDipt. F.H.5, O-Ctdirof Giudt\nLtd., Toronto, Ontario.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nMORE ABOUT\nTHE CABINET\n(Contlnutd Prom Pige One)\nOn leaving Elysee palace Flindin\nlaid with \u2022 great show ot confidence\nthat the poltical truce created by\nDoumergue would continue.\n'The men I have gathered together will forget party differences\nfor one end\u2014to fight against misery\nand unemployment,\" uie new premier said.\nAmong the hold-overs was Herrlot, who became minister of state\nwithout portfolio after the youthful\nFlsndin agreed to drop the points\nof Doumergue's program that\nbrought his downfall.\nPETAIN HAS RETIRED\n\/The new premier, however, lost\nHenri Petain, Doumergue's minister\nof war, who gave the new ministry\nhis blessing, and Andrew Tardieu.\nvice-premier and minister without\nportfolio in tht preceding government whose unfriendliness toward\nFlandin caused him to refuse to\nJoin the government\nAlso among the holdovers was\nPierre Laval, who was offered the\npremiership earlier today but refused because he considered his\nwork as foreign minister too important.\nDespite the tenseness felt everywhere in Paris, Doumergue's fall\nbrought no serious disorders.\n60 ARRESTED\nSome 50 persons were arrested\nwhen thousands massed in front of\nthe opera to storm police lines,\nshouting \"Down with the deputies,\"\nbut mobile guards restored order.\nWhile most political leaders ex-\nSressed the greatest anxiety over\noumergue's departure, many members of parliament said privately he\nhad not entirely failed. In his defence, friends pointed out that when\nhe came to power from retirement\nFebruary 18, he found exactly 1,OOO.OOO francs in the treasury and 700,-\nOOQ.OOO to be paid that night He\narranged to borrow 800,000,000 francs\nfrom bankers within a few hours\nand saved the government's credit.\nIn contrast, his friends argued, is\nthe present state of the French\ntreasury: 2,800,000,000 franca in cash\non hand and bonds in the amount\nof severay billion franca refunded.\nTHI NILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. NOVIMIIR I. 1M4\nCOAST MAN IS\n!   BEATEN, ROBBED\n  s\nH\u00bbns Hensen in Hospital With\nKnife Wounds; Loses $50\nNOTICE!\nThe Boy's\nShop\nOPENING SOON\net 608 taker St.\nDirectly Opposite\nMtgfhtf'i Ltd.\nWatch for\nFarther\n-Announcements\nm\nVANCOUVER, Nov. f (CP) -\nHans Hansen, stabbed, beaten and\nrobbed of 180 in cash early today,\nla in a serious condition in the hospital while two men believed to\nhave attacked him are held for investigation at police headquarters.\nHansen was found lying ln a pool\nof blood in the doorway of a downtown cafe and. when rushed to hospital, examination disclosed he was\nsuffering from three knife wounds\non the right thigh, a dislocated\nshoulder and other injuries.\nThe Injured man reported he had\nvisited a club, where a fight is alleged to have taken place with- two\nother men. A short time later, police picked up two men In a rooming house. Glub attendants were reported to have separted the three\nmen and forced them outside. It Is\nbelieved, the fight was continued\noutside.\nMORE ABOUT\nMILL RIOTS\n(Continued From Page One)\nond outbreak of violence of the day.\nStrikers who were picketing the\nmills jeered workers not on strike\nas they left the mill at noon and at\nnight and rioting ensued.\n8EVERAL ARRESTS\nClashes which followed the end\nof the dap's work in the mill resulted in several arrests. Immediately those arrested were taken\nto the police station to be booked,\nthe strikers gathered about the\nbuilding, demanding the release of\ntheir fellows.\nIt was here that the most severe\nfighting ot the day occurred, when\npolice attempted to repulse the\ncrowd with clubs.\nHand-to-hand clashes followed the\nrioting,  which  continued  for  an\nhour in front of the police station.\nSUMMON MORE POLICE\nWhen it became apparent that the\nsituation seemed out of control of\nthe local police force, 25 patrolmen\nfrom the state police barracks at\nNorthampton and Monson ware\nsummoned, ahd later this detachment was increased to 35 men.