{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0400330":{"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":"2021-07-07","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1922-11-06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0400330\/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":" =\nLondoners\nLOSE AT FOOTBALL\nSee Page 7\n\u00aeb*\nBadminton\nCATCHES ON WELL\nSee Page 8\nmi\nmis. 21.\nNELSON, B. C, MONDAY MOKNINC, NOVEMBER 6, 1922.\nNO. 171.\nILLUMINATES\nNEW PLAN OF\nTRANQUILITY\nBonar Law Will Give Anglo-\nIrish Treaty a Fair\nTrial\nWOMEN WHO WANT WESTMINSTER\nHARMONY WITH FRANCE\nAND  ITALY  THE   BASIS\nXOKIO, Nov. r.. One hundred and\nthirty-five Russian refugees from\nVladivostok mere rtro\"\"nc*<. today mheti\ntWO     BtcllllllTil     fo i \u25a0*.. :T -'ll      ll   . ording\nto a dispatch trom  i*+ ut,    Only two\npersons were saved, tli \u25a0 n port stated.\nThe dispatch omitteil tin exact locn-\ntion of the foundering.\nRed Flags Blaze\nin Petrograd for\nThird Internationale\nI rETUOORAD, Nov. 5.\u2014I'etrograd la a\n[hlaxe of red for the third Internationale\n[congress. From church steeples and\nI every high building Illuminated red\nstar* glitter apd mont of thf* buildings\nlor the city are fringed with strings of\nI red lights. Red flags, too, fly from\n|every point of vantage.\nForty-five nations are represented nt\nthe congress, at which there are 352\n[delegates, according to tho announce-\nnentH. Among the countries represented are the United States, Mexico, Can-\nida, Braxll, Argentine, Italy, France,\n, sh-_iim^- China aad Japan.\nConsider Obligations in Matters of Foreign Policy\nBefore Advantage\nLEEDS, Eng., Nov. 5.\u2014Additional details of the new British government's policy of\n\"tranquility\" were given by\nPremier Bonar Law in an address before an audience of 3000\npersons here on Saturday.\nWhile the main part of his\nspeech was concerned with domestic policies and politics, he\ntook occasion to reiterate emphatically that the Anglo-Irish\ntreaty would be given a fair\ntrial and that the root of his\nforeign policy would be to work |\nwith France and Italy.\nMr. Bonar Law said he had been\nbombarded with quierles as to whether the British would leave Mesopotamia  and  Palestine.\nObi igst ions    Binding,\n\"All I can say ls thnt we shall ex-\nahtine the matter very carefully,\" he\naald, \"but we cannot, with our\nord aa a nation, consider merely what\nit will pay ur to do: we must con-\naider to what extent we are bound by\nobligations.\"\nReferring to the Le-iKtie*- of Nltto&l\nhe said it had worked under great,\ndifficulties, but had not done so badly, and that hia government would\ncertainly try to give It scope for\nmore effective action. He added that\nhe had declared In n previous nddress\nthat the Brltlah mivy must bo kept\nIntact, but that ht? believed the whole\ncerter of gravity was changing ln\nthe matter of national defense, and\nwas being transferred from the sea\nto the air.\nReferring to hia predecessor, he\n\u25a0Mid:\n\"Lloyd Oeorge is a man of amazing energy and astonishing vitality,\nKvery difficult question at home or\nabrond he undertook to deal with It\nhimself. I canrot do that and If I\nhad the strength of Hercules and\nth\" wisdom of Solomon I would not\ntry to deal with them that way.\"\nLabor   Program    Amazea.\nThe Labor party's program. Bonor\nLav\/ ch-mu'teflzed as amazing*. \"If\nit had been a question of policies, the\nLa-M-ntes would not have had a\nghort of a chance In any constItu-\nency In the country.\" He waa confide \u2022 that the Unioist party would\nhave been In the majority, because\nthe people knew that the pledges\nm:ide by the Labor party were nmi-\nrerise   and  could   not   be   carried   out.\n\"Rut now as we (the Unionists) are\na united party, it scorns to be that\nalready an inevitable tendency Is\nshowing Itself\u2014and I do not regret\nIt\u2014the tendency of the Liberals of\nall  shades to draw together.\"\n\"To have tried to keep a party representing everything opposed to labor\nDfAtnat the Labor party and nothing else\n\u25a0 wrts the one way of making the Labor\nparty strong, because It would hat* been\nthe only alternative government. But\nthe working men who nre not Socialist\nnow have their choice of two parties, Instead of having to choose between one\nand those supposed to represent them.\"\nAs   regards  the housing prohlem,  the\nprime minister    said    the uncompleted\nschemes   of   the  old   government   would\nI be carried out, but that they were In-\n\\ adequate and  that a   new  consideration\nI of the problem would be neeessary.    He\n, emphasized the necessity nf encouraging\nprivate   enterprise   to   help   solve   this\nproblem.\nK<> K\u00bbTl\u00abct of Unemployment.\nOn the subject of unemployment he\ndeclared the government would not neglect palliative measures, but added that\nImproved trade alone could remedy the\nsituation and he hoped the election re-\n(Contloued on  Page   2)\nSteamers Founder;\nRefugees Drown\nTop  left:   Mr\ndidate.    Top  right:      l*ndy   Lawson.\ntemperance   advocate,   running  us   an\nF. ci. Kellaway,  National Liberal, i\n1'ruberville,   a   Labor  candidate.     Hot\nPROMISING PARLIAMENTARIANS\nStewart Brown of Liveri>oo). an Independent  Liberal can-\nwidow  of  Sir   Wilfrid   Lawson.   the great\nrt  Independent   Liberal  against   Rt,  Hon.\nin   Bedford,     Bottom   left:      Miss   Picton\ntn   right:   Miss  Scot t-Gntt y.\nNO MATERIAL\nALTERATION IN\nTHEJ-pON\nEnergetic Discussion Centers\non Labor's Capital  Levy\nScheme\nLONDON. Nov. B. \u2014 (By Associated\nPress.)\u2014Beyond the issuance of Mr. As-\nquith's election address at Paisley,\nwhich la praetlenlly Identical with the\nIndependent Liberal manifesto wllh the\nsame 10 points of October 14. there -was\nno political development of prime Interest here today.\nMr. Lloyd Oeorge will start on his\nelectioneering tour of northern Kngland\ntomorrow and, if his health permits, on\nanother similar tour In Wales nn Thursday.\nAll Woman Opposed.\nOf the 1400 and more candidates nominated for parliament, only 32 are women, of whom 14 are standing in the Asquithian Liberal Interests, nine for Labor, five Unionists, two National Liberals and two Independents. No woman\nla returned unopposed.\nEnergetic discussion of the capital\nlevy continues In the press and from the\nplatform. J. R. Clynes, Labor leader,\nin a letter to the Times, points out that\nIt took nearly a century to reduce the\nnational debt by \u00a3200,000.000 hy sinking\nfund operations; he ns*(s bow many centuries it will t;ike to reduce a debt of\nmore than ft!,000,000,000 by such means.\nOF UNOPPOSED,\nCONSERVATIVES\nHAVEMMOMTY\nIrish Unionists Next in Number; Leave 1266 Candidates in the Field\nANGORA TURKS\nTAKE CONTROL\nffspiN!\nNationalists  Tear  Up   Mudania Armistice; Advance Upon Chanak\nSTAMB0UL CHRISTIANS\nIN FEAR OF MASSACRE\n' Sultan's   Ministry   Resigns;\nAcclaim Kemal Pasha\nas President\nCON'HTANTINOI'LK.      Nov.      .V\u2014The I\nNationalist  government   is In control of'\n\"\"\u25a0onstaniinople.    Unfit Pasha is the new I\ngovernor, and Humid Hey. the representative of the    Angorn    government,    hns\nordered the allied troops nut.    In a note\nto the entente he denuinds i<\\ .icnatlon of\nthe allied forces.    Tha Turks have torn\nup   the Muds nm    armistice    convention\nand are marching into the Chanak DM\noccupied  by  the  Hrlljsh, anil other  neutral  zones.\nAllied   Police   open   Fir*.\nSince noon Saturday, when the Nationalist administration Is declared to\nhave been reestablished and in celebration af this masses of excited Turks\nhave been engaged in disorders. Students marched against the j*ilace and\nmobs engaged In such manifest at ton\nthat it became MOessary for the allied\npolice to fire on lb.in, several of the\nTurks being killed or wounded\nTh.- Christian* In tha Stamboul quarter  throughout    8a tarda\nseeking   \u25a0baiter   and   pi\nwhat     ib.-y    openly    1.;ir\nmaawrii\nToday, how.v.r. the |\nthorltles  Issued ord, rs  tl\nanct s would he rlgOToual;\nEx-Premier's Son\nasserts\u2122\nmiddle course\n| onetosteer\n| Uoyd George Speaks ol Past\nServices to Large\nAudience\nLLOYD GEORGE\nPROSPECTSARE\n\"DRUMMER BOY\" WAS\nSUCCESS IN WAR\nNot Ashamed of Description;\nRefers to Foch and\nWilson\nGWILYM    LLOYD    GEORGE\nSon    of   the    former    British    prime\nminister,    Is   a    Libera]   candidate   for\nlb mmons  in   Pembroke,  W'nies\nPOLITEiT\nLOOKING FOR j\nSIM PROOF\nGermans Suggest Internation-\nEx-Premier Fails  to Carry\nOut Threat of Unleashing Candidates\nCAMPAODEGENERATES\nMOSTLY   PERSONALITIES\nnight w.-re\nMtloa from\n-a    Turkish\nDoctor Dies, Nurses\nAre Injured When\nAuto Overturns\nCALGARY,    Nov.    5.\u2014Dr.     O.     F.\nEastman, a local surgeon, died In the\nGeneral hospital nt 1:15 Sunday afternoon from Injuries received when\nhis automobile overturned on the Kdmonton trail, eight miles north of\nCalgary at 11:10 o'clock Sunday\nmorning.\nMiss Kate MacLeod, | nurse employed hy Dr. Kastman, und her sister, Mary, who were passengers in\nthe car, also were seriously injured.\nLate Sunday night. Miss Kate MacLeod was at ill unconscious and It is\nbelieved she is suffering from concussion of the  \"brain.\nBritish Ready to\nAttend Reparations\nConference at Brussels\nthe\nI.UNDi iN. N'ov. *.. Final nnmina-\ntionH for the general elections, according to the weekly dispatch, include 57\nmembers Of parliament returned unopposed,   divided    us    follows*.\n\u25a0Conservatives    II.    'Irish     I'nionists\n10. Llhernls ft, National liberal! ft,\nl*ahor 4. Nationalists 1. leaving 1206\ncandidates for the contests on November   15.\nThe contenting candidates comprise\nthe  following:\nConservatives 4in. National Liberals 105. liberals III, Labor 111, Independent Conservatives 11, Conservative Democrats 2. Independents 21.\nIndependent Labor t, Ulster Cnlon-\nists 13. National Democrats t>. National I'nionists 2. Anti-waste 1, Agriculturists ,'t, Socialists 1, Coniniiin-\niata 5, Nationalists 3, Sinn Keiners 1.\nCooperatives   fi.\nLondon,   Nov.   ft.*\u2014(By  Canadian\nPress Cable).-Following is | complete list of candidates for parliament who wen- returned unopposed at\nthe nomination! yesterday:\nUnionists\nDouglas I long. attorney-general,\nMarleybone; Samuel Roberta, Sheffield;    Sir   T,   Manlnirg,   London   city;\n11. C. Orenfell. London city; Commander Chileott. Wulton, Liverpool:\n1*. I**. Walker. Monmouth: Sir W.\nJoynson lllcks, overseas trade secretary, Twickenham; Major Hums ton.\nMdybliry,    Cheshire;     Sir    V.    Lowe.\nBdfebaston, Birmingham;, a. steel-\nftfaltland, Erdlnton; sir Phillip N>w-\naom, Tom worth: Patrick Hannon.\nMosely. Birmingham; .lames Hope,\nSheffield central; C.enerul Cockerill.\nRelgate, Surrey; Col. M. J. Wilson.\nRichmond, north riding Yorkshire; D.\nPennefather, Kirkdale, Liverpool; Ma*\njor F. 1*. Wood, Rlpon, Yorkshire,\nweat riding; K. U. Turnton, Thlrk and\nMalum, north riding Yorkshire; I*flrd\nStanley. KyUie, Lancashire; Sir M.\nHarlow. Salford south. Captain Hocking. Chorby; Colonel Ashley. New-\nforest; Col, .J. W. Weston. Westmoreland; Sir Phillip Baaaooo. Hythe; Sir\nK. Pollock. Warwick; Colonel Mason.\nCroydon; Karl Winter ton. llorsbatn;\nSir H. Craik, Scottish universities;\nSir G. Harry. Scottish universities.\nNational Liberals\nDavid Lloyd George. Carnarvon;\nArthur Neale, Hillsborough, Sheffield;\nJ, Gardiner. Perth and Kinross; T,\nif field;   Sir  G,\nat   all  dlsturb-\nput  down.\nMinistry   Kcaigna.\ni      The iillie.) high commissioners accepted  th.- n.-w regime -.ml theft was ni.th-\n) ing left   lor the sultan's ministry but resign   frnm  office.\nTewfik Pasha, the grand etter. realizing that his power hml disappeared, dispatched messHKes to the representatives\nof the sublime porte lu the various capitals to transfer their archives tu the\nrepresentatives   of   th,    Angora   govern-\nthat\nupper\nour\ni ih* nt\nThere  seemed  dHnjier  for a   tin\nthe radical fereei wonM gain the\nband       The   sultan    was   <lemn.n,\ngelh-T with 'He ir-iunarilij* and Itnstaphl\nKemal    Pasha    was   aeclalmed\npresident.'*\nIt became necessary to throw* guards\nof troops around ttie sultan's palace,\nwithin which Mohammed VI . now caliph\nonly, Is spending fearful hours. As yet\n.Mohammed VI. has Riven no evidence of\nconformliiK with the determination of\nthe government to i id Turkey of the\nhigh office of sultan, but the i-uickly\ndeveloping popular movement may soon\ncorajh I him. with the loss of his chiefs,\nto accept  the  inevitable.\nIJafct Pasha sprang the news of the\nchange in government in I dramati.-\nmanner on the allied genera 1h. The\ngenerals hnd summoned Ilnfet to discuss the nmstloii of the admission of\nKemallst gendnrin.-s to the Gblhpnll and\nt'hauak section. At the terminal-on of\nthe discussion Rafat, by way of an after\nthought, broke th.- startling news thus\n\"I must inform your excellencies that\nsince noon the Constantinople govern,\nment no longer exists and I hava ns\nsitmed the aovernorahlD.\"\nLONDOK, Nov. 5.\u2014Former Premier\nl.loyd (ieorge stressed tho middle\nground policy he Is advocating, denounc-\n! Ing both revolution and reaction, ln a\n| speech to a friendly, cheering crowd of\n* Londoners who Jammed a big motion\n' piciure theater to hear him yesterday.\n' He urged tbe necessity for a group of\nI men in parliament ''strong enough to\nI Insist upon a middle course, frea from\n' all extremes,\"\nI The ex-premier got a tremendof\nI greeting and h\u00ab held his prip on the lr\n| audience  throughout.\nLloyd Ueorree. who haw just recov\nfrom a slight throat affection, began by\nsaying he was Just out of the casualty\nstation   and  entering  the   fighting line,\nwhere be was glad to be again.\nSituation  Perpltalng.\n\"The nation.\"  he  -said. \"Is confronted\n.    - I        A   I       11\/       I w'\"1 OIU' ol* ^ mnst  I\u00bb'rplexing sltua-\nal   Loan   aS   the   Unly   Way It Ions  it   has  ever  been   called  upon   to\nr\\   . j disentangle, and it is the duty of every\n\"\u2022**\u25a0-\u25a0 public man. whether tn Or out of office,\n  to   give   the   benefit of   his  experiences\nand trninlng as a contribution toward\nclearing up the confusing issues. We\nare choosing a parliament to govern the\ncountry for the next five years\u2014crucial\nyears,\" he pointed out In reviewing the\nsituation, remarking that although every\ngovernment make* mistakes, \"what matters is that during the next five years\nsuch mistakes should not be committed\nas will  be  Irretrievable.\n\"My coll.-aglies and f who stand on\nthis platform have had the responsibility of advising the sovereignty for all;\nyears, the most dangerous years probably this country has ever passed\nthrough since it hecainn a great dominant Empire.\" He predicted that there\nwere men who were shy in associating\nthemselves with the record of the iKiat\nyears, who would cL-tlm i -share In tlv*-1\nWomen Suggest\nCanadian Press\nAssist the Sex\nCALC.MtY. Nov. ;,-.V resolution\nasking that the Canadian Pr, sh curry\n\u25a0 more augmented account of news\nof interest to women was Introduced\nby Miss Kdna KelH Kdmonton, at\na conference here on Saturday of\nnewspaper women and wnmen writers\nof   Alberta    and    Saskatchewan.\nAddresses on phases of Canadian\nJournalism were given by Merle Hail\nWinnipeg; Kenneth Haig, Winnipeg*'\nNellie McClung, M.L.A , Kdmonton\nnnd C. H. Morrison, Edmonton. The\nconference  ended  willi\nBBRL1N, -Nov. \"..\u2014Informally proposing to the alii.-d reparation! commission\ntie- in-Knlialion Ot an international loan\nof 500,0011.000 marks. Dr. Hermes, the\nQarman finance minister, has taken the\ninitial step to transfer the current pour\npurlers with the entente's representatives from the stage of preliminary discussions (0 a concrete basis of negotiations.\nNalthtr Side Shows Rand.\nNeither party In the present conference has shown Its hand, the German\ngovernment having confined the presentation of Its ens*- to a detailed recital\nof tbe oauMl and effect* of currency\ndepreciation on the nation's finances.\nWhile Al. Barthou and his colleugues on\nthe commission are reported to have\nconducted themselves aa polite listeners\nto the documentary evidence presented\nby Dr. Hermes and his aides, they are\nalleged to have intimated that the time\nwas now rip** for receiving from the\ni.erman officials taiiKlble and precisely\nformulated proposals.\nBnrrrasts a Loan.\nThe first of these was delivered to M.\nBarthou today lu the shape of a memo- I\nran dim i    comprising     two     typewritten\npacta, stipulating that n  foreign loan of\nIM, i.'Min  marks  is  in  be  floated   wnh\nthe RCtl-ft cooperation of the relcbsbank\nWhile the loan constitutes the crux of\nits initial proposal to the entente's rep-\nres.-ntathes, tin t ler man government\nwill specifically indicate as necessary\nsupplementary measures of refef a respite   from   gold   reparations   payments.\nrod-action of delfverlea la kind and coal.\nthe details of which    Pr.    Hermes will\ncommunicate to the commission in the\ncourse of this week's discussion.\nTodays   memorandum   lays   stress   on\nthe necessity of an International loan as\nin ladhjaoaathlo leiuilmaoni for effect\ning coordination of Germany's Internal\nfinances, especially the correction of\nbudgetary equilibrium, limitation of the\nfloating debt and currency stabilization,\nwhile temporary exemption from gold\npayments and coal are names as neces-\nsnry   coiiipb-meiita   to   foreign   financial\nraUef\ngreat i\non! | few M\n\u25a0\u25a0 hen.\nTakM Up Bonar Liw\"i Chary-a.\nThe former prime minister spoke of\nthe present premier's recent .sarcastic\neharaoterlaal ion of him a\u00bb a drummer\nboy. In which Hoiuir Law had declared\nLloyd QoOfge had served a uw'ful purpose in wsr time, doing the iliimiming\nhett.-r than anyone, but that I drummer\nwould be out of place in a hospltil after\nthe charge was over and the wounded\nwere being att. tided, unless his drumsticks wi re taken away from him.\nLloyd G.orge, Indicating he was not\nasbam.d of this description, said that\nGermany bad lost the war l<ecause she\nhad no drummer boy, and he added:\n\"I am content with tin- t.-ntimony of\ngreat generals like Foch and Wilswn.\nbut I think I did something tow.ird\nequipping our armies when th.-y wore\n=hort, which  was not   quite a drummer\n-k\noanqii\nGreat Britain has informed the Belgian\ngovernment that a Hritlsh delegation\nwill be ready to attend n reparations\nconference In Brussels early in December.\nPORTUGUESE CABINET\nHANDS IN RESIGNATION\nPARIS.    Nov.    T..\u2014According\nMatin,   Prime   Minister   Bonar   Law   Of I 0***aW,    Attarchff.\nCroydon-Marks,    Cornwall    northern;\nRthjadier-Oonaral   spears.   i\u00bbughhor-\nough; I). Cowan. Scottish universities.\nLiberals\n,T.    H.   Whitby,   speaker,   Halifax;\nsir O. c. Btarrie,  Banffihlre;  Banwl\nKenyon,       Chesterfield.       Derbyshire;\nColonel       Da vies,       Montgomeryshire;\nOeorge   Lambert.   Molton,  Devon.\nLabor\nWilliam     Adamion,     Fife:     Oeorge\nHirst,     Wentworth,     Yorkshire     weat\n] riding;    Oeorge    Barker,    Ahertillery.\nMonmouth.\n(Jlstar   Unionists\nThomus Moles. Ormeu, Belfast;\nCaptain Herbert Dixon, Pottlnfer,\nHelfflat; Thomas E. McConnell, Dun-\nculrn, Hell-iisl; it. Lynn. Woodvale,\nBt-lfHSt; D. D. Held, Down, east: Dr.\nHltnma. Down; Sir W. Whltln, Queens\nuniversity; Sir W. Allen. Armagh\nnorth; Capt. C. C. Craig. Antrim:\nMajor H. O'Neill. Antrim,\nNationalists\nT. P. O'Connor, Scotland, Liverpool.\nNovelist Runs as\nLabor Candidate\nJapanese Steamer\nin Distress; No News\nThrough Wireless\nVICTORIA. Nov. la\u2014At fttt o'clock\ntonight the government wlreb'ns stations in this vicinity bad beard\nnothing further from the .Inpanese\nfreighter Tomi Muru. which was reported Saturday night in distrain LIM\ninibs ou* to sen. The Tumi Mam\nhns a broken rudder aad is at the\nmer.y of I tt mile gale. The ship\nalso is nut of provisions, according to\ndispatches   received.\nLISBON,    Nov.    5.\u2014-The    Portuguese\ncabinet  resigned   late  last night at   the\nc.inclu\u00ablon of the sitting of the chamber j\nof deputlea.\nA dlspRtch from Lisbon on Friday said\nthat the government of Premier Silva\nhad decided to resign In* order that It\nmight be reconstructed.\nRaiders Rod Dublin\nPosioffice; Seize Cash\nand Burn Building\nDUBLIN, Nov. 6.\u2014The rotunda rink\npost office waa seized by armed raiders\nand burned to the, ground thin morning.\nThe raiders overpowered tho military,\nsecured 2340 pounds sterling from the\nbuilding, sprinkled petrol over papers\nand set fire to the building.\nThe maternity hospital next door was\nfor a nm.' in great danger of being de-\netroyed.\nOFFICER  AND SERGEANT  KILLED\nDUBLIN.    Nov.\nofficer   command\nl\u00aburraeks, died last\nhe   received    in   a\nFi. - Captain Doyle,\ntUJ     the     drenmore\nnight from wounds\ni   ambush   between\nNoted\nOrenmorc    and    Dundalk.      Sergeant | candldat'\nTraynnr,  who accoinpunled him, was j uon   seal\n^   | shot dfttd. T       _ n   1 cpmmoim,\nH.  G.  WELLo\nlovellst,  running n\u00bb a   Later\nfor the University  of  Lon-\ntho   British    house    of\nFlashes By Wire\nTornado Strikes Oil Field\nDBUMlUaHT, oklu.. Nov. I*,.\u2014Six\npersons were killed and more than\n30 injured seven seriously. HJ persons are homeless and more Hum\nj:,'Mi,tu.i) worth of property was destroyed in a tornado which struck\nthe ..il BaM smith of here Saturday\nevening, it was learned todaj.