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Y.     *ZJJ.P\nRan&ers Win Games\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\n^:^M0n t\nVOLUMI tt\ni^\nCorn Up to Dollar Bushel\n1      First Since 1930\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\n_WKL~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~WKKKK^^KKK\nT\u00bb A COPY\nNUMBER  lit |\nNEW WAR RUMBLINGS DISTURB EUROPE\nSTEVENS SAYS\nHE CAN SERVE\nRIDING BETTER\nManifesto Is Sent to\nEast Kootenay by\nFormer Minister\nRESIGNATION NOT\nEASY THING TO DO\nWill Devote Service\nto Great Task He\nHas Undertaken\nBon. II H. Stevens, member of\nparliament for Eut Kootanif, who |\nrecently realjned is minister of trade\nand commerce haa luued a \"mani-\nfeso\" to last Kootenay electors outlining hli position and flying hli\nreiaoni for leaving the cabinet. Mr.\nBO|L B. H, STEVEN*\n\u2022tavana dadarea Uiat'be believe! he\nla In a batter position aow to aerve\nthe intereet* of hli constituency and\nCanada as a whole. The following\n(Contlnuad'on' Page Twelve)\nEdmonton Paper\nPublisher Loses\nContempt Appeal\nEDMONTON, Nov. 21 (CP).-\nAppeals by Charlei E. Campbell,\npublisher of tha Edmonton bulletin, and J. ft. Cowper, reporter,\n.agalnit contempt of court conviction! registered during the Mc-\nMllllan-Brownle* seduction trial\nhere ware dlimiued  In a Judg-\nCampbell   In  June wai fined\nment handed down here tod*;\nampba ^^^^^^^^^\n$300 with the option of 14 dayi In\nJail, and Cowper $100, or three\ndays, when the trial judge, Mr.\nJuitlce W. C. Ivei, found con-\ntempt of oourt In tha Bulletin'!\nitoriei on tha Brownlaa trial.\nTension Is More Taut in\nYugo-Hungarian Flareup\nLEAGUEMAYBE\nCALLED UPON\nSETTLE ROWS\nHungarian Premier\non Secret Trip\nInto Austria\nYUGO CHARGE IS\nCAUSE TROUBLE\nCroat Autonomy Bid\nGets Death Blow\nin Belgrade\nLONDON, Nov. 23 (CPHivii)\n\u2014Britain wlll tupport Yugoslavia\nIf that nation 'nilita upon demanding a ipeclal lenlon of tha league\nof nation! oouncll to dlaeuu the\nanamination of King Alexander,\nqualified obiervere Hid today.\nOENEVA, Nov. 23 (AP)- The\nleague of nation! heard today that\nHungary may demand an extraordinary session of the league to discuss Yugoslavia's charge of Hungarian \"complicity'' ln the assassination at Marseille.\nThc Hungarians continued to be\nfurious over the attack of the Little\nEntente and prepared a counterattack which il as sensational as\nthe Belgrade offenaive. The league\nofficials hav* heard unofficially\nthat Hungary is likely to point out\nthat terrorist assassinations have\noccurred In many countries in recent tlmea for which Hungary cannot In the' illghUat degrae be held\nresponsible. \"1\nDRIVING CROATS OUT\nIt waa nelleve-Mhat Hungary may\nattack the Yugoilivlan treatment\n(Continued on Page Two)\n*\nMarkets at\na Glance\n(By tha Canadian Preu)\nToronto and Montreal: Industrial\nstocks higher.\nToronto mines: Lower.\nNew York: Stock! closed higher.\nWinnipeg: Wheat down *k U \\\nLondon: Bar lilver, tin, lead and\nzinc unchanged; copper higher.\nNew York: Bar illver higher-\ntin,\nlead and zinc unchanged.\nMontreal: December silver lower.\nNew YoVk: Cotton higher; rubber\nand sugar lower; coffee unchanged,\nNew York: Canadian dollar up\n1-32 to 1.02 11-13.\nWASHINGTON SCIENTISTS ARE\nINTERESTED IN B.C'S MONSTER\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nFRENCH-RUSSIAN\nALLIANCE NOT\nOFFICIAL\nLONDON, Nov. 23 (AP). -*-\nBritish official quarters tonight\naald they view the statement\nof a Franco-Russian military\nalliance, made in the chamber\nof deputies in Paris, as a pereonal expression by Leon Arch-\nlmbaud, reporter of the chamber finance committee.\nThey said they thought it wai\nwithout official backing .. n d\nthey did not believe there waa\na formal alliance.\nBelieve Something Previously\nUnknown; Dr. Neal Carter\nFurther Describes Find\nWASHINGTON, D.C, Nov.'23,\n(AP)\u2014Of the decomposing body\nof tha Britlih Columbia \"aea serpent\" Dr. Trevor Klneald. head of\ntha Univenlty of Waahlngton <o-\nolaby department, expreaied the\nopinion the creature wai tomethlng praviouily unknown In animal life.\n\"If It waa 30 feet long,\" ha aald,\n\"It waint a iea lien or a walrui,\nand If It had hair and qullli it\nwain't a whale.\"\nAID FOR FRANCE\nLONDON, Nov. 23 (CP-\nHavas). \u2014 Screamirt headlines\nof London's evening newspapers\nbore the words: \"Russia marches\nwith France'' and \"Russia promisee armed aid to France\" as\nthe British capital buzzed with\ncomment on the disclosures in\nthe French chamber of deputies.\nItlllllllllllllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\n**a}-~*_7m7*Tir*r~r\n___\u00a3__..___.\u00bb________\u00bb ______\n.**>) Shopping\nci-mtmos\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C, Nov. 23\n(CP)\u2014The itrange marine monster\nfound on Henry island, which, many\npenons believe may be the remalm\nof British Columbia's famous aea\nserpent, Cadborosaurus, was possibly only an oarflsh or icacow. Dr.\nNeal Carter, director of the fisheriea\n(Continued on Page Two)\n\"Lady In Ermine? Is Queen\nShe la gn arlitocrat, thla Champion Lady In Ermlna, winner of\nhigh honon at annual ihow of Unltad Cat Clubi of America, In Naw\nYork, but the lovai te play with cotton, Juit Ilka tha allay bntd.\nWHEAT FALLS\nAT WINNIPEG\nFutures Reach the\nLowest Level\nof Month\nCALGARY. Nov. 23 (CPl.-S-Je-\nbillzation efforts ln the Winnipeg\ngrain exchange through the central\nselling agency of the wheat pools\nhad brought $25,000,000 additional\nwealth to western wheat growers\ndeclared Prime Minister R. B. Bennett here tonight.\nThe prime minister, coming to\nCalgary, hii home city, for a short\nvisit, disclosed* that he had conferred with John I. McFarland, manager of. the wheat pools' selling\nagency, while en route wfat to\nBrandon, Man., after leaving Winnipeg.\nThe royal commission on mais\nbuying, now in lession in Ottawa,\nwill not deal with minimum wages,\nPrime Minister R. B. Bennett atated\nhere today.\nArchibshop to\nLeave Hospital\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 23 (CP).-\nArchbishop A. U, de Ponder, head\nof the Anglican church in British\nColumbia who was injured in an\nautomobile accident a month ago,\nwill be oermitted to leave the hospital tomorrow, authorities atated\ntoday. It will be some time, however, before his grace has recovered\nluffic.ently to resume his eccleslat-\ntlcal dutlei.\nNew Zealand and\nAustralia Plan to\nControl the Fruit\nWELLINGTON, N.Z., Nov. 23 (CP\ncable via Reuters)\u2014Decision on\ncontrol of the export of fruit from\nNew Zealand and Auatralla were\nreached today at a conference between representative! of the Auitrallan apple and pear council and\nthe New Zealand fruit board, but\nthey will not be divulged pending\nconsideration by British and other\nEmpire growen.\nEconomic Index Shows a Gain of 11 Per\nCent Over Last Week; 13 Over Year Ago\nOTTAWA. Nov. 33 (CP) \u2014 The\neconomic Index maintained by the\nDominion bureau of statistics, ihowed a further gain in the week ended Nov. IT, the standing being 95.5\nsgalnst lit ln the preceding week.\nAdvances were ihown ln each of\nthe ilx major fictori upon which\nthe compilation la based, except In\nwholesale prlcu. The Index of commodity prion wn neirly milnUined\nat 71 a compared with 711.\nBond prices modi further giln\nln the week ended Nov. 17, reaching i new high point ilnce the flnt\nweek of October. The Index of bank\nclearings ln 33 centres Increued\nfrom 61.6 In the week of Nov. 8\nto US) In the week under review.\nThe Index of common itock pricei\nim \u00bb4.i in the waak ended Nov. it,\na new high point ilnce the end ot\nJune. The lncreue over tbe preceding wiek wu 2.7 per cent, while the\ngain over tha ume week of 1833\nwu 12.8 per cent. The Index of 14\npower and tncttom itocka receded\nfrom 60.7 to 36.8.\nTbe nit nault wai tbat the economic index ihowed a gain of 3.3\nper cent over the preceding week,\nand nearly 13 per cent over tpt san_s\nweek of lait year.\nMlnenl production, electrlo power\nand distribution recorded advanoea\nln October over thl preceding mohth,\nwhile manufacturing and conatructlon were at somewhat lower levels.\nA considerable recession wai ihown\nln mmuficturlng production from\nthe level of September, the Index\nIron 89 5 to 04.8.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiililllllllllllillllllllllllllllli\nTHE LORD MAYOR\nPAYS HONOR TO\nROYAL BRIDE\nPOWER TURNED\nINTO LINE FOR\nSECOND RELIEF\nInstalling Crew Busy\non Property; Mine\nTaken First\nWILL SPEED UP\nDEPTH PROGRAM\nMill Simplified by\nEliminating of\nSome Stages\nRydro-electrle power wai turned\nSunday by the Kootenay Power\nM Light oompany Into the branch\ntransmission line from Post* Biro\nto the tecond Relief ihlne, and\nwu available at the power com-\npany'i step-down transformer nation at the (econd Belief camp,\nA, M. Manning, manager of the\nHeU-t-Arllnltnn Mlnei, Limited,\ndisclosed Thursdiy night, when In\nNeUon for the profeuional engl-,\nneen meeting.\nTha Weitlngbouie people have a\ncraw loitalllng moton In the\nmine and wring!\"! for hooking\nap the pawcf fir \u00abH underground,\nManager *e_Mtl*gjj\u00bbted, an* the\n(Continued on Page Tw*)\nRussia Backs (ance Should I GERMANY SAYS\nGermany Threaten Attack\nQueen Is Named\nMayor Winnipeg\nLaborite Beats Alderman Mc-\nKeracher to Post Vacated\nby Mayor Webb\n.Nov.23 (AP).-The\n\u00ab-Wndbn and hli\nretinue turned out ih all thtlr\nfinery today to ride to Buckingham Palace In four horse-drawn .\ncarriages and 15 automobiles,\nand preaent their wedding gift\nto th* Duke of Kent and Princess.\nA few houn later the royal\ncouple were, who will be mar-\nried'November 23, were gueata\nat the Diplomatic Corps' reception in the Brazilian embassy,\nwhere the assembled statesmen\nbestowed their collective gift,\nthree lilver soup tureens.\nllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMIII\n$5000 LOAN IS\nMADECRANBROOK\nVICTORIA, Nov. 23 (CP)-Loam\naggregating $18,000 to three municipalities In Britiih Columbia to cover\ntheir share of direct relief cost*\nwere approved by the provincial\ngovernment today.\nThe loans included $12,000 for\nNew Westminster, $6000 for Cranbrook and $1000 for Esquimau.\nGeorge Smith,\nCool Creek Mine\nWorker Js Killed\nWard waa received In Trail\nFriday evening of a fatality In\nthe mlna at Coal Creek when\nGeorge Smith mat death. Hla\ndaughter, residing In Tral, waa\ndriven to Nelion and left for tha\neait on the early Saturday morning train.\nDecision Reserved\nin Bank Appeal\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 23 (CP).\u2014\nThe Britiih Columbia court of appeal today reserved decision on an\nappeal of the Royal Bank of Canada\nfrom a supreme court judgment dismissing tne bank's application to\nset aside a writ which had been Issued against it by Okanagan Loan\ntt Inveetment Trust company of\nKelowna, B.C.\nThe bank contended that the\nplaintiff company had Joined without leave of the court, ln action to\nforeclose Kelowna property.\nWIFE OF POISONID\nPUBLISHER  LEAVES\nHOME MYSTERIOUSLY\nPORT HOPE, Ont., Nov. 23 (CP).\n\u2014Police tonight were notified of the\ndisappearance of Mn. Donald Wllaon, wife of the late pi Wisher and\neditor of the Port Hope Guide who\nwai believed by authorities to have\nbeen a victim of poison. ^^\neVtVi VkllU 11U\nIN CODE QUOTA\nL C. A. Grants an\nIncrease in\nShingles\nSEATTLE. Nov. 23 (AP).-Meaning many thousand more houn of\nwork betwec. now and Chrlitmai\nfor men who have been on low\nschedules during the year, Charles\nMcGrath, secretary-manager of the\nWashington and Oregon Shingle association, announced today that an\nadditional quota ot 400,000 squares\nof shingles has been awarded by the\nlumber code authority to operators\nof ihingle mllla in 'Washington,\nOregon and British Columbia.\nThe ahlngle induitry, McGrath\nsaid, due to the activities of the federal housing administration and a\ngeneral betterment of business and\nemployment thia fall, hai had to\nrequest two increasei of consequence in th* original allotment of\n1,000.000 squares.\nThe first increase of 500,000\nsquares waa granted October 30\nand the second today. The total for\nthe fourth quarters haa been divided.\n1.423,000 iqu es to American and\n475,000 squares Canadian mills.\nMcGrath aald aeveral days would\nbe necessary to recalculate and distribute the individual aharea to mills\nin the area.\nMonday the authority decided to\ngrant an additional quota ot only\n100.000 squares but after aeveral\nconferenc*! tho authority decided\nthis morning to grant the full requeat for 400,000.\nUU IS HELD AT\nDETROIT AIRPORT\nStarti for B.C.  But Custom\nPapers Not in Order\nDITftorr, Nov. M (AP)\u2014Seeking\nto blase & (-practical commercial air\ntrail from Vancouver to Melbourne,\nIn hla silver plane, \"The Star of\nAustralia.\" capt. cbarles T. P. Dim\npauaed at the Wayne oounty ilrport\ntoday for the first atop on hla\nJourney weit from Montreal to hli\nofficial starting point.\nOapt. trim's plans to continue hli\nflight to the coaat immediately went\nawry when certain papers, necesury\nto clear the customs, failed to arrive from Waahlngton. Hli departure\nwts deferred until eirly Saturdiy.\nThe flyer wu accompanied by\nOeorge Littlejohn. co-pilot, and Leo\nSkilling, navigator.\nRecovery of Miss Bloomer Likely\nBut Her Condition Still Critical\nEDMONTON, .Nov, 14 (CP) .-\"Fairly well, but ln a very critical condition,\" docton ihid tonight of Mils Clara Bloomer, Wablskaw Lake\n\u2022chool teacher who, flown to Edmonton from her northern home Wednesday) underwent an operation Thursday for actue appendicitis. Her recovery is likely, It ii believed.\nMr. and Mn. T. L. Bloomer of Castlegar, parents \"hf Miu Bloomer,\nleft on Fridiy morning'i eaatbound train to be with their daughter in\nEdmonton. g^****\nReady to Move, Says\nFrench Government\nSeeking War Funds\nPASI8, Nov, 2\u00ab (CF-Hane)\u2014\nLaying aside caution and the language ot diplomacy to win a vote\nof approval for Its enormous military budget, the government of\nFrance today tol* the chamber ot\ndeputlei tha oermani were at\nthe frontier and Ruula wai ready\nto send her armies to the assistance   of   France.\nA military appropriation ot\nW.4,JJ\u00ab,*000 (.vaas.ooo.ooo francs)\nand special supplementary fandi\ntotalling 152,640400 (800,000.000\nfranc*) more were made available\nto the war ministry by the deputlei.\nThree government officials\nsounded pnbltc warning that tier-\narmy Is rearming and seeking al-\nJOHN QUEEN\nJ.  A.  McKERCH.'R.\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 23 (CP).-John\nQueen, M.L.A., Labor, tonight was\nelected mayor of Winnipeg.\nThe veteran Labor leader, who\ngained .wide prominence in the 1919\ngeneral strike here, noeed out Alderman J. A. McKerchar, 72-year-old\nretired merchant, in one of the\nclosest races for the mayor's chair,\nvacated by colorful Lieut.-CoL R.\nH. Webb, mayor of Winnipeg eight\ntimes.\nThe final unreviied vote wu:\nQueen, 26,555; McKerchar, 26,313;\nmajority for Queen, 242. \u2022\nFewer votes went to the polls today than ln laft year'i municipal\nelections. The total vote was approximately 53,000, compared with 56,-\n000 a year ago. Tb* total poulble\nvote wu 103,000.\nGOVERNMENT TO\nMEET JOBLESS\nVICTORIA, Nov. 33 (CP)-Dnem-\nployed seeking higher relief allowances will meet the provinciil government on December 7, Premier\nPsttullo said today.\nAn interview bu been arranged\nfor thit-day hy I. I. Winch, C.CP.\nmember for Burnaby.\nB.C. TO CONTINUE\nDYKING MORATORIUM\nVICTORIA. Nov. 23 (CP).-The\nmoratorium on dyking and irrigation loans to farmers in British Columbia will be continued pending\nsettlement of a policy to deal with\ntho question. Hon. A. Wella Gray,\nminister of lands, said today.\nMr. Gray intlmat \" that legislation covering an adjustment of the\nloans would not be ready for the\nnext session.\n(Contlnuad on Page Two)\nPETER FACING\nSLANDER SUIT\nSchool Teacher Has\nStarted an Action\nAgainst Verigin\nSASKATObN. Nov. 23 (CP).-A\n$5000 ilander action against Peter P.\nVerigin, head cf the Chrsltian Community of the Universal Brotherhood of Doukhobora, made its appearance before Chief Justice J. T.\nBrown ln King's bench chambers\nhere today as certain technical matter! of a preliminary pature were\nheard.\nTh* action haa been brought by\nVictor left, teacher ot fee Russian\n\u2022 la Verlgln, Sa**, whowl\n'origin madt certain defam\natory remarks concerning him. In\ncliided In tha alleged statement, the\nplaintiff claimed in hii statement\not claim, Was a remark addressed\nto a number of Doukhobora that\nthey had loit their Doukhobor faith\nand that Victor Kaft wu ona of\ntheir new leaders while they should\nreallae that he, Peter Verigin, wu\ntheir leader.\nMRS. ROOSEVELT IS\nCRITICIZED FOR HER\nSTATEMENT ON LIQUOR\nMOUNT VERNON, N.Y.. Nov. 23\n(AP)\u2014A itatement alleged to have\nbeen made by Mri. Franklin D:\nRoosevelt that \"young women of\nthe nation must be educated on\nhow to carry their liquor and still\nact u ladles\" wai criticized by Mrs.\nCharlotte F. Snyder, atate lecturer,\nin the courae of an addreu before\nthe Westchester County Women's\nChristian Temperance union here.\nMn. Snyder uierted that the remarks attributed to Mrs. Roosevelt,\n\"characterized the letdown of older\npeople alnca repeal.\"\nSHE AIMS FOR\nPEACEJUROPE\nRumored Alliance Is\nOnly Giving Poison\nEffect\nGERMANS ARE AT\nTHE FRONTIER\nSuch Is Statement in\nFrench Parliament;\nRaise More Cash\n(By the Canadian Preu).\nThose who believe another war\nli Inevitable were afforded plenty\nof material yesterday by statement! In the French chamber of\n.deputies, that Russia Is ready to\noffer her army to France In caie\nof need and the Germans are \"at\nthe frontier.\" coupled with pai-\nsage In Parti and Tokyo of greatly Increased military and naval\nbodaets.\nThe itatement regarding a Franco-Russian military understanding\nwu regarded ln British quarter!\nu lacking official backing bat\nthey conceded lt wu quite possible some agreement existed Involving Russian aid ln event of\naggression agalnit Franc*. Tbe reaction ln Berlin was a prompt\nprofessional of peaceful alms- and\na statement that such an alliance\noould oaly have \"a poisonous effect.\"\nRUMPUS IN BALKANS\nHungary and Yugoalavla and tbelr\nrespective sponsors were meanwhile\nembroiled over the bitter Yugoslav\ncharges that Hungary, by sheltering known terrorists, wu guilty at\ncomplicity In the Marseille assassin-\natlons. Stoutly denying tbla, Hungary moved tor an early enquiry by\nthe League of Natlona of tbo\nobliges which It labelled \"tnterpa-\ntlonal terrorism*\n< Ohty from London, ww theee discernible a bright thread In tha\ngloomy picture\u2014new effort* to grt\na naval agreement ln which tho\nnaval reitrlctlom of the, existing\ntreaties would be contlnuad In aom*\n(Contlnuad on Pag* Two)\nYVONNE IS HEAVY\nCHAMP OF QUINTS\nCALLANDltR, Ont.. Nov. 33 (CP)\u2014\nYvonne regained the \"heavyweight\nchampionship\" of the famous Dlonne quintuplets today as Annette,\nafter temporarily holding first place,\nslipped back by losing weight.\nThe babes, 26 weeks and four daya\nold, were all wheeled out ln their\nUttle cribs todiy with a warm nm\nbeating down ln thc vicinity of tho\nDafoe hospital,\nAnnette'! challenge for the heavyweight title wm short-lived when\nYvonne today added l'i ouncee\nwhile Annette lost IVi ounoes, leaving her 2'i ounces ln arrears. Tb*\nother mites are considerably behind\nwith several ounces separating them.\nSHORT WHGHT FOUND IN CLOSE TO\nSO PERCENT OF ITEMS PURCHASED\nCanaries From\nB. C. Win Titles\nTORONTO, Nov. 23 (CP)-Three\ncanaries, exhibited by W. Carr of\nVancouver at the royal winter fair\nconteit for cage birds, carried off\nprize! here today. Carr showed tbe\nbest hen in Norwich Clear Buffs,\nand took second prize for Norwich\nyellow marked hens. In the border\nfancy clear yellow clan, Carr's\nhtn wu third.\nBOMBAY. India, Nov. 23 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014The Swaraj, home rule,\nparty of Mahatma Gandhi, secured\nthe majority of seata in the legislative assembly, lower houae of the\nIndian legislature, in the recent\nelections, it was announced today.\nBring D.S.A. Into League; line up Japan and\nGermany; State Arms Control Baldwin Urge\nGLASGOW, Nov. 3 (CP cable).-\nThe need for every neat nation\njoining the League of Nations and\nstrengthening it aa an agency for\nInternational peace was emphasized\nin a ipeech here tonight by Stanley\nBaldwin, lord president of the council in the British cabinet\nHe alio told an audience of 4000\npenoni that atate control of the\narma traffic wu the only means of\naverting malpractices.\nA collective peace system such ai\nadvocated by the Labor party\u2014employment of joint force* under direction of the league\u2014\"li impracticable in view of the fact the United\nStatei is not, to our unbounded regret, a member of the league,\" he\nsaid, \"and alio in view of the defections of Germany and Japan\nfrom the league in the lut two\nyears.\n\"So long u I have responsibility\n1 nany government for deciding\nwhether to join a collective peace\nsystem, and u an individual, never\nwill I sanction the Britlah navy being used for the armed blockade of\nany country ln the world, until I\nknow what the United States will\ndo.\n\"We will never get a League of\nNations with the power and influence It ought to have,\" he continued, \"until the Unite: States il a\nmember. Whether the United States\nwill ever abandon her traditional\npolicy I cannot tall. What we must\ndo ii go on working largely by\nfaith to get back thoie who belonged\nand trust the day will come when\nthe world circle will be complete\nby the admission of the United\nSUtes.\" ^^\nReason for High Grocery Bills\nRevealed in Cases\nBefore Probe\nOTTAWA, Nov. 23 (CP)- Any\nCanadian housewife inclined to\nwonder at the appetitles of her family Judged by thc grocery bill might\nfind a reason for the mystery in\nthe evidence today before the royal\ncommission on maaa buying. A\nwidespread practice ot selling snort-\nweights in grocery stores all acroaa\nSai\\ada was disclosed.\nSutherland Cuddy, inspector of\nweights and measures for the Dominion government, was the witness, and aubmltted a comprehensive report on ihortweights, based\noi: an investigation made this year\nand applicable particularly to chain\nstores.\nSummarized, the results of the\nprobe revealed that out of 1113\nitems bought ln 479 orders in citie*\nand towns from Montreal to Vancouver, 559 items or 49.3 per cent\nwere shortwelght, 509 Items or 45\nper cent were correct weight and\nH items or 5.7 per cent were overweight.\nDISGRACEFUL METHOD\n\"I think it is one of the moit din\ngraceful methods of cheating the\n(Contlnuad on Page Two)'\nClothing Business\nPicks Up\nWINNIPEO, NOV. 33 (CP) .\u2014Advent\nof colder weather across the Dominion wu reflected ln a pickup In\nseasonal lines of clothing, lt was\nnoted In the weekly trade report\nof the Canadian Credit Men's Trust\nassociation Issued here today.\nSales la almost all other trades\ncontinue to hold up well, It Is re*\nported, and the trend of Canadian\nbusiness generally remains on tha\nupgrade. Brighter prospect* were reported from Saskatoon and iteady\ntunover Irom other centers.\n ferG^pM\nPAGE TWO-\n:'E NELSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. 1.C--SATUROAY MORNINO. NOV^M. 19*-\n_____\nMORE ABOUT\nTHEWARCRY\n(Continued From Paga Ona)\nnances  wtth  Japan  uid  Poland,\nand   gan   aunranoe   tha   soviet\n\u2022rm; had been offered to Franc*\nln tha nent of war,\nTALES OF OERMAN SACRIFICE\n\"We do not want aur children\nto know  the horron of  war we\nhave known.\" declared uon Arcn-\nImband, budget reporter   who on\nMondiy unleashed a tide of national alarm by uylng Germany\naoon will be able to plice ,1,500,-\n009 men hi action tn case of war.\nBevelling tbat warnings of Ger-\nmany'i bellicoie Intention! had come\nto Parts from Moicow, Deputy Jean\nI\u00bbbrr  declared:  \"Oermany   li  only\nwaiting to build up a powerful wn\nSales\nService\nHOW ARE\nTOUR CHAINS?\nBttter net take a chance\nrunning around without\nthem these dayi as we\nall knew that snow it\nnew pretty well overdue.\nSee Vs Today I\nUt us iee that you are\nproperly equipped to\nweather the roughest of\nsnow stormi.\nPhone 117\nKootenay\nMotors\n(Nelion)   Limited\nitrong manpower.\"\nmachine   to   sacrifice   her   already\nPREPARE FOB 1VAB\nWar Minuter Louli Mirln reminded tbe chamber of the adage, \"In\ntime ot peace prepare for war,\" and\nwu greeted with resounding applause.\nThe pre-war lltuatlon of Franca\naligning htrielf with Ruula, hostile Germany between the two, thus\nwu brought dearly Into the open,\nand although Prench government\nofficial! strewed there wu no official military allunce with the\nU. S. 8. R. oburveri found much\nilgnlflcsnce  In today's declarations.\nThe statements of the three men\nwho this week have come Into tiw\nInternational   limelight   were   mar\nat   Thursday's   lata   budget   deb*]\n\u25a0nd on resumption of thl dlicuuli\nthla morning, when the war buds\nwu  voted  Iwthout  serious  oppoi\ntlon and the emergency war crei\nbill also pushed through.\nSTRONG ARMY PRESERVES\nOP   PEACE\nClimaxing pnvlous declarations ot\nM. Archlmbaud, the wordi ot Colonel Jem Fabry md the war mlnllter sounded alarmingly over Europe, though all three apokeemen\nemphasised a France fully prepared\nwould be able to save the peace.\n\"To lit It be believed that Hitler\nli abiding by thi treaty of Ver.\nsallies would be an Ul wrvlet to the\ncause of peace,\" Archlmbaud had\n\u2022aid. Soviet-French union can ure\npeace, hi decltred, charging the\nrelch leader hu attempted to Um\nup Japan and Poland agalnit the\nU. 8. 8. R.\nThe Soviet union hu offered tta\narmy to Franoe In case of conflict\nwith Germany, Archlmbaud said. \"1\ndo not uu either the term military\nalliance or military accord,\" he\npointed out, \"I merely observe tbat\nthe Ruaslan army is very strong\nand hss been offered to us ln cau\nof war.\"\nCanadian Car and\nFoundry Has Loss\nMONTREAL, Nov. 23 (CP)-An\noperating loss of $870,401 as compared with a deficit of $973,428 in\n1933 was shown by Canadian Car &\nFoundry company, Ltd., today In Its\nannual report for the fiscal year\nended September 30, 1934.\nPlgnt hardy ferni.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nThe HUME HOTEL\nPHONE 787\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLuncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nFret Bua Service Nelson B.C George Benweil, Prop.\nHUME: A. T. Frattlnger, H. P.\nPowell, M. Farr, F. W. Mitton, O.\nAukln, A. R. Thompso \u25a0 Mri. J. H.\nOrre, M. Swarta, Vancouver; J. C.\nMacDonald, Victoria; J. E. Miller,\nN. E. Halbrook, Carmi; Mrs. I.\nIrving, Okanagan Landing; Mrs. M.\nW. Watson, Hflhead; E. L. Hughes,\nVernon; A. Anderson, Medicine Hat;\nMrs. R. Cook, Slocan City; J. J.\nClaxton, Salmon Arm; Adeline\nClever, Dora Clever. Nellie Aylwln,\nMrs. A. D. Trlchett, New Denver;\nB. Quln. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Kerr,\nHarrop; W. L. Zuglin, Wallace, Ida.;\nB. Townshend, Willow Point; C. A.\nYule, R. S. Fraser. W. R. Lawrence,\nPenticton; E. R. Pysond, Trail; A.\nG. Trileaneu, Toronto.\nThe Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kin_ \"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel,\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n124 BAKER ST.                PHONE 19              NELSON, B.C.\nSAVOY: J. A. Anderson, Mr. and\nMrj. W. Johnion, city; H. E. Bee-\nman, Spokane; E. W. Borgens, Cal-\ntary; Mln L. A, Trevelyan, Creston;\n. M. Daly. L. A. Freeman, Rossland;\nMrs. E. Olsen, Gray Cree'-; Tommy\nFlecher. Fernie; Mr. and Mrs. F. Harrison, F. Holden, C. J. MlUigan, A.\nJ. Davii, R. A. Scott, F. Telford,\nVancouver.\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS..E.  MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot and Cold  watar\nIn  the HEART of  tbe  Dty\nMew Grand Hotel\nP.  L  KAPAK.  Prep.\nWeekly and Monthly Rates\nHot and Cold   Water\nSingle SOc np     Double $1.80 up\n\u25a0aoma f to \u2022 Montb and Dp\nOccidental Hotel\n709 Vernon St Phone MTL\nH.   WASSICK\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Roomi\nMlnen' Head .uarters\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.\nRoomi from Mc to $180\nMonthly $10 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and eold\nwtter ln even  room\n80S Baker St, Phone w\nMORE ABOUT\nB.C.10NSTER\n'(Continued from Page One)\nexperimental station here, said today.\n\"Identification li not poulble at\npreaent, however,\" Dr. Carter laid,\nand personally I do not care to\n(press an opinion until further formation'is available.\"\nThe man who brought the realm of the monitor here after it\nhad been discovered on the rocky\nIsland by a fisherman, Hugo Sund-\n\u2022trom, gave a detailed description\nof the specimen as he examined it\non the island.\n\"We found remains badly decomposed and eaten by seagulls lying\nbelow high tide at the end of \u2022\nnarrow bsy, apparently waihed in\ndead or trapped by rocka at low\ntide, about six weeks previously,\"\nhe said.\n\"Having no bony limbs, the creature would have been helpless out\nof water. Its length wu 29 feet\nfrom snout to the end of the last\nattached vertebrae; but detached\nvertebrae found on the beach Indicated a possible total length of 33\nfeet.\nHEAD LIKE CALF\n\"There wai a decompoied carti-\nlagcnous head like that ot a calf,\nbut this may have been the remains\not a larger head. No lower Jaw or\nteeth were found. Neck vertebrae\nwere four Inches ln diameter and\nthose ln the middle of the body\nseven inches of solid bone, with no\nproceses as in whale vertebrae.\n\"One cartllagenoua-llke limb wu\nattached five feet behind the head\nand another IS feet behind, with\nevidence of corresponding flippers\non the other side of the body.\n\"It was io badly decompoied that\nIt It difficult to reconstruct the living appearance. The skin ll brownish green, like coarse sandpaper,\nand covered with bristles eight to\n10 inches long on the tail, ends of\nthe flippers and other portions of\nthe body.\n\"A number of stiff spines, four to\nsix inchei long, with tlshhook-like\nends, were found lying loose Oh the\nbeach beneath the neck portions of\nthe body. The hooki were gpparent-\nly imbedded in the ikln when thc\ncreature wu alive. \u2022\n\"There wu no bony structure corresponding to ribs but a dozen cartilage strips were found 'on each\nflipper. Most of the flesh was too\nbadly decomposed to determine the\nshape or decide the diameter of\nthe body.\n\"Considerable quantity of unde-\ncomposed red flein wide* the back\nbone was similar to beef In appearance and wu strongly suggestive of\na warm-blooded mammal. The odor\nwai similar to a whaling station and\nnot a decomposed fiih.\nDr. Carter wai interested to hear\nof the statement of Dr. Trevor Kin-\ncaid of the University of Wuhlngton that the creature wu probably\nsomething hitherto unknown. He\nsaid lt might he well to have Dr.\nKlncaid or a member of hli itaff\ncome here to aee the remains.\nDr. Carter said he considers Dr.\nKincald one of the most eminent zoologists on the continent.\nNANAIMO, B.C, Nov. 23 (CP)-\n\"The Prince Rupert specimen is\nworth more than the wrecked wartime blimp, which ll all they have\nto show for the Loch Ness mrnster,\"\nsaid Dr. C. Motley, itatlon supervisor, referring to the discovery that\nthe Scottish aea serpent wu in\nreality only a wrecked balloon.\nJack Tulley, oceanographer, believes that the Prince Rupert monster may be aome rare marine\ndweller which has drifted Into these\nwaters with the ocean currents and\nmay not be a native of British Columbia waters.\nADJOURN \"TOLL GATE\"\nINQUIRY IN TORONTO\nTORONTO, Nov. 23 (CP)-Royal\ncommission Inquiry Into Ontario\nliquor \"toll-gate\" charges wai adjourned today until January 11 to\nperjnlt Commissioner Counsel Ar-\nthus G. Slaght to obtain certain in*\nformation from distillery com\npanles in the United Kingdom.\nEXTERNAL TRADE IN 1934\n, External trade msde an excellent\nrecord in the first eight months of\n1934 compared with 1933, Exoorts\nat $405,700,000 showed a gain of 31.0\np.c, while imports at $333,042,000\nrecorded an increase of 38.2 p.c. The\nfavourable balance of trade was\n$70,061,000 compared with $63,503,-\n000, the gain being 11.3 p.c.\nHALIFAX, (CPl\u2014Studv of economic, social and political relations\nbetween Canada and the United\nStates undertaken by the Carnegie\nfoundation will be made with the\nassistance of two Nova Scotians.\nProfessor D. C. Harvey, provincial\narchivist and Dr. R. A. MacKay ot\nDalhousle university have been selected as members of one ot the\ncommittees studying the relations.\nOtficers o\/ Canadian Student Body\nShown above are the officer! of I\nthe National Federation ot Canadian University Students: ll) Percy\nG. Davies. M.P., graduate lecretary'\nof the federation, Mr. Dtvlei vu\none of the founders of the federation wben he attended the University ot Alberta. (2) Melvln K. Ken-1\nny of the Univenlty of Toronto.\nGresident, (3) Mark Collins of the\nnivenity of British Columbia,\nvice-president. The N F.C.U.S. la a\nfederation of the itudent unioni ot\npractically all the Canadian universities. Headquarters are ln Toronto.\nLadner Man Wins\nRoyal Trophy\nTORONTO, NOV. 93 (OP)\u2014W. 0.\noibion of udner, B. O, today won\nthe Royil trophy at the Royal\nWinter fair grain ihow for the belt\nhalf buihel of wheat ihown ln a\nregular claw with in exhibit ot Marquis.\nTho Jamei McLean champlonahlp\ntrophy tor ths beet hilt bushel of\noata shown ln a regular cl_ie wm\ntiken by H. A. Tiylor ot Lashburn,\nSask.. on an entry of victory.\nGibson's Marquis wheat exhibit\nalao won the championihip for hwd\nred spring wheat. William Rogers of\nTappen, B. C, hid the bwt exhibit\nof any other wheat othar than\nhard red. He ihowed mlndum.\nMORE ABOUT\nGerman View\n(Continued From Page One)\nform or another. The Britlah and\nAmerican! wen optimistic of an\neventual agreement with the Japanese, though In Philadelphia Ambassador Hlroshl Saito wu politely explaining lust why Japan considers\nparity with the other two la eseen-\ntial.\nTERMED  \"REGRETTABLE\"\nBERLIN, Kov. 39 (API.-A statement before the Pnnch chamber\nof deputlea that an \"undemanding\"\nexists between France and Russia\nwu termed \"regrettable\" in offlcWl\nOerman circles tonight.\n. The Berlin ore*, and Oerman officialdom, which long had been\nwatching warily International developments affecting nance and Russia, deplored the possible \"poisonous\neffect on the lnternitlonil atmosphere\" that the nported alliance\nmight have.\nSome government offlclils protested no Immediate Interest in tbe\nmatter but one ipokwman declared!