{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0404959":{"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":"2021-11-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1931-12-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404959\/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":" Kimberley and Trail Play to\nScoreless Tie\n\u2014Pc_\\e Ten\nelgoti iMln\nIV,\nStock Markets Gain Stren&\\t\nAcross Country\n\u2014 Pa&e Nine\nTOLIMB  30\n-\"\u00ab NELSON D-ILT NEWS, NELSON, B. C\u2014WEDNESDAY MOBNINO, DECEMBEB M, 19SI\nFIVE CENTS at COPT\nChinese Ef^ ate Last Stronghol\nCOLD WAVE HITS THE\nPRAIRIE AFTER THREE\nWEEKS MILD WEATHER\nSnow    Sweeps    Down\nAcross Alberta; High\nWinds Prevail\nSPREADS RAPIDLY\nTO THE EASTWARD\nCity   of   Edmonton\nThroes of a Biting\nSnow Storm\nin\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 29 (CP)\u2014Winter benn to spread oat anew over\nwestern  Canada today  after  more\nthan three weeks of mild  springlike   weather   has   set   old   timers\nwondering   whether   or   not   the\nrltmate had  chanted.  Starting on\nthe   west   of  the   prairie   country\nthe con ware nude an onslaught\non Alberta. Edmonton waa ln the\nthroes   of   a   biting   snow   storm\ndriven by a high wind.\nCalgary and Lethbrldge experienced\nheavy   snowfalls   and   tba   temperatures  were  well  below  tbe  freezing\npoint.   It ' wu   moderately   oold   in\nSaskatchewan   although   Moose   Jaw\nand Reglna had mild weather. Heavy\nsnowfall  at Saskatoon  was continuing.   At   Winnipeg;   and   throughout\nManitoba   conditions   ahowed   11 {.tie\nchance   from   tbe   warmth   of   the\npast week,\nAlberta's eold wave ls destined to\nextend, however, according to the\nweather man. It threatens to engulf\nthe whole country spreading rapidly\neastward. Tbe Immediate forecast\nfor Saskatchewan is cloudy and becoming colder with light snow. Snow\nls also on the sold* for Manitoba\nand the Lake Superior region of\nOntario although no Immediate\nill  t*mVen\nYESTERDAY IN\nWASHINGTON\nsrature  Is expected.\nChang*\nHERMAN TRELIE HAS\nHARD RECORD TO\nDUPLICATE\nWEMBLEY, Alta., Dec. 20. (OP)\u2014\nHe-man Trelle, grain expert who\nsought health and found it along\nwltb fame In the Peace River country of Alberta, Is back on his farm\nagain, tucked e-ay for a winter\nstudy of weeds and chemistry.\nTrelle will be an exhibitor In the\ngrains and grasses at the International show et Chicago again,\nbut hie double win of the oats\nand wheat crowns in the ssme year\nstands alone in grain honor annals\nand may even prove difficult for\nthe northern grower to duplicate\nThree times he has captured the\nwheat crown\u2014ln 1930, 1930 and\n1931.\n15 MEN RESCUED\nDirect federal aid for the unemployed was recommended to\na senate committee by Welfare\nleaders who have aided Preeldent\nHooter In his local charity program.\nAn administration spokesman\nvoiced Its apparent determination\nto send no delegate to the forth-\nference.\nNorman tf. Davis of New York\ncoming European reparations eon-\nwss named as the fifth American delegate to the Geneve arms\nconference.\nThird party talk definitely developed In discussions of the antt-\nH-over  Republican  group.\nPresident Hoover urged a v.hole-\nsale consolidation ot over-'applng\nbranches of the federal government as a major objective of the\npresent sesstcii of congress. The\nhouse Democratic leader announced a plan whereby the house\nwould be allowed only a vote on\nprohibition   this   season.\nSenator Ashnrst, Democrat, Arlsona, declined to serve on a senate committee to hold hearings\non  the dry laws.\nWEATHERMAN HAS\nSTORMS ON TAP\nFOR CALIFORNIA\nResoite  Given Repair Wort\nGoes on; Traffic Under\nway Again\nBAH FRANCISCO, Dec. 10. <AP>-\nAltbough more rain and mow are\nln store for California, the weather\nman says, a respite was given today\npermitting repair of highways and\nrailroad tracka washed oat or covered with dirt and snow slides, ent*\nto permit trains to make some progress through tho snowdrift* on the\noverland routes through the Sierras.\nNineteen persons were roported\nmaroons, 10 of them near Sierra\nCity and the others near Carmel.\nThey   were   motorists.\nThe hlghwaye of the state are expected to be cleared by tomorrow.\nThe California State Automobile association survey today showed tbe\nridge route open and' IT. S. highways 101 and 99 open and safe ln\nmoet plac-3 except that tire chains\nare necessary ln a few spots, especially in tbe Slsklyous. Rain fell ln\nsmall amounts over the state *\u2022_\u25a0\nday, bringing most stations well\npast normal for the season.\nDuchess of Yorlt Officiates at Ceremony\nTO CONTINENT\nSouthern Parts of Continent Have Heavy\nSnows\n| BRITISH ISLES\nHAVE SNOW, COLD\n15 Waifs Found Dead of\nCold in Lisbon\nDistrict\nCOLD MHER Leave Chinchow Area\nBRINGS DEATH     pr(Jvent Warfa_c\nSpreading to North\nRefuse Request\nWithdrawal    Proceedinf\nAa Rapidly As\nPossible\nCHINESE BEHIND\nJAPANESE ARMY\nWhole of Manchuria\nUnder Japanese\nDomination\nFORMER   KAISER   WILHELM\n-A   die-\nOPENft    NEW    FLATS    FOR    WORKING    PEOPLE\nA block of flat* erected for working people by the\nSt. Marleybone Housing nwociation In Salisbury street,\nLondon. England, recently was opened by the Duchess\nof York. Hers the ducheas Is shown receiving  purse\nfrom  a  child   at   the   opening   ceremony.\nHELSINGFOR, Finland, Dec. 29\u2014\n(AP)\u2014 Fifteen men, feared to ' have\nbeen drowned In a shipping disaster\noff thla port, were rescued tonight\nafter spending a day adrift In\nhowling   gale.\nNine were members of the crew of\nthe Finnish steamer Orion, which\nwent aground In a heavy snowstorm\nThe others were the crew of a lifeboat that rescued tbem early today.\nAfter the rescue of the Orion's\ncrew, the lifeboat was reported lost.\nIt waa driven out to sea and the\nwaves best the small vessel all day.\nA lookout on a lighthouse sighted\nthe liefboat tonight ani salvage\nboats were sent to Its aid. All\naboard were exhausted and several\nwere   injured.\nSCHOONER    COMMODORE\nHELD  AT SE.A BY\nBAD WEATHER\nLORD   AND  LADY   BYNG\nTO VISIT CANADA\nOTTAWA, Dec. 39 (CP)\u2014Canada,\nIn the coming spring, will be honored with a visit from a former governor general, Lord Byng, who recently retired from the position of\ncommissioner of tbe London Metro\npoltun police. Lord and Lady Byng\nare to spend the winter ln Jamaica\nand other West Indian islands and\non the way home they plan to go\nto Vancouver, via tha Panama route.\nProm Vanoouver they will cress Canada to Halifax with a few stops In\nthe principal cities, Including Ol\ntawa. It Is plsnned that Lord Byng\nshould be here for the Vimy Ridge\n-Anniversary  dinner on April 9.\nSEATTLE. Dec 39. (AP)\u2014Six days\nafter she had arrived off Cape Flattery, the schooner Commodore was\nstill held at sea by unfavorable\nweather tonight, reporting her position as 106 miles out, and her\nwinning of an Hawall-Puget sound\nrace  still   seemed   uncertain.\nNo word had been received from\nthe tug Roorevelt, which has attempted during the past aeveral\ndays to tow her Inside the Straits\nof Juan de Fuca, and today was\nagain ordered out to attempt the\nwork  a   in.\nLast night the Commodore was\nonly 106 miles out, but during the\npast 34 hours she put to sea 60\nmiles.\nThe Vigilant, the Commodore's\nrival, was r-ported last night as 690\nmiles off the oapt, but was not\nbeard  from tonight.\nThe first of tbe two Inside the\nstraits  will   be   the   winner.\nMURDER VERDICT\nRETURNED\nYORKTON, Sask., Dec. 29\u2014After\n\u2022 searching investigation by officers of the R.CMP.. the Jury\nenquiring Into the death of Malcolm McDonald, 31, of the Saltcoats district, found shot December 18 ou a farm, today returned\na verdict of murder against some\nperaon unknown. McDonald was\nfound with a bullet through his\nneck on the farm of Joseph Spohn.\nLead of Culbertson Cut!\u2122\u2122^\n520 Points by Lenz and\nNew Partner, W. Liggett\nSNOW, FINLAND\nMore Voters Than In Parliamentary Election Turn\nOut on Liquor Count\nINTERMEDIATES RESUME\nSCHEDULE TONIGHT\nIn resuming tbs rudely Interrupted lnberraedl&ts hockey schedule \u00bbt the rink tonight, the Wol7es\nmeet ratrvlew. and the Elks meet\nthe Msple Lests. The boys hsve\nspent moet or the mild weather\n(retting snd fuming and are more\nthan ready to begin wielding the\ncrooked sticks again. The Iirst game\nwill  start  at  7:45.\nGANDHI WANTS\nAN INTERVIEW\nWITH VICEROY\nSends  Telegram  to  Willingdon; Expect Request Will\nBe Granted\nBOMBAY. Indls., Dec. SO.\u2014 'API \u2014\nMahatma Oandbl sought today a\nmeeting with Lord Willingdon. viceroy of Indl'i, to get nis advice and\nhelp ln reaching a peaceful understanding on India's troubled situation.\nApparently anxious to avoid a re-    fi\u201e,|^d\"not\"to renter the match\nCulbertson    Plus    Score\nStands at 16,320\nPoints\nLIGGETT DOESN'T\nLIKE BALLYHOC\nDoesn't  Consider   Match\na Fair Test of Two\nSystems\nKEl__)OF<__.  Finland.  Dee.  as.\nIONDON, Dee. st\u2014 (API\u2014Winters lee blasts swept a large\narea ot Europe todsy. bringing\nd'ath to some of the homeless\nand nnder-fed. lashing seas to\nfury, and earning discomfort and\nsuffering ln many places.\nFar In the south, where winter\nusually Is a faint parody of the\nseason In northern climes, the\npeaks of Madeira were cu-vered\nwith snow. Fifteen waifs were\nfound dead from cold In the Uh-\nson district.\nAt the other end of the continent, snowploughs struggled through\ndrifts tlaat Impeded Finns from recording their vote ln the prohibition referendum.\nPIERCING   WINDS\nBetween theee extreme points.\nLondon, Paris snd Berlin experienced piercing winds and snow, although Laondon and north-east\nEngland thua far have escaped the\nbllEzards that have piled up drifts\nseveral feet deep ln the Scottish\nglens and  the  Yorkshire moors.\nSnow fell at Dartmoor tonight,\nhowever, and in either parts of\nBritain's \"west country\" there were\nhigh  winds,  heavy  rsin and hall.\nCold, rain and snow wer* general\nthrough France.\nA gale has rsged on the Baltic\nsince Christmas. As a result of\nthla gale almost a hundred weight\ntst amber was oast ashore at\nCrane.   Oermany.\nIntense cold experienced In Rome i,.\nover   Christmas   has   been   followed   Will Spend Next Two Months It    would    not    be    satisfied    untU\n....... L :   \\f_t*-Uaal       r**KainfVll      ___-4*__r       _._,\u00bb_.       ___.\u00bbal!_\u00bb\nPBTPTNO. China, Dae. X (Rf\nHarold Timpsrtsy. Associated Treed\nstaff correspondent)\u2014Msrshal Chang\nHaueh-Uang ordered his MsmehurUtt\ntroops to evacuate the Chinchow\narea today and withdraw within th<\ngreat wall of China.\n\"I   : svp  tsken  this  action  solelj\nIn  order thst tho Japanese mllltarj\nme.y have  no  pretext for eitend im\nwarfare   and   Ita   consequences   tn*\nLONDON.   Dec.   29.   (AP)-A   dls-   n-rth  ChjMi  1japwl^pth   pdplnt.\npatch from The Hague to th$ Dally , Tientsin area.\" Msrshal Chans: to*\nMall said tonight the Dutch govern- the Associated Press.\nment had refused former Kalier \u25a0 The withdrawal already has oo\u00bb\nWilhelm permission to go to Frank- j menc-M. It wa* understood, aM\nfort-Am-Main, Oermany, to visit will proceed as rapidly as posalbto\nhis sister, former Queen Baphle of News of the marshal's decision in\nOreece,  who wns IU  there. |made public  after  his headquarter*\nA condition of the former kaiser's | annoumrd   that   the   Chinese   had\nres-denoe   in   H^lartd   ls   the-t   the succeeded  In cutting tn behind  the\nDutch .government shall not be involved by it in any exchanges with\nother   government*.\nEINSTEIN IN\nU.S. TO STUDY\nJapanese armr thst ls pushing north\nfro ii YIngkow toward Konrpengtee.\nHeadquarters also announoed that\nseveral hundred Chinese and\nleast 150 Japanese hsd fallen in th\u00bb\nfighting In the Tingkow-Kowpan\u00abti\u00bb\ndistrict   during   1 he   last   f \u00bbw   days.\nEvery other section of Manehurla\nwith t.e exception of Chinchow hat\nbeen under Japanese domination\nfor several weeks. The Tokyo government \"hse   repeatedly  staled   that\nby   two   days   of   heavy  rain,\nHeavy snow has fallen on the\nnorthern ranges of Spain and winter's clutch stretched over the European frontier Into Asia. Reports\nfrom Teheran were thet' Persia was\nvAPl-Bverybody was ' surprised j liaTln\u00ab *\u00bb\u00ablng weather which had ,\n' caused msny deaths\nNEW YORK. Dec. 29. (By Morris Watson, Associated Pre** staff\nwriter)\u2014at rotund gentlcmnn with\nIron-grey hair sat opposite Sidney Lew. tonight to take the\nplace of 0\u00able Jacoby In the contract bridge match with Ely Culbertson.\nMe wss Commander .. infield\nUgg-tt. Jr.. native of Virginia.\ngraduate of tht* Inlled Mates\nNaval Arartamy, 1905. war-time\nexecutive officer aboard the C 8.\nMontana.\nJacoby appeared, remarked that\nthe Lenz team had lost six lnchrs\nIn height, but gained 2 pounds\nIn  weight, and announced  he has\nby tbe voting today ln the consultative referendum on prohibition, for, despite a bllzcard and s\nslow beginning tn the morning,\nthe turnout was better than the\nmoet   sanguine   had   expected.\nFigures from aa of the 52 Hel-\nsLngfors dl* t Lotg Indicated thst\nii bout 37 per cent of the voters\ntrudged through tho snow to the\npolls.\nThis was far better than In\nthe parliamentary elections. Finland\ntakes two days to do Its voting,\nand In partla men tary contests a\n33 per cent turnout ls never exceeded on the first day of balloting.\nBeyond the mere number of those\ncanting ballots nothing was available tonight as the count will not\nbegin   before1   tomorrow   midnight;\nnewal of the conflict with the\ngovernment over hla demand for\ncomplete independence for India,\nthe Nationalist leader sent thc\nviceroy a telegram esklng for a\nchance to see him. Lord Willingdon Is expected to receive him.\nProspector-Scientist From Manitoba\nDevelops His Own Industry in North\nWINNIPEG, Dec. 29 (CP)\u2014While *,rock   he   has   produced   50   tons   of\nSIR GEORGE FOSTER\nGROWING WEAKER\nOTTAWA. Dec. 29 (CP)\u2014The condition of Sir Oeorge Foster, seriously\nIII at his home here, was reported\ntonight   as   unchanged.   He   is   still\n\u00ab\u00bbW-nfl gradually weator.\nI rail-weary prospectors push them\nselves unmercifully on ln search\nof that soul-firing element, gold,\nIn Manitoba's mining oountry,\nTom Brooks has discovered his\n\"Eldorado\" at Winnipeg's back door.\nEighty- three-year-old veteran of\nthe Cobalt, Klondike and Yukon\nrushes and the first man to\nassay gold ln The Pas, \"Cnrly,\"\nas he Is known to tbe mining\nfraternity Is In Winnipeg for the\nChristmas season and divulged\nnews of his strike today. From\nWar Eagle  lake, 60 miles east of\nfertilizer which Is readily marketed\nhere. By the erection of a smsll\nplant, Mr. Brooks maintains an output of 20 tons dally could be assured and placed on the Winnipeg\nmarket for W0 per ton. This would\ncompete with an imported fertilizer\nof tbe same type being wld here\nfor WOO per ton. \"Blue\"\u2014tons of lt,\nbe claims\u2014can be derived from the\nmuskeg moss of calcined ore after\nchemical treatment. Simples of this\nproduct have obtained a very favorable assay ln Montreal. The chrome\nunder any rlrn.mst.nnre.\nThe commodore deals cards with\na cigarette In the left -\u00bblde of his\nmouth, under a heavllv-wtnkerf\neye. He plays with his chair\ntilted  back.\nTulbertson talis blm \"Commander.\"' l,en_ calls blm \"-Tommy.\"\nMr*.   Culbertson  savs  \"Mg.\"\nNEW    YORK,    Dec.    30. , (AP>\u2014\n(Continued on Page Twoi\nLongest Telephone\nCall Spans Canada\nTALLAHATCHIE\nRIVER BREAKS\nTHROUGH LEVEF\nOLENDOItA, MIm, Dec. 29 (AP)\u2014\nGendora's 11 -mile pr.te?tion levee\ngroaned today against Tallahatchie\nriver floor nnd at nightfall Hundreds\nof rsldent* \u00bband refugees prepared\nfor an eventuality.\nVesterday the floor crashed 20\nfeet of the levee here, Bending a\nsheet of water six fert deep through\nthe business and lower residential\nsections.\n\u25a0 Hundreds \u25a0 cf   convicts   looped    a\ndyke    around    the    break,   stopping\nMarshal Chang's forces were wholly\nout of the provlnoe snd behind th*\ngreat wall.\nThe Tokyo position has been that\nthe Japanese forces In Manchuria\nwould face ft dangerous menace so\nlong as Chlneee regulars and Irregulars were concentrated in the Chinchow district. Japanese government\nofficials have accused Marshal Chang\nof instigating bandit activity against\nthe Japanese-owned South Manchuria  railway.\nAbout two weeks ago Marshal\nChang resigned as commander of\nthe Chinese force* Jn Manchuria,\nbut his resignation was declared M\nTokyo to be meaningless because. It\nwas said, re had no intention of,\ngiving  up   his   authority.\nThe Nanking government asked\nChang to serve as military commlS\"\nsioner of north China but he recom-\nI mended that a council be set up tft\nhandle mUitary affairs In that part\nof the country with himself\nchairman.\nthe  flow,  and   today  the  water had\ndrained  off  and   merchants  had  re- '\u25a0 4aa   riAACT    mw\nopened   their  stores. *JvU   IUAM    _HI_.I>\nT.ere   waa   still   a  slight   rise   In        mr\\   r*r\\  mr\\   1>17_ 11717\nthe river at Olendor* with the flood!       1 tl  iitl   ltl   KUd-IHir\nw-ws-mxmm   _____*\u2022_\u2022     \u201e       ate.    i*tn8*    nearing    the    ffrwt,   Workers\nOCEAN   FALLS    B.   C     Dec.   29-1 pttrnIW    thP\u00b0  ]fVW     Convlrt.    from\nThe longest point-to-point telephone jpareh-n^    prlso      fnrm   anrt\ncall    ever    put    tnrough     between | fwm   hand_      \u00a3    m   ft   Iu?1    ^\ntwo   part-sj   in   Cinada   was   made Igtrenglhcnlng   the   dyke.,  aud   plug-\non    Christmas    day.    When    8.    C. glng   -sand   bolls\"\nStoddart,  night foreman at  the  Pa-   .\t\nciflc  Mills,  Ltd..  talked  to  his  psr-1-*\nent_   in   Clam  Harbor.   Nova   Scotia,  A'aiTOl  fever  Fatal\nat   Mount   Wilson\nObservatory\nSAN PEDRO, Calif., Dec. 29 (AP)\n\u2014Dr. Albert Einstein w,ll spend tonight under the shadow of Mount\nWl Ison observatory In Pas \\do n a.\nwhere he wtll study the problem*\nof the universe for the next two\nmonths.\nBom* apprehension that the professor and Frau Einstein, who will\narrive tonight on the Hamburg-\nAmerican liner Portland fro:n Germany,- would reach pirt too late to\nclear quarantine and be forced to\nremain aboard the vessel until morning, was allayed with word tnat\nthe Portland will be In harbor here\nIn  time for customs  clearance.\nDr. Einstein will be met by a\ngroup  of  scientists.\nIn a radio message tho German\nprofessor said he would not receive\nnewspa-permin or visitors aboard the\n_hlp but would consent to Inter- Chinchow Is a extreme south-J\nViews th pi'atfena,'ftft-f\"hr*,,\u00abmv3l w*\u00bb1\"\"\u25a0 M*\u00abon\u00abri\u00bb, about loo mi*r\nnortheaat of the g;-ea*\u201e wall, and\nserves at the gateway to the pro vine*\nthere  tonight.\nHangs for Murder\nCAMPS THIS WEEK\nand wished them Chrl-t-mas greetings and congratulated them on\ntheir   Mth  wedding  anniversary.\nRadio, cable and te'ep.one lines\nrr\u00ab used ln the completion of the\ncall, and it'ls estimated that the\nconversation travelled 5000 circuit\nmiles. From Ocean Falls to Campbell\nRiver, the radio facilities of the\nBritish Columbia Telephone company\nwere utilized. To Nanaimo lt rav.l-\nled over the regular lines and across\nto Vancouver it was routed to Seattle, thence to New York and finally from New York up to Nova\nScotia.\nore, used in the manufacture of\nWinnipeg and 'only three miles stsel and one of the moet valuable\nfrom the Canadian Pacific rail- minerals of today ls his latest de-\nway Une In the Whltemoulh dls- velopment. It has heen obtained by\ntrlct, he brought samples of rork a leaching process although to what\nwhich   show   a   largs   deposit   of   commercial extent has not yet been\nrich  gold ore and other minerals.\nFrom this muskeg, rock and evergreen coufttry \"Curly,\" in his self-\nconstructed laboratory, with the use\nof his scientific knowledge of chemicals and mining hu also extracted\nchrome ore, fertiliinr and blue dye.\nrnomcEs fertilizer\nOo   t-t   trom.   calcined    (roastod)\nascertained. Throughout, all samples\nshow tracea of tin ore.\nMr. Brooks, builder of the first\nmill In the Cobalt at Larder lake\n20 yeara ago and prophet of the\nOobalt boom when experts scoffed\nat tbe ld?a. hes hr<V a prominent\nfigure to many Canadian mining\nvultures.\nBridge Summary\nSESSION\nCul\nLenz\nbertson\nIHE   riFTIENIH\nPoints  \t\n.. 81,530\n98.890\nPolnta      8.380\n8,860\nPlus \t\n16.330\npiw    _     sao\nRubbers   -\t\n49\nas\nRubbera             8\n4\nOames   \t\n131\n1S5\nOamee            13\n13\nSuccessful\nSuoceasful\ncontracts  -\n300\n318\ncontracts          18\n17\nBeta \t\nIJ\u00bb\n107\nSeta    -        3\n8\nOvertrick\nOvertrick\nhands  -\t\n94\n130\nbands            9\n8\nUttle   slams\nLittle slams\n\u00bb\n7\nmade   ,        0\nJ\nLittle slama\nLittle  earns\n\u00bb\n8\nfailed             0\n0\nOrand  slams\nGrand alama\n0\n0\nmade              0\nGrand   slams\n0\nOrand  alama\n(ailed   \t\n1\n0\n1333\nfailed                      0\n0\n89\nKIMS   \t\n..   1.3U\n1,373\neVtstt           88\n88\nHands   dealt.\na.\nIVuds  dealt.  48.\n\"-.nda passed\nout,  14\n''ands  passed   out,  0.\nfor Five Persor\nBAN  FRANCISCO,  Der. 21   (AIM\n\u2014With   five   c\u00abitl   of   psittacosis\nor parrot fever, four of which\nwore fatal, reported lo the author!! k* In the la*t Heck the\nstale department nf heiilth and\npolice of varloua cities unlled teday to check the niisprrted (UH\nof Ihe malady\u2014the pnrrhope of\nparrots or pnrrakeetfl fr<mv Irre-\nspiw-klli'f    parties.\nWEU-AND. Ont, Dec. 30  Wednesday)\u2014iCP>   -    Nick   Koiub,   formtt\nVANCOUVER. B. C De?. 29.\u2014Be-' heav-rboard   merchant,   was   hanged\nfore the end cf the week non nun   thl.   morning   for   the   murder   last\nwill   have   been   \u00bbent   to   the   pin-   September    of    Mrs.    Mary    Hoiow-\nvluclal    Ro.rrnment     imemployr.ini:.  chuck,\ncamps   at   Siinnyslcie   unci   Deroche. j .... \u25a0\nit   was   announced   today   by   J.   H. ...,.,..     -.-\u25a0 .\nMcVety, superintendent, employment JJKiliVV    ILL\nservice.     One   hundred    met.    were '\nsent   to   the   camps   yesterday   aud\ntoday.\nCONS11ILR   TIIIKI1\nHAL1TAX. N. S, Dec. 29\u2014Lieut.\nColonel Oeorge A. Drew, Canadian\nauthor  and  lecturer,   l*  seriously  111\nP.RTY MOVFMFsNT I nt the : ome \u00b0' n^ si9t*r' Mrs. *\u25a0\u2022 C.\nWASHINOTON. \" Dec '29 (AP) - !sPprrv' PKltp Riviere, Pleunenburg\nRepublican Independent* arc ser,- county, N. S.. according to word\nou.ily considering a t.iird party mow- 1 received by friends lure tonight.\nm\u00bbnt in 1932 ln the event of Re-1\npublican and Democratic conventions fail to nominate a man H\ntheir  liking.\nTHE WEATHER\nCortin Has Properties Akin to the\nMagical Elixir of Life Sought by\nthe Alchemists Science Discovers\nNEW ORLEANS, Ls., Pec. 29\u2014\n(By Howard \u2022 \u2022. Blakeirier, Associated Press science editor*\u2014Something akin to the magical elixir\nof life sought by alchemists uf\nold lias been discovered by modern\nscientists  In   the  hormone, corttn.\nDiscoveries of the remarkable\npowrj* of this rarest nubstanres\nwere reported to the American association for the advancement of\nwlence today by Frank A. Hart -\nnun, Ph. D., of the LnlverMty\nof   Buffalo.\nVICTORIA. B- C\u201e Der. 29.\u2014A low\npressure urea is now centered over\nVancouver Island and mild weather continues over this province,\nSnow hae been general in Alber-\nta and Saskatchewan.\nTtM PER ATI RE\nNELSON     34\nNanaimo         39\nVictoria         38\nVanoouver          J4\nKamloops         33\n'Prince  Oeorge         g\nglands, organs oommon  to  men  and Estevnn   Point        33\nanimals  alike.  At  pre* nt   It  is  ob- prince   Rupert         34\ntalned ln minute quantities \"from the Dawson,   YT \u2022 3\nglands of cattle killed  by  the great ppattle    ....'..!! !..!!    M\npacking plants, and  Is so rare that Portland   Ore  *! '\/*'.'*   S\nnbout  \u00bb12.000  worth   would  make  a San   jfj-^-n-igco\nGood  annual supply  for  a very  sick grjong^,\nperson.   Ouly  a   few   scientists   have\ntried  to make it.\nHltbirto its  use  has  been   mostly\nLos  Angeles     4|\nPentlcton      30\ned to saving live* of A.disona JUJJJ* _AV  *\npat.ents,    but    in    the    la t 2   , \t\ndisease   pate\nfew tnont.s Dr.  Hartman  has gathered eiuragh to discover ether things\nKaslo\nCranbrook\nEdmonton\nEwlft  Current\n.... a\n.... 38\n.... If\nAn\" overdose   of   oortin   produces cortin can do. SS^rULi^V  *5\nnot only  a  sense  of  happiness  but      \"The elfect of the Mtract In  ce- \u00bbwnt  ^\u00ab\u2122t     ' I\nIncreased   strength,   better   memory,  tain   type3   of   illn-ss   Is   so_etirc* Prince   Albert      M\nmore   resistance   to   hat  and   cold,  striking.\"   he   sild.   \"In   a   cs\u00abe   of QJ'.App*!*      26\nand   relief   from   fatigue  snd   from  muscuhr   atrophy   l.s   ln,1-c*!on   i-i-  Winniiyn       26\nladed   nerves.     9 l created     fat gllf-r-sslstftlK*     ;o     tliSt   rltRIQMl\nCortin Is a  hormone, or secretion, j 18   times   _.<   much   work   e;uli   be      Nelron     \u00bbrd     v'clnlty; pu\nfrom   tho   covering   o_   the  adreaal i perform** u lorm*iiy\"                                  occA\u00bb.oaal   i1\n1 t\n\u2014\n\t\n___. \u2014\n \"^T-\nr*oi\nI\nON!\nSUDDENLY AT 74\n|).   B.   McLennan   Operated\nHotela in tht Interior\nfor Many Yeara\n, syjjKXrVVsm, b, O. Dm. ae.\u2014\n\u25a0Helm suddenly whll* redecorat-\nm$ a vacant house lm weat eee-\nEd avenue Monday Mining, Don-\nIt Robert McClenan. wad 74. pl-\nMr Vancouver restdaot. died al-\nient Immediate-*.\n11m deceased, who- vac alone In\nho bulidtng at the time, was dls-\novered in an cnconscloua condl-\nlon br \u25a0 neighbor. Medical aid\nrae summoned but ne died before\nhi arrival of a doctor.\nDonald McLennan ww one of the\nbeat  known  of  the elty1-  pla\nBe was peat preeldem. of tne Vanoouver   Pioneer's    association.\nThe deoeaaod was born ln Alexandria, Oct., and came to Vanoouver  4V   yeara  ago.\nLater he moved to tbe Sootcn-\naya whan be entered the hotel\nbuelneee. He built the Kmpneni\nhotel at ChUllweck Md operated\nit far many yaan.\nIn 191* he returned to Vancouver\nwhere  he  hu resided  ever since.\nBesldee his wife, he li survived by\nthree eon*. Roderick J.. Cecil O,\nand pindlay N. McLennan, aU of\nVanoouver.\nTha funeral will ba held Thursday at 3 pro Bar. p a. Fowler\nwill officiate and burial wlll take\nplaea ln the Oddfellow's plat, Mountain  View   Cemetery.\nBERLIN. Dec. 29 <AP.-Kenklchi\nYoehlaawa left tonight for Moscow\non hU way to Takyo when he will\nbeoome  foreign   minister.\nGuide for Travellers\nNalaon, B. C, Hotels\n422 VERNON STEEET\nPHONE 787.\nNELSON, B.C.\nSPECIAL WINTER RATES\nNOW IN EFFECT\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHCME-Mr.   and   Mra.   Walter   B. |Whlu. MadlclM Htt;  It. L. Haaaard,\nI Johnston*, SUverton; J. E. Seaman, i Creaton; Mrt. S. If. Dodd, Grand\nApoktne; A. Dutour, F. Doodeon, Porka; J. W. Kinney. Portland, Ore.;\nO.  \u2022.  Mclntoah,  cranbrook;   F.  C. If.  E.  Kinney,  CorvilUt,  On.\ni \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0>\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0 -ait\"* *\u25a0*\u25a0\u00bb>\u00bb mmmmnsr*nt*mtwima*twtwsm**r\niWhcre (he Gue&Is King\ncUhe Savoy*\n\u25a0miao-ii'i nwnr amo tout waa.\nSUttVt BOOMS WTTH nuvATi\nBATHS on eHowrna\nIM   BAKES  BT.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nPHONE   1\u00bb\nCURLERS RESUME\nACTIVITY AFTER\n11 DAYS WAITING\nCily Schedule Is Opened With\nEight Games; Continues\nTonight\nQuick advantage wae tak\u2014\nday hy the aurlers, of the (UP tn\ntemperatun that occurred Monday\nnlfht and held throughout Tueeday,\nbecoming accentuated Tuesday nlfht.\nand after a suspension e% cui-lna\nfor 11 days, the Ctty schedule,\nWhtcfe had heen. billed to dem De*\noember  31,  waa  brought  fn.\nOwing to then being no opportunity to gin advanoe notice, the\ndecision to resume curling holy he*\nInf taken Tuesday, tha schedule\narranged for tbe nights play did\nnot etrlotly adhere to the one\nposted for \"\"eoember 31, hut It was\npoaalble to decide eight games, six\nby play and two by default.\nPlay will ha continued tonight.\nRESULTS\nReaulta   were   aa   followi:\n\"A\" division\u2014Alf .Mis 11; R. Andrew 8.\nW. Brown won by default from\nE.  I.   Woolls.\n\"B\" dlvlaion\u2014W. Blner 8: H. M\nWhlmster' S. D. Laughton 8; J. M.\nOordon 10. C B. Mansfield 6; D.\nLaughton 7. J. H. Long won by\ndefault from  R.  D.  Hall.\nC\"   division\u2014B.   Bell   10;   T.   W.\nLedlngham 8. A. a. Ritchie 8; Harry\nHouston   7.\nTONIGHT\nThe schedule tor Wednesday nlfht\nli  aa  follows:\n7 p.m.\u2014Douglu ve. Wll, Oray va,\nSt.Denls, Oordon vs. Mansfield. Bell\nVanoe, McLeod vs. Murphy, Robertson vs. Houston.\n9 pm\u2014 Woolla va. Jeffs, Sharp vs.\nDewdney, Andrew vs. Brown, Murphy vs. Dill, Whlmster vs. aHll,\nBush   vs.   