 ■
——*•
Fernie Conditions Worse
as Winter Nearing
—Page Five
VOLUME It
s<;:rH$0tt
\tift.
IDE   NELSON  DAILY  NEWS.   NELSON,  B.C.—SATURDAY   MOBNINO,   OCTOBEB  21,  IMS
IIVL CENM A COW
McGill Athletes Winners
of Golf, Track Events
—Page Seven
—...— ■l—        — I   '     ' ■ ■-■■.■■■-. ■.e.ce-C.oe-C■-C-l■^■■■■^^|■^
NUMBER  1ST i
U.S. RECOGNITION OF SOVIET LOOMS
Engineer Biroe
Dies in Wreck
Westbound Freight Hits Reck Two Miles
East of Procter, Throwing Locomotive
Into Ditch; Fireman   Maidment   Hurt
SILVER SHIPMENTS IN CANADA
SHOW INCREASE IN SEPTEMBER
When a westbound freight, No .73, struck a rock
two miles east of Procter at about 8:30 o'clock Friday
evening, the engine turned over and went down the
embankiv-nt killing Engineer E. Birce of Cranbrook.
C. F. Maidment, fireman, received cats about the head.
C. E. Mansfield, chief dispatcher, stated at 1
o'clock this morning that the line would be cleared at
about 8 o'clock this morning.
An auxiliary crew was dispatched to the scene of
the accident at 10:30 and accompanying it were Dr.
J. P. Gussin and a nurse.
Shortly after 1 o'clock a second train left for tha
scene carrying Dr. H. H. MacKenzie, coroner and provincial police officers.
Engineer Birce is married and has run out of
Cranbrook for a number of years. He formerly resided
in and ran out of Nelaon.
Remains Found in Vicinity
Pitt Lake Not 'Doc' Brown's
••DOC*' BROWN
Markets at
a Glance
(By the Canadian Frew)
1 oro ni o ond Mon treat: stock*
cloee   Irregularly   lower   but   firm.
Toront mlnee: Moderately hlfher.
New York: Murks cloee firm and
hlfher.
Winn I per   Hheat   closed   higher.
London: Bar Mhrr, lead and ilnc
nnchanged; copper and tin higher-
New York l lln r illver higher;
oopptr, lead ami zinc nnrhtnged;
tin   lower.
New York: Cotton and rubber
higher;  an gar  and  coffee  steady.
New York: Canadian dollar down
4-1*1 to MH.
Bone  Dust  Believed
20 Years of Age;
Missed Fortune
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Oct. 30
—A quantity of aoft white chalfe-
llue material that may possibly have
been human bones at ona time la
all that fvovlnel&l Constable O. A
Bellhouse has brought hick from
ths wilds that lie aome 30 miles
northwest of tba Allco camp and
between the Pitt and Alouette lakes.
Constable' Henhouse we* oent out
to hring In tha bones of a skeleton
said to hsve been aeen theft about
a yaar ago by ii- C. Vuycka of Van-
comer, who was prospecting.
The material brought tn was
feund cloae to * lOng-dlsused shack.
Tbe faw platea asd camp sundries
showed that thay had not baaa ln
use ior * long period,"the police
say.
It was thought that tba bones,
if such thay an, might ba those of
Doc" or "Volcanic" Brown, a wall-
known projector, who la aald to
have gone Into tho Pitt Lake dlstrlet
tare years ago, and haa not been
heard of alnce, but tbe polios thick
that if the material brought m la
bone, tt must have been lying tn
the open for 30 years.
B- A. Brown waa a realdent erf tbe
North Fork. 13 mllee north of Grand
Porks, for nearly 40 yeara, and became famous through hla refusal for
30 years ago of 376,000 for t property near bla homo with an iron
capping. He also claimed to be tha
locator of the Copper Mountain
mine near Princeton, now owned by
the Oranby company.
He derived tbe qame of "Doc"
from hla dispensing of herbal medicine from which at times he raised
much revenue.
Judgment Reserved
in Hartley Appeal
VANCOUVER. Oct. 30 (CP). —
Judgment was reserved today by Ur.
Justice H. B. Robertson on an application in supreme oourt for reinstatement of Major John Curtis
Hartley, ss Indepeudent candidate in
UUooet  ln  the  provincial  elections.
Ths cose arises out of tha nomination day proceedings reoently at
lillooet, when Oeorge M. Murray,
Liberal candidate, filed an affidavit with Returning Officer Alec
Ogston that four of the names oo
Major Hartley,, papers were also
on the papers of a rival candidate.
Commander John Morrison Bmlth,
C.CF.
The returning officer ruled Major Hartley's  papers   lnvslld.
KAMLOOPS. B.C., Oet. 30 (CF).—
Paced with the realgnatlon of nine
members of the board of directors
of Royal Inland hospital, city oouncll haa called a apeclal meeting to
discuss the situation.
| Word of the resignation came In
' a letter from the hospital secretary.
j Tbe move, effective November 1, ln-
eludes* A- M. Tyrlll, chairman.
I Tha directors' step followa rs-
i fusai of the government to give
, the board financial assistance. Four
directors  remain.
Brownlee Appeals for
National Wheat Body
■DMorrrow,  oet.  30   (cp>—Ap-
pea's for a national wbeat board,
relief work to meet the unemployment situation, cheaper money and
short term agilcultural credits were
made by Premier j. 1. Brownlee
ta tendering greetings today to
membera of the Alberta division of
the Csnadlan Weekly Newspapers'
association now in annual convention *>jre
WOULD BAN THE
EXPORT OF NICKEL
victoria, Oct. 30 <cp>-a reeolutlon calling upon tha Dominion
government to place an embargo on
export of nickel to hinder nationa
ln making preparations for war, today bid bean paaaed by Victoria
assembly No. 1 Native Sons of
Canada.
Tba reeolutlon will be forwarded
to tha national council ln Toronto
w.*h tbe requeet It be placed before
the proper authorities. Nickel la
used In tbe manufacture of armaments.
WAGES  INCREASED
TORONTO. Oet. 30 (CF).—Owing
to vastly Improved business conditions and brighter outlook for the
future. Tip Top Tailors announce
an Increase of 10 per cent wlll be
glvan their employees. Tbe Increase
will  become effective  October 34.
PREMIER   hENNETT   LEAVES
WINNIPEO   FOB   OTTAWA
WINNIPBO, OCt. 30 (CP) .--After
a busy two weeka in western Canada, Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett, prime
mlnlater of Canada, Is on hta way
back  to Ottawa  tonight.
VANCOUVER, OCt. 30 (CP)—A
veteran of the IBM Northweat rebellion, Robert Stanley, 70, is deed
here.
NICKEL EXPORT
IS TWO MILLION
POUNDS AHEAD
Month's   Production
About Average of
Year 1926
240,110 OUNCES
OF GOLD MOVES
Production From the
Manufacturers
Is Step-Up
OTTAWA. CWt M (CF)—Mineral
production In Cauda Int month
na about tlw' tMn* es tbt eve-
rsge for th* w UM which I.
twm M tke hue yesr et tM
bf tin Danlnlon bureau of tt*-
tlstlce In Ita comperlsons. Tba Index far Aunt wai 99 and September according to prewnt tn-
dlcattent  wtll  be  hlfher.
Export, of nickel which reached
• new hl|h point durlnj September of-the preient movement.
helped   Improve   the   showing   of
Ntekel exporta In September totalled 10346490 pounds coopered
-wtth   8,443.600   In   August.   Since
Jane, wben export, were  10,503,-
ttt pound., . High level hss been
•hown   only   lecond * to   that   of
tnt   and   lttt,   when   Industrial
llltsdllins rearmed  the  rasilmum
for tbe poet war period.
—mmtatsta ol (old  wer» _to.no
ounces ln September compared with
2M.407   la   Auguet.   Tbe   Ions-term
expansion In* fold production le Indicated by the Index of 164.1. Silver
shipments   were     l ,768.360    otmeei
oompared with 1.378.000 In August,
tbe Index moving up from 67.8 to
80.4.
MANTJTACTURINO   IS   UT
Manufacturing production wai
neater In September than ln tbe
preceding month, tbe indea being
97.0 compared wltb 968. Tbe Index In the montb under review
oompleted an advance of »even consecutive months, reaching a new
maximum point alnce September.
1930. The gain from February to
September at 97.0 compered wltb
M.7 wee no lees tban est per cent.
Tbe peper and lumber industries
were not «o active ln September as
In tbe preceding montb. tbo output
of newsprint dropping from 194,363
tone to 179,416. Tbe adjusted Index of wood pulp export, wae 663
-compared with nt. Export! of
plank, and board, wee 113,939.000
leet compared with 136,458.000 ln
Auguet, the adjusted decline being
nightly more than live per cent.
HIGHER TARIFF ON
FRUITS SOUGHT
Queen Mory Meets
Bull in China Shop
PAKKNHAM. Norfolk. England,
Oot. 30 (CP cable)—A young
bull todar rushed into a ehop
where Queen Marr and the
princess royal were examining
gooda in the china department.
The animal hsd fled from traffic In a crowded etreet outside.
Tba royal party looked up-In
surprise at the aound of commotion snd the Queen found
the bull standing almost beside
hsr. Its driver and clerks hastily
persuaded tt to leave before any.
dsmage resulted. The Queen
and the' princess remained unperturbed* and apparently en-
Joyed tbe incident.
Her majesty said: 1 have
heard of a bull la a china ahop,
but bad never seen one before."
State  of  Washington   Asks
Protection on Pears,
Apples
SPOKANE. Wash . Oct. 30 <AP).—
Movement for an increase In tariff
on apples and peara to protect tha
industry m tbls state ea a result of
unususlly heavy Canadian crops, was
revealed  todav.
John A. Bchoonover, enecutlve
vice-president of tbe Spokane Regional Agricultural Credit corporation, eeld tbe increase was asked
by J. W. Hebert of Yakima, chairman of the tariff oommittee of the
Waahlngton Boxed Apple aasoclatlon.
Bchoonover etated the tariff ot
38 eente a bushel and 75 conte a
barrel on apples makes it poesible
for eastern msrkets. where much of
tha Wenatchee. Yakima and Hood
River crops are marketed, to be
over-supplied with Canadian fruit.
Roundhouse Wreckers
Look for Corner Stone
Coin ond the Liquor
BROCKVILLE. Ont., Oct. 30 (CT).
—Wreckers at work demolishing an
abandoned Cansdtan Nstlonsl Railway roundhouse worked with new
vigor today. They are attempting
to find the corner stone, laid eg
yeara ago. ln which was deposited
the usual coins and papers—and a
bottle oy two ot liquor.
VANCOUVER CHINESE
LOTTERIES CLOSED
VANCOUVER. Oct. 30 (CP).-Polios raiding parties visiting Chinatown, report all Chlneee lottery
house*   cloeed.
Pollce officlsls attribute this to
a persistent campaign against the
placee, which has resulted In fines
of more than 13000 In the psst
three weeks, rather then any spectacular drln.
CURWEN STORE
BURGLARIZED
$17 Taken in Friday
Morning Crime
at Ymir
■IMOt, B.C., Oct. _0.-Du.lW tta*
earl? houn of Friday morning an
unknown pmon brake into and
robbed Ai* tlon ot 8. curwen.
Trace. Ml by tn* burglar war* a
broken -window, a reneecked atock
of clothing and ahoea. aad a bat-
tend aale door. To all appearances
tbe thM entered throuih tbe broken
window vhlch le located et the
(not ot -ehe building. He took in
la cash tat aone clothing.
(THEHEADS
APPLE BOARD
Apple Orders Will Be
Pro-Rated Among
the Shippers
VBtieon. bc., Oct. jo (»)—
Major X. V. UoOulre, forme.- man*
agec of the stabilization board.- hae
been eppolnted chairmen and manager of Okanagan apple marketing
oommittee.
Machinery of the subluxation
board will be at Msjer .McOutn'a
dlepoeal end he will be united by
a oommittee of three shipper- end
one grower. The litter's vote .will be
equal ln effect to that of the three
•blppen.
The growen* representative le W. S.
llasklns. leader of the "cent » pound"
campaign, and the thne shipper.
named en David MoNelr. J. I.
Montague end A. O. Under, all of
Vernon.
Under the flan, orden will he
pro-rated among the shippers and
all collection and adjustments wl'l
he made by the committee.
FRANCE URGES
NEW 3 POWER
PEACE TREATY
; Consider Four-Power
Pact Impossible
at Present
BRITAIN TRIES
STOP ARGUMENTS
White Paper Aimed to
End the Simon-
Neurath Row
(By The ritti-lliff Treat)
Negotiation, looking to recognition ot Sonet Suede by United
Statee wen announoed Frldey.
Preeldent Roosevelt Invited the
preeldent of Russia. Mikhail Kalla-
ln. to consider the. mstter. end the
Soviet leader tnnounoed he will
nnd Maxim Utvlnoff. commlsear
for fonlgn affaln. to Washington.
Other developments tn the Euro*
peaa situation:   ,
OENEVA   WORRIED
OENEVA: League of nations circles believed Germany's iwelgnatlon
from the league win ban * disastrous effect on the disarmament
cause. Notification of the action will
be delivered to the leegue necrete-
rlet Baturday.
PRANCE URGES
PAWS: French eeoetotg wrge-J thtlr
government to erect a three power
egnement of franoe, Oreat Britain
aad Italy to supplant tne four-
power peace pact which French lead-
in oondder dead because of Germany's withdrawal from the disarmament conference-end the league.
Radical Socialists end Soclallata
failed to agree on tbe civil aervloe' pay cut provision of Premier
Daladler's budget-balancing aad antl.
Inflation progrsm ahd thereby made
mon precarious the life of the cabinet. The premier warned the finance committee lf the budget Is
not balanced Inflation of tae franc
win   be   necessary   ln   five   ec   lit
TO THRASH OUT DIFFERENCES
WITH PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
First Direct Communication Between Tw0
Governments Since 1917: Means New
Competitor for Britain
Col. ■ Pred Liater, ' Independent
candidate ln Nelaon-Creston riding,
la IU at hie home et Camp Lister
end hae been compelled to cancel
a number of meetings. He le Buffering from bronehitia and hie doctor
het Instructed him to remain at
home at leaet until Sunday.
RUSSIA SEES MOVE AS STRENGTHENING,
OF CREDITS AND FAR   EAST   POSITION
Campbell Turned
Back by Snowfall
Oa hie way to motor to Coleman.
Alta., Lorne A. Campbell stopped at
Erlckaon. on hearing that there wee
two feet of anow at crows Nest
ead nturned to South Slocan by
Prlday morning's train from the
Oww.
Mr. Campbell atated tben waa
anow en tbe apple trees ftt Erlckson.
Ute later part of the crop betng
atlll to pick.
BANK BANDITS FAIL
IN  MANITOBA  TRY
WINNIPEO. Oct. JO (CP).—Actln
tn rural Manitoba for two weeka.
bandlta today bad failed tn en attempted raid on the Royal Bank of
csnada branch at Lundar, Man,
After cutting all telephone wires
to tht village, the bandit- broke
Into the bank laet nlgbt, but apparently frightened by noise from
a dance cloee by, fled without loot.
rOBVM FOR JEWS
AND   MARXISTS
BERLIN: Officlsls wen silent CO
Oermany'a realgnatlon -lorn lbe
league but eeml-oftlclal eources gan
aa reasons for the action the league
wae a "forum for Jewa and Mar_-
lete" end It bad nfueed to admit
Oermany from the beginning.
END  THE   DEBATE
LONDON: The British gowrnment
Issued a white peper suppocedly
aimed nt ending e dispute between
tbe Britleh and oermea foreign
mlnlstere regarding Germany's stand
on disarmament.
SHOOT  TO  KILL
VIENNA: Revival cf eetlvlty by
outlawed Hitlerites resulted In orders
to shoot to kill Nazi demonxtrat-
ore, glnn polioe In Dornblrn.
Teaching Would Be
Socialised Under the
Regime of the C.C.F.
VANCOUVER. Oct. JO (CPI—Under
a cooperative Commonwealth Fedention regime, teachers would not
be nqulnd to teach socialism but
"teaching would be socialized,** MUs
Mildred Oateihout. CCP candidate
for tbe forthcomlng'Brltleh Columbia
electlona ln Vanoouver-Burrard, told
a political  meeting.
DAKOTA GUARD
IS NOT CALLED
Sheriffs  Ordered  to
Enforce Embargo
Upon Wheat
BISMARCK, ND.. Oct. » (AP>-
Shertffs wtn ordered today to en-
| force the North Dakota wheat em-
bergo ee oovernor WlUlam Langer
shifted hie line of stuck ln an effort to force prices upward.
The grain, however, continued to
move out of the atate b» rellroad
ae lt bad done since tbe embargo
wu declared In effect et midnight
Wedneaday. Camera said lt wae their
duty to accept whett for ahlpment
oeder ootnmeree commission rulee.
pleas for eMtlj -use of the national
guard, already preparing for aobll.
nation, wtn abandoned to avoid
interstate commerce eompllcatlffha
and eapenae to tbe state. Langer
eald troops would go Into action
only " the state's 63 aberlffe were
unable to enforce hla orden.
FORMER NELSON
HOTELMAN DEAD
Wells Also Known As
Oldest ex-M.P.P.
in Province
BY FRANCIS M, STEPHENSON
Associated Press Staff Writer   .
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (AP)—President Roosevtri
suddenly opened the way today for relations between tm
16-year-<tld communistic government of Soviet Russia asff
the United SUtes.
In a letter to Mikhail Kalinin, president of the Sovietl
republic, Mr. Roosevelt 10 days ago invited him to send u
represenUtive here "to explore with me personally tS_
questions of standing between our countries."
On Wednesday, Kalinin cabled acceptance of the fa-l
viUtion and designated M. Litvinoff, commissar for foreign!
affairs to come to Washington to talk with Mr. Roosevelt,
A date for the conference remains to be set
At the same time in tttt
away Moscow the exchangM
was made public. It was thel
first time since the over-T
throw of the czarist reginjil
in 1917 the governments <f|
these two nations had be
in direct communication.
Mr. Roosevelt emphasised the lett
ter simply meant what they aalf,
"Participation In eucn a discussion
would, of oouree," eeld the prealdeat
In hla letter to Kalinin, "not
commlt either nation to any future
course of action, but would indicate
a sincere dealn to reach a aatlsfad.
tory solution of the problems lt If
my hope euch conversations might
.eault ln good to tha people of bottl
our  countries."
CALLS BENNETT
TRADE RUINER
King Asks Return of
Libarat in N. B.
by-Election
VAIfOOUVER. Oct. 30 (*£»>—W. 0.
Wells, former minister of lend ln
ths British Columbia government
of Jamee Muir. le dead here, aged
81. He was recognised as the oldest
ei-MLA.  in  tbe province.
Mr. Welle wae weU known ln the
Kootenay and Boundary country.
•for a number ot yean he wae proprietor of the Hume hotel ln Nelaon.
Re wee alte Interested ln the lumber
builnees.
BDMUND8TCW, N.B. Oct. 10 (CF)
-A crowd ot nearly 4000 heard til.
I Hon. W. L.-Mackenzie Rind. Do-
l minion Liberal leader, denounce thr
j tariff aad trade policies of the
government.
It would hem been "a thousand
tlmea better for Canada If Mr.
Bennett hed done nothing" Instead
of adopting measures which had
"strangled trade." "Mr. King declared.
"Thle le the ttme you have to
decide lf you want Mr. Bennett's
policies." be eald. "Mr. Bennett haa
built a gnat blockade around hie
country.' Tou electors now han a
chance to help d-stroy It."
Mr. King eeked the electora to
support the Liberal candidate end
thus register disapproval of government  tariff po'lclee.
Mr. King's sddress tonight -res
one af the high spots of tbe Liberal
campaign In tbla riding. For weeka
a atrenuoue three-cornered fight hss
been weged for the eeat formerly
held by Max. D. Cormier. Conservative. On Monday electora go to the
poll*.
Vancouver Exports
Show an Increase
VANOOTJVBR. Oct. 10 (CP)—Al-
moet ell oommodltles moving out of
Vencourer to world marketa durln,
tbe flnt nine months of 1911 show
an Increase over the corresponding
period of  1912.
Setae ef the lergest increases ere
indicated ln lttt figures to date
given below with 11133 figures In
brackets: Applee. boxea. U.1M (16.-
Ml): lumber. F.B.M.. I04.-31.3SH
(S3.01S.947); logs. FBM. 17,768,985
(78.780,0731
Manitoba Pool It
Behind the London
Wheat Agreement
wiNNiPBO, Oct. jo (cp)—nm
of the* orgenleed farmers' - associations to formally endorse the l/m*
don wheat agreement, which glvea
caneda en eiport quota of 300,000,-
000 bushels, the Maltose pool Elev-
aton' delegatee, ln annual meeting,
adopted a reeolutlon of approval today. The endoraatlon ot the IM
delegatee was unanimous.
BEAVER DIES OF
OVER-EXERTION
LATE NEWS FLASHES
WINNIPEO — Realgnatlon of 11
doctors from staff of Victorian hoepltel. endorsed by Winnipeg Modi*
eftl   association.
BT. JOSEPH'S. N.B.—No lajurlee
reoleved by studente or * staff in
million dollar unlveralty fire.
NIW TORK—J. P. Morgan. OB.
banker opttmletlc of - up trend In
Britiah' business. "England hae turned the corner," he stated on return
from  sbrosd.
wmtOIT. — Oherlle Oehrlnger
eigne again with Detroit Americans.
QUEBEC—Crown reels ceee ln In-
qui"! lato *"!u*ed opal combine.
PARIS.—Defeat of Daladler cabinet looms maneclngly. Premier
warned If budget not balanced, inflation necessary.
KOBE, Japan. — Typhoon sinks
steamer Yaahlma Maru with lo a of
84 lives. There wera 83 survivors.
One thousand eallora missing since
typhoon struck. Two of' desd Identified ee wives of British sir offlcen.
VANCOUVEB.—Oordon Sloan, Llb-
erel candidate, euggesta "gold note
plan" for "work and wages" plank
in Liberal program. Buggeate purchase of annuel gold yield of province and Issue of gold notes st
ratio ot two ta one.
WINNIPEO, Oct. 10 (CP).—reiti.
one of the beavers et Aaslnlbelne
park, la dead here, and the ep-
proachlpg winter la Indlrertly held
responsible. Working feverishly In
preparation for the winter siege.
Felix dropped dead while hauling a
log. An autopsy showed that death
woe reused by over-exertion.
Wintry Winds Hit
Western Canada
WINNIPIW. Oct. 30 (CP)— Shutting wind* (rom the north brought
tbt nrat rati touch of winter weit-
tva Canads today. From th* Rocky
mountains to tha Manitoba-Ontario
boundary line a blanket of show
ranging from 10 inches in southern
Alberta to a modest two inches In
Manitoba put a temporary balt'to
fall work on the land and brought a
hazard   to  traffic  cn   the   highways.
EXPOSURE CAUSES
DEATH OF TOT
LINC3AY, Ont. Oct. 20 (OP>.—
Missing since Thursday morning,
two-year-old son of Ellsworth Jackson ot Ewan, 13 miles HU ot
Klnmount, was found tedoy a mile
and a half from his home. He oie.i
ott  eXDosure.
MILLION DOLLAR
LOSS IN FLAMES
St.   Joseph's   University   in
New Brunswick Levelled
ST. JOSEPH'S. N.B, Oct. 10 (CP).
—TU. of unknown origin wiped out
St. Joseph's university, causing damage hurriedly estlmsted at tl.000.00a.
The main building ud "Old unlnralty" unit wen leveled, only the
new dispel, skating rlnk end gymnulum survived. The institution was
under Jurisdiction of the Holy Cross
order.
Ontario to Have
Straw Beer Vote
BRAHTPOIID, Ont. Oct. JO (CP).
—Prior to the neit provincial election. Ontario voten wlll have en
opportunity te eaet a "straw -rote"
on the beer end wine Issue.
Carda wth be sent out by the
Ontario Prohibition union soliciting public opinion.
THE WEATHER
NELSON      _» 4S
vsncouver      38 0*.
Vlctorla       43 63
Kamloopa   S3 49
K.tevan   Point  40 S3
Prlnoe   Rupert  SO 40
AUln     10 14
Dawson      3* 10
Seattlc     33 54
Portland      44 64
San   Pranclsco     S3 68
Spoksne      34 46
Prince   Rupert     38 40
Loe  Angeles     64 73
Penticton   30 —
Vernon     33 —
'Tend   Forks      38 46
Kaslo      33 —
Cslgary      34 36,
Edmonton      34 34
Iwlft Current   34 30
Prince Albert   33 30
Qu'Appelle     30 38
Winnipeg     36 38
Nanaimo      40 S3
Mooae   Jaw      36 80
*_»-B5'ow nro.
TOKECAST—
Por 34 hours ending 8 a.m. (Pacific  time)   Itftuli-f.
Neleon and vicinit;—P».-tl< cloudy
with ahsrp fruits st night
MOSCOtr-pLEASIO
MOSCOW,   Oct.   30—Today's   sstS
nounoement occasioned universal
setlsfsctlon In ths US.S.R. becautt
from the resumption of official r*.
lstlons Soviet Ruasla hopes for •
thnsfold result:
"Greatly increaeed credit facilities;
lifting of barriers sgslnst some ei
Its goods, end a strengthening et
Its position ln the fsr east with respect  to  lte  relations   with  Japan"
Russia bas virtual^ made ttat
first two tbe conditions for aay
serious revival ot Soviet-American
trsde, which hss been declining
clneo 1081,
Moscow needs long-term credit!
for any purchases It may make la
the United States because Its exporti
an not sufficient to pay for the
goode It wishes to buy abroad.
BRITAIN NOT SURPRISED
LONDON Oct. 30 (API—metddKt
Roosevelt's overture toward reoognl*
tlon of Russia occasioned no surprise
tn government circles.
Whether recognition will bring advantageous results to the American
b-istness, industrial end flnendel
v orld In another queetlon, aocordlbg
lo observers who hin watched
Clreat Britain's quarrels and npeels
with Soviet authorities over a 10.
year period.
But politically, according to the
Britleh view, tht American tlta
finaly ends Ruaala'a "political outlawry."
Politically, -united statea recognition of Russia will mean llttle to
Britain, but commercially, ln nle-
tlon to fonlgn tnde. the effect If
likely to be of Immediate Importance
hen.
Aceordlng to observers the Unim
States recognition wlll mean the active appearance of a new competitor for Russian business end Brltisli
menutactunn will preas for more
speed ln negotiating trade arrenge-
ments with the U.S.S.R.
CREDIT  ARRANGEMENTS
An Important possibility is a result of tbe move concerns what
credit arrangements wlll be mgdf
with Russia and what terms wlll he
uranted for the length of credit
and what produoti wUl be effected.
If machine tools for example are
Involved, Onat Britain would ba hit
hard.
Britain's outatandlng endlta tp
Russia at preeent ere between Iff*
000,000   and   160,000,000.
The limit for thle cndlt le If
months, with moet business dona qt
a yeer basis.
Oermsny hsa granted Russia on-i-
Its extending for four teen.
