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C. TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 31, 1929\nNO. 219\nRERAR, FORKE PROMOTED\nCrerar Becomes New\nMinister Railways;\nForke Is Senator\nireman and Engineer\nVorn Kamloops Killed\nIS SCENE OF\nActs in Forke's\nPlace at Ottawa\nN. R. Freight Train Is\nhrown Into Fraser River\nby Rock Slide\nAIN LINE TRAFFIC\n1ALTED BY TRAGEDY\nngrine and Three Cars Go\nDown Embankment\nInto the River\nVANCOUVER.  Dec.  80.  \u2014\nI. Ross, engftie driver, and\nH. Reese,  bralteman,  were\nlied when a Canadian Nation-\nrailway  freight  train  was\n,%-cked today by a rock slide\nBoston Bar, east of here.\nie  train   was   enroute   from\nIj-piloops to Vancouver.     The\nigine1 rolled . down  the bank\n' the Fraser river, carrying\nith   it   Engineer   Ross   and\nrakeman Reese.   Medical aid\nas rushed from Lytton, but\n>th men were dead when the\nictors arrived.\nThe bodies of the two men\nere reeo>et*ed from the wreck-\nre and taken to Kamloops,\nhere they resided.\nThe company expected to\navs the track cle#r by mid-\npht for regular traffic.\nHON. -TIURI.ES STEWART\nMinister of the Interior, who was\nyesterday appointed acting minister of\nImmigration ln Ottawa. He ls also\nacting minister of agriculture pending\nthe recovery or Hon. W. R. Mother,\nwell, who ls  Ul.\nPOUCE AVERT\nNEAR TRAGEDY\nCrerar Goes to Cabinet\nForke Becomes Senator\nCanadian    and    American\nOfficials by Quick Work\nSave Lives\nPOISON'LADEN CAKE\nTRACED BY A CHECK\nArsenate     Contained-    in\nFlour From Which Nine\nCakes Baked\nIGHT DEAD\nWHEN STORM\nfflTC BRITAIN\nfeck-End Death Toll Grows;\nFrance and Germany\nAlso Suffer\nCANUCK AIR\nPILOTS FACE\nCOLD WEATHER\nThermometer   Heading   of   50\nBelow Keeps Search Pilots\nAground\nU>]\n\u2022NDOK.   Dec.   SO\u2014At   least   eight\nathl were caused by the southwest\ne  which swept  over  Great Britain\nthe sea coaat pver the week end\n.ore lt blew itself out late today.\n4ost of the casualties were on land\nWe the wind blew down trees tnd\niples   and   caused   the   collapse   of\nhouses.   The fatalities reported\nin   England    and   France,    but\nwal persons were Injured in cities\nnorthwestern   Germany. - \u00bb\nmember of the crew of the steam-\ni Atlantic, en route to Alexandria,\nkilled when a huge wave hurtled\nagainst  a  bulwark  and   another\n_ i  had  both   legs  broken.\nThis    evening-    conditions   returned\n'ly   to   normal   except   for   flood\nten ln the Thames valley.   Channel\npplng    and   the    imperial   airways\ntimed services.\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska, Dec. 20\u2014Pilot\nMatt Niemenen, who will guide the\n_qund of Canadian airmen on their\nflight of more than 400 miles from\nhere to Bering strait coast from where\nthey will sercb. for tho missing flyers.\nCarl Ben Eielson and Earl Borland,\narrived here late today.\nOn the ground here the thermometer\nremained at 00 below zero ail day.\nThe Canadians under Chief Pilot\nPat Reid did not take their three\nFairchild planes up for tests today and\nlf the extreme cold spell continues\nthey will probably postpone the projected flight to Nome, tomorrow.\nNiemenen, who wlll fly one of the\nthree planes, replaces Pilot William\nBroatch, who left yesterday for Vancouver, British Columbia. Pilots Clifford S. Wartman and Reld will fly\nthe other two plan*\"- and each of tho\ntliree will  carry \"    . .chanlc.\nIRERAR TO GET\nDOWN TO WORK\nIN THREE WEEKS\nOTTAWA,   Dec.   30\u2014Hon.   T.   A,\nCrerar,  who  was  today  sworn   ln\nminister of railways and canals,\n11 take over his duties In about\nhree weeks, he said tonight. Mr.\nJreror Intends spending New Year's\nr  In  Montreal,  and  expects   to\n.ve on Friday or Saturday next\n\u25a0 the west.\nOne Killed, Nine\nInjured, Crash\nNear Hamilton\nHAMILTON, Ont., Dec: 29.\u2014Marlon\nWilson, 15, of Burlington Beach, was\nkilled Saturday and nine other persons hurt, two of them seriously, In\nthe worst highway accident to occur\non the Hamilton Beach road this year.\nDorothy Gripps, Burlington Beach, and\nMrs. Edward Klbinka, Burlington, are\nthe two seriously injured.\nThe crash occurred when a large\nfreight truck, driven by rlngle Robson.\nToronto, ploughed into the rear of a\nHamilton bus line motor coach. Tho\nlatter machine was proceeding toward,\nHamilton. % The freight truck ripped\naway a portion of the bus, throwing\nto the road passelgers who were sitting ln the rear end seats, including\nthe young victim.\nRobson, who was slightly Injured,\nwas placed under arrest on a charge of\nmanslaughter.\nWASHINGTON, Dec. 30\u2014How Canadian and American officials ln Washington and Quebec City traced a cake,\nneuviiy charged with arsenic, and prob-\naoiy   saved   the   Uvea   of   a  Canadian\nfamily,  averting   a  Christmas  tragcciy,\n_ud  revealed  tooay   by  V.  ri.   Lmnoar.\naasi\u00bbt_iu. ciiiei ox  tne lood ana arug I\nuuiiu_isii.ru uon  litre       A   neat  bit  of I\naevetfctVH W<*K \u00b0V inspector u. P. Larries, oi tne  united owiues department i\no_   af_r.tiiui.u_e,   a  teiepnode   can   irom\niu- vutot ui __.tu-cn.ua .vuuioney at the j\ntiinau.ua   legation   to   autnorities   u;\nWutucc city, aim  tne ueatny case con-\ntuu-uitf liour, niM-tiveri-iHiy mixed with\nan iu_vctic_ue, tyas ou its way back to j\nWLisiuiit.uj.i   in   un   unopened   pacic-uge\n-.t-tamg    a    unnacinas  seal,   and .tne'\nwtuinug  stamp   oi   tae   Canadian  gov- j\nI eminent\u2014\"jr'OiSOn\".\n*   'ine fcafce ffts one of nine home bak-\\\netl in Virginia.   Tne woman wno made J\ntne cake, nnd  accidentally used fiour i\nMNftUuuf a strong   aamuture  of  cal- ,\n_ium   arsenate,   is   said   to   be   ln   u\nseiiou\u00a3 uOnmuon  as  a. result of eat- '\niiig ner own twite,    sne soid moat  of ,\n.ne canes a wteit or so beiore Unrlst- -\nnuts,   and   one   of   tnem   was   sampled\n\u00bbiui   serious   consequence.     A   dentist '\n*a salu to nave curried a piece of cake\n\u00abo tue department of agriculture, where\n\u2022ma unaiysui uitjciosed tne arsenic content,    ua, uecembw  19, the cake was\nput into tne maids of Inspector Lar-\n_icj_, and within' a short time all but\nune   of  tbe caxes   had   been   rounded\nup.\nThe ninth cake, the baker said,- wns '\n-om to a young woman, she did not\nicno-u house to house canvasser. Fortunately she remembered the cake\nhad been paid for by check. The bank\nwhere the check was cashed traced it.\nOver Sunday, December 23, the signer\nof the check was found and a long\ndistance call was imposslbble put,\nthrought to Quebec to the family to\nwhom the cake had been sent. About\nnoon the legation here called the\nQuebec authorities and two hours\nlater a call back, announcing the dangerous Christmas present had been\nput  in  the mall  for  Washington.        i\nOfficials settled back to enjoy ..\nMerry Christmas, satisfied that what\nmight have been a very disastrous da.-,\nwas  largely saved.\nMon.  t.  a.  (rEr.ui senator forke\nWINNIPEG. Dtc. 30.~4Appomtment of Hon. T. A. Crerar, as minister ol\nrailways and canal* for Canada, nnd the elevation to the senate of Hon. Robert\nForke, minister at Immigration centres interest in the constituency of Brandon.\nMr. Crerar will seek election to the Dominion housp in the constituency\nwhich Mr. Forke Has represented for many years.\nForecast for s^me time, Mr. Crerar's appointment has set the political pot\nboiling In Brandon; and constituency leaders of both the Liberal and Conservative parties today were preparing to consider what action to take. There was\nno announcement from leaders of either party, however, but the possibility\nof the new minister of railways being accorded an action has been mooted. It\nls understood that a Liberal convention will be called within lhe next few days,\nbut Conservative party plans are unknown tonight.\nWhen Mr. Forke was appointed to the dominion cabinet In 192ti, as minister of immigration,    he was elected by acclamation.\nI\nReeves-McDonald and the\nWest Kootenay Power Firm\nDebate Use of Pend Oreille\nVICTORIA, Dec ?0.\u2014Another of British Columbia's\ngreat 'va*er powers, the Pend Ore'lle river, in the Kootenay district, close to the I'nlted States houndarv, will be\nthe subi-ic. of competition before the narliameirt buildings\non Fridav. The Keeves-McDonalf* Mining company will ask\nthe board to permit it to use water from thc Pend Oreille\nfor mminK'fcnrpof-es, under plans not yet fully outlined\nhere. The West Kootenay Power & Light company, it is\nunderstood, will object to the application. This concern is\nplanning on the Pend Oreille one of the biggest power developments in the province.\nPBENbERGAST IS\nAPPOINTED CHIEF\nJUSTICE, MANITOBA\nOTTAWA. Dr.. m\u2014It was an-\nntanni-f<l today that Hon. 4. IL\nPrrndrrgiist. of thf MUttOM \"Olirl\no( aiaptMlK, has heen appoliitr.l\nchief  Jiutia-e  In   Munltnbn.\nCanada Exports\nMore Manufactured\nGoods Than Ever\nDOCTOR McKAY\nSTANDS TRIP\nCOAST, WELL\nGot Some Sleep on Way; Nurse\non  Train;   Finds  Lots\nof Friends\nYOUTH'S ACTION\nAVERTS TRAGEDY\nEDMONTON YARDS\nEDMONTON, Dec. ao\u2014A giant\nCanadian Pacific railway yard\nengine went on the rampage\nhere today and but for quick\nwork on the part of an employe,\none of the wont railway accidents ln the history of the city\nmight have occurred.\nCoaling the engine in the C.\nP. R. shops on the south side of\nthe city, lt was not realized by\nthe men responsible for getting\nthe engine \"hot\" that the throttle was half open. As a result\nwhen they left the great hulk\nof steel, the steam pressure increased and the engine started\nfrom the yartl_L ran through\nthe south side streets of the city\nand was only brought to a halt,\n200 feet from the low level\nbridge by a youtH, Enos Bur-\nnarcl. employe of the C. P. R..\nwho chased lt until he was able\nto catch the swaying cab and\nget  control.\nC. P. R. officials are investigating.\nTiD in Station\nSouth Slocan Is\nRobbed, Weekend\nAIN CORNORATION\nIS  BEADY  TO  MOVE\nrABHINQTON, Dm. 30\u2014The l_ni_rs>\nlonal Oraln corporation with head-\nu-ters ln Chicago ls now read to\net the physical facilities and the\nwnnel necessary to handle the\n0 wheat  crop.\nftUlam O. Kellogg, a former Min-\npolls grain merchant will assume\noe of general manager of the cor-\natlon Wednesda.\n_____  WEATHER\nbrecast Nelson and vicinity\u2014Partly\niidy stationary or lower temperatures.\nMin. Max\n30\n46\n48\n46\n34\n37\n24*\n48\n60\n60\n47\n46\n36\n40\n40\n4a\nHi\n36\naa\nVICTORIA, Dec. 30\u2014During 1929 Victoria shipped 68,402,460 feet of lumber\nto Eastern Canada, United States,\nAustralia, New South Wales, China,\nJapan, West Indies, England, South\nAfrica and Egypt. Import duty, excise taxes and excise duty collected\nby the deparment of national revenue\namounted   to   \u26663,042,414.12.\nSometime on the week-end a prowler\nforced the wicket window in t**\nrailway station at south Slocan and\nstripped the till of the few dollars\nchange that had been left there.\nFirst intimation of the theft was\nhad early yesterday morning when the\nagent entered the office to find that\nthe wicket had been forced. Entrance\nU the building had been gained\nthrough the doors of the waiting room\nwhich are always open.\nTORONTO, Dec. 30-Frahk Nighbor.\npoke check king of the National Hockey league, ls not coming to Toronto,\naccording to a wire received from\nConny Smythe, manager of the Toronto\nMaple Leafs, the Toronto Star says\ntoday.\nOTTAWA. Dec. 30.\u2014Canada is exporting more manufacured and semimanufactured goods now than ever\nbefdre, At the same time, largely be-\nca\\:se of the stoppage in thc .selling\nof wheat, there has been a. marked\ndecrease in the total volume of exports\nof raw materials. Annual reviews\nsettling forth the trade situation have\nbeen prepared by Hon. James Malcolm,\nminister of trade and commerce and\nforwarded to the Canadian newspapers.\nFor the first ten months of the present year, Canada's total exports were\n\u25a0$1,004,835,233, In corresponding period of 1938. exports totalled $1,070.-\n909,345. The decrease in grain and\nflour exports are almost twice as\nmuch as the total decrease of all exports The increase of manufactured\nlargely offset the falling off In the\ngrain.\n-(-\nWord was received in the city by wire\nyeBterday that Dr. D. W. McKay, stifc\nferlng Injuries following an automobile\naccident, was doing well on his trip\nto the coast. He arrived in Vancouver last night to enter Vancouver\ngeneral hospital. He is suffering a\ncompound fracture of thc left leg below  the knee.\nThe wire stated that the doctor rs*\ncelved kind attention from many passengers on the train among whom was\na professional nurse who took him In\ncharge. He got some sleep on the\ntrain.\nCOAST HOLD-UP\nMEN GET THREE\nYEARS, LASHES\nTen Lashes Each Handed Out\nto Two Vancouver Bank\nRobbers\nVANCOUVER, Dec 30.\u2014Declaring that,\nthe crime of robbery was becoming\ntoo common. Magistrate Shaw, in\npolice court today, sentenced two men\nto serve three years in the penitentiary,   with   ten   lashes   each.\nThe prisoners, Prank Burlow, alios\nMalcolm Boyd, and Oeorge Paucett,\npleaded  guilty  to holding  up     banks.\nFaucett was charged with holding\nup a branch of the Bank of Montreal December 17, but did not secure\nany money, being captured within a\nfew minutes afte_' he had left the\npremises.\nBurlow held up a branch of the Dominion bank December 24, escaping\nwith approximately $1500, but wa_\ncaptured and the money recovered\nwithin an hour after the holdup\n... 39\nleouver   -.-\t\n... 43\n.. 38\nMr-Mile\t\n._ 31\nM> Rupert   -\t\n- 34\nIpi\n...4\u00ab\u00ab\n_. 44\nttie   _ _.\ntland   ..._..,._ _\t\n.. 38\ni Francisco _. -\t\n... 40\ntttcton    _\t\n... 80\n... 32\nand  Fork*  \t\n80\ndo  _\t\n._ 38\n... 33\n\u25a0f\n... 18\nmnton    _\t\n... 16\n... 38\nAppelle  \t\n... 38\nUllpeg    _...._\t\n... 30\n<^twewW cm\nB, C* Has Support of the\nWestern Provinces in     ;\nFreight Rates Appeal\nCONTINUE PRESENT\nNEWSPRINT PRICE\nFOR NEXT SIX MONTHS\nCharge Seduction\nDismissed in Court\nHeld at Rossland\nWhen E. G. Matthew, counsel for\nthe defense, moved a non-suit the\nchant against Nick Maloff, East Trail\nresident, of seduction was dismissed\nin county court at Rossland yesterday.\nThe case was heard by Judge W. A.\nNlsbet   of   Nelson.\nR. C. Clegg of Rossland acted us\ncrown prosecutor and called as witnesses. Nick Konken and Mrs, Konken,\nparents of the plaintiff. Cyril Semenoft,\nDr. E. E. Topllff, May Konken. Mr.\nMatthew   did   not   call   any   witnesses.\nFive Instantly\nKilled ih Plane\nCrash, Texas\nAMARILLO. Texas, Dec. 30\u2014Five persons were killed late today in an airplane crash at tho Hill-rest Country\nclub here.\nThe dead:\nLieutenant Robert H. Oray, manager\nof the Amarillo branch of the Texas\nAir Transport company,\nMrs. Robert Oray.\nR. L. Allison.\nRobert  Moore.\nC. M.  Dillon.\nThe plane had been taking up passengers at the Country club all afternoon. After circling over the field for\na short time, the pilot started to make\na landing. About 200 feet from the\nearth, the plane went Into a spin,\nbelieved to have been caused by some\nfault in the tall of the machine. All\n: were  killed  Instantly.\nMOTHERWELL IS\nSOME    BETTER\nOTTAWA. Dec. 30\u2014Hon. W. R. Motherwell, minister of agriculture, who\nls 111 with pneumonia, continued to\nimprove today. Attending physicians\nexpressed themselves well pleased with\nthe progress Mr. Motherwell is making.\n<*%'\nVICTORIA, Dec. 30.\u2014Final details of\nBritish Columbia's freight rate appeal\nto the Canadian privy council on\nJanuary 16 were mapped out here today at a conference between the cabinet and Leon J. -Ladner, K, C., government  rate counsel.\nBritish Columbia wlll go before the\nCanadian government, sitting as the\nprivy oouncil, fully supported in all\nits requests by the government of Alberta, lt was announred. Saskatchewan\nwill support relief for British Columbia by the removal of tbe mountain\ndifferentian, provided that the privy\ncouncil also orders relief for Saskatchewan la thi terminal rates, wblcb\nare  the chief  issue  in  that  province.\nManitoba, while not supportllng Brlt-\nsh Columbia's demands generally, will\nback its petition for a drastic cut\nin rates on fruit moving from here\nto the prairies, to make them equal\nto the rates on eastern fruits moving\nThe hearing set for January 16 In\ninto the prairie markets,\na rehearing of the case previously\npresented to the railway commission.\nBritish Columbia wlll ask the privy\ncouncil to revise entirely the rate\nstructure set up by the railway board,\nto wipe out the mountain differential, to cut fruit rates, to the eastern\nlevel, snd to reduce domestic grain\nand flour rate*.\nNEW YORK, Dec. 30.\u2014W. O. Cliand-\nler. chairman of the paper committee\nof the American Newspaper Publishers\nassociation, today announced that thn\nCanadian Paper &\u25a0 Power compiny\nand the Prince Brothers company are\nnotifying their customers that the\n1929 price for newsprint will' be continued during the first six months\nof 1930, without the previous thire\nyear   contract   requirements.\nSUGGEST GIGANTIC\nEXHIBITION GROUND\nON BURNABY LAKE\nVICTORIA. Dec. 30.\u2014Detailed plans\nfor a gigantic exhibition ground of\n1400 acres around Burnaby lake, to\nform the site of western Canada's\ngreatest fair, were laid before the\ncabinet here today by a delegation\nrHresentlng the Burnaby and New\nWestminster Exhibition association. The\ncabinet was asked to settle the argiu\nment between Vancouver and New\nWestminster over the site of a Joint\nBritish Columbia exhibition by creating\nan entirely new fair ground at Burnaby lake,\nYear Just Closing Has\nBrought Peace River\nCountry Before Public\n-\nStewart Appointed Acting Minister of\nImmigration\n\u2022\t\nWILL READJUST\nOTHER PORTFOLIOS\nPremier Announces\nChanges Shortly in\nthe Civil Service\nOTTAWA, Dec. .{^-Important announcements made by Premier\nMackenzie King tonight were as\nfollows:\nMon. T. A. crerar has ben sworn\nIn us Minister Of iau\u00bb.aj_ tutd\ncanals.\nhun. Robert Forke has been appointed tu tue M>iuie. ue resigns   as   minister   of   iiani-gratlon\ninta   \u00ab\u25a0i-mhiiz.it i    and   aa   .mumer\n1<* bruiKiiiii in tue mouse of\ncommons.\nlum. Charles Stewurt, minister\nof tne Interior, has been appointed\n.hUiijC milliliter of tiuU-igiMifU. He\nwlU also be acting numtter of\nagriculture, during tne uim^s ur\nHon.  \\v, K,  luotaern-rii.\n'mere wlll be a further readjustment of portiollos so as to\nmaintain the pusiiion of wueiiec\nIn this rfgiiid. Tn.s ulli be iiutue\nwKhout   undue   aeiay.\nCivil sutwcE\nArrangements are under way for\nchiiiigrs In the civil service m_ as\ntu   bring   M-.uiu.ieu  services  ot   tbe\nsuiu-e i.\u00bb\u00bbr;.tter wsetner.   .so uetiu-\niif itnui.ui.ivm-.i_t. cuii ue iiimuc ss\nto just  Hnat is inu'udeu at p_v\u00bbeiit\nWiiLa nave been issuea ibr'tne tnree\nbj-titttnuus   in  jdiitiui.   u-utbefcu   oaay\nand  _i_a__uon,    m uuat\u00ab*u utiay and\nDMgot,   nomination   a^j   nas  xwen  *tt\nior   jau_ry   _w,   and   eiecnon   day   for\n_\u25a0 .-unuii'-.       in    i-f.tiuuuii     __oiii_u_..ion_i\nntii    laa.c    pi.ice    ou    wediu-'stiuy,    ireo-\nluary   b,   arm   potung   on   weunesuay,\n. .rui-uary   12.\nt>_Ul'U-v__   A.iwLIN    _...   ..\u201e,_...\u201e.   .._..\u201e.\nctiuuOiiy oi swearing in Hon. T. A.\nurerar an minister ot nu_\u00abvays and\n_aua_s, took p_au\u00a9 beiore Hon. p. A.\n\u25a0 _n. un. iHin.Hn.--.--isi.or. in mc aosenco\nh use txceweuty ins governor-general\n___.s _-.e_i_._K. neient ac me cc.euiony\n\u00bb\u00ab\u2022 tne prune nnu_s_cr, aoo. ttooert\n. once, Hon. cnanes Dunning, non.\n\u25a0-.aA.anea Stewart, Hon. Peter Heenan,\n.-iu nun. ci,_,_..l um, rumve. rs.i. viie\noiiciusiou o_ uie ceremony. Mr. Crerar\nj ..wcuuipamed tne o_i*r memuers into\ntu*   privy   Loun.ii   cilamt-t-r   iuf   a   _L.W\n. u_j_uu.s   beiore   tne   cabinet   meeting\ni ..uicn had ueen suspended, broite up.\nAs *tr. uremr was aireauy  a minister\nI uf the privy council, lt was only nec-\ntt_sary tor mm to be sworn into tb*\nportlolto.    Tnis took only a few min-\n| utes.     When   council   rose,   Mr-   King\nreturned   to   his   oifice   where   newspaper men were awaiting for him, accompanied  by Mr. Forke.\nSENATOK   FOHKE\n\"Let me Introduce to you Senator\nForke,\" said the premier.\n1 Mr. Forke smiled as congratulation*\nwr\u00a9 offered *h_m and Mr. King thanked\nhim for his help, while a member of\nthe cabinet.\nI    The prime minister then outlined to\nI newspaper men what had happened.\nThe appointment of Mr. Crerar, said\nPremier King, increased the number\nof portfolios going to western Canada.\nand diminished thoee in the .east. He\nwished to be clearly understood thAo\nthere would be a further readjustment,\nln order that the position of Quebec\nln the matter of portfolios should bo\nmaintained.\nThe careers of Mr. Crerw aud M_\\\nForke have covered much the same\nground. Both are pioneers, although\ngained recognizance In the public lifo\nof Manitoba and the Dominion an\nleaders ln the farm movement\u2014Mr,\nCrerar was leader of the progressiva\nparty and upon his retirement in 1932,\nthe new senator for Manitoba assumed\nthe mantle of leadership. Both knew\nthe toll and hardship of pioneer farm\nlife\u2014Mr. Forke gaining success as an\nagriculturist ln the district of Pipestone, where he home_iteaded upon\nhis arrival from the mother country,\nmore than two score yeara ago, and\nMr. Crerar in Russell, where he camo\nas a child from Ontario, more than\n60 years ago.\nToday, Mr. Crerar is president of tho\nUnited Oraln Growers, one of tho Dominion's greatest cooperative farmers'\nselling associations. Cabinet life will\nnot be new to him. Under Sir Robert\nBoiden. he was minister of agriculture\nln tlie Union government, a position,\nwhich he held from 1917 to-1919. Two\nyears later he was re-elected to the\nI house of commons, leading the Progressive party untll his resignation In\n1922, wheu he was succeeded by Mr,\nForke.\nThe year that Is closing probably\ndid more to clarify the opinions of\nthe ordinary Canadian on the present\nfertility and future prospects of - the\ngreat Peace River district than any of\nits predecessors. Authoritative statements that wheat in abundance is\nbeing grown, not only ln the southern\npart of the district, but at Fort Vermillion, north of 58\u2014and the 58 also\npasses through the middle of Hudson's\nBay\u2014that a golf course ls being laid\nout. at Orande Prairie, that motor cars\nIn their hundreds, cars of sturdy make,\nare being driven by farmers over fairly\ngood roads and that flower gardens\nexist ln profusion, tended to drive\naway the opinion that anything north\nof Edmonton was barren, sterile and\ncold.\nThese   facts,   of   course,   were   well\nknown for years ln the west, but eastern Canada, generally, was not well\nInformed. Two separate agencies gave\nthe district Its natlon-wldo publicity\nduring 1929. The first was the midsummer trip taken by Premier J. E.\nBrownlee, of Alberta; Dr. Wallace, president of the University of Alberta, and\nJohn Imrle, of the Edmonton Journal. Travelling by rail, motor car and\nair. these men went far north of the\nrail head at Peace River landing. The\ninvestigated the power possibilities\nat Hudson's Hope, where current\n\"equal to that produced at Niagara\"\nts available Looked over the coal deposits and spruce stands and upon\ntheir return, Premier Brownlee mad*\nt!_e report.\nCABINET MEETINGS\nOVER UNTIL SPRING;\nNO DATE OF OPENING\nOTTAWA, IMC SO\u2014The date for\nthr openm. or mrUament wlll ha-\ngltm out \"h earlj u poMlhle In\nthe new year.\" This wae stated by\nPremier Mua-emle King tonight.\nThere will be no further meetings\nof cabinet until next spring.\nCORINTHIANS   WIN\nLONDON, Dec.\noer  club,  uw  Corlnt]\nfeated the English\naloaborough club I\n*ur aoc-\ndo*\nMUl.\n 'HE NFI_.(W DAILY NEWS    TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 31, 1929\nRADIO MAY OPEN\nGARAGE DOORS\nWABHINQTOM. Dec. JO.-Racii.. research pranilin to relieve the aaito-\nmobtts ttriver of the occasional awkward Bace-slt. of getting out to open\nhla garage door when be wants to put\nhla car awav ai night.\nTbe commerce department from its\nBerne \u00ab_srtt__rlai)_ > o-f ice.. is responsible tor toteahadovlng tbe possibility\nof   this   novel   use   of   electtic   waves.\na\\a the new Invention la described,\nthe driver of s car approaching the\ngarage will press a button and thc sp-\nparatua on bis machine will emit waves\nreaching a radio aerial affurd io\nthe garage top. and these will atart a\nmotor which automatically will ihroi\nopen   the doors.\n.tllOPT   BYLAWS.   THAU,\nTRAIL, B. c. Dec. so\u2014Nelson, Pine\nand Birch avenues and Victoria street\nlocal improvement bylaws were finally\nadopted by the city council tonight\n-,-. -.-. f. :: ;: _ _ \u00ab :-. :t it:: u ::X:; __\u201e \u2022,;.:\u25a0 ,\nH\nUME\nr.F.O. BENWELL;  Prop.\nThe Premier Hotel of the\nInterior\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0',\nFIRST NEWSPRINT\nPLANT IN NOVA\nSCOTIA OPERATES\nPremier Rhodes Sets Machinery\n.Motion;   Is   $14,000,000\nPlant\nFive Die in This Crash\nX K._ XX li _ \u00bb ll ii ii \u201e ii tt a i, ii i; a :, \u201e ,:,: _ - :. \u201e ,. i,;: _\u25a0\u201e _ ...,. :1., \u201e \u201e \u201e ,, _\u25a0\u201e \u00bb.\u201e 11,';\nHOME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. A. Prank, Mr gate; J. B. Lawler. Nelson; B. C.\nand Mrs. Sbeeler. c. Anderson. Pat Nison, Orey Creek; J. Miller, Toronto;\nand Panj Praaer, Procter: Miss Georgia ' J. p. Murphy, Klmberley; Mrs. S.