 Nelton Rugby Team Defeats
Trail in Fast Game
— Page Seven
§0tH
Markets Generally Slow q
Saturday's Trading
— Page Nine
volume aa
THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C. — MONDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER .!,  IM'l
PIVE CKNTaa   t  I'mrV
nMN^H
Simon Forms M^Liberal Party
PACIFIC HIDES FATE WUKlu .JEHS
Weds Senator
MOTOR HEARD
OVER ALASKA
EARLY SUNDAY
Film Actress
if
Successful    Should
Land Early This
Morning
FOG, RAIN, WIND
PREVALENT AT SEA
Pangbom  and  Herndon
Left Sunday; Seeking
Big Cash Prize
TORIO, Oct. S (Mond*;) (AP)
—Tb* east gray expanse of th*
North Paclflo ocean, wltb Its
lot, rain and wind, held th*
<f*t« today of th* flyers Clyde
Pang-born aad Hum Demon,
on tMlr flight to the lulled
Elates. TMr had not been sighted . sine* yesterday when they
passed over Nemuro, 250 mile*
northeast ot samushtro Beach,
starting point of their, attempt
to span the Pacific In a single
nicbt.
But th*. noise of an airplane
motor waa heard Sunday over
(False. pass, Ut th*. Aleutian
island*, Alaska, possibility exists
they may be sighted by a ship.
but even thl* wa* considered
doubtful.. Their rout* Is north
Of the frequently-travelled great-
. circle route of steamship Une*
tetween Seattle anil Yokohama.
Had all (on. well, th* fliers
UM* morning shmld m* I* the
■MshMrtoMd mt Dutch Harbor,
MM miles from the beach from
which tbey roared away at 7:01
a. as. -yesterday (5:01 M. E. ST.
Saturday). From Dutch Harbor
they Intend to strike out over
th* Oolf of Alaska for th*
Catted stales, but It was uncertain where they would first
sl*ht tlw cout Une.
FO-LOW VALLEYS
Should this happen north of Vanoouver Island, depending largely on
tha weather, It wag thought probable they would go Inland and
follow tbe -valley* Into central Washington. Otherwise they would follow
th* shortest rout* to tbe United
States directly  to Seattle.
Should a sufficient amount of
fuel remain after reaching Seattle,
the flyer* expect to attempt to
shatter the non-stop distance record of Mil miles set by Russell
Boardman and John Polando on
their flight from New York to Istanbul. Wenatchee, Washington, tbe
home of Pangborn's mother, Bolae,
Idaho, or Salt Lake City hav* been
mentioned as possible landing places.
If successful they are expected to
land In the United' Stales som* time
after 5 a. m. tomorrow (3 p. m.
T. s. T. Monday). Tbey would be
th* first to apan tb* north Pacific
la a single night and eligible for
a 131,000 prize offered by a Toklo
newspaper for a non-stop flight from
Japan to th* States.
TO INVESTIGATE
POLICE ACCOUNTS
Two Officers Temporal.!? Suspended
From Police Headquarters
In Varirouver
VANCOUVER, B. C., Oct, 4.~CMo
auditors are conducting an invsstl
istlon  Into  accounts  of ths  police
court clerk's office at Cordova street
headquarter* relative to alleged discrepancies In records of fines paid
by   nnnvlrt-er!    p-prwms
. In the meantime, ths council's
special reorganisation committee has
ordered temporary suspension of two
officials ot the department, Walter
Firkins, assistant to tbe court clerk,
sad C. J. Blddle, accountant. This
action, It Is stated, ts taken merely
la order that the'auditors may have
a free hand ln their work, awl does
not reflect ln any way on the of fl
clals concerned.
RIOT VICTIMS
ARE BURIED
ASSURED WORK,
SHORTER TIE
LABOR'S WISH
Federation  Sees  Winter
Unemployed at Seven
Million
LEAVES   FOR   ENGLAND
Bliu Landl posed for this picture
before departing for England to
bring back to Bollywood ber mother
and her stepfather, count Zahardl
Landl. Tho film actress claims descent from Empress Blaabeth of
Austria-Hungary.
DOLE SYSTEM IS
NOT SUITABLE
Organization   F o r s c c s
Modification of Volstead
Act   in   the   U. S.
CANADIAN DOLLAR
HOLDS STEADY
CAR HAS A DOUBLE
DOSE OF BAD LUCK
ON BALFOUR ROAD
Turns Out to Avoid One Car
But Hits-Another; Then
Off Ferry Landing
After colliding with a ear st
Wfllaw Fol*t whsn forced suddenly
to turn out because the car in
front of him stopped, Saturday e?e-
nlng, R. M. Hart, Calgary motorist.
had a further Instalment of bad
luck when his weakened steering
gear failed to function at the Nelton ferry, with ths result that he
drove through the rati and hla car
toppled  to. the beach below.
Th« first sccldent happened
about 7 pjn.. Mr. Hart reporting
to tbe provincial police that the
driver Just In front of him stopped
suddenly without giving any signal.
Turning out suddenly to avoid
hitting that car, be found himself
colliding head-on with a car from
Nelson driven by Oscar Holm. Tbe
Holm car was put out of commission and required th« services of
a  "wrecker"   from  Nelaon.
Mr. Hart's car was apparently
still ln working order, and he cams
on for Nelson, his "Jinx" getting
Into action again as be drove on
ths ferry approach.
VAKCOjtTVER. B. C, Oct, 4.—
Wags maintenance, shorter work
hours and assured employment were
demanded today by the executive
oouncil of the American Federation
of Labor to meet winter unemployment, which lt estimates at 7,000,-
000.
In Its program, placed for approval before the federation convention
hers, . the council said lt foresaw
modification of ths Volstead act. It
promised to continue its fight for
3.79 per osnt beer.
First on Its legislative program
for the coming session, lt placed a
measure to limit the use of court
Injunctions  in  labor  disputes.
Opposition to a sales tax was
voiced along with approval of high'
er taxes on "great wealth."
PHILIPPINE INDEPENDENCE
. Philippine independence wss. favored, as was a federal eosl com-
mlsiion to regulate ths bituminous
coal Industry, Bankers wbo advocate wags cuts were sternly erltl
clssd.
Wfcgr maintenance was described
ss a levee against further unemployment, but there wss no mention of
recent wage cuts among several
leading Industries.
In Its program  for  those  out of
work   tbe   oouncil    recognised    the
need .for reflef, but made no reference to federal  funds ln  this con
nectlon.
It ssld ample provision for the
needy should be made ln every
community "both from private snd
municipal  sources."
From a summary of oomplusory
unemployment insurance systems tn
England and Oermany, the council
concluded   such   a    legislation    was
OPTIMISM RULES
ABOUyUESNE
District Joyful Following Announcement   They   Will
Build P.G.E. Branch
QUESNEL, Oct. t—News ot the decision or renew construction of the
P. O. K. between Quesnel and Prince
Georgo wu received with great Joy
here.
Farmers welcome construction as
It wlll afford them a local market
for their produce. Hay, grain, and
root crops were exceptionally good
here thla year and there Is an
abundanw  available.
Tie backers and timber men snd
others are anxiously awaiting word
thst work will commence. It Is estimated that approximately, two million new ties wlll be needed as well
as -a larg? quantity of bridge timbers.
Struggling homesteaders hope to
find employment on construction
work.
ESTEVAN. Beak., Oct. 4—In flowsr-
eovered caskets, borne shoulder high
by 18 of their comrades, and followed by -a solemn procession . of 600
men, women and children, the three
miners who were victims of police
Millets la. the strife riot here Tuesday went to tbelr laat resting place
today Ui a little' cemetery -tali a
mile nflrth of Blenfalt.
The dead were: Julian Jryshko,
Bleniait; Nick Narwan. Taylorton,
and Fate Warkual, Blenfelt. Jryshto
Uld Narwan were killed during the
fr»y.. Warkunl died of wounds ln
Weyfcurn Oeneral hoepltal early Friday morning.
GANDHI  GOES  TO  CBUECH
OANT-ERBClt*, Eng., Act.- 4 (.\P)
—Mabotoa - Oandhl attended the
evening ' service '- In Canterbury cathedral, - mother church of the An-
gltoan faith, today, 'and is', with
bowed head.
Wheat and Cotton in
U.S.A. Will Be Used for
Food and Clothing
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4 (API—
The I. s. farm board's bulging
stores of wheat and cotton were'
offered Saturday to national relief agencies to dull the edge of
winter's unemployrwn distress.
Aa much as. la needed will be
released, either for Aeah or deferred payments, to make bread
and clothing >«r the needy.
B.   C.  riSHtRMEN   RITIRN
TO THEI* BOATS TODAV
VICTORIA. Oct. 4.—Salmon flab
ermen of the west coast of 'Vancouver Island go back to tbelr
boats tomorrow, ha vine reached an
agreement  with   the   ealterles.
The fishermen, yrent on. strike*
asking 10 cants a fish aa against
five cents which they were betne
paid. Under an agreement reached
they will'get six cents.
(Continued on  Page Three)
Falls to Death
PORT ARTHUR, Ont., Oct. 4 —
Falling 300 feat on to the railway
tracks In s rock cut near port
Coldwell. east of here, secondo
Moschetta, 31, was Instantly killed
Saturday. Member of a roek-cut
gang, he was running back to eee
the results of a blast, when hs lost
his balance and hurtled to his
desth.
10 Alleged Rioters
Ask Jury Trials
NEW WESTMINSTER, B. - C.. Oct.
4.—Committed for trial from Praser
Mills, 10 alleged rioters ln ths strike
at the plant of tbe Canadian West
era Lumber Co., Ltd., appeared In
county court and elected for jury
trial at tbe fall assize court next
month. BaU was fixed st |1000
each.
Ths disturbances occurred some
days ago, Tbe strike is still in
progress.
Charges Cheap Labor
Canadian Factories
WASHINGTON. D. C, Oct. 4.—
Representative J. W. Collier, Demo-
crst, Mississippi, todsy let fly at
ths suggestion United states industries were being sstbllsbed In Csnada because of a lower wage scale
ln ths Dominion.
ROBERTSON   GOES   TO  OTTAWA
WINNIPEG, Man., Oct. 4. (CP)-
Senator GWeon Robertson, Dominion minister of labor, and Hon. T.
G. Murphy, minister of ths Interior,
left hers tonight for Ottawa. Agreements between the Dominion snd
governments of sll four western
provinces for unemployment relief
projects were reached st a series of
conferences attended by the two
ministers at Victoria, Bdmonton, Re<
gins snd Winnipeg.
HE-IDS   NATIVE   SONS
NIW WMTMIN8T-BR, B. C., Oet.
4.-—Aid. John Bennett of Nsnatmo
wu elected grsnd factor of ths
Native Sons of British Columbia at
the closing session of the grand,
post convention here*.
PARACHUTE JUMPER KILLED
LEXINOTON. Itan., Oct. 4— (AP) —
Freddy Lung, n.*tlqnally-known stunt
nler. wss killed saturdsy when' hts
parachute opened too late after a
crash with s_.otl.cx plSne,
Pound Sterling closes 5.» Below Friday's Final Figure;
Rites     During     Saturday
Nkw TORK, N- T-. Oct. 4.—
(8y ths csnsolan Press)—The
Canadian dollar held steady
on Saturday, closing st 07V.
centa on local foreign exchange markets, after losing
>;2 cent at ths opening.
During the week ending ssturdsy, ths dollar loet S'«
cents In Unite* states funds,
but since Wednesdsy lsst had
not fluctuated from day to
day mors than \ cents, although for brief periods of
several days Its movements
hsd been somewhat wider.
. The pound sterling closed
at 93-K.i oh local foreign
exchange markets, ,Vi cents
below Friday's final figure,
but \\<. cents above Its opening quotation yeeterday.
NATIONAL LIB
PARTY LATEST
MOVE, BRITAIN
Party Would Give Whole-
Hearted Support to
Premier MacDonald
ELOPED. BY   AIRPLANE
After eloping by airplane snd firing through X blltzerd over the
Slerrss. Benstor Tenant Tubbe of
Sen PranclMo his Just married
Olivia Plllsbury, helreas daughter of
a Pacific coast telephone and telegraph  magnate.
CONSERVATIVE IS
BELIEVED ELECTED
PRESIDENT, CHILE
Hu  Comfortable   Lead;   10
Are Reported  Kilted
In Riots
. SANTIAGO, Chile, Oct. 4. (AP)
Ten persons . wtre . unofririaiiy
reported   killed   In    rioting   tn
Chile's   presidential   election  todsy.   Partial   returns  iste   todsy
Indicated thst Dr. Juan Estebsn
Montero,   Conservative,   hsd   re-
<*lwd  st  least  60  per sent  of
ths votes   cast.   A   candidate   te
required   »?  the  constitution   to
poll   half  of   the  total  number
of votes for electlsn.
Hesdquarters  of  former  President
Arturo  Allsssandrl,   radical,   refused,
however, to conoede Montero's election.
Fifty persons were reported to
have been wounded and some 300
arrested ln tbe election disturbances. One man wss killed ln a
atreet riot ln Santiago snd another
died during sn attack on the Montero  headquarters here.
OANO   MEMBERS  ARRESTED
AVERUX PARK, N. Y., Oct. ♦.—
Three members of ths Vincent Coll
gang of New York, and two women
were arrested here tonight sfter a
Pitched battle between the gangsters and state troopers and. New
York City detectives ln which more
than 3.1 shots were fired.
THREE ARE KILLED
SEMINOLE, okla., Oct. 4—Palling
from an undetermined cause soon
after it had taken off, a plane
crashed and burned here today, killing three men. The dead «re Jack
Whltten, pilot; Eddie Autrey snd
Herry Moore, all  of  Bemlnole.
BRITISH PREMIER
WILL RUN AGAIN
FOR SEAHAM SEAT
Laborites Forget Differences
and Ramsay Willing to
, Run There
SRAHAM HARBOR, Eng.', Oct.
(AP)—The Murton miner's lodge
and Murton branch of the tabor
party, both of whtch are affiliated
with the Seaham division of the
party which repudiated premier
RajBMy MacDonald laat week, todi_
dreU-d to nominate the prime .mln
later ss Labor candidate for the
Seaham   division.
The Murton organisations
nounced they will sA the divisional
executive of the party to call s
special meeting of delegates to re
consld-r Jts whole position regarding
ths prime minister because of the
narrowness of the decision at the
recent Wheatley HUI conference,
when a resolution calling on him to
resign was carried by 40 to 30 votes.
Thomas Luke, secretiry of the
Murton branch of the Labor party,
■eald he asked Mr. MacDonald Friday
If they were free to nominate him
and the prime minister answered
"yea."
Tha prime minister now represents the Seaham division ln parlla
ment.
DIES    AT    VANCOUVER
VANCOUVER,, B. C, Oct. 4—The
funeral was held Saturday sfter
noon of Angus E. McLesn, a resident of Vancouver since 1924, who
died  Wednesdsy.
CRASH   CALSES   DEATH
DUNCAN. Oct. 4.—When the csr
he was driving skidded on the road
early Saturday, Reginald Thomas
Ridley, 34. of Cowichan Bay, re
oeived Injuries which resulted ln
his  death.
Associated Boards Secures Holiday
Fares for All Canadian Students;
Nelson Board Started Ball Rolling
As a direct result of representations by the Aasoeiaved Boards of
Trade of Eastern British Columbia,
teachers and students ln attendance
st Canadian schools snd colleges
but with their home* in Canada
will enjoy special transportation
rates for the Christmas and Easter
holidays, a privilege that wa* cancelled during the war. Advices on
the mat.t#r have Juat been reoelved
by J. R. Hunter, acting commissioner
of the Associated Boards, from the
Canadian Passenger association,
which includes ail the Canadian
railways'. The special rate Is "fare-
and-a-4uarter for round trip.
ORIGINATED  IN   NELOON
The move to get the pre-wsr practice of students rates restored originated with the Nelaon board of
trade, Ven. Archdeacon Pred. H.
praham bringing up the matter
last spring at a council luncheon,
pointing, out that ior want of this
rate, Kootenay students attending
the norm il schools st the coast and
British Columbia ur..verslty sometimes found tt imp* ecu cable to return to their homes for the luterlm
holiday periodn. The board took up
the matter, and it was presented
st the Associated boards convention at cranbrook in *_ay ln a Nelson resolution, and was adopted.
Ip due course ths \-ta Commissioner Fred A. Starkey forwarded
the AstoclStad Boards resolution to
V. R. DesBrisay. assistant passenger
traffic manager of tne csnadlan Pacific western lines, at Winnipeg, and
to IL Creelman, passenger traffic
msnager' of ths Canadian NStlon
weatern lines, also ■« Winnipeg, snd
tbe matter went to the Canadian
Passenger' saaocistlon, with ths final result of action on, a national
ba*H.
Particulars of the action decided
on J&y tjie Canadian Passenger association,- are contained ln * letter addressed to commissioner Star-
key, but received by Acting-Commissioner Hunter, from **t,retary Joseph B. Parker, secretiry of "
HOUSE MAY CLOSE
DOORS WEDNESDAY
Election May Be Before
end of Month; Government Seeks Return
Canada Will Retain
Gold Standard Says
the Prime Minister
LONDON, Oct. 4. (AP)—Premier Bar-assy MscDonsld ls expected to announce the dissolution of parliament Tuesday or
WednMdav, uld a genersl election to take plsce before the
end  or this  month.
The plsn, Is sss understood
over the week-end. Is (or tbe
natlonal government to seek s
nation-aide vote of confidence
and the return, of Its supporters to the bouse of commons
on a platform of broad' powers
to the prime minister to meet
the national emergencies.
A   manifesto  Issued   oner  the
week-end   hy   81r   John   Simon,
lesder    of    the    liberal    group,
which  recently  hss' been  rebellious   toward   the   leadership   of
Rt.   Hon.   David   Uoyd   Geor»e,
declared thst .he snd s number
of   other   Liberal   members   of
parliament   were   tired   of   the
starch   for   formulae   and   were
forming    a    new    organisation
whtch . would give  whole-hearted
support  to the. prime minister.
Mr. MacDonald  was understood to
be ldath that ths surrender be such
as to allow,, them to remain in the
cabinet, which might bs at the cost
of   their   allegiance   to   Mr.   Uoyd
George.
Arrangements for the formation of
the new party were announced tonight to be welt advanced. It probably wlll be called tbe "Natlonal
Ubersls'  party."
The regular Uberal headquarters
Issued a statement tonight ssylng
tbat the news was viewed there
with "complete equanimity," and
that sir John waa regarded as
Conservative trying to keep one
foot in the Liberal camp for purposes best known to himself.'1
FAIL 10 LOCATE
STRIKE LEADERS
Regina Court Scene of Appearance of  Estevan
Prisoners
t,tern lines, division ot the Canadian
Passenger   association,
THC    UtlUM'fMrNTS
Under date of Winnipeg-. Septem
ber 24. Secretary  Parker writes:
"Ycur, of June 11 last addressed
to Mr. crcclraan ana Mr. DesBrisay.
enclosing resolution of tne Associated Boards of Trade of Eastern
British Columbia, relative to reduced fares lor stuaen_ desiring to
■pend Christmas and Eater holiday,
at their homes, vras referred to this
office   for   attention. ,
'.'This subject, has received our
sympathetic consleeratlon and the
following arrangements wlll be made
for teachers and students between
point. In Canada, effective for next
Christmas-New Vlir'i holidays
namely:
"Application—Round trip tickets
to be Issued between all points In
Canada to non-realdent teachers
and students attending schools and
colleges In Canada, wano desire to
return to their homes during the
Easter and Christmas—New Tear*,
holidays.
"Pare basts— plrst class one-way
fare and one-qusrter for the round
trip with minimum of gl, except
that if the one-month round trip
fare la lets than tl the latter wlll
apply.
"D*tu of sal, and return limits-
Suitable dates or sale and return
limits to be designated by tbe Canadian Passenger assocntion. which
will be sufflcently wide ln scope to
coyer'the vacation perlpda of the
principal cduntlonal institutions
and  publlo schools.
"Scholars eertlflc»tes— Canadian
Passenger association standard form
of school certificates to be supplied
to the various .'schools aad colleges,
the reduction to apply only on surrender of such certificates properly
filled ln and signed by principal of
the school or college.
"It jives me a great deal of pleasure to be able to comply with your
request, and I trust you will pardon   the  delay   ln   replying,   which
REGINA, Sask., Oct. 4-Appearance
of the 13 miner, arrested during the
Estevan riot In court here Saturday
njornlng. a atstement by H-n. M. A.
MacPherson. attorney-general, that
the mine strike ims organized snd
directed by men affiliated with the
red "Internationale," and failure of
polio- to yet discover the where,
abouts of Martin Porkln, Sam Scar,
lett and James Sloan, strike lea'ders
were developments over the week
end arising from lsst Tuesday's riots
it Estevan, when three miners were
fatally Injured. The miner, who appeared In court here Saturdsy will
not be tried until the first week of
March,    1832.
When they cime befora His Honor
Judge J. w, Hannon In the district
court, nine were admitted to ball.
H. E. Samwon, K. C. opposing the
admitting to ball or the other tu*
SAVES $102^000
VICTORIA, Oct. a). (API _ Mai
t-elser, retired Victoria business ra,„
was on his way home by train today, congratulating himself on his
nsrrow escspe from losing »102,0O0
In securities to agents of sn international bunco ring. Ulscr left here
with Mrs. Lelscr and his secretary
A.   J.   Carleton.
Mr. and Mrs. Lelser came here
rrom Reno, where they were to
have given the securities to the
bunco men Thursday. Sacrsmen
police snd tlie state bureau _
criminal identification warned them
In time to prevent the "pay-off,'
but the bunco men escaped, evidently learning their plan bad failed
School Boys Locate
Cache of Gold
WINDSOR, ont., Oct. 4_A each,
of partially-treated gold, valued at
about 14000, was discovered by row
aohool boys while playing ln tbe
woods near Sandwich and turned
orer to police today. •___ g_i_ Wai
In small tin containers.
NO BLAME ON GOVERNMENTS
OSHAWA, Cat., Oct. 4 (CP)—Two
prominent Literals refuse, to critl-
cl» the Conservative provincial government for th-» preeent depression
'at a meeting here -sturday. Hon. w
E. M. Sinclair, k. C.. house leader
of the p-i-tl', and , W, H. Moore.
Llberei m. P. for the riding
Ontario,   both   declined   to   lay
OTTAWA. 6nt, Oct. 4 (CP)—Canada retains the
Kold standard, and it ia not proposed to abandon it.
This in effect, waa the statement of Premier R. B.
Bennett last night. Persistent rumor that the Dominion proposed to abandon the gold
standard was drawn to the attention of
the prime minister. His answer was
emphatic. The government had not
changed the position taken when news
of Great Britain's departure from the
gold standard was flashed across the
ocean.
"Canada has not altered the position taken when the announcement
waa made that England had departed
from the gold standard, nor do we -
contemplate so doing," the prime minister declared.
"We have appealed, and not in vain, to Canadians
to conserve our gold supply to meet whatever strain
may be placed upon our resources by reason of our
foreign commitments, which are payable in gold and
will be honored accordingly.
King Charges Government
Has Practically Wiped
Out   British   Preference
Calgary Contractor
Is Shot Fatally
OLDS, A1U., Oct. 4 (CP)—
Olvld C. Blow. S3. Cslgsry
building; contractor, wsi killed
Instantly when'shot by t companion while dock-hunting Saturday near Besrberr.v. northwest
of here. Mr. Blow was s_eom-
psnled on Ute hunting trip hy
his two sons, Harry end Arthur,
and Park OUver, nncher of the
Old, district. Police said thM
the shot tint earned Mr. Blow's
death wis _ccldent-l!r fired by
"Mr. Oliver. Dr. Hartmsnn, coroner, decided the death was an
accident and no Inquest would
be necessary.
ALBERTA TOWN
HAS BIG FIRE
$30,000  Damage  Done;  Hotel A mom? Buildings Burned at Bellis
EDMONTON, Alta., Oct. 4—Patuwd
by a itlfl breeze, fire *w«pt through
ti> main business section of Brills,
Alts., esrly this morning. The town
hotel, a hardware store, general
store, sn Implement warehouse and
one dwelling were destroyed. Loss Is
estimated about 930,000.
The cause of the blare, which
originated in the ImplemeaJ. warehouse, is unknown. Bellis tsniittutted
94 miles nortr_:__st of Edmonton.
LABOR COUNCIL
HEAD ARRESTED
TORONTO. Oct. 4—Oeorge W. Mr
Collum, preslttent of tlie Toronto
natlonal labor council and secretary-
treasurer of the Canadian Electric
Trades union, was arrested here Saturday for the Montreal police on a
bhargj of conspiracy. The charge
arises out of a aerlei ai rxplontons
some weeks ago which cau*ed heavy
dstTwge to the Montreal Light, Heat
and Power company.
Moyle and Allen
Land at Skagway
SKAGWAT. A), ska. Oct. 4-Don
Moyle and Cecil Allen, California
aviators, landed here today at & p.m.
(6 p.m. P. 3 T.) sfter they had
failed to find a field at Juneau on
which they could bring down their
plane. The avlitors vert} on thrlr
way from Fairbanks, Alaska, to Tacoma. Was t. Thry hopped off at
Fairbanks Saturday noon, on a 500-
mlle trip to Whltehorse. Y. T.
Would Have Canada
Pan-American  Body
WASHINGTON,    Oct.    4    —(AP)
Mexico believes U_t Canada should
be invited Into the Pan-American
conferences, Jesus SUva Herseog.
chairman of the Mexican del.gatlon
to tne Pan-American commercial
conference, said Saturday.
CONFESSES  HAVIMi
KKNOSHA. Wis, Oct. 4—Frank
Oray, farm band, wu arrested here
tonight by Detective inspector Chr-
les Rock and Detective P;rr7 Tualer.
Tbe officer* aald be confessed slaying Herbert Boecbert, 30, Burlington
farm, and three others on tbe Boa-
chert farm today.
PIONEEft   LADY  PASSES
VANCOUVER.  B.  C, Oct.  4.—Mrs.
Ann   Williams,   aged   67,   widow   of
W.   L.   Williams,   pioneer   Nanaimo
resident,  died  at noon  Saturday  at
„s the   home   of   ber   daughter,   Mr*,
blame  on   the  otiier   parly   for   uie ••   D.   !..v.von.   BtepSflni
Protests at Decree Fixing
Rate of Exchange;
Changes Serious
OTTAWA, Oct. 4 (CP)—Declu-
ln. thU the result Is "a sun-
ling Increase In the tariff rat*
aislnst foods from oreat Britain." and that the Brltlih pref.
•reiice haa belt p_--i_t_y "wlp-
ed out" on products of a t-Jasa
m kind made In (ansax. Bt.
Hop. Maekenile _1nj. opposition
leader, haa Issued a statement
rritirtsinu two recent decrae*
or the government.
The   first   flies, the   rate   of
exrjiante   In   computing   values
for duty on goods Imported from
. Great Britain at «J8 2-3 to. tha
pound.   Tbe   second   applies   a
special damping duty to Brltlah
Imports of a kind or class mada
In Canada purchased at leas than
H.86 2-3 to the pound.
These changes by order-ln-councll,
Mr. King asserts, "represent a greater    variation    ln    pinadlan    flaoal
policy  than has ever  b.-en adopted
by  sdy  Canadian  government  wltlt
the consent of parliament." ■
TM Uberal leader predlcta that
they WUl aggravate the difficulties
of the preeent situation both In
Great  Britain  and  Canada.
"The recent decision of the government, or Oreat Britain to go ott
the gold standard has been followed
by marked changes In our own tariff,
which have been brought about by
order-ln-eouncll. These chsnges hsv.
been so bewildering in the rapidity
of their occurrence that I have felt
constrained, before offering comment, to await whst would appear
to be the fin.il decision of th*
present Conservative sdmlnlstration.
"Tne chapgej are so serious that
I leei no tims should be lost ia
drawing the attention of the publlo
ta) their nature and inevitable con-
sequences.
MILLJURNS
TIMMINS. ont., Oct. 4—pjre winch
destroys, the Rudolph and McChea-
ney lumber mljl.on the outskirt, of
the city over the week end caused
loss estimated al MO.ooo. The mill
situated ou the aide ot ihe Metaganu river, was rased.
Baby Killer Taken?
NEW TOM, oet. t-vinee*! coll,
sort-voiced Bronx _-ng leader, waa
■dentllled positively tonight. Dollea
sail! «l oho of the killers or th.
Harlem baby massacre. Frank Glo--
dsno. one of his followers. a!aj was
named by a witness to the shooting
as   one   -•   four   m n   who   .-.nrsjea
?o.,h __2_f,,oM*en W""* '"
107th   street   last   August.
UNEMPLOYED MOVE
FROM  LAKE  HEAD
PORT ART-Him. a,,,, . ,,,., 4_
With 100 men rrom Port Arthur ,nd
Port Wllllsm leaving Mondav night
for pine, loo mllcs rast or Kenora.
and tlie passago through lhe lake-
head last night of 100 ■eu from
the "Jungle camps*' ol the Don valley, Toronto, cn route to Hawk lake,
nesr Kenora, first detmlte movement of workers to the camps oh
the route of tbe transcanada highway   haa  started.
Salo of the Bunion
Derby Fame Killed
by Baseball Blow
•PASSAIC, N. j, oet. .-struck on
the b' by a baseball Patrolman
John ,   c.    t„   !>„,_,,,   p_11<:,
<""5ar '•   formerly  a  professional
long _l_t nee runn.r, died tonight
8alo won the second of C. C. Pyles
"Bunion" derby races from Ne*
Ton to Lo, Angeles for whirl, he
received g'.O.OOO. In t: e t,r-1
r--om     I oa     An,«les    1 ,    Nc  ,
• ' - ;.__,_c_ -..j__.
 Guide for Travellers
Nelson. B. C., Hotels
WWVWVWVVWVW
NELSON. B. C.
SPECIAL WINTER RATES
NOW IN EFFECT
GEORGE BENWELL, Prop.
SOIOt-M. aad Mn- O- L. Dtxlle.
Ruby. Wn.; H. J. Levenqua, W. 3.
Toatee, Trail: Mr. and Mrs. W. B.
Johnstone,  Sllverton:  Mr and Mra.
A. B. Fleener. A. J. Curre, Kaalo: Mr.
nnd Mrs. J. X. Hutchinson, South
Blooan; B. F. Phillips. Windermere,
England; Joyce wamer, Nottingham,
England: L. Clerk, Gray Creek; H.
It. Hon,, Oordon Dundee. Lethhrldie:
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. D Martin, P.
phlnney, P. M. Elliott, O. _ lewis.
T. B. Wllaon, Klmberley; J. H. Johnaon. B S. oreenwood, J. R. Anstls,
H. A. Berry Robert o. A. clarlte. H.
tt. Olllird. N. Holland, c. P Ballan-
tlne. J H. Haalewood. Mr. and Mrs.
J. McKay, Mr. and Mrs. p. o. a_m-
etrong. J. T. Oukm, W- H. Burgees,
B. W. MUler, A. Oray Parker, C. C.
Tyran, J. M- Kerr, w. Allan Dam-men,
Mr.  justice  and  Mrs.  W.  A.   Ms--
donald. T. Dl Uul*. W. O Metcalfe.
J A. Frtte, A. P. MacUan. J. W.
Brenner, Vancouver; at L. Beta, O
Kurla, M. Napier, Calgary; A- Dufour,
T. Woodaon, O 8. Mclntoah, Cranbrook; r. cnwtont. w. T. a. ow-
man. J. H Lewie. A, twl—y Modi
cine Hat; R. t. Kennedy, Junes
Watt. T. T. Reld. Toronto; M- J.
nanagan, Montreal; Mr. ttstS Mrs
T. L. Oroea. BdmontoB; Mlaa C. _.
Mantel], Brighton Bngland. Mrs. H.
A. olllle ud eon, sirdar; R. 0. Crosby, Kuskanook; T. J. Alnawortb.
Howaer; J. Boothem, Venllene, ont.;
Mr. and Mrs. A. w. R. WUky. T. *.
Harrlaon, Vlotoria: R. John, Nelson:
I Teaaler, Winnipeg; Poster Bcott,
W. o. Mien, Oalt. Ont.; Ptwd O.
Perry. Pemle; I_ H. Cola. Ottawa.
Clara   Swerteon,  Sandosi.
, ssseweweeeessiess-feeeewe.
Where (he Gueills Kin&
cUhe Savo^
masoiTi jciwBrr and poubt HtfriL
MART ROOMS WTTB PRTVATB
BATHS OR BBOWBW
J. A. KERR, Prop,
_____
r_r»---_.
saaaaaasssssssa
***
BAVOTl It. a. walte O. H
Hadedfe, J. Coecealn. Jack Baton.
A. Neleon. X. Senkow, A. Ward. L.
Oetnsn. a Ml 8. Chandler, R. P.
Jecqueu. D. 0. Rourke. N. Perry,
V. H. Drteon. J. A. Mccargoe. H.
R. Potter. Calgary: Mr. and Mra.
W. Pepper. P. 0. Hoffman. Byron
Fairchild. J. Oriffltha. A. M. Howell.
Mr. sad Mra. Ralph Oreen, E. R.
Haa, I_ B. MoCuUy. J. Hill. James
Stewart, J. I. Uwta, W. 0. Man
vamp, W. D. Jones and bob. C
B. Hufty. Orand rorks; P. Macu
let. cranbrook; O. B. McKlnnon
Klmberley; J. Amglln. M». J- Mor
rls. Trail, B. 0. Treves, Edgewood:
Capt. D. and Mm _>arleoua. Oliver:
W. H Davis. Neleon: Mlu Mary
Johnaon, Seattle; too J. Bernard,
Spokane; s. Reld. Boswell; J. Backer
Victoria;  J. MUler, Nakusp.
Queen's
Hotel
A. Lapolnte,
Prop.
IM and eold water tn at)
steam battel.
QUEENS;   M.   De   Foe.   Cestelger;
9. Sopum. B. N. Dyiart, P. Ben-
ehalrd, C. Reran, P. Stanford. Trail;
V. Cochrane; J. Strachan, Corra
Linn; P. Mellour, C. Mellour. Spokane; J. Hamson, J. Lenton. Idaho;
W. J. Shukln. Tarrys; Mr. and Mrs.
B. creamer. Mlaa Rolson. Lath-
bridge; C. Augustine. Kaalo; Ken
ohnaon, Otis Kaden. H. W. Barnett,
H. Halg. Nelson; H. I. Kelly. -
McKean, Vsncouver; P. H, rrleeon,
Renata.
NEW GRAND
HOTEL
P. U KAPAI, Prop.
Weekly   or  Monthly   Ratae.   eta
single lie up: Doable I1.7J up
Weekly or monthly rates.
Hot and cold inter ta all rooms.
Fbant M3       p. o. Boi imi
FREE BOS MEETS EVERY IRAK
DERBY COUNTY IS
BLANKED BY WEST
BROMWICH ALBION
Guna   of   Sheffield   Club.
Tld-Bits for the Soccer
Fans Saturday
BURY DEFEATS THE
BRADFORD PLAYERS
Grimsby Town Defeats Ar-
Wolverhampton
Beats Southampton
MADDEN
HOTEL
IAS. B. MADDEN
A   HOMELIKE   IIOIEL
In  the  HEART of the  Clly
MADDEN— A. Boeetto, E- laaato,
Hlllcren, Alt*.,; C. Moeee, Cranbrook;
H. Hughes. Spokane; F- c. McDonald, Vancouver; J. R. Murphy, Vern-
noo; Jack Moore, Calgary.
