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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" v&>\nBrooklyn Knocked Out of the\nRace; Cards Win\n:-y- Page Seven .\nVOL. 29\nBobby Jones Leads in Medal\n-   Round, U.S. Golf\n\u2014 Page Seven\nNELSON, B. C.    WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930.\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNo. 183\nFAKE MESS   \"*\u2022 CAUSE OF WHEAT CRASH\n.-\u2022'\u25a0 .-.\u2014....'\u25a0      .1   p\/?^.. \u2022-'._<__' \u2022 '.**.> \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u2022_.\nv?m\nDisposition of $20,Ui\u00abJ,\nto Help Erase Unemployment\nMay Be Known by Tomorrow\nTRUSTEES ARE\nIN FAVOR OF\nI\nDefeat   Resolution   Opposing It by Vote of\n49 to 29\nHWCHUFFE  SAYS\nNO EXTRA COS!\nElimination of Level Cross-;\ning-Is Favored As One\nMethod\nTALK OF (COMPLETE\n^CANADIAN  HIGHWAY\nMany\" Proposals   Reaching\nOttawa Suggests Public\nWorks\nLong Term Will Be Optional With Boards,\nHe Explains\nVERNON, B. .0., Sept..23.\u2014Following a two-hour discussion on the\ncontentious resolution which urged\nthe provincial .government to arrange the high school curriculum\nso that, pupils could complete it ln\nthree years, instead of four yean,\nBritish.'Columbia school trustees in\nannual convention here today, defeated, the resolution by a .vote of\n49 to 29.\nHon. Joshua - Hinchliffe, minister\nof education, In an address, outlined\nwhat he' termed tbe chlor opposition to thi extended course, that\nof extra -cost to ratepayers .aftd\nparents, but ho --was not' prepared\nto aay thete would'be JMW'lncrewe\nIn',-cost. '\"It la ah; open..question,\"\nhe declared-. WhaV the minister, od-\nJected to about political life was\n\"that :tho*e- who ask .for certain\nfavora or concessions,, get after me\nw\u00a3en I start to da those very\nthings.\"\n\"For Instance,\" he continued, \"ln\n1920 .your executive asked the educational system of the province be\nalonfc the lines of 6-3-3; or six years\nin i elementary, . three public and\nthree high . school, a total of 12\nyears when only eight ,and three\nwere i being allowed or 11. years.' In\n1934 you were, still dissatisfied and\nasked that physical .training be a\npart of the curriculum. In 1925,\nyou, tho trustees,'felt-the children\nwere being forced along one line\nand that the high school system wae\nnot filling the bill and in a resolution ..asked for more optional\ncourses.\" \u25a0 \u25a0 _ .\nNOT'.THE SAME\nMr. Hinchhf-e thought that many\ntrustees did not underatand the\ndifference between four years of\nhigh sohool and three years of matriculation. \"They are not the same\nthing at all,\" he. said, \"as a provision haa been \u25a0made to make the\nfour-year term optional, as aaxed\nfor. by trustees.\"\nReferring to text books, the minister stated tho department was\ngiving away yearly nearly $80,000 In\nbooks. Regarding this, he said\nteachers must inculcate into their\npupils the care of the hooka so they,\nmight be serviceable for others. In\nthis, way, ho declared that between\n940,000 and $50,000 a year might De\nsaved, which could bo applied to\nany cost resulting from tbe four*\nyear -course. He\u201epointed out that\n$8 worth of hooks were supplied annually to each sohool pupil.\nFollowing the minister's address\na fuil discussion of the resolution\nwas ' opened. J. W. Berry; M.L.A.,\nof Langley, a delegate and chairman\nof Langley school, expressed a feeling of relief at the minister's .explanation, stating that at ohe time\nbe had a feeling that the tr.i_.__ws\nhad not been consulted on the\nfour-year term,, but this doubt had\nbeen removed. Kef erring, to the extra\ncost, which he said was troubling\n> the delegates, lt would be small\nand he was prepared to let those\nbetter posted carry through their\nplans.\nOTTAWA,   Ont,    Sept.   23.\u2014\n(CP)\u2014The manner In which the\n$20,000,000   provided   by   parliament  to  ameliorate, unemployment   to  ameliorate  unemploy-\nllev'ed to be occupying the attention,, not only ot the various\ndepartments   ot   the   Dominion\ngovernment, but provlnvlul governments and municipalities as\nwell. The regulations which tho\ndepartment ot labor Is preparing for submission to the cabinet will be ready probably on\nThursday. These regulations will   ,\npresent a detailed plan for administering .the fund.\nA  delegation  from   Toronto   waa\nhere today and submitted proposals\nfor publio works ln that city. Other\ndelegations may be.expected within\na lew days and no doubt representatives from the various provincial\ngovernments.\nElimination of level crossings, on\nthe highways in looked upon as ono\nof the most practical ways of spending public money. Parliament a\nnumber of years ago provided a\nfund out of which tho money coyM\nhe expended to co-operate with tho\nrailway companies and the munlc<\nlpalltles to remove particularly dangerous cppssiiige,, \u25a0    \u25a0 \u25a0   \u25a0\nIn recent sessions members have\nurged that the Dominion take a\nlarger naad. ,'in- this'.\u2022work.'\"Hon\nItPrank fcliver was appointed to work\nunder the board of railway commissioners Investigating level crossings and although the major part\nof his report dealt with means of\nprotectlng such crossings, In many\ncases he recommended grado segregations,- Such work ls of such' a\nnature' that lt ' could bo carried\non ln tthe winter. It would give\nemployment to  unskilled  labor.\nThe grado crossing fund divides\nthe cost between the Dominion government, the railways and the municipalities affected. However, ln the\ncase of provincial highways lt would\nwould be the provinces, instead of\ntho municipalities, that would have\nto hear: a share. The government\nmay decide to mako a substantial\naddition to the fund and have lt\nadministered under the direction of\ntho board of railway commissioners, muoh as lt has been ln the\npast.\nThe- question of constructing the\nconnecting links to complete a trans\nCanada highway Is also one which\nwill be given a great deal of consideration by the government and\nthe provinces in turn. In addition\nto this, there are many proposals\ncoming ln from municipalities right\nacross the country, suggestng public works. Probably municipal works\nwill have to be endorsed by the\nprovincial governments before assistance will bo granted to them\nout of the  federal fund.\nThe disbursement of direct relief\nwill likely be a last resort where\nwork cannot be provided of such a\nnature that the person In need\nwould be able to perform, lt. it may\nhowever develop that demand lor\ndirect relief will reach very considerable proportions despite the efforts to provide men with Jobs.\n0. S. SEES NO\nGOOD FOR IT\nIN CONFERENCE\nExpect   United    States\nWheat Exporter Will\nBe Sufferer\nMUST PRODUCE FOR\nITS OWN USE ONLY\nSo Thinks Close Student\nof Wheat Situation\nWashington\nWILL HE'DO.IT?\nMessages Sent in Narne of a\nQrain Broker Say Canadian\nWheat Pool Is in Difficulties\nSAVE HOUSE IN\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nWITH BUCKETS\nResidents of Settlements\nFight for Hours to\nConfine Fire\nFEDERAL BODY\nTO INVESTIGATE\nTHE DOUKHOBORS\nIDENTIFY DEAD\nWOMAN\nQUEBEC, Que., Sept. 23.\u2014Identity\nof a young woman found dead In\nLac-au-Aulnales on Bunday was tentatively established as Miss Yvonne\nMetlvler ot Charny, Que., provincial police announced tonight. A\nyou up man, whose name was withheld, was taken into custody today\nas  a witness.\nThe body was discovered anchored\nto the bottom of the lake by means\nof a heavy piece of pipe, fastened\nto the legs by means of baroed\nwire.\nWASHINGTON, D. C, Sept. 23.\u2014\n(By Ken Clark, Canadian Press\nstaff writer) .\u2014News of the departure of Prime\" Minister R. B. Bennett with executives of tho Canadian wheat Pool. and specialists\nin gran for the imperial conference\nwas received ln Washington with\ngreat interest. Government officials wore naturally not in a position to comment for publication.\nTho assumption; hero is some arrangement may be arrived at between the British Import board and\nthe wheat. flour, producers of tho\ndominions which will not lead to\nthe benefit of the exporter of the\nUnited   States.\n' One cloee student of the wheat\nsituation saw hi the departure for\nLondon of A. J. \u25a0 MacPhall, D. A.\nMacGlbbon \u25a0 Professor Swanson and\nJohn I. MacFarlano, tho beginning\nof a new world market structure\nwherein the British Empire and\nevery'other wheat produolng country would be a self-contained unit,\ngrowing only as milch as mignt be\nused within Its own boundaries. He\nunderstood tho British export board\nwould buy only from the dominions\nat fixed prices. Italy, aerraany and\nother European countries, he pointed out, were already protecting their\nwheat growers ana stimulating production to look after their own\nneeds. With the world situation\ntrammelled by national regulation,\nhe foresaw' the United States, without a market for surplus, reducing\nproduction to the level of Its domestic need.\nIn thi;; last Idea ho paralleled\nChairman Alexander Lcggo of the\nUnited States farm board, who in\na recent address said:\n\"It Is our considered judgment\nthat there ls Just one way the\nAmerican farmer can hope to get a\nprofitable price for his wheat and\nthat is for production ln this country to be adjusted downward so\nthat lt will not exceed domestic requirements.\"\nConcerning Secretary of Agriculture Arthur M. Hyde's charges that\nshort*, selling In Chicago by Soviot\nagents acted as a depressant on tne\nmarket in Its present slump there\nare two schools of thought here.\nThe ono ls represented by Senator\nOddie of Nevada who today announced he would Introduce a bill\nto prohibit the importation into tho\nUnited States of Russian wheat,\nmanganese, timber and other products. The other school holds with\nSenator Carraway of Arkansas, who\nsays Secretary Hyde's charges are tho\nproverbial red herring. It ls generally conceded \u00bbmong tho experts\nthat If the only short selling done\nby the Soviets amounted to the\n7,50(1,000 bushels already discovered,\nlt would not count for much ln\nprico.. \u2022 *\nPrees reports from -England and\nthe continent to the effect that\nRussia Is underselling tlie American\nexporters were taken more seriously.\nNelson and district sport followers, to say nothing of the rest of\ntho world, are hoping he will. The above photograph la an extraordinary\none of Robert T. Jones, Jr., moro commonly known as \"Bobby,\" who Is\nseeking his fourth and the only remaining major golf crown of the\nworld tills week at Merlon Cricket club, Ardon, Penn., the U. S. national amateur championship. If Bobby can win this tltlo ho will havo\ndone what no other golfer has ever dono before\u2014mado a clean sweep\nof tho four major golf testa, the British amateur and open, and the\nUnited States amateur and- open. Yesterday Bobby led thc field of qualifiers with 14il by scoring a 73 In the second day's round after getting\nty 80 in tho first round Monday.\nVICTOMA, a C., 8ept 2S.\u2014\nThe whole problem of Doukhobors administration ln British\nColumbia hiii be made the subject of a thorough investigation\nby the federal department of\nJustice, Premier Tolmie announced today.\nAfter pressing for federal assistance ln paying the - heavy\ncost of enforcing laws and order,\namong the colonists, the premier said he had Juiit received\nan assurance from Hon. Hugh\nGuthrie, minister of Justice,\ntbat hi\" department would go\nInto tho whole question forthwith.\nATTACKED   BY   BEAR,   MAY   IHIi\nSEWARD, Alaska, Sept. 23 (AP)\u2014\nMtko-KAlmakoff, of Kanatak, today\nwaa suffering from possible fatal\nwounds received In an attaok by\na brown bear. He .was taken to\nKodlak last night.\nHEADS DISPLAY\nMEN\nSEATTLE. Sept. 23\u2014Fred J. Port-,\nman, Seattle, was elected president\nof tbe Paclflo Coast association of\ndisplay men at tholr seventh annual\n.convention hero today. Los Angeles\nwas. chosen as the 1031 convention\ncity. Other officers elected were\nw. W. Rowley, San Francisco, first\nvice-president; De Lyal J. Davis,\nPortland, second vice-president; Walter Rimes, Vancouver, British Columbia, third vice-president, and\nAdrian Delam_.n, Seattle, secretary-\ntreasurer.\t\nPRINCE  MAY  BE  GODFATHER\nLONDON, Sept. 23.\u2014ft*)-\u2014'The\nPrince of Wales probably will be\none of 'the godfathers at the christening ot the Infant Princess Margaret Rose, daughter of the Duko\nand Duohess of York. Unofficial reports today said the1 Archbishop of\nCanterbury probably will perform\nthe ceremony whloh will be private.\nCRANBROOK YOUTH, OVERCOME BY\nCAS FUMES, DIES IN WINDERMERE\nLAKE WINDERMERE, B. C, Sept.\n23\u2014George Fanning, 19, whoso homo\nls ln Cranbrook, employee of James\nKerrigan cU Co., died this afternoon\nas a result of being overcome with\nfumes whilo making an examination of a gasoline tank.\nCalling Mr. Kerrigan at Cranbrook\nby long distance telephone last\nnight, Tho Nelson. Dally News ascertained   that,   while   no   further\n\u2022;detalls had been received In Cranbrook, the tragedy was presumed\nto have occurred In connection\nwith a tank car at the oil station\nat which young Panning was cm-\nployed.\nBorn and \u25a0 raised in Cranbrook,\nGeorgo Fanning, a son of Walter\nFanning, real estate man, had been\nin the Lake Windermere position\nsince March. He ls survived by\nhis   parents,   two   brothers   and   a\nsister.\n10 ARE LOST AS\nLIGHTNING HITS\nBOAUTLANTIC\nSix     Survivors     Tell     of\nSchooner Being Split in\nTwo\nAGENT-GENERAL\nIN LONDON TO\nJOIN OIL FIRM\nOALART, Alta.. 8opt. 23.\u2014(CP)\u2014\nHon. Herbert Orccnflold, former\npremier of Alberta and tho province's agent-general at London, ls to\nbo chairman of tho Alberta board\nof Anglo-Western Oils, limited, it\nwas disclosed, here today. Premier\nJ. E. Brownlee yesterday announced\nthat Mr. Greenfield would rotlro\nfrom tho government enrvlco at tho\nbeginning of 1031.\nThe firm whose board Mr. Greenfield has Joined ls a newly-organized Brltlah body to develop Alberta's petroleum resources. It Is'\nheaded by Sir Edward ManvlUe.\nNORTH SYDNEY, N. S.. Sept. 23.\n\u2014(AP)\u2014Six survivors who fought\nhunger and storm ln an open boat\nfor 72 hours brought back today\nthe story ot a tragedy of thc north\nAtlantic  which  claimed   10   lives.\nA bolt of lightning struck tho\nschooner Carran__. last Thursday\nnight, splitting lt ln two. It sank\nalmost Immediately, carrying down\nIts captain, \u2022 rflght passengers and\nthe cook. So speedily did tho riven\nship go down \u25a0 thero was hardly\ntime for threo passengers aud three\nmembers of tho crew to scramble\nInto   a   dory.\nProm tho position whero the\nCarranza sank, about 20 miles west\nof Scatarl Island, ott th_ coast ot\nCapo Breton, the survivors drifted\nwithout food or water untU Bunday\nnight, when a sailor aboard tho\nschooner Vinlgettl heard their cries.\nBoats were lowered antl they were\ntaken aboard, haggard from exposure  and weak from  himger.\nThe Carranza, a Newfoundland\nvessel, put out from North Sydney Tuesday wth her II. passengers\nand ISO tons of coal for Burlcn,\nNfld. \u2022\nAll who perlshod were from Newfoundland. Captain Joshua Matthews, 33, Grand Banks, went down\nwith the ship, as did the cook, John\nRobbett, 27, oi Push Thrown, Xh.\npassengers who died were Thomss\nWhite. Fortune Bay; Samunl Moul-\nton, Stephen Orandy, Frank Loggc.\nJoseph Newport, Archlo Adams and\nJohn  C.  Cluott,  all  of   Garnish.\nSCOTLAND YARD\nMAN SHOT IN\nSAN FRANCISCO\nCANCEL LICENCES,\nLIQUOR EXPORT\nHOUSES IN B. C\nVICXOBIA, U. Ci Sept. 23.\u2014\nAlj liquor export warehouses In\nBritish Column In liuve been\nclosed by an order or the new\nUtjtior eQntrol board.\nAction was taken under tho\npower of legislation passed at\ntlie last session of tlie provincial legislature. Thc six export\nwarehouses In the province have\npaid a license to tlie province \\\ngovernment yearly of $10,000\n' each. This license was paid at\nthe beginning of the year and\nIt Is understood thoy will receive a refund of one-quartir of\nthe year's license fee.\n\u25a0The cancellation by tho former fedenil government at June\nli 'of customs bonds granted\nthe warehouses paved the way\nfor the cancellation of thc\nlicenses. '-'f\nGAS UP BUT NOT\nTO CONSUMERS\nE. WATTS HOME\nIN PART DESTROYED\nFire    Starts    in   Shed\nWhen Family Absent\nin Trail\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C, Sept. 23.\u2014\nFighting the flames for several hours\ntonight, residents of pouth 31ocans\naided by tho Bonnington fire de-^\npartment,- succeeded in saving most\nof the residence ol E. 'Watt-., in\nwhich tiro was discovered at 8:45\np. m., and in preventing spread of\nthe flames to other residences and\nbuildings.\nMr. and Mrs. Watts, with their\nyoung son Donald, were absent in\nTrail, an* little Edna was In Nelson, -whetc she attends school, when\nthe Watts woodshed was discovered\nto be on fire. The flames quickly\nspread to the lower end of the res\nIdcncc, immediately adjacent, and\nthe flaming beacon being visible\nfor miles, people rushed to tho scene\nfrom all nearby points.\nBUCKET'BRIGADE   FORMED\nA bucket brigade was quickly\nformed, and-\u25a0buckets were passed\nfrom the tap ln the barn of Lieut,\nCol. John Murray up to the flro\nfighters, who poured the water on\nthe flames, while others engaged hi\nthe work of salvage. Flylngf embers\nwero falling on roofs all around,\nand these were combattcd with\ngarden hoao and buckets, this portion of the fight centering particularly on thc adjacent buildings, Col.\nMurray's residence, 75 yards to tho\neast, and J. D. Ycatman's store, 200\nyards to the west. Had there been\na high wind the greater part ot\nSouth Slocan - above the railway\ntracks would almost certainly have\nbeen  wiped   out.\nBy 11 o'clock tho fight for thc\nWatts residence, which is a story\nand a half in height, seemed won\nonly the lower end, which was first\nattacked, being destroyed. Practically all tho household effects, except any that were in the lower\nend, were' saved. Men will remain\non the scene all night to put out\nthe flames If there ls any rocrudca\ncenco.\nPrices Close at Lowest Since\n1906;   October  at\n73 1-4\nBROKER DENIES\nANY CONNECTION\nMessage,  False,   Sent  Over\nTwo Continents    in\nMorning\nBOYD READY\nTO HOP THE\nOCEAN TODAY\nSMALL BOAT IN\nFLAMES\nPORTLAND, Ore., Sept. a3.-~<AP)\n\u2014The Portland station of the MacKay Radio and Telegraph company\ntonight received a mesaago from th*\nsteamor, flan Gabriel saying ahe\npassed a small boat whloh was a\nmass of flames, duo east of the\nColumbia river lightship.\nThe pilot boat Columbia, used by\nColumbia river bar pilots, waa standing by, the message said.\nREGINA, Sask., Sept. 23.\u2014(CP.\u2014\nWith word from Portland, Oregon,\nthat his father, attached to Scotland Yard, haq been fatally shqt at\nBan Francisco, A. Sanderson of Reglna today awaltod confirming word\nfrom tho Callfonla city. Sanderson,\nomployed as a hotel porter here,\nreceived word from his slater In\nPortland Saturday that his father,\nInspector G. Sanderson, had been\nshot. A second message said he had\ndied.\nSanderson said he gathered that\nhto father had been murdered.\nTnree weeks ago he passed though\nReglnft on his way 'to San Francisco\non   official   business.\nTORONTO. Sept. 23\u2014 (CP)\u2014Confirmation was given here tonight\nto roports that the price of gasoline\nhfis' been advanced two CBnts a\ngallon to Jobbers. Definite, assurance, however, was given by an\nauthorized spokesman for Canadian\nrefining i%erests that tho increaso\nwould not entail added costs to\nthe   consumer.\n\"Retail prices of gasollno in Canada will not have changed and will\nnot change on account of the\ntariff.\" thc spokesman said. \"So\nfar as the consumer is concerned,\nif he Judged only by prioes at scr-\nvlco stations, there is no chango In\nthe affairs of tho gasollno refiners\nat all.\n\"Prices to tho Jobbers have been\nIncreased,\" he added, \"and thereby\nCanadian refiners enjoy tho solo\nbenefit that comes to them by tho\nrevised tariff. In tho past, with\ntho great surplus stcftks of gasoline\nIn tho united States, Canadian\nrefiners have had tho choice1 of\neither foregoing business offerings\nfor the jobbers, or of taking it at\na' flguro based on United States\nmarkets that allow no profit. Now.\nin selling to the Jobbers,- they are\nin a position to earn a small\nreturn upon their Investrhenta\non tho wages paid to Canadian\nlabor.\"\nCOAST TORIES\nBURY HATCHET\nVANCOUVER. B. C.,' Sept. 23\u2014\nVancouver Conservative association,\nat a well-attended meeting at tho\nAuditorium tonight, adopted tho\ndelcgato system for the election of\nits executive at futuro annual elections, commencing after 1931; disregarded a suggestion to the provincial government for redistribution of the city seats; and heard\nWilliam Dick, Vancouver, M. i\u00bb. A.,\nvoice a warning of tho wrath that\nmight como if tho city organization\nfailed to compose its party differences.\nPiloted by Thomas Lamb, president of tho City association, a\nmeeting that might have developed\nInto another general engagement of\nopposing factions doveloped into a\nlave feast in which ail dffercnecs\nwere finally smik under a new\nconstitution adopted by a sweeping majority.\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 23\u2014(CF)\u2014Prices\ntumbled to record low marks, market and wheat pool heads probed\norigin of a mysterious message tliat\ncaUHtf tho lvalue-downfall and\nwestern Canada's new grain . crop\nmoved smoother and more actively\nthan all season today, as prairie\nfarmers received ajssurance that their\ncontrolling marketing organization\ndid not suffer from, financial embarrassment,\nNorth American and European\ngrain markets looked to Winnipeg\nLn tho morning for* confirmation\nof telegraphed reports that tho\nwheat pool had met financial disaster and been taken over *by provincial governments. And grain\nmen. pool officials and market heads I\nhastened to declare tho statements :\nerroneous, Then they sought thc ,\nsender of tho messages that were\nfiled to markets on two continents, j\nThe investigation continued tonight\nWithout any announced success.\nPrompt denials, that the wheat\npool was In trouble financially came\nfrom Premier John Bracken of\nManitoba, president A. P. White\nof the grain exchange and 9. C\nDobson, assistant general manger ot\ntho Royal Bank of Canada., Unofficial declarations that the report\nwas \"absurd\" were made by pool\nofficials,\nBut the bogus message, quickly\ndenied as it was. shunted wheat\nprices deeper Into low territory.\nNot slnee 1906 when futures sold\nfor '69 cehts a bushel, had wheat\nboeir offered as cheaply In Winnipeg. Traders, grown cautious by\nmonths of experience with the high-\ntension market, joined the selling\nside and remained thero till the\nend of the session. Values closed\njyb th* bottom points, October\nwheat  being  quoted at 73 U  cents.\nThe message was .signed with the\nname of James. Stewart, prominent\ngrain broke here. As .e?nt to some\npoints, it carried tho signature of\njames Stewart and company. It\nsaid. \"Wheat pool, ln difficulties.\nProvincial. government officials to\nta^o over pool operations at 10\no'clock to protect their guarantee.\nBanks called for $28,000,000 yesterday from government.\" It was filed\nabout an hour before the Winnipeg\nexchange opened.\nMr. Stewart immediately disclaimed knowledge of the who when\noutside traders sought confirmation.\nIt had been phoned to a telegraph\noffice, investigators found. President\nWhite of the grain exchange, ln a\nstatement, said the telegraph company and exchange had combined\nforces In an effort to uncover Identity of the sender.\nDumping of Russian wheat on the\nEuropean market added to the discouraging state of affairs and put\na heavier burden on the trading pit.\nWheat waa cheaper at thc close than\nIt has been since 1006. when prices\nwere quoted at 69 cents a bushel.\nOctouer wheat finished at 73 %\ncents, off 1% cents for, the session.\nOther futures declined to the same\nextentr exoept November which was\nolf 2^i cents at 74% oents. December closed at 75^i to 76 cents\nand   May  at  82?i   cents.\nLands at Harbor Grace;\nRefuels for Ocean\nTrip Today\nEXPECTS TO DO\nIT, 22 HOURS\nColumbia Is  in     Great\nCondition; Does 111\nMiles Hour\nHARBOR GRACE, Nfld,\nSept. 23.\u2014(AP)\u2014The transatlantic airplane Columbia,\npiloted by Capt. Erroll Boyd,\nand Lieut. Harry Connor,\nalighted here at sunset tonight, poised to cross the\nocean to London tomorrow\nmorning if the weather remained favorable.\nThe flyers landed at 4:30\np. m.f eastern standard time*\njust four hours and 22 minutes after taking off from\nCharlottetown, P. E. I., where\nthey had been held 10 days\nbecause of bad weather. They\ntook off originally from\nMontreal.\nThe flyers estimated that\nit would take them only 22\nhours to reach London,, and\nwere anxious to have the\nplane refueled tonight. Airport officials ruled against\nthat proceeding, however,\nand refueling will start at\ndawn tomorrow.\nBoyd said the Columbia\nwas in great condition and\nshould take to the waste and\ndangerous space above the\nNorth Atlantic as well as it\ndid. when Clarence Chamber-\nHn took it to Germany from\nNew York. The Columbia\nalso was used by Mable Boll\nin her unsuccessful attempt.\nThe flyers said today's\n! flight was uneventful. The\n| Columbia attained an average speed of 111. miles per\nhour.\nI ONLY TWO IN* GAR\nSUPREME   COl'BT   HKHlsTHMl\n%. SUPERANNUATED\nOTTAWA, Oat-, Bept. 33.\u2014Tho\n(superannuation of E. R. Cameron,\nK.O., as registrar of the supremo\ncourt of Canada, was announced at\nthe prime minister's office here\ntoday. He ls succeeded by James\nP. Bnellle. K.C.. a lawyer ot Ottawa.\n1 Mr. Cameron was appointed registrar\nla 1898.\nTWO MORE DEATHS\nFROM PARALYSIS\nIN TORONTO CITY\nCRASH\nTORONTO, Ont.. Sept. 23.\u2014Although tho infantile paralysis situation was thought to have reached\nIts peak some time ago, two more\ndeaths were r<T>orted to thi? medical\nofficer of health today. Tho tolal\nnumber of doaths, since tho outbreak, of this disease in tbe city, is\nseven.\nOPENING OLD SORES\nAT THE HAGUE\nUNEMPLOYMENT ON\nDECREASE, LONDON\nLONDON. Bept. 23.\u2014A Blight decrease in unemployment waa shown\nln figures officially announced by\nthe British ministry of labor today.\nThe total unemployed on September\n15 stood at 2,103,413. which ls 38.-\n158 less than tho previous week.\nThe total Is still 085,804 moro than\na year ago.\nAccompany   Bennett;\nto London\nOTTAWA, Ont.. Sept. 23.\u2014Major\nGeneral A. O. McNaughton, cnief\nof ffoneral staff, and Group Captain\nJ. Lindsay Gordon, director of the\nRoyal Caflflrtian air force, accompanied the Canadian representatives\nto the Imperial conference when\nthey sailed for London from Quebec\ntoday. i\nTHE HAGUE, Netherlands, Sept.\n'23.\u2014Robert Bonynge, commissioner\nfor tho United States in tho German-American mixed claims tribunal here, today charged German\nagents In the United States beforo\nthe entry of tho United States into\ntho European war engaged not. only\nIn arson and similar clmes but tn\nthe spreading of disease germs imperilling human llfo.\nConunlBslpner Bonynge, making a\nforceful concluding argument, declared tho German government\nagents had deadly disease bacilli\nfor distribution ambng nonet and\nmules at New York city and Mew-\nport News.\nSKATTLE. Sept. 23\u2014(AP)\u2014Aa far\nas known here, no third person rode\nIn the automobile which plunged\nover a 75 foot bunk at, Lake Kceche-\nlUB on the SnoqiiHlmie Pa*s hlRlvwoy\nlast night, kiltlna; Thomas Williams\nand Mlis Phil Ms Williams or Carlsou.\nWilliams was a beattie restaurant\noperator. The woman had beerf\nliving in Seattle tinder thn name\nof Williams and Carlson, hut was\nformerly of ftarrlsburg; Ore. They\nwere  not  related. _.\nDiscovery of two women's hats\nin the automobile led authorities at\nEllenaburg to search tor a third\nperson. Friends of tbe woman here\nsaid  that she carried two hats.\nMONUMENT   FOR   BLISS   CARMEN\nTORONTO. Ont., Sept. 23\u2014<CP>\u2014\nEver since the return of Bliss Carman's ashes to hla native soil a\nmovement haa been gaining impetus\nfor a worthy tribute to him from\nhis own poaple. Now, tho organl7_a-\ntlon of national and provincial committees for the Bliss Carman memorial fund is completed. Tlie memorial to the poet will consist ot a\nshrine and a statue.\nThc Weather\nMm. Max.\nNELSON  \u00ab ft?\nNanaimo    _._.  44 M\nVictoria         47 55\nVancouver     ..\u2014  44 ofi\nKamloops   ...-  3a 56\nPrince   George     an 84\nEstovan   Point   44 60\nPrince   Rupert  _.. 40 3B\nDawson    \u2014 - __.. 32 40\nSeattle       4fl 59\nPorLland   ..\u2014 \u2014 48 63\nSan   Francisco    _._  56 64\nSpokane      44 60\nLos    Angeles \u2022  ..\u2014  60 74\nPenticton  \u2014 S3\nVernon     -  30     ' 89\nGrand Forks  _. 38 65\nKaslo    - 45 60\nCranbrook:  30 46\nCalgary     22 -42    I\nEdmonton     _. 38 4o\nSwift current   60 68\nPrince  Albert    48 54\nQu'Appelle     _. 48       86\nWinnipeg     ....>    6'..       84\nFore>;aat   for  Wednesday:     Nelson\napd vicinity\u2014Partly cloudy and cool\nwith  occasionally  sleet.\n Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930.\nJAMES MACADLAY\nSIMMER RESIDENT\nFOR THIRTY YEARS\nCome Annually to    \"Stone-\nbryes\" at South\nSlocan\n\u25a0H\u2014WWWF\nVETERAN VANCOUVER\nBUSINESS MAN DIES.\nWas in Knowler and Mac*\ncanlay Partnership for\n40 Years\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 23\u2014 Death\nended what Is said to have been\ntbe oldest business partnership ln\nVanoouver. when James Macaulay,\npresident of the firm of Knowler\n& Macaulay, passed away at his\nhome, 4626 Osier avenue. In ill-\nhealth since last spring, when he\nwas operated on, he suffered a\nstroke on Saturday evening, from\nwhich he failed to recover. He\nvas 77.\nBorn in Colombo, Ceylon, and\niducated in Scotland, Mr. Macaulay\nlived for four years in Saskatchewan\nDefore coming to Vancouver ln 1889.\nA year later, with W. E. Knowler,\nhe founded the wholesale firm\nwith which both have been connected until Mr. Macaulay's death,\nMr. Knowler  is  at  present abroad.\nMr. Macaulay is survived by his\nwife and one daughter, Mrs. J. K.\nSlmp-on  9f  Powell  River.\nThe funeral waa held from the\nMount Pleasant Undertaking parlors,  Tuesday  afternoou.\nMr. and Mrs. Macaulay, though\ndomiciled In Vancouver, have been\namong the  oldest residents of the\nKootenay. having spent practically\nevery summer for the last 80 years\nat South Slocan, at their ranch,\n\"Stonebyres\". often they have spent\nnine months of the year there.\nThe past summer was the first\nfor many years they did not come\nto South Slocan, this being a direct\nconsequence of Mr. Macaulay's critical illness in the spring. According\nto word received at South Slocan\nTuesday, Mr. Macaulay's death occurred   Sunday,\nKnowler __ Macaulay havo had\na branch at Nelaon since early\ndays.\nCANADA 'VICTIM,'\nNARCOTICS    '\nGENEVA, Sept. 23.^-(AF)^-Mrs.