\nWEST   IS   SAFE\n\"We do .not feel concerned because our western frontier! afe ufe\nenough, apart from the Saar 'which\nwlll be oun alter Jan. 13. On the\neistern side we an not contiguous\nto Prance*! ally.\n\"France Is nady tor protection\nagainst an eventual attack\u2014trom\nwhich side? Certainly not from\nours.\n\"But all alllanoe between two\nsuch highly armed nations u Prance\nand Russia la regrettable. What can\nthe effect be but to potion still\nfurther the international atmosphere?\"\nUlm to Fly From\nVancouver Island\nVICTORIA, Nov. 23 (CP)- An\norder wu given today for the shipment of SOO gallons of gasoline to\nLong Beach, west cout of Vancouver Island, for the uu of Capt.\nCharlei T. P. Ulm, Indicating that\nthe aviator plans io hop off from\nthere on hit Canada-Australia flight.\nThe gasoline is to be delivered to\nLong Beach for use by Tuesday\nmorning. A local company operating a mail and puenger service,\nreceived the order for delivery.\nProbates Apply in\nB. C. and Alberta\nVICTORIA, Nov. 23 (CP).-By\norder-ln-council the Probates Rec\nognition act ot Britlah Columbia\nwill apply to the province of Alberta. Under a reciprocal arrangement this permits probates and let-\nten of administration granted in\neither province to be recognlted in\nthe other.\nVancouver, B. C, Hotels\nJj^[^ \"VflUft VANCOUVER HOME\"\"\nRENOVATED Dllf f dill HOtOl\nA, Paterton, late of Column, Alta,, Prop.   900 Seymour St., Vancouver\nPHONES\nELEVATOR\nTRANSPORTATION-Freight and Passenger\nLow Week-End Round Trip Fares\nFROM\nTO                1 NELSON 1    TRAIL     |    KASLO   I  NAKUSP\nCASTLEQAR      1     $1.45     I      $1.15      |      $3.<5      |      $3,76\nAINSWORTH     |    $1.(0     |      $4.10      I      $ .70             $5.36\n\u2022OSWELL          !     $1.70     I      $4.20             $2.36             $5.45\nCRESTON           I     $2.96 ' I      $6.40             $3.50             $6,70\nCRANBROOK    |     $6.60     ,      $3.10      I      $6.20      I      $946\nNEL80N                                      $2.60             $2.20             $3.75\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines Ltd.\nNELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND\nDtlly   Truck\nService\nPhone\nNelson\n~~ i\nFREIGHT LINE\nJ. C. \"SCOTTY\" MUIR. PROP.\nPROMPT    EFFICIENT    SERVICE Trail\nAT   ALL   TIMES 13   of   ,\u201e,\nLeaving Nelion\nit 9 a.m.\nPhone\nARE YOU IIP ONE DAY ?\nand down ANOTHER\/\nHEALTH\nANO\nNERVE\nPILLS.\nDo you feel all \"dragged ont\" eome daya\n... reitleu night* .. . norvei on edge\n,.. sick headaehea. Get s new grip on\nlife,. \u2022 Bestore your nerve force with\nMilburn 'r. Health and Nerve Pills. Ever\/\nday you'll feel yourself growing stronger\nand healthier. Highly endorsed for 40 years.\n(jm WeakcmcillMAXniA *P4ople\/\nMORE ABOUT\nThe League\n(Continued Frem Fiji One)\nof Croiti which, lt U contended, ii\ndriving the Croati abroad.\nIt wu Indicated that \"urgent\"\ntreatment of the question by the\ncouncil probably will be aiked for\nby Hunger\/.\nSECRET TRIP*\nBUDAPEST, Nov. 23 (CP-Hivai)\n\u2014Premier Jullui Qoemboes left\nBudapest secretly for Austria tt\n11:40 tonight, according to in authoritative report here tonight\nThe Hungarian leader wai understood to have left for t meeting with\nthe Austrian vice-chancellor, Emit\nvon Starhemberg, at t point ln\nAuitrli which hu been kept secret\nOoemboet' unexpected departure\ncame it a time when lnternitlonil\nteniion hu reeulted from intl-\nHungkriin charges by Yugoiltvli\nbefore the leigue of nitlons ln connection with the Marseille uiutlni-\ntlom ot King Alexander of Yugoslavia ind Foreign Mlnltter Barthou of France.\nGoemboei only recently returned\nto Budapest from conferences with\nPremier Benito Munol.nl it Rome\nand Chincellor Kurt Schuichnlgg it\nVienna where Auitro-Hungirlin-\nItaliin understanding wu cemented.\nA DEATH BLOW\nBELGRADE, Nov. 23 (CP-Havu)\n\u2014The Croat bid for tutonomy todty\nreceived t lethal blow when the\ncentral committee of the nttlontl\nptrty decreed t policy of \"uncompromising national unity.\"\nYugoslivlt ctnnot permit \"religious, regiontl or ethnlcrl groups\"\nto Interfere with nttlontl unity, tn\nofficial communique Mid. following\nthe three-dty lenlon ot the central\ncommitttee of the Y.ugoiltv nttlontl ptrty, of whleh Premier Nl-\nkoli Uionovich it pruldent\nThe commltte decltred Itself in\nftvor of \"maintaining, uncompromisingly, the unity of the itate.\nMORE ABOUT\ni Second Relief\n(Continued From Page One)\nmine will be using the commercial power by the middle ef December  at  thi   litest.   Attn  the\nmine  ti   letting   the   power,  the\nmill will be changed o*er u oolck-\nly u the Initallation ctn be made.\"\nFor Tompreuor-houie   purposes,\nan addition hai been made to the\nmill building on tbe up-creek ilde,\nIt  by  24  feet,  and   H  feet  high,\ntn which the new compressor, wtth\nt\u00ab0 cubic fnt air capacity for an\nelevation of 4000 leet, has been installed. A DM hp. motor wlll drive\nlt.   For   tbe   time   being   the   old\npower   plant,   which   Includes   tfln\ndlewl engines, and the imall eom-\npreiion.   of   wbleh,   tneludlng .the\nportable, there  are  no  fewer thin\ntour,   wlll   not   be   disturbed.   The\niwltchboard for controlling the plant\nwlll be located ln thli addition.\nTO  PRESS  SHAFT\nAi won u tbe mine iwltchei on\nthe commercial power, the development progrim. which reoently bu\nbeen held back by the power shortage, will take on full vigor, tnd\nwork on the shaft that la being\nsunk trom No. 6 level, the main\nworking level, to lectin new depth\non the Second Relief ore body, will\nbe priiied. The mitt la loctted at\none ilde ot the vein, and the itatlon tor thi holit hu been cut,\nthe hoist bu been Initallid and\nthe ctble rigged, and tbout 20 feet\nef linking hu been done. The ihlft\nIt to go down vertically, tnd it \u2022\ndepth ot 160 tut \u2022 itatlon will be\neut for Ho. 6 level, tnd \u2022 drift\nopened on the viln. The ihttt will\nof coune nrve for til further deep\nprogram!.\nThi new power will tlM permit\nan Immediate itart on the uplor-\nttlon trom No. 2 level, when It n\npropoud to cirry on thl mating\n\u2022hort croucut, for ibout 300 tut.\nind Internet underground the four\nparallel  veini known  on  the tur-\ntMO.\nONLY CONCENTRATES NOW\nA simplification of the trettment\nproceu In thi mill hu bein effected recently, Manager Manning attted, by i reillgnment ot the mill,\nwhich eltmlnttu the -hiking Hnen,\none concentrating table, the Drug\nclmltlir, tnd the amalgam barrel.\nbut dou not affect the capacity of\ntbe pint. Under the rearrangement,\nno direct gold recovery li mide. but\nthe v\u00bbiuei ill go Into the concentntei, which tn shipped In that\nform to Ttcomi Smelter.\nAt the proceu now lundi. on\nfrom the primary entitling li fed to\nthe Many mill, rrom which the\nground product puses to a 14-meih\ntrommel screen, the flnei going on\nto a Denver unit flotation cell.\nwhow concentrate li conveyed to\nsettling bins. The ttlll from the\nDenver unit cell an elevated to a\nDorr claulfler. which nturni the\nlands to the Marcy mill, but send!\nthe flnn to the othir flotation\nplant, consisting ot four oalls. Tbe\nconcentrate from thla Joins that\nfrom the Denver unit In the settling\nblni. Talli from thla four-cell michlne go to blanket tables, tnd the\nutll from the litter go to i bowl\neluilller, which feeds fine tnd\neoene to Oventrom tablet, which\nmake   a   further   concentrate.   Thl\nnib from the coarse table finally\ndluhagei from tbe mill after being\nautomatically urapled.\nThe construction program for\notmp buildings Is now ftnlihed,\nManuer Manning said, with completion of cottages added tn the fait\nTodty'i anv ooniliti of 71 men,\nSIX  INCHES  SNOW\nThursday then wu ill Inchu of\n\u2022now at tbe Second Relief, and witb\nwhtt muit hive been added Frldty\nIn the genenl precipitation over the\ndlitrlct, it would nem likely thit\nwinter hu trrlved on tht upper\nwctlon of Erie enek, er the Wen\nfork of the almon or Stlmo river,\nu lt li otherwlw deitgnated.\nBright Spoti\nof the Week\nBy the Cantdltn Prtu\nOTTAWA-Bullding Ptrmltt ls-\nsued in 31 cltlu in October ihow\nan lncreue of 33 per cent over total\nfor October, 1933. reports Dominion\nbureau of statistics.\nIROQUOIS FALLS. Ont.-AbiHbt\nPower Jc Piper company'i mill here,\noperating on curtailed production\nfor three yean, is being itepped up\nto ctpicity.\nTORONTO-Work hu started on\nruing tn old structure to make way\nfor the new heed office ot the Imperial Bank of Canada, to coit\n$000,000.\nKITCHENER. Ont - Dominion\nRubber machinery shopi have called bick 23 former employeu to\nwork on tool production.\nVICTORIA\u2014Lumber production\nin Britlih Columbli in 10 months of\n1!\". epproxlmtttly 373,000,000 feet,\nen :ncreue of 30 per cent over output for same period ot lait year.\nBELLEVILH Ont \u2014 Belleville\nSargent company, manufacturers ot\nlocks and bullden' hardware have\nttken on more employees tnd In*\ncreued the working time.\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont-Noryon\ncompany of Rocheiter are opening a\nplant here for production of art\nneedlework goods.\nTRAIL-Comolldited Mining &\nSmelting comptny will reopen their\nconcentrator it Tidtmc to htndle\nIncreued movement of ore from\nold workings tround Rossltnd.\nWEEK-END RADIO\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n0:00 Hockey Brotdcut\n7:30 Chtrlei Dornberger'i Orch.\n7:45 News ind Weither Forectst\n8:00 Melody Moodi, Vtncouvtr\n3:30 Northern Messenger\nB:%1 Newi (B.C. Net)\n91W Mel Htmlll's Orch., Edmonton\n(ex. B.C.)\n9:15 Progrim From Kelownt\n3:00\n3:30\n7:30\n7:43\n3:00\n9:00\n9:13\n10:00\n10:30\n10:35\n11:00\n11:00\n11:30\n11:30\nC.\n8:00\n8:30\n7:00\n7:30\n8:00\n8:30\n8:30\n9:00\n9:30\n9:43\n10:13\n10:30\n11:30\n11:30\nN.B.C.KPO  NETWORK\nRtdio City Pirty\nThe Gibson Ftmily\nDtnny Mtlone, tenor (KHQ)\nSiberian  Singers\nNitlonil Barn Dance\nFloyd Glbboni\ndraftee Ctrnlvtl\nBlue Moonlight\nTom Cotkley's Orch.\nPress-Radio  News\nJack Mills' Oroh.\nFio-Rito'i Orch. (KPO, KFI)\nBart Woodyard's Orch.\nOrgan Concert (KPO)\nB.S.DON LEE NETWORK\nGrete Stueckgold Andre Kos-\ntelmetz, oreh.\nFootbtll Scorecut\nBind, dir. Edwird D'Anni\nSaturday Revue\nRichard Himber'i Oreh.\nGlen Gray'i Orch.\nHodge Podge Lodge (DX.)\nPortland Junior Symphony\nOrch.\nPolltck'i Orch. (DX.)\nFrank Jenks' Orch. (DX.)\nFred Skinner, song ityllst\n(DX).\nOfville Kntpp'i Orch. (DX.)\nPtsadena Orch. (DX.)\nDick Jergens tnd Orch. (DX.)\nSUNDAY NIGHT\nC.R.C.\n8:00 Footlight Highlights  Toronto\n6:30 Actditn Serentde Htllflx\n7:00 London Male choir\n7:30 Presenting Germine Mtlepart,\npianist. Montreil.\n7:43 Newi ind weither forecut\n8:00 AUintlc Nocturne, Htlifix\n8:30 Thtt Certain Trio\n8:30 Newi   (B.C. Net.)\nEXCEPT CRCV\n8:45 Noel Cook, 'cellist; Jem Cotton, tccompinlst, Cilgary\n9:00 Prairie Putorile\n9:30 Mtry E. Jirvls, soprano, Trtll\nN.B.CKPO\n6:00 Manhattan  Merry-Go-Round\n6:30 Album of Familiar Muiic\n7:00 Hall ot Fame\n7:30 Jane Fromtn, Modern choir;\nOrch., Don Hill, M.C.\n8:00 Wendell Hal), Music Maker\n8:15 Walter Wlnchell, goulp\n8:30 Jack Benny, Miry Livingstone\nFrank Pirker, Orch.\n9:00 Silken Stringi, Orch.\n9:30 The Philiitine (KPO, KH)\n9:30 Cotkley'i Orch. (KGO to Net.)\n9:45 Souvenirs, E.T. (KPO)\n10:00 Newi flashes\n10:13 rieitt, KPO, KFI\n10:13 Bridge to Dream I tnd\n10:45 Cotk'ey'i Orch, KPO, KFI\n11:00 Press-Radio News\n11:03 Midnight Melodlu (KPO)\nC.I.S.-DON  LEI\n6:00 Town Crier\n6:30 Salon Moderns (DL)\n6:30 Danny Russo's Orch.\n7:00 Wayne King's Orch.\n7:30 The Merrymakera (DL)\n8:30-9 Orchestras\n9:00 Hi Jinks\u2014Don Lee\n9:13-12 Orchestras\nMORE ABOUT\nShort Weight\n(Continued From Ptgt Oni)\npublic there is,\" commented Hon.\nH. H. Steveni, former mlnllter ot\ntrade ind commerce.\nMr. Cuddy uld tbit ilnce the\ndevelopment of chiln storee ind\nthe adoption ot tht prictlie ot packaging goodt prior to ule, the problem of thort weights hid grown to\ntuch proportions u to chtllenge\nthe existing mtchinery for enforcing the Uw. Prior to 1929, he uld,\nihortwelghtt hid bten t loctl condition which could be eully detlt\nwith. Now It wu so general it wu\ndifficult to control.\nSince the Inveitlgttion i number\nof offenders hive been prosecuted\nin the courti ind convicted. Other\nprosecutions tre pending. After in\nexecutive union ot the commlulon\nit wu decided to mike public the\nnimes of the itoru igtlnit which\nconvictions htd been regiitered but\nto keep the nemes of other offenders confidential lut their publication should prejudice pending or\nfuture court proceedings.\nQuietly during the lut lix or\neight monthi, Mr. Cuddy reltted,\nhe hid been going ibout the country miking nil InvestigtUon. He\nwu not alwayi tble to keep hli activities secret u hii irrlvtl in west-\nem Cinida wu heralded by newi-\nptper reportors.\nThe lnvutlgitlon wu of t threefold chtrtcter Into foods weighed\ntnd sold over the counter, into\ngoods put up in ptckiges tn advance\nof ule and which might shrink in\nweight before ule, tnd Into store\nscales being btltnced tgilnst the\ncuitomer.\nLeave Over the\nExtensions Plans\nfor Wheat Pact\nBUDAPEST, Nov. 23 (CP ctble).\n\u2014The world whut edvltory committee todty wu ln the bfgtinlng\nstage with Australia, Ctntdt tna\nthe United Stitu enduvorlng to\nretch tgreement with tht fourth ot\nthe big tour exporters, the Argentine, on questions ot new export\nquotas ind wheet tcreige reduction.\nWhile the delegttu ire negotlit-\nIng, i definite decision on extension of the world whwt pict from\n1935 to 1937 hu been left over.\nLA lOLLA-California\nHOTEL\n\u2022=7^ WITH    APARTMENTS\nBritish Columbians' Headquarters\nIn California\nGREETINGS to our msny British\nColumbia friends ... we invite you\nto make the COLONIAL your home\nagain this winter . . .\nOFFICIAL HOTEL CONTRACT No. 129\nAutomobile Club of Southern Ctlifornlt\nFor information or reservations,\naddress:\nR. C. IULCIR, Preildmt   ind   Manager.\nLATOIXA\nbeyt\nFireproof-Steam\nHeated, Beau-\nilly tppolnt-\ned Houiekeep-\nlng Apartment!\ntnd Guest\nRoomt. Itch\nRoom with Private   Bath.\nLOW RETURN\nFARES to\nEastern Canada\nFIRST CLASS TICKETS\nON SALE DEC. 1 TO JAN. 5\nReturn Limit\u2014Three Monthi\nSTOP OVER PRIVILEGES\nOptional Routes\nWhen part ef overseas booking, tickets will havs\nfivs months limit.\nFor Full   Particulars  apply\nN. J. LOWES, City Ticket Agent\nNelson, B.C.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\n\u2014 *  - \u25a0- \u25a0\n \u2014\u25a0\n\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u2014\u2014\"\nw\n-THI NIUON DAILY NIWS NILION. i.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. NOV. 24. 1934-\nKHURCHES!\n\u2014 \u2014 \u2014 M \u2014\u2014 \u2014 -\u2014\u2014*\u00bb. \u2014\u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014 \u2014\nmmmmm*.++mrmmf.\n*m*tVi\u00abm*mVmmmmm%\n4S*\u00bb*\u00bb\u00abJS\u00ab\u00ab*\u00bb\u00ab:\ng>t. \u00a7atiuwr a (Mpnrrfi\n\u00bbunhaa Nix! Srfarr Ahnrnt\n8.00 t.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Dedication of De Veber Memorial\nOrgan*   Choral Eucharist.\nSpecial  Remembrance  of   LcBaron   De Veber   and\nCharles Westly Busk.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014-Choral Evensong.\nAnthem \"I will Magnify Thee, 0 God!\" Sir John Goss.\nUt\nSZZmmmmmmmmmmmsmmml&^Smmmmmmmmm-.\n\u2022S\u00bbftWS*\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab*54\u00ab\u00ab\u00abW\u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\nSrintty\nIttitri) (Eljurrli\nuf (Eauaia\nW. C. Mawhinney, Minister\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Church School\n11:00 a.m.-\"THE   PRINCIPLE\nOF ADDITION.\"\nSoloist: Mrs. S. Couch.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nSpeakers: Mrs. Lyle Ewing\nof Vernon and Mr. Gordon\nHarriman of Vancouver,\nmembers of the Oxford\nGroup.\nDUET: MRS. R. HAG-\nARTY and MIS8 L. ANNABLE.\nMonday, 8 p.m.\u2014Service Club.\n(Miss G. Ewing, 313 Silica\nStreet).\nTuesday, 3 p.m.\u2014United W.M.S.\nMite-Box Meeting.\nSaturc'liy, Dec. 1st.\u2014Service Club\n\"Gift Shop.\" Trinity Schoolroom.\nftrat Qtliurrlj uf\n(Eljrtfit arouttet\n209 BAKER .STREET\nA branch of the Mothei Church,\nThe   First   Church   of   Christ\nScientist in Boston, Mass.\nSunday School 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSubject Lesion-Sermon\n\"SOUL AND BODY\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 pjn.\nFREE READING ROOM IN\nCHURCH   BUILDING-\nAM Cordially Welcome\nhms h (Homing\nGO YE OUT TO MEET HIM\n\"THE MIDNIGHT CRY\"\nEvening Subject,\nSunday, Nov. 25th.\nSunday School   10:00 a.m.\nMorning Worship .' 11:00 a.m.\nEvening Service     7:30 p.m.\nPublic Services, Tuesday and Friday    8:00 p.m.\n1p%1 (Ztatornarl*\nMONTREAL, (CP)-ApplicaUons\nat the Montreal Day Nursery are, as\nalways, in excess of the number of\nchildren that can be accommodated,\nIt has been reported by Miss Margaret St*wart, social service worker\nat the nursery.\ngl. Paul's\nHuitr& GUjurrfi\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson, B.A.\nMinister\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"The Key to Reality.\"\n7:30 pjn\u2014Misa Louise Chapman and Mr. George Clax-\nton, representatives of the\nOxford Group Movement,\nwill speak.\nMonday, 8 pjn\u2014Excelsior Club\nat home of Mrs. Wm. Talbot,\nFairview.\nTuesday. 3 p.m.\u2014United W.M.S.\nMite-Box Day, Trinity.\nTuesday and Wednesday, 8 p.m.\n\u2014\"The Cricket on the\nHearth.\" The delightful\ncomedy by Chas. Dickens.\nDecember 6th\u2014\"Russia,\" by \"Dr.\nBrewing of Vancouver.\nftrat\nfrrabytman\nQUjurrlj\nMinister: Rev. Wallace McClean\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sabbath School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"Christ-likeness.\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"Christocentric.''\nTuesday, Nov. 27th. at 6 p.m\u201e\nSupper will be served. Get\na ticket. Bring a good appetite. You will enjoy our\nSupper.\nSlttt\nSatittat (Mjurrlj\n(Herbert W. Guscott)\n11:15 a.m.-OORDON    HARRIMAN of Vancouver.\nAnthem: Junior Choir.\n7:30 p.m.-MAR\u00abARET \"WATSON and LEIGH HUGHE8\nof Vernon.\nAnthem: Senior Choir.\n(Oxford Group Speakers\nMorning and Evening)\n10:30 ajn.\u2014Church School\nSEA SERPENT'S\nBONE IN EAST\nBelieved  to  Prove   Monsters\nExisted 60,000,000\nYears Ago\nFairview. Fuel &\nTeaming Co.\nWOOD\nFIR OR TAMARAC\n12-in.    16-in.\n1 rick .... $3.00   $3.50\n2 riekt  ... $5.00   $6.00\n1 ricki   ... $7.00   $8.00\n4 ricki  ... $9.00\n4 foot, cord   $6.00\nBIRCH\n4 foot, cord   $7.50\n2 foot, cord   $8.50\nPHONE  701\nWASHINOTON, Nov. S3 (AP)-Ses\nserpents and scientists on both sides\nof the continent sll stirred up today.\nin Prince Rupert, B- C, a huge\ncreature found dead on the rocky\ncoast near there aroused speculation\naa to whether It was a real set\nmonster.\nIn Washington, the Bmltbionlsn\ninstitution pointed to a newly found\nbone to prove tbat sea serpents existed 60,000.000 years ago. The bone,\na single vertebra of the largest fossil\nsnake ever discovered ln North America wss found by Dr. W. Osrdner\nLynn of Johns Hopkins university\non Belvedere beach, Virginia. It\noriginally wis burled ln seabottom\ndeposits ot eocene times and wu\npreserved to this day.\nEven with only a single bone to\njudge by. It Is plain tbat this sea-\nserpent wss t monster, says Dr. O.\nW. Gilmore, expert on extinct animals. It was at least 91 feet long\nand bid a thick body. It Is believed\nto have been distantly related to\nthe modern python family. Scientists hsve named It 'paleophls Vlr-\nglnlanus.\"\nGet Rid of \u00ab \u2014COLD\nQUICK - - -\nIf yoa really want quick relief from that ricking rongh, ar niier*-\nable cold, juit get a bottle of Buckley't Mixture \u2014the scientific\ncreamy-white preparation that biniihei rough** md coldi In leu\nUme -Jmo-t thin it ukes to tell abont it ind is the moit dependable remedy known for bronchitli and 'flu. Buckley's it entirely\ndifferent \u2014immeaiuribly luperior to anything yon hive ever\ntried. No mitter bow long yoor cough or cold hu hung oo,\nBockley'i will nop it\u2014QUICK. For the children, mix with equil\nparti honey. They'll love it, and it'i to ufe for children'! cooghi\nand colds.  Refuse substitutes.  Buckley's ii wld everywhere.\nActa Like a Flub, A Single Sip Proves It Ut\nRUCKLEY'C\nW     MIXTURE        W\nOH RECEIPTS FOR FIRST 10\nMONTHS $374,557 AS AGAINST\nDISBURSEMENTS OF $348,567\nSeveral Items Higher Than Estimates Tabled\nFor; Over-expenditure on Relief $4501\nAbove the Estimated Amount\nGets Divorce\nThe statement of receipts and disbursements for the 10 months ending\nOctober 31 presented to the Nelson city council, shows receipts of $374,-\n557.84 and disbursements of $348^67.71.\nSeveral items have already brought in receipts greater than the\namounts tabled for ln the estimates, While the only over-expenditure of\nany amount is that paid out for relief.\nAt the end of October $14,501.61 was spent on relief, or $4501\nmore than the amount anticipated for the entire year.\nThe main items luch as electric lighti. gas, and street railway revenues and real estate taxes are running higher than estimated. Sewer\nrentals, motor licence profiti, police court fines and the tourist park\nare also above the estimates. Police court fines for the first 10 months\nhave amounted to $1841 and $1000 waa thc amount estimated for the entire\nyear.\nThe receipts for the first 10 months show the following received or\ncredited by the various departments:\nRECEIPTS: Eltlmatei\nELECTRIC LIGHT, ratea  $109,143.04     $130^00.00\nDeposits  BM.48\nGAS. rates   ..- $11,231.84\nSundries    _\u25a0-     4,078.67\nDeposits  -...*...       45.00\nWATER, ratei \t\nSCAVENGER, rates\t\nLICENSES \t\nREAL ESTATE TAXES     \t\nLOCAL IMPROVEMENT TAXES\nSEWER RENTAL\t\nSTREET   RAILWAY  \t\nBETTER HOUSING:\nCurran, W. A\t\nEmory, A. C \u2014\t\nFerguson, G. H ...\nMiller, C  -\t\nWaters, J. F\t\nLUNN,  Ruth  \t\nWANSTALL, R. C\t\nBY-LAW NO. 768, deposits \t\nCEMETERY      \t\nCEMENT, walks \t\nDOG, tax       \t\nELECTRIC, light construction\nMaintenance   \t\n38.60\n193.00\n22750\n135.10\n7750\n299.87\n215.95\n-ANADA'S   LARGfST\nCOUGH   ANU\nGROUP INSURANCE \t\nFIRE DEPT., maintenance\t\nFORESHORE RENTALS \t\nKootenay Lake General hospital.\nLIBRARY, fees  i\t\nLibrary and rest room rent\t\nMiscellaneous   \t\nMotor License Profits \t\nPARKS, tourist \t\nPoll Ux\t\nPOLICE DEPT., maintenance   ...\nPolice court fines\t\nPlumbing fees  ...\nPound        \t\nPOWER PLANT, maintenance\t\nRelief      Y\t\nRoad tax   .....\nStreets   ...\nSCHOOLS \t\nDeferred Grants \t\nStorage tank rentals  _\t\nSEWERS, construction \t\nTAX SALE, lota\t\nCosts .\t\nPurchases, 1933 \t\nPurchases, 1934 _...:^\nSurplus\nWATER WORKS, maintenance ......\nWei$h scales \t\nStationery    _\nSidewalks   _ !\nRecreation Grounds  _\t\nB. C. government relief, 1933     2.963.57\n1934       20.793.39\nGround rent \t\nPublic health \t\n15.353.51\n33,869.78\n3,060.89\n6.042.15\n113.798.22\n7,043.30\n7,304.81\n11,717.75\n671.10\n5.00\n33.50\n30.00\n1,339.82\n96.00\n519.00\n515.82\n682.87\n20.00\n136.00\n3,201.00\n172.42\n'   585.00\n3.50\n6,392.01\n148.00\n2,007.50\n277.15\n1,841.00\n,      94.25\n937.30\n538.40\n868.00\n505.97\n14,447.87\n3,683.04\n115.00\n20.50\n740.00\n452.J3\n65.00\n217.53\n5.00\n3.75\n820.00\n4.15\n2.60\n100.00\n23,761.96\n160.00\n125.00\n374,557.84\n7,170.79\n1,555.04\n20,000.00\n35,000.00\n3,500.00\n6,500.00\n115,638.05\n6.500.00\n7.000.00\n14,000.00\n2,000.00\n500.00\n800.00\n150.00\n3,211X10\n1588.00\n2,000.00\n6,000.00\n100.00\n1,500.00\n1,000.00\n800.00\n27,062.70\n100.00\n1,000.00\n1,250.00\n32,000.00\nUF. LEADER\nTELLSNA1SP\nIff SOCIALISM\n''An Anglican Pastor\nas Opposition\nLeader\"\nNAKUSP, B.C., Nov. 23-Rev. R.\nConnell, M.LA.. leader of the opposition, who has been speaking at\nseveral Arrow Lakes points this\nweek, addressed a well attended\nmeeting in the opera house here.\nThe speaker was lntroducd by\nH. W. Herridge, who said, of the\nmembers of the C.C.F. movement:\n\"We believe we are right and demand the valuea created by those\nWho create them.\" He also read a\nbusiness visitor here.\nJ. A. Gillis of Nelson spent a day\nln Nakuap.\nS. Walker and H. E. Parkyn of\nBurton were business visitors ln\nNakuap.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Motherwell were\nvisitors in Nelson, guests of Mr. and\nMrs. C. E. Clarke.\nJ. White ol Weit Demars was a\nvisitor here.\nJ. A. Staleo of Nelson was a business visitor here.\nC. M. Sharpe, R. McKay and H.\nBell were visitors here from Nelson.\nK. J. McLeod of Edgewood was a\nvUltor here.\nEDMONTON, (CP)\/-To perpetuate\nthe memory of the late Mrs. Arthur\nMurphy (Janey Canuck) the Canadian Authors' association, Edmonton branch, plans an essay competition open to grade 12 students. The\naward will be known as the \"Janey\nCanuck Memorial Prlae.\"\n-PAOI THRU\nBROWN CHARGED,\nMANSLAUGHTER\nRobert Brown of Crowi Neit, who\nwaa at the wheel of an automobile\nwhich plunged ovrr the Lizard\ncreek bridge weat of Fernie, on November 17, and carried Stafford T.\nWilson to his death, hai been\ncharged with manslaughter.\nInformation wai laid by O. A.\nWyman on November 19 before J.\nR. Nolan, stipendiary magiitrate at\nFernie, and on November JO \u00bbn\neight-day remand wai asked for. F.\nLawe il appearing for the accuaed,\nwho is out on $5000 ball, $2500 and\ntwo sureties ol $1250.\nGet under cover all planti whldt\nwill not withstand froat.\nAdela Rogen St. Johns, well-\nknown authoreii, li ihown on the\nwitneu itand In a Lot Angelei\ncourt Juit before ihe wai granted\n\u2022 divorce from Richard Hyland,\n(Iniet) former Stanford football\nStar and iporti writer. \"He called\nme a half-wit and a fool,\" ihe\nteetlfled. They were married In\n1928.\nShe Presided\nCash on hand Jan. 1, 1934\t\nCash in bank, Jan. 1,1934\t\n$383,283.67\nDisbursement) from Jan. 1 to Oct. 31 includes the following:\nDISBURSEMENTS:\nPOWER PLANT, salaries     8,968.55\nMaintenance      2,327.16\nELECTRIC LIGHT, construction ... 3363.26\nSalaries     9,465.65\nMaintenance  5,371.97\nTransmission line   10,187.74\nSUB-STATION, salaries     2,805.00\nMaintenance        224.44\nHIGHWAYS, paving  1,250.27\nGrading   1,054.76\nRepairs     968.84\nQuarry   _  388.30\nCleaning  1,631.48\nGasoline   1,388.00\nTools and equipment   4.010.93\n11,285.71\n'28,388.62\n3,029.44\nEngineering\nSalary \t\nTeam and driver\nDust laying \t\n2.170.87\n1,500.00\n1,386.72\n757.68\nSidwalks  \t\nCement walks \t\nCement walks, repalra \t\nUnemployment relief   \t\nWorkmen's  comp.  board  \t\nWATER WORKS, construction ....    1,821.23\nSalary          1,235.00\nMaintenance     1,894.56\nSEWERS, construction\nMaintenance\nBylaw No. 766\t\n14.40\n409.84\n195.27\nSCAVENGER, salary  _    1,100.00\nMaintenance     3,000.00\nINCINERATOR, -salary     1,000.00\nMaintenance        43.65\nSTREET RAILWAY, salaries   10,146.80\nMaintenance   3,324.81\nGAS. DEPT., salaries  5,836.80\nMaintenance   4,817.36\nLIBRARY, maintenance \t\nLibrary and rest room'rent \t\nPOLICE DEPT., magistrate   637.50\nSalaries    4,152.50\nMaintenance     1.020.90\nTrans, and keep of prisoners ... 552.36\nMedical health officer\nPrevious years accounts\nSchools      ...\nFIRE  DEPT.  equipment\nSalaries\t\nMaintenance \t\nLAKESIDE PARK, salary ...\nMaintenance .      \t\nTOURIST PARK, salary ...\nMaintenance \t\nGyro park \t\nRecreation Grounds \t\nBand stand \t\nAssessment   \t\nCouncil  indemnities  \t\nSalaries   \t\nPrinting and advertising\nPostage and itationery \u201e...\nRevenue stamps  \t\nLegal expense!  .* ..*........\nJanitor and supplies   \t\nFurniture and repain \t\nFuel\t\n637.00\n7,380.00\n835.90\n859.00\n403.21\n200.00\n49.75\n16,503.85\n2,178.68\n63.90\n16.61\n29,553.34\n487.50\n4,950.79\n619.51\n4,100.00\n1,043.65\n13,470.89\n10,654.16\n2.719.86\n1,000.00\n6.363,25\n1,789.83\n3,674.10\n66,048.27\n8.852.90\n)\n)\n1,262.21)\n14,200.00\n19,753.00\n4,270.00\n5,000.00\n2,500.00\n5,000.00\n4,000.00\n1,800.00\n1,700.00\n2,000.00\n60,000,00\n9.510.00\n500.00\n4,920.00\n1,400.00\n17,000.00\n14,100.00\n4,007.00\n1,200.00\n7,365.00\n2.000.00\n3,674.10\n84,343.35\n11,445.00\n)\n249.75)\n476.82)\n271.91\n560.00\n319.31\n400.00\n42.05\n1,568,00\n2,100.00\n9.215.0O\n11,500.00\n258.67\n600.00\n1,333,54\n2,000.00\n198.00\n265.00\n450.00\n800.00\n455.47\n300.00\n105.56\n200.00\n161.87\n330.00\nSetition which the local organize-\non is sending to the authorities in\nVictoria.\nIn his introductory remarks Rev.\nMr. Connell explained his position,\nan Anglican clergyman as leader of\nthe opposition. He said that since\nmaking a thorough study of economics some years ago, he hai\npreached socialism from the pulpit\nand he believes that socialism is\nthe \"application of Christian ethics\nin our economic life.\" He said he\nfinds the socialist principle an aid\nto churchmanahip, lending a new\ninterpretation and he pointed out\nthat Christ had so often spoken of\nestablishing a kingdom on earth.\"\nSOCIALISM AND\nTHE SCHOOL\nThe chosen topic of the evening,\nhowever, was 'Socialism and the\nSchool.\" Rev. Mr. Connell said that\nthe educational system must necessarily reflect the economic system\nof a country, and he stated that the\nsocialist purpose is \"to enable every\nIndividual to live the fullest and\nfreest life possible.\"\nThe speaker advocated a more\nconcrete method ot teaching and\nsaid the pupils muat be given to\nunderstand the importance of work,\nas in the C.CF. country, everyone\nmust be a worker. He also said that\nthere must be no distinction between the white-collar and the\noverall Job. \"Cramming\" should be\ndone away with and the pupil\ntaught to think,\" he itated.\nHs spoke, too, of the unconscioui\nInfluence of environment both at\nhome and achool. He showed that a\nspirit of cooperation should be developed in the child.\nWIDER READING.\nIn conclusion he touched on adult\neducation. He urged that reading\nbe widened and the range of the\nmind extended, \"Anyone whose\neducation ii finished is as good as\ndead,\" he said.\nFollowing the address a dance\nwaa held, half the proceeds of which\nwent toward the community Christmas tree fund.\nTO   REPAIR   MINTO\nThe steamer Minto will be pulled\nup for repain next week. Mail from\nBurton north will be carried by\ncar and the Columbia will run between Robion and Burton.\nW.M.S. MEETS\nThe No\"ember meeting of the\n.\/omen's Missionary society wai\nheld at the home of Mrs. E. C. John*\nMn. William H. Blester, Jr.\nMrs. William H. Biester, Jr., of\nPhiladelphia, national president of\nthe American Legion auxiliary, presided at the auxiliary national convention held in Miami, Fla.\nWith 1,362 official delegates and\nalternates, and with 25,000 members as guests, thc convention this\nyear was the largest women's convention in the world.\nAt this meeting the organization\nformulated plans which will guide\nits 400,000 members during the coming year in their work for the war\ndisabled and dependents, for ade\nquate national defense, for civic jm*\nprovements, and for maintenance of\nAmerican ideals and institutions.\nMra. Biester has served the aux*\niliary as president for thc past\nyear.\nCanada's imports in September\nwere of the value of $42,208,000 compared with $38,698,000 a year ago\nand $34,504,000 two years ago, a\n9 p.c. increase over September 1933\nand 22 p.c. over September 1932. Domestic exports totalled $58,135,000 as\nagainst $57,785,000 a year ago and\n$42,187,000 two years ago, the in\ncrease over 1933 being 0.9 p.c. and\nover 1932 being 37 p.c. Foreign exports amounted to $679,000 compared\nwith $544,000 and $478,000, the increase over 1933 being 24 p.c. and\nover 1982, 42 p.c.\nSend\na gift of good taste\nPURDY'S\njamom\nchocolates\nin the purple box\nNovember 24th today\u2014just another month\nto Chriitmai Eve with its round of festivlt-\nie\u00bb\u2014now there's gifts to be chosen to gladden\nthe hearts of loved ones far and near\u2014and\none irreproachable, delightful answer to lt\nall-The Purple Box by Purdy.\nThese wonder chocolates owe their distinctive\nflavour to fresh, rich cream\u2014highest quality\ntable butter-choicest fruits and nuts and the\nfinest of chocolate.\nEvery day now parcels containing British Columbia's swee'\u00abJ\nremembrance are leaving for far away places. Solve YOUR\nChristmas giving problem in this pleasant way\u2014send us the\nnames and addresses of your friends with the number of pounds,\n(either our standard assortment or any combination of 100 varieties) you wish sent to each. Enclose money order to cover\ncost of candy at $1.00 per lb. (metal containers, if desired. 20c\nextra). Add the postage charges, obtainable at your post office.\nWe will pack, mall, and enclose a card for you. Safe delivery\nguaranteed. \u2022\nPurdy'i Famoui ChoctAtttk-Preferred the World Over\n\u25a0 I.,,, miinn nr--.il Order   now   to   reach   your\nUSE THIS ORDER FORM friends in Great Britain and\ni      TO SAVE TIME       c,o\u00abndsoon.the \u00b0rient' \"*\"'\nR. C. Purdy Ltd. JMark x here\n675 Granville St. \\** y\u00b0<* wlsh _\nVancouver, B. C. Ifree price list only.\nPlease mail chocolates as marked to:\nNAME  *. -\t\nADDRESS\t\nEnclosed is Money Order (Including postage) fon\t\n lbs. at $1.00 per lb. (Metal contalnera, if desired, 20c extra)\n^E<M\u00bbtg<HHSM\u00a3<\u00ab\u00abtg<HE<\u00abg<\u00abP^\u20ac<^HW\nWomen's  Missionary  loeTety  wai\nof Mrs.\n_,\nA discussion on finance was the\nchief topic of business. The report\nwas submitted by the treasurer, Mrs.\nH. Kershaw. .      , .\nAn interesting devotional period\nwas lead by Mra. G. Keys.\nThe hostess was assisted In serving tea by Mrs. M. Kerr.\nDr. H. F. Tyreman motored to\nBurton.\nW. Shlpmaker of Edgewood was\na visitor here.\nT. S. Halverson of Trail was a\nguest at Pine lodge.\nA. French of Nelson was a business visitor in Nakusp.\nMrs. W. Spiller and son Grant,\nwho have spent several months at\nthe coait and in the Okanagan,\nhave returned to their home in\nNakusp.\nOOLDEN KEYS ELECT\nAt the regular meeting of the\nGolden Keys held recently Miss\nMonica Butlin was elected vice-\npresident following the resignation\nof Misi Beatrice Johnson. Georgina\nMunn was appointed treasurer In\nthe absence of Eileen Leary.\nThe program period was taken\nup with the making of scrap books.\nMrs. J. Williams and son of Grahams Landing spent a day in Nakusp.\nH. S. MacTler of Nelson was a\nvisitor here.\nG. Holm of Rossland was a guest\nat Pino lodge.\nJ. W. Butlin ha\u00bb returned from\nNelson ivd Cranbrook.\nMr. and Mrs. Lee Sr., Mrs. George\nLee and Mrs. J. Lee of Arrow Park\nwere shoppers In Nakusp.\nMr. Welch of Arrow Park was a\nRepain to city hall \t\nINSURANCE, buildings .