Italy also hee granted credlte to
Rusala on a four-year basis, aad
should ths United States move to.
wards slmllsr arrangements sa bate
Oermsny and Itsly. observers be.
Hen Greet Britain would feel the
effects.
DUCKS FOOLED BY
ICE ON WATER!
KATHRYN. Alta.. Oct. 20 tCDmrn
Low temptraturea brought loe to ttt
like hen, presenting a flock tf
ducks with quite a surprise when
tbey plunged Into ihe Ice, covering
their swimming  quarters.
TRAIL STIPENDIARY
MAGISTRATE RESIGNS
VICTORIA. Oct. :0 (CP)—Thd
resignation of tjllpendla.y Magistral*
Ruasel J. U. Richards of Trsll wlf
accepted  la  provincial  orders today.
	
 *■
TBE  NELSON  DAILT NEWS,  NELSON,  B.C.—SATITOAT*   MOBNINO,   OCIOBEE  11,  1888 ■
Hemorrhoids
II OA "PILES"
Dr. Chase', Ointment relieves the itching, burning, stinging
ft-r^Urm* almost immediately and for half a century has proven an
«Bective treatment for thia torturing ailment, Why risk an
operation whtn thla ointment will relieve you?
DrXHASt'S
Oil%ITIWIBEimJT
LEADS GUILTY
PASSING TRAM
Pleading guilty to, paaal&g a strwt
t that was discharging *ni taking
t paaseugari, Robert Nelson, Alberta
illness man, explained to Magls-
fete William Brown in pollce .court
r|day. that he realized too late
At he was erring, but made
Bends by bringing hla car to a
BD    beside    the    street    ctr.    The
[magistrate took his Intent into con-
sldertilon, and  fined him only IS.
I   Tha infraction ot the  bylaw oc-
! currrd at the corner of Ward and
Vernon   streets,   when   a   street   car
. bound for Falrv-ew wu taking on
passengers, the Alberta man passing
the car doorway at four ml'es an
hour, and then stopping.
SUGGESTIONS
FOR TEACHING
AT CONVENTION
Jeweler?, it seems, don't like the
mw high llnea of dresses. They do
away with the costume jewelry we
are   In   the  habit  of  wearing.
Once a Year Only!
That's how often you need clean your flues If you
burn WILDFIRE, the ooal that is practically Bootless.
910.50 Per Ton.
BURNS COAL & CARTAGE CO.
U   R    DE LUXE BARBER SHOP
Ml"VT I    SKILLED  OPF.B1TOBS  AT  VOLK   SERV1CK
*t*m |   mm-cIsi Attention to Commercial Traveller*
and TnurUte. Opp.   Imperial  Bank
Visitors in Nelson See
Sectional
Meetings
DEMONSTRATIONS
IN CLASS WORK
Singing   of   Central
School Pupils Is
Warmly Received
Guide for Travellers
Nelson, B.C., Hotels
Breakfast
25* to 60o
Luncheon
35* to 50*.
"Finest in the Interior"
Dinner
35* and 65*
Phone 787
HUME HOTEL
Heleon, B.C.
Free Bua Berrlee               George BeniMll, Prop.
Rotary and Giro Headquartera	
injMt—S. McPherson. B 'si :*.
t. Harrlaon, T. H. Wilkinson, W. F.
3raham, Grand For!*.". E. C. Taylor.
Bdmonton; ]_{_. and Mra. D. It Mc-
|sy, Vernon; G. W. Hlnka, J. A'lan.
Harrington. Kamloopa; S. Fac-
hatt-aulnlla. N:w York; W. Dlnnjle.
Wjary; H. D. Stafford, Klmlaerley;
Burklnaaw. Crawford Bay; Marlon
lellott, Merle Smith. Irene Sarard.
frothy Wllllama, Marie Hepworth,
Murray, A. Roaaman, F. T.. Rut
ledge, T.-R. Roaaman. Dorothy McKay, Gladys Mawdaley. F. Mile.*.
Isobel icier. Margate t : Wllkle.. Say
ar.lt>, 8. E- Oordon, J. Buchanan,
Trail; A. J. Wood, Wlifclpag; H. P.
Pow.U, J. T. Rlley, V. J. Ebhy. R.
B. Cousins, R. Kentlah-Ran.ln, J.
Stott. J. 8. Walters, Vancouver; C.
p. Slater, Sandon; J. H. Haalewood,
A. w. Blaaon, Kelowna; H. M. Cour-
sey, Medicine Hat.
cUhe Savoy
"Where the Guest Is Kin_\"
Nelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.
Many Rooms With Private
Baths or Showers.
J. A. KERR, Prop.
131  BASIS  ST. PHONE  It
•AVOY—R. W. Neabltt. J. Jeffrey. | Olty; Mlaa I. McAu'ay, O. Johnaon.
J. Ooldie, L. W. Bennett. Mra. J. I J. Layton. Brie; F. I. Faraona, Caa*
MoUmnin,  Mlaa  M.   Jackson,   Roe - cade;  c. V. Holm, File, B. W. Bor-
lud; J. Allan, Mlsa B. .McCallum. D
Hartford, J. c. Tonkrs. R. B. Orser.
Orand Forks; Mr. and Mrs. R. Mc-
I____ndera, Caatlegar;  M, Rigby, Slocan
gens, Calgary; r. w. Oreen, W. F.
Boderlck, L. O. Keeler. Spokane; A
E. Graves, Vemon; E. Neiderman,
Edgewood.
New Orand Hotel
F.   1-   KAFAK,   Itop.
Weekly and Monthly Ratea
Bot  and   Cold   water
tlngi. 60c up     Double SIM up
110 ■ Montb aad Up
Occidental Hotel
IM Vernon St. rhone BStL
II.   WASS1CK
mty   Rooms   ot   Solid   Comtort
Headquarters  for   Loggers
and Miners
Madden Hotel
A IVe-.com* Awaits You
JAS.  E.  MADDEN
Completely   Remodelled
Hot  and   Cold   Water
In  lhe  HEART  ot tho  CU;
QUEEN'S HOTEL
A.    LAPOINTE,   Prop.
[looms from SOo io f 1 50 Monthi;
110 snd up.
Steam heated and hot and cold
water   ta   every   room
603 Baker  tit. phono po
TRAIL, B. G. VANCOUVER, B. C.
NEW GROWN
POINT HOTEL
European Plan
IIEAlKRAKltll**.
Commercial und Tourlit Trade
Sample Rooms
COMMERCIAL    RATES
Without    Bath       •1.94
Wild Batb _. F.M ond *--..
TRAIL, U. C.
"A I'aiacc
in the Kootenays"
Dufferin Hotel
VANCOUVE1
.  h.  (.
Brlfht Rooms
-  Otilral
M mitral c
Ratea
A.   I'al ternon,   late
of   Cotrman,
Crow's    Neit.
Proprietor
■JOG   sejniour   St.
bty.   443
Visitors to
Nelson
HEAD   THE
NELSON     DAIL.
NEWS
During   your   atay
In  Nelaon
TRANSPORTATION-Freight & Passenger.
EXPRESS SERVICE
A responsible, quick and convenient express service reaching all points served by Greyhound and
connecting carriers. The frequency of our service affords the closest contact between shipper
and customer. Uae our safe, speedy C.O.D. service.
Central Canadian Greyhound Lines,
m Limited
Xrutruetlre addresses and demonstration* featured tho stctloual meetings of the West Kootenay teachers'
convention pridsy afternoon in the
Central achool. Alter the talka
given by the various speakers, criticism   and  sufiestione  were  invited.
A short musical demonstration by
Mlsa Borthwlek* class proved to be
the most thoroughly enjoyed event
ot the program. The children were
choaan tram grades 0, 0 and 7 and
lu one number were conducted by
little Nina oananer. Mlsa Borthwlek
conducted the second. The evident
delight and enjoyment ot the alnger*
quite caught their audlenoe and the
actions, at the aame time quaint and
suggsatlve, gave the two numbers
the needed touch. The song* were
"The Fox and the Grape*'' and
"Who** Afraid ot the Big Bad Wolf,"
Mlae Mildred Irvine accompanied.
REPORT METHOD ,
W. M Cameron'* class demonstrated the "Report Method ot Social
Studies" after whlcii Ur. Cameron
outlined tbe plan ot tha method and
enumerated the advantage* and defects. The purpose of the method
wa* to obtain and organize knowledge and to teach the puplla the
uae of reference. First they must find
the material, tben aaslmllat* lt,
organize It and finally present lt to
the class. The report system developed abUlty to atand before an
audience and stand on one's teet. It
gave for poise, and the questions
whlcb the claas were permitted to
aak the one reporting, at the conclusion, gave for moral fortitude.
Tbe plan wa* a to advantegeou*
ln tbat It provided variety and Interest. The pupils handling the various matter ln their own way meant
wholesomi change ln divers presentations. Too, It ensured study throughout tbe year rather than Intense
study immediately preceding examination. And, children tended to
talk one mother's language.
Among the disadvantages were,
first, tbe claas waa too Inactive;
aome believed it placed too heavy a
burden on the child; othera that
unless the child knew specifically
what wa* wanted he would be liable
to waste time; another fault waa
tbat two or three ot these reporta
might fall on one pupil In a single
day, and finally children ln taking
down n_etes mre liable to lose the
train of thought.
Tbe report when given would not
be lett cold, mlaslng points would
be   brought  out,   and  the  complete
leeson consolidated.
IMPROVE LANGUAGE
Fine reault* had been obtained by
an experiment In the Roaaland
achool to improve language, observed
E. J5. Perkins, principal of the' McLean school there. Language improvement ln the senior gradea wa*
bla topic.
Five-minute or 10-mlnute talka by
pupUs et tbe beginning ot the day
were found to be highly favorable.
Tbe topic* used could be of many
kind*; biographies, topics of intereat, foreign events, historical item*
or any subject that would prove interettlng and instructive. The pupil*
oould choose an endless number.
BUILD  VOCABULARIES
Building vocabularies could be effected ln written composition, the
teacher* instructing ln the wider
and better uae of worda. By careful
choloe of dictation exercises, portions of prose and verse could be
used tbat would give the pupil
new words and a finer selection. In
spelling, the vocabulary might be
extended, and use of vivid word*
impressed on tbo pupils.
Few reaching entrance claas knew
how to uss a dictionary properly.
They ahould be taught thla and
given every access to one, An instructive plan wu found in having
the puplla value one another's work.
Thl* tended to give them a knowledge of where they could Improve
their own work snd so gjvo them
something constructive to build upon.
MISS   DOUGLAS   SPEAKS
"Art la the love, understanding
and appreciation of beauty," atated
Mlaa Helen Doug a* in speaking on
the subject ot correlation of art,
literature and music. The essential*
for art were, fitness of purpoee,
order and simplicity. Modern tendencies in art leaning toward narea
and ahow all too frequently.
Beauty and utility were really
brother* and lt waa not necessary
to eliminate a thing's uaeta'nea* to
make it a work of art. Tbe power
planta down the river from Nelson
were a fine example of art and they
pot'.eseed solidarity, harmony and
orler.
There were three main lessons ln
art. First must come appreciation.
Thl* would differ through the age
of one's life, in the earlier years,
bright, glittering things attracted the
attention of the tot. Later utility and
possession became the Important-factors. The third period was that of
contemplation and repose, though
thla period wa* generally cut short
try Invading factors from the more
prosaic world. The eecond lesson of
art wa* the creative leeson. Tlie
Imagination should, oe given free
scope, and spontaneous expression
sought. In all probability the youngest peraon would likely be the most
spontaneous. Tbe leeson, too, should
be imparted in terms of possibility
rather than rules.
The third lesson to oomplete the
love for art, and t training 'or Insure, waa the real need tor technique.
And shou-d tbeee tendencies be
correlated lt would make for a better
all-around etudent, and a better
person.
Social Events
of Trail City
TRAIL, B.C., Oct. 30.*—Honoring
Mrs. Edith R. V. Todd, of Victoria,
Mrs. J. B. Cormack and Mra. P.
Coris entertained at the nome ot
Mrs. R. E. Burke, Hendry etreet,
Wednesday evening. Five table* of
bridge were In play, flrat prize honors' going to Mrs. Frank Wilby end
conaolatlon to MU* Clara Minion.
Thoee attending were Mrs. Henry W.
Hankin, Mrs. M. L. Barnes, Mrs.
Paul jonea, Mrs. Frank Versuh, Mrs.
WlUlam Spooner, Mrs. D. W. Forteath, Mr*, p. Phillips, Mrs. Ira Minion, Mrs. Harry ESvIn, Mrs. Samuel
Johnaton, Mrs. Jack P&ge, Mrs. Hugh
Marshall, Mrs. Alex Smith, Mrs.
WUUam Rigney, Mn. A. L. Garrison, Mrs. Harvey, Mrs. Richard Stiles
and Mrs. Lundle of Nelaon.
•   •   •
UT. and Mr** Ernst Wllmes - ef
San Francisco are visiting in Trail,
the guests of Mr. Wllmes' parents,
Mr. end Mrs. Nick Wilme*.
Mr*,   p.   D.   Kollmar   has   ss   her
guests Mrs. Jack Morrison of Caatlegar. Mrs. Morrison's two sons are
guests at the home of Mrs. Carrol
Kendall.
WILL YOU  HAVE  A
MONTHLY
INCOME
cdlwiaqe?
Sbe is (ree ... *
She can travel . . .
The narrow routine of a "dependent relative" will never
place the itamp of age upon her. She u alert, wanted,
part of the life around her,
ttttttt*
At 30 she began to buy a Mutual Life Pension Policy
... her investment grew as she shared in the profits of
the Company . . . now she receives a monthly cheque
and will receive it as long as she lives.
(t 10.90 anted monthly from __e 30 to St will provide a pension
of $10 monthly for life tt 65. Annual dividends mty br used
to red.ee the $10.90 ptymenta or 'utcrttte the pension. Pensions
cam adlo start tl }0. 5 J or 60.)
MUTVALIIFE
Aisurance   Company
OF CANADA
Ealtbtlehed 1169
WATERLOO ONTARIO
"Owned by tht Palieyhold.rl"
I .u Intertited lo four Penttea
Policy to htlp ma becoaa Independent.
Hus.
_.-._...
Al.
H. A. Powell, Representative, Creston, B.C.
J. D. Brackett, District Manager, Cranbrook, B.C.
James Skinner, Representative, Trail, B. C.
Earl H. Felty, Representative, Nelson, B.C. j
—4 Z- „J
SPECIAL WILL BRING 300
ALBERTA UNEMPLOYED FOR
CAMPS IN THIS DISTRICT
Approximately 300 single unemployed men from nor.
then. Alberta, for whom the Dominion authorities are to
provide relief work, will arrive In Nelson at noon Saturday
by a special Canadian Pacific train from Edmonton, to be
distributed among four Dominion relief camps in this immediate district, under arrangements directed at this
end by J. P. Coates, supervising engineer.
Two coaches wlll be detacbea bere,
and will be taken out by the Oreat
Northern freight, which wlU be held
back tor tha purpose, and will discharge their men at the Salmo airport oamp and the Nelway road oamp
respectively.
Tha rest of the ooachas wlU go to
for the Ohln* Creek and Rock Oreek
road oamps, on tho Nelson-Trail
highway.
Intention of tha Dominion to
bring prairie men here, where win.
ter work la more feasible tban on
the prairie, haa been understood for
some time.
Early In tha summer SI or M
men wers brought ln by bus from
Calgary for tho Balmo airport camp,
beside aome brought to tba Grow.
Tadanac, tbelr men being destined
HINCHLIFFE LOOKS
INTO THE NANAIMO
SCHOOL SITUATION
NANAJMO. B.C.. Oct. JO (OP)—
Hon. Joshua Hlnchllffe, minister of
education, and Adam Bell, deputy
flnanoe minister, conferred here with
the city council snd school board
concerning the fata of Nanalmo's
schools, civic authorities has* said
tha schools will have to close at the
end of October unleu financial
assistance ls forthcoming.
Ur. BlnchUtt*. did not believe the
schools would close until tbe end
of November at leaat. He said he
would take tbe matter up with the
cabinet at tha earliest poesible moment.
Kent Addresses
Trail Rotarians
Families Enjoy Picture Tour
With Rotary Members
LUCKE DENIES THREATENED
TO GET FONTAINE'S LIVER
He and Makaeff Testify Shot Fired Through
Wooden D&or by Fontaine; Police Tell of
Pantomine; Adjourn for Defence
That lu never thrtatansd th* tf-ttt
Charles Fontaine, Taghum rancher,
or told him ha "would fat lilt
liver," and that he never told tlu
old man he "wouldn't Uve long
enough tor anyone to get hla (ann,"
or used worda to any of thoae effect*, wu aaaerted Friday by William Lucke, one of the two main
crown wltneaaea ln tht apeedy trial
of Fontaine on a charge ot ahootlng at Lucke with intent to do him
grievous bodily harm, when crow-
examined by C. B. Oarland. Fon-
talne'a oouneei. Tbe trial #111 oontlnue Monday.
DENIES QUARRELS
Lucke, whoae trouser-leg and underwear waa piersed by a bullet that
Issued through Fontaine's door on
the morning of July 13, when he
and hla "father-in-law," Nick Makaeff. stood outalde the door waiting for an answer to their rap*
ping, was given t long grilling
on the atand by Mr. Oarland, as to
hia relations with Fontaine, whose
place he had been living on and
been working on sharea. The witness, apparently In his twenties,
would not admit quarreling with
Fontaine, or being "mad at him,"
but did admit that he waa dissatisfied with Fontaine's failure to
keep his promise to furnish the
equipment for operating tlu ranch.
For a long time Lucke would not
suggest any reason for Fontaine
shooting supposedly at blm, but
finally judge W. A. Nlsbet obtained
from blm the conjecture that perhaps Fontaine "wanted to get rid of
blm from the ranch."
Claiming he was married io Maka-
eft'e daughter, Lucke -finally admitted to his honor that he did not
have the money to "pay a priest,"
did not obtsln a marriage licence,
but merely obtained the consent of
the two parents. He stated he wss
of Polish descent, and came bare ln
192B. i
"I FIX HIM"
Makaeff, an elderly Doukhobor,
Independent for the lut SO years,
though a Community man ln Saskatchewan, teatlfled through an interpreter that Fontaine, after Lucke
had gone to report the ahootlng
through Postmaster J. F. Marsden,
came out of his shack to where he
wu cutting hay, and made tha
alngle remark: "I fix him." Thle
began and ended tbe conversation,
Makaeff being "scared" and offering
no comments.
Evidence of the two men wu essentially identical u to the facts
of the shooting. Thsy represented
that tbey went over to Fontaines
shack, separated by a uttle creek.
and a single-strand fence from the
ranch worked by Lucke, so that
Makaeff, having been awn red of
Lucke'a hatr of the hay crop, might
negotiate for Fontaine's share, there
being tbe further point, tbat Fon*
talne wanted tbe hay In a single
suck, while they considered lt necessary to have two stacks lf there
should be a division, about * quarter of the hay being then cured
and ready for stacking.
They aa.d tt wu t):tu in the morning tbat Makuff rapped on the
teit side of tbe rude uoor made of
strips of V-joint, and then st-ood
at the right side, waiie Lucke
stepped up on the left. A voice,
recGgnizeu as i-ontalne s, aakeo,
"Who Is there?" io which Makaen
replied, "1", and to mrtner quae*
tlon, 'What do you want'/" answered, "I want to see you." Tbey then
..earrt lootsteps leading to tbe bedroom.
MtUT FOLLOWED UAl*
After five to 10 minutes of silence, both Inside and outside the
shack, Makaen rapped again on the
left side ot the door, and immediately a shot was llred tarougn
tne door. At flret Lucke did no*
recognize It as a show but thought
something had been torown against
the door, and woen asked by Makaeff If he had been shot, answered ln
the negative. When the hole ln his
clothing wu pomi«d out, however,
be suggested tnat they withdraw,
Makaeff denied tbat Lucke rattled tbe door and kicked It when
admission   wu   not   granted.
The remaining ctown witnesses
called by C. h. Hamilton, crown
prosecutor, were Sergt. c. o. Barber
and Constable J. G. M. Lock of the
provincial police.
Sergt. Barber testified i > going
down the evening ot July 18 to
make an Investigation. He said Fontaine, when asked wby he tired the
shot, uld be wu afraid that something might happen to htm. Asked
whether be had any firearms, ths
old man went to his bedroom and
produoed  from  beneath  his pillow
SANITARY
RUBBER GOODS
Send lor catalogue or 11.00 tor 15
uuorted samples. NEW KINDS. High-
rat quality, postpaid ln plain wrapper the aame da*? as orler la re*
cefved.
NATIONAL  msTKlBl-OIV     .
Dept.*H-Bo*_-l_3, Regina, Bttt-    ,
a 33 caliber colt automatic piatol,
which had one shell In the hreeeti,
and a partial clip ol live aheUs.
no uld that the bullet bole la (he
door indicated to him that the
weapon wu llred not lartber tban
sn leet trom the door.
Constable Lock deecrlbtd an Investigation made by hlm-cll and
constable Oeorge Irving th* following day, waen tney slgnted through
the hole in the door, wblob ranged
downward, and Xocuased on a point
on tb* bard path' outalda where
there wu tha* mark ot a bullet thai
had struck and rlcoeaetted.
H» uld that alter the old man
bad bsen plaoed under arrest and
wu given ttme to get ready lor tbe
trip, be and bis tellow ottloer started to discuss between themselves
wbere tbe man must have stood
who fired the shot. Ha uld Fontaine then silently took up a position about tour leet trom tbe door
and held bla right hand beside his
wiut u u it wers holding and
pointing a pistol at tbe door.
Both tbe police witnesses ware
crow-examined closely by Mr. Oarland on the matter of a fire-arm
kicking up" when fired.
Sergt. Barber's expenenoe with
small arms was confined to re*
volvers, but Constable Lock wu also
familiar mtb automatics. Tb, latter admitted there wu such a thing
U a "flinch* under oertaln cir-
cumstsnow, but said ln the cau
ot tbe Fontaine aback, it would be
neceaaary for the munle of the
automatic to be Jerked up tor tw
feet from tbe perpendicular, for a
shot aimed at the floor to hit the
door where it did.
On conclusion of tbs crown's oaw,
Ur. Oarland said be would contend
tbat tbe crown had not proved tbe
essential thing, an Intent, but would
prefer an adjournment, u tha argument on both sides wu bound
to be long.
Hit honor adjourned tha eaw
accordingly to Monday morning.
And a new print shows designs
of beer mugs, steins and kegs. The
material is waterproofed—so what
do you maka of that, Watson?
TRAIL, B.C.. Oct. JO^-Accom-
panled hy an Interesting travel talk,
motion plcturea of his trip through
the Mediterranean were ahown by
Harry Kent, Vancouver Rotary olub
member, while at a Banquet given
ln hla honor at the Kr. hall hers
Friday nlgbt.
The program wu sponsored by the
Trsll Rotary club, members being
acoompenled lpy their wlvu and
families, approximately 100 being
present. 8. S. McDiarmld. president
of the club, gave an Introductory
speeoh.
Describing his travels from Madeira to Athens, Mr. Kent continued his talk, showing pictures
from that point on. Many interwtlng "ahota" were shown of ruins
ln Athens, Jerusalem. Dsmsscui,
Egypt and cities of biblical days,
ln comparison with modern Inhabited  sections.
CURTIS OUT OF
SUNDAY'S GAME
         -ek
TRAIL, B.C., Oct JO—Jim Curtis,
csptaln of the Trail eenlor rugby
team, will be out of the gam* Sunday, when the wnior squads of
Nelson snd Trail cluh at th* lake
city field. Curtis, who plays tbe
poaitlon of flying wing, ls a gnat
aswt to th* team, but u a ruult
of a poisoned arm, reeelved lut
week, he wu an inmat* ln ths
Trall-Tadanac hcr,pltal for three
days. Just being releawd Thuraday.
Unger also received fnjuriw lut
wuk having hurt his back, and
his position will be filled ln the line
by Oourbsld.
Although the two substitutes will
adequately fill the positions vacated
by th* Injured lads. Curtla and
TJngsr are experienced In their positions and ths fact that they -will
not be playing In Nelson should
raise tbe hopes of tbat city's 12
that the tables will likely be turned
for Trail hu won the three games
o fthe season with high margins.
The remainder ot tb* team wlll
be tb* ume as usual.
HOSPITAL GETS
2 TONS PRODUCE
At lust two tons of produce,
mostly veietsbles were collected
fram Slocan City to South Slocan
for the Kootenay Lake Oeneral
hospital drive Friday when the
truck covered that area. The donations were liberal and the hospital
committee announces the drjve
as being a sparkling success. As
yet It Is too early to give a detailed account of the amounts of
various produce received.
Almost Instant Relief
From Neuralgia
_/ll_ HA1-t*TO GETA
TAXI AND GO HOME
I'VE DCVCIOPED A
TCRRIBIF
ATTACK OF
NEURAWIA
MARY.WHV
OONT YOU TRY 2
A.PlHIN TABLETS.
THEY U SET RID OF
VOUR NEURALGIA
IN A FIW MlMUTg.
20 MINUTES LATER
__Tl'TJ WONDERFUL HOW
quickly MY NEURALGIA
WENT. THAT ASPIRIN
CERTAINLY WORKS /—lZ_\
For Quick Relltf Say ASPIRIN When You Buy
Now comes amazinslg quick relief
from headaches, rheumatism, neuritis, neuralgia... the fastest soft relief,
it is said, yet disctsotrtd.
Those results are due to ■ scientific discovery by -which an Aspirin
Tablet begins to dissolve, or disintegrate, in the amazing apace of
two seconds after touching moisture.
And hence to start "taking hold" of
pain a few minutes after taking.
The illustration of the glass, liere,
tells the story. An Aspirin Tablet
starts to disintegrate almost instantly you swallow it. And thus it ready
to jo to work almost instantly.
When you buy, though, be on
guard against substitutes. To be sure
you get ASPIRIN'S auick relief, be
sure the name Bayer in the form of
a crou is on every tablet of Aspirin.
WHY ASPIRIN
WORKS SO FAST
Drop an Aspirin
Tsblet In a glass of
water. Note thst BEFORE it touchw bottom, it hss started to
dijlnteir-.tr.
Whst It does In this
ilsss It don fn your
•tomsdi. Hence Its
fast action.
MAM M CAMAM
Does Not Harm the Heart
JUST ARRIVED TODAY
A Large Shipment of the Newest Styles in
Afternoon, Sunday Nite and Party
DRESSES
These smart frocks feature the New
Pouff Sleeves, the Cape effects, Rope
Shoulders, Low Cut Backs, Strap Backs,
New High Necklines and in fact, every
new feature Paris has decreed for this
season.
