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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":" Kimberley Does Not Favor\nCoast Puck Entry\n\u2014 Pa&e Seven\n_\n-\n\t\n\" ' \u2022'     - nun\nt   \"KOVIMCUL   L\n*   VICT0*li*t  C\n\u2022fff ^a\nK\n[M\nwm\nWheat Collapses in the\nChicago Pit\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nVOLUMIM\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER $0. 1934\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNUMMB ISS\nSMITH READY FOR FLIGHT TO OAKLAND\nTEMPERATURES\nTAKE BIG DIP\nIN SOUTHWEST\nThermometer    Under\nSeasonal Average\nin Some States\nOVERCOATS MAKE\nAN EARLY DEBUT\n\"Withdraw\" Is Challenge\nHurled at Upton Sinclair\nFrost Over Georgia\nand Carolines; No\nChange Expected\n(By thi Associated Preu)\nA hint of approaching winter\nbrought topcoats out of the moth\nballs over a large part of the United\nStates Monday.\nThe southeast felt its chilliest\nweather of the season while the\nweather bureau reported tempera-\ntun over all the country were blow\nthe seasonal average. Little change\nwu expected for several dayi.\nIn New England temperatures\ndown around freettng were felt.\nNew York had a minimum Monday\nof 36, the same experienced by Chicago ond much of the middle west.\nSome of the northerly cities -f the\nmid-west, however, uw the mercury ilip down aa low ai 30 degrees.\nAt Ashevllle, N.C, the minimum\nwas 28. On the west coast San Francisco reported a minimum of M\nwhile Seattle had a low ot 46 degrees.\nShreveport, La., felt 40-degree\nweather along with many southwestern citiei. There was froit over\nmuch of Georgia and eectlons of\nNorth and S uth Caroline, extending west to Kentucky.\nWARM IN ALASKA\nKETCHIKAN, Alaska.. Oct. 29\n(AP).\u2014Residents of loufjeaLi-n\nAlaska sympathize with the New\nEngland and eutern state!;, ai cold\nweather layi-over them. I' was 62\nabove here today. No snow baa\n* fallen yet.\nQUAKESHAKES\nHER FROM BED\nBuildings Sway and\nDishes Fall But No\nSerious Damage\nERIE. Pa., Oct. 29 (API-Downtown and residential Erie was shaken from end to end today by an\nearth disturbance.\nBuildings swayed, housewives reported dishes fell from cupboard\nshelves and there was intense excitement but no serious damage occurred. One woman said she was\nthrown from her bed while asleep.\nThe ahock occurred after 3 p.m.,\nand waa felt only for an instance.\nThe seismograph observer at the\nUniversity of Pittsburgh reported ft\nslight shock had been registered\nwithin close proximity at 3:08 pjn.\nT\nUHIBHCS\nA REPUBLICAN\nPatriotism   Stronger\nThan Blindness for\nParty, He Says\nSINCLAIR CLAIMS\nA MILLION VOTES\nCalifornia Battle Is\nHotter Than Ever;\nGo to Courts\nSAN FRANCISCO, Oct. M (API-\nTile tempo of California's political\ncampaign, already at fever pitch.\nIncreased tonight with a LOs Angeles Democratic leader announring\nlie will support acting Governor\nFrank F. Merriam. Republican, and\nUpton Sinclair, Dcmocrstlr nominee, declining an opponent's plea\nto withdraw, with the statement\nthat he had a \"million votes.\"\nWilliam H. Nehlett, Democratic\nleader and law partner ot V. >>\u25a0 Senator William Ulbhs McAdoo, announced he wlll support Oovernor\nMerriam and Republican normlners\nOeorge I. Hatfield for Lieutenant-\ngovernor and Lawrence Cobb for\nstate senator ln Los Angeles.\nContinued  on Page Tin)\nHIT BUFFALO\nBUFFALO, N.Y., Oct. 29 (AP)-\nTossinR sea gulls into the air like\nfeathers and crashing against the\nsea wall and docks, five huge waterspouts roared into Buffalo harbor\nfrom Lake Erie today amidst snow\nand a near gale wind.\nAt least 100 to 800 feet high, the\nspouia travelled in Indian file as\nthey swirled Into the harbor from\na black spot on the lake about a\nmile southwest pf the city.\nPushing averythlng upward In\ntheir wake, the blasts of water spent\nthemselves againit the break wall\nand docks along the harbor shore\nwithout causing any damage.\nKick From Cow\nFatal for Farmer\nDelegates Match Wits tn London\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 99 (OP) .-A kick\nfrom a cow la usually not serious,\nhut lt appeared tonight it would\nbe fatal for Oeorge Dougthy, 85.\nRiding In a truck with a load of\ncows, he was kicked out of the\nvehicle. Hla skull waa fractured.\nLittle hope for his recover; Is held.\nLarge Scale Production Is\nYmir-Goodenough Aim\n100-ton Mill to Be Provided at Once, to Be\nStepped Up by Successive Stages\nto 400 or Better\nCREW RECONDITIONING WORKINGS\nOF YMIR FOR EARLY PRODUCTION\nGoodenough Switches From Shipping to Development While Waiting; Will Find\n30 Per Cent of Feed\nBy H. H. CURRIE\nOnce the largest independent gold producer the Kootenay has known, with 80 stamps dancing upon mill feed from\n10 levels ol its great ore zone, and a huge cyanide plant supplementing this process, the great Ymir mine, after a shutdown of 26 years, within a few days will have 70 picked\nminers and timbermen in its tunnels, raises and stopes preparing it for an operation that is designed to reach, by successive stages, the largest scale of its past history.\nSimultaneously, from the stock issue of the new public\ncompany, Ymir Consolidated Gold Mines, Limited\u2014part of\nthe subscription being a dividend on Goodenough earnings\nfrom the late private company, Ymir Gold Mines, Limited\u2014\na 100-ton modern mill unit will be installed in a part of the\nstrongly-built cyanide plant structure of the early days, a\nfirst unit that will start the program on its way toward an\neventual 400 or 500-ton basis.   A contract for this 100-ton\n(Contitiuid an Pigi Two)\nRepresentatives from thru nations, Great Britain, United Statu\nand Japan, are In London to haggle over terms for a new naval treaty to\nreplace the old London Naval Treaty which divided the ratio of navies\non a S-6-3 bails, with Japan on tha ihort end. Now Jipan Is demanding\nequality;-The representatives era shown above. Top, M. Matiudara\n(lift), Japanese ambaisidor it London, and Reir Admiral Yamamoto.\nCenter, Norman H. Davis, United SUtes envoy-at-large. Below, Sir\nJohn Simon (left) and Sir Bolton Eyrti-Momell, first lord of admiralty.\nJUSTWiWILL\nGETACAB1NET\nJOB FROM B.C.\nStirling,  Fraser and\nDickie Mentioned\nin the Rumors\nMANION MAY GIT\nTHE TRADE POST\nJAPAN'S NAVAL PLAN\nIS NOT ACCEPTABLE\ntlilllllllllllllll'llilimilllllllllllllllllll\n33 GET DOSE OF\nCASTOR OIL\nAND DIE\nDAR - ES - SALEM, Tanganyika, OcL 29 (CP-Havas).\u2014\nThirty-three native girl pupils\nof a school here complained as\nusual that the castor oil tasted\n\"nasty\" and then they died.\nBy road and air, medical relief was being rushed today in\na desperate attempt to save other\nchildren who lay in agony.\nThe government decreed a\nban on castor oil throughout the\ncountry pending Investigation.\niliiiiiililliiiliiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nMcGEER IS IN\nMAYORAL RACE\nLittle Possibility of a Compromise; May End Limitation Pact\nVANCOUVER. Oct. 39 (CP).-Hon.\nO. O. McOeer, K.C, M.L.A., has\nglveu definite assurance of his candidature In the forthcoming mayoral\nelection. Formal announcement Is\nexpected within a few days, with\nthe prospect lt will be a straight\ntwo-man fight with Mayor L. D-\nTtylor.\nBy HAROLD P. I1RAMAN\nAssociated press staff Writer\nLONDON; Oct. 39 (AP)\u2014 Japanese\nproposals for a new naval treaty to\nsupplant the London and Washington pacts are not acceptable to the\nBritish snd United States delegates,\nIt was learned today.\nTho Japanese. It was understood,\nhave been informed that the two\npowers are unable to accept Japan's\nflat declaration of the principle of\neuuallty snd their proposal for a\nmaximum or global tonnage basis\nof limiting armament*.\nThe next move ln the vital discussions waa therefore up to the Japanese, it waa understood that unless\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nSargood Goes\nto Essondale\nVICTORIA. Oct. 30 (CP)\u2014The\nformal order committing T.-A. Sargood. to Essondale hospital waa\npassed by the cabinet today.\nSargood was found unable by reason insanity to stand trial on a\ncharge murdering Dr. a. P. Proctor ln Vancouver.\nTm a Ring-Tailed Roaring Son of\na Gun,\" Shouts Negro Sweep Winner\nHolders of Horses In United Statei Have Various Plans for Spending\nCoin; Olrl Quits School; Another Dolls Up for Photographer\nNEW YORK, Oct. 20 (AP).-A\ncolored janitor just otf Park avenue\nstrutted into his basement today,\nshouting:\n\"Burn down the house: I'm a ring-\ntailed roaring son of a gun.\"\nHe had just been Informed that\nhli wife, Gertrude, had drawn a\nlucky ticket In the Irish hospital\nsweepstakes.\n\"Good luck has come my way.\"\nyelled the janitor, Everett Godfery,\nformerly of the Weit Indies, He\nroused his wife, who was 111. and\nwho had aigned herself \"Unlucky\nSue.\"\n\"I feel weak,\" said \"Unlucky Sue,\"\nand collapsed in a chair.\nAs cables began sending in the\nnames of 51i residents of the United\nSlates, who were sure of dividing\n$1,030,000 in prizes, \"lucky\" New\nYorkers began their celebrations.\nA 13-year-old schoolgirl In\nQuoens, a I'd ribbon in her hair, decided to \"stay home from school.\"\nA music teacher ln public school\nplanned an European tour.\nA mechanic yelled, \"What,\" and\ndropped the telephone.\nA Brooklyn stenographer excused\nhereon and went home to \"doll up\"\ntor photographers.\nThe race will be run next Wednesday at Newmarket, England. Every\nperson Who drew a horse will receive $2000. If his horse wins, the\nlucky holder of thc winning ticket\nwill get f 150,000. Second place pays\n$75,000 and (bird place $50,000.\nMore Fitted for Job\nThrough His Long\nExperience\nOTTAWA, Oot 29-Just what\nwlll happen In cabinet attain following resignation of Hon. H- H.\nSteveni,  mlnltter of trada and\ncommerce li tha question balng\nasked on all sides at preient.\nThe name of Hon. R. J. Manion\nla mentioned ln  connection  with\nthe  vacant  trade  and   commerce\nportfolio. The department of railways and canals, over which Dr.\nManion presides, waa at one time\none ot the most important in the\ngovernment. For yean, however. Its\nwork hai been gradually shrinking.\nContinued on Paga Ten)\nMarkets at\na Glance\n(By the Canadian Praia)\nToronto and Montreal: Industrial\nstoeki lower.\nToronto mines: Irregularly lower.\nNew York: Stock! lower and\nheavy at close.\nWinnipeg: Wheat down H to %.\nToronto: Bacon hogs off car down\n10 centa to 8.25.\nLondon: Higher silver, tin and\nlead lower, copper and zinc higher.\nNew York: Bar silver and 'tin\nlower; zinc higher; lead unchanged.\nMontreal: December silver lower.\nNew York: Rubber higher; cotton,\nsugar and coffee lower.\nNew York: Canadian dollar up\n1-16 to 1.02 3-16.\n50,000 Homeless\nond Crops Lost.'\nin Chinese Flood\nHAIFENO, Honan Province, China\nOct. tS (API\u2014More than 60,000\nChinese were made homeless today\nby the \/aln swollen Yellow river\nwhich broke over Its north banks\nand submerged ISO square miles of\nfarm lands In northern Honan, In\nthe vicinity of Wuchln and Menjli-\nslon.\nPeanut and corn crops were destroyed, grain stocks ruined and\nhundreds of buildings Inundated.\nBURNS FATAL\nBKLLA BBLLA. B.C.. Oot. JO (CP)\n\u2014Fatally burned when her dreas\ncaught fire while ahe was playing\nwltb matches, Cecilia, three-year-\nold daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vlckers, Is dead here.\nTatoo Will Keep\nGypsies Identified\nBUDAPEST, Hungary, Oct. as (AP)\n\u2014Authorities declared today that\nhereafter all Gipsies born ln the\nFacial! district of Hungary wlll be\nbranded with Tattoo marks showing\nthe date and place of their birth,\ntogether with tbe name of each Individual.\nAuthorities explained that they\nwished to prevent the Gipsies from\nwandering and changing their identity when accused of horse stealing\nand other misdeeds.\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON    $4 48\nVictoria - 48 51\nNanalmo  43 55\nVancouver 44 58\nAtlln    20 34\nKamloops 38 50\nPrince George  32 36\nPrince Rupert  44 58\nEstevan Point _. 52 68\nSpokane  34 52\nPortland,  Ore 54 62\nSeattle 44 46\nSan Franciico 54 66\nPenticton    41\nGrand Forks  38\nVernon    39\nCalgary  38 42\nEdmonton     18 40\nQu'Appelle   - 20 86\nCranbrook 38 44\nWinnipeg  24 38\nMoose Jaw 26 40\nSwift Current 24 34\nDawson    4 30\nPrince Albert   24 34\nForecast for Nelson and vicinity\u2014\nMostly cloudy and mild.\nin ii uriiaii i iai laini \u25a0 i \u25a0 i in I\nWILL CONTINUE\nPOLICY WHEAT\nSTABILIZATION\nWINNIPEG. Oct 28 (CP)-\nWhatever restrictions or control the federal government\nplaces on the Winnipeg grain\nexchange, the stabilization poll-\nmy will be continued. It was announced tonight by John I. McFarland, general manager of\nthe Canadian wheat pools central selling agency ana In charge\nof government operation! on\nthe Winnipeg exchange\nWithout indicating what form\nthe restrictions may take if they\nare imposed, Mr. McFarland declared that the government\nagency will continue to provide\nfacilities for the marketing of\nweitern Canada'i wheat crop.\nii i ii \u25a0 ii ii in ii i ii ii i mn mi \u25a0 ti \u25a0 in is i i\nWAVES CRASH\nOVER STEAMER\nPart of Bridge on the\nLetitia Carried Off\non the Atlantic\nMONTREAL, Oct. 29 (CP) -\nShowing the effecti of a levere\nbattering by high aeai In what memben of the crew described as one of\nthe wont stormi they have ever\nseen, the liner Letitia limped into\nport here tonight.\nPart of the liner's bridge hid\nbeen smashed in by the heavy leaa\nand one of her lifeboat! carried\naway in mid-Atlantic. Water was\nsent crashing over the ship's decks\nfrom stem to stern aa huge waves\nswept over her bow, smashing in\nthe bridge on the port side. Terrific\nseas and the wild weather forced\nthe ship to fall considerably behind\nschedule.\nAfter shoving her way through\nthe Atlantic itorrn, the liner encountered more rough weather while\nsteaming up the St. Lawrence Sunday. She wai caught ln the grip of\nthe same gale that forced abandonment ot the foundering ichooner,\nMaria Lydia, which lost three ol\nher crew in the stormy -\u2022Wateri.\nBRITISH HOUSE\nTO SIT TODAY\nLONDON, Oct. 29 (CP-AP)-A\nheavy program of Important social,\neconomic ond political legislation,\nheaded by the vital problem of\nhome rule In India, faces parliament, which reconvene! tomorrow\nafter the summer holiday to wind\nup the attain ot the old session and\nprepare for the itate opening ot the\nnew parliament by the King ln\nNovember.\nThe cabinet met today to put the\nfinishing touches on the policies lt\nWill present, but consideration of\nthe report on India is likely to be\npostponed, along with moit of the\nother Important Issues, until the\nnew session.\nCRANBROOK GETS\n$1500 LOAN FOR\nRELIEF PURPOSES\nVICTORIA, Oct 29 (CP).\u2014A\nloan of $1500 for relief financing\nto the municipality of Cranbrook\nhai been authorized by tha British\nColumbia government.\nOne of Quints\nGains an Ounce\nCALLANDJR. Ont.. Oct. 9a (CP)\u2014\nLittle Marie, smallest of tha famous\nflve-montha-and-one-day-old Dlonne\nquintuplets, gained an ounce ln\nweight today while three of her\nlisters loat weight md the fourth\nremained stationary.\nAll the children were reported well,\nhowever, apparently enjoying both\nthe bracing chill fall all', In which\nthsy spend about five houra a day,\nand their new diet of cow's milk\nand cooked cereal.\nCroll May Be\nLabor Minister\nTORONTO. Oct. 29 (CP).\u2014Posit\nblllty of Hon. David Croll, minister\nof public welfare and municipal at*\nfairs, succeeding to the Ontario port*\nfolio of labor, at present held by\nHon. Arthur Roebuck, attorney-general, was forecast ln authoritative\nclrclea tonight.\nGETS PACIFIC WEATHER DOPE\nAFTERSUCCESSFUL HOP FROM\nFIJI ISLANDS TO HONOLULU\nFitzmaurice Forced to\nReturn to England\nby Bad Engine\nWaller and Jones Arts\nUnsuccessful in Try\nto Beat Scott \u2022\n(By the  Associated  Press).\nAerial adventurei were scattered around the world yesterday and\nlait night in a series of spectacular distance flights.\nHONOLULU\u2014Sir Charles Kingsford-Smith set down hii monoplane.\nLady Southern Cross, after a flight ot 3197 miles from the Fiji Island! en\nroute to California.\nCROYDON. Eng.\u2014James Fitzmaurice and Eric Bonar, pilots of tha\n\"Irish Swoop,\" were laid up here with mechanical difficulties alter starting a flight to Australia in the hope of beating records established ln tht\nrecent air derby.\n, ALLAHABAD, Indla-Cathcart Jones and Ken Waller, derby flyera\non a back-track flight from Australia to England, rested overnight, their\naverage meed on the return trip will over 200 miles an*our.