\nOomm. Sew Denver;  a.  8mlth.  New-1 Pearce, Deer Psrk.\nWLemtte mama >m\u00bbimiwi,,iw,,,,,,,m,,,w,,,,,i -_\u00bb\u00ab m\nWhere the Gue-st is K_n&\nTheS\navoy\nuwis'i  -jro whist  som\n*   BOOM*   WTTB   PEIVATi\nMTn oa bhowxm\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nem.ea.mxsm.am.atxtm.amnm.msm.>__,__.__.__.__.,___,__,,__.,_,\nSAVOY\u2014M. McPherson, KaBtrom; W.\nP. Llngle. Rossland; W. Avis, Perrys;\nH J. McShelly. Nelson: W   M. Thomp-\nlaaaaaaaaaaaaaa^aaaaaai\nLIVERPOOL. N S-. Dec. 30.--.From.\n\u2022sulphite mill aad grinder room tbe\n.sulphite mill and grinder rpom tbe\nproduct of a fallen forest travelled recently through giant felt presses to\nemerge as the first newsprint produced\nin Nova Scotia. Seventeen months\nIn the malting, The Mrsey Paper company's plant at the village of Brooklyn,\nQueen's county, officially began its\noutput  at  the  touch  of  a  switch.\nPremier E. N. Rhodes of Nova Scotia\nand Colonel c. H. L. Jonett. general\nmanager of the company, were present\nas the series of processing machine.-\nswung into action\u2014marking, Clipping,\ngrinding and digesting Nova scoti.m\nwood, and turning out the flninhe:i\nproduct at the source of the raw\nmaterial.\nHlli.N   IN   JINK.   1928\nActual work on tbe Mersey plant\nbegan In June, 1928. Today its maclnnes have a dally capacity of 250\ntons of newsprint, representing tht\n. refining of 375 cords of wood, and a\nproduction value that places the newsprint industry in the province second\nonly to coal nnd steel in manufacturing.\nBuilt on solid rock at tide-water\nthe mill stands at the mouth of the\ninrgest river in the province. Two\nmillion bricks and 44,500 tons o:\nstructural steel have gone into ttte\nconstruction of Its several units.\nThirteen million gallons of fresh water\ndaily, available nearby, are required\nfor its processes. Water wlll be the\nchief means of transport utilized by\nthc plant, both in bringing wood to\ntbe machines and carrying away newsprint to the presses. The company's\nsteamer, the \"Markland,\" specially constructed lor the freighting of paper,\nhas a capacity of 4100 tons.\nHHI.K    IS    IHUWM.    I Oltt 1.\nThe driving force behind the mill is\nthe rlvea ^ar the outlet of which it\nstands. Electrical energy ls supplied\nby the three developments of The\nNova Scotia Power commission on the\nMersey. The harnessed river picks up\nthe wood and sends it through the\nbarker room, the chipper, where four\nfoot lengths are reduced to chips, puts\nit through the digester acid of the\nsulphite mill or the grindstones of tho\ngrinder room, and on through various\nson, Procter; W. Birdsong,* Spokane:\nE. M. Cadden, Eric Atwood. Grand\nPorks; L. Cadden, Kaslo.\nleraT view 6_'the-twisted wreckage which lies\nin a oqrner oi Boiling Field. Washington, D. C, otters\nmute evidence of the stark Yuletide tragedy in which\nfive men, one of them on his way to see bis new-born\nbaby, met almost Instant death- The men were; Representative William K. Kaynor of Springfield, Mass.;\nStanley B. Lowe, Kaynor's secretary; Arthur A. McGill.\n\u25a0'. iriend of Representative Kaynor, Oapt. Hairy A. Dinger,\narms pilot, who had pnoied a numoer\" of congressmen,\nand Private Vladimir Kuwma of the army air corps. Lowe,\neven more Jubilant than, the re4t, waa homeward bound\nto \"see his convalescent wife and their aew-born child,\npreparatory to their returning to Washington for a\nquiet Christmas here. The plane, a large tri-motor^d\nPokker. landed close to the spot where Lieut. Cuddihy\nof the United States navy recently crashed to his death.\nMove Houses Out Of j\nTownWhenltl\nBroke in Wye\nCHEYENNB, Wye. Dec. 80\u2014Hon\nhouse, Manville, Wyo., has been (\nof its  structures  at  the rat*\nor three a week, and thus far |\nhas been able to do anything i\nProperty   owners   of   Manville\nbeen moving their houses  out\ncorporate  city  Limits since\nsued by the town were default)\nThe mayor of Manville appi\nthe   state   attorney-general,\nplied   that  there was  nothing\nWyoming law ta prevent a man ;\nhis    house.     He   suggested,\nthat the town cm pass an i\nprohibiting  moving of  houses\nthe municipality.\nManville, once a thrlvng little '\nslumped, and extensive municipal\nprovements for which th* bond-sl\nissued went into disuse. A large j\nbuilt there recently was moved\na   hundred   miles   to   another\nThere now are between 100 ancj\nhouses left ln Manville, many of '\nunoccupied, and the population i\ntown is barely 300.   During its\ndays the papulation was more thai]\nGBEEN   SHOES\nSteam Heated Throughout\n1\ns\nC?{ew Grand\n1\nS\n\u202219 Vernon Street, Nelson. B.O.\n\u25a0al _n_ cold Water end Telephone Id >U  noomt\n\u25a0oca. as w-Mkli nt* cn ti ttie morn*\nL..\nF. I. EAF.tK, Prop.\nNEW ORAND\u2014Mrs. J, Nyman, Slocan ' City:    J.   Muir.   Kimberley;    Mr,   and\nI Mrs. J. Hurst and son. Pernle.\nQueen's Hotel\nUB    CIMEI    Of   CONVEBMO\nwta. .ai eold water In e-rerr room\nBtwa Heated\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nQUEENS\u2014 B. J. Hayes, Nelson; J.\nDearm, Sllverton; Mr. and Mrs. H.\nAnderson, N. Patterson, Winnipeg; D.\nMcSwaln, T. Anderson, Arrow Head:\nJohn Hall. Burton: A. Hzarth, Vancouver.\nThe Standard Cafe\nBl) Baker Street, Nelaon, B.O.\n\u2022WEN   DAT   ANU    NIOHT\nII ltt to Bitt Special I,oncl\u00bb  **..\u00bb\u00bb\u2022\nl:\u00bb to S p. ro. rapper \u00bb\u00abo\nPHONB   IS*\nMadden Hotel\nT.  MADDEN,  Prop.\n\u2022team Heated Rooms by the Day\nWeek  or Month\nfrerr consideration ihown to gueat,\nI _*.  Baker  and   Wa-d   Sta.   Nelson\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n705 Vernon et Phone 5871\na    WASS1CK\nfifty    Booms    of    Solid    Comfort\nHeadquarters for Logger- and Miner*\nnoUGLAC\n\"* HOTEL   **\nRooms with Baths\nB.   la.   AND   A   OBOUTAGE.   Prop,\nuearo   lleate* Hot   and   Cole\nThroughout Water\n\u2022oi \u00abu\u00ab      Phone 2\u00abl      TraU   B   <\nMADDEN\u2014C.  F.   Carlson.   J.   Sinlgh,\nSouth Slocan! W. Hang, Calgary; R. E. I\nMcCain, Spokane. .   -\nThe Royal CaSe\nCLASSIC    RESTAURANT\nBeflnement and Delicacy Preval'\nOPEN    DAY    AND   NIOHT\nSpecial Dinner 11:30 to 2:30 UK\ntopper 8:30 to 8   ..._ _ _...35i\nWe apecliUze In Chop Suey and Noodle.\nPhone   182\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTrail, B.C.\nA.   t.   I.EVE-JftCB.  Prop\nThere Is\nNo Doubt\nThat\nOur Popular Prices\non\nMen's aud Boys'\nWear\nCommand the\nAttention of\nCareful Buyers\nproceases to the two paper mills, eaclt\nwtth a 16-hour capacity of 126 tons\nof paper.\nThe Mersey Paper company, limited,\nwas incorporated on July 31, 1928. I.\nW. Killam, who wns chiefly interested\nin Ita construction, has been Intimately\nconected with newsprint for practically\nall his life. As a boy he sold papers\nin the streets at Yarmouth, where he\nwas born, and today among other interests he numbers ownership of a\nCanadian daily newspaper,\nINVESTMENT\nTtl*. total Investment in mill construction, water supply, dredging, construction of special steamer and aU\nother construction of the Mersey Paper\noompany is $14,000,000. This figure\ndoes not Include the money Invested\nby the province of Nova Scotia in\nI hydro-developments on the Mersey\n| river.\nj CONSTRUCTION    EMPLOYMENT\n1    An   average  of  700  men   have been\n! on full time employment for a period\n1 of    18   months    in   constructing    the\n\u25a0 Mersey mill. In that time they were\nI paid approximately $1,000,000 in wages.\n\u25a0 OPERATION   EMPLOYMENT\nApproximately 300 men will be\nsteadily employed in the new mill, re-\n| celving annually ln wages approximately $800,000. In addition to these\nthere will be many hundreds employed\nin   the  woods,   either  directly   by   the\n1 company  or   by   pulpwood   contractors.\nI OITPIT\nTlie  Mersey  Paper mill  will  produce\nI 250  tons of  newsprint every 24  hour*.\nI or approximately 75,000 tons per year.\nThe production for one day would\ncover a highway 40 feet wide from\nYarmouth to Sidney! In 48 hours tho\nMersey mil could supply a pt.per\ncarpet, 0 feet wide, to reach from\nHalifax to Vancouver! The production\nfor one year would provide eno.vjh\nEiiper for a girdle 144 feet wide around\nthe earth!\nPI IP WOOD\nThe annual expenditure of the Mcr-\n.sey Paper company for pulpwood will\nbe more than $1,000,000. This sum\nwill be expended entirely in Nova\nScotia. \u2022\nCOAL\nThe   paper   mill   will   use   annually\n50.000  tons of  Nova   Scotia  coal.\nLIMESTONE\nThe paper mill'' will consume annually 3500 tons of limestone, which\nwill be quarried on the company's -own\ndevelopment at Efts' River, Lunenburg   county.\nKtl.PiUR\nThe pulp department of the Mercey\nmill will consume annually 2500 tons\nof  sulphur.\n1)1. TAME   1 KO   MMARKET\nTlie Me:,;cy mill is only 480 miles by\ndirect water <&ute from New Yorlt city.\n\u2014the   world's   best   newsprint   market.\nGIRLS MISS SHIP,\nBUT WHY FRET?\nSAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 30.\u2014Missing\na ship these days Is not such a disturbing matter, with airplanes handy.\nThe Misses Peggy O'Nell and Sally\nAndrews had promised friends they\nwould be aboard the Panama Mail\nliner Columbia when it docked\u2014and\nthey  kept   the  promise.\nThey flew up from Los Aangele*.\nwhere they had overstayed shore leave,\nengaged a harbor speedboat, boarded\nthe incoming ship In the stream and\ntumbled into the arms of friends at\nthe pier as if nothing had occurred\nto break the tranquil journey by\nwater.\nPrinted chiffon in all hte street\nshades are now protruding from one's\npurse or cuff for shopping, lunching\nor any daytime wear.\nColored shoes show; a preference\ngreen ones and vine shades ovei\nother shades. Purpl^ \"brightT\nand  blues  are  not bo  popular, |\nGLITTERING    YOKES\nSome   chiffon   evening   gown*\nunusual  decolletage  treatment  *cl\ned by the use of diamante and be\nyokes that swing like boleros.\nBLACK   MODS\nBlack is the undisputed favorltd\ndressy daytime frocks,   Ona has a\nchenille bow ln front and Is toppe.\na black hatter's blush, hat faced\npink.\nLEARNING RUNS\nSECOND TO\nir\nDES MOINES, Dec. 30.\u2014\"I\" is more\nimportant than sheer learning as a\nstepping-stone to financial and professional success in the business and\nexecutive   world.\n\"If you are seeking -success ln business or industry, tt pays to be Impressive, agreeable and attrativc and net\nto be too intellectual,\" is the way Prof.\nO. C. Brandenburg of Purdue University phrased it, speaking before members of tlie American Association for\nthe Advancement of Science in annual\n-session here. He added scholarship,\nlike virtue, must be its own reward.\nHe was held to these conclusions\nby analysis of the records of 100 Purdue engineering students during the\nfirst  five  years after  graduation.\nEVENING   CAPE\nMink fa.shions a new evening cape\nthat Is very voluminous, has a hug*\nrolling collar *ind ts the new short\nlength.   It is lined with golden velvet,\nSKATING   OUTFITS\nBrown tweed, flecked with burnt\norange, and burnt orange jersey fashion a stunning skating outfit with\nshort coulette shirt, fitted short Jacket,\nand tuck-in blouse of Jersey.\nf\/OfWfffrt\nTHEY REST\u00abi\/_.\nSAME FOUNDATION\nWHEN CopUin Vancouver was rrulsinj the\nPacific Coaat. .. when the French Rctolii-\ntlon was netting attention . . . eomethlnii\ndifferent happened to business in landon City.\nA Stock Exchange was organized.\nAt the start, the institution met cr'y when\noccasion warranted. Bnt as business pnifressed\nand the growth of Joint stock companies increased\nthe market for securities, the Exchange grew in\nimportance.\nFrom ti-.ie to time changes were made which\nincreased the efficiency of the eichange. Today a\nwell-nift'; perfect system has been evolved. The\nVanou! ir Stock Exchange has the full benefit of\nmore tl. m ISO years experience of the London\nStock !vchange . . . principles of stock exchange\ntrading which are in force today In London, Paris,\nNew Ynrk, Montreal, Vancouver.\nThey govern the election of members \u2022 . .the\noperation of a Clearing House, the trading rules on\nthe \"Floor,\" the machinery of offering and bidding\nfor storks, the liability of members to the Exchange\n. , . and tho control the Exchange exercises over\nthose members. ' .\nCompared with great stock exchanges of world\naentrcs, the operation of the Vancouver Stock\nKxchanje is smJll In site . . . but equally great in\nprotection to ttie investor. A charter, passed and\nassented to by the Provincial Government 25th\nApril. 1907, governs its operations. The principles\nof this Charter are identical with those of other\nExchanges.\nlhe foundat inns of the Vancouver Stock Exchange,\nlike those of London and New York, rest on public\naonfidence aid goodwill. The Exchange serves as a\nchannel for the supply and demand of stocks and\nas a means of interesting capital in industrial\nde**elopment.\n\u25a0Q\npiSUu-'MiiwHk\nParis\n\u2022*   5**\nIIAs mdtcttfstnietit li published by N.trbtrs oi the Vmantscr Stock iWiMfie in order to\ninformation  concerning thc iunclion,  of * .Stock  Exctwhgc tnd the  Bmsn-.-ss  of\n&i;ying and AcZ\/i-ig Securities.\nTHE  GUMPS-TARGET PRACTICE\nCanada Play\nLaggard's Role,\nNationalizat\nYE*-    THERE I.A DlFFePENCE-\n%ME HAS CHANGED-\nAnd VNWAT an \\te\\Pr\\QnBtAZNY -\n-iHfc DOESN'T  BELItVE IN KEEPING\nUP WITH THE TlNtES,-   -1WE VTAYS\nAWEA.& OP THEIA-\nYOU tAN   OESCPISe  N&R\n\u25a0PERFECTLY-   WITH   p|V\/\u00a3 LITTLE\nLETTERS. OF ThE\nVMfc HOW   IT SEEMi THAT WAY\naneao    in the distance - '\nisee a rah of hopeand &un&h\/n\na rift in the c-lquds-\n^nd That your face istnat\nLiCjhT that  BRIGHTENS UP TNE\nC.HA.E* AWA.Y   THE  CLOuDS\nAND Pi-Li  f-Ay  WORLD   -\na     VMiYh    YH&   5,-JNJHINE OF-\n\"\"     a  VOU ft\nrfStS  ShMLg\nAM\nll Citr N\\y Bow And AR^Qw\nand do >\\h atvr-\n. \/v\\AV NOT B\u00a3 ^OCH A\nGood marksman -\n$oy the sufcEsr wav ro\npierce a woiaan's* HEAfcr-\nI 5* TO T.VKE AINv   \\MNIlE\nIW V\nTORONTO. Ont., Dec. 30.\u2014Cana*\nplaying a laggard's role in regard\nintf-rnntional thonght oa the a\\Lt\nof tfic nationalization of married\nmen, Mrs. W. R. Lang,. pointed,\nat the annual coriventibo of\nUnited   Farm   Women   of   Ontario\n'woman    witthout    a    oountry\"\nliterally  true of  the Canadian m\u00ab\nwoman   married   1 o   an   American\ni_rn   living   in  the   United   State*,\n:;n_.\n'By Canadian law ahe accepts\nmarriage the nationality of her !\nband, and by American law she\nnot become a citizen of that cou\nuntil she too}; the oath of alleglf\nCanada was falling down on thl$\not intern it ional ' legislation ai _u<\nby cmeent thought of the sufi\nMrs bang believed. All through\nBritish Empire no woman hid\nright to retain her own natiO-l\nunless she was divorced or a w\u00ab\non the other hand, in the XSi\nStates, the malrried. woman\nkeep    htr 'naUonaJlty   aXter   marf\nAccordingly these men we_\u00bb\noughly examined\u2014no half wav m\nurce- and careful and exact ii\nwae given ea<!h employee as t_(\ncare othls body. food, reet an\u00a3.\nereise.\n THB NELSON DAILY NEWS   TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 31, 1929 r\nPts&yiuex*l\nGREAT BRITAIN\nAPATHETIC TO\nMARKET, CANADA\nSAffet John board Of Trade Of-\nficial Writes  to  London;\nSays U. S. Benefits\n, LONDON, Dec. 30.\u2014The apathy or\nGreat Britain towards Its Canadian\nfliarket haa \"beyond all argument, resulted ln a moet dire economic leakage\nfor the empire,\" says P. MAclure\nSclanders, commissioner of the Saint\nJohn, N. B\u201e Board of Trade, in a\nletter to A. E. Wildey, publicity officer of the Port of London authority,\nmade  public  here.\nDeclaring that if the British people\nw_mt the Canadian market they mu.t.\ngo after it and be prepared to pay\nthe price, Mr Sclanders says the lack\nof personal touch between Oreat Britain and Canada has enabled the\nUnited States to secure a large share\not Canada's business.\nTHE   LETTER -   '\nThe letter follows:\n\"Thanks for your favor of the 1st;\n\u2014land I quite agree that ao far as\nthe great Port of London concerned.\np*ople on this side probably know less\nof lt than they do of Glasgow and\nLiverpool Perhaps we do not have\nenough sailings to and from here\narid London Perhaps the shipping\ninterests of London have not fully\nawakened to the Importance\u2014the evergrowing importance \u2014 of Canada's\nocean traffic . At any rate, according\nto my own experience. I would say\nthat the impression ls correct that\ntoo little is known of the Port of\nLondon n tins side.\n\"Of course, people everywhere are\nmost interested ln things that directly\ntouch them. For instance our people\nhere think most of ls a line of steamships operating regularly from the\nPort of Saint John. Such steamers\nconstitute, as lt were, the thread that\nNew Year's\nResolution\nTo Make Good Use of\nthe DYER and CLEANER in Keeping a Smart\nAppearance.\nH. K. FOOT\ni\nHig-h Class Dyers and\nCleaners\nSurvivors of Crash\nTrail News of the Day Kimberley to\nPlayatTrsJ\nTRAIL. B. C., Dec. 30 - A quiet and\npretty wedding was solmruaed at St\nAndrews church taturday evening at\nS:20 when Wlnnifred Aileen. daughter\nOf Mr. and Mrs. O Sewell at Vancouver, was united in marriage to\nLeonard Oordon Hornett of Trail, eon\nof Mr. and Mrs. L. Hornett of Vancouver. Rev. N. D B, Larmonth performed the ceremony. The bride was\ndressed In a becoming costume of blue\nflat crepe in novelty print and wore\ncorespondlng hat and shoe* She wore\na corsage bouquet of ophella roses and\nmaiden hair fern. W. A. Curran and\nM. R. Gumming signed the register.\n\u2022 \u2022  a\nMlas E. Haynes. who taught school\nIn Trail a few years ago, is visiting\nMrs. Celeste Mitchell, Riverside drive.\nMiss Haynes will return to her home\nin Revelstoke early this week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMiss Mary J. Wilson, who has been\nvisiting with her brother-in-law and\nslater, Mr. and Mrs. w. Barchard.\nHanna Bench, returned to her home\nin Cranbrook   Saturday.\nFriday Nicfat\nbtrltfr\n\u00b0s\nand\n*-\u00bb\u2022T_V\nTRAIL,   B.   C,    Dk.    31\u2014*Kln___rt\u00abfr\nMalor    bu-mball    temm    mill    Invi\nTrail   Prltfir   night   to   play   tbe\nol   an  Eut-WMt   Kootenay   borne\nborne _>__.    A ticket selling\nfinance  the venture  was  launched   bf\ntbe Trail Basketball club tonight.\nKlmberles- Is reported tb_ Tear to\nhare a snappy and well organled team,\nand It Is generally conceded that till\nvisitors wlll glee TraU a real rae*.\nA year ago TraU defeated rm*_sl1l\u00bb '\n35-24 ln a Blaylock Challenje raiBM.\nA   girls'   game   will   open   rrtday's\ncard   at   7  o'clock.\nTRAIL INDORSES\nRESOLUTION ON\nTOWN PLANNING\nThe photo here shows the survivors of\nthe Furness-Bermuda liner Fori Victoria,  as they crowded happily on the\nrails cf the pilot boat Sandy' Hook as\nthe cutter brought them safely into the\ncoast-guard pier on Staten Island, N.Y.\nThe pilot was one of the first of the\nrescue fleet to reach the sinking lfner,\nwhich was* rammed by the liner Algonquin off Sandy Hook, New York harbor,\nin a fog, and sunk.\nstrings out little \"bead to other beads\nelsewhere.\nHADING   POKTS   AWAKEN\nto the value of $719,443,513. During the same period Canada's Imports\nfrom the United Kingdom were merely\nparticularly during the past few \u00bb\u00ab\u00bb.M\u00bb.M1 For more than onepart\nyears, leading ports tbraugh the World J. r \u2122r lmp0rt8\u201ei,r0\" ^L \"\"'\"_\nseem to have awakened in a very thor- I statf*s   tov\u00bb   exc\u00abd\u00ab1   WO.OOO.OOO.   A\nmaterial   proportion   of   the   commod-\nBut,\"t_ my MMctttU*_.i_ton. I 'tlM   \"\"\"\"S,^ by   ,?MeMJSSrm.^\nimports   could    be.   undoubtedly,   the\nBritish   preference   tariff   which   Canada allows you. it ls a positive Indictment  that   the   people    of  the    Old\ntheir\nough sense t o the value of good pub\nUclty. But, tn my respectful opinion\nsuch publicity must be followed up\nby the personal touch which, ln turn,\nmust Involve some practical proposition attractive to the other fellow.    1\nwould   M71harthe\"P-r7\"of'\"i_ndon   *\"\"**\"\u25a0   *l*,_*Sf,    \u21223, \"'\nmercial  and  industrial  experience,  per-\nmight find lt profitable to have a\nthoroughly experienced representative\nspend six months on this side, meeting  the  right people  and getting  his   ECONOMICAL LKAKAQB\nrn.li   all   this   business\ni United States.\nto   go   to   the\nfinger closely upon he pul_e of the\nwhole situation. There has been tattoo little of this personal touch between the Old Country and Canada. As\na result the United States seems to\nhave no difficulty In securing a lar\u00bbe\nshare of Canada's business.\n\"Por   instance,   for   the   fiscal   year\nending   31   March,   1928,   Canada   1m-\n\"Old Country apathy toward its\nCanadian market has beyond all argument, resulted In a most dire economic   leakage  for  the   empire.\n'When  your  merchants or manufac-\neentattves were to cover the country\nIn two or three weeks at the most\nand to do it Just as economically as\nit could be possibly done. That sort\nof thing wlll not do. No man can\nhopefully cover a country almost as\nbig as Europe\u2014especially a sparcely\npopulated country, with long distance t\nbetween its populous centres\u2014and do\nit properly in a week or two, and\nwithout spending pretty generously.\nHowever, at the most, the visits of such\nrepresentatives are like those of gngtla\n\u2014few  and  far  between,\n\"If Great Britain had paid a little\nattention to her other less important\nforeign markets as she has done In\nthe case of Canada, she certainly would\nnot have been the Oreat Britain that\nwe  know     today.\n\"If your people want this market,\nthey must go after it; and they mim\nbe pr__>ared to pay the price. Such u\nported   from  the   United   States   goods   instructions   received   by   such   repre\nturers ana their representatives heie. I price would prove a wonderful imest\nthey rarely send the right type ot ment\u2014and the present movement Ii\nman who can Impress the right people.; probably more propitious than any ii\nMostly,  It would  seem as though  the; the   past.\"\njiiWJi\nStorms Delay\nRepair Cables\nOver Atlantic\nSSffli\nHOBOE'H KING\nLeon\nRalph    Smythe   has   returned   from;    TRAIL.   B.   C,   Dec.   30.\u2014Resolution\nChristina   Uke,   where   he  spent   the i of  North  Vancouver,   urging  the  Df\u00bb*\nChristmas holidays with hts mother.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nArthur Caldlcott of Vancouver is\nvisiting with his parents, Mr. and Mrs,\nH.   C.   Caldlcott.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Cathleen Cairns, who has been\nvisiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nThomaa Cairns, leaves Wednesday for\nFort Steele, where she la teaching\nschool.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJack, Buchanan, who waa operated\non in the Trall-Tadanac hospital for\nmastoids last week, ls reported to be\nmaking   favorable  progress.\nvlncial government to appoint a town*\nplanning commission to assist British\nColumbia municipalities, wss indorsed\nby the Tral city council tonight.\nA resolution from the elty of Vancouver urging the Dominion .govern*\nrnent to call a conference of Dominion,\nprovincial and municipal government\nrepresentatives to discuss means of alleviating serious unemployment coalitions, was also Indorsed.\nMiss Kathleen McLeod returned to\nNelson last night where she ls training\nlor a nurse after spending a short\nvisit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nD. McLeod, Topping street.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nMiss Ruth Slater, who Is attending\nbusiness college in Nelson, is visiting\nner parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Slater.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nTRAIL   HOUSES   AND   LOTS,     Insurance, Notary.   J. D. Anderson, Trail.\n(11073)\nO. Keefer visited In Nelson over the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Estelle  Morrlsh,  slater of Fred\nMorrlsh of Trail, who has teen visiting\nher mother In Rossland, returned Saturday to her home In Loe Angeles.\ne   a - ~\nMr. and Mrs. E. Bowkett of South\nSlocan have returned to their home\nfollowing a Christmas vacation spent\nin  Trail   with  relatives.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nLeonard Hellyer spent the week-end\nin Nelson with friends.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA Dawson spent yesterday ln Nelson.\n\u00bb   a   \u2022\nA. Donald wa.s among those from\nTrail visiting in Nelson over the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. E. Orton has returned from Ymir\nwhere he spent his vacation wtth his\nfamtly.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss E. Freeney of Prlnceae Creek ls\nvisiting  relatives in Roesland. -\nWith their afternoon frocks Parts\nmannequins are wearing new Lallque\nglass ornaments, necklest, bracelets and\nbelt-clasp made alike in slabs of carved\nand colored glass threaded as Were\nthe Jet ornaments of Victtortan days,\nand many of the evening fabrics are\nso magnificent that only real or beautifully made Jewellery can be worn with\nthem, but with the less assuming\nstuffs some were wearing necklets of\n^crystal and colored glass, which made\nan irregular rope as thick as two\nfingers.\nThis smiling young r\nU-.arowitu, is king of all the hoboes\nHe is summoning his subjects to a\nM| jungle pow wow near Los Angeles today\nnext month, aud will there assist in\ntha election of a new monarch who\nmust, acordhig to hobo delegates,\n\"have   a   good   line   of   chatter.