Douglas.\nCHURCH PROGRAM\nFOR CHRISTMAS IS\nHELD AT SALMO\ntAVOT\u2014Boj L. skllllcorn. S. T. \\mtir. - W. Alnalle, Vtneourer: V.\nI Moon, Kaalo; s. Jonea, J. Smythe, j. Lommel, Procter; R. D. Kennedy.\n**-' - B.   Bueme,   O.   K.   Ball-1\nQueens\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nHeft ud eold water In -every room.\n\u25a0team heated\n\u2022M Baker Bt. Phone SO\nQta-EMS\u2014J.    C.    Collins.    Bevel-\nIatoke;   O.   H.   McKeen,   Procter;   M.\nMacDonald, creaton.\nMADDEN\nHOTEL\nJAS.   E.   MADDEN\nCompletely Remodelled\nThroughout,\nriot and col    Watar.\nIn   the   HEART   t*t   the   Cltr.\nNEW GRAND\nHOTEL\nr. U KAPAft, Prop.\nweekly   or  Monthly  Rates,  ata\nSingle  7fio  up:  Double #1.75  up\nWeekly  or  monthly  ratee.\nBot and cold water lo all rooms\nPhono 80S        P. O. Boi 1081\nFREtt HUH MEETS EVERV TKtlS\nNEW GRAIfD\u2014N. Paguk, Procter;\nC. Hansen, Tmir; Paul P. Warre-\n,gren, Canal Fist; oeorge Davles,\nNelson;   j.  De Oroots, Rosslsnd.\nMADDEM\u2014F. Johnson,  Cranbrook;\n1W.  Harborne,  Marcus;   T.  Stlrchley,\nMichel.\nThe Royal Cat*\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nRefinement   and   Dellcaey   Prevail\nOPEN DAY  AND  NIOHT\nLai Dinner, 11:30 to 8 p.ro., 38c\nSunday Chicken Dinner Rftc\nIn Chop Suey and Noodles\nPHONE  188\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St. rhone MIL\na SttaStex\ntitty Booma of Solid Comfort.\nHead quartan for Logger, and\n'TBI NELSON PA1LT KIWI, NSLSON, B. C\u2014WIDSESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER M, lUl\"\nRussia Spends $1,250,000 in Canada\ni\nLENZ AND HIS\nNEW PARTNER\nGAIN  GROUND\n(Continued  From  Pige One)\nINVESTING LARGE Sl\"MS IN AORICULTUBAL IMFLEMENTB\nRusela seems to be concentrating on agricultural\nmachinery. Recently ahe shipped 88,000,000 to America\nto pay for the purchase of farm implement*, 81,280,000\nof whlcn wtnt to a large Canadian manufacturer.    In\nthe above picture is shown a Una of completed tractors\nIn a Stalingrad factory where 3330 tractors were turned\nout at tlie rata ot 105 a day ln tha month of October.\nSANTA PAYS HIS\nVISIT, CRAWFORD\nBAY CHILDREN\nCommunity  Tree  and   Program  Pleases Large\nCrowd\nSALMO, B C, Dec. 39\u2014The ftalmo\nchurch wae filled to capacity on\nSaturday evening when a special\nChristmas program waa held by Rev.\nOari W. Janzow who motored out\nfrom Nelaon, aocompanled by his\nfamily. The church wtv* tastefully\ndecorated with evergreens snd a\nbeautiful  Chrlstmu  tree.\nAfter a short talk on \"The First\nChristmas\" the following program\nwsa   presented:\n\"Silent Nlgbt\" by tha junior choir\nwho alao hang \"The First Noel\"; a\nshort reottstlon by Carl Llndow, \"I\nLove to Hear the Starry\" a aohg by\nNaomi Llndatrom, Mable Bradley,\n.Joyce Bremner. Mona Miller, Mary\nKubak and Maxlne Undow; \"Obrist-\nmae Morning,\" a recitation by June\nFair, Mary Kubak and Frltc Foch;\na song entitled \"Onoe In Royal\nDavid's city,\" by Bhiriey Llndstrom\nand Frances Kubak; a dialogue entitled, \"The Chrlstmss Btory,\" by\nOlive r\\lr and Percy Wlldc;\nCbristmaa recitation by Maxlne Llndow; \"While Shepherds Watched\nTheir Hocks by Night\" by the | son.\nJunior choir; \"Hark the Herald j\nAngel's Sing\" by Mary Miller snd\nDoreen Fair; a hymn \"Joy to the\nWorld\"   by   the   congregation.\nEach child taking part was presented with a picture ot Rev. jan-\nr followed by a treat off the\ntree.\nThe church guild was responsible\nfor the decorations and the treat.\nWUllam MUler and Fred Llndstrom v*re ln from their camp at\nSouth Fork to spend Christmas\nwith their families-\nMr. end Mrs. William Mllburn\nspent the Christmas weekend the\nguests of Mr. Wllburn'a mother,\nMrs.   T.   Mllburn,   ln   Nelson.\nAmong holiday visitors to Nelson\nwere Mrs. M. C. Donaldson. Miss\nShirley Donaldson, Miss Georgle\nRead, Mrs. J. C- Hansen, Chris Kan-\nsen, William Donaldson and Audrey\nBurgess.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Feeney and children, Mary, Bernarene and Mllburn\nspent Christmas la Ne&on the guests\nof Mrs. Fceney'a mother, Mrs. T.\nMllburn.\nRobert Reeves was In from Nelway\nand spent the holiday with his sinter, Mrs. Villa Wilde.\nThe Salmo Women's Institute held\nIta directors meeting on Tuesday\nafternoon at Mrs. J. Hearn's home.\nCRAWFORD BAT, B. C\u201e Dec. 29\u2014\nThe community chrlstmu tree given\nby tha Women'a Institute, was a\nsuccess   tn   spite   of   bad   weather.\nNearly every child In tbe Bay\nwaa present. All sat down at i\no'clock to a table laden with Christmas goodies, each child's place befog\nmarked with novelty whistles uf\nmany shapes and colors, napkin and\ncracker. After the parents had partaken of tea, tables were taken\naway and the children joine. in\ngames. A short program by the\nyoung children followed. Recitation-\nwere given by Miss Mary McOregor,\nMaster L. McGregor, Miss 6Ln_pson,\nMiss B. McGregor. Miss M- Fraser,\nMiss I. Fraser and Miss N. Plsher.\nLittle Ian Fisher sang hts favorite\nsong \"I Love a Lassie.\" Master Bob\nFraser played a duet wtth Mtss L.\nLytle em the piano. After the program a few more games were played.\nThem Santa Claua appeared glvtn?\nthe little folk a big surprise. Each\nchild was presented with a present,\nalso a package containing nuts,\ncandy and an orange. The hall wm\ndecorated with Chrlstmu greens\nand a big tree. The committee ln\ncharge was Mrs. Bourne, Mre. O.\nMcGregor, Mrs. Lytle, Mrs. Watson\nand Mra. King, assisted by Miss\nJean McGregor and  Miss  M.  Jacob-\nBrother of Nelson\nMan Tastes Success\nin World of Sport\nGeorge Wallach, ex-Scottish champion long distance runner, and\nbrother of A. Wallach of Nelson,\nhaa finally tastsd success after a\nlong steady grind, according to the\nBoulton Evening Newa Ruff, a sporting paper. Taking over the Broughton Harrier- club lh 1930, Mr. Wallach has given them tha best of\nhis excellent grounding In training,\nand now claims that ln their victory over the B'lton Harriers, they\nare the best club ln the country.\nAnd hi* pleasure Is greater ln view\nof the fact that not one member of\nhis club wu Imported from any\nother club.\nIt has long been Mr. Watlach's\nambition to brat the Bolton United\nHarriers.\nIn taking over the club he has\nale. been Instrumental' ln putting it\non   Its  feet   financially.\nOBTAINS FOOD UNDER\nFALSE PRETENSES\nVANCOUVER, Dec. 29\u2014 \"These\nmen tstoe money from others who\nare In need,\" declared Police Magistrate W. M. McKay t_day in passing\nsentence of one month in Jail on\nMaurice H. Ellwood, who pleadd\nguilty to a charge of obtaining\ngroceries to the valu? of $40 from\nthe city relief department by false\npretence*.\nCity Prosecutor O. Orr Informed\nthe court that the man had repre-\nrentrd to the relief authorities that\nhe wm destitute. It was found that\nhe was In receipt of certain funds\nand al o owned an automobile.\nBERLIN. Dec. 29\u2014Kurt Con Fran-\ncols, well-known as sn explorer of\nCentral  Africa,  died  today, aged  79.\nPAWNBROKERS GO OUT\nOF BUSINESS IN\nBRITAIN\nLONDON, Dae. 30 (Wednesday)\n(C P cable)\u2014The Morning post\ntoday published an Interview with\na pawnbroker who said his business in going out of fashion ln\nt.n-iii   Britain.\nThe number of pawnbrokers In\nl.'-mlim has dropped JO per rent\nduring the past two years and\nnow stands at 213. The newspaper said a new generation Is\ngrowing up which has lost the\npownhmklng habit, while the\nstump in trade has meant thst\nnumerous perple who were normally regular customers of the brokers could not redeem their pledges.\n.VIiUmI In this, the Interview said,\nthe \"dote\" has obviated the necessity of people out of work\npawning   their   belongings.\nSHOREACRES HAS\nCHRISTMAS FUN,\nSCHOOLCONCERT\nSanta Pays Visit; Inspector\nSheffield Congratulates\nPupils\nEXPLODE BOMB IN\nCATHEDRAL\nSANTIAGO. Chile, Dec. 39 (AP)\u2014\nA sma.'l bomb explodrd ln the ca-\nl-edr.il ' in the center of Santiago\ntoday. Fifty persons attending a\nservice escaped injury and the damage was Might. The bombing was\nattributed to a crank and was\nthought to have no connection with\nrecent   Communist    agitation.\nMranwhtle soldiers in airplanes reported that a group of fugitives\nfrom the recent uprising In Atacams\nprovince  had  been  sighted.\nSHORXACR-S, B. C, Deo. 20-\nTbe sehool concert. wn:ch U usually\nthe great event of the Christmas\nseason, was this year particularly\nwell represented. The school which\nwaa gaily decorated with evergreen looked most festive and tht\nnumbers cf parents and friends who\nattended were very appreciative, The\nscholars by their excellent training reflected great credit on their\nteachers, Miss Kathleen Brodle, principal; Miss Elsie oansner, vice-\nprincipal.\nTbe program which was varied\nby recitations, songs and choruses\nopened with a few encouraging remarks by Inspector P. H. Sheffield\nwho had kindly come out from Nelson to fill the position of chairman. *\n\"O Canada'' by the pupils was\nthe opening chorus, followed by the\nrecitation \"A Greeting\" by Mary\nLebedoff. The senior pupils then\ngave a chorus \"Joy _o the World\"\nIn  fine  style.\nThe Junior pupils were very pleasing in their songs, \"Jolly Old\nSanta\" and \"There *. % Dear Old\nMan\" of a stirring action song\nentitled \"Some Folks\" was given by\nthe senior boys who In a later\nnumber gave \"Old BUtt; Joe'' with\ngreat vim. Recitations were glvsn\nby Tolly Chernenkoff, Peter Planl-\ndln, Louis Gugllelnun, Molly Hadl-\nkln and Rumen Barabonoff. A\nvery winsome number was the recitation of Beatrice Oliver, and a\nJoint number by the primary pupils,\nwhich  were  loudly  applauded.\nThe school ln chorus gave \"Holy\nNight, silent Night'' and concluded\nthe program with \"Bells of Glory.\"\nMr. (Sheffield then spoke a few\nwords to the parents and children,\nhe commended the pupils for the\nvery capable way in which they\nhad  taken   their  parts.\nSanta   Claus   then    arrived    and\nu heartily cheered by the children\nte whom he distributed his pack\nof presents, with Candles and\nnuts.\nSidney fl. Lena clicked wtth\nnew partner at Uu Utk\nof the big contract bridge mateh\nearly today. Ue and Commander\nWlnfleld Liggett Jr., disabled war\nveteran, ent 820 paints off the\nlead of Mr. and Mri. Ely Culbertson.\nAfter IU rabbets af tba aeries\nhad  been  playad  tha  Calbertsons\nwere   16,320   points   ahead,   basing won SS  rnbbers  compared  ta\n49   for   Lens   aad   partner.   Lens\naad Liggett won five of the session's  nine  rubbers.\nLiggett was doubled twice toy tbe\nCulbertsons   and   Lenz   ones,   and\neach time the oontract waa success\nful. Once Liggett took all tba tricks\nwhsn doubled at flva duba. Again\nhe succeeded at five hearts doubled\nHe waa not vulnerable either time\nWhan vulnerable Lenz waa doubled\nat fouf spades  and  mado  flva.\nMrs. Culbertaon waa doubled ons\nat two diamonds by Liggett wben\nshe had answered with a poor\nhand and \"S.OJB.\" redoubled by\nhsr husband. A poor choice of\nlead by Liggett enabled bar to fulfill the oontract.\nMrs. Culbertson made a little\nslam when vulnerable also becauae\nof tha wrong choice of an opening\nlead by Liggett. It led to nUW\nchiding by Lena of bis partner.\n\"Tou made a bad lead,\" ha aald.\n\"Tour lead gave lt to ber. She\ncouldn't have made It Otherwise.\nMrs. Culbertson, remembering\nthat Oswald Jacoby bed quit sa\nLenz's partner because of criticism,\npatted Lena on cue arm.\n\"Hush, Sydney,\" she said softly.\nTWO SUCCESSFUL DOUBLES\nTwo successful doubled contracts\ngavs Lsna and Liggett tbelr biggest\nrubbers of the session, a net of\n100 points. Mrs. Culbertson's alam\nenabled her to win 1710 on one\nrubber.\nPraising Lens and Culbertson. Jacoby announced he Would not re-\nturn to the match. Hs said their\nideas wsre radically distinct and\nthat lt would be unfair to Lane.\nLens was stt only three times In\ncontrast to eight for tbe Culbert\nsons.\nWhen the game ended Commander Liggett waa asked for bla opinion of tba match,  as such.\nI don't like the ballyhoo of It,'\nhe said, \"I think lt is hurting tbs\ngame.\"\n\"Do you consider It a test' of\nsystems?\"\n\"Of course not,\" he snorted- \"It's\nsilly for anybody to suppose it is s\ntest. As far as I am concerned\nIt Is Just snother bridge game,\nand I like bo be in bridge games.\"\nInsists Prince Signed Wrong Name\nSTIRLING HOTE\nS Block, Eait ot Poat Office\nP. II.  Bl'SIl, Prop.\nHot and Cold Watar\nSteam Heated        Moderate Bataa\nA Quiet Family Hotel\nDOUGLAC\nHOTEL8*\nRooms and Bath\nI.  L.  and  A.   GEOtlAO-E.  Ptopa.\n\u2022team Heated Hot and Cold\nIhrouthout Water\nBox   SSSt rhone  263\nTRAIL, B. C.\nKilwauea Volcano\nSlackens Activity\nHILO. Hawaii, Dec. 20 (AP)\u2014The\nKilwauea volcano greatly slackened\nIts activity today after doaena of\nfountains had tossed flaming lavs\nwithin Its huge fire pit slnoe Wednesday.\nT_e southwest fountain continued\nto hurl molten rock 50 to 75 feet,\nbut    all    others    ceased    spouting\n_L_rir>*   lut   night.\nWILLS WIFE FOUR SHILLINGS FOR\nBOOK TO RECORD LIES\nMELBOURNE, Australia, Dec. T \u2014\n\"Pour shillings to buy a book in\nwhlcs to write down all the lies\nshe has told sbout me.\"\nThst was all thai, wealthy Edwin\nHalae, of BSllarat, bequeathed to\nhis wife tn his will. He left everything to his three children.\n\"A nice sort of gentleman,\" said\nJustice McArthur when he examined\nthe wlll.\nNEW   ROSE   NAMED   AFTER\nAL  SMITH\nNEW YORK, N. Y., Dec, 2\",\u2014\nA newly developed roae-bud of fold\nand autumn, suffused with misty\namber and coral hues, hu been\nnanned the \"Al Smith roee\" ln honor\nof New York State's former governor.\nA Newark nursery produoed the\nnew variety.\nMONTRBAL, Que., Dec. 2^\u2014(By\nthe Canadian Press)\u2014A complete\nsurvey of all 'Id buildings In the\nprovlnoe of Quebec is bring made\nby the department of architecture\nof McOIll university. Original furnishings as well aa the Interior and\nexterior of such buildings as L'Kos-\npital Oeneral of Quebec City, are being* described, measured, and photographed under tfte direction of professor Traquatr.\nMATTAWA, Ont., Dec. 2\".\u2014(By\nthe Canadian Press)\u2014The boya attached to the Rankin trans-Canada\nhighway construction camp, near\nhere, have gone primitive. In order\nto share the excellent rabbit hunting afforded by northern Ontario's\n\"great outdoors\" they had to overcome the difficulty of lack of firearms, which are prohibited ln the\nconstruction camps. Tbey did this,\nand. armed with sling shots, tbey\nwent out to the chssa. They returned with 15 rabbits.\n!\nSIATTAWA, Ont., Dec. J',\u2014(Bt\nthe Canadian Preae)\u2014'Tha champion\npumpkin pla-aater ot Mattawa Ifl\nthe lateat title won (ran the boya\n:t tha horth by ona of tha worKeia\nattached to the trana-Canada highway <*mp at Rai^tln. And to (et\nlt he dlapcaed of fire whole plea.\nI\n-DAVID'' I\u00bb THE NAME, BATS THIS PLOWEB OIBL\nWhen Daphne DlBby-Jonea, flower girl at Hallowe'en Ice carnival In\nltt*mdon, Eng-. aaked the Prince of Wales to sign her program, she reproved\nhim tor ilgntna- \"Edward P.'' \"You know that la not your name,\" ahe said.\n\"David,\" she insisted was the Prince's right name.\nLess (north)        \\*S\nwwTl\nD.-Q   Jill\nc.-\u00bb r~t Kt t\n-ulbcrt**- Mn. C_M_M_\n(W-M-Hlcaier) Oaat)\n\u2022a\u2014J I 4 \u2022\u25a0\u2014K  10 f  8 I ,\n\u00bb.\u2014J  (711       H.\u2014A E 10\nD,\u2014K 10 7 4 It\u2014A 9 \u2022 I   .\nOr*-\/ 0^-10\nUggrt    (South)\n8--A 4  7  6  1       ,\nH.\u2014Q \u00ab I\nD.\u2014Mona V\nC\u2014A  K 0  I  7    \\\nThe  bidding:\nWa* paaa; norm, paaat tM.\none spade; aouth. two duba; wot\npaas; north, (our clubs; eaat paaa;\naouth, tlw. duba; weat, paaa; Bdrtk,\npaaa;   eaat.   doubl*;   all   paaa.\nI   5\n1          JS\n4H\n38\n\u2022QB\n1          JC\n\u2022O\n100\n\u2022AO\nS          BS\n\u2022s\n\u00ab\n\u2022AS\n4          IH\n\u2022so\n10H\n6H\n1          4D\n1*0\n\u2022D\n\u2022TD\n\u2022   '      3H\n\u20224C\nAH\nBH\n7          TD\nID\n8D\n\u202280\ni        \"TH\n\u202280\nXH\nOH\n*          10D\n8D\nto\n\u202290\n10           48\n\u202280\nIS\nSS\n11          XD\nJD\nAD\n\u2022XO\nThe  remaining  two  trleka ware\nconceded\n\u2022\u2014(Took trick; next lead directly\nunder.)\n.\nCHILD DIES\nFROM BURNS\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. O., Dec.\n30 (CP)\u2014One child U dead and\nseveral others are suffering from\nshock following tn explosion and\nftre on a gasboat operated by Lewis\nNewsham of the B. & fc. Logging\ncompany at Pitt lake.\nAeven children trapped la the\ncabin when the boat took ftre at 3\no'clock this moTT^ng on Pitt lake\nwere rescued by Mr. Newsham, but\none, Betty, his daughter, aged eight.\nwaa burned when sbe ran toward\nths bow and became caught in the\nflames, she died ltt hospital tbis\nafternoon.\nNIW TOBK, N. T-, Dsc. a\u00a9.\u2014\nHolding four spades to tha Queen-\nKnave Mrs. Culbertson mads game\nand rubber on hand 430. She bid\nfirst ln response to an informs-\ntory   double   by  her   partner.\nThe   hand.\nUna  (North)\n8a\u201410 7\nH\u20147 4 3\nD\/-J   8   7   3\nC\u201410  BBS\nCulbertson Mrs.   Culbertson\n(West) (Eaat)\n8.\u2014A  8113       S.\u2014Q   J  4  3\nH.-4J   fl H.W    10\nD,\u2014A   K   9   5   4       D\u2014O   fl   8\nC.-*\\. C\u2014K J\nLigget   (South-dealer)\n8.\u2014K   9\nH.  A K I I 9 1\nD\u201410\nC.\u2014A   8   7   3\nThe  bidding:\nSouth,   one  heart;   weat,  double;\nnorth, paas;  east, one spade; aouth,\ntwo  hearts;   west,  four spades;   all\npass.\nLigget led the King of Hearts.\nLarry Walton Gives\nGay Dance to Friends\nin Edgewood District\nLIOC.BT   TAKE   ALL\nNEW TORK, N. T-, Dec. \u00bb.\u2014\nLigget took sll the tricks when\ndoubled clubs on hsnd 038. Culbertson commented:\n\"Talk about distribution. Here\nIs a powerful hand wrecked cn\nthe invisible rocks of distribution.\nWhy thsy failed to redouble ls a\nmystery,\"\nMrs. Culbertson doubled wtth\nthree and one half honor trleka\nin her hand. The opponents were\nvoid  of  two suits.    The  hand;\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, Dec. 29\u2014The\nc.irlatmaa of 1931 will long be remembered by the poople of Edge-\nwood sa one of the happiest and\nJolliest ever spent ln this little\nbeauty spot,\nParties were held all over the\nvalley and Edgewood. on Christmas\nand Boxing day and Canon Thompson conducted 11 a.m. service at St.\nAgnes church on Chrlstma- morning,\nwhtch vns largely attended.\nLarry Walton gave a dance at the\nArrow Lakes hotel on Saturday evening on the occasion of hla departure for Roesland at whtcb about\nHO were preeent and a real peppy.\nJolly danoe was thoroughly enjoyed\nby  all.\nMra. Jordan WlUlams had a f.i.nlly\nreunion on Christmas day, her visitors including S. Leary and J.\nHakeman and families of Nakusp,\nMesdames Douselaar and Daly held\na joint supper part on Chrlstmss\nnight the Invited guests Including\nR. MUne and family, W. M. Slddall.\nW. H. CoweU and family A. Marx,\nR. Daly Mrs. C. Ford, M. Shlpmaker\nand family. Music, singing, games,\ndancing, etc., made time fly until\nthe early hours-\nMrs. L. Heaton entertained -\nnumber of guest* to dinner at the\nhotel on Christmas day.\nMrs. Prank Llttlewood held a family party on Christmas day.\nU.S. Will Have No\nRepresentative at\nReparations Mee\nWASHINGTON,   D-   C,   Dec.   29.\u2014\nSuggestion from Europe that a\nUnited States delegate ahould sit\nin the forthcoming reparations conferenoe received only this answer\ntoday  ln official  quarter here.\n\"There will ba no trip to Europe\nthis   winter.\"\nThey ware, the words Ogden\nMills, under-secretary of the treasury\nconstant reliance of the administration in International finance, Prealdent Hoover's laat oilier yesterday and his first today.\nSPANISH NUNS FIND HAVEN\nIN   OERMANY\nPPTJLLENDORF,. Oermany, Dee. 27.\n\u2014Forced to leave Spain foUowlng\ntbe overtbfow of tha monarchy ln\nthat country, Spanish benadlctlne\nnuns of Oe Eternal Adoration, have\nfound a new home In Orosseobo-\nenach, near here.\nTeacher Training\nClasses at U. B. C.\nAre Limited to 60\nVancouver, Dee. 39\u2014 Teacher\ntraining classes at tbe University of\nBritish Columbia will ba limited to\n90 students tn the 1932-88 tenn, tba\nboard of governors hss decided. This\nyear ths class baa 103 students.\nLaat term there were Tl.\nReference wfll be given Jn selecting tbe students to graduates of\ntbe University of British Columbia\nand to residents of this province.\nAdditional candidates will bs received according to academic training.\nMacDONALD WOULD\nCONFER WITH\nLAVAL\nLOMIEMOUTH, Scotland. Dae. 39\n(AP>\u2014Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald remained ready tonight to\nmast Premier Laval of France in a\npersonal conference previous to the\nforthcoming reparations parley lf\nthe latter la of the same mttd.\nThere was not development regarding the conferenoe today except that\nBritish opinion appeared to be shifting toward Lausanne, Switasrland,\nas the plsce and January 38 as\nths date.\nSouthern Pacific\nShop Workers Take\n. a 10 per Cent. Cut\nBAN FRANCISCO. Dee. 39.\u2014(AP)\n\u2014Fifteen thousand shop employees\nof tbe Southern Pacific company\ntoday agreed to accept a 10 per\ncent reduction in wages foUowlng\na conference here between workmen's representatives and officials\nof the company. Ths reductions\nbecome   effective   Friday.\nIT'S A\nWOMAN'S\nWORLD\nIndeed it looks that wsy\nfrom the inside of The Nelson Daily News office. What\nwith news written from\nthe woman's angle, features\nstrictly feminine, fiction\nabounding in heart appeal,\nadvertising adressed to Miss\nDebutante and Mrs. Housewife. To know their own\nworld, women read The Nelson  Daily   News   regularly.\nBeauty Services; Fashion Cables; Fashion\nNewt; Household Hints; Food Advertising;\nPersonal Advice Columns; Serial Stories'\nSociety. By these the woman's world is . . ,\nCOVERED EVERY DAY IN\n-frlaon iailtj -fatia\ni\n ^^^M\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nNATIONAL    BROADCASTING\nCOMPANl ,\nKGO    NETItORK\n8:00\u2014Program: \"Old Counsellor\";\norchestra direction George Dasch\n\u2014KGA KHQ. KOMO, . KGW.\nKPI    KSL,    KOA\n8:30-Concert: o-ladya Rice, soprano; orchestra direction Nathaniel Shilkret; Douglas Sunbury, baritone and master of\nceremonies; John Holbrook, announcer: KOO, KHQ, KOMO.\nKOW,  KSL,  KOA\n7:00\u2014To  be   announoed.\n7:30-_ports interview by Grant-\nland Rice; all-string orchestra I\ndirection Gustave Haes-acheii; j\nvocal soloist: KOO, KHQ, KOMO,\nKOW,  KPI. KSL.  KOA.\n8.00\u2014Amos 'n' Andy, blsckface comedians: KGO. KHQ, KOMO.\nKOW, KFI, KSL.\n8:15\u2014Vermont Lumbejacks: KGO,\nKHQ.  KOMO,  KC.W,  KPI.\n8:30\u2014Team Mates; Betty Kelly, soprano; Irving Kennedy, tenor:\nJohn and Ned masters of ceremonies: \"Uncle Rome,\" orchestra direction Joseph Hbraik:\nKOO, KHQ, KOMO, KGW, KPI,\n(KOA  8:4-8). *    ,\n8.00\u2014Rtn-Tln-Tln thriller: Dramatic\nsketch: KOO, KHQ. KOMO, KGW\nKPI.\n6:18\u2014New York orchestra: Dance\nmusic, direction Coon-Banders:\nKGO.\n9 30\u2014aErnle Hoist', orchestra: Dance\nl*_ic: KOO, KHQ, KOMO, KGW,\nKSL, KOA.\n10:00\u2014News    flashes:    Sam    Hayes:\nKOO. KHQ. KOMO. KOW, KPI.\n10:15\u2014Mystery  aerial:  Episode  Nine,\n\"Dead >fcn Prowl.\" by Oartton\nE. Morse: KOO, KSL. KOA.\n10*48\u2014Voice of Pan. Anthony Linden, flutist: Emily Linden, pianist: KGO. KSL. KOA.\n11:00\u2014Lolnar-Harrls ilsncc orchestra: KOO. KHQ.\n13:00\u2014Orgsn   recital:   KOO.\nTb* terrible i\n\u2022\u00abher\"\nAsthmA\n\u2022tapped at once\n(-\u25a0am, <*>\u25a0.;\na *e *H..RAZJtAH hfesa\nY\u00abo_ (a __\u25a0 _ __p -Jl __\nmotk _ comfort once yon start\nta_n\u00bb Te_p_h_-| RAZ-MAH\nNo man batting for breath,\nwbee-ng, dnkng. No harmful\nattsw*. twaeadswatnii alia ward.\nCsamokx. dean. Easy to take.\nGood far Chronic Bronchitis,\nHad ad Bronchial coldi. SOc\n\u25a0rnwU\nRaz-maH\nKPO   .NETWORK\n0:00\u2014Lovable Liars: KOA, KJR,\nNed  Nestcr.  Jim  Sarsfleld.\n6*1)0\u2014Masters of Music: KPO, KGA,\nKJR. The comic strip of the\nair  in  \"The  Funniest  Things.\"\n7.00\u2014Raising Junior i KPO, KJB,\nKGA. aerial  story.\n7:18\u2014Bob Kller's Syncopators: KPO,\nKOA, KJR.\nO.OO\u2014Don Thomivaon sport talk:\nKPO,   KOA,   KJR,   KBX.\n8:16\u2014Prince Albert quarter hour:\nKPO KOA, KJR. KEX. Alice\nfof, contralto; Paul Van Loan's\norchestra; \"01* Hunch.\"\n8:80\u2014BostonlSnaj df the Air: KPO,\nKOA. KJR, KEX. Light opera\nPresentation;   concert   orcheetrs.\n0*0-- Frederick OBrlen: KPO.\n(KGA. KEX 9:18). Author In\ntravelogue talk.\n9:30\u2014Earl Burtnett's orcheatra from\nLoe Angfles. KPO. KGA, KJR,\nKEX.\n10:00\u2014Nations! Concert orcbestrs\nKPO. KOA, KJR, KEX. Direction Charles Hart.\n11:00\u2014Jesse Norman's Ban Fran.\nclscans;   KPO,  KOA.  KEX,\nKFRC \u2014 SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 810 K\n491 tn: 61 c; looo \u25a0\n6:15\u2014Edna   Fischer.\n6:30\u2014Dinner   musto\n6:46\u2014Black and Blue\n7:00\u2014Vitality   peraonalltlea\n7:18\u2014Manhattan reflections\n7.30\u2014Concert\n7:46\u2014a\\iy..     nd   Marge\n8:00\u2014Blng   Crosby\n\u25a01:15\u2014Cyc.  I    band\n8:30\u2014Quarter   hour\n6:46\u2014Boswell Sisters\n9:0O\u2014Abe   Lyman's   orcbtatra\n9:16\u2014Eddie Duchln'a orchestra\n9:30\u2014Isle cf Golden Dreama\n10:06\u2014Anson Weeks' orchestra\n11:00\u2014Hal Grayaon's orchestra\n12-00\u2014Vagabond   of   the   Air\nTBI NSLSON BABaT NEWS. NELSON, B. C\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNWfl. pECBMBBR M. IW\n7:18   IWrruiiliii   enaemble\n7:4\u00bb\u2014The  Bobrick   glita\n8:00\u2014KNX  Sonoart  trio\n1*80\u2014Orury   Uae.   ttoot\n9:00   New,    ^^^^^^\n9:16\u2014KNX\n9-80\u2014Bev.\nDance enaemble\nEthel   Duncan\nKSL \u2014 SALT LAKE CITY \u2014 IIM K\n356.3  m; IU e; MM w\n8:16\u2014Conoert  mualc\n8:45\u2014Majestic  of the Air\n8:16\u2014Answer Man\n9 .-30\u2014Novelty   mualc\n10:00\u2014Danoe mualo\n10:16\u2014Myatery drama\n10:46\u2014Volos of Pan\nUOR   \u2014   VANCOUVER   \u2014. fit   K\n247. I m;  ltl r; 500 w\n6:16\u2014Aero olub\n0:30\u2014tttrnt   flashes\n8:46\u2014Musical   profram\n7:30\u2014Trained   Canaries\n7:45-MIUle and Lime\n8:00\u2014European talks, Stephen Rsy-\nmer\n8-15\u2014Two Ul Fellers\n8:30\u2014Studio\n9:0O\u2014Pu-eelde   organ   recital   \u2022\n10:00\u2014Ballroom -  \u25a0  \u25a0\n11:00\u2014Cabaret\nChristmas Visitors\nReturn to Home*\nin South Slocan\nSANTA WELCOMED\nBY STUDENTS AT\nBELFORD SCHOOL\nExcellent   Program   Presented; Little Tota Please\nCrowd\nKOMO  \u2014  SEATTLE   \u2014\nilBM m; 92 c; looo w\n9:16\u2014Fireside  hour\n9:4*\u2014Singers\n. 0:0*\u2014Success   Reporter\n_0:_0\u2014Blend   hour\nU.20~Globe   Trottier\n11:30\u2014Dance orchestra\n12:00\u2014Organ   recital\nCNRV   \u2014   VANCOUVER   \u2014   1W0\nlttl  m;  103 c;  500  w\n8:00\u2014Musical  program\n7:00\u2014Network\n7:30\u2014Medical   talk\n7:48\u2014Instrumental   trio\n8: J 5\u2014Intimate    Miwtc    Chate,\nJ. Meson\n8:30\u2014Weather   broadcast.\nKNX   \u2014   HOLLYWOOD   \u2014   1050   K\n285.5   m;   105   e!   5000   w\n8:00\u2014News\n.:l&\u2014Petite Concert ensemble\n8:45\u2014Red Cap  at  Your Servloe\n7:00\u2014Prank    Watanabe    and     the\nHonorable  Archie\nSOUTH  SLOCAN, B.  C,  Dec.  39\nMr. and Mn. R. McLean spent\nChristmas week  in Nelson.\nMiss Cathie Laurie and John\nLaurie are apendlng Christmas In\npiano mood_. I Trail at the bome of tbelr parents,\n^^^^\u2122      'Mr. and Mrs. J. Laurie.\nVisa Chrlssle Davidson of Nelson was tbe guest of Miss Myra\nHumphrey at Sumnverhlii tor Chrlst-\naa dsy.\nB. J. \u2022 Irving has returned frcftn\nspending Chrlstmss at tha family\nhome at Tarrys,.\nTbe Rev. W. j. Crick of the\nChurch of the Redeemer, Nelaon, of*\nflclated at a service of Holy communion In St. Matthew's church on\nChristmas morning. Tbe church wss\nseasonably decorated with masses\nof evergreen berries and tbe altar\nwith choice chrysanthemums. Q\nNoel Brown presided at the orgsn\nand rendered special Christmas music. Archie Bishop accompanied Mr\nCrick on tbe trip-\nMrs. R. O. Long and family are\ntbe guest* of Mr. and Mrs. R. G.\nElliott for a few daya.\nJ. Friend was a Nelson vlaltor for\nChristmas.\nMiss Ethel Shaw of tbe teaching\nstaff at Brilliant is the guest of\nMlas M. Edwards for the week.\nMr. and Mrs. A- Sommervllle ars\nexpecting their daughter, Mn. Oor'\ndon Jewel of Cranbrook ln a day\nor two.\nMr. .and Mn. c Buchanan and\nson, Lome who have been spending Christ-ma* wltb relatives In\nRosaland, have returned. They made\nthe trip by motor.\n920   K\nMiss Mabel Parker\nIs Visitor at the\nBosun Ranch, Denver\nSLOGAN CITY, B. 0. Dec. 28.\u2014\nMn. A. X. Purney was a recent visitor In Nelson, the guest at her father\nand mother, Mr. and Mrs. T. B- Hall.\nA. MacMUlan of Sandon spent\nChristmas here tht guest of Mr. and\nMrs.   D.  B.   O'Neail   and   family.\nMr and Mn. M. E. Shannon and\nUttle daughter, Dawn, of New Denver are spending tbe holidays here\nthe guests of Mrs. Shannon's parents\nMr. and Mn. T. J. Armstrong.\nBertrand O'Neail spent Thursday\nin Nelson-\nRev, and Mn. Brown and little\ndaughter of New Denver are spending a few days hen. Mr. Brown ls\nthe pastor of St. Andrew's Presbyterian church hers and preached a\nChristinas service ln the church\nSunday   night.