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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":" POL 28\nNelson, B. C.    FRIDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 4. 19-9\nNo. 145\nPrisoners Mutiny, Murder, Burn\nS-- Ye STOCKS SLUMP 2 BILLIONS\nLRDUTffil\nHITS MARKET\n\t\nares Tumble   as   Panic-\nStricken Speculators\nUnload\nX lgGltaNGES\nWOW AJB&ZINE\nirkrf Valtt-\nors Off $13;\nOthers Like It\nItm YOBJ, Oct. 3\u2014A sudden wave\nliquidation, striking with terrific\nee in the last, hour of trading today\nnight about the most diastic dene ln recent stock market history.\nares of active Issues broke $5 to |2S\nshare, and one Inactive stock turns'. 970 a share as panic-stricken\neculators, alarmed at the rapidly\nmating total fit brokers* loans, threw\nsir holdings overboard for whatever\nsy would bring.\nVE ISSUES LOSE HALF H1I.I.ION\nMore than M.OOO.OOO.OOO ln quote-\nlues was washed away on the New\n_rk stock exchange alone, five of\n\u25a0 most active Issues accounting'for\njre than half a billion dollars of the\ntal.\nSympathetic declines took place on\n\u00bb New York curb exchange, where\nmy of the losses ran from .6 to\nt a share, and ln all ot the other\nidlng security exchanges ot the\nuntry.\nCompimi 'with tho year's high\nStations, today's closing figures reft drastic losses ln several of the\n\u00bbt active stocks. The aggregate\na In market valus of General Mots ls shown at \u00bb158,937,500. United\nites Steel $107,739,920; Oeneral Elec-\n0 133,340.640: Standard Oil of New\nrsey ft6S.140.S34_ Anaconda (.44,131,-\n9; Canadian Pacific Railway ftl3.-\n6,932; Consolidated Gas of New York,\n11,841,930, and American Telephone\nM,769,900.\nBelieve French\nAviator Lost in\nBarguzibu Woods\nMOSCOW, Oct. 3\u2014A dispatch from\nVeruhne Udinsk, Siberia, to the official Tass news agency, today ssld\nthat Russian authorities there thought\nDleudonne Caste, famous French aviator, who went astray on a long distance flight from Paris to Siberia, had\nlost his way ln the forest of Barguzibu\nNumbers in the Doukhobor\nCamp Swell From Day\nto Day\nARRIVALS FROM ALL\nPOINTS OF COMPASS\nGovernment Ceases to Furnish Food for Sons of\nFreedom\nand of Soviets\nStarts for Seattle\nBut Doesn't Arrive\nSEATTLE. Oct. 3\u2014The four Rus-\nIA aviators flying from Moscow to\n\u25a0w York in the Land of the Soviets\"\nMl not arrived here early tonight\nom   Sitka.   Alaska,   which   they   left\n8:42 a. m. today,\n\u2022fche plane had been expected about\np. m\u201e but Its failure to arrive\nused but little concern for its safety.\nSlclals st the naval airport at Sand\n>lnt, where the Russians were to\nnd, expressed the opinion that the\nvisibility and strong head winds\nMl caused them to stop at some point\nong the British Columbia coast.\nanta Anna Flier Sets\nTew Endurance Record\nin Solo Non-Fueling\nLONG B\u00bbACH, Cal., Oct. 3\u2014Cern\njelch, Santa Anna, Calif., filer, land-\nI tt the Municipal airport here to-\nIght a few minutes after he had a\nit a new solo endurance non-refuel-\nng airplane flight record. Spelchs'\n(tidal time ln the air was announced\nr Joe Ntckerent,  National Aeronautt-\nII association timer, as 38 hours, 48\nsconds. His official landing time was\n27:30 P. m.\nSpeich went aloft at 6:35:15 a. m.\nta terday.\nThe previous record, held by Lieu-\njnant Herbert J. Pahy of Los Angeles,\nnt 36 hours,  69 mlnutet.\nSeven Men Fined\nfor 'Riding the\nRods' to Nelson\nBeven men were fined \u00bb6 in the city\nOlice court yesterday by Magtsttrate\nniUam Brown for stealing rides on\ntie Canadian Pacific railway train from\nrooter to Nelson on Wednesday.\nThe men were: Lionel Gorden Miller,\nPayne Humes, Colin Cmeron, Nick\nukanuk, Harry Demanek, Joseph Her-\nian a nd Nick Ornelucek.\nmiLF_-N   LIGHTWEIGHT\n% STOPS   TERRIS   GAME\njnflv* YORK.* Oct. 3 \u2014 Stanislaus\nMysa. veteran lightweight from Chile,\nlowed up the come-back march of\nId Terris, one time \"Ghost ot the\nIhetto,\" by winning a 10-round match\nonlght in the feature event at Madl-\non Square Garden.\n'  OKANAGAN    TECHER8   MEET\nVERNON,  Oct.  3\u2014The  eleventh an-\niiial meeting  of the Okanagan valley\netchers'   convention  will   be  held   ln\n&ls city October 10, H and 12.\nMOLYBDENUM \u201eC1IRTER\nVICTORIA, Oct S\u2014This week's In-\nlorporatlons include the Tidewater\niolybdenum Minis, limited, Victoria,\nJ0.000 thaxn without psr valus.\nSince the 250 Doukhobor men, wo_\nmen and children, were transferred\nfrom the provincial Jail here t6 Porto\nRico their numbers have been steadily\nswelled by the influxlng Doukhobors\nfrom all over the district until the\nroster at the new camp now numbers\nin the neighborhood of 100 people.\nProm every point Doukhobors have\nbeen Hocking to Join their friends, at\nPorto Rico, probably with the thought\nof free food and no work for the winter months. However, if that was their\nmotive they are doomed to disappointment, for the supply of free food has\nbeen exhaused with no arrangements\nfor more.\nFor the most part the Doukhobors\nappear to be fairly satisfied with their\nnew envlrnment, and have accepted\nthe respnstbility of making their quarters ready for the winter months.\nPood ln quantities necessary for the\nsustalnance of the whole camp is being supplied by outside groups of the\nDoukhobors.\nAT TROUBLOUS\nMEET\nCHAINED Ifl\nRAIL HEN\nTwo   Communist   Women\nFight and Scream While\nCarried Out\nONE BITES STEWARD\nWHO STOPS MOUTH\nRT.  HON. ARTHUR HENDERSON\nat the Labor party conference at Brlgh*\nton yesterday scouted the Idea thst\nLloyd Georg- or Winston Churchill\ncould Join the party under its new\nconstitution.\nFORESTRY PLANE\nCOMPLETES LEG\nRETURN FLIGHT\nARRANGEMENTS\nFOR ARMISTICE\nIN PREPARATION\nTheatre Meeting Sunday, Legion Banquet Monday,\nFeatures\nArrangements in connection with\nthe commemoration of the Armistice\nanniversary in Nelson are already under way, the Canadian Legion last\nnight approving steps Initiated Wednesday by the executive in the matter\nTwo committees will divide the work\nto be done. The arrangements for\nSunday are in the hands of a committee composed of H. H. Currie,\nLleut.-Col. M. V. Allen and Boyd C.\nAffleck, while the program of Armistice Day Itself, Monday, November\n11, will be worked out by a committee\nconsisting of E M. Gillott, D. Wade,\nDr. E. C. Arthur and Joe Holland.\nCAPITAL   THEATER   OFFERED\nYesterday J. P. Pitner, manager of\nthe Capitol theater, consented to place\nthe \u2022 Capitol at the disposal of the\nLegion for the usual ma\u00a7s meeting of\ncitizens on the afternoon of Armistice\nSunday.\nThe gladsome side of the Armistice\nwill be evident on the Monday night,\nwhen the Legion will hold its annual\nbanquet for the membership and dependents. It is expected that from\n200 to 250  tickets will  be  issued.\nOn Armistice morning there will be\nthe customary parade to deposit\nwreaths at the War Memorial and at\nthe Rlgby tablet.\nA committee of, ladles will be asked\nto take charge of the usual sale of\npopples, the profits of which are divided between the disabled veterans\nfund ot the Legion.\nEncounters   Heavy    Snow   on\nHop to Kelowna; Will Fly\nFew Days There\nForestry plane stationed here since\nthe early part of July left yesterday\nmorning for the Okanagan on the\nfirst*leg Of Its flight back to Vancouver,\nThe machine, a moth Seaplane.\npiloted by Capt. E. C. W. Dobbin, left\nthe flight to Kelowna, according to re-\ncountering heavy snow flurries during\nNelson early yesterday morning, en-\nports received by the forestry officials\nhere.\nFor the next few days the plane\nwill be used In the Okanagan district\nto make an aerial survey of the various area that have been run over by\nfires  during the  past  months.\nPor a good portion of the summer\nuse of the plane was impossible as\nfar as observation purposes were concerned, due to the fact that a heavy\nbank of smoke hung for weeks between the altitude of 4000 and 12,000\nfeet.\nMillions Involved\nin Four-Year-Old\nLawsuit, Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 3\u2014A lawBuit involving millions of dollars made ln\nWestern lands In the boom days before 1014 and standing in court of\nKing's bench records under the modest\nstyle of cause, \"Goodbun vs. Mitchell\"\nwas pitohed into the legal ring today\nfor its 30th round before Mr. justice\nDysart, presiding In chambers court.\nI Launched ln January, 1925, against\nmembers of a syndicate which promoted the once well-known Saskatchewan valley and Manitoba land company, and naming the company Itself\nas one of the 19 defendants the Issues have been fought back and forth\nin Interlocutory motions court. Printe\nlegal volumes have reached six decisions in the case. Material filed already makes the record the bulkiest\nin Manitoba legal annals, but the\ntrial  is not yet in sight.\nIn summary, the statement of claim\nasks the court for an order compelling the syndicate members to deliver up 12,300,000 capital stock of the\ncompany allotted to them in 1903, or\nto aocourit for and pay to the company its value or proceeds and all\ndividends, profits, and other moneys\nfrom  Issue of the stock.\nThe pleadings allege that since incorporation, distribution of assets of\nthe company have been made to the\nextent   of   $3,682,500.\nFrench Trawler Is\nSafe at Her Wharf\nHALIFAX, N. S., Oct. 3\u2014The French\ntrawler Reml Chulnard was safe at\nher wharf today after being aground\nfour hours at Sandwich Point, on the\nwestern   shore  of   Halifax   harbor.\nBound for the banks with a crew of\nbetween 26 and 30, commanded by\nCaptain Glatre, the trawler ran ashore\nin a dense fog after midnight and\nasked for immediate assistance. She\nwas refloated by two tugs from Halifax.\nChairman  of Labor  Conference Threatens to\nClear Gallery\nBRIGHTON, Eng.. Oct. 3\u2014Fighting\nall the way, two women communists\nwere carried out of tl,* Labor party's\nconference. A man hae-just been ejected from the public galleries on the\nother side of the ha'} after showering the delegates wl'% leaflets. The\nejection of the women was a more\ndifficult matter.\n\"Release the Imprisoned miners,\"\nthe women shouted. Stewards rushed\nto them, but the women had handcuffed themselves to the railing of\nthe gallery,\nSTEWARDS   PERSPIRE\nThe women screamed and shouted while the perspiring stewards\ntried to break the -tain loose. Tke\nstewards tried to stop the noise\nby placing their hands over the\nwomen's mouths. Ones, them broke\nloose and was (tagged with* a hand.\nkrrrhlrf. She broke loose again nnd\nhit a -rtewnrd, T* -*\nA delegate rose to protest that if his\nwomen friends were treated Uke. that,\nhe would punch the steward on the\nnose.\nThe chairman, Hon. Herbert Morrison, replied the delegates could have\nthe steward's job if he wanted it. The\nblame lay with the Communists, who\nhad no more courage than to send\nwomen to the firing line, the chairman   continued.\nI dont mind a certain amount of\nthis kind of thing but Its getting too,\nfrequent,' the chairman said, and lf\nit continues he would have to clear\nthe public gallery.\nWIDEN   CON8TITITION\nThe remainder or the sitting passed\nquietly, with discussion of the proposed changes ln the L_ibor party's\nconstitution.\nA delegate complained that under\none provision Rt. Hon. Lloyd George or\nRt. Hon. Winston Churchill might be\na Labor candidate.\n\"I would like to know what would\nhappen to either of them lf they made\napplication, replied the Rt. Hon.\nArthur Henderson, secretary of state\nfor foreign affairs.\nWarden Latest Victim\nof Rioting Convicts\nCANON CITY, Colo.,\nOct. 4\u2014Warden Francis\nE. Crawford of Colorado\nstate penitentiary was\nshot and badly wounded\nin the fighting between\nbesiegers and mutinous\nconvicts in the prison riot\nearly today. The warden\nwas reported shot through\nthe head and body- John\nAllen, chief clerk of the\npenitentiary, also was badly wounded.\nDetective Sergeant Reth\nof Colorado Springs \u2022 was\nanother of the three taken\nto the warden's house.\nAn armored car from\nDenver, owned by the De-\nlue Detective Agency, arrived late last night'and\nstarted through the gate,\ncarrying sharp shooters.\nHOSTELS FOR\nBRITISH BOYS\nDOING WELL\nBritish    Immigration    Coming\nI p. Anglican Committee\nHears\nLITTLE RAINFALL\nEXPERIENCED IN\nINTERIOR IN 1929\nLittle Rainfall Last Fall is Responsible for Drought\nDuring Summer\nC. P. R. Earnings\nAre $5,746,000\nfor 9*-Day Period\nMONTREAL, Oct. 3\u2014Earnings of tbe\nCanadian Pacific railway for the period\nSeptember 21-30, 1038, were 15,746,000\naa compared with 16,977.000 ln MM,\ndecr\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb ef IUS1.000.\nSenate Authorizes\nAmendment to the\nTariff Bill, States\nWASHINGTON,   Oct.   3\u2014The   senate\ntoday adopted an amendment to the\ntariff bill authorizing the tariff commission to convert the ad valorem\nrates in the measures on a domc3tix\nbasis and report them to congress lor\naction   by   January   1,   1932.\nWhile some opposition developed\nto the amendment from democrats,\nthis was offset by support of the prohibition from republican senators including Senator Norrls, republican. Nebraska, who with 12 other western\nrepresentatives combined yesterday\nwith the democrats to kill the republican flexible tariff plan. No record   vote  was  taken.\nCanadian National\nEarnings Decreased\nby Over a Million\nMONTREAL, Oct. 3\u2014The grow earnings of the Canadian National railways\nfor the nine day period ending Sep-\ntembebr 80* 192S, were $7,415,636, as\ncompered with \u00bb8,618,2a4 for the corresponding period of 1028, a decrease\nof 11,102,988. or thirteen per oent.\nComparative statistics regarding rainfall ln the Immediate vicinity of Nelson for the summer Masons of 1028\nand 1920 point out ideliably just how\nmeager has been the rainfall experienced  during the past season.\nIn a seven month period starting\nwith March and ending with Sep-\ntembeh the total precipitation measured ln Nelson was In 1028 13.70 inertias compared with the 11.64 inches registered during the same months this\nyear.\nIn looking a the last three months\non the scale fer 1928 It ls noticeable\nthat precipitation during that period\nfell off considerably and coniii.ied\nto do so, with the result thai little\nsnow was experienced In the mountains during he winter. As a rsiult\nthe 1029 summer season found little\nreserve  ln  nature's  reservoir.\nOn he trength of the fact that last\nfall's lack of rainfall coupled with little\nrain during the past season resulted\nIn auch a severe drought, some apprehension Is prevalent that theae weather\nconditions may repeat themselves this\nfall and next year.\nComparative precipitation.\n1928\nMarch  2.85\nApril  9.68\nMay    , 5.06\nJune   *.03\nJuly  1.17\nAugust  49\nSeptember 62\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 3\u2014immimtion\nfrom Gnat Britain to Cinoria Is Increasing and that from continental\ncountries is decreasing, Canon C. W\nVernon, general secretary, Toronto, reported to the council for social .rev*\nvice of thj Church of Englnd ln\nC anada, here today. Canon Vernon't\nreview dated from the peak of immigration  year ln 1913.\nFrom March 31 to July 31 of this\nyear the total immigiatlon to Canada was 94,000 as agaiu_t 86,000 in the\nsame period last year, an Increase cf\nnine per cent. Prom Britain ln the\nsame period, 41,000 came this year as\nagainst 27,000 a year ago, an increase\nof 47 per ent. Prom the United States\nthe increase was 19 per cent, from\nNorthern Europe 13 per cent, and from\nother countries, including Southern\nEurope there was a decrease of\npe cent.\nOf the tot.n of 109,000 Immlgants\nfrcm England to British countries. Can\nada had received fully one half. Canon\nVernon reported. Many harvesters who\nhad returned home expeted to return\nto Canada, and, under the new scheme\nof the preesnt labor government, it\nwas thought that there would \\# a\nlarge increase In British Immigration.\nClH'RfH   HOSTELS   '\nThe report commended the work\nof the council in its church hostels\nfor boys coming from England under\nthe auspices of the Church of England\ncouncil cf empire settlement. Hostels\nhad been established at Edmonton,\nMelfort and Indian Head, together with\nthe church army hostel, at Winnipeg,\noperated and financed by the English\nehurch army.\nAt the Canadian hostels 52fi boys\nhad been cared for during their short\nperiod of operation. With few exceptions thesq boys were doing well,\ntn many cases getting (20 a month\nfor the summer and 810 a month for\nthe winter, with extras for harvesting and threshing.\nThe beys at Melfort together had\n13000 In the bank. The same wu\npiratically true of the boys at Edmonton, while at Indian Heed 32 of the\n46 boys received last year have a banking  account.\nA   hearty   vcte   of   thanks   was   expressed to Canon Vernon, by the council,   for   his   book   \"The   Old   Church\nIn The New Dominion.\"\nCHRISTIAN MARRIAGE\nUnder the report of \"Family Life\nand Hygiene,\" Rt. Rev. J. C. Roper,\nbishop of Ottawa, urged the great\nneed of emphasizing the positive teaching by the Church of the Christian\nIdeal   of  marriage.\nThe report on \"Child Welfare\" showed that much valuable work waa being done.\nThe wcrk of the Church army was\ncommented on by Rt. Rev. J. F, Sweeny\nbishop of Toronto. This work had\nwen an honored place as an evangelistic and  social agency.\n150 Convicts Barricade\nSelves in Cell House\nat Canyon City, Colo.\nMurder Captured Guards One by One to Force\nWarden to Open Gate; Burn Several\nPrison Buildings\nFORCE OF 1000 MEN INCLUDING MILITIA\nKEEP BUILDING UNDER BARRAGE LEAD\nDynamite Being Used to Blow Up the Revolters;\nMutiny Sprung at Noon Still in Full\nControl After Midnight\nCANON CITY, Colo., Oct. 3\u2014War, stark and vicious,\nopened on rioting Canon City convicts tonight when Colorado National Guardsmen laid down a machine gun barrage\nto cover an advance to the felons' stronghold to lay a dynamite charge.\nSixty-three men, manning two machine guns and dozens of rifles, poured bullets at the windows, doors and openings of cell house No. 3, where 175 prison convicts tonight\nhad barricaded themselves and had slain at least four\nguards, tossing their bodies out of a window as a grim reminder they were a desperate lot and they were taking\nevery Means to gain their freedom. Four to 10 prisoners\nalso were believed dead.\nAs the needle-like flames of the guns pierced the darkness outside the walls of the state penitentiary, a red glow\nFormer Nelson Man\nDies at Vancouver\n192:)\nll Of,\n16!)\n121\n4.04\n.43\n.76\n:\u00ab;\nWord haa been received from Vancouver that J. C. Bradford, died last\nSaturday ln that city. Ur. Bradford\nwas formerly employed aa a lection\nforeman on the Canadian Pacific railway at Nelson for 26 yean. He leaves\nto mourn his loss a wife and two\ndaughters In Vanoouver.\nFRENCH   CHAMPION   TO\nMEET   BEYANOER,   CANADA\nTORONTO, Oct. 3\u2014lugane Saut,\nEuropean flyweight champion, has\nbeen signed to meet Frenchy Belangar\nof Toronto, ln the-second round of the\nShamrock Athletic club's championship\nACTRESS DIES IN SAN\nNEW YORK, Oct. 3.\u2014Jeanne Eagles,\nstage and screen actress, died suddenly\ntonight ln a Park avenue sanitarium\nwhere she had gone a few minutes\nbefore for treatment. After an autopsy\nDr. Thomas A. Gonzales, asslstartt\nchief medlesl examiner said death was\nHOLDING OF WHEAT\nTHE BEST POLICY\nBank of Commerce Claims Canadian Farmer is Doing\nWise Thing\nTORONTO, Oct. 3\u2014Declaring that\nonly a! remarkable recovery can provide for a normal wheat supply from\nthe southern hemisphere, the Canadian\nBank of Commerce, in, its monthly\ncommercial letter made public tonltjli.\nsays It will be contrary to the present statistical position, of the world\nwheat situation lf at the end if the\ncurrent season Cnnada is not credited\nwith following the wisest policy In\nhaving refused to sell freely during\nthe  last two months.\nIn connection with the bank's comment, lt Is recalled that two days ago\n\u00a3. B. Ramsay, general manager of the\nCanadian Wheat Pool, issued a statement at Winnipeg in which he maintained the western Canadian farmer\nwas not Justified, in reducing the price\nof the wheat he holds, and insisting\nthat even higher prices fire justified\nfor Canada's hard wheat.\nCommenting on the small export\ntrade in Canadian wheat which has resulted In unprecedented comjestton\nat the lake head, bay and export port\nelevators in the east, the Bank of\nCommerca says It speaks well for the\nfinancial position of ihe western farming community that it has so far not\nbeen forced to sell wheat on a declining market,\nRefusal to sell to a low price is\n\"as much the privilege of the farmers\nand their marketing organizations to\nadopt it is as lt is fer other business\ninterests which bargain fot the best\npossible returns,\" the bank says.\nCalgary Woman Was\nSane When Married\nSupreme Court Finds\nOTTAWA, Oct. 3\u2014The supreme court\nof   Canada   today   found   that   Sadie\nFeinsteln   was  mentally  capable   when\nshe   contracted   marriage   with   Tony\nChertkov.   The case came up from the\nAlberta   courts,   the   parties   living   In\nCalgary and then at Bdmonton.    The\nhusband    has   been   sought   to    have\na decree of nullity of marriage on the\ngrounds  of insanity.   Mr. Justice Ives I\ngranted  such  a decree  but  hla  judgment   was   unanimously   reversed   by I\nthe   Alberta   court   of   appeals.     The\nIssue   was:   Was the   wife   because   of i\nher mental condition Incapable of con- _\ntrading marriage\"   The supreme court\nof   Canada   dismissed   the   husband's\nappeal  with  costs.\nMRS.   SYDNEY   IONM    LEADS\nSENIOR   WOMEN    WITH    A   00\nMONTREAL, Oot. 3.\u2014Tnidglns over\nthe windswept and rain-soaked\nstretches of Marlborough Golf course\ntoday, Mrs. Sydney Jones of Toronto\nOolf club turned back the first stage\nof the assault on ber title in the Canadian senior women's tournament event\nwith a gross score of 09. Mrs. W. Oar\nThompson of Kanawakl club, Montreal,\nwas second with a gross of 103, and\nMrs. E. P. Clarkson third with a gros-j\nof 107.\ntournament here on October 18. caused   by   alcoholic   poisoning.\nFRUIT  HEAD TO  INSPECT\nVERNON, Oct. 3\u2014Oeorge E. Mcintosh, fruit commissioner for Canada,\nis running a visit to the Okanagan\nvalley,   arriving   here   on   October   13.\nlighted   the   interior,  flames   from   tha\n> buildings which were fired by the convicts   today   when   they   started   their\ngamble  for  freedom^\nVOLUNTEERS   1-1 ME   DYNAMITE\nWilliam Rnnger, of Colorada Springs,\nand Father Patrick O'Neill, a Catholio\npriest of Canon City, volunteered to\nplace a charge of dynamite under tha\ncell block where the rebelling prisoners are holding forth. Incensed at tha\nwanton killing of four guards, the\npriest declared: \"I can stand this no\nlonger; please let me try. They may\nget me but its the only chance of\nstopping  this.\"\nThe attack on the cell house waa\nstarted at 11:11 o'clock. Father O'Neill\ntook the dynamite in charge. Ranger\nstood Just outside the wall directly in\nthe line of fire as Father O'Neill went;\nin with the explosive to the entrance\nto  cell   No.  3.    ,\nExploding the charge was delayed\ntemporarily because the battery waa\nnot large enough lo set oft the dynamite. William Ranger, ln line of the\nfire, stood by while the battery trouble  was   being remedied.\nAfter a short circuit was discovered\nIn the wires leading from the battery\nto the charge of dynamite. Father\nO'Neill had placed, a conference waa\nheld resizing In a decision to place\na second cuarge of 25 pound-. Firing\nceased temporarily while this charge\nwas prepared. A barrage of nbout a\nthousand rounds* was planned to cover\nthe second placing.\nAfter   the   new   charge   was   placed\nboth   were   to   be  exploded,\nAGAIN   DEMAND GETAWAY\nCANON CITY. Colo,, Oct 4\u2014(FViday)\nEmbattled convicts at the state penitentiary here again demanded shortly\nafter 12:30 o'clock his morning that\nthey be furnished automobiles and\n\"free getaway.\" The demand was refused again.\nA   MIRDER   PER  1101 R\nCANON CITY, Colo., Oct. 3.\u2014Undaunted by machine gun fire directed\nby national guardsmen ,150 convicts\nof the state penlitentiary who mutinied shortly after noon today were\nIn possession of cell house No, 3 tonight\nand ,.as their demands for freedom\nwere refused, shot and killed four\nguards. The guards were held captive In the cell house and at each\nhour, from 7 o'clock to 10 o'clock,\nwith constant refusal of their \"ultimatums.\" a guard waa killed and his\nbody tossed cut of a window to tha\nprison  yard  below.\nAt 10 o'clock the \"final\" ultimatum\nwas delivered declaring' \"All the remaining guards would be killed at\nonce.\" Within a few minutes, the\nfourth body was hurled from the cell\nhouse No. 3,\nOuards In the \"bull pen\" reported\nthe slain guards had faced a firing\nsquad. It was said the guards were\nplaced against u window and convicts\nlined up several paces away and at a\nsignal, fired.\nSEVEN   DHAD GUARD.\nSeven guards were dead and observers said there were four to six bodies\nof convicts in the prison yard at I\no'clock. Three of the guards had\nbeen killed early In the afternoon in\na battle between the prlsonrs and\nauthorities.\nThe victims of the cell house firing\nsquad included J. J. Eels, oldest guard\nin point of service, and oflclal hangman   at   the  penltlentlary. ,\nThe west entrance of call house No.\n3 was dynamited and machine gun\nfire directed incessantly at the breach.\nBUILDING*   iu km n\nCell house No. 4, nearby, was In\nflames, and several other prison buildings had been destroyed by fire during\nthe early hours of the battle.\nThe first ultimatum was thrown to\nprison ofictals at 7 p.m. The convicts   demanded   automobiles  and  un-\niCoutlnued  to  Page  T\u00ab&)\n -_-\u2014-\u2014--.\nPage Twol\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS   FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4, 1929\nWhat wu the origin'of the saying\nto let the cat out of the bag?