\nIncluded In the property loss was\n133 oil rigs, 31 houses, a bull dozen\npower plants and numerous smaller\nbuildings.\nSeveral Die in Steamer Explosion\nMEXICO CITY. Nov. 5.\u2014Several\npersons are- reported dead or injured\nlu consequence of an explosion on\nboard the Americun steamer Mexico\nnt Tampico Saturday, aays a dispatch\nto   Kl   Cniversale.\nNo details are given In the dispatch\nexcept the statement that a tank\nof   ammonia   exploded.\nMoscow Authorises Gold Coinage\nMoscow. Nov. :,.\u2014\\ decree authorizing coinage of gold of a value\nalmllar to that of tho Imperial gold\ncoins Ih nnimirnceil by the council of\ncommlafliuies. The coinage la to\nVfti tiy cover ,\u00bb\u2022 Half bank note.\nClaiitie Credit  for Credit.\nRa-gardtni unemployment, Lloyd\nOeoffS said: \"Here is something tho\nwomen of the country should be interested In,\"\n\"Th,-. effect of Improving our credit\nhas been to reduce the cost of living,\"\nwhich, he said, was someLhlng to he |\nproud of. This was due U> the wise,\ncourageous and sound financing of Austen Chamberlain and Sir Robert Home,\nwho practiced ruthless econom:*. paid\ntheir way, paid ofC som.- at the debr\nand reduced taxation. Lloyd \"Ieorge assert.d that th.-y had laid the foundation\nfor batter trad.-, ralaad the status of tho\nteaching profession, made more generous provision for unemployment than\never before was made In ihis country, as\nwell as helping to build up a healthier\nand stronger race.\nTho ex-pr.mier claimed credit for the\nenfranchisement Ot the women, for reconciliation with the Irish race u<\\,\\ for\nthe establishment ot peace in the- pacific\n00 a permanent basis.\nClaiming thai     the    late    wovctrnment\nwas  the  ffral   of ill   the bellig'Tents to\naholish conscription ami the fir--*! to reduce armament*, Lloyd Oeorge tuld:\nMaintained Prsstlg*.\n\"Y.-t, despite all that reduction, we\nmaintained the prestige of this Country\nUgh In the councils of the world. We\nnever let down the flag on land or sea,\nand when It was ohalleiiKed in t.lio east\nwe showed, in spite of the reduced armaments, that Qreai Britain was prepared\nto maintain her honor.\"\nRegardtni UM future, he declared tho\nI duly of the patriotic cltlieu was to steer\nib.tw-.-tn the two extremes. The first\nj thing was to meet tho Socialist party's\n: challenge to private enterprise.\n\"There never was a Utne In the history of this country when It could afford less to bare an atUick of this kind\nmade upon its institutions,\" ho assarted.\nTherefore, it Is vital to the trade, industry and prosperity of the country\nthat the attack shoud be repelled and\nrepelled thoroughly and emphatically.\nThe municipal elections demons-irate\nthat the danger from that quarter ls\nnot as great, not as Imminent as had\nbeet, apprehended,\nAdTiae* Wideapread.\nLloyd CeorR-e advocated avoidance of\nextremism and -Socialism, \"but do let us\navoid the extreme of stRndstllllsm,\" he\nadded. \"A great nation liko ours cannot\nstand still\u2014you want a strong group of\nIndependent men, froe from party ties,\nstrong enough to tnatst on a steady middle course, free from all extremes\"\nTbe   forme?  premier said he and hIS\ncolleagues represented \"one of thr most\n-.Cwmnuvd  on  page   iwuj.\t\nLady Grey Tears Accusing\nPoster to Bits; Chamberlain Eloquent\nLONDON, Nov. 5.\u2014(By Ca*-\nna'\"\u00b0n Press Cable.)\u2014David\nL) *'i George apparently has\na' j doned any attempt to re-\nf ?i actual power in the com-\n, elections. He failed yester-\ny to nominate the threatened\ni0 candidates in Conservative\n\u25a0 .onstituencies and told a h\u00abge\naudience in Hammerstein's old\nopera house that what \"you\nneed in the new parliament is\na .strong body of independent\nmen who will insist that the\ngovernment shall pursue a safe\ncourse and neither commit itself\nto revolution nor reaction.\"\nSwings   Toward    Bonar    Law.\nThis course seems to have been\ndictated by the apparent awing in\nfavor of both the Bonar Law and As-\nquithlan candidates following the municipal defeats of Labor. It now appears to he the general belief that\nLloyd George will have a stiff fight\nto muster in the house of commons\neven enough to constitute a balance\nof power. The possibility of Bonar\nLaw gaining an absolute- but small\nmajority is growing and there Is\nfurther interesting rumors that there\nhave boon conversations between Sir\nOeorge Younger and Asqulth on the\npossibility of getting any cooperation necessary from the free, rather\nthan from the Lloyd Georgian liberals.\nBonar Law's speech at Leeds did\nI not produce anything like the enthusiasm which Lloyd George's did\n| last week. He confined himself to a\nreiteration of his beliel! in the need\nfor tmn'inllUy and nude, witty raphes to Lloyd George's sallies ot an\nearlier day. In fact, not u single side\nIn the election Is standing firmly arid\ns.-uindly now on any concrete pro-\nlio.s.ils.\nPersonalities   Prevail,\nThP entire campaign threatens to\ndegeiM'rate into an exchange of per-\n\u25a0onatitiee, glittering or bitter, aa the\ncase may be. Rven Labor, or a section of it, is running away from its\nown plaiform, eo heartily was It be-\n3,ibored for Ita < oiiflseatory features\nin the course of the municipal elections.\nThere were I few surprises in year-onlay's nominations. Lloyd George,\nfor the first time in his long parliamentary career, Is not opposed. Sir\nOeorga Fallh and Uibor are opposing Bonar Law in Glasgow. Joseph\nDevlin was nominated at the last\nmoment for the Liverpool division,\nwhere he will have a hard  fight.\nLloyd George'** nomination papers\nwore signed hy in men who had been\nschool fellows in his father's school.\nThe unopposed candidates thus returned already In the coming house\n.ire In tho fallowing proportions:\nMultiply  by  Ten.\nConservatives, :i7; Independent Liberals, S; National Liberals, 8; Labor,\n2;   Nationalists.  I,\nCloaa observer\" say that by multiplying the figures by ten, one can\nget a fair Mm of how the house will\n\u25a0ta&d when the elections are completed.\nTho surprise of the Lloyd Georie\nmeeting was Austen Chamberlain's\nVtlfOr. He nude the real fighting\n1-fteeeh of the day. He rose to real\nhe. ghts of eloiiuoiu'o when he displaced a campy ign leaflet from Con-\nsen atlve beadQQUten charging\nUoyd George with promising the.\nTurks they should return to their\nhoowland nnd then encouraging tbe\nOreeks to attack them.\n*'l call  upon  Bonar Luw  here and\nnow   to   repudiate   the   pamphlet,\"   he\n\u25a0aid,    \"Bonar Law was a member of\n(Continued  on  Page   I)\n Page TW5.\nTHE NELSON D'ATLY NEWS', MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 6, 1922.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhen Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\nAMERICAN PLAN\nRates $3.50 to $5.00\nLLOYD GEORGE\n! PROSPECTS ARE\n|   FALLING FAST\n(I'nntlllllril    ll'\"lii    1'HCi I-)\nj tbe KriviTiuncnt when the |)lciljro Wai\n! made to lhe Turku; Bonar LMv WM\na rr.omtier of tho Kuvcnimcnt whin un\nI unilcrstnniliiiK WU cenr hed with the\n] Greeks. If there is wronf In vvlnit\n| was dune\u2014,-inil tin re is BOt\u2014he Is rt-\nj spnnsll.le.   tin,\"\nClose to Tontjh  Word.\nMr.   Chiinihei'liiin   enine   elnse  to   ns-\ntag n \u25a0borl iiii'i ugly wnrd aboul sir\nAUhrrr   Cril'I'illiltiis.'.iH'eii,    anil    Lord\nBirkenhead     charted      Mr     deorie\nroungrr  with   bad   faith,  .'.s  .lid   Mr.\n] Chamberlain alao.\nMeanwhile,   ihe   earl     of     Derby,\ni tpeaking   in   Manrheater,   caine  oloae\nI to the  sh'.rl   .'ind  iik'ly   \u00ab\"rd   In   retard\nin Lord Birkenhead.    l*ady dray, i'\u00bb\nI tlnB heside her hnshand nl the l.im-\nlon    neetlnf,    seized    a    (\"nnserviilive\nj mister whieh declared thnt if her htm-\ninlid,    Vise.mil    flrey.     then    fni-eiun\n\u2022Kretary,   had   In    firmer   In   19H.\nHl'MK\u2014It. ivrey Dawaan, waller K.  rwiicar: M. McMillan. Crawford Bar:   .hl, war K\u201eul,\\ net  hava coma   Mier\nS-eSm.  w.  tiruiidy,  Vaaaaaveri   Mr.   J^ MrUee-g   Oral-Creek; _BMtnXA K     ha<,   |v|||iii[,   ,\u201e   ,\u201e\u201e   ,,,|ln,,,   \u201e\u201e,.\nand Mra. s. J. Vewtood, city; O. P. nm-, U|M ,',  wfiiuker, Kaslo; c, B. Wilson'. \\ violently   tore   the   poatar   t..  Wl*\nlentlnr, A. W. Whlttaker, Vancouver; It.   Vancouver;  w   C .In(r:(s, Montreal; It. j     (The above dispatch  Is copyrighted\nThe Goat\n-t\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\n\u2022 PECIAL SUNDAY  Dl\nS1.00\nNNER\nTEAROOM   OPEN   10   A.\nTO  MIDNIGHT\n\u2022a\nHeaBquartere   for   all    Traveling    Men,    Mining    Men    and    Touriete>\nJ. Lavally. Nelson; ll 1* Bryan. M, I)., ' C. Kelfett, MeilieUie Hat; C. M. I*, v.-rly\nKelowna; J. F, CTLoushltn, Spokane* C \\ Toronto; it. a, nllar, A. Ef, Johnstone\nT. I'orter, Kpokam ; Laurence Johnson,! Vancouver; K. I'. Cornet! Kitchener; 0\nHpoknne; A. C. ' lilmour, C. K. William- 1 Mcl*-*an, Vancouver; (\".onion l\u00bb;n*ling\nson, rvnitctnn; w. .1. h\"*armer and wife, I Vancouver; Al. Kan-, Vancouver,\nhv the New York\nUnder the  Old   Management  of   H.   W.  Shore.\nNine First-class Well-lighted Sample Rooms\nHOTEL STRATHCONA\nNELSONS  LEADING   HOTEL\nAmerican Plat*.   Magnificent Dining Room\nExtremely Comfortable Drawinn  Room for Ladies.\nSpecial   Ratej  for  Winter   Boarders.\nSTRATHri iN.\\    T.    Weill\nrtr: Klaa 11   WhltUker. Haul,\ntr.   Trail:   .1    II    Huntley.   T<\np-Rourke, Ednionl  ll  E i\\\noi.\\'<\nlierc\nAire  i'l irl\niVatrouac.  .-\nVancou. Montreal;  Mrs   ir   k   RtevetiBon,  Si*>-\n...   I,.,.., kane;   W    H    Walnwrlaht,   Vancouver;\n' Mr and Mrs   II  o. ii.-himii. Vancouver;\nonto:   I' w   Twlddy.  Vancouver;    ('.    II     dood-\n,'. V\u00bbn. \u25a0 mar; ii i'alKarv, c  c   K.,lr. Cranbrook;\n: nn     S     It  sea ft      ll       Ritchie,   Cascade;   T.   Menilnws,\ni'     Mennonc Vancouver.\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nCAFE IN  CONNECTION.\nExcellent Meals.\nEuropean   and   American    Plen.\nWhite   He'p   Exclusively.\nModern!?   turn shed   rooms.\nA.    IAPOINTE,    Propristor,.\nLiUKliN*\u00bb\u00bb- 1. Welchman. IIurIivtuI. n.\nAlia.; J. Peterson, RevsUtoke; A. A. i\nHaitley. K*__ T. I. tiinrin, Sulnio; J. i\n.hraro, Hull UIv.t: aeorfre T Miitttows. :\n1*1*1 mo; K'nrl Rauld, Bull Rlvsr P\u00ab\u00abte '\nSalon-Jo, Spokane; L, J. i'ur.-nl. Vernon; i\nP. i'l.;--* Birch bank; John Mucha.\nUirdo: William Nixon. Bedircwlck, Alia; I\n.(    B.   HontfOmcry,   H    !>ri!k. niloff,  Mrs,\nrinlk.-ndoff.   .Moos*-   Jew,   Bask.;   O.   H.I\nBetcUfL a. Pace, Cranbrook,\nSummer Resorts\nHOTEL CASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR\nGeneral    Store    in    Connection,\nSpecial   Sunday   Dinner.\nAssorted   Solt    Dinks   on   Ice\nE.    f      DOUBLEDAY.    Proprietor.\nIn the Cnlted Slate\nlleinld.1\nALLIES WILL NOT\"\nAGREE   TO   QUIT\nCONSTANTINOPLE\nCONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. !>\u2014\nAn allied extraordinary council\ndecided tonight to refuse cate-\ngorcially the Nationalist demand\nfor the allied military evacuation\nof   Constantinoole.\nSKATING   AT   ST.   JOHN\nMONTRBAL, N\"v. I.\u2014St. John, X\n... backed Mn.nj.-iy by Uke Placid\nttaranac Lake aaaoolatlon, the Mi.uih\nAtlantic, New Bnslaad and other as-\ntoctationa, eras awarded tin* International skatlM meet tor UM, al llu\nnnu;ii rasetln* of tha International\nskatin* Union ol Aimrir.-i. bald bar\nSaturday.\nIM0RRISH1M0RRISI\n.pie\nWE ap|\nAND il\nWE hope to .ai ..i\nTHANKSGIVING d\nREAL   lliaiUlnln. -\u00ab,\nYOU will hara can\nDO   likewise.\nWHEN   in   need of\nMEN-S and   ll\nYOU    d   stfsTTm   I\n\"WE try in pleaae!\"\nBo\u00abCLcm\u00abi\nWi\nNelson's Best Cafes\n^Mor\n\u2022\u25a0\"aio^KI-le'\nMen Suited     ,-j\nWALLY SCHANG\nILLUMINATES\nNEW PLAN OF\nTRANQUILITY\n(Continued  from page ono)\nralta wimM t'liahic ibe fovernnwat to\ncreate an atmoi*i>hi-rc of tranqUtUtty in\nirhtcb    confldeilce   oould    be   rastered\nem In hi Industrtea\nRefardlM hm own proposal i\u00bb <*.*ill \u25a0\noonfereaee of representatlvea of iho '!<*>-\nmlnlona to eavaa \u2022 i Ic developmonl\nof tba Bmptta be nM the InvttaUoni to\nthis maettaf eraM nol be dlapatcbed until attar the ehwtlon,\nRefarrlni to thi*- murh dtaaobaad ifvy\non eapltai Mr, Bonar law nld the daily\npress rrjiorfH thiil In- waa in favor of\naueh a nnasiiro were absolute nonsenaa.\nUp to Capitalist! to lay.\nHa explained that taiisf the war a\nlabor iirputaiiim rtalted bin to jjamiat\nmt thoda of ifciataf monajr.   At that time\nhe OKpraaaed the oiiinlim that a levy on\nOapltal   was   piThjips   ihi-   beat   solution\nof the pra-Meni of rodwdng tbe national\ntl. ht   huiili-n,   hut   added   th.it   it   was   a\nquestion  not fur the working olaaoeo,\nInn   for   lhe   man  who  bad   tnoni*y   ami\n*, bad  to ohoooa between paylnp a\nlevy or nn income tax.\nIt.- pointed \"ut in the denotation that\ntoboT*f poattloa wai entirely different.\ntii,. Laborltae adrooatod \u25a0 capital\n:. Incrraaea in the Income tux and\n\u25a0ease \"tn ev-arptblni elm.\" Th-.* ron-\netderatton which bad made him rven\nIream of a capital lory In HIT, Mr.\nBonar Law decterod, mail.*- him nay that\nwaa abaolutoly loimoy today, ltr--\ntrenchment in Um gwfernmeal akpbantt*\nirea ami redaetlona la taxation wore\ntool Itnaortani te loaW Uada, Thare\nraa room for large aaanogelag in lha\ndmtnlatrattoa and tboae bo would un-\nt-iiik.', inn they wpald nol tooah the\nt. nu ndoni sums of tkh im.iK.-t.\nASSERTS THAT\nMIDDLE COURSE\nONE TO STEER\n(Continued   frnm  pap***  one)\nhonorable episodes  In  the political life\nof the country.\"\nTheT dl'i what thej*dld. he declared,\n\"baoauae they considered It lo be ihelr\npatriotic duty to place the Interests of\ntheir country first nnd the inlerests of\ntheir party second.\"\nAppeala for ralr Play.\n\"They nnd I appeal to the nation I\nwhose prent word is fair p];iy.\" He N(\"l\nnested that all OOndidatOI In the elec-|\ntlone should he asked whether they were j\nprepared to place th\u00ab intenests of the\ncountry before party Intereata, \"It ls of\nthe most urgent importance,\" said\nLloyd QeorgO, ''that at this critical mo-\nmen I   you   should   have   in   the   coming\nparliament \u25a0 strong body of Independent\nmen\u2014men who are prepared to face any\nand every party. In order to Insist that\nthe government of the day shall pursue\na safe course, a sternly course, shall not\ncommit Uself to revolution nor reaction.\nbat pursue a policy which Is in accordance with the honorable traditions of\nthis land, a policy of steady progress\nfor the whole of its existence.\"\nThanksgiving Day!\nStore Closed\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nJ\nMADDEN HOTEL\nMRS.   MADDEN,   Prop,\nFirtt'date     Roome    by    tha    Day.\nWeek   or   Month.\nCfOry   Censiderstion   Shown   te\nGuetta\nCor.   Baker   and   Wsrd   St\u00bb.    Neleen\nM.\\M*K\\- Donald McDonald, Palmo;\nMra .1 H (tylsy, Qu-.-i*- Hay: E J\nVandergrtft nml wif<-. Flon nee Vander-\n\u25a0;:nft, Kv.-lvn Vandcrgrlft, M r. Vand-*>r-\n\u25a0-ri'*. Kaskatchewan; (1 H Ross, \\ r\nJeff. K. Forsy, S Roeenbsenrer, Wol-\ntpl    ; Laurence Johnson. Bpokan*.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL j\nM   t    Mallette   &   Son..   Proprietors. \u25a0\n\\*~,\\v*,   uirirm,  comfortable   roome at\nrcae-jii.ttih)    rHt-e       Open    da*}    and .\nrugril\nCorner    Hall    snd    VofOOW    Street*   |\nl ,\\\nI*AKCV1EW\u2014I)  Lefariro, P  Verrlna,\nHeakatoon: Willl.-nn M.'K;i\\-. i-nlmirv: W\nTVepe. I- h.ivi.n. W Wellare. Vancou-\n.wi J. Raymond. HW.it. ijii..; Ernest\nfbreat li   Lebelle. Quebec.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n\u00ab16 VERNON  ST.   EAST\nComtcrteble  Roome     Hot and Cold\nWster. Dining  Room in  Connectien.\nRatee   $1.00  and   Up\nTHE  STANDARD  CAFE\n320    Baker   Street,    Ncl.on,    B.   C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30 Special   Lunch..3U^\n5:30  to   8:00   p.   m.,   Supper. .35^\nPhone  154\nHIGH   CLASS   RESTAURANT\nROYAL CAFE\nOpen day and night. Quhk btv-\nIce. iJinrier, tl:M \"\u25a0 m. to 2:00\np    m.,   I8e,     Special   Supper,   6:30\np.  m. to 8:00  p.  m..  35c.\nPhone 182. t>04 Baker 8treet\n1\n'\nTHE\n'inr^t   . .pn\nOPEN\n.n.Ii<>    raf\nL\n1\n.1\nD\nA\\\ncare.\nASH\n. unertor\nt\nN\nI,   III-\n.HIT\nlehes,\n' r.\n1\nt\\iiiinfc ao\nah '.l.iilv.\n:i   water,  i\nin. rurnleh\nter    We c\nH I'Ai'i:.\nSI\nim\nit\n,ti\nIn\n'Kl\nll\nrni\nr t\n\u25a0:it  III ,-!\u25a0:\nIAI.     1.\n>i   drink\nnir; hoi\n\u00bb prlviil.\n1\nream.\nNice.\nI oold\nirtlrx.\n*\nTHE CLUB HOTEL\nCor.  Stanley  and  Silica   Streets\nI- irht-ci'iMB   coatfortabte   rooma   al\nreasonable    ratca.     S(k*< -i.il    winter\nmonthly   rates.\nJACK   GRANT,  Manager\n\u2022 iF    YOU    WANT    RESULTS    TRY\nYd  CLASSIFIED  ADVT,\nFor\nInvitations\nIn either card\nor folder form\nC*4LL\n144\nThe Daily News\nQxaiii'i  Printers\nNELSON.   B.   C.\nPure cocoinut nil ind rich pulnt\noil, from our own pliintationi,\nare \u25a0kilfully 11m!,! in Sunli||tit\nSoap. It it the pureit and\nIntlir-i quality laundry toipand\nhat rhe lar|e\u00abt tale in the irnrtd\nSunt \u25a0 it li t Soapwathes hratitifullf\nand at it bai no impure ingred-\nienti it *\u00ab\u00bb<\u25a0\u2022\u00ab >oor clothes und\nmake* them wear longer.\nBey Sumlitkt\nFATHER   WHELAN   DIES\nOTTAWA,    Kor,    r,. -riw.    Ffctfccr\nMatthew  J,  WoeJan,  pariah  priest\nSt.    I'.ilii.L's   I'hun *h.    ilied    hnv    t\n>\u25a0 etter a kmi lltaeaa,   n.*- wns tha\nLdlRC    Iri-li   r;iih\u00abiij.-   c\u25a0t.-n;\\ni.-i!i    e\nI   i-ity   iiiid   Wll   unlveisnlly   know\n\u2022   hi*    i.i-i.-viiy   abUtdaa   m4    hi\nver-fnl lint:      ptoUaathroiay      ti.w:ircl\ny th Mirliti raua    Ma araa prom\n\u25a0nt   in   Mparate   eebool   etrotoo   li\ntawa,  .-.i.l  for   two  fee re   proaMed\nchairman   ..f  the  separate   srh-.ni\nborn in St. Pati i< k'e pariah\nnl saorH his iif<- time tin ro,\nMayor Hylan Is\nUpset When Vets\nNeglect Alleged\nl     ,*.\u201e i.   thf.it*   io   reive   300   hours   of   labor   to  entlth\nand   -Czechs   elbow   each   other    n   their   \u00bb   E colo \" g\nelas\u00bbroom*H,  and,   strangely enounh,  get \u25a0 n .,_,_._J      \u201e,_!\nlong   f\ntwo   thlny\nuly.    Prague l\u00bb known for | m*ei\naeellent eehoola ami good i houi\nthe     Job     wa\u00ab     finished.     Nlnt\nrs, or nnvillonr-, ns the Czechs cal\n  ,,V't...nnt'anV 1  them,  were built,  one  for women.\nmusic.   That Is auttlolent to tempi any   t(inu,st,.r th(, (.0|ony comfortably houser\nShiv student to leave his home ami mm-m\nhis educutlon at the capital of Czechoslovakia.\nThe Story nf Charles university in\nI'nigue makes an Interesting narrative.\nIi was founded in 1318 hy Charles IV.,\nwhose reiKu represented the golden age ; eat\nof Csech history.    As nn institution of    'm\nhigher leamlni Charlai Ulalveralty antedates the Oarman wtf-earaltlea by more\nthan half a century. It was there that\nthe   nation    ami     spiritual     life  of  the\nCaeoha was lonn oaatered.   In IM0, after\nthe   disaslrous   battle   of   White   Moun-\ntaln, where the Caaohi lost their Independence, the university was turned over\nlo the Jesuits; home time later to the\nHermans.     Not     unlil     1SS2     were   the\nCaeoha again permitted  ta have their;\nown department* At the present day\nI here evlsis two universities, one Czech\nand the other German.\nThe regtetratlOn Idfcl semester In\nMayor ,Iv,;,n I p|,:irles university totaled THO\" men and\nrman Institution\nshowed \"-,in nien and IM women. There\nalso are in Prague two teehnleal schools\nof university \u2022\u25a0unking, the Czech hating\nmi atteadanoe of fiflftft and the German\n\u25a0jofin students. Recently, beoauaa of the\nlarge influx of Slav refugees from the\nMat,  Charles  university  haa established\nparata Ruaslan and (Tkralalaa depan-\n141 sludent^.\nWe go by the innjur vote, and I\n(lie majority are insane, the sani\ninusi go tn the hoaplta).\u2014-H. Mtji\nNRW  YORK, Nov.\nbarged \"pitlltli-s\" ami refused to Ita- j -jr.oo women; tl\nten In I |)le:i for sirk veterans when\nItcpresentalive Albeit R. Roaagale ot\nthe BrOU 'ind others appeared before\nhim tn charge that 73 soldiers snf-\nfriing   from   tuberculosis   were   hehg\nbadly fed, neglected and abuaed In the\nS.-a    View   hospital   ut    Staleii    Island, \u201e,\nwhich is n city   institution. menu.\nair, Roaadaie ami other Blemaen of     The school eretam In Coecho-glorakla\nhis   committee   were   received   in   an le undergoing a radical change, from the\nanteroom   -t  the   fcayor*.   office   by \u2022\u00ab\u25a0 ^thenem.   gff**\u2122\u2122\u2122\n,,   , \u201e      ,      ,     . \u25a0 ;i   iiii'ilifva    s ;Mi-. hail  ineule.it- <l   into Ms\nMayor ll.vl.n. tlukal by .-..mmis- \\*\u2122m>, \u201e sysl,.,*n \u201e, a\u201e,i,l,\u201e. \u201e,\u201ei worn\nsinnir nf iinniinis Ilirahfiiiil aad M ,,l0 Pm,,irr rtaelt Th.. Mkoal waa\nWilf.in.   (-..inmissiiiiu-r   Color. a purely orfu-iiil Insiitulion. tiffUl In It.\nThp iiiignaanian aad baraly basoni malnteaanoe of o.-niury-oiil rules ami\nto toll of iinl condition, tutfered by Mind lo any eapar'nientallon whi.-h\nthe   tuberrular   ratanuu   when   Ike \u00bbo\u00abM llbarallae the praTalllni ayatnn\nmayor  made  hla  oharfe.  ol  pol ,|TheCaet\n.ind aaaerted ihai tin- motive waa nol\nto help the vh.-rans,. bm to help IM\n\u25a0nngtvasman'i campaign for reflection\nIn lhe Brans, The i greaaman retorted thai racfe n charge was \"falae\nand disgraeeful,'' while Cnnimis-\nrioner t \"ter aaaertad that it was a\n\"s.