\nMn. E. D. Rogen who spent the\npeet two months with he aon-tn-law\nand daughter, Mr.* and Mn. Clifford\nSwan and family In Klmberley, arrived home on Thursday for tha\nChrlatmaa  holldsys.\nWarwick Parker arrived home from\nYahk to apend the holidays at his\nhome here.\nMr. and Mn. L. Hall and family\nwho apeqt the put year as residents here, left a few days ego to\nmake their bome ln Nelson-\nMiss Mabel Parker left on Sunday to vlalt a few days at Bosun\nranch, New Denver, the guest of\nMr. and Mn. J. C. Harris and\nfamily.\nBELFORD. B. C, Dec. 39.\u2014The\nschool conoert ana Christmas tree\nfor tbe closing of .school, was presented before * large and appreciative audience of parents and\nfriends.\nThe program which was delightfully varied consisted of 30 numbers\u2014tableaus, recitations, playa and\nchoruses wblcb were all admirably\nrendered.\nThe greatest credit reflected on\nMlsa EJwa Gustafson the energetic\nprincipal of the school for the\nefficient preparation of the scholars.\nAfter the opening of the oonoert\nby the singing of O' Oanada by the\nschool Uttle Nora Masloff gave the\nrecitation of \"Welcome\"'.\nA dutt. \"O Uttle Town of Bethlehem\" was sweetly rendered by\nPeggy Fleck and Florence Carlson.\nand a solo number, \"Jolly Old St.\nNicholas\" by Tlna Latkln A very\namusing monologue waa entitled\nFred's Christmas Shopping\" by\nWalter HHI. A tahieau \"Tbe Tale\nthe Fire Told\" by five girls and\nseven boys was very realistic and\neffective In tha setting. A pretty\nlnovatlon was a folk dance by ina\nLatkln and Nora Maaloff. a real\npantonine number \"Christmas Joys''\nwas given In fine style by Fred\nMarkln, Jackie Masloff and Fred\nLatkln and a pleasing pantomlna\nsong \"Bome Folka\" was sweetly\nrendered by Peggy Fleck. A Play\n\"Chrlstmss Time at Santa's Headquarters\" by four gins and six boys\nwaa a roualng and laughable farce.\nDialoguea\u2014 \"The Unwilling Tramp''\nby Wllley Riley, Florence Cirlaon.\nMary Maaloff, Peggy Fleck; \"A Boya\nChristmas\" by <ftek Latkln and Mike\nWasilenkoff and \"Danny Speaks a\nPiece\" by three glrla and three hoys\nwere all very amusing. Recitations\ninterspersed between the plays while\nthe icenery waa enanged consisted\nof \"The Fall of tne Monarch\" by\nJack Latkln; \"Merry ciristmas\" by\nMary Maaloff; \"Beln? Oood\" by\nWalter Hill; and \"T*was the Month\nAfter Cbristmaa\", by Willie Riley,\nwith an effective closing recitation\nby Mary Masloff.\nNumben by tht achool wen \"Children's Laughing Chorus\" which waa\nso trreslatable that the audience\nJoined in the laughing and the final\nchorus \"Angels Sweetly Singing\"\nfoUowed by Ood Save the King.\nSanta waa then joyously welcomed\nand distributed the gifts from the\nbeautifully decorated Christmas tree,\nwith bags of candy, oranges and\nnuts for all the children. The\njuniors thsn had a merry time\nplaying games. Refreshments were\nserved and a Jolly dance concluded\none of the moat enjoyable Chrlatmaa entertainment, ever hald.\nMlsa Gustafson, the school teacher, is spending the school vacation\nat the home of her mother, Mrs.\nGustafson. Victoria ttreet, Nelson.\nMlsa Ellen Robinson who la\nteaching school at Princeton Is\nspending the holidays at ths home\nof her parenta, Mr. and Mn. J.\nH.  Robinson.\nMk. and Mrs. Robinson have their\nyounger daughten, Jean and Torle,\nwho are attending oollege in Victoria, home for the achool vacation.\n\u25a0\"NISTILLKO   in   accordance   with\nBL\/ time-honored 1-ondon tradition,\nthese brands are notable for their age,\ncrystal purity and matchless flavor.\nEnjoy them during the holiday season-\nFar Ssle mt Vendor'., or thi ret from trie liquor Control\nBoard. Moil Order Dmportmtm', rletorio, B.C.\nChristmas Guests\nMany at Elko\nThia advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nGREATLY\nREDUCED\n I   FARES\nfor New Year's\nBETWEEN ALL POINTS IN CANADA\nRound trip fares good going one and one-quarter\nfare, December 30, 31 and January 1.\nReturn limit January 4, 1932\nFull information from any Railway Ticket Agent\nor write\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent,\nNelson, B.C.\nELKO, B. C, Dae. 80.\u2014-Thursday evening Mr. and Mrs. J. H.\nAngell and daughter Marlon motored\nto Pernle to attend the Legion\nCbrlitmaa tree for the children of\nmifmbera who belong to that aoclety,\nMr. and Mn. T. Conquergood, Ab-\nerfeldle power plant, made a few\nhurried calls in Eko before proceeding on their Journey to Fernie\nto spend the Christmas holiday with\nthe letter's parent*. Mr. and Mn.\nT. Gallagher.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Orady and\nnephew. Oerald Eye, Cranbrook, arrived In town early prlday morning to sp^nd Christmas with their\nsod and daughter-In-law, Mr. and\nMrs. J. A. Orady.\nMr. and Mre. J. A. Orady and son\nDonald motored to Pernle Thunday\nevening and were the gueeta of\nMr. and fin. (5   X.  Blklngton.\nMrs. A. Kennedy, son, Allan, and\ndaughter. Violet, wen ths dinner\ngueata of Mr. and Mn. Pred Millar,\nChrlatmaa day.\nPrlday afternoon Mr. and Mn. P.\nVernon and son, Dick eame to Elko\nto have Christmas dinner with Mr.\nand Mn. J. H. Angell and Mr.\nCailaday Mr. and Mn. Vernon and\nson returned to their home in\nPernle   Saturday.\nCarl Ingham and children. Tommy\nand Ella, also Mlaa Julia winsor\nare spending the Christmas boll-\ndays at Sheep Mountain ranch with\nMr. and Mn. A. E Ingham.\nH. M. Wilson, Cslgary, arrived ln\nElko Saturday evening and stayed\nover till Sunday evening, the gueat\nof Mr   and Mn. J. H. Angell.\nElko People Figure\nin Auto Accident\nELKO, B C, Dec. SO.\u2014Saturday\nevening a ear accident occured about\nthree mllea eaat of Elko, on the new\nPerale-Elko road. Mr. Abbey, aon\nChick, and tforee friends who wert\nvisiting at the Abbely home were\ngoing to Pernle trtien tba aootdent\nhappened aad tba oar went over\nthe bank. A passing car brought tbe\ninjured ocupante back to Elko. Mr.\nAbbely wsa badly eut about the head\nand faoe. Tbe others suffered minor\nInjuries. Norman Wilkinson and Jlmmle Costaneo took one party to\nPernle for medical attention.\nCranbrook People\nChristmas at Yahk\nYAHK. B. C. Dec. 30\u2014Miss Margaret Oreyton of plncher Creek\nspent the Christmas holiday here\nwith   ber   aunt,   Mrs.   Harrison.\nMr. and Mn. c H. Buckles* and\nMiss Margaret Mclnnes of Bran-\nbrook spent Christmas day at the\nhome of the tatter's parents. Mr.\nand Mrs. Hugh Mclnnes.\nLen Renwlck of invermere spent,\nthe holidays in town wtth hla family.\nMr. and Mrs. a. Lythgoe, jr., spent\na few days ln Klmberley wltb\nrelatives.\nMm Verch visited at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Prank Hlese in\nCranbrook   over   the   holidays.\nHenry Moncton and Mn. Birch\nand family motored to Jaffray last\nweek to visit Mr. Mateon's parents.\nMr. and Mra. lurry Woodhouse\nand son Junior of Grand Pork-\nspent Christmas ac the horns of\nMn. woodhouse's sister and brother-in-law, Ml*, and Mrs. WUllam\nBaum.\nMr. tnd Mrs. Taylor and family\nof Kimberley spent the week-end\nat the home of Mrs. Taylors\nparents,    Mr.    and    Mrs.    Hlmpettl.\nLare Eajen of Cana] plats ls visiting at. the bome of MT. and Mrs.\nAlex.  Rattray'\nMr. and Mts. Jo_m Wardrope\nand children lefti on Thursday for\nCalgary where they are the guests\nof Mr,  and Mn.   .Archie  Dunlop.\nMiss   Rosle   Poall    of   cranbrook \\\nspent   Christmas   at   the   home   of\nher   parents  at   Glenlly.\nArchie MacLeod left last weflc\nfor canal plate to uke over his\nstore   then.\nOld Time Dances\nPlease at Appledale\nAPPIOPALK, B. C. Dec. 39.\u2014A\npleasant evening waa spent ln the\nhall on Saturday evening by tbe\nmembers of tbe Progressive asaoclation and a few Invited friends.\nSinging of ofi_ Mm* songs and game*\nwere indulged ln till the ladles\nserved supper, then both young and\nold Joined  In  the old  tithe dances.\nMiss Mary Troseo of Nelson spent\nthe week-end visiting her pannta,\nMr. and Mn. p. Trosao.\nMr. and Mn. E. W. Kopeckl and\naon, Bobby, of Boealand spent\nChrlstmaa with Mrs. Kopeckl \"a mother and sister, Mn. J. V. Meyer.\nThey wen aocompanled by Mn.\nMyer* son, Al.\nWlllla* Cant of TraU spent\nChrlatmae with bis pannta, Mr. and\nMn. A. Cant.,\nP. Hunter of VaJllcan wat the\ngueet of Mr. and Mrt. A. G. Watson\nfar Christmas day.\nMr. aad Mn. D. Hlrd and baby\nof South Slocan spent the week-end\nvisiting Mn. Hlrd* parent*, Mr. and\nMn. A. Cant.\nEdmonton's expenditures on direct\nrelief for unemployment amount to\nnearly 1100.000, or at the rate of\n\u2022 100,000 a day, from Oct. 1 to Deo.\n13, aocordlng to civic official*.\nThere's  One   Sure\nWAY   of  getting\nHer   ATTENTION....\nDUSY she is. Not wishing to be disturbed.\n\" This  purchasing agent for  hundreds of\nfamilies, Mrs. Nelson and District Housewife.\nYet surely, inevitably, every day of the year,\nher door opens to let in .the Nelson Daily\nNews. And with the News there enter a certain number of salesmen, salesmen who would\notherwise have been turned away; in short\nsalesmen who gain entrance through the\nDaily News advertising columns.\nSEND YOUR SALESMAN INTO\nNELSON AND DISTRICT HOMES\nIs your salesman among them? Or do you keep him in the shop, waiting for\na chance visit from Mrs. Housewife? Remember. Mrs. Housewife is buying. She is spending hundreds and hundreds of dollars a day. And unless\nyou are reaching into the private homes of the Nelson Daily News readers,\nyou are not receiving a rightful proportion of those dollara.\nYour merchandise may be the choicest, your values may be the best, but unless you are sending the news to Mrs. Housewife through the medium of\nthe Daily News, you cannot expect to find anything but \"Busy. Do not disturb,\" on her door.\nPLACE YOUR MERCHANDISE BEFORE THE VAST AUDIENCE OF\nNELSON DAILY\nNEWS\nL\n MM   tmStm \u00ab\u25a0*\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\nimnnniiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiHiHiiiiitiiiiti|\nJf\nDance\nand\nParty\nFOOTWEAR\nFootwear that keeps in\nstep with the social\n\u2022-vents of the season;\nFootwear that is- marked by its high quality\nand extremely low cost.\n$5 to $10\nWR  S?rCULBE  IN  IVrttWl\nEVENING    SLIPPERS   ANY\nSH.4DE.   TO  MATCH   ANY\n(10WN.\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nleaders in Footfa&hion\nfiiiifiiiiiiniiiiiiitiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nWebster of Robson,\nFox, Crawford Bay\nWin Pension Battle?\nROSSLAND. B. 0., Dsc. 39\u2014Representations made by West Koot-\nenay's member, W. K. Bsllng, to\nthe board of pensions commissioners\nat Ottawa hava resulted ln favorable action ln the case of John\nT. Webster at Robeon, Tbe pension will data from March 1981.\nwhen the application was preeented.\nMT. Bsllng has also had favorable\naction In extending the pension of\nArthur pox of crawrord Bay, who\nla   taking   an   aviation   course.\nSHOREACRES  BRIEFS\nSHORBAORE8. B. C Dec. 99 \u2014\nMrs. Sheffield accompanied Mr. Sheffield on hla visit to the looal\nschool.\nMn. C. R. Osnsper of Taghum\nand Miss Paul Oansner of Nelson\nattended  the  school  concert.\nMr. and Ure. W. Oliver and children were the guests of Mr. end\nMrs. A. E Watta at Bouth Slocan\nduring Christmas.\nMiss Kathleen Brodia ls spending the school vacation with her\nparents, MT- snd Mrs. James Brodie,\nStanley street. Nelson.\n' Miss Jpsts oansner ts at the\nfamily home at Taghum for the\nholidays.\nSociety\nThis column Is eendvcted by\nMra. M. J- Vtfaeu. All news of a\n\u25a0octal native. Including receptions, private enUrtilameaU. per-\naaaal ltema, marriages, etc. will\nappear In this column. Tele phoae\nMrs. vigneux at her home, 519\nSilica   street.\nUee.  T.  Mahar S. J- of  Ooneaga\nuniversity In Spokane, returned yesterday morning vie tbs Oreat Northern. While bare Rev, Mahar aaoisted\nRight Rev. A. K. Melntyre, V. S., ln\nRossland and Rev. Leo Robeon of\nTrsji  during tha Christmas services.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH.   Bets nf  Crawford   Bay  wa* a\nvisitor In town yesterday.\niss\nMr. and Mra. Samuel Alexander of\nKlmberley went to Trail yeeterday to\nvisit   friends.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Janus Davidson of\nCaatlsffar epent yesterday shopping\nln town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAlar Ewlng of Trail   was   in   tfoe\ncity Monday evening attending the\nhockey match.\n\u2022 *. *\nikr. and Mn. J- Armstrong, Front\nstreet, have returned from Oreeton\nwhere they visited their son and\ndaugh ter-ln-law Mr. and Mra.\nCharles Armstrong, over the holldsys.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs, E. Matthew left\nyesterday for thslr home ln SUverton after a vlstt to Nelaon, where\nthsy wars guests of Mr. and Mra. J.\nSlme, Victoria street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. aad Mrs. C. A. Larson leaves\nthts morning to spend New Year ln\nSpokane, after which they will visit\nif Seattle with Mre. Larson's parents. Mr. and Mre. A. C. McNeil.\nThey will be accompanied bome by\ntheir son Arthur, wbo hss been\nspending Christmas there.\nDr. D. W. McKay left laat evening to visit hts mother In Westminster.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nMiss Margaret Oraham li expected\nhome from Vancouver Sunday night.\nwhere she has been vlaltlng*-. relatives  for ths psst week.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMt. end Mrs. Lawrence McPhall,\nSilica atreet, are spending New Tear_\nln Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Mary speers left yesterday\nvia the Great Northern for Vanoouver, where she enters the Vancouver Oeneral hospital training\nclasa.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs- J. Fisher of HaU is a city\nvisitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mre. William Mlllburn\nhava returned to their home in\nSalmo sfter spending the holidays\nat the home of the former's parents.\nMr. and Mrs. Mllburn, Fairvlew.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMr.   and   Mm.   J.   McKernaa   and\nFairway Cash & Carry\nSPECIAL\n15 LBS. CARROTS\nfor  \t\n25c\nCrosse & Blackwell Sockeye Salmon\nLarge tin, 2 for \t\nBlue Ribbon Baking Powder\nPer tin  \t\nEmpress Strawberry Jam, 4-lb. tins\nPer tin  \t\nP. & G. Soap\n7 bars for .\n55c\n25c\n59c\n25c\nYoung Buffalo        Oflp\nSteaks, lb   *uc\nSwift's Silverleaf\nLard, lb. \t\n10c\nFresh    Manitoba\nFish\nA piece \t\nPure Pork Sau-     OK-\nsages, 2 lbs. for   *U1,\nWhite\n25c\nSPECIAL\nCHOICE CREAMERY BUTTER\n8 lbs. for _  \t\n74c\nFresh Shipment of No. 1\nTURKEYS - GEESE - CHICKEN\nand FOWL for NEW YEARS.\nPrices to Meet Your Poeketbook.\n' THB NKLSON DAILY XlWt. KBLSOH, B. Co-WBDMB-BAV MOKM-NO, DBCSMBB M, XWa\nbaby left via the Oreat Wiaansia\nyesterday for thetr bans Ln Spokane\naltar apendlng the holiday at tba\nhome, of Mra. McKlnnan's parents,\nUf. and Mrs. T.  L. Marquis, feix-\ne   s   a\nColonel   RteA   Uater,   M.   V.   F.\nor camp lister, is a dty vistSor.\n*    e    \u2022\nSee. Lso Robeon. pastor ot the St.\nPranoota Xavi-t parish In Trail, hss\nreturned after a visit to Very .Rev.\nJ. C McKennle tn Neleon.\nMr. and Mrs. Walter Johnson sad\ndaughter Pauline of Roaaland. accompanied    by    Mr.    and   Mre, . 8.\nMereditn and eon OUbert ef Trail\nhsve returned after spending the\nChrlstmss weekend at tbi home on\nObservatory atreet of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. McAdam.\n* - \u2022   \u2022\nG. Lldberg of Powell Rleer left\nyesterday for hla home after spending tlw holidays at the home of his\nbrother-in-law aad sister, Mr. and\nMrs. Archie Renwlck. Nelson avenue,\nFairvlew.\ne   \u2022   \u2022\nW. A. McDonald of Trail ww ln\ntown attending the hockey match\nMonday night.\nT.   Brown   of   Nakusp\nvisitor.\nls   a  elty\nMiss Bernice Weatherhead. Fair-\nview, left via tbe Oreat Northern\nyesterday for Vanoouver to enter the\nVancouver Oeneral hospital training\nschool.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. end Mrs. rred X. Smith of\nCreston are hers to celebrate tha\n65th anniversary of the weddjng ot\ntheir parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. O.\nSmith, 313 Nelson avenue, Fairvlew,\nwhich   takes   piece   tomorrow.\n\u2022 .   *\nMiss Isabel Thompson left yesterday morning for her home ln Spokane after spending the holiday* at\nthe home of hsr parents, Mr. snd\nMrs. A. Thompson, Cedar street,\nsee\nJ. Olnol of Olnols Landing la a\ncity   vlaltor.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOeorge S. Brown has returned\nfrom holidaying  ln Pentlcton.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJ. Midwinter of Procter paid a\nvisit to town yeaterday.\n\u2022 *   *\nMies Winona Rouleau. Front street,\nreturned yesterday from Kaalo, whsre\nshe has been spending the holiday\nat the home of her father, p. S.\nRouleau.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Cam amd the\nformer's mother, Mrs. Oeorge Cam,\nall of Trail, were recent, visitors to\ntha city.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. Peterson of Kaslo\nare city visitors.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nRight Rev. A. K. Mclntyre, V. O.\nof Roesland. waa tha gueat of Very\nRev. j. c. McKenzle on Monday,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Franoe\u201e Madden, Victoria\nstreet, left ybsterday for Trail, where\nshe will spend New Years at the\nhome of Miss Vaida Smith.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE. P. Crawford, M \u25a0 E., formerly of\nKlmberley, and now of Vancouver,\nls in the elty.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nR. L. Reynolds of Nakusp waa a\nreoent  visitor   to  Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. R. Baxendal* of Trail\npassed through town yesterday en\nroute to ftocier, where she will visit\nfriends,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. A. D. Poohln have\nhad ss tbelr gueste, Mr. and Mrs.\nCampbell Blair, who have left for\nCanyon after spending the Christmas\nholidays here.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJohn McLean of Cranbrook has\nreturned after two weeks' vacation\nspent at the home of his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh N. McLean,\nLatimer street.\ne   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. F. Young and\ndaughters, Jean and MarJorie, have\nleft for tbelr home ln Bsavermouth\nafter spending the Christmas holidays at the home of Mr. Young's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Young,\nNelson   avenue.\nThe Beauty Box\nby Helen Follett\nBurgess Flashlights\nFor those dark, out-of-the-way corners a Flashlight Is necessary.   Use one and be safe.\nBarges, line of Flashlights is complete.\nSPOTLIGHTS 150-FT. TO 1500-FT. RANGE\nBROADBEAM FLASHLIGHTS\nSNAPLIGHTS \u2014 UTILITY LANTERNS\nRAILROAD LANTERNS\nFLASHLIGHT BATTERIES\nHipperson Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nLook for the Red Hardware Store\nPhone 497 Box 414\nBuslnas girls who go limp snd\nyawny about four o'clock In the afternoon are in need of lessons in\nhygiene. Bad eating habits, wrong\nkinds of food, sre curaslly at the\nroot of the trouble. Bating luncheon too quickly In a noisy, crowded\nreataurant upsets tba digestion, Interferes with assimilation. The girl\nwho fares forth tnd brings home the\nbtoon must consider the Importance\nof keeping well, being highly energised, looking tiptop. Understand-\nard health unfits a woman for the\nJob, casta a cloud of depression over\ntbe mind, raises tha dickens with\nher complexion.\nThe purpose of the vinegar rinse\nafter the shampoo la to remove\nparticles of aoap scum that may be\nresting on the balr shafts, and to\nsoften the trees-locks. Add two\ntablespoonfuls of vinegar to a quart\nof water. Four over the head, dipping from tbe wash bowl with t\ncup, so the solution wlll be perfectly distributed. Rinse away with\ntepid wtter. Use a spray. Sprays\noost little and they're priceless.\npale, delicate shades are beloved\nby blondes, yet tbey do not enhance\nthe color of eyes, skin and hair ss\ndo darker shades, which offer contrast. Nearly all the light-headed\ndarlings look well ln black. Choice\nof colors hss much to do with appearance,   yet  few   women   pay  any\need at all to artistic color blend*\nlng, or seek tones that are most be*\ncoming. Red-heada with freckles\nyallery skins take to brown, which is\nths worst color of sll for them.\nThey should wear blues, greens and\nblack.\nIt Isnt enough to brush the teeth\nvery day and rinse the mouth;\nteeth need certain fooda if they are\nto survive, keep free of cavities. Dentists recommend orange Juloe, milk\ntM lettuce as most efficient ln providing tba body with good dental\nmaterial. Maybe soma day we'll\nknow what to eat to grow hair.\nWont the btldheads be happy?\nOpera singers have beautiful necks\ndue to ffie faot tbat they fill out\nthslr lungs, breathe properly and\nexpand tbs  cavities of their chests.\nThs U 8- senate agricultural committee apprc-ved a bill authorizing\nthe farm board to glv. 40,000,000\nbushels Cf Its surplus wheat for\nf reding the unemployed. It will\ncorns up In  the senate todty.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. O. Dae. 3ft-* quiet\nwedding wae aolemnloed at the Flret\n.Presbyterian church Saturday evening when Miss Jans (Jennie) Ooddard waa united ln marriage to\nWilliam Reld Smith. Both are of\nTrail Bev. James Youngson of Nelaon performed the oeremony. Mrs.\nWinifred coils tnd James Stewart\nattended as witnesses.\neee\nMr. and Mrs. O R. Berry tnd family of Callander, Ont., arrived Sunday evening at Robson and are\ngueste of Mr. Berry's parents, Mr.\nand MTs. C A- Berry. Mr. and Mra.\nBerry intend making their homa ln\nthe district.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022.\nRsv. Jamas Youngson of Nelson\ncame to Trail yesterday to spend\nNew Year with Mr. and Mrs. X. C\nOreen, Cast Trail.\n\u2022 9  a\nMr. and Mrs. S. O. mil and daughter Shirley returned yesterdsy from\nCrsnbrook after spending Christmas\nwith Mra, Hill's parents, Mr. and\nMrs.   J.   Beech.\nsee\nMr. and Mra. Arthur McMillan\nwere the gueste of Mrs. McMillan's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. snd\nMrs. W. A. Talbot of Nelaon over the\nChristmas weekend.\na.   e   e\nArthur Kelly and James Donaughy\nare the gueste of relatives at Needles\nfor a week.\nI   M\nMrs. Arthur Mackle and baby of\nKhnberley arrived Saturday evening\nto visit Mrs. Mackle's parenta, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. H. Hopkins, Government\nroad, for New Year. Mr. and Mrs.\nHopkins met them at Castlegar.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPaul P.  Nordgren,  wbo  hae  been\nvisiting his niece, Mrs.  John  Back-\nman, for the past we:k, left  today\nfor his home at Canal Flats,\na. e   s\nRichard Roeander cf Winnipeg hss\nbeen visiting bis parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Roeander, Columbia avenue,\nfor  the past  week.\n\u25a0 \u2022    \u2022    e\nMrs, S. J. Smith of Rossland hss\nbeen the guest of Mrs. J. Wall during the w-ekond. w\/.tle here Mrs. J.\nM. Doughty ami Mrs. Joseph Row-\nlines entertained ln her honor at\ncards.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Oagne are\nvisiting Mrs. Gagne's parent*, Mr.\nand Mrs. L. Lemire of McLeod, Alts.\nMr. Oagne will return after a week's\nholiday. Mrs. Oagne expecta to remain there for a month.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. R. T. Ellison, Rossland avenue, entertained at dinner\nSunday evening. Covers were laid for\nMr. and Mrs. J. Moffat, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Downie, Mlu Phyllis Downie.\nMies Doreen Downie and Jame_\nFltegerald.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. R. Dennis and son of Sirdar\nare spending the Christmas vacation\nhere with Mr. Dennis.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. H. Matthews returned last evening from Grand Forks, where ho\nspent the Christmas holiday with\nhis family.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nClarence Mclsaac of Ymir has been\nthe gueat of his brother. Atholl Mclsaac.\n\u2022 s   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Willis have\nhad as thslr guests Mrs. Willis' parents, Mr and Mrs. William Rutherford of Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nMrs. Oliver Holmes and children\nand Mrs. Gomer Jones, who htve\ntoren spending eome time tn Vancouver, returned to their homes last\nweek.\neee\nJames Can\/u. who has been visiting hla parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. M.\nCairns, Cedar avenue, for the holiday weekend, left yesterday for\nCalgary.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. F. Blakeley of Red\nDeer, Alta., are the guests for a few\nweeks {I their son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. tnd Mrs. E. 8. Martin,\nTopping street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Ivan O'Nell of Ores-\nton have heen visiting friends here\nduring tha holiday.\nlee\nMiss Betty Blner of Nelson Is in\nTrail for a few days visiting with\nAlderman and Mrs. A. Saunders.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS. _N-\nsurance. Notary. J. D. Anderson, Trail. (B656)\nChristmas Passes\nQuietly, Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR, B. C, Deo. 29.\u2014\nF-tf-ners around this district aw\nlooking forward to t good season\nnext year owing to tbe deep enow\nfall. It ls laying two feet deep on\nthe level oven though the soft\nweather has taken lt down considerably. As the ground ls not frozen\nall tbe melting snow has a chance\nto soak ln and before spring the\nsoil ought to regain some of the\nmoisture lost in the last few years\nand  thus  benefit the crops.\nChristmas passed off quietly In\nthis settlement, there being\npublic functions, family gatherings\nbeing tha rule. ideal weather\nruled on chrlftmss Day, with\nbright moonlight tnd t few degrees of frost at night.\nE. Pratt won the turkey drawn\nfor by the customers or R. west's\nstore.\nWiring ot c. O. 0, hall is now\nIn progress and It Is hoped to\nsoon have the electric lights on,\nspa\n_as_a________n_____________B\niiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiMiiiiniiiiiiiniiitiiiiiiiiiMiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiuii\npte High Speed gM\nby dMay Christie\nMMIMII\nmm\nCHAFTEB  TB\u00bbrr-OIfl 4\nLaurel Jumped up from the Uttle\ntable m tbe cocktail bar and went\nto .greet Bruce Harvey.\nHello. You here?\" She shoeied\nber frank delight ln meetm* him.\n\"I've just come in from \u00bb round\nof golf.\" He wss handsome In a\ntweed knlcker suit of a light grey\nthat matched his eyes, tnd accentuated the little streak of grey over\neither ear that was so attractive.\nLaurel at that moment though\nhim tbe best-looking msn sbe htd\never seen. Her heart beat with excitement.\nCome on In tnd Join us. You\nknow Bruce Sartorls?\"\nBruce Harvey nodded over hsr\nahoulder st Roger.\n'We've met. Sony I htve to leave.\nNeeds must, you know, whsn tbs\npatients are waiting.\"\nAs busy as til that?\" Her voloe\nrose ln a disappointed inflection.\nHe smiled at the young girl. Sbe\nwas still flushed from her battle at\nping pon, plus her second gin\nswizzle. Hatless, with tousled hair,\nher pretty eyea alight with eagerness, she wss a charming picture.\n\"You're the elusive pimpernel, I\ndo declare. Full of good works! I\ndon't believe you're human!\"\n'Say 'humane',\" be supplemented,\nstill smiling at her.\nSbe wore a blue drew with a\nlemon-colored top to It, and a gaily-\npaterned blue and yellow scarf.\nOlpsylsh she looked Just now , . ,\nand, aa Roger bad assured her,\n'devilishly attractive'.\nBhe knew It. Knew her charm.\nThat put Bruce Harvey on his mettle.\nTonight ha would be here, dining\nwith her mother.\nWould Lturel be among tbe party?\nHe wanted thtt. Wanted to dance\nwith her. A queer little electric\nthrill ran through his veins as he\nstood facing the girl.\nHer look waa like a challenge flung\nat him. Sort of a 'dare'. He had\nthe queerest Impulse to grab hsr here\nand now ln the corridor and kiss\nher . , .\nWas the child a witch? Whst kind\nof a charm emanated from her?\nBut aloud he said, mundanely, albeit quizzically: \"WhaVve ygu been\nup to since last I've seen you, Miss\nLaurel?\"\n*T wss In New York with Im . . .\ndoing ths things you disapprove of\n. . making wild whoopee.\"\n\"Well, you haven't wrecked your\nhealth, anyway, by th* looks of\nyou.\"\nThat's becauae we despised kids\nare so full of wira and wlgor!\"\n\"Wine and wiggles?\" he repeated,\ncocking an amused eyebrow at her.\n'What lf we are? What lf we do\nraise the devil?\"\n\"Nobody's stopping you, that I csn\n\"Well\u2014,\" provocatingly, \"why dont\nyou take on the Job of father-confessor?\"\nYou think I'm suited to the\npart?\"\n\"Why, I can alresdy see the halo\nand the wings sprouting.'\n\"You sauoy kid, what you really\nneed ls a sound spanking!\"\n\"Hal I'd bite your ear off lf you\ntried ... on the other hand, who\nknows\u20147\u2014it might endear you to\nme!\"\n\"Uttle monkey!\"\n\"Say, I've a trick or two up my\nsleeve. Maybe tonight I'll show\nyou ...\"\n\"When . , Jt\"\n\"Arenf you dicing with the old\ngirls In the club?\"\n\"Old girls? Miss Launl, thtt's\nmost disrespectful of you.