\"\nSn early daya it occasionally happen-\nd that tha farmer who took a evck-\n\u25a0 pig to market took alao. in an-\nnar bag. a cat, and when the un-\nfgpfr-ttng purchaser had paid the\nmot he discovered on reaching home\ntat hla bag contained a cat. If. be-\ntlg suspicious, he investigated before\ntaking his bag home,  he  \"let the cat\nout of the bag.\" If he did not look\ninto hia bag. he made the discovery\nthat he had \"bought a pig ln a poke\".\nHence the origin of theae two sayings.\nTwelve school children from near\nBurgeeville had a narrow escape while\non their way to the North Norwich\nTownship school fair at Norwich when\nthe steering gear on the truck in\nwhich the children and their exhibits\nwere being taken to the fair broke.\nEleven barns In  Middlesex and  Huron,  eight of them containing the sea- '\nson's crop, were destroyed by lightning\nIn a fierce electrical storm which swept\nthoae countries recently\nWith Runrdnt\nWater\nPnnt* Bathe KnSutte\nThe Hume\nGEO. BENWELL, PrCp.\nThe Premier Hotel of tht\nInterior\nHUME\u2014Mr.  and   Urs.   J.  Carnac,  R.   Williams,   Vancouver;    L.   O.   Salmon.\nD  Bradley, Caljary; O. A. Wett, Kaslo:   Midway;   C.  P. Bush.  Hock   Creek;   Q.\nW.   Vernon,   A.   Grant.   Procter;   H.\nPowell,   C.   Hlnan,   p.   Perkins,   R.\nI C.   Pearce,   G.   M\n| Griffith,   Hamilton\nDuncan.   Mrs.   D.\n* 11111111 n 1111111111111 n i it i it i n 1111 in i n m i n 111\nWhere the Guest is King :\nTheS\navoy\n*       MaUON-R   NEWEST   AND   FINEST   \u25a0 0T1L\nKANT     BOOMS    WITH    PRIVATE\nBATHS   OB   HHOWEHJ\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n1111111111111 111111111 ll 1111111 ll 11111111111111111 iu\nSAVOY\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Heeney, Kaslo;\nMr. and Mrs. Negropont, Sllverton;\nMrs. P. Is. Sterling, T. Hill, P. L. Wou-\nton, Bev Cannon, R Sprlggay, Vancouver: Mr. and Mrs. tt. Alpeen, Mrs.\nH.   Gasley,   Nakusp;   E.   Roth,   Long\nbeach; Mrs. M. Redfern, Mrs. A. Douglas, Reglna; Mr. and Mrs. D. Logan.\nTrail; Mr. and Mrs H. McKenzle, Pat\nMcOuIre, Lethbrldge; H. S. fraser,\nWinnipeg; Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Sheppard,   Sandon.\nSteam Heated Throughout\n<&hc\n0\\\u00b0\u00a3v7 GxAND\n\u00ab18 Vernon Streat, Nelaon, B.O.\nHot and cold Water aim Telephone la all Boa\nP. L. KAPAKS, Prop\nMadden Hotel\nT. MADDEN,  Prop.\nSteam   Heated Booms  by  ths Day\nWeek   or   Month\n\u25a0very eoniideratton shown le guests\nMt.  Dakar ant   ejtt*  Sts,  Nelsoa\nMADDEN\u2014Bill Hall. Nelson; T. p.\nHughes, Spokane; Mre. Prlesen. Ren-\nMoran, Winnipeg; D. Mclnnes. H.\neta: James Studley. Spopkane: R. Hitr-\nshaw.  Klmberley.\nThe Standard Cate\n120 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:80 to 2.J0 Special  Lunch aa.\n0:80 to 8 p. a. supper  85c\nPHONE   IM\nThe Royal Cafe\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nBaflnemeiit and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN DAT AND NIOHT\nSpecial Dinner 11:30 to 2:30 SSc\nSlipper   8:50   to  8   _ _ SSc\nWo specialize In Chop Sney and Noodles\nPhono 182\nNELSON MEN AT\nPRESS CONFAB\nRossland  E4Uor  Is  I'residetit;\nMayor Istnt, Grand Forks,\nAttends\nCHILLIWACK, B. C. Oct. 3\u2014W. A.\nElletson of Rossland. adltor of the\nRossland Miner, will head the B. C.\nand Yukon Press association for the\ncoming year, following election of officers ai the closing day of the 12th\nannual   convention.\nP F. Payns. manager of The Nelson Dally News. Is first vlce-ppre\u00bb-\nIdent. Mayor c. A. Barber of the Chll-\nllwack Progress, second vice-president.\nH M. Walker ol the Enderby Commoner waa reelected secretary.\nSaturday wound up a two-day convention, which, with the glorious wea-\nnOUGLAC\nm^   HOTEL     W\nRooms with Baths\nE.   L.   AND   A.   OBOITAGE,   Prom,\nSteam  Heated\nThroughout\nHot  and  Cold\nWater\nBoi 608       Phone 2(9       Trail, B.C.\nSt. Ivel\nMeat and Fish Paste\nFor Dainty Sandwiches\nSee Demonstration\nHudson's Bay Company\nTOMORROW\nt ther provide. In the Chllllwack val-\ni ley. \u00abh a decided success tn ewry\ni way. It wee a real get-together affair for newspaper men. including\npublishers and editors, and many\nproblem* facing the printing industry from a business standpoint were\ndiacrusaed.\nDelegate* were welcomed to Chllllwack on Prlday morning by the editor-mayor of the city. C. A. Barber,\nand by William Murray, president of\nthe board of trade\nMANY   SPEAKERS\nAmong speakers of prominence heard\nduring    the    two-day    sessions    were:\nRoy   Sales,   a   publisher   of   Renfrew,\nOnt.,  president of the Canadian  Press\nj association;   Hugh   Savage   of   Duncan.\n! president    of    the    Canadian    Weekly\nI Newspaper association;  B. A. McKelvle,\ndirector of  pubblicity  and   Information\nfor   the   provincial   government;   Frank\nJ.   Burd   of   the   Vancouver   Province;\nW.   C.   Hooker,  secretary   of  the   Pacific   Northwest   Newspaper   association,\nand  P.  P.  Payne of The Nelson  Dally\nNews.\nOn Friday night a monster banquet\nwas served, at which over 100 delegates, members of Chllllwack board\nof trade and the officers of the city\nand the municipality attended. Among\nspeakers from the upper country were\nL. P. Sullivan of the Cranbrook Courier, F. F. Payne of the Nelson Daily\nNews, T. A. Love of the Grand Forks\nGazette, and Mrs. E, D. Barrow, formerly   of   Nakusp,\nSaturday afternoon al! delegates and\ntheir   ladles   were   taken   for   an   auto\ndrive through the fertile fields of the\nreclaimed  Sumas  area.   Here  was  seen\nvarious  crops being  harvested,   including  the  hops for which  the valley  Is\nparticularly  well known. One, the Canadian Hop Growera' field of 870 acres,\nis   the  largest  ln  Canada.  Haying   was\nin full swing In some parts and threshing   of   peas   and   clover   seed   was   In\nprogress    In   other   localities.    Several\nfarms   were   visited   and   prize   stock\nexhibited for the editors. Following the\ndrive   the   delegates   were   entertained j\nat afternoon tea at the beautiful home j\nof  H.  J.  Barher, M.  P.  for Chllllwack, |\ngrounds surrounding  the  home of the :\nparliament member were inspected and j\ngreatly  enjoyed. It was on Friday aft-\nernoon  that tbe lady members of the I\nparty   were   entertained   at   the   beautiful new  home of E.  D.  Barrow,  the *\nlatter   an   old- resident   of   the   Koot- i\nenay country.\nVancouver Island wilt be the scene i\nof the next convention, the delegates!\nhaving accepted the invitation of\nBen Hughes of the Comox Argus. Nu- ]\nmerous resolutions of interest to the,\nnewspaper men of the province and;\nDominion   were   passed\nAll delegates were loud iin their;\npralfce for the excellent hospitality:\nof the Chllllwack people, ospeclallyy |\nMayor and Mrs. Barber, who did everything in their power to give the;\ndelegates an enjoyabble two days.\non Sunday all were motored to Ag- '\nassiz and the Harrison hot springs, j\nwhere   the  day  was  spent  in  pleasure. I\nThe entire sessions were conducted'\nably under the chairmanship of J. *\nH. Mohr, Revelstoke Review, retiring \u25a0\npresident   of   the   association.\nAmong thoae attending the conven- i\ntion from the interior of the prov-1\nince were: C. L. Sullivan, Cranbrook;\nMayor T. A. Love, Grand Forks; H.\nJ. Parsons, Golden, Mr. and Mrs. F.,\nF.  Payne  and  3  G.   Curran,  Nelson.     (\nARROW LAKES\nPIONEER DIES\nAndrew  M.   Symons  Had   Resided in District for Over\n30 Years\nBURTON, BC, Qet. 3\u2014Andrew M.\nSymons died here Wednesday. He had\nmany friends In the Arrow Lakes and\nVernon districts.\nMr. Symons had been an active figure\nin the mining and the thnher bus!new\non the Arrow Lakes for over 30 years,\nand was a great favorite with all wh\u00bb\nmet him. He had a jovial manner and\noptimistic outlook on life.\nDuring the last three years he hu\nbeen at Burton ln connection with\nmining activities.\nHe is survived by his wife and two\ndaughters.\nThe funertil was held here today.\nNAKUSP, B. C, Oct. 3.\u2014Andrew M.\nSymons. who died early on Wednesday\nmorning at Burton, was a pioneer prospector of the Arrow Lakes. He had also\nprospected fn the Okanagan Valley and\naround Northport and Rowland. He\nhad been engaged recently on a prospect near Burton where his wife also\nlived.\nSome years ago he built a sawmill\nacross the lake from Nakusp which he\noperated for a short period. He was\nabout 60 years of age.\nVERIGIN TO VISIT\nCOLONIES IN SOUTH\nNEW GRAND\u2014J. J. Mclntyre. R.\nVanderson, J. Kralmer, Vancouver; J.\nF.   Masloff,   P.   Rolard.   G.   Sonkeroff,\nNelson; Mrs. M. Pappalow, Mrs. B.\nLyons, M. E Gosnell, Mullen, Idaho;\nW Beverldge, Willow Point; E. Duford,\nNelson.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHB    CENTER    OF    CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water in every room.\nSteam Heated.\nA. Lapolnte, Prop.\nQUEENS\u2014R. A. McCalex, Klmberley;\nW. F. Clark. Howser; C. Hanson, Reno\nMines; G, Harman, Montreal; E. J.\nHayes, Nelson; L. McKlnnon, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood and\nfamily,   penticton.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n706 Vernon St. Phon* 587L\nH. WAS9ICK AND O .HNATIUE\nFifty Booms of Solid Comfort\nHead quirt era for Loggers and Mlneri\nVery smart for sports wear Is a\nChanel type of klnt suit comprised of\na striped scarf and frock, the latter\nwith bow applique and a jacket of\ndark red to match the predominant\ncolor In the frock.\nBOYS1\nSWEATERS\nPolo Colors\nYou often hear that merchandise is too\nhigh in Nelson. We can only answer for our\nown atore\u2014It is. not!\nPor instance we have purchased 25 dozen\nof the above line usually sold at $1.25.\nTHESE BOYS' POLO COLLAR\nSWEATERS\nON SALE SATURDAY ONLY\nOne Day $Oc 0ne Day\nTakfng   Party   of   Doukhobors\nto talifornia;  May  Visit\nSouth America\nFERNIE, B. C, Oct. 3\u2014Peter Verigin, world leader of the Doukhobors\nwith a delegation of 12 Doukhobors,\n.six men and six girls, have arrived\nin Fernie from the east. They comprised a Doukhobor choir and were\nunder the personal escort of Max Bas-\nkln of  Nelson,  formerly  of Fernie.\nThey vlaited the United States consulate here and secured vises for\na trip to southern California. They\nintend to remain there 30 days, after which the main portion of the\nparty will return home and Peter\nVerigin will, it ls understood, proceed\nto northern Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia. The Doukhobors have colonies in all these\ncountries, of which Verigin will make\na tour of Inspection. Tlie northernmost ones he will visit outside of\nCalifornia will he a colony of about\n900 in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico.\nAfter securing their vises the delegation favored the consulate with\n.some   Doukhobor   songs.\nProcter Notes\nNine leading nations of Central and\nSouth America-Cuba, Haiti. Porto\nRico, Santo Dominlgo, Panama, Jamaica, Honduras, Costa Rico, and El\n| Salvador\u2014have thus far applied for\nadmittance to the Centro-American\nOlympic games to be bald Id Havana\nin   1930.\nI   guarantee,        ln\nwriting, to\ncure vour piles or refund\nthe fee. Nurse In attendance for women. Write for\nfree booklet. Frank Rose,\nM. D., rectal specialist. 404\nZlegler   Building,   Howard\nand  Riverside.  Spokane.\nTIP\nTOP\nRepresentative\nat the store\n-TODAY-\nAND\nTomorrow\nPROCTER, B. C. Oct. 3\u2014Mrs. R.\nWalton of Procter is spending a few\nweeks at Creston with her daughter\nMrs.    W.    McCalpine.\nJohn Bohica, Lois Bonlca, William\nMerrifield motored to Nelson recently.\nCaptain F. Gogal spent the day In\nNelson   on   business  recently.\nMrs. W. Donaldson was a visitor to\nNelson.\nMlsa Hael Campbell and Miss Helen Campbell motored to Nelson recently.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Lumb have re-\nt urned tothelr home In Procter after   holidaying   at  Banff.\nMiss Hazel Campbell, who has been\nholidaying at Procter, returned to\nCranbrook to resume her duties at\nSt. Eugene hospital., where she is\na   nurse   in   training.\nC. Herston, w. Blane, A. R. Ross,\nG. Johnson, P. Halson, and D. Roo-\nney, of Nelson were visiting at Procter   recently.\nA. Anderson of Calgary. A. Rlgma\nand A. Richards of Calgary havl arrived   in   Procter.\nMr. A. Rlbbald and Mra. Ribbald\nof Edmonton are visiting at the Outlet   hotel.\nMrs. C. Gaugh of Klmberley visited   in   Procter.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Sullivan motored from Medicine Hat to Procter\nThey expect to stay in Procter for\nsome   time.\nMrs. A. Wilbur and sons Robert\nand Howard spent a day at Willow\nPoint   recently,   visiting   friends.\nMrs. A. Wilbur entertained in honor\nof Mrs. J. Foy and Miss Tilly Ehmar\nof Yakamo, who will shortly be leaving Procter. The invited guesta were:\nMr. and Mrs. C. Gough, Miss Evelyh\nInnis. Mr, nnd Mrs. W. Swafn. Mrs.\nJ. Foy, Miss T. Ehman, Miss, Thelma\nFoy, Mrs. E. MerrlllelCt, and Mrs. G.\nChatam.\nA birthday party was held at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. J. Foy, Proc\nter, in honor of Mrs. S. Peterson. A\ndelightful evening was spent, In cards\nand dancing. Dainty refresments was\nserved by Mrs. Foy, assisted by Miss\nThelma Fyo and Miss T. Ehman. The\nInvited guests were: Mrs. 6. Peterson,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Swain, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Wilbur. Mr. and Mrs. J Hurst, Miss\nEliss Lenzman, Miss Tilly Ehman, Miss\nThelma Foy, Mr. and Mrs. J. ftof,\nRom  Bradley  and  Roy Bradley.\nCLEARS\nCHOHfB DRAINS\nCUANS.DISINFECIS\nREMOVES OLD PAINT\nMAM 5 GOOD SOAP\nC TC.\nA\/nays ask for\nGILLEM S\nGrand Forks hfotel\nGRAND   FORKS,   B.   C,   Oct.3\u2014Don!\naid    McKlnnon    has   left    for    Kaaltf\nafter  a  short   visit  with   his   parent*\nMr.   and   Mrs.   D.  A.   McKlnnon.\nMr.  and   Mrs.  Fred  Copper  motor\u00a9\nfrom  Seattle   last  week   and   epent\nfew    days    here    wtth    the    former\"!\nmother,   Mrs   T.   Cooper,   They   hav|\nreturned   to   Seattle.\nThe federal penitentiary at Atlanta\nGa., haa seven tennis courts, and thl\ngame is said to be one of the moel\npopular outdoor snorts among thfl\nprisoners.\nGetting Skinnier\nEvery\nsomething   Must  Be  Done   and\nRight Now\u2014Quick\nTens   of   thousands   of   thin,   run-]\ndown   men\u2014yes,  and   womeh\ngetting  discouraged\u2014are giving  tip\nhope   of   ever   being  able   to   take  on|\nflesh  and   look  healthy  and   atrong.\nAll such p ,-_e can stop worrylngl\nand start to smile and enjoy life rlghtl\nnow for McCoy's Cod Liver Extract!\nTablets are putting flesh on hosts *_ll\n-\u25a0kinny folks In all parts of the world|\nevery day.\nOne woman, tired, weak and die-* I\ncouraged, gained 15 pounds In ,flW|\nweeks  and   now  feels  fine.\nAnd this shows what faith thai\nmakers have ln McCoy's for they say.I\nif any thin person don't gain at least!\n5 pounds In 30 days your money Willi\nbe refunded\u2014end only 80 centa ft* I\n60 tablets\u2014Economy Size\u2014 $1,00. Ask]\nfor them at the City Drug and Book|\n'\"omnanv or any drug store\nEveryone Past 40\nShould Make This Test!\nFor  Amazing and  Uistlng  Relief  from!\nMMldle-Affe    Ailments   That    Cause\nIHilly   Annoyance   nnd   Map\nVital  For-*\nNo longer need folks near or past thai\nprime of life put up with those painfull\nand often embarrassing conditional\nbrought on bv overworked, sluggish!\nKidneys or Bladder Weakness with!\ntheir distressing symntoms of Lame-1\nness, Pains in back and down through!\ngroins, scanty but frequent and burn-r\ning urination, \"Getting-up-Nights\"!\nand Nervous Irritability\u2014because a ten!\ndays' test of Dr. Southworth's TJRA-I\nTABS will convince the most skeptical!\nof the value of this special treatment!\nfor   their   particular   case.\nAmazing testimony of Phylslclana I\nand users gives convincing proof of the!\npower of URATABS \u2666i restore Health!\nand Strength to a weakened, inflamed I\nor Irritated Bladder and Urinary Tract, [\nA multidude of alarming symptoms I\nseem to quickly disappear\u2014and you I\nsee and feel a truly genuine Improve* I\nment often within two or three days. |\n\"No more Backaches, no more paint, I\nno more embarrassment or Getting-1\nup-nlghts. I now sleep soundly, and 1\nget up in the morning full of 'pep,' r\nthanks   to   URATABS!\"\nWhile new to the general public, the!\nwondrous value of URATABS has been J\nthoroughly proven by yer- of Buc_ess*l\nful use In the private practice of Dr.!\nH. C. Southworth. And now any goodl\ndruggist will supply them on a uar-l\nantee of satisfaction or money back.1\nTry   URATABS   today.\n\/WHETHER It bo a cut;\nTT   a  bruise,  sprain,\nbora or scald, Zam-Buk\nprovides tha handiest sad\nSurest means to quick,\nperfect healing.\nIt Is from certain valuable\nherbal extracts that Zam-Buk\ngets Its power to subdue pais\nsnd Inflammation, ita germ-\ndeetroylng activity and fin*\nskin-growing property.\nZam-Buk la splendid for\nchapped hands, frost bite, chilblains, etc. Get a box to-day I\ntom-Biik\nsa\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4, 1929\na  a        \u25a0        I.' \u25a0 i a ' \u25a0 i i      I,   i..\nPageThi-f _\nr. H. Waters & Co., Ltd.\nBidders and Contractors\nIi It U BuMdkic Material\nYon Require\u2014S-e U\u00bb\nFor   Jo*    Printing    phon*  144, The\nDaily Kewa Job Department.\nMr. and Mrs. Venables\nAre Honored at Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Ort. \u00bb.\u2014Trail Amateur\nMusical and Dramatic society held Its\nfirst social of the season in Odd Pel-\nlows hall tonight. Several musical\nnumbers were given during the eveft-\nihg-\nAt ll o'clock a presentation of a\nsilver tea service was made to Mr. and\nMra. R. V. Venables. Mrs. Tregonning\nmade - the presentation on behalf of\nthe society. Mr. Venable* had been\npresident of the society for tour years\nand waa forced to retire through illness.   He ls now residing ln Nelson.\nThere are five polo clubs ln Chicago,\nfY\">trYfUriprY*><rY*xY^\n**\u2022      _\u2022>     tM-*     *JSj     xJLV*      _4Li     eJsXt     ejfut      _S-    \u00ab_6_      <JSj      _S_      _S_      t_A-      \u00ab_\u2022*&_\u2022     tMt      _\u2022_      %Aj\nThe\nSTANFORD PIANO\nA High Grade Instrument\nfor $395\nFive New Shippers\nTo Trail Smelter;\n. Record is Broken\nNew High Total Set By Custom\nMines for Period; Twenty\nShip\nLIQUOR FINES\nTOTAL $1100,\nTCALL COURT\nTwo Fines of $400 and One of\n$300 is Imposed on\n\"Bootleggers\"\nFive custom mines made their initial\nshipments of the year to date to the\nTrail reduction plant of the Consolidated Mining * Smelting Company\not Canada, Ltd.. during the period\nfrom September 32 to September 30\ninclusive, according to report fust issued by the company's dflce at Trail.\nThe new shippers were: Beaver Silver\nat Beaverdell with 317 tons; Colonial\nat Sandon with 37 tons; I.X.L. at\nRoesland with 25 tons; Montezuma at\nZwicky with 249 tons and Mary Ryan\nat Rambler's siding wtth four tons\nThe Monteeuma was the second largest shipper during the period, the\nMcAltoter at Three Porta leading for\nthe sixth week ln succession with 365\ntons.\nTWENTY   MINES\nTwenty custom mines contributed\n1474 tons toward a total for the period\nof 16.B62 tons. Company mines shipped the baVnc.-. totalling 14,408 tons,\nbeing the third largest for any period\nthii year to date. The custom total\nfor the period was the largest for any\nperiod this year so far.\nOther custom mines shipping were:\nBell, Baverdell, 51; Cork Province,\nZwicky, 227] Duthie, Smlthers, 33;\nMammoth. Sllverton, 48; Noble Five,\nSandon, 89; North Star, Klmberley, 83;\nRuth, Sandon, 69; Sliver King, Tula-\nmeen. 29; Silver Cup, Hazleton, 70;\nWhitewater,   Retallack,   74.\nIn the Stanford piano you have a genuine full scale\nMason & Risch product where quality of tone, precision of action and built-in long life features assure you\nthe srreatest value that has ever been presented in a\npopular priced piano.\nTrade In your present piano, phonograph or radio as part payment.\nBalance on easy time payments.\nMASON and RISCH Ltd.\n513 Ward Street\nNelson, B, C.\nBox 615\nWin Prizes at\nWhist at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 3.\u2014Whist drive\nand dance was held at the Orange\nhall tonight when the prize winners\nwere: Mrs. H. Ltnch, ladles' first; Mrs.\nH. Negus, consolation; \"Blllle\" Ford,\nmen's first;   James Ewlng,  consolation.\n\"The proper time to influence the\ncharacter of a child Is about a hundred  years' before he  Is Bom.\"\n\u2014Dean Inge\nthroats\nrw*    *~gr\u00bb     \u2022*\u2666>    ryi     *\u25a0*-     reft     \u00ab\u25a0*\u2022->     re_r>     .-ar1    *\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\u2022     **\u25a0)\u2022*\u25a0     rjf.     i-*r\u00bb     rjtt-t     efti     i-ef.     rttf,     rfjr.    |\nTRAIL, B. C, Oet. 8\u2014fines totalling\n11100 have been collected ln TraU city\npolice court ln fines imposed for selling liquor contrary to the Liquor act.\nMagistrate Noble Binn* in Imposing\nthe fines stated that Oeorge Ash of\nVancouver, plain clothes constable\nnow on the 'irail police force, had\nnot been brought here by tha olty\nto get conviction* to add money to\nthe city coffers, as 6ome people supposed, but ln order that a cleanup of\nbootlegger's places might be made. He\nalso added that he had been lenient\nas possible in hia fines, taking into\nconsideration the court behavior of E.\nO. Matthew of Nelson, counsel for the\naccused people.\nRFSKRVES JIDGMENT\ni Judgment in the case of D. Martla.\n1 elll. which came up before the court\nyesterday morning and lasted well Into the afternoon, was reserved by the\nmagistrate until October 16.\n1 Mrs. Marian Stlnson was charged\n| with unlawfully selling liquor to\nOeorge Ash on the evenings of Sep-\nI tember 26 and 27. She pleaded not\nguilty and although Mr, Matthews presented a strong case, the evidence ln\n, many instances was so conflicting that\nthe prisoner was found guilty by Magistrate Blnns and sentenced to pay a\nfine of $400 and costs or to serve\nfour months In Jail. The fine was\npaid.\n.FOUND  GUILTY     \t\nI Mrs. Mary Colombo, appearing on a\ni similar charge, pleaded not guilty but\nwas found guilty when the evidence\nof Constable Ash and Chief Downes\nwas heard. Her fine of $400 was paid\nIn preference to a sentence of four\nmonths  In  Nelson Jail.\nThe final case to be tried today was\nthat of Antonio taamonl, who pleaded\nguilty to selling liquor to George Ash\nSeptember 25. A fine of $300 was Imposed and paid.\nDuring this morning's court proceedings, R. J. Clegg, counsel for the\ncrown, and E. O. Matthew, counsel for\nthe defense, found several points of\ndifference and ln one instance the\nargument became so hot that Mr.\nMatthew asked for an apology. Mr\nClegg, refusing, stated that he was\nwilling to forget the matter and his\nworship suggested the men be good\nsports, shftke hands and forget It. The\nmatter closed with a good handshake\nand   a   few   pleasant   words.\nTrail Has Many\nNew Players For\nRugby Game Here\nTRAIL. B. C, Oct. 3\u2014With * team\nbum around the remnant* of laat\nyear's squad, and with men whose\nabilities on the gridiron are lamely\nunknown here, TraU laces Its opening\nrugby battle with Nelson Sunday with\na good deal of trepldltlon.\nSufficient of last year's players remained upon wholh to build the team.\nThere are, however, a number of new\nmen and whether they will measure\nup to the calibre of the missing play-\nrs will be known only when tbey\nget Into action.\nThe boys will trarel by car to Neleon Sunday to play at 2:30.\nFollowing are the players: W. O.\nWilliams. J. Curtis, Phil Barron, L.\nWilliams, Oeoff Hasafd, Radovltch,\nPercy Hallwell, E. Basso, 'Silvers\"\nDecembrinl, Tonelll, Piester, J. Deml-\noff, Rlgby, Orlpplch, L. Dawson, J.\nOttrowskl and Ken Miles.\nNelaon, lt is understood, has a strong\nteam this year and anticipates winning  the   first   game.\nODD FELLOWS WIN\nCARPET BOWLING\nOdd Fellows beat Clan McLeary fl to\n2 and Sons of Enlgand beat Eagles,\nalso 6 to 2 ln city league carpet bowling matches played at the Memorial\nhall  on  Tuesday   njght.\nThe results of the games were:\nOdd Fellows vs Clan McLeary wtth\nOdd Fellows' skips mentioned first:\nFred Irvine, 15, beat J. Rothery, 4;\nRoss Renwlck, 11, beat D- Donald, 6;\nJ. Draper won by default from W.\nMarr; A. Lane, 7, lost to R. Wallace,\n13,\nSons of England vs Eagles with Sons'\nskips mentioned first: J. Gouldlng, 11,\nbeat T. Powers, 3; J. Bailess, 4, lost to\nA. McArthur, 8; A, Woods, 9. beat W.\nJones, 7: C. Ward, 10, beat H. Hughes,\n3.\nSILVER TIP IS\nBROUGHT, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. x\u2014h silver Up\nbear measuring about six feet ln\nlength and about 90 grouse constituted the bag brought to Trail by\nJim Bcbofleld and Oeorge Watson\nafter a week's hunting tfiP on Baldy\nmountain,   behind   Brilliant.\nThe shooting of the bear climaxed\na week of wonderful hunting. It wa*\nshot at tne snow line, lne fur la undoubtedly the finest of the many\nbrought to TraU this season.\nPalmer Is Again\nSecretary, Trail\nCanadian Legion\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 8\u2014At the first\nmeeting of the new exxecutlve of\nTrail branch of the Canadian Legion\nF. H. Palmer was reappointed secretary.\nPreliminary arrangements . for the\noommemoration of Armistice day,\nwhich will be marked by decoration\nof graves, a memorial service and a\nbanquet,   are  now   under   way.\nA program of social activities, including smokers and whist drives,\nis being arranged by the entertainment   committee.\nFOOTWEAR\nModern for Fall\nYes, Juat aa modern aa to*\nmorrows newspaper, modernism\nlasts, modem In leathers \u2014>tt\nmodem IB the shoemaker's art.\nat modem prices.\n$5 and $6\nWatson Shoe\nCompany Limited\nTerms  Strictly  Cash\nSODIIM   HIL1\u00bbH|T|;   I>I.POK|TS\nThe investigation of deposits of natural sodium sulphate (Glauber's salt)\nln Western Canada by the Mines\nBranch, department of mines, hss\nproven up tonnage by hydrous sodium\nand magnesium sulphates ln excess of\n100,000.000 tons. The nature of the\nsalts ls such that a large amount of\nresearch and experimental work in\nsemi-commercial and commercial plants\nIs necessary in order to devise proper\nmethods of harvesting and drying the\nsalts.