\nMELBOURNE\u2014Eight more plmei in the England-to-Australia air\nderby were still awaited here. Three of them had reached Australian\nsoil.   Stodarts of Britain land from England.\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. *\u00bb (AT)\u2014\nThe Motion liner Lurllne at I p.m.\n(coast standard time) tonight,\n1900 miles east of Honolulu, received a radio menage trtm uiwiai\nKlngsford-amlth, (transpacific filar,\nat Honolulu, requesting Information as to weather conditions, the\nline's officers here reported tonight.\nThe ihlp replied that there were\nheavy swells and the iky wai overcast, but the barometer wu high.\nIndicating favorable weather.\nThe filer did not Indicate In hla\nrequest whether he planned to\nUke Off Immediately for California\nIf the weather report wu satisfactory to him, but the ship mei-\nLOUTELLEGEN\nIS A SUICIDE\nMatinee Idol of the\nSilent Films Stabbs\nSelf With Scissors\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 2\u00bb <AP).-\nLou Tellegen, mitlnee idol of the\nsilent film days, died todiy from\nseven stab wounds id hia breast\nwhich police said he apparently in*\nflicted with a pair ot sciisors.\nThe former huiband of Oeraldine\nFarrar, the opera linger, wu found\ndying in a bathroom of Ml home,\nthe blood-stained scisaon near hla\noutstretched right arm. Tellegen, 92\nyean old, died an hour later.      ,\nIU health and the fear h\u00ab wu losing bit mind were aeedbad by folk-; and hla phyiiqlan ai the probable nuon for the act Detective\nLieut Frank Egan, who conducted\nan investigation, reported the death\nwas undoubtedly suicide.\nALBERTA JOBLESS\nON WAY KOOTENAY\nCALGARY, Oct 29 (CP)-Flve\nhundred unemployed single man\nwlll ba sent from Calgary to work\ncampi In the Kooteniy district of\nBritish Columbli, A. A. Mackenale, chslrmsn of the Alberta relief commlulon itated here today.\nA similar number wlll ba sent\nfrom Edmonton,\nTha flrtt contingent of tha men\nirrlved from Edmonton thli morning by but. They wlll be Joined by\na party of Calgary jobless todiy\nand wlll go from hara by train to\ntha Eut Kootenay dlitrlct,\nUS OET FOOD POISONING\nANN ARBOR, Mich., Oct. 39 (AP)\n\u2014One hundred md 25 staff mem*\nbers of the University hospital wers\nrecovering here today from mild\nIllnesses diagnosed u food poison\nIng. Source ot the poison hu not\nbeen determined.\n(Contlnutd on Page Ttn)\n13INJURED\nIN GAS BLAST\nOAKLAND. Calif., Oct. 39 (API-*\nThirteen persona wera Injured and\neight buildings damaged by i terrttW\nexplosion of accumulated gat ln al\nbungalow court, four-family apart*\nment house here today.\nFire which broke out attar tM\nexplosion, spread through the apart*\nment building. The total damiga\nwas estimated at Mo.ooo by fireman,\nMra, Dena Pavlch, the mott seriously Injured, received a possible\nfractured pelvis wben the porch roof\not tht apartment collapsed on her.\nOthers Injured were burned, bruised\nor cut by flying glass.\nGROOM KAYOED\nWHEN RICE IS\nTHROWN IN BAG\nMANVILLE, N.J., Oet 29 (AP).\n\u2014Rice, traditionally showered on\nbrides ind bridegrooms, almost\nruined tht wedding of Joseph\nOdki ind Mill Katherine Tloz-\nIlllo.\nOna wilt wither loit hli haad\nand threw flvt poundi of riot it\ntht couplt without Uklng tht rict\nout of tht big. Odka wai knocked\nunconscious. Ht wai revived ifter\ntomt difficulty and wu able to\nleave on hii honeymoon.\nKENNEDY APPOINTED CHAIRMAN F(Mt\nMASS BUYING PROBE OPENING TODAY\n-*\nReciprocal Plan\non Death Duties\nVICTORIA, Oct. 39 (OP)\u2014Appll-\ncation of tht Probates Recognition\nact of British Columlba to the province of prince Edward Island has\nbeen approved by tht government\nhere to put Into effect with that\nprovince a reciprocity arrangement\neliminating the need for payment of\ndouble death duties where estates\nara partly within both provlncea.\nSimilar arrangements art ln effect\nwtth Ontario and Alberta.\n8HARP 'QUAKE IN ECUADOR\nGUAYAOUIL, Ecuador Oct. 29\n(AP)\u2014A snarp earthquake shock\nwai felt here at 6:15 pjn. todiy.\nThere wai no immediate report of\nany damage.\nHanson, New Brunswick Member, May Get\nCabinet Post; Confers With tbe Premier\nOTTAWA. Oct. 99 (CP)\u2014Tht conference here today between R. P.\nHsnson and Premier R. B. Bennett\ngave rise to rumors that Mr. Ban-\nson wu to be taken Into the cabinet. He Is the Conservative member\nfor Vork-Sunbury, N.B, and as the\nNew Brunswick representative would\nreplace  Hon. Murray  MacLaren.\nFor aome yeara the appointment\nof Col. MacLaren to be lieutenant-\ngovernor ot New Brunswick hss bten\nforecast but never proved true, it\nli being again revived.\nShould Mr. Hanson succeed Col.\nMacLaren ln the cabinet It would\nbe necesssry to rearrange the portfolios. The latter Is minister of pensions and nstlonsl health and lt is\nhardly probable a lawyer who la not\na returned msn would he placed at\ntht head of this department. Mr.\nHanson therefore doubtless would be\ngiven some other poet lf he came\nInto the ministry.\nAfter seeing the prime minister\ntor a ahort time today Mr. Hanson\nssld his entry Into the cabinet had\nnot been discussed. He is remaining\nln Ottawa until tomorrow and may\ntet Mr. Btnnttt again.\nA general rearrangement of the\nportfolios haa been under consideration tor some tlms |t was learned\nand Mr. Bennett may take this occasion with the retirement of Hon.\nH. H. Stevens to put changes Into\neffect.\nSucceeds Stevens: Sessions to\nGet Under Way in\nOttawa Today\nOTTAWA. Oct. 29 (CP)\u2014WlUlam\nW. Kennedy, Conservative member to\nWinnipeg south-centre, succeeded\nHon. Harry Stevens, former mlnllter of trade and commerce, as chairman of the mass buying royal commission today w lt prepared to continue under a new pilot but wltb\nthe same objective\u2014detecting flawe\nand abuses In the Canadian Indua*\ntlal picture.\nTht commission htld an executive session thts afternoon, preparing\nfor the publlo hearings which wlu\nopen at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning and continue until sometime Itt\nDecember. The former chairman did\nnot attend the meeting but It waa\nannounced that thla wu due to private business, arising from hit rsi-\nIgnatlon as a cabinet minister.\nFishermen from Nova scotla wlll\nbe the first witnesses heard by that\ncommission but before a report for\nthe opening of parliament, tht following Industries will be Investigated, either striking new ground or\nfollowing up evidence already heard:\nChain stores, agricultural Implements*,\nflour mills and bakeries, cannersk\ntextiles and possibly gasoline. It ll\nhoped to conclude the Inquiry 10\nDecember eo that a report cap be\nready for the opening of parliament.\nAnnouncement of the new chairman was made by Premier R. B. Ben-\nnett after a cabinet meeting, when\nthe commission sat-as a committee\nof the house of commons, it elected\nlta own chairman but the government had the elective power when\nIt became a commission. Mr. Stevens,\nalthough resigning the chairmanship, wlll continue as a member of\nthe commission.\nThe commission will sit esch day\nexcept Saturday snd Sunday from\n11-1 and 3.30 to s o'clock.\n \t\nPAGE TWO-\n-THt NILION DAILY NEWS. NELION, B.C-TUESDAY MORNING. OCTOBI\nERN..N4-\nYMIR-GOODENOUGH\n(Continued Prom Page Ont)\nmill unit will be awarded to the McCloskey Mining & Milling\nService corporation of Vancouver, which designed it to\nmeet requirements laid down by Manager 0. D. Frith, following 64 mill tests of combined Ymir and Goodenough ore.\nIt is likely this company will sub-let the construction portion\nof its contract, on which work must start quickly.\nDuring the 2 1-2 months required for installation of the\nmill unit, and for provision of necessary operating buildings\nand plant, the Goodenough, the Ymlr's junior partner on the\nbig ore zone, halted production, as of October 15, after\nshipping 76 cars to Trail since February, and its crew of 28\nmen will be concentrated on development work until the two\nproperties resume production concurrently.\nLEMIR CAMP AT FIRST ky\nFor temporary ctmp accommoda\nnp ac\nI take\ntlon, a lease hu been taken on camp\nbuilding! of the former Yankee Girl\nConiolldated \u2014 the Stoble-Forlong\npromoUon\u2014three-quarters of a mile\nSoles\n^P>\nService\nBE PREPARED\nWith\nPRESTONE\nDon't let t real cold\nalght catch you unaware.\nPltL UP TODAY WITH\nEVER READY\nPRESTONE\nThe Perfect Anti-Freexe\nPhone 117\nKootenay\nMotors\n(Nelson)   Limited\nfurther down the Wild Horse valley,\nwhich will aerve until the spring.\nThe bunkhouie can accommodate\n100 men, and the messhouse is in\nproportion \u2014 both being large\nenough to take care of the temporary installation and construction crews, ln addition to the big\ncrew that first will be rehabilitating the Ymlr workings, and later\nwill be extracting ore from them\nThe permanent camp will be located In association with the mill,\nand will embrace bunkhouse and\nmesshouse for 100 men, translorm-\ner*statlon, compressor-house, machine-shop, assay office, and the\ngeneral office. The housing accommodation will be provided ln the\nspring, to complete the camp.\nELECTRIC HA'JLAGE\nWhile mill Installation and build\ning construction are under way,\nand the Ymlr mine is being recon\ndltloned underground, Mai a ger\nFrith will be rushing surface plant,\nwhich wlU Include an electric haulage system from the No. 10 or main\nworking level, through which til\nthe Ymlr ore will luue, to the ore\nbins at the mill, a distance ot about\na quarter of a mile. Mine supplies\nwill go ln by the same Une. A six-\nton electric locomotive wlll haul\nthe trains of ore cars, which wUI\nreceive their loads trom the chutes\nin No. 10, aU ore from the levels\nabove being mined'on the shrinkage plan, that is, allowed to slide\ndown by gravity as the ore piles are\ndlmlnlsi.od at the bottom. He will\nalso install at once a 1000-cublc\nfoot air compreuor. with capacity\nfor about eight drills besides the\nGuide for Travellers\nNelion, B. C, Hoteli\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nThe HUME HOTEL\nPHONI 717\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLuncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c ond 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nFree Bus Service Nelaon B.C. George Benwelt, Prop.\n0. A. wartyn, P. Crawford, Midi-\netn* Hat; Mr. and Urs. A. I. Duke,\nMr. and Mrs. c. H. Oiler, R. A. Llttlt,\nVancouver; Mr. ana itn. Bruce Delhi,\nSan Francisco; Mr. md Mra. P, McPherson, Reglna,\n. The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kin_\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n124 BAKER ST. PHONB 18 NILSON, B.C.\n8AVOT\u2014Mrs. c. Owenstran, Revelatoke; p. Ryan. Reno mine; Mr.\nand Mrs. Goodman and aon, Lumberton; j. E. Matheson. New Denver;\nJ. E. Laurie, Miss Landers, Crinbrook; H. S. Brockner, Louis Killln,\nXmU Planter, CalgaryJ Mlea J. De-\nroo, Mlas C. M. Douglu, Louli Oroii-\nman, Reglna; H. N. Halnstock, Shell\nLake, Man.; Hugh j. Styles. Salmo;\n3. Dorlty, Bdgewood; 3. K- Bergman.\nOrand porks; Mrs. Harold Onitlne\n\u2022nd daughters. Spokane; j. MacKinnon, Vancouver,\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\n3M.  t. MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot  tnd  Cold  Wittr\nla tbt HEART of the City\nMow Grand Hotel\nP.   L   KAPAK,   Prop.\nWeekly tnd Monthi; Rates\nHot and  Cold  Water\nSingle Me op     Double $1.30 up\n\u25a0ooata \u00abI0 \u25a0 Month and Dp\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vtrnon St Phoni It'll\na  WASSICK\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortablt Roomt\nMlnen' Hetd .uartera\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.\nRoomi from SOo to $1.50\nMonthly $10 and up.\nSteam heated lnd bot and cold\nwater In tvtry room\naos Baker St. Phont au\nVancouver, B. C, Hotels\nmn\nZ^7~ \"VflUR VANCOUVER HOME\" .\u201e\u201e,.,.\nPiaWLT \u2014^        jkji # PHONES\nRiNovATio Duff enn Hotel \u00ab\"v*T0\u00ab\nA. Ptttrton, lttt of Coltmin. Altt., Prop. WXKiymourSt., Vinoouvtr\nTRANSPORTATION-Freight ond Passenger\nROSSLAND \u2022 - NELSON\nWe connect with the Interior Stages at Trail fer Ron-\nland so that passengers can purchase tickets right\nthrough from either way to their destinations. Express\nIs handled In same msnner. Nelson to Rotsland One\nWay $2.50. Return $4.50. Week-End Excursion $3.15.\nOm Day Excursion $2.50.\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ltd.\nTrail lus Station J. M. Doughty\u2014Phone (42\nNelton Bus Station\u2014phone 800\nNELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND\n^vieT\"    FREIGHT LIME\nPhone     J.C. \"SCOTTY\" MUIR. prop.\nNelson      prompt   efficient   service\n\u201e   tmtj AT  ALL  TIMES\nLeivlng Ntlun\nat t i.m.\nPhone\nTrail\n13 er 191\nnacaaaary hoists lu tin tslts* '\u25a0-\ntaking up ateel and other opeiating\nluppliei. A twin to thlt compreuor\nwill come tt a later date whin the\nenlarged operation demands.\nHeavy machinery, such aa the\nsix-ton locomotive, will be beyond\nthe capacity of the small trestle\nbridges on the main Wild Hone\nrotd to ctrry, tnd the public works\ndepartment la replacing them with\nfilit. Three imtU bridges are to be\nthua replaced, and a crew hu started work on the first of them.\nIt goel without stying thlt the\nYmlr Consolidtted Gold Mints wlll\nbe a 'Customer of the West Kootenay Power tc Light comptny for\ncommercial power. That company's\ntransmission line, previously built\nfor the Wild Horse tunnel operation of the Yankee Girl Consolidated, wlll be available with but a\nshort extension to deliver any volume required. The ultimate program laid out by Manager Frith\nand adopted by the directorate as\na policy would not be feasible with\nany leu stable and ample power\nsupply.\nWAITING ORI WORTH MILLION\nSubstantial fictori ln tht decision\nto develop t Urge ictle opentlon\nare a calculated 60,000 tons of ore\nlett blocked out in the old Ymir\nworkings, running $11 plus, with\nan estimated total value ot $745.-\n000; 27,000 tont of $21 ore blocked\nottt in the Goodenough, on the opposite tide ot the hill, evaluated at\n$967,000; and 1500 feet of virgin\nore rone between their closest underground workings. Apart from\npretumptive ore tnd possible ore,\nthe positive ort actually blocked\nout In the Ymlr alone would run\na 90-ton mill tlve yean. On past\nperformance this great ore zone\nlias produced more gold than any\nother ln the Kootenay outside of\nRed mountain, on which Rouland\nwas founded, for the Ymlr yielded\nbetween $3,000,000 and $4,000,000\nIn gold bullion\u2014from which it paid\n$1,790,000 dividends-and the Good-\nenough, which hai stoped only from\ntwo levels, hat produced gold to\nthe amount of $300,000.\nA FAMOUS OPERATION\nLocated in 1606, equipped with its\nflnt battery of 40 starr-ps ln 1808,\nand lta second 40 in 1900. and adding the cyanide plant to increase\nrecoveries In 1802, the Ymlr in its\nheyday had one of the largeat gold\noperations in the British Empire,\nwe old operatora first developed\nthe three upper levels. Then they\nsank to No. 7, and ran Intermediate!. Finally they went ln on Ko.\n10, railed to No. 7, and opened more\nintermediate!. Apparently the jloor\nvaluea on No. 10 led the operatora\nto believe the property wtt playing out; at all events, they closed\ndown an operation that had paid\nhandsomely, leaving greet blocks ot\nore unttoped and other blocks of\nvein matter that today, with better\nprocesses and the gold premium,\nclasses u low grade milling ore.\nA large scale operation, with\nmining and  milling costs conse-\nSuently at a minimum, can handle\ntil low grade ore at a fair profit,\nand materially twell the total profit!, Manager Frith flgurei. Hence\nthe adoption of a large scale pro-\ncram.\nLOWEl\nOWEST MINING COSTS\nMining coata, he flgurei, wlll be\nremarkably low, tor seversl ret-\naoni. The ore It extremely friable,\nand requirei lew holet tnd little\npowder to break It down. There\nare good clean graphitic wills\u2014the\nso-called \"slickensldes\" \u2014 from\nwhich the ore comet away cleanly,\nwithout dilution of country rock.\nThe width of vein or ore zone, trom\ntix to 38 feet, alao cheapen! the\noperation. Gravity handling of\nthe ore trom the upper workings, to\nwhich such big tonnage it adapted,\ntenda ln tht time direction, while\nthe eerly opertton timbered thoroughly., the mine hit itood for 30\nyean more or leu, without the\nslightest movement ot the ground\nbeing apparent, the stopes outlasting the timbers. The new operation accordingly will dispense with\ntimber in the ttopet, a further economy.\nThe low milling coit of coune\nwill be attained principally by putting through a large volume, though\nthere will be an Important uvlng\nin relttive capital cost.