NBW ORAND: R. Beath, 8. Tar-
clan, Nelaon; John Sbepllack. Rano
Mlpe; N; aawchuk, Corra, Linn: p.
J. B-nmens. H. L. Vaughan. Trail;
Mra. R. A Rusel. K. Nicholson.
Opal Acklna, Pentloton: Mr. and
Mrs. Shkwerok, Coykendahle. O.
Hadded, P. Maculak, Cranbrook;
B. Faantr, Lethbrldge; J. o. Lindsay, A. Dubois, W. M. Sinclair.
Vancouver; Mrt. Vera Wayaluk and
Dora, ■ Canal nets; O. Hurl. Cal
gary;   L.  Flndlsnd.  Corra   Linn.
LOUDON, Oet. 4. (CF cable)—
Wert Bromwlch Albion, now heading
tha championship table In English
lint dlvlaion soccer, showed how
well they deeerve this poaltlon on
Saturday when they defeated Derby
oounty by 4 to 0. Shaw soared In
the flrat minute froft a penalty.
Olldden and Sanford netted to In-
tbe Albion's lead before the
half. W. O. Richardson had the
fourth ln the Both minute of the
mateh.
Tbe gamea of the Sheffield duba.
on account of their closeness in the
averages, were tld-blte on Saturdsy.
The Wedneeday anatched victory by
tha one goal acored. Burgess secured
It after nine minutes ot play following aome bright work by the
Sheffield forwards.
Grimsby Town did the bulk of
tbe attacking ln the flrat half
against the Arsenal and Marshsll
headed In from a corner. Arsenal
attacked fieroely in the second half
but could do nothing right. Grimsby won by » to 1.
BI'RV WINS AGAIN
In tbe aeoond dlvlaion mateh.
Bury, the pace-setters, were subjected at the outset to pressure by
Bradford City, but after tbla Initial
burst, which brought them a goal
through Mitchell, the olty faded
away. Eddleatone equalised and Lindsay put Bury ahead Juat before the
Interval. Eddleeton made' tha game
safe for Bury by scoring on a oenter from Lindsay.
Fifteen thousand ww a sens.
tlonal beginning ln tha match between Wolverhampton Wanderers
and Southampton. The Wolvee won
by S to 1. Phllllpa took a long paes
and after a daa_lng run crowned
his fine individual effort with a
brilliant goal for the Wolves. Two
minutes later Hartin gave the
Southampton goalkeeper no chance
with a fast, rising ahot. Buttery
goaled foe tha Wolves and Arnold,
Hampahlro cricketer, replied.
LINCOLN  CITY  WINS
Southend, la tbelr third division,
southern section match with Clapton Orient, ware lucky not to be
deem at tha interval. Shankly, for
Southend, soorsd m tbe first minute after tha eross-over and repeated ln the tenth minute. Barnett, Southend, Jack, Orient, and
Shankly scored In the order named
In three minutes o£ 'beetle play.
Powler got the Orient!* second.
A flawless defence, which successfully resisted a penletent Barrow
attack, helped Lincoln City retain
their position at the head by a
mishap to Baldwin, who had to go
to outside life. Riley scored for
Lincoln after 91 minutes of exciting football, the ball striking a
Barrow baok and deceiving the goalkeeper. Following heavy Barrow
pressure, Thuiaby broke away and
scored a simple goal after good
work by Hall.
NELSON ASSIZES
TO OPEN TODAY
Mr.  Justice  Macdonald  and
Mrs. Macdonald Arrive
From Vancouver
•IBE NELStJN DAILY NEWS, NELSON,  B.  C.  —  MONDAY MOBNDaO, OCTOBER XL  UM
Wrestler's Bride
HONEYMOONING   IN   HONOLULU
The former Marie Elliott of Boston
was photographed aa she sailed on
a belated honeymoon wtth ber husband, Oua Sonenburf, heavyweight
wreetler. Tbey ara beading for
Hawaii and poealbly New Zealand.
ORIGINALS CLUB
HOLD GATHERING
IN LEGION HALL
Decorate Cenotaph and Major Rigby's Tablet at the
City Hall
HOLLAND AGAIN
CLUB PRESIDENT
Rossland to Be Next Meeting
Place; Plan Collection of
Wir Trophies
Occidental Hotel
70S Vemon St. Phone
H. ffuel-ck
Fifty Rooms of Solid  Comfort.
Headquarters (er Loggers and
Mioses.
Use  The Nelson   Daily
News Classified Ads
TraU. B. C., Hotels
Mr. Justice w. A. Kecdoneld. of
Vancouver, accompanied by Mra.
Macdonald, arrived Sunday night
from the ooast, registering at tbe
Hume.
Mr. Justice Macdonald will preside over the Nelson-Trail aasli.
which open Mondsy morning et
11 o'clock.
These cues for trial Include two
divorce actions, a petition to nullify a marriage, oar accident, and the
other for rescission of a contract
respecting a house purchase.
Other oeaea that are not down
for trial -will be the basis for motions.
There are no crlmlnsl esses for
trial.
NELSON ATHLETES
MAKE 65 POINTS
IN TRAIL SPORTS
Jos Wallach, Pat Daffy Tak*
Half Mile and Quarter
Mile Races
GIRLS ARE FIRST
IN RELAY EVENT
Denis Webster wins 880 Run
and   Shot   Put,   Koski
Wins Pole Vault
TOLD IN RIME
WHEN THE DEPRESSION WILL END
fill
JNGTON
Centrally Located
TRAIL. B. C.
A P. LEVESQUE. Prop.
DOUGLAC
HOTEL   9
Rooms and Bath
E.   L.  Slid   A.  GROUTAGE,   Propi.
■tram Heatrd
Throughout
Hot ind Cold
Water
TRAIL, B. C.
Tht Royal Cat*
CLASSIC RESTAURANT
Refinement   and   Deileeey   PrevaU
OPEN DAT AND NIOBT
Special Dinner, 11:10 to • p.m.. tte
Special Sunday Chicken Dinner SOc
specializing in Chop flaey and Noodles
PRONE   IM
Use The Nelson Daily
News Classified Ads
Absolute knowledge, I bave none
But my aunt'a washer woman's son
Hesrd a policeman on hla best
Ssy to a laborer on the street,
That he had a letter Just last week,
Written  In  the  finest  Greek.
By a Chinee*! ooolle In Tlmbur.tnn
Who said that the negroes ln Cuba
knew
Of a colored men In a Texas town,
Who got It straight from a circus
clown
That a man In the Klendyke heard
the  now.
rrom   a   gang   of   South   American
jews
About somebody In Bamboo,
Who saw  a  man who  claimed  he
knew
A  swell   srcVrty  female  rake
Whose mother-in-law would under
Uke
To prove that her husband's sister's
niece
Hsd ,«w».d ln a printed piece
That  aba  had  a  son  who had   a
friend
Who could tell
When the ctspreaalon Is going to end
—OONTOIBUTTD
Celebrating the day which t_e
first contingent of th* Canadian
expeditionary forces sailed from
Oaape Bay for Prance, the Nelson
Originals club on Saturday decorated the cenotaph on Vernon
stroet, and the tablet to Major
Percy Rigby at the city hall.
In the evening a meeting and
banquet were held ln the Canadian
Legion at which vlslton from Trail,
Rossland, Oray creek. Bonnlngton
Grand Forke, Salmo, Kaslo, Procter
and Vancouver were preeent.
President J. Holland and Sec-
reary-tressurer G. K. Ashby. were
reelected to offloe. Mayor Turner
of Roaaland waa elected first vice-
president, and A. W. Anderson ol
Kaalo. second vice-president. Sir
Arthur Currie waa elected honorary
president, and Father Prench and
Archdeacon Scott, honorary vice-
presidents.
After the Ijuelnese a largs gath
erlng sat down to a nicely arranged
banquets when telegrams of best
wishes were read from Sir Arthur
urrle, Father French of Renfrew,
Ont.. and Archdeacon Scott ot Qua
bee. Father French waa the Roman
Cathollo chaplain and Archdeaoon
Soott, Protestant chaplain. The latter -waa known aa 'Dear Old Can-
on Bcott.*'
It wu decided to adopt the red
chevron ae the badge of the club,
elmller to that of a Vancouver
club. Plana were also endorsed for
the placing of a wreath on the
grave of any member who might
die. A vote of thanks wu moved
to Mr*. O. K. Aohby who made
the two wwathe which were placed
In the afternoon.
Roesland will be tbe next meeting   place   and   plana   ara   under
way   to  start   a   collection   of   war
trophies  at   that   city.
Old  time   war   songs  were   sung
with A- J- Cleetosi « R»»1»'"1 *"*•
lng    a    prominent    part    ln    solo
selections, for which FrM Hartwig
acted   u   accompanist.
WERE   PRESENT
Those who were present were B
T OOrady, Candadlan engineers.
H. oerrlsh 10th hettellon; *>
How». RCHAlH ECoop«. CFA
c. W. Peas*. CASCMT-, R. *■
ioulton. » th battalion: J- Hollan<l.
OK  Aahby. J  Hurst, A. W. Andet-
B. Sbsrp. A. H Hugh... E. Strud-
wlck. A. E. Deltas and V St T«v
lor.   7th   battalion:   P.  W.  Holmes.
Mr. Holraee wu a visitor from
Vanoouver.
WATERS LANDS A
211-2 POUND FISH
TRAIL. B. C, Oct. 4.—Piling up
a total of SI point*, IS Nelson
high school boys and glrla came
back from the 1981 TraU field and
track aporta at Butler park Saturday wltb a total of six firsts. 11
seconds and nine thirds to their
credit. Totals for tha other schools
ware unavailable tonight.
Flnt plaoe posiuona were taken
by the Nelson group In the shot
put, pole vault, and the 880-yards
duh in the Junior event*. In the
senior events, flnt* wen won In
the SSO aa* 440 duh. Nslson girls
took flrat plsoe ln the high school
girls' relay.
Following are the results:
Boys'  event.,   12   to   16:
100-yard race—Carl Haley, Trail
Central, tint: Roy Anderson, Nelson
second: Denis Webster. Neleon, third.
Hlgb jump—Orlando Pattlstella.
lint, Carl Haley, Trail Central.
aecond; Roy Anderson, Nelson, third.
Shot put—Denla Webster, Nelson,
first: Andy Honchar, Trail Central,
aecond:  C. Koekl, Nelaon, third.
Broad lump—Carl Balllle. Trail
Central, first: O. Koekl, Nelson, second: Sidney Slncock, Rossland, third.
Pale vault—-*. Koski. Nelson,first:
John Ponha, aeoond: Albert Hey-
wood, Trail Central, third.
SSO yard*—Denla Webster, Nelson,
flnt: Donald HUI, Trail high school,
second:  Harold Long, Nelson, third.
Olrls' events, 14 to II:
60 -yarda—Irene Moorcroft, Trail
Central, first; Martha Crapeka, Trail
Central, -a*)».nd; Dorothy Gibbons,
Nelson, third.
100 yards—Irene Moorcroft, Tnll
Central, flnt; Dorothy Gibbons, Nelson, aecond; Beatrice Matthews, Nel-.
eon, third.
Hlgb Jump—Margant Crapeka.
flnt; Irene Moorcroft, Tnll Central, second; Nellie Trueello, Rossland, third.
Broad lump—Martha Crapeka,
tint: Sheila Forbes, Trail Central,
second; Nellie Wright, Roesland,
third.
Buketball throe- Dixie Edwards,
flnt: Olive MIUs, second; Helen
Penney,  Roesland, third.
High lump, senior—Margaret era-
pake, tint; Man Hudson. Tnll, seoond.
78 yarda—Tlna Toung. TraU Central, tint; Joan Hudson, Trail high,
aecond: Yvonne Oulllaume, TraU
hlgb, third.
Buketball throw—Elizabeth Ed-
war-da, Roaaland, first; Yvonne Oulllaume, Trail, aecond; Delpbena Ce-
tere, Roaaland.  third.
aecond; Georgle Read. Nelson. HUM.
100 yarda, senior—Tlna Toung,
central, flnt: Jean Hudson, aecond; Margant Crapeka. TraU high,
third.
Relay—Nelaon, tint; TraU, -*-»*>
end: Roaaland, third.
Boys' senior events:
100 yarda—Leonard Richardson,
Trail, flnt; Douglu Read, aecond;
Alan McLean, Nelson, third.
Shot put—Carl Balllle, Trail, tint;
Alao McLean, Nelaon, aeoond.
SSO yarda—Jae Waillch, flnt; Pat
Duffy, Neleon, aeoond: Wllfrled Christie, Rossland. third.
Broad Jump-Carl Balllle, TraU.
flnt; Dewltt McQualg, Nelson, second; Mtlsn Prusello, Rossland, third.
330 yards—Leonard Richardson.
Trail, flnt: Douglu Read,, second;
Alsn   McLean.  Nslson.   third.
440 yarda—Pat Duffy, flnt; Joe
Wallach.   Nelaon,  aecond.
Pole vault—Carl Balllle, flnt; Arthur Forreet, Trail, _land; B.
Hontaad. Nelson, third.
High lump-Joe Haley, first; Arthur, Forrest,  second.
Olrls, 11 to IS, 76 yerde—jcen
Downie, flnt; bene San-.poon. aeoond;
Catherine Mandevtl_, third; TraU
oentnl.
High Jump—Jean Downie. Trail
Central. fJret; Catherine Mandevllle,
Tfrall Central, aeoond; Florence Palm-
quiet, Roesland, third.
Broad Jump—Jean Downie, first;
Catherine Mandevllle, Second, Alma
Rommerdahl,   third.   Central   school.
Basketball   throw—Florence   Pslmqulst,   Rossland,   flnt;   Peggy   Mc
Govern,    second;    Edith
ttilrd, TraU Central.
Boya' events,  13  to 18—
76 yards—Pat Holey, tint, Mike
Georgettl, eroond, Trail Central;
Barry   Mathews,   Eut   TraU,   third
Hlgb Jump-^-Pst Haley, Tnll Central, flnt: Harry Kethewi, East
Tnll, aecond; Mike Georgetti, TraU
Central, third.
Broad Jump— Norman Baldwin,
But Tnll, flnt; Robert Herman,
Tnll Central, second: John Hoodl-
koff. Eut TraU, third.
440 race—Michael Hroofcin, first,
Mike Oeorsettl, seoond, TraU Central;  Leonard Una,  Rosslsnd,  third.
Olrls, 8-0—
38 yarda—Dorothy Learz, flnt:
Doreen Mlnton, aecond; Corinne
Bailey, third. AU eg Central school.
Hlgb Jump—Mildred Slmms, Eut
TraU, flnt; Mafslda Presarlo. Central, aecond; Connie Wiley, But
Trail, third.
Broad Jump—Dorothy I_ai_—g ft.
0 ln—Central flrat; Nbna winter-
bottom, Central, aecond; Owen Herman. Eaat Tnll, third.
Boya, t-t—
86 yarda, boya—Ronald Simpson,
flnt; Lome Tognota second; Burt
Adan_on, third. AU from Central
achool.
High Jump, Lorn* T-ognottl, Central, flrat. Nick Turlk, Central,
aeoond; Oordon Ellis, Eut Trail,
third.
Broad Jump—Ronald Simpson. B
ft. 7 in., Central, flrat: Alec Llkten,
Eut TraU, seoond: wuiiam Smith
But   Tnll,   turd.
Boya 10-11—
60 yarda—Harold Covwdal*. flnt;
Albert Morel, second;- Nina Forte
and Stanley Leyton, tl* for third.
All, of Central achool.
Broad Jump—Lome Kerr. It ft.
6 In., flnt; mm Forte, second;
Eric  Douglu, third.
Broad Jump — Hs«l Dawdsley, t
11 Inches, first; PatrlcH young,
second: MUdred McKay, third. AU
of   Central   school.
High Jump—David Oroves, |  fe_
IO   REVIEW  GUIDES
Mlu Agnu Baden-PoweU, slater ol
Lord Baden-Powell, wbo hu arrived
In Canada to nvlew the Olrl Guides,
which ahe founded In 1009. She wlU
tak* up headquarters In Kitchener.
Ont.
CONCERT GIVEN
IN AID CRIPPLED
CHILDREN FUND
Rotarians   Commence   Drive
With Musical Evening;
Is WeU Attended
To (liable them to oarry on wltb
tha can for tbe crippl*4 chUdrrn
of the district, the Neleon Rotarians
•opened a campaign for funda Sun*,
day night, with a mualoil concert
In the capitol Tbaeee, aad reoalv-
ed a hearty raapoaae In the open
lng of tbelr endeavor, as en-met
able audience heard the fla* pro.
gram, which Included. Instunaatsf
trio selections, vocal numbers vWIn
numbers and recitations.
Eric P. Dawson, prior to tbe pro*
gram, gave an outline ot tba crippled
chlldnn work which wu betas earned on by the dub. Tbe Nelaon
Rotations commenced th*lr activities
In tb* lnt*reat of tne crippled chlldnn In 1838. he aald, when tb*
memben voluntarily assessed Onm
second; Lome Kerr, third. AU oflaelwa to aid a cau which wai
Central school. fbrought to their sttention.    Since
Broad jump—Lorne Kerr, 11 feet,, '■*.} tins they had apent 13604 on
the work. This rum wu apart
from doctor's expensee whloh wen
donated. Mr. Dawsm alao paid
tribute tn the medio profession
for Ite part ln helping to oan Set
t Inches, flnt; Nina Forte, seoond;
Eric  Douglu,  third.  All of  Orntral
Kennedy, school.
AU of  Central achool.
-0 yards: Olrls 10-11—MoUy Sutherland,  Eut Trail, flnt; - May McOovern, Central, second; Faith Honchar,  Central,  third.
JUNIOR   RELAY   RACES
Orade III. boys, Eut Trail achool
—Lewie Jones, James McLuckle, Tennis Ellis, Bob Edmonstone, Gerald
Burch, Joe Bsko, oeorge Vaneveld,
BUly  Maitland.
Olrls. Orade II». Eut TraU school
—Margaret Smart, Phyllis Downie,
Isabel Watson, Violet Fletcher, Patricia Cady, Jean Loughery, Chrtata-
bel  PoweU,  Wllma  Oraham.
Orade IV., boya, Eut TraU achool
—John Bukovec. WiUle Smith, Alex
Cunningham, Jim Dolg, Steve Zuk,
Oordon Ellis, Nel* Meteor, Buster
Smart.
Orade V. glrla, Eut TraU achool
—Mildred falmms, Eva Yunker, Ruby
Coee, Molly Sutherland, Bruce WU-
Ham*. Eileen O'Dell, Nellie Skub-
way,   Dorothy   Wilkinson.
Orade v., boys, Central scho__-
Elslo Batlatella, Lorne Mack, All-
stair McKenzle, Paclflco Buna, Richard Holmes. Mlchul Wolfs. Donald
Mlchaely, Maurice Mawdsley.
S. HORSWILL IS
TO HEAD LEGION
BADMINTON TLllB
Broad    Jump—Margant    Cnpaka.
Trail,   flnt;   Lois   Boomer,   Nelson, »".,  Inches, first;  Harold Coverdsle,
At ths Legion badminton meeting Friday night ofllosn for both
"A" and "B" sections wen appointed. Stanley Horswlll wu elected to the presidency of the Joint
club. Miss Palethorpe wu appointed seentery-treuurer for "A" club
with Mr. crowther, H. McTier and
Mn- Faulkner u tbe floor committee.
Miss Irene Laughton tuee ths
dultes of aecretary-treaserer for "B"
club and Miss Grace Laughton and
Mr. Moon will be the floor committee.
the disabled chlldnn.
Bach Rotarlan hu pledged a das
to  tha  drive  which  concluded
Ootober 34.
The program opened with nun-then
by an Instrumental trio oompoaed
of Mlaa Owen Lowery, piano R,
Stratton, ceUo and A. B. Ollker,
clarinet. Their numbers, "Lexts-a"
Louis Galne, and "Mlnlatun Tr'i
wen both well reoelved. A* a eloe<
lm number to the sertae th*
rendered "Jagger "bachl*d" by Weld-
man.
Arthur Stringer wu wall received on his vocal solo, "Tbe Call.
He wu acoompanled by Mn. C. W
Tyler. Mn p. Paddon netted "IT
by Rudyard Kipling, and u an
core.' "A uttle Quaker
"The Poor Man's osrdan," and
Love Your Truly." wen rendered b|
Miss Tieadora Rhodw ss vocal num.
ben. "Scene de Ballet" by D. Bar-
riot a violin solo, wu wait nnder-
ed and gained much applauu foi
Ita artist. Mra. Gladys Webb fbtter
Mise Gwen Lowery accompanied Mn
Foster.
Mn. 0. W. Tyler nndend
the Heart la Young," aad aa en-
core "After All," both receiving mer
tted applauu.
The ushers wen P, F. Payne, W
E. Wesson, C W. Tyler, T. I. Le.
vaaaeur, A. O. Gellnu, J. T. Andrews and I O. Nelaon. M. |. Sarn-
er acted ss door beeper.
T. R. PICKARD WINS
GOLF CUP AT TRAH
TRAIL, B- C, Oet. 4—T. R
Plckard defeated W. Davison to win
the Directors' oup golf competition
hen today. In -the seml-ftnals T
R. Plckard beat w. P. Dunbar and
W. Davison beat j. J. Flngland.
OLASQOW, Scotland. Oot.
(API—Olaagow wu quiet again Sat
urday night after tbe wont rtotlni
in years, polios restored order Sat
urday.
Biggest  Kamloops Trout  of
the Season Taken at Procter  on  Pearl  Spoon
Weak Men
AND ALL DISEASES OF MEN.
Take em Remedies
Pamphlet* "Ms Know Iby-
ulf." and Dlsuau of Men."
'Ills of Women," also ..kin
snd Blood Dl**s*<a witn Dl-
axncala Form and Advte* ln
plain envelope Free by mall.
Mau order and Tablet Bern*
ENGLISH HERBAL
DISPENSARY LTD.
IS9S  Devi. St.. Vaecoover. B.C.
E*Ub||abei_M_Y«OT.
bUehi
W J waten ot Nelaon landed
the largest Kamloops trout of the
season at Procter Sunday afternoon,
a giant weighing 31 1-3 pounds.
John Wallsch  ot  Nelson wss with
The big fish, which struck Just
u the snglen wen about tb quit
after being thoroughly soaked and
chilled, stsrted by going straight
down 300 feet, and then by a rush
taking out more line, till he had
300 feet out from the rod. He wu
finally brought to host after about
10 iplnutes' battling.
He wu caught on a large pearl
spoon.
MRS. GRAHAM OF
TRAIL GOES OFF
ROAD, CASTLEGAR
THAU*. B- C . Ort. 4—Drt^Bf hw
ear toward the ferry it cuttefir
Mri Anfly Orfchua of TraU, went
ovar tba bank. th. car turning completely over, Saturday night about
Ifl o'clock. Un. oraham vu brula-
«4 badly, while b«r son, Clark, had
» bad cut on his head, her daughter, Helen, austelned a broken arm
and Pearl Callen reoelred minor
face cute.
The party were picked up by Mr.
Shield*, of Roaaland,' who drove
them to TraU where Clark and Helen were immediately eent to the
hoepltal.     Mm.   Oraham   and   Mlsa
SHOP
FIRST
Among the Ads!
WO matter what YOU intend buying-^ new frock
l" —a new car or your dailv provisions from the
grocer-SHOP FOR THEM FIRST -in the advertising columns of the Nelsn Daily News - learn what
the day's markets afford and where the various offerings may be had at the most economical of prices
. . . Read these announcements consistently, they
present the day's "market news" ln the most convenient possible manner and the infornnuon, 'hen
acted upon, will materially reduce your household
expenses.
Ihe merchants of Nelson plaoe this store
news In the columns of Th* Dally News because they KNOW that It ts the moet convenient means of giving TOU all tha nam
ebo-j.' their Tailed offerings . . . They
KKnu too,-thai I'- this war they mak*
you uopplng fu mor* pleasant and profitable.
The Nelson Daily News
em
 TBE NELSON  3_O.Y NEWS. NELSON. B.  C.  — MONDAV  MOEN1NO,  OCTOBER i.  MM*
WINNIPEG MAN
RECALLS GOOD
OLD 1DAYS HERE
Scrib on Power Plant Rains
i  and   Cottonwood   Falls
Bring Memories
RECALLS SPORTS OF
YEARS  '87 OR
'98
Recalls    Election    of    John
Houston;   Winnipegger
Hopes Visit Again
,    Te the Editor of the Nelson Daily
Hews:
My Dear Mr. Editor: In the Nel-
.eon Dally News of April St. under
the   "Seen   and   Heard   In   Nelson"
. column by J.B.C., I noticed that he
referred   ln   his   wanderings   around
, town to the old power plant ruins
on the. banks oaf Cottonwood Pslls
| creek Also he refers to the dilapidated Chinese shacks In the dsys
of the old Kail Mines smelter.
Thla article was sent to me by
an old friend of mine. This friend
end I lived In Nelson ln 1807. He
came across this eopy of the Nei-
. eon Dally News ln his eastern home
BABYS
where he tt wrw IMnf end tut
It to me. It has broufht beek
to me many memorise of the oM
dayt. end io Mr. Sdttor, Uke ■
second Rip Van Winkle I am golni
to ermve a ben Item on yow time end
look Into %faa poet fer a few moments when I was young and Melton wee young end hummed with
ill the activity of a mining camp
In a mining boom, end the Joys
and sorrows Ot humanity that ln
thoee den wondered around the
hills turroundlng Neleon.
My old friend says ln hie note
that he would like to be eittlng on
tbe edge ot my bunk again smoking hli first pip* ln the onot so-
called dilapidated shacks which were
not in thoe daya all occupied by
Chinamen hy any means, and I
wonder If J. B- C. tn his wanderings
wandered Into my old shack where
I spent many happy daya and Incidentally earned good money by
working at the smelter weighing ore
and dipping copper out of the rev-
erbratory furnaces. What a wealth
of memoriae come baok m I id
writing.
SPORTS ON BAKER STREET
Lord Aberdeen wae governor- general of Canada and on July 1 we
bad af great celebration, either '97 or
'98—hone races up and down Baker
street, rock drilling contests by tht
minert, and logging chopping contents by tbe lumbermen, and believe
m# tho "double" and "single" work
of the rock drilling men wae an
eye-opener to the eastern visiters.
The boot races and the regatta end
the bare end Jessie and Betty and
Alice Tlmberllnes, et el- A lot of
people have paseed now and are
probably prospecting somewhere In
the celestial regions, and yet I can
_ee some of the old-timers walking
.long Baker atreet with a bunch of
lilacs to some lady love, both long
since sleeping.
Then old Mr. Bliss, end hie dear
old bald heed, tb# machines were
old Edison bl-polar machines, Jlmmle McPherson the dynamic, hard
driving middle man that could run
the plant well and the old switchboard where a fellow could have
a Uttle sleep while the machines
were droning away during the beautiful moonlight spring nlghte.
SMELTER  SUSPECTED
I remember one night someone
shut off the valve at the top of
th* hill and the big pipe remnant which J. B, C. noticed, collapsed. The smelter people were
.uspected ei they were taking water
from the eame creek and needed
water for the tleg flumes. There
wae a shortage of water tbat year
I remember the red fish that
uaed to run up Cottonwood creek,
t used to stand on the little wooden
bridge and spear them. They were
like giant goldfish. And old C»P-
taln Fit* Stubbs, the old gold com'
mlstloner, end I remember a bull
running into hie log eagln one day
and I remember that he, ln his old
War bt the Air
ON THE Alii TONIGHT
MODERN   riaHTIM-   PLANE  IN  SHAM BATTLE
A vivid impression of tbe deys of war Is given ln the above picture
which wee taken during maneuvers at the air pageant held recently st
Oramllngton, near Newcastle, England.
In Agony from Sheer Weakness
Wrs. Sp_.f«m Dawson firmly before, sta w«M not ba lmt
today if slit had mt taken DwWffians' Pink Pis (tonic)
"When my cbudrca were man, writes
Mn. Sputgeon Dawson, Woherton,ObL,
"I wm so weak and run down I could
not walk across tbe floor wiftoot fabt-
rag. Even the slightest eaertkm was toe
jftneh. Days were spent ra agony from
-heer weakness, and nights
fearful thro_gh
hours.
| It seemed is if nothing
whatever woold help me .. .
Dr. Wafiams' Pink ___h were
' recommended, and aftrr taking
twdvc botes I found strength
returning and my stomach ahfc to handle
food again. I had not known wbat a
aeal wis for months."
What would you give to be able to cast
aside your weakness and substitute vigorous physical strength? That is exactly
what many ___n and women have been
enabled to do by the uk of Dr. WiNmu'
Pink Pffls (took).
The iron and other elements In these
tome pills increase tbe amount of haemoglobin or oxygen-carrying agent in the
blood. The increased -supply of oxygen
kindles We in all yonr tissues
just as a draft of fresh air
kindles a fire. The result is a
better appetite, a feeing of
well-being, restful sleep, and
ability to do your work
happily.
Get a supply of Dr. WHliams'
Ptnk Fifls. Take them faithfully. Don't
look for immediate remits. Sometimes
the beneficial results come almost at once
—but not always. Give this tonic a fair
trial and you will be rewarded— just as
other Canadian men and women have
been rewarded. 50 cents a package,    tt
aristocratic voloe demanding that
the bull be ordered out of his office
attd John Houston ot count, president of the Nelson Electric company and mayor of the town, editor
of the Nelson Miner, and frontiers
man par excellence, a picturesque
figure indeed and whin hi was
elected mayor of Nelaon I remember
the torchlight procession down Baker
atreet and finally John wta tender.
ly put to bed. And then the poet
office of Ollker's store where we
all waited for the English mall
to eome tn and what stories one
could tell of the different people
that waited for their mall.
EXPECT HAND OCT
WeU some day my old friends and
I will corns to Neleon again, and
when we do we shall expect the
"damn reporter*" and the town
bend down to meet us. We hop* that
wt will be able to walk, but I
am sunt tbat the sight of Nelson
the eight of Nelson, Ite beautiful
mountatna and lovely lake will bring
back the wine of youth to our
veins and will again enjoy ourselves, and when the council gives
ui a binquet we will try and give
them some history of old times
and when everything is quiet my
friend and I ttk* two ghoeti will
once more walk the hillsides around
Nelson together. We will visit old
homes, we will crow the old bridge
down on the flats, and we will see
my old shack whether it la there
still or not, we will heer our dogs
bark again and we will look up
the hill and aee t.h« smelter and
hear the old crusher thumping
away below the sample room and
wo wlll hear the cars dashing from
.the ore bins to the blast furnaces,
and hear Paul Johnson, and H. C.
Croasdalt, and the little Welshman,
boai of the blast furnaces and Andy
the giant blacksmith hammering
away at his anlval, and then Mr.
Editor, ws will go down, to Gray's
saw mill and watch that for a
while, and tben we will take our
old boat up the lake and camp
along those lovely shores.
We will see old Porcupine Bill
rolling up the ttreet and Scbol.y
coming off night shift at the
smelter and a host of other names
fimlllar only to old timers.
Dear old Nelson, Venice of the
North, long may she prosper and
give creation and Its bleeslngt to
thousands  yet  unborn.
Well, Mr. Editor, you must forgive thla literary effort, but J. B. C'b
little article stirred up brain cells
long since almost petrified.
Your very truly
"OU) TIMER"
Winnipeg, Man., Sept. SS, 1931.
FOCH   DEAD
MONTREAL, Oct. 4— Aocidente
claimed the lives of four Montreal
women today. Dead in auto cwehee
were Mrs. Annie Brar.ler, 51, and
Mrs.  Mercelln  Pabre,  40.
SANDON LABOR
MEN ASK MORE
RELIEF PLANS
Increased  Relief to Married
Men  on  Per  Capita
Ratio
ASK RELIEF ORDERS
ON BASIS OF CASH
Insisit That Wages Be Put
Back at $4 Per Day;
Cut Present Hours
(Standard Tlaas) <
NN   FBOOBAMS
6;00-_robestra—KOO, KHQ. KOMO,
KOW, KOA. Direction Stat enttj-
(Trsns.  from   Ch_ag_>-
C 30—Program—KOO, KHQ, KOMO,
KOW. KFI, KBL, KOA. Mete
quartet: orchestna. direction
Rsnk Black.  (Trena.)
7:00—Express— KOO. KHQ. KOMO,
KOW, 171. KSL. KOA- PUno
duo; Phil Otanen tnd Victor
Antes; novelty orchestra en-ens)
7 3C-Ct_setaough Real Folia—KOO
KHQ. KOMO. KOW. tfl, KBU
KOA. Bursl bend.  (Trsns.)
S-oo-.Togre-m—Amos 'n' Andy—KOO
EBQ, KOMO. KOW, KBL, KOA.
(Trans,  from  Chtcsgo.)
8:15—Vermont Lumber>s<*s— KOO.
KHK.   KOMO,   KOW,  KPI-
8:30—Demi Tassi Rarue—KOO, KHQ
KOMO, KOW, KPI, KBL, KOA
Ous Amraelm'e orobeetra; Loy<_
Whiteman, soprano; Donald No-
Tla, tenor; Dive Marshall, baritone
00—Bouquet of Melodlea— KOO,
KHQ, Orchestra direction Joseph Hprntk.
9:1*—Adventures of Sherlock Holme,
—KOO, KHQ. KOMO. KOW
KFI. KSL. KOA Richard Oordon
Leigh  Lovell.   (Trans.)
9 45—Melody Land, KOO.
10:00—Tlu Road Show—KOO, (KHQ
10:80) 30-plece orchestra direction Mahlon Merrick; John and
Ned,  masters  of  ceremonies.
10.00—Hen flaehee—KHQ. KOMO.
KOW.   KPO.   KPI.   Sam   Hayes
11:00—Lofner-IIarrls dance orchestra
-KOO. KPI.
1J:00—NBC   organ   recital—KOO.
Krac ian rBAN-cisco slo l
Ml m; 81 c: 1000 w
8:00— Concert   ensemble
8:18—Edns.   Fischer,   Piano   Moods
8:30—fltudlo   program
7:00—Program
7:30—Ginger   band
7:46—Musical Crosswod Purzle
8:00—Blue Monday Jamboree
10.00—On.   Time's   16   Men.
10:20—Anson  Weeks'  orchestra
11 *.0O—KOIN   dsnoe   orol-ieefire
1130—KOIN   Slumber   Boat
13 no—vagabond of the Air
9*00—Bouquet of Melodies
«:l»—6b«Ioek    Holmes   adventures
».-4»—eylv» leboes
10:0O—The Boad Snow
11 «>___ner-Harris  dance   orch.
13:00—NBO   organ   recital
KVI TACOMA 7M k
SM.I m; 78 e; 1000 w
10:00—Studio prognm
10:18—Aneon Weeks'  orcheetra
11:00—The White wiaard
11:16—MUl   Hogsn's   orchestra
ASSURED WORK,
SHORTER HOURS
LABORS DEMAND
(Continued  from  pafe  One)
unsulted" to the American wags-
earner.
Coupled with this, however, went
blasts at owners and employers of
industry for falling to "offer either
a plan or a remedy, for the evil of
unemployment"
WORK  OR THE DOLE?
