{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0397189":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-04-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1921-11-03","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0397189\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" ES-i\nawgTuw*. t. nr**-**-\n1-^^^^!\n\u25a0-*'-\"'\u25a0> a.,j\\,~- :.-.i'.i.-.'^^x-xg^r?^\n(\nllMl'li\"1!*!!\n*Sf-*S\n. l\/i.'(.\nCreston Apples\nBESTIR THE\nSee feeS\n.** >\u2022% r\nDiscloses Secret\nLIBERAL-FARMER PACT\nSee'Page 2\nh     a-*.- *.*\u201e * m ..- ,,i\n*     ,. irat^J?Vi\u00b0fjM-ia\n\"NELaONrB.O..  THURSDAY MORNING\/NOVEMBER 8,-1921.\nNO.  160.\n'.\u2022j\" Meighen    Exposes    Liberal\nW      Leader's Objective in \"Big\nInterests\" Talk.\nPROGRESSIVE TACTICS\nSCARE AWAY CAPITAL\n*\nm\nSHEPHERDING UNEMPLOYED\n\u25a0A\nFree Trade Campaign in\nWest One Reason for Unemployment.\nCAMPBEU-EJORD, Ont., Nov. 2.\u2014\nVt'ernior MelgHen opened hln campaign\nmeeting \\wtj_ tOduy\\wlth attribute to\nH-On.jQ, T-*. Tolmle, minister? of agriculture;wim, the premier wild, was\ndoing' valuable work for tho farming\neomtpunlty, The premier cOmhutted a\nstatement In a farming periodical to\nthe effect lhat only, fivo million out of\nfivo hundred million -dollars waa. spont\non agriculture, although the farmers\nword 40 per cent of the population. Thc\nexpenditure on ufcrlcnlturo was greater\nnow-'thun cvor before, Mr. Meighen\naald.'\n\"Mr. Urerar chai-RcK that mergers\nund fortunes aro made under the tariff\nut the expense of the farmers and\ncommon people.\" aald tho premier.\n\"Mr. King takes the same line. Mr.\nKing la simply talking ln cal eh phrases\nto attract vot*A,\" he nald.\nThe premier declared thut two\nthirds or the large mergers In Ciiuudn\nliad taken placo under the Laurier\nKoVchimont-nnd many of them when\nMr, King waa a member ot that government. *\nOnly Ono Way,\nl'KTKItllouo, Ont., Nov. S.\u2014(Uy\nCanadian Press staff currctiiHindont.)\n\u2014\"Winn la this country going to\nlearn thta lt cnn matte Its way hy one\nmethod and one only, and that Is by a\ntariff made by Canada for Canadian\npeople?\"\nThla was tho question which Premier Meighen addressed lu an audi-\noncfl. of about GOO people ttho gathered\nIn tho armorlos here tonight.\nPremier Meighen's tnee; lug thle evening concluded his Ontario campaign,\nat any rata for tho present. He left\nfor Ottawa following his meeting hare\nnnd will tour Quebec and the west before returning to this province. The\npremise trtinpared conditions in Canada Unlay aud thMain other countries\nwVsh had Tjsrtlclllated In the war.\n*'Trled by 'any standard you care to\nupply, Canada has better conditions\nthan any country ln the world, save\nthe United* States alone,\" ho Insisted.\nOne reason for unemployment In this\n\u25a0country waa that there Jiad been an\nagitation for 10 years, with the ultimate reduction ot tariff as Its goal.\nTlie Progrosslves had carried on a free\ntrade campaign In thc west which had\nbeen increasingly active ln .the last\nfour mouths. The result was lhat capital was timid. People with money\nwould not Invest It under present unsettled r>-mllt liMi.-t,\n\"AnnW.er    thin    UitMt (|pCHtlon.  posl-\ntlvoly1 ahd 'Unonulvocally and \\ on win\nhuvo less unemployment In this cp(in*\niry,\" said the premier. Mr. Klag was\nwalling against mergers, hat \u2022 large\nmajority of the great Canadian combines had eomo Into existence when he\nvnu tt member of tho government,\n' Nothing Against Grain Growers.\n\"\"What about thu grain growers'\ninotfcer?\"%skcd u man In tlie audience.\n\u25a0Mr. Melghon replied that he would say\nnothing against Uie l\/nilud drain\nGrowers. It was tho biggest ''big\nbusiness\" in tno went, but he waa not\nan enemy of large organisations.\nHo, stated* however, that hundreds\nuf thousands of dollars mndo by that\ncompany were used for political prop-\nuga]*|d*d.. The company claimed that It\nMd a right to. uso Its proFHs for uny\npurpose it doomed right and that It\ni-oulil finance political newspapers It\nIt wished to. That might he true, ml\nmilled Mr. Meighen, but ll should bo\nnoted that this was where the profits\nwere going to. They wer-i qot bolng\nreturned to tho mon who^ralscd the\nwheat, 'rhe premier- again told Un-\nhistory of the grain Investigation In\nthe west. If iho company headed by\nMr. Crerar had nothing to hide why\nhod lt taken out an injunction to stop\nthe Investigation? he nuked.\nMOUNTED  POLICE KEEP ORDER\nMnny demonstrations have occurred in London recently,   hut   on   the   whole   the   unemployed   havo   been   tuw-\nabldlng.   Here Is the head of one of the recent parades being,j-fleired from Trafalgar H'tuare by mounted pbllpa,    **--\nTHREE M1LU0N\nAYEARPROFST\nProvincial Secretary Forecasts Revenue From Government Sales.\nTWENTY BODIES\nDeath Roll of Britannia Beach\nDisaster 38; Find Two\nMore Bodies.\nVANCOUVER* Nov. 2.\u2014Tho gonornl\nhospital lioro rucolveri anollior vU'tlm\not tlie 'Srlt-ruinln Bench rinnil when\nMn. A. Hltchfjll wns ailmlttcil imileiit\nsuffering from * noi-vctus hi-onkOown.\nHlnco gatuiduj- moniluit \u00bbhi< Juin Ikoh\nwaiting for news of hor luislmnil. whu\nhae not been eoen dead or nllvr slncr\ntho flood. She collapewl toduy anil\nwaa brought hero tor treatment.\nTwo more bodies wero found, today,\nthoso of Gordon Lowe, a achool boy,\nand Mrs. 3. Brnldwood. Twenty bodies\n. Mill aro missing.   Thc Lotnl death llat\nfla*!., *   -**-1\nKing Georv C\u00abWe\u00ab\nCongratulations on\nHarding's Birthday\nT\/VASHINGTON, Nov. 8.\u2014President\nHarding oelobratod Ms G6lh birthday\ntoday' quietly at the White House, nu\ntipeclal program having boon arranged\n-for the occasion. Ho recolved scores\nof   congratulatory   lottors   and   tolo-\nTflSr a\u00abot*go ciihlod: ' ' '.**?\n\"On tho' occasion of your blrlhday.\nMr. PiwiUdant^t irlvos mo dronl plwu-\nitv *fl'1MW''tu fu mr lioortlost good\nwlulieu for j'\u00bbut' heallli and huniiluoHs\nartwra   -you ot my cordial\n**\u25a0* HA.SMMB* ~\u2014\nVICTOltlA. Nov. 2.\u2014Proflls In the\ngovcrnnionl salo. of liquor In Hrltlsh Columbia will average 111.non u\nweek. This Is Imitated In a statement intlUo. hy Hon. .1. I). MacLean,\nprovincial secretary In the legtKlaturc.\nMr. tluciicun thought the profits Mr;\nthc first period or the liquor board's\nadministration, June 15 to Hept. 30.\nwould   be   1100,000.\nOn thc sale of permits during this\nporlod, the government rcnfUcil 1121,-\n034. Balance sheets Hhowlng tho\nturnover ln dlspuxu! of stocks huvo\nnot been ni.ido public.\nMr. MacLean defended the admlju\nhrtrotloa-mfHw-rrrll'-W'n-Ice. quoting\nthe public accounts, already made\npublic, figures to show lhat tho expenditure for tho molntcnauce of the\nclvl*, service was within avoragc\nand reasonable limits.\nMr. MucIjCiiu thought the profits\non liquor sales would average |3,-\n000.000 yearly, from which It may be\npresumed the profit on tho salo of\npermits is not Included In the estimate of 1000.000 for tho 11 weeks\nof the piilei covered.\nSHERIFF ATTEMPTS\nSale Ordered to Satisfy Wage\nClaims;     Declines     As\nsignec's Offer.\nNANAIMO, Nov. 2.\u2014Sheriff Traw-\nfnrtl yesterday offered nt auction tlio\npropel lies of the Pacific Coast Coal\nMines, limited, Including the rallies\nat Morden and Buqunsh and the in i\nehlnery and plant at both places.\nThere wus \u201ea reserve prlco on the\nproperties assessed by n supremo OOUrt\nJudge, which \u00abtt the Monlen properly\nwaa |2.\"iO.*00O; on the Nuipinsh proper\nty, 1200,000, nm) on the machinery of\nboth placnn, $r>0,000.\nTho asslgnci*  of  the  compuny  was\npresent   at   thn   sale   with   J-JT.TiOO\ncash, which he offered  for release of\nthe pruiterly.\nTbls was declined, the sheriff bid\ndhiK tn the property at the prlco set\nby tho judge In chambers.    The sale\nof the properties had been ordered lo\nsatisfy wage claims owing.\nFLASHES BY WIRE\nBolsheviki Evacuate Emeli.\nHNZEIJ.   I'oralo,   Oct.   27.\u2014Uulshc\nvlk Russian    troops    hava. evneuated\nIhls city,    ns    provided hy tho new\ntreaty between Moscow and Ihe Communist government of Persia.\nKilled by Machinery,\nDAK HIVEH. Man., Nov. 2.-8.\nKlrkpntiick, a farmer, was killed this\nafternoon whllo putting a l)\"lt on Ma\nseparator. Hla widow ami four chll-l\ndron survive.\nPoison. Mi\"< '\" Doorway.\nTORONTO. Nov. 2. -Tlie pollen nro\nInvestigating an attempt . to poison\nSam Hestvo. a fruit merchant, his wife\nand six children. Milk loft In a hottlo\nIn tho doorway was lampeicil with.\nThe pet clog drank a small quantity\nand died almost Immediately.\nRuns Again for Mayor.\nWI.VMTPEO. Nov. 2. \u25a0 Winnipeg\nClVIo elections will be held November\nU, wilh nomination day Novtmher 11.\nMayor>i*urnell 'will bo a candidate for\nn second tornrnnd It Is not oxpected\nthat any ono will run against him.\nsixteen    candidates,      Including    six\nniOMlllOlM    Of    thC     lileli'lll     COUncil,    Itl-\nroady are In tho flold ror the nlno nl\ndcrmnnle setita thai uro to be filled.\n.m\nTrains Depart on Time\nFrom Vancouver on Main\nand Kettle Valley Lines\nVANCOUVmrt,   Novi' 2.\u2014Eastbound\nIriilim on tho rnn.i'iinn Pacific railway\nare clearlnf  iliioiu;li  lo lhe cast\nlhe  main  anil   KcHle   Volloy   lines  lie-\nginning i.'iiii;ln.    TIiIh ttnnolineeiitonl\nWu\u00bb iiih.i\u201e !\u2022>  1,triolein loitli.in, when\nta mm tiswua an wteams,\nRUSSIA SHOWS SIGNS OF RETURNING\nCONSCIOUSNESS; OFFERS TO ASSUME\nPRE-WAR DEBTS UNDER OLD REGIME\nLONDON, Nov. 2,\u2014Lortl Curzun, secretary for foreign\naffairs, on Tuesday sent a note to-Leonid Krassin, Ihe Russian\nminister of trade nnd commerce, concerning the recent note\nof M. Tchitchcrin, the Soviet minister, offering conditionally\nto assume tho debts of old Russia up to 1914.\nLord Curzon expressed it as the feeling of the British\ngovernment that the Russian government, by proposing to recognize the debts, have set their feet upon the only path by\nwhich they can attain to the goal they profess to desire,\nnamely, thc economic cooperation with other nations.\nIt is stated that Lloyd Ceorge has expressed a desire to\nconsult with M. Krassin on the subject of debts, and that a\nconference is likely to be held within a few days.\nGerman Syndicate Offers\nto Rebuild Villages in\nFrance for Reparations\nPARIS, No'\/ 2.\u2014Representatives\nof 'a {German .syndicato called, on\nM. Lodcheur, minintor of liboreitod\nreoions today, and offered to rebuild 12 villao>a in the Simn\ndistrict with tVn-man labor and\nmaterial, tho reconstruction to bo\nconsidered as a charge against the\nreparations account under the\nUoUoheur-Ratenoou   agreement.\nThey Informod W. Louctiour that\n2S00 workers wer.\u00bb ready to reconstruct the 12 villtagea within a\nyoar.\nThe minister asked tho Germans\nto roturn on Monday, when ho\nwould'inform them'of his decision.\nCOIRIIS\nAPPROVAL SEI\nIM HE DEFERS\nTO S14TES OWING TO GRA\nTURN IN IRIS!\nChief Military Adviser.\nJAPANESE CHIEF ROWSER SUGGESTS\n'NRKUUIHIMLITnGIK\nDiscussion Tq-morrow on Labor Members' Resolution\nSupporting Objects.\nLONDOKi 5Cov< U.--A (llecusslon of\nLho wiiHhiiiRioit wnWrirtftfo will by\nhold In (he house nt* common*-*, next\nFrlrtny in connwiimi wilh u rcKohi-\ntlou pranntod i>>* lho Iaoo-t inemMn\n\"warmly approving \u00abC tli\u00ab oonfor-\nonce,\" AiiKlcn ('limnlu'rliuul, govern-\nment   leitttor,   m\\Ul   tuduy.\nSir t'*ninci*\u00bb Lowr. (Inlonlttt mpmtici-\nfrum Hirinitighuni, pEptodj&t) aguliiHt\nhiu'Ii u dlxfiiKsliiu m thin time bo-\ncuus-t' of tin- ndvertio otfect il might,\nhave in nitn-i' obuntrlat. Mr. Chnm-\nh< l lain roplled thut thla point liad\nboon given \u00bb*rlous rori\u00ab3oraUon.\n\"I Ihdloated my iluuhtu yo-Htrnlny.\"\noonUnuod tin* spycrnniont Iwder,\n\"iik to whether it wnn dutdrnble tn\nhave thr dlioUtfd-Dfl, toil BlnJoe then\nI- have oonttdorod the mailer in eon-\n\u00bbult!ith\u00bbn With lho prime mlnlater\numl the foreign Hecretury. W'v nre\nIn ItlOh complete accord In tnir d-BSlro\nto ace tlie \\V;inhington conference\nmtccced thut ifft* fjovernment, confiding tn the dbcr\u00abtion of the hotmc\nho to cumltiet the iliacmudon Unit il\nwill not iirejudlcc the hiiucokh of the\ncunfereiuTe. agrued  to lhe dlactiatdon.\"\nIn reply  tn unclhcr question  (rom\nlhe   floor.  .Mr,   Chum he rln In  nald;   \"1\npnwume   It   wilt   he   n   dlacuttaioii   on\nthe   real   purpoM   nnd   OWtntlal   ob-\nIhe   Wu;-ittIngton   cnnforoi\nIh   tho    ri'iluctlon    of   arnia-\nwholc\nWASHINGTON, Nov. :'.\u2014The prlu\nelpul Japanese dologulloii to thc nr\ninuineiil Oanfereuco nrrlved here lot*\ntodny from the 1'nelflc const by spe\nclul ii-iiii.. Tin- pnrty Included Adtnlrul\nT. Kntif, minister of murine; I'rlnce\nl-M*.-*;ii<i Tokugawn, prealdent\nhouae of lioera, und n purty\nvln-srn  nnd   expertn.\nThe   .lupiini'se   delegation    l>\nconlureiii-c la now complete, lit'\nof   *iyj\u00bb-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0i\"ii-v    to   1)C   Colllplet\nurilvn\nThe\nr\nRQOO\nealn\nthc\nof   ad-\nLo   the\n: first\n;d  by\nhore\n.InpuncHc\ndologatlou\nnrrlved\nwill\nhere, uuonrdlng to Ua leudi\nthe deal re and hup* of dlactiwilUK\nflrat at the conference, lhe question\nof limitation of nrmamenta nml not\nFur Baatcm problems. The Japanew;\nviewpoint, It waa explained, wna that\nPacific and Far liaatern qucatlon^\nmight prove full of difficulties, and\nIf tnkeit up flrat. the progress of\nihe uegot In tlons might he deluved.\nChliiu. u lllg Problem\nIn dfacuaahm, juat bofore arrival\nat Washington, the question * of\nChbUli   Dr. 'Klroku   llayaahl,   general\ncouuelllot* lo Ihe Japanese ministry\nof foreign nffnlra, and chief udvltjcr\nto the -jiiii.'i-ri-nce delegation, aald\nIn- would he buhl iude'-d. who would\n\"venture to pttot n solution of the\ngreat problem of t'hlnu. but there\nure two thoughts Unit occur to me-4\nin   lhat  eonneeiloti.*'\nIlls I'lrxt \u25a0\u25a0-';\u25a0.;..,\u25a0\u25a0 -itni wua that the\npowers should agree to cous\u00bb Ihelr\non uM matters pertaining to thnt\ncountry, and his second was that\n(he pQWOtS should mitlte up their\nminds to bo |i:it!ent\u2014Immensely patient\u2014with   ('hlnn.\nfieoA Orderly China\nDr, Hoy ash I declared lhat the contention by some critics that Japan\nseeretly desired a weak and dlwnr-\ng-nilzcil Chins  was a  falsity.    '\nAn orderly China wua necessary t * *\nJapan, he insisted, uddlng that he\nbelieved .liipiiu would subscribe to\nany folluona] plan 10 secure  It.     Hut\nJapan, he sold, would look with e.\\-\ntreme disfavor upon any group of\nwestern power* obtaining a dominant position in China to the exclusion of Japan.\nAgricultural Council of England Dissatisfied With\nCommission's Findings.\nLONDON. Nov. 2.\u2014(By Canadian\nl'rcua cable.) -The council of the Royal Agricultural Soviety of Kngland at\nIheir meeting today dlacusaed the report of tho royal comtniaalon on the\nImportation of otore oattle trom Canada ami expressed decided opposition\nlo thc findings of the commission.\nLord Northbroolt proposed and Lord\n.Sirachlc seconded a rcaolotlon, which\nwai adopted, expressing the council's\ngrave concern at the findings of Ihe\ncommission aud rc-'ordlng that llu:\ncouncil wna more than ovor convinced\nUnit juny nlturatlon In the Discuses of\nAnimals act of l&jti would eventually\nbe ii' n inn ni ii to Uie production of\nhome grown eattlo and consequently\nio tho fri'sh meal aupply of thla country.\nSeveral spoakera declared the findings were entirely at variance with tho\nweight of evidence and ngalnst (he\nview* of n vnat majority of English\nfarmers.\nA Norfolk farmer, who snld Ho came\nfrom a uounty thai wan wholly arable.\ndeclmeil Unit whereaa a fesr years ngo\n:i Nnfoltt farmer ibotight Cahadlan\ncnttln were useful to him ho hud since\nchanged hia mind, knowing perfectly\nwell thai hla mainatuy wuaytho English breeder aud that Iho Impniintbui\nof w fow Canadlatu culllo would bu of\nno benefit.\nAnother apenker mid tbut the United\nKingdom could and' would breed nil\nthu store catlle that tho United Kingdom could keep.\t\nBoys and Girls Compete\nin Calf Feeding Contest\nHASKAtOON.  Nov.  2.    A calf  feed-\nIng   ci hi lent    fer   boys   imd   girls   feu-\nliired  the aheep and awlno \u00abhOw,  thn\nfiiBt.    of   n    series   of    threo    winter\nhk-li opened here today. .Midges\n,f.   A.   A.   Do\/ell,  of  Jho   Unl-\nr thi\n\u2022'     AtbcMtu,    liniidiln'g    awlm\nexhlbite, und John VV'ilsoti of Innisfail,\niu _h_\\ fiitfsfi \\.\\_\\m_.      \u201e\nFirst- Serious Split in Farmer Ranks Occurs in Strathcona Nominations.\ni'AL,UAKV, Nov. 2.-\u2014Dlaaatlafled\nwith the nomination of David Warner, Farmer candidate In Hlrathcona\nriding, uud with the refusal to cooperate with Labor* the Labor party\noil Tuesday night nominated Kico\nSheppard b> contest tho riding in\nbehalf of Labor against Warner\nand James DougV'S, the Hitting member.\nBhe) \u25a0\u2022\u25a0   Is  \u00bbu   old   tlmo   official\nof. the r. lv A. and hlh nomination\nagojnst Warm r, also a pioneer of\nthe Farmer movement, indicates tho\nflrat really serloty split -which haa\noccurred   in   lhe   Former   ranks.\nLabor hnd also placed B. A. Q.\nBarhos os a candfdafl in Weat Bid*\nmon ion,\nISJCK SLIDE\nEngineer and Fireman Killed\nNear Jasper; All Passengers Unhurt\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 8.\u2014Tbo first\naerloua accident to occu^ on the British Columbia divisions of the railways\nsince the big tleup occasioned by the\nfloods   ia   reported   i i   Oelkle,   one\nmile weat or Jasper on rhe Canadian\nNatoimil railway. when Engineer\nillinium-,* and Fireman Thompson lost\ntheir lives on Tuesday night.\nThe men were In charge of tho lo*\nfin-null va luilllni: Nn. _ train, which\nleft Vutieoiiver ou October SI. when it\nbn u. rock slide. The onglno over\nturned. None of tho passeugors abstained Injurloa.    Untb opiployees wero'\niSfiWwusaita>sx,   .._ _____JL'._\nwbeihoi-   tbe\n-j;i-.b)-.fT.i''i!ii*-\"   aJU\nWhen   uakeil\ntp-TiMion  ul. Uv _   ,      ,\na nro could no ral?>ed In the discussion. Mi. rhatnbe-rlaln aald he did\nnot think ihe resolution would cover\nUnit phoso, nddlbf; \"1 should deprecate ns contrary to public Interest\nany dlacuaatou of Uu* kind Indicated.\"\ni The objection of .Sir Francis Lowe\nfound conHidciuh'c support but nothing came of hia protest.\n'I'he motion will be present ed bv\n.1. Robert Clynea. Stephen Wulah.\n.1. II. Thomns. Arthur Henderson\nami  Thomas Khuw.     It   rends:\n\"That tills bouse warmly gpproves\nof the mooting of the International\nopnforahoa ut WaahiuKton and trusts\nUnit a supreme effort will be made\nid arrive at such mouauroi of ogroo-\nmenl as will see urn a BUbstnntl-.il\nand progreaalve reduetlon Of the\ncrush In*.; burden of armaments and\nprevent the exportailon of munitions\nof wur by private firms from one\ncountry   to   number.\n\"In the Interest of unity with the\nLabor parr>* It was decided to expunge from tbe motion ihnt\u00bb portion\nrendltiK 'antl provent tho exportation\nof munitions of war by prlvute firnia\nfrom one to another.' '\nPolitical Pot\nSteadily Boils\nLiberals Name Ollvor.\nKHAIONTON, Nov. V.\u2014Uy uuHnl-\nmous clmlei-. lion. Krnnk Oliver, former mlnlater of the Inlcrlor, will bt\nthe Liberal candidate In Weat Edmonton. Mr. Oliver was nominate']\nby Hon. Charles Stewart, ex-prcmb-r\nof Alberta, the seconder being John\nCormack.\nEdgett   Withdraws   From   Yale.\nVERNON, B. \u00bb'., Nnv   \u2022_.\u2014Col. C. __.\nICduett  has  withdrawn   his name aa n\npossible  candidate   in   the   constituency of  Vale.\nWednesday's    Nominations.\nHiildiinuud*- i>.   II.   Gibson,   Liberal\nBt.     Antoine     division,     MOhtreftl-\nIlon.      Walti-r      Mitchell,      provincial\ntretiBtirer,   Liberal.\nLiberals   Adjourn    Convention.\nEDMONTON, Nov. -j.-The 13ast\nKSdmontott Liberal convention has boon\nadjourned for one week. W. W Mr-\nlUie and .1. K. Kellly both dccllio'd br\naccept  the  nomination.\nThe   Weal   J-Mmonton   l'.   F,  A.   p\nUtlca I    nssoc Intloii    eoin-euilott    sin nd\u00ab\nadjourned   until   tomorrow   night.\nSir Robert Borden Will\nLay Canada's Wreath on\nUnknown Soldier's Tomb\nOTTAWA. MOV 2.\u2014Sir Rlbort Ror-\nden. who In in Waabmgton for Hin pur-\npoac ot ntteudlng lho dlsannann'iit\nconference, will place a wrenth on the\ngrave of lhe I'niled Stnlea utdtnown\nsoldhr on behalf of the Canadian gov-\nernment.\nBergoanl .r. If Young, v. B_ of the\nCanadian Grenadier Guards, Mon Heal\nwill represem lho Dominion exeeutlv-\nof ihe Army nml Xnvy Veterans' association nt the ceremony.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nnl   Montl-ual   from   Glas-\nut  Naples  troni\n'J'uiilslu\ngov.\nPresident  wn\nNew  York. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nl_t   Hevole   ut   Iliivro   from   New\nYork.\nWEHT VANCOUVEH. Nov *.'.\u2014\nMrs. Mmlelliiii BrundMM, wife of\nll. It. I'.niiHli'tti'. tiled toduy In lier\n48rd yi'iir. Born In England, Mrs.\nI'.i'iiii.ii'ihi wns a. rosldenl for. twtiniy\nyenni In Bf Itish, Columbia, 13 nt llieni\niu iisislatsto , \t\nLORD CAVAN.\nwim will in. Britain's chief military\nidvlwr nt Hi.' Waahlngnon conference. Hi- win nlso toy tin' Victoria\nri'.isn mi tin- m;t\\i. <i!' .\\tii'i'l''a'ii unknown  hero.\nPublic Works Minister\nFavors Hope-Princeton\nTrans-Provincial Route\nVICTORIA. Nov. 2.