\nUSE OLD BUILDING\nWhile the early day 80-stamp mill,\nlocated directly betore the portal\nof No. 10 tunnel, it \u25a0 wreck, chiefly\nfrom blasting done by leasers who\nsought to salvage spillage, and will\nhave to be cleared away, the sturdy\ncyanide itructure, witb strongly\nbuilt foundations and many of them,\nand framed with the heivieit timbers, still challenges tbe seesons\ntiter 30 yetn. It embraces a tank\nfloor, containing six cylindrical\nsteel tanks each 32 teet ln diameter,\nand at right angles to it t lower\nfloor the width ot two tanks.\nIts central section of two floors\nwill be converted to mill purposes,\nlittle more alteration, being needed\nthan removal of the central tanks,\nand putting ln of concrete bases for\nthe new mechinery. One of the Jutting wings will be taken down, and\nits timber used ln building ore bint\nand crusher house above the mill.\nMuch of the ore will arrive in larger sizes and there will be both mechanical and hand sorting in the\ncrusher house. Process water will\nbe from Huckleberry creek, which\nin eirly dtyt hid power damt.\nHIGH RECOVERIES\nAs designed the mill will embrace\nball mill for fine grinding, class!-\nfier to separate the material requiring further reduction, flotation cells\nto capture finely divided material,\nand amalgamation. By the mill tests\nthli proceu should recover 61 per\ncent ot the gold as bullion.\nThe plant will be designed to\nmake both a lead and a zinc concentrate if desired, though probably, et existing smelter values for\nzinc, only the lead concentrate will\nbe made, as the gold loit would\noffset the zinc saved. No settling\ntanks will be employed, but the\nconcentrates will be raked by a\nmechanical scraper in steam-heated concrete blm till dry, when they\nwill tall through a grizzly into\nthe dry bin, ready for shipment.\nTotal recoveries will amount to 97\nper cent of the gold, 89.7 per cent ot\nthe silver, 97 per cent of the lead.\nand 87 per cent of the zinc, lt a zinc\nrecovery is made.\nA short three-mile hiul to tht\ncompany'! lotdlng plitform it Ymlr will put tht concentntei on tht\nrail! for Trail imelter.\nIf mill instilling, lurftct equipping, and mine conditioning keep\nup with the tchedule laid down for\nthem, production of bullion aad\nconcentrates wlll start with Lie tint\nof the year, wtth the Ymlr called on\nto provlcti 70 per cent of the teed\nfor the mill, and the Gooden*. :gh\n30 per cent\nWORK UP BY STAGES\nThe initial operation of mlnet\nand mill will be at the rate ot 90\ntont ml ore a day. to get all parts\nof trie operation in efficient and\nBONDHOLDERS OF BANKRUPT CITIES\nFACE LOSS OF INTEREST FOR YEARS\nn\nCray Urges Municipalities to\nAttempt Pay One Per\nCent of Interest\nVANCOUVER, Oct 19 (CP)-If\nbondholders of financially embarrassed British Columbia munlcl-\nfialities were not willing to take\nhe rate ot interest offered them\nthey might expect no interest for\nfive and possibly 10 years, Hon. A.\nWeill Gray, mlnllter of municipal\nattain, declared today in an address\nto the financial bureau of Vancouver board of trade.\n\"The government or the municipalities, have no better offer to\nmake,\" Mr. Gray declared. \"It the\nbondholders are not willing to accept the 1 per cent now offered them\nbefore the legislature meets, there\nwill be no legislation passed on the\nmattjr. I'll forecast that they won't\ncollect any interest for five, yei,\nmaybe 10 yean.\"\n50 OR SO DEFAULT\nMr. Gray itated the Britlih Columbia bondholden are not the only\nones to complain. He laid that In\nOntario, 90 or 60 municipalities\nhave defaulted.\n\"If these municipalities defaulted,\" he uld, \"the people who ihould\nbe dealing with the matter aro\nbonddealen. Many of these municipalities can get by wlti a little\nhelp. Bond dealers are tw proper\nlink between the municipalities and\nthe bondholders.\"\nThe minister Mid his department\nhas been gathering data which may\nhelp the government decide by what\nmeans  British  Columbia  munici\npalities can be aided through legislation  at the next session,  what\nthtt legislation will be, he could\nnot predict\nMAKE 80ME\nARRANGEMENT\nHe uld the government hu limply advise-' defaulting municipalities to do their best to pay tome interest\u2014to make some amicable arrangement w*th their creditor!.\nThe government's commiuloners\ntn North Vancouver and Burnaby\nhad given their opinion to the effect\nthat their municipalities could not\npay any interest, he said, and he\nhad urged them to try to pay 1 per\ncent with a revision every three\nyean and no interest more than 4\nper cent for 29 yean.\n.URGES COMPROMISE\nMr. Gray urged thc bondholders\nto accept a compromise ln order to\nprotect their equity and he declared the government Itself has \"taken\nthe biggest beating.\" They hold\n$900,000 of Burnaby bonds. $400,000\nof North Vancouver bonds and $163.-\n000 of North Vancouver district\nbonds.\nIncidental to municipal problems\nhe cited the case of North Vancouver municipalities and the restored\nSecond Narrows bridge. Restoration\nof the bridge meant a lou of $90,-\n000 a year to North Vancouver ln\nterry receipts, he laid, yet the municipality has no chance of participating ln bridge revenue for 20\nyean.\nMr. Gray uld he thought lt would\nhave been better for the federal\ngovernment to treat the repair of\nthe bridge ai a relief Job and present It to the nvunlclpalltle!.\nbalanced working order, but in\ntwo or three monthi it will be\nworked up to the capacity ot the\nmill, or 100 toni per day.\nThis, however, wlll be only a\nprimary stage in the program, and it\nis expected that within two years\n200 tons of ore will be going through\nIn 24 hours, additional machinery\nin the remaining wing of the cyanide building providing the added\ncapacity. This, ai Manager Frith\nseei It may be provided from earnings, without special financing:\nhence the interval allowed.\nFrom thlt halfway mark a further expamion to tt leut 400 tons\ncapacity, and likely considerably\nmore, Is contemplated, to bring the\noperation to the full scale that will\nreduce all operating costs to the\nminimum and permit the profitable\nutilization ot the lowest grade ore.\nThis last expansion wiU require\naddition to the building. A 400-ton\nmill, however, will not require four\ntimes the machinery of the original\nunit nor will the tint enlargement\nrequire a duplication of it. In both\ncues, the additions will be only for\ncertain parte of the proceu, and the\nmain channels wlll aerve without\nextensive change.\nEvery part of the program now\nbeing put in motion contemplates\nthis ultimate large scale operation,\nand everything that will be done\nwill be designed for permanent use\nIn thlt icheme. In this connection\nit can be bome ln mind that the\nfamoua Ymlr has operated on a\n400-ton scale in the past, and without any Goodenough to swell its ore\nstreams.\nWhile the Ymir mine wtll be\nawakened trom a quarter-century\nft slumber to renewed production\nand development the Goodenough\nis a present performer of record.\nIN WILD HOR8E VALLEY\nTo picture the Ymlr-Goodenough\nlayout, one must mentally crou the\nSalmon or \"Salmo\" river at Ymlr,\ntake the road to the left, and ascend\nthe Wild Horse valley to the point,\nthree miles or a little more from\nYmlr, where Wild Hone creek, at\nthe neck of the valley, receives from\nthe lett the water of Huckleberry\ncreek, otherwise iti north tork. Most\nof tbe broad valley Is on the left\nbank of Wild Horse creek, u one\ngoea up, and the Stoble-Forlong\ncamp, and the Ymlr mine cyanide\nplant and its power-house, are successively paued, before the stamp\nmill's ruins, facing the tenth or\ndeepest Ymir tunnel, are reached\nin a bend of Huckleberry creek a\nfew rod! above its mouth. No. 10\nis the lowest adit tbe Ymlr mine\ncan ever have, ai lt comes out at\nthe valley's edge, and the mine\nstructure, consisting entirely of\ndrift! and stopes, strikes back into\na mountain spur on the left hand,\naround which Huckleberry creek\ncurvet.\nORE ZONE SLICES SPUR\nThrough thlt spur slices the famous ore zone, to Uie further tide,\nwhere the drlfta of the Goodenough\ncome In on it to open up its upper\nore. This remarkably atrong and\npersistent ore occujence\u2014unique in\nfact for thit chtrtcter \u2014 probably\nwu longer ttlll ln an earlier age,\nbefore the mountains were eroded\nto their preient contours. Tbe horizontal *' itance between the closest\nworkings of the Ymlr and the Good-\nenough is 1900 feet. On the one side\nof thla virgin section is the Ymlr\ndevelopment 1100 feet in depth,\nwith 10 numbered levels and a sub-\nlevel; on the other Is the Goodenough development, of three leveli,\nfrom which to date ore valued at\n$300 hai been marketed.\nThe Goodenough road takea otf\nfrom the Wild Hone road at the\nStoble-Forlong camp, and following a little higher course, starts\nto circle the spur ai it overlooks\nHuckleberry creek, turns back from\nit by switchback, and swings around\nacross the ihoulder to the further\nface, ending at the camp, which ts\nat No. 2 level, a branch road dropping down to No. 3, which will\nshortly become the working level,\nand where the compressor plant ts\nlocated.\nGOODENOUGH FAST WORKER\nNotwithstanding its fine perfor\nmance to date, the Goooenough op*\neratlon is one of the youngest of the\nKootenay territory, iti origin going\nback only six yean or so. From the\nprospect stage it had a seven\nmonths development by the Good*\nenough Mines, Limited, a Kootenay\nfinanced company, with Mr. Frith\nin charge. Stoble-Forlong then took\nit under option with the Ymir,\nafter about tour atootka It waa\ndown along with -other Kot'\noption! under tha aetia   ot\nhouse.    After a  considerable  Interval H. Mekion and A. MacDonald, to whom it had reverted, reopened it and realized on 407 tons\nof ore. Then the Ymir Gold Mines.\nLimited, took it over, with the Ymlr,\nfinancing   the   recent   operation,\nwhich opened ln 1933 with 3. F.\nCoats u engineer in charge, Mr.\nFrith resuming the helm lut February.\nNEW DEEP WORK\nThis year's work has consisted in\nstopL.g ore from the two upper levels, while extending them, and in\ndriving No. 3 tunnel, and starting a\nraise from it over 4000 tons of\nore being shipped to Trail. Recent\nshipments have been from three\nstopes on No. 1 level and two on\nNo. 2\u2014the latter being \"L\" stope.\nwhich has 170 feet of ore nine feet\nwide averaging close ta an ounce\nIn gold, and \"K\" itope, opened only Tn September, which goes over\nan ounce.\nNo. 3 level so far lias opened 80\nfeet of ore, which diamond drill\ncores, as well as crosscuts on No. 2\nsuggest will ultimately be about\n650 feet in length. The distance between No. 3 and No. 2\u2014208 feet\u2014is\nsufficient to Justify a sub-level on\nthis wide ore zone, and in tha raise\ntrom No. 3 a station for thii sub-\nlevel hu been cut at 113 feet The\nraise, a three-compartment one,\nfor ore chute, timber chute, and\nmanw-v, is now being continued,\nand when it is completed the sub-\nlovel will go ahead, No. 3 becoming\nautomatically the main haulage\nlevel.\nA No. 4 level It projected. 190 feet\nbelow No. 3 on the dip ot the vein,\nfor future development\nAIM UNDER OUTCROP\nMeantime No. 1 tunnel, the furthest Into the flat-topped mountain\nis being continued toward the rich\nsurface outcrop, the original discovery, on the Goodenough end of\nthe 1900 feet of virgin ore zone\nbetween'the two mlnet, tn outcrop\ndeveloped by two deep open cuts\nsome distance apart, which ahow\nthe ore zone to be 70 teet wide\nthere, and to be carrying richer ore\nthan any found elsewhere on either\ngroup. To gtt under this rich outcrop hu been a primary objective\not the Goodenough development\nwhoie other ore hai been picked\nup on the way.\nWhile the 27,000 toni of ore still\nblocked out in the Goodenough\nafter the year's shipping runs about\n$21, to $11 plus for the 66,000 tons\nblocked out In tha Ymir, the latter is residue lett ln the workings,\nafter abandonment of an operation\nIn mid-career, with presumably the\nhigher grade ore largely mined.\nMOVE ORE THROUGH YMIR\nBut everything suggests thtt between the Ymlr, ana the Goodenough there ihould be productive\nground, and that the Goodenough\nore should also go down. Faces of\nvarious of the Ymir drifts show ore,\nincluding the face ot No. 10 level,\nthe lowest and poorest one.\nWhen the Ymir workings are re\nconditioned, with new trackage\nfrom bottom to top, with two air-\ndriven tugger-holsts installed for\nraising supplies to the upper levels,\nand with electric traction on No. 10\nand on the aurface, a development\nprogram will be launched simultaneously with commencement of\nproduction. This development pro\ngram will include pushing No. 10\n.level through the 1500 feet of virgin area, and under the Goodenough\nworkings, with which tt will In due\ncoune be connected by raise, and\ntor which it will eventually serve\nu the ore route, giving 600 feet\ndepth under No. 8.\nTHUCK T-MPC3ARILY\nManager Frith, figuring that in\ntwo yean there will be the under\nground connection between the\ntwo mines to make them one op\nerating unit has decided- that truck\nhaulage of ore from the Goodenough\nto the mill will be cheaper, for\nthe limited time it will continue in\nuse, than an aerial tram, with iti\nheavy fint cost A more direct road,\nwith easier grades, will be built,\nSilver Seat Sale\nto Close Tomorrow\nMontreal  Exchange  Has 229\nMembers; Expect to Have\nAbout 250\nMONTREAL, Oct. 29 (CPl.-Open\noffering of membership! ln Canadian Commodity Exchange, Inc., will\nfrom the Goodenough'a No. 3 portal, to connect lower down with\nthe existing road, to facilitate this\nore hauling, as well u the taking\nup of supplies. Camp, now accommodating 28 men, and plant, now\nembracing compressor plant tor\nthree machines, and blacksmith\nshop with sharpener, are both being\nadded to, as they will have work\nto do as long u the Goodenough\nmaintains a separate existence.\nBy the time the mill is ready to\nturn over, and the Ymlr mine, is\nequipped to provide ore, new\nstopes will be ready in the Good-\nenough so that this end ot the property will be In a position to supply\nits 30 per cent quota of the mill\nfeed. This quota is proposed to be\nmaintained also for the later and\nlarger production.\nA. M. Manson, K.C., wai treasurer\not the private company, and tills\nthe ume position in the public\ncompany that recently took over.\nMOVE FINANCED\nAuthorized capital of the com*\npany is 3,000,000 no-par shares; 500,*\n000 shares now being offered have\nbeen underwritten, and are already\nlargely subscribed. This will provide funds for complete mill and\nmine plant up to a capacity of 100\ntons of ore per day, and leave\n1,250,000 shares in the treasury for\nthe future.\nJudging by the way the Good-\nenough operation hu paid lta way,\nproducing a rubstantlal dividend\nafter meeting all mining and development coata and overhead,\nManager Frith incline! to the belief that future extension of the\nYmlr-Goodenough operation will\nprolably be effected trom reserve\nof earning!.\nbe eloaed at tbe end ot bualneu\nWedneaday, October 31, It waa announced from the exchange office!\nhere today. The new exchange today\nhad a membenhip of 229, while tho\ncharter make! provision for 300.\nUnder the terms of agreement\nwith the Toronto stock exchange,\nmemben of that exchange have until November 1 in which to take up\ntheir seats. At present, there are\nabout 60 membtn of the Toronto\nstock exchange holding memberships on tba new exchange.\nPresent indications are that the\nfinal membenhip will total about\n250, officen uld. After Wednesday,\nseals will be procurable only trom\nsett holden.\nTELLS REASON\nBEFORE NOTARY\nIII, could not Sleep.   New Enjoys\nUft Because of Frult-a-tivea uya\nMontreal Woman Under Oath\nMn. Aubry, 1605 Mtiionntuvt St.,\nMontreal, wu in extremely tick\nwoman before ahe found a relief for her\nailments. Now she is so happy to be\nwell again that she contented to give\nher experience in \u2022 sworn statement so\nthat others can be sure of its truth and\nbe helped u she was.\n\"I wat troubled (or vein with liver\ncomplaints and headachet. My bowela\ndid not (unction regularly. I had no\nappetite, and no ileep. I itarted taking\nFruit-a-tivei. Inaihorttime, my health\nbecame greatly improved. I now enjoy\nlife much more than betore 1 learned\nabout Fruit-e-tivet. I do not Imitate\nto recommend them very highly to\nanybody suffering from any of tht\ncomplaints I had.