-mindrellv propoaltlon to hring sen\nsational charges of this d\njust before an election.\nli.u. :,  Veterans'  Grievances.\nptlon  bttt\nI H\nin the more or Ie:\nQermantaed sections, in order to retain'\ntheir Identity, had to establtah schoola\neupported by popular subscription, Thie\nwas  the  \u25a0\u25a0Malic- Bkotaka\" or \"llother\nSchool.\"    The   incv.ni   Csecho--Oovakta\nmlntatry of education has plana for a1\nroorganlaatloa cf ihe sehoi system after I\nthe best American concepts.\nj    in Pmgue the eoUege men is likely |\nI to   he   a   tlrcil   looking   youth.    Iiavlng\nI the mid nigh I oil long and often.\n\u25a0   is  cl.id   in   worn   Bhang,  and   In   the |\nIder monthe is more often without\nWith  one.    Many of Ihe older\nstill   wear   their   former   army\nman\npita) before Sunday.\n\"Herer.\" replied the\nI'ongn\n\" \/>\ni\nA display advt. in The\nDaily News enters into\nMany hemes, catches\nmany eyes.\nTo Europe\n, ,, Cherbourg\nNot   ii, r.mp of rranoa. 9MA\u00a7mpim\nSee,   I J,   MontCHlm  Liverpool\n1.    t  Riit'i\u00abg\u00ab  Trom  Montreal-Qntheo.\nNov     Iv.    Metagama (Mango**\nMov    II     Minnedosa      .    . \u00ab'\"ithainpioB\nAntwerp\n'.<\u00bb     11     MontOtere Liverpool\ns\u201ev n  ii,,,,,. of i:,'\u201e..i\u201e   \u2122\">\"\"\"\u00ab\n.   Soulhampton\n0krt*traai Chlpa Prom gt. Jnlin.\ni \u00bbec. f>. \u25a0' uiti: lim .Olaagow\nl.lverpool\nChertwarg\n'>f.c    I,   M.-lita Soiitlinnii.ton\nAntwerp\nDhC    12    M.tNtCHlm Liverpool\nn.-r   it, lUragaau OeaafM\nnrsnRTATioifa.  rati:\u00ab awd rnt.i,\nOFTAILB MAY BE SECURED PROM\nLOCAL AGENTS EVERYWHERE OR\nWRITE J. 8. CARTER. DXUT. PABSGR.\naOEWT.  MUlegOlt, a   o.\nJAurs   BtMLLV\nl:,i!riinoie  nvlrhr.   ihe  \"Babe   Rath\nf the   Inl'-riK.linnal  IrofUe,\"  will  WOOT\nie uniform \"f the New   ,'orlt Qlante\n*-:t\ni Ml.\nLIVER TROUBLE\nPains in Stomach\nRheumatism\/\niry Sloan's\nM..st of the mlifrrj an I 111 health\nthai humanity is burdened with arfae\nfrom fllaordera ol the liver, stomach\nnr   1-i-Ueis.\nIf you are feeling nut of hoiIh, h:tve\n[lalns In the itOTnach, cspniully after\neating, sour slomarli, bilious spells.\nsirk   QT   hllioiiH   headaohea,   heart burn,\nwater braah, etc.. ynu ehooM take \u25a0\nf.-w 4MM of MilluiiiiH Luxn-lJver\nIMlH. They will liven up the liver,\nregulate tho bowels, and tone up the\nstomach.\nMr, T. c, Rahman, niglig-itr., pat,\nwritM: \"I have had liver trutible and\npalag  Iii  the stomach fur a  long time.\n1 atarted to um rour Milburn's Laxa-\nl*l\\er rills, and in a short lttne I no-\ntlood they were helping me. Now 1\nWuiild not be Without them nnd can-\nHOl    leenliimetid    Ihcni    t.no   highly.\"\nMHburn'l L:ixn - Lh cr  PU'g nro  l!tio\na vial at till dealers, ..r mailed ilireel\nun receipt nf price hy -The aft Milburn\nCo., -LiniiU-d, Toronto,' Uilt.\nCharging that  the v< tenuis had re- i eoal lha\nceived    tW)    fund,    suffered    frnm    cold    indents\nIn    winter,   were    ,,.(    prOteeted   t\u00bb   \"\"gj\u2122^   Kll|rl,.nt   m,,   m>1(hl,r   ,,,\u201e\u201e\nmosqultooe  In   sum roar,  kept  in   un-  w room  for Hlhi,.tll.K unrt MOciai ao-\nt-le.n beds and called a \"but ih of a i v 111* t*. There Is no c.nipus anil there\ntruck driver*1\" t'nngressmnn ROM- i are no fraternity houses. Be spends\ndale    produced    four    maty    trays    and' |(1   lo  r,ft  hours  a  week  at  his  lectures, j\nniiiti- j besides the required collateral reading. I\nTheM an the tnings they are fed laboratory work and study     tapft-aarla\nfriim\u201e         - is viven to the ancient elaaalM.\n\"   ''    ,                     , BeaMM    the    university itself, every'\n\u25a0ir   is  evident   from   the  way r^U^^h atudent tahee a prMe In tha atg-\naet,\"   eaid   Mayor   Brian,   \"that you  ,,,,,\u201e-s (.ni<iny \u201enii the \u25a0todeata' home.\nard her.- tor political  purpoaea*1 The former waa built under necessity.\n\"I   think   thut   is   dlagracefuU\" ro*   At the oloae \u00ab<f the war the largo \u00bbath-\ntorted    the    IIIIWIH\u2014II1II       Me    added    'ring   of   stu.lnts   111   PiagUO   overtaxed\nthai  the complaint   was entirely tree  'imn.itu.y fkcllHtaa   Park and railroad\n- - ,, I*   ,1,.,   v.   v-j    station  benches  had  to  serve  as  impro-\nmm po,i,,.    tie ..M tha   he o:u\\ usit] nK rit   Thp apill.nat.h.\n\u2022ritlclzed his own parly f\u00ab r neglect of ||1(. w|||Ur m\/A% lhe aspoct more Kioomy.\nveterans In Other cases as severely TI,,.n ,.,\u201e itadeatS hit upon tho plan\nas tie was now criticising eubordlnatea  of oonstruotlng tholr own dormitories.\n.f Mayor Rykan. The fOYcrmnent plMged an initial sum.\nMayor  Hy\u00bban   aafcad   the  eongroae-1 the president agded a gift aad tha \u00bba-\nlf   he   had    not    visited   the   hOa-   uWpatlty   offered a  splendid   site  ov.T-\ninnkniB  the  city.    In    October,    iy^\u00ab.\n: ground   was   broken,  thf*   men   students\n1 lining the heavy work, the women main-\n\"laai it peculiar that you didn't go   1:lin,hi: ,, hl,(:hf>n ,1(,ar i,y.    Bub had\n,   there  until Jusi   before  flection?'\" asked\n1 \"Von must not ailcmpt to put a BO*I\n| liiie.il angle on lhis matter,\" said the |\nj eongresaman, \"l'olit,tcs has nothing tm*\n\\ do wiih it.   We're here to help the sol-1\nj diem    Y\\V do not  hold  you respniisible\nfor eondlttooa   We merely ask you to'\nremedy   Until.\"\n\"Vou  look   some newspaper  men  with\nyOU   \"ii  ymir   tour of   Inspection  yi-stti-\nday,   didn't   you','\" asked   Commissioner\nHIrah field.\n\"I did not,\" replied the cohrTi s-mati\nOppoatd to Star Chamber.\n\"Why illiln't you come to lhe mayor\nquietly, or why didn't yoil roine to nie.'*'\nnaked Hirehfield.\n\"Hecause I wouldn't he a parly to nny\nstar chamber proceeding,\" replied ROBB-\ndale. \"You 000*1 Inject politics inlo\nI his.     I   don'J   know   that   the  com mil*-\n\u25a0leoer of aaaosata has any lorladlctlon,\nI dOU'l know where he fits In.\"\n\"You are IryliiK to    pull    wool over\nsomebody's    eyes,\" said    the    enmmls-\nsinin r.\nAfilnr further    personal   reflections,\nMayor Bylaa said that he was too deeply   engaged   In   the   liudgft   to   mnko   a\npemoaal   Inquiry    Into   conditions   oa\nStolen Island, nnd he ilbecied rominls-\nslonere Color and Btrshfleld to make nn\niii.|uiry. Then Ihe Uuiyor left lhe room,\nand Commissioner lllrshflehl turned to\nMrn. Malcolm A. Marl^od and Mrs. A.\nP. Dennis, who were members of the\ndelegation appealing for leteraoa They\naaaerted thai sick n terans at tii. Itatea\nIsland liospltal had died from undcr-\nnoiulshment.\n\"Vour net ions.\" nM HqhWImIuMI\nMirslifleld, \"f\u00abhow that you are In league\nwith Congressman Ilossdnle, who seeks\nreeleetlM on the soldiers' voir.\"\nI>r.   I,.   M.   Kramer,   general   mipcrln-\ntendegt  of  Sea  Vhw  hosphni, denied\nyesterday  that   UlON  wns any basin  fnr\nthe ohargM ot Ooagressman noeadalo\nMe agM the vet. ijinN at Hen View received (rood food and good medical care\n\"The four rusty trays which the congressman lock away had been discarded\nseveral months ago,\" said I>r Kramer.\n\"They were probably supplied to tin-\nconareesman by some disgruntled |m-\nUaai The hospital here will stand Die\nfullest inquiry, snd we WOlOOflM any\namount of investigation.\"\nrarms and cases\nStarts blood coursing throu^t!\ni'.- saasssttdsaot, TMifsMrtse sm\nIn iii plan ii warm, rftawtni coatfor*.,\nTry Sloan'sobMratnrd ami bruind\nmafclaa.   It all in nesralfiaaad bai.\nin lie.   lln uku up cotO) in cbc-si.  K.'-p\nh aaaay,\nJlfa.\/r' tn t\nSloans Liniment\nr..mu\nn\u2014t-hills paint \\    |\nChristmas\nCards\nPrinted\nWith\nYour\nName and\nPersonal\nGreeting\nBeautifully engraved\nnml embossed cards, on\nthe finest of material\nnml of the best workmanship.\nIn dozens of different\nstyles. Some are fancy.\nSome are plain. Some\nare large. Some are\nsmall. Folder cards or\nthe flat style.\nThere is a style to\nsuit any taste.\nOr, if you have a special design of your own,\nwe will make it up for\nyou.\nWe specialize in special orders.\nWe can deliver within\n24 hours of receipt of\norder.\nPrices are lower than\nfor some years.\nWe have a splendid\nassortment at\n$2.00 a Dozen'\nThis includes envelopes and printing of\nname and greeting.\nOthers up to $5.00 a\ndozen.\nBusiness Greetings in\nlots of 50 or more at\nspecial prices\nPlease give us your\norders eariy, while you\nhave the largest assortment to choose from.\nIt will soon be lime to\nmail cards overseas.\nThe\nDaily News\nQuality Printers\nNELSON, B, C\nPKAQUE IS (JENTI.H\nOF SLAT CWLTU1E\nThe Czechs hnve nlways nsplred to\nDIBhe l-rfljfue the renter of culture. It\nseems Hint thin h.'iH hoen at last renl-\nlae-J. To f'niKiie have eome ureal niim-\nhers of sturh-nls from Belghborlng Hluv\ncoiintridi.    It urn-liana,  Ukrainian-*, 8erbs\nSynoptic Fotfms\nIn a Compact, Convenient Size,\n9^x12\nCan be used to show at a glance daily, weekly,\nmonthly or annual subdivision of expenses and\nrevenue.\nPer 100 \t\nSmall quantities, each\n*2.00\n at\nThe Daily News\nQuality  Printers\nBAKER  STREET\nNELSON,    B.   C,\n \u2022   ijlt NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY \u25a0MORNING, NOVEMBER fi, 102?.\nI\n9mrhm.\ntf#\nCENTRAL PUPILS\n| SHOW PROGRESS\nAttendance Records Good;\nExamination Results Are\nAnnounced\nReaults for October examination!)\nheld ln the Nelson public school have\nJust been announced. Following is a\nHat of the names in order of merit\nof those pupils making 60 per cent\nor over in tho glass tests held ln\nSeptember and October. The per\ncant of possible attendance made by\neach class during October is also\ngiven at  the head ot each list.\nDivision I-\u2014Attendance, 88.64 per\ncent. Honor list: Florence Wilson.\nJoan Hallett, Ruth Craufurd, Dorothy\nUlllam, Roderick McLeod, Tom Ha-\naey. Elmer Jennings. Jack Huddle-\nBton, Arthur Walters, Margaret Cotter, Elfrio Deo, James Uenson, Margaret Hlpperson, Charlotte Jeffs, Rose\nHartwig and Ethel Shaw* equal,\nLieorge Campion.\nDivision II.\u2014Attendance, 94.27 per\nomit. Honor list: Claude Fawcett,\nIrtn* Armstrong, Gwen Thorpe, William F'engeliy, Crofton Hail and Iaa-\nbell Walton .equai, Mildred Manhart,\nEthel Sutcliffe, Iris Robertson, Ned\nllliodce, Elizabeth Borden, Donald\nMoCliarlet, Albert Kitto, Charlie\nDriscoll, Anna Anderson, Jim Kina-\nhan, Rita Robertson, Billy Bunyan,\nAstred Gausdal, Jack Thomas, Florence Hanna, Bobbie Hall.\nDivision III.\u2014Attendance, 98.51 per\nent. Honor list: Gerald Btlbbs,\nMarion Bell, Hugh Armstrong, Gilbert\nAnderson, Laura Willey, Dorothy\nOoldsmith, Vera Kirby, Muriel Stan-\nfey.\n\"Division IV.\u2014Attendance, 96.02 per\nent.' Honor list: Ruby Whitfield,\nDorothy Sturgess, Ruth Erickson,\nlertrude Matheson, Virginia Morrl-\nlon, Mary Phillips, Molra McLeod,\nMollle Thomas, Violet McGregor, Nona\nMatheson, Alfred Farenholt-z, Hen-\nIetta May, Reggie Bush, Albert Kir-\n>y, Norman Beattle, Harry Corbie,\nJerald McLeary, Jennie Calbick, Rosie\n'\"iorie, Penrod BaBkin, Jack McDon-\nld, John McLean.\nDivision V.\u2014Attendance, 96.02 per\nei*. Honor list: Harold Matthews,\nvy Walker, Lilah Jefferson, Isabelle\nlenson, Mabel Thorpe, Lily Sostad,\nVillie Lee. Lawrence George, Elsie\n*urner, Ruth Bardsley, Gwen Haydon,\nVillio Piokford, Kunkin Hanna, El-\nera Gustafson, Mary Robb, Victor\nValker, Mabel Perdue, Edna Buch-\nnan, Roger Cornish, Mollle Wilson.\nDlviBfon VI.\u2014Attendance, 95.31 per\nnt. Honor list: Dofothy Titsworth,\nIelen Gould, Ruth Orr, Josephine\nV'hltehouse, Annie Gormley, Ellwi-\neth Young, Eleanor McHardy, Edith\nllton, Rose Hail, Fiona Sutherland,\nvelyn Matthews, Morjorle Wilson,\netty Horstead.\nDivision VII.\u2014Attendance, 98.91 per\nnt. Honor list: George Llplnskl.\n\u25a0hn McLeod, Ray Sharp, Annie\nlawes. Evelyn Clark, Annie Walach,\nKathleen Hoggarth, Frank Becker,\naul Huddleston, Charlie De Glrolamo,\nlary Jarvis, Emellne Sharp, GladyB\n\"encza, Roland Thompson, Roy\n'larke, Owen O'Neill, Ralph Olson,\n(.alp Thompson, Gordon Kerry, How-\nrd Maundrell, Connie Frost, Mar-\naret Renwick, Joe Wright, Roberta\n:irby, Robert Joy, Albert Jeffery.\ndam Tencza, Jlnimie Lowder, Ernest\niplnrtlii. Gertrude Wigg.\nDivision VIIT.\u2014Attendance, 92.75 per\nnt. Honor MM: Violet Bhflrp, Velma\nclntyre. Bill Koltck, Teresa Camp-\n\u25a011, Dorothy Jelft, Junior Paten-ton,\nelite Kerush, Waiter Kltto, Eddie\nraves, Winnie Foster, Sandy M:ir-\nn, Ronald Waters, Jim Orr, Nellie\n\u25a0llu. k, George Radlck, William\nrown, Louise Peebles and Ralph\nyner equal, Ronald Beattle, John\n'llson, Charlie Ramsay, Harry Stirz-\n;er,   Sadie   Pond.\nDivision IX.\u2014Attendance, 95.S2 per\nnt. Honor llsti Victor Lindsay.\nlorence Smeaton, Clifford Craufurd,\nun Mouat, Frank Gormley, Leonard\nalton, Olive Maddock, Fred Ncw-\nan. Wesley Slmms, Harold Schulze,\narcia Towgood, Lucy WOHrunt,\n\u25a0Jilsy Floyd, Margery Thomas, Allan\n.ibb. Edna Thaw, Rolf lotted, Har-\nd Brown, Charles Jeffs, < J race Mr-\niaig, Elsie Turner, Brim Biker, Wal-\nr Dahlqulst,\nDivision X\u00ab\u2014Attendance, 93.67 per\ntit. Honor list: Mary Raukuc,\ntisy May, Frances Wheeler, Ktun-\nf Leno, Pearl Zt-tter, Rosie Cat-\nino, Beatrice Cnsley, Marlon Balless.\n\u2022ene Lawson, Irene Erickson, Herbert\n;irk, Margery Benson, Billy Ham-\ni, Robert Hawthorne, James Minnie,\nma Raukuc, Alan Bennett, Gordon\newart, Henry Olynyk. Lily Brad-\naw, Albert Frthner. Myrtle Bailees,\nivld Moses, Dorothy MacDonald,\nibina Mouat, Jack Marks, Carol\nright.\nDivision XI.\u2014Attendance 95.11 per\nnt. Honor list: Victor Fawcett,\nib Bell, Evelyn Wallace, Merle\nchihHld. Edna Maundrell, Vera\n\u25a0illiday. Goe Hoot, Jessie MacLeod,\nill ta HoiHtead, Mollle Forln, Mary\n\u25a0Inlow, Phyllis Van Vactor, Mildred\nTgstrom, Gladys MacLeod, Harold\n\\ydon, Muriel l-orbes. Bob Carlson,\nulley Blackwood, Dor Pen Dunnett,\ncholas I'opoff. Gerald Whitfield,\n.\u25a0rbcit Tow nut-ml, Xsem Melnnes,\nMielda Keniudy, Betty Ewart, Verne\nA 111.\nIvislon XII.\u2014Attendance, 30 per\nat. Honor list: Frames Parker,\nwrence MrKwim, limbic BlniM.\n\u25a0_*\u25a0 Stern. I'red Mower. Ka>mond Mr-\n,y, Alice Miles, Mary Doncatttr,\nb Brown, Edward Chaee. Victoria\nI. Amelia IMS, Clarence Wll-\nStlrling Mclntyre, Duuglass Hall,\nelyn Turner, Nellie Smith. Mary\nnlhain, Norman Dahluulst, oval\nbrum, Genevieve Walley. Guy\nirsy, Roy CroiN<iiilc. Jean Massey,\ni Ritchie, Houald Thomas,\nivlsion XIII.\u2014At tends ner 97.17 per\nt. Honor list: Ruth Lindsay.\n|ggy Whlfhouse, Phyllis Ha'lett,\nrothy Wallace. Helen Lynk, Vera\nrlow, Rosie Norrross, Ina Jnhn-\nVictoria Olynyk, ionise Boyd.\nirren Carlmel. .lea mi 1c Younf,\n!arllo DM, Qtrtll Wood, Lizzie j\nnyk. Ignore Wood, George Stoll. I\nk Buchanan, Tom olynyk, Russell j\n.-Arthur,    Mini     Kelderman,    Mar\nm,mt^mV$_9i,illyU-,*i\nAdvertising Man Dies\nHERBERT  B.  SOMERVILLE\nWidely known Canadian advertielng\nman, who ls dead in Toronto.\nJune Gamble, Jack Be'.l, Lillilan\nWright, Muriel I'oule, Tom Malahoof,\nFrancis Mac Don alii, George Klrby,\nEvelyn Bate, Teddy Player, Albert\nElsmure.\nDivision XIV.\u2014Attendance 92.10 per\nrent. Honor list: Alleen Titsworth.\nElsie Smith, Annie Stromstedt, Florence Maundrell, Alan McLean, Eva\nBallan, Winnie Bardsley, Alice Daniels, Alta Zeller, Lloyd Dahlqulst,\nJanet McKay, Alma Zeller, Joe Bate,\nElla Wright, Mildred Martin, Ethel\nRobisim, Allan Woodruw, Esther\nSchulze, Lily House, Wall Shang,\nM. Kirby, W. Cook, Jim Proudfoot,\nL.  Gillette,  C.  Turner.\nDivision XV.\u2014Attendance, 95.5 per\ncent. Honor list: Gwendolyn Penny.\nMarion Melnnes, Eva McHardy,\nMaxine Chevalier, Lett Ice Catalano,\nMiles Riddell, Hedley Wilton, Jack\nMaber, Rosemary King, David Paterson, Betty Van Vactor, Bfllle Hanna,\nBillle Currio, Annio Rollck, Kory\nWalker, Cecilia Mclean, Edith Goldsmith, Jack Edmonson, Doris Mclntyre, Stanley .hukson, Tom Little,\nJohn Olynyk, Gordon Sostad, Elaine\nStanaway, Bobby Walton. Willie\nStern, \"Frank Smythe, Billle Rowe,\nJack Teugue, Bert Green, Jack Towns-\nend,  Rtgflt Jones.\nDivision XVI.\u2014Attendance, 90.4 per\ncent. Honor list: Joy Doncastcr and\nElizabeth Carrie equal, Doris Bennett, Cora Blceum, i'eter Hucol. Mildred Russell, lielle Kamsny. U;iy Bell,\nBilly Chevalier. Jack Md'auhy. Mary\nKootnikoff, Joan Smith, Marjorie\nOrth, Dorotliy Hall, Sara Lowder,\nGeorge Oathum, Rose Ernst, David\nAllan, David Seott. Douglas Ritchie,\nAgnes Biccum, Emerlco Defoe, Leonard   Grodzkl,  Olive   Dahlqulst.\nDivision XVII.\u2014Attendance, 94.3 per\ncent. Honor list: Freda McKay,\nEdgar Wheeler, Stanley Orchard.\nMarion Daniels, Helen Olynyk, Gladys\nAbbot, Grace Hayden. Adeline Matheson, Olive Bell. Phyllis Jones, Will-\nlam Robison, Martha Knltth*. Edna\nKnlttle, Harry Knit tie. Gerald Mc\nEwan, Jean Smith,  Kenneth   Frost.\nDivision XVIII.\u2014Al tendance. 89.22\nper cent. Honor list: Philip Smith,\nAtkinson Crossley, Leonard Stewart,\nJean Cotter. Alameda Craves. Gilbert\nManhart. Elsie Corbie, Venus Atkinson, Hazel Kellogg, Donald Oakley,\nJoe Morris, Ernest Harlow, Teddy\nGoldsmith. Carl Larsen, Alfred De\nGlrolamo. Stella Kellogg. Peter\nRollick, Donald Poole, Jack McI>ou-\ngal, George Munro, Edith Mawer.\nMargaret  lleltner.\nDivision XIX.\u2014Attendance, 88.70 per\ncent. Honor list: Nina Biiigaman.\npeg^-y Gamble. Graeme Steed. Chow\nJown. Gavin .Mount. Jlmmfe Dee, Ella\nErickson, Gladys Tca-giie, Oliu Cross-\nley, Albert Peters, Harold I'.-ite, David\nBrown, Norman Stater, ThtfMt Stoll,\nMargery Myers, BtrtfBlU Hunter, lna\nMlnnls. Muriel Stirling, John l*ang,\nFrank McDunicI, Peter Olynyk, Bobby\nKennedy.\nFRIENDS ARE\nw\nBroods Over Imaginary Difficulties and Leaves\nthe City\nLEAVES aTaRGE\nBALANCE IN BANK\nCONFER ON EDUCATION\nTrail to Meet Nelson\n. Basketball Quintette\nTonight Trail's crack ki.sketball\nfive will meet the Nelson high school\nboys on the public school floor. This\nis tho first intercity gamo of the\nseason and will no doubt prove a fast\none.\nPractices havo been held quite regularly by the local boys, who are in\ngood shape. In order to become accustomed to tho local floor Iho Trail\nlads will work out this morning ut\n10 o'clock.\nThe teams will line up in the following order:\nTrail\u2014 Hradshaw, Rutlcdge, I\u00abane,\nPlesper, Stanley.\nNelson\u2014Black, Archibald, Brtdthaw,\nMcVicar,   Slmms   and   McKenzle.\nPlans Flight Over North Pole\nCAPT   ROALD   AMUNDSEN\nNorwegian   explorer,   plans   a   spectacular    flight    over    the    north    pole\nfrom   Alaska   to    Wi'iUberKon,    next\nJ W> __ -__\t\nObsessed by Idea Not Making Good; Inquiries Show\nNo Reason for Worry\nObtWttjd with the mistaken idea\nthat his business affairs were hopeless. Harold A. Lowe of Nelson, insurance man and estate agent and\nprominent In social affairs, has disappeared.\nLetters, dated from Spokane to his\nwife and J. H. D. Benton, a brother-\nin-law, show that for months he has\nbeen brooding over what appeared to\nhtm to be Insuperable business difficulties.\nYet investigation of his books and\nbank account shows that he left intact a large balance at his bank and\nthat all his caah entries had been\nproperly made. When he left N'elson\nhe had only a small amount of\nmoney in Ids pocket. A note In the\ncash book shows that before deciding\nthat the Imagined burden was greater than he could carry he had cure-\nfully done everything he could to\nleave his affairs in good shape as\nfur ns Ills clients are concerned. At\nany time, if necessary, he could have\nobtained money from an estate in\nEngland.\nFor months, lt appears from the\nletters, he had brooded. He was making a living and living within his\nmeans, but he appears to have been\ndisappointed in the measure of the\nsuccess be was achieving. Keeling\nthat he was not making the money\nhe wanted to make for hllftttlf and\nhis wife, a bride of a fern months\nthe Ideu finally obsessed Ills mind\nthat he was a failure. Ine,ulrles In\nNelson develop the fact that his personal accounts outstanding amount\nto   less   than   $50.\nDesires to Protect Wife\nIn his letters to his wife and\nbrother-in-law ho talks of being a\nfailure\u2014\"a broken man.\" \"Can't think\"\n\u2014\"Can't do,\" he exclaims, striking a\nnote the tragedy of which is heightened by the knowledge of the recipients that his flight was unnecessary,\nthut Mh business affairs are not in\nthe serious condition lie imagine*\nthem  to  be.\n\"If * remain nnd business disaster occurs, lhe odium will fall on\nmy wife, who will stick by me, but\nIf I go the whole hliiim will full on\nme and sympathy will go to her.'' ht\nsays. \"I've chosen (his course as the\nbest of a terrible selection and hope\nthat  I'm  doing  the  right   thing.\"\nSome weeks ago Mrs. Lowr went\nto Edmonton to visit relatives. Voder an arrangement which was made\nmonths ago, Mr. Lowe was to leave\ntoward the end of October to Join her\nand return to Nelson w.th her. He\nleft Nelson on the Crow boat on the\nmorning of October 24, apparently\nbound for Edmonton.\nOn October 26. Mr. Henson received the letter from him, dated\nSr* kane, October 25, und postmarked\nSpokane, 6:30 a.it*., October 26. His\nwife at Kdmonton, who has since returned to Nelson, received a letter\nof the same date and posting, ln\nboth he said lie was on his way to\nlhe   coast.\nNo Rtaton for Leaving\nSince th'ii rtlatlves' and friends\nha\\e l*vcn moving heaven and earth\nto find him and let him know that\nhis business troubles were largely a\nfigment of his imagination, that a\nfew hours' work on his ledgers shows\nthat he is solvent and that there is\nnothing whatever in his commercial\naffairs to cause him tn abandon his\noffice and the bride with whom his\nrelations havo been of such obvious\nhappiness as to have been frequently\ncommented  on  by   friends.