They would be to blame, the
council said.. If compulsory unemployment laws were enacted.
"It must ,be work or unemployment insurance," the council eald,
sesertlng much of the trouble tn
tbe nation's industrial mechanism
wae due to the "unequal distribution of the nation's Income "
Only 1,000,000 persons would remain to be taken care of thla winter, lt was concluded, If the 3,000,-
000 employers, excluding farmers,
would only employ on an average of
two additional workers each.
Extension of the public buildinc
program, the strengthening of unemployment agencies, preferences for
workers with dependents and keeping
young perwms ln school were additional steps suggested to help alleviate  the  unemployment  "crisis."
ROCHESTER HAS
BIG LEAD IN THE
UTTLE SERIES
Beat St. Paul 2-1; Redwings
Have Three Wins to
St. Paul's One
ST. FAUL. Minn., Oct. 4—Bo-
chester. international league champ-
lone, took a commanding Wad In
the little world series br defeating St. Paul, 1 to 1. today. TM
Redwings hold an advantage of
three games to one.
Oeorge pucctnelll's heme run In
the ninth Inning with one out and
the ecore tied at one-all, proved
the  margin  of victory.
St. Paul scored first In the fifth
snd Rochester tied lt up In the
mth.
Rochester    J   »   0
St.   Paul     17   1
Smith and Florence; Setts end
Fenner.
Judge Stewart of
Hanna Passes
■ANNA. Alta. Oet  4
a weak of .-run. _ -Ll _________■
because of 111 heilth, Judge .'
Stewart died ken thle evening fol
lowing a heart attack.
Judge Stewart was born Is PilM>
id-ward  island ann ee tint tMmM
weet   nrsetlaan   leer   Is   ,______■
weat   oversees   __   _   ____________
Hlnth   Battalion,   ts.   ■    ■>.. M^MM
promoted to ilttteiiarrt oolo-sil duf-
!_r entire service. He wee _____■
a  district  court  Judgs  following  hie
return from overseas.
Gettwgji
Nights Lowers VMaiRy
If you feel old and run-down from
Getting Up Klghts. Ksrvousfteia,
Neuralgia. Lumbago, Leg Palna, £»-
zlnees. Burning Bladder or Kidney
Acidity, use quick-acting Cystex
(Slae-ieg). Often stope trouble in tt
hours. Guaranteed to work satisfactorily or return empty box end get
money back. Only 76c at drufctuti,
SANDON. B. O., Oct. *—The Ban-
don brunch of the Independent
Labor party recently held, a well attended public meeting and two
resolutions were unanimously adopted and ordered to be sent to Premier
R. B. Bennett, Premier 6. F. Tolmie,
Rt, Hon. Gideon Roberteou, Wm.
K. Baling, M. P., Captain J. Fits-
slmmons, M. P. P., snd Dr. Lyle
Telford.
Aa the unemployment situation
In Sandon haa become more acute,
and as the direct relief furnished
by the government to msrrled men
le not sufficient to meet their every
day needs, and as msrrled couples
with large families receive no more
asslstanoe than a m«n and wife with
no family to support:
Therefore w* the cltieens of Sandon,
In meeting assembled request that
Immediate attention be given to
the urgent need of Increasing the
relief to married people on a per
capita ratio per family, and the
relief la Issued by order on merch-
ante for goods, instead of ln currency, thereby hampering the economical purchasing of goods, be lt
further resolved thst the relief be
paid in oash.
RKNOIXTtON No. 2
.As the wagee for work have been
cut from 14 per day to $2 per day,
notwithstanding the assurance given
by both premiers, Dominion and
provincial governments that there
would be no reduction fn wages.
and ae this reduction in wages will
only intensify the more fundamental causes of the economic conditions that exist therefore be it resolved tbat the relief work be given
out at the rate of *4 per day, and
that the houra per day be cut ln
accordance with the present remuneration.
No Fuss or Bother
Telephoning long-dittante it ttuier
today thaa ever before. Yost get yoxtr
number with almost at little delay
at with a keel call. All-Canadian
lines carry your vtict directly tt persons in British Columbia, Alberta,
Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
Ask thc Long Distance Rate Clerk
far rotes aad iaftrmaim.
LONESOME?
G7°a }HEN you get homesick for old
^-^ voices and old places, a call back
home over the long-distance telephone
will put your heart at rest again.
Talking by telephone is the next best
thing to being together. A voice from
far away is as clear and unmistakable as
when it comes from a neighbor's home.
KPO   BAN   FRXCIKCO   gM   k
440.D  m;  M c; MOO w
11:00—Melody-   Men
•8:15—Community  cheat  pla;
(1:48—Henry Starr, U-40 Boy
7:00—Boh Klelr'a flyncopatori.
7:_—Cecil end Sally
8:0O—KPO   Salon   orcheatra;    Alice
Oentle, soprano
8:4B—Program
9 00—Looking  Olass   program
10:00—News   flashes
10:18—Program
10:20—KPO  Drama  ouild
10:8o—Tom snd Dudd
11:00—Norman's San Franciscans
KNX HOLLYWOOD 10*1 k
SSSA m; 105 c; 5000 w
6.0O—Newe
6:18—"Tom and Waah"
0:48—Cheetcr Mark-art, organist
7:00—Frank   Wa-btnafae   and   Hon
Archie
7:1--The Ad Lib Man
7:30—"The    B-altor    Californians"
8:00—Davis Treasure  Ship
8:30—Violin choir; clslre Mellonlno,
pianist;   Calmon   Lubovlskl,   director
9:00—Rev. Ethel Duncan
9:15—Ail-Year   Club   program
9 .30—KNX   dance   ensemble
9:43—Newa
10:00—orchestra
11:00—New Inn
Headquarters for
Winter Fuel
We carry Gait, Imperial Lump, Kleenburn, Amis,
Drumheller, Crow's N«rt and Mleha) Coals. Alto
Briquettes, Petroleum Coke, and Wood of all kinds
and lengths at all prices.
WEST TRANSFER CO.
Special Prices given on quantities.
PHONE 33
Could
D. W. SUTHERLAND
PASSEUROWNA
Ex-Mayor   111   Some   Time;
Lived  in  Kelowna  for
25 Years
KELOWNA, B. 0, Oct. 4—Daniel
W. Sutherland, president of Kelowna
Furniture compeny, and K-elowns
Motors, Ltd.. prominent In civic life
here nearly 25 years, died at his
home at noon today sfter a long
Illness. He ls survived by his wife,
two daughters snd a son.
Mr. Sutherland entered • civic life
shortly after coming to Kelowna
more than a quarter century ago.
He served on the council for 34
yeans, is of which he hsd beau
mayor by scclsmatlon, He wee
known in all parte of British Columbia and had a wide circle of
friends in tee Mssonlc order, of
whloh he was a prominent member.
His retirement from civic politics
came ln 1980 when he withdrew
from -_e mayoralty cont-fat ln Pebruary of that year, when Ws "heeltb
begsn to fall him. About sli months
sgo he suffered a stroke from which
he never fully recovered.
In the provincial geneml elactlon
of 1928 he opposed the Hon. J. w.
Jones, preeent minister of flnsnce.
In south Okanagan, hut was defeated. He was s. Libers! ln politics,
WHITE SOX WIN
ffiOMTHE CUBS
Pound Three Cub Stars for
13-6 Wta; Sox Have
Series Edge
CNRV   VANCOUVER   1080   k
291.1 mi 103 Ci 800 w
600—Dinner   hour
7:00—Wiiteh
7:30-__ety Topics-Percy Abtll
7:45—Instrumentsl   trio
8:30—Orohestre
9:00—Weather forecast
KOA  SPOKANE  1470 k
::<il  m: 147 c; 8000 w
6:30—Knights of Notes
7:30—Northwest Salon orchestra
8:00—Dream Melodies
8:Ifi—Eighteen Peet of Harmony
8:30—Homespun Melodies
8:45—Tlie  Esey   Chair
9:00—Knlghta of the Rosd
9:15—Wlnnlfred  Lundberg
9:30—Wrestling  matches
10:30—Moonlight Melodies
11:00—Vic    Meyers'   orchestra
KOMO   SEATTLE   920   k
335.9 ra; to c; looo w
8:00—Crcbeetra
8 30—Program
7:00—Express
7:30—J_»]   Folks
soo—Atnns 'n' Andy
8:15—Vermont Lumberjacks
8:30—Denu Tssao Re-rue
9:00—Program
9:15—Adventures ol S. Holmes
9:45—Tuneful  Two
10:00—News  flashes
10:16—Lite   Savers
10:30—Little Symphony Hajur
11:20—Globe  Trotter
11:30—Dsnoe orchastre
12 :<_—Organ recital
KIR  SEATTLE  flo k
309.1 m; 97 ai 5000 w
6:00—Norlfcwest   Concert   _lo
6:30—Knlghta o» Notee
7:30—Norfchy_et Salon orcheetrs
8 00—Dream Melodies
8.15—Eighteen Feet ot Harmon-,
8 30—Homeai-un   Melodies
8:45—The Easy Chair
0:00—Knights of the Rotd
0:15— "Conoco Bill''
»;30—Wrestling matches
10:30—Moonlight   Melodies
11:00—Vic Meyers' orcheatra
12:00—Mldnlglt Bwellere
KSL SALT LAKE CITY  1130 k
266J m; 118 c; 5000 w
6:00—Orebeel-ca; Roy Bargy
6:30—Family Party
7:00—EJtprses
7*30—Concert Hour
8:00—Amoa 'n' And*.
8:18—"The   Jewel   Box"
8:30—Demi   Tssse   Review
9:00—Federation    of    Labor
9:15—Sherlock   Holmes   Adventures
10:00—-Inlormat  music
B.C. TELEPHONE OOMPANY
IT*
OHICAOO, Bl., Oct 4—Hitting
national league pitching as tbey seldom hit American lesgue pitching.
Chicago mUlte, sen took the edie
ln the city series three games to
two by pounding three Cub stars
tor a 13 lo 6 win Sunday. Root,
Malone and Smith were treated
roughly hy the Sox aockere. who
piled up a total of 15 safeties.
Cubs „   g 10   1
White soz _.... 13 15   1
Malone. Smlt_, May and Hema-
l»y. Faber, Lions and Orube
EDISON  WEAKED
WEST ORANOI, N. i., Oct. 4
FUckertag steadily lower like
a pulse of some tlme-wprn dynamo, the current of Thomas A.
Edison's Ufa continued to grow
weaker tonight.
KHQ SPOKANE 690 k
«08.> m; N c; 1000 w.
fl 00—Orchestra
6:80—Family Party
7:00—Express
7:30—Cheeeborough Real Folks
8:00—Amoa 'n' Andy
8:15—Vermont Lumberjacks
8:30—Dend  Tssse  Rente
9 00-_ouquet of Melodies
9:15—aSheriock   Holmes   Mma\*ts***w,
9 45—Sylvan  Echoes
19'00-Kews flsshes	
10:15—Nor. Thus, piano melodlea
10:30—The Road Show.
11.00—iLaey On at th* Mike
KOO OAKLAND  IM k
379.5  m;  79 c:  10.000  w
6:00—Orchestra
6:30—-Program
7.00—Express
7:80—Cheeeborough Real Folks
8:00—Amos 'n* Andy
8 15—Vermont Lumberjacks
8.80—Demi  Taase  Revitt
Y"0U hope yonr wife yilll -ttyct ned to »eeS
employment.
But many otKer men Have Had similar Hopes • • anil
their widow* know the heartache* of job-honting.
Fortunately you can make certain that yonr wffe
and children will never want for food, clothing
and shelter. Yon can make them forever Independent of charity.
Simply invert ta Life Insurance and arrange for a
permanent monthly Income which wfll be payable
either to your family or to yourself. Then, whether
or not yon live to old age, the future ii safeguarded.
Tomorrow may be too late. See a life Insurance
representative today and make sure your wife
will never be forced to look for employment.
Life I
nsurance oervice
One of a series of messages spentored by
life Insurance Companies.
 •m units* »_-_,_ xrwi. xelsox. b. c. — mowd-ay ihmin, octobbb i, un*
WW Wi
ll
m
WOMANS PAGE
By Ruby M. Ayres
UBAT HA0 QOm BKPOXLB
Ollea Chlttenham arts out to
Bake Julie Farrow lore bin. Intending to throw her ower in
tevenge for the eulcide of hla
brother Rodney, whom Julie had
gfeet ott. Ba .luooeeda. but flnda
tt_et he haa fallen dssperetsly
te leva with ber hiraeelf. Then
lev dsscowers that tt wee not
Ihla Julie Farrow, but her cousin of the aame name, who had
driven hla. brother to death. But
Giles le married to an American
girl named Sadie Barrow, with
whom he has not lived for a
Song time. Sadie unexpectedly
turn* up In London, at a party
•ft Ollea' mother'! home, but
with   keep   allent   about   tbelr
■v
you? However, you>e eaved dm tte
trouble of fending it to you. Tea
can have your two hundred."
Lombard amlled—an unpleasant
emile.
"I want five hundred."
"Tou ae/eed fer two."
"The price hae gone up aiact
laet nlgbt."
There wae an eloquent alienee
and Lombard aald calmly:
"Five hundred la not a high price
to pay, surely—I cannot Imagine
that Schofield would crap et It tn
return for the tt*or you received
laet night." He ahrugged hla ehould*
er« u he aaw the passionate rage
In Chlttenham'* face.
"It ww you outaide Idea Farrow'* flat laat nlgbt?"
Spirit Bride
marriage.
Julie, disillusioned, enters Into
the wild night life af London to
try to drown her anguish. Law-
fence . Sohofleld wants to marry
har. Lombard, who had first Introduced her to Chlttenham, de-
/_sands money from Olles with
the threat that If he u not paid
ha wlll tell Schofield that Chlttenham snd Julie spent the
nlgbt together on the St. Bernard Pau. Later Julie coaleases
ta Chlttenham that aha loves
hlm. '
HOW   OO  OM   WTTH   IBB   STORY
INSTALLMENT   THTSLTB
The two men made no attempt at
. greeting. Chlttenham merely said:
"lou're   ln  rather  a  hurry,  aren't
"I waited thru home sen patiently, you will admit."
with an effort Chlttenham controlled himself.
"I give you Juat- five seconds to
get out of here." ha aald.
"Very well. Vou know what I Intend to do. I shall tell Schofield
what happened ln Switzerland and
again laat nlgbt—"
"Tell him. and HI break every
bone ln your body."
Lombard went on *v*nly, not
heeding  the violent outburat.
"And I shall tell Mlu Farrow that
the woman she hu bun' making
ber friend le your wife."
Chlttenham wu white to the llpa,
but he laughed.
"You can spat* yourself the
trouble.   I have told her mywlt."
For a moment the two men glared
IO Bt  MABBMD
ION Muriel McCormick, of Chicago, grand-daughter of John D.
Rockefeller, whose engagement to
wed Blish* D. Hubbard of Middle
town. Conn.. Is announced. A few
yeara ago Mlu McCormick announced that ahe wu "bride" ln a spiritual wedding with her fiance, who
had been killed In the war. She
wore bridal gow* at th* "ceremony"
and a wedding ring.
Who-o-o
Wants an  A
Apartment«
"... and the NEXT apartment I
rant la going to hay* this 'n' that
•n" that. . . "How many times have
you promised youfself a BETTER
apartment valaef
Haw about It . . now that your
present lease Is up? There are many
such Ideal apartments ta be h*d . .
If you know where to find them.
Turn ta the "Apartments ta Bent'
section ot the Want Af pages.
There youll find a comprehensive
listing ot the better renting values.
It's the modern way to better living!
Mmm la% Nruta
WANT AD DEPARTMENT
PHONE 143 or 144
L_j.
at one another, tnd It took all
Chlttenham'i will-power to maln-
taln hi* .elf-control, then Lombard
eald hoarsely;
Til make you eorry for thla be-
fare I've done!"
"Oet out, or XU make you eorry
lor It now."
The door cloeed between them
For eome momenta after Lombard
had gone. Chlttenham §tood .taring
at tbe cloeed door.
He would see Julie at onoa and
tell her the whole truth. But Fate
wa* agalnat blm. He went to Julie?
flat only to find that ahe had gone
out to lunch. He went to aeveral
restaurants where be thought ehe
might be but could not find her.
There waa nothing for lt. but to
wait till the arternoon when they
would meet at hie mother'* house,
He purposely arrived rather late,
Mra. Ardron. who vu near tbe door,
crept to him and whlapered that he
muat be very quiet.
"lt'a *o wonderfulI" ehe breathed;
she squeezed hie hand excitedly.
Ollea stood betide her, angry and
allent.
Now he waa more accustomed
the darkness he could see that
there were about a doeen people ln
the room sitting in a rwg. and apparently holding handa. There waa
a queer aromatic aoent In the air,
and a curious feeling of nervous
tension.
He saw now that the light from
the shaded lamp ws* falling on the
race and figure of a nun whom he
supposed muat be the great Chryer.
A strange-looking man with a pale
asoetlo face and long, dark hair,
who lay back in the chair, Ma eyes
closed and his hand* clasped agalnat
his breast.
Presently he began to apeak in a
sing-song dreamy *ort of voice.
"Two women and one man—one
man and two women • * • they stand
before me ln the darkness, not
knowing of the tragedy that dl'
Tides their lives. ..." He drew i
quick breath and there followed a
little alienee, broken again almoat
at once by the same sing-song
Toloe—"Two women snd one man-
In the darknsss all et them, and
two of them will come out Into the
light, but the third wlll never see
the sunshine again- Darkness—
blindnessl The blindness of ths
eyes. . . -here, close beside me. . .
His clasped handa released one
another, and moved forward ln a
curiously groping fsshlon sa lf
seeking to find something. Olles
did not know whether to be amused
or angry. What fool* women were,
to be taken ln by auch a charlatan 1
He had moved back a step to find
the switch of. tbe light when suddenly those groping handa swooped
down with a curious pouncing movement and fastened on something or
some one tn the silent ring of
listeners.
A pierolng scream rang through
the silence of tbe zoom, a scream
ln the frightened voice of a woman,
and then the cry of hla own mmel
"Ollesl   Ollea, . , ."
Xt seemed an eternity until his
fingers same Into contact with the
switch, and still tbat cry went on:
-Ollesl   Olles!"
It was Sadle'a voioe, he knew, and
wben at last tbe room was flooded
with light he sew thst she wss
standing up, her bands covering her
face, her childish body swaying to
and fro as lf in grest petn or terror,
while the welling repetition of his
name came from her llpa monotonously again aad again.
It wss like a scene In a dream—
the rl«g of half frightened women-
end tbe strange figure of the man
Chryer a* he roee slowly to his
{set, * shocked, awakened look ln
hia somnolent eyes. Tben Mra. Ardron began to cry hysterically and
the whimpering sound aeemed to
break the spell which waa upon
every one.
Ollea took a quick stride forward:
"Sadie!"
She turned swiftly at the sound
of her name, her hsnd* 0ut*tretched
snd when bs took tbem in his, she
clung to htm, sobbing and shaking
like s frightened child.
He kept protecting srms around
his wife's slim figure.sa he glsred
round the room wit furious eyes.
His mother. Doris snd half a
doeen other whom hs knew slightly
snd.. . .Juliej
Julie was standing up.- very stiff
snd straight, looking st him screes
the room, s pitiful, wondering question ln her pretty eyes, her fsce
quite colorless, ber hands gripping
a, rhstr back.
And then for s moment nobody
moved or spoke, but Chlttenham'a
anna fell from his wtfe snd he
took sn lnvolutsry step sway from
hsr.
She looked up, ber face whits snd
distorted.
'XHleal. - . •" end then before
any one could mere to help her
ahe fell fainting st his feet.
Chlttenham wae very pale and hit
voice   was   rough   end   uneven   ss
kind hspds carried Settle from the
room.
He   wu   conscious   of   Impending
Efficient
Housekeeping
SSI LAW-, A. SBKMAN
TOMOBBOIPI  WirD
Breakfaet
Banana.
Cereal
poached   «gg»
Toast Ceitll*
Luncheon
Bam  Souffl*
Uttuoe French Prigging
Wholewheat Bread
Jelly Olngarale
Dinner
Roast of Beef
Celery
Potatoea Onlona
Appleaauce Tapioca
NIW  DliHEl  IBM WEU
Ham Souffle—Put two cups of
sweat milk Into a saucepan and
heat to th* boiling point, than
thicken by el____n_ several mlnutea with tiro tablespoon* of flour
mixed with on* teaspoon of melted
butter; season with one-half teaspoon of chopped raw onion* and
stir In tha beaten yolks of two raw
eggs. Cook, stirring steadily, till very
thick, then add two cupa of chopped
cooked ham and let the mixture
cool. When almoat oold, fold ln
the •tlftly whipped whits* ot two
egga and *crap* Into a buttered
dlah. Bak* 30 minutes In a moderate oven, ar till firm and high,
tben serve at onee.
Applesauce Tapioca—Book aix table
spoona of p*arl tapioca overnight In
one cup of oold -water. Next day add
one aad one-half cupa of boiling
water, one-third teaspoon of aalt,
three tebleapoona ot auger, and let
the mixture cook over boiling water
for as hour, or until th* tapioca 1*
soft and transparent. Then add on*
cup of previously cooked applesauce
and flavor wtt_ one-half teaepoon
of vanilla extract, serve cold, with
sweet cream or top-milk.
Cheesed Tout—Spread slices of
bread with cream cheese which you
have seasoned well with salt, to
suit Individual taste, then dip theae
slices Into raw egg and fry till
brown. Serve with thtn sweet cream.
Answer to "Invalid Reader"—To
make the egg-orange drink, simply
beat one egg and stir Into It the
Juice of one or two oranges, som*
like lt with cracked loe, others Juat
moderately eold. Sweeten to taste
with augar, and serve at once. It la
a good thing to havs one of thoee
cocktail shakers on hand to mix
such drinks -a* these.
Tomorrow—Anawcrs  to Inquiries.
One Too Many
WHAT TO DO?
Jun* CDee, musical comedy prima
donna became engaged tbe other day
to Vernon cornea. New Tork Yankee
pitcher. Then th* ball club'* secretary. Edgar Barrow, _ alleged to
have put a fast ona over the plate
by stating tbe pitcher already haa a
wife in California. Oame* denies It.
The Beauty Box
by Helen Fottett
"We've sent for a doctor," hia
mother said. "Julie 1* staying with
her."
"lt'a    only    an    ordinary    faint,
Doris   said   contemptuously.      "I'm
surprised   at   Sadie   being   such   a
fool."
The others had all gone end
Chlttenham stood with an elbow
on the mantel-shelf staring down
at the grate which was filled with
flowers snd ferns. He could think
of nothing but thst pitiful, won-
dering  question   in  Julie's eyea.
What was *he thinking? What
had ahe guessed?
•   •   e
What a fool he had been not to
tell her the truth laat night; she
would have understood end forgiven
him then. Would ahe understand or
forgive him now?
Xt aeemed aa eternity until the
door opened behind htm and Julie
cams ln,
Chlttenham turned. He made s
swift movsment towards ber sa If to
take her in his srms, thsn stopped
This was not tbe woman who had
clung to him only last night snd
whispered how much she loved him
—this wes not even the wild, broken
Julie who bad hurt him with utter
recklessness during ths psst unhappy weeks—thla wae s woman
whom he had never aeen before, with
cold eyea that accused him harshly
even before ahe apoke.
"Sadie is no better. The doctor
hss Just come. Would you like to go
to her now?"
Giles flushed scarlet. It ws* such
sn unexpected challenge.
"Why should I go to her? Whst
do you mean?" hs asked roughly.
They were the Isat words be meant
to ssy and yet for tbe lite of him
he could not hsve controlled tbelr
utterance.
Julie shrugged her shoulders.
"I only thought , , ln the circumstances , ,"
He covered ths ground between
them ln s stride snd caught hsr by
ths shoulders.
"Julie . . hsve you fogrotten lut
night? How csn you speak to me
like this? How csn you look at me
ln auch a way?"
He felt her alim body stiffen beneath hla graspf snd her eyes met
his unflinchingly.
"How long hava you J"HOWB Sadie?
Why did she call out to you and
run to you like that? What la she
to you?"
There wu sn agonised question ln
her voice though she tried desperately to keep It unconcerned.
She moved back s step when he
would hsve touched ber end both
their feces were whits.
There's no need to pretend any
longer," she said with a harsh breath.
"Jrille—" Chlttenham broke out
again desperstsly then stopped u
the door opened beneath bta mother's agitated hand.
"Ollea—they want you st once—
tbe doctor aent me for you—oh,
Glleal"' ahe caught hla arm with ineffectual hsnds. "I don't understand! I feel u If 1 am going mad,
or u lf every one else ls—whst do
they sll mssn? And lf it's the truth
why didn't you tell me? Sadie la
saying awful thlnga, too—ebe muat
be light-heeded! She saya she's your
wifs? How csn ahs be your wjle
whsn you are not married?"
Ollea turned on bla heel and etrode
out of the room- Mra. Ardron
turned to Julie, both white, useleu
hsnds outstretched.
"Is It true?" she appsalsd hslp-
Isssly. Bhe forgot bar dislike for
J-tlie. In her present distress sbs
uld hsve turned to her wont
v _emy for consolstlon. "Tou heard
whst I ssld.    Sadie dsclsrej sbs Is
v son'* wife. Hew een she be
en he Is not married. He never
..ed women—he hu ssld so scores
of  times?"
It should be en important pert
of the art of living end the occupation of making oneself attractive
to hsvo some healthy, wholesome
fun now and then. To play! Oet
all hot and b»Ppy »nd !•* your hair
fall down I The mother who plays
fos end leeee with her "young" is
a heap eight better mother than tbe
dour-faced parent wbo can't unbend. Ths plsyful one will retain
her youthful spirits until she's -a
special entertainer for hsr grest-
grsndchlldren. The world can dispense with criticism, nagging, serious conversation, but it oent get
along comfortably without nonsense
and laughter.
When large pimples form on the
fsce, neck or cheat, thsy should be
treated to moiat hot applications.
When tbe yellow point hu fully developed, open with a needle which
haa been sterilised by holding In a
flame, press out tbe pus with extreme gentleness, keeping the finger
tlpe covered with clean game. Care-
leea treatment will spread germs,
cause mors pimples to form. Touch
wounds with a solution of boric
acid.
It may be two or three months
after a fever before hair will take
on a despondent air and fall out.
Therefore, it la advisable to have
acalp treatments before the havoc
begins. Ambrosial locks respond to
friction of the scalp, thorough, vigorous shampoos every ten days,
tonic applications, brushing with a
brush that la kept clean. When
shampooing use hot wster, but finish with en ice cold rinse.
Uttl* dollies are doing tricks
with thow smooth rolls they wear
st the beck of the long bob. In
steed of one, stretching demurely
from esr to esr, they uss three snd
aet them on the bias. Or there is
a small roll sctng u a buffer state
between clusters of curls placed
back on ths can.
Wltb   hate   piquant,   aasay    and
email, the coiffure with smooth
crown—ho waves at all—la convent
ent. One doesn't hsve to find i
mirror when tbe hat is removed, tbe
smooth halrdreaa having a facility
for staying put.
PLAIN CAKE-
HOW TO MAKE
Vamps May Turn Domestic
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
An Authority on Probbn* or Loas and Mania**
Ml* I* going la b* mass-lad ln*w_*h way tlw wind blows. Ass un
two weeka and her chief concern 1* "
wMtbsr th* hat, ehe s *el*ot*d to go
away in, aulte her profile or not.
ah* ha* other worrlee, too. Wlll ahe
Uke living la a four room flat after
th* roomy house her p-erenta have
la tha charming aubinti?
And how about getting Tom'*
breaWsat? A part am* maid will
ie ln lo get the dinners. Julie
welly haa her anxtoua mosne-ta. Her
mother ha, them, too, but they are
quite apart from hate, flat, and
breakfaet*. It I* ah* wbo hu written
to me about thla 30-year-old gin
who la to be married In two weeka.
It aoeme that Julie, from the
time aha wa* la high achool. ha*
been oontlnuaUy in love, that Ufa
without * love affali*—cnlld. violent,
Juat mlddUa*>-waa unthlnkeWe.
Julie ha* oonteeeed If eh* were not
In love, practically all the time,
ebe'd think sh* were getting old or
something. Thst Is what worries
har mother.
How eaa I feel aura ahe wlll not
tire of Tom aa she haa aa th* rest?
And Tota la such a fine chap—clean,
honest, ambitious; but .he's so
foolishly susceptible I've no confidence that marriage with her will
be any more permanent than lysr
innumerable Jlirtsuogs. Tom knows
all about her vamping; I tall him
his must be the 'perfect love (which)
caatcth out fear'."
Tom la not- marrying the girl
under gates pretenses, he's walking
Into tha altuatlon with wide open
i which la better than if he
imagined he waa marrying a aweet,
inexperienced young thing who had
never oared much about anyone else.
And through one ot thoee mlneles
whloh sometimes happen, all may
turn out for tbe beet. But I wish
Julie* mother had told me a little
ahout her daughter's taate*—no, not
la men. But what sort ot ttilnga ap
pealed to hsr ln that big house ln
the pretty euburb?
Did ahe like her surroundings to
be attractive? Did ah* like flowers
on the table, and a few narcissus
blooming in a bowl on tba mantel
piece? Tl^ei charming touch may
be had for tb* sum ot 10 oents. Wee
Julia's room sweet and dainty'
Theae thlnga are all straws teillc;
tidy gin at home, lstereatsd In
nothing but pretty dotbas, good
times and making whoop** generally (Peaking, will aoon be bond getting bar buabaad's breeUsete, and
you're likely to find them parched
on stool* breakfasting at tlw neanef
drug store after a f*w weeka.
But, belters It or not, Vt. aaaa
girls Just aa Impressionable aa Julie
converted by a little flat with a
Delft blue kltoaen. Much ot their
susceptibility wsa Juat so muoh do-
mastlctty pent up stream. After tbey
had a home of tbelr own, and a
man who underatood how to keep a
kind nut flru hand on the rune—
especially K that greatest of blowings, a baby, arrived—the fluttery,
butterfly gin became th* most conscientious of mothers.      a
But the etrewa should be watched
—If the Jullee •"■ean't bear el-Wren." |
lf tbey have aheolutely no resources,
within themaelvee, If they pitch I
things on th* tebl*. and haatlly
pick up a broom when company ts
coming—If they n*v»r res_y live
unless whoopee I* brewing—a young
man who llkea a horn* bad batter
crank up his trusty car and move on.
FUR-TRIMMED
SUIT STYLl
Oet. 4.—fbablon adds a»-|
other leal to her laurels with
advent of tho fur trimmed ault tt*
winter. All the Pane couturtera
showing these models.
Maggy ltouff haa a ault of
type made cf duvetyne, «
cloth, and trimmed with eeal- Bass
daily   done   tn   dark   green
-with raven, collar and euffa of i
It le highly coveted. Worn wtth if
la   a   pink   taffeta   baaque   Mot
trimmed with Valenelennee laoe.
laebat and skirt ara  gored  ts
without a wrinkle, and tbe akirt
flared   aver   ao   slightly   I
knee,   to   give   room   for   waikln
comfortably.
Painful Backache,,
Qukkty Relieved)!
VICTORIA, B. O.. Oat. ..-Severe earthquakes, taking place approximately d.aoo mile* from here
waa recorded at the local observatory at 11.36 Saturday morning. The
first tremor lasted four hours and
was followed by a -second which
lasted nearly three  hours.
"My back a-aeawfulir ease," writes
Mr. Clifford Whtttom, Paspebiae
Weat,P.O. "I teak theae boieeaf
Do3_. Kidney Pill, asd they ■*••
me gnat rawf. If I *v*r ttwet
Kidney Pills again I will carta--.
uas Dodd's. I race mas snd Dadd'e
Kidaer PHI' to all my ftiende and I
ther now say that they am the |
best Kidney mad-ins,"
Da_d'« __-rPnUt_i«r
b_sl_a.dM_aa-._a
woman. Gi*. _«—«___ ,
em te obMlasd a aU atim, j
Dodds Kidney PM
MAIL ORDERS A SPECIALTY
UNIFORMS of DISTINCTION
BOWMAN'S
APRON SHOP
«10 GRANVILLE ST.
VANCOUVER, B.C.
Write for Illustrations and Samples
A good plain cake rule that eaa be
varied in aeveral ways wlll be found
In the following recipe:
One cup granulated sugar, '■, eup
alwrtenlng, 1 a-3 cupa flour, S tea
spoons baking powder, */. cup sweet
milk, 3 eggs, Vt teaspoon vanilla,
teaspoon wit.
Bs sure tbe shortening Is abou*
room temperature. Cream thorough
and elowly best In sugsr. Best In
four tablespoon* sifted flour. Ml::
and sift remaining .lour with baking
powder and salt. Add well-beaten
eggs to flrat mixture and beat bard
with dover beater. Stir sbout one-
lrslf tbe milk snd itlr until smooth.
Then sdd half ot remaining flour
mlrture and wben smooth sdd remaining milk end vaniu*. Wheij
blended, sdd rest of flour snd stir
until smooth. Pour into sn oiled
snd floured cake pan. pur hJng batter
up against tbe edgea of pan, and
bake 40 mlnutea In a moderate oven.
If baked ln layers bake 30 minutes.
The oven thermometer should register 360 degrees F. when cake is put
in, rising to 375 degrees P. to complete the bsking period.
WHEN   IN   A   HURRY
Now for the Tsrlatlona:
To make en acceptable emergency
cboooUte cake, sdd two or three
tahlespoonTula of cocoa to the dry ingredient* snd reduce the flour to
two tablespoonf ula.
Ths addition at apioes results In
a tender cate delicious with apple
eauoe snd requiring no icing.
Or e lsysr cake wltb a custard
filling, using the yolks for the custard snd putting the whites in the
cske. can be concocted to furnish the
whole deeaert.
Halt the rule een be used to
make a Washington atom pie, cup
cakes, or "upalde down cake." ln
the osss of ths "pie" tbe egg white
la saved for the top froaUng aud
ths pte ls filled with jelly, jam or
fresh flult. Butter Is used in cskes
for ths sake of the fuse flavor
lt la supposed to fire. But In snyj
cske ln which the flavor U made
dlatinctlve by spices or ehoooiatc
some ksa expensive shortening can
bs substituted  with  perfectly satis-
You Can't Go Wrong
If yoa
SELECT YOUR PRIVATE
GREETING CARDS
FROM THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE INTERIOR EXQUISITE DESIGNS TO SUIT EVERY INDIVIDUAL TASTE
,... AT PRICES THAT WILL APPEAL. ... L00K1
TWO DOZEN CARDS
Priced at
$1.50, $1.75. $2.00, $2.50 Up to $8.00
Printed with your name and address.
NO TWO SAMPLES ALIKE .. .SELECT YOUR PERSONAL
GREETING CARDS WHILE OUR EXCLUSIVE STOCK IS AT
IT'S BEST.
SEHD FOR SAMPLES.
Samples mailed to out-of-town customers upon request, but we ask that they
return them a_ f-oon as they make their choice, as w<*. only have on of each
samfilc.If in town and unable to call at the office, PHONE 144 and we will
have samples sent to your home.   Order early.
::■-- _*-
Jfetatt Bath} Newa Sob Separfmlmi
Baker St.
Phone 144
Nelson, B. C.
.__.__
 ASTORIA
The Best Good Shoe
for Men.