\nPetroleum Coke\nWe wish to announce to our numerous customers\nthat on and after October 1st, the price of Petroleum\nCoke will be % 18.00 per ton delivered.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE SJ\n.\nThe New, Wonderful...\nEASY\nVacuum. Electric\nWASHER\nAnd here is the new EASY! Built like a fine car ... more\nefficient than ever before... much stronger.\nDo the family's clothes seem to wear out very fast? Then\nit's high time you called the Easy to your rescue, for the Easy\n\u2014by actual experience\u2014is from 25 to 50 per cent, easier on\nclothes than washers not using vacuum cups! The vacuum\ncups\u2014that's the secret! They are just like human hands . . .\nthey are so thorough, so gentle, yet so firm and, unlike\nhuman hands, they never tire!\nThe EASY Vacuum Cup Principle\nGentler, Quicker, More Thorough Than  Human Hands.\nFascinating to Watch the Cups\nClean the Clothes\nYou start the washer. Watch the cups.\nThere they go, busy as can be . . . up, down\nand around ... no let up .. . flushing air,\nsoap and water through the clothes! Watch\nthe clothes change place from bottom to top.\nNothing escapes, not a hanky or a stocking.\nIn one minute those busy cups plunge in\nand out of the water no less thon 66 times\u2014\ngently, quickly, positively cleansing everything in the tub! And there's no wear.,\nProduced in Canada.\nEasiette $155\nj\nTerms to suit the purchaser.\nModel L $180\nTrail Boy Winner\nof Consolidated's\n$500 Scholarship\nTRAIL, B. O., Oct. 3.\u2014Donald Perguson, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Ferguson of East Trail, was the winner.\nfor the term Just passed, of the Consolidated Mining *_\u25a0 Smelting Company\nof Canada Limited's $500 scholarship\nwhich ls annually offered for the high\nschool pupil, son of a Consolidated\nemployee, who makes the highest\nmarks  in  the district.\nAnnouncement to this effect was\nmade todsy by T. W. Blngay, comptroller for the company. The scholarship is provided to assist the winner\nIn carylng on further studies at the\nUniversity of British Columbia at\nVancouver.\nDonald  Ferguson  is  16  years of age.\nSmart English women at OleneagleS t\nare sponsoring tweed cardigan suits,\nand, secondly, leather wind-jammers\nwith tweed sweed and flannel klltfl\nwith blouses of men's cotton shirtings, and men's stockings, leaving the\nknees bare, and the sweaters are principally cashmere types, many high-\nbelted with by-color novelty plaited\nstring  belts.\nPHON|J\u00bb95 FOR    A,DEM,ONSTBATrON\nColumbia Electric -*\u2022\u00ab<\u25a0\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL.B. C. Oct. 3\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nR. _opli_s, accompanied by Ma-. Wright,\nbf Rossland, motored to Trail last\nnight.\n* *   \u00bb\nMrs.   A.   W.   Lewis.   Victoria   avenue,\nentertained nt  the  tea hour today.\n\"   \u00bb    \u2022\nDr. Walter Bradshaw of Nelson has\narrived In Trail to take up temporary\nresidence.\n* *   *\nDr. R. E. Gray and S. H. Murdin\nof Nelson were visitors to Robson\nTuesday evening, the guests of Mr.\nand  Mrs.  Berry.\n* \u2022   \u2666\nE. O. Matthew returns to Nelson\ntoday following a two-day business\nvisit  In Trail.\n* *   \u2022\nT. M. Rum> nnd F. Donaghy of Red\nDeer   are  Trull   visitors  this  week.\n* *    \u2022\nW. J, McCann of Fernie Is visiting\nin Trail for a few days.\n* *    \u2022\nE. Wnlshe of Taber, Alta,. is spend,\nlng a, few days ln Trail.\n* *    \u2022\nE, Wallock of Nelson Is vlalting in\nTrail.\n* *   \u2022\nW, Miller of Kimberley spent yesterdiy in Trail  visiting.\nS. J. Boyle of Northport waa a visitor to Trail yesterday.\n* \u2022   *\nO. S. Maybe of Kelowna. spent a\nfew   days   in   Trail   recently.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nW. F, Trant of Vancouver, post office Inspector, spent Wednesday In\nTrail.\nAttendance at\nTrail Schools\nHigh, September\nTRAIL, B. C , Oct. 3\u2014Six divisions in\nCentral school had attendance percentage of over 98 during September,\naccording to the reports for Beptember.\nDivision 20 was first with 98.79:\ndivision 10 second, 98.74; 11 third,\n98.62; 12 fourth, 98.47; four fifth,\n98.31;   and   one   sixth,   98.06.\nThe low division for the month\nwas   division   18,   which   scored   90.81.\nThe average for Central school was\nhigh.\nAttendance at East Trail school\nduring September maintained a high\naverage, the lowest ppercentage, 92.12,\nln division 8, being only 4.49 per cent\nbelow division 2 the leader, which\nscored   96.61\nNo other Tea\n[offers you such\nHUE\nFLAVOUI\nat such\nLOW\nCOST\nas,\nGiase ^Sanborn's\nSUPERIOR\nIn sealed air-tight packages\nA sample will be gladly mailed\non request to Chase & Sanborn,\nMontreal. t\u201e\n\u25a0jEAUTIFY your kitchen\nby giving your stove\nthe blackest, brightest and\nmost beautiful polishing it\never had ... the quick,\nclean way, with Zebra\nLiquid Stove Polish ...\nand, as if by magic, that\nstove becomes as radiantly\nbright and glowing as the\nday it was new.\nIE BRA\nLIQUID STOVE POLISH\nRECKITTS (Orersea) LIMITED\nMOia-l-MI.   -   TOWWTO   \u2022-  TAJXCOCVHI SS\nPattullo Banquetted\nby Windermere Libs\nINVEKMBRE, B. C. Oct. 3.\u2014T. D.\nPattullo Liberal leader, .accompanied\nby Major P. M. Moodie, provincial organizer, also John A. Buckbam. M.P.P..\nwere tonight tendered a complimentary\nbanquet here by the Liberal association\nof Lake *lndenr_ere district,\nOther    Branches   at    Winnipeg.    Yorkton.    Saskatoon.    F.ilmonton,\nCalgary, Letltbrlilge, Vuncou.er, Kamloops, Vernon und Victoria\nShoe Department\nAnnouncing\ncomplete    fall\nStock   of\nRubbers\nFeaturing something new in Rainettes,\nmoire rubber goloshes, styled in Blue,\nBlack, Grey a nd Beige with spike and\ncuban heels, and fleece-lined for\nwarmth. *\nThe Splasher Cuff adds not only distinctive stylishness but actual protection to hosiery.\nSecure your pair before sizes become\ndepleted and be prepared for the wet\nfail weather.\nSizes and half sizes from 3 to 7'\/;>. Price\nPer Pair  \"$2.54)\nMen's and Boys'\nRaincoats\nMEN'S ENGLISH MAKE GABER-\nDENE RAINCOATS. In new shades.\nBelted style with conventable collars.\n$15.50, $17.50, $21.00,\n$27.50\nMEN'S ENGLISH   MAKE   TRENCH\nCOATS.   Fine Gaberdene with waterproof interlining. Double breasted. Belted  style and  strap  waists.\n$25.00, $32.50\nMEN'S SLICKERS. ToWrs Fish brand\nguaranteed. Double throughout.\n$7.50,   $7.95\nBOYS' VARSITY SLICKERS in the\nnew blue shade. Double bodys, with\nstrap and buckle collar  $4.50\n________\n_____________________\n____________\n\t\n ^\u25a0Ha*_________________B_____\n\u2022\u2014\u2014\nPage Four\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by The News Publishing Com-\npny,  limited.  Nelaon.   B   C.\nBuslneaa letters should be addressed\nsad checks and money orders made\nVayable to The News Publishing Com-\npny, limited, and in no case to individual   members  of  the  staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or my be seen at the office\not any advertising agency recognized by\nthe  Canadian   Press  Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES   \t\nBy mall  (country), per month .   S   -SO\nFer   year     Q.00\nBy mall   (city),  per yer    13.00\nOutside   Canada,   per   month   \u2014     .78\nPer   year        7.50\nDelivered,   per   week         .25\nPer  year     13.00\n\\      Payable In Advance\nMsaaliii   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulation\nFRIDAY.  OCTOBER 4, 1929.\n(THE NELSON DAILY NEWS FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4, 1929\nFIVE-MILE AND\nTHE THIRD\nDIMENSION\nScientific writers who dab-\nI ble in speculation over the\n' fourth dimension are fond of\npicturing the mere lay minds\nwhat the world would be like\nif there were only two dimensions. They point out that in a\ntwo-dimension world, a man\nwho would be a flat being,\ncould circle around a given\npoint on the world's plane, but\ncould not jump over it. Such a\nbeing, they state, would find\nit difficult to visualize a third\ndimension. Similarly, we mortals who are familiar with a\nthree-dimension world find it\nhard to get a mental picture of\nthe so-called fourth dimension.\nWe may read or listen to this\nkind of conversation without\ngetting much from it, but today everyone will admit that,\nfor practical purposes, most of\nus live in a two-dimension\nworld.\nOn a flat, most of us live out\nour days. Now and again we\nmay look down from some eminence and get a view of depth,\nof which we ordinarily have\njust a mental conception. Here\nin the mountains we have more\nchance than have the people\nof the plains. Here different\nelevations are jumbled together, and from the Bastion of\nGyro park., or from Pulpit Rock\nor from the Silver King\u2014to\ntake only Nelson points\u2014we\nsee something of a third di\nmension.\nBut as for getting off the\nflat, and getting a general\nthird-dimension picture of our\nbit of the earth's surface-\nwhy, we just don't do it\nThese remarks are evoked by\nthe airplane inspection of the\nFive-Mile watershed, made by\nCity Engineer Boyd C. Affleck,\nNot sinoe time began, but\nprobably since man began,\nFive-Mile creek has had a contour roughly like that it has\ntoday. The birds of the air were\nfamiliar with its contour-\nAirmen serving as stunt artists at the Nelson fair have\nhad casual glimpses of it from\n1913 on.\nFor the last three years,\nCapt. E. C. W. Dobbin and his\nbrother Clare, and officials of\nthe forest service here, have\nseen it regularly, their interest\nin it being to see that it bred\nno smoke spirals.\nBut the characteristics of\nFive-Mile creek and watershed,\nas an engineer would appraise\nthem, were largely unknown,\nexcept those that could be observed from points of vantage\nin the surrounding heavily\ntimbered terrain.\nIn other words a third-dimension picture that had existed unchanged for thousands of\nyears, had never been snapped\nfor the benefit of mankind.\nMr. Affleck is credited with\nstating that he not only obtained more information for the\n$60 laid out by the city on his\nflight of an hour's duration\nthan he could have obtained\notherwise at an expenditure of\nmany hundreds of dollars and\nmany weeks of effort, but that\na considerable portion of the\nvaluable information obtained\ncould not have been obtained\nat all except from the air.\nOur past is a two-dimension\npast. In our present we are getting a glimmering of the third\ndimension.\n'Probably in our early future,\nsay in 20 years, air maps and\nair data will be included in the\nordinary information assembled\nin connection with every detail\nand the looks of our own bit\nof earth from the air will be\ninvolving land, water or timber,\nreasonably familiar to all of us\nUltimately, we will have a\nfully three-dimension world.\nC\/4unt Het\n\"Poor old Nancy reminds me of a\nwinter apple left to dry up on the\ntree and hatln' men because they\ndidn't pick her when she was ripe.\"\nLighter Side\nThe approach of winter must puzzle\nfashion experts. What more can the\nladles take off?\nThen, too, table scraps can be seasoned with a little salt water and converted Into a nice fur coat.\nThings even up. The poor man may\nfind it hard to trick Justice, but he\nhas less reason to.\nHOW NARROW - MINDED THE\nNEIGHBORS SEEM WHEN THEY SAY\nWHAT  YOUR CONSCIENCE IS SAYING.\nThe Russian episode teaches us that\nit ls much easier to love the under\ndog  if  he  will stay  under.\nHitch hiker: A pedestrian who\nwants you to stop so he can get a\ncrack at  you on even terms.\nEducation really will increase your\nearning capacity unless you become\nan  educator.\nIf that archaeologist really found a\ncreature that could see equally well\nat both ends. It isn't'unique. A billed\nhorse can do that.\nThe speed-mad I nfcted States\nnow outrun*-; the world, except In\nairplanes, locomotives, automobiles\nsteamships sailing vessels and\nafoot.\nLaws are like men. Every one that\ndoesn't work makes things harder\nfor  those  that do.\nHour*\nBj   MS.   **\u2022.   BAKTON,   M.   D.\nVALUE  OF  PERSPIRATION\nAs students we were taught that as\nPerspiration or sweating took liquids\nend wastes from the skin and the skin\nthus took considerable work off the\nkidneys.\nIn the warm weather the skin was\nso active and so much sweat was\nproduced that the kidneys did not need\nto throw off much urine, but ln the\ncool weather lt was just the reverse\nand the kidneys had to do more\nwork.\nThus drugs and other methods were\nused to induce sweating and so remove\n'poisons' from the system. Then a\nlittle later we were taught that the\namount of poison removed by the\nakin even when sweating did not\namount to anything, the benefit coming simply from the loss of heat and\nmoisture by the body.\nHowever, physiologists now believe\nthat the skin can relieve the kidneys\nof much of their work, as they find\nthat sweat contains some of the principal substances of the urine. In.\nacute inflammation of the kidneys the\nsweat glands cannot take the place\nof the kidneys, but in old or chronic\ninflammation of the kidneys patients\ncan  be kept alive by sweating.\nWhere there ls high blood pressure\nand Inflamed kidneys sweating is no*\nalways safe, nor Is it considered wise\nto use drugs or moist heat to induce\n- wealing. Some patients collapse from\nthis treatment. Dry heat ls the method   that  ls  safe  and  effective.\nDr. P. M. Allen describes the construction of a chamber which ls 20\nfeet square and 8 feet high, properly\nventilated, and hot dry air used at a\ntemperature of 140 to 1B0F.\nThe treatment can be given from\ntwelve to fourteen hours a day, but the\npatients sleep  ln a cooler room.\nAs much as four quarts of sweat\ncan be lost. This dry heat chamber\nhas been found useful in rheumatic\ninfections, skin ailments, and nose,\nthroat and  lung conditions.\nWhile the moist heat of the Turkish\nbath certainly helps many individuals,\nthis dry heat ls more effective and ls\nmuch safer.\nIt ls certainly not so exhausting.\nThe small electric light cabinet bath\nls  helpful  in  mild cases.\n10 Years Ago\n(Prom The Dally News, Oct. 4, 1019)\nExpressing himself u greatly pleased\nwith hla Lake voyages In the Interior\nof British Columbia and particularly\nwith the attractiveness of tbe trip on\nKootenay lake from Kelson to Kootenay Landing. His Royal Highness the\nPrince or Wales, presented Captain\nWilliam Seaman of the steamer Kuskanook. with a silver watch case with\nhis insignia.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCincinnati Reds tightened their grips\non the world's series flag yesterday\nby defeating the Chicago White Sox\n4 to 2. As t'jey also won the game\nyesterday they need but three more\ngames   to   land   the  series.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe national executive of the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the\nEmpire has decided to form an organization throughout Canada to collect\nhalf a million dollars for a war memorial to Canada's sacred dead.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGeorge Steele has returned from an\nextended visit ln the east.\nSilverton Notes\nPERSONALITY IS THE VAOUE\nSOMETHING THAT ENABLES YOU TO\nOET BY IN A DRESS SUIT WITHOUT\nMAKING ANYBODY WONDER WHAT\nRESTAURANT YOU WORK  IN.\nA new orchestra number ls called 'The American In Paris.\" The\ntoot Is represented hy  the brasses.\n\u2014o\u2014\nTHE      OUTLAWS     IN     NICARAGUA\nHAVE   BEEN   SUPPRESSED   AND   THE\nGOVERNMENT    IS    IN    CHARGE    OP\nNICE PEOPLE WHO FAVOR A CANAL.\n\u2014o\u2014\nHeadlines arc deceiving-      There are\nmillions ot people In  Chicago and  Its\n\u2022uhurbs  who dou't know how big  the\nbusiness end of a gun looks.\nCORRECT THIS SENTENCE: \"THE\nCASHIER'S SUICIDE.*' SAID HE, \"IS\nGENERALLY ATTRIBUTED TO ILL\nHEALTH.\"\n30 Years Ago\n(From The Dally Miner, Oc.. 4, 1899)\nThe Provincial Exhibition at New\nWestminster was opened today by Hon.\nSydney Fisher. He was accompanied by\nHon. David Mills. In the lacrosse match\nNew Westminster defeated the Toronto\nteam  7  to 2.\ni   i ,1\nLately   they had   15  degrees  of  frost\nin   Winnipeg.   On   the   same  day   wild\nstrawberries  were picked,  in Nelson.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nWarii Bros., agents for the Nelson\nCity Land _\u00a3 Improvement company,\nyesterday sold lot 8, block 7, ln Palrvlew, addition 58A, to H. Hurry for\n$150.\nThe putting up of the new poles in\nNelson is only a part of the thorough\nreorganization of tne telephone system, which the company ls about to\ncarry out at a cost of several thousand   dollars.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nBy the now postal arrangements.\nmail for Calgary and all points east\non the main line goes out via the\nCrows Nest Pass instead of by Bevelstoke  as  heretofore.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nll>   LAURA   A.  KISKMAN\nIK.Ill l\\(.   THE   HOME\nTOMORROWS    MENU\nBreakfast\nLeftover   Pineapple\nCereal\nBoiled Eggs Tout\nJam Coffee\nLuncheon\nCom Fritters\nCole Slaw\nCoffee Cake Cocoa\nDinner\n\u2022Tomato Coup\nBaked Plah\nLyonnalse Potatoes\nTomato Jelly Salad\nLemon Tarts Coffee\nA reader friend has written to ask\nfor an article on lighting the home.\nI am going to pass on to you ideas\nfrom printed advice given out by an\nelectric lighting company.\nIdeal Bedroom Lighting: Have a\nreading lamp directly over the head\nof the bed or use one which fastens\non to the head of the bed. This should\nhave a 25 watt bulb ln it. Have a\nlamp on both ends of the dresser or\ndressing table, each wtth a 40 watt\nbulb.\nBathroom: Have ' a celling fixture\n(Indirect lighting! containing a 100\nwatt bulb. Also have bracket fixtures\neither side of the mirror over the\nwash bowl, each wtth a 40 watt bulb\nln  ot.\nHallways: Have a ceiling fixture\nwith a 40-watt bulb.\nLiving Room: Center celling fixture with 25 watt bulbs. Have brackets at either side of the mantle over\nfireplace, each with a 25 watt bulb.\nFloor lamp\u2014have a 60 watt bulb if\nonly one socket, but two 40 watt bulbs\nif lt has double sockets. Have an electric table lamp at another side of\nthe room with a single socket holding a 60 watt bulb. Have two wall\nbrackets on either side of the double\ndoor leading to the dining room (If\nthere is this arrangement), each holding a 25 watt bulb.\nDining Room: Have a celling fixture in centre of room, holding only\n25 watt bulbs. Also have two wall\nbrackets each holding a 40 watt bulb.\n(However, when the housekeeper wishes to use candles on her dinner table\nIn the evening, she may transfer the\ndimmer bulbs to the wall brackets\nand not light the celling fixture at\nall.)\nSILVERTON. B. C. Oct. 3\u2014Mrs. H.\nLancaster entertained at four tables\nof bridge at her home. The high score\nwas held by Mra. H. Stewart, low score\nby Mrs. C. Smith. Dainty refreshments were served by tbe hostess. The\nInvited guests were: Mrs. a. Mathews,\nMrs. S. Watson, Mn. W. Hunter, Mn.\nJ. Tingling. Mrs. If. \"cNott, Mra. A.\nMcAulay, Mra. R, Fajnuret, Mra. J.\nMatheson, Mrs. A. Walton. Mra. J.\nJohnstone, Mrs. L. Mills. Mn. G. Iron,\nsides, Mn. H. Emerson, Mrs. C. Smith,\nMra. H. Stavart and Mrs. H. Demls.\nMiss Ethel Marshall who has been\nvisiting ln Kaslo for several weeks,\ntbe guest of Miss MarJorie Cadder,\nhas returned home.\nC. H. Rawltngs and son, Cecil, spent\nthe weekend at their home ln Nakusp.\nO. Webb has left for California and\nArizona on  an  extended visit.\nMiss Dorothy White spent the week\nend ln Slocan City, the guest of Mlsa\nVelma  Clough.\nS. Levick was among those who\nmotored to Nelson this week.\nA. McQueen, assessor of Kaslo, was\na business visitor in town.\nThose attending the dance and fair\nat Slocan City were Misses Annie\nCooper, Alyse Lamb, Dorothy White\nand C. Rawltngs, F. Becker, C. sten-\nson, J. Trozzo, F. Blnnlsh and H. Russell.\nF. F. Doubleday Is visiting his brother  ln  Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Eunson have left for\nNelson where  they  will  reside.\nHarold Russell speftt the weekend\nwith his parents at Slocan City.\nC. Evans. and W. Cartler have returned from Nakusp after spending a\nfew days there.\nFlrat automobile driver to complete\n100 miles in 1 hour 14 minutes 8\nseconds was Wilbur Shaw of Indianapolis.\nAway From Home\nThe\nCoeiir d'Alene\nat Spokaiw is a friend of\nthe Traveler. It welcomes\nyou upon your arrival,\nserves while you remain,\nand sends you on your way\nwith the satisfied feeling\nthat you have sounded the\ndepths of that somethiwj\nknown as Hospitality.\nThe COEUR D'ALENE\nHotel '\nHARRY  QOETZ,  Mgr.\nNakusp Board\nof Trade Has\nBusy Session\nNAKUSP, B. C\u201e Oct. S\u2014The monthly\nmeeting of the Nakusp Board of Trade\nwas held with R, Isllp. president ln the\nchair. There were about IS members\npresent.\nAmong Items under discussion were\nthe recreation grounds, which was held\nln abeyance for another month for the\nattendance of an absent member who\nwae the chief of a committee appointed\nfor the selection of suitable location.\nThe dumping grounds for garbage was\nalso discussed and left In abeyance.\nIt was decided that a meting of users of\nBectric light would be held ln the near\nfuture for the election of a oemmittee\nto go fully Into the matter of any difficulties that exist between the users and\nthe company, or any that may arise ln\nthe future, tt was decided that tbe November meeting take the form of a\nsmoker, each member Inviting a guest.\nThe president offered to supply the eat-\nblea and Mr. Allen and Mr. Rushton\nwere appointed a program committee.\nTbe matter of furnishing a building\nfor basket-ball for the children was also\ndiscussed. A suggestion was eventually\nthat a building might be forthcoming\nlor a gymnasium with community haU\nabove.\nFirst Whist Drive\nHeld at Silverton\nSILVERTON, B. 0, Oct. 3\u2014The first\nwhist drive of the season was given\nby the Whist and Bridge club recently.\nSix tables were ln play. Ladles first\nprise was won by Mrs. A. Walton,\nconsolation by Miss MarJorie Emerson\nand men's first by H. Dimock, and\nconsolation  by  A.   Elsmore.    .\nRclie\nPa\nDODDS\n.KIDNEY\n?'\/_ PILLS\n\u2022M   V\\\\\nSubscribe    for    The    Daily\nFirst   American-born   player   to  sign\nup  with  the Toronto  Maple  Leafs News and get the paper daily.\nhockey team was Carl Voss. '\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast Lumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\n20 Years Ago\n(From  The  Dally  Newa,   Oct.   4,   1909)\nNegotiations   between   the   Kootenay\nJam company and the C. P. E. for acquisition by the former of the factory\nsite   have   been   concluded.   The   Jam\ncompany  secured the lots  In question.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022     \u2022\nSam  Gorman,  manager  of the Can,\nadian Marble Works, came in last evening  from Marblehead.\nsee\nAlexander Carrie, Nelson architect,\nis preparing plans for a residence for\nLord Aylmer, which will be erected on\nthe latter'e ranch at Queens Bay. Con-\natructlon will commence shortly and\nthe residence when completed will cost\nIn tbe neighborhood of 04000.\nGranitewear Sale\nWe are offering as a special for Thursday at 40^ each\n^\u00ab____ a ms*- __g~\nAn assortment of high grade Graniteware,  con-\nsisting of oval and round dish pans, sauce pans.\nWash Basins.\nPudding Pains.\nBread Pans.\nTHURSDAY ONLY    *\nFirst Come, First Served\n\u2014See Our Window\u2014\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale  and   Retail  Quality   Hardware\nNELSON, B 0.\nFall and Winter\nSr     Every one a model hat at the very special price of\n6-75\nA special display for Friday and Saturday\nFlares at the sides . . . off the forehead . . . the\nback of the neck completely covered . . . ne\\v tricks\nin turns, twists and pleating . . . clever folding of\nbrims. These are the perfect hats to, complete the\nnew Fall feminine silhouette . . . nnd this is a remarkably low price for hate of such smartness and\nfine materials.\nDeveloped of velvet . . .\nfelt.. . soliel and smart\ncombinations in black\nbrown and new colors.\nSuch exclusive firms as\nTHE CHAUNCY.\nTHE DORIN\nTHE NATTY\nTHE JEANETTE.\nFRENCH DR1MA\niamaim ir ob.\nSmart Shoppe for Women\nEfficiency\nAt Your Finger Tips\n,.. the Productive Way\nEnds Pen-Dipping\u2014Puts Lost Motion at Work\nPen-dipping has resigned in favor of Non-\nstop writing, and big business Is quickly falling\nin line with the change to meet a competitive\nworld.\nThis sjvift and extensive trend is exemplified\nin the new modern building of the London Life\nInsurance Co., London, Ont., where 31 Parker\nDesk Sets are in use in executive's offices.\nSo it is from Halifax to Victoria\u2014business\u2014\nGood Business\u2014has turned to Parker Fountain Pen Desk Sets for a snorter way and a\nmore productive day!\nParker Desk Sets bring the Parker Convertible Pen with taper for desk use, and cap and\nclip for pocket.\nA pen having 24 ft more ink capacity than\naverage, size for size, and * Guaranteed against\nall defects. It writes with Pressureless Touch.\nAs graceful and light as a dart\u201438# lighter\nthan rubber. For it's made of Parker's Non-\nBreakable Permanite\u2014lustrous, jewel-like,\ncolourful.\nOrnamental base in onyx, marble, porcelain\nor glass\u2014with a graceful ball and socket sleeve\nthat holds your gold-pointed\nParker ever ready within\ntight and reach.\nTo inaugurate productive\nwriting this month, stop at\nany Parker dealer's, or\nphone him to put a Parker\nDesk Set in your office.\nTwo Pens in One\nand\" Guaranteed\nagainst all defects\nRemovable lispee tkenget lie\nPuekee femes a Disk Pitt tt *\nPotktl Ft. tvnttusisie denied.\nAo tlkteit CQ.vtrt.hlt. Parker\nitselssdt* a complin cap and\nftseltt clip -wills teste, Disk\nFt*. Htr.ee a Duofold pen dot,\nfir tost tfltktr mtktt.\nThe Parker Fountain Pen Co., Ltd.