\nGroup  \t\nMiscellaneous   \t\nSuperannuation\t\nCEMETERY, salary \t\nMaintenance \t\nCHARITIES, aged women's home\nRelief       \t\nHospital\t\nDonations  \t\nIndustrial ichool \t\nHome for incurables\t\nMothers'  pensions   .....\nProvincial home \t\nTranquille sanatorium \t\nMental hospital \t\nTarllng house\t\nWeigh Scales \t\nREFUNDS, light deposits\t\nLight rates  \t\nGas deposits \t\nPoll Ux \t\nRoad tax \t\nWater rates \t\nCollection poll and road tax\t\nTrail picnic \t\nTax sale costs \t\nLota 1933  -\t\nInterest on loans\t\nInterest on debenturea  .\nInt. and Skg. funds, better housing\nElectric light        -\t\nFairview aewers \t\nGeneral .    -\t\nHospital       \t\nLocal impt\t\nTrafalgar achool    \t\nSt. Railway Int. and sinking\nfund debs, not sold  \t\nDebentures redeemed\t\n1,000.00\n1.053.52\nCash on hand\t\nCash in bank  Jt\t\n19.40\n75.00\n623.28\n1,500.00\n1,244.54\n1.500.00\n1,030.80\n1.500.00\n4,099.92\n5,000.00\n2,053.52\n2,250.00\n175.00\n420.00\n14.501.61\n10,000.00\n6.545.50\n8,000.00\n1.226.08\n1,500.00\n286.40\n3,305.00\n340.20\n510.00\n855.01\n1,200.00\n175.06\nloo.oa\n1.391.25\n2.300.00\n1,228.50\n1.650.00\n558.25\n500.00\n745.52\n1,000.00\n485.35\n14.90\n48.75\n155.00\n4.00\n47.50\n47.00\n170.13\n31.50\n3,659.71\n3.75\n20,050.00\n364.80)\n21.116.83)\n4.133.30)\n1,191.64)\n1,600.00)\n88,556.00\n4.194.30)\n3,616.20)\n2,279.00\n15,000.00\n$348,563.71\n2,310.44\n32,409.52\n$383,283.67\niiir-n-glaiiin   \u2022*\u2022 t-Mtt liTflt\nSaturday and Monday\nKootenay\nBargain Days\nCrepe Hose Special, pair 79c\nSilk Hose Special, pair  69c\nNew Scarves, each   69e\nNew Handbags, each  $2.95\nWomen's All-Wool Hosiery .'.    ?9c\nMen's Tie Holders -~ $1.00\nWomen's Unlined Capeskin Gloves $1.00\nWomen's Shoes, pair  $3.95\nSale of White Sheets , $1.00\nPillow Slips, 3 for  $1.00\nFrilled Marquisettes, yard 25c\nIrish Damask Cloths   $1.35\nFlannelette Mill-ends, yard . 19c\nSunday Nite Frocks $3.95 to $14.95\nWinter Coats, Values to $25.00 $14.95\nChildren's Coats $2.95\nWomen's Rayon Pajamas or Gowns $1.00\nInner Belt Corsettes $1.95\nMen's Two-Pant Suits 4 $19.50\nMen's Overcoats  $17.95\nMen's Bathrobes $3.95\nWork Shirts  $1.00\nRed Label Combinations $3.19\nNotice!\nMrs. H. Howard, representative\nof the Russian Duchess Laboratories will be at this store Mon-\n_-,_nm m kj day and Tuesday, No-\nKUc\/c\/ 1\/\\W v e m b e r 26th and\nDUCHE\/A 27th. Mrs. Howard\nwill speak on Russian Duchess Cosmetics\nand will be pleased to advise you on your\nbeauty needs.\nHHBH\n \t\n\u25a0- \u2022\u2014\"\u25a0\nFAOE FOUR <\nLADIES AID AT\nCREST0NW1LL\nHELP HOSPITAL\nSubstantial Funds in\nHands of the\nAuxiliary\nCRESTON, B.C., Nov. \u00bb-No-\nvember meeting of Creston Hoipital Women's auxiliary was held\n\u2022with the president, Mrs. R. Stevens.\nin charge, and an attendance of 21\nmemben and three visiton.\nThe fininclal itatement showed i\nmibttantltl balance In hind and It\nwu agreed to spend some money at\nonce on various things needed it\nthe hospital.\nIn the tbsence of Mn. Hare, Mn.\nStevens reported for the monthly\nmeeting of the hotpital board, and\nmentioned eonildemble Improvements made at the hospital, especially In clearing the basement ind\nproviding storage room for vegetables, and so on.\nMn. Archibald reported for the\nvisiting committee and Mn. Charles\nMurrell for the buying committee.\nMrs. G. John and Mn. A, E. Davlei\nwill be the visiting committee for\n\"next month. Prize award of airplane ride donated by W. M. Archibild, ind I limb donated by H. H.\nGibbett, brought in 918.45. \u2022\nA ipecitl entertainment it the\nhospjtal on Christmas was planned,\nwith the following to take charge:\nMrs. Steveni, Mn. G. G. McKeniie,\nMn. G. John and Mn. A. E. Daviet.\nTei hostesses were Mn. G. Jacks.\nMrs. McCreath, Mw. A. W. Millen\nand Mrt. John. The free will offering wu $3.15.\nDYKE PROGRESSES\nThe big wheel tcraperi of Oruton Dyking comptny, Ltd., ire miking greet headway in putting up\nthe dyke on the esst bank of the\nKooteniy river. They hive ever-\naged more than a mile of dyking\nper week since commencing work\non the high ltnds along the river,\ntnd are keeping the bulldozer tnd\ntree-felling crews busy to cletr the\nscrub and heavier standing timber\nalong the right ot way.\nThe two draglines are busy on the\nsouth end dyke and are likely to\nhsve It completed by the end ot\nthe month ai originally expected.\nSteady rain tor the past 10 days will\nnecessitate the starting ot the\npumps u soon ai they are Installed.\nDue the very wet state of some\nptrts of the big tract there has been\nDistinguished\nVisitor\nAmong distinguished British viiiton to Canada recently was the\nRt. Rev. H. E. Patton, Bishop of Kil-\nlaloe, northern Ireland, who returned home last week-end in the Ath-\nenia trom Montrul. Bishop Patton\nspoke highly of Canadian hospitality\nmd admired our churches ln Montreil ind Toronto.\nFORKS MISS IS\nPAID A TRIBUTE\n21STBIRTHDAY\nMiss B. Donaldson\nSurprised by Her\nFriends\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Nov. 22-\nMiu Bernice Donaldson wai surprised ly a number ot her friendi\nthe occuion being the 21st anniver-\nury of her birthday,   The evening\nwu ipent it bridge, Mist Kathrine\nHennlier and Edmund Eureby\nctrrying otf the honon for huy>\n\"Miktt Wuh Oty Eultr\"\nIt's      U\n1      Msds\n100%\n9   '\"_.\nPure      fl\ntj      1.C\nBUACH\nThs housewife's friends\nYour   local   grocer  sells\nand recommends it.\nManufactured solely by\n8UPREMA  POLISH  CO.,  LTD.\nVancouvtr, B.C.\ni let-up,  ln breaking  operations.\nMrs. ft. Hopwood of Vancouver is\nviiiting her parents, Mr. tnd Mrs.\nW. T. Simister, here. She will re-\nmiin until tfttr Christmas.\nMill Eva Weblter, R.N., of Vancouver, is visiting her parents, Mr,\nand Mrs. J. H. Webster, here, before\nproceeding to Toronto, In which\ncity she Is to wed Dr. Cuthert\nWebber early next month. She hu\nbeen guest of honor it t number of\nappropriate tocltl pre-nuptltl function! here.\nMiss Mtry Cummlngs of Boswell\nIs a guett pf Mr. ind Mrs. Chirlu\nMooro here.\nMr\u00ab. Frank Garrett and diughter,\nBeverly of Bltke, are viiltlng her\nSarents, Mr. and Mrs. F. LaBelle,\nere.\nMr. and Mn. Chirles Leamy ot\nWynndel were viiiton to friendi\nin Creston.    , .\nCharles Huicroft has lett for\nToohty, where he ii to be employed\nin the mine being developed tt that\npoint by Cruton and Erickson capitalists.\nMrs. Arvld Samuelson Is back\ntrom Red Deer, Alta., to which\npoint she md her mother, Mn.\nJames Murphy, were called for the\nfuneral of her grandmother, Mrs.\nHart, earlier in the month. Mrs.\nHart had been an occasional visitor\nat the Murphy home ind i number\nof friendi here heard ot her death\nwith regret.\nRev. M. C. T. Percival, Anglican\nrector, took service it Cimp Lister\nind Wynndel. At the litter point\nthere wu i celebration of holy\ncommunion, with the service it the\nhome of Mrs. ftumsey.\nRev. C. Btase, Lutheran putor,\nwu tt Klmberley, Crinbrook tnd\nYahk to hold services.\nMrs. B. Johnson was a Creaton\nvisitor en route from Kitchener for\ni holldty in Spoktne.\nCROYDON, England, (CP) - A\nflying hearse containing a coffin\npiled high with flowen, arrived\nhere from Budapest, bringing the\nbody of Miss' Bessie Steele. 19, of\nCheltenham, who died of heart\nfailure while touring Europe.\nTolly \u2014 I Just don't dire take baby out! She's been behtving\nterribly lately. I can't iraigine why ihe'i go crou!\"\n\u2022Ske'i ssllow, Login, lost the utf Bobby wss when he htd that\nwhiney ipell lut month. She probably needs a\nIllative. Try Castoria.\"\nttt how baby enjoys hir ride todty, Polly. I think Clitoris has\ndent perfect wonders (or her!\"\n\u00a7\n\"Tw, I see it has, Louise. Csstorla hss helped thouunds\n\u2022f children. It's Mpecially good tor acid stomsch. You know, it\ndoesn't contain sny of the harm-\nfill drags thtt often art in\nadult Uittivet. Cutorlt ia\npleaunt to tike, too \u2014 tastes\nawfully good.\"\nCASTORIA\nThe children's laxative\nitott biby hood to 11 jttn\nscore. Comolitlon prizes went Tp\nMils Peggy McCsllum snd Rsy\nmond Oner.\nMiu Donaldson wu presented\nwith 1 brown leather purse.\nThote preient were: Miu Bltnche\nWigge, Miss Miriorie Ttylor, Miss\nBerti McLeod, MlM E. McPhenon,\nMiu Betty McCallum. Miu Eileen\nJames, Art Morrison, Bert Dltfon,\nBasil Flynn, Raymond Orser, Bill\nEureby, Wallace Huff men, Ken\nCampbell, Barry Harford, Guy Winten, Reg. Heaven.\nMrs. Peter McCallum is viiltlng\nher daughter, Mn. J. Morrison of\nRossland. .\nMiss Marjorle Kidd, igent for the\nB. C. Telephone Comptny, hu returned from i holidiy with friends\nin Spokane end Nelson.\nMn. Blckerton end diughter\nIron, were viiiton to Greenwood.\nMn. George Musie hts returned\nfrom Penticton where she hid been\nvisiting her diughter, Mri. Berne\nPickering.\nConstable tnd Mn. Greenwood\nire on \u2022 trip to Vtncouvtr.\nMn. R. Hoogerwerf ipent I\ncouple of diys ln Trail.\nMany friendi here of Mlu Barbara Love were intereited to hear\nher voice coming over the tlr trom\nradio itatlon CGAT it TraU. Miss\nLove ung two numbers.\nMr. snd Mrs. A. R* Pollsrd of\nKelownt were guests of the letter's\npirenti, Mr. tnd Mri. W. M.\nGowans.\nLawrence Kelly of Kelownt, Mn.\nChipman ind Gordon Harriroin\nwere vliltora In the city en route to\nNelion, to ittend meetings ot the\nOxford group followers.   .\nMiu Katherine Hennlger has lett\ntor s ihort visit to Nelson.\nMayor T. A. Love hu returned\nfrom Trail. ^^^^^^^\nPLAN TO STAGE\nDICKENS' PUY\n\"Cricket on  the  Hesrth  to\nBs Stsgsd by St. Paul's\nPlsyers\nChirles Dickens' delightful story,\n\"The Cricket on the Heerth \" in\ndramatized form, is to be produced\nsoon by the St. Paul's Players. This\nthree-ict comedy hu til the flavor\not Merrle Engltnd during the Victorian ere.\nSuch pictures of heroism u the\nlolly old Caleb Plummer, making a**)\nlaradise out of their poverty for nil\nillnd deughter, Bertha, are deer to\nthe hearts of Dickens' lovers. The\nhalf-wit maid, TiUy Slowboy, keeps\nthe comic element strongly to the\nfore. The honest cerf let, John Perry-\nblngle, with his happy little wife\nire a tine contrast to the sour end\n[rasping Tackleton, a toy merchmt\nIrs. Fielding, driving her coach-In-\nfour of proprieties, Is another typically Dickensonian character while\nher daughter, Mary, t sweet gentle\ngirl, mines everybody love her. The\nmystery running through the whole\nplay centers tbout the personality\nof \u25a0 itranger, evidently tn disguise,\nwho ctusei much merriment\nthroughout\nVhe SL PiuPs Pliyen hsve already bten Invited to pruent the\nplay at two outside'points.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, R.C., Nov. 2J- A\nnumber of friends of R. Symmonds\ntendered him in enjoyable birthday\nparty it the ruldence ot Mr. ind\nMrs. Chirles Vesey, Music tod\ndtneing mide the time pus all too\nrapidly. A delicious supper wss\nserved. Those preient were Mr. and\nMrs. Brad-haw, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nConroy, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dupperon, Mr. and Mn. W. Pollock Sr.,\nMr. and Mrs. Hume Pollock, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. McGregor, Mr. and Mrs.\nC. Melrose, Mr. and Mrs. William\nGresley-Jones, Mr. and Mrs. R.\nSymmonds, Miss Tina French, Mlu\nMillie Zentner, Mlu M. Symmonds,\nS. Bowen, T. Monkhouse, B.* Vesey,\nF. Maxwell, A. Reed, J. Williams,\nEd tukkar, J. Ttylor, Jack Mar*\nahall. R. Stenson, J. Quayle and the\nhoit and hosteu.\np^\t\nMn. Htrry A. Bathie entertained\nthe memben of the Women'i auxiliary to the Cinidim Legion\nB.E.S.L., at her home on Court\nHouie squire. Plans were laid for\nI Christmas tree for the children\nof members of the Legion and auxiliary, to be given in the armories.\nThe following committee; were appointed:\nTree and decoration\u2014Mrs. Robert\nClelland and Mn. T. Wood.\nToys\u2014Mrs. Percy E. Taylor.\nCandy baga\u2014Mrs. R. Synlmonds.\nSanta Claus luit\u2014Mrs. R. Crawford.\nEntertainment\u2014 Mn. Htrry A.\nBtthie.\nThese will act u conveners end\npick their own uslttants. Refreshments were served.\nThose present wers Mrs- Thomai\nWood Mn. W, F. Line, Mn. A.\nO'Reilly, Mri. Wllllim Gresly-Jones,\nMn. R. Symmonds, Mra Percy E.\nTaylor, Mn. J. McCullough, Mrs. A.\nE. Jewell, Mrs. R Crawford, Mn. J.\nHtrdy, Mrs. Htrry A. Bathie, Mrs.\nJ. Williams and Mrs. Robert Clelland.\nINDORE, India, (CP)-Restoratlon\nof cuts in salaries of state officials\nwere announced at the 27th blrtli-\nda;* celebrations of the Maharaja of\nIndore.\n- THI NELSON BAILV NIWI. NILION. I.C--SATUROAY MORNINO. NOV. M. 1914 \u25a0\t\nYlslts fm Wert niCTDIOTUntf   |\u00a3 Mr.rw\u00a3olumb,r to\nMr. tnd Mn. Bob Clayton hive\nreturmd to Klmberley ifter a week's\nvlilt with the former'! parent!. Mr.\nud Mn. Matt Clayton. During tbelr\nitay Bob motored hit mother, tnd\nbli brother ind slater. BID and lisle\nClayton, to Bpoktni, tor i few\ndtyi' holiday.\nMr. tnd Mn. O. M Samuelson\nhire lett for Klmberley to vlilt\nfrlenda.\nMrs. Bradbury and diughter of\nVancouver ire hen to ipend the\nwinter with her lather. Robert\nTurner. Mn. Bradbury left ben In\n1917 for tbe cout, and thla ti\nher first vlilt to tbe dlitrlct In\nthe Intervening 17 yetrt.\nA. D. Pochln li hen looking after\ntht picking ind shipping of the\napplt crop on bit ranch, eut ot\nCreiton.\nJtmes Andenon of Vincouver wu\nt builniM vliltor here, on matten\nin connection wltb the old Reclamation Farm, which It ll nosed to re-\ndyke nest anion.\nMn, Slicker, wbo hu bun viiltlng\nat Wyndell, wu in town on her return to Uwlston, Idaho, tnd wu\niccompinled by har grtndftthir, J.\n8. Rudd of Wynndel.\nIn tbe Junior buketball guut it\nPark Ptvllion Friday, honon were\n\u2022ven between Canyon and Cruton\nhigh Mhooli. Thi Canyon boyi'\nquintette pulled out a win, but\nCreston glrli wtre too fut for their\nopponents. The week previoui Cin-\nThli picture ef Mre. Onee Morrlion Poole, pruldent ef the Qenertl Fiderttlenof Women'i Clube,\nwtt taken en htr nturn frem\nvisiting tht ftrthtit wuttrn por.\ntlon of htr olub domiln\u2014tht territory of Hawaii.\nAfttr htr return, Mn. Roele attended the New Enelend unter-\nenee ef itate federation!, held In\nBoiton. Her heme Is In Brockton,\nMtu.\nBISHOP VMS\nIN WINDERMERE\nMsny Services snd Receptions\nArranged for Bishop\nof Kootenay\nDISTRICT NO*\nLINING UP FOR\nTHE YULETIDE\nPlans for Community\nChristmas Trees\nUnder Way\nCMSSTON, Nov. SS. \u2014 entertain-\nmenu to nlse money tor community Chrlitmu entertttnmenti in\nunder wty tt outalde points.\nAt Ctnron SIS wu netted it\ni whltt drive it whleh both bridge\nted the old style whist wu pliyed. At the former the prim ven\nttken by Mrs Cimpbell Blttr ud\nOeerge Nlblow. At whllt tht high\nMoreri were Mlu Onct Bothimlcy\ntnd Xm Uoberg.\nTbe uae evening tt Ctmp Lister\ntht Community society ittted t\nbridge tt which tbe prlsei were won\nby Mlw Mutant Huicroft and A.\nW. Siadtlr. At tht ume point tkl\nume evenlnt  then  wu t benefit' yon won both gttnei. it Canyon\nINVERMERE, BC. Nov. il -\nCommander J. Copley Powlei, R.N..\naccompanied by the Rev. Trederic\nStanford, vicar of the perish ot\nWindermere, motored to Golden to\nmeet his lordship, the Rt. Rev.\nWelter Adams, D.D., bishop of\nKootensy, who is ptylng his first\nofficial visit to tht periihes ln thi\nColumbia valley.\nMiny services snd receptions\nhive been srranged for his lordship\ntnd be will hold conflrmttion ierv-\nIces tt several ot the churchn.\nHis lordship wlll be the houu\nguut of Commander Powlei, who\nhu pltced hlmielf end his csr st\ntht dlspoul ot tht bishop.\nThe Hon. R Randolph Bruce, former lleutenmt-govrrnor ot British\nColumbli. ind Mn. Bruce pused\nthrough Golden on their wsy to\nVlctorls to visit their niece, Mrs.\nHobirt Molson. They expect to meet\nJulian Piggott who is returning\nfrom Mtncnurii.\nThey expect to itay over In Invermere on their return trip to Montreal, where they hope to spend the\nChflstrttt holldayi.\nThe valley is to loie two old residents, Mr. ind Mn. Archer Smith,\nwho hive been terming near Edge-\nwater for the put 15 yetri.\nMr, Smith hu not tully recovered\nfrom in opentlon he underwent\ntt the beginning of the yetr, ind tn\nopportunity for selling the branch\nas a going concern wu taken, so\nthat they might return to Kent,\nEngltnd, where It ll hoped Mr.\nSmith's hetlth will be greatly improved, it hit old home.\nThe purchaser of Mr. Smith'i\nnnch fi Mr. Jseggl, newly out\nfrom Switierlind, who is now ln\npossession.\nLeslie Wilson of Vsncouver is\nvisiting his brother-in-ltw tnd sister, Pr. snd Mn. Coy, of Invermere\nHeights. Mr. Wllion is Connected\nwith the C.N.R. steamship line,\nhiving lately been on the itetmers\nrunning between Vincouver ind\nAllsksn ports ind Is being trsns-\nferred to the Hallftx-Plorldi run\nfor the winter. He Is taking this\nopportunity of stopping off tor t\nvisit, the first he his ipsde to the\nvalley.\nW. It. Kelly. CPJt. station sgent\nat Lake Windermere, his lett for\ntht cout, where he will spend the\nnext few weeks on holldsy. His\nplace Is being filled by Mr. Vork\nof Revelitoke.\nDuring the visit ot his lordship,\nthe bishop of Kootenty, services\nwere held it Cintl Flit. Thtre wis\n\u2022 chlldrtn's service in the tfternoon\nend in evening service followed by\na congregational reception. The Can-\ndldstu for confirmation ctme to\nthe evening service at Christ cburch\nInvermere, where the bishop held\nthe sacred service. Tbose confirmed\nwere George William Cockihoot,\nVernon Albert Hollmsn, Robert\nNelson Murray, Bruce Macdonald\nMurray, Lorna Austin and Anne\nMarie Xlmilie.\nConfirmation icrvicu were tlso\nheld it Galena. Those confirmed\nwere John Charlu Stewart, Clarence Alexander Cameron, Ernest\nDonald Cameron. Malcolm Cameron,\nArthur GaJbraith. Chirlu Thonon,\nMamie Lorraine Stewart. Pitrlcla\nAnne Galbraith. Catherine Ellen\nStewart Evelyn Joyce Thorson.\nLoulie Hilda Thorson, tnd Constance\nCameron.\nRev. T. V. Harrison, rursl dean\nof East Kootenay, and Mn. Harrison, who had attended the Induction services of Rev. Mr. Stawsrt u\nvicar of Golden, spent i ihort time\nin Invermere on their wty home to\nCrinbrook.\nA largely ittended innutl meeting of the Windermere District\nCurling club wu held when reports of the secretary-treasurer\nshowed a most lucccnful yur, with\n50 members and l credit Dilutee of\n$50.\nThe retiring officers received\nhesrty thsnks.\nThe following were elected:\nHonoriry president, Hon. R. Rsn-\ndolph Bruce; president, W. H. Su-\nton; vice-president, w. H. Kirk-\npitrick; secretary-treasurer, Charlu\nCrook Jr.; executive committee, r.\nC. Oreen, C. H. Thornton, T. W.\nLee. J. Scott. A. Ashwerth, end R.\nLittle; draws committee, W. H.\nCleland, W. Weir md Mtlor Bell;\nice committee, F. C. Stocltdtle, J.\nScott, T, Campbell, J. Long, W. J.\nNixon: referees, A. Taylor ind W.\nH, Klrkpitrlck; tuditor, E. E. Tun-\nnecltffe.\t\nKUMBAKONUM, Ipdis, (CP) -\nTo avoid election worries and ex\npense munlclptl electloni here were\nheld ln the temples Initead of polling booths. Many candidates were\nelected by lota drawn before the\ntemple deity.\ndance at the home of Otto Becker\nwhich realized SIS. music being iup-\npiled by Fred Mtcbt ind Irwin\nMiyer.\nDurlag the wuk Mrs. Edwards\nand Mn. Fran Bunoe have been\ncwvuilnt the butlneu section for\nfundi for thl yuletlde treat tt\nArrow Creek ichool.\nAt Wynndel t urlu of entertainments hu been Inaugurated for the\nume purpou.\nR. B. SUplu ot K-lowna, one of\ndlrctors ot Creston Dyking Comptny,\nLimited, wu here a few dtyi on\ncompiny buslneu.\nW. Ktlrn hu lift tor Kelowna,\nwhen he li representing the Cres-\nton-Wypndel-Boewell district at a\nmeeting that will elect three memben ot tbe B.O. Ttu Fruit Board\nMr. Kelrn wu named delegate tt\nt growers meeting hen, which wu\nwell ittended.\nJeff. Collls bu ltft for tht rruer\nVtlley. whin hi hu secured t potltlon on \u2022 dairy firm.\nLEAVE  FOR EAST\nMri C. Rou ud her diughter,\nMn. Rank Btker, of Camp Lister\nhtve left oa whtt Is planned to be\ntn extended vUlt it tbe old heme\nit Sydney. Capt Breton. Mrs. Baker\nwill nturn early tn the spring,\nbut Mn. Ron Pltni a longer stay.\nPrior to her departure Mrs. Rou\nwu guut at t futwell reception\nit the home ef Col. and Mrs. Pred\nUtm.\nCharles Wllaon of Sirdar wu a\nCreston visitor. Re stated that the\nfoggy weather of the past ten days\nhu curtailed the dally take of\nducks md geeu at Kootenay Landing.\nTO  TAKE  OUT  TOMS\nArvld tnd Oodfrey Samuelson ara\nleivlng for Rutl Creek, ln the\nKitchener district, when they will\ntiki possession Of some of the\numps of Crubrook Suh It Door\nCompany, Limited, from whom they\nhtvt secured i itand of timber.\nThey wlll operate this winter taking out t considerable quantity of\ncedar posts ln anticipation of a good\ndemand for thut trom tbe C.P.R.\nnut season. In the put the nil\nwty company hu purchased liberally from them. Mn. Samuelson will\nttke up residence with them u soon\ni opentlom get under way.\nW. Itldd li leivlng for Antross.\nneir Ueombe, Alt!., where he will\nbe In charge of the Ron-Beard\nLumber compuy, which wlll be ln\noperttlou all winter, Mr. Ridd bts\nJust finished  t  eontnet ot  plan\nNAPOLEON'S LEHERS TO MARIE ARE\nTO BE SOLD IN LONDON IN DECEMBER\nBy THOMAS T. CHAMPION\nCintdlin Prui SUff Wrlttr\nLONDON, Nov. 23 (CP) \u2014 Another collection of Napoleon's love\nletters, to Archduchess Mule Louise of Austrlt. whom he mtrried ln\n1810 after divorcing Josephine, trt\nto be sold here in December. The\nntme of the owner of this collection\nis not disclosed.\nThe number ot letters grettly ex-\nceedi those written to Josephine,\nwhich were sold out of the lite\nLord Rosebery's library a year ago.\nArdent u the Mirie Loulie letten\ntre, they lick the fint fine rapture\not his earlier love tffalr.\nThe series of epistles to Mtrlt\nLouise cover t period of four years\n\u20141K10-1814\u2014giving a picture of Napoleon pleading with the young\nAustrian prin~-ss even before he\nhad met her, tnd efterwardi of\ntheir married life down to the time\nof hil first imprisonment at Elba.\nHt begim by decltring his imps-\ntlen to meet her. hii longing to\n\"throw himself tt her feet.\" and to\nThe November muting of Cruton\nMaaonlc lodge wu in chargt of the\nput muten, the former misters\nalio pitying hosts it the dinner thtt\nfollowed. The attendmee ot viiltlng\nbrethren wta large.\nBOARD HELPS FAMILY\nThe November teuton of Cnston\nBotrd of Trtdt on Tuudty nlgbt\nt last wu uneventful. Nine members\nwen in attendance tlong with Pruldent Bell, who wu tn eharse of\nproceeding!. The tppllcttion for\nmembenhip of W. Fruer wu accepted.\nThe correspondence consisted of\none letter, which wu from the\nc.p.R. divisional superintendent stating that electric lighting of the nation tt Cntton wu ttlll under consideration Al the \"Juice\" hu, ilnce\ntbtt time, bun Instilled thi litter\nwu ordered tiled.\nThe loctl eommlttu on nllef lint\nt litter telling of tbe unfortunate\nshape ot the Mourn fimlly, ncent\narrivals from the prtlrle, tbe hud\nof which It hopeful ot being Uken\nInto tbi lulttrtum tt Kamloopi tor\ntreatment. Somt ISO It- needed for\nthla ctuie tnd the botrd voted SS.\nprovided tht other til Is ralaed.\nConstitution md by-laws governing the loctl botrd wen flntlly approved, tnd the eommlttu ln charge\nof the work wu complimented by\ntbt president on tbe workmanltk!\nlob tber bad made of the taak.\nThe secretary wu Instructed to\nwrite tha ucretary of the Auociited Boardi of Trtdt ot Eastern\nBrltlth Columbli, uklng for coplei\nof the resolutions passed tnd rejected tt the 1934 convention tt\nOrtnd Forki.\nTht rotd tcrou tht flttt to the\nferry wu dlscumd md tbe mttter\ndisposed .of by instructing the sec.\nretary to write tbe publlo worki department uklng thtt thli hlghwiy\nbe mtde t passable rotd,\nLONDON (CP)-A fitting place\ntor the final meeting ln London in\nconnection with the centenary of\nthe emancipttion ot sltvu wis the\nMansion house, which wu the scene\nof tht first sieve being set tree ln\nthe British Empire.\nWALTHAMSTOW, Engltnd, (CP)\n\u2014Slipping Into i 30-foot deep tewer\nhe was guarding, Fred eliding, 60,\nnight watchman, died before help\nirrlved. ^^^^\u2122\ndevote hli life to miking her hippy.\nDuring Ntpoleon'i campaign! he\nwritee to her dey efter dey, urging\nher to be cheerful, md to be u-\nsured of hii unchangln love. \"You\nknow how much I love you,\" he\nwritu, \"ud how I long to hetr\nthit you ire well md hippy.\" ending with \"Good-bye, my love, md\nt thouund kisies.\" After the birth\nof their son, the King of Rome, hi\ninviriably adds: \"Give t Wm for\nmt to the little King.\"\n\"IE CHEERFUL\"\nThroughout the Ruuiin ctmpaign\nhe describes the letdlng events, but\nnever even in the dirk diys of the\nFrench retreat, did he cease to urge\nher to be cheerful, hit only worry\nbeing lest her letten to him might\nbe intercepted by the enemy.\nAt the tell of Puis, he begs her\nto be \"brave md itrong, ts he ia,\nfor the uke of their son,\" md assures her that he \"feels his mis-\nfortunei fir mora tor her stke thm\nfor bit own.\" The laat letter of the\nurles wis sent trom Elba. \"The\nIsland is lovely, but you ire so fir\ntwty,'' he writei. \"md I long to see\nyou ud my son.\n..ENDS\n\u2022 Cold\nSoontr\nPROVtP BY 2 CiMHATIOH\u00bb\nNelson Party Visits\nSlocan Park\nSLOCAN PARK, B.C.. Nov. 23-\nMiss Marjorie Brown, teacher here,\nhsd ss her guut Ust week her\nmother, Mrs. T. Brown, Hoover\nstreet.\nDr. snd Mrs. J. P. Guuin and ion\nBarney, accompanied by Mn. Gus-\nsin's father, T. Brown, end sister\nGeor;vna Brown, also Miss Helen\nBreeze, motored from Nelson and\nvisited Miss Marjorie Brown and.\nMn. Fred Cursons.\nGood\t\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMenus, Recipes and Hints\nMENU  HINT\nPork Chops Glased Sweet Potatoes\nPineapple Salad\nButtered and Mashed Turnips\nMolasses Pudding Coffee\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nGlazed Sweet Potatoes \u2014 Four\nboiled sweet potatou, two tablespoons water, one-half cup brown\nsugar, one-fourth teaspoon ult.\nCook potatoes; pare and mt Into\nstrips. In a frying pan, melt the\nbutter, blend in sugar ud water.\nCook about three mlnutu. until a\nthin syrup lt formed. Add the sweet\npotatoes and cook very, very slowly\nuntil the potatoes are well glazed.\nYou will need to be very careful or\ntbo syrup will burn. If you prefer,\nthli glazing may be done in a slow\neven and then there isn't so much\ndanger ot burning,\nMolasses Pudding\u2014One cup molasses, one cup hot water, three-\nfourths cup sugar, two eggs, one\nteupoon sods, two cupe flour. Mix\ningredients and steam one hour.\nServu 10. Half the recipe maku\nfive nice servings.\nFACTS AND FANCIES\nOrange  Salad   Dreiilng\nOne-fourth cup lugar, four table\nspoons flour, one-halt teaspoon salt,\none-half teaspoon mustard, one-\neighth teaspoon paprika, one cup\noranje juice, two tablespoon butter,\none-fourth cup lemon juice. Mix\n' ,   \". Is, add orangi\nslowly md cook over hot wster\ndry ingredienfs, add orange juice\nuntil thick. Add butter snd whu\nmelted add lemon juice. Remove\nfrom stove. But until smooth. Cool.\nWIFE PRESERVERS\nUse dry salt to cleanse tha scalp\nmd keep It free of dandruff. Leeve\nthe salt in the hair for five mlnutu\nand then brush out.\nA large Jack Homer pie for k\ncenterpiece will be enjoyed at the\nchildren's party. Fill the pie with\ninexpensive gifts, each tied to a\nstring or cord which in turn Is attached to a small card which hu\nthe ch\"d's name written on lt. The\nchild fulls the cord md gets the\nfsvor.\nThty Varlsty\nThere Is the ever-popular combination of scalloped potatoes with\nham. Try using a generous quantity\nof grated cheeee ln the cream stuce\nused with the potatoes and substitute Ctntditn btcon for the usuil\nhim.\nllf V LNAfld  CONNOISSEUR\n\"Drink More*1 Brand\nMadt frem tht pure juice ef choice vine-ripened\nOkanagan Tomatoes for thst full, dtlicieui flavor.\ni~BULMANS\n300 Ladies' DRESSES\narrived this week, silks, wools, etc., sll out on a\nSpecial Sale for Saturday md Mondty.\nNewett itylu, well made.\nUrge Women's Silk Druses, sizu to 46 tt\u2014\n$3.95 \"* W5\n*   (Worth SSOO, W.00, $10.00 md \u00ab\u00bb.\u00ab) '\nAll tizei, ipecial two-day price\u2014\n$3.95 $3-35 $4-95 $5.95\nThli is the greatest dreu'buy we have ever\nseen offered to the public, with a very large\nassortment to lelect from.\nSLIPS-The new Swiss tat silk ftC\/J\nOVERSIZE SLIPS.       ttl QC md Cl *Q\nbuilt up ihoulden 0*****~9      9*-*--7\nLADIES' OVERSIZE SILK -JOA\nBLOOMERS, pair    '-*>\nLADIES' SILK PANTIES and -UkA\nBLOOMERS,   pair  *~*Jr\nLADIES' CAPE AND KID GLOVES,  fit 9ft\nlined md unllned, pair *?\u2022**\u2022*\u2022*\nLADIES' SILK AND WOOL HOSE, also  MAA\nall wool cashmere hose, peir 1'r*\nLADIES' CORSETS and CORSELETTES, new\nstock just received. SI 29\nLADIES' SILK AND WOOL CS QB\nCOMBINATIONS     \u25a0*?*\u2666*>\nLADIES' SILK AND WOOL VESTS,      *JCA\nill itylu *-~T\nCHILDREN'S WOOL SWEATERS, hud made,\npullover and coat  JJ^JJ and $|^j|\nWINTER COATS AND SUITS ALL REDUCED\nWe are receiving the largest assortment of new goods, that has\never entered this store, you will be pleased with the very reasonsble\npricei we are tiling it.\nVELVET DRESSES, extremely smart and exclusive.      tut Qg\nJust in. J days only - Vw*T9\nRAMSDEN'S\n322 Bsker St. at Stanley\nOpen\nSaturday\nEvenings\n730 tO 9  MAKtvWPQEX-MASJoy,\nIn order to accommodate purchasers of Christmas\nCards, the office of the Commercial Printing Department will be open every Saturday evening\nbetween  the hours of 7:30 and 9:00  o'clock.\nWe invite you to drop in and see our range of\nGreeting Csrds. Every style and size,    -\n2 DOZEN CARDS\nAT PRICES FROM\n$1.75 Up to $4.50\nJMamt Bailg iNm*\nCEumutfrrtal printing Ibpi\nOPEN SATURDAY EVENING\n%Sh\u00bb\u00bb)^_\u00bbj\u00bb_\u00bb)l\u00bbi>Sj\u00bb>\u00bb3>^>j\u00bb>j\u00abt\u00bb)\u00ab\n ~-\u2014\u2014\nSCOUT SANTA\nAGAINTOACT\nBoys' Toy Shops to\nMake Kiddies\nHappy\nOTTAWA;  Nov.  23.-(CP)-The\nGoloshes\nOvershoes\nRubbers\nfor\nMEN\nWOMEN\nCHILDREN\nOur Stock li Complete.\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nBoy Scouts' toy shops across Canada\nwhich for the past 10 yean have\nbrought joy to the hearts of thousands of Canadian children ot\nChristmas morning, will again be\nin full swing this year to play Santa\nClaus to less fortunate kiddles of\nUie Dominion, it Is anounced by\nDominion headquarten of thc Boy\nScouta association here. This movement for \"Happlfying\", which has\ndeveloped steadily since 1924, will\nthis year receive more concentrated\neffort and attention than ever before in order to meet increaied demands.\n\"The need for this movement apparently will be greater than ever\nbefore, said Commissioner John A.\nStiles, at Scout headquarten. \"Since\n1924 our boys, seeking to do their\ngood turn, have thrown heart and\nsoul into this work ln ever-Increasing numbers, and we hope to\nplay Santa Claus this Christmas to\nwell over 100,000 young Canadians.\"\nThere may be scotfen who doubt\nthe existence of a Santa Claus, but\nit would be difficult to so convince\nany of the half million children wbo,\nthanks to this Scout activity, have\n\"found there is such a benevolent\nspirit. In many cases it was despite\nthe heart-breaking regrets of their\nparents that \"they were afraid Santa\nClaus would not be able to get\naround this far this year.\"\nHARRY BODNER\nDIES SUDDNELY\nCollapses in Pool Mall; Resided in Nelson Five Years\nBarry Bodner, *ho bsd been suffering from heart trouble for some\ntime, collapsed ln John Patls' pool\nroom Thursday nlgbt and died a\nfew minutes ifter being admitted to\nKootensye Lake Oenenl hospital.\nair. Bodner was about 48 years of\nage and was born ln Roumania. He\nleaves no relatives ln this country.\nPor 80 yean he haa been a Canadian resident and for tbe laat five\nyears a resident of Nelson. He was\nemployed ln the mines.\nOrdinary corncobs, treated with\naclda and put through simple converting processes, bave been found\nto make effective electrical Insula-\nton.\n-THE NILION DAILY NEWS. NELION. B.C.-8ATUROAY  MORNINO. NOV. 24. 1934\nCRESTON NET\nSTARS BEAT\nYAHK, 31-16\nYahk Holds Own in\nMen's Doubles in\nBadminton\nCRESTON, B. C, Nov. 22.-Inter-\nsectional badminton was Inaugurated for the 1934-33 season at Park\npavilion, Creaton. when the picl*\nof the Yahk shuttle talent visited\nhere for a aeries of games, and were\ntreated to 31 to II setback In a total\nof 47 contests.\nThere waa a large turnout of playen and in order to permit all to\nparticipate it was agreed to limit\neach set to 11 points, and to play\nbest two out of three games.\nThe visiton showed to best advantage in the men's doubles ln\nwhich they were defeated by a\nsingle set, 7-8. In the ladies' doubles\nCreston won 0-2, a feature of this\nplay being that all the sets were\ntaken in two straight games. In the\nmixed doubles thc figures were 18-8\nln favor of the locals.\nFollowing are the teams and scores\nYahk mentioned first in each case:\nMIXED DOUBLE!\nJ. Brogan and E. Revans, lost to\nG. Sinclair and Mrs. Frank Levin.\nH. Dickson and Mrs. Dickson, lost\nto H. Cornwall and Miss M. Smith.\nR. Fraser and Mn. Lazenby, lost\nto J. P. McDonald and Miss Jean\nHenderson.\nC. Harrison and Miss S. Wilkie.\nlost to O. Sostad and Miss M. Hamilton.\nJ. A. and Mrs. Hamilton, lost to\nMr. and Mn. R. M. Chandler.\nB. Revans and Miss E. Revans,\nbeat R. Lynn and Mn. G. Sinclair.\nC. Radford and Miss H. Mclnnis.\nlost to A. W. Millen and Miss Hazel\nHobden.\nW. Jupp and Mn. Revans, lost\n\u00a7AFEWAY\u00a7TORE$\nphone      Pay Gash and Save        Free\n153 SATURDAY \u2014 MONDAY Delivery\n4?\nSUGAR io lb. Cotton Sack 65c\nKETCHUP, Heini 14-ot. bottle    bottle 22*\nJAM, McDonald's Pure, all flavors .. 4 Ib. tin 52*\nTOMATO JUICE. Libby's, 14 ot. tin, 3 tint Hit.\nORANGE MARMALADE, Aylmer .... 2 Ib. jar 29*\nCORNED BEEF, Llbby't   2 Unt 23*\n3 lbt. IROWN SUGAR and both\n1 Ib. WALNUTS, Broken for\nSALAD DRESSING, Nalley'i,  12 ox. jar Vk\\t)\nOLIVES, Libby's Stuffed  7 ot. Jar 21*\nDILL PICKLES, Happy Vale   25 ... jar 23*\nHONEY. Pure Local   4 Ib. tin 69*\nPEANUT BUTTER, Squirrel, No. 2 tin tin 29*\nKIPPERED SNACKS, Conneri ..'. tin   5*\nEGGO BAKING POWDER\nWith FREE WATER TUMBLER\u2014\n16 oi. tin\t\n32*\nMAPLE SYRUP, Pride ef Canada .. 16 ot. bottle 25*\nICING SUGAR 2 Ib. package 17*\nTOILET TISSUE, Sable      3 rolls 25*\nBORDEN'S CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK, 16 oi.\ntin     35*\nBUTTER\nHIGHWAY FIRST ORADE\n3 lbs. 73c\nCOFFEE\nMAXWELLHOUSE\nLb 39c\nLb.\nTEA\nSALADA\n55c\nLb.\nCOCOA\nAIRWAY\nI9c\nPINEAPPLE\nSINGAPORE,  LIMIT 3\n3 tins\n25c\nSOAP FF.AKES\nFINEST'BULK\n3 lbs.\n25c\nKRAFT CHEESE\nLb. 25c\nSARDINES\nKING OSCAR\n2 tins\n25c\nBAKING NECESSITIES\nWo have a full line of best quality Baking necessities. Raitint, Curranti, Cher-.