\"\nft. McLeod spent yesterday ln Nelson.\nE.  Calder was a Nelson visitor yes-\nFuneral of Miss\nMabee Held, Trail\nANEW\nj.w: STOPPER\nIt's a corker too! There's nothing\nlike cork for holding fast the good\nold Johnnie Walker flavour.\nBut, though made of cork, the new\n'J.W.' stopper needs no corkscrew.\nGrip the milled cap between finger and\nthumb; an easy pull; and that's that!\nHALIFAX. N. S\u201e Dec. 30\u2014Repair\nwork on the trans-Atlantic cables\nsnapped by the earthquake that shook\nthe ocean floor Irom New York to\nNewfoundland in November, is proceeding slowly because of heavy seas.\naccording to reports reaching here.\nOf the 10 broken lines of communication, only one\u2014that of the French\nTelegraph Cable company between Cape\nCod and Brose\u2014had been restored\n1'itrly in the second week of December. ..\nEleven lines were not affected by the I Addyman officiated\nquake. I     Miss Mabee  had resided in Trail and\nExecutives of the various cable com- j Nelson   for   seven   years.    She   was  a\npanics said they were able  to handle '. lister of Mra. p. Hallett of Trail.\nTliAIL. B   C. Dec   30\u2014Funeral serv\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Ike   Olover   of   Rossland   were   visitors   to  Trail   Saturday\nevening.\nTRAIL PASTOR TO\nLEAVE SOUTH FOR\nHOME TOMORROW\n\"\nTRAIL. B. C Dec. 31\u2014A letter from |\nkm for Miss- Bessie M. Mabee. aged 61\nnrcJWM   lrom   Knox   United  church   Re1v\"\u00a31'\u25a0_\"b-___i'7__- ln Knoi United\nafternoon.      Rev.      Charles   churcll   ,Mt  plgM   8tMM   jj-   oaten\nwould   he   leaving   Los   Angeles   New\nYear's  day  for  Trail.\nHe   said   that   Mrs.   Oaten   had   a\nthe   bulk   of   their   business   without i    Interment   was   made   In   Trull-Tad-   th_1w_f .naTnatural after travelling\ndolay,   but  the  Radio   Corporation   of   anac   cemetery,   many   beautiful   floral   81\u2122e het arrl'vai m California, however,\nshe appeared to be much improved.\nLIGHTING RATES POR\nTRAIL AND TADANAC\nSCHOOLS DISCUSSED\nTRAIL, B. C. Dec. 80.\u2014The question\nof lighting rates in Trail -Tadana*\nschools, as referred to the city council,\nwas left by the city ln ths hands\nof City Clerk W. E. B. Moneypenny,\nThe matter Is an Adjustment tk rate*\nto be taken up with Lome A. Campbell, manager of the West Kootenay\nPower & Light oompany.\nT. H. Waters & Co., Ltd.\nBuilders and Contractor!\nPhone 156\nNELSON,\nP. O.\nB.  C.\nGET OIK PRICES ON\nBUILDING  MATERIAL\nBEFORE   YOU   Bl 1LD\nCoast Lumber\nAmerica recently reported the flow of  offerings  being  made.\nwireless messages to' the  other side  of      Pallbearers   were   W.   E.   Wilson,   C.\nthe Atlantic to be fifty per cent above  Scanlan, T. H. Ollis. P. B. Hallett. Dr.\nnormal.\nNO  rsTlMATK  OP EXPENSE\nNo estimate of the cable expense\nentailed by the quake haa been given\nout. but it was learned that each\nrepair ship has a dally maintenance\ncost of more than $2,000.\nCable   steamers   sent   out   to   mend.\nthree Western Union cables were  un-i 0f'L^O\nBay   Williamson   and   C   H.   Hall.\nOfficers Installed\nby Trail L.O. B.A.\nBottled by ourselves in Scotland\nand  guaranteed   same   quality\nthroughout thc world.\nJOHNNIE\nWAbKER\nThi* m\\ivtrH*etMiU i. slot pubti'hrd ot dispia-.rd bv\ntt. I.tarns Control Hoard or by tM _.**. \u00bb*\u00ab\u00bb. of\nBritt*hCUmtotws.\nBORN 1820 \u2014 STILL GOING  STRONG\nable to grapple for loose ends owing\nto severe storms and had to lay to.\nThe Commercial Cable company reported similar dlflculties with Its three\nbroken lines.\nTho Western Union cable steamers\nLord Kelvin, John W. MacKay and\nCyrus Meld, and the French repair\n\u25a0hip Edouard Jeramec have been out\nfor several weeks. The All America,\nof the All America Cable company\nsailed from Halifax on December 9.\nThe Cambria was due to sail when\nshe completed loading some 150 miles\nof cable rushed from England.\nCOLOMBO  CBEW  (OLD\nBuilt for work in southern waters.\nthe Cambrln was found rather cool\nup here by its colore^ crew, and there\nwas talk of sending them back to\nBermuda and picking up another crew\nat   Halifax. <t\nThe numerous cable breaks ln the\nNorth Atlantic lends interest to the\nroutine pursued In locating the repairing them.\nA cable steamer proceeds to the probable position of the break as located\nby experts. The particular kind of\ngrappling iron used to locate and\nbring the cable to the suffice ia determined by soundings and cnartings\nmade of the ocean floor at the time\nthe cable was laid. The grappler\nmost generally employed is the Lucas\ntype, whose two progs seie a broken\nend of the cable and slide tt Into\na groover at the shank. A dynomo-\nmster Indicates the strain, and the\ncrew then haul the cable to the surface. Tlie end Is attached to a buoy,\ntopped with a flag and electrically\nlighted for easy location day or night.\nThen begins the process of locating\nthe other end.\nOnce the ends of the cable are\nraised and buoyed lt Is comparatively\neasy for the electricians to splice in\nthe new cable. Sometimes, however.\nseveral breaks occur In the Bame cable,\nand In that case lt Is much more j\ndifficult to repair the separate breaks, j\nThe thickness of the cable varies\nwith the floor of the ocean. Inshore,\nwhere icebergs drift or ships anchor,\nthe strands are three inches thick, \u25a0\nwhile In deep sections of the ocean\nthey taper down to an  Inch  or less.\nThe cable ships are floating laboratories with competent * staffs of electricians and trained men who have\nevery modern convenience to locate\npromptly the various breaks and repair them as quickly  as possible.\nTRAIL   a.   C,   Dec.  so.\u2014Trail  order\nB.'Ar-  installed   officers   to-\nEnsley   was   In  charge\nnight.    \u25a0\u00bb,   IC\nOf   installation\nThc following officers were\" installed:\nMrs. R. Armitt. worthy mistress; Mrs.\nJ _minw. deputy mistress; Mrs. W,\nOwen, chaplain; Miss I. Mclntyre, recording secretary; Mrs. J. Dougthy,\ntimMiiTr: Mrs. K. Anderson, inner\nguard; John Doughty, guard; J. McLennan, outer guard; Mrs. W. Houston,\ncommittee.\nLenle' advueates boleros on frocks for\nall w Ouatona\nCalyai;   is   bot'i   new   and   young   on\nfelt    \\r.v.>\n'Vivid flame M equally [.noted for flat\n-tcpe or filmy  chlifon.\nBYLAW   REAB, TBAIL\nTRAIL, B. Ci Dec. 30.\u2014Two readings\nwere given the anticipation loau revenue bylaw for $65,000 by the city\ncouncil tonight.\nGood Buys at Gn y>\nDiamonds\nWe hav\u00a9 a large\nassortment of\nDIAMOND RINO\nThese are in the  n    \u2022\nsettings and beaui \u2022\nf ul Gems\nPriced from    .\n$20.00 to $300.00\nCall and see them\n\/ B. Gray\nll   407  Baker  St\nDiamond   Merchant\nPhone 333\nCuticura Talcum Powder\nFor the Toilet and NwmHisy\nA Talcum Powder worthy of bearing a name that\nhas become famous all over the world for tae*\ntsinnl quality anfl purity for fifty yean. Yoa\nwill be delighted with its fragrant, medicated\nefficiency u a cooling, soothing Addition to yonr\ntoilet, and as a sanatfYr, antiseptic, deodorising\nprotection to your skin.\nAn Ideal After\u2022Shavittg Poieder.\nSold evrr-fm-lietr Simpl- tree on raoutit\nAddrtii CmHttdiatm Dtftt: j. T. Wiit Company. Ltd , Montreti.\n(.'___ur* .._-i> sad OmUDCQ. .5_. c_u_b.\n \u2014.\u25a0 A\nWhat was effect at the end of a\nyear, and for the years since lt  began\nThat the time lost due to Illness\nin these same men ha., been cut down\nby   33   per  cent. \t\n\u2014\n_\nltoi\u00bb$0i#l?fl(! Sompanti.^\nfNCORPOftATCfr tf\u00bb MAV I6T0l\nOther   r.i.HiriM\"-   at   Winnipeg.   Yorkton,   Saskatoon,   KUnioiiton.\nCalgary,  l.ttnitrUlKi*.   Vancouver,   Kamloops,   Venraii  and   Victoria\nLadies Wear\nFelt and Velvet Hats for Miss and Matron. In shades of green, blue, brown\nand   wine.    Price\nSI .95\nVelvet a|d Metallic Hats, for afternoon\nand  evening  wear.\nSpecial  $2.95 and S-3.95\nBroken Lines in Corsets and Wraps\u2014\nCo-sard and D & A models. Values\nup to $3.95. Special  Sl.OO\nLarge  Women's  Corsets  in a Broken\nassortment.\nRegular $6.50.    Sale for       . $3.95\nRegular $4.50. Sale for  ?3.95\nRegular $3.95.    Sale for  ?1.95\nWinter Coats for Children.    Made of\nfine broadcloth. Fur trimmed. Stitched on cuffs and down back: In shades\nof brown, wine and blue.\nSpecial    S6-95\n\u2014Sea canal  Floor\u2014H  B C\u2014\nmttea,\n tames foo_ ^\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS  TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 31, 1929    \u00ab\nTHE DAILY NEWS\ntFUbltataed e*r*rj morning except %un-\nmt h? The News Publishing Com-\npw, limned. Kelson, B. C.\n^^\u25a0PftMi letters should be addressed\nH Check* and money orden made\nite to The Newa Publishing Com-\nlUnlted. and lp no case to in-\nml members of the atari.\nTHTertlslng rate cards and ABC\n\u25a0tctements of circulation malleer on\n\u25a0mast, or mav be seen at the office\noff any M_vertMlng agency recognized\n\u25a0r  the  Canadian  Frees  association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\n\u25a0\u00bb mall  (country). per month ....$    tn\nTVor   jeoi   \u2014       6,00\nBy  mall   (city),  per  year     13.W\nOUtalde   Canada,   -\n.   per   month\n\u25a0 ttt   fear      \t\nDelivered,  per  week  \t\n'. Per   year\n.15\n7.30\n33\nPayable   In   Ad-nnc.\nAudit   Barean   of   Clrenlatlaan\nTUESDAY*.   DBCniBER  31,   1939\nLET THE SPIRIT\nLINGER\n' Christmas ia past. How about\nIke good will and neighborli-\nnees which havejyprevailed in\nao marked a degree during the\nlast week or so? Is this senti\nAent to subside and humanity\ngo back to the hard rule oi\navery man for himself? If so\nwhat is the permanent gain in\nstaging this annual carnival of\nfriendliness and generosity?\nLife is pleasanter in the\nChristmas season than at other\ntimes. It is pleasanter in proportion as one gives, not as\nhe gets. The moral is plain.\nThe way to be happy is to\nmake others so. It is actually\nbetter to give than to receive.\nChristmas proves it. Why\nthrow away the recipe for happiness just because Christmas\nhas gone?\nTHE WORD\nLANGUAGE\nc\/iunt Het\n_____\n\"T didn't know Jim had rrne lut\"\"\nbankruptcy untll I seen iiu wfe an'\ngirls struttln' out In ewell new clothes\nWhat Do\nYou Think?\nAsks  What  Is  the\nPower of Inspectors\nin B. C. Schools\nmay after m\u00bb team had tone through I boUtaf tern eat cupful of peanut MM* I minutes of cooklnt, lf nteemttrt.\ntheir  work  the  Judge  told  me  that   pre-tomi. mixed with one cup *f ad- |    Sandwiches are delicious when made\nthe   ooowMttkn J~   J\u00abW   \u00ab>*\u00ab\u25a0- J\u2122 ' dmonal hot milt.    Season  with salt   with pimento eheeae and tbe canned\nthe new hook the Mth edition. This   ^ ma ^^   \u201e_,  tjs,clea  wlUl  ,__    brnw_ brM<1 \u201e ,\u201e\u201e\u201e ,_\u201e,,.   u  ,\u201e-.\ntublespoons of Hour mixed to a paste I ever, you wish to serve a toasted aand-\nwlth one-half cup of cold water. The I wlch. use mild, hard yellow cheese\nlonger this soup _____ ln a double , between toast slices of white bread,\nboiler, the better It becomee. although j slipping the sandwich luto a moderate\nlt may be served after three or four   oven long enough to melt the eheeae\n\u25a0dltor Nelson Dally  News:\nSir:\nyears   ago\n\" Less   than   175\nthere   were    only\nEnglish-speaking people on the\nplanet,  or  but  three-fifths  of\nLighter Side\nYou  can't expect  people to  feel\nunusually   righteous    on Sunday\nmorning slnee they learned to take\na bath every night.\nIf poverty causes theft, why do the\nswell   hotels   make their   room   rate\nhigh    enough    to cover    the    towel\nshortage?\nAutomobiles may be almost as deadly\nas war but they don't make you salute\nall  day  and scratch  aU   night.\nNOW IF THE CARNEGIE FOUNDATION WOULD INVESTIGATE TENNIS\nAND GOLF. IT MIGHT WORK OUT\nA OOOD DEFINITION OF \"AMATEUR\".\nSenators may seem autocratic when\nthey   deny   some   man    a   seat,   but\nWhile  disclaiming   snv   intention\ncast any reflection on the good  faith\nor efficiency of any official of the education  department  or  of  any  school\n':   vou K IidlV b'Io \u00bb  ;*n\nthe columns of the Dally Km to voloe\naa objection to an educational practise tnat I fear is he-corn.! it ah -on\nprevalent. Permit me to repeat that\nI believe those responsible for the\npractise are acting conscientiously under the mLsi'iik _ r notion tnat. > r \/\nare serving tba beat interests of the\nrising getienttfyn I r^ter to the ict\ngreat activity of parties other than\nthe responsible boards of trustees In\n.nuking appointments ol teeners, i\nwould like to call attention to the\nfollowing advertisements that ran for\nseveral days m one ot the coasi. dallies:\n\"Male    teacher   wanted    for    th-*\nschool. Duties to commence \"with, the\niiniu:,'.'.      tcra_.*.\u00ab.A_.pucuuon__     ij     ue\ng en t    to    Inspector at\t\nand one copy to be sent to secretary\n School  Board  at .\nNow my first impressllon on reading\nthe above advertisement was that our\nvery capable and enthusiastic miniate:\nof education, the Honorable Joshua\nHmchlnie, had _-_-oba_i_ anirnd-d tflfl\n\u25a0e.rhool law and regulations ln such\ni mnnner as to vest the appointment\nnt school principals in the hands of\nthe inspector. I could not help admiring the courtesy of an Inspector who\nunder    such    clrmm\u00abtani*ef    fnd    tfce\nwas the first lnimatlon of any change.\nFor aome reason yet to be explained\nthe Windsor police team have been\ntrained In this new book since last\nSept. and up to the time of the competition the Nelson team had not even\nseen the cover of the new book. Every\nmember of my team Is a sportsman\nand does not mind defeat if lt ls\nhonourable, fair aud above board.\nI t*iav sav h\u00bbd w\u00bb won the trophy\nln those conditions we would not accept\nI lt, however, E. G. Noble secretary\nof 8t. John's Ambulance for Western\nLines and certain other officials in\nto | the west are taking the matter up.\nThe   Windsor    police    team    are    a\njust as good and I would like to see\nreal good team But I know of another\nthem, have a fair chance.\nYours Vert*  Ti-utv\nFREDERICK BLAKEMAN,\nCaptain C.P.R. First Aid Team.\nNelson, B.C.\nslilghtly,  then serve hot.\nA -can of marshnwillows should si-\nways be kept on the emergency shelf.\ntoo. For lf you lack cake, you may\nplace a marshmallow between two\ncrackers and slip this combination ln\na moderate oven until the marshmallow\nmelts enough to gum the two crackers\nto lt. than serve.\nInura\nBy IAS. W   ninTOX,  H   l\u00bb.\nCHILDREN AND COD LIVER\nOIL\nweights\n,   various\nwhat    a\nyou've got to admit tfcey put up with   chance of appointment was about one\napplicants send a copy of their application to the  school  board  Of course\nlt did  not occur to me  at the  time   milk, but one group received cod Hv\nthat tho unfortunate applicant  whose   e-\nYou have seen tables of\nyoungster ought to be a\nand measurements showing\nmonth and years of age-\nNow these weights and measurements have been accepted for years\nJuki vet haw nearly rignt are they.\nAs there are different types of Individuals there are also different types\nof individuals there are also different\nwypocs of youngsters and no table\ncan  naturally  be exactly  right.\nIn an effort to see what effect certain foods would have on babies and\nnow these effects would show In re-\nlal.on to-weight and height and weight\nbome western physicians experimented with two groups of ihfants.\nBoth groups received  modified cow's\nMl\nTHE MODERNS DO MORE PET-\nTIM!. PERHAPS, BUT THAT\nDOESN'T INDICATE A DECREASE\nOF MODESTY. IT MAY BE\n(Al'SED BY THE DECREASE OF\nPINS.\noil   in   addition.\nBoth  groups were  studied  from  the j\n-i.andpo.nt   of   growth,   as   shown    by ,\nincrease in weight, and In the amount I\nof    nitrogen,    lime,    and    phosphorus\nretained  by  the  body,  and  the  waste\nthrown out.\n\"The  infants  receiving  the cod  liv-\nRchool   Law   and   Regulations   of   \u00ab  o\u00ab   in   addition   to  milk  not   onlv\nColumbia    and     looked     un   _P_**1-_*__*\u2022  *_. the  same  age. than\nin 60, was being given unnecessary\nwork ln addressing a school board ln\nno way responsible for his appointment.\nBut fearing that I might be jumping at conclusions I procured a copy of\nthe\nBritish     Columbia    and    looked     up\nthose receiving the cod liver oil, but\ncarefully the separate duties of in- were considerably heavier than the\nspec^ors   and  school  boards.   According   accepted  standards for their respective\nStill,    Mr.    ruru,    u\n\u00b1__.,UUV.yjyjV   ?y a day> wi4o would buy flivvers?\nParachute   men   say   they   have   no\n1 sensalton    of    falling    lf   they    don't\nnotice how much lower they  are. Ap-\nthe   population   Of    r ranee.    In   parently   something   like   the   \"upper\n1790 there were still but  16,-1claaft\" law breake^_\n000,000, while France had 26,-     Ever,y T01\"\"41\u2122d ** ?',s0CiaI\u201e*?:\n1 perior     to   do   her   Christmas   duty\n000,000. Today there are nearly  must enjoy the w*y Russia taiu to\n200,000,000    who    speak    our | m\"\"e 8om'      _<_\ntonirilp     Th. V    control    all     the I     MODERNISM:  SUFFERING LONG IN\ntongue,   iney   control   ail   me ,.REN_IED   hhjwce   because  we\nAustralian continent, nearly all  i-ack   the  nerve   to  complain\n.,     ,        , .        ' , * ABOUT    THE    M ICMHOK's    COKNET;\nthe North American, and much  exploding at last and passing\nof tfetfrican and Asian. Their  J^ers. *\u00b0   HAN\u00b0   ALL   CW\u2122\nprospects  for growth in  numbers   and   wealth   are   unap- j\nproaiehable by any other Ian-; ^ t_\"\u00a3.__*'\nto the school law of British Columbia\nthe Inspector is in no way responsible\nfor the appointment of teachers. If\nthere ia a clause anywhere ln either\nthe school law or the regulations giving htm even advisory functions in\nthis regard I have failed to find it.\nFord, if everybody made j However. th\u00ab school law plainly and\nunmlstakeable vests the appointment\nof the teacher ln the board of school\ntrustees.\nI have a   friend who is now teaching! too\" low,   and   that   thc   human\nand who has taught in practically all i would  be  much  stronger  if  we  stannic   provinces   from   Quebec   westwaM ; ed^ourjnf^ts^ off with tody ^ullding\nand   he   informs   me   that   so   far   as\nhe knows the  school laws  in  all  the\nprovinces    make    the    trustees    alone\nresponsible   for   the   appointment   of\nteachers  In  fact,  he   informs  that  ln\nsome    provinces.    Inspectors   are    forbidden to interfere.\nI submit that a law that is common\nto   all   the   provinces   must   exist   for\npood  and   mifficent rwwons.  and  that\nour   school   system   will   work   more\neT\"flct\u00bb,T,+*lv   vrti*\u00bbn   In-awf-or   aid    trustee each confines himself to his proper\nI function.    If trustee boards that per-\nIf the bravest aX\"tl_e tenderest. the ' \u25a0'\u00ab   *\" J*'\"*  *^\u2122 J^L^Sl\nsteer   whose   loin   we   had   for  dinner   *\u00ab\u00ab__\u00ab_\u25a0 ,*_\u00bb   *_\"SS?3_._ \u00b0! *   W\" ?B\nages and their weights at birth.'\n. Your first thought may be that this\nincrease in weight was mostly fa.,\nbut the waste in the urine showed\nthat these heavier children had a\nbetter development  of muscles.\nThis increased physical development\nis attributed to the building pow.r\nof cod liver oil with the vitamins it\ncontains.\nThese .DyyjilGians. are of the opinion that the accepted standards of\nheight   and   weight   of   children   are\ndiets. Where the measurements wer.\nbelow normal the addition of cod liver oil would be the Ideal method of\nbringing  them up  to normal.\nEfficient .\nHousekeeping\nBy   I AIR*   A.   RIKKHAM\nA jack rabbit chased inspector find any fallinjoff in methods and educational procedure they\nwill have only themselves to blame,\nThe Inspector has quite enough to\ndo without running a teachers* placc-\nand\nTaxpayer\nWar will end soon after mortals\noutgrow the urge to swat the fellow\nwho thinks he Is a Pattern No.  1.\nguage group, for Canada, Aus-|   The merchant ^~exchaagt pre6ents,\ntralia   and   South   Africa   are hut   what  a  disappointment  w bt,\n'-     !,\"\u25a0_., ottered   a \u00bb3.75  article  Ior one clearly i ment   bureau   for   the   trustees\nclearly destined to become pop-, mamed \u00bbi6.\nulous powers. Taken collectively, the dlff&rent nations and\ncommonwealths have practical\ncommand of nearly half the\nworld's surface and more than\nhalf its resources now avail-\n4ble. Their sense of duty should\nfqual their pride of power, and\nif they rise to their responsibilities their influence will indeed be potent.\nI\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(from The Dally News. Dec. 31, 1019)\nI J. W. Mulholland left last night for\nm>s_land. where he intends to spend a\nfew  days.\n\u2022    *   \u2022\n'  H.   T.   Maguire   arrived    from   Trull\nXcsterday  to  make his home here.    He\nWill   assume   thc   duties  o{   city   electrical engineer on January 12.\n'\" A- Oordon Wilson, manager of tht\nKelson   branch   of   the   Canadian   E*-\nBUwives Ltd., has been no_ui_u of nis\ntransfer to Toronto, to assume man-\n\u00abke_lal charge of the consolidated office of tfce corporation of that city.\np. Shedwln. superlnteudnt of thc\nBlue Bell mine at Rlondel, was ln the\nCUff   yesterday.\nJ Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Boyd of Regina\nfcave arrived to take up their residence\nlh Neleon. where Mr. Boyd ls Joining\n-Uie staff ln the book bindery of The\nSews   Publishing   company.\nSO LIVE THAT YOU WON'T\nSHIDDER WHEN THE lt\\(.(,\\).l\nMAN GETS KOI (ill WITH YOUR\nSLIT   CASE.\nNelson First Aid\nTeam Not Informed\nof New Rulings\nTOMORROW'S    MENU\nBreakfast\nGrapefruit\nCereal\nCodfish   Balls Toast\nMarmalade Coffee\nLuncheon\nRice   Croquettes\nTomato   Sauce\nBiscuits\nNuts\nPineapple\nTea\nTeam beat us nine points on the\nptretr^cr work, four Points ln theorv,\n10 points in practical work Just 23\npr'nt\u00ab in all.\nEvery one  ls anxious  to know  why\nwe gave them so many and I refrained\nHappy  thought!  Maybe Big  Business ! from saying anything about 1.. because\nwon't   stand   for   another   war   when \u2022 I thought some one would sav  I  wns\nit   fills  other  countries  with   factories i Juat making an excuse for our defeat\nCookies\nDinner\nCheese   Omelet\nSweet   Potatoes Lima   Beans\nLettuce   Balad\nChocolate   Meringue   Tarts\nCoffee\nTHE   EMERGENCY   SHELF\nAt thla  season  of  the  year  friends\nDear Sir: ____________        drop in frequently and the wise house-\nOwlnff to the keen interest taken keeper keeps her emergency shelf well\nnot only of Nelson but the whole stocked so that she may Invite an\npwlBO_ of the results of the N\"lKon unexpected guest to lunch, supper, or\nC. P. R. first aid team in the finals afternoon tea with the security of hav-\nheld in Ottawa Just recently, in this mg delicacies always at hand,\ncompetition,   the   Windsor   St.   Police      Today,   when  delicious   brown  bread\nThe liquid that makes people blurt\nout the facts ls called \"truth serum.\"\nAnother one is called hooch.\nthat  could  be   confiscated.\nThe next big job will be to inukc\nthe individual American and Englishman accept one another on a parity\nbasis.\nBy actual count satin and moire\n\u25a0hare honor* equally at New York night\n4ubs.\nTWENTY YEARS\nAGO\n(From  The  Daily  News,  Dec.  31,. 1909)\nBorn,   on   December   25   to   Mr,   and\nMis.    John    Wood.    Victoria    street,    a\ndaughter.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nTom Peck, the well known conductor, who developed a case of pneumonia on Monday while on his train\nwas taken to the Oreenwood hospital\nand was reported to be worse.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nH. R. Gramer of Calgary has moved\nto Nelson this week where he will\nmake his headquarters. He wlll be the\nrepresentative for this district of\nOeorgeson & Co., thc wholesale grocery.\nSleds\nAt Less Than Cost\nW.   have a few B. C. Flyer Sleds which we are\nclosing out at just\nHalt Price\nNo. I Sold at $2.00. Now each  $1.00\nNo. 2 Sold at $2.50. Now each   1.25\nNo. 3 Sold at $3.00 Now each   1..50\nNo. . Sold at $3.50. Now each   1.75\nGet one for your Boy or Girl while they last. We\nhave also the Genuine Flexible and _ire Fly Sleds.\nNelson Hardware\nWholesale Quality Hardware Retail\nNelson, B. (.\nhowever, perhaps I had better explain.\nThere is a new text book Just out, tlu:\n38th edition, and according to the\nrules set down in the first aid ga_-\nzettc of St. John's Ambulance As-\nfation   wiving  that   all   competitions\nIs put up in cans, all housewives\nshould have this food on hand constantly. Tomato soup is another favorite, for lunch or supper, made into\na bisque as follows: Turn the thick\nsoup from its can and heat to the\nboiling point, then add a pinch of\nbaking soda and while the soup fizzles,\nstir Into lt an equal measure of hot\nsweet milk. Thin, If desired, with\nmore milk. Servo in two-handled\ncups, well seasoned with salt.\nA small Jar of peanut butter will\nalso make a dellctable soup, as follows:\nPut   one   quart   of   sweet   milk    (or\nheld in 1929 would be taken from the   canned  evaporated  milk,  greatly  thin-\n37th   edition  and  much  to  ouv   dls-  ned with water) over the fire and when\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your .bill, of\nBuilding Material. Coa-st Lumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\nAnnouncement\nWe wish our Friends a yery Happy,\nand Prosperous New Year and look\nforward to a continuance of their good\nwiil and patronage. No one appreciates it more than we do.