\nC. \\V. Appleyard, a personal friend\nof Mr. Lowe, left Immediately for\nSpokane. He hunted through Spokano.\nSeattle and Vancouver. It is thought\nthat he may still bu ln Seattle or\nVancouver.\nMr.   Lowe's   brother,   \\V.   II.   I*owe\nof   Montreal,   has   arrived   in   Nelson\nand  has taken over  the  management\nof the office for the time being.\nBrooded   for   Months\nHe has come to the conclusion Iho* |\ntho   missing  man   first   Iwgun  to  get\nobsessed with tho idea of failure last |\nJune or July,  as  while he kept his\ncash entries In good rhape. ht ceased\nabout that time to balance bis ledger.\nHence, whiln constantly brooding ovur\nhis imagined difficulties, be apparently grew so dishuirtened that he never\nchecked   up   his   financial    standing,\nthough   a   few   hours   work   on   his\nbooks would have shown him that he\nwus  exaggerating  his  difficulties.\nDuring all the time that he was\nbrooding he gave no Intimation to\nhis friends of any trouble. He never\nmade any application for a bank\noverdraft, though his business would\nhave Justified one. In his letters he\nspeaks of maintaining a cheerful\nfront and of this having added to\nhis mental strain. \"I couldn't talk\nto anyone about It, I had to appcar\nehesrful, to seem natural, but 1\noan't stand lt any longer.\" lie says.\nId effect, in his letters.\nIn appearance *Mr. Lowe, for whom\ntn active search Is being made. Ms\nabout ft feet 8 Inches ln height. He\nIs of stocky build, with unusually\nbroad shoulders. His eyes are a very\ndafk browfl, he wears glasses, hus\ndark reddish hair nnd speaks with u\nPeculiarly deep voice. Me Is cleanshaven, has an English accent and\nwhen he left Nelson wore _ dark\nsuit. His age Is H yeaitt. A reward\nIs   l-ehig   offered   by   his   friends   for\nPROVINCIAL   REPRESENTATIVES\nHon.  L.  A.  David,  minister of education   for Quebec;   Hon. Pcrrin Baker of Alberta;   Hon. B. H. Orant, minister of education fur Ontario;   and Hon. S. J.  Latta,  minister uf education for Saskatchewan,' photographed at  the\ninter-provlnclul conference held in Toronto recently.\nWORK FOR A\nBETTEpSON\nTeach Boyhood to Play the\nGame, Says Rev. Stirling\nin Thanksgiving Message\nHarvest thunksgr*. ing und services\nfor the anniversary of St. Paul's\nchurch wei*e held yesterday at both\nthe morning and evening services.\nRev. James Barr Stirling, the minister, preached at both services which\nwere well attended. Special music\nfor the   occasion  was   rendered.\nTaking his text from Kcclesiastes\n17 verse 24 \"*< said in mine heart,\nGod sha'l Judge the righteous 'and j\nwicked, for there ls a time there,\nfor pur-pot* and for every work.\" the I\nminister said thut he thought thai '\nthere wtt proba'dy no better time\nthan al tht celebration of the mini- \u25a0\nversai-y nt the church opening to set\nOtTtaln e.ootl IVOlIU fOT tht ensuing,\nyear. \"We shuuUl, In the year Just\nentered upoti. try to make Um city of\nNelson a better and cleaner and more\nWholesome   place   to   Mve   in.\n\"Thk; city Oatmptfes ia\\orably with\nother cities In Which I have lived.\nWhat me need is people with high\nideals lo help lu this work. Do not\ncriticise cilieis. crttlcblt our own lives\nand  llu n  apply   11  lo others.\n\"Prttbyterianltin stands for Christianity in the activities of the church,\nthe city and the government. We\nhnve 1'reshytci iaii.-* on lhe board of\ntrade, on the citv cotnicll. und 11 Is\nup te llice governing bodies tt set\na standard which will keep the people ttmgffUag to attain it.\nArsks   Cooperation\n\"! would alM as'..\" o.mumied Mr.\nStirling, \"that members and adherents\nand lamliy lnuds would look inert to\nlhe QW of training and instructing\nthe youth or the city in the principles\nof dt'ty and eltlt' rishlp. and tlie\nschool* would ssl thsmntl-MH more\nfirmly  to lhe task.\n\"If lh.* men do not show enough\ninterest In the youths, let them quit\ncriticising   the   boys.\n\"It Is no mc,\" slate.1 the tpttttcir,\n\"when   our  hoys   ha\\e   done   wrong  to\ntell them h iw wt a-ettd when we1\nwere boy* Wc v.ere rome boys. The J\nold grandmother nould tell a tar'\ndifferent story. The boys of today ,\nare htndfhg out the same stuff that ,\nwns handtd out pome 2(1 und 30 years ',\nago. The buys wh* u they ure being ''\ntod of htw their parents ucted years\nugo arc not   following bo eagerly out\nof respect as out of wondtrrnent.\"\nPlay   the   Game\nSpeaking especially, to tht boys.\nMr, Stirling said: \"I **was no angel\nWhen a boy and u lot uf your fathers\nwere not angels when they were\nyoung. When I look back on some\nof the things done ln my youth I\nmake some of the boys of today look\nlike amateurs. I iim sorry for some\nof these things which were done before   thinking   twice.\n\"Boys, try to play the game, clean\nIn thought and deed. In sport be a\ngood sport, when winning root and\nenjoy It, when loooslng root for the\nother fellows, when beaten tak*** it\ngood but get ready for the next time.\nIf at any time you have occasion to\nleave NMson just show what Nelson\ncan produce In the lines of a sport\nund   good   boyhood.\n\"Let lis make tiii:-* year a year of\nthanksgiving, not one day for thanks\nand 361 lor grousing, let's do all our\ngrousing on one day We surely cannot thank Oo4 enough for all that\nhe has done for us In one day.\"\nMusical   Program\nThe following program was given\nIn the morning and evening services.\nThe Nelson Symphony orchestra, under the leadership of Boss Fleming,\ntook   part   in   the   evening   service.\nOrgan Prelude--\"The Bells of Aber-\ndovery 'chine si.\" 1,11. J. Stewart),\nMiss   (>.   Campbell.\nAnthem\u2014\"My Soul Shall Magnify\nthe   Lord.\"\nSolo\u2014\"Leave It to Him,\" Miss\nStewart.\nSymphony orchestra\u20141, \"Chanson\nJoyeuse\" til. Buvina); 2, \"Flower\nSong\" (Umge); 3. \"Serenade\" (Drlgoi;\n1.  \"The  Swan\"   (C  Saint  Loens).\nilntroil\u2014 \"The   Magnificat.\"\nAnthem\u2014\"The Valleys Stand Wt\nThick   With   Corn\"   (.Maunder).\nDuct- \"Whispering Hope,\" Mes-\ndames Milroy und Crossley.\nDismissal\u2014\"None   Dimmit Us.\"\nDAUGHTERS GIVE\nANNUAL DANCE\nLICE NUMBER\nIN ARTS CLASS\nj University of B. C. Second in\nCanada; Visitors See Need\nof New Buildings\n(By   Miss   J.ini*t   Crane.)\nVANCOt'VEfC \"Nov.    5.\u2014The    campaign which  tho students of the  i'niversity   of   British- Columbia  are   carrying   on   to   have   their   permament\nbuildir-gs   erected   at   the   Point   Orey\nsite, hns brought to light the fact thnt\na   large   number  of   Uritish   Columbia\n| people know little of the actual Inud-\n; equacy    of    lhe    present   accotnmoda-\ni tlon  at the  university.    With  a   total\n| registration   of   11S7   (the  arts   registration    being    next    to    Toronto    und\n> second   In   Canada)   certain   pitlftttnit\nare   forced   to   give   lhe   same   lecture\ni three  or four  times  because  there   is\n: no room large enyugh lo contain their\nwhole class:   a   privale house and   two\nI churches,   inrJurJln^   a   basement,    ure\n1 beinng   used   arf   classrooms,   while   u\ni chemistry   cour-g^. is   even   conducted\nj in    a    tent.      fcrfery    available    bit    of\n| space   Is   in   Us-j^Vind   further   expan-\nI sion   is   quite   aut   of   the   question. |\ni Something miist-4K* done at once, and ]\nthe   students   in   making  known   such I\ni deplorable   conditions   are   asking   the\ngeneral   public   to   extend   its   support\nland   bring  the   pressure  of  its   opln-1\nj ion  to bear on   the government.\nIt Is a very slgrufieant fact that i\nI Alberta, with a smaller population I\nthan we have, has spent ten times as J\nmuch on university buildings and\nc (Uipmeiit. My the Klwanis plan of\nraising on tht* security of the varsity\ngrant nf MM acres of Hnd at Point\nGrey, the university could be moved\nI without placing ai ;.* additional bur-\n[0-tn w-hatsoevcr on the ta\\in>el*. Sin* e\nthe objection \u201e{ i,iei*i\\iseil taxation\nis thus removed, and since the university It being fatally cramped by\nits unfavorable quarters, there should\nbe no further delay in the construction of permanent buildings.\nIllVttt tbe Public.\nSo   anxious   ware   the   undcrgradu\nspace and equipment. Many laboratory classes which met last Friday\nwere visited and an opportunity given\nto see the collegians nt work- IR\"*\ndifferent activities ed courses wet*)\nexplained and the congestion In Mrery\nbuilding was brought home to tho\nvisitor .i.\nAti item of interest was the clo^n\n[>roktmlty of the college buildings lo\nihe consumptive wards of the Vancouver Oeneral hoepit. I; the luti* r\n:*.ot lit) .vuniL* I'rttji) ihe biiihiii'j;s where\ntbe students hv1 the greator part ef\nhe   day,   Bepawed   only   by  a   board\nt'ttIK e !vji;    Ug     - [>  llir-,1  :  ! i    I      OH      W:tM\nthe entire !.: \u25a0'-. pf campus or .gym'!:.-\nslum and n.ut?h surprise wa.3 ex-\npresttd that t\\* V ii. C gtfalgtea\nhave become to pi ofl- ten) in spoilt\n.. .-h   ibsoluuly *.o athletic fecUttita.\nYcu Won't Cough\nAfter Taking\nBr. Wood's\nNorway Pine Syrup\nOn the first nppearanee of a cough\nor cold do not neglect it; get rid of\nIt at once before it has a chance to\ngrow worse and gets settled on the\nlungs, causing bronchitis, pneumonia,\nor other  serious  lung troubles.\nIn Dr. Wood's Norway line Syrup\nyou will find a remedy that will relieve the cough or cold on Its first\nInception by soothing the irritation,\nund healing the diseused lining of the\nlungs and  bronchial  tubes.\nMrs. Percy Mcllae, Little Shemo-\ngue. Nil., writes:\u2014\"Three years ago\nI had the \"nu\" which left me with a\nvery bad cough. I tried different\nmedicines which did me no good, so I\ntook DT, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup.\nIt relieved me of thut awful cough\nin a sohrt time.\"\n\"Or. Wood's\" is J5c and 60c a\nbottle at ull dealers; put up In a\nyellow wrapperr three pine trees the\ntrade mark; manufactured only by\nThe T. Mil burn Co., Limited, Toronto,\nOnt.\nI have Often said thut all the misfortunes uf men spring from their\nnot knowing how to live quietly ut\nhome, in their own rooms.\u2014Pascal.\nTonight The r.igle hall will he the\ncenter of attraction, where the\nD-iughti-.-s af the Smpire will hold\ntheir snr.ual Tb a tiki giving dance.\nThe gcod work which title org*taxation hae dose ln the past will be\nwell remembered and a large crowd\nli expected. First-class mnelc by\na local orchestra and dainty refreshments will be two of the main features of this evening's pleasure.\nales to\ncrowded\nlhe con\nKiinck.\nmake     known    their     over-\n.olidition   that   they   secured\nnt   of   the   prtsldent,   I*.   S\ni   have   last   Friday   as   visi\ntors day, and they Invited the public\nto Inspect the premises nnd ste the\n| situation for themselves. .\\ K.mmit-\ntee of -students, with Miss M. Agnew\nas chairman, showed tht visitors\nI through the various buildings, polnt-\nI ing out the handicap both to students\n, and     professors    of     the     insufficient\nTHE PRUDENT MAN\nlays In his coal now. He done\nnot wait until cold weather\nwhen everybody wants coal at\nonce. He is for preparedness\non the coal QUtJttan anyway.\nP.. sides coal is cheaper at this\n\u25a0oaton. Why not bo as wise\nM lie and give us your coal order now? There's profits ns well\nas prudence In doing so.\nWest Transfer Company\nB. C VETERANS WEEKLY FOOTBALL COMPETITION\n$10,000  EK3s=\u00bb=MI JN PRIZES\nINSTRUCTIONS FOR FILLING IN COUPONS\nVou simply\nof lust  yeai\nWEKKLT t\ntion and thi\nindicHt\nby ptael\nnd one ci\noupo\nwhether the H\nig an \"X\" in t\nupon; Mc ent\nis;  $1 entitles\nOME  TEAM\nhe column  p\nties   till*   KUb>\nthe  subscriii\nwill score\nruvlded ln\nicriber to t\ner lo twent\nMORE,  LESS, or   the SAME  NUMBER of Oo\noupon.    25c en tit Is   the   subscriber   to   five\neK\\-\\*   SUh:\ny-five  weeks'\ncrip tlon and two coupons;  7.V\nsubscription and I'lvu coupons\nthan they scored in the corresponding numi*\nweeks'   subscription   to  THE  B.   C.   VT5TKRANB'\nentitles the subscriber to fifteen Weeks'   subscrip-\n(NOTICE\u2014You will note that $1 subscription entitles\nyou to five additional weeks' subscription and one extra\ncoupon). There is no limit to the length of subscription\nand number of coupons which may be sent in by any one\nperson in one week.\nGAMES TO  BE   PLAYED   NOVEMBER  1ltb.\nCompetition   No. 5 Closes   Friday   Midmrjht,   Nov.   10th,  ..i   the  offico of\nTHE B. C. VETERANS'  WEEKLY,  LTD.\nP.   O.    Drawer   938,   Carter-Cotton    Building,    corner    Hastings    and\nCambic Streets.\nVANCOUVER,   B.   C.\nCOUPON MOST BE CUT ALONG \u00a3>   *:DER\nNI*,\\V HEMES\nNo. 5\nU. C. ViriEIUNS WKEKLY Ull).\nFOOTBALL COMPETITION\nOAM\u00a3B TO Hi; PLAYED SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1Kb, |\u00bb*j*i\n(OmjKlhJoii Clown 12 o'clock Midnlirht Tilduy, Nov. 10th fcUQ CoujHms to I*. O. D\u00ab1PU WW, Vancouver, B. C.\nI snXrr the B. C. Vekrui W\u00abkly root ball Competition and *tgr\u00ab\u00ab to a bile by tie ml-ns as publish* it in th* B. n. VpH-rans Weekly, and to acrtpt th\u00ab A-oditor'P\ndecision as rtnal and loyally binding in all matten concerning this corupetlttin. anit enter on lhat un lerstaniUng. Twenty-five cents enclosed lor hs* waakl' aubacripUon\nentitle*. cont'-otUnr to ona \u2022\u25a0.Mmata:   hOc ten weeki and two estimates;  7,r>i* fifteen  weeks and threo estimates; It.00 twenty flVM weeKj and a*?e estimates.\nNOTE-Nark wilti X m volunui yro\u00bbi>Jcd wiiCtlm* you think tba HOME team wjj scor* MO&E, USti or tlie i-AMli lumiber ol ficala H La tho corrt&pouduig gaiut\nlist emeu.\nNAME.\nADDRESS\nLan\nTear:\nScore\nARSENAL\nASTON VILLA 2\nBLACKBURN 2\nLIVERPOOL  1\nCRYSTAL PALACE    2\nBARNBI.EY 2\nBLACKPOOL 1\nWEST HAM UNITED 1\nBRISTOL ROVERS ' 1\nREADINiJ 2\n_\n_1_\n2\nCREWE ALEX.\nHALIFAX TOWN\nOLAS00W CELTIC\nHIBERNL\\NS\nKILMARNOCK\"\nat\nHi\nI*\n \u25a0****\" ~~.\nPage Four,'\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER e, ltJE\"!,\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by The. Ni ws Publishing oompany.\nlimited, Nelson, R C, Canada.\nBunln-ftflB letters should be addressed\nand checka and money orders mude payable to The News Publishing company,\n:-tmlted, and tn no case to Individual\nmembera of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cardw and A. B. C.\n\u2022tatemeiua of circulation mailed on request or may be neon ut the office of\nany advertising agency reeogulied by\ntlie Canadian Presa Aanoelatlon.\nBubpciipiluii niles: Hy mall (country), fiO cents per month, Jfi per year.\nOutMde Canuda, a month, 75 cents; a\nyear, $7 r.O. Delivered, 75 cents per\nmonth, 14 for six mont lis, $7.50 per\nyear   payable In advance.\nMember Audit Hureau of Circulation.\nMONDAY,    NOV.    6,    1922.\nCanadian-U. S. Postal Pact\nAUTO BUGS AND BUGGIES\nBy Wood Cowan\nA postal convention that will\nenable the .postal services of the\nUnited States and Canada to\nfunction as one in the transmission of mail between the Dominion and the United States\nis in the making.\nPostmaster-General Work of\nthe United States has completed\narrangements for a conference\nwith the postmaster-genera! of\nCanada with a view to concluding the proposed postal agreement. Plans looking to this end\nhave been under consideration\nfor more th>>n a year and the\nimportance of the move prompt\ned Postmaster-General Work to\ndecide he would come to Canda\nthe first week in December to\nparticipate in the deliberation.\nWith the successful negotiation of this postal convention\nwhich will link the two nations,\nan instrument will have been\ncreated for the first time whereby an interehanp-e of mail matter between Canada and the\nUnited States will be facilitated and result in a tremendous stride toward the perfection of the petal systems of\nboth countries.\nThe convention wll be held\nin Ottawa and the postmaster-\ngeneral will be accompanied by-\nother high postal officials of\nthe department. Reciprocal exchange of postal equipment, insurance of parcel post between\nthe United States and Canada,\ntransit of United States mails\nthrough Canada and Canadian\nmail through the Uivted States,\ndirect correspondence between\nCanadian and American postmasters, uniform money order\nforms for both countries, United States railway mail clerks i\nto extend their runs into Canadian territory and others are\namong the proposals that will\nbe discussed at sessions of the\ntwo post office departments.\nThe agenda as finally outlined\nfor the convention consists of\n25 different questions that, if\nagreed upon, will thoroughly\nunify the two postal systems.\nLong Shirts~and High Steps] \u00b0[ **c0\nir&ou\nON THE RADIO LINE\nYouthful -simplicity is the keynote\nof this brown velvet frock with its\ninteresting pocket arrangement and\nthe newest idea in s eeves. The\nwalatllno   is   extremely   low   In   the\nEfficient\nbuseh\nyWtWw XaKkrtanw*       ..*.\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\nKKiiV.:.NU. rNCOuKJilD   0 HANGS  AND QtUPBFRUIT\nToday I am Ruing to outline some\nrules for serving orunges nnd grapefruit  on  the   home   table.     1   am   sure I\ntop to allow a bad of cracked te* to\nhe placed under the fruit,\nCurled Orange\u2014Wash and wipe tlw\nouter Hkin of the orange. Take a\nthat my old-housekeeper readers al- j s,1(ir|) knIf(l aml cut the Mkini |<,nRth-\nready know these rules; but, for the i wise, in \"petals'* (that Is, into nar-\nsake of the inexperienced housekeeper. | row strips), each petal beginning at\nI   am going   to  set   them   forth:\ni the \"blossom\" end and gilng to wlth-\ni In one-luiif inch of the stem end.\n1 1-onsen these ---kin-petals without tear-\n' Ing them off the fruit, then curl\n| eaeh   one   under,   toward   the   orange.\nAll   dOttMttC   science   sihnola   today\nliiHtniet  tlu-ir  pupils   in  certain  little\n\"niceties\" regarding the appearance of i ,, , ...\nY-M   now  have  an  orange  which   re\nserved   uncooked   oranges   and   grape-    g).mnl(.H     \u201e     flower.     The     work      is\nfruit.    The chefs  of   large  hotels also    finished   when   you   have   scraped   the\nemploy   these    methods   of   preparing , eupurflous  white part  from the  fruit.\n..       .. .. (without   breaking  Into   the  pulp-mr**-\n| tions).\nBiaakfaat Oninaa\u2014Cut theoranf\u00ablnl    Picnk. omnge-As ihta l\u00ab bard to\nhalf, crosswise. One half Is lined ^tpj^ln, I wj|| tell vou what the fruit\nper person. Shave a thin slice off j ,,)oka Ilk(l wh(.n ,U(, Worl( \u25a0\u201e *j0.10: It\nthe bottom of this half-orange, so j |s Just u lnnf< 8trip oC rln(i 0ue-half\nthat It will not rock when set on a \u25a0 ,lni.h wi(I(, wRh aI| of the lini,r0ken\nplate. Now take out the seeds and | HW.t|0n8 cliniring to it. When this\ncore    as    follows:       Take    a    pair    of\nosopher just because he remains\ncheerful In spite of aches and pains\n\u2022suffered by his wife.\ni*rdllnary scissors (clean, of course)\nand snip each white Inlerseetiun mem\nbrane near the core, or heart; by\nthis I mean stick the sharp points\nscissors deep into the orange-\ni cut eaeh thin membrane-\nsection.     When    you    have   gone    all\nstrip is rolled up It mukes a round\norange with a yellow band of rind\nnround it. To achieve this result,\ncut away nil the orange skin except\na half-inch hand of it running right\narOttnd the middle of the orange, Then\nseparate the pulp-soct.ons without\nbreaking   tliem.      nnd      make     a   cut\nAmong    the    first   echoes    of | around the trait In thla way, clipping j through the yellow band in one place\nfashion's decree for longer\nskirts is the cry from women\nin Chicago, New York and elsewhere for lower steps on street\ncars.\nFor a time the fashion in\nskirts permitted women almost\nthe same case and freedom that\nmen enjoy in moving about.\nBut now, wilh skirts again\nsweening the pavements and\nembellished with outriggers\nthat further incuml>er the wearer and increase the difficulty\nof taking a full stride, the negotiation of street car steps presents the old difficulty.\nStreet car steps may be too\nhigh, but it is fairly certain\nthat they will noLbe lowered.\nFashions in street cars have to\nbe more stable than are fash\nthe sections, you will find that you I f^-move white membrane-core. This\nran pull out the i-ore with the seeds, ifl an exct.i--*nl way to serve an orange\nclinging to it. The ha'f orange then! lo a Hirk child or invalid-\u2014as well as\nhas a hole in its center, which may , u convenient way of preparing it for\nbe    tilled    wllh    sugar    if   desired\nSCtl.no cherry for a Riiest\na  \u25a0harp,   thin knife  blade\naround   the   edge    uf   the\nbetween the Inside of the\nns   the\nwith a mar\nmeal. Hun\ncompletely\nhalf-oraiiKc\nskin and the pulp (this loosens\npulp so that it may be easily removed when eaten.) Chill and serve.\n\u2022Grapefruit ls prepared In lhe same\nmanner. Tor a guest breakfast, nn\norange prepared In this way looks\nbent  set   in   ono of  tin*   loiiR-steinmcd\npicnic.\nTo in I) IT\niw\u2014Answered  Letters.\nAnoiher nice thing almut doing\nyour writing at home Ih that you\nhave the phonogniidi-s of seven neighbors   to   encourage   you.