\nMary Irene Parley of Alberta today\ntold the social questions committee\nof the League of Nations tliat\nCanada is one of \"the victims\" of\nthe   illicit   traffic  in  narcotics.\nShe said tbe situation was Improving, however, owing to th\u00a3 arrest of many taking part in the\ntraffic. Thorough control of narcotics entering Canada had also aided\nin decreasing the quantities illegally   brought   in.\nDELAY OPENING\nOF POSTOFFICE\nTRAIL, B. 0.i Sept. 23.\u2014Trail's\nnew post office building will not\nbfi occupied until the latter part\nof October at* the earliest. It had\nbeen thought that the new building\nwould be ready for occupancy by\nOctober 3, but non-arrival of furniture and the formality of tho official handing over of thc building\nto the government by tbe contractors will result In unavoidable delay.\nPostmaster J. B. Twaddle made\nannouncement to this effect today.\nSEES COLLAPSE\nOF GANDHI'S\nMOVE IN INDIA\nSIMLA, India, Sept. 23\u2014(AP)\u2014\nThe collapse of Mahatma Gandhi's\ncivil disobedience movement waa\nprophesied   tonight   ln  the   Indian\nSvernment's weekly communique on\ne political situation ln tho country.\nThe communique said the influence of propaganda by national\ncongress agents was \"rapidly evaporating\" and thou_ih still important\nln rural areas waa destined to\nfall inevitably because of thc deleterious economic consequences of\nthe civil disobedience campaign.\n\"The (methods of domination\nwhich have been the outstanding\nfeature of the congress have aroused\nthe apprehensions of minority communities and have stiffened their\nopposition.\n'\"Phe attempted boycott of education institutions has created a\nreaction among parents Hnd students.\n\"The boycott of foreign goods\nand tlie widespread loss it has caused to Indians are gradually but\nsurely alienating from tho congretis\nthe sympathy of an important section of tho Hindu middle class.\nLastly, the impression produced\nby propaganda dlssamlnated by congress agents, claiming an assured\nsuccess( of their proRTHm and their\nearly accession to power la rapidly\nevaporating. It may still have nn\nephemeral effect In some rural\nareas but it is not a factor that will\nseriously postpone tho Inevitable\ncollapse of the movement.\"\nTRAIL, B. C. Sept. al\u2014The cits\ncouncil last night decided to temporarily pay the rent of tho residence of Mrs.Coint.enay, who pleaded   destitution   In   hor   application\nRESCUE.!) FROM\nCLIFF\nPOBTIiAND, On.. Bept. .3.\u2014l'AP)\n\u2014A rescue party of JO carrying Paul\nCalllcott, experienced ' Portland\nmountaineer, on their ahoulders, arrived at government camp on Mount\nHood's slopes today, where Calllcott\nreceived medical treatment for Injuries he suffered tuinbllng down\nthe mountain. Be received a frac.\n\u2022Hired right ankle, bruised leg and\nfront bitten feet. Calllcott remained\non the mountainside alone from\nMonday until this morning when\nrescuers found him.\nCHILE ARMY LOYAL\nSANTIAGO DE CHILE, Sept. _8\u2014\n(AP)\u2014The army whloh enemies of\nPresident Carlos Ibanez had hoped\nto turn against him, was declared\ntoday by General B. Blanche, mln.\nlater of war to be absolutely loyal\nto the government.\nGeneral Blanche said lie had received assurance of the loyalty of\nthe troops at Conoepclan, where\nOen. Enrique Bravoe and Col. Mar-\nnraduque Brove. retired army officers, had hoped to start a revolution, . General Bravoa, col. Grove\nand three Chilean olvlllanB as well\nns two America navlators, who had\nbrought them from Argentina, were\narrested.\nW. E. MONYPENNY\nAND McDIARMID OF\nEMPIRE CONFAB\nFACESPROBLEMS\nConditions Greatly   Changed\nSince Last Gathering of\nDominions\nLONDON, Sept, 23.\u2014(By George\nHambleton, Canadian Press staff\ncorrespondent)\u2014The Imperial conference of 1930 will face Its cen>\ntral problem of Empire trade under ohanged conditions and with a\nlargely ohanged  personnel,\nSince the conference met four\nyears ago, irttematlonal trade has\nentered a' new phase. The upward\nmovement .of tariffs has heen accentuated. By safeguarding and stimulating their own production, the\nnations of continental Europe are\nseeking to become less and less dependent on Imported foodstuffs.\nCanada, for almost the first time,\nhas found her granaries filled with\nunsold wheat. Australia is faced\nwith a financial crisis so grave\nshe cannot balance her budget. The\nBritish market remains tho one\ndoor In the world. And Britain is\nslon such as she haa not known\npassing through industral depres-\nslnc0 the aftermath of the Napoleonic  wars.\nReorganising the Empire on tho\nlines of trade has, therefore, an appeal such as did not exist when Premier Bruce, of Australia, submitted\nREPRESENT TRAIL'Ws tariff-schema at the Imperial\neconomic conference of seven years\nago. Yet the reorganization will not\nWHEN TRAVELLING\nThe Following Offer the Best of Service\nNelson, B. C. Hotels        Vancouver, B. C. and Island\nTRAIL, B 0\u201e Sept. 33.\u2014 Olty be accomplished without dttflcutly.\n\u00a3!\"*-_\"; E- B' Monypenny and j The British manufacturer of tex-\nF ty___I?,'?-n<'_'. s-_s McD1\u00bb\"rml<l WW tiled, still fighting his way In tho\nixi Trails delegates to the annua! \u201e.orI(t lt,_r_ou.. claims he must have\nmeeting  of   the   B   c  Oood   Roads cltMp production to retain his trade.\nI Mr. Baldwin has so far declined to\n| arcept food taxes as part of hts\nj campaign program.\nj Without, food taxes Britain can-\nI net. give a tariff preference to the\n' food products of the Dominions.\nThe dominions, on the other hand,\nwill have to safeguard their own\nindustries In any scheme for reorganizing Empire trade.\niJKMl  6  to   11.\nfo\n__B______t___>_U_,_l_._, K_i. _ w,^^\n\u2014est-\nl\n\\>-.J\ni\ntjumr luitr1\ni\nRooms With _________ Water                  GBO. BEWW____, ftop.\n\u00a7\nrrl.ato Baths Ensulte                                           Nelson, B. 0.\ni\nHUME\u2014W. A. Wells, Edmonton;\nW. Livingstone, Sarsdalc; A. Myers,\nA. O. Larson, O. C. Thompson,\nC. B. Webb, A. C. Whltmorc, R. C.\nBrodle. C. Bayley, J. Selgrave, B.\nMayworth, J. Franklin. Vancouver;\nJ. A. Beverly, Fernie; Mr. and Mrs.\nW. E. M. Hayne, Spokane; Mr.\nand  Mrs.   H.  L.  Torken,  Iwwlston;\nDr. and Mrs, D. Broley, Kaslo;\nSnlllek, D, p. Rowland, Winnipeg;\nW. Sneddon, N. W. MacQueen,\nToronto; T. Boyd, Nelson; c. McLellan and family. Reglna; J. Cope,,\nKelowna; Mr. and Mrs. H. Knight.\nCranbrook; Mr. and Mrs. H. Knight,\nSaskatoon; L. P. Rowling, Victoria;\nj.   R.   Hansbrough,  Portland.\nl^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^g)\nSAVOY\u2014Mrs. W. Barnes, Mrs.\nDaniel- and sister, '.[rail; A. C.\nClerale, Nelson; J. Prudent, Mrs.\nC,  H.   Hewat,   G.   A.   Crerar,   C.   H.\niMhcFarland, Vancouver;    Mrs.    J.\nMacKinnon. Procter;     G,     Croft,\nNeedles;   G- K.  Lamport,  Nanaimo;\nA. J. Small, Brandon,\nQueen's Hotel\nThe  Center of  Convenience\nHot  and   Cold   Water  in\nEvery Room\nSteam Heated\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nQUEENS\u2014 P. Dounst. D, Brewls-\nter. Procter; Mr. and Mrs. F.\nLlndborn.  Klmberley.\nMadden Hotel\nD.   A.     .cDONALD\nSteam    Heated    Rooms   hy   thi\nDay. Week  or  Month\nEvery consideration shown\nto  guests\nCor. Baker and Ward Street.\nNelson\nNew Grand Hotel\nA Modern Brick Building\n616 Vernon  St.       Nelson,' B. O.\nHot and  Cold  Water and   Telephone   ln   all   rooms.   Steam\nHeated Throughout.\nRooms   by   Weekly   Rate\nor  by  the  Month\nP. h. KAFAK. Trop.\nEuropean Plan\nMADDEN\u2014J. Olson. E. Oraham.\nProcter; C. Taylor, Spokane; r. E.\nHorn, Marcus; Mr. and Mrs. j.\nLelkeman,  vanoouver.\nStrathcona Hotel\nWhen   ln   Nelson   stop   at   tha\nStrathcona. Hot and cold  water.\nRates II per night. Sperlnl rates\nby tbe week or month,\nNEW GRAND\u2014J. McKenzle. P.\nJamet, Fernle; Trail; H- Began,\nJ. Sundqulst, K Nordstrom, Procter; V Kelly, P. McCulloch, P\u00abeo-\nland;   I,   Hanson,   Vancouver.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n70S Vernon St. Phone tail\nH. WASSICK\nFifty Booms of Solid  Comfort\nHeadquarter, lor Logger* and\nMiners\nRead The Nelson Daily News\nBLACKBURN'S SUPER SERVICE\nSTATION\u201482a Seymour Sti The\nKootenay Tourist's Vancouver Garage. Moderate charges for Washing, Polishing and Greasing. Parking, Storage, Accessories. Gasoline,\nand Oils, Engine Repair work. Free\nCrank Case service. Tiro, Battery\nand Brako Service. Vulcanizing and\nSlmonlztng. See us for used cars.\nA large stock at all prices always\ncarried,\nMake your trip to Vancouver a plea-\n5HEL b^ having your meals at the\nNEW ORPHEUM CAFE-780 Granville st. choicest Food at, Moderate\nCharges.    James P. Dwyer.\nDUFFEBIN HOTEL\u201490n BjBYMOUR\nST\u2014Bright Rooms, Central. Moderate rates. A. Patterson, lat__ ol\nColeman, Crow's Nest, Proprietor.\nLONDON       CAFJ-TERIA      LTD.\u2014710\nRobson St. The ever popular dining\nPlace to make use of while in Vancouver.\nNew Tork notes that \"mellow\ntoned mahogany Irom 18th century\nEngland is a first choice of smart\ndecorators and hostesses for town\nhouses.\"\nKaslo and Spokane\nWUOmVOKTH'S      CAFE\n613 Riverside Ave. \"it's different.\"\nOfficial Western Travel club. Freo\nMaps and  Tourist Information.\nAutumn brides selecting utility\nlinens for their new homes show a\npreference for solid color, next white\nwith oolored borders, and lastly, all\nwhite.\nKING GEORGE Hotel\nFlr.st   class  accommodations.   Excellent   meals.  Boating and\nFishing.\nChicken   Dinner  every   Sunday\nevening\nRenter and Latham\nAinsworth, B. C.\nEnjoy Your Week-End and Summer Vacation at\nAINSWORTH\nHot Springs Hotel\nAND SWIMMING POOL *\nNATURE'S   HEALTH   AND   SUMMER   RESORT\nFURNISHED COTTAGES \u2014 EXCELLENT FISHING\nTrail, B. C.\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA.   P.   LEVESQUE,   Prop.\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb.\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb_,\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb..\u00ab,\u00ab.\u00bb _,_,_,_,_,_,\u201e,_,..........\nDOUGLAS\nHOTEL   W.\nROOMS and BATHS\nand   A.   OROUTAGE\nProp..\nSteam Heated\n, Throughout\nBox   608\nIlot and Cohl\nWater\nrbone _e_\nTRAIL, B.C.\nUNION OARAGE\u2014Service station\nand machine -shop. Accessories,\nuna, oils, Goodyear selected dealer.\nRossland   Ave.    Phone   1.\nNelson DailjyNews\nVacation Guide\nIs thoroughly read and used by\n\u2022lie many hundreds of eastern and\nwestern Canadian and American\ntourists who pass through the Kootenay every year during the summer\nmonths, in addition to more than\n4000 reaiers who live lr. the\n*<ootenay.\nNelson, B. G. Cuf es\nThe Standard CaSe\n320 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nOPEN DA* AND NIOHT\n11:30 to 2:30 Special  Lunch .'l.'ic\n_:30 to 8 P.' in.  supper  _.. 880\nPHONE  IM\nKOOTENAY CAFE\nVERNON   STREET\nDinner, 11:30 to 8:30 35o\nSupper,   5:80 to 8 p. m 35o\nShort  Orders a  specialty\nQuick Service\nNext Kootenay Hotel, Nelson\nThe Royal CaS\"\nCLASHIC RE8TALBAN1\nseflnoment and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN DAY AND NIOHT\nSpecial Dinner 11:30 to 2:30 850\n'urper    5:30  to 8 850\nWe    ,ieclallre In Chop\n8uey and  Noodles\n\"\"lone 182\nB.C.P.O.executive In recent session urged the necessity of . packing this year's crop with tho least\npossible cxponse. Cheap products\nfrom the U. 8. are, according to\nthese present, a rail threat at our\nmarkets. ,_.\nRAUN HAS LITTLE\nEFFECT ON WATER\nSUPPLY AT TRAIL\nTRAIL. B. C . Sept. 23.\u2014The rain\nof the pMi lew days haa not. increased io an? extent tho flow of\nwater in neighboring creeks whloh\nfurnish Trail';, domestic water supply, according to a report by fclty\nengineer to the city council laat\nnight. Thero was still the necessity for car\u00a9 that water was not\nwasted.\nTlie question arose following discussion of certain water pipes in\ntho vicinity of Lookout street which\nhad caused trouble through freezing lost winter. The pipes were,\nbeing looked after by tho engineering department  it  was  roported.\nSUCCESSFUL TEA\nGIVEN AT TRAIL,\nANGLICAN MISSION\nTBAIL, B. C, Sept. 23.\u2014Cakes\npastries and cookies, with many\nother delicacies, wero offered today\nat a most successful sale of home\ncooking ln East Trail, arranged under tlie auspices of tlie Women's\nauxiliary of East Trail Anglican\nmission. Mra. J. H. Owen, convenor\nwas assisted hy Mrs. H. Currie, Mrs.\nA. H. Johnston. Mrs. A. J. Williams\nand Mrs,  A.  Yates.\nPLANE TO AID\nSICK WOMAN\nIN THE NORTH\nTHE PAS, Man., Sept. 23\u2014Treacherous north country weather halted\nefforts to rush medical aid by plane\nto Mrs. D. Donaldson, wlfo of the\nHudson's Bay company factor at\nNelson House, 200 miles north of\nhere. Mrs. Donald is seriously ill\nat tho little frontier outpost and\nplans to rUsh Dr. S. Stephansson of\nThe Pas to her bedside by plane\nfrom Cormorant lake air base wero\nfrustrated by heavy rains and wind\ntoday.\nAIR FORCE PLANES\nRETURN\nOTTAWA, Ont., Sept. 23.\u2014(CP)\u2014\nNews of the arrival *of No. 2 general\npurpose department of tho Royal\nCanadian air forco at Churchill, after a scries of flights extending\nover 8000 miles ainco July 4, is announced from the department of\nnational defence hero today. Two\nairplanes were employed, piloted by\nPlight Lieut F. J. Mawbcaley and\nPlight Sergeant H. J. Winny. C. S.\nMacDonald, B.L.S.. of the department of the Interior, accompanied\nthe  party.\nThe purpose of the detachment\nwas to explore itfid photograph the\nmain travelled water and aerial\nroutes of the North West Territories\nand to inspect and \u2022 report upon\ngasoline and oil caches of the\nRoyal Canadian air force located\nIn   this   region.\nBEATTY TELLS OF\nFAITH IN CANADA\nVICTORIA. B. C-. Sept- -3.\u2014As the\nresult ot Its lalth ln Canada and\nan Intelligent aaU-lnfc-rest, the Canadian Pacific railway has mado a\ncapita! expenditure ot approximately \u00bb__8,000,00o on development to\nthe last decade. President. E. W.\nBeatty stated In addressing a Joint\nluncheon of the Canadian and El-\nv. uhs  rere  today.\nBecause student* of history s_w\nthe country entering a cycle of depression was no reason for alarm.\nMr. peatty said. Rather there was\nan Indication of continued progress\nJust as certain, If not as speotaou-\nla\u00bb, as that of tho last decade.\nTHREE-YEAR-OLD\nKILLS MOTHER\nSAULT fiVITE. MARE., Opt., Sept.\n23.\u2014Ma. M. r. Clark, 97, wife of\nformer Provincial Constable Boy\nClark, -was almost Instantly killed\ntoday when shot through the heart,\nwith a' .22 calibre revolver by her,\nthree-year-old son Bruce, at the\nfamily home. The. shooting was\n\u25a0purely accidental. Mrs. Clark, seeing tjio child playing with the\nweapon, endeavored tc* take It away\nfrom him and it was discharged.\nEUROPEAN BODY\nTO STUDY THE\nBRIAND PLAN\nTo Hold First Session, Federation of Europe question, January\nGENEVA. Sept. 23\u2014<Ap.~Securely within the structure of the\nLeague of Nations, M. Aristide\nBrland's scheme for a federation\nof European states, took another\nbrief step forward today through\ntlie organisation of small-European\ncommittee of study to Induire Into\nits possibilities.       .\nUnder instructions . from the\nleague assembly, a special commit-\n\"\u00ab nf European diplomatic representatives met for the first time\na uia icagu. council's glass walled\nohambet The French foreign minister, father of thc idea, was cho&en\n.o be the first chairman of the\ngroup which numbers the spokesman of 37 nations.\nFinding hla committee closer to\nthe leagflo and to , the idda of\nuniversality. M. Briand designated\nSir Eric Drummond, chief of tho\nleague's secretariat, to be the secretary of the new committee. The\ncommittee agreed to the chairman's\nsuggestion that his memorandum\nof May 17. in which he cet forth\nfully his Ideas of European cooperation under political direction, together with the government's replies thereto, should be used as\nthe  first  textbook.\nThe committee decided to assemble for the first regular session\nnext January at the time of the\ncouncil   session.\nThe committee during its session\nof about half an hour acknowledged the authority given it by the\nassembly of tho league to seek the\ncooperation of other nations, even\nnon-European, in pursuing its study.\nBIG MOVIE SHEPS\nEARN MORE THAN\nHOLLYWOOD STARS\nHOLLYWOOD, Calif.. Sept. 28\u2014Big\nmovie ships earn more per day\nthan most Hollywood actors.-\nIt coats $1000 a day to rent some\nof  the big  three-and-four maaterB,\nTheir \"It\" comes from hectic\nyears on the high sea*\u2014ae rum runners, whalers and relief ships to\nloo-trapped vessels In the frozen\nnorth.\nAged and sea-worn now, their\nbackground thus makes them authentic \"prope\" for actors in the\nguise of pirates, princess or whalers.\nThoy still are seaworthy enough for\nshort cruises in calm waters.\nAnd seldom aro they subjected to\nstorms and gales. Usually when sea\nstorms are depleted oa the Bcreen\nthe \"harassed\" ships aro miniatures\nthat sail on studio ponds.\nTlie Bear, oldest of these vessels,\nwas launched ln 1874 In Scotland\na whaler. After failure of tho\nGreeley relief expedition in 1882 the\nBear, with two other craft, rescued\nthe castaways.\nIn 1888 lt became the property\nof the United States revenue cutter service, now the coast guard, and\nfrom then until 1628 It carried supplies and mall to Alaska and rescued\nIce-trapped vessels. Now lt belongs\nto the city of Oakland, Calif.\nThe Lily, a two-masted schooner,\nls the largest of several ex-rum runners now following a less hectic\nexistence. It was a liquor carrier for\nfive years under Nicaraguan register,\nthen was captured and confiscated\nin 1821 by the Canadian government.\nA studio brought lt from Canada\nand it has been used in \"The Single\nStandard\", \"The Ship from Shanghai\" and other pictures,\nShips most frequently used are the\nSanta Clara and the Indiana, built\nln Bath, Me., and launched ln 1876.\nThey originally carried freight from\nBoston around the Horn to - China.\nA whale was honored when the\nNarwhal was named. It is a 600-\nton barkentlne and began whale\nhunting 47 years ago. An ambitious\nadventurer not long ago started on\na trip around the world ln it, but\nnear the  Tahatl  islands  lt  sprung\nleak. Later It was repaired and\ntowed to San Francisco. Five years\nago it was used' ln \"The Sea Beast\"\nand again lately when the picture\nwns remade as \"Moby Dick\".\nThe most used steamer in the\nmovies ls the Walmea,' originally\ntho City of Topeka, which slid into\nthe water in Chester, Pa., in 1884.\nIt carried passengers and freight to\nAlaska for years.   \u2022\nDozens, of retired and semi-re-\ntlrcd fish.- lumber and whaling\nschooners and one-time rum-running\ncraft of all descriptions are in nearby ports ^waiting a call.\nApparently a ship's happy hunting\nground is Hollywood.\nSUN ELEPHANT IS\nA NOVEL CATCH\nGENOA Italy, Sept. 33\u2014A \"sea\nelephant\", weighing 300 pounds and\nmore than 15 feet long was hauled up\nhere by fishermen and killed with\nknives after a hard fight. It waa\nthe biggest of tbe species caught\non thn Llgurlan coast this summer.\nCREW   RESCUED\nPETERHEAD, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, Sept. .23.\u2014(AP)\u2014Slxty-iour\nmen. many of them Japanese and\nLascars, who formed the crew of the\n6614 ton British steamer City of\nOsaka, which ran on the ,rocks\nnear here In a storm during the\nnight, were rescued todny by lifeguards.\nVALUABLE   TIMBER  TIOUBATENED\nVICTORIA, B. Ot, Sept. 38^-A\nbrush fire on Gabrloia Island, near\nNanaimo, today threatened a valuable stand of timber, but fire rangers there tonight expressed the belief that they had the bluae under\ncontrol. Residents of the dlstrlot\nwere reported to ba ln no danger.\nDAMAGED    SHIP   REACHES   FORT\nBREST,' France, Sept. 33.\u2014(AP)\u2014\nTho Hamburg-Umorlka freighter Li-\nvadla made port at 3 p, m. today\ntowing the Greek ship Theodores\nBulgaria, reported ln distress yesterday with a cargo of 7000 tons of\nwheat. The Wheat was said to have\noeen   only   slightly   damaged.\nPOPULAR NELSON\nFAMILY LEAVES\nFOR COAST HOME\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. D. Bw-\nson and Family Go to\nVictoria\nIn apJendtd tribute to tho popularity of m. and  Mrs. J. H. D,\nBenson and three daughters, who\nlift lkflt night by the Kettle .Valley for their new home in Vlotorla,\nsome 60 Nelson residents gathered\nat the station to bid their adlous,\nLeaving last night Mr. and Mrs.\nBenson terminated 10 years of res'*\nIdence ln Nelson where Mr Benson\nhas been manager of the impcml\nbank of Canada. Recently -he had\nbeen promoted to the management of the Vlotorla branch of\nthe  bank.\nMr. Benson who has been con<\nnected with thc Imperial bank ln\nvarious capacities over a period of\n34 years was born in Seaforth, Ontario. At the age of five he, with\nills parents, moved to Reglna where\nlie received his education.\nSTARTS    BANKING\nIN   CALGAEY\nHln banking career started in\nCalgary In 1890 and proceeded ln\nsuccession branches In Edmonton\nand Edmonton south, negtna, and\nRevelstoke.\nIn 1904 Mr. Benson filled his\nfirst post as branch manager, at\nWetaskiwln, Alta. While at Wet-\nasklwln Mr. Benson married and in\n1808 waa again transferred this\ntime   to   Golden.\nIn 1911 he was moved to Nelson\nwhere he remained until, hla latest promotion to victoria.\nWhUo in Nelaon Mr. Benson\nbuilt up enviable reputation as a\nbusiness man which was recognized,\nadmittedly, by the other members\nof his profession even though,.they\nwere of  the  opposition.\nIn addition to banking, Mr. Benson was an ardent supporter and\nmember of the Nelson board of\ntrade and during the war years\nacted ae local secretary for the\nCanadian Patriotic fund here, Secretarial work in connection with\nthe. fund reached prodigious proportions by the end of the war\nWELL-KNOWN AS GOLFER  ,\nSince the inception of the Nelaon Golf and Conutry club here\na few yean ago Mr. Benson has\nquietly bult up a reputation of\nthe steady golfer not to be taken\ntoo lightly in any competition\nMothodlcnlly he has toppled club\nchampions and near-champions\nfrom their pedestal*, In friendly\nmatches. \u25a0    -\nMrs. Benson, too, was welliknown\nIn Nelson golf circles but is better remembered from earlier years\nwhen her four talented children,\nwhom she trained, gave many musical recitals here.   -\nAccompanying Mr. and Mrs. Ben-\npon last night were their three\ndaughters the Misses Isabel], Margery and Nipper Benson. All three\nof the Benson girls, especially' Is-\naboll and Margery, are well-known\nfor thetr miusloal and dramatic\nability. Tennis players throughout\nNelson and district know woll the\nprowess on the courts, of these\ntwo girls.\nJim C. Benson, only son and\neldest of the family, though not\nat home with his family at the\ntime of their departure, ls also\nwell-known here as a musician and\ntennis player.\nCladuattng ln liberal arte last\nsummer from the University of\nAlberta Jim, as everyone knows\nhim, haa been, and is still playing\nleading parts tn ''Follyanna\", on\ntbe prairie Chautauqua circuit.\nRheumatism23Yrs1\nDiscovers Way to\nBanishall Painl\nNpthing Helped Till Sh(\nTook \"FRUIT-A-TIVESl\n\"Hod rlwumatlsrl\nfor1 93. .0016, Hnopl\ntola cmucln't help _ a\nWon la bed wh.l\nI tools 'Fruit-_-tlve.il\nThey have done wonI\nders. can do mff\nwork aud no moil\n_oln.\" \u2014 Mra. A. X_\nWeld, Wyward, sa\u00bbk. f\nJust one' ol thousands who sal\nrheumatism, neuralgia, neuritis f;f\naway quick with \"S.uit-a-tlve_.l\nChronic constipation and-Uver troul\nbles end overnight. Bad stomac; P\nbiliousness, indigestion, hewtburJ\nbos vanish like magic. Kidney anil\nbladdor Ills, pain in back go In hu.l\nry. Nerves quiet, sound aleep at onccf\nTen of nature's greatest remedial\ncombined in handy little tabic*\nMarvelous discovery of famous Oan|\nadian doctor. Speedy results. . J\nQet \"Frult-a-tlves\" from druggls]\ntoday.   Sleep fine, wake, up great.\nARTHUR OF TRAIL\nHOLDS WORLD MAT\nCHAMP TOA DRAW\nYakima Followers Think He\nWill Win in Final\nBoat\nCPJFL SOT TO\nPUSH AVlATIOf\nVICTORIA Septi 23\u2014While It\nInteresting Itself ln aviation ancll\nhas. acquired a minority lntere.vf\nin a new. alrwaye company to' bd\nincorporated to operate ln eaaten|\naud western Canada, the .Canadlail\nPacific Railway does not Intenti\nat .hie time to embark on Join I\nrail and air transportation l,lke thai\nattempted in the United States!\naccording to President B, W. Beattyl\nK.C.; on his arrival here todnfl\nafter a trip around Vanconvel\nIsland.\nWhen asked what his, companl\nintended to do in the \u00a3evelo)?men|\nof aviation, he eald: \"Both thi\nCanadian Pacific end Canadian N.il\ntlonal railways have a minoritl\nInterest In new airways companl\nprop-used to be Incorporated to ail\nquire existing services In dasteiT\nand western Canada. The P\u00b0Jld\nof the railway in respect of al\nservices will, of course, depent\nupon- the developments whloh takl\nplace but primarily their lnteresT\nwill be in the utilization of all\nservices In connection with thi\nhandling of mall and express anl\npassenger service where that ll\nfeasible. I do not expect, that thi\nexperiment tried In the Unitpl\nStates .of Joint rail and air transl\nportation services wllj be immediate!\nly copied hi Canada. Certaliill\nnot until its value is .more dei\"\nlnltely ascertained.\"\nNO TRACE FOUND\nOF THE BODY OF\nP. DEMIDOFF TRAI.\nYAKIMA. Wsab.. Sept. 23.\u2014Krnio\nArthur held Jim Lamb, Junior middleweight champion of the world,\nto a draw here tonight ln a two-\nhour limit match. Lamb took the\nfirst fall In fi8 minutes, Arthur the\nsecond ln 83 minutes. The last 34\nminutes went to a draw. The match\nwas billed for the Junior middleweight championship of the world-\nErnie will get lt next time, according to many of his large following\nsupporters heM.\nTRAIL CITY IS\nTO BE ASSESSED\nIMMEDIATELY\nTRAL, B .C, Sept. 23.\u2014A general\nreassessment of the city will ba\nmade before Trail's ID31 assessment\nroll Ib prepared.\nIt  was  reported   at  the meeting\nof the city council last night that\nmuch of the preliminary work had\nbeen done  and  decision  waa  then\nmade to complete the work.\nTRAIL, B. O., Sept. 23.-\u2014Dragglnj\noperations at the lower Arrow lifefl\nln the vicinity of Syrlnga creelc ecu\nducted all day yesterday failed t|\nlocate the body of P. H. DemldoiJ\nof 1-ail who drowned In that vlcluf\n\u25a0Hy late Sunday afternoon.\nToday the large party of search!\nerrs  Who  ere  cooperating  with  til r\nprovincial  police' decided  to reaoM\nto dynamite in an effort to rah\nthe body.   No lnformatloh had hw.\\\nreceived up to noon that would i.\ndlcate that today's efforts had ber\nanv ' more   successful   than   yester|\nday's.\nTROLLING  BOAT  BURNS\nASTORIA, Ore., Sept. 28.\u2014(AP)A\nThe trolling boat Joy B. burned anl\nsank about five miles off the mon;I\nof the Columbia river late todal\nArthur Graham, nwaco, Wash,, anl\nhis son, Robert, owners of the bo:ijT\nwere rescued by the crew of thf\npilot echooner Columbia.\nThe\nPrudent Man\nlays in hla coal now. He does no]\nwait until cold weather, when svl\nerybody' wants coal at once. Ha J\nfor preparedness on the coal quesl\ntion anyway. Besides, coal ls oheapl\ner at this season, Why not be a\nwlae aa he, and give ua your coiiL\norder now? There's profits u well\nas  prudence  in  doing  ao.\nWest TvansCe* Co.\nPHONE   SS\ns?\n?\nSPECIALTY\nHOPPE\nNEW SHIPMENT\nSmart Fall Dresses\nEvery wanted shade. Sizes 14 to 42. A\nreal value. Fox's , , .\t\n$6.95\nFall Millinery\nFELTS and VELVETS\nLovely new  styles and every\n-   wanted shade. Fox's,\n$3.95 to $b.95\n THE NELSON DAILY N1.W3      WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1980.\nPage Thn\u00bb\nCANADA IN MINING CONGRESS\n(Leading Place In Production\n\u25a0 of Minerals Belongs to'\nDominion\n\u2022 .'Canada.- record of mineral production and of. mining expansion-is\ni_ao of rapid and fairly .steady progress. It ls mainly a. story of. the\nilisoo.ery and development of mln-\neral deposits coincident' with tho\nmarch of exploration and progress,\nthe trend of whloh now seems to\nbe definitely established toward the\nnorthern parts of the. Dominion.\nVast,areas of potential mineral interest still await the comln_ of tho\nejplofer and prospeotor, and it is\nreasonably within . the bounds of\npossibility that much more mineral\nwealth lies undiscovered ln tho\nnorth than ihas yet been developed,\ntpheso various \u2022 factors combine to\nStrengthen Canada's postlon as a\nmining country and to indicate a\nsplendid future for her mineral in.\ndustrtes.\" .\n'With the above paragraph Dr.\nQhirles Camsell, deputy minister\nof mines, and Canada's representative at the Third Empire Mining\naim* Metallurgical congress, in South\nAfrica, closed his Introductory remarks to the \"Review of the Mining Industry ni Canada\", presented\nby him at the Congress meeting.\nThe congress opened ln Capetown,\nSouth Africa, on March 24, and\nmeetings were also held ln Klmberley, Johannesburg, Bulawayo and\nDurban, the closing session taking\nplace ln Capetown on May 0. Nearly\n250 delegates representing every part\nof the British Empire attended.\nPlans for a stock-taking of the mln.\neral resources of the Empire were\nformulated an exohange of views\nafforded, and opportunities provided\nTV) not wait for infection, lame-\nnenor _____________ to set ta\n. . . nib in Absorbine. Jr., immediately . . . it la both a concentrated liniment sod * dependable\nanticcotic . . . quickly relieves\npnin, inflammation and soreness\n... keep it handy at all timet far\nFirst Aid . . . sreasdets and\nwill not stain the skin ... atyotn.\n'druggist's\u2014$1.33 per bottle,    jjj\nJii'lici'c. Hi i' imi it\nliediicvtlK-Mi'i-ttinti\nAbsorbinej\nSIGN FOR U. S. PROHIBITION CARS\nfor fi close-range vie? of every\nphase of mining In South Africa.   -\nA' series of papers covering mineral . production and mining activity\nln eveiy part of Canada prepared by\nleading authorities ln the Dominion\nwas presented by Dr. Camsell. \\ln\nhis Introduction,. Dr. Camsell said\nin part:\n\"The development of, the Canadian\nmining and metallurgical Industries\ntp their present status is of com.\nparatlvcly recent date. For many\nyears the term\" Granary of the Empire' symbolized the more important economic assets of the Dominion, and It Is only within the past\ntwenty years that mining and'metallurgy have appeared as factors of\ngrowing Importance on the national\nindustrial horizon. During this period progress In mining and Its allied industries has' been steadily\nmaintained, not only ln quantity\npMductlOn and Increased variety of\noutput but also In unproved technical methods, until today mining\nranks next to agriculture and forestry as the third of Canada's great\nprimary industries..\n\"Some Idea of the extent of the\ngrowth and of 'the present importance of the Canadian mining industry may be obtained fromh the\nfollowing summary of progress. In\n1900 the total annual mineral output, of the Dominion was valued at\n$64,420,877; In 1910 it had risen to\n$106,823,623; ln 1920 to $227,859,665;\nand in .1928 -a new high record of\n$273,446,864 was reacheg, surpassing\nthe previous high,record values of\n1926 and 1937.      .     .      ...\n\"Only In recent, years has Canada's\ninternational status as a producer of\nminerals been established, n the\nperiod between 1886 and 1826 the\nDominion secured practically complete control of the world's nickel\nmarkets, ninety per cent of whose\nrequirements It now supplies. Canadian asbestos still supplies the largest part of the world's demand for\nthis commodity, and Canada may\nalmost bo considered as the in_\ndustrla! mother of the metal cobalt. The output of the Porcupine\nand Klrkland lake districts of Ontario has placed Canada third\namongst gold-producing countries,\nand at the moment of writing the\nDominion takes third place m the\nproduction of silver, fourth in the\nproduction of lead and copper, and\nalso supplies a considerable portion\nof the world's zinc. More than\nforty primary metals , and minerals\nare listed in tho federal production\nstatistics and of these the metals\nand    other    minerals    referred    to\n\u25a0M_W::k*fo6S TOTAL\n'5 FARES\nto CANADA\nADVANCED\nBRITISHERS\nin Canada may now\nbring forward their\nFamilies, Relatives and\nFriends'on Easy Terms.\nFor lull details apply:\u2014\nJ. S. CARTER, District\nPasiencer Agent, Nelson, B.C.\nBritish Re-Union\nAssociation\nCANADA'S ANNUAL\nARCTIC PATROL\nMAKES PROGRESS\nDepartment of Interior Expedition Is on Stormy\nVoyage\nIt's not of the alcoholic kind. Only a sample of new sign which will be\ninstalled on all cars of, thc prohibition unit in Washington, D. C. Left to\nright: Col. Amos W. Woodcock, director ot prohibition; H. M. Lucius (in\ncar), president of the Maryland Auto club, and Ernest N. Smith, former\nvice-president of tho American association.\nabove, together with coal, natural\ngas, petroleum, gypsum, salt, platin-\nstanding importance. With thc ag-\num and palladium, arc all or out-\ngregatc annual mineral output of\nthc Dominion now well over a\nquarter of a billion dollars It may\nbc said wtih confidence that, thc\nCanadian mining industry is at\npresent soundly established    .   .    .\n\"In the field of metallurgy Can_\nada continues to keep pace with\nthe advance made In Its basic mtn-\nJng Industries. The progress In milling practice, lu concentration methods or ore treatment, and In\nmetallurgical practice of oro reduction has been to some extent\nresponsible for the increased output of thc metaH The development\nol hydro-electric power, so rapidly\noxtendtng throughout tho Dominion,\nIn making it possible to carry on\nmining operations on a larger scale\nand with decreased tonnage ex.\npendlturcs, to treat and reduce the\nores moro cheaply, and to produce\npure electrolytic refined metals in\ncompetition with other countries.\nAn Increasing proportion of the total output of Canadian ores is\nbeing  refined   in  the   Dominion.\n\"A marked increaso has been\nnoted In recent years in tho number of plants engaged ln thc chemical manufacturing industries. In\nCanada, as in other progressive\ncountries, the tendency Is to force\ntre product of thc mine to yield\nthe largest possible contribution\nto the national welfare, and as a\nconsequence the lntrrdtpendence of\nthe mining, metallurgical, and chemical industries is becoming much\ngreater thart formerly. Modern\nchemical processes arc turning into\nindustrial channels materials formerly entirely wasted, and aro in,\ncreasing the economic value of raw\nmaterials formerly wastefully, consumed.    Very considerable quantities\no* poA_ouo rti-uuoj ngriftiU-lij o\nescape from smelter fllimes are\nbeing turned to industrial uses\nand contributing appreciable sums\nto tho smelter J revenues. The\nmost remarkable development along\ntheso lines is found In the processing ot coals, In which the application of scientific research ls\nmaking good headway toward the\nsolution of ono of the most urgent\nproblems of tho present day This\nIs also ono of the major problem:;\nrelated to mining development now\nbeing Investigated by tho Dominion\ndepartment of mines at Ottawa.\nThc chemical industry and many\nother Industries arc directly or indirectly dependent upon mining, and\nthe progress made along these lines\namply indicates tlie growing importance of mlnng in Canada's Industrial  development.    .    .    ,\"\nEXCHANGE NOTES\nCLOSES, INCIDENT,\nSEIZURE OF SHIP\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 23\u2014(AP)\u2014\nAn exchange ot diplomatic notes\nbetween tho Washington ahd Ottawa governments' has. brought to a\nclose the most recent Incident. \u2022 ot\na seizure or. a. Canadian vessel oft\nAmerican   shores   by   coast   guard\nFORD\nLEADS AGAIN\nNow a new Heavy Duty Truck with 2 WHEEL-\nBASES. 131 and'157 inches. NEW RADIATOR.\nGREATER COOLING SURFACE. NEW AND LARGER HUB. ALL WITHOUT ANY INCREASE IN\nCOST.\nMODELS NOW ON DISPLAY\nDo you notice the number of New Ford Cars? The fact\nis self-evident. They are a wonderful car to drive. We have\nseveral models in our showrooms now which we will be pleased\nto demonstrate to you.\nCome in today!   Ask for a demonstration!\nOur shop work Is always worthy of considerable mention.\nBring your car in. Tell us when you want it It will be ready on\nthe minute and you will be pleased with thc service and\nprices. *\nKootenay Motors\nH.vHarrop\nAFRICAN EMPEROR\nWILL BE CROWNED\nWITH GREAT POMP\nADDIS        ABBARA, A'oysssinia,\nS:spt. aa\u2014This ancient capital city\nIs circling itself for another of\nIts colorful coronations. On November 2, His Majesty Hallo Sellable I la to be crowned emperor\nof the Ethiopians with all pomp\n\u2022 original to his long established\nrace. Abyssinia fs tho only absolute   monarchy   in   Africa,\nH. M. Halle \"Scllasslc I lias been\nthe center of one coronation. In\n1928, he was named co-ruler of\nthe country with lie titllc ol Negus\n(Klhff.) by thc Empress Zaodltdu\nwho died on April 3, Much ot\nhis time ana that of the govern*\nment of lato has heccn spent in\npreparing for the blf- coronation.\nThe new -Emperor will receive his\ncrown from thc principal archbishop of tho Ethiopian church\nIn tho presenco of representatives\nof the various governments of the\nworld.\nBefore being named Negus, Halle\nSellapslo I was governor of thc\nproving or Harar. Ills father, who\nwas a cousin of the Emperor\nMenellk II, who died in 1013, hold\nthe' same distinction beforo \"him.\nThc coming to the throne bf Hallo\nScllasslc Is. being watched closely\nby the threo European countries\nwhich have colonics adjoining Abyssinia\u2014 England, Franco and Italy.\nSince bis trip through Europe\nIn 1024, thc emperor ha.s adopted\nmore modern way ot doing things.\nFranco and Italy arc now Jockeying for predominant Influence In\nthe country. Commercial traffic\nfor thc northern part of Abyssinia\nMas been handled through tho\nport of Jibuti in French Somali-\nland.\nRecently, a treaty was signed between Italy and, Abyssinia calling\nfor construction of a new road\nfrom tho coast city of Assah ln\nEritrea, which is controlled by\nItaly, to Magdala, a strategic city\nin Abyssinia. This, it ts believed\nwill divert some of the traffc from\nthe  French  port.\nGreat Britain ls nterested In the\ncountry becauso head waters of the\nBlue Nile, which is the life of\nthe Sudan, are In its mountains.\nAn American construction oempany\nwas recently awarded a contract\nfor canalization in this section of\nthe  Sudan.\nCOAST HARBOR\nBOARD NAMED\nOTTAWA. Ont., Sept. 23.\u2014(CP) \u2014\nTho Vancouver harbor board was\nannounced from tho premier's office\ntoday. Sam McClay is president,\nand the other members aro James\nD.   Thompson   and   Tt.   B.   Williams.\nDO YOU\nSUFFER FROM\nCONSTIPATION.\nCountless remedies aro advertised\nfor constipation. Many relieve for\nthe moment but they are habit,\nforming and must ho continued.\nOthers contain calomel and dangerous mineral drugs, wheih remain In the fiystem. settlo ln the\nJoints and cause aches and pains.\nSomo nre hi*reh purgatives which\ncramp and (tripe and leave a depressed after effect.\nAvoid lubricating oils which only\ngreaso the intestines and encourage\nNotwithstanding storms, heavy ice,\nand adverse winds, thevwork of re-\nprovlslouing the posts on tho islands\nof the Canadian Arctic archipelago\nand making the annual patrol Is\nproceeding. Tho steamer Beothlc,\nwhich left North Sydney, Nova\nScotia, with the department of the\ninterior's 1930 expedition In charge\nof Mr. Oeorge P; Mackenzie of thc\nNorth West Territories and Yukon\nbranch, has completed the northern leg of the voyage to Bache\nPeninsula, Ellesmore island, and ls\nnow engaged ln visiting the posts on\nDevon and Baffin Islands.\nThe Beothlc sailed on tho evening of July 31 with a party of administrative officers, scientists, and\nmembers of the Royal Canadian\nMounted police, for a voyage which\nwill cover approximately 8000 miles\nbefore the ship returns late In\nSeptember. For tho first part of\nthe voyage through tho gulf of\nSt. Lawrence and along the Labrador\ncoast,, fair weather prevailed and\ngood progress was made. However,\nwhen tho ship turned eastward for\nthe crossing to thc Greenland coast,\nheavy storms wero met and for\nmany hours the staunch vessel was\nbadly buffeted. However, notwithstanding her heavy cargo, she weathered the galo and thc expedition\npaid its usual call at Godhavn,\nthe Beat of the local Danish government, on thc morning of August 7, remaining there until four\no'clock in the afternoon. As In\nprevious years the visit of the\nCanadian expedition was tho occa-\ntlon for a public holiday. The\nparliament, of North Greenland adjourned for thc duration of the\ncall. Governor and Mrs. Rosendahl\nand other Danish officials and their\nWives wero the guests of the officer In charge or thc expedition on\nboard the ship. The Canadian and\nDanish officials discussed matters\nof mutual interest touching on the\nwork in tho Arctic. Dr. Porslld, who\nreturned to Greenland from Canada\non the Beothlc, disembarked at\nGodhavn.\nLeaving Godhavn. thc ship was\nheaded northward along tbe Greenland coast on Its dash to Bache\nPeninsula on Ellesmore island, tho\nfarthest north post. The weather\nduiing this part of thc voyage was\nreported as dull, with strong north\nwinds, a moderate sea, and little\nfurther progress of the Beothlc\nICq but bergs. On August 10, the\nwns prevented hy the Ice which\nblocked Smith sound. By eight\no'clock on thc evening of tho llth\nshe had worked her way through\ntho barrier to Fram Havn, whero\nthe members of the Bache Peninsula detachment, Constables McLean, Beattie and Fraser were waiting to greet the expedition. Then\nbegan a flvo days' battle with the\nfloes ln Buchanan bay In an unsuccessful attempt to reach Bache\nPeninsula.\nHours of following tiny leads.\nforcing openings, retreating, and\nadvancing brought the Bcothic within ten miles of the post on August\n12 only to have thc terrific pressure of the Ice necessitate thc withdrawal or the vessel to the protection of Fram Havn. Inspector Joy\nof tho Royal Canadian Mounted\nPolice, on his annual lour of In.\nspectlon, boarded a \"small boat and\nby taking advantage of thc clear\nwater between the shore and the\ngrounded ire was able to reach the\npost. However no amount of effort could bring the ship to Ita\nobjectlvo and on the 16th, after\nreaching a point within fifteen\nmiles of Bache Peninsula, whero\ntwelve tons of tho supplies for thn\npost wore landed, the ship returned\nto Fram Havn, and hopo of reaching tho post was abandoned. The\nremaining supplies wero unloaded at\nthis point; and the ship bade farewell to tho tlirep officers of Canada's most northerly pollco detachment.\nStorms which swept the Beothlc\nfrom fitem to stern retarded the\nprogress of the ship on Its southward voyage through Sntlth ,somid\nand Baffin bav to thc post of Dun-\ndas Harbour,\" Devon island. The\nship arrived at Dundas Harbour on\nAugust in. After -unloading supplies at this point the Beothlc began the atempt to force her way\nwestward through the Ice to Winter\nHarbour, Mclvlllo Island. On the\nevening of August 21 the ship had\nreached Cty.ton point, on the\nsouth coast of Cornwallls island;\non the 22nd sho had worked her way\nInto Austin channel about ten\nmiles west of Cape Cockburn, Bath-\nurst Island, where she Vwas held\nin tho grip of the Immense ice\npans moving south until the 24th.\nOn that date the ship was able to\nforce her way a scant fifteen miles\nfarther.\nAt six o'clock on the evening of\nAugust 26 the Beothlc was five\nmiles south of Cape Cockburn, evidently having had to change her\nposition owing to the pressure of\nthe ice. An easterly wind opened\nup a passage along Bathurst island\nwhich was followed to Schomberg\npoint, but as no way could then\nbe found around the impenetrable\nbarrier to tho \u2666vest, the expedition\nwas forced to abandon for this year\nthe attempt to re-provlslon tho\ncache at  Winter Harbour.\nThe return trip waa a desperate struggle !.> got clear of th\u00a9\ntremendous pans of grinding,\ncrushing tee ln time to complete\nthe round of tho posts to the south\nOn the 26th the BeoMiic had reached\nGriffiths island, south of Cornwallls\nIsland and midway through Barrow\nstrait. Th0 strait waa full of ice\nthrough which the ship was forcing\na way. On the 87th sho was clear\nof tho Ice and heading for Pond\nInlet,  Baffin   Island.\nThe Canadian government protested reoently the seizure on June\n5, of the .Canadian motorship Fire\nLixht. with the 12-mlle limit embraced by the liquor smuggling\ntreaty between the United States\nand Canada but outside the territorial waters limit by three miles.\nTho vessel was seized. as a menace to navigation, it being contended the Fire Light was running\nwithout lights. Tbe protest was\nagain the principle of .the action\nand not against the action itself,\nsince the vessel was subsequently\nreleased.\nThe state department acknowledged the note, without comment and\nthe incident is considered closed,\nROBBER REFUSES\nLESS THAN $5;\nGETS 10 YEARS\nMONTREAL, Sept. flU^A , western\ncowpuncher, who turned \"bandit but\nrefused to take from his victims\nless than five dollars was sentenced\nto 10 years in the penitentiary by\nChief Justice Perrault ln the arraignment court today. The prisoner gave his name as Jack Starr,\n26, and said be hailed from Winnipeg, man.\nApproaohtng William Adam, man\nRoyal aveune yesterday, Starr point'\ned a 32 calibre revolver and ordered\nn_m to hana over his money. Adam\ntook $2.40 from his pockets, all\nin schange, and promptly proceeded\nto hand  it over to tho bandit.\n\"Not enough, I never accept less\nthan $5,\" stated the man with\nthe gun. \"I'm going now and If\nyou ever say a word of this, you'll\nhear from me.\" With that he\ngrasped Adam's hand firthly and\ndisappeared.\nThc   clerk   immediately   informed\n\u25a0\">llPH   and .with   a   constable,\ncombed   the   district   in  search   ot\ntho lugitlve. whom ttjey \u25a051\"**?\nnot far . from the ' spen\u00ab at w\nattempted  holdup.\nDeaf Hear Again\nThrough NewAid\nEarpiece  No  Bigger  Than\nDime Wins Enthustiastic\nFollomng. Ten-Day\nFree Trail Offer\nAfter twenty-live years devoted exclusively to the manufacture of scl-\nager uf a gasoline station on Mount t entlflo   hearing-ajde.   the   Canadian\nKOOTENAY LAKE\nHIGHWAY ON WAY\nTO COMPLETION\nDistrict     Engineer      Finds\nGood Propress Made; Connect Portions New Years\nAcoustlcon Ltd., Dept. 220-C, 45\nRichmond St., West, Toronto Ont..\nhas Just perfected a new model\nAcoustlcon that represents the\ngreatest advance yet made ln the\nre-creation of hearing for the deaf.\nThis latest Acoustlcon ls featured\nby a tiny earolece no bigger than\na dime. Tfirough this device,\nsounds are clearly and distinctly\ntransmitted to subnormal ears with\nwonderful benefit to hearing and\nhealth alike. The makers offer an\nabsolutely free trial for 10 days to\nanv one person who may interested,\nand a letter will bring one of thesa\nremarkable aids to vour home for a\nthorough and convincing test. Send .\nthem your name and address todayl\nDistrict Engineer W. Ramsay, who\nhas Just returned from a tour of\ninspection of the Grfty creek-Kus-\nkanook road which Is under construction at present, reports that\nthe lO'\/a miles of contract work\nis about 60 per cent complete and\nof the nine mile day labor work\nthere remains about three miles.\nMr. Ramsay Btated that at the\npresent rate of progress, which was\ngood, that the two sections would\nbo connected up by the first of\nnext   year.\nIt, is hoped that when the present\nwork is concluded his men may be\nallowed to go ahead and widen\nthe 15 miles of existing roa<i between the new work and Pilot bBy.\nAt the present tune 330 men\nare being employed in tho construction  of  this  new  road.\nUp In the Big Bend country Mr.\nRamsay 1ms a gang of 175 pushing\nthe new road Into tho timber at\nDownle creek 14 miles north of\nRevelstoke.\nIt is planned that this crew will\nmeet that of the Dominion government working toward Canoo river.\nIn 1932. Both crews are at present\na little over 50 miles from Canoe\nriver.\nNOTHING NEW IN\nWATT'S HEARING\nnature's machlnory  to  becomo lazy.\nA purely  vegetable  laxatlvo suoh\naa Carter'* Little Liver Pills, gently\ntouches the liver, bilo starts to\nflow, the bowels move gently, the\nintestines nre thoroughly cleansed\nand constipation poisons pwis away.\nThe stomach, liver and bowels are\nr,ow active and the system'enjoys a\n, real tonic effect. All druggists 25c\nw and. Vfic red pkgs.\nPRINCE RUPERT, Sept. 23.\u2014For\nnearly two hours this morning Norman Watt, former government agent,\nwas on the stand without anything\nnew developing in the enquiry regarding his dismissal. It was of-\nflclally announced that after hearing argument of counsel, the court\nwould adjourn to October 2 at Victoria, prior to preparing tbe report, to thc government. This was\nobjected to by A. M. Manson, but\nMr. Justice W. A. McDonald explained that nothing of Importance\nwas likely to come up then.\nDandruff\nCrust Quickly\nDissolved\nOne after another, a million men\nand women have made thia discovery; that this simple method docs\ndissolve tbe crust or dandruff; puts\ntho scalp in the plnk-of condition;\nmaker, hair sort, lustrous, thick and\nvigorous.\nGet n. bottle or \"Danderlnc\" from\nyour drug or toilet _ouiitcr today.\nPut a Uttle on your brush each\ntime you dress your hair. Penetrating to thc head, its soothing aid\nsoon has an itching, feverish scalp\ncool, comfortable, healthy. Tho crust\nof  dandruff simply  melts  away.\nDandruff Is unsightly. It is the\ncause or grayness, baldness, dry,\nbrittle, dull hair. When the scalp is\nfreed from this Irritating scurf,\nDanderlnc soon has the hair back\nIn condition; soft, glossy, thick, vigorous and youthful looking.\nStart on Danderlne today and end\nhair worries. A thirty-five cent bottle\nwill demonstrate its merit! '\nVancouver Health\nOfficer Retires\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 23.\u2014Resignation of Dr. F. T. UndorhUI, P.G.C.S,\nmedical health ortlcer for Vancouver\nslnco 1904, has been regretfully accepted by tho city council. Ho will\nbo superannuated on December 31,\n1930, at the age of 72 years.\nA waxed papcrr funnel stuck\nthrough the upper crtist of a fresh\nberry, pie will keep tho Juice from\nrunning over.\nB\npersopa\n^T^ott'A^ \u20acmtt|Wtt$^||\nINCORPORATED   5..  MAY 1670.\nOther Branches at Winnipeg, Vorkton, Saskatoon,  Edmonton,\nCalam.-, Lethbridge, Vancouver, Kamlooiis, Vernon anil Victoria\nDRY GOODS\n.     WEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIALS\nGENUINE REDUCTIONS IN BLEACHED\nSHEETINGS\nAbout 100 yards.     Nice heavy quality Sheeting.\nFully bleached, round, even thread, firmly woven, and full width. Remarkable value, Today \u2022\nonly, 5 yards for   $2.45\nNote: As our quantity is limited on.this special\npurchase, phone orders will be filled in rotation.\n\u2014Main Floor, H.B. C\t\nLADIES' WEAR\nDRESSES. All wool jersey dresses. Trimmed\nwith contrasting shades. Flare and pleats. Sizes\n36, 38, 40. Shades are Scarlet, Fawn and\nBrown.   Special    $4.50\nSKIRTS. Made of all wool flannel, pleated. Wraparound effects. In assorted shades and sizes.\nSpecial   $2.95\nRAYON SILK VESTS AND BLOOMERS. In\nall shades, including Maize, Azure, Peach and\nGreen. Small, medium and large. Vests 59.S\nBloomers   65^\nFLANNELETTE NIGHT GOWNS. Made of good\nquality flannelette.  Short sleeves, square and\nround necks. Small, medium and large.\nSpecial     9S\u00a3\n\u2014Second rloor\u201411. R.  C.\u2014\nINCREASE\nSALES\nWith Good Printing\n\"First impressions arc lasting\"\u2014we all agree\nto that. Then why not make the best impression possible on your customers wtth good\nprinted matter. It's rather a small point, yet\nso vital in \"ringing the cash register.\" Let us\ndo your printing, then you'll know\nit's properly done.\nJtomt latlij \u00a3faui0\nJob Department\nPhone 143 or 144\nSummer\nExcursion\nEast\nWest\nTo\nTORONTO . To   VANCOUVER\nMONTREAL VICTORIA\nQUEBEC \u2022 SEATTLE\nAlso    many    points    in     Also Circular Tours via\nEastern     Canada     and \u2022 Arrow  Lakes  or  K.  V.\nEastern   United   Slates.     Ry.   or  via  Spokane  ta\nVariable Rotates        * either direction.\nON SALE DAILY TILL SEPTEMBER 30\nRETURN LIMIT OCTOBER 31\nTickets, Sleeper  Reservations and  Complete  Information from Mai'\n. Canadian Pacific Railway Agent, or write\nJ.  S.   CARTER,  DISTRICT  FASSENOEH  AGENT,  NELSON, _, Ok\nCanadian Pacific\nWorld'n Oreatett Travel System\n Page Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER\" '% 1930,\nBRITISH ANNOUNCERS MET TONGUE\nPUZZLES BY FOR MING A TRIBUNAL\n%iAdviBsory    Committee    on\nSpoken  English\"  Will\nCorrect Mistakes\nLONDON, Sept. 28\u2014(By Thorns*\nT,  Champion,   Canadian   Press  cor-\nhtfespondflnt)\u2014-Mention was made ln\na recent despatch of a, radio an-\n- nouncer who proclaimed to the\nBritish Isles at largo that something\ncu' other was being dono (or wasn't\nEfeh.$ done) by the government\nof \"Oht-ahr-ie.\" The British Broadens! trig corporation, which, under\n' a certain amount of government\n.\"V.pcrvjr.'.an, controls all radio mat-\nltff3 here, ha3 lately constituted\nitself a kind of tribunal concerning the \" pronunciation of proper\nmme*-. especially place names, It\nhas organized an \"Advisory committee on spoken English,\" This\ncommittee   has   just   published   a\n|'. booklet containing what it deems\nto be the correct pronunciation\nof more than 1,500 place names.\nCanadian nainse are not included\nIn this compilation, so we do not\nknow whether it was on the authority of the Advisory committee\nthat the announcer referred to\nthe government of \"Ont-ahr-le.\"\n.In   a  foreword   of  the  booklet  it\n|, is explained that the British Broadcasting corporation is often required to send out urgent messages such as calls to friends of\nthdse dangerous^ ill, who cannot otherwise be found, notices\nfrom the board of agriculture warnings to seamen and so forth.\nSHOULD    BE    WELL    KNOWN\n\"Every man believes,\" says tho\neditor, \"that the name of the \"place\nin which he lives should l>o as\nwell known to the world as it la\nto him, and he regards a wrong\npronunciation of It aa a slur upon\n146 justifiable local pride. How do\nHEADACHES\nRheumatism\nNeuralgia\nLumbago\nNeuritis\nl>, VOU can't always stop work and\n\u25a0. X frive-in to a headache, but\nyou can always get relief from such\nsuffering! A tablet or two of\nAspirin will ease an aching head\nevery time. Tcrfcctly harmless;\nprescribed by thousands of doctors.\nAn effective antidote for pain, taken\nby millions of men and women\nwhenever they've a cold, headache;\nneuralgia or neuritis; rheumatism,\nlumbago, sore joints, etc. Read\nthe proven directions that come\nwith Aspirin and realize how much\nsuffering these tablets can spare\nyou. Aspirin has medical endorsement. It doesnt depress the heart.\nYon know what you are taking.\nThe box bears the word genuine in\nled.\nTRADE MARK RES.\nmSPlRIN\nSlou pronounce trigham, Oewell,\nJahir, Burntisland, Milngavlo and\nYnysybwl? It ls a Question that\nmay be put to the announcer at\nany moment, and often so hurriedly that he Is unable to Ting' up\nanybody   to   help   him   out.\n\"Slalthwalte must take heart of\ngrace and face adverBlty with all\nthe courage that her famous county\nbreeds. So long as she looks like\n'Slalthwalte* she must be 'content\nto be called something like lt,\nand 'Slowit' will be a term of\nendearment restricted to her nearest and dearest, who may proudly\nproclaim their allegiance to her\nby addressing her as such. But so\nlong as she masquerades as Slalth-\nwalte, then Slalthwalte she must\nbe to the outside world, mod\nSlalthwalte she will be to the\nannouncer. Cirencester must settle\nher own affairs, and not expect\ntho British Broadcasting corporation to settle them for her. Saw-\nbridgeworth miy. h.ye been 'Sapsed'\nin tho past, but in the future is\nto be Sawbrldgeworth, at any rate\nwhen   lt   is   broadcast.\"\nMISS P. HOLT OF\nKIMBERLEY GOES\nTO VANCOUVER\nKn-v-BKRLEY, b: C, Sept. 23.\u2014Miss\nPhyllis Holt left early in the week\nfor Vancouver where she will take\na business course. ,\nMrs. Lilly eijwrtained a f<fw,\nfriend;, at her homo on Blarchmont\nTuesday afternoon.\nMr. Murray Garden left yesterday\nfor Vancouver where he will enter\nhis third year at university. He\nwent by motor from Cranbrok whero\nhe was joined by friends who were\nalso returning to U. B. C. after summer vacation. '\nRev. and Mrs. Bryce Wallace and\nlittle aon, Ian, accompanied also by\nRev. Dr. Osterhout of Vancouver,\nwere callers at thc United church\nmanse last week.\nRev. R. X Mclntyre of Vancouver\ngave a most Interesting and Instructive address on the prohibition\nquestion in -thc Presbyterian church\non Wednesday evening.\nMrs. Mackley who has been tho\nhouse-guest of Mrs. Charles Dakln\nfor the past week left yesterday for\nher  home in  Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. Lloyd Crowe and\nother members and wives of the\nKimberley Gyro club returned home\non Sunday after attending the' Gyro\nconvention held in Calgary last\nweek.\nMr. and Mrs. Halllday Blake and\nLlla left early In the week for Edmonton where they will make their\nhome in future.\nRally day in United church took\nplace Sunday morning with a largo\nattendance present. Those of tho\ncradle roll membership passing into\ntho beginner's class in the Sunday\nschool, which was represented by a\nbeautifully decorated . Ratsway were:\nMargaret Cond. Ida Splnks, Melvln\nPearson, Donald Nesbltt. Eric Ford,\nEdgar Lindsay. Alan Nlcl.soii.\nMr. E. M. Hughes went to Cranbrook Sunday evening where he took\ncharge of tlie .service for Rev. Mr.\nWallace who Is attending the council' meeting of ihe United church\nin London, Ontario.\nMrs. Burpee Lockhart who has\nbeen visiting her father and sister\nin Penticton for the past two\nmonths returned home this week.\nShe was accompanied on the trip by\nher little daughter, Shirley.\nENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED\n\"BILL AND TED\"\nARE DONORS TO\nBLAKEBURN FUND\nBut for :i donation of $'_!, during\nthe past four days little Interest\nhas beon taken In the Biakeburn\nfund here, with the additional BUiti\ntbe local fund now stands at $250\nTho only recent donation was received    from   \"Bill   and   Ted\".\nALL SCOTLAND\nREJOICES OVER\nMARGARET ROSE\n\u25a0 Of interest to society and military circles ln Canada Is the announcement of the engagement of Miss Vivian Scott, pictured abovo, daughter\nof Mr, and Mrs. Harry Alwyn Scott, to Captain Ernest Geoffrey Weeks,\nM. C, M. M., the Royal Canadian Corps ot Signals, son of the late Major\nand Mrs. W. A. Weeks of Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.\nCRESTON SCHOOL\nHAS 60 PUPILS\nPublic   School   Overcrowded:\nPetition for New Room\nand  Teacher\nCRESTN, B. C, Sept. 23\u2014 Monday . morning's enrolment at the\nhigh school touched the 60 mark,\nof which but 13 are from outside the local school district. Students overtake the capacity of the\ntwo high school rooms and orders\nhave been given to refuse any\nfurther pupils. At tho public\nschool the enrolment has reached\n210 and this has so overloaded\nthe seating capacity In the five\nroom public school that the teach'\nere are insisting on another room\nand \u2022 teacher being provided. To\nthis end an effort is being made to\nlease thc Parish hall, which is\nabout tlie only suitable quarters\nto be rented. If thin connot be\nsecured permission to use the basement may be asked of thc inspect'\nor.\n\"TALKIE\" PARTIES\nPOPULAR, BOMBAY\ntingling taste ot\nfresh mint leaves is a real\ntreat for your sweet tooth.\nWRIGLEYS\nAffords people everywhere great comfort\nand long'lasting enjoyment.\nNothing else gives 60 much benefit at\nso small a cost.\nIt is a wonderful help in\nwork and play\u2014keeps ^you cool,\ncalm and contented.\nBOMBAY, Sept. 23.\u2014As part of\nMahatma Gandhi's scheme to drive\nthn British out of India ''talkie'\nparties have become thc rage\nthroughout the country, A \"talkie'\nas lt Li called in the vernacular.\nis nothing more than a simple\nHttJe twlrll-glg for spinning cotton yarn, and has been put, ln\nuse by men, women and children\nsympathizers of the independence\nmovement,  almost everywhere.\nMen In the street cars in their\nway to work, children on their way\no school spin their little talkls.\nWomen at home, and sitting as\npickets ln front of the toddy shops\nspin hour after hour and appear\nvery Intent, of tholr tasks. All\nsorts of shopkeepers, and their\nclerks, who are Nationalists, keep\ntheir talkls going most of tho day.\nThey are unable to talk and to\nattend to a certain amount of business, where hands are not required, and where conversation alone\nwill  suffice,\nTho talkl, a very plain affair,\ncosts but a few coppers. It has\nbocome known as a \"nation build\ning weapon\" because of its pop>\nidarlty. Thoso who have become\nadept in the cotton spinning dc-\nclaro that there Is a certain fascination about the task conceived\nby, tho Mahatma as a means of\nIncreasing home Industry and keep\nIng out foreign competition, prln\nclpaily British, which ls on\u00a9 of\ntho chief alms of tho congTess\nmove for independence\nMr. Gandhi himself in prison\nspins by tho hour. He Use* not\nonly a talkl hut also a spinning\nwheel for a change. Thc Nationalists maintain that the talkl has\nbecome such a craze that many of\ntholr friends who aro not congress\nparty members have been fascinated and are now spinning thorn-\nselves aa a paatimo merely because  \"everybody's doing  lt.\"\nSays Mr. Gandhi; \"'If wc want\na total stoppago of textile imports\nand an lmmedlato replacement of\nsuch exports, every one of us must\nstrive to make our own cloth and\nuntil we are able to do that we\nmust make It a point not to\npurchase   any   foreign \u2022cloth.\"\nThe talkl was taken on because\nIt la portablo and may be carried in the pocket. Millions of\nspinning wheels too have been\nbrought Into use\u2014 .\"CharKas\" thoy\nare called\u2014 but they arc UBcd\nchiefly  ln  the home.