\"\n\"To hell with respect. Don't they\nhot-foot it their lives with the best\nof us youngsters?\"\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy  LAURA   A.   KIRKMAN\nToast\nTOMORROW*   MENU\nBreakfast\nLeftover  Apple Sauce\n...    Cereal\t\nBoiled  Eggs\nCoffee        M\nLuncheon\nPotato   Salad\nRolls Cheese\nLeftover Apple fleuce\nCookies Tea\nPinner\nMeat    Lost\nTomatoes\nLemon   Breed' Pudding\nCoffee\nSa wm amused, despite Ntnaatf. He\naald: \"Ton -_oee\u00bb you think that\nthey're your ooapi-ttorsr\n-For whose sffeotlons? I like your\nnerve! I e*poee you fancy youraelf\nas an Adonis?\"\n\"Indeed I don't.** He grinned,\n\"Tou hand me many parts. X*H sty.\nA few momenta ago I wm as angel\n. . . then t father-confessor.\"\n\"Well, if I'm ever ffl .. . .touch\nwood!. ... I darseay you'd be a\ndaxnm good doctor!\"\n\"Now I must go,\" \u00abtd bs, \"you\nmustn't ksep your friend waiting.\n\"8'only old Roger. I can see him\nany old time. Say, wbat about this\nevening?\"\n\"I'm yonr mothers gueat. That's\nan I know. Are you to ba in the\nparty?\"\n\"What? This chae-ild?\" Bh* struck\nher bosom dramatically, \"T.-.ere'll\nba no female at tbe dinner under 40!\"\n\"That's cattyl\"\n\"All right. Walt UH you get Mrs.\nDelahunt's claws into youl\"\n\"Sh-hl\" He seemed chocked st\nthis\u2014at lesst, outwardly,\n\"Oh, don't shush ms. I'm wise to\nthat old girl's doings. 'No chicken\nbut OAME!'   You get my meaning?\"\n\"Indeed. I don't. I wouldn't permit myself to understand yeu.\" But\nhis eyes twinkled.\n\"Wsll, 'aging and amorous,' then!\"\n\"What about claws?\"\n\"Huh, I'm etlll a kitten^-theo-\nretlcally. If you don't react to Mrs.\nDelahunt\u2014I mean to say, by all accounts it'll bs either pawa around\nyour neck or murder.'\n\"Will YOU ba at tbe olub tonight?\"\n\"Perchance.\" Sbe winked at him\nimpudently. \"Maybe you ctn have a\nwhirl at my fatal charms If you\nstep lively!\"\nBruce Harvey went away and Laurel went beck to Roger and ber gin\nSWt-BlS.\nShe turned up st tbe elub eoon\nsfter nine o'clock tbat night, in ?.\nsophisticated little dresa of pink\nsatin. It hsd s great bow on one\nhip, practically no back at all, and\ntrailed on tbe ground ln the rear.\nHer   little   face   had   a   wlld-roac\nShe wore pink pearl earrings,\ngardenia* ln the same color on her\nshoulder.\nThe flowers gsve out Intoxicating\nodor.\nbloom  that  was pertly rouge  snd\npartly excitement.\nShe'd dance with handsome Bruce\nHarvey tonight. Oo out with him\nInto the enchanted moonlight . . .\nHe waa & real mtn. She'd be\nDelilah tonight to his Semson. .\nLove? Could It be love, thia queer,\nbeady emotion?\nImogen and Freddie and Roger\nhsd come over to her house this\nevening for dinner. Her mother had\nsuggested this. She knew that Connie didn't want her daughter near\nher. Connie wss hostess at the club\nto a party of aix ... . including\nthe handsome young doctor.\nLaurel hsd donned her prettiest j\nevening gown, and the foursome'\nmotored over to the club after din-!\nner.\nIt wasn't till the fifth dance\u2014after\nhe had danced twice with her\nmother and ones with eaoh of the\nother ladles ln his party\u2014that Bruce-\nHarvey cut In on her ... ,\n\"You danoe beautifully,\" he conceded, ln his pleasant voloe.\n\"We fit divinely,\" murmured\nLaurel,\n(TO   BE   CONTINUED)\nJohn w. Crozter, Port Perry bar-\nrlster. was remanded for a week on\n15000 ball when he appeared following his arrest on.a charge of uttering   a   forged   document.\nGerald and Wilfred\nLee Visit Parenta\nat Sooth Slocan\nBOItHBraTO-  FAIaU, B. O, DM.\ntts\u2014attSot tomt ttm. Turn- Lm haw.\nM tlwli hi\u2014., (Mr vi Otntt.\n-alio twchM at Bquaa- Wil\nfred oc Van-soever \u00abod_a. to\nChrtataow  vacation. *    .t \u2022\nStt. aad Hta. W. Oook -oho haw\nb\u00aban re-dint nam for mmi. month,\ntoft to .pond tm* winter ln Creaton.\nVera, stswxel. wbo baa bMo .pend-\nmaj ChrtitmM with hla parent, at\nErie haa returned to Oorra Unn.\nJerry Towgood haa return*! after\n.pending Chrlatmaa at th. hom. of\nbta parenta, Mr. and lira. J. Towgood at  Sandpit.\nCol. B. Oood. u apeodlsf Chriatmu wwk at Cranbrook, tha gueat\nof Mr. and Mra. \u00bb. T. M. Power.\nTransfer Company\nWins Curling; Mateh\nStaged at Cranbrook\nOB_-BBOO_. B. O., Dm. ttr-\nOouMoaM. InUnat ontartd around\ntha cballang. match af ran ing\nplagad oe Saturday belnaau tha\nout Tr\u2014uf\u00abr oorapanr and tta\nCranbrook Foundry company. Th.\nprln !\u25a0 a load at wood to ha donated by tha 1om\u00bb to tta Saltation\nArmy. The Olty Traoafer company\n\u2022merge- winner, and apo_m*4 tte\nrafrMhraant. whleh wara Mr-red\nplayata and epectatora at tba dote\nof tha game. W. B. Worden wu\n>klp for th. trawler tMm with\nH. Mclnnli, \u00bb. Pattlnaon and J.\nMilne. Por the cranbrook foundry\nt\u00abam J Reekie ww rtlp with A. A.\nMacKinnon, C. B. MacKinnon and P.\nMartin.\nrrilMllMIIMMII Ml IIMMIf 111111 \u25a0 1111111111 (IM111111 f 11MI f 11 f 11111MIII111111\nEvening Gowns!\nFOR NEW YEAR'S EVE!   AT GREAT\nREDUCTIONS.\nWelcome 1982 in the grand manner\n\u2014go places, do things, and be gay!.\nDress up! Look like a million and\nfell like a million, for a few dollars        V*'\\t__\u00bb 1\nexpenditure. ..ASr^JjfJ\nNewest Evening Gowns, Laces \u2014    1 \/Jw - \"&*\nSatins   \u2014   Crepes,   including   such\nmakes as Stapells, Madame Arnott,\nand the new Miss Trepannia.     A     (t\/l\ngreat many received last week.        ^J_ J^^^^^_\nENURE STOCK REDUCED       IT jfvL\\v\nTo 115.50 ff7 7C   MV'   \\\nJust half today  9l'tD      jk_    \\\nTo $21 4! 1(| cn\nJust half today 9U\/..JV\nTo ?30 fflK\nJust half today  ,Diu\nTo $48 \u00ab91\nJust half today  *\"**\nBUNNY JACKETS, for evening wear ~ JgQ OK\n2 only, each  \u00ae*7,\u00ab'u\nOPEN ALL DAY TODAY!\nFriday being a holiday, this Wednesday we stay open.\nAFTER CHRISTMAS\n1-2 PRICE SPECIALS!\nAll our novelties to at half, absolutely no reserve on\nthem. Also most of the Men's Christmas things such\nas Ties, Sox, Handkerchiefs, etc., all go. Half regular\nprice, SOc Silk Sox for 25^ and so on.\nTHE FINEST LOT OF LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS,\nBOXED OR SINGLES that we ever showed for Christmas Gifts, we have far too many, we will now offer\nthem to you at 1-2 price.\nBARGAINS ALL OVER THE STORE\nRamrisdee Bros.\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\nm j in: :i it iiiiii 111 Diiiiiu-ii t in ii in i ii 111111 \u25a0 it i iiiii mn i n i in i mn \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0mil iin i ii i\ni\ni\nii\nii\nii\nii\nf\nrLzz+^s^M\nRlC\u00ab\nNew School Is\nOpen Shoreacres\n8HOWEACRES, B. C, Dee. 20.\u2014\nF. H. Sheffield presided at a rate\npayers meeting at the close of the\nschool Beeston. Since the midsummer term a new school bulidtng\nhu been built on to the school\nbuilding which was erected soms\nten years ago and to take the place\nof the first lost school house whloh\nafter the first f.*ame building was\nerected, was used for the Junior\ngrades. The school house* which now\nAccommodates both senior and Junior grades is a most attractive\nlooking building facing the htgh*\nway and overlooking the Kootenay\nriver.\nIreneo Legulsamo, crack Argentine\nJockey, established what was believed to be a world woord when he\nrode seven winners out of one day's\neight raoee.\nA   NEW   YEAR'S  PARXV\nWhether the party be planned in\nadvance or be merely an Impromptu\naffair, lt. ls a good plan to Introduce a few games devoted to looking\nbackward over  th*  year. Try theee:\nNews Contest: cut from a pile of\nnewspapers not older than three\nmonths, the photographs of people\nwho have been Involved la sensational news\u2014such aa criminals, politicians, avlatos, etcetera. Pass around\npencils and papers and let everybody\nJot down as many of the names of\nthese pictured persons as they can\nrecall.\nWriting Comic' Mistakes: Again\ngive tte guest* paper and pencil,\nand ask them to write down some\ndire mistake which tbey have made\nduring the paat year, then hold up\ntheir papers. Shuffle all the papers,\nthen ask each player to select one\nand read it aloud\u2014of course not\nknowing   who   has  written  It.\nA few predictions for the Kew\nTear are  also  appropriate:\nThis ls a variation on the last\ngame described, only ln thi* stunt\nthe players write some wlah tot the\noomlng year; the papers are then\nshuffled, drawn, and read aloud.\nA pack of fortune-tell ing cards\nwill also add to this fun cf trying to\nlook Into the New Tear. Or the\nclever hostess csn, before the party,\nwrits general (happy) predictions\non small cards and hide these around\nthe room for the gxiests to hunt-\nhe or ahe who finds the cards, will\nsupposedly find tho \"journey,\" \"gift\nof money,\" \"maJTlige,\" etoetera, in\nstore during the next 13 months.\nRefreshments should be hearty,\nfor It wlU be very late before the\nguests go. Welsh Rarebit, or toasted\ncheese sandwiches, (something hot)\nIs suitable for the mam dish, accompanied by cake, coffee or cocoa\nand  sandwiches.\nTomorrow\u2014Requested Reclp?s\nI WHAT DO YOU\n\" SPEND FOR\nPRINTING?\nI\n1\ni\ni\ni\n\u25a0\ni\ni\n\u25a0\ni\ni\ni\ni\nWHE answer to nothing. For if your printing to well\n' done, the results will far exceed the cost. That is true\nin the smallest detail. Every form, letterhead or bit of\nprinted matter should perform a service for you that\nsends every dollar of its cost right back Into your pocket. \u25a0\nIt will do just that If you use this better print shop\nI\nI\nI\n\u00aelje Jfelaon latlij Jfauis   j\n3lob Dftrartmmt        \u25a0\n\"Service in Printing \"\nOnr Salesman Will Call and Assist You 2\n144        PHONE 1^ |\n(\n :~\n\t\n[-Oi\n1 J J THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. Ml min   B   II    WIMIWII  lloKMMi, Ml t:\\IBER  Ml. 11.11  ~^ \u25a0 ' ~=       \t\n|M\u201eMlllll..riM\u00bbMMMMM.MMM..M.M\u00ab,ii-i-.--.-,--...-*._-\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb*--\u00ab*-.\u00ab*,M.-.-_-\u00bb\u00ab.M..\nPACK\nTHIS IS A CHANCE TO MAKE YOUR DOLLAR DO DOUBLE DUTY-AT NO OTHER TIME CAN YOU GET WANTED MERCHANDISE AT SUCH SAVINGS, AND NEVER BEFORE HAVE SUCH QUALITY MERCHANDISE BEEN SO LOW IN PRICE. STOCKS ARE HEAVIER THAN USUAL BUT WE ANTICIPATE THAT BUYING, DUE TO THESE\nWONDERFUL SAVINGS, WILL ALSO BE HEAVIER. SO, DO NOT DELAY BUYING WHATEVER YOU NEED-NOW IMMEDIATELY \u2014 BEFORE THE CHOICE THINGS\nHAVE BEEN SNATCHED UP.   EVERY DEPARTMENT GREETS YOU WITH PHENOMENAL VALUES IN HIGH QUALITY MERCHANDISE.\nSale   Starts   Thursday  Morning\u2014December   31\nTERMS: STRICTLY CASH\nt**\nEVENING DRESSES\nIN JANUARY SALE\nThe last word in style, and the smartest materials.   Taffeta\", Satins,\nChiffons and Flat Crepes. All the new pastel shades, as Well as wnite\nand black. Sizes 14, 16, 18 and 20.\nREGULAR 121.50 DRESS FOR $16.50 EACH.\nREGULAR $25.00 DRESS FOR $18.75 EACH-\nREGULAR $35.00 DRESS FOR $26.75 EACH-       *\nREGULAR $45.00 DRESS FOR $33.50 EACH.\nWomen's Afternoon\nDresses\nSmart and becoming styles in the\nnewest materials. Canton Crepes,\nChiffon and sheer Velvets in every\nnew style and color. Nearly every\ndress a copy of the late French\nmodels, and are offered at manufacturers' prices. Sizes for misses, women and outsizes. Regular values\n$22.50 to $65.00 each. .\nSALE PRICE $18.00 T0\n$50.00 EACH.\nSports Dresses,\nReduced for\nQuick Clearance\nGolflex   Dresses   and   other   well-\nknown   makes   of   sports   dresses.\nMade of excellent quality pure wool\nmaterials. All new smart styles, and\nsizes from 16 to 40.\nRegular $22.50 to $45.00 eash.\nSALE PRICE\n$18.00 TO $35.00 EACH.\n6dd Lines of Dresses to Clear at $5*00\nOne rack of clearing lines of dresses. Fine woolens or silks. Assorted\nsizes up to 20.\n. ALL ONE PRICE, $5.00 EACH.\nWomen's Dresses\nDresses of Silk Crepe or Crepe Back Satins. Assorted styles and colors.\nONE RACK TO CLEAR AT $9.95 EACH.\nWomen's Dresses\nDresses of sports woolens, printed Silks or plain Silk Crepe in a range\nof colors and styles. Assorted sizes. Values to $25.00 each.\nJANUARY PRICE $12.95 EACH'\nJanuary Sale of Millinery\nWomen's Hats at Half Price\nA saving of $3.50 to $7.50 on these hats.\nThere is still a splendid assortment of all the\nnewest in millinery. Medium or large head\nsizes. Blacks and colors. Regular prices $7.00\nto $15.00 each.\nSALE  PRICE  $3.50 TO $7.50  EACH.\nWomen's Hats to Clear\nat $1.00 Each.\nOne full table of women's hats. Assorted styles\nand colors.\nALL ONE PRICE, $1.00 EACH.\nLadies' Silk Underwear\nCrepe de Chine\nDance Sets\nDance Sets, consisting of Pantee and\nBrassiere. Made of good quality Crepe\nde Chine. Assorted sizes.\nTO CLEAR AT $1.59 THE SET.\nHarvey Silk Underwear\nHarvey make Underwear in Bloomers, Vests, Gowns, Pajamas and Slips.\nA big range to select from.\nCLEARING AT 20% LESS.\nWomen's Gowns\nCrepe de Chine Gowns in extra quality material. All lace trimmed. As-,\nsorted sizes. Regular price $3.98 each.\nSALE PRICE 82.98 EACH.\nJANUARY SALE OF\nSILK AND DRESS*\nGOODS-VALUES\nTHAT CANNOT BE\nDUPLICATED\nHeavy Flat Crepe\nCrepe that sold originally from $1.50 to\n$1.95   the   yard.   It  comes   in   splendid\nweight. 38 inches wide and in 20 different shades.\nSALE PRICE $1.19 THE YARD.\nCanton Crepe\n$2.50 quality Canton Crepe in a range\nof colors. 38 inches wide.\nSALE  PRICE  $1,75  YARD.\nDress Velvet    *\nBlack  Chiffon  Velvet.  36   inches  wide.\nExtra quality. Regular $3.50 the yard.\nJANUARY SALE PRICE\n\u2022 $2.79 THE YARD.\nPure SUh Georgette\nHeavy Georgette in 25 different shades. 36 inches wide.\nSALE PRICE $1,10 THE YARD.\nOdd Lines of SUh at Just Half Price\nOne table of Canton Crepes, Satins and Taffetas. All wanted colors.\nCLEARING AT HALF PRICE.\nAll Wool Poplin\nPure wool French Poplin in all wanted shades. 36 inches wide. Splendid material for children's dresses.\nJANUARY  SPECIAL,  75^  THE  YARD.\nAll Wool Flannels\n54-inch Flannel in assorted colors. Splendid quality. Regular $1.65 the\nyard.\nSALE PRICE $1,19 THE YARD.\nWool Dress Goods\nA splendid assortment of noveltv Woolens, Serges, Tweeds and Trico-\ntines, CLEARING AT HALF THE MARKED PRICE.\nExtra Heavy Sheeting\nThe regular $1.00 and $1.10 quality in sheeting. 72 inches wide.\nSALE PRICE 69\u00a3 THE YARD.\nRegular lines of Sheeting selling at 45(, 651,\nISC and 851 the yard.\nCLEARING AT 20% DISCOUNT.\nPillow Cases\u2014Ready to Use\nHemstitched Pillow Cases in good quality cotton. Full sizes.\nSPECIAL--5 .OR $1.00.\nIMPORTED OR DOMESTIC  PILLOW CASES.  Regular 40c,  SOc to\n75c each. CLEARING AT 20% DISCOUNT.\nLinen Glass Cloths\nHeavy quality pure linen Glass Cloths. Full sizes,\nSPECIAL, ^ FOR $1.00.\nLinen Towels\nLarge size pure linen Towels. Splendid quality.\nSPECIAL, $1,00 THE PAIR.\nPure SUh Hose\nKayser, Orient, Penman's and Holeproof Hose\nin service or Chiffon weight. Assorted colors\nand sizes.\nALL ONE PRICE, $1.00 THE PAIR.\nSuperstth Hose\nService weight Hose in excellent quality. All\nsizes  and  all  wanted  colors.  Regular  $1.95\nvalues.\nSALE PRICE $1,50 THE PAIR.\nAll regular lines of SUh Hose In the first week\nof the Sale at 20% discount.\nLadles* and Children's Wool Hose, In every\nwanted color and size.\nCLEARING AT 20% LESS THAN REGULAR.\nCwMea&her'sSD\n607 Baker St.        Phone 200\nNO GOODS ON APPROVAL\nJANUARY SALE OF COATS\n\u2014PRICES SLASHED\nSmart styles, fashionable pebbly fabrics, luxurious fur trimmings and\nrxpert tailoring are the outstanding features of these fine coats.  A\ncomplete range of sizes up to 44. Prices slashed to the bone.\nREGULAR $75.00 COATS FOR $55,00 EACH.\nREGULAR $97.50 COATS FOR $70.00 EACH.\nREGULAR $35.00 COATS FOR $25.00 EACH-\nREGULAR $50.00 COATS FOR $36.95 EACH.\nREGULAR $65.00 COATS FOR $45.00 EACH-\nFifty Women's Coots to\nClear at $15.00 Each\nOne rack of women's coats. Made of fine\nwool   materials   and   with   fur   trimming.\nAlso tailored coats with self collars. Sizes\n16 to 38.\nODD LINES TO CLEAR AT\nONE PRICE, $15.-00 EACH.\nWomen's Sports Coats\u2014\n20% Less\nLeather coats or coats o\u00a3 heavy weight\nwoolens in a range of colors. Sizes 14 to 38.\nREGULAR $ 8.75 COATS FOR $ 7.OO\nREGULAR $12.95 COATS FOR $10.00\nREGULAR $15.00 COATS FOR 812.00\nREGULAR $25.00 COATS FOR $20.00\nWomen's Separate Shirts\nSmart tailored skirts in all the newer\nstyles. Soft pure wool materials in medium\nM light weight. All wanted colors. Sizes\n14 to 20. Regular $4.50 to $7.75 each.\nON SALE AT $3,50 TO $6.00 EACH'\n20% Saving on Women's\nSweaters\nPure wool sweaters in cardigan or pull-on\nstyles.   Imported  or  domestic  makes.   Ail\nsizes. Regular prices $4.50 to $8.50 each.\nSALE PRICE $3.60 TO $6.80 EACH.\nRayon Gowns\nSpecial clearance of women's Gowns. .Made\nrf good quality Rayon. Assorted styles and\ncolors. Regular values to  $2.25  each.\nSALE TRICE $1.69 EACH-\nWomen's Stlh Underwear\nBobettes, Bloomers, Slips, Teddies and Pan-\ntoes, All wanted colors. Values to $2.25.\nSPECIALLY  GROUPED  TO  CLEAR\nAT 950 EACH.\nTurhlsh Towels\nAll lines of white or colored Turkish Towels. Regular price $1.00 to\n$3.50 the pair. CLEARING AT 20% DISCOUNT.\nSave Money on Umbrellas\nGloria Silk or all Silk Umbrellas in black or colored. All new style\nhandles. Regular $3.5\", $4.50 to $6.75 each.\nCLEARING AT 20%  LESS.\nFancy Linens\nDinner Cloths, Bridge Sets, Tea Sets, Napkins, Pillow Slips and Towels. Chinese hand embroidery, Spanish or Italian cut work and Madeira\nhand embroidery. ALL CLEARING AT 20% DISCOUNT.\nSUh Redspreads\nAssorted colors and in all sizes. These sold regularly at $4.95, $5.75,\n$6.75 to $10.50 each.\nSALE PRICE 25% LESS THAN REGULAR.\n _ ,     -\nmoe nx\nJRp _frhmt flatly lima\nPublistjed svary morning txcept Sunday bj flaws Publishing Company.  Limited.   Nelson,  SS  0.\nMember  ol  Canadian Press  leased  wtn  newt service.\nArUertlslng rate cards and A B. c stetemente o( Mreulatlon\nmailed on request, or ma; be seen at tbe offloe of sn; edwtliini\nagency reeogn-ed  by tbe Canadian  Dall;  Newspapers' Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy mall (oountry). per montb .\ntm year\nBy mall  (city), per year \t\nOutside Canada, per montb\nTm year\nDallTered, per week\nFey -fear \t\nPayable ln advance.\nMember Audit Bureau of circulation.\n_\u2022    .90\n- e.oo\n- 11.00\n.- sit\n_   SM\n_   at\n- 13.00\nWEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1931\nReducing Size of Governments\nIt ia aot only in British Columbia that the public is\ntaking an interest in the reduction of numbers of\nmembers of spending bodies, such as the legislature.\nHore it is has been proposed that the number of\nlegislators should be reduced from 48 to 24 or 30. It is\nfelt that such a reduction would bring about direct\neconomy in cost of government and many indirect\neconomies through facilitating the more thorough consideration of legislation. Everyone with experience\nknows that the larger a committee, for example, the\nmore difficult it ig to obtain prompt and satisfactory\nconclusion of business.\nSpending bodies throughout Canada are numerous.\nBoards of education, library boards, advisory councils,\ncommissions, city councils, legislatures and the Dominion parliament all do their bit within their own sphere.\nThe commissions are frequently highly paid. The\nlegislators, with the exception of cabinet ministers, do\nnot do so well, but roll up a substantial total. Even\nin bodies where the members are not paid the membership is often too large, and their cumbersome proceedings inducive to expense.\nIt would be perhaps impracticable to reduce the\nnumber of the organizations which are engaged in\nlooking after various aspects of public affairs. Though\nthe movement to prune the membership in such l>odies\nhas not advanced very far, there has beecn a beginning. St, Thomas, Ontario, has this year reduced its\ncouncil from 11 to seven members. In Kingston there\nis a movement on foot to cut the council from 21\nmembers to 14.\nIn Manitoba the attorney-general is out with a proposal to reduce the membership of the legislature from\n55 members to 35.\nGondHPs War Threat\nMahatma Gandhi is developing rapidly into a fiery\nrevolutionist.\nIt is a long step from passive resistance, from extreme pacifism and a pose of patient martyrdom to\nMonday- declaration that he would not hesitate to\nsacrifice a million lives \"to purchase the liberty of\nIndia.\"\nGandhi has been out from the commencement of his\ncampaign to secure complete independence for India,\nalthough he has masked his desires under more moderate claim.'.\nOn the other hand, while Gandhi is now talking\nwan-and civil war at that\u2014the Moslem league has\nrelinquished its demands for complete independence\nand is asking only for dominion status. The Moslems\nhave thus, at least insofar as this branch of the Moslem political group is concerned, brought themselves\ninto line with thc promise of Premier Ramsay MacDonald, backed by a vote of the house of commons,\nthat India should be granted dominion status as soon\nas practicable. Mr. MacDonald has set no definite\ntime for the conclusion of this development. He cannot\ndo so, as quite apart from the difficult questions of\nmilitary and financial control, India itself might delay the achievement of a degree of autonomy by attempting to achieve it by military force.\nNo better evidence of the dangers of a too rapid\ninauguration of Indian autonomy could be found than\nin recent incidents in the northwest and the sanguinary threats of Gandhi, since he returned to India and\nthrew his mask of peaceful propagandist.\nTov5-a Wor><f Industry\nDuring the Christmas season thousands of children\nin Kootenay have been gladdened by gifts of toys,\nwhich brings up the question as the countries in\nwhicli these toys are manufactured.\nThe National Revenue Review -points out. that the\ntoys are not all made at home, although many are, and\nCanada even exported to other countries, chiefly to the\nUnited States, New Zealand nnd Newfoundland, toys\nand other fancy goods valued at $28,312 during the\nlast fiscal year.\n.Many of the toys enjoyed by children of this country arc purchased abroad. During the fiscal year ended March 31, 1931, Canada imported toys, including\ndolls, to thc value of .$1,974,131. Of this total those\nimported from the United States were valued at $830,-\n634; from Germany $637,179; from the United Kingdom $241,415; from Japan $192,697; from France $28,-\n544; from Czechoslovakia $1-7,374.\nThe origin of toys is lost in the mists of antiquity.\nProbably the children of Adam and Eve improvised\nthe first dolls, clothing them in thc simple fashion of\nthe day. One of the oldest actual relics of childhood\ndays, however, is a tiny clay horse made by a potter\nin Ur of the Chaldees to delight the heart of some\nsmall Methuselah. Many toy relics have been preserved\nfrom ancient Egypt consisting chiefly of dolls made\nof wood, stone, earthenware and metal. In the British\nmuseum is a wooden Egyptian doll with mud beads\nrepresenting hair, also a number of other Egyptian\ntoys including a wooden calf, a porcelain elephant,\nand leather and papyrus balls stuffed with hair or\nstraw.\nIn a museum at Berlin there is a small limestone\nlion fashioned much like a toy of today, but which was\nthe property of a child of Persia about 1100 B.C. Greek\n\u2022nd Roman children played with go-carts, building\nblocks, balls, tops, rattles, dolls and many kinds of\ngames.\nOne of the most popular toys with the children of\nthe middle ages, however, was the tin soldier, and next\nlo popular esteem came the puppets. These puppets\noriginated with the Greeks, and were taken to France\nin the reign of Charles IX by an Italian named Marion. In the sixteenth century the puppets blossomed\nout into the famous Punch and Judy shows, and today they ure represented by the beautiful marionettes.\n\\\nfS-ffirmr'iiw'iiiiiiiiinw^;\n\"Between You\nand Me\"\nBy \"J.&C-\n\u25a0Tnrrri.nii i un, i tn.\nBill Hlpperson\u2014Tou vant a pound\nof ochre? Is lt red ochre for painting bricks?\nflmaU boy\u2014|fo, Ita tappy ochre wot\nMaw  melts   put-din\"   with.\n* *    \u2022\nHere's a story written by LSnham\nBvans, IS yeara of ace, who works on\nthe UMesa Reporter, Teus. Merlen\nPew of Editor and Publisher pre-\ndiets a great Journalistic future\nfor the lad. The boy's gtory as follows appears on the front page of\nthe  paper:\n(By   the   Printer's   Devil\nThe printer's devil is started with\nthe hardest, hottest and dirtiest\nwork first. After that, lt U not so\nhsrd The presses are lniTesting to\nwatch, but the heck to oil snd keep\nclean. When I stsrted In. I was told\nto sweeps the shop, it is one of the\nwcrst Jobs of sll, as the shop ls\nswept once each week and cleaned\nfrom back to front once a year.\nWhen it Is cleaned nearly everything\nthst has been lost during the past\nyear  la found.\nThe working hours of the day are\nstopped st 10, two and tour to refuel\nwith watermelon, canteloupe, soda\npop, etc.\nI would not like t_ be the reporter\nfor this paper, because of the big\nyarns he ls told.\nThis office Is very high-toned. It\nhas paper towels. Very few printing\noffices  have  them  I  am  tola.\n8am Smith, the linotype operator,\nand I sympathize wit. each other\nbecause we do most of the physical\nlabor around tli-. shop, but he even\ngiven  me  orders   at   times.\nI wouldn't want to be the manager for this paper, because he gets\nthe blame for everything that happens.\nI wouldn't want to he the society\neditor because some people get sore\nlf you don't put their articles in\nthe paper and some get sore 1*; you\ndo. And It's hard to please everybody.\nAfter all, the main- part about\ntbls printing business that I like ls\nthe  noon  hour.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAnd I notloed\u2014-Sergeant .Alex.\nStewart meeting members of the\nKlmberley hockey team and calling\nArt Mackie a \"little devil\"\u2014Well,\nArt msy not be Just that, but he Is\nas persistent as said notoriety when\non the ice\u2014And I noticed Uoyd\nCrowe, father of Klmberley hocksy,\ngetting redder and redder as the\nphone line was busy between Nelson\nand Klmberley\u2014He just wanted to\nget the news of victory through In\nthe worst way\u2014And at that he told\nKay Jones, on the other end, to\nphone so-and-*o snd so-and-so\u2014\nIn fact he told 'em to tell the whole\ntown\u2014Ves. both of the-m\u2014 I mean\nboth towns\u2014And I became acquainted with Andy Orr\u2014Andy Is the etar\nfull-back on the Klmberley team-\nHe's the Amos and Andy both\u2014And\nis he Scotch?\u2014Well he's\" so Scotch\nhe counted the check over twloe at\na local restaurants\u2014And Andy oould-\nnot figure out Just why he could\nnot go to Masonic lodge Monday\nnight\u2014It waa John's night and he\nsayg he has been a member of that\nAmbulance asaoclation for a long\ntime\u2014But Andy was \"selven up\nand twa to go\"\u2014And he juat \"wudna\nalt doon\"\u2014At the hockey game I\nheard Aid. J. B. Oray telling a young\nlad to sit down so he could see sll\nof the gsme\u2014Well, that's right\u2014All\npatrons should get 60 cent* worth-\nThen Norman McQuade, big husky\nwlngman for Klmberley, was wondering where his assists were going\u2014He\nsaid they were not going ln tho\npaper\u2014Well, we scribes can't go out\nand get assists for these hockey\nplayers\u2014We Just write the dope and\nget\u2014Well, you guess\u2014Antl lt 1-\n<unny who theae Klmberley people\nstick together\u2014Jack Talbot meets\nthe trains and keeps his eyes on\nthe visiting boya all the time\u2014Kim-\nb?rley Is one place thc former residents -are proud to boost\u2014It must\nbe the altitude\u2014And I was Interested tn seeing \"Dune\" Chisholm,\nmanager of the Klmberley boys\u2014\nShaking hands with Oeorge Orlf-\nflths\u2014\"Dune\" and G-ecrge used to\nwiild wicked etlcks fqr Rossland in\nthe old days when hockey was hockey and a man used his stick to\nprotect himself--Then I cot a kick\nout of a Christmas card Oeorge\nHorstead received from Thomas Wilkinson who uee<l to ranch up th**\nWest, Arm\u2014It was Just the \u00bb-t\u201eme old\ngreeting and a 1] that\u2014And A. J.\nDill remarked that there appears to\nbe more American money floating\nsbout lately\u2014Well, that's enough\nchatter   f6r   today.\nw TBE KEUKUI DAILT\nNELSON, B. C\u2014WEDNESDAY MOENTNG, DECEMBER Mt IMt\"\nEly Culbenson of Chicago, the well\nknown auction expert, elates thrjt\n20.000.000 otherwise sane Americans\nare a-dinted to bridge. We have personally estimated that when they\nar& all playing at thc same time.\n9,894.733 will ask at Intervals ot\nabout 10 seconds. \"Whit did you\n*iy   were   trumps?\"\nAfter  receiving  a  .nowhnll   in   the\nneck   one  suddenly   realizes   that   in\nwinter sport there ls never any dispute ov:r the size of a snowball.\nI   e   f\nOur well-known Scotch friend,\n: Sandy, wns operating a gentB' furnishing store, the entrance of which\n\u2022.vis located exactly between two\nJew stores, run by our equal'y well-\nknown friends, Iky and Mo.vs. Busi-\nne s being terrible. Iky put up a\nhuge sign across his premiers, <id-\nvlslng all and sundry, thur. \"Big\nsale now on, huge baitslAS, ridiculously low prices.\" Moses, not to be\noutdone, retaliate with \"Bust, everything given away.