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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":" \u2014.\u2014\n(lean Mum, Election\nSee Page 8\n26 fflJ3ffON, -TaTMONDAY MORNIjg, SEPTEMBER 26, 1927~~ No. 1.\nIRE DOES $150,000 DAMAGE, VANCOUVER\nRDER SOUNDINGS PROPOSED NELSON BRIDGE\nST\nms Many Before Project\nt Ahead With He States\nat  Vietoria\nIANOOK EOAD TO\nBE STARTED, SPRING\nIa Seeond Announcement\nnine From Minister of\nPublic Works\nCTORIA, Sept. 25.-^Sound-\nrrill be taken immediately\nbridge across the West\nKootenay lake, according\nmouncement by Hon. Dr.\nerland, minister of public\nHe indicates, however,\nmany problems will have to\nittled before the project\nahead. If the bridge is\neaat of Nelson, possible\nference with navigation will\nto be considered while if\nplaced west of Nelson the\ntern approach would have\nross the C.P.R. property,\ncreating a scheme that\nhave to be approved by\nrailway commission. Oon\nstion of the Kootenay Bay-\ntanook roaii will be start-\ntat spring.\nCI\n'C\nI\nME'THEH\nsve Doctor Barber's State-\nrient of Infant Mortality\nUntrue\nUnited States Charge d'Affaires\nSaves Young King Michael of Rumania\nFrom Getting a Ducking and a Scolding\nCONSTANZA, Rumania, Sept. 25.\u2014Robert M. Patterson, charge d'affaires of the United States legation in Rumania, was motoring along r< smooth beach on the Black\nsea here, when he heard cries for help from a small, half\nnaked boy flying a huge kite which was carried so high by\nthe wind that it threatened to pull the youngster into the\nsea.\nThe frightened lad was five-year-old King Michael of\nRumania, who, despite his elevation to the throne, cares\nmore about kites than kingdoms.\nThe only raiment the juvenile sovereign wore waa a\npair of tiny trunks.\n\"Hey, help me. I'm losing my kite,\" cried the young\nking, to the diplomat. \"Come quick, or I may be dragged\ninto the water.\"\nMr. Patterson -stopped his motor and rushed to\nrescue the frightened king and his kite. Taking the thick\ncord from the blistered hands of the bare-footed tousled-\nhaired monarch, he pulled in the huge kite which was twice\nthe size of Michael.\n\"Don't tell my mother,\" admonished the anxious Michael.' \"She will kill me.   She doesn't know I'm out.\"\nMr. Patterson placed the lad in his automobile and\ndrove to the Princess Helen's house, depositing the little\nking safely in the hands of his English,nurse.\n\\Chamberlin With\nSAILOR SCALDED\nTO DEATH, HALIFAX\nTwo Others Badly Burned, One\nIs Negro From  Van-\ne6uver\nSW YORK, Sept. 26.\u2014Sharp i\u00bb-\nwith Dr. Chauncey Barber, of\nIng. Mich., who Friday declared'\ne the American Association of\nMedico-Physical reneach at Chi-\nth\u00abt 80 per oent of the babies\nof cigarette-smoking mothers\nbefore they arf two yeara of age\ntaken today hy New York spe-\nito.\nt  ls certainly  exaggerated,\"  an id\nCharles H. Smith.    \"Many moth-\ntoday   smoke   and   mott   of  the\ni do not die,\ndon't mean to say I think it\n\u00bbd thing for women to smoke.\"\nsontinuedj \"but a statement that\nbutes 60 per cent of the Infant\ntality to mothers who smoke is\nf ter trom the truth.\"\nffloials of medical societies and\nf physicians of maternity hospi-\nlndicated that they, too, were at\ninnce with Dr. Berber's state-\nit.\nnditions Aboard\nTramp Steamers Are\nto Be Investigated\nOS ANQEI^BS, Sept- 86.' \u2014\u25a0 A\nsral Investigation of conditions\nard certain tramp steamers in the\nMai trade of North and South\nBrlca was under way today, as a\nlit of charges made by Bailors to\nUd States Commissioner David B.\nid and other officials that food\n.-working conditions approximated\n\"hell   ships\"   of  sailing   days   of\nhe investigation grew out of a\nPjng of several complaints from\nJp8 of flallors recently,\nbe sailors, clad ln ragged gar-\nits and some of them showing the\nfie of scurvy, t< stifled that they\nbeer? forced to eat spoiled meat,\nthat many of them had not been\nI since the ships left New Tork\nf' months before.\nmontons Snow\nGoes But Chilly\nWinds Prevail\n T-\u2014\nIDMONTON, Sept. 25.\u2014-Moet of\nsnow wh.eh fell Friday and\nftketed this district to a depth\n,ar> inch or ; more disappeared\nty. Chilly northwest winds pre-\nI and. unless the, weather clears.\nre Is tittle prospect of re-sumption\nharvesting operations for some\nft to come. Snowfalls are also\nerted in the north with two inches\nSpirit River, * one Inch at Peace\n\u00bbr and one and one-half lnch\/s\nBeaver Lodge.\nHALIFAX, N.S+i Sept. 26.\u2014N. Mortimer of Vancouver, colored, died\ntoday from effects of burns suffered ln the explosion on board the\nCanadian government merchant marine steamer, Canadian Carrier,\nwhich' occurred Saturday morning,\nbringing Instant death to William\nEwlng and serious Injuries to Mortimer  and  J.   St.   Hill,   both' colored.\nThe latter was believed today to\nhave a fair chance of recovery.\nThe explosion occurred off Hall-\nfax harbor shortly after the steamer\nsailed for the Barbadoes, A main\natop valve blew off in the engine\nroom, filling the compartment with\ndense, scalding steam, and trapping\nthe three victims. The |teamer\nsent out a call for help and the\nehlp's doctor of the Red Star liner\nArabic,, which wag about to enter\nthe harbor, was placed\" abpard the\ncrippled freighter ta render first\naid. > ,\nEwing was taken, out-of* the engine room, dead. He waa a native of\nHalifax, and St. Hill's home is in\nBarbadoes. The freighter Vas\ntowed   back  to  port  for  repairs.\nRAILROAD STRIKE\nAdjustments   Made   and   2000\nMen Continue at Their\nWork\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. 20.\u2014\nA threatened strike ^f 2000 members\nof the Brotherhood of Railroad Train\nmen employed'on the Soo line was\navoided late Saturday, when differ\nc-nceg between the road end the\nunion  were adjusted.\nA statement, issued jointly by the\nmanagement of the road and the\ntrainmen's union, said.\n\"The differences between the trainmen and the Soo line have been\nsettled fatiafactorlly.\"\nThe spokesmen for the two partite\nto the controversy, which for several\ndays threatened to result In a walk\nout of some 2000 brakemen, yardmen\nand other train service workers, were\nA. E. Wallace, vice-president and\ngeneral manager of the Soo Hire, and\nA. F. Whitney, vice-president of the\nBrotherheed of Railroad Trainmen.\nThe So* line executives failed to\nreply to an ultimatum wlt.hln the\nstipulated time limit, and the general\ncommittee of the brotherhood, comprising 16 representatives of the\nunions' local over the Soo system, began taking a strike vote. Finally\nMr. Wal gee made a formal offer to\narbitratei the 17 grievances before the\nmeriiatloit board of the United States\ngovernment.\nOf the 17 cases which were vthe\ncause of the controversy, some were\nadjusted by r the men participating In\nthe discussions Saturday and others\nwill be left lor final decision by the\nboard of mediation.\nReleased After Second Trial on\nCharge of Poisoning Her\nHusband\n\u25a0MOUNT VERNON, 111., Sept. 26.\u2014\nMrs. Elsie Sweetln, was a free and\nhappy woman tonight, after the Jury\nin her second trial for the poison of\nher husband, Wllford, a coal miner,\nanswered her dramatic plea \"Give me\ndeath or send me back to my children,\" 'by acquitting her yesterday\non  the  flrat. ballot.\nThe Jury took only five minutes to\ndecide the 36-year-old widow deserved freedom, after three troubled\nyears spent  in  prisons and Jail.\n\"My life in the future will be devoted to my  sons\/ she said.\nWhile Mrq, Sweetln was celebrating the verdict, her former pastor\nand admirer, Lawrence M. Hlght,\nwas back ln hie prison cell. They\nwere co-defendant* In the first trial.\nConvicted on Christmas eve, 1924,\nHlght was sentenced to serve life\nand Mrs. Sweetln 36 years. But Mrs.\nSweetln continued her fight for\nfreedom and won a new trial on\nthe ground that ehe should have\nbeen  tried  separately.\nFeme Boy Is\nFirst Paralysis\nCase in the City\nFERNIE, B.C., Sept. 25,\u2014Tht\nfirst oud of infantile paralysis\nin tMs city, that of John Drev-\n\u2022nak, XZ, wgo diagnosed Saturday.\nTwelve Hundred\nChinese Troops\nKilled in Battle\nWASHINGTON, D.C., Sept. 25.\n\u2014The state department hae b*en\ninformed by the co mutate at\nShanghai that 1200 Chinese soldiers had b**n killed or wounded'\nIn factions I fighting which occurred iH the vicinity of the city\non September 29 and 21, wheh\nthe Nationalist authorities die-\narmed the 31tf* *rmy as unworthy   and   disloyal.\nBURGLAR SUSPECTS\nSHOT TO DEATH\nDETROIT, Sept. H.\u2014Three burg\nlar suspects were ahot to --ath and\nI wo policemen wounded in pistol\nbattles here over the week-end, In\ncident to the drive acainst criminals\nordered following the kidnapping fori\nransom of a child laat week by\nmembers of^an alleged extortion ring.\nJoe Sobko of Akron, wanted here\nfor the murder of Edmund Welner\nduring a holdup, waa killed by de.\ntectlvea after he had *ehot and\nwounded Patrolman Percy Van Con-\nnant.\nDavid Huskill, 48, was ahot to\ndeath by Patrolman John FMxpatriek,\nwho sought to question him regarding a warehouse robbery. Fltspatrlck\nwaa wounded by the auapect'a return\nfire.\nJohn Malone, negro, was ahot and\nInstantly killed by a patrolman when\nhe attempted to drive away ln .\nstolen  automobile, s\nKETTLEfRVER\nGoes Over Bank Near MWway\nWith Truck Wh\u00ab| Met by\nGlaring Lights\nOGOLOFF, COMPANION,\nIN CREEK, UNHURT\nTruck Was Loaded With Sacked\nGrain;Inquest Today at\nGreenwood\nGRAND FORKS, B-C Sept. 25.--\nAlex. Bazcroff, Doukhobor of Cedai\ncreek, about 20 miles up the north\nfork of the Kettle, Wat Instantl.\nkilled about 7 o'clock' last evening\nwhen a truck which .he was driving\nleaded with sacked grain, went ovei\nthe bank on the Hill at Deep creek\none mile out of Miy-vay towar\n\u25a0TJreenwond, when the flare from a\ncar coming down the hill toward hln\nblinded him.\nWhen the truck went over the edge,\nBaseroff pitched down rfill ahead ol\nit, by was evident y hit hy it as it\nturned over, as he wee dead when\npicked up about 60 feet down.\nOgoloff  Gee*   in  Creek\nA companion, Nick Ogoloff, sitting\non the load, also pitched down, am\nfell Into the water of the creek, fron\nwhich he emerged, hardly hurt, tc\nlook for Bazeroff.\nIdentity of the car or driver coming\nlown  the  hill has  not been  learned.\nThe -OoukboboM wet*, toouwi foi,\nTrand Forke with the grain.\nAn inquest will be he d at Greenwood tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock\nBRY LINE SPEEDY\nSurvey Party Already Bisy on\nNew Portion of Right-\nof-way\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 26.\u2014A survey\nparty has already been d lepatched\nnorth of Mile 355 on the Hudson\nBay railway, the point at which the\nline will swing north from the orlg\nlnal line to Nelson, and should return\nwith a report within three weeks,\nofficials of the Canadian National\nrailways announced tonight.\nSteel Is rapidly being laid from\nthe Limestone river bridge to Mile\n865 and will be In condition for u*e\nby construction trains before winter\nsets in. Clearing of the right-of\nWay north of Mile 355 is also well\nadvanced. It was stated that two\nboats have left Montreal Yor Nelson\nto assist In salvaging any materials\nthat can be used in port develop\nmerit at Churchill. Four engineers\nand 200 men are now working at\nthie project which is expected to be\nfinished    before   winter.\nUnited Church Will\nTake Interest in\nBritish Immigrants\nTORONTO, Sept. .S^lt was intl\nmated here today by Rev. C. E. Man\nnine D.D., ot the board of home mission* of the United Church \u00abf Canada, that the United church will take\nflggres-ive action in' the matter of\nPromoting- Immigration froip the British  Isles.\nThe board of home missions has\nappointed a committee of outstanding laymen to cooperate with Dr,\nManning in developing and carrying\nInto effect such an Immigration policy\nas ln their Judgment might be in the\nbest Interests of Canada and the\nEmpire.\nRail Employees to\nConvention in\nMoncton Next\nMONTREAL, Sept. 86.\u2014The 1929\nconvention of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railroad Employees will be\nheld ln Moncton, N.B., It was decided\nat the final session of that body's\nconvention here Saturday.\nThe meeting concluded with the\nadoption of Beveral resolutions and\nthe election of officers.\nA resolution of protest against the\ndecision ot the Canadian National\nrailways to retire employee* at the\nage of 15 was adopted.\nAnother resolution adopted dealt\nwith the dismissals of a number ot\nshopmen employed by th\u00bb National\nrailways, which dismissals were carried out without regard to the\nseniority rights of these employees.\nHis Columbia Is\nHost mt Venice\nVENICE, Italy, Sept. e%\u2014\nChsrlss A. Levine** airplane, Columbia, with ite owner abosr* arrived here at 4 o'clock this afternoon. Levin*, with Captain\nWater Hinchliff. ae pilot, took\noff at Vienna at 8:30 in the\nmorning.\nThe two aviators cam* her*\nto witness th* Schn.id.r cup contest after having abandoned thwir\npropand flight to India on account of rough  weather.\nADE OFFICIAL\nDERBY HERS\nFinal Figures of New York-to-\nSpokane Races Are Given\nOut\nSPOKANE, Wash., Sept. SI\u2014W.\nC. Holman, St. Paul was officially\ndeclared winner of the New York\nto Spokane class \"A\" cross country\nderby, and C. W. Meyers. Detroit,\npronounced victor of the class \"B\"\nderby for smaller planes, when the\nfinal figure* for' the two flights\nwere announced laat night by the\nNational Air Derby association.\nHolman, who was the first to arrive at the flnlah of the class \"A\"\nrace laat Wednesday afternoon won\nthe'110,000 first prise. Hla elapsed\ntime was 19:4:47.\nE. B. Ballough, Chicago, was second, |B000, and B. B. Mammerj Bpn\nkane,  tlrtrd,   U**M.\nIn the claas \"B\" event, Meyer* woi\nthe first prise of J6000 with ai\nelapsed time of 30 hours and 23 minutes 15.45 seconds. LeBlle Miller, De*\nMoines, Iowa, was second 38000, and\nJ. S. Charles, Richmond, Va., was\nthird.    His prise was 81000.\nBrothers Die in Frantic Effort\nto Save Two Kiddies, Also\nVictims\nMOOSE JAW, Sept. 25.\u2014Four lives\nwere lost ln a disastrous fire which\nbroke 'out at \u00bb o'clock Saturday\nmorning and which completely destroyed the farm home of o. W.\nHouck, five miles north of Pasqua.\nln an effort to save the lives of\ntwo children who wers sleeping In\nhe house, William and Fred Houck\nwere burned to death, the two\nyoungsters suffering the same fate.\n ^     \t\nPastor Wagers on\nTunney; Loser Goes\nto Church for Year\nNEW  BRITAIN,   Conn.,  Sept.   26.\u2014\nAt least one regular church attendant\nhas  been  made as a result  of Gene\nTunney'-   victory   over   Jack   Demp\nsey.\nRev. Samuel Sutcliffe, pastor of\nSt. Mark's Episcopal church here,\nexpected the marine to win, and\nwas willing to back his expectation\nwith money. Harry Blews, proprietor\nof a refreshment parlor, expected\nDempsey to win and had the time\nto back his opinions. So an agree\nment  was  reached.\nIf Dempsey wen, the minister was\nto spend at least five cents each\nday for 365 days ln tke refreshment\nparlor, w4ii.'e If Tunney won, Blews\nwas to attend Mr. Sutcllffe'a church\neach  Sunday  for  52 'week*.\nBlews started paying off this morn\nIng.\nCommission Will\nNot Reverse the\nFight Decision\nCHICAGO, Sept. IS.\u2014John\nO. R-ghctmrr. i-lutlrman of the\nID-nots stat.* athletic oomm_s-\nslon, olosed the door yeaterday\nto any appeal that Jack\nDempaey might file demandln-c\na reversal of the deel-lon In\nMs world'* hravywe4cht cham-\nplon-Mp match with Gene Tunney.\nThe decision, unanlmowdy\nrend-n-i by Dave Barry, rrt-\neaee, and the two judge*,\nGeorge Lytton, millionaire Chi.\noag-o merchant, and Sheldon\nClark, president of the Sinclair Refining company, stand*\nand the slate commission trill\ngive no oont-deratlon to an appeal for reversal. Chairman\nRdghe-mer   declared.      '\nTile comii-swion _padb It\nclear that it would (Ive either\nDempsey or hi* manager, Leo\nP. Flynn, a hearing at any\ntime on any score, but the box.\nIne authorttle* also made It\nequally clear that Ihe comml*.\naion had no Idea of rcvcrsJaig\nthe verdict given in the ring\nat Soldiers field laat Thursday night.\nAmericans in France Have Nar\nrow Escapes, but Reach\nDestination Unhurt\nE\nOVERCOME IN\nCOAST FI\nNorthern Pacific Building Scene\nof Blaze; Damage U\n$150,000\nOTTAWA STREET CARS\nare Victims or\nParnate   la   Capital   Reatftta\n$200,000 Fire Is Near\nRidcau HaH\nN^CR. .France,. Sept. 2fc-*Dy\u00bba-\nmltefli and train wreckers apparently\ntried to hinder the progress of <be\nAmerican Legon's two goodwill special trains, but they reached here\nsafely and the 1-egionnarles ran into\nanother Paris welcome. AH Riviera\nwaa out to greet them and cheer\nthem. Several thousand miliary po\nlice and detectives were called out\nto protect the Legion nar ies when the\ntrain wrecking attempts became\nknown. The police had all they\ncould do to plow a way 'through the*\nline.\nTwo possible disasters of other\ntrains were averted over night and\nthe authorities believed that the attempts Included the cutting of the\nrails to keep the Legion members\nout  of  Nice.\nA bomb exploded on the track &\nfew miles this axle of Cannes at mid'\nhight, five minutes after an express\nhad passed, but 11 hours before the\nLeg'on train was due. The railfl\nwere torn up, a deep hole was made\nIn the roadbed and 67 telegraph wires\nwere cut. The noise was heard at\nGolfe-Juan station by railroad employees who stopped approaching\ntrains. The road was quickly repaired and Jn a few hours another\nattempt was discovered east of here\non the line near Monte Carlo. There\nrocks were piled on the rails, but\nthese were removed by a track crew\nand the Legionnarles knew nothing\nabout ut.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\njtdur    !H!  rmfwyp shrdl shrd'u\nAdriatic, at New Tork, from Liver\npool.\nArabic, at New Tork, from Ant\nwerp.\nCanadian Painter, at Montreal, from\nAntwerp.\nMinnedosa. at Montreal, from Liverpool.\nTransylvania, at Montreal, from\nAntwerp.'\n-Sirrah, at Montreal, from Rotterdam.\nMetagama, at Montreal, from Glasgow.\nRegina, at Montreal, from Liverpool:\nArabic,   at  Halifax,   from  Antwerp.\nLabourdonnaise, at Ha'lfax, fron*\nBordeaux.\nOecar II., at Halifax, from Copenhagen.\nStockholm, at Halifax, from Gothenburg. .\nSeasonal Fares\nto Prevai on\nAtlantic Ships\nSOUTHAMPTON, England,\nSept. 26.\u2014Transatlantic patwen-\ngor farce ln the future will\nvliange with the  seasons.\nCheaper   rates   for   steamship\npaxHiige arc to* prevail (hiring the\nfall  and spring ae  well  ae  the\nwinter.   This action of steamship\nofficials haa heen taken to stimulate business in what are known\nas the \"off seasons.\nBy the new arrangement, agreed to\nby    all    the    principal    transatlantic\ncompanies, there will be three different   tariffs,   one   for   summer   when\ntravel is heavy, one for the Intermediate    seasons,    the    fall    and    early\nspring   and   another   for   midwinter\nwhen travel is lightest.\nThe reductions on the more luxurious liners, such us the Majestic,, Ber-\nengaria and Leviathan, In some instances, amount to 10 to IS per cent\nfrom  the summer  tariff.\nFour Murder Cases\nWitt Be Heard at\nVancouver Assizes\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 25.\u2014Four\nmurder cases will be heard In assize\ncourt here which opens Tuesday\nmorning. In all four Instances the\nvictims were women. Mr. Justice\n\\V.  A.   MacDonald  will  preside.\nThomas Q. Clarke is charged wMh\nhaving killed his companion at an\nalleged drinking party, Geoffrey Don\naid :s charged with having beaten\nhis wife to death, Ulchl Tao-al. Japanese, ie accused of killing Mrs. Ta-\nkahashl, Japanese, and the charge\nof murder against Dr. J. S. Gladwin\narises from an alleged illegal opera-\ntlan.\nVANCOUVER, ftept. 25.-B\u00abf-\nfltog tha efforts ef the entire fire\ndepartment for more than three\nhours, fire tonight eausetf rfam-\nage estimated at $160^000 te eev-\noral store, and effiees [a the\nNorthern Pacific building, Qran-\nvWe and Ponder streets. Tho\nbuilding, a two-storey structure,\nwaa damaged to the extent of\nbut |10,000, but largo stocks of\nmerchandise will be \u25a0 tetal lose\nfrom the flamoa, satoke and water.\nThrse firemen Were overcame\nby smoke and had to be removed\nto  hoopttalf.\nThs cause ef the outbreak haa\nnot   bean   determined.\nDAMAGE IS HEAVY\nOTTAWA, Sept. 26.\u2014Fire tonight\ndestroyed a wing of the Ottawa Electric street railway barns 1& the\nRockliffe section, and 25 trolley cars,\nwKh an estimated loss of U9v,0\u00ab#,\nEarly, investigation pointrd ta the\nblase having originated from defective wiring.\nTwo other wings of the main barn\nwere saved.\nThe structure ls within a stone's\nthrow of Rldeau Hall, official r\u00absl-\nence of the governor -general, and\nbut for en opposite wind the buildings of His Excellency Would have\nbeen endangered by sparks thrown\nup by the blaze. Fl remen had a\nstrenuous task in keeping the flames\nfrom catching on to the thick bush\nwhich stretches for miles at the\nrear of the barn and forms' Rockliffe\npark, a scenic beauty spot of tha\ncapital.\nGerman Flyer on\nWay to States Is\nOverdue ut Basra\nLONDON, Sept. 25.\u2014Sinoe Lieut\nOtto Koennecke, the German\nflyer, left Angora, Turkey, at\n6:30 o'ceock Saturday morning\nfor Basra, Irak, nothing haa been\nheard m Europe of the progress\nof his airplane, \"Germania,\" with\nwhich ho is attempting to maktf\na flight from Cologne ta Mew\nYork. The flyers were expected\nto reach their destination, 1060\nmiles   distant,  tho   isms   tfvsming.\nThirty-two Businesses\nFail in Dominion\nDuring Past Week\nTORONTO, Sept. 25.\u2014A total Of 32\nfailures occurred throughout the Dominion during the paat week, according to the report of R. G. Dun * Co.,\nas compared with IT the previous\nweek, and 44 the corresponding week\nof last year. The failures by provinces are: Ontario It, Quebec 18,\nManitoba 5, Saskatchewan and British Columbia three each, Alberta,\nNeva Scotia and New Brunswick one\neach.\nThe Weather\nFrom the Dominion Metlorolof leal\nOffice, Victoria\nSATURDAY'S   WEATHia\nKin.   Max\nNELSON       It      7.\nVlctorla,    .44       \u00ab\u00ab\nVancouver        M        \u2022\u2022\nKamloopa         W     , \u00ab\nBarkervllle    '    M ID\nPrince Rupert    ,44 II\nEstevan         II II\nAtlln  .'.    M \u00ab\u00ab\nDawson  .....'     14 41\nCalcanr     II\nWlnnlpo*         II 44\nPortland         II 14\nSan  Francisco        II 1*\nSeattle        II II\nSpokane        II 14\nPentlcton        48 II\nVernon         47 7D\nGrand Porka     ID 'I\nKaalo         47 lit\nEdmonton     II \u2022*\nSwift Current      ID II\nPrince Albert       II II\nQu'Appelle          ID 14\nForecaat\u2014Nelaon      tad      vicinity.\nPartly  cloudy aad mild.\n ^TiBbTwo^\nr THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, 1927\nBOLD ROBBERIES\nOCCUR, NEW YORK\n3   NBW   TORK,   Sept.   tl\u2014Two   bold\ndaylight robberies, one ln Manhattan\n! he   other   in   Brooklyn,   netted\nndits more than $18,000 in cash,\n\u25a0'\u25a0ti and jewels yesterday.\nIn the Red Hook section of Brooklyn two hold-up men knocked a bank\nmessenger  unconscious  with   a -piece\n. of   lead   pipe   and   escaped   with   a\nportfolio containing $500 In cash and\n$1000 in checks, Anthony PugUes, the\nvictim, 1s not expected to live.\nAn hour earlier three well dressed\nyoung men entered an upper Eighth\navenue jewelry store ln Manhattan,\nlocked the door and hacked the proprietor to the rear room. While the\ntwo held him at tho point of revolvers, fhe third oalmly removed Ms\nhat and looted the display window of\njewels valued at 110,000.\nThey  fled  in an automobile.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nMa, Be Ohtamtd\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms with Running Water, Private Baths and en Suit*.\nHeadquarters   tor   aU   Travelling   Mas,   Mining   Man*   Lumbar   Man\nand  Tourlata.\n\u25a0P-DCIAIi SUNDAT  DINNER $1.00 Fotarian  Headquartera\nTha Holt Comfortable Rotunda In tha City\nHUME\u2014V. B. Cook, N. W. Walker, J.\nJ. Baofield, R. Morrow, H. Q. Stafford,\nMj-s. Prior, C. R. Hickman, L. M. Clement, F. F. Dowllng, J. A. RlggS, C.\nH. Fraser, G. L. Russell, H. J. Ltevlcli,\nJ. A. Miller, W. H. Tomson, A. 8.\nOeuthsa, W. R. Munals, R. 8. Reid, H.\nr. Holmes, J. Cooper, A. J. Hukbulson,\nIt, C. Wright, J. R. Cherry, F. C. Bell,\nVancouver; A. McAlpine, Lethbrldge; R.\nW. Durllng, Ottawa; R. 8. Hurlburt,\nWinnipeg; J. 8. Bliss, Niagara Falls;\nH. Tool, G. A. Rtggs, U B. Holling-\nways, Toronto; J. J. Mclntyre, Bellingham;   R.   8.   Powers,   Kootenay   Land\ning; M. H. Olson, Q. R. Peterson, F. O.\nBerg, H. H. Dale, Mr. and Mrs. W. F.\nWay, Spokane; Mr. and Mrs. C. Hunt,\nBessie Hunt, Benton Siding; J. H. Butler, Calgary; Q. P. Fry, London, Ont.;\nJ. B. Mavox, Glasgow, Scotland; Mr.\nand MrB. Mulinen, Philadelphia; G. C.\nHall, 8. Samuel, W. Pasqune, Trail; E.\nB, Brauns, A. S. Hill, Gerrard; Premier\nJ. D. MacLean.S. F. M. Moodie, Victoria; H. A. Foster, Seattle; I*. A.\nCampbell, Rossiand; H. Leggatt, Longbeach ; J. S. Gibson, Toronto; L. fl\nCox, Fernle.\nSAVOY\nNELSON'S FIhE3T HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nAll Ro\n1\nSAVOY \u2014 A. Scater, Needles; Mr.\nand Mrs. W. N. Johuson, Mr. and Mra.\nP. B. Aaderson, Mr. and Mra. 8. V.\nJohnson, Spokane; L. H. Bell, Park Siding; W. Ramsbottom, Hlocan City; Mr.\nand Mrs. W. A. MacCabe, South Slocan;\nMr. and Mrs. L. M. Verlgen and family, Arrowhead; Mr. and Mrs. W. H.\nFaldlng, Rosaland; Mrs. A. Wexall, J.\nH.   Llerock,  J.  Boerkt,   J.  Kennlck,   \\.\nJones, T. W. Broughton, A. G. Napier,\nA. H. Nanlef, M. H.'Burton, Vancouver,\nP. J. WoKt, L0\u00bb Angeles; W. T. Sterling, F. E. Harvey, Calgary; K. Murry,\nGrand Forks; J. Harper, Mrs. C. Har\u25a0\nper, Silverton; Mrs. D. A. Bell, Miss V.\nBell, Miss D. G. Newell, Miss E. M.\nWilson, E. T. Fletcher, Muriel C. Stanley, J. Garmer, Trail; L. V. Newton,\nKamloops.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE   CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot **& cold water In every room.