\nries, Petit, Pineapple, Walnuts, Almonds, etc. All freih ttock. Moderately\npriced and sanitarily wrapped. BUY YOUR REQUIREMENTS NOW.\nFRUITS AND VEGETABLES\nBANANAS\u2014Firm, Ripe   Doz. 29<\nSPECIAL\nAPPLES, Wagnert   box 95*\nGRAPES       Ib. 15*\nGRAPEFRUIT, Florida .... 2 for 23*\nLETTUCE, California Ige.; 2 heads 23*\nCELERY, Armttrong ........ Ib. 10*\nSPINACH       3 lbt. 19*\n1 SHOPPING BAG FULL OF     OA*\nASSORTED VEGETABLES    LD\nSPANISH ONIONS 3 lbt. 25*\nSWEET POTATOES  ....   3 lbt. 25*\nQUALITY MEAT VALUES\nTender Beef Roasts\nBlade\nRound Bone\nStewing Beef\nLB, 6c\nWEINERS\u2014\n2 lbt.  \t\nPICNIC SHOULDER,\nIb\t\n35<\nir\nLAMB\nLEGS Ib. 18*\nSHOULDERS  ..  Ib. 10*\nLOINS    lb. 20*\nRump\nRound Steak\nStanding Rib\nLB. 10c\nSirloin Tip\nSirloin\nRolled Rib\nLB. 12c\n1?\nHAMBURG STEAK,\n2 lbt\t\nSWIFT'S SLICED     Or*\nBACON: Ib 00\nPORK\nLEGS    Ib. 19*\nLOINS Ib. 22*\nBUTTS   Ib. 15*\nPORK SAUSAGE\u2014\nIb\t\nBOLOGNA\u2014\nIb\t\n15!\n15*\nVEAL\nFILLETS Ib. 16*\nRUMPS     Ib. 12*\nSHOULDER .... Ib.   8*\nto F. V. Staple! and Misi Nora\nPayne.\nR. G. Potter and Mn. Dickson,\nloit to Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Telford.\nG. Lockwood and Min H. Mclnnii. beat Dr. and Mrs. G. G. McKenzie.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Lythgoe, beat\nTed Moore and Misi Jean McCreath.\nLADIES' DOUBLES\nMlas E. Revans and Mrs. Dickson\nbeat Miss M. Smith and Mrs. Levirs.\nMiss H. Mclnnii and Mrs. Lazenby\nlost to Miss H. Hobden and Mrs.\nTelford.\nMiss S. Wilkie and Mrs. Hamilton\n'ost to Miss Jean Henderson and\nMrs. Chandler.    '\nMrs. Revaiii and Mrs. Lythgoe lost\nto Misses Nora Payne and M. Hamilton.\nMEN'S DOUBLES\nJ. Brogan and H. Dickson lost (o\nG. Sinclair and R. M. Telford.\nR. Fraaer and G. Harrison lost\nto H. Cornwall and 0. Sostad.\nJ :-ogan and C. Radford beat\nA. W. Millen and J. P. MacDonald.\n.. {\".milton and E. Revans beat\nDr. McKenzie and F. V. Staples.\nW. Jupp and G. Lockwood lost to\nR. Lynn and R. M. Chandler.\nA. Lythgoe and R. G. Potter\nbeat H. A. Powell and Ted Moore.\nAfter play there was an hour of\nsociability with the following in\ncharge of serving lunch: Mrs. F. V.\nStaples, Mrs. C. W. Allan, Mra. R.\nM. Telford, Mrs. F. C. Rodgers. Miss\nCarcella Sanford, Miss Betty Speers,\nMisi Dora Nickel and R. M. Telford.\nDue to the poor shape the roads\nwere in all last season, only one\nvisit was made to Yahk in 1933-34,\nbut it is hoped to have a monthly\nt.ourn ment with tha club of that\ntown this season.\nLAID TO REST\nBurton Resident for\n12 Years Dies\nSuddenly\nBURTON. B.C., Nov. 23*-Funeral\nof Oscar Humphrey, a resident of\nBurton for the past 12 yean, was\nheld Wednesday from tha United\n<-hurch, Rev. C. Addyman officiating.\nMr. Humphrey died suddenly\nfrom a heart attack Monday. He\nhad been in poor health for two\nyean.\nHe la survived by two sisters and\none brother, all ln Ontario.\nMiss Janet MacDonald of Burton\nwai a sister-in-law.\nHARROP MAN IS\nRECOVERING\nHARROJ>, Nov. 23-W. D. (Bunt)\nOgilvie, Harrop-Longbeach ferryman, is getting along \"nicely\" on his\ncrutches. About 10 days ago Mr.\nOgilvie received an injury to his\nle; while on ferry duty. He was\n** i to Kootenay Lake General\nhospital. Nelson, where his leg was\npaced in a plaster cast.\nM. J. Guidus has moved on to the\nproperty he purchased last spring,\nmore familiarly known as the Electric ranch.\nGYROS HONOR\nR.E.H0RT01-\nGive Him Big Sendoff\non His Birthday\nAnniversary\nMemben of the Nelson Oyro club\ngain. R. I. Horton a glad hand\nThursday night when he celebrate*-\nhis birthday anniversary at his bome\nIn Falrvlew. The gueet of honor was\nshowered with sll manner of humorous gifts. >ven replicas of the Dlonne quintuplets were showered\nupon the Oyro member. Bringing the\nevening to a climax E.A. Mann,\npresented a gift which turned,out\nto be a photo of R. I. Crerar.\nCards were plsyed during tho evening.\nThli column la conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vigneu*. AU newi ot a\nsocial nature, includ. ig receptions,\nprivate entertainments, penons!\nitems, marriages, etc., will appear\nin this column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home, 519 Silica\nttreet.\nButcherteria News\nT. S. SHORTHOUSE, Prop.\nPHONES 527\u2014528 FREE DELIVERY\nAt all fimei protect tht health of your family-\nBuy Government Graded and Stamped Moati Only!\nSATURDAY and MONDAY BARGAINS\nBargains\nBreakfast Sauiage\u2014 ICi*\n2 lbi  *>*\u2022\nMinced Steak\u2014 CA\nPer  lb \u201e *V*\nBelling Beef\u2014 _*A\nPer lb ! **>\nStewing Vaal- Eat\nPer lb **>\nCREAMERY BUTTER t'M*\n2 lbi *****\n3 lbs. limit\nPure Lard\u2014 4 MA\n1-lb. print  'mtr*\nB Orade Eggt\u2014 IM\nPer do ****\nOntario Cheeie\u2014 9_M\nPer lb  smT\nFRESH KILLED _t_tkA _kMA\nTURKEYS-Lb. tWlt-mJr\nMincemeat\u2014E:it grade;     1_*A\nper lb *--**\u2022\nOYSTERS\u2014 Eutern;     \u00a3\u00a3A\nRed Label (Canada\nChoice) Beef\nChoice Oven Roaitt\u2014        fC___\nPer lb      ~-~~*\nRolled Roaita-     _kr_A   _\\_\\A\nPer lb  m****'   ***-**>\nFRESH KILLED\nDUCKS-Ptr Ib. .\nJK\nMilk Fed Veal\nLeg and Loin Roaita\u2014      \\t_dt\nPer lb     **Ot-\nOven Roaitt\u2014        lft A \\_\\A\nChoice; per lb....   ****> ***->\nRump Roaiti\u2014\nPer lb\t\n140\nSELECTED GEESE- _t_tA\nPer Ib m**r*\nNo. 1 Lamb\nLeg Roaitt\u2014\nPer lb\t\nShoulder Roaitt\u2014\nPer lb.\t\n220\n130\nKOKANEE  TROUT\u2014  t_*A\nPer Ib.  ****>\nTwo Trueki at Your Service\nWE HAVE NO BUSINESS CONNECTIONS WITH ANY\nOTHER MEAT MARKET IN NELSON.\nSinned: T. S. SHORTHOUSE\nV2 -^wuiHllj **\nCASH MARKET\nPHONE 854 FREE DELIVERY\nA SANITARY MARKET\u2014GOVT. INSPECTED MEATS\nSPECIALS FOR SAT. and MON.\n5_ Blade Roast _W*_\\m\n6 Trimmed Right       DC\nBoneleii Pot Roait   f\nR Lb. Lamb Breaiti per lb.\nPot Roaiti\nBelling Beef\nBeef Stow\nHamburger\nBREAKFAST SAUSAGE:\n2 lbi  lit*\nPURE PORK SAUSAGE:\nLb  18*\nROUND STEAK, STEER:\nLb  12%*\nPRIME RIB ROAST: Rolled;\nLb.   15*\nSIRLOIN TIP ROASTS:\nLb  17*\nWITHOUT WASTE\nFRESH LOCAL BOILINC\nFOWL:\nLb\t\n15'\nPORK OVEN ROAST:\nLb  17*\nLOIN PORK CHOPS:\nLb  25*\nVEAL CHOPS: Tender;\nLb  13*\nVEAL OVEN ROAST:\nLb  11*\nVEAL   FILLETS:   Lb. 18*\nVEAL RUMP ROASTS:\nLb  15*\nNOAK'S LOCAL FRESH\nKILLED TURKEYS:   9g*\n25'\nMr. and Mrs. J. McNlchol of\nJohnston's Landing, announce thc\nmarriage of their eldest daughter,\nNellie, to J. F. Thompson of Gerrard.\neldest aot. of Mr. and Mn. Joseph\nThompson of Willow Point. Trie\nceremony took place November 20\nat ColvUle, Wash.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. James Kennedy of\nFrasen Landing were city visiton\nyesterday.\n. \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nAmong shoppers In Nelaon yesterday waa Robert Cunningham of\nCrescent Valley.\nI  a <a\nT. A. Whelidon of South Slocan\nspent yeiterday in town.\nC. A. Cawley of Snlmo viiited\nNelson yesterda-\n\u2022 .   .\nAmong viiiton from Solcan City\nyesterday was R. L. Reynolds.\n.   \u2022   .\nMn. C. S. Leary of Nakusp is\nhere to Meet her young daughter,\nEileen, who Is convalescing from a\nmastoid operation at the Kootenay\nLake General hospital.\nMr. and Mn. Frank Paddon have\nas their guest Miss L. M. Cowan of\nKelowna, who is In the city for a\nweek,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. L. Hogarth ot Cranbrook,\nand her son, E. Hogarth of Spokane,\nwere In town yesterday en route to\nrraiL\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nW. Blane has returned from a few\nweeks' vacation at the coasL\n.\u00ab   *   \u2022\nLome A. Campbell ot South Slo\ncan left yesterday for the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. R. Perry of pasimore was a re\ncent shopper ln town.\n. \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. E. J. McGregor oi\nSouth Slocan spent yesteray in Nelson,\n\u2022\u25a0*\u2022.\u2022\nSt. Saviour's Woman's Auxiliary\nheld a successful doughnut tea and\nbake sale yesterday afternoon at\nthe rectory with Mn. Fred H. Graham ai convener. Mra. Graham,\nassisted by Mra. George Horstead,\nalao made doughnuts. Mrs. A. T.\nHorswill assisted by Mrs. Harold\nE. G. Penny, president at the bake\ntable, while Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson and Mrs. C. E. Slmond.\nserved tea. Mrs. < James Draper\nmade a capable cashier and the president ot the association, Mn. G. K.\nAshby. received the guests.\n-   *     \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nCarl Llnapw of Salmo visited Nelion yeiterdiy.\n\u2022 i   i\nAmong shoppers in the city yetterday was Mrs. F. Broughton ot\nNew Denver.\n\u2022 \u2022 * \u2022\nRev. J. M. Smith of Grand Forks\nwai in town yetterday to attend a\ndeanery conference.' He was tha\nguest of Very Rev. J. C. McKensle,\npastor of the Church of Mary Immaculate.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMn. John Gllroy of Willow Point\nvisited Nelaon yeiterday.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMn. F. C. Sharpe leaves this\nmorning to ipend a week visiting\nher mother in Lethbridge.\n\u2022 '\u2022. \u2022\nMrs. Charlea Holt wai in town\nfrom Balfour yesterday.\n' .   .   .\nVery Rev. J. C. McKenzie has had\nas his guest Right Rev. Msgr. A. K.\nMclntyre, V.G., of Rossland, who\nattended the deanery conference,\nMr. and Mn. F. Abey of Kaslo\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\na* a  a\nAmong shoppers ln the city yesterday was Mn. George Trickett of\nNew Denver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nVlslton in toWn yeiterday Included Mrs. Louis DeCocq ot Har-\nrob.\naaa\nMr. and Mn. D. StDenis, Kerr\napartments, returned last evening\nfrom a couple of weeks' visit in\nSeattle, where thty were guests at\nthe home of Mrs. StDenis' parents,\nMr. and Mn. Buggins.\nMrs. H. E. Cooper of Balfour\nvisited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 \u25a0 .   .\nRev. Leo Hobson, pastor of St.\nFrai.cis Xavier parish ln Trail, was\nin Nelson yesterday attending a\ndeanery conference.\nt ,-,\u2022   \u2022\nJ. Stanines of Kaslo viiited the\ncity yeiterday.\n.   .  .\nLady Aylmer of Willow Point\nspent yesterday shopping in Nelson.\n\u2022 .   *\nAmong vlslton in town yesterdiy\nwas E. Paul of Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nM. C. Donaldaon of Salmo spent\nyesterday In town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. James Draper of*\nNew Denver were city 'shoppers\nyesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. W. R. Grubbe entertained informally at dinner last\nevening preceeding the golf club\ndance at the Hume hotel.\n\u2022 a \u25a0* \u2022\nMn. Arthur Houston of Fraser\nLanding spent yesterday In the city.\nCD. Harding wai In from Wlnlaw\nyesterday.\nMn. Clarence Shannon of Willow\nPoint was among Nelion shoppers\nyesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPaul Bratlng of Kaslo spent yesterday In town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMri. W. Holmgren, Carbonate\nstreet, entertained yesterday afternoon at a benefit bridge for the Girl\nGuide Association fund. Those playing were, Mn. W. G. C. Lanskail,\nMn. H. D. Dawson, Mrs. M. V.\nAllan, Mn. Eric Sowerby, Mn. S.\nC. Rowley, Mrs. George Schupe,\nand Mrs. John H. Argyle.\nThursday evening Mr. and Mn.\nArthur P. Mllla, Ken* apartftienta,\nrecently married, were the honor\nguests at the party given ln the\nWomen's Institute rooms by the\nKinsmen club. They were presented\nwith a handsome silver cheese and\ncracker dish. Among those present\nwere Mr. and Mn. W. M. Cameron!\nMr. and Mn. Louis Choquette. Mr.\nand Mrs. Nelson Ball, Mr. and Mrs.\nS1RARTHUR\nPINERO DIES\nFamous Playwright\nPasses After an\nOperation\nLONDON. Nov. 33 (API-BIT AT-\nthur Plnero, 73, famous plsjwrljht.\ndied today In a nursing home following an opentlon.\nSir Arthur Plnero was ss famous\ntt home tor hla shyness aa he wai\naa a dramatist. He wta ta difficult\nto Interview as Kipling, as bashful\nas Barrle, and hated telephones\nwont than Bernard Shaw, Thomu\nHardy tnd H. O wells all rolled up\ntogether. He wat created a Knight\nby the lata King Idward VU ln\n1903.\nPlnero began hit publlo career at\nSn actor. But t*e Alt not care for\ntht itage, particularly because he\nhad to speak worda written by\nother persona, so he took to wrltlim\nhli own plays and appeared hlmielt,\nfor t time, ln them.\nHis Uttle skits, written for himself\u2014mostly one act affalra\u2014aerved\nas stepping atones to his greater\nsucceu ta a dramatic author.\nSir Arthur, when be first branched out as a dramatist, produced\nhli own plays. And every play ot\nhis waa acted aa he himself would\nhave acted every part. It was a\nPlnero performance throughout.\nActors and actresei feared him.\nHe used to lit ln the front rows\ntnd thunder out orden like a general directing hla soldiers. If there\nwere tny ro.ee Inflections ln the\npity, as finally produced, the Inflections were aa Sir Arthur himself would have , produced them\u2014\nand not aa the actor might think\ntbey should be done.\nIn later years, he seldom appeared ln public, excepting at a cricket\nmatch aow and then. This wta hla\nchief recreation, plnero did not attend the big games, wbere then\nwould be tens of thousands ot\nspectators, but wts fond of seeking out tecond or third grade gamei\non the village greens. Selections a\nseat somewhere oft In a corner, he\nwould teaat hit eyes and mind on\nthe action of the pity. If sny ona\nattempted to Interrupt him, he\nwould roar at the Intruder so that\nno one ever thought igain of going\nnetr him.\nPlnero loathed Interview!, in fact\nInterviews were out of his line completely, por yean no one even tried\nto get him to talk on any popular\ntopic, or anything of the sort. He\ndid not care for formtl dinners,\neither, tnd lf he did accept an ln-\n\\Wk>\n-PAGE FIVE\nvltatlon It wu with the distinct\nunderstanding that ht wu not to\nsptak.\nNeit t6 cricket, sir Arthur Uked\nbicycling. He became Intereited In\ntU out door aporta as a boy wben\nitudylng Uw, tor a time, ln hla\nfather'! office. Plnero wu born\nIn London, Mty 34, IMS.\nChicken feathers hive bten dissolved to form a pltitic sultablt for\nmaking fountain pent, Insulators,\nand  various novelties.\n\u25a0pi i H1' i .iraamjcma:\nNorman A. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nT. Carew, Mr. and Mrs. B. French,\nMonty Morley, Mr. and Mrs, J. P.\nHorswill, Dr. and Mn. R. C. Shaw,\nBenjamin Sutherland, J. Boyce, B.\nMartin, Mr. tad Mrs. T. S. Short-\nhouse, Thomas Johnstdne, Hector\nMcKenzie, Mr. and Mn. D. C. Richards, T. C. Lambert, J. B. Stark,\nJ. Venus of Vancouver, Miss Lois\nSheffield, Miss Margaret Mayer,\nMiss Sylvia Price, Miss Kahle, Miss\nMildred Martin, Miss Irerle Edmondson and Miss Ryan.\nNow...\nIs the Time for\n\"A Wool\nDress\"\n1\nFor Home ...\nFor Office ...\nFor School...\nWe have the style and\nthe size you want in a\nvariety of colors. A full\nrange of sizes.\n$13.50\nto\n$35.00\nEach\n\/jA\u00a3A&*d\nLimited\nPhone 200\n607 Baker St.\nOUR SPECIALS\nFor SATURDAY and MONDAY\nCHEESE\u2014Ontario \t\n  Lb.\n19*\n  Lb.\n25*\nSHREDDED WHEAT ....*.**\u25a0;....\n....  Pk|.\n11*\n25*\nCOFFEE\u2014Malkin'i Beit \t\n Lb.\n39*\nPURITY OATS \t\n....  Pkf. 1 Hi*\nMAYONNAISE\u2014lett Foodi,  8-ox.\n\t\n20*\nCJtEEN CUT BEANS\u2014Nabob\t\n 2 far 2Em\u00bb\nTEA BISCUITS\u2014Chriitie'i\t\n1-lb. pkg. 33*\nWASHING POWDER\u2014Royal Crown,\nLarge ..,\n21*\nJELLY POWDERS\u2014Shlrrlff'g\t\n 2 for\n11*\nORANGES\u2014Naveli 30*; 3 dox.  .\n85*\nBANANAS\t\n... 2 lbi.\n19*\nHORSWILL BROS.\nPhone 235 grocers Free Delivery\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nVASSAR'S\nPHONES\n831\n,832\nCASH MEAT MARKET\n \u2014,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u2014\"        \u25a0       \u25a0-\u25a0  \"-- -    i.    \u25a0__\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0:\u25a0:- ::      \u25a0: \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0_.-     - \u25a0\u25a0\u2014\nMoney So vers for Soturdoy ond Mondoy\nChoice Steer Beef\nSIRLOIN STEAK: Ib. 15*\nPOT ROAST: Ib. ...\nBLADE ROAST: Ib. .\nRUMP ROAST: lb..\nROLLED RIB ROAST\nLb. \t\n5*\n8*\n10*\n15*\nVEAL FILLET\nROAST: Ib. ......\nVEAL OVEN\nROAST:  Ib\t\nVEAL STEW:\nLb\t\nLEGS REAL LAMB:   0(K\nLAMB'CHOPS: OC*\n2 lbi CO\nW\nir\n.5*\nBUTTER: Creamery; 00*\nSWIFTS   PURE   LARD:\n1-lb. cartom; OQ*\n2 lbi tttl\nEGGS: C Grade;        iC*\n2 doi W\nEGGS: Local Pallet    OQ*\nA'i; doi JO\nROASTING OA*\nCHICKEN: Local; lb. C\\)\nHAMBURGER: IP*\nFreih made; 3 lbi. . 10\nBREAKFAST 17*\nSAUSAGE: 2 lbi.    .11\nSWIFT'S BREAKFAST\nBACON: Sliced;        OC*\nKOKANEE TROUT:' IP*\nPORK OVEN\" IP*\nROAST: Ib   1J\nAll Our Meati Are Government Inspected\n-_\u2014--\u2014_-------_--.\n_______________\n ____________\n\t\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. S.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. NOV. 14. UM-\nSgg^ Stage Is Set, Cast Is Ready, For Brilliant  Su^a\nWedding of Two .Royal Houses\non November 29\nHere is shown tht Duke of\nYork, who with the Prince of\nWales will support their\nbrother, Prince George, Duke\nof Kent, at his wedding to\nPrincess Marina.\nScene of Wedding\nThe Qroom       and     The Bride\nHere is a beautiful portrait study by Dorothy Wilding, | minster Abbey, November 29. The ceremony will be one of\nof Prince George, youngest son of the King and Queen, and the most magnificent spectacles ever witnessed in London,\nPrincess Marina of Greece, who are to be married in West-1 with royal notables from every part tsi the world attending.\n<\nHs* It a view of historic Westminster Abbey, whleh\nwas renovated in preparation for the elaborate wedding.\nParents of Bride-to-Be\nHere are fine portraits of Prince and Princess Nicholas of Greece, whose daughter,\nPrincess Marina, is to wed Prince George.\nWill Act At Royal Wedding\nhe Archbishop of Canterbury,\nDr. Lang.\nArchbishop of York\nRoute of Wedding Procession\nM*.'l,itl.V\\t1*-mr^\nNot since the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of York\nwill London have seen such an elaborate procession as will\nbe seen at the wedding of Princess Marina and Prince George.\nThe above map shows the route of procession.\nThe Princes of Wales, possibly Britain's future bachelor\nKing, will, with his brother,\nthe Duke of York, support\ntheir- brother Prince George\nwhen he is married to Priiy\ncess Marina of Greece.\n\u00a9\nInside View of Abbey\nHere is beautiful scene of the interior of Westminste?\nAbbey where the wedding is to take place.\nParents of Qroom-toSe\nHere are excellent studio portraits of King George V and Queen Mary of Great Britain,\nwhose youngest son, Prince George, Duke of Kent, is to be married to Princess Marine\nof Creece. \u2022 :\nEight Beautiful Bridesmaids Who Will Attend Princess Marina on Her Wedding Day\nPrinceii Juliana, Holland,\nFriend, aged 25.\nPrinceii Irene, Greece,\nCousin, aged 30.\nPrlnceu Elizabeth. England.\nPrince George'i niece, aged I.\nPrincess Eugenie, Grejce, Princes* Katherine, Greece,\nCousin, aged 24. Sister, aged 21.\nIn this layout are shown the eight bridesmaids who will\nattend Princess Marina. Five are princesses, three of whom\nare cousins and one her sister. Princess Elizabeth and Lady\nMary Cambridge, two youngest bridesmaids, will probably\nact as train-bearers. Gowns are likely to be of white crepe\nwoven with delicate silver thread fo make a perfect background for Princess Marina's silver bridal gown.\nGrand Duchess Kyra, Russia,\nFriend, aged 23.\nLady Irli-Mountbatten, England,\nPrince's relative, aged 14.\nLady Mary Cambridge, England,\nQueen Mary's Niece, aged 10.\n \t\n-THI NILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. B.C-IATURDAY MORNINO. NOV. 24. 1134-\n\\ffl\nWELFARE ASSOCIATION START\nDRIVETOASSURE FUNDS FOR\nCHRISMS CHEER IN NELSON\nBamford Again Heads\nAssociation; Start\nCanvass\nDetermined to give under privileged famlllea tha usual Chrutmas\ncheer, and to provide a substtntlal\n{uad for additional sislitince\nthroughout tbe winter, tbe Nelion\nWetare auoclatlon launched a rlg-\noroua campaign Prlday night at a\nmuting In the city hall.\nAid. W. B. Bamford, will again be\nat the helm thu seaaon, both be\nand W. E. Wiuon, city cleric having\nbssn reelected to tbe posts ol chairman and secretary-treaiurer reipectively.\nX. D. Barnei wlll act u chairman of a convaulni committee that\nwlll itart the drive for fundi at\nonce. On hli committee in Mayor\nM. H. Smythe. A. 8. Horswill, J. P.\nMorgan, Rev. w. C. Mawhlnney, H\nX). Ram-den and P. T. orlfflth!. The\ncommittee will bold its flnt meetlns tbla mornlnt to plan the drive.\nT. T. Qrlfflthi wsi named to can-\nvan C. P. R. employee!.\nIn opening the meeting Aid. w\n8. Bamford itated thst the meeting wu called to again launch a\ncampaign to provide Christmas cheer\nfor the needy, to make the children\nhappy at Chrlitmai and to make\nsure that no child la forgotten. The\ntresiurer might be able to lupply\nfacta concerning last year'i work\nbut no one could gtve an estimate\nof the thinks that the committee\nreceived from the old and young\nalike. This year the need waa as\ngreat aa ever, he atld. There were\nItlll old and crippled people and\ndiscouraged parenta. Many wbo required tb* help would (won not\ngat it tban aak fee It.\nHe declared tbat he would Ilka to\nsee the Chrlstmu cheer fund and\ndistribution! bandied by one aaaoclatlon and under one bead.\nIn aeoondlng a mon for a continuance of tbe welfire and Chrlstmu cheer work thii year, Mayor\n8. H. Smythe declared that tf a\nconcerted effort was not made to\nprovide at leut iome meuure of\ncheer for the underprivileged per-\nmm, he and other members of the\nassociation would not enjoy their\nown Christmas dinners hilf u well.\nA. \u25a0\u25a0 Honwlll outlined the activities of the Toe H club ln connection wltb the distribution of ton\nand aaked tor a grant to defray expense! of repair material! and small\nincidental. Tbla wu left In the\nhandi of the executive.\nLodges and ill organisations within tbo city an to be circularized\nwltb tha view of obtaining tbelr\nbacking In tbe drive.\nUat year'i finance meet wu lub-\nmltted by w. I- Wuaon who drew\na comparison with expenditures ind\nreceipts of the previoui year. Lwt\nyesr asOaa.01 wai spent On Chrut-\nmai cheer, |53 on milk. 110 on groceries, 1328.79 on clothing, 1143 on\nfuel 140.05, on medloal supplies and\n$54  on  Indlvlduil relief.\nCaih contribution! had amounted\nto 13,789.53 and thU year a bank\nbalance of 1375.34 wu on hand as\ncompared witb 1174.00. The I.O.D.E.\nhad taken the bulk of thi responsibility of lupplylng milk ovsr and\nexpenses Involved ln th*#operation\nof the lupply depot wu dUpenied\nwith when the Salvation Army took\nover tbe work.\nPRESENT GOLF\nCUPSJPRIZES\nBig Dance Winds Up\nSeason for Nelson\nPlayers\nWinding up actlvttlei for the\nseason, the NeUon Oolf and Country\nclub held IU annuil dance and\npresentation of prlaes ln tbe Hume\nallver ball room Friday evening. The\napacloua hall wu well filled and\npresented a gay scene.\nC. W. Appleyard, president of the\nolub, with tbe iMlitanea ot Mn.\nH. Lakes, ladlea' prealdent, preiented\nthe cups and trophies to the iuc-\nceaiful golfers of the put leuon.\nThose wbo received prlzei were\nas followi:\nWllion cup, men's handicap\u2014B.\nTowmhend, winner, J. D. Kerr, runner up, T. It WlUon, winner of conaolatlon flight.\nNoxon cup \u2014 ladles' handicap\u2014\nMrs. B. Townshend, winner; Mn.\nOuy W. Davli, runner up and Mra.\nJohn Cartmel, winner of the conaolatlon flight.\nSmyth shield, mixed foursome\u2014\nMn. A. _-\u25a0 Murphy and p. 0.\nSchroeder, winners; Mr. and un. L.\nB. Bradley, runners up; Mr. and Mrs.\nRoy Pollard, wlnneri of coniolitlon\nflight.\nJunior tourniment \u2014 Leigh Me-\nBride winner, Jim Allan, runner\nup; Ken McBride, winner of conaolatlon flight.\nLelth cup, men'a open\u2014R. J.\nBourque. winner; B. Large, cranbrook. runner up; L JS. Bradley, flnt\nflight winner; w. Blane, second\nflight; P. D. Campbell, third flight;\nR. E. Horton, (outh flight; jamea\nO'Shea, fifth flight.\nOosnell cup, ladles' open\u2014Mn. B.\nTownihend, winner; Mn. John Cart,\nmel, runner up; Mri. l. S. Bradley,\nwinner of flnt flight.\nRUPTURED?\nPerfected Invention. No elastic, no\niteel, no leg straps. Never movea. No\npreuure on spine. Light, inexpensive, investigate.\nSmith Manufacturing Ce.\nistabllihed 1893\nDept. 9T Preston, Ont\nMcBride cup, men'i lenloMJ. o.\nBunyan, winner; C. H. Stark, runner\nup; Quy W. DavU. wlnnir for flnt\nUlght.\nAppleyard-Lowe cup. men'! club\u2014\nA. f. Murpby, winner; C. W. Apple-\nyard, runner up; W. Blane. winner\nof flnt flight) A. A. Lambert, ucond flight; A. I. McCulloch, third\nflight.\nRuth Armitrong rose bowl, ladlea'\nclub\u2014Mri. Roy Pollard, winner; Mn.\nB. Townihend, runner up; Mn. A.\nT. Stephenwn, flnt flight winner.\nSeason mixed foursome\u2014Mr. and\nMn. B. Townihend. winners.\nTombatone tournament \u2014 T. R.\nWllion, men'i; Mn. Roy Pollard,\nladles'.\nWYLIE AGAIN\nHIGH BOWLER\nHooker end Fowles Teems\nCapture Honors at the\nMm\n\u2014\u25a0\nW. Wylie waa again high man ln\nLegion bowling league play Friday\nnight, rolling high single of 190 and\naggregate of 348.\nJ. C. Hooker and W. Fowlei were\nwinning skips.\nI. C. HOOKER VS\nJ. S. GOULDING\nR. Olson   130   130   200\nRolson    130   130   280\nJ. Goulding 140   140   280\nTotal M0\nW. Wylie 150   100   340\nJ. Hooker 1W   179   348\nToUl\t\nW. FOWLEI VS\nR. GLAZEBROOK\nJ. Chapman  130   130   280\nR. GlaMbrook  15\u00ab   141   297\nTotale 286  2717   557\nB. Stephenson  133   123  258\nWUUam Fowles  180   178   338\nTotals    293   303   396\nHigh individual score, W. Fowles,\n178.\nHigh aggregate icore, W. Fowles,\nEASTBOURNE. Eng.. (CP)-As a\ncontribution to the Minister of Transport's silence-zone idea this town\nhaa stopped the striking of the town\nclock between 10 p.m. and t a.m.\nFaster Way Found\nto Relieve Headaches\nNOW PAIN OFTEN RELIEVED IN MINUTES!\nRemember the pictures below when\nyou want fast relief from pain.\nDemand and get the method doctors prescribe\u2014Aipirin.\nMillions have found that Aspirin\neases even a bad headache, neuritis\nor rheumatic pain often in a few\nminutes!\nIn the stomach as in the glass\nhere, an Aspirin tablet starts to dissolve, or disintegrate, almoat tho\ninstant it touches moisture. It bo-\ngins \"taking hold\" of your pain\npractically as soon as you swallow it.\nEqually important, Aipirin ia\naafe. For scientific tests show this:\nAipirin does not harm the heart.\nRemember these two points:\nAipirin Speed and Aspirin Safety.\nAnd, see that you net ASPIRIN. It\nia made in Canada, and all druggists\nhave iL Look for the name Bayer\nin the form of a* cross on every\nAipirin tablet.\nGot tin of 12 tablets or economical\nbottle of 24 or 100 at any druggist's.\nWhy Aipirin Works So Fast\nDrop in Aspirin\ntablet in a glvs of\nwater. Noll that BEFORE it ItvthH the\nbottom, it to disintegrating.\nM1 MCONDI IT ITOI* WATCH\nAn Aspirin tablet starts to disinte-\nCrate and go lo work.\nWhat   tuppem  In  thm  liaises\nhappens in your stomach\u2014ASPIRIN\ntablets atirt \"takini hold' ol pun\na lew minutes after taking.\nFlashts From tho Wirei\nWINNIPEG*\u2014Hum Cutler, local\nlawyer, and Dennis Pennleard, hli\nalleged accomplice, were committed to atand trial on rhariea of\nroniplrar*** and obtaining money\nunder false pretences.\nNUNC! RtlPBRT. B.C-The body\nof tbe marine myaterj now here\nawaiting Identification, may be tbat\nof Zaweaksb (monster of tbe aea)\nwblcb waa known and leered by\nIndiana of aa early day on tha\nnorth coaat of Brltlab Oolumbla,\naccording to a theory advanced tonight.\nVANCOl'VEB\u2014Adam Blcbardwn,\nVancoarer arlator, hai offered tbe\naervtees of hlmielf and his alx-\npassenger flying boat to Capt.\nCharles tlm If the Auitrallan filer\nwishes to look over Long Beach\non the west coaat of Vancouver\nIsland, aa a possible takeoff place\non bli projected Canada to Auatralla flight.\nfight to regain cuatody of her\ndaughter, Juat aa tbe co-guardians\not   Uttla   Olorle'a   11,100,000   estate\nvoted to keep the beautiful widow\nof Reginald Vanderbllt from gaining control of her daughter'! property.\nTOBONTO\u2014The Earl of Beaaborough, Canada'a governor-general, wea the gold medal for the\n\u2666eat  new variety of Chrjianthe.\nSam ihown at the Boral Winter\nlr.\nWOOD-STOCK, Ont.\u2014Uon SUM\nwaa sentenced to two months im-\nprlaonment and ilx itrokai of tbe\nlash foe breaking a chair over bli\nwife's head during a quarrel.\nVICTORIA \u2014 Seven etlff brlatlea\nfrom the nape of the neck of the\ndead aea monster at Prince Rupert,\nwere received here and studied,\nwithout any progreaa being made In\nIdentifying tbe atrange creature.\nf HUADH-PHU\u2014Hlrosl Saito, Jap.\naneae ambassador to the United\nStates, In an addreaa for delivery\ntonight, laid tbat \"lt appear!\" the\nUnited Statei and Japan\" are\nheavan-ordalned to be mutually beneficial and ever to be the co-guardl-\nana ot the peaoe of the Pacific.\"\nThe ambaaiador aald, \"Japan la\ngoing to give notice of her intention to terminate thi Washington\ntreaty of 1922.\"\nMONTREAL\u2014At tbe wme time\nthat the Montreal city council today voted 11,393,700 for December\nrelief expected te take care or\n43,000 families, aldermen directed\nwarnings to the Dominion and\nprovincial governments that Montreal was pulling out of the relief\nholiness after Jan. 1, 1934, \"became poverty-itrlcken taxpayer!\ncannot itand the financial strain-\"\nNTW TORK\u2014Mn. Gloria Morgin\nVinderbilt opened her higher copri  fleer,\nCHICAOO \u2014 Buddy Baer, 140-\npound kid brother of the world\nheavyweight champion Max Baer,\nused up only 15 seconds of a\nscheduled four-round boat In die-\npoilni of Frank Kettcr, 302V4,\nChicago.\nwnntlPKO \u2014 Wllaon I. McLean,\nWinnipeg, wai appointed legislative\ncouniel to the Manitoba government, aueceedlng tbe lata J. C.\nCommon, K.C.\nLONDON, Ont.\u2014London Tecum-\nlebi International League hockey\nclub, announce purchaae of Ernie\nKenny, 210-poond defenceman,\noutright from Chicago Black\nHawki.\nLONDON\u2014Bearing out the Britlah governmental declaration that\nthe trl-power naval talks have not\nbroken down, there free optimism\nIn BrltUh and Amertatn clrclea tonight tbat Japan may yet change\nhar eratwhlle \"uncompromialng\" attitude on ber demand for parity\nwith the fleeta of the other two\nnations. Tsuneo MaUudalra, Japanese imbaisador. la arranging a meeting between hlmaelf and Norman\nDavla, United Statei ambaaaador-\nat large, for Monday.\nSAN FRANCISCO \u2014 Al CaPOne.\nformer Chicago gang chief, must\naerve hli full prison sentence without hope fo parole, Col. Joel\nMoore, chief federal probation older larcd.\nColombos Win\nHockty Gam*\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 33.\u2014In a rough\nand tumble match in whteh there\nwere -at leaat a doten penalties,\nColombos won the fast game of the\nTrail City Juvenile Hockey league\nby defeating St. Francis Xavler,\n3-2. Booney Samartino scored two\ngoals for th* Colombos while Mike\nGeorgetti, of the F.X. wu credited\nfor tho aame number.\nOeorge Murray scored the other\ngoal for the Colombos.\nScotty Ross refereed.\nF.EMORY DIES\nATPOMD\nSon of Mr. and Mrs.\nA. D. Emory; Well\nKnown in Nelson\nFrederick Emory, sonof Mr, and\nMrs. A. D. Emory ond former Nel-.\nson boy, succumbed Friday afternoon to complications following an\nappendix operation in Portland,\nOre. according to word received\nby friendi here Friday evening.\nHis parenta were with him at the\ntime of his death and his brother,\nA. C. Emory, and Mrs. Emory, were\non their way to Portland.\nMr. Emory wu born in Winnipeg\nin 1801 and came to Nelson with his\nparents when but a young lad. He\nattended both public and high\nschools and made a large circle ot\nfriends in Nelson through his school\nand private associations. Leaving\nthe city he took up a course ln electrical engineering. In 1914 Mr. Emory married Miss Annie Caddy at\nIngersoll, Ont.\nHe started in the electrical game\nat Winnipeg, and attended tbe Briss\nelectrical school at Wuhlngton,\nD.C. Leaving school he went to\nHamilton and was later assistant\nelectrical superintendent at Cobalt.\nThen he came back to Nelson for a\nwhile and still lstcr was city electrical engineer at Kaslo. After acting\nas Dominion government meter inspector at Nelson he went to Fernie to superintend the construction\nof the East Kootenay Power company'i plant. Furthering his itudy\nof the electrical profeulon, he took\nanother coune at Medford, Ore.,\nand up until the time of hia Illness\nwas salesman for the Lines Material company tor Wuhlngton, Idaho\nand Oregon.\nMr. Emory wu a member of the\nMasonic lodge.\nHe Is survived by his wife and a\nson and daughter, Ronald and Janice; his father and mother, and one\nbrother, A. C. Emory of Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. A, D. Emory have\nbeen in Portland for the past week\nduring his illness. Friday afternoon\nwhen his condition beea. e critical,\nhis brother, A. Clyde Emury, was\ncalled to Oregon and left by auto\nto make train connections at Spokane.\nNEW SCHEDULE\nFOR BOWLERS\nWeaker Teams Get\na Spot for the\nGames\nntry\ners into the Men's Ten-Pin Bowling\nleague, another schedule had to be\ndrawn up. Some of the teams are\nweaker than others and it wu\nthought advisable to give them a\nspot. The Merchants, Dill's S.S.S.\nand the Cherry Pickers will start\nfrom scratch. The Barbers will get\n300, the All Stan 240; Daily News\n200, Plumbers 240.\nThe following is the new schedule:\nNov. 28, 7 p,m.\u2014Merchants vs\nCherry Pickers.\nNov. 20, 0 p.m.\u2014Daily News vs\nDill's S.S.&.\nNov. 27, 7 p.m.\u2014All Stan vs\nBarben.\nNov. 27, 9 p.m.\u2014Plumben vs\nCherry Pickers.\nNov. 30, 7 p.m\u2014Plumbers vs\nMerchanti.\nDoc. 3, 7 p.m.\u2014Cherry Pickers vs\nDill's S.S.S.\nDec. 3, 9 p.m.\u2014Merchants vs All\nStan.\nDec. 4, 7 p.m. Dally Newi vi Barben.\nDec. 4, 9 p.m.\u2014Plumbers vs Dill's\nIII\nDec. 7, 7 p.m.\u2014Plumbers vi Barbers.\nDec. 10, 7 p.m. Cherry Picken vs\nAll Stars.\nDec. 10, 9 p.m.\u2014Barbers vs Dill's\nS.S.S.\nDec. 11, 7 p.m.\u2014Dally News vs\nMerchants.\nDec. 11, 9 p.m.\u2014Plumbers vs All\nStan.\nDec. 17. 7 p.m.\u2014Cherry Picken\nvs Daily News.\nDec. 17, 9 p.m.\u2014Daily News vs\nAll Stars.\nDec. 18, 7 p.m.\u2014Mevhants vi Barbers.\nDec. 18, 9 pjn.\u2014Plumbers vs\nDally News.\nTO OIJT TOUR PICK\u2014PICK PROM\nthe  Nelson  Dally  News  claaslfled.\nMAPLE LEAFS\nWIN OPENER\nBuckna Gets Four\nGoals in Puck\nGame\nTRAIL, B\u00a3, Nov., 23. - Mike\nBuckna proved to be a sensational\ngoal getter at the Trail rink Friday\nnight when he scored four goals for\nthe Maple Leafa who won 6-3 trom\nEast Trail in the opening fixture of\nthe Trail City Hockey league. Despite there being much other entertainment in the city the game was\nwell attended. The majority of\nsenior men were in fine form and\nmany of the Juniors who ore playing to complete the three teams in\nthe league, played well with tbe\nolder contestants.