Make your next pair
ASTORIA
R. Andrew
&Co.
Leaders in Footfashion
— -: _■   :-.   ■■-™.1.
Society
SCHARMSCHM1DT
DIRECT JOBLESS
SCHEME FOR B.C.
VICTORIA, Oct. 4—Colonel P.
Bchannschmldt, M D, of Vancouver,
to to be entrusted with the enarm-
o*m task of directing the machinety
Of tbe provincial governments unemployment scheme, the main part
of whloh will be the sorting out of
Various classes of rt.ltef cues from
the province's 53,000-odd registered
[unemployed.        - ,
Dr. Scharn_sc hmidt will cooperate
With both tbe federal snd provincial
government departanents to se. that
0very man seeking relief will be
Manfully Investigated before he Is
put to work.
Major Schannscbmldt was well
-known In tlie Klondyke aa superintendent of tbe river dlvlaion. White
rase and Yukon river.' He served ln
Mesopotamia  during  the   war.
a IBB  NELSON DAILY SEWS, NELSON, B. C. — MONDAY  MORNING.  OCTOB1R »,  lWr^W
[Unreality Subject
Science Churches
'Unreality" waa the subject of
[ths Lesson-Sermon In the Christian
pclenoe church on Sunday.
One of tbe Scriptural texts con-
Jtelned ln the I/eson -Sermon was,
'But of the tree of the knowledge of
kood and evil, thou shalt not eat
pf lt: for In the day that thou
[latest thereof thou shalt surely
Pie"   (Genesis 2:17).
fallowing tbe reading of tbe Bible
torts, passages were also read from
'Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures" by Mary Bak.r Eddy, one
passage being the following from
page 300: "Jesus' demonstrations
lift the chaff from the wheat, and
unfold the unity and the reality of
(Cod, the unreality, tbe nothingness,
M eni."
Announcement
H. C. Dimock
M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
has opened an  office  in
tthe Medical Arts Building.
Phone 204
Suite. 101
: n m n i n. i n 11: i ii n i
Thla column la connected by
Mrt. M. te Vigneux. AU news
of a -octal nature, Including receptions, private cntertalnmenta,
personal Items, n_err___ges, etc.,
will appear ln this column. Tele-
plum* Mn. vigneux tt her
home, M9 Silica street.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pollard, MUl
street, said their Infant eon Deret
Vane, have returned from Victoria,
where they have been for tbe peat
three months.
a  w   e
Mr. aud Mrs. George McKay of
Trail apent the week-end ln town,
guests at the bome of Mrs. McKay's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gregolre Choquette, Latimer atreet.
^__B • • •
Mrs. Fred W. Conway, Kerr apartments, has returned from a couple
of months' visit to relatives ln
Portland, Ore.
• e   e
W. J. Meagher spent yeeterday in
Trail, the gueat of his son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Prank
Meagher,
s   •   *
J. H. Graham motored to Spokane
yeaterday.
• •   »
J. A. Iiebbard, mining Man of
Ymir, wu a visitor to the city during the week-end.
a   a   s
L. K. Larsen and party motored
to  TraU  and   Roaaland   yeaterday.
• •   •
J. F. Oulmont left yesterday for
Montreal as a delegate to the convention of the Order of Railroad
Telegraphers at a meeting to be held
there this week.
• •   •
J. Doeenberger and hts son Nick
of Sunshine Bay, and Abe Doeenberger of Chemalnui, V. I., were
shoppers to Nelson  Saturday.
• •   •
Miss Belle McOauley of the staff
of the Nelson high school spent the
week-end at the home of her parents at Castlegar. She was accompanied by Mlsa Carol Wright, Stanley  street.
• •   •
Mrs. W. H. Walker and family
have taken up residence ln their
recently renovated home, 912 Vernon street.
• •   •
Mrs. J. Sewell of Sunshine Bay
paid a visit to town Saturday.
• •   •
Harvey Wallace of tbe staff of the
Canadlsn Bank of Commerce, who
left last week for Vancouver, where
be bas been transferred to the
bank's main office, waa prior to his
departure presented by George Lee
Warner, on behalf of the .members
of tbe Young People's association, of
which, he was president, with a
handsome  pair of   gold   cuff  links.
• •   •
Mrs. A. S. Ritchie of Procter spent
Saturday in the city.
• *   •
Mrs. M. L. Bruce of Band Point,
Idaho, and her mother motored to
Nelson yesterday and were guests at
the home on the north shore of
Mr. end Mrs. 8. N. Rose.
• •   »
Mrs.   Bcott  Wardle  of   Longbeecb
spent Saturday In Nelson.
w • •
A marriage of considerable Interest to Nelsonites occurred ln Vancouver, the bride's mother having
ou several occasions visited friends
ln  Nelson.
Masses of white chrysanthemums
and shaded pink gladioli banked
around the chancel formed the setting at Holy Trinity church on Wedneeday evening for tbe marriage of
Muriel Gertrude, only daughter of
Capt. and Mrs- John Barberle, 8707
West Thirty-fifth, *h Albert Edward
Osborougb, son of Mr. and Mrs. A.
Osborough, Holywood, County Down,
Ireland. Rev. Charles B. Clarke officiated at the service, which was
fully choral, while A. Sloan supported the groom, and tbe ushers were
Harry Mantle and Sidney Wiggles-
worth.
Tbe bride, given ln marriage by
ber father, was lovely ln a gown of
white georgette and net. The bodice
of tbe dress, reaching to the knees,
was of hand-made rouleaux of georgette with a brilliant dlmantc belt,
and tbe skirt was of very full
flounced   net   over   white   chiffon.
Her sltpj>*rs were of white brocade
and ber veil of whit* French net
and laoe waa arranged from a e*jr-
ooet embroidered lh seed pearls
caught at tb* back of th* bead wtth
dusters of orange blossoms aad
falling to the floor where It formed
a train. Bhe carried a ahower bouquet of whit* rosebuds and Illy of
tho valley.
, Ipse Dorothy Oibeon, the bride's
4nly attendant, was charming in a
gown of eprtoot satin mad* tm long
lines wltb a close-fitting bodice and
softly flaring skirt. A Japquatt* of
dark brown velvet, a bat of the
same abad* trimmed wltb brown
satin ribbon, apricot aatlh slippers
and long beige gloves completed ber
costume, and sbs carried a bouquet
of   bronse   and   yellow   chrysantbe-
Mrs. Barber chose a gown of black
and gold old lace over black chiffon, tbe bodice fashioned with a
yoke of pale beige chiffon and the
sleeves having tiny beige chiffon
cuffs. Her hat was of black felt
and Ber corsage bouquet wu of
yellow roses. Hrs. R. Adams, aVit
of tbe groom, wore becoming black
satin with a black hat and wore a
corsage bouquet of deep pink roses.
A reception wu held following
the ceremony at tbe bome of tbe
bride's parents, where quantities of
autumn flowers and bright colored
leaves were used to decorate tbe
rooms. The bride's table, which wu
centered with a three-tier wedding
cake embedded ln yellow tulle, was
decorated with silver vssss of yellow rosebuds and lighted with tall
yellow tapers, Mrs. T. H. Burgess
snd ' Mrs. W. O. Rowan presided.
wfille Mrs. J. A. McDonald cut tbs
ices. Assisting in serving were Miss
Marlon MatUx. Mlas Lillian Goddard,
Miss Bertha Goddard, Miss Mary
Gardener, Miss Ida McNeill and Miss
Alma  Stewart.
Mr. and Mrs. Osborough left later
for Portland, the bride travelling ln
tailored Burgundy red flecked
wool dress with a hat of the ume
material. Her coat wu of black
chunga cloth wltb deep squirrel
collar and cuffs and . her accessories
were brown. On their return they
wlll reside on Weet Fortieth.
• •   •
His honor Judge Nlsbet snd bis
eldest daughter, Miss Nancy, are
leaving on Thursday for Toronto,
going by way of Spokane and Chicago, and expect to be away for
about two months. Judge Thompson of Cranbrook wlll act ln Judge
Nlsbet's  plsoe  during  bis  absence.
• •   •
R. O. Oscarson and hts brothers,
William and E. Oscarson, all of
Erie, were recent choppers in town,
• *   *
John Fraser, Carbonate street, left
Saturday morning via the C. P. R.
for  a Visit to  the  coast  cities.
• •   •
James Anderson and Mrs. Anderson of Vancouver, former residents
of Kaslo, were la town Saturday,
and left via the C. P. R- for Creaton.
• •   •
Mri. William Gray of Salmo was
a city shopper Saturday.
• •   •
Mrs. K. Ore of Wynndel spent
Saturday in town.
• •   •     .
H. L. Rawllngs, former contractor
of Nakusp and now of Victoria, la
a  city  visitor.
«   •   •
Mr. and Mrs. George Helbecque ct
Bonnington have returned from
motor trip to Banff, Lake Louise
and Calgary. In tbe latter plaoe
tbey visited their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. 8. D. Fleteh'
er. They wer$ accompanied on the
trip by Mr. and Mrs. .Alfred Legault of Greenwood, who hare slnoe
returned  to thetr home.      '
• •   •
Mrs. John MUross of Vsncouver, a
former resident of Trail, waa In
town Saturday on her way to visit
ber parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. McLeod,
In Klmberley.
• •   •
Mrs. R. W. Diamond of Trait wu
a recent shopper in  the  city.
ROTH BLENDED TO PERFECTION
N.6
BADMINTON RACQUETS
BENTLEY'S AND ATLAS RACQUETS
High Class Racquets for Fast Play
ATLAS
Champion  $ 5.00
BENTLEY'S
Winner $3.50
Royal     5.50
Flash     6.50
Ace    7.50
Speed King  _ 9.00
Aero Flight .... 16.00
Royal
Eclipse
Star ....
Amco ..
Bini  ..:.
Silver Fern
6.00
8.00
8.00
9.00
14,00
15.00
Racquet Presses ! $ .75 !j
No. 1 James Badminton Shuttles, doz    4.00
Hlpperson Hardware
Company, Limited
Look for the Red Hardware Store     '
Phone 497 Box 414
C. B. Garland,
lut night on a
Victoria.
Mill  street,  left
business   trip   to
Miss Sybil Archibald, Stanley
atreet, apent yeaterday In Grand
Forks, tbe guest of Miss Helen
Archer, matron of the Grand Forks
hospital.
• •   •
Mr.   and   Mrs.   Harold   Clark   and
their son Bob, who havs spent tbe
put week in Nelson u guests at
the bome of Mr. Clark's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Oeorge M. Clark, Cedar
street, left for their home In Clay-
burn . Saturday night.
• • •
Saturday afternoon Miss Sybil McLean, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. D.
McLean, entertained a number of
her young friends at a theater
party, which was followed by supper and games at.her home on Carbonate atreet. Rose and white asters
were used to decorate the rooms.
Mrs. McLean was assisted ln serving
by Mrs. Alex Sutherland and Miss
Bertha Sutherland. Sybil's Invited
guests were Misa Mary McDougaU,
Mlu Laura McEwan, Mlu Margaret
Oulmont, Mlu Jerry Mann, Mlu
Jessie Lutes, Mlu Joy Ferguson, Mlu
Doris Tralnor, Mlu Katbleen Tralnor, Mln, Daisy Norrls, Miss Lorraine
Ferguson, Miss Kathleen Manahan,
Mlu Jeannette Leriger, Satnlg Pa-
paslan, Mlu Lois Mansfield, Jackie
McDougall, Mlu Jessie Richardson,
Mlu Margaret Merkley snd Mlu
Margaret  Sutherland.
• •   •
Recently    Mrs.    Joseph    Sturgeon
and Mrs. M. J. Vigneux entertained
at an Informal tea in compliment
to Mrs. Harold Clark of Clayburn.
B. C, who, with her husband and
son, wu the house guest of Mr.
and Mrs. George M. Clark, Cedar
street.
ARCHDEACON GRAHAM TELLS OF THE
GREAT DECISION MADE BY RECENT
GENERAL SYNOD OF THE ANGLICANS
Office of Primate  Enlarged  and  Primate  Chosen   From
WWer Field; Provincial Synods Retain Powers;
National Commission Reports
Tbat ln Its action to reduce tbe ^neighbor diminished the foroe of the
Isolation ot clergy ln ears of spersgf^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
settlement, by making arrangements
for occasions! meetings and conferences, tbe general synod of the .Anglican Church of Canada acted on
lines long ago developed by the rurl-
dacinal chapter of Nelson, with its
system of quarterly meetings, and
annual retreats, wu brought out
Sunday by Ven. Archdeaoon Fred H.
G?abam. wbo twice addressed his
congregation of St. Saviour's on topics connected wtth the recent Anglican national gathering. The Nelson
deanery Wu now cloee to its 300th
meeting, he pointed out.
Taking u his text the proverb.
"Where no counsel is the people
fall, but ln the multitude of coun-
Kllors there ls safety," the arch-
tfetcon pointed out that the general
eynod, "developed ln tbe wisdom of
Oo0 out of own autonomous church,"
not only protected*'the Anglican
body from hasty or undigested action, but wu largely responsible for
Ite *lee and consistent and' steady
progress.
. At the recent gathering U out of
_S archbishops and bfehopP in actios office were in attendance, tile
two not ln attendance being ill,
while two bishoprics were vacant,
though since filled. The senior metropolitan. Archbishop Worrell of
Navo Scotia, presided over joint
sessions of the upper and lower
housea with a commanding ability
and a vigor that belled hla advanced
yeara Over 300 clerical and lay
delegates composed the lower house.
FILLY   REPRESENTATIVE     *
Among outstanding characteristics
of the recent general synod, Archdeacon Oraham first emphasized Its
representative character, pointing
out tbat the grwt cities, smaller
cities, small villages, sparse settlements, missionary dioceses, and Indian fields were all well represented.
It wu also representative, be stated, of sll achcools of thought In the
Canadian church. Among the delegates were outstanding exponents of
tbe high church school of thought,
and also outstanding men In the
low church movement. Yet never
a word wu spoken In a party spirit,
It bad been uld with truth thst
befon "our church" could consider
union with other churches lt should
consider unity within Itself. Tbe
recent gathering, he stated, wu marvellously united.
RECORD .MADE
Another characteristic of the gen
eral synod, uld the archdeacon, wu
that lt was Intensely In earnest. One
reeult of this wu that, while all
were prepared to listen to any
speaker making a concise and logical submission, it held down any
who were Inclined to prepared .oratorical effort, and u -one man insisted on speakers keeping to the
point. Because It was tn earnest
and insisted on minding Its business, a vol up." of business such u
no other general synod had ever
accomplished wu done, and very few
loose ends were left to be dealt with
afterward.
A dominant fact wu the submission of tbe report ot tbe Anglican
national commission, which for three
years wu engaged In a survey of
the whole Anglican church ln Canada, Its three members, tbe bishop
of Niagara, Canon Gould, secretary
of the Mtwlonary Society of tbe
Church of England ln Canada, and
Chancellor Gisborne, chancellor of
the diocese of Ottawa, freed of all
other duties, giving their times and
efforts exclusively to this work. The
complete report wu published ln
book form, but a condensed report
giving the main findings and recommendations of the commission.
was what wu before the general synod. These recommendations gave
rise to the great bulk of the general
synod's outstanding deliberations.
TEN  COMMANDMENTS
Before dealing with the action of
tbe general synod on the recommendations of the national commission, Archdeacon Graham said he
wished to explain a matter clouly
related to Kootenay. diocese, and ln
regard to which be wu misquoted,
rather amusingly, on the wires, that
of the form of the ran Commsnd-
mente. When the revised prayer-
book wu brought out, It was widely
accepted by tbe mother church, but
wu rejected by the house of commons, which, as the mother church
wu the state church, had the final
word, this rejection being most disappointing to the archbishop of
Canterbury, Dr. Davidson, who had
labored   prodigiously   In   connection
A.   stlmmel   of
o  town  yeeter
Mr.  and   Mrs.   B.
Trail  were  visitors
day.
Miss Lois Sheffield, SUlca street,
spent yesterday  In Spokane.
• •   •
H. H. Harper of Gray  Creek  left
yesterday for Montreal, where lie
will join bis two children, wbo sre
arriving from England.
• •   • ^H^
Mrs. Oeorge Murray wu a recent
visitor to Nelson from Trail,
• •   •
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Oeorge  Slmms,  018
Latimer street, have taken up residence at T14 Silica street.
• •   •
Among recent visitors to town wu
Mre. I. W. Haulwood of Trail.
ess
Mlu   Irene   Edmondson,   Victoria
strut, spent the week-end tn Trail,
where she attended tbe first of a
series of Cinderella dances.
a  e   a
Tbe manse of St. Paul's United
church wu the scegie of a very
successful tea and bake sale Satur-
command ^^^^^^^^^^^^m
JEWISH   ELABORATION
Another instance of obvious addition wu in tbe commandment
against coveting, tbe essential part
Of which was "Thou shalt not
covet." But tbe Jews elaborated
tbls, Archdeacon Graham aald, spect-
fylng a list of prohibited property
ln tbe order of its importance ln
tbelr eyea, making It le u expanded
almost amusing. First In the list
wu a man's houae—comparatively
few having houses—while next wu
a nun's wife, the wife coming second because not so rare, every man
having one. Thsn came the means
of work, the ox, and the means of
transportation,   the   -»..
And so down the ages the commandment came la this form, and
hi a day wben autos speeded on
tbe roads and airplanes dotted the
aky there wu still the Jewish prohibition against coveting the ox and
au, which belonged only to a primitive  state of society.
.Archdeacon Graham uld be did
dot in his comment at the sessions
uy tbe Ten Commend men t# were
out of date—u reported on the wire
—but that their utting wu out of
date.
The situation wm that certain
bishops had given permission to
tbelr clergy to uw tbe shortened
form. As the clergy had the option
of reading the Lord's summary instead of the Commandments II they
wished, the result wu that some
ceased to reed the Commandments.
Tbe situation was discussed et the
diocesan synod of Kootenay the paet
summer, and it esme before the
general synod. Archdeacon Oraham
speaking to the question.
SHORTENED FQRM
FAVORED
As a result of the discussion,
Archdeaoon Graham said, the proposal to adopt the shortened form
passed the lower house of the general synod by a large majority. Ke
uld he was told that when It
went later before tbe upper house,
composed of bishops, it also passed
with a large majority, but wu not
considered when it wu realized
this would mean a revised prayer-
book. Now tbe bishops, he uld,
did not object to the prayerbook
being revised, but did not want It
to be revised piecemeal, or untll
there wu a general revision. So tbe
final action of the bishops, sitting
u the u/per house, wu to refer
the question to themselves, u the
house of bishops, for future consideration.
But there was no question, Archdeacon Graham pointed out, aa to
the feeling of both branches of the
general synod on the matter, or as
to tbe feeling of the Anglican
church generally, that the Ten
Commandments, for the purpose of
being read In the services of the
church, should be freed from the
accretions of the old rabbinical
traditions.
A   WIDER  PRIMACY
Outstanding among tbe recommendations pf the national commission. Archdeacon Graham uld, were
thou relating to the primacy. The
put system had been that tbe four
archbishops elected a primate from
their own number, and that the
primate had a life tenure of office.
Tbe natlonal commission felt.
first, tbat there should be a greater
range of choice for the primate;
second, that the electing body should
be larger; third, that there should
be opportunity to make a change In
primate. It also recommended that
tbe office of primate be enlarged,
so u to have more influence ln
the   church.
The bishops themselves, the archdeacon uld, changed tbe mode of
electing the primate, so u to have
the primate chosen by an electoral
college composed of the bishops and
representatives of the clergy and
laity. Future primates also would
be chosen not from the archbishops
alone, but from all tbe bishops of
the church. Some time the field
might be still further enlarged, the
archdeacon Intimated, but it was
considered wise at this time to
atop  with  this extension.
There wu also .assent to the view
tbat tbe primate should be relieved
from the ordinary epfscopal duties
arising from the charge of a diocese, so u to enable him to give
superylelon to the church. To accomplish this. It wu felt there
should be a prlmatlal see, the work
of which would be light, comparatively   speaking,   that   tbe   primate
j.-.-———,-———   i
cJVfeagher'sSc>
607 Baker St. Phone 200
STORE NEWS
Lodel Coats
Luxuriously
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A wonderul showing of all that is new and smart
in the better class coats. Coats with a continent-wide
reputation such as De! Monte Hickey, Shagmoor and
Ianbourne makes. Imported cloths with the new pebbly finish, also novelty French mixed cloths that are
exclusive with us. Large collars of such furs as Beaver, Fox, Wolf, Ringtail Opossum, Chinese Weasel,
Kolinsky, Squirrel and Alaska Sable. Rich .bilk linings
and the finest quality tailoring. The prices, too, are
reasonable for such fine coats.
EACH   f59.50, $69.50, to f97.50
n connection j could give the moet of his time to
with the revision. In Cknada. how- oversight of toe church ln general,
ever, the Anglican cuhrch was under j Archdeacon   Graham  uld   tbe  mat
no such handicap, and wu able, to
accept and utilize the great wealth
of new liturgical material la tbe
new   prayerbook.
As published In 1928, the new
prayerbook contained a shortened
form of the Ten Commandments
without the allusions that Were local and tbat bad in tbe course of
time become archaic. For Instance,
"Thou ahalt not bear falu wltneu,"
tbe proposed form of tbe commandment against bearing false witness.
was no doubt the form employed by
Moses. But the Jews ln the course
of time came to believe that no one
outside their own racial limits wu
entitled to consideration, and so
they limited the application of this
commandment to "thy neighbor."
Now In a broad sense a man's neighbor wu anyone at all, but in the
narrow sense meant by the Jews It
wu applicable to themselves alone.
Restricting this application to one's
day afternoon which wu given by
the members' of the Excelsior club.
The- tea arrangements wers under
the convenershlp of Miss Eileen Mackenzie and Miss Constance Martin.
Dahlias, with pink predominating,
graced tbe living rooma, while the
tea table wu centered wltb a bowl
qf mauve and pink sweet peu and
pink tapers. Mrs. A. T. Richard
presided and the urvlteurs Included
Mrs. Louis Choquette, Mlu Grace
Laughton, Miss Nellie McKenzle and
Mrs- W. Anderson. Tbe bake table
wu la charge of Mrs. W. M Cameron, while Mlu Margaret Arthur
dlspoud of fancy-work articles. Mrs.
E, Boyes acted as cuhler.
•   •   •
George Moines of Wynndel spent
tbe week-end in town.
* •   •   •
O. L. Thompson of Bonnlngton
and hU daughter Elizabeth were
city vlslton Saturday,
ter of the prlmatlal  ue  was  being
considered,   and   many    places   had
been suggested for It,  but one  had
not  yet  been  chosen.
SANCTION   OF   BINHOPS
In connection with the election of
bishops, also, some change was
made. Hitherto tbe clergyman chosen
for this office by a dloceee was
subject to sanction to by bouse of
bishops of the ecclesiastical province ooncerned. In future the choice
must also be sanctioned by tbe
house of bishops of all Canada before It would be effective.
Another recommendation of the
national commission, the archdeacon
stated, was that the rights and
powers of the general synod should
bis enlarged. This departure, however, was not accepted,' It ■ being
felt that the provincial synods
knew better bow to deal with diocesan boundaries ahd with other
problems now coming under the
provincial synods, as they were
nearer to  them.
In tbe matter of salaries of the
clergy, it was felt tbat any clergyman who had been five years In
orders ln cbarge of a parish ought
to have a minimum stipend of
$1500. It wu pointed out tbat there
were clergy who received only $800
snd #900 a year. In most dioceses
there has been an effort to bave a
minimum of $1000, and ln the Kootenay dlocue, tbe archdeacon said,
thla wm being gradually accomplished. Along with this subject
wae considered tbat of providing
transportation expenses for the
clergy, tbls evoking a sympathetic
discussion.
rUTURE PENSION
SCHEME
The question of a general pension
scheme for the clergy also eame up.
Thla wu clearly a scheme for tbe
future. Archdeacon Graham reported. The first principle wu that It
Social Events
of Trail City
TRAIL,    B.    C.    Oct.    4.-Mrs.    N.
Wllmea entertained st a charmingly appointed tea yesterday. Mlu
May Stewart attended the door and
Mlu Viola Stewart assisted in receiving tb* guests. Mrs. 8. C. Stewart and Mrs. N. Ruelle aulsted
Mrs. Wllmea in serving.
e   »* a
Mr. and Mra. Thomas Patterson
ahd two sons, who left Trail about
three month! ago for the east, re
turned this week from Montreal
and have taken up residence on
Third avenue, Trail Eut.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil H. Burgess
are apendlng tbe week-end at tbelr
summer home at Willow Point.
They will have u Uieir guests Mr.
and  Mrs.  F.  W. Jackson.
• •   •
F. Bergestrom of tbe Oranite
road, Nelson, wu visiting tn tbe
city Friday. He was accompanied
on his return by his daughter,
Miss Mildred Bergestrom. wbo hu
been the guest of Mrs. John Beck-
man, Hendry street, for the put
two weeks.
• •   •
Mr. and Mrs- A. R. McCarthy returned after a few days' visit In
Nelson Friday.
• •   •
Mrs. James Coupland motored to
Nelson Saturday on. Community
Chest business.
• •   *
Mr.   and    Mrs.    Dan    McKee    are
apendlng a short holiday at Greenwood. Mr. McKee is on % hunting
trip.
• •   •
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Foster
and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Davles of
Vancouver are Trail visitors tbls
week-end.
• •   •
Mrs. A. M. Lang, Mrs. W. E. E
Monypenny, Mrs. C. o. Bowden ot
Vancouver, Mlu Catherine Lang and
Douglu .Lang motored to Nelson
yesterday Mrs. Lang will spend a
few days u the guest of Mrs. John
Stobo of Nelson. Miss Lang and
Douglas Lang left yesterday afternoon for Kamloops for a vacation.
While there they will visit Miss
Laura   McCormack.
• •   •
Mrs. James dimming of Syringa
Creek   ls   the   guest   of   her  son-in-
law   and   daughter,   Mr.   and   Mrs.
Lawrence   L.   Lawner,   Government
road.
• •   •
William Robinson and Richard
Ransome of Spokane, wbo arc recent resident* of Trail arrived here
Prlday for a week-end vlalt with
frienda. They were accompanied by
William Jones also of Spokane. Tomorrow they wlll be guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Ransome of Frultvale before returning to Chewelah
where they  are   employed.
• •   •.
Mlu Janet Aitken wu guest at
a surprise party lut evening after
choir practise at First Presbyterian
church hall, wben John Allison
on behalf of the choir members
made a presentation. .Songs featured the evening's program and
delightful refreshments were aerved.
Mrs. J. B. Doig and Mrs. D. 21c
Cabe presided at the table. Tbe
gueets attending were Mrs. James
Thompson, Mrs. Robert Livingstone,
Mrs. J. B. Doig, Mrs. William Robertson Mrs. D. McCabe. Mrs. A
Pearson, Mr. and Mrs. John Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. John Allison, Mlu Carrie Millar, Mlsa Janet
Aitkin, David Benton and Roy
Hayman.
Mlu Mabel MacKay wss a charming hostess to a number of Trail's
younger set when sbe entertained
at . a party at tbe bome of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. MacKay lut nlgbt. The rooms and supper table were attractively decorated with a profusion of autumn
(lowers. Games and dancing were
enjoyed. Mrs. MacKay, aulsted by
Mrs. J. R. Gray, Mlu Annie Hall
and Mlu Jean Davidson, served
refreshments. Invited guests were
Mlu Kathleen Tyson, Mlu Margaret
Burton, Mlu Lilllth McLeod, MIm
vllle. Mlu Lorraine Flynn,' Mlu
Blanche Hall, Mlu Mildred Mac-
Gladys Alty, Mlu Marian Sommer-
Key and Messrs. Arthur Kelly,
James Donohue, Ralph Temple,
Boddte Stuart, Raymond McLeod,
Gordon Balfour, Cbarlu Lundie Jack
McDiarmid, Walter Weir and Wll
fred  McDonald.
• •    •
Mr, and Mrs. John Whltelow and
family of Comox arrived In Trail
Thursday and are the guests of
Mra. Whltelow-a sister, Mrs. Jamu
Kldd- They are house guests today
cf Mrs. Alex McLuckle.
must be on an actuarial basis, so
as to be fully sustaining. When it
came in it must be a scheme without a loophole, and lt must aba be
fair to those whom it was intended
to benefit. The scheme, after being
once Inaugurated, would be applicable only to those under 30 years,
but aa ths clergy Included men of
all ages,' a sum must be raised to
take care of the older clergy, who
were "accrued liabilities," or for
their  widows  or   other   dependents.
It wu estimated that a capital
sum of $4,000,000 was needed to
start the scheme, of which about
$1,000,000 wu in hand. The general
synod spent some time considering
the best way to raise this sum, snd
It wu conceded this matter lay
chiefly in the hands of the lalt:
The laymen, however, were intensely
In earnest in thla matter.
AID   YOl'NG   INCUMBENTS
Conditions In the life of the
clergy were also examined ln a sympathetic way. In tbe cue of young
clergy, pitched out ou to the frontier, to find tbelr own parishioners,
lt wu found tbat special problems
arose, and sometlmea mistaken
[■ourse5 were followed. It wu decided that in future these young
men should hawe five years competent  supervision.
-Another angle wu tbe case of tbe
clergy wbo were isolated, and were
often for long periods without in-
tereouree with other clergy, sometimes growisa morbid under thetr
responsibilities.
In this connection was tbe decision of tbe general conference, re
ferred to above, by which meettn'
and conferences will be held fro:
time to time, with the clash of
.mind on mind, this providing both
mental and spiritual refreshment.
Trail News of the Day
TRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS. IN-
surance. Notary. .J. D. Anderson. Trail. (7092)
CABINET   COUNCIL   MEETS
OTTAWA,   Ont.,  Oct.   4— (By   tho
Canadian Press i — Cabinet council
had a thru hours' sitting Saturday. At the conclusion of the, meeting, it wu announced there wu
no statement to make. No appointments were made at the sitting.
POPE CALLS ON
PEOPLE TO WORK
TO AID JOBLESS
Encyclical   Issued  Calls  for
New Crusade Mercy
and Relief
VATICAN crTY, Oct. 4. AF) —
Pope Plus XI. lut nlgbt Issued an
encyclical ln which be called qn
the world to Join la a new erunde
of mercy for tbe relief of unemployed millions who, be said, are
the victims of economic distress
caused ln part by tbe "unbridled
race   for  armaments."
The encyclical, called "Nora Impendent"—new things are upon us—
wu written by tbe pope Friday, tba
day on which tbe church celebrates
the feast of guardian angels. Hunger, want and the menacing "plague'*
of idleness, tbe holy father said,
are caused largely by tbe armament
raoe Inspired by natlonal rivalries
snd resulting ln the dissipation of
enormous wealth.
He instructed tba bishops and
other church authorities to organise
relief and directed all men to contribute to the support of thla charitable endeavor.
Five Teams Will Play
in American League
CHICAOO, Dl., Oct. 4—William F.
Grant, of Kansas City, yutsrday
wu re-elected president and secretary-treuurer of tbe American
Hockey league, Thomu J. Shaugh-
nessey of Chicago again wu named
vice-president.
It wu indicated the league would
operate thla season u a five-club
circuit with Chicago, Kansas City,
Buffalo, St. Louls-Mlnneapolis snd
Tulsa.
A plan is being worked out to
combine the Minneapolis and St.
Louis   Clubs.
Plumbing • Heating
Phons 160 for prompt and experienced work on your plumbing    and    beating    requirements.
NELSON  PLUMBING
ft    HEATING   CO.
GEO. BRANT
"It's Safe Because It's Pasteurized"
You Should Drink
A PINT A DAY
Milk is the most perfect
food known to mankind.
It contains every food element necessary to keep
the body in repair. In milk
are the five vitamins imperative to health. They
^^^^^^^^^^^ promote vitality and ward
off disease—Calcium to maintain sound, white teeth
is contained in milk—Protein to repair worn-out tissue—Mineral salts to enrich the blood stream.
You should drink at least a pint of Curlew Milk
each day. It is purest and most healthful because it
is Pasteurized.
CURLEW CREAMERY
PALM DAISIES, Ud.
ICE CREAM BUTTER tflUK
ALL  PERFECTLY  PASTEURIZED   PRODUCTS
 G% Sfolaon BatUj Nema
I ,._- mcr-alng eicapt Sunday Dy Haaa Publishing Oam-
panir.  Limited. Neleon. ■   0.
Member ol Canadian Ram leaned wtre tarn, all WW.
Advarttalag  nla earda  and A. B. C. statetaente ot elgaitttoa
malled oa isgusas, or me.  be aean at tha effloe of an amrtlslas
'     t tba Oanadlaa Dally Newspapers' «aeodatlo_.
By mall (oountry). pac
far  rate
SUBSCBIFTION RATES
Br mall tout), par jaar —
Outelde Canada, par month
Delivered, par weak
Hr roar    . ,, .,,
Parable la advance.
Member Audit Bureau oJ Circulation.
too
1S.0O
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. 7J0
.     M
MAO
MONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1981
Keeping Wages High As Possible
There an two school* of thought cm the wage question, and the division between them it so sharp thtt
they can scarcely be reconciled.
One school holds that wages must come down, because commodities have come down. The other declares that to bring down wages would only result in
reduced purchasing power and consequently would accentuate the depression.
Theories are not of much value in matters of thia
tort.   Facts have to be faced.
The only solution actually ia to do the best we can.
Where wages can be maintained on a prosperity scale
then they should not be reduced. In every case they
should be kept as high at possible.
But if an industry cannot continue to operate on the
existing scale of wages then it is obviously far better
to make a redaction in wages, keep the industry going
and keep its employees at work than to close down and
throw employees into the bread line or into relief
camps.
With wheat at 50 cents it is beyond argument thtt
a farmer cannot pay as high wages to farm help as if
wheat were atx$l. And it is better for the farmer to
hire men at a reduced scale of pay and harvest hit crop
than to leave the men unemployed and the crop to
perish.
If canned fish will only bring half of its normal price
in the world market, then it's better for a fisherman to
get a lower price for his fish than to have the canneries
close down and take away his source of employment.
Each cate mutt be dealt with on its merits. Employers who can do so owe it to their employees and the
country to maintain wage scales; thoee who are forced
to make a cut or to close down, or go out of business,
thould keep wages as high as possible. Quite apart
from any sentimental considerations, it is in the interest
ef the country as a whole that wages, purchasing power
and the standard of living should be kept at high as is
practicable.
But wage-earners have their duties to perform, alao.
Reasonableness and common sense make it evident that
industry cannot pay out for materials, overhead and
-wages more than it takes in for its product And it is
better to work for $3 or $4 a day than to walk the
streets becauae someone can't pay $6 or $6.
Employees can assist in bringing about a return to
prosperity in other ways. They can reduce waste, in
supplies, in materials and in time.
Increased efficiency in operations reduces costs and
makes it easier for concerns to sell their products or
services at prevailing prices and makes it possible to
pay out more in wages.
It is a time of all times for cooperation and goodwill
between employers and employees.
Improvements—Not New Roods
Relief work is to be concentrated upon the improvement of existing highways rather than upon building
new roads.
Hon. Rolf Bruhn's decision in this respect is sound.
There is need of a tremendous amount of modernization
of roads now in use throughout the rpovinee and relief work, which is now getting under way, will result
in widening, improvements of grade and reductions of
curvatures.