\nSteun Heawd\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nQUEENS\u2014J. McLeod, C. Lowen, W.\nTweed, W. F. Laurie, N. Walton, C.\nStrachan, C. Oradp.1, D. Maudsley, H\nMaudsley, 8. Maudsley, W. MacLeod,\nTrail; C. V. Campbell, Nelson; A. Mitchell, Cranbrook; Mr. and Mrs. H. Olson,\nCastlegar; W. Markin, Glade; L. Kio-\nvanoe, Erie; Mrs. M. Leonard, Spokane;\nMiss O. Hurst, Slocan City; V. Geroux,\nLeman Creek; L. E. Arnoto, M. Kennedy, Moose Jaw; J. A. Eethier, F. Fres-\ncott, J. Kairn, W. Gemmell, South Hlocan; A. Taggart, Plncher Creek; G, E.\n<*ooper, Vancouver; F. Lane, Cranbrook;\n\u00ab. Smith, Winnipeg; S. E. Cocper, Calgary; B. W- Brown. Ottawa: Mr. and\nMrs. Schrebel, Slocan City; Mrs. 8. E,\nCoulter and daugnters, Creston.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\nt\/4   Block,   tee*   et   Post   Offlo.\n\u25a0bun heated. Hot and oold water.\nRooms   by   day   or   week.\n\u25b2_so Furnished Suites.\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nUNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF\nWH. JONES\nGOOD, CLEAN ROOMS, REASONABLE RATES\nPHONE 75 616 VERNON 8T.\nRead tha Advertisements\nUF WITH PROGRESS\nNew Grand Hotel\nA Modern Brick Building.\n610   Vtmon   Street,   Nelson,   B.  C.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephone*\nIn All Rooma   Steam Heated\nThroughout\nJ. Blomberg, Prop.   European Plan\nNEW GRAND\u2014R. H. Carron, Mrs. E.\nG. Vandergeyst, Rossiand; C. E. Van-\ndergiyst, New Denver; P. J. Wolff,\nLos Angeles; Mrs. K. K. Nyberg. Mtss\nL. Gllderhans, Salmo; Mr. and Mrs. J.\nBalfour, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Mutchlson.\nT. E. Nollie, Trail; M. M. Reeves, Lardo; D. J. Luther, J. A. Jardine, Kaslo;\nJ. W. McBrlde, Vancouver; R. B. Richardson, Howser.\nMadden Hotel\nT. MADDEN, Prop,\nSteem-Hested   Rooms   by  the  Dey\nWeek or Month.\nEvery   considerstion   shown   te\nguests.\nCor.  Bsksr end  Word Ste,  Nelson\nMADDEN \u2014 Mrs. M. Kendrlck, -toss-\nland; S. Murvl, Vancouver; Mr. and\nMrs. Whltcher and children, Vanguard,\nSask.; A. Madden, Brie; H. Tlppln, Sandpolnt; J. Shaw, W. Forrest, Trail; Mrs.\nJ. t Jantes, Ottawa.\nOCCIDENTAL  HOTEL\nA. C. TOWNER, Proprietor\nTbe Home ot Plenty.\nFifty  rooms  of  solid   comfort.\nMeadauartar. lor Looaera .nit Mine\nStresemann   Would   Speed   Up\nPreparations for World Con-\nference to Disarmament\nSAYS UERMANY IS\nWILLING TO AID\nSays  Armaments   Should  Not\nForm Basis of Security Between Nations of World\nGENEVA,    Sept.    25.\u2014Germany-\nonce   regarded  ae  the  rreatest  mill\ntary power ln-the world\u2014Is now disarmed    and   calmly   waits   for   her\nneighbors to do likewise, Dr. Gustav\nStresemann, the German foreign sec\nretary, declared last night la a plea\nfor   the  speeding up  of  preparations\nfor   an   International   conference   for\nreduction  of armaments.    He insist\ned   that   armaments   could   not   and,\nshould not form the nasi, ot security,\n\u2022-\u25a0_\n\u20225=\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nYOUR CAFE\nTHE GOLDEN GATE\nOnly White Help\nSoda   Fountain    service   unexcelled.      Cold     drlnka,    fancy\nsundaes.\nJuat  call\u2014you'll  oome again.\nPhone UI. Day end Night.\nRest  Room  for   Lady   Shoppers.\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest Equipped Restaurant tn tha\nCity. OPEN DAT AND NIQHT.\n8PECIAL\u2014Ice Cream, Soda Water\nand Hot Drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms, hot and cold water.\nWa Catar to Prlvata Partiaa,\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n820   Baker   Street,    Nelson,   B.   &\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIQHT\n11:30  to  2:30,   Special   Lunch,   36c\n6:30   to    6:00    p.m.,    Supper,    35c\nPHONE   164\narguing   that   their   Inevitable, effect\nwaa a threat to other nations\nDr. Stresema-nn, M. Paul Boncowr\nof Treeee, Drf Leudon of Holland\nand Senator De Brouckere, Socialist\nspoke whan the disarmament plana\nwere submitted to the asaembly. It\nwaa the powerful address of Senator De Brouckere. who acted as reporter for the \"fclHurmament commit-\ntee, which- ttmHenKed the moat attention. Vyitli years of experience\nin the league's disarmament efforts,\nhe ttolemenly warned his hearers\nthat the ro\u00bbd to success would be\nIon* and perilous; yet he eloquently\npainted a picture of fervent fafth\nthat the coal will finally be reached.\nHopes Retmaed\n\"I do not sa$r that peace now ta\nassured\/' he exclaimed. \"I do not\nsay the wolves of war have ceased\nhoWling In the  forests.\nBut I do say that under the auspice* of the leaffue, forces are being;\norganized which will clear the forests\nof these wolves; that we have\nrealized some part of our hopes and\nthat the number of men of goodwill in all countries is steadily Increasing.\"\nHe emphasized, howeVer, that the\nslowness, of disarmament was causing the murmur* of the people to\ngrow louder and louder, and declared\nthat multitudes are determined to\nknow the exp.et nature of the ob\natacles Impeding peace, and. deter\nmined also to prove that a roan ls\nnot a primitive, brute destined forever   to   slay   his   fellows.\nAn impressive feature of yester-\nday's session, which was adjourned\nuntil 10 o'clock Monday morning, for\nresumption of the disarmament discussion, was a solemn* roll call on the\nquestion of acceptance of the Polish\nproject for outlawing wars of aggression and the settlement of con-\nROYAL CAFE\nClaeeia Restaurant\nRefinement    and    Delicacy    Prevail.\nOPEN DAY AND NIOHT.\nLuncheon, 1_:\u00ab0 to 2 __\u00bb_\u2014 Mo\nSpecial Dinners 8:20 to \u00bb 85c\nWe   epeclallae   ln    Chop   Suey   and\nNoodles\nPHONE   182\t\nSummer Resorts\nWHIM  TO  FIS-COK-  I* OOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER, B.O.\nXls-daf, Boating, Bat-itf, Golf,\nTennis Courts\nnebl-f lulls InppllM. Oroosiy\nWore la Counsel-on.\nW. A. WARD, Proprietor.\nOb   Xoo-uay  !\u25a0*_.\u00bb,   90  IDlee  from\nBslsoa.    aaeeonabls weekly and\nKontUy Betse.\nTrail Hotels\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C\nA P.  LEVESQUE, Prop.\nCompletely Renovated and Refurnished\nHot   and   Cold   Running   Water\nSteam     Heated\nEuropean  Plan\nRotary\nHeadquartera\n\u2022 Centrally     Looated\nSample    Rooma    in\nConnection\n(team Heated\n' Throughout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nE.   L.   AND   A.   QROUTAQE,   Props.\nBox MM       Phone 263       Trail, B.C.\nThe Old Reliable\nCROWN   POINT   HOTEL\nA. McDERMOTT\nKvery Courtesy Extended to Tourlata\nand Others Visiting Trail\nSmart Sport Clothes for Town\nand Country Demand\nCorrect Accessories\n'*! have a Unit shtmOow that goes in and out with mt\",\nSO BEGAN one ol four childhood\nrhymes, snd today you might well\nlubititate the word \"iparts frock\"\nfar \"shadow.\" For die well drewed\nwoman now wean a coitume of the\ntoon type in town and out of town, in\nclaurooQ and office, for motor, train\naad ihipboard. She is particularly care-\ntul toselect accessorio which arc\u00bbtrictly\nr-like in style and spirit, and she\nws them to harmonize with one\nanother and withthe cos tumeasa whole.\nThe hat will be felt, small and close.\nIn the country it may have a down turned\nbrim that ripples slightly. (\"Sketched,)\nThe town hat might be a cloche with\ns narrower, leas rippling brim. Or\nReborn's fuccesaful tricorne sketched\nhere. The small bows at each side are of\nfelt. It will probably be the color of the\nwrap, though there is a fashioo of\nintroducing another color in that hat\nand scarf and the swearer worn beneath\nthe coat or jacket.\nWith the disappearance of fur from\nsports aod motor coats, scarfs have\nreappeared not only because they are\nhighly decorative but -because they ire\na protection from sun and wind. They\nmay be worn knotted on the shoulder of\nthe sweater or jumper frock when the\ncoat is taken off.\nIn a sports ensemble the shoes should\nhave leather heels of medium height and\na comfortable last with a rounded toe.\nBoth the styles sketched are of this\ntype. Another shoe that is correct ia\na low cut oxford in snekeskin, lizard,\nalligator or kid with the same sort of\nheel and a wide silk tie.\nBags are tailored and uniformly medium sized. The flat ppuch sketched is of\nsoakeskin, with a covered frame. The\nbag must be definitely related to tbe\ncostume in some way. The most usual\nensemble is bag and shoes, but it may be\nbag and gloves or bag and belt.\nM.\n(Copyright, rp_7, Jy Btattrick).\nBODY OF SUICIDE\nTAKEN AT NIAG.\nNIAOABA  FALLS,   Ont.,   Sept. |\ntaken out of the Nja.ar.  i\nMaid ot tbe Mist landing today,\nremains n\u00bb_  aa   ihoj\nMrs.   Mary   t I\nBuffalo.\nMra.   Pltass  i.   believed   to   ba I\nwoman who went  over the fella I\nFriday   last   after   coolly\nto Jump Into tbe water .\nfilets  of whatever nature  by pacific\nmeans.   Every nation voted \"Yes.\"\nDODD'S %\n^KIDNEY^\nht PILLS M>\nWm   ^HE*^^.\u00a3\n\u00b0'ABET_5   \"_\nENGINE TROUBLE\nFORCES GILES DOWN\nCHICAGO, Sept. 25.\u2014Engine\n|_rouble forced; Captain Frederick\nGileB. who plana to make a aeries of\nflights from Detroit to \"Wellington\nN.Z.. to return to the Pioneer air\nfield after his hop off for Iowa\nCity   yesterday.\nCaptain Giles expects to hop off\nagain some time tomorrow.\nVancouver Man\nBadly Mutilated\nWhen Hit by Car\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 25.\u2014When he\nwas knocked down by an automobile allegedly driven by R. V. Rees\ntoday, Fred Ita suffered a broken\narm, head injuries and possible Internal injuries. Rees was charged\nwith  driving  to  the  common  danger.\nAn\nAppreciation\nMENS\nWEAR\nBOYSv.\nWEAR\n[frtnSB-TH-HWKR-J-T\nA lady called on us from out\nof town the other day and expressed herself aa highly pleased\nat  our  assortment   of\nPOPULAR-PRICED\nMEN'S AND BOYS'\nWEAR\nShe found it neoeasary on account of location to patronize\nmail i order houeee eometimee,\nbut consioWed our pricea bora a\nfavorable comp-atfiaon, besides\n9'ving an opportunity for a personal aelect ion\n\u2014\nLetterheads\nYour Letterheads will give recipients the right impression of your business if it is well printed, on a suitable\ngrade of paper. It is not necessary to use \u00abn expensive\nletterhead, but it is wonderful what a difference good\nprinting makes.\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPARTMENT\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nPRINTING\u2014RULING\u2014BOOKBINDING\nTHE  GUMPS \u2014WHAT'S WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE?,\nr-^NbyX   WWW CAME  IN \u201e\nMERE f  NNHAY WAS  it ?\ni\\ GHOST ? A   MANIAC ?\n-MAYBE A SNAKE  BROKE\nOUT OP THE ZOO- IT LOOKS\nTo ME  UKE A TRAINED\nGORU.U*.*-  SOME  OP THAT\nED6AR ALUN WE 4TUSF-\nTHERE'S  ONLY ONE WAY\nME COOLS) GET IN - HE \u00bbAUST\nHAVE CLIMBED OVER THJf\ntransom and unlocked ,\nthe door from the insioe\"\nbut when he opened the\ndoor v\/hy oldn't he take\njhe chair\nwith hia-V\nThirty Mexican\nBandits Killed\nin Train At\nMEXICO   CITT,   Sept.   2r I\nadvices ifrom   Masatlati   receivw_|\nEl Universal say that 30 luindits '\nkilled   early   laat   week   when\nthan 100 bandiits attacked a Houtl\nPacific passenger train between i\nraivcas   and   Larquemada.     Ten\nt'r.il soldiers and many of the ban|\nwere   wounded.\nThe train guard of about 60\naral soldiers gave battle to the\"\nrauders for several hours and evJ\nually drbve off the bandits wtadl\n-aped death or serious Injury. N|\nof the train passengers were hi\nthough many bullets passed throa]\nthe coaches.\nST. paulflour\"\nMILL DESTRO.\nST. PAUL, Sept. 26.-\u2014The main i\nand warehouse of the St. Paul Mltl|\ncompany, Tour manufacturers,\ndestroyed by fire tonight. The ed\nmated loss is $450,000. The damJ\nIncluded $350,(100 for the buildlj\nand $100,000 for stock.\nThe  plant  of  the   Equity   CoopeJ\ntive Exchange, nearby, was in diuif\nbut it  was eaved.    Train service\ntween   Minneapolis  *nd  St.   Paul\nthe   Milwaukee  road   wfts  lnterrup\nfor several houra.\nWill Search Coast\nof Ireland (or Trace\nNungesser and Cd\nDUBLIN, Sept. 25.\u2014Ro much specl\nlation has been caused by the renewl\nreport that the French plane \"WhJ\nBird,\" piloted by Nungessor and cJ\nhad been seen to plunge into tl\nsea off the west coast of Irelafl\nthat the French consul-general, A. ;\nBlanche, has asked the Irish authotj\nties to make an investigation.\nCommandant   Fitcmaurlce,   head\nthe air force, said today a Free Sti\nairplane  would   probably   be  sent\nthe scene.\nRoyal Windsor May\nBe Flown for Visit\nto Vancouveriti\nVANCOUVER,     Sept.     26.\u2014C.\n(Duke)    Schiller    ln    his    monopttd\nRoyal Windsor, may visit Vancouvj\nMajor   D.   R.   McLaren,   president\nthe   Air   Force   Club   of   British   C\nlumbla  stated   tonight  that  an   ln\\\ntatlon from the club to the CanadU\nflyers   who   have   just    completed\nflight from New York to Spokane\nvisit Vancouver would be sent the\ntomorrow'   morning.\nRetain the Charm\nOf Girlhood\nA Clear Sweet Sin\nCuticura\nWED Help Yon\nOn 6\u00bbd\u00ab_-a tner Btt- De.\nCANADIAN i,,,PACIFIC\nLAST SAILINGS\nFrom St Lawrence Ports,\nMontreal-Quebec\nTO LIVERPOOL\nOct. 7, Nov. 4*    Montclar\nOct.  14*,  Nov.  11*    Montros\nOct. 21, Nov. 18*     Montcaln\nOct.   28    ...' Minnedos\nNov.   25\u00abo        Mellt\n* Calls Greenock  for Glasgow.\no Calls at Belfast.\nTO CHEUOtTXO,  BOUTHAJCPTOW,\nOct   6, Nov.   2     Montroyal\nOct. 19, Nov. IB     Montnalm\nTO CHERBOUaO,  SOUTXAXFTOV\nOct. 12    I-.mpress of Franet\nOct. 26    Empress of Scotland\nTO   BELTAJTT,   OLASOOW\nOct. 27 Metagama\nFuture  Sailing*   From   Winter\nPort, St.  John\nBerth reservations can now be made.\nAsk about the new Tourist Third Cabin.\nFull details, with rates, from any Agent\nor write\nJ. S.   CAXTEX,\nDistrict Passenger  Agftnt,  Nelson,  B.C.\nTONIGHT\nee late as 11 p.m.\nVou mui phone yonr Want\nJrnOe to rrewh The D*%\nNews' lange reader audience.\nWant Ads Will Sell It\nfor You\nPhone 144\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n \u2022 \" \" -\n\u25a0^E^S\nTPJE N\u00aeJSO\u00bb iWV. NBWSl MONDAY MORNING, SSKTEltBER 26,. 1927\nfr\"*\u00bb\n[Baas-den  Unable  Make Tom;\nCar Turns Over Twice;\nNo Glass Broken\nTearing down Nelson avenue at\nmidnight Saturday night, H. D.\nRamaden waa unable to make the\nturn to go down to the ferry, and ta)\n\u2022rder to miss a telephone pole drove\n\u25a0straight ahead and struck the sidewalk and platform at the car stopping  place.\nThe car, a sedan, slurred around,\nturned over twice, and came to A\nstop on *s wheals, lacing the di-\nectioif from which It came. Ita occupants, Mr. Ramsden and W. Sutherland, suffered no more serious injuries, than   bruise*   and   a   shaking\nConsiderable damage, however, was\nI ajuistatoed  by  the car,  and  tbe  aide-\nwalk   and   platform   were   torn   up.\nf Though   the   car   turned   over   twice\n[ and was  dented la almost all* parts\nnot a pane of glass was broken.\n! CONVICTED MURDERER\nSTARTS ON FAST\nPORTLAND. Me., Sept. 25.\u2014Benja-\n[ rain H. Turner, 36-year-old convicted\n' murderer of James D. Hallen, entered\nI his 41st hour of tasting at mid-\nI niK^t\nTiro or three drinks of jyater have\nbees taken by him since Saturday\nmorning, when he learned that the\nMaine taw court had \u2022tlsmlssed his\nfinal plea for a new trial.\nTurner waa given a life sentence.\nTrail News of the Day\nTR4IL. B.C., Sept. 25.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. J. D. Anderson, accompanied by\nH. Wade, motored to Spokane Saturday, where they spent the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. J. C. Moncrieff and daughter,\nMildred, returned Friday from Vancouver, wher\u00a9 they spent the summer holidays.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ.  Schofield,   R. Williamson and G.\nWatson returned Friday after spending a week's  hunting at Sheep  Like.\n\u25a0*r^B #   \u2022\nMrs. O. StOenls of Blrchbank is\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. T. M\nCairns  for a,  few  days.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Ella Thompson spent the\nweek-end with her sister, Miss Edith\nThompson, In Nelson.\nThe home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nCampbell. Tadanac, was the scene of\na de'lghtful surprise sjjower Friday\nevening given ln honor of Miss Margaret Campbell, a bride of this week\nThe shower was a cup and saucer\n\u2022one, Miss Campbell receiving many\nyerly pretty and daintily decorated\nqifts. Cards were enjoyed during the\nearlier part of the evening, after\nwhich danlty refreshments. were\nserved. The surprise guests were Mr.\naind Mrs. Herb Jackson, Mr. and Mrs.\nUrn ent Clay, Mr. and Mrs. W. Mc-\nB*ady, Mra. F. Rossman, Mrs. Kenning, Miss Thurza Rossman, Miss\n1-Tanny Kavic, Miss Margaret Campbell  and   Mr.  and   Mrs.   Jack  Camp-\nteu.\n\u00bb * \u2022\nMtes Doris Mitchell spent the weekend at her home at Robson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nWOTTCX\n\u25a0jTMil Amateur Musical Society Social\narranged for Thursday, September 29,\npostfoned  until  further  notice.     (9801 >\nAUSTRALIANS PLAN\nLENGTHY FLIGHT\nSAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 25.\u2014The\nChronicle says today tbat four Australian aviators, with official and\nfinancial backing of New _ South\nWales, are rushing preparations for\na flight from the United States to\nAustralia the middle of October.\n1 The projected. route, the article\nsays, will be from Oakland, Cal., to\nHawaii, 244\u00bb miles; thence to Ra-\nbaul, New Britain. J800 mUes; to\nL&e, New Guinea, 360 miles; 960\nmiles to northern Australia, and the\nremaining 2000 miles to Melbourne\noverlandj a total -of Nearly MOO\nmiles.\nThree of the Australian aviators'\nnames are Kingsford Smith, Charles\nT.   P.   Ulm  and  Keith  V.  Anderson.\nKaslo and Slocan Boards Plan\nto Make Nelson Visitors\nWelcome\nProspects are for a large representation of Nelson's business men\nstarting tomorrow afternoon on the\nboard of trade excursion to Kaslo\nand the Slocan. In addition to mem\nbers of the board of trade. Acting\nSecretary Fred A. Starkey made It\nplain last night that any citizen who\ncared to associate himself with the\ntrip would be welcome. Something\nlike 20 have so tar lined up for the\ntrip, which will be ln the nature of\na  stag  party.\nFrom Nelson to Kaslo the trip\nwill be by motor, enough oar owners\narranging to go to care for the\nparty.\nThe Kaslo board of trade ss en\nterlng into the spirit of the thing,\nand arranging to extend a welcome to\nthe  Nelsonltes tomorrow  evening.\nWednesday will be spent tn the\nSlocan, Neil Tattrle, president of tfie\nSandon section of the Slocan district\nboard of trade, having telephoned\nMr. Starkey that the visitors would\nfle fully welcomed at that point, while\nlt Is understood arrangements are be\nIng made to convey some, or all, of\nth\u00a9 party by car to New Denver\nIn  the afternoon.\nSome of the excursionists wfll return to Nelson Wednesday night,\nwhile others may stay over In Kaslo\nto   the   morning.\nIS NEWLYWED\nNelson Young Man Gets Bride\non Prairie; Wedding at\nRegina\nREGINA, Sask.. Sept. 25.\u2014The\nmarriage of Lloyd Renwick of Nelson, B.C., and Celeste Lipsett of\nCorinne, Sask, took place at Westminster United Church manse on\nMonday,   September   20,    1927.\nThe ceremony was performed by\nRev. H. ID, Leltch, minister of West\nminster church ind the witnesses\nwere MJbs Annie Renwick ot Nelson,\nB.C.. sister of the groom, and James\nLipsett of Corinne-j Qask., brother of\nthe bride. Thi; ncwlyweds will live\nIh Nelson, B.C.\nMine \u00bbthe .\nIk-tfJobmtheVKrrld\/\nSend Tour Num. .ltd\nAdew.it lor Tun free\nTrie! tectestt .\/\nGr.eeNtM ani \"A\nloot .1 Belter -Wat.\nlottt\". A4dr.it C0.0-\ndim\/ellenC, Ud.,\nDeal. Gil tl\nUesreteUSan >\/J|,\nTerente 2, Ont.\nJONES ii happy, successful, nuking\ntbe most of his life. Hit energetic\nbody and mind\u2014developed through\nplenty of exercise, proper sleep . . .\nand principally right food\u2014hare enabled him to capitalize the big opportunities.\nMillions of men like Jones begin each\nday with Grape-Nuts for breakfast. It\nwas dtliberettly designed to supply, ia\ndelicious form, the five essential elements of nutrition. And it il easy to\ndigest. It ii crisp, eo that teeth and\ngums benefit from the enjoyable chewing of Grape-Nuts.\nBer Grape-Nnti from your trocar In the wu.\nwrapped package. Four teaipoonfuli, coKing\nle.. than one cent, ia a diffident awriag. Un\n.rom tha pockap, with milk or c\nirapesNuts\n) for Delicious nourishment\nDtfMt of Nebon 4 to 1; Puts it\nin Running for Championship\nSUPERIOR TEAM WORK\nBEATS THE NELSONTTES\nFirst  Half Tie;- Bradley  Sent\nOff Field Early in\nSecond\nHere ara photographs of a new\ntype ot home architecture coming Into\nbeing In tha United States, aa at result et the Vogue of the motor car.\nNEW HOMES IN THE STATES\nThe -Ina homes ara loeated In Portia!-, Oregoiv and -An Francisco, and\ntypical of many thousand, of others.\nIt  will  ba  noticed that the ground\nfloors ara entirely devoted ta gar-\naffe accommodation, while the family\nl*ve on the second floor and up. Even\nrery expansive homes are now be<\nlag built In this way.\nTrail Women 0\/ f he\nMoose Heart Legion\nEntertain mt 1\nTRAIL, B.C, Sap*. 44.\nbenefit dance social\nwoman of the Moose Heart J\ntertalnad about 1M gua\nMoose hall. Abut M took\nln the whist drive, at which the\nwinners were: Mrs. A. McLeod, ladles'\nflrat; Mlsa E. Crawford, consolation:\nW. Marshall, men's flrat; D. Kirkpatrick,  consolation.\nAuto Stolen at\nSaskatoon Is\nFound at Coast\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. I*.\u2014Dsfsnting\nrtolion'i strong representative soccer\nteam 4-1 In a thrilling encounter -here\nSaturday, Trail lifted ttself within\nrang* of the West Kootenay championship In spite of av poor start and|\nNelson's   earlier   victories.\nNelson now leads on potato 4 to 2,\nhaving won the first two matches\nand lost the third. Trail, however,\nleads on goal average, 7 to 6, due to\nSaturday's score, tn the final same\nof the series, which will be played\n\u25a0to Nelson, doubtless within the next\ntwo weeks, a draw would give Nelson\nthe championship. But a win for\nTrail, while splitting the points,\nwould give Trail the championship\non goals scored. With the series\nstill left, tn doubt the potential Interest of the final battle has thus\nbeen materially Increased.\nTrad Superier\nTrail had the superior team on the\nfield aad played a winning game.\nNelson opened the scoring after |i\nminutes' play. Trail put through\na tying goal seven mOnutes later.\nFive minutes after the resumption,\nBradley, Nelson's skipper, who, according to his statement, protested\nthe non-award of a penalty, wan\nseat off tile field, according to Ref\neree W. Pollock for \"ungentlemanty\n\u25a0conduct.\"\nNelson, decisively outplayed in the\nfirst half with Its full team, fell\nvictim to heavy adverse scoring in\nthe second, with but 10 men to op\npose   Trail's  determined  attack.\nTrail went out to win from the\nkic-koff, forcing the visiting defence\nto strenuous resistance un^er steady\nand continued pressure. Only in\ntermlttently could the Nelson forwards get away Into Trail territory.\nThe Nelson halves and backs defended c.everly and seldom gave the;\nhome boys a chance to take a clean\nshot. On top of that, in Deslreau,\nNelson had a brilliant custodian.\nThe Seoornrg\nFollowing a three-minute seige of\nthe Nelson goal . with Trail halves\nas well aB forwards striving for\nclear shot, at 31 minutes, Nelson's\nforwards' broke away un a line at\ntack. A partial clearance returned\nby the halves harassed the home defence and Timlth, Inside left, opened\nNelson's scoring at 10 yards.\n. A few minutes late' J. McVue,\nbeaten to a place shot by the backs,\npassed to, the wing. Rowlands centered. Deslreau rushing out to Met\nit missed, and McVie connected and\nshot into the open goal, to tie for\nTrail.\nTn spite of Bradley's enforced re\nfiremen t early in the second Nelson\nheld the Trail boys out for 20 min\nutes, during which time McVle made\na mess of several fine chances and\ngave ground before the visitors' husky\ndefence  men.\nThe Winning Goal*\nFerguson, the most consistently\ngood Trail forward, recommenced\nTrail's scoring. On a centering forward pass by Stiles he drove in a\nhard ground shot from 20 yards, s\nyard wide of Desireau's leaping form\nT. Laurie, following a broken line\nattack, closed on a loose ball and\nscored Trail's third. Some time after\nStiles \u00bbjftlng a wing shot ovtf Tal\nbot grazed between the bar and\nDesireau's hand to score TVail's\nfourth.\nExcept   for   the   first    20    minutes\nof  the   second   half,   Trail   played\nconstructive and passingly good brand\nof soccer with team work rtn all de\npartments, and  was consistently eg\ngresslve.\nNelson Combination- Weak\nNelson, though no lees aggressive,\nand destructive of Trail's planned at\ntacks, was weak on combination and\nrelied on energy and speed. They\nwere properly beaten.\nThe teams were: ^B^^^^\nNelson\u2014L. Deainiau, goal; O. Talbot and 0. Roynon, backs, M. Major,\nN. Bradley and R. Renwick, halves;\nC. W. Tyler, G. Nutter, J. Davidson,\nF. Smith and P. Kelly, forwards.\nTrail\u2014M. Marshall, goal; J. Marks\nand J. Kltchin, backs; T. Dunlop, A,\nIjaur.e and J. Thomson, halves; T.\nRowlands, J. Ferguson, J. McVle, T.\nLaurie and D. Stiles, forwards.\nHave Banquet\nAfter the match the visitors were\nthe guests of the Trail Soccer league\nat supper in a local cafe, where\nJames Leckle, president of the Trail)\nleague,   presided. ^^^^^~\nC W. Tyler, Nelson .representative\non the West Kootenay league executive, complimented Trail on its vie\ntory and dts banquet, anad predicted\nan opposite result in the next match,\nand a visit to East Kootenay for\nNelson.\nMr. Leckie declared he much en\njoyed the game. Summing up tbe\nplay, he was satisfied Trail waa\nLttle too much for Nelson, a fact\nwhich had made the series a little\nmore   interesting.\nBesides the two teams, those pres\nen* wer* W. Pollock, B. Marshall, F.