\nGreatly surprised were both players and fans when, after the opening\nfoceoff, Buckna went through the\nEast Trail defence to score in 17\nseconds. Maple Leafs had the edge\nin the opening minutes and after\ncontinually pressing tallied another\ngoal when Moran scored on a pass\nfrom Sammy Martin. After this onslaught Mercer, playing defence for\nEast Trail, was moved up to center.\nCronie, of the Leafi, and Kinnear\nof East Trail iquad, repeatedly fired\nat Wolfe and Weir, but both goalies\nwere playing their positions well,\nbut Wolfe proved better in pinches,\nhaving played senior lait year witb\nRonland.\nG ARM AN SCORES ETAOIN\nEut Trail stepped into the scoring\ncolumn when Carman found the net\nwhen he received a pass from\nThompson. Carman went up directly\nafter the faceoff and shot another\none of Thompson's passes but Wolfe\nsaved. While the puck was rolling\nin circles In front of the Eut Trail\nnet, Buckna scooped the puck at\nWeir, who fell to the ice. Cranio put\nIn a hot one at Walte, who alio\nflopped on the rubber.\nBuckna fired at Weir shortly after\nthe faceoff of the second period but\nwas stopped. McGowan brought\nWeir to his knees to save. Kinnear,\nWalker and Norris went up together\nbut Wolfe handled the attack by\nwarding off Kinnear's shot. At 10:28\nCarman scooped the rubber Into\nthe Maple Leaf net to even the\nscore. Morris gave him the otn.\nPurcello, another of junior caliber, soloed up the ice and went\nthrough McGowan and Johnston on\ndefence. He fired directly at Wolfe,\nwhose belly pad warded off the\nshot. Buckna broke the tie at 12:82\nwhen he scored on a rebound from\nthe boards, Cronie having sent\nsillier over the top of the net which\nforced Weir to duck. Moran went to\nthe box for one minute for raising\nhis stick too high. When he returned\nto the ice there were seven Maple\nLeafs ln play and after he went back\nto the box there were still six men\nout.\nBUCKNA AGAIN\nBuckna scored again at 18:54 when\nhe went up with a trio on t power\nplay, taking advantage of Moran being off The ice. The flhw period was\nan evenly contested fight, both\ngoalies working hard.\nCronie tried to score on Weir after skating around the net but there\nwas no room to poke the rubber\nin. Buckna, after being in the box\nfor one minute, skating to the opposite side of the rink where he\npicked up the puck to go through to\nscore at 14:19.\nThompson scored tho third goal\nfor East Trail at 17:22. There was a\nmad scramble behind the Leaf goal.\nThe puck came out from behind the\nnet off a bunch of sticks and Thompson, standing at a vantage point,\nbanged it home.\nBuckna scored the Leafs' sixth\nand final at 18:88 when he bulged\nthe net with a backhand shot after\na scramble.\nThompson, husky defence of the\nEast Trail team, received a bloody\nnose part way through the third period, but his sweater being red, no\none noticed the stains.\nCarl Kendall refereed.\nCar loadings on a monthy basis\nshowed appreciable increase over\nthe level of the first eight months\nof 1933. The total at 1,487,000 cars\ncompared with 1.249,000, was up\n19 p.c. The gross operating revenue\nof the Canadian National on Canadian lines gained 13.4 p.c. at $90,081,000\ncompared with $79,484,000. Thc gross\nrevenue from railway operations of\nthe Canadian Pacific at $78,907,000.\nas against $70,700,000, showed a gain\nof 11.8 p.c.\n-PAOI SEVEN\nThree Flags Confuse Saar Voters\n, The SwMtika flag of Nail Germany, the flag of eld Germany and\nthi Fnnch trl-color are dliplayid In thii main itreet In Saarbrucken\nto Influence voters in the oomlng plebiscite next January to determine\nwhether the riah Saar basin territory will Join Germany or France, or\nremain undar Leigue of Natlom mandate.\nPRIESTS TALK\nCATHOLIC AIM\nGathering Here Dips\nInto Topic of an\nActive Laity\nDlicusilon of the question of\n\"Catholic action\" was the purpose\nof a fathering of priests of thii\nCitholic deanery here Thursday, under the chairmanship,of the dean,\nVery Rev. J. C. McKenzie, V.F.7of\nthe Church ot Mary Immaculate.\nOther priests in attendance were\nRt. Rev. Mgr. A, K. Mclntyre, V.G..\nof Rossland; Rev. L. A. Hobson, of\nTrail; Rev. J. M. Smith, of Grand\nForks; and Rev. J. J. Cheeven, of\nSlocan mission.\nArranging j>f iome general\nmethod of procedure I* the object\nof this and other deaner- conferences throughout the Catholic body\nin Canada, in furtherance ot the\nobjective recently adopted, of training an active laity.\nW.M. NEAL TO\nVISIT NELSON\nW. M. Neal, vice-president of\nwestern lines for the Canadian Pacific Railway company is scheduled\nto visit Nelson Sunday. His private\ncar will arrive on the evening train.\nHOLDS MEETING\nMembers Tell of\nExperiences and\nChange\nThe series .' of meetings which\nmemben of the Oxford Group\nmovement will hold in Nelson was\nstarted Friday night In the Women's\ninstitute rooms when a number of\nmembers of the movement related\nto those present their experiences\nbefore and after joining the move\nment.\nFollowing the meeting an informal\ntime was spent.\nMsyor S. H. Smythe opened the\nmeeting and introduced the speakers. He welcomed the delegates to\nNelson and welcomed those who\nattended the meeting.\nHe had been greatly Interested ln\nthe movement after he had heard\nthat it sought to gain a greater and\nmore intimate knowledge of the\nbible, and that its memben ought\nto turn back to God.\nThere was more in life than\nempty pleasure, money and exalted\nposition and unless one held faith\nfor a higher life, the things in this\nworld were meaningless.\nThc depression had had a good\neffect for it had served to bring\npeople to a better understanding, a\ncloser cooperation and a sharing of\nburdens, he stated, in conclusion.\nCHANGING  LIVES\nGordon Harriman, chairman for\nthe evening, stated thc principles\nof the movement were not new and\nwere based on \"a fellowship in\nChrist. The movement had faced\ncriticism but that was to be expected and could not be helped. The\nfoundation of their Christianity was\nthe crucified Christ. They wire a\nband of pilgrims engaged in changing Uvea and seeking to aid othen\nin solving the problems encountered\nin life:\nLeigh Hughes of Vernon, the first\none called to apeak, depicted an\nearly life of ein that rolled away\nas a bitter dream once he gave\nhimself up ta Christ. From a life\ngiven almost wholly to the pleasures\nof Bacchus, he had changed to a\nlife ih which he found the touch of\nthe 'divinity In and through all\nthings. He had been reborn and had\nfound lite sweet.\nJ. Claxton of Salmon Arm asserted\nthat every person he met now was a\nfriend whereu a year ago he re-\nSpain's \"Joan of Arc\" Proudly Goes to Prison\nWhen in Pain Remember TKete Pictures\nASPIRIN IS THE TRADE MARK OF THI BAYER COMPANY, LIMITED\nLARGE CROWD AT\nFIREMAN'S BALL\nTRAIL, B. c. Nov. 28\u2014The ever-\nIncreasing patronage of the Trill\nfiremen's annual ball reached a ne*,\nhigh Friday night, when, deeplte\ndamp weather, tbe greateat turnout yet occurred.\nFiremen bad no apparatua trucks\nparked outside tbs X. P. ball wbere\nthe dance vu beld. but fortunately,\nno calla vera received.\nColon of tbe department and lta\nenalgnaa predominated ln tbl hail\ndecorations. The blue background\not the atage aupported two croaeed\nladder! with tha letten T.F.D. In\ntbe top ind ilde inglei. The aide\nlights were covered with red ahadea,\nlight shining through the cutout\nletten.      *\nA moon blinked aurreptltloualy\nIn one corner of the hall and provided all the desired light for moonlight walttes.\nA light aupper ln the Palm room\nthe Crown Point hotel at midnight\nwaa part of the nlght'a program.\nA \"Joan of Arc\" of S\/aln't mine itriken (who\nmuit ba namelen), marchei proudly at th head of\nthe column after ihe and 3! othen were arretted In\nthe foreit naar Lu Branoaarai. The village li In the\nheart of tha mining center In Atturlu and wai the\nlut lector to be brought under control In tbe recent\nuprlilng. Wearing the barettai that have been part\nof their coitume for agei, the civil guard! ara marching them to prlion. Tha roadway, mottled by the\nnoonday lun u the raya filter through tha leavei,\nmakea the acene a plctureiqui oni indeed, In ipite\nof its lombre connotationi.\ngarded everyone u an enemy. Such\nwas the change wrought in his life\nafter surrendering himself to Christ.\nMEANING UNKNOWN\nIn his earlier yean and until\nbut a short time ago he had enjoyed\nall that money could bring and yet\nlife had proved a great disappointment\u2014he failed to find lta true\nmeaning. Originally intending to go\ninto the ministry, he had wasted\nhla time and finally drifted away\naltogether. Thinking that life was\nnot worth living he had even attempted suicide.\nBut a year ago he had gone tb a\nmeeting of the Oxford Group and\nthough claiming no church, no religion or belief in the bible, he had\nsuddenly learned the great possibilities for good and the wonderful\npleasures contingent upon acceptance of the Christlike life. He intended now to complete his theological course and fill his rightful\nposition.\nMn. L. Ewing of Vernon. Frank\nStewart and Miss Peggy Davis of\nNelson, and Mn. L. Chapman of\nKelowna, were some of tne other\nspeakers of the evening who related their experiences following\nthtlr first Intimacy with the movement\nT. F. McKechnie's\nSitter It Token\nT. F. McKechnle, 924 Stanley\natreet, received the word Friday\nthat his sister, Mrs. Archie Bryce\nhad passed away at Paisley, Ont.\nBill Kirby Continues\nto Improve\nBill Kirby, who was operated\nupon for appendicitis last Saturday,\ncontinues to improve at the Kootenay Lake General hospital.\nNow Science Explains\nWhy So Many People\nPast 40\nFeel That They're Slipping\nLosingTheir\"Grip\" onThinga\nMany people 'round 40 think they're\n\"growing old.\" They feel tired a lot\n... \"weak.\" Have headaches, dizziness, stomach upsets.\nWell, scientists say the cause of all\nthis, in a great many Cases, la simply\nan acid condition ol the itomach.\nNothing more.\nAll you have to do Is to neutralize\nthe excess stomach acidity.\nWhen you have one of these acid\nstomach upsets, take Phillips' Milk\n\u2022 of Magnesia after meala And before\ngoing to bed. That's all!\nTry this. Soon you'll feel like\nanother penoni Take either the\nfamiliar liquid \"PHILLIPS'\" or the\nconvenient new Phillips' Milk of\nMagnesia Tabids. Made io Canada.\nALSO IH TABLET  FORMi\nPhillips' Milk et Magnesia Tablets are now on sale at ail drugstores everywhere. Each tiny tal>\nlet is the equivalent of\na teaspoonful of Genuine Phillips' Milk of\nMagnesia.\nPhillips'\njtfitk dAlaatuiitx.\njave your\nCOLD\nin a\nMustard Bath\n#Don'i lei coughs and coldi gel worse! Stop them quickly bf\ntaking a bet M*i-rd bttb\u2014steamiog btl water and 3 tiblespooru-\nful of Colman'a Mustard! Lie there and relax. Your skin wUI\ntingle. Then jump out, dry yourself thoroughly, get straight Into\nbed and swe,ttbep.mns mtl Wonderful stuff\u2014Colman'a Mustard,\nthl good old-fashioned remedy.\nOr, It more convenient, take a foot bath In a pail of water as boi\nas you can bear, with a tableipoonful of Colman'a added. Wrtfjmtt.\ntill tpumrm and soak your feet for 1J minutes\u2014and keep warm\nafterwards! Mustard plasters on tha chest or aching parts ghat\ntttck relief. You can't beat these old-time \"prescriptions.\"\nOaf ttl Aa\u2014Itt\n(tr tb* cbmTI) mU\ntttp it soi ymr\naim,*r'sM*sUv*i\nb,*Jf ftr tbi fint\nttp lft ttmfk tr\naid.\nIt\nMIIIVI\neou\nHatter\nHANI MUS\nFull lath\nTAW\nMM\ntmK*kt                   **\n.\nGoM.              \u25a0*\n\/\nf\nCke-ICeUi     \u2022*>\ni\n.\n<M               -\u00bb\n'\n.\nRMMMlKI       *****\n\/\n****.       **\nt\n1  i\nCOLMAN'S\nd.s.f. Mustard\n\"It's ALL Ptre Mustard\" \u201e\n)\n '\nPAOI glOHT\u2014;\t\nJJelamt Uatlij Jfrma.\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\n\"Interior of Britith Columbia's Family Newtpapef\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished  every  morning  except  Sunday  by\ntbe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY   LIMITED,\n218   Baker   Street.   Nelson.   British   Columbia.  '\n-THI NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.\u2014SATURDAY MORNING. NOV. 24. 193*1-\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting all Department!\nMember of the Audit Bureau of Circulation! and\nThe Canadian Press Leued Wire News Service.\nSaturday, November 24,1934.\n' MEDICINE'S NEXT GOAL\n*\nIf you would like to know what maladies constitute\nthe greatest challenge to medical science today, you\nmight consult the statistics which show that heart dia-\n' case is the principal cause of death, with cancer next and\napoplexy third, followed closely by Bright's disease and\npneumonia.\nIt is in the field covered by these ailments, then,\nthat the greatest possibilities for medical triumphs are\nto be found. A sweeping blow at any of them comparable to the blows already struck at diabetes, diphtheria,\ntyphoid fever, and pernicious anemia, for instance, would\nbe of stupendous importance to the race.\nAnd while no such triumph is to be expected immediately, it is worth remembering that some of the\nfinest brains in medical science are being devoted to a\npreparation for it.\nTHE EUROPEAN WAVE OF REACTION\nWhen the Armistice was declared in 1918 it was expected that it would mean the beginning of a new era of\ndemocracy. It is true that thrones and kings have toppled during the past 16 years, but in Europe there has\nbeen a reaction against democratic government. In no\nless than 12 European countries democracy has ceased\nto function, namely Albania, Austria, Bulgaria, Estonia,\nGermany, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal,\nRoumania and Yugoslavia.\nIn Italy the last semblance of the parliamentary\nsystem disappeared with the establishment of the so-\ncalled corporate state. It is a curious system of government which Mussolini has set up, which may work\nfor Italy, but it is difficult to visualize it operating successfully under British peoples. The cabinet headed by\nMussolini still functions, but is responsible to no elected\nbody. If it is responsible to anyone, it is to the Fascist\nNational Council which presumably would pick the\nsuccessor to Mussolini if anything should happen to\nthe Italian dictator. The country has been divided into\n22 corporations representing the various industries and\nprofessions of the nation. From these corporations are\nselected equal numbers of employers and employees,\nsome 700 in all. This body which was called together\nfor the first time last week, takes the place of the old\nelected Chamber of Deputies* Just what its authority\nis it is difficult at this distance to see, but apparently its\ndecisions are to have the effect of laws, subject to veto\non the part of the cabinet.\nThe Italians believe they have discovered a new\npanacea for government which will take the place of\nthe old parliamentary system, which they claim has\nbroken down. They imagine other countries will yet\nfollow their lead. One cannot see Britishers accepting\nsuch a curious method of government, which after all\nis despotic in character. Nevertheless, the Fascism experiment, like the Communistic experiment in Russia,\ncannot be ignored.\nFor a period after the Napoleonic Wars there was a\nreaction against the new found democratic liberty. It\nculminated in the Holy Alliance. However, in the end\nEurope found wider freedom and a new epoch of democratic liberty was ushered in. History seems to be repeating itself and in the end we believe that the dictatorship wave in Europe will disappear to be followed by\ngovernment by the people and for the people.\nWEEKLY WEATHER BULLETIN\nMonday, Nov. 26, 1934\u2014On the\nPacific slope and southwest parts\nof central provinces somewhat unsettled, but cast of mountains fairly\nwarm and clear; temperatures slowly declining.\nTuesday, Nov. 27\u2014Probably mild\ndisturbance ln southwest, though\nnot much precipitation; most of\ncountry clear; mild temperatures,\nbut turning colder.\nWednesday, Nov. 28\u2014Clearing in\nwest and northwest but somewhat\nunsettled in southwest, yet not much\nprecipitation expected; temperatures slowly decline.\nThursday. Nov. 29 \u2014 Generally\nclear weather and lower temperatures; ln southeast near great lakes\nand east rather unsetled but with\nvery light precipitation.\nFriday, Nov. 30\u2014Nearly everywhere clear and colder, but in\nsouthern sections of central provinces unsettled, especially near thc\ngreat lakes regions.\nSaturday, Dec. 1\u2014In southwest\nand on Pacific slope some precipitation, with unsettled conditions;\ncentral regions clearing; slowly\nturning colder.\nSunday, Dec. 2 \u2014 Unsettled on\nsouthwest Pacific slope and the\nsouthern secUoni of central provinces, but with very light precipita\ntion and considerably colder weather.\nWeek of Nov. 26 to Dec. 2, 1934,\nin central provinces begins with\nclear weather, except on Pacific\nslope and a slight disturbance drifting east along southern borders. At\nfirst temperatures are expected to\nbe quite mild, but slowly decline,\nand by end of the week very cold\nweather is indicated. In general it\nis a clear, cold week, though with\nfew mild disturbances in southern\nsections, with only very light precipitation. About Dec. 1 or 2 a rather severe cold spell slowly sets in\nand this will probably bring on the\npermanent let\/ temperatures of winter.\nIn December the weather In this\ncountry usually takes on a peculiar\nchange which seems like a slow,\nprogressive southward movement of\ncold weather. In the upper reaches\nof the north Saskatchewan rivet-\nvalley thc temperature now drops\nto low levels and to all appearance\ntltis is a kind of steady flow of cold\nfrom the Beaver river basin to the\nsouthwest and then along the Saskatchewan and tributaries to near\nthe southern borders. In the valleys\nto the southwest this is not so evident, and in southeast near the\ngreat lakes is less steady than\nIn northwest.\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nBy J. B.C.\nSANDON VOTED FOR\nQALLIHER\nI notice in today's news columns\nthat Judge W. A. Galliher, well\nknown in the Kootenay as \"Big\nBill\" Galliher, ia dead. This no\ndoubt will recall many an Interesting bit ot fun of the early days. He\nwas, from what I can gather, a\npopuar.chap with all parties. There\nis an old time story about \"Judge\nGalliher seeking a seat in the Kootenays in the early days. At that\ntime Sandon mining camp was\nbooming and the miners took a\ngreat interest in political affairs. Interest at this time, it seems, was\nabout evenly divided between Liberal, Conservative, and possibly a\nLabor condidate. Anyway the boys\ngot together and decided to vote\nafter the outcome of a poker drive.\nThe miners divided into camps and\nthe whole Sandon camp got together and voted for Galliher. That\nis cooperation. It is an odd thing\nthat just 30 years ago today, according to the \"30 years ago\" column\nthat Mr. Galliher was elected in\nKootenay.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMORE  ABOUT \"QUIZ\"\nYesterday I had a paragraph regarding the introduction of the\nword \"quiz'' into the language. My\nstory blamed two Irish students for\nstarting the word. Friday one of\nthe office staff did a little digging\ninto history and this is what he\nfound:\n\"Quiz\" is usually explained as the\ninvention of Daly, manager of the\nDublin theater, who chalked it in\nevery accessible wall in Dublin, to\nwin a wager that he could introduce\na new and meaningless word Into\nthe language within 24 hours. So it\nwasn't a student's Idea.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nTHE MODERN YO-YO\nThen again I find on further probing that \"quiz\" was a toy of the\n18th century, consisting of a grooved\nwheel having a string wound upon\nit. It was dropped, unwinding as it\nfell, and attained such impetus that,\naided by a slight upward jerk, it\nwound itself up, rising again to\nthe opeerator's hand.\nAnd now, dear folks, I think that\nwe can trace the modern yo-yo, the\ndelight of the small boy, back to\nthat 18th century toy the quiz. All\nof which shows that modern youth\nstill delights in old toys.\n...\nWELL IF IT ISNT\nGEORGE AGAIN\nFinally after many moons I have\nreceived another letter from my\nfriend George Miller. I am publishing It but deleting some of the\nparagraphs. Now that George has\ncome back and the English and\nScotch have had a round at each\nother I'm going to close all arguments. Many thanks, George, old\nchap, you helped keep the wheels\nof thc column going over a rather\nslack period. Glad to print your\nreply.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nALL OF WHICH IS ACCEPTED\nDear J.B.C.:\nIt'a only George Miller again to\nextend his thanks for publishing his\nlast letter, and to apologize to you\nfor his criticism of you. He hopes\nthere are no hard feelings.\nWell the two letters you received\nin answer to mine are nothing to\nwrite about. However, in passing I\nwill say that Mr. Rees always goes\ninto history, and I so happen to\nknow Mr. Perkins.\nPerhaps I was a little severe on\nthc Englishman as there are certainly lots of good ones. Then, the\nmajority come where I class them.\nOne of the good ones is Charlie\nPearson, and I know he Is a great\nfriend of yours, and I have been in\nCharlie's company many a time,\nbut then he is only one of the few.\nThat is certainly a good one from\nProcter today.\nHow docs this one suit you on the\nScotchman, and the other ia just\nthrown in with it.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPOOR SCOTTIE\n\"A Chinese cook at a threshing\noutfit was asked by one what nationality he liked best between an Irishman, an Englishman and a Scotchman\"\n\"Me no lika da Irishman, he allee\ntime fight.\"\n\"Me no lika da Englishman, he\nallee time a talk.\n\"But me lika da Scotchman, he\nallee time Ilka da Chinaman.\"\naaa\nAND IT GOES\nON FOR DAYS\nAt school one day, the teacher\nasked the pupils to bring something\nto represent Canada. One little boy\ncame in with his hound and its\nfour pups. The teacher says, Johnny,\nwhat do you mean by this? Well,\nhe says, you told us to bring something to represent candy, and this\nis the stack ot horehound, and\nthese are four all day suckers.\nGEO. MILLER\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nBOLD  BIDDING\nSome players appear to have the\nfaculty of closely approximating\npartner's holdings from his bidding,\nIf rational. North seems to possess\nthis faculty to an unusual degree.\nHe is a prominent attorney, noted\nfor his alertness, Charlei J. Lane,\nof New York City.\n\u2666 71\nfKQI\n\u2666 AQJ1074\n4K10\nBidding went: South, one Club:\nWeit, one Spade; North, three Diamonds; South, three No Trumps, to\nihow hii quick trick strength;\nNorth, four Diamonds; South, five\nClubs, to show unusual lentth;\nNorth, six Clubs; South, six Diamonds. North reviewed the bidding\nto date. That shift to Diamonds\nshowed none too solid a Club suit.\nThe immediate No Trumps indicated possession the three missing\nAces, as South was a careful bidder,\nso North ventured to go aeven Diamonds, which few of us would have\nrisked. The Spade stop might have\nbeen the King-Queen, while there\nwas no certainty that South held the\nmissing King of Diamonds. But\nNorth never questioned what his\npartner held. In fact he was so certain that he scribbled on a score\nsheet. \"Aces of Spades. Hearts and\nClubs, King of Diamonds\" and\nshowed the sheet to me, witn a nod\ntowards his partner.\nLane's assurance was the most\nremarkable thing about the deal.\nThe opening lead was taken with\ndummy's Ace of Spades. The King\nof trumps was led. Three leads of\nDiamonds cleaned up that suit. The\nKing and Ace of Clubs were taken.\nNorth ruffed a Club, and that suit\nwas established ln dummy. A Heart\nput dummy in the lead. North discarded his single remaining Spade\nupon one of dummy's good Clubs,\nthen North spread his hand for the\nbalance of tricki, without argument.\nI have known Mr. Lane intimate*\nly lince 1926. Although he alwayi\nIs equally positive in all mattera I\nhave almost never found him wrong\nin his opinions. It is a wonderful\ngift.\nCAN NORTH GO GAME?\n\u2666 \u00ab\nf 8\n\u2666 K 9 8 7 6 8\n\u2666 Q J 10 7 2\nBEE  STINGS\nThose who think of bees as dear\nlittle things may be surprised to\nknow that before Victor Smith died\nat Hayes, England, from a bee sting\nhis wife extracted thc sting which\nwas one-half Inch long.\u2014St. Thomas\nTimes-Journal.\nTHE SEASON APPROACHES\nIt will soon be time for candidates\nfor municipal office to confess that\nthey have been approached by such\nlarge and influential deputations of\nratepayers that they cannot resist\nthe call to service.\u2014Brockvllle Recorder and Times.\nAWAY TO KASLO\nSo for another week. All I have\nto do now is to climb into some\nbasketball togs, in disuse for about\nsix years, and try the game once\nmore. I am to be star player at\nKaslo Saturday night. Those Kaslo\npeople better watch out for last\ntime I played the hoop game there\nI scalped the preacher. And no one\nknew he wore a wig either. Gosh,\nwas my face red. Tra, la.la.\nAUNT HET     *\nWE'LL HAVE TO CARRY MORE THAN JUST THE LITTLE END\n\u2014Knox In the Memphis Commercial\u2014Appeal.\nALLERGY\u2014THE NEW SPECIALTY IN\nMEDICINE\nBY JAMES W. BARTON, M.D.\n\u2666 Q-5*     . .\n\u00bbQ6!2 l-VH\n\u2666 A\u00abl\n*86J\nS   \u00abi\n\u2666 J 10 8 l\n2\nf A7I\n\u2666 10\n\u2666 K948\n\u2666 AK97\nf KJ1094\n\u2666 QJ2\n\u2666 A\nNorth Is Declarer. The contract\nis five Diamonds, doubled by East.\nCan he go game against the best\ndefence? The answer will appear\nMonday.\n10 YEARS AGO   !\nI From Nelson Dally News Files I\n\u2666 1 ; \u00bb.\n(Nov. 24, 1924)\nRequest of the Nelson Radio club\nfor free power for a broadcasting\nstation was referred last night by\nthe city council to the electrical\nengineer for investigation. Alderman A. S. Horswill is acting mayor\nitvthe absence of Mayor L. H. Choquette who is in Spokane.\n.   .   .\nGeorge Anokoski of Trail and\nMiss Katherine Lang of Nelson were\nmarried here Nov. 22. They will reside ln Trail.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nTwo new members, Dr. G. A. C.\nWalley and Ronald Smyth, were\nwelcomed into the Gyro club. The\nformer was introduced by A. C.\nEmory and the latter by J. B. Curran.\n20 YEARS AGO\n\"Jennie must be rich. No poor\nwoman ever made her dressmaker\nwait that long for h\u00ab pay.\"\nI From Nelson Dally Newa Files I\n9} 1 \u00ab\n(Nov. 24, 1(14)\nR. S. Lennle of Vancouver, who\nhas been in Nelson a week, left last\nnight for the coast.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA. G. L&rson, Vancouver mining\nman who has been here on business,\nleaves for home tomorrow.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nE. S. Martin, principal of the Public school, haa resumed his duties\nafter a few weeks' illness.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWaterfront property of 2.12 acres\non the West Arm, near Nine-Mile,\nhas been donated to the patriotic\nfund by Rowland Bourke and will\nbe raffled. Five hundred tickets are\nto be issued at $1 each.\n30 YEARS AGO   |\nI From Nalson Dally News Files I\n<8> i\n(Nov. 24, 1904)\nDuncan ROss' election in Yale-\nCariboo is assured, making one\nmore Liberal for the already large\ngathering at Ottawa. He has a majority of 126 over Martin Burrell,\nConservative, and final figures are\nexpected to incre-se it to 200.\nA fight between Tommy Ryan,\nmiddleweight champ, and Jack Root\nof Chicago, wu stopped In the\n'ourth round by Referee Jack Mc-\nGuigan, who declared It wes a\n\"fake.\" Becauie the crowd was slim\n'he fighters demanded their money\nbefore entering the rinp, and then,\ninparently, bee-use the amount we*\nsmall, proceeded to do as little damage to each other as possible.\n...\nGreat Northern trnliis will be running into Fernie by the end of the\nmonth. Tracks are now laid to the\nbridge and very little work remains\nto be done.\nNow that we are learning so much\nabout allergy\u2014being sensitive to\ncertain substances\u2014it seems strange\nthat this \"science\" was not discovered a great many years ago.\nAlmost every family will have\nsome one in their own or a rel tive's\nhousehold who is sensitive to some\nsubstance. It is estimated that from\n10 to 19 per cent of human beings\nhave symptoms due to this cause.\nThus butter, eggs, strawberries and\nother fruits cause hives or urticaria;\npollen of planta causes hay fever\nand asthma; too much starchy food\ncauses attacks of epilepsy.\nThere are now so many Individuals afflicted with some form ot allergy, that, as mentioned above, a\nnew science or study has been developed and the various ailments,\ntheir causes, new words to describe\nthe causes and symptoms are being\nfound in medical dictionaries and\ntext books.\nDr. John A. Kolmer, Professor of\nMedicine, Temple university, Phila-\ndclphis, outlines what he calls 'The\nPrinciples of Allergy.\" He says that\nfinding the substances to which so\nmany individuals are sensitive and\ntreating the ailments which these\nsubstances cause, is now a sp.-ialty\nin medicine, known as Allergy.\nAmong the better known allergic\ndiseases may be mentioned: \u201e\nHay fever; catarrh; inflammation\nof the lining of the eyelids; asthma;\neczema; hives (urticaria); swollen\nJoints; migraine (one sided headache); epilepsy; acute distress in the\nabdomen; skin and abdominal\nsymptoms from certain drugs such\nas quinine; and shock and other\nsymptoms due to serums injected\ninto skin or veins.\nHeredity exerts a very Important\ninfluence upon allergy; perhaps as\nmuch as 90 per cent of cases arc\nhereditary.\nHow can these individuals get rid\nof this sensitiveness to these substances?\nThey may often be \"desensitized\"\nby being given small amounts of the\nparticular substances causing the\nsymptoms\u2014a tiny piece of butter, a\nvery small amount of egg white,\ntiny doses of pollen, or vaccines injected into the skin.\nAvoiding the substances known to\ncause the symptoms will keep the\nindividual free of them.\nWHAT DO YOU  THINK?\nAU letters to Uie editor must bo signed with the name of tha\nwriter   A nom de plume may be uaed for pubUcaUon if deairejL\nTrailite Explains\nBanking Laws\nThe Editor, Nelson Dally News:\nSir\u2014Your correspondent, J. M. M.\nof Trail whose letter appeared on\nthe 19th instant displays childish\nignorance of banking laws and of\nthe nature and use of money. Did\nany four year old child ever deliver himself of anything so naively\nsimple as the following:\n\"Loans of bank credit may be\ncreated by pen and Ink as thc bankers dictate.\"\nDoes J. M. M. know there are\nbanking laws that restrict within\nvery narrow limits the amount of\ncredit any bank is allowed to give to\nthe borrowing public? Before any\nbank can give credit it must possess tangible assets far beyond the\nvalue of the credit given. The note\nissue of any bank is limited by statute to a certain definite fraction ol\nthe liquid asets of the ban!. No bank\nis allowed to issue paper money to\ncannot redeem, or give credit except where certain collateral is\nin evidence. Not long ago I had occasion to thank a bank manager\nfor his kindness in making loans. He\nreplied that thc bank must give a\nman of my financial standing certain amount of credit. A man who\ncan readily pay his notes, when due,\nreally does the bank a favor when\nhe borrows. The more often they\ncan oblige such a man the better\nthey arc pleased. The bankers do\nnot dictate credit. They must first\npossess it themselves and in turn\nthey must give it where banking\nlaws demand it shall be given.\nAnother naive piece of simplicity\nwill be found in the following:\n\"Banks create book account money by mere pen and ink when adding inteaest to depositors' deposit.\"\nBefore one can get a deposit account he must first hand over to\nthe cashier good hard* cash to the\nfull value of the deposit. The accountant does not create deposit\ncredit by mere pen and ink. His entry ts a memorandum of the fact\nthat the bank has become indebted\nto the depositor, for a certain\namount. The bank loans the amount\nfor which it has thus become responsible at current rates. At the\nend of each half year the bank credits each depositor with his share\nof the net gain. The bank which\nhas done the work and assumed\nthe risk gets 5 per cent and the depositor who has furnished the cash\ngets 2 per cent. The bank entry\u00bb|\nhas created nothing. It is a mer* memorandum of the profit sharing and\nwould have no meaning lf there\nwere no profit.\nJ. M. M. ia puzzled over the Increase of money. No one can reason truly about money until he\ngrasps its purely representative\ncharacter. Money has no value except as it represents things of real\nvalue. As long as money Is readily\nexchangeable for food, clothing,\nand shelter it wlll be valued highly.\nBut inflation can make it loss\nthis magic of transmutabllity as tha\nplague of leprosy can make us shun\nthe fairest of womankind. May I\nteU J. M. M. that time and again\nin history the world has seen people\nanxious to get rid of money\u2014when\nth' whole populace has been filled\nwith a frantic desire to exchange\nworthless coin for land, houses, Implements,\u2014anything of value. Such\ndays may come again if those who\ndemand easy money and freer credit\nget their way.\nIn conclusion let me point out\nthat as long as the things money\nrepresents,\u2014land, houses, herds, etc,\nyield their increase so long will it\nbe just and right that the money\nwhich represents their value should\nbear interest. If I loan a man a\nherd of cattle worth $10,000 J. M. M,\nwill not deny that I am entitled to\na show in the increase. If I sell\nthe herd for $10,000 and put tba\nmoney in the bank why should I\nnot share the interest?\nCITIZEN\nTrail, B. C, November 23, 1934.\nCUSHION SOCKET\nWHAT THE  PRESS  IS SAYING\nGERMANY'S MAIN PROBIE: S\nWhat are Herr Hitler's chief problems? One is that of war, the other\nthat of economics. The two are inter-connected, because when Herr\nHiUer was in opposition, he cast the\nblame for Germany's economic woes\non the post-war treaties and demanded unlimited re-armament, together with treaty revisions, such as\ncould not be obtained without fighting.\nRearmament has gone forward at\nhigh speed since he came into power, and has given employment to\nvery largje numbers, besides providing profits for the co. 1 and steel\nkings who are the Nazi party's chief\npaymasters. But, like other forms\nof artificially stimulated expenditure, from which there is no economic return, it has Increased, not\nrelieved, the country's insolvency.