{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0413353":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2022-04-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1937-11-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0413353\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Green Vegetables Advance in\nPrice on Local Market\n\u2014Page Eleven\n**mmmmmm,\nsi\n44 *\"V\nVOLUME St\nFIVE CENT8 PER COPY\nArbroath Holds Ran&ers to Tie,\n, Motherwell Still Leads\n\u2014Page Eight\nJELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-MONDAY MORNINQ. NOVEMBER 15, 1937.\nNUMBER 204\nID. GAS CASE\n|l VANCOUVER;\nARMER SLAYS\nTHREE CHILDREN\nTwo-Year-Old Is Dead\nAfter Eating Rat\nPoison\nSEVEN LOST AS\nFREIGHTER SINKS\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14 (CP).-\nTwo young children vtefe In hospital tonight recovering from effects of Illuminating gai which\nI took the life of their 24-year-old\nmother Saturday In Vancouver's\naecond   fatal   asphyxiation   case\n|   Within 41 hours.\n,      Hospital attendants said that the\n1 children, Warren Ferguson, four,\nand his sister, Donna, seven, would\nrecover although still In a serious condition,\nStewart Ferguson, husband of\nthe dead woman, told police he\nleft the family's east end apartment Saturday night but return-\nad when he failed to get an answer\nto a telephone call.\nI He found his wife Florence, lying\nJn a bed beside Donna in their gas-\n(Ued suite. The boy was in a crib.\nlie children still breathed. All gas\nets in the apartment had been open-\nd and paper stuffed in the door\nambs.\n'ARMER KILLS THREE\n(IDDIES THEN HIM8ELF\n.STURGIS,flask, Nov. 14 <CP)-\nKObert Fatersok-tt-year-old farmer,\niterday shotfafld killed his two-)\nJghters and lone wm and 'then.\nMd-the gun'on himself in their\nle farm noihj five miles south-\n\u00bbst of here. Paterson died from\nwounds this morning,\nhe dead children are Gwendolyn,\nGeraldine,  seven,  and  Angus,\n,!. Bodies of the children and the\nWinded husband were found by\nIts. Paterson on her return from\n\" rby Preeceville where she had\nvisiting.\n\"You Just came home In time,\"\nPaterson said to  his wife when\nihe found him and the children\n\/Ing In pools of blood on the base-\nlent floor. \"I was the one who did\nIt\u2014they are better off like that.\"\nHrs. Paterson could give no motive\nr the slaying. She said her husband\n.s in good health and good spirits\nben she left their home at noon\nfturday,\nI-YEAR-OLD DIES\n|F RAT POI80N\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 14 (CP) -\nTwo-year-old Joyce Skoblynluk Is\ndead and her five-year-old brother\nArthur Is In serious condition In\nhospital after eating rat poison\nthey found Friday In a garbage\ncan near their home. Joyce died\nyesterday but Arthur did not become noticeably III until today\nWhen he was rushed to hospital.\n'OMAN SHOT TO DEATH\nCHICAGO, Nov. 14 (AP)-Mrs.\nernice Standarowski, 25, was kill-\n1 early today and her escort, Ed-\n\u00bbrd Zulkey, 28, wounded by shot-\nin blasts as they returned from a\ntvern party. John Kobos, 24, was\n^ized for investigation. Police said\n'Obos was a former admirer of the\nUNWIN MAY BE\nOUT ON BAIL\nTODAY\nEDMONTON, Nov. 14 (CD-\nRelease from custody of Joseph H. Unwin, Social Credit\nmentber of the Alberta legislature for Edson, was expected to\nbe arranged tomorrow pending\nhearing of an appeal against his\nconviction and sentence on a\ncharge of publishing a defamatory libel knowing it to be false-\nFailure to complete bail arrangements Saturday delayed\nMr, Unwin's release,\nMISTAKEN FORA\nDEER, KIMBERLEY\nHUNTER IS SHOT\nTony Blezina Taken to\nHospital; Bullet\nin His Hip\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Nov, 14-\nThe first hunting accident in the\nCranbrook district for a great many\nyears occurred this morning when\nTony Blezina of Kimberley, who\nwas hunting near Bull river, with\nW. Cairns of Kimberley, was shot\nthrough the right hip. The shot\nwas,said to be fired from the rifle\nof William MacDonald of Cranbrook.\nMacDonald, who was hunting with\nP. Douglas and N. Wasson of C\/an-\nbrook, was reported to have seen\na brown object move md to have\ntaken it t% be-deer. After ftmder-\nlnjf'first Sid, they brought the injured man to the Cranbrook hospital on an improvised stretcher. He\nwas attended by Dr. Green and later\nmoved to the Kimberley hospital.\nThe wound was not considered\nserious.\nOUR DEAD A8\nUTO IN RIVER\n.WIND80R, Ont., Nov. 14 (CP)-\nTwo men, two women companions,\n.vere killed Saturday night when\nhe car In which they were riding\nllunged off the end of a 300-foot\n\u25a0_\u00abk Into the Detroit river at the\nrest end of the city.\nPolice sought tonight to learn\n'iow the two couples came to drive\nf the end of the 20-foot wide\nuk which reached out into the\nriver from a little used riverfront\nitreet. It was not definitely known\nI what time the sedan toppled Into\nthe water because Investigations\nhave not yet revealed movements\nof the victims for several hours\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nCOURT REFERENCE\nTO START JAN. 10\nOTTAWA, Nov. 14 (CP)-Validity\ntest of the \"disollawance\" and 'reservation\" clause of the British North\nAmerica act has been set for January\n10 and this week a date will be fixed\nfor hearing references to the supreme court of Canada on the three\nAlberta bills reserved for the pleasure of the governor-general.\nLegal agents for interested parties\nwill appear before Chief Justice\nDuff Friday next to fix a date for\nthe hearing of references on competence of the Alberta legislature to\nenact the three bills in question.\nDIES AT REUNION\nDINNER AT COAST\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14 (CP) -\nNorman J. De Graves, 45, collector\nof customs for the port of Vancouver, collapsed and died last l.ight\nas he finished a speech at the reunion dinner of the 68th battalion\nof the Caradian Field Artillery\nwith which he served overseas.\nAn inhalator crev. of the Vancouver fire department, called to\nthe downtown club where the dinner was held, failed to revive him.\nSLOCAN IS TO VOTE\nON BEER BY GLASS\nVICTOHIA, Nov. 14 (CP)-A\nvote on beer by the glass In Slocan district of Kaslo-Slocan riding has been authorlted by the\nBritish Columbli. government for\nNov. 24. Robert Bell of Ainsworth\nwas appointed returning officer.\nREVELSTOKE A88IZE8 NOV. 29\nVICTORIA, Nov. 14 (CP)-The\nopening date of the Revelstoke fall\nassizes has been postponed from\nNov. 15 to 29 by provincial i vern-\nment order. Vernon assizes will\nopen a seven-day session Nov. 15.\n|Three Men, Suspected of District\nSale-Crackings, Guilty al Kelowna\nLOWNA, B. C, Nov. 14 (CP)-\ntree men appeared in police court\n|_terday   and   pleaded   guilty   to\n! $831 burglary of Kelowna Grow-\nExchange   grocery  store  last\ndnesday night.\n\"aistrate J., F. Burne remanded\nj three, Daniel Brent, Raymond\nLeod and Archie Wills, one week\n! jentence.\nTie men were arrested Thursday\nISpuzzum, about 120 miles east of\n'e apparently en route to Van-\niver. They were held overnight\nnearby Hope, then brought here\ntrial\nMost of the checks and currency\nstolen was recovered.\nProvincial police headquarters at\nNelson stated Sunday that if any\nevidence is found to definitely connect these men with the five safecrackings in this district\u2014one at\nSalmo, three at Nelson, and one at\nTrail\u2014application will be made to\nbring them here for trial, once they\nhave been sentenced at Kelowna.\nThe police have definitely established that their car was in this locality at the time the safe-crackings were committed.\n,1\nBRUSSELS MEET\nTO NAME JAPAN\nTREATY-BREAKER\nTHIS AFTERNOON\nDeclaration   Asserts\nShe Has Broken\nTwo Pacts\nCANADA'S VOICE\nANSWERS ITALY\nBRUS8EL8, Nov. 14 (CP)-To-\nmorrow afternoon the nine-power\npaot conference will formally\nadopt a declaration arraigning Japan at a treaty breaker In the\nfar last. All day Saturday until\nwell Into tho evening the conference mulled over a draft of the\ndeclaration.\nThey approved It clause ty\nclause, leaving only the formal\nadoption until Monday. Already\nthe conference has sanctioned It\nboth In principle and In detail.\nCount Lulgl Aldrovandl-Mares-\ncottl, the Italian representative,\nwas the only opponent.\nItaly, Count Aldrovandl-Mares-\ncottl declared, could accept the\ndeclaration neither as a whole nor\nIn detail.\nSpeaker after speaker supported\nthe declaration, Great Britain, the\nUnited States and France particularly standing by the sanctity of the\npledged word in international affairs.\nDANDURAND SPEAKS\nA remark by Count Aldrovnndl-\nMarMMttl.J>r4Ufl[ft Intervention\nInto  the   discussion   by   Senator\n.Raoul Dandurand- leader of the '\u25a0;\nCanadian delegation.\nTh-' Italian referred to a sentence\nin the Japanese reply that declined\nan invitation to attend the conference, in which Japan said she would\nhe glad if the powers \"could make\ntheir contribution to stability in\neastern Asia in conformity with the\nreal situation.\"\nCount Aldrovandi-Marescottl suggested that in accordance with this\nsentence a new approach might be\nmade I > Japan.\nSenator Dandurand with Norman\nDavis, United States ambassador-\nat-large, and Anthony Eden, British\nforeign secretary, opposed the Italian submission.\nMEANS REVERSING ROLES\n\"it means reversing the roles,\"\nSenator Dandurand said. \"We\nhave been asking Japan to contribute by joining In conversations\nwith the conference, or with a\nsmall group of delegates. Japan\nhas consistently refused. It Is Japan which Invaded Cliina with\n300,000 troops. We are trying to\nget Japan to accept an armistice.\nNow Japan asks us what we suggest.\n\"We can suggest that Japan accept the Invitation to negotiate. We\nshall be glad of any contribution\nJapan can make to the conference.\"\n\"Did the Italian delegate really\nbelieve.\" asked W. J. Jordan, New\nZealand, \"that Japan is really desirous of opening conversations with\nthe conference?\"\nThe draft declared it was clear\nthat Japan's concept of the issues\nand interests involved in the conflict \"is utterly different from the\nconcept of most of the other nations and governments of he world.\"\nVIOLATION OF PACT8\nThe declaration asserted the war\nwas a violation of the nine-power\npact and the Kellogg-Briand pact of\noutlawing war as an instrument of\nnational policy. Japan is a signatory\nof both.\nThe declaration referred to \"the\nenormous number\" of Japane.e\ntroops In i-hlna, to the declared\nobjective of Japan \"to destroy the\nwill nnd ability of China to resist\" and 1jo the refusal of Japan\nto discuss'the dispute In accordance with'the nine-power treaty.\nIt concluded there is no ground\nfor belief Japan and China by themselves would arrive al any solution promising peace and security\nfor other countries and political\nand economic stability in the far\neast.\nBandits  Take   Coin\nand Cabs From\nTaxi Men\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14 (CP)\n\u2014Police tonight sought armed\nbandits, who held up two taxi\ndrivers, in separate robberies,\nand took a total of $25 cosh and\nboth cabs here early today.\nThi.taxis were later recovered. \\ *\u25a0\nLIQUOR 8ALE RESTRICTED\nIN MOSCOW\nMOSCOW; Nov. 14 (CP) \u2014 City\ntrading department, Which operates\nstores in Moscow, today 'restricted\nthe sale of liquor in the capital in\na move to \"protect the health and\nmolality of the Sov|\u00a3 pwple.\"\nHeavy Rainfall at Nelson\nas Record Snow Falls at\nCoast; Whole West Is Hit\nEight  Inches erf Snow at Victoria,  Is an\nAII-Time.Record; Three Inches Fall\nat Vancouver; Foot at Kamloops\nWIRES DOWN, TRAFFIC TIED UPAS\nKOOTENAY IS HIT BY SNOWSTORM\nTelephone and telegraph wires\ndown, buses and cars Blocked and\ntied up for hours and roads and\nsidewalks hazardous for travel\nwere all results of the first snowstorm of the season which hit the\nKootenay district Saturday night.\nGreyhound bus running from\nKaslo arrived in Nelson one hour\nlate Sunday morning, due to heavy\nsnow blockades In the Coffee creek\narea and Woodbury creek hill.\nOne motorist arriving In Nelson\nSaturday night reported about 30\ncars lined up In a row on the Ymir\nroad. Six inches of fresh snow\nwere found between Apex and\nHall.\nWith the exception of the Kaslo\nbus, all Greyhound buses were reported running on schedule and\ncoaches between Nakusp and' Vernon. Heavy snow blocking the Mon-\nashee pass stopped. all traffic between the two latter cities. Buses\nwere continuing, however, via the\nCascades..>,   ;\nWIRES DOWN '        ,\nCanadian, Pacific tettamh wife*\nwere dowivlo the west tor i time\non Saturday but were soon repaired.\nAll telephone communication\nbetween Nelson and New Denver\nand Nelson and Kaslo was cut\noff as officials of the B.C. Telephone Co. reported wires down\nbetween Slocan City and New\nDenver and Ainsworth and Kaslo.\nOfficials expressed belief that the\ntrouble would be remedied by\nnoon today.\nIn Nelson, snow began to fall about\n4 p.m. amounting to slightly over\nhalf an inch and soon turning to\nslush, then rain, the snow on the\nstreets disappearing.\nAutoists caught unawares without\nchains slid and slithered all over the\nstreets. Shoe dealers reported a\nhuge trade in rubbers and overshoes\nSaturday night.\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 14 <CP)-Can-\nada fell generously into the grip of\nwinter today as snowstorms swept\nManitoba and British Columbia and\ntemperatures well below freezing\nwere reported in all four provinces.\nEight inches of snow, a record\nfor mid-November, blanketed Victoria and the snow was general\nover Vancouver Island and the\nsoutheastern British Columbia\nmainland. Twelve Inches fell In Interior Kamloops, but Nelson In the\nKootenays felt one of the season's\nheaviest rains.\nHighways of west-central Manitoba were buried by 12 inches of\nsnow and motorists and busses were\nweather-bound in som. parts. The\nstorm extended from Portage Ia\nPrairie 60 miles west of Winnipeg to\nNeepawa, another 80 miles west\nSouris in the southwest also reported\na heavy fall.\nEdmonton reported 1.6 inches ln\nthe past 24 hours, the total fall In\nfive days a.2_T inches. Skies threatened more snow in Calgary where\nthe mercury fell to near zero tonight but only a few flakes added to\nthe six-inch blanket of last week.\nNo snow was reported at Regina or\nSaskatoon.\nFREAKISH WEATHER'S\nGRIP RETAINED\nVANCOUVER, Nov, 14 (CP)-\nFrcakish winter weather continued\nto hold southern British Columbia\nIn Its grip tonight,\nWhile snow fell generally over\nthe moderate lower mainland and\nVancouver Island, Nelson In the\nusually colder West Kootenay, felt\none of tha heaviest rains of the\nseason. >    - -   ...\t\nBig white flakes drifted down In\nV_ncoAiv\u00abfvmehi!ttBlnMe dnwntowft\nsectlshj but piling u'pT-ri the higher\nlevels where a three-inch fall yesterday was the heaviest for November in 18 years.\nDairies reported milk trucks delayed in the Fraser Valley district\nwhere drifts piled up a foot or more.\nKamloops dug out from a 12-inch\nfall which spread from the south\neastern city to the Alberta boundary\nand showed no signs of lessening\ntonight.\n23 DEGREES\nIn Vancouver the thermometer\ndropped to 29 degrees above zero\nover night, coldest of the season.\nA heavy rain which began to fall\nFriday night gradually turned to\nsnow as the temperature fell to 33.8\ndegrees, less than two degrees above\nfreezing. Total precipitation hi Vancouver for the 12 hours ending at\n9 a.m. Saturday was 1.08 inch.s.\nHeaviest snow apparently fell\nIn Burnaby municipality adj-in-\n'Ing Vancouver, where snow was\nmore than three Inches deep.\nThe storm took its toll of telephone\nand telegraph communication systems, and many points were temporarily  isolated while  repairs were\neffected.\nEIGHT INCHE8\nAT VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, Nov 14 (CD-Streets\nof this Vancouver Island capital city\nof British Columbia were covered\nwith eight inches of snow tonight,\nan all-time record for the time'of\nyear.\nPrevious high mark was Nov. 12,\n1911 when six inches was registered.\nStarting yesterday the snow continued until after midnight.\nELK VALLEY MAN\nIS FOUND WITH\nBULLET IN HEAD\nFERNIE, B.C., Nov. 14\u2014William\nBoivan, 55, a rancher in the Elk\nvalley, was found in about four feet\nof water in the Elk river. There was\na bullet hole behind the right ear.\nMr. Boiven was well known, ss he\nhad often servied ns a guide for\nhunting and fishing parties from\ndifferent parts of Canada and the\nUnited States. For many years he\nhad been engaged as a fire patrolman. It is thought that he committed\nsuicide.\nJOSEPH GEORGE IS\nGUILTY, INDECENT\nASSAULT CHARGE\nKAMLOOPS, B.C., fjov. 14 (CP)\n\u2014An assize court Jury late Saturday convicted Joseph George, Indian, on a charge of indecently assaulting his 65-year-old mother-in-\nlaw. He was acquitted on a charge\nof attempted rape,\nMr. Justice A. I. Fisher reserved\nsentence to the end of the assizes.\nMrs. Matilda Jules charged the\nassault occurred at her Canford reserve home near Merritt, B.C., last\nSeptember 25.\nWILLEY IN TRUCK HIT BY TRAIN;\nARM BROKEN, BONNINGTON (RASH\nDriving a West Kootenay Power 4.\nLight company truck across the railway track at Bonnington Saturday\nduring a blinding snowstorm, A.\nWilley, superintendent ot the company's No. 2 power plant, situated\nat Upper Bonnington falls, was\nthrown violently into the rear of\nthe truck when it was hit by the\nnoon passenger train from Trail and\nsuffered a broken arm, head lacerations and shock. The right rear\nwheel was torn from the wrecked\ntruck, which Mr. Willey had been\ndriving from South Slocan.\nL. L. Boomer, engineer of the\ntrain, brought the train to a stop at\nonce, and A. Kirby, conductor, tak\ning assistance, extricated Mr. Willey,\nand took him to the train, by which\nhe was brought to Nelson. The in-,\njured man was then rushed to Kootenay Lake General hospital by\nambulance, Dr. H. H. MacKenzie\ntreating him.\nMr, Willey was sufficiently recovered from his shock Sunday\nmorning for the broken left arm\nto be set. The break la an extremely\nawkward one, close to the shoulder.\nWhen he was thrown, Mr. Willey\nmust have been rendered unconscious as he landed in the back of\nthe truck. He was unaware of the\ntrain until the truck was hit, when\nhis mind flashed to' the thought\nthat it was a train that had struck.\nSEVEN DEAD IN\nRIOTS BETWEEN\nARABS AND JEWS\nIN THE HOLY LAND\nSituation Is Tense in\nJerusalem; Curfew\nOrder Renewed\nARAB UPRISING\nON THURSDAY?\nJERUSALEM, Nov. 14 (AP) -\nSeven persons were killed and 14\nInjured today In renewed rioting\nbetween Arabs and Jews In Palestine.\nReports from Safed, near the Sea\nof Galilee, sard bills signed by\n\"the revolutionary committee\" had\nbeen posted calling on Arabs to\nrevolt against the British mandate\nbecause the Arabs were \"on the\neve of freedom.\"\nHeavily armed patrols were\nconcentrated In the Jaffa road\narea of Jerusalem where the most\nserious rioting occurred. Detachments of police marched through\nthe streets scattering crowds.\nA new curfew order was Issued,\nThe situation in the city was tense,\nwith few persons daring to venture\nfar from shelter.\nReports circulated that Arab\nleaders had set November 18 for\nsome form of rising or demonstration as on that day British military\ncourts are scheduled to begin sitting\nin an effort to stamp out the recurrent terrorism.\nSix of those killed today were\nArabs. Eight Arabs and six Jews\nwere Injured. The rioting began\nwhen two Arabs were killed and\none Arab and four Jews injured in a\nclash between labor gangs.\nBe Opened by\nDuchess Windsor\nPARIS, Nov. 14 (CP)-Christ\nchurch today announced it had invited the Duke and Duchess of\nWindsor to preside at a charity sale\nto be held in the suburb of Neuilly,\nNovember 20.\nThe announcement said:\n\"The Duke and Duchess of Windsor have most graciously promised\nto be present. Gratitude is felt that\nthe engagements of His Royal Highness make it possible to help by his\npresence the work of the church,\nand the Duchess has kindly consented, at the chaplain's invitation,\nto open the sale.\"\nLONDON, Nov. 14 (AP) - The\nBishop of Fulham today expressed\npleasure on learning the Duke and\nDuchess of Windsor would open an\nAnglican charity sale in Paris, November 20\u2014\"after the unpleasant misunderstanding Armistice Day.\"\nRight Rev. B. S. Batty, the bishop\nwho controls the Church of England's continental churches, said,\nhowever, the charily sale invitation\n\"was not officially inspired nor\nwas Canon Dart's attitude which\nrepresented publication of a private\nconversation.\"\nWilkins Prepares\nto Leave Edmonton\nfor Northern Search\nEF.MONTON, Nov. 14 (CP)\u2014Hoping for colder weather, Sir Hubert\nWilkins and his companions began\npreparations here today to take off\nfor the Arctic regions in their big\nmonoplane to search for six Russian\nfliers lost since August 13 last.\nThe search parly reached Edmonton yesterday,afler a 50-mile flight\nfrom Regina, where they had been\ngrounded since Thursday because of\npoor flying conditions.\n\"Human Fly\" Burglar\nGets $20 From House\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14 (CP) -\nPolice today received a report from\nMrs. A. Marsden that a \"human fly\"\nburglar had entered a second-storey\nbedroom at her home in south\nShaughnessy residential area last\nnight and took $20.\nBurglaries of a similar nature have\nbeen reported from homes in the\nPoint Grey district recently.\nKING  AND QUEEN ATTEND\nVILLAGE CHURCH\nWALDENBURY, Hertfordshire,\nNov. 14 (AP)\u2014The king and queen\ntoday attended services in the village Church of St. Paul's where the\nqueen was baptized and where she\nworshipped as a girl. After the service the queen unveiled a plaque\ncommemorating'her association with\nthe church. The. king ond queen\nwere week-end guests of the queen's\nbrother, Pavid Bowes-Lyon, and\nhis wife.\nReleased on Bail\nStan Morris of Nelson, driver of a\ntruck under which 7-year-old Eric\nTrenamen of Boswell was killed,\nhas been released on ball. He is\ncharged with manslaughter. A coroner^ jury Friday found the boy's\ndeath accidental and expressed sympathy for the driver. Young Morris\nis a well-known Nelson athlete, having played on city hockey teams,\nas well as taking part in track and\nfield sports.\nJudge Thompson\nFrees Morris on\nTelephoned Bail\n'StlJtrftf Mowis\"' Nelson \"youth,\nwho was committed at Creston Friday for trial on a charge of manslaughter, arising out of the death\nlast Wednesday of the Boswell kid-,\ndie, seven-year-old Eric Trenaman,\nwho fell off the running board of\na truck, Morris i was driving, - was\nbrought to jail here on Saturday\nmorning's train by Constable R. H.\nHassard, but was soon after at liberty on bail..-\nAs soon as Morris was in charge\nof the jail authorities, \"his solicitor\nE. P^ Dawson, applied for bail, W.\nJ. Sturgeon, court registrar, communicating by long distance with\nJudge G. H. Thompson of Cranbrook, who authorized acceptance\nof bail. \u2022   \u25a0   '\nSince a manslaughter charge may\nbe tried only before a judge and\njury, the case will not come up for\ntrial until  the  Nelson spring as-\nQUAKE RECORDED,\nNEW YORK UNIV.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 14.(AP)\u2014The\nFordham university instruments recorded a severe earthquake early\ntoday. The first shock the university\nannounced, was felt at' 6:11.19 a. m.\n(E.S.T.) the second at 6:21.34. Probable distance from New York was\nput at 6800 miles; the direction was\nnot ascertained.\nBREAKS HIS NECK\nIN A RUGBY GAME\nTORONTO, NOV 15 (CD-William McFarlane, 19-year-old halfback\nof Etobicoke high school's rugby\nteam, suffered a broken neck in an\ninter-school game here Saturday and\nis in serious condition in hospital.\nMcFarlane was attempting a flying\ntackle of a ball carrier in the East\nYork high school team when injured;\nFound in Snowbank\nWith a Broken Leg'\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14 *(CP^\u2014\nFound lying. helpless In a snow\nbank a few miles south of here\nnear the fraser river, early todt\u00ab.\nsuffering from' exposure and a\nbroken leg, 61-year-old. William\nPinfold was In hospital tonight.\nAccording to hospital officials,\nthe man had slipped and fallen\nwhile walking through a iparcely\nsettled area there last night and\nhad lain helpless In the snow until\nfound this morning.\nANOTHER CITY ON\nRAILWAY TAKEN;\nENTIRE DEFENCE\nOF (NINA SHAKEN\nKunshan,   Centre   of\n'Hindenburg Line',\nIs Captured\nDRIVE CONTINUES\nTOWARD NANKING\nSHANGHAI, Nov. 15 (Monday)\n(AP)\u2014The Japanese army today\nannounced columns driving westward along the Shanghai-Nanking\nrailroad had captured Kunshan,\na strong point near the centre of\nGeneralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's\nfamed \"Hindenburg line.\"\nReported fall of Kunshan,35 miles west of Shanghai, came as tha\nforces of Japan, In their first major\nthrust against the main Chinese\ndefences, threatened the collapse\nof the entire system.\nForeign military observes believed the capitulations of the city\nwould enable the Japanese to march\nrapidly along the railway toward the\nSoochow front,120 miles distant.\nIn the unfortified towns of ChenI,\nWaikwatan, Kwarituli and Waiting\nthe foreign observers expressed belief the advancing Japanese would\nencounter only rear-guard resistance from the Chinese in an effort to slow the thrust against Soochow.\nTURN  BOTH FLANKS\nWith the tip of the Shanghai peninsula in their control the Japanese\nappeared in1 a position not only to\nbreach the centre of the \"Hindenburg line\" but to turn both flank*.\nThe system stretches some-50 miles\nwest of Shpghai'from the Yangtze\nriver south into Chckiang province.\nChinese defences appeared to ba\nweakening steadily in face of ths\nrapidly developing strategy of tho\nJapanese. The Chinese advantage\nin number\u2014some 400,000. to about\n200,000 \u25a0 Japanese-;was i more than\noffset by the modern weapons and\ngreat mobility of the. invaders. ,\n' Japanese officers said the general advance west of- Shanghai was\nmerely a prelude to a drive against\nNanking, the Chinese capital 125 to\n150 miles to the west of the \"Hindenburg line.\"\nJapanese airforces raided the Chinese rear, bombing a score of towns\nconsidered to be concentration\npoints. .Among these was Soochow,\nChina's \"paradise under heaven,\"\nwhich missionaries had appealed, to\nthe Japanese command to spare.\nMUNITIONS DUMP\nEXPLODED\nIn Nantao, adjacent to Shanghai's French concession, a Chinese\nmunitions dump was exploded.\nIn Nanking an army announcement told of the heroic stand of four\nChinese battalions from Hunan pro.\nvince near Nanziang west of Shanghai. . All tho 2000 men in the four\nunits died said the announcement,\nbut not before they had inflicted\n1300 casualties on the Japanese.\nIndicating Japanese might demand a larger ehare In control of\nShanghai's International settlement, the United News, a Japanese\norgan, said Japan, Great Britain\nand the United States should have\nequal shares In administration of\nthe settlement. Britons now are\ndominant numerically ln the settlement's council,\nQUINTS NOT TO\nGO TO GLASGOW\nNORTH BAY, Ont., Nov. 14 (CP)\n\u2014Canada's famed Dionne quintuplets will not be permitted to go\nto the Glasgow International Fair\nnext year, Judge J. A. Valin of\nNorth Bay, one of the quints' guardians, said today in connection with\na report from Scotland the fair directors were anxious to have the\nfamous five little girls go to Glasgow for the exhibition.\nJudge Valin said the quints were\ntoo young and such a trip would\nbe too hazardous tor them.\nTRAIL MAN LOST FROM HUHTING\nPARTY IN THE BEAR CREEK AREA\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 14-Late tonight provincial police and volunteers, many of whom are experienced hunters, were still searching\nfor I. E. Brinson, 1225 Second\navenue, who Saturday night was reported lost from a party of three\nmen hunting in the Bear creek area.\nBear creek flows into the Columbia's cast side a few miles south of\nTrail.\nAbout 9 o'clock Saturday morning, Brinson, a brother Amos, nnd\nanother hunter named Lypchuck,\nafter travelling by car seven and\none half miles into the hills, set out\non foot hunting. They became separated about two hours later, and\nalthough they searched till dark\nto locate the lost man, the other\ntwo were unable to find any trace\not him so returned to Trail and\nnotified Corporal J. F. Johnson of\nthe provincial police, who immediately mustered a search party.\nTrail city police broadcast a request for volunteer searchers to meet\nat the cily hall Monday morning so\nthey can leave at 7 a.m. for the\narea in which Brinson is lost.\nIt is reported that (here are from\nfhrce to four inches of snow on the\nground in the Bear creek district.\nMiM^MMiMtHHaaHMHBaHMHHI\n  \u2014\n***mmmm**-\nPAGE TWO  '\nNO DAMAGE DONE\nIN CHIMNEY FIRE\nAnswering a call shortly after 6\no'clock Sunday afternoon, the Nelson fire department extinguished a\nchimney tire at a house on Lake\nstreet owned by J. E. Marquis, No\ndamage was done, and the fire was\nput out by the use of chemicvls. The\nfire was attributed to a dirty flue.\nmmmmmr*mm\nNELSON  DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY  MORNING. NOV. 15, 1937,\nFans See Senior Hockey Battlers in\nAction in Evening Carnival Feature\nMaple   Leafs  Wallop   New   Comers   7-3\nGeneral Skating, Boxla-Hockey\nand Races Fill Program\nA snappy senior hockey battle,\nrelay races, a mock bull fight, and\nband music, supplementing two sessions of general skating provided a\ngrand windup for the day-long Hockey club carnival, and ample entertainment for the gala crowd in attendance.\nA committee of Nelson Hockey\nclub, Booster club, Nelson junior\nboard of trade and service club\nmembers arranged the program.\nA glimpse at the boys, who will\ncarry Nelson's hockey banner into\nthe West Kootenay and possibly provincial senior hockey wars, was\ndished out in the feature event of\nthe evening, the Nelson Maple\nLeafs, B. C. champs, versus senior\nnewcomers, and fans got a real eyeful.\nShowing but dashes of their last\nseason's form, Nelson Maple Leafs,\nthe lines bolstered by two of the\nnewcomers, Hugh Sutherland and\nJack Kilpatrick, outfoxed and outplayed the team of candidates to\nclose the game 7-3.\nRough and unfinished though the\nteamwork was, flashes of brilliant\nindividual play brightened the game\nfor the fans. Hugh (Scottie) Sutherland, newcomer from Saskatchewan,\nthrilled the crowd with his defence game and dashes into enemy\nterritory.\nKILPATRICK SHINES\nOutshining the entire lineup, and\nassuring himself wilh a place on\nthe regulars, Jack Kilpatrick, who,\nduring the past two years, carried\nthe colors for the Wembley Lions,\nshot three counters past Holmes\nwithin nine minutes from the opening. Again in the second he tallied,\nwhen he nailed a pass from Carr.\nAl Euerby, working hard as ever,\ncombined with Thomson of the newcomers, to bring the count at the\nclose of tlie second to 4-2.\nTaking plenty of knocks, but in\nthere on every play, Red Carr\nshowed some of the stuff that made\nhim a possible candidate for professional ranks recently, A pass\nfrom Kilpatrick late in the third,\ngave him his scoring chance.\nAll the speed and flash that wns\nmissing last year was there Satur-\nday in Pete Bonneville's game. He\nwas all over the ice, but nevertheless kept in with the play and he\nbrought in the only count for the\nnewcomers on a solo tn the third.\nNick Smith added the other two\nscores for the Leafs that made the\ncount 7-3 final.\nLineups, follow:\nMaple Leafs \u2014 Bill McKay, goal;\nLen Bicknell, Hugh Sutherland, defence; Jack Kilpatrick, Nick Smith,\nRed Carr; Ty Cully, Stewie Paterson and Pete Bonneville.