\nToronto 3, Ontario\n\u2022The Parker Duofold Fountain\nPen U mad. to give lifelong\nattlalacrion. An. defective\npalla will be replaced without\ncharge, provided complete pen\nk_CTMttothef.ctorvv.lth 12c for\nOCumpMtagc and regfmatton.\nDuofoldVeskSets\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS     FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4, 192S>\nPage Five\nMen's\nWork Boots\nwith _*AttCO or\nLEATHER Soles\nMen'* sturdy work boots\nttt solid leather. Made over\ngood fitting laste.\n$5.00 TO $7.50\nWith Panco Soles.\n$4.50 T0 $6.00\ntenders in Footfashion\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nSociety\nt MM nature, |_*lu__I reo*-\ntlona, private entertainments, em-\naor\u20141 Items, marrleoa eta., will\naipeer la thla column. Telep-cn.\nIB*. Vigneux at her home.\nA   Formula\nfor a\nj^ERFECT SMOKE\nA PETERSON\nPIPE\nand a Cu ot\nBush'\ns\nSpecial Mixture\nRUSH'S\nA. D. McLeod, manager of the .Royal\nBank at Canada haa re-trued from Spokane where he attended the mining\no\u00abnventlon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. F. MM. Barnett Silica\nstreet have taken up residence at 417\nCedar street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. J. 8. Oooche of Crawford   Bay\nwaa   among   city   visitors   yeeterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. Heighten of Procter spent yeeterday ln nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nN. G. Fltchpatrick, superintendent of\ntraffic for the British. Columbia Tel\nephone company, and X. F HeUlwell,\ncommercial superintendent, who have\nbeen touring the Kootenays left yesterday accompanied by ii. A. Nicholson,\nlocal manager. Tor Kaalo. They will\nvisit In TraU tdday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Oswald McDougall of Kaslo wae\na visitor to Nelsoi) yeeterday.\n\u2022 * \u2022\nt Yesterday afternoon Mrs. Prank Murphy, Ball mines road, entertained\nthe sewing circle of the Church of\nMary Immaculate when ahe was assisted\nln serving by Mre. BUgtngton, Mrs.\nArthur A, Plen-ier and Mrs. A. O. Oel-\ninas. These present Included Mrs.\nDennlson, Mr\u00bb. John Burns, Ms. Stephen\nVingo, Ms. Colin P. MacDougall, Mra.\nGeorge Piantt, Mre. A. G. OeHnasv\nMrs. Gregolre Choquette, Mrs. Joseph\nSturgeon, Mrs. M. J. Vigneux, Mre. C.\nV. Gagnon, Mre. K. Coyle, Mrs. Oerman.\nMrs. George Bt. Denis, Mm. 'J. H,\nDoyle, Mrs. J. B. Hughes, Mrs. J.\nVivian, Mrs. Arthur A. Perrier, Mrs. T.\nI,. Marquis, Mre. Cdginfftoa, Mw. L.\n8. McKlnnon, Ms. J. Frcclpt, Mrs. M. J.\nVprseveld and Miss C. Flore oT Vancouver.     \"\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss C. Flore of Vancouver ls visiting\nfriends tn Kelson.\nMiss Joan Hunter, Edgewood avenue\nleaves this morning for a visit to her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs,\nD. T. Fotheringham In Calgary.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Arthur CartmeH and her Infant\ndaughter have left the Xootenay -t***6\nGeneral hospital for their home on\nVictoria street.\nTobacconist\nFor   Job    Printing    phone   144, The\nally, News Job Department.\nMr. and Mrs. H. M. Hufty of Seattle\nwere In town Wednesday on their way\nto Brillant where they will visit Mr.\nIKifty'H parents, Mr. and Mrs. w.\nH. Hufty,\n\u00bb    *   \u2022\nP. Bonaccl of New Denver was a\nvisitor   to   town   yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nColin Major of Procter passed through\nNelson yesterday en route to visit his\nbrother and slster-ln-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nNorman Major In Trail.\n\u2022 t   *\nMiss Lillian Smith, Kootenay avenue\nentertained'  a   number   of   her   irelnds\non Tuesday evening the occasion being\nher hlrthday. Ber gueeta WuMude* Ue\nMlssse Mary and Margaret Morgan, Miss\nAbble Wall, Miss Bthel Men-meld. Mlsa\nTeots Houston, the Misses Edna and\nKathleen Porter, Mlsa Myra Chrtshop.\nMiss Malsle Peake, Miss Myriad Morrison. Miss Edna. Chapman, Miss Myra\nHumphry, Mrs. It. Jenne. Mrs. Harold\nH. Hlnltt and Mre. A. Uatassa.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr.   a\\\\oA   Mrs.   Alex   Sutherland   of\nKaslo paid a visit to the elty yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nStanley Byrne was ln town Wednesday en route to Tadanac from eBaver-\nmouth.\n\u2022 #   \u00bb ta.\nAmong   visitors   to  Nelson yesterday\nwas Mre. M. Murphy of Kaslo.\n\u2022 *    *        '\nDr. and Mra.  H.  H. Mackenzie  have\nresumed from a month's motor trip to\nthe coast cities.\n* *   \u00ab\nA very enjoyable- bridge was given by\nMrs. Harry Dunk at hsr home on\nBaker street Wednesday when bene\nfiting the church of Mary Immaculate\nfund when she was assisted by MIMbs\nAlbert!ne Choquette and Mrs, M. J.\nVigneux. The prizes were won by Mr*\nEugene Poulin, Colin F. MacDougall.\nMrs. George Motion and P. J. Gallagher.\nAjftslstlng tn serving ware Mrs. E. Poulin,\nMrs. Guy Wright, Miss Isobel Rahal and\nMiss Amiable Dunk. Among those at\nthe bridge In the evening and tea ln\nthe afternoon were Mr. and Mrs- E. Y.\nBrake, Mrs. W. N. Hoore, Mre. George\nAllen. MTs. A. T. Noxon, Mr. and Mra.\nP. J. Gallagher, Mrs. M. Maden. Mrs\nGeogre Motion, Mr. and Mrs. L H.\nChoquette, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Poulin\nMrs. Jack Atorris, Urs. R. R, Brown,\nMre, J. D. Notman, Mrs. George Fluerv,\nMr. and Mre. Colin P. McDougall, Mr.\nand Mrs. Wesley CUlblck, Jr., Mrs. Guy\nWright, Mre. Walter Crowther, Mrs\nW. E. Keyt, Mrs. Philip Rahal, Miss Al-\nbertlne Choquette,, Mrs. M. J. Vigneux\nMrs. Frank Murphy, Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon, Mrs. C. V. Gagnon, Miss Abble\nWall, Miss Yvonne Lapolnte, Mise Helen\nScanlan.\n* \u2022   *\nH.     Perry Leake  of Balfour  was  In\nthe city yesterday on  business.\n* *   \u2022  \u25a0\nMrs. G. NbH Brown and her (laughter Mra. Baddeley  of Bonnlngton spent\nyesterday   in   Nelson.\n* *   *\nJack  Annable  was opereted   on  yesterday afterhoon at the Kootenay Lake\nOeneral  hospital   for appendicitis.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nF. A. Steikey has returned from attending the mining convention tn Spokane.\nMr. and Mre. Howard Dennis, Terrace apartments have as their guest\nMr. Dennis' mother, Hester L. Dennis\nof Spokane.\nCRANBROOK HEARS\nLIBERAL LEADER\nMettlirg  Addressed  by  T.  P.\nPattullo is Well\nAttended\nMrs.   A.   Bremner   of   Salmo   paid\nvisit to town yeeterday.\nHer Great\nDay\n\u25a0\nj N  every  woman's\n1      life there t'.re the       A\nfew great moments. The      XI\ngreatest of all  is  her     M\nmarriage   to  the  man     JH\nBv\nshe   lores      Her   first   fMk\ndiamond\u2014in its gleam-  Wl\\\ning   depths   ahe   fimls   Iw\nFW\\v\na fascinating appeal to   \\\\ Wf\nft  V        1\ny K\nher imagination.      .       If*\/\n7 \\\n. Let her first diamond        ff\nrafm. r       A\ny\nbt fitting to the mom-\n\u25a0 ent.\n^a\\mT     '\n'\n4\nA. T. NOXON\nLeo  Gansner   Oranite   road   left   for\nVancouver to resume her studies at the\nUniversity   cf   British   Columbia.\n...\nMra,    Oeorge    Piatt    of   Bonnlngton\nwas among city shoppers yesterday.\n\u2022    a   \u00bb\nD. McPhee left laat evening for Vancouver.\na   \u2022   .\nAmong Nelson  visitors yesterday  was\nMrs,    J,    p.    Stevenson    of    Sunshine\nBay.\n...\nHarry   Beck,   C.   P.   R,   road   master\nat Kaslo spent yesterday in town.\n.   \u2022   t\nMr.   and   Mra.   E.   Oordon   of   Bonnlngton were  ln Nelson _._mpp_Ag  yesterday.\n.^sste'.\nMiss Jean Cola* of. tfe. British Columbia   Telephone    company's    staff    has\nreturned  fro ma  three weeks'  visit  to\nher sister Mrs. Lepper In Vancouver.\n*a.\nJack   Annable   successfully   underwent\nan operation for appendicitis yesterday\nafternoon    at    the   hospital.\nCRA-BBOOK, *\u00bb. C, Oct. \u00ab.-Cra_-\nbroo- Uberals, as well aa few from\nKlmberley, met ln the Masonic hall, list\noccasion belnj the visit to the district\nof Mr. T. D. Pattullo, leader ot the __-\netaja of the province, and Major S. M.\nMoody provincial organiser of the party.\nThe' hall waa comfortably flUed with\npeople who enjoyed the forceful view,\nof Mr Pattullo on the questions affecting the liberal rwtv in Doth the federal\nand provincial houses.\np M M_*Ph*rson, local member ln tne\nprovincial houae, acwd as chairman of\nthe meeting. Mr. Swanson of Klmberley prealdent of the district Liberal association, and Mr.. C J Little president ot tbe Cranbrook City Liberal &>-\nsoclatlon were also present.\nIn introducing the speaker Mr. MacPherson spoke ln eulogistic terms of the\nwork of Mr. Pattullo. both aa minister\nof lands in the h_t government and a\u00bb\nhouse leader of the Liberals In the present government.\nSAV MacPHRRSON OOOI>\nMr Pattullo ln opening his address\ncongratulate the people of Oranbrook\nand district on tttelr choice of candidate, saying that the impression made\nby Mr MwPheraon in the house on\nmen of an parties had been highly favorable He asked the Cranbrook people\ntheir opinion of Dr. Tolmles Alaska-Yukon highway project when Uwir own\nroadi were In a condition that was\nkeeping out tourists by the hundreds.\nHe devoted aome time to the arguments brought forward by Hon. B. B.\nBennett on. hla recent tour of the west.\nPerhaps the most forceful note struck\nlh Mr Pattullo's address was hts statement that while Canada was the only\ncountry -.at had not Increased Its tarirr\nlh the period since the War, Its progress\nper capita had been greater than In any\ncountry in the world in that period,\nPollowng J_r. Pattullo's address Mr.\nMoody told' something of the orgnlr--\ntlon and plans of the Liberals lh t*he\nr_ovlnce, adding his congratulations to\nthose of Mi-. PnttUllo on the efficient\norganization of the Cranbrook and KUn-\nberley Liberals In the last election.\nDuring the evening vocal solos were\nacceptably rendered by Mrs. t. M MacPherson and S. Manson. accompanied by\nMrs. MacPherson. Following the programme refreshments and a social hour\nwere enjoyed. The supper was under\nthe convenorship of Mrs. P. Oenest\nOn the following morning Mr. Pattullo and Mrs. Mbody, acompanled b,\"\nMr MacPherson. I left for Klmberley.\nwhere a meeting was BddresBed Wednesday evening. Mr. Pattullo and Mr.\nMoody came to the city from Creston.\nDuring their stay In Cranbrook \u25a0 Mrs\nMacPherson eniertatned at dinner In\ntheir honor.\n(^Meagher's\n611 Baker Street.     Pxvms 200\nStore News^d\nBlankets and Comforters of Superior Quality\nv::\n-pr-\nSPECIALS\nFRESH FISH\nArrive Today\nFresh Halibut, Salmon, Cod,\nFresh;*__erf tag, (irabs, J_Hrimps\nand Tresh Eastern Oysters.\nSee our; 'vyindow for\nek-End Specials\non alt    '.\n..      CHOICE NO. 1 MEATS\nTry Out Tomatoe Sausage\nfor Sunday Breakfast\n* '   '\nBurns & Co*, Ltd*\nPHONE  511.    BAKEB  STREET,  NELSON,  B.   C.\n'West Kootenay Butcher Co*\nPHONG  6,  WARD  STREET\nBlames Nerves\nfor His Reckless\nDriving, Toronto\nTORONTO, Ont., Oct. 3\u2014E. W. Patterson  blamed   his   nervee  for  driving\n\"I will have to send you to Jail li\nwest.\n\"He told me to go to ,\" a policeman  advised   traffic   court.\n\"I thought he was a civilian,** declared   accused.\nMagistrate Jones reminded accused\nthat he had no business talking to a\ncivilian or policeman in such a manner.\n\"If you are nervouse you should not\nbe driving. You will have to get rid\nof your bad nerves or the automobile,\"\nadvised   the   bench.\nAccused   was   fined   $10.\nSun Ka Woo was assessed \u202210 for being too great a hurry to get home\nwith   his   laudnry.\n\"I wll have to send you to jail if\nyou can't pay your fine before the\nend of the month,\" the court informed Irving Perry, who was ordered to\npay an aged man 975 a week ago as\nthe result of knocking him down on\nDahforth avenue.\nJohn Doherty admitted driving recklessly on Oerrard street. He preferred\nthe sidewalk to the road when turning\nop  Church  street  and  was  fined   J10.\nL. Small was positive he did not do\nany speeding on Front street one day\nrecently.\n\"I never got up until 10 o'clock tn\ntHe morning.\" he testified, The\ncharge   was   withdrawn.\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO. B. C, Oct. 3\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nWlllftlm MurchHon nave returned lrom\na visit to Trail whe\u00bb they were the\nguests of their son-ln_.li-.- and daughter,  Mr. and  Mrs. B.  8.  Dlmoclt.\nProvincial Constable C. P. Oland\nWith Mrs. 01a\u00bbd and their son David\nhas left 'or Bum* lake. B. C to which\npoint  Mr. Olanrt fsxs been  transferred\nWilliam Cline. W. Oomm and Georie\nArisen came ln from the Cork mine\nMonday and lattt left to spend a few\ndays at their homes ln Mew Denver.\nMr. and Mrs. H. A. ftose have left\nfor Sandon. where; they will make their\nfuture home.\nMr. ond Mrs. Angus of Nelson were\nSunday  visitors  ln  Kaslo.\nMrs. W. L. Boilings, Mrs. R. L.\nTinkers and Mrs. J.' Paterson have returned from a motor trip to Bpokane.\nJohn 8words came down from the\nWellington mine -Tuesday and will\nspend  some   time   In  town.\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. Zlnckey. who\nhave been the guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nOeorge Stolt. have left for their home\ntn Couer d'Alene. Idaho.\nMrs. A. J. Harris Bpent Tuesday ln\nHelsn.\nEric Paterson was a Monday visitor\nto   Nelson.\nJ. W. Wilson of Calgary arrived In\nthe  city Monday  evening.\nCharles W. Mason of Tacoma, arrived ls Kaslo Monday and left for\nthe Duncan River district Tuesday\nnight.\nEdgar Petersen ls in from Sandon\nfor  a   few   days.\nDown Comforters\nS12.50 to 850.00 each\nImported or Domestic Comforters filled\nwith finest quality down. Coverings\nof good sateen or saitin in all the wanted\ncolors. Full sizes. Special value for\nsuch good quality.\nEach  f-2.50, $15.00 to $50.00\nNew Turkish Towels\nS1.25 to $3.00 the Pair\nPure white or fancy colored towels in\ngood heavy weight.   All full sizes at\nThe Pair  *1.25, f 1.50'to 83.00\nPure Wool Blankets\n$10.00 to $17.50 the Pair\nPure white, Plain colors, and Fancy\nPlaid Blankets. Made of pure wool\nyarns and with whipped or Satin bound\nedges. Best Scotch or Canadian make.\nPer Pair $10.00, $12.50 to $17.50\nNew Fancy Cushions\n$3.50 to $12.00 each\nRound, oblong or three cornered shape*\nNice soft filling and covered with shot\ntaffeta or fancy brocade silk\nEach  $3.50 to $12.00\nHolds Line in Error\nPhone Bill Is $700\non Oall to England\nSeven hundred dollars for one telephone call.\nSuch was the bill that faced Fred\nPorsdike,   a   visitor   to   Toronto.\nMr. Forsdike, who is an ex-Lord\nMayor of Cardiff. Wales, telephoned\nfrom the King Edward Hotel to England via the trans-Atlantic service.\nLeaving the telephone to obtain some\nInformation he did not replace the\nreceiver and even when he was delayed in Retting the desired information, he did not worry, thinking that\nthe call would he automatically completed after six minutes, as In the\ncase ln the Old Country, where a\nwarning is given after three minutes\nand the call broken off at the end\nof  six  minutes.\nSad were hla disillusionment and\ndiscomfiture when he was told that\nhe would have to stand the racket\nof a 52-mInute call to England, amounting to the neat tittle sum of 1700.\nWhen the situalon was explained to\nhim, however, Mr. forsdike paid up\nmanfully.\nWillow Point Notes\nWILLOW POINT, B. ft, Oct. 3\u2014Mrs.\nL. Y. Davis and baby son. who have\nBeen the guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. H.\nApplewhaite since March, have left for\nParksville. Mrs. Davis received the\nnews of the death of her father-in-law.\nDr. L. L. Davis, government physician\nat Parksville, tin September 23.\nMrs. D. Heddle was the guest of Mrs.\nA. Allen, Fairview.\nMrs. C. Bean is spending a few\nmonths   holiday   In   Calgary.\nMrs. W. Bennett has left for prairie\npoints.\nMrs. E. H. Applewhaite has left for\nMontreal to attend the annual meeting of the Dominion Board of Women's\nAuxiliary to the M. S. C. C. and expects to be away about three weeks,\nwhen she will he accdYnpanied back\nby her son, John, who has been in\nEngland   for  a   years  stay.\nSlocan City Notes\nSLOCAN   CITY,   B.   C,   Oct.   3\u2014Ted\nHicks   was  a   business   visitor   to   Nel-\nPat Magulre  has  left  on a  business\nson   and  Tarrys.\ntrip to Spokane.\nMrs.   D.   P.   Ora-iam   and   daughter\nMiss Margaret uraham of Nelson spent\nthe past week  here visiting with rela_\nrelatives, leaving,  accompanied  by  Mrs.\nJ.   V7. Crow  to visit  with   relatives  at\nMetaline Palls, Wash.\nMrs. Melckle of Trail spent the week\nend   here,   the   guest   of  her  daughter\nand son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. Ewlng\nand  David,\nMrs. G. Carlson and baby have left\nto visit with relatives in Victoria. Mr.\nCarlson   accompanied   them   to   Nelson,\nfirst   single-engined   speed   boat   to\nexceed 87 miles per hour was the \"Miss\nEngland\",   driven   by   Major   Seagrave.' of Mr. and Mra. J. H. Clarke.\nYMIR,  B.  C,  Oct.  3\u2014Mr.  and  Mn.\nB. A. ualrwen were godfather and Bod-\nmother for the infant daughter of Mr. '\nand  Mrs,  J.  H.  Ciarke.  Mr.  and  Mrs. |\nA.  B.  Clark  were  godfather  and godmother for the infant daughter of Mr.\nand   Mrs.   L.   P.   Bond,   at   a   double,\nchristening here. Later ln the evening\nrefreshments were served  at the home\nFirst horse to win over $100,000 In\nthe Belmont Futurity was Whichone\nin  1929.\n\u00abf\n5-\nWhen It Comes\nto Candy\nYoung people of today\nare most discriminating in\ntheir choice of good chocolates. They invariably turn\nto Sapp's.\nYou wUl  like  them\nK*_\nThe Heintzman\nPiano\n\u2014Ever Increasing ln popularity (or home and eon-\ncert um, thla Instrument\nhu by Ita wonderful ton*\nand artistry of design endeared Itself to the public.\nJoin our list of satisfied\nTERMS ARRANGED\nAND YOUR OLD\nINSTRUMENT ACCEPT.\nED IN TRADE\nHeintzman & Co., Ltd.\n3unspo*s vary in numbers in a period of average length of eleven and a\nhalf years. Trie weather ls found to\nvary along with these changes in the\nsun, in some locality quite definitely.\nAs a result living conditions vary with\nconsequent effects on birds, animals,\ntrees, grain growth, ud economic conditions. \"\nBADMINTON RACQUETS\nBewtley's Badminton Racquets\nWINNER  MODEL  S3.00\nROYAL MODEL... S5.00\nVARSITY MODEL  fS.OO\nFLASH  MODEL   _7.0O\nSPEED MODEL S8.00\nW. J. B. MODEL aia.oo\nYORK MODEL  fl_.00\nSILVER KING MODEL -...f 15.00\nPRESSES       ta\nHlpperson Hardware Co.\nLimited\nLook for the Red Hardware Store     ^\nPhone W Box 414\nm\nPhone 299\nJ\nCORN\nit the one grain native\nto America. One of\nnature'* most healthful\ncereals. To know how\ndelicious it can be, just\nsit down to a bowl of\ncrisp Kellogg's Corn\nFlakes with milk os\ncream!\nCORN FLAKES\ni(tZr.at far the htaaiii\n\u2014easy te Jlteet.\n Page Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER I 1929\nMarkets and Mining\nSLUMP IS STILL\nFELT, VANCOUVER\nSTOCKjXCHANSF\nEncouraging   News   Does   Not\nAffect Market Trend; Mines\nAre Listless\nVANCOUVER. B. C. Oct. ..\u2014 (By H\nW Robertson Ltd.. leased wire). Oils\nled activity in the Vancouver Stock\nExchange today with the market still\nsuffering under the downward slump\not yeaterday. Stocks In most instances\nopened below laat night's cloae with\ndownward tendencies until the noon\nrecast Afternoon strength did not\nmaterialize and with selling apparent\nmoat stocks closed with net losses.\nMews today was encouraging and was\nnot reflected in the market trend.\nA. P. Consolidated opened at 3.83 and\nclosed at 380. a net loss of 9 points.\nH ia under light trading. Associated\ng6td to a close of 2.65 and Calmont\ntold for a net five point loss after\nfluctuating narrowly. Home wrs under\nunusual volume opening 5 up, and\nClosing   at   11800.\nA softer tone was noted In Mayland\ntnd despite news tbat its well is 330\nfeet ln the lime with gas bubbles\nShowing through 600 feet of very hard\nmud. Southwest Pete closed at 3.S\nlifter a low of 2.60. Other oils had\nminor losses. Trading in the mine\nfaction was listless and In small\nquantity.    Pew  changes took  place.\nCanada Bonds\nW_om_0. Oct. 8\u2014The Dominion\nwar Issue prices:\nBonds:\nWar Loans\u20141831, M_W:   10S7.  101 M.\nVictory loan*\u2014uss, 100M; 1034,100:\n\u25a0037.   104 M.\nBenewala\u201419S2,   0S.73a   W SO\nRefunding loans\u20141943. MTS; 1044.\n0600;    1040,   95.00:    1946.   95 00a   05.50.\nSTADACONA SURE\nBEING FINANCE\nPRICES TOBOGGAN\nSUDDENLY ON THE\nNEW YORTCHANGE\n'Jflit'-s are Hardest Hit; Call\nMoney is Down to 6\nPer Cent\nProfessional    Short    Sellers\nKnock Down Lindsley\nStocks\n;  Tork  street,   London,   is  to   be   wld.\ntoned   from  Tnlbot   to   RldoOt   streets.\n41\nAn increased\ndemand\nfor\nB.C Products\nmeans\nincreased\nemployment\nin B.C.\ntmJ\nB.C, PRODUCTS BUREAU\nTil* V_-v*ou\u00bbi*- Ito-i-il d.  I, K.Jt<\n\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0**-*\u25a0\u25a0*\u00bb\u2014   \u25a0\u00bb. .\nTORONTO. Ont., Oct. 3\u2014(By Hugh\nW. Robertson Ltd., leased wire). Stad-\nacona Rouyn interesting property working under Lake Pelletler. has had fear\nof recapitalization lifted. Directors\nwill provide money required to complete the program. Last week diamond\ndrilling started from the 300 foot\nlevel.\nWith three Lindsley stocks touch-\nIn gyear lows this week, the only possible solution found ls that professional short sellers and attackers have\ntaken advantage of the executives' absence In the west. They are conducting\nsearch for the McAlphlne party Impervious to market doings. The public\nis not setting short and neither are\nthey buying in any rush, all of which\nmakes die-hards who have not been\nforced into liquidation guess where\nstocks on the block of favoritism a-\nmonth ago are being hurled from.\nMillions have been sliced from market\nValuation ln a few days. In one week\nNoranda lost about \u00bb_2,000,000 of its\nvaluation, there are hints at the significance of a large house offering to\nbuy certain stocks on 10 to 15 per cent\nmargin. ',\nIf some rumor has been blamed for\nthe acts of bears in regard to the\nmarket, lt is even more to note that\nmalicious things have been said about\nthe financial standing of certain\nhouses. That has been an annual trick\nend has been about the same as water\non a duck's back. One large house\nsent Investigators north to find the\nsource of things. Over a year ago the\nAttorney General's deparment became\ninterested In these malicious rumors\naffecting the mining Industry.\nLogan & Bryan\nPrivate Win\n\u2022 TOCKS     BONDS.    COTTON\nnun\nMEMBKBS\ntern Tork Uontreal and Vancou-\n\u00bber Stock Exchanges, Chicago\nBoard of Trade. Winnlpec Oraln\nexchange and other leading ax-\n*hanget\nOFFICES:\n\".oconver    Spokane   and   Sesttle\nPRICE TREND IS\nDOWNJIONTREAL\nHeavy Liquidation in International Nickel and Brazilian\nSets Pace\nNSW YORK. Oct. 3.\u2014The wide open\nbreak which many traders have been\npredicting since stock prices began to\nhit ths toboggan nearly a month\nago, oame with startling suddenness\ntn the last hour of trading today\nwhen a heavy flood of liquidation\ncarried scores of Issues down 6 to 30\npoints. Commercial Solvents broke\n70 points on a few Bales. Trading,\nwhich was only moderately heavy ln\nthe early part of the session assumed\nhuge proportions in the last hour\nwhen nearly 1,600,000 shares changed\nhands, the day's total being 4,474,340\nshares.\nThe record breaking increase of\nnearly 9670,000,000 ln stock exchange\nmember loans last month, announced\nafter the close of yesterday's market,\nwas generally believed to be responsible\nfor   the   selling   movement.\nThe federal reserve figures announced\nafter the close of today's market, furnished another unpleastnt surprise\nwith a gain of $43,000,000, bringing\nthat total to a new high record at\n$6,084,000,000.\nCall money dropped from 7\u00bb_ to 6\nper cent with loans in the outside\nmarket offered as low at 5*,i, and\ntime money was slightly easier at 0\nper cent after being quoted at 9 to -!_\u25a0\nfor a week, or more.\nPublic utilities, many of which had\nbeen selling at 40 to 100 times current earnings were the hardest hit.\nStandard Oas and Electric dropped 25\npoints. American Water Works 24l_.\nAmerican and Foreign Power 1914 and\nAmerican Telephone and American\nPower and Light, consolidated Oas,\nElectric Power and Light, North American, Stone and Webster and Western Union dropped 6 to 12 points.\nMost of the others fell 3 to 7 points.\nUnited States Steel common closed\n10 points lower at 313 after selling\ndown to 213*4, or nearly SO points below the high established months ago.\nAir Reduction, Allied Chemical, Atlas\nPowder, Oeneral Electric, Johns-Man-\nville, Simmons and Underwood-IUlott-\nFlsher dropped 10 to 12 points, Westinghouse Electric 17 and Auburn 27',-fc.\nMONTREAL, Oct. 8.\u2014Heavy liquidation In International Nickel and BraaUlan, which have dominated trading\non the Montreal stock exchange for\nthe past two weeks, set the pace in\na steady downward movement on the\nlocal   exchange   today.\nBrazilian, which led the list In point\nof activity, finished with a net loss\nof 4Mi points at 67>i. while Nickel\nclosed at the day's low mark of 5214.\nwhere lt recorded a net depreciation\/\nof 4ft  points.\nThe power stocks, though experiencing Uttle trading were among the\nheavy losers. Montreal Power slumped\nto a low of 163 y4, the final sale at\nthis figure showing a net decline of\nR% points. The heaviest loss of the\nsession, while Power Corporation\nweakened three to 116. Shawinigan\nworked under pressure throughout almost the entire session and depreciated\n3% points at 98, while Wayagamack\nbroke   IH   points  to  81.\nNew York Stocks\nMontreal Stocks\nWHEAT TUMBLES\nIN CHICAGO PIT\nCHICAGO, Oct. 3.\u2014Shaken by breaks\nIn stock market quotations, wheat\nvalues tumbled today, especially In\nthe late dealings. Low prices at which\nwheat Is selling in Europe tended\nfurther to disturb  confidence.