\nDuring nineteen months of Nazi\nrule, Germany's position in regard\nto foreign exchange has grown\nsteadily worse. It is now near\nbreaking-point.\nUnless the trend can be Interrupted, the coming winter is going to\nbe an extremely hard one for most\nGermans. On this side, the Nazis\nwill appear convicted of failure. \u2014\nLondon Observer.\nNOT HEALTHY SIGN\nCoincident with the news dispatches from Jugoslavia concer..:.ig\nthe assassination of Alexander there\nwas a one-inch news item from that\ncountry which most people doubtless overlooked. It was to the effect\nthat Croatian village beUe, being informed by a returned traveler that\nthere were prettier girls in the outside world, betook herself to thc\nbarn and hanged herself. She\ncouldn't stomach the thought.\nIn itself, of course, the incident\nwas merely bizarre and sad, but\ncoming, as it did, in the midst of the\nexcitement over the death of the\nlast absolute monarch of Europe,\nwith talk of another world war on\nthe wires, it served forcefully to remind the reader that mankind, take\nit as a whole is, not interested in\nhigh politics.\nBack of governments with their\npomp and their assumption of being\nthe center of all eyes, there are the\nfarmer following the plow, the\nmason fitting his stones, the straphanger on his way to the office, the\nmother over the sick bed, the lawyers ln the court, thc shoveler in the\nditch, and the viUage belle worrying about her eyebrows. The minutes of the day which these give,\nPopular Profuse\nBloomer\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCentral P.-esa Gard* t Expert\nEven Mid-Victorian ladies, who\nstill frown on tobacco, are fond of\nthe petunia, even though it is linked with tobacco. The name was taken from Petuit. which means tobacco in the Brazilian language.\nAnd well they may be fond of the\npetunia, for it is a profuse-flowering\nlittie annual. There are but few annuals that produce so many flowers\nof such beautiful colors.\nThere are rich purples, violel-\nhued, light pinks, whites and clear\nblues, that are both dainty and\nshowy. Then there aro the striped\nsorts, giant doubles, frilled and what\nnot\u2014 gorgeous, indeed.\nPlanting petunias on a steep bank\nwill solve a mowing problem, and\nlends charm and individuality to the\nhome grounds.\nAmong the ruffled Monsters, single and double, is Diener's Blue, free\nflowering and ot a deep silky blue.\nOther ruffled Monsters are Giant\nPink Glory, splendid for window\nboxes and pot plants. Diener's Pink\nGlory, a fine grower covered with\nflowers of a pure rose pink; this has\nruffles, too! Copper Red which is\nthe smaller Copper Bronze much\nImproved. Then there is that marvel\nof ruffled Monsters\u2014Variegated, the\nflowers five to seven inches in diameter, and this comes in checks,\nblotches and stripes of red, pink and\nwhite.\nCOMFORT\nFOR OLD A NEW LIMBI\nCalaary Artificial Limb Factory\nCaloarv, Alta.\nRuptured?\nAfter Handling Trusaai many\nyean w* have decided th*\nLITTLE  DOCTOR TRUSS\nV    H1IWH\nI   sutler.\nDie. ah-\nto run.\nli tbe beat on the mar*\nket. and la tb* answer\nto all rupture i \"\ners. Neat, simple,\nclent. no Bteel\nno elastic, no pres.\nsure on th* back or\nhlpa no Kg straps,\nweight 8 oz No matter how aood vour truaa\nIs If Interested In the\nnewest and best, ae*\nthla one Free demonatratlon AU\nwork done aubject to rour doctor's approval unlimited fre*\naervlce at any one of 200 Western Agent*.\nWRITE TO\nSCHINDLER ARTIFICIAL\nLIMB CO.\n407 Sprague Ave, Spokane, Waah.\nSTAMP CORNER\nBy M. A. BESSEY\nPATRIOTIC COVERS\nThe covers illu ated is from the\ncollection of W. E. Marley of 'i'or-\nonto. It will be recalled '.'.i8t we previously illustrated .one of Mr. Mar-\nley's exhibition covers, and drew\nattention to the p.ssibilltles of patriotic cover collecting. .\nIn this field thc most important\nitem is again the cover, itself, not\nthe stamp or stamps, which may be\nquite common.\nThe cover Illustrated is one of a\nseries printed in 1900 by thc J. C.\nWilson company of Montreal, to\ndraw attention to the various engagements which took place during\nthe Boer war in which Canadian\nsoldiers took a part.\nThe design on the envelope is attractively printed ln colors, and\nwhen a number of the different\nspecimens are neatly mounted they\nmake a most pleasing display. There\nar also a variety of designs printed\non postcards with this same idea.\nPatriotic covers eklst, commemorating the sixtieth year of the reign\nof Queen Victoria ln 1897 as well\nas others of more recent yeari.\nCanadian covers alone, if one can\nsecure a variety of them, make a\nmost attractive and interesting collection, and if one goes further into\nthe foreign covers, there is an al-\nmo.. unlimued field.\nI know of no price list or catalogue for this type of collection;\nthey, are by no means common,\nneither can they be classed as rare.\nTheir actual value is little, ln most\ncases, it one goes by tl.e stamps\nused on them, although as previously\nmentioned, the stamps are a secondary consideration.\nIn any event they are Interesting\nand differenti and worth consideration as a aide-line for you.\nQUESTIONS AND\nANSWERS\nColleen M. Smith, Capital City,\nMan.: The Canada Map stamps, 1898,\ncatalogue at eight cents ea \\ used.\nCarl Kauffman, Blind River, Ont.:\nFollowing are cct-ilogue values for\ngood used copies; Canad-, 1868, one-\ncent, $2; two-cent, \u00bb1.25; three-cent,\n50 c:nts. U.S.A., 1693 Columbian\nIssue: one-cent, 3 cents; two-cent, 2\ncents; five-cent, 18 cents; eight-cent,\n15 cents.\nor wish to give, to high politics are\nnot many.\nAnd whereas members of the\npresent administration repeatedly\nhave referred to the increasing\nAmerican interfest, in politics, and\nreferred fo it with pleasure, it is not\nin reality a healthy sign. For most\nof us, the less politics the better.\nThe need for concentration on government results from the far', that\ngovernment is ln trouble and that\nis not something to call forth congratulations. Of course, under democracy, there must be Interest in\nmen and issues. Nevertheless for\nAmerica as well as for Europe, it\nwill be a happy day when government requires less attention. We do\nnot notice our bodies until we are\nsick\u2014Portland Oregonian.\n'\" MINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are a suitable\ngrade for all mining\nand other camp buildings It is strong\nwaterproof, light and\nvery easy to handle.\nDistrict Distributors\nWood, Val'aitce\nHardware Co.; Ltd.\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nA Bride\nChooses\nPacific\nMilk\nWe received a letter yesterday so\nnear like one we received two years\nago that it fills us with pleasure and\na sort of mild astonishment For both\nletters are from brides and each\nbegan using Pacific Milk in her own\nnew home for the same cause.\nThe letter from Mrs. . . yesterday\nsays: \"My mother used Pacific Milk\nfor years. So the other day because\nwe always liked it I bought a can.\"\nThe letter of two years was so near |\nlike this as to be surprising.\nPacific Milk\nPlant at Abbotaford\n'100% B.C. Owned and Controlled\"\nAt Your\nPhone's End\nWe are just that near to\nrender service or advise\nyou on questions relating  to plumbing and\nheating.\nA Phone Call Will\nBring Us!\n\/- CALL 666\nKootenay Plumbing\n& Heating Co., Ltd.\nNEW BRUNSWICK, Stampalia.\nPiscopi, Zululand are among the 300\ndifferent 10c packets on my new\nlist\u2014Free for postage\u2014or with 5 different Picturesque or Commemorative sets for 25c. Paramount Stamps.\nDept. 21.  Powel Hlver, B.C.   (5028)\nRoofing Papers\nNow is the time to repair your leaky\nroof before the snow comes. Tar\npaper, building and felt papers also\nin stock.\nTelson Hardware Co.-\nWholesale and Retail Qualify Hardware\nNelion, B. C.\n(\n ____________\n_______________\n\t\n \t\nMASTER MINDS\nMaster mlndi ef Tulene. Left, Coach Ted Cox, right, Capt. Joe loftin.\nTRAIL SCHOOLS' PUCK LEAGUE\nSTARTS.!. 1KTHIS1RNII\nHve Central School and Six Hiah School\nTeams Have Been Organized in\nThree-Division League\nBowling - Badminton - Hockey -Basketball - Boxing - Wrestling\nLacrosse - Rugby - Soccer - Skiing - Horse Racing -Indoor Sports\nPAOI NINI-\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NILSON. I.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. NOV. 24. 1934 --\n- RAOE NINI    The field tikti a hdge during the Tewion ituplichiie at Rlmllea, Md\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 23,-Sequent\nto the Trail-Tadanac and district\nschool board making provision to\nrent Ihe Trail skating rink on Saturday mornings to make possible\nakatin*- for the pupils, a schools'\nhockey leegue has been organized.\n* The main sheet of ice at the rink\nwill be cut up by Trail's youngsters\nfrom 8 a.m. until 12 o'clock noon\nevery Saturday morning. From 8a.m.\nto 9 a.m. Saturday, November 24, a\nsenior game between the Tigers and\nCanadiens will be the opening fixture From 9:05 a.m. to 9:95 a.m. a\nRunlor game will b*\" staged, the par-\nIcipaling teams being Maple Leafs\nand Sharpshooters.\nJuvenile games are slated from\n10 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., when the\nFighUng Sixes meet the Eagles; and\nfrom 10:39 a.m. to 11:09, Flashes and\nRockets will clash. The foUowlng\n10 minutei will be alloted to Ice\ncleaning, boy and girl students having the use of thc ice till 12 o'clock\nnoon Jor skating.\nThe Junior and senior ichool\nleagues are comprised of teams ot\nthe high school and the Juvenile of\nCentral school calibre.\n. Following are the Central ichool\nteams and schedule:\nFighting Sixes: Sandy Zinlo (captain), Tony Ludovlci, Amerigo\nBuidonl, Jack Murray, Stan Layton,\nPacifico Buna, Russel Deans, Roland Crowe, George Watson, Stan\nJukich, A. Tognottl, and Bill Stiles.\nAces: M. Georgetti (captain), S.\nDiPasquale, J. Balano, J. Tiedje, B.\nBaldassi, G. Wilby, N. Turik, M. Mat-\nteuci, A. Harvey, L. Tognotti, Billy\nBurke, E. Henchel arid D. Roberteon.\nEagles: E. Groves (captain), A.\nWilson, G. Lees, G. Hlnton, G. Hinch,\ni. Oliver, M. Glover, D. Mandeville,\nA. Dodimcad, J. Simpson, H. Saunders, E. Dwyer and S. Wright.\nflashes: Sam Saprunoff (captain),\nA. Bilesky, G. Simpson, Harvey\nSmith, W. Bishop, E. Erickson, L.\nFalkner, E. Potter, W. Leduc, R.\nWalby, F. Androsoff, A. Honeyman\nand J. Krowveskv.\nRockets: Donald Michaely (car\ntain), Maurice Mawdsley, Bob Maze,\nL. Mark, R. DeBiasio, F. DeVito, H.\nMcLeod, G. Duncan, B. Dlmok, A.\nBalano, H. Morrish, D. Twaddle,\nand G. LeRose.\nDec. 1, 10 to 10:30 a.m.\u2014Aces vs.\nRockets; 10:39 to 11:09 a.m.\u2014Flaihcs\nvs. Fighting Sixes.\nDec. 8, 10 to 10:30 a.m.\u2014Rockets\nvs. Eagles; 10:33 to 11:13 a.m.\u2014\nFlas: es vs. Aces.\nDec. 19, 10 to 10:30 i.m.\u2014Eagles\nvs. Flashes; 10:35 to 11:09 a.m.\u2014Aces\nvs. Fighting Sixes.\nDate not yet set for following\ngames:\n10 to 10:30 a.m.\u2014Fighting Sixes\nvs. Rockets; 10:33 to 11:05 a.m.\u2014\nEagles vs. .Aces.\nSchedule repeats itself above.\nFollowing are the hi school\nteams and schedule:\nSeniors-\nTigers: J. Ponak (captain), A.\nTognotti, B. Turik. L. Forrest, R.\nMorel, B. Lypchuk; M. Dcstelano.\nM. Smith, K. Weir, F. Barchard,\nand J. MacDiarmld.\nCanadlens: George Murray (captain), G. Pagnan, B. SammarUno,\nPit Haley. C. Graham, P. Bunn, G.\nPaollnl, P. Barchard, A. McPhiti,\nA. Cavalini and Pat McGauley.\nWanders: G. Rlchardaon (captain),\nA. McDonnel. M. Mainarlch, S. Dem-\nbicki, Paul Haley, N. Murray, D.\nMurdoch, C. Kennedy, R. Temple,\nU Cutler and F. Framcn.\nJuniors\u2014\n. Sharpshooters: Steve Jankola\n(captain). Stanley Wilson, Albert\nMorel. Alec Colonello, Steve Yun-\nker, Frank Cocia. I. Kingwell, E.\nLeRose, R. McLeod, C. Kennedy,\nE. Taylor, Martin and Desmond\nHood.\nMaple Leafs: St. Clair Lewis (captain), Archie Layton. Lome Kerr,\nSteve Saprunoff, Mike Hrooskin,\nBob Kendall. Benusuck, Leslie Ley-\nland, Ramsden, G. Ayres. George\nLong. Nick Balano and Art MacDonell.\nHawks: J. Vellutini, J. Ludovlci,\nJ. AguiUnelli, J. Stewart, A. Demo,\nH. Dembickl. L. Johnson, E. Mason.\nC. Green, D. Webster, G. Harvey,\nE. Bourne, A. Mainarlch and Elmer\nHall.\nDec. 1. 8 to 9 a.m.\u2014Canadiens vs.\nWanderers; 9:05 to 9:39 a.m.\u2014Sharpshooters vs. Hawks.\nDec. 8, 8 to 9 a.m.\u2014Wanderers\nvs. Tigers; 9:09 to 9:95 a.m.\u2014Hawks\nvs. Maple Leafs.\nDec. 15, 8 to 9 a.m.\u2014Tigers vs.\nCanadiens; 9:09 to 9:95 e.m\u2014 Maple\nLeafs vs. Sharpshooters.\nALL-STAR BALL\nSERIES PLANNED\nLOUISVILLE, Ky.. Nov. 23 (AP)\n\u2014The high and mighty of baseball,\nwith a few exceptions, had packed\ntheir bags and departed tonight,\nfollowing adjournment of the 33rd\nannual convention of the National\nassociation of professional baseball\nleagues.\nfiie American association furnished practically the only action of\nthe day. by approving an all-star\nlame or series after Uie regular\npennant race rather than in mld-\nseasr. i.\nThis attraction will replace the\nlittle world series, which was scrapped when the association and the\nInternational league could reach\nno agreement regarding interleague\nplayoffs.\nThe only deal coming to light today before the exit of players, magnates and managers, saw Paul Eas-\nterling. outfielder, going to Atlanta\nfrom Beaumont, Texas, for cash.\nIW SO. WALES\nCRICKETERS WIN\nVHBOURNE. Australia, Nov. 33\n|CP Cable).\u2014The Sheffield shield\ncricket matches\u2014Australla'i championship series\u2014opened todiy with\nNew South Wilts t-.klng a long\nlead over South Australia.\nNew South walea. although licking  the  services  of  four  of  tbelr\nmen who hive hid test cricket eg.\nperlence. Klppis. McCabe. Chipper-\n.field snd O'Reilly, amassed 422 runt\nfor  loss  of seven  wickets,   w.   A.\nI Brown accounted for 111 runs and\nI Fingleton for 134. 'tiili pair putting\nIon a great opening-wicket partner-\nI Ship   that   a counted   for   240   runs\nlln  Just, under  three hours.  W.  A.\n\u25a0 Oldfleld   was   57   not   out  at   thc\nI close of play.\nc\nOALt\nOAL*\nDont Wait Until ths\nReal Cold Weather Sets\nIn\u2014Cat prepared new!\nWe handle the be it\nprsven coali for Furnace\nor Heater.\nPHONE 797\nPOR COAL SERVICE\nRENWICKS\nGeneral Transfer\nVines Wins the\nWembley Tourney\nLONDON. Nov. 29 (AP).\u2014Ellsworth\nVines of California today won the\nprofessional Round-Robin tennis\ntourniment at Wembley Stadium,\ndefeating Bill Tllden 9-7, 7.5, 8-2\nln the final match. Earlier In tbe\nday Martin Plaa of Prance beat\nBruce Barnes of Texas 3-9, 2-6, 6-4,\n6-4, 6-0.\nTHAT TOY BULLDOG\nMickey Walker, the scrapping ex-\nmiddleweight has never had any\nsense of smell. His nose Is boneless,\nand though a punch can flatten it\nlike a bulldogs', it comes right back\nto its pudgy shape. Says he was\nborn that way. Drives a car around\nLos Angeles as though all the cops\nwere his pals and traffic lights\ndidn't exist.\nFormer Goalie for\nNewcastle United\nDead in England\nCALGARY. Nov. M (CP)-Jim-\nmy Lawrence, former goalkeeper\n[or Newcastle United and Scotland,\nis dead at his home ln Scotland, according to word received here by\nhis sisters. He ww well known in\nCansdlan soccer circles, hiving refereed the game between Calgary\nHillhurst and Nanalmo in the Dominion championihip of 1932.\nLEVINSKY AND\nLASKY IN DRAW\nCHICAGO, Nov. \u00ab (AP).-Klng\nLevinsky, Chicage, fought Art\nLasky, Minneapolis challenger for\nthe world's heavyweight championship to a 10-round draw at the stadium tonight.\nLevinsky came from behind in\nthe last four roundi to move out\nin front by a slight margin. Lasky\ndid some rallying himself to outfight Levlnsk} in the final seuion\nand salvaged a draw decision.\nThe fight wu so close that the\nverdict of the two Judges and the\nreferee was split three ways. One\nof the judges voted in favor of Levinsky by a margin of one point,\nwhile the other called it a draw, and\nthe referee, Davey Miller, cast his\nballot in fivor of Leaky by a margin\nof one point.\nThe 13,73 customers who paid a\ngrosi gate of J30.579.75 to view the\nbattle, alio appeared to be as widely\ndivided In their opinion ai the\nofficials.\nThe customer!, however, leaned\nslightly to the pride of Maxwell\nstreet, figuring he had scored an\nupset In holding Lasky to a draw.\nIn a prevloua meeting at Los Angeles, Lasky -don the decision.\nVANCOUVER BEATS\nSEATTLE HAWKS\nSEATTLE, Nov. 23 (AP).\u2014Vancouver Lioni opened the Northwest\nProfeuional Hockey, league season\nhere tonight with a sensational 7-4\nwin over the Seattle Seahawks. piling up a 5 to 0 lead before the Seattle team tallied at all In the last period.\nREFEREES ARE\nTHROWN OUT\nWW TOWt, Nov. 36 tk*)m-t)r.\nBarold Barnes, instructor of optometry it Columbia Unlerslty, wai\nsuspended Indefinitely is a ludge\nof prlae flgbb, along wltb Danny\nRidge, referee, by tbe Mew Tork\nSUte Athletic eommlM-On todiy as\na result ot the deeliie-p awarded\nyoung Peter Jackaon, California negro, over Sammy Puller ot Boiton\nhire list Fridiy night. It wai generally conceded that Puller ihould\nhive been given the decision.\nTbe commlulon refused to discuss\nthe luapenslons beyond saying they\n\"were for the beat Intereita of boxing.\" At the ume time tbe commission warned that in the future\nany Judge or referee \"wbo makes\nan obvious mistake, whether honest\nor not will be discharged.\"\n38 Countries in\nJewish Olympic\nTEL AVIV, Paleattni, Nov. 23 (CP-\nHavai).\u2014The aeoond Jewish Olympic games wlll be held here April\n> to 7, 1939, and 38 countries. Including Oermany. wlll be represented, lt wai announced.\nCompeting atbletei are expected\ntrom Canada, Great Britain, United\ntitei, Auatralla. Germany, Egypt,\nPrance. India, eouth Africa ind\nmoit other  countrlei.\nLENN1E TREASURER\nOF CITV PUCK CLUB\nJ. leenle hw been appointed\ntreasurer of the Nelaon Senior\nHoekey club. The, poet of treasurer\nwas left vacant it tha annual meeting beld two weeks eg* and Mr.\nLennle wu appointed by the et-\necu tlve.\nINKSLINGERS GO\nTO KASLO TODAY\nEfferveielng with hope, puffed tc\nbreaking point wltb aspirations and\nundaunted by the defeat auffered\nthere aeveral monthi ago, the Dally\nNiwi Inkslingers once more take\ntheir fate tn their handa and move\nKaslo-ward todiy to do bittli under\nthe banner of buketball. Tbla Is\nundoubtedly the greiteat event ln\nthe apart world since the Three\nLittle Pigi began to play.\nIt la unknown what the Kulo\nlineup will be but tbe Inkslingers\nwlll have the following: Weiley\nSlmms and Oordon Roynon, guards;\nPete Onves. Archie rrench, Jimmy\nCurran, Jack Stout, Bill Brown and\nSam  Brown,  forwarda.\nA' carloid of booiteri will ie-\ncompiny the team.\nThe game la called for 8:30 ihirp.\nTommy Johnston\nPlayed for Nelson\nThli la Tommy johniton'i second'\ntry ln the West Kooteniy Hockey |\nleigue, only thli tlms he ll attempting to get In under the binner\nof Trill Instead of Nelson. Three\nyears ago he pliyed defence fer\nNelson, Bobby Thompion holding ]\ndown the other defence position.\nTommy wu born it Olelchen,',\nAlu.. md be pliyed five years\nhockey there.* He pliyed no Junior \\\nhockey, however. Leaving Olelchen\nhe went to High River fer a year\nand then In the 1931-33 season he\nwas In Nelson, playing left defence. |\nWhen he returned to olelchen for \u25a0\nthe 1932-33 ind 1933-34 whom he'\npliyed on defense, although he his |\npliyed forward ilso.  Last year he\nwu well up In tbe scoring, being\nthird in the turn. Thiy got to the\neeml-flniU ln the Alberta later-\nmediate playoffi. but found their\ncoune blocked then.\nLONG   REACH\nAnyone who hia Men Tommy\nplay win remember hli long reach\nind hli ability to eheck. His reich\nli proportioned on hli height ind\nTommy hu a knack of ipeiring the\npuck even ifter playen think they\nare by htm. Hii height by tbe way\nli lix feet, one Inch. He doetn't\nneed the extra inch but be hu It\nany wiy. Hs weighs 173 .pounds.\nTommy believu the greatest hockey truism li: \"Be sure your shins\nwlll find you out.\"\nMURRAY PATRICK\nBREEZESTON.Y.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 23 (CP).\u2014Anotber Patrick blew Into tbe big\ntown todiy aiming to carve hil own\nniche In hockey's hall of fame.\nLitest Pitrlek to trek southward\nfrom hli Cinidlan home la Murray.\n19, stalwart forward who wlll do\nhla puckchwtng thli Mason In the\nInterests of the Brooklyn Hamilton\nCrescents, a club ilreidy well bal\nlanced with stars from the Cinidlan\nwest.\nThe two other Patricks alreidy\nwell known to Gotham lam ire\nLuter. cotch ind vice-president of\nthe Rtngen, Nitlonil Hockey leigue\nteam uid Lynn, eldeit ion of thi\ngny tos, who Is starring at center\ntor thi big leigue bluuhlrts.\nMurny li Lynn'i younger brother\nSPLIT FAVORITES\nFOR MANCHESTER\nMANCHESTER, Nov. 23 (CP ca\nble)\u2014Jeen's Dream and Deimond\nDene were made split favorites for\ntomorrow's Manchester November\nhandicap in the final betting call-\nover tonight, each being quoted at 7\nto I. Previously Jean's Dream had\nbeen firm favorite at 5 to 1.\nFree Fare waslOO to 9, Irongrey\n100 to 8 end Gamcsmaster 100 to 7.\nOddi on other candidates for the\nmile end one-half race were Robber\nChief IS to 1, Pip Emma 100 to 6,\nAchtenan 18 to 1. Spade. Scarlet\nRiver 20 to 1, Thrapston, Moneybox\nand Lucky Patch 25 to 1, Artesian 30\nto 1. Solmint 33 to 1.\nBlack Tulip, Geggo Vanteener,\nBrunswick and Solar Boy were all\n40 to 1. Foxmasque, St. Boswells,\nand Lincrusta were SO to 1, Hands\nOff and Misanthrope 60 to 1. La\nSourlcierrc 88 tt) 1. Sans Espoir,\nSerenita,\" Gainslaw and Epejcn 100\nto 1.\nSARNIA FANS GET\nA SPECIAL TRAIN\nSARNIA, Ont., Nov. 23 (CP>-\nHopes for Sarnia's first Dominion\nrugby title were carried to Toronto\ntoday when Imperials left to clash\nwith Regina Roughriders in the\nCanadian final, followed by a band\nof home-town supporters who felt\nconfident the coveted laurels would\nrest in Sarnia after Saturday's game.\nCitttens of Sarnia forgot business\ncirei as they awaited the football\nclusic. Tomorrow morning a special\ntriin will carry several hundred\nfani from Sarnia to Toronto, leaving the town somewhat deserted.\nAs Coach Art Massucci placed his\nliuiky crew aboard the train today\nevery regular wa6 reported In good\ncondition with the four casualties of\nlast Saturday'a eastern Canadian\nfinal with Hamilton fully recovered.\nThe Victims of the Hamilton struggle were Norm Beach. Norm Perry,\nBoob Molloy and Smith.\nHere Come the new Bruins\u2014And Are They Mad.'\nCLAPPER\nBARRY\n\u2022HURT\nThis is likely to be the opening) Frank Patrick In the driver's ,*\u25a0\noffensive brigade of Boston's burly | Imteed of Art Ross, they intend\nBruins who didn't do so well last show Boston fans that the  lar\nycar in thc big time ice    ce. With I was but temporary. Thc goal-gciti,\n-lo above are Aubrey \"Dlt\" Clip-1 ert, former Montreal Miroon wing-\nr, wing,' former   league-leading ei*. In training camp thii trio have\n\u2022r: Mart Barry, dangerous .it- shown n Drollflc scoring punch that\n.Uing center, and A. \"Babe\" Seib- augurs ill for opposinj nctmindcrs.\nREGINA GETS\n3 TO 2 BREAK\nINFORECAST\nTeam Shows Some of\nIts Stuff on a\nToronto Grid\nTORONTO, Nov. 23 (CP)\u2014Reglni's\nhopu for Dominion rugby foothill\nhonon came to town todiy to rt-\ncelve i filr chance from the critics\nof winning thi Dominion honon.\nCotch Qreg Qruslck inhered hli 20\nrugbytits on the field (or a brief\nworkout on Toronto univenlty grid-\nIron but the mentor guirded them\ncirefully  igtlnit Injury.\nReglni's btttle plana for the tlntl\nagalnit Sarnia Imperlili tomorrow\nwere locked In secrecy. GrsMick\nstaged a running drill but the\nteim'i plays were kept under cover.\nThe OlMn-Plerce combination\nbrought to Reglna from tercet thi\nborder Instructed tht pltyers from\nthe quarter-back poet and Mimed\nto* know plenty of footbtll atrttegy.\nUSE  PARS PIATR\nAlthough a tew passes that hive\nfailed to gain much tn eutern rugby\nwere totted, lt wu learned from\ntbe wuternen there were a few\npttMi in the big thtt wlll turprise\nBtrnlt, vlotort over Himllton Tigers\ntor eutern Cinadlan laurels.\nPlunging duties of Reglnt wlll rett\non thi capable thouldert of Walker\nfrom North Dakota, George Sprtgue,\nformer otttwi tnd Himllton rugby\npliyer md \"Oke\" Olson, south Dakota'! glint.\nOtttwt hu mother representative\non the tetm ln Miller, in end whose\nwork ii a bulwark againit any team,\nAnother North Dakoti repreeenta-\ntlye, Adklni, li a husky end. imart\ntt matching pisses from the tlr.\nKicking ability ts lacking ln thi\nReglna teim, the critics claim, md\nthey'll be no match for Bummer\nStirling of Imperials In t booting\nbtttle. The leg swinging duties ire\ndone by olton and young for the\nweatern Invaders.\nTHREE  TO  TWO  BREAK\nAfter scanning the fut-movlng\nReglna line, thi rugby experts give\nRoughrlden a three to two chmce\nof carrying the Ctntdltn rugby\ncrown to the Saskatchewan capital.\nReglni's ittiwarta announced thty\nagreed that Simla wu t imirt\nrugby outfit but they carry no fur\nof thi eutern monarchs and they\nhive the record of downing Wlnnl.\npegs, the. team thit forced Argos\nto the limit in the final list yeir.\nRugby power of the eut holds\nno greit blanket over Roughriders.\nIt'i Just mother time and the\nwesterners ire out to win.\nCuylar'i Players Too\nStuck Up to Win\nWORD O' PRAISE\nThe great Red Grange, who is\nrated by many the best ball-carrier\nAmerican gridirons ever produced,\ncalls Beattie Feathers, Chicago\nBears' star, the best half-back he\never saw.\nBy AL DEMAREE\nLike msny ether profession!] bell\nplayers from the dayi of Hani Wagner to the preient, KiKi Cuyler\nplays basketball in the winter\nmonths, in fact he has hli own\nteam, which tours the country, billed\nunder the name of Curlers All-\nStars.\n\"One of the funniest and stickiest\nexperiences we ever had waa in a\nsmall hall ln Wisconsin,\" said Cuyler. \"It was so imall you could\njump center and sell tickets ln the\nbox office at the same time. They\nmust have had a dance there the\nnight before,,because the floor wai\nslippery as glass and you could\nhardly stand up. I conceived the\nbrilliant Idea of using glue on the\nfloor as a hasty experiment. All was\nwell until the glue started to run\nfrom the heat of the lights, players\nand spectators. The ball finally became so sticky vou couldn't throw it.\n\"In another town shortly aiter-\nwardi, a player on the town team\nasked me how to keep from slipping.\n\" 'Eat plenty of bananas before\nyou start,' wes my advice, and I suppose he followed it.\"\nAnswer to yesterday's question:\nRunner Is out, as it is necessary for\nhim to retrace steps and touch second base ln going back to first. He\ncannot cut the bag.\nToday's question: What great player recommends basketball as a great\ngame for ball players during the\nwinter months? Answer Monday.\nSPEED PLUS BRAWN\nGeorge Hackenschlmdt wu the\nstrongest wrestler the mat game\never Knew and he was also rated\none of the fastest. It was not un?\nusual for him to lift as much as 850\npoundi when he wu in hii prime.\nDICK IRVIN, COACH OF THE LEAFS,\nHAD A PRIZE ROOSTER BUT IT DP\nTORONTO. NOV. \" CP)\u2014JO-Jo\nchoked to detth on t field pet\ntt the Royal winter filr todiv. A\nwhite cockerel, Jo-Jo wu a fivor.\nlte to win the grind chimpionihlp\nfor hli owner, populir Dick Irvln,\ncotch of Toronto Letfi ln the Nttlontl Hockey lesgue. He ilreidy htd\nwon honon u best Wyandotte cockerel ln the poultry show.\nJo-Jb, who ctme all the wiy from\nReglnt, was enjoying t meal tn hu\nctge when hi grabbed the pea that\nttnick ln his throit. irvln's pride\nrolled over deid. Hli owner had\nplanned to inhibit him it New Torn\nsnd Des oMmes, lows, ahows, for\nJo-Jo  hid   been  described  by  the\npoultry fsnclers u the ftneit cockerel ever ihown it the ftlr.\nHe wu vtlued it lioo. ion dt\nthe cockerel which won the Wyandotte award list yeir. Irvln wld he\nwti \"quite a favorite with all of ui\ntt home.\" tnd he added:\n\"Whit breaks my heart ll thtt\nthese birds on each ilde of him ire\nfeeling fine tnd he had to be the\none thtt choked on a common little\nwhite field pet.\"\nAnother thing wai worrying him\nand thit was MniT Conny\nBmythe of Letfs who described Dlck't\nchlckeni it similar to hli hockey\nteim\u2014ible, to win everything but\nthe  final playoffs.\nBROUILLARD IS\nRING VICTOR\nBeats Al Gainer In\nSlow Rounds at\nthe Gardens\nMADISON SQUARE GARDEN.\nNew York, Nov. 23 (AP)\u2014 Lou\nBroulllard. former welterweight\nand middleweight champion of the\nworld, opened hli metropolitan\ncampaign for a third champlonahlp,\nthe light heavyweight crown, by\nwhipping Al Gainer, New York\nnegro. In 10 lick lustre roundi tonight before,! scant crowd of 9700.\nBroulllard. chunky French-Canadian now of Worcester, Mm..\nbeat the negro all the way but his\nmauling style, hii counter-fighting\nway of doing all hli battling at cloie\nautrters, was unimpressive, even\nthough it brought him the unanimous decision of the two Judges and\nreferee. There were no knockdowns\nand neither ever wu in any real\ndanger of hitting the floor.\nGainer, a stiff right-hand puncher,\ntried desperately to link the former\ndouble-champion with hii fivorlte\npuneh, but though he ahot Broulllard'! head back at tlmei, netted\nhim repeetedly In the body, tou\nalways came bounding back for\nmore.\nWINDSOR WINS\nWINDSOR, Ont, Nov. 23 <CP)-\nRelentleu backchecklng Inspired by\ntha latest recruits to local ranks\nwas the favor thit decided a hard\nskating International Hockey league\ngame here tonight. On the strength\nof that persistent checking and some\nuseful net minding by Eirl Roberteon, Windsor Bulldogs defeated London Tecumsehs 2-1.\nHATS\nAND BLOCKED\nWe have the correct\nequipment to handle\nall ihtpes of  hate\u2014\nMen's and Women'a\nIOSTON HAT WORKS\nShot Shining\nPhone 77, Medical-Arti Bldg.\n\u00bbW\u00bbW{*>i^\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb?*^>\u00bbi)8\u00bb\nTry Our\nSpecial for\nBreakfast\nTwo Eggt, eooked in any\nef our popular itylti.\nFried Potato**\nToait\nCoffot\n25c\nNICICS\nGOLDEN GATE\nCAFE\nHUDSON'S BAY\n\u2122      SCOTCH\nWHISKY\nBLENDED AND\nBOTTLED IN\nSCOrfAND\nIn\n26-M.\nSite\n4*\niWrtBM\u00abAI100_f,'KvlVr\n^\u2022wnlurtwrft*?!'**\nTUBie: ihiuhuB*-'-*-1**'\n*l*A6i\u00ab\u00ab iwioHueW\"\n\u00bbmQu)HiS-W>\u00bb\n0.1,1. m--**-J>l __-,\nHudeo\u00bbg\u00bbayCo\u00bbl*v\nFine, old and mellow, this\nselect Scotch Whisky hat\nan average age of 12 to\n15 yeara. Wherever good\nScotch Whisky isenjoyed\n-Hudson's Bay Best\nProcurable has a host of\nfriends.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by ths Liquor Control Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\n\u2014^\u2014\u2014\u2014________________^^^_\n_____\n ___\u2014\u2014\nPA0ET8N-\n-THC NELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNINO. NOV. M. 1134-\nMICtAssiFiED Section Inhere buyer ^seiierHeei\ni8\u00bbawj\u00bbii\u00ab-\u00bb.\u00bb\u00bb'\u00bb\nSeWWSWWSSWWiWSSSWSWMSWS-JSg\nTlie Blonde Countess\nBy HERBERT O. YARDLEY\nI\n\u25a0\nPretty Joel Carter Is secretary to\nNathaniel Greenleaf, head of the\nU.S. \"Black Chamber\", where much\nof the real wartime secret service\nwork is done. She accompanies him\nto a ball given by Countess Thorlund, wife of the Scandinavian ambassador, although she distrusts the\nCountess. She hears Captain Duval\nfriend of the Countess, accused of\nbeing a spy. Duval shoots himself\nafter refusing to name his accomplices, Jensen, a servant, who has\nbeen listening, with ear phones,\nsteals away. The Countess asks\nGreenleaf to permit her to work\nwith him ah the \"Black Chamber\".\nSuspecting her he,' nevertheless,\nagrees that she advertise for a secretary In hope of trapping J-37,\nmysterious woman spy. He goes\nto see Joel and discusses the Countess with her.\n(Now Go On With the Story)\nCHAPTER  11\nIt was nine o'clock when Greenleaf reached the Bl^ck Chamber,\nclimbed the worn wooden stairs,\nand looked in at the code room before going lo his office. Within the\ncode room, Ryan, the secret service\nman from the war department, sat\ntilted back in his chair, watching\nwitt) puzzled eyes while Tom Weaver the night clerk, decoded a message. Weaver, thick code book before him, his eyes shaded with a\ngreen celuloid shade sat under a\ndrop light busily putting rows of\nnumerals on a sheet of yellow\nscratch paper. He wai In his shirtsleeves and smoked a corn-cob pipe.\nA paper package of Navy cut lay\non the table beside him, a part of\nits contents spilling out.\nAs Greenleaf came to look over\nhis shoulder Weaver nodded briefly\nand went on with his work. \"War\ndepartment message,\" he said. \"I'm\nnaarly through.\"\nThe code was of Greenleaf's devising, and so complicated that he\nbelieved it would take the Germans\nweeks to decipher it. Against that\nday he must prepare another. As\nthe columnist remarked \"II y a tou-\njours quelque dam chose.\" WeU,\nthank God, that was some weeks\naway unless the Germans were unusually quick. He surveyed the\nsmall room, empty but for a few\nchairs and the large table. A vault\nin which the code books were kept\nstood with its steel door ajar. Greenleaf looked at It, frowning. The\nvaluable code books were too easily\ngot sit. Since Bill Martin had been\nshot he was only too sure that cnem*\"\neyes were always upon him and\nthat the enemy agents would be\nruthless.\n\"Lock up the book before Ryan\ngoes,\" said Greenleaf. \"This place\nneeds more protection.\"\nWeaver glanced up swiflly with\nnarrowed eyes.\n\"Anything up?\" he asked.\nGreenleaf could sec an automatic\nIn a holster slung under the table\nedge. One movement of Weaver's\nhand\u2014but if someone shot first?\n\"Nothing special,\" he said. \"I've\na general nol ion we've got 4o be\nalert, that's h1*. One of these books\nwould bo right useful in certain\nquarters.\"\nRyan with wide eyes listened to\nthis remark.\n\"Somebody would need a lot of\nnerve,\" he continued.\n\"Somebody has a lot of nerve,\"\nGreenleaf said.\nHe went to his office, thinking\nhe'd ask for a secret service man or\ntwo to be on the job night and\nday. Mustn't have any worries on\nhis mind just now. There were too\nmany things to think out. He sat\ndown at his desk to straighten the\ntangle of his thoughts, to decide\nwhich of many things crying to be\ndone he should do first, irrelevantly his mind jumped back to his conversation with Joel. He had meant\nto ssk her what she thought of\nTlinrlund. the Scandinavian ambassador, and his response to ihe dramatic scene of last night. He knew\nwhat his own reading had been: The\nambassador was wary. But the am-\nb: sudor was always wary. If he\nwas secretly helping the German\ncause it would bo very difficult to\nprove the fact. Another X in thc\nelaborate equation Greenleaf mu*jt\nsolve, and quickly.