\nSmedley Garage Go.\nPRICE\n\u2022 SPECIALS\nStill offer WB-ndwful opportunities for the economical.\nTwo floors displayed with half price specials.\nEVENING GOWNS ALSO DAY TIME\nDRESSES AT HALF PRICE\n12 only, evening gowns, advanced styles and also a few\nwith more conservative lengths. Selected for sale at half\nregular price.\n100 SILK DRfcSSES ADCO FLAT CREPES\nAIpo Cantons, Crepe de chenes, out they go at half\nregular prices.\nLadies* Winter Coats b2 Price\nHURRY AND GET A CHOICE OF COAT AT HALF PRICE.\nHOUSE DRESSES\nAt half price\nRegular  $1.25, now 65^\nRegular $1<70, now 80^\nRegular $2.50, now $1.25\nRegular $2.95, now fl.50\nLADIES  APRONS\nFancy cretonne slip ons\nand wrap arounds 95c and\n59c,  now 5\u00a9\u00a3 and 30^\nLADIES\nKIMONAS\nHeavy Beacon Cloth, at\nhalf price.\nBRASSIERES\nRayon   Silk   to  match\nat\n.50^\nLADIES CORSETS\nSome 50 to select from\nat half price.\nLADIES\nBRASSIERES\n\"Half Price\nLADIES GIRDLES\nHalf Price\nLADIES\nTRIMMED HATS\nEntire stock at half\nprice. Lovely $2.95 and\n$3.75 Metallics and Felts\nnow ....fl.50 and f 1.80\nBOYS SHIRTS\nHalf Price\nNOVELTIES\nAny novelty in the atore\nat half price. New tables\nmade up at\n251,  50<,  751, ai.00\n.    MEN'S SOX\nTies, Suspenders, etc.\nRegular $1.00. Now 50f\nMEN'S HANDKERCHIEFS\nPure Linen  25^\nLINGERIE\nRayon Silk, also Crepe\nde Chene numbers at half\nprice.\nSMART SHOPPE FOR SMART WOMEN\nv r^v_.^\nChildren\nthrive on FRY'S\nThis pure and high quality cocoa is\nmade {rom specially selected cocoa\nbeans, by skill acquired in 200 years\noi experience. For giving health and\nvigor, FRY_ Cocoa is matchless.\nJ. 8. FRY tf SONS (Cauda) Limited, Moottc-1, Que. i\n^H________________B\n to 3? TOP 3? TO?*\nSmart i..\nUndoubtedly you will\nbe heeding new footwear for the holiday\nactivities, dances and\nparties, etc. Yoti will\nchoose well and wisely by selecting this\nfootwear here.\nRAndrew\nand Co.\nLeaders in FootfoAion\ny {&> <Jl> cX3,c_C. <X> <3j> t\nw-mi, i  \"i  .    -.\u25a0\u25a0_- \u25a0\nSANTA VISITS\nGYM KIDDIES\nDistributes  Presents;    Young\nFolks Present Program;\nSufoitr Served\nSociety\ntom coIUmn ii c<yhductttl#\nUn. U J Vlenou*. All flR \u2022\n\u00a3aociai ^natur\nlartmom\ntgncux  at\nrata.\n0yro Christmas tree and entertain-\nm\u00ab__t, held lu the Legion gym laat\nnight wu a huge success. Both old\nand' young joined in the fun. The\nnflo of Santa claus was cleverly takfen\nby   Charles  Morris.\nfiefor. the entertainment the Gym\nkMpies were treated to a fine supper.\nFollowing the supper a splpndld program was given-, by the younger folks.\nA.; duet was rendered by Joan and\nB<p-tty Ferguson, and songs by Edna\nEaHe  3_fuchapan and Roddy McKenzle. 1\nAficdWfi -ifel by MarJorie and BiUy |\nIv^rets   a-hd   Effy   and    Bobby   Morris\naiif a plana solo by Phylls Gray were\nalso fine numbers.\n[The   most   important   part   of. the i\nprogram started when  Santa appeared '\non the scene and gave each kiddle a {\npresent   and   a   bag   of   candies.    Mr.\nMorris acted his part exceedingly well.\nkeeping the kiddies and parents laughing    throughout   the    distribution   of\npresents.\nPatou's lily of the valley is the only\nflower that really matters this season,\nsays New York.\nA Formula\nfor   a\nPERFECT SMOKE\nA PETERSON\nPIPE\nand a can of\nBusies\nSpecial Mixture\ngUSH'C\nTobacconist\nRegain Lost Vigour\nWith This Refreshing\nBeverage\nAw yoa ttwj. ran down, cant sleep?\u2014\nraid what Mr. John J. Metcalfe of 829\nOntario St., Toronto, aays:\n1 wmmrundown In h\u00bblth that I d*>\n\u2022paired affCcercrr. I commenced taking\nDr. WatoMfr Tonic Stour ud am pi *\u25a0\u2014\n\u2022d  t*  bear twitum  ta lit  wonderful\nFor 75c yoa may purchase enough ingredients to make 3 gallons of ui.\nWAtaonaToricStontandAle\u2014Engtad'a\nold reliable tonics\u2014a mftwriiing. h_nHth.\nful drink, uaed for 93 yeara. i\nSold kf\nA.   MACDONALD   &   CO.   LTD.\nNelson,  B.C.\n_____-.   _ M.  ALLEN  &   CO.  Limited\nTffminal   Bldg. Toronto,   Ont.\nMr- and Mn. Arthur Lakes of Vanoouver who were expeetfO. to tar ih\nNrtsop, oarr the Mtw Yesr. h*\u00ab on\naooount of tha illneas of Mrt. Lake's\nmothtr, Un. George Johnstone, been\nunable to leave tha coaat.\n4   *   *\nAnthony MMden, who has been a\npatient te the Kaalo hospital, arrived   in  ths city  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u00a3   e\naVm Eilean Hlrd o\\ the British Columbia Tblephohe company office has\nreturn*! frbm k couple of weeks spent\nvisiting relatives at the ooast.\nMiss Elise Cody of Kaslo was In\ntown yesterday on her way to Trail\n.where she went to visit her father, L,\nCody.\n\u2022 .**  *\nMrs. Stoma Hlnley of Salt Lake City,\nUtah, sfcnt the week-end the guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lincoln, Stanley\natreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMM. 3. M. Gordon, Kerr apartments,\nwho has been visiting her relatives tn\nWinnipeg for the past few weeka, has\nreturned  home.\n\u00bb   e   \u2022\nJ. Jerome of ftonnlngton ptUd a\n.isit  to  town  yeaterday.\nMrs. J. s. Gooche of Crawford Bay\nspent yesterday In the city.\n\u2022 *    9\nAmong  visitors th Iffeteofc ywterday\nwas Jb, f .E. Haines of Harrop.\n<*   \u2022   \u00bb\nJ. Sibbald of Crawford Bay was a\nbify vWtt>_- yesterday.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Sarah Henry of Kaalo left yesterday after . spending , tha week-end\nwith Miss Winona. Rouleau, Front\nBtreet.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs,   J.   D,   Anderson   of   Kokanee\nspent yesterdag la the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOswald    McDougall    of    Kaslo    was\namong   Nelson  shoppers  yesterday.\n\u2022 *   *\nIDs. Russell McDonald of Bonnlngton paid a visit to the city yesterday.\n\u2022 \u00ab   *\nJames H. Gagnon recently visited at\nBonnington.\n\u2022 *   \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. Bud Stevens, Annable\nblock, have as their guest* Mrs.\nStevens' three sisters, Mrt. A. C. Rash\nof Monitor and the MlssM Cecilia and\nFrcdressa Lyden of Seattle, also Mrs.\nB. Stevens* brother-in-law, A. C. Rash.\nThey have been visiting in Grand\nForks   over   Christmas.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nMr.  Kennedy,  contractor at  Procter,\nis spending the New Year tn the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs.   I.   Bourke,   An able   block,   has\nreturned from a visit to her eon and\ndaughter-in-law, Coniander and Mrs.\nRowland Bourke at Crescent Bay.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. G, Douglas Nagle and\ntheir two little daughters left yesterday by motor for Portland and San\nFrancisco, nffer which they will visit in\nsouthern   California.\n\u2022 *     a\nMr. and Mrs. A. Grant of Procter,\nwho have just returned from a visi.,\nto Winnipeg, were visitors to town\nyesterday\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Noel Harrop, recently\nmarried, have left for the coast on a\nhoneymoon trip.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs, W. L. Sheeler and\nthetr son. Charles Anderson, have\narrived from Oalena Farms mine to\nattend the New Year dinner dance at\nthe   Hume.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Charles Baldwin of Marcus has\nreturned after a vlalt to Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nCharles F. Carlson of South Slocan\nwas a city visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2666\nMr. and Mrs. W. M, Walker, Stanley\nstreet, left last night for the coast\ncities.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA. McDonnell of Trail is visiting in\nNelson with his family, Observatory\nstreet,\n\u2022 *   \u2022    ...\nJack Locke ot the C. P. R. ticket\noffice staff, returned from spending a\nvacation with relatives at the coast,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Olive V. Abey of the Hume\nschdol teaching staff left last night to\nvisit her father, Frank T. Abey in\nNakusp.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJ. V. Kosancic of Creecpnt Valley\nwas a visitor to town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   si\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Madden of\nKlmberley arrived in town last evening\nhaving been called through the sudden\ndeath of the former's brother, Thomas\nSadden.\n\u2022 *    *\nMrs. Robert Armstrong, who has\nbeen visiting in Winnipeg and Beaupre.\nQue., for The past few months has\nreturned  to Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Ronald Oreyson of Bonnington\nwas   in   town  shopping   yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0*\nMiss Mary Madden has arrived from\nS____' KOOTENAY WOMAN\nIS WELL KNOWN\nIN CALIFORNIA\nFormer  New   Denver  Woman\nFarrtous for ItotanM Work\nin Southland\nHelen\ngirl, whd; despite the \"bar j_-i_T\nrevealed by her- \"colored\" husband\nafer research into family tree, is reunited to him after a five-day separation.\nEverett.    Washington,   to   attend   the\nfuneral of her brother, Thomas Madden\n* \u2022    .\nAmog city shoppers yesterday was\nMrs. George Hunt of South Slocan.\n* \u2022   *\nMaurice Walker, who teaches at\nBonnlngton. paid a visit to town\nyesterday.\n. * .\u2022    a\nMra, Frank S. Frlsby of South Slocan spent yesterday shopping in Nelson\n* w *\nMrs. J, N. Carey of Edmonton, formerly Mrs. J .Labble of Nelson, ls\nexpected in Nelson this evening to\nattend the funral of her nephew,\nThomas Madden.\n* .\u2022   *\nAngus Mcpherson, manager of the\nCork Province mine at Kaslo. paid a\nvisit to town yesterday.\nFeminism Problem\nConfronts Quebec\nat Present Time\n _. i\nm6nTR__A__, ' bee. 3<V-^1i1emlhl8m is\none df the probl-ems Quebec., has to\ngrapple wjth at the present, time,''\ndeclared Pierre Beullac, Kt'. apeaklqg\nat a meeting of the Junior Bar association. \"It ls an outgrowth of the\nWorld war. During that troubled period women volunteered their services\nworked side by side, with men, and\ntook a most active part In the lire\nof   the   nation.\nTh. Province of Quebec si essentially traditionalist, not easily awayetl\nby new venture*. Femlniom is welcome by some and deplored by many.\nThe champions of that movement are\nlisting new support from day to day.\nWomen have developed In their own\nranks eloquent leaders. Their repeated\ndemands  have  found  an echo  in  the\nfireas,   in  Parliament  and   the   homes,\nhe  question   ls  how  whether  or  nc-t\nyou are a feminist,    \"Am I one?\" was\nthe enigmatic cjuery df the speaker.\nSUMS   IIP  CLAIMS\nIn  order   to   present  women's   cases\nclearly, the lecturer summed  up their\nclaims   as   follow:   fl)   The   betterment\nof the  conditions  of  working  women.\nby. way of limitation of working hourS;\nequal  pay   for  equal  work   promotion\non .merit;    i2)   access   to   the   liberal\nprofessions  On   the   same   examinations,\nas  men; ; (3)  granting  of  femine  suf-\nfraga. for   the   provincial   a*   well   as\nthe federal house;   (4) complete recognition   of \u2022;. civil   rights,    that    ls,   as\nnear   aa   possible,   equality   before   the\nj law.   There is a wide range of dlver-\n| gence of opinion of a problem of this\nimportance.    The  pessimist   ls   of  the\nI opinion   that   women   bf   granted   all\n| they ask for, they Will turn down matrimony that would mean the ultimate\nI desertion  of the home.    The optimist\n( sees   no  harm  and  should   conditions\nturn   for   the   worse,   it   will   always\nbe possible  to come back  to  the old\nI order of things.   The philosopher states\nI that   women   have   so    many    means\nto avenge, themselves  that   lt  is  Just\nas   well   grant   them   at   once   what\nI they   want.     The   cynic   claims   that\nshould   women   receive   all   they   are\nasking,   should   they  get   their   rights,\nthey will be  the  very  first   to  forget\nabout lt.\nIn conclusion, Mr. Buellsc said lf\nthis generation should not grant them\nthese \"rights'' readily, another generation might most likely consent to\ndo without a word of discussion.\nAppearing lately in a,. Los Angeles\nnewspaper is a long article dealing\nwith the activities Of Mrs. X p. McPadden who lived formerly at New\nDenver. Some six moftths ago Mr.\nand Mre. Mcpadden bought a raneh\nnear Roscoe. Calif., and since that\ntime Mra. McFadden, who. is a botanist\nof note, has continued her studies Ip\nthe southern country.\nThe following la the article as lt appeared in the southern paper:\nLast June Mr. and Mrs. J. P. McPadden. of British Columbia bought\nthe Cline ranch of eight and a half\nacres, and, with thetr two daughters\nmoved into the attractive cobblestone\nhome after having lt remodelled and\ndecorated to suit their needs. The\nranch was purchased with the Idea\nof raising pigeons, but after a more\ncareful survey of supply and demand\nfor squabs, they decided not, to enter\nthe field. The pigeon lofts that have\ni>een built will probably be converted\nintp ferneries, for Mrs. McFadden,\nknown in tho Kooteniy district of\nBritish Coliimbla as Fay A. McFadden,\nhas dcoted years of study to flowers,\nplants, mosses and lichens, tn her\norderly cabinets Mrs. McFadden has\nabout 5000 specimens of flowering\nplants, mosses and lichens. The majority of these were gathered, mounted\nsnd labeled oy herself, but a few were\ngiven in exchange by other naturalists.\nThe Identities were verified by specialist :; before the plants were mounted\nand filed.\nMrs. MpFftUdon has now reached the\n1 stage In her studge of plain life whrffc\ni ihfe is an authority, herself. Befors\ncoming t\u00bb Calffornilsfye \u00a5M^ \u00bbcmher\n;df the Canadian AfcimTciub. wa8~\"b\"n\n: the executive council of the National\nPark association, tho Sullivan Moss\nsociety and the British Biological society..\nWhile   in   collecc   at  boulder,  Colo.,\nMrs.  McFadden  wt\u00bb not especially  Interested   in   botany.     Her   interest   in\nplant  life  was  roused  about  ten years\nago when a  visitor from Chicago asked\nher  to name sdtne of -the wild flowers\nnear her Canadian home, and she was,\nunable   to   do   so.     Then   Mrs.   Mc-\nFaddn  began to  read  books,  and the\ndeeper  she delved   into thc  study,   the\nmore   Interesting   tt   became   to   hor. ,\nThen she began to collect-wild flowers :\nAfter  having1* colcctcd and   mounted [\nflowers    fnr    several    yearc.    .Mrs.   McPadden   became   interested   In   mosses,\nand  spent one entire summer collecting them.   Since then ahe has devoted !\nmuch   cf   her   time   to   these   lovely\nplants.\nlast year she collected Wild flowers\nIn California and Arizona, adding 6500\nnew specimens to her already large collection. She expects lo Comb the\nmountains which surround her home\nfor wild flowers and ferns, and wlV.\nalso devotp much time to the cultivation  cf  naMve  plants.\nMrs. McPadden is never happly\nthan wfien out collecting flora fot\nher files. In her collection is a fern\nthat could easily bo covered, root and\nnil. by a 50-ceht piece, yet it is one\ni of   her   treasures.\n! \"When I round It,\" she said. \"I lei\n1 out a yell that ..tartled my companions\nI might look for days, months even,\nand not be able to find another.\"\nShe is qui^e enthusiastic over Cal-\n1 iforniu plant life, and is planning to\nBnend many happy hours in the botanical garden,, at Exposition Park and\nother places where she may meet\npeople' who'-.'-re interested in the\nscincc  of plant*.\ncMeaghers\n611 Baket Street,    t-lume 200\nStore News^D\nNew Evening\nDresses for the\nHoliday Dances\nA potable collection of Evening Dreeses featuring every new style. Unwen IwsnBnw.\nClose fitting bodices, low backs, flattering\nyouthful styles in all the best colors and\nblack. Rich materials, Panne velvet, transparent velyet, Canton crepe> Satin, Georgette,\nTaffeta and Moire. Altogether a wonderful\nrange of the newest and best the market af-\naffords and reasonable in price. Sizes 13 to\n20.\nEaeh  _ _p.J5.00 to S85.00\nContinuing the Sale of Winter Coats Today\nThere is a great savings in the coat department today. All are this season's\npurchases ahd only tho best makes carried. Travel Coats and dressy coats of\nfinest wool mntqri\u00bbls. A complete range of si-zee up to 46 and in an the best\nfcoldi-S.       \"\nRegular Values \u00a73,5.00.\nRegular Values $50.00.\nRegular Values $59.00.\nRegular Values $65.00.\nRegular Values $85.00.\nReguJar Values $100.00.\nRegular Values $i45.00.\nSale Price  *?5.C0\nSale Price '.  \u00a787,8-0\nSale Price .'   \u00ab45.00\nSale Price ..._ -  $45.75\nSale Price _  B60.00\nSale Price ._  875.00\nSale Price \u201e  * 100.00\nWIXNfcR LARGE\n\"llEAKT BALaM\"\nInstitute Members\nat Boswell Succeed\nWith Crystallizing\n__\n-iTTTar\n__\nYour Choice\noi the\nWorld's Best\nRadios\nMajestic, Victor, Kolster,\nSparton, Philco, Brunswick.\nConvenient Terms Arranged.\nKootenay Music House\n_Mll5tC-\njV^taai instruments\n=fc===2=\nBOSWELL, B. C. Dec. 30\u2014At the\nDecember meeting of the Boswell-Sanca\nWomen's Institute a note of congratulation was sent to Mrs. Van Kou^hueu\non the birth of her son. A message of\nsympathy to M_-s. James Coupland, ol\nTrail, fot: the serious sickness in he;\nfamily.\nThe convenor for the Home Economics reported that several members had\nbeen very successful with crystalled\nfruit. A considerable quantity has\nbeen disposed of.\nThe report of Mrs. K. Wallace, convenor for Education and Better schools\nwas followed by a discussion on school\nlunches and Mrs. Hughes offered to\nhave hot lunches prepared at the teach-\nerage.\nMrs. S. J. Cummings, committee for\nagriculture, spoke on tbe transplanting\nof plants, from the garden to pot.-,\nfor the house, emphasiing particular\nly the need for packing the roots\ntightly and watering the plants profusely. '\nMrs. J. R. Higgens. League of Nations\ncommittee, read two extracts\u2014one, a\nspetch by Oeneral Smuts eulogizing the\nLeague of Nations, which he claimed\nwill end War; the other, a speech by\nArthur Hendersen, referring to M.\nBriand's virion of a \"United States of\nEurope''.\nAn interesting discussion took place\non the program for next year, but definite plans were left for a later meeting.\nSouth Slocan Notes\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C. Dec. 3d.\u2014\nEdward Watts was a busine-s visitor in\nNelson  on  Saturday.\nMrs. F. H. Rlndle and daughoera\nof -.rpcan City arl* the quests of Mi.\nand Mi's. w. T. Jones for Christmas\nand the New Year.\nMr. anu Mrs. J. Elioson. Miss Agnes\nEliaaon. and Herbert Ellason spent\nSaturday  in Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Somervllle have as\ntheir guests for the New Year, tint.\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and _t$-6. j\nJ. l?rleBan and children of Kimberley\nand their son-in-law and daughter, j\nMr. and Mrs. Oordon Jewel .of Cran-1\nbrook. I\nTHIRTY YEsiKS .ACO\n(From The Daily Miner, Dec. 31, 1809)\nRumours of a Fenian rtetng are circulating  through  eastern  Canada,  but\nmany   think   it   is  only  a   hoax.\n1    r      *    *    *\nProviding there is ice, the Nelson\nhockev club will play against the\nRcwJrUid 'cam here tomorrow. The\nNelson colors are light blue and white\nand membership badges in those coolrs\nhnvenwh  received.\n*    *    *\nBoer forces are now entrenching\nthemselves with skill and the skilled\ninland Boer officers are getting In\ntheir deadly work. Colenso hills are\none vast fbrt.\n*ee\nMrs. Clark of the Queen's hotel\ngave a ball last night. Sixty couples\ngraced the floor and dancing: and\nmusic continued until the small hours.\nRotarians Stage\nHumorous Program,\nWeekly Luncheon\njn the ajrtrlt erf the New \"tea* which\ncomes shortly the memhers of the\nlocal Rotary club staged an Informal\nprogram   at  thetr  luncheon   yesterday.\nAfter the usual slngsdsfr J. S. Caster\ntook the chair and called on certain\nof the Rotarians for any humoroiw\nstory that they might think fitting\nfor the occasion.\nAmong those who amused their -fellow Rotarians for the greater part of\nan hour were: Rev. W. C. Mawhinney.\nW. E. Wasson. O. Horstead, I. G. Kelson end A. Perrier\nA vote of thanks was extended by\nthe numbers of the club to Oeorge\nBehtreil for the turkey dinner tjiat\nhe served them, end to WR. Thomson\nfor the surprise Christmas package that\naccompanied the meal.\nWEST ARM WATER\nDOWN OVER INCH\nWater level ln the West Arm droppefl\nfrom zro yesterday to a new level ot\nl'\/a inches below zero.\nNews from Parts brings comfort to\nthose with shorn tresses, tot < readH\nmodels follow the lines of Vbe hesd>*4\nclosely, that it is practically Imposa-bls\nto vear these small hats wltb long\nhair.\nPAY TRIBUTE TO\nCANADIAN POET\nVICTOR CULBET IS\nDEAD AT SPOKANE;\nILL ONLY 24 HOURS\nMV. and Mrs. W, A. Ward of Proctsr\nhace recdvAtl word of the death of\nMrs. Ward's nephew, Victor ClUbert.\n24 years old, of Spok.me. .son of Harry\nCulbert, manager of the Audion the\nnter at Spokane. Mr. Culbert had\nbeen ill only 24 hours with spina?\nmenlngltus.\nHe was well known in Nelson and\nProcter, where he hsd visited many\niime_ during the pa..t few years. He\ntffcves a wife, having been married\naLbout-   ;i   year-\nCnpele.s on wool frocks are being\nfeatured In latest Paris dress collections.\nWORKS FOI.\nCANADA\n'Mi-son, former protewor\nor mtxlcrn 1-i-aiory ana coach ol the\no h. F. u. football (cam and ona or\nih%> iock.y uum it Toronto Unl-\nvcr-tVy. has b\u00abn appointed to represent, the Oanrtian department of\nexternal affalra at the forthcoming\nrive-power navftl conference in London. England.\nMiss Ba*ftha Cleavenger. Detroft,\" to\nwhom a Detroit jury in a breach ot\nproml* hearlnt. recently alrttrded\nM50. 000, said to be nearly twice, the\namount of the next largest \"heart\nbalm\" ever awarded  ln the States.\nWhat the Press\nIs Saying\nPl'XISHIMC,   LOW   FLVEHU\nDue to recent accidents in which\nflyers crashed Into streets or houses\nln New Yorlt and vicinity the aeronautic* bureau of the .Department of\ncommerce has been suspending the\nlicenses of all reckless aviators who\nlly too low over eastern cities, ft\nhas been made quite plain by tragic\noccurrences resulting from the taktnt;\nof these chances that low flying Is\na danger to the community.\nDespite all warnings arid an occasional HcehsS retrdcafidn, sotae of our\ncoast aviators aro still showing then-\ncontempt for the regulations governing aviation in this country. The other\nouy a flyer was arrested near Long\nBeach tor diving at automobiles ou\nthe highway. He would swoop down\nof a sudden, like a hawk after a chicken, frightening motorists who did\naot knoW but that the plane wus\nbeing forced down, threatening disaster\nUJ themselves aud their passengers.\nNo report of the occurrence was made\nto the local representative of the Department of Commerce, and so the\naviator did not lose his license.\nIn the majority of such cases the\naviator get* off with a reprimand and\ntiift exaction of a promise not to repeat his silly performance, which he\nsays was only Just for a little sport.\nno   harm   being   intended.\nAnyone who tees a plane flying\ndangerously low should report Its license\nnumber, lf descerlble. to the Department of Commerce aeronautics branch\nbureau. 1151 South Broadway, together\nWith the clrcuniktan-ea attending the\nflight, and due attention will be paid\nto the matter. It ie only by proper\nresentment by the publlo of these\nencroachments upon its rights that\npunishment can be Visited upon reckless   pilots.\u2014Los   Angeles   Times.\nTOBONTO, Ont., Dec. SO.\u2014The career of a much-loved and brilliant\nCanadian poet, playwright and rjoy-\nellst, Mn. Isabel Bccleetone Mackay.\nwas sympathetically _fl_ Informingly\ntraced at the CstNflian Literature\nclub at McMaster -aplvemty. Mrs.\nMackay was born ln Woodstock, Ont,\nin 1875, and spent the 20 years of\nher life preceding hef death In 1928\nin Vancouver. Lady Wllllson, who delivered the main address, aald that\nMrs. Mackay was \"ft rose of a woman.\" with hosts of friends who were\nvery dear to her. Analysing her literary achievements, she placed Mre. Mac-\nkay's poetry first, with a preference\nfor her children's verse lln the \"Shln-\nLatly Wllllson thought had she lived\ning Ship.\" Her plays came, next, and\nshe would have become Canada's greatest playwright. She recalled that an\nImportant milestone waa reached by\nMrs. Mackay in 1907 when she won\nthe lioo prize in the Christmas Globe\ncompetition for the best historical\npoem.\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n., PILLS\n\u25a0umwvsN\nLL KjDNI\nj?\u00ab5_X.\n...ay\n.\u25a0J\nJewellers in Paris as well as this\ncountry are stressing the emerald this\nseason for the costume requiring a\nfinal touch of green to complete its\neffectiveness, and the emerald ring and\nbracelet set In Individual mountings are\nchic while other stones having a new\nvogue are rubles and sapphleTs since\nthe various shades of red and the\nbrighter blues are prominent in costume colors\nWool crepe, because of its lightness\nand susceptibility to ejcellent tailoring,\nemajns a classic for the sports suit.\n__r\u00bb\nDelicious\nSteak\nIs Our\nSpecialty\nThis Week.