\nChicago wheat future deliveries closed heavy, -4 to 2% cents a bushel\nbelov yesterday's finish. Cora cloeed\nH to 114 cent down, oats -4 to to %\nto % cent off, and provisions unchanged to a rise'of 32 to 35 cents.\nLIQUIDATION IN\nNICKEL FEATURE\nTORONTOMARKET\nNoranda   Never   in   Stronger\nPosition; Call Money Slide\nHelps a Lot\nONTARIO-ALBERTA\nMAKES OIL STRIKE\nSouthwest   Pete   Reaches   the\nLime But No Sign of\nProduction\nBuy Bonds-\nRoy ai Financial Corporation Ltd.\nVANCOUVEB\nSAFETY      INCOME      MARKET ABILIT-\nWe deal in Government, Municipal and Corporation\nSecurities of the highest class only.\nAH investments sold by us are recommended foi\ntheir Security. Certainty of regular Income and readv\nMarketability.\n-m\\ \u00bb. HEWITT, District  RepresenUUve,\nJSOYAL   AKNS   HOTEL,   Kelowiis.\ni' '.!\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0' \u2014'  ;\t\nHigh\nAllied  Chemical  .... 314*1,\nAndes        \u2014\nAmerican   Can    .... 171V.\n1 Am.   For.  Power   .. 166\nAm.   Loco  114%\nAm.  Steel  Fdy    67.4\ni Am.   Smel.   &   Ret. 113%\nAm.   Telephone  244V_\nAm.   Tobacco  168\nAnaconda   ....'__.\".*.,_. 116**4\nAtchison      273'A\nBaldwin        67%\nBait.   \u201e   Ohio     133*4\nBendix Aviation ....   \u2014\nBethlehem   Steel   .. 116%\n) Canadian Pacific .. 318%\nCerro de Pasco .... 92%\nChes.   &   Ohio   .... *-3%\nChrysler        66%\nCon. Gas N.  Y  168%\nCorn   Products\n113%\n44%\n66%\n363\n.   86\n113\n37\nX\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Ltd.\nOffice, Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL.  BRITISH  COLOMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPut-chasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore-\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC,  TRAIL\n{^.^^^L^MMS^^S^^^Mij^\nA UNIVERSAL\nCURRENCY\nCARRY a Letter of Credit from the\nImperial Bank of Canada. This\nletter enables you to draw funds in any\ncountry, and in any currency\u2014dollars,\npounds, francs, etc.\u2014to the required\namount.\nTake along also a few Travellers'\nCheques. They will be convenient when\nyou are not in reach of a bank, and are\nhonoured in all countries without\nquestion.\nLetters of Credit and Travellers'\nCheques may be obtained at all\nbranches.\nAny branch of the bank mill give you\npainstaking and dependable service,\nIMPERIAL BANK\nOF CANADA\nKELSON BRANCH....:. t. H. D. BENSON. Manager\nCRANBROOK  BRANCH   W.   R.   GRUBBI.  Manager\nCRESTON BRANCH H   C. W. ALLB\", Manager\nCurtis   Wright\nDupont     168%\nFord   (BngllBh)   0. -\nFord   of  Canada   .\nPreport    Texas    -\nOeneral   Motors   \u2014\nOeneral Electric  ...\nOranby    \t\nO.  N. Preferred\nGreat West Sugar\nHowe   Sound     60%\n; Hudson   Motors    ... 74%\n' Inspiration    Copper 42\n! Int.   Rapid  Transit \u2014\nI Int.   Nickel     66%\nInt.   Tel   Ss  Tel   .. 123%\nKelly Springfield   . 8\nKennecott    Copper 82%\nKresge    S    S      49\nKroeger and Toll .. \u2014\nMack   Truck      06%\nNash   Motors      80%\nNat.   Pow   St   Light 68*t\nN.  Y. Central    222%\nNorthern   Pacific 103\nPackard   Motors   .. S7%\nPenn.   R.   R.   ..,  100%\nPhillips Pete    39\nRemington   Rind 62\nJladlo  Corp     88\nRadio  Keith   Orph 28%\nRock   Island      136\nS Louis _ 8. Fran. 122\".\nSchulte     17\nShell Onion Oil  .... 27%\nSinclair   con  36\nSouth   Cal.   Edison 87\nSouthern  pacific  .. 141%\nStan. Oil of OI\nStan. Oil of Ind\nStan OU of N. J.\nStewart  Warner  -\nStudebaker      83%\nTexas   Corp     66%\nTexas Qulf  Sul   .... 68%\nUnion OU of Cal .. 68%\nUnion  Pacific     269\nUnited   Aircraft   .. \u2014\nU. 8. Rubber   61%\nU.   S.  Steel     224\nWest.   Electric      338%\nWillys Overland   ... 18%\nYeUow  Truck     37\nLow\n300\n162\n143%\n111\n64%\n107\n285\n165-\n110\n265%\n66\n128%\n111%\n214%\n90\n251\n64\n142%\n108%\n177\nffi\n75\n76%\n60%\n43\n83%\n360\n80%\n111\n36%\n57\n73%\n41\n63%\n118\n7%\n7\u00bb\n47%\n93%\n77%\n61%\n315...\n68\n25%\n98\n37%\n48%\n83%\n35...\n138%\n120%\n26%\n33%,\n82%\n140\n73%\n73%\n59%\n61%\n63%\n66%\n54,%\n263%\n60%\n312%\n313\n18\n26\nClose\n305\n50%\n163\n144\n111\n54%\n107%\n285\n105...\nIll\n265%\n67%\n128%\n66%\n112%\n216\n90\n251\n54\n141%\n109%\n18\n180\n17\n35%\n43\n65\n363\n81\n111\n36%\n68\n73%\n41\n39%\n53%\n118\n7%\n79\n47%\n34%\n93%\n77%\n53\n316%\n98\n36%\n98\n36%\n47%\n83%\n36\n138%\n130%\n17\n36%\n33%\n83%\n140\n73%\n53\n73%\n59%\n61%\n63%\n66%\n64%\n363%\n103\n50%\n313\n316\n18%\n35\nBank of Commerce   375\nDominion   Bank     243\nImperial   Bank     248\nBank of Montreal    367\nBank of Nova Scotia 395\nRoyal    Bank      349\nBank  of  Toronto    368\nAbitlbi   Power   Sc  Paper     60%\nAsbestos Corpontlon   4%\nAtlantic Sugar   9%\nBell   Telephone     168\nBrazilian T. L. Se Power   67%\nBritish   American   OU     6*3\nBropm\u2014n    Paper     **  40%\nCanada Bronze   67\nCan.   Car   _   Foundry     118\nCan.   Cement  36\nCan. Cement (pfd)   98%\nCana.  Industrial  Alcohol    17\nCan.    Power     -  30\nCan.   Steamship  Lines  38\nCon. Mining Sc Smeltlnu   386\nDominion    Bridge     101\nDominion   Glass     180\nDom.   Steel   Corp'n   (pfd)     48\nDom.    Textile      \u00bb8%\nA.   P.   Grain     40\nLake of the woods    58%\nMaseey   Harris     60\nMontreal   Power     162%\nMont.   Telegraph     48\nMontreal   Tramways   . 180\nNational  Breweries    139%\nNational Steel Car   78\nOgllvle   Milling     620\nOttawa L. H. St Power   100\nPenmans   Ltd 84\nPower   Corporation     116\nPrice   Bros  65\nQuebec    Power 87%\nShawinigan  98\nSherwin   Williams     5\u00bb%\nBo.  Canada  Power    45\nSteel   ol   Canada     62%\nSt. l_awrence Flour Mills .-.  38%\nTuckett   Tobacco      202\nWayagamack  81\nWestern   Grocers  24%\nWinnipeg   Railway  7\u00bb.\nWinnipeg  Railway   (PM)  106\nCALGARY, Alta., Oct. 8.\u2014(By H.\nW. Robertson Ltd., leased wire.) Crude\noil has been struck at the Ontario-\nAlberta well et SuffleId, near Medicine\nHat, reports say. Yesterday oil rose\n150 feet ln the hole which was down\n3100 feet when the strike occurred.\nCasing is being run at the Vanalta\nwell on the Red Coulee structure to\nplace the well on the pump for production test, it struck crude oil about\na week ago and ts believed commercial\nproduction  will  be  had.\nPreparations are being made to run\ncasing and set lt in tbe lime at\nSouthewest Pete. It reached lime\nTuesday at 6470 feet, an Important\nevent as no well tn Turner Valley has\nfailed to obtain production from that\nformation yet. When it ls brought\nInto production It will prove up a large\narea ln the south end of the field.\nMayland No. 1 was drilling af, more\nthan 200 feet ln the lime last night.\nA gas flow ts expected soon and tt\nmay be the largest ln Turner Valley.\nIt will be reused and the well brought\ninto production. No. 1 hsd an Increase\nIn   gas  flow   last   night.\nSpooner No. 1 will be shot with\nnltro glycerine ln an effort to increase production. It ts down 6380\nfeet and has been producing about\nbarrels dally for some time, although lt had greater production when\nfirst brought ln.\nMerland, most southerly well In\nTurner Valley, was drilling with rotary on the Highwood Structure, near\nthe Prince of Wales' ranch, was down\n1300 feet in the Kootenays. Much\nshallower drilling than in Turner Valley\nls expected.\nTurner Basin was drilling at 3666\nfeet. Open hole ls being drilled from\n2405 feet to which point 13% Inch\ncasing was lowered. This casing will\nbe carried deeper before beingu set.\nCalmont No. 5 was drilling at 2874\nfeet   and   progressing  steadily.\nHome No. 4 was drilling at 6350 feet\nwith the lime expected any time.\nStructure is central Turner Valley,\nwas at 2005  feet  yesterday.\nInnerfold was drilling at 1875 with\nthe   bit   in   the   Kootenays.\nCalvary Oil\n'By H, W. Robertson Ltd. leased wire)\n\"vance          1.00\nA  P, Consolidated       3.78\n\\&acciated\n3 and E I\nTomonwelth\nDalhousle  ...\n~*evenlsh \t\n\"\"attr-rest \t\n\"abyan\n3.(\n4.95\n1.10\n2.30\n.24\n1.91\n.13.\n\u2022e-hold   v      l.W\nHat?al       1.80\nHome OU     17.80\nIllinois Alt*.  ~ 82\nMcDougall Segur Ex       2.80\n\"rnougftii Segur New      1.00-\n.80\n0.00\n2.90\n8.60\n3 15\n.44\n1.70\nMerrrury .\nMill Ctty \t\nMcLeod   .:\t\nMayland  \t\nOkalta New \t\nRegent \t\nSterling Pacific ..\nVulcan\t\nLightweight boxing champions have\nproven mere durable than tbe title-\nholders of any other classes. Kid\nLavigne boxed for 24 years; Battling\nNelson, 90; Joe Dans, IS; Frank Erne\nand Ad Wolgast, 15, and Benny Leonard. 10.\nToronto Mines\nTORONTO, Ont., Oct. 8\u2014 <By Hugh\nW. Robertson Ltd.. leased wire). Trading today on the Standard stock and\nmining exchange is featured by liquidation ln International Nickel but this\nwas expected owing to tbe heavy selling pressure coming from New Tork.\nPreviously this stock held extremely\nwell and was not until this session\nthat any serious setback took place.\nThe general opinion ls that the bottom must now be reached. The same\nconditions prevail ln Noranda, where\nliquidation Is influenced largely by\nNew Tork. Noranda was never In a\nstronger position. It ls impossible to\npredict what new lows ths New Tork\nsituation will force that and other\nIssues. The Marley today ls no reflection of actual conditions at the\nproperties. International Nickel opened at yesterday's close and closed at\nthe day's low price of $62.70. Unofficial rumor Is that a further addition\nto Its program of smelter expansion Is\ncontemplated,\nNoranda opened at 60% and traded\nto a close of 49.60. Amulet closed at\n2.75 and closed at 2.73, a net 7- point\nloss. Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting opened strong at 10 and traded\nto a net 26 gain. Strength was noted\nln base metals, opened at 4.10 and\nclosed at 4 55. In a few weeks the\nmining plant and mill of Base Metals\nMining corporation will go Into full\noperation. Mining Corporation Is\nheavily Interested ln Base Metals.\nWith call money reduced to 6 per\ncent strength was apparent In Abana,\nDome, Pen OfeUle. Stscoe, Teck Hughes,\nSudbury Basin, Sherrlt Gordon, and\nsome  others.\nOils continued down with strength\nln only a couple of issues.\nThe office of the Slscoe Oompany\nhas been beselged with Inquiries regarding rumors casting remarks as to\nthe standing of the company's title\nto their properties.\nWheher or not these rumors are\nbeing circulaed by those Interested ln\ndamaging Slscoes shares ls not known,\nbut advice to all shareholders ls that\nthere ls no foundation for such rumors.\nTitles have been passed on by the\ncompany's solicitors and declared ab-\nsoultely clear. The Slscoe management ts rushing this warning to its\nshareholders that they will not be deceived   by   such   rumors.\nV\nancouver\nStocks\n(By H. W. Robertson Ltd.\nAbana\t\nAconda __,.'.\t\nArno\t\nAJax \t\nAmulet\t\nAmity \t\nA. P Consolidated\t\nAssociated  \t\nArea     , ....\nBaldwin \t\nBaltic Oil \t\nB. A. OU\t\nBase Metals\t\nBedford   \t\nBldaood\t\nBarry Holllnger \t\nBwana \t\nBiff Missouri \t\nCalmont   \t\nC   and   15   Lands\t\nCentral Manitoba \t\n'Chemical   Research   \t\nClerlcy    .! ......\nDome  -\t\nT\u2014lbousle \t\nDuprat    .\u201e\t\n\u00bbastcra*t \t\nFoothills\t\nFaloonbrldge   .\t\nOoldale  \t\nrtnodflsh \t\nHome Oil ._\t\nwarlter Odd \t\nw^lllnffer   \t\nHudson  Bav    \t\nInternational Nickel \t\nVeelly\t\nKirkland  Lake\t\nKootenay Florence \t\nMandv \t\nMacassa\t\nManitoba   Basin    ,\nMalartic    \t\nMcDoufrall    _..\nMclntyre   \t\nMining  Corp \\\t\nMayland  \t\nMurphy \t\nNewbec  \t\nNew  Imperial   OU  \t\nNlptssing    _.\nNoranda    \t\nPeterson Cobalt \t\nPend  OreUle\t\nPremier   Oold     \u201e\u2122\nOold Colony \t\nOregon Copper ,\nS   W  Pete\t\nSherrlt   Oordan   \t\nSudbury   Basin\nSterling Pacific  \t\nSlscoe   \t\nSt.   Anthony*    \u201e..\nStadacona   \t\nTech Hughes  _...\nThompson Cadallac \t\nVlpond   \t\nVentures  \u201e\nWright Hargreavea  \t\nWalte   Ackerman   \t\nleased wire)\n      1.28\n.08\n.22\n      1.26\n      2.73\n 15\n3.80\n      210\n 11\n 03%\n135\n    64.00\n4 55\n        .41\n 10\n.20\n6.60\n.88\n2.85\n    s-.oo\n 30\n    8.90\n 07\n    8.76\n    2.36\n 03%\n     1.81\n    3.90\n    8.60\n    6.04%\n      .06\n     17.75\n 04%\n      -M\n     530\n  16.25\n  62.60\n 46\n    4.65\n 11\n 68\n 12\n 13\n       .08%\n      Si\n  1380\n    3 76\n    8-0\n 04%\n 35%\n3800\n  a.iB\n  49.50\n      .30\n    405\n     1.70\n 10\n -     -5\n    2.60\n    6.10\n.   8.60\n    1.70\n      .1*\n 16\n 05\n    6.28\n 10\n 83\n    6.60\n     1.43\n-    4.60\nWinnipeg, Grain\nWINNIPEG,    Oct.   3.\u2014Oraln quotations:\nOpen   High     Low cloee\nWheat\u2014\nOct      144% 146       142% 142%\nNov   148 146%    143% 143%\nDec      146% 145%    143% 144%\nMay     153% 152%    150 150%\nOats\u2014\nOct     68% 68%     67% 67%\nNov  \u25a0  66%\nPec         70 70% \u25a0   69% 69%\nMay         73% 73%     72% 72%\nBarley\u2014\nNov.  73%\nOct     73 73         72% 72%\nDec     76% 75%     74% 74%\nMay         81% 81%     80% 88%\nFlax\u2014\nOct   293 293  290 290\nNov. 291\nDec      293% 293%   290% 290%\nMay      303 303       300 300\nRye\u2014\nOct  105% 105%    103% 103%\nDec      108 106%    106 106\nMay     116 116       113 133%\nCash wheat No. 1 northern 142%; No.\n2 northern 139%; No. 3 northern 135V_;\nNo. 4 131%; No. 6 120; No. 6 99;  feed\n85;   track   142%; Bcreanlngs   $10   per\nton.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Oct. 3.\u2014Copper steady;\nelectrolytic spot and future 18.\nIron\u2014Steady- unchanged.\nTin\u2014Steady spot 44.12a; future 44.75\nLead\u2014Steady spot New York 6.90;\nEast   St.   Louis   6.70.\nZinc\u2014Steady East St. Louis Spot\nand  future  6.80.\nAntimony\u20148.50.\nAt  London:\nStandard copper, spot \u00a373 15s; fuutre\n\u00a374 10s: electrolytic spot \u00a384 6s; future \u00a384 5s.\nTin\u2014Spot \u00a3198 5s; future \u00a3203 6s.\n\u2022 Lead\u2014Spot   \u00a323   7s  ad;   future  $33\n10s.\nZ|nc\u2014Spot \u00a323 17s 6d; future \u00a324\n2>   lid\n(By H. W. Robertson Ltd. leased\nBayvlew \t\nBig Missouri\t\nBluebird  \t\nCork  Province   \t\nDuthie \t\nGeorge Ent\t\nGeorgia Copper\t\nOeorge River \t\nOoioonda, ..J. .\u2022\u201e....\t\nGrandview\t\nIndependence\t\nlnt  C.  St C\t\nKootenay norence *\nKootenay King \t\nLucky   Jim   \t\nMarmot ntver\t\nMorton Wolleay \t\nNational SUver   \t\nNohle   Plve   \t\nOregon   Copper   \t\nPremier \t\nPend OreUle \t\nPorter Idaho \t\nReeves'McDonald \t\nRufus Ahtenta  \t\nRuth Hope ..( _\t\nSilver Crest \t\nSilver Cup \t\nSnowflake \t\nSlocan Rambler \t\nTopley Richfield \t\nTorlc  _\t\nWhitewater   \t\nWellington \t\nwire)\n.03\n.86\n.08\n\u202208%\n.42\n.18\n4.60\n.25\n.76\n_37\n.06\n\u202231%\n.13\n.35\n.12%\n\u202202%\n.63\n.13%\n.65\n.23%\n1.72\n4.00\n.36\n1.52\n.16\n.35%\n.07%\n.07\n.25\n.13\n.10\n.40\n.40\n03%\nThe bench recently signaled to\nGoose Goslin to let a pitch go past.\nIt looked too good so Goose smacked\nlt.    He   was   fined   6100.\nWeekly Clearing\n(Canadian Pnm)\nFollowing an the bask dealings\ntbe 'principal  Canadian  cltlea  for\nweek ending today, and for the\nresponding week a year ago:\nWeek. 1938 Week,\nHalifax     t   4.178,336 8\nSaint  John ....    3,966.370\nMoncton           1,018.238 U\nQuebec City\nSherbrooke    ....     1.04694* 1,1454\nQuebec          7.708.W1\nMontreal              168.300.743 194.618.7\nOttawa                   9.107.778 9,085?\nKingston            ,   1.168-88 11479\nPeterboro                 1.041133 1 130Wl|\nToronto       153,790 883 166 619.V\nHamilton          \u2014\u00bb  7,\u00bb30,f\nBrantford     .....     1.661800 1.537,1\nLondon          4.408.666 4.318.0\nKitchener          1,509.441 l,773,6ll|\nSarnla          1.018.037\nWindsor          6,448,884 5,8664\nChatham              625,484\nFort  William  ..        134.621 I,185.43\u00ab|\nWinnipeg        96,464.584 107,174.07lT\nBrandon          1,045,762 870,0\nReglna           8,631,860 0,368.5771\nMoose   Jaw   ...     1,538.946 1.611,6111\nSaskatoon          8,368.888 3,737,3581\nPrince  Albert        831,1881\nCalgary    15.718.270 18J07,98\u00bbI\nEdmonton         7,903,324 8,383,1551\nMedicine   Hat           638,488 750.14\u00bbl\nLethbrldge   ....         90,808 1,242.8611\nN   Westminster     1,280,036 1,448.1141\nVancouver        21,586.237 25,550,3261\nVictoria          7,840,888 3.448,1201\nLive Stock\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 3\u2014The receipts:\ncattle, 1340; Calves 306; hogs 636;\nsheep 0.60.\nSteers\u2014Choice 860a 0.00; fair _|\ngood   7.26a   8.25.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice 7.76a 8.00; ]\nfair to good 6.00 7.50.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice 6.25a 6.60; falr|\nto good 6.00a 6.00.\nBulls\u2014Good 5.36a 6.75..\nOxen\u2014Good 6.00a 6,5\u00bb.,\nStocker steers\u2014Choice 6Q0a _5; fair I\nto  good   5.00a  5.75.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice 7.00a 7-8; falr|\nto good 5.76a 6.76.\nCalves\u2014Choice fta 11* good 7,00a 9.001\nHogs\u2014Bacon 1180; butchers 1115a |\n11.50; lights and feeders 9.60a 11.00.\nLambs\u2014-Fair to good 8.00a 9.50.\nSheep\u2014Fair to good 5.00a 680.\nMcLeod No. 4 Is drilling at 5330 I\nfeet ln hard \u2014ck, and th5 Dakota ]\nsands are -expected any time now. _>. 1\nvelopments are possible ae soon aa this\nlayer  ls tapped.\n1000 SHARES\n\u2022f. ,\nIva Fern Mines Ltd.     i\nFor Quick Sale\n$200\ni\nApply A. B. C. Dando .1\n1645-14-1 Ave. West     I\nVancouver, B. C.\na\u2014\n-_\u2014-\n_!_\nCAVE AND COMPANY\nLTD.\nFormerly\nThe  B.C.  Assay  and  Chemical\nSupply   Company,   Ltd.\nASSAY SUPPLIES\nCHEMICALS\ni\nLaboratory Equipment\nFOR\nchemical, Industrial,   I\nEDUCATIONAL    AND\nHOSPITAL  LABORATORIES\n687 Hornby St   Vancouver, B.C.\nE&& Markets\nOTTAWA. Oct 3.-^.anedl|n egg\nmarkets are holding firm and unchanged today.\nToronto\u2014Dealers are quoting country shippers for ungraded eggs, cases\nreturned, extras 44a 46; firsts 39a 40,\nseconds 29a 30.\nMontreal\u2014The egg market ls holding\nfirm under a good demand.\nChicago\u2014Spot  unchanged,   November\n36%,   December  37%.\nNew York\u2014Spot 36%a 30.\nMOOT-REAL,    Oct.   3\u2014 Eggs   higher,\nbutter steady, cheese steady, .\nCheese, finest westerns 30a 30%;\nfinest easterns 20.\nEggs, storage extraMS; stance firsts\n30; seconds 33; fresh extra* 65; firsts\n48.\nButter\u2014Unquoted.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Oct. 3\u2014Sterling exchange firm at 4.79 16-16 for sixty-day\nbills and  4.86%   for demand.\nForeign  bar  sliver 60.\nCanadian   dollars  39-33  discount.\nFrancs 3.91%.\nLire  5.23.\nCoast Copper Has\nHigh Ore Tonnages\nLittle has been said about Coast\nOopper, subsidiary of smelters, which\nhobnobbed marketwlse with Noranda\nearly this year and has slipped to\naround 135. It has 300,000 shares outstanding besides a bond Issue of $750,-\n000 with smelters holding: 110,000\nshares. It has had a most meteoric\ncareer and has been claimed as holding one of the highest copper tonnages ln Canada with possibility of as\ngreat a gross value as Noranda though\nlower in grade. A few years ago lt\ntraded at \u00bb1 ln Vancouver. In 1938\na high of \u00ab60 was had with added Interest through assured copper ameltar\nIn the coast to treat its ores and\nthose from other coast workings-\nAT YOUR\nSERVICE\nemutma saitmss\nTUSCANIA\nfrom HoIHok, N.S.\nto Plymouth, Havre\nand London,    -v   +\nATHENIA\nfrom Saint John, N.B.\n\u2022Friday, Dk 13th\nfrom Halifax, N, S.\nSoturd\u00aby,D\u00abc.l4th\nlo Belfast, Liverpool\nand Glasgow.  4- -*\u25a0\nDirect train connection! from any point\nto the ihip's tide.\n\"Remember the last\nCunorder. sail from\nMontreal this season\non Nov.22r>d. Weekly\nsailings to thai date.\nBook through\nThe Cunard\nSteam Ship Co.,\nLimited, \u00ab\u00ab,\nHastings Kt. W..\nVancouver. (1*1\nSeymour 3648-9)\nor any steftmehlp\nagent.\nGo Home with\nthe Christmas^Mail\nthis Year\nA Christmas Greeting In person this\nyear...what a pleasure lo the old\npeople across Hie water! Christmas\ndinner together again. Visiting the old\nspots...lunch in Oxford-Street or the\nStrand...tea at Lyons or the A.B.C.\nA green Christmas, too; grass in th*\nparks. Sail Cunard or Anchor-\nDonaldson...enjoy the real old\nCountry atmosphere on these famous\nChristmas ships.      +      +      +      +.\nCUNARD\n*N\u00a3*W CANADIAN KftVtC-\nIN CONJUNCTION WITH THI\nANCHOR. DONALDSON  UNI\nCABIN   \u2666   TOURIST   THIRD    CASIN   -t-   THIRP    CIA5S.\n__________________\n_____\n TRE NELSON DAILY NEWS FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4, 1929\nSPORTS\nLOUIS NOSES\nOUT CLEVELAND;\nDETROIT LOSES\nins   Take   Browns   10-In-\nitgs But Lose 3-2; Only\nTwo Games\nLOUIS. Oct. 3\u2014The Browns hung\nornly to a slim chance to tie\nllrd place by defeating the Clave.\nIndians.   3   to 3  ln  a   lO.lnnlnt.\naore today. Cleveland scored tn\n.nth but FaUt'a error helped the\nto tie the score ln their half\nfinally nosed out another run to\nBHE\nland     _.    a   10     3\nouls  ,     3     8      1\nJanes\u2014Hudlln and Sewell; Crowd-\nid Ferrell.\nONLV SEVEN HITS\nICAOO, Oct. 3\u2014Ted Lyons Perth. Tigers only seven hits to-\nind the White Sox won the open-\nfame of their final series 3 to 1\nknuckle ball twlrler pitched his\ncame of the* season to win hts\ntriumph  this  year.\nr     a     c\nIt        1 1 0\n10       3       11        1\n'_.***'\nitw.es \u2014 Hogaett. Page and Hay-\nIt   Hargreeves;   Lyon   and   An trey\nIT two games scheduled today.\nOTECTINO OAME  RESOI'IirEs\nminded sportsmen are realizing\nIt Is high time to pursue a policy\natteful conservation and proper\ncUon 41* Canada's game la to be\nI\nThree Shifts\nat New Mill,\nGalena Farm\n\"SAVAGES\" LEAVE\nTAUSOF BEAUTY\nMysterious and   Beautiful Indian  Legends are  Recalled By Writer\nSILVERTON, B. C, Oct. 3\u2014The new\nhundred ton mill of the Oalena Farm\nConsolidated Is completed and ls running three shifts unaer the manage,\nment of J. Adams. Until the completion of the new tramway to the Hewett\nmine, the mill is being run toy the\ntailings from the old mill, H. Dewls\nhaving the contract for bawling. A\nrood showing of ore la gradually Increasing *\u2022 tht shaft Is being sunk\nat   the  Oalena.\nLeaders Now Marked\nIn Soccer Leagues\nof the Old Country\nLONDON, Oct. 3\u2014Soccer clubs In\nthe British Isles have settled down\nfor their long season's work.\nCompetition among the leading sides\nin ihe English league Is quite keen\np-crept In the northern action of the\nrhird division, where port Vale, demoted from the second division, are\npitying a strong 'game. They are four\nTaints ahead of Stockport County.\nUMVffb the latter club has gamee ln\nfcMMl\nIr th* first division only three\nOOl&ta r-eparate the leading club, Leed*\npAttgd, and the fourteenth in the\nthttnxHeMhlll In the second division\n0!rthr>m Athletic have pulled out Into\na rlnpr lead and have not been beaten\n\u25a0\u25a0 tat Plymouth Argyle and S_uth Snd\n9fifttd are going strong ln the southern  section  of  the  third  division.\nIn Scotland. Rangers are again set-\ntntr the pace, followed by Aberdeen\nml Kilmarnock.\nVIEWING    PEAK*    FKOM    THE    BOW\nMany visitors to Banff national park.\nAlberta, frequently use the Bow river\nas a means of viewing the peaks.\nNavigable for eight miles above Banff,\nthe river affords some splendid' views.\nDelightful canoe trips may also be\nmade on Echo river and Wllolw creek,\ntributaries of the Bow. Willow creek\nespecially affords not only magnlfent\nviews of the peaks, but Is also noted\nA>r the beautiful reflection in its\nwaters.\nNORTH  MAGNETIC  POLE  IN  CANADA\nThe north magnetic pole is located\nln Boothia peninsula on the Arctic\ncoast of Canada and the south magnetic pole in South Victoria Land\nsouth from New Zealand.\nAt one of London's smart October\nweddings the bride will wear a beautiful piece of family lace 400 years old\nas a train for the gown of white tulle\nappliqued\u2022 with silver leaves and her\nheaddress will be a Russian one of\norange blossom, while her six bridesmaids will wear picture gowns of silk\nnet. In \u25a0\u00bb burnt orange color, appliqued\nwith a large, conventional leaf design ln taffeta of a deeper shade.\n214\nBrings a\nTAXI\nor\nTRANSFER\nat Your Door\nWE HURRY\nTAXI\nPHONE  214\nShoe Shine Parlor In Connection\nTOIMWTO, Ont., Oct. S--A recent\nvisitor to tha Atafa Canyon, along tba\nAlaoma Central Railway, waa astonished to obaerve on tbe rock face tbe\nwell-defined bead of an old man. as\nthough roughly carved by some giant\nsculptor, says tbe Qlobe. Tba Incident started a train of reflection covering the Indian legends of tbe Northland. Tbe diligent student knows\nmany of them, but few others bave\nlearned tbelr beauty and mystery. Many\nof tbe fascinating legends of the Mlc-\nmacs, down by tbe Atlantic, bave been\ngathered by Professor Cyrus alacafll-\nlan, while Pauline Johaon, In later\nyears, recorded legends of tbe British\nColumbia caost. Schoolcraft, who married an Indian woman, long ago became a classic authority for legends of\nthe Interior.\nHAUOHTV WHITE MAN\nHaughty white men, greedily depriving the Indian of their ancient empire, long fostered the notion tbat the\nred men were \"untutored' and possessed no Imagination. As early as\n1637, however, Father Le Jeunc, a\nJesuit missionary, found they were ln\nthe habit of entertaining themselves\nby fanciful tales, and wrote his opinion that \"the savages, ln point of Intellect, may be placed In a high rank.\nEducation and Instruction alone are\nwanting.\" Charlevoix said: 'Tbelr\nharangues are full of shining passages\nwhich would have been applauded at\nBorne or Athens.' Modem Canadian\nreaders know the beauty of Indian\norations .such as those of Tecumseh,\nother chiefs who met the whites tn\nquality of speeches of Crowfoot and\nor tbe simple dignity and Imaglntalve\nthe seventies and made treaties for\nthe surrender of the Canadian West.