\nCandidates \u2014 Holmes, goal; Leo\nAtwell, Walter Duckworth, defence;\nSeekeenea, John Smith, Al Euerby,\nTalk In the store had turned upon the comparative\nteliability of squirrels, wood chucks nnd patent\nmedicine almanacs as long-distance weather forecasters,\nj \"I got a better system than any of them,\" declared\nMr. Picobac, smacking the down-turned bowl of\nhis pipe upon the palm of his hand.\n\"And what's your system?\" inquired Mr. Henry\nCotton of Cotton, Higgins (Dry Goods, Groceries\nand Hardware),\n\"I watch the wood pile,\" said Mr. Picobac, puffing\nvigorously. \"When it's low I know it's just my\nluck to run Into a cold spell, and I'll have to get\nbusy with the buck saw. But if I happen to have\nplenty of wood ready cut, split and piled, the\nweather turns mild. We run into a soft spell sure.\nNever fails.\"\nMr. Picobac chuckled.\n\"But I don't care how cold It gets,\" added he.\ni\"Let the wind howl. Give me a hot fire of good\ndry maple and plenty of Picobac tobacco and I\ncan tough it out Yes, sir \u2014 a mild . . . cool . . .\nsweet smoke near a good wood fire \u2014 that's what\nI caU COMFORT.\"\n'IT OOKtaste good in a PIPE I*\n.0\nGuide for Travellers\n_**\"\"\"\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel.\nNelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME\u2014T. Gibson, F. D. Lambert,\nH. M. Atkinson, L. B. Cook. A. T.\nMcGillivray, H. T. Hood, T. Boyan-\nner, Vancouver; R. D, Askey, Trail;\nC. A. Yule, W. B. McCallum, Pen\nticton; J. Tabork, Swift Current; H.\nE. Miard, Fernie; G, Wolfe, Calgary;\nC. Meggitt, Grand Forks; Mr. and\nMrs. J. M. Sutherland, Winnipeg; H.\nM. Coursey, R. Brough, Medicine\nHat.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietors\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nFree Parklna NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon 8t Phone 89?\nH. WAS8ICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJA8.  E.  MADDEN,  Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled.\nHot end Cold Water.\nIn the HEART of the City\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"    Newly Renovated Throughout\nDufferin Hotel ^M^wnr*\n900 Seymour St.      Vancouver, B.C.    Coleman. Alia., Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m..Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135 Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nM. H.  MclVOR. Prop.\n\u00ab\u20ac****_********\u00ab\u00ab\nJim McPhee, McDonald, Thompson,\nSchneff, Gourmlie and Mel Whittles.\nBOXLA-HOCKEY\nAn innovation among innovations,\nboxla-hockey, opener of the carnival evening entertainment, was a\nmirth-provoker and true erowd-\npleaser. C. B. C. and Panther boxla\nboys on skates and armed with boxla\nnets, mixed it up to provide some\nwarm entertainment for the cold\nweather fans.\nMasters of the Innovation, Panthers soaring ahead at a quickened\ntempo in tho final session downed\nthe Catholic boys, 5-3.\nNets and skates didn't mix, and\nthe boys tickled the crowd with their\ncat-on-hot-bricks antics. Warming\nquickly they' dished out a session\nof crowd-pleasing boxla-hockey.\nSeconds from the cowbell, Bud\nEmery, Panther flash, opened the\nscoring with one that completely\nfooled Blais. A quick C. B. C. rally\npaved the way for Lindsay's tying\ncount. Continuing their rally in the\nsecond Catholic boys ran the count\nto 3-1 when Gelinas and Lindsay\ntallied. A quartet of markers in\nthe final gave Panthers the game\n5-3, Breeze and Emory halving\nthe scoring honors.\nLineups follow:\nC. B. C. \u2014 Doug Blais, goal;.\nCharlie Lindsay, Elmer Gelinas,\nErnie Defoe, Leo McKinnon, Mickey Prestley and Johnny Olson.\nPanthers \u2014 Fred Parks, goal; Jack\nMorgan, Bud Emery, Victor Del\nPuppo, Howard Breeze, Jack Morrison, Everett Kuhn, Don Hunter,\nGeorge Milne and Harold Tapanila.\nTed Cornfield of the Panthers,\nsubstituted on the C. B. C. lineup\nfor one period.\nOfficials were: Stewie Paterson,\nreferee; George Bishop, judge of\nplay; Bill McCracken and Ken McBride, goal umpires.\nThere was no place for dull spots\non the hockey carnival program and\nany intermission while there was\nno ice program was filled in with\nentertaining programs by the Nelson City band under F. L. Irwin.\nRELAYS THRILL\nA duo of relay races provided\nthrills for the fans preceding and\nduring an intermission in the senior\nhockey battle.\nAl Euerby's tumble when crowding a corner gave the opposition a\nlead in the men's relay and Jim\nMcPhee carried the stick home for\nhis team. Teams consisted of Jim\nMcPhee, Nick Smith Walter Duck,\nworth and Len Bicknell; Hugh\n(Scottie) Sutherland, Red Carr, Al\nEuerby and Stewie Paterson.\nTransferring their summer relay\nactivities to the ice, Nelson's ace\ngirls' relay squad filled in a period\nintermission for the,fans. Despite her\nfall, Audrey Emery chopped down\nher opponent's, Isabel Donovan's\nlead in the final lap, and they\ncrossed the line together, Teams\nconsisted of Audrey Emery and\nHelen Wigg\u00bb Isabel Donovan and\nDoreen Long.\nFollowing the senior game, crowds\nflocked onto the ice for general\nskating session that marked finis\nto the carnival.\nJuvenile Nelson Has a Won\nTime at Ice Spo|p\nMasquerade  Is Followed by Big  Program\nof Races of Various Kinds; First\nSkate of Season Is Wind-Up\nof Shopping\nUntil Christmas\nSpokane Clippers\nal Top of Heap\nSPOKANE, Wash,, Nov. 14 (CD-\nSpokane Clippers climbed into first\nplace in the Pacific Coast Hockey\nleague standing tonight with a 1-0\ndecision over Seattle Seahawks. It\nwas ttie cleanest game of the young\nschedule with only one penalty\nhanded out.\nAs in the league's inaugural here\nlast Sunday when Clippers downed\nPortland Buckaroos 2-1 Sad Shm\nTimmins again played a major part\nin the Spokane victory with his\nstellar goal-tending.\nConie King, one of the league's\nhigh scoring centres last year, fired\nin tonight's lone score before the\ngame was 10 minutes old.\nSUMMARY\nFirst   period:   1\u2014Spokane\n(Holmes), 8:09.\nPenalties: Gilhooly.\nSecond period: no score,\n. Penalties\u2014None.\nThird period: no score.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nKing\nThe mountain goat is the only\nAmerican member of a mountain-\nclimbing animal family, including\nthe European chamois.\nAUSTRALIA'S^^^Vr\/r^VVlNES\nTariff preference partly explains\nthe modest prir.e of EMU Ports\nbut modest price alone does not\nexplain their Dominion-wide\npopularity. A rich full body,\nfine flavour and consistently\nhigh quality arc the guardiane\nof the goodwill EMU Wines\nenjoy.\nTHE EMU WINE CO. LTD.\nK-TABUIH-0 1MB\nM__1_A1D- a LONDON IENGLAND)\nThis advertisement -is not published or displayed by the Liquot\n,    Control Board or by tht Government of British Columbia.\nA great program of juvenile Ice\nsports, embraoing a masquerade and\nskating races of many kinds, opened\nthe skating season for the boys and\ngirls of Nelson Saturday afternoon,\nwhen the juvenile section ot the\nopening carnival staged by the Nelson Hockey club, with the assistance of service organizations, was\nheld at the civic centre arena.\nFor the better part of an hour,\nfairies, imps, cavaliers, and even\ninanimate objects paraded in airy\nevolution over the gleaming surface,\nwhich was soon white with powdered ice, while the committee of fair\njudges from the Soroptlmist club had\nan ardutus task selecting the winners from the many worthy candidates.\nTHRILLING RACES\nThen came a race program that\nwas full of thrills, with contests in\nfour age divisions, the contests for\nboys being paralleled'by those for\ngirls, except in the item of the\nballoon race, where close to 100\nboys of all ages took part in the\nvarious heats, and the girls contest\nhad to be omitted so as not to encroach on the skating time. M. R. K.\nclub ancT Fairview Athletic club\nuniforms were prominent in the\ncolor scheme* of tlie races.\nBefore the skaters came on, there\nwas a \"Spanish bull fight,\" with\nFrank O'Genski doing the matador\nact, while Jack Annable and Murray Clark cavorted as the bull, and\nTy Cully and George Benwell personated the fiery steed that O'Genski\ndidn't attempt to mount.\nLastly, there was an hour's skating, when hundreds of boys and\ngirls, many in. masquerade costume,\nand quite a number in hockey uniforms, had a great time with the\nfirst skate of the season.\nSMARTLY HANDLED\nThe program of races was smartly\nhandled, with hardly a lost moment.\nP. C. Richards, chairman of the\nchildren's sports committee, who officiated as megaphone announcer,\nhad the various age divisions occupy\ndifferent seat sections on the dressing room side of the rink,' the sections being in command respectively\nof T. A. Carew, John Thorn, H. C.\nPitts and Ron Lowe. Corner men\non the ice, seeing that the contestants racing did not \"cut\" the corner\nflags, were Brand Morley, Jack\nStark, Archie Hardy and Reeve\nHarper. R. Temple and J. J. McEwan\nwere starters, and Floyd Irwin and\nR. E. Power, the judges. JackHous-.\nton was record keeper, with Roy Mc-'\nKenzie assisting him, and Con Cummins was in charge of tho lavish\nprizes donated by business houses,\nR. E. Crerar operated the broadcast\nsystem from time to time, and C. W.\nTyler, general chairman of the\ncarnival committee, lent moral and\nphysical support.\nThe judges of the masquerade\nwere Miss Grace McDonald and\nMiss Lois Sheffield, acting on behalf of the Soroptimist club, with\nMrs. C .W. Tyler, chairman of their\ncommittee.\nAlmost exclusively juvenile ln\ncharacter, the patrons of the afternoon carnival had a wonderful time.\nWINNERS:\nMasquerade winners were os follows:\nGirls' comic\u2014Potato, Peggy Grimes\nGirls original\u2014Flag, Verna Black-\nwell.\nBoys comic\u2014Little Black Sambo,\nAlex. Allan.\nBoys original\u2014Robin Hood, Bob\nBeattie.\nTiny tots comic\u2014Scarecrow, Dorothy Wallace.\nTiny tots original\u2014Pied Piper,\nNeil Hood.\nBest advertisement \u2014 Shamrock\nbrand, Catherine Argyle. ,\nResults of the races were as follows:\nSenior boys\u2014Heat 1, Albert Maxwell, first; jnd Vic DelPuppo, second\nHeat 2, Bud Emery first, and Stan\nMorris second; final, Bud Emery\nfirst, and Stan Morris second.\nSci-ior boys relay\u2014Albert Maxwell, Bud Emery, Vic DelPuppo\nand Joe Gallicano, first.\nSenior girls\u2014Audrey Emery first,\nand Isabel Donovan second.\nSenior girls relay\u2014Audrey Emery, Isabel Donovan. Beulah Greer\nand Doreen Long, first.\nIntermediate boys \u2014 Heat 1, Walter Firth first, and Jack Whitehead\nsecond; heat 2, John Dunnett first,\nand Warren Ferguson second; heat\n3, Frank Christian first, and Elmer\nGelinas second; heat 4,. Bud Emery\nfirst, and Everett Kuhn second;\nfinal, Bud Emery first, and Frank\nChristian second.\nIntermediate boys relay \u2014 Bud\nEmory, Harold Tapanila, David Dunlop, and Tom Griffiths, first;\nDoug Winlaw, Warren Ferguson,\nBilly Crossley and John Dunnett,\nsecond.\nIntermediate girls \u2014 Jackie Hesse\nfirst, and Beulah Greer second.\nIntermediate girls relay \u2014 Hazel\nSmith, Beulah Greer, Jeanne Archibald and Lillian Hickey, first,\nJunior boys\u2014Heat 1, Ian Currie\nfirst, and Anne Dill second.\nBoys open balloon race \u2014 Heat 1,\nJackie Jajbeau first, and Elmer\nGelinas second; heat 2, Vic DelPuppo first, and John Beattie, second; heat 3, Raymond Burgess first,\nand Albert MSxwell second; heat 4,\nLinus Mbrrison first, and .Lionel\nStainton second; final, Albert Maxwell first, and Raymond Burgess,\nsecond.\nfirst, and Paul Hielscher second; heat\n2, Jackie Jarbeau first, and Jim Ritchie second; heat 3, Billy Benwell\nfirst, and Billy Jarvis second; final,\nIan Currie first, and Paul Hielscher second.\nJunior boys relay\u2014Ian Currie,\nHarry Wassick, Paul Hielscher and\nJim Ritchie first.\nJunior girls \u2014 Heat 1, Frances\nBoyce first, and Joan Kcrrsecond;\nheat 2, Isabel Kay first, and Betty\nWigg second; final Isabel Kay first,\nand Joan Kerr second.\nJunior girls relay\u2014Isabel Kay,\nCoral Sahara, Betty Wigg and Effie Small, first.\nMidget boys \u2014 Harold Bonmark\nfirst, and Dick Santo, second.\nMidget girls \u2014 Kathleen Curran\nISO Tons Coal\nPer Day Being\nProduced, Michel\nWork on Repairing the\nFire Damage Rushed;\nCoke Ovens Busy\nNATAL, B. C.\u2014Work on cleaning\nup of the ruined Michel tipple is\nsteadily progressing. Only the twisted slack bin and the damaged dry\ncleaner remain of the. once proud\ntipple of the Crow's Nest Pass Coal\ncompany. The wooden , temporary\ntipple is also taking shape, and is\nexpected to be ready for use within\nthe next 10 days. The coke ovens\nare working full time, with the majority of the ovens in operation. A\nrepair crew of approximately 20\nmen- has been employed since the\nfire throughout the mines, with an\nadditional 30-odd,men employed on\nMonday in the B. mine for the production ot coal to be used for the\ncoke ovens. These men were^able to\nbe put on because the house coal-\nchute was undamaged by the fire,\nwith the slack being hauled away\nto the coke ovens by truck, while\nthe lumps are being taken away for\nhouse coal.\nIi is estimated 150 tons per day Is\nthe output. It is not expected that\nany additional men will be put to\nwork until the temporary tipple is\nready for the production of coal.\nWith three weeks already behind\nsince the fire, the unemployed hunters have taken to the hills, with the\nresult that game has been brought\nin quite frequently, especially since\nthe recent snowfall on the hillsides,\nIn the meantime a number of men\nhave signed for relief, as some of\nthe men, especially those from the\nNo. 1 mine, have been out of work\nfor over a month already.\nHouse D Presents\nComedy Program\nLilting songs by the Beach Party\nchorus, a round-the-world talk, taking the students to every part of\nthe globe, and a humorous burlesque\ndepicting\u2014and picking apart\u2014the\nworks and writings of Shakespeare\nall added to the merriment of the\nprogram presented by House D in\nthe high school auditorium Friday\nafternoon.\nIt was the second In a competitive series of four programs presented by the four houses. Winners\nwill be announced at the end of the\nfourth program.\nBetty Miller, who lived five years\nin China, delivered the \"globe trotting' talk.\n\"The Rehearsal\" first attempt at\nrehearsing 'McBeth' by Shakespeare,\nwith its hilarious costumes and the\nactors supposedly and really forgetting their lines, was the high spot\nof the afternoon.\nThe Beach Party chorus sang five\npopular sangs, \"Margey\", ba \"InaL\npopular songs, \"Margey\", \"In a Little Gypsy Tea Room\", \"Blue Hawaii\", \"Harbor Lights\" and a second\nrendering of \"Margey.\"\nMembers of the chorus included\nKatherine Pearce, Pauline Wright,\nThelma Byrd, Enid Latorncll, Frances Campbell, Dorothy Johnson,\nNorma McKerns, Marjory Teaguc,\nNina McClements, Violet Wagstaff,\nWilbert Anderson, Herbert Eliason,\nRichard Manning, Clarence Cawley,\nVirginia James, Iris Moore, Howard Campbell and Paul Ritchie,\nCast of the \"Rehearsal\" included\nHoward Campbell as McBeth, Norma\nMcKerns as Lady McBeth, William\nAffleck as Shakespeare, Paul Rit\nchie as Macduff. Herbert Eliason as\nBanquo, Richard Manning as the\ndoctor, Connie Hancock, Catherine\nAnderson and Thelma Holm as three\nwitches, Harold Mayo, producer,\nand Clarence Cawley, stage manager.\nFINK'SIIIIHI\nSports \u25a0\ni\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nTogs\nSki Jackets\nAll Wool-\nNew Cabin Jacks ti.\nLeather trim and neatly\ntailored.\n$\nJ.M\nSki Pants\n^11 wool\u2014well tailored\u2014\nSmooth fitting \u2014 ribbed\ncuffs.\nChildren's Wear\nSNOW SUITS and\n3 PIECE SETS\nAll wool\u2014winterproof Snow Suits In\nred or blue\u2014Ski pants, jacket and\nhelmet\t\n3 PIECE SETS\nPastels and whites. All wool chinchilla or checked blanket cloth with\nwin fur collar and buttons\t\n$4-9$\nAnd Up\n$4*\nAnd Up\nFOOTWEAR\nTHAT WILL KEEP THE FEET DRY\nGoloshes\nVelvet\u2014fur trim, Cuban heels.\nBrown or black. Sizes 3 to 9.\n$2-^5\nOvershoes\nRubbers\nPlain   overs.\nSixes 3 to 8.\n75c\nFive Dome, Rubber\n:::$i,29\nFleece lining. Brown or\nblack. Sizes 3 to 8\nReady-to-Wear\nChildren's Wear\nFootwear\n\u25a0 IlllHIIII\nCancian Takes High\nScoring Honors in\nTrail Pin Bowling\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. H-A. Cancian, one of F. Baduin's trundlers.\nbowled a high single of 212 and high\naggregate of 581 In games of the\nCity Ten Pin Bowling league at\nMemorial hall Friday.\nBabuin's crew won two of three\ngames from 'Doc' Postill's pin spil-\nlers. A. Merlo's team defeated E.\nMerlo's in two out of three games.\nGame scores follow:\nPostill          647   636   679-1962\nBabuin       645   744   692-2081\nE. Merlo       643   720   641-2001\nA. Merlo       677   664   709-2050\n7-3 for Leafs in\nSaturday's Game\nTORONTO, Nov. 14 (CP)-Toronto Mople Leafs and Chicago Black\nHawks took up in Chicago tonight\nwhere they left off here Saturday\nnight when Leafs drubbed Bill\nStewart's men 7-3 in the first game\nof a week-end National Hockey\nleague doubleheader between the\nteams.\nLeafs fired three goals within two\nminutes in the first period while\nHawks were a man short. The Leaf\nattack was highlighted by Charlie\nConacher's first scoring spree of\nthe young season. The big right-\nwinger shot three goals before a\ncrowd of 12,300.\nSyracuse Wins, 4-1\nSYRACUSE. N..Y Nov. 14 (AP)\n\u2014 Syracuse Stars won a 4-1 victor.' over Pitts\" urgh Hornets in nn\nInternational-Americ-h Hockey\nleague game tonight.\n5-3 FOR SYRACUSE\nPITTSBURGH, Nov. 14 (AP) -\nFinal period goals by Chuck Shannon and Jack Markle gave Syracuse\nStars a 5-3 victory Saturday night\nover Pittsburgh Hornets in a rough\nInternational - American Hockey\nleague game.\ntkm,\n2-0 for Cleveland\nPROVIDENCE, R. I\u201e Nov. 14\n(AP)\u2014Bill Cook's Cleveland team\nin the International - American\nHockey league scored its first victory ot the season 2-0 tonight at\nthe expense of his brother Bun's\nRhode Island Reds before 4000 tans.\nNEWTESTSFACE\nU.S. PRESIDEN\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 14 (AP)-i\nnew test of leadership, more critio\nin some respects than any he h\nmet since he took office, confron\nPresident Roosevelt at the speci\nsession of the United States CO\ngress beginning tomorrow.\nCircumstances unforeseen at t\ntime Roosevelt issued his call 1\nthe session in mid-October ha\naltered the atmosphere in whi\ncongress meets.\nSpade work on such measures\nwage-hour regulation, crop adju:\nment, government roorganizatl\nand regional resources planning v,\nthe theme for the session as t\npresident then saw it, paving I\nway to early adjournment next yc\nfor the congressional campaigns.\nBut on the eve of the session\nstrong and growing moverm\namong his own party captains\nhouse and senate has arisen to me\nbusiness stimulation, recovery ra\ner than reform, the Immediate pi\npose.\nit's on\nso^tsS\nAc\u00bb*s\n<'*..\nton*!\nWhen you have a cold on your chest the\nimportant thing is to break up the congestion quickly. This is where Sloan's Liniment\ncan give speedy aid. Applied gently to chest\nand back, Sloan's Liniment will quickly send\npenetrating heat deep into the paining parts\nand bring a flow of healing blood to the congested areas, relieving the \"tightness\".\nFor best results don't rub or massage Sloan'*\nLiniment. Just pat it on lightly, Sloan's has\nIn itself all the power needed to produce\nspeedy results. isk\nSLOAN\n>\u00bb4linimen\n \"\u25a0   I I\n******* \u2022fmm\n\u25a0\"\"^\"^wppem\"\"*^\"^\nJ.V|IJ_W.NUppW\u00ab!\u00bbM*i.\u00bb <W>:\n|^tj\nArrested for\nHitting Bank\nJohn Arishinkoff, a Doukhobor:\n\u2022vho was alleged to have collmed\nwith the bank on the left side of\nthe Granite road while driving out\nof Nelson Saturday night, was arrested by Provincial Constable\nRalph Lees, on a charge of being in\ncharge of a motor-vehicle while intoxicated,\nYarmaluk, Rossland,\nArrested Following\nCollision in Trail\nTRAIL, B. C Nev. 14 - Paul\nYarmaluk 01 Rossland was placed\nin the Trail lockup Saturday night,\ncharged with driving wllilc intoxicated.\nAccording to city police, the car\nwhich Yarmaluk was driving collided with one driven by Chester\nBuchanan, 188 Esling street,- on\nRossland avenue al*cut 9:30 p.m.,\nand proceeded on its way. Damage\nto the rear left ender and wheel\nof Buchanan's car was reported.\nYarmaluk's car later was spot-\nled on Tamarack avenue by Sergt.\nJoseph McMullen, who gave chase\nin the department's car. Yarmaluk\n[piled to stop his car when signalled\nto'do p-.. so was forced to the curb\non Bay avenue and arrested.\nPOSTMAN FINDS\nWAY TO HEALTH\nFROM ARTHRITIS\nTells   Others   Too,\nAbout   Harris'\nWondro\ndo severe wns lhe arthritis suffered by this well-known Pacific-\nCoast postman lhat his left leg was\nseveral inches shorter than his right.\nHe not only found relief himself\nafter being advised to take Harris'\nWondro, but he also has told many\nother sufferers whom he has met.\nin his daily round about the benefits\nof Harris' Wondro. Read what he\nhas to say about this proven herbal\nremedy in this letter to Mr. Harris\n\"Dear Sir;\u2014Just a few words in\npraise of Harris' Wondro. Since 1919\nI suffered intense pain around my\nhips. It was clearly shown after\nbeing X-rayed that arthritis was the\ncause of the pain. Three years ago\nI had a severe attack of peri-articular arthritis of the left leg and in\ntwo months my leg was drawn up\nseveral inches shorter than my\nright. Plor two months, without results, If endured a thirty-pound\nweight Jo my leg and also went\nunder treatments to have the small\nof my back raised several inches.\n\"I was finally advised by one of\nmy work-mates to try Harris' Wondro. I immediately started taking it\nand by the time I had taken half\na bottle I was able to discard tbe\nweight off my leg and in six months\nI was back at work again. 1 am a\nletter carrier, walking and climbing steps all day which I find to\nbe no trouble at all. I am more than\npleased to say that I have not had\nany return of arthritis or missed\none day's work for the past three\nyears so I think your medicine lias\neffected a lasting recovery. I am\nsubject to bronchitis due to the\ncoastal weather conditions and Harris' Wondro is the only thing that\nseems to get hold of it. I always\nkeep a couple of bottles handy to\ntake if I ever get run-down but\nat the present time I feel quite a\ndifferent man, full of energy and\npep.\n\"Now, sir, I must tell you I have\nalways praised your medicine on my\nduties as postman, and will quote\nhere the history of a few cases.\nfollowing my recommendation of\nHarris' Wondro. Two retired farmers\nhere \u2014 both very bad cases of\nneuritis in shoulders and arms \u2014\n(tne could not raise his arms. 1 advised Harris' Wondro (they knew\nof my illness), and today there is\nnot a thing wrong with them. An-\nothcr, a postal clerk in my office,\nwas in bed for five monihs with\nboth knees swollen with arthritis,\nHe was told nothing could be done\nfor him and the only thing he was\ngiven was powerful drug tablets,\nHe took Harris' Wondro on my advice in capsule form and today he\nwalks to and from work feeling\nfull of pep. Another very old lady\nhobbling around on two sticks on\nthe verandah dare not and could\nnot get down the steps. I advised\nyour remedy and today she does\nall her own shopping and takes\nlong walks with only one stick.\nMy sister in Ei.gla.td whom I wrote\ntn you about has derived great benefit from Harris' Wondro and ner\nneuritis is entirely gone. I have\nseveral other cases taking your\nmedicine. I shall always recommend\nHarris' Wondro to any sufferer\nwhom I come in contact with is\ntoday I feel better lhan ever.\n--Yours sincerely, Alfred Fowler.\n3406 Clinton Street, Burnaby, B.C.\"\nMen and women who have 1p-.d\neverything else in vain . . men and\nwomen who have suffered the torturing, crippling agonies of arthritis\nin it* advanced stages . . . men and\nwomen who have been given up\nas hopeless have found permanent,\nlasting relief through the persevering use of Harris' Wondro, because\nHarris* Wondro sends rich, healing\nblood coursing lo lhe seat, of the\ntrouble and supplies the minerals\nand vitamins that weak, starving\ncells are lacking. Order n treatment\nof Harris' Wondro for yourself today\nHarris' Wondro is for sale at all\ndrug stores and is obtainable als.i\nIn boxed capsule form. A bottle of\nHarris' Laxico, a medicine for constipation, is included free with\nevery purchase of Harris' Wondro.\nIf your druggist cannol supply you,\nerder direct from George Harris &\nBon, Herbalists, Calgary, Alta.\n(Advt.)\nNELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.\u2014MONDAY MORNING, NOV. 15. 193\/.\nSmart Young Moderns Like Soft Woolens\nTwoi\nleft, black with plaid taffeta tottchci\nbeige\nschoolgirl collar, stitched skirt.\nSoft wool dresses are favorites\nwith young moderns. They go places\nand do things. You see them at\nluncheon in smart cafes, in the\nschoolroom, shopping, in offices, at\nclub meetings and lectures.\nTwo are shown, the one at the\nleft in black with plaid taffeta\ntouches, simple and smart. The one\nat the right in beige with schoolgirl collar and stitched skirl. Both\nare appropriate for the impromptu\ndance after the big football game.\nTweed dresses often take the\nplace of the suit in mild weather\nin London and vicinity. One society\nwoman wore a small brown and\nwhite check in shirtwaist style, and\ncompleted her costume with brown\naccessories.\nA dark red thin woolen dress is\nsmart with red accessories, a red\nscarf being tucked into the neck of\nthe dress.\nCONTRAST IN BELTS\nContrasting belts are used as the\nonly trimming touch on some of the\nwool dresses, a royal blue woolen,\nfor instame, having a wide red leather belt. Buttons were used extensively on this dress. Many dresses\nare seen with the front closing, buttoning down the entire front.\nMulti-colored effects in sheer\nwools are also interesting to note.\nUsually these frocks are slim and\ntubular. Swirts are no higher than\nWh inches from the floor in the\nlatest models.\nTrail Hoop Men\nin Three Tilts;\nArgumentative\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 14-Dcspito\nletters of T. H, Negus, Trail basketball association secretary, informing\nthe various teams entered in the\nmen's senior \"B\" division league,\ninforming them that the referee's\ndecisions would be final and supported by the association, heated\narguments continued to break out\nin that division's game Saturday\nnight when Colombos defeated the\nSheiks 29-25.\nDue io argumentative stalls the\ngame required an additional 15\nminutes above normal.\nContinued arguments this season\nare no doubt attributed to the keen\ncompetition between all teams participating. In Saturday's tilt the\nColombos and Sheiks battled neck\nand neck all the way, Sheiks being\nahead 16-14 at half time.\nAmazons, addition to the ladies'\nloop this year, defeated Buddies in\nanother closely contested fixture.\nAmazons emerged from the first\nhalf with a four-point margin,\nwhich they managed to reestablish\nby full time.\nThe men's intermediate go was\nsomewhat of a fiasco as Newsmen\nwalloped Tailors 40-14. During the\nfirst half Tailors were held down\nto six points while Newsmen romped off lo score 22.\nTEAMS AND  SCORES\nThe teams and scores follow:\nNewsmen\u2014Hartin 15, Rodd 2. Sinclair 14, Long 3, Mandcville 3 and\nHarrison 3.\nTailors Sammartino, Agostinelll\nI, Turik. Balano 3, Paolini, Paldassi,\nGeorgetti, Temple 4, Murdock 6.\nSheiks\u2014Pagnan 8, Battistello, Salsiccioli  2   Turik,  Kirby il,  Young,\nSmith 5.\nSammartino 2. Anger-\n\u25a0 17, Brandohni 4, Baillie\nGeneral Skating\nOpens Here Today\nGeneral skating for the season,\naside from that included in the Nelson Hockey club carnival program,\nopens with adult skating this evening.\nThree adult sessions, on Monday,\nWednesday and Friday evenings,\nwith two periods for children, one\nThursday and one Saturday afternoon, complete the week's schedule.\nMiss Marguerite Phillips will be\non hand during the children's periods\nto give assistance required by\nyounger girls learning to skate, while\nArt Bradshaw has been named to\nsuperintend the skating.\nWindermere Has\nArmistice Event\nWINDERMERE, B.C. \u2014 On November 11 at 11 o'clock in the morning .there was held at the cenotaph,\nInvermere, the usual short but impressive memorial service for those\nmen who lost their lives in the\nGreat War. A large number of people attended in spite of the weather\nbeing cold and dull. The pr\/sident\nof the Canadian Legion, S, Gordon\nof ihe Windermere district conducted the proceedings. Two minutes'\nsilence was observed, and the two\ncalls, \"Reveille\" and the \"Last Post\".\nwere sounded, followed by the national anthem.\nMany Tributes\nTrail Worker\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 13 \u2014 A large\nattendance of freinds and fellow-\nworkers from the C. M. k S. company paid their last respects to\nJohn Glynn, 45, at Requiem high\nmass in St. Fracis Xavier church\nat 9 o'clock this morning. Rev\nFather C. J. Clancy was celebrant.\nA profusion of floral tributes cov-\nI ercd the casket, which was borne by\nS. Hepworth, J. Horsby, E. Cook,\nW. McDonald, James Conveny, and\nWilliam Baril.\nInterment was in Mountain View\ncemetery.\nMr. Glynn, who died in Trail'\nTadanac hospital last Wednesday\nafter a week's illness, is survived by\nhis wife and four small children.\nManducca   3.  Matthews\nGrinich 6, Thomdnle 4,\nivrilik  1\nllUi'iR-\nStrarhan\nColon-be\nilh li. Mci\nand  Marl\nBuddies\n2. LcPafio\nMawdsley 5. Hood ii.\nAmazons- Morris 12, (\nZuk, Adamchuck 2. Croni\nstie 4. Nesbitt.\nTailors -Sammartino. .1. Agoslen-\nrlli 1. N. Turik. J. Balailn li. G. Paolini. il. Baldassi, M. Goor\u00abolti, 1!\nTemple 4 and I.. Murdoch fi.\nA ncw world's record in egg laying was recently set by a pen of ID\nwhile Leghorns, whicli laid 30R2 eggs\nin 51 weeks, an average of 308 apiece\nCRIBBING, POLES\nWASHED AWAY\nBY RAIN, TRAIL\nTRAIL, R. C. Nov. 14 \u2014 A heavy\ndownfall of slcct and snow Saturday\ncaused about 60 yards of cribbing\non the lower side of Oak street to\nslide down hill about 25 feet, taking\nthe sidewalk arid a portion of lhe\nroadway with it early Sunday\nmorning.\nThe West Koolenay Tower &\nLight Co';., poles were dislodged but\nlight service was not disrupted.\nA blockade and lights were set up\non lhe remaining portion of the\ni'oad by the city public works department, as a safeguard to traffic,\nTRAIL.  B.C.. Nov. 14\u2014This city\nand district received its first heavy\nsnowfall of Ihe se;.son Saturday.\nAboul 8:30 a.m. rain turned lo sleet,\nand later snow, a heavy precipitation continuing all dny, rain again\nfalling al night nnd till day Sunday.\nSnow made the surface of the\nslreels slippery, and five minor accidents were reported to cily police\nduring the two days.\nHoopsters Practice\nWith a triple deck intercity pro\ngram on tab, Nelson hoopsters this\nweek plan a duo of practice sessions\nto get into shape for the matches.\nFriday has been allotted as a\nspecial day for practice.\nWeek's schedule follows:\nMONDAY - 6:30 to 8:15 p.m.:\nHornets and High school.\n8:15 to 10: Fairview A. C. and\nGrocers.\nFRIDAY - 6:30 to 7:45 p.m.: Ar-\ngylcs  'Rookies.'\n7:45 to 8:45 p.m.: Catholic girls.\n8:45 to 10 p.m.: Aces.\nSATURDAY - 7:30: Nelson Intermediates vs. Trail Bon Tons.\n8:30: Nelson Girls vs. Trail Girls.\n9:30: Nelson Seniors vs. Trail\nShieks.\nMan Wanted for\nRegina Warrant\nCaught Creston\nActing at the instance of the Royal\nCanadian Mounted police, who wired\ndivisional headquarters of lhe British Columbia police at Nelson, Constable R. H. Hassard of Creston,\nplaced under arrest Friday night al\nCreston, Norman Wolfman. wanted\nat Regina to answer a charge of\ntaking false declarations. The man\nwas brought to Nelson jail Saturday morning, and is awaiting arrival of a warrant now stated to be\non the way here from Regina.