\nFable\u2014Once  there  wus a girl who\nreceived  a diamond   engagement ring\nand didn't  suffer with curiosity concerning its  cost.\nThe) Hoiumcife's Idea Box\nstyle favored by Lunvln, the slender\nUtile belt of self-material tying\ndirectly on the hip at the lift side,\nthe pockets flaring out slightly above\nthis line.\nKor ornamentation, green and white\nbeading may bo used, as In the original Inndcl, ur dull gold metal thread\nor silk embroidery may he substituted.\nOne of the new cashmere fabrics or\nsitke crepe of a substantial weight\nmay     also be used for this design.\nIrate Music Lover (to owner of escaped parrot)\u2014I say, I wish you wol\nget your wretched bird off my wireless. 1 can hear nothing else but \"PreT\nPolly, pretty Poll,\" mixed up with Rachmaninoff's Prelude!\u2014The Pasa\nHhow, London. '\nTwenty Years Ago\n(The Daily  News, November 6,  1902)\nC. \\V.  Uusk, who was in the city\nyesterday,   said   he   thought   that   the\n$r.OO   allowed  by   the   government '\nthe   Improvement   of   the   trail\nwagon   road   on   the   north   shore I\nthe lake would be sufficient \"to co|\nmost of the work.\n\u2022    \u2022   '\u00abr \u25a0    t-\n\"Cluy Fawkos day.\" passed wit hi\nany usual celebration by the lo]\nOrangemen. ,\nAlways Uniform in Quality\nDelicious\n\"SALADA\"\nHAS   THE   LARGEST   SALE   OF ANXl\nPACKET TEA   IN   NORTH  AMERICA.f\nt-\nTen Years Ago\n(Tlie Dally Ncwh,  November 6.  1912)\nW, R. Wolfe,  manager of the  Hope\nmine at Ainsworth,  ls ln the city.\n\u2022 B   \u2022\nA very quick job was made ot the >\nrepairs to the steamer Moyle, and I\nby working day and night she was I\nenabled to take the usual run yes- i\nterduy   to   Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nUctwecn -JOOOU and $6000 will be ex- ;\npended  by  the  provincial government\nthis   winter   on   improvements   at   the I\nsummer   resort   to   bo   developed   at\nLoekart   beach.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nUnable to speak a word of English,\na German tot, who had been put on I\nthe Great Northern train with a |\nticket to Spokane, was yesterday '\nturned back at the boundary. Her '\nguardians or friends cannot be located. I\nf Wl 'J*    y\\.\n__\\\nmm\nRound Oak\nFurnaces\nFor economy, service and efficiencjl\ninstall a Round Oak Furnace. Let|\nus figure on your requirements.\nDon't forget your chance on the!\n?200 Range. You get a ticket withj\nevery purchase of ?5.00.\nNELSON HARDWARE COMPANY\nWHOLESALE AND  RETAIL,\nNELSON, B. C.j\nLet   us   figure   your   bills .of'\nBuilding Material.   Coast Lum- ;\nber a specialty.\nBuilding\nMaterial   John Bums & Son\nAll Inyulrlea. adrireasrrl to MlM Klrk-\nman  In   cure  of  Hie  -\"Efficient  lloun\u00ab*\ni keeping\" department will be Anvwered\nIn   teem  coluniiiN   In   their  turn.     Till.\n] require, considerable time, however,\nowing to the great pumper received. So\nIf a personal or quicker reply la desired   a titaiiipcd and sclf-addreHBcd en*\ni velope must he enclosed with the queaj-\nI tlon. Be sure to use YCUH full name,\natreet   number,   and _the  name  of   your\nglusscH which dare sufficiently at Ihcjcltjr and province.\u2014Tha Editor.\nthe garden to the .jealousy and\nfear of the dispossessing god,\njust deciphered by an Asryriolo-\ngist of the University of Pennsylvania, is in line with the religious fancies that in early-\ndays led some races to fashion\nions in women's wear. It costs their gods after their own im-\nlittle time ana effort to let out agining. Puffed up with the\na tuck and lengthen a skirt; the vanity of person, these ancient\nheight of street car steps is de- religionists made many ot their\ntermined by structural require- divinities in their own image\nments that could not well be | and endowed 'hem with their\nchanged without greatly chang- own attributes,\ning the general construction of I    Hence,   in    many   instances\nthe cars,\nBy far the easiest way out of\nthe difficulty was suggested to\nChicago women the other day\nby a New York artist who advised them in matters of dress\nto follow their own good taste\nand the dictates of health and\ncomfort. Members of the New\nYork Federation .of Women's\nclubs are following that course.\nThey have announced to shopkeepers, designers and all others interested that they will not\nbuy skirts that are less than\nseven inches from the ground.\nWith skirts of that moderate\nlength and suificiently ample\nin width women look well\ndressed and need ha-e little dif-\nfifulty with stt.et car steps.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"J   '   ,       ' I 'W       *\"***\nMan-Made Gods\nsome men wouldn't know how to begin a  sentence.\nThe chief objection :o people who\nspeak what they think is that they\nthink  such  insulting  things.\nThs Bart Way to Stan Away Bilk\nIt ?mi must itors awij illk, do not\n-wrip It In white pup-Mr. Tb\u00ab chloride\nOf ltm\u00ab thtt wai nnd to bleach the\npaper may he harmful to tht color of\nth* tllk. Blue or brown paper ti much\nbatter. If you raa get a amootb yal-\nlowlah India paper you wlU find that\ntha safest of all.\nTHE HOUBEW1PH.\nQmsvrtshi.   1H\u00ab.  ly  MHe L_**r Ctmm-mt,\n' \"\u25a0\u2014\" *S?!\u2014\"~   \u2014 \" \u2014\t\nWINNIPE'I, Nov. B.\u2014F. W, Sprndo.\naged 65, anil obl-tlme resident of Win-\nI'lpc? and well known In former years j\nU thi proprietor of the Manitoba hotel\nIn this city, wus found dead In his home '\nthH afternoon, lie had been killed by\nthe accidental discharge of a tthotgun\nhe was cleaning.\nWhy   many   a   flapper;    You   can\n,-       , get    a    pet    at    the    bird    store    tb*at^\ntheir  gods  were  merely  weak! won't cost you anything for coitiies.\nBhlpf carrying UqttQf mustn't come1\nwithin the American three-mlh* limit\nunb'MM they are orthodox rum-runners. \u25a0\nThe ancient  Babylon  legend\nfti-toibl-iting nian'a pualer kom\neditions after themselves, imagi\nnary creations crippled with human  passions  and  weaknesses,\nOnly the imajrnation that could\npicture divinity as a:i imitationI    In thla commercial age a man isn't\ncould  imagine  it as afraid  or J\"*\u00ab^ *r tht conp-un he kaaps, bat\njealous of man.    Only a ni \u00bb \"\u00bb \u00ab**\u2022** \u00bb\u00ab \u25a0\u2014\u00bb**\nso fashioned could be cast in a|    0nr chief objection to the Turk is\nrole of man's rival and persecU-[ that one  haa  him  an  hash  for  three\ntor, drivinj-r him out into waste | (lay8 after Thanksgiving.\nplaces lest he :nvade *he realm j    _. ,..\u00b0       ,    \u201e     ,  ,\nI.    ,.        .. ... . . There is one  thing  ti   family   skele-\nof divinity.    It is not surpns-| ton -8 golKl for,   lt ls Kood for abolU\ning that a race that could be led j two columns on the front page,\nto attempt to scale the heights\nof heaven by building a tower\nfell into such wild misconception.\nThe Lighter Side\nThe bachelor has one disadvantage. He hau nobody to cuaa but\nhla own relative!**.\nIf  it  wasiVt  fpr _h_ pronouu   \"i,\"\nAnd yet. the Dardanelles straits are\nnot as narrow as  mm of the  minds\nthat frame policlea  concerning  them, j\n o\t\nIII I Iterate* who can't read the mjb-\ntltlea probably think tt their fault\nili.it   the picture seems idiotic.\nCorrect this sentence: \"He wao a\nrich old bachelor, very near death,\nand none of his relatives came near\nhim.\"\nMany a man thiuks himself a phll-\ny\u00a3 KEPT FAITH\n1014\u20141022\nTHANKSGIVING\n\/take this opportunity to\nthank my many cus-\ntunurs and patrons for\ntheir generous and continued support during the\nliast year, and to assure\nthem of my cintinued effort to give them the utmost in quality, service, and\nreasonable prices and thus\nmerit their continued confidence and favor in the\nyear to come.\n\/trust that all may enjoy\na real Thanksgiving,\nand find many blessings in\nthe year to come.\nA. STANLEY HORSWILL\nCommunity Cash.\nGrocery\nPHONE 245\nSubscribe for\nThe Daily News\nKootenay-Boundary's Up-to-the-Minute Newspaper\nC.Full leased wire service of Associated Press and Canadian Press\ncables and telegrams gives Daily News readers all the worthwhile\nnews from overseas aud of this continent.\nCA corps of correspondents reports district news of interest.\nCSp'ecial correspondents in the big cities supply The Daily News\nwith special, despatches dealing with events of special local or\ngeneral importance.\nCOur financial and markets page is of marked value to business\nmen, farmers and others interested in the stock markets, metal\nmarkets and current prices of commodities.\nSpecial Features (or Women\nIncludes Miss Kirkman's\nHousekeeping Articles\n\"Bringing Up Father,\" the\nbest of comic strips, appears\nin The Daily News every day\nr\nCThe Daily News &ives you all the news of first importance, and i\ngives it to you while it is fresh.\n\u2022^Subscribe today. 'The rate by mail is $3 for six months, $6 for\na year.   By carrier in Nelson, $4 for six months, $7.50 for a\nyear.\nThe Daily News\nNELSON, B. C.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 6, 1922.\nFave Five.\nm\nQuality\nIs an assured characteristic of our footwear. It is\na definite promise and\npledge to our patrons.\ns\nWe have many to choose\nfrom in shades for fall and\nwinter wear. Let us show\nyou the different styles we\nare carrying in black and\nbrown.   Prices from\n?6.50 to 811.50\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders   in   Footfashion.\nKootenay and Boundary j\nPOPULAR PAIR\nLEAVINGWALDO\nMr. and Mrs. Anderson Will\nBe Greatly Missed; Presentations\n\u25a0RAYNKH LAKK, Nov. It.\u2014On Wednesday evening a number of friends entertained Mr. snd Mrs. Tom Anilerson to\ni dinner In order to express their regret\n; at their approaching departure from\ni Waldo. Mr. Anderson has bought a bu-si-\nI liens at the const mid leaves Waldo next\nIty the klndnena of Mr .and Mrs\nLadies' Aid of\nthe Presbyterian\nChurch Meets\nNKW PENVKR. Nov. 3\u2014The lad lea-\naid nf the Presbyterian church met nt\nthe home of Mrs. j. b. Smith Thursday\nafternoon  with  the president. Mrs. John\nCory, in the chair.   There wm a large\nat tendance and a new member. Mrs.\nHulehind,  was welcomed lo the  society.\nArrangementi were made for sewing to\nbe don* by the members and a re*j>ort\nwas  given  by   the  committee  hiving   In\ncharge the lecture on \"Jess Vaijcan.\"\nAfter the lecturer was paid a balance\nof I1B.TB was tOiown. The members felt\nvery gratified nt  the result.\nAfter  refreshments   were   served   M\nGhost Party Is\nCheer Affair\non Hallowe'en\nMISCHIEF  WITHIN  BOUNDS.\nCRANBROOK, Nov. 3\u2014Halloween\npassed off very quietly In thla city.\nThe boyn were out in force, but they\nconfined themselves to innocent fun and\nno reports were received of vandalism.\nI Hales  Rosa the  patty was held at  their I Rtevin,se.n rendered a piano solo and  thi\nhome and the company enjoyed a chick- ! meeting adjourned   to meet next month\nI en dinner.    The table was graced with a ! with Mrs. Under on.\nj very  pretty  silver  flower  basket   filled j\nI with roses, which was presented to Mrs\n, Anderson, while her husband was the re-\n| clpient of a case of pipes.\nj Mr. Hales Ross ln a pleasant speech\ntold  Mr.  nnd  Mrs.  Anderson  how much\n1 they would    lie    missed in the neighbor*\n, hood, not only    by    all    their personal\n. friends,  but  by  the  public generally,  as\nj they have always been among the first\ni to   rapport   any object   for  the   good  of\nI the community.\nPi tan Favorite.\nj     As storekseper, golf   player.   Mason,\n[ and  In  every  way  genial  \"Tom\"  Ander-\n| son has been a prime favorite ever alQOe\nI he came to Waldo 11 years ago.    While\n1 as  nn officer of the T. O.  P   K.  and  a\nJ member of the ladies' Aid and the Red\nl Cross. Mrs. Anderson has been a leading spirit.\nThe   company     Included     besides   Mr.\n| and Mrs.  lt..sn and  the gueats of honor.\n\u25a0 Mr. and Mrs. Beattle, Mr. and Mrs.\nKline, Mr. and Mrs. Lea, Mr nnd Mrs\nBlsckledgs. Mr. and Mrs. Will Redd,\n\u2022he Rev. J. D. and Mrs. Stewart and Joe\nRoss.\nSocial Happenings\nm^mms-mm^m-ms*\nIn Nelson  -#&\nThla column Is conducted by Mrs.\nM. J. Vlgneux. All news of S social\nnature, Including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will appear In this column.    Telephone Mrs. Vljb'uieu't,\n' Robert Thompson, Mrs. W. 0. Rose, Mrs.\n| N. H. Cairns, Mrs. W. W. Wasson. Mrs.\ni J. O. (Jrunimett, Mrs. Norman Bradley.\n\\ Mrs.  R.  D.  Hall,  Mrs.  Pavld   Kerr.  Mrs.\nNorman MaoDonsld, Mrs. Arthur Ter-\n! rill, Mrs. Elmer Tltsworth. Mrs.\n1 R.-iseh. Mrs, Stanfield, Mrs, E. Gammon.\ni Mrs. W. H. Shaw, Mrs. A. T. Walley,\n-. Mrs. J. l\u00bb. Westman, Mrs. (Jeorge Fcr-\n' guaon,   Mrs.   P.   J.   Croll,   Mrs.   W.   A.\nThurman,   Mrs.  J.  A.  Irving.  Mrs   A   Q.\nLambert, Mrs. Leigh McBride. Mrs. Fred\nAllen and Mrs. Edward Murphy.\nMrs. Ferguson Wilson, n recent bride,\nheld ber first pOSt-nuptlal reception al\nher  present  home,  713  .Josephine-  street.\non Saturday afternoon. The young hostess\nwho 1 fioked charming In a creation of\nnavy blue with an overdress of navy silk\nlace, was assisted in receiving her\nguests by her mother, Mrs. William\nMoore. The living room was prettily\narranged with graceful bouquets of\nvaricolored chrysanthemums. I     ...       Tr.,n(,   w___mm   of   Willow   Point\n-$? r^eTnn^mTmnt \\n&-\\Zn^R4 .? \u00ab?'\nchrysanthemums and   foliage,   was pre; |     Mp M(J Mrg w  ft K,imfon], 816 Ver-\nL.\nP. Ought red, the mining man of\nInsworth. leaves on the Crow boaL this\nornlng for Montreal.\nPERRY SIDING NOTES\nWOMAN TAKES\nEVERY CHANCE\nTo   Recommend   Lydia   E.\nPinkh\u00bbjn'\u00bb Vegetable Compound, for It Helped\nHer So Much\nPKItnY SIDING. Nov. 3\u2014John Avln\nreturned to Bandon on October 23. he\nhaving been homo for a few days nursing a couple of broken ribs.\nTbe Farmers' exchange has been distributing a carload of flour and feed\namong the members.\nTwo carloads of wood were shl|)ped\nout from here on October 23 and two\nmore  are  now  loading.\nDr. H H. Mackenzie of Kelson made\nan   official   Inspection  of  tbe   school   on\nOctober ill.\n8. Beptley bad the misfortune recently to have a very valuable cow killed\non the  railway track.\nThe Farm.r-' exchange held the adjourned  meeting it  Mr.  Barn-hart's on\nFriday, OetObef 27. when some important business was transacted There m\nnot a very large attendance of shareholders\nMr Kyle, manager of the British Co-\nlumbla Poultrymen's exchange, and C.\nTraves, government poultry Inspector,\nwere here on Saturday. October 2**, explaining the objects of the association\nand signing up those who Intended -shipping eggs, etc., to them. About SO per\ncent of the poultry raisers Signed un\nand the remainder are expected to do so\nWhen   they can  be seen.\nMrs Deteoor of Wlnlaw was vteltlng\nMm. Pchonbers between trains on Monday,  October   30.\nFredericton,  N.  B \u2014\"I  was weak\naad had some troubles women oTten ;\nhare, and usually i wis until for my\nwork.     I   saw   your  advertisements ,\nand decided to try Lydia B.  Pink*\nham'a   Vegetable  Compound.    I   tm i\nvery  much   pleased  with  the  result '\nsnd recommend your Vegetable Compound   whenever   1   have  a  chance.  '\nYou may use this letter for tho bene-  j\nfit of others.\"\u2014Mrs.   Wa.ndlus. 360  .\nChurch 8t, Fredericton, N. B.\nMrs. Wand lews, like many, many\nother women who have found relief :\nby taking Lydia B. Pinkham's Vege- \u25a0\ntable Compound, is anxious -to let I\nother women know of this splendid j\nmedicine. So by word of mouth snd\nby letter, one woman to another, Its \u25a0\nvirtues are made known.\n\"Women -suffering from  femsle ailments,  Indicated  by such symptoms   |\nae   backache,   nervous   trouhles,   hot   i\nHashes, -pain fn the side and n pn-    lllts Just p\u201eC(;n|1    ullll(.IK01te allolh\n\u2022ral run-down condition of the whole   | rloim op.\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nBLOCAN city. Nov. I.\u2014Mr. Day,\nmining man.of New Denver, spent a few-\ndays in town this week.\nMr. J \"hi Ipot of Silverton was a visitor\nhere   this  week.\nD. S. Scott, tbe Presbyterian nilnlst. r.\nwho Just returned after \u25a0pending ttie\nweek-end In Nelaon with his family. left\non Friday to Hike the services in tbe\nPresbyterian church In Trull on Sunday\nIVler Swan left on Friday for Van*\nCOUver to sec bis won Walter, who Is a\npatient in a military hospital th\nsystem, should take Lydia B. Plok\nbarn's Vegetable Compound.\nFor nearly flfly years It has been\nhelping women.    Let It help you.\nLydla E Pinkham's Test-Rook upon\n\"Ailments Peculiar to Women\" will\nbe sent you fre***- upon reiuent. Writ*,\nto Lydla E. Plnkham Medicine Co.,\nLynn, Maes.\nB, Severns, the Goat Creek mil I man,\ni made a business trip to the const this\n: week and expects to return on Monday\ni Mrs, J, o Covington went to Sandon\nfor the week-end.\nL BAYNl-S   LAKE WALDO.\nI      RAVNKS   LAKE,   Nov.   3.\u2014Mr.   Lund\nhas   b-fI      Waldo.     hs\\ Ing     bought   Mr\n; Kllngenimlth'i business at Bke,\nNKW DENVER, Nov. I.\u2014Mr. and Mrs\nFr.d Webber gave a very enjoyable Hal\nlowe'en party and taffy pull Tuesday |\nevening. IS young people being present.\n\"\"he Misses tiumm gave a ghost party\non Hallowe'en, one of tbe stunts being\na visit to the cell, when- a ghost\nwhacked the guests over the heads with\na buxom pillow. A whale of a time was\nenjoyed.\nLife Membership\nof Daughters Is\nGift to Secretary\nBAYNES l.AKK, Nov. I.-\u2014On Thursday the monthly meeting of the BSasI\nKootenay chapter of the l. O. l> B. was\nheld at Baynes. As it was the last\nmeeting al which Mrs Anderson, the retiring secretary, would be present, a\nlarger company than usual Was present\nand a. very excellent tea was served\nMrs.    Morrow,      the      regent,   presented\nMrs\/ Ami.-raon wiih a life membership\nIn  the order, on behalf of the chapter\nMiss Foreman will act as secretary of\nthe chapter until the end ot the current\nyear.\nun Mondav. October 10, Ihe Junior 1\nO. D. E. of Waldo entertained Mrs Anderson to tea and presented her with \u25a0\nbeautiful cut glass salad bowl.\nCRANBROOK NOTES\nK, Ntre. Z - -Dr. and Mrs\ni returned home Monday evening\nmonth'!   holiday   spent   at    the\nCI.AXtU\"\nK. Green re\nafter\ncoast.\nDr.     Burnett,     who    looked  nfter  Dr\nHreen's practice during his absence, returned t.. Vancouver on Wednesday.\nMrs, Archie Cameron  is borne again\nafter   a   \\ i-ll   of   iwo   Weeks   with   rela\nUvee in Edmonton,\nMrs. Tremhath of Rowland will pay i\nvl-dt to this city thH week-end Ss hem\nof ihr \"Pythian liatere of Hritlsh Columbia, Durink' ber stay In Cranbrook she\nwill visit with ber daughter, Mix* Hazel,\nwho |s on  the  Dublin school  slafr*.\n.Mrs. Alan Hr.iham. who spent the\npast week in Nelson us Ihe guest of her\nsister.. Is home mjuln, hnrving returned\non  1'u.sd.iv\nMr and Mra D. M. MaeFarlatie of\nNarbnry avenue have visiting with   then.\ntheir   daughter   and   husband,   Mr.   and\nMrs. C. K. Amoss of Toronto Mr. nnd\nMrs Amoss ure on their Way to bM\nAngel.-s. Cal.. where they nre planning\nto spend the  next   two months\nRev. T. Tap* cott, who has be.-n in\nNelson for ihe last three weeks, is ex-\npecleO home on Thursday.\nLECTURESUPON\nJEAN VALJEAN\nsided over bv Mrs. R. O. McKeown and\nMrs. C. D. Shaw. Mrs. J. Armstrong\nand Mrs. J. F. Croll cut the lees Those\nassltslng In ser\\ Ing were Miss Kathleen\nArmstrong. Miss Laurene Dunham, Miss\nGenevieve McMahon. Miss Marlon Tail\nMiss Fluine Coles. Miss Crelna Horstead,\nMiss Enid Etter and Mrs. Oeorge\nSlmms,   Mtsa Mamie Croll answered the\ndoor. Mies Laurene Dunham rendered\nseveral piano -selection* during the afternoon, which were very pleasing. The\ninvited guests were: Mrs. J. A. Gllker,\nMiss Jean Gllker. Minn Dorothy Whit-\nmore, Mrs. Charles F. McHardy, Mrs.\nHarry Ferguson. Mrs, H. E. Dill, Mr;\n'    Stanley.   Miss  Olive   Healby.\nstreet,  hi\nCalgary and  tin\nleft for a  vacation to\ncoast cities,\n.T. R. Conway, fire warden at Ral four,\nwas a visitor in town yesterday.\nMiss Elizabeth McKinnon. who\nteaches school at Longbeach, leaves tomorrow morning on the Crow hoat after\n\u25a0pending the Thanksgiving holiday with\nher mother, Mrs. L. McKinnon, Victoria\nstreet.\n\u2022  as\nC. A. Howse lei\"! yesterday Morning\non the Crow boat for Fernle.\nR.   R.   Hedby\noetorday moral\n.Ta\nMrs.\n.1 P. Weinman. Mrs J, Fred Hume, Miss\nMabel Fox, Mrn. Charles Hunter. Miss\nAlbertlne Choi,net te. Mrs. George Ferguson, Miss Enid Ftter, Miss Irene Fox,\nMiss Florette Choquette. Mrs. C. Etter,\nMrs. W. E. Coles, Miss Alia Johnson,\nMrs. W. O. Rose, Mrs. J. E. Annable.\nMrs. C. Cryderman. Miss Little Annable.\n.Mrs. Frank Hawthorne, Miss Alice Dunlop, Miss Thelma Neelln, Mrs. W. H.\nTurner, Mrs. C. IV Shaw. Mrs. R. G.\nMcKeown, Mrs. W. Smrdley, Mrs. Leigh\nMcBride. Mrs. .1. J. Foote, Miss Marion\nFoote, Mrs. Edward Murphy. Mrs. O.\nSlmms. Miss A. Campbell. Mrs. Eastman. Mrs. A. D. Bmory, Mrs. Carl Larson, Mrs. G. MoGuire, Mrs. O. Tl. Matthew. Mrs. Marcus Martin. Miss [na\nSteed, Mrs, Oeorge Steed. .Miss Marion\nTail. Mra. J. Talt. Mrs George Renwell\nSr. Mrs. 'Jeorge Menwell Jr.. Mrs. A. T,\nWalley. Mrs Gordon Allen. Mrs. C. N.\nBltrrldge, Miss Freda Hninswick Hume,\nMiss Greta SteeVes.  Mrs.  R.  K.-efe.  Mrs\nj. Robertson, Mrs. .T P. Hums, Mrs. Neleon Murphy, Mrs. W, Robertson. Mrs\nWilliam Mlddleton, Mrs. James Weir.\nMrs. Joseph Bturecon. Mm. M. J, Vlgneux, Mra .1. Towbr. Miss Florence\nH..r\u00bb re .Miss Eva Irwin. Mrs. George L.. holiday with frj,\nIrwin, Miss Mlnctta Slmms. Mrs. James\nLiwreuce.    