\nMOST   _\u25a0'-.MILIAR\nPerhaps most familiar of all Indian\nlegends are those recorded by Longfellow ln Hiawatha, and these are derived from traditions current ln the\nLake Superior country, adjacent to the\nAgawa Canyon. The names of the\ncharacters ln this poem, such as Mln-\ntaehaba, or Laughing Water; Mudje-\nkeewls, the west wind; Wabasso, the\nrabbltt; Nokomls, tbe mother of Hiawatha, proclaim the poetic Imagination of the Indians. Legends were universal ln the winds, as we see from\nthe poets Illusion to their origin;\n\"In the birds nest of the forests,\nIn the lodges ot the beaver.\nIn tbe hoot-prints of the bison,\nIn the eyrie of the eagle I\nELEMENT OF ROMANCE\nAll over these legends ls the element\not exaggeration, romance, even magic.\nThere Is the closing picture of Hla-\nwathas departure In his magic poet,\nwhich resembles that of the Algonquin hero, Olooscap, and recalls the\ndeparture to Avalon of the Old World\nhero, King Arthur, Hiawatha\u2014\n\u25a0'Launched his birch canoe  lor sailing\nFrom the pebbles of the margin\nShoved lt forth Into the water;\nWhispered   to   It,   'Westward I   Westward 1\nAnd   with   speed   It  darted   forward.\nDoubtless the Indians had their type\nof tired business men, who had to he\namused by these far-fetched yarns of\nanother age. Their tribes had their\nConan Doyles and Edgar Wallaces of\nfertile Imagination. Lumberjackks of\na later day, sat open-mouthed at the\nstories about Paul. Bunyan, the wonder\nman.\nStrikes and Spares\nTRAIL    MEMORIAL   HAU.\nPresidents                      1st   ad 3d tot.\nThompeon.    J IM 153 1S7 4TJ\nMlUigan.   A  170 103 11* *\u00ab__\nOoveat,   B.     ._          100 103 140 SM\n* Pottlll,   W  IM 145 148 486\ni Merlow,   A      101 170 IM 504\nBaldrey.    B.   W.          168 102 130 400\nI Hall.   S.   0      168 77 130 381\nBeech,   R   33 03 146 330\nLaurtente,   T  114 140 143 807\nMcDonald.    P.   R.       142 149 114 401\nHicks,   W    03 83     83 371\nOunn,   A.   C  150 138 147 436\nKerwln.   X.      139 134     8} 8M\nVice    Presidents          lit   3d 3d tot.\nLaurlente,   C.     308 183 160 630\nMorrlsh,   P  161 180 313 553\nBsnwa,   0  161 173 170 604\nMacLean.    H HI 178 176 490\nMurdoch,   H.  M  300 148 138 483\nDler,   D  235 117 173 834\nBenedict:   A 133 118 133 384\nDodds.    B  193 143 150 451\nPonalll.  C  167 116 143 429\nParry,   C  179 137 134 430\nSbellds,  P  117 39     65 361\nPesclpal.   E  100 117 148 388\nSletth,  A  118 100 118 338\nLITTLE WORLD'S\nSERIES IS EVEN\nRochester  Beats Kansas City\n11-2 in Second Game at\nKansas City\nOne beauty specialist studies In\nParis the new shades used by the\ndressmakers, and chooses new makups\nto suit the prevalent color schemes,\nand to enable her clients to wear the\nnew ralsjn-brown shade to advantage,\nshe has evolved a new kind of rouge\nof a coral tint for cheeks and lips,\nwhile the new powder to go with this\nIs intended to give the skin a warm\nbut rather lightly sunburned appearance, the foundation cream being tinted to match.\nCanadian Pacific\nWorld'* Greatest Travel System\nBEFORE PUNNING\nYOUR VACATION\nFOR all who are planning a\nIrip to Europe or a vacation in\nCalifornia and for anyone who\nwill have a week in the Fall, this\nholds particular interest.\nOn October 17 the Empress of France\nwill saif from Vancouver for Southampton and will call at San Francisco, Balboa\nand Cristobal. This is a chance in a\nlifetime to visit Europe or to have \u25a0\nshort vacation in the South.\nThe cost is remarkably modest, the fare to\nSan Francisco giving you a spacious stateroom, delightful meals and the many delights of travel on the Empress of France\nfor as low as $45.00. Hake your plans now,\nand for reservations and further particulars\napply to\nJ.S.Carter\nDistrict Passenger Agt., Nelson, B.C.\nHugh Livingstone. West River road,\nOalt, had a springer spaniel pup that\nwaa born with lour legs, but only\nthree teet. He has no right lorepaw,\nbut a friend of the owner ls making\na rubber foot for the animal, so that\nhe may have use of the fourth leg\nln getting  around.\nGhost Writers Pen\nYarns for Players\nWHAT 00 YA WANT\nME TO SAY IN\nYOUR 5T0RY FOR\nTHE MORNING\nPAPtR, l^RKY\nf ;U8T  USft\nfOOR OWN\n.mi:To LEAVE\nThe Word Series^\n'rW-WnlLfl-T\nK1LU-P IF I STAY -\ntfTCTTHATMlatp\n-iANPHEDiK\nm  AL IH MMtll\n(Former   Pitcher   New   Ymk   Giants)\nThere Is alwaya a great hue and cry\nraised -:very year when the hall players\non the two pennant winners start exporting, with the able assistance of\ntheir \"ghost wrtter8,,\u25a0 with articles ln\nthe dally  newspapers.\nMany other prominent persons, besides th diamond athletes, employ\n\"ghost writers\" to write either their\nmemoirs or their speeches. Why pick\non  the  ball  players?\nMost of the athletes either dictate\nfinished and blue pencil and misstatements or embarrassing paragraphs.\nJohn  McGraw ls  an  exception.\nI told him one day that I liked his\nlife story that appeared In the dally\npress.\n\"That so?\" he answered. \"I'm going\nto wait until they come out ln book\nspotlight df the impending series be*\nform beforg 1 IWV'<Mj[- l        -;\u00ab\u00a3\u25a0\nRUGBY GAME ON\nSUNDAY WILL BE\nSPEEDY AFFAIR\nNetaon   to   Field   Faster   and\nLighter Team; Determined\nTo Win\n1 KANSAS CUTY,( Mo., Oct. 3\u2014Three\nKansas Ctty p'.ichers were pounded\nfor 15 hits and 23 base* by Rochester\nhere today and the Red Wings, International league champions evened\nthe little worlds series wtth an 11 to 3\nvictory. The one sided triumph more\nthan ever avenged the Blues 4 to\nS success yeeterday in the ten Inning\nopening   struggle.\nKansas City got eight hits off Tex\nCatleton, who also gave ten bases on\nballs, a new  Uttle world  series record\nI but at the times when a solid blow\nwould have meant Kansas City runs,\nthe lanky right hander had hla control\nand  his assortment of puzzlers  work-\n, ing perfectly. Carleton also hit a\nbatsman.\nTh\/> third game of the series will\nbe prayed here on Saturday. The clubs\nwill rest tomorrow. Approximately 8000\nfans saw  the  game.\nR    H    S\nRochester       11   IB     0\nKansas City       2     8     1\nSchneider Cup Team\nfor Canada Would Be\na Hatter of Millions\nTORONTO, Ont, Oct. 8\u2014The organization of a Schneider cup team ln\nCanada would prove too expensive. In\nthe opinion of Toronto aviation officials, who aay they knew nothing\nof such plans as announced by Captain J. D. Parkinson at Vancouver\nwhile on a good-win flight.\n\"If some one would come along\nand give us a couple of millions. Canada might do tt\", commented Col. D. O.\nJoy of Aircraft, limited. \"It costs\nso much now they are talking of holding the race every four yeara Instead\nof   every   two,\"   he  aald.\nA. A. Crowson, of Curtis-Retd Hying\nservice; Major Robert Dodds, Canadian\nairways, and E. L. CapreoL, cf De\nHavtlend    aircraft,    agreed.\nDiamond Drilling\nat Amulet Moved\nAmulets latest diamond drilling is\n1900 feet east of any previous hols\nand should ore be cut lt will give an\neast-west length of 500 lsst. Rouyn\nenthusiast* say It Is almost sure ta\nbring  result*.\nPacific Coast League\nLest Angeles  1, Oakland  a.\nPortland 9,  Hollywood 5.\nSeattle   1,   Missions   13.\nSen   Francisco  0,   Sacramento .1.\nThe forward pass, introduced in a\nmodiefled form ln Canadian rugby\nthis year, will be used in the flrat\nWeet Kootenay league game between\nNelson and Trail at the Recreation\ngrounds here on Sunday afternoon.\nThe game, which Is due to start at\n2:30, will be greatly speeded up It is\nexpected as the result of using the\nforward pass.      ,\nAnother contribution toward speeding up Sunday's game will be the\nfaster and lighter Nelson team. It\nwas lack of speed and weight that\nhandicapped the Nelson team In its\nleague games with the speedy and\nheavy Trail team of last year. This\nyear, with a few more experienced\nplayers and the team a* a whole much\nfaster, and with weight being a less\ndeciding factor with the use of the\nforward pass, Nelson bids fair to capture the West Kootenay championship.\nThe rugby .team, as last year, ls\nagain Nelson's last hope of bringing\nhome a team championship and the\nsupport of the fans ls needed ln this\neffort to keep Nelson from again being\nshut out without a title. Hockey, basketball and football all failed to bring\ndistrict honors to Nelson and the rugby team, which Includes many players\nof the other four sports, is determined\nto win out or go down fighting.\nCHICAGO BEATS\nCINCINNATI, 8-1\nPete Donahue is Easy Mark;\nNew York-Philadelphia,\nPostponed\nid You Know\nThat In the Bordeaux district of\nFrance there are some 300 motor trucks\nbeing operated on wood gas as a motor fuel? And that developments ln\nthis line are being followed at the\nforetft product* laboratores of Canada\nat   Ottawa?\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThat the most important Industrial\nresources of Canada are timber, minerals and water power, and that lt ls\non water power that the development\nof timber, minerals and many other\nnatural   resources   depend?\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThat Joe Mahon of Toronto university set two new walking records\nof 26 miles In 4.01:30' and 60 kilometers tn 6:03:28, tn the 60 kilometer walking race at Toronto?\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThat a modern mushroom growing\nplant Is soon to be started in Saskatoon?\n\u2022 \u2022   #\nThat the flavor of a ham will be\nmaterially Improved if when roasting\nlt, lt is basted with a few tablespoons-\nfull of grape Juice, or lf, while boiling lt, a half cupful of vinegar and\ntwo tablespoonsful of grape Juice ls\nadded   to   the   water?\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThat more than 200 boys enrolled\nIn a model airplane club at Calgary\none day recently?\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nThat the easiest and most satisfactory method of cleaning kid gloves\nthat have embroidered cuffs is to\nrub them briskly with art gum?\nThat the season of 1928 was a poor\none for the collection of forest tree\nseed in the west and that orders received by the forest service for seed\ncould only  be filled in  part?\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThat Rochester, winner of the International baseball league pennant set\na new world's record of 362 double\nplays for the season the old record\nbeing 222 set last year by the Pueblo\nThat Melfort, Sask., ls planning a\n\u26664000   curling  rink.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThat women's footless skating socks\nire being featured for the coming season's winter sports by a Glasgow\nmanufacturer of knitted garments, and\na narrow band which passes under the\nInstep, leaving apertures for the heel\nand toes, holds the sock ln place, thus\nproviding the necessary warmth around\nthe ankle without causing undue bulk\ninside the boot?\nMotoring coats chosen In materials\nand colorings to match one's motor\ncar are a vogue stressed by Paris fash-\nionlsts this autumn, and at Le Tou-\nquet recently there was held a \"con-\ncours d\/elegance o'auto,\" where prizes\nwere awarded for the smartest cars,\nand the winner was a giant white one\noutlined with black strtppes, while Its\ndainty little owner-driver wore a smart\nlittle white drill costume piped with\nblack braid.\nPROMOTERS OF BOXING MATCHES\nIN ILLINOIS ARE REQUIRED TO\nHAVE TWO STRETCHERS AT THE\nRINGSIDE READY TO REMOVE\nKNOCKOUT VICTIMS UNABLE TO\nWALK  FROM  THE  RINO.\nThe Haskell Indian School at Lawrence, Kan., will specialize ln night\nfootball' games this autumn. A floodlight system will be installed at a\ncost  of   04000,\nPlans have been announced for a\nnew $3,000,000 Chicago Yacht club\nhome rising five stories on Lak* Share\nln Grant Park to replace the old\nclubhouse.\nCricket, rugby and soccer among the\nEnglish baseball ..basketball and football ln the United States are the recognized Anglo-Saxon contributions to\nthe games of the world.\nKnights of Columbus\nGive Picnis for 350\nOld People, Toronto\nTORONTO. Ont., Oct. 3\u2014The Knight*\nof Columbus recently gave a picnic\nfor 350 old people, residents of the\nHouse of Providence, at the Exhibition ,\ngrounds.\nTwo couples took the .floor when a!\nwaltz was suggestted. A lady ln a\nflat black hat that bobbed as she\ndanced, did a solo. Then the men Joined ln. The first was a merry old chap\nwith a gay red muffler., who was the\nlife of the party. In Just a few mln.\nutes there were eight women and five\nmen dipping and circling, laugmng and\nJoking, while their friends cheered\nthem on. One little lady, Mrs. Edward Price, who curtsied and tapped\nas graceful as any, admitted smilingly to 80 years.\nAnd sitting watching all the time\nwith as happy a smile as any, was\nlittle Mrs. Margaret Shea, whose age\nis at least a hundred years, talking\nto one of the nuns. Another resident,\nwho traces her age to 90, said, \"I can\nremember every dress I ever Wore,\neven ln my school days.', when someone commented on her memory. The\noldest man was Henry Martin, who\nwa* 91   last June.\nCINCINNATI, Oct. 3.\u2014Pete Donohue\nwas easy for Chicago ln the third\ngame of the last series that the Cube\nwill play at Redland field this year.\nThe Bruins won by 8 to 1. Hasen\nOuyler stole two bases to Increase his\ntotal to 42.\nR       H       E\nChlcag6       g       10 0\nCincinnati       1       10        0\nBatteries\u2014Carlson, Nehf. Malone and\nSchultz*;   Donohue  and  Sukeforth.\nWASHED   OUT\nNew York at Philadelphia, postponed\nrain.\nOnly two games scheduled today.\nLadies' Bowling\nBowling has become as\nmuch a ladies' game aa it\nis a men's game. It is not\nnecessary to form a party\nto bowl now, just drop in\nand enjoy a game at any\ntime.\n(QELINAC\n~\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u2022\u2122   TOBACCONISTS    **-**\nExperts at  Madison  Square  Garden,   New   Volrk,  are   planning  big\nboxing    matches   at    Miami,    Fla..\nnext winter, lejtanllrss of the law.\nItaly   is   fast   becoming   a   sporting\nnation.    Besides auto and bike racing,\nsoccer,   basketball   and   track,   another\nrapidly-grow ing sport is boxing.\nIn the flnt six months of this\nyear 1,584,517 golf balls were imported to the United States as\ncompared with 1,420,423 in the\nsame period or 1928. The United\nKingdom has been the source of\nnearly ail ithe import-.\n  \\\nLike Suzanne Lenglen, Betty Nut-\nhall, the British tennis star, took up\nthe game at the age cf 7, being trained by her father. She won the girls'\nchampionship of England when she\nwas 13.\nFRED McLEOD, 47-YEAR-OLD PROFESSIONAL AT THE COLUMBIA\nCOUNTRY CLUB, IN WASHINGTON,\nHAS COMPETED IN EVERY UNITED\nSTATES OPEN LINKS CHAMPIONSHIP\nFOR  THE  LAST  27  YEARS.\nPolo is regarded as the most Important game at the Military Academy\nWest Point, and ls tbe onlly sport that\nls played all year round by the cadets.\nThough his right arm was cut off\nbelow the elbow, Ray Watson, of the\nIllinois Athletic club, ranked as one of\nthe greatest middle distance runners\nfrom   1921   to   1923.\n5 Strokes Under\nPar For 2 Holes\nCHasteen\nHarris of Memphis,\nIfeNM.SHOTTHt\nI^ANPlStt-HOl-E-\n4TT&E peuE Keape\nCC. NASHVIUff.TfeNN.\nin Five\nStrokes\nUNDER\nPAH\n\u25a0> p. Windle o**\nWC\\\\rC*tG>0  MADE \u25a0\n\\ not. in One at \u25a0 g\nOld Narieiijli. floi* OLUB WHEN HE\nhit A ToM*93TortE WITH Hi8*r*R SHorJ\nBy AL DEMAREE\n(Former   Pitcher   New   York   Olants)\nBarrie Payne, the golf humorist\ntold me the other day of a playei\nmaking two holes In competition in\nfive strokes  under par.\nChasteen Harris, a rugged little\nplayer from Memphis, came to the\nfourteenth hole at Belle Meade, Nashville, in the southern golf Association\nTournament.\nThe 14th hole Is 476 yards long\nHarris got a long drive followed by a\nNo. 2 iron shot that finished 18 Inches\nfrom the pen and holed his eagle 3.\nThe 15th hole is Just 261 yards, a par\n4, set in a punch bowl green. Harris,\nemploying a brassle, smacked the ball\nand had the extreme satisfaction of\nseeing tt roll up on the green ln the\ndirection of the flag. A moment\nlater came a wild yell from the players on the next tee, overlooking the\ngreen-\n\"It's in the hole,''  they shouted.\nOn a pair of holes which had a\npar of 5-4, Harris had done 8-1. This\ncuts a stroke more from par than\nJock Hutchison's famous brace of\nholes ln tha British Open at St, Andrews in 1921, when Jock holed a 1\nat ths 8th and a 2 at the ninth. This\nwas four strokes cut from par In two\nholes in succession.\nBLACK & WHITER\nSCOTCH WHISKY      \"**Vn\n\u201e.A        Jane, Buchanan t Co.. LID . Glamow t London\nAlia test.iit... o. BUCHANAN * LIQUEUR\nTins auveru.-c\"._Ai .. iau. !>_..\u00ab_ 01 ujsplayed by the LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or by the Government of B. C. \u2022\nThis advertisement is1 not published or displayed by the LIQ-'\nUOR CONTROL B0ABI? or by the Government of B. C,\n____\n__________\n .\nfPag-Eigh.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4, 1929\n..- !_,\u25a0-.\nCAn&el Child\nBy Grace .Perkins\nCOPYRIGHT   BT   RUB   B.   HENKLE   CO.,   INC.\nINSTALMENT TWO ing uke that and meaning It.\n(Continued) And mama turned  back in her seat\nAnyway.   I  was   glad   she  asked   me \u25a0 and   sighed,   and   her   eyes   got   kind\n** pUy   pinochle;   so  she  rang  for   a j of  reddish  all  around  the edges,  and\ntable and five of us played. There waa   she said  in a  low  voice   to  Mr.   Hal-\nme, and Mr. Halton (who ls our character man and once played with Sir\nBeerbohm Tree), and Alice and Eddie\nBorden. Eddie is our leading man at\npresent, and he is quite piesant and\nsmokes a pipe and Just came out of\ntbe movies, where he played the lead\nwth Pota Negri, and never had a job\nsince, till he Joined our company\nafter wa threw out Tom Cornwall for\ngetting drunk and making Mr. Daring\npay for a taxi ride that cost forty,\nfour  dollars.\nThen there was Stanley R. Ogllvle,\nwhose initials are good luck to any\ncompany, and who plays the doctor ln\n'The Unseeing Eye,\" and comes In\nduring the second act when I am so\nsick and fiddle Borden has to come\nhome to me and make it up to his\nwife and leave1 the Uttle tart which\nhe waa running around with, because\nlt looks like I am dying, and I keep\ncalling for my daddy (which ls my\nbest scene). That's all Mr. Ogllvle does\nln our company, except to stage manage the rest  of the  time  back  stage.\nWe often play pinochle on the trains\nto pus the time, only Mr. Daring, the\nmanager, won't let us play higher\nthan a nickel a point, because there\nused to be too many fights and folks\ndrawing on their salaries ahead of\ntime, wnen Mr. Daring didn't have\nthe money.\nTm a good pinochle player, and more\nthan likely I win twenty cents tn\neach game. But if I don't then I cry\nor sulk, and Eddie Borden flips coins\nwith me and pretends I won a dime\nfrom hm, so I oome out on top. anyway. When I lose, mama gets very\nmad but Just. She always makes me\npay, because she says I must learn\nto be a good loser, though she is very\nred ln the face when she aays tt, and\nalways  gives me  the  devil  afterwards.\nWell, we weren't playing very long\nthat day before Miss Eden came out\nof the drawing room which she and\nMr. Daring always have (except when\nlt ls overnight Jumps, because that\nwouldn't be moral to have a compartment together, and they have to be\ncareful, inasmuch as there is a child\nIn tbe company). But we seldom have\novernight Jumps, as they are more expensive for everyone concerned. Particularly mama. Because mama and I used\n.to take one berth together, until last\nyear when I got up on my rights\nabout lt and yelled until I got a\nberth of my own. Because mama would\nalways squash me up against the window and I never had room to turn.\nBesides, she wouldn't let me sit up\nand put up the, shade so's I could\nlock out at the stars, and the big\nblack blocks of houses and trees that\nwe passed. And how could she expect me to go to sleep before twelve.\nAnyway, Miss Eden came out of\nthe drawing room, and she looked as\nwhite as a clcud. Just from the ex.\npressior. on her face, we all knew\nthat something had happened. She\ncame up to us slow and a little unsteady, and she said ln a very low\nvoice:\n\"Anybody got anything to drink?\"\nSo  Eddie   Borden   said:\n\"Sure,  slBter.  Come  with   me.\"\nSo he took her by the arm and\nled her dcwn the aisle to his seat.\nwhere he opened his valise. And be\ncause it looked like something serious.\nnobody else tried to horn in on the\ndrinks, but we Just sat and waited.\nAnd Stanley and Alice and Mr. Halton got klnda sore that Eddie was\nhogging all the news, so Alice said to\nme:\n\"You run down and ask Miss Eden\nlf she isn't feeling well, darting.\"\nSo _ started to get up, but Stanley\nStubbed me bv the arm and said:\n\"Yee, Its rieht where you are, and\ndon't go butting in.\"\n1 So then we went on watching some\nmore, and at last Stanley couldn't\nstand it another minute, and so he\nremembered he was. after all, the stage\nras\"a\u00abpr. so he said:\n\"I B-uess I'll go and talk to the boss.\"\n1 8o he got up and started toward Mr.\nDaring's door, but Miss Eden caukht\nslirht of him from the other end of\nthe car and she called to him. So then\nhe went down and Joined Eddie Borden and Miss Eden, and the three\not them buzzed, and the three of\nus sat at the table and wondered.\nAnd pretty soon Miss Eden called\nMr. Halton. and Alice and I were\nleft alone, So I got right un and\nwent over to shake mama and wake\nher   up.\n\"Something ls going on, mama,\" I\ntold her.\nSo mama blinked, and leaned over\nthe aide of her seat and stared down\nat the group at the other end of the\ncar. And Just then we saw Miss Eden\nsit right down and put fier face In\nher hands and begin to cry. And Eddie Borden put his arm* around her\nand kept saying, \"There, there, it'll\nall oome out ino the wash.\"\nMama was Just making ready to\nget up and go down the aisle and\nsee what tt waa alt. about, when Mr\nHalton turned away, kind of embarrassed at Mss Eden's tears, and he\ncame up to mama and said:\n\"They've  had   a  fight.\"\n\"Who?\"  says  mama,   \"IM\u2014\"\n\"Yeh. Her and the boss,\" said Mr.\nHalton.\n\"Oreat guns.\" said mama. \"Well, she\nmight have known it couldnt go on\nforever. I never saw it to fall yet.\nShe was  Just  riding for a fall.\"\n\"Oh, shush!\" said Mr. Halton, kind\nof mad. \"What's the use? After all,\nthe kid Is pretty broke up about H.\"\n\"The kid!\" e<fhoed mama, with a\n\u25a0port. \"Huh!\"\nBut Just then a wail came from\nthe back of the car, and we heard\nMiss Eden's voice very hysterical, say-\ntflg:\n\u00bb\"I wouldn't care so much, only he\nowes me money! And he's Just been\nmaking a fool of me and he knows\nit! But I liked him. I did. I liked him\na lot. But he was Just stringing me.\nAnd I fell for all his he.mani stuff.\nOil. I didn't know I could be such a\nnun I\"\nWall, we were all lookln at Miss\nI4ert. iinfl honest, she was pretty, cry-\ntoo:\n\"Poor little thing! Ain't I seen that\nhappen over and voer again these\nlast ten years. My Ood. but a woman\nhas a tough time of It, and don't you\nforget it.\"\nAnd poor Mr Halton locked very\nguilty and got all fussed because he\nwasn't to blame. But mama turned and\nlooked at Mlas Eden again and her\nheart got too big far her. Mama is\nalways soft-hearted when It comes to\npeople being in real trouble. So she\nforgot that ahe hadn't liked Miss Eden,\nand. she got up and went to the end\nof the car and put her arms around\nMiss Eden and said:\n\"Now listen, kid. It won't do nc\ngood crying and spoiling your pretty\nlittle   eyes.   It's   rotten   luck,   but  you\n\"Sure!\"\n\"Ho never was any good, anyway,\" i\nmama went on. speaking out her mind i\nquite freely. \"None of ua ever liked |\nyour taking up with him. We couldn't ;\nunderstand   it   at   all.\"\nWhich was very true, because, believe me. nobody in the company\nhad any love ln their hearts for Tom\nDaring, and everyone had thought\nMiss Eden an awful sucker to make\nsuch cloee friends out of htm. Mr.\nDaring likes to play the part of tyrant. As a matter of record, nobody\nln the company would ever play cards\nwith him, because he always won and\ntook lt out of next week's salaries.\nOne of our leading men caught Mr.\nDaring cheating at cards and they\nhad an awful row which ended in\nthe leading man getting a broken\near drum snd his notice. Tom Daring was famous for being a good.\nmoney-making manager, and an awful handful, and people really only\nworked for him when they were hard\nup  and   had   nothing  else   In  sight,\n|0 when mama put into words\nwhat everyone had been thinking for\nthe last three months or so, Miss\nEden looked up and gazed at eash one\nof us and then she took a deep\nbreath   and   said::\n\"Listen. I'm going to tell you something.\"\nShe was very earnest as she spoke\nand looked real sweet, in spite of\ntbe lear marks on her face. So ev_\neryone gathered closer around her.\nand I sort of hid myself behind mama,\nbecause generally If they see me they\nst nd me away when anything exiting   is   going   on.\niTo be continued)\nCLASSIFIED  ADVERTISING\nINSTALMENT   IHREK\nMiss Men, the leodlng lady In our\ncompany, looked up at mama very\npitiful, and she seemed to forget she\ndidn't  like  mama,  too,   and  she  said:\n\"Oh. what am I going to do? What\nwill   I   do?\"\n^tenTTt   ^'d:   :     _, , .. !    A. H. Young, star sprinter ot Ade-\n.,__\u00a3    _,,^,d\u00b0 _\\\u201e*n1   et\" *\"'  \"V   lM'   \u00ab*\"\u00abnilty.   has   *mn  23  coiteecu-\nstory    straight.    Well    help    you    all j tlvo races over the quarter-mile route,\nm,. \u00bb',,.\u00bb ...   W        .___.___. and   ls   said   to   be   the   outstanding-\nShe, turned to the rest of the com- ] ,40-yard   university   runner   In   either\nSchools at Orand\nForks Are Closed,\nSmall Pox Cases\nORAMD: FORKS, B C , Oct. 3 \u2014\nOwing to the threatened outbreak\nof small pox the public schcol\nhas been cloeed as a measure of\nprecaution. All the rooms of the\nHigh School have been thoroughly\ndisinfected.\nAccident Victim\nof Slocan City\nis Laid to Rest\nMany   Flowers  at   Funeral   of\nLittle  Patricia\nMeDonald\npany   then\nquick  as  a\nand    they   all    answered,\nflash:\nNew   Zealand   or   Australia.