Such improvements will be immediately beneficial
and will get many miles of highway into condition for
aome form of hard surfacing which must be don as
soon as possible, in order both to provide for better
travel conditions and alto to cut down maintenance
costs.
A Chance for Canada
Sir Thomas Lipton, gallant sportsman, and one of the
world's most prominent of merchant princes has passed
beyond. Aside from the prominence attained in amassing millions of dollars from an humble beginning Sir
Thomas will go down in history as the man who spent
millions to lift a yachting mug and in 20 years of effort failed to reach his goal.
His last attempt to lift the historic yachting trophy
was a heart breaker. He built a wonderful boat, sailed
it across the Atlantic, and then taw it defeated by the
American speeder. But Sir Thomas had lost the race
for so many times that sportsmen in the United States
were backing him to win. They wanted to see his effort* rewarded.
And so Lipton passed on and tt is almost unlikely
that a challenge will come again from across the ocean.
The cup is held by an American yacht built by an American syndicate. The great handicap against Sir
Thomas was the fact that the rules made competition
possible for Britain only as she Bailed ber entry across
the sea.
Here is a chance for Canada now. Canada has a lot
ef wealthy sportsmen. Canada has sailors of yachts
and fishing boats equal to any in the world. Canada
has ship builders as good as can be found anywhere.
Why not a Canadian syndicate? Why not a Canadian
yacht? The barrier of having to sail the Atlantic to
enter the race could thusly be hurdled and the American
ships given closer competition. Because Lipton has
died international yacht raring for the historic mug
ehould not be forgotten.
Ohmy, a circus star of 80 yeart ago, who took his
name from the exclamations of his audience whan he
performed his trapeze feats, has just died at Blackpool,
England. His real name wat Joseph Smith, and he was
77 years of age. He appeared before Queen Victoria
in 1877 and later before the present Ring and Queen
of England.
Bin WLtOK BAU.  KIWI. -SHOW. B.  C - MOWAT MOWO**.  UI1IMB 5, WI*
Seen and Heard
In If ELSON
"O. J.
(Br t. B c.)
8." sang hla ea»<
K taturdar'a laeue. He
baa earned an admirably, ao waH In
tan* tbat It la wltb moctaaoa that
"On -Mta tpot" la thrown Into Ma
dieoarda tor tbe tana being. _ow-
ever, "On ttie Spot" haa baaa "taken
for a ride" ao we are baok again In
Belaon. Bert ot a reincarnation ot
"J. B. a"
...
It ww Hick Mamer the taaned
Spokane air pilot, who aald at Vernon: "Anyone who thlnka ha la It
par cant better than any Canadian
la a a  liar." Aad It made i
great Ut wtth  tha crowd.
...
TiiwuilHj lata hgrneje af«er a hail*
am is x hard Job. Bin a tellow eaa
alwata talk about hla holldaya atft
hi.   adventures.
...
Bar l-rteaoe, I learned while away
that Oeorge floury and Oeorge Dill
ot Neleon oould go back to Vernon
and run for aldermen aad ba as-
aured ot election. Tbey wen on
huntlnc trip la th. okanagan elty
(I should aay oountry) but hunting
waa ao good la Vernon they .tared
there.
...
Aad thaaa two boya proved good
"grouaeaa? They ahot several while
travelling bete aaa Edgewood and
Vernon. Toura truly helped eat tbem
on the roadaide beside a babbling
brook. It waa lucky we did oo. I
learned afterward that certain grouae
were out of aaaaon In the okanagan.
Of courae tha onea the boya ahot
wen la aaaaon.
...
If yon ever Imagined you were
going through a anowatorm oa a
warm, aunny September afternoon
all you had to do wae to follow tbe
Din oar along the Okanagan hlfhway near Lumby. Oeorge Fleury
wa. plucking the grouee. The faater
barrage waa a "plucky" dembnetra-
UOB.
...
Ken Fish, formerly of Nelaon, waa
enjoying a haircut in a Vernon
barber ahop. Art Oodfny, formerly
of Nelaon, aaya hla telephone service
le tke beat la the world. At Pentlcton Oeorg-e Kemmerling, formerly of
Nelion, wae a buey nun during the
"main line" traffic rata. And William Myera of Nelaon waa there trying to And a gnvel pile.
...
Kelowna waa a busy place. Did not
maet a Ndaontte there. Down Oliver
war every fanner sella ointeloupee
and tomatoee from a little atall ln
front of hla acreage. In fact the
fruit waa going to waete on aome
farme.
...
At Vernon 1 paid 33 centa for
three large loupe. At Oliver J
thought I ahould do well. But I
looked like a tourist. They wanted
25 oents for two canteloupes then.
But after I protested the fanner offered ma about 109 pounda for 60
cate.
... i
At Osoyooa the customs man did
not search my baggage for liquor.
But he waa curious about a bottle
of ginger-ale. It waa Okanagan ginger
air and I offered to give him the
bottle. But he aald they made better
stuff at home.
...
In Spokane Harry Ooe_ waa Interested la the beer vote ln Nelaon.
Re waa alao Intonated ln Canadian
currency. And Oonatable Moss of
the Spokane police force wsa Inquiring about provincial ottleeta la hla
dlatrtct, eepeclally Mr. Dunwoody,
now at the roast, and Oonatable
Henly, formerly of Salmo. Motorcycle Patrolman Anderaon waa keen
upon a hunting expedition he waa
taking into the Cariboo. When theae
Spokane fallows go hunting they do
It right. They planned to travel In a
car and trailer. The trailer waa ln
shape of a house. They juat lived ln
the contraption which waa fitted
with everything but a bathtub.
...
Aad ln Spokane I learned that
George Oady of Trail knows aa many
people there ee he does ln Trail.
And how he oan talk to a policeman when In difficulties! But let
Oeorge tell tbat one. And If be does
not tell lt all Billy MOllaky wtll
put tke anxious inquirer right.
...
Don Manly of Orand Forks, secretary ot tha board of trade therein
llkea etrplenrag. He la going to fat
a machine soma day ... "If i
can find something to use for money," ao he remarks.
...
But of what interest to the reading
.public I. all this chatter? WeU you
wMl have to put up with lt that's
all. And down In Vemon I met the
chief of police. Chief eletke. He
boasts that he la the oldest chief of
police In any police servloe In Brltlah Oelumbla. And Chief Clerke
knowa hla horsea. He rode on. all
through tkt air pageant. He bed
eome nice things to aay about Nelson. He recently visited hen to pick
up a couple prlaonera. With the
mountles, provincials and city police
officers Vernon without Doukhobon
to contend with haa almoat aa many
police olficera as we have ln Nelaon
Song  Writer—"Vine—twine—moon—croon—pent  house
—rent house."
Scottish Place Namea In Canada
And wall be eeein' you . ..
AUNT HET
Then li an lntereaUuf study In
thii subject, for it implies history
it well ss feofrapfcy. Tbeie Is s
tendency In ths ttaroeiend to tfctnk
thst people ot Scottish Mood form
a large part of Canada 6 population.
This Is hardly true, especially during recent years. In soms pqits the
percentage 1* very small, owing to
the hssvy immigration from other,
countries for a period of several'
But it ta stUl a fact, that,
.Scottish place-names sre numerous
tn every province, with ths exception of Quebec which wss settled
almost entirely by tbe French.
There are historical reasons for
theae facts. In the early years of
the nineteenth century, the Highland clearances forced many of the
crofters to see* new homes. Lord
Selkirk led a band of these by wsy
of Hudson Bay to what, ln 1812,
wss unknown land. There Is plentiful evidence of their arrival, snd
communities bearing familiar names
appear along the Bed river near
whst Is now Winnipeg. Selkirk, St.
Andrews, KUdonan, Balmoral ere s
few of these.
But the evidence Is even stronger
when we examine the east, embracing Nova Scotia, Prince Id-
ward Wand snd Cape Breton. Owing to the failure of the potato
crop, hundreds of families migrated
from Lewie, Bkye, snd other parts
of the Hebrtdea snd Highlands. So
we find such names ss these occurring with frequency: Inverness,
Glencoe, New Olaagow, Argyle, Caledonia, Dalhousle, Glengarry, Lorne,
Torryhurn, Athol, Alton. Dundee,
Perth, Clyde, New Annan.
About tbe middle of the century
there wss another migration. This
wss before Confederation ln 1887.
snd people ln the maritime provisoes spoke of "going to Canad*"
The inducement was rich crown
land almost free, and thousands
availed themaelvee of the offer. It
was before the dsys when rail'
roads hsd penetrated the newer
settlements. What arrests our attention la the extent to which these
settlers again reproduced tbe names
taken from Scotland, virtually all
the above names are found In the
province of Ontario, and many more.
Tbe county of Bruce, on the shore
of Lake Huron, about 150 mllea
northwest of Toronto. If a case ln
point. Of the 18 townships we note
Lindsay, Albemsrle, Annabel, Arran,
Elderalle, Carrick, Kincardine, Bruce,
Klnlaaa. Greenock.
So also with the towns and villages of that county. We find
Holyrood, Bervle, Glamls, Dukeld,
Cargtl, Paisley, Tobermory within s
small area. With the village of
Lucknow as a oenter there ls a settlement which to this dsy retains a
strong Highland element, and Gaelic
is understood by many of ttie
younger people. Lochalsh, Landalde.
Klnlough are some of the names.
There are few finer settlements
than those ln the county of Oxford.
Certain townships where Murreys
and Mackay* prevailed sent out
famous men. Bttrlck, Klppen, Blair,
Doon, St, Morgs are ln this district.
In a few cases tbe offsprings
Have surpassed the parents ln
growth. This ls true of such flourishing cities sa Hamilton, sometimes
called the "ambitious city" as a
rival of Toronto. Fort William hu
a large foreign population. Calgary
Is outliving Its cowboy days wben
"remittance" men were too numerous. Banff has a reputation for its
hotel, scenery, and Highland games;
Oban and Braemar need to look to
their laurels if they hope to be In
the running. Other places are hut
miniatures   of    the    original.    Ayr,
Dumfries,      Strathaven.
- There are aoores of ottu
"where t ths name hae a familiar
sound to Scottish sen. One may
instance Beeforth, Culler, Nairn,
2allendar, Ba-nnockbura, Peebles,
^offatt, Kelso. Bat the above will
"ve some indication of the large
ite»t to whtoh Scottish place-
lsmss sre reproduced In Canada.
Another fine qualify in Gandhi's character ia that
h$ observes whole days of silence.
See/? 5 MUlion Cold
100 Feet Under Sea
Out In tha Bay M
ttm mllea (Nan the part of Bleat.
there la an operation tat pmrw
which cannot lall to atrlke a fa*
sponslve chord tn the Imagination
ot tha boja of yesterday who onea
reluctantly laid aside their "Treaatro
Mend" to dream of burled rlehet
and aunkan (old. When theae rlehee
amount to aeveral mllHoaa of dotlei-i
In gold, the attempte to aalni*
them are ecoompanlecT hy world Interest.
It la not plrau tald that an
Italian salvage ship la eeeklnt to
tree trom the graap of Neptune ln
the Bay of Biscay. It le tha proaalc
raid of a modern commercial world,
fire million dollars ot tt, loat when
the liner appt aank after a coin.
alon ln a fog ln 18J» ln too teet
ot water.
InWli Swedleh ateamer found
the aunkan wrack attar M equate
miles of the Bey ot Btacar had been
dragged. Defeat, however,
the ettarta of tha crew to recover
the treaaure. Then a Oerman selvage crew took a hand In tha tame
with the aame result. Finally the
Italian salvage ahlp Arttgllo came
upon tha aeene. In December, 1930,
another dlaaater Immediately con-
nected with tha flrat took place.
Tha Artlalio and Ita companion vee-
eel had. In addition to Ita work In
connection with the Egypt's fold,
heen engage, to dee-troy an eld
nunlttone carrier which had aunk
with a carta ot eaploalvea tn tba
bar .and waa a constant menace to
hipping. The Artlgllo, loaded with
explosives, blew up. Artlgllo n Is
now on tba Job.
Operettas, are proceeding on the
theory tbat the aweet way to
cover tha treaaure was to lift the
atrong room of the veaael Intact. In
order to do thla, however. It
first necessary to eut lt away
the reet ot the vessel. 71m cutting
away waa attempted by means of
exploatves, methodically cutting
great section 90 by SO fact through
tbe four decks above the treasure
room. At laat report they had eut
away all except one deck; after It la
eut away the bullion room will ba
acceaelble for the giant grapnels used
In the operation to damp thetr
steel lawe upon tha atrong room and
|lft lt to the surface.
That $50,000
Payment
SECURING A RUFF
A* "demreet Bridge South might
DM the above band In verloua ways,
depending -upon the system ha
waa using; hot the final declaration
would ba four Hearts tn aay avant
became South could not atop abort
of game wtth only three losing
carda la hla hand.
There ate four ways ln which
tht band oould ha bid. South
might call ton Heerte Initially;
If ha used aay ault bid of two
aa a forcing hid he might bid
tan Bearta Initially, with Worth
heaping the bidding open by calling
two No Trumpa, South on tha aeeond
round would bid four Bearta:
If ba used aay ault bid ot three
aa » forcing Md ha oould bid
three Bearta Initially; or he might
use tha artXMal two-Ch* hM initially and hid four Heerte after hla
partner's weakneee answer ot two
Diamonds.
At Auction bridge South would obtain an uncontested one-Heart contract.
When the hand waa played wast
___. by winning wtth tha King
aad Queen cf Diunonda; after which
ha led • third round whloh South
trumped. South then exhausted the
advene trumpa In three rounds and
led a dub. forcing out tha advene
had a ahow-down for
tour-odd.
Did thla hand entitle him to make
that much!
THE CORRECT PLAY
Mt readily could have aaved tbt
game. Whan West led tbe King ot
Diamonds (aat ahould have seen that
game could be aaved it South had
two Diamond-. laat ahould have
taken tha flrat trick with the
Aaa of Diamonds and lad the
singleton Ace of Clubs, to trick I,
returning Waat'a Diamond. Thla
play would enable Wbat to mark
last with tha singleton Ace ot
Clubs and a desire to ruff and to
trte* 4 Weat would, hav* lad a
dub. Eaat would have ruffed and
game would have been aaved.
That Body of Yours
By IASSSS W. BABTOH
THE ENEMA IS HELPFULf*. J
ale find  tha  dally   use  of  atr _
paraffin oU all that la ns pessary «i
keep tbe lateetlne actively healthy. I
A little fratt dally, aad bending!
axataleea give satlsTaotery reaulta tel
a gnat many parc^a. 1
However, It Is well to know that|
bead safely ooca a week, er three]
times ln two weeks, aa needed.
OM ef tha household remedlee
that ettat te ba going out of use
la tha old fashioned enema or -ln-
Isctlon," aa t it sometimes caliad.
Not that than are nat a number
of specially eccetructed taetnuaauta
that an being; eold for the purine, eome of which an vary help-
ful. Also tbe long tube being used
to litigate or wae_ out the large
inteatlna—colonic Irrigation—Is of
gnat help tn ridding thte bowel
of wastes and products from Inflected teeth, tonalls, and gall Madder, which often Ua than for a long
time after tha teeth, tonalla and
gall bladder have bean removed.
Why did the uee ot tha enema
go out of taw to a cooalderahle extent?
Becauae lt waa found that tta
over-uae took away aome ot tht
natural strength of tha muscles
of the large mtaatma. and thaaa
muscles became flaccid and loat
tbelr tone.
However, If enemaa ara not uaed
too often they can ba of real help
tn ridding tbe Individual ot wastaa
which even lf not potsonoua aa
was formerly thought, nevertheless
by pressure on nerve endings cf the
intestine give rise to depression
and lack of energy.
The beat method of using an Injection la putting about a table-
tpoon cf salt to two quarts of warm
water. Aa you know, thla le the ao-
lutlon that la uaed to replace blood
~han mora fluid to needed In the
blood veeeele.
Dr. Walter Alvarei telle ua tbat
an enema is a logical remedy for
eoasUpaUon because It cleans out
the lsst two or three tbat of tht
large lnteetlne (colon), where all
tbe stagnation takes place, and rt
does not upaet the as feet of small
bowel where stagnation pnotlcally
never takee place.
Now there are times wben purga-
"It's about ao you can't truat
a married woman Wo tar or a
married man too near."
Unemployment Officer
Arrives at Femie
pnuni. B. c. Oct. 4—Mr. Brookar
of Vlotoria has come to Fernie to
aaelat In tha public works office.
will take charge of tha aooountlng
relating to the unemployment camps
of the district,
Lelth, Dunfermline ara email
comparison with thoee in the homeland, while several others are neither
great nor small, auch aa Lanark,
Lauder,   Perth,   Gretna,   Sourts.
In several cases seaport, ot Scotland are alao on the water In Canada, but the reverse often occurs
owing to the Immense stretch trom
coaat to coast. There la harmony
ln the caee of St. Andrew. Tobermory. Mgln, But Saltcoata Is on
the vast prairie. Dun vegan Is hundreds of miles inland, and Allsa
Craig ls a peaceful village of Ontario.
In the province of Manitoba appear sucb names as Thornhlll.
Douglass, Carnegie, while ln Saskatchewan (where one might expect fewer traces of Scottish Influence. a« the foreign population to
numerous) tbe map shows Aber-
nethy, Troeeacha, Adair, Bigger, Cupar, Omit. Orkney, Stranraer, Stru-
an. Familer also are auch plaoas
tn Alberta farther weat—elg_ Barrhead, Alrdrle. Carstalra. Lomond. On
the western coast tn British Columbia, whtch to mora English than
Scottish, eepeclally In Victoria, atlll
we aee Catthnees, Fife, Caledonia
and Cralajellachie, where Donald A.
Smith (afterward Lord Strathcona)
drove the gold spike which connected the eaatarn and' waatem aec-
tlona of the Canadian Pacific railway.
Hy-. Arthur Meighen, member of
the Hydro Commission, tcid a meeting at Kincardine that it would not
be right to load the province wtth
the cost ot an Inquiry to determine
why a payment of M0.0O was made
to John Aird. Ha waa satisfied
that tha matter had been dealt wttb
quite satisfactorily tn a stsitement
made by the chairman of tbs commission.
There Is ona way In which to
avoid an Inquiry, and that la by
the making of a statement from ths
Hydro Commission whloh will give
all the facta and ahow to the satisfaction of the people ot thla province
Aberdeen, why It waa necessary to make thla
WO.000 payment. _.^__^^_
Fifty thousand dollars la a gnat
deal ot money. It would purchase
tha services cf several competent
men for a long period.
People an not asking anything
unree~a_a_e when they aay they
desire to know more about lt, and
the peop}_ h«ve not forgotten that
they probably would have known
nothing about It were lt not for
the Beauharnois Inquiry. Mr. Meigh-
en'a address at Kincardine did not
clean up the matter at all.
Notions in Sleep
Steep la tar from motlonleee. The
average healthy adult during dean
aleep makes aome noticeable changes
ln noslUen on an average of once
every aevan or eight minutes, it li
shown by experiments made at -the
Mellon Inatttota tor Industrial Research.
Tbe obeervatlena carried on by Dr
R. M. Johnaon ahaw that ever:
aleepar hu a repetolre cf approximately a doaen different eleeplni
positions. On a typical night ba WIU
use nearly all of them, chngtng
from one to another tram JO to no
tunas according to various aaaaa-
tlons and body lrrttatlona. The
brain to sufficiently alert to guard
tha sleeper's comfort but at the
same time the momentary dlsoom
forts are kept out of cootelouonesa.
OFFICIAL STSTtM POINIEB
NO. 19
Having In recent pointers
learned what are supporting
tricks for partner** sult-bld, we
next take up what number al
«»_> tricks Is necessary in order
ta Jruttfy a raise. Thla varies,
depending upas, -whether thr
partner has made an ortglna'
bit af ana or two ot a salt:
la the latter eaee partner hater
aa much Wronger, fewer support
lag tricks an needed.
Tha specific requirements hi
each edsa win be stated ta the
pointers whtch loHojr.
Medical Aid Given
By Radio and
Airplane
One of tbe most naarkable and
beneflclent development* in connection with tbe east Interior In Australia in araa about two mtLbon
square miles, ta tbe Aerial Medical
Service of tha Australian Inland Mie-
slon. Thla Inland Mlaelon waa bom
In tbe brain of a Presbyterian minister. Rev. John Hynn. It ministers
to tba aptrltual and physical need*
of tbe eettlera inland.
In almoat two-thirds of the Island continent there la no town of
sufficient alee to support a private
medical practitioner. For 1500 mllee
north and south, and for the aame
distance east and west, there la no
medical man tn practice. There are
about 20,000 white people scattered
over thte huge area, who live at
least 200 miles or more from hospitals and medical aid.
John flynn was tbe first to see
ln wireless and airplanes the annihilation of distance, and the possibility of an efficient medical service over vast sparsely populated
areas. Be took a map of Australia
and drew circles upon tt with a radius representing 300 mllea. Be found
than only six suoh were needed to
cover tbe whole area at preeent out.
side ordinary medical ranee. Be also
reckoned that one doctor eojulpped
with an airplane could cover sueh a
adlus. Bis reckoning proved correct.
MNKKD  BV  WI-H.LESS
WITH MMPLE TBANBMITER
After many disappointment* be
erected the first wireless station
8 AB, in an old Dodge oar, tbe engine of which supplied the power
After aeveral years of experlmer.
the Ideal Baby transmitter wss evolved which Is now revolutionising
tbe whole of the inland. This mn-
chine U r«ne man power, lt la won
ed hy foot pedsls like a bicycle
There are no batteries to get out cr
order. This transmitter has a ren?-
of a tarn hundred miles. Transmit
sian ls by Mores code. The inlanders can be taught to uee It readily.
Tlie mother station was officially
opened at Oloneurry. Queensland.
An expert Is always on duty at this
station- Bach owner of a transmitter haa a certain time allotted to
him tor sending and receiving messages. He taps them out by Moras
inlanders ar? no longer isolated, and
tbe bush la losing its dread loneliness, llie Inlanders can receive
tflephonlcally, but can at present,
transmit telegraphically only. The
owners of sets cannot only communicate with the mother station, but
also with one another. Messages
can be passed from one to another,
and so to tbe mother station, so
tbat *ny distance can be covered.
TREATS  CASE BY BADIO,
OB. It SEpIOCS, FLIES
The Australian Inl»nd Ulswon
doctor la stationed at Gloncuiry
He bu his plane and pilot. When
an Inlander falls HI or Is seriously
injured six or seven hundred mllee
*w*y, t|}e message is tapped into
Oloneurry. Ths doctor bas th«,symp-
to*a described, he prescribes wbat is
to be dons. If bs believes tbe illness is not serious be mty await a
series of bulletins on tbe patient's
progress. If the case Is serious he
at once takes to tbs air, and In a
comparatively" abort tins peys s
professions! visit.
Thirty Years Ago
(From Tbe Tribune of Oct. i.lgoi)
A hunting party composed ot
Steam. Ifusaon, Holt. Van Agnew
and several other, tram tba Athabasca mine, started on a hunting
tup up the eaat fork ot Cottonwood
creek jeaterday.
^H ...
Tha contract for repladng tha
Kelson city wharf hag bean awarded
John Toye tor tha sum ot gflSO.
Mayor Fletcher, plana for repair to
the approach of tho wharf.
^■H ...
An old proapeotor named Andrews
ower of tha Goodenough claim on
Morning mountain, has been missing
now for se*fer»l days.
.   *   a
A practice run of tht ftre brigade
to tha Nelaon    Saw and    Planing,
to test  the  power
ot the water at    tbat   point, wat
Ten Tears Ago
<ma na Dally Mam af Oet.
IMD
HM. Mowat, member for PaaktlJ
dais, haa bean appelated to thej
bench of tha supreme aoqft cf OmtJ
m. together wlH
with the anBounoement ot tba in
polntment of It. T. Oreen. luatn'Mg
Of Kootenay, to the senate, aa
of the Brltlah Ooitnab
...
Between 84,000 and MjMO MM
tba margin of traU as
onr the ftfuiee   cf  1»1»   to
data. Tlie total    tonnage    tet
nine moi_ba wa* M7.IM ton*.
L. McCulloch. left tbe ctty
day to make a cross seotlon ot thg
1817 gurwy Una of th, Ta* roedfl
to meat wtth the requtmneats
the   Dominion   go-rennnent.
.   •   • ^B^
A   political   caucua  of  tha   Dls*
Met   U__w   FWmtfa   OoocMtaUrg
society waa  bald  laat  night
plant  wen   made  ts hate  a  rapl
nsentattt* la tba coming atactWiig
Twenty Years Ago!
The   Deny   Newt  M
October  villi)
O. H. Stesrart-Wade, commlsalo
er tor tha  proeinclel   _anr___a__g
spent yeaterday  oo the  watt Affg
collecting   potatoea  to  ba  tent
th, united Statee tor th* SUlwelg
cup competition. ^^^
latum
Dr. frank on hla
his trip to Bcaaland
vised Col. N. A. BurriU that ',
Petrle of tbat plaoe, general nianaM
ot th* Boundary Mining tsm/M
Igptoratton oompany, had
htm a telegram to tha etteot <■■
their local ooal had takaa
prlEea at tha Spokane fair.
*   a   •
Intimations hare been recelead
that Bar. E. S. Lode, of Wadsbur*
Ont, has accepted a oall to SM
Paul's Presbyterian church, which]
was extended a short thaa ago,
J.  P.   FOrda,   tb*
ernment cam* ln last night
Baeelttoke  and  la  at  the
P?W^t -Sal
I Find Many
Uses for Your
Want Ads
Says This Housewife
"Such a tlme-sarec! Aad results follow
so qukklyl They're my tary fkst
thought whenever there's a want xt be
satisfied ... a happy thought, too.
For yean, of oourae, I oaa* Nelson Bally
News tram Ads to hire doaaastlc help.
And recently they're been netting au In
other ways, too.
"Whan we moved laet fall, oat delightful bungalow was located through
these Want Ads. We sublet oar old
apartment tn the same way. Aai laat
week they helped aa again! You'd
know what 1 mean If yoa saw II la our
| driveway . . . th* cuteet, prettiest
sedan you ever laid eyee ou, almoat new.
And wa found It tn the Nelson Dally
News Want Ads.
Nrlamt latlg Nrmfi
tet Ail B-pt
Phone 148 or 144
Alnmimim Ware
Now is the time to purchase your stock
of Kitchen Utensils at a Low Price.
SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK
Steamer and Sauce Pan  $1.09
Utility Water Kettle     $U9
8-Quart Water Kettle and Insert ............ $1.75
SEE OUR WINDOWS.
Nelson Hardware Co.
. Wholesale and Retail Quauiy Hardware
Nelson -<*■»  B. C.
 VMS'
NELSON HOLDS TRM. UNE AND
DUCK WAY TO 15-5 WIN OVER THE
VEnORS IN EXCITING RUGBY GO
Shut Baw 55 Yarda fer
a Pretty ToQchdawn;
MeLeod Bart
WILLIAMS   INJECTS
PEP TRAIL LINEUP
Neleon Forte* PUy nd Usee
' Forward Paae wtth hot
Uttle Saeceaa
s* tk*
rt us
tsammmm
Canadian Bag-by mxmml battled
tt. mat to m 1S-5 victory em
ball tt tlu —aetlf erne
ea Bandar agtcraooa. It ma tin
■neater CSttfe tttet teetsseSS me-
tttt In tm nn. Deeptta tk*
fact that the bell wae xllsmmi
aad tk* foetlag treaelpraaa. tke
*» »rtk*,ln», wfco iteeea tke
elnaoata   wan   treated   m   a
aaeppy eihtbmon of tk* gridiron  reme.    -
He-oa appecrod to be aa snurel,
aitferent team tram tb* oo* that
■tumbled lliwkii ooat ot whlte-
waeb at Tnll laat week. Tb* line,
•tnoft-eoed br the acquisition of
Mm* and O'Qeneki. wu efficient ln
meeting tb* backfield. which, in
turn ehowed great im-favement. Bill
Venoe, th* looaal trlpU-t_net man,
wae out»ttnd__g tor the vloton. aa
alao wea shugg at hla quartet po-
atttao.
eiam la tba viattow" Uneup la-
•»**>. Curtla. BaWwo-. WTflunu,
and Lauder. Tb* latter ehowed hlm-
trtlt to ba an able fleld-feneras, and
■pap-tlled hJa force* to the beet
advantage througlwut.
waiiifi
k>«wa«i pass
The opening quarter *aa* bard-
fought   and   aooreleae.   Martin   waa
recetvlag   Trall'a   klok-oR, Decembrlnl.
and nelaon lmmedtately broke into
atrial attack, but UcLeod'a forward
PM w«* incompleted. Vance made
eight yards, ant Helton kicked co
ttm laat down. TraU encountered
aHW CRwattlan In litaiinillii. to
enter tbe Helton territory, tb* play
toteeend in oenter. McLeod rude
» 18-yard gain on a pwtty left-end
-on. bat Ma next forward paae waa
internet*! by HaUlweU. Trail eouW
aat penetrate the looal defence
whan kl poeaeesion of th* ball, and
man toreed to kick on third downa.
Sfcua. Martin, aad McLeod wan
teetttert la end runs, the Nelaon
querter making a 35-yatd gain oo
ea* pJey. Neleon completed tta arte
forward p*aa ait tbl* etege. the Mc-
Ited-Vanot ooenbinatlon 'stealing 13
yard* throne- th* *tr. Advancing
thue to Trail'* 90-yard line. MfcLeod
Bunttd la a deadline attempt. Mel-
no Uneaten wen too anxious, and
am aet tl** tba Tnll back enough
yaide wb«a b* received the kick be-
Mad hit line, and the referee ruled
MeUOD  BUNS  WELL
Tnll ww Hints tint down oo tta
ewa m.jstta lln*. tad tlw line tight-
ku wa* neuaied. After fumbln on
both eMee, nelson again advtnoed.
McLeod (ambled a snap, but n-
to kick tbe ball trom the
■poaad, aad Toung was bald on th*
ltall M-ytrd line. Curtla and Zuk
wen stopped on bucks, aad Curtla
ktojert to Vanoe. McLeod carried the
baU to yarda around right and, to
within alt yards of Tnll'* Ua*
the chance for a looal
ecore, and called for a forward paaa,
whtch wa* incompleted.
sotomv molbod hcbt
Tbe aecond quarter wae hardly a
aural* old. wben Vance opened tbs
tearing with a field goal from »
yard* out, giving Kelson a three-
polnt lead. TraU kicked lrom the 40-
yard line, and McLeod, ln running
tht ball back li yarda, sustained a
note injury whloh put hlm out of
the game. Tbe grldden settled down
to late-die tackling, Deoemt-tnl
a-bowlng up for Trail, and Buohanm
and Reno air Melton. Play wee
ttfbt. except for Vanoe'e Jo-yard
run-back of Curtis' kick. Halllwell
wa* sent otl tor 10 mlnutea. and _■
Zuk for two, a* a result of Illegal
tackling. A little »:ter. with the pla,
la oenter, Shugg broke through for
th* first touchdown, on a snappy
60-yard canter. Vanoe felled to convert, and the ecore stood 8-0.
Th* Trail huskies tightened their
belts, and advanced to Neloon'a 19-
yard line, mainly through tbe gains
ot Toung and K. Zuk. Tba emelter-
mea looked good for a touch, but
lott possession of tht btU due to
lneulflcle-t men In the Une, tod
Helton kicked out of danger. Jonee
brake through to hold Toung a* th*
punt wat received, and half-time
sounded. Score: Kelson S; Trail 0.
TBAIL   ADVANCES
Ko aeon wae nglttered In the
third apeem, which wae replete
wttb fumMee tod offside penalties.
Vance held the spotlight with hit
broken-field running and atrelght-
ermlng. while Halllwell of Trail waa
alao spectacular ta gaining yards.
0_e__ki waa can-lad ott the Held
attar * hud tackle. Both team* attempted forward panes, and both
(tn*_ Curtis. Toung, and Lauder
wen all trying hard tor gains, but
tha local tackling waa etttoMnt.
Trail began to march down the field,
making three flnt do—na In a row,
due to tht ilnt-plunglng of the Zuk
broHien, Halllwell, and "Silvers"
Russell    and    Dolphin
-mn making aura tackles,
brtnt and Freno amused the crowd
with terrific tackling and wrestling.
At throe-querler time, both squads
wan fighting strongly.
On tkt third down after th*
change-over, Vance punttd to Curtla
behind the line, where the TraU
back waa rouged by Dolphin for
one point. "Windy" Williams now
appeared In the vlslton' half-lint,
aad he aad HaUlweU mad* sensational gains. Deoembr'.nt and N. Zuk
ploughed through to advance Trail
te ttie Kelton three-yard line, but
tht aggreeeora -wen aet back 10
yarda co an offside play. Curtla
then kicked for Kelson's deadline,
but Vane* snagged the ball out ot
tha air. Unfortunately, he attempted
to kick out, and Burrows blocked
tba punt and threw hlmeelf on the
ball for Trail's lone touchdown. Tba
forward paaa convert attempt waa
unauocessful. aad Uie aeon atood
9-1, with 19 mlnutea to go.
Nelaon beam a forward movement,
with Martin and Vance earning tba
leather. Within punting distance,
Vance kicked. Trail fumbled. Knight
of nelson recovered, and tt -(aaa Kelson's ball with three yards to go fer
t touch. Shugg called Bill Freno,
who smashed through on a power
buck to place the ball ont yard ovtr
the line. Vance converted on a drop-
kick, aad the ecore was 15-S, with
eight minutes of play left.
WILLIAMS    18    STAB
Williams continued to thrill tke
gallery with beautiful running, wtth
the local crew still fighting firmly.
^uu-ebDinG
Q^eWlitWmiti
The Nelson Daily News Job Dept.
carries in stock the finest grade
of wedding stationery and is
prepared to give you the best the
printing art affords for the very
particular class of work.
Come in and let us show
you samples and the modern styles of printing.
Sob -Separttttimt
Phone 144 — Nelson, B. C.
Society Printing a Specialty.
A Trio That• Hard lo Boot
CONNIE   MACK   AND   BU   MAINSTAYS
Connie Mack (Oenter), manager of the Philadelphia
Athletlce,  with   two of  his  Individual  stars.  Mickey
Cochrane
pitcher.
(lett), catcher,  aad Robert   (Lefty)   Orove,
Dall again failed to complete a
forward pea*. Freno, Knight, aad
Buchanan displayed effective tackling, but Trail wen alowly pushing
toward tke local team* citadel. The
whittle blew aa Vance smeared
Williams after a 10-yard gain, on
Nelson's 15-yard line.
lhe teams starttd ae follows:
Trail—-Burrows, center; Anglln. K
Zuk. laeldee* K. Zuk, Decembrlnl.
middles; Mllea, Richardson, outtldee;
Humphries, flying wing; Lauder,
quarter; Bradbury, Curtis. Halllwell.
halves; Williams, Sammoiu. Barron,
B-Uour. apent.
Kelson— Woods, center; Jonet
O'Qeotkl, Intldes; Freno, Russell,
middles; Buchanan, polphin, outtldee; Knight, flying wing; Shugg,
quarter; Martin. Vance. McLeod.
halvea; Wallach, Derby, Harper,
wny, spares. -
Referee, L. HaHem; umpire, L
Piper; timekeepers, T. Fraser, L.