\u2014Or. J. H\nKing, miniitcr of public wor^s,\nannounced in the legislature this\nafternoon that tho government\nfavored tho Hope-Princeton route,\nknown as the Dowdney Pass rosd,\nin ptefcr-gnco to the, threo other\nroutes for the transprovincial\nhighway. He enumerated tho cost\nof tho other route:*, and declared\nthat an unimproved road capable\nof boaring ordinary traffic and not\nfor tho handling of freight, open\nfor the months of May to September, could be consru&ted through\nthe Hone mountain's at a cost of\na half million dollars.\nBottomley's Case Against\nBigland Involves Political\nIntrigue in Byelections.\nLONDON\", Nov. 2. Wli.H ihe nun\nistr.ite dosortbed nn \"startling hiikkch\nlions\" were mode hore today in tb\nn-mimed h.iirinu al Un lto\\v iiroe\ncourt In ibe action for alleged criminal\nlibel   brOUgjjl     by     Utiratiu   Unttnmli\nM.   p..  pubbdlier   of    .lohn     Hull   nnd\n'.tend of Ihe Victory   Mond eluh. n^iiliM\nRoboit   Bliland.    Again  there  wns n\nlarge attendance in court a large proportion of those present being women\nThe suggestions referred to wen- in\nconnection with a case wherein n ma\ntunned Barrutt, Who Is now lit Jnli. w.i\nconcerned,   llairatt had claimed filOB\nus n reward offered i ir proof thnt tb\n\u2022h'iin iiuii competition uuri nol propet\nly conducts, und Mr, EHoa, mtniasliiK\ndirector of Oldham's  Press, Ltd., do\nnled an allegation lhal three wltnravei\nIn tbut ooae \"Kift oul of tjie way,\" thu\nproven ting the case procebtflng,\nCorrccls   Former   Evidence.\nMr.   Klla |   li.ol   pr.-, i.-u.W   mrn-eled\nhln. formt i >\".i'ii mw with \u2022\u25a0 \u25a0* ird to\ndate wheriani hi   roportOd lo Mi   I\ntomli'V   IiIh   t ill;   with   '\u2022\u2022 U*nd\u201ent    1\nbind      lb    Mid   tin*   dale   \\\\*un  Uctuber\n20,1 not a im or two after the high\ncourt proceedings In which the affidavit referring tc. i-:iias was read,\nKlin* denied tb.it ho hud authorised\nor known of Un- offer el BInland\n\u00a310,000 |f Iir agreed to ihe auggra\natrangemoni ol tho ntao and be u\ndenied thai he had t\"\"\"'' ,l party to\npaying iniiiny to seouro lite withdrawal ol Charges mad'- OgOluSt Itottotnley\numl .lohn  Hull.\nPolitical Wdrkors gavo evidence\ngardlng alleged attempts by niRiand\nIn the byolectlons to Induce thftn to\nhelp iiim obtain money from BOUoih-\nley in connection wltb tbrcaiH iu plna\nter lbe electoral division! with pom\nphieiN. The witnesses in question sold\nthey bad refused to do anything of the\nHOI\"!.    I'-l'.' I:*'*1   they     Wore     offered   a\nHhiiii- i.r the money If M were obtained.\nThe caae wo* ottjoumod until Sfttur-\nday. ^_\t\nALBERTAMINERS\"\nNOT CONCERNED\nCALQAItV, Nov _. -foal mhilm; in\nAlbertu win procoed uncheeked even\nif nil the miner* in thfl United Statoa\nK\u00ab on Hirlkc. The dlHpuh- whieh nt\ninenent confronts opormton and miner* In the United States doos not imply iu any wny to dlnlriet No. IS of thu\nV. Mi \\V. A., and will have in. beating\non the iue.il agreement, This aasur-\name wn* given today by Robert LaV-\neti. International board member, dls-\ntrlci No. re. The Alberta njjTccincnt\ndoe* uui expire until Mareh \\M, IDSl\nnnd unless aonielhlng unforeseen cropi\nup production win proceed smoothly\nuntil then. _\nACQUtTTED OF MURDER.\nQUBBJBC. NOV. -\u2022 -Wllllnni Krede-\ntieli Paluu'i, abas t'ole, and Uaonl\nHlnet. alias I-4>gault, were tonight ar\nquilled of the charge of murder in\nconnection with the death or Blanche\nQarnegtti _ young   I'n-iu-ii   i lanadiui\n...hop  gift,   wlui   WOU    ibUBUil   and   m\ndared   July -\u25a0'.  I-'-\"'    \",-;U'    Vbjtorlu\nJiw'kj iUfa $Mu     -      \t\nPremier Cancels Passage on\nAquitania; Irish Problem\nRe\/ ' I Critical Stage;\nW a^nd Washinpon\nCf :    ince Later.\nUli      PREMIER TO\ni-AVE FOR LONDON\nDe\njments Hang Fire Un-\nii ,*>ir James Craig Consulted; Negotiators Hold\nPrivate Meeting; No Date\nYet Fixed for Formal Conference.\nLONDON. Nov. 3.\u2014Prime Minister\nLloyd George hae definitely cancelled\nit:.* I-.\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 on the steamer Aquitania.\nnn which be was to have proceeded to\nthe United States November S to attend the Wmdilngtou conference.\nThlH become officially known tonight for the first time.\nIt hud been known, however, somo\ndaya sinco that the critical etage ot\nthe Ii-IhIi negotiations hod been\nreachod, which probably would prevent\nMoyd Uenrge from sailing on Sunday.\nIrish  Affairs Critical.\nOwing io the grave turn In Irish\naffairs It is not even pmudble to fix a\nprovittlonu! date for tlio prime mlnla-\ni-'i's Balling, but he t-tllt intends to go\nt<> w.i- liini.inn at the earllcHt possible\nummen t. The rune el Int Ion by tho\nprime minister of his taiBttagc is con-\nxldcred a favorable, rather than un-\nfavorable, sign of the progress of tho\nIrish negotlnti' The Interpretation\nplaced on H Is that i.loyd Oeorge hopti.H\nthat a few days' delay In hla depart-\nurc will enable him lu nee a settlement\nreached, or ut least tjie 'baals of an\nagreement arrived at which can bo\nworked out during his absence from\nthe country. In this connectlun Importance Is attached io thc fact that\nSir .lames Craig, lite T'ltdcr premier.\nIs coming to Umdon Saturday. Tho\npromoters of tho lortl mayor's banquet,\nwhich Is to be held November V, have\nl\"*fn anxious to have Lloyd Ooorgo\nspeak ut Uie dinner, at which for many\nvears It bus been customary for tho\nprime in i ru-.it i to make s -bolifUal\npronounecmeni.\nLloyd Georgo, however, bus declined\nto make nny promlso tu attend tho\nfumtion. and this Is taken in sjomo\niltiarters an showing thut he Is stilt\nhopeful nf being able to sail for tho\nUnited States within a week.\nReloaao Interned Prisoners.\nIH'BL-IX. Nov. 1\u2014it le* announced\nthut IU prisoners In the Bullyklnlar\nInternment eamp were liberated today.\nWhile no reason was given for the re-\nlease of tho men It is considered hero\nas Indicating that a general releaso\nof prisoners Is nut distant und that\ntheir being turned loose might be a\ngeneral peace agreement.\nCraig Going to London.\nItKLI'AST. Nov. _,\u2014Sir James\nI Yau. the Ulster premier, will leuvu\nhere Friday evening for Londofi. Ho\nWill remain there until November 16.\nTln'ii he will proceed to France for\nthe unvoting by Sir Bdmffd Carson.\nthe former Ulster b-ader. of the monu-\nnifiit Brected t\" the memory of tho\nUlster divisions.\nNegotiations Hang Fire.\nLONDON. Nov. 2.\u2014The -Irish negotiators held* two private meetings today ami while there wHl bo further\nauch gatherings no dute* has yet been\nfixed for a formul conference.\nIt Is learned ut Sinn Fein headquarters that the negotiations arc likely to\nhung ttr<* until something Is heard\nfrom Sir James Craig, thc Ulster premier, ou the snbjocts on which he has\nbeen  consult!.:.\nDUBLIN,   Nov\n\u2022 -niiln.il..I\n\u2014Dr   Patrick Uc-\ni'ago   Seven.\nTHE WEATHER.\nH*\\V\u00a3 YOO ZV_r\\\nBEEN Bf\\OL*Y D\\-b-*\\P-\n> POINTED IN NOT\n&ETTIN& t>OMETrt\\S6-\n) YOO WANTED, AND\nLATER FOUND OUT\nI It W\/V3 LUCAY Yoo^\nDIDN'T &ET IT.\nmr~'\nm\nVlCTO'KtA,   Nov.\nvicinity\u2014mt\nNrlmin      \t\nVlrloilii    \t\nVlinrmlvGl'   . . . .\nKamloopa    \u2022  .\nIlnnu!    Ii'urks\nPentioton    ...\nKaslo   ........\nrrunlinMik     ..\nIliirlinivllli'   ..\nI'rlncv  Uuiiorl\nl-.ilmiry\nWliiiiipoi  .\nrui'iiinni\n_m Kumiss.\nmi\n-Nolson 'and\nIT     III      llUtllt,\n 0\na\n\u00ab*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 8, 1921.\nawe\nLeading Hotels of tiie West\nWhu, Oi. TraveWng  Publl* llty OMala taparior Accommodation\nJ\"\nTable d'Hota\nA la Carta\nSfct\nWt%\nThe Premier Hotel ol the Interior\nGEORGE BENWELL. Prcpri.tar,\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DIXNER, #1.00\nService Unexcelled.\nINCOMPARABLY THE  FINEST TEA  ROOM   IN   B.  C\nOp,n Dally 10 a. m. ts Midnight Musie ans) Denelng\nTha Lataat Sundses. Ic* Caid Drink* \u00ab-i  l\u00ab\u00ab*\nAfttrnoon Tt* (2 p. nv I* t a. nv) 29\u00ab\nHeadquarter! for Alt Tr*v*lliwj Man, Mining Man and Tauriata\nEUROPEAN PLAN\nROOMS. SUM UP\nHUME\u2014Mrs. A. I.. Mncphoe; John\nCannon. Trull; H. It. Orlsenhryi-r. ISrla;\n*W. E. BrldBcntun. Spokane; W. J. EUWr,\nOswego, N. Y.; A. I.. Macl'hce Slocan;\nll. M Bwqdalkt, Sai-dputnc. iii\u00bb, \\v\n!\u2022\u2022 Jum>\u00bb, Montre-il J V tKrs Win-\nnlpvf;  WaLlos   I'u.i...   Spokane:  1.   K\nOonstaM.. MvdW.iw Hal; Chow 1.,*:\nC.  J.   Huyur.   Willow   lvlnt.\nAmerican Plan, $3.00 and Ue.\nEuropean  Plan, $1.00 and  Up\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nNelson's Leading Hotel\nTHE HOME OF THE COMMERCIAL MAN\nWell lighted sample rooms on\nground    floor.\nSpecial winter ratea by week\nor  month.\nHALCYON HOT SPRINGS HOTEL and SANITARIUM\nArrow  Lakes, British Columbia\nAmerican Plan, 13.50 per day.\n$24 per week. For rates apply\nBtrattacona   Hotel   or   Halcyon.\nH. W. SHORE\nTho finest water for Rheumatism, Sclutlca, Gout, Urlnlc Condllions,   etc.\nOTTAWA. Nov. 2.\u2014Both Mr. King\nanil Mr. Crerar deny that \u2022 a secret\ncompact exists between the Liberals'\namt Farmers. They may havo been\nkept In Ignorance of tho. compact\nwhich lines exist nnd which Is belli); implemented, although, as ln all\nstvivt diplomacy, there Is grave suspicion by the contracting parties of\neach other, riivumsuinllul evidence\nin i-iiinwrt of lbe belief In the secret\ntreaty is very ^inclusive, but thero\nts m'orv than circumstantial evklenco\navailable. Here Is a messiiRc from\nthe head of the Mackenlle King Liberal organisation to Andrew Hnvdon.\nvrsanlser of the Liberal convention\nof 1MJ. national secretary of tho\ntjbera! party nnd chief of the Liberal\nors---.ii ami publicity department In\nthis contest.\nOffer Cash  to  Candidates.\nI.earvt   Knott   people   may   cause\ndlttk-u'.ty   If  thoy   succeed   In  placing\n\u2022andid.il- in rural constituency where\nstreet   \u00ab,>uM  be  tn  defeat   friendly\nFarmer and elect Conservative. They\nat endeavoring lo have nominations\n\u2022i various places anil openlv nffoHmr\nandldate* considerable money, l'rn-\nnuwu* candidates report to us and\nc warn them to be i'refill about ac-\n-eplltig this money. Thev apparently\nhave somo money and talk of Immense amounts. One slory direct from\nthem Is that the fund Is supplied\nfrom Quebec through Senator Cns-\naraln and that Jacobs will sneak here\nfor them It. hv nny possibility, nny\nQuebec people ere Interested in de-\n\u25a0entlng l.llievnl-Farmer hero ih\u00bb\u00ab\nmould bo advised to spend Ihoi-\n\u25a0ash  more  wisely.    Answer.\"\nThere ore two Liberal factions In\nManitoba with separate organisation.\nProprietor\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nluropsan   and   American   Plan\nSlaam Heat In Every R**m\nA, LAPOINTE, Pr\u00abprl*Ur\nQVKENS\u2014Chas. Wylie. Cutlenr-\nS. Mlyasakl, T. Hnyashl. Kaltno; l)vu.\nForbes, Winlaw; O. V. Only. Parks;\nJl L. Lindsay, Johnsons: Ike l.oughci-it,\nTrail; Eugene Nndeau,  City.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS.  MADDEN,   Prop.\nFlrat   dim   Rooms   by   the   Day,\n' Week or  Month.\nEvery Consideration Shown te\nGuests.\nCor. Baker end Ward 8ts., Nelson\nMADDEN\u2014D. A Mcl'hall. Cristnii;\nJ. McCrilght. Kitchener; W. J. Reed.\nCranbrook; F. MacRae, H. B. Clurk.\nW.-H. Coinptou. Winlaw; Thos Mini.\nden, Edmonton.\nTREMONT HOTEL\nr, NILSON, Proprietar,\nBAKER STREET\nFumiih.d   Room*  by   Day,   W**k\ner Month.\nTREMONT\u2014E. Bookman. Slocan Cily\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nMr*.  Mellette.   Proprietress\n* Heme fer the world at rMeeneble\nratea.\nOpen   night   and   day.   Flrtt-\n\u2022laee dlnlna*raam. Cemfortable\nreome.\n311  Vernen tt      Near Poet Office\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nSIS   VERNON   ST.   EAST\nCamfortabla Roome,  Hot and Celd\nWater.   Dining   Roam  In\n' Connection\nRatae \u00bbt  and up.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTEL\nOwned ana run by Canadians. No\nalien labor employed.\nRoom and board, pcr month....$45\nE. KERR, Proprietor.\nStirling Hotel\n711 Vornon 8t. Two blocks and\na half east of the post office.\nNewly opened. Light and cheerful\nroome with bot and cold water,\nateam heat. Also 2 and S room\nhousekeeping  apartments.\nP. H- BUSK. Prop.\nCLUB HOTEL\nJ.  GRANT,  Prop,\nCorner Stanley und  Klllcti Streets,\nRooms, 60c up,.\nSpeclul rates by week und month.\nKOOTENAY\u2014E. J. Davis, Ynhk: \\V.\nMarshall, Yahk: Win- Mini'. Snlmo;\nHarry Allen, Taghum; 1*. McClcchmi,\nHpokatif.\nThe fire chief of Windanr has Jusl\nlwen married. The firemen of his sln-\ntlon answered a fire cull iiulckly, he-\nllt*viug they had lu attend un ouihrcuk.\nThe bridal couple hnd driven to Clew-\ner church on u new motor fire engine,\nund after the wedding they found nn\narch of fire axes outside the church,\nand then all hunds with bells clanging\nJoyoui ly proceeded to the bride's\nhouse, thc newly married cuuple being\ngiven seals on the engine.\nP STANDARD CAFE\nS2U   Bakar   Straat,   Nelaen,   B.   C,\nOPEN   DAV   AND   NIOHT\n11:30 to 2:30 Special Lunch..3\u00abJ\u00abk\n5:30 to  8:00  p.   m..   Supper. ;j5c\nPhona   154\nVANCOUVER HOTELS\nHOTEL MARTINIQUE\n1176   Grandvllle  Street\nCosy,    bright    roome.    Just   the\nplace   for    your    vacation.    Rates\nmoderate.    Write   for   particular*.\nMRS.   A.   PATTERSON\nLate of  Royal  Hotel. Granville St\nEVIDENCE OF SECRET LlBEBALFftRMER\nCOMPACT MORE THAN CIRCUMSThKTIRL\nono headed toy Hill, the writer of the\nabove tnensage, and tlto other by\nKfiotlT.\" Tho laitii* organ I ration remained filthful to Sir Wilfrid Laurier. but haa -heeii Ignored by Hon. \\V.\nJj. Mnckenxte King, who has thrown\nIn hla fortunes wilh the Norrls-Du-\nfoe lilberal party, aud the agreement\neurrles with It a free field for the\nFarmer candidates In prulrlo constituencies. Tho other Liberal faction re-\n\u2022sonta the desertion uf Mr, King uud\n\"he betrayal of western Liberalism\nand are nominating candidates. It\nls ngulnst placing Liberal candidates\nIn the field that Hill protests to Hay\ndon.\nWarns Farmers Off Quebec.\nIt is not known what price was\npaid Quebec to ngrco to this cotn-\n\u25a0\u00bbict. Measra. Norris, Dafoe and fll****\nClifford Slftdn havo nlways been notoriously aiitl-Quebee and the price\nuf Quebec*'--} acquiescence In their demands muet have been very great-\nIt Is .believed to huvo been tho return\nof the nutlonul railways tu corporation control and very probably n\ncorporation railway monopoly of Canada's tranaporta tions system. Mr.\nCrerar haa been an ally of Mr. King\nduring the post two sessions and on\nthe platform never refers to the Liberal leader nor the Liberal leader to\nhim. He la to havo full awing In\nthe west and Mr. King in Quebec.\nMr. Crerar haa already willed off the\nFnrmrr Candidates In Quebec. He\nappears to bo Implementing his part\nuf tbo compact with greater success\nthnn are Mr. Klug'a friends in Manitoba. There Is strong circumstantial\neevldenco In Ontario of lhe compact,\nbut there are further revelations to\nbe made that will place beyond doubt\nthe secret treaty bet ween Liberal\nleaders and the Woud-Crerar party.\nWESTERN HOSPITALS\nASK RADIUM SUPPLY\nREQINA, Nov. 2.\u2014An adequate\nsupply o( radium to Irani nil cubss\nof oanoer will ho nsked by tho\nWestorn Cutunln llosjiltu't nssoclation\nfrom thf provln I il (rovcrnmonta\nof iho four weatern provinces It wus\ndecided ut tho closing hours ot\nthe convention of tho nssoclntlon\nhere toduy. Tho government will\nho naked to pluce this upply In tho\nInmost hospital In ench province. VI-\nniiuclul niil will nlso lie naked from\ntho province! for the establishment\nof psychopathic words in tho lurgcr\nhospitals.\nDr. ti. V. Stephens, superintend-\nont of' the Winnipeg general\nhospital, wua elected president pt\nthe association and Dr. L. A. I'nntoli.\nNorlh  Biittlefol'd.  secretary.\nWinnipeg wus fixed as tbe meet-\ning p'tice of the convention next year.\nHALIFAX EXPLOSION\nWRECKED HER NERVES\nTlie rendu will, no doubi. remember\nwhen a ftnv yeurs ngo there wns n\nt'olllslim III llie Halifax, X. 8.. harbor\nnnd one of the munition ships wus\nblown up, ratlalng great loss of life\nand laying a portion of thc city In\nruins, and musing a greut deal of suffering und distress among tlie inhab-\nItunls.\nMr,-. Wliifleld 1)111. now nf Windsor,\nX. S.. una living In Halifax at that\ntime nnd went through this trying\noxpcrloliee and lhe shook wrecked her\nnerves. Hlie writes as follows: \"I\ni'us living In Halifax at the Unie\nf lhe explosion, und It wroeked my\nnerves so that 1 eould not do my\nhousework. 1 would take suoh nervous spells tb.it 1 would lie under the\ndoetor's euro.\nI suw Jlilburn-s Heart und Nerve\nI'llla ndvel'llsed, so 1 took lwo boxes\nand they helped me so mueh 1\ntook six mnre. and now I am completely relieved. 1 eun recommend\nihem to anyone suffering from heart\nand  nerve  trouble.\"\nTo ull those who suffer from nervous shock we would recommend our\nMILBURN'S\nHEART   AND   NERVE   PILLS\nas lhe beat remedy lo lone up the entire nervous system and strengthen the\nweukened organs. Milburn's Heart\nand Nerve I'llls nri- the original heart\nand nerve fund, having been on lhe\nmarket for lhe pnsl 27 years, l'rlce,\nfiOc a box at all dealers, or mulled\ndirect on receipt of price by The T.\nMilburn Co.,  1.United, Toronto, Ont.\nWithout   accident    the    female   fly\nmay live from one season lo the fol-\n1'iwliig summer. \t\nRAGS\nThe Dally Newt\nJob Department\nwill pay 5 cents\na pound for deaa\ncotton rags.\nE\nHEADS PUBLIC\nAppointment Made; Members Urge Publicity as to\nStatus oi Institution.\nH. McArthur. \u25a0supervising principal\nof thc Nelaon school!*, w.'is up pointed\nchairman of tho Nclnon municipal library hodrd at the mrctlns of the\nbonrd In the city hall yentonluy. G. H.\nAtihinun. *.tpp<>miril by the city council, wiih welooini'il by thc other mem-\nbttni present, Mayor O. F. McHardy,\nU. H. Dawson and Swcrutury F. U Irwin.\nA consignment of 30u hooka lonned\nby the'provlnclal library at Victoria\nhun been returned and a miliar con-\n\u25a0iicum.-ni selected from the traveling\nllbrarta******* promlsOi. Secretary Irwin\nwas Instructed to entrust selection to\nHerbert KUIam of Victoria, anulHlant\nprovincial librarian,\nThu book committee, Uetsn. McArthur.    I \u25a0i'\\   mt   and    A: lim:ui.   WUS   in\nHtructed lo prepare u lint of masasineH\nto  bo  Hated  in  the majpixluc section\nduring 1922.\nThe question of malting tlto jlbrury\nmorc Inviting to tho general reading\npublic wns dlsctiHaed. it being urged\nthat maiiy citizens were dubious as to\nwhether the library were public or\nnot. An electrical sign advertiainx\ntho existence of tho library, window\nHlgna and inure attractive window\ndreasings were miggcstud. tJecreUtry\nIrwin was Instructed lo secure data\nas tu costs fur consideration by the\nboard.\nDuring October tho library wua\nmore popular than In any of tho six\nprevious months. In thut month the\nbuilding was visited by 1!799 persona\n1S6?  books were circulated.\nROSE SUPPORTERS\nGO OVER THE LIST\nA meeting of tho general committee of the Natlunal Liberal und Conservative purty for the riding of\n.Nelson WU held In the committee\nroom In the Tremont block. Bukor\nstreet, lust night. The committee was\nengaged exclusively on matters connected   with   the   voters'  list.\nSage  T\u00aba   snd   Sulphur  Turni   Gray,\nFadsd Hair Dark and\nGlossy.\nAlmoMt everyone knows that Sage\nTm anil Kulphur. proiierly compounded, bring-*-* back the natural color\nand luHlie to lhe hair when fadod.\nutreukcd or Krny. Yearn ago the only\nway to gel this mixture wan in make\nit at home, whieh Is mussy und troublesome,\nNowadnyx we simply ask at any\ndrug store for \"Wyeth's Ssge and\nSulphur Compound.\" You will be a\nlarge bottle of this old-time recipe\nImproved by the addition of other Ingredients, at very little cost'. Everybody uses this preparation now, because no one can posslnly tell that\nyou darkened your hair, as It does lt\nso nnturally nnd evenly. You dampen a sponge or aoft brush with It\nand draw this through your hair,\ntaking one small strand nt a time;\nby morning the gray hair disappears,\nand after anolher npptlcatlon or two,\nyour hair becomes beautlfuly dark,\nthlrk and glossy and you look years\nyoungi r.\nAT ITS BEST\n(The strongest compliment ever paid to\n, Scott's Emulsion\nis the vain attempts at\nimitation. Those -Jla\nwho take cod-liver -Ml\noil at its best, take   JTf\nScott's EmmUion.\nI\nInternational Acceptance of\nDominion Status Will\nCome in Time.\nDISSOLUTION SALE\nThe fifth day project! an avalanche of new specials oi extraordinary values.\nHave you been getting your share of the bargains?\nHeavy Flannelette Blankets\nLargest Blie.    Ta clear, (PO CO\nat .'. _ -SOaOtm\nSpecial Lot\nLadies'  Suits ana Coats, splendid uuulity  cloth,\nbut requiring alterations as to (J A QC\nstyle.    Your choice    ,-iO'xaVO\nSport Skirts\nAll wool In plaids and stripes. Box pleatod. Juat ,\nIn and right on sale.   Regular (I\u00bbA \u00a3f\u00b0| .\nVery smurt.\nDress Special\n. $16.00\nBlouses\u2014Georgette\nLatest style, beauties.   Regular S8.G0     (\u00a3\u00a3 QA\nnnd J8.00.   Clearing at  wOsUV\nAll other lines reduced in proportion.   Ask for what you need. Come down early and\ncome often.   Terms strictly cash. No goods on approval.   Mail orders given special\nattention. .\nSMILLIE  & WEIR\nLADfES'    WEAR SPECIALISTS\nIS Ladies' Skirts\nIn  Serges.  Plaids and  Tu-eeds.  A Httle out  ot\nstyle,  but good material. (IJO Q4\nTo  clear - -... W^.t\/**\n10 Only Ladies' Dresses\nSerges and   Silks,  not  new. (PQ AO\nTo  clear  ....