\n.MM\nANGLICAN JUMBLE\nSALE AT PROCTER\nRAISES SUM $24\nPROCTER., B.C.-The Anglican\nChurch guild held a successful\njumble sale and tea at the home of\nMrs, J. P, Bourne Wednesday. Ladies from Harrop, Sunshine Bay and\nBalfour, as well as many from\nProcter, were in attendance.\nMrs. A, Major and Mrs. L. Exton\nwere in charge of the sale while\nMrs. J. Robinson, Mrs. W. A. Ward,\nMrs. O. Appleton and Mrs. Bourne\nserved tea. Mrs. Berry of Harrop\nwon the door prize. The sum of $24\nwas realized.\nDAVID GRANT OF\nTRAIL IS (AILED\nPioneer of 40 Years\nDies at Age\nof 88 \"\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 14\u2014Another old\ntimer of the Kootenays, David Grant,\n88, who had resided in this district\nfor 40 years, died at the home of his\ndaughter, Mrs. Herb Lamb, Bay avenue, Saturday afternoon, shortly before 4 o'clock.\nHe came to Rossland In 1897\nfrom his home in Nova Scotia. A\nstone mason by trade, he worked\non several public buildigs in the\nKootenays, among them, the Rossland and Nelson post offices and\ncourt houses, as well as the court\nhouse at Yakima, Wash. He also\nworked on the Castleper bridge\nEntering into partnership with IL\nW. Fox, Rossland, he bought out\nthe contracting business of the late\nW. D. Wilson; whioifi business was\ncarried on until 1926, when both Mr.\nFox and Mr. Grant retired.\nMr. Grant was also a monumental\nstone cutler.\nHe lived with his daughter, Mrs.\nHerb Lamb of Trail, for- the past 10\nyears.\nHe is survived by three daughters,\nMrs. Herb Lamb, Trail; Mrs. Hector Ramsay, Vancouver; Mrs. I). A.\n\u25a0Powell, Penticton; three sons, David,\nVancouver. Alex of Missoula. Mont.,\nand Melvin, Great Falls, Mont.\nFuneral services will be conducted\nTuesday, at Clark's Funeral chapel.\nSome kinds of glass turn violet if\nexposed only a few years lo desert\nsun.\nTriple-Decker\nGrappling Show\non Tab Tonight\nThrills   Aplenty  Are\nPromised by Fight\nCard\nA three-bout program of thrills,\nwith Jerry Bianchi and Alvin Britt,\nJack Coleman and Buck Davidson,\nholding the spotlight in the feature\nevent, is slated for the armory fight\ncard tonight, Don Antonio, former\nmiddleweight wrestling champ of\nItaly, and Curly Butorac of Trail\nwill tangle in a preliminary.\nAn eastern heavyweight threat is\nBianchi, who reportedly gets into\nthe ring with only one purpose\u2014\nand that is to win. He is a real\nwrestler and his rough and ready\ntactics are sure to thrill the crowd.\nHis opponent, Britt, is no slouch at\ntiie game, and is expected to give\nBianchi plenty of trouble. Britt,\nuntil February of this year, was\nthe undisputed junior heavyweight\nchamp.\nLIGHT HEAVIES FAST\nFresh from a four-week scries of\nmatches in various centres of the\nnorthwestern states, Jack Coleman.\n195-pound Texan, and considered\none of the strongest in tlie game,\nwill try a best two out of three fall\nmeeting with Buck Davidson, who\nat one .time claimed the U.S. navy\nlight-heavy title. Both are clean and\nfast and should go good with the\nfans.\n\u2022Curly Butorac needs no introducing, for many Nelson and district\nfans have seen him in action at\nTrail. He is fast, knows all the\ntricks, and will bo no easy match\nfor his opponent. Don Antonio, former Italian middleweight titlist.\nJoker Tonelli of Trail will handle\nthe. matches, with Ernest Collinson\nas timekeeper and Gone Giliott, announcer. W. W. Fisher is promoting\nthe bout.\nCouple of Trail\nBury Twin Sons\nTRAIL, B. C, Nov. 13\u2014Twin sons\nof Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Rogers, formerly of Nelson, were laid to rost in\nMountain View cemetery this afternoon. Private funeral services\nwere held in Clark's Funeral Chapel,\nRev. L. A. Morrant officiating.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H. 3. ALLEN\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 14-The Oddfellows' hall was the scene of a\ndance Friday night when the Adi-\nnah Rebekah lodge No. 8 entertained about 200 guests, the occasion\nbeing their 14th annual ball. The\nballroom was decorated with festooned streamers of pink and green,\nthe lodge colors, which connected at\nthe centre with a large number of\nmulticolored balloons. The orch\/s-\ntra platform was in the form of a\nbower of illuminated pink and\ngreen lights and during intervals\nthe orchestra favored with specialty\nnumbers in costume, A balloon\ndance was featured during the evening. In the reception hall, the\nguests were seated at individual\nparty tables which were covered\nwith green cloths and centred with\nasters and chrysanthemums in silver and crystal vases. The head\ntabling was centred with a large\nsilver basket of pink carnations and\nflanked with pink and green tapers i nsilver sconces. Table and\nbridge lamps were used exclusively\nfor illumination of the hall. Mrs.\nE. J. Chandler was general convenor, who was ably assisted by a\ncommittee including Mrs. A. T.\nSmith, Mrs. J. Fowler, Mrs. James\nDwyer, Mrs. W. E. Harris. Miss\nEthel Webb and Miss Margaret Sar-\ngeant.\nMiss Belle McGauley of Nelson\nattended the University of British\nColumbia banquet and dance Saturday.\nThe Trail Women's institute held\nits first East Trail baby clinic when\n20 babies were examined by Dr. J.\nL. Gayton and Dr. W. J. Endicott.\nAssisting were Mrs. T. Roninson,\nMrs. J. L. Gayton, Mrs. A. Saunders and Mrs. H. Swedberg.\nCentral circle met at the home\nof Mrs. Joseph Shutek, those attending being Mrs. J. A. Stewart,\nMrs. Harrington, Mrs. N. Devlin,\nMrs. N. Ruelle, Mrs. J. Wood, Mrs.\nJ. Shutek, Mrs. J. A. Stewart, Mrs.\nK. Butorac, Mrs. A. Frie.\nMrs. Sahlgren of Fruitvale has\nreturned to her home from the\nTrail-Tadanac hospital, where she\nunderwent an operation.\nMrs. Alex Jackson entertained the\nTown circle of the Ladies' Service\nclub of the First Presbyterian\nchurch Friday afternoon. Mrs. Roy\nHayman was hostess to the East\nTrail circle and Mrs, David Milne\nwas at home to the Nelson avenue\ncircle.\nThe Ladies' aid of East Trail\nUnited church met in the church\nhall Thursday afternoon, the members in attendance being Mrs, W. J,\nBenton, Mrs. T. F. Cullen, Mrs. E.\nPAGE THRI\nT)ttteot# T^\u00a3 (tomjmng^U\nincorkhutsd er? may i670.\nSALE OF FULL FASHIONED\nSilk Hose\nSUBSTANDARD\nThe imperfections in these\nhose are so slight, that you\nwill be wise to stock up\nwith several  pairs at this\nprice. Your choice of either\nsemi-service or sheer chiffon in shades jaunty, moon-\ndusk, carib, caribou, smoke-\nmist or London mist.\nSizes8'\/2tol0'\/2.\nPAIR\n59l\nCHAMOISETTE\nGLOVES\nFLEECE-LINED\nNow is the time you will\nappreciate this fleece-lined\nfabric glove. These come in\nthe gauntlet style with elastic at the wrist\u2014a perfect\nfitting is assured with every\npair. Colors black, brown\nand beaver. Sizes Hf\\\n6V2.08. Pair liJC\nPerfect Celanese\nHOSIERY\nIN ALL NEW COLORS\nFor comfort in an every-day\nhose try this stocking with\na \"stretch-easy\" top. The\ncelanese is durable and yet\nhas the fine appearance of\nsilk. Colors smoketone,\nvogue, incatan, durbar and\ndebonair. Sizes 8V2 Oft-\nto IOV2. Pair OjC\nG. Crispin, Mrs. G. Rainier, Mrs. E.\nStanlon, Mrs. J. McNeil, Mrs. J. S.\nRoss, Mrs. S. Lennoz, Mrs. W. H.\nHouston and Mrs. J. Chambers. At\nthe conclusion ot lhe business meeting Mrs. Houston and Mrs. Chambers were lea hostesses. Mrs. Elmer\nRingheim is a patient in the Trail-\nTadanac hospital.\nMis. P. Lightbody, Kavic road,\nwas hostess to the Milligan Hilt circle, Catholic Women's league, Wednesday night, when she entertained\nwilh a card party. Mrs. K. Verzuh\nwas winner of ihe first prize and\nMrs. S. Dicecco consolation. Miss\nMarion Lightbody assisted her\nmother in serving refreshments.\nThose present were Mrs. P. Lazarenko, Mis. J. Gall. Mrs, M. Wolfe,\nMrs. M. Buckna, Mrs. C. Palek, Mrs.\nW. Fitzgerald, Mrs. J. Kambick,\nMrs. A. J. Kavic, Mrs. T. J. Teahan,\nMrs. J. Sisel and Mrs. F. A, Kudok-\nlin.\nMrs. Morrison of Kimberley, who\nlias been the house guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. Alex Caldwell, has re-\nturend home.\nMayor Bruno Lerose is a patient\nin the Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nAmong those attending the University of British Columbia banquet\nand dance here Saturday were Miss\nB. Lang and Miss Elizabeth Gage\nof Slocan City.\nEast Trail circle, Catholic Women's league, met at the home of Mrs.\nW. Waite Thursday afternon, those\nin attendance being Mrs. Gaines,\nMrs. P. Lagan, Mrs. P. Kobluck,\nMrs. T. Gallagher, Mrs. T. Gagne,\nMrs. V. Bayes, Mrs. S. Hepworth and\nMrs. A. Farnum.\nMrs. J. Devito, Nelson avenue, entertained Nelson avenue circle,\nnumbering among her guests Mrs.\nC. Catalano, Mrs. W. Baril, Mrs.\nGeorge Drew, Mrs. R. D. White, Mrs.\nW. A. Young and Mrs. George Bergeron.\nMrs. R. D. Daoust, Riverside avenue, was hostess to the Riverside\ncircle, the members present being\nMrs. J. Hurley, Mrs. E. G. Provost,\nMrs. N. Wilmes, Mrs. W. J. Sullivan,\nMrs. E. Matthews, Mrs. S. R. Walley\nand Mrs. W. McDonald.\nA surprise miscellaneous shower\nhonoring Miss Eileen Butorac, a\nNovember bride-to-be, was tendered by Mrs. Richard Forde, Owen\napartments, Wednesday evening.\nThroughout the rooms bronze chrysanthemums were used as decora-\nlinns, and the basket which held a\nweallh of articles for the new home\nwas trimmed in mauve and white.\nRefreshments were served by the\nhostess, assisted by her sister, Mrs.\nCecil Dawdy, Miss Fermie DeStef-\nano and Miss Jean Butorac. The\ninvited guests included Mrs. Fred\nLauriente, Mrs. K. Butorac, Mrs.\nBruno Lerose, Mrs. H. R. Lauri- -\nente, Mrs. J. Volpatli, Mrs. Earl.\nLeroy, Mrs. William Thompson, Jr.,\nMrs. John Kennedy, Miss Esther:\nDeStefano, Miss Teresa Muzzin,'\nMiss Mona Shields, iMss Sarah Lerose, Miss Erma Salsiccioli, Mrs.\nDawdy, Miss DeStefano, Miss Jean.\nButorac and the guest of honor.\nMrs. John Wilson and family of\nLargy,    Lamavady,    Londonderry,\nIreland, arrived  here  recently  to\njoin Mr. Wilson, a resident in the \u2022\ncity for the past few years.\nKidneys Musi\nClean Out Adds\nTour My cleans out excess Acids Bnd\npoisonous wastes ln your blood thru 8 million tiny delicate Kidney tubes or Alters. If\ngerms ln the Kidneys or Bladder make you\n\u2022\u25a0\u2022\"-'- *\"--; Up Nights, 1\t\n   under Eyes, _.., ,.\nBackache, Swollen Joints, Acidity, or Burn-\nsuffer from Getting up Nights, Nirvousness,\nLegi Palns,_ Circles .under Eyes, Dizziness,\nclncs. Fight such germs and troubles with\nthe doctor's prescription Cystex. Cystex\nstarts working In 3 hours nnd must provs\nentirely satisfactory ln 1 week and be exact\nly the medicine you need or money back.\nAsk your druggist for Cystex (81ss-tex) today. The money back agreement protects you.\nAn Extension\nTelephone\nIn the Privacy of\nYour Bedroom\nfor as low as SO cents\nper month\nInstallation charge is only $1\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA  TELEPHONE  COMPANY\n\u25a0M\n ipi-PtWljHWI.1. Jlj, PV. ^Bflipiiltjjjy^B^i\n\\tsz rwn <\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. NOV. 15. 1937.\n^\nOOKS ARE POPULAR IN LONDON AS CHEFS MAKE FEASTS\nHew Chef at Buckingham Palace lo\nPrepare Dinner tor King of Belgians\n'ubby Lines Out...\nWinter Styles (all for Slim Figure\nSo Gel Busy and Check Up on Weight\nSmall hole* fat aluminum pans can bo\n(satisfactorily mended by holding a fist\n.piece of iron Inside the pan and pounding\non the outside with a hammer. The aluminum is soft enough to expand and fill the\nemail hole\nWith such a figure she has no need for dieting\nMARGARET LINDSAY\nBy GLADYS GLAD\n:. In one of the smaller countries\nacross the sea, I am told, odd dietary customs are observed. Only\none meal is eaten a day, but that\nmeal, my friends, is a lulu! It takes\nplace around three o'clock in the\nafternoon. It consists of at least\niive courses, and each course is\ndecidedly generous. The table fairly groans beneath the abundance o\u00a3\n-iood.\n' In most countries, of course, we\nare accustomed to the well known\n*Hhree squares a day\". But, personally. I think that a less plentiful\nversion of the one-meal-a-day system would do a great deal of good\nlor some of our tubbier damsels,\nWhen you look at some of the new\n.frocks that have been designed for\nwinter, you can tell in a second\nthat chubby girls are going to be\ndefinitely out of the beauty picture. And I'm willing to wager\nthat there are a good many who\nhave failed to keep their curves under control, and have acquired their\nexcess poundage during the past\nfew months.\nNow is the time for such damsels\nto get their figures into good shape\nagain. The life of the dieter, of\ncourse, is not an easy one, whether\nher aim be the loss of five pounds\nor of 35. For there are so'many\ntemptations in the way of delectable dishes that confront her,\nHowever, the lass who can count\nthe number of her excess pounds on\nher fingers is going to have a much\neasier time of it than her heftier\nsisters. The one who has ac iqrue\nsisters. The one who has acquired\nmore than a doze nexcess pounds\ncan't use half measures, you see.\nFor her, a good, thorough course\nof dieting and exercising is the only\ncourse.\nHALVE FOOD INTAKE\nFor the person who has only a\npound or two to dispense with,\nthere is a much simpler means of\ngetting the figure into attractive\nshape, and that is by cutting the\ndaily intake of food exactly in half.\nIf you arc in this class, stop eating\nbetween meals. Take one buttered\nroll instead of two for breakfast.\nForego those .second helpings at\nluncheon and dinner. You really\ndon't need them, you know. And\nyou'll be surprised at how quickly\nyou'll lose those five or six extra\npounds that are giving your figure\nsuch awkward, inharmonious lines!\nThere's another method for a girl\nlo slenderize her figure lines, and\nthat is through following a fruit\nand vegetable diet for a while. It\n'isn't a starvation diet by any means.\nfor she ran eat all she desires of\nthe recommended funds, but she\nmust stick to these foods exclusively.\nDuring this entire dieting period,\nall breakfast should consist of a\n' brimming glass of orange, grapefruit or some like fruit juice. No\nStarches or sweets should he oaten, and there should bo absolutely\nno nibbling between meals. For\nluncheon, the heavies! meal of the\nday in this case, a selection of\nfresh, cooked vegetables, such as\npeas, carrots, broccoli, spinach,\nstrong beans, cauliflower and asparagus, are particularly appropriate. You can eat as much of these\nvegetables as you wish at your\nmain meal. And for supper you\nshould have a large salad of cold\nvegetables, cooked and uncooked,\nor a bowl of crisp lettuce, chick-\nory, escarole, endive or any of the\nother leafy greens. For dressing,\nolive or mineral oil, lemon juice\nand a bit of chives should be used.\nFerns Can Be Moved\nbut Need Care\nCrOWN PROTRUDING\nABOVE SOIL ..\nStart Young...\nPunish (hild at\nOnce ior Use ol\nUgly Name, Word\nBy GARRY C. MYER8, PH. D.\nThere is a great deal of unhappiness in tlie world because some\npeople will call others ugly names.\nLike charity, this habit begins at\nhome, and generally while the child\nis very young; and tlie mother may\nbe the first object ol the tot's\nattack.\nNow let me entreat you mothers\nof little children to be exacting in\nthis matter. When your little child\nkicks or strikes you or calls you an\nugly name, make him immediately\nsorry for it. Bare his bottom, turn\nhim over your thighs, and give Wm\na smacking he will long remember.\nDo likewise when you first hear him\ncall another person an ugly name,\nHowever, it is always dangerous to\nslap the child's mouth or to strike\nhim about the head.\n. Deal with this anti-social practice when it first appears and it\nsoon will fade out. But if you let\nit go on it may become a fixed\nhabit destined to bring you much\nembarrassment and your child\nmuch unhappiness. Practiced in\nthis bad habit, the child is likely\nto employ it on the playground\nwhen things don't go his way, or\nwhen he is teased by other children.\nYou know tlie consequences\u2014fewer\nand fewer friends, more and more\nannoyers.\nOLDER CHILDREN ABUSIVE\nSome parents write me of tta\nadolescent boy, even girl, who will\ncurse them or speak abusively to\nIhcm or other members of the family. If you have an older child who\noften calls you names or speaks\nabusively to you, immediate rebuke\nor punishment may not be at all\neffective; and the older the child\nthe less effective they will be, as a\nru). A better way is to keep wholly calm and quiet and wait for a\nlater moment when you can be\nwholly poised and he can be ready\nto reason. Then ii you are gentle\nand persuasive, you might accom-\njlish wonders at leading him to\nwant to strive henceforth to restrain himself and be more considerate of you. Generous expression\nof genuine affection for this child\nshould help a great deal.\nOne is tempted to lecture the\nchild immediately after he has ut-\ntred an abusive word \u2014 the very\nthing one should not do then. We\nare angry then and the child is angry. To upbraid him at the moment fires his rage anil ours.\nHappy With Hubby.\nHusband's Folk\nUnkind lo Wife;\nShe Is Unhappy\nDISGUSTED HARRIET writes of\nher husband's relatives who are unkind to her, although they come to\nher when they need help with work\nof various kinds. They never ask\nher to go anywhere with them, and\n\u2022they never come to her home. One\nsister even called her a name, but\nHarriett didn't fight with her even\nthen.\nHarriett and her husband get\nalong beautifully, but she seems\nto expect him ho do something\nabout his family's attitude toward\nher. They all live in a small town,\nso Harriett feels the slights of her\nhusband's people, having no relatives of her own near by.\nHer query is, should she go to\nsee them or have anything to do\nwith them? Even when she isn't\nwell they do not come near her.\nYour case is one of thousands,\nHarriett, Your husband is an only\nson so his family think no girl is\ngood enough for him, and are\njealous of you, his wife. It is too\nbad and they cheat themselves out\nof a lot of pleasure by such an\nattitude.\nI don't know just what your husband can do about it. It would\nnot help if he quarreled with his\nfamily necause of you. It would\nonly make them dislike you more,\nThe only way to handle such a\nsituation is to ignore it and be\nhappy with your husband and your\nfriends. Any situation that you cannot better, .must be accepted and\nmade the best of, you see.\nIf you don't expect your mother-\nin-law or sister-in-law to ask you\ntn go with them or to come to\nyour house, you won't be hurt when\nthey don't. Don't, let it prevent\nyou from doing nice things for\nthem when you can.\nThe main thing is that you are\nhappy with your husband, so dwell\no nthat and make him happy. The\nin-laws may come round in time\nand take you in. As you are lonely\nfor some one belonging to you,\nmake friends and let them substitute for relatives. Many times\nwarm friends are closer to us than\nour relatives \u2014 kinder and more\nunderstanding and sympathetic.\nUNDECIDED: Well, if you like\ntlie first boy best, and he wants to\ncome back and be your best friend,\nbetter take him back. Of course,\nyou won't have quite the faith in\nhim that you did, as he left you\nfor another girl, but you young\nfolk shouldn't take your love af-!\nfairs so seriously. To take t\\iem\nlightly, h6wever, is easier for an\nolder person to say than for a\nyoungster* to do, eh, what?\nSerial Story . . .\nDead Reckoning\nBy BRUCE HAMILTON\n^^    __-*fiaBfc_*\u2014-i\n__\u00a3-_l2-ii\u00ab\u00ab\"\n -_2__&J\nKSli\"\nFerns bring a suggestion of the\nwoods to our gardens. They can\nbe grown successfully providing\nthey can have shade, moisture and\nsoil containing leaf mold and sand.\nIt is best to plant ferns in the autumn, but you must then give them\na mulch of ler. os to protect them\nduring their first winter in a new\nlocation The mulch retains the\nmoisture in the soil until the old\nroots have taken hold and the new\nones have started.\nThis Garden-Graph shows how to\ntransplant ferns. Ferns having a\nprominent crown, such as the Wood-\nferns, Christmas fern am' Ostrich\nfern, should be placed with the\ncrown protruding, as it docs naturally. Otherwise the plant will suffocate. Also do not remove any of the\ndead leaves, but leave them on to\nserve as a protection for the young\nleaf buds.\nFerns can be used advantageously\nwhere most, other plants will not\nthrive, such places as along the\nnorth side of the garage or house,\nunder trees and shrubs, and in other\nheavily shaded parts of the garden,\nDental Science..,\nX-Ray Reveals\nHidden Defects\nin Teeth, Gums\nIf you want to \"jau up\" apple Bauee f or\na special occasion, when it is cooked and\nhot, add one teaopoon cinnamon, one-\nfourth teaspoon ground cloves. Then\ngently fold in one-half pnekase of marsh-\nmallowB cut in quarter*. Heat a few\nmore minutes until the mawhrnallowB ar\u00ab\npartly melted,\nThis is the seventh in a series of\nhealth stories approved by the Nelson department of public health.\nCHAPTER 7.\n\"Let me see,\" said Dr. Young, .as\nhe put the last polishing touches on\nJohn's teeth. \"It has been over two\nyears and a half since we x-rayed\nyour teeth, hasn't it?\"\n\"Don't ask me,\" replied John. \"I\ncouldn't remember how long it had\nbeen since I had my teeth cleaned,\nlet alone x-rayed. Look it up in\nyour records.\"\nDr, Young glanced at John's record card. \"Yes, it has been almost\nthree years since an x-ray has\nbeen taken. I'd advise another one\nif I were you. Your teeth and\ngums look fine, but there may be\nsome cavities starting in between\nyour teeth, especially in between\nyour back teeth, that I can't, discover with my instruments. A full\nmouth x-ray will soon tell us whether or not any new cavities are\nforming on the hidden surfaces of\nyour teeth.\n'Another reason that I would advise an x-ray is that you have two\ndevitalized teeth \u2014 what you ordinarily call dead teeth -~ the pulps or\nnerves have been out of them several years. The last time we x-rayed\nyour mouth they seemed all right; !\nhowever, some infection might have\nstarted in them since then.''\n\"All right,\" said John, \"we better\nbe safe than sorry. 1 don't want\nto take any chances with my health\nthese days.\"\nIt took only a few minutes for Dr.\nYoung and his assistant to x-ray\nJohn's teeth. One by one, fourteen\nlittle films were placed in different\npositions in his mouth. As rapidly\nas Dr. Young adjusted the films\nhis assistant would press the switch\nand' the magic rays penetrated the\ntissues and registered upon the sensitized'plates.\n\"X-rays are wonderful things,\"\nsaid John, as the doctor removed a\nfilm from John's mouth. Tho next\ntwo exposures were taken in silence.\nThen John said, during an interval, \"Funny how x-rays can show\npus and1 infection at the end of a\ntooth or in between the teeth.\"\n\"X-rays don't show p*:,\" replied\nthe doctor, \"x-rays can show a pock-\ncated;, but they can't show the Infection itself.\"\n\"How do they work then?\" asked\nJohn. As the doctor took the last\nof the exposures he explained:\n\"X-rays arc powerful short length\nlight rays, developed by this machine. They are so powerful that\nthey can penetrate almost any object. This little film that I place in\nyour mouth, is nothing more than a\nhighly sensitized photographic plate\nsimilar 1,^ that which-you use in\ntaking snapshots.\n\"When I turn on this switch the\npowerful rays penetrate your cheek,\ngums, bone and teeth and register\nupon the film which I hold behind\nthe teeth.\n\"Naturally the rays penetrate the\nsoft gum tissue more easily than\nthey penetrate the harder bone tissue. They penetrate tho bone tissue more easily than they penetrate the harder tooth structure,\nThe x-rays developed by this machine will not penetrate such things\nas metals used in inlays, fillings,\ncrowns and bridges. Therefore,\nwhen the rays strike those objects\nthey are entirely screened out and\ndo not. register on the film. All\nthat, you see in an x-ray film is a\nshadow produced by tho rays passing through the various tissues.\n\"Thus gum tissue shows up dark\nbecause the rays penetrate it easily. The bone shows lighter because\nit is dense enough to screen out or\nhold back part of the rays. The\nharder tooth structure holds back\nstill more rays so that it. shows\nlighter in the film, and the metal\nfillings show clean because none of\ntho rays penetrate them.\n\"Now an abscess condition of long\nstanding usually causes the bone\nat. Ihe root, end of the tooth to be\neaten away. Therefore, when an\nx-ray picture is taken of that tooth,\nthe rays penetrate the weakened\nbone more easily than they penetrate the solid healthy bone and\nthat, makes a dark spot on the film.\nYou don't actually see the pus in\ntho abscess, but you do see the bone\ndost ruction caused by the infection.\nIs that clear?\"\n\"Perfectly,\" said John ns he pro-\npared to leave.\n(To Be Continued Monday)\net in the bone, where pus may be lo-  onion and green pepper.\nPICKLE APPETIZER\nAn unusual appetizer may be\nmade by cutting dill pickles ihU:\nl\\    -inch slices, hollowing the een   j\nIres and filling them with cottage      Mayonnaise   can   be   \"stretched\"\ncheese mixed with minced parsley, j or diluted by folding it into beaten\nCHAPTER 33\nBeing honest enough to recognize\nthe justice of the misfortune that\nhad overtaken him by the evidence\nAdams had 'scovered, Tfm never\nattempted to paliate his deficiencies\nby ascribin them to bad luck. For\nalmost the only, ethical principle -e\nacknowledged 'was a belief that\nanyone who behaved in a foolish\nor injudicious manner fully\nserved to suffer the consequences\nentailed by his own action.\nHe was not beyond applying the\nrule to himself, and even succeeded\nin extracting consolation from his\nown freedom from self-deception,\narguing that experience would immunize him from blunders in the\nfuture. He admitted that he \" d\nbeen singularly fortunate to escape\ncomplete disaster at the price of a\nmoney tax which, however sever,\nhe was not incapable of paying.\nHis external life, indeed, suffered no considerable change.\nAdams, now the mischief was out,\nrelapsed into the model servant he\nalways had been, treating Tim with\nscrupulous respect U\\ public, and\nin private obtrudin; himself as\nlittle as possible, only using a very\nmoderate degree of familiarity\nwhen contact was unavoidable.\nHo even showed positive consideration. It was at his suggestion that the story was given\nout at 'Hie Wilderness that his\nLondon doctor had advised him to\ntake things easier owing to a w.ak\nheart. In this way his sudden emancipation from alt household duties\nescaped dangerous speculation and\ncomment, and Tim got credit for\nhis thoughtfulncss and solicitude.\nIt became necessary to take on\na boy to relieve the extra pressure\non tho domestic staff, nnd this cost\na little more money, 3ut\/ Adams\nfulfilled his promise to carry un\nwith his work at the surgery. He\nshowed his power only by more\nfrequent demands for leave of absence, which he customarily overstayed.\nTim did not find his feelings toward Alma in any way diminished\nby worry jver self-preservation.,\nIndeed, he thought of her more\noften and with intenser passiun, as\na refuge from other preoccupations.\nBut after a good deal of self-communion he decided not to advance\ntho day for bringing his affairs with\nher to  a  clear understanding. Ho\nSolved Problems...\nScientists Use\nCats lo Assist\nStudy Aviation\nBy LOGAN CLENDENNING, M.D.\nSc-veral years ago in a certain part\nof this strange country, you might\nhave seen two serious looking men\ndropping cats out of windows. The\ncats were scientifically photographed with a motion picture camera,\nas they fell, and, in fact, an endowment of $10,000 had been made\nto take the pictures, for it was believed that they would stive some\nproblems that were troubling aviation flight surgeons and their patients, the pilots.\nIt was well known that even with\nvery good cars, a pilot may go into\na spinning nose dive or some such\nwhirling maneuvre, and when he\ncomes out he has illusions\u2014he may\nhave the illusion of turning when\nhe isn't. This iluusion, it was\nknown, comes from the disturbance\nof the inner ear due to life spinning\nmaneuvre, and some surgeons suggested that the safest aviators would\nbe those whose ears do not work.\nHence, the experiments with the\ncats. It is known that cats have a\nremarkable feeling of position in the\nair\u2014what pilots call \"the feel of the\nship\", If dropped from a window\nfeet up, they immediately right\nthemselves, extend all legs downward with the back humped, float\ndownward and land perfectly.\nThe question the flight surgeons\nwanted answered was whether sight\nor vestibular sense in tho ears was\nmore important for this. So they\nblindfolded cats by tying a bag over\nthe head, and dropped them from\nthe window, Thoy turned over just\nas promptly and landed just as well\nas when tho eyes were open.\nNow the surgeons destroyed both\ninner ears (under an anesthetic, of\ncourse), let the cats recover, and\ndropped them with eyes open. They\ndid not turn right side up, but rolled over and over on descending\nuntil the ground was struck. With\none ear out of commission, thoy gav.\na better performance, but not as\ngood as the normal cat.\nCAN DO WITHOUT\nONE EAR\nIf one cerebellar hemisphere\u2014the\ncerebellum is the little brain to\nwhich the vestibular fiber of percep\ntion of position go\u2014is destroyed, the\ncats turn over very well, both with\neyes open and blindfolded. If the ear\non the opposite side is destroyed,\nIhey give a bad performance, just as\nthey do if both cerebellar hemispheres are removed.\nAll this is very important for the\ntraining of aviators, and especially\nwith reference to blind flying. \"Any\noverconfident pilot, who still feels\nthat, he can rely on his own senses\nin meeting all the conditions of the\nair is apt to come to grief,\" says\nDr. Isaac Jones in his hook on aviation medicine. Man has not as good\nequilibrium sense as tho cat. Through\nall tho ages the bird has been meeting the conditions in the air. He\nhas internal ears of enormous siz\u00a3.\nand he has been using those and the\nparts of the brain to which they are\nconnected through countless experiences. Yet it has been found that a\nbird always avoids a fog or a cloud.\nIt. doer, not, like blind flying.\nThere are many instrument tho\npilot uses to correct his senses\u2014lhe\ndirection gyro, the turn and bank\nindicator, lhe rate of climb, indicator,\nall of whicli stabilize his senses.\nMany pilots, however, do not. trust\ntheir instruments and \"if one analyze?,\" says Dr. Jones, \"lhe disasters of modern aviation, he cannot,\nfail to be impressed with .an old\nstory --'Bad weather\u2014fog- -storm'---\nin brief, blind flying.\"\nwanted to go to her with a clear,\nuntroubled mind, and ' e felt Lis\nto be impossible under present conditions,\nThough reconciled to the necessity of paying hush money for a\nwhile, he had no intention of continuing to do so indefinitely. But\nhe needed time to elaborate a policy. He had a strong belief that\nprovided the induce, .nt was sufficiently temptbjg, Adams would not\nbe able to resist indefinitely the\noffer of a big cash payment in return for the letter. Freedom would\nbring restlessness, and by waiting\npatiently and choosing his time Tim\nhoped to arrange a deal which\nwould make him his own master\nagain\nThe problem was how to raise\nthe money. When he had told\nAdams that \u00a350.0 was all he could\nmanage, he was almost speaking\nthe truth. Actually, he had rather\nover \u00a3600 at the bank\u2014\u00a3500 on deposit, a sum he had for several years\nbeen intending to invest in industrial securities, the -remainder\nthe balance of his current account.