VERY REASONABLY PRICED
$5.95, $9.95, $i2*95' $15
SEE THE NEW HATS
Felts and Velvets—A good selection
in the Mae West models—Now so popular.      •>
$2*95, $3.95
Milady's Fashion Shoppe
MISS GEORGINA BROWN, MANAGERESS
608 BAKER ST.
 *-~~~~~~~~~~~*
————*
I
I
-THE  NELSON  DAILY  NSWS,  NELSON,  BC—SATURDAY   MORNINO.   OCTOBER   11,   19SS-
PAOE  THRI'B
irintty
luffed (Eljurrl?
ul (Canada
W. O. Mawhlnney, Minister
10:00 a.m.—Church School
11:00 ain.—Sermon Theme:
"THE NEED OF BT ABILITY"
Dust: Mrs. Hlnltt snd Mrs.
fl.  Couch.
7:30 p.m.-Sermon Theme:
"WHEN   THB  GLOW FADES"
flololst: Mlss E* E. BUchsnan.
N.B.—Mission     Band    Tea    and
W.M.8.    Bake    flsl«,    Octobft-
asth.
Mrs Rom Bridge
Hostess ot Creston
CRESTON, Oct. 20—Honoring her
cousin, Mrs. R. Jackson of Toronto,
who Is hem on a visit with her
cousins, Mrs. J. F. Rose and Mrs.
W. H. Watcher, Mrs. Rose was st
home Wednesday st bridge, with
-seven, tables ln play snd the high
soore prises going to Mrs. W. Lln*
den Bell and Mrs. Roy M. Telford,
nnd tbe consolation prise to Mrs.
M. Jt.   Joyce.
Mrs. K. Knott, of the Blde-a-We?
auto csmp. Is a visitor to Calgary
this weslt.
Misses Ruth McKowsn snd Edna
Collier of Cranbrook are this week
visiting tbe former's grandmother,
Mrs.   O.   Cartwrlght.
Bob and Alvln McMaater of Cranbrook wer* vlsltlhg at the ranch a
few  days.
Hendren Bros, have been awarded
first Ollturrl? uf
(EljrtHt SrlFttttBt
109 I1AKER STREET
A branch ol the Mother Church,
rhe Hr'st Church ot Christ
scientist In Boston, Massachusetts.
Sunday  achool  9:45 a.m.
Sunday Servloe 11 ajn.
Subject  Lesson-Sermon
"PROBATION   AFTER   DEATB*'
Wednesdsy Testimonial Meeting
8   p.m.
FREE READ1NO ROOM  IN
CHURCH   BUILDING—
All Cordially Welcome
Why stay
RUN-DOWN?
&!. flaul'B
Itiifefc ©Ijurrlj
Rev.  T.  J.  8.   Ferguson,  BA.
Minister
Worship-,11   a.m.  and 7:30 p.m.
Sunday  Sohool—10  a.m.
Nursery Claas—ll *m.
Morning Theme—"The Qualities
of a Oreat Leader."
Evening Theme—"Whst Bhsll I
Do." A solution of your
present   problem.
Wednesday, 8 p.m.—TP.S.
Anniversary Services wlll be held
on  Sunday,  November Bth.
ersble now Is tbe
t bought thit for
years! •tragfled
along In anin-down
condition, when, if
1 had known stout
'Frult-a-tlTes* I
would have been
WCfl.   I wat eoostlpated, bilious snd suffer*.
greatly from severe beadschei.   'Fruit-a-tJves'
toned naupgnwrally. Tbey really have done
me lhe world of good."
Fruit-tt-tioew .
ell drttg etorm
the contract of rebuilding and enlarging tbe residence of R. M. Telford at Erlckson, which was gutted
by  fire.
Miss Cecelia Hsndley hu returned
to Kaslo after * two weeks' visit
to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
W.   Hsndley.
Mrs. Werre and children left thts
week on a visit to Saskatchewan.
Mrs. Douglsa Putnam and young
son, Frank Irwln, sre back from
Kitchener, where she wss a guest
of her mother, Mrs. McOonegal.
Mr. and Mrs. Clark and Mlas
Stoddart ot Oray Creek were Creston
visitors.
Mtss Dean of Desnshsven spent a
few dsys In town, a guest of Mlsa
Joan Hilton.
Mr. Harper of Crawford Bay was
a Creston vlaltor this week, with
Mra, Harper, who la a patient at
Creston  hospital.
Mrs. R Hopwood left for Vsncouver Wednesday, after a holiday
with her parents, Mr. snd Mrs. W,
T. Slmlster.
O.-A. Robinaon of Vancouver was
a Creston caller at the first of the
week, a guest of H. A. Powell.
WILDFIRE COAL is
CLEAN! "SB*
iis»- *i    ^
g  . *THE DOTS DISPEL THE DOUBTS*
*"■■"       NELSON-Burn. C oal &. Cartage Co-, Phone 53
FrOm—  CRESTON-H. S. M c Creath, Phone 69X
Safeway Stores
Free
Delivery
Quality Meats
Phone
153
Blue Label Beef
Pot Roasts, per lb.
io< • ir 14*
T Boiie Roasts, IC**
lb. _ - *J
Rolled Prime Ribs,  JO*
Stewing Boneless,     OO*
3 Iba.  ■ 1*0
Breakfast Sausage,    1A<-
Pic Nic Shoulders,    IO*
Spare Ribs, \tt
2  Iba. U
Fowl, very choice,    OP*
lb. _ - : Ld
Legs of Veal, 17*
Ib. _ -...■ 11
Lotas of Veal,   *     17*
lb.   11
Local Spring Lamb
lrtg8. lb.  _  19^
Loins,  ib   15^
Shoulders, lb. _  12*
Stew, lb. 5*
Rumps of Veal,       1 tit
lb. 14
Minced Steak, 1 rr
2 lbs *..... 10
Roasting  Chicken,    OP*
 Very Choice.
Tomato Sausage,      OCt
2 lbs OO
^^    Tare  pork   sausage
1 lb. Liver, V, lb.     OA*
Bacon taV
■   Grain Fed Pork
Shoulders, lb.   12*
Loins, lb  'Mt*
Legs, lb.   17*
LIBERAL BACKS
FITZSIMMONS
IN ELECTION
Brown of Nakusp Is
for Efficiency  .
in Service
HOSPITALS NEED
MORE ASSISTANCE
Fitzsimmons Tells of
Aid of Trails to
Mining
BEATON. Oct. 30—<Japt. J. Fitr-
slmmons. Independent candidate for
Kaslo-Slocan electoral district, addressed large audiences October 12
ln Beaton and Camborne. He waa
sccompanlrd by a, A. Brown of
Nakuap.
Mr. Brown stated that he was a
four squsre Liberal believing ln and
supporting, to the utmost of his
sblltty, tbe federal Liberal policy
under his lesder, Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King. He said that if Cansda
adopted a state bank; it would he
first enacted ln the federal house
of parliament, Ottawa, then passed
on in senate. They are vested with
sovereign powrr over Csnadlan monetary matters. But he said a state
bank is not, as yet. ln the Liberal
policy, nor Is lt an Issue for this
coming e.ectlon, nor Is lt within
tbs Jurisdiction of Brltsh Columbia's
legislature. This ls a provincial
election and candidates whose present platforms are national propaganda of other groups, who sre at
this time neglecting the requirements of our British Columbia people, who sre asking honest, falr-
mlnd.d Liberals to vote for them,
are attempting to prostitute the
manhood of his party, and be will
not support them.
British Columbia and ths balance
of the whole world hsd one common Issue with lack of consumption
and should, therefore, present a
united front for progress through
this depressing era. Our people's
province hsa abundance ln natural
resources but their wee..".y pay
cheque* were reduoed to eo low a
number thst It gave tbe greatest
concern.
HITS PARTV SPIRIT
Mr. Brown aald he was supporting
Csptsln Pltaslmmons because ln
hlm be hsd found a man who for
yeara declared that bis duty was
first and always for the people, and
who had persisted ln frequently appealing to the members of the house
not to purpoee y, expensively function on purely psrty lines, tout to
give the people 100 per oent efficiency in service. Thst was thalr
duty to the taxpayers ot this province. Party politics ahould not be
tbe predominating spirit over all
our legislature sessions, mora-particularly during this distress period
when the best thinking minds were
engaged on ways and means to Increase business flow. He knew ot no
member wbo mor« thoroughly canvassed his riding between sessions
ln order to glesn first hsnd the requirements of the people ln this
district, and of them construct his
p: at form of entirely provincial necessities, than Captain Fltzslmmons.
SEES NEED OF HOSPITAL
Captain Fltzsltnmons first drew attention to tbe public hospitals. They
were not self-sustaining. Thsy certainly must receive sufficient help
to allow them to oontlnue treatment so necessary to suffering humanity In sickness, accidents and
births. Bs wss of the opinion tbat
ths men who engage ln the development of tbls mining provlnoe, tbo
men who sre making these present
activities possible, were not alwaya
successful and not alwaya employed
ln paying work and many of them
are prematurely disabled by the
hardship of the hl'-ls. They must be
tsken care of when sick and properly pensioned ln their old age.
During his long residence In this
district many of his associates and
acquaintances had passed on, leaving
their wives and children. He placed
hlmaelf on record as standing four
squsre firmly for mothers' pensions
and for children's during school ate.
He directed attention to the successful results that occur ln trail
work, a portion of which ls accepted
ln lieu of the annual assessments
required. Both tbe government and
the mine owners benefit by this
concession he obtained. In the Kas'o*
Slocan riding the major industry ls
mining. The captain has assisted
that Industry by every reasonable
effort. He has Insisted frequently
that the government do Its psrt on
trails, thereby establishing roads for
the miners to hsve access to their
properties and further to keep those
trsils In proper * condition. When
the minister of finance, Hon. J. W.
Joiiee. brought his lsst budget into
cauous Fitzsimmons discovered there
wsa not a dollsr alloted for those
roads. He detailed the rapidly Increasing number o' mines developing, freight movement, and h:avy
machinery awaiting transportation
over roads snd bridges partly washed
out, as a too. common condition In
his riding andahe said, "I cannot
support that ■ budget un'ess lt Includes sufficient money to protect ,yf\f\ A I ir*LJ DA DTV
tbe mining industry of this province | I UU /VtUV-rl TAK I 1
to a fair and reasonable extent. The
budget waa not brought down that
day. By the shaving of a good nupi-
ber.of Items 165,000 waa provided.
snd one ot tbe most happy men in
Victoria that night was Hon. W. A.
McKenzie, minister of mines. That
was what he told Captain Fltzslmmons when he thanked him for the
stand he hsd taken snd success In
securing  that  money.
PRAISES CAPT.
FITZSIMMONS
36 Years in Slocan,
Knows Problems
Riding
SAYS CANDIDATE
Will Continue Efforts
on Silver
Question
.hit appropriation ww mad*. As a u A J-4 11 Trtkl MEW
rwult of thli, au amount was mt n^mifclvn I^BTT
aside (or that puipo**. UE AlV Y A Ulf   C\ UR
In epeaklng of  the roada  In   tbls        "WMI   IM-Tirw  V.UUD
district.   Captain   Fltcslmmoni   sal.] .	
that  he  stood   for  completing   the *    — a        /-**. _j
road to Sllverton from Slocan  City      DOYS Are UrganiZed
so   that  Sandon,   Ntw   Denv-r   and '        . '    __     ..   _~
verton would have an outlet. AS    I rOll    KOngeTS
Tlie speaker said that the handling I '       a
ot   relief   work   wu   "not   a  bed  of
roses." He showed how he had made I TAHK. Oct. 19.-The Mclslor Bad-
It possible for some of th* pros- minton club met Monday. To suc-
pectora to do their relief work on keed president Erl.* Lawnby. Jack
their own roa'ds leading to thel; Hamilton waa elected. He appointed
claims. Cyril  Radford  to  help  arrange the
He explained tbat he had done a < games. Elnar Christiansen was given
KASLO BADMINTON
PLAYERS BEATEN
KABLO, B.C.. Oct. :0.-J. J. BtltlK
has left to spend a few days lo
Nelson.
Walter Oardner of Johnson's Landing is a patient In the Victorian
hospital.
A. W. Anderson and his friend
Mr. Pope have left for their homes
tn Oolden. after spending a Week
In KMlo while holidaying. Mr.
Anderson was,, formerly on the Kaslo
government office staff.
Bid Ross waa a visitor ln the
ctty during the weekend while en
route to Retallack sfter a visit ln
Nelson.
f. J. Ainsworth has returned to
Ms home tn Howser sfter visiting
in Nelson and KaslQ.
Oscar Burden, who haa been a
patient in the Victorian hospital.
hsa returned to his home In Crawford  Bay.
J. N. Murphy spent the past few
days at his home. Mrs. Murphy.
who Is a patient In tbe Victorian
hoepltal. la convalescing satlsfsctor*
lly.
O. O. Cummings. M. L. Brothers
and Fred Sammons left Tuesday
for their hoihe in Trail tfter visiting at the summer camp of Mr.
Sammons  st  Shutty  Bench.
Oeorge Johnson hss returned from
Retallack.   ■
Davin fiwanson arrived from Oakland, Csl.. to visit his wife who
is the guest of her father H. Olegerlch.*
W. Beaton left Monday for his
home ln Nelson. He has been in
charge of the bridge building operations st Fletcher creek.,
Mre. J. J. Sklllleorn hss left to
visit  friends  in   cranbrook.
W. Battensby of Mirror Lake re-
CShtly underwent, a eerioue operation at the Victorian hospital but
ls now making satisfactory progress
towards  recovery.
A. H. Dryden and C. W. M. Can
niff of Retallsck spent the weekend
here.
Mrs. B. Hicks was a weekend
visitor en route to htr home ln
Oerrard after a visit ln Nelson.
Harold R. Hepderson of Van
eouver ws* a weekend  visitor.
Mr. and Mrs. w. Roberts and aon
have left to spend the winter ln
Trail.
A number of local badminton
players Journeyed to Hsrrop Fri
day evening for a tournament. The
Kasloltes returned home losers but
reported having a most enjoyable
time.     .
J. McAdams of Nelson waa a
city visitor Tuesdsy.
3C
N0-rT WONT FMIZt
WHIltWIstATTHESHOWl
PB6STOHE HOTKTS
TD AWAY BELOW aW
Jerusalem artichokes ars of much
greater value ss a crop for poultry
feeding than Is generally resllped.
The tops msy ■ be used u green
fodder ln summer and the tubers as
roots  for  wlntsr  feeding.
Jean:   "Fashions   may   come   and
go. buf there's always a demand for
cosmetics.**
SANDON, B.C., Oct. 30—A well-
attended Independent meeting was
; iield In Sandou on October 17 when
| the speakers were Capt. J. Fits-
Simmons, independent .candidate for
Kaslo-Slocan riding, and C. Howarth
| of Nakusp. J. Oreer scted as chairman.
Mr. Howarth explained the Independent platform of Captain Fltzslmmons. He told the audience that
whether they were Liberals, Conservatives or. c.CF.'s i to Join together and help to bring order out
of chaos.
In regard to tbe .clause on mining
ln the platform, Mr. Howarth said
they were simply carrying on what
Captain FitiAmmons had been doing. In The Nelson:Dally News. Mr.
Blaylock ssld that hs had written
a IKter to Captain Fitaslmmons In
reply to a letter about the restriction of Slocan ore .offerings. "That
Is one of the captain's unfortunate
traits," saL} Mr. Howarth. "Ha- does
not tell us enough of what he doea
for us."
In concluding, Mr. Howarth said
on behalf of tbe candidate. "He has
lived here for SS years and I do
not think there I* a man who . ls
batter known or who knows better
the problems of the KasIo-siocan
riding. A man of his wide knowledge
ls certainly fitted to represent you.
He has been fair and just to all
people. On November a you can do
no better than to place your cross
after tha name of an honest, man.
F;om honest men you get honest
government and I ask you to place
your cross before the name of
Csptsln Fitzsimmons ss sn honest
man."
Captain Fitaslmmons explained why
he was running aa an Independent
when he had been elected lut time
ss a Conservative. He ststed that
he had no apologies to make for
taking the atand of Independent.
"Under the stress which hu existed
ln British Columbia and throughout
the world, the time hu come for
bdtter oooperatlon ln the affairs of
government. There ls too much party
politics on the floor of the house."
He gave many Instances where
the time wu taken up In the houae
discussing things which wsrs not
pertinent to present-day affaln. Ha
mentioned in particular where a
lawyer had tajked for an hour aud
40 mlnutea giving a fine apeech
making people believe that he wu
honest and sincere snd when hs ut
down said to the member sitting
next to him. "Did I get thst fellow's goatt"
Captain Fltsalmmons deelsred that
the people of British Columbia liked
to see a good, fair and Intelligent
opposition; one that wlll be lair
and just ln Ita criticism and with
good suggestions. He did not think
that the opposition members took
tbe Interest of tbe peolpe seriously
enough.
Captain Fitaslmmons uld that
when tht budget wu brought in by
tbe minister of flnsnce he notloed
that there wu no appropriation set
ulde for tbe upkeep of mining
roads and trails. He spoke to the
minister and told him that he
would only  support  the budget  lf
great deal of work on the silver
question, getting s resolution taken
up at tbe Imperial conference and
promised thst he would continue to
keep the question before the powers
who   deal   with   it.
Captain Fltaimmona, asserted that
he waa strongly in favor of old age
pensions, mother's pensions snd
health Ipeurence. He wu successful
ln bringing the mother's pension
act before the house three years
ag<) snd having lt bettered considerably. He hoped thst in the nesr
future some scheme of health Insurance would be placed on the
statutes  of   British   Columbls.
In closing hts address, Captain
FltEslmmons said, "Lut election I
had only one opponent. This election
I have two. With regards to the
C.CJ1. candidate, he ls a good hardworking man and he hu a right to
hts ow«i opinion Just the ssme u I
have a right to mine. Lut election I
said I wu going to conduct a clean,
honorable campaign and I Intend to
do the ssme this time. Captain
Leary wonders lf I am an Independent. Well, upon my word of honor,
I am independent. When I am elected. I am going u a straight Independent snd when I get to Victoria,
I shall do my very best. I wsnt
you to forget your ltttle differences
and Join together for the good of
tbe provlnoe."
his nionthly dues In return for prc>
paring the hall. Three new members
were accepted. They were Frank
Coleman, WUUam Peterson snd Tom
Shaw.
Rev. Mr. MacLean of Vancouver,
arrived In town Tuesday to organise
a Trail Ranger club for the boys of
Yahk. A large number of enthusiasts
turned out to hear Mr. MacLean. A
club wu formed with Art Lytli-
gal u leader. A nominating committee consisting of Jsek Anderson, BU'
Hamilton. Verdun Cooper and Dan
MacCartney  wUl  ulect   the  officers.
Charlie MacFarlane left Tuesday
for Twin Lakea where he will vlalt
his father, Sandy  MacFarlane.
Ernest Lythgal rsturnsd to the
coast thla week after vlaltlng his
parents. Mr. snd Mrs. E. A. Lythgal,
Doctor Henderson of Creston was I
a visitor In Tahk Tuesday.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles 1
Helgrln. Saturday, Oct. 14, at the
St. Eugene hospital, Cranbrook, a
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mulllns of
Cranbrook visited here this week.
LAPOINT WINS
AFGHAN DRAW
Knights   of   Pythlas   Hold
Whist Drive Scotland
High Table
MILD WINTER
IS PREDICTION
CRESTON. Oct. 20—The first re
snow of the sesson started falling
late Thursday sfternoon and ken',
up intermittently daring the evening and night, accounting for a
blanket slmost an tnrh deep. WhlOl.
ls almost a record for early-heavy
snowfall.
Had ths "beautiful" arrived evgi
a few days earlier It would hnve
proven disutrous u It was not until the middle of the week thit
apple picking was almost completed
Had the fruit been on the inr ■
much damage would have been doq
by   the   breaking   of   limbs.
Despite the early »-tval or snow
the weather wise still adhere tt
early fall prognost'r-uions that Ibn
valley ls t> have * long open fall
and no winter until nround Christmas.
An unfailing sign of a raild vlattr
la the mountain uh berries whlrh
are of a light red hue this fall.
tn the put two years they have
been a dark red—a sure sign of *'i
severe  winter.
SOLID COMFORT
HEAT ANO SATISFACTION
LETHBRIDGE
IMPERIAL COAL
Knights of Pythias' opened their
social activates for the season with
a military whist drive tn the fraternity hsll Thursday night. Scotland wu tbe winning table and
the occupants were Mrs. W. J. Hlpperson, Mrs. S. Kldwell. Mrs. P
Rowe and O. Norberg.
An Afghan wu raffled end went
to  A. Lapointe.
Tha social committee tn charge
of the evening's arrangement Included Mrs. D. Wade, Mlss O. Laugh,
ton, Mrs. F. ooucher, S. J. Newell,
D. Laughton, J. Mclvor and F.
Ooucher.
A'
*a
Star of Earth
•By Odiavus 'J?oy Cohen
Final Closing Out Sale
Minton's Pharmacy
This is your last opportunity to purchase your
drug needs, -etc.. at prices you cannot afford to
overlook. Our sale will continue until Wednesday,
October 25.
Entire stock at special prices. Do your Christmas
shopping now
Sss Our 5 Cent Window Display!
Phone 100
Box 1221
ft*
.tf
When Better Meats Are Served We Serve 'em
DISTRIBUTION
WITHOUT WAST
EVEREADY
PRESTON E
ANTI-FREEZE
at a Hew fow Price !
COMPLETE
ALL-WINTER
PROTECTION
FROM FREEZING
FOR AS LOW AS
'MDIAN   Ht
INSTALMENT TWELVE
Jim •eemr-d In no hurry to aniwer.
Hli ulumbnoiM eye. looked Into
Bfrgdorf'** bleik on«. He -an* undisturbed by the mane hoetUe
manner.
"What do you know about the
killing of Tanae Wllaon, Mr. Ben-
dort?"
"Nothing."  Bergdorf  sneered.
"Where were you when It happened?"
"In a far corner of the lot attempting to puzzle out a problem
which had Juat.arlaen ln connection
with the picture I am making."
"You   were   alone?"
"Of course. I do not think In
company." -   -     „
"It might have been better ir
you had done so tonight," murmured Hanvey.
'Do you mean lo Insinuate . . .
"I am asking. questions. Mr. Bergdorf—not Insinuating. Tou msy answer or not, Just as you want."
"There Is no question you can
ask me which I am unwilling to
answer."
'You heard the sh«s?"
"Yes."'
"And you walked toward the
■pot they came trom? But you dldnt
gtt   there,   did   you?"
"Not then."
"Why?1
"Because I met a stagehand who
told me something had happened.
I heard a good deal of eicltemrnt
ou the eet adjoining the one In
which I waa at the moment, and
walked toward the noise. I aaw
Mlsa Randall on the ground and
preeM-med thst this .was the trouble
the stagehand hsd referred to'."
"And ydu were walking from the
far corner of the lot when you met
thle stagehand?"
"That la What I aald "
"Sura you did. But what I waat
cow ta tha truth."
Bergdorf't aUely eyes blazed. "I
am not a Uar."
"Sura you are." drawled Jim.
"And an awful crude one. Aa a
matter of fact whan the stagehand
net you. you were already ln tha
Mttle alley through Which you eventually walked to reach tbe spot
where Mlas Randall waa lying."
"You are a very bright, man,"
snapped Befgdorf, "and an Insulting
boor."
"That'a luat too bad. But accepting that ae true, did you aee Tanae
Wilson   killed?"
"No."
"You didn't even know that anything had happened to him?"
"No."
"Therefore when you reached the
crowd near Mlaa Randall and aaw
her lying on the ground you thought
she had been ahot?''
"Yes."   he   anawered. at   length.
"You didn't seem very solicitous.
Mr. Bergdorf."
"Why should I?"
"I don't know ... Aren't sou and
Mlss Randall old friends?"
"Quite."
"Weren't you exceedingly cloae
friends?"
The mana figure etlffened. "I
don't care to dlacuas my relatlon-
Milp with  any woman."
"Very chivalrous. 1 admire you
for that, Mr. Bergdorf. Unfortunately the fact of your cloee friendship with Mlss Randall In the past
Is not ezactly unknown. It alao
sln't any secret that .when you
stood to win real success ln your
profession. It was through her Influence— applied via Tanse ,WHson_-
that you werc kicked out. Isn't
that true?"
"You seem to know."
Presuming thst It Is: You certainly are not particularly fond of
Mlaa  Randall   or  Mr.  Wilson."
"Correct."
"Isn't. It a fact * that you figured
you might eventually resaaert your
Influence over Mlss Randall—ahd
that your laat hope or doing that
vshlehed this afternoon when you
learned that she hsd married Wtl_
1 eon?"
"I cannot prevent you trom drawing your conclualona."
"Thank goodneeal You won't an-
•w*?"
"Why should V"
"Only for thla reaaon, Mr. Bergdorf: Your poaitlon Is kind of
tough. Mlaa Randall waa assaulted
and Mr. Wllaon murdered. You
were the only man on tha lot. ao
far as we know, located ao that lt
would have been possible to have
committed both crltnea... and you
had plenty of motive."
(To Be Continued)
** .-u/vMinaATin   ■«• MAV l»7Q.
INCOMOIUTtD  13 tMmt 1*70*
MEN! 3-Day Sale of
MADE-TO-MEASURE
MEN'S SUITS
$17-95
Extra
Pontt
$5.00
Style, Make, Fit Quaranteed
• Choose from 40 patterns high grade plain
and fancy English Worsteds.
• Specify style details to your complete satisfaction.
t Enjoy that perfect fitting the well dressed
man demands.
• Value that cannot be equalled in this day of
advancing prices.
3  Days Only - Saturday, Monday
and Tuesday
Rubber time is here! Get yours
Women's and Children's
Wpmen's Overshoes In Black or Brown, Cuban
Spike heels. Warmly lined. Dome ma |CC
Fasteners.     rAIR    ..*•"_»
Misses'  Rubbers In  sll styles, Black. •Jiff*
rUR     /X1
Misses' Plain Rubbers. ' ISf*
PAIR _   IV
Children's plain  Rubbers. __£______*
pair *y
Chlldren'a all White Rubbers. fiCC
rAIR  •y
before stocks become depleted!
Men's and Boys'
H.St
*U5
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91.10
95<
Boys' Red rolled toles,  storm  front*..   >«  »m
91.10
Men's Red double sole, storm fronts
PAIR ...- _	
Men'a Red rolled edge, storm fronts.
PAIR 	
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Men's plain, all atylea.
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Youths' Red rolled  soles.
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Boys' Red rolled soles.
tair
ON SALE TODAY AND MONDAY
GROCETERIA
3 Cakes Lifebuoy Soap, 1 cake
Lux Soap for    27**
C. & B. Little Chip Marmalade,
12 oz. jar   23<
Kellogg's All Bran, large pkg. .. lft-f
Brookfield Pork Sausage, 1 lb.
carton     19*?
Rowntree's Cocoa, -,£ lb. tin  21£
Home's Custard Powder, 1 lb. tin 33*?
Roman Meal, large pkg,-  31*£
Cut Mixed Peel, 1 lb. pkg  28*
Glace Cherries, % lb. pkg  25£
Hudsonia Butter, per lb  25<
SERVICE GROCERY
Vi-Tone, the tonic foftd beverage,
1 lb. tin   Wt
C. & B. Malt Vinegar, qts., per
bottle   33*
('. & B. Soup, tomato or vegetable,
2 tins    \»*i
Borden's Chocolate  Malted  Milk,
1 lb. tin  30*
Brookfield Pork Sausage, 1 lb.
carton     21*
Fancy Assorted Sandwich Biscuits,
Perlb  25*
Kraft Cream Cheese Spread Cups,
Pineapple, Relish and Pimento,
Each  18*
—___-__.