\nThe rioting was so severe at one\npoint that offlclala ot the mill\nplanned to aak the governor for\nnational guardsmen to control the\nsituation. It was decided later, however, such a move would not be necessary.     .\nWorkers ln the mills havt been on\nstrike for several months, and previously there had been several outbreaks of violence. Only about hilf\nof the mill's 1100 employees ara slid\nto be on strike for higher wages.\nORIVINQ  PILES\nThe public works department hu\nbeen driving piles at Procter, so that\nthe ferry boat may be safely anchored to the wharf.\n\"When You Think of Groceries\u2014Think of the Star\"\nBrown Sugar .4 lbi. ISc\nMAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE  Lb. 39*\nM.J.B. COFFEE\u2014There is none better Lb. tH~tp\nROYAL CITY CUT BEANS\u20142s 2 tins 25?\n| Saanich Clams tail tin ljc\nC. & B. VEGETABLE, CHICKEN OR TOMATO SOUP\u2014\n2 tins IW\nGARDEN PEAS\u20142s  2 tins 25f\nGREEN ASPARAGUS\u2014Malkin's   Tin 23^\n| Fry1! Cocoa i-u tin 13c |\nLIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE\u2014lOVz-oz. tin .. 2 for 15*\nROYAL CITY PORK & BEANS\u2014Tall tins .. 2 for 15\u00ab.\nCHICKEN HADDIE\u2014U \u2022'.......   Tin 19*\nMALKO RED SALMON\u2014'\/y ..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Tin 15(.\n| Putted Wheat.. pkt. 10c |\nMALKJN'S BEST HONEY   2-lb. tin 35*\n4 BARS LUX TOILET SOAP AND 1 PKT. RINSO 25*\nOLD DUTCH CLEANSER 2 tins 19*\nJOHNSON'S WAX OR GLO COAT Tin 69*\nEureka Bleach 1 bomes 2Sc |\nOLD COUNTRY PALM TOFFEE      Lb. 35*\nFRY'S CHOCOLATE MAPLE BUDS .......  Lb. 25*\nENO'S FRUIT SALTS   Bottle 79?\nFruits and Vegetables\nFRESH LOCAL SPINACH    3 Ibs. 19<.\n| Sweet Potatoes 3 lbs. ISc |\nCARROTS AND BEETS   Bunch   5*\nCELERY ....  Bunch 10?|lETTUCE, head .... 10*\n]\u00abL STAR GROCERY **Z\nFret Delivery to All Parts ot thl City\nPHONE YOUR ORDERS\nFREIGHT PREPAID ON ALL ORDERS OVER $10.00\nMARKETING ACT\nWORKING ML\nW. E. Haskins Says\nImproving   It\nGradually\nW. E. Haskins, who is a member\not the temporary marketing board'\nin charge ot the fruit control, as\nprovided under the Natural .Products Marketing act, was ln Nelson\nThursday, passing through to, the\nOkanagan from Cretton, where he\nhis been in connection with the\nfruit trucking.\nMr. Haskins reports the act to be\nworking as well as could be reasonably expected, and ttiat although it\nIt not perfect and does not pretend\nto be perfect, it is gradually aligning various opposing factors and lt\ncuring waknesses where found.\nHe stated that the board expected\nmore than mere observance of the\nlaw, but it expected active cooperation. He added that if lt could not\nget cooperation it had the means\nof compelling it as the board had\ndrastic powers. But they preferred\nto h-.ve it work without resorting\nto drastic measures.\nPRINCIPLES LONO\nIN EFFECT\nThe act merely put into practice\ndemocratic principle that had been\nin effect for years, namely the will\nof the majority ruling. If the fruit\nmajority was big enough,to say that\nit wanted a thing done a certain\nway then it would give the board\nthat power. The only other people\nInterested in the act besides the\ngrowers, were the consumers, and\nthe board was willing to have them\nrepresented. But apples, declared\nMr. Haskins. were a luxury, and\npeople could do without .them.\nTherefore, if the price were raised\ntoo high, this would in itself, serve\nas the consumers' check. The board\nwould not cost the consumer a cent\nAlthough the prices prevailing\nnow for apples, said Mr. Haskins,\nwere higher than last year they were\nnot paying the grower.\nOnce the majority gave the power\nto the board, the board wat In the\nsame position aa \u2022 magistrate, Uquor\ncommissioner or any Other governing body of almllar nature. The\nmajority, however, had to be obtained before the board could be\neffective.