\nGolden Gate\nCafe\nWomen Allowed to\nDrive Cab, England\nWORTHINO, Eng., Dec. 30\u2014Women\nare considered unsuitable for taiicab\ndriving by Worthing Licensing committee. But a different view ia held\nby Worthing Town council, and it\nreversed the committee's decision not\nto grant a license to Mrs. Hilda Booth.\nShe waa one of tho first women in\nthe country to take up motor driving\nas a means of livelihood and whan\nwar broke out she offered her servlcea\nto tha military authorities.\nSTART\nThe New Year\nWith the Right Milk\nThe right milk in the case is Curlew. It's Pasteurized, thus assuring >-ou the neflBssarSr'protection.\nA Milk of the Finest Quality.\nCurlew Creamery Co. Ltd.\nIce Cream Butter Milk\nAll PMrfect Par.tin.red Products\n _____ NEKON DSIEY NEWS  TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER SI, IBS\nMarket and Mining\nRUGBY PRESIDENT\nIWH ACTIVITY ON\nVANCOUYER MARKET\nWHEAT VALUES IN\nFURTHER DECLINE\nSHORTS COVER\nON WALL STREET\nCHICAGO.  Dec.   30\u2014Notwlthatanding\nthat the  United  States wheat  vlilblle\n^_j_     ,.   , ;     _  ,, aupply today decreaaed a,0_,000 buahels,   _\nBtrong  I'nderone in  Evidence; time timea aa much u many trade*\u2122 t Urgent   Bidding   Sends   Prices\nSterling Patific, C. & E.\nAre Strong\natfcOfflntB. Dec. 80\u2014 (By Stsssth wt.\n\u25a0\"\"-l-eo-n.   IM... leaaed   mlu)\u2014Caoao-\n\"kptlxtty vaa noted on the Van-\nr atock, \u00abieh\u00ab_Be   today  Mth  a\nundertone  in  evidence.    Sterl-\nwlflc and c. and  X. wtre the\nHUt  active   traders   of   the  session.\n*\" wllnc Pacific opened  stranger  an\n-that  baaing had  commenced at\n. \/well on Sunday  but  on  various\n\"n atock sold down  to low  and\n\u25a0of 11.\nlooked  for,  wheat  values declined.\nClosing Quotations on wheat were 1\nnervous. V, to *t, osnt under Saturday's j\nfinish. Rye cloaed % to 3% centa\ndown: com !4 to 3tt cents off: oata\nH to as centa drop, and provisions\nunchanged to tan cents down.\nUp; Selling of Tax\nIntent Evident\nDIE STEADY\nTREND IN EAST\nand V apened 5 up at w-5 and Morning   Prices   at   Montreal\ndemand closed $3 after\na hlfh fo rSOn. A. P. Con-\nxtia  showed   net. gain   and\n$1J7 and was up 7 centa from\nclose.    Calmont  showed  good\ntoday  and .reflected  tha  oon-\nPirm;\nAfternoon Prices\nSteady\na NIW TORK. Dec. SO\u2014Selling for\ntax purposes waa expectedly small In\ntoday's session of the stock market\u2014\nthe last saasion ln which regular transactions may be made for that purpose\u2014and shorts were prompt to cover\ntheir  commitments.\nUrgent bidding for leading shares\nln the laat hour of trading sent\ndozens up 3 to 10 points.\nThe selling of tax intent was widely\nln evidence *$o^_v_*. and closing\nprices were  highly  irregular.\nThe day's newa was not of a character to influence the market, but the\nStut2 Involuntary Bankruptcy petition\nhad been partially foreshadowed by\nthe recent market action of the stock,\nbut   which   between   September   and   early\nMONTREAL,    Dec.    80.\u2014A   dull\nla' stock  Is  now  attracting  steady trend opened the Uontreal stock December had declined from 12 to 3 _\ng   operations   have   recom-   _\u201e\u25a0,_\u201e\u201e     \u201e__,\u201e    \u201e,_   __\u201ei-_    __.-__ Credit conditions remained llrm. Call\naloaing  with  net  gain  of   \u00ab<\">ange   today,    the   morning   prices ameJ _newe<1 at \u201e. \u201eT Mnt.\nMercury  was another of the    *\u00bb -   \"rm   and   the  afternoon's   hold- utilities and Electrical manufacturing\nHy   active   Issues   today,   no   lng steady,  If not  reflecting the  up- stocks  were  ln   the  forefront of   the\ndoe   to  report   from   the   field   ward  trend  of   Wall  street. day's advance, auch issues as American\nte. 3  will make a test for pro-      The two leaders,  International  Nick- and Foreign Power, Standard Oas. -en-\nel and BraaUlan Traction, both cloaed eral   Electric,    Weetlnghouse   Electric,\n\u25a0*\u2022   with   fractional   gains   Nickel   waa   up Columbia Oas rising from 3 to V points.\n\"   H to #31 V.   while BraaUlan rose   _  to'     Othsr notable strong spots were Na-\n* to wm, -wane anuiiaa rose  _ to ^^ ^^^ up 7 and Otis Elevator\nviraatrp.i   __,.r   ______   i_au- W ua-   United States Steel, American\nMontreal   power   rose   \u2022%   to   138 Vi. J\u00a3    international Telephone and Na-\n\u00bbower corporation, up,'A to 173: <\u00bbue- S^*S__liSrter were among shares\nbee  Power up   1   to  Mt. and Sha-wln- J^t,      a\u00a3_t  four  mBtt.\nigan   closed   unchanged Among   other   shares   touching   new\nAmong the  Implements, Massey  Har- \u25a0 low,  WMe  continental  Motors,   Good-\ni   roee   1\\   to   MS.   and   Cockshutt rlcll preferred and United States Rub-\nand Pend Oreille also attracted trading   Plow    remained    unchanged.    National ber and Pressed  Steel Car,  Pfd.,  the\nIn-\u2014nst both, closing higher than pre-   Steel  Oar waa  1   point higher  at  tot. laet named breaking 8 points,\nvtous close prices, Pend OreUle 10 up  Dominion Bridge up 1_ at \u00bb731_, while\nOIL BRIEFS \"TT* _m ***\" \u00bb \u00bb \"Mil Mauser- Int blown down tea hlfh wind wal'\nuiu mui\/i u cial welfc; brought   under   contKoTanain   taW\n\u2022   a   . this morning and lt la Mais blo\u00abB\nBOM* Na 4 bottom at \u00ab444 feM tad through separatora   wtth notmal  pro-\naa\u00ab\u2014\u00ab     t.    _______     ._ dUCtlon\nCALGARY,   Dec.,  so\u2014 (By   Hugh   W.\nRobertson.   Ltd.  leaaed  win)\u2014Starling 81   teet  u   the  IU\nPadflc, at Ml. feet and 3\u00ab3 fe* ln hare   dieeontlnued^rtlllng   l-HSt-der\nlima,   commenced   at   test   for   pro- to re-cement casing at tha top of the\nf^^^i. 8,ui,laL n!?rSll_'-____i!^t Uln\u00bb- \u00b0\u00bb ettaitstl cement Job having\n1000 feet of mud waa bailed from the mam  found  to  bs  unsatisfactory.\nhole  yesterday and last night efforts _   .   \u00ab\nwere being nude to get >the well to      Eastcrest Not 1 was stm waiting tha\nblow   free.     Baok   pressure   waa   built arrival of fiscal tools last night to clear\nup and released several ttmas, remov- the  hole  o\u00ab about  too  feet  of drill\nIng   small   quantities   of   the   drilling md twisted off several days ago.    No\nfluid eaoh time. At a late hour apera- 2 wu reaming and circulating.\ntlons were stopped until morning aad ' .   .   \u2022\nlt  waa  thought  that  further  balling      a. P. \"Con. Ne. 1 was preparing to\nmight   be   attempted   today.     '\nW.rmit.e& (mnn\nDec,\nWheat\u2014 O-n-Mi\nTettC  1.40*4\nWftV      1.4*1.,\nJulv  ........ l.\u00abH\nso    \u2014_^ saw\nBecauae  run 8i4 Inch casing to tl31 fset laat   \u2122\u00b0;    -   J_J\n80\u2014Oram    quo__\u00bb\nV.i\ntsslw   ._...-\nBarley-\nDec.\n.axx.\n.m\nKlnsella.   of , the   Argo-\nof   the   large   amount   of   mud   atlll ni_ht,   This well has more open hole\nremaining  ln the  hole  lt  waa  lmpoa- than any In the field and the casing\nslble to gat any idea of what produc- w_j   protect   agalnat   caving.    Drillers\ntion    might   be    expected.     Offtclale exDect to land \u2022_ Inch casing ln the   .,\nwould   venture   no   opinion.     Should uom.   Baltac was drilling at saso feet  }f\"       -**2\nproduction be obtained sterling Pacific ,_,_(  -_h   the   bit   working   m   tha   Ju         -1\"*\nwill add four miles to the provenllme lower  Fernies  having  passed  through   __1\u00ab\u2014    \u201e\u201e,\nstone  formation  of  the  field  aa  well the   Dalhousles Dftc 3fi3\nas  prove  up  a large  portion  of  Ita .   \u2022   . Stat  _ 3.71\nholdln-js which comprise 720 acrea ln      nargal waa drlUlng at 4100 feet on   J*1*   -  \u2014\nthe ac-juth end of the field. Sunday with the bit 93 feet In the      *\u00bb*\u2022'-      _.,.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022 Dalhousie san_\u00bb. Jf* -   \u2022_\u00bb_\nHigh winds over the week end took \u2022   \u2022   e May    tmsi\ntheir toll In Turner   Valley by sweep-      Dalhousie No. 7 waa fishing for cable   Ju]7 _-_^'?3\nlng   down   four  derricks.     The   moat lost   ln   the   hole   when   the   derrick\nserious  damage  was  at   Home  No.   3 burned  down  several  -weeks  ago.   ac-\nwhere   the   falling   derrick   broke   a cording   to  word   from  the  field   on\nconnection and the great producing well Sunday.    Little difficulty  ia expected\nblew   wild.    Last  night   efforts   were in  getting the well  ln shape to te-\nstill   being   made   to   again   harness sumo drlUlng.\nthe   flow    which   yields    about   600 -.   .   .\nbarrels of naphtha a day.   The other      At 0 ajn. the crew at Sterling Pacific\nHie-h\n1*114\n1.47%\n1.48 _\n.mv,\nM\n.ta\n.70K\n3 IB\n3.71 ,\nLow ol\u00abM\n1.40% 1.40%\n1.48% 148%\n1.47*4 147%\n.60%\n.84%\n.6t%\nJM%\n.67%\n.70%\nMM.\n.twt,\n.60%\n.851%\n.67%\n.70%\n\u00bb6\u00bb\n3.71\n3 63\n3.71\n3.74\n'\u00bb\u2022\u00bb%\n1.00%\n1.08\n1.01% LOOK\n1.03 103\u00ab\nCash wheat Nn. 1 hard tl.41%: No.\n1 northern 81.40%: No. 3 northern\n81.38: No. 3 northern 8133%: No.\n4 1137%: No. E 61.16%: No. 6 1.06%:\nfeed 1.89%; track 11.40%: screenings\nM Per ton. '\n. __.,.J_, r.,,!. whaii team. To-   derrlcka   were   Commonwealth   No.   2.  waa awaiting ardeia after making at-\nnaut <^>?\u00ab_ra_^ \"*___?___\u2022\"\"[7,  IT.  Ullnato   Alberta  No.   3,  and   Freehold   tempts to  have the  well  blow  ltaelf\nnew   president   of   the\nE&& Market\nOTTAWA, Dec. 80\u2014There is not yet\nany sign  of  Increased  production  ot\nfrom' the Dalhoualea.\n. waa firm throughout\nbetween M and 60 centa and\n61. Gains were noted at close\n1 session in Dalhousle, Freehold,\nHafttl, McDougall Segur New, McLeod.\nMerland, Southwest Petroleum and\nunited. .\nttt the mining section Orandview\nwas. the most active and closed 1 cant\nax7' at, 15   cents.     Reeves   McDonald   \u2122   roee\nronto.   ls   the   new  b\u2122\u2122\u00bb\"     .t\u201e__ No.   3.    None  of  these  derricks were Into\" production.   Unsufflclent pressure\ninterprovlnclal   Rugby   Football   Un^ ,_   __, could  be  built  up  to  blow  out   the\nDr.   KlnseUa   ls   a   ^\"\u2022^s,1,f_Vl**rr \u2022   .   \u2022 entire mud column and It was thought fresh eggs in Canada, and dealers in\ngraduate and has been Indentiiiea witn Mn.cn\u2014 Na \u201e _,\u201e ^jajujg at 4770 orders  would   be   to   run   the  bailer the  larger  eaaUrn* clttea  are  looking\nfootball   and  rowing   for   many   years. ^  &_d _loM w t)w  bottom  of  the \u201e,,!\u201e although lt was believed officials to the United States for supplies.\nHe ls a keen student of the game ana u^a.,,,^   ,___,   on   Sunday   night might  decide  to run  In  mud  again Toronto \u2014 Dealers quoting country\na first class executive.\nand , Reevee,   7. . Few   changes\nnolajd  in the other mining Issues,\nVancouver Stocks\n(Bf H. W. Robertson fid., leased wire)\nBb_v1sw. .,...._ -    \u25a001'rlt\nCanadian Car waa off  %  at 836%.\nMontreal Stocks\nBank   of   Commerce    340\nDominion Bank   _ 336\nImperial   Bank    _    338\nBank   of   Montreal  310\nBank   of   Nova   Sootia    373\nRoyal Bank   3*6\nBank of Toronto  _ 344\nAbitlbi  Po\u00bber  \u2014  Paper      35\nAsbestos   Corporation    _    __\nAtlantic   Sugar   ...\u201e _      6%\nBen   Telephone    _... 140\nBrazilian T. L. ft Power\nIndependence *.....'.  M%   Brit. American Oil \t\nIni-'C.  _ C.       .27      Brgmpton Paper      38%\nKdWenaiy* 'Florence    ..\u2022...:._.._        .07     Canada Bronze _ _   43%\nKeofcena.   King     06%   Can. Car * Foundry     36%\nLurk.\"-1m         .06      Can.   Cement    _..._ ...._ _   17%\nMarmot  River,  asked    18% Can. Cement pfd  _    93\nMorion   WoUeay      _         .08      Cana. Industrial Aloohol     13%\nsTMUmal    Silver       07       Can. Gen. Electric  pfd.  385\nNew York Stocks\nBig Missouri   \t\nBlyeiurd,   aided   .\nCort. Province   \t\nDuthie    ...-..-\t\nOw^ga   mat       \t\nGeorgia    Oopper\nOtoi*e- River     \t\nOo_*nda\t\nGtandvtew\n.06%\n.04\nA0\n.12\n2.76\n.14\n.79\n.14>\nN4\u00ablle   Five\nOMgon   Copptr\nJwmler    \t\np\u00bbPd   Oreille\n.a\n 13\n  1.61\n.... 2.60\nIdaho            M\nServes   McDonald   1^4\nRufus   Argenta        -..- 09\n*Aqth  Hope     31\n-awrercreet   \t\nHrer   Cup\t\nBnowflakt-\nRichfield   \t\nP..fc'*;:)'..i\n\u2022Galfeary Oil\nCan: Power      17%\nCan. Steamship Lines  _    18%\nCons Mining _s Smelting _ 350\nDominion  Bridge   *    73%\nDominion Glass   131\nDom. Steel Corp. pfd    35\nDom.  Textile    _ \u201e _   76\nA. P. Grain  _   37%\nHillcrest Colliers _   60\n\u25a005'.i   Lake of the Woods     46\nM'\/i   Massey Harris    43\nMontreal  Tramways    166\nMontreal Power  \u201e  136\nMont.   Telegraph    48%\nNational. Breweries. _ _..._  118%\nNational   Steel   Car       67%\nOgUvle   Milling    , _. 600\n113%\n172 V,\n55%\n14%\n.04\n.20\nH. W. Robertson ltd, leased wire)   L^     \u201e*\ni P._.._o_solkla_d        186\n_bt\/ -. 16\nAMo*(_*sd        100\nt!   * -E.   Lands     300\nOntario  Steel   Products\nOttawa L.  %   Power ....\nPenmans,  Ltd\t\n<Hn___..*._tn\nOUmotit\nttpbousle\nEabyan\nfreehold\n_8rgal\n.60\n1.18\n1.60\n.15\n1.13\n.07%\n.68\n_8\n8.10\n34\n90\n..    78\n..    73%\nPrice BrOs. *    84\nQuebec Power     64%\nShawinigan   ._    76%\nSo.  Canada   Power       32%\nOil\nHllnois Alta      .83\nMcDougall Segur ex      M\nMcDougall  Segur  new    78\nMercury      \u2022\u00bb\nMoLeod         3.36\nMill   City   *. _    1.M\n\"Mayland    1A|\nOkalta   New    _     1.25\n\u25a0Bsgent                 -8\nRoyaliue .._::.  83.00\n1.01\n-Sterling   Pacific\nVulcan   ....-\t\n\"United    \t\n.........\n.48\n\u202276\nThe Prince- of\n-with a maroon\nstripe.\n'.   Hacienda a deep mellow tone like thr\n\u2022walls of Spanish bMMflii \u00abm in thr\n!.,_.     Un.s. ...\" \u25a0    1   \u2022\nSteel   of  Canada _ 43%\nSt, Lawrence ....  _  37\nWabasso cotton  _  38\nWestern Grocers  -. 30\nWinnipeg Railway  _  97\nWinnipeg Railway, pfd  80\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Dec. 30\u2014Copper quiet,\nelectrolytic spot and futures 816.00.\nIron\u2014Irregular; No. 3 fob. Eastern\nPennsylvania 820.00 to 821.00; Buffalo\n617.00  to 617.50.\nTin\u2014Easy. Spot and nearby 83925;\nfutures 839.76.\nLead\u2014Steady; spot New Tork 86.25;\nEaat St. Loula  86.10.\nZinc\u2014-Quiet, East St. Louis spot and  un Aircraft\nHigh Low\nAllegheny     33% 32%\nAllied Chem 360 264\nAndes     \u2014 \u2014 ,\nAm Can  119 llt%\nAm For Power    89% eVA\nAm  Loco       99 98%\nAm Steel Fdy     45 44%\nAm Smelt  & Jtef    72% 70%\nAm   Tele     217% 315%\nAm Tob   197 193%\nAnaconda       74 71%\nAtchison      330% 219\nBaldwin     30% 3?y4\n37%   B * O  116% 114\n45%   Ben Avla     \u2014 \u2014 \u201e\n'    Beth  Steel       9S% 91%\nC P   187% 186%\nCerro de Pasco  ....   64% 63%\nC _  O    303% 200\nChrysler       35% 84%\nCon Oas N Y     66% 95\nCorn Prod   -   88% 86%\nCurtis Wright     \u2014\nDupont     11-tV*\nEastman Kodak .... 175\nErie   1    56%\nFord  (Bug)      \u2014\nFord Can      \u2014\nFree-Tex     38%\nFirst Nat Stores ....   66\nOen  Mot       40%\nOen Elec    236\nGranby       61\nG  N   pfd       94%\nO W  Sugar      29%\nHowe Sound    39\nHud  Mot    M\nIns Cop     37\nInt Rap Tran     \u2014\nInt   Nickel       31%\nInt Tel * Tel     72%\nKelly spring     3%\nKen Cop      Mil\nKresge S 8     32%\nKroeg _ Toll      23%\nMiami       27%\nN P     titx\nPack Mot     1S_\nPhillips Pete     34%\nRadio Corp      43%\nRock   Island     114\nSchulte     4%\nSheU Un Oil     23%\nSin   Con       33%\nS P   119%\nStand OU Cal     60%\nStand OU  N J  ...   66\nStew  Warn       38%\nStude       41%\nTex  Corp      56\nTex Gulf Sul   -   63%\nUn OU Oal      44*\nTJ  P    214\nU S Rubber     24\nU   S   Steel     167%\nWest Elec  139%\nWillys  Over        7%\nClose\n33-_\n260\n33%\n118%\n89%\n98%\n44%\n70%\n316%\n194%\n73%\n319%\n30%\n114%\n34%\n93%\n187%\nFEW CHANGES ON\nTORONTO MARKET\nStandard Exchange Sees Only\nNarrow Priee Range; Sher-\nit Gordon Strong\nI Drilling   wlll   be   discontinued   today  and drtll a Uttle deeper before making shippers for ungraded eggs, extras 58c\nand drill rods will be moved to No. 2   a more complete teat for production, to 60c;  firsts 47c to 50c;  pullets * ex*-'\nwhich should resume drilling from 4264   Approximate   one   thousand   feet   of tras 43c to 46c.\nfeet ln a few days.   No. 3 wlll make  Uie mud column was balled  out  on Montreal\u2014One car of -United Stat*\na test for production from the sands  Sunday:   How much more was blown storage  eggs   has  been  sold   for   a\u00bb-\nbut   balling   wlU   not  be   started   for  out   ts   not   known   but   considerable livery here at 39%c, f.o.b. Chicago.   '\u2022\nseveral days until rigging of a aepar-   remains In the  hole. Winnipeg\u2014Fresh eggs dealers country\n\u2022   \u2022   * shippers extras 47c; tints 43c; seoodB*\nnome No. 3 after blowing wild for 35c.\nsome Houfs as ttie result of a broken Vancouver\u2014Dealers quoting ptoducett\nconnection caused by the derrick be- extras 41c;  firsts 36c to 36c.\n-TORONTO, Dec. 30.\u2014tBy Hugh W.\nRobrrtson Ltd., leased wire) Trading\ntoday on the Toronto stock and mining exchange proceeded within very\nnarrow price ranges, and no substantial changes were recorded at the\nclose of the session. A fairly strong\nprice tone was maintained throughout the mining section. The gold Issues, ln particular, held strong with\nan upward trend apparent.\nTrading ln the mining section was\nfeatured by activity and strength ln\nSherritt Gordon. This Btock closed\nfirm at yesterday's last quote. The\nother LIndsleys showed good strength\nand closing quotes were near Saturday's    laat    prloes.    Falconbridge    was\n64% j firm   at   86.15   during   the   session   to\n300%   close  at  this  figure.\n36%   VEXTrBK.1 41AINS\n96% 1    Ventures   at   close   of   62.90   showed\n87% '\u2022 net  gain   of   15  cents.  Sudbury   Basin\n6% , at 63.16 was off 5 cents from previous\nfutures 65.46.\nAntimony\u201488.60.\nT~T QulsksUver\u20148134.00.\nHa-i-a new cgr      Al London:\ntttiev  \u00bb  scafle       standard   copper spot 167.  Ss,   8d:\nfutures \u00a366,  16a.\nElectrolytic,   spot   182,   10s;   futures\n\u00a383,  10s.\nT_f-Gpot \u00a3176, 10s; future* \u00a3IB0, 5s.\nZinc-Spot \u00a319,16s; futures \u00a330, 7s.6d.\nYel Truck\n14\na7%\n61%\n39%\n329 V,\n49%\n92%\n28%\n37%\n64%\n36\n30%\n69%\n3\n56%\n32%\n23\n25%\n84%\n16%\n33%\n40%\n111%\n3%\n22%\n23\n118\n59%\n64%\n36%\n41%\n55%\n62%\n43%\n211\n23%\n164%\n132%\n7\n13%\n114%\n172 %\n66\n11%\n31\n38%\nator and tank has been completed.\nIn view of the Merland strike from\nthe Dalhousles, just over a mile south,\nNo. 3 Is believed to have good production  from  the  upper   horizon.\n40\n236\n60%\n92%\n3%\n56%\n32%\n23%\n27\n84%\n15%\n34%\n42\n111%\nMiracle, ln the Mercury group, twisted off twelve stands or about 1000\nfeet of drill pipe early Saturday when\ndrilling at 3700 feet. Fishing for the\npipe waa continuing, laat night and\nnome difficulty was anticipated in tbe\nrecovery of the tools. Wellington which\nhas been standing with casing cemented at the top of the lima for\nthe past 10 days, resumed drilling\non Sunday and should be malting\nnew hole in the Ume in a few days.\nRigging of a separator was also underway. Big production ls expected at\nthis well because of its location about\none third of a mile southeast of\nHomo   No.   1,\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nBritish Dominion No. 2 appears to be\na   commercial   well   without   further\ndeepening into the Ume.   In a 24 hour j\nproduction test which ended on Sunday 1\nthe well yielded 102 barrels of naphtha\nand last night production man at the\nwell  believed the figure for the sec- 1\nond  day  would  be somewhat greater i\nas   the   gas   appeared   to   be   getting\nwetter.     This   well   was   drilled   and'\nbrought   ln  with  cable   tools  and   la\nlocated on a 20 acre lease from McDougall  Segur  Exploration.\n\u2014\n,\nCommonwealth test for production\nfrom the Dalhousle sands has so far\nbeen unproductive. When all but 40\nfeet of the drilling fluid has been removed on Sunday, bailing was discontinued because of high winds and\nclose.   International   Nickel   opened   40\ncents lower at 830.50 but  under good\nbuying   pressure closes'. 831.10,  up  60\ncents   on   the   day's   trading.   Noranda\nat   close  of   833.75   returned   net   gain\nof  16  cents.  Amulet  waa  exceptionally\nstrong  this  morning and  reached  new\nhigh Of 61.66 before closing  81.64. We\nunderstand    Amulet   ore    reserves   are\nbeing steadily increased. Strength was: there was unsufflclent gas flow\n29'b a_o noted in' Abana, Barry Holllnger, clear the hole. Officials of the company\n38% Big Missouri, Dome, Oranada, Rouyn, are planning to shoot the sands with\n55% Holllnger Howey, Kirkland Lake, Lake nitro glycerine m an effort to Ubetate\n36% Shore, Mandy, Mclntyre, Newbec, Pend. production. The attempt, it ls be-\n20% Oreille, Slscoe. Teck Hughes and Wright I\n30% HargTeaves.,\n71%      Apparently influenced -by the upward\ntrend    in    Home   05  .aud    continued\ngood   reports   from  various   operations.\noil issues ln most cases traded strongly.   Home   at   close   of   68.40   was   up\n20   cents.   Calmont   showed    gain   for\nthe day's  activities, A. P. Consolidated\nat last sale of 81.85  was  up   10 cents.\nDalhousle   gained   5   cents.   Associated,\nAJax.  C. els E. Foothills,  Merland and\nSterling    also   showed    firmness    near\nrecent levels. Recessions, where.; recorded, were within small proportions.\n1930\nResolve to Open\nA NEW ACCOUNT\nthat will be\nA Real\nSAVINGS ACCOUNT\nANY BRANCH OP THE BANK WILL\nBE GLAD TO HAVE YOUR ACCOUNT.\nIMPERIAL BANK\nNELSON BRANCH, .\nCRANBROOK BRANCH,\n\u25a0^ESTON BRANCH.\nOF CANADA\nJ. H. D. BENSON. M.n.,\u201e\nW. R. CRUBBE, Manage:\n\u25a0      C. W. ALLEN, Man.,-,\n23\n23%\n118%\n60...\n64%\n37%\n41%\n55%\n62%\n44%\n311\n23%\n166%\n139%\n7%\n45%\n13%\n=S2_\nBeauharnois Power\nCorpn. Ltd.\n8% Collateral Trnst Sinking Fund Bonds dm Oct 1, 1959.\nHydro-electric development now being carried out by the company\non the St. Lawrence tllver ls of Internatonal importance, and will\nconstitute one of the greatest producers of electricity ln the world.\nBach 61000 bond carries with It a stock bonus of 5 shares of common and stock purchase warrants tot 10 shares of common at 836\nper abare, procurable at certain dates.\n,    We offer our participation at per and accrued Interest.\nR.P.Clark&Co.,(Vanc.)Ltd.\nINVESTMENT BANKERS\nNEJJSON, B. C. PHONE iOU\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Ltd.\n\"\"\" Office, Bmeltlng end Beftnlng Depert__n\nTRAIL.   MUTIM   OOUJMBIA\n8MELTEKS AND REFINERS\nPunk-Man tsf Gold, SUver, Copper, Lead and Zinc One\nProducer, ot Gold. Sihrwr. Oopper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTAD-MO. TBAIL\nExchange Rate\nNEW YORK, Dec. 30\u2014SteriW exchange irregular at 64.83% for 60 day\nbills and 84.67 0-16 tor demand.\nBar sliver 48%c; Canadian dollars\n21-32c discount: \"Francs 3.\u00bb3%c; lire\n\u20146.2314c;  marks 23.87c;  kronen 26.81c.\nNelson approximate rste sterling exchange 84\u00bb>. ^^\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Dec. S0-_ggs higher;\nbutter and cheese unchanget.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns 38%c; finest\nessterns 38c to 38%c.\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurised 88 %o to\n%c; No. 1 creamery 42c to 43c.\nI*ggs-^-8torage extras SOc; seconds\n44c; fresh specials 72c; extras 70c;\nfirsts 60c.\nSASKATCHEWAN GETS\nMEMORANDUM TODAY\nToronto Stocks\n(Bf H. W. Robertson ltd., leased wire)\nAbana     107\nAcondfl     ; 07\nArno     21\nAJax        1.48\nAmulet        160\nAmity    13\nA. P.   Consolidated       1.80\nAssociated     98\nArea     06\nBaldwin 02%\nBaltic   OU    71\nB. A.    Oil     _  45.50\nBase   Metals    1    3.35\nBedford, asked      -6%\nBldgood     00%\nBarry   Holllnger    16%\nBwana      4.95\nBig    Missouri     61\nCalmont       1.15\n    3.00\n aa%\n _ 6.00\n 08\n     7.15\n    1.80\n        .02\nEastcrest     _ _..   1.11\nFoothills    1.60\nFalconbridge        6.10\nGoodflsh      0.3\nHome   Oil       8.35\nHarker    Oold          .02\nHowey 86\nHolllnger _    4.95\nHudson  Bay      8.46\nInternational   Nickel    31.10\nKeelly    33\nKirkland    Lake     51\nKootenay Florence 07%\nMacassa     10\nMandy     37\nManitoba   Basin    18\nC.   _ . E.   Lands\nCentral   Manitoba\nChemical  Research\nClerlcy,   asked\nDome    \t\nDalhousle   \t\nDuprat\nOTTAWA, Dec. 80\u2014Premier Mackenzie\nKing will send his reply to the memorandum   presented   by   Saskatchewan\non the natural resources question to- \u25a0 McDougaU   - 26\nmorrow.     It   will   not,   however,   be   Mclntyre      15.28\nmade public then.   The prime minister I Mining   Corp  2.95\nssld tonight that it would  be given j jjayland   .... 160\nout   simultaneously   tn   Ottawa   and: Newbec\n.22\n_   Ottawa    and    \u201e\nRegina. when he \"ceijed -word '\u00ab\u25a0_>> I New  ImiserM  on  ZZZZ'Z M.n\nPremier  Anderson  that  lt   had   been\nreceived.\nWINS   PRIZE,  VANCOUVER\nB06WELL, 8. C Dec. 30.\u2014K. Wallace has received word that at the\nBritish Columbia Winter Fair held in\nVancouver in November, he waa awarded second prize for Winter Nells pears.\nNlplsslng     \u201e._     1.66\nNoranda    - _  33.60\nLogan & Bryan\nPrivate Wire\netOCU,   BONDS.   COTTON.\nOBAIM\nNew York. Montreal aad Vanoouver Btock Exchanges, Chicago\nBoard of Trade, Winnipeg Grain\nExchange and other leading a\u00bb\noencui\nVancouver. Spokane and Seattle\n\u25a0_______8_-______P_^\u00bb\nOld   Colony\nOregon    Copper\nPeterson   Cobalt\nPend  OreUle \t\nPremier   Oold   ...