\nHis standard of living had always marched pretty close to his\nincome, and he had never succeeded\nin saving very much. During the\nlast, year, owing to Esther's accident, he had spent, considerably\nmore than was coming in. He had\nplanned to put by \u00a3200 or \u00a3300\nyear when he reached the age of\n50. Presuming he retired at 65\nthis amount, together with what\nhe had saved already, and the pro\ncoeds of the sale of his practice,\nwould have sufficed to buy him a\ncomfortable annuity and make provision for Esther, if still alive.\nIt, was evident that is scheme\nwould have to be modified. He\nwas afraid ho might have to go\nup to \u00a31000 to attract Adams. At\ntlie same tune, he was not prepared to curtail drastically his rate\nof expenditure. He was fixed in\nhis personal habits, used to certain\ncomforts and conveniences which\ncost money; besides, his pride made\nit impossible to inaugurate his marriage to Alma with a regime of\neconomy.\nAfter long thought he devised\nwhat seemed to be a likely' solution. If he let The Wilderness,\nwhich he could probably do at a\nrental of between \u00a3300 and \u00a3400 a\nyear, he believe1 he would be able\nto borrow from his bank enough\nto mako up \u00a31000 to buy off Adams.\nThe rent would serve as security,\nand afford him something over for\ncurrent expenses.\n1h the meantime he and Alma\ncould live at Maybank, It would\nbe a wrench parting with The\nWilderness, it would be hard to ask\nAlma to share the sacrifice, for\nshe had obviously fall n in love\nwith the place. But he could provide a , _jry plausible reason which\nwould do him credit\u2014say that for\nthe time being memories of Esther\nhad made the place unbearable to\nhim. And they would be able to\nreturn there directly his finances\nwere straight again, probably in a\ncouple of years.\nUnder such circumstances, however, it would be . dvisable for him\nto make the gesture of offering to\npay the rent of Maybank, or at\nleast part of it. He was pretty\ncertain that this did not amount\nto more than \u00a380 or \u00a390 a year,\nat an outside figure, but it became\nimportant to find out something\nabout Alma's financial siuation.\nIt is curious but quite characteristic that Tim had never shown\nthe slightest interest in this. Never\nan avaricious man, he had rested\nserene i the assurance that he\ncould earn enough to ensure the\nhappiness of their lives together.\nThere was no mercenary motive behind his pursuit of Alma. But he\nhad assumed that she was quite\ncomfortably off. Her dress, her\nwhole style,of living, were not that\nof a woman who found making ends\nmeet and keeping up appearances\nanything of a struggle.\nTim could not of course sound\nBy MOLLIS McGEE\n(Canadian Press Correspondent).\nLONDON, Nov. 14 (CP).-London hostesses are looking to their\nkitchens. Not for more than 10 years\nhave there been such brilliant, formal entertainments and more than\never success is a matter of culinary\neffort.\nAt Buckingham Palace there has\nbeen a change of chefs. During the\nreign of George V, Monsieur M. Pou-\npart prepared royal meals. He resigned in the time of Edward VIII,\nreturning to superintendent the coronation banquets for George VI and\nta instruct Monsier Rene Roussin\nwho has taken his place.\nThe new chef will show his skill\nat the banquet Nov. 16 in honor of\nKing Leopold of the Belgians. Later\nhe will prepare royal feasts for King\nCarol of Rumania, King Boris of\nBulgaria and the King of Greece\nwho \"will visit the King and Queen\nduring the next few months.\nAt the reception given by the\nMarchioness of Londonderry \u2014 the\nmost brilliant affair of the season to\ndate\u2014refreshments came from the\nhistoric tile kitchen that is large\nenough to accommodate an army of\ning given special mention by the\npapers. Costumes were also a feature\nat the Londonderry reception on the\nevening preceding the state opening.\nII was attended by about 2000 of\nLondon's elite.\nHemmed in by brilliant uniforms\nand scintillating jewelry it took\nguests 20 minutes to ascend the\nmarble staircase and greet the hostess, Lady Londonderry, who wore\nthe spectacular diamond tiara and\nbrooches given her ancestress by a\nRussian Cz*r. Yet, amongst all the\nwomen's gowns one particularly\nstood out, a marvellously-embroidered yellow Chinese silk dress worn\nby Madam Quo Tai-chi, wife of\nChina's ambassador. It made be-\nsequinned satins look ordinary.\nQueen Elizabeth spent only four\ndays in London when she first returned from Scotland before leaving for a tour of Yorkshire. While\nin town she chose her white and\ngold gown for opening of parliament\nand a collection of other dresses\nfrom the house that has made for\nher since she grew up.\nFor evening, the Queen decided\non a white-gold lame patterned in\nsmall squares shot with the mauve\nand green of beetles' wings. This\nservants and has great copper pans: js known as \"Precious Stones\" and\nmore than 100 years old lining the j will be worn on official occasions,\nhigh shelves. For  family  parties  she   choso   an\nlt is no longer considered smart ashes-of-roses satin broche, rcsemb-\nmercly to have a caterer come in. | ling a lovely old damask. Her day-\nOld cook books are being brought i lime dresses, all made with three-\nout, old recipes tried out. Women' quarter or hip-length coats, are in\nwho bear great names are houseproud of new electric appliances and\nare taking pride in offering their\nguests delicacies prepared under\ntheir own supervision by their own\ncooks.\nDRESS RESPLENDENT\nLovely gowns were worn to the\nopening of parliament, Mrs. Neville\nold   rose  velveteen,   made  with\nblouse of lame, in soft biscuit angora\u2014with matching satin top and\nin \"Queen's Blue\" wool -~\u25a0 heavy\nmorocain top.\nThe Duchess of Kent has thrown\nher lot in with women who wear\nhats in the evening. She appeared\nwith the Duke at a restaurant late\none evenly recently in a black vel-\nChamberlain's   mauve   and   silver! vet evening gown and tiny black\nbrocade with purple velvet cloak be-' velvet hat with a nose veil.\nher personally, however delicate\nhis approach, with a proposal of\nmarriage looming in the near fore\nground. But by discreet handling,\nso that they had no suspicion that\nthey were being pumped, he managed to get the information he\nwanted out of the Grantleys, who\nhad known Alma for a good many\nyears.\nIt appeared that her personal\nfortune amounted to between \u00a3600\nand \u00a3700 a year, leaving aside alimony (which would probably cease\non remarriage) of about \u00a3200. This\nwas eminently satisfactory, and Tim\nfelt he could go ahead without fear\nof embarrassment.\nAccordingly, one morning before\ngoing to work he looked in at\nBlacklidge and Son, the chief real\nestate agents in West Shilston, and\nhad a very satisfactory conversation with the son.\n\"I can let The Wilderness easily,\nMr, Kennedy,\" said young Blacklidge. \"It's just the right size for\na country house just now. What\nlength of lease have you in mind?\"\n\"I thought about two years.\"\n\"It would be better for a longer\nor a shorter period, but I've no\ndoubt we can manage it.\"\n\"What sort of rent can I ask\nfor?\"\n\"You'd let furnished, I suppose?\"\n\"Oh, certainly,\"\n\"Well, I'd like to talk it over\nwith my father before making a\ndefinite suggestion. And it would\nbe better for one of us to look\nover the place. But I should say\nprovisionally you ought to ask for\nat least \u00a3350, and be prepared to\ncome down to \u00a3.325. I certainly\nshouldn't let it go for less than\n\u00a3300.\"\nTim nodded. This was very much\nwhat he had expected,\n\"I wish you'd go ahead then.\nAnd if you or your father want to\nlook over the house, I'll show you\nround. What about the lunch hour\ntomorrow?\"\n\"That'll do, Mr. Kennedy. I think\nSomvysayings\nThi. ain't no wny t' start out n\nnew week, but kin \/ help it!\nSnappy Weather...\nhints for\nhousewives\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMenu  Hint\nCream Soup        Toast or Crackers\nSalmon or Shrimp Salad\nHashed Brown Potatoes\nSquash or Pumpkin Pie       Coffee\nWhen  the weather is cool and\nsnappy, cream soups taste very delicious, With a plate full of rich\nsoup, one needs no othe,r hearty dish\nso I am suggesting that you serve\na fish salad, warmed over potatoes,\nand dessert for a full meal. Personally I have never added glycerine to cream soups, but it is said\nthat this gives them a smoother flavor, and so is recommended. Glycerine has a sweet taste, and is colorless\nyou know. It may be omitted if you\nprefer.\n1 egg white.\nToday's Reclpe9\nCREAMED ONION SOUP - - One\neup<diccd onions, two cups milk, one\ntablespoon butter, one and one-half\ntablespoon.s flour, two tablespoons\nglycerine, white pepper, one-half\nteaspoon salt. Boil the diced onions\nin small amount, of salted water\nuntil done. Scald milk in ton of\ndouble boiler. Rub butler, flour,\nseasoning to a smoflth paste and add\nto the hot milk, stirring until sauce\nis thick and smooth. Add glycerine,\nmixing thoroughly. Cover and cook\nsauce three minutes. Rub cooked\nonions through sieve into the hot\nsauce and serve.\nin inch pieces and cook with onion\nin water until done. Force through\ncoarse sieve. Melt butter, add flour\nand milk and cook until thickened,\nAdd glycerine and cook until sauce\nis done. Add sieved Celery to\nsauce and reheat before serving.\nCREAM OF CARROT SOUP -\nThree large carrots, three medium\nsized potatoes, one onion, one\ntablespoon flour, two cups milk,\none and one-half tablespoons butter, three tablespoons glycerine, one\nteaspoon chopped green pepper,\none tablespoon chopped parsley, salt, pepper. Peel and slice\ncarrots, onion and chopped pepper.\nCook until tender in salted water.\nMash through a coarse sieve, saving the stock. Frepare a white\nsauce with flour, butter and milk\nand add glycerine when cooked,\nmixing well. Add vegetables\n(sieved) and stock. Reheat, add\nparsley, salt and pepper to taste\nand beat with a rotary beater and\nserve very hot A spoonful of\nwhipped cream may be added before serving if desired.\nCREAM OF CELERY SOUP -\nSix stalks celery, one-half cup\nwater, three cups milk, one slice\nonion, three tablespoons butter,\nthree tablespoons flour, one-half\nteaspoon salt, three* tablespoons\nglycerine, pepper.  Wash celery, cut\nWASHABLE  NECKTIES\nIN FAVOR\nWashable neckties are being taken up in a bija; way in masculine\narbiters of fashion. Made of Congo\ncloth and other non-crushable fabrics, they keep on looking sprightly\nno matter how often they are tied\nand untied. As soon as they lose\ntheir ciisp freshness, a soap and\nwater bath is all they need to reenter the service of the most exacting Beau Brummel.\nENGLISH WIG STANDS\nIn The days when men wore powdered wigs in England, in the\neighteenth century, mahogany wig\nstands w^re used either for bowls\nof wig powder or to support the\nwigs while they were .being powdered and curled. Today these\nstands aro put to quite anothei\npurpose. They make exceedingly\nattractive stands for growing plants,\nivy or cut flowers and add a decorative touch to a room.\nmy father knows the accommodation pretty well. It's a question of\ncondition, you see, sir. If the house\nis in good order, it makes quite a\ndifference to the rent.\"\n\"Oh, it's in excellent order.\"\nTim went on to his surgery well\nsatisfied. He finished work at about\nhalf past 1. He was about to cross1\nthe road to the William and Mary,\nwhere he usually lunched these\ndays, when Dr. Harold Arkwright's\ncar pulled up at the curb in front\nof him.\n\"Hullo, Tim,\" said Doctor Arkwright. \"I haven't seen you for\nquite a while.   Had your lunch?\"\n\"I was just going over the road\nto get it.\"\n\"Well, jump in and come and\nhave a bite with me instead.\"\n\"Thanks.   I don't mind If I do.\"\nTim got in, and Doctor Arkwright restarted the car. \"How\nare you feeling these days, old\nman?\" he asked.\n\"Pretty low.   But T keep going.\"\n\"Same here. But I don't know\nif I'll be able to much longer. I'm\ngetting to be an oli man, Tim\nI'm seriously thinking of retiring\nnext year.\"\n\"Nonsense, Harold. You've half\na dozen years of good work in\nfront of you yet.\"\nDoctor Arkwright shook his head\ngloomily. ''One's as old as one's\narteries,\" he said. \"I get tired very\neasily nowadays. And I find it\nharder and harder keeping my\ntemper witli stupid patients. That's\nfatal, you know.\"\n\"Oh, all you want Is a good holiday.\"\n(To Be Continued)\nFrom several hundreds of letters\nrecently received from persona who\nhave been using Dr. Chase's\nParadol the following quotation ia\nselected for today.\n\"I havo been subject to severe\nheadaches for yeara and have\ntaken any amount of headache\ntablets without obtaining much\nrelief. 1 now use Dr. Chase's\nParadol and find that one or two\ntablets ia sufficient to relieve a bad\nheadache.\"\nParadol is n quick relief for headache, neuralgic and rheumatic\npains. Sinco Paradol is n Or.\nChase product you can depend on\nit to bo reliable ond effective.\nParadol .15 cents at nil dealers or\nThe Dr. A. W. Chuso Medicine\nCompany, Ltd., Toronto, Canada.\nr\\    DR.CHASE'S      I\nParadol\n mmmmmmmmmmmm\nvipiiwn^jf^\n*yt^^i!in>''!Wl'*-'*w?\nm\nNELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-MONDAY MORNING. NOV. 15, 1937.\n\u25a0 PAGE   FIVE\n193 Persons Transferred From\nFernie District in Two Years;\nTotal Cost fo Province $7222\nAnswering questions asked In the\nhouse at Victoria by T-iomas Uphill, member for Fernie, Hon. G. S.\nPearson, minister of labor, stated\n156 persons had been transferred\nfrom Fernie district in 1936 and 1937\nto other parts ol the province, at a\ncost of $4077.37. An additional 37\npersons were sent from the Fernie\ndistrict to other provinces, or 'overseas.' Of the combined total of 193\npersons transferred, 112 were adults\nand 81 were minors. The total cost\nof transfers was $7222.85. Altogether\n99 families and 65 single persons\nwere transferred in the two-year\nperiod, Inclusive of unassisted transfers.\nSecurities to the amount of $12,-\n547,528.21 are held by the workmen's compensation board, the minister of labor told another questioner. None of the securities thus\nheld are in default as to principal,\nat the present time; but the pro\nvince of Alberta is ln default as to\none-halt of the Interest ph its securities, arid the district of Burnaby,\nand the city and district of North\nVancouver are in' default as to Interest.\nCRESTON LANDS\nA series of questions asked Hon.\nA. Wells Gray, .minister of lands,\nelicited for the Souse the Information that between January 1, 1936,\nand October 31, 1937, three parcels\nof land in the Creston land settlement area were disposed of to- purchasers, who were P. Meyer at $2950,\nA. W. Sinclair, jr., at $950, and Garfield Gorrill at $1800. The two first\nnamed were given immediate possession as former leaseholder was in\noccupation.\" Notice was given this\nsquatter on March 15, -637, to va\ncate this land, but compliance was\nnot forthcoming, and the land settlement board altered its attitude \"in\nview of representations made by\nresidents.\"\nA PIONEER B. G.\n\"GOBLIN GOLD\"\nDramatic Society Puts\non Comedy Drama\nat Hall\nROBSON, B. C\u2014The Robson\nAmateur Dramatic society delighted a large audience November 6 at\nRobson hall, when they presented\n\"Goblin Gold.\" The play was a\ncomedy drama written by Isabel\nEcclestone Mackay and published by\nSamuel French of New York.'\nThe story concerned Ma Beamer,\na widow, in reduced circumstances\nwhose only wish was \"to get the\nbutcher bill paid.\" The part was\nsplendidly taken by Mrs. D. Magee.\nCORNS REMOVED WITH\nCASTOR OIL:\nBay goodbye to clumsy corn-pads nnd risky\nrazors. A new liquid called HORN-KING\nendB pain In 60 seconds. Dries up peskiest\ncorm or callus. Contains pure castor oil,\ncamphor and iodine. Absolutely safe. Winner of Good Housekeeping Seal. Easy directions in package. 86e bottle saves untold\nmisery. Druggist returns money If KOl.N-\nKING fails to remove any corn or callus.\nSOLD AT\nfleury'$ Pharmacy\nBox 505 Medical Arts Block\nNELSON, B.C.\nRUBBERS\nThe widow's son, Tom, well played\nby Mr. Albert Kisell, was a worried young man, who, without consulting his mother, had mortgaged\ntheir home and was being forced\nby his creditors to surrender it.\nAlso he had a pretty young wife,\nBrenda, accurately played'by Miss\nJean Ballard, who was a persistent\nbargain hunter, and in this way\nspent much of their slender means.\nMrs. Beamer's elder daughter,\ntola, excellently played by Mrs. R.\nT. Waldie, was struggling to complete her normal course to become a teacher. Her young sister,\nSally, played in a delightful manner\nby Miss Helen Magee, was a school\ngirl whose slang and boisterous\nmanner bothered her family.\n\u2022 Their wealthy relatives, the\nhaughty Mrs. Bolton-Brown, cleverly played by Mrs. W. H. Porter,\nand the henpecked Mr. Bolton-\nBrown, played in an amusing manner by George Clyde, were no benefit to the Beamers.\nTheir fortunes, however, were\nvery rosy at the conclusion of the\nplay for-their old Uncle Simon, a\nprospector who had come to live with\nthem, turned out to be rich, after\nall.. Before he arrived they had\nhigh hopes that he would be well\noff but when he came they saw he\nwas poor. Nevertheless they all\ncame to love him dearly. Thill part\nwas ably taken by J. T. Webster.\nThe bearer of the good newS that\ngold was found making Uncle Sime\na rich man, was his partner from\nthe mine, Nick Callings, well played\nby J. Walker. He took a liking\nto Uncle Simon's folks at once,\nespecially to Iola, the pretty young\nschool teacher.\nTha Beamer family was overcome\nwith joy when Uncle Simon so\nproudly gave them back the deed\nto their house and told them that\ntheir financial worries were at an\nend.\nThe play was directed by Mrs.\nLily Hett\nLATESTCAROF APPLES CONTAINS\nCHRISTMAS BOXES FOR OLD LAND\nJ.\u00bbL        '!\nTHE HASSARD'S MODERN FARM RESIDENCE\nBUILDERS OF NATIONS\nTop row, left to right\u2014Ernest F. Hassard,' San Francisco, Cal., Gordon J. Hassard, Enderby, John I. Hassard, Armstrong, Elmer 0.\nHassard, Vancouver,,Fred J. Hassard, Victoria, A. L. Hassard, Enderby.\nSecond row\u2014Mrs. R. Stevenson, Enderby,. M)ss Thelma Hassard,\nVernon, Mrs. W. Ward, Lumby, Mrs. T. J, Whitehead, Vancouver, Mrs.\nN. K, McDonald, Vernon, Mrs. P. G. Farmer, Enderby, Mrs. John\nL. Jenkins, Nelson, Mrs. Gforge Jones, Enderby, Mrs. F. A. Beals,\nVernon. Bottom row\u2014W. A. Hassard, Enderby,' Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nHassard, Vernon, Mrs. W. Johnston, Vernon.\nThe above picture portrays the story of the growth of a pioneer\nBritish Columbia family. This group was taken at the Hassard estate\nrecently at a family reunion, a son coming from California to attend the gathering. With one exception, Mrs. W. Johnston, all the\nfamily were born at the ranch home at Enderby.\nMr. and Mrs. Hassard came to Enderby 45 years ago from Ontario, -where they took up a homestead. Today the farm is one\nof the most up-to-date in the Okanagan, there being 640 acres under\ncultivation. While the Okanagan is famed for its fruit, the Hassards\nbelieve in tilling the soil for wheat and hay.\nThe picture to the left shows the modern ranch home. Mr. and\nMrs. Hassard have now retired and the farm is managed by their\ntwo sons, Gordon and Al,\nNELSON Social..\nOn Nofciisp's lake Playground\nBy MRS M. J. VIGNEUX\nEvery Style\nEvery Size\nfor every member\nof the family.\nR. ANDREW\nand Company\nLeaders in Footfashion\n\"Mortals and\nImmortals\" Is\nSermon Subject\n\"MORTALS and IMMORTALS\"\nwas the subject ot the Lesson-Sermon in First Church of Christ, Scientist, Nelson, Sunday.\nThe Golden Text was: \"Because\nye are sons, God hath sent forth\nthe Spirit of His Son into your\nhearts, crying, Abba, Father. Wherefore thou art no more a servant, but\na son; and if a son, then an heir of\nGod through Christ\" (Galatlons 4:6,\n7.)\nAmong the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the\nfollowing from the Bible: \"Even every one that is called by my name;\nfor I have created him for my\nglory, I have formed him; yea, I\nhave made him\" (Isaiah 43:7.)\nThe Lesson-Sermon also Included\nthe following passage from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science and Health with Key to the\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy:\n\"Immortal man was and is God's\nImage or idea, even the infinite\nexpression of infinite Mind, and\nimmortal man is coexistent and co-\neternal with that Mind. He has been\nforever in the eternal Mind, God;\nbut infinite Mind can never be in\nman, but is reflected by man.\"\nDEATHS\nBy the Canadian Press\nParis\u2014M. Franklin-Bouillon, 65, a\nleader of the left wing party and\ndetermined opponent of the Versailles treaty.\nBaltimore \u2014 Harold J. (Derby\nDick) Thompson, 55 who as chief\ntrainer for the E. H. Bradley stables\nsaddled four Kentucky derby winners.\nToronto\u2014Prof. Adam Carruthers,\n80, professor emeritus, University\ncollege, University of Toronto.\nToronto\u2014Thomas J. Madigan, Toronto newspaperman,\n\u2022 Mrs. Alex Leith, Terrace apartments, plans to leave via the Great\nNorthern this morning for La Jolla,\nCalif., to spend the winter.\n\u2022 Lyman St. Dennis of Trail,\nwas a recent visitor at the home of\nhis father, D. St. Denis, Kerr apartments.\n\u2022 Most Rev. Martin M. Johnson,\nD. D., bishop of Nelson, left by\nmotor Saturday for Penticton and\ndistrict. He plans to return the\nlatter part of this week.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gaston Bourgeois of Crescent Valley were guests\nin Nelson Saturday of Mr. and Mrs.\nGracien Bourgeois, Behnsen street,\nFairview.\n\u2022 Ronald Webb of Trail, spent\nthe week-end in the city.\ne Mrs. Hughes of Queen's Bay,\nvisited Nelson Saturday.\ne Shoppers in town Saturday\nincluded W. Smith of Crescent Valley.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, Ralph'Sostad of\nErie, visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Douglas Nagle, Charles H.\nStark, A. Begg, Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nC. Kettlewell, Mrs. L. Hanna and\nDavid Kerr attended the funeral ot\nS. Hunter at Kaslo Friday.\ne Miss Beatrice French, who\nteaches at Brilliant, spent the weekend at the home in Fairview, of her\nmother, Mrs. J. J. French.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, Alex Smith, Fall\nstreet, had as their guest, Mrs. M. H.\nBaskin of Slocan Park, who left Saturday for her home.\n\u2022 Miss Donalda Walker, who teaches at Boswell, visited Nelson at\nthe week-end.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stogart ot\nSlocan City spent Saturday in town.\n\u2022 Charles Unsworth, teacher at\nSheep Creek, spent the week-end\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 R. E. Witter of the Sheep Creek\nMining company, visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, E, A. Mann and\nfamily, Silica street, have returned\nfrom a few days at Spokane.\ne Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Varseveld,\nKootenay street, had as their weekend guest their daughter, Miss Josephine Varseveld, who teaches at\nShoreacres.\n\u2022 Mrs. H. Carlin, Carbonate\nstreet, has returned from a three\nmonth visit to Vancouver Island.\n\u2022 A. S. Ritchie of Procter, Is\nspending a few days with his family, Latimer and Ward streets.\n\u2022 Mrs. John Erb and infant son,'\nLatimer street, have returned from\nseveral weeks at Victoria.\n\u2022 Mrs. Norman Major of Longbeach, visited town Saturday.\ne Mrs. M. Gibbs, Victoria street,\nplans to leave this morning via the\nGreat Northern' for Sacramento,\nCalif., where her son, Harry Gibbs,\nresides. Mrs. Gibbs will visit en\nroute at Eugene, Ore.\n, \u2022 Mr. dhd Mrs. P. 0. Bird of\nBonnington, visited town Saturday.\ne J, F. (Billy) Bunyan, of the\nYmir Yankee Girl mine at Ymir,\nvisited his parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. G. Bunyan, Nelson, over the\nweek-end.\ne Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gordon,\nJosephine street, left yesterday on a\nfew days' visit to Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. A. McCabe of Bonnington, spent Saturday in town.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city Saturday\nincluded Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Ferguson and daughter, Bobby, of Ymir.\n\u2022 Robert Winstanley of Michel,\nrecently was in Nelson en route\nMiss E. Shorthouse\nResigns From Staff\n, of Fernie Hospital\nFERNIE, B. C.-Miss Edith Short-\nhouse,'for several years a member\not the nursing staff of the Fernie\nGeneral hospital, has tendered her\nresignation to the board, effective\nNovember 15th. It is understood that\nMiss Shorthouse is gqlng to Nelson.\nMiss Winifred Fensom was appointed to the permanent stall in place\nof M)ss Shorthouse.\nMISS DIM IS A\nROBSONSPEAKER\nHealth Nurse Tells of\n:rhe \"Last Great\nNorthwest\"\nROBSON, B. C.\u2014Robson Women's\nInstitute met November 10 at the\nhome of Mrs. Claude Duplat. There\nwere 20 members present. The\nmeeting was in charge of the President, Mrs. George Miller.\nIt was decided that each member would bring some sort of toy\nto the next meeting to be sent to\nthe children at the Solarium.\nThe matter of having a district\nconvention was discussed and it\nwas hoped that one could be arranged soon.\nThe members were notified that\nthe library contained a new lot of\nbooks just arrived from Procter,\nthe Institutes having exchanged\nbooks.\nFinal plans for the Christmas\ntree were left until the next meeting, but it was decided to propose\nto the Sunday school that the Institute combine the community tree\nwith the Sunday school entertain,\nment.\nMiss Ruth McDiarmid read a letter from Mrs. Duncan Carter, a\nformer member, who told of attending a Women's Institute meeting io England, where she is visiting.\nMISS DUNN SPEAKS\nMrs. D. Magee and Mrs. W. T.\nWaldie, Child Welfare committee,\ntook charge of the meeting, and\namusing quizz, then introduced the\nspeaker of the afternoon, Miss Dunn,\nhealth nurse of Nelson, who gave a\nsplendid talk on \"The Last Great\nNorth West.\" The ladies were intensely interested in her stories of\nthe north country in the Peace River\ndistrict and in the beautifully\nmounted pictures of homes and\npeople and roads in that area.\nAlso a feature of the afternoon\nwas the contribution of three amusing recitations by Miss Mae Macfarlane of Nelson.\nBoth Nelson ladies were given a\nhearty vote of thanks.\nTea was served by the hostesses,\nMrs. D. Gavrilik and Mrs. C. E.\nTutt.\nBetter   Than   Car   a\nDay  Moved   in\nOctober\nDemand for Kootenay apples has\ncontinued excellent in the past two\nweeks, Robert Foxall, manager of\nthe Nelson sub-central of the Asso--\nciated Growers of British Columbia,\nannounced Friday.\nShipments have been made to\nWinnipeg, Edmonton, Brandon and\nNeepawa, Man., as well as a total\nof five cars to the export market\nvia Montreal.\nIn checking over records for October it was found that shipments,\nfrom Nelson and district to both export and domestic market combined\nhad averaged a little better than a\ncar a day. Included in the total shipment of five cars lo England during\nthe month, were about 18,000 boxes,'\nmostly Macintosh Reds and- Jonathans. These varieties have made\nan enviable reputation for themselves in Great Britain.\nIt is expected that the last export\nshipments will go forward next\nweek. A car was loaded Saturday\nwhich contained a large number of\nboxes of apples shipped as Christmas presents from residents of the\nKootepays to relatives and friends\nin England.\nHugh Brown Who\nSaved Man's Life\nYear Ago Is Dead\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-Following a\nthree week illness, Hugh Brown\npassed away at the St. Eugene hospital Friday. Mr. Brown was 31\nyears of age, and has been living\nin Fernie and Cranbrook since he\nwas one year old. He was born in\nScotland. Ho is survived by his wife\nand son Donald, at Cranbrook, hia\nparents at Fernie, and three brothers and two sisters.\nHe was an employee at the C. P.\nR\u201e and one year ago was working\nat the cement mixer at the skating\nrink, when,he saved tho life of Mr.\nFoisey, who was badly injured in\nthe mixer.\nThe funeral was held Sunday\nfrom the United church with Rev,\nR. W. Hardy officiating.\nThe expression \"blind as a bat\" Is\na misnomer. AH bats have eyes and\nin some species they are well developed.\nA Montrose firm has secured a\n$240,000 contract for the erection o(\nnew cinema houses.\n\u25a0SB:\"\nmm-m^mmr::-:-::--\nRossland Social..\nA new kind of rubber-joint strip\nis expected to make driving smoother on concrete roads, because the\nrubber filling at road joints will\nnot bulge above the surface.\n\"WORN OUT\"\nAND WORRIED\nDragging around each\nday, unable to do\nhousework \u2014 crank;\nwith fhe  children \u2014\nfeeling miserable.\nBlaming it on \"nerves\"\nwhen the kidneys may\nbe out of order. When\nkidneys fait the system\nclogs with .mpuritiei,L__\nHeadaches \u2014 backache, frequently follow.\nDodd's Kidney Pills help clear tbe system,\ngiving nature a chance to restore health\nand energy. Easy to take. Safe.      ||&\nDodd sKidney Pills\nThe Women's institute diving float\nbackground is Saddle Back mountain,\nmary Short and Muren Fowler.\nin tne lo-egi'\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nReliable\nService\nAll   Grade.\nof Cood\nCoal\nPhone 33\nWEST TRANSFER\nCOMPANY\nESTABLISHED 1899\n' -.     \u25a0        .    :   ' .\nROSSLAND, Nov, 14\u2014The Rossland Ski club held it first social\nevent of the season at Ski Cabin,\ndancing being the main feature of\nthe evening, music being supplied\nby Elmer Huhtla and his piano accordion. Orin H. D\u00ab Long, secretary\nof the club, who was recehtly married was presented with a beautiful table lamp, President R. E. Plewman making the presentation on\nbehalf ot the members. Mrs. Sig By\nwas presented with a wedding gift\nalso, Mr. By being unavlodably absent. Those present were Mr. and\nMrs. Irvin Matthews, Mr, and Mrs.\nO. H. DeLong, Mrs. Sig By, Misses\nJean McDonell, Dorothy McDonnell.\nTheresa Cran, Doreen Wilson, Rita\nClelland, Belty Wright, Elsie March-\nison, Lilias Jarvis, Dorothy Stevens,\nHelen Stevens, Dorothy Brooks, Kay\nMcLean, Frank McLean Paddy Dru-\ngan, Leonard Lins, Claude Olsen,\nWilliam Coulter, Raymond Cullinane, Edward Cullinane, Fred\nThompson, Morton Johnson, Frank\nBlackwell, Joseph Bielli, Jack Corner, Maurice Sawyer, Don Hird, Harold Fox, Harry O'Reilly and Don\nChubb.\nThe young girls' study group was\nentertained Thursday evening by\nMiss Rita Fourt, refreshments being\nserved and a social hour enjoyed\nafter the study period. Those present were M. Concellierc, aPtricia\nHardy, Eileen Mara and the hostess.\nDino Baratelli left yesterday for\nCalgary, where he has been called\nby the death of his father.\nMrs. A. J. Vetere entertained on\nWednesday evening at her home in\nhonor of her sister, Mrs. Ray Underwood, a recent bride. Cut flowers\ndecorated the rooms, the color\nscheme being pink and white.\nGames and contests were enjoyed.\nMiss Ida Osing won the guessing\ncontest and the will game was won\nby Miss Eda Vetere. The novelty\ncontest was won by Mrs. Joseph Lan-\nducci and Mrs. John Vetere captured the special prize. The gifts were\npresented to Mrs. Underwood by\ntiny Louise Vetere and Lorraine\nSantori, dressed as bride and groom,\nand carrying a large basket decorated in pink and white and heaped\nhigh with gifts. Those present were\nMrs. Albert E. Harrison. Mrs. Douglas Dick, Mrs. A. Santori, Mrs. Harry\nSmith, Mrs. Robert Laface, Mrs.