\nYou_too, can be helped by Fruit-a-\ntivu. Thii fimom remedy hu brought\nluting relief to thousands of men and\nwomen from constipation, uck-haad-\nachea and other like Ub. That'i why\nFruit-a-tivei il tht largest telling\nremedy of itt kind in Ctntda.\nCom ot Mrs. Anbnr's rrera jtatnwet\n\u2022III bt mt oa ttm_at.  Wrlw Fraltaifna\nUmited. Ottawa. Canada.\nntUIT-A-TIVM-ISt mtt Ms IVBtyWHBE\nFaster Way Now\nto Relieve Neuralgia\n\u2022 DISCOVERY ALSO EASES BAD HEADACHES \u25a0\nMUSCULAR PAIN OFTEN IN FEW MINUTES\nRemember the pictures below when\nyou want fast relief trom pain.\nAspirin eases even a bad headache\nor neuralgia often in a few minutei I\nAn Aspirin tablet begins \"taking\nbold\" of your pain practically as\naoon u you swallow it. And Aspirin\nis safe. For Aspirin does not harm\ntht heart.\nRemember these two points:\nAspirin Speed and Aipirin Safety.\nAnd, iee that you get ASPIRIN,\nthe method doctors prescribe. It is\nmade in Canada, and all druggists\nhave it. Look for the name Bayer in\nthe form of a cross on every Aspirin\ntablet. Get tin of 12 tablets or economical bottle of 24 or 100 tablet*\nWhy Aspirin Works So Fast\nDrop an Aipirin\ntablet in a glass of\nwater. Note thtt BE-\nFORE it touches the\nbottom. It is disintegrating.\nIN 1IKONDI IT STOP WATCH\nAn Aipirin tablet starts to dislntt-\nirate and go to work.\nWhat happens in these _\nhappens In your stomach\u2014ASPIRIN\ntat.leti start \"taking hold\" of pain\na few minutes after taking.\nWhen in Pain Remember These Pictures\nASPIRIN 18 THC TRADE MARK OF THE BAYER COMPANY, LIMITED\nDominion Voters List\nList of Electors are posted ot the undermentioned stores and residences, for the purpose of\nRevision, to be held at those places for the electors, resident in the sections of Nelson mentioned opposite Enumerators' names.\n ENUMERATOR tnd ADDRESS: DESCRIPTION OF BOUNDARIES;\nR. |. Howe, 723 Robion St  Between Robion and Innei Streeti\nH. Lindemore, W. Marr's Houie, Vincouver St   Rosemont, All Weit of Cottonwood Creek\nW. E. Coles, 523 Robion St  Between Latimer and Robion Sti.\nC. Honteed, 602 Robion St.   Between Carbonate and Latimer Sti.\nD. Laughton, 909 Edgewood Ave   r  Between Victoria and Lake Front\n|. E. Annable, |r\u201e 515 Ward St Between Victoria and Carbonate Sti.\nE. M. Cillott, 214 Houiton St All South of Innei and Eait of Cottonwood Creek\nR. |. Howe, 723 Robion St  East of Park St. and South of View St.\n|ohn Notman, Morrii Service Station  From Selwyn and View to Behnion Sti,\nMarcui Martin, Morrii Service Station      Between Behnion ind Daviet Sts.\n|. H. Chapman, Houie Corner of Sixth end Kootenay Ave. .'    Between Daviet and Kootenay Stl.\nL. C. Mabon, Annable'i Likeihore Camp at C.P.R. Shipyirdi From Kooteney St. on; alto North Shore\nH. D. Ramsden,\n516 Stanley St.  Nelson, B.C.\nRegistrar of Electors Kootenay West\n \\M\nKfSPBERRIES\nARE PICKED\nAT CRESTON\nBelieve Indicates a\nLate and Mild\nWinter\n100 REGISTERED\nON VOTERS LIST\ni Women's Institute\nHas a Bridge\nParty\nICRESTON, B.C., Oct 29-Thor-\nuglily ripe raspberries have been\nphered in village gardens through-\nut the week. This is taken to indi-\nkte a late ftnd mild winter. Ever-\nhiring strawberries are still com-\nIg from vines in sheltered loca-\nEis.\nIFor the week October 19 to 26,\nle valley has had a rainfall of al-\nloit two inches, .89 of it coming on\ntednesday. The moisture is most\nklcome on unirrigated lands and\nI fruit trees will go into winter in\nlie shape. The rains have alio\nleeded up tall ploughing.\n\u25a0Mr. McMahon haa arrived from\npronto and is a guest of hii son-\n-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. Speers.\nA. Biccum has moved his second-\naid store stock into his new build-\ng on Wilion avenue, and the prem-\ns he hai just vacated is being\ntted up as a butcher shop.\nThe Putnam-Cartwright packing\ned is the first to finish the scan's pack of apples and is now\noied. The firm, however, hai still\nquantity of apples to move.\nWord is to hand from Esquimau\nthe death of Mrs. J. P. Compton,\nformtr well-known resident of\n\u2022eston, who moved to the coast\nout 10 years ago. She li survived\n' her husband, Capt Crompton,\nd son, Frank. She was In her\nty-fifth year.\nJoe Miller wai a vliltor at Yahk,\nindlng up business in connection\nith the ranging of cattle in that\nea while the flats at Creiton were\nider water the past season.\n0 REGISTERED\nOver 800 names are shown on the\niw federal voters list for the vil-\nge of Creston and territory imme-\nately adjoining, according to the\nits posted by R. Sinclair Smith\nid H. H. Taylor, who had charge\nthe work in north and south\n\u2022eston. As compared with the lists\nmpiled in 1930 th re is a gain of\n0 voters. At Erickson there is also\nconsiderable gain. On the list\ned in the provincial election a\n\u00bbr ago there were 141 names. The\n34 federal list shows 208 names.\nie gain at the latter point is due\na considerable influx from the\nalric to Arrow creek.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Celli are back\nom a two weeks' motor trip to\nlints on the Pacific coast. Return-\ng, they made an inspection of the\nnnd Coulee dam.\nG. Timmons and W. Barner have\ntt for Sanca, where tbe former has\naumed development work on the\nikeview mine.\n| Harry Helme has been busy with\n|Fairview Fuel &\nTeaming Co.\nWOOD\nFIR OR TAMARAC\n12-in. 16-in.\n1 rick .... $3.00 $3.50\n2 ricka  ... $5.00 $6.00\n3 ricki  ... $7.00 $8.00\n4 ricki  ...  $9.00\n4 foot, cord  $6.00\nBIRCH\nEfoot, cord  $7.50\nfoot, cord   $8.50\nPHONE  701\nhis truck bringing in the apple crop\nfrom moit of the ranches at Camp\nLister, where there is not sufficient\nitorage.\nCharlei Moore hai been busy surveying tbe lands on Kootenay Flats\nwhich are being dyked by Creston\nReclamation Co., Ltd. Some breaking has already been done.\nThe planer at the John Huscroft\nsawmill plant at Huscroft has been\noperating all week, dressing the balance of the season's cut of lumber.\nReports from Kitchener state that\nthe relief camp at the airport is\nfilling up fait Some 110 men are\nnow in camp and there are new\narrivals almost every day from the\nprairies.\nFrank  Putnam, MJP.P., hai  returned  trom  a  business  viiit  to\nBeaverdell\nIN8TI1Ul\u00a3 HAS BRIDGE\nCreiton and District Women'a institute had 10 tables of players for\nthe bridge drive at the pariah hall\nat which the high score prizes were\ncaptured by Mrs. Colin Sinclair of\nFlagstone and K. M. Telford of\nErickson. Consolation honors were\ntaken by Mrs. J. _. Johnston and\nW. H. Kemp of Erickson. Lunch was\nserved after cards.\nMr. and Mrs. Stanley Paul and\nfamily, along with the funner'a par*\nents, Mr. ana Mrs. J. faut of iiuner\nValley, were visitors here, guests of\nMn. Marshall. The 1'auls were residents here till about 10 years ago,\nana were struct with the grow in in\nevidence at all points in tne valley.\nFrank Pratt, a recent arrival from\nCalgary, has leased the Mrs. J. T.\nVance orchard property east ot\ntown, and will get immediate possession.\nGeorge Willis Is the last of the\nlocal men who went to the prairie\ntor harvest and threshing, to return.\nMrs. Frank Ebbutt and daughter,\nShirley, of Britannia mine, who\nhave been visiting the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Webster,\nhave lets for home.\nR. H. Speaker has returned trom\na trip to eastern Canada, which took\nhim as far as Toronto.\nMrs. W. Currie is spending a few\ndays with old friends at Fernie and\nother Crow points.\nOan Alton, who has been employed here during the fruit harvest, has returned to his home at\nFernie.\nSyd. Scott has returned from\nCranbrook, where he underwent an\noperation for appendicitis at St\nEugene hospiUl, earlier in the\nmonth, and is making a nice recovery.\nW. G. Littlejohn, Creston valley\nrepresentative of the B.C. tree fruit\nboard, spent a few days at Cranbrook and points in the Crows Nest\npass.\nMrs. R. Dodds is a visitor at\nCanyon, a guest of Mrs. Jock McRobb.\nRobert WUUs, who hai been cm-\nployed at Eholt for tome months,\nis on a visit with his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Ira Willis at Lakeview.\nMiss Margaret Stapleton has left\nfor several weeks' holiday with rela-\nUves ln Vancouver.\nTO BUILD HALL\nA seriei ot dances has been arranged to raise funds for the erection of a community hall at Alice\nSiding, Just north of town. The first,\nat the Guy Constable packing shed,\nwas well attended. The music was\nentirely by local talent. Including\nA. B. Ness, Bob Marshall, Ron.\nSmith, George WUUs and E. Constable.\nMiss Clara Morrow has arrived\nfrom Traii on a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Morrow.\nMiss Minnie Downes has lett for\nTadanac, where she has secured a\nposition.\nTom Barrett of Cranbrook was a\nguest it the home of Mrs. E. Garfield here.\nMrs. H. Dykstra of Lethbridge is\non a month's visit with her father,\nM. P. Wiltse, at the Arrow Creek\nFox farm.\nMiss Mildred Klngsett is at her\nhome at Nelson.\nMiss Jarjorie BeU has left for\nCranbrook, where she has aecured\nemployment.\nB. Rouch of Cranbrook, wai a\nvisitor with Mr. and Mrs. H. Cartmel. Mr. Rouch Is in charge of game\nconservation work in the Cranbrook\ndistrict.\nMr. and Mra. WUllama of Vancouver, who had been on a visit\nwith the former's sister, Mra. Staple-\nton, have returned home.\nMn. E. S. Dawson of Kimberley\nIs here on a visit with her daughter,\nMrs. G. R. John.\nMrs. S. A. Speers and Miss Betty\nSpeen are back from a month's holiday with friends in Toronto and\nother points ln Ontario.\nThe Junior W. A. of Christ church\nhad a successful bean supper in the\nParish hall when, despite most disagreeable weather, the cash intake\nwas about $29.\nMiss Irene Johnson of Calgary,\nhas arrived to spend a vacation with\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, Ni-SON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 30, 1934 -\nHRYSTEVENS\nWAS SLIGETED\nTreatment Indicates\nRisk Run When Aim\nProtect Public\nTERMS TREATMENT\n\"OUTRAGEOUS\"\nI*   MUTUAL   COM PA HI V\nJSOLIDJ\t\nTHE CONTINENT\nFor tvery $100 ol Liability, North American Life\nholds $114 ot Assets, distributed as follows; 32.8%\nGovernment and Municipal Bonds; 26.7% First\nMortgajes; 19.2% Policy loans; 9.1% Public\nUtility and Corporation Bonds; 3.0% Preferred\nStocks; 5.2% Bank, Loan, Trust and Consumers'\nGas Company Stocks; 4% Real Estate, etc.; and\nless than 1\/10th of 1% Common Stocks; Interest\nrate 5.38%. Investigate the advantages o'\n\"Assuring Mutually.\"\nIMOKTH\nMERICAM\nLIFE\nR. E. CRERAR\nDISTRICT MANAGER\nNelson, B.C.\nILL PROFITS FOR PCIICYHOUDEM\nIssue Now Is Whether\nMonopolies Will\nRule in Land\nVANCOUVER, OcL 29 (CP)-The\nresignation of Hon. H. H. Stevens\nas chairman ot the committee in\ncharge of the price spread investigation at Ottawa indicat, s the risk\nthat every public man must run\nwho dares to make any attempt to\nprotect the pubUc from the avari-\nciousness and greed of predatory\nmonopoly, G. G. McGeer, M.L.A..\nstated today.\n\"Granted that Mr. Stevens may\nhave erred by overlooking the rules\nof parliamentary procedure,\" Mr.\nMcGeer said. \"Possibly he should\nhave consulted the cabinet before\ninforming the public of the facta,\nbut the minister's methods are not\nnow the real issue. Something infinitely more important has arisen\nout of the controversy.\nPUBLIC ENTITLED TO KNOW\n'That Mr. Stevens la quite correct\nwhen he says that the Investigation\ndealt with a fundamental feature of\nthe economic structure, namely that\nof the merchandising system, cannot be overlooked. Undoubtedly, ln\nconnection with such an investigation, the public was entitled to the\nfuUest measure ot information and\nno government has the right to censure a minister for disclosing wrong\ndoing.\n\"The outrageous treatment according to him by Mr. Bennett and\nhis colleagues constitutes a flagrant\nexample of the kind ot wilful indifference to and deliberate repudiation of the public's interest of\nwhich the public should be aware.\nGREED  PREVAILS\n'The open repudiation of Mr.\nStevens is merely an evidence of\nthe real attitude of the government\nthat is, more than any other factor,\nthe cause of poverty and destitution in the midst of abundance.\nGreed prevails in high places when\nsocial justice should rule.\n'The resignation of Mr. Stevens\nraises the one great issue of immediate significance\u2014shall government serve and protect the pubUc\non the basis ot the greatest good\nto the greatest number or shall government ignore thc welfare ot honest business and the people by maintaining and protecting monopolies\nand the people by maintaining and\nprotecting monopolies and privileges\nthat are resigned to permit the few\nto exploit the mass.\n\"Frankly, my sympathies In this\nparticular Instance are with Mr.\nStevens and I have sent him the\nfollowing wire: 'Sorry your splendid work has been interrupted but\nwish to pay tribute to your courage\nand to congratulate you upon your\nstand.'\"\nPolzun to Face\na Second Charge\nCiven Year for Safe Robbery;\nTools Found\nNick Polzun, who was sentenced\nto a year's imprisonment for the\nrobbery of the Imperial Oil company's safe, is to face another charge.\nPolzun will be charged by the provincial police today for being in\npossession of tools stolen from C.\nW. Walton. Polzun pleaded guilty\nto -the safe robbery charge and a\nsearch of his premises outside of\nthe city limits, on the Granite road,\ndisclosed a large quantity of tools,\ncutters, planes, braces, etc.\nRIONDEL COUPLE\nAT KASLO\nKASLO, B.C., Oct. 20-MaJor and\nMrs. J. H. Stubbs have as their\nguests Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Fowler of\nRiondel.\nMiss B. Jesty of Shutty Bench\nhas returned after spending several\ndays In Willow Point where she was\na guest ot Mr. and Mrs. M. Roberts.\nSirs. Mary McAndrewa has gone\nto Nelson where she will spend a\nfew days visiting friends prior to\nher departure for California where\nshe will spend the winter with her\ndaughter. Miss Agnes McAndrews.\nW. F. MacNlcol of Johnsons Landing was a Friday visitor in town.\nJ. R. Tinkess was a visitor in\nNelson.\nJ. R. Fisher of Gerrard waa a\nKaslo visitor Thursday.\nMrs. Hicks of Gerrard arrived in\nthe city Thursday and left Friday\ntor a visit to Nelson.\nLONDON, (CP)-Following an Intensive press advertising scheme,\nmore visitors travelled to North\nWales this past summer by road,\nrail and sea than ever before. The\nmajor portion went from Lancashire\nand the Midlands.\nThe evening before a marriage\nin Bohemia finds thc young girl\nfriends of the bride making the bridal wreath, each adding a twig of\nrosemary and a prayer for the winning of a husband; only the bridegroom-to-be is permitted to observe\nthe ritual.\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Johnson.\nH. Smith of Kimberley has assumed the position of assistant\nC.P.R. agent at Creston, replacing\nE. Leveque, who has been transferred to Nelson.\nReports from most points in the\nvalley indicate that deer are scarce\nthis year and, so far, very little venison has been brought in. Geese,\nhowever, are reported more plentiful.\niiliiilliiiiilliiiiiiinilliliiiiiiliiiilllllil\nGiven a Bed, Woman\nSteals $720\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 29 (CP).\n\u2014Chris Eden, who Uvcs on his\nfishing boat tbe north end of\nBldwell street, invited a stran-\nfer on board the boat to sleep,\nunday morning he awoke to\nfind the stranger gone and $720,\ntbe proceeds of a fishing seaaon, missing.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 29 (CP).\n\u2014Anne Blundell was arrested\ntoday on a charge of robbing\nChris Eden, who Uvea on a fish-\nboat at the north end ot Bid-\nwell street. Eden had $720 stolen\nfrom him. Police stated they had\nrecovered $450 of the money.\n..Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllh,\nFORM!.\nHigh Tmperatures Are\nMuch Higher Than\nAverage\nBesides being drier and sunnier\nthan average, 1934 to date has been\nunusually warm. Going back to the\nfirst month of the year. January,\nthe highest maximum temperature\nfor the month was 44 degrees as\ncompared with a 31-day average of\n25 degrees. The same comparison\nholds right down to the present\nmonth.\nApril's high was 82 degrees as\ncompared with an average of 46\ndegrees. Durin*\u00bb July the high point\nfor the year was reached, 102. The\naverage for July is 66 degrees. October's high so far is 70 degrees as\ncompare4 with 47 degrees for the\naverage.\nLast year the highest point the\ngovernment tl.jrmometer registered\nwas 99 degrees and the lowest was\n16 degrees below. The total rainfall\nis well below last year's total of\n23.13 inches and Nelson will have\nlo have a much greater snowfall\nthan average to equal last year's total of 158 inches. The average is\n100.8 degrees.