\n8.   W.   P>ete   \t\nSherrlt Oordon\nSudbury BMin\nSterling    Paclllc\nSiscoe    \t\ngtndflcona    \t\nTech    Hughe*    ....\nThonijuwh   adallac   05\nVlpond    oa\nVentures    2X1\nWright  Hsrgreftvet     1.3ft\nWatte  Ackerman     3.18\n 06\n 11\n 06\n.... 2.S5\n.... 1.61\n... .98\n3.06\n... 3.1S\n.... 106\n...   .43\nft.10\nTor the first time three sportB-women\nwere recently invited t. dinner by the\nBritish Sportsmen's club who tingled\nont three distinguished feminine exponents. Lady Bailey, the air-woman,\nthe Hon. Mrs. Victor Bruce, the motor\noar and motorboat racer, and MJw\nMolly Courts*, tba golfer, seldom talk\nMi\nPRINTING\nFor All Purposes\nLook Over the last of Items Below . and . Cheek .Over .Your\nStock. .'We Pride Ourselves Upon Giving the Best of Service\nand Upon Reasonable Prices.\n:\ni\ni\nFor the Bookkeeping\nDepartment\nRECEIPT BOOKS\nBILLHEADS\nSTATEMENTS\nLEDGER LEAVES\nSYNOPTIC FORMS\nLOOSE LEAF BINDERS\nVOUCHERS\nCHECKS\nFor Direct Mail\nAdvertising\nCIRCULARS\nPRICE LISTS\nFOLDERS\nANNOU. \u00bb_MENT CARDS\nBLOTTERS\nENVELOPE STUFFERS\nFor General Use\nPAMPHLETS\nBOOKLETS\nPOSTERS\nDODGERS\nWINDOW CARDS\nFor the General\nOffice\nLETTERHEADS\nENVELOPES\nSPECIAL FORMS\nBUSINESS CARDS\nPOSTCARDS\nCIRCULAR LETTERS\nINDEX CARDS\nLABELS\nFor Mining\nCompanies\nOFFICE STATIONERY\nLOOSE LEAF BINDERS\nSTOCK CERTIFICATES\nSYNOPTIC DISTRIBUTION FORMS\nCOMPANY SEALS\nSocial Stationery\nN0TEHEADS AND ENVELOPES\nVISITING CARDS\nINVITATION CARDS\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nWEDDING STATIONERY\ni\n:\nTke\nDAILY NEWS\n\u2014Job Department\u2014\nPhone 144 Nelson, B. C.\n\u00a79i\n>\u2022##\u2022#_\u00bb\u2022###\u2022#\u2022###\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022_\u00bb\u2022\u2022\n Sports\narm, neibon dsily news Tuesday morning, December \u00ab, 1929    \u2014\nn*\n[ANCOUVER IS\nVICTOR OVER\nVICTORIA CUBS\nOM  Game  Finds  Vancouver\nOne Up on  Score\nof 3 to 2\nSHIKAT THROWS\nROMANO, NEW YORK\nNBW YORE. Dec. 30\u2014Richard Shlkat,\nworld's heavyweight wrestling champion,\nso lar as the New Tork and Pennsyl-*(\nvania state athletic commissions an\nconcerned, threw Mike Romano with\na crotch and body hold after 30 minutes and 3S seconds of wrestling here\ntonight.\nBritish Football\nLeague Standing\nITAKCOUVER, _tc. 30 \u2014 Vancouver |\nm nosed out a 3-3 victory over\nVictoria Cubs in a Pacific Coast\n\u00abkey league game here tonlgh. The I\nLbs displaying much better form than '\ntr did ln their game here laat\nmay when the Lioiw defeated them\n9 held the faat moving locals well\nhand  tonight.    The  teams  ended I\ni first  period  with  a  goal  apiece. ' Sheffield Wed   21 13\nineouver went Into a two-goal lead   Manchester   c   :\n. the second period, and ln the final\n_ton  Villa   ....  33 13\n_   Darby   County   23 13\nsalon the Cuba counted their aecond , , -.^   united   23 12\nlly  while they prevented  the Lions! Liverpool     23 11\nnn further scoring.                             | Bolton  Wan....' 33 0\nLlnl.p                            j Huddersfleld T 23 10\nVia toria I Leicester   City    23 10\nGOAL                                | Middlesbrough    23 10 l'_   3   92   4.   33\nUAtsou                 _   .            Itober_on I B\"mlfy    23 \u00bb\u00bb   4   49   49   38\nDEatXCE\nJerwa   _   Kennedy\nrennan    Redpath\nCF.NTEK\nIncluding   gamea   of   Saturday,\n-\u2014'       December 38.\nENGLISH    LEAGUE\nFIR8T   DIVISION\nV   W   L   D   P   A   Pts\n4 53 24 30\n4 64 37 SO\n4 49 41 23\n4 43 40 38\n2 43 S3 as\n4 39 49 M\n5 41 37 34\n4 38 M 34\n4 46 48 34\nsettle      Ev.a.n-.\ntuna\nfcAdam     _         Kelly\nindeison   P. Runge\n''Vancouver   subs\u2014   DUnn.   F.   .'erwa,\nhunmlngs, Arnott.\nVictoria t**sbx \u2014  Leacock,   H.  Runge,\nSWe, Williamson.\nReferee\u2014Ton.\nPint period\u2014 (1) Vancouver, Sander-\nan;   a5.   <2>   Victoria,\nWly, 8:22.\nPenalties,  none.\nManchester Un 23 10 10   3   36   43   23\nArsenal       33 9 11    3   36   33   21\nWast  Ham  On 23 8 10    6   46   48   21\nSheffield   Unit 23 'Al\nBlackburn Rov 23 8 1-p\nBirmingham 23 7 10\nPortsmouth   .... 33 7 10\nSunderland   .... aa 7 11\nNewcastle    Un 33 8 13\nEverton   a* 5 12\nOrimsby Town at 6 11\n8ECOW1 DIVISION\nOldham    Ath 32 14   3    5   63   26   S3\nBlackpool     22 16   6   1    60   39   33\nLeacock   from ,. Chelsea  ._  22 11   8   6   41   28   27\nSouthampton.: 33 11    8   4   60   42   36\nBradford     23 10   7   6   43   42   36\nCartoonist Depicts Deep Snow, Conditions\n\u2022\u25a0\/--- V___ -__-________=____!\n3\n43\n49\n21\n5\n48\n64\n21\n6\n38\n36\n20\n6\n36\n39\n20\n4\n33\n43\n18\n2\n43\n60\n18\n7\n39\n63\nn\n4\n37\n63\n16\nSecond   period\u2014(3)   Vancouver.   Mc- I Cardiff City .... 24 11   9 4 34 33 36\n.dam,  16:22;   (4) Vancouver, P. Jerwa,   Bury       22 11   8 3 44 39 26\n:49.   Penalties\u2014P.   Jerwa.                        Wlplverhamton    23 10   8 6 44 44 35\nThird period\u2014(6) Victoria H. Runge   *\/\/   Bromwlch   22 10   8 4 62 40 24\nrom Lowe, 14:44. Penalties\u2014H. Runge. ] Charlton   Ath    33   8   7 7 34 31 33\n                    I Notts    Forest     23    8   8 7 33 39 23\ntfaritime Fishermen           I _*_.\u00b0__y T. __ ! IS 5 % \u00ab S\nPlan Organization ~damCi\u00a3 S ? ! ? 2 2 l\\\n23 8 11 4 36 46 30\n23 6 9 9 37 49 19\n23 7 11 6 36 62 19\n24 4 9 11 31 40 19.\n\"Recent  winter storms a* they ap-    worst weather the humorous side of life\npeared to the cartoonist.     Even in .he    is bound to come up.\nMr$.McT\u00abr$\nBowlers Win in\nSecond Roosi.\nMn. MeTiar. bowlen won the tecond .\nround  In  the  ladles'   bowling   tournament on Oellnaa*  bowling  altera  yeaterday afternoon wttb a aeon of M0.\npins.\nMn.  P.  Hamford's  team, still\nthe league by a matin of 47 pus\nhaving won tbe flnt round of UJe\nladles Ave pin tournament laat Monday,\nher team scoring 987 pins. Tha final\nround  will  bs  played  next Monday\nMn. H. Lakes won high stasia soor-\ning 181 pins and Mn. L. Kerr, tne\nhigh aggregate wtth 167 pins (or the\nafternoon.\nFIRST  OAME\nPlayen                       1st 3d SdTotak\nMn. H. McTier     7t IN IH   in\nMn.  O. Kemerlinc  1 IT 108 Wt   313\nMn. A. O. Oellnaa IM 88 M8   MO\nTotals\n311    298   841    9W\nMn. P. Bamford ...\u00bb 00\nMra. A McLeod   113\nMn.  P.  E.  Wheeler  88.\n77    108   2*0\n72    131    1(1\n79     87   263\nTotals 298 228 331 847\nSECOND GAME\nPlayen Iat 3d 3d T\u00abta]\u00bb\nMn.  H.   Lakes       88 78 181 838\nMn. T. E. Levasseur 78 58 4*0 2(8\nMn.   H. 8.   Godfrey   90 118 117 32\u00bb\nTotala\n249    245   408   902\nMn. O. Browell  ....   94   108    912*\nMn. L. Kerr   126     99    138   \u00bb\nMn. P. Coulter .:  47    80   100   2$\nTotals\nTHIRD  GAME\nPlayers\n388   284   833\nHALIFAX, N .8., Dec. 30.\u2014\"It WlU\n\u00ab a wonderful thing for the Mar-\ntime   Provinces,   and   have   much   to\nPreston N E\nMlllwall Ath\nBristol City....\nNctte   County\nHeading   23    5 10    8    26   33    18\nClassification\nof Curlers to\nBe Made Today\nClassification of the members of the\nNelson   Curling   club   will   take   place\nPIONEER PASSES\nt people  working   together,\"  aald   Dr.\nI. M. Ooedy. of St. Francis Xavier Un-\ni-i-JKli  DIVISION\nNOI'a'HESN   SECTION\n1    6   64    19\n4   3   47   22\nlo with  the future prosperity   of   thc   Barnsley    _    22   5 12   6   27   42   16   today lt was announced laat night by\n\u00bbnt*ry, fl we can get the great mass   Swansea  To\u00bb\u00bb   23   8 23   6   31   41   16   j. H. Long, president.   To be classified\nall members must turn In their names\ntodsy.\nWhile   the   making   of   Ice   at   the\ncurling   rink   in   Rosemont   has   been\n48   37   30   delayed  by  the  recent  warm   weather.\n33   19   27   *l  l8 expecled  curling  will jjet  under\n40    22    25\n44   49   34\n46   33   23\n33   30   23\n39 40 23\n8 29 31 32\n8    39    39    22\n5 43    43    21\n6 39   43    ?0       NBW TORK,  Dec. 30\u2014The  first step\n5   38   30   19    toward  reoragnlatlon  of  the  American\n40 45   10    Olymplcan, advance of the 1932 games\nPlymouth    Ar 21 14\nrerslty,  to whom the Federal Govern- ..Brentford  21 14\nrent  haa   entrusted   the  work  of  or-   Brighton  _  H 21 13\nanlzlng the fishermen of the province   Northampton 30 12\nl Bournemouth.. 19   9\niy  the sea.                                                  Crystal   Palace 24   9\nDr. Coady Kir -already organized thc   Coventry   City 30 10\nIshermen of  Cape  Breton  Island  and   Southend  Unit 20   8\nhe counties of Ouysborough and Hal-   PWham    21   9\nfax.     When   the   organization   of   the   Queens Park R 30   7\nederal  group* is completed, Dr. Coady   Swindon  Town 23   7\nrill call  a  meeting of  delegates  from   Norwich   City 21   8\nhe   different   federations   In   a   Marl-   Torquay   Unit 22   7\nJme   conference.     Then   a   Marattme   Exeter   City   .. 21   7\n[roup will be organized to handle thc   Walsall         . 22   7 10\n>lg problems of the hundreds of small   Luton   Town\n-roups     and   control  the  destinies, of   ^\nway shortly after the New Year.\nTAKE STEPS TOWARD\nORGANIZATION OF\nAMERICAN OLYMPIAN\n21    6 10\n21   5 11   5\n'he  thonsaiids  of' fishermen\"who\"\"ply   Clapton-orient.  21   _   8(11\n;heir   trade   alohg   the   shores   of   the   Brl,to1 'Ro?ere   20   5 11   4\ntine  provinces   . ailllnglwn 22   5 13   4\nDr. Coady said his work was lightc- Newport Coun 20 4 12 4\ninsd by the eagerness of the fisher- Merthyr Town 19 2 11 6\nnan for organization.   They seemed to ~_! _ I),v*'!l'*,'l,p'-\njnderstand, he s aid,  that they could NORTHI.BN  SECTION\nnot  get   anywhere   until   they   go   to-   Port   Vale 22 16   3   3   66   23   35\ntether    and    co-operated    ln    solving   Stockport    Co    19 13   3   3   51   22   29\n33   47   17   at   Los  Angeles,   was   taken   today   at\n24   36   15   a   Idnt   conference   of   leaden   repre-\n16 30- it ;\"metust travm previously at-.war over\nthis subject. Chief among the proposals recommended were the formation of a permanent standing chairman of the Olympla association and\nthe raising of the capital fund of\n$2,000,000 for permanent financing ot\nAmerican participants in the games.\n38 46 14\n20 46 14\n35 43 12\n20 54 10\nVANCOUVER    HOCKEY Kl   Ciow9r*\nSKIPPER    IS    FATHER \"\nOF   TWIN   SONS   NOW\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 30 \u2014 Doug\nBrennan, new captain of the Ban-\ncouver I Jons In the Pacific coast\nprofessional hockey league, received\nword today from Vancouver that\nhe was the father uf twin bo.*.\nTORONTO VARSITY\nHeads Scorers\nin\nMONTPEAL, Dec. 30\u2014-olncldent with\nthe ascent of the Montreal Maroons\nInto first place ln the standing ot\nthe National Hockey league, their scor-\nwt t rsww -v lng star. Nelson Stewart, has assumed\nTTllNaD J_-_OI__I leadership of the Canadian section ln\nthe matter of points and of the entire\nNatlonal Hockey  league  in the matter\nIat 2d SdTotak\nMn.   J.  Bell     180 74 85   2*7\nMrs. R. Cornlat .......   63 101 183   JT\u00bb\nMn.   W.   Desjardln   134 68 108   Jlp\nTotala\nMn. D. D. McLean\nMn. O. Wright ....\nMn. SA Maloney ....\n334   343   316   883\n70\n74\n64\n90 110 374\n80 54 2ft\n78      40    183\n300   257   304   881\nMCGILL   LEADS\nLAKE PLACID. N. Y. Dec. 30\u2014McOlJI\nUniversity tonight held the leadership\nln the eighth annual winter sports\ncompetition here for the President\nHarding trophy. Two of the eight\nevents scheduled wen held today.\nMcGill ran up a total of 10 points In\nthe Slalom ski raoe, taking the flnt\nthree places. Dartmouth got eight\nln the seven miles cross-country ski\nrace,  and thereby placed  second.\nNew Hampshire, the favorite, now\ndefending the cup lt haa won ior\nthe laat three yean, was trailing - with\ntwo points, being tied with Ottawa\nUniversity.\nBOSTON,   Dec.   30.\u2014The   speeds-   To- of  scoring  goals,  according  to official\nronto   Vanity   Hockey   team   won   Its statistics    Issued    tonight    from    the\nsecond   American   clash   here   tonight office of President Frank Calder. These\nby   overwhelming   Dartmouth   11       to include the 8unuday matches.\n3.       The   Canadian  collegians   opened Stewart   has  now   annexed   20  goals\ntheir   American   Invasion,  by   defeating and   has  had  four  assists  giving  him  .\nHarvard   ln   New   York   on   Saturday. J total of 25 points, three better than\n  Hec Kllrea, and Frank -King'- Clancy,\nthe   dynamic   Ottawa   pair.\nWINNIPEG TAKES\nPUCK LEADERSHIP\n23 ARRESTED ON\nLIQUOR CHARGES\nC.   D.   Barr,   Lindsay   pioneer,   noted    senlon   hockey   league   fro   mthe   Nia\nW1N1?IP.G'_    ?f'   . ^r1.\u2122,\"\"!\u2122'8      OCEAN CITY-  Md-  \u00bb\u00ab\u2022  30.-a\\ctlng-\ntook   the   leadership   of   the   'Wnnlpes   cn   lnformatlon   supplied   several   days\nago.   two   coast   guard   officials   today\nleneral   problems.\nWITH TRAIL\n32 11 8.3 48 38 25\n30 11 7   2 45 29' 24\n20 10 6   4 44 31 24\n20 11 7   2 52 44 24\n21 7 6   8 43 34 22\nDarlington   ...\nCrewe   Alexan\nAccrlngton    8\nCarlisle    Unit\n, Southport    ....\nNelson        21   9   8   4   31   39   22\nYork   City   ...    20 *   4 11   30   26   21\n| South   Shields   21    8   8    3   33   37   31\nDULUTH SWAMPS\nST. LOUIS 7 TO 1\nLincoln City  ..   20 6\nWlgan Borough 21 8\nWrexham     22 7\nRochdale      18 8   7 3\nHartlepools   U    19 6   6 7\nChesterfield    ...   20 7   9 4\nTranmere  Rov   21 7 10 4\nDoncaster   Rov   21 7 11 3\nRotherham   U   20 5 10 5\nNew   Brighton   21 7 13 1\nHalifax   Town    23 4 18 6\nBarrow       20 4 14 2\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE\nFIRS!    DIVISION\n5 10 29 26 20\n9 4 38 39 20\n9 6 32 38 20\n39 42 19\n33 34 19\n39 35 18\n38 42 18\n30 39 17\n28 43 15\n38 63 15\n25 39 14\n19 83 10\n*\u00bb. WUK-.TLJtY. emwwme*\nStar forward again playing\n\u25a0ith the Smoke-Eaters in the\noiping hockey series.\nCanadian Pacific\nsjL Sai!?\u201en*s\nEUROPE\nFrom Saint  John\n.10           -lai*.  _    RIChmon\nTo  Olasgow-Llverpool\n17    Ducpesa   Yori.\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\nmktwt   Mellta\nTo  Glasgow-Liverpool\n___tl   .- Metagama\nTo Cherbourg-London\n_a-1    Montraaa\nTo Gluagow-Delfast-Llverpool\nHt  _ - Mlnnedn.\nTo  Glasgow-Liverpool\n\u25a0yi   Montcaln\n. To Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\na. .80       Mellta\nCherbourg-Southampton-Hamburv\nB.   \u00ab8        Mnntroef\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\nireta  7     Metagama\nTo  Cherbourg-London\nItch 7    Mlnnedosa\nTo  Glasgow-Liverpool\ntrati 14   Montcalm\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Liverpool\nWh   14   Duchess  Bedford\n0   Cherbourg-Southampton-Llverpool\ntrots   30   .Mellta\n.   To   Bellas-Glasgow\natm 21   Ducheas York\nTo Liverpool\naH*  27       Montrose\n\\) Cherbourg-Southampton-Antwerp\nrVll details wltb rates and Passport\nofmatlon from anv -.ent or write\n_._. __   '\u2022 *\u2022 CARTER\n\u25a0Wivl Passenger Ageat, Nelaon, ft ft\nRangen     20 15 2\nAberdeen     32 14 4\nMotherwell    21 13 5\nCeltic      20 12 6\nPartlck Thistle 22 12 7\nKilmarnock  .... 21 10 5\nSt.   Mlrren   .... 21 11 8\nHearts      21 9 7\n3 50 16 33\n4 52 34 3*3\n3 48 30 29\n3 48 24 27\n3 51 36 27\n6 40 31 26\n2 43 31 24\n5 43 37 23\nAyr    United.... 21 10   9 2 43 42 32\nFalkirk     21 8   8 5 39 44 21\nHamilton   A... 21 7   9 6 46 48 19\nCowdenbeath.. 20 7   9 4 28 32 18\nDundee     22 7 11 4 27 33 18\nClyde     31 6 tO 5 36 46 17\nMorton      21 6 11 4 38 53 16\nQueens   Park 22 6 13 3 32 44 15\nAlrdrleonlona.. 21 6 13 2 26 36 14\nHibernians   .... 21 4 11 6 33 39 14\nDundee    Unit 31 5 12 4 32 58 14\nSt. Johnstone.. 22 4 13 S 26 49 13\nSECOND DIVISION\nLelth   Athletic 31 17    13 55 21 37\nEast  Fife    21 15   3 3 63 26 33\nAlbion   Rovers 21 16   3 3 60 30 33\nThird    Lanark 20 12   5 3 44 27 27\nArmadale     21 12   7 2 63 44 38\nForfar Athletic 21 10   6 6 54 39 95\nRalth    Rovers 21 9   6 6 56 36 34\nArbroath     21 9   7 5 43 43 23\nQueen   of  Sou 21 9   8 4 41 38 32\nMontrose     21 8   7 6 44 43 22\nKings    Park 21 8   8 6 56 50 31\nDunfermline A 21 8   9 4 54 43 20\nK Stirlingshire 20 9 10 1 40 30 19\nBo'ness     31 7 11 3 33 63 17\nBtenhousemuir al 6 11 4 47 57 16\nSt. Bernards .. 31 6 13 2 30 35 14\nClydebank 21 3 13 6 33 54 11\nDumbarton   .... 21 6 16 0 33 87 10\nAlloa     21 4 15 2 27 64 10\nBrechin   City.. 21 3 16 2 30 79 8\nMust Have New\nAuto Licenses\nOn Tomorrow\nCar owners who Intend to drive their\ncars on and alter the first of the year\nand have not already purchased their\nlicense have been, requested to do so\nby the provincial officers here. Tht\nnew license have been on sale for tht\nlast month, giving ample time to secure them and any person found\ndriving a vehicle with the 1929 license,\noil  or   after  tomorrow   will  be   prose\nDULUTH, Minn., Dec. 30.\u2014In o.\".c\nof the wildest games ever witnessed\non Duluth Ice, the Hornets swamped\nSt. Louis 7 to 1 ln an American a-s-\ni oclatlon hockey oonf_6t here tonight.\nThe Hornets by the victory went\ninto undisputed possession for second place, one point behind Minneapolis. '\nnew-spaperman  of  half  a   century  ago tlve  Sons tonight  when  they  won  an  fiCiz'e(j neo,j-iy 2000 cases of liquor val\nand  registrar of counties Victoria imd overtime   match  3   to   1.    It   was  the   ued   at $270,O0O  and  arrested  23  men\nHaliburton,  Ontario   for 38 years, who De8t   contest  of   he   seas6n. 1 who  mn ch      d  ^  Bmuffgilng   ln\ncited   in   Lindsay   .The   late   \"JJ^JI  *  the landing of the Uquor cargo from a\nwas   the   fater   ot   Rev.   A.   Fordyce\n\"Biddy\"   Barr   of   football   fame.\nBowling Widow in\nLimelight Now\nNO NEW YEAR'S\nHOCKEY BATTLE\nTHIS SEASON\nOpening Game Here Postponed;\nNo Ice; May Play on\nSaturday\nJ^._i5wf\/\/f#\nBy   AL  DEMAREE\nFor the first time ln yeara there will\nbe no Kew Year's Day senior Weet\nKootenay Hockey league , game thia\nseaaod. The opening game scheduled\nto be played at Nelson between the\nlocal team and Tadanac on Christmas\nday and postponed till New Year's\nday, has again .been postponed. It Is\nhoped to be able to play the game\nhere on Saturday. This was announced\nlast night by R. E. Klrby, manager of\nthe Nelson team.\nWhile the first postponement was\nnot on account of Ice conditions, the\nsecond was. The weather, which has\ncaused more speculation and played\nmore tricks this year than for several\nseasons, has for the first time ln years,\ndefeated the plans of the West Kootenay Hockey league.\nNO   ICE    AT    RINKS\nAfter freezing steadily and aillowing\nofficials to secure a foundation and\na sheet of ice sufficient for the local\nteam's practices, the weather turned\nwarmer, and, although hope was not\ngiven up till yesterday, has continued\nto ruin the foundation already procured and halt preparation ot Ice for\nthe game.\nFor years it has been the custom to\nInclude a New Year's afternoon game\nIn the West Kootenay league and for\nthe past several seasons Ice haa always\nbeen avallabe.\nKOHSLAND IN  LEAOtH \u2022     \u2022\nRossland, at first announced as out\nof the West Kootenay league for .this\nyear at least, has now decided to enter, running the Trail second team,\nwhich was to have been entered as\nTadanac. Rossland wlll therefore be\nthe   team   which   wlll   play   here   on\nThe Memphis Little Theatre has en-. motor  trawler  tour  miles off short.\nUsed    debutantes    of    thc    season    a.      When  the  coast  guardsmen  arrested\nushers, and the debs also serve coffee  the   men  on   the   beach,   the   trawler\nand cigarettes during Intermissions.       weighed  anchor  and  made  Its escape.\n.\u00ab\u00ab$\u00ab\n3$3$S$$g$$$aSiMS>MfrMM>r\nBOWLING\nand\nBILLIARDS\nBowlim;   end    Billiard\nake a very pleasant pap\ntime any afternoon or \u00bbyr\ning. Our up-to-date equip-\nent greatly increases th'\nIeasantncss of yonr game\nGelinaS\n^^       TOBACCONISTS      ~^\nv\u00ab\u00abtt*\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00abS\u00bb5*W\u00bb5\u00bb\u00abaSS5ftK\u00bbWfc\n(Former Pitcher New York Glairtu)\nThla la the time of year when the Saturday It the Ice ls available,\n\"bowling widow\" exchanges places with The posslbUlty of playing the Hew\nthe -golf widow\". The golfers who Year's game at Roesland was con-\ncannot get away to California and sldered but It was reported from that\nFlorida for the winter probably turn city that there was no Ice there be-\nlnto bowlers, when the thermometer cause of there being no watet avail-\nIs doing a nose dive. able for flooding the rlnlc.\nThere are probably more players ac- ___,-.\u201e--  TXT _,--,\ntlvely   engaged   In   socking   the   little LONDON  IN TIE\npellet  over  hill   and  dale  and  rolling \u201e.\u2014\u201e  \u201e- -,,...   . \u00bbIr.\nthe hard medicine ball down the alley |                WITH C,LEV_\/LAND\nthan any other sports ln the calendar. \t\nJimmy Smith   the ^be Ruth of the L0NDON,   ont..   Dae.  30.-_f_r  fao-\nZEmJ? , sa   _,i *_f ?h\u201e   _fih.   ?\u201e in*   a   three  goal  deficit ta  the  first\n__f,h   .   !\u201e_ h\u00bbnT\u00bbd   b_wl,rPwho  hit \"  manutes of play, the London Pan-\n_a.m fromer ''B^l^Sld^ound \u00ab-\u00bb  \u00bb^,ea S^!\".^ JT\nhimself to tle tne clevelaJul Indians, the ecore\nWalking   into   an   alley   ln   a  small : \u00bb\u00bbln\u00ab  *  t(*-  ln f\"  oVert'\"*  Interna.\nsouthern Illinois town he noticed that tlonal professional hockey league game\nonly the right  side of  the  alley  was , here  tonight.\n-ned, the leit side being\nrough and bumpy.\n\"What's the big Idea?\" he chirped.\n'      \"\u25a0' u \"   pnswe*fcci   the\nproprietor, scratching his head, \"you're\nthe flnt left-banded bowler tbat ever\nwalked tn here, and I figured there was\nLong   formal   gloves   must  be  shirr-\ndown to be smart\nBrown   felt   hats   aro   tmqortaut.   to\nwear with  brown furs this season.\ncuted.\nyew.\nMo   grace   wlll   be   given   this   no use spending any money on tbe left\nside of th* alley.*'\nPatou'a   emeraude   green   Is\nihade for evening.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or\"bj. the GovernmePt of B. C.\n4\n\u25a0 *\n - papain\nTH!. NELSON DAILY NEWS TUESDAY MORNING, DEefflfBEl. 6t, _t\u00bb\ncUhe Qan&erous (Road\nBy oJ*Cancy <_3brr tzMavity\nFACED FIRIXd\nSQUAD\nCHAPTEm    30\n\"Tour dnttintt.'' orainga Wild to\nJoyce the next morning, facing her\n\u00abcroas the daak, \"letn see them.\"\nHia voice betrayed nothing of the\nman wno believed in fairyland. He\nmi onoe again alert, laconic. Yet\nJoyce surmised that he wanted to\naea them because ahe had told him\nthat she, too, had once entered\nmagic   country.\nWhen she moved to Marjorie's home,\nshe had brought her designs to the\n\u2022tore to save room, and had laid them\nln the wide, flat drawer df her drawing -table, ' Por one fleeting Instant\nahe wondered whether the \"forces\" of\nwhloh   Grainge   had   spoken   had   had\n* hand tn that decision; but ahe\n.shrugged the half-formed thought\nMide. It was quite natural that her\nsuperior should show some Interest\ntn her . work. There was nothing\npersonal.   Vet    alone   mystical,   in   It.\nShe stepped across to the art\nroom and % moment later laid the\n\u2022pen portfolio on the desk before\nhtm. \\4e turned the sheets slowly,\none __\\ter another.\n\"M-m\". he hummed through closed\nUps;   and  again,  \"M-m\".\n\"\\\\ wonder what he'd think,\" Joyce\nmiAed. \"if i told htm he sounded\nJ'jst  Uke a  giant  bumble  bee.\"\n\"Mr. Cornell said\u2014\" she finally\nVentured, a Uttle uneasy lh the prolonged  silence.\n\"I know what Mr. Cornell said.\n.At least I know what he would say.''\nBis  face  wiw no  longer  the  face  of\n* dreaming Celt. He looked very much\nthe eon of hla father at the moment,\ntempered by nine years of finding the\nway to make the world pay tor his\nbrains. \"We'll have to do something with these.\" The \"we'' clipped\nout  unconsciously.\n\"Tou   mean   the   store\u2014\"\n\"No. The store doesnt manufacture dresses, you know that.\" Tnere\nwas sharp impatience ln his voice\u2014the\nwearing a bathing suit to an evening\nparty.     You   simply   don't   do   lt.\"\n\"But I can't let this drop, for the\nwant    pf   a    few    hundred    dollars.''\nJoyce's pmJect had become unaccountably Robert's own.\n\"Well, J nel the same way about\nlt\". Joyce's anger dropped as suddenly is lt had flared. \"I do appreciate your Interest. You've helped\nme already, tremendously. Let me\nsee if I cah*t figure out a way to\nput this through.\"\n\"You might at that. Tou say you\nknow   nothing   about   business\u2014\"\n\"Not  a thing.\"\n\"Well, that means you won't think\na lot of things can't be done just\nbecause nobody's ever done them. You\nmight hit pn something. But It's not\nso easy. If it doesn't work out. will\nyou do this: as a last resort, will you\nlet me see if we can't make that\nbathing suit presentable for the party?\"\n\"Yes\", said Joyce after a pause,\n\"I'll do that.\"\nShe felt her fingers wrung in a\nsolemn   handclasp   across   the   table.\nWith a relief and a Joy that neither analysed, they felt themselves\ncemented in the partnership of n\ncommon undertaking with which, they\nassured themselves, personal relations\nhad nothing to do.\n(Continued   Tomorrow)\nFOUR SERIOUSLY\nINJURED IN BIG\nFIRE IN CHICAGO!\nCHICAOO.  