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From Thc Dally News of September 24, 1020)\nIn view of the recent rains and\nthe filling up of tho city reservoirs,\nthe restriction on sprinkling has\nbeen removed here.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nThat the famous lost silver mine\non Cultus creek, which has been\nvainly searched for, for over 20\nyears, has been discovered by a well\nknown miner, J. w. Mulhollaiid.and\nthat the secret of Mulholland's find,\ngradually leaking out. has caused\na miniature rush, ls the statement\nof W, B. Pool.\nThat tho last link of the Kootenay Landing to Alberta border lino\nportion of the Grand Trunk road\nwhich the provincial government ls\nbuilding will bo completed next\nmonth, Is the announcement of\nJ. E. Griffiths, first assistant government   engineer.\nDr. and Mrs. Fred M. Auld are\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nE.  Lathe, Grand Forks.\n\u2022 *    **\nNell F. MacKay. M.P.P. of Kaslo.\nitime in on the Kokanee yesterday\nand leaves for tho coast today.\nODD FELOWS ARE\nHONOREMELSON\nT. Choate Presents Flag to\nOrder; E. E. Elliott\nOfficiates\nOdd Fellows of Kootenay City\nlodge were out in force Monday to\nwelcome their district deputy grand\nmaster, E. E. Elliott of Vancouver,\nwho was here on his official visit\n'and was aocompanled hy Tnm\nChoate,   grand   treasurer.\nAn interesting event of the evening was the presentation of three\n25-year veteran's Jewels, the presentation being made hy Deputy\nGrand Master Elliott, who took\noccasion to congratulate the recipients on their long standing in\nthe order. Thoso receiving the\nJewels wero James Balding, C. E. P.\nWatts  and  Guy Wright.\nAnother feature of the evening's\nprogram was the presentation to\ntha Nelson lodge of a large Union\nJack, the donor being T. Choato.\nwho is one of tho landmarks of\nOdd  Fellowship ln   Nelson.\nFollowing the lodge session Re-\nbckahs and friends Joined with\nthe \"three linkers\" in refreshments\nand  dancing.\nBIRDS FROM THE\nNORTH AND SOUTH\nNEST AT JASPER\nJJASPER PARK. Alta,, Sept. 23.\u2014A\nfew miles In the central Atha-\nbaska Valley In Jasper Park form\na nesting ground for birds from the\nfour great areas of the continent. Hern, acocrdlng to H. Lalng,\nof Comox, B. O., Canadian Government naturalist, birds of. the Arctic, the southern section of the\nUnited States, the east and western\nslopes of the Rockies have a common nesting  ground.\nAFTER! I EVERY\n!W&\u2014H^pW\nWhen cooking oorn on. the cob\nadd a scant tablespoon of sugar and\na little salt to the water. It glvoa\nthe oorn a fine flavor, *   -\nBOY SCOUTS OF\nCRAWFORD  BAY\nVISIT AINSWORTH\nCRAWFORD BAY. B. C   Sept. 23.\n\u2014Scoutmaster Fraser accompanied a\ntroop to Alnsworth on Saturday. The\nboys enjoyed themselves, the greater\npart of the day being spent at the\nhot springs. Mr. Fraser took the\nboys to Kootenay Bay ln his car\nin the morning where they took\nthe boat for Quoons Bay, then walking Irom Queens Bay to Alnsworth.\nSilverton People\nMotor to Nelson\nSILVERTON, B. C, Sept. 23.\u2014Mrs.\nW. Tattrle, Mrs. E. Marsden, Misses\nMargery and Edith Tattrle were\nmotorists to Nelson on Saturday\nevening.\nMlas Olive Young of Nakusp is\nthe' guest of Misses Doreen and\nViva  Peachey.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Whito, Miss Dorothy White, L. White and K. McKlnnon motored to Kaslo on Sunday\nand were tho guests of Alderman\nand  Mrs. A.  L. McPhee.\nMr. and Mrs. H, Oddett and little\ndaughter, Dorothy, of Trail, are the\nguests of Mr. oddett's - aunt, Mrs.\nA. S. McAulay.\nMrs. R. White, who has been visiting her mother, Mrs. T. Crowe, at\nVancouver for several months, has\nreturned home,\nMr, and Mrs, Olson, Miss Edith\nOlson and John Olson of Helena,\nMontana, have taken up residence\nin town. **    \u25a0\nArt Lano motored from TraU on\nSaturday and spent the week-ond\n.visiting friends.\nMiss Ethel Marshall Is spending\na few days ln Kaslo, the guest of\nMiss Margery Cadden,\nNew Princess Is to Be So\nChristened at Buckingham Next Month\nLONDON, Sept. 23\u2014(AP)\u2014 All\nScotland is rejoicing because of the\nofficial announcement that the Infant daughter of the Duke and\nDuchess of York is to be christened\nMargaret Rose, jf.\nEver since the youngest member\nof the.Royal family was born August 21, -the Scotch people have been\nhoping ^he . would receive some\nname reminding of' her birth In\nGlamis castle and her mother's\nScottish nationality. Of all sucn\nnames they chiefly hoped for Margaret, since it ls Intimately entwined with the whole history of\nScotland.\nThe second namo, Rose, was wholly\nunexpected, and experts are wracking their brains to discover ir It\nhas ever been borne by a member of\nthe British Royal family.\nTh6 Uttle girl will bo christened\nln Buckingham palace next month\nand she will then become \"Her Royal Highness, Princess Margaret Rose\nof York.\"\nKASLO GOLFERS\nSTART TOURNEY\nKASLO, B. C, Sept. 23.-^The' handicap tournament of tho Kaslo Golf\nand Country club got welt under\nway Saturday and will contlnuo during the week, the finals to be played\nSunday. Tho trophies,aro the Bowker rose bowl for ladies end the\nKootenalan cup for tho men. The\ndraws were as follows; Mrs. J. H.\nStubbs, 36 vs. Mrs. Mrs. G. D.\nBowker, 50; MVs. F. S. Chandler, 36,\nvs. Miss Sllzabeth Glegerlch, 50;\nMrs. J. J. Sklllicorn, 38, vs. Mrs.\nJ. J. Blnns; Mrs. E. H. Latham,\n38, vs. Miss Emellne Wilson, 70.\nMEN'S  DRAWS\nDr. D. j. Braclay, 36. vs. A. W,\nAnderson, 30; H. Glegerlch, 38, vs.\nR. L. Sklllicorn, 28; O. J. White, 28,\nvs. R. H. Grave3, 30; F, S. Rouleau,\n30, vs. G. D. Bowker. 30; E. H.\nLatham. 30; vs. O. E. Desmond, 30.\nRESULTS\nTho results of the first rounds,\nMrs. Chandler beat Miss Glegerlch,\nMrs. Stubbs beat Mrs. Bowker. Miss\nWilson beat Mrs. Latham; Mrs.\nSklllicorn beat Mrs. Binns, on tho\n10th hole, leaving Mrs, Stubbs to\nplay Mrs. Chandler and Mrs. Sktlii-\ncorn to play Miss Wilson. Dr. Barclay beat Anderson. Sklllicorn beat\nGlegerlch; White beat Graves,\nRouleau beat Bowker, Latham beat\nDesmond. Dr. Barclay will play\nWhite; Sklllcorn plays tho winner\nof this game. Rouleau will play\nLatham, the winner of this game\nto play the winner of Sklllicorn and\npartner. \u201e\nNelson Guests\nEntertained by\nKaslo People\nKASLO, B. C, Sept. 23.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Robctr Taylor entertained Saturday evening when their guests\nwero Dr. arid Mrs. D. J. Barclay,\nMisa Dorothy Gilchrist of Nelson.\nMiss Elizabeth Glegerlch, Miss Em-\neline Wilson. Dr. Burko of Nelson,\nMr.  McCarthy  and Mr. Fraser.\nP. Langlcy of McLeod, Alta., was\na Kaslo visitor teh iattcr part of\nthe week.\nDr. Burko of Nelson was tho\nguest of Mr. and Mra. Robert Taylor\nover the woekrend.\nMr. and Mra. Ronald Hewat have\nreturned from a motor trip to Calgary and other points, Thoy were\naccompanied by their daughter-in-\nlaw, Mrs. Harry Hewat.\nMrs. Carlson of Bull River is the\nguest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Sklllicorn.\nMiss Dorothy Gilchrist of Nelson\nwas the guest of Mr. and . Mrs.\nRobert Tyalor over the week-end.\nJ. W. Nelll of Penticton was a\nweek-end   visitor  in  tho  city.\nMr. and Mrs. F. W. corell of\nSeattle have returned from a visit\nto Mr. and Mrs. Carter at tho Flint\nmlno.\nW. D. MacKenzie or Calgary arrived In town Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Thomson and\ndaughter of Nelson were visitors ln\ntown Saturday and Sunday.\nClayton Adams of Vancouver was\na week-end visitor in Kaslo.\nA. W. Archer and A. W. Osmun\nof Seattle arrived in tho city Sunday.\nF. H. Lutz of Montreal was a\nweek-end visitor in town.\nOeorge Williamson of New Denver\nwas a city visitor Saturday.\nMrs, R. L. Tinkess was a visitor\nto Procter Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. M. C. Tan of Nelson\nwere visitors  in  the city. Saturday.\nYMIR VISITORS\nRETURN, SPOKANE\nYMIR, B. C, Sept. 23.\u2014A. A. Lovell left on Saturday for his home\nln Spokane. Mr. Lovell had been\nhero  for the  past week.\nMr. and Mrs. it. R. Shrum wero\nNelson visitors on Friday evening.\nA. Burgess and Matthew Burgess\nwere Nelson visitors on Saturday,\nMr. Burgess going ln for medical\nattention for a sore eye.\nJ. H. Clarke and A. B. Clark\nwere salmo visitors on Saturday\nevening.\nMrs. S. L. Springer spent the\nwek-end  In Nelson visiting friends.\nD. Gibbons and Dick Wiles of\nSalmo wero Ymlr visitors on Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. M. Prochnow of\nSalmo were Ymlr visitors on Sunday\nand wore the guests of Mr. and Mrs,\nE. Daly.\nMrs. K. Cawley left for her home\nin Wallace, Idaho, on Friday, Mra.\nCawley had been the guest of rcl-*\natlves  for  the past weak.\nMr, and Mrs. J. H. Duck and their\ndaughter,  Jean,  and  Mr.  and __\nSmedley of Nelaon were Ymir valors on Sunday and were the guests\nof friendB.\nMrs. J. Philbert passed through\nYmlr on Monday on route to her\nhomo ln Vancouver.,\nE. Kmllson of the Goodenough\nmine spent Monday in Ymlr.\nTho comparatively negligible loss\nsuffered by forest fires in 1020 ln\nNew Brunswick and Nova Scotia\nls attributed to the permit sys\ntern in vogue, Increased care on the\npart of the public, and to the\nIncreased effectiveness of 'the pro<\ntectlvo organizations in there provinces, #\nMISSION BAND OF\nSLOCAN CITY HAS\n'    BIRTHDAY PARTY\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C, Sept. 23.\u2014A\nnumber . of' the mission band children enjoyed a picnic at the park\non Saturday afternoon, to commemorate the second year of tho mission\nband. A birthday ca_;e for the\noccasion was furnished fey- Frances\nNorrls with two oanthoa. Those in\ncharge were Mrs, T. R. Mosher, Miss,\nAgnes Mulr and Mn, D. B. O'Neail.\nAfter the races lunch .was enjoyed\nand the balance of the.tlmo was\nspent with games.\nCRESTON FAIR TO\nFEATURE SPORTS\nPresident  Putnam  and  Directors Plan for School\nAthletics\nCRESTON, B. O., Sept. 23\u2014 Everything ls ln readiness for CrcBton\nValley Agricultural association's 12-\npublic annual fall fair which\nopens to the public on Wednesday.\nTuesday Ib receiving day, with all\nexhibits to be In - place by. noon,\nand the afternoon and. evening\ngven to the-'plating of rewards.\nThis year President Frank Putnam and the directors have devoted . special attention to arranging\na line of outdoor attrtcttona that\nwill make the afternoon pass more\nadvantageously, \u25a0 At 10.00 a. m.\nthe school ports will be ^staged for\ntho championship- shield, wheh was\nlast year won by the school at Huscroft. - These events. promise to be\nkeenly tested, as all the schools in\nthe valley have had their students\nIn training for thc past two weeks.\nAt 1:30 thc girls basketball\nteams from tho public and high\nschools will clash, while a three\no'clock Kimberley and Creston\nbaseball teams will meet. Creston\nwon over Klmberley at Klmberley\non Dominion day, and slnco then\nhas annexed the Crows Nest Pass\nchampionship at tho Labor day\ntournament at Fernie.\nC. Murrell, secretary, reports that\nentries for tills year indicate a\nmuch larger showing In both cattle\nand horses. In the latter the entry list is heavier in teams and\nwork animals, and unusually keen\nInterest ln the \"boys' and girls' saddle\npony section. A featuro to tho\ncattle is an entry of ten in the\nboys' and girls' calf club, a new\nfeature that has been well worked\nup by tho vice-president, Charles\nSutcllffe, who ls also president of\ntlie Stockbreeders' association.\nTa Women's institute havo chargo\nof the needlework, cooking, canned\ngoods, dairy products' and flowers\nand 1930 looks as if it will be the\nbest In the past few years in all\nthese lines, Tho fruit class Is fairly well filled but ls not as representative as in the earlier years of\ntho exhibition. Entries In tho poultry class aro on a \u25a0 par with other\nyears.\nDONATE SERVICES\nFOR CLEARING OF\nYMIR CEMETERY\nYMIR, B. C, Sept. 33.\u2014Those\ndonating their services toward the\nwork on the cemetery on Sunday\nfor the Ymlr Ladles' Guild and the\nYmir Institute were; E. Daly, J.\nM. Gille, Thomas Wilkinson, Joe\nDunn, Raymond Gill. Joan Ruskln,\nR. R. Shrum, Charley Kublskl,\nS. A. Curwen, E. Daly, Jr., and Fred\nLarson. Boys helping were Elmer\nPeterson, Jim Grant and Jack Grant\nAn account of tho rain, dinner for\nthe men was served ln the Guild\nhalj hy members of the Guild and\nInstitute. Those serving were Mrs.\nE. Daly, Mrs. H. Stevens, Mrs. M.\nPeters, Mrs. R. R. Shrum, Mrs. W.\nB. Mclsaac, Mrs. J. H. Clarke, Mra.\nN. Peterson and Mrs. L. P. Bond.\nA new game soon to be launched\nfor the homo is called \"billiard golf\"\nand ls a form of indoor golf to be\nplayed with billiard rules on the\nfloor of your apartment.\nHEATED ARGUMENT\nBREAKS OUT AT\nTRUSTEE_MEETING\nStarts Over Question of Out-\nof-Pocket Expenses\nof Members\nV-S&NON, B. 0\u201e Sept. 23.\u2014(CP)\u2014\nA heated argument which was cut\nshort by the chairman when personalities were creeping in, featured\nMonday's session of \u2022 British Columbia school trustees convention now-\nbeing held here.\nThe discussion arose when a resolution was introduced to indemnity\ntrustees ln respect to attendances\nat meetings and out of pocket expenses. Trustee J. Dixon of Buv-\nnaby In speaking in support of payment casually asked if any delegate\nhad at any time accepted any\nmoney for work done In connection\nwith school board services.\nTrustee J. P. Carr of Matsqui ln\nreply stated he had received a small\nsum for gasoline. ' \"Then It'waa\nillegal and you are liable to disqualification,\" declared Trustee O.\nM. Woodworth of Vancouver.\n\"No, no,\" came a chorus from\ndelegate^ \"Then I will leave It to\nJ, A. Grant, secretary df the association and an astute lawyer,\" Mr.\nWoodworth  said.\nMr. Grant before answering the\nquestion asked Mr. Woodworth who\nwas paying his expenses to 'tlie convention.\n\"The Vancouver school board,\"\nreplied  Mr.  Woodworth.\n\"Th6n Mr. Carr was perfectly Justified in accepting payment for\ngasoline while . using his car on\nschool board work,\" Mr.'Grant ruled\nC. B. L. Lefroy, chairman, gave hla\nopinion that the dissuasion was inserting tho thin edge'of the wedge\nand some delegates were looking for\ntlie \"almlghrty dollar.\"\n\"If you don't' wish to work for\nthe benefit of the children without\nremuneration you don't have to\nseek tho of tee,\" he stated.\nThe resolution waa deeated 50 to\n36. Those voting for Indemnity Included Trustees Miss A. B. Jamleson,\nMra. Campbell, F. L. .Fellows ana O.\nM. Woodworth of Vancouver and\ntrustees Dixon, chairman of tne\nBurnaby school board. All other\nGreater , Vancouver delegates opposed lt.\nNELSON PEOPLE\nVISIT CRESTON\nCRESTON, B. C, Sept 23\u2014Mr,\nand Mrs. C. Barber of Chllliwa:k,\nand Mr. and Mrs.. F. F. JaVno of\nNelson were \u2022 Creston visitors on\nSaturday, motoring In from East\nKootenay points. While- herb they\ninspected the fruit packing warehouses  and   grain  elevators,\nBen Crawford left oa Friday\nfor Edmonton, where ho is commencing his first year ln medicine\nat Alberta University. Ho has\nbeen assistant post-master the past\nyear and is succeeded by P. W. Ash.\nMrs. Donneau of Fernle was a\nvisitor here a few days last week,\na guest of her sister, Miss A. Doyle,\nMrs. Oliver of Blairmore, Alberta,\nwas here, over tho weekend on a\nvisit with her husband, Dr. j.\nOliver, who ls in charge of Creston\nValley hoalptnl. They are looking for a residence, Mrs. Oliver\nand children hop-s to move to\nCreston. )\nWeekend visitors to Creston\nincluded Dr, and Mrs. Roiy Llllle,\nof Blairmore, tho former being called here due to the serious condition of his father, Dr. O, Llllle.\nDonald Archibald has just left\nfor Victoria, wr.vc he ts resuming\nhla   studies   in   Brentwood   college.\nGIVEN FAREWELL\nAT CRAWFORD BAY\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C;, Sept, 23.\n\u2014A farewell dance was given to\nMr. BJid Mrs. Pollock on Thursday\nevening ln the public hall, a very\npleasant tlmo being spent. Mr,\nand Mrs. Pollock and little daughter\nleft on Thursday for Trail where\nthey will reside.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From lhe Daily News of September M. 1M0)\nH. Holn, pulp .tut paper expert,\nengaged' by tho board 'ol trade to\nmake a report on the possibility ot\npulp and* paper manufacture here.\ncompleted a two days' examination\nof the dlstrlbt yesterday ahd returned to the coast last night.\nAccording to, word received by\nO. D. Blackwood and Howard Bush,\nSpokane traipflhooters will compete\nln Nelson on the day of tho tall,\nfair whloh ls to be held next week.\n...\u00bb\u2022\u25a0\nAlter a .week had paused and\ntnveetlgatloii had failed , to solve\n_o mystery' of the W^ll stree.\nexplosion which devastated tho, business section, another ^mystery 'was\n.dded .yesterday' when' .the police\nll&covered a packet of, dynamite in\nthe Reld avenue elevated station\nat Brooklyn. . '\u25a0  *. ,\nA marriage of Interest to many\nNelson, residents took place alt\n_hrlst church, Vanoouver, recently\nwhen Miss Jeannle Currlo formerly\nof   Nelson,   became   tho   bride   ot\nJames Whitehead of Yancouver. -.:. '\n.  ..,\u25a0,-.\nOeorge, Bussell, fireman on tho\nIncoming Kettle .Valley train, received severe oute when'the train\nwas derailed hear Labartho last\nnight.\nPROCTER PEOPLE\nMOTOR, gPOKANE\nPROCTER, B. Oi,\" teepfc. 23.\u2014Me.\nand' Mrs. H. G. Schulze left Monday\nmorning by motor for 'Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. A. \u25a0 Grant motored\n\u25a0to Nelaon Thursday.\nMrs McLeod and dauchter, Kath-\nlyn, wero ln Nelson Friday.\nRoderick MacKinnon, who has\nbeen on the fire.-p&tro} -around the\nJuneau river for ' tho last three\nmonths, haa returned to his home.'\nMr. Ferg, Mr. V, Irwin, Dick\nCalrnes and Delmor Fcrg motored to\nNelson Saturday,\nRonald tica_ of- Balfour, who is\ncontinuing hts studies In Nelson was\na visitor to Prooter Saturday, accompanied by his mother; Mra. 'Seal,\nalso of Balfour.   -\nMiss Claudle Lumb was.the guest\nof her cousin, Miss Barbara Seal of\nBalfour, Saturday.\nMr,, and Mrs. ,F. Q. -Couper\\ vera\nNelson visitors Saturday.\" \u25a0>\nMrs. D. McKay o\u00a3\nSlocan City Is\nVisitor, I Rosebery\nSLOCANiClTY, B. .0., September\n28.\u2014Mrs. Tt McKay' spent Friday\nvisiting with ftiends it Rosebery.\nMr. and Mrs. R. J. Johnson and\nchildren were visitors to Nelson on\nSaturday.\nMrs. J. Mulr and two daughters\nEthel and Agnes Mulr, were 'visitors\nto Nelson on Friday. :        .   \u2022\nThomas MoNtelsh and Wk 8j\nGraham left op. Friday on a trip\nto Emrriit, Idaho.\nNorman, Hartnell ls fcaturiryi an\nevening ensemble roverslns tlie\ncolors qf a ''middy\" uniform, which\nhas the skirt ln white chiffon and\ntho bodice in lapis..blue, while the\nHit\/tie waist-length\" jacket is In\nmatching blue velvet.\n\u00a7hMS\n. DODDS   \/\nl-KI'DNEY\nI', PILLS -\n,.  -^KlDNEt^Y\nV  \u00abi,8Ac_Acr'',i.i-s  ,\nDo These Three Things\nto have strong, healthy teeth\nInclude the\n1  diet below\nUse Pepsodent\n2    twice a day\nSee your\n3    twice a\ndentist\nyear\nA PROMINENT professor of a large university finds that the natural resistance to\ndecay and gum disorders can be greatly built up\nby the proper diet. The most common ages of\ntooth decay are during the period of growth.\nHere is the diet he recommends foryou and your\nfamily, depending upon age for the quantity.\nDo these things\nEvery day one quart of' milk; eggs; head lettuce, cabbage or celery; lemon juice mixed with\norange juice, and as much raw fruit or fresh vegetables as you like and other foods to suitthetaste.\nEvery day', too, you must remove from your\nteeth a cloudy film that coats them. Film is\nthat slippery coating you can feel with your\ntongue. It sticks like glue and. ordinary brush\ning fails to remove it effectively. Film absorbs,\nthe stains from food and snibking. It turns\nteeth dull and dingy.\n\"   Vour dentist will tell you that .when Pepso- \u25a0\ndent removes film from teeth it ..plays an\nimportant part in the prevention of decay and\nother troubles.\nEat the proper food. Use'Pepsodent twice\na day. See your dentist at least twice a year.\nThat is the surest way to lovely, Wealthy teeth.\n0      MADE IN CANADA\nPepsodent\nThn tooth paste whtch presents you with '\n. tbe Amos 'a' Andy radio progrMso\nAMO\u00bb'WTAWPY\u00bb'Thepremierradiofeature XJStSliil.) 10-30 P-m-Central Standard Time.   N. B. C, Network\n THE- NELSON DA1L-^NI_WS      WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER Vi, 198&\nUS.\nTHE NEWEST\nEnna Jettick\nbnOCS are Herel\nif\n\u2022^*fl*fl*fi**fl*i---V!*tflfl*C\nMM-flflOftMtfMV-\n.vAAfcB\nYour Size In Stock\n\u2014 TUNE IN -\nENNA JETTICK MELODIES \u00abw.Sin_r.\n<_nln_ onr WJZ and 35 Ai.od.tid\nSutloni\nR. Andrew\n& Co.\nLeaders   In   Footfashion\nThrills Galore Await>\ning You at\nSavoy Qolf\nCourse\n18 Holes Illuminated\nat Night\nLET'S QO.'\nAAAAAAAAS\nP1HM11N6\nJmivu-hi*.\n.wiftmwmkw\nIs Your Heat\nAmple.7\nIf not, wllj' not callon in\nand lcl. us modernize join'\nheating equipment us well\nas jour water supply. It\nwill pay jou tn plan now\nto enjoy even' comfort unci\nluxury 'in yonr home lliis\ncoming winter.\nNelson Plumbin;\nAND  HEATINO   to.\nrimnc   100\nGEO.   BRANT\nSociety\nThis column is conducted by\nMro. M. J. Vlgneux. AU news\nof a social nature, Including receptions, private entertainments,\npersonal Items, marriages, etc,\nwill appear .In- this column.\nTelephone Mrs. Vlgneux at hex\nhome. 619 Silica street.\nBev. Leo Hobson, pafetor of the'\nSt. Francis, xavier church in Trail,\nla expected In Nelson today .He\nwill bo accompanied by Rev. Father\nCollins, O.S.S.R. of Yancouver> wh0\nwill remain, in Nelsoh to conduct\n\u2022the mission beginning in the church\nof Mary immaculate Sunday at\nhigh mass and which lasts a week.\nWhile > here Father Collins will bo\ntho guest of Rev. J. C. McKenzle.\n...\u00bb   \u00bb   *\u25a0\nMrs. M., McFarland of Cranbrooi.\nwas a-recent visitor to town, having\ncome to ba present at the Women's\nInstitute district directors meeting\nwhich took place hero Monday.\n.*   *   \u2022\nIt. O. Oscarson,. mining man of\nEric, paid a visit to Nelson yesterday.\n*--.;**'-\u25a0*.\n. Goorge'D. Wood of Winnipeg was\na i .business visitor to Nelson yesterday.\n\u25a0> .*\u25a0   *   *\n|.lrs. W. Barnes leaves this morn-\n\\t\\_t  for   Cranbrook.\nj, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. D. Benson\nand their threo daughters the\nMisses Isabelle, Margery and Honore\n(Nipper) .Berisoh, left last night\nfor Victoria, where they will make\ntheir  home,\nMrs. E. Watts was a recent visitor\nto Nelson from South Slocan, having attended the Women's institute\ndistrict directors meeting held here\nMonday.\n\u00bb   \u2666   \u2022\nMrs. W. J.-Mohr and her daughter,\nMrs. James Fitzsimmons, bom of\nWillow Point, - were visitors In tho\ncity yesterday.\n* *   \u2022\nMrs. F. H. Fox returned last\nnight from a fortnight spent in\nSpokane.\n. *  **   \u2022\nYesterday afternoon St. Paul's;\nchurch was the scent of a pretty '\nbut quiet wedding when Margaret\nSlater of Vancouver, second daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. John Slater of\nVancouver, bocame the bride of,\nAndrew Gardiner Jaffray of Nelson,\nfifth GQii of Mr. and Mrs. James\nJaffray Of Tochleneal, Scotland. Itev.\nT. J. S. Ferguson officiated. Tho\nbridesmaid was Mrs. A. Watsori of\nVancouver and the best man was\nA. L, Elliott of Nelson. Tho bride,\nwho was glvon ln marriage by T.\nW. Ledlngham, wore a most becoming frock ol powder blue georgette\nwith hat and shoes to match and\ncarried a gorgeous arm bouquet of\nJoanna Hill roses and fern while\nthe bridesmaid carried a lovely\nbouquet of shell pink carnations\nand chrysanthemums. Alter a honeymoon spent at Alnsworth, Mr,\nand Mrs. Slater will take up residence at 621 Silica street,\nMr. and Mrs. \" W. M. Cunllffe.\nObservatory street, and their daughter, Ml'.* Louise Cunllffo and Mrs.\nCuthbert arc spending a few days\nIn   Spokane. \u25a0  \u2022\n* \u00bb   *\nMrs. J. Peters of Vancouver, who\nhas been on an extended visit to\neastern Canada, is ln town the guest\nor her son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. nnd Mrs. Percy Bates, Silica\nstreet.\nThc members of Mrs. Charles H.\nHamilton's circle of St. Saviour\nChurch Helpers met at Mrs. F.\nRussell Sadd's home on Innes street\n.recently when: those present were:\nMiss A. Morton Richmond, Mrs.\nCharles H, Hamilton, Miss Louise\nCunllffe, and Miss Jean Hunter.\nW. \u2022 A. Wells, who has been in\nNelsoa .and-district on Knights of\nColumbus, bu-siness, leaves this morning, for liis homo in Edmonton,\nMr.' and Mi'.'.. A. Nolan, recently\nmarried     hi     Enderby,    who    havs\nAlmond\nCrisp\nHere's n confection that will win u\nyour lmtant approval, just as *|\nIt: lias iliousands ot lovers of\nsnap's chocolates Jiving throughout B.(.\\ You will like it for. !t|\nits richness, its freMmrps, mid\nIts deliriously different, flavors\nmi- i-iiarui'terlsiii.- of all\n(Sapp's finer Chocolates. Olitiiln-\nm.io in Vi, lWr. *.'. and ;i pimml\n_\u00bbi.\\es.    Order  today 'from\nTonic   Urilg    Co.\nHunt   Bros.\nII.   riicvriiiRtrn\n('ianl)rook    Drug\nCo,\nClinton's Plwrmacy\nNelson\nTrull\nItossland\nCranbrook\nFernie\nSound\nRestful\nSleep\nAssured\nWhen you use this ideal combination,\nSIMMONS  BED -\u2014 ?15.00\nBEAUTYREST MATTRESS ...  -.. 42.50\nSLUMBER KING SPRING   12.00\nWe will be pleased to show them to you.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nCOMPLETE  HOUSE FURNISHERS\nNELSON, B. C.\nBEAUTY IS WEDDED\nInteresting camera.study of Dorothy F. O'Nell, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Goorge Henry O'Nell of Toronto and Lewlston Heights, New York,\nwho wedded Thomas Bernard Farrell, Jr., of Montreal, at Lewlston. Heights,\nbeen ln the city for a few days,\nhavo left to continue their honeymoon in Spokane, Soattlo, Portland\nand Vancouver. On their return\nthey will mako their home in Ver-\nOn the eye of his departure for\nVictoria, where he has been transferred J. H. D. Benson, manager of\ntho Imperial Bank of Canada, was\npresented with a handsome leather\ntravelling bag by Ralph Forrester\non behalf of the local staff of the\nImperial Bank of Canada\n* *   \u00bb\nMrs. H. H. Pitts, Cedar street,\nhas had as her house guest, Mrs.\nG. Hunter Gardiner of Nakusp,\nwho was a delegate to the district\nmeeting of the Women's Institute\ndirectors held  In  town Monday.\nJ.  H.  Thompson  ot Kaslo  paid\nvisit   to  town  yesterday.\nFred Allen of Staveley, Alta., who\nspent yesterday In Nelson on busl-\nn:ss, leaves this morning for his\nhome. While In town Mr. Allen\nwas the tiousfi guest of Mr, and\nMrs.- it.  L. McBrido,  Hoover  street.\nAmong shoppers to town' yesterday was Mrs. C. M. Fawcett of\nKaslo.\n* * * \u00ab*\u2022\nMr. and Mrs. N. Peterson of Ymir\nwere   recent   visitors \u25a0 to ' town,\" .\nMrs. J. Cianpbell. Fairview, has\n.eft to spend a week in Nakusp,\n0        *        *\nMrs. Harry Hewit of Kaslo is in\ntown.\n\u00ab\u25a0   *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Eari . E. Murdln,\nFairview, have as their house guest\n.drs. Murdln's mothon'' w\\ra. u\nievern 'of   Trail.\nMiss Margaret' White, who has\n.con visiting- friends in . thc city,\ntaves this morning' lor Erickson\n.o visit her sister, Miss J. ' White,\nvi.o   tcachrs   there,\n* *   *.\nMtb. J. Keen has. been . a city\nflsltor for the past couple of days,\njclhg a delegate to. the Womens\n. ustiuite district directors meeting\nvhich took place in Nelson Monday.\nMi's, Leslie Craufurd, Hoover\n.tiect, entertained the members of\naer circle of Ut. Saviour's Churth\nhelpers recently, when, those present\nA'ere: ' Mrs, A. A. Q. Williams,\n..Irs. D. A. McFarland, Mrs. W. 11.\n.arvls, Mrs. ll. ll, Crccce, Mrs. I,\nSJoLeodi Mr.;, A. _S. Mann,- Mrs,\n.\u2022'. C. Rowley, Mrs, R. A. Aldersmith,\n.md  Mrs.  It,  W, Hiritori.\nMr. and Mra. Fred Johnson, Falls\nJtroeti have as their suest the\nJlfeSOS Kathleen McDougall \u2022\u2022\u25a0'Hi Miss\nJary James, both ol Vancouver,\nJha . are   spending    thc    week    lu\nSWEEPSTAKE IS\nBANNED BY THE\nHOSPITAL BOARD\"\n' Among those present at thc ban-\n.u_V given by the male members\n;t the club hoiihc of thc Nelson\nJolf and Country club Monday\nnight, honoring J. H. D. Benson,\nwho has been transfused' to Victoria, were Goorge ;Ferguson, J.\" P.\nKerr, ot LoiiKbeach, E. C Wragge,\nW, M. Cunllffe, John Fraser, James\nO'Shea, E. E. L. Dewdney,. L. B.\ndeVeber. T. H. Wilson, R. L. McBrlde. Guy W. Davis, William Rutherford, H. m. Whlmster, CD. Blackwood, Dr. H. Hi McKenzie, ' W. V.\nP. Clery,' J. B. Gray, A. D. McLeod,\nW. E. Keyt, C. E, Mansricld, A. L.\nMcCulloch, ,H. E. Apolcyard, L. V.\nRogers, F. c. Whltehouse, h. S,\nWatson. W. J- Grove, John Cartmei,\nG. Spencer Godfrey, Thomas Cran-\nnagc, J. G. Bunyan, Harold Lakes,\nC. W. Appleyard. T- Russell Sadd,\nW. J. Meagher, G. Shaw, B. Townshend, A. G. H. Strickland, of\nBalfour, Angus Grant of Procter,\nA. Morton Richmond, R. J. Hewitt,\nDr, E. L. Beld, W. It, Baxendale,\nof Trail, L, 8, Bradley,- C. H. H.\nStark, Gordon H. German, J. H.\nL. Boblnaon, J. M. Gordon,_ Ry e.\nCrerar, Felix Schroeder, Robert Andrew, W, Blane, William T. Fotherlngham, P. H. Sheffield, C. B.\nGarland. Alex Leith, -A. E. Murphy,\nF. F, Payne, W. M. Walker, r. t,\nThorburn,' A. Barry Gilker, Leslie\nCraufurd W, B, Bamford and Paul\nLincoln.\nDR. BENNETT TO\nGO TO ROCHESTER\nDr, J H. Bennett of Nelson, who\nhas been confined to hla-bed with\nIllness since last Frlt|\u00a3y, leaves on\nFriday of this week for the east,\nstopping xttl at Montreal'for-expert\nadvice belore gojng on Ito Rochester.\nHe may \\k away for a- period of\nfour to she weeks, Dr. J. P. Gussln,\nbis partner here, stated last night,\nRefuse to Countenance Pro\nposition for Raising of\nMoneys\nThe money making scheme of W.\nS. Heffernan of Mirror lake which\nho placed before the board of the\nKootenay Lake General hospital here\nlast night was unanimously turned\ndown when it was found that the\nproposition outlined had to do\nwtth a gigantic lottery, actually\nillegal throughout the whole of\n\u25a0jUiuida.\nMr. Heffernan, who was formerly\nconnected with the Army and Navy\niwecpstakes, explained to the board\nthat he had heard the hospital was\nin n\u00bbed of funds and so conceived\n.he idea of placing .the ..wecpstake\ncharity    fund    before'   them.\nHe pointed out that while the\n.euing of sweepstake tickets was\n.llegal in Canada, anything in which\ncharity figured was not prohibited.\n_n fact lhe hospital at Nanaimo\nbad recently financed the bulldlnj\n\/fa new wing to their institution\nmainly through thc medium of such\ni  swc?pstake.\n.voixn (Set ;t.. per cent\nNo matter what -size the swecp-\nita&e happened to be the hospital\nA'ould. get 30 per cent. He proposed\n\u25a0ailing 45.000 one dollar tickets.\nThese tickets would not only he\n.out )n tne district but throughout\n\u201ehe Upited Slates and Canada by\n.neaiis of agencies and persons who\n..nade a business of selling such\n.lckcts.