\nMORE ABOUT\nUS. ELECTION\n(Continued Pram Ptge Ont)\nB-minatlng the votw tbat wtnt for\nthe minor pirtiee, tha Democrat! had\nbetter than a 8,000,000 vote edge\norer tht Republicans. \u25a0**\u25a0\n30 OF 49 STATES DEMOCRATIC\nThirty of the ta autea gave tht\nDemocrate practically complete command of aU major elective offices\u2014\nsenate, houae and governorship,\n-eighteen atatet turned over all theat\nofloea to tbe Democrats, in 13\nothera, the Republicans managed to\nhold only ont, or tt tht moat tvo,\not theae offices, sgalnst tbt new\ndeal buffeting!.\nBacked by thla demonstration of\npopularity, Prealdent Rooaevtlt today\nwent Immediately at the work of\nshaping Into lasting figures thoat\nportions of hla plan which hitherto\nhava betn but rough designs ln\nplastic mud.\nIn his first efforts, ht turned to\n\/social legislation \u2014 his avowed attempt to make the United Btatea\na better place tor tht average Amtrictn, to see that no person shall\nstarve. Ht talked with newly elected\nProgressive Senator Robert Lafollette\nof Wisconsin over a luncheon table.\nThey talked aa the bead of ona party\nto that of another.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. t (CP). -\n\"Ottawa can and won't; we would\nand can't, sums up the situation,\"\ndeclared Attorney General Gordon\nSloan of British Columbls, laying at\nthe door of the federal government\nthe blame for the inability of tbe\nprovincial government to carry out\nIts plans for \"work and wages.\"\nMr. Sloan was addressing the Vancouver Center liberal association,\nlast night.\n\"The program of the Liberal party,\nby which it hoped to start public\nworks in this province and provide\nneeded work, was predicated upon\nthe use of national credit for a\nmajor program of public works,\"\nMr. Sloan aaid.\n'\"Work and wagea' was no idle\nobjective and still Is not. It is the\nsincere desire of the Pattullo government We have not been able to\ncarry out this part of our program\nbecause the prime minister will not\naccept as sound the Pattullo plan\nfor financing with national credit.\"\nToo Lot* to Classify\nFOR BALK\u2014TWO HOUSES. S DOTS,\nSHOO,   terms  IS0O   down.   HO   t\nmonth. H. Trow, 0th St., Falrvlew.\n(4830)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nCOMEDY\u2014\"Crleket an the Hearth\".\nSt. Paul's Players. Nov. tsto. (4808)\nHear Da. mdlcott, 8 pm. tonight\nln St. Paul'e HaU. Admission Free.\n(4814)\nTroubadour Orcheatra playing fot\ndanoa tonight, peppy Mualc.  (WIS)\nLarge  turn.   home,   centrally   looated. APPly Mrs. F. Wllaon. Ph. 330U\nl47W)\nOpening aoon, Clastic and Ballet\nDancing. valUa Dance Studio.\n(47M)\nTO REMOVE THE PRINTINO\n\u25a0\nThera are n mtny nice uses fin-\nnew flour bags but almoat all of\nthem require the removal flrat of\nthe printing ton them. Lay the bag\non the ttblt and cover all the printing with a thin layer of lard. Roll\nup and let stand for three days.\nThen unroll and wash ln boiling\nwater. The lard trill loosen the print\nand it will wash out or boll out\nreadily.\nSome ptople an good Juat because they're afraid to bt bad.\nO. C. P. oourt whist Strathcona\nhottl Saturday evenlnt, 9 pm.\n\u2022harp. Admission 36c. ,,4834)\nServe the finest Qoalltj* bread in\nour home. Phone 258. CHOQUETTE\nIRO-I. Bakers. (4171)\nGood n-et Beatty Whltecap Electric Washer. Bargain. Phone 408Y.\n(4818)\nLADIES' HOME JOURNAL ANU\nCOLLIERS AT NELSON NEWS DEPOT. (4785)\nDaughters of Scotia meeta tonight.\nItO. Installation of officers. Social\nevening. (4S07)\nA thouldtrettt or wristlet for the\ndance. We have every oolor. Nelson Flower Sbpppe. (4811)\nI. O. D. I. Kokanee Chapter nest\nmeeting at home Of Mrs. Chas. Kelman, 1034 Ward St., Tues., Nov. IStli,\nat 8 p.m. (4031)\nPROFESSIONAL WRESTLING Saturday, 8:30, NELSON OPERA HOUSE.\nTickets on sale today. Bush's clisr\nStore. (4833)\nPoultry show Market Bldg., Vernon\nSt. Entrlee cloee Sit., Nov. 10th. A.\nWtllach, Box 887. Nelaon. (4788)\n ; *.!   I.\nTwo deliveries dally\u2014Juat when\nthe milk la really freah. Phone\n434X3. Platers -Orade A Dairy.\nI.O.D.G. MEMBERS\nPleaat meet at Cenotaph for Arm-\ntatlc Service Sunday, at 10.80 aa.\n(4833)\nYOUR FAVORITES, MT. A.