\nStephen Reid, Mrs. J. Shellard, Mrs.\nM. Landucci, Mrs. P. Pisquale, Mrs.\nStanley Allibone, Mrs. P. Cabianca,\nMrs. Henry Brown, Mrs, John Vetere, Misses Delphine Vetere, Ida.\nOsing, Curtis Triggs, Florence Harrison, Clara Schubert, Kay Brown,\nMary Vetere, Marjorie Dickinson,\nBernice Santori, Lorraine Santori,\nEdna Paul, May Harrison, Winnie\nMorris, Louise Vetere, Mary Vetere.\nBetty Jean Vetere, Eda Vetere, Dorothy Laface and the hostess.\nhome after a fortnight's visit at the\nhome at Crescent Bay of his brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Winstanley.\n. Mrs. J. At Cullinain of Rossland, visited Nelson at the week-end.\n\u2022\u2022 Miss Alison Younger, who\nteaches at Taghum, visited her father, H. R. Younger, Mill street,\nover the week-end.\n\u2022 W. Kendrick, J. J. Binns, R.\nL. McBride and Clyde Emory were\namong those from Nelson to attend\nthe funeral of Samuel Hunter at\nKaslo Friday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Norbert O. Choquette,\nStanley street, returned Saturday\nfrom Cranbrook, where she spent\ntwo months at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orphir Bourgeois.\n\u2022 Mrs. G. Spencer Godfrey entertained at the tea hour Friday ot\nher home on Vernon street, when\nshe was assisted by Mrs. A. G. Cuthbert, who poured. Yellow and pink\n'mums were the flowers used. Invited guests were Mrs. Hotson, Mrs.\nC. V. Gagnon, Mrs. Haylock, Mrs.\nA. L. Creech, Mrs. Harry B. Gore,\nMrs. E. Ferguson, Mrs. A. J. Cornish, Mrs. H. D. Dawson and Mrs.\nJ. R. McLennan.\n\u2022 Rev. E. J. 0\"Brien visited\nRossland and Trail Friday..\n\u2022 L. R. Haskell of Crawford Bay\nspent Saturday in town.\n\u2022 Visitors in the city over tho\nweek-end included Miss E. Burgess\nof South Slocan.\n\u2022 L. A. Penhoel, M. E\u201e of Los\nAngeles, Calif,, has returned from\nthe Silver Cup Mine. He was accompanied by Mrs. Fenhoel.\n. Mrs. William Winstanley ot\nCrescent Valley, was a guest of Mrs,\nJoseph Sturgeon, Silica street, Saturday.\n. Mr. and Mrs. Rankjn Hanna of\nSlocan City, were week-end guests\nat the home of the former's mother,\nMrs. C. R. Hanna, Carbonate street.\n\u2022 F. Rotter of Salmo, visited\ntown Saturday.\n\u2022 Miss Emily Lemmon, who teaches at Passmore, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Lemmon,\nFairview, at the week-end.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Scott ot South Slocan,\nvisited Nelson Saturday.\n. Joseph Pasacreta, who teaches\nat'Sproulle Creek, was among city\nvisitors in Nelson at the week-end.\n\u2022 Fred Irvine, P. Bush, J. Balyn-\n, tine and J. P. Fink motored to Kaslo\nthe funeral of\nFriday  to  attend\nSamuel Hunter.\n. Mrs. F.' E. Dockerill of Trail,\nvisited Nelson Friday,\nMr. and Mrs. F. R. Pritchard,\nNelson avenue, Fairview, had as\ntheir week-end guest, their son,\nCharles Pritchard, principal of the\nYmir school.\n\u2022 Oto Gill of Ymir, spent the\nweek-end in the city.\n. T. D. Edgar was in Nelson\nfrom Vallican Saturday.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. Barclay, Fall street,\nhad as her week-end guest her\ndaughter, Miss Peggy Barclay, who\nteaches at Brilliant,\n\u2022 Mrs. Bert Ryley, 810 Victoria\nstreet, has taken up residence at\n706, Victoria street,\nMANNION HEADS\nMINE WORKERS IN\nBALLOT AT MICHEL\nNATAL, B. C.-At a ballot taken\nat the Michel lamphouse for the\nelection of president and vice-pres*\nident of the Michel Local 7292, District 18 of the U. M. W. of America,\nG. Mannion of Michel with 167\nvotes defeated J. Jenkinson with\n140 for the presidency. For vice-\npresident J. Tupper of Michel won\nout over five other candidates as he\npolled 131 votes to his closest rival,\nL. Troyanek of Natal, who received\n73 votes, while the rest.were: N. Un-\ngaro, 55; T. Androlick, 25; R. Martin,\n18, and M. Barsalo 11.\nFOR THE\nOF QUALITY\nMADEIH\nCANADA\nRev. Mr. Addyman\nIs the Armistice\nSpeaker at Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C\u2014An impressive\narmistice service was held in the\nLegion hall at Nakusp Thursday\nmorning, wilh Rev. C, Addyman of\nthe United church in charge.\nSpeaking on the peace theme,\nRev.'Addyman stressed the need\ntodry of \"policing\" the world, instancing the . situation in India,\nwhere comparatively few British\nsoldiers maintain peace in a country where the population is large\nand strife is imminent.\nFollowing the service at the hall\nthe company proceeded to the cenotaph, where two minutes' silence\nwas maintained. The roll call was\ngiven by H. W. Herridge and\nwreaths were placed.\nThe Boys' Bugle band, ln attendance, sounded the Last PoqU\nUTTt*   UOHT -\u2022\u00bb\"*\u00bb   i.GHT-UJt\nP\nioiSON\/MAZDA\nJmwwJ\nCANADIAN\nWE CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK OF\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS IN ALL SIZES\nNELSON ELECTRIC CO.\nBaker St.      McRORY fr REDDEN      Phone 153\n^^^^\n ;\nmwrnmrnm\nmm.\n,mm><\u00bb ,|,UI.\u00ab-\nmm\n-[(^H\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C\u2014MONDAY MORNING. NOV. IB, 1937.\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n218 Baker  Street,   Nelson,    British  Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting AU Departments.\nMembers  of   the   Audit  Bureau   ot  Circulations  and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nMONDAY, NOVEMBER 15,1937.\nKOOTENAY EXPORTERS MIGHT BENEFIT\nThe department of trade and commerce at Ottawa has\njust issued a booklet dealing with work of the Canadian\ngovernment exhibition commission. It is a publication that\nwill be of interest to executives in industries in Kootenay\nwhich are concerned with export business, and also to\nmembers of boards of trade who are interested in the development of their local industries. .   ,\nThe Canadian government exhibition commission is\nresponsible for exhibits,! such as those shown this year at\nParis, Olympia in London, and Glasgow, and also for\nspecial exhibits such as a display of what is called a typical\n\"Canada Shop\" entrance, and of a typical \"Canada Shop\"\ninterior in stores in large centres in Europe.\nThrough this Canadian exhibition commission, industries in Canada which are seeking export trade are able to\nmake arrangements for exhibit of its products, both at the\nexhibition where there is a major Canadian exhibit and\nalso at the exhibition where there is no general exhibit\nrepresentative of this country.\nThere is provision for governmental financial assistance under certain circumstances to the Canadian industry\nwhich is making exhibits.\nYou may take it as an absolute rule that no man or\nwoman of character ever uses the word \"boared\".\u2014John\nCowper Powys.\nSIR EVELYN'S WORK FOR PEACE\nSir Evelyn Wrench is no stranger to the people of\nCanada. Even more widely known are the very decided\nviews he holds on the subject of world peace. When he\nspeaks of the need for brains such \"as those that built'the\ngreat San Francisco bridges and shoved Canada's railways\nthrough the Rocky mountains, to pound out. . . some political instrument to join the nations of the world,\" there\nneed be only one guess as to the sort of instrument Sir\nEvelyn has in mind. Broadly it must be something that\nwould promote, rather secure, a spirit of neighborliness,\nhonest neighborliness.\nAs founder of the Overseas league and the English\nSpeaking Union, Sir Evelyn has gone a long way toward\ndemonstrating the practical possibilities of such an instrument. Both of these organizations have one purpose\u2014the\ndevelopment of the individual's knowledge and understand-\nin? of the other fellow as the foundation of a mutual friendship. If they are devoted largely to the Empire, they are\nno less useful as working models of the neighbor ideal on\nthat account. Contributing, as they most certainly have\ndone, to better understanding among the peoples of the\nEmpire, they have encouraged a better understanding\nof other nations.\nIt is essentially a slow process, and for many may\nseem like the long way around. But only now is it dawning\non many of the peace advocates that most of the instruments have been premature, years ahead of their time, but\nonly so because there was not the foundation of a common\nunderstanding, mutual sympathy and honest neighborliness upon which to build,\nIf we were to select the most intelligent, imaginative,\nenergetic and emotionally stable third of mankind, all\nraces would be represented.\u2014Br. Franz Boas.\nSHANGHAI CARNAGE\nWhen they started the present war, the Japanese\nmilitary authorities probably expected to drive the Chinese\nout of Shanghai long before this. Certainly the rest of the\nworld expected them to do so and the fact that the capture\ntook about three months is a real tribute to the fighting\nqualities of the Chinese as well as a measure of the difficulties of modern land warfare.\nThe Japanese have had an army of several hundred\nthousand men in the vicinity of Shanghai, the larger part\nof their strong navy as well as numerous other special\nequipment including their fleet and mechanical equipment.\nFigures as to the total number of Japanese troops engaged\nhave not been given but at different times a force of more\nthan 150,000 men has been mentioned as participating in\nthe attack at one time.\nThe numerical strength of the Chinese is not known\nbut it probably has been even larger than that of the\nJapanese. But it lacked the guns of a large fleet of war\nvessels, it lacked-much of the mechanical equipment that\nJapan had and its air force was decidedly weaker.\nOne of the things that has drawn comment from every\ncorrespondent in the area and even from the Japanese\nthemselves has been the dogged courage, even fatalism, of\nthe Chinese troops. In the face of terrific gunfire and\nbombing they have maintained good order. Discipline apparently has been excellent. Even in the final withdrawal\nfrom Shanghai, dispatches tell of the orderly manner of\nthe retreat.\nNow that Shanghai has been captured the situation\nseems to be that the Chinese have taken up positions a few\nmiles inland from the city. Presumably these positions\nwere prepared in advance. If they were not, they may\nprove inadequate and a further retreat be forced. In that\n..Between You and Me\nBy   |. B.C.\nA correspondent complaint about\nthe blood-and-thunder radio programs that come on at the kiddles'\nbedtime. Sometimes it takes a\ncouple of political broadcasts to put\nthe little one to sleep.\n' \u2022   \u2022   *\nOVERHEARD ON\nBAKER 8TR~ET\n\"I said to him: 'Gee, but'you're\nfreshl' But he only laughed.\"\n.   ,   .\nNEW IDEA\nIt Hollywood Is sincere about\nwanting a new plot, how about\nhaving the grid hero win the game\nin the first minute of play?\n*   \u2022   \u2022\n'ROUND TOWN\nHere and there around town -\nDr. D. W. McKay expressing pleasure at the showing made by Nelson's\nhockey material on Saturday evening \u2014 Bob Crerar equally enthusiastic \u2014 Norman J. Lowes\nworking on the transportation\nangle for the puck organization -r\nP. E. Poulin raking in quarters for\nthe hockey club on the old crown\nand anchor game \u2014 Murray Clark\nadmitting bullfighting op the ice-\nis not so easy a job \u2014 bdxta on the\nice \u2014 an exciting \u2014 but, rough\npastime \u2014 that could easily,1 Become\nout of control \u2014 John' Teague having difficulty keeping track of new\nhockey material \u2014 Colonel Phil, t\nof Cranbrook looking over, the Nelson armory \u2014 Frank O'Genski\nmaking an excellent comedian on\nskates \u2014 Hal Ronmark attempting\nto pick a senior Nelson puck squad\n\u2014 \"Slim\" Horswill declaring he v.\\s\nto get another week-end of hunting \u2014 he already has a buck deer to\nhis credit \u2014 as has Harry Hughes\nand a lot of other local huntsmen\n\u2014 Allan Dill hoping the snowfall\n.would halt as he has to make a\ntrip to Grand Forks over the Cascade and Rossland summits \u2014\nColonel John Murray of South Slo-\ncan starting home In his auto in a\nHeavy snowstorm \u2014 Alex McLeod\nenjoying a feed of sausage \u2014 Jack\nBuchanan visiting in Nelson over\nthe week-end from' Spokane \u2014\n\"Chuck\" French looking very sedate\nas he enjoyed his first skate at the\nrink.\u2014 C. W. Tyler doing hie stuff\nat the skating carnival \u2014 Tom Wilson getting his first fling at timekeeping at the hockey match \u2014 Fred\nLeno turning down a hot dog \u2014\nAnd I hear the curlers will be out\non Tuesday \u2014 arid that mean, a lot\nto a lot of Nelson fellows \u2014 A. J.\nBalment of Cranbrook presenting\none of tl-. laughs for which he is\nfamous \u2014\n.   *  *\n41 DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS\nMrs. Jones: \"Look, dear, how pic\ntur&que; the Brown's are bringing\nin a Yule log.\"\nMr.  Jones:   \"Yule log my  eye:\nthat's Brown.\"\n... .   .\nMEMORY TEST PERFECT.\nAt the dinner table, a 10-year-old\nschoolboy ' of North Toronto announced proudly: \"I made full\nmarks in memory today, Dad.\"\n\"Good business,\" father responded, \"and what did you remember\nso perfectly?\"\n\"Some verses \u2014 i T saw a ship\nhis head; \"Funny thing, Pop, but\na-sailing\u2014\" then sonny scratched\nI can't remember them now!'\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby.\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nDON'T BLOCKADE HIM\nEVERY PLAYER ahoufll keep\nhis eyes open to avoid blocking his\npartner In the run of a suit. Many\na no trump defense depends entirely upon the bringing In of a\nsingle itrlng of cards. If it Is interrupted, through' the shorter\npartner being unable to' keep the\nlonger one in the lead, disaster be.\nfalls.\nV J 8 7 _\n\u2666 AJ109\n+ 10 5-\u00ab(\n4 J 10 9 3\nVQ63\n\u2666 8 0\n*K763\n*A87C.\nVK102\n\u2666 K7\/\n*8*\n\u2022 ADS\n\u2666 QBS2\n+ AQJS\n(Dealer: South, Neither side, vulnerable.).\nHere South opened the none top\nbrilliant bidding with\" 1-Club,\nNorth called 1-Dlamond and South\ntrial 1-No TrunSp, wheM.tf*'as *t\u00bb\nlo-,\u2122) to stand.'\nThe spade J was led by West,\nthe 5 played from dummy and\nEast, reading his partner for four\ncards of the suit, decided to allow\nSouth to win the first trick.with\nthe Q, so that when the diamond\nwns finessed to him, his side could\nwin four spade tricks and possibly\nset the contract.\nWhen the declarer led a diamond\nto the second trick, East winning\nwith the K, he laid down the spade\nA, on which West played the spado\n3, not the 0, as he should. East\nthen returned the spade 4, but as\nWest had blocked the suit,' only\nthree tricks were taken In spades.\nThe declarer was able to make\n2-No Trump on the hand, as,, after\nwinning the spades, West was\nobliged to lead another diamond.\nSouth then took the club finesse to\nWest, who won with the K. A club\nwas returned and declarer cashed\nthree clubs, three diamonds, one\nheart and one spade.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\nB. A\u201e Nelson\u2014What was the name of\nthe tairy queen in English folklore?        \u2022     '   \u2022\nQueen Mab.\nT AH., Trail\u2014Can you give me a list\nof vegetables containing vitamin\nC?\nCabbage, turnips, spinach, cauliflower, asparagus, tomatoes, peas,\nrutabagas.\nT.G., Nelson\u2014Can you tell me the\nmeaning of the name Okanagan?\nBelieve it is of Indian origin and\nmeans \"rendezvous.\"\nK.P.H., Nelson-What is the mileage, by road, by Canada and by\nthe States, from Nelson to Rochester, Minh-J\nNelson; Cranbrook, Medicine Hat,\nWinnipeg, Fargo, St. Paul, Rochester, 1761. miles; Nelson, Spokane,\n-Butte, Fargo, Sauk Center, St. Paul,\nRochester, 1852 miles.\nM. B\u201e Salmo\u2014What day of the week\ndid February 5,1882, fall on?\nFriday.\nP.G. Kimberley - What is the\npopulatibn of Seattle? of Spokane?\nSeattle, 374,100; Spokane, 135,000.-\nSO THEY SAY\nLUXURY MILLIONS\nExpenditure on luxuries and- on\nsemi-luxuries, such as tobacco, cosmetics, liquor and cinemas, has increased in Britain in the last six\nyears by 20 per cent to a sum of\nbetween \u00a3200,000,000 and \u00a3300,000,-\n000 a year\u2014Sir Arnold Wilson.\n\u2022: *    \u2022\n-FORGOTTEN  MAN\nWith the increasing demand for\nskilled labor today the clerk in\nbusiness is apt to be overlooked.\nProductive wages in the form of\ncosts are suffered as a \"necessary\nevil\" to be reduced to the lowest\npossible minimum\u2014Action.\n\u2022 #   \u2022\nQUARTER-8TRENGTH\nOf the 16,000,000 people now in\ninsurable occupations, fewer than\n4,000,000 are enrolled in the trade\nunions.\u2014Secretary W. A. Appleton,\nGeneral Federation of Trade Unions,\n* *   *\nFORGOTTEN MEN\nNearly half of the applicants for\nunemployment assistance and more\nthan a quarter of the claimants to\nunemployment insurance benefit\nare'45 years old or more. Obviously,\n\u2666 8642\n\u00bbAJ5\n<4A7S\n\u2666 J 8 8\n>None   ~\\ -A\/,   I  \u2666KloTj\n\u00bbQ9872 \\-f     -i   V1063\n\u2666 J0965\u00bb      \"*    4842'\nAAK103< '5. j  \u00abHQ97\n\u00abTKQJ\n\u2666 642\n(Dealer: South, norm-south'-\nvulnerable.) I\nWhat play by South enables him\nto make 4-Spades after the defense,\nhas cashed three club tricks ?\nLooking Backward.*.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nNovember 15, 1927.\nFire, breaking out shortly after\nmidnight, completely destroyed a\nfive-room, one story house and the\nfurniture belonging to W. J. E. Biker\non tho North Shore\u2014Nelson was in\ndarkness from 10 to 2:30 o'clock to-\nnight as the result of a break in the\npower line near the Bonnington\npower plant. A tree had fallen across\nthe line, necessitating the use of gas\nlights in the city for many hours. \u2014\nE. P. Crawford of the Porcupine\nGoldfields Development k Finance\ncompany of Kimberley, is a Nelson\nvisitor.\u2014Rev. D. C. Catchpole was in\nthe city from South Slocan.\u2014Mrs.\nG. L. Johnston, Strathcona hotel, has\nas her guest her mother, Mrs. T. H.\nHardy of Vancouver\u2014P. T. D. Celle,\nfor some years a resident of Nelson\nwas in the city renewing acquaintances.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nNovember 15, 1917.\nD. S. Fowler of Riondel is in town.'\n\u2014Wendell Shrum of Ymir is a city\nvisitor. \u2014 Lieutenant G. Murray of\nNelson has been wounded overseas.\n\u2014Lieutenant John Cartmel of Atlin\nand formerly government agent in\nNelson, has been wounded overseas.\n\u2014At a cost of $6500, Nelson has purchased a new motor generator.for\nthe city power plant.\u2014Platoon-Sergt.\nClaude L. Wales died overseas of\nwounds on the head, received in action.\u2014 R. G. Joy, secretary of the\nReturned Soldiers aid committee, has\nreceived   word   that   Pte.   William\nPriest and Pte. John Roche are on\ntheir way home from the trenches \u2014\nT. R. Wilson was a Rossland visitor,\n\u2014J. O. Patenaude was a Rossland\nvisitor.\n,        THIRTY YEARS AGO\nNovember 15, 1907.\nHarry Wright made an inspection\ntrip of the various sections of the\nwagon road along the Arm which\nhave been constructed in the past\nfew months.\u2014W. A. Galliher, MP.,\nleaves today for Kaslo to confer\nwith the lumbermen there as to\nthe best plan of establishing communications with the Upper Duncan\ncountry.\u2014James Cronin is in the\ncity.\u2014L. M. Blake of Wlngham, Ont.,\nis visiting his brother, James Blake\nC.P.R. engineerr-P. J. Maloney of\nKaslo is in town.\u2014Lome A. Campbell of Kaslo is in the city\u2014Mrs.\nCaptain Paddon of Crawford Bay\nis in town.\u2014G. S. Rees has resumed\nhis position of chief clerk in Captain Gore's office.\nDer Fuehrer sleeps baaly\u2014especi\nally in Berlin. At night, ghosts walk.\nErnst Roehm was Hitler's most intimate friend; on June 30, 1934, he\nwas shot dead at the Nazi leader's\ncommand. Since then Roehm's revengers have dogged his footsteps,\nMail addressed to him always includes correspondence stamped R.R,\nThe initials were once found on a\ntreaty that had been laid before\nhim to sign. Once they were sten\ncilled in scarlet ink on the trench\ncoat in which he appears in public.\n\u2014Liberty, New York.\ncase, the present success of the Japanese may develop\ninto something more important than it is at present.\nIn the three months fighting preceding the conquest\nof Shanghai the losses have been terrific. Almost certainly\nthe Chinese have suffered more than the invaders but with\nthe immense resources of man power in China they can,\nfrom a pure military point of view, afford to suffer losses\nseveral times those of Japan. Indeed only a few days ago\na prominent Chinese spokesman declared the objective of\nthe Chinese authorities was to exhaust the Japanese by\nmaintaining a long drawn-out resistance. That is to say\nthe Chinese strategy is purely defensive and designed to\ninflict as much loss on the enemy as possible even if the\ncost lo China in casualties is heavy.\nAt Shanghai, as in Spain, something has been learned\nabout modern war. It is that the attempted capture of\nterritory is inevitably costly. Defence has become so strong\nthat a successful attack is certain to be a long and painful\njob. Another thing that has become evident is that the\nairplane is not nearly as effective a weapon as had been\nthought or that populations simply refuse to be terrorized\ninto submission.\nV. Questions V.\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader of\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will the name of the person\naskina the question be published.\nBRUSSELS SPROUTS!\nJgOfttfa\nindustrial recovery is not providing reemployment for the \"over\n45's\".\u2014John Bull.\na    ,    ,\nWARNING\nA modern war involves the whole\nWHAT DO YOU THINK? .\nAll letters to the editor must be signed with, the name of the\nwriter. A nom de plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines  in typewritten copy should  be double spaced.\nSchool Students\nand Examinations\nTo the Editor: \\\nSir\u2014May I call attention'to a res1\nolution passed by the recent teachers\nconvention that is worthy of support\nfrom all who have at heart the welfare of our Schools. I think it was\nsuggested that the monthly report\ncards be changed in character so\nthat the teacher would report on\nthe pupil's general attitude toward\na given subject rather than on his\ncompetitive standing with other pupils of the class. This reform, might\ndo away with the monthly competitive examinations that wear out the\nenergies of both teacher and pupils\nand so encroached upon school time\nthat little time is left for real teaching on the part of the teacher or\nstudv on the part of the pupils. One\nhas to be in the schoolroom in a\nposition of responsibility to realize\nhow grave is the evil. Say for instance the subject is grammar and\nthat grammar is on the time-table\ntwice per week. Without interruption\nof examination tests this would\nmean eight lessons per month\u2014seven\nlessons if one period per month is\ntaken up with .examination. I submit that no thorough-going teacher\ncan teach enough grammar in seven\nlessons to justify the giving of a,\ncompetitive examination. We must\nnot forget that learning of any subject is a growth from certain ideas\nwhich like seeds are planted in the\nmind of the child and the teacher\nwho follows regularly seven lessons\nof planting with one ofexamination\nis like the gardener who after carefully placing seeds in 'the ground\nuncovered them every seventh hour\nto see how they were germinating.\nConstant review and thorough examination, have their place in the\nschoolrootn but one can actually\nmake a class, forget a thing by too\nmuch review and examination just\nas we can actually kill a good cause\nby too much propaganda in its\nfavor. A thing once well-taught needs\nneither examination nor review. Let\na senior grade public school class\nonce hear the story of Casabianca,\nwell told, and not even the dullest\nmember of the class will ever be\nable to forget, a single detail of it.\nThe unwise teacher who would make\nthis story a subject of examination\nand review would forever ruin its\nmoral and intellectual effect. Much\nof the work in the schoolroom can\nbe damaged by too much examination and review.\nGood work in the class-room is\ndependent wholly on live healthy,\ninterested pupils but still more on\na teacher who Comes to her work\nwith a super abundant store of\nenergy and interest in her work.\nYou cannot have a live interesting\nteacher and bright interested pupils\nif teacher is worn out by her nightly\ntask of correcting papers and pupils have exhausted all their energies cramming, (to use an expressive slang term) for the examination.\nOne has to be thankful for small\nadvances in the direction of reform\nbut I would like to see examinations\nlimited to the following times; midterm in autumn, Christmas, midterm before Easter, Easter, and final\nJune examinations. With the evil\nlimited to these periods examinations can still do enough harm to\ncomfort the most uncompromising\nenemy of the human race.\nBut there Is a principle underlying\ncompetitive examinations that runs\ncounter to every principle of Christianity and every axiom of polite\nconduct and good breeding. Did not\nour Saviour say that the one who\nwould be greatest among us must\nbe the least of all and the servant\nof all. When we meet In polite society do we try to out-dress, out\nargue, and out-jest those whom we\nmeet? Do we not at times, politely\nadmit that the other has the best\nof the argument, and in jesting do\nwe not purposely allow our companions to get the laugh on us? Do\nwe not often efface ourselves and\nallow others better fitted to assume\nthe leadership? Are not these things\nthe very essence of good breeding.\nWhy then when it comes to school-\nlife must we, Christians and genteel\nfolk that we arc\u2014teach our children\nthe very essence of vulgarity. Why\nmust we embue them with a desire\nto outshine and outdo every member of their class?\nRETIRED TEACHER\nTrail, B. C, November 10, 1937.\nof the civil population as much as it\ninvolves the professional soldier and\nsailor.-rDefence Minister Sir Thomas Inskip.\n\u2022 *   *\nSCOTS  WHA   HAE\nI do not think anyone can justify\nthe present system of conducting\nScottish business - in parliament.\nDuring the whole of the last three\nparliaments less than 16 hours a\nyear on the average has been given\nto debates on Scottish estimates.\u2014\nJ. Henderson Stewart, Liberal-National M.P. for Fife'East.\n\u2022 *' +\nTRAGIC WEAKNESS\nThings have been written and said\nIn the Mediterranean which would\nnever have been written or said if\nthe British navy in lhe past few\nyears had only been a little stronger.\n\u2014Lord Lloyd.\nI      AUNT HET\nI       By ROBERT QUILLEN\nIn the Marquesas islands, a bride\nand a bridegroom must be smoked\nin sandalwood, massaged with coconut oil, and presented to the king  shameful\" before one\" anotherrbiit\nbefore they may set up housetop-1 you're ashamed to do it before the\ning. voiinguns.\"\n\"Children help you behave, iou\nget so you ain't ashamed of actin'\n-     \u25a0\n__________________\n\u00aba4__j__^_\u00ab_tf_M__i_li_i_i_i_:\nmini-----.\n\u25a0_\u25a0\n m\n*I!PP*1\u00bb\nipwpit|j)|Hyi\u00bb:{^\nW\nNEL80N  DAILY NEW8. NEL80N, B.C^MONDAY MORNING. NOV. 15. 1937,\nPAGE SEVEN\nTopping and Binns First Two Mayors in Trail\nMderman 0. A. McAnally, J. P. Byers, J. Dawson, Mayor E. S. Topping, Aldermen Noble Binns, A. E. Steele and W. Furnell.\u2014Council of 1901.\n\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .;   \u00ab',? j \u2022 \u00bb\n\u2022*\u00ab^V..;...,\t\n\u25a0\u25a0   :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 \"      .\nWtoS*!**\nI \u00ab *,iyjt_n-v-.->-.-i-\n4M.K\u00abenn.9-\nTB41U MoMCtfMkW 0.00NOL.-   1902\nAldermen B. E. Strong, |. Dawson and J. P. Byers, Mayor Noble Binns, Aldermen A. E. Steele, W. Furnell and J. H. Schofield.\nOldest Twins Meet After 52 Years\nRECALLED FROM\nFRANCE\nThe Sultan Goes A-Star-Gazlng\nBelieved to be the oldest twins on the North American continent, Robert L. Bond (left), of Ottawa, Ont., and Hichard N. Bond,\nOf Walla Walla, Washington, are shown after they met at a family reunion in Ottawa for the first time in 52 years. The twins, 88 years old,\nwere born at Carleton Place, Ont., and recognized each other at once,\nwhen brother Robert greeted brother Richard at the Ottawa railway\nstation, Richard attributes his longevity to being born in Canada\nthough most of his life lias been spent in the United States. Robert,\nhowever, really- doesn't know what made him live so long excepting\n\"where I come from they live to such an age they had to kill a man to\nstart a graveyard.\"\nVittorlo Cerrutl, Italian ambassador to France, who has been\nrecalled by II Duce, leaving important Italo-French relations in\nthe hands of a minor official. The\nmove was seen as in retaliation\nfor the French neglect to send an\nambassador to Rome, leaving in\ncontrol a charge d'affaires rather\nthan recognize the Italian conquest of Ethiopia.\nOne of the distinguished visitors to the international exposition at\nParis, the Sultan of Morocco, showed deep interest in the stars. He is\nshown, eyes glued to the lens of a big telescope in the Palace of Invention. The sultan is wearing traditional Moorish costume.\nSCIENTISTS STUDY DEVELOPMENT OF DIONNE QUI NTS\n_,,,,-,,,,\u201e\u201e-,-^-\u2122\n-      iilliiiiiHjMi^ltmraifl\n'    \u25a0 c*;''i|\n_pi \u25a0      \"'^\nfPHjlLL...'    \"                                      *^^__P    yWW-\"\"\"                                          BTvl'pWWiiNI-:  V..:--';v\u00ab|i|jff:;*^^ -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0';;''>nffl_>-fc-_'                         frV\u00abfvv                               jL             \u2022    1          mm _fl_H_h__  :\nm \u25a0\u25a0k\"          \u25a0 fi,v:i\/'             ; .J_nS*!&_*___i_k, I  ^Rfl b^\n%J _> i_H   H^^^^^^^^^f^   ^^^^ _i_i_i_i_M_d_rfir  ' ''I^T* * ^_i_(_Hr^_i_l   -\nhH\n' JsK*\"'''Mm     mk\\* -^\u25a0.S             H\nClimaxing a conference which had for its sub- the occasion is shown at top and Includes from\nject the physical and mental growth of the Dionne left to right; Dr. G. D. Stoddard, of the University\nquintuplets, the group of noted scientists, phycho- of Iowa; Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, the quints physi-\nlogists and doctors studying the famous five, travell- cian; Judge Valin, of North Bay, one of the original\ned to Callander, Ont., for a close-up study ot the quints guardians of the babies and Dr. W. E. Blatz, Toronto\ntheir nursery home. One grouo in Callander for child psychologist.\nA NIGHT PICTURE\nA night view of the News Publishing Company's plant on Baker street in Nelson\nUGE NELSON PRQDUCT.GQING   TD  NORTHLAND\nt\nw mj\nticklish Casting Job for Consolidated\nAif&tee te Q*m it t\u00a9 Box kafe <Kfe\nEveryone lends a hand on a Job like this\u2014the casting of a big\n(\u2022heave pulley better than seven feet in diameter\u2014at the Nelson Iron\nTWorks. It's one of the most ticklish of casting jobs and a specialty at\nhue Nelson plant. Moulds are deep in the moulder's sand confined\n(within a box which stands some three feet high. First the rim is\npoured, and when it has cooled slightly, the hub is poured to grip\n|\nand fasten tightly upon the spokes. In this picture molten iron Is being\npoured from a big ladle, using a crane, while everyone watches the\njob to which he has been assigned. With light radiations from the\nmolten metal competing with blacks shadows, the picture was a\ndifficult one to get. It was taken with the aid of powerful photographic\nlights,\nHere is the sheave, set up on a monster lathe to be machined and\ngiven the finishing touches. When this is completed it will bo sawn\nin half from rim to hub and sent to Trail for a rubber cushion to be\nmounted in the rim at the Consolidated Mining k Smelting company\nrubber shop. Then it will be shipped eastward by freight and flown\nby airplane to the Consolidated Box Lake properly, there tn be\nmounted at ihe head of a shaft and used to draw mineral wealth\nfrom underground. Two of the big pulleys have been turned out\nrecently. Similar but larger sheaves are in use at the Sullivan,\nKimberley.