\nSammons, Alderman J.--A. McKinnon,\nH. Barr, H. Stevens, W. Freno and\nJ.  Rothery.\nER\n[fl\nI Irresponsible   Driver   Damages\nNew Work; Police on\nHis Trail\nA sedan car with hardened cement\nIn the treads of Its tires is the object\nof a search being made by Chief\nThomas H. Long and the city police\nforce.\nThis car, thought to be an out-of-\ntown one, came from the east on\nVernon street about 8:30 Friday evening. After turning up Josephine\nstreet oblivious of the barrier at the\nfoot of the paving with a red lantern\non it, the car part w.iy np turned\nover on to the fresh pavement, laid\nonly a few hours previously, and proceeded on this until forced to turn off\n\u2022J again when it encountered the big\nmixer.\nPart of the cement had already\nhardened but the last couple of\nsquares ovejr which the car ran were\nstill soft, and deep marks were the\nresult.\nC. W. Dill, construction manager\nfor the Carter-Halls-Aidlnger company, the contractors, had to get his\nfinishers on the job to repair the\ndamage.\nHydrant   Sprung\nThe police have examined practically every car in town, and have instructed garages, g^s stations and all\nothers to keep a watch for the car.\nbut so far it has not been found. It\nwas seen running on tbe pavement,\nbut the number was not obtained.\nWhen last seen by eyewitnesses,\nthe car was -headei for the hydrant\nat the Poo'e Drug company corner,\nThe hydrant was found badly bent,\nand with a leak opened in the main.\nThe irresponsible act of the driver,\nand his general handling of the car,\nled to a deduction by spectators that\nhe was inebriated.\nPublic Schools Remain  Closed\nAnother Week; Senior\nMatric Opens\ncorner while returning from a dance\neasly today.\nThe gin asked Schlleben for the\nmoney to visit friends. He told her\nthat ehe had better go home, warning her not to accept the money from\nFrank Ryzner, another youth, who\nwas with them. She disobeyed and\nlie  shot   her.\nMEXICO CITY, Slpt. 25.\u2014Roeallno\nJimeneV, Barvo, labor leader, and\ndenardo Ramlrea, politician and\nprominent ln labor circles, were kidnapped from a ranch at Tusamapan,\nwhere they were visitors, taken off\ninto the  hills and  shot and instantly\nViolent Deaths\nAre Numerous in\nEastern Canada\nNo change occurred over the weekend ln the situation regarding the\nepidemic precautions in Nelson, no\nnew cases being reported In the district, and none in the city.\nThe public schools wilt not open-\nbefore a week from today, Dr. B. C.\nArthur, city medical health officer,\nstated last night, though he has arranged that certain high School classes\nthat can be strictly segregated may\nresume today, this applying only to\nthe fourth year.\nAU four epidemic cases In the Nelson Isolation hospital are progressing\nfavorably, the two Infantile paralysis\npatients from Appledale, and one from\nSouth Slocan, and young McLean\nfrom Nelson, who was described ln\nDr. Arthur's letter of last Wednesday\nas suffering from cerebro-spinal meningitis. Two of tbe four have no\nparalysis. \u201e\nThe Slocan City case, which was\nnot brought to Nelson for treatment,\nIs altso  practically recovered.\nKills Girl Because\nShe Accepts Fare\nFrom Another Man\nCHICAGO, Bept. 26.\u2014Frank Schlleben, aged 19, shot and killed Stef-\nfle Cieloc, aged IK, because she ac-\ncepted 16 cents for car fare from\nanother  youth,   as  they  stood   on  a\n  E\nDEATHOFTRftlLITE\nMrs. H. L. Green Dies in Hospi\ntal After About Two Week'\nIllness\nTRAIL, B.C., Sept. 2\u00bb\u2014The death\nof Mrs. H. I_ Green, wile of H. L.\nOreen of Victoria atreet, occurred at\n1:10 this morning In the Trall-Tada\nnac hospital. She was 111 for about\ntwo   weeka   with   dysentry.       ^H\n* SASKATOON, StFt. M\u2014Al automobile, property <_f _*rneet Thsod\nof Saskatoon, stolen here on August\n_, has been recovered at tbs Pacific\nGarage, 624 Homer street, VaneouT-\nvsr.\nCharles Kellerman, arrested hi\nEmerson. Man., ln possession of aft-\nother ear, ls held by ths polios ia\nconnection with ths theft ot ths\nTheod   automobile.\n'\u25a0\u25a0'i   I\nHOTEL CASTLEGAR\nTHB BEST PI_ACB TO HAT\nAND  BI____P BBTW-IBN        \\\nT-UH, AND NIT-SOW\nNELSON MOTOR COACHES\nLt. Hendricks   Oarage,   Kaslo. .7:\u00abf n.m.\n\"     \"      Nelson.\nLt. Capitol   Motors,\ni.Ueje.\nLt. Procter   ...TT. T T:l\u00bbaja.\nLt.Capitol  Motors,  N.lson. ...S:<iM-\nraUKW4 .  -_-____\nLt. Slocan City connections tor\nLt. Peebles' iiotors,' Neison!'.'. !4:1( Ms.\nLt. Nelsoa,     soaasatioaa     Cor\nRosslaad    I:isa.s_.\nLt. Trail, connsotlona tor Slants  OUT    !:*\u2022*.\u00bb*.\nLt. Salmo\u20141:00 am.\nLt. Nelson\u20141:10 p.na.\nnnui tots s*r**M tuts\nLt. Nelaon  (Madden Hotel)   11 j\nLt. Salmo    1 1\nREED ANY COM\nOrder Now\nNow is the time to lay In\nyour winter supply of coal W*\ncan supply you with the bast\nIn Domestic and Furnace Coal*\nWest Transfer Company\nPHONE 3S\nOTTAWA, Sept. 25,\u2014Violent deaths\naccounted for a total of 15 lives In east\nern Canada over the week-end. Toronto\nalone had six, wlille Montreal and ntt.i\nwa district.) recorded large quota?.\nMrs. Mary Gardhouse died in Toron\nto today from injuries when she wsb\nstruck by an automobile on September\n16.\nInjured in Quebec City on September\n22, Mrs. Elizabeth Franklin, 61, died in\nToronto today.\nJohn Hannah, 64, Toronto, was thrown\nto the pavement with such terrific foro*\nwhen a street car struck the bread\nwagon he was driving on Saturday that\nhe died two hours later.\nA man whose identity police liav-j\nbeen unable to discover, was found dead\nin a Toronto rooming house. Death\nwas attributed to gas poisoning.\nJames House, aged ty*, years, died\nin a Toronto hospital from scalds he\nreceived when he fell Into a pail of\nboiling water.\nMargaret Kennedy, 9, was Instantly\nkilled when she stepped into the path\nof an automobile on the highway near\nVaudreuil, Que.\nFrom a bullet wound ln the neck,\nWilliam Wellein, I, died at Montreal.\nThe injury was accidentally inflicted\nby the victim's brother.\nWilfred Relrois, longshoreman, waa\nfatally injured when he lost his balance and fell into the hold of the 8.8.\nRhoden ln dock at Montreal.\nAt Kentvllle, N.8., Wesley Pearl, \u00ab8,\na laborer, waa Instantly killed when the\nflyheel of an engine fell on the overhanging end of a plank, the other end\nof which flew up, catching him under\nthe chin and breaking his neck.\nThe body of Emerson E. Boucher of\nWashington, Ont., with gunshot wounds\nthrbugh the eyes and forehead was discovered on a Kitchener, Ont., river\nbank.    Police suspect suicide.\nAt Quelph, Ont., 6-year-old Arthur\nWellhauser darted across the street in\nfront of a motor truck and was distantly killed. w\\  \\\nEmile Rosmi, water boy for railway\nseotlonmen, was struck by a train near\nCornwall, Ont., and killed.\nTwo bodies were recovered from the\nCornwall canal\u2014those of Clifford Tes-\nsier, aged 6, and Oeorsje Oouet, SI. A\nnote written by the latter Indicated that\nhe had contemplated suicide. Toung\nTessler apparently lost his life while\nplaying near the canal.\nA new French seaplane, said to be\nthe smallest ln the world,\/ can be assembled, piece by piece, In three\nminutes on the deck of a floating\"\nsubmarine.\nWith about  864   airpilots  and   ln-\n         termediate  fields already established\nkilied, special dispatches from JalapaI throughout the United States, 187\nreport. The kidnappers were either I ertsee are consWerint the develop-\ntMindits or  political enemies, ' meat of landiaf field*,\nPlain Mn York of York, Yorks*, tells the boys and\ngirls of the TASTE that set all England acclaiming\nand eating PLAIN YORK chocolate*\nThe minute the btU rings ttmd school\ngets out,\nChilarte, cone rushing with pious\nshout\nInto the. store\nThey all want *>\u00ab\u2022_____________\nPlain Yorkr~it's the choc'late they\nwon't do without.\nTrust the boys snd girls to spot some,\nthinf food! And ike minute they tried\nPlain York, they .potted the chocolate\ntreat o< \u2022 life-time.\nThis delicious, Telr-tr-nnooth plain\nRowntree chocolate it the triumph of\n200 yesat' experience in its. chocolate\nmalting. No wonder it li to truly\nchocolate\u2014not too hitter, not too sweet,\nInst right) s perfect dream at e taste.\nTry It\u2014its quality sulfas, ui any chocolate you have seer tasted.\nJ\n Page Four\"\"\nPublish **d every mornln* except fiun-\nr The News Publlahlnf company,\nletters should be addressed\ni   and   money   ordara   made\ni The Newa Publishing com*\nj\u00bbd la ao ess* to Indt-\nof the staff.\n__,   rate   cards   and   A.B.C.\nof   circulation   mailed   on\nar may ba aeen at tba office\nadvertising  agency  recognised\nHan Press association.\n ICRIPTION   RATES\nmall  (country), per month...!   M\n___\u25a0\u00ab yaar    \u00ab.\u2022\u2022\n_T man (elty), par year  11.04\n, Outside Canada, par month TS\n_rer year      f.M\nIwwei par weak 21\nFar yaar     II to\nJPayaUe la Advanoa\t\nrftadH\nTHE NEISON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, J927\nMONDAY,   BEPT   2\u00ab,   1927 *\nCricket Gaining\nf Statistics are said to show that\n* fcricket Is making strides in popular-\n' Ity lh Canada, and thet the great\nEnglish game ia extending Its terrl-\nI tory  from year to  year.\nThis Is * very good thing.    There\n; cannot be too  many  team sports  in\n\u00bb the   country,   and   the   more   sports\nthere are  the more  persons will  be\nengaged A athletic diversion.\nA good point about cricket la that,\nlike golf, it Is good for men of every\nmsje. At all events, men of ripe years\nure proud to \"keep up their cricket.\"\nFor cricket to make gains ln Canada Is less a conquest of new territory -than a repossession of a territory once held. In the east, the\nVillage playing field or college cam-\n|>us was onoe the \"cricket ground.\"\nOn the prairie the element from old\n(England kept cricket in the lime -\nlight.\nNot many years ago  here In West\nKootenay there was a \"cricket week\"\n' at    Nelson,    held    annually    on   the\nRecreation  grounds.\nThe flanneled men, whom Kipling\nnamed under another, term, would\nlook well there again.\nThe Battle of the \"If\n\u25a0\u00bb\nThe\nLighter Side\nReaders of Tha Dairy News\ncontribute many of the best Items\nto this column. Just sign yonr\nname or initials, or nom-de-plume,\nand send In your brightest '\n\u2014Editor,  Lighter Bide.\nAUNT HET\n\"I always think women have\nmore troubles than men until X\nhere the way Pa talks when\nhe's shavin'.\"\nThere is tonic in praise. A little\napplesauce every day keeps the doctor\naway.\nThere's   a   serum   for   snake   bite\nnow, but there's no Sweet Adotlne ln\nbarrel of lt.\nSTILL, THE MORE YOU SEE OP\nSOME PEOPLE THE MORE TOU\nBELIEVE  IN  BIRTH   CONTROL.\nA military leader in China seems\nto be anybody with a bunch of followers and an itching  palm.\n\u25a0   Mighty   is   the   word   \"if.\"      With\nten \"if granted, we may do anything.\nIf Dempsey had retired to his specified corner sooner, the count over\nTunney would have started sooner,\nand Tunney, with his hand on the\nropea, and watching the count, would\nhave had to rise earlier, in a weak-\nsjreakened condition and perhaps\ndoomed to  lose. '\nIf Dempsey had seised the opportunity he had and leaped on Tunney,\nInstead of standing off for several\n\u25a0econds while indulging in time-wasting taunts of his opponent, he might\nhave been able to hand him the\nwallop that a few seconds difference\nallowed the champion, to avoid.\nEither of these \"ifs\" might have\ngiven Dempsey -the championship\nagain.\nH*re is another \"if.\" If Oene had\natarted earlier the series of two\nrights to the chin that \"stung Dempsey,\" two left hooks to the head\n\u2022that \"nailed him to the ropes,\" the\nright that sent him \"reeling into the\n: corner,\" the left hook that \"almost\nfloored him,\" and the pair of \"misses'\nas Dempsey lay stunned against the\nropes, in the fourth round, or if the\npair of misses had been a pair of\nwallops, Dempsey almost certainly\n\u2022would have been out ln the fourth\nround, instead of lasting out 10.\nAnd so It goes.\nIn Dempsey's fight with Firpo, the\n*'BuII of the Pampas,\" if Dempsey\nhad not had the luck to land on the\nbaok of a spectator when he was\nknocked through the ropes at the\natart of the first round, and had\nnot been assisted back into the ring,\nhe would certainly have been counted\nout\nMighty   Is   \"if.\"\nThere's many a tall tombstone that\nto sacred to the memory of postmortem vanity.\nIf you get up and start early ln\nthe morning, you miss all the traffic\nexcept those who started early to\nmiss it.\nIf Mr. Levin* is really itching for more excitement, 1st him\ntry f ying from England to\nFranca.\nThe Nordic may be superior, but\nytou never saw one who could take\na polishing cloth and make an apple\nworth 10 centa.\nCanadlanlsm: Trying to make hotels\nmore like homes; trying to make\nhomes more like hotels..\nFable: Once there was a man who\nwent broke and was Jobless, scorned\nand hungry, and didn't change his\nconvictions.\nThere's -one consolation. You can\nbuy a genuine sealskin' coat if you\ncan't afford any of the expensive\nimitations.\nA wife is licked if aver she tats\nher husband get sway with any.\nthing because he says: \"I knew\nyou'd understand, dear.\"\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy   LAURA   A.   KIRKMAN\nOUR   TAJMiE  LINENS\nTOMORROWS MENU\nBreakfast\nGrapes\nCereal\nFried Eggs Bacon\nToast Coffee\nLuncheon\nScalloped   Cheese\nBran  Muffins\nCelery Baked App'es\nCookiea Tea\nDinner\nPotatoes\nBeef Loaf\nCarrot-Stuffed  Peppers\nTomato  Salad\nChocolate Pudding\nCoffee\nHope Tkrougk Young Peter\n. It Is strictly the own affair of the\nDoukhobors ln Canada whom they\nahould choose as their religious leader, aad the own affair, also, of their\nIncorporated company as to whom it\nchooses for Ms head.\nThe choice having fallen on Peter\nVerigin the second, known to the\nDoukhobor colonists as \"Young^ Peter, however, tt Is a matter of con-\n\u25a0gratulatlon that the new leader, Juat\narrived from Russia to get acquainted\nwith his peopla, their problems, and\nhia duties, Is a man of reputed liberal views.\nWht-.tever plana the new leader\nmay have for bettering tha material\nfortunes of his {followers, one being\naaid tp be a plan for concentrating\nthem in on* part of th* country, it\nMs leadership results in his peopla\nturning toward schooling with avidity,\nto gain the free equipment for life\nthat this country puts within the\nreach of every child, then the Douk\nhobors wfll b* facing toward th*\nsolution of th*ir own problems, and\nat th* earn* time toward tbe solution\nSdjalloped Cheese\u2014Butter three\nthick slices of white b\/ead, then\nbreak them ln small pieces and put\na layer of the bits in the bottom\nof a greased baking dish. Add a\nlayer of finely chopped mild American cheese, then another layer of the\nbread and a seoond chees layer.\n(Use, ln all, one-third pound of the\ncheese). Beat three unseparated eggs\nand mix them with two cups of cold,\nsweet milk, one-half teaspoon of salt\nand a pinch of pepper. Turn this\nliquid over the bread and cheese\nlayers ln the dish and bake three-\nquarters of an hour ln a medium\noven.    Serve hot. ,,\nSweet Potato Pie\u2014Line a pie <pan\nwtth uncooked pastry. In a mixing\nbowl mash two medium sized well\ncooked, hot sweet potatoes; add two\nbeaten eggs, one-half teaspoon of\nground nutmeg, one-half cup of sugar\nand one pint of cod, sweet milk.\nTurn this liquid mixture into the\nuncooked-pastry lining of the pan and\nslip aU Into a hot oven\u2014550 degrees\nP.\u2014to set the crust for about seven\nto 10 minutes of baking, then reduce\noven heat to medium and let continue to bake at this temperature\u2014\nabout 400 degrees F.\u2014for\" another 25\nminutes (about 35 minutes ln all).\nVeal Salad\u2014Tp one pint measure\nfull of roast veal which has been\nShaved into pieces one inch long and\none-half inch wide, add two chopped\nhard-boiled eggs, four large pieces of\ncelery diced, two hea\/ts of lettuce cut\nin small strips to suit individual\ntlklng. Moisten the mass with either\ncooked or Mayonnaise dressing and\nserve on lettuce.\nStuffed Hubbard Squash\u2014Cut a\nmedium sized Hubbard squash into\nhalves and bake in a hot oven till\nthe pn'P 1* soft enough to be scooped\nodt easily with a spoon. \"With this\npulp mix one and one-half cups of\ndry bread crumbs, one teaspoon of\nsalt, a little pepper, one cup of cream\nand. a generous lump of soft butter,\nHeap this mixture lightly into the\nshell again, rounding It up and cover\ning With more dry crumbs, dot with\nbutter, and return to the hot oven\nfor several minutes till delicately\nbrown. Serve in the half shells.\nTomorrow\u2014Answers to  Inquiries.\nAddress Inquiries to Mlas Kirkman,\nand Inclose stamped -addressed envelope\nfor reply.\u2014Editor.\nThat Body\nof Yours\nBy JAMES W. BARTON. M.D.\nIn Influenza Should Return\nWe are all naturally hoping that\nthere will not be another influensa\nepidemic. Th* results of the previous epidemic art still showing, and\nwill always be evident ln the lives\nof many individuals.\nWhy?    ,\nBedause It has been definitely\nproven that Influensa attacks the\nheart, and In perhaps 5 per cent it\ndoes  permanent  damage  thereto.\nDr. A. S. Syman points out that It\naffects the rhythm of the heart, Interfering with the nervous mechanism,\nso that the impulses do not stimulate\nthe heart muscle regularly to action.\nIt inflames ths tin 1 fig of the heart,\nas do the so-called rheumatic infections, causing th* valves to \"pucker\"\nand thus causa a leak. And finally\nIt actually damages the muscular\nwalls of th* heart Itself, thus lessening its power of pumping blood.\nNow, as you know, some attacks\nof Influensa seem so light that the\npatient perhaps Just stays around\nthe house for a few days, and then\nreturns  to  work.\nOther individuals are stricken down\nmore severely, go right to bed, but\nIn a few days feel better, and return\nto their occupation within a week or\nten  days.\nOthers first suffer the attack of\nInfluensa, and then tt goes on into\na broncho-pneumona, end they are\nconfined to bed for two to four\nweeks.\nNow, what about protecting that\nImportant organ, the heart, during\nand after an attack of influenza?\nSome of those who recovered in\na few days found that they were very\nalow in regaining their strength, that\ntheir work seemed unusually heavy,\nand that they tired easily.\nSome who had gone right to bed\nfor a number of days, found that\nthey seemed about as well as ever\nwhen they returned to work at the\nend  of a week or ten days.\nThose who had gone to a broncho\npneumonia found that they ware\nmonths   betting  back their   strength.\nWhat is the lesson?\nThat aa influenza attacks the heart\nand met damage tt permanently, that\nin all attacks of influensa tbe patient\nshould go right to bed and stay juat\nas long as hts physician so advises.\nDon't try to belittle influenza because you are not very sick. Just\ntry to remember that the severity\nof the attack may not be In'proportion to the harmful effects upon the\nheart\nThis ts one time at least when tt\nwill pay you to remain an \"invalid\"\na few days longer than you think\nnecessary.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(The Dally Newa, Sept. 26, 1907.)\nMr. and Mrs.  A.  M.  Stewart and\ntheir  two   boys   of  Vancouver,   are\nthe guest of A.  O. Brown, on Silica\nstreet, for a few days.\n\u00ab    \u2022    \u2022\nA meeting waa held yesterday of\nthe new opera house company, which\nIs now finally organised.   The direc-\nThirty Years Ago\n(The Weekly Miner, Sept. 26, 1897.)\nAlderman John J. Malone and Mlas\nLydia R. Bennett were married on\nSeptember 22, Rev. J. Morden officiating.\na * \u2022   \u2022\nMr, McVlcar of the Nelson Hydraulic company, recently unearthed a\nnugget weighing nine ounces, which\nsold for  |180,   at  Forty-Nine   creek.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nThe contract for sewer construction was awarded yesterday to New-\nlings & Co., for $1641, and work\nis to  start  on  September  27.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nAt a meeting of the city council\nlast evening, with Mayor Houston in\nthe chair, the Nelson Electric Light\ncompany's proposition was accepted,\nproviding the company will dispose\nof its plant, franchise,; etc., to the\ncity within a year at a price ijot\nexceeding    $40,000.\nChilliwack Man Is\nBelieved Victim\nCareless Hunter\nCHILLIWACK, B.C., Sept. 25.\u2014\nBelieved to have been the victim of\na careless hunter, the body of Michael Doyle, aged ib\\\\ was found late\nWednesday night near the Vedder\nriver dyke, five miles from here,\nwith a bullet through the back of\nhis head. No fire* arms were found\nnear the body.\nTwo Inmates of Cobourg Jail overpowered the turnkey and escaped, but\nwere recaptured in 15 minutes by a\nposaa*\nTen Yean Ago\nAll High Grown\n\"SALADA\"\nGREEN TEA .\nQuality depends on garden elevat jon.\nton ara C. W Buah, Blake Wilson,\nO. P. Weill, B. C. Travis and W.\nGoanell. .\na    \u2022    \u2022\nUre W. P. Tlerney anil Mln Well*\nTlerney laft yesterday for a abort\nvisit    to    Seattle.\neee\nR. W. Hulbert haa established *\nrecord ln fruit packing. He won two\nfirsts and a aecond at Nelaon fair,\nand a flratj aecond and third ai\nKaalo.\nWhy Women Wanted\nAnd Science developed\nA New-Type Hygiene\nBr ELLEN J. BUCKLAND\n*ew Regietered Nurse\nMODERN women with the business world to face, and a more\ntense social life to lead, demanded\ngreater protection in- meeting their\ngreatest hygienic handicap. As a result, the old-time sanitary \"pad\" is'\nfast disappearing.\nOver 80% of better-class women\nnow employ KOTEX\u2014more than a\nsanitary pad; true scientific protection.\nFilled with Cellucotton wadding, the\nnewly perfected super-absorbent, it\nIs five ttmes as absorbent as ordinary\ncotton pads.\nKotex also DEODORIZES while\nit acts.   Also, it is discarded easily\nas tissue.\nNo laundry,\nno disposal\nproblem.\nPacked 12\nin a box. At\nany store.\nLook for\nname Kotex\non the box.\nIf it is not there, take cart;\nreal Kotex.\nit is not\nKOT6X\nNo laundry\u2014AitcerA like time\n\\^^A>\nSTANDARD   FURNITURE CO.\n-*-'---_\u2014 \u2022*>-.\u25a0-p'*D    \u2014\u25a0 t\u2014-pr\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS & SON\nThere   is   nothing   in   the   govern\nment'a pamphlets on the proper care\nof    children    that    suggests    waking\nthem up to hear the bedtime story.\nIT ISN'T OF RECORD THAT MAN\nEVER GOT RESULTS BY SITTING\nIN THE SHADE AND ASKING\nPROVIDENCE TO PULL THE\nWEEDS IN THE GARDEN.\nThe best thing about the great\nopen spaces ts that it's usually several   miles   between   saxophones.\nChina isn't shipping us so many\nancient eggs now, but the country\nstill has enough for dramatic criticism.\nCorrect this sentence: \"The widow\nfollowed the advice -of her late husband's friends.\" said the gossip, \"and\nmade a lot of money.\"\n<The   Daily   News,   Sept.   26,   1917.)\nMarcus  Martin returned  yesterday\nfrom Alnsworth.\n* \u2022\nRcbert Potter and W.  J.  Hill left\nyesterday afternoon on a fishing trip\nto Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nHarry Abey of Kaslo left yesterday\nfor Vancouver to enlist tn the flying\nAlex.  Henderson of Sandon is visiting   Nelson   foi*  a   few  days.\n*    *    \u2022\nLieutenant Donald McQuarrle of\nNelson has again reached France\nHe recently underwent another operation ln London.\nProvince's Claim\nto Saccession Duty\nDenied by Coart\nVANCOUVER, Sep*. 26. \u2014 Nearly\n12000 succession duty, claimed by the\nminister of finance from the estate of\nMrs. Leonora Clappam, whg died 13\nyears ago In Victoria, has been lost\nto the province through a Judgment of\nMr. Justice Morrison In supreme court,\ndenying the province's claim.\nHeating Stoves\nA good heater makes a comfortable home in cold\nweather.   We have the Clair Bros., Gait Stove and Round\nOak makes.  Brick-lined in four sizes-\nNo trouble to keep fire all night in one of our air-tight\nwood heaters.\nClair Bros., and Round Oak Ranges, Pipe and Pipeless\nfurnaces.\nIf you require a new furnace or your old one overhauled, we have a good furnace man for the job.\nWe can handle your sheet metal requirements in our\ntinshop.\nFIRST-CLASS WORKMANSHIP\nNelson Hardware Co.\nNIUON\nintf   Rstr.ll   Quality\nPHONI tl\nr\\*r*m*re\nm a\n\"Her luncheons\nare so delightfully different!\"\no\nN THEIR way home they naturally were talking about the\nluncheon they had just attended at Mrs. Richardson's.\nEvery detail had been perfect. The table brought forth \"a\ndozen exclamations of delighted surprise. The dishes were unusual and admirably prepared.   The service, was flawless.\nThey wondered how Amy Richardson did it. What was her\nsecret. A few years ago she had been teaching school\u2014now\nshe was the most perfect hostess in their little set\nMrs. Richardson could have told them that most of her\nideas come from reading advertising.\nFrom the silverware and linen advertisements she learned\nnew ideas in table decoration because she realized that these\nadvertisements were prepared by persons who were experts\nin tasteful and original arrangement\nProm the food advertisements she learned of new dishes,\nnew recipes, unusual things because she knew these advertisements were prepared by leading domestic! scientists.\nMrs. Richardson read the advertisements for the real news\nbf one of the things she wanted to do well\u2014the business of being\na perfect hostess. .     - \u2022\u00a5.'*.,\u00ab\u00bb I m\nEvery woman can do as Mrs. Richardson does. The material is there for all to read and utilize. Read advertising more\ncarefully, look for ideas and you will find them\u2014and save money\nas you carry them out\nRead advertising regularly.\n 'THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, 1927\nPagsFive\nOur Pomps snd Slippers\nI shown for fall wear are\n(torred in every way.\nJ Showing in Patent, Satin\n[and Kid.   Priced\nfS-50 to $10.00\nR. Andrew & Ct.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nCRANBROOK NOTES\n\u25a0GRANBROOK,    B.C.,   Sept.    26.