\"' Snndy. pondering\na moment over the activities of his\nJewts. friends, ordered a sign to be\nplaced above his door reading:\n\"Main  entrance,   w_lk   \\u.\"\nBetwe? n you a nd m \"\u2014The \" bra\nbricht, mem ilcht nicht\" will toza\nbe  here.\n\"Stop that noise!  You know I'm noivous!\"\nAuction and\nContract Rrldge\nBj tlw WocM'i Lmilat  xotttotU;\nMILTON C. WO\u00bbI\nA SMALL SLAM PASSED\nOUT\nThat Body of Yours\nUy   JAMES   It.   BARTON\nTHE MOUTHS OF\nCHILDREN\nOne of the mistakes made by\nphysicians is that of net interesting\nthemselves In the troth and mouth\nof   children.\nAs far as adults are concern* cl\ndentlst3 sometimes \"feel that the\nphyscian blames too many ailments\non  tr\u00abth.\nKow it often happens that dentists do n#, see children until the\nfirst teeth are almoet gone and the\npermanent set are appearing.\nDr. R. H. McKeag, London, calls\nattention to the fact that mouth\nbreathing, what.ver Us cause, can\noften be noted and steps taken to\ncure It by tbe physician, but this\nmust be done at an early age. Similarly thumb sucking, lip biting,\nand tongue biting can be Investigated by the physician and the parents\nwarned of the probable consequence.'!,\nMilk snd cod liver oil help to produce good strong teeth containing\nplenty c< m.neral salts.\nHard food develops the Jaw and\nleaves room for the entire 32 teeth\nof  the  permanent set.\nShould decay appesr whether ln\nthe first or deciduous teeth or in\nthe permanent teeth, the sooner the\nchild ls brought to the dentist the\nbetter.\nDr. McKeag believes that physicians should educate the public,\nabout the need of caring for the\nteeth from the earliest childhood,\nenp-az.ng particularly tha importance of taking good care of the\nfirst or milk eet of teeth.\nTimely words of advice from the\nphy.cian could save his patients\nfrom many deformities of the tasth\nwhich prevent proper chewing of the\nfood, ani spoil the expression of\nthe face.\nI have spoken more than once of\nthe importance of caring for the\nflrat set of teeth. There Is not only\nthe nourishment t_at is lost to\nthe child by not chewing the food,\npa\/l.cularly the starchy food, of\ntha gas arising In the large intestine\ndue to the same cause, and of the\ndistress and pain from \"eore\" teeth\nwhich  depresses the nervous system.\nCaring for the first 20 t-eth so\nthat they last as long as possible\ngives the jaws a chance to grow\nproperly and make sufficient room\nfor  the  permanent  set of  __   teeth.\nIt ls a great thing for tbe youngster from the health and appearance standpoint to have room for\nall the teeth to come Jn, in regular\nfashion.\nLargest Zinc Nine Is In\nRrltish Columbia\nAUNT HET\n\"Maybe I'm too modest, but lt\nmokes m? mad to pass a store\nwindow thnt shows ever't.ilnj a\nwoman wears when I'm welkin'\nwith a man.\"\nThe Sullivan mine tn British Co-5\nlumbla, is the largest producer of\nsilver in Canada and the largest\nsingle producer of lead and zinc in\nthe world, The mining engineer\nglibly etntes that Sullivan ore is a\nmixture of galena, lnannatite (zinc\nblended with iron, pyrlt* andpyrrho-\ntite. The layman, however, is more\nInformed when he learns that from\nthis ore are produced lead, zinc, silver, gold, copper, antimony, cadmium and bismuth. The ore contains\nIron and small quantities of tin\nwhich  are not at present  recovered.\nMost silver-lend eves carry more\nor less zinc. Originally the Sullivan\nores were smelted for silver and\nlead only, writes Philip H. Sheffield\nin the Canadian Geographic Journal.\nAs tlie presence of zinc was detrimental to high recoveries in blast\nTurnaccs, ores contain lng _4nc were\nheavily penalized. Tlie high proportion of zinc in Sullivan ore was,\ntherefore, a liability rather than an\nasset.\nONCE' rON*1I)ERF.D   HOPELESS\nThe following extracts, taken ffom\nthe report of a commission of experts appointed by tho government\nof British Columbia in 1B08, show\nthe hopelesasncw of the situation at\nthat time; \"The mine (Sullivan) Is\nctwenllally a load mine; although It\nhas nv>re developed sine than any\nother mine In British Columbia, but\nthe character of the ore la such\nthat, extraction is almost hopeless.\nZinc smelting cannot be carried ou\nwith ooel at present prices. Electric\nsmelting will never displace ordinary fire smelting, If It is necessary\nto generate power from coal. It is\nunlikely that electric smelting of\njzlnc ores can ever profitably be\nj carried on In the 7,li,c-produc!ng\n| areas of the east aud west Kootenays.\"\n! Nevertheless, in the face of these\ndiscouraging report*, as soon a., the\ncompany had acquired the mine, Its\nresearch department attacked the\nI problem of recovering tb\u00ab zinc tn\n]the Sullivan ores, Samples cf the\nore were sent for study and treatment to smelters in foreign lands.\n;but no <uicc-*ss was achieved. Process\n, after process wus tried, experiment\nfollowed experiment, nnd one test\nmill after another was built and discarded. By 1912 some features of\nthe problem hud been solved. It\nwaa discovered, for example, that\nzinc could be plated on aluminum\nsheet* by electrolysis, but at the\nlow price tben prevailing thc metal\ncould not be produced at a profit.\nWhen the World war began, Britain and her allies needed metals\nurgently, and, at the suggestion of\nthe Munitions board, the company\nundertook to produce zinc on a\ntarge sc.ile. An eT-fctrolytle pine refinery wna built in 1815 and began\nto operate early m the following\nyear. By selective mining and careful sorting, ore high in zinc content was secured and the company\nwns able to make regular shipments\nof the metal, although the recovery\nof both lead and zinc was still\ncomparatively low.\nOil.   FLOTATION   PKOfEf-S\nA WCCBM\nThe real solution of tbe problem\nof how to aepaj\u00abt\u00ab the zinc and\nlead in the Sullivan ore wsa found\nto Ue la selective oil flotation methods. Which were developed In the\nTadacaC labori-ories tn 1930. The\nrirst flotation plant started operation\nin March, apd, after a short period\nof discouraging results, began to\nfunction more effectively than gravity concentration, magnetic concentration or any of the other methods\nprevioutly employed. The 600-tr.n\nmagnetic plant wns then remodelled\nto permit the extension of flotation\noperations.    For a few months only\na mixed load and zinc concentrate\nwas produoed, but during that time\nthe company's chemists made great\nprogress in determining what chemical reagents shoiild be mixed with\nthe ore for the most effective flotation results. In the autumn of\n1820 thc first lead concentrate to\nbe produced from Sullivan ore by\ndifferential flotation was turned out.\nThat culmination of years of research work well deserves to go\ndown in the annals of the company\nsnd in the history of Canadian metallurgy as a red-letter event.\nFrom that time on the test mill\nsaw many changes, one difficulty\nafter another being conquered, until in August', 1923, tho present process was perfected. As a result, the\nproduction of lead. Bllver and zinc\nincreased enromously. and the Sulli-\nvan mine, which was so long the\ndespair of metallurgists, camo into\nits own.\nOre concentration by oil flotation\nis one of the most marvelous developments In the whole field of modern metallurgy. In the ordinary\nflotation process, the valuable sulphides arc separated from the worthless gangue by causing them to\nfloat ou the surface of pulp consist-\nlug of finely pulverised ore, water\nand oil. The mixture is agitated so\nthat the sulphide particles are\ncoated with oil and air bubbles\nbecome attached ta tbem. with the\nresult that tbe heavy particles float\ntn a froth on the surface while the\nlight paritcle* of waste rock settle\nto the bottom. As hn* been apUy\nesid. this is \"concentration upside\ndown.\"'\nMore marvellous still are the\nmethods of differential or srlectlve\nflotation which floats the mineral\nconstituents one at a time. After\nthousands of experiments, the research starf of the Consolidated discovered that the addition of certain\nchemical- in small quantity to the\npulp, under carefully controlled con-\nimons. made possible the moltation\nof a high-grade lead concentrate\npractically free from zinc, then of a\nhigh grade trine concentrate, while\nthe iron sulphides were made to settle with the non-metallic constituents.\nThe contribution made by the\ncompany's technical staff in the\ndevelopment or preferential flotation\nroasting technique, improvement in\nblast furnace practice, and the electrolytic refining of zinc, has been\none of the most outstanding on\nrecord.\nIn appreciation of this contribution to metallurgical knowledge the\nAmerican Institute cf Mtnnig and\nMetallurgical Engineers unanimously\ndecided to bestow upon 8. O Blaylock, the vice-president and general,\nmanager of the Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Company of Canada\nthe Dougia* medal for 1938 The\nawarding of this medal to Mr. Blaylock wss not merely an acknowledgment of the important research work\ncarried out in the Tadanac plant\nbut alao a recognition of his Own\ndominating part ia thst smazlng\ndevelopment. Mr. BUtfock t\u00bb the\nfirst Canadian to receive this award\nwhich ls Iteelf named in honor of\nthe greot Canadian scientist, James\nDouglaa\nTh. eijeve band wu re.tn..y .wld\nIn a Duplicate game of Oontract\nplayed at University Heights, New\nTork City. It produoed all sorts of\nbidding. Tboee Souths who considered two and a half honor tricks\nessential for an original bid. passed;\nand ln that case North, if playing\nthe same system and requiring three\nhonor-trlcka for a bid after two\npasses, also passed, and the band\nwas psssed out. This occurred at\nabout a quarter of tbe tables.\nAt some of the other tables South\nbelieved in bidding originally with\ntwo high-card tricks or was influenced ln favor of a Md ln this case\nbecause the hand with Diamonds the\ntrump contained more than six probable tricks.\nWhen South etarted with one Diamond, West made a following or defensive bid of one Heart; and North\nthen had a choice betwen one No\nTrump and two Diamonds. In either\nevent the South hand, not fitted for\nNo Trump, bid four Diamonds and\nNorth Five.\nAt the tables where South and\nWest passed and North did not use\nhonor-trie' - in reckoning his hand\nfor a No Trump but employed tbe\ndependable 4-3-2-1 No Trump count.\nNorth bid one No Trump as he had\na count, of 14. Juat enough for a\nthird-hand Np Trump. South Jump-\nshifted to three Diamonds. North\ncalled three No Trumps, and South\nfive Diamonds.\nOnly one South was bold enough\nto venture a \u00bbmall slam bid after\nNorth bad shown No Trump strength,\nsnd nla daring was rewarded with a\ntop score.\nAt Auction bridge South would\nobtain a Diamond contract and\nprobably would not be obliged to Wd\nmore than three.\nIn the play the Ace of Hegrts was\nled, followed by a second Heart.\nNorth won and most of the Declarers\nwho had bid eleven tricks made not\nonly game but an extra trick. At\ntwo or three tables the extra trie!'.\nwas missed by the Declarer's leading\ntwo rounds of trumps to exhaust the\nadversaries, and then finding that\nthe dummy had only one trump\nleft and that two were needed to\nruff   cloted   hand's   Spades,\nTHE CORRECT PLAY\nThe correct way to play for the\ntwelve trleka was to lead one round\nof trumps, win ln closed hand, snd\nthen two rounds of Spades. The\nsecond Spade tricks being won in\nclosed hand, a third Spade would\nbe led for dummy to ruff, and it\nmattered not whether West Interposed a trump or not. Dummy would\nsecure two ruffs of Spades and\nclosed hand would subsequently draw\nthe advene trump and consequently\nthe only trick lost would be the Ace\nof Hearts. So the hand produced a\nsmall slam at Diamonds and, lt will\nbe noted an easy game at No Trump,\nhardly an advisable pass-out.\nBeck (despondently)\u2014I said some-\nthing my wife didn't like and she\nhasn't spoken to me fcr two days.\nPeek (eagerly)\u2014Cwt you remember what you  said?\nS'-e\u2014\"i .Bursa you played around\nwith all th> French girls while you\nwere In Paris.\"\nHe\u2014\"No, not sjl of then, f was\nonlv there for two weeks.\"\u2014 plgester.\nTen Tears Ago\n((tea The Dall; News ot Daoamk-ar\nSO, mi)\nJ. 8. Garter an return-Mi from\nSpokan*. wssart _\u2022 spent Chrlstmu\nwltb his dsufhter, son-in-law and\ngrand-child.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. w. B   Pool and C.\nA. Pool, their son, lltt yesterday\nmorning for California, where User\nwlll spend four monttja.\nNorma- R. Dunn, Kelson's crack\nsehool athlete, and * popular mem\nber .at to* younger eat, leeree mis\nmorning for oorrallia. On, to enter\non a four-year course at the school\nof ccrnmeree tbere.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nInspection of tbe fire daenfe In\ntbe light yesterday, revealed tbat the\ndestruction wrought by tbe Annable\nblock fire would be near \u00bblo,ooo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTte flrat game ln the Weat Kootenay Hockey league was played on\nRoaaland' loe Wednesday evening\nwhen Trail city puck ahaaera defeated the Rossland team 9-6.\nThe Accepted Wine for\nNEW YEAR^\nDINNERS \u2022 PARTIES \u2022 PUNCHES\nTHE nectar of full ripe native\nloganberries . , . crushed In the\nwine presses of the Growers' Wine\nCompany and aged in the wood\nfor three years. Logans and Via\n\u25a0Supreme are piquant Loganberry\nWines possessing an Irresistible flavor\nunsurpassed es dinner wines.\nAt Government Liquor Stores\nGROWERS WINE COMPANY LTB.\nL IA\n9 fjtstgmnm   \u00abn<f   Hn I\nSupr.nxtt    mak.    an 1\n.tr.U.t\\t     twa.\npunch, ar 'at tin tor-\nhit sUmaxVrtt*. ttc*\nLOCANA\nVIN SUPREME\nJjMJ(t>tOrtlt\u00bb        \/l\/\"l a\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nTwenty-Five\nYeai* Ago\n(From  The Dally  News of December\n30,   MOO)\nThe following delegates were ches-'\nen at a no-ninating oonv.ntlon of\nthe Nelson Conservatives here yesterday; Dr. W. O. Rose, J. A. Irving,\nB. S. Lennie. McCandlish, Kirkpat-\nrlck, H. H. Pitts, P. A. Starkey, W.\nft. McLean. D. M. McDonald, Q, F\nMotion, A- Uumnt., j. Thompson,\nV7. A- McDonald, J. E. Annable,\nB.  C.  Wragge and   J.  A.  Gibson.\nBorn on Deozmber 29 to Mr. anJ\nMrs.   John   Byers,   a   daughter. I\n* \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. , Oarland and children of\nKaalo are spending the holidays\nwith Hrs. Jennie Harris of Vernon\nstreet.\nBorn on December 27 to Mr. wi_\nMrs. A, T. Noxon, a son.\nDr. T. O. Olbson has consented to\nstand for school trustee for th*\nvacancy created by the retirement\nof  Dr.  Hall, |\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 L\nP. H. Sheppard, wife and child, of\nOerrard, leave here this morning fcr J\nLiverpool. They will sail from St.\nJohn on the Lake Manitoba on\nJanuary  5.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From The Pally News of December\n30, 1911)\nThe bylaw to authorize the borrowing of $18,000 by the city *or a\ngrant toward the new $70,000 hoepltal building, yesterday drew the\nlargest vote ever cast on a morny\nbylaw In Nelson wd passed almost\nunanimously.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2666\nW. A. Anstle Is making prepua-\nMons in the city for thc meeting of\nthe members of the Mountain Lumber  Manufacturers\"  association.\nPlan* aro under wsy tn Niausp\nfor the incorporation of the city. At\n. meeting called to discuss the proposition. E. R. Vipond wns elected to\nthe ebsir and ft. h. Balrd acted as\nsecretary.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nTurkeys retailed at 32 cents in\nOreenwoo;! during Christmas season.\nWork on th; goverqmemt bridge\nserosa Wllsou creek at Itcsebery hss\ncommenced.\nJ. D. Slbajd, ex-gold commissioner\nof Itevelst^ke baa left on _. vacation  to  Vancouver.\nJ. H D. Benson, the new msnager\nof the imperial bank, his arrive\nln the city from Oolden and ls s\nguest at the Hume.\nThe date upon which the coming\nsession of the Saskatchewan legislature will open w-.li b: announced by\nthe government 8;>me Ume esrly thl*\nweek. sceordlng to Premier J. T, M\nAnderson.\nWHEN YOUR\nDOLLARS GO SHOPPING\nARE THEY WELL-INFORMED?\nWell-informed dollars buy more!\nThat's why the Nelson Daily\nNews is just as important for its\nadvertising columns as for its\nnews columns. By studying the\nmerchandise described and pictured in the Nelson Daily News,\nand by planning you. purchases\naccordingly, you can make your\nshopping much easier, pleasanter,\nAND more economical. Don't fail\nto take advantage of this opportunity for thrift.\nREAD THE ADS IN THE\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nSEE OUR\nPRE-STOCK\nTAKING\nBargain\nCounters\nat\nPRICES YOU CANNOT DUPLICATE\nThe Nelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail   \"Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON, B.C.\n r\nW^W&SaAWM'-l\n\u25a0TBI NIMON DAILT NtWS, KELSON. B. C\u2014WEDNESDAT MOIM.SO. DECIMBCB St. 1W\nLilllli-IUiTrta\nand Blackhawks Play 3-3 Tie\nin Thrilling N. H. L. Game at Boston\nBOSTON, Oeo. 29\u2014Ills Boston\nBruins and Chicago Blackhawks,\ntied for second plsoe ln the American dlvlaion of the National Bockey\nleague, waged s thrilling 3-3 deadlock tonight ln a slambang overtime contest.\nThe Bruins put on s great opening rally and soorsd twice in the\nopener, -from the sticks of Cooney\nWeUsnd and Tip Foster. Tbe Hawks,\nhowever .opened up wltb all of their\nguns In the seoond and pulled up\neven, Johnny Oottsellg and Tommy\nCook slamming shots through Ooalle\nThompson.\nPerk Oalbralth, spare Bruin winger,\nput his club back Into the lead by\nscoring hts first tally of the season\nin the third session but the Ross-\nmen were only able to hold it for\nabout six minutes. A four-man\nrush enabled Jerry Lowery to register the tying counter on a double\nassist from Louie Holmes and Paul\nThompson.\nUnlup:\nBoaton: Thompson; Shore, Hltchman; Barry; Oliver, Touhey. Subs:\nWelland, Clapper, Oalbralth, Chapman,  Cook,   Owen,  Foater.\nChicago; Oarlner; Oraham, Boucher; Cook; March, Adams. Subs:\nThompson, Holmes, Lowery, Ripley,\nGpf-Mlg, Abel, Wentworth, Couture.\nF | rees: Hewltson and Shaver.\nM\\.,l. RY\nFirst period: (l) Boston. Welland.\n(Clapper) 5-32; (3) Boston, Foster\n(Barry*   13.35.\nPenaltlee: Adams, Clapper, Shore,\nBoucher.\n6-oond period: (3) Chicago, Oottsellg, 10:54; (4) Chicago, Cook,\n(Oraham*   1:63.\nPenalties:   Abel,   Owen.\nThird period: (5)\u2014Boston, Oalbralth, (Clapper) 0:34; (6) Chicago,\nLowery. (Holmes and Thompson)\n6:SA.\nPenalties: Poster, Wentworth.\nOvertime   period:   No   score.\nPenalties:  March   (3), Barry,\nUmp Raises His\nOwn Baseball Nin\nAMERICANS MAKE DEAL\nWITH FALCONS'\nNEW TORK, Dec. 2\u00bb\u2014New Tork\nAmericans of the National Hocksy\nlesgue todsy announoed the consummation of a deal ln which Tommy Flimore and Bert Mclnenly cf\nDetroit Faloons will Join t_e Amerl-\njcana In a trade for Happy Emms\nand Frank Carson.\n1 Flimore and Mclnenly, both wing-\n1 men, will be sent to the New Haveu\nJ Eagles, farm team of the Americans\nla the Canadian Amerloan leagu*'. to\nreplaoe Brums and Carson, wbo now\nare with ths New Haven club. Thc\nDetroit playera will report to Manager Gerard of the A-nerlcans tomorrow while Bmme snd Carson ars\nexpected to be In their new uniform, in time to play Friday ntght. |\nST. DENIS HEADS\nHOCKEY LEAGUE;\nSUCCEEDS GORDON\nB.   C.    WAGERS    THREE\nMILLIONS ON  RACE\nTRACKS IN YEAR\nVICTORIA, Dec. 30\u2014British Columbians wagered 13,496,513 on race\ntracka during 1031, according to official figures released today. Thts U\na relatively small drop from the\n53,678,308 wagered In 1030, but\nsubstantially less than the $4,441,-\n155 which went through the p'sri-\nmutuei machines In 1020.\n(DTollums\nScots ((J husky\nNO CHOKING WITH\nTHE  ROPES\nBALTIMORE.    Dec.    30.    (AP)    -\nDick  Davlsoourt,  heavyweight wrestler from California, was disqualified\ni here tonight In a bout with Matron\nThis advertisement is not pumisn    Kirllenko for choking  his opponent\ned or displayed by the Liquor Con- with   the   ropes.   Kirllenko  wss  de\ntrot Board of by the government ot l clared   the   winner   after   the   bout\nBritish   Columbls. had been ln progress 35 mlnutea.\nNeff Is Secretary-Treasurer:\nReferee Question\nDiscussed\nDini* St. Denis of Ne!s_n was on\nMonday night elected tj the presidency of the West Kootenay Hockey\nleague succeeding J. M. Oordon, who\nresigned on account of pressure of\nbusiness. W. E. N:ff was elected as\nsecretary-treasurer after Trail's proposal, J. H. Long of Nelson hsd refused  to take over the  work.\nDelegates present wers Lloyd\nCrowe and \"Dune\" Chisholm, Kimberley, Alex Ewlng aud W. A. Mai-\nDonald, Trail, and C D. Blackwood\nand   Herbert  Pitts,  Nelson.\nA lengthy discussion occurred concerning referres. In thc mala all\ndelegates were satisfied with the\nofficials at present handling the\ngames but delegates wished lt un-\nd:rstocd that teams in the league\nmust adhere to the appointments\nmade by  the league president.\nLeague expenses snd other matters  wer.   also  discussed.\nEDMONTON SUPERIORS\nWIN, 3-1\nEDMONTON, Alta., Dec. 39\u2014In\none of the greatest senior amateur hockey games played ln this\ncity this year. Edmonton Superiors\ntriumphed over the Forty-Ntners by\na score of 3-1 here tonight, a\ncrowd of about 1000 fans attended.\n\"On the Spot\"\nin Sport\ntat \"ojha\")\n\u00ae\u00ae\nffCAfffim HOBBY & MAMC\nTftteKS tfm carps am Com\n'\/ty\/?* SE\u20acrtS\\\nQWET JHO \\\nftACCFOL!}\n*fe00fft\">90Y<${\nCtMmPftCNf\n^.^jv?\/f*-*<^*\nHy   AL   HIM \\RUi:\nFuel   for   the  \"hot  stove  league.\"\nJae McCarthy, the Yankee manager\nIs all steamed up about magic. He\nspends moat ot his leisure time p:r-\nfeet. ing tricks with carda or coins\nsnd allght-of-hand performances to\nmystify his friends.\n\"Red\" Ormeby, the umpire, ts tlw\nproud daddy of nine children. Red\nsays that st dinner by the time he\nserved the Ust kid, the first one ls\nfinished and yelling for another\nhelping. Hla grocery bills must be\nappalling even for an umpire. Twelve\nquarts of milk and tire loaves of\nbread and five packages of breakfast\nfood sre Just an Item.\nLarry Sutton, the Brooklyn scout,\nls 75 years old and has never shaved\nhimself. He's spent plenty at the\nbarber's.\nMany of the wise boys of baseball\nsay lf present conditions continue\nthere will not be sny- class C and\nD leagues in 1038.\nDick Klnsslla, Olant soout, claims\nnight baseball ls ruining major\nlesgue prospects. \"Tou can't tell\nwhat they can do In daylight. \"I'll\ngive it one or two more years of\npopularity.\"\nCALGARY BRONKS\nBEAT MAROONS, 4-2\nCALGARY, Alta., Dw. 29-\u00a9efeat-\nlng Maroons here tonight 4-2, Bronks\nstepped farther ahead in the lead\nershlp of -Southern AlWrta Senior\nAmateur Hockey league by winning\ntheir seventh straight victory. Three\nthousand ssw the game to establish\nthe largest attendance for a league\nmatc.i tnis season and both teams,\nplayed on home Ice, provided plenty\nof thrills.\nfl\nTHE SPIRIT OF GOOD FELLOWSHIP\nll\nLooks as  though the  fans  who\nhave   a  chance   to   see   the  West f\nkootenay Hockey  league  teams  In  1\naction   this    winter,    are   getting\ntheir money's worth. And now the\nKlmberley  Dynamiters  are on the\ntop of the heap\u2014snd likewise Nelson Is at the bottom\u2014which, from\nany  Nelsonlte's  point  of  view.  Is\nno place  for  the  Maple   Leafs   to\nhe    reclining    this    early    In    the  I\nsesson.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nIn the game on Monday night\n.hers wae another of those rows\nleading up to a disallowed goal. It\nappears again, that the g-al Judge\nwaa asleep on the job ani didn't\nsee a fair goal scored. There ls\nsomething akin to an epidemic of\ninsomnia among goal judges in the\nWeet Kootensy league this year.\nThis time tt was s Klmberley goal |\nofficial who \"didn't see\"\u2014in tbe\nfirst gam; with Trail played here\nthis sesson It waa a Nelson official\nwho was at fault. And Incidentally,\nany Klmberley player saw that\ndisallowed goal scored the other\nnight it was up to him to admit\nlt\u2014the same applies to Nelson players under similar ctrcumstanow, after all winning a game is on* thing\n\u2014but the method used is a \"bird of\ndifferent  color.\"\nOpe cold Saturday arternoon ln\nlate November this scribe snd s\nfriend took s wslk oat the Granite road for the sake of exercise.\nDuring the coarse of' the excursion we were psssed by s young\nfellow who was loping slong wltb\nthe long essy stride of tbe distance runner. Though the eold\nair had a lung-rutting Intensity,\nthe runner appeared not to be\nsuffering as he plodded slong In\nco\\er-alls fnr obviously. It wss s\ncustomary occurence for him to\nrun In such weather. We wondered\nwhat bis object could be training\nat that time of the year. But now\nwe know\u2014he was none other than\nBoy Hall, of Nelson, who rsn In\nthe Mx-iuile road race st Calgary\non Christmas day. After riding the\ntender of an engine to Calgary\nthis hardy Individual plaoed Slut\nIn the race. It takes a lot of\ncourage for a man thst knows\nthe rigors of s six-mile rare to\nrun In cold weather after s trip\nlike that. It's too had more Nelson\nnthlrtes haven't a spirit like that.\nMost of the Nelson athletes we\nknow want everything handed\nthem on a platter\u2014one of the\nsilver  variety  preferably.\nCREIGHTON GOES\nTO BRUEN CUBS\nDR-Orr. inch. Ok. SH-\u2014 (Bj\ntht) pin-Minn Press)\u2014curly fended\nJimmy ' Crelihton, who ltd Fort\nArthur*,' hockey team to tbe Oanadlu tltlt In ion. hu bMn wnt\nto Boaton Bruin. Cuba ln tbe Can-\nadlan-Amertcan league tot a try-\nout, n waa announced tonight hy\nOeorge Hay. playing manager ot\nDetroit Olympic in the International league. Crelghton alined\nago with Olympics hut\ntwo\nMontreal Maroons Defeat the Detroit\nFalcons, Four-to-Two; Game Is Not Exciting\nMONTREAL, Der. 20. (CP)\u2014A\nhurst of scoring st the close of\na dull National Hockey league\ngame fa\\e Montreal Maroons s\n4-2 victory pver the Detroit Falcons here tonight. Tbe Maroons\nscored twlre In the second snd\nmice In the third period. The\nFacons counted s polr of gonls\nIn the second half of the lsst\nperiod.\nIf the hockey wns not exciting ln\nthe early part of the encounter,\nthere were r \"ier factors to throw\nthe fans ln an uproar. Kllrea of\nDetroit got his nose punched and\na major penalty for drawing blood\nfollowed. Nels Stewart was marked\ndown for the major, but after he\nentered the box Hooley Smith told\nreferee Rodden that he had done\nthe damage. The penalty wss switched to him. If Nels Stewart had taken\na major tonlgh t he would have\nbeen automatically suspended for a\ngame.\nThe next excitement came when\nConacher beat Connell on a drive\nfrom the boards on Montreal's first\ngoal. Connell claimed that tlie puck\nhad slipped through a hoi* tn the\nnet. There was a flve-mlnute argument that ended with the withdrawal of goal umpire Percy Moorr.\nThe game went on. but not for\nlong. Cornell wae cut. in the head\nby Siebert s drlv^ and retired for\nstitches to close the wound. Montreal bad a go.il called back In the\nthird period, the referee overruling\nthe goal umpire. It came during a\nplie-up with Connell under a welter\nof players.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u2014No score.\nPenalties\u2014Noble, Trottier W*, Kilrea, Ward, Cooper, Cox, MeVlcar, R,\nSmith   (majori.\nSecond period\u20141. Maroons. Conacher, 13:20; ., Maroon, R. J,\nSmith,   4:0ft.\nPenalties \u2014 Aurl* (2>, Conacher,\nA. Smith, Siebert, Brydson, Lewis.\nThird period\u20143, Maroons. Stewart\n<R. Smith), 4:17; 4, Maroons, Siebert (Stewart, R. smith). 1:52;\n8, Detroit, Cooper (Kilrea, Ooodfellow), 3:2.'; 6, etrojt, Young, 1:18.\nPenalties\u2014Cox, A. Smith, Noble,\nWard,   conacher.   Siebert.\nDempsey May Fight\nCarnera at Renr\nU. B. C. BASKET\nSQUAD LOSES\nPAIR OF MEN\nGovernment\nJiquor Stores\nor direct from Liquor\nControl   Board   Mail\nOrder   Department,\nVictoria, n. C\n\u2122 _____B\nOIDK\nStraight  and   Lee   Will   Be\nAbsent From Lineup on\nPrairie Tour\nVANCOUVER, B O., Dec. 39.\u2014University of B. Cs Canadian championship toop squad set forth tonight on their barnstorming tour\nof western Canada with elgh players on the lineup, Doc. Thorpe\nas trainer snd Gsv. Dlrom as student's  council   representative.\nAfter waiting apprehensively for\nthe results of the Christmas exams,\nthe following men found they could\nnot, make the trip: Bob Osborne,\nPi Campbell, Wally tfaytrs, Eddie\nArmstrong, Harold Straight. Ken\nWright, b-urle Nicholson, Doug Mclntyre.\nStraight, however, refused the opportunity to Journey, claiming that\nhe preferred to stay home and\nstudy.\nCy lee, diminutive upoed arl 1st\none the college forward line, fall-\nfid to Ret the necessary marks, so\nwill t^tay home and work at his\nbooks.\nThe first match that the collegians will play is qgainst Lethbrldge. Dec. 31, and then onward\nto Winnipeg, playing exhibition\nBrumes en route at Raymond. Jan.\n1: Calgary, Jan. 2; Mt*-*e Jaw. Jan.\n4; Reglna, Jan. 8. On the way bach\ntbey defend the western Canada\ncollege title against Manitoba, Sua-\nkstrhewan sad Alberta. After they\narrive in Vancouver tney take en\ntbt Multonomsb Club of Pert*\nland. Jan. 13, in sn exhibition\nbattle.