- _   *3)OsU\u00a3\n10 Girls' Heavy CoaU\nIn Fancy Chocks, Hough Tweeds, (PQ (JA\notc.   To clour _..._.    wOsOV\n10 Ladies' Suits\nIn  flno  SergeB,  Black,  Navy,  Fawn  and Orey.\nRegular |3G 00  to  sr.n.iiu. d>-| \/\u2022 r rt\nTo clear    _ _ ....wJ-UstW\nSpecial Today Only\nQood heavy White Flannelette. -J Q _\n\u00bb12.00 for\nBrown  and  Navy  Serges.\nSpcclul   loday\nCensus Figures Show Trifling\nGain in Population During\nthe Decade.\nThlrty-fuur Dominion ridings in\nsouthwestern Ontario have gained approximately 1000 persons each In the\nlast 10 years, according to tho figures\not the census. Just unnounccd. The\nfollowing tnlile shows the figures per\nriding for the present census and that\not 1911:\nBrant    SO.OHB   !'.\u2022.-...\u2022\nBrantford    .,..lt.4M   26,017\nDufferln    S..W.410   17,740\nKidn.  east   17.401   17,007\nKlgln,  west    21.026    26,715\nEssex, north   71,010   18,006\nEssex, south   31,162   20,641\nOrey, north  S0.6U   33,0117\nOrey, southeast    27,103   31,034\nHaldlmand    21.180   21.662\nllulh... 26.265    22.208\nHamilton. B. (city, pari).40,723   30,70}\nHair)Hon, W. (eliy, pari) .39.436 , 37^170\nHuron, norlh    28,001   26,816\nHuron, south   it,664   20,007\nKent    62,076   40,301\nI .mil\u25a0no,,   east    23.742    28,827\nLnmliton,   west    12.024    29.100\nLincoln     48,108   85.420\nLondon  (city, pnrt    38.662    46,800\n\u2022 Middlesex,  east    37,067   28,465\nMiddlesex,   wesl    24,077    27,300\nNorfolk    26,394   27.110\nOxford,   north     24,403    26,077\nOxford,   south     22.183   22,204\nPeel     TT. 26,386   22,102\nPerth,  nurlli    38.126    30,235\nPerth,  south    18,887    18,047\nWaterloo,   nurlli    41,666    33,610\nWaterloo,   south    33,671   28,088\nWelland     66.510    42,163\nWellington, noi 111   10.815   22,202\nWellington,   south    34,261   32,200\n\"Wentworth 64.48!   84,634\n\u2022Contains part if London. \"Contains purl of Hamilton.\nPROHIBITIONISTS\nON THE WAR PATH\nAll Trains From Vancouver\nEastward Scheduled to\nLeave on Time.\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 2,\u2014Damago\ncaused by waHhouu to bridges and\ntracks on thu Canadian Pacific railway east of Vancouver will be repaired by 6 o'clock tonight. Canadian\nPacific officials announced this afternoon. All Cunadlan Pacific trains will\nleave hero on time tonight and proceed\neuBternward on their normal schedule\noWr their own^llne. \"\nBUDGET IS Mi\nFinance Minister Will Bring\nProposals Down Next\nWeek; Interest Keen.\nM'CTonLV Nov. 2.\u2014Hon. John\nHart, minister of finance, will bring\ndown his budget next Wednesday or\nThursday, he stated in the Iioubs to-\nLECKIE ALL LEATHER I\nBOOT FOR BOYS\nBlack or Brown.    .\nSizes 1 to Si\/a ?5.50\nSizes 11 to 18 V4 |4.50\nC. Romano\nTha Housa of Solid Leathor\nShots\nLOKDOK Nov. 2.\u2014The Glasgow\nHsraW kujh It thinks the dlsniitlHfac-\ntipn -^syrvmiHl by Premier Smuts of\nSouth Africa and'Gy seVertil upholders uf tho autonomy school in Can\nadit nt the failure of the Hrltlsh government to seoure separate dominion\nrepresentation at the Washington\ni*onferenc\u00ab Is perfectly  nntural.\nInclusion of Canadian aud Austral-\nIan statesmen would meuu a voice for\nImperial Britain, according to the\nHerald. It Is not merely lhat the\nmother, countrf alone will bo heard,\nbut from tho t>olnt of view of the\nstatutes of the dominions, which\nmeans much to South Africa In tho\nstruggle with the Nationalists tljere\nIn an undoubted retrogression from\nthe position attained at the Interna\ntlonnl conference at Paris.\nAmerica, with her devotion to legal forms, the Herald further says,\ndoes uot understand the British Km-\nplre at all. \"Unpleasant as Is the\nsetback, the dominions must to content to leave the natural process of\ndevelopment to thef ull lnterenatlonal\nacceptance of their position which\nassuredly will eomo In time,\" thc\nHerald concluded.\nCommittee to Administer\nSwift Current Finances\nSubject to Ratification\nH1XIINA. Nov. 1.\u2014Following a\nmeeting of the bondholders and the\nSwift Current eity officials and the\nprovincial cabinet tuday the government \"xkftad. subject to minor\nchanges which do not affect the\nagreement, and alao to the ultimate\nratification of the legislative aaaembly and Its neat session, to an agreement between the bondholder! and\nthe city, whereby the city's flnancea\nwill be administered by a committee\nof Ave, two ohoaen by ihe council\nand three by the bondholders.\nHHOIXA, Nov. ,*.\u2014Governments\non tho Canadian and United States\nsides of thc International boundary\nwil'. be asked to lmplomcnt ono another's inin-,1 laws, in otdcr that\nrunt running may be further curbed.\nit was decided at a eonvonUon of\ninternational prohibition officers hero\ntoday.\nTho United Slates government will\nbe asked nut lo grunt any more permits for thc shipment of liquor\nacross the Canadian border except\nwith the consent of provincial authorities affected. On the other hand,\nthe Canadian government will bo\nasked not to release liquor from\nbond to be shipped ncrosa the\nAmerican side where ll can be sold\nillegally.\nOne of tho features of the session was the statement that government control of liquor In British\nColumbia hud not curtailed the bootlegging Industry In that province, tho\nstatement being made that it>9,-\n000 cuses of liquor had been shipped\nIn to the coast province from Saskatchewan liquor warehouses elnce\ntho government of thut province bad\nassumed control of tho business an<J\nlhat this liquor was being used, for\nehlpment Into the States and to supply the bootlegging Industry in other\nCanadian  provinces.\n.More liquor, it was stated, has\ngone Into British Columbia for Illicit\nRurposes since government control\nas been adopted In that province\nthan went Into Manitoba and Alberta\nduring the period of Inter-provlnclal\ntrading.\nBABY'S OWN\nSOAP\nBoys just love Hi smooth\n\u2022fro-4rBnrH*flttier\nIU '.I <    HAIlY   (HST'   tou\nEvery Can\nIs Alike\nPeople who have used canned milk\nfor many yeara aay tbo most remarkable thing about Pacific ls\nIta uniformity. We have received\nletters from womon who have\nbought constantly tor tive yeara,\nand aay that ln all that time they\nhave never found a single can\nwhich was unlike every one beforo IL\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\nLIMITED\nVANCOUVER\nFactories at  Abboteford and Lad-\nner,  B. C.\nday. In view of the fact that In h\nbudget speech tho mlnlater will ou\nline the financial pmpoeala of the go\nernment In respect of aid to munlt\npnllttea, as welt aa the new taxatt\nproposals whereby the money whl\nwill be granted to the munlelpalltl\nthrough various new sources to\naccorded to them will be mmle up\nthe government, keen Interest la I\ntached to It. The budget le tho I\nthing before the present session of t\nloglsluture, and with legislation cut\na minimum It would appear alm<\ncertain that the present session will\nterminated at latvat by the end of t\npresent  month.\nRAM CHILD\nOn Body and Face, Red ind Itchy.\nCried for Hour-**, Lasted a Year.\n\"A tuh suited all over my little\n\u2022 Ill's body, and she had some on her\nbice. It suited Ins pimple\ntbat was lull of water, and\nk got red and Itchy. She\ncried for hours. This trouble\nlasted a ytar.\n\u2022'Then I etattad with a free\nsample of Cuticura Soap\nand Ointment. I bought more, and\nI use* four cakss of soap and three\nboxes ofOlntment which healedher.\"\n(Signed) Mra. Dora Langly, 1032\nOertrode St.. Verdun, Que., August\n11.1911. I\nTbe Cullcura Toilet Trie\nConsisting of Soap, Ointment and1\nTalcum li an indispensable adjunct'\nof the dally toilet ID  malntrinlng.\nskin purity and skin beakh.    .\ntma *\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab wW.it \u2014SS.1\n1000 Eggs\nIn Every Her\nIt You Keep Chickens, Cut this Out\u2014Four to Seven Eggs\nWeek Per Hen Through Cold Winter Season.   With Eggs at\nDollar a Dozen, Means $5.00 Profit per Hen in Next Six\nMonths.    Amazing Poultry Secrets Revealed by  '\nAMERICA'S FOREMOST POULTRY EXPERT\nThis  Is  un  offer  no  rcaUur  of  this\n(nper who keeps chlckuns can af-\nord to Ignore. We will tell you\nwhr.\nHenry Trafford, Famous Poultry Expert and Breeder, for nearly eighteen\nyears Editor of ''Poultry Success,\" has\n' veloped a new  and  remarkable  ny*\nlem of rearing, breeding and feeding\nchickens for heavy egg prodactlon that\nseems certain to revolutionise the poultry Industry and give five sggs or\n  * If***\"\"\nseems certain to revolutionise the poultry Industry and give five eggs or\nmore for every egg produced today.\nThis plan or system Is explained In\nMr. Trafford'* \"*1.000 Kgg Hen\" a free\ncopy of whloh will be sent to any person who keeps nix hens or more.\nPoultry keepers, following Ut, Traf-\nford's directions, learn how to start\nyoung pullets laying early: make old\nnens moult quickly and resumo heavy\nlaying during entire winter season.\nMoat any hen will lay In spring when\neggs are cheap. Mr. Trafford tells\nhow hens lay four to seven eggs a\nweek during the coldest winter days\nWhen eggs sell at a dollar a dosen or\n5lore.     Hla   system   shows   how   any\nreader,  with  ordinary  care,  may  gat\n1,000 eggs or mora from nearly e^ery\nlien   In   four  to els   yeara'   time a\nhet   profit   of   $25.00.\nThere Is bli money to be made *\nrhii'U.'H** this winter by the man\nwoman who gets the eggs- The t\nto get the hens ready for heavy i\nter laying Is now. Mr. Traffo\n\"1,000 Egg Hen\" ayatem tells how.\narrangements have been made whet\nnny reader of thla paper may reo\none copy abrolutely free by using\nCoupon below. Send no money,\ncut ont the Coupon aud mall It J\nyour name and address to Henry T\n\u2014nghaw\nford,  Ht  D Court  Hlda..  Bin\nN. T\u201e ahd the story of tha l.wwv\nHon will bo sent you by rotum i*\nNelson, ll. C. News Date 11 1\nThla Coupon entitles holdei\nprovided he keeps eta hens o\nmore to one free oapy of Ml\nTrafford's \"1.000 Egg Hen.\" Wrll\nname and address plainly an\nenclose In envelope with thl\ncoupon. Address Henry Tral\nford. VOID Court Bldg., Blngha*\n sp\ntW'^ti\n\/SS\n; TW8*.ffli!ES8\u00bb. ftfflff $swa>, .to-^t ;vi.^:?^,HyVij^cfy a, m,.... \u25a0\nI\n\u25a0-j\nie\nK\nn\nNelson Veterans Suggest\nOpen Afr Memorial Service in Hpnor of Fallen.\nA essutlrtn oi'tnislnem for lwo hours\non Friday, November 11, between thc\nbourn of 11 and 1 o'clock, corresponding to tho first two hours of tho nr-\nmistico, and tho holding of un open air\nmemor*tal servico tn front ot Cotitrnl\nschool; Is thc suggestion of the Nelson\nQ,' W- V. A. for.\"the observance of Armistice day in Welson. Thanksgiving\nd\u00bby ls not ncceptablc to the returned\nmen of Cunmla as Armistice day and\nthe recent Dominion convention of tho\nGe'.W- V. A. declared for tho exclusive\nobsfltranre df November 11, Tho majority nf the Kodtenay branches of .ho\nQ, W. V. A. have adhered to November ll In their arrangements and the\nNelson O. W. V. A. last night nrrlved\nnt thw opinion that, even though November ll will not be a public holiday,\nit. Im the one and only day on which\na public memorial service for the ending pt tha war will be Appropriate.\nThe m**itiori*il days committee, to\nwhich C'H. Swannell and W. Pascoe\nwere added, will today communicate\nwith Mttfor C. P. McHardy. the Ro-\ntair Merchants' association, tho schog)\nboard, the Ministerial association nnd\nthe city band, asking their cooperation. If thin fa forthcoming it in proposed that all eg-servico mon should\nparade, in uniform if possible, and ut*-\ntefld the memorial service ln a body.\nThe participation of the school children, of course, would bo an essential\npart of tho program.\nPoppy  Girls Are  Ready.\nArrangements for thc snlc of the\npopple;;, which are In the hnndn of thc\nJoint committee of Lhe I.-udloH' auxiliary nw\\ tiie I. 0. D. K., mo now well\ndeveloped. About SO fnlr poppy girls\nwill be stationed nt strategic points\nover the pity on Armistice day, purveying'the beautiful symbols of the\nhoys who He In Franco.\nThe original consignment nf poppies\nordered from the provincial cnmmapd\nof the 0. W.'V. A. in Vancouver wus\nconsiderably' reducod through inability\ntp fill the order. The Nelson O. W. V.\nA. then wired Toronto and secured the\n\"laat thousand\" the.Toronto headquarters had.\n^a'All thc city pastors nre being asked\nV, mention Armistice day and the\npSftples of Artois nt their Sunday\naervlces,\nThc glad side of Armistice day will\nhave Itn exemplification In tho ove-\nnln*. when tho -O..W. V. A. will have a\nfunction In thoJto-niorjy.\nOver One Thousand Torts for\nDay Reach Smelter Daring\n- Last 10 Days of October\n\u25a0. * * ',-i,'-. * ****    \u25a0 **\nOro.rccclptB at tho Trail sinelter (pr\nthe last 10 ilayii ot October were 10,683\ntons ot ore nnd concentrates, or over\n1000 tona per iluy. '1'hiii brings the receipts tor the yoar to date up to 337.-\n201 tons.\nFour well known mimes appear In\ntho Trail list for tho first time thin\nseason, thc Rambler-Cariboo, which\nW. A. Cameron and associate* an-\nworking under a lease, being credited\nwith 30 tona;'the I'llca, which ia how\noperating nfter n long period of Idle,\nneaa, being credited with -17 loun;; the\nSilver Bell, nn Kaslo creek, with 10\ntons;- and tho Silver Standard of New\nHlselton, with 30 tonn. Other iiunn-\ntltlca In thc weekly statement are\nJosle, Rossland, 92 tons; Rosebery-\nSurprise, Now Denver, 133 tons; and\ntho Knob Hill, Ropublic, 217 tons.\nProperties of the Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting company accounted for\n10,319 tons.\nReoelpts at the Trail smelter for thi\nyear to dato are as follow*:\nCompany mines .., i2l,13*>\nNalion-Arrow Lake*.\nChampion,  Salmo           ;.'o\nGold Hill, Taghum         IS\n3lillio Mack, Burton         11\nNogget, Salmo  .-,  j\nRowland.\nI. X. L, Rossland          '*$\nJosle,   Um Miami    ,       40(\n_ i.i|v'-.M'M'jai   \u2022t.ff.il.y]\nFarmer-Labor   Candiate   It\nReservati-Jw \u00ab.$!\nATTENTION,\nLIBERALS!\nGet Your Names on the\n*-*;,*   Voters' Lists     \u00b1\nLibcrsl    Committee    Rooms   at\nMtOjceopr ,(tw..'.Hall,   .\nMsolio. Block.\nOpen every day from 1ft a. m.\nto 10:30 p. m., where information   may  be obtained.\nAll  supporter, of tht Liberal\ncandidate,    Dr.    Hamilton,    are\nasked to give assistance at th*\ncommittee rooms every ov.ning.\n.   ERIC  P. DAWSON,\nSecretary.\nLegal Notices\nVelvet.  Velvet\nBoundary-Simitkemoen,\nCastor Fraction, Beaverdell  2\nHighland   Chief,  Beaverdell.... 1\nBell, Boavordoll  110\nHorn Silver, Chopako   IM\nKnkomo, Beaverdell ..\nProvidence. Oreonwood   >0o\nSally, Beaverdell    15\nSutherland &   Thompson, Boa\nvordoll.  ,- j\nSloc.-in-Ainjworlli-Lsrd.su,\nAnna, 8locnn City   20\nBlack Prince, Slocan City ..... 81\nBluo Boll,,Rlondel  .'  1,114\nrllaillliiT:.-..   Saliilmi    ......'  t\nFlorence, Princess Creek   .$\u00a7.\nFreddy Ijm, Sandon   tl\nGonv. Sandon    11\nHighland, Ainsworth   It\nKrao, Alnaworth  ...\nLast Chonco, Sandon  ty\nU T., Slocan City  \u201e  U\nLittlo Mnpilo, Ainsworth   if\nMajestic,   Bandon   \t\nNettle I., Oorrard    II\nNip and Tuck. Snndon\nNo. 1, Ainsworth (leasers)  II)\nRambler-Cariboo,   Rambler  SO\nRoaeliery-Surprlse,  Itoaebery... Oil\nRuth. Ainsworth   41\nRuth, Sandon  21\nSilver Standard, New Hatclton. 30\nSilver Hell. Zwlckry   41\nSkyline,  Ainsworth  II\nSpokane-Trinket,   Ainsworth.... 41\nlltlcn. Adamant    47\nWhitewater, Retkllaek .,  101\n-    \u2022Ra<4 Koolen.y.\nNorth Star, Kimberley   '  147\nParadise.   Utile. Wlnilcnnere... 4M\nWashington.\nChntterboy, Danville ....'  It\nKnob Hill, Ropublic   1,117\nRepublic,  Republic     lit\nSan Poll, Republic   47\nSurprise,  RepUUo    1,704\nC. N. Trevitt, Republlo\nUnplscsd.\nBingo  (pounds)  Ill\nDAUGHTERS ARRANGE\nTHANKSGIVING DANCE\nIn the Small Debts Court of Nrl*on,\nBritish Columbia\nUnder and by virtue of certain Kx-\necu t long let-mod out of the above Court\nnitainst KlUsb-Mh Afihmiin wife Of \u2014r\u2014\nAnhntnn, of the City of Nrlnon, tform-\n'erly Kllsabeth Dowell 1, 1 h>vr noU*\nnd a quantity of household good* and\none violin, nnd will offer all. right\n.title nnd Interest of the wild Klixiibrth\nANhinun, in same, at tho hour of Noon\non Thursday, November 3rd, l|Sl, nt\n. my of rice, Court House, NeUon, B. C.\nTerms   of   Bale:   Cash.\nL             JAMBS  H.  DOYLE,\n*. Sheriff .of South  Kootenay.\n.    October U, 11.\t\nNOTICE\nAOCnOH    SALS   OT OOVSMnMIMT\nNotice Is hereby given that an ouc-\nl tion sale of lota belonging to the\nCrown, In the \\lclnlty of Cm\u00bbtlcR\u00bbr.\nluting mibdlvlslons of Lota HP.4 and\n11976, Kootenny District; will he held\non Tuesday the 15th dny of Novsth-\nber, next, at the nur of 10:30 o'clock\n'In tho forenoon, nr the office of thc\n'lovernment Agent, Court Hou*1 -. Nelnon\nit.   C.\nAll lota will he offered subject to\nnn upset jirlce, which will ho announced\nThe terms of tmyoumt will\nnt the aale.       .\nbe one-hnlf cnah at the sale nnd the\nbalance In ono year with Interest at\nthe rate of 6 per cent per Annum-\nPlans of t[)o subdivisions rna>- be\naeon at the residence of Capt. ft. E.\nMcGauley, Cnstleaar, and nt the, of rice\nof the Government wit. Nelson.    .\nDated at Nelson, BT C. October 3lst,\nllil.\nJ.   CARTMJL_\nGovernment   Agent*\n<fil<H>\n__\\\nA||rn\nKowua   ACT\nOwrHfleate   of   IaproTamsnt\n* NOTICE\niD.1T0S5*ul5N& ^THAM. CUR-\n...and DANDY Mlnertl Claims slt-\n'*. In..the. N*lMn_^li\\)m Division of\n<n Miking\nDtatrfetr\n\u25a0At head otVkmn Creek, nbout twelve\nmiles  from  Salmo.\nT-AKB NOTlqb that I. CLARENCE\nA. POOL, actlw M aaant for iteno\nr-m.A 1\/i*.^ Vf&T  FTM llf\"'- -.\u2022'-*\nbold Mines. Ltd.   IVee Viner'a Certlfi-\nmte   No.   3H18C,   Intend,   sixty   days\nilfty days\nSoft*\nTe \u00b0ahflS '\nfrom the data hereof, to ap;\nMlnlnir  Recorder  for  a Ceri\nJmprovementa, for tho purpoae\ntri In In a a , Crane  Grant  of the\nclaims.\nAnd   further   take   notiee 'that   sender  oeotlon  It,  must be  com-\n*   before  the   issuance   of' auch\nte  of   Improvemeou.        >      .\nthle 10th Uf ot October. A^D.\nThc DauKhters of the Empire have\ncompleted plans for whut 1\u00ab described\nas the \"danco of the season\" oi\nThanksgiving dny next Monday. Any\nthing undertaken hy thc Daughters is\nalways carried out so well thut the\napproaching function Is already an assured success, Nothlnjj ls lacking In\nthc nppolntments nnd arrangements to\nmake It bo. \u25a0        \t\nCANADIAN'-'.!*.. PACIFIC\nTo Europe\nI un BMasTinon ww. i\nasraRnEa-ronwi\u2014i\nProm   81.   John.   N.   B.\n 01\t\nFrom   -\t\nTo Glasgow, Tunisian ...Deo. I.\nTo Italy\u2014Caserta   Dec. 7\nTo Liverpool, Metaiama Dm. 9.\nTo Liverpool, Empress af France\n Deo, ll.\nMtnmuiA* so iitiuml\nNov. 11. Dec. 9, Jsn. 13, Metaanma\nNo\\. IVDei*. at, \u2022Keb. it,...Mrllta\nNov.. 26,    Jan. 3    MliineilnHii\nqusbeo mm uimon\n**Nov. I, Nov. 26 iCmpress of Brllftln\nNov. IE..   Dec. 13. Empress ot France\nMOKTBE&I.   TO   MMHW\nNo\\. B, *D\u00abc. 8. \"Jan. S\u00ab, ..Tunisian\nNov. --. \"Dec. it, 'Feb. it, Prstorlan\ntuamaa t.-Am\u2014\u2014mr\n(Via  Havre and  Southampton)\nNov. 11, \u2022lire. 91 Scandinavian\nNov. II, Jan. 11 \u2022  Corslclri\nuo\u00ab?**_xA.tz.-.\nNov. I. -Dei'. 11 lionlrcsl\nMQStT_K*l.-Xtrl.VB-aW-*0*.\n*Dee. f,  ...-  Osserta\nL'ombln.tl Service Canadian I*aclf-\n1c  \u00bb NayalM'on. Oen.ra).  Ital-\niias.\nZ_ML\nfrom Bt.  Jolrib\nfSKttm omit-\nipptoalmst.    lalUar    UstM.\n\u2022axoa-\u2014mtx\u2014t.otmom\nNov.  II,  ;....    Boi-irortli\nNov. st,  :.....;..... -Dunb-Kdie\nApply to Ajsnta \u00ab-\/.rvwh.r\u00bb oe\n3. a. cAB-ram,-B.F.A.\n.jdlelsen, a. O.\n\u2014\nZ\nTbe Consolidated Mining & Smelting Co.\nOF CANADA, LIMITED\nOHIoa (meltlna and Refining. D.partment\nTBAIU \u00bb\u00ab1TI8H COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND\nPURCHA8BR8 OC GOLD,  SILVljp,  COP\nPratatmmJm.w -mM> \"Slw^ Cipliii, l-llua\n\u2014^ TADASAC -rmtU\n3 AND LS AD ORU    ',\ne, Pli'LeasV Una I\n\\fmmmmm\ni'APIWir.\nAt   a.   rai'cllni:   of  tho   niipporlers\nL  W.   HuiJiD),Wy.\nLnbor I'liiiiliiliue for the West Koote-\ntha   Fnrmer-\nnay, hnlil lust nJ(*M In. Labor hall,\nthe ceriiriil cump|||ip executive wa*\n^ppolptea ID-Ptfj-?,, ,\ni Those named .'for the. executive\nwere:. J. Norcraa% IV. T. Choate.\nOoprge Turner, Jf. Phillips, J. F. Kllby, It. Elliott. T. le. UliinniiT. 1. W.\nMiilllOllunil. J. 11. Fez, W. J. Mr-\nKim, c. It. Howell, M. Austin,*'.I.\nMoraden, F- C3ippm\u00abn.. W. W. Bhapk-\nli'tou, J, Notman, lt. V. Ramadan, A.\nKirby, P, Hunden. W, Bartholomew.\nR. Jardlne, V, tilmmonds. J. Marshall\numl ,1. ). (Inrrlo.\nCandidate Humphrey, who enlisted, In the Mth bnttnllon May IS,\n1911, and served In the ltnllwny\nCorps, hi'liiB illSchnrgod Aug.. 14,\nllil, la ehatr'raan of tha grievance\ncommittee of his union, the Brotherhood   of   Locomotive.' Engineers.\nThe platform handed to The Daily\n4*u-uiui_i.i i,    , sum   11 im' nu i\nNews for. publication last night, la\n\u00abe-follows:      -,-r-r-i\u2014.- \u2022\u2022 --. \u2022\u25a0\n1. I'he initiative, referendum and\nreoall, and,t|ie proportional 'reftresen-\ntntltin system of electing representatives.    '   \u2022' .      .\n\u25a0: t Adept clause 4 of the farmers\ntaxation propolals, eliminating precious metals and sections \"C\" and \"Ir'\n6f tho tariff plank In the Progressive party's ppitforrn.\nI. It is tho duly ot the government to curry out necessary publlo\nwork to relieve the unemployed.