\u2014Mra\nTH,   Melf-aa   !\u25a0   In   Toronto   visiting\n\"Mf.\nHyde   MacKinnon,   son   of   Mr.   and\n1. A. A. MacKinnon, returned to To-\nInto   on   'Wednesday   to   resume   his\nTidies  In the university.\n8. Dunlop returned to Cranbroofc\nUa week after three weeks' absence\nmt in the interests of the Brother-\nof Locemottito Engineers at Mont-\nMr. Dunlop attended the Toronto\nijbition and renewed acquaintance\n1 old scenes In the east.\n^.r. and Mrs. F. Parks and Mrs. J. F.\nbhnont are visitors to Banff for a few\nmf this Week, motoring.\n[Mr. and. Mrs. A. C. Blaine are In Spo-\ntto see the finish of the air derby.\n.  and  Mra.   W.   H.  Wilson   left  by\nr for Vancouver on Tuesday with\ndaughter,  Jean,  who la  resuming\nsr studies tn the university.\nMrs. J. AS McD. Young hpld her post-\nStial reception at her horae'on Bur-\nI avenue on Thursday afternoon,\nMta   t   until   9  o'clock.     Miss   Jessie\n.ynes received the guests at the door.\n'\u00ab. Dennlson Wilson and Mrs. Walter\nodie poured tea and coffee, and Mrs.\nlQlsm Wilson and Mrs. Martin Har-\n.\u00bb\u2022 and Mrs. Fred Bcott served the\nJtlaty, refreshments. The decorations\n\u25a0ere in mauve and pink, with a table\nrater of sweet peaB flanked by mauve\nInflles. Mrs. Young wore her wedding\np#n of Grecian rose georgette,, snd\ntee assisted by her mother, Mrs. J, T.\n|Strs.' A. J. Balment returned to Cran-\nfroek on Tuesday from a week's visit\nft 'Calgary. Mrs. Balment's mother,\n|r\u00ab. (Hansford, accompanied her to Cal**\n' snd -remained for another week\n_____ friends.\nIA wedding of deep Interest to many\n1\nGOVERNMENT IS\nPremier MacLean a* Cranhroofc\nSays He WiU Carry\noo aa Before\nWILL ENDEAVOR TO\nAVOID PAST ERRORS\nMayor Welcomes Him; Large\nAudience Hears Premier's\nSpeech\nry may grow and attract outside espial and more population. Another crltl-\n\u25a0ism that his government wss a machine government was refuted by the\nfact that the contract for pro\\ ill on*\nfor the asylum at New Westminster\nwas awarded this year on tender to the\nConservative candidate in that riding\nAnother contention, that tbe government was controlled by the liquor Interests, was disproved by tht Investigations which hsd been conducted before Tribunals composed of such men\nas Mr. Justice Morrison, Dr. Henderson\naod W. H   Malkin.\nBacks IDs Potior\nHe justified the policy of hts government in the past by citing the progress\nmade in public buildings, such as hospitals, sebools for the deaf, dumb and\nblind, mothers' pensions, the improve -\n\/nent la agriculture, fishing, lumbering\nand mining, and gave figures to show\nthat British Columbia has so Increased\nIn manufactures as to now rank as\nthird province ln the Dominion in that\nline ef industry.\nHis government in the future would\npursue the same policy, only seeking to\navoid the mistakes of the past, and he\nvlsfoned for his audience a greater\nBritish Columbia, with her agricultural\nproduction sufficient for her population, her mining, lumbering and manufacturing surplus and the agricultural\nsurplus of Alberta and Saskatchewan\nflowing through hsr impro\\ed porta\nand harbors to the markets of the\norld.\niLACKHEADS\nOet two ounces of peroxine\n'powder from your druggist.\nSprinkle on a hot, wet cloth\nnd rub the face briskly. Every\nackhead will be dissolved. The ens\nite, sure and simple way to remove\nackhead s.\nPEONIES\nt Lovely Peonies Each Different\n$1.60   Postpaid\nId.  &  O. Dodds,  Sorrento, B.C.\nOladiolis and Peonies.   Send for\n1   Catalog\nOIANBHOOK, B.C.. Sept 15. \u2014 The\npublic meeting called for the purpose\nof hearing the Hon. Dr. MacLean, prime\nminister of British Columbia at the\nAuditorium, Cranbrook, on Friday eve*\nnlng opened with a large audience oon*-\nposed of people from both parties.\nW. A. Nisbet, as chairman, congratulated Dr. MacLean on his .selection for\nthe high office he now holds and spoke\nfeelingly and eulogistically of the nigh\ncharacter of nls predecessor, the lata\nHon. John Oliver.\nMayor T. M. Roberts, In a brief but\nwell pointed speech, extended the welcome of the city of Cranbrook to the\nprime minister.\nMrs. H. A, MacKowan, for tbe women\nof the city and district, congratulated\nDr. MacLean on his past record ln tbe\ngovernment of   which   he   is   now  the\nead.\nHon. Dr. MacLean In opening said ln\ncoming before the people in this tour,\nwhich' would extend from Fernle u>\nGreenwood aad is elude alt large centers between; his object was to give\nthe people tbe opportunity, to which\nthey were entitled, of seeing and hearing their new premier, to explain the\npolicy-of the government, and by his\ntalk dispel any prejudice which may exist with regard to that policy.\nOemparea Ooodiaens\nTn carrying out this object, he compared the present condition of the country With the condition tn UK. Against\nthe deficits, unemployment, bread lines\nand damaged credit of that time, when\nmoney was borrowed at 88, there was\nteday a balanced budget of fourteen\nmillions ln tbe sinking fund, lowered\ntaxation and e credit second only to\nthe province of Quebec, which enables\nBritish Columbia to borrow money at\n96.\nHe dealt with some of the criticism\nadvanced by the Conservative party.\nThat the present government was\nspending too much money he answered\nby referring to the balanced budget,\nand further explained that a new country such . as British Columbia must\nhave large sums expended on roads,\npublic buildings, agriculture and, above\nall, education, ln order that the coun-\npeople of this district will take place In\nVancouver on September 28. when Miss\nElsie Beattie, eldest daughter of the\nlate R. B. Beattie of the Vancouver\nharbor commission and a former resident of Cranbrook. will be married to\nHerbert Chester, eldest son of Mr. and\nMrs. H. Chester of Cranbrook.\nThe young couple will return here\nfor a few days' visit before taking up\ntheir residence at Invermere, where Mr.\nChester is employed on the staff of the\nexperimental farm.\nMrp. H. Chester and son, Gilbert, left\nOB the noon train, Friday, for Vancouver. ......\nThe Misses Lillian Jackson, Marion\nMiles, Marion Henderson of Cranbrook\nand Miss Burdette - of Klmberley snd\nChester Roberts and James Taylor of\nCranbrook left this week for Vancouver\nto pursue their studies ln the university.\nFIREPLACE FIXTURES\nThe fireplace with its cheerful blaze is the heart of\nthe home.   Equip yours with necessary fixtures and irons.\nBASKET COAL GRATES\nFIRESIDE SETS\nFIRE SCREENS\nHEARTH BRUSHES\nCOAL SHOVELS\nCOAL HODS\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.\nPHONI *\u00bb7\nL.ok for ths Rsd Hardwsrs Itsrs\nBOX  414\ni\nJs(htup to Save Your Eyes\nTo prcvtnt rye-strain and keep your vision\nkeen, use Edison Mania Lamps freely. Their\nInside Frosting diffuses light properly, and\ntheir long life makes them economical. Ask\nyour dealer. mi\nEDISON MAZDA\nINSIDE       TROSTbD\nL\nLAMPS\nCANADIAN CENEQAL ELECTQIC PQODUCT\nSlocan City Free of\nInfantile Paralysis\nbut Cancels tke Fair\n\u25a0Locajf citt, \u00bb.c. s\u00abvt. aa.\u2014\nThe \u25a0looms, Tslley Agricultural\nemeoekm*\\mQm\\ have oaaevUsd thtfr\nfruit tait tor this yaar owing to\nMam epidemic ot infanta* paralysis.\nHoean o.ty la now trmw, the little\nBobsR-ti child having fully recovered trom the malsdy.\nAfter Trip in United States He\nThinks Canada'the Better\nPlgce to Live in\nNAKUSP, B.C., Sept. 25.-\u2014C. S. Lesry,\nM.L.A., who has Just returned from a\nbusiness trip Including- Minneapolis,\nChicago, Boston and New Tork, retur*<\nwith a feeling of great aatiflfaction with\nhis own country\u2014Canada\u2014and especially hla own province\u2014British Columbia.\nAs a member of the provincial legislature he naturally kept his eye open regarding anything of a public nature\nwhich might In any way differ to that\nIn British Columbia\nProm a prohibition point of view, the\nwhole thing Is an absolute farce, he\nstates, alcoholic drinks In some parts\nare openly offered for sale in such a\nmanner as to be impossible In Canada.\nThe courtesy of railway employees on\ntrains is also unfavorably commented\nupon. In comparison with the servioe of\nthe Canadian Pacific railway, while\ndining car meals, generally deemed ao\nexpensive In our own country, are considerably higher in the States. He\nbrought menus with him, and waa able\nto vouch for thla. Mr. Leary was a\nmuch-traveled man during and since the\nwar, but he was certainly glad to b*\nback on Canadian soil from ths \"land\npf the free.\" He, however, spoke highly of the business men with whom he\nhad transactions.\nMrs. James Anderson Is Ladies'\nChamp and A. W. Anderson\nthe Men's Champ\nKASLO, B.C., Sept. 26.\u2014Mrs. James\nAndarson is the ladies' champion and\nA. W\". Anderson Is the men's champion of the local golf club, am the\nresult of the finals in the annual\namateur cup tournament played today.\nMr. Anderson has won the cup two\nyears ln succession now.\nThe large cup In both the ladies'\nand men's tournament, presented by\nColonel H. H. ArmsteacC Is passed on\neach year, but a sporting cup was\npresented to the two champions by\nPresident James Andarson, Whioh\nthey will retain.\nThe play was  as  follows:\nMen,  First  Round\nS.  8. Rouleau beat O.  D.  Bdsmond.\nW. H. Burgess beat Dr. Bartlay.\nR  H. Graves beat B. tt,  I_atham.\nSecond Round\nRouleau  beat Burgess.\nGraves beat T. h. E. Elderji.\nGordon Bowker beat J, Anderson.\nA. W. Anderson  beat H.  Giegerich.\nThird  Round\nRouleau   beat  Graves.\nA. W. Anderson beat Bowker.\nFourth   and   Final   Round\nA. W. Anderson beat S. S. Rouleau.\nLadles, First Round\nMrs. S. S. Chandler beat Mrs. J. J.\nSklllicorn.\nMrs. J. Anderson beat Mrs. J. J.\nBinns.\nMrs. E. H. Latham heat Miss Mabel\nHaml'ton.\nSecond Round\nMrs. Latham beat Miss Giegerich.\nMrs. J. Anderson beat Mrs. Chandler.\nFinal Round\nMrs. J. Anderson beat Mrs. Latham\nlJSCA\u00a5OTTNOTir\"\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Sept. 25.\u2014Mrs.\nW. A. Jackson went to Nelson on Wednesday to see her husband, who is a\npatient In  Kootenay Lake  hospital.\nAlderman H. L. Fife left a few daya\nago on a business trip to Edmonton.\nP. Schonberg left a few days ago on\nan extended visit to coast cities.\n' When using\nWILSON'S\nFLY PADS\n3CAD   DIRECTIONS\nCAREFULLY AND ,\n\"HOW THEM\n\u25a0 HY   '\nBest of all Fir KHIera\u201410c and\n25c per packet at all Druggists,\nGrocers and .General Stores.\nt_m&am\n\u2022Thi? column is conducted by Mrs.\nli J. Vigneux. All news of a social\nnature. Including receptions, privet*\nentertainments, personal items,\nmarriages, etc., will appear la this\ncolumn. Telephone Mrs. Vigneux at\nhsr home on Silica street\nMr. and Mrs. H. M. Whimster, Fair-\nview, havs had as tbtlr house guest\nfrom Erickson. Mra G. Cartwrlght, who\nwas ons of the Judges at the Nelcon\nfair.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nBenjamin Creasey of Harrop apent\nSaturday in town.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nW. Lee of Bonnington was a visitor\nto the city Saturday.\nR. H. Grey left for his home in New\nWestminster, Saturday, after spending\na holiday the guest of his dun ana\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. B.\nOray, Baker street.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Hsanay of Trail, Who is summering at Crescent Bay, was a Nelson\n\u25a0hopper Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAlan McAlpin of Lethbrldge, who has\nbeen visiting friends in Nelson, returned Saturday from Kaslo, where he\nwent to visit his niece, Miss Dorothea\nSandercock, who teaches at Sandon\n\u25a0    \u2022    \u2022.\nRev. J. S. Mahood of Queens Bay wan\nin the city over the week-end .officiating at St. Saviour's church for Ven.\nArchdeacon Fred H. Graham, who la in\nthe east.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nArohle McCormlcfc of Passmore wa.*\na visitor to town during the fair\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Elliott of Trail, who\nhave been holidaying at Procter, werr\nin Nelson Saturday an route to their\nhome.\n\u2022 \u00ab    *\nW. O. Miller and daughter, Miss Toots\nMiller, left Saturday night for a visit\nto  Vancouver.\n\u2022 mm\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh Ross, Silica street,\nentertained at bridge recently honoring\nout-of-town guests who were in Nelson laat week judging at th* fair. Tho\nhonors of the gams went to Mr. and\nMrs. E. C. Hunt, Mrs. M. J. Boyd of\nCreston and H, S. French of Cranbrook,\nThe players Included R. P. Murray of\npenttcton, K. W. White of Victoria, H.\ni, French of Cranbrook, G. L. Landon,\nMrs. G. Cartwrlght of Erickson, Mrs.\nM. J. Boyd of Creston. Mr. and Hrr. K\nC. Hunt, Mm. H. M. Whimster, Mr. and\nMrs. Leslie Bedford and E. Greenwood\nif Victoria. \u25a0\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. W. E. Keyt, Carbonate street,\nand her small daughter, Audrer. have\n-eturned from a vacation to Victoria\nind coast cities.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. T. A. Alrey of Cedar\nPoint were in town Saturday en route\n'0 a vacatlofl to be spent at t.te coast\n'itles.\n\u2022 \u2666    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. E. Nightingale of Vancouver flfrenj the week-end in Nelson.\nMra. Parker and child, Baker street,\nleft Saturday for' the coast citlet.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. snd Mrs. James Duffy have returned from their honeymoon spent st\n'he coast cities.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMra. Wilson Whltelsy of South Sin-\ncan was a visitor te ttwvn Saturday.\nMrs. C. Cronln of Procter sper.t Saturday in town.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nMrs. Martin KendrJck of Rossiand\nwas a visitor to the city Saturday.\nDr. Major of Sunshine B\u00bby spent Saturday shopping and attending the fair\nn Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. C. vLjdagnon, silica\nstveet, -have a* \u00abhelr h-bfai* gtfestft Mrs.\nWilliam Barrett of Calgary, and her\nson, Harold, who arrived in town last\nnight.\n'   *    \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Robert Thompson, High street,\nand her son, Malcolm Thompson of\nTrail returned to town Friday from a\nfortnight spent at the coast elites, nnd\nSpokane, where they attended tne air\nderby.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr& Frank H. Hill, Kerr apartment*,\nhas returned from a visit to friends In\nKelowna.\nt    \u2022    s\nMiss Maud Arbeau of Salmo was a\nvisitor to Nelson over the week-end.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMiss Elisabeth McKinnon, teacher at\nProcter, spent the week-end In town,\nthe guest of her mother, Mrs. L. McKinnon, Victoria street.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nMiss Lorna MacLean, who teaches a*\nHarrop, was the week-end guest of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. MacLean.\nEdgewood avenue.\nW. B. Bamford, C.P.R. district freight\nagent, leaves this morning for points\nnn the Crow.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nSylvio Muraro, Silica street, left Nel-\nMr. and Mrs. G. Noel Brown of Bonnington were city shoppers Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nB. L. Eastman of Riondel spent Saturday ih Nelson attending the fair.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. J. Nichols of Frocter\nwere visitors to town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. W. J. Turner of Salmo waa a\nhopper in Nelson Saturday.\ns   *   \u2022\nR. Kennedy of Rossiand arrived in\ntown Friday and left Saturday to visit\n\u25a0lis parenta In Slocan City.\n\u2022 e   a\nJ. O'Tool of Ross' Spur spent Saturday in Nelson.\nsee\nS. Freeman of Alamo was a visitor\nto town Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. W. B. Steed, Laftmer\natreet, have left for the coast cities by\nmotor.\n\u2022 v    \u2022\nE. Doney of Sandon waa a visitor to\nown Saturday.\n\u2022 \u25a0\u00bb    *\nMrs. I. Van Trump of Chicago, who\nhas been visiting relatives and friends\nin Nelson, leaves via th* Arrow laker\n(might for her home.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nK. H. Shook and son of Sloc.tn City\nwere  city visitors  Saturday.\nI   el\nHarold Mclnnes, the Trail lawyer,\nBpent the week-end with ft iendB In\nnelson.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. J. L. Purdy of South Slocan paid\na visit to town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJ. J. Banfleld, Vancouver broker, left\nfor his home Saturday after a visit to\nNelson and district.\n\u00bb    \u2666    \u2022\nMiss Muriel A. Johnston left yeaterday for her home ln Seattle after a\nvisit to, Captain and Mrs. Walter\nWright, Kerr apartments.\nMrs. I. Bourke, Annable block, left\nSaturday to spend a week the guest of\nher son and daughter-in-law, Commander and Mrs. Rowland Bourse, at Cres\ncent Bay.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. M. J. Boyd, who acted as Judge\nat the fair, has left for her home in\nCreston.\nmee\nMr. and Mrs. John Burns, Miss Jean\nBums and Teddy Burns and Miss Kathleen Rahl motored to Trail yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMra. W. J. Meagher and son, Frank,\nhave returned from a couple of weeks\nspent mt the coast.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr.   snd   Mrs.   SL -I*.   Nightingale   of\nVancouver, who have bean visiting\nfriends in Nelaon for a few days, left\nlast night for their home.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. George Boudler aad son of Three\nForks, who have been visiting tne for-\ntrier's daughter. Miss Emily Boudier,\nfor the last four days, leave for their\nhome thla morning.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJack Weir, who has been visiting his\nparents, Mr. and Mra James Weir, for\nthe paat two weeks, left Saturday night\nfor Vancouver, wher* he Is employed ln\n$11 Baker Street.   PhonstOO.\nFall Coats Never Have\nBeen as Luxurious\nRich and supple and cleverly manipulated fabrics, fashion\nthese Coats, and never have furs been used in such an abundant fashion or in such a variety, while fabric treatments,\nself seamings, pipings, and geometrical designs, individualize\nthe coats and lend a silhouette more slender, and more youthful than ever. We have just received a beautiful line of these\nsmart coats which go on display, and we hope every woman\nwho is searching for a new Coat will visit this display. Rea-\nSONABLY PRICED AT *25.00 TO f 150.00 EACH.\nNew Millinery\nChic new Fall models in Felt and Velvet, in choice fitting and\nsmall brim styles as well as the smart vagabond models. All\nnew colors and Black, smartly trimmed in the new shape manner.\nSelections for both matron and miss. EACH f5.O0 TO f 18.50.\nNew Satin Frocks\nIn one- and two-piece belted effect with fitted htpline. New\npleated and flare skirts topped by youthful bolero effects.\nJ These are the frocks smart women should choose without delay\nfor these are the frocks that embody every new Paris tendency\nfor Fall. All new colors and Black in sizes for both Women and\nMisses.   SPECIALLY PRICED AT $22.50 TO $65.00 EACH.\nthe commercial department of the British Columbia Telephone company.\nsee\nAram Pashgian leaves this morning\nfor Pasadena, Cal., after spending two\nweeks in Nelson.\n\u2022    *    \u2022\nJohn Lojd, late of the Nelson Transfer company, leaves this morning to\nwork at  the Lucky Jim  mine.\nYAHK NOTES\nYAHK, B.C., Sept. 25. \u2014 A quiet wed\nding took plac* at Cranbrook on Thursday, September 16, in presence of immediate relatives and friends, when\nRev. H. McNeill of the Baptist church\nunited In holy matrimony Miss Mary\nMIsabeth Burlfngham, second eldeat\ndaughter nf Mr. and Mrs. N. R. Burling-\nham of Yahk, and the onlv son of lit'\nand Mrs. S. L. Patterson, Cranbrook.\nAfter a short honeymoon in thp\nStates, Mr. and Mrs. -Patterson will\nmak*   their  home  fn  Cranbrook.\nWilliam Pederson left Saturday for\nCamp 16, where he has accepted a position as night watchman on the C.P.R.\nrifmai.\nMr. and Mrs. Reginald Lanfear, Miss\nL. Burllngham were motorists to East-\nport, Idaho, Wednesday.\n'KIMBERLEY NOTES\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Sept. 25. \u2014 The\nwhist drive given under the Auspices of\n*\"\u2022 Knights of Pythias in their new\nliall Friday evening drew a fair crowd\nA musical program was Immensely en-\nJoyed, the Kimberley band in attendance. Refreshments served by thi1\nr-vthlah Sisters came In for their fharp\nnf praise. Prlz*- winners -wpre: Ladies'\nfirst, Mrs. B. Herd: consolation, Mrs\nHogg; men's first. L. Mawson; consolation,  T.  t\\.  Leighton.\nMr. Richmond was master of ceremonies in a most capable manner.\nThe dance given In Oughtred hall,\nhnpmnn Camp, on Friday evening was\ni huge success McKay's ever-popular\norchestra dispensed music to the satfs-\n'action of ell. The proceeds from the\n^ance are t*? be used to Improve the\n\u2022hildren's playground. Harry 8ton>\n'va\u00ab  tn  charge of the  arrangements.\nEd I>eschamns and family nf Kini-\nVfley left Saturdav morning fnr a mn-\n\u00b01tri? '^ Richer Creek ->nd Calrary.\nJ. T. Thompson and W. Bailey of\nklmberley, who have been hunting In\nV Windermere country, returned Prl-\n\u25a0ay evening minpa the big game thev\nvere after. Th-*y did, however, succeed\n\u2022i hagglng a few birds. Thev report\n\u2022Mlly weather, w'th Ice on the water\n\u2022i  the earlv mnrnfnga\nM\". and Mr= H. H. Moll have return-\nd from an enloyable vicntton apent in\n''\"nttl* and  other coast points.\n.T. Crooks and fnmflv nf Klmberlev\n'\u2022\u25a0ft Saturday morning for a motor trip\nn prairie points.\nP.   V.   HORN!)\nIs shown above In a unique \"safety suit\" recommended for aviators,\nwhich he ls demonstrating in Canada, It can be donned In 18 seconds over ordinary clothing, and is\nguaranteed to keep the wearer warm\nand afloat, in case of a fall Into the\nwater.\nWINS HURON\nSALMO NOTES\nSALMO. B.C., Sept. 25.\u2014Miss Edith\nGreene, who lias bt*en spending the past\nweek the guest of Mms Muriel Lindow,\nreturned  to  her  homo  in  Ymlr.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Brenner and Mr. and\nMrs. J. Sappb'H spent Thursday jn Nelson.\nJaok Moe, who has heen attending\nhigh school in Natron, has returned to\nhia home, owing to the ban being again\nput on the schools due to a case of\nspinal meningitis  in  the city.\nMrs. Q. O. Pair has left to spend a\nfew  days  visiting   in  Nelaon.\nW. B. Ponle of the Reno mine has\nreturned to his home after spending a\nfew days In Nelsoa on business.\nS, J. McDonald has returned from the\ncoast, where hw has been spending the\npast week.\nThe munthly meeting of the Community club was held at the home of\nMrs.  J.  L)n\u00ab.ss on  Wednesday.\nThe  home  of  Mrs.  O.  Matthews  wu*\nthe scene of a Jolly crowd at the  tea\nhour  Tuesday,   when  ahe  entertained  a\number of her friends.    Among the in\nvited guests were Mesdames B. Feeney,\nJ, Payaht, M. McCaslin, J. Happies, A.\nItremner,   W.   Miller,   J.   Linean   and   R.\nYMIR, B.C., Sept. 26.\u2014Miss D. Whit-\ntaker was visiting Miss Edna Burges*\nfor a few days.\nMr. Pomeroy arrived la town on\nThursday. He ls Interested In tho\nHoward mine.\nMrs. L. M. Prochnow returned home\nFriday evening after spending a month\nwith her mother at Yakima, Wash.\nKASLO NOTES\nGEOftGE   SPOTTON\nConservative, who iron tfie North\nHuron, Ontario* byelectlon wtth dill\nvotes. His Liberal opponent, Archibald Hislop, polled 4SI8 and Shsldon\nBricker, United Farmers of Ontario,\n2728.\nKASLO, B.C., Sept. 25. \u2014 O. Hall ot\nConiston and H. 11. Yulll of London,\nboth of the Victoria Syndicate, wen.\nvisitors   to   town   Wednesday.\nAlan McAlpin of Lethbridge was a\nWednesday  visitor  to  town.\nMiss D. Sandercock of Sandon spent\nThursday in the city.\nMra J. H. Tattrle of Sandon was a\nThursday visitor In Kaslo.\nAmong Nelsonltes arriving In the city\nFriday were Albert Celros, John Johnson, John Parvialnan and Tom Gundei-\nson.\nMrs. Raper and sona of Johnson's\nLanding spent Thursday tn town.\nFred Johanson left Thursday morn-\nlog for the prairie, where ht will teaoh\n\u2022wool during the coming winter,.\nRow Whittahff has goaa ta Vancou\nver, where he will attend the University of British Columbia during th*\nwinter sessions.\nOeorge Palethorpe, district forest\nranger, has returned from an extended\ntrip through the Upper Duncan and\nLards districts.\nPete Kelly, who haa been a plttlent In\nthe local hospital for several weekv,\nhas been discharged from that institution and left for Poplar Saturday.\nMrs. A. Esch and ohlldrsn of Edmonton, who hive been tbe guests of Mrs.\nEkcI.'h mother, Mrs. Catherine Hughes,\nfor the past few weeks, left for their\nhome  Friday  morning.\nF. T. Abey has returned from a two-\nweeks' holir'nv trip spent at Spokane\nnnd coast cities.\nLittle Jerry Heffernan of Mirror\nLake fell from an apple tree Thursday,\nbreaking his arm. He :s a patient In\nthe  Victorian   hospital.\nMias Kennedy of Portland. Ore., i*\nihe house guest nf Or. nnd Mrp. W. A.\nAllen.\nMrs. McCouhrey and children have\nreturned from an extended visit to the\ncoast.\nBuy Bee Cee Cigars\nA British Columbia product. Wonderful 1 ii <-tnt value. Our Special Mix is\ngoing strong.\nBUSH'S\nDiamond Rings\nIiABGE VARIETY\nNEWEST   SETTINGS\nPERFECT -STONES\nA T. NOXON\nYOUR   JEWELER\nNo more\nDishpan\nhands\nJust * spoonful of Lux ta\nplenty to do ill\nthe dUhe.\u2014and\noh I how fntenil your land*\nwill be, how whit* and toft\nyour -kin\n amw\nft#Hx\"<\nTTHE NELSON DJ1ET NEWS;HONBXY HORNINC, SEPTEMBER 26, 182?\nCURSE O* LOVE\nBy MILDRED BARBOUR\nthe\nthe Action and Characters\nCREEP., the beautiful,\nultra-modern only daughter\nwealthy family, recelvaa, on\nt* af har marriage to\nBASIL HARCOURT, retired,\nBritish army, a man nearly\ntwice her age, the anonymous gift\nof a magnificent black opal. At the\nsight of the opal, Major Harcourt\nla greatly agitated.He goes back to\nEngland without explanation. Frantic at being Jilted ln tba eleventh\nhour, Cynthia dashes .out In her\ncar, determined to marry the first\nman ahe can find, ao that lt will\nappear tbat ahe eloped on tha eve\nof her wedding. She meets a gay\nadVenturer.   