\n mmmm^mmwmfmasmi^mmmm^mmmmmmmmvmFmmm.\nS^tstSmS9T^m\nl.ljf. WJpwmsWgfjmSIP-iM'il'1 .'\u25a0\" \" .im-WSBP***?*1 '-'W\u00bb''\u00ab\u00ab'.'-- \u00ab\u00ab^!\u00bbPrvr^wnswB^w^5W,. i\u00ab|\nPAGE EIGHT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NEL80N. B.C.-MONDAY MORNINQ. NOV. 15, 1ti7.\nSPORTING NEWS\nOut of the By Eric Ramsden\nPRESS BOX\nAMERKS TRIM\nMAROONS l-I)\nNEW YORK, Nov. 14 (CP)-The\nrear-running New York Americans\ntrimmed Montreal Maroons 2-0 to\nnight and hurdled two teams to\nland In second place in the National'\nHockey league s Canadian division.\nA crowd of 15,000 persons saw\nth teams battle through two periods of fairly fast and ruggeJ hockey\nwithout cither side threatening\nseriously to.count.\nJack Shill, one of the three new\nacquisitions of the New Yorkers,\nopened the scoring near the half\nway mark of tl.e final chapter, In\nthe closing minutes, Americans\nbroke away for the clinching marker, Nels Stewart getting this one\nwith the aid of Joe Jerwa.\nA brief fist fight between Hooley\nSmith of Americans and Jerry\nShannon of Maroons enlivened the\nsecond period. Smith was given a\nmajor penalty.\nSummr-y:\nFirst period\u2014Scoring\u2014None.\nSecond period\u2014Scoring none.\nPenalties\u2014Day, Shannon, Evans,\nH. Smith '(major), Gallagher,\nShields.\nThird period\u20141\u2014Americans. Shill\n(Gallagher, Stc  art) 8:04.\n2\u2014Americans, StewarK Jerwa)\n17:50.\nPenalties\u2014Carr, D. Smith, Ward.\nOlDlOUNTRY\nSOCCER\nNelson Track Queen\nArbroath Holds Rangers lo Draw;\nMotherwell Wins fo Retain Lead\nTHE MacDONALDS\nARE IN AGAIN\nIt may have escaped your notice,\nbut the two McDonalds\u2014A. W. and\nD. P.\u2014are \"in\" again\u2014Gus as president ol the B.C.A.H.A. and DcePcc\nas president of the A.H.A. They're\nbrothers, both former players, and\nneither is able to > keep away from\nthe game. \"P.R.,\" their dad, must\nwonder about it too at times\u2014he's\na curler.\nFRANCIS MICHAEL CLANCY-\nTHE KING\nWhen Francis Michael Clancy became the bench-leader of Maroon\nplaying forces, he joined forces\nagain with the fellow-Irishman\u2014\nTommy Gorman \u2014 who a long\nhockey-generation ago lured him\nfrom amateur to professional ranks,\nto become one of the outstanding\ndefence stars in the game, finally bought by Toronto Leafs for\na sum in the vicinity of $50,000,\nstill the record price ever paid for\na hockey player. Clancy came into '\nthe National League in 1921, figured on a couple of world's championship teams under the Gorman\nguidance, was sold to Toronto Leafs.\nin 1930, and with that team his\nvivid personality, his high fighting\nspirit, his dash and speed acted as\na spark-plug that fired the club to\ngreat feats. He compiled a high-\nscoring record for defence players\nin 1929-30, of 17 goals and 23 assists that no defenece player has excelled.\nVeteran of fifteen seasons of actual play, Clancy has acquired a\nvast knowledge of hockey and\nhockey players. He retired early last\nseason, became Toronto's \"Ambassador of Hockey\" but was anxious\nfor some closer affiliation than this\nto the sport he graced over such an\nunusually long period, and welcomed the opportunity to put into\npractical use the hockey knowledge\nhe acquired over that hard and long\ntrail. With his inspiration, his\nCeltic diplomacy and ready wit,\nClancy is expected to be a great\nsuccess in Montreal. He is 34 years\nold, having been born February 25,\n1903.\n\u2022   *   *\nNEW IDOL FOR\nWEMBLEY FANS\nAt the opening of ice-hockey's\nseventh British season last week\nWembley authorities expected demonstrations at the absence of the\nchampion Lions' former captain,\nlithe Lou Bates,\nStreams of \"Lou, Lou. Lou!'' from\nfrenzied fans used to be the Lions'\nrallying cry. Last season, though suf\nfering so badly from cartilage trouble in both knees that he displaced\none of them at least once a week,\nBates refused to give in and played\nmagnificently to help his side carry\noff the National league.\nThis season Lou failed to come to\nterms with Wembley and announced\nhis retirement, but last week newcomer Jack Wilks of Montreal had\nalready played himself from the centre-ice position into the hearts of\nWembley fans.\nAbout British ice-hockey there Is\nstill a marked Canadian flavor, despite big efforts to eradicate it. Four\nof this year's team coaches have\nplayed against each other in Canadian professional sides.\nAt Brighton the Tigers this season\nare being trained by blue-eyed Billy\nBoucher, regarded as Canada's foremost talent spotter. With him he has\nbrought several young, fast, heavy\nCanadians who may make the Tigers\nthe danger-team of the 1937 season.\nWhile watching his team perform,\nCoach Boucher chews gum vigorously, presses it under his tongutf to\nwhistle to his players. Barred from\nthe Tigers are oeer and late nights\nEvery player must be abed by midnight.\u2014News Review.\nDETROIT TAKES\nCANADIENS, 2-1\nDETROIT, Nov. 14 (CP).-The\nchampion Red Wings, showing some |\nflashes ol the form that led them\nto the Stanley cup last season, defeated Montreal Canadiens 2-1 here\ntonight for the first Detroit victory of the current National Hockey\nleague season.\nVeteran Hec Kilrta's goal at 2:22\nof the third period broke a tie and\ngave Detrbit it's winning margin,\nBut lt was the neat stick-handling\nof Pete Kelly until recently an alternate forward that set up the\nscore. Kelly broke through the Ca-\nnadien defence on right wing and\nlaid a short pass on Kllrea's stick\nright in front of Goalie Wilf Cude.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u20141--Canadiens, G.\nMentha 5:41\nGLASGOW, Nov! 14 (CP Cablel-\nJust'an ordinary club In out-of-town\nmatches, 11 gallant footballers from\nArbroath, Forfarshire seaport, are\nfar from a subdued crew In their\nown balllwlch. The formidable Glasgow Rangers were held to a 1-1 draw\nthere at the week-end, a typical Indication of Arbroath's home strength.\nFlaying Its third season in major\nleague company, Arbroath's first\ngame this year went to Dundee,\nearly-season pacemaker. It was the\nfirst and last defeat on home soil.\nAnother unlooked-for result over\nthe week-end was Clyde's 2-1 victory over Aberdeen while Dundee's\nheavy 4-1 defeat at home by Fal\nkirk came as a surprise.\nI\nPenalty\u2014Gpupille.\n \u201e. _ewls) ......\nPenalties\u2014McDonald, Goupllle\nSecond period\u20142\u2014Detroit, Sorrell\n(Barry, Lewis) 12:14\nPEDENS THIRD\nIN BIKE RACE\nCHICAGO, Nov. 14 (AP).-Gus-\ntav Kilian and his partner, Heinz\nVopel of Germany, captured their\nsixth consecutive six day bicycle\nrace in winning Chicago's 38th international grind, whichc finished\n\u2022 at the Chicago stadium shortly after\nmidnight.\nThe final standing of the first\nthree teams:\nMiles Lp   Pts.\nKilian-Vopel   2400   9   1444\nIgnat-Diot   2400   9   1012\nW. Pcden-D. Peden .... 2400   9    985\n'quakTholds up\na cricket match\nLAHORE. India, Nov. 14 (CP\nCable)\u2014Lord Tennyson's touring\ncricket eleven had an unusual experience today, an earthquake delaying their match with an Indian\nteam for some minutes during the\nsecond day's play. The tremors\nlasted 90 seconds.\nTho Englishmen ran up a total\nof 207 in response to India's first\ninning score of 121, Batting the sec-\n: ond time the home players had lost\n\u25a0 eight wickets for 191 runs when\nstumps were drawn.\nNo longer do ordinary Bkntw nnd\nfIiock satisfy those who wish to excel\non the ice today. C.C.M. Matched\nSets are tlie choice of skaters everywhere. A C.C.M. Matched Bet con-\npists of nn expertly matched pnir of\nC.C.M. 8kn.es securely rivetted in\npertect alignment to n matched pnir\nof C.C.M. shoes. Every C.C.M.\nWatched Set is identified with a\nspecial tag.\nliK\nMATCHErSETS\nWe Stock a Full Line ot\nC.C.M. Skate and Shoe Outfits\nfor Ladies, Men, Boys and Girls\nHipperson Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nA Full Stock of\nC.C.M. Skate and Shoe Outfits\nCarried for Ladies, Men, Boys and Girls\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nSee Us for Your\nC.C.M. Skate and Shoe Outfits\n.0llipiUt|i.\n-jBCMttwww sir mat ,.ro.\n\"AUDREY EMERY\nAnd that's a pretty broad title for Nelson has been turning out\nsome exceptionally speedy lassies of late, most of them products of\nAlbert (Major) Wallach's handling. But Audrey Emery, above, 16-\nyear-old track star, leads the lot.\nAll but one of the trophies pictured in the foreground were won\nby her, Individually, either in the Kootenay-Boundary school track\nmeet here May 22 or the Labor day meet. The large Gyro cup,\nsecond from the right, Audrey, along with Helen Wigg, Isabel\nDonovan and Doreen Long, won In the girls' relay at the school\nmeet. The other trophies from left to right are the Wilson cup,\nKootenay-Boundary grand aggregate trophy; the Argyle cup for\nNelson's best girl athlete at the Labor day meet; individual Kootenay-Boundary girls' relay cup: Labor Day high aggregate Individual cup; Gyro cup and the Safeway cup tor the best Nelson athlete at the Labor day meet.\nThird perlod-3-Detrolt, H. Kll\nrea (Kelfy) 2:22.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nFormei* Vlavy\nChamp\n....,._ \t\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nArsenal 1, Bromwich 1.\nBlackpool 0, Birmingham !,\nBolton 1, Stoke 0.\nBrentford 3, Middlesbrough I,\nDerby 2, Leeds 2.\nEverton 4, Chelsea 1.\nHuddersfield 2, Portsmouth 0.\nLeicester 1, Liverpool 3.\nSunderland 2, Grimsby 2.\nWolverhampton 1, Charlton 1.\nSecond Division\nAston 0, Burnley '0,\nBlackburn 2, Newcastle 1.\nBradford 1, Bury 1.\nChesterfield 1, Manchester U 7,\nFulham 0, Barnsley 0.\nNorwich 2, Tottenham 1.\nPlymouth 2, Stockport 1.\nSheffield W. 4, Luton 0.\nSouthampton 2, Nottingham 2.\nSwansea 3, Sheffield u. 5.\nWest Ham 0, Coventry 0.\nThird Southern\nAldershot 0. Northampton 2.\nBristol 2, Queens Park 0.\nCrystal 4, Torquay 1.\nExeter 2, Cardiff 1.\nGillingham 0, Bournemouth 0.\nMillwall 2, Bristol 1.\nNewport 2, Southend 0.\nNotts 1, Clapton 0.\nReading 3, Mansfield 2.\nSwindon 1, Walsall 1.\nWatford 1, Brighton 1.\nThird Northern\nBarrow 1, York 2.\nCrewe 1, Tranmere 0.\nDarlington 3, Carlisle 1.\nGateshead 3, Chester 1.\nHartlepools 1, Southport 2.\nHull 4, Rochdale 1.\nLincoln 2, Doncaster 2.\nNew Brighton 2, Rotherham 3,\nOldham 1, Accrington 0.\nPort Vale 0, Halifax 0.\nWrexham 2, Bradford 1.\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nArbroath 1, Rangers 1.\nClyde 2, Aberdeen 1.\nDundee 1, Falkirk 4.\nHearts 2, Queens Park 0.\nKilmarnock 1, Queen ot South 1\nMorton 2, Hamilton 6.\nMotherwell 3, St. Mirren 2.\nPartick 6, Ayr 2.\nSt. Johnstone 2, Hibernians 0.\nThird Lanark 1, Celtic 1.\nSecond Division\nAlbion 5, Edinburgh 3.\nAlloa 2, Dumbarton 1.\nBrechin 1, East Fife 2.\nDunfermline 2, St. Bernards 1.\nEast Stirling 2, Forfar 0.\nKings Park 0, Cowdenbeath 4.\nLeith 0, Airdrieonians 2.\nRaith 6, Montrose 0.\nStenhousemuir 3, Dundee U 1.\nRUGBY UNION\nLONDON, Nov. 14 (CP Cabled\nEnglish rugby union matches played\nSaturday resulted as follows:\nBirkenhead Park 51, Guys Hospital 0.\nBlackheath 19, Oxford University\n21.\nCoventry 19, Northampton 8.\nGloucester 23, Old Blues 3.\nHarlequins 1, Richmond 9.\nLeicester 19, Cambridge University 17.\nLondon Welsh 10, Aberavon 3.\nOld Merchant Taylors 0, Rosslyn\nPark 10.\nOld Paulines 14, St. Marys Hospital 10.\nPlymouth Albion 20, St. Thomas'\nHospital 10.\nPortsmouth  Services  8, London\nScottish 12,\nBridgend 11, Swansea 6.\nLlanclly 18. Police Union 0,\nMoseley 8, Bedford 0.\nNeath 24, Penarlh 6.\nNewport 3, Cardiff 3.\nNewton Abbot 12, Devonport Services 9.\nOld Edwardlans 12, Bath 0.\nPonlypool 0   Ebba Vale 6.\nWaterloo 6, Dublin Wanderers 18.\nGlasgow   Academicals   5,   Royal\nHigh School 73.\nStewartonians 20, Herlotonians 8.\nCOUNTY CHAMPION8HIP\nDurham 8, Lancashire 15 (at\nWe6towe).\nGloucestershire 9, Cornwall 3 (at\nBristol).\nSomerset 11, Devon 14 (at Bath).\nYorkshire 14, Northumberland 8\n(at Moseley).\nFINeF$25~FOR~\nHOCKEY FIGHT\nMONTREAL, Nov. 14 (CP) -\nFines of $25 apiece were assessed\nby President Frank Calder ot! the\nNational Hockey league Saturday\nagainst Babe Siebert of Montreal\nCanadiens and Baldy Northcott and\nStew Evans of Montreal Maroons\nfor their part in a fight that broke\nout in last Thursday's Maroons-\nCanadiens game.\nTho fines will be turned over to\ntlit Howie Morenz benefit fund.\nBolton Only Top Team lo Win\nin English League Firsl Division\nLONDON, Nov. 14 (CP Cable)-\nFive drawn games were played In\nmajor English football over the\nweek-end and leading teams figured\nin four. Bolton Wanderers proved\nthe only winning squad of the first\nnine in the league's first division.\nBrentford stretched its margin at\nthe top of the pack to 'two points\nbut could do no more than draw\n3-3 with Middlesbrough although\nplaying before a home crowd at\nGriffin Park. Chelsea fell with a\nthud at Everton, losing 4-1 and the\nPensioners as a result share second\nplace with Wolverhampton Wanderers who eked out a draw against\nCharlton Athletic.\nHar4 grounds may have had\nsomething to do with the topsyturvy results. Footballers did not\nrelish the change after several\nweeks' play on soft pitches.\nBamford, Manchester United's\nWelsh international forward, found\nthe light-ball to his liking and he\nsent in four .goals in his team's spectacular 7-1 victory at Chesterfield,\none of the second division's strongest squads. Sheffield United won\n5-3 at Swansea, Dodds tallying\nthree.\nBrentford gave a disappointing\ndisplay, its attack being strangely\nineffective while the defence blundered frequently. Middlesbrough\nopened strongly, Hlgham heading\ninto the net after three minutes.\nScott netter twice for Brentford and\nReid put the Londoners further\nahead but Forrest and Penton put\nMiddlesbrough on even terms before the end.\nEverton put an end to Chelsea's\nrun of successes with a sparkling\ndisplay. Cunliffe and Trentham\ngave the Toffee-Makers a 2-0 lead\nat the interval but a defensive error\nallowed Mills to reduce the margin\nsoon after the change of ends. From\nthen on it was all Everton. The Lancastrians bombarded Chelsea's goal\nand although Woodley, international custodian, played brilliantly, he\ncould not stop the Everton forwards. Lawton sent in two goals in\nfour minutes near the end.\nArsenal put up an indifferent\nperformance at Highbury, drawing\n1-1 with the fast-slipping West\nBromwich Albion team. Mahon\nscored for the Thistles six minutes\nbefore the cross-over but Leslie\nCompton put Arsenal on even terms\nby heading in from a corner,\nBRUINS NUDGE\nOUT RANGERS\nBOSTON, Nov. 14 (CP)\u2014Boston\nBruins ran up a three-goal lead on\nNew York Rangers and then barely\nstaved oft a powerful third period\nrally for a 3-2 win tonight as they\nmade their first home appearance\nof the National Hockey league\nseason,\nA crowd of '15,000 saw the game.\nThe Boston tallies were caged\nwithout assistance \u2014 by Bobby\nBauer and Milt Schmidt during the\nopening session, and by Bill Cowley\nearly in the second frame.\nSummary:\nFirst period:\n1\u2014Boston, Bauer, 2:30; 2\u2014Boston,\nSchmidt 18:55.\nPenalties\u2014Coulter 2, Portland 2,\nWatson (misconduct 10 minutes),\nHollett.\nSecond period\u20143 Boston, Cowley\n2:51\n' Penalties\u2014Claper, Hextall, Kirk\nand Hollett.\nThird period\u20144\u2014Rangers, Keeling (Hextall, Smith) 14:02; 5-\nRangers, Pratt (Smith) 15:10.\nPenalty -Heller.\nMotherwell held Its one-point\nmargin at the top of the championship table with a tight 3-2 verdict\nover St. Mirren while Hearts, victorious 2-0 over Queen's Park, broke\nthe runner-up deadlock with Rangers, Celtic, one point behind, battled\nto a 1-1 draw on Third Lanark's\nground.\nAt Motherwell, first-half goals by\nStevenson and Ogilvie\u2014the latter\nnetting two\u2014were enough .to sten\nthe desperate St. Mirren second-ha_-\nattack. McKenzie and Fen iSoP\nscored the Saints' counters. Leadin\nmarksman on Its roster. Brand giv\nArbroath a 1-0 first half lead.\nUnbeaten this season, Rangers ha\nto fight hard to draw scores leve\nafter the interval, Smith counting.\nCANADIENS WIN\nSATURDAY TILT\nMONTREAL, Nov. 14 (CP)-The\nFlying Frenchmen flew again last\nnight as Montreal Canadiens defeated Detroit Red Wings 5-2 for\ntheir first National Hockey league\nvictory of the season.\nCanadiens came from V.hind 'a\ntwo-goal deficit late in the second\nperiod to score five goals without a\nreply, four of them in the final 20\nminute:\nOne hundred and seventy pounds\nof grief to the other fellow in the\nrir*, Buck Davidson, former lightweight U.S. navy champ, Is booked\nto thrill the grunt and groan fans tonight. He takes on Jack Coleman,\nscrappy Texan, in one of the features\nof the Armory card.\nCANADA'S,\nFlNESTj\nCIGAR\nPUNCH\nsWSS.\nTROUT FISHING\nSEASON CLOSED\nGrapplers in Action Tonight\n\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0\":\u25a0\u25a0 :.\u25a0'-.'\u25a0'\u25a0:.:    -''. \\  : '  : : f$p \"\u25a0  ' i\n\u25a0  '\" : \u25a0\n^5Wfli?^TO\n: r'      \u2022 ' :\n\u25a0     ::< :: ;V\/:,    ;-~      -.-\nAlvin Britt, former junior heavyweight champ of the world is recognized by the National Wrestling association, and plotured at the top of\nthe heap above, will show his wares at the Armory tonight against Jerry\nBianchi, eastern fighter.\n'Riders, Argos,\nQueen's and the\nMustangs on Top\nTORONTO, Nov. 14 (CP).-Thc\nfootball croupier raked the blue\nchips into neat stacks today before\nfive teams, and when the final card\nfalls three weeks frohi now the\neast will know Its titleholders in\nthe Big Four and Intercollegiate\nunions.\nIt will take just that long, now\nthat play-off time is here in eastern Canada football, for the dealer\nto make known the hands held by\nthe five teams, Those five are left\not the eight that started out nearly\ntwo months ago for the two coveted\ncrowns.\nOn rain-swept gridirons Saturday,\na hot-and-cola Montreal team lost\n9-5 to Roughriders at Ottawa; Argos\nswamped Hamilton Tigers 18-5 at\nToronto; Queen's capped a great\ncomeback drive in the college by\nblanking Toronto 3-0 in Kingston\nand Mustangs playing in Montreal\nwon 4-0 against McGill.\nRovers Win by 4-3\nNEW YORK, Nov. 14 (AP)-New\nYork Rovers came from behind today with a three-goal' offensive in\nthe last two periods to down Baltimore Orioles 4-3 in the .opening of\nthe Eastern United States Amateur\nHockey leagues 1937-38 season.\nSATURDAY NIGHT HOCKEY\n8CORE81\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nToronto 7, Chicago 3,\nCanadiens 5, Detroit 2.\nINTERNATIONAL-\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nSyracuse 5, Pittsburgh 3.\nSpringfield 3, Cleveland 0.\nPniladelhpia 2, New Haven 1.\nAMERICAN A880CIATION\nMinneapolis 2, Kansas City 0.\nOVERTIME OPAL\nWIN8 FOR RAMBLER8\nPHILADELPHIA, Nov. 14 (AP)-\nA goal by Joe Krol in the waning\nminutes of the extra period Saturday night gave Philadelphia Ramblers a 2-1 victory over New Haven\nEagles and sent the blue shirts into\nfirst place in the International-\nAmerican Hockey league. Kilby\nMacDonald scored the other Rambler goal and Obs Hexime. netted\nfor Eagles.\nCOLLEGE PLAYOFFS\nBOTH AT TORONTO\nLONDON, Ont, Nov. 14 (CP)-\nBoth games In the Intercollegiate\nsenior rugby football playoffs will\nhe played at Toronto, University\nof Western Ontario officials announced here tonight, Western Mustangs will tangle with University\nof Torqnto next Saturdr.y in a sud-\nden-dealh r.-.mc and the winner\nwill tackle Queen's Iniversity Nov.\n27 for the title.\n3-3 Draw for the\nLeafs and Hawks\nCHICAGO, Nov. 14 (API-Chicago's Black Hawks and Toronto\nMaple Leafs battled to a 3-3 overtime tie tonight In a thrill-packed\nNational Hockey league battle before 13,000 fans.\nA goal by Johnny Gottselig, halfway through the third period, enabled Hawks to gain a measure of\nrevenge over the Leafs for the 7-3\nvictory scored by Toronto Saturday\nnight.\nBuzz Boll started the Leafs on\ntheir way with a goal early in the\ninitial stanza, with help from\nThorns. A few minutes later Much\nMarch, with Doc Romnes sliding\nhim the pass, slapped the puck past\nGoalie Turk Broda to knot the\ncount, In the second period Charlie\nConacher, getting the puck from\nHorner, caught the Hawks flat-\nfooted down the ice and whippea\nthe burner which put the Leafs in\nfront again.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period \u2014 1, Toronto, Boll\n(Thorns), 8:58; 2, Chicago, March\n(Romnes), 12:05. Penalties\u2014None.\nSecond period\u20143. Toronto, Conacher (Horner), 10:21. Penalty \u2014\nHorner.\nThird period\u20144. Chicago, Seibert\n(Romnes), 6:37; 5, Toronto, Conacher (Thorns), 9:14; 6, Chicago,\nGottselig (Dahlstrom, Thompson),\n11:32. Penalty\u2014Davidson. .\nOvertime period\u2014Scoring, none.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nLONDON, Nov. 14 (CP Cable)-\nResults of English Rugby league\ngames played Saturday follow:\nBatley 7, Hull 3.\nBradford Northern 13, Huddersfield 13.\nFeatherstone 19, Bramley 12,\nHalifax 8, Swinton 2.\nHull Kingston 25, Keighley 10.\nLeeds 5, Hunslet 8.\nLclgh-Dewsbury unplayed.\nNewcastle 0, Widnes 15.\nRochdale Hornets 7, Liverpool\nStanley 10.\nSt. Helens Rees 12, Broughton\nRangers 7.\nWakefield Trinity 12, Salford 5.\nWarrington 3, Castleford 14,\nWigan 5, Barrow \"\nYork 2, Oldham 2\nTrout fishing season throughout\nthe Kootenay district closed Sunday\nfor another -season. All game fish\nwith the exception of Dolly Varden\nor char In the Arrow lakes, Koote-1\nnay and Slocan lakes and their <\ntributaries, are protected by this\nclosed season.\nOpen season on coarse fish, namely ling, chub, Rockey Mouhtain\nwhitefish, sometimes called grayling, squaw fish and suckers, continues.\nCrowd Forces Charity\nGolf Players to Quit\nNEW YORK, Nov. 14 (AP)-A boisterous, unruly crowd of 10,000 spectators forced abandonment of the\nbig charity golf match, which was to\nhave been the official unveiling of\nJohn Montague, after nine holes over\nthe Fresh Meadow club course today.\nWhen the match finished amid\nwild confusion, Babe Ruth and his\npartner, Babe Didrikson, were two\nup on Montague and Mrs. Sylva An-\nnenberg. None of the four could putt\non the ninth green, so densely was\nthe crowd packed.\nTONIGHT...\nWRESTLING\nTwo main bouts\u2014Best 2 out of 3 falls. 90-minute\ntime limit.\nALL\nSTAR\nGERRY BIANCHI vs. ALVIN BRITT\nJACK COLEMAN vs. BUCK DAVIDSON\n\"CURLY BUTORAC vi. DON ANTONIO\nA Card Full of Thrills and Actions\nArmouries \u2014 Tonight\nADMISSION\nRingside 75c\u2014General 50c\u2014Children 25c\nDOOR8 OPEN 7:46 FIR8T BOUT 8:30\n\"This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liguor Control Board or by th.\n\u25a0ia ' ' \"~.     ' Government of British Columbia. ,      }\n-HM-i\nMm\n^\n mm\n\t\n1 -' \u25a0 \u2022\"\u00bb\u2022\nMpW\u2014~~\n1^1\nSAMUEL A. HUNTER OF KASLO IS\nLAID AT REST BY THE MASONS\nNELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.O-MONDAY MORNING. NOV.\nChurch   Crowded   for\nKaslo Ceremony;\nMany Flowers\nKASLO, B.C., Nov. 14\u2014St Andrew's United church was crowded\npast the doors at 2:_SU Friday afternoon when friends gathered to pay\ntheir last respects to an honored\ncitizen, Samuel A, Hunter, who\npassed away Monday in the Victorian hospital after an illness of about\ntwo weeks' duration.\nThe simple, yet impressive church\nservice was conducted by Rev. J.\nFielding Shaw, pastor of S!. Andrew's. Mr. Shaw first spoke of\nreturning from a funeral service\nsome weeks ago when Mr. Hunter\nwas his companion and who stated\n\"What was said today was true, I\nliked that feature\" and added \"Whoever speaks at the service when I\npass on 1 hope will not say too\nmuch. 1 have had my faults, have\nknown and struggled against them,\n1 have tried through life to do my\nduty, yet I fear there is not much\nto be said.\"\n\"How much should be said, I am\nsure he would leave to my sincere\njudgment,\" Mr. Shaw continued.\n\"The underlying plea was for\nbrevity and graveness in a funeral\ndiscourse, 1 shall seek to comply\nwith his expressed desire. On learning of his passing there flashed\nacross my mind, in rapid succession, certain characteristics which\nhave appealed to me through some\nmonths of a growing friendship. I\nthought first of his friendliness\nduring his long residence in your\ncommunity. He was a man of surpassing geniality. His cheery spirit\nshed its radiance on all about him.\nDuring my residence in the city it\nhas been my good fortune to meet\nwith him almost every day and 1\nhad learned to look for the friendly\ngreeting and cheery smile; thus, I\nfancy, was the experience of the\ngreat majority of you. He was a\nboon companion. He was a born\nartist. A characteristic which profoundly interested me was his thoroughness; that quality wound its\nway all through his life. He had\nsmall patience with skimped or\nslovenly service. He obeyed, and\ndesired others to obey, the Biblical\ncommand, \"Whatsoever thy hand\nfindeth to do, do it with all thy\nmight.\" In the more sacred association of life the spirit of through-\nness was translated into a spirit of\nloyalty. He was deeply devoted in\nhis affections to his lodge and his\nchurch. This spirit pf loyalty entered into his domestic life. Prominent though he was in the life of\nihe community with many demands\non his time, how frequently I have\nheard him say that after the day's\nwork was over he enjoyed so much\nthe comforts of his home. We mourn\ntoday the passing of one whom we\ncould ill afford to lose, one who in\nmany respects was a worthy citizen\nand a true gentleman. As we have\nseen he was not a one-sided man\nwith but one ideal or one virtue.\nNo, anything but that. I feel I can\nfittingly close with the lines 'His\nlife was gentle, the elements so\nmixed in him, that Nature might\nstand up and say to all the world\u2014\n\"This is a man.'\"\"\nDuring the service the choir sang\n\"Nearer My God, to Thee\" and\n\"Lead, Kindly Light\" and Walter\nWright rendered \"Peace, Perfect\nPeace\" as a bass solo.\nThe casket was covered and surrounded by a wealth of beautiful\nfloral tributes, not only from Kaslo\nfriends but from district and many\noutside points.\nMASONIC  RITES\nAt the conclusion of the church\nservices Kaslo lodge No. 25 A. F. &\nA. M. accompanied the remains to\nthe Masonic cemetery, where interment took place and the Masonic\nburial service was conducted by C.\nF. Nelson of New Denver, acting\nchaplain. A large number of visitors\nrepresenting the Masonic lodges\nthroughout the district were in attendance.\nRain fell throughout the afternoon but did not deter an unusually\nlarge number from forming a long\ncortege wending its way to the last\nresting place. The pallbearers were\nW. L, Billings, Dr. D. J. Barclay,\nFrank Helme, H. T. Hartin, Waiter\nHendricks and Gordon Bowker,\nwhile S. H .Green and H. Giegerich\nwere honorary pallbearers.\nIN KASLO IN 1896\nBorn at Kempvirlc, Ont., 65 years\nago, Mr. Hunter ventured west\nwhile still a very young man he\nfirst arrived in Nelson, but soon\ncame to aKslo, arriving wilh a parly of friends in 1896. A piano tuner\nby profession, lie found little of\nlliis work in the hectic days which\nKaslo was then experiencing. He\nwas only a few days in town when\nhe secured employment in the H.\nGiegerich store. When lhe Byers,\nGiegerich & Green amalgamation\ntook place in 1902 Mr. Hunter remained with the firm and travelled\nthrough the district in their behalf\nfor a time. When in 1924 H. Giegerich took over the entire business\nfrom his partners Mr. Hunter was\nstill retained on the clerical staff,\nhaving been directly or indirectly\nin the employ of Mr. Giegerich during his 41 years of residence in the\ncity. Aa a side lino he handled insurance for a number of years, His\nartistic ability in dressing show\nwindows was outstanding and reprints of photos of these have appeared in Canadian trade magazines\nand have been highly commended.\nThe truly beautiful gardens at his\nA avenue homo nn the hill were\never a source \"f attraction lo citizens nnd visitors alike and Mr.\nHunter took keen delight in showing visilors over the grounds and\nrarely did one leave without carrying away some of his beloved\nflowers.\nALDERMAN   ON\nBOARD   TRADE\nMr. Hunter served nn the Kasln\nCity council as alderman at times,\nwas for years an active member of\nthe Kaslo volunteer fire brigade,\na member of the Knslo board of\ntrade and took a keen interest in\nall sports, being very active in hockey, lacrosse and running, in his\nyounger days.\nIn politics he was a strong Conservative, having held the presidency of the Kaslo association at\nvarious times, and was also president of the district Conservative association.\nFriends had urged him to accept\nthe nomination to stand for election\nto the British Columbia provincial\nlegislature but their efforts were\nnot rewarded. Though ever genial\nand most courteous in business, Mr.\nHunter was essentially a home\nbody and did not seek honors, political or otherwise.\nA member of, St. Andrew's Unit\ned church, he always furthered any\nmovement whereby the church and\nits adherents would benefit. He\nwas a member of Sunshine lodge\nI.O.O.F. from its inception in Kaslo,\nbut his heart and executive ability\nwere centred in the Masonic order.\nHe was a member of Kaslo lodge\nA. F. & A. M. for years, was a past\ngrand master of this lodge, and at\ntimes held other responsible offices.\nThe high honor which the Masonic\norder bestowed on him by electing\nhis district deputy grand master of\nthe order in British Columbia on\ntwo separate occasions was most\nunusual but Mr. Hunter fulfilled\nthe duties of- this high office with\nremarkable ability and enthusiasm.\nMARRIED IN 1902\nOn April 2, 1902, Miss Agnes Han-\n15. 1937.\nson became the bride of Mr. Hunter\nthe ceremony taking place in St.\nMark's Anglican church, the officiating clergyman being the late\nVen. Archdeacon Henry Beer, then\nvicar of St. Mark's. One son was\nborn to Mr, and Mrs. Hunter, Robert, now resident in Hamilton, Ont.,\nwho reached Kaslo in time to be\nrecognized by his father before he\npassed away. Robert's wife and\nsmall daughter were unable to accompany him to Kaslo. Besides his\nwidow and son Mr. Hunter is survived by two sisters, Mrs. R. Conn\nof Kempville, Ont., and Mrs. Pelton\nof Toronto and one brother, John\nHunter of Stockton, Cal, who was a\nKaslo visitor during the past summer.\nAmong the many members of the\nMasonic order throughout the district who attended the funeral services were Charles F. Nelson, Frank\nBroughton, A .L. Levy, M. McLean\nrGRlFH\u00b0Sann1\u201eNdeS.^'j . ^ highest percentage of suicides\nNakusp, George McKean of Win-]ln lhe Unlted states occurs among\nlaw; Howard Bush, R. L. McBride, persons between the ages of 65 and\nWalter   Kettlewell,   Fred   Irvine, 175 years.\nWalter Hendricks, J. J. Binns, David Kerr and Charles H. Stark of\nNelson.\nConnecticut has started a plan of\nmaking automobile licence plates\nlast five years, by equipping each\naluminum plate with a small colored\ninsert for the proper year.\nFAOB   Nil*\nMrs_ R. Williams\nDies at Fernie\nFERNIE, B. C, Nov. 14\u2014Mrs.\nRobert ' Williams, Fernie resident for the past 32 years, died in\ntho Fernie hospital Thursday, following a lengthy illness. Mrs. Williams, who was 67 years  of age,\nwas born in Enfield, Southern !\nland.   She is survived by her .\nband, three sons, Edward and\nfred of the Peace River district\nand Robert, .r., of Fernie; th\ndaughters, Mrs. David Mitchell\nthe  Peace River district, Mrs.\nCarnwalh of Fernie, and Mrs. Led\nCartlidge of Ymir, B. C. and 2|\ngrandchildren.\nAlfalfa is an Arabic name meani\ning \"best fodder.