Miss   Alma   Choquette,   MlSS\nMargaret  Whalen of Spokane,  Mrs. J.\nHell Jr, Mrs. Hubert Hell. Mrs. Frank\nBoyd, Mrs Waldo Ferirusoii. Mrs. C. V.\nGagnon, Miss K11 fen I*ong. Miss Genevieve McMahon, Mrs R fo. Hall. Mrs\nE Moore. Mrs. W. E. Wasson. Mrs. J.\nThompson of Willow Point, Miss Winnie\nThompson of Willow Point. Mrs. J, \\V.\nHolmes, Mrs Edward Hummer, Miss\nCrelno Horitesd, Mi*-*-* Freda Hunter of\nTrail, Mrs Thomas Madden Jr. of Edmonton, Miss Vlol-t Walker of Grand\nForks. Mrs P. G Neville. Miss Bessie\nHamilton. Mis* Carrie Campion. Miss\nMoi I le Dunlop, Miss Nellie Coldough,\nMiss Phoebe Cummins, Miss Mary Cummins, Mrs. Uoy Sharp.-, Miss Blaine\nColes. Miss Gwenn Cummins, Mrs J\nArmsirontf, Miss Kathleen Armitrong,\nMrs F. J. Croll, Miss Minnie Croll, MU\u00ab\nLauren**- Dunham. Mrs. J. II. Dunham.\nMiss H McBroom of Spokane. Mrs. Da-\nvld D Townsend, Mrs A. W. Nagle. Mrs.\nC. rfffctfield. Mrs Clifford Irving, Mrs.\nA Choquette, Mrs A H. Grac.-v, Mrs A\nP.-rrier    Mrs.    F,    Hint.   Mrs    II     Maun-\n\u2022ii-.ti. Mrs t. d DeaBrlssy, Miss Laura\nMcEnchern, Miss Krma Brown, Mrs H.\nA mas. Mrs C GrUielle. Mrs. J. H Turner, Dr. Isabel Arthur and Mrs. Wilfred\nAllan of Stave ley, Alfa.\nMiss Evelyn Apple whalte, who\nteaches at Procter, came to town Friday\nevening to attend the St. Saviour\nYoung Men's club dance, which took\nplace ln the new memorial hall. While\nfn the city Miss Applewhaite was the\nguest of Rev. F. H. nnd Mrs. Graham.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJ. A Rohinson of Celford motored to\ntown Saturday.\nsee\nMrs. J. S. Ryley o.' Queens Hay Is a\nvisitor ln the city over the Thanksgiving holiday, tbe guest of Mrs. Thomas\nMadden.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss Evelyn Hilton returns tonight to\nSt. Joseph's convent boarding school\nfrom Rossland. aftef enjoying the\nThanksgiving holiday with  tier parents\n\u2022 at        \u00bb\nMiss Laura McEachern is spending\nthe Thanksgiving holiday with her unci.\nand ae-it. Mr. and Mrs J. A. RoblnSOH\nof Bel ford.\nthe\nnlnlng  man,  left\nThe Store lor Quality\nThanksgiving Dag\nStore will be closed\nall day\nPhone 200.\n611 Baker St\ni>r his father,    T.    ,1.    Scanlan, Stanley I\nstreet, for a couple of weeks.\n\u2022 \u2022     \u2022\nD. O'Rourke of Kdmonton. who has\nheen In the city for the oast 10 days,\nleaves for his home this morning on the\nCrow boat.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Dorothy Caw, who is attending\nSt. Josephs board school lu this city,\nreturns tonight on tlie Crow boat from\nSinbtr, where she went to spend the\nThanksgiving holiday with her parents.\nRoy Hradshaw and T. Lean of Trail\nnre spending Thanksgiving at the home\nof J. C. Hradshaw.\nMorris   spent   the   Thaslagl'\nt   Belfurd.\n\\PLAY MISCHIEVOUS\nHALLOWE'EN PRANKS\nCocoa King Dies\nMiss Kitty Fletcher, who teaches\nschool a I Bonnington, motor. <l lo town\non Saturday.\n\u2022     \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Ida C.aw has returned to her home\nlu Grand Forks nfter visiting with\nfriends In  the city  for  the past week.\nTHE SOLDIER SETTLEMENT BOARD OF\nCANADA\nWILL  HOLD AN\nAUCTION SALE\n\" OF FURNITURE AND FARM EQUIPMENT\nAt 2 p. m. on Saturday, November 4th\nDr. Lazier's Ranch, Willow Point, 5 Miles irom\nNelson.\nComprising i part as follows:\n1 Cullvator and ntt.'u htneiiLs, 1 Spring Tooth Harrow, 1 Spike\nTooth Harrow, 1 8-Inch Deei ItiR Plow, 1 Hand Sprayer, 1 Set\nSingle Harness, 1 Wheelbarrow, Hose, Axes, Crowbar, Sledgo\nHatninera and other tools; 1 Healer and Cook Stove; Chairs, Tables, Dresser-n, Reds and Bed I.lnen. Kitchen Utensils and Table\nLinen,  and  numerous  miscellaneous  article*-..\nTerms: Strictly Cash.\nPrice Books\n(f\\ Black Leather Covers with rings\nand indexes. High-grade binders\nwhich will give good service. In\nconvenient sizes.\nThe Daily News\nQuality Printers\nBAKER 8TREET\nNELSON, B. C.\nNBW DENVER\nowd SMtrntiled it\nchurch Wednewlay ,\nJ. II Smith In her\nJean.\" which -he a\neffect ami oonfldsni\nlure portrayed by  \\\nfor\neven\nher   audi.\nNov.\ni    the    P\nVeiling   t(\nrecital.\ninled   111\n.a, mskln\nielor  llu\nThe\n.-A     fin.\nvsbvt. rial\nhear Mrs\n'Jeen  v.ii\nnUKll     Will\n! each   ph-\n[O   live   he\nIta I lasted\nn hour an.) a half. (hiring Ib.\ni* Mrs St. Vinson gave tin nrgne-\nMeua>Urcohn*a \"Sadness of Soul.\"\nand Mrs. !(.\u2022!.run rendered the vocal solo,\n-Tfod's Osrden.\" Th\u00ab*> proceed* wen\nover 110     lira.   Smith  proceeded  next\nday to Sllv.-rton. wh. rr *\u00abhe gave an eve-\nning for the Ladles' Aid. Muring her\nwley h.-re nhe was entertained by Mrs\nBadminton on Saturday drew a large\nnUmher   to   tin    armory,   when    the   Had-\nminton club held its fir*-*! meeting. Borne\nvery int.-testing games w.-re enjoyed. In\nwhieh tvron Mewed slmoal as much\n\u25a0\u00abkiii ns the experts. Tea was aerved in\nth. afternoon by the eommlttee, con\nslating of Ifro. H .Ion. m. Mrs O, M. <i'*d-\nfivv. Miss Marion I thick wood and ||tas\nIluth Armstrong. Mrs, R. H. Louis,\nwho formed the club, ll to be congratulated on a  great success.\nThe-**- who hn\\e Joined the club are:\nMiss Mildred Irvine Mrs Hugh W, Robert son.    Mr    and   Mrs,   T.   II    Cau.lwell\nMr and Mrs B. Townahend, Miss Town-\n\u25a0end,   Mlas   Helen  Townsend.   Mr.  and\nMrs \\V V, K. VI. .Mr. nnd Mrs. R Jones\nMr. and Mrs, A. K. Allnn. R. Dawson,\nMr, and Mre Brio Hawssn, Mr. and Mrs\n0. s Oodfrey. Mr. snd Mra K C\nWragge. Mr and Mrs. P. C, Whltehouee,\nMrs, W Louis. Mm, Gordon Hall. 11\nMr. nnd Mrs Leslie Crnufurd. Mr |-*ran '\nels. Mr. nnd Mrs H. Masters. Mr. and\nMrs. H. A, Lowe. Mrs. J. H D, Benson\nMrs. H. Rosllntr. Ouv Smith. Robert\nMorrow, I' M.*l, Forln, A. Mc Dons hi\nMr. Miens. Leslie Wh-htwlck. Ted Lew-\nIs, William Brown. Miss Clarice Bleed-\nwood. Mies Marion Blackwood, Mllfl\nLout-*  Cunliffe,   Ml*!   Ruth   Arm\u00ab|rnng\nMiss Helen Olgol and Mm* Olive Bealh)\nMiss\narrive.\nand Is\nH. I).\nMr\nstreet,\ngiving\nson-In.\n.Maude   Campbell   of   Kdmonton\n.ti the Crow boal Friday evening\nhe   guest   of  her  sister,   Mrs.  J.\n-neon.  Victoria  street.\nII    II    Pitts,\n111  Cedar\nI   Thank\nand   Mrs\nspent  tli\nholiday wllh  their daughter and\nlaw,   .Mr.   and   Mrs.   John  Waldie.\nill  Castlegar.\nMr.   and   Mrs    H.   W.   Shore   returned\non    the   Crow    boat    lust   evehinj**    from\nBosweii after sending yesterday at the\nhome of Koland Kills.\nBAYNES LAKK, Nov, I.\u2014On Tuesday\nthe Waldo school teachers nnd friends\ngave the children a Hallowe'en party In\nthe Rose hall. A very jolly party was\nsomewhat spoiled by the action of some\nfoolish persona who cut aft the light\nand barricaded the door of the hall. Fortunately no panic took place, as might\neasily have been tbe case.\nWitches, Wizards and\nHarlequins Rrolic on\nHallowe'en at Ymir\nf'\nT\nPP-P-* ^\n1    S5*-*,\n|\n\\\\\\\\WsX.   m J\n\\mk't\nf\nL\nw\n1 ^\nMiss Evelyn Nell will\nSW   boat    lonlghl   from\nI  went     to    spend     tht\nwith her te\nreturn   via   the\nSirdar, where\nThanksgiving\nMiss  Nell   i\na boanler at St. Joseph's Convent in thts\ncity.\n.Mr  nnd Mrs\nMASQUERADE BALL\nLARGELY ATTENDED\nCRANBROOK. Nov. I,- The ni.i<tque-\nrade ball put on by lh. Rehekah-.; on\nHallowe'en was wery Isrsely attended\nthe hail being crowded. The judges r.u\nthe evening were Miss McLeod, Mrs\nHenderson and Mr, Rsworth, Miss i\u00bba-\nvls. dee *sed as a red rose, won the prUe\nfor the best ladles\" costume and Ben\nJohnson of Wycllffe. In an Indian costume, best gents' prize.\nThe b. st (nHies' comic was won by\nMrn. H Hrown In \u00bb gypsy costume, an.l\nW\\ S. Johnson, as a tramp, won tht\nbest gents' comic. Tb.- net proceeds\nwill amount to about |H0,\nLADIES' GUILD MI'I.TS\n.I-.ht\nL*amefon, -vho bus been at th-\ni* the BMl week, retum-d Sat\nla   the   Kettle   Valley.\nCapt\nfrom the\nr,   L.   Or\nconst  vl;\nreturned  Inst  nigh)\nthe Kettle Valley.\nI y   The\nLadles'\nYMIR.   No\nmeeting of t\non Thursday\nl>nly. Among those |\nBoss, Mis McIfMiac, J\nJ, II. risrke. Mrs. H\nLeeoe.  Mih.    n.    ivt\ngu\nml   monthl-i\nId was held\nie of Mrs K\nint were Mrs\nE Da I v. Mrs\n'M ns. .Mrs l.\nn.   whll.\nImllaon became n  member of the guild\ntentative arrangements were dlncuesed\nilth regard to the Christmas festivities\nENJOY  HALLOWE'EN.\nBAYNES  LAKI\nMl.\nrade   lb.Ho\nand\nRo\nFi Ida\nn partv jit Wai-\nAbout   .in  of   the  youna   t pie  of\nthe  neighborhood   were   Invited   and   a\nvery pleasant    evening    was npsnt   in\ngnin'-s. niusie and dancing\n\"D0DDS'%\nKIDNEY\n\u2022v PILLS \/\nHi,l,riJ*'s'fVi'f,\n-    rf:^AP;5B'*,k\nMi\u2014   F,    M.   Fitznatrick.   R    N..   Slll.-i\nstreet,  accepted   a   profcn\u00bbional  call   to\nRoSSland   Saturday   nii-ht.\nTbe Qotf Bridge club, which meets\ntwice monthly, h.hl their Initial game\nOf their third year's season on Saturday\nevening at the horn*1 of Mr. nnd Mrs\nW. M, Walker. 617 Carbontae street.\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nMr,   nnd   Mrs    K.   J.   Vanderwater   of\nRoaalsnd arrived in thf city Baturdai\nevening to spend the Thanksgiving holiday SI the hom. of Mr. and Mrs. C. W\nAppleyard,   71.\".   Hoover   utreet.\nArllc\nof ths\neaaet\nr Lakes returned the latter pari\nreek from \u25a0 bnalassi trip to th.\nMiss   Violet    Walker   nf   flrand   Fork*-\narrived In ths city Friday svanlng snd\nIs a gdesl at the Imme of her aunt and\nancle, Mr and Mrs. J. A. C.llker. Ill\nVictoria sir.i-t.\nMl si Muriel Red path, diuiRbter of Mr\nan.I    Mrs    E    B    Redpath,   III   Vletoila\nstr.-t, arrived In the city Friday evening on the Crow boat from Camp Lister. whefS she \\- teaching school.\nRSV Father Althoff. V. 0. leaves thi-\nmorning on the \"it.at Northern f-it\nFrultvale, where he will celebrate th.\nholy encrlficf of the mass. He will re-\nturn to the city this evening.\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nOn   Frhb.v   afternoon   at   tho   home   of\nMrs   a. w   Nagle, BQl Baker \u25a0 treat, s\nmost oellghtful afternoon was given In\nthe form ot ii musical and tea\nMrs (i. IVugln\" Nagle assisted the\nhostess in receiving. Rod clirysanth.-\nnntSI    Were    mainly    Used    In    the    color\nscheme In the reception hall and parlor.\nwhile  yellow  chrysanthemums tied  with\ntulle formed a pretty center until    with    gr#en    candle*    throwing\na  sofl  Rl.\ngr#en    ca\nr.\nvoral\ngre\nrounded\nOU'   I   so\nBeautiful    voral    nn miters\ndered   by   Mrs   J    Mllrov.   Mrs    H.   HIk\nglnbotham ami Mrs   MacOonald.    Each\none responded most graciously to encores, which were followed by me vera I\npiano \u25a0\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0 I*-i i inns by Mrs. Meslon In her\nown Inimitable way, which were greatly\nenjoyed  by nil.\nPresiding  nt   the   tea   urns   were   Mrs\nJ    E.   Annable.   Mrs    A.   IV   Bmory    I\nMrs, Holmes Others assisting wen-\nMrs Ed Chimmer, Mrs. A. Clyde Emory\nand  Mrs   Purvis.\nAmong those present were Mrs.\nGeorge Clark. Mrs, F. A. Mcltoimid, .Mrs\nH   n   r.u ,   Mi     0.  B   Matthews, Mis\n, U  Emory left Sunday\nmorning on the Crow boat for Fernle,\nwhere thay weni to spend the Thanksgiving hoi (dsy with their son and deugh-\ntsr-ln-law, Mr, and Mrs. Fred K Emory.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss H. Whttaksr. who Is on the\nKaslo teaching staff, is a visitor in the\ncitj  for the Thanksgiving holiday.\nLeslie wightwkk returns todaj from\nhis ranch at LOflghaaoh, w hi re he spent\nihe week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMis.  Harry  Dunk  returned Bsturda]\nevening from' Castlegar, when the went\nto demonStrsti in connection with th.\nWomen's  institute.\nGEORGE   CADBURY\nYMIR. Nov. I.\u2014Oa Tm-soay evening a I     English cocoa    manufacturer     and\nvery   successful   aoclal   and   dan.-e   was   owner   of what   Lloyd   George   called\nheld   in   the   public   hall   in  com.aemora-    ..lh(,    ..^^    pr,.^-    u   deud   ln    Eng.\ntlOH of Halloween.     Most of those prSS* I K\nent     wore     fatiey     dress,     r. preventing i land.\nw itches,     wizards,     harlequins,  gypah a. ^\nMephlstophelea,  etc,  and   were .-,  credit; _\u201e.. -\u00ab.\u00bb--\nto ihe designers and wearers silks.    Re-1 YMI* \"votes.\nfreshmsnta weer provided by the ladles \t\nand a very enjoyable s ven Ing was spoDt Y.MIR.     .Nov.     3,\u2014.Mrs.     N.     Pfterson\n \u2022\"**\u2022\u2022  | spent the day ben- on Thursday, return-\n1 ing   to Nelson   In  the evening.\nI     Mrs. A. tea leaa af Republic Is Fpend-\nIng   I   9em   da>s   fn   town,   on   her   way\ntu her home.\nNEW  OEKVC1   NOTES\nI.- Mr*    Cl.\nNKW   IiKNVKB,   N\nhas had u fins new ft. ..\nhis bom.-, h Nelson firm doing the work, j back from Nil\nMr.\nBoiinn\nMrs.\nn th,\nii this\n>nd    .Mrs\nB.    H.\ni hoppl\nM.  Lockyer\ntenay  like Qenerol ho\n, i.-ft that Institution >\n11.   Parry \u2022\u2022{ Balfour war, a visitor in\ntown  Saturday.\n.Miss Aaffnes Welsh, who loaches school\nat Alnsworth. returns this afternoon on\nthe boat, after .'pending the ThhnkSglv-\nIng holiday with Mrs. Beek, ou Bllloa\nstieel.\nMiss  Norma   Lenn.  a   pupil  of St. Je>\nseph'i con ven I boardlni school here, re*\nturns tonight from sp. ndlng the Thanks*\ngiving holiday with her parents in Trail\nMrs.\nnu in\n(1.    Noel    Hrown   of    Bonnington\ntown shopping on Saturday.\nT,  ffsodium of the city power plan\nat  Bonnington was a city visitor Satur- I\nday.\nMrs.   Beott   louder   of   Queen'i\nsp.-nt  Saturday in Ihe city.\nCharts*   Scanlan   arrived   hi   tb\nFriday   evening  via  the   Kettle\nfrom   Vsnoouver,   where  he  is  c\nstaff   of   the   Canadian    Hank   of\nmerce.     Mr    Scanlan   w ;11   lie   the\nRaj\ncity\nT.WHERRY\nIPEimiSrt\/TANNER\nKr.ii  for rt\"-*  Mtt ot\nVtrk      in t || n l I :i  |\n\u20222f   Pandora   Ave.,\nVictoria,  B   C.\nBaby's Own\nSoap\nhands\n\u00ab body\nlath-jr tkem\n,+re*ly with Baby's Own Soap\nLedger Leaves\nIn\nStandard\nSizes\nOr made up specially to suit your\nown hinder.\n\\\\v carry the (standard sites is\nsto.-k and s.-ll then at prices\nwhich arc lower thnn it costs you\nto bring in sheets from the cast.\nLEDGER BINDERS\nIn red Russia and Corduroy or\nCanvas in the standard sizes.\nINDEXES FOR ALL PURPOSES\nin\nThe Daily News\nBAKER STREET\nQuality Printers\nNELSON, I. C.\n Page Six\"\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,' MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 6, 1922.\nIliMetsglFinaTO]\nH\nPopular Sailor Retires\nCopper Shares I Wheal Recovers\nShow New Life From Set-Back!\nOil   Wall   ShfWt'      <-HlC.UiU.   Nov.   sZwfc\u00bb1   recovered\n  ; final bom* nf the short session Raturday j\nNEW TORK, Nov. (.\u2014Profit taking i on -reek-end oorerttty, l&dsioed by ad\" ,\nby traders who had bought stock* dur- vicea of resumed baying for export, |\nlug the recent reactions tempomrlty Ootn nnd tttii followed wheal for lha\nhalieii tlie upward movement of prices most van, althoofft. the latter did nol |\nin tmbiy's stock market, bul ther* wm rttpond te readily to bullish sentiment !\nunuNuulty good buying of the copper The dose wnt ',t down te lc advance\n\u25a0hires, which have \u25a0\u2022.. n lagging behindj oii wheat, with December I1.1B-N ttj\nthe rest of the list. ,'U\"-1,- and May |] it <*\u00bb to -fi.i 1%; corn. ,\nThere won- no -special development! V to *\"\u25a0,<\u25a0 up; i\u00bbruvlnlims finished Te tt\nin the topper trade to ittnini for thejlftc hli-'lu-r.\nlist-. The statistlea potttlon of tin* in-;\ndustry ha.s been mmdlly improving in\nthat the huffi Burplm of tt#pt* (,n t,;\",,t\nalter the w\u00bbr boa been i gr-idual to*\ncreui-e In the dOtnenUt  \"Uinuiid   for tlie\nproduct.    The price of  ilu*  in.tal. due. j     xi:\\v    VuiiK.    Nov, 4.\u2014{Sterling salt the flood of Impart* frow 13hm* sn4 < oliaafe  krtttular al   M.4I-K   for M*dft#\nother South   A*r*erlsat)   oountrttt,   haaJbUla and M.******   ''<\"' flwnaftl\nhi-ld around Ho b i-i-uh-i.\nSterling Exchange\n-W        -\n'.'      i,?!'',,*?*iK.     \u25a0***'\nflf    \u25a0 ' #**% ***\u2022'*\u2022'\nW    Asm     l\n, *vKmh\\m\\n%~'\n!\u00a3*\u25a0  \u25a0\nHL\nC'sed Articles\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nF-arm Profee\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant   an 1    Clai elf ied   Advtrtltlng\u2014\n'One nnd a half cujita per word   per  In\n: BtrtlOB.  Six   centa  per word  per  weeK\n* or  'im VjO \u00a3er  wont   p\u00ab-r month,  ea..h  li>\nadvance.    Tranaiatnt   a-lR  tootPttd   only\non a eash-.m-adviijicn   basis.     Each   inl\n: tlal  figure,   dollar   eigii. \u00abtc,   counis af\n(.na    word.    Minimum    2&c,    If   charged'\n} (Oa Dlnpuy   type   double above raien.     I\nLocal Bea'tin*   NHM\u2014\"*c   per   word\neach   Insert .-'.n.     In   black   face   or   ma-\n' ohlnt ttptttlo  4c pat word,  black  face\nuf    the    I'nilcil    States; cupitaln   ba   a   wonl,   2Fi   per   cent   din\ni   Ibe   World   war    who   OOUnt   I*   run   daily   -without  ohiuige   of\n.     ...        ...   ..     ....   ___,,   'copy  for one month   or more.       Whert\ni ,iiui   -t,i  years    strv- * -^Ytrttttmtnt   is  set.  out In ehorc  lines\n- the  chaage   is   LtHo  a  tliii   for  Roman\ntrpt,   Ibl   for   black,   face,   and   20c  foi\nblack   f\u201e \u25a0*!    capltala.    Minimum   ate.   If\n1 chanted   ttc \t\n23 City Property for Sale\nBUNGALOW\nTin\nADMIRhw S.iviS\nMETHODIST   DIVINE   DIES\nTotal sales Were 115.WO shares.\nThe clearing bon.-.. .-UiU im nt BfetWtd\na. decrease of $14.bf,M'.>ll In loan.-*, discounts and InveatHionu, a dttreatt of\n|IT,4M,000 in the rewrve of member\nbanW-i In the federal res. rve bank and\nun Lnereaac of I447.DO0 In the rtatrre in\nthe bank's own vaults. Nei demand deposits decreased HUM,600. Aggregate\nreserve totaled |S(\u00bb,\u00bb76,000, making |\ndeficit In reserve of 14,08*1,140, as onn<\npared with excess reserve of 161,17*1.011\nlast week.\nPrices In today's bond market again\ntended upward, with the bttt exhibitions\nof siient-th In coi>i\u00bb\"i ci.'ici-any Ib-ns and\ni*nit{-u   stai. i   government   Mtttritlaa\nTi.iding was ontttttUy biivk for t half\nb.iiid.iy icttlon.    Chile Copper Vs wtri\nIbe  Individual    fi ature\u00ab.    climbing    -\"*\"-)\njioinis. the fi per cent bondi of th\/e Ural\ncompHny rttlng -',. Ctrrt ie Ptttt .*\u2022\u00ab,\none of the omsI  itttlve nt*  ilu   tt-pper\nIs.-'lies. gdvtated -\\. Tbe iu\\v Koveiu-\nment   A',    ptT  ceni   bond!   crossed   par,\nolt^ag ai lloo.oi of lo c< ota above last\nntghfe cloee.\nClUBillg    i**-'  ,..ltioi!':.\nHlgTi Low. Qttt.\nInl. Marbie coin. ... tth ... It-Si\nMo. I'actfic pfd .... 54 ...      MH\no., It a st. r. \u2022   \u25a0 t%%    .i\"1;-    10%\nltock Tsland Il'4       lOH       H':N\nC,  P.  11        I I.V'i     111';     Hft%\nWtrtt Arrow . Itn     *S%     '-\u25a0-\n.SHidel'akrf     lt%%     II\u00bbH     ISt-ti\nu. s. steel eom..   i\"; %    i\",;;s    107-n\nNCI,SON.\nexchange  f<\nNo\nt.\n\u25a0ling, M.-l\nrrent counte\nA   mob\nioubH, Im\nTORI 'NT' I,    N'ov.   5.- ftav.    Willian\nrtgrga,   D.D.,  former ttoward  of ttt-t\n[tlhodlul    booh    room,    died    at    hi--\nane hert today.\n1<\u00bb   Male Help Wanted\n*ii:i:mi:n. brnkemen. i.e-jinm ra j\nlater |2C0 (which position?). Hailw\nBox   5211,   [.'aily   .News.       (01\ni^sasraEKaB'sa\nForeign Exchange\nKKW TOIIK. N\"\nmte, n%t\nCaimclliin dollar..\n-Bar Mk. I- i\nl*j w IM i.:::.\ners\nEither With Your Name\nor with the words\nWANTKD\u2014iftrat-clttt cook for larpce\nconstruction ownp. Oood wafftt nr\nright man. State age and experience.\n\\|ii\u00bblv gulllvan .Mill ContUruetlon uf-\nf-ci. Khmberloy. B. C. I MID)\nAUTO ANh TRACTOK BCHOOU\u2014We\nteach thcroujfhly practical oounea In\nauto and   tractor  repair, auto eleclrlc-\niiv.   storage   batierlet,   welding   and\n\\ iileuilKinr. iIoin! position? open to\nour graduate***. No aft limit. Previous cxpi riem-e unnecessnry. Prea\n\u00abiiipb.vnu nt department, write or call\nfor catalogue No. BO.   Modern Auto &\nTractor  Schools,   IgO-l   W.  Third   Ave.\nSpokane iSinr.)\nQOOD wtflet and steady employment\nMen wanted to learn the barber trade\nLight, phy-af-wiit. clean work. Vou nan\nlearn in o fen Weehs' time by attending Hemphill's, Ureal demand Pti\nbarber* nl from -j-.1:, to ||fi per week i\nmid eonunlsslon, Hundreds of loot- :\nileus wa-are you can .-tart in business\ntor \\oiu-.-iii'. Write or call for free\nrntuloKua Hemphill Bnrber College,\n!CS oth Ave. E., Ctlgary, Alta.    (SIM)\nrooins and both, 2 nttlc\nrooms, slecpiiiR porch, \\l lotM. Quiet\nlocation. Five lninutes\" from post office.     -$111(0 110.    Very   easy   ternm.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nPhone. Baker  St\n(&170)\n18 Miscellaneous tor Sale\nTOli    sale\u2014Rored   wood    Irrigation\npips and wooncn pumps. Prlttt and\nparticulars on application. Jamie-\nson, Kochs Hiding, Wit)\n22\nMiscellaneous\nDltKSSMAKINC\n7IU Stanley St. lT.141)\n-8 Miscellaneous Wanted\nWANTED\u2014To    purchase    immediately,\n10-foot poles and up.   8, P. Pond.\n(6141)\nPIANO wanted for cash; condition no\nobject. Must b>' Ohoap, State make\nand price. P. O. Bog tI4 or phone\nQgQLl. (i.L'07)\nWANTED\u2014LaunOh not less than 10-foot\nkeel Must be iii first-class condition\nand price right Clivs full partlculara\nto D, ll. Ferguson, Long beach. Nelson,\n>t. C. (520S)\nORSBN hides, six cents pound, calf\neiRbt cents. J. P. Morgan, Nelson,\nR   C. (5136)\nRINTED stationery   of all kinds. The\nDally   Npws   I'rintlnxr  Department\n20   Live Stock for Sale\nFOR      SALE\u2014Empty      barrels,     keRs.