His name ia\nKINO CARSON, and she asks blm to\ngo through a marriage ceremony\nwith ber. Carson, who baa apent\nten years ln the oil fields ln liex-\nIco, where be haa made a fortune,\nti keen for adventure, and the situation appeals to him. He agrees\nto marry her. They part immediately after the ceremony. During\nthe drive home, Cynthia's car Is\nwrecked ln a storm, and her purse,\nwith her marriage certificate and\nthe black opal, Is swept away,\nwhile she ls desperately Injured.\nWhen she recovers, her memory of\nail tbe events of that night are\ngone, and her parents are ln ignorance of what has happened. Meanwhile, Cynthia's hand-bag, containing the opal, haa been found by\nNORMA COLLINS, the charming\ndaughter of the nouveau rlche\nJ. i>. COLLINS. His ambition Is to\nse\u00ab -Norma jMtrrted to \u2022 poor, but\nsocially  eligible  young jnan,\nPHIUP KENDALL, who is in love\nwith Norma, but is forced to swal-\nlow'hls pride and aak her father for\nj a loan to savt- his business, since\nhis friend. King Carson, upon whom\nbe depended or help, is delayed in\narriving. Collins offers the money\nto Kendall as hla son-in-law only,\nand Kendall, torn between love for\n\" Norma and dire necessity, proposes\n' marrtage to her. She Joyfully accepts. Ignorant of the financial\ntransaction between Kendall and\nher father. Carson arrives ln town\nJust after -Kendall and Norma have\nleft on their honeymoon. Following\nhia friend to the Collins summer\nhome, where Kendall and Norma\n\u2022re honeymooning, Carson learns\nAbout ttfe loan and agrees to advance Kendall enough money to\npay lt off, thus removing the only\ncloud trom the bridegroom's happiness. But Norma haa already\nsensed tbat something is wrong and\nhas began to think her husband\ndoes not love her. She meets a\nformer  suitor, '\nBYD^EY STOKES who haa never\nforgiven her for rejecting him. He\nmakes  a  sinister  insinuation   con\ncerning Philip Kendall. Norma,\ndeeply troubled, makes an appli-\npotntment to meet him and hear\nhla explanation. He tells her of\nthe deal between her husband and\nher father, but does not mention\nthe subsequent transaction with\nCarson, and she believes that\nKendall married her for her money.\nShe does not know that, by accident, he has seen her with Stokes\nand wonders why she was meeting her former suitor. Meanwhile,\nCarson, hoping again to see Cynthia,\nhas gone to the vicinity of their\nmeeting-place. Although she had\nrefused to unveil her face at their\nmarriage ceremony, he hopes to\nidentify her car, not knowing that it\nhas been wrecked. Unable to bear\nthe thought that Kendall married\nher for money, Norma goes to her\nfather's bungalow to think out her\nproblems. Stokes follows her. Kendall finds them there. Norma has\ngiven Stokes the opal for safe\nkeeping in the bank vault, and, as\nhe leaves the bungalow that night,\nhe ls shot by an assailant, who\nescapes. Norma, terrified lest Kendall be accused of the shooting,\nforces him to summon medical aid\nand leave her alone with Stokes.\nThe family doctor takes care of\nStokes, but Kendall, believing\nNorma loves her former suitor,\ndisappears. Meanwhile, the opal ls In\nthe possession of Stokes' assailant,\n\"SLIPPERY SAM,\" who, fearing he\nhas killed his victim, enlists the aid\nof his wife,\nFANNY, to get rid of the Jewel. She\ndecides to sell It to an eccentric\ncollector,\nSANCHEZ. On seeing the atone,\nSanches apparently loses his mind.\nThe outcome of the shooting ls that\n* Kendall leaves Norma, without ex-\nplantation, and Stokes recovers.\nWhen Sanchez dies, his belongings,\ntogether with the black opa, go to\nhis friends.\nPROF, LIND, and his wife, Ada.\nUnd then dies and his wife goes\nto a winter resort, where she meets\nNorma, who is staying at the same\nhotel. King Carson, learning of\nPhilip's departure for the orient,\ncomes back from Europe to try to\nadjust matters, and locates Norma,\nShe te Is him what happened at\nthe bungalow, but she cannot bring\nherself to tell him why she went\nthere, or that Stokes had said\nPhilip had married her for her\nmoney. He wants to go to the\norient to find Philip, but feeling\nthat Norma is not telling him\neverything, he decides to postpone\nthe trip until she confides more\ncompletely In hhn.\nCHAPTER  XLVI.\nTho Susceptible Heart\nAda Lind was waiting in the lounge\nwhen Norma and King Carson emerged   from   the   dining-room   after\n\u2014stealing happiness and prosperity. Yet for a few\ndollars a year loss from the death of the breadwinner,\nBurglary, Fire Accident, Sickness\u2014any source\u2014may be\navoided. The answer is INSURE with any of those\nnamed below.\nFor! Fire Insurance\nAutomobile\u2014Life\u2014Accident and Sicknei*\u2014Plate\nGlass and All Other Forms oi Insurance\nJ. E. ANNABLE G. A. HUNTER\nC. W. APPLEYARD C. F. McHARDY\nC. D. BLACKWOOD HUGH W. ROBERTSON\nB. W. DAWSON H. E. DILL\nP. E. POULIN\nFor Life Insurance^\nC. W. APPLEYARD, Sun Life Assurance Co.\nC.  D. BLACKWOOD, The Great Wert Life Assurance Co.\nR. W. DAWSON, Imperial Life Assurance Co.\nE. H. HANLEY, North American Life Assurance Co.\n8. C. LATORNELL, Dominion Life Assurance Co.\nC. F. McHARDY. Monarch Life Assurance Co.\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON, Canada Life Assurance Co.\nH. E. THAIN, Monarch Life Assurance Co.\nJR. C.  NAIRN,  Griffin   Block;   Manufacturers'   Life\nAssurance Co\ni: ROSS FLEMING, Sun Life Assurance Co.\nUMfrPWlAr*, North American Ufe Assurance Co.\ntheir rather unsatisfactory Interview.\nAda beamed upon them both.\n\"Wall, I hope everything Is nicely\nsettled,\" she remarked.\n\"Far from it. Mrs. Lind,\" answered\nCarson deliberately. \"For my part,\nI Intend to remain here until Mrs.\nKendall chooses to confide In. ms\nmors  fully.\"\nAda looked distinctly pleased A\npersonable young man and s. friend\nof Norma's waa Just what she bad\nbeen most ardently hoping to*'. She\nfelt that at least she was to have a\ntaste of youth and the chance to try\nher restored charms cn a member of\nthe opposite sex.\nBut Norma sighed and made a\nweary   gesture.\n\"If you'll excuse me, I think I'll\ngo to my room. I'm very tired,\"\nshe murmured.\n\"Perhaps I can persuade Mrs. Und\nto take a little stroll with me on the\nbeach,\"   suggested   Carson. \u2022\n\"I should be delighted,\" Ada\nagreed, with alacrity, \"but I must\nget  a  wrap.\"\nShe came back presently with a\nblack lace mantilla over her dinner\ngown. Carson offered her his arm\nand they went out together into the\nnight.\n\"Norma\u2014-Mrs. Kendall's a perfect\ndear, Isn't she ?\" Ada ventured, as\nthey descended the steps te the\nbeach,\n\"I'm not so sure of that as I'd like\nto be,\" Carson returned gravely. \"Tou\nsee, I dont know her as well as I\nknow; her husband. I admire her\ngreatly, that goes without saying,\nbut I'm not sure she hasn't treated\nby friend rather shabbily.\"\n\"Oh, no. you're quite mistaken,\"\nAda protestlnged hastily. \"She is very\nvery unhappy because her marriage\nIsn't\u2014well,   hasn't   been  a   succtse.\"\n\"See here,\" said Carson abruptly,\n\"lt may not be fair play to discuss\nher behind her back, but\u2014has she\nconfided   in  you at all?\"\n\"Only to say that she and her husband had a misunderstanding and he\nwent   away.\"\n\"I'd give half I own to know what\nthat misunderstanding was about,\"\nmuttered Carson. \"Women\u2014I beg\nyour pardon, but It's true\u2014can play\nthe deuce with a chap's intelligence.\nWhen she's talking to me, ahe makes\nthe story seem fairly lucid, but, when\nI stop to think lt over\u2014\"\nAda laid a sympathetic hand on\nhis  arm.\n\"Don't distrust her,\" she pleaded.\n\"She's a dear, sweety true girl.\"\nHe looked down at her audaciously\nas she trotted  along  beside  him.\n\"I thought a woman never came\nto  the  defence  of  another  woman.\"\nAda sighed.\n\"It la a hit unusual\u2014especially\nwhen the other woman is 80 much\nyounger and prettier than herself.\nBut I've grown awfully fond of Norma. She's been very sweet to me and\nI\u2014I   have 00  few  friends.\"\n\"I can scarcely believe, that.\"\nCarson assured hsr grave'y. \"But*-\u2014\nmay  I   hope  to  count   myself   one?\"\nAda was in a perceptible flutter.\nIt was the first time ln 25 years\nthat she had strolled on a moonlit\nbeach alone with an attractive young\nman. She blushed and stammered\nlike a schoolgirl when she attempted  to respond  to  his  suggestion.\nCarson, the irrepressible, grinned\nunder cover of the darkness.\n\"I wonder what she'd do 11 I\nkissed her.\"  he  thought.\nAs lt was, he drew her arm more\nclosely through his and laid his\nhand   lightly   over   hers.\n\"You're cold,\" he said solicitously.\n\"Shall   we   turn   back?\"\n\"Oh, no, no,\" declared Ada hastily'\n\u2014and was sure she had said the\nwrong thing, and became more\nflushed   than   ever.\n\"Let's stop for a soda, here\/' he\nsuggested, indicating a beach cafe*\nwhere gay lights oeckoned.\nThey entered and seated themselves. Ada ordered a limeade, but\nher gaze fastened itself longingly\non a chocolate and marshmallow\nsundae. She sighed resignedly. The\nattempt at youth had Its  drawbacks.\n\"Why did Mrs. Kendall come here\nto the beach?\" Carson finally asked.\n\"I think lt was because she was\nunhappy at home People asked\nquestions about her husband. It was\nembarrassing for her. Poor little\ngirl,   I'm   frightfully  sorry   for  her.\"\n\"You approve of marriage, then?\nYon found the institution successful.\"\nAda hesitated.\n\"Not exactly, but I hope\u2014*\" She\npaused  and  blushed.\n\"The next time, eh?\" Carson smiled\nhis engaging smile. He leaned acrosa\nthe table. \"So do I\u2014hope,\" he added significantly, and his mischievous\neyes spoke volumes.\nHe knew he had made a conquest;\nat least, he had gained what he\nwanted\u2014a -staunch ally ln Ada\nLind.\n(To Be Continued.)\nFRASER FISHING\nON IN EARNEST\nBut It Is Silk Bales That People\nAre Salvaging After\nthe  Wreck\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 25.\u2014Wrecking crews of the Canadian Paclfio\nrailway are continuing tbelr efforts\nto salvage fire cars of raw silk valued at 11,-00,000 which hurtled into\nthe Fraser river near Talo on\nWednesday. According to official!\nthe silk will not suffer from immersion, aa the river at Tale la not\naffected by tidal conditions. Bome\nof the cars were smashed and the\nsilk floated down the river. Tale\nresidents are reported to have retrieved a large quantity of the commodity, while one Indian woman\n\"fished\"   out   40   bales.\ni-unraaa omm n*a\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 23. \u2014 John\n\u2022Trench Forbes, South Vaaeouver, on*\n'of the two Royal Canadian Mounted\npolice officers who escorted Louis Rlei\nto tke scaffold, is deal here.\nTRAIL-NELSON\nUSED   CAR   MARKET   REPORT\nBUYERS* PBOTECTIVE GUIDE NO. 5\n'\nThis data is compiled and published for your protection. Cut this out for ready reference.  You should\nnot pay more than the price listed below for cars in good condition. Consult the guide before deciding; on\nany purchase.  The latest copy should be in plain Tiew wherever used cars are offered for sale.\nPROSPECTIVE NEW CAR PURCHASERS MAY ESTIMATE   THE   ALLOWANCE   PRICE   OF\nTHEIR OWN CAR BY DEDUCTING FROM TH E PRICES BELOW THE NECESSARY EXPENS*\nFOR RECONDITIONING AND HANDLING.\nChevrolet\n1920    1111    1*1*    Hit    1124 1926    1921\nRoadater     t 90    (125    $160    $275    $376 $460    (650\nTouring    UI      110      260sp. 326      450 600      100\n200Reg.    .\nCoupe. 2-paas.   ITS  200  260  200  600 426  TOO\nCoupe, 4-pass.   400  660 \t\nSedan         176      200      325      400      (00 700      100\nCoach                400     460 060     700\nLandau  Sedan                  ... 726      216\nCommercial   Chassis      1(0     200 376     476\nUtility Express      2(0     1(0 (00     100\nChrysler\nModel   \"18\"                                                           192( 1921\nBr. B.W.100W B.W.268P\n4-Cyllnder                                                     toB.W.2(9P B.W.600D\nTouring         I 7(0 $860\nCoupe  ..-            100 9(0\nCoach                900 9(0\nSedan              1000 10(0\nMODEL \"60\" First car sold\n4-Cyllnder May 11th\nTouring    ,.  *rt_o\nRoadster     12(0\nCoupe   1360\nCoach     147(\nSedan    - ,  1400\nMODEL \"60\"         . 1024\nFirst car sold\n4-Cyllnder Aug. 21st\nCoupe  $1000\nCoach  102(\nSedan  1160\nSer. 1001 to 22818\nMODEL \"70\" 1924        1925        1224\n3241$\n\u2022\u2022Cylinder                                                            A.W.188W AW.188W\nTouring         $1000        $1200 $14(0\nRoadster           13(0         1650 1860\nCoup*               1760 1200\nCoach           ....           1400 1460\nStandard  Sedan         1400          1(00 17(0\nRoyal Sedan       1400         14(0 1950\nDodge\nSeries\u2014                 1220    1921     1922    1923    1924 1025    1924\nTouring Standard    $200    $276     $900    $600    $460 $760    $860\nTouring Special        276       200      ...       700 8.00      900\nRoadater Standard     200     250     800     450\nRoadater   Special\t\nCoupe Standard   200     860     450'    660\nCoupe  Special\t\nCoach Special\t\nSedan  Velour       350      400      600      700\nSedan Leather      (50\n700\n400\n(50\n700\n760\n800\n700\n760\n800\n850\n900\n900    1000 . 1150\n850      960    1050\n900\nBOO\n860\n900\n(50\nEssex\n4-Cyl.   4-Cyl.     4-Cyl.     4-Cyl\nCoach\nTrg.\nCoach\nTrg.\n1922   \t\n1226\n276\n476\n625\n726\n826\n400\nFord\nSeries\u2014\n1920\n1921    \"1322      1928\n1924\n1926\n1924\nSerial\n231000\n279000 219000 876000\n455142\n628500 688401\nNo.\u2014\nto\n279000\nto         to         to\n819000 376000 455142\nTouring Str.  .\n(160\n$186      $226      $260\n(316\n$850\n$4(0\nRunabout Str.\n125\n150        185        226\n285\n326\n\" 400\nChassis  Str.,.\n76\n85        100        125\n140\n190\n280\nTruck Str.  ...\n126\n160        176        200\n250\n300\n(50\nCoupe (old)  .\n175\n200        235        276\nCoupe   (new).\n276\n425\n665\nTudor   (new).\n400\n460\n426\nSedan   (old)   .\n176\n200        235        285\nFordor   \t\n...\n400\n466\n\u202225\nHudson\n1922\n1923\n1924\n1(26\nTear\n1922 .\n1921\n1(24 .\n1925   .\nCoach ( Sedan 7 Sedan Brougham Phaeton\n..$ 475       $...       $...        $...        $ 325\n..     (50 825 925   475\n..     826        1126        1276 .... (26\n..   1050          1450 1400 826\nJewett\nTouring\n(600\n725\n825\nSedan\n$775\n875\n(75\n1425\nCoupe\n$776\n876\nDe Luxe Models 1924-1926, $100 extra.\nStandard Sedan\n1\u00bb2(    ,.  $107(\nR'dster Br'gham\n$775    \t\n(76 $776\n  825\n1276 1325\nDe Luxe Sedan\n$1200\nMcLaughlin-Buick\n1922\nRoadster        $560\nFour-Cylinder\nTouring\nCoupe, 2-pass.\nCoupe, 4-pass.\nSedan, 2-door\nSedan, 4-door ,\n650\n650\n1928\n$850\n650\n860\n850\n860\n1924\n$760\n' 760\n900\nSix-Cylinder\nSpecial\n1(26\n1926\n$ 900\n$1250\n900\n1260\n1250\n1600\n1260\n1400\n1260\n1460\n1300\n1(00\nSIX-CYLINDER MASTER\n1920    1921    1922    1923    1924\nRoadster  $2(0   $400   $(50   (((0   (860\nTouring,  (-pass.      400      4(0      (00      700      900\nTouring, 7-pass. ..\nCoupe, 4-pass. ...\nSedan, 4-door, 6-p\nSedan, 7-pass. ....\nSedan,   2-door   ...\nBrougham   ,'\nBrougham\t\n8(0\n450\n460\n4(0\n400\n600\n(00\n600\n(00\n4(0\n4(0\n4(0\n\u202200 700\n((0 1200\n8(0 1200\n8(0 1200\n1200\n1200\n1925\n$1000\n1200\n925\n1600\n1400\n1600\n1800\n1600\n1(00\n1926\n$1200\n1200\n1200\n177(\n1700\n1800\n1(00\n1800\n1800\nPaige\nSedan\nTear Touring 7-P. Touring 4-P.\n1(21 _ -       $$7( $ 375\n19M   66\u2014 7\u00bb\u00ab       44\u2014   400       44\u2014$ 426\n64\u2014   400\n1412   70\u2014 (76       70\u2014   87(       70\u2014 127(\n1(24    70\u2014 (tl       70\u2014   97(       70\u2014 1675\nim     1775\n1(2(  Stad. Sedan  Dtftuxe Sedan   Cabriolet Brougham\n1776 1926 2675 1471\nCoupe,    Brougham\n44\u2014$ 426\n\u20226\u2014 87(\n70\u2014 975\n70\u2014 1076\n70\u2014 157(\nNash\n2 Brg.    17 Brg.\nCr-ksh'ft Cr'ksh K\n1920    1(21    1(22    1921    1924      1921      1424 111*\n(-pass. Touring. (400    $4(0    $600    $700    $900    $1000    $1000 $1200\n2-pass. Roadster $60      400      600      6(0      160      1000      1(0)1 12(4\n7-pass.    Touring 2(0      400      600       (00      700        (21      1.04 1*0?\n4-pasa.   Coupe..  4(0      (00      4(0      (60    1200      1600      1775 IM*\n7-pass.    Sedan..   460      600      450      160    1200      1(01      1&00 2244)\n4-pasa Sport Tfg 200      400      (00      800      860 .,\t\n6-paas Sedan 4-D Model No (9I80O 1(0    1200      1400spcl700 1664\n(de luxe) (de luxe)\n121401    11(0 (snec.)                     \\ -'\\\n6-P. 4-D Coupe     1176    1400     1600     ITH \u00abN\n(-P. 2^D Sedan       ...      18*0      1604 1(10\nNASH FOUR\n1921    1922    1911    1114\nTouring    '.    $300   $400   HOD $7(0\nRoadster          100     I7I-.    $00 760\n(-pass. Sedan   600     \u00ab5\u00bb:,\u00ab00 1000\nCoupe       600      \u00bb7( :   ... \u00ab$\u00bb\nCabriolet    None\nCarriole    ....:       ...     414     1*4 IH,\n6-pasa.   Sport   Trg      4(0 764\nNASH LIGHT SIX\n1925  ' 1(2$\nTouring    $700 $760\nSedan, steel body         90<|, 9(0\nSPECIAL NASH\n1926      1926 192*\n6-paas. Touring   $900    $12(0 None\n6-pass. 2-D Sedan     10(0      1450 16(0\n2-pass.   Roadster    '.'     (00     1200 1(00\n6-paaa. 4-D Sedan   1250     1(00 1(00\n2-pass.   Coup*    .'.,        1400 1400\nOldsmobile Four\n42A  43A 43A\n1(21 1922 1923\nRoadster (2)  $200 $300 $4(0*\nTouring (6)   200  400 6(0\nCoupe (4)   2(0  400 400\nSedan  (6)      276      400 400\nOLDSMOBILE SIX\n37A 4-20B 6-37C 6-37D 6-37D\n'     '                                        1920*21    1924    1926    1926    1924\nRoadster  (2)    $126    $600    $100   $800 $1060\nTouring   (6)       126      400      700\nSport Touring (6)               (60      7(0      (OK 1054\nCoupe   (4) *....  225      700      (00      960 1800\nSedan   (6) 226      7(0      (00    1000 1(10\nSedan de Luxe (5)    ,       900    10(0 Hop\nCoach (6)   ,.       ...     860   1000 1244\nOakland\n1922    1(22    1924    1925 1924\nTouring     $440    $500    $825    $925 $10(6\nRoadster     .850      600      776      900 1000\nCoach    \u25a0\u00bb      1160 1200\nThree-paao. Coupe   600      400     900    1160 1*44\nFour-paas.   Coupe   ...     700   1060   1221 ....\nSedan      (00      72$    1150    1240 1600\nL. Sedan     1400 1404\nPontiac\n1924 KIT\nEarly Late\nCoach\" $786 $1064\nCoupe ,700 1011\nStar\nSerial\nTouring, Standard .\nTouring, Special .....\nRoadster .wi-i..-**\nCoupe\nCoupster \t\nSedan, Standard\nSedan;   Special   .\nCoach  \t\nLandau   ..\t\nSIX-\nFOUR-CYLINDER\nCYLINDER\nModel C\nModel F\nModel M         R Models\n1922-3\n1924\n1924\n1925\n1(14\n1926\n10,001-\n10,484\n10,(23\n18,621\n10,434-\n200,026-\n248,385-\n350,001\n1,001\n18,260\n248,384\n295,388\n378,744\n15,12$\n$225\n$250\n$375\n$475\n$67(\n-..._.\n ..\n400\n650\n(25\n$71\n195\nact\n300\n\t\n(00\n296\n310\n469\n(64\n77(\n(60\n......\n ,\u201e\n......\n(04\n700\n, ptn.\n226\n(64\n626\n700\n(40\n\t\n250\n375\n660\n750\n925\n1,1(0\n675\n825\n975\n..\u2014\n\u2014_\n.\u2014\n\t\n*    \u2122\n1,260\nStudebakers\nBIG SIX\n1(20 \u2014\n1(21    \t\n1922    \t\n1922    \t\n1924 .....\n1925 _..\n1924    \t\n7-P. Tr'g.Sp'dsfr R'dst'r\n......   $444       \t\n6-P.\nSedan\n700\n800\n954\n1100\n1690\n700\n800\n97$\n1604\n7-P.\nSedan\n$640\n400\n860\n1150\n1460\n1700\n2000\nSheriff      Coupe\nSPECIAL SIX\n1(20\n1921\n1922\n1922\n1924\n1915\n1924\nTouring\n  $676\n  47$\n  800\n._  900\n  1000\n\u2014 1200 .\n  1400\nRoadster\n$500\n400\n776\n876\n97$\n12(4\n1404\nSedan\n$500\n604\n1259\n1504\n1700\nCoupe\n$600 4-P.\n440 4-P.^\n800 4-P.\n940 5-P.\n1100 5,P.\n1C00 4-P.\n1740 4-P.\n(40 4-P.\n9001-P.\niitff.K\nCo*,.\n1104\nWOO\nDeduct from above pricea $100 if not equipped wtth Big * Motor, on\n192$ and 1921 models.\nLIGHT SIX\n1(21 _-_\n1(22 \t\n1(21 --\n1424 _...\nTouring\n$460\n\u202250\n704\n700\nRoadster\nSedan\n' $700\n(00\n(50\n1004\nFull balloons on 1(24 models, add $54,\n675\n-50\ncowie\n$$$0 2-P.\n\u202275 2-P;\n7(4 2-P.\n,1094 5-P.\nSTANDARD SIX\nPhateon     Roadater        Coup       \u2022 Coach\n1926   $3200 $1104 12001-P.    $1244\n192$      12(4 1200 1460 2-P.    1400\nSedan Br'gham\n$1400 ,        $1(00\n1((0 1(7(\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, 1927\n'P\u00abge 9erm ~%\nbm-VPORT^llfl,\nOvertime, New Scoring\nJtules Adopted; Restrict\nSires of Sticks\nTWO-GAME LEAO\nU. S. GOLF TITLE\nMiss Orcutt Is Defeated in Close\nPlay; Both in Difficulties\nat Times\nAre Two and Half Games Up on\nGiants;    Beat    Cubs\nTwice\n\u25a0HICAUO.  Sept.  J6.-At a meeting\n\u25a0 the National  Hockey league  here\npterday,    President    Frank    Calder\nauthorised to  sign an agreement\n|llfttlng the Central Hockey assocla-\ni-wlth the National league.\nlie officials of the National league\n|th  several  changes,  tor; the  moet\nln playing rules.\nwaiver   price   for   transfer   of\ninrs   was   raised   from   $2500   to\n\u25a0\nni   period   of -overtime  play   was\nPAced from 20 to 10 minutes.\nJThe length of hockey sticks was reacted   to   BS   inches.     (There   had\nno limit  former'y).\ne   blade   of    goalkeepers'    sticks\n|re limited in length of 144 inches,\nsise -of   goalkeepers'   leg   pads\nreduced from 12 to 10 Inches In\n\u25a0Kb\nInterference Barred       '\nnew clause was written  regard-\nthe   question   of  Interference   to\n' effect   that   any   players   not   in\nision  of  the  puck shall  not  In.\nAre with any other player of the\nidslng side ndt actual'y playing the\nIck   by   cross-otiecklng   or   holding.\nI player sha'l  be considered  In pos-\nHion of the puck until lt has been\nuched by another player.\nf*A   defending   player   shall   not   be\nijildered   offside   in   hie  own   area\nIbe receives the puck in that area.\"\n\u25a0A   provision   was   made   In   regard\nI goal scoring.    \"The goal shall  not\ni scored If the puck Is put Into the\n*x\\   by   any   part   of   an   attacking\nlayer or his skates.\"\n|The anti-defence rule was strength-\nled  by   providing  a   minor   penalty\nlr three men  being behind the blue\np.\n\u25a0 Deliberately picking up the puck by\npy player except the goalkeeper was\nde a minor penalty.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nSaturday\nll*ort_and   20,   Los  Angeles   6.\niHo'lywood   8,   San  Francisco   2.\nIjftlsslons   5,   Sacramento  2.\nI-Oakland-Seattle,   wet   grounds.\nSunday\n\u25a0Oakland  \u20ac-10,   Seattle  4-1.\n[Portland   8-8,   Los' Angles  3-1.\nrMlseions   2-0,   Sacramento   6-1.\nI Hollywood 1-6, San Francisco 11-7.\nSANDS   POINT  WINS\nWBSTBURT, N.Y., Sept. 25.\u2014The\nttd-ridlAg Sands Point four, boasting\nnomas Hitchcock Jr. as Its star, delated the United States army polo\nu'rant in the open championship\njrles yesterday, 12 to 10.\nNew York, Sept. 25,\u2014The pace-\nmaking pirates Increased their lead\nIn the National pennant race over\nthe Giants by two and a half games\nand held a two-game lead over the\nSt. Louis Cardinals by taking both\ngames of a double-header today at\nChicago from the Cube by 2 to 1\nand 6 to  1.\nStellar pitching by th* league lead-\nera coupled with opportune hitting\nand fast fielding, was responsible\nfor both victories.\nThe first game was a pitching duel\nbetween Guy Bush and Vic Aldrldge,\nthe latter allowing the Cubs onljr\nfour scattered hits, one of which was\na homer by Heathcote, saving Chi\ncago from a shutout.\nThe Cubs were unable to solve\nKremer's delivery in the second game.\nBeck's double, a sacrifice and Adam's single gave the Cubs their only\nrun of the game.\nOn the other hand, Charley Root;\nout aftrr his 27th victory of the season, was unable to stop the slugg.ng\nPirates and he retired after the fifth\nInning for a pinch hitter. Root was\nfreely batted ln the sixth, the P-\nrartes scoring three  runs.\nThe world's champion Cardinals\nwrung a double victory over Boston,\nwinning out 4 to 1 and 6 to 1.\n\"Old Petcfl' Alexander, relieving\nRelnhart in the seventh, saved the\nsecond game for the Cards by holding the Braves scoreless after they\nhad crept up to one point of St.\nLouis.\nA crowd of 32,000 saw the Giants\nand Brooklyn battle to a scoreless\ntie in seven Innings at Ebbets Field,\nBrooklyn. The game was called because   of   darkness.\nIt was a tight pitchers' battle, Jess\nPetty holding the Giants to 2 hits,\nwhl'e \"Dutch\" Henry held the Rob-ns\nto two.\nPhiladelphia stopped over in Cincinnati long enough to win a ball\ngame 8 to 2 from the Reds. They\nhammered Jimmy Beckman hard\nenough to drive him from the box.\nGARDEN CITY, NT* Sept. 25.\u2014\nMrs, Miriam Burns Horn of Kansas\nCity Saturday pulled a deadly accurate mashle niblick trom ber bag\nto win the national women's golf\nchampionship, defeating Miss Maureen Orcutt of Haworth, N.J., 5 and\n4, over the final stretch of 26 holes.\nMiss Orcutt tn much the longer\nfrom the tee and had a slight edge\nIn the putting, but Mrs. Burgs was\nsble to place her approaches much\ncloser to the cup. The Miaaourian\na'so had a less Intimate acquaintance\nwith traps, although the winner and\n'he loser managed to Inspect many of\nthe sand-Infested hazards during the\nday. Several times they showed superlative sportsmanship by going into\nthe same trap.\nThe women requirrV six hours and\n15 minutes to play, the 18 holes of\nthe morning using up three hours and\na quarter, and the 14 in the afternoon\naklng three hours flat. The players\nwere taking their time and an en\nthusinstic gallery of close to '2000\nalso slowed the performance.\nMrs. Horn, the new champion, took\nI fu'l advantage of her first real chance\nto win the title. She had never before\nprogressed to the finals, al* hough she\nwon the western women's championship In 1023 and was runner-up the\nnext year. Miss Orcutt. too, was a\nnationalist finalist for the first time,\nbut holds the metropolitan women's\nohamplonshlp for the second time.