\n,ln short he would handle thc\n.ale of the tickets while a com-\nnlttrc from thc hospital board\nwould supervise and look after\n;ollections nnd distribution of prizes.\nAt this lat6-dale t.hc Manchester\nhandicap would he the, only racln;\n.vent that tne hospital tickets\n.ould' be sold  on.\nHi., financial teaume, shortly, was\n-hat once the tickets were .sold\n\u25a0?30,000 net would he jcit for thc\njorfpltal. Of t'nis sum something\n,lkc $10,500 would he kept for \"the\n.lospital Itself while the remaining\nJ19.000 would be .reserved tor tho\n.jayment   off prints.\nOf the $.0,500 left the hospital\nJHwjO would be \u00ab.\"t aside tn take\n-tare of hla Ice. printing and hi\nforth. Actually, therefore, the ho;.-\npltal \u25a0 would realleo Jfl.fioo for its\nown use,\n,.\u201e;.i.i,s  IDEA\nJ. Irving indignantly derided th?\nproposition which lie stated was\njambiing and contrary 10 the\n.aws of the land. \u2022\nHe didn't think either the hoard\nior the citizen.-; of Nelson would\nipprove of .any such move that\n-ould not but result in criticism.\nIt was further explained by J, B.\namy that such a similar propoel-\n_lon had been made recently to\nLhe Gyro club, which had been\nturned  down. v\n\u25a0v-nii liltlo further discussion thc\n.natter   was   dropped.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL. B. C, Sept. 23.\u2014Mr. and;\nand Mrs. E. T- Harris, accompanied\nby Mr. and Mrs. George Crawford\nand Mi's. Ellzebeth Deans of Vancouver ^ere Rossland visitors Sun--\nday. Mrs. Deans, who' is district\nUcpuy grand' recorder of the Wo-.,\nmen's Moosq Heart Legion, paid an\nofficial visit to the lodge over the\n.week-end. Sho left for* Klmberley\nlast night accompanied aa far as\nCastlegar by Mr. and -Mrs. Harris\nand Mr. and Mra; Crawford,\n\u2022 *   * V\nMrs. I. Devlto,  who has beon **\u25a0\u2022*\npatient at the Trall-Tadanac hospital for several weeks, .left Saturday. Sho left tbe same day for\nWelBcJn to stay with relatives, Mr.\nand  Mrs.   C. Romano,\nMiss   Dorothy   Dockerill   let   this\nXnlng for Spokane. Tomorrowp\nning she will gd by airplane to'\nSeattle and then to Vancouver, wheer,\nshe will join Mrs. Dockerill ana:\nspend . a week on vacation.\n* i   *\n'Mrs. A. F. Taylor and Mrs. O.\nPage, who have been spending the-\npasji six weeks ln Vancouver, tho\nguests of their parents; Mr. and.\nMrs. B. Owens, returned home\nThursday. . ,\nMrs. O. J ,-Stalnton returned to\nher home Sunday Irom the Trall-\n\u25a0Tadanac hospital, where she ha*\nbeen  a patient  for  some time.\naw*\n' Mrs. Donald McLeod .spent Sunday in Nelson visiting her daughter,\nMiss Kathleen, who is a nursc-in-\ntratnlng at the Kootenay'Lake General  hospital.\nLouis Morris was the guest of\nVerne Vance at hla hocc in Rosemont,  Nelson. s\n\u2666 *   %\nMlsa Vera Kcmpston, formerly of\nTrail Central school teaching staff,\nhas arrived In Kobe, Japan, according to a postcard received from her\nwritten on board ship.\nEdward Harper, who underwent\nan operation on his knee a week\nago, is reported to be progressing\nfavorably.\nMrs. E. Bowkett and daughter May\nof South Slocan are the guests of\nMrs. Bowkett's parents, M. and Mrs.\nW. Laurie Sr. Mr.' Bowkett came\nwith them but returned homo Sunday evening,\n\u00ab   *   *\nMr. and Mrs. F. S. Willis and\nfamily spent the week-end at\nChristina lake.\nA. B. Clark, who has been living\nsome tlmo at Ymlr, is back in the\ncity and Intends to make his home\nhere. Mrs, Clark and children accompanied him but returned to Salmo Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. F. Hay ley were\nweek-end visitors ln the city, from\nVancouver.\nA. Coverdalc left thia morning\nby stage for two weeks' vocation\nto be spent in Spokane, Seattle and\n\u25a0Vancouver.\nDouglas Burt, who has been\naway all summer, returned to his\nhome   here   tills   week-end.\nR. B. Bcli. Vernon architect, who\nhas been the guest of his son, Hugh\nBell, Nelson avenii\", since Saturday,\nleaves   today   for   the   Okanagan.\nMrs. J. J, Wilson and Mrs. Alex\nCox of Rossland are city visitors\ntoday.\nJames Quayle, j. g. Quayle and\nE. B. Quayle motored to Nelson today   on   business.\nMrs.   R.  Drew  and   two  Children;\nwho have been the guests of Mr,\nmd Mrs. George Lh-ew lor the past\nweek, left Saturday for Spokane,\n.vherc they will visit Mrs. Drews\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer D.\nJail. Mrs. Drew accompanied them\noy   car,   returning   Sunday   evening.\nMrs. Joe Savelll left last evening\n\u25a0>r a visit to her old home in Italy.'\n3he was accompanied by Mrs. A.\nigas-l, president of tho Sisters of\nColombo lodge here.\n\u2022 *   \u00bb\nMaurice McCarthy left tills morn-\n.ng   to  spend   a   vacation   in   Spo-\n-ftilC.\n* *   \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. Q, H. Ferguson\nof Nelaon, ami daughters, Joy and\nBetty, were visitors tu Trail on\nSunday.\nrMs. W. T .Fothinghani of Nel\u00bb\nson visited Her daughtrr and son-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. McBay,\n;n Sunday.\nciMea_.her's<^)\nPhone 200 607 Baker St.'\nStore News\ne\nWednesday Half Day Specials\nMisses' and Women's\n'-        Skirts\n$2.95.^ Each\nSmartly tailored skirts of all wool\ntweed.  Made in pleated  styles in\nsizes 14 to 20.\nSPECIAL TODAY, EACH ?__.95\nFlannelette Sheets\n$2.65 the Pair\nDouble bed size flannelette sheets in\nbest quality.\nSPECIAL, THE PAIR   $2.65\nCotton Sheets\n83.00 the Pair\nSilk Underwear\nAt Half Price\nYEAR AGO TODAY\nMinimum Tcmpcfatinc Is 42\nDegrees and  Maximum\n(i_. Degrees\nLittle Indications ar* nhowri hrrc\nof Winter weather. Trees are only\nbeginning to 'lose thetr leave;; and\nthc  days   are   comparative*   warm.\nYet one year ago today nnow\nfell on the higher mountain regions   visible   from   the   city.\nDuring the 24 hours ending 5 p.m.\nTuesday, the ' minimum waa 43\ndecrees, a figure several degrees\nhigher than that on previous evenings during the past week. The\nmaximum temperature waa 62 tio-\ngrees.\nAlthough no Immediate signs of\nwinter are noticeable, autumn has\ndefinitely come. Everywhere the\nbrilliant foliage Ib evident. Throughout the city the Virginia Creepers\nhave turned to red and mople.i to\npellow.\nSTEEL   WOOL      ,_____._,_____,\nHi.eel wool or \"steel fihavlng\" consists ' of long silky flgres shaved\n1.1,111 bteel. vVhcn massed together\nth:se fibres- have the appearance\nof wool.\nTrail News of the Day\n1RAU. HOUSES AND LOTS. Insurance. Notary. J. D. Anderson.  Trail. 11687)\n\u2022    \u2022    \u00bb\nGrace  Brett studio of _)ancln_\n'rlvate and ClMa lessons ln Reducing\nSenior   Girls'   Daubing   class\n\"rlvate lessons in Ballroom DanclnR\nor. Victoria and Tadanac. Phono 737\n11800)\nThe principal Canadian fish products at present exported to Germany are frozen eels and frozen\nand   mlki-curcd   salmon.\nDirect from tlie mill, these are extra value.      They come in  heavy\nweight and full size.\nSPECIAL, THE PAIR  $3.00\nChildren's Dresses\nand Coats\nS3.98 Each\nOdd lines of dresses and coats in\nassorted styles and colors.\nALL ONE PEICE, EACH $3.98\nWomeh'sHouseDresses\n9Sc Each\nWell made, of good  quality print.\nAssorted patterns and colors. Sizes\n,\".6 to 42.\nSPECIAL TODAY, EACH .... 98\u00a3\nEmbroidered\nHandkerchiefs\n5 for a S1.00\nPure linen liandkerchiefs with colored hand embroidery. Assorted colors and patterns.\nSPECIAL, 5 FOR   $1.00\nOne table of silk underwear, consisting of vests, bloomers, combinations, slips, etc., in assorted colors\nand styles.\nALL CLEARING AT HALF PRICE\nHoleproof Hose\n$1.25 the Pair\nFull  fashioned  pure  silk  hose  in\nservice weight.  New  French heel.\nAll the new Fall colors. Sizes S\\_\nto 10.\nSPECIAL, THE PAIR   $1.25\ni \u201e\u201e.\u201e.\u201e\u201e \u25a0_\u25a0____. ....;. __i\nLEGION MEMBERS\nTO ATTEND MEET\nAT TRAIL TODAY\nDistrict   Branches  Hold   Inter Branch Relationship\nMeeting\nA contingent of Canadian Legion\nmembers numbering about 30 leave\nhero I his afternoon lor TraU to\nlake part ln the Inter Branch Relationship BUMtlng of tlie district\nbranches. TraU, Slocan City, Central Slocan, Rossland and Nelson\nbranches will bo represented. The\nmeeting will bc both a social and\n;i business one. Cnrs ]eavc the city\nat   5:30,\nWindow\nGlass\nRepair your broken windows now. We\ncarry a large stock of window glass in\nstandard sizes.\nOdd sizes cut to measure.\nCel-o-glass for poultry houses.\nHlpperson Hardware Co.,Ltd.\nLook for the Red Hardware Store\nPhone 497       NELSON, B. C.       Box 414\nThe Trail branch haa charge of\nthe entertaining of tho other\nbranches. The meeting In held\nto promote inter branch relationship and to create more Interest\nIn  tho organization.\nIt Is generally known that the\nmines or the Sudbury district of\nOntario contribute about 90 per\ncent of the world's production of\nnickel, and that development during\nthe past few years has proved the\nexistence of large deposits carrying\nhigh values in copper and In metals\nof the platinum group as well as in\nnickel.\nIS  APPOINTED\nOTTAWA, Sept. 2a\u2014J. C. Brady,\nfarmer 'Conservative member ctf\nparliament for Skeena, British Columbia, has been appointed a census\ncommissioner of the demography\nbranch of tho Dominion bureau\nof statistics. it waa announced\ntoday Mr, Brady will organize the\noensiw oil institutions \u25a0aufch aa\nhospitals, asylums, penltenturles and\nhouses  of  refuge   all  over  Canada.\nSixty-three salmon canneries operated in British Columbia in 1029;\none   more   than   lu   1A28.\nThe uniform quality\nof Blue Ribbon Mali\nyear after year has\nswept it to permanent leadership.\nWherever you so\nyou And America's\nBiggest Seller.\nPacked full 3 lbs.\n Page Six\nTHIS KELSON DAILY NEWS      WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930.\n-% Mmm lailij Jta*\nPublication every morning except. Bunday by The-News Publtsh-\nllshing   Company,   Limited,   Nelson.   B.   C.\nBusiness letters should be addressed and checks and money\norders, made payable to Tbe News Publishing Company, Limited,\n'\u25a0\u25a0.*...\u00ab in  no case to individual members of  tho staff.\nAdvertising rate cards *&d A. B. C, statements of circulation\nmailed on request, or may be seen at the office of any advertising\nagency   recognized   by   thc   Canadian   Dally   Newspapers   Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\nBy mall  (country), por month  _____..__.._.._...._._._.._._____-_.   .60\nPer   year   _ -....-     ____-__.__.._.\u25a0_\u00bb...   6.00\nBy mall (city), por year ..____.__...._.............-.........  13.00*\nOutside   Canada,  per  month   _._.. _..\u2014 \u2014.._..,  .76\nPer   year    - _  _______ .  _ \u201e   7.50\nDelivered,   por   week     ...  ,.\u201e\u25a0\u25a0., _\u2014.-- 35\nPer   year      -  13.00\n\u2022 Payable ln advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ot circulation.\nrivi^SSDSYr^l^WlB 24,:;i9$6'\nTACKLE AUDITORIUM\nISSUE NOW\nIt is between three and four years since Nelson\ncitizens have been discussing and admitting the community's crying need for an auditorium, arena, pavilion, or community center, capable of accommodating\nevery large gathering and capable of being put to a\nlarge variety of usee. The proposal was born when\nMayor J. A. McDonald's regime had nearly a year to\ngo, and it has seen nearly three years completed under\nMayor R. D. Barnes.\nWhen it wag launched, the Nelson fair still had a\nhome, though it was regarded as slated for replacement; and the opera house was still available for\npublic gatherings, and continued to serve for all the\nuses for which it was adapted.\nToday the community's facilities are diminished\nby the fair pavilion, which also served various community purposes besides housing Nelson's splendid\nfair, and by the opera house, which is being converted\nto other uses.\nNelson's condition with regard to accommodation\nfor large indoor gatherings of various kinds is today\nfar worse than it was when the discussion of this proposed all-round community facility was first launched.\nNelson today cannot stage a fair\u2014and it should\nhave the largest and best fair in the interior.\nIt cannot accommodate a show requiring a stage\n\u2014a rather humiliating confession.\nIts accommodation for public meetings, instead of\nbeing so enlarged as to be equal to any demands that\ncan arise, is enormously reduced, and the size of Nelson gatherings is still further limited.\nIts floor space, already totally inadequate to meet\ndemands, is further restricted. \u2022\nIt is surely time to face the condition of affairs,\nand for these added reasons, which reinforce those\npreviously existing, to take up the question of a civic\nauditorium.\nTlie retiring city council should at least leave the\nproject farther advanced than it found it. If it were\npossible to develop the project sufficiently in the immediate future, for the matter to be submitted to the\npropertv-owners at the January election, it would be\nwell.\nTHE POSSIBILITIES\nA civic auditorium, built on a scale to serve the\nlargest gatherings and to serve many different uses\nwhich it is desirable to serve, would be of the greatest\nutility to Nelson, and would be even an asset to the\nWest Kootenay at large.\nFirstly, Nelson must have a fair, and the auditorium, for which the only logical site is that of the late\nfair buildings, with the Recreation grounds in connection, must necessarily be its home.\nWhen providing such a home, Nelson should\nutilize the opportunity to design the building so that\nit could accommodate gatherings of 2000 or more\npeople, seating being moveable.\nTlie main interior should be provided with a stage,\nso as to provide accommodation for shows, as well as\nfor mass meetings.\nEntrance or entrances to the main floor should be\nsuch as to facilitate auto shows, and for this purpose\nit would be desirable for the main floor to be on the\nstreet level.\nSuch a design would make possible a large basement area, which could be utilized in part for a- community swimming tank and showers, perhaps in part\nfor such a purpose as the Dominion fish hatchery here\nor for general storage.\nMany uses would be found for the large floor space\nIt could be rented for large dance*. It could earn revenue from badminton. It could serve scheduled gymnasium classes.\nThe design mighl .ermlt the main interior to be\nbroken up into sectional halls by sliding or falling\ndoors, thus making il possible to accommodate various\ninterests at the same time.\nAmong revem*    possibilities might be:\nBasement renla\nSwimming and athletic clubs.\nBadminton rental.\nDance floor rentals.\nPolitical and other large meetings.\nDramatic and musical productions.\nRoad attractions, such as bands and touring pro.\nduction..\nIndoor athletic   meets.\nIndoor carnivals and kermesses.\nAuto shows.\nThe fair.\nIsn't it worth while to give Nelson a community\nfacility of such a character, even if it costs something?\nWouldn't such a building pay well eventually on\nthe investment?\nNelson is not dependent on one single line of\nactivity for its prosperity. It has many lines of business which share its maintenance. But undoubtedly its\ngreatest resource is the selling of service \u2014 its 25\nwholesale houses do more to bring in new money than\nany other group of activities. Nelson also sells service\neducationally. With a civic auditorium of the kind\nunder discussion, Nelson would sell further service to\nthe district, by bringing within its reach great road\nattractions, auto shows, and other events that would\nbring district visitors to Nelson in large numbers.\nAUNT HET,\n'I hate to be gettln' absent-mind\ned, especially ln church. But that\nstranger In front o' me had a bald\nhead so like Pa's that I swatted\nthe fly before I thought.\"\nThe Lighter\nSide   i\nTake  His  Ftnger-PrtnU\nCftiistable\u2014Have you seen any\nsuspicious looking people around\nhere lately?\"\nHad\u2014Yes, _ bloke took a rabbit out o' mc whiskers i-tr'a\nnight nt tbe circus\u2014Smith's\nWeekly, Sydney.\n__o\u2014\nAlphabet   crackers   are   unpopular\nin London.  The itlds mess up  the\nfloor so dropping h's.\nIN   DOUBT\n\"So you are really In society?\"\nsaid friend of earlier years.\n\"I wouldn't say for sure,\" answered Mr. cumrox. \"Nobody has ever\napproached mc with any propositions to write up my past unless I\npaid to stop 'em.\"\u2014Washington Star\nChicago Is the fourth city. There\nIs Sodom and Gomorrah and\u2014 ah\n\u2014what   was  the   other?\n\u2014o\u2014\n' \"Bridget,  do  you   know  anything\nconcerning my  wife's whereabouts?'\n\"Yes   sir,   I   put   them   in   the\nwash.''\n\u2014Milton Eagle\nLIVING WITHIN THE INCOME\nMEANS LIVING WITHOUT THE\nWORRY.\nEfficient Housekeeping\nBr LAURA E. KtRKMAN\nTOMOBROWS MENU        ',   **,\ni Breakfast\nLeftover PlncBpplo\n.\u2022   Cereal\nPoached Eggs Toast\nCoffee\n, Luncheon\n': Vegetable Salad\nBiscuits    . Peanut Butter\nStewed.. Prunes Cookies\nTe\u00bb\nDinner\nTomato  SOUP\nCold;'Sliced Beef\nPickles   .\nRt_e Brussels Sprouts\nEalaln  Pie , Coffee\n' REQUESTED PRESERVES\nClrapo Conserve: Wash three\npounds of grapes, mash well, then\ncook (pulp, skins and all) till,\nsoft. Press through a wide-meshed\nslevs find to this sifted part add\nthree pounds of granulated, sugar,\nono pound of seedless raisins (put\nthrough food chopper) the Juice\nof two lemons and the two lemon\nrinds ohopped finely. Last, add\nthree medium-size oranges out In\nthin slices (rind and pulp.) Let\ncome to a boll, then simmer, stirring often, for one and one-half\nhours, before turning Into hot,\nsterilized Jars, using new rubbers,\nand  sealing airtight at ones.\nSpiced Pears: Pare and core seven\npounds ot pears, then put this fruit\nInto a sauoepan with enough water\nto cover, and boll five minutes, to\nsoften them somewhat. Drain, not\nkeeping the water. Now Into your\npreserving kettle put one cup of\nclear water, two oups of vinegar,\nseven cups of granulated sugar and\none-half cup of broken stick-cinnamon tied In a small cheesecloth\nbag; boll five minutes .then add\npart of the previously par-botled\npears and cook till tender and glazed. Remove these cooked pears to\n.sterilized Jars, and. continue to cook,\nthe remainder of the par-boiled\nfruit ln the same - manner. .Last,\nturn the boiling sirup over the\nglased fruit ln the Jars (keep\nJars hot while doing this, by wrapping In towels wrung from hot .\nwater.) put on new rubbers and\nseal at onpe.\nGinger-Tomato Preserve: Skin one\npound of lyeHow pear-tomhtoea,\nthen place in a bowl with on\u00bb\npound of granulated sugar and let\nstand over night. Next .day, pour\noff sirup whloh has gathered, and\nbol till quite thlok before adding\nthe tomatoes, two ounces, of pre.\nserved Canton ginger arid two siloed lemons. Cook till tomatoes look\ndear .then turn Into Jars. Seal at\nonce, over new rubbers.\nNO   BRIDAL\nEntirely without fees or charges\n>t any sort will be the marriage\n\u2022olomnlzed this, year before local .\ntribunals of the civil registry ln\nlartlsa to a m atrlmonlal union\nthe federal district, contracting\nwill simply meet together before\none of these civil courts, and be\nduly united at the public expense.\nThis Innovation ls expected to be |\nof particular benefit to poor people many of. whom have dispensed\nwith this formality altogether In\nthe pest because of the assessments\ndemanded for papers, eto.\nBonldcs these free rorrlages, functions will be ratified by govern- J\nnont officers at the home of one\nof the uniting parties at a time\nstilting, the - official convenience,\nfat 30 pesos (about $15) and waddings within the federal dlstrlot\nat extraordinary or special hours\nwill be authorized and confirmed\nat a oharge of 60 pesos,        , J \u2022\n\u2014I*om El Universal Mexico Ottr\nThe\nL\n\/0&fyii\nThe C(age) We Live In.\n\"Fred, we must pay something on what we've bought before we\ncan buy anything more!\"\nBy   M.   E.   LEES,   DEER   PARK\nWith all thc adjuncts numerous\nand sundry, your comfort and\nvanity demand safely kraalcd under\nlock and key in your club-bag, you\nsally forth one morning In July.\nThe shimmering baby-waves on the\nlake's bosom, tlie sombre silenoes\nof old Grandfather Mountain, and\nall the familiar scene which at\ntimes you have loved better than\nyour best friend, cry out ln protest\nof your faithlessness: \"Peace, security. Security, Peace.\" The air\nIs alive with lt. Peace! What is\npeace to you with this urge for\nlife, action, danger maybe, boiling\nin your veins? Haven't you almost\nwallowed In peace for ten somnolent months? So you speed your\nsteps though you have a good\nquarter hour to cover half a block.\nThere you are at last\u2014the warning honk of the horn. With the\nspirit of adventure strong upon,\nyou, Don Qulxote-llkc, you mount\nyour Roslnante. ln the shape of\n\"Nelson Greyhound\", and fare\nforth Into the unknown. Temporarily you relax, settling back easily,\nwith a sense of all last-minute responsibilities finally disposed of.\nBut not for long Roslnante slows\nto a atop, and, \"Tickets please,\"\nbrings you Into action with a pre-\nmonltlonal chtll creeping up your\nspine, Ticket! Why, your purse\noi course. You dig down, frantically\ndiving Into twenty-one compartments. Horrors! Gone 1 You rc\"-\npeat the 'search fruitlessly. The\nkindest and most, sympathetic driver\nIn world comrs to your aid, but\nunav&llingly. You continue the\nhunt until the next stop ts reached\nwhen he patiently turns his car\nupside down in your behalf. Then,\nJoy of Jbys. Pound! Some miracle\nhafl replaced lt In that exact corner\nof the purse where for safety you\noriginally cached it. 'O well I At\nleast you are wide awake now and\nhave found your terra flrrna with\nRoslnante vanished in thin air.\nFor hours now. the driver pilots\nyou over a yellow thread of road\nthrough stretches of tlmberland,\noccasional settlements, and along\nmere ledges on canyon sides, where\na swerve of the wheej would precipitate you Into Eternity. But\nhe knows every Inch of his run,\nand points out for you half-on-\nocaled marvels of the way, opening\nyour eyes to a panoramic wonderland before udrcamed of. Suddenly,\nlt sjems. Orehound stops ln\nhis tracks, confronted by a sign\nprescient with warning, almost\nthreat:\nUB. CUSTOMS\u2014ALL BAGGAGE\nOPEN   FOR   INSPECTION.\nNothing to excite one\u2014no. Yet\nalmost guiltily you make mental\nInventory of your perfectly innocent baggage seizing on the recollected image of a nashllght Included\nwith your ninety-nine other Items.\nSuppose Its possession Incriminate\nyou as a highway robber? Horrible\nthoughtl Almost you wish that you\nhad faced the tenors of the lone\nand llghtlcss country road of your\ncourage returns. Fifteen minutes\nlater you have been pronounced\na desirable tourist, or st worst a\nharmless intruder\u2014 not however,\nwithout having first submitted to\na questionnaire which brought tbe\nred blood to your cheek, and almost\nthe salt tear to your eye; but,\n\"There little girl don't cry!\" Before\nyour return you will have grown\ncallouses on the tender places, and\ndeveloped a staunch friendliness\nfor these off-hand, ready witted,\ncosmopolitan-spirited neighbors of\nyours. We Britishers, lt may be,\nare a thin-skinned people who\nmight with profit absorb something\nof the give-and-take unconven-\ntlonallsm which breezes over ua\nimmediately we cross the border.\nMeanwhile you are speeding\nwestward at an unbelievable pace\nand before you realise lt you are\nthreading the outskirts of that\ncoast city which is your objective. Seattle-wonderful city of never-ebbing activity, of feverish\nquest, of high-pressure, and unfaltering optimism. As you step\nfrom the friendly shelter of your\ntransport the fragranC* \u00ab a '\"Cof\nfee Shop\", assails your nostrils\nand proves your first downfall\u2014\nirom now pn the trend of your\nhard-saved kale is a chronic dwindle. You tender a crisp Canadian\nten-spot. An alert cashier remarks\nlt; \"From the wet country,\" and\nglimpses you appralslngly as if\nhalf suspecting . you of being still\nintoxicated. In a few days you\nhave familiarized thc downtown\nsections; played with the little\ntrays of the cafeteria, located the\nhorn? of thc snappiest \"Talkie\"\nraided the Departmental, where\nyou romped on the rolling stairways, and squandered a month's\nsalary on bizarre souvenirs whose\nchief appeal is thclr absolute use-\nlessness.\nBut how fast Bpeed the days\neach bristling with lte minion\nthrills! On the fourth, confident\nof sophistication, you reject escort, hit out on a pilgrimage of\ndiscovery through the Intricacy of\noy-way, and of courso lose yourself. Several hours later a beating sun, and an aching void beneath your ensemble, declare high-\nnoon. Vainly you' cast about for\nan eating-place, but the inhabitants of this section must indeed\nbe total abstainers\u2014 not a Coffee Shop even rewards your search.\nYou will return to civilization\u2014\nnothing exciting has resulted anyway ! Westward you turn your\n'weary steps and In half an hour\nare back to thc same spot. Of\ncourse you have circled. Resolutely you set your face ln the opposite direction. Ditto result.\nSame experience repeated till lt\nceases to be a comedy. Almost\ndropping from blistered feet hunger and exasperation, you seize on\nan approaching taxi, fairly leap\nthrough tho door in your eagerness l?Bt lt escape you, and before you aro comfortably settled\nhavo landed outside your hotel\nmeekly paying the j driver, (who\nhas sensed your newness), six bits\nfor   a   two-block  lift.\nThen comes \"Fleet Week\", when\nnil the sea-port town goes wild\nwith carnival, when the streets\nare aswarm with blue-coats from-\nthe American and visiting war\nships now riding at anchor in the\nharbour, and you witness perhaps\nfor tlie first time the unusual\nsight of The Union Jack, and Canadian Ensign flouting loftily side by\nside with Stars and Stripes along\nthe highways of traffic. You stifle a wtld urge to shrill, \"God\nSave tho King,\" and, \"The, Maple\nLeaf Forever,\" but a happy chance\ndiverts your attention to the plight\nof a hero of the briny waves, who\nls striving manfully to dispense\nhis favors equally among' a quartette of feminine admirers, who\npossess him two-deep on either\nside. But whoever heard of a\nseaman disparaged by a plurality\nof fair worshippers? Not this one.\nHe sweeps them collectively into\na fountain-booth, flings down a\ncart-wheel and calls for \"Green\nRiver,\" and \"Root Beer,\" to the\nextent  of   tt.\nWonderful gala days! Now they\nhave gone with the sailors and\ntho brave ships and the floating\nflags. The weeks are Hwallowed\nup in a waning August. Your\nfaithful Grayhound will soon return for you. Only a Uttle last-\nminute ahopping remains. A Nlckle\nin the slot, your weight and your\nfortune\" machine, intrigues yon.\nYou have dropped exactly twelve\nand three quc\/rter-fcounds since\narrival here, and you learn that\nyou never will be rich, hut happy,\nalso that you are destined to\nmany a widow with one arm and\ns|x children, a prediction you deem\nrank fallacy, since in these days of\nautomoblllty two arms are as Indispensable to a man as a hip-\npocket. But there-cease your rant-\nlng-grayhound   has   returned..\nThen one morning at 7:30 you\nrouse to the raucous din of the\nold alarm clock at your bed-side,\nfeeling like the dregs of the homebrew with which your friends celebrated your toii-p-ooirctag and\nleft in the glass overnight, and\nyou know that you have been A-\nHoUdaylng.\nThat Body of Yours\nBy  JAS.  W. BARTON, M.  D.\nFEVER FROM AN\nUNKNOWN  CAUSE\n1 have spoken before about the\nmistake mothers make ln using the\nclinical thermometer so much with\ntheir children. Even when the child\nlooks well enough, is sleeping and\neating well, the mother for \"safety's sake\" will take Its temperature.\nShould it show a rise of even one\ndegree she begins to worry and\nvery frequently calls In the doctor.\nAa you know a youngster,' or even\nan adult may have a temperature\nof 97 degrees F. In the early morning and 99 degrees F. at four\no'clock In the afternoon, and be perfectly normal. In fact most of us\nwill show a difference of at least\none degree between the morning\nand the late afternoon temperature.\nAlso any little temporary disturbance\nin the stomach or intestine can\nraise the temperature one or two\ndegrees, and no attempt should bc\nmade to reduce this temperature by\nfever reducing drugs. The use of a\npurgative or enema of course may i\nbc Indicated.\nHowever where a youngster or an\nadult has a perslstont temperature\nevery afternoon for a number of\ndays or weeks, even if the temperature is not Unduly high 100\ndegrees F. to 101 degrees F., then\nH would be verv u.i _e to I1\nit. There must be some real cause;\nsomething more than a Uttle indigestion. \\ |\nThe physician should be called In\nand any and every suggestion he\nmakes regarding the needs of the\ncase should be met by the family\nas far as possible.\nThere are so many things that\nmay be causing this *\"low fever\",\nas lt ls called that lt may need\npatience on the part ol uv-.ryu-.-w\nbeforB the actual cause le discovered.\nIt may be a low infection from\nteeth, tonsils, sinuses, largo intestine, appendix, gaU bladder and so\nforth. It may be the beginning of\nsome thyroid or other glandular\ncondition.\nIt may be the eany symptom\nof tybhoid fever.\nAfter painstaking effort the cause\nis likely to be found because of the\nmethods now at the disposal of the\nphysician.\nDrs. H. L. Alt and M. H Barber\nof the Peter Bent Brlgham hospital,\nBoston, report that of 34,000 patients admitted Into the hospital\nsince its opening, only 17-} had a\npersistent temperature whose cause\ncould not be discovered at the\ntime. Of these basca that t*ey - n\nunable to follow lip, 23 \u25a0 later\nshowed the likely cause\u2014tuberculosis, cancer, heart disease, rheumatism or other cause.\nDon't let a little rise in temperature worry you. It is Nature's\nmethod of fighting an ailment for\nyou. However dont' ignore a temperature that persists for some days.\nCall  a  doctor.\nMONITOR TOP\nguarantees\nDependable, quiet\noperation always\nSEALED air-tight within tha\nMonitor Top it tha antlra\nmechanism that \u2014UI operate a General Electric Refrigerator year ln nnd\n.car out\u2014quietly and dependably\u2014\nwithout a thought or worry on yoor\npart.\nF.vcry iaj the General Electric Re-'\nfrigerator will save you money. For\na few cents a week It will provide the\nsafe, dependable refrigeration that\npreeerre. foods, safeguards health\nand prevents -note. And thc Monitor\nTop ls designed to giro a life-time\nof economical, trouble-free seniee.\nAak the nearest dealer to demonstrate the many advantages of the\nGeneral Electric Refrigerator.\nWhat Do You Think?\nDoukhobors Allot <\n$50,000 to Schools\nSays Vereschagin\nTo the Editor of The Dally News:\nSir\u2014Recently ln thc Nelson paper\nstarted to appear articles of threatening character, namely: That If\nthe Doukhobors will not fulfil the\nlaws according to the ^School act,\nthen the blame would- fall on their\nleader and his followers,\nThe author of this letter would\nlike to explain to tho public the,\ngeneral history of the Doukhobors.