Stewart;   heed llneemaiu. B. Beattle
HILL CLIMB IN
EAST TRAIL IS
VIEWEDBY1500
Professional Motorcycle Rid
ers From Spokane Take
Part ln Thrill
TRAIL, B, O., OOt. 4—Aibout 1600
•met. tor* it tended tbe aeoond annual motorcycle hill climb in But
TraU todav. Tbe hlU wa* in good
ibape and well marked off ao tbat
tba contestant* were viable to tlw
spectators on tbe whole course.
In tbe 40-lnch novice event Shrub-
•ole and Konak tied at 177 feet aad
In tha runoff Shnxbeole won, giving
him aeoond place and Sonak third
in tbe evant.
The last event of the day, tba 80
Inch open, waa open to all and only
praieeeionai men from Spokane took
part, riding special hill climbing
machinea. It wee tbe only time during the hill-climb tbat any machine aotudlly went over the 276-
foot hill. It having & 00 per cent
gride-
SUvar cupe were givan for flr&t
prlaea ln each event while motorcycle acceeearleB made up the other
priaca.
Reaulta   ot   the   contest   were
folkm:
45-incb novice— ned Simmons,
flnt; A. I. Sbrubaola, second; J.
Konak, third.
tt-incb e*perU-Pelmer Rutledge,
218 feet, Tom Davy, 912 feet, Fred
Simmons,   197H   feet.
74-tn-h   eJBpert—Palmer   Rutledge
FOOTBALL SCORES ON MANY GRIDIRONS
PACIFIC COAST .
W. 8. C. 13. D. C. L. A. 0.
Washington  25.   Montana  0.
Idaho 0. Oregon 9.
v. s. c. a*, o. a. o. o.
California 0. St. Hertae If.
Stanford  t, Santa Clan 0.
Utah 13, College ol Idaho 0.
ITtah Agglee 21. Montana state 8
Whitm.n 31, Albany 0.
Batten  Ongon  normal  s,  Spokane tt. o.
Puget  Sound  31.  U.   S.  S.   Hem
Tork  0-
Brttham Toung IB. Nevada 14.
MIDDLE   WEST
Oklahoma A. _ St. 0, Minnesota 30
Coo 0, Purdue IB.
Rotre Oame M, Indiana  0.
Nebraska 7, NorthWesfern 19.
Wisconsin 13. North Dakota 7.
Michigan 34. Michigan  normal  0
(second  game).
Central State  Teachers 0, Michigan 37   (lint game).
Bradley 6,  Wtsconeln 33.
Baldwin Wallace 3, Case 3.
Cincinnati t. Ohio State  87.
Butler 0, Ohio 40.
Western Reserve 0, Purdtas as.
(second game).
Wyoming 0, crelghton 3.
Pittsburgh  (Iowa)  30, Iowa 0.
St. Louis 0, Illinois 30.
Carleton 13, South Dakota  13,
ftlpon 13, Btlott e.
Maine 0. Yale 19.
Union 0, Columbls 91.
Knox 6, Ann 6T.
Waahington and Jefferson 10. Carnegie Tech 7.
Uralnua 34, Kaverlord  0.
Betas  0.   Harvard  IS.
Parana MUl 0. Lehigh  18.
Lowell   Teitlle  31.  Mlddlebur.   |3
Boeton  U.  0,  New  Hampehln   «
St. Lawrence 0. Colgate 41.
William and Mary 3. Navy is.
Dayton 0. Boeton college 13.
PtovWence 3, Holy Croat 38
Williams  3d,  Bemeelatr  Poly   13.
Weat Virginia Wesleyan 0. N. Y U.
34.
Buffalo 0, Dartmouth 61.
awartmor.  7, Pennsylvania 31.
Western Maryland 7, Georgetown SS
•   Drexel  6. Rutgers 37.
Lebanon Valley «, Penn state 19
Suequehenn- 0, Dale-
Wett Virginia 7, Pord!
Buckneli 14, Geneva
Amhent  0.  Prlttoeton  31.
Rhode Island stats 0, Brown  ia.
Colby 0. Springfield 33.
Bowdoln  -9,  Massachusetts 33-
Niagara  3, Cornell  31.
Hon   0,   Oeorge   Washington   43
College oi New York 13, Catho-
llo tl. 47.
St. Johns 33, Vermont 0-
Georgia Teoh 36, South Care-
Ulna 13.
i.
Penn Stat**
i-ai 31.
:•<•»'  30.
a Tr
ST. JOHNS MAO
COMEBACK TO WIN
FROM MANITOBA
FoMth-Qosrter  Rail}'   Stvw
Day   for   Champs   ia
Winnipeg Rugby
wtNWpao.
Oet. 4 iCP)—Oemora-
llaad aai Impotent for three perlods
aa tfnlverslty of Manitoba', shifty
halvea thewered them with forward
paaaea, St. John's scored a aat—a-
tlonal tonrth-ouarter triumph over
the Collegtana ln a Manitoba union
conteet here Saturday, is to 1,
and ntained their ipofiita rugby
recced. The Saint, hate been unbeaten by a Manitoba te-am atnoe
19M.
Hae faeteat, strongest squad vanity
haa teat out ln yeara outplayed the
champions for three-quartan of Ute
gsme and led by 7 to 3 at the end
of the third period. "Red'' Currie's
pasting and Tommy Miller's catching
featured a varsity sttaek that waa ae
brilliant on tbe ground it in tht sir.
Tctnltneon went over for a touch-
dowp In the aecond quarter
Currie converted It. Currie
punted a alngle. Alt McLaughlin
counted two Mr St. John'a with
deadline kicks.
Veteran Baddy Stewart and Tom
my Mobberley led the Saint comeback In a fourth quarter that'
brought disaster for the fighting
atudenta. Stewart snatched a loose
ball back ot the vanity goal-Una (or
hla flrat touchdown and Mobberley
converted lt to put the champions a
point In front. A minute from the
finish, Stewart Intercepted a varsity
forward pate xtstt nn it 40 yards
tAt another touch. Mobberley added
a point on tbe convert.
333 feet; J. Campbell. 330 feet, T.
Davy 31. feet.
80-inch open—Oeorge Smith over
.the top ln aeven seconds: R. Buth
over the top In Hi seconds; both
of   Spokane.
IRELAND DEFEATS
SCOTTISH SOCCER
TEAM, SCORE 3-2
BELFAST, Northern Ireland, Oct.
4.—(CaaadUn Press Cable}— After
showing deolded superiority la the
early stages ot the lnter-league
soccer match here Saturday the
Scottish team wttkened and Inland won by the odd goal of live.
Bambrick waa a continual thorn in
the aide of the Scottish defence and
was conspicuous ln all the Irish attacks.
The teama were deadlocked with
the score one-all at half time, Crawford acoring lor the Scots and Kelly
for Ireland. Kelly sent the Irish
ahead and Bsmbrick made .heir
third. Boyd reduced arrears Just
before time.
WEST BROMICH ALBION LEADS WAY,
FIRST DIVISION; BURY; SOUTHEND
LINCOLN LEAD IN OTHER DIVISIONS
LONDON.   Oct.   4   (O   P   cable)—(
positions and polntt of leading clubs'
ln English league aoccer at Saturday's matches were:
I1KSI  DIVISION
Weet Bromwlch Albion, li: Sheffield Wedneeday 13, Sheffield United
and Everton.   13;   Arsenal,   Birmingham   and   Middlesbrough,   11.
SECOND   DIVISION
Bury 15; Wolverhamton Wanderers
Stoke   and   Plymouth   Argyle,   1);
Leeds  united   and  Bradford  11.
THIRD   DIVISION
Southern   section:   Southend   16;
Bournemouth    and    Boscombe     14;
Bientford 13; Pulham, crystal Palace
and Luton. 13; Watford 11.
THIRD DIVISION
Northern section: Lincoln City 16;
Southport 14. Oateehead 13, Cnwe
Alexandra, Tork and Accrington  11
Scorers In Saturday's games were:
F1BST DIVISION
Birmingham: Bradford (l); Portsmouth. Season, Bolton Wanderers
Bleekmore, Davidson (through own
goal). Newcaetle United Richardson
Chelsea Jackson <*». Liverpool nil.
Kvt-fton Johnton (3). White, lltck-
pool McOlellan (3). Orlmtby Town
Marshall. Sheffield Unit*. Tunatal
Middlesbrough Sarnsell- Huddersfleld Town sll, Sheffield Wednesday
Burgess. Aatou Villa nil. Sunderland
Tuner. Connor. Blackburn Roven
Thompson. Bruton. Weat Bromwlch
Albion Shaw, (Hidden, Saudlord.
w. o Richwdaon. Deity County
all. west Hem United CHggins.
Ltteeeter city Blue (3) Chandler i3>.
SECOND DIVISION
Bradford City Mitchell, Bury, Bd-
dleston (3). Lindsay. Burnley Jonet,
jenklne. Manoheater united nil.
Chesterfield Pynegar (3), Tbornl-
well. Tottenham Hotspurs Bellamy.
Brain.   Leeds   United   Keetley   (S)
Milwali Smith (3). Port Vale Jonet
(3). Preaton North End: Heatoe,
Bradord nil. Southampton Arnold.
Wolverhampton Wanderers rhllllpe,
Har Mil, Butter)-. Stoke City Liddle
(3), Sal_ Mawaon. Swansea Town
Sykaa. Pearce. Bristol City nil.
third   nivisiou     •
Southern section. Bournemouth
and Boacambe Williams. Hayward,
Thaln. Mansfield Town Baxter. Johnaon, Bristol Rovera nil. "Norwich
City Blakemore. Cardlft City Bmer-
aon. Robhtn. Keating. Brentford
Bums, Lake. Clapton Orient Jack,
Powler. Southend United Shankley
C3), Barnett. Crystal Palace Lane.
Stmpson. Watford James, GUUngham
Williams. Coventry City Lauderdale.
White, Bourton. Luton Town Tard-
Jey (2). Rennle i8>. McNestry. Exeter
City Houghton 131. Varco. North-
arfipton Town nil. Thames Device
i3i. Kempt Queen'a Park Rangen:
Goddard. Brighton and Hove Albion
Klrkwood. Reeding Davie, (3), Bag-
gcti, Eaton. Fuliiam Newton IS).
Torqujiy United: Waller, Trotter.
Swindon Town Morrle.
Northern sr-otion: Accrlngton
Stanley Afar. Ferguson. Williamson
(3). Itotbtrbam Bayon. Splcer. Bat'
row nil. Lluceln City Riley. Thurhy,
Cacllile Ualted Hut-rMson. ?ork Wt
Bains Cnwe Alexandra Deacon.
Southport Dfvidton. Gateshead
Charlton. MeNaiuhton, Leak. Hart*
(epoelt United; Dixon. Halifax Town
nil. Darlington Slddle. Mitchell.
Welloek. Hew Brighton nil Cheater
Hedley. Orocha>le Wjtaon (3). Mc
veer. Doneeater Rovera Knar;. Stockport county Swift. Jennings Hull
City nil. Waltal Halllwell, Roynton,
Turner. Wlgan Bcro nil. wnxhun,
Bamford, Ferguson, iranmen Rovan
Ma-eton.
ESKIMOS HUMBLE
UNIVERSITY BOYS
Score 20-7 Victory on Grid
Field; Esks Outplay Cal-
guy Students
BDMONTON. Alta, Oct. 4—Beaten
in their flrtt two atarta of tbe
season, Bdmonton Eskimos stepped
out Saturday In winning form to
humble University of Alberta, 30 to
7 ln an exhibition gridiron fixture.
Uncovering a hitherto unrevealed
scoring power In the aecond half
after being distinctly fortunate to
finish tbe flnt half with a 8-3 edge,
the t-klmoa outplayed the green
and gold aggregation In every department. Ivan Smith, laet season
vanity etar, smothered the early
hopes o« hla former mates and akme
accounted
points.
for   13   of  the  Eskimos'
Can Connie Mack
Make It 3 in R*w
'sn&'Wr 6omt WiwS
Tka Mst/es To .AM**-
it A/sftw MftWP-
RUGBY SEASON
ROLLS AROUND
ACROSS CANADA
Ottawa  Bwers  Opm Sea-
m   WHh    Wk   Ow
Brockville  by 15-1
COWDENBEATH
IS DEFEATED
RANGER CREW
Go  Into   Lead   in   Scottish
Play; MotherweU Gains
Draw with Morton
OLASOOW. Scotland. Oct. 4 (C P
cable) Bangen went Into the lead
ln the Scottish first dlvlaion aoccer
averegee on Saturday when they won
from Cowdenbeath, while MotherweU could only get a dnw wtth
Morton. Rangen, who won by s to
1, had an easy time with Cowdenbeath.
Morton actually led MotherweU at
halt time, but could not hold their
lead. Aberdeen and Pai-tick Thlatle
played a ding-dong flrat half, but
the Done alowly won their oppon-
ento down, scoring two goals la the
second frame. Clyde, twice behind,
managed to dnw with Aim United
Dundee United were down at the
Interval, but finlahed strongly to
defeat Third Unark. Falkirk played
In fine form In the second half
agalnat.. Dundee, winning I It t
Morgan scored four goals for the
winner.
Wien the referee disallowed Kilmarnock's third goal which would
have given them a tla agalnat Celtic,
the crowd booed during the entire
second half. Tbt hall went into the
net but wat disallowed becauae
Maxwell handled. Celtic won by 3
to 3.
The baseball universe le taking
whether Connie Mack, the <g year
old wonder—Manager of the Athletics, can ttttbllen two new e-
cords, will ht bt thc flrat manager
to win time Moceattve world *
champlontbipo tnd can he aotp
the jinx winch twice stopped tbe
American leegue when It tried far
five -straight title honora.
Only one other man. John McOraw, who wat Macka oppoaem
In three world's aeries, had a chance
to win three blue ribbon titles
la t row.
Twice befon the AOierlctn lttgue
had a chance to win five straight
world's aeries titles. The Athletlce
had won ln 1)10 aad llll and 1913,
the Boston Red Sox winning la
1(13. But la ltl4 the Boatoa
Brevee stopped the Athletlce.
The American league won la 19 IS.
1913, HIT end 1*1*. but the Cincinnati teem defeated the Chicago
White See. known later ee the
"Block"   Sox   In  1919
Be Cotnellua MeQllHcudy, otherwise known te Connie Mack will
certainly try to "bear down" in
this eerlae.
week-end rugby
RESULTS
WESTERN SEMOB
Winnipeg St. John's 15: University
of Manitoba 7. Moose Jaw 1; Reglna Roughrlden  11.
EXHIBITION
Calgary 13; Saskatoon 10. Bdmonton Eeklmoe 30; University of
Alberta 7.
GEORGE SHAW RETAINS GOLF TITLE;
MSS A. WRAGGE IS LADIES CHAMP
Shaw Gets Two Birdies and
Equals Par for Nine
Holes in Second Nine
Playing excellent golf in the firat
18 holes of the 33-holc match Oeorge
E. Stow defeated A. E. Murphy to retain the Appleyerd-Lowe cup and the
club championship which he won
laat year, on the unite of tbe Nelson
OoM and Country club Sunday morning and afternoon. The ladlee' club
title regareaierated hy ttie Ruth Armstrong Roae bowl goes tq Miss
Alolse Wragge who eliminated Mrs-
Ouy w. Davis.
When ttte mta teed off at 9:30
ln the morning the prospects for a
good day wen none too bright and
at the day advanced the conditions
became lets favorable. Throughout
the afternoon they played under a
steady drizzle which soaked their
clothes and clubs and broke down
their splendid play which they exhibited In the m <amlng.
Mr. Shaw negotiated the first nine
holes ln 37 aad equalled par for the
course In ble aecond round with a
33, giving him a total ot 70 for the
lg holes, a par for which It M. Mr.
Murphy made the first nine holes
la 42  and  the second In St.
Mr. Shaw seek 13 to 30-foot puttt
on greent No. 3 aad No. 4 tor two
birdies. Rls work around the green.
his approach aad hla putting waa
splendid, lilt opponent, a comparatively new bww et tfee gapi* on
the other head gained hit nd-rante-ie
oa hit long drives
Approechlng green No. 9 on tht
thlfd roiihd Mr. Murphy made one
of the leagett drive* of the tournament. He placed hit tine that In
the hoilew just before the rite
whloh overlook! the holt, tad tht
ball bouactd clean over the rough.
a rocky point oontatatag aeveral
email treat on the right hand aide
oomlng down, it came to a atop only
a few feet bom tbe top eg the rise
Cochrane (31. Oldham AthleUct nil. home.
Pint mentioned  duba  played at overlooking the green. Starting out
on the laat round, after picking up
a hole bore and there and halving a
number, he alto made a pretty drive
and It looked as lf he might cut
down the big lead tbat was agalnat
hlm.
Teeing oil to the second green he
drove the hall away off to the left
and on his aecond shot dropped it
on the edge of tht gr_n. a fine.
long shot. He failed to take ad-
vamtage of hla petition, however,
and lost out on ths putt. Mr. Shaw
whoae gems wa, featured by taking
the ball from poor positions, placed
hit third ahot, an awkward one, on
the edge of the cup aad went in tor
-four to halve the hole. Having a
lead ot eight Holes and wltb only
aeven to go, Mr. Shew took the game
by a comfortable margin.
MISS   WRAGtiE   WINS
Mies Wragge had It pretty much
her own way throughout her match
with Mrs. Davis for tye ladles'
title. Oood putting with occasional
lucky brake counted tn Mile
Wragge'. vlotory.
Playing for the flrat flight honon
In the ladka' data. Mlaa Jean Hunter downed Mlas K. Ethel Gray, six
and five. Mlsa Oray drove well but
the breathe wen agtlntt her, her
shots bouncing out of bounds oa
several   occasions.
The men's third flight proved aa
Interesting battle, Q. a. Godfrey winning out at the eighteenth hole,
whep hie opponent. Dr. W. Laishley.
made a poor approach shot At th*.
and of th* math Mr Qodfrey led
erae up, aad on the eUteenth Mr.
Lalehiey evened when he saak *
40-yard approach ahot. They halved
tbe aeventeenth end went dovra the
eighteenth fairway ell aauare.
w Haae heat Paul Lincoln two
up IB a cloee conteet for the a coad
flight. Mr. unee-ln. erhe wae tin
down at aaa stage, pulled up in tbt
laet pert of the game. The playlag
wat good, with Mr. Blane having a
email edge oa hie putting and approach a hots.
Pint flight honors were won by
Arthur Lakes on Mondsy when he
defeated   R.   L.   McBrlde.
MISS 0RCUTr IS
STILL WEARING
GOLFING CROWN
Beats Margery Kirkham  of
Montreal   for    Ladles'
Canadian  Open
e?(vl?        n?rwori   .. fteUN
TORONTO pnt. Oct. 4—Meureen
orcutt. par-defying mlaa ef Engle-
wood, N. J.. M etlll wearer of the
In an International tut over the
Canadian ladtea open golf crown
Hilla of Rosedale Saturday. She
turned back the challenge ot Margery Kirkham, of Montreal, to retain the title ahe flrat won la 1930.
Tlie championship waa decided by
the convincing margin of eix up and
four to play. But to attain that
edge in the face of one ot the moet
atout-hearted bids ever made for
the laurels, Miss Orcutt had to shoot
aub-par golf. In the 33 holes that
wan played before a deelalon wes
retched, ahe collected eight birdies
and clipped four atrokee orf perfect figures for the hazardous rouse
Medal scores for the morning 18
holee were: orcutt, par 77: Kirkham
73. for the 14 holes played in the
aftarhoou the defender uaed up 37
atrokee and Margery lo mon.
McGILL DBCKIVBLY
BEATS R.M.C. CREW
queens   F_Bb   to   Maatraal
A. A. A.; Bator Beaek
Win Fn« Argewats
OTTAWA. Oct. 4 (CD—Oaaetag et
n  Qnebec   Rugby  l%ilken  league
featured eastern rugby maeebn yeaterday. oaa week left to wett tbem-
seine into  ceadKioe.  senior,  ooa-
theouetv-e   wttb   exklMHas
Brown*   football   beet   lato   It*
va IB Breckvine
u. by
own IB Breckvin* etter a ltpae at
eeveeel years, Ottawa r
their aaatoo ut tbe «. •. p.
trouncing BroekellU 11 m> S.
in   their   annual   e____-_ae   pn-
aeoa conteet, McOlU aalnMtp
declalvety Mteted aogal __Haey
college. Kiagetoai. us to i. The tint
quarter eaat each teem aeon a
touch, Dohtrty *:_ng over frcat R.
M. Ct five-yard Has. aai Blanchard, quarterback, caatribatlof the
eoldten' only scarir^ hi the game.
McOUl then took ooaaawad, adding
13 sure poiate. 13 aeeatmtee lor
by touehdewae. McOiU completed
aix out eg 14 forward paean, but B.
M C. could gel bv -aith otiiv oaa
of 11 trite.
QUEENS IVU-UTLl*
Montreal Amateur A'hletlc ,::nation, later-provincial entry, defeated
Queca'e university 21 to t In an ee>
hibiuon mateh In Montreal. M A. A.
A. acored three touchdewat, one eat
aa tattNapM pan by Warns
Steven. Brilliant kicking of welly
Whitty accounted for flvt rouges.
Balmy Beach, Domimen champions, defeated Toronto Argonaut*
for the Te-roato city ehaavtoaablp.
3 to 1. Both teama tried the ferwaM
paaa. Balmy Beech complealag two ef
all. Argos tried twice, aad one waa
eucceesful. niaiget martmd tn tan
acoring eaoept a placement kick by
Harris  far  Balmy   Beach.
boi gh MBcas mil's
la Ottawa. Hough ...tme defeaM
Can-Uaa Me-lecei ntiwan. Moat-
reel Intermediate team, ti to 1 la
aa exhibition game. Sea*_r completed time toeeea tor galea of N
yarda twice aad 33 atala.
Opentaej the o R I' u. ia Moat-
real, Montreal Weetward. oaenrtteaa-
ed Cornwall ONte, 33 ta o. mi
Dlonne, ot Weetward acoteej two et
the touchea la aucceaalea.
Sarnla imperlala defeated Wlmtmr
Oreihounda 18-3 In a senior O. p. V.
game at Sarnla.
Hamilton Tlaen hamming «_J»
way to a 31 to 1 victory asm Weat-
ern unl-eM-ty In an exhibition WI
at   Htmllton.
PACIFIC COAST
LEAGUE STANDIN6
sad   nunenco,   om.   i_T»e
final ttandla* of the paettir. Ceaat
Baaeball leegue for the tteattd keif
ef the aeaaoa follow,:
W   L Bat
San Fraadaoa   go   338 tM
Lot  Angelea  Sk 42 Jtt
Oakland    ______ _ W   47 .MB
rortiand  • t» .ita
Hollywood    47   ta .im
Sacramento    _ «   ii .ni
Seattle  _. 43   r>n .toss
Missions     33   56 .411
PACIFIC COAST LEAUUE
Sacramento 2-11. Mudou 1-7.
Loe Angeles 7-4. Oakland 3-1.
San Pnnctaco 4-9, Seattle .>-3.
Hollywood  3-3.  Portland  7-1.
Calgary Ruggers
Beat Saskatoon
OALOART. Alta, Oct 4 -fCP)—In
closing quarter attack. AltomeU-
Ttgem of Calgary defeated Quakers
of 8aakatooa. sask.. In an exhibition
rugby game hen Saturday ajfternecei
by a soon of 11-10.
A klok to the deadline by Scharte
gave the Quaker* the only point of
the tint querter and Calgary equal-!
lad at the beginning of the aecond
period when Gideon roughed. A field
goal by Scharte near the end of the
quarter gave Saskatoon the lead
four to one. In the third quarter.
Quaker, added six polnta with a
touchdown by pullen and a rouge by
the same player. Eleven polnta were
piled up by Calf ry Jn the fourth
quarter to win the same. Harrison
and Holn-e acoring touclidowne and
Johnson converting once- Brings and
Jackaon, membera of tlw -Quaken.
received the only penalties of the
gam*. 	
CARD
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SMOKERS SETS, etc.
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y«l can pay more bat yen
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"Thia adverti'-'amtnt is not published or displayed by the
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Columbia.
\
 -THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, &  C. — MONDAY .MORNING,  OCTOWR 8, 1M1"
■   **. ■■ —— ■■ p t ■    ■   llir    -ttLVUn    V*tll   1     .^IH3,    Pll^'V    n     '       —    -tvnvms     tnumr, s mxx.    ./v   nnwi.    o,    twrnt ■   ■■ ■ - -  —-- — -* —  —
".^^V-Want Ad Panels%.li__
Mountain Woman
Has Hands Fall
Alta.. Oct. 4 (By the
rrT"""* Press)—To supervise the
management of a "dude ranch," to
run a chalet for tourists and mountain climbers in a hlfh valley. IS
miles sway, to serve as a notary
public, an issuer of big gsme Uoens-
et, as local postmaster, and still to
smuar always unhurried and unflur-
rlsd Is tbe remarkable achievement
Of Mrs. Roy Hargreaves ot Jssper
and Mount Robson, say» Helen Mat-
tern in tbe Journal. When her husband Is absent with tourists on the
trail ln summer and hunting parties
la winter sbe must take his place.
Ber three-year-old daughter has been
trained, too. She rides up the mountain, having learned to ride by herself ever slnoe sbe was two years
eld. before sbe could talk.
In the spring Mrs. Hargreaves goes
• with ber husband to the round-up.
, Tbe winter pasture is 90 miles
away, and as soon as tbe worst of
tbe snow le oft the passes, they
start out with a couple of cowboys.
Ninety miles means 10 or 13 days
on tbe trail, through ley streams
swollen wltb tbe spring thaw; 10
or IS hours in tbs saddle each dsy.
sleeping out ln a bed roll, becauae
tents mean extra pack horses. And
all "Just for an outing."
Onos Mrs. Hargreavee, ln chasing
two horses, got separated from tbe
men. Late ln the afternoon sbe got
tbem turned about, only to find
.that she was lost. To be 80 miles
ttom nowhere ln the mountains on
a rapidly tiring horse, and still to
bars presence ol mind enough to do
tbe right thing. "As long ss tt waa
light enough to see, I followed my
own trail back." she said. "And
When It got dark, and I knew I
couldn't be far from camp, I climbed a switch-back and waited for tbe
boys to light a Camp fire. After I
saw that, I Just gave Buck his head
and be got me down aU right."
Mermaid   Divers   Are
Subject Health Research
KURARHIKI. Japan. Oct. 4 (CP)—
Tricks of nifty Japanese mermaids
Who go out to sea and dive for
shellfish are to be exposed for the
benefit of a lot of staid scientists
at Geneva.
Miniature figures showing the undersea work of the women divers
will bs used by Or. otto Teuoka,
president of the Kurashlkt Labor
Science Research Institute, before
ths International Industrial Medical
Science conference which began Its
alttlnga at Geneva early last August,
8uch work haa been carried on ln
Japan for centuries, Dr. Teuoka wlll
explain ln detail the divert' task
Wbleh is generally looked upon by
laymen as an almost super-humsn
act. His purpose Is to determine
what effect deep-sea diving has on
the health of  women.
It is a well-known fact that some
Japanese women divers can remsln
Mt 4 depth of 100 feet for two min
vtes and a half without the aid of
oxygen or diving suits. Those divers
who are able to work longest under
water are women below the age
Of 80.
Among other things, Dr. Terouka
Will explain about the labor conditions of Japanese professional women and the psychological effect
upon them of their work. He will
speak on the subject as seen from
the biological standpoint, dwelling
upon such questions as the fatigue
of women workt.-s, the so-called vocational illness and disease, and the
aoclal significance of feminine labor.
Bs will strew the necessity for protecting feminine workers, legally and
otherwise.
Colony
INDEX TO CLASSITOO ADS
AGENTS WANTED
AUTOMOBILES FOR HIKE
AITOMBOBILES WANTED
AUTOMOBILES FOB SALE
BIBTHI
BEES
BOATS, LAUNCHES, FOB BINT
BOATS, LAUNCHES, FOB BAU!
BOATS. LAUNCHES. WANTED
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
CANARIES  FOB  SALE
CANABII8  FOB  SALE
CATS AND DOGS WANTED
DRESSMAKING
J ABM AND DAIRY PBODUCE
ABM PROPERTY FOB SALE
FOB SALE OB EXCHANGE
FOB BALE OB BENT
FURNISHED BOOMS FOB BENT
FUBN1SHED BOOMS WANTED
FURNITURE FOB SALE
HELP WANTED
HOUSES FOB BENT
HOUSES WANTED
IN MEMORIAM
INSURANCE
INVESTMENTS
LITEBABY
LIVESTOCK FOB SALE
LIVESTOCK WANTED
LOST AND  FOUND
MACHINERY
MARRIAGES _
MINING.  TIMBER.  LIMBER
MISCELLANEOUS
MISCELLANEOUS   WANTED
MUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS
NOTICES
NURSERY PRODUCTS
NURSING
PERSONAL
PLANTS
POULTRY AND EGGS
PROPERTY   WANTED
PROPERTY   FOB  SALE
RABBITS   FOB  SALE
RANCHES FOB RENT
ROOM AND BOARD
ROOMS TO BENT
ROOMS WANTED
SCHOOLS
SITUATIONS WANTED
STORES TO RENT
TEACHERS WANTED
(1!)
1411
(421
<l>
(65)
|«_|
(44)
(451
(11)1
(3)
191
(SO I
(7)
s
8
(Ii)
(i«i
146)
(Id)
(21)
(!»)
(4)
(II)
(IXI
(6)
(231
(24)
(llll
(56)
(3)
CM)
<2«)
(2«>
(.-.41
(8)
(47)
(11)
1.11
(.VII
(261
iu!
(341
(2-.I
(4-1)
(17)
111)
(IK)
CI2I
llll
ill
(13)
W_NT AND CLASSIFIES-
\DVEBTI8
_   JSWO
On. insertion 10 tots > Ha*
Sl_ i___t__s 40 cents t lot
On. month 1130 t Un*
Minimum two lines.
8o extra chars, la charted.
lrth  notices  (re.  ot  chari.
Deetha,    mernagee    and    cxtai   ol
thanks.  20 cants  ner   Una
mntral   Boners   IS   centa   par  Una
Verne of  th. Day  Items.  20  centa
fit) EXTRA COST IF CHARGED
(I)
OAIRNS—To   Mr.   and   Mrs.   A    K
a i na   at   Trall-Tadanac   hospl-
I  I, October 2. a son.
MacKINNON—To Mr. and Mrs. John
MacKinnon ol Procter, October 1,
a son.
U.UAL NOTICES
"Government  Llruor  Act"
Notice ot Application <or Beer
Licence
NOTICB ls here? given thst on
the 2Bth day ot October next the
undersigned Intends to *PPW to
the Liquor Control Board tor a
Ucenoe ln respect to tne premises
being part of the building known
as the Occidental Hotel situated nt
Nelson upon lands described aa Lots
Twenty-one (21). Twenty-two (22).
Twenty-three (23), and Twenty-tour
(24), In Block sixty-eight i«Sl according to the Official Plan of the
City of Nelson Province of British
Columbia. Nelson I,and Registration
District, in the Province or British
Columbia, lor the sale of beer by
the glass or by the open bottle
for   consumption   oa   the   premise*.
DATED this 28th day of September,   1931.
HARRY  WASSICK,
Applicant
(7505)
_____
NOTICES—Continue..
••G-verom.nl  i.muor  Art"
Notice ot Application for Brer
Licence
NOTICB la hereby given that on
tho 98th day of octot-r next the
undersigned Intends to apply to'
the Uquor Control Board lor a
ltosnoo In respect to the premises
being part ot the bulldl-g known
ae tbe Hume Hotel situated st Nelson upon lands described aa Lots
Pour (4). Plve is), and Six (6).
Block Nine mi, subdivision Ninety-
five (PS), according to the Official
Plan ot the City of Nelson, Province of British Columbia, Nelson
Land Reglatratlon District. In the
Province ot British Columbia, for
the sale ot beer by me glaas or by
the open bottle for consumption on
tbe   premises.
DATED thst 28th day of September.   1931.
OEOROS BENWELL.
Applicant.
(74»7)
"Government  Liquor  Act"
Notice of  Application for Beer
License
NOTICE Is hereby given that on
the 29th day of October next the
undersigned Intends to -Apply to the
Liquor control .Board for a license
in respect to the premises being
part of the building known aa the
Sherbrooke Hotel situated st Nelson upon lands describe;} as Lots
Five ts) and Six (6). Block Ninety-
one (91). Subdivision Ninety-five
(95), according to the Official Plan
of the City or Nelson. Province ol
British Columbia, Nelson Land Registration District, In the Provinre
of British Columbia, for *.ae sale
of beer by the glass or by the open
bottle for consumption on the
premises.
DATED this 29th day of September,   1931.
HARRY DUNK.
Applicant.
(7513)
"Government Liquor Act"
Notice   st Application for Heer
Licence
NOTICB Is nereby given that on
the 24th day ot October next the
undersigned intends to apply tD the
Liquor Control Board lor a licence
In   respect   to   ;hc   premises   being
Bart of the building mown aa the
ew Grand Hotel situated at Nelson upon lands described aa Lot
Plve tfi) and the East Half <'--,) of
Lot Four (4). Block Two (2), sc-
cordlng to the official PI in or the
City of Nelson province cf British
Columbls, Nelson Land Registration
District, In the Province of British
Columbia, for the sale of beer by
the glaas or by the open bottle tor
consumption   on  the  premises.
DATED this 24th day ot September,  1931.
PETER KAPAK,
Applicant
(7440)
"Government  Uquor Act
Notice of Application tor Beer
Llcenc.
Notice Is hereby given that on
the 28th day ot October .iext the
undersigned Intends to apply to the
Liquor Control Board ror s licence
ln respect to the premises being
part of the building known as the
Queen's Hotel situated at Nelson
upon lands described as Lot Eleven
LEGAL NOTICE
(Continued)
(11). Block Two (2), Subdivision
Ninety-five (95), according to the
Official Plan of tbe Ctty ot Nelson
ln the Province of Brltian Cclumbla,
for the aale of Beer by the glass
or by tbe open bottle aor consumption   on   the   premleee.
DATED this 28th day of September,   1931.
ADOLPH   LAPOINrE.
Applicant
(7500)
l.ttSONAL
_<»
BALDNESS.  BALD SPOTS, PALLING
Hair/   New method, aim result,;
write  today  for  guarantee.    Free
geniculars,    Home    Remedy ' Co.,
oi  1508,  Chicago, 111., U. 8. A
(7816)
THREE QUESTIONS ANSWERED
by Astrology for 91. aend olrth
date; sex—to Edith Allen, psychic
resder, 416 Beverldge Bldg.. Calgary. (7662)
FOR PURELY MUSICAL PERSONS—
H.  M.  Augus.    Plan:> and  orgen
Tuner,    Box    7876,    Dally    News.
(7575;
SITUATIONS WANTED
_«  .
WANTED — HOUSEWORK BY
young girl. Good with children.
Apply Dally News Box 7120. (73201
A-_aVl_   WANTED
(12)
LOTS OF MONEY-WILL BE MADE
this fall by Agents selling "Imperial Art'' Personal Christmas
Cards. They wlll have the finest
and most complete line made ln
Canada at opular prices, ssmple
book free to responsible people.
British Canadian Publishing Co..