\nLochhart Breaks\nDe Palma9s Speed\nMarks on Dirt Track\nCLEVELAND. Ohio, Sept 25 \u2014\nFrank Lockhait of Dayton, Ohio,\nbroke more than 104 A.A.A. dirt track\nspeed records when he won the 100-\nmile automobile racing classic at\nNorth Rjnda'l today* Lockbart averaged 80.826 miles per hour, 14 minutes and 14.4 seconds. He shattered\nall ot De Palma's old marks from\none mile to 26 mi'es and all of\nTommy Milton's records between the\n50   and   100   miles   distance.\nIfMEISM\nBEATINGS BUT\nID TO LEADS\nCardiff   Beats   Uniteds;   Sheffield and Wednesday Draw;\nBury  Is  Blamed\nTIGERS DEFEAT\nCleveland Beats Chicago While\nWashington  Takes  Game\nFrom Browns\nSCHNIEDER CUP\nRACE POSTPONED\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL RESULTS\nVENICE; Sept. 25.\u2014High winds,\naccompanied by heavy seas this afternoon forced a postponement of the\nSchneider  cup   race   until   tomorrow.\nWhile It ls hoped the contest may\nbe staged tomorrow, there Is no great\ndegree of confidence that conditions\nwill be sufflclnetly (improved to per\nmtt. the Anglo-Italan speed test of\nthe air. Continued storms which\nhave been swiping the region of\nPadua and Venice may cause the\nrace to be put off for several days.\nGRIDIRON SCORES OVER UNITED STATES\nPscifio  Coast\nW S. C. 6.  Mount St. Charles 6.\n.Whitman-27, Cheney Normal 0.\nOregon   7,   LlnfleM  0.\nMontana   State   22,   North   Dakota\nHate  0.\nMontana  19,  Centervllle of Butte 0.\nU.8.C. freshmen 6, Pasadena Junior\nMllege 0.\nCalifornia   Fresh    18,   Santa   C ara\nVosh 8.\nStanford  7,  Olympic 6.\nStanford 33, Fresno State 0.\nCalifornia  li,  Santa Clara  6.\nWVomlng 31,  Spearfiah,  N.D.,   Nor.\nnal 6.\nRegis   College   20,   Nebraska   Wes-\nejian 0.\nColorado     Teachers    IS,    Hastings\n(Neb.) Teachers IS.\n, U.8.C.   3J.   Occidental  College   0.\nUniversity    of    California    at    Iyos\n*uife'es    33,    Santa    Barbara    State\nTeachers'  College  0,   %\nSt. Ignatius IS, Nevada 0.\nWhittle.  College 40, U. S. S. Pennsylvania 0.\nSouth\nMississippi 57, College of Ozark. 0.\nTennessee 31, Carson-Newman 0.\nDavidson 5, Citadel 0.\nW. ft U 26, Lynchburg 2.\nWake Forest 9. North Carolina 8.\nFlorida 26,  Southern 1.\nSewaneo  32,  Translyvanla 6.\nV. P. I. 21, Roanoke 2.\nLouisiana      State     46,     Louisiana\nPoly. 0. . '\nChristian     University     37,     Daniel\nBaker 0.\nSt.   Edwards   College   0.   Simmons\nUniversity 0.\nLoyola  (New Orleans)  13, Rice Institute 0.\nAlabama 46, Mlllsaps 0.\nVanderbilt 45. Chattanooga 18.\nMercer 77, Norih Georgia Aggies 0.\nUnion   University   14,   Arkansas   A.\n* M. I.\nBirmingham   Southern   14,   Marion\nInstitute 0.\nTexas Tech. 63, Panhandle A.ftM. 0.\nJohn Carleton  6, Abilene Christian\nCollege \u00ab (tie).\nTexas    University    43,     Oklahoma\nSouthwest Teachers 0.\nSouthwestern     40,    Lambuth    Col\nlege  1!.\nHoward 37, Springhill 0.\nTrinity 0,  Texas A.&M. College  45.\nMarysville   6,   University   of   Ken\ntucky 6  (tie).\nSouthern   Methodist  University  68,\nDenton Teachers' College 0.\nV.M.I. 22, Richmond 0.\nVirginia  81,   Hampden-Sidney   6.\nSouthwestern  University  19,  Baylor\nU-.\u00ab.\n,  Centenary 86, gam Houston 0.\nSouthwestern    6,    Mississippi    State\nTeachers'  College 0.\nMidwest\nDetroit 44, Adrian College 0.\nMarquette 29, St. Viators 0.\nKansas   Aggies   30,   Hays'   Teachers 6.\nBut er 46, Muncle Normal 12.\nWashington  University  6,  Lombard\nCollege 0.\nSt, Louis University 20, Carbondale\nTeachers' 6.\nOhio Wesleyan 20, Wilmington  18.\nWittenberg  63,  Findlay  6.\nGrlnnell      6,      Penn      (Oskaloosa,\nIowa), 6.\nSt.   Thomas   6,   Iowa  State   Teachers 6 (tie). ,\n. Ohio University 21. Rio Grande 0.\nFranklin  8, Indiana Central 0.\nWabash   31,   Danvll e   (Ind.),   normal 0.\nDes   Moines   University   9,   Central\nCollege   7.\nClemson  0,   Presbyterian  College  0.\nEast    \/\nBrown j*, R. I. State 0.\nPennsylvania 8, Franklin and Marshall   0.\nW. 4b J. 14, .Waynesburg 0.\nCo'umbia  32,  Vermont   0.\nColby  13,   Wesleyan   0.\nCornell 41, Clarkson 0.\nWilliams   34,   Rensselar   7.\nAmherst 21,  Alfred 0.\nDartmouth   47,  Norwich   0.\nFordham 34, Bethany 0.\nAuburn  0.   Stetson   6.\nPittsburgh 48,  Thie! 0.\nCarnegie  Tech.   25,   Westminster\nDrexel 0, Juanlta 0.\nPenn State 27, Lebanon Val'ey 0.\nArmy 13, Boston University 0.\nUnion 13, St. Lawrence 6.\nHoly Cross 33, Newport Naval 0.\nGeorgetown  80, Lenolr-Rhyne - 0.\nWest   Virginia   27,   West   Virginia\nWesleyan  7.\nGettysburg 31, American 0.\nSyracuse 18, Hobart 0.\nLehigh 0, St. John 0.\nNew Tork University 27. Niagara 0.\nMaryland 79, Washington College 0.\nUrslnus 27,  ITpsam  0.\nConnecticut Aggies 38,  U.  8. Coast\nGuard Academy 0.   .\nSpringfield     College     63,     Cooper\nUnion 0.\nMuhlenberg  3, Albright 7.\nBowdoln 0, Massachusetts Aggies 0.\nLafayette 39, Schiiy kill H.\nHamilton 0, Colgate 21.\nBucknell  43,  Susquehanna  7.\nProfl-ssional    Football\nDayton    6,     Philadelphia     Yellow-\njackets  3.\nHigh    8chool    Games\nOonaago  High  9,  Chewelah  0.\nKelogg 12, West Valley 6.\nLONDON. Sept. 24\u2014Games played\nin the old country Saturday resulted\nas  follows:\nENGLI8H LEAGUE\nFirtt  Division\nAston  Villa  1,  Bury  0.\nUackburn   4,   Birmingham  4.\nBolton   0,  Mlddlesboro  0.\nCardiff 3, Newcastle 1.\nDerby 4, Arsenal 0.\nEverton 2, Huddersfield 2.\nManchester United  3, Tottenham 0.\nPortsmouth 2, Leicester 0.\nSheffield United L Wednesday 1.\nSunderland 2, Burnley 3.\nWest Ham 3; Liverpool 1.\nSeoond Division   \u25a0\nBarnsley  4,  Clapton  2.\nBlackpool 6. Bristol City 2.\nChelsea 1,  West Bromwlch 1.\nGrimsby 2, Southampton 2.\nLeeds 2. Hull 0:\nNotts Forest 4, Manchester City 6.\nOldham 0, Notts County 0.\nPortvale  2,   Swansea. 0.\nReading 1.  Soke 1.\nSouth Shields 2, Preston 3.\nWolverhampton  3, Fulham 1.\nBrentford  6, Mlllwall  1.\nThird  Division\u2014Southern\nBournemouth 2, Crystal Palace 2.\nBrighton  and  H'jve 0,  Exeter  2.\nBristol Rovers-Swlndon, postponed.\nCharlton 1. Queens Park 0.\nMerthyr 8, Coventry 2.\n^Northampton 4, Norwich 2.\nPlymouth  2,  Newport County  0.\nSouthend 1, Torquay 0.\nWalsall   7,   Ull ingham   4.\nWatford 1, Luton 0.\nThird  Division\u2014Northern\nAshington  1,  Accrington 1.\nBarrow 2,. Wrexhah. I.\nBradford City 8. New Brighton 1.\nCrewe Alexandra 4, Hartlepools 0.\nDarlington 1, Wlgan 0.\nDoncaster  2,  Rotherham 0.\nHalifax 3, Lincoln 1.\nNelson   2,   Durham 1.\nRochdale 5, Southport 1.\nTranmere 2, Bradford 2.\nSCOTTISH  LEAGUE\nrtrat  Division\nAberdeen  2, Falkirk 1.\nAirdrle 1, Dundee 1.\nBoness 4, Dumfer Ine 2.\nCeltic  3,   Clyde  0.\nOowdenbeuth   1,  Queens  Park  0.\nHearts 2, Ralth Rovers 0.\nMotherwell   1,   Rangers  1.\nPartlck 6,  Hamilton 2.\nSt. Johnston 1. Kilmarnock 1.\nSt. Mlrren 3, Hibernians 2.\nSecond   Division\nArbroath 2, Arthurlle 3.\nArmadale  2,  Morton  1.\nAyr United 1, Forfar 0.\nDumbarton 4, Kings Park 6.\nDundee United 3, Albion Rovers 2.\nEaat Fife 2, Bathgate 3.\nEast Stirling 1.  St. Bernards 2.\nLe-l.h 2. Alioa 1.\nStenhousemulr 2, Clydebank 0.\nThird Lanark 1, Queen of South :\nIrish  League\nDistillery   0,   Linfield   0.\nBelfast   6,   Glentoran   2.\nGlenavon 3, Barn 3.\nCllftonvllie   0.   Ards   2.\nBangor   2,   Portadown   4..\nQueens Island 3, Coleralno 3.\nLarne 2,' Newry 0.\nNEW TORK, Sept. 26.\u2014Detroit\nctoeed its season In \"New York today\nwith a 6-to-l victory over the Yanks,\nEarl Whltehlll being master of the\nAmerican league champions ln the\npinches. Blue and Travenar hit\nhomers.\nCleveland drew close to fifth pace\nwhen they defeated Chicago 10 to 1\nat Cleveland. The White V\/,x\ngathered but four hits off Hudlin.\nHeavy hitting of the home team-\ncoupled wl'.h loose fielding by the\nBrowns, gave Washington its fourth\nstraight victory over St. Lode 10 to\n0. Jachary kept his former teammates' seven hits scattered.\nNotts Forest played Manchester Otty,\nwas alao featured by a deluge of\ngoals, there being Bins scored la\nthe course of the play. Manchester\nsecured the verdict by tbe off count-\nAmerican LeigM\nResults\nHuggins Big Little\nMan of Majors\nJprONDON. Sept 15.\u2014Hie leaders of\nthe first two divisions of the English Soccer league lost their unbeaten certificates on Saturday, but\nretained their hold on the league on\ngoal average. Newcastle United's\ndownfall came at Cardiff, where the\nouphotder*' defeated the league champions h\u00abfpre 30,000 tens. Tbe ecore\nwas  3  goals to 1.\nThe intraborough rlva's, Sheffield\nUnited and The Wedneaday, fought\nout a sirring battle at Dramall Lane\nbefore 50,000 people, evenly divided\nwith respect to support. The game\n'ended ln a, division of points, each\nside, securing one goal.\nAston Villa blanked Bury at Villa\npark, York's gcal ln the opening half\nbeing tbe deciding factor.\nO d Trafford saw ti sterling victory\nmarked up for the home club, Manchester United, when they whitewashed Tottenham Hotspurs by 3\ngoals. Hanson waa the outstanding\nplayer, finding the net on two occasions for the United.\nPortsmouth resumed their winning\nways against Leicester City when\nthey made lt 2 to 0 on their own\nground. The game was a tie at the\nInterval, but In the second period\nLeicester were unlucky and had to\nplay without the services of Duncan,\n*vho was injured badly.\nHuddersfield Town ran into a division of tbe point* at Everton when\nthe Issue was closed at two goals\nall.\nThe metropolitan team did bad'y on\nSaturday, only one victory coming\nLondon-way ln the first string. Both\nthe Spurs and Arsenal were defeated,\n'he latter at Derby, where the county\nran   up  four  goals against   them.\nForty-five thousand spectators\ngathered at Stamford Bridge to see\nChelsea play to a draw by West\nBromwlch Albion.\nThe Blackpool-Bristol C.ty game\nwas productive of prolific scoring,\nwith Blackpool securing six counters\nto a couple by Bristol. The home\nteam was leading by 2-0 at the interval, then Bromwell brought about\nthe hat trick inside of eight minutes,\nBarnsley overran the  second string\nleaders,     Clapton     Orient,     defeating\nthe Londoners by 4 to 2.\n'  The   game   at   Nottingham,   where\nSunday\na h. m\nDetroit           \u2022    ll     I\nNew York   i     \u00ab     I\nBatteries\u2014 Whltehlll and Baasler;\nHoyt, Shocker, Glrard and Collins.\nK.  H.  B.\nChicago       I   . *     1\nCleveland     10   11     \u2022\nBatteries \u2014 Blakenshlp, Connally\nand  Crouse;   Hudlin and  Sewell.\nb. h. a\nSt.   Louts    0     T     I\nWashington      ^ \u00bb   1*     0\nBatteries \u2014 Wlngard, Vangllder,\nCrowder and Schang; Zachary and\nRuel.\nThree   games   scheduled.\n.ATElM\nFLYNN STILL\nPROTESTING\nFiles Protest With Illinois Body\nand WiU Go Farther if\nNecessary\nE\nGovernment Reports Shows the\nGovernments Share, Taxes,\nMore Than Half Million\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 25.\u2014The\nnumber of paid admissions to the\nDempsey-Tunney fight was 102,450,\nand an admission tax of 1242,015.71\nwill be paid to the treasury, Mabel\nO. Keinecke, collector of Internal revenue at Chicago, has advised the\ntreasury.\nIncome tax payments from the\nfighters, promoters and others who\nprofited from the fight will Increase\nthe government's share to more than\n(500,000.\nFight officials had placed the actual\npaid  attendance at  135,000.\nTh\u00a9   government   report   shows   a\ntotal   gate of   $2,420,-357.10,   comparing\nwtth  92,668,060 as announced at Chi\ncago.  _        ^^\nCHICAGO, Sept J5.-~8hould the\nIllnols athletic commission persist\nIn Its refusal to reverse tbe referee's\nand judges' decision giving last Thursday nights fight on points to Oeqe\nTunney, a formal protest will be\nfiled with the National Boxing association. Jack Dempsey and his manager _eo P. Flynn, said before departing for New York today.\nThe national boxing commission\ncontrols boxing in 11 states, Including   Illinois.\nFlynn said a letter formally asking\ntbe Illinois commission to reverse\nthe decision had been dispatched to\n-the Illinois body. If tbe demand ,ls\nrefused the protest will be taken\nup with the national boxing commission, headquarters of which are at\nBaltimore.\nTOLEDO CINCHES\nFIRST PENNANT\nTOLEDO, Ohio, Sept, 25.\u2014Toledo\nclinched Its first American association pennant by winning the first\ngame of & double-header ai Indianapolis today, while Milwaukee was\nlosing both games of a double bill\nto   St.   Paul. v\nLIGHTNING   ARTIST   WINS\nNEWBURG, England, Sept. 25.\u2014W.\nM. Singer's 4-year-old Lightning\nArtist won the Newbury autumn cup\nSaturday.\nWrTK\nBEST BUY IN THE WEST\nINSIST ON\nB. C PRODUCTS\nTHEY LEAD IN QUALITY\nBy   AL   DEMAREE\n('Form*   Pitcher   New   York    Giants) |\nTho jockeys, or lightweight managers, seem to be having a year ln\nthe big leagues this year, with Miller II\nHuggins \"in\" again as a winning\npilot and little Donnle Bush bosslngj\nthe  Pirates.\nJohn   McOraw   used   to    call   blgl]\nWllbert    Robinson    of    the    Dodgers\nthe   \"elephant  Jockey,\"   but  this  y**r|l\nthe   regular   jockey    sized   managers |\nare doing  very well.\nHuggins is only about 6 feet SI\ninches high, but he haa developed al\nnew Babe Huth in the person of\nyoung Lou Gehrig, and with two\nmighty wallopers he is a pretty\ntough lightweight. He may be little, |\nbut  he  Is  mighty  powerful.\nThey say \"Bull Neck\" Guthrie, thel\numpire, lost Mb Job la the American |\nleague because of  this  wisecrack.\nOne day Guthrie ordered \"Whltey\"!\nWitt out of the gams.-and Huggins\ncame up to argue. \"You're out ofj\nthe game,\" Guthrie said to Witt, and\nglancing at Huggins, he added, \"andj\nUke the bat boy out with you, too!''\nJOCK IS WINNER 0F~\nP0T0MAS HANDICAP!\nLoose Leaf\nOffice Equipment  1\nBinders of Quality\nNEW  YORK, Sept. 25.\u2014E. B. Mac-\nLean's   Jock  ridden   by  Jockey   Ambrose    won    the    I'otomac    hmdlcap |\n$20,000  purse,   the  feature of yesterday's card at Havedegrace.    Leading I\nfiom   the   rise   of   the   barrier; \"Jockl\ncovered  the  mile  and a sixteenth  in\nthe new track record time of 1:44 3-6, j\none-fifth  of  a second   less   than   the |\nprevious* record.\nBOX  A   DRAW\nLIEGE, Belgium. Sept 25.\u2014Em 111\nPladner, f ywelght champion of\nFrance, boxed a draw last night with!\nPetit Biquet, Belgja% titleholder. The |\nbout was billed for the flyweight |\nchampionship of Europe.\nHunting Time Is Here!\nand there is no better time to sell that gun\nand hunting outfit you are no longer using\nthan now. A Want Ad under \"For Sale\u2014Miscellaneous\" in The Daily News will get a buyer-\nquick.   Just mail your ad or\nPhone 144\nYes\u2014you can charge\nlater.\nit.    Bill will be mailed\nWe manufacture our own binders and because we know what material\nand labor are put into them we know that they will stand up. Every\nbinder is backed by our guarantee. Yet our binders cost no_ more\nthan others.\nBinders in Any Size or Style; Standard\nSizes Always in Stock\nLoose Leaf Forms\nOur ruling, printing, punching and perforating equipment is modern, and\noperated by a competent staff experienced in the manufacture of Loose\nLeaf Forms of all kinds.\nBillheads, statements, synoptics, ledger leaves, order forms, report\nforms, office record forms\u2014every style of form, special or standard.\nThe volume of business we do is the best evidence of the high quality of\nour work and the fact that our prices are reasonable.\nThe Daily News Job Dept\nPhone 144\u2014Two Lines\nPRINTING RULING BOOKBINDING\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,* MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, 1927\nTHREE EMS\n2 RACE FOR LEAD\nLawson Leads; Diederichs Only\n16.9 Points Behind; Six\nWeeks to Go\nRacing fer leadership, as the Agaa-\na4a taring contest neary Ita conclusion,\nare pane entered by C. IT. Lawson, J.\nC. -Mederlchs, and Simpson et Holland.\nLawson la leading by the scant margin of 11.4 points over Dlederlcha, each\nHaving, respectively, 3558.1 and 8541.7\npoints. Simpson ft Holland are third\nWtth 2(14.4 points, 4.4 less than Law.\naon. The contest is now la Its forty-\n\u2022atxtk week, kat six remaining before\nlt runs its course. These three pens\nare the only ones having more than\n3600 points. The fourth pen, J. H.\nMufford 4k Sons, ha* 2478 points, and\nla the only one In the 2400 class.\nProduction   is  down  to   (1.(6   per\ncent, due to moulting.\nThe contest standing ls:\nBleak X-aor-es\nW.    Ttl. Ttl.Pts.\nMartin,  1 -.   37     14(4     1718.0\n(tenet sorts\nLamMe, I.      10     1880      1911.6\nWilcox, R V     (6     (0(1      1191..<\nSip. Farm. Agassis   82     1(99     1718.7\n\u25a0ko*.   MM   Ma\nKiss  Brown,  A.  G.    13     18(4      2003.6\n-tussell,  D     34      18(8      2147.0\nWMte   wyandottes\nI Currle, T.     ((     1757     n_\u00ab.5\nsnap.   Sta.   Summer-\n>end         38      1542      15(2.0\nn^^^nrit\n'  Grant, *W. H.      44      1(63      3180.7\nPullen. F. D _...    1(      1183      nil.1\nWktts Legion.\nAppleby, P. W.     87      1(98      1118.2\nBennie.   R.        48      8271      22(7.9\nBolivar Leghorn P.    (0     31(9      22(0.0\nBoyea.   Brosl       22     1(74     2851.8\nBonier. D.      29     1741      191(4\nChalmers, J     ((     1141     _1H t\nChalmers, R. W. ....    (2      1901      2140.7\nCoulter,  C.   S.       81      1543     1548.8\nDarbey 4b Sons     (4     1931     te(9.3\nDiederichs, J. C     45      2398      9541.7\nEvans, P. W.      40      2219      2272.0\nPairweather, W. M.    41      1919      1933.0\nFarrington Broa ....    81      2180     (157.0\nFJowerdew. B. 8     34      1913      2198.0\nOrahame.   R.  H.  ....    41      1970      8021.0\nHoman,   M,   L.       30      17(4      3046.3\nI   Johnson,   J _   89      1899     1980.1\nKennedy Broa _   41      3193      1301.8\nLawson,  C.  W.  .....    49      2807    \u00ab255! 8\n!   Mains, Alex     49     2048     2065.3\nMaple Leaf Farm ..    47      21(1     (844.0\nMetcalfe, C. P     48      2041      1960.0\nMUfford,   J.   H.   It\nSo\"      34      2042      2475.0\nMcKlm  Poul.  F     34      17J8      S041.8\nRuttledge, H. W>. ....    49      2183     2876.2\nI  Schofhrid, A. W    53      2164      2141.7\nShannon Bros.      25      2031      2834.3\nSimpson   *- Holland    43      2464     3514.4\nI Hmlu. Bro*     87     _n3]     2l(a.g\n.   Snyder, H. A.     60      1904      2103.4\nKurreydene  Poultry\nF\u00bbrm         35      i9B9      2260.9\nWard, Oeo     36      1584      1708.5\n\"\"***\u25a0 8. A     37      1897      313E.TI\nWebster,   J.  T     10      1818      1478.1\nWaHe, R.  At       35      2162     2363.4\nTotals     1627      87035    88834.7\nI National League Results I\nm\u2014 _\u2014__4\nR.   H.  E.\nPhiladelphia      (   15     0\nCincinnati      8     8     2\nBatteries\u2014Sweetland, Decatur and\n\"Wilson; Beck man. May and Har\ngravies.\nR.  H.  B.\nNe)W   York     0     3     1\nBrooklyn     0     2     0\n(Called   7th,   darknelo.)\nBatteries\u2014Henry and Taylor, De\nvomer;   Petty and Deberry.\nR.   H.  E.\nl*ttobur\u00ab*h(     4 H     7     J.\nChicago      1     4     0\nBatteries\u2014Aldrldge and Gooch\nBut* and  Hartnett.\n.Second game\u2014 R.  H.  B.\nPittsburgh      8   U     0\n.Chicago      1     7     1\n.    Batteriea\u2014Kremer      and       smith;\nRoot,   Jones  and  Hartnett.\nR.   H.  E.\nBoston      1     7     2\nSt.   Louis      4   14     J\nBatteries\u2014Robertson, Werti and\nUrban;   Sherdel and  O'Farrell.\n.Second game\u2014 R.  h.  E.\nBoston      6   10     1\n8$. , Louis      6    10     1\nBatteries\u2014Morrison, Wert_ and\nOlbeon; Rein-art, Alexander and\nO'Harrell.\nSimpson Cup Is\nWon by the Mid\nStates Players\nCHICAOO, Sept. 26.\u2014The Simpson\n.\u2022up, emblematic ol the United States\nintersectional team tennis champion\nship, went to the middle states today\nthrough the battering assault of tt 1\nHam T. Tilden and Wallace Johnson,\nboth of Pennsylvania.\nFor three sets Tlldsn gave a flash\not the tennla genius which kept him\non top of the net world for seven\nyears, as he swept through the youth\nfit! peorge Lott J., Davis cup alternate,   4-2, 4-1, 6-1.\ntp the other singles match John\nsea polished off Luke Williams, Chi\n_a\u00abd, ln straight sets, 6-0, 4-1, 4-1.\nTie doubles waa the most thrilling\nstruggle of tke day, Lott and Hennessey winning tha four hard-fought\nss4s over Tilden and Johnson, 11-8,\n4-4,   4-4,   7-(.\nMANITOBAN8 SWAMPED\n\"vfiNNIPlCO, Sept. 25.\u2014The University of North Dakota football team\nengaged the Manitoba Varsity squad\nln nn exhibition game here on Saturday and romped oft the field with\na. one-elded victory of ((-0.\nDUBLIN, Sept. 26.\u2014Before a crowd\n\u2022 r   $4,444    spectators, today,   Kildare\n^^BU-erry. holders of the champion-\nIve point* to three,  in  the\nit-imp* <%>\u00ab$ Sttf*ii urn,\n7\nDIVULGE DATE OF\nWill Be Any Time in Legal Period, He States by Inference In Interview\nKOOTENAY TOUR HAS\nTHREE-FOLD OBJECT\nMeets Liberal Party Officials,\nSixes   Dp   Results,   Sees\nNew Requirements\nPremier MacLean, after addressing public meetings at Fernie, Cranbrook and Kimberley, in East Kootenay, en the last three nights of the\nwsek, arrived In Nelson last night\nfor the West Kootenay portion of\nhis   itinerary.\nHe ls due to speak here tonight.\nat Trail tomorrow night, at Roaaland\nWednesday night, at Grand Forks\nThursday night, and at Midway Friday night. After the Midway meeting he will return directly to Victoria,\nReasons for Tou\nSpeaking of hip tour, when seen\nat the Hume, Dr. MacLean said:\n\"What I am really doing ls three\nthings. First, I am getting In necessary touch with the officials of the\nLiberal party; secondly, I am finding out what the results of our policies and legislation have been* and\nhow they are working out; thirdly,\nI am getting fin* hand information\nfrom the people aa to what they\nconsider   the   requirements.\"\n\"In other words,\" he amplified, \"I\nthink it only fair, ln my position of\nresponsibility, for me to get acquainted with the people, and to give\nthe people an opportunity to get acquainted with me.\"\nSaw   Mighty    Sullivan *\nThe premier's sightseeing so far\nbas been limited to an underground\ninspection of the Sullivan mine. Saturday afternoon. \"The magnificent\nscale of everything was what appealed to me,\" he said, describing\nthe experience. \"There ls the great\ncement portal of the main tunnel,\ncelled for wme distance, through\nwhich the vast dally output reaches\nthe surface. It is marvellous to see\nIn the mountain's interior, ln addition\nto the enormous chambered stopes,\na fully equipped machine shop, a\npower plant, and electric motors.\"\n\u2022 At Klmberley Dr. MacLean recognized Nick Michaely, formerly of\nRossiand, whose children he taught\nwhen he waa school principal in the\nearly days, and also shook hands\nwith W. R. (Billy) Ross, K.C., of the\ngolden city for two years ln the\n\u25a0old McBrlde cabinet, Billy Ross looking  particularly  fit.\nInside  Dope  on Byelectlon\nAsked if he cared to relieve Nelson's curiosity regarding the byelectlon date, the premier said he would\nmake the same frank statement that\nhe made to a group of political\nfriends and opponents in Vancouver\nwho asked him when the New Westminster byelectlon was coming.\n\"I told them,\" remarked the premier, with a, broad smile, \"that I\nwould tell them as closely as I couldj\nand that It would be some time before   1(29.\"\nWithout amplifying further, the\npremier left It to be inferred that\nthe Nelson byelectlon would take\nplace not later than the legal period\nwithin which, under the law, lt mint\nbe  brought   on.\nOrganiser   With   Him\nOn his arrival here the premier\nwas met by his party friends, Including L H. Choquette, president of the\nNelson Liberal association, Mayor J.\nA. M-Honald. E. W. Widdowson. A.\nL. McCulIoch, and E. R. Redpath,\nall members ot the party executive\nhere.\nHe Is accompanied by Major S. F.\nM. Moodie, Liberal organizer. This\nls the major's fourth visit to Nelson\nsince the seat became vacant ln Auguat by the death of the later Pre-\nmir OUvr.\nUsed Article.\nReal Estate <\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobile*\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nUp Wanted\nPosition Wantedj\nLost and Found\nUn Slick\n\"ndlfiMf\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWan. eeA cumfied Advwttrfa* \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per Insertion, If paid tn advance, 9c per word\nper week, or 22*^c per word per month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a canh-\nln-advance basis. Each -Initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc., counts aa one word.\nMinimum 25c. if charged 60c.\nI_oc*l Baadlnf Voticea \u2014 Three cents\nper word each Insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4o per word.\nBlackface capitals &c a word. Twenty-\n, five per cent disc-punt if run dally wlth-\ni out change of copy for one month or\n'more. Where advertisement la set out\nfn short dines the charge Is 16c a line\nfor Roman type, 20c for blackface and\n26c for blackface capitals.. Minimum\n36c, If charged 60c.\nList, of Wadding- Frss\u2014i% and\nFloral TrlbntM at Funeral* \u2014 Ten\n: cents per line.\nHarrlag-SB-, Deaths and In xemortnm\nCards\u2014Three cents per word; 60c minimum.\nBlrtk Vcttc**-\u2014Free.   \t\nRENE   LACOSTE\nAbove, on Saturday defeated \"Biff\nBill Tilden tn the final for the National tennis title play. Lacoste with\nCochet copped France's flrat victory\nin the Davis cup competition. Rene\nLacoste won both the Bills\u2014Tilden\nand Johnston\u2014while Henri Cochet,\nbelow, was victor) over the latter ln\nthe deciding match of the series.\nBirths\nCHh.UUY \u2014 At Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, on September 22, to Mr. and\nMre. D. C. Cherry, 24 Palls street, a\nson.\nFLETCHER\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Emll G.\nFletcher of East Trail, at Trall-Tafl-\nunac hospital, September 21, a son.\nProperty For Sale\nBUYS\nSILICA STREET\u2014A comfortable\n6-room house: 3 bedrooms* large\nliving room, dining room and\nkitchen. All in flrst-claa* condition. A snap at $2500.00 and\nterms.