	
—
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nn root
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"Interior of British Columbia's Family Newspaper"
ALL THE NEWS  WHILE IT IS HEWS
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PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED, 31. Baker Street, Nelaon,
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SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1988.
The War Dogs Bark
There is an increasing preponderance of evidence
to support the theory that all Europe is preparing for
another war. It is not an encouraging outlook and
there was never a time when there was such need of
the moral forces of the world combining to stem the
tide. Speaking to the London Canadian Club, Capt.
H. G. Scott, who has just returned from Germany, said
that from his observation, another war was inevitable
and he placed the blame upon Nazi Germany. J. L.
Garvin, writing in the Observer of London, Eng., says
that those who glorify war will make it if they can,
that war is coming and that those who think Great
Britain can keep out of it are as blind as the blindest
before 1914. An Associated Press cable from London
describes the past two weeka as among the gravest in
all history, with war plans being perfected by every
major European power.
With Germany armed to the teeth and drilling
even children not yet in their 'teens in military science,
one can hardly blame France for taking an alarmist
view of the situation and increasing her frontier fortifications. However, they are not likely to be of any
great value, for there is no doubt that the next war,
when and if it comes, will be fought in the air. On
this point Garvin says in the Observer:
"Most good routine soldiers, in France as well as
Britain, are earnestly preparing for the last war. We
are told that the Germans, anyhow, cannot equip themselves adequately with artillery for two years. The
German military .thinkers do not dream of making war
in the old way. Germany is the strongest country in
civilian aviation. We may absolutely depend upon it
that capable ingenuity is being employed to make that
swarm of civilian machines rapidly adaptable for
spreading fire, flame, poison fumes, and disease."
If another war comes in Europe there will be no
such thing as a noncombatant population. Civilians
will suffer just as greatly as the men on active service.
In fact, so terrible would be the carnage of a war conducted chiefly from the air that it could not last very
long. It is almost incredible that reasonable human
beings can contemplate the prospect of nations again
at war, but unless something is done to curb Germany's
plans for increased armament, a very grave situation
will exist within a few years. The only real hope is
that the united English-speaking nations will be able
to exert sufficient influence to prevent hostilities. On
them depends not only the peace of the world, but the
future of civilization as we know it, for another war
would mean its total collapse.
THAT BODY OF YOURS
By JAMES W. BARTON,  M.D.
■■■■■■■■■■^■^mmmm^i
"Between You
and Me"
By   J.BX^
VUSH UVER OE LIVE*
EXTRACT    IN     ANAEMIA
A oouple of yean ago a provision
—ixhsnt waa complaining about
ftts-lth writers praising calf's liver
M a blood builder, as he was unable
go keep up with the demand despite
tbe high prloe oharged. "The customer la annoyed becauae we have-
so! always a supply On hand, and
ww lose good customers."
Slnoe that time two thlnga hare
happened. Flrtt, lt has been found
that beef, particularly young beef
Uttr, aad lamb's liver aro Just aa
effective as ca'f'a Uver in building
Wtt blood. Second, an extract has
been made from liver which can
bow be uaed when fresh liver ls not
aTBllabl*.
.Since tbe Uver extract hae come
Into uae there has been a feeling
bt some places that It la much superior to fresh Uver aa only amall
•guantltlee are necessary, and lt Is
always available.
Kow the extract has these advantages and is partlouCarly helpful
where the patient dislikes fresh liver,
but research workera find that "freah
Uver la superior to all Uver preparations in activity. Tbe  use  of  freah
Uver moderately cooked haa not
been surpassed by the Introduction
of Uver preparations or by the
method of injection of liver extract."
The Presbyterian hospital, New
York, and other large hospitals, ln
| order to have patients use the fresh
liver lf at aU posalb'e, got out a
large number of menus using fresh
Uver. ao that patients would not
tire too quickly of any one method
of serving lt.
Now It la really up to the physician to say whether freah Uver,
Uver foods put up by responsible
wholeeale drug houses, or the extract of Uver Iteelf, shou-d be uaed
ln any caae. He knows what la beat
for any patient.
In very severe cases It has been
found tbat the use of fresh Unr
and also Uver extract may be used.
Before tbe discovery of tbe value
of liver ln the severe form of
anaemia, blood transfusions from a
healthy Individual were given to
build up the quality and quantity
of blood ln the patient. Tbey are
still used  ln some cases.
However ln those cases where the
patient can eat fresh Uver every day,
this Is the slmp'eat and most effective treatment.
'Sno good, remarked several Nelsonites as they watched the flakes
fall yeaterday.
• *   *
Oeorge F-vguson was taking no
chances—He waa dolled up ln a
big b.own overcoat—And Hairy wore
a grey one—Heard Diet Jones asking
about a robbery in Ymir—and noticed Arthur Lakes visiting a bank—
Oien Lovejoy aeema out of lt all
since hunting haa atarted—Oien
likes to fish—But ls not particular
about being shot at—Which reminds
me that we have not had any reports ot any hunters being mistaken
for grouse or pheaaant—Fe.ix Schroeder Is the feathers—He. got some
phessants In the Okanagan—Ae met
Mac over there—Felix aaya Mac
wu ln a bad way—tie had got into
a crowd and they were aU boled
up together and shipped to the
prairies—Yea Mao's full name It
Macintosh Red—The Okanagan is
full of thoae Scotchmen—But Felix
said It were better to be boxed and
shipped for a train ride—Than to
get into a jam—and be canned—
But one thing one never hears, or
very seldom hears of tny Onansgau
Mac betug aiifiated io; t_-..-"-s pitiUS.d
•That'i the oucumoeu Un't it,
boys'1—Several candidates tn the
field today tre reported as ill—Not
htlf to many are IK today as WlU
be the day after votes are counted—
• •   •
The Nelson .Masons sre going to
Spokane today—A lot of them went
yesterday—Some youngster down the
street uked me If they were putting
up a very big brick building In Spo-
kano—He couldn't figure how all
of them would be able to work at
once—
iat
Conductor Joe Turner—How old ll
the boy, mum?
Moth-r—Nearly  4.
Joe (suspiciously)—How old are
you, sonny?
Boy—Nearly 4*
Joe—Wei:, I won't charge for him
this time, but he'll grow up Into
good Uar or a giant.
• •   *
Spinning revival Is expected in
France, tbe government having lifted
the ban on roulette.
After thla, F.ench caalnot as well
u movie theaters can advertise,
"Take-t-Chanoa   week."
French financiers face the future
with confidence. The croupier la at
the wheel.
As one Parisian expert explains
the situation, "Things sre on the
turn."
Roulette ls a great game for the
bank. Ftw gamblers lut more than
a oouple of sounds.
In roulette, u ln go.f, tbs trouble
Is to keep your eye on the ball.
Revival of roulette ln France
breaks Monte Carlo's monopoly of
the sport. And there goes the old
ball game.
• •   •
There's perhaps not much need to
mention this, but lt may help somebody with their Christmu list: The
famed Oolconda diamond ls offered
for sale ln London at a mere $260,-
000.
• t   •
"What's that tune the band's playing now?" the farmer uked his wife.
"The program says It's Chopin,"
she answered.
"We l. maybe 'tis, but lt sounds fo
mc much more.like sawln'."
• •   •
Oien Fslls, NY. reports that
Theda Bare II, a Oreat Dane, hu
given birth to 30 puppies. That's a
big family, Utter-ally speaking.
Austria  (between Mussolini and Hitler): "Thanks. Td rather remain
spinster."
(Musso.tnl holds an Albanian doll ln hla hand)—Pontiles, Belgrave.
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
PLEADS FOR    ■	
SOME CHANGE!0"7 ""• °* "•im
over details in their bibles or creeds.
CRYDONIA
Thirty Years Ago
(From The  Dally  Newt of  October
20,   IMS)
The Alaskan Boundary award wu
officially   algned   yesteTdty   and  the
treaty It now binding.
• •   •
One of tho busiest spots in the
district ls tho Roseiand Power company's miu site near Trail where
construction of the concentrator to
treat the War Eagle-Centre Sttr
ore is under way.
• *   •
I. N. Haney. O. R. Hosmer, F.
Paull, Oeorge Benson, T. O. Black-
itock, Sir Charles Ross and W. M.
Doull have been named directors of
tba West Kootenay Power & Light
oompany.
• •   •
Phillip Xing and associates have
bonded a group of claims on Oold
mountain to a Spokane syndicate
for tio.ooo.
AUNT HK
"These nudists are awful,
but they don't look u naked
u a man's upper Up when he
shaves oft his mustache."
To tbo Editor:
Sir: I havs been earnestly reading
f.u the letters in your ptper and In
fact anywhere I can get hold of that
which treats of government, good,
bad, or indifferent. It depends on
the  point of  view.
"Individualist's" letter intereited
me tnd I wondered why tny novest
get together to study the conditions
and try to make a change for the
better ahould bo regarded as revolu
tlonary, communistic, etc., for are
not all so called Independent, Lib
eral politicians advocating a change
and It seems to me that ls It only
when money ts threatened tnd likely
to lose some of Its standing above
tny and everything tha\ the mud
slinging begins. Wei), 1 think money
is well able to protect itself. It
always hu been so. Is the idea
of money being made simply the
medium of exchange the sore spot?
Can not a man of ordinary' Intel.lngpnce see the difference between the hatred of a system that
is the cause of suffering and the
hatred of any person whatsoever and
now could there 'be any more efficient means of driving all men
out of their homes, lovely or unlovely, than the present system of
taxation and unfair tax adjustment
and how must this clause re trail
and lovely homes read to the men
who have lost their homes and
Jobs and are living In camps and
huts. All honor to these men who
are now sbldlng under the circumstances and putting In good work
on tbe roads.
I, u an old tlm* Liberal, feel
that lt Is our duty to cooperate with
these men or any body of men to
relieve the situation regardless of
the feeling of a few money grabbers and old parties who have had
tbe opportunity to do so much ln
the lut four years and did not do
lt and promise to do so much In
the next four years if returned to
power.
I also would at least suppose that
Woodsworth and McPhail could manage the mines and u well as they
are managed now with the hordes
of men put to work. There Is a
uylng "That Sympathy Without Relief Is Uke Mustard Without Beef"
and the relief aure ls like mustard
or mustard plaster to irritate the
receiver.
Why compare Canadians with their
Ideals and educational advantages
to people, who while they may be a
fine people are ln the mass Illiterate
tnd superstitious to a degree. Just
consider how they would have acted
with this need In the midst of
plenty. Our men may have talked
a Uttle roughly at times but is
that any reason to class law-abiding
cltlsens with Russian Communists
who doubtless are aa brutal to their
workers u this Capitalist system Is
proving to the workers of Canada,
many of them old pioneers who
wreatted with all their might and
sacrificed much to build up this
fair country and now are like paupers begging a llttle work on the
public road, paid for by the money
paid by the ume people to the
treasury. Why don't w* leave Ruasla, Italy and England to work out
their own salvation. They are able
to do lt without any aid ttom us
and we have none to spare and why
not clean up our own  back  yard?
And when I see ministers of ths
gospel speaking against any or all
efforts to relieve the hunger and
needs of the public ln the fear that
they would bo worse off, they must
be fearing for their own Jobs, as
the majority of the people htve
nothing to lose nnd could not possibly be worse off and Uve at all.
Let them go read of the Muter
we profess to serve and see that
his first miracle wm to give pro-
Tialon for a feast and all his life
he seerhed to realise that the bodily
needs had to be met and met
them.
Among his lut words was the
command, "go feed my sheep", and
most churches are nobly trying to
feed the hungry. Some ministers
sny that means to feed them with
theology. We all know hungry men
can't Uve on sermons and everyday
we say first, in the "Lord's prayer.
"Olve us this day our dally bresd".
and any or every system of government that will try to fulfil that
prayer with Ood's help Li bath constitutionally good and the best religion possible and wben tbat Is
done all the sects and denominations can have their Innings along
other lines tf they have any time
left from conferences and squabbles
SUGAR AND JOBS
AND RELIEF CAMP
To the Editor.
Sir:—I had >ust read the letter
signed "Camp No. 2" appearing ln
your Issue of tbe 16th Instant. My
heart wu filled wltb pity for the
writer. So whle we atlll lingered
at the breakfut table I told my
wife about the poor unfortunate
writer and uked her to read the
article and see If we could not do
something .for th« writer,—perhaps
give htm a job and feed him plenty
ot sugar. My wife ta not u kind-
hearted as I am and I wu aware of
the fact by the hard look with
which she regarded me u she laid
the paper on the corner of the table.
"John" she' said "do you think I
want two men throwing cigarette
stubs all over the plaoe."
"Why, there's no mention of
cigarette stubs in the poor fellow's
letter"  I nld.
She gave me a look of infinite
scorn, reached tor the paper and
with her index finger pointed to
the word "tobacco."
"Oh that will be all right'1 I aald
"Just give htm a job and well
both  smoke  in  the  haymow."
She took a deep breath and I
awaited tha ouset—hut she let It
pass. Again she glanced at the paper
and said;
"John, dear, It ls quite enough
to have one man lu the house who
puts his legs under tho table and
scoops the sugar bowl empty. You
ars welcome, dear, to all the sugar
you care to eat but I don't Uke
to find your cup half-full of sugar
after every mui." ^^^
"Say no more" I said, "You have
no compassion or pity in your heart."
The deep breath again and this
ttme the exposlon. In ber sweetest
dulcet tones she said:
"John, dur, you are not hard
but soft,—soft, toft;—ln the head,
and lazy, else you would not think
of piling more work on me to get
somebody to help do your work
snd you spoiling tor want of healthy
exercise."
You can do nothing better than
let a woman have her wty so I
dropped tbe subject to take lt up
later with my friend "Benjamin"
Who regularly employs a doeen men.
"Ben" I uid read this over and
see lf you can't give the poor fellow
a Job."
He flnt took out a pencil and a
pad. He held tbe pencil poised
while he read and re-read the letter
signed "Camp No. 3."
Tben he shook hla head. "This
poor boy" he uid "dou not mention
one useful thing he la able to do.
From hla letter J learn that he can
eat, ride a truck, smoke and place
his legs under the table but u
I cannot find out what work he
can do I do not know if ho will be
useful to me."
"Beside..' he uld after a long
thoughtu. pause "I do hate to fire a
man and just this morning I had
to discharge a man whose only
fault wu an une ura ble disposition
to complain about everything set
before him ln the llne of eating."
So I gave up trying to rescue
the unknown from Camp No. a,
Nelway. However considering the
unsympathetic attitude of my wife
toward my own craving for sugar I
congratulate him on being a alngle
man. Moreover he might be worse
off than In Nelway. Some day my
friend, Ben, might offer blm a Job
am if this should happen I would
say something of the unwisdom ot
jumping out of the frying pan Into
the ftre. SYMPATHETIC
Nelson, Oct. 20.
Auction and
Contract Bridge
By the World'i Ludlng Authority,
MILTON C. WORK
SUIT ESTABLISHMENT
One of the difficultly which trouble a Declarer, who Is not in the
super expert cosa, Is correct determination of which suit to start to
establish when playing a no Trump
contract. The following hand was
played ln a rubber game In a popular club:
Ten Years Ago
(From  The   Dally  News  of   October
80,   1923)
Temperaturea    yesterday    were   31
and 40  degreu.
• •   •
A. W. McDonald and A. Schwart-
zehauer, both of Trail, won the
aggregate cups at the Indoor schools
track meet held at Trail yesterday.
• •   •
Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Noxon have returned from a trip to Victoria and
Vancouver.
I  f i
Mr. snd Mrs. C. E. Mansfield and
daughter Alleen returned lut night
after attending the Trail track
meet.
The bidding wu very simple. South
with an evenly distributed hand, no
biddable ault, thne suits stopped,
four and a half honor tricks, and
a no trump count of 18, called one
no Trump. After Wwt'a paes, North
with a no Trump oount of 9, and
mon than one and a half honor
tricks, raised the no Trumpa to two,
and South bid three.
West's opening letd wu the Queen
of Diamonds, the correct card to lead
from Queen-Jack-9. The flrtt trick
wu won by South and the question
wu whloh ault tbe Dec'arer should
attempt to establish. In the play of
the hand, the Declarer with uven
Spadu and Seven Clubs and desiring that North letd clubs, led the
Seven ot Spades from the closed
hand and with Weet playing the
Nine, finessed the Jack. East's Queen
of Spadu won and the Dlamonl
wu nturned, Declarer ducked, West's
Jack took dummy's Ten, and a
third round of Diamonds wu won
by North's Aoe and North then led
a Club for a Unease. Wwt held up
the King but took the wcond round
ot Clubs and cuhed his good Diamond, South discarding a Spade. A
Olub thin wu :ed, won by dummy
ahd dummy led a HeeH which
South finessed. After cashing his
Aoe of Clubs, South hsd to lead
his Aoe and then Quwn of Hearts
and Eut won the lut trick, thereby saving game.
THE CORRECT PLAY
The Declarer bad a simple play
whloh would have produced game.
WhUe the Spade and Club suits ware
of equal length, tbe Club ault wu so
much stronger that It should have
bwn wtab-lshed flnt A small Club
should have been led from clowd
hand which would have bwn taken
with dummy's Ten. Dummy then
should hsve led a Heart and . the
flnesw winning a second smaU Club
■hould have been led from clowd
band. This time Weet would Interpolate the King and lead a aecond
Diamond. South would win, put
dummy In with a third round of
Clubs, lead a woond round of Hearts,
flnesw a seoond time, win, and then
caah his Aw ot Oubt and Aos ot
Hearts and put dummy ln with a
Spade to cuh ths thirteenth Hurt
whleh had luckily become eatab*
llshed Playing In this way, the De-
clarer would take one Spade, four
Hearts, two Diamonds, and thrw
Clubs—ten tricks.
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The  Baron  Munchausen
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Sarah Krelndler, violinist
Hollywood on the Alx
Carfree Carnival (KFO to network)
Nathan Aces, violinist   (KQO)
Anson Week's Orch  (KPO to
network.)
Orch.   (KOO)
Charles  Hart,   Instrumentalists
(KPO to network)
10:30 Serenate, polak's Orch. (KOO)
10:30 Blue Moonlight (KPO to net.)
11:00 Tom  Coekley's Palace Or.
(KOO)
11:00 Orch. >
11:30 Slumber Hour
CBB-DON   LEE   NETWORKS
KVI      KFRC      KOIN      KSL      KOl
579       610 940       1130       1171
6:30 Symphonic strings, Montreal
7:00 CBS Public Affslrs
7:15 Ann Leaf at the Organ
7:80 Willard   Robinson's   Oreh.
6:00 Triple Bar X Days and Night*
8:00 isham Jones' Oroh.
6:16 Yess, Jones, Meade, comedians
8:30 Charlie  Davis'  Orch.
9:00 NBA Program (Don Lee)
9:30 Ted Flo Rlto's Orch.
10:00 Don  Lee  Dance  Orcb.
441   m
60,000 *
Twenty Years Ago
(From The Dally  News of October
20. 1918)
Speaking of the dlaauletude occasioned by the expenditure upon
naval armaments ln Onat Britain,
Hon. Winston Churchill ywterday
stated that while next year lt
would be gnater, the Intention
ww to kwp within the narrowest
limits the wrlous misdirection of
human energy Involved In Britain
and other countries by preparations
for war.
• •   •
Mn. John Brown, her ton Ittrold
Brown, and Mn. Joseph Marsden
have nturned from a trip to Lancashire,   Kngland.
• •   •
J. R. McDougall, with a score of
26. W. Oliver with 24 and R. W.
Hlnton with 20 carried off the prize*
put up by W. A. Thurman for tiie
lut rifle shoot of the yetr hen
ywterday.
STENOGRAPHIC  SERVICE
Mining Reporta —  Literary
Manuscripts
Oenenl Stenography
Mimeographing
Moderate Ratw
>      ANNE BELL
Public stenographer
Hotel Vanoouver,  Vanoouver,  B.C.
VERSE
THE  LANO  ROAD
"ETTftlCK"
It a lang road tao 'Bos'ells an' the
bonnle, Newtoon burn,
Its a lang road tae Scotland,  an'
the wu an dwp atwwn.
Ten's strange roads that load awa,
Uk way A like tae turn.
An' muckle hil s tbst daunt me, frae
the places a hae bwn.
But at nltch tlmw 1' tbe gloamln',
A oan alt an' lltch ma pipe
An' sw tbe bllla a' purple an' lowln'
1' the sun,
I' tbe gowd September wuther, when
tbe oorn Is glowing ripe,
Or  tbe  fresh gled grwn <y  spring
time en the simmer Is begun.
A can hear the Untie alngln', an'
tbe pet-weeps  eerie  cry,
An'   the   plck-s-maws   an    sklrlin*
like a whwn o' angry weans,
An' at nltch time 1' ths thicket, A
wis half feend tae guan by
Por tbs hoolet's hootln' g.lffef mt
tao  the marrow o'  ma banw.
A wn fwl ths caller wttter gurglln1
foon' aboot ma fwt,
What  A gaed tw gump tor  beard-
lw  neath   the   muckle   slippy
atsn.s,
An'  an wl  waud  come  by  allppln'
like a streak o' Utchnln' fleet
An' ma hert waud whummle daftly,
an' A'd gang aft gn:tln' heme.
A can tute  ma grannie's1 sweeties,
an' her sconea an' Jejlle fine.
D'ye    mind    the    muckle    pandraps
whan we gaed awa tae kirk?
An'  the  ipucke  chunks  o*   honey.
Oh the days o" auld lang syne,
Wl' the blackies alngln' sweetly whan
the nltchs whero growln' mtrk.
Its a lang cry tae 'Bos'ells, an' the
the bonnle Newtoon burn.
An' A'm sometlmw kind o"  frlchted
that A'U never we lt mair.
But the memory o' its wl' mo nu
maitter whaur A turn,
The  blue   hills  o'  the  Etldon*.  an'
the wuds iw grwn an' fair.
TIIE GUMPS:
SHOULD OLD ACQUAINTANCE BE FORGOT
NEVER TOO COLD
NEVER TOO HOT
AN UNDERFEED
Coal Stocker
pays for itself while
it works. — See
KOOTENAY
PLUMBING &
HEATING Co., Ltd.
680   k KPO
SAN FBANCISCO
0:00 Mualcal Echoea
6:30 Education at Croseroeda
0:40 Souventre ot Bona
7:15 Balalaika Orch.
7:90 Kay Kyser'a Orou,
8:00 Aesop's Fablea
8 do Piano pala
9:00 Carefree  Carnival
10:00 C. Hart, lnetrumental
10:90 Blue Moonlight
11*00 Oroh.
11:30 Organ concert
1090 k KNX ttS.t
HOLLYWOOD 11,000
0:00 New, Service
8:18 Phlllp Musgrsve,   -cello
8:30 Lawrence Kins, tenor
8:48 The Hawk
7:00 Frank Watanabe
7:18 Football  Chatter
7:90 Oroh.
7:48 Chandu,  the Magician
8:0O KNX  Varletlee
9:00 Newa  Service
9:16 Comedy stars
9:45 Marian Manafleld	
»■_■■■ ■    ■
FOR PANELS
Kootenay Cottonwood
is unexcelled tn the
bwuty of lti grain
u it la unexcelled In
utility and economy.
Repeat orders prov*
Its popularity.
Wood, Vallance
Hardware Co., Ltd.
DUtrlct Mitrlboton
"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS'
A Lady
Writes
They Get
Pacific
Milk by
The Case
We have Juat received a letter from
a  lady   whoae   family   Uvea   ln   the .
far    reaches   of    Britiah   Columbia.   .
who saya Paclric Milk la ordered fort|
her home by the caae. She aaya they
bought tbelr flrat tin five yeara ago.
"Need  I aay that only becauae
•  we  found   lt  particularly  good
we kept on ualng It?*'
Many thanka Mn. H. We oertainly
appreciate thla letter.
Pacific Milk
•■100-j, B.C. Owned and Controlled"
PLANT   AT  ABBOTSFOBD.
HURRY!
We will be in our present location until tbe end of
the month, only one week left to get in on the
most wonderful bargains ever offered. We did
not know we were going to lose this location and
bought goods for the two floors. Now this new
merchandise is being slaughtered.
NEW HATS
Arrived   ftlday,  every   warned
and oolor. About 100 to
-elect from, only	
A nice group of Felta and
Velvets at  — —	
Ladlea' Betty Browna Pullover
-Sweaters, were »8->0 jt*f  OQ
to M.78, and now v*eO_r
Heavy  Silk   Vests .Q,-
Fur Collar and cuff $AAQ
seta  to  »18.78  for T«f*»l-'
Ladles' Cashmere Hoee, 9A<.
new ahadea, pair _____ 37
atyle
*1.29
69^
m^W
Special Notion Dlaplay;    _m*
10c and 18c tt-ema for **Y
38 coats arrived that ahould aell at $35.00 each. All aliaa
and real fur trims. ftm _a q«>
Clearing at  _._     Ttt**»73
STORE AND OFFICE FIXTURES FOR SALE
RAMSDEN'S
Phone 270
Nelson, B. C.
Tinsmithing
Now is the time to get your stoves and furnaces
put in shape for the
Cold Weather
We Have an Expert o*>
Furnace Wark.
DO IT NOW!
NELSON HARDWARE CO.
Wholesale, Retail Quality Hardware
Nelson, B. C.
 V0_*O
WOULD RUSH
SOVIET IDEAS
Putnam Does Not Fear
the C. C. F.
Party
Charging the Conservative government with extravagance In tho administration of relief, and declaring
that If the C.CJ1. party gained
power ln the coming election that
rH^ROtSH-MScRiJV
|UNIFOMS4DIJmcnON
BOWMAN!
ON SHOP
SIO     OR.ANVILLE
VANCOUVER- D.C.
WMTI FOfc  IWTCHM
aohool* would ba uud to advance
socialism, Frank Putnam. Liberal
aendidste for the Nelaon-Creaton
riding addressed a large gathering
at FrultvaTe Wedneaday night. Harold Mclnnla, K.C. of Trail, Prank
Staples of Creston and Jaok St.
Denis of Nelson were preaent.
Mr. Mclnnis spoke at length on
the Liberal platform. He declared
that the platform waa not an election one. having been drafted a
Uttle over a ytar ago, before the
election  was even  thdught of.
Mr. Putnam atated that the Conservative., went Into power five yearn
ago on the slogan thst lt waa time
for a change. Dr. Tolmie and a score
of speakers had toured the provlnoe
from one end to the other promising
the people anything and everything
for their support. How the promises
had been carried out, ha left to
hla audlenoe. the speaker stated.