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia.\nOTTAWA   J.   roUNP   0\nKATOWICE. Poland, Dec. 29. (CP)\n\u2014The Ottawa all-star hockey team,\non a tour of Europe, n- ;ed out thr\nPolish national tesm 1-0 in a game\nhere today. The single tally cams\nIn   the  third  period.\nREVO. Nev., Der. 2D. (AP) \u2014\nA definite offer may be made to\n.larw Dempsey tonight to meet\nPrima Carnera, giant Italian. In\na 20-rnund fight here oil Decoration   day.\nFifty Reno business and professions! men will meet at that\ntime to determine whether they\nwlll bark a match between the\nformer havywelght champion and\nCamera.\nJames McKay, Reno sportsman,\nalready Is understood to hare offered to guarantee Dempsey |100,-\n000 with a percentage of the\ngate receipts.\nvia seriously  Injured ln the midst\nof   his   first   aeaeon.\nManager Hay aald that Crelghton would remsln with Boston if\nhe msds good on his try-out.\nwoMgoiIrs\noutdo men in\nthe ust year\nMen's   Play   in   the  U.   S.\nSlumps 29 1-2 per cent,\nWomen's Play Up\nCHICAGO, Dm., M. (API-Johnny\nDuffer of American golf turned hi,\nthought* from par to business tn\n1931 but Mr,. Duffer pls-ped more\ngolf ta\u00abn ever.\nA mmy oompleted todsy m\nOolfdom. x business Journal of\ngolf, discloses thit while men'r\npity ilumped 3\u00bb'4 per otnt during\n1981, women's play increase! _*y_\nper cent over 1939. The net .lump\nwm U',4 per cent in the number\nof roundi plsyed. Business oondltlons were blamed for the decline\nPlsy on the nation's 3349 nine-\nhole courses end the, 3487 18-hole\noouras registered a 1911 totsl of\n93.S19.4C0 rounds the survey revealed, course data ssld there were\n3,0_.6lt golfers ln the United\nStates at the close of the 1931\nseason. Oolf club plant Investment\n-less    placed    at    M30.041.3ta.\nThe greater part of the loss ln\ngolf plsy was at ths prl\u2014te courses\nmost fee and public course,\nhad plsy slight!; ln excess of 1930.\nMemberships at private clubs fel!\n\u25a0In large numbers, with ths 18-hole\nclubs suffering a loss of 10 per\ncent snd the nine-hole clubs a two\nper oent loss.\n36    Officials    and    Players\nMake Up Canadian Squad\nTouring Japan\nSIX TEAM LEAGUE\nSCHEDULE DRAWN\nup, enr bowling\nGames    lo   Be    Played    on\nGelinas' Alleys; Games\n\u00a3tart January 4\nA new city bowling league has been\nformed to play scheduled games on\nOellnas' bowling alleys. The following teams make up the league:\nElks. Merchants, Rotarians, legion\nC.P.R.. Cherry pickers. The opening games of the new league will\nbe held ou Oellnas'. bowling alley,\non January 4. The schedule to\nJanuary 38 Is s follows:\nalAM'ARY   4\nElks vs. Rotarians at 7 p.m.\nMerchants   vs.   Legion   et   9   p.m.\nJAM ARY    7\nCP.R. vs. Cherry Pic'  .1 at 7 p.m.\nRotarlstu ve. Merchants at 9 p.m.\nJ1MARV   11\nLegion   vs.   C.P.R.   at   7   p.m.\nCherry Pickers vs. Elks at 9  p.m.\n\u25a0lANlIABY  14\nElks  vs.  Merchants  r*.  7  p.m.\nLegion ve. Rotsrlans st 9 p.m.\nJAMARV   18\nCherry   Pickers   w.    Ftottrf\u00bbn3   at\n7 p.m.\nElkst   va.   Legion   at   0   p.m.\nJAM'ARY   3*3\nRotarians vs. C.P.R. \u00bbt 7 p.m.\nLegion  vs. Merchants at 9 p.m.\n4AMARY   25\nLegion vs. Cherry Pickers at 7 p.m\nElks  vs.  C.P.R. at  9 p.m.\nJANUARY   28\nCherry   Pickers  vt.   Merchants   at\n7 p.m.\nSHIELDS BEATS\nVAN RYAN, 6-4, 6-4\nCHICAGO, Dec. 29. (AP)\u2014Frank\nX. Shields, of New York, defeated\nhis 1931 Davla Cup teammate, John\nVan Ryan of Orange, NJ-. In\nstraight nets in the opening match\nof charity tennis show in Chicago  stadium   tonight.\nShields   won   6-4,   6-4.\nElg ti teen at-ciden ts were reported\nto Edmonton pollc- headquarters\nover the weekend, sll of which, apparently were the result of sllpperi\nstreets.\nKOOTENAY\nHOCKEY\nTRAIL\nAT\nNELSON\nJanuary 1\nNew Year's\nDay\nMaple Leafs Defeat the Americans to\nTighten Their Grip oo Section League\n *,       __\u2014\n.1 \u25a0\u25a0 - __._   .      W...      \u25a0__ I !\"W    Y0,Bta    D\u00ab--    \u00bb     CWrtll.\nDIirrCDC   C All    TA \"\u25a0\u00ab * 'mta passing attack wttk\nKUWjfclQ MIL 10    a-K SS.\"iSS\nORIENT SATURDAY _&SJ'r\u00a3_S\nAmericana*   string  et   MNti   to-\nnijht    .y    besting    the   Anurfcg\n1   to f\nToronto wae the better team e%\naround and never wm sarloui-f\ntroubled after -Andy Blair scored tt*\nfirst goel on Hal Cotton's paaa in\nthe first period.\nRed Horner scored the second To*\nrouto goal jnst before the \u2022econd\nperiod ended, poking tbe pock between Ooalle Roy Worten' legs after\ntaking Bailey's paas, and Toronto\nfinished tbe Job with three goals la\ntbe final period. Harvey Jackaon\nsank two countera si eeeonds apart\non paasea from Joe Prlmeau and\nBailey took Blair*e paas for the laat\ngoal juat a few second* before tha\nbell clanged to end tha game.\nThe Americana bad one great\nchanoa early 'in the third period\nwhen two Leafs players, nnnlgea\nand Cotton, were in the penalty box\ntogether, but their disorganised attack failed to produce the necessary\nscoring punch.\nSIMMABT\nFlret period: <1) Toronto, Blair,\n(Cotton)   13:05.\nPenalties:   None.\nSecond period: ia> Toronto, Horner,   (Bailey)   19.54.\nPenalties: Flanagan, Ayrea. BaUey.\nThird period; (3) Toronto, Jackson, (Prlmeau) ll:\u00bb8; (4) Toronto,\nJsckeon, (Prlmeau) :3l; (5) Toronto,\nBailey.   (Blair)   7:\u00bb.\nPenalties: Flnnlgan, ootton. Burch,\nOracle.\nVANCOUVBR, DM. 39 (CD-Headed by J. Fyfe .Smith, prealdent of\nthe Brltlah Rugby Union of Canada,\naome ifl official* and playera will\nMil from Vancouver next Saturday\naboard the steamehtp Empreaa of\nCanadft for a tour of Japan.\nThe official selection committee\nhas named 20 players to make .he\ntour, which will be ln charge of\nHarry Lord, Vancouver. Jack Tyrwhltt, former president of the British Columbia Rugby union, wlll\nact aa coach.\nThe ail-Canada team will arrive\ntn Honolulu on January 7 and will\npossibly meet a picked team in an\nexhibition match. Every facility will\nbe plaoed at the disposal of Coach\nTyrwhltt and membera of the team\nto keep in shape during the 14-day\nvoyage to Japan, where they arrive\nJamuary  10.\nAfter a few days' rest In Tokyo,\nthe Canadians will commence a\nseries of seven matches against\nrepresentative  Japanese   fifteens.\nEight players from the prairies\nand eastern Canada are Included In\nthe party. Victoria has six repre-\nsentatlvea   and   Vanoouver   12.\nDuring the paat two weeks the\nvarious members of the team have\nengaged in dally workouts aad also\nhave played two matches against\nVsncouver and Victoria \"rep\" teama,\nwinning both. On Friday a third\nmatch will be played with the Vancouver \"reps\" offering the opposition.\nPHILLIES'    PITCHING\nKTAFF   M'MBE*    14\nPHILADELPHIA, Ps., Dee. 79\u2014The\nPhiladelphia Nationals today announced the signing of Reg Orabow-\nskl, rightbanded hurler of Syracuse.\nN. Y, bringing their mound staff\nto 14. Orabowski, a brother of Al\nOrabowski, former St, Louis Carllnal\npitcher, signed u a free agent.\nVines Beats Wood\nCHICAOO, Deo. *. (AF)\u2014Ella-\nworth Vine* 30-year-old Pasadena\nyouth re-afflrmed hia right to tha\nNatlonal Singles championship when\nhe turned back Oeorge Lett of\nChicago, in a three-set match that\nfeatured a charity tennia program\nhere tonight. Tha scores were 3-8.\n0-3,   10-0.\nVines, who won his title after\nan epic five-set battle with Lott\nat Forest Hills la September, found\nhis' foe equally stubb\u2014n tonight\nand pulled through only after a\naee-aaw third set that had a crowd\nof about 7000 ln an uproar frequently during tha final stages.\nTo hear \" You .1 have a whisky before you go ?\" makes a\nstranger feel halfway on the road to friendship. Better still,\nreminds two friends that each likes the other well. And\nas you take your leave and the light from the front door goes\nout, you are warmed by an inner glow\u2014for the unaffected\ngood-fellowship of the people in the house behind you.j\nDISTILLED\n& BOTTLED\nINSCOTLAND\nJOHNNIE\nWALKER\nBORN   1820-STILL GOING STRONG\nFnr isle tt vendor,, air Ulniet from Llqnor Control SScmS.\nMill Oraaer Department, Victoria. B. C.\nTriiitidimTuttiwttUnotpiibluhidor& the Government nf British Colwntia\nI\n -    ,-\nPAGE EIGMT\n'TRE NELSON B1ILT NEWS, NELSON, & C\u2014WEDNESDAY MOBMNO. DE-TEMBEB ID, 1M1*\ng__ SSaWant M Pa&.^__,l\u00ae--\nGAY CHRISTMAS\nCONCERT GIVEN,\nFORT STEEE\nChUdren   Play   Parts   Well;\nSanta   Distributes\nPresents\nHalf Pint\nFORT   Sma_-,   B    C,   Dec.   20 \u2014\nThe Christmas tree and oonoert held\nlo the Masonic ball was a success,\ntiie children taking their parte *fery\nwell. Tbe concert opened with t'ie\nsinging of \"O Csnsda\", followed by\na recitation by Vera Dawson. \"The\nRed. Whits and Blue March\", by\nthe   juniors   wa_   plasslng.\nA play, 'The Polar Bear\", wss\namusing. Ferdinand Savarie as the\nbear, Leonard Werden as a white\nrabbit were excellent. Kenneth Nlool\nrecited nicely. \"Day After Christmas\"\nwltb Alfred Luck, Alice Oraf end\nOeorge Nlcol was pleasing. \"Tlie\nNursery Floor\" wa* a fine item.\nLeonard Cretney made a wonderful\nHighland soldier in bis kilt*. Kenneth Nlco! a teddy bear, Mary Kelly\nas Sarah iane, Leonard Werden.\nGolliweg. Marian, Chinaman, MarJorie\nDouglas, snowflake. Marlon Kershaw,\nMadamoseile Frsnchette from Paris,\nwho did a very prety dance and was\nreceived very well by Ihe audienoe.\nTbe Wand drill by the junior girls\nwas verv well done, showing patient\ntraining. \"Queen of Hearts\", wltb\nVernlca Werden as queen, Vic Barr\ntbe king, Mona Miller the careless\nkitchen maid. Dor:* McMahon the\nKnave, Vera Dawson the oook, caused\nmuch laughter, aa did the t-nree\nblind mice, wbo all lost their\nSails with tbs carving knife.\nA Christmas joke wae funny -wh^n\nBernloe Miller turned into s bis\nblack cat, Jimmy Werde_ ., teddi\nbear and Alfred Tack s mama d-ii.\nBobby smith a reindeer helper.\nLeonard Cretney and Mary Kelly\nwere good in \"Dominque\". The\ntwo black crows, Richard Buckxnan\nand M. Miller were a typical \"Amos\n'n' Andy\" and pulled off some g\"od\njokes. \"Three Kings of tbe Orient\",\nwas very well done. Bay Howard\nbeing the Infant, The thrss kings\nwere Isobel and MarJorie Douglaa.\nVera Dawson wltb six attendants.\nTne Tulip dance\" wss a good number, tbe tulip costume* being very\ncharming. Iris Wise and Ronald\nSmith tip toeing through tbe tulips.\n\"Sweetie on My Knee\" by tho\nseniors was something quite new.\nMsldiwyn Mfller's recitation regarding the adventures of limburger\ncheese waa amusing. Donald Smith\nalso recited nicely. The rroater\nfight, a shadow picture, resulted\nwith one of the combatant* falling\nott the platform. George Nicoi recited \"If Santa Claus were Twins.\"\nThe play, \"All st Sea';, was very\ngoood, Isabel Douglaa taking the\npart of Mrs Somers, splendidly, while\nEdward Cretney was very good as\nthe jealous husband of Isabel. MarJorie Douglaa as Rose acd Oordon\nKershaw as Lieutenant Marine ln\nlove with Roee, kept the audience\nguessing until tbe end of the play.\nRoger Savanle aa man of all work\nwith political inspirations was a\nscream, taking a difficult part.\n\"Bethlehem's Star\" waa sung very\nsweetly by the senior girls; The\n\"Noel Chorus\" by tbe senior pupils;\n\"Carol Sweetly Carol\" by tbe\nachool brought the evening to a\nclose. Mrs. Moore acted as accompanist. After tbe concert Santa Claus\nsrrlved and in a nest little speech\nwished everybody a Merry Christmas, distributing the gifts from a\nlovely   Christmas   tree.\nDancing followed. Mrs. Moore was\nassisted at the piano by Allan\nMoore, Jr. on the saxophone.\nTHIS   IS  THE   CAT'S\n\"Hey, quit tickling.\" So chuckled\nLa Mer Faybeth, Jr., shown above\nln the cup won by her mother at\nthe Kansaa national live stock show\nin Wichita recently. The kitten, also\na pri._e-wlnner, is owned by Mrs.\nCharles L. Mercer of Wichita.\nChristening Is\nHeld, Fort Steele\nFORT   STEELE,   B.   C-,   Dec.   3*\nMaude  Brander  arrived  Saturday  to\nspent the holidays with ber mother,\nMiss Cairns ls spending h<r bolt-\ndays at ber home ln Trail. Mlaa\nTully is at Pernie.\nRev. P. V. Harrison held divine\neervice in St. John's church Sunday\nafternoon. Follow mg the service tbe\nthree children of Mr. and Mrs. C.\nSmith were baptised. Robert James,\n\u2022and tbe twins Ronald Stephen and\nDonald Cecil.\nFERNIE VICTOR\nIN FIRST EAST\nKOOTENAY GAME\nCRANBROOK,   B.   C.   Dee,    \u00bb,\u2014\nTbs first game of tbe Eaet Kootenay senior hockey league series was\nplayed oa Cranbrook toe Saturday\nevening with a teir gallery, tbe\nFernie team winning by s score of\n5-3. Though tbe Cranbrook team\nplsyed under a disability of two\nmembers absent wltb members of the\nJunior tfam playing ln their places,\nthe game was a fast one throughout\nand showed that hockey fans are to\nbe treated to a good brand of bockey whilst the series are being played. Tlie next game of the series wlll\npossibly be played on New Year's\nnight on Pernle ice, but this has\nnot been definitely decided. The\nCranbnv-k players were: Mulrhead.\ngoal; Collins, Cox and Pelkey, defend; South Loula, Downey, McKay,\nHall and Williams, forwards. J. F.\nScott was referee. H. Bridges was\nJudge of play. J. Atchison ls manager of the Cranbrook team.\nGAY CHRISTMAS\nPARTY IS HELD,\nBOSWELL GUILD\nBOBWBLL, B. C. Ow. \u2022\u00bb.\u2014Tie\nChristmas part; beld ln tba. Memorial ball was very mucb enjoyed\nby tbe adults and children. At\nfour o'clock an excellent ua was\nserrrd by tbe ceammlttee appointed\nby the church guild, asalatcad by\nseveral other ladles. The tally decorated Christmas cake which occupied\nthe center .of the long table bad\nb_n made by Mrs. 6. J. Cummlngs.\nAfter tea games were playad until\na loud knocking announced tbe arrival of Santa Claus. As he entered tbere was a hearty shout of\n'Mesry Christmas, Santa Claus\".\nSanta explalnrd that he had sent\nthe presente ln advanoe some days\nearlier, as owing to the condition\nof tbe roads, he was doubtful\nwhether he -would be able to reajii\nBoswell.\nA curtain wus then drawn back\nrevealing a tall Christmas tree, hung\nwltb gifts snd bags containing\ncandy, oranges and nuts. These\nSanta distributed to the children.\nHe wss assisted hy Mrs. C. Alien,\npresident of the Church guild.\nC__:s were resumed after the\ndeparture of Santa and a long\nline waa formed for ''Sir Roger.\"\nDancing concluded a very Jolly evening.\nTlie party was held tbls year\nunder the ampiccs of tbe Boswell\nChurch guild, the committee annotated to handle arrangements\nbeing Mrs. A. Krnnaviy, Mrs. J. R\nHlggcnaa, nnd Mrs. W   L. Hepher.\nINDEX IO CLASSIFIED  ADt\nAOfcNTB  WANTED fill\nAUTOMOBILES   FOR   RISE 41\nAUTOMOBILES  fOB  SALE 40\nBEES                            \u2022 (_jt\nS)1*\"\u00bb u\nBOiTB. LAUNCHES. KOK  KENT (48)\nBOATS, LAUNCHES Fok SALE 44\nS{,J.TAaVAli'NCHE\"    \"ANTED (45,\nSVS'N-l81*   OPPORTUNITIES (301\nCANARIES   FOR  SAl.E (91\nCATS AND DOOS FOB SALE (SSI\n!_.?!. aliO  DOOS  WANTED (\u00abo(\nDEATHS (2|\nDKESSMAKINO 7)\nFARM  AND  DAIRY  KBODLCE (ani\nE*RM   PROPERTY   FOR  SALE (36,\nFOR   SALE  OR  EXCHANGE (37)\nIOR   HALE   OR   RENT (2*t)\nrlHMSHKI) ROOMS,OR RENT (15)\nIIRMSHCH   ROOMS   WANTED 161\nFURNITURE   FOR   SALE (46)\nHELP   WANTED (10)\n\u25a010USES  FOR  RENT til)\nHOUSES  WANTED (SO)\nIN MEMORIAM (4)\nINSURANCE (it.*)\nINVESTMENTS\nLITERARY\nIVESfoCK   FOR  SALE\n(IS)\n161\n(33)\nLIVESTOCK   WANTED ltl)\nLOST  AND  FOUND (31)\nMACHINERY (56)\n.MARRIAGES (3)\nMINING,  TIMBER, LIMBER (38)\nMISCELLANEOUS <2\u00bb)\nMINCKLLANEOIS   FOB   SALE til)\nMISCELLANEOUS    WANTED <M>\nMUSICAl,  INSTRUMENTS <.VII\nNOTICES (8)\nNURSERY  PRODUCTS (47)\nNURSING (14)\nPERSON AL (5)\nPLANTS (53)\nPOULTRY   AND   EGGS (26)\nPROPERTY   FOR  SALE (34)\nPROPERTY   WANTED (35)\nIttlllll'ls   FOR  SALE ('-.)\nRANCHES   FOR   BENT (111)\nROOM   AM)   HOARD (17)\nKOOMS   FOR   RENT (19)\nKOOMS   WANTED (18)\nSCHOOLS (33)\nSITUATIONS   WANTED 111)\nSTORES   TO   RENT (31)\nTEACHERS  WANTED (13)\nBOSWELL HOMES\nHAVE VISITORS\nBOSWELL, B. C. Dee. to.\u2014W fl.\nHepb-r of Moscow, Idaho, ls spending hi- vacation with hU parents,\nUr. slid Mrs. A. Hepher, HUI IMUn.\nMiss N. Kennedy left Sundsy m -> i*\ning for Cranbrook after spending\nChrlstmss here with her parents,\nMr. and Mra. Andrew Kennedy.\nOapt. C. R. Hlgglns of Yahk was\nths goest of Mr. snd Mrs. J. R.\nHlggsae for ths Chrlstmss weekend.\nOapt. and Mrs. Gilbert West of\nSilver Heights, Kaalo, are the guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. Donald V. West\nof Destiny Bay  camp.\nC. Allen of the C. P. R. staff la\nspending a vacation .at hla home\nhere.\nMlaa Sylvia Benedettl left last\nwek to visit her parenta at Wynndel.\nShe Is expected to return to Boswell early In the new year.\nWANT AND CLARIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne Insertion  lu cents a line\nSix Insertions 40 cents a line\nOne  montb  tl.30 a line\nMinimum  two  llnea\nBirth   notices  free of  charge\nDeatha.     marriages    and    cards    of\nthanks   20  cents  per  line\nPuneral  flowers  is cents per line\nNew\u00ab   of   the   Day   Items  20   centner  Une.\nNO  P.XTRA COST  IF CHARGED\nrLKSONA;,\nO)\nSEND   Uc   -   RECEIVE   SAMPLE\npackage \"PALESTINE\" pure Turkish    Cigarette    Tobacco.    Calgary\nTobacco   Company.   Calgary   Alta.\n(8395)\nMME. ELLEN-DEFEND ABLE C1IFT-\ned ln second sight. 5 question\n\u2666 1.00 by mail 751 Granville St.,\nVancouver, B. C. (8588)\nm'ATIONS   WANTED\n(11)\nTWO BOYS WANT WORK\u2014AGE 20\nund 21. Apply B>x 8975 Dally\nNews. (8975)\nChristmas Trees Are\nWrecked, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK. B. C, Dec. 39.\u2014\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Grubbe of Nelson were ln Cranbrook over Christmas, guests of Dr. and Mrs. Oreen\nand of Mrs. Orubbe s sister. Miss\nPaget. Mr. Grubbe returned on Sundsy to Nelson. Mrs.. Orubbe is remaining for a day or no -longer.\nMm. Beale and others entertained\nat tea for Mrs. Grubbe during her\nstay nere. Mr. Grubbe was a visitor\nat the Cranbrook curling club of\nwhich he waa president for several\nyears.\nMiss Kathleen Henderson, of the\nKlngsgate school staff, who was tbe\nguest of her mother over Christmas,\nleft Saturday for Seattle where she\nwlll spend the balanoe of the holidays with her sister, Mrs. W. W.\nWilliam-.\nMrs. McKowan and Miss Dorothy\nMcKowan were tea hostesses on\nSaturday afternoon.\nTrees along Cranbrook's main\nstreet as weU as slong Korbury\navenue hsve added greatly to the\ndecorative affect during the Christmas season, were knocked over on\nChristmas' night by seme youths\nwltb s misplaced sense of fun. The\npolice have names of most of the\noffenders who will appear shortly\nbefore    Magistrate    Leask.\nNo meant of communicating your 'WAISTS'\nor 'OFFERS' to the General Public compares with the Quick, Easy, Inexpensive\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\n\"WANT AD\"\nMETHOD\nWhether you wish to Buy or SeD, Rent or\n.Lease, Loan or Borrow, the Solution is\nequally simple\u2014Just write out your WANT\nAD and Mail to the\nNelson Daily News\nWANT AD DEPT.\nPhone 144\nCSE   THE   NELSON   DAILT   NEWS\nClassified    Advertising   Columns.\nROOMS   FOB   BENT\nCM)   HISCELLANEOCI   FOB   SALE\u2014Con.   LOST   AND   FOUND\nTERRACE    APTS.     UNFUHJflSHED\nsuites. Apply P. I Joulln. (8906)\nTWO   ROOM   SUTTB  DC   K.   W.   C,\nbloc*. aSSS-ll\nSUITES\u2014ASHMAN'S    APARTMENTS\n(8794)\nHOUSES    FOR   RENT\nHOUSE FOR RENT\u2014CORNER J08E-\nphlno and Victoria.    Pbone 794L1\n(8977)\nPARTLY   FURNISHED   HOUSE   tit\nper montb.   Pbone 392L3.     (8853)\nPURNI8HED   HOUSE  CLOSE  IN  \u2014\nApply J. J. Boyd, Nelson.     (8971)\nLIVESTOCK   FOR   SALE\n(Ul\nTOGGENBURO BILLY-GOAT \u2014 7\nmtbs.; Dam, one gallon milker\u2014\nprice no\u2014P.OB. -eriCKson. c Kelsey. (8988)\nAN EXCELLENT AYRSHIRE OOW 5\nyesrs old. freshens .len. 6th. J.\nD. McDonald\u2014ft. B. l, Nelson.\n(8979)\nMISCELI.ANKOLS   FOB   BALE     (Z7)\nIMIIItllllllllllllllllllllHIIIiniHIIIIIIIW\nSPECIAL OFFER\n= On  Dec.  30  and  31,  we  will S\nZ give  PREE  with  each  ton  of \u00a3\nZ coal   ordered   %   rick   of   13- Z\nZ or    16-inch    DRY    PIR    AND S\nS  TAMARACK   WOOD.\nI GALT \u2014MIDLAND I\nGREENHILL      |\nBELLEVUE\nCOAL\nPhones 53 \u2014 846\nBURNS\n| Coal and Cartage Co. |\n|   -511 Baker Street\n(8983)    Z\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiih\nSIN-BAY   HEALTH   LAMP!\n11.00 Month\nUltra Violet, Ultra Red Oarbcns\nsupplied with each lamp. If you are\nrun down, nervous or leas thsn\n100% efficient\u2014you need a Sun Ray\nlamp\u2014for Eczema, Paorasls, or any\nskin disease you get Immediate\nrelief. Write for booklet \"SUN-RAY\nTO HEALTH\" Its Pree to you\u2014anyone desiring to purchase outright\nwe will make special price and\nterms.\nHASKINS _  ELLIOTT\n1037 W. Pender St.. Vancouver, B.C.\n(8601)\nCREAM SEPARATOR*\u2014 Standard\nand Wes.phalla, 637.80; also on\neasy monthly payments. Nickle\nplated, rusfe proof bronze bowl,\n340 lb. capacity and larger. Plve\nyear guarantee. Samson Rotary\nBod Weeder, Ltd. Cal-pry, Alberta\n18738)\nWOOD FOR SALE\u2014Oood dry cord-\nwood, or eut to ault. Trunk Cottonwood 64\u2014and good mixed wood\n65\u2014this will run about half\nwhite birch. Oeo. York. Box 1198\nNelson.   Phone 188L1. (8930)\nFOR   SECOND   HAND   PIPES   AND\nfittings get our prices before\nbuying. Many satisfied customers\nln your district. Swartz Pipe\nYard, 330 1st. Ave.. Eaat, Vancouver, B. C. (8619)\nUSED   CAR   PARTS   POR   ALL\nmak is. Including WUlls Knight\nfour, orandview Auto Wreckers.\n3086 Commercial Drive Van. (8631)\nFOR 8aV_\u2014BARRELS, KEOS BUR-\nlap sacks white sugar sacks. McDonald   Jam   Co. (8820)\nPROPEBTY  FOB BALL\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nRATTLESNAKE OIL\nINDIAN LINIMENT\nFor treatment of Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Aches,\nPains and tired feet, etc.\nWe are selling two $1 bottles of Rattlrsnske Oil Liniment and 61 box of 14-\nday Wonder Tableta Blood\nPurifier. 83 value, fdr 61;\npostaage prepaid. send\nmoney order. Household\nProducts Co., 616 Main St.,\nWinnipeg. Man., Dept. N. (8807)\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nONE AUTO KNITTER PRACTICALLY\nnew  836.    Box  623,  Kaslo,  B.   C.\n(8948)\nmiiiiiiiimimiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM\n| LOW PRICED HOMES |\n~ _17-0   B\u2122\u00abllow.   3   bed- Z\nT*afa#v    rooms, living room, z\nbathroom, new modern plumb- S\nS Ihg.  oement foundation,  base- z\n\u2014 ment. cement floor, newly pa- Z\npered and  painted inside and =\n_ out. Good location. Thla prop- _\nZ erty  ls practically as good as 5\nZ new.   Terms  arranged.\n$2100  Stan,eT  Bt*   corner \u00a3\nfmtmtwwt   _!tn   bungalow.   J \u00a3\n_ rooms    aud    bathroom,     full z\nZ basement, cement floor, excel- Z\n\"\" lent  corner  lots.  Garden   and \u00a3\nfruit trees.\n& i\nSturgeon\nLC. AGENCIES I\n317 BAKER STREET        . \u00a3\n(8982)    I\n11 \u25a0 \u25a0 1 \u25a0 > M11M111111111M1111111111111111 iT\nLOST\u2014A OENTLIMAN'S UMBRELLA\nnear Fleming's store, please return to 80S Second St. (8973)\nFARM   AND   DAIRY   PRODUCE   <J9>\nFOR SALE-NO. ONE TIMOTHY HAY\nand straw. Oeo. Lavlolette, Lumby. B.  C. (8916)\nAUTOMOBILES   FOB   SALE\nHave You Seen It?\nThe New 1932 Model\nG. M. C. Truck\nIM  to 2-Ton Bated Capacity\n131-lnch Wheelbaae. Chassis, Cab\nand Dual Tires - _.._ 611SO.O0\n167-Inch Wheelbaae, Chassis,  Cab\nand Dual  Tires -  11340.00\nPrice  Includes  Llcenae for\nbalance of 1931.\nWrite for Specifications.\nGeneral Motors Truck\n& Coach of Canada\nLimited\n967   Seymour   St.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\n(8616)\nCHRISTIE TRUCK AND CAR PARTS\n1630 West 1st. Ave., Vancouver,\nB. C. Largest reliable wrecking\ncompany. Power planta, trailers\nand parte. (8617)\nINVESTMENTS\n(48)\nMM Fllll I PI III 11MI III 11 Ml 1II llll la!l I\nI Investments |\n\u00a3      We  will be glad  U> Invest     |\nyour  fund*  at\n8%\nSecured  bv\nZ        FIRST MORTGAGES ON -\nZ      NELSON  CITY PROPERTY Z\nCome  tn  and  get  details. 3\nGENERAL INSURANCE\nand\nHOUSES   FOR  SALE \u00a3\n\\ C. W. Appleyard =\nESTABLISHED   19   YEARS\nPHONE 269 BOX 626     \u00a3\n(8766)  \u00a3\ni\" iiiiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimn\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAccountants\nCHAB. P. HUNTER. SJMHT.A.C.\nMunicipal and commercial Audita\nP.   o   Box   1191,  Nelson,   B.   c.\n(S687)\nAssayers\nE. w. Wlddowson. Bos Alios Nelson,\nB.  c. Standard  western charges\n(6666)'\nChiropractors\nDR   GRAY, GILKER BLK. NELSON\n(8699)\nM1TTUN AND GEDDES, X-RAY snd\nNCM Cranbrook and TraU.  (8660)\nDR.   MACMILLAN   ORAD.   PALMER\nSchool, Aber. Blk.. Nelson, _hT313\n  (8661)\nDressmaking and Designing\nDRESSMAKING, DESIGNING\nFlower making, Acodemy of useful Arts; No. 4. Write Mary E.\nRogers, Box 363,  Rosaland,. B. C.\n (8682)\nEngineers\nH. D. DAWSON. B. O.  L. B.    Room\nISA.   KW.C   Blk.   Nelson.   (8863)\nCHAS  MOORE\u2014Oriffln Blk., Nelson.\nB. c. Land Surveyor, Box 684.\n  (8664)\nFlorists\nOrlzzelle's Greenhouses. Nelson. Cut\nPlowers and floral designs. (86fj6)\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. Full\nline cut flowers at all times. Floral designs.    Phona 333.        (8868)\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES\u2014Phone\n343. Cut Flowers. Potted Plants\nand   Floral  Designs. t8667)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance. Rentala Next Hlpperson\nHardware, Baker St. (8668)\nSecond Hand Stores\nthe Ark\u2014 Dealers ln second hand\ngoods.    Phone  634. (8669)\nStorage\nSTORAGE. MOVING, OOAL WOOD.\nPhone 63. Burns Coal and Cartage\nC-3- (8938)\nTransfer\nUSE   THE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nClassified    Advertising   Columns.\nATKINSON TRANSFER, ROSEMONT\nCoal   and   wood. (8671)\nWood Factory\nLawsons Wood  Factory, 317 Baker\nSt.   We please our customers.\n(8673)\n($M6UMP~ AUSYKA.UAa.N\nI^IUIONAalRE ANb CHAMPION\nV_>MAN   HATER CP THE\nVMORU> 1% HltsieiM* A TERRIBLE\nTUaNE ON HIS TRIP HOME-\nTHE HONEY MOONEI-VS.\nA.RE DRNINfa HIAA. CRAZY-\nTHE  GUMPS-SHIP  AHOY!\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McMamw\nNOW- WHO TOOK MT BOOK^\nTHEW'S ME DAUGHTER-1\n\u25a0WONDER IF SHE TOOK IT\n1 wuz juyr start in\nto reap a book on\n\" the life of napoleon'\nan' Someone took it\nOH! I DIDN'T\n\\\\ KMOW IT V\/A-\nTbuW-V I TOOK\nIT ANO CAVE IT\n\u25a0<-^TO MOTHER-\nNOV\/ 1 COT TO FIND\nMAGGIE-1 CERTAINLY\nAM STARTIN' ON A FINE\nLITERARY CAREER\nON'. TE-o'. DAUGHTER\nGAVE IT TO ME AND\nMRS- BOND WAS HERE\nAND SHEWANTEO TO\nREAD it- <oO I LENT\niT\n11931, King Fa_fli_ Symlk-e, Inc., Grr\u00abt Britain rigbea tmerttA.\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Westover\nNCKU   THAT    VOU\nHAVE     yoKJR. OLD\nFace   ba.ck. .\nI'M   <5\u00a3>IMQ   TO\nGive vou voui-e.\nOLD 3*oB\n\/THANKS. BOS<\nI MOVE    TILLIE;\nDesk, ore\nMove niine\n7\/'\nI WI. King tutwrn 8,na)qaaa.!_. Cam Baa_\u00bb .*\u00ab>\u00bb aa\u00bba_aai.\n\"SO   -THAT'S     ,t    1^ ff *\nvMen.,  cll move   both\nOF     VOUR.    OHSK-S   \u2022   VOO\n\u00b00    OOT    -AJJD    HAVE     VOUI-\n>_\u00abJNCH   AND   EVERy-TMi-MQ   TT\nVAIIL-L.    BE    AU.   t-l-SH-r   VUHBM\nr-THAf\n\u25a0SUITS\nMe Piue\nKIR,\n^IMPKIWS\nI\n____________________\n______\n \u2022TU NEMON DAILT KIWI, NELSON, B. C\u2014WEDNESDAY MOBNINO, DECEMBEB SO, 1931*=\nMarket and Mining News\nMOTHER EARTH LOATH TO GIVE UP\nGOLD IN ALBERTA CRESS; HOODOO\nAPPEARS TO DOG EVERY NEW STRIKE\nCALOA1Y, Alta., Dte. tl_(\"fty\ntlw oaaadlai Trem)\u2014GoU Um In\nnearly e\u00bbery rtier, tttt*-, and tote\nIn alberta knt Mother tutt holds\ntenaciously to har wealth, crush-\nIn, heartlessly aaaas onslaacht for\nthe elusive mineral. Man have\ndiscovered told In tha numerous\nwaten ahd In various parts of tha\nprorlMe, vteloninf fortunes, hut\nevery atrtkt since 1179 hes proves\na   Hilars.\nFlfty.two roan am fold waa found\nIn Alberta but murder reared Its\nuflyheed when tha, finders quarreled and one waa killed. From than\non the treaaure baa remained locked in the earth ln a rebuke to\nmankind, a hoodoo seemed to follow told etrtkee after the slay.\nInf.\nMVtDEM   PABTNEB\nAeoordtef ta etorles from the\nstoney Indians, It was In tha aprlng\nof in\u00bb whan Joe Lemon and his\npartner, \"Black Jack\", came from\nMontana to Alberta. They found\ngold ln tba foothills near tha\nLivingstone river, abont SO mllee\nweet of the town now known as\nNanton. They made S27.00O, lt\nwaa aald, but In a quarrel Lemon\nkilled hla partner with an axe.\nLemon returned to Montane and\nbrought a party of men to tba\nLivingstone valley but he went\nsuddenly mad before reaching his\ngold claim, tha Indians aald. Back\nIn Montana again, Lemon waa arretted and found guilty of Black\nJack's murder but died of amall\npoi before bo oould be hanged.\nSEE* MINE\nTo thla day man have aaugbt\n\u25a0\"We loat Lemc- mine\" mutely.\nWhen gold was reported In the Bed\nDeer river ln 1B1I. a \u00abr\u00bbt tush\ncommenced but bo find proved\nmeagre. In February, 19J1. an\nEldorado waa Tlslonad by tha gold\nseekers whan someone found a\nplaee of quart* In tbo Livingstons\nvalley, as miles weet of Nanton\nln  tha  aouth  foothills.