\nMaximum temperatures for the\n10 months of the present year, together with thc average maximum\ntemperatures for corresponding\nmonths taken over a period ot 31\nyears:\n1934 Aver.\nJanuary - 44     25\nFebruary 47\nMarch  58\nAoril  82\nMay _ 87\nJune  - \u201e 90\nJuly _ 102\nAugust 95\nSeptember  80\nOctober  _ 70\nWhen monkeys examine the fur\nof a companion, they are not search-\nin** for fleas, but for a salty skin\ns*s--*>tion. which is much relished by\nthe monkey tribe.\nClay fingers have been found\nnear mummies interred centuries\nago. presumably for use of the dead\nwhen the real fingers had deteriorated.\nSoap and House Shortage\nWorst Problem in Moscow\nFew Beggars in Soviet Capital's Streets\nDespite Warnings of \"Hell\"\nA TRIP TO RUSSIA\nWife of Pierre van Paassen, noted European newspaper correspondent, and an experienced Journalist In her own right, Coral \u2022\nvan Paassen, Nelson Dally News European correspondent, Is visit-\ning Russia. One of her series of articles describing vividly what,\n*\u00bbht sees there, follow. The articles are written In an Informal\nway from material gathered from personal contact with the people\nof tha country.   Don't mlsa a single one..\n(Third of a Series)\nBy CORALIE VAN PAASSEN\nCentral Press Canadian Writer\nMOSCOW, Oct. 29.-The last thins\nI saw in Paris on the evening I\ntook the train for Moscow was an\nannouncement on a huge bill-poster\non the waU in the north station that\nthe \"grand iournaliste,\" Henri de\nKerillis, had just returned after a\nmonth's trip in Russia and was going to address a mass meeting where\nhe would '211 the world all about\nthe \"enter Sovietique,\" the Soviet\nhell. It waa too late to cancel my\nticket, and the whistle was flowing\nso I resigned myself to the inevitable. In Berlin the next morning\nI bought the BerUner Tageblatt\nat the Friedrichstrasse station and\nin that paper on the front page I\nread a graphic account by Herr\nPaul Scheffer about \"Die Hoelle\nvon Raeterussland\", the hell of Soviet Russia: It was a,most discouraging description and I sat mentally\ndebating whether I would get off\nthe train, until I saw some Nazis\non the platform hei'. some other\nNazi and I thought about the days\nwhen Herr Schefier was still a free\nman ant could write what he wanted, and the whistle blew again and\noff we went.\nPASSENGER'S WARNING\nA little beyond Warsaw a lady\ncame in my compartment, who told\nme in the course of a conversation\nsh; opened, that she was the daughter of a former Russian diplomat.\nShe not only advised me strongly\nto go back whencq I came, but she\nflew into a fit of hysterics when I\nsaid I had no intention of going\nback until I had at least seen\nMoscow. -\nYou'll see nothing but cemeteries;\" she called out. \"You have\nbeen led astray by propaganda from\nthe red murderers. There is nothing ln Moscow, nothing but corpses\nanC hunger and misery.\"\n\"But.\" I said, \"madame. there\nwere 15.00 .'.merican tourists visiting Russia this summer alone and I\nknow several of them who -came to\ntell me in Paris how much they\nwire impressed. ...\"\n\"Lies, lies, Ues,\" she screamed\nagain. She was bringing the other\npassengers out into the corridor\nwith her yells. 'The buildings they\nshow foreign visitors,\" she went on,\n\"are just walls, false fronts like the\nmovie people put up in Hollywood,\nthere is nothing behind them but\ncemeteries and corpses. You are\ngolnr to a hell on earth.\"\nHell again, I thought. But I said\nnothing, for the woman was obviously out of her mind.\nFIND FEW BEGGARS\nAnd now I am nearly 10 days In\n^T^totottVT&iqj dUtpmi.lK\n\u25a0mcqwohatio aa MAT MO.\nMonth End Food Specials\n193-Phone$-194\nFree Delivery\nLet \"The Ray- Cut Tour Food Bill!\nMarmalade, Aylmer    OQ<\nOrange; 32-ox. jar . Lt\/\nAiparagui   Cuttings   Rose\ndale, for Salads, 2s;\nPer tin\n25'\nSpinach, Royal City    1Q<*\nIVu per tin   leJ\nPeat, Aylmer, Sieve 5, No.\n2 tin; Off\n2 for  LD\nMARMALADE\nAylmer Orange,\n32-oz. Jars \t\nJar 2H\nPeanut Butter, Butter C9<\nNut 4i; per tin .... Ott\nRoman  Meal  Cookies,  Dr.\n|ackson's;\nper dox.  |....\n10'\nHBC Broken Pekoe   inf\nTea, per Ib *\u2022*\u25a0\u00bb\nRoman Meal Breakfast\nCereal, Dr. Jackson's; OCtp\npkg OJ^\nCORNED BEEF\nLibby's,\n12-oz. tins\nTin 130\nHBC Luxurious\nCoffee: per Ib. .\n43\nMince Meat, Em-       iC?\npress; quart   w\nBee Cee Tomatoes,    OOO\n2V-s;2 tins *-0\nMinute Tapioca, 10f\"\nper pkg  wO\nSHREDDED WHEAT\u20142 Pkgs. 23f\nMalt Extract, Cold Medal\nHop Flavored, d>1 OQ\n2Vis; per tin  ... \u2022~'*Lj\nWalnut Pieces,\nper Ib\t\n32'\nSoda   Biscuits,   Christie's\nSnow Flake, lOr\nper pkg.     IO\nMandarin Oranges,\nBirks'; per tin  ...\n15*\nKETCHUP Cro,,e * Blackwtll's,\n14-os. bottles\nBottle 190\njello, All flavors;\n3 Pkgs\t\n19*\nlohnson's Fluid Beef, QO<\n16-ox. bottle    *fm-\nChateau Cheese,        OOC\n1-lb. pkg LO\nHoney, Linden Brick, *06\nFLOUR\nSeal Of Quality;\n24s\n85*\n49l\n$1.65\nOnions, Good quality; 12 lbs.\t\n100-lb. sick  fl.75\n25'\nSoap, Royal Crown,\nper carton \t\n22\"\nMalt Extract, Cold  Medal\nPlain, 2<\/.s: {1 1Q\nper tin   \u00ab])1.1J\nSilvo or Brasso, Olt\"\nper tin   t-l\nPOTATOES '\u25a0\"**\u2022 \u2022Po^\u25a0<, \u25a0*'**\"\u25a0\nGems, 100-lb. sacks\nSack $1.35\nthis Soviet \"hell\" and I must say\nthat it isn't such a bad place after\nall. The streets are full of people\nand busy. On 'lie faces I can t read\nany signs of melancholia. Maybe I\nam a victim of illusion, or maybe\nthe Soviet power has called out\nthose tens of thousands of pedestrians just to impress the foreign\nvisitors. It is true I have seen a few\nbeggars and I have seen a street\nfight between two men, but I am so\nused to the sight of the beggars who\nsleep in the doorway across the\nstreet from where I live on the Rue\nSt. Remain in Paris, that I did not\npay enough attention maybe to their\nRussian colleagues.\nAU Joking apart, I declare, that all\nthat vast host marching up. and\ndown the streets of Moscow la few,\nbut very few excepted), looked well-\nfed and healthy. I heard a good deal\nof laughing. And on the whole they\nwere well-dressed and well-shod.\nEmilc V.indcrVelde, the Socialist\nleader, and Belgiar minister of state,\nwho visited Russia a couple of years\nago, told us at our home in Paris\nthat lie thought a lot of people in\nMoscow were abominably shod.\nThings have improved a lot since\nM. VanderVelde was here, For with\nthe exception of some peasants in\nthe market, who wore a kind of\nstraw shoes\u2014of the kind their fathers have worn for centuries, homemade things\u2014all the people were\nrather heavily booted. As in Poland\nand in all Slavic countries the men\nseem to go ln for knee boots, even\nthose working In offices. Stalin is\nalways photographed in high boots,\nlt must be the mud ol centuries\nthat accustomed them to those heavy\nthings.\nWEAR OLD-FASHIONED GAR!\nYou don't see any extravagantly\ndressed in Moscow. The professors\nat the Polytechnic Institute which 1\nvisited this afternoon do not differ\nin dress from the workmen. A shirt\nwith a belt and high boots, just as\nyou see in old photographs of Count\nTolstov on his estate. The czar also\nused to dress that way when he was\nin private, I am told.\nFew men wear collars. Only thc\nyounger element go In for this fash\nn\nH ------------------------------------\nka it seems, to go promenading\nalong the boulevards or iu the parks.\nA wnole city of people dressed in\nwhite. But they Keep their boots\nion. Eut^.' are astonishingly clean,\n\u2022laity    after    nightfall\nbody puts on a white roubash\nEspecially    after    nightfall  when\n^^L__^_\non. No. I must confess my first impressions of this great big new world\nare not so bad. No hell at any rate.\nI would not dare make comparisons\nwiUi such streets as the Etuves St.\nMartin ir. Paris or the Nalewski in\nWarsaw, Moscow certainly is not\none big slum as some have described it. It swarms with old palaces. 40\ntimes 40 church and masses of imposing new buildings.\nBut the housing question in spite\nof the extensive rows of new apartment houses and the nationalization of hundreds of palaces remains\nacute. The population stands now at\nthree millions seven hundred thousand. They can't build fast enough\nto accommodate the influx. Moreover, the death rate is constantly\nsinking and the birth rate is going\nup. as nowhere else in thc world,\nstatistics show. These are strange\nthings for a country which some\ncall a hell. There is still a shortage\nof certain articles, soap, for instance.\nI had heard of this before I left so I\nhad taken a whole box of soap with\nme, for my own use and to do some\npeople a favor with.\nWON'T R18K SPECULATION\nI have one cake left. Thn customs\nofficers at the border looked at the\nbox in amazement. \"You don't need\nal that soap In a month.\" said one\nof them. \"What do you intend to do\nwith aU that soap? Do you intend to\nsell this soap?\" \"No,\" I said. \"What\ndo you think?\"\n\"I think,\" he said, \"I will let you\nkeep one coke and hold thc resl\nhere, where you can claim it when\nyou pass through here on your way\nout.\" And he added: \"We don't take\nchances on speculators ln this country!\"\n\"Bureaucratl\" I hissed at him.\n\"Bourgeois!\" he hissed bsck,\nA listener is as bad as the \"osslp.\nIf it were not for hope all hearts\nwould break.\n-PAGE THRU\nDEAD AT NI\nRich\nand\nManufacturer\nLumberman\nDies at Hotel\nNEW YORK, Oct. 29 (AP).-Ect\nward W. Backus, 74, wealthy man'\nufacturer and Ium' erman here oa\na business trip from Mlnneapolit\ndied early today at the Vanderbilt\nhotel, where he had been stoppinf\nsince Friday.\nBackus notified the hotel desk al\n6:30 a.m. that he had been stricken\nwilh heart pains and Dr. Francis J.\nMurray, hotel physician, hurried\nto the man's room. Backus soon\nlapsed into unconsciousness and\nUied shortly afterward.\nA policeman was summoned and\nlie renoved the dead man's effecls\nlo tte East 35th street police station. Among them was discovered\n200.000 paper mill stock certificates,\n$132 in cash and a will.\nSeymour W. Backus, a son, wat\nnotified in Minneapolis by tele*\nphone. He made arrangements fol\nthe care of thc body which, mean1\ntime, remained at the hotel.\nMOTHERS\nNeed The Vital 3\nMother must furnish calcium for the unborn infant's\nbones, iron for its blood and\nphosphorus for its nerves.\nShe can add to her supplies of\nthese \"Vital 3\" minerals by\ntaking Fellows' Syrup, which\ncontains calcium, phosphorus\nand iron in a form easily\nassimilated by both mother\nand infant.\nna\nFELLOWS'\n\".VS,.  SYRUP\n)ff fyl\u00ab0n*T&\u00ab]i ^mpiitt6.1|r\nINOORTCftATae l\u00bb MAY It\/to\nOn Sale Today and Wednesday\nNOTICE)\nNEW ACCOUNTS OPEN TODAY. BUY TODAY-\nPAY BY NOV. 10TH.\nSALE PRICES ON STANDARD FLOOR COVERING\nEnglish felt linoleum in a fine range of patterns suitable for any room.\nAll 2 yards wide.\nHARVEST SALE, SQUARE YARD ......^\n45\nFRILLED CURTAINS\nDainty frilled curtains in all colors complete with vallance and tiebacks FQ-p\nHARVEST SALE, PAIR      OV\nSPECIAL BROADCLOTH\n36-inch Wabasso broadcloth in a range\nof new shades. All fast colors. OC0\nSpecially Priced, YARD    LO\nGILT FRAMED\nMIRRORS\nRound and Hexagon\nmirrors in embossed gilt\nframes with rich mouldings. 14-inch size. Special  for Harvest Sale\n$1-98\nInfant's Lamsdown Coats\n*  Regular $4.95\nWhite or camel colored coats, warmly lined. Sires 1\nto 3 years.\nHarvest Sale $3.95\nWOMEN'S FLEECE LINED BLOOMERS\nServiceable warm bloomers in sand, flesh\nand navy. Sizes small, medium and large.\nHARVEST SALE.\nPAIR\t\n45\nCHILDREN'S WINTER COATS\nJust in\u2014a big range of fur trimmed coats in plain or\nsmart tweed patterns. Semi-fitted backs with double in\nverted pleats. Lined and warmly interlined. Sizes 8 to\n14 years. HARVEST SALE \t\n' 10-95\nMEN'S CREAM RIB COMBINATION -\nFall and winter weight underwear. Combination with long legs and 8 | \u2022OQ\nlong sleeves. HARVEST SALE   ,        *\nDRESS   BRACES\nFree   swing,   new   style\nbraces in long and extra\nHARVEST SALE \u00abpl.UU\nWOMEN'S CAPESKIN GLOVES\nAn opportunity to select\na pair to go with your winter outfit. Smart slip-on\nstyle, and good range of\nshades. Plain or fancy\ntrimmed cuffs. Sizes 6\nto 8.\nPAIR ....\n$1.50\nDRESS SHIRTS\nFine quality broadcloth in\nwhite and plain shades.\nFine wool cashmere shirts,\nstripes and fleck effects.\nAll sizes. ei AC\nHARVEST  SALE tfl.UO\nNEW NECKWEAR\nDainty collars in fine quality crepes. Assorted styles\nto choose from.        CQ-?\nEACH\nWORK SHIRTS\nNew winter weight work\nshirts, all wool coat style\nwith double cuffs and col-\nHARVEST SALE $1\"\u00ab)\nWOMEN'S\nCASHMERE  HOSE\n\"Penman's\" cashmere\nout-size hosiery in a good\nwearing quality. \u2022 Colors\ngrain and gunmetal. Sizes\n9V_, 10, lOVi. COC\nHarvest Sale, PAIR   OO\n _________________^_____M\nPAOI FOUR *\nTHI NILION DAILY NIWI. NILSON. I.C-TUISOAY MORNINO, OCTOItft M. 1M4-\nPOLICE CHIEF\nGYRO MEMBER\nWelcomed at Weekly\nLuncheon; Plan for\nSeason Activities\nChltf ot police Aln Stewart waa\nMound Into the Nalaon oyro cluh\nMondiy nlfht at tha club luncheon\nto tba Hume silver ball room, A. I.\nMinn, paat president, conducted the\nInstallation and a welcome waa glv-\naa on behalf of tbe club by president P. H Sheffield. It wu the first\nmeeting of tbe club since the re-\natrictlona os public gathering! and\n(he flrat part of the evening was\napent ln preparations for future entertainments to be sponsored by the\nclub, and ln the presentation of\nreporu of several committees. John\nCartmel wound up the evening with\nto account of hla recent holiday\ntrip ln thl south.\nDouglaa Cummlna reported on the\nprogress of the boedown wblcb tbe\nclub la sponsoring this week and\ninnounced committee members. Mr.\nCummlna bas been busy during the\npast week on plana for the elub'a\nannual dance and entertainment de-\nlux.\nCommittees for the boedown are\nV. Owens, Chief of Police Alex Stew-\nart, decorations: J ,D. Notman, music\nand floor arrangement*; R. E. Horton, P. E. Poulln, Harry Ferguaon,\nand jack Morris, games; D. D. Townaend and Austin carter, refreshments; R. O. Barnes, tickets. The\npossibilities of sponsoring the Scottish players again on their trip\nthrough, and of staging of another\nplay, were dealt with. J. D. Notman\nreported on the former and B. D.\nBarnes on the latter.\nLITTLE THEATRE ASSOCIATION\nPresident F. H. Sheffield, speaking\nof the activities of the Nelson Little\nTheatre aaaoclatlon, stressed the Importance of the movement. aU over\nthe Dominion associations were\nspringing up to bear \u2022 evidence that\nthe legitimate stage still held Its\ncharm, people still Uked to sec\nthe actors \"ln the flesh.\" The\nplay that tha Nelaon association ws< aoon to produce.\n\"And So To Bed,\" wae a happy\nfarcical drama aa well as a fine\ncharacter atudy, Mr. Sheffield stated.\nQuest* of the club were WUUam\nMcLean of Toronto, Url Duke ot\nVancouver and Cecil ijambert of Nelaon. Mr. Duke brought greetings\nfrom the coast club ind aald tbe\n\"boys\" were going strong. Hi had\nittended a Kelowna luncbeon and\nnld Kelowna members were going to\nlive other clubi a run for* tbe attendance contest prize. H- S. Wataon\nnported sending flowen to Dr. H. H.\nMacKessle, now ln the hoeplttl. The\ndoctor wss doing fin* tnd would\nwon bt out agtln, ht ttld,\nJohn Cartmel reported having had\n{, plessapt trip In the United States,\nha weather and travelling condition! combining to mtkt it in ideal\nholiday. Mr and Mrs. Cartmel made\nthe trip which took them aouth to\nAgua Calient* and altogether tbey\nktvelled 8397 miles. On the return\ntrip they travelled over tht new\nPtclfle Bed Wood hlghwiy. Mr. cartmel visited a sister In San (Tanclsco\nSd a brother In Lot Angeles, one\ny the Nelsonlte ate at a restaurant\nfrequented by Hollywood stars and\nHw t number of actors and actresses ln tbelr stage garb, Roman gladiators ln armor, and bathing beau-\npee ln thtlr \"war ptlnt.\"\nTht trip along tht Oregon hlgh-\nJrey and t vlalt to t famous cave\n-mre alao described.\nOordon Bennett wai called upon\nto  report  on  Kootenay   flat!   and\nSvt lh tccount of bla duck hunt-\nt expedition.\nRailway Death\nToll 37 in the\nMonth of August\nOTTAWA, Oct. 39 (CP)\u2014There\nwere 97 persona killed and 348 injured ln railway accidents in Canada ln August, the board of raliwry\ncommissioners reported today. Of\nthe total killed, 30 were classified\nta railway accidents whlla aeven were\nkilled ln railway accidents tt crossings.\nLET US FILL\n.   