\nThe Doukhobors according to their\nreligious persuasion are taking their\nbsglnning from the three youths of\nBabylon, who, for the faith in their\nGod have been cast into the red\nhot furnace by the kinfe of Babylon\n\u2014NebuchadnewuT.\nThe Doukhobora believe into Jesus\nChrist, as .a reformator Saveor of\nthe whole world. Their belief\nhas been openly expressed in the\nRussian Empire over 300 years a_o,\nand their forefathers have suffered\nterribly for refusal to submit to\npopes and,, their dogmatic ceremonials. Doukhobors do not worship anything they can see. Doukhobors worship their Ood ln spirit\nwith their souls, because God is\na spirit, \u25a0\nHISTORY   OP   SECT,\nlu the year of 1895 the Doukhobors refused to submit to mlUtary\nservitude and burned on a pile\nall mortlferous weapons, Por aU\nthis they have been severely punished by the Russian government and\nmost of the male population have\nbeen exiled; to the far and cold\nSiberia.\nThirty years ago, destiny caUecl\nthe Doukhobors according to thetr\nreligious belief, to migrate Into the\nBritlah Canada. Here the Doukhobors expected to rest from their\npersecutions and fulfil the Ideals\nof peaceful life, namely the commandment of Christ, and do not\nantagonize   evil.\nIn the Bcope of 30 years, while\nthe Doukhobors are living in Canada, they did not rob anybody, and\ndid not start any revolt In this\nland with arms in their hands;\ncontrary, they cultivated their lands,\npeacefully working for themselves.\nAlthough their unforgotten leader,\nF,   W.   vcregln,   had   fallen   aa   a\nsacrifice in this land from a murderous hand, the Doukhobor wish\npeace and happiness to all living\nIn the land of the new world, and\nalso   ln   the   whole   universe.\nThe history of the world from\nAbei till the present times Is spotted\nwith blood. With the might of\nmurderous weapons have been destroyed and burned up villages and\ncities, the whole nations have been\ndestroyed from the pressuro of\ngreat armies. In blood-thirsty extremes soldiers of certain nations\ndrank the blood of their enemies.\nTherefore the Doukhobors named\nthemselves the Christian Community\nof  Universal   Brotherhood.\nDoukhobors do not recognize In\nthe whole universe any enemies, and\nthe Doukhobors profess themselves\nas free citizens of tho whole universe.\nSCHOOL    IDEAI,S\nThe school question tbe Doukhobors, with the exception of a few\nfanatics, do not reject, but the\nparents strictly watch over their\nchildren that the teachers should\nnot give them any military training.\nThe Doukhobors recognize war as\na terrible crime before God and\nman's laws.\nProm our children, we endeavor\nto create a \"laboreous IntUegency\".\nThis Ib our genuine aim, and we\nwill accomplish It. Our wealth\nIs  confined   ln  this.\nIn the last year of 1929, we have\nexpended over $30,000 for erection\nof school buildings, and also to\nthis year we assigned (50,000 lor\nschool  buildings and education.\nWe received Information that the\nnumber of ohildren who attended\nschools are 860 only in British\nColumbia.\nS.   W.   VEREStJHAGlN\nONLY   A   TEMPORABY   REFORM\nPremier King went into office with\na promise on his Ups that he would\nreform  the  senate.\nPremier King went out of the\noffice with the senate reformed\nln only one respect. , The Con\nseratlve majority had given place\nto a Liberal  majority  of three.\nBut alas, and likewise alack.\nthis is a reform that will not last.\nFor some of the Liberal senators\nare full of sears and will ..soon pass\nto  their  reword.     .\n'    Then   wicked    Tories   will    take\nI their  places,\n'\u2014Toronto   Telegram\nI\nEASY TERMS ARRANOBD\nGeneral Electric Ref rlgera-  .\ntor dealers are ln a position\nto offer exceedingly reason-\nable terms, well within the    I\naverage family budget.     '\nGENERAL\u00ae ELECTRIC\nALL-STEEL REFMGERATOIt\nGUY'S ELECTRIC STORE\nWest Kootenay Power & Light Company, Limited\n(Agents\u2014Trail   and   Rossland)\nGuaranteed   hy   CANADIAN   GENERAL   ELECTRIC   CO.,   United\nBuilding\nMaterial   JohnBums&Son\nLet ub figure your bills on |\nBuilding Material.   Coast\nLumber a spsdalty.\n^\nHeating\nSTOVES\nNow\u2014.\nIs the time to. purchase that\nheating sto\\: you have been\nthinking . about for a long\ntime, before the winter sets in.\nWe have a nice line of coal\nand wood heaters, and the best\nCIRCULATING  HEATER\nyou can buy, and at a reasonable price. Come in\nand see our\nJewel Home Warmer\nIf you want your furnace overhauled, we have a\nfirst class tinsmith oh the job to give you the\nbest of service. .\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON, -_-i B. C.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS       WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER U, 1980.\ni iS3\nPage Sevefl\nBROOKLYN OUT OF RACE NOW\nN NATIONAL LEAGUE, CARDS\nSTRENGTHEN HOLD ON LEAD\n|Only Two Clubs,  Cards and  Cubs,  Retain Mathmetical\nChance of Winning League Pennant;\nGiants Well Back\nHornsby and Joe\nBest of Friends\n. (By Associated Press) $\u25a0\nOnly two .clubs retain a methe-\nImatical chance of winning the Na-\n\u25a0tlonnl league pennant as the result\nlot yesterday's two games, and the,\n\u25a0 St. Louis Cards are further ahead\n|than ever. <\nBy downing the Phillies 10-16 in\nIi yesterday's slugfest, the Cards raov-\nled out three full gardes ahead of\n\u2022the Chicago Cubs- who were idle\n{and the Cubs have only four games\nSin which to try to catch the leaders.\n' The Brooklyn Robins, losing an\n(eight two decision to the New York\nGiant:;, were put completely out of\ntbe race with the lose of a full\ngame. They now are five games behind and have four to go.\nI The Giants gained a virtual tie\nJwith the Rabins for third place\n'through their victory and trail by\none point.\n_ The standing of the leaders:\n\u25a0Club: W   h  Pet. To play\nSt.  LOUls    OB   61   .593       4\nOMcaso        88   64   .573       4\n-rooklyn       84   66   .560      4.\n$9*  York  -    85   67   .569       2\nm CARDS   RUN   WILD\ni PHILADELPHIA,     Sept.     23.\u2014The\nit. Louis Cardinals again 'ran wild\n\u25a0gainst the Phillies today, winning\nheir  final   same,   19   to   16,    The\nvictory    increased    the    Cardinal:;.\nnargin to three games over Chicago\nmd eliminated the Brooklyn Robins,\nwho  lost  to  New  York,  from  the\nlennant race.\nThe Cards \"bombarded four Phll-\nf tdelphia hurlers for a total of 29\nlilts while the Phillies slammad out\nH<6  blows  including  a -homer -with\nj',ho bases full by Rensa.\n1 By winning the Cards  gained  a\n\u25a0halt gamo on the Idle Chicago Cubs\n'ind now are three games ahead of\n[toolr   only   remaining   rivals,   with\nout   four   to   play.    Brooklyn,   by\n.oslng to the Giants while St. Louis\nIwon, dropped to five games behind\nho   Cards   and   clear   out   of   the\npennant race.\nR H E\nI3t.   LOUlfl    - -  10 26   2\nPhiladelphia     16 16   *\nRhem, LindBey, Hallahan and\niMancuaco; Collins, Elliott, Benge,\nfHansen and Rensa.,\nVANCfc' DRIVEN FROM NOt&D\nBROOKLYN. N. Y\u201e Sept. 23.\u2014The\nl*New York Giants orovo Dazzy Vance\nfrom the mound, scoring, four runs\nin the fifth inning and defeated\nihe Robins, eight to two, in their\ntnal clash of the Beason. The vlc-\nory gave the Giants a virtual tie\nwith Brooklyn for third place in\n-.he standing.\nR H  B\n\u25a0Jew York     8 14   o\nBrooklyn        2 '6   2\ni; Fitzsimmons   and   Hogan;   Vance,\n[jJlark, Elliott and Lopez.\nI TAKE  A DOUBLE '.\nI PITTSBURGH. Sept. 23\u2014The. Cin-\nI tnnatl Reds won both games of a\nI ouble header from the Pittsburgh\nl&afeM here today, taking the\nipightcap five to two, after blank-\nj the buccaneers elght-to nothing\nthe   opener.     Jakto   May   gave\nthe Pirates. three hits in the first\ncontest.\nFirst  game: RH E\nCincinnati    ..    8 If   0\nPittsburgh    - :....   0   3'. 2\nMay and sukeforth;' Spencer, Bed-\nnar and Bool.\nSecond   game: R H E\nOtncln-TSTl        6 11   0\nPittsburgh    :  '.2   6   1\nAsh and Gooch; Wood and Hemsley.\nCAMPOLO READY\nTO MEET WITH\nJACK TOMORROW\nNEW YORK, Sept. 23\u2014(AP)\u2014Vic-\ntorio Campolo, the big disappointment from Argentine, tossed asido\nhia padded mittens today, completely trained for his1 15-round\nmatch with Jack Sharkey, Boston\nheavyweight, in the final outdoor\nshow of the season at tho Yankee\nstadium Thursday night.\nWhile the odds favor the experienced Sharkey, who plans to\nknock out the' Argentine in two\nor three rounds, at about 2 to 1.\nCampolo has many supporters. He\nbelted old Tom Heeney in the side\nwith his right until Tom collapsed\none night at Ebbots field, but he\nhas been .unable to land his ponderous clout*, successfully on such\ngladiators as Phil Scott and Johnny\nRlsko.\nAttempts to stir the interest of\nthe paying customers have met\nwith little success and the Madison\nSquare Garden promoters are facing\na financial loss on the engagement.\nSharkey, dickering with Chicago\npromoters (Oj a match with Prlmo\nCarnera, was roped back into the\ngarden fold by a guarantee of\n$100,000 for the Campolo match.\nFinancial forecasts today Indicate\nthat the total gate may not exceed\nthat sum. Campolo signed for\n$7,500 and- the opportunity the\nbout   offered.\nSPEAKING\nOF SPORT\nA goal lor the composing rooral-J  -\nLeslie .Oraulurd; prominent lnarand FM \u201e k o1 aohl,V(>menta\noperatic circles In Nelson, presented^ ^ IanB ^, thta ,ty couW\nan argument yesterday ln lavor of ,r0[|t  t,v  It .\"\"\"\nth. \"America's oup\" and bsclee* aran\u00ab Forks, commonly known\nIt up with a quotation irom theln Nelson a8 8mall to b0a8ta\nEncyclopedia   Britannic*. \u2022\u25a0 \u201e, 8omet_ing that oven the Queen\n-Him It  ls: Clty oI the mterlor hasn't got and\n\u2022The cup won at coves by the that., \u201eve atuIeMo association.\nAmerica', although not originally And 0 t0 , tl)at K b_ a\nintended as a challenge ctp, was iports \u201e,\u201e.{_, who makM ,t \u201e,,\nafterward given to the New York BU8m___, not only to promote sports\nYacht club by the owner of thc 0( M Kbsiilj amoag tne young- but\n\u2022Amer)ca as a challenge trophy _ndt0 provide the fans with first class\nnamed The America's cup'.\" \u2022   entertainment.\nMr. Craufurd's authority that tho    H   a Patton hM Droven a valu.\ncup   Is  not   the  \"America  cup'   as'alJle man M 8pona alrect0I. 0_ the\nclaimed by the. editorial deDBrtmont0rancl _,m Athletlc _,BOciatlon.\nwill take a_lot to beat. He ^as preeopted - somo very lino\nFurther, if thc cup was not orlg-car_a ot bmtlni! and wreBtl_ng. In.\nlnally posted as a challenge cup.olucl|_g each time younger blood,\nthen wlwn the schooner .America _n(j onco before, when the assocla-\nwon It, lt. became tho property oftlon was mating an effort to ralso\nihe winner, and that would account30me itaanceB, Ernls Arthur, of\n.or   the   possessive   case. TraU, Canadian middleweight wrest-\nHowever, just to be stubborn, weang champion, and now champion\nwon't admit defeat yet; Tbe game0I the Paclflc northwest. helped out.\nIsn't .over and maybe before long now Arthur haa consented to de-\nwc'U prove It Is the \"America cup\",felia his newly won belt against\neven If wo have to write to thoB1acity Hermon ot Butte. Montana,\nNew York Yacht club and _etm a 0ran_ Pork8 rln8. Mr, pat.\na photograph of thc trophy wlthton explained that Hermon had\nIts inscription. That ought to challenged * Ernie for the belt and\nsettle   lt. \"Ernie, being a personal friend .of\nIn   the    meantime    our    readers rain6i   wo   are   staging   tho   show\nshould   send   lu  their  opinions  onnerc.\"\nthis serious  question. In' addition to the headllner, thero\nBy Al demaree\n(Former Pitcher New York Giants)\nMany conflicting rumors of\nRogers Hornsby's status with the\nChicago' Cubs aro floating about\namong the fans.\nI was talking with Hornsby two\nweeks ago and at that time he said\nhis injured anklo wbb coming along\nln groat shape and that he expected\nto help the Cubs ln their last Jaunt\nthrough the cast In September.\nAnd Incidentally, over a month ago,\nho went on record by saying that\nthe Cubs would win the pennant\nthis year by a bigger margin than\nthey did last year.\nAny 1 ..mors of dissensions between\nHornsby and Monagor Joe McCarthy,\nas far as I know, are without\nloundat'on and do both men an injustice.\nCUBS TO MEET\nWHITE SOX FOR\nCHICAGO TITLE\nCHICAGO, Sept. 33\u2014(AP)\u2014The\nCuba today accepted the challenge\nof the White' Sox for a city championship series unless they do the\nhighly Improbable and win the\nNational   league, title.\nThe series will start on or about\nOctober 1 and run until one team\nhas von four games. Tho Cubs\nwon tho last city series played\ntn  1928.\nW. KLAUER WINS\nHIGH AGGREGATE\nFERM SPORTS\n!. Hamilton Is Second;  M.\nAlamo and Alma Peters\nWinners\nAN   EXAMPLE  FOB  NELSON\nNelson  could  take  a leal out ol their    money's    worth\nFERNIE, B. C, Sept. 23^-The mile\nrace In tho Fernle schol sports was\nrun betwen the Benlor boya on\nSaturday morning to decide the\nwinner of the cup for high aggregate. The cup was won hy William\nKlauer, with Orant Hamilton a\nclose second. Snow and Hughes\nwere third and fourth respectively.\nThe race proved a thrilling one as\nthe boys finished with a remarkable\nreserve of speed. The races for 12\nyears and under were also run off\nwill be good preliminaries, and fans on Saturday morrtln.. In this class\ncan rest assured they will get Marshall Anaelmo, Alma Petera and\n| Kathleen Ashmore starred.\nQUALIFIERS IN U. S.\nAMATEUR GOLF PLAY\nMBRION   CRICKET- CUTS,   Ard-     William p. McPhail, Dedham. Mass.\nmore.   Penn,,   Sept.   23\u2014(AP)\u2014Tho  77-77-1M.\nQualifiersi to__a_ national amateur,   jm, Knowlee. New York, 79.7_-134.\n.....   .p_najtt    .^   Armstrong,   Auroran,\n111..   81-73-154.\nGeorgo   J;   Volgt,   .\u00ab.7_-lB_.\n(A)   Phillips   Flnlay,   New   York,\ngolf championship for match play\nare:\nRobert T. Jones, Jr.,- Atlanta,\n69-73-142.\nGeorge Von Elm, Los Angeles,\n73-70 143.\nPay Coleman, Culver City, Calif.,\n76-89-146.\nDr. O. P. Willing, Portland, Ore.,\n70-76-148.\nSidney W. Noyes, Jr, Ardsley,\nN.   Y..   70-77-147.\nGeorge T. Dunlop, Jr., New York.\n71-76-147.\nT. H. Perkins. New York, 74-\n74-148.\nCharles D. Hunter, Jr., Walllng-\nford. Pa.,  74-74-148.\nFrancis Oulmet. Boston, 73-76 149.\nJohn Goodman, Omaha, 73-76 149.\nWilliam Uttle. San Pranclsco, 73-\n78-161.\nGua Novotny, La Grande. 111.,\n78-73-161.\nCharles A. Reckner. Mt. Airy,\nPa.,    79-73-762.\nEugene V. Homans, Englewood,\nN.   J\u201e   80-72-162.\nJohn E. Lehmam, Chicago. 73-\n76-163.\nLester BolBtod, St. Paul, 79-\n74-163.\nJ. Wood Piatt, Philadelphia, 78-\n76-163.\nP. G. Hoblltzel, Toronto, 77-77-\n164.\n80-76-166.\n(B) Charles Beaver, Los Angelc;,\n79-75-156.\n(B) Rosa Somerville, Londc ,\n75-80-156.\niC) Maurice J. McCarthy, Wow\nYork,   78-77-185.\n(O Jack A. Ahearn, Mamburg,\nN,   Y\u201e . 79-76-165.\n(C) Jess W. Sweetser, New York,\n81-\/4-100.\n(C) David W. Ward, Grand Rapids,\n76-80-165.\n(C) Watts Ounn. Pittsburgh, 80-\n75-166.\n(C) Edmund H. Drlggs, Jr., Naw\nYork,   79-76-135.\nNON-QUALIFIERS\n(D) Charlie Evans, Jr., Chicago,\n79-76-156.\n(C) Loona. Martin, New York,\n79-76-156.\nJONES CAPTURES\nTHE QUALIFYING\nMEDAUN GOLF\nLeads Von Elm by Stroke,\nQualifying Round, U. S.\nAmateur\nUPSETS  FEATURE\n'-WO-l)A\u00a5   KOUND\nSOMMERVILLE TO\nMEET JONES IN\nGOLF PLAY TODAY\nNELSON TO PLAY\nTRAIL GRIDIRONS\nHERE OCTOBER 5\nMay Play a Vancouver Team\nHere  on  Thanksgiving\nDay\nMBRIONT CRICKET CLUfe, Ard-\nmore, Pa., Sept 23\u2014C. Rose Som-\nmervine. Canadlnn amateur champion who squeezed Into tho qualifying class with a par four on the\nfirst playoff hole as darkness set\nln here tonight, will meet tho\ngreat Bobby Jones, who led tho\nqualifiers with 142 after two days',\nPlay,\nThe Canadian star thus begins\nhis    first    round    of   match    play\nagainst   the   top-heavy   favorite   to i n___>- __\\_z      ,     \u201e , \u25a0\ncapture  the United States amateur ! Jhe :\u00ab*W game in Nelson, and tho\ntitle;     SommerviUc    compiled    1551fourth and final 8\u2122  ln T\u212211 0n\nln   his   qualifying   rounds   and   the\nplayoff  brings him  into  tho select.]\nclass.\nHBIVNESSY BRANDY\nIS A SAFE STIMULANT\nIS ALL EMERGENCIES.'\nKEEP IT HANDY)\nCyril Tolley and Other Seeded   Players   Are\nEliminated\nM.SRION CRICKET CLUB, ARD-\nmore, Pa., Sept. 23.\u2014Continuing his\nunbroken march of triumph for the\nyear, Bobby Jones today captured\nthc qualifying medal in the national amateur golf championship\nwith a record-equalling score o 69-\n73\u2014143 ln a battle \u25a0 that witnessed the downfall of the deendlng\nchampion, Harrison R .(Jimmy)\nJohnston, St. Paul, and produced\nunprecedented upsets among other\nfavorites.\nPitch darkness finally overtook\nand halted the struggle over thc\nhistoric cast course of Merlon after\nJones had emerged the victor by a\nsingle stroke over George von Elm\nof Los Angeles, who finished tha\n| two-day 36-hole test with 73-70\u2014\n143; after Johnston hart been cllm-\nmaU'd by a single shot, despite a\ngallant comeback, as he scored 83-\nOctober  26. i 73\u2014156, and after no less than 11\nAn active season has been def- I players with scores of 155 had start-\ninltely planned by the local squad, ed but failed to complete a play-off\nA game is looked forward to with battle for the eight places remaln-\na Vancouver team here on Thanks- Ing 'n the list of 32 qualifiers for\ngiving day and negotiations are match play,'starting tomorrow,\nbeing made for games with Michel Johnston's failure to cam Che right\nand  Fernle, to   defend    his    crown   at   match\nTfils year the local team 'is lack-  P^y marked thc second time In tho\ning m both weight and players and  four-year   history   of   the   national\nthe manager Is on the lookout for  amateur tournament that a cham-\n\u25a0-*   ' pion had not qualified.\nMANY HEEDED PLAYERS OUT\nSo sensational were the upacts\nthat cluttered up the last bajf of\nthe qualifying round, participated\nin by more than 160 players, that\nthree of tho first io seeded entries\nand seven of the first 20 favored\nnames were removed from the tournament.\nThat thc first rugby game for\ntho West Kootenay championship\nwill he staged hero October 5,\nwhen the local gridirons will battle\nTrail, was the announcement mado\nyesterday.\nOn October 12 the second game\nwill be played at Trail, October 19\nBig Six Baseball      '\n(By Associated Press)\nWhUe the American league half\nof the Big Six was idle yesterday,\nBtatlsclans did Borne checking on\nthe averages and found that unofficial scores of, the National league\nleaders had been giving them too\nmany times at bat.\nA check with the official scores\nreduced BUi Terry's total trips to\nthc plate by one end Chuck Klein's\nby five. As a result Terry lost\nonly one point, dropping to .404\nas he hit once in five attempts.\nBabe Herman, who failed to get\nany of these \"breaks\" held his\nmark at .393 by clouting his 35th\nhomer as his only hit ln three\ntimes up. Klein made five trips\nto the plate and hit four times\nand this walloping with' tho reduction of his times at bat carried\nhis mark up to .392.\nThe standing:\nPlayers: G   AB   R   H   Pet.\nTerry, Giants 151 626 138 253 .404\nHerman, Robins 140 596 139 234 .393\nKlein. Phillies 162 633 156 248 .392\nGehrig, Yanks 150 563 141 214 .380\nSimmons, Athl 135 543 140 205 .378\nRuth,   Yankees   Ml 503 147 181 .360\nMISS MCKENZIE\nSTILL IN GOLF\nA\u2014Scored birdie three on first\nday off hole.\nB\u2014Scored Par fours on first pl\u00bb7\noff holo.\nC\u2014Play off tomorrow to decide occupants of five remaining players\nin first round draw,\nD\u2014Eliminated at first play off\nhole, taking six each.\nFIELD  RESULTS\nBoya, 6 years, 60 yards\u2014Alan Mc*\nLean, first; Robert Addison, second\nJimmle  Logan, third,\nGirls 6 years, 60 yards\u2014Elizabeth\nRoss, first; Frances Augeraon, second; Pearl Hutchuck. third.\nBoys, 7 years and under, 50\nyardB\u2014Norman McLsan, first; Babe\nClark, second; Theodore Anselmo,\nthird. I\nGirls, 7 years and under, GO yards !\nhusky  youths to add to the grid\niron   squad.\nARTHURAGREES\nTO MATCH, FORKS\nWill      Defend      New Title\nAgain Hermon There on\nOctober 4\nENNESSY\nGRAND   FORKS,   B.   C,   Sept.   23.\n\u25a0That Ernie Arthur, who won\ntho Pacific northwest middleweight\nwrestling championship across the\nlino a few days ago, had accepted\nthe challenge of Blacky Hermon of\nButte, Montana, and would defend\nhis newly won belt in a Grand\nForks ring on October 4. is the\nannouncement just made by H. O.\nPatton, sports director of tho\nGrand    Forks    athletic    association\nThe bout will head a card of\nfine boxing and wrestling matches\nThe semi wind up will likely be\na wrestling match at .128 pounds\nThomap    Busji    of  . Trail\n\u2014Alma Peters, first; Marian cunllffe, I\nsecond;   Kathlen  Ashmore,  third.\nBoys. 8 years and under. 80 yards\n\u2014Bill McLaughlin, first; FYed Baker, second: Jerf Hunt, third..\n' Boya, 8 years and under, 60 yards\n\u2014Kathlen Ashmore, first; Irene Eck-\neraley, second; Louise Rollard, third.\nBoys' race\u2014F. Hunter, first; Willie\nFleming, second; Philip Melek, third.\nOpen soft ball thnfw, girls\u2014Aurora\nChisafio. first: Dollie Sprovteri,\naECond;  Ruth Nledtg, third.\nBoys, 9 years and under, 50\nyards^\u2014Alfred Blnuto. first; Alex\nStewart, second; Billle Dlcken, third.\nGirls. 9 years and under. 50\nyards\u2014Margaret Fleming, first; Minnie Costanzo, second; Mabel Meller,\nthird.\nBoys, 10 years and under, 75 yards\nDorelik, second;  Otto Rlgets. third,  1\nGirls, 10 years and under, 75 yards\n\u2014Hazel Bosslo,  first;   Peggy Brown,\nsecond; Dolly Sprovieri, third.\nBoys, 11 years and under, 75 yards\n\u2014Marshall Anselmo, first; Otto\nRlgets, second; Will Dorelik, third.\nGirls, 11 and under, 75 yards-\nRuth Nledlg, flrat; Owen McNeil,\nsecond; Helen Dlcken, third.\nOpen broad Jump, boys\u2014Bill Bur-\nland,  first;   Willie   Verklrk,  second;\nDoug.  Winters,  third.\nBoys,   11   years   and   under,   100\nAttains      Second      Round;\nThird Round to Be Played Today Also\nMONTREAL, Sept. 23\u2014(CP)\u2014Favored players strode through the\nfirst day of match play ln the\nCanadian womens closed golf championship today. The defending\nchampion, Mlsa Ada MacKenzle of\nToronto, and her most threatening\nrivals are still in the running.\nThe west's lone survivor, from qualifying play, Mrs. Vera Hutchlngs,\nVancouver, advanced to the second\nround by an Impressive 7 and 6\nwin over Miss Catherine Beer,\nBcaeonsflcld.\nMiss MacKenzle defeated Miss\nLucille Rolland, Laval, 5 and 4.\nMiss Marjorie Klrkham, qualifying\n| medalist, triumphed over Miss\nPhoebe Campbell, Royal Montreal,\n9   and   7.\nSeven Torontonlans, five Montreal-\ners, and one entrant ea^h from\nOttawa, Vancouver, Welland and\nSt.   Catherines   go   out   Into   the\nyards\u2014Marshall Aneslmo, first; Connelly Osborne, second; W. Dorelik\nthird.\nGirls, 11 years and under, 100\nyards\u2014Msrgarte Fleming, first; Minnie Costanzo, second; Ruth Nledtg,\nthird.\nBoys. 6 to 8 years, three-legged\nrace\u2014John Herchuck and Gero Costanzo. first; Albert Vecchlo and\nTheodore Anselmo, second; David\nboion and Robert Adamson, third.\nGlrla, 6 to B years, three-legged\nrace\u2014Clara Pod and Kathlen Ashmore, first; Helen Dlcken and Vic*\ntorla Papira, second; David Salon\nand Robert Adamson, third.\nGirls' ' open    broad    Jump\u2014Ruth\nNledlg,   first;   Elma   Peters,   second;\nKathleen  Ashmore,  third.\nGirls, 9  to  11   years, sack  race-\nBrown,   second,   Margaret   Fleming,\nthird.\nBoys, 9 to 11, three-legged race \u2014\nMarahall Anslemo and Otto Rlgeta,\nfirst; Harry Hunter and William Dol-\niuk, second; Norman McBeaa and\nFranlc Kupchek. third.\nBoys, 6 to 8 years, sack race\u2014BlUy\nDlcken, first; Douglas Mlnton, second;  RobeTt Anderson, third.\nGirls, 9 to 11 years, three-legged\nrace\u2014Margaret Fleming and Peruy\nBrown, first; Victoria Papira and\nDorothy cole, second.\nGirls, 6 to 8 years, sack race\u2014Brisbane Hunter, first; Kathlen. .Ashmore, second; Ruth Peterson,\nthird.\nBoys 9 to 11 years, sack race\u2014\nOto Rlgets, first; John Adamski,\ns.cond;   Philip   Melek.\nBoys' open 440-yard relay\u2014Marshall Anselmo, Otto Rlgets, Harry Hun-\ntor, Gerry Roes. l\nGirls' open 440-yard pslay\u2014Peggy\nBrown. Ruth Nledlg, Dorothy Cole,\nVictoria   papira.\n-Marshall   Anselmo,   first;   William   Dorothy     Cummings,    first;     Peggy\nTOD MORGAN  WINS\nSEATTLE, Sept, 23.\u2014(AP)\u2014Tod\nMorgan, Seattle, former Junior lightweight champion of the world, who\nis making a comob-^ok in the lightweight dfvislr,** mm 1 a close decisis\never Santiago ,___:llla, Panama, In\nan eight-round bout here tonight.\nSix  former American  tltleholders,  \u00ab&\u25a0   uawioruwo   zu   u\"v   juw    __.\u00ab\u25a0\nIncluding  Johnston,  Jesse Guilford.  e\u00abond   round    tomorrow    morning.\nfH.i..t,    _*,__\u00ab__    m    rrhnnriip-   F.__nn    Tho third round,  in the afternoon,\nChick Evans, H. Chandler Egnn\nDavidson Helton and Max Marston,\nwere eliminated, along with the\nBritish star, Cyril Tolley. Another\nformer American and British champion, Jesse Sweetser, waa nmong\nthe half dozen who must continue\nthe play-off tomorrow to decide\nwho will fill the flvo remaining\nplaces ln the draw.\nSuch stalwarts as Donald K. Moe,\nPortland Ore., Walker cup b\u00abc;\nFrank Dolp, also of Portland, and\na former western amateur champion; Roland- MacKenzle, another\nWalker cup player; Keefe Carter of\nOklahoma City, ex-western king,\nand Francis I. Brown of Honolulu,\nthe present California state champion, all failed by varying margins\nto make the qualifying grade.\nMoe,   adding   on   atrocious   83 .to\nbetween    rnomas    bubo    vl  , mn.j    \u2014\u2014.    \u201e\nand Buck Lewis of Grand Forks.) hla previously good 74. for a tptal\n\u2014hi .._ t\u2014 _._,_, u\u00ab\u00ab-*(t..of 157, missed out by only two\nI strokes. Tolley, with 82-81\u2014183,\nwas eight strokes from the low qualifying figure while Dolp had 16;\nEgan   161,   Brown   166;   Herron   166\nof   tho   Grand   Forks   Athletic   association.\nDRUGGISTS' CASE\nAGAINST MINIMUM\nWAGE POSTPONED\nBOTTLED AT COGNAC, FRANCE\nHI.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\n[the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of Brit-\nKlah Columbia.\nVICTORIA. B, C\u201e Sept. 23.\u2014The\nappeal of the employing druggists\nof British Columbia, against the\nwage scalo for licentiates in pharmacy recently ordered by tho Minimum Wage board will not be\nheard until October 1,\n. At the Joint request of counsel\nfor the dm'gglsts and licentiates,\nChief Justice Morrison today in\nsupremo court chambers consented\nto  delay  the   proceedings.\nThe wage scale ordered by the\nboard was 80 cents per hour for\naU qualified licentiates ln pharmacy. The master druggists are\nasking review of the order with\na view to Its variation or cancell-\nment' by  the  court.\nConjuring creek, tho curious name\nof a northern Saskatchewan river,\nwas first suggested by that of\nWizard lake from1 which it flows.\nTho cmc namo ia \"Pawgomow.\"\nand   Marston   W9-\nLONDON MAN TO\nLECTURE, B. C\nVANCOUVER. Sept. _J3\u2014Meetings\nare to bo held ln Vancouver, Victoria and New WeiJtmlnster shortly\nto enable A. E. Wlldey, public\nrelations officer of the port of\nLondon authority, to lecture and\ndisplay movinj picture films Illustrating the facilities of that great\nport. Mr.,WUdey is making a tour\nacross Canada to establish personal\ncontact between the Port of London\nand the commerce of Canada. He\nwilt give details of tho rapid !\"\u25a0\ndustrlalizatton of'the south of Eng\nland to show the increased market\navailable adjacent to London for\nthe products of Canada.\nwill  produce  the   seml-flnallsts.\nMrs. E. M. Rougvie, of the Ottawa\nHunt Club, opposes Miss MacKenzie   tomorrow.\nHOME RUN KINGS\nHOME   RUNS    YESTERDAY\nHerman.   Roblfts,   1.\nWright, Robins, 1.\nLindstrom,   Giants,   1.\nHonan,   Giants.    1.\nCucclnello.   Reds.   1.\nRensa.  Phillies,   1.\nTHE    LEADERS\nWilson, CubB, 63.\nRuth,   Yankees,   47.\nGehrig,   Yanks.   40.\nKlein. Phillies,   30.\nBerger,   Braves,   37.\nSimmons. Athletics. 86.\nFoxx.  Athletics, 36.\nGoslin, Browns, 3G.\nHerman.   Robins,   36.\nLEAGUE  TOTALS\nNational  868.\nAmerican 660.\nTotal   1,626.\non    the\nmany Bad-\nBASEBALL\nAMERICAN   LEAOUE\nNo games scheduled.\nCOAST   LEAGUE\nLos Angelea   i,  Seattle  a.\nOakland 3. Mlsalons 2.\nSacramento 4.  HoUywood 6.\nBan Francisco-Portland, postponed,\nrain.\nThe rapid advance of civilization\nand the progress of Industry ln the\nnorthern areas of Oftnada during\ntho past few years have greatly\nincreased the demand for aurvey\ncontrol ln order that these districts\nmay be accurately mapped and Information regarding the country\nWINS  BY  K.  O. made    available    to    the    different\nSAN JOSE, Cali.f, Sept. 23,\u2014Peto interests concerned in the develop'\nVerkan, Portland \u25a0 heavyweight, ment of the mineral and timber\nknocked out Kuck Beaaley of Oak- resources. Hence the growing use of\nlund in the first round of a the aeroplane ln surveying by the\nscheduled 10-round main event here    department of the   interior.\nLearn to Play\nBADMINTON\nThe Way It Should Be Played\nIN CONJUNCTION\nWith the Opening of the Canadian Badminton Season, Week of\nOctober 4th, The Nelson Daily News Will Run a Series of Weekly\n.Articles by Mr. W. F. Percival..\nON\n-low to Play Badmint*\nThese articles will appear each Saturday during the seas,\nsport page of The Nelson Daily News.    We strongly urge tht\nminton players of this City to watch for these articles.   They are bound\nto improve your game, so intelligently are they s'et forth. Each article will\ncarry an illustration to   make matters clearer.\nMr. Percival has had many years association with Badminton, and\nknows the game \"inside out.\" He has only recently come to Canada from\nEngland, where the game has _ very strong hold, and where Mr. Percival starred for several seasons past In  introduction,   Mr.  Percival  says:\n\"One of the chief difficulties in Badminton is, that the average athletic\nperson of today can acquire fairly easily, a certain proficiency in hitting\nthe shuttle over the net. Having got so far, the presumption for the\nnormal individual is that he or she will improve with the seasons. But unlike Lawn Tennis where a player realizes his limitations more quickly,\nBadminton leads the beginner into thinking that he is progressing favorably. I think the reason is that stroke production is easier, in its initial\nstages, at Badminton than at Tennis. This facility of getting the shuttle over the net may lead the novice into faults of footwork and stroke production. They will get him into serious difficulties later. It is, therefore\nmost important to start along sound lines.