\n4, We consider It necessary tor\nthe government to fulfil Its pledges\nto the returned soldiers to tha full\nextent, and especially to those who\nare'Incapacitated, and lurllier recommend thut pensions be-^jillotted\naccording to dlshblltty and not to\nrank. ,\n6. The abolition of the senate,\nalso of government hy order-ln-\ncouncll, .\nI. The: basic workday ns recommended by the International labor\nemigre\u2122  uf  the League  of Nations.\n7. Kxeluslnn of all Asiatics.\nH. We \u00bbre favorable to taking\nthe tariff out nl the hands of tho\npolitical arena, by the establishment\npf' an independent tariff hoard on\nwhich farmers nnd labor will he fully repr'esen.ted...\n. !>. Kiiual pay for equal work for\nmen and women.\n10 Thei. piiblll-hlnts* once n year\nof Ihe. directors,, managers, and control of all companies Incorporated In\nCanada,   Including   newspaper*   and\nperiodicals. *  '\n' 11. That the railway commission\neentatlve who would be-selected by\nshould.nopslst of at least one repre-\nfurmers and one who would be selected   by  railway  workers,.\n*ll. Abolition ot child labor under\nthe age of 18 In Industrial, institutions. ,\nII. Our member will support the\nProgressive party excepting*, tho\nclauses \"C\" and \"D\" In their tariff\nreform plank.\nffiUTKE\nRepresentations Made by\nProvincial Counsel May\nInjure City, '   , \u25a0\nApprehension .Hint the equalisation\nnf freight rates asked for by the province will fall lo safeguard the Interests\nof the ^nntenay na a distributing tor-\nrilpry and of Nelaon ns a distributing\npolnl led tn n special pineting of thc\nfreight nnd iransportntlnn commltteo\nof the board of Irnac. yesterday after-\nnnnn and a resolution naming a (medal committee to prepare,,\u00bb hriaf\nmemorial lo ihe railway commlssipn\nu......'. j i. -.ui. u., -nxiiim aaai .\nsetting forth Nelson's Individual view.\nThat individual view la that Nelson Is\nIp accord with equalisation provided If\n.will not be discriminated against,\nIt was pointed, out that the affected\nxone, whloh tfas originally,-on asauih.\nances nude by CI. O. UcQeer. provincial counBc), assumed to oe confined M\ntbe main line ot the C. V. ft., wquli\nnow almost certainly include the ten\nritory south, with me certainty Unit\nthore would be some disturbance at\nthe shipping relations' ot the coast and\nNelsop. That tills disturbance will lie\nIn favor of the coast and that thlH easy\nwill bear very close looking Into le\nthe contention jf 3. It. Hunter.\n- -Other poinniheslde the coast will\nbear ivniciilnn also. In Mr. Hunter's\nopinion. J.'i.r liuitiincc, under certain\n'curcumstances a rate oeteptlblv very\nfavorable will havo no concrete results, owing to it being confined to\nstraight carloads of products of one\n;speplal typq,\ni It waa recoiled by I. O. Nelson and\nothers thnt In tho long ago W. Bi Lan-\nIgan, general .freight traffic manager,\npractically gave a pledge that after\nthe Spokane caae wa* finally -willed\nNYliioii would I-I- niiiillui-ly dealt with\nhere. ,,\nTho cnminiii.-e appointed to prepare\ntho loiter to the railway commission\nconsists ot Chnlrman tl. A. Hrown. J.\nK. Hunter and C. H. Caudwell.. .\nThose present were Chairman Q. A.\nBroirti. SecretAry R. F. Olgot, Presh-\nYoc Mmt Viiit Gen\n' Just ifcrei' _-__ rt^lrf\nqualified persona may I\nvoters   for   the. pemlnion\nEveryone wtu). old not,\nInst provInr|*|.,election, ta, .'\ndivision tn which he or sho i\nsides shiiuld personally register -..\nRegistrar 3. B, Oould|pg, at Oeofl\nHorsiead'a pfilof )n the opera house\nblock. Personal application hi the one\nand only way to get on. and new\nregistration Is r.^oassary both In lho\ncasp of  (hose  who  did  not, vote III\nthe' last provincial\nthose who huve moi\n(ng, dlvWopi   ip , tfiylofy\ntion,\n. .and .of\nthose who have moved frorp thc pqll-\n .they\n.jhlch they reelded\nand, voted at the tithe of each lut\nIccllon.\nThe  roBlatrer.\nconstant  stream\nwho in hatpUIng\nof applicants, Is in\ndent F. .1. Boloa, W. M. Curi|l\u00abe, T. H.|hls office from 3 In the forenoon 'to\nCaudwell, J. ft, Huntor, L Cf. Nelson,:!! at nlgltf.'.. ,  ,. ,\n!_!_!  i,  j    .    'ii      ' \u2014lJ ii mini , mimsmimmaseamm^mmaar^msaaisSm\nmmm\u25a0\nm\n\u25a0T\nHAT DOES CRERAR SAY?   Here are hit exact\n\u2022\n'7 stand opposed to tlie principle of Protection as being\nneither sound economically norf_tht morally.\"\n\u2022ma*mwm^m*mtmmmmmam_mmm, \u2014 \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb,.!\u25a0       \u25a0 \u25a0      n n   n\u2014saC     I i-i.     \u25a0    \\ tm-m-Xmma-m     i      i        - , W\n_.:: .' . ..;;.,-\u2022\u25a0!*, f-{.>.i,:..:-. \u25a0\n~\\\n*\u25a0\nYet, since the war, the trend in In Japan, higher tariff protection\nall other important countries is was demanded, and as a result\nrds increased Protection ^ ^j,  w ^ ^^ on Ae\nare going up Ae world ^^ important article, were\n**'   ,     *       ,     . materially increased.\nThe various peoples are adopting\nthis mean* of defending toem- FrtMice, Italy, Spain, Switzerland,\nselves, and are trying to establish Austria, Roumania and the Balkan\ntheir industries through their $Mm have n^ gubgtantUd In-\njnTiSw^^ crwet m *** cu*tom, tum\nand thuslje in a portion to battle \u2022\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb the ArmUtice.\nfpr the markets of the world. EWn Englandf ^ fa^u ot\nThis Spring, the Fordney Bill shut Free Trade, has found it necessary\ne?cfefen1JniSk StotM \u00b0Ve. to P\u2122tftet her PWducew and\nproposed newtarjiff of the United \u00bbtanbal duties have heen imposed.\nStates  will ivirther reduce Ajutralia also has turned strongly\nCanada's trade with thai country, protective.\n*\nCRERAR asks you to believe that all these countries are foolish, that\ntheir fiscal policies are morally wrong and economically unsound, and\nTHAT HE ALONE IS RIGHT. < ,\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\n\"'I.' W  '     'I       \" I'        ' 'II'        1      'mill\nL\n\u25a0i**?,*'*:**\"**\nWith His Broad National Vision\nt,\nB-4\n'\nTho National Liberal and\n,tj\u00bb\u00ab Party\ni\u00bb- ki,, m.t..J ottu iU-yitiZ\n WWI4>\u00ab   '\n\u25a0HB-M\n\t\nfV.^\nTHE ITEESON BaTLY NEWS,  THURSDAY HORNING, NOTTHRER Jf, 1921.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sun-\nlay br the Newa Publishing Company,\n.United,  Nelson,  B.   C.   Canada,\n\u2022Iness letters should be addressrd\nchecks  and  money   orders   made\n_J>le to Ths News  Publishing Com-\n.y, Limited, end in no case to lndl-\n.\u2014uel members ot the staff.\nAdvajrUelna; rate cards and A. B. C.\netatements of circulation mailed on request or many be seen at the office of\nany advertising agency recognised by\nthe Canadian Press Aesoelatlon.\nSubscription rates: By mall (country), 60 cents per month; 18 per year,\nOutside Canada, a month, 75c; a your,\nIT.60. Delivered, 75c. per month; 14\nfor all months; \"n.&r\nIn advance.\nGO per year, payable\nMember  Audit  \u00bbureen   of   Circulation\nTHURSDAY,   NOV.   3,   1921\nWident\nbusekt\nUupa, A. Kir-Kmon\nLET    BULBS    BRIOHTEN    TOUR   WINTER    lUNINO    ItOOM\nLady Laurier.\nIn the death ot Lady Laurier\nCanada has lost not only the\nWidow of one of 'its leading\nstatesmen, but one of the best\nand most womanly of women.\n'A country seldom realizes the\ndebt it often owes to the wife of\na statesman. Many a great\nman would have been less great,\n-perhaps even a failure, if linked\nto him in his home had not\nbeen a wife equally noble in\ncharacter within her sphere.\nGladstone is a case in point.\nHowever unswerving an opponent of Gladstone's policies, one\nmust admire Gladstone's\nstrength of character, the sterling moral fibre of the man.\nRecent biographies have shown\nup the part which Mrs. Gladstone played, a true helpmeet,\nan unfailing source of strength\nand courage and steadfastness.\nLady Laurier was of the same\nschool of womanhood. All honor\nto her and to the millions of\nwomen of equal nobility of soul\nwho are seldom heard of in the\nnoise and clangor of this world\nof ours, but upon whom so\nmuch of the future of civilization depends.\nrsyclioloalsls have proved that a sunshiny dining room Is conductive to\n(rood digestion and general optimism\nnt mealtime. The chccrlness thnt emanates from riowerlng plants is almost\nequally ns necessary In tho dining\nroom as sunshine.\nMany women have poor success with\nregular plnnts; and mnny others who\ndo hnvo success witli in-door plants\nhavo tried forcing theve plants with\nthe result lhat now1, nt tho beginning\nof winter, the plants are In need of u\nrest und refuse to bloom. Such women\nshould resort to the planting of bulbs\nin  rotation.\nOr course, thero Is the question of\nexpense to ho considered In this plnn.\nQood bulbs, nnd enough of them so\nthnt about 3 bulbs can ho planted ev.ry\ntwo weeks from now till January first,\nwill cost several dollars. But to my\nmind. It Is several dollars well spent.\nFor, for this sum one cnn hnve bright,\ncheery flowers now until February\nfirst\u2014when our regular potted plants\nnre ready to flower or when our spring\nseeds nre ready to be planted.\nA good choice Is: first Hyacinths\nill,,ll:,mi nnd l:\u25a0 .111:1111: second, curly\nTuIIiih; third, Narcissi (Van Hlon. Hors-\nfledll, Empress, Trumpet Major nnd\nPaper White\u2014the flv. best forcing\nvarieties); fourth, Bermuda Lilies, more\ncommonly known as Easter Lilies nnd\ncntnlogued  oa  \"L.   Harl.ll.\"\nI hn\\e named these In the order of\ntholr planting. For economy's enke\nplnnt   three   In   the   seme   pot.     The\nChang,\nes\nin  Travel\nYears.\nin\n70\nThat veteran author, publicist\nand charming as well as\nthoughtful writer, Frederic\nHarrison, has given in two articles in the London Times his\nimpressions of travel old and\nnew, the old embracing journey-\nings of a leisurely character in\nPrance, Germany, Switzerland\nand Italy in the '40s and '50s\nof the past century, and the\nnew visits to those countries in\nrecent yeara. As Mr. Harrison\nreached his ninetieth; year last\nmonth, his reminiscences of\ntravel cover seventy-five years\n\u2014a longer retrospect than is\ngiven to most men.\nHe began his travels as a\nyouth just fresh from Oxford\nand in \"an era before the railways, before ugly new buildings\nand worse 'restorations,' before\ncircular tours and colossal hotels,\" and, to a certain extent,\nhe is able to take his readers of\ntoday back to times that seem\nso remote. He spent the autumns of 1845-6-7 in France in\nthe homes of people with whom\nhe was intimate.\nIn 1IS1 I sulled up the Rhine, drove\ninto the Black Forest, thel) was all\nover Swltserlnnd, Inlo Italy, and 10\nto Paris In the Second Republic. In\n18K3 we drove about the Rhone country, and then all along Ihe Riviera\nfrom Cannes to Genoa, and thence to\nTuscany nnd Florence. In lllr, I wns\nall over Lombardy and then tn Verona and Venice; nnd I spent the\nautumn of 186S In Romo and the\ncountry around. Since then I have\nwatched the \"progress*'\u2014may I say\nthe vulgarising?\u2014of Europe almost\nyear by year. My last climb on the\nenow Alps was In 1014: my last visit\nto France was in  191G.\nCertainly, if any one knows\nthe countries of Southern Europe well it ought to be this indefatigable traveler, who in travel, as in other things, had the\nseeing eye and the understanding and remembering heart. As\nto the general aspect of these\ncountries seventy or seventy-\nfive years ago he says:\nThe charm was In tho novolty, the\nqualntnesn, the old world air of\nevery new place. A Belgian town then\nwas quite unlike any other: still more\nunlike was a Rhenish town. In Oermany, the people, the habits, the\nbuildings wore In strong contrast to\nthe Italian. France had, everywhere\nbefore t)ie Empire, a pre-revolutlon,\nprovincial aspect. Frenchmen wer-\netlll the most gay, cheery, wlttles*\nIdealists In all Europe. In the '40s\npartly in the '(0s, even up to th>\nsavage war of 1870. the deep International hatreds and Jealousloe- ]>:i\nnot matured. French, Germans, English tot Italians could talk plena-\nantly In trains, coaches or hotels. *\n* \u2022 The separate table, the \"reserved\" coach, had not beon Installed. The\ngloom of national acorn and reveng1\nhad not settled upon Europe, W\nfound a common enjoymont ln alt w\nmet.\nAs to the actual changes by\nwhich travel has been, accord-\ninn to Mr. Harrison, \"standardised\" and \"vulgarized,\" and cities and towns \"brought up to\ndate,\" he gives many examples',\nbut it if pleasant to note that\npot .-: formations\nIn knowledge. Thousands now go\nwhere only tens could go then. Europe hns boen opened to tho masses.\nmade familiar to the least learned, (o\nthe most moderate purse. N'ew worlds\nof bcauly and of history hnvo been\nrevealed. \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 I write only to\nremind the traveling world how much\nhas boen sacrificed to their comfort\nand their gain.\nOn the whole, then, the reader and the tourjst of today may\ncongratulate himself on the\nchanges in the past three-quarters of a century as respects\nforeign travel\u2014changes which\nhave made it possible to cover\nat least the ground Mr. Harrison did in his almost uncounted\njourneyings, spread over seventy years, in a few months'\ntime.\n$Ka~a*jbU_S\nBYLENOH\nbulbs may touch eftch other in tho pot.\nThoy should not be prrHHCtl down\ninto the dirt, but iwroly rest mi top\nof It. Tin* dirt Hhould not bo packed down around thorn, A little bono\ni.riiii.. i umy bo mix\u00abil with a heavy\nvariety   of   noil. ,   *\nAfter you havo planted tlio bulbil.\nwator Ihem well jimt onco nnd plnce\ntho pot in u tlark, cool place for hIx\nwookn; thin Ik very Important foi* tho\nreanon that It Ih noc\u00abH*nary to trfvo the\nroots a chance to crow boron W0\nflowerlntt HhontK come m\u00bb. The not\nshould bo woll filled with vnotn beforo the tdinolN appear.' Tbo cellar\nIh tho nliuv thnt most poonh- put tholr\nIiotK (titer plantlnK thfl bulbs  In  tbem.\nAfter a bulb has once flowered It\nhnd bout be thrown away. For althouirh\nmany women try to keep their bulbs\nfrom yenr to year. II Is almost a vain\nhopo that they will flower hkhIii--\nana oven when they do thoy aro never\nsatisfactory blooms.\nTomorrow\u2014A rnssorolv Gueel Supper  for Sunday  Night.\nAll Inqulrlei niidressod to Mini Kirk*\nman ln earn of the \"Kfflolont Honso-\nkoeplntt\" department will be answered\nln those columns In tholr turn. This,\nrequires considerable tlmo, however,\nowing to the groat number received.\nSo' If a personal or quicker reply l-j\ndesired, a stamped and self-iiddressed\nenvelope must he enclosed with the\nquestion.\u2014Tho   Editor.\nI'A TUB.\nIt Is not always the frock that makes\nherious pretentions to bem\u00ab oi-igiiuil\nthut mnkos tbe strongest appeal, indeed not seldom, but often\u2014an tho\nexperience of our own pattern \u2022 depart\nintuit would liullciitc--lhe d\nIn dofmtml are those develo\nhave been without at least some\ngain\u2014a ga'n even from \"vulgarization,\" as in his concluding paragraph he says:\nIn seventy years foreign travel has\nWined Immensely In ease. In volume,  cloieW guarded ns Sevres ware Ofainut\nthe vibrntlons  of heat  and  cold  nnd\nSTANDARD METER\nHAS   LENGTHENED\nCroat excitement In scientific circles\nwns occasioned this week whon it wi%*\ndiscovered that the International metric soalo, which for S2 years 1ms bi\nThe Lighter Side\n -\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014-\u2014    -tmrn\u2014..   .... ^\nIf the drivers hnd nimbler wits,\npedestrlnns wouldn't need such nimble   legs.\nTho hnhlt of hlnmtng everything on\nthe freight rates at least gives thn\nkaiser a   rest.\nThe automobile front seems determined tu equal the easunlty list of\nthe  western  front.\nWhen future historians leurn tfut\nve railed those things cootie coops,\nthey won't feel Inclined to call this\nhe  age  of  chivalry.\nKate usually tiiniH her thumbs down\nor the chap who stands about walt-\nng for something tn turn up.\nEven the rural gentleman with a\none-gnllus equipment would be a little ashamed to wear a Bam Brown\nbelt.\nWo 'hull never be satisfied, how-\nover, until some scientist shows up\nwhnt human glands will do for\nmonkey.\nIt Is possible to keep Japan from\nexpanding. It In possible to remove\nthe safety valve from a steam boiler.\nAn economist says every household should havo a fixed overhead\nchargo- It has If the wife has a\nfondness for millinery.\nThe diet of worms marked n turning point In the world's history;\nperhaps this diet of yeast Is more\nsignificant   than  we  renl lie.\nThey ren'l fool the public wilh n\nre-Issue of an ancient plcturo In which\nho heroine pulls down her skirt when\nsho sits down.\nrobbery, no longer is officially authentic.\nWhen the experts decided to chcc'<\nup tho weights and measures standards a few weeks ago they discover*!\nthnt the platinum bar had strangely\nincrensetl in length\u2014not much to be\nsure, but enough to throw the calculations of astronomic experts all out of\ngear. The variation wns calculated\nto ho about flve-mllllonths of ty meter,\nor whnt Is known officially us tleml-\nmlcron.\nThe only explanation so far advanced is llial the scale when cleaned\nannually was disturbed to iuch nn extent that the platinum molecules were\ndisplaced. Tbe phenomenon Is to bo\nwatched closely for the next ten years\nand If the meter ngaln lengthens\nwashing will lie abandoned, with tho\nprobability that the molooulei will\nagain find the positions which they\nhnd In 1819, when twenty nations do-\nelded to be guided henceforth by tho\nineanun ni' -nl-* of Iho platinum Mile.\nNew York Herald.\n-*-\nTwenty Years Ago\nProm the Dolly Miner, Nov. 3, 1001.\nTho mnnnger of tho Mirror Lnke loo\ncompuny, Chnrles Bjorkness, returned\nyesterday over tho Crow*s Nest from\nNorway, where he hns spent tho last\nsix months visiting lhe land- of his\nbirth. Mirror i.il.-- Is slluntcd ubout\nthree miles back of Kaslo, and owing\nto Its altitude and the purity of Its\nwater the Ice obtained from It Ih of\ngood quality ami Is tn demnnd all\nover the Kcotenays.\nOp Wednesdny while the steamer\nNelson wus landing at Six Mile polnl\nIp lake on some freight the gangplank\nwas run out before the shore linos\nwere attached* as Is the custom nt the\nshore points along tho lake, to savo\ntlmo. Ah n rule al; works smoothly\nbut tm this occasion as one of tho\ndeckhands *rau across the plank to pull\nIt farther on the wharf tho hunt moved\nsllgbrty. with the, result that ho nnd\nthe plunk wen- precipitated Into the\nlake. He went down, but enmo up\nImmediately and was promptly seized\nwith a bom hook by on* of the other\nmen on the boat and hauled aboard\nnone the worse for his ducking.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nJ. A. McDonald of Itossland secured\nthe skin of Ih\u00ab bear which was shot\nnear the bunkhoiise of the Rllver Hill\nmine last weok. The bear had been\nstealing everything left out and was\nshot by the strategem related In tho\nMiner ln a previous 'issue, n piece of\nment having been placed In tbe bottom\nof a barrel, ho arranged that on the\nmeat being touched a heavy rifle was\nfired at the disturber. The bullet nearly\ntore out the heart of the hour, kilting\ntbe animal Instantly. Tbe skin Is coal\nblack aud one of tbe handsomest that\nhas been secured, tho animal having\nbeen In tbe pink of condition.\nDaily Recipe\npie. conservative line:\nn main In fashion f.\nfirst flush of the i\nHowever, even tie-\nfrock   may   have\nt conser-wtllv*\nlittle    .-, hM.lii.>l.\niy  ...\nties, a** tno nnvy blue twill model t\ntbe sketch nbly Hlustntios. Note the\nsleeves\u2014Isn't that a pretty scarlet,\ntike the bead ornament whloh fusions\nthe hell. The brabl down tho center\nIs black clre, (au exceedingly effective trimming this season) mul where\nupplled cruoswlso In the front, contributes also n pnlr of ronvunleiit pookets.\nThe nolo of red may be carried also\nInto the hat, as suKK'-sted l-y the wax\nberries   In   this girlish   model.\npattkrn no. i...\nA pattern for the aboxe model (No.\n29P) can be obtained lu sixes 34. '\u25a0'\u2022>'\u2022 or\n3S. by sending to LENORK. A West\n40th St.. NEW YORK CITY, your\nnnmo, addresw. anil &0 cnnt\u00bb in postage\nstamps. Be sure to keep tbls newspaper clipping of tbo si,.'ten and description of the garment to use ns a\nworking model when tho pattern\nroaches you\u2014which will be within two\nweeks' imi\".    Tin' Kdllur.\n(Paste this In your conk book.\nCANNED  MUSHROOMS.\nPick over with care, remove skins\nand all stems that are not tender. Put\nIn kettle, cover with boiling waler, and\nlet stand hnlf nu hour. Itemove and\nput In cold wuter for same length of\ntime. Place In sterilized jars without\nflavoring or seasoning. Heat the water\nthey were first covered with to boiling,\nfill Jars and seal. It Is sometimes\nfound thnt a tablespoonful of vinegar\nIs nu Improvement, added to n falr-\nslzed saucepan of .mushrooms after\nBtewlng them untnPlhoroughly sterilized.   Keverat doves can be added also.\nVIOLATES  SEDITION   LAW.\nJACKSON, Minn., Nov. 2.\u2014A. C.\nTownley, president of the National\nNonpartisan league, sentenced to a 90*-\nday Jail term for violation of the state\nnedltlnu law, wns locked up today.\nm>\nAn ex-corporal of tho 28th Canadian\nbattalion tells of fishing trips hla\ncompany used to make on lho Arras\nfront ln 1818. Ench period In the\ntrenches wns known as a \"trip.