\nyou want the best\nresult at the\nml n l m u tn expense there ls no\nb e tter medium\nthan the Classified   Columns   of\nNews\ni\n1\nSell'Furniture\nquickly and\nprofitably\nthrough the\nDaily News\nWant Ads\nFill This In and Send It to Us.\nClassified Advt, Dept.\nThe Daily News.\nGentlemen:\nThe enclosed  $   is for  classified\nAdvertising to appear in your issues of \t\nThere are, including my  name\nand address  words at the rate\nof 114 cents per word.   No ad, however, will be inserted for less than 25c.\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C, Oct, 3\u2014The\nfuneral of little Patricia McDonald, who\ndied from a gun shot wound, was\nheld from the United Church on Sunday at 4:30 o'clock. Rev. T. W. Rud-\ndell, officiating, took his text from\nLuke, twelfth chapter and fortieth\nverse, \"Be ye therefore ready also, for\nthe Son of Man cometh at an hour\nwhen ye  think   not.'' \u25a0\nThe following hymns were sung:\n\"Safe In tbe Arms of Jesus.\" There's\na Friend for Little Children\" and\n\"Peace,  Perfect  Peace.'\nMiss Gladys Reynolds, presided at the\norgan.\nTlie following four little girls were\nhonorary pallbearers: Enid Graham,\nIrene Terry, Thelma Russell and Marguerite Patterson. The acting pallbearers were: D. Tallrle of Silverton, J.\nGreer,   editor   of   New   Denver   Leaser;\nD. 8. McVannell  and  C. K. Barber.\nAfter the service  at the church  the\ninterment took place at tht local cemetery.\nThe floral offerings were as follows:\nProm Loving Mother, and Daddy,\nGordon and Jean, Aunt Clara and\nUncle Percy and Grandma McDonald,\nMiss Mary Ormend, Mr, and Mrs. J.\nBolsvert, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bruin and\nfamily, Mr. and Mrs. A. Schneabele,\nMr. and Mrs. Christopherson, Silver-\nten; Mr. and Mrs. J. Reld,* Two Friends\nHotel. Mr, and Mrs. T. McNelsh, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. J. Johnson and family,\nMr, and Mrs. T. Russell and Thelma,\nMr. and Mrs. ' Charles Russell, Ted,\nEnid and June Oraham. Alderman and\nMrs. H. L. Fife, Charles Barber, Mr.\nand Mrs, J, Domke and family, Mrs.\nLong and Melville, Mr, and Mrs. H.\nParker   and   family.   Mr.   and   Mrs.   J.\nE. Tattersall. Btank-y and Jtfmie Hyl_\nslop, Mr. and Mrs. W. Mlddleton and\nfamily, Elma, Wilfred and John Greenwood, D. S. McVannei, A H. McNeil,\nMr. and Mrs. H. D. Curtis and family, Mr. and Mrs. D. B. O'Neail and\nfamily, Mr. and Mrs. A. Ewlng and\nDavid, Mr. and Mrs. J. Terry and family, Velma and Dorothy; United Church\nSunday school, Mr and Mrs. William\nClouRh,. Mv. and Mrs. D. Ewlng, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. A. Blackoourne and Audrey. Frances and Golda, Norris, Mr and\nMrs. J. Law, Mrs. Hill and Frank, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. M. Rae and A. Y. Rae,\nMr, and Mrs. R. E. MacMUlan, Mr.\nand Mrs. Paterson and family. Mr. and\nMrs. R. L. Reynolds and family, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. E. Gage and family, the\nButler children. Mr. and Mrs. T. J,\nArmstrong. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Hufty\nnnd family. Mr, and Mrs. P. Shlndler.\nsister and brother-in-law of Mr. McDonald, who wese here to attend the\nfuneral left for their home in Vancouver on   Sunday   night.\nOsii-W AAvtrtising Raits *\"*\u00ab** ro* \"\u25a0\"\n___.\nLocal Reading Notteee\u2014 Three centa\nper word each Insertion. In blackface\nor machine capital* 6c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent discount If mn dally\nwithout change of cot)* for one month\nor more. Where advertlsment ls set\nout ln short llnea the charge la 16c\na line for Roman type, 30c for blackface and 25c for blackfao capitals\nMinimum 35c. if charged 50c.\nWant and Classified advertising \u2014\nOne and a half centa a word Der Insertion. If paid In advance 6c per word\nper week, or 22%3 per word per month\nTransient ada accepted only on a\ncaah-ln-advance basis. Each Initial\nfigure, dollar sign, etc., counts aa one\nword. Minimum 25c. lf charged 60c\nBirth Notices and Social Items\u2014 Free.\nBIBTH3\n(1)\nSAVINKOFF\u2014At the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, to Mr. and Mrs. T.\nSavinkoff of Orand Porks, October a,\na daughter.\nPERSONAL\nA->>\nMACLEAN (GilllsV\u2014Alec John of Oil-\n11s Cove Nova Scotia. Father John.\nMother Mary A. oillls. Alee or\nfriends telegraph collect Immediately\nto Chester J. O'Brien, Little Building, Boston, Mass., or valuable estate rights wlU be lost. (107701\nHELP   WANTED\n___\u2022>\nWANTED\u2014Cook,   general.\nH. A. Nesbltt, City.\nApply  Mra.\n(10774)\nSITUATION!.    WANTED\nJtiii\nEXPERIENCE-    LADY    COOK\u2014Wants\niob   in   small   camp.    Phone   587R.\n', O. Box 84, Nelson. B. C,    (10775)\nAOfcNTS   WANTED\n-i__\nDOUBLE YOUR SALARY\u2014By adding\n$35.00 weekly selling Imperial Art\nPersonal Christmas Cards to Friends,\nBusiness Associates, Club and Church\nmembers from Magnificent Free\nSample Book. Imperial Art. Manufacturers, 61 Wellington West. Toronto. (10719)\nFURNISHED    BOOMS\u2014For   Bent\u2014(15)\nFURNISHED     TWO-ROOM\nK.  W. C. Block.\nSUITE \u2014\n(10045)\nROOM  and. BOABD\n___.\nBOARD AND ROOM\u2014Close In on Victoria St.   Phone 514L (10773)\nROOMS\u2014To Rent-\non)\nFOR RENT\u2014FLAT.\n515  Hall St.\n(10721)\nMISCELLANEOrs\nsfsT STUD\u2014Togenburgh Buck, Canada\nof Deerfleld 683C.T.S. Fee >2.50. A\nCameron, Balfour, B   C. (10767)\nSilverton Women -\nInstitute Elects\nConfab Delegates\nSILVERTON, B. C. Oct. !. -Mrs. R.\nFalrhurst and Mrs. C. Robinson were\nelected as delegates to attend the convention In Nelson at the monthly\nmeeting of the Woman's institute\nwhich was held at the home of Mrs.\nA. Walton. A very Interesting paper\non Bulb Culture was read by Mrs. A.\nWalton. After refreshments Mrs. R.\nHumbly and Mrs. W. Johnstone rendered   several   piano   selections.\nBusiness Booming\nat Procter Owing\nto Construction\nPROCTER. B.C. Oct. 3\u2014 When\nthe building of the railroad link\nfrom Procter to Kootenay Landing, Procter hae these paBt sU\nmonths became a busy little\nvillage. With the constant string\nof men coming in dally, both\nfrom the east and west, seeking\nemplloymer.t on the conduction\nthere ls not a house available\nto be rented. There has been several new buildings and houses\nerected.\nThe business part of the village has srown considerably,\nthere stores, lunch counters, a\npjol room, rooming house, besides\nthe hotel, as well as the hospital\nThe Procter pavilion, which haa\nbeen clceed for tlie past three\nyears, has been reopened, and is\nputting on two shows a week\nwith a dance following and has\nbeen   well   attended.\nThe schcol ls taxed to Its limit with an attendance of over\n50 pupils.\nProcter has always been a fav-\nold. This past season the beau-\nprairie people, the lovely scenery\nfishing, boating and the bathing beach having always been\n' attractive to both young and\n?ld. This past season the ebau-\nty has been hidden under a\npall of heavy smoke, but now\nit  is showing  ln   Its  fall   glory.\nWith the completion of the\nrallrcad it Is thought tbat Procter\nyill ln the near future become\na popular summer resort.\nYORKSHIRE PIOS \u2014Seven  weeks  old,\n\u26665.    Jowett Bros., Edgewood.   (10678)\nPOR SALE\u2014Yorkshire pigs, well grown\nstock, 7 weeks; 16. Boothby. Edge-\nwood. (10050)\nFOR SALE\u2014Chester White pigs, seven\nweeks old, 16 each. J. H. McCauley,\nTaghum. (10682)\nPURE BRED Red Cocker Spaniel Puppy\n\u2014Female, 10 weeks old, $7. Osga-\nthorpe  Ranch.   Harrop. (10634)\nFOR SALE\u201430 Yorkshire Pigs, 7 weeks,\nold, at 15.00; 8 young pigs, cross\nbreed, 7 weeks old, at 6476, fob.\nEdgewood. John Egloff, Edgewood,\nB.   C. (10879)\nA SNAP\u2014One team. 2600, healthy and\nIn fine shape, five and nine years\nold; harness, wagon, democrat and\nsleigh for 8276.   011 Mill St.    (10663)\nFOR SALE\u201435 slx-weok.old pigs, crossbred; 6600 each, ty lots of ten and\nover at  84.75.  fob.  Needles,  B.  C.\nApply   F.   O.   Shlell (10732)\nFOR SALE\u2014Female Oerman police dog,\n16    months    old;    kind    disposition;\ngentle    with    children:    first    class\nstock dog.   Box 42, Retallack, B. C.\n(10771)\nAYRSHIRE FOR SA_E\u2014Four choice\nyearling heifers and two two-year-\nold heifers from good R.O.P. dam\nand prize-winning sire. Fit for foundation stock. The stock ls good and\nthe price Is right. He^d ls fully accredited. Write to S. P. Chaplin,\nAgasie, B.  C. , (10772)\nMISCELLANEOUS  FOR  SALE\n(27)\nFOR SALE\u2014Wicker baby carriage.    606\nVictoria St. (10688)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Baby   buggy,   high   chair\nand walker.    Snap.    717 Victoria 8t.\n(10696)\nTHORNLESS BLACKBERRY CANES\u2014\n68 per hundred. O. H. Fraser, Nelson. (10681)\nFOR SALE\u2014McClary range, nearly new.\nAlso new Williams sewing machine.\nPhone   401L3. (10758)\nFOR SALE\u2014Delco light engine, 850\nwatts, in thorough repair, overhauled.\nBox Ai, Edgewood. B. C.        (10731)\nFOR SALE\u201416 Yorkshire pigs six weeks\nyoung Holsteln cow; good heavy\nteam; bob sleighs. J. H. Hoskin,\nBalfour. (10754)\nFOR SALE\u2014Victor Oranada Ortho-\nphonic gramaphone ln good condition; cost \u00bb__ sell for 685. Mrs.\nF. Frlsby. South Slocan. (10733)\nFOR SALE\u2014Or would trade for similar\nanimal, one Ayrshire bull calf, three\nweeks old; very nicely marked; eligible to Registry. Hugo Dumont,\nBrldesvllle,   B.  C. (10759)\nPROPERTY  FOR SALE\n___.\nFOR   SALE\u2014SevBn-roomed   house;   cement  foundation;   2  lots.    205   Victoria St.    Apply Telephone 495L.\n(10760)\nFOR SALE CHEAP\u2014Good ttock or\nranch land. Northerly - of Lot\n9272 Group 1 Containing 60 acres\nmore or less Kootenay District. Province of B. C. Apply Erlo Norburg.\nNorthport.  Wash. (10434)\nMISCEI.LANJQ1 S   WANIBP\nWANTED     TO     BUY\u2014 Ueed     hei\nPhone 378X6. (14\nFOB   SALE   OS,   WT\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014A Tunnel Mu]\nHorse for haulln\u00ab ore out (\ntunnel, one that Mks been brok\nsuch work preferred. Correspond\ntbe Union Mine. Orand Forke, 1\n<1(\nBUBINE88   t*PP<)BTl>NITl_\u00bb_i ^\nCANDY    STORE\u2014For    uie\nBest  of  fixtures   lncli\nTheatre.\ntwo-hole     Frigidaire\nWrite  Box   10,  Trail.\ncab\n(1(\nFOR SALE\u2014General store at\nB. C. Doing good business,\nselling on account of ill ho\nTelephone exchange ln mnnec\nPrice 66000. Can he bought\nterms. ' For full particular* f\nJesse Kemp. Ltd, Trail, B  C. (II\nHOUSM  TOB, BEN**;\nHOUSE FOR RENT\u2014Also furniture\nsale chegs,   717 Victoria St.    (10\nBUSINESS,    PROFESSION\nDIKECTOR-\nAmbulance  Service\nF. E. HOWELL. FUNERAL DIRI\nor. Sucessor to Standard Underta\nCo. All local Ambulance calls <\nPhone  262,   Day  or  Night. (10\nAccounting\nHARRY   D.   RAMSDEN.   Publlo\ncounting. P. O. Box 1176. Nelton.\n(10\nCHARLES  F. HUNTER\u2014AUDITOR,\nDonald Jam Building. Box 1011,\nson, B- C. (10\nAswyeri\nE. W. WIM1OWS0N. Box A1108 Ne\nB.  C.  Standard  western charges.\n(10\nAuctioneer and Bailiff\nJAMES   H.   DOYLE\u2014Bailiff.   AnoHOI\nNelson,  B.  O. (10*\nChiropractor!\nDB.   MITTUN.   X-RAY,   CRANBRO\n(10*\nDR.   GRAY,   UTLKEB   BLK,   NELS\n(10*\nDentista\nDR.  G.  A.  C.  WALLEY\u2014Griffin Bio\nNelson, B. C. (107\nEngineers\nH.  D. DAWSON\u2014I-nd  Surveyors\nlng and Civil Engineer Kaslo. B.\n(1071\nti.    _\u00bb.    tnstiMt\u2014Mine    surveying\nAerial Tram Construction, Kaslo.\nC. (1071\nI.     H.     UltKfcN      CO.\u2014( <>MKALIU\nFormerly Oreen Bros.. Burden Noli\nCivil   and   Mining  Engineers.   B.\nAlberta   and   Dominion   Land\nveyora. (10'\nTurquoise blue moire is very smart\n*.mr, cash\nFOR QUICK SALE\u2014One acre cultivated, nearly new flve-roome-l bungalow,\nSleeping porch, ceinent cellar, city\nwater, llfcht, phone, outbuildings, six\nblocks to shipyards, overlooking lake.\nP. O. Box 887, Nelson, or phone\n328L3. (10738)\nFlorists\nLEGAL NOTICES\nQuick Action\nLAND   REGISTRY   ACT\n(Section   160)\nAll minerals precious and base (save\ncoal and petroleum) In or under Lots\n1720 and 1731 \"Hlnkley\" and \"Black\nColt\" Mineral Claims, Kootenay District.\nProof having been filed in my office of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 9476-A to the above-men-\niioiiprj lands ln the name of William\nHastle Adams and bearing date the\n3rd July, 1909, I HEREBY GIVE\nNOTICE of my Intention at the expiration of one calendar month from\nthe first publication hereof to Issue\nto the said William Hastle Adams\na provisional Certificate of Title in\nlieu of such lost Certificate. Any\n.person having any Information with\nreference to such lost Certificate of\nTitle ls requested to oommunicate with\nthe undersigned.\nDated at the Land Registry Office,\nNelson, B. C. this 9th day of September, A. D.,  1929.\nA   W. IDlENS\nRegistrar of Titles.\nDate of first publication. September\n10.  1929.\n(10430)\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nUKIZZI.LLK'S    GREENHOUSE,      Nel\nCut flowers and floral designs.\na ,\u00abW1\nWM.   8.  JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone 843 Cut flowers Potted Plai\nand  Floral  Emblems. (107!\nInsurance and Real Eitate\nIt.   W.   DAWSON\u2014Real   Estate,   *n\u00bbi\nance,   Rentals.   Next  Hlpperson Hal\nware, Baiter St. (1071\nE.   DH.I--1NS11RANKE\nFABM AND  CITY PROPERTY\n508 Ward St. (lot\nD.   A.   MCFARLAND   REAL   ESTA1\nInsurance. Coal. Board of Trade ROo\nTelephonc  40,  P.  0.  Box  24.     (10T\nPhotograpitan\nOEORGE A. MEERES\u2014ArtIM and I-\ntographer.    713 Baiter St. (1071\nTransfer\nBERTRAM      THORPE'S      TBANSFEB\nPhones   534   and   977L3. (1071\nwu\u2014iAM.-.-    i kaiysnik\u2014ttamte, tit\nand wood.   Phpne 106. (low\nWood  Working Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Baker   St..   Carpenter\nJoiner.  Bash  and  Hardwood.\n(1071\nBy Wertow\n\"Ii-tkm , PAi_t>MEe- \\ f Righto,,\nyou'v\/f \u00a3 -Tau-ed\nLON6   h.^dU0H - MOW\nLET   ME  'SEE   -oME\nACTIOM   QH  TV*!,   OP- .\n|_L    -EL- r^ax7~^~l^\nIT   TO\nOWE   oF___\nMR. n_**-IL\nL_AV-   IT\nTo   ME\nAND B\/S~\u00a5\nTHING VAIIU\ne>_ o.K,\n JBiSril\nGOTTA  HAMD\nIT   CO   THA*>_lt_\">\nFOP.  _T=FICIEMCY\nK- TAKE-    -P\nl_E-*S  OF   THE\nBOSS'   TIME\n~TH\/*N\nBKLNGING UP FATHEl.\nfly George McManu\nSPEAK. \"TO\nJj   ME WITH\nTHIME E-VE-S\nDIO YOO\n[ MEAP*. THE\nI PROFE--OR_\nV-A-T SOMC;\nro like to\nHEAR HIM.\n-IMC- IM  OLD\n<TUCKY\nl  HOPE I'VE\nHEARD HI-\nLA-T -ONiCr\nBUT IF HE\nMO*pT -olMG\nL-T . HAVE\nHIM \u00ab-lM_-\nIKI THE\nGRAND\nC Af-J VCiN-\n,   WMV-HE\n1 HA-3 \u00ab\\\n!v.\/OKIDER(-_)L\\\nME\nR.EMIMO-3\nme or-\n(V1ATT-\nBRUSH-\n\/%<>\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4. 1929\n' Page Nine\nlyor Open? the\n, Eleventh Annual\nFair, Slocan City\nson  Boy  Wins  in  Sewing;\nOther Nelsonites Win\nPrizes\nOcan cmr, Oct. 3\u2014ateeto city's\nnth   annual   fruit   fair   waa   of-\nlly opened  by Mayor Swan ln tbe\nace   of    Captain    J.    Pltzalnunons\nP. P., who had been asked, but\nto   other   duties   waa   unable\n\u00ab  present.\n\u25a0 prize winners, In otder of\nsecond and third, unless other-\nmentioned,   were:\nit pyramid of apples\u2014J. o. Clay,\nMo.\nWithy,    box\u2014J.    0.    Clay.\nElnto-h   Red\u2014J.   O.   Clay,   E    W.\nney.\nagener,    red\u2014E.    W.    Dawney.\nx$  other  variety,   box\u2014J.   O.   Clay.\nMlthv,   plate\u2014J.   O.   Clay,   E.   W.\nney.\n\u25a0avensteln, plate\u2014E. W. Dawney.\nNorrls.\n1   plates:\nly other variety\u2014Mrs. O'Neail, Wil-\nDavles.\nDlntosh  Red\u2014J.  O.  Clay,   Mre.   W.\nAnderson,  Perrys.\nnathan\u2014E.   W.  Dawney.\nitario\u2014Mrs.   Norris,   William   Dav-\nilteenburg\u2014J.  O.  Clay.E.   W.  Daw-\nsgener\u2014E. W. Dawney, A. 8. Cham-\n\u25barthern    Spy\u2014J.   O.   Clay,    A.   L.\nnplon.\nlUcloua\u2014\u2022A.   L.   Champion.\niy  other  variety\u2014A.  L.  Chomplon,\n_.   Champion.\nat   of   pears\u2014Mr.   Dawney.\nu-tlett,    plate\u2014Mrs.    D.    A.    Stod-\n, New Denver, W. R. Perry.\npnish  Besuty\u2014A. L. Champion, E.\nDawney.\niy    other    variety,    plate\u2014William\nes, Mrs. Norris.\ntuns,   Lombard,   plate    -   William\nPlums,   Tellow Eggs\u2014Mrs.   J.  Pinchbeck, William Davles.\nPlums,   Oreen   gage\u2014Mrs.   J.   Pinchbeck.\nItalian   Prune\u2014Oeorge   Moir,   J.   O.\nClay.\nPond's   Seedling\u2014E.   W.   Dawney,  A.\nL. Champion.\nAny   other   variety\u2014William   Davles,\nWilliam   Davles.\nPeaches\u2014J.   O.   Clay.\nBlack   Orapes\u2014William   Davles,   Mn.\nD. A. Stoddart, New Denver.\nOreen   grapes\u2014Mrs.   D.   A.   Stoddart,\nNew  Denver.\nTranscendent crab\u2014Oeorge   Moir,  A.\nL. Champion.\nHyslop crab\u2014J. 0. Clay, A. L. Champion.\nAny    other   variety\u2014H.     D.    Curtis\nstart  second.\nStrawberrlee\u2014Mrs.   R.    L.    Reynolds.\n,   Blackberries\u2014Mrs. Long, Wm. Davles.\nDisplay   plate  fruit\u2014J.   O.   Clay.\nPotatoes  white\u2014Mre.  J.  Scovll, Mrs.\nJ.   V.   Meyers,  Appledale.\nPerrys  potatoes red\u2014Mn. F. Tro__o,\nOraham,  Perrys.\nAppledale,  John Oraham,   Perrys.\nTurnips\u2014Mrs. W. H. Anderson, John\nOraham.   Perrys.\nCarrots,   Table\u2014Mrs.   J.   V.   Meyers,\nGeo. Moir.\nCarrots,   field\u2014Mre.   J.   Scovll,   Mrs.\nJ. V. Meyers.\nParsnips\u2014Mrs. M.  Cameron,  Mrs.  J.\nV   Meyers\nCabbage   summer\u2014Elma   Buret,   Mrs\nJ. V. Meyers.\nCabbage, winter\u2014W. R. Perry, Apple-\ndale, Elma Hunt.\nCabbage,  red\u2014Mrs. J.  V.   Meyers.\nOnions   from   sets\u2014John   Graham.\nOnions    from    seed\u2014W.    R.    Perry,\nJohn Graham.\nCorn,   table\u2014J.   O.   Clay,   Geo   Moir.\nBeets, Globe\u2014Mrs. fct. Cameron, Mre.\nJJ.   V.   Meyers.\nBeets,   long\u2014E.   W.   Downey.\nCelery\u2014W. R. Perry,  Mrs. P. Trozzo.\nSquash,     any    other     variety\u2014Wm.\nDavles.\nPumpkins, field\u2014Mrs. J. Scovll.\nPumpkin  pie\u2014W.  R.   Perry,   Mre.  P.\nTrozzo.\nAlfalfa*\u2014Geo.  Moir,  E.   W.   Downeyy.\nVegetable marrow\u2014J. O. Clay, E. W.\nDowney.\nTomatoes\u2014Mrs.   P.   Trozzo,    Mrs   M.\nCameron.\nCucumbers\u2014Mrs.   M.   Cameron.\nCitron\u2014Mrs  W.  H.  Anderson,   W.  R\nPerry\nTry this flavoury blend\nwhen next you order tea\niifi^iiiJi\nTEA\n\u2022Fresh from the gardens'\nA beautiful\n\u25a0.old trimmed\nCup\nahd Saucer\ngiven away\nwith every\npound\nBraid's Best Tea\nOrange Pekoe\nThe finest Quality Tea io Canada\nBraid's \u00a3_ Tea\nA Popular Tea at a Popular Price\nBraid's Best\nCoffee\nThe Coffee that made our reputation\nASK YOUR DEALER\nBRAID, TUCK & CO., LIMITED\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nWatermelon\u2014 John   Graham    Mia.\" J.\nV.   Mayers \u00ab\n\u2022a-Aa-lon-lira   J.   V   Mayers,  Mra\nP. Trozzo.\nRhubarb\u2014John     Oraha.n,     Mrs     J.\nPinchbeck.\nMangolds\u2014Oeo.   Moir.    Mra.   W.   H.\nAnderson.\nEgg   white\u2014Mrs   J    V    Meyers,   Mrs.\nJ.   Scovll\nEggs, brown\u2014Mrs   J   V Meyers. Wm.\nDavles.\nButter 1 lb. print\u2014Mrs. J V. Meyers,\nMrs K. Popoff.\nButter,  1 gal crock\u2014Mra. K. Ponpff\nMrs.  J.  Scovll. \"*\n13    l-lb.    para    amber    honey\u2014Mrs.\nA.  E.  Purney.\ni    6   l-lb.   Jan   white   honey\u2014Mrs.   K.\nPopoff.\nj    6 l-lb. Jars amber honey\u2014J. O. Clay.\nI     Deep   frame   comb   honey\u2014Mra.   K. ,\nPopoff.\ni Cake of beeswax\u2014Mrs. K. Popoff. '\nI Special prizes for honey\u2014Mra. K. >\nPopoff. Mra. A. E.  Pumey.\nTable fowl\u2014Mra  J.  Oraham.  Mra.  J\nCcovil\nPr.   leghorns- Ernest   Sherwood.\nPr.  barred  rock\u2014Mrs.  A.  E.  Purney.\nBeat   developed   chickens\u2014Mrs.   A.   E\nPurney\nAny   other  variety\u2014Mrs.   M.   Benlsh.\nBread:\nWhite\u2014Mrs.     Pinchbeck.     Mrs     M.\nHicks.\nBrown\u2014Mra.   D.    A.    Stoddart,    Mrs\nLong.\nRye\u2014Mrs.   J.   Graham,   Mrs   Benlsh.\nRaisin\u2014Mrs.   J.    Oraham,    Mrs.    M.\nMameron\nBaking   powder   biscuits\u2014Mrs.   J.   V.\nMeyer. Mrs. M. Cameron.\nSweet   buns\u2014Mrs.   D.   A.    Stoddart.\nMrs   J.  Oraham\nParker house rolls\u2014Mrs. Norrls, Mrs.\nJ. Oraham.\nRaisin   buns\u2014Mrs.   J.   Oraham,   Mrs.\nItorrls.\nDoughnuts\u2014Mrs.    Benlsh,    Mrs.     J.\nOraham.\nCooklea,   oatmeal\u2014Mrs.   Scovll,   MrB.\nM. Cameron.\nCookklea:\nSugar\u2014Mre.   Scovll.   Mrs.   Benlsh.\nOlngersnaps\u2014Mrs.   Scovll,   Mrs.   Ball-\nlargeon.\nCake:   :\nDevils\u2014Mrs.   JJ.   V.   Meyers,   Mrs.   J\nOraham.\nLayer\u2014Mrs.  Benlsh,   Mrs  J  Graham.\nSpiced\u2014Mrs.   J.   Oraham.\nFruit\u2014Mrs.    M.    Cameron.    Mrs.    J.\nGraham.\nJelly   roll\u2014Mrs.   Benlsh,   Mrs.   Cameron.\nScotch short bread\u2014Mrs. A. E. Purney,  Mrs.   J.  Oraham.\nPie:\nLemon\u2014Mrs  Benlsh,   Mrs,   M,   Cameron.\nApple\u2014Mrs. M. Cameron, Mrs. Norris,\nPumpkin\u2014Mrs.   J.    Graham   second.\nDisplay  of  cookie*\u2014Mrs.  J.   Graham.\nMrs.   Scovll.\nDisplay    of    homemade    candy\u2014Mrs.\nJ. Oraham.\nCustard    pie\u2014Mrs.    Long,    Mrs.    J.\nOraham.\nSpecial    magic   baking   powder   biscuits\u2014Mrs.  Cameron,  Mrs. Purneyy.\nSpecial   blue   ribbon   baking   powder\nbiscuits\u2014Mrs. M.  Cameron,  Mrs.  Long.\nCanned:\nCherries\u2014Mrs. Ai E.  Pumey, Mrs.  J.\nV. Meyers.\nPeaches\u2014Mrs Binish, Mrs J. Oraham.\nPars\u2014Mrs. J.   Graham.   Mrs.   A.   E.\nOage\nTo Relieve Catarh,\nCatarrhal Deafness\nAnd Head Noises\nPersons suffering from catarrhal\ndeafness, or who are growing hard of\nhearing and have head noises will be\nglad to know that this distressing affliction can usually be successfully\ntreated at home by an internal medicine that *n many Instances has effected complete relief after other\ntreatments have failed. Sufferers who\ncould scarely hear have had their hearing restored to such an extent that\nthe tick of a watch was plainly audible seven or eight Inches away from\neither ear. Therefore, if you know of\nsomeone who Is troubled with head\nnoises or catarrhal deafness, cut out\nth\"s formula and hand lt to them and\nyou may have been the means of\nsaving some poor sufferer perhaps from\ntotal deafness. The perscription can\nbe prepared at home and la made as\nfollows;\nSecure from your druggist 1 oz. Par-\nmint (Double Strength.) Take this\nhome and add to it % pint of hot\nwater and a little granulated sugar;\nstir until dissolved. Take one tablespoon   four times  a  day.\nParmint is used in this way not only\nto reduce by tonic action the inflama-\ntlon   and   swelling   In   the  Eustachian\nTubes,   and   thus   to   equalize   the  air\npressure on the drum,  but  to  correct\nany excess of secretions ln the middle\near, and the results it gives are nearly\nalways quick and  effective.\nEvery person who has catarrh ln any\nform,   or  distressing  rumbling,   hissing\nsounds In their ears, should give  this\nrecipe a  trial.\nRaspberries---Mrs. K. Popoff, Mrs. J.\nOraham,\nJams four varieties\u2014Mrs. J. Oraham.\nMrs.  Downey.\nJellies fdur varieties\u2014Mrs. _r. w. Downey,  Urs.  J.  Graham\nPickled onions\u2014Mrs, a. E. Purneyy,\nMrs.  J.   Oraham.\nPickles four varieties\u2014Mrs. J. Graham,  Mrs. Blnlsh.\nCollection canned vegetables\u2014MrB. J.\nGraham.  Mrs. Cameron.\nCollection home canning, 13 varieties\n\u2014Mrs.   J.   Graham,   Mrs.  Purney.\nTomato catsup\u2014Mrs. Long, Mra. J.\nOraham.\nCahned chicken\u2014Mrs K Popoff, Mrs.\nJ.  Graham.\nCanned    beans\u2014Mrs     M     Cameron,\nMrs. J. Graham.\nRaspberry   vinegar\u2014Mrs.   J.   Graham.\nHomemade    vinegar\u2014Mrs.    Cameron.\nMra. J.  Scovll.\nMustard pickles\u2014Mrs. J v. Meyers,\nMrs.   J.   Downey,\nVase of asters\u2014Mre. J. Cecchelil.\nMrs. W. U% Anderson. Perrys.\nBowl of Pansles\u2014Gladys Reynold*\nMrs.   Cameron.\nVase of dahlias mixed\u2014Mrs. J. Life,\nMrs.   Anderson.\nVase of sweet peas mixed\u2014Mrs.\nO'Neail.   Mrs.   Cameron.\nVase of sweet peas, variety\u2014Mrs.\nO'Neail,   Mrs.  Downey,\nBowl of dahlias any foliage\u2014Mrs.\nCameron, Mrs. Life. t\nCollection   cut   flowers\u2014Mrs,,  Morlev,'\nH.  D.  Curtis.\nCollection:\nHouse   plants\u2014Mrs,   Bolllargeon.\nCut   roses\u2014Mrs.   Kitchener,    Nelson.\nGladiolus\u2014Mrs.   Cameron,   Mrs.   Purney,\nZinnias\u2014Mrs.  Cameron,  Mrs.  Morley.\nFoliage   plant\u2014Mrs.   MacMUlan.   Mrs.\nBolllargeon.\nPrlschld\u2014Mrs.  M.  Cameron.\nGeranium\u2014Mrs.   J.   Life.\nLuncheon   Set.   Emb.   white\u2014Mrs.   R.\nM. Inglis, Victoria, Jean Hunter, Nelson\nLuncheon   set   novelty\u2014Mrs.    R.   M.\nInglis,  Jean  Hunter,\nTea cloth crochet trim\u2014Mrs. En-\nquist,   Jean   Hunter,\nTea cloth embroidered-Mrs. R. M.\nInglis, Jean Hunter.\nCentrepiece embroidered\u2014Mrs. R. M.\nInglis. Mrs. E. Blickflld. Brigade Lake\nB.   C.\nDolly trimmed\u2014Mrs. E. Bliokfeld,\nMrs R.  A. Vance.\nBuffet or vanity set- Mrs, E. Bllck-\nfeld,   Mrs.   Downey.\nHandkerchiefs, fancy\u2014Jean M. Hunter,   second.\nTatted trimmed article\u2014Jean M.\nHunter,   Mrs.   J.   Graham.\nPr. pillow cases embroidered\u2014Mrs.\nE.   Bllckkfeld.  Mrs.   R.   M.   Inglis.\nPr pillow cases trimmed\u2014Mrs. Bail-\nlargeon  second.\nDresser scurf white\u2014Mrs. E. Bllck-\nfeld,  Mrs.  R.  M.   Inglis.\nDresser scarf novelty\u2014Mrs. R. A.\nVance, Mrs A. Schneabele.\nTable runner\u2014Mrs, J, Downey, Mrs.\nA Schneabele.\nNight gown, Mrs. E. Blickfeld, Jean\nM. Hunter.\nBoudoir caps\u2014Mrs. Baillargeon, second.\nSofa   pillow\u2014Mrs.  R.  M.   Inglis,   Mrs.\nDowney.\nKnitted:\nSweater (adults)\u2014Mrs. R. A. Vance,\nMrs.  J.  Graham.\nSuit or drew\u2014Mrs. J Graham, Mrs\nR.   A.   Vance.\nSocks\u2014Mrs R. A. Vance, Mrs. J\nOraham\nStockings(childs)\u2014Mrs. R, A. Vance,\nMra.  J.   Graham.\nBaby's bonnet\u2014Mrs. H. Morey,\nNelson,   Mrs.   J.   Oraham.\nBaby Jacket\u2014Mrs. H. Morey, Mrs.\nR. A. Vance.\nCrocheted baby bonnet\u2014Mrs. H.\nMorey,   Mrs.   A.   Schneabele.\nMen's knitted mitts\u2014Mrs. R. A,\nVance,  Mrs. J. Oraham.\nBaby's bootees\u2014Mrs. H. Morey, Mrs\nR. A. Vance.\nCollection of made over clothing\u2014\nMrs  A,  E.   Purney.\nBedspread novelty\u2014Mrs. R. M. Inglis,\nMrs.  A.   Schneabele.\nQuilt, cotton, pieced\u2014Mrs, M. Hicks,\nMrs. J.  Scovll.\nRug, booked\u2014Mrs. A. Schneabele,\nMrs.   