\nFin hundred man, eome poorly\nclad, using pack horses, walking\nand driving dilapidated motor oars\nplunged Into Livingstone valley,\nstorms and octd weather met the\nfortune hunten, many without tents\nor blankets, vainly trying to keep\nalive by huddling around a Uttle\nfire. Alberta provtnelal police finally were foroed to prevent proa-\npectora entering tba valley unless\nproperly  equipped.\nSome packed away at rock formations, othen panned the Livingstone\nriver but tba source of the treasure remained bidden. Small quantities of go\" dust wvre taken from\ntha river bad but the etrlke petered out and another chapter wss\nadded to Alberta's freakish gold\nhistory.\nINDIANS  MAKE   STRIKE\nBight months later, on October\nt, \u00ab band of Stoney Indiana raced\nInto Calgary to file clalma In tba\nFallen Timber Creek oountry. 30\nmllea northweet of Morley. They\ndisplayed pleoee of quartz they said\nhad bean found around the creek:\nAnother rush was om hundreds\nentering the territory hunting gold\nIn the creek and surrounding district.\nMon stood In the creek'e cold\n\u2022miters, bltmnts howling about\nthem, panning with hands numb\nfrom tha cold but thalr only reward waa a faw flakes of gold and\nthe latest \"strike\" went the way of\nall otbtn.\nBut then Is gold In Alberts.\nIt ls maintained, plently of It\neomewhen. It ls found in riven,\nlakes and streams, nekes csn be\ntaken from the waten of the Bow\nriver, tbat rolls through Calgary\nfrom the Rockies. Tbe Saekstche-\nwan river with Its source In the\ntowering mountains, has yielded\ngold. So haa the Bed Deer river,\nthe Baptists at Rocky Mountain\nhouse, the Athabasca and the Peace\nriver in the far north, gold le there\nbut lt seems to bide mysteriously\nfrom the eearehet-a, appearing In\nlittle particles, sufficient to lure\nthose staking riches on the long,\ndisappolnttne- grind.\nAIDS UNBMFLOVED\nMother earth, however, relented\nsomewhat to aid the: army of unemployed. Along the banks of the\nriven and streams in some sections\nof tbe provlnoe this year, the\nw-orkleee snatched a poor living froin\nthe waten. They panned sufficient\ngold, In some instances, to return\n\u20221.70 a day, enough to secure\nfood   and   shelter.\nNear Bdmonton the men congn-\ngated on tha shores of ths Saskst-\nchewaA river, searching for gold.\nIt waa against the law to do so\nwithout a permit which cost gl.75.\na sum the hapless could not\nmuster. A special order-ln-counctl\nhowever, waa passed by the provincial government, permitting theae\nmen to continue their operations\non a restricted area of the ft*\"..\nTbey did not make much rooney\nsnd the little they did acquire waa\ngin up by tba waten grudgingly,\naa If tbey recalled the Mack mark\nplaced on the hlatory of fold in\nAlberta when Lemon killed bis\npaftner.\nMETALINE ORE\n130FEET WIDE\nMining and Leasing Company\nGiven 12 Per Cent Content\nby Intending Buyer\nSPOKANI, weah., Doc. M>\u2014In a\ncircular letter to tbe stockholders\nof the Metaline Mining and Leasing Oompany, having property near\nMetaline Falls. O. C. Andrus, secretary. Spokane, aays:\n\"We han driven tunnel No. \u2022 tt\n(he soo-foot level i960 feet. Fran\nthle tunnel we ban rained to tbt\nupper tunnel pissing through on\n173 feet of tbe way, tbenby proving\nthe showing ln tbe upper tunnel\nand the fact that It went on\ndown. A short distance from where\nwe made the rain in etarted a\ncrosscut northeast and cut sine on\nfor  73   feet.\n\"The anngt sampling we took\nof thla cn nn about t ptr cent.\nWt then passed through a slip\nand ran Into vary high-grade lead\nand zinc on. We tank a wln\u00bb 13\nfeet and wen still In thla tame\nhigh-grade ort. Wo went weat 37\nfeet In good high-grade ore, encountering a slip and went through\nthe slip, but weet of this wt found\nno on. We then started drifting\neast and want ISO feet ln ore.\n\"An average sample taken by tbe\nengineer of a prospective buyer wbo\nwaa not going to give ua beat of\nIt. went over 13 per cent. A\nnumber of camples from the face\ntaken by ua went Rem JO to to\nper oent sine. Tho oro body la\nloo per cent wide. At tbla point\nwe paaaed through a slip and found\nno more ore on the other. elde.\nwe an drifting touth on the on\nbody and an in rich Ind and\nalnc  on,\n\"We feel tbat we an entirely\npaat tht prospecting stage and have\nproven that we han a splendid\nmine, and well enough developed\nto wamnt a mill. In this tunnel\nat Intervale we would drill 7 or 8\nfeet down and found we wen ln\nthe aame on. Our diamond drilling would Indicate that thla on\nplane Is 80 to 40 feet thick.\"\nWWN1WO. Pec. to (CFI\u2014Influ-\ntnotd by reportt of unftvonble\nweather In tbe Argtnttne. whtat\nprion soared In the grain pit hen\ntoday. Values at closs ef tradlnt\n\u2022 IH to IH higher than tht\nprevloua days cloelng level.\nDeoember closed at Mlt fer a\ngain of IH. while May and July\neach galnad V* to IV, to cloee at\n88  and  68H   respectively.\nSome export trade wh worked\novernight, and then waa a moderate demand for futures, but cables\nmet* weak and foreign newt not\nencouraging. No real demand for\nwheat wae looked for until after\ntht ntw ytar.\nCeth whtat and ooam -grains\nwtre uninteresting.\nLogan & Bryan\nOBAIN,\nSTOCKS,   BONDS,   COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nNtw  Turk.  Montreal  and  Vancouver   Stock   EichangM,   Chicago Board of Tnde, Winnipeg\nOraln Birhante, and ether\ntndlng exchanges.\nPRIVATE  WIRE\nOFFICES:\nVancouver, Spokane, Buttle\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nAbana       _    -\n.03\nAc-onda    \t\n-1\nAJax   ...          ,\nAmulet        w   \t\nJO\nAmity\t\n.01\nA F Consolidated\t\n.10\nBaltic OU       \t\n.08\nB A  Oil -\n880\nBase  Metals    \t\n1J30\nBarry   Holllngtr   \u201e \t\n.08 Vi\nBig Missouri    \t\n.18\n.07\nC snd B Lands .- \u2014.\t\n.18\nChemical Research  -\t\n1.75\n.18\nEastcrest     \t\n\u25a0\u00bb\ngldorsdo  \u2014.\t\n108\nFoothills     \t\nJMVi\nrslconbrldga       ,\n1.00\nOoodfish    \t\nAS\nOranada    , ...    *     \u2014\n1.10\nHome OU        \t\nett\nHarker  Gold  -\t\n.01\nHowey    ,\t\ntl\nHolllnger      \t\nSSO\nImperial  Oil \t\n90S\nInternational   Nickel   \t\n9.50\nKeelly   .  \t\nM\nKirkland  Uke  *\t\nJl\nLake   Shore     \t\n37 ao\nMacaaee      \t\n,4S\nMandy  ,.-....._*.\u00bb__,.,,,,.\u201e.\u201e..,\n.03\nMalartls       ,\t\n.08\nMclntyre    \u201e\n18.75\nMining Corp \t\n1.80\nMurphy    ...\u2014     -\n.om\nKXWbec      _   \t\n.03\nNlplsslng    .,\t\n1.10\nNoranda    -...\t\n5.10\nOld Colony   ,\t\n.00\u00bb',\nPeterson   Cobalt   -\n.01\np;nd Onlile \t\nJ0\nPremier   Oold   \t\nM\nSherrlt Gordon \t\n.83\n,40\nSlacoe     \t\nJ51\nTech   Hughes    _....\n4.70\nThompson   Cadallac   -\t\n.03\nMS\nVenturea ;  _\t\n.48\nWright   Hsrgreavn   \t\n3 63\nWalte  Acker-nan   _....\n.80\nIMPERIAL  OIL  ACTIVE\nON MONTREAL CURB\nMONTREAL, Dtc. 30\u2014Imperial Oil\nwaa active leader on the Montreal\ncurb r-arket today in a total turnover of 1743 ahares, with the price\nholding unchanged at 10. With thla\nexception the list continued spiritless. Canadian Vickers dropped *i,\nnet to close st 3, a new low level,\nwhile Noranda, ln th\u00ab mining division, was 60 otnte stronger at\n616.50.\nBales ware up approximately 1300\nshares. Of 17 issues to make their\nappearance, losses and galna were\nabout equal.\nThe Consolidated Mining & ^melting Co., of Canada. Ltd.\nTRAIL-BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nManufacturer,  ef Ammonium   Phosphite\nELEPHANT\nSulphate of Ammonia\nTriple  Superphosphate\nBnnd\nCHEMICAL   FERTILIZERS\nSOLD   BT   NATIONAL   FRUIT   CO.   NELSON\nProducers   and   Refiners  of\nLead-Zinc\nTADANAC\nBnnd\nELECTIOLTT1C\nCadmium-Bismuth\nMETAL MARKETS\nHIW TOBK. If. T. DM. tt\u2014\nCopptr quiet; cltctm-me spots and\nfuturt 714. Tin. seay*. spot and\n**ttt-, 31.78; futun 3348. Iron,\nquiet, unchanged- Lnd, ateadr\ntpot New Tork 378; Batt St. Loula\n348. Zlno tteedy; Ket at. Louie\napot and futon 8.18. Aattatow\n8.18.   jwtlfn net- Hlvtr soli ttntt.\nAt London\u2014Sl___r< oopptr tpot\nIU Ut; futun 188 7t \u00abd. lUrtro-\nIrtle, tpot 148: futun Mat. Tla.\nspot 1141 it 84; futun (l\u00ab4 Bs.\nLead, apot fu lit \u00abd: futon 116\n10s. Une. sint 114 7s ed; futun\n\u00a314   Its.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nPRICES ON RISE\nReports of Bad Weather in\nthe Argentine Strengthen* Prices\nNEW YOBK 8'\nrocK\nIH\ns\nAlltfbenr   \t\ni*\nIH\nAllied   Chemical\n\u00ab\u00bb'A\nISH\nSTH\nAmerloan Oan  .\nei%\nMH\nUH\nAmr- For Power\nTit\ntH\ntH\nAm   Ma   _   Fdy\n30\nIIH\n19%\nAm Smelt _ Be\nIt\nISH\n1IH\nAjn Telephone -\n117\n113%\n115%\nAmerlc    Tobaoco\nttH\n87\n891,4\nAnaconda   \u201e -\n10'*,\n\u2022 H\nIH\nAtchison     _\nMH\nII\n83%\nBaldwin   _\t\nSH\n4%\n8%\nBait  _   Ohio   _\n15%\n14H\nISH\nBendix   Aviation\n17 H\n18H\n17\nBeth  Steel\t\n11\n17H\n18\nCanada Dry   ....\n11\n10%\n11\nCanadian    Paclf\nI1H\nUH\nUH\nCerro   de   Paeco\n13H\nUH\nUH\nChes  tt  Ohio  ..\n3tH\n38%\n37%\nChrysler     \u2014\nISH\nIS\n13%\nOom _ South\n8H\nsv,\nIH\nOon Oaa if T...\ntl\nM\n59%\nCorn producte ..\n\u00abH\n38%\n40%\nc Wright pM ..\nIH\nDupont   \u2014\nSSH\n13 H\n84%\nEastman   Kodak\ntlH\nTlH\nMH\nEl Power a_ ia\nUH\n10%\nUH\nBrie    - _..    ,\u201e,\n5%\nSH\n8\nFord English ...\nPord  of   Canada\nIH\nFirst    Nst    Stone   48\n48\n48%\nFro-port Texas ..\nISH\n\u00bbH\n18%\nOeneral   Moton-\n33H\n33\n31%\nOenenl   Electric\n38H\n34\n34H\nOeneral  Fooda...\n31%\n81%\n13%\nOold  Duet  ........\n17H\n17H\n\"H\nGoodrich   \t\nSH\nIH\n3%\nOranby\t\n8\n5H\nIH\nOreat North pfd\nJ7H\n18H\nUH\nOnat   w   Sugar\n(\u25a0>';\n8\nt\nHowe  Sound   \u2014\n13 H\n13 H\nHudson   Motors.\n10'i\nJO\n10%\nIns Copper \t\n3\".\n8\n1\ninter Nickel \t\n7H\n7H\nIV,\nInter Tel _ Tel\nIH\n7%\n7%\nKelly  Spring   ....\nIH\n1\nIH\nKenn Copper ....\n10H\n10%\n10%\nKreege B S \t\n18%\n18%\n1S%\nKroegg    _    Toll\n\u2022\u00bb%\n4H\n4%\nLehn 8c Fink   .\n30\n\u00bbH\n30\nMack   Truck   ...\n1\u00bbH\n18%\n14%\nMilwaukee pfd -\n3H\n3%\n1%\nNash  Moton  .\n18%\n18%\n16%\nNat   Dairy   Prod\n33%\n31H\n23%\nN Power \u2014 Lt\n14%\nNew   Tork   Cent\n30%\n31%\n39%\nPaclf Oas  _  n\n36%\nm_\n14%\nPackard    Motors\n4\n3\",\nSH\nPenn  R R  \t\n18%\n17%\n17%\nPhillips  Pete   ...\n4H\n4\n4%\nPure   Oil    \t\ns%\n3%\n3%\nRadio    corpora..\n8\n\u00ab'i\n5\",\nRadio  Keith   Or\na\nIK\n3\nRem  Rand    ...\n3\ni'l\n2\nRock   Island   ....\nt%\n!%\nft\nSafeway   Stores.\n43 %\n40%\nUH\nS Louis a, B T\nan,\n3\nt%\nBhell Union Oil.\n5\",\nHt\n27<a\nSinclair   Oon   ....\n4:...\n*   4!t\n4%\nSouth   Calif   Id\n31%\nSO\n30 ',4\nSouth   Pacific   ..\n38\n38 %\n17\nStan  Oil  of oal\n34%\n3S%\n31 v.\nStan Oil Ind ....\n13H\nStan Oil of N J\n37%\nM%\nIT\nStewart    Warner\nSV,\n5\n8\nStudebaker   \t\nUM\n10%\n10%\nTexsa,    Corpora..\nUH\n10%\n11\nTexas   Oulf   sul\n33%\n11%\n33%\nUnion Carbide ....\n30%\n38%\n29(4\nUnion  oil  Oalif\n13%\n11H\n12%\nUnion  Pacific\t\n74H\n71\n71\nUnited   Aircraft..\n10%\n10\n10%\nU S ploe At Fdy\nUH\n11%\n13\".\nU S  Rubber  ....\ntH\nIH\nIH\nU  S   Steel\t\n89%\n18%\n17\",\nWest Electric  ....\n34%\n31%\n33\"-\nWillys   Overland\n3%\n1%\n3%\nTellow Truck ....\nIH\n1\nIH\nEXCHANGES\nllrf TOOK, Dm. M. (APi\u2014The\nitoefc market perked up today, ei-\n\u2022etty eanoellinc, on the averaffe,\nMoDday'i decline, which had pulled\nprloee   cloee   to   the   December   17\nlm,\nUU Millar claimed about half\nthe extreme advance, but the market waa more eot've on the earlier\nrlee than on the final sag, and\ntransfers of 3.443,867 _har.\u00a7 were\nthe Ierf_\u00bbt In 10 day*.\nWith tax aelllnt mueh lees noticeable, Wall itreet felt perhaps the\nstage wee being set. earlier then\nusual, for the year-end rally. Investment trusts are much interested\nIn lata mark-ups slnoe their Deoember tl aeeet values are ahown\nin annual statements profit thereby.\nIn both 1990 *nd 1939 sharp rains\nwere reserved for the hat two trading days.\nLRAD1NO  ATOCK*   AEE UP\nIn r*neral. final prices of leading\nstocka represented fractional to 2-\npolnt advances. American Telephone\nrecovered briskly, closing 2% hlrher.\nIT. S. .Steel touched 89% before falling back to 38, where the rein was\n~ ',4. The preferred wu stronr er.\nAmerican Can, Bethlehem, Oeneral\nBectric, Westinghouse and Standard\nOil Of Kew Jersey finlahed with\n\u25a0mall plus signs, while Consolidated\nOas, Ifew Tork Central, Natlonal\nBiscuit, Case, Woolworth and North\nAmerican were up a point or slightly more.\nForeign exchanges mostly favored\nthe dollar, sterling's net loss was\nabout a cent, while the Japanese\nyen was down  nearly  3.\nHallway loam did their best to\nresurrect a fallen bond market today, but weakness of United States\nr-overnment obligations and inertia\nof other domestic securities halted\nthe movement. Total sales mere 618,-\n481,000.\nMONTREAL, Que., Dec. 20\u2014(By\nthe Canadian Press)\u2014British end\nforeign exchange in relation to the\nCanadian dollar as compiled by\nthe Royal Bank of Canada, closed\ntoday as follows:\nArgentic*    (peso)    _    0.8186\nAdstralla (pound) _ \u201e    9.3830\nBelgium    fbejga)        0.1719\nBrail   (mtlrels>       0.0793\nChina (Hong Kong dollars) ..   0.3173\nCzechoslovakia   (crown)      0.0868\nDenmark (krone*      0.2335\nFinland   ifinmark)    \u201e    0.3180\nFrance   (fraoe)   \u201e._ _.    0.0483\nOermany   (reichsmark)   _    0.9934\nGreat Britain  (pound)  _    4.2151\nGreece    (drachma)     ,    0.0159\nHolland   (florin) \u201e    OM\nIndia  (rupee)  \u201e \u201e    0.8303\nItaly   (lire)    \u201e      0.0637\nJapan   (*\u2022\u00bb>     \u2014    0.4560\nJugoslavia (dinar)     0,0335\nNew Zealand (pound)     8.831s\nNorway (krone) ., -  05317\nPoland   idott)    __.-   0.1893\nRoumaala   (leu)   \u201e,    0.00078\nSouth   Africa   (pound)   _._...   5JB19\nSpain   ipeeeta)       01043\nSweden  (krone)  \u2014,_.   0.3364\nSwitzerland   (franc)      03404\nUnited    States     t dollar)    33%    peT\ncent premium.\nNEW YORK LIST\nCANCELS LOSSES\nOF DAY BEFORE\nUU  Selling   Claims   About\nHalf Expense Advance;\nMarket Active\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Dee. 39. (CP)\nA spectacular rU# la Pioneer Oold.\ncoupled wtth active txadlnr In Lome\nOold, featured an otherwise dull\nsession on the Vancouver stock exchange today. The activity of the\ntwo leaders failed to extend to the\nremainder ot tbe list snd other active issues cloeed unchanged generally.\nPioneer, opening at 8.00, eold up\nto 3.80. at which price tt closed, a\nnet gain of 60 cents. Lorn* Gold,\nslso a firm opener at ll'i cents,\nrose to 13% for the final sale, closing at 13 cente bid, a net advanoe\nof 1 cent.\nBid\nBig Missouri 15\nBluebird      03%\nOeorge  Knt u-  -01',4\nOeorge   Copper\t\nGeorgia  River     .03 Ti\nOolconda    ..._  .23\nOrandview     _ .06%\nInt  C  6c  C    , _ .10\nKootenay Florence  .01\nLorne Gold - .13\nLucky  Jim    -  .03\nMorton Wollesy   .01\nNational Silver   .02%\nNoble   Five     .06%\nOregon   Copper     .01 %\nPremier     \u201e _ .60\nPend Oreille   JW\nPioneer  Oold 8.80     J\nPorter  Idaho   07%\nReno   Oold   .._ 30\nReeves McDonald  _ .38\nfillvervcreet  0.1%\nWellington   ...._\t\noas\nA   P   Consolidated   -\t\nC and Z Lands \t\nCalmont      \u201e...\nCommonwealth  ........\nEastcrest    -  _.\nFabyan\t\nFreehold   \t\nHargal      \u201e _\nHome   Oil   \t\nCHICAGO GRAIN\nPRICES HIGHER\nMarket  Takes   Freah   Courage From Strength at\nNew York\nOmCAOO. Dec. 39. (By John P\nBoughan, Associated Press market\neditor) \u2014Taking fresh courage from\ncheerful action of the New Tork\nstock market, all grains went briskly\nupward today.\nReport* of crop damage by Hessian fly ln Illinois and Indiana to\nwinter wheat and of persistent, unwelcome rains In Argentina tended\nto promote the advance. Scantiness of domestic receipts of wheat,\ntogether with tightening of cash\nprsmiums for Immediate delivery,\nacted as an additional bullish factor.\nWheat cloeed unsettled, 1% to IH\nabove yesterday's finish; corn l'i\nto 1% up; oats showing \u2022% to 1%\ngain; and provisions 5 to 15 cents\ndown.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nReglna and district have experienced thla fall the most rain In\ntbe last fife months of the year\nsince 1918, records of the Reglna\nweather  bureau  Indicate.\nWINNIPEO, Man. D\u00ab. 39.\u2014Receipts; cattle 130; calvea 35; hogs,\n408;   sheep, nil.\nSteers, up to 1060 lbs: good and\nchoice   14.75   to   96.\nMedium (4 to 94-80; common\n9300   to   |3.60.\nSteers, over 105o lbs: good and\nchoice, 95 to 9?; medium 94.00\nto 94-75;   common 93.00 to (3.50.\nHeifers: good and choice 94.50\nto 98.50; medium 93.76 to 9425;\ncommon   93.00  to  93.50.\nFed calves: good snd choice 95-50\nto 96.60;   medium   -..no  to g&.OO.\nCows: good 93.00 to 83-60; medium\n93M to 93.75; common 82-00 to\n62J5: cannera and cutters 9100\nto 91-75.\nBulls: good 81-75 to 82-00; common   91-25   to   9160.\nStocker and feeder steers: good\n8300 to 93.50; common $3,00 to\n$3.60.\nStocker and feeder steers: good\n83.00 to 93.50; common 62.00 to\n93-60.\nStock cow* and heifers, gcod\n62.73 to 63-00; common 82.00 to\n$3.50; milkers and fpr.r.grr* 835.00\nto  965.00-\nVeal ca'ves: good and choice, *6.00\nto 98.00; rom_non an<l medium\n93.50   to   65-50.\nHogs: Select bacon 8100 per head\npremium; bacon 84.00; butchers\n61.00 per head discount. Heavy\n9360; extra heavy 63.00; lights\nand feeders, 6300 to $3.50; rows\n83 00.\nLambs: good handywelght 63.50:\njtood heavies g4-0o to $425; common\n\u26663.50   to  64-    Bucks   63-00   to   64.00.\nSheep: good heavies $2.00 to\n93.50; good handywelght 92.50 to\n63.00;   common   6100   to   61-50.\nEGG MARKETS^\nOTTAWA, Ont., Dec. 29.\u2014Eggs:\nToronto:\u2014At extras 23 cents, firsts\n30 cents; graded out and delivered. The poultry market is still\ndepressed.\nMontreal;\u2014Extras 33 cents, firsts\n38 cents, seconds 2o cents, with\nB. C. eggs bringing two cents\nhigher. Turkeys are dull and could\nbe bought In cartots on a basis\nof 35 cents for grade birds over\n16  lbs.\nHalifax:\u2014Extras iw \u2014 32 cents,\nseconds  18\u201430 cents.\nSaint: John:\u2014Extras 30 rents,\nfirsts 26 oente, pullet extrw 20\noents,  delivered,   cases returned.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Dec. 20,\nFlour unehanged. Shipments P\n322; pure bran 14.0o to 14.50.\nWheat:   No.   l,   Northern   69\":\n73%;   Na   1   Red   Durum   67\u201461\nDee. 70;  May 67%;  July 66%.\nOata:  No. 8,  White 26%\u201427%.\nOorn: Not 3 Tellow 41%\u201443%.\nFlax: Na I, 1.37%\u20141.42%.\nPIONEER GOLD IS\nSPECTACULAR ON\nVANCOUVER BOARD\nLome Gold Is Also an Active\nTrader;  R*\u00bbt of List\nUnchanged\nEXCHANGE RATES\nVANCOUVER LIST\nMINE)\n17\nMri\n.it\n.03 ii\n3t\n.07 H\n.IS\n\"51'4\n.mi\n.03\n.03\n.03'*\n.07%\n.03\n.08\n1.85\n.08^\n.ia\njo\n.03\nMOWTRBAff,. Dae. ta.\u2014Voluo. 0(\ntrawling dp tha Montreal atock exchange Increased conalderably to.\nday. mainly due to activity In Bra-\nalUan. The remainder of the llat\ncontinued at a low ebb. Price*\netrenithened allfhtly.\nBraalllan wa, active leader ot tha\nllat with a total of 6082 shales, and\ngained V, net to im. International\nNickel alao llnlahed hither at \u00bb**.\nup t, net.\nAmong cloelng prlcea wcre: Abitlbi\nup W) net to 3, tha preferred laaue\noff Vi to oft; Canada Cement up\n'ei to 8*,,; and Oanadlan Pacific\n% to 14V,. B. C. Pecker, waa down\n(4 to 1.\nTha bond department waa conalderably more active.\nThere ware 28 laauea traded, and\nof these galna outnumbered loaaea\nby 7 to J.\nMcDougall  Segur B \t\nMcDougal Bttt -r \t\nMercury \t\nMayland    ,\t\nRoyallte          8.0O\nSterling  Paolflo 1014\n.10\n.38\n.08\n.07\n.11\n'll*.\n.Mii\n.03 ii\n.46\n.03\n.08\n.09\n.19\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON. Dec. 29.\u2014(API\u2014C P\n818%: Bran Trae 814: Brit Amn\nTob \u00a33 12a 8d: Distillers \u00a32 3a 6d;\nDunlop Ruhr 14s 9d; Electrical 6c\nM. Ind. ord. 18a 3d; Pord \u00a31 7s;\nHud Bay \u00a31; Hydro Blec *}*_; imp\nChem 13a 3d; Imp Tob \u00a31 13s 9d;\nInt Hold \u201e Inv \u00bbI'4: Intl NXl 811 tt;\nShell T & T \u00a31 12a 6d; vickers\nBa liid; Brit Five per cent war\nloan. 1947 .198 10a; Brit 4'i per\ncent war loan \u00a302 10s; Brit four\nper   cent   1960\u2014'90  \u00a393.\nIrtw   TOIUC   N.   T.   Dee,   M._\nSterling exchange eeev at l> 35 for\n)-day kllla ahd at 83.41V, for da-\nmand.\nCanadian dollara 18% por oent\ndiscount.\nFranca t_i w-18 canta.\nLire 8 081, canta.\nUruguay   44_5   canta.\nMarka  23 77  centa.\nKronen   19.1Q  oanta.\nMONTREAL UST\nGAINS^STRENGTH\nBrazilian Traction Is Active\nLeader;    International\nNickel Also Higher\nTORONTO INDUSTRIALS\nBell   Telephone  .... 1)9\nBraaUlan     12       1114    U\nB   A  Oil     9%     \u00bb'\/,     9)4\nCan   Dredge    13\nCanada Malting  .. UU\nCona   Bakeries   .... 714\nCona Mining    66 _   6814   8814\nDistil  Seagrams   .. (14\nFord of Can  A  .. 1114             1114\nImperlsl   Oil     10'i    10      10\nInter   Nickel   -  0%     9'4     0%\nrnter  Pete    ll'i   ll      11\nLoblaw A   10';   10      10\nMaasey  Harris  ...... 4\nNoranda    -  15>4\nOnt Eqult Ufa .... 6%\nService Stations .. 614\nSup-rtest      1814\nHlran   Walker   .... 2%     214     SV,\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, Dec. 28,\u2014Cheese, butter snd eg* prices unchsnged today.\nCsrlot prices of British Columbia\nfresh eggs were 36-36 cents for extras, 30-31 cents for firsts, and 36\noents  a doeen  for  pullets.\nCheesp\u2014Ontario. 0\"* to 9%: early\nseason,  12 to  12'_\nButter\u2014No.   1   finest,  31H.\nEggs\u2014Fresh specials ln cartons,\n48; fresh extras in cartons, 42;\nfre*h firsts ln cartons, 36; storags\nextras In cartons, 31; storage firsts\nin cartons, 28; storage seconds ln\ncartons, 34.\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nCALOARY, Alta. Doc. 39\u2014Receipts: cattle. 17; calves, hogs, aheep.\nnil. No sales were recorded during the session.\nesB=ematetsmmmmmststmmmmmmnsimm tJtttt MIM\nRoyal Bank Assets for Year Are town\nSeven Per Cent; Deposits Are Increased\nDOLLAR AND POUND\nEASE  SLIGHTLY\nNBW TORK. Dec. \u00bb. (OP)\u2014Tba\nCanadian dollar and pound sterling\neaaad alightly on local foraKn ei-\nchanges todar. the dollar closing %\ncent lower at 8114 eenta, and sterling ending the day 1 otnt lower\nat  83.42  for cable  transfers.\nTha* dollar opened unchanlM thla\nmornlnr ot 81'i. cente, eased to 61\ncenta at noon, aold tor 8114 In\nmid-afternoon, and ended Uw day\nlower at 81% eenta.\nSterling opened 14 cent lower this\nmorning at 884214. w\u00bbs quoted at\n834314 at noon, sold for 88.43 In\nmid-afternoon, and ended the day\nat that figure.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nIN FIRM TREND\nBrazilian Traction Is Feature\non the Stock Exchange;\nMines   Firm\nMONTREAL.   See.   M^Tfc*   BOltf\nuHt of Canada lasued Its financial statement for tbe year ended\nNovember  30.   1631.   her*  today.\nTotsl assets of the bank we It-\nported at M36JW2.466. \u2022 redttettoo\nof approximately 7 per otnt trem\nlaet   year's  total.\nThe total liquid esteete toe mare\nthan 48 per cen^ of all liabilities\nto th\u00ab public. Thla compares with\na ratio of 48.87 per eent tn IPSO.\nand 46.61 per eent for IMS. Tlw\nprincipal accounts Included tn these\nsasets are: Csah It-eros of 6160JS6,-\n801: Dominion tnd pronnetal gor-\nernment securities, 666.473,068; Ot'\nnadlan municipal. British, foreign\nsnd colonial public securities et\n664,614316- Oall loans total 676,-\n368,880, snd rtpnettnt \" a c ooel der-\nable reduction from tbe totalt In\nthe previous statement\nTotal deposits stand at 6647,608,-\n078, ot whleh savings deposits total\n1476.366.171 and demand deposits\n\u2022 170.913,603 Latt ytar. saving* deposit* totalled 6648348446. W4.Ha\ndemand   deposits  wert  6161,746306.\nProfits for tht yttr wtrt 66,441,-\n327, which compares with 66372327\nin  the previous  year.\nTORONTO, Dec. 30. fOP)\u2014While\nsales volume continued light on the\nstandard stock and Mining exchange\ntoday, tht price trend was firm,\nwith mott leaders ln tht gold and\noil sections closing with substantial\ngains. Base metals were featureless.\nTht teas! \u00ab brought action Into 75\nissues, of which 27 closed higher.\n26 declined, and 23 held unchanged.\nStlea totalled  169,666 t'-.ret.\nBRAZILIAN  A   FEATURE\nTORONTO, Dec. 29. (CP> \u2014 A\nsharp advance in Brazilian Traction\nfeatured a stronger market today\non tht Toronto ttock exchange. The\nissue provided well over half of tbe\nsharp turnover and closed with s\nnet gain of Hi points at 12. There\nwas no news to account for the\nadvance.\nImprovement in tht remainder of\nthe list appeared to h* in conformity with strength in New York.\nTotal turnover amounted to 14.757\nshare-!, and of the 50 issues traded,\n21 closed with net gains, 11 with\nlosses,   and   12   wert   unchanged.\nWINNIPEG,    Man.,    Dtc.   36.-*-^\ntures quotations:\nOpen   Hlfh   Low Cloat\nWheat:\nDte\t\nMay    \t\nJuy    \t\nOats:\nDec.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nAblUbl Power * Ptper   3\nAsbestos  Corp    35\nAtlantic Sugar  - 6\nEMI   _>lephont  119\nBrazilian T L 6c Power  13\nBrit American Oil    930\nCan\" Car   _c   Foundry     6%\nCan   Cement      6^\nCan   Cemtnt   Pfd - 67\nCan   industrial   Alcohol     \\y_\nCan   Power    \u2014.. 60\nCons Mining 6c Smelt mm 66\nA   P   Oraln    , 4\nImperial Oil  -, 9%\nLake of  tbt Woods \u201e ~ 6\nMawey  Harris     4\nMont_-?sl   Power     38\nMont   Telegraph \u201e \u201e 44 ft\nSt Lawrence Flour Mills \u201e  , 1\nWabasso  Cotton    10\nWinnipeg Railway    .. 5\"i\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\n56       69%    86       90'4\n61H    68H    61%    63%\n63%   M%   63%   66%\n38%    30%    38 K    3B%\nMay        31%   63%    81%   33%\nJuly        83%    33%   83%   33%\nBarley:\nDec \u201e   37%    88%   37%   87%\nMay        38       80%    89       89%\nJuly 39%    39%   39%    89%\nFlax:\nDtc.        97       99%   97      M\nMay      101% 103% 101% 106%\nJuly     -... 103%\nRye:\nDec _..   44       44%    44      44%\nMay        46%    47%   45%   47%\nJuly        47% 47%\nCuh Prices:\nWheat: No. 1 Hard, 60%: No. I\nNor., 60%; no, 3 Nor., 66%: No, f\nNor.. 51%; No. 4, 47%; No. 8. 44%;\nNo. 6, 41%; Feed, 39%; Track. 56%;\nNo. l Durum. 77%; Screenings, per\nton, 60 cents.\nDEFER   DIVIDEND   PAYMENT\nMONTREAL. Dec. 39.\u2014Until tht\nretultt of operations for the year\n1931 have been determined, directors\nof penmans limited have deferred\nthe dividend on the common stock\not tht eomptny. A dividend of 1%\nper cent on the preferred stock for\nthe Quarter ending January 31, 1933,\nhas been declared, payable February\n1   to record  of  January   31.\nOOLD  OL'TFLL'X  IS\nCHECKED   IN   V.   9.\nNEW YORK. Dec. 29.\u2014The recent\nyear-end outflux of monetary gold\nfrom the United States wat checked\ntoday.\nThe New York Federal Reserve\nbank announced that there wert\nno exports, but an import of \u00ab7.475.-\nooo from Japan was reported at\nSan Francisco,\nrtm-K' f'.r ?;\u25a0    C:\u00bb(p.. jjiu.p.trk.hk.-.solt.\nI,AI_W_(UI      a._\u00bb,-J4  TUB   ADDRESS\nbLACKSTXIKk IIAIX In Ole rUct.-\nft a wvi* nnt* ntt is iltc nH<\u00ab, -\nCHK-TER-AV.. <^J7.,LITTtE'HOTKL-\n'  New. quitt. hmBdikK*. wru up; mmi-ms\n%sler, i\u00bbt>. ihm-.: mfn . lobby\nGBEir T\/OOD. 6_\u00a3 PLAZA 480\nQRBEJ., BRIAR fiOTEfc\n$9 p'ir wee4c( $2 |\u00bber* ,da^ iftp.\nN<*\u00ab\u00bb bM..: rrt\u00bb. tbh. WWr. stwy rni.: l\u00bb\u00bbgt.\nIJShl tTtim.: no txl. <Iup. tnt :.-. ur. al li*n\u00ab.\nflRWN vAV.. J.tfl.  iD. AFP.N--9\n-Mte-aflaj furs   itrra frost cm:. \u2022\u00bb\u2022 wirnlow*.\nwirt M*1e.. unlf.-M pr It ifflitcd s-arili, t;l ''\"\noa.:  W-It. homt:- 1  hlk.  to I. t. C*   Tilt?\nKtimofid.     | flrtUnrt_*\u00bbn ^- P. j-ju\ni-Vl'lT   I'-ARK-RI.VP\".   14J\"-LAB-UK.   AIR\\V\n\u00ablf..p1ifinrt; \\tb wk. S|i;  -'. ' \u25a0'\n'\"\"\u25a0 \"P-PARK,   41'i:i\u2014KAST   VfMV   HOTF.L.1\nUwje rraa.i r>nv. -or num. bath: cool\n--- tictM \u00bbfM.:-H rom. In. WJlt n\u00bb.\nlw\\HH   PKi.  \u25a0il''rU_VjU.\\  MAHfeB:   vTnTf\n\u25a0ni5ft* - T^Jf1: .\"fJ. _h.7 \u00bb\u00ab\u00bb- twt. h. Hi.60 _IC.\nSJX'---v#rM--i-.. B.7TS4 - q., <<'\u2022*:\n'ACfCSON PARK! PLA--A.\nBftw.\/rtia. *Aj: hMfL\" \u00bbh*f-  tW-l'fl \u25a0\nvn0BVH-8r..li..'y.iL-&Gi.. nniiT\nAWN. 6J,.l-COTL.U\u00bb. H*. R. ff.\n\u25a0 rMi.: t'hy>. 66 Wja ; t C.__.__\n ;>\u25a0\u25a0...\naits. -CR. :.>TFgRV-MH.aYn.\nI mtn: no \"bj. ta cfifM: .lvwir iit<)\ns\u00abu:,. \/.nE. ihv\u201e kt. BsiTTSP-fi\n\\cl.  tr.in\u00ab\u201e )\u00bb**>', \u25a0-n 0 rgpifl.       \u25a0 __:\nllotfl\/Haoms*\ni>7 wk  HP: l Vtww\nnf. ramvik*0 MrTiec.\n63 P-\nMm:.  PK.\u20143\nm. Ijni-.fW.t   \u25a0\ny.'sOjf\" \"\" HAWK JiST\nEU   UYTON\nDO:    .Or*   tlSCVt.M pf.\nToorin\"  N.aut'.rcat b.\u2014.\n;*! Tl a. I\"    \"*\". 18 aacelalj\nfo\u00bb eaqh noom.\nsr\n\u2014jup.\nVRTONVMOTSL\n'oaii.j-tr-aiW. i_(H|rt_..\n'^-D^corafttt.\niH R-OM.\np; daily. ll.-Q up:\nTboou. >Wii);\nENSrOBK-tfl-'tS\n.... .     Wf>tT\u00bb- \u25a0ft*,,'',\"*-';\n|s,, KbBtH^~\u00bby M.c>\nCOrTTH.