GREAT CHANOE
"Dr. Tolmie promised a great
change and I wlll give him credit
for that. He surely gave us a great
change, a change that the people ln
this province will never forget," the
speaker   remarked-
Mr. Putnam did not ,wl*h to lay
the blame for the depreaalon on the
Conservatives but ha did place the
responsibility on the late government for the way things had bwn
handled when the depression did tet
ln. He aald tbat instead of putting
men to work for wages the government had used large sums of money
-THE  NELSON  DAILT NEWS,  NELSON, B.C.—BATCH-DAY  MOBMNG,   OCTOBER  21.  1833-
Saturday
SPECIAL
A complete Laundry Outfit — The Combination
Beatty
ELECTRIC WASHER and
Beatty
ELECTRIC IRONER
$199.00
WASHER STORE
HIPPERSON HARDWARE         PHONE 497
to buy machinery and equipment,
and allowed large commissions to
political heelers. Today the machinery,
was laying Idle.
MANY NAMES
Tolmie had changed tbe name or
his government from Conservatives
to unionists or Independent or Independent Independents, In fact
many others. Mott of tbem were still
old ministers and membera of the
lata government who had loat confidence in him juat aa aoon as they
had   received   their  last  indemnities
Mr. Putnam stated that any one
supporting the independent candidate waa Indeed only voting for the
late Conservative member who voted
confidence In Dr. To'mle's government every time the opposition
moved a vote ol non-confidence.
FARMERS DIP THEIR PART
Tho candidate declared that the
farmers had done their part but
that the distributers had failed In
thelr's. Farmera had filled grain
elevators and cold storage sheds to
the brim yet many peopls in British Columbia were in want. Thla was
due to tbe government lowering
tbe purchasing power by herding the
men Into camps to be paid 30 cents
a day. He held strongly to the
clause In tha Liberal platform announcing that an effort would be
made to put theae men back to
wo.k at reasonable wages.
Mr. Putnam deo-ared that there
waa Uttle to fear from the CCF.
saining  power  ln  Biltlsh  Columbia.
The people of the province were
an intelligent people and would not
fall for any "Soviet ldeu."
"If tht C.C.F. go Into power
schools will bt used for the teaching of socialism. Thst In ltaelf Is
sufficient to condemn any pany,"
be declared.
SUFFERING AT
FERNIE GROWS
WITH WINTER
Clothing Needed for
Pupils of
Schools
WIRES DEMAND
QUICK ACTION
Catholic School Asks
Aid From
City
nm im
Society IHOSMERMAN
WINS DIVORCE
Tbla column is conducted by
Mrs. H. Madden. AU newt of a
eoclal nature, including rtfltp-
ttnus, private entertainments,
personal Items, marriages, etc.,
will appear in thla column.
GRAHAM NAMES
WEST AS AIDE
Will Be Cranbrook Election
Clerk—Deputies Are Appointed
—At Your Bridge
—At Your Tea
—At Your Dinner
Serve the refreshment that is ever popular and
always acclaimed with delight. It's delicious. . ,.
At Your Dealers in Brick or Bulk
Curlew Creamery
PALM   DAIRIES,   Ud.
ICE   CREAM BUTTER MILK
ALL PERFECTLY PASTEURIZED PRODUCTS
CRANBROOK.' Oct. 20.—Alan Graham, returning offloer, announces
the appointment of c. H. Wett as
his election clerk. Deputy returning offices have been named ss
followt:
Athalmer, Frank Richardson; Bfls-
co, Stephen Atchison; Canal Flat*..
C. M. Edwards; Chapman Camp,
Harod l* Abbott; Crsnbrook, Mr.
Shankland, Mr. Paxton, Mr. McPhee.
Mr. Moffatt, Mr. Msnnell, E* Ulll.
W. Randall; Edgewater, Erie Smith;
Fairmont, R. w. Bartman; Oalena,
Frank Hale; Gooseberry creek. John
Walsh; Invermere, WlUlam H. Beaton;
Klmberlfy. 6. Norton, A. Ward. O.
Mahaffy, R. O. Poe; Klngsgate, John
T. Tipper; Lumberton. Walter Robertson; Marysvl:le, Edmond Harvey;
Mayook, Tnomaa Gray; Moyle, Harry
Hogg; Radium Hot Springs, H. C.
Oliver; Skookumchuek, Mark Miller;
Ta Ta creek, Peter Jensen; Wardner,
Lewen Mlggtns; Wttt Newgate, Geo.
M. Munro; Weetport, Colin Cameron;
Wett Waldo. Harry Nash; White
River, Norman Bench: Wllmer, Janet Chamberlain; Windermere, Ernest
E. Brysn; Wycliffe, Hans Orove
White; Tahk, George Warren.
MASONS FROM U. S.
VISIT CRESTON
FERNIE, Oct. 20.—A delegation of
seven members of the Mens* and
Womens' Unemployed aaaoclatlon was
received by the city oouncll Thursdsy. Speakers Carter ahd Beale of
ths delegation complained of the Inaction of the Provincial government
following the relief investigation bere.
They claimed that due to the
reoent snow and oold weather parent* wert rinding It difficult to
keep their children sufficiently
clothed to*' go to school. They alao
stated that a great many cases were
suffering from Insufficient bed-
clothing, snd requested that the
council do something to alleviate
the  situation   Immediately,
Tlie council pointed out that the
municipalities were Unable to act
but appointed an alderman to accompany a delegation to the government agent to endeavor to apeed
up the neoeaaary relief. They alao
passed a motion ordering a wire
to be aent to Hon. H. H. Stevens
and the provincial relief department requesting necessary household
articles snd bedding.
February 5 waa the date aet for
the court of revision*
The chairman of the Holy Family
school wrote requesting a grant to
enable tt to carry on financially.
The matter wae tabled for a further
meeting.
E. W. Brown was refused per-
mlasion to build a shed behind the
41  Meat Market.
H. A. Wilkes waa granted the
use of part of the lot adjoining the
city   hall.
The expenaea of a small child of
a city employed family at the University of Alberta hospital were ordered paid.
The council ordeneO accounts
paid aa aoon aa powlble.
A resolution from the city of
Nanaimo proposing a different method of collection of taxea was
read. The council decided that their
preaent method wu In advanoe of
that suggested so no action was
taken.
Pure Food Market
SATURDAY SPECIALS IN CHOICE
FRESH KILLED MEATS   .
LOOK THEM OVER! They're All Money-Savers!
Choice Boiling Beef,    tt
lb. -    »  I
Choice Pot Roasts, (tt-Q**
10
Ib,        	
Choice Rib Roasts,
lb. 	
Choice Prime Ribs    ltt
rolled,   lb ID
Choice Rump Roasts, 1 *)e*
Ib 1-C
Choice Sirloin and T 1 Or-
Bone Roasts, lb 10
Extra Specials
Choice Fresh Killed Ott
Chicken, Ib LD
Choice Fresh Killed ltt
Fowl, lb. 10
Eggs, storage sec*   OA<
ond*. per doz Lv
Fresh Calves' IM
Tongues, Ib     lw
Choice Creamery       Jtt
Butter, 2 lbs. _. _*W
Choice Slewing Veal, tt
Ib. „    0
Choiee Roasting Q< -1 A<-
Veal, Ib. _ 0     IU
Choice Rump Roast  1 C«*
Veal, Ib IJ
Choice Loin Roast      1 Ot*
Veal, lb 10
Choice Leg Roast     OA<
Veal, lh.   L\3
Choice Rolled Roasts 1 tt
Veal, lb Id
No Bone—No Waste
Fresh Stewing Mutton, Ci
Ib.  :. 0
Fresh Shoulder Roast 1M
Mutton, Ib.  IU
Freah Loin Roast     IO*.
Mutton, Ib. IL
Fresh Legs Mutton, IC*
(while they lut), lb. ID
CRESTON. Oct. 30 lltmbei. 0(
the M-lonlc frmtamlty In l__*fgs number-, from Sandpoint and Bonner*
Terry, Idaho, u -mil it the odd
visitor from W_»hlniton, and Montana,  and  Oregon,   were   here   Wed
neaday for International Night at
Creaton Maeonlc lodge. Amongat
theae attending vera H. curtla ot
Sandpoint. . paat grand maater of
.Idaho grand lodge, and af. Norton,
dlatrlct   deputy   grand   maater   for
' northern Idaho, as well aa Meears
Ellerlck and Monks, presiding mas-
tera of the lodges at Sandpoint and
Bonners Ferry. A third degree vaa
conferred by the offloers of Creston
lodge.
R. EL Horner
524 Vernon, Cor. Josephine
Opposite Public Market
Removing to new quarters on Ward Street shortly,
and are clearing out our stock of RUBBER FOOTWEAR, OVERSHOES, ETC. Buy now at COST PRICES
while our stock is complete.
MEN'S RUBBERS, from 85c to $1.00
WOMEN'S RUBBER OVERSHOES,
Poir   $1.25
SOME   REAL   CASH   SPECIALS   IN   GROCERIES
on lines in which we wish to reduce our stock.
BURNS & Co., Ltd.
PHONE 50
BUTCHERTERIA   NEWS
EXTRA  SATURDAY  BARGAINS!
Choice Steer Beef
Pot   Roasts, Cf'W
Rump .Roasts, IQr
Ib .10
T Bone Roasts, 1D<
Choice Pork Roasts, ltt
per lb ID
Choice Veal Roasts,   lOf
per lb. ..................      IL
Shoulders Lamb,
per lb	
13'
IXTRA
Stewing Beef, Stewing
Lamb, Minced Steak,
Stewing Veal, Ott
3 lbs LD
Roasting  Chicken      OC*?
per Ib LO
Choice  Round   Roasts
Steer Beef, 1 P<
Boiling  Fowl,
per lb 	
.Iff
Nippy Ontario OF.0
Cheese, per lb.  LO
Breakfast Sausage,    1A<*
per Ib „ IU
Eggs, fresh seconds, OCc>
per doz.  . t*Q
hoice Creamery but- £7^
ter, 3 lbs.  _ Ol
(Limit 8 lbs.)
PHONE 149
FREE DELIVERY
At St. Saviour'* church, Nelson, on
Friday, October 30, Alfred Brabant
HUl ot Longbeach wu united ln
marria,o to Mlaa Franoaa Pooley of
Mancheatsr. England, Ven. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham officiating at
tho ceremony which ww % very quiet
one. Mr. and Mr*. HIU wUl take up
realdenoe at Longbeach.
• ■»   *
a. Blruch was a vlaltor In the
elty   yeeterday   from   Brie.
• •   a
Mr*. Blrkbeck, teacher at Brie, 1*
spending a few day* In tbe city.
• •  e
Charlea Prltchard, teaeher at Lardo,
apendlng  the  week-end In  the elty.
• •   •
J. Lawson of Caatlegar, who hM
been a patient ln the Kootenay Lake
Oeneral hoepltal, left yesterday for
Ul* home.
• e    *
H. H. Donald wa* a vlaltor ln the
city peitertlay from Longbeach.
e    •   *
Mta* Phyllla Archibald, teaeher at
Longbeach, la apendlng the week-end
in the city the gueat of her parents
Mr. anci Mrs. C. 1. Archibald, SUnley
atreet.
e   •   •
Josephine Varseveld, teacher at
Wlnlaw, la apendlng the week-end
In town the gueat of her parente,
Mr. and Mrs. M. J, Varseveld. Water
atreet.
• •   *
Mlaa Mae Dlnney of Blueberry la
.-pending  the week-end In tbe city.
• e    •
Mrs. B, J. Skinner, wbo haa been
spending a week with her daughter,
Mrs. J. Lawson at Castlegar, returned home yesterdsy,
• e    •
Mrs. M. M. Watson waa a vlaltor
ln the city yesterday from Kootenay
Bay.
e    •    »
A. Ling of Balfour spent yeaterday
in town shopping.
• •   •
Mrs. J. Sleeman and daughter.
Mlas E. Scott of Vancouver are
visitors la the elty the guest* of
Mrs.   F.   Und,   Victoria  street.
• t   •
Mr. and Mrs. oeorge F. Danlell* ot
Procter were visitors la tbe city
yeeterday.
• *    e
Mlas Kathleen Porter la spending
the week-end In the city the gueet
of her parent*. Mr. and Mrs. w. J.
Porter, Fairview.
• *   ■
Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Abey were
visitor* ln the city yeaterday from
Mirror Lake.
• •   t
Mlaa June Phalr of Glenwood, Mln..
la a vlaltor In the city at th* home
of her aunt, Mr*, j.  Olbson.
• •   •
D. Cameron wae a vlaltor In tbe
city yeaterday from Balfour.
Mr. and Mra. Howard Foster and
daughter, who hav* been vlaltlng In
Nelaon at the home of air. Foster's
brother and slater-In-law, left yesterdsy for their home la California.
J. Kennedy waa & vlaltor In the
city yesterday from Balfour.
• •   •
M- Bdward* waa a city visitor yeaterday from South Slocan.
• •   •
A. Nelaon et crescent Valley spent
yesterday In town ahopping.
• e   •
D. D. Townsend left yesterday by
motor to apend the week-end tn
Spokane.
• •   •
R. D. Barnes left yeeterday by j
motor to spend a lew days ln Spokane.
• •   •
Mlss Hose Jeffrie* leave* this
morning by motor to spend the
week-end in Spokane.
• *   •
Ur. and Mm. M. C. Donaldson and
children, Peggy. Shirley and William, accompanied by Douglaa Read,
leave thla morning by motor to
spend tbe week-end In Spokane.
• •   •
Mr.   and   Mrs.   M.   Dumont   and
daughters,  isobel,  Lillian  and  Rose..
of  Perry's  Siding  are spending   the
week-end  visiting  ln  the city.
**•
J.  Peachy,  teacher at Procter,  is
spending   the   weekend  In  the  city.
• •    e
Mlaa Oertrude MUne and Mlaa
Peggy Barclay, teachers at Brilliant.
ars apendlng the week-end In tbe
city.
• •   e
Mr. and Mrs. A- C Emory, accompanied by Mlss Eileen DUl and P.
H. Buah. left yeaterday by motor to
apend a few days ln Spokane.
I _ t   t
Dr. O. Bradshaw leaves thla morning to apend a few days ln Spokane.
I   •   •
Mlss Stevenson, who hu been
visiting In the city, left yeeterday
for Vancouver.
• •   •
Miss A. Sanders left yesterday for
Vsncouver.
e    •   •
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Triggs left
this morning to spend a week's ho l-
day ln Spokane.
• •   *
Mr. and Mrs. N- J. Lowe* and
daughter Olenna have returned from
a 10 days' holiday apent ln Winnipeg.
D.  McNaughton,  teacher at Roes-
land, waa a vlsjtor In the city
yeeterday.
v •   •   •
Mlas Haw! Hulla, teacher at
Thrums, la spending thc week-end ln
the  city.
• •   •
Walter Kettlewell. accompanied by
L. it. McBride, W. Allen and R.
Sharp, leave thla morning by motor
to apend the week-end In Spokane.
• t   *
Mlaa Roberta Kirby and Mlas Elizabeth  McKlnnon,  teachers at  Shore-
Decree Absolute Is
Granted in Case
At Fernie
NEARLY 500 AT
UPHILL SOCIAL
Michel Beer
Appeal Is
Set Over
Parlor
_ Oct. aQ.*-a*ndy Bchraro
af Hosmer vu granted absolute
doctee ot divorce trom Constance
Schram at the fall assizes. Sber-
wood Herchmer, K. c, acted for
Mr. Sehram.
An appeal by McCool and Ross of
Crows Nest against a conviction ot
Magistrate Robert Wlnatanley of
Mlchtl, Imposing a fine of WOO for
having thelr berr parlor open on
Sunday, was heard by judge Thompaon Wednesday, and Thursday. It
waa set over to be decided at the
ntxt court on Not, 14.
J. B. Kennedy of Cranbrook ls
substituting u government agent ln
Fernle while Kye Bryant Is' away
on his holidays.
X whist drive and dance was beld
Wednesday under tbe auaploea of
the Labor party. The hall wa* packed
to the doom there being some 86
tablee ot whist »nd 4*60 altogether..
Candidate Thomas Uphill address*-!'
the gathering and waa greeted wtth
loud acclamation.
Tbe first part of th* evening was
spent at whlat of whlcb the winners
were: Ladles' flrat, Mlas Vantoiu-
kirk; ladlea' second, Mrs. J. LaAalle.
third, Mrs. J. McLean; Gentleman*'
rirst, A. Luke: gent'-emana' second,
D. Schorll*. tblrd, J. Cole*. Winners
of tbe lucky chairs were Mlss Balok.
Mlas Fetako, Mr. Oaakell and Oeorge
Smith.
Dancing waa enjoyed with T.
Biggs acting aa master of ceremonies.
Refreshments were served by tbe
Ladlea' Laibor aasoclatlon.
Winners of the draw were. Mrs.
R. Hartley first, Mrs. B. Andereon
second, and Mr. cavanaha third.
iiaistmwwwwiww/Bmiiiviiftmwayh^wMJiaEBj
dMec^her's^O
607 Baker St. Phone 200
STORE NEWS
The Strandwear Feature Dresses for
November Are Here
Rotary Club Honors
Kent With Supper
Make Preparations for Visit
of Coeur d'AIene
Members
Harry B. Kent, Vancouver Rotarian, who apoke at Trinity United
church on his Mediterranean cruise,
wu a guest of honor at a meeting
held by the Rotarians and sttended
by their wives ln tbe Hume Sliver
hall room Thursday evening.
An informal talk by Mr. Kent
and preparations tor the reception
of a Coeur d'AIene delegation on
October 28, together with community singing, constituted the program. Approximately 12 Coeur d'AIene members and their wives an
to be the guests of tbe Nelson club
on October 28. Wives ot the NeUon
Rotarians wii again be the guest*
of the club. Plans were announced
by E. P. Dawson.
Mr. Kent, who ls on the board
of the Rotarians crippled chUdren
hospital at Vancouver, gave a brief
account of bis travels, touching especially on his contact with the organization while ln Europe,
While on his cruise be had the
opportunity of attending Rotary
meetings at Venice, Jerusalem and I
Cairo. Meeting with Rotarians of)
foreign tongue proved exceed I ngl y
interesting, the speaker deelsred In
recounting Incidents ot the meetings.
Ultra smart frocks for daytime and evening wear.
Designers have used the newest in rough crepes
and satin to create these November Strandwear
frocks into models of exquisite detail. New fall
colors and black. Sizes 14 to 20.
EACH ..:  JS&.00
GOOD  HOUSEKEEPING
By Circle No. 4 of St. Paul's Ladies' Aid.
This column ta compiled by the Ladles of Circle No. 4.
None but tested recipes will be Inserted.
CHICKEN   PIE
1 Chicken.
Pepper and salt.
3   tablespoons   butter.
Cut up chicken and put tnto boiling water, add pepper, salt and butter. Oook till tender. There should
be about one quart liquid Wt when
chicken ia cooked. To thla add
flour enough to make thick gravy.
Put In baking diah and cover vlth
rich biseutt dough.
HUFFED   CHOPS
Mutton chops cut one and a half
inches thick. Drawing aa for chicken or turkey. Split meat in half
Into the bone. Insert into each
gaah aa much dressing a* it wlll
hold. Tie with string and bake In
moder»t*  oven.
and cook by slow simmering. Keep
tbe temperature below the boiling
point snd renew the water as needed to keep from stesmlng dry. Vs *
as little water aa powlble so thtt
the gravy may be rich ln flavor.
Calculate at least an hour a pou in
for cooking. Four houra ls thc
allowance for a medium alee roaat.
Vegetables aro delicious cooked with
roast.
acres, are spending ths reek-end In
the city.
wee
W. Fotheringham left yeaterday to
spend  the week-end In Spokane.
see
H. M. Whimster left yeaterday by
motor to spend the week-end In
Spokane.
• •   •
Carl  Llndow waa a  visitor  In the
city yesterday from Salmo.
• *>  *
H. Stevens of Tmlr apent yesterday vlaltlng In the city.
Miss    Walker    left    yesterday    for
Lytton prior to leaving for England
from St, Johns on th* Duchess of
Athol,  December  8.
Mr. and Mrs. Marc DuMont and
Mlaa E. DuMont were vlaltora ln the
city yesterdsy from Rosebery.
see
Mlaa Ethel Buckner ha* returned
from a holiday soent in Coleman,
I Alta.
• *   •
I Mr. and Mrs. Collngwood Oray
were visitors in the city yesterdsy
:; >tu Bonnlngton.
• •   •
Mr.   and   Mrs.   H.-xtor   Angus  and
daughter of Rlondel  have arrive j  in
the city and are taking up reeldence
In the Annable block.
see
jamee Oagnon, teacher In Trail,
Is apendlng the week-end ln tht city
the guest of his perente, Mr. and
Mrs, c, V. Oagnon, Silica street.
• •   •
8. J. Towgood ef Sandon arrived
ln the city laat evening and la the
guwt ot hla daughter and son-in-law,
Mr.  and  Mra.  WUllam  J.  Sturgeon.
• •   •
Mlaa   Dorothy   Potior   of   Trail   ls
spending a few days lfl the city.
• •   •
E* Shannon of Hew Denver ls
spending a few days vlaltlng ln the
elty.
• •   •
H. L* Leveque is epeadlng a few
days to the city from Nakusp
• •   •
Mlas Msry McAuley of SUverten
Is spending a few days In Nelson.
• •   •
A Angrlgnon ot Dur Park is
spending a few daya 1a the city.
• e  s
Jamw Madden, accompanied by
hi* gipther, Mra. Margaret Madden,
Mr*. R. W. Hunter and children,
Fat, Join and BUl, motored to
i Queena Bay yestr.day.
SUNDAY   SURPRISE
Put a layer of tomatoes and Jule-
In a deep baking dish. Tben put.
a layer of thinly sliced onions. Then j
a layer of hamburger steak, wblch ,
hu first been warmed through in
a trying pan. Then put ln a layer:
of boiled rice, e sprinkling or
grated cheeae and seasoning ot nit
and pepper. Repeat tbe layers until all the material la uwd. Bskr
ln a moderate oven for one hour.
FALLS HEADLONG
DOWN THE STAIRS
FERNIE. Oct. 30—A serious
accident happened at ths Labor
social, Wedneaday evening, when
John oeorge fell headlong down
tho length of the stairs leading
from the street to the hall,
which 1* upstairs.
He was removed In t seral-
unconacloua atate to tb* Labor
oommittee rooma and from there
taken to the Fernle hoepltal by
ambulance. He la thought to have
sustained head and back lnjurlea.
POT ROAM OF BEEF
Use a cut from the round or tlv
chuck. Chuck la mottled with fat
whll* the round cut consist* or ven
Juicy, lean muscle, wipe meat witn
a clean cloth. Heat sn Iron kettl*
or deep trying pan smoking hot
Besr entire surface of the meat
Add a generous cup of water, cover
th*   pan   clowly,   reduce   the   heat,
m   ITALY'S FINEST
THE WORLDS BEST
VITTUCCI
"Stop of Italy" Virgin
OLIVE OIL
rronounwd "VM-TWO-CHEE"
  -IM
Vassar's Cash Meat Market
GOOD BUYING FOR SATURDAY
AND MONDAY
Choics Steer Beef
Special Round Steak, nrt*
I  lbs 1*0
T Bone Roast,
per lb	
Rib Roast, rolled,
per  lb	
Pot  Roast, good,
per lb	
Rump Roast,
per Ib	
Veal Oven Roast,     lOf
per lb \L
Veal Chops, 1 tt
per lb.  YO
Pork Roast, 10c
IVT    lfc.    mm  10
Lamb, not Mutton     1Q<*
par lb.  m VS
 Sh
per lb.
.17'
15'
6'
13'
Legs, per lb.
Lamb Shoulders,       10*?
Crystal  Creamery Butter,
Saturday  only, Ott
per  Ib LO
Eggs, Urge Storage Firsts,
Saturday   only, OA<
per doz uU
Frying Chicken,       OAf
per lb LV
Local Fowl, Jtt
Each w
Fresh  Ling  Cod,      Itt
sliced, per lb. _ 10.
Hamburger, fresh     Ott
made, 3 lbs Ltt
Breakfast  Bacon,     OAt
fresh sliced, per lb* .. Lft
-reakfast Sausage,    1A^
resh mads, per lb.
'.ousting Chf "
local, per lb.
oasting Chicken,     Ott
We Deliver at These Prices—Phone 862
_
 ^——
'»SI SB
■ THE  NELSON   DAILY  NEWS,  NELSON,  B.C.—SATURDAY  MORNING,   OCTOBER  21,   19SJ-
AWAITED MOVE Bright Spots of the Week
UPWARD COMES
TO NEW YORK
Net Gains of One to
Four Points Are
Made in Day
CAR LOADINGS
ON INCREASE
Call Money Holds at
Steady Rate; U. S.
Steel Up
By JOHN L. COOLEY
Associated Press Financial Writer
NFW YORK, Oct, 30 (AP)—The
eagerly awaited rally finally appeared ln stocks today. It wu fostered by a good upturn ln wheat,
by reports the government wu plan-
nlng action to allay agricultural unrest and by rumors the matter of
Russian recognition had attained
more definite status.
Net gains of 1 to 4 points were a
pleasant revers*: of the market's
dominant trend this week. Oall
money held at -Vi or l per eent.
Rail stocks wers helped ln their
recovery by word loadings which lut
week were 664.058 cars, were well
above a year ago when ths 1832
high had been made. New York Oentral. Santa Fe, Illinois Central. Baltimore and Ohio, Southern Pacific
and Pennsylvania were up 1 to 3
points;  Union Paclflo ra'lled 4.
In U-S. Steel, American Telephone,
Wwtlnghouse, Sears Roebuck, and
American Gan the Improvement also
ranged to 1 to 3. Salea of stocks
totalled 3,498.760 sharea.
By   the   Csnsdisn   Pres**
WAGES   INCREASED
TORONTO— Three Ontario concerns, Swift-Canadian company, Tip
Top Tailors and Hamilton Ootton
company announced wage Increases
of 10 per cent for employees.
MORE VESSELS IN HALIFAX
HALIFAX—In September 489 vessels entered and cleared the port of
Halifax, oompared with 446 vesse s
ln the same  month  lut  year,
NEW  OVERALL   PLANT
ELUIRA, Ont.—New plant Will
start here ln November with about
30 persons employed manufacturing
overalls, work shirts and wind-
breakers.
'5.000  TO  CUT  WOOD
QUBBBC—Assistant chief of the
provincial forestry servloe announced
38,000 men will be employed tn
Quebec cutting wood neit winter.
REOPEN PAPER MILL
WINNIPBO—Abitlbi company receiver hu given order for purchase
of 30.000 cords of pulpwood and lt
ts reported tbe compsny's Pine Falls
mill will be reopened.
PLAN PLANT IN WINDSOR
WINDSOR, Ont.—S. H. Camp &
company, limited, subsidiary of a
Jackson, Mich., concern, will open
s plant here soon, manufacturing
surgical   supports   and   braces.
ASBESTOS OUTPUT GROWS
MONTREAL—Asbrstos from Thet-
ford mlnu area to volume of 8347
tons shipped In September corn-
oared with 8580 in September lut
year.
240   NEW   INDUSTRIES
RBOINA— Provincial department
announces in current bul'etln 340
hew industries were added to the
buslneu life of Saskatchewan last
year.