\"\nTODAY\nGENERAL MOTORS PRESENTS THE\nNEW I9tf CHEVROLET\nTHE CAR OF LOW PRICE THAT BRINGS YOU ALL THE NEWEST,\nMOST MODERN, MOST UP-TO-DATE MOTORING ADVANTAGES\nStyling as different as It is\nbeautiful, for this bigger-look-\ning,better-looking, low-priced\nChevrolet.\nSmooth \u2014 powerful\u2014positive\ni..the safe brakes for modern\ntravel... giving maximum\nmotoring protection.\nTODAY, we join with General Motors in inviting you to see the greatest motor\ncar Chevrolet has ever produced\u2014the new Chevrolet for 1938 \u2014 the car that\nis complete.\nBigger, more luxurious, more massive in appearance\u2014beautifully different\nwith its new Modern-Mode Styling\u2014outstandingly complete in all ways \u2014 this\nncw Chevrolet merits the careful consideration of everyone who is thinking of\nbuying a new motor car in any price range.\nTo see and drive this smart, dashing car is to know you'll be ahead with a\nChevrolet ... to own it is to save money all ways . . . because, again in 1938,\nthe Chevrolet trade-mark is motoring's best-known symbol of savings.\nVisit our showrooms as soon as you can. Enjoy a new, comfortable ride and\na new driving thrill.\nMonthly payments to suit Your purse on the General Motors Instalment Plan.\n(WITH SHOCKFROOF STEERING)\nSo safe\u2014so comfortable\u2014so\ndifferent.. .\"the world's finest\nride\". On Master DeLuxe\nModels.\n(WITH SAFETY GIA5S AIL AROUND)\nLarger interiors\u2014lighter;\nbrighter colors\u2014and Unisteel\nconstruction, making each\nbody a fortress of safety.\nGiving the most efficient combination of power, economy\nand dependability.\nGiving protection against\ndrafts, smoke, windshield\nclouding and assuring each\npassenger individually controlled ventilation.\nA simp!e7 efficient, single\ndiaphragm spring replaces\nthe conventional multiple-coil\nspringsT-for easier, tiptoe-\npressure operation. Minimizes wear; never requires\nlubrication; an exclusive\nChevrolet advancement.\nNELSON TRANSFER CO,, LTD.\ntttiioTof w\n323 VERNON ST. General Motors Dealers for Nelson and District\nNELSON, B. C.\nManly & Miller\nCrand Forks, B. C.\nDominion Garage & Sales Co.\nTrail, B. C.\nCreston Motors\nCreston, B. C.\nWheeler Motors\nCranbrook, B. C.\nmmmm\u2014w________\u25a0___\u25a0\n_______-__________^__^__a\n\u2014m\n\u2014a\u2014m^m^^mm***********.\n_H_aH_M\n mmmm\nmmm*:\nIPPVJHHIf\np\u00bb.\u00bb?;\u00bb^T?ffH'>.u,'A^y^\nvmymmiNyi\nNELSON  DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING, NOV. IS. 19ST.\n|- _-N  \u25a0  \u2014 NELSON   UAIUI   BW*  -nmn,  \u00bbvr-,..,.,n, -.. __ ^ \"\u2022\"\"* 4\nrhis Want Ad Page Is a Directory of Buy^Quick Bargains\nssland Ladies\nHear ol Church\nof Earlier Days\nArs. A. Harrison Tells\nof Experience on\nPrairies\nROSSLAND, B.C., Nov. 14. -\npeaking at the annual thankoffer-\nIg meeting of the W. M. S. of St.\nSidrew's United church, Thursday\nVening, Mrs. W. C. MacKenzie of\nTail, presbyterial president, gave a\ntaphic account of the meetings of\nlie Dominion board recently at To-\nonto. The central theme of the\ntteetings, said Mrs. MacKenzie was\nrtiat the church meant to the world\n\"he speaker told of attending serv-\npes at \"The Church of All Nations'\nB Toronto, where the Gospel is\n(reached in many languages to lis-\naners who come from all parts of\nihe globe. She told of the new hos-\nlitals being opened up by the mis-\nton board, particularly the one re-\nlently opened at Battle River In\nhe Peace River country. The wo-\nnen's organization made a point of\nmdgeting their funds, ond they had\nhe money for a certain year in hand\ni full year before it was spent, thus\nteeping free of the danger of run-\nling into debt. Not only that, but\nthe interest received on the money,\npaid all the cost ot administration.\nMrs. A. Harrison told some of her\nexperiences as a Methodist minister a\nwife in a prairie parsonage many\nyears ago. when funds were scarce\nand calls for help many. The workers grew very close to each other\nfor there were not many of them.\nThe parsonage was a log hut plastered with mud. Mr. Harrison borrowed a yoke of oxen, got the logs from\nthe woods, took them to the sawmill to have them sawn into the required length, and the pine lumber\nfor floors and finishing was brought\nfrom Emerson some 60 miles away.\nRooms upstairs were made by hang,\ning sheets for partitions, and the\nfrost on these sheets was one-half\ninch thick, when her first baby, now\na missionary in China, was born.\nThe worship service was conducted by Rev. T. W. Reed, who spoke\nof the duty of the church In this\nage to bring in a sense ot universal\nbrotherhood. Distance was being\nrapidly annihilated; men no longer\nthought in terms of national boundaries, and the church needs more\nand more to spread the doctrine\nthat \"God hath made of one blood\nall nations of the world to worship\nHim.\"\nMrs. D. G. MacArthur, president\nof the W. M. S., spoke in similar\nvein. The offering for the evening\namounted to nearly $25.\nSeven major diseases declined by\nmore than 70 per cent in mortality\nm the United States during the last\n25 years, life insurance statistics indicate. The seven are: Typhoid, malaria, diphtheria, diarrhea, measles,\nwhooping cough, and tuberculosis.\nMean Mg Jfema\nMember of the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE  144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departmenti\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy .\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN BROADCA8TINQ\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n5:00 Canada Week by Week; 6:15\nLouise King, songs, Toronto; 5:80\nGermany Salutes Canada; 6:00 Melodic Strings; 6:30 CJBR innaugur:.-\ntion program; 7:30 Sports in Canada\n7:45 News and Weather, Toronto;\n8:00 Just Supposin', drama; 8:30\nOn The Mark, Vancouver; 8:00\nListen to the Band, Winnipeg; 9:30\nAu Claire de la Lune, Edmonton\n(not CRCV); 10:00 News and Weather, Vancouver; 10:15 Evening and\nYou, Vancouver; 10:45 Mrs. Walter\nWinsby, Vancouver, talk.\nEXCUSE IT, PLEASE!\n\u25a0-\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ  KGW  KF1  KPO  KOMO\n690 620 640 580 920\n5:00 Eddie Swartout's orchestra; 5:30 Beaux Arts Trio, instrumental; 6:00 Paul Martin and\nhis Music; 6:30 Hour of Charm, all-\ngirl orchestra; 7:00 Musical Hour;\n7:30 Comedy Ray Noble's orchestra\nand guests; 8:00 Amos and Andy,\nblack face comedians, 8:15 Uncle\nEzra's Radio Station E-Z-R-A; 8:30\nAlf Wallehstein's orch.; 9:00 Fibber McGee and Molly, comedy, Ted\nWeems' orchestra; 9:30 Vox Pop,\nsidewalk interviews; 10:00 News\nFlashes; 10:15 Sports Graphic; 10:30\nFrank Castle's orch.: 11:00 Joe\nReichman's orch.; 11:30 Jacques\nRenard.\n $   .05\nBy carrier per week     .25\nBy carrier per year  13.00\nBy mall in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months v1.80; six -month3\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 countriei, other than\nU.S. !ame as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising Rates\nHe a Line\n(Minimum 2 lines)\n2 lines, per insertion _ $ .22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions   88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion     .33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions  \u201e-. .- 1.32\n2 lines, 1 month 2.86\n3 lines. 1 month   4.29\nFor   advertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox  numbers  lie extra.  This\ncovers any number of insertions\nALL ABOVE RATE8 LE88 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nVrof. Konk: \"Where can I find a hotel**\"\nN.B.C.-KQO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Concert Petite; 5:15 Roy\nCampbell's Royalists; 5:30 Grand\nHotel, drama; 6:00 Philadelphia or.;\n7:00 Warden Lewis A. Lawes; 7:30\nRadio Forum, guest; 8:00 Eli Dant-\nzfg's or.; Land of Whatsit, drama\n(KGO) 8:15 Lum and Abner, comedy; 30 Today's News; 8:45 Mr.g-\nnolia Blossoms, Gus Heanschen's\nor.; choir; 9:00 Stanford University\nProgram; 9:15 Harold Stern'a orch.,\nDance Hour; 9:30 Memory Lane,\nserial; 10:30 Josef Horniks orch.;\n10:30 Slumber Hour. Jimmy Grier's\norch.; 11:30 Paul Carson, organist.\nCOLUMBIA NETWORK\nKVI KOIN KNX K8L KOL\n570 940 1050 1130 1270\n5:00 Maurice's Orchestra (Pacific);\n5:45 Judy and Her Jesters; 6:00\nThe Radio Theatre; 7:00 Wayne\nKing's orch.; 7:30 Brave New World;\n8:00 Poetic Melodies (KSL); Scat-\ntergood Baines drama (Pacific);\n8:15 Boake Carter, news comments;\n8:30 Pick and Pat, comedy, music;\n9:00 Horace Heldt's Brigadiers; 9:30\nOrrin Tucker's orch.|_10:00 The\nNight Rider; 10:15 white Fires\ndrama (Pacific); 10:45 Bob Crosby's\norch.; 11:15 So Hoopi's Hawaiins;\n11:45 Prelude to Midnight\n800 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver .500 w\n5:15 Uncle Mickey1!, Club; 6:00\nConcert Hall; 6:45 Sports' Resume;\n7:30 Skipper Scans the News; 7:45\nWilf Wylie; 8:00 News Revidw; 8:15\nRonnie Matthews; 8:30 Sports\nbroadcasts; 10:00 Ronnie Matthews,\norganist; 10:30 News; 10:45 Slumber Hour.\n910 k CJAT 319.6 m\nTrail I-\"\" w\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:15 Musical Clock; 7:30 Request program;\n8:00 Nakusp Mornin: Bulletin;\n9:30 The Old Timer; 10:15 Whats\nNew?; 10:30 The Radio Chef;\n10-45 Cee CBC network except:\n11:00 Backstage Wife, E.T.; 11:1a\nKootenay Echoes; 11:30 News Review; 11:45 Variety Show; 12:15\nSpokane Welcomes You; 2:00 The\nWomens Magazine of the Air; Lav-\nendar and Lace; 4:30 Time Presents;\n4:45 Leather Stocking tales; 5:00\nTheatre News; 5:15 Talking Drums;\n5:45 Barnacle Bill; 6:45 Hollywo. 1\nSpotlight; 8:00 King's men; 8:15\nBlaire of the Mounted; 8:30 Singing Strings; 8:45 Home Folk Frolic.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10.000 w\n5:00 Concert Hour; 5:30 The Buccaneers; 6:30 Red Head Family; 7:00\nSKUA; 8:00 Peoples League;\n8:15 Rhythmic Age; 9:00 News\nFlashes; 9:30 Peacock Court; 9:45\nGarden of Melody; Other periods,\nRecords.\nDON LEE NETWORK\n4:45 This Side of Twenty MDL;\n5:00 Chas. Gaylord's orch. MDL;\n6:15 Phantom Pilot, MDL; 6:30\nFrank Bull, sports, MDL; 6:45\nNews Flashes; 7:30 The Lone\nRanger, drama, MDL; 8:00 Pageant\nof Melod;. MDL; 8:30 Don Ihm\nIsahm Presents; 9:00 Newspaper of\nthe Air, KDL; 9:15 Tommy Dorsey's\nor.; 9:30 Charles Gaylord's or.; 10:00\nAlong the Waterfront; 10:15 Dick\nStabile's or.; 10:30 Erskine Hawkin's\norch.; 11:05 Jim Lunceford's orch,;\n11:30 Frank Sortino's orch. MDL;\n12:00 Mldnite Matinee.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nQ8D, 11.75 mo..(26.53 m.)\nGSC, 9.58 mc, (31.32 m.)\nGSB, 9.51 mc, (31.55 m.)\n6:00 p.m. \u2014 Big Ben. The Varlo\nTrio; 6:20 A Pure Woman, Part 2;\n7:10 News and announcements; 7:30\nPianoforte Recital; 7:45 Green Fields\nand Pavements\u20147. Talk.\nBIRTHS\nGILL\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Otto Gill,\nDurango Mine, Ymir, at Kootenay\nLake General hospital, November 9,\na daughter^\t\nBRADFOOT \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nLome Bradfoot, Cottonwood street,\nFairview, at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, November 12, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\nHelp Wanted\u2014Male\nApplications will be received\nfor position of Master Mechanic\nat Michel Colliery. Must have\nfirst-class engineer's certificate\nand also be prepared to supervise\nall machine shop work. Apply\nstating salary expected, to Crow's\nNest Pass Coal Co. Ltd., Fernie,\nB.C. (3497)\nGIRL, MUST BE GOOD COOK.\nOther help kept. Apply by letter\nstating age and qualifications to\nMrs. D. A. Shea, Castlegar, B. C.\nWANTED WOMAN COOK FOR A\nmining camp.   Small mine, close\nto Nelson. Box 3465, Daily News.\n(3465)\nMIDDLE AGED WOMAN FOR A\ncompanion. Apply Mrs. E. J. Skinner, 902 Fourth St. (3441)\nWANTED GIRL FOR HOUSEWORK\nApply 1118 Stanley St.        (3482)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nONE SURE WAY TO FIND OUT\nWHAT A\nWILL DO FOR YOU\nGive One a Job to Do!\nPhone 144\nMail Orders Given Prompt Attention\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nLARGEST.IN THE INTERIOR\nUSED MORE READ MORE\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE. NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorator3 and other\nstimulants. One dose peps up organs, glands, If not delighted,\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n(3243)\nFRESH SANITARY RUBBER LA-\ntex special guaranteed 25 for $1.00.\nWrite for free catalogue. National\nImporters. Box 244, Edmonton, Alberta. (3244)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nBLACK TEAM HORSES, ABOUT\n1500 lbs. Quiet, good condition,\nHarness and collars to go with\nteam. Ph. 32T or write R .H\nStewart, Creston, B. C.        (3421)\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD OR BOARDER\n419 Silica St (3365)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS,\nETC., FOR SALE\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for lull Information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. C.P.R, Calgary, Alta.\n(3245)\n8 ACRE DAIRY RANCH, COWS\nand all dairy equipment Included.\nFor particulars write Mrs. E. Garfield, Creston, B. C. (3471)\nSMALL COTTAGE, 2 BEDROOMS.\n4 level garden lots. $1450. $200\ncash. Balance as rent. C. W. Apple-\nyard, Baker St. (3374)\nPART  FURN.   MODERN  SMALL\nhome. 310 Richards St.        (3421)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nFORD COUPE that's a\ndandy. $135 down will\n1930\ntake this one.\nBUTORAC MOTORS\nTRAIL, B.C.\nHudson,   Terraplane,   Packard,\nLaSalle,  Cadillac,\nPontiac and  Buick  Can\nG.M.C., Indiana and Whlta\nTrucks and Busses.\n(3249)\nFOR SALE: TEAM OF HORSES,\nwell matched, roans, weight 1450\neach, also wagon and harness,\nEllison Milling Co, (3169)\nFINE THRIFTY YORKSHIRE PIGS\n10 weeks. $4.00. Ready now. John\nGardner, Graham Landing, B. C.\n(3472)\nEXP. YOUNG MAN WANTS JOB\ntrucking or general garage work.\nBox 3419, Daily News. (3419)\nEXCELLENT WOMAN COOK, SON\nas cookee, camp preferred. Apply Box 3457, Daily News,   (3457)\nYOUNG RELIABLE MAN DESIRES\nwork in butcher shop. State wages.\nBox 3494, Daily News. (3494)\nBOY, GOOD ON RANCH, DESIRES\nwork. Box 3425 Daily News. (3425)\nTHI GUMPS\nBy Gut Edson\nANDV.MYBOY, YOU'RE\nLOOKING ATA JOYOUS\nMAN .'MY TROUBLES\nARE OVER \u2014 I'M\nJOURNEYING FULL TILT\nPOWN THE ROAP TO\nCONTENTMENT-'\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 27)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER\nOF BEER LICENCE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that, on\nthe 27th day of November next, the\nundersigned Intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for consent\nto transfer of Beer Licence No. 4007\nissued in respect of premises being\npart of a building known as Allan\nHotel, situate at No. 308 Baker\nStreet, Nelson, British Columbia,\nupon the lands described as Lot\nNos. 2 and 3, Block No. 12, Official\nPlan of Nelson City, Nelson Land\nRegistration District, In the Province of British Columbia, from Cat-\nerina Pisapio, Nelson, B. C, to Alfred Andrew Vassar of Nelson, British Columbia, the transferee. \u2022\nDATED at Nelson, B. C, this 27th\nday of October, A. D. 1937.\nA. A. VASSAR,\nCATERINA PISAPIO,\nApplicant and transferee.\n(3173)\nFINE YORKSHIRE PIGS, OVER 0\nweeks old, $3.75 each. A. W. Sinclair, Camp Lister, B. C.      (3491)\n4 YR. AYRSHIRE COW.   FRESH 2\nmonths. Also Alfalfa. T. Dodman,\nBalfour. (3490)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\n2 NICELY FURNISHED ROOMS\nin new house, suitable for two\nbusiness people. Board lf de-\nslred.   Ph. 520-R. (34802\nNEWLY RENOVATED, COMPLET-\nely furnished home. Two bedrooms, furnace. Ph. 35 after 6 p.m.\n(3500)\nLT. HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS, 918\nKootenay Street. (No children.)\n(2987)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for renL   Annable Block\n(3250)\nSEE KERR APTS FIRST\n(3251)\n2 RM. SUITE AND CABIN. AP. 311,\nUnion St., or P. O. Box 196. (3106)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidalre equipped suites.    (3252)\n2  UNFURN.  ROOMS   SUITABLE\nfor housekeeping. Ph. 273R. (3478)\n6 ROOM FURN. HOUSE. APPLY\n205 Kerr Apartments. (3476)\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\n4 GOOD LOGNG. HORSES. REA-\nsonable price. S. Holuboff, Robson.\n(3489)\nff WKS. OLD CHESTER WHITE\npigs $3.75, f.o.b. Vallican, B. Munch\n(3389)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nWANTED - 2 JERSEY.OR AYR-\nshireT.'B. tested cows. 3 or 4 calf.\nMust be good milkers. ,S. S.\nVerigin, Ymir, B. C. (3492)\nPHONE 144\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nFOR SALE\nPIPE  TUBES   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B.C\n(9247)\nONE HUNDRED TONS OF BALED\nAlfalfa hay. Will sell by carlot or\ntruck loads, and make prlct delivered or sell f. o. b., Creston. Apply Chas. 0. Rodgers, Creston,\n(mi)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company Ltd\n250 Prior St, Vancouver, B.Q\n(3248)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C.      (3249)\n12 TONS ALFALFA $16, F. 0. B.\nGrand Forks. Terms strictly cash.\nP. 0. Box 250. (3496)\n6, 4, 3, 2 INCH WOOD PIPE.  W. W.\nOzeroff, Castlegar, B. C.      (3443)\nWANTED\nWANTED   ONE   SMALL  STEAM\nBoiler. Box 3444 Daily News.\nam\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBEJi\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\na W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter.   301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C.     (3283)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 428\nFall Street, Nelson, B. C, P. 0.\nBox No 728 Representing shipper's Interest, Trail, R. C.      (3284)\nharold~s7TTlmes\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist\nRepresenting Shippers\nROSSLAND,   B. C.\n(3285)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(3286)\nChiropractors\nj. R. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk.\n(3287)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Experience Ph. 969 Gilker Bk, Nelson\n(3220)\nCorsets\nSpencer corests.   Surgical Belts M\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St Ph. 668\n(3288)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH D DAWSON Nelson, B C\nMine Surveys and Reports\nB. C> Land Surveyor.       (3289)\nBOYlTC AFFLECK FnJitvaie B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg, Professional Civil Engineer\n(3290)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert  Mortician     Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n  (3291)\nDAVIS  FUNERAL  SERVICE\"\nEmbalming & Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Assisting\nPhone 95. Ambulance Service.\n(3292)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n347 Baker St., Phone 68.      (3293)\nK^W  DAWSON. Real Estate   Insurance.   Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.\n(3294)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD,   Insurance of\nevery description.  Real Est Ph 99\n(3295)\nH. E. DILL AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate. 508. Ward St\n(3296)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE\nRentals, Insurance.   Annable Blk.\n(3297)\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nDISTRICT MANAGEMENT\nof the Mutual Benefit Health and act\nassoc. now under supervision ol\nFrank A. Stuart and E. L. Warburton, Office: Aberdeen Block,\n577 Baker St., Nelson. Box 389.\n(3300)\nSEE D.  L.  KERR,  AGENT  FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins, For better rates.\n (3298)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate, Phone 135.       <3299>\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring. Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 503     324 Vernon Street\n (3301)\nH. E. STEVENSON, \"Machinists,\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine k Mill work a\nspecialty Fully equipped shop Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (3302)\nMine b Equipment Machinery\nE. L WARBURTON. REPRESENT-\nIng C, C Snowdon. oils, greases,\npaints, etc. Agent mine machinery, rails, pipe steels, sheet Iron,\netc. Steam coals. Office 518\nWard street, Phone 63.        (3303)\nNotaries\nD.   J.    ROBERTSON,     NOTARY\nPublic, Nelson. Phone 157L. (3304)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\n(3305)\nPhotography\nREALLY PERSONAL CHRISTMAS\nGreeting Cards from your own\nsnapshots. Ten cards, Including\nenvelopes $1.00. Send negative\nand 10c for sample. Krystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask. (33061\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant. 217 Baker SL\n(3308)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,   SELL k  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.    Tho Ark Store\n(3309)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch it Is on time all the tima\n345, Baker St., Nelson (3310)\n wm?\u2014\nLeaders Drill\nDownward, N.Y.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 14 (AP)\u2014Selling was light and buying lighter\nln the week-end stock market, with\nthe net result prices of many leaders tended to drift downward.\nMinor losses were noted ln most\nCanadian issues. Off fractionally\nwere Canadian Pacific, Lake Shore,\nDominion Stores and International\nNickel. Dome moved ahead for a\nslight gain.\nStocks under water the greater\npart of the day Included Chrysler,\nHudson Motors, General Motors,\nMack Truck, U. S. Rubber, Goodrich, J. I, Case, International Harvester, Kennecott, American Smelting, American Can, General Electric, Inland Steel. Some came back\nat the finish.\nResistant were U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Republic, Youngstown Sheet\n_. Tube, Anaconda, Deere, Wool-\nworth and Cerro de Pasco.\nOILS LOWER\nCALGARY. Nov. 4 (CP) \u2014 Oil\nshares ranged lower on the Calgary\nstock exchange with transfers of\naround lli.OOO tor the brief session.\nFirestone at 20% and Prairie at 26%\nwere the only stocks to advance,\ntheir ilains being fractional. Commonwealth lost 1 and Anaconda and\nMcDougal Segur each declined half\na point.\t\nToronto Stock\nMINES:\nAfton Mines Ltd       .02\nAldermac Copper      .47\nAlexandria Gold  02\nAmm Gold   27%\nAnglo-Huronlan    \u2014-    3.50\nArgosy Gold Mines ...     .36\nArntfield Gold - 30\nAstoria Rouyn Mines 03%\nAltec Mining Co 06\nBagamac Rouyn 18\nBanktield Gold  63\nBase Metals Mining 14\nBeattie Gold Mines      1.25\nBldgood Kirkland       .46\nBig Missouri 36\nBobjo Minesi-t4 -      -10\nBralorne Mines     ISO\nBrett Trethewey  05\nBuffalo Ankerite     11.25\nBunker Hill Extension       .14%\nCanadian Malartic      !\u2022?'\nCariboo Gold QuarU     1-61\nCastle-Trethewey    - 64\nCentral Manitoba 05\nCentral Patricia -     252\nChibougamau -     -21\nChromiumM&S 54\nCoast  Copper     250\nConiagai Mines      1-75\nConiaurum Mines .,     -M\nConsolidated M k S A   54.00\nDarkwater    \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022' - 12\nDome Mines Ltd    45,25\nDominion Explorers  r..     .04\nDorval-Siacoe Gold i~     .19\nEast Malartic .._ ..-     -87\nEldorado Gold     181\nFalconbridge Nickel      5.10\nFederal Kirkland      .09%\nFrancoeur Gold 39%\nGillU Lake  16\nGod's Lake Gold  _..     .53\nGold Belt 30\nGranada Gold Mines 06}'!\nGrandoro Mines        .041.\nGunnar Gold Mines _.      .81\nHard Rock Gold _     J.03\nBarker Gold _ 11\nHollinger    - _    12.25\nHowey Gold  29\nHudson Bay M k S   22.00\nInternational Nickel    44.75\nJ-M Consolidated _     .21%\nJack Waite 45\nJacola Gold  28\nKerr-Addison     1.75   .\nKirkland  Lake       1.25\nLake Shore Mines   50.25\nLamaque Contact  03\nLeitch Gold  70\nLebel Oro Minej 14%\nLittle Long Lac      4.75\nMacassa Mines  -     5.00\nMacLeod Cockshutt     1.03\nMadsen Red Lake Gold 51\nManitoba & Eastern 02%\nMandy 13\nMalroblc Mines  -     -01%\nMclntyre-Porcuplne     35.00\nMcKenzie Red Lake     1.10\nMcVittie-Grahom    13%\nMcWatters Gold  _. 35\nMining Corporation  ~    1,80\nMinto Gold _ 04%\nMoneta Porcupine -    1.81\nMorrls-Kirkland    21\nNiplsslng  Mining     1.90\nNoranda   ~    48.50\nNormetal    70\nO'Brien Gold  -    5.25\nOmega Gold  -      -42\nPamour Porcupine     STO\nParkhill Gold 08\nPaulore M      .12%\nPaymaster Cons  44\nPend  Oreille       1.77\nPerron Gold      1.20\nPickle Crow Gold     5.60\nPioneer Gold     3.25\nPremier Gold     2.13\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B, C.-MONDAY MORNINQ, NOV. 15, 1987.\nMarket and Mining News\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Nov. 14 (CP) -\nPrices ruled nominally steady on\nCanadian commodity exchange Saturday,\nButter spot \u2014 Quebec fresh (92\nscore) 30-30%; Quebec grass regraded 30B; Quebec seconds (38\nscore) 29%-29%.\nEggs spot-rOntarlo A-large 46A;\nA-medlum 38A.\nButter futures\u2014Steady, unchanged to % cent up; November 30-30%;\nDecember 30%-30%.\nDo You Want a\nRANCH\n\u00bb\n\u25a0\nWhy not save time\nond energy?\nA WANT AD\nWill Find It\nTwo (2) lines 6 times 80e net\nTwo,(2)  lines once 20c net\n-T^HONE 144\nNelson Daily News\nSmellers Holds\nOwn, Montreal\nMONTREAL, Nov. 13 (CP)-Un-\nbalanced by heavy selling Brazilian\ndropped 1% to 11% on sales of 13,000\nShr-F^fi\nPrice Brothers slid a point to 20\nwhile St. Lawrence Corp., common\nand the preferred gave up fractions.\nCanadian Car and C.P.R., sold lower.\nA minor gain showed for Hollinger\nat 12% but Nickel closed around %\nlower at 44. Noranda and Smelters\nheld about even,\nDominion Bridge bucked the trend\nfor a point-gain at 31 while Canada\nCement improved %.\nQuotations\nPowell Rouyn Gold     1.28\nPreston East Dome 93\nQuebec Gold 37\nRead-Authier     3.25\nRed Lake Gold Shore      .21\nReeves MacDonald  _ 34\nReno Gold Mines       .70\nRitchie Gold Mines      .02%\nRoche Long Lac' _. 09\nSan Antonio Gold    1.45\nShawkey Gold      .36\nSheep Creek Gold -. 93\nSherritt Gordon  \u201e     1.34\nSiscoe  Gold     3.45\nSmelters Gold  \u201e..     .01%\nSladen Malartic 90\nStadacona Rouyn      .40\nSt Anthony  15\nSudbury Basin     2.55\nSullivan Consolidated _    1.03\nSylvanite    _     3.10\nTashota Goldfields 03%\nTeck-Hughes Gold     5,15\nToburn Gold Mines     2.25\nTowagamac   ... \u25a0      .48\nVentures Limited     4.90\nWaite Amulet     1.40\nWhitewater      .06\nWright Hargreaves      7.15\nOIL8:\nAjax       .30\nA P Consolidated       .26\nBritish American Oil   20.75\nBritish Dominion 13\nBrown Oil  33\nCalmont 33\nCalgary k Edmonton     1.75\nChem Research 54\nCommonwealth  22\nDalhousie   .\u201e     .52\nEastcrest      12%\nFoundation   -      .18\nFoothills    45\nHighwood 11\nHome     1,06\nImperial    _   18.50\nInter Petroleum    30.00\nLowery Pete  15\nMcColl  Frontenac      10.50\nMerland   ...'. 06\nModel _      .30\nMonarch Roy _ _.     .21\nNordon      ,i\u00ab\nOkalta      .85\nPacalta    08%\nPantepec    _     5.00\nRoyalite      34.00\nSouthwest Pete 45\nTexas Canadian      1.31\nUnited : 14\nVulcan  _.    1.02\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power \u201e       2%\nBeatty Bros       14\nBell Telephone       160%\nBrazilian T L k P       11%\nBrewers & Distillers        5\nBritish American Oil       20%\nBrewing  Corp         1%\nBrewing Corp Pfd       15%\nB C Power A        32\nB C Power B        5\nBuilding Products         40%\nBurt F N Co        32\nCan Bakeries A          3\nCan Bakeries Pfd       35\nCanada Bread Co         3%\nCan Bad Malting        7%\nCan Car k Fdy         9%\nCan Cement         9\nCan Cement Pfd      104\nCan   Dredge         34%\nCan Malting       33\nCan Pacific Railway \u201e _        8\nCan Ind Ale A        5%\nCan Ind Ale B        4%\nCan Wineries         3\nCarnation Pfd       69\nCons Bakeries  _\u201e \u201e      15\nCons SmelterB       64\nCosmos            20\nDominion Bridge       20%\nDominion Stores        5%\nDom Tar k Chem --        7%\nD Tar & Chem Pfd \u201e.       84\nDistillers Seagrams  _      17%\nFanny Fatmer       21%\nFord of Canada A       17%\nGen Steel Wares        9%\nGoodyear Tire        77%\nGypsum L k A          6%\nHamilton Bridge        10\nHamilton Bridge Pfd       59%\nHinde Dauche        15%\nHiram Walkter       44%\nIntl Metal*   \u201e     8\nIntl Milling Pfd       98\nImperial Oil -       18%\nImperial Tobacco        13%\nInternational Nickel       44%\nInternational Petrol       29%\nLoblaw A  -       23%\nLoblaw B       21%\nKelvinator -_      13\nMaple Leaf Milling         2%\nMassey Harris         6%\nMcColl Frontenac        10%\nMontreal Power       30%\nMoore Corp  ._       30%\nNat Steel Car       29\nOnt Steel Prods       12\nOnt Silk Net      6\nPage   hersey          88%\nPower Corp _ _      15\nPressed Metals       20%\nSteel of Can        60%\nStandard Paving -.       2%\nGreen Vegetables\nAdvance in Price\non Local Market\nJ)ealers reported a somewhat\n\"dampened\" trade Saturday morning at the Vernon street market owing to the steady drizzle of rain\nwhich by 5 p.m. had measured .66\nof an inch, with half an Inch' of\nsnew.\nContinuing the seasonal drop-off,\nseveral products left the market,\namong them mushrooms, In the\nvegetable booths, Flemish Beauty\npears in fruit row, dill pickles and\nasters in .the miscellaneous section,\nand rabbit at the meat counter.\nSeveral vegetables advanced in\nprice, while some lowered. Advances however, held the upper\nhand. Green onions advanced to'\nfive cents a bunch instead of three\nbunches for 10 cents, Pickling onions went to 10 cents a pound from\nthree pound for 15 cents. Swiss\nchard was 10 cents a bunch Instead\nof three bunches for ten cents, and\ngreen peppers climbed to ten cents\na pound from two pounds for 15\ncents.\nHead lettuce, past their peak, sold\nat two for 15 cents, Instead of 10\ncents a head. Chrysanthemums were\nthe only cut flowers left. Horseradish dropped to 5 cents from 15\ncents a pound.\nQuotations follow!\n'VEGETABLES\nSage, bunch _    .05\nCelery, bunch   .10\nHorseradish, lb \u201e 05\nParsley, bunch _ 05\nMarrow, lb _  .03\nSpinach, 2 lbs 15\nGreen onions, bunch \u201e  .05\nPickling onions, lb \u201e 10\nGarlic,  lb _ 20\nDill, bunch 05\nRadishes, 3 bunches   .10\nHubbard Squash, lb   .03\nParsnips, 7 lbs. 25\nSwiss chard, bunch   .10\nRed cabbage, lb. _ 05\nHumber squash, each 25\nDried Beans, 6 lbs.   25\nand 3 Ibs.  25\nBrussels  sprouts,  lb _ 15\nLeeks, bunch     .     05\nScotch kale, head  10 and  .15\nSunflower seeds, lb 10\nCabbage, lb.     02\nCarrots, 8 lbs 25\nRed peppers, lb 10\nCooking onions, 6 lbs 25\nHead lettuce, 2 heads 15\nGreen peppers, lb \u201e 10\nField Tomatoes, 3 lbs 25\nCauliflower, lb,.\n.06\nTurnips, 9 lbs     -25\nPumpkin, lb.  .03\nBeets, 7 lbs.-  -\u2014- 25\nHothoustf'tomatoes, lb 15\nPotatoes, sack $1.75 and  $1.90\nand 12 Ibi. ...        .-,-   21\nFRUITS:\nCooking apples, 8 lbs. ..........   .25\nAlexander apples, 8 lbs.    .25\nMcintosh Red apples, 7 lbs. .....   .25\nCitrons,  lb _ \u201e.   .03\nAnjou pears, box .. ...'.   $2.00\nHowell pears, box      .'.  jl.50\nRome Beauty apples, box     .90\nNdrthern Spy apples, box    SO\nWinter Banana apples, box 90\nMISCELLANEOUS\nGeranium,  plant    , .20\nChrysanthemums, bunch 10\nSperengi. plant  40\nChristmas cherry, plant    .75\nCyclamen, plant 75\nEGGS\nGrade \"A\" medium, doz \u201e 48\nGrade 'A\" large, doz 50\nPullet, doz    .45\nMEATS\nBeef, lb   .07  to   .20\nVeal, lb. _  .08 io   _K\nLamb, Ib. _.____-__ .10 to .25\nBacon, lb 30\nBeet liver, lb      .12\nCalves liver, lb 25 and   .30\nDripping,   lb.     _   .08\nSausage, lb _ 10 and .15\nBologna, lb.   17\nChicken, lb    .25\nFowl, lb 20 and   ,25\nSausage meat 10 to .15\nHead cheese, lb. . .10 and .15\nPork, lb 15 to   .25\nSpring chicken, lb    .30\nDAIRY  PRODUCTS\nButter, lb   .30 and   .35\nCream, pint  25\nCottage cheese, lb.   .10\nOoat cheese, lb. .25 and .35\nNew cheese, lb.\nWhipping cream, % pint...