Dee.  30\u2014Four  men were\n| seriously   ihjut-ed   and   several   others\ni were    burned    during   a    fire   which\ni swept through a grain elevator of the\n1 Albert   SchWitl -ahd   company,   manufacturers  of  rrialt \u25a0products,   ln  South\nChicago   today,   at   a   loss   estimated\nbetween \u2022 1,000,000 and $1,500,000.\nAbout 700.000 bushels of various\ngrains were stored ln the big elevator,\nI and the grain was virtually all destroyed. Officials of the company said\nthe grain was valued at between\n170,000 and $1,000,000. The elevator\nj itself, was valued at $500,000.\nI PAGEANT FEATURES\nBOSWELL CONCERT\nClassified Advertising\nBishop ~__rsany ChahovzoTi, head of\nthe Russian Orthodox church, the\nGreek.. Catholic Church of Canada, who\nwas. once a pHioner of the Soviet and\nthree times faced a firing squad before being rescued by Whit* Russians.\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL, B. C.. Dec. 30\u2014 R. Yull!\nold-timer, of Lockhart Beach, has been\na patient in the Kootenay Lake General\nhospital,  Nelson,  for some  time.\nG. B, Stratton has arrived from\nStreatham, London. England, to work\nfor a time on K. Wallace's ranch.\nW. Stanley Hepher, who la studying\nforestry at the University of Idaho\nis   spending   his   vacation    with    his\nimpatience of - mind on th. track \u00a3___* \"*' \"* M\u2122 A' Hepher' H1\"\nof an Idea with all the singleness | jln__e Hughes is spending a few\n-of a terrier after a rabbit. Por the daya In Nelson as th. _,,__f\u201e.Jr. '\u201e\u201e\ninatant   he   had   forgotten   Joyce   as  __\u00a3 b   Low?ry\n\u00bb person, and pushed aside her inter- , Mr. and Mrs. Donald West have lett\nruption as lf he were dismissing for Kaslo to spend the holiday with\nan intrusive thought of his own. Mr. Wests bretS? and sX-m-Taw\n\"H4Te you any money?\" he asked capt. and Mra O A West ahum-\nabruptly.   He had forgotten all about   Beach\nSis eafller desire to protect her pride capt. C. B Hlggens of Yahk ,..nr\n_. VP\u00b0?S__n',Ue8tl<m<' \u00b0n \"\" Pa\" Chrtetn\u00bb-\u00bb d>? *\" ^w\u00b0el,Y .h. E\n\"\u2022I'-m \u2122 something out of my __\"\u00a3, 'mA- Mr \u2122\u00ab Mrs' J' R\n\u25a0aalary.'' Joyce answered unhesitating-1 steDhen Sh__-n ..< -o . ia,_.\nTy. She did not even think of the' both of thelK _,_\u201e. \u201e\u00a3_*\"V\nQuestion \u00bb personal. It was the laying *\u00b0Ser \"\u2022 X ' rhrfJ._\u201e _, f\nout of the points of a problem, and Itth and S\u2122 a s SS \u00bbu\nOrainge  waa  the  agency  of  its solu- , T_   \u201eaT\" Sherman, \"Hove-\ntlon.    Her hands were  cold with  ex-'    j   wi__a   \u201e,_- .__,. +_\u00bb  _. .  .\neltement.    Somehow  her designs were' dan  ta^to'la^h^ita^J*.'   _.\nto be allowed to come to life in the I Ee here returned   to  his\nreal   world,   after   all!     All   that   she |    mJT   \u201eJ   j^.\n^^^^^^^ Orley   Austin    and\nfamily   of   Kaa_-,_ are   the   guests   of\nMlaa Grace Mackie ls visiting her\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nAlex Mackle. ln Trail.\nDAUDET, ROYALIST\nLEADER, PARDONED\nBY THE FRENCH\nwere   also   granted   amnesty   by   the\ndecree.\nDaudet, who ls a son of Alphonse\nDaudet, famous novelist, will return\nto Parts ln time to celebrate New\nYear's day with his family.\nPASTOR MUST GIVE\nBOND TO APPEAR FOR\nTRIAL IF REQUIRED\nVICTORIA, Dee. 30\u2014Insufficient evidence to warrant committal having\nbeen adduced, Magistrate George Jay\nthis afternoon ln provincial police court,\nrequired Rev. Samuel Lundie, pastor\nof the Sooke Presbyterian church to\ngive bond to appear for trial ln required, following the accidental shooting of his friend Louis Godtel last\nNovember, when the two were hunting.\nHalf the smart debs of New York will\nbe wearing frocks of lace at this season's holiday parties.\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nneed   do  was  to  give  what  information she could, and  keep out of the ! Mr*\"__m\"iur\u00abr^ to_u_^_\njrjjr   *   that   onrushing   mind   acr\u00abs; %.\u00ab; ^rSgraph linem\n\"Not   enough\".     Grainge   knit   his I he^-' \u25a0*?* the .*\u00bb\u00bb<*\u25a0\u00bb* in Nelson.\n\"heavy   brows   untll   they   met   ln   a\nblack   band   across   his  forehead.    \"If\n.you   could   start   a   little   factory   of\nyour own\u2014But you can't.    You probably   wouldn't  know   how  to  run   lt,\nanyway1',\n\"I wouldn't\".   Joyce agreed promptly.\n\"Well,   you   have   a   good   head   to\nknow that ln advance.''\n\"Thanka.\"     Joyce   could   not   resist ______________\na   flicker of  Irony. (     PARIS, Dec. 30\u2014President Doumergue\n\"Excuse me\u2014I know I'm not being , today signed a full pardon for Leon\npolite. Pm often not, when I-Vn' Daudet, the Royalist leader, who was\nthinking.\" The swift apology brought i exiled to Belgium two years ago. fol-\na quick and friendly smile to Joyce's; lowing a spectacular escape from a\nupcurved Ups. Paris jail.    Eleven other political  of-\n\"Oh, pease\u2014I don't mind. Go as fenders. Including several communists\nfar as you like.\"\n\"Well, then. You ought to get\nthese dresses manufactured, somehow. If you brought us the finished\nsamples, with the assurance that you\ncould deliver in quantity, I'm sure\nwe'd buy them like a shot. Air! not\nonly us, but other stores, of course.\" '\n\"You mean sell the designs to u\nmanufacturer ?*\u2022\n\"No, that wouldn't do, either. It\nwouldn't pay you enough, for one\nthing. Fot another, they have their\nown designers. You might hire a\nmanufacturer   to  make   them\u2014\u2022'\n\"But aren't the factories all in the\neast? I cquldn't possibly pay for a\ntrip like that, especially on a chance.\"\nBothe of them were utterly absorbed now, responding to the quick\nimpact of mind on mind, oblivious\nof the disturbing effect which each had\nfelt m the other's presence.\n\"The  big  factories   are  in  the  east\nthat's   true.    But  you  couldn't  break\nInto   them,   anyhow.     They   wouldn't\nbother with a small order.   There are\nsome smallones here, however.''    He\nhastily   rummaged   into   a   card   catalogue   that  stood   on   the  desk,   and\nscratched a name and address on a pad.\nTearing  off  the  sheet,  he   pushed   lt\nacross the table to her.    \"You might\ntry this one to begin with\".\n\"But   how   much   would   it   cost?\"\n\"I  don't  know.    That's for you  to\nfind out.''\nJoyce did not want to hear him\napologize again, but she could not\nhold her Ups quite steady as she reflecting that thinking did indeed\nseem to have a harsh effect on his\nmanners! Grainge caught the half\nquiver   of   her   smile.\n\"Therel I've done it again. I'm\ntruly sorry. I'm not used to talking   business   with   ladles.''\n\"Godness! I hate being called a\nlady. It sounds like putting too much\nstarch ln your\u2014in\u2014\" Joyce felt that\nher metaphor waa leading her to diction rather unbecoming to the term\nshe flouted, and hastily chose the\nawkwardness  of  silence.\nGrainge, however, did not notice\nthe   unfinished   speech.\n\"I will advance you whatever money\nis   necessary,\"   he   said   tersely.\nJoyce felt as lf she had bumped\ninto solid ground after a rapid spin\nln the air.\n\"I couldn't possibly accept that,\nMr. Grainge.\" With extreme annoyance, she felt her cheeks grow hot,\nand illogically transferred the annoyance to Robert. He should have known\nbetter than to propose such a thing.\n\"Can you tell me exactly why not?\"\nThe eyes under the black brows were\ncold, almost bellggerent. Robert had a\nway of looking angry when he was\ncovering   up   a   hurt.\n\"It isn't done, that's all.\" Joyce's\nchin had never looked more determined   than   at  that  moment.\n\"If Its that you don't trust me\u2014\nlf you think there's a catch in it\u2014\nI can assure of every legal safeguard.\"\nGrainge was used to peering closely\nfor the \"catch'' in most offers; his\nfather   had   overlooked   so   many.\n\"Mr. Grainge, that was a mean thing\nto say!\" Joyce's eyes filled with tears,\nthe tears of an angry child. \"You said\nyou weren't used to doing business\nwith ladies. Well.* women simply\ndon't borrow money from men. even\nwhen they're friends. Can't you see\nthat?\"\nGrainge reflected for a moment.\n\"No, I can't say that I do. If you\nask me, I don't see any sense what*\never in a rule like that.\"\nThus   caused    to    defend    it,   Joyce\nfound herself rather at a loss to ex-\n^^^K iu   rationality\nj'  fuel\u2014one of those things\nget  r\"und.    It's  Uke\u2014like\nShip Building\nSlump May Be\nWorse in Japan\nBOflWELL, B. C, Dec, 35\u2014under the\nauspices of the Boswell-Sanca Women's institute, the annual Christmas\nsocial was held ln the Memorial ball.\nThere was a large attendance of parents and children. An excellent tea\nwas served by the Women's institute,\nafter which games were played for an\nhour or so,\nA splendid concert by the school\nchildren, under the direction of Mrs.\nHughes, assisted by Mrs. W. L. Hepher,\nfollowed, and at 8 o'clcok, Santa Claus\narrived with his gifts. Great excitement was Caused by Santa's bringing\nhts \"reindeer'1 Into the hall and\ninviting the children to take rides\nwith him. Martin Verdonk and Ralph\ns.helle accepted the invitation. Besides\nthe gifts from his sack, Santa distributed crackers and stockings containing nuts and candy, from the\nprettily decorated tree. He was cheered\nheartily before he left.\nGames and dancing concluded the\nenjoyable evening.\nThe institute committee in charge\nof arrangements was composed of: Mrs.\nK. Wallace, convener; Mrs. J. R.\nHlggens, Mrs. S. J. Course, Mrs. A.\nMackie and Mrs. A. Hepber.\nThe   second   part   of   the   program\nClassified Kates\nLoral Reudlng Notices\u2014Three cents\noer word each insertion. In blackface\n>r machne capitals 5c a word. Twenty-\n'ive p*r cent discount ii run dalh\nwithout change of copy for one month\n_r more. Where advertisement Is set\nmt ln short lines the chares is 16c\ni line for Roman type, 20c for black-\nrace and 23c for blackface capitals\nMinimum 36c.   if  charged,  50c*.\nnunt anu itassiiied advertising\u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per inser-\n.lan. If paid in advance, 6c per word\nper week or 22 lie per word Per month.\nTransient ads accepted only oa s\ncash-in-advance basis. Kach Initial,\nfigure, dollar sign, etc., counts as one\nword. Minimum 2oc. lf charged 60c.\nBfitTHs    _____ r        AU,\n.   NELSON\u2014At     the    Kootenay     Lake\nGnrrnl hospital to Mr. and Mrs. N. H.\nNelson, Carbonate street, December 30,\na son a\nHELP   WANTED\nWANTED\u2014By January 8, experienced\ncook for the Lcland Hotel, Nakuhp.\n (13051)\nWANTED\u2014Good canvasser. Apply J\nTeague,   Room   8,   K.   W.   C    Mock.\nDEATHS\nIf)\nBENNETT\u2014Amelia Belle, loving\nmother of Mrs. W. A. Rockliff, W. W.\nand Gordon Bennett, passed away Sunday. The body will Ue in state at\nHowell's funeral home till 1:15 Friday\nafternoon, thence to the St, Saviours\nchurch where services wlll be held at\n1:30, Venerable Archdeacon Oraham\nofficiating. (12067)\nMADDEN-^Thomas, age 33 years,\npassed away Sunday He leaves to\nmourn his passing, his wife and two\nchildren, two sisters, and three\nbrothers. The body wlll lie in state\nat Howell's funeral home until 9:15\nThursday morning, thence to Church\nof Mary Immaculate where services\nwill be held at 9:30, Rev. Father McKenzle   officiating. (12068)\nPARSON \\h  <5)\nYOKOHAMA.    Japan.     Dec.    30.\u2014 T.K . _   >\nrecent announcement that tne embargo j f\u21228^'\"*.^ a Pageant entitled'1 'Beth\non   gold   v.Hi   be   lifted   early   m   the] \" \"~\"   '      \"\"*\"\"    \" \"\n....   B-._\u00ab   .,._.   w*.   ...\u201ev~   \u2122-.    lehem\", in which all the scholars took\nnew year is expected to have a ben- j fart- They were Ruth Cummings, Kath-\nefirial influence on Jspanwe shU l6*\"). ,fug^- \"\u00b0K\u00bb Cummlngs, Percy\nping, but the UUUKtry is still ron- \"\u00ab* J. ..^\"d Btlnbrldge, Albert\nironted   with   two   important   quesUon*   \u00a32?',;22\u2122SJ?\u00a3f ^. Norman Baln-\nnaval limitations and *\u00bb r\u00ab\u00bbor- | 2S^t^^\u00a3SSSc^_oSS ,SSSfc\n'Industry In Japan Ua, kept un 5SSJ\u201e^^^H5\u00a3Jf- \"^ ^\nusually prosperous lathe Whe of the The pageant commenced with the\nnlvereal slump in shipbuilding. The -singing of Sullivan's \"It Came Udoii\nbuilding of new ships to be plarcd the Midnight Clear'', by the children\non the government's j-ubiiltlized hue.; with an obligate by Wilfred Bain-\nand the temporary urtlvity of clic-'el-1 bridge and' Jimmie Hughes,\nenglned ship construction account fori S. J. Cummlngs acted as chairman,\nmost   of   this   prosperity. W\u00bbd Mrs. W. L. Hepber as accompanist!\nWhen     the    present    contracts    int\t\ncompleted,   however,   the  situation   will   HOLDS   PHRIQTMAG\nbecome   more   complicated   and   several   \"^^\"^  V.niU01_UA\u201e_-\nmergers    of    Japanese    shipyards    an\nlikely   to   materialize.   The   naval   anv,\nnments   limitation   Is   a   very   serioua\nquestion  to  the   Japanese   shipbuilder-\nsince    auxiliary    war    craft\nbuilt by large yards. T.-.ese yards which\nwere given a telling blow by the naval\npolicy   plan   adopted  by   the   Washing-\nMo   conference   are   threatened   to   be\n.similarly    hurt    if    the   coming    uavai\nrestriction    is   realized\nare    being    built    by\nwhile  submarines  arc   being  constructed it \"Kobe,\nWorship construction nas l\u00bbtn a\nprofit-making proposition for thee-,\nyards, and the withholding of order.-\nin the future will prove no little\nblow to them. In short, t'.ie shipbuilding Industry will be given an\nadvantage by the gold embargo lit tint\nbut the naval limitation .stand, 1\ngreat menace to them. Much depend*\nnow upon the establishment of a\nlarge shipping ant! shipbuilding bank\nintended to cater to the financial\nneeds of shipowners and shipbuilders.\nwhich plan is being drafted by lea.\ning shipping men of this\nunder government support.\nSERVICES, BOSWELL\nBOSWEaLL, B. C, Dec. 30\u2014Rev. Clyde\n\u25a0j\"\u00ab'J'1 Harvey   held   Christmas   services   here.\nDeinBi there   being   a   good   attendance,   particularly at the afternoon service.\nAt    the   children's   service   In    the\nmorning,   the   little   son   of   Mr.   and\nMrs.   J.   Holiday-Smith   was   baptized,\nreceiving the names of John Rosewell.\nLarge   cruis-re j The godparents  were the  baby's aunts\nseveral     yards,! and   uncles,   Mrs.   W.   Lawson   Hepher.\n' Mis    E.    Holiday-Smith.    Capt.   C.    R-\nHlggens  and   B.   W.   Holiday-Smith.\nAt the close of the afternoon service.\nStanley Hepher was presented with\nthe certificate of the Royal Humane\nsociety for-rescuing a child from drowning. The presentation was made by\nRev.   Mr.   Harvey.\nTRUSS TORTURES Eliminated by\nwearing our supports. Thirty days\nfree trial. Write for booklet. A.\nLundberg Co., 938 Pender W., Vancouver. (11930)\nROOMS\u2014To  Rent\nBEDROOM FOR RENT, nicely furnished ahd comfortable, 613 Vemon St.\n(11946)\n(11)\nMTDAJIONS    WANTED^\nWANTED\u2014General   housework.  Reasonable wages.    Apply Box 12041. Daily\n(12041)\nEXPERIENCED GIRL WANTS light\nhousework. One or two children\nunobjectionable. Sundays and one\n475,   Kaslo,    B.C. (11995)\n- o\u00abT    *N1)   f'OIA'j).\nau\nLOST\u2014Police dog pup\u2014six months old\n\u2014large.   Phone 87. 112060)\nWMrrtD\u2014Bderly woman as working\nhousekeeper for family of four.\nApply stating \u00abte. salary ted references,   Box   84,   Proctor. (18038)\nLADlfe   WANTED   AB   tt\n\u2014Earn while learning Hairtfresitng\nand Beauty Culture. Special plan-\nPleasant, big pay work. Latest special exclusive methods. Free catalogue\nWrite Marvel Parisian Halrdresslng\nAcademy, 224A 8th Ave. W., Calgary\nBranches principal cities Coast to\nCoast, (11708)\n60   MEN  WANTED~-We  will   allow  SOc\nper hour extra time to the next 50\nmen Joining our Auto-Tractor Electrical Ignition, Aviation Mechanics\nVulcanizing, Welding, Battery, Bar-\nberlng, Bricklaying or plastering\nclasses. This is a special offer In\norder to help a few nnbltlous men\nobtain big pay work. Literature\nfree- Write or call at once. Dominion Trade 6chools, 808 Centre St.,\nCalgary.   Branches Coast to Coast.'\n(11707)\nIt Ls TOO LATE to get\nINSURANCE\nWhen thl.\nPIttE BELL RINRS\nWhy not carry sufficient 1\nsurance *uid nave an easy miiH\nDon't put it off. It's\ntrouble. Just telephone 135\ncall at the office*\nChas. F. McHardy\nPhone  189 Nelson. B. O.\nBeaJ Estate and Insurance\n(11*\niaftdi ANb ro*rNri\nLOBT\u2014A  crinvaa-.   auto-cover. BetwiH\ntDutb   Slocan   and   top  of Taei_H\n-,il.     Finder   please   write or  tM,\n-ally Hews Box No. 13037. (1203|\nfl'BNISIIFD   BOOMS\u2014tnt    Kent\u2014 (1\u00bb)\nFURNISHED  ROOMS.    Phone   765L.\n(12010)\nROOM   AM)   BOARD\nPOUND\u2014ISOAT NAMED MART.   .\t\nup   on   ChriatiTUas  Day  in   Kooten,\nBuy   Owner may haye eame fay pa\nim   for   salvage   and  ano   for  tlL\nadvertlsa-meat.     Apply   K.   D.   ItiUfl\nJr..   Kootenay   Bay. (law-g\nflUSINESS,    PROFtESS-ONA^\nDIRECTORY     ~\nAccounting\nBOOM AND BOARD tor two lodlea, or\ntwo gentlement.   Phone 790L.\n(11944)\nROOM AND BOARD for two ladles, or\ntwo gentlemen. Apply Mrs. A. J.\nMUler. (12048)\nHOCSFS   FOB   RENT\nFOR RENT\u2014Furnished house, close ln.\nApply Box  11990. (11990)\nFIVE ROOMED HOUSEE. Moderate\nrent. Robson, near Castlegar. J.\nJ.    Jenkins,    Robson. (11897)\nFURNISHED HOUSE-81X rooms and\nbath, centrally located, reference required.    Box  12008, DaUy News.\n(12008)\nLIVESTOCK    FOB    SAI.r.\nIIS)\nPURE BRED COCKER spaniel putf-\npy male, make real bird dog. S.\nCouch,  Box   74,   Nelson. (12022)\nLIVERTOCK   WANTKI)  ijMl\nBonnington Notes\nBONNINGTON FALLS. B. C, I>< 30.\n\u2014Colonel S. Goode -who is leaving on\nJanuary 2 for a six months' visit to\nEngland, lias been spending Christmas\nin Grand Forks, the guest of thc Rev.\nand   Mrs.   W.   J.   Stlverwood.\nMr. and Mrs. W. C Motley were\nshoppers in Nelson on Saturday.\nThe Misses Burns ot Slocan CUy who\nhave been the guests of Mrs. R. Greyson during the week left on' Saturday\nfor Nelaon.\nChisholm Gray was a Nelson visitor\non   Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. F. Croll and Miit\nJessie Croll are the guests of Mr. and\nMrs. C. K. Bland for ChristiuH-a and\nthe New Year. Mr. Croll rtturnt&l to\nNelson  for  business  in   the   mear.timr.\nJ. West was a Nelson visitDts tiur-.\ning the week end.\nSALE OF WORK IS\nSUCCESS, BOSWELL\nBOSWELL.    B.C,   Dec.    30\u2014Thf   Wo-\nnuui's   Auxiliary   recently   held   a   successful   sale  of   work  at   the  home   of\ncounti. i Mrs.   H,  .Johnstone.     Owing   to   very\nj Inclement weather, the attendance was\n, not   large,   but   practically    all   goods\nwere   disposed   of.   Tlie   home   cooking\nstall was soon sold out.\nA bridge drive was -held in the evening, prtze-wlnncrs being: H. Johnstone, men's first; K. Wallace, ladles'\nfirst: and Mra. A. Kennedy and A.\nMackie,   consolations.\nSPECIAL SERVICE\nAT MOYIE CHURCH\nMOYIE,    B,    C,   Lee,    30\u2014Christmas\neve, a  special   service  and  concert   by\nthe pupils of the Union Sunday school\nwas held  in the United  church. Carols\nwere dramatized,  \"We  Three  Kings  of\nOrient'\"   and   \"Silent   Night'*,   by   Mrs.\nDakln and Mrs. Mennle and Miss Mary\nj Andrews.     Mrs.   W.   W.   Parker   acted\n, as    accompanist  .for    the    children's\ni choruses.\n\u25a0    In   St.   Peter's   church,      midnight\n: mass was celebrated by Rev. Father L.\nChoinel, C.  8. V.    There was a good.\nI attendance at both churches.\nCOL. J. S. DENNIS\nTO RETIRE FROM\nDEPARTMENT, C. P.\nINVERMERE, B. C, Dec. _0.\u2014With\nthe anticipated retirement of Col. J.\nS. Dennis, C.M.a.. from the position\nof Chief Commissioner of the C.P.R.\ncolonization and development, the provinces of Western Canada lose a very\ntrue and warm hearted friend. Ever\nsince the days of his early youth,\nwhen he first saw the prairies at\nFort Garry, Colonel Dennis lias had\nhis living and being and t-.ll thc interests of his life entirely wrapped\nup In the colonization and development of the prairie provinces and,\nas associated with them, the Lake Windermere district of East Kootenay ui\nparticular   ha*   been   favored.\nColonel Dennis was early associated\n\u00bbs chief with many of the large irrigation projects of Western Canada and\nhis accustomed boxindless zeal ond\nenergy went in heart and soul to the\nwork of construction, colonization end\ndevelopment of the territory which\nsurrounded ench. Probably the best\nknown of these undertakings are what\nis known as the central and western\ndivisions of the Alberta irrigation, project* of the CP.R. During the early\npart of his second period of residence\nin Calgary.. Colonel Dennis by his rare\nmusical ability afforded great pleasure\nto the music lovers of that city, as\nconductor It) the production of oratories, '\nHis retirement Is expected to take\nplace on January 1, when he will te\nsucceeded ln the. Colonization branch\nby  J.  N. K. MacAllister  of  Montreal.\nBlack and such colors ,as the smart\ndahlia and sapphire blue as well, as\nbrown are favored for, afternoon frocks\nof flattering lace and the lace dress\nwith lon\u00ab sleeves is given a new air\nby way of clinging drapes and wide\nfrills below  the  elbow.\nGlove leather coats with beret to\nmach are smart.\nWANTED\u2014Good  family  cow,  fresh, or\nsoon to freshen.   Apply Box 497 Nelson,   or   phone   249L4. (11968)\nPOULTRY     AM)     EOOft\nNEW  LAID EGGS.    65c  dozen...  West-\nways Ranch, ^Harrop. (11996)\n.IISCEIJ.ANEOLS   FOU   SALE\nSIX horse power gasoline engine ln\ngood condition. D. B. Merry. Annable.   B.  C. (12039)\nPRIVATE SALE\u2014Furniture and garden\ntools. Dally from the 3lst to the\n27th.   314 Gore St. R. Cotter\n(11954)\nULTRA VIOLET (Artificial Sunlight)\nLamps for Home Use from 939.50.\nAlso Violet Ray Machines. Send for\nIllustrated pamphlet. Empire Agencies Ltd., 643 Granville St.. Vancouver. (11562^\nE. NORMAN\nArcOI'NTING,    AUDITINO\nUOVERNWENT   REPORTS\nBox   864,  Nelson       (j\n\" CHAS. F. HUNTER     m\n.M'DITIM;       income tax return!\nBOOKKEEPING IMKSTIGATION_f\nBox   1191,  Nelson,  B. ft      ^\nAmbulance Service\nP.   E.   HOWELL,   PUNBRAL   DIRISOTl\nor.   Successor to standard Undflrt*1'*\"*\nCo.    AU   local   Ambulance  calls _.\nPhone  252.  Day  or Night. (tf\nAssayers\nE. W. WHmOWSON, Box A1108 Neliwnl\nB- C.    Standard  western charges.     \u25a0\n(lie73i\nCECIL      E.      CftOSSLBT.       Provincial\nAssayer.    Address  Reno   Gold   Mines\nLtd..   Salmo    b    C a 18801\nAuctioneer and Bailiff\nI AMES   !!.   DOYLE\u2014Bailiff,  Auctioneer!\nNelson.   B.   C. (ll\u00ab8l|\nChiropractors\nDR.    MITTCN,    X-RAY.    CRANBROOK\n(1168-\ni\u00bbll.    GRAY,   GILKER    BLK.,    XELHOfti\n [11683\nDentists\nOR.    A.    G.    WALLEY\u2014Griffin    Block\nX-Ray.    Nelson. B. C. (11684)\nEngineers\nM1SCKLL ANKOt'S   W-tNTED\n(28)\nWANTED \u2014 CUTTER    SHATTS.       Mrs.\nEllis,  R.  R.  No.   1. (12020)\nTHREE MILK COWS\u2014For sale.    Appily\nMrs.   Haines,   Harrop. (12040)\nMISCELLANEOUS\n(21)\nWANTED\u2014HOME FOR a good work\nhorse for the winter months.\nApply Nelson Transfer or to A. D.\nEmory. (12009)\nHAPPY AND\nPROSPEROUS\nNEW YEAR\nto all our\nCustomers\nWILLIAMS\nTRANSFER\nPhone 106\nII. D.  DAWSON\u2014land Surveyors, mining and ClvU Engineer. Kalso, B. 0\n(116851\nA.    H.    OREEN    CO.,\u2014CO,\\TRA(TOB8\nPormerlv Oreen Bros., ' lurden NelsoE\nCivil and Mining Sr \/Ineers. B. 0.\nAlberta and Dominion Land Surveyors. (11-886;\nFlorists\nGH1Z7.EI.1.E-S     GREENHOUSE,     NelaWtt\nCut flowers and floral designs.\nU1\u00ab8T\nWM.   S.   JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone 342 Cut flowers. Potted Plantl\nand  floral Emblems. (11688!\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate, ln\u00ab\u00bbr\nance, Rentals. Next Hlpperson Hard\nware.   Baker   St. (11688!\nBllSINESS    OPPORTUNITIES\nWANTED--PARTNER to h_p develop\nsome well located claims. Box 323.\nTn>U. (11045)\nH.   E.   DIM.\u2014INSURANCE\nFARM   AND   CITY   PROPERTY\nS08 Ward St. (11690\nPhotographers\nGEORGE   A.   K1EERES\u2014Artist  and  Pho\ntographer.    715 Baker St. (11601\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u2014BW(8(e,   Col\nand   wood.    Phone   108. (11803\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Baker    St.,    Carpenter\nJoiner,     sash   and   Hardwood.\ntsutt\nBy Westover\n. \u00a3''!&^'_\u00ab__:__iM_\u00a3__ir\n**______F___H\n____________________________________\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS    TUESDAY' MORNING, DECEMBER 31, 1929\nP\u00bb_e\nV. Z. MANNING\nHfcADj Lhbiurr\nATW8R00K\nManjiffoasts at Banqdet Later;\nJ. A. Young Is First\nVice-President\nCRANBROOK. B. C Dec. SO\u2014The\nCranbrook branch of the Canadian\nLegion held Its anual general meeting\nrecently, the main business being tha\nelection of officers for the forthcoming\nyear.\nThe following were elected: President\nV. Z. Manning; first vice-president,\nj. A. Toung: second vice-president,\nJ. P. Lunn: executive. P. J. Foot, D.\nHalcrow and T M. R. stalwart; chaplain, Rev. McLean BeU; honorary\npresident. Dr. F. W. Oreen; honorary\nvice presidents, T. M. Roberts, J. P.\nPink, w E.' Worden and Oeorge T\nMoir\nAt   tbe   close   of   the   meeting   the\n\u00abaft<i!i*\u00a9wifr\nAT THE EMPRESS HOTEL\nVICTORIA, a.c.