PAINT  GOODS   FIRM  TO  OPEN
TORONTO—Savrogna Company of
Canada, Ltd., hu been formed here
to manufacture a line or painting
acoessorlu.
HUGE   RAIL  ORDER
SYDNEY, N.8..—Dominion Iron and
Steel company expects to start at
ones on 36,000 ton rail order for
Canadian National railway.
DOMINION FUNDS
DOWN FRACTION
NEW YORK, Oct, 30 (CP).—Uck
of stable trend unsettled the foreign exchange market here today.
Dominion funds closed at 96H
for a decline of 5-16 of 1 per cent.
Sterling opened at 44.52=1. down
1% centa. Tbe close wu at 4.61%.
French gold francs suffered an
overnight loss of 4Vi points at 6.53
cents and declined to close at 4.51 V*.
Bterllng rose to 83.69 francs, u.s.
dollar in terms of the franc closed
at 71.79 cents.
U. S. Dollar Firms
Som* ot Montreal
MONTI-SAL, Oct. 20 (CP).—The
pound sterling milled about uncertainly In trading on Montreal foreign exchanges todar. Following the
lead of New Tork, lt broke IH In
late trade to cloee at 4.87 5-16. The
VJS. dollar firmed to cloae at IH
per oent premium, Franca declined
■ 11  eent to  5.86 centa.
New York Stocks
70
■nt.
6%
IStt
40
40 fi
1T*S
S3
IB'h
Allegheny       SK
Al    Chemical    _ 1S1
Am  Can   -    88
Am   Por  Pow   _     Th
Am  loe        6
AaUidni      14
Am Smelt ti Re    34(4
Am Telephone _ 115%
Am  Tobacco   _..   88
Anaconda _    11%
Atchison    48
Auburn Mo STh
Baldwin        10H
Bait  Is   Ohio  .   ai',
Bendlx   Av       lift
Beth   Steel   _.._   25%
Canada   Dry       28
Can Pacific _    12'-,
Cerro de Pasco _   27%
Ches  -e  Ohio  _   39
Chrysler      40%
Com _ South _    2%
Oon Oas N T -   41%
Com   Prod    _   7»%
O Wright Pfd _
Dupont 	
East Kodak	
Dec  Pow  ts  Ll
Erie     —
ford English 	
Pord of. Oan -
Pint Na Stores ..
Pteeport Tex —
Oen   Motora   __
Oen    Eleo    	
Oen   Foods   —
Oold Duat 	
Goodrich  —.—~-
Oranby      7H
Ort North Ptd     1»%
Oft   West   Sugar      22%
Howe Sound ...._   22
Hudaon  Motora      10
Ina    Copper    .._     4%
Int Nickel       17%
int Tel Is Tel _   10%
Jewel  Tea     28
Kenn   Copper   _    17%
Kresge S S    11%
Kroegger Is Toll 20 V,
Lehn ts Fink _
Mack Truck —
Milwaukee Pfd -
Mont Ward ...
Nuh Motors _
Nat Dairy Prod
N   Pow   As   Ll   ..
N T Central _
Pae Oas _ Elec
Packard Mo —
Penn R P. 	
Phillips Pete	
pur; OU  _  10%
Radio Corp   8%
Radio Keith Or - 2%
Rem   Rand    8%
Rock Island   3%
Safeway Stores - 36'/,
S LouU Is B T - 2%
Shall  Union     7%
8. Cal   Idlaon   _ 18%
South   Paclflo   _
Stan Oil  of Cai
Stan OU of Ind
Stan Oil of N J
Stewart    Warner
Studebaker     4%
Tex Corp   22%
Tex  Oulf  Sul  _ 88
Tlmken   Roller 24%
Under  Type  ..... 31',.
United  Air  _  37%
United   Bis     20%
Union  Pas  _.... 104
U    S    Pipe    .... 18
U S Rubber   12%
Vanadium Strel 38
West    Electric 32%
Woolworth     38%
Wrigley    80
Tcllojj, Truck  _     4
16
34%
4%
17%
17%
13%
22%
10%
3%
34%
14
18%
37%
40
6%
3
135%
85%
8%
A*h
12%
30%
113%
87%
10%
48%
33
S<h
II
10%
34
23%
11%
24%
37%
37%
3
33%
76%
80
88%
8%
11%
48
39
24
16%
32%
16%
9%
6%
14
31
8%
3%
16%
10%
15%
10%
19
22%
4
16%
15%
13
36%
19
3
22
13%
10%
6
2
6%
3
86%
6%
17
17%
38
DOW JONES AVERAGES
80 industrials    86.63 up 2.25
20 rails  35.87 up 1.41
20 utilities    23.78 up   ,52
PIONEER GOLD
GAINS 45 CENTS
Brewers and Distillers
Off Ten Cents
at Coast
VANCOUVKl. Oet. JO (CP). —
Stocka atrengthened throughout the
forenoon aeaalon on the Vancouver
stock exchange, but weakened again
in the afternoon and, with few exceptions, cloaed with email net
galna.
Pioneer Oold at 9.33 had a net
gain ot 48 centa after selling up to
9.75, Cariboo Oold aold at 3.00 and
closed at 2.80. A net gain ot alx
cents Premier closed 8 centa higher
at   1.00.
Wayside cloaed at 42, up 4 oenta.
Meridian at 36 waa 2 osnts higher
as waa Bridge River Consolidated at
21 and Bridge River Exploration
finished with a gain of 1 oent at
S3. Bralorne cloeed unchanged at
9.00 after aelllng aa high as 9.75.
In baae metala Pend Orellle closed
at 70, up 3 cente, Noble Five waa
up % oent at 7% and B.C. Nickel
cloaed unchanged at 80.
Royalite cloaed at 12.78, up IS
centa. There wen no sales transacted
In this Issue. Home Oil at 130 and
Calgary and Edmonton at 85 were
each up S centa.
Brewera As Distillers waa off 10
cents at 2.00 and Coast Breweries
closed unchanged at 9.80.
Exchanges
MONTREAL. Oct. 20 (OP)—British
and foreign exchange ln relation to
the Canadian dollar, aa compiled by
the Royal Bank of Canada, cosed
today aa follows:
Argentina,   peso .3778U
Auatralla,   pound   _—___.... S.7164D
Auatrla.  schilling .1708D
Belgium, belga .— _1014D
Brazil,   mllrels .0854U
Bulgaria,   lev  .0197U
Cblna, Hongkong dollara _   J390A
CBechoalovakla,   crown .0432D
Denmark, kron* _ ____-_—   _)093D
Finland, flnmark ________   .02150
France,   frano     .   .056SD
Oermany,  relchsmark      .3443D
Oreat Britain, pound 4.6730D
Greece,   drachma  _________   .0084D
Holland, florin .5822D
___. .2588D
  _S850U
  .0761D
 - _2846A
Jugoslavia, dinar  .0200D
New  Zealand,  pound     3.7303D
Norway,   krone
Poland, alott  .
Roumania,   leu
Hungary,    pengo
India, Rupee —
Italy,   lire    —
Japan, yen
Produce Prices
Stage Comeback
MONTREAL. Oct. 30 (CP)—Higher
levels on country boards stimulated
a alight recovery In prloes on the
Montreal dairy and produce market
today, cheeae rose % to 9% cents a
pound for Ontario* and 8% for
Quebecs.
Butter unchanged; No. 1 grade
18%. Receipts 390 boxes.
Egga flnn; Ontario extraa 38.
flrata 17 aeconda allghtly lower.
Offerings 217  caaea.
Potatoea firm; new Quebecs 65 to
70,  New  Brunswick*  70  to 76.
Toronto Stocks
Aconda .
Arno _...
AJax
Amulet	
Amity   	
A P  Consolidated
Aahley  	
Associated   	
Area	
Baldwin  _	
Baltic Oil
4%
4
21
32
31%
34
26%
30%
97
13
10%
38%
39
35%
3%
3%
128%
S6%
7
e%
13%
33%
113%
79%
11%
48
37%
10%
20%
11%
35%
25
11%
26%
38%
30%
t
40%
76%
4
71%
70%
6%
13%
6%
9%
48%
40%
35%
17%
33%
17
10%
7%
16%
33
33
9%
4
16%
10%
28
17%
10%
20%
16
24%
4%
18%
17%
13%
10%
38%
19%
3%
24%
13%
10%
6%
3%
6%
3
38%  Mining Corporation	
2% I Murphy    -  	
7%  Newbec    	
18% (Nlplaalng  	
18     Noranda    __—._..
36%   Northern Canada	
29%! Peterson   Cobalt   	
39% I Pend  Orellle   	
6% i Premier   Oold    ______
4    i San Antonio  	
22    I Sherritt   Oo don   	
35%   Sudbury Baaln ____——
33    iSt.rlng pacific —..._...
.2349D
.1108O
.0098U
4.160OD
.1210D
.3417D
Swltaerland.   franc        -3800D
United Statea, dollar, s%   per cent
premlum.U
South Africa pound
Spain,  peaeta _ _.
Sweden,  krone  	
Vancouver List
■ ■n_irrnr.i.lH,-...l
'May We Serve You?'
SPENCER
 DECORATING	
RaUabie Auto Repairs With modern
equipment. NELSON TRANSFER.
AVSNUE~SERVICI bis, Oil. Wash.
Ing^ Oreaslng, etc. Drive In today
GEO. A. MEERES—For Oood Photo-
graphs—Aak   Anybody—Pbone  48.
Please Phone 673 R for Mlaa Thompson  Dressmaking.  P.O. Box  101. _
J. y~ COATES—Reglatered Professional Electrical Engineer. Contracting, Supplies   Phone 766. _
Expert Watch. Clock" and Jewellery
Repairs, our work la satisfying
service prompt. E. COLLINSON
P.O. Drawer 1102^ Nelaon, B.C. _
Nelaon Dally News job ~ Department
(or all klnda ot commercial printing. Phone 144.
McGregor Bros. Portralta for Christ-
mas. Phone 224.	
R H MABER. flnsmlthlng. Furnace Repairs   Rooting. Phone 655.
•May We Serve You?'
(Continued I
Plumbing aud Heating. Installations
and supplies work ouaranteed
Phone   Jullua   Relaterer  at  659L2
LEGAL NOTICES
K.   Is   T.   Auto   Repair   Shop.   Ex
~ it(
MlSCEI.LANEtlt'S   TOR   SALE (37)
pert  workmanship   low Rates.
For   cleaning,   pressing,   alteration.
THE   WARDROBE.  417   Hall   St
NOTICE  IS HEREBY  OIVEN thst
a aale of 106 lots In the Subdivision
of Lot 7588. Cariboo Dlatrlct, situate
about one-half mile north of Bar-
SHORTY'S    AUTO   "REPAIR    SHOP   kervllle   Townslte,   wlll   be   held   at j
for.Dependable Repairs. 26th'""'"io °a MTnumi">'  0ctqb" j Everyone using our Leth-
PuuJ._['!°5?rd."15Jirh.<li_"repI1_, *Su,'_" i   PuVther particulars may be obtain-; bridge Imperial Coal say it
_llned.   Mrs.  Falrhead._ Ph. 246 L2.   ] e(1 on application to the Department;
H.   E.   STEVENSON — Electric   and I of  ___anda,   Victoria,  or  tbe  Oovern-
acetylene  welding;  steel _ works.  j ment  Agent at Quesnel, B. C.
For   amart    Permanent   Waving    - 5__..?.£rS?«_,?_':    - ,_._.__.
THELMAS BEAUTT PARLORS. ,     A      R!Pur,,1LMI,n■s,"  "' Lan4s*
Phoue_38_for"TaxI=Safe,   Reliable   vtctorla ^* 18709) ',
Buick   Cars.   NELSON   TRANSFER   Vlc*°r"*-_P*-*-—______ '^-—11
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALB
(Continued)  	
(37
HAY—FIRST CUTTING B.C. AL
falfa, second cut B.C. Alfalfa
Brome Hsy, Mlx*.d Timothy, red
top, and Alslke. Wheat straw. Th*
Btackman-Ker  Mlllg.  Co. Ltd.
 (8936
(il
FOB SALE OR RtNT	
WHITE KITCHEN CABINET. DOU
ble-bed and mattress with spring
both ln A-l condition. Phon
386 X2. (8900
is the best they ever used.
Try a ton of it and
note its superiority in
heat and preparation.
MISCELLANEOUS  WANTOD
(38
 Limited.^
Radio   Repairs." Insullatlona.   tube
testing  KO"~
'ERSONAL
(»|
ASTROLOGY-LIFE   READING
JRBCA ~"~
MacDONALD
WHEAT SLIDES
UP IN US. AND
WINNIPEG PITS
Bulls   Muster  Their
Forces; Buying
Orders Heavy
_ OOTENAY MUSIC. Ph 585 ; AND FORECAST
PAINTING  AND  KALSOMININO ' ror  1933 and  1934. Glvee prediction
C.  MUler.   Phone  790L. 1 month by month for one year, cov-1 _r_ __.      0  T?        3 af*
erlng   full   business   affairs,   signing ' \__,___TtGl_G CC T UCJ l-jO.
arrlage. I cr*>
WANTED   —   GOOD   UB-B-   TYP1
writer.    Phone   59. (8903
BUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES (SJ
FOR   SALE   —   ON   ACCOUNT   Ol
sickness I am forced to sell thr
Leland Hotel at Nakusp   B.C. An
ply to Wm. J. Pratt, Nakusp, B.C
PROPERTY  FOB  SALE
(34;
Metal Markets
Britiah American OU
Baae  Metala    	
Barry Hollinger	
Bobjo     	
Big Mlaaourl	
Bunkerhlll Ext	
Calmont     	
C and E Landa ....	
Central Manitoba  _
Chemical  Research —
Conlagaa   	
Clerlcy    	
Contarum     	
Dome    	
Dalhouale ..—
Eaatcreat  __ .	
Footblla
Falconbrldge   	
GooJflsh   	
Granada    —        „
Home   OU   	
Harker Gold 	
Howey     —
Bollinger 	
Hudson   Bay    —
International   Nickel   	
Imperial   Oil   _ 	
Keeley
Klrkland Lake
Lake Shore .
Macaasa
Mandy    	
Manitoba Basin
McVlttle
Mclntyre
McWatters
Slscoe
St. Anthony
Stadacona 	
Tech riughes
Towsgsmac
2*'.!
26%
20%
101%
18     I
12    I Thompson   Cada'.lac
36%   Treadwell    	
31%  Vlpond  _
36    I Venturea     -
60    I Wright  Hargreavea ...
6     Walte Ackerman -	
.00%
.04
1.10
.87
.03
.14
1.05
.16
.03
.00%
.03%
13.60
8*8
.10%
.16
_S1
.07
•07',,
.85
.14
US
3.20
.01%
JO
33.50
.15
.35
M
8.05
.16
.88
19.33
.03 V.
1.01
9/65
8.5:1
17.45
11.50
.60
.35
46.00
.88
.09
.01%
.88
35.50
.47
1.68
.01%
.02%
2.20
10.60
44
.01 %
.70"
1.01
US
ts
ts
a*
itt
.29
.12
8.70
.36
•13-A
1.40
.60
.72
7.SS
110
MINES                             Bid Aak
B.C. Nickel, lut aale at .60
Bralorne   -     9.00 9.35
Big Mlsaourl  New....     .28
Beaver  Silver       .08% .08
Bridge   River   Con...     .31 .22
Bridge  R Ex        .33 .34
Oold  Belt   _     .35 .60
Georgia   River   _.-     .02'.
Oolconda .... .30
Orandvlew        .03 .03%
Int c As C       .10
Kootenay  Florenoe.-.     _)1 .01%
Lucky Jim      .03 .04
Meridian   _ 38 .36%
Morning Star, laat sale at .18%
National  Silver      .04 .06
Noble  Five      .07% .08
Pend   Orellle .70 .75
Pioneer Oold 9-15 9.75
Porter Idaho      tt .06%
Premier        100 l.m
Reevea McDonald 18
Reno   Oold    -    -73 .74
Ruth   Hope      03%
Sllvercreat          .01% .03
Wellington      .01% .03
OILS
A P Consolidated  .14
C and E Landa  85
Dalhousle —  .36
Eastcrest .  .35
Freehold                              * - •*•"*>•
Hargal     05%
Home  OU  UO
Mercury   —, —— -18%
McLeod  35
Okalta   Com  04
Royalite.-      13-73
Sterling Paclflo  .35
Vancouver Sales i
CASH DEMAND IS
INDIFFERENT
Reported Fixed Price
of $1.28 in U. S.
Helps Market
WINNIPBO. Oct. 30 (CP)—Bulls
marshalled their forcea on the Winnipeg grain exchange today, and
prices were booeted for substantial
galna aa New York and Chicago Interests Invaded the pit with heavy
buying orders. Quotatlona at the
close wera 9%' to 4%  cents higher.
Closing quotations showed the
October option at 59%. November at
69%, December at 69% and May
at 84% centa.
Export bualneaa to tbe extent of
600,000 buahela waa reported, but
thla by no means the chief Influence
ln the advance. Anticipation of constructive news from Washington, together with a sharp falling off ln
hedging preasure apparently lay be-
htni the revival of speculative demand, which waa confined largely,
however, to big Interests.
Cuh gralna demand wu Indifferent. Coaraa grains trading wu Influenced by the action of wheat
futures.
NBW YORK. Oct. 30 (AP)—Copper
steady; electrolytic spot and future
7% to 7%.
Tin nearly steady, spot and nearby
46.00;    future   46.25.
Iron quiet, unchanged.
Lead steady, spot New York 4.00;
Eut St.   LouU  3.85.
Zinc dull; Eut St. Louis apot and
future 4.75.
Antimony, apot 6.86.
Bar silver steady, % higher at
36%.
At London:
Copprr, standard apot £33 17s 6d;
future £33 2a 6d; electrolytic apot
£36:  future £37.
■Tin. apot and future £332 8s.
Lead, spot £11 7s ed: future £11
13s «a.
Zinc, spot £15 16s; future £19
3s 6d.
Bar sliver quiet, unchanged at 18d.
paper.**, lov. courtship, marriage,
employment, travel, speculation,
health, accidents, lucky daya. etc.
Complete 81 ; Character outline 26c.
Send blrthdate. M. Kleman, 96
Eaton   St..   Winnipeg,   Man.
 __J (8718)
MARRY—INTRODUCTIONS BY PRI-
vate   letters.   New   eystem.   Hun-
MINE ISSUES
CLIMBING UP
VANCOUVER,  Oct   20   (CP)—Mining  aharea  aold  on  the   Vancouver
'stock exchange today:
LISTED
Bralorne 1196
Bridge River Con. 13.350
Bridge River Ex. 11.800
Oeorgla River 4000
Orandvlew 6000
Meridian   61.800
National Silver 4000
Pioneer 660
Premier 1600
Reno 6400
UNLISTED
Big Mlaaourl (new) 8360
Noble   Five   6000
Pend   Orellle   600
PorteT Idaho  1000
I    Sllvercrest   7600
I I Kll
Big Slide 1000
1    B.C. Nickel  3930
Cariboo 4376
L.  and L. 3000
Morning star 13,700
Native Sons 3300
Nicola 4000
Pavilion 50.
Rufua Argenta 1000
Snowflake 5000
I    Waverly   17,600
Wayside 8340
TWO TO  FOUR  HIGHER
CHICAOO. Oct 30 (AF)—Extensive
wheat purchasing for government
account helped rush grain prices upward today. One of many stimulating factors wu a report President
Roosevelt had been aaked to fix a
price of 11.36 for July wheat on
the grain exchanges.
Wheat closed flurried, 2 to 4%
centa higher; corn % to 1% up,
oats 1% to 2% and provisions from
2 cents decline to a rise of 10 cents.
Mclntyre Up $2.25;
Silvers Show Added Strength
TORONTO. Oct. 30 (CP)—Firming
t:n_.enc.es in outside marketa were
reflected ln late trading on the
Standard mining exchange lata today
and plua signs were ln the majority
at   the   cloae.
Mclntyre climbed to »36.30, where
lt waa up 3*35. Dome recovered 1.36
to 33.80, Lak» Shore 25 centa to MS.
Pioneer 05 cents to 9.35 and Brslorne 30 oenta to 0.50. Teck advanced  10 to 5-70.
Leading secondary sharea closed 4
cents higher Including Howey, Klrkland Lake and Slscoe. Noranda finished $1 higher at #31 while Nickel
was up 10 cents to 17.50. Base
Metals gained 10.
In the silver group, Eldorado closed
30 centa higher st 18, Home Oil
gained 7 centa and Chemical Research 8.
dreds of members (both sexes)
In Western Canada. Msny others
ln United States and British Isles.
Partlculara 10c. Canadlsn Correspondence club. Box 138, Calgary,
Alberta. (8909)
PRIVATE   HOME   KINDERGARTENS
Say. We start you.   The Canadian
Llndergarten   institute,   Winnipeg.
 (8713)
HELP   WANTEU
U0)
WANTBD—COMPANION HELP, ENO-
llah lady preferred. Apply Daily
News  Box  8868.  (8866)
HOW TO" OET A OOVERNMENT
lob. Pree Booklet. The M. C. C.
Ltd..  Winnipeg. _ (8714)
HOME FOR GIRL IN RETURN POR
light   housework.   Phone   330L  or
_Bqx_m._Clty.    (8898)
SITUATIONS   WANTED
_A«>
STENOGRAPHERS'      EXAMINATION
—B.C.   CIVIL. SERVICE
An examination wlll be held ln
various centres throughout British Columbia on Ssturdsy afternoon snd evening, November 35th,
1988. Candidates must be British
subjects, residents of Canada for
at least one year, and of the full
axe of 17 years snd not more than
35 years. No applications to write
accepted after November 16th,
1933. Pee 43-00. Application forms
and further particulars may be
obtained from any Government
Agent, or from R. G. MONTEITH,
Civil Bervlce Commissioner. Victoria,   B^C. (8842)
(B726)
FUEL
Car of "ECONOMY" Lump
Coal   just   arrived.   Place
your orders now for early
delivery.
$10.00 TON
We are  also  unloading
car of good dry wood,
PHONE 106
Williams' Transfer
809   Ward   St. Nelaon
(8896)
FAIRVIEW  LOTS
■2 lots (doublu corairl level, plant*
ln   garden,   lacing   tha   Lake—Prlct
|200 0(i sperlar low price  lot
Immediate  Sale,
H.  E. DILL
riiti and  Auto Insurance
(8911)
FOR BALE OR EXCHANGE
(»f
I HOUSES FOR SALE OR TRADB-
Por land or farm equipment. Jottl
Oraham. Ferry Siding.     ,    (88-0!
AUTOMOBILES   FOR  SAXE B
STUDEBAKER FIXED ROOF TOO!*
er. Splendid condition. 8120 caah
a. Sargent, R.R.  1, Nelson.
I AUTOMOBILES WANTED («)
MODERN FORD OR CHEV.—BlSE
full partlculara to P.O. Boa 931
Nelion. (88*28)
AGENTS  WANTED (1!) I
CALENDAR AND ADVERTISING
Speciality Salesman. Experience
preferred but not neoeaaary. Hlgb-1
eat commissions, exclusive tern- ]
tory and good contract to rlgbt
, urn. Start early ln November. \
Apply with references, to Box i
520, London, Ontario. (8868)
EASTERN SALES
SUGAR QUIET
NEW YORK. Oct. 20 (AP)—Raw
augar waa quiet today. No aales
were reported, although, the undertone waa eaaler wltb offerlnga more
liberal.
Futures were irregular and after
recovering early loases, eased oft
partially and cloerd at 1 point decline to 1 point net advance. Sees
were 20.300 tons. Dec. Ill to 1.13.
Jan. 1.11, March 1.17. May Ul (o
1.22, July  1.37. Sept.   1.31  to 132.
Refined waa quiet and unchanged.
TORONTO,    Oct.    20    (CP)—Salea
of 100 or more aharea on the Toronto
■ *liange today were:
Brail lan 4183.
Brewers and Dlstlilera 290
Canada Cement 496
Can Induatrlal Alcohol 8100
Canadian Pacific Railway 260
Consolidate Smeltera 906
Pord "A" 1690
Hiram  Walkera  16,770
Hiram  Walkera pfd. 2092
International  Nickel. 10.065
Winnipeg Groin
WINNIPEG,    C
tatlona:
Open
Wheat:
Oet _   St
Hot.       87*i
Dec. 88%
May   —   62
OaU:
Oct.    —   28)4
High
S0K
eon
60%
OS},
30H
31H
U',
(CP)—Quo- !
Low
Cloae
«
S3",
STA
59H
56%
59 H
61
64*
MONTREAL   SALES
MONTREAL,   Oct.   30    (OP)—Salea
1 of 100 or more aharea on the Mont-
eu atock  exchange today  were:
B.C.   Packers   275
Brazilian 445S
Brock Silk  080
Can Indua-rla* Alcohol 1589
Canadian Car 1055
Celaneae 348
Canadian  Pacific  Railway  1669
Consolidated Smelt,-m nno
International Nickel 4595
Maaaey Ha.rla 500
Montreal Power 2086
National   Brew   1160
Shawlnigan 785
Toronto Industrials
28'.
39 V.
32.,
Dee    2914
Ma,    _....   3214
Barley:
Oct    91V4     33S 3114
Dec    33',     3414 32
May    .....   38        34S 35%
Flax:
Oct.      123       13714 12114
Dee.     13814    133 12614
May      128       13614 13714
Rye:
Oct.       _   —       — —
Not.   _.«.   —       —• —
Dec.        3714     4114 37
May  —     43         48 4114
Caah prlcea:
Wheat—No. 1 hard 63",. No. 1 nor.
8914.   No.  3   nor.   5614. No   3   nor.
8414. No. 4 nortt   6314, No. 6 4914,
No.   6   4514.   fee-   4314, t n-i;   691,,
No. 1 nor. tough 5614, No. 1 amber
durum 6114.
Beatty   Broa   	
Bel Telephone	
Braalllan   _	
39% .British  American  Oil
30%. Canada Bread
3314 I Canada   Dredge  	
Canada   Malting   	
32% I Conaolldated   Mining
33% I Distillers Seagram 	
37    I Dominion  Storea  —
For- of Canada A 	
13714 Ooodyeae*   —
130% I Hiram Walker 	
138%! Hiram  Walker   pfd  _
I Imperial   OH   	
39    'Imperial Tobacco 	
39% ' Induatrlal  Alcohol A
. I KNlSHtU   BOOMS FOB RENT 115)
FURN.    OR "tJNTURN.    APTS.    B.
week or month. Medical Arts Bldg.
(8629)
TERRACE APTS.—Beautiful  Modern
Prlgldalre equipped aultea. (86*30)
FURNISHED   801TB.   807   CARBON-
ate atreet. Phone 390 R. (8847)
IIOOMS  FOR   HEM
(19)
APARTMENT. UNFURNISHED. OVER
Store. J. W. Gallagher. Nelaon.
 (8914)
FOB  BENT
(31)
HOUSES
FOR RENT
3 Bedrooms etc. Will rent
this at $16 a month. And
it is close in.
2 Small houses in good
shape at $12 a month.
c. w.