YOUR NEEDS\nIN COAL\nAll our ooili offer grut hltt\nvilue with \u2022 minimum  of\ntoot tnd dutt.\nImperlil\nMidlmd\nMichel\nPhono 258\nMacDonald\nCartage & Fuel\nCompany\nWILLOW POINT\nBOYS PROGRESS\nPine proirrM la belnf mtde by\ntbe willow Point WOU pack and\nBoy Scout*, according to Dlatrlct\nCommlMloner J. M. Dronsfield. There\nare seven membera ln each and\nthe boya are under the direction\nof L. Spearin, The pack and troop\nwere  organised  thla fall.\nCOUNCIL MUST -\nSANCTION BAN\nMedical Officer of Health\nHas Consulted Council Both\nTimes It Was Stated\nAldermai. W* B. Bamford ralaed\nthe question at the Nelson council\nmeeting Monday night as to what\nthe council'., attltute would be for\nfuture bans, He stated that be\nthought the council should be communicated with before any bans\nwere place on the city.\nIt was pointed out that the city\noouncll had been interviewed and\nthe ban sanctioned both tlmea lt\nwu placed on the city, and that\nonly through the council could the\nhan be placed on the city. On the\nsecond occasion the decision of the\nmayor and four of the councillors\nwa\u00ab obtained even though a meeting\nwas not oalled.\nThere was a difference of opinion\nexpressed as to whether the medical\noffloer of health should consult the\nmedical association of the cltv before urging that a ban ahould be\nplaced on the city. Some urged that\nflthe medical offloer of health decided a ban wsa necessary that was\nsufficient, whereas others held that\nlf the medical officer of health de-\nsultcd it would provide the aldermen, as laymen In health, with a\nbroad opinion on the matter.\n01 APPLICATION\nFOR RAIL BOARD\nOne tppllcttion hta bten mide\nfor consideration when tht botrd\nof railway commissioners meet in\nNelaon Nov, 9. The Arrow Likes\nLumber company, Limited, at Nakusp haa applied lor a reduction tn\nrates on lumber from Nakuap to the\nprairie provinces tnd Ontario; tnd\nexport rates to Quebec and the\neaatern seaboard and to New Westminster and Vancouver.\nThe board htt requested that\nwhere practicable the parties should\nfile copies of the documents submitted, to be used tt tht hearing.\nScouts and Cubs\nActive This Week\nScouting In Nelton will let Into\nfull awing thla week, atated District\nScout Commissioner J. M. Drontfleld. Tueaday la aet for the flrat\nmettlng of No. 1 pack tnd Ifo. 8\ntroop; No. 3 troop wlll mttt Thunday night; No. 1 troop will meet\nFriday. Straight Scout tnd Oub work\nwill be taken with a view to the\ndifferent boyt passing testa In the\nnear future.\nB. C. Roads League\nAgain Asks for a\nHighway Commission\nVANCOUVER, Oct M (CP)-Re-\niter*\u00bbted demand fot k hl*Jhway commission in Britlah Columbli il expressed in t resolution adopted here\nby the executive of the Good Hoads\nleague tnd forwarded to the provincial government.\nThe resolution wu passed \"in\nview of press reports to the effect\nthat the provincial government did\nnot intend to introduce legislation\nfor the establishment of a highway\ncommission at the coming session of\nparliament and whereas this commission was promised at the time of\nthe last provincial election and the\nnecessary machinery for setting it\nup should not prove an expensive\nundertaking.\"\nThe executive decided to launch a\nmembership campaign and to have\nan estimate prepared of the cost of\npaving the highway from Osoyoos\nto the coast. The estimate will be\nsubmitted to thc provincial government before its delegation leaves\nfor Ottawa to attend the conference\nof premiers.\nChabot on Way\nto Join Hawks\nTORONTO, Oct. 29 (CP).-Lorne\nChabot, former Rangers, Toronto\nand Canadiens goalkeeper, left his\nhome here tonight to report to the\nChicago Blackhawks, Stanley cup\nchampions of the National Hockey\nleague. Chabot said he will sign a\ncontract on his arrival at Chicago,\nhis terms having been met by the\nHawks.\nThe difference between borrowing money and borrowing trouble\nIs that one can still borrow more\nof the latter.\nThe Inside Nerves\nControl the Vital Organs\nEv*ry baat of tha haart,        ^^^^^^^^m\nEvery braath of the lungs\nIs ths result of expended nerve fores.\nThese Inside, or sympathetic nerves\nDirect and control the machinery of the body.\nWhen you are worried and nervous and sleep-\nIsss\nThese bodily organs become weak and slow In\naction,\nTheir motive power\u2014nerve force, is running\nlow.\nYou may not considsr yourself sick,\nBut what is worse than a nervous breakdown.\nUnfortunately nerve troublea do not correct\nthemselves.\nIt it necessary to build up new nerve force.\nThis can be done by using Dr. Chase's Nerve\nFood,\nThe  time-proven   restorative  of  blood  and\nt,        nttfi*.\nREGISTRfP^AS FIGURES FOR\nPRELIMINARY V0TERS1ISTS\nSubject to Change\nat Revision in\nNovember\nReturns have been received from  |\npractically all the enumerators In  j\nKootenay neat stating tht nam- i\nber of mines placed on the pre- j\nHiulnary   voters'   Usta,   and    the ,\nllgures have been obtalued from |\nII. D. Ramsden. registrar of voters i\n(or Kooteniy Wett.\nThese figures tre not flntl, how- I\never, as they may be added to or\ntaken from when the revision Is\nmade Nov. 18, 14 and li.\nThere la a slight change from\nthe figure flrtt quoted for Nelson\nseveral days ago. Voters' Usta htve\nbeen placed at the following atores\nand residence ln Helton and mty\nbe seen there by tnyont. These\nare alio the places of revision tnd\nInclude the territory mentioned: R.\n3. Howe, 723 Robson ttreet, between\nRobson and Innea street!; H. Llnde-\nmere, W*. Marr's house, Vancouver\nstreet, all west of Cottonwood creek;\nW. I. Coles, 623 Robaon atreet, between Latimer and Robaon streets:\nO. Horstead. 602 Robson ttrttt, between Carbonate and Latimer streets;\nD. Laughton, 909 Edgewood avenue,\nbetween Victoria street tnd Lake\nFront; 3. t. Annable, ir., 616 Ward\nstreet, between Victoria atreet and\nCarbonate ttreet: I. M. Qlllott, 214\nHouston ttreet, all aouth of lnnet\nstreet and east of Cottonwood creek;\nR. 3. Howe, 723 Robion street; East\nof Ptrk street tnd aouth of Vltw\nstreets to Behnion ttreet: Marcus\nMartin, Morris Service Station, between Behnion tnd Davles streets:\nJ. H. Chapman, houat corner of\nSixth atreet and Kootenay avenue,\nbetween Davles and Kootenay itrtet;\nL, 0. Mahon, Annabie't Lakeehore\ncamp at CP.R. shipyards, from\nKootenay avenue on, alto north\nshore.\nAlntworth  tt.\nAnntblt  144.\nAppledale  M.\nArgenta lt.\nArrow Park M.\nBalfour 73.\nBoswell  72.\nBrouse 92.\nBurton IH.\nCastlegar 100.\nColumbia Gardens 47.\nCrawford Bay 132.\nCrescent Bty 24.\nCrescent Valley 41.\nDeer   Park   4\u00ab.\nIdgewood  131.\nltst Arrow  Ptrk  M\nErie   77.\nFauquier  <4.\nFerguson 13.\nFruitvale 236.\nOalena Bay 2*3.\nOerrard 14.\nGraham's Landing 32.\nOny Crttk 43.\nHalcyon\u2014unheard from\nHall 24.\nHarrop-Longbeach 112.\nHowaer M.\nJohnson'! Lending 37.\nKulo 401.\nLardeau 32.\nMarblehetd 11.\nMirror Lake 3T.\nNakuap North 340.\nNakuap South IM.\nNeedles S3.\nNelaon ctly center 107)\nNelton West 3364.\nNew Denver 332.\nNorth Upper Arrow Likes 30.\nPark Biding 96.\nPasamore   66.\nPend d'Oretlle 91. *,\nPerryt 67.\nPoplar\u2014unheard   from.\nProcter 148.\nQueen's  Bty   34.\nReno, Sheep  creek  80.\nRenata  64.\nRiondel 37.\nRobson 79.\nRoeebery 18.\nRossland  1416.\nSalmo 149.\nSandon-Cody 11.\nSilverton 188.\nSheep Creek-Rossltnd 31.\nShirley  106f\nShutty Bench 31.\nSlocan City 190.\nSloan  Ptrk   14.\nSouth Sloctn 317.\nSummit Llkt 3.\nSyrlngt Creek 38.\nTarryt 33.\nTrtll Center 1996.\nTrail last  1067.\nTraU Weat 1008.\nThree Forks 21.\nTrout  Ltkt  26.\nThrums 18.\nWaldle's Camp nil.\nWaneta  33.\nWest Robaon 34.\nWeit Dtmtrs 86.\nWhatahan Uke 3.\nWillow point 131.\nWlnlaw and Ltbahdo SO.\nTmlr  143.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 29 \u2014 Klaus\nScheer motored to Grand 'orkt tnd\nChristina Lake Saturday evening.\ni   .  .\nMr. and Mrs. John Laurie Sr.\nct'ebrating the 36th annivertary of\ntheir wedding, were guettt of honor\nat a surprise ptrty tendered them\nat their home recently. Mrs. J.\nWood, Mrs. Alex Laurie and Miss\nAnne Thornton served refreshments,\nGames, dancing and singing provided an excellent program ot en*\ntertainment. On the musical program those taking part wert Mrs.\nR. Livingstone, Mrt. William P.\nR-bertson, Mrt. J. Rantoul, Miu\nThornton, j. P. Grant, Mr. Livingstone, Patrick Lagan and George\nOrgan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMr. and Mra. John YurkoskI have\ngone to Portland.\n\u2022 \u2022  t\nWilfred W. Emiley motored to\nChristina Like Saturday evening.\nEdward Haley it visiting relatives\nat Cranbrook.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00ab\nMitt Jennie Ron, who his been\nvacationing at the coast, hu returned to Trail.\ntet\nLeander Mickleron of Revelstoke\nhu returned home after visiting\nfriends of Rossland and Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Lena Beck hu arrived ln\nTrail from Calgary and will make\nher home here.\ntet\nJ. Martin, who for aeveral montht\nhu been residing at Calgary, has\nreturned to Trail.\n. *  \u2022  *\nMri. Gunnar Sorenson is a patient\nln the Trall-Tadanac hoipital.\n\u2022 *  \u2022\nMn. J. Furtock wu hottess recently at a delightful children's\nparty for her ton Joseph. Following\nsupper, dancing and gamea were\nenjoyed.\ntee\nB. Andretta viiited recently at\nNelaon.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMn. Archibald Millar entertained\nrecently at bridge, Mn. Herbert\nClirk winning prize for high tcore,\nMra. W. C. Alton, tecond-hlgh, and\nMiu Verna Stinson, somolation.\nJudge Bucks the\nSending of Money\nOut of Canada\nMONTREAL. Oct. 30 .CPI-Thtre\nart too many cites, Mr. Justice J.\nBumbny intimated today, of naturalized cltlaens tending money to\nforeign countriea to aupport their\nfamilies thert. Hereafter, he declared,\nno naturalisation papera will bt Is*\nsued to in applicant unless ht ctn\nihow thit hli wife tnd children, lt\nany, reside In Canada.\nFlashes From the Wires\nCHICAGO - The United States\ngovernment with unexpected\nabruptness rested its mall fraud case\nagainst Samuel Iniull and followed\nwith a vigorous resistance to an\nattempt by Stanley Field, one of the\n16 co-defendants, to obtain a verdict\nof not guilty.\nEDMONTON\u2014Third man to loin\nthe old Royal Northwest Mounted\npolice when it was formed in Ot*\ntawa in the early 70s, James Mc*\nKernan, 83, is dead here.\nLONDON\u2014All steel or iron wire\narticles entering the United Kingdom on or after October 31 will be\nsubject to an ad valorem duty of\n33% per cent, the treasury announced today.\nNEW YORK-X-ray motion pictures which for the tint time wlll\nshow the living human heart ln ani\nmated cartoon style were described\nto the Society of Motion Picture\nEngineen.\nThese cartoons are pulsating shadows on a movie film, made definite\nby careful -outline tracings. The\nheart thus revealed was said to be\nso graphic u to offer medicine a\nnew method of diagnosis of heart\ndiseases which are the foremost\ncause of deaths in the United States.\nMILWAUKEE - Teddy Yarosz,\nclaimant to the world middleweight\nchampionship wins a 10-round decision from Johnny Phagan, Chicago negro.\nWASHINGTON - President\nRoosevelt's policy-making aviation\ncommission seriously considered a\nproposal for United Statei partici-\nfiatlon in a net-work of airship\nhies providing speedy transportation acrou the Atlantic and Pacific.\nTwo world recognized Ilghter-\nthan-air leaders urged such a step\nbefore the commluion\u2014Dr. Hugo\nEckner, who hai flown 600,0c 1 miles\nin his Graf zeppelln, and Paul W.\nLitchfield, whose firm built the\nnavy's A'\/.*on and Macon.\nHAVANA\u2014Eight persons were\nkilled in a political clash ln Plnar\nDel Rio and the Cuban government\nsuspended constitutional guarantees\nin Havana and Oriente provinces\nfor another .30 days.\nVICTORIA \u2014 Sustained objection\nto- pooling being included in any\nscheme tir the marketing of fluid\nmilk countenanced by the provincial marketing board was made by\nJ. W. deB. Farrls, K.C, today before\nthe B.C. board,-as the highlight in\na day-long argument of marketing\nplans. This, said Mr. Farrls was the\nrock on which the Dairy Products\nSales Adjustment act had foun\ndered when given a practical trial\na year or two ago.\nSEVILLE, Spain\u2014Plans to make\nSeville the key port in transatlantic\nzeppelln service were announced\nhere by Emlllo Moreno, aub-iecre*\ntary to th presidency.\nMONTREAL-A letter from President E. A. Gllroy of the Canadian\nAmateur Hockey association stated\nthat transfers of players to the\nmaritime provinces after January 1\nlast will not be countenanced.\nMEXICO, D.F.\u2014Hundredi of men\nand women, some carrying babies,\nstood in line all day inside and\noutside the cathedral to receive the\nblessing of Archbishop Pascuel Diaz.\nWINNIPEG-Aubrey Webster and\nSammy McManus, stars with Moncton Hawks last year, signed to play\nprofessional hockey with Montreal\nMaroons of the National Hockey\nleague.\nWASHINGTON-Purchascs of silver from the Mexican government\nas part of the United States treasury's program of giving the currency a 25 per cent silver backing\nwere disclosed today by Secretary\nHenry Morgenthau.\nAUSTIN, Texas\u2014Destitute men,\nwomen and children of Travis\ncounty camped at the Texas capital\nentrance in a \"starve or get relief'1\nstrike.\nHAWARDEN, Saak.-Hil skull\nand face pierced by the flying pieces\nof the grindstone over which he wu\nworking. Fred Murray, 55-year-old\nblacksmith of this place, died.\nLOS ANGELES-Judge William\nP. James today took under advisement until Saturday the bid of\n$4,000,000 made by Harry F. Sinclair,\noil magnate, for properties of the\nRichfield Oil company of New\nYork, subsidiary of Richfield of\nCalifornia, now in federal receivership.\nAlberta Liberals\nSeek Extension\nof North Border\nIDMONTON, Oct. 91 (CP)-Holding that dtTtlopmtnt of the north\nhad suffered becauae the northwest\nterritories btd betn admlnUtertd at\nOttawa, w. R. Howson, M.L.A, Albert! Liberal, tonight had announced\nthat Wla provincial party platform\nwould seek tht titenilos of Alberta's\nnorth boundary to thi Arctic ocean.\nThe extension would doublt the\n-lttt ot tbt provlnot.\nEipltlnlng hli propoul, Mr. Howson uld \u2022'Alberta mutt seek new\nsources of revenue tnd our present\npopulttton cannot be uked to cirry\neven the present burden, our people\nare now ttxed beyond the limit of\ntheir ability to pay.\nVETS BOUNCE\nKID PLAYERS\nGALT, Ont., Oct. 29- (CP).-Tor*\nonto Leafs of the National Hockey\nleague bid farewell to Gait, training center, by staging an exhibition\nfame when Eddie Powers' Whites\nefeated Dick Irwin's Blues 5-4. The\nWhites are Leafs' regulars of the\nN.H.L. season.\nHerbie Lewis and Laurie Aurie\nof Detroit Red Wings and Normie\nHimes of New York Americans took\nthe ice to strengthen thi ranks ot\nthe Yannlgans, and Bill Courtney\not Toronto, former toiler ef the old\nOntario profeuional league, wu in\nthe nets for the Blues.\nNewcomen to the Leafs impressed\nfana with their speed. Harvey Jack*\nson, however, showed most speed.\nThe Thomas-Boll-Kilrea line and\nthe new kid line of Kelly, Metz and\nArt Jackson displayed some real\naggreulveneu and a battling spirit.\n\"Flash\" Hollett and Happy Day\ntumbled the boyi about when they\nhit the defence and King Clancy\nand Red Horner replied by ihowing\nno leniency with the kids.\nTRAIL SKI CLUB\nTAKES NEW NAME\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 2\u00bb-The Trall-\nRoulind Ski club will hereifter be\nknown u the Tnll Ski club, lt wu\ndecided at a meeting In the Memorial hall Monday night. Lut year\nthe club wu formed ln Rouland\nand it asked the local body to drop\nthat name from the title. At memben of the Trail club who are from\nRouland will be joining the Rouland club, the Trail body decided to\nomit the word Rouland as lt< activities would have little or no relation to that city.\nA number of volunteen will work\non the hill at the Nels Nelson lite\nSaturday and Sunday. Bert Bothum\nand Bob Linburn, who have been\nworking at the hill lite for tome\ntime uked for additional aid.\nCity Council\nBriefs\nInstructions were given by the\nNelson city council Monday night\nfor the city clerk to effect collection\nof road and poll tax from several\nemployees of the Dominion government who had so far escaped the\ntaxes, although'subject to tbem.\nThe offer of Alt Erickion for\nthree lott just oft Houston tnd Fill\nstreets wis rejected by the council\nbut he will be offered them tor $40\na lot Mr. Erickson proposed to pay\n125 a lot.