\nOB8ERVATORT STREET\u2014A well-\nbuilt *-room bungalow: 8 bedrooms, dining and living room,\naun parlor, concrete foundations\nand cellar, hot air furnace. A\nbargain at  $3000 and terma.\na W. DAWSON\nGeneral Insurance.\nPhone 197 P. Box Ttl\nAnnable   Block.\n(974\u00ab)\nHelp Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Two young men or women\nof good character, to do sales work\nIn Nelson and district Immediate, for\nresponsible and growing firm. Apply mornings, 608 Ward street, between nine and ten o'clock. Inter-\nmountaln Building and Loan Association. (9600)\nDRAW AQAIN\nBUENOS AYRES, Bept. 25.\u2014The\nfourth game of the world's chess\nchamphmship match between Jose\nCapablanca, the titleholder. and Alexander Alekhlne, Russian challenger,\nmded in a draw last night after 49\nmoves. Each man has now won one\nSame and two games were drawn.\nFormer Prokibition\nAgent Arrested on\nCharge of Piracy\nMIAMI, Fla., Sept. 25.\u2014Charged\nwith having participated as an unauthorized member of a coastguard\ncrew In the seizure of a rum running\nvessel within the three-mile territorial\nlimit of British waters, Charlea H.\nNestle, former United States prohibition agent, has been arrested at\nBimlnl by Bahama colonial government authorities for alleged piracy on\nthe high seas, reports received here\nsaid.\nDetails of  the  capture of   the  rum\nboat were lacking.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nColumbus   5-3,   Louisville   6-6.\nToledo    5-2,    Indianapolis    2-0\nMinneapolis   2-2,   Kansas   City   3-8,\nSt.   Paul   8-15,   Milwaukee   9-6.\nAgricultural Jubilee\nfor Canada W'dl Be\nCelebrated at Toronto\nOTTAWA, Sept. 25.\u2014\"Canada's\nagricultural jubilee is to be celebrated\nin this sixtieth year of confederation\nand due recognition paid ito agriculture\u2014the greatest of the Dominion's   basic   industries.\"\nAnnouncement to this effect 1*\nmade by Hon. W. R. Motherwell,\nfederal minister of agriculture, who\nhas initiated the plans through which\nit is hoped will be brought home to\nthe people of Canada, the far-reaching extent and Importance agriculture\nplays   ln  Canadian   life.\nWhile the complete details of the\nprojected \"Canada's Agricultural\nJubilee\" may not be announced yet,\nit has been decided to hold It ln\nconnection with the royal winter at\nToronto from November 16 to No'\nvember 24 as the new buildings\nerected (there jointly by the Dominion and province of Ontario offer a\nsplendid setting for the event. His\nExcellency Viscount Willingdon has\nconsented to officiate at the opening\n, ceremonies,\nWomen's Canadian\nClosed Golf Play\nGets Away Today\nTORONTO, Sept. 25.\u2014More tha\u00bb\n200 women will tee off tomorrow in\nthe qualifying round of the women's\nCanadian c'osed championship, the\nlargest number ln the history of th*\nevent.\nThe 32 players returning the best\nscores will form the championship\nflight. The remainder of the field\nwill be grouped in flights for the\nmatch play, which commences oh\nTuesday.\nSAMPHIRE  WINS\nPARIS, Sept. 25.\u2014Samphire, owned\nby C. W. Blrkins, today won the\n2400-raeters stake, valued at 76,000\nfrancs, at Longchamps, by a neck.\nThirteen ran.\nWANTED\u2014Men, mechanically Inclined,\nwho would like to work at the world's\ngreatest paying Industry. Auto mechanics, garage work, electrical ex\nperts, welding, battery anf vulcanising. We guarantee to train you to\nqualify for big pay positions. Only a\nshort time required, Write or call\nHemphill's Auto Engineering School,\n10 Hastings St. E., Vancouver, B.C.\n(9634)\n|100 MONTHLY \u2014 Energetic young\nman for office assistant sales, live\nB. C. agricultural center; $2000 Investment required (secured); new to\nnartnership. Box 9754, Daily News.\n(9764)\nENERGETIC MAN, for milk wagon;\nreferences necessary; steady job for\nright man. Apply Box 8779, Daily\nNews. (9779)\nWANTED \u2014 Two experienced canvass-\nerp (male or female) to take orders\nfor \"Thrift Dry Soap'1 as shown ut\nthe Nelson \u2022Exhibition. No collecting\nor delivering. Apply Monday, between 9 and 11 a.m., Room 4, Annable\nBldg.  (9798)\nLADIES WANTED to do plain and light\nsewing at home, whole or spare time.\nGood pay. Work sent any distance,\ncharges paid. Send stamp for particulars. National Manufacturing\nCo., Montreal.  (9584)\nJ1RL FOR GENERAL HOUSEWORK\n\u2014Three in family, no children. Apply, 'phone or write Mrs. D. P. Kane,\nKaslo, B.C. (9774)\nWANTED \u2014 Woman to do housework\none day a week for two hours. Apply 713 Silica street between two and\nfour p.m. (9794)\nA BIG $6 Private Christmas Greeting\n\"\u25a0 Card sample book free; men and\nwomen already making five dollars\nup dally, in spare ttme; experience or\ncapital unnecessary. Garretson Co.,\nBrantford,   Ont. (9673)\nSALESMAN WANTED IMMEDIATELY for wholesale house, Nelson. State\nage, and experience If any. Box 9776,\nDaily News.  (9776)\nSchools\nMOLER REAUTY COLLEGE\nMOST SUCCESSFUL COLLEGE ON\nTHE CONTINENT\nExpert instructors in all branches of\nBeauty Culture, including Water Waving and Permanent Waving. Terms.\nMoler, 10 Hastings St. E., Vancouver,\nB.C. (8633.\nMEN AND WOMEN LEARN BARBER.\nING\u2014Expert Instructors in one of the\nbest paying businesses. Earn while\nyou learn and become independent.\nCall or write Moler Barber College,\n10 Hastings Bt. E., Vancouver, B.C.\n(9633)\nA MAN RENTED ONE\nHOUSE\nFifteen   yeara\nPaid, at least 13600.00\nFOR RECEIPTS\nHe has since bought the house.\nPAID TWICE FOR ONE\n'HOUSE\nPoor business.\nYou   can   buy\nA NEAT; COMPACT, NEW\nBUNGALOW\nHas open fireplace, good fittings.\n$3250.00, $600.00 cash, balance\nmonthly.\nWe have property to suit all\npurses.\nCALL   OR  PHONE\nRobertson Realty\n.Company, Ltd.\n414 War. Street\nPhone M\n(9783)\nHOUSE!\u2014Close  ln,   cement   foundation,\nfor sale cheap.    P.O. Box 987. (9653)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Six-roomed   nouse.     \u00a7ar-\n?:aln for quick sale.   Apply P. E. Pou-\nIn.  (9710)\nFIVE-ROOM HOUSE, good baBement.\nEasy terms. Apply Box 9734, Dally\nNews. (9734)\n984 ACRES timber and grazing land,\nadjoining Nelson townsite; 6-room log\nhouse; with creek through property;\nonly $6 per acre. Frame house and\n\"two city blocks, nearly 4 acres, $1000.\nIt.  Hcd-Ie, Box 663. (9736)\nAgents Wanted\nANYONE CAN EARN 826 weekly up,\nln city or country, ln spare time taking orders for the best-known, highest grade, lowest-priced line Canadl-\nan-rnade Christmas greeting cards.\nMagnificent sample book free. Write\nCanadian Publishing company, 61\nWellington W\u201e  Toronto. 19402)\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED TO BUT FOR CASH\u2014Furnished or unfurnished modern house,\nwith three of more bedrooms. Phone\n60'R, (97271\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nROOMS, with piano \u2014 624 Latimer\nstreet. (9776)\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's Apartments.    (9476)\nFOR RENT IN ANNABLE BLOCK\nOne two-roomed suite, furnished; one\ntwo-room suite, unfurnished; one sin\ngle housekeeping room; one single or\ndouble bedroom.   Phone 77.       (9477)\nFURNISHED   TWO-ROOM    SUITE   \u2014\n507 Carbonate. (9476)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nROOMS  ahove Toole  Drug. (9799)\nPersonal\nKNOW TOUR FUTURE \u2014 Send dime\nand birth date. Let me try and locate your future mate; will send\nname and address. Ade!., Box 619,\nSta.  C, Los Angeles.  Calif.      (9615)\nAutomobiles\nWILL SELL MT EQUITY ln Buick car,\n1918 model, extra good shape, 3100.\nBox 9726, Dally News. (9726)\nSituations Wanted\nEXPERIENCED CAMP COOK DESIRES POSITION; references. Apply   Daily   News,   Box   9789.       (9789)\nWOMAN, OOOD WORKER, wants\nhousekeeping place In city or farm.\nApply Box 64, Rossiand, B.C.    (9771)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nUsed\nPianos\nOn*       New       Scale       Williams'\nPlayer 1460.00\nOne  Mount  Royal  Player  $426,00\nOne   Willis   Piano    $276.00\nOne    new    Craig    Player    Piano,\nregular $760.00, for  $676.00\n26   ROLLS   WITH   BACH\nPLAYER\nCall or write\nGerard Heintzman Piano\n609 Ward Street\nJ.   R.   BOWMAN,   AGENT\n(9768)\nFOR BALE \u2014 One B.  B. C.  IV,  x  4\npool   table,   slate  and  woodwork,   aa\nSood aa new.   Price $160.   H. Scheer,\nrand Forks. (9667)\nNew Enamel Bath Tubs V I\",\n$28.00; Sinks', 18x30, $5.60; Complete stock new and used pipe\nand fittings; guaranteed good\npaint, red or black, $2.26 per\ngallon; apeclal values In Roofing\nFelt, Barbed Wire, Corrugated\nIron, Wire Rope, Canvas and\nmaterial of all descriptions. B. C.\nJunk Co., Vancouver, B.C.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n186 Powell St. Vancouver, B.C.\n(9479)\nBARRELS,   KEGS  AND  EMPTT   sacks\n\u2014McDonald Jam Company, Nelson.\n(9480)\nPIPE\u2014We have a quantity of one-Inch\npipe for sale; In new condition. Nelson Iron Works, Ltd. (9434)\nFALL WHEAT AND FALL RTB FOR\nSEED \u2014 Local grown, \u2022 Cranbrook\nTrading Co. (9883)\nFOR SALE\u201414-foot boat with 2 HP.\nEngine. Will take rowboat or canoe\nIn exchange. Apply Daily News, Box\n9796. (9796)\nFOR SALE\u2014One field spaniel.\n334R.\nPhone\n(9778)\nPIANO FOR SALE\u2014Will sacrifice for\ncash.    Apply Box 701, Nelson.  (9763)\nWILL SACRIFICE FORTY ACRES, one\nmile from Winlaw station, for $450\ncash. Good oabln on place. Snap lt.\nApply Hugo Du Mont, Bridesville,\nB.C. (9685)\nVIOLIN, leather-covered case, one bow\nand all accessories, twenty dollars.\nBox 809. Fernle. B.C. (9748)\nFORD TOURING, fully equipped, run\n700 miles. Cash or terms. Also, one\nKoken Hydraulic Barber Chair, good\ncondition.    Apply 508 Josephine.\n(9803)\nFOR SALE\u2014Lloyd, baby carriage. Like\nnew.    H. Townsend, 314 Mill street.\n(9808)\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Young registered Jersey\nbull, T. B. tested. J. A. Robinson,\nBlewett P.O., B.C. (9755)\nMiscellaneous\nWANTED\u2014Good  secondhand  safe:  not\nless   than   23 x 17 x 15   Inches   Inside.\nHipperson Hardware Co., Nelson, B.C.\n(9780)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nLAID   BBOXVTBT  AOT\n(Section   160)\nIN THE MATTER OF Parcel \"A\" of\nassigned number one (1) of Lot 10882,\nGroup 1, Kootenay District, Province of\nBritish  Columbia.\nProof having been filed ln my office\nof the loss of Certificate of Title No.\n8761-1 to the above mentioned lands In\ntha name of Isabel Till and bearing\ndate the 17th of February, 19J0,\nI HEREBY OIVE NOTICE of my in\ntentlon at the expiration of one calen<\ndar month from tbe first publication\nhereof to Issue to the said Isabel Till\na provisional Certificate of Title In\nlieu of such last Certificate. Any person having any Information with reference to such lost Certificate of Title is\nrequested to communicate with the undersigned.\nDATED at the Land Registry Offiee,\nNelson, B.C., this 18th day of August,\n1927.\nA W. IDIENS,\nRegistrar.\nDate of first publication, August 23,\n1927. (9185)\nLive Stock for Sale\nREGISTERED    BOLST&IN    BU\nyears   old    '\nquiet.    Apply I\n  (\u00bb7\u00abr\nJERSEY-AYRSHIRE COW FOR SAlj\n\u2014Fall freshening. No reasonable L\nfer refused. Short of hay. Box 971\nDally News.\t\nFOR SALE\u2014flix -weeks-old Torfcggjjj\npigs, fl collars, cob, Edgewood, 8\nR.  Hopp. <>fl\nFor Rent\nifflfl\nSMALL  STORE  FOR  RENT  \u2014  Al\nMack's Billiard HalL\t\nHOUSE!\u2014Modern, four rooms; new |\ndecorated; High street. Free watjT\nTwenty dollars.   Ed. FergUBon._(9Tj|\nFOR  RENT\u2014Well-located  stoi\nbnrlness section on Baker street, 1\ntween   Ward   and   Josephine   strat\nFor  further  particulars, apply  R\nDawson,  Annable  Block. (978>|\nHOUSE    TO    RENT,    fully    :furnish\nclose In.    Apply the Ark. (KM\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014On    Sunday,    probably   bstwecj\nCarbonate   and   Fairview\u2014gold\npattern bracelet.    Notify Dally Net\nReward. (97*\nLOST\"'\u2014 On \"Kootenay street, ft*\nsweater. H. Townsend, match blod\nman.    Reward. (18011\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nAssayers\nE.  tT.  WTDDOWSOM,   Box   AU08,  Nel\nbos,  B.C.    Standard western  charge*\n (MMl\nAccounting\nCH-J-XES  r.  HUMTEX\u2014\nAuditor,    MacDonild   Jam    Bui\nBox 1191, Nelson. B.C. (948l~\nSpices, Extracts. Etc.\nTBI\"   BAWMIOH'S   r*OD*JOT_\u2014 Mail\norders to Box 23, or Phone 37.R3.\n(94841\nTaxidermist\nlABIIimi, rux-usB\u2014\nrastOT  B-J-XEKA-F, Edrewood, B.Ol\n(969IJT\nTransfer\nWIT.T.TSm'    TBABSrEB   \u2014\nCoal  and  Wood.    Phone  10\nBaggaael\n.   (94Ttir\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSOV \u2014  Baker  St.  Carpenter aadL\nJoiner.   Serpens and Hardwood,   (9498)1\nInsurance and Real Estate!\nB.   W.   DAWSON\u2014\nBeal Estate, Insurance, Bentals, Ann-\nable Blk.  P.O. Box 733.  Phone 197.\n <9M7)|\nH.   B.   DILL\u2014I**BTJ_-__TCE,\n'ABM AND   CITT PBOPEBTT\n608 Ward Street,\n(9488)1\nChiropractors\nDB. QUAY, (\u00ab-_\u2022_\u00bb BIX. \u2014 Phones:!\nOft. 115,     Res. 621Y.     Hrs.: 10-12 and I\n.   Saturday, 9:30-12. Q488) I\nFlorists\nOIUHIIIIE'8     OBEENHODBES,    Nelson.   Cut flowers and floral designs.\n(9490) |\nTO \u00ab.  JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone   842.       Cut   mowers.     Potted I\nPlanla   and   Floral   Emblems.     (9491) ]\nWholesale\nA.   MACDONALD   ft   CO.\u2014\nWholesale     Grocers     and     Provision I\nMerohante,  Importers  of Teas, Coff-\nfees, Spices, Dried Fruits, Staple and\nFancy Groceries, Nelson, B.C.       19492)\nEngineers\nA. X. OSIER CO.\u2014OOVTBACTOBR\nFormerly Green Bros.. Burden,  Nelson.\nClTll and Mining Engineers\nB.C., Alberta and Dominion Land\n-hunreyw. (9494)\ne* V. DAW80X\u2014Land Surveyor.\nMining and Clyil Engineer\nKaelo, B.C. (9495)\nKATWABD   C.   XINaXOBB   \u2014   Bonsst\nBnglnew, Cranbrook, B.C. \u2014 Timber\nestimates and logging maps. Reports\non  timberland  properties. (9498)\nFuneral Directors\nD. J. ROBERTSON.\n1*. S. B. ft B.\nSanitary Parlors and Beal. Mo tor Beerss\nPhone _SS Day; Bight, 157I_\nEBTICB (9497)\nSERVICE\n(9073)\nP\"\nMudard Furaltvrt\nCo. \u2014 Undertakers.\nAuto Hearse, up-to-\nlate chapel. Beat\nw services. Prises\n*U!\/  reasonable.     (9498)\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, 1927\nIIITEDIS  PRICE MOVEMENTS\nUP OBI POINTS\nClones at 246 at Montreal; Canadian Canners Also Makes\nGood Cafai\nON THE UPGRADE\nMclntyre  Soars  Sixty  Cents;\nAmulet Breaks Through\nHigh \u2022 Mark\nMONTREAL, fl\u00abpt. 25.\u2014The recovery\ni values which got under way on Fri-\nay was carried on with increased vigor\nt Saturday's short session on the stock\n\u25a0exchange, with substantial advances re-\nported.\n^National Breweries furnished trading\n|In I79t> ehares, and closed at the new\nHgh of 88-4 for a net gain of 2%. Con-\n\u25a0aelidated Smelting came second ln trad-\nItDg with 4700 shares, and closed at 246,\nla gain of 12 points. Braillian hsd a\niturnover of 3S5B shares, and closed at\n1*11% for a net gain of 2% points.\nCanadian Canners preferred recorded\nI the greatest gain, closing at the new\nIglgh of 105, ex-dlvldend, for a net gain\nj-of 12 hi points, with trading In only SO\nIthares. Steel of Canada closed at 1\u00bb4,\n|for a net decline of 4 points. Dominion\nBridge gained \u00ab points, at 262.\nTotal sales 29,148 shares; bonds,\n118200. t\nClosing Qmotattoas at Montreal\nI Bank of Commerce  282\niBank of Montreal     .343\n[ Bank of Nova Scotia  889\n[Royal   Bank    828\nI Asbestos   Corporation  29 y.\nft Asbestos Corporation preferred... 16\nI Atlantic Sugar    26\nI Bell  Telephone , ...149H\nBritish Colombia Btahing    13%\nI Braslllan T. L. * Powsr 182%\nI Brompton   Paper     40*\n[ Bunker   Hill    115\nj Canadian Canners  69\nCanada Car & Foundry preferred. 86%\n[Canada  Cement    244y*\nCanada Cement preferred   123\nCanada Converters   ...; v. 108\nCanadian Industrial Alcohol    Z9%\nI Canada Steamship Lines preferred 90 %\nConsolidated Mining ft Smelting. .246\nj Dominion Bridge   261 %\nDominion   Glass    130 Vi\nDominion  Textile    181%\nHoilinger  Mines    17.00\nMassey-Harris      37 %\nMassey-Harris  preferred    108%\nImperial  OU     63%\n.Lake of tho Woods   152\nLwurentfde     104%\nNational   Breweries  88 %\nOgilvle Milling   310\nPenmans   Limited     86\n, Pstsr Lyall     38\nPrlca Brothers     61 %\n\u2022Quebec   Power    203\nShawlnlgan     90%\nSherwin Williams preferred    120\nSpanish  River    103%\nSpanish  Rfver preferred* 117\nSteal Co. of Canada   195\nSteel Co. of Canada preferred 190\nWtayagamack      82\nWinnipeg  Railway    g]%\n.Winnipeg Railway preferred   106\nTORONTO, Sept. 86.\u2014While trading\nop the Standard Mining exchange Saturday was much lighter than In tha\ncorresponding seaslon of the week previous, major price movements wero all\non the upgrade, and hardly\" any of the\ndeclines in the active Issues were more\nthan fractional.\nMclntyre was the leader in the advance, soaring to $27.35, and closing at\nthat point, a gain of 60c. Dome, after\ntouching 111.16, eased to 810.90, up 10c.\nOoldale was up %, to 83%: but Vlpond\nlost lc, at 66c.\nWright Hargreaves rose to 17.80 and\nfinished at 37.75, 10c higher, while Teak\nHughes climbed a similar amount to\n39.90. KIrkland Lake was 7c better, at\n,12.35, and Beaver was 8c better at |1.76.\nLake Shore failed to make a new marh\nbut closed at 125.60, up 10c.\nMcKlnley Darragh sprang Into prominence by reaching 25%, the best price\nof the year, and finished at 22c, a gain\nOf 5%.\nAmulet broke through its previous\nrecord, and after touching $7.10 eased to\n$6.97 compared with the previous close\nof 16.90. Noranda and Towagamac were\neach 5c higher, at $24.75 and $4.76, respectively.\n*r.-J\"* *T'-T\nPKIItlTT\nRealizing   Sales   Quickly   Absorbed j Rail List Great;\nOils in Spurt\nSpokane Stocks\n(Reported by C. W. Appleyard)\nCanadian Pacific Railway   .....$184\nChrysler    $ 5914\nDodge  Brothers   f 18\nGreat Northern  $101 %\nInternational Nickel   $69%\nStudebaker    $ 68%\nPhillips  Petroleum    $42%\nUnited  States  Steel    $152%\nLucky Jfm       28c\nAmerican   Locomotive    $107%\nSmelters     $238\nBrazilian   Traction  .\\m\\\nMassey-Harris     $ 37 %\nSeagrams    $ 21 %\nWinnipeg   Electric        $ 83\nNoranda     $ 24 %\nAsbestos   preferred    .....$ *95\nGoldsmith        10c\nUP IT TORONTO\nCanners, Nickel, Hersey and the\nOil Issues Lead the Way\nSaturday\nTORONTO, Sept. 26.\u2014Prices were bid\nup vigorously ln the brief Saturday\nmarket op the Toronto Stock exchange\nwith Canadian Canners, International\nNickel, Page Hersey and the oil Blocks\nshowing most activity. Several new\nhigh marks were established.\nCanadian Canners preferred reached\na new peak at 106, a gain of 4 points.\nPage Hersey common reached a new\nhigh at 90, and finished at 88%, a net\ngain of 2%. The preferred advanced to\n180 and finished at 178. Shredded\nWheat moved up to a new peak at 71%\nand closed at 70%, a net gain of 1.\nBritish American Oil attained a new\nhigh at 33% with trading in 9065\nshares. Imperial Oil also made a new\nhigh at 62% and closed at 62%, a net\ngain of 2%; McColl touched* a high'at\nSO, and closed at 49%.\nOther changes: British t Columbia\nFishing, up %; Canadian Can common,\nup 4; Canadian Oil, up 2; Smelters, up\n9; Dominion Bank, up 1; Royal, up 5;\nStandard, up 3; and Toronto, off 8.\nNEW TORK, Sept. 36. \u2014 Strength\nand activity of the public utility\nshares, half a dosen of which attained\nrecord high prices, featured the resumption of the upward movement of\nprices ln Saturday's stock market. Buying of these shares was stimulated by\nmerger reports and larger current earnings.\nOperators for the rjse again con-\ncorned themselves with some of th*\nhigh-priced pivotal stocks, notably tbe\nGeneral Motors shades, United States\nStool, American Smelting and Dupont.\nThe usual week-end realising came into\nthe market during the day, but sales\nof this character were promptly and effectively absorbed.\nRailroads were rather quiet, showing\nlittle disposition to get fax away from\nyesterday's final figures. Atchison,\nBrie and a few others were up a point\nor so. Rubber issues were again active,\nKelly-Springfield 6 and 8 per oent preferred getting Into new high ground,\nalthough some others reflected profit-\ntaking.\nMail order issues sold well, Montgomery Ward moving up more than 2\npoints, and Sears-Roebuck half a*\nmuoh. Houston OU staged one of Its\ncharacteristic spurts, but petroleum\nsues otherwise werp not yery active.\nThe weekly bank statement showed\neacess reserve of clearing house member's of $25,067,450, an Increase In \u00bb\nserve of $55,330,090 over the previous\nweek-end. The actual condition this\n\u2022eyey showed decreases in all principal\nitems except cash In own vaults, which\ngained $2,082,000 and reserve in Federa\nReserve bank of member banks which\nrose $42,223,000. Loans, discounts, in\nvestments, etc., declined $109,423,000\nreserve In own vaults $653,000, net demand deposits $101,763,000, and time de\nposits $12,655,000.\nHow  Tork  Stook  Quotations\nHigh     Low    Close\nAllied   Chem.    ...    161        158%    160\nAmer.   Tele     175%    174%    176%\nAnaconda           48%      48%      48%\nAtchison         192%    191%    192%\nBait, ft Ohio  ....    121%    121       121%\nCan.   Pacific   ....    184%    183%    184\nCerro  de  Pasco..      65*%      65 66\nChile   Copper   ...      36 34%      35%\nChrysler          69%      58%      68%\nCorn Products   ...      58 57%       57%\nDodge   \"A\"            18%      17%       18\nDupont'        336%    832%    334%\nGen.   Motors   ....    271       266       270%\nGen.   Electric   ...    136%    186%    186%\nGranby           36%      36%      36%\nGt. Nor.  pfd     101%    101        101%\nHowe   Sound          41%      41%      41%\nInter.   Nickel   ...      64%      69%      69%\nKenne. Copper ...      76%      74%      76\nN. Y. Central   ...    167%    166%    167%\nNational  P.   ft.   L.      26%      24%       25%\nPhillips  Petr.   ...      42%      42%      42%\nRadio   Corp       65%      6$%       65^\nShell   Union   Oil..       26%      25%       26%\nSine.   Cons       17%     17        17%\nStan. OU Cal.   ...      59%      59%      64%\nStan. OU N. J.  ..      40 39%      39%\nStudebaker          59 58%      68\nTex.   Gulf  Sulph..       77 76%       76%\nUnion  Pacific   ...    189%    188%    188%\nU. S. Rubber        56%      65%      66\nU.   S.   Steel        152%    151%    152%\nWillys   Ovid       16 16%       15%\nMinimum Prices That\nLicensed Skippers\nAllowed to Charge\nTha following ara tha latsat \u25a0*\u25a0!<\nmum prices f.o.b. shipping point, fixed\nby tba latarlor trea (rait aad vegetable\ncommittee of direction, at Eaton*, to\ngovern licenced sblppers, wko seer exceed these price* but cannot fo below\ntheav\nJobbera,\nRetailers Retailers\nexpress\nfreight\nOravenstein,  fancy   ..\n1 1.60\n|  1.15\nOravenstein,   \"C\"   \t\n1.20\n1.45\nOravenstein, cratea  ..\n1.10\nl.\u00ab\nEarly applea, up to\nDuchess,   wrapped..\n1.U\n1M\nEarly applea, up to\nDucheaa, cratea\t\n1.00\n1.11\nDucheaa,     bulk,     ton.\ncontainer*  extra   ..\nSl.OO\nM.M\nWealthiea, fancy  ....\n1.(0\n1.16\n1.10\n1.4S\nWealthiea, crates  ....\n1.00\n1.16\nWealthles,   bulk,   con\ntainers  extra,  ton..\n40.00\n4S.00\nMclntoah,   fancy   ....\n1.1*\nl.OO\nMcintosh, \"C.\" 1*\np.c. oolor, 111*  ....\nl.se\n1.70\nMcintosh,  crates  ....\n\/US\n1.S0\nMcintosh, balk, crate\nSS.OO\n00.00\nKin* David, balk.\ncontainers extra, ton\n\u2022 l.OO\nSl.OO\nKootenay Oem,  fancy\n1.S0\n1.05\nKootenay   dam,   \"C\".\n1.10\n1.46\nKootenay Oent,  cratea\n110\n1.16\nSuch early applea aa\nAlexander,      Beltig-\nhelmer,          Colvert,\nHubbardson,     Maid\nen Blush,    Rlbaton,\nSt. Lawrence,  Scar-\nlet Pippin,  Twenty-\nOunce, wrapped   .. \u25a0\n111\n1.4*\nAbove varletiea, cratea\n1.00\n1.15\nAbove varletiea, bulk,\ncontainers extra, ton\n46.00\n60.00\nCrabs, fancy, straight\n1.00\n1.11\nCrabs,  \"C,\"  standards\n.11\n1.00\nHyslop   crabs,   fancy.\n1.1s\nl.M\n-.\u2014\u2014     I   ,1 ..If\u2014   \u2014 .. -\u25a0   .11\nTO FIFTY-FIVE\nIL\nBeef Also Appreciates ia Price;\nPork Plentiful bat\nSells Out\nJobbers,\nRetailers Retailers\nexpress freight\nBartlett, extra fancy    .11.71 11.00\nBartlett, fancy    '  1.50 1.76\nBartlett,   \"C\"           1.16 MO\nAnjou,   fancy          2.75 3.00\nAnjou,   \"C\"       Ill 1.60\nAll ethers except An-      . .\nJou and Winter Nellie, extra fancy....     2.50 2.76\nAll  others,   as   above,\nfancy           2.26 t.SO\nAll others, as above,\n\"C\"           2.00 ..If\nWEEK'S ODE XT\nTRAIL ELEVEN\nCompany Mines Ship 8889 Tons,\nCustom, 2637; Total to\nDate 438,228\nEggs took another Jump in price et\nthe local market Saturday morning, and\nare now selling at 66c a' dosen.\nTbjere was a large supply of pork on\nthe market for the first time for some\ntime, find together with beef wu\nquickly sold.  Beef wen* up 6c a.pound.\nBradshaw plums,- selling at 6c Mt\npound last week, dropped to 4c.\nFoliowlog ara the pneea quetafl:\nEggs,   dosen       65c\nButter,   lb 46c\nBeef, lb   10c to 15c\nVeal   lb 15c to lOo\nBaby beef, lb., 16c and   25c\nPork,   lb S6o to SOo\nFowl,   lb.     l*o\nCheese,   lb sec\nMsrmalade.   lb Me\nHorse   radish,   lb He\nCream   cheese,   lb S6o\nCure,   dish      Me\nCarrots,    .   lbs  Uo\nCelery,   bunch      loe\nParsley, bunch      Be\nSpring   chicken,   lb J6e\nCucumbers, up from     6c\nNew potatoes,  10 lbs  25c\nNew  potatoes,  sack $2.00\nTomatoes, up from 4 lbs 26c\nVegetable marrow, each, up from.. 10c\nHubbard  squash, each     SOc\nOreen peppers, 6 lbs 25c and 35c\nGolden Bantam corn, dos., up from 25c\nCabbage,  per   head 5c,   10c, 15c\nLettuce, per bunch   .*     Co\nBeans,   I   lbs 25c\nBradshaw   plums,   lb     4c\nOravenstein apples, box, up from 11.86\nCrabapples,   per   box  1.19\nPears, per box, up from   $2.26\nReceipts during the week ending oa\nSeptember 21, of 11,624 tons of ore,\nmade the total receipts to dato this\nyear at the Trail reduction plant of the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting Company of Canada, 418,1(2 tons.