\nMary Burns entered from the\nInner room where his clerks who\ndid the routine work in code decipherment passed their days.\n\"You staying late?\" he asked.\n\"Why?\"\n\"I've been tabulating the German\ncipher dispatches.\" she said. \"The\nSecretary of War is very impatient.\"\n\"He would be.\" said Greenleaf\ntartly, \"Did you tell him we needed\nsomething more to go on?\"\n\"Yes,\" she said wearily, \"he doesn't understand if. He thinks it's\nlike\u2014like\u2014\"\n\"Like an acrostic or a cross-word\npuzzle,\" Greenleaf said. \"He has a\nWee simple mind and I like him. but\nI wish he'd go lo Hawaii or somewhere until the war is over.\"\nMary Burns sighed at the thought.\n\"Wouldn't that be nice?\"\n\"You go home.\" Greenleaf said.\n\"Leave those things with me. I'll\nhave another look at them tonight.\nI might have a hunch or something\nand pull off a piece of magic for the\nold boy.\"\nThe telephone rang while Mary\nBurns was putting on her hat preparatory to going. It was Blane.\n\"Yes\", said Greenleaf to Blanc's\nquestion. \"I'll be here.\"\nMore complications. He wondered\nif Jake were about. The door to his\nlaboratory was locked but he responded to Greenleaf's knock and\nlooked Inquiringly at the chief.\nThey're So Good.'\n15   DIFFERENT   VARIETIES\nASK YOUR DEALER\n\"Juit wanted to make sure you\nwere here,\" Greenleaf aaid. \"Blane's\ncoming. Got something on his\nmind.\"\n\"Another secret Ink letter?\"\nGreenleaf nodded.\n\"I think so. We don't want any\naccident to overtake this one.\"\n\"No.\" Jake said sombrely. Outside of Greenleaf and Blane he was\nthc only one to know of Bill Martin's\ndeath. He had had to be warned of\nthe risks he ran and the precautions\nhe must take.\n\"If we get something to work on\nI'll stay with you,\" said Greenleaf.\n\"while you have a try at It. Bill\nwas taken by surprise\"\n\"I can't see how,\" frowned Jake.\n\"I can't sec how it was done.\"\n\"I know how it was done,' 'said\nGreenleaf. \"I only hope someone\ntries it the same way again. Only\nthey won't. No chance.\"\nJake looked at him inquiringly But\nGreenleaf said nothing to enlighten\nhim.\n\"Go on back to work,\" Greenleaf\nsaid. \"I'll be out here.\"\nHe returned to his desk and reflected. The Ink waa important.\nIntercepted messages must be read,\nand quickly. Messages and code\nintercepts\u2014both were links in that\nchain whereby important military\nand diplomatic knowledge was\nsmuggled out of the United Stales\nand conveyed to Germany. He must\nread both. The cipher, given sufficient material to work with, he could\nbreak. But the secret ink messages\nwere different. They had first to be\nintercepted and then read. He\ndid not underestimate the difficulty\nof the reading. Bill Martin had at\nlast been able to read one, and discovered one of the methods used.\nBut there would be other inks, and\nJake, though a good man, had not\nBill's special aptitude and knowledge in this field of chemistry. He\nmust try other methods, must, if he\ncould, discover the spies themselves.\nBlane came in and locked the door\nbehind him. Greenleaf from where\nhe sat could see the wall where the\nsecret door was set. And there was\n\u25a0-little electrical apparatus which he\nhad installed to warn him of anyone again attempting to enter. The\nsecret service agent would guess\nthat, of course, and\" not try the\nsame method again. A case of locking the barn.\nBlane, Greenleaf could see, was\npleased.\n\"Another letter,\" he said, \"Sent to\nthe old address.\"\n\"And nobody appearing to call for\nit I'll bet.\"\n\"No,\" Blane assented. \"Not yet.\"\n\"And won't be,\" Greenleaf said.\n\"Why?\"\n'The fact that we got the first\nletter warned them. Probably this\none wai already mailed and there\nwas no way of stopping it. But jt\nwill be the last. Here's hoping we\nmake something out of it.\"\nHe rang for Jak\u00ab. and the three\npored over the sheet of paper, an\ninnocent appearing advertisement\nsimilar iri character to the first. It\nwas an anti-fat remedy this time\nwhose pote-i'y was persuasively\nworded, \"TCeaucto will make you\nwhat you always wished to be.\"\n\"I'll bpt there ain't no sich animal\nas Reducto,\" said Jake.\n\"No takers,\" Greenleaf replied.\n\"Well. I guess we'll'give it the iodine,\ntest. .Evidently that's what Bill\nused.\"\n\u2022To Be Continued)\nSILVERTON MISS\nGUEST OF HONOR\nSILVERTON, B. C. Nov. 22-Mrs.\nW. E. Marshall is visiting in Trail\nfor a few days.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Dewis and son\nSeaman, were visitors to Nelson.\nP. Johnson of Trail spent a day in\ntown.\nMiss H. Marshall and Miss N,\nAlexander of the staff of the Kootenay Luke General hospital, visited\nth\" former's home.\nMrs. S. Watson and Mrs. J. Matheson were visitors to New Denver.\nJ. A. Moir, who has spent some\ntime in Ymir and Nelson, has retimed to town.\n18 H0STE88\nMrs. W. E. Marshall was hostess\nat a dinner party in honor nf her\ndaughter Hazel's birthday. During\nthe evening cards were played, high\nscores being held by Mrs. Marshall\nand P. Johnson.\nGuests included Miss K. Marshall.\nMiss N. Alexander of Nelson, Miss\nE. Marshall, Miss E. Cechelero of\nNew Denver, Miss M. Emerson, Mrs.\nW. Barkley, Mrs. E. Fairhurst. Mrs.\nW. Jones, Mrs. J. Millar, and J.\nMcAulay, L. Emerson, E. Marshall,\nW. Morrison, J. Millar and P. Johnson.\nNdsnn Sally Nrms\nMember of Ihe Canadian Daily\nNewspaperi Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrlvite Exchange connecting to\nall Department!\nSubscription Rates\nSingle cop\/    $   .05\nBy carrier, per week       2S\nBy carrier, per year,        13.U0\nBy mall in Canada, tn subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month. SOc;\nthree months, $1.80; six months.\n$3.00; one year. $6.00.\nUnited states and Great Britain, one month. 75c; six months,\n$4.00; one year. $7.50.\nForeign countries, \u25a0 '.her than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\t\nBIRTHS\nFASUTTO-To   Mr.   and   Mrs.   J.\nPuutto at McDougall hospital, Klmberley, Friday, Nov. 18. a wn.\nMILLER\u2014To Mr. and M's. J. W\nMiller, at McDougall hospital. Kimberley, Saturday, hov. 17, a son.\nLECAL NOTICES\n(iOVEBNMENT LIQUOR ACT\nNotice   of   application   for   conient\nto Tranifer of Beer Licence.\nNotice Is hereby given that on thi\n4th day of December next the undersigned Intends to apply to the\nLiquor control Board for consent to\ntransfer of Beer Licence No. 3874 and\nIssued In respect of premises being\nSart of a building known as Madden\notel situate at 607-9 Ward street\nCltv of Nelson upou the lands described as Lot One Block Five Official Plan City of Nelson, Kootenay Land Registration District, ln\nthe Province of British Columbia\nfrom Floyd M. Barnett of Argenta.\nB. C, the transferor.\nDATED at Nelson. B. C. this 3rd\nday of November. A. D. 1934.\nA. SHUTTY,\nApplicant and transferee\n  (47391\nPERSONAL\nMARRY-INTRODUCTIONS BY PRI-\nvate letters. Hundreds of members everywhere. Teachers, nurses,\nfarmers' daughters, widows with\nfarms and property. Also ranchers,\nfarmers, business men and railroid men seeking mates. Particulars, 10c. Canadian Correspondence\nClub, Box 138, Calgary. Alts. 148331\nASTROLOGY: WHAT DO YOUR\nStars decree? send dale, place and\ntime of birth with 12-00 for Special Individual Delineation; or. si oo\nfor General Reading. Sharman Old-\nfield. 1189. Newport Ave., victoria.\n148081\nGENTLEMEN. SAVE 60^*. BUY YOUR\nSanitary requirements by mall.\nStamp brings catalogue. Sanl-\nTex Company 709 Dunsmuir street\nVancouver, B.  C. (4\u00ab44i\nAN OFFER ^O EVERY INVENTOR\nList of wanted inventions and full\nInformation sent tree. The Ramsay\nCompany world Patent Attorneys\n273 Bank atreet, Ottawa, Canada.\n   (4684)\nGROW MUSHROOMS FOR US AT\nhome. Bla demand; excellent profits, write for free booklet to Domestic Muihroom Growers. Edmonton. Alta.    (47451\nSANITARY RUBBER GOODS. HIGH-\nest Grsde. 20 for tl. Mailed In\nwrapper. 24 Union Bldg. Calgary.\n.algary,\n,4877)\nPRIVATE HOME KINDERGARTENS\npay We start vou. The Canadian\nKindergarten  Institute, Winnipeg\n (4714)\nEcaema Itch Piles Ulcers Try Geo Lee*\u00bb\nChina Remedy it Hudson's Bay Co\n(48691\nHELP WANTED\nWOMEN WANTED TO SEW FOR US\nat  home,  sewing  machine  necessary. No idling. Ontario Neckwear\nCompany. Dept. 292, Toronto 8.\n (47J9)\nWANTED - TWO EXPERIENCED\nwaitresses to take full charge,\none kitchen girl. Box 4943. DaUy\nNews. *4943)\nHOW TO GET A GOVERNMEN\nJob Free Booklet. Tbe M. C C\nLtd., Winnipeg. (4713I\nCOOK WANTED. FRENCH OIR*\npreferred, p. o. box 869.      (49971\n1 WJ*-To~.m I s\u2014m\u2014r *w-or**, -or _*\"M pw*     \u2014    __     s*m     ONU\/\nCHRISTMAS\nGIFT\nSUGGESTIONS\nCifH for \"Htr\"\nFor Joy and COMFORT. A dress\noi* woolly Kimono made by NORAH COLEMAN. Annable Blk.\n(9007)\nJuit the ptesent for Her. An up-\nto-the-minute    Cabinet    Electric\nSINGER SEWING  MACHINE  CO.\n(5010)\nWhat could be nicer than a Permanent.   Capitol   Beauty  Shoppe.\n(9009)\nNovelties. Hankies, Weldrcst Hdse\nand chic Dresses at the\nD. C, DRESS SHOPPE.\n(9011)\nCifn fer \"All\"\nMACLEAN'S MAGAZINE SPECIAL\noffer  for  Christmas,  n   per  yr.\nGift card. NELSON NEWS DEPOT.\n15012)\nMCGREGOR   BROS.   FOR   YOUR\nChristmas    photographs.    Special\nChristmas prices. Phone 224.\n***************************^^    (5015)\nA \"China\" Chrlstmu Gift Is at\nwaya appreciated, we have tbe\nlargest selection In the district.\nJ. P. MORGAN, 301 Baker St.\n^^^^^^^^^^^    (9014)\n(5013)\n         I\nt.**W*T\u00bbt-drmf*WiTVtmrmi-*rmfmTMf\nLASTING PRESENT?\nJewelrv  of  every   description   at\ntMPAZIAN'S,  HaU  8t.\n(9008)\nGifts fer \"Him'\nOrder   Xmas   wrapped   Tobacco,*\nCigars, cigarettes, Williams New*.\n,9018)\nChriitmM Economy\nSimottiem\nChoose from our wide range of\n-* \u2014      -\u2014 STORE.\nnovelty China. Tbe ARK\nOrder your Christmas Greeting\nCards from The NELSON DAILY\nNEWS. Printed with your name\nind iddress. Prices from 11.75 to\n14 25.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nENGINEER, 3rd CLASS,\nposition, fireman, watchman, first\naid man. Oood references, character  and  ability.  Box 4945,  Dally\n__Ne-__!_.   '****-'\nGIRL\" AND MIDDLE AGED WOMEN\ndesire housework. Both able to\ntake full charge. Box 6030 Dally\n_Newa. _(5030)\nYOUNG LADY WITH SOME Hospital experience wishes care of\nInvalid or young children. Box\n6039, Dally News. (6039)\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES\nAGENTS   WANTED  To   SELL   SILK\nneckties for us. Wi sell vou at \u2022\nfrlcc tbit allows you to make\nWT, commlulon. Write today for\nfree samples and . particulars Ontario Neckwear Company Dept 669\nToronto 8. Ont. (4730)\nNELSON DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED\nads. The leading salesman and\nbuyer for Nelson and surrounding\ndistrict.\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS,  ETC.\nFor Rent\nSix   roomed,   fully   furnished\nhome, Edgewood __*_\nAvenue   *rmt~9\nFive roomed House,        $20\nEdgewood Avenue .     'r****'\nFive Roomed Cottage,    6fB\ntop of Stanley Street . *r**-~\nMODERN OFFICES\nMEDICAL ARTS BLOCK\nFor Sale\nFully furnished, rooming\nhouse on Carboncte\nstreet.  Snap!\nMortgage Funds Required\nChas. F .McHardy\nReal Estate\nInvestments Insurance\nNELSON, B.C.\n(4956)\nARE GUESTS AT\nSALMO\nSALMO. B. C. Nov. 22 - Miss\nMona Stubbs ond Miss Helen Stubbs\narc guests of Mrs. William Grutchfield. They attended the Masquerade dance.\nHerbert Grutchfield was a Nelson\nvisitor. *\nMrs. E. Kraft ii a guest of Mrs.\nStanley Kitchener.\nMrs. S. Kitchener was a guest of\nMr. Kitchener's parents at Nelson.\nR. H. Bruhn is a visitor at the\nQueen mine.\nRussel Whitter was a Spokane\nvisitor.\nA successful masquerade dance\nwas given in the community hall by\nthe Pythian Sisters, Miss Kathleen\nSapples and orchestra from Trail\nsupplied the music. The prise winners were:\nBest dressed couple\u2014Gipsy, Miss\nMona Stubbs and Herbert Grutchfield.\nComic couple\u2014 Dinah, Mrs. M.\nDodds, Creston; Rufus, Mrs. William Miller.\nMost original couple\u2014Red cross\nnurse and Dionne quintuplets, Mrs.\nA. Bremner; fireman, Oliver M.\nSmith.\nMiss Kathleen Reisterer has returned to her home in Nelson after\na week's visit to her sister, Mrs.\nNoel Harrop.\nAdvertisers who desire may\nhave replies addressed to a pox\nat tho Nelson Daily News and\nforwarded dally to their address. A charge of 10 cents is\nmade for this service. In this\ncase add four words (Box \u2014\nDaily News) to thc count for\nthe number of words.\nUNFURNISHED HOUSE-7 ROOMS,\nelectric range and hot water. High\nStreet\u2014Apply W. W. Ferguson .\n_____  (4932)\nROOM HOUSE, ti MILE FROM\nferry, wlll rent to couple without\nchildren. |8 per month. Ph. *****\n (60J6)\nROOM HOUSE AND BASEMENT:\n4 lots. Cheap rent. Close ln imu\nWater  St. (4915)\n-OMFORTABLE BEDROOM. CL061\nIn, 408 Victoria, phone 590R.\n15020)\nTHREE ROOM FURNISHED SUllk\nbith ln urlvate home. Close In 413\nCedar St. (5031)\n(rontlnurd)\nFOR RENT\n(I'nlitlniied)\nPURNISHED    HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent  Annabli Block\n <__)\nMODERN   OFFICES   BY   WEEK   OR\n_month._Medtcal Arts Bldg. (4887)\nIN     THE    KERR     APARTMENTS\nfurnished and unfurnished aultes.\n \u25a0_         (MTO)\nFUR     ROOMS.-  STEAM     HEATED\nshower, terms mod   Can   Legion.\nmmum^^^^^^ _m\nHOUSE    FOR    RENT,    CLOSE    IN\nPhone 628X. (4867)\nHEATED   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOMS.\nLight Included, 711 Vernon St.\n  (4916)\nFURNISHED TWQ ROOMED SUITE\none^single. K\u00b1 W. C. (4896)\nTWO    ROOM    FtlRNISHED\"  SUITE\nfor   rent.   Stirling   Hotel.   ,46891\nSIX   ROOM   HOUSE   NEWLY   REN-\n_ OV'ted. Phone 488L. (4769)\nUNFURNISHED 5 ROOMED HOUSE.\nHigh street, phone 662.       ,4933)\nTWO AND THREE ROOMED FURN-\nIshed mltei. phone 389R1.  (4979)\n3 ROOM SUITE 113. PER MONTH\nUnion  Rooms.        (4890)\nFOUR ROOM HOUSE. APPLY D.\nMagllo. phone 806L. (4772)\nFOR RENT-M(S>ERN HOME. GOOD\nlocation. Phone 38. iM83)\nTERRACE   APTS   Beautiful  Modern\nFrlgldalri equipped mites.   (MOD\nAGENTS WANTED\nWANTED\u2014CAPABLE MEN TO SELL\nour special miners' sickness snd\naccident policy. Sold to miners\nonly; all accidents and every\nknown disease covered. Liberal\ncommission. Apply Merchants Casualty, 1005 Rogers Bldg., Van-\ncouver.         (4970)\nSALESMAN WANTED TO HANDLE\nour products as side line. Liberal\ncommission. Reference required.\nPacific chemical Co., Ltd., Van-\ncouver. (4967)\nWANTED FOR INTERIOR TOWNS,\nmen anxious to earn a good living. \"You can do thli.\" See for\npartlculsrs or write L. j. Deshar-\nnsls, crsnbrook, B, c. (4721)\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED TO RENT. HOTEL WITH\nbar and pool room. Wrlto Box\nD42,  Trail,  B.J3. |4967>\nFOR SALE\nUNDERWOOD STANDARD TYPE-\nwrlter 620. Coal brooder stove, 270\negg Incubator, gramophone, cash\noffer or trade for rifle, tent, mining stock. Box 5023 Dally News.\n(6023)\nUSED CASH RKU1KTIRS  WE GUAR.\nantee   suitability    and   accuracy\nWrite National cash Register Co\n570 Seymour St.. Vancouver B C.\n_, (4618)\nPIPE   AND  FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company  Ltd..\n250   Prior   St.   Vincouver    B    C\n^^^^^^^^^^ (4666)\nTWO DIESEL ENGINES 120 H.P\nand 50 HP Kootenay Belle Mine.\nSalmo. t. C. (5029)\nFOR    SALE-  BARRELS     KEGS\nsugar tacks, liners  McDonild Jim\nCo.,  Ltd.  |47_1)\nBABY    SULKY    AND    PLAY    PEN-\nCheap for cash. Phone 391L1.\n_\u25a0 49761\nNEW AND USED SSCKS. I.\" BECKER\n2809 W. 6th, Ave,, Vancouver.\n(4892)\nHOUSES WANTED\nMODERN 6 OR 7 ROOM FURN.\nor unfurn. home. Electric stove.\nGarage. Falrvlew or vicinity. Exceptional tenant, phone.736.\n \u25a0\u00bb\u25a0  (4950)\nWANTED BY JANUARY 1st, LARGE\n3 room modern suite, kitchen,\nbedroom, and living room. Private\nhome preferred. Apply Box 6036.\nDally News.  ,50252\nLOST AND FOUND\nSTRAYED PONY CAN BE HAD AT\nRusset's Landing by paying for\nthis ad. pally nets. -4999)\nLOST\u2014REDDISH BROWN COCKER\nSpaniel puppy. Biby's pet. Phone\n627. Reward. (5004)\nTo Finders\nIt you find \u2022 cat or \u25a0 dog a\npocketbook tewelrv or fur or\nanything elsa ol value, telephone\nTbe Daily News A \"Found' Ad\nwlll bs Inserted without coat to\nyou Wi will collect from tbe\nowner.\nEDUCATIONAL\nTHE ACADEMY OF USEFUL ARTS\nteaches professional Pattern-drafting, Designing, Dressmaking. Three\nGables Hotel. Pentlcton.       (4717)\nMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS\nLEWIS  PIANO SPECIALS\nEasy   Terms\u2014No   Interest   Charged\n$69~Boudoir piano, walnut case,\nnice   practice   Instrument.\nS125- Wernam   Piano   boudoir\nmodel,   walnut   case,   iteel\n{rime.\n8150-***\u2122*5 Brothers Piano, up-\nT right    grand,    over-strung\nsteel frame.\n8175\u2014Gerhard Piano, cablnat\ngrand, overstrung steel\nframe, lovely deep tone.\nApproximately 'joo thoroughly overhauled pianos at lowest possible\nprices, on Eaay Terms, Without Interest charges. All leading mikes,\netc. We crate free, and ship F.O.B.\nVancouver, B. C.\nLEWIS PIANO HOl'SB L1MIIF.I)\n1044 Granville St., Vancouver, b. t'.\n(6017)\nFOR HIRE\nTEAM OF HORSES AND HEAVY\nwagon. Town or buah work. Cheap.\nApply Mrs. Hall, Gordon Ro:d,\n14990)\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE ON\neasy- terms In Albert] and Saskatchewan, write for full li-Iorm-\n* atlon to 908-Dept of Natural Resources, C. P. R. Oalgary, Alberta\n  (4743)\nAUTOMOBILES FOR SALE\nSPECIAL CHY8LSR 8. 1931 MODEL.\n8 wire wheels, privately owned.\nPerfect condition. Looks Uke new\n\u20221000. Terms. Nelson Transfer.\nCompany. (4992)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nREMEMBER \u2014 USED PARTS FOR\nautos. trucks, tractors. We sell\nche.ip. Write, wire. Elmwood Auto\nWrecking Co., Gatesburg, Illinois.\nU. S. A.    . 16022)\nCLASSIFIED ADS ARE TIME SAVERS\nMOTORCYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nParts and Accessories\nAgent for Pyroil'\nExpert Repairs to All\nMakes\nSend Us Your Motors\nINDIAN SALES and SERVICE\nPALMER  RUTLEDGE\nTRAIL, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK  FOR SALE\nSIX WEEKS OLD YORKSHIRE PIGS\nfrom good atock 13.50 each. One\nYorkshire Boar one year old. two\nbrood sows one bred to farrow 1st\nof Marcb. one Toggenburg Bill}\nGoat. Prlcea on Application. J.\nSchmidt,  Blueberry   Creek,  B.  C.\n     _ (50241\nOOdb HOLSTEIN COW. 6 YRS. OLD.\nFreshen Jan. 16th. Price reasonable. Box 4934 Dally Newa.   (4934)\nRABBITS\nBELGIAN HARES. FLEMISH GIANTS.\nSiberian   Black  or Chinchillas for\nfur. AH eood atock. The Rabbitry,\nBox 135, Nelson. Phone 635. Acton\n 14716)\nDOCS\nREGISTERED      POLICE     PUPPIES.\nbest Imported strains. Males 110.\nWhatshan Kennels. Needles. B  C.\n14830)\nPOULTRY AND ECCS\n78 LEGHORN PULLETS. NEAR LAY-\ntng.  Some ftl. 50 bens year. SOc\neach. F. Iftoda, Appledale, B. C.\n_         (4937)\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED\nWANTED TO BUY A SMALL STAMP\ncollection.   State   particulars   and\nprice to P. O. Drawer 80. Roaaland.\n (4936)\nPOWER  STRAW  CUTTER.  BOX  47.\nSlocan City. B, C. (4962)\nGOOD CLEAN  RAGS WANTED   AP*\nply   Daily  News  Office ,3368)\nMISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE\nPhone 106\nFor Coal and Wood\nSand, Gravel,  Rock\nFurniture Moving\nCrating, Storing\nFreight Hauling\nGeneral Transfer\nWork\nWilliams'\nTransfer\n009 Ward St.\nNelson\n(4955)1\n\"fcl\naudi\nGALVANIZED IRON PIPE AND FTT3\ntings    Beltlngi,   etc.\u2014New    WlreL\nNilli Hi\"   l*y It 2>,i\" WM perl\n100 lbi Pull line ol new and uud|\nOalv and Buck Pipe and flttlna\n_  Galv   new a .ic.  1\" Black  &\n3   Black lultable tor Irrigation and\nwiter   line   10c.   other   eiies   Ion\nprlcea   new corrugated galv   Iron\n86 00 per 100 squire feet  Poultri\nwire  netting 3 and 6 feet   Put\nitor.   of steel split pulleys. Putau\nand grain ucki Barbed wire. Win\nRope,    Canvas    Doors.    Windows\nRoofing Felt. Garden and Air baae\nDoom    Chains    Merchandise   am\nEquipment of all descriptions En\nqulrles   solicited \u25a0\nB.C. JUNK CO. \t\n135    Powell   st,   Vancounr.   BCl\n(4716\u00ab\nSALT POR CATTLE: 60 LBSTPLAOl\nBlocks, 50 lbs. iodised Blockn]\n6 lb. Range Bricks, 5 lb. Iodised!\nBricks, Iodised Coarse Salt. Plain\nCoarse Salt. Dairy Salt, Epson!\nSalts. Tbe Brackman-Ker Militate!\nCo., Ltd. (5086*1\nGOOD FREIGHT RUN AND\" V,L\ntone Pord truck tn good order_\nCaah 1600. Boi 5018, Daily News]\n (60113\n?#!\nBusiness ond Professional Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS F HUNTER. 8. P. A E\nMunicipal and Commercial Audita\nP   O   Bex 1191. Nelson. B   O\n(4692)\nAmyen\nE  W   WIDDOWSON  established 1900\n305 Josephine St.. Nelaon. B O\n(4693)\nUhtKflLLB H. (IRlMtV'OOD\n18 Baker St.. Nelaon Boi 726\nCustom and Control assays. Chemical analysis. Representative at\nTrail lor Shippers' Intereata. (4694)\nKOOTENAY    LABORATORIES\nAssayers &  Chemists\nBos   1342                  Trail   B C.\n (4695)\nBuiineii Training\nApproved    bookkeeping    course    by\npost,   practical,  complete,  reasonable   price.   Commercial   Training\nBureau, Boi 1216, Vancouver. B.C.\n (4951)\nChiropoditti\nDr. Mildred Slmonds Foot Specialist\n405  Fernwell  Bldg.  Spokane,  wash\ni4696)\nChiropractors\nE.   M.   WARREN.   D.   C.   BOX   872.\nPh. 115   Gllker Block.'612 Biker.\n14648)\nElectrical\nJ.  F   COATES\u2014Tbe  Electrlo  store\nSUDPltei and ipst-umnos\nPhono 766.                 P. O. Boi 1061\n (4697)\nEngineeri and Surveyori\nA   H   OREEN CO    LTD    616 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelson. B.C.  (4698)\nH   D   DAWSON -NELSON\nENGINEER   AND  SURVEYOR\n (4699)\nBoyd C Affleck. Fruitvale B c\nLands Mineral Claims Waterworks\netc  Surveys. Plana and Estimates\n  (4700)\nFlorists\nFor Christmas flowers delivered ln\nforeign countries, let Us have\nyour order now to effect a snvlngB\nto you. The F.TJ3. Service delivers anywhere in the world.\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. Ph. 233.\n(4703)\nInsurance and Real Estat* ,\nROBERTSON REALTY CO- LTdI\nRea. estate. Insurance, rentala\nAberdeen block, Baker St,  (47081\nPOR AN ALL RISK INSURANCE\npolicy on Jewelry and furs ttm\nT. D. Rosling, 3 Roysl Bank Bldf]\nR. w DAWSON. Real Estate ln*l\nsurance Rentals Next Hlpperwd\nHardware, Baker street, (47041\nC    D    BLACKWOOD   Iniurance   ol\nevery description. Real Bit Ph 99\n(47041\nH   E.   DILL.  AUTO  AND  FIRE    _t\\\nlurance  Real Estate 508 Ward St\ntm^^^^^^^^^^^*r (47WJ\nj     E.    ANNABLE.    REAL   tf   4T|\nrentals, Iniurance.  Annable      *ck\n       071\nLIFE. FIRE At AUTOMOBILE t,     IR,\nance. P. E. Poulln. Ph. 70. (470W\nCHAS   F   MCHARDY   INSURANCE***]\nReal Estate\u2014Phone 186.      i4T<M\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal work Latbd\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grinding]\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene Welding!\nPhone 693. *^^^\n324 Vernon street\n  (4710)|\nMaternity Homsi\nELIZABETH  PEEL.\nMATBRNITY  HOMI\nStrictly private\u2014Confidential. Physl.\nclan tn Attendance. Ph. Broad. 3078\nW-1S24 Broadway, Spokane, Wash\n  (4895)\nMusical Tuition\nVIOLIN     AND    THEORY     PUPIM\nMary Heddle, Phone 311R-   (4701)\nSash  Factory\nLAWSONS 8ASH FACTORY   HARD**]\nwood merchant, 217 Baku itrettj\n(47UJ\nSecond Hand Stores\nLunch counter chairs for sale Mra\nRadclllfe. Vernon St. (47181\nWANTED: USED BEDS AND USffi\nstoves. THE ARlC (47341\nBUYERS ARE READING THISJ\ncolumns\u2014and selecting what the!\nrequire each day\u2014Will they flnt\nYOUR Classified Ad here? Tele*\nphone your ad\u2014We'll do the tti*\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\nHEKE'S   Vouli\n<SO\\aJM AND\n-THAMtc you\nv\/BBV,VEay\nMUCH, MBS,\nBlLT\n( NO\\\u00ab DOM'T\nFOfeSET.VPO\nAMD MB. *-V*.\nEOUS\/M-L ABtj\nINVITED TO\nAMD voy 0\u00bbWI\ni\u2014,.-       i i Pick out thb I\nTHE        I  lttk*\u00a3T_rouiNIN|\n|MEBRIO\/\nIVAIE'BB\n\u2022soi we* TO\n'\u2022.-WS Ball\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Sidhey Smith\nVJELL Sl*\u00ab\nTHIS I* THE FIRST\nCASE I EVER WORKED\nOK WHBRE BOTH\nSIDE* >NON -\n,   ANC WHERE BOTH\nLAV4YERS GOT PAID\nIN FOUL WHIN A\n\/\u2022AONTH AFTER THE\nCASE. IS OVER -\nMY ONLY RE6.RET IS\nTHAT VNE OlbNT\nASK FOR MORE-y\nV4EU.,DARUN(j-EV\/E.RY LAST , *.\nMEfAoAv OF THE TRIAL IS OVER NOW- \\   ie\n>NHAT OO I CARE WHAT IT MAY\nHAVE COST- YOU'RE WORTH\nMORE TO ME THAN ANYTHIKW*\nGOUJ COOLD EVER BUY-   \u201e.,\nTHERE IS NO PRICE TOO 6REAT\nTO PAY FOR SUCH HAPPINESS,\nAS OURS-HOW FAR BENEATH\nOUR THOUGHT* AT LAST ARE\nSUCH CRASS THINOS AS\nMONEY-\nR**.u\"s is;*,os,c_pv.\n*** Tht'o,,\n.^L\n ^^H\n^^^^^^\u25a0i\ni^T\n9LDSWEAK\nAT TORONTO\nTORONTO. Nov. a (CT)-Weak-\nw in th* gold aharw pulled down\nlotationi on th* mining list of\n\u2022 Toronto itock exchange today.\nae metali firmed at tb* cloae .\nNet loiaea of U to TS centi wer*\n(latered for Dom*, Mclntyre, Hoi-\n[ger and Bralome. Wright Har-\neaves and Teck Hughes weakened\nto 15 centa each; Little Long Lac,\nNTi Lake, Bobjo and Gunnar for-\nlted - to 7 centa.\nIn the allver. Eldorado dipped 4\ntot* and smaller recessions crop-\nt out Irr Castle, White Eagle and\nN_r Exploration. Nlpiailng finish-\n; 11 cents up.\nANK SUMMARY\nSHOWS RECOVERY\n5 Out of 50 Business Indices Shown Gain\n-THE NSLSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-SATUADAY MORNING. NOV. 24. 1934-\nMarket and Mining News\nMONTREAL, Nov. 23 (CP)-Out\n80 available builnes* indicet, 43\npw galna, th* majority of a pro-\nKneed character, and the Ca-\nidlan winter seaaon open* thii\n\u25a0V with distinctly better condi-\nxu than in 1933, it waa noted in\n\u2022 Bank of Montreal'! November\nwinces summary released here to-\nJtvidence of briiker builneu Is\nlorded by bank clearings, car\nSSinga and bank d*blti. Mineral\nnductlon li large and textile in-\nutrles moderately active. Crops\nive been more abundant and, aid-\nl by hlghtr pricei, \"the let af the\nrater la better.\" Fishing on both\nButtle and Pacific coaita it im-\n\u2022ovod.\nThe official  employment index\nindl at 100 compared with Ut in\niptember and with 90.4 and M.7\nOctober, 1933, and 1933 respec-\nNewsprint production of 235,021\nna was tb* largest ln any month\n[over two yeara with the excep-\nPi of May, 1934, when the output\n1242,539 toni. Shipments amount-\nto 228,921 ton* In October, nearly\nfee time* aa larg* ai In the United\nirtei._\t\nEGG PRICES\nLOWER\nMONTREAL, Nov. 23 (CP).-Egg\n' *i wer* allghtly lower on the\nitreal produce exchange today.\nJi, A-large, 38; A-medlum, 34;\nlets, 32; B. 21, C. 19.\nttter steady: No. 1, 21%; solid*.\nwint, 33.\n\u00bb.ie*ie, No. 1 Ontario, 9%.\nPotatoes  firm;   N.B.  Mntni,  45;\nMebeci 45.\nJU. S, DOLLAR OFF\nMontreal, Nov. 23 <cp)-on\nontreal foreign exchanges today\n( pound sterling eased 9-32 of a\nnt at $4.88% while the American\nillar was off 1-32 of 1 per cent at\n*t per cent dlicount The French\nmc held unchanged at 8.42 cents.\nExchanges\nMONTR-BAL.   NOV.  SS   (CP.-Brlt-\na and foreign exchsnge in relation\ntne Oanadlan dollar, a* complied\nthe   Boyal   Bank   of   Canada,\nand today aa follow*:\ngentlna, p**o    2459\n\u25a0trail*, pound       3.8*74\nutrla, *efillllng 1845\nilllum, Mln   \u2022\u2022 2272\naall,  m__r*l*      .0708\nUna, Hong K*n\u00bb dollars    4075\n\u25a0pmark. kron*  - 9172\n\u2022anoe, franc     .0842\ntrmeny. relchimark     3918\nnet Britain, pound _ 4.8*14\nWand,  florin 8585\nujgary. pengo     am\ntut.   rupee       .3886\nIII, llr*  0880\npan. y*n 3838\niw Zealand, pound - 3.8839\n\u00abwey,   krone   -    .9444\niland, alou        1855\nlUth Africa, pound   4.8817\nreden,  toon* 2508\nrlteeriend, franc        .3188\nBite* State*, dollar, 3H per cent\nMount\nCARIBOO GOLD\nGAINS SEVEN\nVANCOUVER, Nov. \u00bb <CP>-\nCtrlboo Cold wu stronger on the\nVancouver itock exchange today\nand clowd with *n advanc* of 7\nat 13t. in good trading. The reat of\ntha lilt followed although ther*\nwtre imall losses marked agalnat a\ntew Issues, notably Bralome, otf S\nat 12.40.\nDentonia gained 2 at 48 in light\nturnover and Premier Gold and\nReno each firmed a cent B.R.X.\nand Taylor Brldg* each eased Vt\ncut. United Empire wu unchanged\nat 9 with no sales tranaacted. Other\ngold iharei were unchanged to\nfractionally stronger.\nUPWARD TURN\nAT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Nov. 33 (CP). -\nConstruction iharei on the Montreal\natock exchange bounded upward\nalong a broad front during today'i\naeuion.\nCanada Cement preferred gained\n2% at 53. Dominion Bridge advanced\nV\/, while Steel of Canada wu up\n% at J9%. Beverage! were itronger.\nSmall fractional advance* were\nscored by C.P.R., Brazilian Traction,\nConsolidated Tmelters and Nickel.\nPower, paper and textile* were\nhigher,\nLosiei were recorded by Massey-\nHarrii. McColl-Frontenac and Imperial Tobacco. Noranda gained 75\ncents and Dome was off 85 centi,\nSales 17,404 shares; bondi $74,150.\nRevenues of C. N. R.\nUp $153,271\nMONTREAL, Nov. 23 (CP) -\nGross revenuu of Canadian National railways for the week ended\nNovember 21, 1934. were $3,155,382\nu compared with $3,002,091 for the\ncorresponds week of 1933, an lncreue of $193,271.\nBar Gold Up Cent\nMONTREAL. Nov. 33 (CP)-Bar\ngold ln London up one cent to\n$33.88 an ounce ln Canadian funds;\n137 4d in British funds. The fixed\n$35 Washington price amounted to\nJ34.ll in Canadian.\nEASTERN SALE*\nMONTREAL, Nov. 23 (CP)-Sal**\nof 100 or more shares on the Montreal stock exchange today were:\n779 Brazilian, 891 Ind Al A, 380\nInd Al B, 780 CPR, 198 Smelters,\n1493 Nickel, 595 Mass Harr, 2780\nMont Pow, 1465 Nat Brewi 330 Steel\nof Can.\nTORONTO, Nov. 23 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Toronto\nstock exchange, industrial section,\ntoday were;\n1015 Brazilian. 110 Brew It Dls,\n185 Can Can 2nd pfd, 390 C In Ale,\n384 CPR, 8480 Ford A, 2720 Nickel,\n660 Mass Har, 1880 H Walker, 10,665\nDist C Sea, 410 Dom Bridge, 2310\nInt Pete.\nVancouver Soles\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 23 \u2014 Mining\nsharea sold on the Vancouver stock\nexchange today:\nListed\u2014Beaver Silver 1500. Bradian 140, BRX 2400, Cariboo 4915,\nInter C & C 200, Mak Siccar 6000,\nMeridian 2000, Morning S 100, Nat\nS 4000, Nicola 500, Prem B 2000,\nPrem G 1900. Reeves 150. Reno 750,\nSally 2500, Taylor B 5200, Wayside\n1900\nCurb\u2014BC Nickel, 4200, Big Misa\n200, Congress 50, Can R 3400, Dentonia 4000, Fairview 800, Golconda\n2000. Grange 5862, Grull W 500,\nHome 1000, Koot B 5100, Mlnto 900,\nNoble Five 7250, Pend O 200, Salmon\n500, SUveramlth 2000, Vldette 1800,\nWaterloo 3000.\nMONTREAL SILVER PRICES\nMONTREAL, Nov. 23 (CP).\u2014Silver closed easy. Sales\nlosed eaay.  Sal*\" contract*: Dec. 10, March 4, May 4*\nI Open        High      Low       Close\nlecember      B4-40B      54.80      54.00 .   54.00\nlarch    65.40B      56.80      56.00      55.00\npay     56.10B      56.00      56.00      56.75B\nSomething New\nFIRS INSURANCE on ouy\nmonthly  payment! large  or\namall   risks,  sea  your  leeal\n| \u00ab*ent or writ*\nPacific General\nAcceptance Company\n$21  Hall  Building\nVANCOUVEF   8. C.\nMoney\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt  Montreal\u2014Pound  4.86\ndollar .97H. franc 6.41-4.\nAt New York-Pound kXVt. Canadian dollar 1.02 11-16, franc 6.59H.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 75.78 francs, Canadian dollar 15.58 franci, U.S. dollar 13.I7H franci.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12s 3d, Cinadlan\ndollar 61 centi, U.S. dollar 39.41\ncents.\nDow Jones Averages\n30 Indurtriata 101.62 up 1.69\n20 rails    35.84 up 0.58\n20 utilities    18.19 up 0.23\nVancouver   Stock  Exchange\nA P Con\t\nAmal OU \t\nB   C   Pickers\nBeaver   SUnr\nBradlan\t\nBralorn*   \t\nraVfgs.\nCariboo Oold .\nC* I Corp ..\nCoait   Brew   ..\nOold   Belt   \t\nHorn*   OU   \t\n2it Coal  \nak Elecar  ....\nMcLeod   Oil   -\nMercury\t\nMiridlm     ...\nMetaline    _..\nModel OU \t\nMorn   Star    _...    ___.\nNat   Silver     .08\nNicola Mine*\nQkalta   Olla\n\u25a007 ti\n18.00\n.07 v.\n3.24\n. 12.40\n.0*\n>*!s\nf\nto\n.10\n*.*\/,\n\u00a38\n13-M\n.30\n.19%\n.40\nPioneer gold\nPremier  Gold   ..\nPremier  Border\nQuitstno\nRtno Oold   \t\nSilly   MUM*   \t\nSpooner   ..\nTaylor   Bridge   ..\nvanalta   \t\nweyald*   \t\nLtftB\nAlMindrla   \t\nAnaconda    \u201e\t\nBayvlew     .,\n\u00a7C Silver  \nC  Nlckil   \t\nB C powar B ....\nIl*   Mluourl\nBnw It Dlit \t\nCan   Rand   \t\nCalmont Oil   \t\nCout   Copper   ..\nOongnn Oold  .\nCrows   Neit   -\npilhouile Mlnei\nDalhousle   OUa\nDentonl*   \t\nD\u00bbv*nlifi   \t\nDictator    -     t.\nM .:!\nMt,\n1.06\nt\nfl\n88\n?\n.40%\n.08\n.04\n1.76\nSI\nii\n11.50\n1.28\n.01\n.03\nLOT\nJS.\n.99\n.01%\n.01U\n1.00\n.41\n6.00\n.33\n.75\n.06\n.4714\n18   =\nDunwell      \u2014\nAtlln   Pacific      \u2014\nUttle Long Uo       \u2014\nD D LT...T 78\nPscalta    \u25a0    .06ti\nRanchmen'!     \u2014    .70\nOlacler    Creek     08\nSunshine     1138\nFreehold         .08\nOolconda     \t\nOold   Mountain\n8eo Rlvtr   \nruidvlew\n8rani*   Mlnw   .\nrull   wlhksne   .\nHtdlw   Amal   \t\nHerculei Con  \t\nHlghwood   Sarcee\nSome Oold\nomutetd Oil  ...\nIndian   Mine*   ..\nIndependence\nKoot Belle\nKoot  Plor\nLak*vlsw .\nMir   Jon\nMerland\nMlnto   Oold\nMorton Wol\nNoble   Flv*\nPavilion    ..\nPend  Orellle\nPUot oold -        ___\nporter   Idaho        SH*\/,\nReward\nRoyalite    \t\nRulus Argent*\nRuth   Hope\nSalmon Gold     .w.j\nSilvercreit    OlVi\nSilverado    \t\nSllvirimlth   ...\nSnewtlike \t\nTsylor    Wind\nS nlted   Empire\nnltsd   Oil\nVldette Oold .\nVlklna\nVulcin Oil \t\nWtttrloo   ..   ..\nWaverley Tan*\nWelllniton     .Oi\nWhitewater          .04\n.06%\n.00$\n.09\nj*\n.03\n|\nOl\n.08\n.09 Vt\n.Oltt\n.18\n.11\nti\n.04\nJot\nOIU\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAletindri*    \u2014\t\nAlgoma -\nAmity -\t\nAihley Oold  \t\nBirr*, Hollinger \t\nBaae Metala -\nBankfleld      - -\n\"\u25a0ear  Exploration\t\nilt Mlatouri\t\njoblo -\t\nBradian  _^~\t\nBraiorne   _,-._.\t\nBrett Tretheway \t\n8R X Oold  - \nrownle* \u2014...\nBuffalo Anchorite  \t\nBuf  C\u00bbn Oold   _..\n\u00bbn   Klrkland   \t\nJan  Malartic  ......\nCariboo Oold      \t\nCastle Tretheway  ....\nCentral Manitoba  \u2014\ncentril Patricia -\nClerlcy        \t\nm Copper   -\nt Contact  -....\nColumarlo    -...\nConarlum \t\nCom M tt S  -\nDome    , -\t\nDom  exploration\t\nBldorado\t\nP*loonbrldg*   \t\nOod's Uke  \u2014\u2014\nGrenada     ~\t\nHardrock    - \t\nHollln*er   \t\nHow*y     \t\nHudion B*y  \u2014\nint  Nickel   \t\nKlrkland Uk* \t\nUke Maron \t\nLittle Lon\u00bb ue \t\nUke Shore ...\nMcUod  cockahutt   \t\nMc&tyr*   .     .......\nMcVlttl* Grahamme ....