\nW. A. Smith wrote uklng reconsideration of the quettic.i of dim-\nages claimed on hil radio, which\nhe stated the city was responsible\nfor. Mr. Smith will be informed\nthat the city will abide by the de\nclsion of the city engineer on the\nmatter. R. E. Potter after investigating the question tome time ago\nstated that ln hit opinion the city\nwu not responsible for the damage.\nA letter ot thanks wu received\nfrom Robert Morris who wu one of\nthe winners of the scholarship prizes\noffered by the city. He expreued his\npleasure in winning the scholarship\nand offered his apologies for not\nhaving writteh tooner. The letter\nwas ordered received and filed.\nRequests from the West Kootenay\nPoultry institute, the West Kootenay Farmen' institute and the board\nof railway commissioners for the\nuse of the city hall, were granted.\nThe different dates spoken for were\nNovember 7, 8 and B, respectively.\nIn response to a letter from the\nNelson Gyro club regarding lumber\nwhich the club obtained to build\ngrandstand seats at the Recreation\nfrounds for the exhibition game of\nhe American league all-stars here,\nit was decided to buy the seat\nframes from the club at a cost of\n$70, and it was left with the city\nclerk to deal with the club regarding the rest of the lumber there.\nThe council wu unanimous in\nwishing to help the Gyros out in\nsome way ln view of the ldis suffered by the Gyros when the game\nhad to be abandoned.\nA letter from the secretary of the\nUnion ot Canadian Municipalities\nat London, Ont., uked the Nelson\ncouncil to pay its membership duet\nof $10 to the organization. Alderman\nJ. J. McRae of Vancouver wrote in\nsupport of it. It was decided to pay\nthe fee.\nA letter from the deputy provincial secretary at Ottawa, requested\nthat all traffic be stopped for a period of two minutes on November 11\nat 11 a.m. and that a silence be observed. A motion wis pissed to\ncomply with the request.\nNo direct action wu taken by the\ncouncil on i letter from the Union\not British Columbit Munlclptlitiet\nuklng that a reiolutlon be pused\nh woteit of Premier T. D. Pattullo'i\naction ln refusing to meet the Union\nof British Columbia Municipalities\ndelegation at the cout. It wu laid\non th? table for further information.\nLONGMAN HAS\nDAILY PLUNGE\nA. B. Longman of Falrvlew, although alone ln hli tctlvltles. continues to take his dally dip af Lakeside park. He states the water is\n\"not too bad yet.\"     r\nPUBUC BEATS\nHIGH SCHOOL\nTeams Receive Strong\nSupport From Their\nClassmates\nTRAIL, B. O.. Oct. 39\u2014A penalty\nshot won for the public school from\nthe High sohool an exhibition buketball (tmt it tht Memorial hall\nMonday afternoon, when the Junior\npuplli defeated their elders 7-8. Pupils from both school! wert out ln\ngrut ttrength tbe boot tnd rths\nbtlng lynonymout to only those of\nsome chimpionihlp tut when thousands were ln attendance.\nHigh tchool bid tht upper hud\nat the itart, managing to sink I\nsingle field basket to nuke the score\n2-0 it tht tnd of tht flrtt quarter.\nPublic school avenged tht score but\nt penalty ihot tgtln put High ichool\nin tht ltad it half time, tht icon\nbeing 3-2. By the end of the third\nquarter tbe scores hid idvinced\nproportlonttely, etch team making\nanother field gotl to mtke the icore\n5-4.\ntn the lut quarter tht score\nstood at 4-5 for tbi greiter ptrt ot\nlt, \u2022 personal costing High sohool\nthe  fixture.\nBooney Stmmtrtlno ot tht Colombo!, men's tenlor tetm, retorted.\nMist D. Williams coached the Public ichool squad and J. Jeffries, the\nHigh  echool.\nThi teims wen:\nHigh tchool: Hsael Miwdtliy, N.\nOrlplch, L. Thorndale, C. Almqulit,\nLoulie Mollnt, Lena Molina, A. Blaglonl, J. Baillle ind L. Laurie.\nPublic school: 3. Hood, H. Rom-\nmerdahl, F. Honcher, z, Tunker, P.\nCtlltn, M. Adtmchuk, H. Wtlr, M.\nLeckle tnd M. Minducca.\nVENTURA IS HIGH\nB0WLERATTRA1L\nCity Bakery Defeats the Un\nion Hotel in League\nPlay\nNELSON IS OPEN\nCITY ONCE MORE\nNelson wta once more tn open\nCtty Monday tnd schools, poot balls,\nbeer parlon and other places of public aaaembly were open for the\nfirst time ln a week. No diphtheria or poliomyelitis developments\nwere reported but precautionary\nmeasure* were adhered to and a\ncloae watch kept on school children.\nONTARIO CITIES\nSHARE IN BEER\nWill Get 20 Per Cent of Authorities Given Hotels\nSays Premier\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 3\u00bb\u2014City Bakery\ndefeated the Union Hotel two out\nof three games ot the Trail city\nbowling league in the Memorial\nhall Monday night. High single ot\n225 and high aggregate of 574 were\nbowled by D. Ventura of the Union\nteam.\nTeama and icorei were:\nCity Bakery:\nJ. Stewart  149   IU   157   -MS\nC. IUott 171   IM   165   504\nA. Merlo  157   16S   175   BIS\nA. Paaacretta .... IU  167   157  462\nD. Merlo  -.. 171   171   171   513\nSpot   21    21    21    68\nTotall  807 874 847 2528\nUnion Hotel\nJ. Howard  165 190 163 516\nT. Jones   120 \u00ab 158   375\nD. Ventura  168 183 226 574\nD. Dallaa  164 171 127 462\nG. DIPasquale .... 177 185 180 551\nTotal! 782   826   862 2480\nMontreal Bowlers\nTake Major Points\nMake Five Points and Royals\nFour; Royals Still Lead;\nWalters High\nLIAQUI STANDING     .\nRoyala   16 pts.\nMontreal       9 pti.\nImpirltl-Commtret   2 pti.\nThe Montreil bank boys took five\npoints in the Five-pin Bowling\nleague Monday night when, headed\nby Bert Walten they found things\nto their liking. Walters too:, high\nsingle with 296 pins and high aggregate with 638 pins. O. Suttle of the\nRoyal bank was next with 502 for\naggregate. He alio headed hli team\naa they took four pointi. The Imperial-Commerce bowlen filled to\ntally and they continue to keep the\ncellar warm. The games were at\nGelinas' alleys.\nThe teami and icorei were:\nROYAL BANK\nD. Suttle  141   190   171- 502\nJ. Lennle  140   151   101- 39a\nA. Wallach    87   168   110- 345\nR. Bourque   144   163   182-\nA. Paul   165   187   131- 453\nTotala    677 809 695-2181\nMONTRIAL\nBuck Guernsey 128 167 166- 461\nD. M. Reed    86 167 124- 407\nD. Lucaa     83 125 150\u2014\nBud Greenwood 155 150 114\u2014 410\nBert Walters . . 148 296 194\u2014 638\nTotal     ' .. 610 937 748-2293\nIMPERIAL-COMMERCE\nR. Hayei  181 121 185- 437\nA. Gllroy    99 89 143- 331\nD. Edwards     82 122 111- 315\nJ. Clowei          108 119 146- 373\nJ. Whitfield   137 134 1\u00bb- 410\nTotal   607   585   874-1866\nREV. SILVERWOOD\nIS RECOVERING\nRev. W. J. Silverwood. who has\nbeen confined to hii bed for the\npait two weeki, ti ilowly recovering\nand hopei to conduct all services\non Sunday.\nKeep Up Pay for\nWomen Workers or\nForm Own Party\nOTTAWA, Oct. 29 (CP)-Dlimis-\nnl ot women worken would not In\nany way relieve or solve the unemployment problem. Ida Smith, president, asserted tonight to an executive meeting of the Ottawa Buiiness\nWomen's Liberal dub.\n\"And may I add that in thc event\nof such a plan, or policy, being\nadopted by our country and being\nput into practice, the women of\nCanada would doubtless unite ln a\ncommon effort to sponsor a party of\ntheir own,\" she declared. She urged\nthe memben of the club to cooperate with a view to Improving the\nwage scale of women worken ln\nCanada. Men and women should re-\neleve the same rate of wagei for\nsimilar work.\nTORONTO, Oct 29 (CP)-Mu-\nnicipalitiei will share by 20 per cent\nin proceeds from \"authorities\"\ngranted hotels and in profits derived trom sales of beer tnd wines\nlr Ontario Premier Mitchell F. Hepburn announced tonight. The premier also announced that the municipalities would be relieved of\ntheir contribution of 20 per cent to\nthe upkeep of highways.\nThe changes will become effective\nNovember 1, said the premier, along\nwith the new regulations governing\n\u2022ale of beer and wines in hotels,\nand on November 1 aale in hotels,\nhe said, would be stopped at 11 p.m.\n(E.S.T.) while clubs and dining\nroomi would be permitted to continue sales to midnight. Under present provisions, beer parlon may remain open until midnight.\nTHOMPSON ACTS\nAS LAY READER\nPresents Candidates for Confirmation at the Church\nof Redeemer\nIn the abeence ot Rev. W. 3. Silverwood through illness, both morn-\nand evening services were taken\nat the Church of the Redeemer,\nFairview, Sunday by Rt. Rev. Wai*\nter Adams, blahop of Kootenay.\nAt the cloae ot tbe morning terv*\nIce Austen Thompson received his\nauthority to act in the capacity ot\nlay reader in the parish, the bishop\npresenting the necesury authorization ln documentary form. Mr.\nThompson, on behalf of tho vicar,\npresented candidates for confirmation to the bishop in the evening,\nSUMMERS \"SKIPS\"\nOUT OF NELSON\nPolice State Nelson Man Has\nCone; Will Issue Warrant\nfor Arrest\nTHICONTEST\nOF FIRST AM\n11 Teams Enter in Stl\nJohn's Ambulance. [\nCompetition\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. \u00bb.\u2014A tot*\nof II tetmt will compete in tn\nSt. John's Aumbultnce First AB\ncontest at the Memorlil hall, tsst\nsecond week tn November, a deflifl\nItt date for the competlon ha-rlxf\nbeen  Mt.\nAa ln the paat four yean It wll\nbe t two claas contest, tht novlcJ\nreceiving a handicap to compete t*\nprizes and the tetmi thit he'l\nentered before to compete at acrata\nfor the Labor Day Sports cup. wefl\nlast year hy the Zinc tank toonl\nteam.\nTht team copplnt the trophy I\ntht scratch competition wlll earn T\ntrip to Klmberley and contest tn\nBlaylock bowl, emblematic ot til\nConsolidated championship. Thl\ntrophy hss not been posted for til\nput three yean and Is at prettf\nheld by Klmberley.\nTrail   tetmt   entering   the   locfl\ncontest will be: carpenter shop, eltj\ntrie shop, general office, D. and\nlead   refinery,   plant   and   itortH\npltnt, Wtrflild. ^^^\nTRAIL ROTARY\nPLAN CARMYAI\nCommittees Draft New Col\ncessions; Parade to\nBe Similar\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 29-Plam ft\nthe vtrlout booths for the Rota-\ncarnival to be held early in D\ncember, were formulated at tl\ngeneral meeting of committee chal\nmen in the Memorial hall Mondi\nnight. One or two new features w\nbe brought into concessions tl\nyear, and the parade will be simil\nto that of last year, but probata\nsomewhat elaborated. The full pr\ngram will be drawn up later. Tl\nvarious chairmen of the concessit\ncommittees wlll be announced\nthe Rotary luncheon Tuesday,\nGYROS BUSY\nONH0ED0WI\nAttic Will Provide Attire fj\nthe Occasion; Decorations!\nin Keeping\nAccording to the Nelson city pollot, I. J. Summers, who ws\u00ab to appear ln police court charged with unlawfully keeping liquor for sale.\nhaa left tht city and his whereabouts Is unknown it the present\ntime. A warrant will be issued for\nhla arrest.\nThe chargt agalntt Summer! arose\nout of a rtld by Chief Alei Stewtrt, Sergt. Robert Htrshiw tnd Constable H. B. O. Penny Stturdiy\nnight. A qutntlty of beer was obtained it Summers' Vernon street\nestablishment.\nMrs. Harrigan Is\nBuried at Forks\nMrs. Margaret Janes Harrigan.\nBoundary old timer, who died Saturday at the home of her daughter.\nMrs. George Russel of Nelson, was\nlaid to rest in the Grand Forks\ncemetery Monday afternoon, Funeral services were held in Nelson\nfrom the First Presbyterian church\nby Rev. W. McClean who was assisted by Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson.\nFollowing the service at 9 o'clock\nin the morning, the body wis taken\nto Grand Forks for burial.\nNelson pallbearers were A. Wllley, J. R. Hunter, J. B. Gray, Jamei\nKay, J. Simons and N. Winlaw.\nGames and amusements will pr\ndominate at the Nelson Gyro ch\nhoedown this Friday at the Eagl\nhall. Further plans were made\nthe Gyro luncheon in the Hun\nhotel silver room Monday evenlr\nThe various committees are bu\non the various details of the ho\ndown and this event is expected\nbe even more of a success than tl\none held last year. Any clothet,,\nwas stated, would do, and the oni\nthing necessary to get a costume [\nto go to the attic aad take the fill\nthings that are handy. 1\nThe hall will be carefully dec!\nrated with hay and straw and til\nspirit of the farm will predomlnal\nat the event. ^^^\nWhy do Doctors\nTest Kidneys Fint?\nBecauie tbey know thtt healthy\nKidneyi remove from the blood\ntht wa\u00abte mttter formed by tht\never-changing humtn body ts it\ndactyl tnd rebuilds itself. But if\nthe Kidneys fail \u2014 the system is\npoisoned tnd illness surely follows.\nAs t hetlth ufegutrd\u2014as t wist\nprecaution \u2014flush your kidneyi\nregularly tvery three weeks with\nDodd's Kidney Pills-\u2014for orer\nthree generations tht ftvorite Kidney tonic tnd remedy\u2014non-habit\nforming\u2014fre* from drugs.       33 i\nDodds Kidney Pillsj\n...Helps to AVOID\nMANY COLDS altogether\n... New Formula\nBY MAKERS OP\nVICKS VAPORUB\nRemarkably Successful\nQuick .'\u2014At that fint nasal Irritation, sniffle or sneeze\u2014just\na few drops of Vicks Va-tro-nol.\nIt stimulates thc functions provided by Nature\u2014in the noee\n\u2014to prevent colds, and to throw\noff colds in their early stages.\nUsed in time, Va-tro-nol help*\nto avoid many colds entirely.\nWhere irritation his led to a\ndogged-up nose (a stuffy head\ncold or nasal catarrh) Va-tro-\nnol penetrates deep into the\nnasal passages, reduces swollen\nmembrane*, clean away clogging mucua\u2014brings comforting relief.\nBttttr C0NTI01 of Coldi\nThis new aid in preventing colds,\ntogether with Vicks VapoRub, th*\nmodem external treatment fer colde,\nforms thc basis ofViclts Plan for Better\nControl of Colds\u2014to help reduce their\nnumber and duration. The Plan is\nexplained io each Vicks package.\nVICKS PLAN'\u00b0\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\"\u00abCONTROL OF COLDS\n ia\u00abo\n-THI NILION DAILY NIWI. NIUON. S.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER \u00bb, 1IS4\n\u25a0PAOI PIV*\nCRANBROOK WINS HONORS AT\nBLAIRMORE MUSIC FESTIVAL\nChoral Society and\nSymphony Group\nAre Seconds\nW. BLINSTON IS\nFIRST IN A SOLO\nShower for Cranbrook\nHospital Proves a\nBig Success\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. M-On\nSaturday a special train containing\nCranbrook's entrants In the musical\nfestival held at Blalrmore at the\nlaat of the week, left the city at 7\najn. and returned somewhere around\ndawn Sunday morning, the competitors having enjoyed the various\ncompetitions entered and bringing\nhome a fair share of the honors in\ntheir classes. The groups attending\n\u2022were the Cranbrook Symphony orchestra, the Cranbrook Choral society, and the Anglican church choir,\nwith several entrants in vocal and\ninstrumental solo classes. These, to-\nI gether with a few well  wishers,\nmade the number of those who attended the festival about 100.\nThe  Cranbrook  Choral  society,\nI with David Morgan as leader, received a marking of 104 for their\n' two numbers, this being one mark\nbelow the winning mark of 185 accorded the Crows Nest Pass Choral\nsociety under T. S. Benyon. The\nlatter was a much larger choir than\nthe Cranbrook society. Mr. Morgan\nreceived the highest praise as a\nleader, the adjudicator stating that\nat times the choir did not quite\ncarry out his excellent ideas.\nSYMPHONY\nORCHESTRA SECOND\nThe Cranbrook Symphony orcheatra under William Raven was also\nmarked second to a Crows Nest\nrival, this being the Crows Nest\nPass Amatei Symphony orchestra,\nwith W, K. Moaer conducting. This\nturns the tables aa Mr. Raven's\nmusicians hava been marked ahead\nof groups trom the Pass at former\nfestivals both at Blalrmore and\nCranbrook. The Crows Nest Pass orchestra played with excellent effect\nthe \"Valae Trieste\" which was one\nof the numbers played by the Cranbrook orchestra in winning the\nshield last spring. This year's numbers played by Cranbrook were the\n\"Magic Flute overture and \"Pomp\nand Circumstance,\" a number that\nhas been a favorite with the orchestra's audience here and elsewhere.\nThe Cranbrook Anglican church\nchoir, an aggregation of excellent\nvoices well blended under the baton\nof A. E. Turner, received a good\nmarking for their numbers and\nwere the only competitors in their\nclass. They have shields hung from\nformer festivals.\nCRANBROOK MAN WINS\nWilliam Blinston ot Cranbrook\nwon the highest marks in the wind\nInstrument solo class. In the vocal\nsolo class open to winners of previous competitions Mrs. George\nMacDonald. contralto, of Cranbrook,\nreceived the highest praise for her\nvoice and her artistic handling ot\nher song. Marks were withheld in\nthis competition, rather to the disappointment of the competitors.