\nOf the week's total, SII8 tone were\nshipped by company mines, and 26S7\nwas otistom ore. These made the totals\nfor company mines' receipts and cus\ntorn ore, respectively, 229,156 and 109,\n228 tons.\nOmvtom   \u25a0 lSlip-\nCustom receipts In detail for the\nweek were:\nCopper concentrates \u2014 Allenby, Allenby, 618.\nLead ore\u2014Bell, Beaverdell, 40; Bluebell, Rlondel, 111.\nLead concentrates\u2014Van Hot, Silver-\nton, SO.\nZlac concentrates \u2014 Bluebell, Rlondel,  99; Van  Roi, Silverton,  81.\nMilling ore\u2014Bluebell, Riondel, 292;\nBluebell, Pilot Bay, 30; Lucky Jim,\nZincton, 44; Mammoth, \u2022 Silverton, 33;\nRambler-Cariboo, Rambler, 41; Rose-\nbfry-Surprise, New Denver,  196;  Ruth,\nSays Darwin's Theory Has Destroyed Story of Creation\nTold in Genesis\nOTTAWA, Sept. 25.\u2014Toronto \u2014 Extras In good demand, with other grades\nmoving slowly.\nMontreal \u2014 Extras 46c to 49c, flrstB\n\u2022lie to 44c, seconds 32c to 36c.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Extras 40c, firsts 3\u00abc\nSeconds SOc\nEdmonton \u2014 Extras 35c to 40c, firsts\nt2c to 37c, seconds 27c to 32c.\nVancouver\u2014Dealers are now quoting\nproducers for ungraded eggs, delivered,\nextras 44c to 48c, firsts 41c to 48c, pullet extras 37c.\nWttTISH  COLUMBIA   BOOS\nFresh firsts 49c, firsts 4\u00abc, pullet*\n,42c, peewees 28c.\nVancouver Stocks\nBid\nB.  C.  Silver   \t\nCork   Province     '    .07%\nDunwell    28\nIndependence\t\nIndian Mines 05\nInter.   Coal    23\nLucky   Jim    27%\nMarmot Metals 10\nPremier    \u25a0       2.25\nPorter   Idaho    2714\nRuth   Hope    27\nSelkirks   \t\nSilver Crest   \t\nSilversmith    19%\nRichmond   > 12%\nCoast  Copper        16.60\nB. C. Mont 00 1-10\nBrit.  Petr 07%\nTrojan Oil   \t\nSunloch     60\nAsked\n1.40\n.08\n.SO\n.00 Vi\n.26\n.29\n2.28\n.29\n.30\n.02(4\n.05\n.21\n.18\n10.26\n.00%\n.08\n01%\nWHEAT AND CORN\nRISE AT CHICAGO\nCHICAGO, Sept. 25.\u2014With a new cold\nwave In sight and Canadian threshing\nbrought to a halt, prices both for wheal\nand corn went rapidly higher Saturday.\nClosing quotations on wheat were unsettled at 1%C to 2%c net gain, corr*\nl%c to 3c up, oats varying from K,c decline to He advance, and provisions unchanged to & rise of SOc.\nKOOTENAY BOND & INVESTMENT CO.. LIMITED\nINVESTMENT   SECURITIES\nGOVERNMENT\nMUNICIPAL  AND\nINDUSTRIAL\nBONDS\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA,\nONTARIO, MANITOBA\nAND QUEBEC MINING\n8T0CKS\nHOME OFFICE, TRAIL, B.C.\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice   8malting   and   Refining   Dr-iartmant\nTRAIL,   BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC' TRAIL\nToronto Mines\nBid\nAmulet    ,,      8,96\nAeonda        ,        ,27\nArgo    42%\nArea ts\nBeaver           1.74\nCastle    70\nCanadian  Lorraine 13\nConlagas          4.80\nCapitol    14\nDome        10.90\nDon  Rouyn    25\nGold Hill   30%\nHolly   ,     17,25\nIndian    05\nKIrkland   Lake          2.84\nKeeley 78\nLake Shore       20.50\nLaval     45\nMclntyre        27.35\nMining Corporation          J.07\nNlplsslng    ,       7.80\nNewray    41\nNoranda        24.70\nPioneer    ' , 62\nPremier         2,28\nRouyn     03%\nStadaoona    24 %\nTeck   Hughes           2.90\nTough  Oakes    30%\nWright  Hargreavea          7.76\nWest Dome Lake 05\nCentral Manitoba Mines        1.20\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Sept. 25. \u2014 Eggs and\nbutter  firm,  cheese unchanged.\nCheese\u2014Finest westerns 21 %c to 82c.\nButter \u2014 No. 1 pasteurised 18c, No.\n1 creamery 87%c, seconds 36%c.\nEggs\u2014Storage extras 44c to 46c, storage firsts 42c, storage seconds 38c, fresh\nspecials BOc, freeh extras 65c, fresh\nfirsts 4c. \u25a0\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Sept. 26. \u2014 Sterling\nexchange steady at 14.81 6-18 for 80-\nday bills and H.8\u00ab!4 for demand.\nForeign bar silver\u201458a.\nCanadian  dollars\u20147-84  premium.\nFrancs\u20148.82 He.\nLire\u20146.45c.\nVANCOUVER WHEAT\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 25.\u2014Cash and en\nroute wheat Quotations, Saturday:\nNo. 1 northern 141*1$, No. 2 northern\n117%, No. I northern 180%, No. 4 122%,\nNo. 5 112%, No. 6 102%, feed 22%.\nPLAYWRIGHT  DIES\nHELSINQFORS, Finland, Sept. 25.\n\u2014Dr. HJamlar Procope, poet and playwright, died suddenly from a heart\nattack today, only a few hours after\nhe had received the degree of Doctor\nHonoris Causa from.the Swedish ual\nvarsity.    He waa born In IMS.\n\/ Jobbers,\nRetailers Retallera\n\u2022sprees   freight\nNo.   U        11.35        fl.60\nNo.  2a       1.10 1.80\nAvdoota\nJobbers,\nRetailers Retailers\nexpress   freight\nNo. 1, 4-baaket      f 1.75      11.95\nNo. \u00bb, 4-basket          1.40 1.80\nSuitcases           1.10 1.80\nJobber*,\nRetallera Retailers\nexpress   freight\nItalian Prunes,\nsuitcases         80.85        10.80\nItalian prunes, straight\ncars, Winnipeg 25 .70\nItalian prunes, straight\nor mixed cars, Winnipeg, no diversion.        .55 .70\nYffvtablea\nJobbers,\nRetailers Retailers\nexpress   freight\nPotatoes,   ton    J 24.00    {29.00\nCarrots,   ton        26.00       85.00\nBeets,   ton        80.00       85.00\nTurnips,  ton        26.08       80.08\nCabbage,   ton         20.00       26.00\nWashed celery, lb 04 .04%\nCalifornia celery 03%      ;04\nOnions, standard, field,\nsorted, catch weight -\nsacks,   straight\nsacks,  straight  oars    80.00       86.00\nOnions as above,\nmixed   cars        86.00       40.00\nOnions, standards,\nwarehouse     graded,\neven weight sacks,\nstraight cars       82.50       27.60\nOnions as above,\nmixed   cars        87.60       42.60\nOnions, standard,\nwarehouse     graded,\ncrates, straight cars    88.00       43.00\nOnions as above,\nmixed   cars        43.00       48.00\nOnions, choice, field\nsorted, catch weight\nsacks,  straight cars   83.00       38.00\nOnions, as above,\nmixed   cars        88.00       43.00\nOnions, choice, '\nwarehouse   graded,\neven weight sacks,\nstraight cars       35.88       40.60\nOnions, as above,\nmixed  cars        40.60      46.60\nOnions, choice,\nwarehouse    graded\ncrates, straight cars    41.00       48.00\nOnions, as above,\nmixed   cars        48.00       61.00\nOnions, choice, straight\ncars,   Manitoba\nonly,   ton     28.00       33.00\nOnions, standard,\nstraight cars,\nManitoba only,  ton.    26.00       30.00\nBermuda  onions,   half\ncar or over, ton   ..    46.00       60.00\nBermuda onions, small\nlots, per ton        66.00       80.00\nPeppers, lb         .10 .18\nTomatoes,   4-basket\norates and  luga 76 .11\nTomatoes, seml-rlpe,\nbox          100        1.15\nOreen   tomatoes,   box.        .76 .90\nOreen toraatoeB,\nstraight   cars 66 .70\nOreen tomatoes,\nmixed   cars 60 .76\nEgg  plant, lb II .14\nSllverskins          1.16 1.45\nSquish,   too         80.00        85.00\nMarrow,  ton        80.00       85.00\nPumpkins,   too         80.00        86.00\nCitron,   ton         85.00        40.00\nCucumbers, bulk,\nper  ton,   containers\nextra        38.00       43.00\nCucumbers, box 60 .76\nLettuce    |      .65 .80\nFlying Officer. Is\nBach at His Old\nPost in Vanconver\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 26.\u2014After two\nyears at Camp Borden, Ont.. Frying Officer A. H. Hull has returned\nto Vancouver and will assume command of the Jericho Beach station\nhere Hts home la In Nanaimo. Flying Officer W. D. Van Aliet, who\nhas been ln command all summer,\nwill return to Camp Borden.\nWinnipeg Grain\nLOUDON. Bftrt. 14\u2014Another lea\nlight of tbe Churcfc  of Bog*\u00bbnd,\nBit.    Rev     Ernest     William    *\u00a7^^H\nbl-hop  of  BTinlngharo.  haa  *e^_U\nhimself on the  aide of the scientists\nby   asserting   that   tha  story   ol\ncreation,   as   set   forth    In   Genesis,\ncould not be accepted aa a solid fai*.\nThe bishop, preaching ln Westminster Abbey today, alluded to. tha\nrecent work of the British association, and said that, nstead of clinging to old faiths, the people should\nrather welcome new dlacoverlea with\nao open mind, and reverence the*1\ngreat  men  who   made  them.\n\"Stories of the darden of Bden\n\u25a0have become for ne,\" ha aaid, \"only\nlolk lore. Darwin's triumph haa destroyed the whole theological scheme.\nMan is not a thing who haa fallen\nfrom tho Ideal state of perfect innocence. He Is an animal who m\nslowly gaining spiritual understanding and with the gain, rising far\nabove his distant  anceators.\"\nWheat\u2014        Open   High     Low    Close\nOct.    ...    137       139%    137       139%\nNov.   ...    137       138\nDec,\nHay\nOat.\u2014\n133%    137%\n132       133*4    131%    13S\n135%    137%    135%    13<%\nOct. .\nNov. .\nDec. .\nMay .\nBarley\u2014\nOct. .\nNov. .\nDee. .\nMay\nFlax\u2014\nOct. .\nDec, .\nMay .\nRye\u2014\nOct. .\nDec. .\nHay .\nWheat\nnorthern\nNo.  I 10\n63% 64% (3\n63% 68% 68\n56 55% 64%\n67 68% 57\n7\u00ab 79% 77%\n73 77% 76\n73% 76% 73%\n76% 71% 76\n199 201 198%\n199% 201% 199%\n210 210 208\n95\n94%\n95 9\u00ab%\n94%      95%\n99 99%\nCash Priori\n\u2014No.   2 imrthern  143%,\n133%, No. 4 127%, No. 6\n1%-\n6414\n56%\n6\u00bb\n58%\n79%\n77%\n76%\n7\u00ab\n199%\n200\n208%\n91%\n95%\n99%\nNo.  3\n118%,\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nThe UNDERWOOD is the fastest typewriter.\nThe UNDERWOOD is the most durable typewriter.\nHundreds of users in NELSON will attest to this fact.\nWe carry all makes of typewriters from f 10.00 upward.\nRebuilt UNDERWOOD typewriters are better value\nthan any new writing machine of any other make.\nEasy terms.\nMachines on Approval.\nMr. H. R. Kitto will render authorized UNDERWOOD service in Nelson.\nUNITEDTYPEWRITERCo.,Ltd.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n^^u^onAgSnmjjanii.^f\n-r-f-\nincorpoha.teo *** may i\u00abto.\nOther Brancbea at Winnipeg, Yorkton, Haikatoon, Edmonton, Calgary, Lethbrldge.\ni Vancouver, Kamloope, Vernon and Victoria\nMen's Wear\nNEW PYJAMAS FOR FALL WEAR JUST ARRIVED\u2014Smart new stripes in\nflannelette, Ceylon flannel and twills, welLmade with silk frog: fasteners. Reasonably priced at, suit  $2.75, $3.25, $4.50\nBoys' sizes, suit  $2.25 and $2.50\nMEN'S STRIPED FLANNELETTE NIGHT SHIRTS\u2014Well made and full cut.\nEach   ,  #2.25\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear\nWATSON'S SILK SLIPS\u2014Rayon shadowproof skirt, small, medium, large and\nextra large sizes. ' In all leading colors of Powder Blue, Lipstick, Peach, Nile,\nGreen, Rose, Japonica, Black, Grey, Brown, White, Moonbeam, French Nude,\nPink, Mauve, Maize.    (AH one price)  #2.75\nSILK UNDERWEAR\u2014In Wood's, Currie Mercury, Oxford, Watson's makes. Extra quality, good wearing and washing. In kimonas, pyjamas, vests, bloomers, nightgowns, bobbetts. In assorted sizes. Trimmings of contrasting shades.\nPrices as below listed: \/\nVests ... 95*, #1.25, $1.50, #1.08\nBloomers  $1.25, $1.50, #1.75, $1.\u00bb5, $2.50, $2.98\nSlips   .' $2.75, $2.98, $3.50, $4.95\nPyjamas  #4.95, #5.50, #12.50\nKimonas #4.95, $6.95, $14.95\nNightgowns   $2.95, $3.50, $3.95\nBobbetts  #1*75, $1.95, $2.50\nDAINTY SETS consisting of vest and bloomer, trimmed lace, with lace inserted in vest and bloomer.   In Peach,  Green, Mauve, Maize.    Sizes assorted.\nPrice, per set   $4.75\nSecond Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nDry Goods\nGREY BLANKETS\u2014With Red borders.    These are of a union weave and are\nmost suitable for rough wear.   Size 56x76.    Price, pair  $2.95\nALL-WOOL BLANKETS\u2014Grey with Blue borders.    Size 50x80.   Pair . ..#5.50\nEXCEPTIONAL VALUE  IN  ALL-WOOL GREY BLANKETS \u2014 Soft, fleecy\nweave.    This blanket will stand rough wear and give satisfaction.   Size 66x86.\nPrice, per pair  $8.95\nNEW DELIVERY OF FANCY CHINA CUPS AND SAUCERS in several new\ndesigns and colorings.   Price  69*\nCUPS, AND SAUCERS\u2014With border in Tan or Blue.   Price  29*\nCUPS AND SAUCERS\u2014In a large size with color decoration.   C. and S 15*\nCUPS AND SAUCERS\u2014In a good size with bud decoration.   Price 29*\nCAKE PLATE AND 6 SMALL PLATTERS to match in floral decoration.    7\npieces for        $2.95\nTAJ.se make useful gifts.\nFANCY VASES in two sizes.   Price, each 49* and 75*\n21-PIECE TEA SET in Blue Lustre.    Price, set $3.95\n20 DOZEN WHITE CUPS AND SAUCERS with gold rim and line.   Price 20*\n1 DOZEN CANARY CUPS AND SAUCERS    39*\nFANCY CHINA PEPPER AND SALTS  in  ducks,   birds,  pelicans,  etc.    Per\npair  35* and 45*\nSALT AND PEPPER SHAKERS with fancy decorations.   Price, pair 30*\n Tea\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, lfl\nlie Ark\nower patak \u00bbll  elm,\ncurtain  nets,  scrims\n.; children's hose, 25c snd\nmen's  shirts,   (Lit;   linen\n\u25a0   tor   ttc;    heavy   socks.\nfactory  cotton,  flan-\nand   apron  ttltgllani,\nnit arc,   crockery   and\n\u2014\n15\n*ege.\nI W. HOLMES\nfa too too* teg tho ah*.\nnythe's Pharmacy\nTFTIOH n-DUUR\ntar your health.   Let as\npree-rlptlone.       Mall   orders\nexecut.4.    Call aad wait foi\n.   rkeae _.\nheani Ittlutltsl m\nDEVELOPING\nPRINTING\nENLARGING\nFRAMING\nJ. H. ALLEN\nnature   Framing\nAmateur Flnighlng\nYOU  CAN   GET  YOUR\n0. K. BREAD\n\u2022t the  following  Stereai\n. hi Neleon\u2014Star Grocery, Kendy\nland, Campbell's Grocery, Blue\n'    Bird Stare.\n; In    Fairview\u2014Fleming's    Stare,\nKMre.  Peaks,  Fairview   Fillint\n-   Station.\nREV. MR. GOWtE\nTells Sons, Daughters and Maids\nof England of Meaning of\nWord \"Worship\"\nUSES NELSON MOTTO\nAS TEXT OF  SERMON\nITYDRUGCO.\nl's   Dispensing   Chemists\na, Kortalts, Drofs, Smtloiicry.\nOrders   Promptly   Despatched.\n1SSS Nelson, B.O.     PHONE Sd\naad   Oet   Yoar   Wciirhl   Pre*\nIncrease Yonr Salary\nEvening Classes\nIndividual Tuition\nNelaon Business College\nDemocracy Must Be International as Well as National, He\nAsserts\n\"England expects tbat every man\nthla day will do  hla duty.\"\nUsing these famous words of Lord\nNelson, the motto of the British nation since the battle of Trafalgar,\nRev. D. F. Cowle, addressed a patriotic sermon to members of the\nNeleon lodges of the Sons of England and the Daughters and Maids of\nEngland at the church of the Redeemer last night. The lodges were\nmaking their annual church  parade.\nSaying English men and women In\nCanada were privileged in that they\nhad a greater sense of citizenship\nthan others through being of one\nblood with the mother government,\nbecause their honor and Integrity\nwas a world standard, and because\nthey were members of the world's\ngreatest empire, the minister played\non the word \"duty,\" urging pure and\nfull patriotism, and International si\nwell as national -democracy.\nWorship DenMndto Sacrifice\nHe developed the idea of worship,\nusing Newton's law of gravity, which\nwas. In effect, that \"everything la\ndependent upon something else.\" Worship engendered love and reverence.\nMr. Cowle aaid, and ultimately it\ndemanded sacrifice. The service ot\nholy communion waa the greatest\nkind of worship because It was a\nservice of fellowship.\nMr. Cowie ridiculed the idea that\nChrist was not the originator of the\ngolden rule, explaining that similar\nrules of great men before Christ\nwere, in effect, to \"not do unto\nothers what you would not have them\ndo unto you.\" This, he thought,\nshould be called the \"silver rule,\"\ninasmuch as it was a negative statement, while the golden rule was positive.\nCity\nTax Sale\nAll properties on which taxes are delinquent will be offered for sale by public auction in the council chamber of\nthe city hall, on Friday, the 30th day cf September, 1927,\nat 10 o'clock in the forenoon Properties sold on the 30th\npf September last year can be redeemed up to and including tho 80th of September, 1927.\n-The Cty of Nelson\n\"ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR WHO USES IT\"\nTht finest recommendations we have ever heard for our\nRaspberry and\nStrawberry Jams\nhave been the recorrtmendatlons of those who have tried\n-them and have thus become regular users.\nALL GOOD GROCERS CARRY NELSON BRAND JAMS,\nJELLIES AND MARMALADES IN STOCK\nMade in Nelson by\nMcDonald Jam Company, Limited\nHUNTING TIME IS HERE\nTiy as (or Gum, Rifles and Ammunition.   \"Duk-\nWk\" Waterproof Clothes, Camp Equipment, etc\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, Et\nRETAIL\nESS\nTruck Jackknifes\nami Hat Hydrant\nA. truck for T- H. Waters * Co.,\ndriven by Kenneth Hayes, suddenly\n\"jack-knifed\" and swerved Into a\nhydrant at the comer of Vernon and\nStanley w.reets, Saturday on Vernon.\nThe hydrant was knocked out of\nUna.\nSells More Tickets Than Other\nFive; Miss Bergstrom\nIs Second\nMine J. R. Burton, with a margin\nof 87,750 votes over her nearest\ncompetitor, Miss Mildred'Bergstrom.\nwas victor In the sales contest conducted by the Nelaon Gyro club In\nconnection with the Nelson fain.\nShe sold 1081 tickets, each ticket\nrepresenting BO votes, for a total of\n64,650 votes. Mlsa Burton sold more\ntickets than the rest of the competitors together..\nMJsa Bergstrom earned 16,800\nvotes, Miss Edith Wood 12,300, Miss\nOfpha .Manhart, 10,900, and Mlaa\nDorothy Vyae 10,600.\nThe five contestants sold h to-.nl\nof 2100 tickets at 50 cents each,\nraising 11060. Thla will be used by\nthe Gyro *ol\u00abb in community service\nwork.\nMrs. William Bennett of High\nstreet was holder of the ticket, drt-wn\nby Mayor J. A. McDonald,- which won\nthe $450 chesterfield net and Kami\nlamp. The result of the contest was\nannounced by K. D. Barnes, vice-\npresident of the Gyro club, at the\nmidway Saturday night. Mayor McDonald drew the furniture-winning\nticket from a churn, after the tickets had been thoroughly stirred.\nTWENTHIFTH\nAll FAIR\nBUT A MEMORY\nDebrte in Exhibition Buildings\nand on Ground* Marks\nIts Passing\nRECORD ATTENDANCE\nON THE FINAL DAY\nMidway and  Free Attractions\nDraw Huge Crowd; Midway\nLeaves for Vancouver\nNew Westminster to\nBe Site of Big New\nPalpwood Concern\nSEATTLE, Sept. 25.\u2014State Senator Charles G. Helfner of Seattle\nannounced last night that he and\na group of Canadian and American\nassociates contemplate construction\nof a $800,000 pulpwood -mill at New\nWestminster,  B.C.\nCA8E   DROPPED\nPICTON, Ont., Sypt. J5.\u2014No evidence was offered today In police\ncourt here when J. P. Williams of\nBelle vi is and Ralph H. Raynor appeared to, face charges <v,conspiring\nto defraud the Industrial Acceptance\ncorporation of Windsor of $18,000.\nAccordingly, the cage waa dismissed,\nand automatically the charge against\nRaynor ln connection with the same\ntransaction was dropped also,\nToday the Recreation ground* are\nscattered with scraps of paper, bits\nof wijpd, excelsior\u2014relit-ft of four\ndays of fun at -the Conklin & Garrett\nmidway. ,\nSimilar detfrs tn the exhibition\nbuildings marks the- passing of Nelson's twenty-Mth fahvThe exhibits\nhave been removed, and the buildings, thronging with life last week,\nare deserted. The Nelson fair of\n1927, t he attendant m Id way\u2014these\nare but memores.\nThe exhibition proper closed Friday\nntgbt, and exhibitors removed their\ngoods  on   Sa**day.\nPack Saturday Night\nBut the midway and the free\nacrobatic attractions curried on, and\ntthe huge attendance, afternoon and\nnlghit, testified to its popularity. At\nthe night performance of the aero\nbatlc displays, the grandstand was\npacked to capacity, and the overflow\nsurged   atyput   tha   platform.\nUp to midnight-the midway hummed with We. Cans^f \u25a0C-Haveahinch,''\n\"ihousle-housie,\" \"crown and anchor,\nthe old army game,\" \"bingo,\" and a\nhundred other expressions mingled'\nwith the blare of music from the\nmerry-go-round, the penny arcade,\nand the one-ring eveus, and above\nit all the ceaseless hum ot the crowd,\nand -the shrill shouting of hundreds\nof  youngsters.\nIt was a gala day, with a record\nattendance, and a fitting -ronc'.uHlon\nto  the  twenty-fifth   f\u00abi.r.\nConklin   A   Garrett   L_*avs\nThe midway people packed itheir\ntents and, goods during the night,\nand yesterday afternoon, attached to\na freight train, the cars left for\nVancouver to go iyto w-nter quarters.\nJ. K. Krugfcr,\nStates a\nDiego  w\nthe bay.\nlot of United\nwned at San\nane fell Into\nNelson News of the Day\nOAJtD Or THAWS*\nMlfs Mildred Bergstrom wishes to\nthank all those wee, have s sained her\nIn the Gyro Contest. (980\u00ab)\nSeason Ticket No.; 1*9 won- the $100\nworth of Jewelry at<Jray's, given by\nthe Fair Association? <\u00bb805)\nKMpttal Aid desire to\nthank tbe Wholesale and Retail Merchants and all thope who kindly contributed to thetr refreshment booth at\nthe Pair, al no those who assisted with\nthe Tag Day. We gratefully acknowledge all the kind assistance rendered on\nthis occasion, <9&02>\nDaughters and Maids of lOwland will\nmeet tonight in Memorial 11*11 at 7:30\nsharp. Whist and Five Hurfdred Drive\nand Dance, 8:15. Admission 36 cents.\nEverybody welcome. (HSOO)\n\"BSSXBTB9  HEATS  AT   WUUHT\u00bbtt\"\nAny Conservative, man or woman, residing In West Kootenay, desiring to\nattend the Winnipeg Convention in the\nopacity of a guest, will receive the\nnecessary credentials by making known\nhis, or her, Intentions to the under-\nlignetf.\nThe Convention rate of fare Is a single\nfare and a half for the round trip. Selling dates  will be  October  7th  to  13th,\nInclusive, with a return limit to arrive\nback  home  oa  October  20th.    The  reduced  fare applies to delegates,  alternates, members of their family and any\nConservatives   desiring   to   attend   the\nconventlos.      Reserved   seats    will   bo\nprovided for Went Kootenay  visitors.\nE. O. MATTHEW,\nSec,, West Kootenay  Federal  Executive,  Nelson,  B.C. <\u00bbTBI.\nVelour Hats\nFor Fall\nIf you feel that smart style is essential\nand that quality is a necessity, we call your\nattention to the new Velours for fail which\nwe just unpacked today.\nIt's time now for a new hat\u2014don't wait\nuntil we are out of your size.\n$6.50 and $8.00\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\n%S^\nHrs. Hermann Clever and famllv of\nNew Denver desire to thank their many\nfrienus for the kindness and sympatny\nshown them in their recent ber**\\e-\nment In the loss nf a loving husband\nnnd father; also for the beautiful floral\ntributes. <97I5)\nBALLEN WINNER OF\nSPOKANE AIR RACE\nFEL1T8 FIELD, Spokane. Sept. 25.\n\u2014Lieut. E. C. Balle\u00ab, Dayton, Ohio,\nwon tne SpokesmantRaylew free-far-\nall trophy race for .army, navy und\nmarine corps plane*, hurtling his\nCurtiss-Hawk over a 120-mLe course\nat a speed often exceeding 200 miles\nan hour In the national air races\nhere  yesterday.\nSens of England will meet In Memorial Hall tonight, 8 o'clock. Whist\nDrive. (8717)\nAOTOW'S  \u00bbBAUTY PABX.OBS\nOur work is a little different.\n410  Baker, (97\u00ab\u00ab>\nExpert  Piano \"aimer,      L. Singleton.\nPhone 251.    Masot. ft Risch. iHU>\nFree Instructions, art needlework and\nrug making at Hudson's Bay Store.\nOnly   this  week. (9728)\nFurnished   Suites\u2014Kerr   Apartments.\n(9499'\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysician  and   Surgeon\nSuite   SOS   to  BOO   Rookery   Building\nOver  White-house.\nSPOKANE,   WASH.\nCorner Riverside and Howard\n5ee the\nclassified\nads\nAustralia Preparing\nfor Airship Service\nSYDNEY, \"Australia, Sept. 26.\u2014Following the report of the air service\ndelegation from Oreat Britain which\nhas been Inquiring into the question\nof airship mooring masts in Australia, Premier R M. Bruce of the\nAustralian commonwealth announced\nthat the cabinet had decided to proceed Immediately with the preliminaries for the t stabltshment of an\nairship service between Oreat Bri-t\na in and Australia.\nPlumbers' Brass Goods  Fixtures\nand SuppllA, Tile and Sewer Pipe\nB. C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING \u20ac0.\n306 Baker St       Nelson, B. Q.\nCOMING  WEST\nOTTAWA, Sept. 25.\u2014The railway\ndominies on will leave for Vestern\nCanada on October 7. The board\nfor this tour will consist of Commissioners McLean, Oliver and Lawrence,\nand the Itinerary will be announced\nshortly.\nPublic Meeting\nOpera House\nTONIGHT\nMonday, Sept 26\nThe Hon. Dr. J. D. McLean\nPremier of British Columbia\nWill deliver an address to the people\n\u2022f Nelson.\nChair to Be Taken at 8:30\nEverybody Welcome\nESSEX\n1927\nDEMONSTRATION\nCAR FULLY EQUIPPED\n$1150\nSmedley Garage\nCompanj\nLIVE DOWN TOWN\nAnd save time and street car\nfares.   You get real comfort\nin the\nKERR APARTMENTS\nSEE THE NEW PORTABLE\nGRAMOPHONE\nsolid Mahogany, ws.oo\nRECORDS\u2014The new  Columbia Viva\nTonal Process.   Any record ordered.\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\nThe\nBackward\nChild  \u2022\nThe   child   who   Is   backward\nls gem-rally backward in vision-\nWhy not forestall low standings   by   having:   the   children's\neyea     examined      now      before\nschool  tt officially opened.\nNow   I\u00ab   a   good   ??-ne   to   Investigate.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nExpert   Optical   Service\n$1.00 OR $2.00\nDOWN\nand    the   bftlance   watklf    or\niiionlhlj\nPUTS IN fOCB BOMB AWT\nHot-Point Appliance or\nLighting Fixture\nW.    O.    HUNTER.\nSncrvmor to Howe rjeotrlo Co.\nNELSON\nNEW OPTOMETRY\nIn attending my recent postgraduate course, it was surprising and pleasing to see the\nadvancement that optometry ls\nmaking.\nWe do not stop with just\nthe examination of the \u00abya for\nIts sight error, as was the\ncustom, but we go further back\nto the brain, where the real\nseeing . take place\u2014nnd the\nnerve Innervation in consideration with the sight and muscular   errors.\nYou may be assured no part\nis left out In this new modern\nexamination   we  conduct, ,,\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R. 0.\nSpecializing in Eyeeight Defect*\nGRIFFIN, BLK.       PHONE 1\u00bb\nSHORT FEATURES\nTeaches and Plumbers9\nPATHE NEWS\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. 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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":"1927-09-26 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":"1927-09-26 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. 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