APPLE.YARD
& CO. LTD.
I offer for ssle En Block or ln
Separate   items   ths   Stock   snd
Fixtures of'the Elite Grocery Co.
Ltd.,   Bankrupts,   consisting   of:
Grocery  stock—Cost value 1830.
Beraec Meat Bllcer
Cheese   Cutter   and   Cage
3-lb.   Brentford  Scale
30-lb.  Dayton  Scale
Dalton   Cash   Register
Coffee  Grinder   (Electric)
Ice   Box
Ford  Delivery Truck
Hester snd Plpea
Shelving, Counters, etc.
The   above   msy    be   aeen   on
application    to—
D. ST. DENIS,
TRUSTEE.
(8872)
Standard
Lethbridge
Coal
Lump, ton $10.50
Egg, ton  ?10.00
Nut, ton      ?9.00
Phone 701
FAIRVIEW FUEL
SUPPLY
180261
(48)
FURNITURE   FOB_BALE_
CHESTERFIELD SUITE, RADIO
Walnut China Cabinet, Table and
Chalra, McLeary Kitchen Hangi
with gaa fixture and other houae*
hold efefcta. alt ln perfect condition.  302   Robaon  St. (8889)
(54)
MUSICAL  INSTRUMENTS
ORGAN.    IN     GOOD    COND-TIOH
Cheap. 814 SUIca St. (8888)
MOTOBtvCLES   FOB   SALE       (88)
MOTORCYLES
and Parts—all makes of
Motorcycles — PALMER •
RUTLEDGE, TRAIL.
(8718)
CLASSIFIED    OtsrLA.
WE DO EVBRTTHINQ IH
PRINYWO
BOOK  BINDINa
PAPER  RULQtQ
Correct etslea In Wedding Infl-
tatlona, Announcementa, and
Invitation Carda.
JOB
Phone  144
THE DAILT NEWI
PRINTINO   DEPARTMENT
Pbone 148
Business, Professional
Directory
Accountants
CHAS. T. HUNTER. 8.F., INT. A. a
Municipal and Commercial Audit*
PO. Box 1191. Nelaon, B.C.    (8887
Assayers
GENERAL INSURANCE
City  Property
Nelaon. Britiah   Columbia
(8908)
39% I nte.natlonal Nickel ....
44 **, I Internationa*. Pete .
Loblaw   A    	
Maasey Harrla 	
Noranda
Photo Engravera !	
Page   He-aey    _____
Service   station-   „     8
Standard   Paving      IV.
... 7%
  108*
... I2y,
_ 18
._ 3
._ 1514
._ 27
.__ 110
._ 18
... 19 V,
._ 10
... 90
.... 88
z SI
_ 1014
._ UH
— 17-H
.... IVh,
.— W'a
— 8V4
— 30H
__ 13
... 80
FURNISHED FOUR-ROOM BUNOA-
low. clean and modern, 120 per
month. Apply Flemlng'a Cabin
Camp. _  (8789) |
NEWLY RENOVATED 8-ROOM
house, all modern conveniences.
Apply Weat Tranafer Co.     (8689)
UNFURNISHED REDECORATED
bungalow, excellent location.
Phone 288 T. (8923)
NEW SMALL HOUSE. FURNISHED.
Pbone  328 L3. (87821
New and Used Black and
Galvanized Pipe and
Fittings, Boilers, Engines, Pumps, Rails, Pulleys, Belting, Shafting,
Bearings, Gears, Sprockets. Wire and Manila
Rope.
Enquiries Solicited
Canadian Junk Co., Ltd.
3S0 Prior St.       Vancouver, B.C.
(8678)
E. W. WIDDOWSON, eatabllahed 1900
306 Joaephlne St., Nelaon. B.C.
 (8888)
GRENVILLE  H.  ORIMWOOD,  PTTJ
Box  418.  Kaalo,  B.C.        (8869)1
B. 0. Land Surveyor
I R. O. LESLIE, B. C. L. S. 302 KtfiS
- Block, Nelaon. phone 276U    (8*80)
Chiropractors
GALVANIZED IRON PIPE AND F1T-
tlnga.    Beltings,    etc.—New    Wire   _
Naila IV,  I'V   •-> •*■'*•"• W*80 P"|NE*'SON   FLOWER  SHOPPE.
100 lbs  Full line of new and uaed      line cut flowera at all times. Flor.
Galv   and Black Pipe and fittings,!    al  deslgna. Phone  233. (8064!
R. E. Gray. O.C., Ph,C. oliker BlooS
 (8661]
J. R. MACMILLAN. DR. OF CHIR-3
practlc, Aberdeen Blk., pb. 212.
 (8682
C   HCLTGREN,  D.C.  Ph.C,  Pain*
Graduate, McCulloch Blk., Ph. 811
 (886a;
______ Florists
JOHNSON'S   GREENHOUSES,   Phons
£42.   Cut   flowers,   potted   planta
ond floral dealgna. (86881
FUQ
BONDS NERVOUS
NEW YORK, Oct. 30 (AP). —
Bondi shuffled about nervously In
cautious trading today, pending,
clarification of the European pic-1
ture. Sales totalled 19,645,000 par
value.
Ralls edged up fractionally around
a point and modest advances were
held  ln  industrials.
The foreign list *>** dull. French
bonds eased one to two points as
the Franc declined.
14   Oalv.  new  6V4c,   1"  Black  5c, 1	
2* Black aultable ht irrigation anci    insurance and Real Eatate
water   line    10c,   other   sizes   low | 	
prices, new corrugated galv. Iron I r. w. DAWSON, Real Estate, In
M.50 per 100 square feet. Poultry j nurance, Rentals. Next Hlppereoi
wire netting 3 and 6 feet. Full Hardware, Baker street. (8665
stock of steel split pulleys, potato t
nud grain sacks. Barbed wire. Wire
Rope, Canvas Doors, Windows,.
Roofing Felt. Oarden and Air hose, 1
Mining Engineer
For daytime wear there's a trim
and attractive pump ln taupe kid*
skin meant as tn accessory for
beige costumes. Also aa afte-noon
Oxford of black kldskln trimmed
with patent leather-
Boom Chains. Merchandise and
Equipment of aU descriptions. Enquiries   solipited.
B.C. JUNK   CO.
155    Powell    Pt.,    Vancouver,    B.C.
_ (B715>
100,000 FEET -SECOND HAND * RE-
condltloned pipe, suitable for all
purposes. All slses. Write to
SwartB Pipe Yard, M0, 1st Ave.,
Vancouver,   B.C.       __ (8638)
HUNTERS BARGAIN —""AUSTRIAN
Mannllcher high power rifle; Goers
telescope hair trigger, perfect condition, $78.00. Wallace. Thrums.
B.   K  (8855)
CLE-TRACK CATERPILLAR TRAC-
tor In good shape. Som'. spare
parts, $200.25. Harry Nixon, Perrys
Siding.  B.C. (8802)
T.  S   PfflTRS
Mining Engineer
Examination, operation and manage
ment of  mines  and  mineral
properties, Rossland, B.C.
 m
H.'D.   DAWSON   —   NELSON
MINING ENGINEER
B.C.   LAND  SURVEYOR
Sash Factory
LAWSON'S SASH  FACTORY.  HARD
wood merchant, 317 Baker stree'
 (SMI
Second Hand Stores
THE ARK BUYS AND SELLS EVERY
thing.    Phone   634. (8643
TILLIE THE TOILER:
By Westove]
 o^(p|
Sporting News
ONNELLY AND
WATT IN FINAL
Vlll   Decide  Tennis
Supremacy of the
College World
SINOOTON. Ont.,  Oct.  30   (CP)
D oourts veterans who command
peet ln the hest of company will
lh here tomorrow for the tennis
gles title ol tho Canadian college
rid.
iJWln Connelly, modest young Ot-
ra player Of Queen's and Laird
tt, McOlll aoe, wlll trade strokes.
Uy Connelly, Queen's singles
impion. wu taken to three sets
It. Murray, McOlll, before bis
►erior strength gave him a 8-0,
. 0-3 win.
Htt,   had   leu   trouble   reaching
the finals, disposing of J. Marler,
of the University of Montreal, 8-3,
«*0.
Results of the slnglw match may
decide the team championship* McOlll have seven points to Queen's
six.
M'GUL LEADS
IN GOLF PLAY
VIS-IT'S ECONOMICAL I
YOU ADD AT LEASr A GALLON
OF WATER TO EACH GALLON
Of PRESTON! !    WATER
—I COST* YQU NOTHINQ
ita Itewlow Price!
:OM PLETE
ILL-WINTER
>ROTECTION
ROM FREEZING
OKAS LOW AS
CANAHMN   NAUONAI   I AKUON
Up Nine to Six in Rut-
ten Trophy
Contests
MONTREAL, Oct. 30 (CP> —McOlll university went Into the lead
ln tbe annual competition between
Toronto Varsity and McOlll unlveralty for the Rutten trophy, at the
later-co-leglate golf championships
being played bere today and tomorrow. Tbe trophy was won last year
by Toronto. McOlll led their Toronto
oppon i ta nine points to six.
In the play for the team championship emblematic of the individual championship, McOlll held the
lead at the end of tbe flrat day
also. Players from Royal Military
co lege. McMaater unlveralty. Toronto university and McOlll are competing.
QUEENS LEADS IN
TENNIS TOURNEY
KrrcHSNSR. ont. oct. ao  ccp.
•—Queens unlveralty led the Ile.d at
the women's Inter-collegiate tennis
tournament here today when darkness halted competition. Queens had
eight points; University of Toronto,
five, McMaater. and Western each one
point. Championship wlU be settled
tomorrow.
► THE  NELSON  DAIIT NEWS,  NELSON,  B.C.—SATTTRDAT  MOftNINO,  OCTOBER  tl,  MM-
BRINGING UP FATHER:
paw nrmt
By Geo. McManM
FORTS AND THE
PORTS WEAKER
Thunder   Bay   Puck
Players May Go
Near Chicago
BILL BRYDGES OUT
OF HOCKEY PLAY
OSHAWA, Ont., Oct. 30 (CP> —
Bill Brydgee' 1933-34 hockey season
wu Juat 15 minutes old today wben,
lh a practloe game, a puck flew up
and gashed his right eye. Tbe cut
will keep him Idle eeveral days.
PORT WILLIAM, Oct. 30 (CP)—
.tumor hu epread a dark cloud over
the amateur hockey situation at the
head-of-the-lakes. and Intimations
are Thunder Bay loop wlll operate
mlnua a whole hockey team thla winter.
Persistent reports are to thft effect aeveral of the twin cities bockey luminaries will be taken aa a
nue'eus for a new six-team circuit
tbat is planned in and about Chicago.
Among players aald to have been
approached are Art £amec, Gus Sax-
berg, Arnold Deacon, and Clem
Spooner of laat year's Port Arthur
seniors, BUl Hogarth, who played his
final junior- year with Kenora last
season and Jack Smith, Fo t w.r.ara
youth, wbo performed with Toronto
St. Michael's 'college Junior O.HA.
la the M32-33 campaign.
"Big League"
BOWLI NG
Toronto Leafs Start _
tht Training Grind
.oraHBNTB. Ont., Oct. 30 (OP) —
Toronto Leafs of tbe National Bockey
league oommenced work today unde.-
Harold BalVntyne physical director
Of the Kitchener public schools. Mat
work waa introduced Into the dal.y
curriculum. t
NELSON SPORT SHOP
Next to Overwaitea—Box 57
Our Slazenger Badminton Frames strung here,
Georgia, Ranelagh, Regal, Bluebird, Stanley, Logan, selling strung from $2.95 to $12.00.
RESTRINGS
SPECIAL  TOURNAMENT   S4.00
NO. 2 QUALITY     ?2.50
NO. 1 QUALITY    $3.50
MURRAY'S  SPECIAL    fX.50
Replacements 15c first string, 10c each following.
No. 1 Blue Goose Shuttles, doz. |3.00
Other good shuttles at, each  20e>
See us for  Badminton  Shoes,  Sport Sweaters,
Shirts.
Table Tennis Sets up from  _. $1.05
CANADIAN PACIFIC
[      RAILWAY
COMPLETE TRANSPORTATION
SYSTEM
UILWAYS, HOTELS, STEAMSHIPS, RECREATION
CAMPS, EXPRESS CABLE and TELEGRAPH
SERVICES.
Tickets to Ali Ports of the World
(The Comfortable Route
To the Old Country, Alaska, China and Japan
Through Trains Daily
{To All Points in Middle West, Eastern Canada
and the United States
Steamship Service to Nanaimo,
Victoria and Seattle
Por Rates. Itineraries and Other Information
Apply to Any Canadian Paclflo Agent, or
N. J. LOWES* City Ticket Agent, Nelson^ B.C.
37 HORSES FOR
CAMBRIDGESHIRE
Race WiU Be Run on October
25 at Newmarket
M'GILL HOLDS
TRACK TITLE
Phil Edwards Is Leading Light in
the Events
KDjaerron. ont.,oot. ao <op>—
McGii; retained her Intercollegiate
'.rack and field ehamplonahlp today,
defeating Unlveralty of Toronto and
Queena with eaee aa Phil Edwards,
ducky Olympic middle dlatance runner, and Oordon Melklejohn, former
Michigan atate unlveralty weight
man, accounted for four red trl-
umpha between them.
The red force from Montreal amaae-
ed a point total ot 73 to Varelty'e
31 and Queena' 94. Edwarda won
the mile and half mile handily and
placed aeoond to BUI Frit*- In the
440. He alao won the NO. Meltc-
John won the ihot put and dlecu.
'.brow.
NEWMARKET. England. Oct. 30 —
(CF oa-ie>—Thirty-eaten horaea wtre
ln when final acceptances wen called for the Cemtorldjeahlre I'.Msci.
big autumn handicap to be run oyer
the H-mlle course here Octoocr 25.
The remaining eleglbles with weights
are aa followa:
Daetur, 133 pound; Limelight, 138;
Hill Oat. 125; Disarmament: 125;
Donblgh, 121; Andrew. 121; Totalg,
120; chatelaine. 119; Version. US:
Raymond, 119: Qlno, 115; Cheat Scot,
115; Inverman. 116; Hot Fight. 114;
Poramam*. 113.
Alluvial, Ul; mica. 108; Bow
and Arrow, 108; Toung Native, 108;
Tartan, 107; Town Crle.-, 107; Dlam-
antee, 107; Cotoneaater, 107; Seraph
Boy, 100; Eauu de Roses. 09; Obesity,
at; Ingleaant, 08; Stalky, 07; Ole
King Sole, 09; Manoeuvre, 85; The
Font, 92: Efraceablc, 91: Rathlln Isle.
01; Bucke.-ell, 91; and Alu Craig,
01.
(By   AL   DEMAREE)
Study tbe above Illustration and
try theae grips. It may improve
your game, especially lf you are a
beginner or a veteran  ln a alump.
No. 1—Hook ball from right corner.   Used for flrat ball.
No. 2—Straight ball from right
corner. Also shooting for spares
in center of alley, or sometlmea
used for first ball wbere conditions
require Its uae.
No. 3—Straight ball from left
corner (shooting for No. 10 pin or
spare on right side of alley.)
No. 4—Short hook from right
corner (shooting for No. 1 or
| No. 7 pin or for any nparo on left
side ot alley.)
KASLO AUXILIARY
TO HOLD SHOWER
Set Date for Annual Sale of
Fall Work
TORONTO LIST
IS IRREGULAR
Prices   Shaded  in  Late  Trade:  In-
terltated issues Firm at
the  Cloee
TORONTO, Oct. 30 (OP>—Stocks
backed and rilled on the Toronto
stock exchange today. Following a
quiet afternoon prloea were shaded
ln late session trading.
Reflecting Washington's attitude
toward liquor Imports Walkers loat a
point at 96. and the common sagged
to 33. Distillers Seagram flnlahed at
15%.
Inter ll* teds were firm at the cloee.
Nickel at 17.40 was up 18 oents.
CPJt. gained Ya and Braalllan 4.
None Of tbe olla reported gains.
Super teat dropped '%, Pete V» and
ba. >,*». Heavy industrial* closed on
top with few exceptions.
NEW YORK RANGERS WILL HAVE
19 ON TRAINING LIST TODAY
ANGLICAN CHOIR
GIVES PROGRAM
Cranbrook Musicians Raise
Funds for Trip
SPORT NEWS IN
BRIEF FORM
HAMILTON—W. J. Snyder chargea
that Ahe El lowl tee, Ottawa back-
field star, played pro baaketball tn
Detroit.
NIW TORK—Blllle Petrolle and
Sammy Puller meet Saturday ln 10-
round  bout.
TORONTO—Saturday rugby gamea:
Toronto U. vs Kingston, Western vs
McOlll, Montreal va Ottawa, Hamilton vs Argonauts, Hamilton Cubs vs
Sarnla, Be my Beach vs St. Michaels.
pHICAOO—Phillip K. Wrigley will
not accept presidency of Chicago
Cubs.
MONTRBAL—Harry Cameron ot
Saskatoon and Kenneth Paul of
Vancouver named arbitrator* ln the
National Hockey league by Prank
Patrick.
OTTAWA—Earl McCready decision*
'Wee Willie" Davla ln wrestling bout.
National Lottery
Proves Big Success
PARIS, Oct. 30—The National Lottery, which haa been revlvtd after
a lapse ot nearly 100 years, has
proved a most enormous success.
Tickets for the flrat eerles, or such
aa are left, are aelllng at a premium
of over 10 per oent, but the organisers atate that as long as there
ls a demand for tlcketa It wlll be
fulfilled.
Actually, when the lottery was
tlrst discussed, .the total was fixed
at ono thousand million francs. In
^:der to Increase this total, a new
law wlll be necessary, but, ln view
of the profit the government makes
on the lottery, lt ls not difficult to
believe that such a law wlll be
passed with alacrity.
One Ingenious taipayer has written
to the preas suggesting that, ln future, all payments of taxes should
be acknowledged by a receipt which
would also represent -_, lottery ticket,
the prizes to be the remission of
so  many   yeara'   taxeil
BUFFALO FINDS
A SANTA CLAUS
TEN  YEARS   AOO  TODAY
October 30. 19-.3—50,000 watched
tht grut Zee attest the Engllih
horw, papyrua by Jour lengtha ot
Belmont race tract, New Torn.
INCH OF SNOW
FALLS NELSON
Por the first time thla aeason
pans of the Dominion government
meteorologist held sufficient anow
to reoord Prlday morning, the fall
amounting to one inch. Late
Thursday night and early Prlday
mornlrf a heavy fall whitened the
house top* of the city and covered
the streets on the upper section
with s'ush. The pans of the government meteorologist alao contained
.15 Inch of rain.
Temperatures during the day were
fairly low, ranging between 38 and
45  degrees.
ADAMS TO HEAD
FIRST AID BODY
CRANBROOK.  B.  C.  Oct.   30—Dr.
Oreen ha, returnM from i hunting
trip   In   southern   Alberta.
Mra. Paaacuzzo and J. Qeneat ware
winner*, at the card party at St.
Mary's hall Tuesday, whlat honors
having been wou by Mra. H. Armstrong  and  Mrs. H. Pitta.
Mr. and Mra. W. H. Wllaon were
Creaton visitors at the beginning
of  the   week.
Stanley Moffat haa returned from
a holiday trip to Oolden, Banff.
Field and Calgary. The entire trip
waa made by bicycle. He returned
by way of McLeod and  Crows Nest
At the annual meeting of the
St John's Ambulance aaaoclatlon.
the following officers were elected:
hon. patron. F. MacPherson. hon.
prealdent, Mayor T- M. Roberta, hon
vlce-preeldVnt. Jamea Bartle. prealdent, F. Adams, aecretary. J. Oor*
non. executive, J. Wilson Q. MacDonald, J. M. McClure, and George
Reece. claaaea will again be In
the handa of J .Wilson, under whoae
Instruction last years claas paaaed
100 per cent. A ladlea claas la In
process of formation.
Dr. O. E. L. MacKinnon and Dr.
J. M. Large have been hunting on
the  pralrlea  for a  few  daye.
J. 8. Peck of Calgary ls spending
a few days with Mr. and Mra. H.
A.   McKowan.
KASLO, B.C.. Oct. ..--Mre. ttttsir
and Mra. Oleeon of Alnaworth were
vlaltora Tueaday.
H. D. Curtla ot Slocan City, dls-
trlot returning officer, arrived Tueaday and will apend tha nnt few
daya here.
Mllea MacPheraon of Trail 1" in
town the gueat of hla father Jack
MacPheraon.
p. Robinaon left wedneaday for
a vlalt to penticton and Vancouver.
"Buck Guernsey is relieving at tho
local bank while Mr. Robinaon la
absent.
Tellx Depretto. who haa been »
patient In tha Victorian hoapltal
here, haa left for hla homo In Alnaworth.
j. M. Kirk la vlaltlng frlenda In
Nelaon. ___
Alei Orant of Alnaworth wag a
Kaalo vUltor Tueaday.
Archie Oreenlaw. D. VenHorn and
R .Caraon arrived Tuesday and left
Wedneeday for their homea ln Lardo.
Oeorge Walton, C. C. F. candidate
for the Kaalo-Slocan riding waa .
vlaltor in town during tha week
leaving Tueaday for vlslta to polnta
on the north end of the lake. Mr.
Walton waa accompanied by E. Matthewe and C. Molr of Nelaon.
Frank Helme la down from the
Sliver   Bear   mine  for   a  tew   days.
Bob Smith ot Nelaon waa a reoent
city vlaltor. ., u
t. Jonea, who haa been a patient
ln the Victorian hoepltal, la now
convalescing at hla home.
Mlaa K. Pearaon, R. N. who haa
been the gueat of her mother Mra.
A. Pearaon. haa returned to her
i home In Vancouver.
The St. Mark's Women'a auxiliary
I met Tueaday In the pariah hall.
I acting president, Mra. Ronald Hewat
waa in the chair. A latter from
Alice M. Thomloe, R. N., of the
Italian Realdentlal school at Alert
Bay waa read acknowledging receipt
of the bale forwarded trom thle
aoclety laat June. The matter of a
apeclal aervloe on Nov. 11 waa lett
until aftar tho arrival ot the new
vicar. Rev. E P. Orltfltha. The
president aaked the ladlea to donate
to a canned fruit ahower for the
uae of the new Incumbent and hla
family. The date for the annual
fall aale of work, etc., waa aet for
Dec. 9. the details for thla wlll ba
arranged at the November meeting.
After the meeting adjourned tea
waa eerved by Mrs. Matthew, and
Mra Hewat. Thoae attending were
Ronald Hewat. Mrs. R. A. Cheater,
Mrs. J. H. Stubba, Mrs. t. H. Utham. Mlas Alice Hodgea. Mra. John
Keen, Mra. Jamea Ooodenough. Mra.
Foi. Mra. C. o Bowker. Miss c.
M. Fawcett. Mra. Fred Moulton, Mra.
E. C Cherry. Mra. Matthewe. Mra.
Oeorge Palmer, Mlsa Mildred Twlae.
Mlsa Margaret Smith and Mra. W.
Kudkln.
A. Coombs and family have moved
into the house on the hill, owned
by Mra. o B. Hall of Jamaica. S.
J. Maywa having purchased the
Caldwell property, formerly occupied
by the Coomba family. Mr. Mayaea
and family have now taken up their
reeldence  In  their new home.
CRANBROOK. BjC., Oct. -0—The
annual concert staged by the Anglican choir took place on Monday
and Tuesday avenlnga and waa up to
tho uaual high atandard of enter-
lalnmenta etaged by thla group. The
firat part of tho concert waa . program ot Instrumental and mualcal
numbers and danoaa, which Included
number, by the choir, who were
termed tha "Oood Companlona" aa
the oonoert took the form of an
evening with the gypalea.
J. 8. Manaon choae aa hla vocal
numbers "Gypey John." and "When
Bright Eyea Glance." The gypsy
dance by Mtaaeaa Helen and Marjot
Van Braam and the Harlequin Interpretation by Margot Van Braam
to a aolo by Mrs. J. M. Coutts were
features ot tha program. Mra. Coutte
waa beard ln two numbers. "Love
the Pedd'er" and "The Fairy Plpera."
Mra. Oeorge MadDonald aang two
contralto aoloa and alao wae heard
ln . vocal duet with J. 8. Manaon
John Edwards, boy alnger, wu heard
ln two aoloa and Mlaa Bale Wood
aang two lov* aonga, a gypey num*
' bM and a Japaneea love aong with
Mlf-sea E. and D. Eley accompanying
har.
Mra. F. W. Willis aang "Knocked
'Em tn the Old Kent Road." Two
piano duets were by Mlaa Doria
Edwarda and V. O. Edwarda. A
ladlre trio, Mra. Coutts. Mra. Bay
and Mra. Peckenpaugh, aang "Lullaby."
Tha comedy "Tommy Saya Hallo"
waa preeented under tha direction
of H. Laker. Tha atory, In which
Dr. Jonaa, psychiatrist, cana for
aome of hla patlenta in hla own
home, the arrival of frlenda anl
relatives, who mistake each other
and ara mistaken by the maid for
mental patients, makes for many
amualng situations. Tha part of tha
doctor la taken by J. S. Manaon and
tho maid by Mra. P. W. Willie.
Oeorge MacDonald Is Tommy Tucker,
the gueat who ta mistaken for a
lunatic. Other parts ara the doctor's
mother-in-law taken by Mlaa Edna
Baiter and his wife by Mra. Peckenpaugh.
Rav. T. V. Harrlaon acted aa chairman. Mra. Edmundeon and V. C.
Edwarda were accompanists. The
proeteda of the evening wlll go to
I defray tho eipenae, ot the choir
in attending tha Blairmore mualcal
teatlval.
14 of Old Team Will
Be on Deck; Pusie
Is Newcomer
Lester Patrick, boss of New York
Rangera, who haa strengthened hla
.team oonalderably for the coming
aeaaon. ,
MRS. ROCHAC IS
DEAD AT SIRDAR
Montreal Stocks
MONEY   ADVANCED   BY   BUFFALO
CAPITALIST TO  LINEUP
INTERNATIONAL TEAM
BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. JO (CP) —
Proapeots of Buffalo's participation
In the International hockey league
thla aeaaon ware brighter today.
Frank B. B. Balrd. Buffalo capttallat,
will advance sufficient money to
enable signing of players.
HARROP HEARS
OF ISRAELITES
HARROP, B. Oh Oct. 20 —Thursday J. W. Parker of Vancouver gave
an address In Harrop hall on British Israel federation. \_r. Parker explained through history the tribes of
Israel ss based on the old testaments in the Bible. Tbe speaker
wu Introduced by Commander B.
A. Smith of Longbeach.
Ur. and Mrs. N. Bacchus of Blrchdale were ln the district recently.
Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Cote and family were visitors In Harrop Bunday.
Mrs. H. Newcomcn of Howser was
a guest Wednesday of Mr. and Mrs.
E.   Harrop.
Mlss Ruby Whitfield is spending
the week-end with her parents ln
Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Whlt-
fle(d.