J.   Oraham.\nRug crocheted or knitted\u2014Mrs. M.\nHicks.\nCentrepiece     novelty\u2014Mrs.     Norrto,\nMrs. Acchlni.\nHandicraft\u2014Jean  M.   Hunter.\nCrocheted   lace  or   doily\u2014Dora   Patterson,   Perrys.\nVanity set or dresser scarf\u2014Frances\nNye.\nArticle from flour sack\u2014Robert\nFleming, Nelson, Dora Patterson, Perrys\nRag rug\u2014Beth Gage.\nIced cake\u2014Frances Nye, Beth Gage.\nHandicraft\u2014Robert Hermon,\nOutline work\u2014Joyce Johnstone, Silverton, Ruby Nye.\nDressed doll\u2014Mary Wilson, Cecile\nBaillargeon.\nDressed doll\u2014Frances Norrls, Sera-\nphlne   Baillargeon.\nScrap book\u2014Frances Norrls, Florence\nTerry.\nOutline work\u2014Eilleen Johnstone,\nSilverton.\nSpecial pan of baking powder biscuits\u2014Seraph ine Baillargeon, Mary\nWlison.\nSpecial collection of sewing\u2014Frances   Nye.\nManual training\u2014Ceclla Warner,\nMarguerlU Patteraon.\nPenmaitS-ilp\u2014John Clay. Robert Hermon, firsts; Chas Hufty, second; Peggy\nOage.   first,   Nina  Cecchlna   second.\nNatural drawing\u2014Victor Runt ttma\nHurst.\nDesign  \u2014Elma Hurst,   Dick  Inqulrt.\nObject\u2014Elma   Hu wt,   Ruby   Nye.\nWash work\u2014Seraph! ne Baillargeon,\nD. Hermon.\nDistrict or club exhibit\u2014Slocan\nSlocan   City   Womens   Institute.\nRally Day Services\nHeld at Silverton\n.     SILVKWON,    B.    O- Oct.  .8\u2014Tlie\nUnited church was crowded on Sunday evening when the Roily day service was conducted by Rev. R. Herd-\nman, assisted by the Young Peoples\nchoir. A quartette composed of Mrs.\nT. Barron, Mrs. R. HamWy, R. Herd-\nman and R. Hambly, rendered several\nselections. Mrs. F. Barron also rendering  polos.\nYmir Notes\nYMIB. B. C, C*t. 3\u2014A. Burge_ waa\na Nelson visitor on Tuesday.\nJohn Bremner was a recent visitor to\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Haaland and family of\nErie, were recent visitors ln Ymir and\nwere the guests of Mr. and ...rs. J. M\nOllle.\nFernie Notes\nl-Wl*-. B. c. Oct. 3\u2014Mn. Kot- |\nman Broley hu lett for the coast, I\ntiter spending the aummer In Eernle. i\nMr. Broley will follow shortly, be- |\nlng detained by aome details lu coo-\nneetloon with firUsMng the building   of   the  Holy   Fimlly   school.\nMiss Lily Dicken arrived home Monday from a vacation spent ln Oreat\nFalls,   Montana.\nMr. and Mrs. Charnock, with their\ndaughter. Miss Dorothy, who have\nbeen residents of Weat Fernie for\na considerable number of years, have\nsold their home and removed to Klmberley.\nMr. and Mrs. Duncan and family\nhave taken apartments ln the Wilkes\nblock, pending the repairs to tba\nNickel hotel, which they were about\nto occupy when the fire occurred\nthere.\nUnited States consul N. F. Brand\nwith Mayor Oates and B. Crowe, spent\na day on a fishing expedition about\nnine  miles  north  of  Bull  River.\nE. O. Montgomery, manager ol!\nthe Consolidated Mining _ Smelting\nInterests at Klmberley, was a Ftrnie\nvisitor.\nj Grand Forks Man\nHas Hand Crushed\ngrand forkb. b. c. oet. te\u2014n\ney\" L\u00abwls was the victim of an unfortunate acldent yesterday when he had\nhis hand badly cruahed *hlle loading\nloss at Smelter Lake. Re wu mshed\nto the hospIUl aad ta now making satisfactory progress toward recovery\nthough he may lose one of hla fingers.\nAbbey..\nfor the Kidneys\nAbbey's is always beneficial where ther* ia\nPain in the Back\u2014or\nRheumatism or Neuralgia, due to an excess\nof uric acid in theblood.\nMt\nThe Morning Health Salt\nFEEL WELL AND STRONG'\ntLR. No. 3, Barton St Eaat, Haa\u2014 ton, Ont.\n\"I have to work in the store\nand do my own housework too\nand I got nervous and tun-\ndown and was in bed neatly all\nsummet. The least noise would\nmake me nervous. 1 was told to\ntake Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I have\ntaken seven bottles. It has\nmade me sttonget and put\nm-re color into my face. I get\nalong nicely now with my\nwork and with my fout children. I would like to answer\nletters.\"\u2014Mrs. J. Malin.\nme', frank ll...\nTL No. 1. Box !8, Uokln, N. -\n\"I had two babies which I\nlost at seven months. Before\nmy third baby was born my\nhusband advised me to take\nyour medicine and he bought\nme three bottles of it. When I\nhad taken the fitst one I began\nto feel bettet so I kept on during the whole period. We have\na healthy baby boy and we are\nso proud of him and praise\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound for the help it gave\nme. I feel well and sfrong.\"-\nMrs. Frank Lukes.\nLydia E. Pinkhaiu s\nVegetable Compound\ndi.i F.. I'inl.hain   Mc\u00abi \u2022 \u25a0\n.,11,! (.......;,\"   ( Inrarin, <   in \"' '\nYEARS OF RESEARCH PUT\nMARCONI\nYEARS AHEAD\nMa\nLarconi dealers\nare now showing the rqost advanced Radio Receivers of the season\u2014\nTriumph Marconi Receivers embodying lhe perfected and   proven   developments achieved through 3(1 years\nof Marconi research*\nSuperior performance, of course. Lifelike realism.    You naturally look fur that\nin Radio designed aud built hy Marconi\nengineers. And you get it in the new Triumph\nMflrooni to a degree never realized  before.\nOperative simplicity loo    .     .     ,    Reliability\n,      |        .   Man-lit.i   precision   workmanship\nguarantees that.   Cabinet beauty to\nItansi   about,   setting  a  new  und   vastly\nhigher standard  tn   harm.minus ilcsign\nsmart,   voguish,   elegant.\nUntil you've hccu ibis new Triumph\nManniii  Radio,  until you've   heard\nIt, you cannot  fully  realize what\nMarconi   research   has    areom\nplished in creating Radio that\nsurpasses    all\nprevious sla \u2022\"\u2022-\u2022\u25a0\nurds.\nU   R\n\u2014 Complete Shielding \u2014 Vour Gang Tuning\nContlensvr \u2014 _ niform Tuning \u2014 Illuminated Indicator\n\u2014 (Me Dial Station Selector \u2014\nAutomalic J oltage Regulator\nOutput (Ml \u2014 Beautiful\nttvo-ttmed walnut Cain net \u2014\nAdapter Jnek for playing\nphonograph rccurrU.\nPhone695 COLUMBIA ELECTRIC Ltd. Nelson,B.C.\n____________\n____.\n 1\nTHE NEESON CXTLY NEWS FRIDAY MORNING,r OCTOBER,\"-.'_S_T\nYOUR GARDEN\nNeeds\nOUR BULBS\nNow is the time to plant Bulbs for outdoor Spring\nFlowers, or for indoor Christmas Blooms.\nHYACINTHS, TULIPS,\nDAFFODILS and NARCISSI\nA splendid lot of new Bulbs just received.\nMANN, RUTHERFORD COe\nDispensing Chemists\nrareful Service Prompt Delivery\n150 CONVICTS IN\nCOLORADO PRISON\nMUTINY AND KILL\n(Continued From Page One)\nCity Drug Go.\nKELSON'S      I.lsri.YSIM;      CHEMISTS\n|K__,    Kodaks,    Drugs.    Stationers\n' Mall   orders   promptly   despatched.\nfcx   1088   NELSON,   B.C.   PHONE   84\n_Coma In and Qet Tour Weight Free\nHunter Electric\n& Plumbing\nPhone   530 Box   101\nNelaon, B.C.\nKitchen\nUnit-fixture\nt Complete, u; ual price $3.58\n*   WEEK END-SPECIAL\n$2.00\nWe have some wonderful values ih beautiful\nLIGHTING\nFIXTURES.\nLearn to Earn\nAT\nNelson Business College\nChina\nArtistic     presents    in\nWedgewood Sandwich sets.\nHarmony sets for two\nin blue and rose.\nBlackberry tea sets.\nYou    will    get    many\nhappy suggestions at\nD. C. ArtSKoppe\nPhone i;.i Josephine St.\narmed     transportation     beyond     the\nprison  walla.\nTo this the warden replied: \"'Oo to\nhell.\"\nShortly after a note was received\nfrom one of the guards. \"They will\nkill all ot us,\" he wrote, \"lf you\ndon't act quickly. For Ood's sake\nhelp us.\" At this time 10 guards\nwere captives of the mutineers.\nSix desperate characters, headed by\nJames Pardue, 8t. Louis bandit, serving a sentence of from 25 to 30 years\nfor robbery, are leaders of the mutiny.\nThe mutiny started at noon in the\ndining room and caught the guards\nby surprise. Within a few minutes\nthe convicts had seized the prison\narsenal where hundreds of guns are\nstored, and soon were virtually ln full\npossession of the penttentia*y.\nARMY   OV   THOUSAND\nFlames broke out In the chapel.\nthe dining room and cell  houses.\nFrom noon on blasts from the prison\nwhistle warned the town of the\nmutiny, intermittent sniping prevail\ned until late ln the afternoon.\nPolice and National Guardsmen from\nDenver, Pueblo and this city responded, and without the prison walls tonight waa an army of mote than\n1,000 persons. The outside force, assisted by hundreds of armed citizens,\nhad little effect upon the determination   of   the   mutnious   convicts.\nMachine   guns   and    light    artillery\nwere drawn   up.\nDENVER   SENDS    FORCE\nDENVER, Colo,, Oct. 3\u2014Four automobile loads of Denver policemen, led\nby Chief R. Fred Reed, tonight raced\n80 miles to Canon City with machine\nguns, tear bombs and riot guns to\nat the state penitentiary. Thirteen\nlend assistance ln the prison mutiny\ncrack shots of the Denver police force\nwere  tak eh.\nCANON CITYi Colo., Oct 3\u2014Deaths\nin the rioting which started at noon\nthe state penitentiary, reached a\ntotal before midnight at between ll\nand 13.\nYoung Flier\nNelson News of the Day\n\u00bb lan     .MeUury\n8   o'clock.\ntonlj.1.1    at\n(10709)\nToday from 3-6\u2014Presbyterian W.M.S.\ntea and bake sale, church parlors.\nProgram. ,   ' (10781)\nPresbyterian church congregational\nmeeting at 8 p.m. tonight to welcome\nRev.  Jihn  Sutherland. (10780)\nHome Cooking at\nST.    PAIL'S    CHOIR    TEA\ntomorrow (10777)\nBugle   Band   Dance   every   Saturday\nnight   at   Eagle   Hall.     K.   O's.   Four\nMoons.    Admission   75   and   25   centa.\n(10470)\nJncouellne   Kean.,   small   daughter  ot   Capt.   John   Keans   Is   seen   here   all\nJ*Ti.P for an early morning flight.   Jacqueline was up betimes when she\n^?\u201e tLdd. to mert the visiting American aviators to Toronto.     Tills photo-\n\u2122s  Jmx^e^ex^atme aerSfome while the  tiny  enthusl-t wa.  waiting\n(or the aeroplane, thrilled with anticipation.\t\nTeachers Receive\nSalary Increases\nat Fernie Schools\nTwo Night School Classes Enrolled, Three Others Are\nin Offing\nThis is the store of precise prescriptions, swift service and pleasing prices. Purity, courtesy and\npopularity of price are the three\npoints of appeal on which our business is based. Are you one of our\nregular customers?\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPhone 1\near\nDon't   forget\nST.   PAIL'S   CHOIR   TEA.\nSaturday (10778)\nL.   O. .L.   1692   lodge   meeting   posted  from  Friday   to  Saturday,   Oct.\nUh   at   8   o'clock   sharp.    K.   P.   hall.\n(10776)\npone.\nft*   _     .\nInitiations.\nPythian Sister* are requested to attend a special meeting tonight at 8\no'clock to welcome our Grand Chief.\nSister Hannah Slaughter. (10782)\nCome to the Olrl Guides whist drive\nln the Redeemer Parish hall Friday\nevening at 8 o'clock. Admission 25c\nRefreshments. (10766)\nFriday, October 4, 3-6, Presbyterian\nW. M. 6. tea and bake sale, church\nparlors, program., at 8 p.m., public\nwelcome.   Rev.   John   Sutherland,\n(10751)\nForthcoming Events\nFirst\nmday,\nPresbyterian\nNovember   22.\nBazaar\n(10779)\nFERNIE, B. C, Oct. 3\u2014At the\nregular meeting of the Berate school\nboard, W. R. Pepper waited on the\nboard in connection with some children being out of school. These cases\nwill be looked after.\nMr.\" Pepper also drew attention to\nthe fact that all students who have\nbegun high school this year will require four years for junior matriculation and five for senior matriculation. Those who began last year\nwill get by with three years for Junior matriculation. This was the new\nprovincial law, said Mr. Pepper.\nWays and means were discussed for\nproviding for the influx of beginners\nat February 1 as the class rooms are\nnow filled.\nMr. Pepper gave a report relative\nto  the   night   school.   Two   classes   are\nTrinity G. G. I. T.,\nElects Officers\nFor New Season\nAda Brawn Is Elected  President After Campaign Speech\nIs Delivered\nOVERCOATS\nValue cannot be correctly\nmeasured by price.\nThe average man usually\nhas difficulty in shifting the\ngood'from, the poor clothe*\nOut of the many that are\non the market, and then he\nia uncertain what he should\npay.\nPut your trust in Emory\n\"clothes.   They are recognized\nas  unsurpassed  for quality\nand style.   Let us show you\nthe new overcoats.\n$25 to $85\nEMORYS ltd.\nEach\nbeen\nthe   var.\nAt  the  second   fall   meeting  of   tba\nTrinity   Canadian   Girls   ln   Training,\nwith a group  name and  m\u00bbtto.\nlors,   girls   who   had   previously\nnominated   were   elected\nlous   offices.\nAfter the meeting had been opened\nby singing \"Follow the Gleam\" and\na short talk, by Departmental Superintendent Elva O. Hanna, each of the\nnominees   gave   her   campaign   speech.\nOfficers elected were: Ada Brawn,\npresident; Marion Burnett, secretary;\nAda Saare, treasurer; Hazel Hulls, news\nscribe;   Idna Buchanan,   planiste.\nOfficers of the Individual groups\nwere later elected in the group rooms.\nLeaders of the C. G. I. T., which is\ndivided Into four groups this year,\nare Elva G. Hanna, Leona Boss, Charlotte   Jeffs,   Dorothy   Bowman.\nNew   officers   elected   in   the   senior\nElectric Ranges\nMake old kitchens   new,   modern and\ntwice as efficient. \u2022\nSee the display at our showrooms.\nThe City of Nelson\n\"TTC. Plumbing &\nHeating Co.\nAgents for\nALBERTA   CLAY    PRODUCTS\nSEWER PIPE & DRAIN TILE\n306 Baker Streat Nelson. B.C.\nLong\nWinter\nNights\nReading, sewing, and long\nhours of use by artificial light,\nbrings  on  eye   sight   troubles.\nWe relieve such, making your\nreading   and  sewing   a   pleasure.\nJ. A. C. Laughton R.O.\nSpecializing   In   Eyesight   Defects\nIn the Orlffin Block\nElks Taxi-Transfer\nPhone 77\nSedan \u2014 Cut\nBar uul Night Santo* ,\nBMgtn ud Kxpre*.\n,r\nUse\n\"Bapco\" Paint\nFor Fall Painting\nThis is the best ready-mixed paint we can b*y and\nwe carry a wide range of colors to choose front, also\n1 Turpentine, Linseed Oil and Brushes.\nCOLOR  CARDS  AND PRICES ON BEQUEST\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nwnoie\u00ab.u\u00ab NELSON, B. C.        **\u2022\u00ab\u2022*\u00bb\n-__Wrt--Hti__-NMMk. Jmm\\mm\\\\\\\\m\\\\\\xm,\nalready  enrolled   and  will   begin  work of   whlch   MlM   H\nimmediately. Three others are in the     ,efl4er    were.    Ed       arie   Buchanan,\noffing.  The  bookkeeping   class  has an ident;   Ma      Qpear<   vice-president:\nenrollment of  15;   the dressmaking  13.   vlctorta Gradakl  8ecretary; and Winnie\nThe minimum for a  class  is   10.  Five   CoIematli  trea_urer.\nhave enrolled  for wood  working,  three\nfor  mining  and  three  for  commercial\narithmetic.   These   latter   two, will   be\ncombined    ln    order    to    jtaptng    the\nnumbers   up  and  enable   the   class   to\nbe   organized.\nBOOKKEEPING    CUSSES\nFirst and secon year bookkeeping\nwill be taught by J. C. Oonnlck. Dressmaking will be ln charge of Mrs. D.\nG. Alexander. G. B. Dickson la the\nteacher for commercial arithmetic, J.\nR. Leask for mining, Mrs. Harold\nWhite ls the proposed teacher for shorthand, for which only one pupil has\nenrolled; Miss Isabel Dicken for \"Eng_\nllsh for foreigners,\" enrollment of\nthree  so  far;   Mr.  c.  V.  Stainsby  for\nwood    working,    enrollment    of    five.\nSchool   nurse   Seymour   will   give   pre-\nnatan   and   Infant  nursing   if   a  class\nis formed.\nHigh school teachers had their salaries increased as follows: Mlas Thompson  from   S1920   to  $1980;   Miss   Cot-\ntlngham   from   $1740   to   $1830;    Miss\nDwinnell   from   $1800   to   1860.\nOTHERS   INCREASED\nThe public schcol teachers had their\nsalaries   Increased  as   follows,   in  conformity with the fixed schedule which\ncovers years of experience and position\nwith   regard   to   platoon   system:   Miss\nWolfenden   was  at  the  maximum;   Mr.\nLeask will get $1300;  Mies Gibson will\nget the maximum of $1800;  Miss MacDonald  $1600;  Miss D.  Dicken will  be\nriased   frcm   $1650   to   $1600;   William\nDuncan   from   $1200    to    $1260;    Miss\nFreney   will   get  $1350;   Mlaa  Anderson\n$1500:   Miss   Caufleld   from   $1100   to\n$1160;   Miss   Barton   gets   $1150;   Miss\nWallace   and   Miss   I.   Dlaken   are   at\nthe   maximum    of   $1400    and    $1500,\nrespectively;  Miss Bean will get $1050;\n41450  during Mr.   Elley's  absence  and\nMiss Ferguson will get at the rate of\n$1300    thereafter;    Mlas    Reynolds    up\nto   $1300   from   $1250;   Miss   McKenzie\nto   $14*00   from   $1330.    The    domestic\nscience   teacher   will   get   $1500;   the\nschool   nurse   $1650   and   the   manual\ntraining   teacher  $1900.     There  are  on\na special  schedule.\nMrs.   Porter   will   receive   a   rebate\nof  $12.50  on  account  of  the  fees of\nher daughter, Helen Bla(r,  who Is attending    school    from    put    of   town.\nThis is due her for time she was resident in Fernie\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALS\nSunlight Soap, 5 cartons $1.00\nKing Oscar Sardines, 6 tins for fl.00\nSalmon, half pound tins, 9 for $1.00\nSoda Biscuits, Red Arrow, 5 packets for $1.00\nMalkin's Best Jelly Powder.     4 for 26\nCampbell's Soups.    7 .for    $1.00\nPen and Pencil Scribblers and Pencils\n7 for _ 25\nMaple Leaf Grocery\nJ. P. Herron\n911 Stanley Si Phone 101\nFred Starkey Says\nMining Convention\nBig Event, Spokane\nS. A' Easton Suggests Tariff\nMight Be Raised to Protect\nWashington Mines\nIn the senior group rcH call next\nweek ls to be answered by each girl\nwith a roup name and motto, Each\nmember will also work out an invocation and closing for the meeting.\nNew officers elected in Mise Boas'\ngroup were: .Marion Burnett, president; Edith Goldsmith, vice-president;\nLaura Sheehan, secretary and newa\nscribe;  Pauline Wade, treasurer.\nNew officers elected in Miss Bowman. r>\ngroup were: Annie Wllletts, president;\nRosemary Talbot, vice.presldent; Gladys\nTeague, secreliary; laVeada \u2022 Larson,\ntreasurer.\nNew officers elected in Miss Jeffs'\ngroup were: Ruth Allen, president;\nJean Holtby, vice-president; Margaret\nBurnett, secretary; Clara Tallberg,\ntreasurer;   Helen   Breeze,   news   scribe.\nThe next meeting of the Trinity\nC. G. I. T. each group meeting In\nits own room for the purpose of selecting a name, motto and project\nfor the coming year, which it is expected will be a year of great success\nand   accomplishments   \u2014-*\u25a0--   \u25a0>\u25a0*\u25a0\u2014   -\u00bb--\n.44 Taxi and Transfer |\nPhone  44      Con  cummini      Box\nFreight and Express Service Dally j\nIncluding    All    Intermediate    PolnteJ\n9 a.m.\u2014Nelson to Trail and Roeal\n7   un.\u2014Slocan   City,   8llvertoi_   Nef\nDenver and Sandon,\nunder   the\nFred A. Starkey, chairman of the\nNelson board of trade mining committee, who has Just returned from attending the Western mining con ven.\ntion ln progress at Spokane during\nthe entire week, states that the convention has been one of the best yet\nand that many old time mining men\nwere  present   at  the  sessions.\nOne of the pertinent points ot interest to British Columbia mining men\noame up in the luncheon address of\nStanley A. Easton, manager of the\nBunker HUI & Sullivan mine of Kellogg, Idaho, who, ln touching on the\nmagnlty of the organization which he\nrepresented admitted that though the\nBunker Hill & Sullivan was large, that\nthe mine at Klmberley far exceeded\nit ln production. Going further he\npointed out that at present there waa\nno competition between the two, due\nto a protecting tariff. In the future,\nhowever, he time might come when\ncompeltlon would necessitate the raising of the tariff as a further protective measure.\nYesterday various parties of the convention left Spokane on motor tours\nthrough the various mining districts\nnot too fSr removed from the city.\nIn speaking of the chamber of mines\niable supervision of the new  officers. | ore  exhibit  which  was  on   display   at\nthe convention Mr. Starkey proffered\nthe information that tbe samples\nfrom the district had caused a good\ndeal of Interesting comment and that\nmany questions were In order concerning the various phases of mines\nand mining ln  the Interior.\nCharming Group\nof Women, Peace\nRiver, States\nFINE FOOD PRODUCTS\nII you're at all particular, patronize\nthla nearby grocery. All your lavorlte\nfood product* are here\u2014ln tlna, Jars,\npackages and in bulk. Jam lor the\nkiddles; fresh-packed preserved fruits\nfor tasty desserts; fancy groceries-\nplus prompt, courteous service and\nlow prices.\nTHE ELITE GROCERY\n\u00ab22-4 Baker Street\nEDMONTON, Alta.. o$t. 3.\u2014\"I have\nnever met a more charming group of\nwomen anywhere,\" declared one woman from eastern Canada, referring to\nthe reception given by the Women's\nCanadlaan club of Peace River ln honor\nof Uie wives and daughters of tho\nvisiting delegates on the Canadian\nChamber of Commerce tour.\n\"I suppose that ia a manufacturer,\nof cottons, silks and woolen goods.\nI noticed particularly the way the\npeople were dressed,\" said one man\nin the party. \"There seemed little evidence of poverty. Tae girls were as\nprettily dressed and as up-to-date in\nthe clothes they wore as the girls of\nent in Fernie *'   v .Montreal, Toronto and Edmonton. The\nThe   Fernie   board   will   collect   fees!men-  *\u00bb\u25a0  \".***** in tnelr ?vera1?'\ndirectly  from  the out of  town  boards; were  as wel1  drwsed  &* ftny  \u00b0'  \u00ab\u25a0  ln\nIn   the   case   of   students   under   the\nage of 15. This applies to several students attending school here from Tjor-\nbin.\nA letter was read containing detailed\ninformation relative to a gymnasium.\nMiss Nettle Nlcolettl wrote requesting to be allowed to get as substitute teacher In cases of absences\nfrom the regular staff. Her application\nwas filed.\nI.KAVIM.   NOTHING   TO   CHANCE\nGlasgow\u2014From the Olasgow Herald\nof  100 years ago:\nMistakes ln Heaven Prevented\u2014The\nminister of a village not 100 milcB\nfrom Edinburgh, a few Sundays ago,\nconcluded the service of the day with\nthe following pious prayer: \"O Lord\nshower thy blessings oo the illustrious family at present resident in this\nneighborhood; and for fear there\nshould be any mistake, It is the Earl\nof   Hopetown   I   mean.\"\nUl\nThat the Entomological branch oi\nthe Dominion department ef agriculture li waging an earnest war against\nIMsM, ft. 0. imect petts and plMt Oiaww?\nwere as ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nthe   party.\"\n\"It is a wonderful country for young\npeople,\" said Mrs. M. Kennedy, mother\nof R. H. Kennedy, treasurer of Uie\nQuebec board of trade, who took the\ntrip with her son. \"I think that young\ncouples starting life ln that country\ncould make a great deal of money,\"\nBhe sad. \"The settlers' homes seemed\nprimitive but very comfortable, and\ncertainly in that country they never\nwant for food. With their oVn cow,\ntheir own butter, fowls and beautiful\ngardens, they can provide better dinners than you usually can have in the\ncity. The beautiful scenery, so different\nfrom the east, is an attraction.\"\nMiss Lambert of London, who is\ntravelling with her father, Hon. George\nLambert, and several other younger\nmembers of the party had a \"glorious\"\ntime,\" they sad. They loved the motoe\ntripe, and like their seniors were Impressed with the culture and progressive spirit which they had thought\nImpossible  so far  removed\nThat the higher waistline Is being\ndefinitely acented ln slender belts of\nthe fabric of leather, while shirring or\nInverted tucks are Important ln this\nrespect, placed at the sides or front\nor emanating from verical straps applied to the front or one side of the\nblouse?\nThat at one of New York's leading\ndress openings this week skirt lengths\nvaried for sports wear and three inches\nbelow the knee wa -advocated, extending to eight Inches in afternoon costumes, while for evening wear ankle\nlength was stressed, with attentuatlons\nto the floor at the sides or back?\nWomen golfers at St. Andrew's famous course on medal week sponsored\nelaborate ensemble thems, many wo-\nmn carrying golf bags and golfing umbrellas ln colors to match their tweed\nsuits, while a number of the women\nspectators were dressed entirely ln\ntweeds, including the suit, hat and bag,\nand carried walking sticks with crook\nhandles covered with tbe tweed, and\nwith tweel cardigans, tuck-in shirts\nwere worn, but the smartest younger\nwomen adopted short sweaters terminating with narrow ribbing Jjust below  the  waistline.\n\"Marriage, rather than a sacrament.\nIs an art, with Ma own artuou\u00bb preliminary  technique.\"\n\u2014Henry  L.\nPaquln  sponsors  the  season's  vogue\nfor blue, or silver fox on  black.\nINCREASED\nFACILITIES\nto give more prompt service\nIn our\nPrescription Work\npow   in   charge   of   G.   Merton\nRose, formerly with Norman Cull\nof  Vancouver,\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist ind Optlolan\nIxpert Optical Bertie*.\nGROCERY\nSPECIALS\nFRIDAY  AND  SATUttDAt\n1 lb. Braids Best Tea,  \u25a0      '\nwith  cut saucer     70o\n22  Cakes  D Jt O Soap  .... 1.00\n1 Carton Fela Soap     SOc\n3 large cans choice Peas,\nCorn and Tomatoes .... 1.00\n9 pkts. Kelloggs Flakes ....\" 1.00'\n8   Cans   Blue   Mountain\nSliced Pineapple     tte\n2 pkts.  All  Bran      tae\n2 pkkts. Shreaded Wheat ...   \u00abto\n1.00 boxes Sodas      60o\n1 Large Pkt Oraham Wafers 40c\n4 lbs. Dates      4SC\n4 pkts. Jelly Powder     26c\"\n2 tins Corned Beef     4So\n1 pkg. Rolled Wheat ....     26o\nPure Pickling Vinegar *\nper   gal  1^0\n2 lb. tins Ve Tone for   14\u00bb\nChoicest  Premium Bacon\nSliced,   lb    WO\nFor   High   Class   Groceries\nservice and Satisfaction\nPhone 110 '\nThe Sugar Bowl\nGrocery |\n**\n- TONIGHT -\n7 and 9 p. m.\nAl Jolson\nIN\n-The Singing Poor\nThe perfect blending oi\npathos and humor which\nmake the ideal picture.\nComing Monday\nJazz!!\nSyncopation\nFeaturing\nWeirings Pennsylvanians\nVL\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1929_10_04","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0405036","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1929-10-04 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":"1929-10-04 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}