\t\nCream cheese, lb. \t\nCurds,  lb:    _\u2122____-\nSauerkraut. lb\t\nCommission Sails\nfor Hong Kong to\nTake Dope Evidence\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14 (CP)\u2014En\nroute to Hong Kong to take evidence\non commission in connection with\nthe trial of five Vancouver orientals\ncharged with conspiracy to distribute narcotics, Henry Castillou, K.C.,\nand Corporal G. J. Haywood of the\nRoyal Canadian Mounted police sailed aboard the Empress of Asia for\nthe orient Saturday.\nBoth defence evidence and evidence for the crown will be taken\nbefore Mr. Justice R. E. Lindsell of\nthe supreme court of Hong Kong.\nAccused are Gordon Lim, Chang\nSing, Wong Ying, Lee Hoy and\nLum How. The trial will resume\nhere Jan. 17.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta. Pac. Grain \t\nAssoc Brew ot Can\t\nAssoc Tel & Tel  \u201e.\nBathurst P k P A \t\nBell   Telephone   \t\nBrazilian T L k P\t\nB C Power A \t\nBC Power B \t\nBuilding Prods \t\nCanada Cement  \t\nCan Cement ptd \t\nCan North Power \t\nCan  Steamship  \t\nCan Steamship pfd\t\nCan Car k Fdy \t\nCan Car & Fdy pfd \t\nCan   Celanese  \t\nCan Celanese pfd \t\nCan Ind Ale A\t\nCan Ind Ale B \t\nCan Pacific Rly\t\nCockshutt Plow\t\nCon Min & Smelting ....\nDistillers Seagrams \t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDominion Coal pfd \t\nDom Steel k Coal B\t\nDominion  Textile \t\nDryden Paper \t\nFoundation C of C\t\nGen Steel Wares \t\nGurd Charles \t\nGyp Lime k Ala\t\nHamilton   Bridge   \t\nHoward Smith Paper\t\nH Smith Paper pfd\t\nImp Tobacco of C \t\nInter Nickel of Can\t\nMassey Harris \t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMontreal L H _. P \t\nNational Brew Ltd. \u201e\t\nNat Brew pfd \t\nNat Steel Car\t\nOgilvie Flour Mills \t\nOntario Steel Prods \t\n2%\n12\n6%\n.   12\n160%\n11%\n33\n.    5%\n41\n.    9\n\u25a0  90\n20\n3\n9%\n. 9%\n20\n21%\n108%\n5%\n4\n54%\n.   17\n.   31\n.   18\n14\n.   72\n.    8%\n.   14\n10%\n.    7%\n6%\n7\n17\n98\n13%\n44\n6\n.   10%\n.   29%\n.   37%\n38\n29%\n200%\n17\nPower Corp of Can ....\nQuebec  Power   \t\nSt. Lawrence Corp \t\nSt. Law Corp pfd\t\nSt. Law Paper pfd\t\nSouth Can Power \t\nShawnigan W k P\t\nSteel of Can \t\nSteel of Can pfd\t\nWestern Grocers \t\nBANKS\nBank of Canada\t\nCanadicnne Natlonale\nCommerce  \t\nMontreal   \t\nNova Scotia \t\nRoyal \t\nCURB\nAbitibi P & P Co \t\nAbitibi 6 pfd \t\nAcadia Sug Refin\t\nBeauharnois  Corp \t\nBathurst P k P B \t\nBrew & Dist Van \t\nBrew Corp of Can\t\nBritish Amer Oil\t\nBC Packers  \t\nCan Malting Ltd\t\nCan Dredge k Dock ....\nCan Industries B \t\nCan Vickers \t\nCan Wineries\t\nCons Paper Corp\t\nDominion Stores\t\nDonnacona Paper A \t\nDonnacona Paper B ....\nFord Motor A \t\nFraser Co Ltd \t\nImperial Oil \t\nInter  Petroleum\t\nMacLaren P&P\t\nMitchell Robert \t\nPage Hersey Tubes \t\nRoyalite Oil\t\nThrift  Stores  \t\nUnited Dist of Can\t\nWalker Good k W\t\nWalker Good pfd\t\n. 15%\n. 15\n. 6\n, 18\n. 58\n. 12%\n. 20%\n. 60\n. 57\n. 50\n. 57%\n. 158\n. 157\n. 193\n. 290\n. 171\n. 2%\n. 22\n. 2%\n. 7\n. 4%\n. 5\n. 155\n. 20%\n. 10%\n. 34%\n. 34%\n. 125\n. 4\n. 2%\n. 8%\n. 5%\n. 7%\n. 7\n. 17%\n. 16%\n. 18%\n. 29%\n. 22\n. 11\n. 88\n. 33\n- %\n. 90\n. 43%\n. 17%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAl   Chem   \t\nAm Can\t\nAm For Power\nAm Mch & Fdy\nAm Smelt k Re\nAm Telephone..\nAm Tobacco ....\nAnaconda   \t\nAtchison \t\nAuburn Motors\nAviation Corp ..\nBaldwin Loco ..\nBait & Ohio ....\nBendix Av \t\nBeth Steel \t\nBorden   \t\nCanada Dry\t\nC P R \t\nCerro de Pasco\nChes k Ohio ....\nChrysler \t\nCon Gas N Y ....\nCorn  Prod  \t\nC Wright pfd ..\nEastman Kodak\nDupont  \t\nEl Pow & Lite\nErie \t\nFord English ...\nFord of Canada\nFirst Nat Stores\nFreeport Texas\nGeneral Electric\nGeneral Foods.\nGeneral Motors\nGoodrich   \t\nGranby  \t\nGrt North pfd\nGrt West Sugar\nHeclcer   Prods.\nHowe Sound  ..\nHudson   Motors\nInt Nickel \t\nInt Tel k Tel ....\nJewel Tea \t\nHigh Low\n166 166\n69% 88%\n5%      6%\n14% 14%\n52% 51%\n157% 149%\n71% 71%\n31% 30%\n42% 41\n9%\n3%\n9%\n13%\n14% 14%\n54%     53y,\n9%\n3%\n13%\n20\n15%\n20\n15%\n45% 44%\n39% 38%\n70 68%\n27% 27%\n67% 57\n3%      3%\n164\n123\n163%\n122%\n14%     13%\n9%\n5%\n\\v-:\u201e\n5%\n17%\n36% 36%\n23% 23%\n42% 41%\n31 30%\n40% 39%\n16% 19%\n5% 5%\n29% 28\n29% 29%\n7%\n51\n8%\n7%\n49 %\n7%\n44%    43%\n7%      7\n54%    54%\nClose\n166\n89\n5%\n14%\n52%\n161%\n71%\n31%\n42%\n9%\n3%\n9%\n13%\n14%\n54%\n20\n15%\n8\n46%\n39%\n69%\n27%\n57%\n3%\n164\n122%\n14%\n9\n5%\n17%\n36%\n23%\n42%\n30%\n40%\n19%\n5%\n20%\n29%\n7%\n50\n8\n44%\n7%\n54%\nKenn Copper\nKresge S S ..\nKrocgger k T .\nMack Truck ....\nMilwaukee pfd..\n35%\n17%\n17%\n24%\n1%\nMont Ward     40%\nNash Motor-\nNat Dairy Prod\nNat Pow & Lite\nNY Central ....\nPac Gas _. Elec\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R \t\nPhillips Pete ....\nPure  Oil \t\nRCA\n13\n15%\n9\n20%\n26%\n5%\n24%\n44 Vi\n13%\nII\nR K 0     5%\nRem  Rand\nSafeway  Stores\nShell Union Oil\nS Cal Ed  \t\nSouth Pac \t\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStewart Warner\nStudebaker\n15\n25\n17%\n22\n22%\n32%\n34%\n49%\n12\n7\nTexas Corp     43%\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTimken Roller..\nUnder Type ..\nUn Carbide ....\nUn Oil of Cal.\nUnited Aircraft\nUnited Biscuit.,\nUnion   Pacific.\nUS Pipe \t\nU S Rubber ...\nU S Steel \t\nVanadium Steel\nWarner Bros ...\nWest Elec   104%\nWest Union ....  31\nWoolworth     39%\nWrigleyl    83\nYellow Truck ..   12\n30\n55%\nWill,\n75%\n21%\n19%\n20%\n04\n33%\n28%\n60%\n17\n%\n\/    .,.* ::   \u2022   \u25a0',.,\n34%\n17%\n17%\n24\n1%\n40%\n12%\n15%\n8%\n20\n26%\n5%\n24%\n44\n13\n7%\n5%\n14%\n24%\n17%\n21%\n21%\n31%\n34%\n49%\n12\n7\n42%\n30\n52%\n58\n74%\n21%\n19%\n20%\n94\n32\n27%\n58%\n17\n8%\n108\n30%\n39\n63\n11%\n35%\n17%\n17%\n24\n1%\n40\".\n13\n15%\n9\n20%\n20%\n!V:i\n24%\n44%\nlll'l\n7%\n5%\n14%\n25\n17%\n22\n22%\n31%\n34%\n49!',\n12\n7\n43\n30\n55%\n58\n75%\n21%\n19%\n20%\n94\n33%\n28%\n60%\n17\n8%\n104%\n31\n39%\n63\n11%\nWheal Weakens\non Profit-Taking\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 14 -Contradictory reports of destruction by frost\nin the Argentine led to irregularity\nin all world wheat markets. Winnipeg futures slumped a cent on profit-taking at the start, recovered\nand then eased near the close,\nDespite government reports of\nfrost damage In southern and western areas, traders apparently believed the estimate of 75,000,000 bushels of wheat loss were too large,\nOnly a scattered export business\nwas reported though overseas firms\nbought November and December\nwheat earlier.\nLiverpool closed % to %'d higher.\nBuenos Aires firiished unchanged\nto % cents lower.\nIn cash wheat No. 1 and 2 northern were 20 and 16 cents above the\nNovember future. Lower grades\ndropped fractionally, No. 3 and 4\nwero 5 and 12 under the nearby\nfuture.\nLiquidation in rye and flax sent\nprices down two and three cents\nrespectively. Oats and barley futures followed the trend of wheat\nBrazilian Hits\nAnother Low\nTORONTO, Nov. 13 (CP)-An-\nother decline for Brazilian Traction\nset a new low at 10% and the closing price of 12% off was down %\nfor the day. Abotit 8000 shares\nchanged hands.\nO'Brien declined about 15 cents\nand other issues trading at losses ot\n5 to 10 cents were Pickle Crow,\nTeck Hughes, Siscoe, Macassa and\nCentral Patricia.\nNoranda and Nickel closed fractions down. Minor losses were\nboarded for Ventures, Chromium\nand Aldermac.\nProfit-taking continued in Distillers-Seagrams, forcing the price\nback a small fraction while Walkers common firmed about a halt\npoint. Banks, implements, foods,\nand utilities held steady to strong.\nJunior oils were almost dormant,\nBrown, Calgary k Edmonton, Calmont, Commonwealth, Highwood\nSarcee and Texas Canadian were\ndown 1 to 3 cents each. Acme\ndropped a fraction.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Nov. 14 (CP)-Brit-\nish and foreign exchange closed\nsteady Saturday. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nAustralia, pound, 3.9785.\nBrazil, milrcis, .0590.\nDenmark, krone, .2225.\nFrance, franc, .0338.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9843,\nHolland, florin, .5529.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0106.\nNorway, krone, .2569.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2305.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14  (CP) <\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight Tough\nNo. 1 hard   127%      125%\nNo. 1 northern   127%\nNo. 2 northern   122%\nNo. 3 northern   110%\nNo. 4 northern   103%\nNo. 5  wheat     96%\nNo. 6 wheat     83%\nFeed     71%\n125'\/,\n120%\n108%\n101%\n93%\n81 Vi\nVancouver Unlisted\nBid A.k\nBayonne    07 .09\nColumbia Oils  06 .09\nEuphrates         \u2014 .04%\nRoyal Can    - .20\nUtica       \u2014 -15\nWinslow        \u2014 -\u00b08\nColonial-Type Bungalow of Brick Charming\n\u2022 PAGE ELEVEM\n\u2022  A colonial type of bungalow ln brick is substantial and homey-looking.\nThe entrance vejtlbule opens from the porch,\nand contains a closet for wraps. Back of this vestibule is a bedroom, also with its own closet. Living\nroom, dining room, bathroom and kitchen occupy\nthe rest of the space downstairs, and there are two\nbedrooms above. Tho downstairs bathroom will be\nconsidered a decided convenience by many prospective home owners, There is a fireplace in the\nliving room.\nThe house contains 24,520 cubic feet.\n.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 13 (CP)-Graln\nquotations:\nOpen High Low Close\nWheat:\nNov  120% 121% 119% 120%\nDec  115% 118% 114% 116%\nMay     113 113% 112% 113%\nJuly    107% 108% 106% 107%\nOats:\nNov    - - - 47%\nDec.   .....   44% 44%    44% 44%\nMay       44 44       43% 43%\nBarley:\nNov    61% 62%     62% 62\nDec.        -58% 59       58% 59\nMay   I...   57% 67%     57 57%\nNov,3\"'... \u00ab7%   177%   177      176%\nDec?    174       -       -      174\nMay    175     176     174     174%\nRye:\nDec.       77       77%    75%     76\nMay       79       79%     77%.   77%\nCash prices:\nWheat\u2014No. 1 hard and No. 1\nnorthern 139%; No. 2 northern\n135%; No. 3 northern 115%; No. ,4\nnorthern 107%; No. 5 wheat 100%;\nNo. 6 wheat 937\/a; feed wheat 95%;\nNo. 1 garnet 115%; No. 2 garnet\n112%; No. 1 amber durum 98%; No.\n4 special 99%; No. 5 special 93%;\nNo. 6 special 87%; track 134%,\nOats-No. 2 c.w. 47%; No. 3 c.w.\n46%; ex. 1 feed 45%; No. 1 feed 43%;\nNo. 2 feed 39%; No. 3 feed 35%;\ntrack 45%.\nBarley\u2014No. 3 c.w. 62; No. 4 c.w.\n60; No. 5 cvv. 56; No. 6 c.w. 58;\ntrack 60. \u201e   _\nFlax-No 1 c.w. 176%; No, 2 c.w.\n172%; No. 3 c.w. 151%; No. 4 c.w.\n146%; track 174.\nRye\u2014No. 2 c.w. 75%.\nDOLLAR UP\nLONDON, Nov. 14 (AP)\u2014An advance of 1-16 of a cent was made by\nthe United States dollar in foreign\nexchange trading. Final rate was\n$4.98 01-76 to the pound.\nDow-Jones Averages\n30 Industrials\n20 Rails \t\n20 Utilities \t\n40 Bonds \t\nHigh\n. 133.24\n.   34.29\n.   23.49\nLow\n131.73\n33.93\n23.04\nClose  Change\n133.05\u2014off   .04\n34.26-up   .29\n23.43-up   .15\n93.54\u2014off   .03\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nListed\nA P Con\t\nAmal Oil\t\nAztec Min Co\t\nBig Missouri\t\nBrit Dom Oil\t\nBralorne  \t\nBridge River Con .\nC & E Corp\t\nCaimont Oil\t\nCariboo Gold\t\nCoast Breweries ....\nCommonw Oil \t\nDentonia \t\nGold Belt Mines\t\nHargal Oil\t\nHome Oil \u2014\nInter Coal\t\nIsland Mount \t\nKootenay Belle\t\nMak Siccar _\nMcDoug Seg Ex ......\nMcLeod Oil\t\nMinto \t\nModel Oil\t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold ..;\t\nPremier Border\t\nQuatsino \t\nRelief Arlington .,..\nReno Gold  ,\t\nReeves MacDonald\nSally \t\nSalmon Gold \t\nSheep Creek -\t\nSllbaK Premier\t\nTaylor B. River.....\nVanalta Ltd\t\nVidette \t\nWesko    _\nCURB\nAnaconda \t\nBaltac Oil\t\nBC Nickel\t\nCongress \t\nCork Province\t\nCrows Nest new\t\nDalhousie Oils .\t\nDavies PetroleXn..\nDunwell Mining ....\nEast Crest Oil\t\nFairview Amal\t\nFederal Gold\t\n.'4'\nBid\n.25\n.06\n.06\n.37\n.14\n8.00\n.02\n1.71\n.35\n1.63\n13.50\n.23\n.09%\n.30\n.15%\n1.01\n.21\n.71\n1.07\n.01%\n.15\n.04\n.32\n3.25\n2.13\n.01%\n.02%'\n.17\n.88\n.30\n.05\n.07\n.93\n2.00\n.04\n.04\n.10%\n.00\n.03\n.00%\n.02%\n.00%\n.50\n.24%\n.03%\n.11\n.04%\n.01%\nAsk\n.27\n.07\n.08\n.39\n.19\n8.10\n.03\n1.72\n1.65\n13.95\n.25\n.35\n.75\n1.08\n.02\n.17\n.30\n.04%\n3.30\n2.15\n.01%\n.03\n.19\n.70\n.40\n.08\n.95\n2.10\n.05\n.20\n.11\n.05\n.12\n.03\n.01%\n.05\nFirestone Pete\t\nFoundation Pete\nFour Star Pete ....\nFreehold Oil\t\nGeo Copper \t\nGeo Enter\t\nGeo River \t\nGolconda \t\nGold Mountain ....\nGrandview \t\nGrull Wihksne ....\nHaida\t\nHedley St\t\nHome Gold \t\nIndian Mines\t\nKoot Florence\t\nLakeview Mine ..I.\nLucky Jim \t\nMadison Oil \t\nMar Jon Oil _...\nMercury Oil\t\nMeridian ncw \t\nMcGillivray \t\nMill City Oil\t\nMonarch R\t\nNicola \t\nNoble Five  _\t\nNordon Oil\t\nOkalta Com\t\nPacalta   \t\nPend Oreille\t\nPorter Idaho \t\nPilot Gold\t\nPrairie Royalties..\nQuesnelle Q\t\nReliance  \t\nReward Mining....\nRoyalite Oil \t\nRufus Argenta\t\nRuth Hope \t\nSilver Crest i\t\nSilversmith\t\nSouthwest Pete ....\nSunloch Mines\t\nUnited Distillers ...\nUnited Oil\t\nViking Gold  _.\nVulcan Oil\t\nWaverley T new...\nWellington Mines.\nWest.Flang \t\nWhitewater\nBid\n.20\n.18\n.05%\n.20\n.01%\n.01\n.06%\n.02%\n.09\n.08\n.05%\n.02%\n.01%\n.01%\n.01%\n.02%\n.04%\n.05'2\n.12\n\u25a0111\n.11)\n.09\n.20\n.05%\n.03 %\n.16    \u2022\n.85\n.09%\n1.80\n.03%\n.01%\n.26\n.05\n.01%\n.06\n33.00\n.01%\n.01%\n.02\n.01%\n.40\n.10\n.90\n.12\n.01%\n1.00\n.00%\n.02%\n.29%\nAsk\n.03%\n.07\n.02%\n.09%\n.09\n.06%\n.03%\n.02\n.02\n.01%\n.01%\n.02%\n.05\n.22\n.10\n.05%\n.04\n.90\n.10%\n1.85\n.04\n.02\n.27\n.01%\n.06%\n34.00\n.03\n.02\n.02\n.45\n.02\n1.02\n.00%\n.03\n.30\n.07\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Nov. 14\u2014Bar gold declined one penny.\nBar silver steady, off 1-18 at\n19%d.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 14 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London down two cents to\n$34.95 an ounce ln Canadian funds;\n140s in British.    >\nSilver futures closed steady, 10\npoints up to 10 off. Sales four Dec,\ncontracts four May, eight exchanges,\nDec. to May, at a difference of 25\npoints.\nSpot: copper, electrolytic, 12.15;\ntin 48%: lead 8.5; zlhc 5.00; antimony 17.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 14 (AP) -\nMetals nominally unchanged.\nMoney\nBy tht Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.98 7-16;\nU.S. dollar .99 15-16; franc 3.38.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.98 7-16;\nCanadian dollar 1,00 1-16; franc\n3,38%.\nAt Paris\u2014Closed.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12s 2d; U.S. dollar\n56.05 cents; Canadian dollar 59.14\ncents.\nBecause of Mexico City's high altitude, flies and mosquitoes are virtually unknown there.\nWheal Falls\nbut Recovers\nCHICAGO, Nov. 14 (AP)-Wheat\nprices tumbled almost two cents il\nbushel Saturday but recovered;\nabout half of the loss before tht\nclose.'\nWheat closed %-l% lower, corn\n%-l% down. Oats lost %-%.\nWheat: December 91 .i-01.4; May\n92-92%; July 86%-86%.\nCorn: December 54%-54%; May\n57-57%; July 58%-58%.\nOats: December 30; May 29%\u00ab\nJuly 28%.\nSoy beans: December 92%; May\n94%.\nRye: December 71%; May 78%)\nJuly 67.\nCash wheat: No. 5 hard 84%; corrt\nNo. 3 mixed 51; oats, No. 3 mixed\n30%; rye, No. 3, 72%; soy beans,\nNo. 2 yellow 92%-93; barley, No. 1\nmalting Minnesota 8; feed, 41-58;\nmalting, 60-85; timothy seed, 2.26-\n2.65; red clovcrsead, 27.50-32.50j\nsweet cloversecd, 7.00-7.75.\nDividends\nStuart Oil, preferred, 20 cents,\npayable December 1 to sharehold\"\ners of record November 16.\nCanada Vinegars, 30 cents pay?\nable December 1 to shareholders o_\nrecord November 20.\nMcKinley 'Mines Securities, 9\ncents, payable December 1 to shareholders of record November 19,\n\"In My Day, Sonny, We\nTook Our Chances\nWith Qerms.\"\nYES\u2014In those days people took chances on many\nthings\u2014Things which today are no longer a risk\u2014\nIndeed, the world has changed.\nThe Nelson Daily News is proud to be in step with\nthe times\u2014to be up to date\u2014to be able to give\nits readers the quickest, most reliable news obtainable, interwoven with the best of features\u2014to have\nthe reputation of being a\nNEWSY PAPER\nTHE\nNELSON   DAILY  NEWS\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting\nDaily Newspaper\n mp4tmmmr*wm^\nw\nwmmm\n*m\\\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, NOV, 15. 1937,\nLibrary\nDiscards\n35c  3 ^ $1.00\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nNEW HAVEN AND\nINDIANS IN TIE\nNEW HAVEN, Conn., Nov. 14 -\n(AP)\u2014Nev Haven Eagles, still\nseeking an International-American\nhockey league victory, engaged in\ntheir third tie in five starts tonight as Springfield Indians held\nthem to a 1-1 deadlock.\nJack O'Connor Dies\nST. LOUIS, Nov. 14 (AP)\u2014Jack\nO'Connor, star major league catcher\nin the '90's and one time manager\nof St. Louis Browns, died today.\nHe was 65. He had played vith\nColumbus, Denver. Cleveland, Pittsburgh and St. Louis teams. He\nmanaged the Browns during the\nlatter part of the 1909 season and\nthrough the 1910 campaign.\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needs In plumbing repairs, alterations, and\nInstallations.\nPh. 815\n301 VICTORIA St\nD. A. McPherson,\nGrealWarVef.\nDies al Age 64\nDonald Alexander McPherson, a\nresident of Nelson for the past dine\nyears, died at his home on Hoover\nstreet Saturday evening, aged 64.\nBorn in Inverness, Scotland, 'in\n1873, Mr. McPherson came to British Columbia 25 years ago. He was\na Gerat War veteran, having served\nwith the Scottish Highlanders for\ntwo and one-half, years.\nHis wife in Nelson, and a brother,\nNorman, in Scotland, survive him.\nFuneral   services   will   be   held\nWednesday morning from the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate.\n \u2014\u2014 -.\nNorth Shore Lions\nTied af Top With\nMeralomas Squad\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14 (CP) -\nNorth Shore Lions defeated Knights\nof Columbus 8-0 Saturday to gain a\ntie with Meralomas as the top of the\nBig Four Canadian Rugby league.\nJock* Taylor opened the scoring\nfor Lions in the first quarter with\na kick to deadline, arid collected six\nmore of his team's eight points in the\nfourth when he intercepted a pass by\nTaylor and went over for a touch.\nHe converted.\nEd Kendall of Knights was rouged\nfor one point in the final quarter,\nSPRINGFIELD WINS\nSPRINGFIELD, Mass., Nov. 14-\n(AP)\u2014Springfield Indians Saturday\nnight won their first International-\nAmerican Hockey league game ot\nthe season, defeating the Cleveland\nBarons 3-0. Carrigan, Filmore and\nConnolly scored.\nU. S. DOLLAR UNCHANGED\nMONTREAL, Nov .14 (CP) -\nPound sterling firmed 9-16 cents\non Montreal foreign exchanges Saturday to'<4.88 7-16, while the French\nfranc at 3.38 cents and the United\nStates dollar at 1-16 per cent discount held unchanged.\nSkating Schedule\n(Subject to Weather Conditions)\nWeek November 15th to 20th Inclusive\nMONDAY NIGHT: 8 to 10 p.m.\u2014Adult Skating.\nWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON: 2 to 4 p.m.\u2014Adult Skating.\nTHURSDAY AFTERNOON: 4:15 to 5:30\u2014Children\nSkating.\nFRIDAY NIGHT: 8 to 10 p.m.\u2014Adult Skating.\nSATURDAY AFTERNOON: 2 to 4 p.m.\u2014Children\nSkating.\nADMISSION: Adulti 25c or 6 period ticket! for $1.25.\nChildren 10c, or 12 period tickets for $1.00\nAt all Children's skating periods, Miss Marguerite Phillips will attend to assiit the younger girl skaters when necessary.\nSKATER8 ARE REMINDED THAT THE REGULATIONS NOW\nPOSTED ON THE FRONT OF THE BAND STAND WILL\nBE STRICTLY ENFORCED\nArthur Bradshaw will act as an Official on the Ice.\nFallen Honored by\nMichel, Natal Folk\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 Anniversary of\nArmistice was observed at Michel-\nNatal on November 11 at the Michel\nLegion hall. With warm weather\nprevailing the parade, headed by\nthe Michel-Natal band started from\nthe Natal Mission hall at 10:15 and\nproceeded to Natal under the direction of the Michel-Natal branch No.\n81 of the B.E.S.L. with Constable\nShepherd in command. At Natal the\ntwo Italian lodges the Duke d'Aosta\nand the Emmanuele Filiberto joined\nthe processioh which then headed\nto Michel and finally finished at\nthe Legion hall where the service\nwas conducted under the supervision of Joe Lyne of Michel, president of the Michel-Natal Legion.\nAfter the two-minute silence was\nobserved Bugler Herbert Hughes\nplayed the \"Last Post\" and the\n\"Reveille\". After singing of \"O\nCanada\" followed by an address on\nArmistice and the present situation\not the world by Rev. W. Latimer of\nthe Michel United church. The\nscripture reading was given by W,\nHuntley of Michel, which was followed by the hymn \"0 God, Our\nHelp in Ages Past\". While the Girl\nGuides were taking up the collection the band played the march\n\"Old Comrades\". This collection was\nto he sent for the soldiers suffering\nfrom tuberculosis at Kamlops, B.C.\nBefore concluding the service other\nhymns were sung before finally\nparading to the cenotaph where the\nwreaths were deposited and the\nfinal service conducted by Rev. W.\nLatimer, in front of the Natal-Michel Central school. Wreaths were\nlaid by the following: Michel-Natal\nbranch No. 81, BJ.S.L., Michel\nF.O.E. No. 1864, Michel local 7292,\nU.M.W. of A., Natal Emmanuele\nFiliberto, Michel Duke d'Aosta, Michel Girl Guides and others.\nIt's Never Too\nLate to Learn! 1\nThe Coal.with more value\nfor your money.\nMurray\nCOAL\nTry a ton today.\nMacDonald\nCartage and\nFuel Co.\nAgents for Michel and\nCoal Sellers\nPHONE 258\n| S8BS8BH8S3KSSSSSS\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nTo Make Room for Another Carload\noft Those Truly Popular Gars\nThe 1938 Nash\nWe Are Offering at\nSacrifice Prices\nTHE FOLLOWING EXCEPTIONAL USED CARS\n1-1936 TERRAPLANE DeLuxe Sedan\n1-1936 FORD DeLuxe Coach\nWITH HOT\nAIR HEATER\n1-1935 FORD DeLuxe Sedan\nWith 2 new Jumbo tires and\nequipped for winter driving\n1-1934 CHEVROLET Master Sedan\nIN PERFECT\nCONDITION\nNo Reasonable Offer Refused\nIF   ITS  A  KOOTENAY   MOTORS\nUSED CAR, IT'S A COOD USED CAR\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI Kootenay Motors  I\n(Nelson Limited) \u25a0\nI\nNASH, LAFAYETTE -\nPHONE 117\n\u25a0 HUDSON, TERRAPLANE\nNELSON, B. C.\nI\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOUND - FINE LEFT-HAND\nGlove Sunday at Willow Point J.\ni. Campbell.        (3502)\nWANTED - WILL PAY CASH FOR\ngood fresh cow.\nPhone 311-L-l.\nSlader's Dairy,\n(3507)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nREFRIGERATION SERVICE. PH.\n(66, F. H. Smith, 313 Baker St (3222)\nLoose leaf books less 20 per cent\nNelson Stationery Co. (3224)\nSkates sharpened for artificial Ice\nat Wade's Shoe Shop. (3485)\n2 room furnished suite for rent\nStirling Hotel.       ' (3422)\nNelson Electric Street Number Is\n574 Baker Street\nSave CIVIC THEATRE Coupone\nfor 8UITABLE\"XMAS Gifts\n(3495)\nDelicious meals at all hours.\nGOLDEN  GATE  CAFE\n(3468)\nMORE ABOUT\nTRAGEDIES\n(Continued From Page One)\nbefore the time they are believed\nto have met their death.\nSEVEN DEAD AS\nFREIGHTER 8INKS\nNORFOLK, Va., Nov. 14 (AP)-\nFifteen sailors, wave-tossed for more\nthan 30 hours after the Greek\nfreighter Tzenny Chandris sank of\nstorm-battered Cape Hatteras, N.C,\nwere saved in dramatic fashion today, bringing to 21 the number of\n.survivors rescued since the vessel\n| foundered Saturday morning.\nAirplanes used for spotting purposes directed a coast guard cutter\nthrough thick weather and high\nseas to the men rescued today.\nBodies of four others were aboard\nthe coast guard cutter Mendota and\nsurvivors said three more seamen\nwere dead\u2014two drowned and one\ndead from exposure. This made the\n28 the coast guard said was believed\nin the trew. Some sources said there\nwere 29.\nFALLS INTO BUCKET\nOF LYE SOLUTION\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 14  (CP) -\nSpalding's Badminton Racquets,\n$2.75 to $19.00. Birds $2.50 S. $3.26\ndozen.    Hipperson's, (3228)\nMusical Instruments and Repairs.\nWebb's, 806 Baker Street.\n(3474)\nSNAP \u2014 Jewel circulator In good\ncondition. $20. Milady's Fashion\nShoppe, Phone 874, (3488)\nNelson Women's Liberal association at Mrs. E. H. Patersoh's, 911\nCarbonate street, Tuesday, 16,8 p.m.\n(3506)\nATTENTION Nelson Lady Curlers.\nNo Ice today. Season opens\ntomorrow (Tu-iday),\n(3509)\nWomen's Canadian club in Hume\nhotel, Thursday,, Nov. 18, at 8 p.m.\nThomas Wayling, speaker. Lecture\nonly 25c. (3503)\nReserve Wednesday the 17th for\nthe Women's Institute concert at\nthe Canadian Legion. Good eats,\nAdmission 25c, Starts at 8 sharn.\n' (3504)\nWe now have a most complete stock\nof electrical specialties for early\nChristmas shoppers.\nMcKAY & 8TRETTON\n'   ' (3429)\nPHONE 144 and have our local\nrepresentative,   Miss   Arthur,   call\nand show our CHRISTMAS CARDS.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n(2890)\nWHI8T     -     DANCE\nBE8T DANCE! BE8T LUNCH!\nBE8T ENTERTAINMENTI\nCATHEDRAL HALL\nTOMORROW  NITE, 8 p.m.\u201425c.\n(3493)\nThe Canadian Legion express very\ngrateful acknowledgement to the\nmany ladies who have so kindly\ndonated flowers or rendered other\nservices in the beautifying of the\ncenotaph throughout the past year.\n(3501)\nThe Mayor wishes to pass on their\nexpression of thanks to those persons in the Nelson district who contributed the fruit and vegetables and\nto the various Committees, individuals and school children, without whose help the shipments could\nnot have been assembled.       (3486)\nTAKE NOTICE that no one has\nauthority to pledge my credit or\nincur accounts in my name and I\nwill not be responsible for any accounts incurred in my name by\nanyone.\nJOHN HERBERT PERDEY.,\n(3487)\nNOTICE\nMayor Morgan is in receipt of a\nletter from the Vonda, Saskatchewai\nVoluntary Relief Committee, expressing their high appreciation of.\nand gratitude for the carloads of\nfruit and vegetables so generously\ndonated for free distribution to deserving people in Vonda, Saskatchewan.\nPFEIFFER \u2014 Mrs. Mary Amelia\npassed away Saturday. Body rests\nat Somers' Funeral Home until\nWednesday, where service will be\nheid at 2 p.m., Rev. E. E. Lindgren\nofficiating. (3499)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMcPherson, Donald A\u2014Died Saturday. Body rests at parlors of\nDavis Funeral Service until 9 a.m.,\nWednesday, thence to Cathedral of\nMary Immaculate, where Requiem\nMass will be sung. (3505)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nGRANT \u2014 Passed away at his\ndaughter's home, Bay avenue, Trail,\nNovember 13\u2014David Grant in his\n88th year. Funeral service will be\nheld at Clark's Funeral Chapel,\nTrail, Tuesday, November 16, at\n1:30 p.m., Rev. F. G. St. Denis of.\nficiating. Interment at Mountain\nView cemetery. (3508)\nNAKUSP-VERNON\nDue to heavy snows in the\nMonashee Pass service has\nbeen discontinued between\nNakusp and Vernon for the\nwinter. Connections to\nOkanagan points, however,\nare still .being made via\nTrail.and Grand Forks.\nPhone 800 for Further\nDetails.\nGreyhound Lines\n221 Baker St.\nPhone 800\n(3282)\nJoan Parker, 22, was in hospital tonight with burns to the face and\nback suffered when she tripped and\nfell into a bucket of a strong lye\nsolution in the kitchen of the Balkan cafe here last night,\nHer condition was reported as\n\"good\".\nTWO CHILDREN KILLED\nDOCANVILLE, Sask., Nov. 14\n(CP)\u2014Two children were killed\nand a man seriously injured when a\ntruck, carrying 15 young people\nhome from the service at a Roman\nCatholic church, overturned in a\nditch near here today.\nThose killed were Thercse Gagnon,\n10, and Charles Fex, 13. '\u2022 They wero\nthrown clear of the truck but were\npinned under when it fell on them.\nTherese had her neck broken, Fex'\nchest was crushed.\nFOUND DEAD IN 1\nSHRUBS\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta., Nov. 14\n''$1?    Rose\n\"\"Beauty ?arlor\\\nPHONE 317\nPermanents,   Facials,\nManicuring, etc.\nOn With\nTHE SHOW\nA Rollicking\nMusical Revue\nPRESENTED by the\nNELSON KINSMEN CLUB\nUnder the Direction of\nMISS MABEL C. SLICK\nwho last year gave you \"The Big Broadcast\" acclaimed one\nof the finest amateur productions ever seen in Nelson\u2014\"On\nWith the Show\" promises to be still better.\nCIVIC THEATRE\u2014THURSDAY and FRIDAY\nSpecial Kiddies Matinee Thursday at 4 p.m.\u201410c\nAnuiecinu en. Reserved Seats 10c extra at\nADMISSION 50c M.__p Ruth_|.ford Drug co,\n' Tickets From All Kinsmen\n(CP)\u2014Apparently the victim of\nexposure, James Shannon, 81, was\nfound dead in shrubbery near the\nbanks of the South Saskatchewan\nriver here today. The aged man,\nwho lived in Vancouver, until a\nyear ago, had been the subject of a\n12-hour search when his body was\ndiscovered by an early morning\nfisherman.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 14 (AP)-The\nBritish pound sterling rose 9-16 of a\ncent to $4.98 13-16, tbe French franr\ngained .00% of a cent and the Canadian dollar was unchanged at\n1.00 1-16. . In London the United\nStates dollar rose >A of a cent to\nclose at $4.98 11-16 to the pound,\nagainst the New York overnight rate\nof 4.98Vi for sterling.\nJ. A. C. Laughtot?\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg\nYour Prescriptions Are Filled\nas Your Doctor Prescribes.\nAt SMYTHE'S\nPrescription Druggist\nPHONE 1\nMufflers^\nFrom England and Scot*;,\nland come these fftj#'\nwarm mufflers. YoW\nfind just whathe wartj|\nin this collection of r)*#'7\nmufflers selected especially to please men.\nWool, cashmere and silks.\n\u00abpl.Zj to \u00abp\u00ab).iD\nEMORY'S\nLimited.    -\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0___\u25a0 1\nl\njELMTW.THAWAHTA^\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES   :#i\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Lt*\n\"The Home of Cood Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nEvening Dresses\nExpertly Dyed\nor Cleaned\nH. K. Foot\n324 lehnsen St.\nNelson, B. C.\nWestern\nGem COAL\nLess Ash    No Soot\nMore Heat\nin\nLump or Stove\nWilliams'Transfer\n1918. 613 Ward St.\nPHONE 106\nEst.\nSELL IT WITH A WANT AD!\nSNOW\nSUITS\nThe practical outfit for\noutdoor children.\nFOUR PIECE SUITS\nmade up of jacket, pullovers,\nhelmet, mitts, In pure wool\nsuede cloth. Colors of Royal\nand  Scarlet.\nAge, 2 to 6 6^5\nComplete   r-w    \u00bb\nONE PIECE SUITS\nZipper front, double knee, In\nheavy blanket cloth. Colors\nnavy, royal, brown with contrasting trim.\nAges 2 to 6 _.\u00ab_.25\nIncluding  helmet .. Y*\u2014*\nSEPARATE PULLOVERS\nIn jersy cloth, SI.25\nPair  v       \u25a0*\nGODFREYS\n' LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\n378 BAKER       PHONE 270\n\u2014 YOUR OWN\nCIVIC TH\u20acATR\u00a3\nNOW TILL WEDNESDAY\nCOMPLETE AT\n7 AND 9:00 P.M.\nTONIGHT IS COUPON NIGHT\nAT 7:55 AND 10:10\nSALLY EILERS\nJAMES DUNN\nMISCHA AUER\n\"We Have\nOur Moments\"\nSally's at sea with the\nbiggest fakers on\nearth, and the only\nhonest man among\nthem was the one who\nstole her heart.\nWHAT LAUCHS\u2014\n\u2014WHAT SHENICANS\nAT 7:00 AND 9:10\nWE WHO ARE ABOUT\nTO DIE LAUGHING,\nSALUTE HUGHI jj*},\nA Special Short Feature\n\"How to Ski\"\nEvery ski enthusiast will truly enjoy this entertaining\nand educational short feature.\nTUESDAY IS GUEST NIGHT\nKocMU HUDSON\n^..\/WHALEN\nTHOMAS BECK\nI     ALAN DINEHART\nI   DOUGLAS FOWLEY\n|\u2122':    _MtU\u00bbiv\u00bb P'od\u00ab\u00abr Sol M  WyrlM.\nfilbw.. Oirtttls*) I.. ANm Own,,        __S^HtSW_\nPrices: Matinee 10c and 25c \u2014 Nite 15c .incUK>;\n__j______ji_______J___i._\n\u25a0 \u25a0\ny^,...._-.\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0_\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_1937_11_15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0413353","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"}]}}