\n\"You may see other players produce spectacular strokes which take\nyour fancy. Do not attempt them, until you are master of the ordinary\nstrokes. Remember that the experts have had to work hard at footwork nnd\nstroke production. They only pull out their showy shots when in difficulties!. Having graduated, as it wera, in the stroke production school,\nthey are qualified to experiment in the orthodox. Rather watch their ordinary strokes. Try to understand how they are produced. You will find that\nyou will have all your work cut out to lea:-,, the regular strokes.\"\nWatch for These Articles in the\nJM&m Satlij JJj^utjR\nBEGINNING\nSaturday October 4th, on the sport Page\n 'Page Eight\nTHE WELSON DA1E-- WEvVS       WEDJNESDAX, SEiJTEMBr_B. 24, 19bU.\n%e World's\n--<Deli\u00a3ht\u2014\nPART   TIIREC\nCHAPTER   VII\n\"Boulevard Malesherbes\u2014No, 103.\"\nDolores climbed Into the musty\ninterior of a voiture de remise in\nfront of the Gare du Nord, and\nsank back nervously against tho\ndusty plum-colored cushions.\nAs she was driven toward the\nfantastic refuge o\u00bb M. Alexandre\nDumas, \"she was thinking, \"Now\nParis\u2014what do you hold for me?\"\nSyrely' it could give her nothing\nworse than had London; life must\nhe a little more cheerful and trustworthy  ln  this  gay   capital.\nLike a chill, tin influenza of\nthe. spirit, tho lotwitness had been\ncrpeping. upon her, ever slnco she\nhad broken with Swinburne, months\nbefore. In the obsession of hard\nwork she had tried vainly to ioiget;\nIt- was so natural to brood upon\nthat Illustrious treason. Playing\nthe part Of William in \"Black-eyed\nSusan\" at Astley's, she had remained aloof and disdainful, in\nspite of the repeated notes and importunities of Swinburne, the Intercession of his friends and the\ncasual torments or almost everyone\nwho talked with her\u2014while wtth\nincreasing clamor the very stones in\nthe street semed to sing her name\nin the red-haired poet's Infamous\nrhymes and Jingles. She faced lt\ndown . and kept ai her work. As\ngirl and Arab and Intrigante, she\nappeared again in her old success,\n'\"t$xe Preach Spy\/' or the \"Siege\nof. Constantlna\"; then, at Sadler's\nWelle tn the springtime, she rode\nhopefully forth once again as Mazeppa. But, after many repltlttonB\nttie glamor of the Tartar spectacle\nwas dimmed, and ihe public no\nlonger responded; against her wishes\nshe wae forced to the road, only to\nfind that Sanger, the Bhowman, and\nother rivals already had played Mazeppa under canvas through the\nprovinces. The tour was fiasco,\nher bank account almost exhausted,\nwlien suddenly her property in New\nTork was sold for one-fourth Its\n-viluc and she was able to go to\nParle and to M. Dumas, not as a\npauper but in temporary Independence.\nBorne cordial magnetism drew her\nto Alexandre Dumas. Enough men\nhad disppolnted her\u2014one would\nhave thought Bhe would have no\nmore of them, bui none since her\nlong-dead stepfather had charmed\nher as Dumas. Whenever he was\nnear, he imparted to her a comprehending fellowship, a sense of\nresigned well-being, an exhllirating\nrepose. Dolores would not try to\nconfide in the gay old novelist; he\nwas too pious a hedonist to listen\nfor more than two minutes t*> any\nother's misfortunes or injustice\u2014\nperhaps because he could understand without words.\n\"Boulevard Malesherbes\u2014No. 103.\"\nshe had told the driver.\nHere was the last Parisian dwelling of that luxurious Oumas, who,\nonly a few short years before, had\nbeen installed ln royal plenty behind the mighty bronze gates of his\nestate that was called Monte Crlsto.\nSad to find him now, reduced to a\nflat, four flights up on the Boulevard Malesherbes. The great story-\nsplnner was In his last eclipse; his\ntrail of red fire across the sky of\nFrench letters wns almost burned\nout. Dolores did not. know this;\nshe thought he was impoverished by\npreposterous specuntnons and extravagances; she did not. even guess\nthat Dumas, as ttie Parisians t;ald,\nwas not living to write but was\nwriting to live. ir?s \"Three Mus-\nketers\" wrc now old enough to go\nto the Unlvcrslto, and no new\ncharming sons were born from his\noverworked pen. In these days he\npallant Rcneral of whom even Napoleon was Jealous; nil tn Ing up the\ntitle of his grandfather, the Marquis\nde la Palllerterle, who married a\nDomingo negress ana thus madu hts\ngrandson a quadroon. Todiiy on the\ngrand boulevard that grandson\nstrutted with an exaggerated courtliness of expression :n his negroid\nfeatures. The Jongleur was falling\n\u2014this gay-hearted unfortunate, who\nhad wished to be a gloomy Rene\nand had made the miserable discovery that he possessed a natural\ngayety  of style.\nLate In the Afternoon' sunshine,\nDolores was driven up under thc\ntrees and alighted before tho house.\nHer trunks were still at the station;\nwith only a ridiculously tiny handbag she mounted tho long and\nmusty staircase, arm at last rapped\nupon his door. Presently she was\nadmitted by a lemon-faced but aat-\nMlcd old maid, who had heen with\nDumas for many years.   When this\nCLASSIFIED   ADVERTISING   SECTION\nLEGAL NOTICES\n^'GOVERNMENT  LIQUOR ACT\"\nMlLHli    OF \"AM'UUATION    foe\n(.'ONSEN! 10 TRANSFER BEER\nLICENCE\nNOTICE IS HEBflY GIVEN that\non the 13tb day ol October next the\nundersigned intend to apply to tho\nLiquor control Board tor consent to\ntransfer or Beer Licence No. 1620\nund issued ln respect oi premises\nnelng part oi a building known as\n\"finehurst Inn.\" situate at South\nttiocau in tlie County ol Kootenay\nupon the lands described as Parcel\nii ol Block \"B\" ot District Lot\nM. District ol Kootenay, Map 872,\nKelson Land Registration District,\nln the Province ol BrttiBh Columbia,\nirom Floyd M. Barnett to Robert\nOeorge Elliott and Georgo .crome\nKln.sley, ol South Slocan, British\nColumbia, the transferees.\nDATED at South Slocan, B. 0.,\nthis lath day of September, A. D.\n1030.\nROBERT GEORGE ELLIOTT.\nOEORGE   JEROME  KINGSLEY.\n(1757)\nLEGAL-NOTICES\n(Continued)\nmysterious creature had first flung\nherself at her master's feet, he had\nallowed her to 'remain in his houso\nand be his \"worevrinder,\" a sort\nof living thesaraus who scoured his\nmanuscripts and, wherever he repealed nouns and verbs, she looked\nthem up In the dictionary and then\nscratched In her synonyms. as\nDumas seldom read over his pages,\nthis \"word-finder\" woman was the\nreal culprit In some of his choice\nabsurdities.\n\"M. Dumas is engaged, you will\nwait awhile,\" tho spinster explained\ni_ftcr taking In .with appraising\nglances across the threshold the\nmagnificently dressed Dolores. \"You\nmay follow after me.\"\nDown the long hallway she trudged, and ushered Dolores into what\nseemed a general living room\u2014the\nuoor cluttered with periodicals and\nbooks; the furniture scattered in\nsenseless disarray aa If the whole\nhousehold had just moved ln and\nall were too_ weary to sot their belongings straight.\n''Are you coming to live here?\"\nasked the maid with a worried note\nin her voice.\nDolores shrugged her shouldere as\nsho sat on the edge of a Louis XIV\nchair, Its gilt rusty and its brocaded seat worn into peeling patches. Sho was out of breath from the\nlong climb up the stairs, and there\nwas a knifing pain in her side.\n\"Because If you are, there is not\nenough money .for those who really\nbelong here,\" continued the word-\nfinder with a wide-eyed policy of\ndirectness. \"When I first came to\nM. Dumas, there waa never any\nworry about money. He alwys sent\nus to that silver vase over therewith his thumbs he would point at\nIt\u2014and ln those daya it was alwayB\ncrammed to the bnm with gold\npieces.   Look at tt nowl'*\nThe actress looked at It now\u2014\nthe vase was full of cobwebs.\nLeft alone then, Dolores sat and\nwaited; and soon Ehe heard, behind\nthe curtains at the ot^ier end of the\nroom, tho voice of iTUtnaa raised ln\nthe soft magniloquence of his peculiar irony.\n\"I am ready to oontract for tho\nfuture delivery of my imagination\nin quantities to suit your needs,\"\nho was saying, evidently to a publisher. \"There are 4j ucademcians,\nLet them contract Ho supply you\nwtth 80 volumes a year\u2014they will\nbankrupt you! Alone I havo done\nwhat never man dta Defore nor will\nagain. Why are you worrying, my\ndear M. Vernon?\"\nDolores rould hear the business\nman  clear  his  thro.it  nervously.\n\"RI. Dumas,\" he srfid severely, \"we\narc ruined if we do not publish In\neight days an amusing, sparkling\ninteresting romance.\"\n(To be continued)\nMrs. G. Hodgson\nof Perrys Visits\nDaughter, Trail\nPERRY'S, B. C. Sept. 28.\u2014Mrs.\nG. Hodgson accompanied by her\ngrandchildren, Eugene and Phoebe\nleft for Trail this week for a visit\nwith her daughter, Mrs. E. Flynn,\nwho has taken up residence in that\ntown.\nMr. nnd Mrs. Milton Patterson left\non Wednesday for a trip to Prince\nGcorRc by motor,\nIsabel Traynor has gone to Nelson\nwhere she Is attending high school.\nMr. J. Hurrls of Bonnington wa3\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. G. Wood on\nWednesday.\nMr. F. Powell spent Thursday ]n\nSlocan where he attended a meeting of the Anglican church parish\ncouncil, presided over hy Rev. Mr.\"\nLarmonth, of Trail,  the  rural dean.\nDEPARTMENT OF THE SECRETARY\nOP    STATE\nReparations\nPursuant to a notice that appeared in the Press, dated the 18th\nday of November, 1918. asking those\nof the civil population of Canada,\nwho may have been subjected to\nloss and pecuniary damage arising\nfrom the destruction of life and\nproperty during thc late war though\nthe illegal warfare of the enemy, to\nfile claims for compensation with\nthis   Department.\nPublic notice is hereby given that\nby an Order of His Excellency the\nGovernor General in council, dated\ntho 6th day of September, 1930,\nthe undersigned Commissioner was\nappointed for the purpose of continuing and completing an enquiry\nand reporting upon all such claims,\nwhich have not heretofore been disposed of In the report of the previous Reparation Commissioner dated tho 14th day of December 1927.\nInstructions respecting the method of filing and the proof to be\nfurnished may be obtained from\nLhe   undersigned.\nThe last day on which claims will\nbj accepted for consideration is the\nday of November 1930.\nEliROL  M.   McDOUGALL,\nReparation Commissioner.\nRooms 201-8,\nTrafalgar  Building,\nOttawa.\nSeptember   17,   1030. (1907)\nMISPICKEL,    SILVER    BAR,    GOLD\nBAR,   and   SILVER   CROWN\nMineral Claims\nSituated in tho Nelson Mining\nDivision of West Kootenay District,\nBritish Columbia.\nWhere located:- On Wilson Creek,\na tributary of and to the east of\nthe Salmon  River.\nTAKE NOTICE that John Drummond Anderson, B.C.L. S., of Trail,\nB. ('., acting as agent for Eric\nHarkness. Avard Longley Young,\nHans Gunstead and Mike M. Butorac all of Trail. B. C, Free Miner's\nCertificate numbers respectively\n18131-D, 18117-D, 18116-D, 18315-D,\nIntend sixty days from the date\nhereof to apply to the Mining Recorder for Certificates of Improvement for the purpose of: obtaining\nCrtswn Grants of the above claims.\nAnd further take notice that action under sections 85 and 37, must\nbe commenced before the issuance\nof such Certificates of Improvement.\nDated this 12th day of September,\n1930.\nJOHN DRUMMOND ANDERSON,\n(1915)\nIn the 26 years from 1901 to\n1027, the relative positions of wateV-\n^ower and fuel-power ln Canada\nhave been more than reversed. In\n1901 the situation was: Water-power\n36 per oent, fuel-power 63 per cent;\nIn 1927 the situation was: Water-\npower 79 per cent, fuel-power 21\nper  cent.\nLEGAL NOTICES\n(Continued)\nNOTICE OF INTENTION TO APPLY\nTO PURCHASE LAND,\nIh Slocau Land Recording District\nand situate at tbe north east end\nof LOON LAKE near Alnswortu and\nlying between lots 2829 and 865\nKootenay District.\nTake notice that John Burns of\nthe city of Nelson, B. O., occupation Builder, intends to apply for\npermission to purchase tho follow,\ning described lands:\u2014\nBounded on the west hy lot 2829,\non the east by lot 555. on the north\nby lots 2830 and 2366 and on the\nsouth by the north boundary of\nlots 2831 and the said boundary\nproduced easterly and containing\ntwo acres, more or less.:\nJOHN BURNS,\nName of Applicant ln full.\nDated Sept. 2, 1980, (1600)\nWOMAN COOK WANTS WORK IN\nmining camp.: Thoroughly experienced. Box 1000 Nelson Dally\nNews. HMO)\nBELP WANTED\n-{Hi\nWANTED\u2014CHAMBER    MAID.      AP-\nPly Hume hotel. (1906)\nWANTED\u2014GIRL POR HOUSEWORK.\nApply 008 Vernon. (1888)\nWANTED\u2014BOY TO DELIVER PAK-\ncela.   Apply Mann Rutherford Co.\n(1916)\n1031 CENSUS CLERKS. HUNDREDS\nwill be required. Write M. C. C.\nCivil Service School, 401 Kensington. Bldg.,  Winnipeg. (1690)\nWANTED\u2014QUICK, CLEAN WOMAS\nfor housework, nlno to twelve\ndally. Twenty dollars por month.\nBox   689   Nelson. .1917)\nEARN MONEY NOW TAKING OK-\nders for Personal Christmas Greet-\n, Ing Cards. Finest line ever shown.\nEasy to sell. Write for particulars\nRegal Art Co., 310 Spadlna Ave.,\nToronto. (1659)\nEARN UPWARDS OF $25 WEEKLY\ngrowing mushrooms for us, all\nwinter, In cellars. Illustrated\nbooklet freo. Canadian Mushroom\nCompany, .Toronto. (1910)\nYOUNG MAN IN EVERY CITY,\ntown and village tn Canada as\nmanager of miniature golf course.\nWrite for particulars. Canadian\nMiniature Oolf Corp. Wilson\nBuilding, Toronto. (1885)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n~sm\nFIRST CLASS WOMAN COOK\nwants position, thoroughly experienced.   Box 1809 Nelson News.\n  (1899)\nUPHOLSTERING DONE VERY WELL\nand cheaply. Expert work. Prompt\nservice. Mall orders special attention. You will profit by It. John\nKlus,  Box  639,  Fernle,  B.   C.\n(1585)\nHOTEL, FIRST CLASS COOK\nwould like position In Hotel, City\nor Country, thoroughly experienced in all Hotel routine, good references, w. Swain, Alnsworth\nHot Springs Hotel, Alnsworth\nB-   0.     \u25a0 (1920)\nSITUATIONS  WANTED\u2014 (Cont.)\nKALSOMINING OR PAINTING\nwork wanted by the hour, day or\ncontract.    Phone  384Y2.      (1695)\nAOENTS   WANTED\n(12)\nAGENTS MAKING $15 PER WEEK\nup. ln spare time (more according t'o time given) selling \"imperial Art\" made-ln-Canada Personal Greeting Christmas Cards,\nacknowledged by agents and pub-\nlie the greatest selection In value,\nprice and new variety. Season ln\nfull swing. Write for sample\nbook on approval. British Canadian ' Publishing Company. 51\nWellington West. Toronto.    (1843)\nROOM   AND   RO_RI>\n(17)\nROOM   AND   BOARD   IN   PRIVATE\nhome.'   Apply   Box   348   City.    '\n(1898)\nA COMFORTABLE DOUBLE BED-\nroom, twin beds, with or without board. Telephono 838 or\n'P. O. Box 673.     ' (1830)\nBOARD AND ROOM FOR TWO\ngirls\u2014Mrs. McLean. Opposite Oas\nWorks\u2014Call mornings 11 to 1\no'clock or Post Office Box 471.\n(1883)\nROOMS\u2014To Rent\n(19)\nHOUSEKEEPING  ROOMS.    614  Josephine. (1876)\nFOR RENT _ LARGE SITTING-\nroom, Bedroom and Bathroom-\nHouston Block. Apply Hamilton\nWragge _ Hamilton. (1852)\nHOUSES WANTED\n(20)\nWANTED TO PURCHASE\u2014SMALL\nbungalow, wtth light and water\nand about an acre land cultivated\nln or near Nelson. Box No. 1862\nDally   News. (1802)\nHOUSES FOR  BENT\ntill\nNEWLY FURNISHED HOUSE, CLOSE\nIn.    Phono  798L1. (1923)\nFOR RENT\u2014SEVEN  ROOMED FUR-\nnlshed house.   Telephone 495L.\n(1836)\nFOR    RENT \u2014 HOUSE    FOR    SIX\nmonths.    Apply   1024  Latimer   St.\n(1921)\nFOR   SALE   OK   RENT\n(22)\nSMALL COMFORTABLE HOUSE,\nfurnished or unfurnlBhed, bathroom, hot and cold water In bedrooms. Postmaster, Queen's Bay,\nB. O. (1804)\nFIVE ROOMED BUNGALOW, FULL\ncement basement, furnace, garage, 75 foot corner, close High\nschool . Immediate possession.\nHarding.   Phone 803L. (1926)\nLOST  AND FOUND\n(31)\nLOST\u2014GOLD MEDAL, HIGHLAND\nDancer on face, near Capitol\nTheatre.    Return   Dally  News.\n(1801)\nFURNISHED ROOMS For Rent (15)\nFOR    RENT\u2014NICELY    P9RNISHED\nfront bedroom.   Apply 819 Vernon.\n(1857)\nLIVESTOCK   FOR   SALE\nHARDWOOD FLOORS LAID.SCRAP-\ned and polished; old floors scraped\napd   reflnlshed.    Estimates   given\ntree.-   H. Ronmark, Phone 186Y1.\n(1840)\nFORTY    YORKSHIRE ' PIGS    FIVE\ndollars each.   Boothby, Edgewood.\n\u2022   (1810)\nilX WEEKS OLD YORKSHIRE PIGS\n80   feo.h.   Edgewood 'B. Hopp.\nFOR SALE\u2014PURE BRED YORK-,\nshire boar. Quiet. D. Heddle.\nR.   R.   1,   Nelson. (1883)\nSHROPSHIRE BREEDING EWES\nand lambs. F. Oatney. Harrop,\nB. O. -~ (WUl\n\u25a0'OR SALE\u2014GOOD WORKHORSE,\nand heifer duo soon. Cheap, or\ntrade for used truck or car. W.\nInnes, Vslllcam B. C. (1834)\nONE GRADE AYRSHIRE FIVE\nyears, lust freshened, very quiet.\nExcellent milker. Ono Grado Ayrshire, due first calf September 30.\nVery promising. The two $190.00\nK. Wallaco, Boswell, B. C.    (1914)\nLIVESTOCK   VPANTEk.\n(24;\nWANTED\u2014ONE   PURE   BRED   NU-\nban   Billy   Goat,   two   years   old.\nH. B. Johnson, Rossland, B. C.\n,'1908)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR   BAM     ffi7)\nl'OUNG SAWMILL COMPLETE FOR\nsawing lumber $160. F. Galncy,\nHarrop. (1012)\nf OR SALE\u2014BARRELS, SXXid. oOS-\nlap Jacks, white sugar sacks. Mao-\nDonald Jam Co. (1580)\n_ OR SALE\u2014SEOOND HAND DROP-\nheod Singer Sewing machines,\n$15.00 up. Apply Singer Sewing\nMachine Co.    (1881)\nFOR    SALE     CHEAP\u2014BRUNSWICK\nWalnut Consolo Phonograph with\nRecords.     Terms    to   responsible\nparty.    Phone W. Taylor, 377L.\n(1003)\nSECOND HAND PIP5- \u00bb\u201e (1T-\ntlngs for sale. When you are In\nneed ot used Pipes and Fittings\nany sl_e Black or Galvanized,\nwrite to Swartz Pipe Yard, 220\nFirst Ave. East. Vancouver, B. C.\nThe Largest exclusive dealers ln\nReconditioned Pipes and Fittings.\n(1709)\nAll the scenery and stage\nsettings and 250 opera chairs\nrecenSy in use in the Nelson\nOpera House, which is being\ndismantled.\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nNelson, B. C.\n(1849)\n.MISCELLANEOUS\nt-9>\nWRITE FOR PRICES ON POTA-\ntoes, labbage and carrots for\nwinter use. W. J. McConn\u00bbn.\nHarrop. (1013)\nWe place jour tunds at\n\u2022_J%  FIRST  MORTGAGE\nCITY PROPERTY\nCW.Appleyard\n(1592)\nIS\nBe prepared for it by filling\nup your coal bins with\ndependable coals.\nPHONE 108\nWilliam's Transfer\n(1909)\nPROPERTY  FOB   BALB\n_\u00ab>,\nFOR SALE\u2014HOTEL WITH BEER I\nParlor and 12 acres of garden I\nground. Apply to A. W. Johnson, I\nIt. No. 2, Lynch Creek, Grand 1\nForks,   B.   O. (1528) |\nFOR SALE-ONE ACRE. CULTTVAT-1\ned; bungalow outbuilding, olty I\nwater, light phone, near Lakeside I\npark, Falrvlew. P. O. box 887,1\nNelson: (1004)1\nBUILDING SITES   .\nAttrocti-ve lots, close in, at \u2022 reai-\nenable   prices,   property   values r are I\nrising   ln  Nelson.  Buy   Now.   Easy!\nterms.\nR. W. DAWSON\nHIPPERSON   BLOOK\nReal Estate Insurance\n(1891) I\nFOR SALE  OR EXCHANGE\n(87)\nFOR SALE\u2014VIOLIN OR SWAP FOR 1\nguitar.   Box 265. (1916)\n1928 CHEVROLET COUPE, RUNS1\nand looks like new. will sell I\ncheap on easy terms,   a. Roynon,\nNelson.\n(1090)\nCATS AND DOGS FOR SALE\n(58) (\nFOR SALE\u2014HANDSOME OHB8A-\npeako dog, two and half ye_r_ol_.\nFond of water. Good ,.aia ind\ncompanion, fond ox^Mten itoth\n(1876)\nRossland.\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAccounting\nCHAS. F. HUNTER\nPublic Accounting and Auditor\nMcDonald Jam Bldg., Nelson\nllQA.t\nH. D. DAWSON\u2014LAND SURVXYOH. I\nMining and Civil Eogtaee^Si.\n(1639)1\nArchitects\nCHAS!    MOORE,    C.    E.-Archlteot\nLand Surveyor, Revelstoke.  (1562)\nAssayers\nE W. Wlddowson, Box A1108, Nelson,\nB. C.   Standard western ehugju.\n(1833)\nGEORGE   A.   M___R_B__Trti__   .Yl\nPhotographer,   716   Bake? \u00ab.      I\n(1041)1\nBeauty Parlors\nSoolety Beauty Shop.   Gilker Bloc*.\nMrs. E. Halgh, Phone 171.    (1634)\nChiropractors\nDR. MITTON, X-RAY. CRANBROOK\n(1635)\nDR. ORAY. GILKER BLK, NELSON.\n(1636)\nDentists\nDR   G.  A.   O.  WALLEY   \u2014  Griffin\nBlock,   X-ray,   Nelson,   B.   O.\n(1637)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nr w DAWSON\u2014Real Estate, In-\n'surance. Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware  Baker   St. (1638)\nEngineers\nA,i\u00a3.J_5KEN,,\u00a3a--00,\"'aACTOHs, 1\nFormerly    Green   b_hl     _,,r__I_ I\nNelson.   Olvll   and  *tn$__ %?*_?\u2022 I\n.\u2022\u00ab\u00ab,  _\u2122i  and Mining  Enoin-I\nPhotographers\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE   COAL AND WOOD\nPhone 106 (1642)1\nATKINSON    TRANSFER\u2014\"coal    .__!\nWood.   Long dtotan.Th_Xg.   *|\nl1648)1\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Baker 8t, Carpenter and!\nJoiner.    Sash  ana  Hardwood ^1\n(1644)1\nFlorists\nGRIZZELLE'S OREENHOUBB. Nel-L\nson. Cut flowers and floral de-1\nsigns. . (1045)1\nWM. 8. JOHNSON\u2014Phone 342. Otlll\nflowers. Potted Plants and Floral!\nEmblems. (1640)1\nTHE  GUMPS-SAY IT  WITH DIAMONDS\n'une aus anxious days for the widow\nSEVEN  \/WORE DA.YS AND IT WILL AU- BE\nOYER-   THE   WEDDING VMILL TAKE PLACE\n\/Mb SHE -WILL BE RICH  BEYOND THE\nWILDEST DREAM\u2014 SHE IS WORRIED ABOUT\nCARLOS-   HE'S BEEN. DRINKING HEAVILY-\nYVILL WE HOLD HIS TONGUE ? V.HAT IF\nHF TOLO ALL- - AND THE V.EDDIN-r WAS\nCALLED OPF AT THE  LAST MINUTE \u2014\nSHE  SHUDDERS AT THE\nTHOUGHT -\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nChange in Service\nARROW LAKES-\nSLOCAN DISTRICT\nEffective Sun. Sept 28th\nARROW LAKES STEAMER\nLt. AtTOwhfnd ..\u201e   8:10 a.m. Mrm. Wed.   Frl.\nArr.   Nakusp     11:40 a.m. Mon. Wed.   Frl.\nArr.  Robnon West 6.4JS p.m. Mon. Wed,   Frl.\nLt_ Robson West 11:20 p.m. Mon. Wed.   Frl.\nArr.   Nakusp   .... 1^:00 noon Tues. Thurs.  Sat.\nArr. Arrowhead ..   3:1.1 p.m. Tues. Thurs.  Sat.\nDirect   train   connection   to antl Irom   Rcvrlstnke.\nSLOCAN LAKE STEAMER\nLt.  Slocan  City    7:00 a-m.\nArr.  Rosebery    0:35 a.ra.\nLt. Rosebery  10:15 a.m.\nArr.  Slocan  City  12:45 p.m.\nItlB p.m. Mon. Wed. Frl.\n3:25 p.m. Mon. Wed. Frl.\n3:50 p.m. Mon. Wed. Frl.\n0:25 p.m. Mon. Wed.  FrL\nKASLO-NAKUSP TRAIN\nLt.   Kaslo     6:15 a.ni.   Moh.   Wed. Frl.\nArr. Rosebery    9:25 a.m.  Mon.   Wed. Fri.\nLt. BoMbery \u201e.\u00ab   9:50 a.m.  Mon.  Wed. Frl.\nArr. Nakusp \u201e. 11:30 a.m.  Mon.   Wed. Frl.\nLv. Nftknsp 12:30 noon  Mon.   Wed. Frl.\nArr. Rosebery ....   2:30 p.m.  Mon. Wed. Frl.\nWed.\nLt.  Rosehery\n3:40 p.m.  Mon.\nFrl.\nArr. Kaslo     7:10 p.m.  Mon.   Wed.  Frl.\nNELSON-SLOCAN MTY TRAIN\nI.v. Nelson    8:40 a.m. .Mon. Wed. Frl,\nArr. Slocan City 12:00 nam: Man Wed. Frl.\nLt.   sioran  City    1:30 p.m. Mon. Wed. Frl.\nArr. Nelson     4:40 p.m. Mon. Wed. Frl.\nCABTBB\nDistrict Passencer Agent,\nNelson\n8 IMP. I\u00bbt1 relet.__,!_,fa., ____ Pi*\". HcM\u00bb\u00bbW\"*\n1'%*\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nI:\nTHAT'S THE.\"\n\"TiaOUB-uE  VJITH\nyou, TIL.UE\nyou MOTlCE\nTVffi   CAB\nIMSTEAD\n0*F   THE\nham *y.\nBy Westover\nOn. ye-EH\nVNELt-, HE\nDOESN'T TAKE\nOTHEI6 GIRLS\nRlDIN'\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS      -WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930.\nPage Nin.\n\" ! I\"' .1\nMarket and Mining News\nACTIVE SHARES\nUP FROM ONE\n* TO FOUR, N. Y.\nLate Short Coverings Help;\nConsiderable Early Ir-   L\nregularity\nNEW TORK, Sept. 23.\u2014Although\ntoday's financial newa was largely\ndominated by t.hn weakness ot\ngrains and other commodities, the\nstock market (.queened Into prominence by virtue of late Bhort coverings which pushed active shares one\nto lour points above the previous\ncldse,\nitJntil the last halt hour the market exhibited considerable irregularity.\nAlthough   stocks   closed   higher,\nnearly   three  score   Issues  touched\nnew lows during the season.   Among\ntlicm were Anaconda Copper, Ken-\nnecott,   Andes  Copper,   Texas   Corporation; Standard Oil of New York,\n|   International     Harvester,     Crucible\nsteel,   Republic   Steel   and   u.   3.\nRubber-\nAmerican Can stood out in the\nstandard Industrials, rising 15 points\nand retaining most of the advance.\nThere were four point not gains ln\nUnderwood   'Elliott    Fisher.    Allied\n\\.Chemical and American Waterworks\nand advances of threo or .more  in\nA__(ierlcan  Telephone,  Auburn  Auto,\n\u25a0Dupont   and . Case.     U,   B.    Steel,\nWestlnghouse,      Bethlehem      Steel,\nLoew's,   Tax.    John-s-Manvilla,    Na-\n. t.ional     Biscuit,     Eastman     Kodak\n|j'Houston Oil, Public Service of New\nJersey and others Improved two or\nmore.\nForeign exchanges were steadier\n: and the Oerman mark made a small\n| recovery from yesterday's lows.\nWhile the day*s trading showed a\nj continued strong demand for high\ngrade domestic issues, the pressure*\n* exerted on foreign loans was again\n- the feature of the bond market.\nVANCOUVER\nSTOC)\nBid\n___\nAsk\n\\ Bayvlow   \u2014;\t\n...   \u2014\n\u202201 Va\nI Big Missouri\t\n.    .60\n.61\n1 Bluebird     _ -\n.    .02\n\u2014\n.. 1.05\n\u2014\n\u25a0i Georgia River  ...\n...    \u2014\n.05\n_   .46\n.    .05\n.40\n| Int.  C.  J:  0\t\n.   .17\n_\nNational   Silver   .:\t\n..    .\u2014\n.04\n..    .061.\n.07\n..   .10\n\u2014'\n.93\n\u2014\n1.00\n\u2014.\nI Reeves  McDonald  \t\n.35\n..    .03\n.05\n-.03\nW\u00abU__|ton\t\n.011\nOUR 36-year-old Plan of\nmoney-.uikllngisused by\nmore than 185,000 Investors.\nWrite for free descriptive\nbooklet, \"Enjoy Money.\"\nInvestors\nSyndicate\nFOUNDED 1894\nUeol Offla*\nHlppenon Block, Editor St,\nNELSON, B. C.\nNelson   District   A\u00abent   Ior\nJnvMtnrB   Syndicate\n%, W. Dawson\n323   Bakc-i   Street\nPhono  197\nDISTRICT  MANAGER\nFor  West  Kootenay  end   o_un;t__n\nA. A. Milligan\n,   K.  P. Block Phono  570\nTraU,   B.\"  c.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nGRAIN\nSTOCKS,   BONDS,   COTTON\nM_.MBF.RS:\n\u2022 New York, Montreal anil  Vancouver\nStock  E_crmn_es, Clilcu_ci  noaril  ol\nTrade,   Wlnnlpr.   Grain   Exchauso\nand other tnidlnx exchanges.\nPR1VATK    WIRE\n.. OFFICES:\nVancouver, spokano and Seattle\nNOBLE BINNS IN\nFRANCE WRITES\nTO NELSON MAN\nFred A, Starkey, commissioner of\nthe Associated Boards of Trade\nof Eastern British Columbia ls in\nreceipt of a letter from Noble\nBlnns of TraU, president of. thc\nboard, who ls ln Nice, France,\nMr. and Mrs. Blnns have spent\nsome time in Ireland, the .home\ncountry of the former, and are\nnow touring France. Mr. Blnns\nstated In his letter that he was\nenjoying himself immensely but that\nhe would be glad to get back to\nthe climate of British Columbia,\nACME HEAVILY\nTRADED, EAST\nTORONTO, Ont., Sept. 22.-Willle\naalea on tlie Standard 'atock and\nmining exchange today were 570,530\naliarea the greater part due to heavy\ntrading ln Acme and three or our.\nother stock* In the penuy class. Tho\ngeneral prlco tendency waa atrongly\nto lower levels.\nWith but one exception tho Interested stocka moved downward in\nprice, while trading waa .comparatively light. Nickel, tho exception, rose 6c to closo at \u00ab22.75. Noranda fell 10c to (21.30 and Hudson\nBay lost 20o to \u00bb7.25. In tho higher\npriced oils. British American and\nImperial each dropped SOc. dosing\nat 917.00 und $21 respectively, ana\nRoyallte declined 75c to $21.\nTho copper-zinc stocka moved In\na somewhat restricted manner, with\nonly a very limited number showing\nfractional gains, the majority closing well under previous prices. The\nLindsley group held a weak session\nwith lower prices. Sudbury Basin\ndropped 16o to $1.26 and Sherrttt-\nGordon lost nine polnto to $1.60.\nNEW   VOKK  STOCKS\nHigh Low Cloeo\nAllegheny     20 19V. 19..\nAllied   Chemical 250 255'\/. 259\nAndes      10   . 10% 18\nAm  Can    126 190% 124%\nAm For  Power.. 63V. 81V. 63Vi\nAm  Smelt St,  R 03% 62',. 62V4\nAm    Telephone.. 211V_ 208 211V,\nAm Tobacco .... 120 118% 13u\nAnaconda     43 40% 42%\nAtchlBon    ... 8l7',_ 215.; 215V.\nBaldwin    32 30Vi 32\nBait  &   Ohio   .. 00.. 97Vi 9B%\nBendlx   Aviation   20'\/, _B>,_ 29W,\nBeth  Steel    85% 83'.'_ 85V.\nCan Pacific    182',. 181._ 182'\/,\nCerro   do   Pasco 41V. 41 41V.\nChes   _\u2022.   Ohio  .. 48 46.4 47%\nChrysler        20 25% 26\nCon Qbs NY.. 106% 104V. lOOVi\nCorn    Products. 88'\/, 88V. 88V.\nC Wright pfd .. \u2014 \u2014 1%\nDupont.  1151. _12 115V.\nEastman   Kodak 207',_ 203V, 207V,\nBrio     - 40 3814'' 40\nFord English  .... \u2014 \u2014 18\nFord of Canada \u2014 \u2014 26%\nPreeport    Texas 44W 43V_ ..',<.\nOen Motors    42% 41% 42V_\nGen Eleotrlo .... 68 66% 6a\nOen  Foods     56V. 65V. 55%\nGranby     20',. 10% 10%\nGt   Wost   Sugar,  171. 16% 16%\nHowe   Sound    _ 29 _8'\/_ 28\nHudson    Motors   28 27 28\nIns   copper     13!. 13% 13U\nInt  Rapid Tran .- \u2014 30%\nInt   Nickel     23 V_ 22',. 23'\/,\nInt Tel & Tel ., 30 37% 38%\nKelly   Spring   ....     3           1% 2%\nKenn   Copper   .. 33% 32% 33\nKrcsge  S   S    30% 29% 29%\nKroegc   &   Toll 28% 36% 26%\nMack   Truck   .... 64.1 53% 54%\nNlish   Motors   ... 32% 33 32\nN  Tow  &  Light \u2014 \u2014 44V_\nN   V  Central   .. 1 ftBv_ 168% 150!.\nPackard    Motors 12V. 12'. 12%\nPcnu It R   72% 71% 71%\nPhilips   Pete   .... 30V_ 30'., 30%\nRadio  Corp     36% 34% 35%\nRadio  Keith   Or 31V; 29'\/. Ill'\nRem   Rand     27% 27 27J_\nRock Island   93% 03 93\nS  Louis  Ss  S  P 86% 86 85\nShell  Union Oil 13% 13V. 13%\nSinclair  Con  \u2014 20V, 10% 20\nSouth   Pacific   ,. 116% 114!., 114%\nStun Oil  of  Cal 58% 57% 68\nStun Oil of Ind \u2014   ' \u2014 48.1\nStan Oil of N J 86% 65 68%\nStewart   Warner   24% 23% 24%\nStudobuker      30 39 ' 30\nTexas   Corp   ... _ 50!. 50 50%\nTexas   Ciuir   Sul 57 66% 57\nUnion   Carbide.. 46% 45 48%\nUnion   OU   Calif 38'., 37% 38%\nUnion  Pacific:., 214% 313!; '310V4\nUn    Aircraft   .... \u2014 \u2014 53%\nU. s Rubber  .... 17% 17 17%\nU S Steel   162% 15D% 162%\nWest   Electric   .. 141 138 140%\nWillys   Overland     6%       6% 6%\nVcllow  Truck   .. 19 V_. 17% 19\nCANADA  BONDS\nWINNIPEG. Man., Sept. 23.\u2014\nQuotations on Victory bonds for\nS1000  are  aa  fololws:\nflonds~Wur loan--1031, 5 per\ncent, 100.40; 1937, 5 per cent. 104.26.\nVictory loon\u20141033, 5% per cent,\n102.80; 1934, 6% per cent, 102.80;\n1937,   5'\/.   per   cent.   108.16.\nWar Iohii renewal\u20141932,-5._ per\ncent,   101.70.\nRefunding loan\u20141043. 6 per cent.\n103.40; 1040, 4% per cent, 100.25;\n1944.- ... P\u00b0r, cent, 100.25; 1036.\n4% per cent. 100.25. \u25a0     ,\nWE OFFER\n$1500 CITY OF NELSON\n5 1-2 Per Cent 1943\nTo Yield 5.15 Fer Cent.\nR.PXlark&Co.(Vanc.)Ltd.\nPhone 100\nNelson, B. C.\n\u00ab\u25a0\u00bb\nThe Consolidated Minii\u00ab\u00a3 and\nSmelting Co. of Canada. Ltd.\nOffice, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL.   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC, TRAIL\nLEADERS STRONGER\nON MONTREAL LIST\nRecessions Felt in Other Issues But Average\nHigher\nMONTREAL, Que,, Sept. 23.\u2014Decided strength In leading Issues that,\nhad Buffered most In Monday'u general decline, and further fractional\nrecessions ln the balance of tbe list\nwere the main features of trading\non tho local exohange today. How\nmuch this condition was \u00bbo may bo\nInferred. \":om the foot that while\n24 stocks declined, against only\nsl_ advances, the averages were able\nto record a email appreciation.