\nsnckH.    McDonald Jam Co. (Ultff)\nTENDERS WANTED\nTenders will be received by the un-\ndersiKiied for the purchase of the following property:\nTenders may be for the whole or\nfor any part thereof. Neither the lowest or any tender will necesaurily be\naccepted.\n1 RtmlSfton  Typewriter, cost....$lS5.iJU\n1 iHirrou^hs    Adding    Machine,\ncost     285.00\ni Cfcrgt   Baft,   cost &2U.oo\n1 Fillnp    (ubinet,    letter    size,.\nvertical,  cost   \u201e    47.50\n1 Kherer-tlillette Grocers' counter,   cost     385.00\nThe above prouerlies are all in first-\nOlMg eondition, good us BtW, and may\nbe seen at the store of the Italian Co-\nOpcrallvo   Association   at   Trail.\nW. H. FALDING,\nAuthurlzi'd Trusti-p.\n(0172)\n10    Poultry and Egg\u00bb\nKOH SAI.ffi\u2014 25 Wh:to I.oihorn hiTi.,\n|1.2fi each,    l'hone i)84I.l. (Mil)\nPOR SALB\u2014Twrtity-flv. W. Wyaralutte\npullils. April-May hutched, J:.oil each.\nTwenty yeurliliK W. WyundutU- heua,\n$1.50 each.    A. I.lliB. Balfour,       (5\u00ab26>\n38 Farm and Dairy Produce\nFOR .SAI.K\u2014Dressed beef by the (.barter. I'-runt, lie per lb.; hind. 12c, f. o.\nb 1'assniore. Jumleaon, KochH Sld-\nlllK.  (M84)\n28     Lost and Found\nLOST\u2014Hunch   of   keys.     Kindly   return\nto f. 1''. McUurdys office. (5J73)\nLOST \u2014October 17, orown lur between\nVernon street und Kaslo bout, l'leaso\nreturn to Mrs.   VT. O. Miller.      (51127)\nBusiness    and    Prolesiona,\nDirectory\n35\nFor Rent\nFolt SA1.1: Qxcellelltly matched team\n.lappti pray rrrcherou horses, inure H\nyears, (ellllnf 7: welKln about H00\neaeli; si-uinl. ((elide. Painr lULVllW.\nWilli harness ami WWI. HOD. Hovd.\n'\u2022en Crawford, B. C. (52:t4)\n(HOICK Yoikshir.\nold,  seven  dollar.\nI       I'OK   827,   Nelson.\nI KKUISTERED*\"\n.Mrs. v.. H. Ki\ns.    >t(hl    v\n(ll.      T.   lie\nElflHT-ROOU 1 se    loo    block Silica\nstreet.    Apply J. M. I.udv. Iff.       15235)\nSMALL  lu.use   for  rent.    Apply  J.   lt.\nChoiiuctte. (5229)\nSTORE for rant.  Apply Mack's Uilllard\nHall. (5195)\n219)\n!*:     Room and Board\nHolatcln\ncow   for   sale\ne(lb S.       (52111)\nROOM and board.    121 Victoria St.\n\\\\ A\\Ti:i'\u2014 Men    and    wnlnell    lo    1. am\nliMbeline;.       I'anl   Willie   learnlnaT   and'      \"'\"-\"-',\".' ' '' ,\" \"- '       ''! (5206)\nloola free    Wrlto for catalogue.   Moler    1-OIt     SAI.K - Seven-year-old.      1100-lb. ' 1 '\nBarber College. Vancouver. (5IH)       horse and waiion; cheap.   24 Sillc,, St. i TELL your   want,  through   Th,  Dally\nmake mo>VtT\"t Hosn^tirroTeo ! -\u2014 ir\"r,!\" I    N\"\"* **-\u00ab\u00bb <*\u00b0\"\"\"*\"\npaid wef'cJy for your Optra. tlm\u00ab writ-    ,,\u2014\nlnp aliowi-*v*Js for us.    No OtmattlM   , *\u00bb\"0\nWo   lostract   unil   supply   with   work. . _^^\nWest Aiu-ms  BhOWOtTOl ber\\lce.  7 Colli.,     III'!--; .    Toronto IBIM)\nFor Exchange\ni3-    For Sale or Rent\nwanted i\nJObS,   KiUM -\n\/.inc.    i'xy-.*\nirj   wortw,\n< it   In   li hi\nand\ntn\nin  for BUtO K^l^  true\nmechunl-ns, tiro \\ \u00abi\ni vi- m    welding\nn':v a few\n111)    er   IlleM-   trad\n>i   riutM,   CoU\nWll.l, tnid,- Holstc\nRock ur lu-d del\nheifer year old for : HOUSK  foi\n.     llox   ul47.   Dally !      Hamilton\n(I14T1\n*!\"us'V!'-13* Business Opportunities\nsnip   or   rent. Mrn.   John\nPhone UILt, (!it99)\nTELL   your   wants   tnroucti The   DtU>\nNews til-isslfled columns\n\u25a0 in   iart<   \"\u25a0\u2022\ntr  nml\nMONTRi'.AL Kc\u00bb. 5.\u2014CySiOliaatca\nXlnioif Is B-m-eltinff tltMi at 25', bid\n\u25a0nd 26 Mfetl Ittartt-f,\nVancouver Stocks\nr.nk Provlnc,\nDatiglaJ ('ban\nHowe Moon,I\nHit.   Coal   .      .\nKUIKI t  ......\n\u25a0Hvi ramlth\nBoundary   Uaj\nl.llllHle\t\nSparian   .\nTrolun\nToronto Board\nTi-\nINTO,\nttowry buWoi\ntendt d holldu]\nronto in.ui.-1\n.ii\ni.i.\nAccording tt the ItamMM\nPOrtratstBl rc-golntloa* BlB\nfannr.ra wtos sp,l hottrw\n\u00bbi'hcr to Ittftt or *\u00bbHv*tflIy\nnre required io bare It properly cov*rrtl in a wrsppsr sn\nerhUh MIST sppwu* ta\nprominent   teltere  the  \u00bbw\u00abli\n-DAIRY  DUTTER*\nIii* te' f is ejm ernphastsM\nt^a^ ail butter , In etirh\nptckafti niu.*-t Im of ths full\nd-M weight of sixteen NMM\nand In dcf.vilt of same \u00bb fins\n\u25a0)f from ll*) to $30 for **arh\n9ntthU*M l* lmi*os\u00ab4. V*bey\nii'iUer must ba eo labelled.\ntrtt wlen mixed with dtvriy\nbutter and dn.lry butter t\u00bb-\nlalat It\" label even though tt\nb* mixed w.lh tho crearnary\nproduct\nPrices\nPRINTLO   WITH    NAME    OF\nFARMriTI   OK   IRAHD   NAME\nIf yon hart your own  naao tf\nhrar-d on f%W wupjiery ] -hi gait\nvaluable adrtf-ttling for >our but*\nt\u00abr. lt csiiaes pttglt lo naif. tVt\nih<- sums bftnil stuli\ntoo. i *\u25a0\u25a0:- \u25a0\u2022  nl\nTHnUnf    \u2014    -   ..\nmo.  i ->.   r and\nPrlntlnc    \t\nPRINTED   WITH    WORDS\n-DAIRY    BUTTL\u00ab\"\nIM\nfor   _.\t\nUL\u201e S1.50\nK)o\n\"E7 $4.50\n$4.25\n$7.00\n\"OKD3\n$1.00\n$1.50\n$2.50\nl-'OH BATiffi    ProfTOttlTO    i*hoe      rrpalr\nshop,   Trail.     Qtti   locution.      Kitted\nK\u00abKini 8ob.\u00bbf i:\u00abi?h Av^     w\"h \u00bb\" ~>e.~ Kuipmmt.   R*a\u00bba\n\u25a0i^ '\"'vn-, *    iV'V.'i'i     f\"r   \"\u25a0'''\u25a0   U\u00ab\u00bbl\u00abi   ''it>.     B-   Vcn.lilli.\n\u25a0'\"\u25a0'\">\u2022 -*\"''.   . i\u00bb\u00ab..i      bq, tt, Trail, B. C l\u00ab4T)\nf,1' Kooteii'iiv 'siiii'.Kle Co^'l'.Td '     CI.ARSIKIKD ads. bring reHullH quirk\n(\",l(jlH '     IJ-   an,l   Kcoiiomtcrdly.    l^c    a   vur.l\nlt   iaprol'j(al,le   to   pay    m    advane*\nplai\n,1  .11   III   lie.,   .   hOW.\n\\.;,,     ne.'lei.r.     | [iur   olal 1\nnluM\nTiie outiuuidlni [tatu\nsion   n,i~   lie    I'nrtli. r     lie\nMln...  i\"ii   h     i   \u25a0\u25a0:  \u00bb1\nBrailliaii  conllnued actlvi   an\ntoucblm ll, i \u25a0 at IS!.,\nIi. ,,.\u25a0,,!   I',,,   leu i,   atock.   CO\ntl' \u25a0    \"M     v. \u25a0\u25a0: ,h     LfJ    I   re\nI Inl       v..lr.   Ul'    I-nl-r.   Hie   1\n,\u201e'    lh,     \u00ab-\nII,      Home\n,i   clou 1   111\nlinn, ,1:\n[mra\nkl \u25a0\ni\"\nWINNIPEG  OILAIN  QUOTATIONS.\n[Q.%*      I'll'\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINKFIAroi.il>.    Km     .'. - Floui\ntui fed; ahtptm nts, Tl.SSI barrtli.\ntlr.iii -III \"i|  it. }.\u2022{ (HI\nWh \u00ab\u2022    Ko    l   northern,   f-M-Sh\ni n%\nCora\u2014No I inHow, II lt\u00ab* to 17V\n. mte- So l wiiih' t*%e tt M%*\nFlai - Nu.  i, |l BI to tm II\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL    Nov.    r, \u2014 I^KKa alron*.\npMAtoa.   Him     elleei'e  Mtroflff\nClMOM     F1nn,t      eo.ternr..      Hl',11    to\nHnller\u2014I'lioie..! .leiini.rj.  Sic\nKu,-- m <\u25a0\u25a0 !<\u25a0\"            |M''\nWE CAN SHIP IMMCDIATELY ON   RECEIPT OF CKDER\n1\/ wrappers are to be mailed include postage when\ntending money orders\nDaily News Job Department\nHOTEL MENUS\nw,.\nMint   Hotel   Menus,\ncither\nwith\ncomplete   menua   or\nwith\nthe\ndilforcnt       headings\nand\nblank\nap.ac.es   for   typing   i\nbill   ol   faro.\ni   tha\nThe\nDaily   News\nDepartment\nJob\nTh\nHome of Good Print\nng\nNelson,   B,   C.\n.\n1' Furnished Rooms to Rent\nKl UNISHKD\n-\"   Live Stock Wanted\n11 Female Help Wanted\nWANTKD Immrdlately, rood, atatMe\nhousi-k . p.-r for two tentlemea Apply\nBoi US, Kii-i\". twfij\nTKLL your wants through The Dally\nNewa  cl*ii*f*lfjed  columtin.\nHAVE YOU A ROOM\nFOR RENT?\nMany want rooms, some\nwith board, some without.\nlf you have a room\nwhich you wish to rent, advertise it in these columns.\nThat is where people look.\nl'\/ic A WORD A DAY\nInsurance and Real Estate\n\u00bb.  W. DAWSOaT.\nReal   Eatate,   Inaurance,   Rental,.\nAnnabU Blk.  V. O. Box 733.  Phono 117.\n (r,i78)\nMonument!\nCampbell & Rltchla Monumental Co.\nP. O. Box Mir,.       Nelson, B. C\n  Telephone 16. (5179)\nCAIfADIATf  AUTO AltD  BI.HCTaUOAJa\nSUPPLY COMPAHT.\nBftttary Bervtc. Station,\nCleveland rock drills, air hose fittings,\nradio supplies, electrical appliances, motor nnd Ketierator repairs, eleotrlcai and\nnieehiinlcal Installing:, oxy-acetylene\nwelding, machine shop work. P. o. Box\n53, 306 Baker St., Nalson. Phone 693.\n(6180)\nPainters and Decorator*\nMDKPHT BKOS,\nPainter, and Daooratotl,\nDealers   in   Wallpaper,\n<13  Josephine  St. (5181)\nAccountants\nCHARLES F. HUNTER\nAuditor\ni   1191 Nelaon, B. C\nFlorists\nIRl\/.ZEI.I.K'a   C1REENHOUBE,   Nelaon\nCut flowers aad floral deigns\n  (5183)\nAssayers\n\u00ab   W    WIDDOWSON,  Box A110I, Nal.\non    B   C     Standard  western chargaa\n(51S()\nWholesale\nTHP.  HOMt  Or   GOOD  PniNTINO\ni i; ITUT\nNtlSJtl, B. C\nThe Consolidated Mining &\nfnmnonv nf I onoila    I imitan\nOffice   llWSllillU   .ind    Rsfinini   Dcpartmont,\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSmelter? and Reliners\nPurehascm of GoW, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducerg of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC, TRAIL.\nCondensed \"Want\" Ads Order Form\nUse this blank on  which to   \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0 *i-i yuur conilenbc-J   mil.,   one   word   in   each   ipsce.     Enctots   monty\noidor or check and  indil  duct lo The Daily  Niwa,  Nelaon,  B. C,\n~\" Rate:    Ono and a  half cent a  word each  iniertion,   six   consecutivo   insertions   for   price   of   four\nwhen   cash  accompanies  order.    Minimum,  20c.     Each   initial,   figure,   dollar   signs,   etc.,   count   aa   one\nword-    No , -i. (\u25a0]-   loss than 50 cents.\n \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\"\n1\nI\n!\nIf  desired,  repli\nto  be   mailed  encloan\ns  may  be  addressed  to  box  numbers  at The  Daily  News  Office.    If  replies  are\n10o extra to cover cost ef postage and allow five words extra for box number.\nBKRRIHGTOIf    ft   BEAWH,\nWli ol tell*  rruit Hvrohsnts.\nAll root vcgt-tables bought for cash.\n*\">iephone  ui Nelson. B  C.\n (S185)\n*. MACDONALD * CO,, WHOLBSALB\nGrocer-** and Provision Merchants\nImporters of Tpan, Coffee, Spices,\nDried Fruits, Staple and Fancy Oro-\nCfrli-B.     Nt-lMin.   H.   C. (.r)1W6)\nEngineers\nGteeO Bros., B*irrfeac^\nHELSOS.   B.  O.\nCITIX.  *UtO  KIHIMO  SHaiaTZXBa\nB. C.. Alberta and Oomlnlon\nLand   BnrT.yora.\nCrown Grant Agents.       Sine Printing.\n (&1\u00bb7)\nMltTOrO aaraiarxxm,\nB.  O.  Land  Bn.rv.70r.\nB. S. DAWSON, XASLO, B. O.\n  ti US)\nAuctioneers\nW.   CTJTI.EB,\nAoetlonaar,  Avpralicr, Taloator.\nGoods sold privately or at suction.\n119 Ward ritual. I'hona 77.\nFuneral Directors\nD. J. ltOBEUTNON, F. D. D. * E., 101\nVictoria   Ktrest.     1'lniue   292.     Nlflit\nI'liunc 1S7J. (ilSO)\n!\u00ab\u2022 ,.sm.\nstandard rnrnltnre\nCo., UndertakerK,\nKuiiernl Director***.\nAuto bearae, up-io-\ntliitfl elm pet. nest\nW\"    pcrvlcc.   I'rlccs rcn-\navaabla. <&mi>\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nr\nBy George McManss\nALL. Rl<5HT\nHA.IJL IH\nTHE BOAT.*.*\n t&W\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNINO. NOVEMBER 6, 1922.\nPage Seveu.\nNews of Sport\nLONDONERS\nLOSE OUT\nATSOCCER\nSix Metropolitan Teams Fail;\nOver a Million Attend the\nMatches\nJUST BEFORE COLLAPSE\nLONDON, Nov. 5.\u2014 (By Canadian\nProas Cable).\u2014The extent of nn-\nemp'oyment in Grent Hritain can\nhnrtlly be Judfed from tho attendance nt football matches. Yesterday's first Hush leaffM matches at-\ntrnctod well over a rnillion spectators, the Newcastle-Siimlerlaiul match\nheading   the   Hat   with   f.4,000.\nTho  feature  of   the   day's   play  whh\nthe   nppnlllnff   fate   of  Un*   Londoners.\nt,i   xleams   loning.   four   drawing   and\nfire tford   a'one   winning.     Liverpool. I\n. i*r.dcrlnnd,  Mtddleaboro and   Burnley I\n: land   out   as   the   most    convincing I\naides  of   the  first   division,   bm   lhe 1\nmidlands ran derive satisfaction from\nthe state of affairs in the second div   I\nIslon where Notts county and  l*eii*.-y-\nter city are putting up a keen etrunle\nfor  th*   leadership,    Burntey'i   score\nof 8 was a record for tho aoaaon, bm j\nthe   score   did    tint    exaggerate    their\nsuperiority.\nHigh tension prevailed among the j\nhuge crowd na Hie frn.si lioimd ground |\nnt Newcastle owin-,' In the e\\ ontiess ,\nand balance nf the two sidi-s. The\ndeeiding goal was seemed bj Aiken\nfrom a corner. Notwithstanding the\npresence of five International players\non each side, the Nottingham-Liverpool game was dull except In the last\nhill hour when the gnu s were scored.,\nNEW HOCKEY\nCOMPLICATION\nCOKO ALONG\nFat in the Fire Over Newsy\nLalonde and Joliat;\nThreaten   Action\nIii-furc Carpentier\nSCENE AT PARIS FIGHT\ni,llil|ls..|l.      Him;   |ih,ili.iil.il.il   Ol   il\u201e.   I.iiiiuii\nRank Outsider\nWins Futurity\nBALTIMORE, M.I., Sov. 6.\u2014Blossom Times. K. EL llra.lley'.s filly from\nthe Idle' Hour stock farms, and ji\nrank outsider in the betting, won\ntho first division of the 1'imllco futurity yesterday by more than :i\nlength over De-Ages, another outsider,\nowned   by   .1.   S.   Ward.\nSally's Alley, from the Willis Killer\nstables, generally regarded as favorite, won the second division of tin\nevent, taking the lead at the stmt\nOOd utiVt'C bviuu_.beaded. \u00a3>he won\nhy more Ihan a longlb. Albert Johnson rode both horseM and made a\nrecord In turf history for one day.\nThe times were\u20141: \"111 4-ftaod 1:SI 1 -.'*-.\nThe purse was for $110,000, believed\nto be the largest ever offered fur a\nhorse race The race, which Included\nndded money, was worth MLMI to\neach of the winners.\nThe  first   four horstM in   each  divl\nsloii   will   meet   in   a   special   race   for\na sold cnp. to in- run  next Tuoaday\nor Wednesday.\nVancouver Team\nIs All Over the\nEdmonton Players\nVANCOUVER, Nov, :.. -diving \u00bb\nsp>inii'i ,'xhii'ii:nn i.f rugby, th..\nVaUvcouvtr  iiiiiii  defeated   Bdmonton. .\nl in ii, bare \u25a0atarday ittern i. Two\nthi.usaii.l   taol wilti. :.s-.l   ih..  g\t\nWilli Hi., exception ol \u25a0 lew mln-\nut.* in ih.. aeeond hah*, when, the\nvisiilni! Corwnrda dribbled danieroua-\nly  aaar the Vancouver Una,  Ihe   u\ni\u201e.i-i:i   bnya had   m ehaae   break\nint,, ii\u201e. Boon .\"iiiiini.\nThough   beaten,   Bdmonton   played\ng I   i tall    They   were   powerful\n,,n ih.. delenalve, tackling in deadly\nfaahlon. Hallbtrrton, in parttnilar,\ndlaplayed greal ability, bin u.'rk aav\nini,' try after try- Ha daalted ihtush\nHi., Held lima after lima and raekled\nVancouver runuera. Ire* fcnea -i!*.\"\ndid k i work.\nVancouver waa good in all depart-\nrnenta, exeepl lhal Ihey foiled to con-\nvert n ilrtgt* try. Lou Banter atarred\nami the entire hnrk iI1vIm..ii pin veil I\nbrllilanlly. Hunter aeor .1 Hi tlral\ngoal nml Tyrwhltl Un. aeeond,\nim  Monday  afternoon  il\u00bb'   ,'tattoraj\nwill piny tin. vanity,\nOLD COUNTRY FOOTBALL\nLONDON, Nov. '.   Reauttaofleague\ni ii,., i   gamea   iilav \u25a0!    in   tin.   ol.l\ni.ani.t   today  follow:\nEngliah Laagua\u2014Flral  Division\nI.\n1\nVil I\nQueens Outplay\nthe McGill Team\nINDIANS  ACQUIRE   LUTZKE\nCLEVELAND,   Nov.   a.    Tli.'   I'li'VO- |\nland  baaehatl   ehtb   abuUnad   Walter I\nLutzk,..   Ihiril    I'limnnan.     Irnm     0,\nKnnsiiH    City    I'lnli   ut    Ilia    Annl'ii an\naaaoelallon, ii Is announced. The\nmet Involve, playan ami eaah, i.m\najatnea nml the amounl wen with-\nin-:.i.\nl.utzki., who vraa wilb Indlanapblla'\nin lli'JO. is sai.i i,y in.ijai- league\nacouta ia la1 tha baat third baae-\nmnn in lb,' minora, 11\u00ab- participated\nin 111 gunea lust aaaaen. havlog a\nbatting average nf III.\nKINGSTON,   N..V.   5.\u2014Queeaa   ,tis-\nppaad   \"1, HcOIII   ua   Sainnlay   at   Ilia\nItlchardaon atadtiun, Jn to I\", .bowing   vaperlorlty   m   ail   departmenta,\ntlimiKb in lln' Unil few nlnutea Mali.II aoroed nine polata an.l looked\naxtremrly dangeroua. li waa, how-\naver, when both Batal  and Lead-\ntoy    W.I t    nl'    lla-    | a,    lla'    I'f.l\nan.l   while  uncorked their rally, win, I,\nma,I,, ihlnga look glum lor 11\u25a0.\u25a0 in\nMriar,\nTli,. wonderful work of Queena-\nwlnga tha line punting of M. Kelvey,\ntha wail; nf tha half-backa ami Ihi\naporting genenlahlp <>r Bvana brought\nvictory  tn ilia tricolor.\nRoyal Export Beer\nFull Standard  Strangth.    Order through\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR STORE\nfree   Delivery\nDIRECT   FROM   BREWERY\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY, LIMITED\nOldham   V  0,  Ai\nUlrmlnjthan. 0, Cardiff *\"it v 0,\nBndderafleM  o,   Blackburn  ll.  2\nBolton   \\v.   i.   sink-   1.\nBurnley  v.  NottIngham  V*.  2.\nPreaton  N.  B.  -. Chelate o.\nTottenham  ll.  I,  Liverpool  I.\nw. Bronurlrh a. 1 Idaneheoter C, a.\nMiddleaboro   |,   Sheffield   t\\   2.\nN ewe untie  V,  2,  SonderinlM   l.\nSecond   Division\nPli hara \u00ab.  Harnaley   i.\nI... iiM r. :i. w.Mii.nn V. \".\nI Hr Cuter   I'ilv   u.    Hull   Cily   1.\n\\l.nii h<   l*i*   l\".   :>.    I'lap too   H.\nSotte County -J.  Rlaekpool 0.\nivn   \\.iie I,  Bury 0.\nKntherhaw <'. :'. Coventry C. 0.\nThe Wedneaday S, Cryatal Palace 1.\n\u25a0outhampton t, l-iradford \u00bb.\ns.n.Hi Shi. Mr- ::   Derby C,  l.\nBtorknort C. I, WTolverharapton  \u2022\u25a0\nThird   Divis *>,n~Southcrn   Section\nAi trdare 0, Queene   Park   R.  \"\u25a0\nlit.t nl  :'..   Morthyr  Towa   L\nBrighton nnd Hove l. Bwanaea T. S,\nlh lalol   Cily   'J.    I'.irlsmuHth   I.\nlOv.i.r City  :. Norwich C, n.\nOllllnghom 0,   Swindon  Town 0.\nMl 11 wall   i. Charlton  A.   l.\nNewport c. t,  laiiii.n Town a.\nPlyaeouth   v. t, BHatol n. o.\nBouthend If, :'. Northampton 2.\nVPatford i. Reading it.\nNorthern   Section\n.\\ei-rir,*,!*>ii   \"',  \u2022  b.-.-nrlii-ld   I.\nBarrow   I.  Nelaon o.\nBradford  4.   Durham City   1,\n<;. ini-rJ.y Town :', Crewe a. ;i.\nH;.ri apool r. n. Rochdale 2.\nUnroln  dty  *.'.  Bouthport  0.\nBtaleybrldffe  !,   Aahlncton   1.\nTinnmi r.    I;.   2.   \\V.ils:ill J.\nWlianboro 0,  HallTaa Town  1,\nWrrxhnm  n.  Darllnirton   0,\nScoHiBh   Le.tgue\u2014 Pli st   Divition\nAI Won   It.   I,   Alloa   1.\ni\"|\\.|.-   li.   r.-liie   1\nDuMdee   i.   'in,:,.-   i.\nr.iikni, ;.. HU\u00abernlami \".\nHamilton Acade ft, Ayr L'aitad l.\nlb   in   2.   St.   Mliren   2.\nKilmarnock  0,  Motherwell   \u00ab.\nMorton   I.  K.uih Raven \".\nRangt n   i. r-nr.-k Thlatlee  1.\nThird   tanarfc  2. Aberdeen  1,\nUnivirKibes   Beaten\ni.'i\\H\"\\. Nor, i tttf Canadian\npreea Cab\u00bb.- i n twq friendly eoecer\n^.iru'-s ii\u00bbii:i\\-, Nonhead defeated <';nn-\nhridge   iniivi rally   \\   to   0.   nnd   Corin-\nthimiM  won   from  Oxford   university\nVARSITY   BEATS   McGILL\nTOROXTO, Nov. :..-V-ir.-dty do-\nfaatod kfeOlU 7 tu n in on BngHsta\nrugby  game  plnyed   here today.\nMONTREAL,  Nov. S.\u2014The fat la Inj\n(he  fitc  -isfain  in  the  National  Hockey!\nle.'iKiie, Neway Lalonde, nccurdinB to!\nthe riillnt,' gtyen by Preahlaat I*'ranlt;\nCalder nt the annual meeting here \u25a0\nSaturday,   beeomee   the   property   of\nlhe BaflkatOOn ClUb, to which In- wu]\ntindoil by ihe Canadlena for Anriel ]\nJoliat, but Joliat, hy virtue of gj\nresolution paaatd after a bitter fiKht,;\ni.s  not   eligible for lhe  National  Hockey'\nleague.    Cana-dlena,    therefore,    hnve t\nlosi l.;il.>nde and the rhnn.ee of sell-\nInt him for $:t.\"i0(- io H-imilton or To-\nrontfl and 'hey h:ive alBO been de- \u25a0\nprlVOd   of   the   servici-s   of   ,full:it.\ni.eo Daadtmnd  ihreatena legal nt*-1\nUOn iitfaitiMl lhe National Hockey\nleague \u00abnd everyone connected wilh |\nit.     Xewsy   l.nlonde   threatens   to   re- |\nfuse to ko to Baskatoon ami ihe Baa-\nkatoon club threatene action against |\nCanadlena if Lalonde does not report.\nCharges Conspiracy.\nThe resolution which will bar Jollal\nwai presanted hy Secretary Oorraaa\nof Ottawa and MlpuJatbe thai \"aB\nplay-f*ra luspended or sxpelled by any\notinr athletic orsenlsatton most ftrat\nbo relnatated by a majority vote before being eligible tor the N, H. UM\nDandurand charged the three oppoa*\ntag \u25a0 lube with conspiracy, as he saw\nat once |hat I hit* resolution woohj\neliminate Joliat, who is under siis-\npenalon   by   the   Northern     Ontario\nHockey   le.-iKtie,     Th>-   resolution   pre- ,\ncl pita ted one of the hottest debates in j\nihe history of the N. H. I.. Canadlena\nalle-gnd that it was a \"frannnp\" to\nroll   them   of  the  scrviios   of  the  play-\n\u25a0 r   ihey   bad   received   for   lalonde, I\nwin i   upon   ihe  Ottawa.   Hiitnilton   and\nToronto   delegatee    informed      Dan-*\ndurand   thai   il   was   meant   to   bar  all\nundestrabls candldatea. The NMltt-\ntlon carrisd by a vote of :t tn 1. No\ntrades wire put throuuh and the\n\u2022schedule, wWch opens on Deoember\nIii,   was   referred   to   I'resiilent   Gaidar\nWill   Not   Promise.\n! Neway Lalonds attended ihe r>an-\niturond banquel in the evening ;*iiii sat\nbealde  Mr.  McOmnnd, of Baskatoon,\nto uhoin be referred u \"my m*w\nmannyer,\" but he refused to pfpaalae\nto   go   wi st   and   said   he   would   have\n\u25a0om-rthlng   to  ny   about   tin*   entire\ntransaction in the course of a feu\ndays.\nOttawa    fnupht    hard    tn    have    the\nphy   off   abandoned,   bul   the   other\nthro, eluhs favored ll and last year's\nsystem of home ni'd home games will\nbe    con tinned    With    the    majority    or\ngoals counting en the round. The\nesaaoa will dose about March *.\nTii.' Toronto motion rafaring the'\nwaiver pri<-c m IISM paaaed unani-,\nmously and Ottawa'! reeolutlon forc-\nIttg    clubs   which    ask    for    waives    to\neurrender ihe player also weal\nthrough.