61   Wellington  West,  Toronto.
(7496)
GOOD MONEY CAN BE EARNED
handling Chrlstmss Cards and
slde-Unes. Few districts still available, write Mr. Hunt, 1633 Marine Bldg., Vancouver. Free samples. (7516)
a. UUM   AND   BOARD
(171
DESIRABts! ROOM POR BUSINESS
person—board—Baker St. Phone
674L. (7600)
KOOMs  TO  REM
(19)
COMFORTABLE ROOM—HOT AND
cold water for rent by the month.
Savoy  Hotel,  Nelson. (7543)
TERRACE APTS.. FURNISHED OR
unfurnished suites. Apply P. E.
Poulin. (7577)
l-ol L1K1    UNO   EGGS
CM)
150 ONE YEAR OLD LEGHORN
hens at 65c eacn. Wheat and oat
straw at -fclo a ton, F.O.B., Gust
Henke, Nskusp, B. C. (7472)
WHITE LEOHORN AND BARRED
Rock -pullets. Police dog pups.
Sacks for potatoes. McKim poultry Farm. i7542)
Fnrs rellned. repaired and remodelled.    Mrs. Falrhead, 611 Silica St.
(7624)
HOUSES FOB BENI
-«Si
FOR RENT—FOUR ROOM BUNdA-
alow furnished 126 per month.
Phone   698-6. (78441
LAKE SIDE COTTAGE POR RENT,
partly lurnlahed. W. Rutherford.
Nelaon. (7C2»l
LIVESTOCK   FUg___t_B (W)
FOR SALE—YORKSHIRE PIOS 7
weeka old «S. C. H. Loehnert,
Box 621, Nelaon. (7546)
REGISTERED    SHROPSHIRE    RAM.
Write or phone F. Hetnti, Waneta.
(7501)
LIVESJOCK_WANTIiD _
-W
WANTBD—HORSES FOR FOX PEED
—Avis Broa,  Perry Siding, B.  C.
(7387)
BABBITS   FOR  SALE
_S__
CHINCHILLAREX, CASTORREX
Rabbits, pure bred; full grown.
Two does, one buck, 620. Sharpe
Nakusp, B. C. (7616)
MISCELLANEOUS FOB BALE      lj}j
I J_l 11111 11111111111 ■ IM1111111 MUM
COAL and WOOD
:    CORBIN    FURNACE    LUMP,    3
|    CORBIN   WASHED   STEAM.   S
Drumheller Egg
3    SLABWOOD — CORDWOOD    =
Bip.cn.
PHONE 106
| Will_am'sT,rans_e_ |
1 609 Ward St. Nelson 3
= (7629) 3
illlllllllllllllllllllllllll„;)„,i;....lllim
OASOLINE STUMP-PULLER HOME
Can Sealer and Cana; Six Tube
Radio; Two Gas-Lanterns; Large
Tent and Fly: and 8ewlng-Ma-
chlne for sale, all ln good condition. Must sell thle week. Apply Mrs. C. W. Ketchum, Ross
Spur, P. O. (7536)
ELECTRIC LIGHT PLANTS— SPR-
cial offer: 1930 model Led-O-Ute
electric plants, complete wltb batteries. 15-light capacity, 6105;
30-llght capacity, (235; 30-llght
capacity, 1385. Leeders Ltd.. 137-
Portage Ave.. Winnipeg.       (7671)
50,000 praT i tNCH USED
black pipe, good condition
5 centa per foot. Large stock of
other sizes. Enquiries solicited.
Swartz Pipe Yero. 220 East 1st.
Ave..  Vancouver, Jl. C.        (7675)
FOR SALE—FOR A LITTLE MORE
than expressage. Pedigreed Homer
racing pigeons. Have either tlown
300 to 600 miles or ate from
stock with record. Box 7503,
Daily  News. (7563)
SPLENDID PIANO— REASONABLE
price. Music given free. Apply
Mrs. H. Thorpe, mornings. Phone
277L3. (75211
MISCELLANEOUS FOB I ALE—(Con)   LOW AND FOUND
"HO-MAYDE" BREAD. IMPROVE*
Makes bread of finer texture and
flavor, better color and quality
from eame quantity flour. Gives
larger loaf. Packet 30c sufficient
for 100 loaves. C. At J. Jones, Limited.   Winnipeg. (7635)
USED CAR PARTS FOR At.L
mskes. Including Willis Knight
four. Orandview Auto Wreckers,
2084 Commercial Drive. Van. (7696)
FOR SALE-OFFICE SATE. WOULD
consider smaller sate In trade.
Apply   Box   7668   Dally   {Jews.
(7658)
OAK HALL SEAT AND MIRROR
dining room light fixture, gaa
heater—snap.   Phone 674L. (7602)
-Pi- 121
FOOND-PDBSB COHTAIHING SUM
of money. Apply box 7619 Dally
News. 17019,
li'lUMOBILBB ro. ,_u, ,„,
FOR SALE-BARRELS. KEGS. BUH-
lap sacks, white sugar sacks. McDonald   Jam   Co. (7598)
FOR SALE — LAROE McCLARY
Heater coat 136. Now 648.50. 407
Latimer  St. (7600)
ymimiiimiiiiintimmiimiiiiiiiiiuiii
G.M.C.
£   CANADIAN   MADE  TRUCKS S
£ Prlcu   Reduced
Z, Model T17A, l-Ton   -. HJ0.00 3
- Model   T17B,   1-Ton    ... C86.00 £
S Model   T3JA,   IVi-Ton   1100.00 3
- Model   TJaB.   lJi-Ton   1190.00 3
3      Price.  F.OJB.   Vancouvor 3
Nelaon   Dealers:
I Nelson Transfer I
i        Co., Ltd.
£  G»«R_L MOTOB8 TOU-KS £
riillHIIHMIIIIIIIinilllllllll|l".,Vinr
FOR  SALE—STEWART  HEATER   IN
good  condition,    phone  724R.
(7364)
rOR SALE FAWCETT CIRCULATOR
Mrs. Rowling, Phone 686R3. (7601)
McCLARY   FDRNACETTE.   PRACTI-
cally   new.    Phone  238X.    (7572)
MISCELLANEOUS   WANTED        (M)
WANTBD — SMALL KITCHEN
range, cheap; good condition;
muat have good oven, Box 494,
Kaslo. 17630)
.1USINE8H   OPPORTUNITIES       Iglj.
IIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMMMIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ:
Barber Shop |
Two chaira,' low rent, beat lo- £
cation on North Shore (not 2
£ for aale). Will trade for Ber- £
ber Shop In Nelaon or any £
good  town  Inland.  Apply       £
57   LONSDALE  AVE.,
£   NORTH   VANCOUVER,   B.   C. £
£ . * (7618) £
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiff
LEARN A TRADE PATTERN DRAFT-
lng and Dressmaking at the
Academy. Victoria Bldg., Josephine   St. (7411)
FARM   PROPERTY   FOR  SAI.K     nil
KOOTENAY FHUIT-VEGETABLES
district; 30 farms, irrigation adjoining station; sacrifice $20,000
terma: coet 645,000. Sell farma
separately. Captain Peters, Creston.  B.  C. (7655)
STORES   TO  RENT
(51)
FOR   RENT-   SMALL   STORE   AD-
lolnlng Club  cigar  Store.   (7633)
1630 Wast Iat Ave., Vancouver,
5*™°' L»,_?t reliable wrecking
company. >ower plants, trailers
and  parte. (7699)
■"Kt.Siff "J930 "MtD COACH.
Splendid  condition.    521  cart-i-
"»•*»   (7660)
FOR SAM CHRYSLER 52 SEDAN.
A-l. Price $460. Bog 442, Trail
B- O- (7534)
cords, small dealt, Daulton din
ner Mt. Brase Bed 4' 6" epnni
(nd mattreaa, Oolden oak dreaaei
large mirror: Child's crib aa
mattreaa; one Oak Chair. "
W. R. Thomson, 104
Apartment,. (fni
MB8EBY PBODUCTB
-i-ll
PLANTS  AND  BULBS
SELLING     RASPBERRY      PLANTS
Latham, 13 tor 60c;   Black  Curran
,.l.na.    w*nlH    ,s*   ._-   .. m.   -CV._
ulanta, Naples. 13 tor $1.00: "ona,
berry pliH. n for il*; SaaUtooi
Mante. 13 for 60c. Poetfieexffi
The  Hartman   Nuraery,  Delia,  Alls
ClttS
CATS AND POOS FOB HAff     ,||
FOR   SALE   —   ITOALE   COClttI
Spaniel.   Three montha old. Pfln
1.    C.   A>   Cawley,   Baimo,   B.   C
(7657.
M1SICAL   lN^BU»tgNTg___Juj
EXCELLENT PIANO $166 CASH OI
terma. Mtaon _ Risch, Ud. NeUon
(78391
MACHINERY
____
GASOLINE ENGINE 6 H. pTusB
one year, half price. 1133 Hoove
st..   Phone   638L1. (7669
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
Accountants
CHAS.    F.    HUNTER,     8.F-NT.A.O.
MunlcipsI and Comme-cial Audits.
P.   O.   Boi   1191.     Nelson,   B.   C.
(7578)
L.   A.   READ
Puollc  Accountant
Successor  to W.  H.  Fsldlng, CA.
Bay Avenue, Trail, B. c
(7679)
Assayers
E. W. Wlddowson. Box A1103 Nelson,
B.  c. Standard  western  charges.
(7580)
Chiropractors
DR. GRAY. GILKER BLK., NELSON.
(75811
DR. MITTUN, X-RAY, CRANBROOK
(7583)
DR.   MAC MILLAN   GRAD.   PALMER
School, Aber. Blk., Nelson, Th. 213.
(7883)
Dressmaking and Designing
DRZBSMAKINO,      DEBIONINO
Flower making,  Academy of Useful  Arts-   No.  4.    Write Mary  E.
Rogers. Boot  362.  Rossland,  B.  C.
(7587)
Second Hand Stores
The Ark—  dealers ra second hand
goods.    Phone 634." (7592)
Engineers
I.   D.   DAWSON,   B.C.L.S.     Roon
12A. K.W.C. Blk. Nelaon.      t7MS;
C    MOORE—Grlftm    Blk.,   .
Engineer and Surveyor. Boi «H
 (7J$ft
Florists
GrlraeUe'a Oreenhouaes. Nelaon. cu
Flowers and floral designs.  (75_|
NELSON FT.OWER SHOPPE. Ful
line cut flowers at all times. Floft
designs.     Phone   283. (756»;
JOHNSON'S OREENHOUSEB-Phoni
343. -cut Flowers, Potted Planti
and  Floral  Designs. (7590*
Insurance and Real Estate'
R. W. DAWSON, Real Estate. In
aurance. Rentals. Next Hlpperso!
Hardware, Baker St. (7191
Transfer
WILLIAM'S TRANBTER
BAOOAOE   "OAL AND WOOD   J
Phone  108 lltlS)
ATKINSON   TRANSFER.     Coel   _
Wood.     Long   distance   hauling.
(7694
Wood Factory
Lawson's Wood  Factory. 317 Bake
St.   We pleaae our customers.
(7595>
MAY  ABANDON   ISLAND
Tristan da Cunba, the lonely lsland
•utpoat of the Brltlah "-Empire lying
Ia the South Atlantic between Cape
Town and Buenos Aires, amy be.
cleared of Ita small colony of settlers this autumn. Tbey have previously refused to leave their lonely
island where they are eald to lead
. happy life.
is worth
quardinq
PAY
BY THE 10^
or m agreed m
GOVERNMENT AND
AUTO CLUB JOIN
TO STOP ACCIDENTS
MONTREAL, Que., Oct. 4 (By
the Canadian Pt_bsi—In an effort
to discover the underlying cauae of
accldenta and to find the best
means to remedy conditions, the
provincial authorities and the Royal
Automobile Club of Canada are cooperating in an educational plan
to teach motorlsw w report every
accident. The club's part, li was
explained, is to bring to the notlrc
of motorists the importance of reporting accidents and the direct
benefit which they derive from do*
lng so.
The plan makes it compulsory
for any driver, owner, police authorities and Insurer of any car which
bu been in an accident, to bring
tbe matter to the notice of the
provincial authorities, it was pointed
out. Forms which must be filled
In are to be found at the club's
headquarters and the provincial automobile- offices. The Idea behind
the present effort, however, it was
eald, Is not so. much to punlet.
those who have caused an a.ccident,
though the law la strict on this
point, aa to complete statistics. The
authorities -explained to the club
that they wish to find the contributing cause of mishaps, whether the
driver, the condition of the road, or
other circumstances, bo that they
can adopt measures to prevent repetition.
While hundreds of accidents arc
reported, a greater number ife not.
and the chief causea are never uncovered because it is impossible to
secure proper figures. It ls claim
ed that as long as this state or
affairs continues remedial measures
cannot be taken properly, and lt
wa* decided tbat If motorists will
co-operate, by giving all the details
of an accident, improvement wlll be
made easier and the highways safer
*tfcl
. . . for Instruction
High, college or trade,
Learn for advancement,
You'll be well repaid.
THE NELSON
DAILY NEWS
WANT ADS
Phone 143 or 144
___■
 •in NBISON  DAttV  NEWS, NELSON.  B.  C. —  MONDAY MOWING. OCTOBU I,  1881"
Market and Mining News
NO CUT MADE IN PRICE ON MACS
SAY FRUIT SHIPPERS, OKANAGAN;
PROTEST AGAINST COAST STORY
M«e» Set at $25 Ptr Ton;
Growers Storlag Fruit
to 8m Markst
B. O, Oct. *.-8blppert
an entirely dleeetlsOsd with an ar-
tide which appeared on the ooast
and J. & Montague ef tha B. 0.
ttip Shipper., chairman ot a ape-
est.) committee cf the shippers'
council,   haa   Issued   the   following
'In ooaaection wltb article dated
M Victoria September to In which
a picture of tba worst possible con-
dlticne ww painted aa to the trult
situation ia tha Okanagan valley,
thla article appaara to have em-
aaated from the office of tbe provincial bureau of markete Information, aad la eaualng a great deal ot
Unfavorable oommant by tbe shippers ot tha Okanagan."
A committee ot tht shippers'
council met Friday morning in
connection with thla and checked
mm with tbe office of the bureau
ol markete information operated by
9. A. Orant and secured Information tbat thla article waa not Inspired from tbat office.
"It Is quite true that there has
been a lot cf team track leading of
bulk apple, by shippers outside of
tba shippers' council and alao by
growers who prefer to tell their own
orops. Preesure has been brought to
pear on tbe shippers' council to
meet thla competition, and oa Monday price waa eat oa bulk Mclntoah
•f  M»  per  ton,  household packed
Saay shipper. At the seat time
a price* on packed and wrapped
Mcintosh remain firm se set originally."
Tha article In question states tbat
tha prlc* oa Molntoah bulk was
eut from wo to M5. Thl* u in-
eceract. Tb* tint and only prlc*
Placed on bulk Mclntoeh by tbe
shippers' oouncil  waa 838 per ton.
Tba faot remelna that every mem-
bar of tha shippers' ooundl Is packing medium site fancy and 0 grades
and storing them, taking them entirely ott tbe market untll such
time as tha market wlll absorb
theae two grades.
"The bureau of markets information operated by the government
at Vemon la functioning satisfactorily and tbe shippers aee no rea-
aon for tbe government to close
thla office.
•"With tb* bulk cf tbe Mclntosb
crop In th* packing houses now.
aad a large percentage going Into
eold tscrage for later sals, and the
email crop oi winter spplss following, the shippers tie confident that
tha apple deal, the marketing of
which will extend over tbe next
•even months, will be bandied ln
web a way tbat the moet poaslbla
teoney will ba had from It.    The
epara ara thoroughly convlnoad
it la lmpoeelble to cram thla
•PPl* trap down the throats of tba
preirl* consumer, in a abort time
and ara fujly prepared to store and
M*»nd th* marketing period. Tbey
alao teal tbat tba few outsider* wbo
are determined to unload their
•rep* quickly regardless of pries ar*
eel* bringing poor returns to thetr
grower, through their Inability or
i»wl_lngneet to work with otgan-
Md ehlppara. If their supplies were
Jerg* It would probably permanent-
ly cripple th* deal, but fortunately
auch outaid* supplies ara not heavily
tnd ooee they ara off tb* market
the altuatlon will clear up."
WINNIPEG GRAIN
WINNIPBU, Man., oet. j.-oraln
Met,: •—«.«_
Open   High Low Cloae
WHSAT:
83H   it Mu   53
hh an, m, 53U
MH    MH MH    63!.
87H   MH MH    57*
Oot.
Kov. ...
Dee. ...
May ...
OATS
Oct. ...
Dec
38       J»H   JTH   37H
...   WH   MH   37*    38H
"j^Jj,-.-    »°H    *>">   «»H    SOH
<0 MH M'i 30H
»H MH M"< 30%
MH    MH   MH    MH
MH   MH   MH   MH
lot     1MH 100H ioo>4
81% H« S1H 31H
S»      MH   ga*H   s_|4
-cUmV ** ■» "*
WKBAT: Na 1 hard J5H; No. I
Her. 64; No. 3 Nor. Ml No. 3 Nor.
w-. It*. 4, 41-No- B. »7H; Bo. «,
S3; »Y*d 35; Track MH: No. Dur.
*g*H-
MONTREAL STOCKS
BraaUlan _ _ j.
Canada  Oement   _ _  34
Canada  steamera       3>,
•fcwaeto  cotton    10
Wlnnlp^i   Blec.        -j*
Logan & Bryan
OBAW,
ftOCKS, BONDS, COTTON
MEMBERS:
New Tork, Montrael aad Vsncouver Stack Eichsnge,, Chicago Bawd of Trade, Winnipeg
Oraln  Exchange, aad other
trading exehnges.
PBIVATE   WISE
OrrtCBt:
Tane-avar,  Spokane,  Seattle
B. C. Turkey Grower.
Have First Chance
for Thanksgiving
VICTOBU, Oet 4.—Owing to
the early dale ot Thanksgiving
day this year British Columbia
turkey growers have a gocd opportunity of capturing the* turkey trade of the wast, Decease
th* average weight ef turkeys
la th* prairie provinces at this
period Is far below the average, It was stated today hy ;.
B. Terry, poultry commissioner
for the provtaee.
Bemuse af tha early date of
marketing Mr. Terry advises the
turkey growers to pen. or yard
teed birds before killing, so
they may be In prime condition
for tale. An extra heavy demand
Is expected io ba made oh the
B. C. growers this sesson wltb
prices averaging about as aiual.
MINING MARKET
SESSION ACTIVE
Issues Show Firmness; Gold
Strong; Noranda and
Hudson Bay Gain
TOBOglTO, Oct. 4 (OP)—With ln-
terllttad Issues strong, tha et.nda-rd
Stocking aad Mining exchange made
a firm showing In trading Saturday.
Trading, However, waa largely confined to tha higher prload metal list.
Total sales ware 87*15 sharee. the
loweet rate for tha year.
Oold issues again held speculative
attention and all leader* la the
group moved upward In prloe. Lake
Shore again lumped 13 to clcee at
♦35; Holllnger rote it cents, to
MM and Mclntyre 50 cent, to
♦18-0. pome at 80 30 waa up t cants.
In ths baaa metal section Noranda
and Hudson Bay each registered a
email gain, tha former lo oent, to
♦1S.10 and the latter 35 cents, to
MAO. while International Nickel feu
30 cents, to dose at M38. The oil
section developed price flrrnneas, in
dull trading. Brltlah American at
t».16 and Imperial at tioao each
moved up (0 cent*, and Interhatloasl
rata gained M centa to t>M.
NEW YORK STOCKS
Allegheny     SH 3H <H
Allied  Chun  .... 77 H 7t 7Mi
Am  Can 77H 75H 78-H
Am  f P   __ 13H 13H UH
Am   M   A   T   _ 18% 17H 17H
Am   S   *   F   _. MU 33H 33H
Am   Telephone 130 137ft 1MH
Am  Tobacco  _ giu 78* 7SH
Anaconda    . I5H ItH 14',
Atchleon  10SH 10JH 10JH
Baldwin  7 8% sh
Bait Is Ohio ... 34H HH >1H
Bendix,   At  It 14H 14H
Beth   Steal   _.._. 3SH 3»H 3SH
Oan   Pac     14 UH ItH
Cerro   de   Paace 13% UH 13H
Chee as O   JT. 3SH 38
Chryalar      HH HH 13H
Com   ii   So   .... 5H » >H
Con   Oaa   N   T M 85H 8SH
Com   Prod   .... 43* 41 41
C   Wright   pfd — — 3H
Dupont     to* MH MH
Eastman  Kodak 103 9S>._ »0
n   f   ll   Is  31H 30 30
Brl*   _   ia n n
Pord    Eng     — —. tu
Ford of Can __ — — 10H
First  Na  Stone 49 44 46
Freeport Tet __ 17 10 H 17
Oen    Motors   _ 23% 31 31V,
Oen    Elec      37 H 31 38
Oen Fooda   34H 33H MH
Oold  Duet   19H 13 18
Oranby      854 — t%
Ot   Nor   pfd   ... 33 33H 33
Howe  Sound  .... 13U IS is
Hudson   Motora S% IH IH
Ins    Copper    .. 4 —• 4
Int   Nickel   .  IH 7% t
Int  T It  T ... 16% ItH ItH
Kelly   Spring   . 1 — 1
Kenn    Oopper UH 11 1114
Kresge   S  S   .... 30H 30H 30H
Kroegg   t%s   ToU 7H 7H 7H
Mack   Truck   .... 17H UH ItH
Milwaukee   pfd 4H 4H 4H
Naah Motors   ... It ItH UH
Na   Dairy   Prod 33 31% SI",
N Pow _ Light — — 14%
N   Y   Oent     SOH MH MH
Pac Oaa & Elec 33 31'. 3IV4
Packard   Motors 4!4 4H 4H
Penn P. B _  33H 31H HH
PhlUlps   Pete   .. SH 5". SH
Radio   Corp   ... 13 ft 13 13 ft
Radio  Keith  Or g "'• 7%
Rem    Rand       . 4ft 4H 4Vi
Rock Island     38 33H 33H
Safeway   Btorr-s 4fi 43% 43ft
St L At s r .... » I Sft
Shell   Union   Oil 3% 3", 3ft
Sinclair Con .... tft 8 8
SO    Cal   Id    ... S0>, 30 30
80    Pacific      S3 SOH SOH
Stan OU  Cal .. 39ft 30H SOH
Stan OU Ind _.. — — 17ft
Stan OU N J  .. 30ft 39% 39H
Stewart   Warner 8 Sft 6ft
studebaker      10H 9H 9ft
Tea  oorp    toy. 15H 1SH
Tex Quit BUl _ 33ft 33 33
Union   Carbide toft 39ft 39H
Onion  OU Caltf 13 — IS
Union  Pacific   .. 109 10SH 105%
United   Aircraft ltft 13ft 13ft
U 8 P _ F    .. 1314 UH 13ft
U S Rubber ... 8ft 8%H 8ft
O   8   Steel     71ft MH MH
Weat   Blec     44% 40% 41H
Willys   Overland 3 1ft 1ft
TeUow Truck _ 4H 4 4
Tht Consolidated Mining & Smelt-
tag Co. of Canada, Ltd.
TRAIL-BRITISH COLUMBIA
Manufacturers af
ELEPHANT
Ammonium  Phosphate
Sulphate of Ammonia
Triple Superphosphate
-CBXM1C4L   riRTtLITIRg
SOLD BT NATIONAL rRUIT CO., NELSON
Producers  and  Beftaatt  of
TADANAC
ElI-TBOl-TIC
Lead-Zinc
Cadmium-Bismuth
METAL MARKETS
r TOM Oct. «■  Metaw Kcmtn-
aUy  uacbaased.    Foreign  bar so.
ver   31   casta   at   London,   metals
ncanlasUy unchanged.
NINE BUILDING
PERMITS TRAIL
FORMPTEMBER
Total for Month $9490; Four
Residences,  Four Repairs.
One  Retaining  Wall
'TRAIL. B. C. Oct. 4.—Building
permit* issued in Trail during September amounted to 8*490, bringing
the total tor the year to 8113.388.
Only nine permit* -ware Issued,
four for repairs, one for a retain-
tng waU and tour for residences.
Following were tbe permlte Issued:
RESIDENCES
F.   Tnvieon,  Byers   street   .... too
w. Oratory, Birch avenue __ 3400
A.  Oonnel,  Second  avenue   .  3080
F. 0. Koehn, Bey avenue   3340
Total     .97330
REPAIRS
Mra. Webster, Columbia
avenue ..( 7J0
Mrs. Spence, Lookout street —   470
A. Monaldl, Ceccanti street ...   IM
I. MacDonald, Hendry street ...   300
Total tlS70
RETAINING  WAU
Kootenay Breweries, Rouland
avonue   -.  js, 700
Total  permits  Issued ..99490
mm prices
MAKECOMEBACK
Rnmor of Canada Abandon-
ins Gold Standard Bring
Change Sentiment
WWJ-riFBO, Man., Oct. 4. (CP)_
Active short oovertng la tht lut
hour of trading lifted wheat prices
fractionally above yuterdsy's close
on the market bare. October cloeed
at M; November at Mft; December
at MH. and May at 57ft. Final
quotation* war* ft to ft Higher.
Rumors from unofficial sources
that Canada pad abandoned the
gold ataadard brought about tb,
change of sentiment ln the final
hour. Tha raporta were later officially denied. The market had trad-
ed around ft oant lower. THere was
a noticeable lack ot hedging operations. Export' trade waa negligible
Oaah wheat and coarse grains held
fairly steady In light trading.
GOLD ISSUES AT
TORONTO STRONG
Oils Firm and Base Metals
Soft in Short Saturday
Session
TORONTO, Oat. t (CP)—Continued
etrength of the gold-mine stocks
ws* a feature of Saturday's short
eeuion on tho Toronto sto* eg.
change. Aggregate turnover amount-
*d to 10.375 sham
While oils and some other Issuu
were firm, bue metals -were soft.
The gold mine eharara were, strong
throughout. lake Shore at IU close
of 834.10 wa, up tl3S andVMcIntyre
gained SS cent, to tit .40.
International Nickel waa off H at
Ite close of 9H. The three leading
oils were higher at the cloae. B. A
OU gained H to 8ft. Imperial being
up H at Its clou of 10% and c p
R. which wu off % at lift. Ford
was uncl-Bnged gad walker cloud
tt IH. up %.
TORONTO STOCKS
Abana     _ «,
Aconda     _     ,"        Jl
Arno _ ;.;;;    ;„,
AJag     i.j;
atmulet __ J,
Amity           '„,
A P ConsoUdated        ot
Associated     _)
atrea          nt
Baltic  OU          _,.
B. A. OU  „_... sjo
Base  Metals          ]_x)
Bldgood     ,1
Barry   Holllnger toy.
Calmont _ _ _      .05
Clerlcy    _ 01%
Dome         9.45"
Dalhouale        .(,
Eutcrest    _____ .0914
Foothills    .'.   35
Falconbridge  „ 99
Ooodflsh    _ otfi
Home  Oil     ,        .40
Harker   Ocld 01%
Howey     _       .30 ij
Hotltnger      5.50
International Nlckei      900
Keelly          a»
Kirkland Lake       A9H
Mclntyre       113J
Uke   Shore _ _   34-0
Mayland  _ 11
Newbec       xy
New Imperial ou  _   10.3S
Nlpleslng     _      130
Ncrsnda         h.jj
Peterson  cobalt       .0114
Pend orelUe         .80
Premier   Gold     .      .40
Sherrlt oordon _..      M
Sudbury   Buln   ...__,_..-...       40
Slscoe - 49
Tech   Hughe,        too
Vlpond    — 84
Wright Hargreavaa   .    3.70
Walte Aekerman  -    100
Peaches Valued
for Duty Upon
Invoice Prices
OTTAWA, Oct. 4 (Cp)--*tfee-
tive teday, the fixed valtn tor
duty purpetw at 4H cents par
pound on peeebM coming into
Canada bu bean cancelled. Tha
order for a tired valuation wu
pat Into effect a* July 11 laat.
PnchM new entering the country wlll De valued far duty
purpose, st thetr Invoice prleea
Official announcement ta thla
effect wat made today.
KING, JONATHAN
APPLES SELL AT
THEOTMARKCT
Quiet   Session   Experienced;
Tomato Prices Are
Varied
For tba end of the month, the
local market had a comparatively
quiet session Saturday. With the exception of two new varieties of
spples, Jonathans and Ktngs, there
were no new Item, on tb* market
list. Jonathans and Kings war* both
offered at 90 centa a boa.
A wide variation waa noticed ln
the prloes of tomatoes. At one stall
field grown tomatou sold at four
pounds, for 3i cents and hothouse
tomatoes at 10 cents a pound; another eold them at six pounds for
3S osnts, while a third stall asked
40 cents a pound.
Turnips sold at six pound* tor 35
centa.
Potatoes brought 11 AO per 100
pounds, and Orand Duke pluma 35
cants a basket.
Tbe  prices  were:
VEGETABLES
Breed   beans,   3   lbs ......t .35
Beets, 5 centa a pound or
t pounds  for   T _   .35
Cauliflower, per bead .10, .11 and .26
Celery, 3  heads       .is
Carrots,  3   bunehee     .10
Horseradish, per lb.    .10
Potatoes,   100   lbs  1A0
Squsab,   per   lb _   _)3
Dry onions, per lb _   sib
Swlu chard, per bunch _ _   .10
Onions, pickling, per lb    .08
Pumpkins, each  lt to .SO
Tomatoes,  8  lbs     m
Turnips,  per  lb     .06
Vegetable marrow, up from —   .It
Oreen peppers, I lhe.
Lettuce, per bead     ,ot
Bed Cabbage, per  lb.      M
FRUIT
Applu. Kings,  per boa   *o
Apples, Oravenstelns, per bog _ 1.M
Apples. Jonathans, per box   .90
Apples, Wealthlee, per box   lit
Applu, crabs, per box _ __ 1.40
Applu. Macs, per box ___ L40
7   lbs.   for   .   jj
Apples,  Jeffery,   per  basket ""II .it
Plums, Burbank Sugar,
> lbs. for .        __ __,
Pears, Bredsbavs, per buket".'! 30
tkti plant, 4 for  ..,_  __.
Watermelon, per lb   nt*
Canteloupes. each  .ioliind 11
aad   *   for     jt
Orapu,  3   lbs "" 95
Citrons,   each      ..
FLOWERS,   PLANTS
AND BULBS
Ferns,  each    _ _ ______ jjo
Ivprlutlng   flowers,   doaen""" it
Asters. 3 doaen tor  _„.. __.
Fbrna   ___   t_
Snapdragons,   par   bunch,
aeranlurns, up trom
Fibrous  Begonias   	
Aphodellus, potted, up from"'™ 100
Sootch   m_t,   potted    _ tt
Ivy plant,  potted    II   ]jg
Ornamental  grew _.-_      "    _n
MEATS
Uver, per lb.
Pork, per lb.
Umb, per lb    4t to .30
Beef,   per   lb.     10 _, M
 31
  30
35
to   .71
 10
—   M
St
AO
.30 to   .30
Hams, per lb	
Potted meats, per lb. ...
Head chew, per lb. .
Mutton, per lb  jii'io
Tongue, per lb.  ..
Ottall   	
POULTRY, EOOS    - •——
AND BUTTER
Egg,,  firsts,  par   dona •	
VMs, extraa. per doeen
Duck eggs, per doeen .1.2
Spring chicken, per lb.
Butter,   per   lb	
Fowl,  per  lb	
HOME  COOKING
Brown broad, per loaf
Buns,  per  doeen
Cookies, per doaen
.SO
.40
.40
.40
._
35
30
.20
Chocolate cake _.7..._II™ " 'ts
Scotch ehort cake, denn Till   !lt
Crow's Nest Glacier
Gets New Fiances
■SPOKANE. Wash., Oct. 4-The ap-
pointme-t of V. j. Freeman, a P:nn-
srlvanla oil operator, as flsld man-
ager for the Orows Nest-Olacler Oil
company ig announoad by A. J.
Knudson. president, In a te_grsm received hy Ben (. stlmmel yesterday.
The new manager bu ordered a
complete new rotary diamond drill-
lng equipment that wu to bave left
Vsncouver. Brltlah Columbia, yuter-
dsy and that la expected at tha No
1 wen at Sage creek, British Columbia by the middle of thla week.
A h«d rock driller and his asaistant,
tw'h from California, «re preparing
n.l VS,, "" ""* "«-*PU»» « the
new drill.
Completion of u_ well Is expected
n three weeks from the time drUling
_»   J-*'   °n   completion   of  this
wfll, the rotary diamond drtu will
•Pud In what will h. th, jj0. s weu
President Knudson states thst Mr.
Freeman and hi, suoclstes hsv, ac-
cep-ted 100,000 shares of treasury
stock at 40 oent* * .hare, thus giving
the company _ working capital of
Mo,ooo, say* Mr. stlmmel. All other
tresaury stock  hu been withdrawn
w__ V,!_,'"' I,dd* M^H* ta the
W«t Vlrglnle f_fld, Un )_»,_,„
aaa operated in pennaylvsnie. 0bio
and the west He passed eight yesrs
I_,.*" »Pw*tor lD tlw east Indian
ii^h. ,,'?. ?f** *• mStt* service
in the OU fields during the war.
Call for Pend Oreille
P.^"8^,', «**Toct 4-Btds for
S_ _?*1U* m°- *"<f M»*ala
jumped to 84 cent, on an announce-
ment tlut stork that hsd been sold
ano not delivered would be oaUed for
_£„.-"_ ,un * "»«" *<»* v"']
oouw, British Columbia, received
»r I. J. Qtbeon t> Co. yuterday. As
*r**ult tb,re 1, a Mvaly effort to!
Borrow stock on two point premiums
that may reach three or . ur cents.
OlbaoB as 00. aald S000 shares
were due them aat) that stock b>-
Okb due five or six houau here for
«he lut two or three wteks from
aeveraj firm, i_ vanoouvw.
The clou at Varciuver follows:
Big Missouri, u t» 13 cents:
Crow. Nest, 4H to t «rta: Oolconda,
33 to 34 oente; Orandview, 4H to
S cents; NobJe Five, 4H to t osnts,
Ptnd OrelUe. u to 70 cents; Premier
Oold, 43 to 60 cents; Kuvcs MacDonald, 30 to ft centa.
RAILS PAYE WAY
TO MARKET DROP
ON WALL STREET
Steel Hits Bottom and Entire List Is Sent Scampering, Saturday
NIW TORK, Oct. 4—A* hu usually been the case In recent months,
one session of comparative proep-rlty
proved too much for the etock market, and Saturday prices mon than
lost their Friday gains.
Weakness ln the rail*, coincident
wltb tbe filing of the four-system
merger plan at Wublngton,' upart
the entire list. Steal and chemical
Issues were put on the spot for substantial tosses, with United Statu
Steel common closing on tb* bottom
of a l'a/, point break, which put It
down to ItH, a new low.
Tbe rmrket wu not unusually ac-
tlve. but the sheenco of support allowed quoted values to shrivel euUy.
Ssles wens lust mor, thsn 1,000,000
shares.
WaU strut found lt bard to explain the rails' weakneu, unless lt
wu that the, had discounted all
f-vorable news tn sight and were
skeptical of the freight rate Increase proepect. Kew Tork Central
and Union Pacific loat S. Santa Fe
SH and Southern Pacific 3H. all
going to new Iowa. Chesapeake cor-
poratlon yielded t and Rook Island 4.