\nMcwatten   aold   \t\nMacau*         \t\nM\u00bblroblo   ...... -\t\nMaple   Ulf    \u2022\u2022\u2014\nMarbuan -\nMining Corp\t\nMoffatt  Hall .\u2022\u2022\u2022- \u2014\nNlplsslna   \t\nNoranda\t\nParkhlll     _..-..\nPaymaster    -\t\nPend   Orelll*   \t\nPickle  Crow   \t\nPioneer Oold  \t\nPremier   Oold   \t\n\u25a0     ti\n.18\n\u202208\",\n.65\n.44\n.19\n_\n.27\n2.20\nus\n3'.75\n.03\n\u25a00814\n.60\n1.88\n.71\nOl\n.1)2%\n1*8 .\n\u25a02?\"\n.22\n1.85\n1S6.00\n35,08\n.08 %\n1.03\n8.20\n1.68\nlr-*\n21\n18.40\n1.02\n1155\n23.00\n:   til\n4.76\n50.60\n\u20220854\n40.00\n.38\n.38\n3.38\nDl*,.\nJOS\nM\n1.15\n.02H\n2.51\n.    31.25\n.25\n.20\n.41\n1.71\n..    1.40\n1.24\nReno Ool*\t\nSakoose\t\nSan Antonio \t\nSherrltt Oordon .\nSlscoe    .. \t\nSmelters   Oold    ...\nsquth Tlblemont\nBtadacona   \t\nSt Anthony \t\nSudbury  Basin  ..\nSylvanlte    \t\nTeck  Hugh** \t\nTowagamao   ,\t\nTreadwell\t\nVenture*   ..\t\nWalte   Amulet   ...\nWayside   .   \t\nWhite Eagle\n':0,1\n996\n.48\n9.90\nf>\n.31\n1.08\n2.23\n3.94\nJO\n10'\/,\nWright  Hargreaves \"     8.00\noiu\nAcme  \u25a0\u2022\nAlex \t\nA P.Coj\nAssociated\nB A OU\nBaltic\nCalmont_\n 18\n 96\n ,        .08\n      ..-Wtt\n \u2014    14,78\n 03\n              .03\nC and E Corp  - 78\nChemical  Research     1.88\nDalhousle 20\nHome   OU    ~ 65\nHomestead O and O  08\nImperial  Oil    ie_W',4\nInter   Pet*    82.00\nMerlaiid '7'7Z\nNordon   \t\nOil  Selections\nOUa     \t\ntoyalits    \nami*    -.\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bro* A \t\nBell   Telephone    \u2014\nBritlllui  \t\nCan   Bread\t\nCan   Cement ...\nCan  Car  and  Foundry\nCan Indus Alcohol A -\n8an   Dredge    ....\nan Pac Railway\t\nCona Bakeries   \t\nDlstlllsrs  Seagrams  \t\nFord   of   Canada   \t\nOoodyear  Tire    _  ...\nHiram Walker     3t>\/_\nimperial  Tobacco      12\nLoblaw A    1714\nMassey   Harris        814\nStandard paving      1.00\nSteel   ot   Canada    39-H\nMARKET MORE\nOF CARTEL 3\nAll shippers are required to take\nnotice of the following, says a clrcu-\nla No. 34-26 lasued by the British\nColumbia tree frutt board over the\nsignature of O. W. Hembling, member,\nCARTEL RtlEASE\nIn addition to percentages previously released, snippers are now\nauthorized to market the following:\nCartel No. 3, 15 per cent.\nThis brings the total release on\nthis cartel up to 63 per cent.\nFORD DECLARES\n75 C JfflDEND\nIs Best Year Since 1930, Declares Canadian President\nWINDSOR, Ont., Nov. 23 (CP)-\nDividend of 73 centa a share on the\n31,658,960 outstanding sharea of the\ncapital slock Of the Ford Motor\nCompany of Canada, Ltd., was declared at a meeting of directors at\nthe head office of the company in\nEut Windsor today. The dividend,\npayable December 17 to stockholders of record November 30, involves distribution of $1,244,220.\nWith the 50 cent dividend last May\nthe total distribution tor 1934 is\n32,073,700, the largeit since 1930.\nWillace H. Campbell, president,\nsaid 1934 had been the most satisfactory year from the standpoint of\ncontinuity ot employment in the\ncompanys experience since 1930,\nand thc outlook for next year was\nencouraging.    \\\nSILVERS LOWER\nMONTREAL, Nov. 23 (CP)-In\nlight trading, silver futures declined\non the Canadian Commodity exchange today with prices 40 to 55\npoints lower. Transactions totalled\n18 contracts, involving 180,000\nounces.\nDecember closed at 54 compared\nwith yesterday's final sale of 54.45.\nMarch finished with a sale at 44\nagainst the last sale yesterday of\n55.65. May closed at 55.75 comparing with a final bid yesterday ot\n56!20.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR\nAGAIN UP\nNEW YORK, Nov. 23 (CP) .-Sterling moved within a half-cent range\nIn the foreign exchange markets today and closed at f'M'A for a net\nloss of % of a cent.\nThe Canadian dollar extended its\npremium from 2 21-32 to 2 11-16\nper cent. The French franc moved\nup .00 \u2022*'\u00ab of a cent to a closing rate\nof 6.59',4 centi.\nQuotations On Wall Street\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited.\nTRAIL - BRITIIH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nELEPHANT Brand\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium Phosphate*\u2014Sulphite of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates\u2014Complete Fertilizers\nProducera and Refiners of\nTADANAC Brand\nElectrolytic\nLead-Zinc\u2014Cadmium Bismuth\nHowe Soum\nHudion Motors\nlm  Copper  ....\n\"nt Nickel  ..\ni Tel * Tel\nKenn Copper .\nKresge S B   ..\nSoegger k Toll\nhn St Pink .\nMack Truck ...\nMilwaukee Pfd\nMont Wird \t\nNash Motors ...\nNa Dairy prod ..\nN Pow & Ii\nN Y Central .\nPac Oas It Elec\nPack Motors  ...\npenn  n Jt \t\nPhillips   Pet*   ..\nPure   Oil   \t\nRadio Corp\nRadio Kslth or\nReni Rand \u25a0   ..\nSafeway Stores\nShell Onion \t\nS Ctl Edison\nSouth Pacific\nSUn OU of Cal\nttan Oil of Ind\ntin oil of N J\nStewart Warner\nStudebaker\nTex  Corp\nTex   Quit  BUl\nTlmken Rollers\nUnder   Type\nUn Carbide\nUn Oil of Cal\nUnited   Air   \u25a0\nUnited   Bis\nUn   Pacific   \t\nU S Pipe   \t\nU 8 Rubber \t\nU B Steel ...,.\nVan Steel ....\nWest  Electric  ..\nWoolworth   \t\nwrltley   \t\nYellow Truck  ..\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBell   Telephone    -\nB c Packing   \u2014-\nBri4Billan\t\nB   C   Power   A\nCan Car It poundry\nCsn   Cement\n8an Oen Electric\nan  oypsum   :..\t\nCan ind Al  A\nOan ind Al B  .-\nCH..  \t\nfi X * s \u2014\u2014\nBridge \nGlass \nTextile    \nSteel War* \t\nHamilton  Bridie\t\nInt Nickel  _\nlaisey Harrla\t\nMontreal Power  _\nNat   Brewing\t\nNit Bteel car \t\nPower Corporation\nPrice   Bros\t\nOuebf-    power\nshawlnlgan   \t\n>\u00b0\u00bb\n8\n1\n150\n5\n88%\n2S\n33\nT\nIS*\nSteel of Csnsda' ..\nITRISS\nAae'd   Breweries\nBrew & Dlat\nCan  Celanese\t\nCan Vlckers      ..   .\nDistillers   Seagram\nDom Engineer \t\nDominion Tlr \t\nHome   Oil      \t\nImperial   Oil     \t\nImperial Tob Can\nint Petrol\t\nMcColl  frontenac .\nNoranda   \t\nPage  Herety  \t\nBANKS\nCommerce\t\nMontreal   \t\nRoyil   \t\nmisi'|.i.i.\\m;oi s\nDom   stores   \t\nFord Csn A ,\t\nLiura   -Wcard' \t\nLob   Groceries   \t\n39V4\n: i3iJ\n:::: itt\n:::: .\u00ab.\n    30\n' J*\n.... 16>i\n.... 13\n  31%\n. 13M\n31.08\n  89Vi\n168\n... 204\n. .. 18914\n  W\u00ab\n.... 2.1H\n.... 68\n  17tt\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS. Nov. 23 (API-\nWheat, No. 1 northern 108 to 110,\nNo. 1 red durum 112*4, Dec. 105,\nMay 102'\/,.\nCorn, No. 3 yellow 86\"*4 to 878.\nOats, No. 3 white 55-\/< to 56yt.\nFlax, No. 1, 177 to 184.\nFlour unchanged. Shipments 24,-\n044. Bran 25.00 to 26.00.\nCalgary Live Stock\nCALGARY, Nov. 23 (CP)- Receipts: Thursday, 155 cattle, 81\ncalvei, 976 hogs, 264 sheep and\nlambs. Friday to noon, 82 cattle,\nand 622 hogs.\nBulk of today's receipts were on\nthrough billing; yard clearing up\nwell. Hogs steady with yesterdays\nbulk sales, selects $7.25, bacons\n36.75 and butchers 36.25 off trucks.\nCattle, good butcher steers $3.\nCommon steers $1.60. Medium heifers $2. Good butcher cows 3150\nto $1.75. Medium cows 31.25. Good\nveal calves $2.50 to $2.75, medium\n$2.25.\nLondon Close\nWHEATSALES\nAID THE WEST\nPremier Says About\n$25,000,000\nRealized\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 23 (CP)-Wheat\nfutures prlcea fell to the lowest\nlevels of the month on the Winnipeg grain exchange today\u2014as low\nas 1 cent above thc \"pegged\" prices\nin one future. Affected by weakness\nat Liverpool, values closed 's to *U\ncent lower.\nThc December future, closing at\n76tt cents, was l'i centi higher\nthan iti minimum of 75 centi, established by the exchange council November 1. May at 81tt was Itt\nabove its 80-cent \"peg.\" and July,\nat 82 V* cents, closed only one cent\nhigher than its minimum of 8IVi\ncents.\nModerate export sales estimated at\n250,000 bushels failed to offset the\nlVod decline in the English market.\nCash grains were quiet. Coarse\ngrains futures eased in sympathy\nwith wheat.\nLUMBER EXPORTS\nSHOW INCREASES\nVICTORIA. Nov. 23 (CP)-Lum-\nber exports from British Columbia\nin October showed a slight gain\nover the corresponding month lost\nyear and held the increase for the\nyear to around 40 per cent.\nThc shipments for tho month were\n71,305,791 feet, as against 69,063,-\n880 feet in October, 1933, figures\nobtained hy the provincial forestry\nbranch today showed.\nTotal export for the first 10\nmonths Is placed at 687,897,855 feet.\nThia compares with 488.679.681\nfeet in the corresponding period last\nyear. The IncreaJe is 199,217,974\nteet.\nINDUSTRIALS AT\nTORONTO HIGHER\nTORONTO, Nov. 23 (CP)-HeavI-\npst trade in several weeks featured\nbusiness on the industrial board of\nthe Toronto stock exchange today.\nAdvances of two points-were plentiful throughout the list.\nFord A led in action with a gain\nof *!i to 251. under stimulation of\ndividend announcement of $1.24 for\n19S4. Other interllstedi warmed up.\nNickel gained %, Brazilian tt, and\nC.P.R. 14. Distillers Seagrami advanced Vt ot 17 and Induitrial Alcohol advanced tt-\nFoods were steady. Weston laiues\nadded M* each. Bridge Iharei moved\nup and banks were allghtly Irregular with Montreal at a new high\nfor the year.\nMetal Marketa\nNEW YORK. Nov. 23 (API-\nCopper quiet; electrolytic, ipot and\nfuture, blue eagle, 900.\nTin iteady; ipot and nearby 91-25\nto 51 JO; future 51.30 to 61.35.\nIron quiet unchanged.\nLead, iteady; spot New York 3.50;\nEast St. Loula 3.55.\nZinc iteady; Eaat St Loula ipot\nand future 3.87.\nAluminum 19.00 to 23.00.\nAntimony, ipot 13.00.\nBar liver firm, Vi higher at SSVi.\nAt London\u2014Copper, standard spot\n\u00a327; future \u00a327 7s 6d; electrolytic,\nspot \u00a330; future \u00a330 10a.\nTin, ipot \u00a3228 7i 6d; future \u00a3228\n15i.\nLead, ipot and future \u00a3 10 10s.\nZinc, snot \u00a311 15s; future \u00a312.\nBar silver steady, unchanged at\n24 9-16d.\nWALL STREET\nSWINGS HIGHER\nWhole List Better; Best Day\nin Two Weeks\nBY FREDERICK OARDNER\nAuoclated Press Financial Writer\nNEW YORK, Nov. 23 (API-Buying stocks today waa the most aggressive ln two weeks and stirred\nthc market into a moderate advance.\nThe forward movement embraced\nvirtually the whole Hit.\nAmerican Telephone gained a\npoint at 108.\nShare turnover expanded to 1,130,-\n191 shares.\nGains of 1 to 3 ooints were registered in Allied (Jhemlcal, Bendix\nAviation, American Can. Santa Fe,\nChrysler, Bethlehem Steel. Columbian Carbon, Union Pacific, Du\nPont, J. I. Case and Deere. Air reduction. Coca Cola. American Tobacco B, Eastman Kodak and Liggett St Myers sold at new 1934\nraks on advances ranging up to\npointi.\nIn the Canadian list, Bell Tele-\nfihone of Canada spurted four points\no 127, 8t. Regie Paper prelerred\nadvanced 114. Canadian Industrial\nAlcohol A., Distillers-Seagram, Noranda and International Nickel were\nhigher.\nFord of Canada advanced more\nthan a point. CP.R. improved fractionally.\nMore than half the population of\nNew York state is in N\u00abw York City.\n\u2022PAOI ELEVEN\nCORN AGAIN\nAT DOLLAR\nCHICAGO, Nov. 23 (API\u2014Flm'\nnesa characterized grain prices today, with corn repeating yesterday's\nachievement of $1 a buihel.\nCorn cloied Irregular, tt off to H\nup, May 83.\u00ab to 86, wheat at tt decline to V\u00ab advanoe, May 87% to\n97tt and oata tt to tt down.\nTemporarily the wheat market\ninfluenced by uneaalnesa over ru-\nmofs of United States Import! of\nFrench wheat for feed purpose!\nunderwent a sag ot about one cent\nSECURITY\nand\nDIVERSITY\nla on*\nINVESTMENT\nSuch very desirable features are\nfound In but fe\u00ab Investment\nmediums other than the INVESTMENT TRD8T type.\nALL CANADIAN\nCOMMON STOCK\nTRUST SHAKES\noffer to investors partnership Interest ln such leading Corporations   aa:\nGOODYEAR TIRE CO.\nOF CANADA\nIMPERIAL   OIL  CO.\nINTERNATIONAL  NICKEL\nNORANDA MINES\nand   nineteen   others.\nDIVIDENDS   twice   yeirly,   CERTIFICATES In 5, 10. 15, 36 ihirei.\nconsider   IT:   An   tn\u00abitment\nwhich slves a pro rata stock Investment     In     TWENTT-THRM\nIcadlna    Cansdlan    Corporations\nRiving   unusual   opportunity   for\nprice   rise   and   Increasing   dividend  payments.\nPRICE $10.20 par trult ihare.\nProspectus gladly mailed\non request.\nOut-of-town   correspondence\nInvited.\nWaghorn, Gwynn\n& Co. Ltd.\n535 Seymour St., Vincouver, B,C.\nROYALTIES FOR SALE\n'    Approximate Monthly Returns\nNo. I  9130.00     No. 2 f 110.00\nNo. 3       90.00    Vtt. 4      70.00\nOutof-Town  Orden  Invited\nHAROLD C. RALPH & ASSOCIATES\nEitabllihed 1919\n627-28  Rogen  Bldg. Vancouvtr,  B.C.\nAuxiliary Ventilation for Metal Mines\nGOOD AIR\nhas a direct effect on\nProduction Costs . . .\nLONDON, Nov. 23 (API-Closing\nquotations: Brazilian Traction $10%,\nCanadian Pacific $11,A; British American Tobacco \u00a36%; Courtlands 47s\n9d, De Beers .3',i; Distillers 94s\n6d; Dunlop Rubber 49.7*>4d; Hudson Bay 24s 3d; Imperial Tobacco\n138s l'id; Mining Trust Ltd. 2s 3d;\nRand Mines \u00a37; Rhodesian Anglo\nAm. 9s 6d; Rhokana Corp \u00a34;\nCrowns \u00a313; Springs \u00a38%; East\nGeduld \u00a38V\u00ab; Rio Tintos \u00a312t4;\nRoyal Dutch \u00a318W; Viewers 10s\nHid.\nBonds\u2014Canadian 4 per cent loan\n1953-58 \u00a3112%;' British IVi per\ncent consols \u00a398<<2; British Z*h per\ncent war loan flOOty; British funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3118%.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 23 (CP)\u2014Futures\nQuotations:\nOpen    High    Low    Close\nVtllCOV.\nDec.   ...\n77'i\n8214\n76-IV\nIS*'\nMay\nfil a\n81'4\n8l<\u201e,\nJuly    \t\n83\n83\n82 !\u00ab\n83',\nOats:\nDec.   ...\n41\u00ab4\n41H\n41'4\n41%\nMay   .\n__i\n43 \u25a0{\n43',\nMH\n43',,\nJuly   .\nBarley:\nDec.   ..\nMay   ,...,\n\u00ab3\u00bbj\n48\n431.\noa.t\n55 J,\n58*,\n52\n54%\n64%\n63>,,\n58 >i\nJuly\nPlsx:\nDec.\n0*\n65%\n85\nIMU\n185\n134U\n138\nMav\nIM',\n139 >i\n139%\n1.1\u00bbi,\nJuly   ..\n\u2014   .\n\u2014\n\u2014\n140U\nEye:\nDec\t\n56',\n5\u00bbH\n56 \"i\n69',\ntOki\n56 \"4\n56',\nMsy ' ..\n69 ti\n59 >_\nJuly   .. .\nMH\n69%\n60\nWheat:\nNO.   1\nhard\n80 Vi;\nNO.   1\nThree lines of 16\"\nVentube carrying\ngood air to 72 men\nin dead ends of\nstopes, drlfta and\nraises* on 3.000 foot\nlevel\nnor. 78W:  No. 2 nor.\n^lo. 4 nor. \u00ab7!4: No _\n61%;   feed   \u00ab7%;   no.   1\n...   No* 3 I\no. 8__63%:\n78W; Dt. _   _\nnor. 72;Tlo. 4 nor. 87 V,\nNo.   6,   67%;   feed   l._.._- -\ndurum 86%:  No. 1 A- B. W. 70%\ntrack 77%;'screenings 18 per ton.\nLooking up raise ventilated with Ventube\nTHE operator who attempts to economize by failure\nto provide proper and adequate ventilation equipment will pay dearly in dollars lost because of inefficiency, discontent and low output.\nC-l-L Ventube system is a practical, efficient end\neconomical method of getting good air to remote\nworkings and \"blind ends\" that cannot be adequately\nventilated by the main system. The Ventube carries\ngood air through the most tortuous workings. It\nlowers temperatures and quickly displaces fumes and\ndust after blasting.\nC-l-L Ventube system comprises a line of Ventube\nand Its necessary accessories, coupled to a portable\nmotor-driven unit. Owing to the special treatment of\nthe fabric walls, a line of Ventube offers no more\nfrlctional resistance to the passing of air than does\na line of rigid tubing. In actual practice the air loss\nis usually less in Ventube because of the tight joint\nmade possible by the use of patented couplings.\nA special process makes Ventube highly resistant to\nfungus growths, acid\nand alkaline water;,\ndry rot, and all sim-\ni I a r    underground\nconditions.\nAsk how Ventubs\ncan be supplied to\nyour ventilation sys-\nExchange Rates\n(CANADIAN   INDUSTRIES   LIMITED!\nJ EXPLOSIVES DIVISION \\\nNEW YORK, Nov. 23 (CP)-Sterling exchange easy at $4.98% for 60-\nday bills, and at $4.99 Vi for demand.\nCanadian dollars 2 11-16 per cent\npremium.\nFranc 0.59% cents.\nLire 8.53 cents.\nUruguay 80.60 cents.\n \u2014\u2014\n\u2014\nPAGETWKLVI-\nCHINA\net AUCTION PRICES\nSee our Wsrd St. Window I\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nHOCKEY RESULTS\nHint Jobn 2, at Moncton 0.\nCharlottetown 4 tt Halifax 4 (tie),\nSound waves produce heat, testa\nthow.\nDRAPER RECEIVES\nBOWUNG TROPHIES\nInternational Australian Bowler Remembers Nelson\nFriend\nJack Draper Is the recipient of\ntwo little bowling trophies from T.\nC. Ridgewey. member of the Melbourne Bowling club, and a former\nmember of the international Australian bowling team that toured\nEngland, Scotland, Wales and South\nAfrica in 1922. Mr. Draper met Mr.\nRidgeway at Vancouver this summer md they bowled together there\none day.\nMr. Ridgeway. a keen bowler and\nbowling enthusiast, was Interested\nin the Nelson club, and on returning to Melbourne he sent Mr. Draper\nthe imall pin which the members\nDon't Forget to Try\nCollinson's Hidden Treasure Sale\nOYER $370.00 TO BE GIYEN\nAWAY IN PRIZES\nWONDERFUL BARGAINS! BEAUTIFUL PRIZES!\nSEE OUR WINDOW FULL OF PRIZES AND READ\nOUR POSTERS FOR FULL INFORMATION\n$1.00 li All You Need to Spend for\na  Fine Cift!\nCollinson's Jewellery Store\n316 Baker Street\nfwi\nAdmission 50c\nPure Food\nark e t\nFree Delivery\nPhone 50\nSATURDAY'S SPECIALS\nHigh Grade, Government Inspected Meats\nPRIME RIB\nROLLED\nST. 15'\nOVEN ROASTS\nVEAL (  !(K\n910'\nCHOICE\nCREAMERY\nBUTTER j|\u00a3<\n2 Ibs.\n45*\nSHOULDER   ROASTS\nMUTTON: y%t*\nCHOICE BOILING\nBEEF:  Ib\t\nCHOICE POT\nROASTS: Ib\t\nFRESH STEWING\nMUTTON: Ib.  ..\n...'St\noW\nLECS MUTTON: While\nthey last\u2014 1 Of\nLOIN MUTTON\nROASTS: Ib.\nFRESH KILLED\nFOWL: Ib\t\nPORK LIVER:\n4 Ibs\t\n16'\n16'\n25'\nQuality\nCleanliness\nService\nBURNS & Co., Ltd.\nNelton, B.C.\nMcCLARY\nSunshine\nor\nMonarch\nPIPE AND PIPELESS\nFURNACES\nBuilt by Canadian workmen for Canadian homes.\nEspecially adapted for aoft coal burning eg well aa\nhard coal, coke and wood.\nFOR FURTHER PARTICULARS\nSEE OR WRITE\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\not the 1822 team received, alio a\npennant ot the Carlton Bowling\nclub. A very courteous letter accompanied the pin and pennant\nThe pennant ii of blue silk bordered with white and carries the\nletters C.B.C. at the top and Carlton\nin large letters.\nThe pin la a small gold one with\nthe figure of a kangaroo on a\nboomerang.\nSITE AND DIEGEL\nREACH FINALS\n-THI NELSON DAILY NIWi NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MOHNINQ. NOy. K 1M4\nWRESTLING\nTUESDAY, Nov. 27\u00abu\u20148:30 P.M.\nNELSON OPERA HOUSE\nAuspices Nelion Hockey Booiter Club\nTwo Main Heavyweight Bouts by Well\nKnown Coast Professionals\nPat McKee vs. Danny Winters\n200  LBS. 200  LBS.\nJack Kogut vs. Hlnie Olsen\nTWO LOCAL PRELIMINARIES\nReserved      75c\nRlngiide  $1.00\nMELBOUENE. Australia, Nov.\n(AP)\u2014Denny shute, former British\nopen golf champion, and Leo Diegel.\nthe odd-putting Philadelphia, today\nwon their way to the final round\nof the 19000 eentemry profeuional\ngolf championship with victories\nover fellow Americans.\nDiegel put a sudden hilt to the\nsensitlonal progress of Joe Eur,\nthe wild Texan, fl and 5, while Bhute\nput out big Craig wood of Deal,\nN. J., one up.\nThe two play tomorrow in the 36-\nhole final for the winner'! price of\nWS00. The loser wlll get about I100O.\nNO SPORT ON WEEK-END\nExcept for e possible rugby game\nfor the Juveniles there is no sport\non the roster for Nelson over the\nweek-end.\nMtMH_MRMHMIIIWMNIHHSl\nFOR THE FRIEND\nACROSS THE SEA\nCalenders with local\nviews offer an acceptable way of conveying\nyour Christmas Greetings to friends in the\nhome land across the\nsea.\nPriced from 20c to\n35c also local view\nGreeting Cards at\n\u201e      2 for 25c\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nHeadquarters for Christmas\nCards.\numm\nFORMER MP.\nHERE IS DEAD\nWon First Kootenay\nElection 30 Years\nAgo\nVICTORIA, Nov. 23 (CP) .-British Columbia lost one of Its best-\nknown jurists today in the death of\nformer Justice William A. Galliher,\nwho retired from the British Columbia court of appeal in July, 1933. He\nhad been In indifferent health more\nthan two years.\nBom In Bruce county, Ontario, on\nJuly 26, I860, he was called to the\nManitoba bar in '\"87, the Northwest\nTerritories bar in 188D and the British Columbia bar in 1897. He wai\nappointed iustlce of the appeal\ncourt in 1909. ?\nMr. Galliher served with the Nile\ncontingent in Egypt in 1885 under\nLord Wolseley, He was elected\nmember of the Canadian house of\ncommons for Yale, British Columbia,\nin 1909, and for Kootenay, newly\ncarved out of Yale, ln 1904.\nNELSON LAWYER\nThe late W. A. Galliher, known\nin his hectic political days in the\nKootenay as \"Big Bill\" Galliher, wai\na practising lawyer In Nelson *lor\nabout 10 years. ,\nComing here about 1891 from\nMacleod, Alta., where he ha* practised law, Uie future statesman and\nJudge formed a law partnership\nwith P. E. Wilson, and the firm\nhad its offices In the K.W.C. block,\nwhere Dn. Rose & McKenzie now\nPARTICULAR\nMEN\nDEMAND\nIT\u2014\nIn Your\n\u2022 Suite\n\u2022 Topcoats\nI Formal*\nYou'll never -be out of\nstyle in custom clothes\nmade for you at\nR.Nolte\n\u2022-  MASTER TAILOR   \u2022\n__\u00ab___\u25a0___________________\u25a0____\u00bb\nIrving-\nMcDonald\nCOMPANY\nPHONE 161\nFree Delivery\nPrices Effective\nSAT, ond MON.\nMILK: Tall tins, Qf\nall brands; tin   <J\nCOFFEE: Chase fr     \u00abWW>\nSanborn's; tin    OeJ\nBUTTER: Forestville   i(M\nCreamery; 2 Ibs. ... 49\nCOCOANUT: 10?\nDesiccated; Ib    10\nSHELLED\"WALNUTS: New\npieces; OQf.\nFIC BARS: Fresh  ihip-\nment; Q[V\n2 lbs OO\nONCER SNAPS:        oF<\nCrisp; 2 lbs CO\nECCS: Crade  B.  Medium,\nGuaranteed for Oltt*\nCooking; doi OU\nSPINACH?- 1(W.\n3 Ibs  IV\nGRAPEFRUIT:   Sunkist\nSeedless; OJV\n4 for LO\nAPPLES: Fancy tiFt}\nDelicious; 5 Ibs. LO\nKrank's\nLATHER SHAVING CREAM\nSaves You Money I\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPHONE 1\nREX JARVIS\nElectrical Contractor and\nEngineer\nRepairs and Supplies\nFor Service Phone 844\n102 Joiephlne Street\nSEE OUR WINDOWS\nFor a Really Choloa\nSelection of\nGIFT\nSUGGESTIONS\nA small deposit will hold\nany item until Christmas\nWeek!\nFleury's\nPharmacy\nPHONE 25\nMEDICAL ARTS. BLDG.\nClean Cotton\n, RAGS\nWANTED\nMust be FREE FROM\nBUTTONS\n5c e Lb.\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nCOLUMBIA\nCREAM\nSTOUT\nPhone 175 *~-*d\norder a carton\ntobesentC.O.D.\nThe charge is\n$1.75 PER DOZEN\nwe pay you 25c for dozen empties and carton,\nmaking   your   net   cost\n12Vic per bottle.\nKootenay\nBreweries\nLimited\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by thc Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nMORE ABOUT\nH.H.STEVENS\n(Continued From Page One)\nletter was received to; the Nelion\nDaily Newi from Or. .. H. Blair\not Michel.\n\"During the put four yeiri ai\nminister of trade and commerce I\nhaw sought with all the power that\nI hive been possessed of to give\nto Canada tbe best service that wu\nln .me. X think I can look back\nover that period and Justly claim\nthat In all matters pertaining to\n\u2022the administration of the office I\nhave done a reasonably good Job.\nWOBKEI) FOB EAST\nKOOTENAY\n\"In regard to the service to my\nconstituency I have done everything\npossible to advance thetr interest!\nand, while times have been difficult and there Is much more I\nshould have liked to have accomplished, yet. In view of tbe circumstances, I feel that f can claim to\nhave glvep thit service to my fellow cltlaens In Eut Kootenay tbat\n.might have been expected of me.\n\"In the midst of these efforts,\nhowever, t became convinced that\nthere were certain matters of great\n\"fir. Wilson, familiarly \"Pete'' iJemportance that demanded public\nthose rough and ready days, eon-\"*'\ntinned to practise law in Nelson for\nsame years, until h. was appointed\ncounty court Judge for East Kootenay. Some time after the war he retired trom the bench to re* _me the\npractice of law. end now Is practising at Fort George.\nhive theirs. His family consisted\nof wife, and young son and daughter.\nAt that time the Kootenay wu a\npart of the Dominion constituency\not Yale-Cariboo, and Mr. Galliher\nwas nominated by the Liberals for\nthe 1900 election, and carried the\nleat by 529 votei. The province's\ndelegation at Ottawa for thet parliament embraced three Liberals\nand two Conservatives.\nFollowing the 1901 census, the re\ndistribution of 1903 gave British\nColumbia seven seats, and one of\nthe new seats waa the Kootenay.\nThe general election was on November 3, 1904. but the Kootenay\nand Yale-Cariboo contests were deferred to November 20. Thus it was\n30 yean ago yesterday that Mr.\nGalliher celebrated hii election by\n707 votes over C. H. Mackintosh,\nConservative, ex-lieutenant-governor of the Northwest Territories,\nand by about 1400 over the Socialist, Baker. British Columbia that\ntime sent seven Liberals to Ottawa,\nknown as the \"solid aeven.\" i\nDRAFTED TO BENCH\nThe Laurier government a few\nyears later drafted the Kootenay\nmember to the supreme court of\nBritish Columbia, and when the\nprovince aet up a court of appeal a\nfew years after the war, the King\ngovernment named him to the\nhigher court.\nKIW ANNAS WIN\nIN HOOP GAME\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.. Nov. 23\nThree basketball games were played\nat McDougall hall Wednesday when\nthe Kiwannas defeated Motor Inns\n33-32; Hawks defeated High School\nboys 27-20, and Chapman Camp\nbeat McDougall Memorials. 53-46.\nWord haa been received from C.\nM. Sharpe of Nelson that he will\ndonate a cup to the \"best sport\" In\nthe McDougall Badminton club this\nseason.\nCHAPMAN  CAMP\nBOWLING LEAGUE\nAmerican five-league standing:\nTeams: W L Pta.\nConstruction _ 12    3   17\nEntwisle No. 1  -....   9  12   13\nO'Connor's    _    9    8   12\nBoiler House  ...   9    7   10\nAccounting   \u201e_.    7    8    9\nEntwisle No. 2     8   13    9\nTesting Department ...:..  5    7    7\nAssay Office     5    7    7\nMrs. A. E. Ingstrup of Chapman\nCamp it visiting her mother ln\nCranijrook.\nEric Stone has been 111 and away\nfrom work several days.\nNEWSOFTHEDAY\nST.    PAUL'S    ANNUAL\nTUESDAY, DECEMBER 4.\nBAZAAR\n(5034)\nBritish     Newspapers.     Mag-tines,\nPeriodicals, wllllsms News Btand.\n(4733)\nNov. 37 and Sg\u2014Dlckin'i Cricket\non the Heirth' M St. Paul'i pliyeri.\n(5033)\nBt. Bivlours Motberl Club Cbrlst-\nmu Bale of Work. Tues. Nov. JTth.\n(S0S7)\nTrinity  Service  Club  Olft  Shop.\nSaturdiy, December l. (5041)\nMaclean's and Chatelaine at the\nNELSON NEWS DEPOT. (4J5J)\nWhen you want a Tail ride ln a\nBulck phone 35, Nelson Transfer\nCo., Ltd. (4733)\nWinted.   300   grou,   empty   pint\nbottles. McDonald Jam Co., Ltd.\n(495S)\nDecember a\u2014\"Whit About Russia\"\nHeir Dr. Brewing\u2014Just returned.\n(5032)\nTORT OARRY\" fine and coarse\ntobacco it VALENTINES. \"Try this.\"\n(47S0)\nNOTICE\u2014I will pot be responsible\nfor any debts Incurred by any person other than myself, Steve zwolski.\nHIM)\nST, ANDREWS MTE, NOV. 30th.\nDANf-E. EAGLE HALL. CLAN MCLEARY.  KEEP  DATE   OPEN.   (4959)\nFor warmth md comfort ride In\nBB. Taxi. Heated sedans. Fbone 93.\n14738)\nCHRISTMAS BOXES OF CHOCOLATES ARRIVING EVERY DM. LET\nUS MAIL ONE FOR YOU\u2014KANDY-\nLAND. (5015)\nBe sure to hear Rev. Robt. Connell, M. L. A\u201e leider of ths oppoaltlon; Kulo. today; Robion, Sun.\naft., Bouth Slocan, Sun. night, 35th;\nOray Creek. Mon., a\u00abth*. Ymlr, Tue,,\n37th; Nelson, Wed. 38th; Fruitvale,\nThurs. aft., Trail, Thurs. night, 39th.\n(5040)\nOxford oroup meetings today at\nHume Hotel 3.30 p.m. Segregated\nmeeting for men and women. 4.00\npm. Explanation of principles of\nOroup. 800 p.m. Public meeting.\n(5027)\nSunday   Oxford   Oroup   meeting!.\nThem will be speakers In some of\nthe churches. -See notices). 8-OC\ni.m. Corporite Communion ln the\nFirst Baptist church, s p.m. Public meeting led by young people in\nthe Hume hotel. 9 p.m. (After\nchurch) Public meeting, Hume Hotel.\n(5037)\nHarrop-Longbeaeh   Ferry\nOn Sundiy, Nov. 25th thli Ferry\nwiU not operate until 2 p.m. after\nwhich time the regular service will\nbe resumed. Prov. public Worki.\n(8031)\nCHBST CLINIC\nDr. A. S. Lamb, Travelling Provincial Medical Health officer and\nCheat Specialist, will hold i Cheat\nClinic ln the Kootenay Lake General Hospltsl. Mondiy, to Thursday,\nNovember 28th-29th. Examinations\nat thla clinic are free. Those wishing a consultation are ssked to mike\n\u2022rrangementi through their family\ndoctor. (5038)\nattention. One wu the low price\nbeing ptld to the farmen for their\nordinary farm products. The other\nwu the plight of many of tbe industrial workers of this country. I\ngave the mttter careful itudy and\nI became convinced that it wu\nwithin the power ot the government\nto do tomethlng to alleviate theae\nconditions.\n\"I took these mitten up with\ntbe prime minister ln a very definite way In September, 1933. In Justice to him I must sty he expressed concern regarding the condltlona\nI disclosed but nothing of a practical character wu attempted by the\ngovernment at thtt time.\nDEMANDED REDRESS\n\"I then spoke In Winnipeg on\nthe livestock question tnd firm\nproblem and later ln Toronto on\nthe Industrial situation and the\nsweatshop conditions arising out of\ncertain practices of the Itrge distributors. Tbeae two subjects aroui-\ned some bitterness on tbe part of\nthoae, who, While not named ln\ntheie tddreuei, were clearly Indlcited u being responsible for much\nthtt wu wrong.\n\"Certain of these Interests approached the prime minister tnd\ndemanded some redress and Insisted that I should be submerged.\nThtt wu ln January lut..\n\"I -refused, however, to refrain\nfrom publio discussion of these\nproblem!, feeling thtt lt wu my\nduty to do ao ti minister of trade\ntnd commerce. In other words, 1\nconceived It to be my pecular responsibility to study the welfire of\nthe commerce of this country and\ndo the belt I could to direct lt\nalong proper channels. Therefore, I\nrepeat, I refuted to be silenced.\n\"Tbe mttter became somewhat\ntcute at that time tnd u the public correspondence hu disclosed I\ntendered my reitgnttlon to the\nprime minister, who, however, declined to tempt It.\nWITHHELD RESIGNATION\n\"I then suggested the tppolnt-\nment of a roytl commission to Investigate theae matters. This the\nprime mlnlater did pot wish to do,\nbut offered to apppolnt a committee of the houie of commons and\ngive me the chairmanship. He Invited me to draft the order of reference which would direct thtt body.\nThlt I felt lt my duty to tccept and\ndid to, tnd consequently withheld\nmy resignation. Thtt wu ln Jtnutry.\n\"During the long months of the\nlut sessions up to July I worked\nday and night In my efforts to\nbring out the facts ln connection\nwith the abuses In our agricultural\nand industrial life. I did not spare\nmyaelf in .the slightest but throughout thit whole period I wu subjected to Irritating criticisms by t\nlimited minority of my colleagues.\nDID NOT GIVE IT TO PRESS\n\"At the conclusion of the tesalon\nI mtde t ipeech to certain memben of parliament which wu later\nPHONE 81$\nfor better and prompter aervloe In plumbing repain and\nalteration!.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nHORNER'S\nGROCERY\nCASH SPECIALS\nSaturday and Monday\nQuaker Oata: China- OQ<\nware; pkg  LD\nI.B.C. Sandwich orc*\nBiecuits: Ib  CO\nKellogg's Whole Wheat\nW..:. io*\nMalkin's Pure Strawberry\nl\u00bbm: CO*\n4-lb. tin DC\nEmpress Pure jam: 2-lb.\nAll kinds; *iitp\nChocolate Eclair Biscuits:\nBest quality; 0[V\nFry's Premium 00(\u00a3\nChocolate: '\/2s  LL\nFry's Cocoa: \u25a0)*(\u25a0\nVis   Cl\nMalkin's Coffee:\nTin   \t\nPHONE 121\nWe  Deliver!\n39*\nBONDS RALLY\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2S (AP)\u2014 A\nrevival of secondary loans gave the\nbond market an upward push today,\ncoincident with a rally in stocks.\nRails and industrials gained 1 to 2\npoints. .\nIn the foreign section bonds of\nDenmark edged up to new highs\nfor the year.\nmimeographed for the uie of the\nmemberi. Tbrough no action of\nmine, however, iome coplea got Into\nthe hinds of tbe preu tnd It wu\npubllihed, I am not apologizing tor\nmythlng thtt wu In thtt ptmph-\nlet nor am I seeking to mtke tny-\none else responsible for giving it\nto the preu. But the simple fact\nIs, I did not do It.\n\"Hen again certain powerful Interests which were affected stepped\nln tnd wtnted my \"bead on a\ncharger,\"\u2014ln other wordi, a public\napology for itatements, which, u I\nhave already Intimated, I htd definitely declined to apologue for.\nRather than succumb to theie demands which I considered unfair\ntnd in t sense dlsgrtceful, I decided to surrender my portfolio tnd\nresign from my ministerial office.\n\"it wu not tn euy thing for\nme to do. It wu not t pletaant\nthink to bnak with the many colleagues whom I detrly loved beciuse\ncertain othen of them were unftlr\ntnd unjust, but I eould iee no\nother course thin to do lt.\nCAN SERVE  BETTER\n\"I do not think my constituents\nwlll suffer becauie of my action.\nZ think I ctn serve Eut Kootenty\ntnd the rest of Ctntdt perhaps\nmore effectively under the clrcum-\nstance! u t free worker tnd a\nprlvite member thtn u a minister\nof the crown under the circumstances  above Indicated.\n\"I with to tike this opportunity\nhowever to Indicate to my fellow\ncltlzena of Eut Kootenay, thtt I\nIntend to devote my services to the\ngrett tuk to which I htve pltced\nmy hand tnd to tbl Intereit tnd\nwelfire of my conitltuenti. I hive\nfelt it my duty to mtke known to\nthem my potltlon.\n(Sgd.). H. H. STEVENS.\"\nThe vivid red Polniettiu which\nidd to the colorful plant life of\nFlorida tnd Ctlifornlt were brought\nto the united States from Mexico,\nFORSYTH\nSHIRTS\nSee the new shirts ...\nthe great variety of patterns. The highest quality and most attractive\nline it has been our\npleasure' to show for\nsome time.\n$1.75 ,. $3.50\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nTwenty-one of the 48 Unl tei\nStatei have ocean frontage.\nELECTRIC SOLDERING\nMetal Spectacle)\nFrames electrically soldered\n|. A. C. LAUGHTON, R.O.\nOptometriit\nSuite 206 Medical Art! Bldg.\nHoliday Special\nfrom Nov. 26th to Dec. 12th Inc.\nLa Figaro Permanent\n$5.00 Complete\nRegular $7.50\nMAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT\nNOW and avoid the Christmas\nrush!\nRose Beauty Parlors\nTELEPHONE 317\nP.S.:\u2014We use specially Imported materials, guaranteed not\nto discolor white hair.\nTODAY\nWWi\nzasu Pins\nKELfON\u2014EDWARD EVERETT HORTON\nNat Pendleton, Ned Sparks\n3 COMPLETE SHOWS\u20142, 7, 9:20\nXmXmm*^<m*S1mmK&m*mSimmVm^^\n-\n-\t\nI\n ____.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1934_11_24","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0405373","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}