\" In\nApril, 1018, the company commander\nwas Captain Salmon and the lieutenant was named Wales: his batman\nwas ulso named Wales. Every day the\ncountersign was the namo of a fish,\nsuch ns Haddock, Iterrlng. etc. Therefore these periods became known to\nthe company aa tho fishy trip,       \t\nThe Finest\nLESSENED COST of production\nhas lowered tho price of Dirks*\nSterling Silver Toilet Ware, hut\nIts ciuallty is the same as ever\n\u2014tho finest.\nIt Is mnde In our own workshops, In our own designs and\nof the very best materials. - It\nIs matchless for beauty nnd\ndurability\u2014lho finest of till\n\"piece  by  piece\" gifts.\nVANCOUVER, 0. C,\nREDUCE ClVlfc WAG'tt. ?-\nMEDICINE HAT, Nov. 2.\u2014Repl\nj-eni.-itlv--.-i of Saskatchewan and a\nberta cities at a conferenco here tod\ndecided on a reduction in tho wa|\nnf civic employees for 1922 on a bn\ncalling for a cut of 32 per cent mit\nIncrease of 1921 salaries over those\n1914. .\nCASH AND CARRY\nGROCERY\nPhon* 245 P.  O.  Box  1077\nBurns' \"Dominion\"  Bacon,\nStreaky   flldo   piece,   lb 42c\nSliced, per lb. -_ 45c\nBurns' \"Shnmrork\" Hnm, fresh\nslock,   II) Mo\nSwift's fnncy Shoulder Hnm.,,\nfresh smokod, nothing fln-j,\nner,   Ib   - 30o\nCoffee and Teas\n\"Myown\" Blend, fresh ground,\nlb   45o\nArawnna Tea, Ib - HOe\nBraid's Ideal Tea. 2V4-!b package    - \u00bb $1-211\nThese lines are rapidly growing  In  favor.\nQuality ana Tains cannot bt\nexcelled, fyjirl this month right\nPay Cnali and Sara Mon.y on\nyour   family   groceries.\nI carry a full stock ond can\nsupply all your grocery neoda,\nnnd you run get high quality\nmeat nt the Butcherlerln In\nconnection. Prlco and Quality\nGuaranteed.\nPersonal   Rervlee\u2014Courteous   Attention.\nOpposite Methodist Church\nDuring the past forty years Alaska\nhas produced minerals with a total\nvalue or tW1.474,Tft.\nNative Australians eat grubs, which\narc cut oul of gum trees.\nIN 0UEST FOR DOCTOR LOST IN BUSH\nPerfect blending make* Tetley's Golden Tip* so delicious\n\u2014so refreshing and fragrant\nTETLEY'S\nMakes good TEA a certainty\nAnd only in Tetley'\u00bb can you\nfind this exacting blend of young,\ntender top leave* of the world'g^\nchoicest tea plant*.   It is the result of a century of experience.\nISCOVERED    Ar'fEP.   TWO    WEEKS\nTlie urouji Include*-) noma of the\n.in-i. ^ uml iiolU-n offteere who -i.ntlei-\n.mtt'ii lu Uu* M-fcrcti for Or. unihum\nI'liuinhiTN, Toronto iihymelmi, who wiih\nfound nfl-r I- tm: Iuhi In N.-riti- ni Un-\nLitrhi i.n ii for two wot'kH. From left\no ni:ln. they ale Jot*. i:-.i In-.hi. Wm.\nt'en null, It. .Mit'ln-moti, N, Jordan, Joo\nWeld-., joe Or, k. i\u00bb. Canpbell and\nW. K. Cullen. rutupliell tnul Cullen\narc provincial it-nllcem* li. Below Ih thu\nKmiH-ror Hotel ui Fort KrnnclH where\nI>r.    ('hu inhere    Ir    now    heing    nun-tod\nImi'k  to  health.\nHUNTING SEASON\n\"In a few days you will be able to shoot all kinds of game.\nAre you prepared with necessary Guns, Rifles and Ammunition? We have Shot Guns, Rifles, Cartridges. Cleaners,\n'\"un Oil, Greases, Hunting Clothing. Rifle Covers. Knives,\netc., etc.   Lowest prices.\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nBAKER STREET,\nNELSON, B. C\nZEALANDERS WELCOME PRINCESS\nTen Terns Ago Today\nFrom Tho Dally Nowa, Nov. 1. Ull.\nW. P. C\u00abr\u00abon leavei today for Hev-\nelatnke utter having arranged ta give\nNelaon two Illustrated lectures on November 20 and II, under tho aueplccn\not Rev.. A. 8. smith \u201et tho Methndlut\n-hurch. The aubjecta choaon are \"Cal-\nfornla\" and \"Yoaemlto,\" but there\nvill alao bo aome flno alldea doplctlnK'\nho Kootenay region, which the pub-;\n.it v bureau la having manufactured j\n-Npeclally for the occaalon. Conaldrr-\nng that auoh cltlea aa Winnlpog nml\n'algary havo only boen awarded one i\ni-cture apiece. Nelaon la balnff eipe-l\n-Inlly favored by Mr. f'lum'e preaenco\nm theae two succeeding nights.\n\u2022 a   \u2022\nHugh Cork of Chicago, who nd-\nlressod the Sunday achool Institute\n'esterday, was the guest of ttr. and\nIrs. N. Wolverton. Rev. J. I. Wllllnm -\nHin of Vanoouver, the field superln-\nifndent, waa entertained by Mr. and\n.ii-s. J. E. Annable. They leave on\nJus morning's boat for Pernio.\n*' *   ' \\.\nRev. J. H. Howe of Robson, who U\nittendlng tho Sunday school workers'\nnstltutc, Is thc guest of Rev. Charles\nW. King.   Mr. Howe haa been secured\nby the young people's union here to\ngive a popular recital at an early date.\n* \u2022   \u00bb\nWilliam Watson, manager of the\nMother Lost* mine, arrived yesterday\nand la raglatared at th* StrathooBa.\nPEA8ANT OIRLS GREET JULIANA. .\n.   This Istost exclusive photogmph of Jullnnn, tho twclvo-yrnt'-old   daughtor  ot  Quean   Wllhelmlnfl,  shows  har\nbeing greeted by peasant girls, clad in quaint native coitunws, during n recant visit'to Zaoland, I\nIt's Summer Time in     _^\nii\ns\n-a\ntheLpnd-e.\nNow that your\nharvesting is over\nspend THIS winter in sunny California.\n\u2014- avoid tlie wintry northern\nweather.\n\u2014 rest-up 'tween seasons in\nease and comfort.\n\u2014 enjoy die warm, southern\nsunshine; bathing beaches and\nother delights of this great\nwinter playground.\nGo NOW] and travel part of the\nway by water. You will enjoy tha de-\nligkfulihort ocein trip between SestiU\nand Sin Fnndica or Los Angelas via\nthe Admiral tins.\nThru tioltsts s\u00ab reduced sacutsm fuse\nNOW ON SAIA  , *\nAilc your local railroad agent tor lull\npankulan, or writs:\ntualSunshine\ntG McMkkn.\n1-aat.TeaSU,,.\nSpecial\nreduced\nUCmmttt\nfares now in effect!\nAn ironclad guarantee wi\nevery CALORIC. Inves\ngate before buying.\n mm\n)&tk?\n\u2022 THF NELSON TJ5TCT NEWS, THIJIISIJA? ISIOHNINfj, N07MBEF & 1921.\n\u25a0%\\\nS\nYOUR EVENING SHOES\nThe slender, graceful,\npleasing lines of the feet\u2014\nhow often are they hidden\nby improper footwear.\nYou have the choice here\nof modes that not only possess great beauty and\ncharm in themselves, but\nhave the quality of correctly expressing and emphasizing the beauty of the\nfoot.\nft. ANDREW _ CO.\nLeaders in Foot Fashion\nKootenay and Boundary\nWEDDINGS\nCOMif-KUfti'ER\nKASLO, Nov. 1.\u2014At tho reshh-noo Of\nMr. uml Mrn. Ham Hunter, on Oct,\nII. 1921, by thr Rev. M. C. Cnmpbt'lt\nAI. A.. Ith'luinl Conn, nnd MIhh Catherine Kllxn Hunter, both of Ottawa,\nOnt.\nThe   britle    In    woll,   nnd    favorably\nknown  In  the olty.    She him been  the\n%m\u00bbst of her brother and Mm. Hunter.\nrer   Hlnter-ln-law,   for   some   time   end\nMn   made   many   frlendx   in   Kanlo.\nLil;*- tho bride, the bridegroom ln\nfrom Ottnwn, itlthough |n the west on\nbUHlnenfi at pronent. Thc mnrrlnRO\nwnn attended by near frlendx only,\nend mfter the ceremony a very happy\n. end am it ful wedding hreukfnnt wan\n\u2022n'nyed   hy   the  party.\nThe newly married couple left by the\nnun nun; bout for lho honeymoon.   They\nwilt return  here  for a few day*'  Htay\nhoforo  going  to Cnllfornln  for several\nnimuli**      Alter   thut    ile v   expect   to\nmnke tholr home  ln Ottnwa.\nThe   numerous   friends   of   the  bride\n'here follow her nnd her hufdmnd  with\n* the bent  wish on of every hnpptnoss  In\nlife.\nMr. and Mra, Hunter, being nnionij\nthe beat known renldentn ln the city,\nnaturally much Interest hun been shown\nIn the event.\nCANVASS OPINIONS\nON DENTAL CLINIC\nROBSON, Nov. L\u2014At tho October\nmeet lng or the Women's Institute, Mrs.\nOarland Foster, of Nolson, gave an\nInteresting paper on Child Welfare,\nwhich was much enjoyed by nit present. Tho business part wns left over\ntill  tbo November meeting.\nAt a special meeting of the Institute\nheld on Friday, Inst, to dlsouns the\nndvltmblllty of having n dental clinic, lt was decided to make n canvns\nor thn district for namoa of those\nwho would avail themselves of this\nopportunity of hnvlng dentistry done\nIn  the plnce.\nBOUfCANDIDATES\nBUSYJN RIDING\nCRANBROOK, Nov. 1.\u2014Dr. Bonnell,\nM. Ri and Hherwood Horchmer, Fernle\nbarrister, secretary of thn East Kootenay government political organization,\nwero In town last week-end For a time\ndlscusHlng campaign plnns with members of iln   locnl organisation.\nCRANBROOK. Nov7 I.\u2014R. E. Beat-\nties, Liberal nominee, ha* been addressing meetings In the Columbia and\nCranbrook ridings along with M. A.\nMacdonald and Hrlg. Oen. Odium, Vancouver     candidates.\nWOMEN'S AUXILIARY\nGIVE CHURCH TEA\nCRANBROOK, Nov. L\u2014The first tea\nof the season, given by the Womon's\nAuxiliary of Christ church, wus held\non Thursday afternoon nt the home\nof Mrs. Thompson on Burwell n\\enue.\nTho drawlnb room was beautifully decorated Tor the occasion with marigold--'.\nAssisting Mrs. Thompson were Mrn.\nHoy Harrison, Mrs. T. Roberts nnd\n.Mrs.    Rumsoy.\nCRANBROOK MERCHANTS\nOPPOSE PROPERTY TAX\n4  (F^TT^sSli\nItOBRON, Nov. 1,\u2014Pr. A. P. Mc-\nTtlnrmld hnn cone fn\u00bb* n trip to Winnipeg  for a  few weeks.\nMrs. C. s. :\u25a0;.lun-\"\u25a0 uml Miss F. Perrier spent a couple of dnys In Nelson    this   week.\nJan. Forbes han heen relieving the\nexpress messenger on the H. s. Mlnto\nfor thc Inst we\u00abk.\nMiss C. Masterton, who has been\n--spending the Inst few months with her\nslsler and brother at the ranch here,\nIm-:  gone  to Vancouver  foe  the  winter.\nWith the -thiiuuHit of another cur\nof winter apples this week, the frull\nsensnn will wind up, nbout nine cars\nin all have been .\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0-\u25a0mi-i. \u25a0.) and packed.\nA car of feed nrrlved last week nnd\none   of   hay   this   week   for   the   valley\nMiss Todd wns a Nelson visitor over\nthe    week-end.\nJ. Berry and son, of Hy lingo Creek\nwere  Robson visitors on  Monduy.\nCrtam left ta^^~-\\i);11\nkgep\nWithout ice\nAPPLES   APPLES\nClean up all winter varieties.   Last car for'season\nshipping   on    WEDNESDAY. NOV. 9th.\nKootenay Fruit Growers'\nUnion\nPhono  180 Nelion\nCRANBROOK. Nov. \u2022\u2014Different\npubl lo bodies ln Cranbrook, ns elsewhere, nro showing some opposition to\ntbe Idea nf the provincial government\nto allow the municipal authorities to\ncollect part or all of the personal\nproperty tax, nnd to regard this as\npart of the proponed got ernment nld\nto the municipalities. This tax for\nthe most part falls heaviest on the\nbusiness men. There In also a proposal to Impoae an additional tnx of\n1 per cent on iho-\u2022\u25a0 who hnve not been\npaying the personal property tax. Both\nthe Cranbrook Bonrd of Trade and\nthe It stall Merchnnts association nre\nopposing  It. i\nROBSON NOTES\nBffifttB\nRanchers Secure Prizes for\nCox Orange Apples\nAgainst Whole Emipre.\nCRESTON. Nov. 1.\u2014Creston valley\ngrowH the bent Cox Orange npples\nproduced nuywhero In Canada or any\nof tho British dominion--* ovorsenH, and\nthe second best dessert apples grown\nanywhere In tho whole of tho British\nEmpire also come from the Creston\nvalley, and In Snows nnd Mcintosh\nRods   tho   Creston   valley   takes   third\nEl ace ln all  the overseas  units of the\nImplro,\nThis In the satisfactory intelligence\ncabled Creston today from London,\nEngland, whore the awards ln the\nbig British Apple Show, nt the Crystal\nI'alnee, wore announced yesterday.\nln Cox Orange, the Robert Stark\nranch carried off first prise und the\nW. J. Little Jol.n ranch second, In\nthe five-box lot competition open to\nall the British overseas colonies, nnd\nIn which clnss tncre was un exceptionally heavy entry lint from British\nColumbia points, due to this vurletv\nbeing the top favorite with English\napple buyers.\nRobert Stark, vahose twenty-two\nboxes of Cox Ornnge were awarded\nsecond prlio ln the best dessert apple\nclass, a lno inoi with the strongest\nkind of competition in n class which\nwas open to growers of the whole British   Empiro.\nThe other exhibition honors went\nto Mr. Ltttlcjohn, whoso Snows nnd\nMcintosh Reds were third In the\noverseas dominions competition. On\nWealthy* neither the Llttlejohn or\nW. V. Jackson ranches, both of whom\nhad a fhe-box entry, woro sucessful,\nbut nt thnt the valley's score of one\nfirst, iv... seconds and two thlrdH on\nseven entries Is a showing thnt will\ncertainly tnko somo bent Ing.\nmean on   for   Frtda\nThat tho entry lint at tho show was\nlarge, especially from British Columbia.\nIs in-ill .ii.'I In the fuct tbat the sixty\noild boxen shipped from Creston to\nVernon lo be Included In the Okanugan\nfruit in the express-car trip to Mon-\ntmal, was part of at len*t two straight\nears of exhibition frull thut wus assembled at Vernon from the other Okan-\nngttn    centers.\nIn addition to the satisfaction that\ncomes of knowing that in tho Cox\nOrange variety the volley la the\ndandy district of them nil, It In still\nmoro commercially satisfactory to have\nachieved that prominence In the Old\nCountry at a time when tho local product of thut variety will be a contender for the trade on lho Engllnh apple\nmarket, wilh a valley planting to the\nCox thnl should make Creston n considerable exporter of that variety, nexl\nseason. ,    ..\nParticularly In view of tho outstanding success of lho Creston fruit\nlt In fortunnte the valley hus Robert\nStark an a personal representative at\nthe  big  fruit  fair.    Among   the  thou-\nASPIRIN\nOnly \"Bayer\" is Genuine\nWarning! Take no chnnccs with\nsubstitutes for genuine \"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin.\" Unlets you see\ntho name \"Bayer\" on package or on\ntnlileta you are not getting Aspirin\nat all. In every Bayer package are\ndirections for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy\ntin boxes of twelve tablets cost few\nconts. Druggists also sell larger\npackages. Made In Canada. Aspirin\n;s the trade mark (registered In Can*\nudu), of Bayer Manufacture of Mo-\nnoacetlcscldeiter of Ballcyllcuclil.\nWhen\nyour dealer\nshows you\nHurlbuts\nsands of callers at. the show, Mr,\nUark Is peculiarly well (nullified lo\nxtol   thc   advantages   of   the   Creston\ndistrict to Interested parties, while\nthe awards gained at the show will bo\nnil the corroborative evidence neces-\njtuVy to convince that In tho product\nof hlrh clnss fruit lh* valley ranks\nsecond   lo   none.\nUreal commendation Is nlso due\nMtssrs. Llttlejohn, Htnrk and Jackson\nfor the splendid public spirit displayed In going to no end of trouble to\nselect, pack and ship\u2014to say nothing\nof the financial side of the Incident\u2014\nthe prise-winning fruit in the quantities\ncalled for. while nn equally hearty\nvote of thanks Is coming to Manager\nLovedny, of Creston Fruit O rowers\nUnion, who worked o\\ertlme In hln\nefforts to secure n representative display of valley apples ot the show,\nns woll as doing no Inconsiderable\namount of work getting all the need-\ni-d information regarding ihe exhibition,\nnnd looking after nil the other details\nconnected  with   the   exhibit.\nThe valley show frull will be sold\nto the highest bidder after the fair\nclones and Mr. Htnrk, will. In due\ncoursr. advise as to what prices the\napples brought, as well as giving ;*\nstory of the apple show details that\nwill   bo   of   local   Interest.\nLITERARY SOCIETY\nGIVES PERFORMANCE\nROBSON, Nov. 1.\u2014The first open\nmeeting of the Robson Huncrlor School\nLiterary society wns held on Friday\nafternoon, when most of the parents\nwere preaent. A very Interesting program was rendered by the pupils, consisting of speeches, songs, recitations,\netc.. nnd a hearty vote of thanks was\ngiven   to  the  school  at   the   loie.\nA most enjoyable Hallowe'en pnrty\nwas also guot up by the literary club,\nunder tho sui>ervlsion of Miss Todd,\nthe principal of the Superior school.\nA most oxcltlng paper chase took plnce\nIn the afternoon and nfter a dainty\nten games of all kinds were Indulged In.\nCRANBROOK NOTES\nYOUR dealer knows what the tender giowinj\n(eet ol a child require. His knowledge\nis rslusble\u2014he is proud of it..\nThat is why he shows you HURLBUTS. He\nwill point out the nature shape\u2014room to grow\nlor every toe\u2014the soft, flexible cushion insole;\nthe pliant supple upper of highest grade r.iatri i:il;\nthe welted construction, and will tell you why\nHURLBUTS injure the lowest cost per day of\nwear.    .\nHe is anxious to gin you the best boot (or a\nchild he knows-he shows you HURLBUTS.\nWrit, far booklat about Hurlbut\n'-Rebuilt Stmca\" and we will tt_\nytm Iks nam of Uu Hurlbut dealer\nnnrist Is ytm.\nHURLBUT\n- CUSHION-SOLE\nShoes ^Children\nMADE IN CANADA\nby The Hurlbut Co. Limited, Presto^ Ont.\nNo. 9\nCRANBROOK. Nov. 1\u2014 Martin T.\nHarris returned Thursday from the Old\nCountry, where ho spent nn extended\nholiday.\nMr. Bachelor, of Nelson, hns come\nover to joint the staff of the Royal\nRnnk.\nMr. and Mrn. Olrvln Moor nro receiving congratulations on the arrival of n ten pound baby hoy horn at\nthe   cottage   hospital   in   Hunday,\nMr. and Mrn, Blewart MncIntoNh\nare spending a few days In Rpokanc,\ngoing down on Fridny.\nPIMPLES\nON FACE\nDIDN'T LIKE TO GO OUT\nThose nasty Httle plmplea that break\nout on the face and other parts of the\nbody are simply Indication* that the\nblooa' la- out ol. order und requires\npurifying.\nThere li only one way to get rid of\nthla obnoxious akin trouble, and that\nIs by giving tho hlood n thorough\ncleansing which can best bo done by\nthat old .reliable blood medldno\nBURDOCK   BLOOD   BITTERS\nnnd   when   the' blood   la   purified   thc\npimples will vanish nnd you will hnve\na  clear,  healthy   complexion.\nMiss Mary K. Flanagan, R. It.\nNb. I, Stella, Ont.. writes: \"I suffered for iibput two yeara with pimples and hjntche* breaking, out on my\nface. The doctor said It woo cauaed\nhy bad 'hlood, My face waa bo bad I\ndidn't like .t\u00bb go out among a crowd\nof peoplo. Ono day I waa talking to\na friend, and ahe advised me to get\na hot tic of Burdock Blood Bitters\nand try It. I Juit took threo bottloi\nand thoro.wna not a blotch or pimple\nof nny kind left. Some of my friends\nasked me what I had used and I\n\u2022nld, 'Burdock Blood Bitters chased\nthem.'\"\nB. B. B. has heen on the market for\nthe past 45 years, ao you are not experimenting with somo new and untried remedy.\nPut up only by Tho T. Milburn Co.,\nLimited, Toronto, Ont,\nMortarboard and Gown\nDISTINGUISHED   MEN   AT   M'GILL\nUnusual pictures nre reproduced\nabove of men who hnvo figured much\nIn Canadian affairs In the post fow\nyears. On the top Is Lord Byng; In\nthe middle Is President 13. W. Beatty\nof the c. P. R.. nnd al tho bottom\nSir Arthur Ourrle, The pictures were\ntaken ut McOlll university centennial\nOBITUARY\nXRS. *OBT3 BIQOTTJIME\n- CRANBROOK. \u2122Nov. 1.\u2014The funeral\nof Mrs. Rose Blgotilnc, who died In\ntho Ht. Kugcne hospital on Thursday,\nwas hold Saturday ufternoon from  the\nHt.   Mary's  Catholic  church.\nWILL WEAR POPPIES\nON ARMISTICE DAY\nCRANBROOK. Nov. 1.\u2014Armistice\nDay will be observed In Cranbrook by\nthe nelllng nnd the wearing of the\nFlanders poppy. Thin poppy has been\nadopted as tne memorial flower lu\nhonor of our men who did not return\nfrom Krnnee. They arc made by the\nwomen und children of lhe devastated\nparts of France, mid the proceed* from\nthe sale of these Imitation flower*\nwill help these poor widows and orphans To exist through the coming\nwinter.\nCONCERT AND WHIST\nDRIVE PLEASES ALL\nCRICSTON, Nov. 2.\u2014Tho Indies of\nHoly Cross church. Creston, wore hostesses at u decidedly successful concert and wis. t pnrty In the parish hull\non  Tuesday   night.\nIn splta of ihe inclement weather u\nverv representative withering was preaent to enjoy iln .-veninn's whist, music\nand refreshments. The concert was un\ncxc.-lleiii, as well as a ph-asant change\nfrom the usunl routine of church socials.     The   musics^  program   follows;\nHong, '\"1 Love t he Moon.\" Capt\nCromplon; plnno duct, Mesdames Oarland und Cromplon: cello, solo, J. K,\nChorlton; uunrieUe, \"Kwcctjnnd Low,\"\nMi'sil-uucs Ci'-.nipi-Mi nnd (Hi tin ml, nnd\nMessrs. R. B. Btaplei und Cupt Crompton: song, \"Uny of Biscay.\" Capt.\nCrompton; plain' duett, Mesdames Oarland aud Crompton; solo, Mrs. Cromplon; 'cello solo, J. K. Chorlton; solo,\nMi*.   \u00ab\"i-.ii. l'i\"\"     plnno   duel,    MoBil-jinu \u25a0\u25a0\nCrompton   nml   cnrlnnd.\nAll ihe numbers were well executed\nand generous!* applauded, and numerous    encores    Riven.\nRev. Father Bessette presided in\nhis hnppy manner, the whist prises be\nIng won hy Mrn. U. A. M. Young nnd\nMrs.   II.   Small.\nCnpt. and Mrs. Crompton were responsible for i he musical program.\nand K ts due to tholr efforts thnt\nsuch n musical treat wos given to n\ncritical   and   appreciative   audience.\nTho thanks of lhe ladles of Holy\nCrons church are extended to Mrn.\nC. B. Oarland mul Messrs. Staples and\nChorlton. for their cooperation In the\nmusical program, and also to those who\nt-o generously assisted with tho refreshments.\nlt Is pleasing to state that the num\nof *-'\u25a0'* wns rculiicd nfter paying all\nexpenses.\nQuestion About Medals\nDraws Disapproval Shouts\nAgainst Inquirer.\nLONDON, Nov. 2.\u2014(By Conadlun\nPress ruble.)\u2014Tho secretary of state\nfor wnr, Sir Unnliifj Worthington-\nEvans, nnswerlng a complaint In the\nhouse of commons today as to the distribution of war medals, .aald that 10,-\n000,000 medals Imd already been delivered.\nJ. E. Mills, a l-ahor member, asked\nIf the wur office would buy up Ihe\nthousands of medals being pawned to\nbuy food Shout**** of disapproval arose\nfrom all parts, of the house and there\nwere cries of 'shirker*' and \"Who did\nyou loso In the war?'\"\ni-flUts worked In tho Woolwich arsenal during tho war._\nREDUCE PUBLIC DEBT.\nWASHINGTON. Nov. _.