LIQUOR ISSUES
UP AT MONTREAL
Late    Bally    tv I pen    Out    Pre.lous
Losses;   Smelters  Are  Off
Point
MONTRKAU Oct- 30 <0P)*—Despite a late rally wblch wiped out
prevloua losses, stocka on the Montreal atock en-change today ahowed
an Irregular appearance at tbe close.
Leading Issues ahowed  gains.
Increased buying support lifted
liquor lssuea. Canadian Industrial
"A" stock* beld t U gain at 13
and tbe "B" held at 11V4*
Interllsteda closed fairly steady.
Nickel advanced 10 cents to 17.50,
while Bmelten st 109. lost a point.
Bruck 811k rose a point at IT, while
Montreal Power and Shawlnigan
both rose % at 93% and \9Y.. respectively. Braslllan, C.P.R. and n
few othera were higher.
fiales  were  37,063:   bonds  gao.l&O
Royal   Bank    	
Bell   Telephone    	
Braslllan TU Power 	
Canadian   Cement  	
Canadian  Industrial Aloohol...
CPR 	
Cons Mining  Ae Smelting _
Dominion   Bridge —
Dcmlnton    Olass    —,———
Dominion Textile —..-  ■■
Massey   Hirrl*    , 	
Montreal   Power   —	
National   Breweries  „. -
Ogllvle  Milling   ■      -
Penmans   Ltd    —..., - ■——
Power Corporation	
Price Bros - -        	
Hhawlnlgan   —....
Steel of Canada ~~
Winnipeg  Rsllway	
crntw
page Kersey — ...
Walker Oood   _-__
Walker  Good  pfd	
MISCELLANEOUS
Cen   Bread      -	
Can   Oypsum ——
Can  Dredge    ■—
Dom   Power   — — •—»
Dom Stores .-■
Pord Can "A" _-,_.--■—
Ooodyear  _ — —	
Lob   Oroc   "A"   ——— ~
phot Engr  _
Service  Stations
Stand   Paving
Stanfords 	
SIRDAR, B. C, Oct. 30 —Col. Mai-
landalne ln his capacity aa mag*
lstrate, with Constable McKay, were
visitors on Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Denis who have decided to make their home ln Neleon are moving their furniture this
week.
After an Illness extending over a
considerable period, Mrs. Rochac,
wife of Kr. Rochac. died thts week.
Coming here with their family
from Saskatchewan some five years
ago they took over their present
plaoe and by dint of hard work and
perseverance succeeded In turning
It into a splendid rsnch. The funeral wss held In Creston cemetery.
Her age wss HO years and 20 days.
Pall bearers were Joe' Soltas, A.
Olasler, P. parento and T. Heptner.
Those attending from here were Mrs.
Blumenauer, Mrs. Colombo, Mrs.
Heap, Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Thomas,
Mrs. Rogers, Mrs. Faasouzxo, and
Dominic passcusBo. Mrs. Rochac
leaves four eons and three daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bysouth of
Creston have moved to Kuskanook.
Dr. Coughlan and O* G. Cummins
of Trail were hunting hen over thi
week-end and were guests of Prank
Hamilton of Kootensy Landing.
Bam Bysouth was a visitor to
town during the week*
Cspt. Hlncks and party arrived
at Atbara by houseboat and with D.
Plsher returned home to Crawford
Bay for a few days when they wlll
again resume tbelr hunting which
has been successful.
A meeting of the TJnlted Pront
psrty was held here Wednesday before sn audience estimated at about
SO. Sam Kanagan was ln the rhalr
with T. E. Mountford the principal
speaker.
MONTRXAL, Oct. 20 (OP)—With t
dosen- players already In and the
others due within 34 hours, Lester
Patrick's world champions, the New
York Rangers, wlU be 19 strong
when they start their training
grind here tomorrow for the National  Hockey  league   campaign.
Of those reporting to Patrick today five were newcomers. Jean
Pusle from the Vancouver Lions,
Lorne Carr from the Buffalo Bisons
and Lawrenoe Molyneaux from the
Quebec Beavers are recruits who
have signed for their big league
chhnce. Bert Connolly of the Moncton HSwks and Can Shewan, wbo
still attends Manitoba unlveralty,
are  here for  trryouta.
Patrick expects to have 14 members of his Stanley cup aggregation
again. So far those In Montresl are
Andy Altkenhead, Murray Murdock,
Art Somers. Ossle Osmundson. Doug
Brennan. Cecil Dillon and Babe
Slebert. Tbe Cook brothers, Chlng
Johnson and others are en route.
Prank Boucher Is due from Ottawa
tomorrow.
Three exhibition games have been
arranged for the Rangers. They wlll
race the Boston Bruns at Quebec
In a matinee game October 39; take
on Montreal Canadlens st Kingston
on November a and test Montresl
Maroons st the Forum here November 4.
MAR   PEFENSEMAN   OF   BRUINS
DECIDES tO BTAY WITH
BIS  BUSINESS
BOSTON, Oct. 30 (CP) —George
Owen, of Hamilton, star defenoe man
of tbe Boston Bruins lsst season, will
retire from the gsme and devote
bis attention to his brokerage business, lt was learned todsy.
-June;  "Tes, women oan't go wan
forever.
Good
Coffee
You'd be surprised the
number of people who
come to the Golden Gate
three and four times a
day for a cup of coffee.
But if you knew how delicious and fresh this
coffee really was you
would no longer be surprised but you would be
joining them in a cup of
Nelson's .finest coffee.
Golden
Gate Cafe
145
101
13 Vi
AAA
IS*
13Vi
10.%
. -_'.
,   13
63
3%
.   -In
.   13
no
43
,     Vk.
40
Wh
3d
3
SO
30
Wh
3
3
Wh
IVi
IVt
10
so
H*.
13
S
IVi
»*h
CRESTON WILL
OPENHOSPITAL
CRESTON, Oct. 30—Dltwtora ot
Creaton Valleir public hoapltal mat
and find Oct. 35 aa the date (or
the opening of the new hoepltal
building.
All the detalla In connection with
tha opening ezerctaei wll* ba In
charge of the Blckaon, Canyon and
Creaton Ladlea' hoapltal auilllarlee.
and the hoapltal committee of Wynndel   Women'a   lnatltute.
At the dlrectore' meeting a cheque
for I10O waa received from Canyon
Ladlea1 au-ltlarf to be applied to
the building fund.
Give Your Jack a
Bulldog Grip
The Ntlson Automatic Jock Clamp
Attaches to any ordinary jack.
Can be applied in an instant.
Can be released in an instant.
Prevents car falling off jack.
Prevents swivelling and side-slipping.
Simple and easy to operate.
Saves time, labor and clothes.
Can be attached with equal certainty ln daylight
or dark.
ASK YOUR DEALER TO DEMONSTRATE
Nelson Transfer Co., Ltd. — Dill's S.S.S. — Koot-
tenay Motors (Nelson) Ltd.— Capitol Motors
Creston Motors, Creston—Lythgoe Service Garage,
Yahk
 *-—-—•
m—mm—m—m,
rtOB  EIOHT
THE MAGIC NEW SELF HEATING
THERMAT
A heat pad that gives 8 to 10 hours of steady, comforting warmth from 2 tablespoons of cold Cl CA
water. Each     «P1.«W
HOT WATER BOTTLES
Fresh stock, guaranteed quality, 75fS, fl.OO, f 1.25
and S2.25
Fountain Syringes   fl.26 and S1.50
Ladies' Syringes S1.85 to $4.00
Bed Pans    ?3.50, ?3.75 to f4.00
Ice Caps fl.00 and $1.50
Finest Grade Absorbent Cotton .. 15**, 25«# and 35<
Hospital Grade Absorbent Cotton, per lb 50<-
Adhesive Plasters, all sizes, fresh stock .. 10-tf to 85c-
FIRST AID KITS
75*, fl.10, S2.25, S3.25, f 12.00 and $24.00
Spring Trusses and Elastic Trusses in all sizes and at
the cheapest prices in British Columbia.
Our Prescription Department is always in charge of a
Graduate Druggist. Our work is second to none but
our prices are the lowest.
MANN RUTHERFORD CO
SCHOOL'S DUTY
IN WORLD TOLD
TO TEACHERS
C. C. Brown Gives the
Relations of School
to Legacy
BPSH
BAKERAW^RD STS.
Druggists and Stationers
lill^H
LLOYD HALLAM
TO BE WEDDED
TRAIL, B.C., Oct. 30-Lloyd Hal-
itm, ooach for the Trail senior rugby
team, will not be on the bench Sun
day to handle the game. As tar aa
the local rugby team ls concerned
they  are   taking   a  back  aeat  with
Lloyd for the time being for he left
Trail Friday morning for Vancouver
where he vlll be married to Mlaa
Hazel McKenzle, formerly home eoonomlea teacher at the Central school.
Thla A.W.OX. trip was a sort of
surprise to the rugby boys for he
had been keeping his marriage a
deep secret.
Addressee by C. C. Brown, principal o( the South Burnaby high
school on "Our Common Legacy
and the School," and Pr. H. v..
Smith of the education faculty or
the University of Albert* on
"Schools of Other Lands," were
given enthusiastic reception st
the opening aerston of the West
Kootenay Teachers* convention ln
the Junior high school auditorium
Friday morning. Musical numbers
hy the boys or the Nelson Junior
htgh school proved sparkling and
were excellently rendered and received.
The school was the greatest conservator of the legacy of civilization
declared Mr. Brown in enlarging
on hla subject, and without the
school, civilization would die. The
function of the achool was to broaden vision and build up the world
by education, for education was
world building. To retain Its proper
plaoe lt was eesentlal that the
school be allowed to go untrammelled
and that economic factors be prevented from submerging the influence and scope of the aohool and
depriving coming generations of their
rightful heritage. '
The legacy of civilization contained all those comforts and securities which aurround people, and
which were more or leas taken for
granted, perhaps even unnoticed. It
included  those  things  pertaining  to
-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,  NELSON, B.C.—SATTJKDAY MOBMNG,  OCTOBER 21,  1958*
Picobac
Tobacco
NOW 104
HURRAY!
^*».    ^fc|^^^_J'Gentlemen*— because so msny of my fellow
/\   1 ^^***~"     Canadians tre smoking Picobac, it has become
A   k tf the largest selling burley tobacco in Canada—
^M*%\\ •id because of its great popularity you benefit.
fm tt\ You can now buy Picobac for 10*! and get still
l   (W'^R more tobacco for your money.
"I urge every pipe smoker to buy one of the handy pocket tins of Picobac
and get acquainted with a tobacco that's friendlier, more sociable in a
pipe. As a matter of fact, you'll hardly recognize the old pipe, once it's
loaded with Picobac, lighted and drawing well. Sweet? You bet! Mild?
You can smoke it hour after hour and never get fed up. Cool? You'd
travel a thousand miles and never find a mellower, cooler smoke."
Picobac is the pick of Canada's Burley crop, grown in sunny southern
Ontario i; : always cool .;; mild and sweet in your pipe.
Good for making cigarettes, too.
—and don't forget, you get more tobacco for your money.
Handy pocket tins now 10c.
14 H>. ti»* Now Reduced from 75c to 60c.
* WOOES TASTE GOOD IN A PIPE !
Imperial Tobacoo Company ot Canads, Llmitad
THEY
  LAST
EVEREADY^-^    ]M^B LONGER
FLASHLIGHTS
DON'T TAKE CHANCES
There are so many places where you need a flashlight and the
prices are so reasonable that you should get one today and be
safe.
BE SURE AND ASK FOR eVEREADy
The Batteries last longer and the Cases are guaranteed for
life.
WOOD, VALLANCE HARDWARE
COMPANY, LIMITED
food, clothing, shelter, health, transportation,   and   ln   fact,  every  walk
of life of our present social order.
HANDED   DOWN
IN   THREE   WAYS
Tbe legacy of civilization vas
banded down in three main ways,
hy national literatures, arts and political Influence... The latter included such things as the Hebrew
lawa, the Roman lawa, the Teutonic
customs snd the orders of the great
assemblies. And the social Inheritance waa pasaed on by the family,
church and the state.
It was tne duty of every cltlwn
to see that the legacy waa conserved, enriched and transmitted to
future generations. The school's
function lay in Just thst duty. It
was the chief conservator, lt preserved, and lt transmitted that Inheritance. The primary echool gave
the direction, the bent, and the
Fecondary achool provided for ape-
riaiiEation and preparation for further atudv. Finally the university
enabled {he student to probe farther, explore nev fields, and reap
new  harvests.
The value of the school could best
be shown ln the affect on the world
when It was throttled In the dark
ages.
Natural resouroes were alao a
common legacy, vent on Mr. Brown,
they were for the use of humanity
as a whole. But they had fallen Into
the handa of a few and the benefits
were drained by them.
FOR BENEFIT OF FEW
Social Inheritance was going the
same way. a favored class waa seeking to exclude these privilege* from
youth for Its own special benefit.
They could deny youth Ita rightful
heritage on a plea or exhorbltant
expenditure. They classed auch
thlnga aa mualc, home economics.
etc., as frills. These advocations were
nothing more than carefully concealed propaganda that would rob
youth, asserted Mr. Brown. The stste
could not spend too much money
on education, for the more people
that were educated, the greater vere
the beneflta .derived. And statistics
showed that lt was cheaper to give
a child a year's education than to
keep one In prison for the eame
length of time.
What   had   Africa   given   to   th-_
world.  Had   Asia  given  the  beat  lt
| waa  possible of?
I Schools were always aligned with
progress and lt was essential the
public be convinced that the as
aaults on education were ruinous
snd that lt was the highest duty
of the state to conserve the Instl
tution which beat conserved the
legscy of civilization and passed lt
on-to future generations, richer than
before.
TWO   IMPORTANT   FACTORS
Two things were of prime import
ance In the education of the child
stated Dr. Smith. The first was the
nature of the child, the second, tbe
purpose, society had ln mind for
educating him.
Canadians were prone to think
their system of education was ln
all probability the best, but perhaps
lt vould be wise to view some of
the phases of education of other
lands. In parts of United States, for
Instance the Cambridge plan of education vaa ln effect. Thla provided
for teaching children vho were not
aU of equal ability. Ths elementary
course wss divided into alx yeara for
the average pupils, Onea allghtly below the average could take seven
or eight years, while thoae unusually
bright could take lt ln five years.
And there vaa the Dalton plan,
under vhlch the puplla vorked on
Individual assignments. A criticism
forwarded against this system declared lt tended toward too much
individualism. A better system vas
the combination of the two, vlth
number of "tool" subjects and
social subjects. The former vould bs
done Individually and a certain proficiency attained before moving on,
the latter. Including such subjects
as drawing, music and literature.
vould he taken in group.
NEW  SYSTEM IN AUSTRIA
Austria recently adopted a new
system ln the elementary school.
Every child vaa required to go to
this four-year course, vhlch usually
occupied the child between the age
of six snd 10. They were In reality,
activity or project schools, and the
aim was to educate for the fundamentals ot citizenship. Teachers
drew up, say monthly, a certain
program which they forwarded to
the education board for approval. It
the question to he studied for the
month wu transportation, during
that time they vlalted railways, etc.,
or any place where the question of
transportation could be learned and
seen. In this'vay the student became acquainted vlth facts of life
surrounding him.
The Russians put labor at the
base ' of achool Instruction and
claimed they were instructing the
child to interpret the outside life.
They were Instructed in the life of
NEWS OF THE DAY
Liberal  Committee Rooms located
at 507 Baker St. phone lite.    (8810)
the preeent rather than the life of
the past.
ONLY   A   FEW
' Austria and France openly stated
they did not want the rank and file
of children to go through secondary
achools. Upon completion of tho
elementary schools the majority ot
pupils went tor a year or two
longer In continuation schools to
give them a partly vocational training, sufficient to get them stsrted
ln ths kind ot vork they desired.
Only the chosen fsv, of high
sohool standing, would attend the
secondary schools snd they would
conserve the classic legacy of the
country. Here they would also be
trslned for going on to university,
but it wishing to go no farther,
they would receive a baccalaureate
degree which enabled them to enter
moat ranks of the civil service, etc.
PRACTICALLY  TIIE SAME
The English had practically done
the aame. The secondary- schools
were for specialization. There were
also non-selective schools, which the
pupils could take after the elementary course, end so obtain technique
ln  a  line  he  chose.
Germany's system waa much the
same.
In closing. Dr. Smith pointed out
that he waa not advocating any of
these systems, but suggested that
they he kept ln mind as ideas.
H. Charlesworth spoke briefly on
the advisability of the teachers
uniting In a solid front.
The mualcal numbers under the
direction of Mlss Enid Etter vere
much enjoyed. Tho boys, rigged out
ln the attire of piratea ot the Spanish Main, gave three songs with
suitable gestures and interpretation.
They even sank a large galleon that
adorned the atage. Mlss Helen Douglas did the stage directing, the
entire scenery being tastefully and
suitably finished. Numbers sung
were "Oolden Vanities," "Down the
Coast of Spain," and "Dutch Sailor
Song." Mlss Louise Denoreas vas
accompanist.
Chairman of the session was R,
Smlllie.
The  millets  are  among the most
ancient    agricultural   planta,
J. A.C. Laughton, R.O.
orro_i_rni--T-opTi_a__iif
••It, 108. Medical Art, Bonding
SEE
vie	
GRAVES
MASTER   PLUMBER
Fore Modern Plumbing
AT   MODERATE   PRICES
Opp. City HaU       PHONE   815
Ham VANC. SUN delivered dally.
Phona  3.7.  NELSON  NEWS  DEPOT.
For rent, furnished or unfurnished
3-room  miles. Kerr Apartment,.
(8804)
NELSON MUST WIN SUNDAV TO
KEEP   IN   RUGBY   LEAGUE   RACE.
(8917)
When you want a Tail ride In a
Buick. Phone 35, Nelson Tranafer
Co... Ltd. (8872)
SENIOR   CANADIAN   RUGBY
RECREATION  OROUNDS SUNDAY
"■30   P.M. (8817)
C. McPhee. expert typewriter and
! adding machine mechanic—Por eerv-
; Ice   call  858 X. (89121
I     NELSON  RUGGERS   ARE   FIQHT-
j INO  MAD.  SEE  THEM  IN  ACTION
SUNDAY,  2:30  P.M. (8917)
I    No   one   can   make   better   bread
i than   MOTHERS   BREAD.  It   la  the
1 acme of quality. Choquette Broa.
(8930)
GOLF CLUB DANCE
I    Don't   forjet—Next   Prlday   night,
:iume Hotel silver Ballroom.    (8031)
HOCKEY CLUB DANCE
Saturday night. Eagles Hall. Dancing 9 to 12. Admission SOc and 25c.
18887)
GENERAL ELECTRIC RADIOS
Alwaya assure you of the best
values. We also have some good buys
In 1933 models. Fleming's store.
Talrvlew. (8933)
LISTER INDEPENDENT COMMITTEE ROOMS. FER.;l SON BUILDING.
OPPOSITE NELSON TRANSFER.
I'HONE 770. OPEN ALL DAY AND
EVENINGS. (8803)
ALL       CLASSES      OF
Metal Work, Lathe
Work, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.
Motor Rewinding.
Acttykne     Welding
BENNETT'S
LIMITED
W
*...................m...
Our Christmas
CARDS	
have arrived and will be on
open display in a few days.
In the meantime call and
see our boxed assortments.
We believe them to be tbe
best values we have ever
ahown.
As usual our Calendar
line of Local Views will be
complete and ready for
your Inspection tn a short
time.—All new Views this
year.
CAllen s Art Shoppe
........................
NOTICE
Owing to heavy snow on the
Monaahee paae, the Nakusp-Vemon
stage Is closed till further notice-
Central   Canadian   Oreyhound.
(8907)
I     THE SECRET OF PLAYING POPU-
I MR MUSIC  Is  REVEALED BY JIMMIE   MORRISON—YOU  CAN   LEARN
IN   A   FEW   EASY   LESSONS— LET'S
GET   STARTED.     THONE  614 L.
(8903)
KELOWNA BOY CHORISTERS
In a refined concert at the St.
Paul's United church Tuesday, Oct.
Zl. A musical treat sponsored b>
the Nelaon Symphony Orchestra. See
window cards. (8933)
NOTICE
To introduce myself and
my method of how I get
sick people well, I will give
one month's CHIROPRACTIC ADJUSTMENTS for
$10 to the first TEN that
14II at my office. Examination free during month of
October. Office upstairs in
the McCulloch-. block, next
door to tlfe Standard Cafe.
Hours — 10-12, 2-5, 7-8.
Phone 818 for appointment
C. HULTGREN
D.C,   Ph.C.   ,
*w«      \_/t     J.
Will   make   the   Kootenays
famous
(8924)
The Auction sale of H. Taylor.
Auctioneer, ls being held today, Saturday. Oct 21at. at 1:30 p.m. and
sgaln at 7:30 p.m. at 614 Baker. St.
Owing to a typographical error this
waa advertised In yesterday's paper
to lake place  Oct.  1st.
(6320)
TENDERS    FOR   WOOD
Tenders wlll be received by the
City Clerk up until 8 o'clock P.M.
Monday 23rd October, for tbe Supply
F.O.B Nelson In carload lots or 4-ft.
dry Fir and Tamarac wood.—City of
Nelaon. (8937)
ST.  SAVIOUR'S  CHURCH
19th Sunday after Trinity
8:00 'a.m.—Holy  Communion
11.00 a.m.—Golden Wedding Thanksgiving.
(My.  and  Mrs. Oeorge  Johnatone)
Holy   Communion
7:30 p.m.—Evensong
(B93S)
SUGAR BOWL
GROCERY
SATURDAY AND MONDAY
SPECIALS
Baiter's Coco*— «£..
tt-lb.  tin    _  **V
Swanauown   Cake   Flour— 'Jaac
Per   pkt.  3**-
sugar—Urunlated; <■ m_fa
■4(1  lbs  fleW
Creamery   Butter—Our Oftc
flnesti J lbs. for   °«'y
New   Laid   Eggs—Pullets; __f_c
Hot  J»v
Nabob or  Malkin's Best Atttt-
Tea—Per  Ib  *f"v
Paatry   Flour—Wild AttC
Christies' Cheese Wafers— £A£
In tins; each  V*1*
Christies' Butter Cookies— _CC
ln  pkts.;  each    —*V
__TZm.mmw
Fresh Pure Pork sausage— tiCg-
2  lbs.  for  iV
9  cans  Tomatoes—        tt f aa
Urge  um  T*eW
Roger's Golden syrup—     A_tt_
S-lb.   tin    _ 93
Home   Cooked   Ham— _*___
Per Ib  4™
Freshly   Ground   Coffee—   MMdt
Our special; 2 lbs. 3V
Canned Milk     £«*• tttt*
Small 3y   Large *****
A   doz.   Juicy   Oranges t*C6
tor   TV
We   Serve   to   PLEASE   and   are
Pleased  to  SERVE
PHONE  110
We Specialize in the Making of
DOORS and WINDOWS
Large or small, and ln any style, wo can take care ot your door
and window requirements. Strongly made of durable materials,
and moderate ln cost.
rhone l's Your Order Now, and We WUl Fill It Promptly
A. H. GREEN CO. LTD.
701   FRONT   STREET
PBONE   171
CCF. PUBLIC MEETING
Opera House
at 8 o'clock
TONIGHT
Speakers: DR. G. A. C. WALLEY, candidate
ANGUS McINNIS, M.P.
Questions Welcomed
Today
Auction Sale
Saturday, October 21st at 1:30 p.m., and again at
7:30 p.m., 614 Baker St.
Comprising: Dining Room Set, Breakfast Bet, China Cabinets,
Kitchen Cabinets, Bedroom Suite, Beds, Dreseers and Chiffoniers,
Centre Tables, Easy Upholstered Chairs, Couches, Rockers and Chairs,
Wardrobe, Gateleg Tables, Carpets, Organ, Musical Instruments,
Guitars, Violins, Banjo, Tuke, Clarinet, Gramophone, Typewriter,
Caah Register, Show Case, Six-hole Rangea, Electric Ranges, Gas
Ranges, Heaters, Coal Oil Stores, Plre Baaket and Dog Irons, Cot
Beda and Mattresses for campers, Kitchen Tables and Chairs,
Silverware, cutlery, Chlnawere, Ornaments, Glassware, Blankets,
Tools, Clothing and many other articles too numerous to mention.
H. TAYLOR,
AOCTIOIIKIR.
Wood-Wood
Only a very limited supply left at this price,
FIRST CLASS FIR and TAMARAC
SINGLE CORD
$5*50 Cash on Delivery
5-CORD LOTS
$5.oo Cash on Delivery
Make arrangements with us to have this wood sawn
at your own home—Sawing charges:
16-INCH LENGTHS, Cord... $1.00
12-INCH LENGTHS, Cord... $1.50
YOUR CHANCE FOR CHEAP
WINTER HEAT!
Buy Now tnd Stve!
Nelson Transfer .%
LTD.
Good Groceries
at Hor swill's
GRAPES     TOKAYS
2 Lbs. 35c
CAULIFLOWER 10Ca, Lb. 6c
CORNED BEEF „
Jt for 25c
SULTANAS	
.. 3 Lbs. 37c
COCOANUT  Sdded
2 Lbs. 55c
SOAP    pe 1R[,  wiiitf.       	
6 for 22c
Pancake Flour :,ijo..
CHEKKIEa  RF|> pitted.
3-lb. bag 28c
\7i Cans 35c
PEAS    DRIED OBEEN _	
3 Lbs. 20c
McLAREN'S BAKING POWDER
12 oz. tin 29f -Vt lb. cans 89<
HORSWILL BROS.
Free Delivery Phone 235
Underwear
Our underwear is tailored to fit at prices to
please. Does its duty so
well  that you  never
think about it from on*
day's end to the other.
Stanfield's,  Ceetee  and
Hatchway  No-Button
Combinations      a
f 1.50 to S7.00   fl
EMORY'S
Limited
Nervous Debility
In tha Aim call! (or toot
Reconstructive  Tonic'
SMYTHE'S   CIIO  VW
correcti tbe eantea of  Nervoui
Breakdown
Smythe's Pharmae;
PHONE   1
Shop with Ca hr M*-l
STAR VALUES
Tba remarkable money aa*rtn|
valuee advertleed In jeatardayV
paper ara alao ln effect today.
BUY  AT  THE  STAB  AND   SAVI
STAR GROCERY
PHONES 10 and 11
LA FIGARO
THI PERMANENT SUPRCMI
It la thorough, becoming. etfM
tive ln appearance and laatln
ln lte lovellneaa. There la a
atlnt on time, exactneaa or artii
tlo precision, and tbe reault I
a graceful dlatlngulabe* asd tl
thralling effect.
ROSE
BEAUTY PARLORS
Phono  817
Beauty  Culture  in all Its
branches
NEW
TODAY
MARY LESLIE
PICKFORD   HOWARD
"Secrets"
SILLY  SYMPHONY
COMEDY
NEWS
MONDAY — TUESDAY
JANET  GAYNOR
WARNER BAXTER
In
"PADDY
NEXT BEST THING"
WED.  —   Till R.  —  FRI.
RONALD  COLEMAN'S
Greatest   Since
"Bulldog Drummond"
"Mosqueroder"
_
__