\nAmong .closing prices were noted:\nGypsum, % lower at 18; Dryden. ii\nlower at 0; Domi&ilon Steel _s Ooal\n\"B,\" !4 lower at 9; smelters, a point\nlower at 185; Canadian Paolflo, IM\nlower at 45V_: Bridge 1% higher at\n56.4; cement, % lower at 18: Canadian Hydro-Electric, two lower at\n84; Alberta Oraln, a potnt lower at\n10; Abltibl, off Vi at 30V4; Masaey-\nHarrts. off Vi at 18; McColl-Fran-\ntonao, % higher at 17%; power a\npoint higher at 68%; Shawlnlgan, Vs\nlower at 17 V4 Quebeo Power lost\nthree points to 68; Steel of Canada\nheld steady at 48, and St. Lawrence\nCorporation at 6.\nInternational Nickel, active leader\nat the cloee, was % higher at 23.\nMontreal Power, second In volume,\nclosed at 63%, a point net higher,\nBrazilian, third, closed at 35%, up\n2% on the day.\nTotal sales 33,935 shares. Bond\nsales (36,600.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBank   of   Commerce 248\nDominion Bank    333\nImperial   Bank     335\nBank of Montreal    323\nBank  of  Nova  Scotia 321\nRayai  Bank    \u2014 3*10\nBank of Toronto 340\nAbltibl   Power  &   Paper       SOU)\nAsbestos   Corporation -.      %\nAtlantic    Sugar - _     5\nBell   Telephone   ~  - 153\nBrazilian T..L. & Power     36%\nBrit.   American   Ol]    _..,   17%\nBrompton  Paper   \u2014    33Vi\nCanada Bronze     40\nCan. Car & Foundry    30%\nCan.   Cement _ - -   18\nCan.    Cement    ._      95\nCan.   Converters   .\u201e _.._    65\nCan.   Industrial   Alcohol        3%\nCan.   Cottons    _, \u2014    80\nCan. Oen. Electric, pfd.    300\nCan.   Power       1_%\nCan. Steamship Linen          0%\nCons. Mining  _: Smelting  .... 184\nDominion Brldgo      66%\nDominion   Glass    ._  110\nDom. Steel  Corp.. pfd.      34\nDom.    Textile        84\nA. P; Grain   \u2014...   10\nHillcrest   Colliers        80\nLake  of  tho  Woods    38\nMassey   Hants       18%\nMontreal   power        68i_\nMont. Telegraph   .__.,\u201e._....   48\nMontreal   Tramway-    . 175\nNational  Breweries      31\nNatlonol Steei Car      47\nOgllvle    Milling    ...-.   360\nOntario Steel Products   169\nOttawa U  H.  - Power     90\nPenmans.   Ltd    70\nPower    Oorp -    66%\nPrttji    Bros __    69%\nQueoeo   Power   _ _    55\nS_tawlni_an         67%\nSherwln   Williams    _....   34\nSo.  Canada  Power  _ -   30\nSteel  of  Canada      45%\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills     27\nWabaaso   Cotton       40\nWentern    Grocers        18\nWinnipeg   Hallway  103\nWinnipeg    Railway,    pfd    38\nTORONTO STOCK..-\nAbona    _..._      .32\nAjax     _  \u25a0    2-17\nAmulet \u2014....     .65\nAmity 02V,\nA. P. Consolidated  69\nAssociated    - 40\nBaltic   Oil    13\nBedford     16\nBarry Holllnger  14\nBig   Missouri    57\n6, and E. Lauds 75\nCentral Manitoba  06\nDome        8.80\nDalhousle      75\nFalconbrldge Nickel,  ask  ....   2.30\nHome Oil       3.90\nHowey      - 33\nHolllnger       5.05\nHudson   Bay       700\nInternational   Nickel     23.00\nLake Shore *.  22.50\nKlrklond   Lake    _ 51\nKootenay   Florence    \u201e 01V_\nMucasea -      -08\nMundy     _ 1714\nMttlurtlc    02\nMcDougall    lo\nMclntyre     18.23\nMining   Corporation       1.05\nMayland      121\nNewbec         -07\nNew imperial Oil   21.00\nNiplsslng         1.10\nNoranda    \u2022'\u25a0  21.40\nrend Oreille  01\nPremier  Gold   90\nS. W. Peto  30\nSherrit Gordon     1.65\nSudbury  Basin     1.25\nSterling Pacific  00%\nSlt,coo 36\nStadacona     - 08\nThompson cadallac  03\nvipond       1.20\nVentures 76\nWright.   Hargreaves       1.88\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN\nWINNIPEG. Man. Sept. 23.\u2014Grain\nquotations:\nOpen     High Low     Close\nWheat\u2014\nOct    76%     75% 73 V.      78Vi\nNov    Hit     76% 76%     76%\nDec    771,     78% 76%      76H\nMay    .   ..   85!.  '  85V_ M%     82%\nOats\u2014-\nOot    30VJ      30% 30         30Vk\nDec -   30%     30% 30         30Vi\nM\u00ab.y        36%     35%- 34%     SV,.\nBarley\u2014\nOot.    -....   30        80 20%     29.1\nDeo    83         83VJ 81%      81%\nMay    ...'...   88        88 38%     8814\nFlax\u2014\nOct.    \u2014 142'..    143% HO',.    188%\nDec  138V.    189% 184       184\nMay     146      146 140%   140V.\nRyo\u2014\nOct    36        36% 84%     34H\nriec    40\u00ab, ! 40V4 37%     37V4\nMoy        47         47 43%     44V4\nCaBh prices\u2014\n\u2022 Wheat\u2014No.   1   hdrd 78%   No.   l\nnorthern 73%; No. 2 northern 70;\nNo. 3 northern 88V4; No. 4 66%; No.\n6 63V.; No. 0 62Vi: feed 42'\/.; truck\n73; screenings per ton 83.\nYMIR-WILCOX TO\nBE DEVELOPED BY\nCALIFORNIA WEN\nRecent word has been received\na seizure of a Canadian vessel of\nthat the Ymir-Wllcox mine; one\nof the old time shippers of Ymlr\nIs again being developed by a crew\nof 10 men under California Inter-\neats. In 1913 .some 3900 feet of\nore was taken out under the supervision of Arthur Lakes. J At tha*\ntime a quantity of ore was shipped.\nCOMPLETE SALE\nOF PLANET SOON\nExp.ect Ratification of Plan\nat Meeting on October\n8, Coast\nVANCOUVER, Sopt. 33.\u2014Negotiations which have been proceeding\nfor some time for the sole of the\nPlanet mines, Stump lake, Nicola,\nto the Premier Gold Mining Co., will\nprobably be concluded at ah extraordinary general meeting of the\nplahet Mines is Riduotlon company\nof Nicola Ltd., on October 8 In\nVancouver.\non September 15 Peter Bancroft,\npresident of the Planet company,\ngave an option to the Premier com-\npany on1 the Planet free-mtUIng gold\nmine and Mr. Bancroft's adjoining\nproperty known aa the Donohue\ngroup. Under the terms of the\n30-day option, the premier Gold\nMining company to to pay the\nPlanet people 9100.000 and undertake tho 'development of the properties. A new company is' to be\nformed -to which the Planet and\nDonohoe group are to be trans-\nerred and this organization will Issue 8,000,000 shares, of which the\nPremier Gold Mining company tB to\nreceive 2,600,000, and tho Planet\ncompany 3,400.000.\nThe directorate of the new oompany will consist ot seven, of whom\nthree Bre to be nominated by the\nPlanet oompany.\nThe deal means that shareholders\nol the Planet company will receive\n24 shares for every 10 they now\nhold.\nCALGARY OILS\nA. P.  consolidated        .59\n'Commonwealth    _.....Y.....;...      .2,\nPalhoiBIe    - 75\nEastcrest    \u2014'.      .37\nFreehold    _...:.     .2-\nHargal     17%\nIllinois   Alta        .09%\nMcDougall   Segur   Ex    13%\nMercury      '. '\u25a0\u25a0    .37%\nMcLeod   .' , _    1.05\nMill    Otly     33\nMayland    1.30\nOkalta New  43\nBoyallte       23.00\nsterling   Paclflo         .13\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, Sept. 33\u2014(AW-OW\nper quiet; electrolytic spot, axul _-\u00bb\nture,   10V4.\nIron, quiet; unchanged.\nTin, steady, spot and nesfW.\n39.76;  futures 29.90.\nLead,   steady;   spot   New   Yo*\n5.50;   East SC Louis 5.36.\nspot and future! 4.36  to  4.30.\nAntimony, 7.62.\nZinc,     quiet;     East   St.   LouH,\nAt  London:\nStandard oopper\u2014Spot and futur_ ,\n\u00a345   0s   nd:   electrolytic,   spot   \u00a3_9j\nfuture \u00a350.\nTin\u2014Spot \u00a332 6s; future \u00a3134 6\u00ab.\nLead\u2014Spot \u00a317 12s Cd: fitting\n\u00a317   10s.\nZlno\u2014Spot   \u00a315   10s   ;future  III .\n12s   8d. i\nJJ HFKK ?\nf Forty-eight miles on a gallon of gasoline\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022   #\nf 20,000 to 40*000 miles on a set of tires   \u2022   \u2022   \u2022   \u2022  ,.r\\\n\u2022 \u25a0\nf 1,000 miles on $0.50 worth of gas and oil .\n\u2022   m\nYou've heard of the bantam car . . . read about\nit... perhaps seen pictures of il.\nNow see lbe car. Discover first hand why thc\nAmerican Austin is thc front-page news of molor-\ndom today\u2014lbe advent of a new era of smart\neconomical transportation.\nJVie car is on exhibition, now ol, lhe address below.\nLook il over, , . surprisingly compact... surprisingly comfortable... smart as milady's new bal...\nyet as thrifty as'a housewife.\nLess than a cent a mile buys its gas, oil and tires ...\na joyful facl for the economically minded.\nSlip behind lhe wheel. You'll find comfort,.. ample leg room... the easy give of well balanced springs.\nBehind you... a generous compartment for parcels.\nOn tbe road will come olher surprises. It darts in and\nout of traffic with the agility of a lithe young animal,\nll speeds up lo fifty miles an hour on lhe straightaway.\nIt will do up to forty in second. And so easy to\nhandle, turn, and park in hitherto impossible spaces.\nSo Austin makes its bow. Made on this continent\nbul with lhe heritage of a design that has proved\nits mettle on the testing courses of the world. See it.\nNow on display.. .ut the address below.\nCome and bring your prejudices with you\nTOM HURST\nInterta* Distributor\nDILL'S SUPER SERVICE STATION\nBOX 180, NELSON, B. C.\n _?age Ten\nTHE ipLSON-DAILY i NEWS,     WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930.\nBridge Novelties\nBridge Tallies\nBridge Sets\nNew Stock\nMann, Rutherford\nCo.\nPhone Taxi\n57\nFreight    Schedule\nDally  to  Ilossiand\nand '\"'vail  lo a.n_\nBUD    STEVENS,\nProp.\nTraU    1'hone    135\nSmythe's\nCatarrh Balm\nValuable  for*  treatment of \"oiturrli,\nHay  Fever. Cold ln the  Head,  Ca-\ntarrlial   neatness,   and   other   Nasal\nafflictions.\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION   SPECIALIST\nPHONE   1\nPhone TAXI\nThe  Best   of  Service\nCareful,   courteoui\nDrivers\nNelson TransSer Co., Ltd.\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST    and    OPTICIAN\nRoom   3   \u2014   Orlfttn'  Block\n44 TAXI AND 44\n\u25a0TRANSFER\nTRAIL   AND   ROSSLAND\nIfRlilliUT   AND   EXPRESS\nSchedule\nDally to Trail, iea.es  10  A. M.\nTAXIS   DAV    AND   NIOHI\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNclson'a   DlspenBlns   Chemisti\nFilms,   Kodaks,   Drugs,\n\u25a0Stationery\nMall   Orders   Promptly\nDispatched\nCome and get your\nwelcht  free\nBox    1083   Nelson,   Phone   34\nVIC. GRAVES\nMaster Plumber\nU Years Practical  Experience\nNELSON,   11.   <:.\nP.  O.  Box  217 Phone  313\nREBEKAH HEAD IS\nWELCOMED HERE\nPresident    Mrs.   Merrithew\nIS Presented With Silver\nTray and Flowers\n' At a social gathering- of the NelBon Rebekahs here Tuesday evening,\nPresident Mrs. R. A. Merrlthaw, of\nthe Rebekah Assemblies of. British\nColumbia, a resident of Vancouver,\nwas presented with a silver tray antl\na bouquet of flowers. Mrs. J. Draper,\ndistrict deputy president, made tho\npresentation on behalf of the lodge.\nMrs. Merrithew is In Nelson on\nan-official visit. | Cranbrook and\nKimberley will be the next points\nto receive the president. Mrs. Merrithew   arrived   in   Nelson   Monday\n'BETTER BREAK\ni-astnt \u00a7l)ot-pr\nBAKER ST.\nSomething New\nDifferent and\nDelicious\nCaramel Buns\nor Rings\nMake it a point to\nbuy your baking   at\nthe  Old English\nPastry Shoppe. You\ncan't go wrong.\nand was tho guest of...Mra.. Draper\nwho gave n toa m her honor In tho\nafternoon.\nHunter Electric\n6c Plumbing\nDisplaying  Lighting\nFixtures of Latest\nDesign at Moderate\n. Cost\nPhone 530\nPITNER'S\n\"The Place to Dine\"\nYou will have better health and live longer\nif you eat what you enjoy. To get thc best\ncome* to\nPITNER'S\nl i\n\u25a0 \u25a0\nCity Tax Sale\nTUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30\nAll properties on which taxes are delinquent\nwill be offered for sale by public auction in the\ncouncil chamber of the city hall, on TUESDAY,\nTHE 30TH DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 1930, at 10\no'clock in thc forenoon. Properties sold on the\n30th of September last year can be redeemed up\nto 30th of September, 1930.\nA list of properties to be offered for sale\nmay be seen at the city hall.\nThe City of Nelson\n\\L.\n.J\nHunting Time\nIs Here\nTRY US FOR-\nGuns, Rifles and Ammunition,\nWaterproof Clothing, Decoy\nDucks, Camp Equipment, Etc.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany \u2014O\u2014 Limited\nWHOLESALE - Nelson, B. C. - HEX AIL\nOILS MOVE UP\nON COAST LIST\nVANCOUVER, B, 0\u201e Sept.' 2!\nOils turned upward in increased\ntrading on the Vancouver stock\nexchange today, Volume of sales\nover. There were a few weak\nalmost doubled yesterday's turn-\nspots, but generally prices tended to higher levels.\nHome and Mayland led the upturn, with the latter leading in\npoint of activity. Home gained 20\noents to 4.15, while Mayland Jumped 19 cents to 1.36. Other firm\nspots among tlie oil list included\nJ. and E, corporation up 8 cents to\n.86,- Hargal up 6 cents to .22, McLeod, up 5 cens to 1.20 and Van\nAlta up 3 cents to .26. Soft spots\nIncluded Commonwealth, off 4\ncents to .21, and Calmont and Dalhousle, each of which dropped 3\ncents\nMines did not follow the lead\nof the oils, and were rather qquiet\nGeorge Copper sank lo cents to\n1.05. Merger of planet mines and\nPremier Gold failed to move either\nIssue.\nCRESTON PACKING\nHOUSES HANDLE\nMcINTOSH CROPS\nCRESTON, B. C, Sept. 23\u2014All\nfour packing houses in Creston\nare working at top speed getting\nout the orop of Mcintosh Red\napples. This should have been the\nbig year for \"Macs\" but due to\nsome apnaMteffable winter injury\nthe outgo will not be much larger\nthan 1929 which' was the off year\nfor this variety. Due to the rather\ndry season the size Is hardily average and ln the absence of cool\nweather the color is not as high\nas normally. It will take till at\nleast the end of the month to get\nclear of Mcintosh. Wealthles arc\nJust about all moved but the demand for these slowed up when the\nprice set on' Mcntosh was a shade\nhigher than that obtaining on\nWealthles. Tho slowing up in demand for Wealthles has also caused tomatoes to stack up, as the\ntomatoes wero going out (ln mixed cars \u201ewhich were running heavy\nto the Wealthles.\nNO ANNOUNCEMENT,\nCABINET MEETING\nOTTAWA, Out., Sept. 23:\u2014 CCP)-.\nMethods for dealing with unemployment were given some consideration\nat a'meeting of the cabinet presided over by Sir George Perley,\nacting prime minister, this afternoon. Thc program-^ has not, however, reached a point where any\ndefinite announcement respecting it\ncan bc mado. There will bo another\nmeeting of cabinet on  Thursday.\nSir George stated that no appointments had yet been made to\nthe tribunals provided for under\npensions legislation. He intimated,\nhowever, that nctlon would oe taken\nin  thc  near  future.\nLOSSES  OUTNUMBER\nGAINS, TORONTO\nTORONTO, Out., Sept. 23.\u2014Leading Issues on the Toronto stock\nexchange made progress. In art upward, direction today' with volume\nconsiderably heavier but losses: out.\nnumbered gains throughout the\nmarket as a whole.\nWeak spots were not concentrated\nIn any groups but straggled Irregularly  throughout tho list.\nThe general softness apart from\nleading Issues was evidenced by the\nIrregularity ln cloilng prices ln the\nutilities and steel ; groups. B. C.\nPower A at 37V. wa_-:off tv(o. Bell\nTelephone was 'off lyj, at 163 _,\nC. P. R. dropped four to 181 and\nPower Corporation was off VA to 67.\nBrazilian Traction led this group\nand Its net gain was 1% to close\nat 35V_. New O.'-P. R. Issue also\ngained %. to close at 48V. and\nUnion Natural, Gas was up lv. to\n28V_. Page Hersey was off one to\n91, and Steel of Canada lost 1%\nto 45.   '\nGOOD START IS\nMADfi IN EXPORT\nOF JEIEEF CATTLE\nOTTAWA, OUt., Sept. 28.\u2014(OP)\n\"The resumption of Canada's export\ncattle trade to the old country has\napparently got away to a good\nstart,\"- commented H. S. Arfcell, Dominion livestock .loimnlBsloncr,' following receipt today of a report on\nthe initial shipment of Canadian\nbeef cattle to Manchester, England.\nV'Our catfle have evidently met a\nvery' satisfactory reception despite\nthe aot they urrived on.the market\nduUng one of the hottest spells of\nweather England has. experiencoa in\n20 \u2022 years,\" Mr, Arkell said. ','Now\nthat we have made such a good\nstart Canadian shippers should see\nto it .that no inferior cattle aro allowed to go overseas.\"\nDOMINION    LIVESTOCK\nWINtilP^G, Man., Sept. 23.\u2014Dominion h \\ .ock receipts are as follows: -__ cattle; 7. calves; _bl\nhogs;    115   sheep.\nSteers\u2014Good and choice 6.60 to\n6.00.\nHeifers\u2014Good and choice 6.25 to\n5.75. _\nfed calves\u2014Good and choice 8.00\nto  0.00. ,\nCows\u2014Good 4.00 to 4.60; canners\nand  cutters  1.50 to 2.25.\nBulls\u2014Good   3.00   to .3.25.\nStocker and feeder steers\u2014Good\n4.50  to 5.25. '\nStock cows and heifers\u2014Good 3.50\nto  4.00\nMilkers and springers\u201440.00 -to\n70.00.\nVeal calves\u2014Good and choice 8.00\nto 0.00.\nHogs\u2014Select,, bacon $1.00 per heatf\nperrnlum; bacon 11.26; butchers 70c\nper head discount; lights and feeders  11.00  to  11.25. .\nLambs\u2014Good handyweight 6.50 to\n7.00; good heavies 5.00 to 6.00:\nbucks  4.00  to 5.00. ,\nSheep\u2014Good heavies 3.00; good\nhandyweight 3.60 to 4.00\nEGG MAKiM-lS\nOTTAWA, Ont., Sept. 23.^-\nToronto\u2014Brokers are now asking\nfor graded country shipments' extras\n36 to 37, firsts 34 to 35, seconds\n25, delivered. Wholesale dealers\nare quoting country shippers for\nungraded eggs extras 34, firsts 31,\nseconds 23, to 24, delivered, cases\nreturned. ' Wholesale prices to retailers are extras 44, firsts 38, seconds ,27  to  29.\nMontreal; Fresh extras on spot\naro Jobbing to wholesale dealers at\n40 to 4i cents and firsts at 35 centa.\nWholesale prices of fresh eggs to\nretailers are higher at extras 45,\nfists 40,  seconds 32. '\nSt. John; Prices to country shippers for ungraded eggs are higher\nat extras 34 to 36, firsts 27 to 29,\nseconds 20 to 22, delivered, cases returned.\nHalifax: Wholesale dealers arc\nquoting country shippers for ungraded eggs extras 33 to 35, firsts\n27 to 29, seconds 21 to 23, delivered.\nChicago spot 23; November refrigerators 23%; December refrigerators  24.\nIndia   prints   arc   a   new   Idea   in\nchair  covers.\nAt the\nRIGHT PRICE\nThe true value of a used car is represented entirely by the service it will give you.\nWhen wc take in a used car it is carefully\ninspected and the replacements and adjustments necessary to put it in first class condition arc made.\n1Q9C   PONTIAC  SEDAN.      Has  been  CC\/1K\nl\"*\"0 completely  overhauled    _<U*_>\n1Q9Q CHEVROLET COUPE. The finish fi>C\/l C\nxui'J is like new and it runs good  'DV^\u00b0\n1QOQ CHEVROLET SEDAN. A sturdy flJKQE:\nxu^\u00b0 little car, and we guarantee it VOVO\n1927 CHEVR0LET SEDAN. Very low <|MQK\nXVidt mj)eagej an(j a bargain fit only wLxOO\nXjriH CHEVROLET SEDAN.      Used a (RQCPC\nllEiTT  short time as a calling car *>?&?\nNEW OLDSMOBILE SEDAN. This is' a\nllLlY new car, but has been driven     <j\u00bb\"I QQC\nCOO  miles   \u00b0 $1003\nWc Invite .von to inspect these cars\u2014ride in them\u2014drive\nthem\u2014nnd  you  will realize that  we  nre offering\nbetter values thun ever hefore.\nNelson Transfer\nCo., Lt\u00ab|.\nPhone 35     Nelson, B. G.\nt.mm**mmmM\n---*-%-% \u00bb _._-_._._.<_*\u00bb* - r-'r-ikmrn,\nDROP IN GROSS\nEARNINGS OF\nC. N. R., WEEK\nMONTREAL, Que,, Sept. 23.\u2014\nGross earnings of the Canadian National railways for the week ending\nSeptember 21, 1930, were $5,009,672\nas compared with $6,699,919 for tne\ncorresponding period of 1939, a decrease   of   $690,247.\nEARNINGS DOWN\nFOR BRAZILIAN\nDURING AUGUST\nMONTREAL, Que., Sept. 23\u2014Earnings of the Brazilian Traction, Lignt.\nand Power company, limited, and\nsubsidiary companies, for the mown\nof August, 1930, were $2,314,839, as\ncompared with $2,447,024- in- August,\n1929, a decrease of $132,185.\nENGLISH FLIER\nIS IN INDIA\nALLAHABAD, India, Sept. 23.\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Captain P. R. At. thews, Briton, attempting to fly in record\ntime from England to Australia, arrived here today, a full day ahead\nof the time set by Bert Hinkler two\nyears ago.\nMilNlNi-AfUUS     GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. 23.-\nFlour unchanged. Shipments 00,900.\nBran 18.50 to 19.00. Standard middlings 19.50 to 20.00.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern Sl'-a to\n85',*,; No. 1 red durum 681\/4 to 69V_;\nSeptember 70 Vi; December aV\/B\\\nMarch   86;   May   8616.\nCorn\u2014No. 3 yellow 82 to'83.\nOats\u2014No. 3 white-313-8 to 41%.\nFlax\u2014No. 1  1.78 to 1.82.\nEXUiAINGi.  RATES\nNEW YORK, Bept. 23.\u2014Sterling\nexchange at $4.83 13-16 for 60-day\nbills and \u00abt $4.88 13-16 for demand.\nForeign bar sliver \"36\"Je  cents.\nMarks 23.80^  cents.\nKrpnen 26.85'\/a cents.\nCanadian dollars ; cent premium,\nFrancs 3.92'\/:r^its.\nLhe 5.23=8  cents.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL,  Que.,  Sept.  23.\u2014Butter,   eggs   and   cheese   firm.\nCheese, finest westerns .16.\nCheese,  finest   easterns,   .16i\/3.\nButter, No. l  Quebec,  .31.<.,\nEggs,   fresh   specials,   .50.\nEggs, fresh extras, .46.\nEggs,   fresh   firsts,   .40.\nNews of the Day\nEagles meet tonight at 8 o'clock.\n_,        (1931)\nInstruction  In  auction  and  contract bridge.    Box  1872 Daily News.\n(1872)\nReserve November 22 for Excelsior\nclub   bazaar. (1922)\nKindergarten classes resumed.\nPhone   791.R. (1919f\nMothers' club Christmas sale, November 18. (1025)\nNext Harrop Social Club Dance\non Wednesday, September 24. Free\nfwry.   OB18)\nCourt whist, Redeemor parish hall\n.onight, 8 p.m. Admission 36 cents.\nRefreshments, (1924)\nGrace Brett Studio of Dancing.\nPrivate and class lessons in reducing. Business girls' dancing class.\nPrivate lessons In Ballroom dancing.\nFriday afternoons and evenings.\nStrathcona hotel. (1861)\nMrs. Gllison's circle of St. Paul's\nchurch will hold a tea and sale of\nhome cooking at the\" home of Mrs.\nGibson, (.arbomilc street, on Iriiluy,\nOctober   i-iid. (I!):.!.)\nFRIDAY, October NINTH, HEClT-\nAI. BY MISS LOUISE PEBBLE., ASSISTED BY MISS ELEANOR\n.QUIRES   AND   MRS.   J.   ti.ANSNER.\nWatch  for  particulars. (1930)\nSplendid musical program at\nChurch Helpers; tea on Fridav afternoon, September 26, 3 to 0, Women's\n.Institute rooms. Admission 25\ncent_. llM8)\nCome\u2014Piny Military Whist with\nus, Lady Society of the B. of\nL. F. and E. Memorial Hall, September 25th, 8:15 sharp. Refreshments. Good prizes. Admission 36c.\n(18631\nLegion members remember the\n'Inter-bran:h Relationship\" trip to\nTrail tonight leaving Nelson Head\nQuarters at 5:30, Tlie assistance of\nmir members with cars will be mn\"'i\nnppreclated. N       (1927)\nEXPERT\nGun-Rifle\nRepairing\nH_ R. KITTO\nNelson, B. C.\ni\nBENNETT SAILS\nFOR ENGLAND\nCanadian  Delegates  to  Imperial Conference Start\nVoyage -\nQUEBEC, Que., Sept. 23.\u2014(By\nThomas Green, Canadian press staff\ncorrespondent)\u2014Headed by Premier\nR. B., Bennett, Canada's delegation\nto>-TO\u00ab Imperial and economic conference, which opens ln London,\nOctober 1, Bailed from here today\nfor London on board the Empress of\nAustralia.\nAccompanying the prime minister\nwere Hon. Hugh Guthrie, minister\nof Justice; Hon. H. H. Stevens,\nminister of trade and commerce,\nand Hon. Maurice Dupre, solicitor\ngeneral. *\n-Hundreds gathered at the pier In\nan informal send-off and Joined In\nthe singing of \"O, Canada\/7- As the\nship was aljout to leave there wero\nbrief speeches delivered by the delegates from the main deck to tht.\ncrowd below.'\nSpeaking ln French, Hon. Mr.\nDupre, who represents Quebec West\nln parliament, said that French and\nEnglish Canada would both play\ntheir part at the conference.\n\"I am not going to the confer*\nence ln any official capacity,\" oe<\nclared Premier Howard Ferguson ol\nOntario,1 who Is sailing with the\ndelegates. \"I am going to listen at\nthe keyhole, but anything I can do\nfor the unity of the British Empire I will be glad to do.\"\nMiss Mildred Bennett, Mrs. Ferguson, Mrs. Guthrie, Mrs. Dupre\n\\nd Mrs. Stevens were ott board. A\nnumber of technical officials of the\nDominion government service oorti-\nposed the rest of the party.\nRETURN OF HIS\nSIGHT BRINGS\nON HIS DEATH\nDISCOVERS HOW\nNATURE DECIDES\nON THE SEXES\nPASADENA, Calif., Sept. 23\u2014-Discovery indicating how nature determines whether sex shall be male\nor female was reported to the\nNational Academy of Sciences today by Dr. Calvin B. Bridges of\nCalifornia   Institute   of   Technology.\nThe method Is a matter of\nbalance between male and female\nelements in body cells, and differs\nfrom many scientific findings which\ncredit sex control almost wholly to\ntwo specialized microscopical parti-\ncles in body cells, called chromosomes,\nDr. Bridges' work was done on\nfruit flies, while he made no\ncomment on possible human application his findings increase the com.\nplcxity  of  controlling sex.\nIS ACCUSED OF\nTREASON\nLEIPSIG. Germany, Sapt. 23 (AP)\nAdolp Hitler, leader of the German\nFascist party, has been accused of\nhigh treason by Reichswher authorities and today was sunpoenaed\nby tho attorney-general to testify\nas a witness at the trial of three\nRt.ichswehr officers accused of attempting high treason. The accusation against the leader of the\nsecond strongest party in the ,relsch\ntag, whose Influence has Increased\nby leaps and bounds since thc\ngeneral election last week, was\nbrought out by the lawyer defending thc three -officers, who arc\nFascist  sympathizers.\nFINLAND STILL\nLOST\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., Sopt.23\n\u2014(CP)\u2014Low-hanging clouds that\nforecast rain put a partial check on\naerial search activities today for\nMike Finland, Consolidated Mining\nit Smelting company engineer-pilot.\nlost for a - week in tho. northern\nSaskatchewan barrens. Led by Ken\nDewar, fellow-pilot of Finland, the\nhunt went on throughout the day\nand early evening but prospects\nwere that flying might be curtailed by bad weather tomorrow.\nRELEASED   FROM   JAIL\nCALCUTTA, India, Sept. 23\u2014(AP)\nA mayor and an cx-mayor of Calcutta, prominent in the civil dls-\nobedtonco movement of Mahatma\nGandhi, were released from Jail\ntoday after serving sentences for\nsedition  and   conspiracy.\nJ. M. Sen Gupta, sentenced In\nApril to six months for sedition\nand conspiracy, served out his full\nsentence. He was arrested while\nmayor   the   the   great   Indian   city.\nBubhas Chanora Boso, recently\nelected to the mayoralty but unable\nto occupy the office, served nine\nmonths of a year's sentence for\nsedition,\nAstrakhan is to bo one of thc season's most popular furs.        ,\n!_rn3T_n_T_a__\u00a3_an_aa_i\nIT'S GOOD\nCII.LI CON CARNE\nHome ln nnd -.sample a dish . . ,\nYou will find lt delicious . . 1\nmade from our own special recipe,\nHOME-MAD*!   PASTRY\nPear   ples    3Bc   oach\nDate   Cookies   ....... 2bc   doz.\nDevil's Food Cake, 50c each\n<m\nison s\nThe   place    for   Afternoon   Teas'\n^yyypwf^4*w^)iw\u00abMphi?_lii\nIn these days of numerous automobiles can you, from a purelj\nselfish standpoint of your safely,\nafford to drive without corrcctlj\nntted   glasses?\nDon't take n ehnnce on yonr eyes,\nhave us exit mine your eyes now\nand avoid the posirtblllty of\naccident*.\nJ.0. PATEN AUD.'\nOptometrist _: Optician\nExpert Optical tiervlce\nST. THOMAS, Out;, Sept. 23.\u2014\nHenry Frederick Jelly, justice of\npeace- at Port Stanley, was so over-\nJoyed on Sunday when he found he\ncould ete following an operation\nfor the removal of cafcyacte that he\nbrought on a stroke wnich caused\nhis death on Sunday evening. Mr.\nJelly was the sole survivor of The\ndisastrous wreck on the Pacific coast\nwhen the. Steamer Pacific sank in\n1876 with a death list of 2?0 passengers  and  crew.\nRESERVE DECISION\nI COAST INCOME\nTAX TEST HEARING\nVANCOUVER, B. O., Sept. 23 .\nIn a test case, which, was heard\nby Mr. Justice Audette In exchequer court here, Clinton Willis\nRoenlsch, grain \"broker, of Calgary mid Vancouver, claimed the\nright to deduct provincial \u25a0 income\ntax In the computation of his Income for Dominion tax purposes.\nJudgment was reserved by his\nlordship.\nAlthough the amount at issue Is\ncomparatively email the principle\ninvolved Is important. 9\nRoenlsch appealed from a decision of the mlnJsteff of national\nrevenue, who disallowed .the broker's claim to deduct $459, being Income tax payable to British' Columbia, from Income earned ln the\nprovince, for the purpose of de\nterminlng the amount which It.\nliable to Dominion insom\u00a7 tax.. The\nfederal authorities assessed a tax of\n$1019 In respects of Roenlsch\n$19,905 income for 1927.\nIn arriving at.a balance of gains\nover losses in respect of profits\nearned in , British Columbia, he\nclaimed a deduction for provincial income tax. The claim was\nput forward on the ground that the\n(459 was a necessary disbursement.\nNO MORE CHARGE  '\nFOR INSPECTION\nOF DAIRY HERDS\nOTTAWA, Ont., Sept. 23.\u2014(OP)\u2014\nAs a ,mB_8ure of rielf tor dairy\nJarmers producing milk and cream\nfor export to Uip United State.,\nHon. Robert Weir, minister of agriculture, has tamed instructions to\n.he veterinary Inspection staff tna.\niip.lnnin.it September 23, Inspections\nequlred under the United States\nfederal import milk act to permit\nof milk or cream being shipped into\nthe United states be made free or\nchargo.\nThis means a saving to the dair.\nfarmer of from .2 to J5 or more\n-for the official Inspection of his\n.remises and herd.\nUnderwear\nfor Any   j\nWeather\nIf you are as particular\nabout your underwear as\nabout your outerwear you\nwill wear onr union suits.\nTailored to fit, yet not\nbind. Warm enough for tho\ncoldest day, yet light\nenough for now. All sizes\nand lengths.\nSTANFIFXD'B, HATCHWAY,\nno-button; GOLD    \u25a0'\nFLEECE, CGETEE.\n$1.95 to $10.00\nEmory's Ltd.\nThe   timber   of   a  redwood\nwhich has' Iain upon ,the ground ;\nCalifornia for several centuries\nbeen found to be ln a perfect i\nof preservation. _   . .,\nThe Iron Fireman\ndoes the work\nSee it at\nB. C. Plumbing\n& Heating Co.\nATTEND\nTHE\nMATINEE\n2 P. M.\nADULTS\n35c\nCHILDREN\n10c\nmmm   two\nSHOWS\nNIGHTLY\n\"Enjf'il-vimni'nf\nAND ai___iN THE\nCAPITOL SCORES\nWITH  ANOTHER\nGREAT SHOW\n7\nAND\n9 P. M.\nTHE FULFILLMENT OF\nYOUR MOST EXTRAVAGANT\nDREAMS OF ENTERTAINMENT\n^^\u25a0Mnm msemasawmmm m m_______bo__ -ukeb\nWarner Bros.\n'SHOW\nof\nSHOWS'\n100 STARS\n1000 HOLLYWOOD BEAUTIES\n.     100 SHOWS IN ONE\n(Jorgeous ensembles, rhythmic flanclnr; hosts of clowning comedians, original melodies, entrancing music. .\nA shining new milestone in\nthe  history  of  pictures.\nYou'll thr|ll with Its drama! .\nYou'll  laugh  at  Its  humor!\nYou'll gaze with amazement\n.it the manifold wonders, of\ntuipcr-cntcrtalnment.\nFILMED IN TECHNICOLOR\nAmazing! Thrilling!\ni   '       Astounding!\n\"SHOW OF SHOWS\"\nThe Greatest Entertainment the Stage or\nScreen Has Ever Known\nNOVELTY SONG REEL\n\"I'M FOREVER BLOWING BUBBLES\"\nGet the Habit of Attending the\nMATINEE at 1 O'clock\nNext Attraction \"Desert Heroes\"\nComing Next Week\nJackie Oakie in \"Let's Go Native\" '\nSpecial, \"Journey's End\"\nAl Jolson \"Mammy\"\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1930_09_24","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0400573","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1930-09-24 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1930-09-24 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}