\n\u2022 a*t\nSEA-MUSIC FESTIVAL\nJ\u00abn. 15-18,1930\n_>e\u00bb-Chantey Play \"The Order of Good\nCheer,\" ''At a Lews Fishing,\" tofether\nwith 1%-te Paquin, Herbert Heyner,\nJohn Goes ana other fine singeri.\nThe life of Vancouver Island'*\ndelightful winter season pivots\naround the Empress Hotel . . .\nenlarged\u2014remodelled\u2014redecorated. Plan to see these winter\nevents. Yuletide Music Festival, Sea-Music Festival, Midwinter Golf Tournament February 17 to 22.\nSPECIAL FAIL AND WINTER RATES\nOn American Plan, in Effect until\nApril 30,1930\nArts Canadian Pacific Ticket __f\u00abn_ utilt\ngladly \\uoie farts, mai\\e ratrvailona, and\narrange every detail,\nCanadian\n* Pacific\nmembers adjourned to the Cranbrook\nhotel where they sat down to an\nexcellent banquet and musical program. The first toast w%b \"The King.**\nproposed by Comrade Harrow.\n^ lHTpiFo\u2122 \"toast. \"Honorary dfficerp\"\nreceived an enthusiastic reception. Mr,\nManning In speaking to this toast\ndwelt on the hanov poaltlon the\nbranch had found itself in In havim.\nmen of the calibre they had to fill\ntheae positions. Dr. Oreen made a\nwitty and emitting reply and brought\ndown, the house with his remarrs In\nconnection with a well known liquid\nissued at the front and his con.r.1**\"\nfailure to understand how It could\nmake  anyone   feel   warlike.\nThe third toast. \"Retiring President.\"\nwas proposed bv J. P. Lunn who\nsooke in eulogistic term* of the able\nand energetic manner in which Mr.\nHalcrow had carried put bis respon-\nI sihilltles and onerous duties durinur\nthe past year. Mr. Halcrow replied\nbriefly and thanked the members and\nhie exwutive for the cordial cooperation, that they had always accorded\nhim.\nThe toast \"The British *mplre Servloe __ea\u00abrue\" was oroposed by the\nchairman and reolled to bv J. A.\nYounfr. Mr. Ybung enumerated the\nohlecta snd Ideals of the Ien\u00abni* of\nwhich the Canadian Lesion forms a\npart. He referred to the hanoenlnrs\nat the recent arreit, Leelon convent'0\"\nat Reetna emohasi-zlng the fact thnt\nmembership offered nothinar to n\u00bb\u00ab\nwell _uM healthy man but. afforrteri\nthe only real and effective mean**\nwherehv he mteht be of assistance to\nthe stck and disabled and **\u2022'*** .vho\nhad lost out as a mult of their services. He made an earnest plea that\nall returned soldiers should cons'ri.?r\nit their dutv to become members. The\nnromise recently ri_*de by Prrm ier\nMackenzie King that, the oeneral pr.n-\nclnlft of the TVnsion act that, the\nsoldier had to nrove that any disability\nh\u00ab had lncu\"\"\"d was due to war service\nwas to be altered and that In future\nJthe _>resumntlon would be that the\ndlaabllttv wss due to auch war service,\nand thut this prent mln w~* dire-\"*'\"\nattributable to wha^ took place nt the\nfteuton conference held recently\nTO   THE   AMERICAN   l._:.;lON\nW. A. Drayton proposed the toast fn\ntbm \"American Legion\" drawing n vivid\npicture of the amicable relations now\nexisting betwen the peoules of the\nUnited Statps and the British Empire\nplcturesouriv exemplified by t.he recent frlendlv chnt\u00ab that too* place between Premier Ramsay Macdonald and\nPresident Hoover benta* a little strepm\nIn Virginia. Thi toast, wns responded\nto by Mr. Oirard and Mr. Cnmp nf\nthe Americsn Legion in happy and\nuimisini-   terms.\nThe chairman nronosed \"Our Province.\" to which Col. Pred Lister replied,\nspeakintr feellnelv of thc fact that, it\nwas from Cranbrook that he had lolned\nup for the war and that he felt anv\nlittle success which he might have attained as a soldier was due In no small\npart to the Cranbrook soldiers who\nhad so well supported him. He congratulated the branch in having as\ntheir new president Capt. V. Z. Manning, one of his old officers, and he\ntold  the  members  that   Captain   Man\nning wm a 100 per oent officer and\nhe waa sure be would keep that htgn\naverage up m a president also.\nUr. Tnglif. Mr. -tents, Mr. Kay. Mr\nBurton. Mr Mansfield a* W. Smith\nformed a first class strlnf band, theli\ntring -tftewdlnglir appreciated\nliners while the concert party\nconsisting of Mrs Forrest, Mise Fink\nand Mr. Manson and Mr, Llnnell wa.\nenthusiastically   received.\nRock Creek Notes\nROCK CREEK. B. C Dec 30.\u2014Mis\nE. Thompson of Duncan. Vancouver\nIsland, haa returned to her he-ne In\nKettle Valley to visit her parents,\nMr.   and   Mra.   J.   Thompson\nJ. caldwell left for Vancouver, where\nhe spent Christmas with bis two\ndaughters, May and J\nArthur and Frank Roberts of Myers\nCreek have their brother from Salmon\nArm visiting them for the holidays.\nCharlie Johnson of Kettle Valley\nleft for Grand' Forks, where he spent\nChristmas  with   hi* sister,  Violet.\nW. Wheeler, who has been attending htgh school *at Penticton, returned home to his parents, Mr. and\nairs.  Owen   Wheeler of Rock  Creek.\nTed Whiting left for Vancouver,\nwhere he spent his Christmas holidays\nCranbrook Notes\nCRANBROOK. B C, Dec. 30\u2014Miss\nMarlon MacKinnon was a bridge hostess on Friday night In honor of Miss\nMargaret Home ond Dr. Keith Wasson\nwhose nuptials we to be held on\nNew Year's day in the Anglican church\nPrize winners at the close of the game\nproved to be Miss Eileen McQuaid, Mrs.\nPeter Price. R. Large and C. Roberts.\nThere was also a handsome remembrance ior the guests of honor. Those\npresent were: Mrs. Price, Miss Eileen\nMcQuaid. Misses Margaret, Nora mr!\nMarriet Home. Miss \"Dorothy McKowan\nand Mtss Aubrey McKowan, P. Price,\nM. Large, R. large, J. Atchison. C.\nRoberts. J. Taylor and Dr K. Wasson.\nMiss Eileen McQuaid was a tea hostess on Saturday afternoon tn honor of\nthe students of various un-Wattles\nvisiting their homes for the holidays.\nThose nresent were: Miss Lyllian Jackson, Miss Hazel Jackson, Ml*s win-\nnifred Beale, Miss Nora Miles, Miss\nNancy Nesblt, Miss Phyllis Thompson,\nMiss Mary Green. Miss Margaret Home,\nMiss Nora Home. Miss Harriet Horn\".\nMiss Marion Flett, Miss Jean Flett.\nMrs. Godfrey. Miss Wanda Fink, Miss\nMuriel Baxter, Mtss Vera Baxter. Miss\nJessie Hunter. Miss Marie Petev. on.\nBiss Bettv Green, Miss Marlon MacKinnon, Miss Jean Ward, Miss Oertrude Patmore, Miss Dorothy McKov:;in\nand Miss Aubrey McKowan.\n ,\t\nInvermere Notes\nCONQUERORS OF NELSON\nFIRST A II> TEAM\n[INGRAM BRIDGE\nSCHOOL CONCERT\nIS BIG SUCCESS\nFollowing their vlctqjy in the Eastern\nLines championship oF flrat aid teams\nof the Canadian Paelflc Railway, the\nWindsor Station police team,:of Montreal, carried off the Grand \"Challenge\ncup for alt first aid teams on the\nCanadian Pacific Railway system, defeating a team from Nelson, British\nColumbia, winners\" of the Western\nchampionship, fn the all lines final\nat  Ottawa  recently.\nThe Montreal team obtained 186\npoints out of a possible 275, and Nelson\nreceived 163. The trophies were presented by Hon. Hewitt H. Bostock,\nPC.   M.A.,   speaker   of   the ^senate,   at\na pleasant Informal dinner. The'teams\nwere judged by Colonel Charles A.\nHodgetts, C.M.G., V.D., D.P.H., director\nof the St. John Ambulance association,\nCanadian branch.\nAbove Is the Montreal police team,\nleft to right standing: Constables E\nG. Wykes, A. H. Stott. and O. Tomllnson; sitting. Constable W. H. Allison,\n(captain of team) C. G. Miller, first\naid Instructor for Eastern Lines, and\nConstable W. W. Peterson. Individual\ncups, donated by' Dr. H. A. Beatty,\nmedical officer of the Canadian, Pacific, were presented to all members\nof the team.\nROCK CREEK. B.C., Dec. JO\u2014 ingrain\nBridge school recently held tta Christmas tree and entertainment. Santa\nClaus was the principal .guest at the\nschool. A delightful program was put\non by  the children.\nThe school children received man;\nbeautiful presents and spent the evening playing gamea, followed by a\nvery   tempting supper.\nWIXLAW   NOTES\nWINLAW. B. C. Dec. 30.--G.\nhas   toft   for   a  few   month'*\nEdinburgh  to visit his paran*\nT    Allan   of   HaU   siding   is\nihere.  the'-iuest of E. K   Chair\nBaby Boy Christened\nat Cranbrook Church\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Dec. 30\u2014The\nUnited church was the scene of a\npleasant gathering on Sunday afternoon when Peter, infant son of Mr.\nand Mn. Peter Price of Kaalo, wss\nchristened in the presence of about\n40 friends and well wishers. Reverend\nBruce Wallace officiating. Later the\nguests repaired to the home of the\nchild's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W\nH. Wilsop, where refreshments were\nserved  and  a social   hour spent.\nmv\nMOOT  ORGANIZATION', ROCK   CREEK\nROCK CREEK. B. C, Oec. 3U.\u2014A\nmeeting of the Wheat pool was held\nat Brldesvllle for the purpose of\nforming a Co-operate association In the\ndlstlct. The speakers of the meeting\nwere P. Black, district agriculturist,\nof Grand Forks, G. H. Pitman of Rock\nCreek and Captain, Brew of KetTTp\nValley.\n*_Briu> b. c.-\nPacific\nMUk\nAt\nChristmas\nTime\nThe inference is a fair one that\nPacific Milk is having a part in\nehe forthcoming festivities\nCooking and baking rises to\nenormous proportions in\npreparation for Christinas and\nthe additional demand now for\nthis good milk is actually considerable.\nPacific Milk\nFactor)   st\nvhlmt-furil    111\nest Colds\nRub well ovet\nthroat and chest\nVIS5S\nOver 21 Million Jars Usee Yeaplv\nPILES\nI   guarantee.        iD\nwriting, to\ncure your Diles or refund\nthe fee. Nurse ln attendance for women. Write for\nfree booklet. Frnnk Rose.\nM. D., rectal specialist. 404\n\u2014 Zlegler Building. Howard\nRiverside.  Spokane.\nINVERMERE, B. C. DSC. 3 ft.-Noel\nStewart of Calgary Is here on a holiday with his father and mother Mr.\nand Mrs. Stewart. Hospital Rftad, invermere   Heights.\nMr .and Mrs. Brott Gralngor of Clare-\nsholm and their infant son recently\nreached this part and are spending\ntheir holiday visiting thc parents of\nMrs. Graingor and Mr. and Mrs, Doug- I\nlas Gralngor, the latter ul Windermere.\nMiss Susie O Nixon of McBrlde avenue is away on a visit to Miss BftF\nat   Rossland,   B.   C.\nBALFOUR SCHOOL\nCHILDREN MAKE\nMERRY, CONCERT\nBALFOUR, B. C, Dec. 30.\u2014Balfour\nschool children made merry at their\nannual Christmas concert held here. A\nlarge  crowd   attended.\nA feature of the program was a series\nof boxing matches In which Albert\nCrossby battled David Peachey and\nGeoffrey    'Hartrldge     battled     Henry\ni Hartrldge.\nAt  the close  Santa  Claus  made   hla\n'appearance,  distributing presents,candy\nj and oranges. Refreshments were .served\nand all Joined In three cheers for\nSanta and   Mr.   cook,  who  trained   the\ni children.\nA. MACKIE HEADS\nMEMORIAL HALL\nSOCIETY, BOSWELL\nBOSWE'LLL, B. C, Dec. 30.\u2014The ad- '\nour ned annual meeting of the Boswell-\nMemorial  Hall society was held in the\nMemorial   hall,   with   president   B    H\n'Smith in the; chair.\nThe following new members were\nelected: Mr. and Mrs. D. West, Mr.\nand Mrs. S. J. Course, A. Howe. James\nJohnstone   and   w.   Mackie.\nNew directors appointed for the coming year were: A. Mackle. president;\nS. R. Sherman, vice-president; H,\nJohnstone, .secretary-treasurer; A. Heph-\nner. K, Wallace.\nNotice was given of an extraordlnart\ngeneral meeting to vote on the changes\nin the by-laws.\nROCK CREEK SCHOOL\nCHILDREN PRESENT\nSPLENDID PROGRAM\nROCK CREEK, B. C, Dec. 30.\u2014Rock\nCreek school children gave a delighfutl\nprogram recently. Songs and recitations were eplendidly given by the\npupils. The children received many\npretty end useful presente.\nTh evening was spent In playing\ngames which were thoroughly en-\nJ-oyd by the many visitors who attended. A delicious supper was serred\nby Mrs. Carey, Mrs. Kays and Mrs.\nRusch, who certainly knew how to\nserve delightful eats to the children,\nall  going home thoroughly pleased.\n\u00bbr*r4 mr ro-mcHr' ,\nGRANTS\nBest Procurable\n(THE ORIGINAL)\nPare Scotch Whisky\nRICHEST IN FINEST\nHIGHLAND   MALT\nThe   dnp;'.   an_   puff-   ot   &\u25a0   new\nmode are especially smart in moire.\nBottled uid |*ai\u00bb\u00bbM\u00ab4 by W_1m\u00bb\nCr.nt 6 Son* LiMiMd. CW\u00bbfM>ck mstd\nBftlvcnie.Clcnliwt Dwt-lctm. DwtJ-\ntowK-lt GImiow. SntUatfL\nadvertisement is not pu'\n(IOR CONTROL BOARD or hv the (^overTr-neii.  if H\nStart the\nNEW YEAR\nRIGHT\nBy getting the RIGHT paper for the\ncitizens, of the Kootenays\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nReaches you FIRST, gives you the news\nyou are looking for\nWorld, District, Sport, Mining,\nStock Markets, etc.\n$6.00 a Year. $3.00 Six Months.\n60 Cents a Month, by Mail, Outside Nelson\nTHE DAILY NEWS can be obtained from\nthe following agents:\nWINLAW CHILDREN\nPRESENT CONCERT\nWINLAW. B. C. Deci 30.\u2014A spi\u2122_d\nprogram was pres-ntaxl when ..he\nschool chlldren-s Christmas concert\nwas held ln the Winlaw hall under the\ndirection ol the teachers, Miss M.\nClark and Mtss T. Bourgelo.. A huge\ncrowd atetnded, many having to\nstind.\nAlter the concert each child received\na present and a ba-y of candy from\nthe Christmas tree, handed out \"oy\nSanta Claus. Refreshments wer. served\nand dancing held sway till early\nmorning.\nWIN CANDY AT\nBALFOUR PARTY\nBALFOUR, B. a, Dec. 30.\u2014Jack\nHarris. Mary Blewer and Bill Tallts\neach won a box of candy at a military\nbridge drive held at a meeting of the\nYoung People's club of Balfour. Those\npresent were: Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bren-\nil.son. Kitty McKay, Elizabeth Lin&,\nMary Blewer, Tom Hoskln, Jack Harris,\nCecil Rawllngs, Rob McKay, John\nPeachey, Leighton Cook, V. Redllch and\nBill  Tallis.\nI\nNELSON\nNelson News Depot\n77 News Depot\nHume  Hotel\nCapitol Paper Shop\nCity Drug Co.\nMaim & Rutherford\nWilliams' News Stand\nPoole Drug Co.\nC. P. It. Lunch Counter\nIB.11L\nK. A. Margeson's Drug\nHunt' Bros.\nW. O. Kennedy\nJ.   M.   Doughty\nEAST  TRAIL.  J.  Plntta\nROSXI.AND J. C. Orauhart.\nGUAM!10RKS\nWoodland _ Co.\nK. Scheer\nPROCTER\nW. Ward   .\nGeorge  Daniel\nKASLO. Chas. Webster\nCRESTON. Creston Drug Co.\nYAHK. Norman Mclnnes\n1 HAMIKOOK\nBiutlie   \u201e   Nobli-\nCranbrook Drug Co.\nJ.   R.   McDonald\nELKO. Dorothy Wood\nKIMBERLEY. Klmberley  Drug  Co.\n( llAPMIN  (.IMP. Ernest  Stone\nMARYSVII.LE.  Robert Bidder\nl-ERNlE.   W.   Ingram\nSILVERTON\nW.   li.    Malbhull\nJ.   Pcuchy\nSANDON\nStore W. J. McDonald\nW. J. Parham\nSLOCAN  CITY. P. Hufty\nNEW DENVER. C. P. Nelson\nLUMBERTON. Vincent Downey\nYMIR, John  DWey\nSOOTH   SLOCAN.  J.  D.   Yeatman\n.MICHEL. Herbert Lc Roy\nCALGARY\nNational ~IJ?tvs\nBoston  Hat  Co.\nCapital News\nBPO*ANE. 8. P. Jacoy\nVANCOUVER\nP. O.  News Stand\nUniversal News\n17 NOW ATTEND\nBOSWELL SCHOOL\nBOSWELL, B. C, Dec. 30.\u2014Seventeen\nchildren are now on the roll of Boswell school ln grades I, II, in, IV, V,\nVilli and X.\nOne pupil. Evelyn Van Koughnett.\nwus promoted to Grade II at the end\nof the term.\nMrs. Hughes, the teacher, takes\ncia.se.s in\"Domestic Science apd weekly\ninstruction is given lu music by Mrs.\nW. b, Hepber. and Manual Training\nby   H.   Johnstone.\nNc\\ys agents on C. P. R. Boats and trains.\n ajj^iilftiiizwv' '\u25a0\nNelson Boy Learns\nThat Goats Relish\nChristmas Trees\nWINLAW, B. C, Dec. 30.\u2014Watching\nH, Derrig cutting down fir trees to\nfeed to his goats, a Nelson boy visiting\nhere, expressed surprise, aayln\u00ab \"That's\nthe first time I knew that they fed\ngoats Christmas trees\u2014end there's so\nfew Christmas trees In Nelson.\"\nMOYIti NOI lis\nMOYIE, B. C, Dec. 30.\u2014Among thoee\nwho celebrated Christmas at their\nhomes here, tho following came down\nfrom fciiuberley and Cranbrook. J. W.\nFitch, V. Christian, c. T. Dakln, U;i~\npoleou Ooeselln, L. Desat {Inters. K\nHyde, T. Horrobin, O. A. Smith, W. W\nParker, Andrew Graut, Oscar Burch, W.\nHule und B. Ferguson.\nMrs. Harry Hogg and baby and Mis.--\nEsther Pearson, Chapman camp, were\nvisiting at the home of their parents,\nMr. and Uxa. Albert Pearson.\n* EVERYBODY Reads the Paper\nTher's old Grandma Brown reading the obituary ... and being reminded to have hei glasses changed,\nby an optician's ad. There's Mrs.\nJones reading the market news . . .\nand restrained from rash speculation by the bank savings ad on thc\nopposite page . . . Here's Tom, thc\nchauffeur, scanning the sports sheet\nand observing an ad on auto accessories. Laura and liose are discuss-\nK\ning thc dress sale at The Vogue. . .\nand reading Thc Vogue's ad.\n\"Greasy\" Miller, our janitor, doesn't\nbelieve what he reads (he says)...\nWhat  this\nPaper Offers\nAdvertisers:\nbut he's going to buy some of the\nhardware he's reading about in that\nhardware ad . . . And Ed Jacobs\nin the end seat\u2014he swears the only\nthing he reads in the papers is the\npolitical news and editorials . . .\nbut tomorrow he will buy the Overcoat that was advertised in the\npaper this morning. EVERYBODY\nreads the paper. EVERYBODY\nreads the ads.\na\nA free matrix service,; their choice of hundreds of illustrations on\ncocru topic from diamonds to dry cleauiutj; from topcoats to tombstones.\nWc furnish thc sUrcutijpc, a layout and suyyestcd copy. All lion pay\nfor is the space.\nThe Nelson Daily News\n TaT\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS   TUESDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 31, 1929\nNEW YEAR\nGREETING\nCARDS\nA big selection at\n5c, 10c and 15c\nMann, Ruthcr.oro\nCo.\n_J\u00abW\u00bb\u00bbJ-|\u00ab-___\u00bb-\u00ab\u00bb\u00abf\u00ab-f*^S_._<_*\u00ab*-,\nfakt Taxl-Transf\u00ab\n* <oNI\nM*%s\n77\n\u25a0      \u2022\u2022\u00bb!    IND   NK1HT    .\u00bb\u25a0...\n\u2022unnAor hi kxprup\ns\u2014* '\t\nCity Drug Co\njMSLaON-H     OlSPKNslNa       1 IIKMI-\nP   Pltau,   Kodak!,   Drags    station.,\nL    Mai] orders prompt!} dtspau-he.-\nW>x   logs  \\'ei\u00abo\\   b   r   pim-vt\n- ami*   lit   aaiul   eel    vaam    avrlthl   'r.\nPhone   44 Box   68\nLearn to Earn\nMercury\nCoal\nThe coal that is clean,\nsootl-ess, economical . Because of these three important factors it will pay\n,\"you to let t\u00bb fill your bin\nw'th Mercury Coal.\nRenwicks\nTransfer Co.\nPHONE 797\nNelson News of the Day\nIIUNf*\nQrmelle'i    _\u00ab___:___'\nolanta.\nfor    flowera\n(11-71\nzelle's and  Ran'dyand\nWanUd\u2014fUlabi.\nFloral design.. Plants, Flowm.    aria.\nRandyand (13053)\ntie man to drive automobile   to   California.     Phone   67.\n  (130*7)\nPurnialied    Two-Koomeri    suite    to\nrent.    Appl;  Kerr -p-rum-uts    (13011)\nMtt. Carlton Currier wins the lunch-\neon aet  with   number   100. (13040)\nRoad at Black Bluff closed  Wedneeday,   January   1.     Detour   by   Rosebud\nLake to be used untll future notice.\n113030)\nMrs.  8.  J.  Kennedy  wish*  to  thank\nthe   Fifteen    Hundred   club    for   the\npromptn. vi In the paytn_ of her claim.\nIIM\nO.   C.   ART   HilOPPK\nTwenty    per   cent   discount   on   all\nour   stamped   needlework   goods.\n112050)\nJACLaughton, R.O.\nSpecializing  in  Oarieetlng  Defective\nBight  by  Proper  Glasses\nQuick  Repair Service\n'.BIFFIN   BLOCK FHONE  125\n44 TAXI AND\nTRANSFER\nFluent aedau Cars In tbe City\nOpen  Day  ana  Night\n>\nXjnjoii-\nNew Years Eve at Pitners\nWelcome 1930 with colorful enthusiasm; dance to\nthe .syncopation of an insmrin**; orchestra and luxuriate in course after course of delectable food.\nNOVELTIES GALORE\nDancing 10 to 2\nOnen from 11 a. m. to 2 a. m.\nWe are serving a delicious\nNew Year's dinner tomorrow\nPitners\n!\"rii\nCl KI.IKS   .TTKNTION\nRinks will be classified Tuesday, December 31. Kindly get your name on\nthc   list, (1204S)\nMrs. S. J. Kennedy wishes to thank\nthc Nelson Protective Awoclatlon for\nthe promptness shown In thc paying of\nher clslm. 1130481\nFuneral Notice\nFuneral   of  the  late   Charles  Maltby\nwill  take  place  this  afternoon  at   1:30\nfiom  St.  Saviour's Church. (130154)\nElection of Otrfcwra. Nelson Branch,\nCanadian Legion, Thursday, January X\nAll Active members requested to b*\npresent  at  8 p.m.  sharp. 113033)\nFuneral of the late Marvan McDanlels will take place Thuraday. January 3. at a o'elook from D. J Robertsons   underu.klng   parlors. (13058)\n(HI RCI1   OF    RKOEEMER,    FAIRVIKH\nWATCIINir.lIT   NKRVHT.\nThere will be a Watchnight service\ntonight  at   11:30. (13059)\nWATCH   MI1HT  SERVICi:\nST.   NAVIOI RS   I'llI'HIil\nnil-,   evening\n11:30   1'iu\u2014lit;,in   and   address\n13   M.\u2014Holy   eomnnlon\n(13053)\nCanadian Legion Olhrlstmas Tree\nond Treat. Children 14 years of age\nor under, of any Ex-8ervlce man are\ncordially United to report at Headquarters, Canadian Legion. Nelson, iat\n3 p.m. New year's Doy. (12034)\nMrs. J. J. French and family wish\nto express sincere thanks for sympathy\nextended and for floral tributes received\nduring their recent sad bereavement,\nthe death ol  Mr. French. 113056)\nThe above te a picture of Mr. Alex\nPalmer of Toronto and of the dog\nwhtch accompanied him. on a northern trip in which the hunter became\nthe hunted, when Mr. Palmer suddenly\ncame face to face with a huge black\nbear. Caught ln underbrush and unable to run, he fired two shots and\nTO EVERYONE\nA\nHAPPY\nPROSPEROUS\nNEW YEAR\nW. R. CAMPION\nGROCER\nMAYORS, REEVES\nREELECTED ONTARIO\nTORONTO. Dec. 30.\u2014The mayors and\n24 reeves were elected by acclamation\ntoday at the cloae of nominations lu\nOntario   municipalities.\nTwo opponents withdrew to give\nT. B. Mitchell the mayoralty of Oshawa. while F. M. Brown, was unopposed  at Welland.\nIHMiM.'tNY   DANCE   NEW    YEARS   EVE\nEagle Hall under the auspices ot\nthe Clan McCleary. Good music and\nrefreshments. gl.OO per person. Come\nand htrald the New Year with the\nBiggest   and   beat   of   crowds.\nCOME   ONE COME   ALL\n(12042)\nCARD   OE   THANKS\nThe Matron   and  staff  of  the Koot- i\nenay Lake Oeneral Hospital wish to cx-\nI tend   their   thanks  to  all   the  persons i\n' who    donated    g(ft\u00bb.    candy,    etc..    at\nChristmas  for  the   patient*  and  staft.\nEspecially   the   girls   of   tlte   Busy  Bee j\nClub  for   their  lift of  a   wheel   chair\nto   the   Children s   Ward. (12047)\nIs Your Child\nBackward.\nIB TOUR child obtaining a\nsatisfactory average In school?\nDo you knoy whether or not\nyour child is handicapped ln\nhis or her mental development\nby defective vision?\nJ. O. Patenaude\nOptometrist  and  Optician\nl'M>ert   Optical   Service\nOrder\nNewcastle Coal\nFrom Leslie\nFuel Co.\nYou will like Newcastle.\nIt's free from soot and\nlasts longer.\nLeslie\nFuel Co.\nPHONE S3\nWholesale and Retail\n421 Baker\nI\nI\n_\nI\nand Furnace Coal\n$9*S\u00b0 A Ion\nSpecial Rates on Carload Lots\nGALT LUMP COAL\n\u25a0 i i'. '.\nDRY  WOOD  ANY  LENGTH\nI NELSON TRANSFER CO. *\nLIMITED\n___Hp\"\u2014\nLr\u00abr. Vernon and  Stanley Sts. Nelson, B. C.     I\nPHONE 35\nRAINBO\nConfectionery\nand\nBakery\nFirst Class Bakers\nPhones 285 and 177\nP. O. Box 795\nDeliveries All Over Town\nSay it With Flowers\nNelson Flower\nShoppe\nV Stand; for dependable delivery. You\nsurely get that at our\nshop.\nLet Us Deliver Your\nChristmas   flowers\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nTUXEDOS\nfor the\nHoliday\nFestivities\nThis is the season\nof the year that every\nman needs a Tuxedo\nfor the numerous\nsocial events that will\nbe held.\nFeel corre<Stly\ndressed in a Tuxedo\nfrom Emory's. Smartly tailored and correctly  cut.\n$35 AND UP\n^\n'WEEKS\"\nBREAK-UP-A-COLD   TABLETS      _\nFor ColcU. Constipation and Headaches\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription   Specialists\n407 Baker Phone 1\nBadminton\nBIRDS\nRACQUETS\nREPAIRS, ETC.\nJ. Holland\nService and Satisfaction\nThe  la.ta_t  violet shad*\nreddish glow to lt.\nhaa a warm\nFor\u2014\nSERVICE\nPRICE and\nQUALITY\nPhones 10 & 11\nBattery Storage\nfor the Winter\nJust Phone Us\nBennetts Ltd.\nThe Succfcs-\nof a groeery store\nnot only depends\nupon quality groceries. Service is an important factor, too.\nFor Both, Try\nPhone 235\nffoRSWIlX\nBROS.\nChildren's\nHealth Toys\nWe have a splendid assortment of C. C. M. Joy-\ncycles, Scooters and Kiddie Kars\u2014also Gendroh's\nAutos, Aeroplanes, Doll Buggies, etc. We also have\nFlexible Flyers* Sleighy and Skis.\nAny of these toys will give your boys and girls\nuntold pleasure, as well as making them healthier\nand more robust.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany,    Limited\nWHOLESALE    Nelton, B. C.    RETAIL\nKliWMii: *\u2022<.<\u00ab:\nDiamonds\nThe -sparking beauty\nof a perfect DIAMOND enhanced by\nits exquisite hand\ncarved setting of\nwhite or green gold\nor of platinum, makes\na beautiful engagement ring that will-\nbe prized for a lifetime.\nWe have a fine selection from $25.00 to\n$260.00.\nE. Collinson\nJeweler\nCP.R. Time Inspector\nWork\nClothes\nYes! We keep an\nexceptionally large\nstock of clothing for\nthe miner, lumberman or the outdoor\nworker.\nHeavy Wool Shirts\nCarss Wool. Pants\nRed and Blue Label\nUnderwear\nMackinaw Coats and\nShirts\nHeavy Rubbers\nGloves and Mitts\nBlankets\nQILKERS\nSEE\nand\nHEAR\nIT\nTONIGHT\nThe Black Watch'\n'    A MOST WONDERFUL PICTURE\nWITH\nVICTOR MCLAGLEN, MYRNA LOY,\nDAVID  ROLLINS,\nROY DARCY\nA man's man becomes a lady-killer\nto save his country\no@o   qd  o\u00a9o\nBIGGER, BETTER THAN EVER\nNew Years Eve Midnite Matinee\nAfter regular show tonight\nAdmission 50c\nTickets on sale now\nSPECIAL PROGRAM. PRIZES ANP FAVORS\nBid goodbye to the old year and greet the new with\nI     your friends. They'll all be here.\nYou'll have the time of your life\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1929_12_31","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0405089","@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":"1929-12-31 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1929-12-31 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\/1.0405089"}