Allied Chemloal. American Tobacco
"B" and Baatern dropped 4, Bethlehem, Wutlngbouu, Du Pont and
Air Reduction about t, and Union
Carbide, Natlonal Biscuit, Loew'a,
General Electric, North American.
Consolidated Oas and sears Rot-
buck 1 to 2 Loew'a preferred slumped SH- U. s. Distributing preferred
and Worthington Pump "A", both
inaotlvea, loat 34H and 14H. re-
speotlvtiy,
Stricter control over Oennany's
foreign exchange holdings, reeultlng
•from recent large gold leases, found
the mark still heavy, t, u possible
that tbe Relchebank may lncreau
the dleoount rate, now g per cent.
Sterling reacted to 43 84 and cloaed
st es-8«, off t oente. Advioes from
London uld tb* decline wu attributed then to political unotr-
Islntlu, to th* completion of short
covering, and to a halt in tbe uie
of aecuritlu on thla market.
MINNEAPOm GRAIN
MINNEAPOLIS, Idna.. Oet. 4. —
Flour unchanged. Shipments 38,-
6t4, bran  1000—10A0.
WHKAT: No. 1 Nor. till—t6H:
No. 1 Red Durum 48H—4SH; Dec.
MH;  May 08%.
CORN: No. 3 Tellow WH—84H
RTI:  No.  1  t7%-S»».
FLAX:   No.   1.   133—133H-
EXCHANGE  RATES
NIW TOUK. Oct. 4—SterUng e:-
change Irregular at tst. for caMes
Canadian doUara 13H centa dla-
oount.
Franca   394   oente.
Lire 5.18 cents.
Uruguay   31.75   centa.
Marks   33.30   oents.
Kronen 33.90 cent*.
First Ship Arrives
at London With Grain
From Churchill Port
LONDON, Oet. 4 (C P cable)—
A new chapter la th* history af
commaatratlea between Csaada
and tha mother eeaatry apesed
today with tke berthing la Victoria Sack af tbe steamer rare-
worth, krtagtag S77,**t bubals
of wheat treat CherehlO, Making pioneering • bad* route
which bring, the great grain-
growing areas ef the prairie provinces 1*90 miles closer te Britain.
Arrjtlag tarlier tkan expected,
the Farnworth made her way la
tbe dusk slowly op the Thames
to ber goal. Bat a few saUors la
the docks, seeing her lights realised history wes being made
and tbey raised a cheer as the
vessel was berthed.
POTMAN CHARGES HOOVER BH
INTERNATIONAL SILVER 'ARLEY;
ONLY SOLUTION SAVE U.S. HE SAY!
Wide Fluctuation
in Sterling Prices
Montreal, Saturday
MONTREAL, Oct. 4—Wife flac-
tuatten M-Ktces tar aterltag la
Montreal wu reported Saturday,
the prlc* varying betweea 84Jt
aad S4 so with tba elea* at
K40 ta 34.41.
MONTREAL LIST
WJLLJACTIVE
Only   5000   Shares   Change
Hands; Nickel and Brazilian Features
MONTREAL. Oct. 4 (CP>—m a
dun and Inactive session, tn which
only 5000 shares changed hands, one
advance and two declines were
shown on the Montreal stock exchange Saturday rooming.
Tba activity wsa practically confined to four issues. International
Nickel end BraaUlan Traction furnished over 3000 of the 8000 shsres
eold while Canadian Pacific and
Canada oir accounted for much of
the remainder.
Only 30 Issues wer* dealt tn cf
which one, Cockshutt Plough, gained
two. International Nickel snd Canadian Pacific showed losses. Six
wen unchanged from the previous
closing prices and 11 were traded ln
broken lots.
Interrutlonsl Nickel active leader,
closed at 9H, off vt; BraaUlan.
aecond. cloalng unchanged at 10.
Canadlsn Pacific closed at ItH. oft
H- Total ssles 8017 ahares. Bonds
tlOO.
CUSTOMS RECEIPTS
TWO THOUSAND UP
FOR HALF YEAR
TRAIL, B. C, Oct. 4—Cuatom* reoeipte at tbe revenue office In TraU
for tba tint six month, of tba fiscal
year 1981 exceeded the ume months
of 1030 by over 83000.
Receipts ln 1930 for AprU, May
and August exceeded thou of 1981
but reoeipte this year for June,
July and September were higher
than lut year.
Following an the receipt* for
1930 and 1911:
1030 1931
AprU      g 8,014.85   t 7,943.88
May      8.088.48       7.i74.88
June     13,618.8-      15.977.98
July     - 10.340.33     12.078.48
August     14,688.37     10,139.33
September       9,968.99     13.789.07
Totala    -  64.481.78     6S.4t7.89
SPOTLIGHT HELD
BY THE PRECIOUS
METALSAT COAST
Prices Show Firmer Tendency; C. P. R. Issues'
Advance 50 Cents
VANOODVSR, B. O. Oct. 4—Prtew
showM s ioroewhftt rirnj«r tendency
at tb* tnd of tn* »t_ort ««Mlon
on tht Vancouver ttock tichftnge
Sftturdty, wltb th* precious metal*
group occupying tbt spotlight. OU*
were entirely ntglecwct with no •*!*»
recorded. Total ■*_*_ for the half
day were io.M2 thtrei on the big
board   end   13.380 on  the  curb.
Cottonbelt continued tctlre and
cloeed up lit cent* «t 39H cent*
bid. Oeorglft rim, alao active, gained a fraction at 3H cant*, pioneer
add ateadlly at 316. at which figure lt cloaed. uncnanged. lorne
Oold, another active trader, cloted
firm at ly, cent* unchanged. Ptnd
OrelUe after opening it 04 cento, a
gain of T eent* tated to 63 cento
at the clot* for a gfTa of b <*ent-#
Snowflakt waa fractionally higher
at   \y.   cent*.
In th* Industrial* Canadian Pacific
In three •mall transaction* advanced  M  cento to clow  at   16.00.
WHEAT CORN AND
OAK PITCHED TO
BOTTOM LEVELS
CHtCAOO, Oct 4. — Shattering
quotatlona both on stocks and ater-
llnf broke down buylnt resistance
of trains yesterday, and pitched
-wheat, corn and oata to fresh bottom levels. May wheat outdid any
low prloe record -which that delivery
had ever reached befon slnoe or-
tanlaed trading began hen. The
fall ln sterling militated eepeclally
against wheat, with North American export business In that commodity  fading almost to aero.
Wheat cloeed skittish. IH to S
centa lower; com 1 to IH down:
oata '. to l', oil, end provision,
varying from 7 oents decline to S
centa advance.
WAMBKROK, Oet. 4 >la*l«sal
Herbert Hoover waa chaise* |^^^B
ator Key Plttm»n Seturds^^^H
blocking an International alH^^^H
rei.no* which tb* Marsala Pun at
contend* la one solution 4^^^H
world d uveas km.
Httmen. ekalnaaa cf a senate
ver situation, said an
tlonal coatennce was "■-_,
ly necessary" and sd-*d data?
waa "exceedingly danger***. 8*
tke muasearis af tba laited
States."
Ha predicted tbat Ow M-
tala'a tempenry abaadouaeat et
the gold staaitert would axefaaw
tbla onutry frees feraaga __r-
kets aad anlees sometklng were
stem tt remedy tb* sltuatlwi tk*
I nlted Stetoe would be fiarred 8*
"Uee within Iteelf." Tk* reealt.
he said, would ke roatlaoed
unemplayaeat aad aten ante
ecanemle distress.
Plttman aald tba calling of an
international silver eonfannoe, by
the president, aa su**e*ted by tb*
senate, would Involve "no suggestion
of en sbsndotuneut of tha gold
standard by the United Statee."
VANCOUVER  LIST
MOiSS
Mf   Missouri   	
Oeorge int.     	
oeorgla River _	
orandview     	
Int. C. * c. _...
Lome oold 	
National   stiver
Noble  Hve  _.....»_
Premier     	
Pend   Oram*	
Pioneer    _—_.-
Porter   Idaho  	
Reno  Gold    	
Rufus   Argenta  	
Buth Hope   ,
Silver    Crest    	
Snowflake'  _.
J8H
at
Mtt
.04
10
•07 ii
.01
..    .04
. l.lt
.   M
Al
•OIK
oa*
A.  P.  Consolidate*  	
o and ■ Land* ...._..__.._.
Commonwealth    ..,.,.,..,■_..
■setcreet     	
pabyan 	
Hargal     - ^*-
McDoufall ssgud Haw _-...
Mercury     ______
McUod    	
MUl   City   	
Mayland      „
wwallte    _ 	
ss*
A).
-081.
08
.44
.78
2311
-18
Jt*
.08
.01H
.08 ti
_0
08
.08
■01 Vi
as
.08
jOS
3.
.08
.18
8.00
MONTREAL PRODUCE
MONTREAL. Que.. Oet
butter and egga hlgner. Hia *gg
market advanced during the mmtt
2 centa a doaen on top gradea of
trash eggs. Carlota ot Ontario ar
prairie province eggs were quoted
at 18—84 centa on Saturday tat extru and 37—at for firsts. Brttfci
Columbls egg* -wen to csote for
extraa and lb
centa for flnte.
Cheese, Ontario,  uw—UH.
Cheese  Quebec,  13— IX! i.
Butter Nb. 1 finest SO.
Eggs  treah  extru  In  cartons   87.
Eggs, fresh flnte In cartons. 83
l^s, storage extra* 1q cartons.
.33.
Egg<. storage firsts In carta**,
Jt.
BYoadcastYourProgram fromStation
W^N-T-A-D-S
Everyone who has a real message broadcasts over this station,
whether for good used cars, beautiful apartments, jobs, or musical
instruments, dogs, small businesses, etc., etc., etc. Whoever has
something to sell, to trade, or to buy, whoever has lost something
or found something, whoever wishes to employ or be employed, uses
the want-ad columns of the News. Use The Daily News classified
columns.
Use Nelson Daily News Want Ads
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Rhone 144 or 14}
 FADE  TEN
The Remington Typewriter representative is
in town. If you need
his services phone us.
Nana, RutharEord
Drag Co.
KootenayPlumbing
dc Heating Co., Ltd.
at Old Grill Block,
Baker   St..
REPAIRS
by Experienced  Workmen
Phone 666
JOHN A. SMITH
STANLEY JEMSON
Building?
No matter how big or
how small the job you may
be planning we are always
at your service to supply
you with the best of building lumber.
W.W.Powell
Co., Ltd.
"The Home of  Good
Lumber"
Foot of Stanley Street
Phone 176
HOMES BUILT IN NELSON DURING THE
PAST NINE MONTHS TOTALLED 36 AND
THE COST OF ERECTING THEM $82,050
Building in Nelson and Fair
view About on a Par
Not Counting Shacks
During th* put nine month*
Nelson hM experienced a steady and
well balanced building program
which well exemplifies tbt healthy
.growth of the city. During that
period 183,050 haa been invested
In Nelson homes, which represents
ths erection cf 86 structures. This
ls span from business building and
repair.
Not only were th* honvs numerous but they were commodious. 11
costing MOOO snd over, five costing
14000 and one costing W5O0.
Of tbe 38 penults Issued six were
for the erection of small structures
valued at brtween 150 and $350
Buildings ln the upper part of
Nelaon, which Included five auch
shacks, numbered 30 and homes
built ln the Fairvlew section of
Nelson, 18. Not taking Into consideration th* small dwellings, both sections of th* city wer. on a par
with 15 homes each.
PHONE TAXI
ri
trelibt Schedule
Dally to Rowland
■nd Trail. 10 a.m.
Trail    rhone    135
EUI T. T. * r. LTD.
ELECTRICAL
WORK
C-U   u   ioc   aa.   eiertrkei
work that nil mar MN la
jotir homo.   Keaaontbla ratal.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
FHONI a
L. B. Electric
Use  The  Nelson   Daily
News Classified Ads
COAL-COAL
Don't hesitate—Now is the time to fill your
bins—Before—not after the cold weather catches
you unawares.
GALT LUMP, ton $11.50
GALT STOVE, ton    9*50
JEWEL LUMP—The best tor
hot air furnaces. Ton .. 11.50
McGILLlVRAY Screen Lump
Steam Coal, ton  10.50
SPECIAL RATES on Car Load Lots—Dry Cord
Wood—All Lengths.
PHONE 35
Nelson Transfer 2J.
FORTY-EIGHT MEN
WILL BE ON RELIEF
IN TRAIL MONDAY
TRAIL. B. C, Oct. 4.—Thirty men
art at present employed on relief
work by the city of Trail end the
city engineering department sipects
to put 18 more to work on Monday
morning.
Slaty men leave the city this af-
ternoon*for Murphy creek where the
road camp ls ready for occupancy.
These men will work on relocating
end standarlzing the highway on
both sides of Murphy creek.
The unemployment situation in
the city is much alleviated with
these develpoments and wlll bt further Improved with the opening of
more road camps ln the near future.
NEWS OF THE DAY
For rent— Furnished Suite. ISe..-
trlct refrigeration. Kerr Apt*. ^7856)
One nicely furnished suite, al.o a
small suite for rent. Annable block.
(75(13)
Tonight. 8 p.m.. Salvation Arm?
Harvest Festival Sale, produce and
home cooking. Sheriff Harper, auctioneer. (7888)
Ladles of the Royal Purple ere
holding a military whist drive followed ny a dance ln Elks hall. October 7. at 8 p.m. Admission _5
cents.    Refreshments. (7048)
Fast President's Night of the Sons
of England benefit society at Memorial hall at 8:15. Tonight is the
night All active and ex-members
Invited. (7685)
AWAY
with Dost and
Ashes.
HEAT WITH
GAS
Automatic, Smokeless, Bootless and Cinderless ....
that's the story of Gas Heat.
Let's {five you some interesting facts and  figures.
Phone 37, City Gas Works.
—The City of Nelson
NEW LAMPS
for
OLD
€_ a   jgsa allowed on any old Lamp or Lan-
*W*m»3*mf terri) coai oil or Gas, Turned in
on a
NEW COLEMAN
Wood Vallance Hardware
Company, Vsmited
Wholesale - NELSON, B.C. - Retail
ROSE
Beauty Parlor
K.W.C. Block Ward Rt.
Phone .117 for Appointment.
 Downstairi	
Hunter Electric
and Plumbing
FOR  MATERIAL      -
Tou  rati  aaave nanny  M
TBI NELSON DAILY KIWI, NELSON. B.  C. — MONDAY MORNWO, OCTOBER I,  MM"
BRITISH FOOTBALL
RESULTS
yoUowlnf at the old country soccer results:
■FIRST DIVISION:
Birmingham 2. Portsmouth 1.
Bolton 2.  New Cutis  i.
Chelsea 2,  Liverpool  0.
Fverton S. Blackpool 2.
Clrlmsby 3,  Arsenal  1.
Manchester City 1, Sheffield TT. 1
Mlddlesborourh  1, Huddersfleld 1
Sheffield Wed. 1, Aston VHW *
Sunderland 2. Blackburn %.
West Bromwlch 4. Darby 0.
Westham  1, Leicester *}.
Accrlnfton 6. Rotherham 2.
Barrow   0,   Lincoln   2.
Carlsle   1,  Tork  *.
crews ], Southport '1.
Osteshead 3. Hartlepool 1.
Halifax 0. Darlington 3.
New Brighton 0, Chester 1.
Rochdale 3, Doncaster 1.
Stockport 2. Hull 0.
Walsall   3,   Wlgan   0.
wrexham 2, Tranmere  I.
SECOND  DIVISION:
Barnsley 0. Plymouth 0.
Bradford City   1, Bury 3.
Burnley  2,  Manchester  United  0.
Chesterfield 4, Tottenham 0.
Leeds United 6. Oldham 0.
Mlllwall   2,  Portvale  2.
Nottingham  2.  Notts   1.
Preston  1. Bradford 0.
Southampton l. Wolverhampton 3.
Stoke  4,  Charlton  0.
Swansea 2.  Bristol  0
THIRD   SOUTHERN:
Bournemouth 8. Mansfield 2-
Brlstol 0. Norwich 1.
Cardiff   3,   Brentford   2.
Clapton 2, Southend 4.
Crystal 2. Watford I.
OllHngham   l.   Coventry  3.
Luton  8, Bxeter 3.
Northampton 0. Thames 4.
Queens Park Rangers 1. Brighton 1
Reading 4. Pulhsm 2-
Torquay 2, Swindon  1.
EGGS ADVANCE IN
PRICE FIVE CENTS
AT TRAIL MARKET
Demand Greater Than  Supply; Flowers in Profusion
Few  Price  Changes
TBT  SCOTTISH  LEAGUE
FIRST   DIVISION:
Aberdeen 2. Partlck 0.
Clyde   3.   Ayr   8.
Dundee 3. Third  Lanark 2.
Falkirk 5, Dundee 2.
Hamilton  1, Hearts 4-
Kllmarnock 2. Celtic 8.
lelth 0, St. Mlrrert 4.
Morton 2. MotherweU 2-
Queens Park 3, Airdrlonlans 1.
Rangers 8. Cowdenbeath 1.
SECOND  DIVISION:
Albion l. R»1th tf.
Arbroath 2, Ct. Johnstone 3.
Bo'ness 2,  Montrose 0
Brechin 1, Stenhousemulr 7.
Dumbarton 1. Porter 3.
Dunfermline 1, St. Bernards 1.   .
East Fife  4.  Armdale  1. '
Hibernians  1.  East Stirling  1.
Kings Park 3. Edinburgh 2.
Queen of South 0, Alloa 3.
FINED   |2«   IN   TRAIL
TRAIL, B. C, Oct. 4—With the
charge amended to "entrusting his
car to another who operated it to
the common danger," Harold A.
Rush pleaded guilty this afternoon
and was fined $26 and costs by
Police Magistrate Noble Blnns. Rush
also was ordered to p*y the expenses of th* police department In
bringing him back from Nelson.
A Blind Eye
It may appear to be so. bat
the majority of cases can be
brought back to see by proper
application oE glasses.
These amblyopic eyes, as
they are properly called, are
cases of neglect from child*
hood.
We have a good number of
such cases of men and women
in the fifties that we have restored to normal vision.
J. O. Patenaude
R.O.
Optometrist and Optician
Expert Optical Service
Building Materials
Lumber
Brick
Cement
Lime
GARAGE? Bang-low? Store?
Indu»tri»l Plant? Whatever
it is you plan Us build, you can
rely on ni for all your building:
materiala.
FOR SALE—Door and Frame (or Vault. A bar-tain.
A. H. GREEN Si.
(SuccMaors to John Burn, ft Son)
OFFICES &«■• *
PHONE  2M
TRAIL, B   C, Oct. 4-Eg»» at ths
Trail markft were advanced fire
centa per doeen in all grades Prlday
and there wu scarcity at most
stalls.
Plowcv  were In profusion.  Vend-
ors, however, were selling them fast.
Meat,   shown   by   two   or   three
vendors,   wu  popular.
There were only a few changes In
general  commodity prloes  Friday.
prlcu quoted  wen:
Potatoes,  12 and 14 lbs. - I 25
Lettuoe.    lb !    .16
Tomatoes, fl and 7 lbs „..   M
Vegetable   marrow,  lb „   .03
Bach     _.   .10
Radishes,   bunch       M
Vancouver Approves
Unemployment Relief
Program for 2500 Men
VANCOUVER,   B.   C,   Oct.   *.—A
$1,110,000 unemployment relief program far Vanoouver, capable of put-
ting to work for three months between 2,000 and 2.600 married men.
wu approved by toe city council
Saturday. ,
Tht Dominion and provincial gov-
ernments are to pay $604,000 and
$188,62. respectively, and left the
ctty M20J75 to carry IU shsrs of
ths  wort.
Cucumbers,   2   for
Doeen     _...;....,
Swlu   chard,   lh	
Parsnips,   .0   lbs	
Lb	
Squash, 6 and 7 lbs. ......
Parsley,   bunch   	
Sage,  bunch
Dill  pickle,  bunch  	
Turnips,    lb	
Parsnips,    bunch   '.	
Beans,   4   lbs	
Cabbage,    lb.
Pickling  onions, lb.	
Carrots,   6   lbs	
Citron,   lb    .01
Each 10
Beets,  6  and   8 lbs 25
Cauliflower, lb 10 and    .l.'/j
Kale,   bunch       .05
Cooking onions, lb    ,08
4    lbs.     26
Com,  doe. 10 snd   ,15
Pickling cabbage, lb.  .03 and   .06
Pickling cucumbers, dos 10
Oreen   peppers,   lb.
Celery,  lb.
. .06
■ 10
Tomatoes, green and red, box .75
. .80
. .06
. .10
Tomatoes,  ripe,  crate
Egg  plant,  each	
Spinach,    lb	
FRUIT ^^^^^
Canteloupes,  from, each      .08
~     plums, 6 lbs «   .25
Damson plums, buket     .3ft
Cauba   melons  lb 06
Esch _.   .25
Ground  cherry,  lb.   10
Hazel   nuts,   lb 10
Peaches,  basket     .35
^^™   _-„ 1.50
Bradshaw plums, 3 lbs    .26
Crabs  1.40
Plums, lb 04, .06 and    .06
APPLES
Oravenstelns,   6   lbs -..   .25
12    lbs ..__'. -   .25
Colbert*,   6   and   12  lbs     .26
Alexanders.   6   lbs       .35
Twenty-ounce Pippins, 7 lbs. M
Orlmes Oolden. 10 and 12 lbs. .26
Wealthy,   14   lbs    .25
Box       1.26
Mcintosh,   basket    .26
Box    1.60
Crab apples,  10 lbs. 26
Kings,   box       .00
Jonathans,   box  1.00
Pears,   boxes   76  snd    125
panteloupe.\   each    10
3  for 25'
Italian prunes, lb.     .08
Css&ba melons, each    .10 and   .16
Watermelon,   each     -25
Prunes,    buket       .25
CUT   FLOWERS
Salplglossls,  bunch .    -10
Mixed   flowers,   bunch 10
Everlastings, bunch .. .26 -and .35
Dabllu,   bunch   .10,   .16   and   .25
Panslee.   bunch    10
Snapdragon,  bunch   10
Roses,  2 _br  «   .15
Bunch 80
VICTORIA, B. Ca. Oct. 4—Local
Wealthy apples are selling at $1-25
per box. Cooking apples ers from 85
cents to $1. Ontario Concord grapes
st 85 cents per buket. The grapes
from the Okanagan are of superior
quality to the Ontario product now
offering, says the msrket news letter,
department of agriculture, Victoria.
Tomatoes, hothouse, sre quoted at
$2.60 per 4-buket crate and Held
st $1-26. Cooking pears are selling
from $1 td $1-25 and table pears st
$2.26 per box. Xocal onions are on
the market at $1-40 and mainland
onions st $1.75. Yakima prunes are
wiling at $1.30 per crate. Celery at
90 cents per doeen. A car cf Gem
potatoes arrived from the Chllllwack
district this  morning.
The    following   wire   received
from   the   district   of   markets
from  Calgary: "Car of Mcintosh
apples   on    track    from    Orand
Forks district advertised by railway company for sale by tender
up until  Thursday noon. Valley
bulk Mcintosh expected here tomorrow. Strawberries and blackberries   arriving  irregularly   and
quality not very satisfactory."
SASKATOON—    The    weather    ls
again   fine   for   threshing   after   10
day« -of   mln.   Ontario  grape   stock
heavy   with   movement  slow,   prices
40 to 46  cents  per 6-quart buket.
Bulk  Mcintosh   apples  are  expected
on the market Pridsy. Some wilt be
packxd  and  sold  ln,  approximately,
40-lb.,  faced, and filled hampers.  A
car of Wenatchee prunes arrived during the week and ire selling at gi.io
to $1.25 per esse. British Columbia
oniony are selling st gi .60 to $1-75
per 100-lbs. A car of Spanish' onions
Is expected later this week. Also another  car   of   cranberries.   The  first
shipment   o_   Victoria   hothouse   tomatoes arrived on the mr.rket today.
Local hothouse tomatoes are retailing at 3 pounds for 25 cents.
TOpONTO—Peacfces, Elberta, six-
quarts, Ro. 1'at 90 to 75 oents. Pears,
Duchess, slues. 20 to 26 cents. Celery
40 to 75 cents per dozen. Cabbage,
40 cents per doeen. Cauliflower, 50
to 75 cents per down. Apples,
Wealthis in bushel baskets, $1 to
$1.25. Plums, Relne Claude and
Orand Dukes sixes, 20 to 35 oents.
Onions, per 100-lb. bag, Ho. 1,
$1.78. No. 2. $1: Sllversklm, 1 .-quarts
50 to 75 cents. .Potatoes, per eo-lb.
bag, 40 cents. The first British Columbia Mcintosh apples arrived yesterday, extra Stacy, $340 to $2.50,
fancy 85 cents less. Weather a little
cooler. Market still overloaded with
clocsl fruits and vegetables and
movement   draggy.
Petunia,  bunch
Bcabtosa,' bunch  	
Zlnntu,   bunch   	
.10
.15
__________^_ ■   ••&
Sweet peas, bunch .06, .10 and   .16
Cosmos,    bunch     10
Coreopsis,   bunch    10
Room, 2 blossoms  16
Carnations, bunch .... .20 and   .26
Gladioli. 6 In bunch    .10 and   .16
Asters,  bunch  10 and   .16
Chrysanthemums,  bunch -...._   JO
POTTEII  PLANTS
Irish Moss, each .._. -   ..0
Geraniums, each  16 to 1.50
Perns,  each   60  to 2.00
Fuchsias, each    1.00 to 2.00
Star of Bethlehem, up from     .80
Potted  roses, up from  60
Late  ferns,  up  from. .... 60
DAIRY   PRODUCE,
MEATS,   ETC.
Cream,   H   pint  _.„  js
Pint  .46
Buttermilk, quart  _......_ .10
Gallon     „.. .36
Curd   cheese,   lb.  .10
Chickens,   wring,   lb  .25
Chickens,  routers,  lb 30
Veal, lb 10 to .30
Butter, lb.  .80 snd .35
3 for  55 and .88
Chicken,   boilers,  lb.   .20.   .23, .25
Baby beef, lb 12 to .25
Pork, lb 16 to M
Homo cured bacon, lb. .30 and .35
Potted meat, lb ...» .20
Rabbits, each  .86
Extru,    do_ _...,. ,46
Firsts,   dos „... .40
Pullet extru, dog.   .35
pee weu, doe.    JJ0
Vines Defeats Perry
to Win Pacific Title
SAN FRANCISCO, , Cal., Oct. 4—
Ellsworth Vines, Paudena, United
States Blnglrs champion, annexed
the singles crown ol the 42nd annual Pacific roast tennis tournament
here today by defeating Frederick
Perry, British Davis cup star, ln
fttpilght   sets,   6-3,   21-10,   6-3.
Order
MERCURY
COAL
Clean—Sootless
Economical
Phone 797
RENWICK'S
TRANSFER
CP.R. OFFERS TO
SELL CAR, MACS
OF GRAND FORKS
Okanagan Grapes Found Superior to Those of Ontario; Spuds Roll
CAPONE"RAZZFD"
AT RUGBY TILT
Crowd   Gives   Him   "Bronx
Cheer'1  and  He  Quits
Stands;  Had Guards
CHICAOO, Oct. 4—Forty thousand
voices gave "Scarfsce Al" Capone
the "Bronx che^r" yesterday ln
Northwestern university's stadium ln
Bvanaton. Th* gang leader, accompanied by "Machine-Gun" Jack
McOurn and several other men, supposedly body-guards, wu jeered and
hooted by the vast throng attending
the Northwestern-Nebrssfc. football
game when he arose and departed
at the end of the third period.
The Capone party walked hurriedly
and apparently somewhat abashed
to the nearest exit and hastened to
escape. Northwestern woh.
ROUGHRIDFRS
WIN BUT LOSE
SERVICES, STAR
REGINA, Suk.. Oct. 4—Losing the
services of the dynamic sddia James
ln the second quarter when he
suffered slight concussion of the
brafn after a hard tickle Reglna
Roughrlders were still able to beat
Moose Jaw Maroons here In tbelr
first • home game of tbe senior western rugby schedule by 11 to 1-
Prominent through the first Quarter touchdown of the game before
his injury. He will be sufficiently
recovered, lt Is expected, to play in
the game against Saslcatoon Quakers   next   week.
COPPER PRICE
STATUS SHAKY.
BUYING LIGHT
Farther Drop From Present
Low Mark Forecast Lead
Unsettled  Zinc Steady
By CHARLES r. WILLIS
Editor, The Mining Journal, Phoenix
Considering tbe net that tbe demand for nonferrous metals Is so
small, It Is rather remarkable that
lead and zinc have maintained their
prloe and It ts omy ous to the excellent and improving statistical position of those metals and tbe fee.
that there la no preuure to sell.
Without a doubt the declining stock
market hu had an Influence od thc
demand for metals.
LONDON MART DISTURBED
The continued «ea__ness of lead
on tbe London market hu been •
disturbing factor and lt bu been
practically on a parity wtth New
Tork but hu not gone sufficient,
low to threaten the New Tork price.
Production of lead Is sufficiently
well under sales that no price re
duetlon from that condition ls anticipated,
A probable cause of the bobbin*
about of the London lead prloe 1'
the  difficulty  tn suing where  th"
outlet  Is to be  for ttie new  Australian  production that  li comin
on to ths market.   The refinery t
handle Mt. Ha bullion is design-
to  produce between 6000 and 600
tone   of   lead   monthly   tnd   ever
though   Mt.   Isa   might   scale   down
production  to fit tne edict of the
Lead   Producers'   Association,   there
will   still   be  a  slzeaoie  production
to absorb.
The United States lead statistics
for the month of August thow that
the industry, Is making forward
strides In putting Its house in order. Refined prooufioq for the
month amounted to 36,702 tons, a
decrease of 864 tons, shipment*
for the month of August amounted
to 38.6&0 tons, whtcn it the second
largest shipment for any month thla
year, but 3641 tone less than were
shipped ln July. Rtfined stocks ln
the hands of United States producers at the end of August amounted
to 131.082 tons, a further decrease
of 2876 tons from tbe previous
month.
It his been small quantities of
distress sine that have disturbed that
market and brought It down from
340 two weeks ago to the current
price of 8.70, but lt H felt that It
would take only small evidence of
demand to bring It back eg-tn.
Consumers are known to have but
small stocks and sre not bought
ahead and the dealers feel that a
buying wave ls close by.
Zlno consumers nave been restricting their purcnases to immediate needs only. There wu an
active buying spurt in July and it
ls probable thst some consumer
overbought at that time and that
that accounts for the smaller sales
made during August snd September, while sellers have been unwilling to sell for future delivery,
there ls stated to be a loosening up
snd thst sine can now be bought
at current prices for delivery
through November.
Most of the large une producers
have withdrawn u sellers realise
that little is to be gained by offering metal on an unwilling market. The opinion la expressed that
lf sellers would only bide their time
and not show such great anxiety
to wll they would probably experience leu difficulty In making sales
and would undoubtedly get better
prices.
Domestic copper buying Is to
small that the custom smelters, to
who the market hu been passed,
are paying little attention to selling but are devoting their attention to the foreign demand which
hu maintained reasonably well since
the lowering of the export price.
Domestic producers are making no
effort   to   sell   at   any   price.
Toe situation with regard to copper ls reaching a climax, with the
lowest price on record and surplus
stocks lnncreulng each month. Many
observers wonder why, ln tht apparent lack of leadership of the
copper mining industry, Interested
banker* and stockholders have not
taken a hand and forced some action toward stabilization.
The question, "How low can copper go*** it now' heard on every side,
and this Itwlf denotes there Is a
general feeling, or fear, that the
bottom of the marxet hat not yet
been reached- Having come down
to 7 oents, and with supplies " increasing, snd demand dwindling,
and tellers anxious, lt may go lower
before the threat, or realization, of
bankruptcy forces a drutlc reor-
ganlra-Jon.
nome people may argue that the
corner crisis has come and gone,
and' that despite the large unsold
stocki, the market Is just bumping
aloni? somewhere near the bottom
pending a revival In trade, which Is
u ture to come u day follows
night. Prom * philosophical point
ot view, there Is muen to be said
ln favor of this line of thought.
PULLOVER
SWEATERS
A sweater has be-j
come a regular part]
of every man's wardrobe, and of course,
the new sweaters Sre
colorful. Here's a
great collection of
new ones — in the
popular, pullover
style. Price? are
moderate.
$3.50-$3.95
to $6.00
Phon*
TAXI and
TRANSFER!
44    lull j   Freight   Sche-d
*  *    to  Tnll  anil   Rosalaoa
Leaves   NeUon   10   e.1
Trail Depot—Dominion Gann f
Roaelaud   Depot—U   D.   CM*
CON. CUMMINS
For Modern Plumbing
at Moderate Prices
tu
VIC GRAVES
MASTER  PLUMBEB
Opp. City Ball non. 114
A. D. PAPAZIAN]
WATCHMAKER,
JEWELER
and Graduate Optician]
413  HALL  STBEET
Phone
TAXI
The Beit at Servtal
.Careful,  courteotu
^^^^^^^U      Driven
Nelson Tranfer Co, Ltd. i
35
GLASSES
J. A. C. Laughton, RCL
OPTOMETRIST  and  OPTICIAN
•iult. 209-201. Medical Art. Bld|.
A   full   etock   of   various   .lie*
and colors carried by
CITY DRUG CO.
Xehon's Dispensing ChemisU
Phone 21 Box 10M
Always at your, service
French Runner Makes
New Record for Mile
PARIS, Oct. *.— (AP)—JnlM
Mdnirmr^r, French mldrtH 'Ht-
t ance star, todsy srt a new
no.Id's record for the mile mn
when he covered the dtatanre
ln four minutes *'i seconds.
Ladoomegue's performance slipped more than a second from
the accepted world's record or
4, 10 2-5 Kt by Paavo Nurml In
1921.
Nelson
Business Collet*
DAY OB EVENING CLASSES
Individual    Tuition—Commence
any time.
P. O. Boi 14 Phone SM
JUST   ARRIVED
Another shipment of Parker Duofoli
Pens,   right   from   the   factory.
The Pen with a lifetime ruarantei
Smythe's Pharmacy
Prescription  Specialist
PHONE   1
Shop with us by mall.    _
NOW SHOWING
Good-Time Charlie's
Here to Set Tou All
a-Laughing
Two Shows
• ..Nightly
7:30—9:30
Matinee
2:30
CHARLIE
RUGGLES
-THB JOLLY rUN-SltiXtR IN
"CHARLITS AUNT' OFF ON A
LOVB  BPRSE.
GIRL HABIT
ALL HM I_FB HTS BDN AWAY
FBC.'. MATTtlMONY—AND WHIN
KIT FINALLY BBOS FOB IT THB
OIBLS WONT TAKE HIM SERIOUS!/. I
SOMETHING MUST BE DONE-SEE THIS MATR.M0NIA7, MIXUP
COMEDY. .
"THE   LUBE   OE   HOLLYWOOD"
With
Ttralna   Brooks.   PhjIH.   Crane.
Rita  Ftvnn,  Qeeete  Chandler
SPORT1.IOHT Vf\\  lWITWa
"THB    DIXIE    CHASE" £__"_
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BARBARA STANWYCK in 'TEN CENTS A DANCI?