\u2014A reduction of about H(I.\"),ooo.mm hi the public\ndebt nf the United Slates during October was announced today by the treasury department. The heavy decrease,\nofficials said, was pecountod for by\nheavy redemption ot government securities,\nThe Store tor Styti\nThe Store for Qaalit,\nMid-Season Unloading Sale\nQuality Goods at lowest possible prices.   Also an opportunity to select your requirements Irom the finest stock of Ladies' Ready-to-Wear  and  General Dry\nGoods in the Interior, in many cases at less than manufacturer's prices\nWOMEN'S AND MISSES' SUITS\nUnloading Price, $35.00 Each\nPositively the best values in Suits at the prices shown for years.\nAll splendidly tailored in Mannish Serges, Tweeds, or Heather\nJersey Cloths. Coats are belted styles with convertible collars,\nand lined throughout with good Silk or Satin. Skirts plain-\ntailored and belted. Sizes 16 to 42. Values to $65.00.\nUNLOADING MUCE, the Suit    ?35.0O\nFUR-TRIMMED COATS\nAt $35,00, $45,00 and $50.00\nThe best values in the Province for the money. Materials are\nall-wool Velours. Some of the Coats are Silk-lined throughout,\nothers lined to the waist. Belted and loose-back styles are\nshown, and all are finished with large, comfy Fur Collars.\nColors are Brown, Castor and Taupe. Sizes 16 to 40.\nUNLOADING SALE PRICES ?35.00, 945.00, f50.00\n500 YARDS PLAIN AND NOVELTY DRESS GOODS\nAt $1.50 Yard\nGoods that sold up to $3.00 the yard. The showing consists of\nall-wool plain and striped Serges, and novelty weaves in all\nwanted colors. Widths from 40 to 44 inches. Values to $3.00.\nUNLOADING SALE PRICE, yard  $1.50\nPLAIN LINEN TOWELLING\nAt 50c Yard\nGood weight Linen Towelling, 24 inches\nwide, sold formerly up to 90c yard.\nUNLOADING PRICE  50<\nPURE LINEN GLASS TOWELS\nAt SOc Each\nOnly ten dozen of these secured at a snap\nprice.   Pure linen, full size with colored borders.   SALE PRICE, each....50f\nHEAVY STRIPED FLANNELETTE\nAt 29c Yard\nFull 33 inches wide, and in a range of\ngood patterns. Formerly sold at 45c\nyard. UNLOADING SALE PRICE,\nyard .: ' 28f\nRFMN ANT\\ Al about half price* Ends of Silks' Dress80<\u00abis, Flannelettes,\nRMIll\/iilliJ Linens and Staples at Less  than  Manufacturers' Prices.\n611 Baker Street\nPhone 200\nPLAYER'S\nNAVY CUT\nCIGARETTES\n\/O for 18*\nZO \u2022 35*\naflndin tins\nofSO\u00a3 lOO\nSuperb Sualily\nHnest UhrhnansJup\nGre&lest Value\nin ihe World,\nJ\n I I.\n) ft\nTHE NEESON BATE? NEWS, THURSDAY ttGSKTWG, \u2022\u25a0JrtVfiMB'fiH' 5, 1S2T.'\nFAILSJO ROUSE\nStocks Irregular, Do Not Respond to Favorable Features; Pools Active.\n\\SVfy YpRK. Nov. S.r-The stock\nmnrket ''pursued 1* recent Irregular\nand professional course, paying little\nattention to the lowest money rutrs in\nmany weeks and other encouraging\nfnotors. An abundance of local nnd\nInterior funds forced call loans down\nfrom Mi to -m per cent before noon\nand effected moderate concessions on\nshort nccommodaUona with mixed col-\nIntern I. Announcement of the reduced\nrediscount rates by the federal reservo\nbank became known shortly after the\nclose of tho market.\nSteadier conditions and anolher\nmoderate spurt ln production were reported from leading steel centers, but\nfailure of tht railroads to mnke long\ndeferred oan tracts for now construction and equipment again wns u source\nof disappointment.\nPools were active tn many speculative Issues, hut they made Httle headway.\nIfexlean and European issues repeated their erratic movements, but\nshowed gains In thc main. Oils continued to absorb the bulk of the dealings.\nUnited Fruit enlivened the final\nhour, heavy buying causing a net advance \"f -It*, points.\nSales were 5*5,000 shares.\nThe further collapse of German\nmarks to 4tH. a new low record, was\nthe only striking feature in the foreign exchange market.\nA steady to firm tone marked thc\nbroader dealings in bonds. Liberty issues, as well as standard rails, industrials and some or the foreign division\ndosing at advances.\nTotal sales. $15,375,000.\nClosing Quotations\nHigh.' Low.   Close.\nMR STEADILY\nNRW YORK, Nnv. 2.\u2014Silver, \"\u00ab*ic.\nIIH*.\nlondon, Noy \u00bb,\u2014Silver\nFOREIGN EXCHANGE\nNBW.VOPsK, Nlovy 2 \u2014 Cailtiy'Hn dollars\u2014 tf.n:\nCttnatlinn ilollnrp\u201402.2.1.\nPrancs\u2014Demand  7Uti. cables 7.36%.\nUre\u2014IVmnnd   4.0SH.   cables   1.04.\nMarks\u2014Demnnd   ,5tH.   Ml hies   ,*i2.\nSTERLING EXCHANGE\nNEW YOKK, Nnv. 2.\u2014Sterling exchange Irregular \"I IS.89\", [or CD-day\nhills and II \u25a0<:''.   for demand.\nNEI-SON, Nov. _\u2014Curronl counter\nexchange for sterling,  I'-lTi.\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW Y< >RK, Nov. _.\u2014Copper\u2014\nsSteady; electrolytic, spot and nearby,\nI3c: later, lie to lSUc\nTin\u2014Easy; spotjond nearby, %H,Vt,\nfutures. I2S.00 to 128.12.\nIron\u2014Bteady and unchanged.\nLead\u2014St curly:  spot, $1.70 to |4.?fi.\n-Zinc\u2014Quiet;   spot.   $4.40.\nAntimony\u2014.Spot. 94.75.\nAt London\u2014Standard copper. spot,\n\u00a367 2s Id; fmures. \u00a3ti\" 10c; electrolytic, spot, \u00a3.3 10s: futures, i'7\u00bb 10s.\nTin\u2014Spot. 6 IT.W _. fid: futtire\u00bb,\n\u00a3157 7h fid.\nJjead\u2014Spot, \u00a3SI 12c Id; futures,\n\u00a323 7s 6d.\nZinc\u2014Spot. CIO; rut tires. C26 12h\nAd. ,\nChino   \t\n.. 26fi\n25 \",\n2S\u00ab4\nc. p. n\t\n\u25a0 ns*\n113*4\n113\\\nInter.   Marine   ..\n. HH\n10\n10*\nMo. Pacific com.\n. l8*-s\nISH\n18%\ndo pfd  \t\n\u25a0 A2\\\n42H\n\u00ab*\nStudebaker   \t\n\u25a0 -*>\\\n7'M,\n74*\nPlereo-Arrow   ...\n\u25a0 u\\\n13%\n14'i\nV. 8. Steel com..\n\u25a0 80H\n80 H\nS0H\n\u25a0Willys   \t\n.    B'fc\n6%\n45*.\n. AIM,\nAh\\.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nIN CUE\nConsider Securing Steamers\nfor Storage to Relieve the\nLake Elevators.\nPORT \\ITM.IAM. Ont., \\ov. B,\u2014If\nYor the noxt two weokfl grain \u00abUu,k*s*\nat the head of the laken iieeuniulule\nns tost iih they did last week the nlot*-\nagc ut Kurt Wllllum and Port Arthur\nwill bo plugged by November lfi. A\nmllilnu und u half more iiu\u00bbheln came\nhere laut week than were Snipped out\nand thin left over 30,01)0,000 Uusholfl |n\nstore.\nStretched tu the uttermoKt, nllowll)B\nfor thc sepnriHlon of h't'adox, the ole-\nvutoi'-t here cart not take more than\n\u25a0Ifi.ooo.Oim bushels, and this would be\nail taken up in leas than ihtv*.* woekN\nfrom Novemlier 1. Already there is\nHerfoiiH talk \u00ab'f sOcurlns n large Opel\nof hteamera to come here and tie up\nfor thc winter, taking on grain so as\nto relievo the elevators.\nWltb the scanty domain) fnr wheat\nfor export (he -Hltuutlou has never\nlooked no serlotis ut this season of the\nyear nt* far ns storage Is concernOp,\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nM< \"NTRISAL. Nov. d |. - Produce\nprices quiet\nCheese\u2014Klnest caylerns, UttO to\nHe.\nItut ter\u2014Choicest ereamerv. i0e to\n41c.\nEggs-Selected, -Ifie.\nPotatoes\u2014Per bag, car lota, 11.86 tn\n$1.3:..\nT\nALBERTA JOBBERS\nBritish Columbia's Counsle)\nArgues Case of Lower\nRates in Province.\nWill\nEDMONTON,    Hat.   2.-  r\nIts iinn iitiy session hero anil\nIntr. nt sevet-ul cfiBOfl of which th\nl\u00abh Coltinihln raii> nppllcm\nmust ouistiiinlliij,', tin- hout\nci>inmissl<in(-i-.s Icfl I'dimm\nllllj'   IllBllt   for   N;i!<],;Hiiiill.\nslims urn In be conducted,\nWednesday nftomoon's\nsession hinv G. n. McGeer, i\nHriligh CoIUBlllIn, oram-exn\nPIAlter, the Etlinnimin liotiri1\nii'l'ntfrvijltlve, lu Hie limn'\nlisliljlK     Mrljlsll     Ciilillillllti'\nvli-w thai' u-rotUu'tiiin In tr\nIn I'.rlt Ish - Columbia would\nthe jobbing Itilcivslii In A\nwould. In the nil. riuillve,\nnsslst eonilKliins here und\nUveal channel nf commerce\ntenllllllKi' (if Cfillimii.litics li\nimploUng\nhe lii-iir-\nlirlt-\ns the\nrailway\nilm\nhcl'ta\nnml    llrltlnh\nudjntinteil\nDttn-nl fur\nnine P. T.\nnr trades\ntif\"-cstnli-\ni point of\nlgl)t rnlog\nimt affect\nlicilit, Imt.\nmaterially\n-stal'Msli u\n,v llic In-\ntween Al-\ni.lim\nIlls.\nMAKE CHANGES IN\nMARKING CLAUSE\n1 ri'lilelil   Mnlklt\nI'onril cf trado ilm\nnm rtnlni.il   locally\nwi.nld Im in].- Atlii-\nmyth.    A  reduction   i\nh,. a.iHcrtcd; .would mu\nnn-.'in u Ktiinulnti.iii of\nliritlHh (.'olumhlit johii\nnow Hi-rved toy ]otiln rs\nManager llvmin ,.!\nCaiuters. n. V.. Ltd.,\nreduction In Brltlah (\ncould only hitv.o tin\nintf business bi-lv.-i ,\nIsh t'oliimbla.\nf   the   Viinei\niver\n\u25a0d tlun tin- fear\nii in:.-n Jobbers\nwnn nn nltsoluii.\nn fi-i-tuhi rates,\nlit uny uiuniii'r\nthe IniBlliess uf\nin    points\ni of Albert*.   y\n' the Dotnlnion\nnlso assertod u\nColumbia's tittos\n-ff.-et of Increun-\nMlx-l'ln tuidllrlt-\nidlitn\nimil-\n(nods\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2.\u2014Offering* In\nthe yard* yesterday were 1803 eattle,\n176 hoes und 0. sheep, Becelpts up to\nt a, m. today were 1700 cattle. fi00\nhoffs and 300 sheep.\nSteers\u2014Choice. |4.50 to 15.00; fair to\nRood, 13.50 to J1.-5; common, |!.!5 to\n13.50.\nButcher helfers-\u00bb-Cholce, 13 50 lo\n44.00; fair to Rood, O-50 to $3.35.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice, 32.75 to 13.00;\nfair to good. t!.2f> to 32.50; canners\n\u2022nd cutters, 11.00 to 11.50.\nBulls\u2014Good. 12.26 to (2.50: common.\n11.50 to 11.75.\nOxen\u2014Good. 33.50 to MOO; medium.\n32.7.-. to $3.26: common, $1.50 to $2.50.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice, $3.7ii to $'.00;\nfair to good, $2.76 to $3.50.\nStookor steers\u2014Choice. $2.75 to\n$3.26; fair to Rood. $2.00 to $2.50.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice, $2.50 to\n$2.75: fair to good. $2.00 to $2.25.\nCalves\u2014Choice, $8.00 to $4.60: Rood,\n$3.00 to 33.50; common. $2.00 to $2.60.\nSheep\u2014Good, $3.00 to $4.50; common, $1.50 to $2.50.\nLambs\u2014Oood, $6.00 to $8.00; common, $4.00 tn $6.00.\nHor*- Select..-. $10.50; heavies, $6.50\nto $1.60; lights, $10.50'to $10.7.',; slugs,\n$4.00 tu  $4.60.\nCHICAGO. Nov. 2.\u2014Reports that\nCanadian Interior elevators and rnll-\nronds would eoopernte In regulating\nshipments helped to rally the wheut\nmarket toduy nfter prices hail fallen\nto  tbe lowest level  since 1015.\nClosing quntntlons were unsettled nt\nH\u00bbc net decline to Ue ndvnnee, with\nDecember $1.02 tn $1.02'.. nnd Mav\n$1.07 to $1.07*.\nCorn gained !\",c to %v; outs lost \"Ac\nto He, and provisions closed unchanged to 10c off.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nOTTAWA, Xov. !,\u2014(By t':i\nPress.)\u2014Curiums regulations n\nIng tho murk ing of Imported\nwltli nn imlloitlon of the country of\norigin have own cohftlfterably chuiiRfil\nIn so for .i.s 11-n-y ponei-m piece pwfs,\ncui*|mMk (uni ollrloltis. It u*in :innotini-i>il\nnt tho dopartlhent of custom** hero W-\ndii>\\\nUnder the now rt'Kiiltitions cloth ond\nmuterlot iu lho weh or roll will bo\nrnurkiMi with no Indlcailoii of the\ncountry of origin on one end nf ench\nweh ond on tho pli-cc ticket. C&SJMta\nwill he marked hy moans of a prOtfU*\ndlnff ticket attflched to the eilce of\nenrh roll nt ihe center, aud JlnoleumH\nami oilcloths will he marked at one\nond of each roll either hy stamping.\n* ten eil In ft or udhealve  labels.\nThe former regulation called for\nmarkings woty throo yards on pleee\nRoods cu pol V of Ihmiik marked without Injury, and every five yards on\nearpete.\nYOUNG MEN \"DISAPPEAR;\nLAST   SEEN   IN   CANOE\nNEW.CUNARDER FOR\nCANADIAN SERVICE\nid la\ni.M.N'DOK,     Nov.   ^,',--<I-i)\nPinisa cable.)\u2014The Ounardi\ndeiUmod for the numdl.\nwon launched at Hepburn oh the Tyn\nTio'sduy, Lady Pvrley performtiiB tl;\nilnIvtonlns t'eivnoni,.\nThe  liner  is  ti-bi  toel   Ion-.  65  r. -\nbrood ond 43 feel,deep, and n.-* caput\nliy Is lfOOO ions and i peetl\nTin1 now boat Is ekpectod < \u2022\nfor cfiiamfsHion next spring\nhavo oQcutnmoilatlon for ,'lta\n1200 ihlrd-clOHa pasuengers.\ncluttiH'H are provld.d for.    It\nnl! as fuel und sumo of Iht- in\nure n vernnduh cafe and n\nplayroom fur tho children.\nHlr Tlmmnfl Boydeti, lu-eslillm;\n.....   iiimtit   ,.*..\nluncheon', iftld '.the\ntun a regular amir\nA mla\ni knot*.\ni\u00bb- ready\nit Will\nil'in and\n!Co other\n-viii burn\ninatlog^s\nspailoufl\na\nUsed Articles\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\nmmmmm\nClassified^^vertising &rfes\nWant nuti OlaBBlfiofl Advortliliiff\u2014\nOne and a hnlf conts pcr word per In-\nsartlon, Six \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0nm per word per week,\nor :::''' n p>er word per month, caBh In\nadvanco. If charged i',-\u2022.\u2022 a word\nstraight. Tramdont ads eccentfld only\noo a \u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0 h in 'i-iv'tiif-i tiusiH. Kuoh Initial, figure, dollar elgn. eto., counts aa\none word. Minimum 26c. If charged\nOve. DlHplny type rioublv \u00abbove rates.\n\u00a3ocal ZtaA-ainff Notices\u2014 Jc' per word\neach in. mi.-ii. In block faco or machine capitala m per word. Black face\ncapitala _c a word. 25 por cont discount If run dady without chango of\ncopy for ono month or moro. Where\n\u25a0 \u25a0'i\\ -n ,\u25a0\u25a0< ',n,-ni is sot out In short lines\ntho chargo Is r:>*. .\u2022 a line for Roman\n(**-\u25a0\u25a0\"*, lEc for black face, nnd 20o for\nblack faco capllals. Minimum SCo, If\ncharged  Gflo.\n10   Male Help Wanted\nWANTED \u25a0 1-:xiii-i-I.-ih-.-iI illHliwimhi.r.\n..'nitily   Tltn  Orlll. (1111)\n\u2022tVA.NTl-:!l\"i;rlKlit boy lo iimk.- Iilnmi-ir\nffonornlly iiM-ftil anil to ntutly tln>\nrttlinti-iil Iti^tninii'iit linsini-hs. HtRlt\nM-lioiil  pt:n!ii:it,.  |it-,-riTt-,nl.    l-IXPi'llrnt\ntiro!,! tn.      Writ,.    Hox    B0B0,    Dally\nNVWH.  (IJOtiO)\n|il-:SK room Tne in office for wlntfip.\n.hint mt  111.Inr Kt.    Apply  Box   H4,\nSo\nH'.llll.'.,\n11 Female Help Wanted\nWANTKD     Wniill\nimlly\n>   rliargp   of\nof  four   in\na    DtC.    Hox\ni \u25a0\u25a0'\"II I\ninraii;.  hoped tu\nC.'in-iila.\nRlmi\nSalon\nat    I I\nPnlrvli\nMRt    will,\nI,     Apply\nw. r.s.M.i.\nturns)\nFor Rent\nroit   m-jNT-\npaitlv turn!\nii-roi-d   l'i in\n-Rnug    r.:\\ke\u00ablde    e\nihod,    111 a to.oith.\nCompany) Neuo'n,\nituure,\nHuth-\nA Ki:\\v\n.n, c,\nKoit i:\n- in. i\nBARhRR snor\nHotel.\no   rooiow   for   iiii>n  at   Y.\nmv   yaant \\t.i\u00bb_.\nSlx-toonifd    Iiouho,    cloan\nun. tco&t)  (Forma.\n23    Property for Sale\nGOOD   FARMS.\nIt. 337\u201420 aoros, about ?\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022 miles\nfrom town: good hind; 1% aeres\nri'MM'i: ahack; on wngon road.\n> i \u25a0\u25a0 nui.iiii.   Termx.\nIt. -12-1\u2014il ocrctt, j.iH.-i; some floe\ntimber; close to school and railway;\n3 \u25a0acres olearud; cabin; \"J22CO.0O.\nTorma.\nII. 43!l\u20148fi acres, In good valloy;\n30 acroa bottom land; good tlmbi-r;\na   cheap  buy;   $1200.     Terms.\nR, !!\u00bb<!\u201410 arrea; Improved fruit\nranch, 10^ acrna. cleared; 425 fruit\nirt'os,   cum men clnrtf   to   boar;   small\ni ; ml:.;     (WO    fllin    <\u25a0!'<\u25a0.\u25a0!\u25a0;:\u25a0;    QUO    SIOllll\nframe house: nice lovol land, no\nwiiHte; boou, uttrac<ivu and convenient   place;   SflOtio.OO,  on   terms.\nIt. 4'l$\u2014__-y_ urn ; Improved\nranch; Ti OOCM cleared and 2f\u00bb acres\npartly: about 2fi fruit trees 10 years\nold; variety of small fruits; well;\n3-roomed Iiouse; barn; !> other? out-\nhulldltiffa; $4350.00,-half cash.\nPRBB PRICK L18T\u201470 selected\nrancbea listed In thla smnll book, all\nkinds; prices from $700 to $!i0.00t.\n1 have tho largest list In tho Interior of Hrltlsh Columbia for you to\nonoOHO from. Call or - write for a\ncopy.\nHCOH W. ROBKRTBOM,\n\"The   Land 'Mnn.\"\nWard   St.,   neur   tho   Hume   Ifntol.\nrhone    08. (0100)\n22       Miscellaneous\n$600\nand water\n$2200\nRoscmonl,  3  roomeil shnolt\non lot r.Ox250, oloetrlcNlRht\nCosh. \u2022\nCarbonate street, a nlco-\nly situated 5 roomed httn-\n-faldw. Rood chicken house nnd wood\nshed, on 2 lots, with ti plea lawn lu\nfront.    Terms,-\n$4500\nStanley street. This is a\nmoat deal rn hie propprty,\nconsisting of n woll built 7 roomed\nhouse, stono foundation. In flr.it class\norder and stamls on 1 aero of ground\nadjacent to the city. There nre 04\ngood fruit bearing trees nnd a largo\nnumber of small fruits, good outside\nbuildings and thn ground Is all fenced:    electric   lights   und   city   water.\nto r. nt.\n2,\u2014Cuttle receipts.\nSi-aily prices;\nTORONTO, Nov.\n3812; prices steady\nCalf    receipts.    114\ntop, 13c.\nSheep receipts, 2K7.   L-nmbs Moody\ni \u00abnu- selected lumbs oold ut 10c.\nHog; receipts, 2110. Market declined\nslightly, closing at 9c, fed and watered.\nMONTREAL UST\nMONTR|Ul.. Nov. 2.\u2014A Mttr ton\"!\nv,-nn diRplaycd on thc local Rtock ox-\nchango today. Thr most Important\nadvance waft in Hill, r, -t Collieries,\nwhich Bold up 5 points to CO, where It\nwait lost January.\nAtlantic Sugar trading accounted for\nni-arlv Im If tho total ttMii- n i UiiiH and\nthe lnmi'1 made a tuna)] advance of %\nto 38ft. The piiiH-r;. fthowed early\nutrengtli, hut lost part of their Rttlna\nduring the later trading.\nPromlni-nt advances took In Lake of\nther-*Woods with a gain of 3 points\nto MS. One point gains were noted\nIn Detroit I'nlted, Dominion Textile\n, and Ogilvie, Breweries advanced %\nto r.r.:i-\nJLossee took In Steamships preferred,\ndown \\i at WA, and Montreal Power\nmade a similar decline to S3'. Bell\nTelephone sold **. down at 104.\nIn the hanks Commerce and Royal\nadvanced a point to lg? and 2011. respectively. Toronto also added n point\nadvancing to 189.\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN   QUOTATIONS.\nOpen.   High.   Low.   Close,\nWheat \u2014\nNov.   \t\nDee.   \t\n(Max   \t\nOMs-\nNov-.   \t\nDec\t\nSlay   \t\nBarley\u2014\nNov\t\nDec.   \t\nMay   \t\nFlax\u2014\nNov\t\nDee\t\nRye\u2014\nNov\t\nDec.   \t\nMay   \t\n.106%\n.10t\n(109\n. \u00bb*}%\n\u25a0 iVe.\n.  4014\n. M\n. 66\n.170\nH',1'\nN\ntill\n106*\n101%\n109\n103 \u2022%\n100%\n106 V4\n104 %\n102 V.\n108 Vt\n\u25a0l-l-K\n40 %\nHi\n17\n40\n3\u00bbV4\n37 M\n40?,\n56 H\n66K\n69\n56 S\n5614\n6414\n68H\n\\_m\nItiV,\n1\u00ab7\n1\u00ab5\n160\n168-\u00bbi\nMI4\nT8\n77\n76\n7714\n7\u00bb\n80\nEGG MARKET\nOTTAWA, Nov. ^.-t-Reoe^fU* of eggs\nat first rooelvlng points orr \\l$ht ifnd\ncountry ahJpjwre suite that more thun\ni\u00bb0 per cent m those arriving are stale\nntock. The. mnrket Is firmer for npe-\ncfaln und extras.\nMontreal fltw; jobbing spsclais, 6__\nto 70c;  extras, $9*!', \/Irsts, G(kt,\nEdmonton advancing under Itght receipts; retail price It up to lUtx\nBritish Columbia, fresh, 62c country\npoints;   tic offered for specials;  sp\ndels jobbing 68c.\nChicago current firsts, 60c to 68e\nNew York, current receipt* extra\nfirst*, Ho ta ftc; Xlrats, m _H Hfc\nMINNEAPOLIS.  Nor. 2,-\nchanged to 30c lower at $7.0\nshipments, S-U.30& barrels.\nHnm -ji:'.;..i.\nWhoat\u2014No.    1    northern.\n$1.2-IS.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 yellow, 39c.\nOats\u2014Nn. 3 white, 2Ge to\nKliix\u2014 No. 1, $1.69 to $1,75,\nFlour un-\n_ to $7.3.*.;\n$1,114\nTORONTO BOARD\nTORONTO, Nov. 2.\u2014Victory bonds\nand war bonds easily dominated tho\ntrading on thc exchange todny. Government bonds were In demand all day\nand advances were made ranging from\n10 points in the cose of 1937 war bonds\nto 30 points ln the 1934 Vk-tocy.\nAnother development of the day wna\nthe firmness In a number of the power\nstocks.    Abltlbl. Spanish  River, Rlor\ndon ond Wayagamack were on the net\nIve list.\nSteamships \u25a0preferred eased off\nslightly.\nImperial oil. fnr which new fInane\nlng wus also announced, eased off to\n94 bid.\nIxisec* were made hy Toronto Rull-\nway, Maple i.--*u'. Ontario Steel Product*. Canada Cement nnd P. N. Burt.\nBonk  stocks  were generally strong.\nSUGGESTS INQUIRY\nINTO MEAT PRICES\nWINNIPEG,* Xov. ?.\u2014the appointment of a provlnelul government commission lo investigate the spread In\nmeat prices, between prices paid pro-\ndt.ccrs and the price charged In the\nretail stores of tbe cRy, was suggested\nto Hon. George H. Malcolm, minister\nof agriculture for Manitoba, todav. It\nwa* pointed out that while the live-\nweight price hnd decreased considerably there hud been very slight decrease In retail prices of meat and that\nmany formers claim they cnn not raise\ncattle and hog* at a reasonable profit\nbased on present pricea.\nThe provincial government would be\npowerless to take net Ion to fix tho\nprice of meat, hut lt could Appoint a\ncommission which could find whether\nor not exorbitant pricea were being\ncharged after the atoek left the farmer*.\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 1\u2014Two yoimg\nmen have disappeared Irom Eagle\nHarbor, according to word reaching\nthe provincial police here today, Th\nare Clinton Dunn. 20 yifiirs old. v<>n\nof Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Dunn, 2121\nPrincess street, and Ted Ollllnghom\nof Victoria. They were Inst seen on\nThursday morning at 7:3\" O'clock setting out In no lS-foot AUtOc for I'nul-\nfleld*.\n\u25a0.vthovon'a- rather\nnobOS on the pin\n\\cara old.\nmde  h\nhrfun\nI\"\nApply  Hupio\n< \u00abW7)\nSmoke\nT&B\niTOULOUSn Qeejo and Handera frnm\nvery Knot! layltlK wtmlti: mother Boone\nlaid llilrly-rlvo enff\u00bb Hits year. Is\neaelt.    .Mrn. Doaenuerstr, l'roetor.\n (HOIO)\n18 Miscellaneous for Sale\nlll'lllllll-ISIIS\no i-o'it it:\nwill .-.11 t'.i\nReplaced lo\nKi.tiit.i; ma\nCranbrook,\nailillny, uuu-ltiti* iiuiiili.-i-\nim ItiHttreit for ILTiO.im\n-:\"'i\"n Including stand.\nl-l.I lullilll      \u25a0 !   . -1, ,. -   UOOll-\ntllM, AUdr.au Hox lit,\n- i'. illllll\n. \u2022Ati, \u2022'\nIf ym* rnnmlt* plar--. 