\nPagln, Mr. A. Stringer, soloists. SUNDAY EVENING Armistice concert, In\nCtpltOl Theatre, (481(1\nSpecial meeting Women't aaaoclatlon First Praabyttrtan Church. Saturday, S pm, Important business.\n(481S)\nWREBTL1NO \u2014 Two heavyweight\nbenta. Opera Bodie Siturdiy nltht.\n8:80. Admission (LOO, 7SC-50C\n(4801)\nMlt. Webb Foster, Nelaon't out*\nstanding violinist will, (by requett)\ncontribute a tolo on Sunday evening at Capitol theatre:        (4(33)\nTHIS IS THE NIGHT, ENJOY\nYOURSELF. HOSPITAL D A N C K.\nDancing \u00bb:S0. Good music by Troub-\nador Orchestra. Supper. Tickets 75c\neich, on silt Nelson Flower hboppe.\n(4\u00bb08)\nTHE CANADUN LEGION ANNUAL\nDINNER WILL BE HELD MONDAY\nNIGHT 8:30 WITH AN EXCELLENT\nPROGRAM FOLLOWED BY A\nDANCE. TICKETS (1.00 EACH. GET\nTHEM  EARLY.\u2014PHONE  848.   (4S00)\nI.O.D.E. ARMISTICE CONCERT\nSunday, 8 p.m. Ctpitol Theatre.\nArtists\u2014Miss MARY SARVlb, soprano\nholder\/of I. O. D, E. Cup 1934 festival. MISS RUTH CRAUFURD, contralto, -MISS LOLKA HORSTEAD.\nMeiso soprano. (4S1S)\nFADED\nIf sonny's suits or daughter's\nromp-era are perfectly* good but\nbadly faded from the sun, they may\nbe bleached* white with a white\ndye and then re-dipped to any shade\ndesired. It will add months ot wear\nto the 'little garments.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nSECOND ANNUAL\nDoll and Wagon\nPrize. Contest\nSTARTS  SATURDAY\nNominations optn now,\nStl tht  18  lovely  prizes* In\nour window. Aik for details.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\n9\u00bbe\n<&mm*!m*$Xm~tmmmKm*tSI^^\nBuy a Poppy\nSaturday, November 10\nAuspices Nelson Branch, B.E.S.L. 51\n\"Shall all our sense of gratefulness be\nlost?\n\"Shall we, who  'scaped the dreadful\nHolocaust,\n\"Be niggardly In response to give\n\"To those who cannot work\u2014yet must\nlive?\"\nREMEMBER!!\nAil   monies   rtcelved   from   this   Tag   Dsy   srs\nussd for tht aid of disabled and\nntsdy veterans.\nAll poppies sold sre made exclusively by disabled\nVeterans  at   their  Vet   Craft  shops' ih  Victoria.\nSCHOOL CHILDREN\nREQUIRE GOOD EYESICHT\nThe basis of all understanding it\nthe ability to see clearly, at\n63% of all mental impressions\ncome through the eye. Poor\nmarks received by school chll-\n. dren often have been traced\ndirectly to defective vision.\nTests show that over 20% of\nall school children have defective vision. Is your child among\nthat group?\nOnly a thorough eye examination can tell the true condition\nof your child's eyes.\n\u2022  |. A. C. LAUCHTON\nSuite ttt, Medical  Arte Bldg.\n, Optometrist - - Optlciin\nRaincoats\nTrench Coats\nSlickers\nDefy the wet weather In\none of these costs. English Cbardine raincoats,,\nsilk lined. Trench costs'\nwith oil silk interlining\nand slickers with double\",\nshoulders.\nRAINCOATS\n?9.00 ta 125.00\nTRENCH COATS\n|7.75 ta 115.00\nSLICKERS\n?7.75\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nBeciuse so much ot the potat\ncrop is lost ln Europe through la\nproper storage, many potatoes Jj\nmtde Into \u2022 powder called \"potfl\nflakes.\"\n' Krank'i\nLATHER SHAVINC CRIAl\nSaves You Money I\nSmythe's Pharm\u00bbe]\nPHONE 1\nNovember Sale\nCoats\nof\nIndividually styled \u2014 lining\nand fUrs guaranteed the smart |\nstyles of the 1934 Fall season\nat t discount of\n25$\nMillinery\nThe balance of our Fall Mil\nlinery at a discount of\nPhone 151\nLook for the Neon Sign\ntf-1:1 JiJill\nToday and Saturday\nHE'S BUSTED LOOSE\nAGAIN\u2014to fill your\nheart with Laughter!\n1!**!#*<-3)&tiSmm*$&SSImXSj\u00bbtt^^\nSHIRLEY\nTEMPLE\nIn\n\"Whafs to  Do'\nSilly Symphony\n\"Las  Treis\nCochoni\"\nFrench Version of\n\"Thrtt Llttlt Pigs\"\nand^\u2014A  FULL  REEL OF THE\nDionne QUINTUPLETS\n\"THE AMAZING PHENOMENON OF CREATION I\n______________________ ___________\n\t\n\t\n_______\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1934_11_09","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404732","@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":"1934-11-09 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1934-11-09 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\/1.0404732"}