\nMACDONALDS\nPackages 15*\nLOOK FOR GRUELLING\nGAME AT EDMONTON\nI A\neon\nHani\nMar.\nin   li\nIbe\nin. i\nHon.\nk-iny\nIhi,\nmen\nmill:\nlllli..\nfur   I\nA\nl,y     ,\nearly\nI.OARY, Nov. 5\u2014Murray T*omp\nni  afooaa .law.  a\u00a3ooiBpanla4  i.y\nk    ('l).iy.    well-known    baaetai ll\nairiv.l   here   innlKht   rn   route\niilniiiiiii.ii  where  thay  will  attend\nReflna-Edmonton ruKl.y Rami, in\nilayoil   ThanksKivinK   ilay.   Thonip-\naloni  wilh   Ann.al   Walk  nf  CaVl-\n. will hr- ih., official in thane \"f\nKami'.      Thi.   UoOH   .law   aBOrta-\nil'.lliri,   thai   Retina   Iihh   a   f.'l-\nhli. aqnad ami ai'.- y\u00ab'ry o.inch to'\nadvanta(M  offered.    Tiny  look\na   fruaQlm  eanii'.\nlarte delegation nf Calgary rug-\nenthualaata  an-   laavvbii   on   the\nmorning  train  io   e\/ttnaaa  iho\nsi.\nTigers and Argos\nPlay Drawn Game\nTORONTO. Nov. iY\u2014 Km* Pome\nwe. ks back, the Hamilton TiRer snp- |\nporten have claimed ili.it liic jnnu'Ic\ncrew    are    n    better    team    than    the\nArgonauts, although ihe oarasaen de- j\nf-al.d    lhe    Timers    in    Hamilton    by I\na    decisive    score,    and    the    BeOgale :\nannounced     that     they     would     show\ntheir   superiority   win ti   they   met   the\nCanadian   champions   on   their   own\nfield.\nThin opportunity WM Riven to\nHartMt'S team on Saturday at the\n\u2022stadium and Ihey practically lived\nBS -* 'heir promisee, holding the\nKcullers to a U-1S lie, nnd KhowiriK\nlhat were It not for Conaeher they\nwould hive Won. The Tiers, on\nthe whole were a. better team, nt\nleast on Saturday's play, nnd had\nIt not been for a wonderful exhibition   by  ihe  Argonaut   captain,   the\nHCilllet-M    would    have    suffered    d-feat\nfor the first lime in  tWO BeMOnS.\nOur Greater Service\nIdea!\nCJust 12 montlia ago our \"Greater Service Idea\" was adopted by\nall U. B. Co. Stores.\n#XAll our departmental managers put forth the outcome o\u00a3 their\ncollective buying policy merchandise, and the result has been\ngreater  values for your money.\nCTIiis week we again demonstrate to you what it means by \"Seal\nof Quality\" merchandise.\nCU'ioils you can depend on to give you tlie utmost satisfaction at\nprices which are almost unbelievable. Compare the values offered and you will find your money will go farther.\nMen's Department\n$15.00\nMEN'S TWEED SUITS in good, serviceable grey tweed, won- (U1 Q KA\nderfnl value at  \u00abMOeOU\nMEN'S TWEED SUITS, in brown fancy\nstriped tweed; well made (P<*)-| fTA\nand perfect fittinjr    ipZ 1 .')l'\nMEN'S I), li. OVERCOATS, In dark\nIK) and brown shades, with belt at\nback; deep convertible collars and lined\nthroughout This is a great bargain\nat these prices\u2014\n$21.50 and $23.50\nMEN'S ENGLISH MAKE GEBARDINE\nRAINCOATS, fawn shade, with check\nlining, raglan shoulders and detachable,\nbelt .   UnaqiUalfod\nat    '\t\nMEN'S PARAMATTA WATERPROOFS\nin fawn, dark green and.    (J\u00bb*r\u00bb Qr\nMEN'S FLANNELETTE WORE AQ\u201e\nSIIIKTS, in grey          VOC\nMEN'S KHAKI AND GREY FLANNELETTE WORK \u00a31 ,A\nSHIRTS    \u00abM.4i7\nMEN'S KHAKI AND GREY PICE\nAND PICK WORK (M    A ft\nSHIRTS         \u00abM.4y\nMEN'S STRIPED ENGLISH \u00bbf 4(\\\nOXFORD WORK SHIRTS  itM.-**.*\/\nMEN'S HEAVY WOOL WORK SOCKS.\nThese are  values  vou  must  not  miss.\n40c, 45c, 50c, 75c\nMEN'S COMBINATIONS, in Tiger. Admiral and Watson's tf>\u00bb\") AO\nmake          *J)smS.Jo\nMEN'S MERINO SHIRTS     (PI   A A\nand DRAWERS, Penman's..\u00abPleUl\/\nMEN'S HEAVY RIBBED WOOL COMBINATIONS,\nat \t\nMEN'S MERINO\nCOMBINATIONS\nMEN'S RIBBED COTTON\n$1.69\n$1.49\nBED COTTON     <J>-|    A ft\nDRAWERS, Watson's make\u00abD 1.41\/\n$1.49\nMEN'S BLACK BIB OVER\nALLS, sizes 40 and 42 ...\nMEN'S BLACK DENIM        <j>S    Aft\nPANTS, sizes 40 and\nBOYS' ALL WOOL BLACK HOSE for\nschool wear; \"the Sturdy Lad,\" with\ndiamond double knees, Pair,\n75c, 85c and $1.00\nBOYS' ALL WOOL HOSE with fancy\ntops in fancy heather (*>-|   A A\nshades;  all  sizes.  Pair \u00abpl-eUU\nTktH are value*  unobtainable else-\nirhrre.\nBin'S* WOOL MACKINAW COATS in\nplain   or  check   patterns.     All    sizes.\nir\". $5.50 and $7.00\nBOYS' GOOD SERVICEABLE TWEED\nSUITS, with 2 pairs of Bloomers, A\nwonderful bargain.    Suit,\n$7.50, $8.75, $9.50\nBOYS' TWEED  BLOOMERS,  in  good,\nstrong tweeds.    Pair,\n$1.25, $1.50., $1.75\nAND  \u00abPZ.00\nDty Goods Department\nWhere the Quality Is Always First Consideration.\n>\n25c AND 50c\nBARGAIN TABLES\nThese tables\nare fillet\nwith extra\nspecial   values.\nThe  items  are  too\nnumerous   to\nmention.\nThe   early\nshoppers  will\nget  the\nbest   choice.\n$1.00\nBEST      QUALITY      FLAN N ELF\nBLANKETS, pink or blue striped\nders; white only; medium size,\nthese prices.\nPer pair \t\nWhite or grey, largest\nsize, per pair \t\nBLUE   AND   WHITE   STRIPED\nTICKING,   featherproof   weave,\nlish manufacture; \">8 inches wid\nusual value, per\nvard \t\n$2.\n$3.\nTTE\nbor-\nNote\n25\n00\nBED\nEng-\n18 YARDS TARTAN DRESS FABRICS,\nsuitable   for   children's   dresses,   etc\nRegular $1.60 yard. Special., per yard \t\nWHITE ALL WOOL BLANKETS; tot\nvalue obtainable:    *\n7 lbs.  weight.\nPer pair \t\n$8.00\n, $9.00, $10.50\n$1.50\n8 lb.\nweight, p\n7.\"> YDS. FRENCH CREPE DE CHINE,\nheavy, quality,  black,  ivory,  pink and\ncopen; 10 inches wide; unusual value; per yard\n86 YARDS COTTON BLACK SATIN\nLINING, suitable for lining furs and\nmuffs; dark brown,    taupe   and   grey\nshades; .\"(i inches wide.\nSpecial, per yard \t\n$1.75\n$1.00\nM-yard  Um  urf  the  tell  wm t*.-\neovr-reil li hm tli.in I yar.l fr.uu Al-\nberiu K<i;il UM by Suskuti Ih-h-hi.\nMi l.i'iiil went OTH for a. touch, which\n\\y;im cnnvi'rtt <l. Tin* visllin\u00ab t\u00ab:im\n\u2022nulpiiyril unil OUtffOMimlltd the luuii''\nRfgrofftttotl ;ill tlUWtttl lhe q;ime\nnml the wlnnluK points nuvored ^rfftt-\nly \u00bbf  lu<*k.\nALBERTA TEAM\nBEATS SASKATOON\nWinged Wheelers\nGain First Win\ntack, got ^ th.- greet credit for tho\nrod and blue uui, tin*- rmsy baok\nfield player earning frequent plsiidtti\nfrom the -.'ii*o ipectatora by tin* many\nthrilUnj pity* that faatvnd tha i>* si\nptrformance hi* taa ever turned In j\non tba irtdton.\nThe riMiiiini,', paaalwg |mm of the i\nwinged whielrrs prored too nuu-h fori\nilu*  ottavB*\nFix Date for\nElections in\nNew Zealand\nSASKATOON, Nov, B.\u2014-A toueh-\ndown In the lant two tnlmites of play.\nafl<T    batac    OUtplayed    in    the    pro-\nee.iini; qoartan aad ihe major part\nof thf* fourth parted) Kave BMkatoon\n\u25a0 7 to 3 vielory ovrr Alheita In thi*\nfir.sl Intori'olU'Klnte nifby match in\nwewteril    ('ana (la,     yeshrilay,       Wllh\ntwo mlnutaa to ro, Palatay kickni\ninto   Ihu   acilmmage   on   the   Alberta\nMONTREAL,  Nov.  5.\u2014Marlfo.1\nerlorlty     In    the     hack     fi\u00ab 1.1\nM A.A.A.   n   victory   of   11   io   i\ntiu*   Ottawa   \u25a0anatora   in   tin**\nIcaiztie    |iBH    of    the    Interprm i\nseries   aehaduled   for   IfontraaJ\nfall,    ami    liiciil.-nlally    turntahad\nwlnK'*l  wheeler*-*! with  their  first\ntory in three aaaaoM on  their\nCroiimlH   in   a   Bl|   l-'mir   itrUfgle,\nTo Jelf KuiibL'll, funner McUill\nLOYOLA   COLLEGE   WINS\nsi I Kill UK H IK K.     Nov.     r..\u2014Uyolu I\ncollece defeated Btabop'a oottaia uni-;\nviTHily   in   the   first   name   of   a,   home j\nand home aartaa for the fonlor inter-j\noolloflatQ  provincial football title ont\nthe   local   eampUB   on   Satunlay   hy   a I\nscore of  I'l   to   lit\ncial      WANDERERS   BEAT  DALHOUSIE\nHlip-\niav\u00ab\nover\nfinal\nHALIFAX, \\.H\u201e Nov. I.\u2014The Wan- j\ndarara1 Athletto alnb rathy team ii<*-:\nteatad   Dalhouale  vrntreratty   t>  ta  I\nhere   Saturday   and   won   the   city\nleugue championship. \u25a0\nWTCLLINOTON, Nov. 5.\u2014 (Via Rfu-\nters.) -The ilate of the ppmrril t-lectlon\nin NVw Zraliind hnpi hern flx*\u00bb<1 for D\u00ab*\nct*mhi*r 7. Premier Masn*y will op#n\ntin- lt.*form pnrty'B e.irnpalgn tomoirow.\nThe Llharala fire h-Mi-ib Io the euuntrv\nmid. r thi* leaaefUfcta of Wllf-rtrd, who\nmici'-'eiiod to the leadanhlp of the p.irty\non ,1om>ph Want'-* (lef.nt In the lnut elee-\nThe pnrliamenlHry I.abor parly in eon-\nlaallaff most of the \u00bbeatn on the Rort.il-\ntft pni|(r:im. Joseph Ward ntnten that\nhe Id not yet derided whether he will bft\na .,mhI..I.it-- In the present \u25a0 '.< \u25a0. u-,u.\n 'pm EigH.\nTHE NELSON \"D'ATLT TTEWS, MONDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 6, 1922.\nTHE ARK\nFor winter underwear. Ladles' Winter Veats, 75^ and S5> each. Heather Hose. $0)0 ami $1.25. Silk,\nfine quality. $1.00 \"*\u25a0 $1.25.\nCoreeta, $2.00 Pulr* Men's Heavy\nWinter Underwear, $2.00 Per Buit*\nBoye' All Wool Hose, 75<?. Flannelette Blankets, largest aire, $2.75\npair. Heating Stoves, Ranges, Linoleums, Furniture, etc.\nJ. W. HOLMES\n\u2022hen. 634 M\u00ab Varnon  St\nThanksgiving\nChocolates\nDo not forget to take\ns box of WillartTs or\nMoir's home with you.\nCanada Drug &\nBook Company\nPhon. 81,\nP. 0. Box 1087\nNelson News of the Day\nMARIMBA   WEEKLY   DANCE\nEvery   So tu rday,   Kii^le  Hall.\n(T.197)\nWhist drive nml dance under auspices\nof Y. M. C.  A. Tuesday, November 7th.\n1922.  730 p. in. prompt, the.    .Marimba\norchestra. (T.231)\nSons of England meet tonight at 7:30.\nInitiations an.t social. Visiting membera welcome. (5837)\nHOTIOE.\n1'ntll further notice ihe undersigned\nmeat   market!   will   close   during   the\nweek,    exoept     Wednesdays   and    .Saturdays, nt   five thtrlv  o'clock.\nP.   MKNS  ft   CO.\nNCl.SuN   .VI'AT   MAKKKT.\nHrTVlll-.RTKltlA.\nWEBT  K< a>TI-:.N'AY   111* T<' H I-\". Ft   CO\nU   LAURITZ. t;>236)\nDr. Wilson Herald, ear, nose and\nthroat .specialist, will be In Nelson November X and can b\u00ab consulted ut the\nhospital. (5204)\nDr. H. L. Bryee, the eye specinlist, of\nK.-lowna. will be in town today and\navailable for oonstdtatlon at  the Hume\nhotel.\nCapitol orchestra dance at the Armorv\nWednesday.    Watch for display ad\n(5239)\nANNUAL DANCE\nI.O.D.E.\nThanksgiving Day\nMONDAY,   NOVEMBER  6th\nEagle Hall\nTick\u00abl\u00ab, 11.00. 9 p. m\nNOT OUT OF THE\nJEWELERY   BUSINESS\nMr. 1'atctnaudo wishes to announce to hi\u00ab customers that he\nwill now devote alt his Attention\nto his Optica] business, where\nho will ho plcaseil to receive his\nold and new patients.\nAs he has arnUtCtd for Mr\nK. Collin son In mintage his Jow-\nelery ami Watch Repair Department   in   the  future.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptist   and   Opticisn.\nBADMINTON     INTERPRETATION\nCAMS ON OF FACTS COUNT\nNew Sport for Nelson; Ten- Rev. Westman Takes on Sci-\nnis Players Shine; New ence and Religion at Har-\nPlayers Surprise ve\u00bbt Anniversary  Service\nJOHN DALY        1\nCABINET CIGAR STORE\nMAIL ORDERS ATTENDED TO\nPROMPTLY.\n\u2022m-eklng Tobseee, Snuff, Pipes\n\u2022nd Full 8toek of Cigars, Cigar-\nettee.    Other Smoker*' 8uppliaa.\nfine ft\nurs\nTOR TALL  AND  WINTE*\n\u2014An assortment of ntmoet\nbeauty and variety\u2014models for\nevery occasion and type. Xxquls-\nHe workniamliip, and of a yu.*.lltj\nrarely found at moderate prices.\nG. GLASER\nMsnufscturing   Furrier\nPhone 106. Neleon, B. C.\nI'admin ton started off to a good\nhwIiik on Saturday when the members\nof the newly formed Ituilminton club\ngathered at the armory for the first\nmasting of tba season.\nMrs. It. II. IvOtils. who organized\nthe club, must he congratulated ou\npVtttlW the thing over in good style\nand   perfect   taste.\nThere arc- already 45 members and\na  waiting   list\nBadminton l\u00ab essentially a less\nselfish gams than tennis, to which\nIt is allied. An ordinary game does\nnot last more than 15 minutes. So\nwith say 10 players and two courts\n32 players can get a game In each\nhour, and even with a full attendance\nno one has to lay off a long spell\nbetween   gsnas,\nA lot nf people have the idea that\ni Badminton is \u25a0 \"Blaali\" game. Let\n[ them try It Tennis players who\nI know how strenuous that Is and who\nI tried it on Saturday, some for the\ni first lime, found themselves pretty\ntired at the end  of a set.\nMrs. Louis is perhaps the best exponent among the ladles. Mrs. Leslie Craufurd, Mrs. Gordon Hallett and\nMrs. II. Rosling also showed excellent\nform, and Miss Hahe Blackwood, as a\nnoviaie, -showed promise of wonderful\nthings.\nF, A. MacDonahl starred among\nthe men, W. K. Keyt, 1'. M. Forln and\nQ. S. Godfrey were good  runners up.\nIn badminton, when the \"bird\" ls\nflying, apparent ly through the window, it has a surprising habit of\ndropping dead at your feet; also If\nyou hit it t.n i he wi ng, the least\ncrooked stroke will kill at tho net.\nExtraordinary skill and speed are\ncalled  lor.\nBadminton  has  eotu to stay and\ndevelop a new set of muscles. Clever\nfoot and wrist work seem to be the\nmain essentials; otherwise, as in tennis, delicate skill at the net and long\nlow drivers to the hack lino are the\nmain features of defense and attack.\nBadminton, however, is new to Nelgon\nand eonimcnt is perhaps better withheld till players und writers know\nmore   about   it.\nWe .foe Ready.   Are You?\nFull   sseortmant   in   atock   now   of\nRUBBERS\nThs   best\u2014Maltese   Cross    Brand-\nnow   lasts.\nFLEMING'S   STORE\nFairview\n\\ Displav Ad in the\nDAILY NEWS\nEnters Many Homes\nCatches Many Eyes\nLast Football Match of\nSeason Set for Today\nFootball followers will this afternoon witness the last football match\nof the MiftOB. The game, which is\nbetween tennis eaptainod by A* Wel-\nlach and Harry Uolton, will commence at 2:M t-harp. as both captains\nhave picked strong teams a Rood gurae\nis  expected.\nSpecial harvest thiinksKivln*? and\nchurch anniversary Sirviccs held sway\nyesierday at the Trinily Methodist\nchurch, which was appropriately decked\nfor the occasion with various produce\nharvested this year. I'.cv. J. P. West-\nman occupied the pulpit for both the\nmorning and evening services.\nA special baptismal service was held\nat the morning, when five christeninRs\nwere held. The pastor also spoke on the\nsubject of \"Food for Thousht\u2014The\nBrain in Action.\"\nIn the evening a special musical program was held ln connection with the\nservice, Including the following numbers: Chorus, \"A Song of Hope\"; anthem, \"Festival Te Ileum\"; anthem,\n\"The Lord Is My Light\"; duet, \"Peace\nto Thy Dwelling,\" Miss Lottie Annable\nand fjeorge Hrown; quartet Trinity male\nquartet; anthem, ''Thy Way, Not Mine.\n0 Lord\"; solo. Mr. Hartinilale; chorus.\n\"The Christian Stand.\"\ngpeaklag on the subject \"Can Science\nReplace Religion1.'\" Rev. J. P. Westman\nsaid that our \/scientific progress has developed in mnn a sense of self-reliance.\nThe more he knows of the laws of nature the less the casual thinker Is Inclined to feel the need of Ood or religion. The discovery of gravity hy Newton caused many preachers of the period\nto change their sermons, he said.\n\"In the 17th century we believed fn\nmassed prayer as a remedy for an epidemic, whereas today through the understanding of laws we forbid this and\nsend for the health officer. This materialistic conception of life Is what holds\na nation down to perdition. It is not a\nknowledge of facts thnt count, but the\ninward Interpretation of facts by Individuals. Thus, in the same community\nwe have people that are perfectly satisfied, while others more favorably\nsuited are discontented.\nAn Incorrect Theory.\n\"Scientific    knowledge    alone    breeds\nmaterialism,   religion   supplies   the   motive and a worldly  interpretation.    The\ntheory that religion is failing ls not cor- I\nrect.     Two   hundred   years   ago   people\npredicted that the church would fail in\nliO yenrs.    Since then through  the ISth\ncentury   revival   the   largest   I'roiestunt\ndenomination In the world has grown up. ,\nI'eople are today saying the same thing. '\nWho knows,\" asked the pastor, \"but thnt\niti another HOD years another church will ;\ngrow up?\nChristianity an Interpreter.\n\"Christianity has  revealed   to   us  the \\\ngreatest Interpretation of life.    We need ,\nthis interpretation; power will not suf- !\nfice.     We   have   so  much   power   today\nthat we tremble In the face of it.    It is\nspiritual   forces   upon   which   we   must\nbuild     if    civilisation   Is  to be secure, j\nWhat   the   world needs  today,\" empha-\nWHAT MAY HAPPEN IF SERMONS BROADCASTED\nMackinaw\nCoats\nNow is the time to get\nthat Mackinaw Coat.\nWe have received an exceptionally fine line of\nCoats in blue, brown\nand jjreen checks. All\nwool.\n$8.50\nOne of the beat values\nwe   have   ever   offeied.\n\u2014SUNDAY    '\"\nThis Is wii.it lln- Passing Show. London, thinks will happen in tin\naverage hotta In Kngland, where a Sunday termon is to be a permanent\nft at ure   In   official   broadcasting   program:-.\nsized Mr. Westman, ''is something that \\f\nwill rest the .\u25a0\u25a0mil. The church must be\nthe medium through which that powi r\nis ghen. Learn all the facts; but there\nstill remains man's moral asset, which\nIs a capacity for inspiration. Religion\nIs indispensiide if the world is to he redeemed.\"\nRussians Insist on\nFull  Representation\nLausanne Conference\nMOSCOW. Nov. r..\u2014Soviet   Russb   in- j\nsists on full representation in tin- l*uii- ;\nsanne   peace  conference   upon   the  same\nbasis as the other participating powers, i\nM. Tchitcherin. the foreign minister, ! f\nmakes this known in a note he has sent ' I\nto   -.rent    Hritain.   dance   nnd  Italy.   In\nreply to the iavttetlaj of the entente\nthat Russia take   port  only  in  the discussions relating lo ihe straits.\nThe note also dsma-AdS the participating of  I'krahn   and  r.eorgia.\n1\t\nYour  Business  Success\nDepends on Good\nEyesight\nif ut*\nvour   in\nprwrlb\ninnot   do efficient  work\nlire    eyes    are    sapping\nrvom*   energy.     Let   us\nfor you.\nJ.\nJ. WALKER\nOptician.\nSuccessful\nDemonstration\nOf the Crossley Receiver\nNo 6. Made Saturday Night.\nReception of voice over\n1000 miles away heard just\nas distinct as if the announcer were in the same\nroom.\nFollowing were some cf\nthe stations \"listened in\"\non: Telegraph Hill, San\nFrancisco; Denver, Colorado ; Portland, Ore., and\nCalgary.\nGet our prices on radio\nequipment.\nHowe Electric Co.\nOpera  House Block\nBest   Churn  on  the   Market.  Makes\nButter in One Minute. At the\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating\nCompany\nNELSON.   B.   C.\nClassified A ds.\nBring Result\nJ8\nT\n0\nN\nI\nG\nH\nT\nHOME  OF\nT\n0\nN\nI\nG\nH\nT\n**IOn   p      ^\u2014*\"**^r s\u2014mes\\WsW\u2014emm-~-      ,       _.,-\n\u25a0    arfiOus Pi r      JU. CorP\u00b0raTl\nu\"s Players Canadian \u25a0~ulr\nSOMETHING TO BE THANKFUL FOR\nViola Dana\nIn a gay comedy of embarrassments and compromising situations\n'Seeing's Believing*\nOn this great national joy day one does not want to see morbid sex or problem plays,\nbut, on the contrary, something light, bubbling with fun and happiness.\nTHAT'S \"SEEING'S BELIEVING\"-LET'S GO!\nA I s o-\nCHRIST1E COMEDY, \"A HICKORY HICK.\"\nGAUMONT GRAPHIC TOPICS OF THE DAY\nPROGRAM at STARLAND\nCLEAN PICTURES\nALWAYS\nIs the aim and\nambition of\nKATHERINE\nMACDONALD\nMiss Macdonald has\nnever given the\nscreen a finer picture.\nEXTRA ! !\nMaek Seiwett\nCtmtds,\n\"Made in the Kitchen\"\n\"Uthfiine 1\/UcVomii \u2014i (itm(\u00bb Fisher u 'Domestic Relation**<\nHeating Stoves\nIF YOU REQUIRE A NEW HEATER WE WILL BE\nPLEASED TO HAVE YOU\nEXAMINE OUR STOCK\nBEFORE YOU BUY.   WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF\nMcCLARY & STEWART STOVES TO CHOOSE FROM\nWood-Vallance Hardware Company, Ltd\nNCI.HON.   ,. C,\nIF   VOU   WANT   RESULTS   TRY\n\u00bb  CLASSIFIED ADVT.\nSPECIAL TODAY!\nFirjt Show. 7 p. m. Second  Show. 9 a.  m.  Feature  Starts 7:10 and 9:10.\nUSUAL PRICES\nREMEMBER-If you see it at Starland-IT'S GOOD\nCOMING WEDNESDAY-THE GREAT HOBART BOSWORTH KLONDIKE FEATURE, \"BLIND HEARTS\"\nWHAT IS MENTAL\nCRUELTY?\nThis is a story of\nneglected wives and\nneglectful husbands.\nFor Rich Wives\nFor Poor Wives\nNot forgetting\nHubby.\nEducational  and  Scenic\nReel,\nCITIES OF\nEASTERN\nCANADA\nFIRE PREVENTION\nLast night an able add reus was riven In the City Hull nn Fire\nPrevention.\nWt> are ln henrty nympnlhy will, thin \u25a0MVMMM **v<-n If the ultimate end means a reduction In FJff Insuninre Premiums\u2014\nBUT\nwhile  rtindltinnfl   ar***  hh they  nr\u00ab  the   next   best   thltiK   II   PROTECTION   AGAINST   LOHH HY  KIRK.\nMlllionr* of dollara are lost every y**;tr. Will your properly be In\nnext mrmthn Hut? I'ne n little onltnnry huflneBS aenm? and put n\nfew   dollnrj   ln   PROTECTION.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nHEAL  ESTATE PHONE   135 BONDS\nInsurance\nFIRE ACCIDENT LIFE\nBest and Cheapest\nBread is your best and cheapest food\u2014eat more of it.\nRye, Wholewheat and  Graham  Bread.\nCHOQUETTE BROS.\nPhona 268. Sola Maker, af \"Mothar'a Br,ad\"\nA WANT Afi, IS BflJH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT.,I,\nI   AM   BUSY\nTesting Eyes\nMy patrpni do the adveriie-\ninr. My complete, accurate\nlyitem alweye Rlvee -ntlsfaa-\ntory remilts (iln-Asee eup-\nplled. Itroken len*-\"e replace*,\nAll repair* madn.\nA, H'tgginhotham\nOptomatrirrt*  end  Speoialiet\nnoi>mt S, 4 and 5, Griffin Ilk,\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_1922_11_06","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0400330","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"}]}}