1\ntry T A B big plug\niron sai.i:\ni-ntlilltloli.\nIH  HUNT-- rianii\nMra.   l.ttela   .-int;\nKIM-IT\nrilKE!\nGERMAN LINE RESUMES.\nBHEMEN, Xov. J.\u2014The North German i.ln-.-.i Steamship eompany announces the reiipenltiK of dlreet communications With thc rolled .Stales In\n.lumifiry.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nChristmas Cards\nIn  good\nVictoria\ni.W.'i\nReady   to   trantnjjknt\ni     ......     num  i>   nursi-ry   row   of   rlral\ni    cIiins. w.-ii rooted stock; ti varleues\nj     Of    npploH,     II.2S    and     SI.SO    eacb.\n!     These   iiii-iud.-   DtliciouB,   OravsnitslQ,\nj     Alho   |tears   and   other   fruits.   Rutherford   Drug Oo.,   Nolaon,   it.  <:.\n ttlj.)\nIONK new cabinet fflngcr S.-vvhu: m*ch-\n\u25a0 ine: 0111 oiano light, with ciectrlc at-\n| tnchmont; elahi .. ...i brtss elsotrlc\nyffnta  with  globes complete t-ultnbte\na. t. McMillan\nFOR\nReal   Eitate\nHOUSE    LISTINGS   WANTED\n..   8ALE  OR  RENTAL\n624 Baker Street Phone 601\nAgent   for   Farm   and   Home  Journal,\nSubscription, $2.00 Yearly.\n(0142)\n20   Livestock for Ade\nTOR   MUff-tMnd   Vorltdhlrc   plg\u00bb   $6'\n\u2022 ach,   ready   to  ship  November 7^  J.\n1 losenberger.  Proctor. (nffi\nKolt j-tAIJ-:\u2014Hny horse, healthy. \u2022 .nil.\neasy kept, tfood in every way. clever\ny\u00bbiirn  old, over   1500   lhs.   $100.   curHh.\n\" 'in- mi each light drivtnir, democrat\nand heavy work harn,-\u00bba. ntrlng bolls.\npair, scotch hams top*, buggy, eut-\nt<r. --Irhtha, and heavy farm wagon.\nAll la at mil condition, $200. Apply\nJ-ctdtr Mclnnls, Canyon City, R p.\n(6137)\ni I-'tiR SALIC-Cbeap two horses one h\ndr.'d    doUgM,\nfor\nS'llHlOII* ,\nCan be\nf, S11...1\nBeautifully   Engraved\nPersonal Greeting Cards\nPrinted with yonr name and\naddress.    Scores to choose\nIrom. .\nPrices from $2.75 a dozen up\n[\nDelivery Day After You Give Order.\n]\nThe Daily News\nbaker street\nQaolify Printers    '   N,L80N: B; \u00ab\u25a0\ntheatre,\nsnsn tiny unit. :it f.n vitMorlti Btreet.\n  (MM)\n'i'i: sai.i-;. so-ao wtneheater SShTstp;\nfire*\u2014\u2122 -^^^Inch.wiler tiiiiKnitliic rlt'li-\n\u00bbl.',.H0. First i.|ura ruiiiilllnn. Ilaw-\nstm. II. ll. X... I  Willow  r\u201emt  (C0K)\nniil    with\nlllail.-.   II.\n- ..un-\n.   elBhl   nml    i, n    yrnrs\nhiiritens.      T.    : i ..u- I\t\n\u00a3_ . (\u00abHi)\nCll.-ht^X\nThe   Sugar\n}1!ix-|\u00b0!tl|.'s lor hns nl\nIltiwl. tin. stun, ttmt Is\npopularity, tr-.   us witli   your .\\'ov\nbar Htili-i-.   \"\nl'i KB iiiiuu CheateA Whin- sews.\n1'uri.liniil Onetier white sows soven\ntnoiilliH. fttti l\u201e. n-Klsli-roil. A. De-\nv.-rson.   friiwfunl   Itny,   tt,   tv   tC0S3)\nYtil'.Ntl I'tilV-Kor sale, four yrars old,\nHltrtutil fri-slii-ti Itt .Mim-h, now i:l\\ inr\niiliottl futtr iiti.uis (tally.    Kasy-ntllk.\nhii,\"\"!! iV\"':**     \"\"       ' '\nc,\nnt\nf our tirU-t-s: Cltuice\ninii-iy Itttltrr 1,1.-., Fnvth Kkkh\n(\u2022I.-IIIH i.r Wheal \u00abr llnlli-it tints\nBlue 1111,1.11,, T.-.-i H*,,.., Swlffs\nMess Ilini.. :i;,i-, Itnynl t'ruwit or\nIIrIii Me.. Situlrri-i ivanut Itut-\nntti-.    l'hone nn for prompt  fi-\n'______ '  (COM) I\nBALE\u2014Two\n\u25a0iff.\n(60H0)\nKrtttle  holsteln  halt.\nIn   Noviiinhi-r   IC5.00\nTOM.    BALE\u2014Two    coal    htat.rfl,    o\nprsctlcallj    n.w.      -Coot.nay    St.am\nLsnnllry. (60W)\n\u25a0IIINQLES\u2014Bur thlB aow Irom Nakusp Shingle Mill, Boa 1, Nakusp.\n1* ' (Cttsii)\nK'llt  PAI.K\u2014Two\ners,   fn-s)tenlng\na   pleoe.    Ilnl.teln   bull   !1   monlhs\nOld,  IU.-i.no,    A   It.,111.  Crawford  Boy;\n.-\"\u2022-c_ . . ;        teoc-l)\n\u2022\u2022'('It HAI.K\u2014One horso fivo years old,\nisee lhs.   l'rlce 1150.00.   M. \"\nNWralMt   H.  \"\nWANTED\u2014Coal   Black  kitten.    App\nHtunUiy's   News   Depot. _t\\t\nWANTED\u2014During Xmns weok tl\nl'liinltilii-il rooms, bed In each ore\ntension .couch Itt one would .:i\nRooma must oommunlcate. Api\nBox   6063   Dally   News.        __t\u00bbB\n17    Howes Wanted\nFURNISHED HOUSE or cottal\nwanted nt once for winter month\n\u25a0 ii' permanent. Close tn. l'hone &16\nor address .'l-'nnii In .1' Uell. Dol. Nt\nMB^ \/ ||{J\n_\n54\nArticles Wanted    I\nWANTED\u2014Coah register. Bote II\nTrail, B;_C.  (\u00abM\nWANTED\u2014Ton**to~l0 tens of-20-podi\nmils.    Hot  i',lu:l.  Dally New\u00bb.(010\n18    Room and Board\nROOM  nntl   Ronrd   All.   Victoria  St.\n(611\nBusiness   and   Profession*\nDirectory\n.    OUI\nOppo.lt. Mesgb.rt Mon\nDrop in and try the best home cool\ned  meal   In   the  city   prepared  by a\nwhin- hate. (6101\nCarpenter and Joiner\nT. A. LAWSOK, AU Clns.ee of WaH\nFnctory, 100 Hull Ht. Lumntno pawl\n     M\nGunsmith\n> _*rs_na. i,\nm. \u00bb.  B3TTO.\nRepairer uf .Cyclos, I'lionographdPgn\nfine tnaohlncry. \u25a0t?^'\nLodges\nNELSON   LODOE  No.   t,  B.  P. O.  I\nMeets I in'.j linker St., first and thlr\nThursday, (tltH\nBoots & Shoes\nlee xaa ft co.\nBoots and  shoes  Made to Order. Ba\npairing.    Uli   FRONT  ST. IIIU\nAccountants\n-wmM\nchaju.es t. iAhth*,\n;*ii. \u2022 -\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0  rn    to    Iln-    lui.'\nJntnrw   11.   Lawrcnco.\n191 Nt'lson.  B..C\nrr__\n__t\nFlorists\nORIZZEIXE S   QREENHOU8B,   Nelsot\nCut   fluwi-r.-i   and   floral   dssli\n!\u25a0'f6n.,\n\u2022 1071\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Boa A110I, Nek\nson, B. C. .standard westorn Charles\n \"elOt:\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD ft CO. WHOUDCAUI\nRrooers nnd Provision Merchant*\nImporters of Teas, Coffees, Splooa\nDried Fruits. Staple and Fsnoy OOft\ncerles.   Nelson.   6.   C. (11101\n  \u25a0 IB-.\nV-.^ts. tutasmr\nArchitects\nSt.   im   BEAD,   IC   B.\nAKCHITECT.\nBay  Ae.nn.. , Trail,\nO. a. A.\n<%,!_\nP. Kav!\nlenii-j)\nDo You Want to\nSell Your\nRanch?\nIf so, tell the prospective\nbuyers about it in these\ncolumns. This is where\nbuyers look for offerings\nof properly for sale.\nFOR HAI.E \u2014 Three registered Ohio\nChester White Hrood sows, lit each\nFourteen youngsters, eight weeks old\n16.60 each, one young sow pure\nbred, eight months oldT 116 P. O.\nH. Edgewood, B. E. Church, Edgewood.\n1  (6031)\nPOR SALE\u2014Smull  pony.  mare,  saddle\nor   (tacking   IJDi   or   will   trade   on\n\u2022\u2022PrlnK rig. >4 or K Inch Iron piping,\nlivestock. W. Battonsby, Mirror l.:ili.-,\n(601S)\nI38 Farm and Dairy Produce\nPoll BALE   \u2014   liufte .\ndressed   mutton,   beef,\nfor  prices direct  from\nVlliin, Aim.\nfor prices i\nil.il.ll- ii. li.\n\u25a0ggs. poultry,\npork. Wrlle\nproducer. I,,\n tliO'Jl)\n14 Furnished Rooms to Rent\nRt'l'MS  10 rent.\nil'.'l  Mill street.   (00H1\nSUITE\u2014Campbell's  Hindi,,,\n89    Lost and Found\nLOST   \u2014   (1 recti   Jade\nward.    l'hone 101112.\npin.      Re.\n(6111)\nPOUND\u2014 Purso with small amount of\nmoney! between Nelson and Thrums\nOwner cnn hnve same by writing Ed.\nPnul, Rosslnnd. nnd giving doserlp-\nllon.  (1081)\nLOST\u2014A yellow oolllo pup, S months\nold. Relurtt tn 021 Carbonate, or\nphono   I60Y.     Howard. (6072)\nEngineers\nGteei.Bw\u00ab.i\u00abttr<\/eg^.\n\u2122_ \u2022    tmmom.m. c.\nCIVIL     AWD     MurtHO     HUmOl\n\u00bb.  0\u201e  Alb.ru  aad  DoaUalm^\nLA\u00abD   \u00abU\u00bbTlrOBB^\nCrown Grant Agents.        Blue Printing\n <\u00bblfil\nA.   L.   MeOOLLOCH\n__ Hydranllo   -\nprovincial\nBaker St.\nAuctioneers\nM\n_____    tr.  nmn\nr,\u201e\u201e*?1Bct,'i*1,*r' ,*W\u00ab\u00ab~\u00bb, Valoataji\nCeods   .old   privately   or   at   Auotlog\nn> Ward Street. Phon\u2122 H\n\u25a0 mm\nFuneral Directors\nD. J. ROBERT80N, P. D. D.\nVictoria   Htre.t   Phono\nl'hone   ir.^J.\n.ti.^tS.\n<ino\nSTANDARD FURNITMr\nCOMPANY\nC.   J.   Carlson,   Undertaker.   Under-\ntakers   and    Embalmera   and   Punwal\n1J!JC \"f* e^i' \"*\"*\u2022\u25a0' \u00bb\u00bb\u2022*\" moat \"P-8.\ndate undertaking par or* and ohapel l\u00bb\nwomen   and   children.   Day   Phone   li;\nNight   phone  262   and   \u00ab|!' (Ill\"\/\nBy George HcHmm\n-\"V-.7STHC MftTTERV\n\u2022\u00abU LOOK.' V\u00ab),E\u00bb10UiH\ntO t*_ a\\ MA^Kirrj M,\nI OlO AHbrHO?,\nMOTHER MCEPTEO\nNE.-\nJL\n tM7\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 3, 1921,\nfir\nNews of Sport\n116 SEASON\nlockey Talk in the Air; Toronto Practice Season Begins Tomorrow.\nTORONTO, Nov. 2.\u2014With the local\nkutltiR* aeason In full awing hockey\nIlk Is tn the air and tho Toronto so-\nlor teams have made arrangements\nrlth the arena management whereby\nhe practice eeason will bo ushered In\ntext Friday. This Is tho earliest start\nhat any teams ln eastern Canada ever\nad and It means that thc Queen City\niltiyerH will be In mldseaaon form long\nbefore the Ontario Hockey association\nnee commences.\nThe    Sportsmen's I'utrlotlc nssocla-\nIon games will be played In November\nInd It Is possible that several of tlie\n)cul teams will play somo of the O. H.\nfr. gnmes bofore Christmas.\n\u2022ootballIquabble\nsettlement in view\nSASKATOON. Nov. 2.\u2014A settle-\nnent of the squabble In the s. R. jj\\\nI appears ln sight. President Itish-\nip was notified over the  long dta-\n\u00bbnce telephone tonight thnt the Re-\nna team wished to hold a meeting\nif the union ln Sr.ttkatoon tomorrow\nlight. If the club's decision reach-\nd here last night Is nnal, Reglna wir,\nHay here Friday or forfeit the game\naid   -Mr.   Bishop.\nREGINA, N\u00abv. 2.\u2014President Blah-\ntp'a decision to call a meeting to-\nnorrow night In Saskatoon, If he\nvas requested to do so by two clubs\n:i the association, was received with\nAy here tonight and the Reglna and\nloat club teams Immediately sent\nvires to him asking him to do so.\nrhe question of tho protested gamo\nIff last Saturday will be decided nt\nhe meet tomorrow when tho whole\nexecutive   will   be  representor!.\n\u2022 To Consider Protest\nSASKATOON, Nov. 2.\u2014President\nBishop stated that tho protest would\nlot be dealt with at the meeting\nierc tomorrow. The meeting is call-\nMi on the request of thc two clubs\nto consider the protect, he said.\n1EVEN HARRIERS\nMAKE TRIAL RUN\nKleven long distance runners of the\nnewly  formed   Y.   M.  C.   A.   harriers\n[club,   took    their   Initial    run    last\nitiKlit out aa lar as thc second bridge\nIon   the   Oronlte   rond   and   return.\nI Among  the  atrtng   was  A.   Wnlliicli.\nT{W.   M.   Skilling,   C.   Crydorman.   J.\nNotman, E. Murphy, V. Johnson. (J.\nUorrls,   Ian   McDonald.\nThe runnero left tho \"Y\" building\n' it. 1:16 o'clock with J. Notman pac-\nn(. The flrat man In ngaln nrrlved\n\"lit 1:01 o'olock. A brisk massage and\np. shower put them all Into excellent\niplriis, vowing they would bo on\nliand for tho next run which Is to\nI to tho shipyards at Falrview.\n.vii i-u'i-s shaped last night were that\nim one must get ahead of the pacer,\nhnd no attempt at racing Is to bo\nade.\t\nSUCH IS GOLF\nBv Wood Cowan\nREVELSTOKE BOWLERS   I\nDRAW FIRST BLOOD\nKelson Y. M. C. A. bowlors wore\nlicked to a -fraulc by Revelstoke\nin the telegraphic test match with\nwhich tho two clubs opened Intercity bowling matches Tuesday. Rov-\n.elstoke's score, received hore yesterday, gives Revelstoke tho victory by\n368 ,p|llB,\nThe scoros wero:\nFirst Second Third Totnl\nRovelstoko    .1B}1     I.n ill     1','ii'l     1948\nNo'\/ion   u.tir,   1648   mn   leao\nHOCKEY FRANCHISE\nAGAIN ON MARKET\nMONTROAL, Nov. 2.\u2014The franchise\nnf the Canadian elub, In the National\nHockey league, Ih again un the market.\nThis afternoon Thomas J. Dtiggnn,\nwhu has previously hecn reported us\nhaving ncqulrcd ll from thu estate of\nthe late George Kennedy, ereator of\nthe cluh, announced he had made an\noffer which had not been accepted und\nhe had accordingly withdrawn It.\nI.- * - \u2022 umiui,-.ii,i and .ii>.' Calarrlnlcli. '\nboth noted French -Canadian sportsmen, are bidding for the franchise\nagulnsL Lniggnn and ure said to bi>\nwilling tu put up more than thc $10,000\nhe offered.\nuounced that the Canadlon Hockey\nclub franchise was sold today to Joe\nCattarlnlch and Lee Dandurand, both\nwell known local sporting mon. This\nfollows tho announcement that T\"m\nl\"u-,\",;iii president or the Mount Royal\narena, had broken off negotiations\nwith tho estate of the lute Oeorge\nKennedy'** sporting Interests. Thu\nprice to be paid was nut disclosed.\nNEED QUALITY 10\nmtKNXAN  OKTB   DI-XISION\nSale Arranged.\nMONTItKAU    Nov,    J.\u2014It\nl'KOVIDEXCti, It. I.. Nov. M.\u2014Bill\nll\/enniin, New York was given the\ndfcilion over Dan Dowd. of Boston,\nIn a 12-round heavyweight fight at\nMiinevllle tonight.\nTel Marshall, of I'nwtucltet, knocked out .llm Iver.', of the same eity.\nIn the flCth round of their scheduled\n12-round bout for the light heavy-\nwe ght Championship uf Utuide li*\n'end.\nMACDONALD'S\nCut Brier\nMORE TOBACCO FOR THE MONEY\nAUTOMOBILE HOCKEY TUBE\nElectric welding gives utmott atrength. Slies 10 to 11*\/,   $6.00 \u201e\nA Dozen Models. Sixes and Prices to Suit Everybody\nTolmie Urges Closer Coop\neration to Put Hog Indus-\ntry on Sound Basis.\nOTTAWA. Nov. 2.\u2014(By Canadian\nlYess.)\u2014The need for a belter understanding all around and closer cooperation If the hog Indus try In Canada\nwas lo he put on a good, sound Im**-*!**-*\nwas Impressed by Hon. Dr. 8, F. Toi\nm!e, minister uf agriculture. l\u00ab a rep-\nresental.ve (lathering uf Canadian pro*\n(hirers and packers, who were the\nguests of the live-stock branch of the\ndepartment uf agriculture at a dinner\nhen- this evening. Referring to lh\u00bb\nestablishment ot a standard of grades\nfur hoRii. a question upon which the\nproducers and packers unnnlmoush\ninrrecd at a Joint conference In the\nafternoon, Dr. Tolmle stated that quality was an essential If Canada hoped\nto corn pete with other countries In the\nworld markets.\nHun. Oeorge Hoadley, minister of\nagriculture in the Alberta government.\ntold thc gathering he thought the decision regarding the grading of hogs\nwas a most Important one. Thu question uf ((tiallty wuh paramount. Quality from Canada In every one of her\nproducts would cii'tlile her to conquer\nthfl markets of tin- world.\nDr. J. Orlswald. deputy minister of\n\u25a0im* uli in \u25a0-. presided at the dinner,\nwhich was attended hy leading hug\nproducers and packers, representatives of sevtrul of thu provincial departments of agriculture and officials\nof thu federal department of agriculture.\nVisits Smithfield Market.\nRecalling his trip to England some\nmonths ago. Dr. Tolmle told ot visit*\nlug the Hmllhfleld market nnd comparing the various bacons of Europe\nlie noted tho freshncM of thc bacons,\nwhich he attributed to the proximity\nof the countries tu England, llu had\nreturned to Canada with a feeling that\nthl* country coiiltl orfltf iioopeu* .^Ul\nEuropean eountries by placing on thi\nmnrket pork of first-class quality.\nThis brought forward the question of\nwhat should he done to secure quality\nIn this regard account must be taken\nor the great disadvantage of Interfering with legitimate business.\nThe grading of hogs was surrounded\nWilli many difficulties, but tho resolution adopted at the conference and\nany action taken with a view of placing thu hog Industry on u firm basis\nwould receive his tdrungest encouragement. \"I um prciwred to guarantee\nthat until midnight of December 81\/\nMr. Tolmle stated, amidst laughter.\nCanada Coma* First.\nMr. Hoadley dwelt on thc need for\ncnopcrntlon. The question of the\nrights of tbls ur that man, this or that\nbusiness, this or that province, he said,\nshould be a consideration aftor the\ngreatest advantuge to Canada had\nbeen considered This policy had not\nbeen followed to thc greatest extent\nIn tho past. Tho decision In favor of\nestablishing a standard for the grad*\nlng of hogs was simply pointing the\nway. Quality from Canada on every\none of her products would enable her\nto conquer the markets of the world.\nButter trom Alberta and Saskatchewan stood highest In England today\nbecause It was of guaranteed quality.\nQuality was a necessity and every-\nth.ng i-i.---.itd-' tu bring It about should\nbe done.\n\"We have been fighting for quality\nand quantity, but wu have neglected\nthe markets,\" Mr. Hoadley concluded;\n\"Wi- must fight for markets, but we\nmust keep In mind that grading Is a\nnecessity to Inaure^quality.\"\ngome San Francisco women play\ngolf carrying their babies In golf stlolc\nbags.\nThe Mexican army haa bean reduced\ntu 81,000 officers and men,\nBUCK CROUSE LASTS\nJUST FOUR ROUNDS\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2.\u2014Mlko Mc-\nTlgue, middleweight champion ot\nCiinitdit, knocked out Buck Crouse,\nof Philadelphia, In thc fourth round\nof a scheduled 10-round hout\nnt tho Mount Royiu iirena hero tonight.\nAftor Ihe hout, MoTlgue announced\ntluit ho would he willing to fight\nJohnny Wilson, Mike Gibbons, Mlko\nO'Dowd or Jeff Smith for a side bet\nof t 10.000. the proceeds of the bout,\niipnrt from the hots, to go to a\ncharitable  Institution.\nTOMMY GIBBONS SIGNS\nTO BOX SOLDIER JONES\nWINDSOR. Ont. Nov. 2.\u2014Tommy\nOlbbons has been signed lo box Soldier Jones of Toronto 10 rounds to a\ndecision ut thc urmorlea here Novem\nber 10.\nTILDEN   RESTS  ON   LAUREL8.\nPHILADELPHIA, Nov. 2.\u2014William\nT. Tllth-n 2nd, United Stales tennis\nchampion, said here today he tlld not\nexpect to go to England next year to\npiny In lhe Rritish championships,\nwhich he has won twice.\n\u2022 \"Much as l would like lo try for the\ntitle at Wimbledon again,\" TIHen said,\n\"I feel. In view of the strenuous season In prospect here, thc risk would be\ntoo great.\"\naa\nEnglish Hochey Women\nContinue Winning Form\nCAMBRIDGE. Mass., Nov. 2.\u2014The\nEnglish women's hockey teum ndded\nanother win to their unbroken string\nof victories on their tour of this country by defeating the Sargent School\nof Physical Education here today, 11\nto 1.\nKing Professci to See Grave\nScandal in Shell Shipments\nFrom England.\nSARNIA, Onl., Nov. 2.\u2014Ono of lhe\nSreulcst scandals in thc history of\nCanada was lu the process of being\nunearthed In conntctlon w!t*p ammunition now arriving from England\nsaid Hon. Muckeniic IClng here tonight. Crowded audiences listened to\nMr. King In bolll lhe Imperial the\niter and the cily bull. Fred F. Par\ndec. Liberal cnntllditte for West\nUimbtoil. and James Murdock. 8\"Uth\nToronto nominee, also uddrootcd both\nmeetings.\n0,1 no platform toduy. wild Mr.\nKing, was free trade being ndvneatcd.\nThe prime minister, In asserting that\nIhls wits an. Issue, was deliberately\ndeluding the popple Mr Mclulieii\nivould not come before lhe people on\nhis record liooinlso he was nsli-itued\nf It, His remaining ul the head of\nuffnirs lu Canada for the past 16\nmonth* wns as autocratic tin usunm-\ntlon nf power a\" the gctlon of Lsnlnv\nand TrotSky lu Russia. Senators\nnd Judges eiintlnuod In he appoint -\ned bv Mr. Meighen. Who WM thus de-\ntiling the trend of legislation ami\nIta administration lor many years to\nomc. In declining tn give parliament details of public monies expended In connection with tho National railways Mr. King asserted\nhat lh<- government was responsible\nfor a system particularly calculated\nto lend to waste, extravagance, grafl\nand  theft.\nAssociates   With    Elector,.\nReferring to ihe qiMgUon of ammunition, which hus recently boen\narriving from England, Mr. King snld\nthe truth seemed to be coming out\nlittle by little. Mr. King Intimated\nthat Ihere was something vastly suspicious about lhe arrival Ol muni\nHon wiilch he believed to he newly\nmanufactured lost nl the time of an\n\u2022lection campaign.\nThere was something buck \"t ll\nill which be believed would constitute\ninu of the gravest scandals In the\nhistory of Canndn.\nMr.   Murdock   spoke  uf  prOflttortng\ni a vast scale which had come to\nhis notice In l'.H9 and lilt ns ii\nmember of lhe iHiard i>r commerce\nHe told how ht had come lo discover\nhat the -government only desired him\nto-aciieiit his 11000 a year while he\nAl iifllMlv and did nothing. He was\n\u2022\u2022xpccleil In accept their \"filthy'\niinin-v to help the government fool\nthe people of Canada. This, however,\nic declined lo do and resigned his\nposition.\nItinerary Includes Victoria.\nVancouver and New Westminster.\nOTTAWA. Nov. 3.\u2014Tho Itinerary\nof Hon, W. L. Mackenxle King's western tour was nnnounced here tonight.\nThe Liberal leader will leave Ottawa\nnfter his meeting here on Monday\nnexl. for Sudbury, whero he speaks\non Tuesday. Tho rest of tho schedule\nfollows:\nThursloy,  Nov.  20, Porl  Arthur.\nSaturday.   Nov.   12,  Saskatoon.\nMonday, Nov. 14. Edmonton.\nTuesday.   Nov.   15.   Cnlgary.\nThursday,  117.   Victoria.   B.   C.\nFridny   Nov.   16,  Vancouver.\nSaturday. Nov. 10, N\u00bbV- Westminster.\nMondny, Nov. 21, Moose Jaw,\nTuesday,  Nov. 2J. Reglna.\nA schedule of meetings. luc'Aiding\nWinnipeg and points ln northern Ontario, to he addressed by the Liberal lender on his wny back to Ottawa,\nwhero he will arrive on Sunday, Nov.\n17, will be nrrnnged and nnnounced\nInter, aa alao wltLbo the schedule of\nmeeting to he held at eastern points,\nduring the Inst week of the campaign.\nTWO-DAY\nClean-Up\nOf AU Small Quantities\nFormer prices forgotten. Read the partial list in\nyesterday's Daily News. All departments are assisting in this dean up of all oddments.\nFAMILY GROCERIES\nll Packets of Fancy Biscuits,\nassorted.   Per packet f_\\u\u00a3\n6 Only large slxo Feather Duat-\ncrs,   each    29\u00a3\n7 Only   1-lb. Tins Cowan's Co-\ncoa,   pcr   tin - -I.\nr.   