\n.'iliji l\ndM\nr: u i.mu\nwith tatl^\n.Race. 7i_-jbbaut-\nGRFIRNT.KA 445-\n\u25a0 pin . pr. _bn.Hi: \u25a0 |irrj\nresMORE. \u00abu:-i-3'\nriiH* m-kl mt.: m\u00ab \\\nwun  be#rh-  Gpwl If_u*t\nl'KNMORE._\nr'BNHQRE.\n[\u25a0t-t n\u00bbiti.pi\n\u00ab***.\nr BNMnHE.\n464 -.a-\n\u00a32_______ii\nftfht 1-.1 rtn*.. ttmmnU\nENMORB. 416_--i A\n\u25a0WMt\ns'mi\nLAifiSWFPC ..\nri-Mm-a: *'f ^r*. 0\nI,: 611.61   f^f, JJJ\nm> 1 rm. npi.. ;\nLA   SALL  ,   N.   103,\"\n1-C-il r._ h(t\u201e jrl\nLA NAI1 , &\u201e lot*,\n_\u25a0: t  r.TtH..*Mi.;ih:. I\nr,4W_j:NC'k sfi t-aT\n.. 'et.. M. \\ S.'kti.'-By\nI   4 ,v *\u25a0*.  vri^       N3.        'a?\nwJSSthSL\nTTTTn\n- t).   HiMxJ_\n\"eTand' ol-.  ATH\n\u25a0- - tttQatbr -J\n______r*n\nI'i'.r.'opft\nh'> : (KP \u25a0^.sy.tlh: 1\nHNErilnovt tte\"i\nj!l_*__!_J-',tt\u00a35_Jai\n\u00bbn*i a nas..tilt \u25a0*\u25a0>\n*'.-.\u2022\" '\"'\u00bb'\u2022'*' woJi.r\nRAflKB. \u00ab4.)-y\u00bbTJ\nroscoe'w* %wn\n\u00bbf\u00bb. trf. aw't fmw\nSosoot. 71    [JI^T'l\nmM-fBRO'.,V\"\n\u00a3_*_\nACK$6fJ^.L'-X. _Q\\\\\nrn.net    _-Otckr*t\u00bbBff\nnwtr.    Van   Rvrir-''\n___*_i__________i\nVfK.\ni**n\\\n,   a*tXfaVii*,   5827J\nUse the\nWhen You Want\nQUICK RESULTS\nDo you own something: that is no longer serving a useful\npurpose? Is it something that another person might use?\nWould you like to find that other person? And sell him\nthat something? Then here's how! Go to your telephone\nNOW and call 144. Tell The Nelson Daily News ad-taker\nyour want. That's all.\nNelson Daily News Want>Ads\n_\n \t\nNEW YEAR\nGREETING\nCARDS\n5*, 10*. 15*. 20t,\nand 25*\nMann, Rutherford\nDrag Co.\nKIMBERLEY BATTLES TRAIL SMOKE\nCHASERS TO NIL-NIL DRAW IN A\nHECTIC BATTLE ON TRAIL SHEET\nHUNTER ELECTRIC\nWARD STREET\nGeneral    Electric    Radio\nrnbea   Special   for   thia\nweek-end.\nM per cent off List Price\nNelson\nRuslness College\nBAT  OB EVENING  CLASSES\nIndividual    Tuition\u2014Comma-nee\nany time,\nr. O. Boi 14 Pbone \u00ab0J\nFor Modern Plumbing\nat Moderate Prices\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nOpp.  City Hall Phon* 813\nHalton   Shines   in   Visitors\nNets; Only Goal Scored\nIs an Offside Thrust\nKlmberley\nTrail   \t\nNelson   ...\nLEAGUE    STANDING\nW    D     I   Pts.\nTRAIL, B. C, Deo. \u00bb.\u2014Trooping\ninto TYail with a 1-0 victory over\nNelaon tucked under their bockey\npads, Klmberley Dynamiters Tuesday night made thetr lead ln the\nKootenay hockey raoe firmer when\nthey held tlie Smokeaters to a\nnil-nil conteet. It was slap-bang\nhockey all night, with the goal-\nminders r*_ each elde doing wonders wltb the rubber. Time and\nagain In the overtime periods Hutton, who wes Injured, saved his\nteam from defeat by hair-raising\nsaves.\nAlthough there wse a steady\nstream to the penalty box, the game\nwss quite clean. Reddlck and Koaak\nroughed It considerably, and both\nserved time.\nMellor, Kosak, Art and Dub Mackle starred for tbe vlaltora, while\nWheatley, Brown, Hanson and Samec were bright lights for the local\nteam. Klmberley reposes at the\nhead of the league with three wins\nand a draw.\nFirst period opened fast but lt\nproved disappointing toward the\nend. Klmberiey's close checking at\nthe blue line wes breaking up almost every Trail advance and except for occasional dashes the Trail\nfans h-d little to cheer. They had\nplenty of apprehension however f\u00b0r\nKlmberiey's  thrusts   had  Dupuis  In\nopen The\nDAY        STANDARD CAFE\n\"Nelson's Popular Restaurant\"\nEstablished  1916\nand\nNight\nFOOD COOKED\nRIGHT\u2014LUNCH\nAND   DINNER\n.Ct*\nOOOD   SERVICE\u2014\nSATISFIED\nCUSTOMERS\nSATISFl-u    .liOMERS\nFOOD  COOKED   RIGHT  -a-  GOOD   SERVICE\nHOT DRINKS for COLD DAYS\nho*< water several time. \"Dub\" Mac-\nKie etarted lt wltb long shot that\nDupula went down to save. Hs was\nslow clearing and \"Dub\" MacKle\nwae right in on him. Brown got\nthrough but Koeaks stir'- waa bearing down and he was unable to\nshoot. Koeak got a minute lh the\nbox for bis unorthodox spilling ol\nWheatley as the Trail men broke\naway- Shortly after W^?atley. Brown\nand Benson went in and Curly\ncalled tor a goel after the ahot.\nWilson handling the bell consulted\nthe goel umpire who claimed the\nrubber rebounded from the poet.\nMcQuade was Injured when he\nbumped into Botterlll aa the two\ndashed tn to check Brown and went\noff for the remainder of tbe period, Dicken taking his placs on\nKlmberiey's first string. fiamec's\nwork at center was good- Brennan supported him well In their\nfirst session on the Ice but when\nthey came beck for the laet five\nmlnutea Mickey wae 'sulolng again\nand coming to grief against Kozak\nor the Klmberley forwards every\ntime.\nTbe last h**\\t ot the period was\nalmost devoid of thrills. Dupuis\nmade a grand save from Kemp and\nthen dived nlto a fracas to clear\nthe puck as Klmberley swarmed ln.\nReddlck and Kozak tangled toward\nthe end as Reddlck attacked and\nboth went to the box for a minute.\nThey had 60 seoonds to go in the\nsecond.\n*TBE NELSON DAILT NEWS, NELSON, & (\".-WEDNESDAY MOBMNO, DECEMBER SO, 1M1\u00ab\n*Sent Up**\nLOST AIRMAN\nBROTHER LADY\nIN CRANBROOK\nCm Nellie Forrest Had Cold\nExperiences When Plane\nFeU Through Ice\nFor the second time in her career, Sylvia Sidney, young actress.\nbaa gone to prison for the sake of\nher art. In her next pi lure she wtll\nappear as an inmate of a women's\nprison. In \"City Streete\", which wes\nbanned In Ontario, she alao proved\nthat she did not need beautiful\nclothes to be a splendid actress.\nMP' CHECK DOORS\nP    and WINDOWS\nKeep Winter Out\nCheck over yoor doors and windows and make\nsore that they are in good condition. If they let in\ndrafts or if the sills of windows are rotted have repairs made, and make sure of comfort.\nLime: Cement: Brick: Plaster: Storm Doors:\nStorm Windows: Lumber: Roofing Materials: Shingles:\nB.C. Veneer: Gyproc\u2014everything in the building line.\nA. H. GREEN\nCO.\nLTD.\n(Successors to John Burns & son)\nPI-ANT T%<Xl si OFFICES\n\u2122d SALES OFFICE\nUS 11 Mill ST.\nrllONE 264\nCOKE\nWUl Keep Your\nHome Fires Burning\nand Cut Down Tour\nFuel RUls\nIt is clean to handle and M1.70 per ton delivered.\ndoes not clinker. *10-00 P\u00abr ton at lhe ci,y\nGas Works.\nCoke U an Ideal furl ror home snd commercial use. It Is clean to\nburn and handle, produces no smoke or soot, and maintains an\ne-ren, steady heat at all times,\nnio.NE   ORDERS   TO   TRE   CUT   0.(8   WORES,   87\n\u2014The City of Nelson\nTHERMOS\nSTRONGLAS\n(\u25a0COD TSADE   MA*KI\nTHE BETTER BOTTLE\nWill not break unless treated outrageously\nWe can  supply  bottles   only  or\ncomplete kite for work or school.\nWood Vallance HdVre.\nCompany Limited\nWholesale   Nelson, B.C.  Retail\nAN   OFFftlDE   OOAL     ^^^^^^\nThe second period reversed the\nslow opening of the first, but was\nfull of thrills ai the end. It wm\ncllm-exed with a goal thtt wae Juat\nbeaten hy the offstd\u00ab bell. Brennan\nand Bemec, In ths prettiest combination of the nijht. went right\nthrough and bulged the net a minute before the end, but lb was no\ngoal. Hanson, Brown and Wheatley\ndid not go so good ln this stanza,\nthe Klmberley men breaking up\ntheir attacks before they got started.\nBrown missed a golden opportunity right at the opening when his\nbackhand shot wss wild. BotterlH\nbroke away and passed to Art Mackle close ln, but the shot ws.\nstopped. Klmberiey's goal was well\ncovered whenever Trail got through\ntbe forward line. Klmberley had a\ndecided edge on tbe play during the\nfirst half. Art Mackle drew a minute for spilling Harry Brown, rugby\nfashion. Trail's second line played\nIts best hockey of the season In\nthe last quarter of the period. Brennan missed a grand opportunity\nwhen he beat the whole Klmberley\nteam only to shoot directly to Hut-\nton's stick with Samec there waiting for a pass. It was a fast ending. .\nTHRILLS   IV   THIRD\nThrill piled on thrill in th* third\nas the boys whooped It up, putting\neverything tbey had into It. The\nsecond lines opened the affray and\nTrail carried on as It had in the\nfirst. Dicken got a minute for spilling Mollsky. Boon sfterward Reddlck\ndrew the first major of the jr_me,\nthree minutes, for cutting Kozsk\nacross the chest and arms after\nKoeak had slashed at BrennAn's\nheels se he lost the puck. Dupuis\naaved two when the Mackle brothers and Mellor attacked. Trail was\nheld in its own territory. Reddlck\nwent down a;. Kozak tried to\nchoulder him. Fe drew a minute In\nthe pen. Trail threw four men Into\nthe attack. Kozak had hardly returned when Mellor got a minute\nfor trlpiping Reddlck as the hlg\nfellow went down th* boards. Play\nflashed up and down the Ice with\nthe goalies attaining herplc heights\nsaving daisy-cutters snd high ones.\nDicken missed an open goal. Mac-\nkle's backhand was hot, but \"Dupe\"\nhandler! lt. During the final few\nminutes nf the gam\u00ab Trail was\nbottled until Brown broke away. He\nwas almost m when Kozak And Botterlll sandwiched him snd spilled\nhim, and he was held when Wheat-\nley passed back ln from the corner.\nThey rested for the overtime.\nHI'TTON   INJURED\nIt wee Just as fast In the first\novertime session, the teams playing\nabout even. Thrills were climaxed\nIn Hutton's Injury when he stopped\nWheetley's hot one, but he carried\non. Botterlll came near scoring, but\nhe was bottled. Hanson broke away\nand beet the Dynamiters' defence,\nand Hutton fisted away his htgh\nshot. Wheatley missed Hanson's pass\nfrom the cottier. Klmbertey, with\ntwo tough games In as many nights,\nappeared to be tiring as the period\ndrew to a close, but they were ln\nthere and fighting.\nHI'TTON   IS   HERO\nIn the second and third overtime\nBrown went through, but kicked\nthe puck at the goal mouth. It\nwas faced off, and th\u00ab puck went\nto three Trail men in succession,\nbut Hutton cleared. They changed\nends at the end of five minutes.\nDupuis saved from Kemp. Jordon\nwent down and passed to 8amec. A\npile-up In the goal mouth resulted\nand Hutton was forced to save from\nBrown and then Jordon. Dupuis\npaved from Kemp. Trail's first line\nfinished the game with a pile-up\nIn front of the Klmberley goal\nmouth.\nTHE TEAMS\nKlmberley\nDub Mackle, N. McQuade, Hugo\nMackle, \"Puffy\" Kemp, Earl Mellor\nand Dicken,  forwards.\nTrail\u2014Dupuis. goal; Reddlck, Jc-\ndan, defence; Hanson, Brown, Wheat-\nley, Mollsky, Samec, Brennan, 10. -\nwards.\nPenaltlee\u2014First period\u2014Kozak, Kozak, Reddick; second period\u2014A. Mackle; third period\u2014Dicken. Reddick\n(3j, Kozak. Mellor; first overtime-\nnone; second overtime\u2014none; third\novertime\u2014Mellor.\nReferees\u2014Joe Venatter, Trails and\nE.   WJlson   of  Klmberley.\n$61,WllLi.G\nPERMITS ISSUED\nIN ROSSLAND QTY\nWater   Works   System   Receives Attention; Paving Is Done\nNelson Prohibits\nOrientals Having\nWhite Female Help\nThai Ntlson keeps one wholesome\nlaw which le receiving serious\nconsideration elsewhere, wu proved\nrecently by e Jury \u00bbt Vancouver,\nfollowing trouble whldh resulted\nIn Um death of e 90-year old girl\nat the hands of a Chinaman, after\nwbleh the slayer took his own life,\nthe Juty' urged strict enforcement\nof the lew prohibiting ths hiring\nof white female help toy orientals.\nNelson has the unique poaltlon\nof being the only olty In British\nColumbia where thla law l\u00bb strictly\nenforced.\nROSSLAND, B. C, ec 29\u2014Build-\nIn-? permits Issued In Rossland during 1031 totalled . $61,000, stated\nCity Engineer O. L, Colborrie at\nthe council meeting tonight. Of this\nthe commercial amount waa $35,000\nand $19,600 for new private residences, th\u00a9 remainder being for alterations  \u00bbnd   repairs.\nT' . new water works system has\nbeen Improved by laying 1500 feet\nof 10-lnch steel to replace ths old\nwooden flume. Seven hundred feet\nof four-Inch Iron pipe has been laid\nln the Dulhan addition, and a new\nhydrant installed ln this part of\nthe city.\nOne thousand, two hundred snd\nninety-six feet of paving was laid\non Columbia avenue and M4 on\nWashington, and eight-tenths of a\nmile of concrete 10 feet wide laid\non the Rowland-Trail road, and\nthe south side of Columbia avenue\nfinished   with   black   top.\nA letter was reoelved from Oliver\nW. A. McKenzle stating that Rossland's share under the Unemployment Relief act would be \u00bb24,MG.\nThis ls 5 per cent less than at first\nagreed   upon.\nA ward abolition bylaw received\nIts second and third readings, and\nwas  Adopted.\nJohn A. McLeod. M.C.. will set\nes returning officer for the municipal election. John Newman, deputy\nreturning officer for e\u00abt ward,\nand A. D. Christie for the west\nward.\nEIGHT AMERICAN\nLEAGUERS ON THE\nSTARBALL TEA^\nMembers   of   the   Baseball\nWriters'   Association\nConduct a Poll\nHutton.  goal;   Kcwak\nLegion Children\nAre Remembered\nat Crawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY. B. C., Dec, 29\u2014\nMiss Daphney, Phyllis and Cathleen\nHaughton, who have been attending\nschool at Victoria, have returned for\nthe Christmas holidays with their\nfather. A. C. Haughton.\nMlsa Dorothy Pox, who has been\nvisiting frtends at the coast for the\nlast three mouther hae reiurnrd\nhome.\nTlie Canadian legion gave the\nchildren of the returned soldiers a\nparty on Wednesday at the home of\nMrs.   King.\nAll ut down to a delicious t:a at\n4 o'clock. A-ter tea games wero played. T ere was a tub in whtch the\nchildren dlppscl for little presanta,\nafter thnt the mothers also dlpp.d.\nA lovely tree was laden with other\ngifts and decorations these were also\ngiven to tho children. Candles and\nb-illo?ns wer? handed around to thc\nchildren \u00bbfter.\nand   BotterlH,  defence;   Art  Mackle, the neck.\nFOR   THE   TRAVELLER\nTh? cits and stoppers of bottles\npacked in a trunk often work loose\nduring a Journey. A good plan Is\nto draw over the top of each bottle\nthe finger of an old glove. This\nshould be pulled right dow\/ and\ntied  securely  with   a  string   around\nCOAL - for Every Use\nGALT LUMP: A good coal for cook-   $H#50\ning and hot air furnaces\t\nGALT STOVE: A small lump coal for  $9,50\nyour kitchen range \t\nJEWEL LUMP: The ideal and best    $H.50\ncoal for hot air furnaces. Ton\t\nCROW'S NEST: The best for steam   $H,00\nand hot water plants. Lump\t\nMine Kun  1 $10.25\nSpecial prices on carload lots.\nDRY WOOD-AU Lengths.\nNelson Transfer fc,\u00b0;\nPhone 35\n^^_      Ltd.\nNelson, B. C.\nG.  N-Tille  Forrset,  Canadian  Airways filers, reoently loet and rescued\nIn the northland ls a brother of Urs.\nMaude Forrest of Cranbrook. who Is\na sister of Mrs. Nellie Hogarth, also\not Cranbrook.\nId relating the experiences of Forrest   end   his   companion    St. wart\nMcRorle,   the   Winnipeg   Free\nreoently   said:\nTrudging  along on  a weary  hike\nthet   meant  skirting   lonely,\nlakes,   and   pushing   through   snowbound,   pathl-fsi   woods,   their   only\ncompanions  two  Indians  wbo  speak\nno English, Stewart McRorle and C\nNeville    Forrest,    Canadian    Airways\nflying  men  w.o have betn   missing\nsince Friday, Dec. 11, were spied Just\nbKore dusk on Tuesday by Pilot A\nN. West?rgasrd, wbo bad been sent\nto   tbelr   relief,   and   were   brought\nsafely   to   Winn.pei   Wednesday   af'\nfcernoon, about 2 o'olock.\nAfter nine days of anxlou* watting\nfor the relief plane that never oame,\nhopefully watching the hazy skies as\nfellow    pilots    flew    overhead,    but\n.ailed  to \u00bb;\u2022 the  w.isps  of  smoke\nfrom  warning fires  they  had  built.\nMcRorle and Forrest decided at last\nthat   everything   does    not    always\ncome t*j those who wait, and planned\nto   essay   a   100-mlle   walk   to   tbe\nshore-line   of   Lake   Wlnnip?g   and\neventually cross the lake to Rlvertou\nwhere trains would end thetr d-smal\ntrek.\nLONG-AWAITED\nsi (TOR     ARRIVES\nWith two Indians as guides and\ncompanions, and their food and other\ncomforts packed on a d-g-slelgb, the\ntwo mn were just well started on\nt'-.etr hazard-fraught Journey when\nthey were seen by Pilct Westergaard\non Tuesday evening, and the long-\nawaited succor ca_ie to them.\nLEFT WINNIPEO DEC.  11\nMcRorle and Forrest s:t out early\nIn the morning of Dec. 11 with a\nflight of planes bound for Island\nlake, scene of a rush of mining\nclaim stake.-, taking out a party of\nmining engineers and prospectors.\nMcRorle and Forrest had no passengers aboard, but wers carrying food\nand  oth;tr supplies.\nTheir plane was a Fokker Universal, not -as fast as the Super Universal* the other pilots were flying. ^\t\nFalling to m^e the speed and beat Wood, atar on the rugby field\nthe rapidly clouding skies, McRorle. again displayed his ability to com*\nfinding his ceiling bscom.n* lower through tn a pinch here tonlgh\nsnd lower, s_aped a course for Lake when he gave Harvard \u00bb C-8 hoeke\"\nCharron. a large body of water at- victory over McQlll with his goa'\nmoat due west of where the Msnl- ln ln overtime period. It wee thr\ntcbi-Ontario boundary line swings iMond meeting and second over-\noff   to   the   northeast,   and   about tlme   cla_h   for   the   ^ Mcm\nthrse  hours   flying from   Winnipeg. Uki      th    prevt0UB gMM-\nIntending  to  make  a  landing on i T        *\nt'K !\u00a3? ^^^[hirL^Sere^M       TA0S   MARK    THE   0FADES   IN\nthe   Ice   was not  se  thick  here  as nnraarn pmi tb v\nelsewhere, and when  he came down' DBE8SED POULTRY\nBT. L017I8, Dec. 29\u2014An all-star\nmajor league baseball teem chosen\nhy 229 members of the Baseball\nWriters' Association of America, ls\nmade up of eight American league\nand two Natlonal  league players.\nThe team, announced here today\nby the sporting news, is made up as\nfollows: Al Simmons, Philadelphia\nAthletic*, left field: Earl Avrrlall, of\nCleveland, center field; Babe Ruth,\nof the New Tork Yankees, right field;\nHarold Traynor of the Pittsburg.*:\nPirates, third base; Joe Cronln of\nWashington, shortetop; Prankle\nPrisch of the St. Louis Cardinals,\nsecond bee:; Lou Gehrtgh of the\nNew York Yankees, first bese; Mickey Cochrane of the Philadelphia\nAthletics, catcher; Robert M. drove\nsnd Oeorge Earnshaw, both of the\nAt-letlcs,   pitchers.\nOrove', magntf.cnt pitching during 1S31. the news said, won htm\nthe distinction of being the only\nunanimous choloe. only once before\ntn the history of this particular\npoll, hu a player been chosen\nunanimously, that honor falling to\nMickey O.chrsne, Grove's battery\nmat.  In   1920.\nFashion * Craft\n'20^\nDiscount\nSale\nNow is the time to get t' lit new Suit or Overcoat made to measure at a saving of 20 per\ncent or an extra pair of pants free. Fashion\nCraft are putting on their Semi-Annual Discount Sale of made to measure clothes. Perfect fit guaranteed\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nClosing at Noon Today.\nTrail People Hare\nChristmas at Ymi\nHARVARD BEATS\nMcGILL, 6-5\nSYRACUSE,   N.Y.,   Dec.   29\u2014Barrv\nhis mao_.De went through ths Ice,\nthe wings ahd tall remaining on\nthe   ice.\nHe quickly climbed out of hts\ncockpit snd went to the eld of Forrest, wbo had t>o be helped from ths\ncabin through the door. Unfortunately, Forrest wai soaked through to\ntbe skin when t_e ship went\nthrough the Ice.\nMoRorle's next move wss to salvage the emergency tent, always carried   on    these   distant   trips,   and,\nFarmers alt over Canada this year\nhave fed and finished their poultry\nwith more care with a view to\nproducing high quality in the fin.-..\ned product. That they have benefited\nmaterially Ia amply demonstrated by\nthe huge volume of well-finished\nbirds which have been graded and\ntagged with the purple,- red and\nblue tags of the Canadian Standards\nfor dressed poultry. This f.ns poultry, packed out under tte Inspection\nby the poultry division of the Dominion live stock branch, was a real\nYMIR, B. C-, Dec. 39\u2014Mr. and\nMn. C. J. Anderson have as tbelr\nguest over tbe holidays their daughter, Mrs. Carl Nystrom, of Oreenwood.\nJamrs Ollle Jr, returned to Spokane on Saturday.\nCharley Knoviskl ls the holiday\nguest of his mother, Mre. C. A.\nForslcff ln Spokine for e few days.\nP. H. Wation of Corra Unn and\nJ. Vincent Hughs cf Vancouver were\nYmir visitors on Saturday and were\nthe guests of Mr- and Mrs. W,\nCl\u00bbrk.\nMr. end Mrs. S. Ball had as their\nguests on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nStevens, Mrs. Clar nee Mclsaac and\nMrs.  Helen  Virlgln.\nMr. end Mrs. A. B. Clark and\nfaml'y returned to Trail on Monday\nafter spending soms days hers visit-\n:_(.   with   relatives.\nMr. and Mr:. S. A. Curwen hed as\ntheir guests on Sunday evening, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Clark and Mr. and Mrs.\nA. B. Clark and family of Trail.\nL. Slattery wis a N:lson visitor on\nSaturday.\nMiss Helen Verigin of Trail Is\nspending the .ollday season with\nher parents, Mr. an. Mrs. S. Verigin.\nMlas Oladys OUle of Seattle was\ns guest r* Mr. and Mrs. E. M.\nO.lle   on   *aturday.\nPhon*\nCITY DRUG CO.\nTo ele n up, we sre offertni for\nthe n 'xt tlm dare onr ontlra\nstock of Toilet Sets, et nestle\nreduced prices. Oet In an tks\nbargains.\nYOUR DRUGGISTS\nAiwa;,  at   Yonr   Servlea\nPHONE  34 BOX  1M3\nTAXI and\nTRANSFER\nDall;   Freight    Schedule\nto   Trail   and   Rossland.\nLeaves   Nelson   10   a m\nTrail IVpof\u2014Dominion flarase\nRossland Depot\u2014L. D.  Cafa\nCON. CUMMINS\n44\nROSE\t\nBeauty Parlora\nPhone til tar Appointments\nDownstairs\nK.W.C. Woo Ward st\n52T\u201e-d. .'V-Tr\/rr-L\"^;^: !c*\u00bbjl_-____ \u00a3r.\u201e\u00ab2s\u00bb\nfor himself  and his wet companion.\nWith the aid of a Primus stove\nMme warmth was available, and\nslowly Forrest was able to dry himself  out.\nThe next rrornlng they shifted\nover to the shore of the lake some\n200 yards distant, and rigged up\ntheir tent there. They also salvaged\nfrom the half-sunk plane what food\nand other comforts they  need.d.\nHere tbey remained for eight or\nni ne days\u2014they lost track of the\ndays\u2014waiting for the relief they\nknew would oom:. But the hazy,\ndull weather made the smoke from\ntheir warning fires tantallzlngly invisible to the search planes and\nother ships whlci. flew over their\nheads.\nEventually they decided to more\nout and effect their own relief. They\nhad plenty cf food, and they planned to trek out to Big Black river,\nwork their way to the shore-line of\nLake Winnipeg, and ln time get to\nRlverton- , \t\nSome Indians whom they met\nwere persuaded to act as guides.\nThese men, ttirough lack of knowledge of English, at first were unable\nto understand what was required of\nthem, but, with recourse to the\nlanguage cf signs, they finally grasped what the fliers wanted.\nSH.HTII)   FROM   AIR\nTrudging along with their Indian\nfrl.nda and a dog team to carry\ntheir loads, they were seen by Pilot\nWpjtergaard Tuesday evening. Just\nbefore dusk. Westergaard quickly\ndescended,   took   them   aboard   his\nthe Christmas season. Th\u00bb t-g tells\nthe grade. Special A and B la both\nmilk-fed and selected,\nLAST MINUTE\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nLOST\u2014ONB    TRUCK    CHAIN    BE-\ntween Nelson and Shoreacres. Reward.     National   Fruit,   Nelson.\n(9986)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nPublic    Market    open    Thursday,\n30th, and  Saturday, Jan. 2nd.\nMALT   EXTRACT   WITH   COD\nLIVER OIL\nSPECIALLY   PALATABLE,\nDIGESTIVE tti- MTRITIOIH\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPresctt,,     t   Specialist\nPRONE   1\nShop with us '    mall\nPhone\n35\nTAXI\nThe   Best   of   Service\nCareful,   Courteous\nDrivers\nNa .son Transfer CoM Ud.\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST  and   OPTICIAN\nSuite 286-206, Medical  Arts Bldg.\nToday\u2014Furnished    suite   modern\nalso unfurnished  three.    Kerr  Apts.\n(8606)\nWho   got   my   ruboers   at   Oyro\nClub Monday?    Charles Morris 70_L.\n(3984)\nOet u Rick of Wood FREE.\nSee Burn's Cartage ad. on Classified\nPage. (8885)\nD. C. .Art Shoppe\u2014Taffeta evening dresses\u2014Iat Est Colonial styles\n\u2666 15.00. 18080)\nVacancies ln Annable block, one\nfront suite end ons single housekeeping room. (8907)\nMiss Margaret Graham, teacher of\npiano and violin will reopen her\nstudio, January 4th. (8976)\nship, and'flew them to his  baae at j    Hogmanay J>:nee, New Years Eve,\nIsland lake.\nPetrolle a Favorite\nin New York Tonight\nNEW YORK, Dec. 2ft\u2014Looking\nforward to a crack at Lou Roull-\nlsrd's welter-i?lght boxing title, BUly Petrolle, the boy wbo came back,\nend youthful BUly Townsend of Vancouver m?et in the 10-round feature\nbout at Madison Square Garden tomorrow  night.\nBacked by a reputation built at\ntl-.e expense of some of tbe ring's\ngreatest, Petrolle is expected to en-\nt;r the ring % strong favorite to de<\nfeet Townsend. There wlll be Uttle\ndifference In the weights. Petrolle\ntipped the scales st 140 and Town-\nsend st 142 when they finished\ntheir training today.\nEagle' hall\u2014Clan   McLeary.     Admission  |l.    Refreshments. (8968)\nDANCE    SATURDAY   NIOHT\nEagle    Hall.      Dancing    9    to ' 2.\nGents  75c.    Ladies  Free. (8973j\nIntermediate heckey tonight, Fair-\nview vs. Wolves 7;4fl; Elks va. Muple\nLeafs   9:00;   Admission   25   and   15.\nTECITMSEHS HOLD THE\nBISONS   SCORELESS\nLONDON. Ont., Dec. 20. (CP)\u2014\nThe weerled London Tecumsehs\nheld the pace setting Buffalo Bisons to a scoreless tie tn a throbbing International league engagement here tonight, a packed arena\nwatched the two tee>ms battle\nthrough 70 minutes of hockey without a tally.\nDIAMOND   HEAD   WINS\nTANFORAN RACE TRACK, Calif..\nDec. 29 (AP)\u2014Dlaxond Heed, Peter\nB. Kyne's two-year-old, won thl\nSalinas purse over six furlongs here\ntoday. Altmark was seoond and\nMiss Morocco third.\nThe time wu 1:10 1-5.\nSCANDINAVIAN DeaCE\u2014 Friday,\nNew Year's night at Oellnas hall.\nViolin, pllano and mandola. Everybody welcome. (8904)\nThe  Staff  of  the  Kootenay  Lake\nGeneral    Hospital    wish    to    thank\nall  the  frlenda  who so  kindly  do-\nnoted glfte for their Cnristmas Tree.\n(8901)\nT O N I G H T~^~THE OPERETTA\nKTOKVLAND WILL BE REPEATED\nFOR THE THIRD TIME IN ST.\nPAIL'S HALL AT 8 P.M. SILVER\nCOLLECTION. (8987)\nNOTICE\nThe manag: ment of t he Hume\nHotel brgs to annoui.ee that owing\nto limited ace mmodailon st thetr\nNew Years Eve f'relic thu none\nother than those '-ems reservation*\nfor dinner end dance can expect\nto   bfl   admitted. (8968)\n,   STOP!    LOOK I \" LISTEN!\nOpening of the Riiz nail, formerly tbe Market haU. Dance with an\nIntermission concert. Admission free.\nA collection wlU be taken ln eld of\ntbe Welfare Fund. Remember the\ndate. December 30. Everybody welcome. (8966)\nPHONE TAXI\n77\n421    UAKt'.K   ST.\nFreight Schedule\nDallr to Rossland\nsnd Trail. 10 a.m.\nTrail    Phons\nELKS T. T. *  F.  LTD.\n13%\nL. D. CAFE\nNelson's Finest Equipped\nRestaurant\nExcellent  meals  with\nexcellent service\nAll our Food is strictly\nfresh and carefully\nprepared\nCome   and   bring   your\nfriends    for    regular\nSunday Dinner.\nFurnished  rooms steam\nheated, with hot and cold\nwater ever ready\nL. D. CAFE LTD.\nGee Soot, Sec.\nS13 Baker St.\nttsett* ttt\nThe Sugar Bowl\nGrocery\nSPECIALS   FOR   WEDNESDAY\nAND   THURSDAY\n10 cans Tender PEAS for _.| M\nt cans  Choice  TOMATOES     .95\n7   cans   Choloe   CORN       .98\nFancy COOKING FIGS,\nper   lh.    ,    .10\nFancy EATINO FIOS,\nLarge   pkt _\u201e _   .20\n2 Itu. NABOB or MALKIN'S\nTEA    __  .   M\nS Ibs. BLUE  RIBBON\nTEA   oe   COFFEE .95\nLOCAL  NEW-LAID\nEGGS, firsts, per dos.    .40\nOI R   SPECIAL   CREAMERY\nBITTER,  >   Ibs.  for      JUS\nF-ncy  Sliced  B\" 'iAKFAST\nBACON,   per   lb _.__  M\n4-lb.  can  RASPBERRY\nor   STRAWBERRY   JAM  _   .50\n4 tins SOCKEYE SALMON,\nv, lbs.     ;  .to\nZ  lbs.  freshly  ground\nCOFFEE   (Our  Special)     .55\nSMOKED  HADDIE  FILLETS,\nper   Ih _     .JK\nPHONE  110  FOR  SERVICE\nAND   SATISFACTION.\nA full house at the Canadian\nLegion Military whist drive tonight\n(83 tables. All reserved). Play to\ncommence 8 p.m. anarp. Doors cgaen\n7:18. Twelve prizes ror tha threa\nwinning tables. Dance open to\npublic about 10:30 to i ajn. Admission 28c. Pull piece orchestra.\nl>974)\nBl\nI\nA!\nAI\nLITE, TREATED   ;\nFRANKLY;\n3MANCE,  AS IT  IS\nRBAO\/Y LIVED;\n\u25a0OVE,   WITH   rfs\nJOYS   AND\nSORROWS.\n-BAD GIRL\"\n!   OOOD   A   STORY\n1 YOU'D WANT TO\nJEE-ON  SCREEN\nOR m BOOK.\nSTAND BY POR ONE\nOP   THE   OREATEST\nCOM-DY-DRAMA8\nOP THE YEiAR.\n\"BAD   GIRL\"\nTHE UFE OP A MILLION    SHOP    GIRLS\nAND    THEIR     BOYFRIENDS ALL ROLLED   INTO   ONE\nSTIRRINO\nROMANCE\n1\nTWO SHOWS  NIGHTLY\n7 and 9 p.m.\nMATINEE 2 O'CLOCK\nNow Showing\nA Picture That Is Rated\nOne of  the Four\nBest of 1931\n'BAD\nGIRL'\nVINA   DELMAB'S\nSENSATIONAL   NOVEL\nJAMES DUNN\nSALLY EILERS\nYOU'LL LIKE IT\nBECAUSE   I?'S   HUMAN\nYOU'LL LIKE IT\nBECAUSE  IT'S  TRUE\nYOU'LL LIKE IT\nBECAUSE   IT'S\nBEAUTIFULLY  ACTED\nCOMEDY\nBILLY HOUSE\nln\n\"RETIRE  INN\"\nTERRYTOON\n\"ABOUND   THE\n, WORLD\"\nFRIDAY RONALD   COLEMAN   In   \"BAFFLES\"\nllTlinni yHABBV   LAUDER   IN   CHARACTER    SONO~\nSAlUKUAldN THE STAGE\u2014DANCE BEVUE\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. 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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"}]}}