Only  1-lb.   tlna  Braid's   Best\nCoffee,  pcr tin   58\u00ab>\n9 Only Bath Bricks. Bach.. 18\u00ab>\n6 Only   Jam   Barrington    Hall\nSoluble Coffee, por Jar....05<^\n8 Only   packets   Quaker   Pearl\nHominy,   per   packet 17(\u00a3\nli   Only   packets  Tllison's  Bran,\npcr packet  15<\u00a3\n10 Only   packets  Post Toasties,\nIter   packet 0<*\n11 Only  tins Oxo Cubes, pcr\ntin  Z16\n3   Packets   Buckwheat   Pancako\nFlour,   packet    *VJ_\n7 Only   tins   Grated   Pineapple,\nper tin    - _ 21\u00ab->\nJ Only Hub Blueberries, llnJJOd*\n11 Only tlna Red Salmon, per\nim   _0_\n0 Only litis FrcBh Herrings, pcr\ntin    lit**\n9 Only  tins  Oysters,  Iln. ...19<J\n1 Only  Bottles Horso Radish,\npcr bottlo 27*f>\n11   Only  Jars Wagstnff'n Pre-\nscrvea, per Jar  35<*?\n11 Only packets Chocolate Jcllo,\nIter   packet    _ \u2014 $s*\na Only packets Ice Cream Jcllo.\npcr pocket  H**.\n',* Only 4-lb. tins Raspberry and\nApple Jum. per tin 65<J\n.1 only 4-lb. tins Plum and Apple Jam. per tin  65\u00a3\n7   only   tins   Clark's   Bcafeteak\nand   Onions,   iter   tin 35\u00a3\n18 Only  tins Libby's Devilled\nMeal,  per tin   &tj\na Only Jars Sliced  Beef,  pcr\nJar  .. ZOO\n14 Only tlna Libby's Pork and\nBeans,   per tin  15-\"J\n3 Only Jars Clark's Mincemeat,\npor Jar . 45ti\n10 Tlna Separata Milk Kllm,\nper tin  48*\n27 Packets Macaroni, pcr\npackot \u2014..\u2014~- - ft*\n8 Only 1-lb. glasses Keillor's\nMnrmaladc, per glass 37d\n8 Only Jars Llbhy's Prepared\nMustnrd,    per    Jnr 21*\u00a3\n2 Only 1-gallon tins Napoleon\nOllvo Oil,  pcr tin S5.15\n3 Only   M -gallon tins Napoleon\nOllvo  Oil,       pcr tin $3.65\n7 Only tins Libby's Ripe Olives,\naa  per tin  - 35<^\n11 Bottles Pickles, Cauliflower,\npor bottle 21\u00ab>\n2 Only 1-gnllon crocks Mustnrd\nPickles, per gallon 91,25\n11  Pnckcla  Puro Gold Quick\nTaplocn,   per   packet TOc\n9 Packets  Pure Gold  Quick\nArrowroot,   per  packet.... 10*\n13 Packets Pure Hold Quick\nCustard, per packot -\u25a0\u25a0\u2022IO*\n11  Only bottles Clark's Tomato\nCataup, large size, bot..-29*\n11 Only packets Pure Gold Salad\nDressing,   pcr  packet 11*\n31   Only   tins Campbell's   Soup.\npcr  tin   - \u2014. 17*\n02  Packets Gong Soups,  per\npacket \u2014   5*\n27   Cnkes   Fairy   Soap,   pcr\ncake 8*\n5 Only  10-lb. tins Molasses, pcr\n'In    ---   85*\n7 Only bottles ot Wnfflo Syrup.\nper bottlo _ 45*\n17 Only 60c sl\u00abe packets Poultry\nSpecific,   per   packet 52*\n(It  makes 'em  lay.)\ni Tins loco Liquid Glasn, per\ntin     50*\nMore Clean Up Offerings (rom the Men's Department\nMen's   Brown  Worsted\nOnt   Only\nDongela Tweed Overcoat\nConvertible       coll.ir,        button\nthrough, belled, double stitch-\n&r:__L _ $13.50\nOne Only\nMan's Suit\n,:v;:::^. $19.50\nMen's Heavy 2-Piece Underwear.\nShli'l..   and   llrnwel'S.     Sixes   34\nand   4i     Pcr (p-|   am\ngarment \u2022!** I . \u2014 't\nMen's Heavy Cream Ribbed Combinations\nSixes 30 to 1\nThe   ault\nSuits\nStylish, durable, all sizes. Theso\nare new stock, but we have\ntoo many. i.-,\u25a0\u25a0;. Into tills mutter. Our uffer will satisfy\nyou. For 2 days,   (PQO  CA\ntn.- sun .boii.oO\nMen's English Heather\nSox\nSizes  10 tu  11',. A \\rry  strong\nund  warm  line at  an  exceptional   price.\nPcr   pair   \t\n3 Palis\nfor\t\nBoys' Grey and Brown\nBloomer Pants\nSixes 26, 27. 28. A fj\u00bb1 Off\nsnap.    Per  pair ... .\"51.00\n49c\n$1.30\nL\nI\n\u25a0jCiinlinunl From raw Ono)\nOurtiMi,   former  re-prrKi-ntulivi-*   of   Un*\nDall  jHrnnn  in the Unit*]  sunt-*,\ntoduy wuh appointed \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0lnni:- \u25a0 \u25a0\"\u25a0 \u25a0 ; of\nhi' Dail Klmmn to administer tho\niii'.i.i'- of the iJiibliu board nf Kunrd-\niftnn. The cuurdlittia roeently eon*\n1'ettMed inalilllty to eope with the ud-\niilnifdrutl-.in, owIhk to the vnted ln\u00ab\neft-HtH of off [finis nnd other** tltlM\nhe old rettlmu They uiipealed to\nhe Dull Kfrninn to appoint a rotn-\nnlsMlom-r. Kormer lTnlonUl\u00ab were\nhe  foremost   hUpporter\u00ab uf   the  \u00abur-\nLlOHTfOSSTRTS\nTl\nAppeals to House of Lords\nto Support Parliamentary\nInstitutions.\nLONDON*, Nov. 2. \u2014 (Canadian\nPrew Cable. \u2014 Winnton Rpeneer\nChurehl'l, ttecrctnry of ntnte for the\ncolonira, KpenkliiK nt the minimi\nmeeting of the Kmplre parllamctitary\naiwoelation. today nald Kngland could\nnot powlbly continue exeept In cooperation and < \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0iin.*n with thw\ngreat cotflmunUlei which had Mprung\nup   under   tho   Brltlxh   force.\n'Although for many years tho\ntitle de-pda of Kmplre will be depoii-\nItod here.\" he *Ald. \"the ItritlBh\npeople are bound, nlep by ntep, to\nattune their pollev to tbe wIrIim and\nneedr* of the overnean dominions. I\nannot doubt tbat ihe year before us\nwill un m\u2014i favorable development*\nin the unity of our far flung race.\nIt we move on that road there are\nno Untltl lo lhe peaceful proaperity\nand -security which tho Kmplre may\nenjoy. If we were trying to stand\nhy ourselves we could never meet\nthe great sister nations which speak\nour language on those terms of\nperfect  equality which ulonu can be\nthe foundation of a still higher und\nmore  lmi\u00bbortant  destiny.\"\ni:\u25a0\u2022-.\u25a0 Mim - Also Moral\nItoss Clynes. Laborite. alluding to\nth.- fact that the LJntlod Kingdom\nbraneh of thi- Empire parliamentary\nMMClatlon was support'\"! more heivrt-\nlly tn actual membenhlp by mesn-\nbi'rs  of the  house of commons  tH\u00bbn\nmeinbor* of ihe house of lu-ds. remarked that the house of lords wiih\nBritain*! most ancient uovorninn boilv.\nbui h.' would Kiv\u00ab' today the speoi-\niicle of a ljuhor npokesman uppea'ing\nto thi- house of lords to support\nparliamentary Instltniions. Mr. Olyni^t\nadded lhat the resource* of tbo BrltS\nish Kmplre were not merely econ*,\nOttilC, but mom!, uud could find ox-\npnsslon only through parliamentary   traditions.\nMINISTER'S WIFE\nTELLS SAD STORV\nTORONTO, Nov. 2.\u2014\"I knew thst\nthina* hail pot into such a stato that\n1 would have to leave or to bo carrtor\nout of the Iiouse. sick or dead.\" declared Mrs. A.la W. Walker, tcsllfylnK\nIn the nonjury asslxes as to why sho\nhail loll her liuahand. Rev, Harry\nWalker, whom flic Is suing for 120 n\nweek alimony. Asked whal was lho\ngeneral condition of affairs In tho\nhousehold, she said: .\n\"It waa Intolerable-a hell on earth.\nWalker Is a Presbyterian minister\nand she was formerly a teacher. After\nkeeping compnny fur 10 years they\nwere married May IS, 1 JIT.\nPlaintiff claims, among other things,\nthnt In their three anil a half years\nof married lite her husluuul allowed\nher only 119 for clothing, shoes, etc.,\nnnd that he allowed Inr only tv quart\nof hot water a day for bathing tho\nhaby. ,   ...\nMr. Walker denied moat uf tho\ncharges mnde hy ills wile.\nMr. .Instlrc Hits reserved judgment\nSmoke\nT&B\nFmr bit ranlls, buy\n\u2022m bt Imrgm -mw-W\u00ab'\n -I---HH\n-r-\nPJIlJIkipp\nI ymi\nTHE ARK\n^\u2014     - - - - - -\nHeraslltchcd Tea Cloths, 28x30,\n91.25. Shcphcr's Check, QQ^ yard.\nSlMnch Knit Cases, 83.50. Dress!\nPoplin, 75\u00ab* ynrd. Boys' Neck Ties,'\n40*\"**. Men's HeniHtltcliod Handker*\n' * \u25a0 also colored and fancy, 20tf\nk each. Tapestry Table Cloths,\n, Boys' all Wool Hose, 754\npnlr. Indies' Cashmoro Hose,\nto SI.50 l'n'r. iadles' Silk\nH\u25a0\"\"*'*, 38e '\" 81.25 I'-'ir- Crochet\nCotton, 10<> per ball. Heavy Flannelette, white or colored, 304 '\"\n40<^. Men's Heavy Overalls, 82.75\npair. Men's Underwear, Ladlos'\nGloves and Camisoles. Furniture,\nRugs, Stoves, etc.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhene 634 606  V.rn.n  at.\nWhy\nWith a cold in the head?\nFOSSAL BALM\nGives instant relief.\n60c PER TUBE\nCANADA DRUG AND\nBOOK CO.\nMmm tl P, 0, Box 1037\nkaU\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL  _  RITCHIE  MONUMENTAL COMPANY\n\u2022iMOMSort   to    Kootenay    Granit.\n. .       ahd Monumtntsl Co.\n\u2022*\u25a0\nANOTHER SPECIAL\nFOR  THE  MEN\nGray Flsnntlotte Shirt, detachable collar, Peck made, splendid\nWlus at  81.25\nFLEMING'S STORE\nWE CLOSE AT 6 P. M,     \\\nSt Charles Milk\nTho Old  Standby\nItarily size, \u00ab for  81.00\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 3, 1021. *\n _ \u00ab ; : : _\nTOMATOES,\nbasket\t\nCHICKEN,\n% tins\t\nONIONS,\n6 lbs. (or _\nSPINACH,\nper Ib. _\nCELERY,\nbundle \t\nfn\n.5Qic\n2&\n25c\nlOjc\nlOjc\n20c\nLliTTUCE,\nper lb. .\nCabbage, Paranipi. Boats, Tm-.\nnipt. Green Onions, Carrots.\nHubbard      Squash,      Vegetablo\nMf-iiTown,   Cauliflower.      J\nPHONE   10.\nJCOUNCIL WltL DISCUSS\nFLOOD VICTIMS RELIEF\nA apodal ini'i'ilnj', uf the city council\nhaa beon culled Tor Krhlflv evening to\nconm-Jor what tho city earTUo toward\nn*Hl\u00abtlng the hunl fur the relief of tho\nMm,,,i victim* rn <'ni|iiiiiiiin .uni Britannia, riccorOlntf to Mayor t-'. F. McHardy yomenhiy.\nSocial and Personal\n&\neadaches\nWhy vtand for cont Inutil\nhcaduehoti or spasmodical hcatf-\nachos. which cause other *i:.*-\nturbnncea?\nIt la n well known fact Hint\n00% of headaches can bo traced\nto dcfectlvo eyes.\nAn examination will reveal\nthe ttuo condition*-!. Why not\ncortio now nnd commit eye apc-\nclalttit  with   proper credentials?\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist snd Optician.\nWATCH REPAIRS\nTour    witch    repairs    promptly\nand accurately done.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\n=\nPOR    SERVICE    AND    WORKMANSHIP\nBond your shoo repairs to ths\n20TH  CENTURY SHOE\nREPAIRERS\n\u00ab0 Ward St. P. 0, Box 305\n\u25a0\"     '\nThe Farmer\nin Business\nWe carry a full lino ot Fsc-de,\nFlour, Bran, Shorts. Oats, l)ar-\nley, Corn, Chopped or Crushed,\nScratch Feed and Chic Chops,\nSalts nnd Condiments, Oxmcsl,\nMiddlings and Feed Flour, Timothy and Alfnltu Hays.\nPhons 174.\nBox No. 4B*.\nNelson and District United Fanners Cooperative\nAssociation.\nT. .Mnililrii returned lo tin-\nlltel, niutlili--, )\\st,.tila>.\nt-lty rrom\nNelson  News  of  the  Day\nC* P. R. Social Club\nDAKCE m T.M.r.r. halt, Saturday,\nN'tiv.   f>lh.   y.OO   to   18   O'Oloek.     Afltnls-\nilnn   :..c. (OHM\nwsB-raro\n.\\ innvtlicr \u00abif Hi- oiUHjutlvti cOmmUteD\ntf tin-   l''urm*\"r-l.nl\u00bbir pnrtv  tonight  ut\n;   tiVtuuk,   TntdoH-uibor  Oouucll   hnll.\n(fiir.o)\nMin. .1. T. AndrewK. Mm. M. Ml-\nDomiiIiI. MIsk 81 Hurt. MIhh FrraoHOll\nuni. Minn i\/Uurliiim will eoiitrlhutt- In\nhe inuuical nroKhitn ut thc V. M. G,\n\\. tin na Frlimy aftnrrtoon: * WWi^\n'oykliiR  for wile. M**H'J)\nDfUiee.   Nowinber   IS,   In   a III   of   thfl\n.icoutH. ICH\")\nAll Mails flab' imd funcy kouiIh nt\n-\u2022-iHonnble prices wilt he mi utile Sat-\ninhiv at the Mnplliit Indies nuIh in tln**\nXtUghla of Pythias 1*11. IM\u00ab)\nA TliniiliKClviiiK ilfaner will Ik- Inlil\nn Rt. I'niil'H eluin-h under the nun-\n\u2022Uv.  of   llie   Udlea   Aid   Nov.   !0,\nnil Hi)\n\u25a0aptur-i\u2014Tho J'orfox Qupture nppll-\nuitM* liotdK and holds comrnrtably. No\nI\".\u25a0\u25a0\u2022inti Ahull t It. Ih HfCht, iiinlsttiir\n\u25a0irnof. oomfortnhl-* nnd exact. Supplied\nmd properly fltt-ud by expert. Cnll,\nV llicuhili.'th: in, IE-Mini 4 Orlffln\nlilueli, T&Ihum,   B.  C- I 1003*1)\nATTENflON!\nAlvin E. Perkins\nIn now tn the i-lly on ti special trip\nin put lira fine stock of Hclnlxmun\n& Co. planus In nood condition.\nMr. 1-Yrkius will not mnko IiIh culls\nnow, oh IiIk ri'frulnr trip will be about\ntbrw mouths later, no atiyuno rciiulr-\niiiR export work now must phono at\nimi- tho\nHEINTZMAN COMPANY\n\u25a0UO  Baker  OtrMt. Phont  11?\nPooling tonight at ti o'elnck of all\nMipiiMi-i.-rfi     of     l-*Wiw*-M*Hbor     move-\ni.i. ni. tu rnilvu repori of convention\nthfl cduqt '\u2022xroiiUvc com mil tue, In Trade\nuni  Uuh.r hall. t\u00abI35)\nO      W.    I-    *\\.    SMOKER\nTon iir ht        Nor,       8,        for       Mem-\nban   only,  to  hear  report  at  delenU\nto Tint Arthur convention. (C073)\nMolded Into figure like Khinerbrc^il\nmen blay h; sold In Porn.\nKogro ehlldrun In Wort Africa play\nth*? old gHtne nf \"CoVh fradlc.\"\nCanadian Pacific Employees\nWill Have Right of Way\nat Social.\nl-'tniiluyi-t's uf tin- C, P. K. liQi'o have\nonu topic of roim-rsntloti.tlu'se days.\nII Is tho rullroutlns' social lo Uo lu-hl\nat tin- V. M. t.'. A. itt Ib:45 o'clock to-\nnioi'i'oiv iilKlit. An open Invitation has\nhonn oxlcntlotl lu till nillroiitli'i-s t,r tho\nr. J*. It., \"cnililoyoi-s ul nllli-tl i-oliipa,\nnlos,\" and tholr families nnd frlond\u00ab(\nlo ho Min gin-sis of tin v. M. C. A. for\nHint irlBlit.\nTho following \"ordors\" nppotlVvd on\ntlio ordor l)o,irds yoslorduy:\nKvory om- will punch In \u00bbt> 18:-15\nsluirii. liowllng crows will proceed to'\nl_ trnohs Imtnctlliitoly.\nRound house crow\u2014J. Draper. W. O.\nHull, .1. Sloilil. W. I'yiut. II. Morgun.\nUdok shot, crew\u2014H. l'roetor. J.\nAiiiiBlmW, ~. Woods. W. Uomiiln; M.\nCrothers.'\nCar shoii crow\u2014A. Wigg. O Hcos,\net. lWBtt'ii. f. A'nii.itiolfg. B. Y. Brake.\nl\\'n pusher crow\u2014A. Brown, G.,\nIJInicrllng, \\v. Wutklns. _'. Bradley,\nH. v. Riinisden. T. A Tullyn.\nCrews having Hie right ot way will\ndouble up in the final.\n19:30 o'Clock.\nLadles will handle the rolling stock\nof tho car depurtnieitt and tho loco,\ndepartment, respectively:\nLoco' orow\u2014Mrs. A. Brown, Miss M.\nHrown, Mrs. V. lleniidro. Mrs. J. Draper and Mrs. J. 81ndel.\nCar deportment crew\u2014Mrs. tr. Kim\nerllng. Mrs. P. II. Tullyn, Mrs. W. Ro^\niimiii. Jltlss M. Briiku and Mrs. H.\nProcter.\n20:15 o'Clock.\nProgram of sports will lie run off hi\nthc roundhouse. Indoor' ItaBclmll. volloy\nliall and hnndball.\n21:15 o'Clock.\nBasket bull gnme will ho playod between the c. I . R. shops and a Y. M,\nC. A. tenm. The C. P. I;, team will\nbe: 3, Noimtiu. A. Scanlpn, J. Draper\n\\V. Pynn ond \\V. Watltlns: spares. \\V\nCrowlhers and IL. Morgan.\n21:30 o'Clock.\nThe muln event of the evening will\nho stnged. Kid Morgan, the glan.t\nhollermoker. meets Lefty Wlgg, Ilia\nwily oat-mutl, in u au-i-ounil lioxlng\nbout. Referee, li. Morris.\n22 o'Clock.\nBuffet supper will he served during\nmusical progrum. Mayor C. P. McHardy, Superintendent W. I). Miller,\nA. S. Horswill anil .1. II. Hunter will\ndeliver short addresses. A nine-piece\norchestra, under A. Brown, will attend.\n aemm\u2014\t\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2.\u2014To permit\nol the attendnnee of witnesses still\n,-ngaged In searching for missing vli\nllms. Coroner Jeffs has udjourned for\neight days the Inquest In tho cases\nof the 18 Identified dead III the Britannia Beach disaster. Thc Inquiry\nwill bo rtsumed on Thursday. November 10.\nA. S. Horswill & Co.\nQuality and Lower Prices\nFinest Picnic Hams, lb 2-ltf\nLean Back Bacon, piece, n> \u25a0il'.tjt\nPlump Hind  ilainii, lb Vti6\nNew tiultuuu Jtalalns, 2 lbs..55-f*!,\nWalter Baker's Cocoa,  lb..55\u00bb*\nCowan's   Cocou,   Ib !>5e^\nlinest Japan Rice, 10 in\u00ab j>Ot>\nOur  Best   Flour,  !IS-lb.  suck:\n\">r  *4.60\nOut- Best Flour,  tn-lb. sack,\nfor - 82.35\nSpuds, tier \u00ab,-\u25a0\u00ab. Hill Iti.-i S2.00\nSSwede Turnips, 100 lbi-jJ2.75\nCarrots,  ver>- flue,  100 lbs.\nfm-\n ' \u2022* 82.00\nProinpt DeliViHry\nI. 0. D. E.\nDANCE\nReserve    November    7th,\nThanksgiving, Day, for\nThe Dance of the Season\nAT EAGLE HALL\nUntieing begins al 8:30. Uxquls-\nlie music hy Johnson's Orchestra\nBuffet Supper.   Admission, $1.00\nEconomy\nBreud Is your bost and cheapest food. Eat moro of It. Insist\non gelling\nMOTHER'S BREAD\nBAKED ONLY  BY\nCHOQUETTE BROS.\n416  Baker\nPhons 258\nHigh  Clsss  Rsitsumnt,\nROYAL CAFE\nOpen day and night Qulok servile.    Dinner, 11:30 a. m. to  1:00\np. nu  40o.    Special   Supper,   1:10\np. m. to 8:00 p. m\u201e 40c.\nPhons 1B2. 604 B.k.r  ttrsst\nH. B. Warner\nfor th* love of a woman he went ttraight. Later when tha\ndltactive, who had io ratantletsly pursued him, was in his power.\nWhat   ht   did   makes   one   of   the   greatest   dramatic   climaxes   ever\nHALLROOM  COMEDY\nA Club Romance\n\"VELVET FINGERS\"\nA Public Meeting\nTo   Bo   Addressed   by\nM. A. MACDONALD, K. C,\nt i\nAND\nGENERAL VICTOR 0DLUM, V. C.\nWill be held ill the NELSON OPERA HOUSE, at 8:45 p,\nrn. Friday, November 4, 1921, in support of\nDR. HAMILTON\nTlie  Liberal  candidate  for the West Kootenay  Riding.\nWc Have a Fine Line ol\nTo choose from and will be plowed to have you examine\nour atoek beforo you bur.\n\u00bb'.'        Iji'4\n\u25a0Attn aTRKT.\n\u2022mntmmmmwmm\n.Ltd.\nhil\u00bboh, a. c.\n-as\nAuction Sale\n102 Baker Street, Saturday, 5th Nov., at 2 O'Clock\nHaving received instructions from Mr. J. W. Gallagher,\nI will offer at public auction the whole of his stock of\nMen's and Boys' Furnishings, etc., to make room for new\ngoods. The sale will be held Saturday afternoon and evening and during'next week until everything is cleared out.\nNo reserve.\nTERMS:  CASH. -^_ \u25a0\nW. CUTLER, Auctioneer\n^^^SS3\nii;t''V        .,1\nPoultry Si\ntt_t_*m Poultry\nKarswood Spice, P|\n* and   Poultry\nLice Powder,   Oy\nCrushed   Bone,\nqSjaYco?).,,,   ;t,\nthtbi&c.\n- .   MIUI\u00abKl-ce.J\ni^i_m_-iiii_*L?j\nThis Week Wc Aro PcfKtlrlng in\n^ Our  Window   Dtsptcy\nA highly nourishing 'food in tht\nmost concentrated form. Nourishing,    sustaining,   invigorating,\nvitalizing.\n2-or.   Battles (5<>\n4-0-1. Bottle*  85|*\n8-o\u00ab.   Bottles    _  $1,50\nAt the present time when disease la so prevalent In tills district BOVRIL will provo ft bless-\nini; Insofar thut It Is such u\nprcvcntfttlvo of disease, giving\nthe necessary strength to tho\nBystem to ward off any attack.\nJ A. IRVING & CO.\nLast Time To\nGOING CHEAP\nOwing to the lateness of\nthe .season we are willing\nto   sacrifice-\nOne Ford Touring Car\nTwo Chevrolet 490's\nOne % Ton Track\nOne   Baby   Grand\nRoadster.\nCALL AND SE8YTHEM\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO., LTD.\nVernon     snd     Stanley     Slreots:\nBox 576 Phons 35\n$1.00 Day\nNOV. 12TH\nSeo -our window Saturday,\nXov.: 12th. Every urtlclo In It\non that day will *<> for Sl.OO.\nYou should get tn on these bar- \u00ab\ngains.\nJ. J. WALKER\nMinnis Fuel & Transfer\nCompany\nfinest quality GALT COAI,\nIn stock. Pls.cs your order (or\nwinter's supply now. During the\nfull cars will be scarce and\nshipments delayed.\nPhone 39\nr. O. Bos  1099. Xaddsa aloes.\nWart   (trait.\nNONE SO GOOD AS\nOur Best Flour\nManufactured by\n\u2022 \u2014, \\ \u2022        '   \"\u25a0\t\nHilling and Elevator Co.\nLIMITED\nftt DYEING\nCLEANING\nH. K.F00T\nHigh Clasa Dyer and Clisn.r\nFsirview, Nelsfn, B, C,\nCOLUMBIA\nGRAF0N0LAS\nThs Bset Value, in Gramophones\nCabinet  slso,  solid walnut,\nlor  \t\nMiiiii-K.iii-.. full  tone.\nMahogany, smullcr slso.i\nFumod Oak  $37.50\nCorns snd Let Us 8how Vou\nRutherford    Drug    Co.\nNELSON,  a, C.\nHIGH CLASS FURS\nA very fine selection kept\nin stock or made to order.\nCustomers' own furs made\nup into any article desired.\nOld furs repaired and remodelled.\nG. GLASER\nManufacturing.  Furrlsr\nPhsns 1M N.l.en, B. C.\nmm%m\u00ab-\n\u25a0\"  \u25a0'\u25a0 ,* fjft\n*PL IS! '- i \\\nAn  spio of  American\non ths greatest, prob\nall. history.\nChjurtie\nIn his Second Million-]\n..\u2022Cotti-py,.  -\\_\\\n\"SHOULDER\nEfeieMin*\nWu urt-  now  uh  never\nln u  im* iiitiii  to attend '\u25a0\nri')i;ili*im;      ih-.iI:*.        h;ivli\ncr-L-unL'U   our  Htaff   of\nimlrers.\nThli Ih lhe only\ntown which huH tho\nwelfc rcpalrhiff syjtcnf.\nWhile you arc hi  wl\nlook\neyes  und   tuko\nprices    un    Mcu'u\nShoea.\nund\nGoodyear Shoe Cot\n\"WAD\u00a3  RIGHT  11\nBiker Streot\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0     I,,   iwqiqwywi\nTHE NEWEST EFI\nIn wall papers are very.]\ntive and arttstlc.    Tlio;\ndistinct tone of Indlvldo\nthe rooms.    You i can\nhen  at   their   boat,\nshow all tbe other aow\nwnll   decorations  In\nfins texture and ot sple\nsign.        i' \u25a0'' -\u25a0 \"j-\nMURPHY BRC\nPainters  and   Docoi\n413 Joitphino Strait\n8 PCT. FIRST MORTGAGE FUNDS REQUIRED\nfflOFAA   On ons ot beat    West    Arm   ranches.      Valued       at\n$7000\n$8000\nIM.000.\nOn Y. M. C. A. property valued at 140,000, 'so martin ot\nsecurity good and Institution Is a clvlo necessity,\nOn ona of tba- but business blocks ot Bakar Street,\nValued at 130,000,\nr\\\nCharles P. McHardy\nhmuranA phone ih rem. arm-re\nGUARANTEE!\nTfs guarantee that a 40JOLA\"\nPlpeless Furnaot will beat your\nboma properly. , Wa cannot\nmake It stronger than thati\nTou aro to ba tba Judge. Wa\nwill stand back ot our product\n\u2014absolutely. %\nCLARE BROS. * CO, LIMITED\nPre.ton, Ontario.\nR.H.MABER\nAQENT, NELSON, R. C,\nGenuine Clearance Sale\n20 Per Cent Off Enllro Slock\nDrake'. Variety Store\nM-l.gM ___^__\nma*awmn^^^em^^mm]sg^mj\nmn\n\u25a0Mil I 111\t\nNOTICE\nDOMINION ELEQTORl\nRe&i8tration of Voters\nAll qualified electors who. are not on the -in-v\nvoters' list as certified at the liiist court of revisi\n-June, may register between Oct. 31 and Nov. 5, wil\nof the following urban registrars:\nRossland\u2014A. j. Cleeton.\nTrail\u2014Harry Adair.\nNelaon\u2014-J. S. Goulding.\nRevelstoke\u2014H. If. Ferguson.   -\nHARRY WRIGHT\nReturning Officer for Kootenay Wast\n=*-**\u2022\n\u2022\u2022.\"I\nMackinaw\nCoats\nBest All Wool Macfiiniiwi\ncd  or  Norfolk   S&l|*s.   I\ncollars.    Dark colon. Oi\nand Cai'ss makes.\n$12.50 \u00ab\u2122dS15J)\nEMORY |8t WAL LE\nMM\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1921_11_03","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0397189","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}