\nOther Cranbrook competitors winning complimentary remarks though\nnot first or second standing in their\nclass were Miss Sybil Norgrove,\nIn the vocal solo under 20 class:\nMiss Barbara Fink in the open violin solo class and Dorothy Hayden\nin the vocal solo under 12.\nIt was noticed that all markings\ngiven by R. W. Gibson, adjudicator,\nwere lower than those received by\nthe competitors for similar efforts\nat the handa ot previous adjudicators. Those accustomed to a marking\nof DO, here found that It wu probably in the neighborhood of HO.\nAccompanying thc competitors\nwere President E. W. Sjoain and\nSecretary H. J. Collier of the Cran*\nbrook featival committee, Mrs. Sjo-\ndin, Mrs. Collier, Miss Audrey Collier, Miss Irene Mclnnis, J. F.\nSmythe and the Courier staff and\nothers.\nJAM  AND  PICKtE\nSHOWER\nThe annual jam and pickle shower held by the members of the Hospital aid for the St. Eugene hospital here proved to be one of the\nmost successful since the inauguration of the idea. All of the city was\nthoroughly canvassed with the result that 000 jars of jam, preserves\nand pickles were collected for the\nshelves ot thc hospital, not the\nsmallest feature of the venture being the whole-hearted willingness\nwith which the canvassers were met\nby Cranbrook housewives.\nMrs. Green, president of the aid\nand her executives were in charge\nof the collection, those assisting\nwith cars or collecting being Mrs.\nParka, Mrs. Beale, Mrs. Bridges,\nM s Madeline Woodman, Mrs. Miles,\nMrs. McKowan, Mrs. Little, Miss\nIrene Mclnnis, Mrs. Argue, Mrs. Gill,\nMrs. Caldwell, Mrs. G. H. Thompson,\nMrs.\nLarge, Mrs. Bell^ Mrs. Green\nGladys ~\nnon and M\nMrs. Gladys DeWolf, Mrs. MacKin-\n      Fergl\nMISS CARLSON HI\nHURACK GAINS\n[GARDEN AWARD\nFOR CRESTON\nHales of Grand Forks,\nMelneczuk, Nelson,\nWin C.P.R. Honor\nISAAKSON WINS\nFOR ROSEBERY\nGarden   Competitions\nHeld Throughout\nthe Summer\nORANGE PEKOE BLEND\n\"SALAM\nTEA     \"\n\"Fresh from the Gardens\"\nBULMANS\n\"Eatmore Rrand*\nFANCY MY PACK\nPUMPKIN\nIT'S RICHER IN  COLOR AND FINER  IN  FLAVOR\nASK\nFOR\nFergie,\t\n^^^^^^  IONOREO\nHonoring Miss Iris Carlson ot\nKimberley, whose marriage is to\ntake place early next month, Mrs.\nH. Stiffe entertained at a delightful\npantry shower at her home here.\nThe many lovely gifts were wheeled\nin in a decorated wagon by little\nTommy Stiffe. The evening was\nspent in playing bridge, the prize\nwinners being Mrs. C. Gill and Mrs.\nOsborne. Thc invited guests were\nMiss Iris Carlson, Miss A. Suran,\nMiss W. Fink, Mrs. C. Gill, Mrs.\nOsborne, Mrs. Lengrin, Mrs. Leigh,\nMrs. Donald, Mrs. Campbell, Mrs.\nJostad. Mrs. Benson, Mrs. Nelson,\nMiss Elsie Wood, Mrs. Beck, Miss R.\nJohannesscn, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Gou-\ngeon, Mrs. T. Caldwell, Mrs. F,\nCarlson, Mra. Nevln, Mrs. Pearson,\nMiss Irene Maclnnis.\nGordon De-cell.has left for Trail\nwhere he will spend a week before\ngoing to Vancouver.\nMiss Margaret Farrell of Nelson\nis spending the week-end with her\nparents here.\nH. A. McKowan left today for\nGreenwood, where he will visit Mr.\nand Mrs. D. M. MacDonald.\nMrs. C. Foote and Chris Foote ot\nKimberley were Cranbrook visitors.\nW. Flett of Kimberley spent the\nweek-end with hla mother here.\nMrs. A. G. HIU has left for the\ncoast where she will visit She will.\nbe accompanied home by Miss Beu-\nlah Hill, who has been visiting in\nVictoria.\nMiss G. King and Miss J. McKay\nof Kimberley were Cranbrook visitors.\nMiss May Maltman of the staff ot\nthe high school spent the week-end\nwith her parents in Fernie.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Lindsay of Kimberley spent Saturday visiting here.\nMrs. ft. J. Collier, Miss Audrey\nCollier and Miss Irene Maclnnis\nspent the week-end in Blairmore.\nHALLOWE'EN DANCE HELD\nThe Cranbrook high school held\ntheir annual Hallowe'en dance Friday in the high school auditorium.\nThe hall was decorated with orange\n^SOCl ETY\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nMakea   Better\nand Mors  Pica!\nThel. \t\nand black streamers, and delightful\nrefreshments were served. Miss Muriel Little was convener of the invitation committee and Vincent\nDowney headed the entertainment\ncommittee. The decorations were\nmanaged by Lloyd Burgess and the\nrefreshments by Miss Phyllis Ward.\nMr. and Mrs. MacDonald of Fernie\nspent the week-end in Cranbrook\nvisiting their daughter, Miss Elizabeth MacDonald.\nJack Scott, young son of Mr. and\nMrs. J. F. Scott who has been ill\nat his home tor three weeks, is on\nthe road to recovery.\nConcluding games of the annual\nhandicap tournament of the Cranbrook Tennis club are being played,\nWINNMO, Oct. aa.-Keenly con\ntasted during the aummer eaaon\nof 1934, the annual garden com\npetition among station properties oi\ntha Canadian Paclflo Railway's west-\ncm lines haa eloaed with the awarding of caah prises to the contestants\nlu the districts o( Manitoba, saakat*\nchewan. Alberta and British Columbia by J. R. Almey, tha company's\nhorticulturist,   Winnipeg\nMora than 00 gardens were awarded prizes ln the contest which reached lta height In Manitoba dlatrlct\nwith t3 on the llat. Britlah Columbia came neit with 16 and Alberta\nand Saskatchewan presented 14 and\n13 entries, reapectlvely.\nGARDENS  HARD  TO JUDGE\nMr. Almey, whose examination of\nthe gardens 'Is dona In conjunction\nwith the district superintendents,\nmade his decisions with difficulty,\nhe stated today, becauae of the\ngeneral excellence and unuaual\nbeauty of the gardens entered for\ncompany awards.\nListed as follows the Britlah Columbia district's prlw winners were:\nBeat District garden\u2014H. W. Bowen,\nwatchman, Reefers.\nBest old garden, visible from\ntracks\u2014First prlae\u2014Vancouver dlvialon, H. I. Padgett, operator, Ruby\nCreek; Revelstoke division, o. C.\nCobb, agent. Port steel: Kettle\nValley division, J. MUlerahlp, section forman. Arawana; Kootenay division, V. Hurack, section foreman,\nCnston.\nBest old garden, visible from track,\nsecond prlae\u2014Revelatoke division, G.\nT. Freeman, agent. Taft: Kettle Valley division, z. Blomqulst. section\nforeman, Princeton; Kootensy division, G. H. Hales, agent, Orand Forks.\nBest new garden, visible from\ntraoks: Vancouver dlvialon, a. t.\nMclsaac. operator, Spencea Bridge;\nRevelatoke dlvialon, J. Wolfe, sectyon\nforeman, Twin Butte; Kettle valley\ndivision, F. Baekman, aectlon foreman, Jeaalca; Kootenay dlvialon, W.\nMelneczuk, aectlon foreman, Nelaon.\nBest old, garden not visible from\ntrack; Vancouver division, S. M.\nWard, agent, North Bend; Revelstoke division, A. Deem, section\nforeman, Revalstott; Kettle Valley\ndivision, w. H. Hallett, aectlon foreman, Pentlcton, Kootenay division,\nC. Isaakaon, aectlon foreman, Roeebery.\nPure Food\nMarket\nPhon* 50\nFree Delivery\nTueiday ond Wednesday Specials\nT\n15*\n18'\n25'\nBOILING BEEF: C*\nChoice Steer; Ib   .*..U\nPOT ROASTS:    Q Q 1fl<*\nChoice Steer; lb.0 3 IU\nBEEF AND KIDNEY: \\-\\t.\nFresh Cut; Ib -L\nVEAL STEW; 0*\nFresh; Ib O\nVEAL STEAKS:\nFresh; 2 Ibs.\n25'\nMUTTON STEW:\nFresh;   Ib\t\nMUTTON CHOPS;\nFresh; Ib\t\nCALF TONGUES:\nFresh; Ib\t\nPORK LIVER:\nFresh; 4 Ibs\t\nHEARTS, BRAINS,\nKIDNEYS: Ib. ...\nFresh Smelts, Herring, Crabs, Soles, Shrimps and Oysters\n| BURNS \u25a0& Co.. Ltd.\nU but the men's doubles now being\nompleted. Prizes will be presented\nat the club's annual dance which\nwill probably take place shortly.\nU. S. DOLLAR OFF\n1-16\nSTONE CROCKS\nFOR PICKLING AND ALL\nHOUSEHOLD PURPOSES\n1 gal. Without Cover    _.\">C\n2 gal. With Cover  90c\n3 Csl. With Cover  ' 1.15\n4 Csl. With Cover  f 1.50\n5 Cal. With Cover  82.00\n6 Csl. With Cover  f 2.40\n8 Csl. With Cover  93.25\n10 Cal. With Cover  f 4.00\nHlpperson Hardware\nCompany Llmltsd\nLook for the Red Hsrdware Store\nPHONE 497 BOX 414\nMONTREAL. Oct. M (CPI\u2014Ths\npound sterling declined 1-18 oanta\nat 4.85 19-18 On Montreal foreign\nexchange today. The Wilted states\ndollar declined l-t6 of one per cent\nat 3 5-33 per eent discount and tha\nFrench franc wu off .01 cent at 8 45\ncenta.\nDouglas Social\nCredit Party of\nB.C. Is Formed\nVANCOUVER. Oot. 39 (CP)\u2014 Adto-\ncatlng economlo reform aa designed\nby Ma]. C. E. Douglu ln Auatralla\nwhere the party hu been most active, the Douglu Social Credit party\nof British Columbia waa formed at a\nconvention here Saturday.\nProf. R. ROUeaton West, University of British Columbia vu elected president of the new organisation. R. w. McDowell of Victoria,\nmember ot the B. C. Industrial\ncouncil, wm elected vice-president.\nRev. F. W. McKlnnon of Victoria\ndescribed \"the wsy we have come\"\nln an addreaa Saturday evening to\ndelegates.\nApproximately $40,000,000 of unclaimed money is lying idle in British banks whose rightful owners\ncannot be traced.\nGood..........\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMenus, Recipes and Hints\nMENU  HINT\n(For a Luncheon)\nFruit Cup, Tomato Juice or Clear\nHot Soup\nPressed Chicken\nCreamed or Scalloped Potatoes\nOrange and Grapefruit Salad\n!Hot Rous Jelly Pickles\nSponge Cake With whipped Cream\nCoffee\nThis is Intended for a luncheon or\nsupper menu when you are entertaining your club. It is dainty without being fussy. Of course a less\nexpensive salad may be substituted\nfor the fruit one. You con use some\nof your canned peaches and pears,\nwith shredded cabbage for making\nnests In which to serves the fruit.\n\"It Helps Mel\"\nHut's wbat 9S OB of t0<>\nwomen say sfter taking aala\nmedidoe. It quiets quivering\nnerves, gives them aaora\nStrength before tai after\nchildbirth, tides them over\nChange of Life ... makes life\nseam worth living again.\nLYDIA E. PIHKHAM'S\nVEGETABLE COMPOUND\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nThla column is conducted by\nMrs. M J. Vigneux. Al! news of a\naocial nature, including receptions,\nprivate entertainments, personal\nllema, marriages, etc.. wtll appear\ntn this column. Telephone Mra\nVlgneux at her home, 919 Silica\nMrs. H. McArthur, Mrs. W. R. Gibbon and Mrs. Charlea H. Stark were\niolnt hostesses at brl'ge tor the\nLokanee chapter, I.O.D.E. benefit\nfund Saturday night at the home\nof Mrs. McArthur on Silica street\nwhen those playing were Mr. and\nMrs. Stark. Mr. and Mrs. Homer,\nMr. and Mrs. P. H. Sheffield. Mr.\nand Mrs. W. R. Gibbon, Mr. and\nMrs. W. M. Myers and Mr. and Mrs.\nMcArthur. ,\n\u2022 .   .\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Appleyard,\nHoover street, have returned from\na few weeks spent in Vancouver\nand Spokane.\nttt\nMrs. F. 1. Dockerill of Trail was\na week-end visitor in the city,\n.   .   \u2022\nMrs. N. Murphy and Mrs. Harry\nBurns were joint hostesses at a\nbenefit bridge for Kokanee chapter\nI.O.D.E. recently at the homo on\nCarbonate street of the latter. The\nplayers included Mr. and Mrs. G.\nStuart Macintosh. Harry Burns,\nMrs. Robert Thompson. Mrs. J. A.\nGibson. Mrs. William Waldie, Mrs.\nW. T. Fotheringham, and Mrs. W.\nO. Rose.\n\u2022 .   .\nMrs. 3. Conway of Vancouver has\narrived \u00abto Join her husband here.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. S. N. Ross of the\nWhitewater mine at Rettallack spent\nthe week-end ln Nelson.\na  a\u25a0 a\nJ. Kerrigan of Cranbrook is a\nNelson visitor.\naae\nMrs. Palmer Rutledge of Trail is\nthe guest of her mother, Mrs. G. C.\nSimpson, Baker street.\n\u2022 * i\nWilliam Myers of Kaslo visited\nNelson yesterday.\n_____________\nMrs. Mart McAndrews, who hu\nbeen sp< iding the summer in her\nformer home in Kaslo, is visiting at\nthe homes of Mr. and Mrs. A. McL.\nFletcher, Nelson avenue, Fairview,\nand Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Trainor,\nStanley street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. G. B. Russell and\nsons motored to Grand Forks yesterday where the funeral of the\nformer's mother, Mrs. Harrigan, took\nplace.\naae\nMrs. Garland of Rettallack spent\nyesterday ln the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Haines of Ymlr visited Nelson\nyesterday.\nGeorge Taylor of Boswell visited\nNelson on the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Maitland Harrison of Howser,\nwho Is visiting her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Noel Brown at Corra\nLinn, was a city shopper yesterday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Wllley of Bonnlngton were In Nelson yesterday\nto attend the funeral  service of\nMrs. Harrigan.\n.   .   .\n, Miss Minna Kahle, who has been\nholidaying ln Spokan_e, has returned.\nF. K. r.mslic of Trail was among\nweek-end visitors in town.\n.   .   .\nMrs. D. H. Ferguson of Longbeach visited Nelson yesterday.\na a  a\nMr. and Mrs. Frederick Miles,\nwho have been spending their honeymoon in Spokane, have returned\nand left for Trail where they will\nmake their home.\nawa\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Matheson of\nNew Denver were week-end visitors\nin town.\n.  .  .\nMrs. R. L. McBride, Hoover street,\nrecently entertained at two tables\not bridge benefiting Kokanee chapter, I.O.D.E. fund. Those playing\nincluded Mr. and Mrs. Clyde M.\nGraves. Mr. and Mrs. W. V. P.\nClery, M. A. J. Wood of Winnipeg,\nMrs. P. G. Morey. Mrs. A. E. Murphy\nand Mrs. McBride.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2666\nMiss Gertrude Forrester, Rosemont, has returned home after visiting for several weeks in Coalhurst,\nAlta., and vicinity.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMrs. F-ed Hartwig of Trail visited\nover the week-end at the home on\nStanley street of Mr. and Mrs. D. R.\nHinton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. F. F. Payne, Hoover\nstreet, have as their guests Mrs.\nPayne's brother-in-law and sister.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Scott of Calgary\nwho are en route home from three\nweeks' visit at the coast.\nD. MacNeill of Blairmore visited\nNelson during the week-end.\nMra. F. Wilson and young daughter have returned from Fire Valley\nwhere they have been alnc. Saturday. Mr. Wilson, wbo accompanied\nthem, la remaining for awhile owing\nto an tecldent to his father, WlUlam\nWilson, who wu hurt while plowing\non hla ranch that day. Mr. Wilson Is\nnow receiving treatment In the Nakusp hospital.\nCANADIAN  RADIO\nCOMMISSION NITWORK\n6:00 Fundy Fantasy\n6:30 Hand Across tha Border\n7:00 Mastering the Coremonies\n7:30 Billy Bissefs Oreh.\n7:45 News and Weather Forecast\n8:00 Burrard Male Singers\n8:30 Pianology. Al Smith (ex. B.C.)\n8:30 News (B.C. Net)\n8:45 Similitudes\n9:00 Archie Phillips, tenor. Trail\n9:15 Mr. and Mrs., comedy\n9:30 Eventide, Kamloopa\n9:30 Organ Silhouettes (ex. B.C.)\n10:00 Venetians, Vancouver\nN.B.C. KPO   NETWORK\nKHQ KQW KFI KPO KOMO KJR\n590     820     040     680     920     970\n6:00 Melodlana, dir. Ernie Gilt\n0:30 Ed Wynn, McNamee, m.c.\n7:00 Beauty Box Theater\n8:00 Amos n\" Andy\n8:15 Gene and Glenn\n8:30 Relsman's Orch.; Phil Duay\n9:r0 Bpn Bernle's Orch.\n9:30 Death Valley Days\n10:00 News Flashes \u2022\n10:15 The Story Behind the Claim\n10:30 Tom Coakley's Orch.\n10:5} Press-Radio Newa\n11:00 Tom Gerun's Oreh. (KPO)\n11:00 Fio-Rito's Orch. (KGO to Net)\n11:30 Knapp's Orch. (KOMO to Net)\n11:30 Organ Concert (KPO)\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NITWORK\nKVI    KPRC    KOIN    KSL    KOL\n570       S10       940       1130    1270\n6:00 Blrg Crosby. Boswell Sisters\n6:30 Ishajn Jonea' Orch.\n7:00 Walter O'Kecfe, Anette Han*\nshaw, Ted Huslng, Glen Gray\n7:45 Moon Ood (D.L.)\n8:00 Myrt and Marge\n8:19 Orchestras\nSOO k CJOR\nVancouver M^^^\n6:00 Frankie and Archie\n8:15 Zela Goodrich\n6:30 Prairie Drifters\n7:00 Quartet, dlr. Bill Tweedie\n7:15 Commonwealth Federation\n7:30 Social System\n8:00 News\n8:15 Trio\n8:30 Studio Program\n9:00 Len Chamberlain's Orch.\nOther Periods: Records\n6:30 Bong Bag\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Silver Strains\n7:15 Old Song Contest\n7:30 Magic Harmony\n7:45 Waltz Drearoa\n8:00 Tax Committee, talk\n6:15 Jack and Melody Maids\n8:30 Souvenirs of Song\n8:45 Caetlee In Music\n9:00 Newa Reporter\n9:15 Charlie Kent and Singers\n9:30 Pick and Pat, _.T.\n10:00 Till Tomorrow, Reed\n10:30-11:30 Orville Knapp's Orch.\n11:30 Melody Palette\n11:45 Fireside Phantasies\nKNX\n1050 k\nHollvwoo-1\n6:00 News Service\n6:15 California  League\n6:30 Your Dinner Dance, E.T.\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Watanabe and Archie\n7:15 Electrical Transcriptions\n7:30 The In-Laws, play\n7:45 King Cowboy\n8:00 June Irwin, E.T.\n1:15 Concert From Lucca's\n8:30 Forge ot Freedom, drama\n9:00 Ne s Service\n9:15 To be announced\n9:30 Pick and Fat, E.T.\n10:00 The Croeketts\n10:30 Pete Pontrelli's Orch.\n286.5 m\n50,000 w\n30 NEW NAMES ON\nMUNICIPAL UST\nEligible Voters Hsvt Until\nWednesdsy Afternoon\nto Get on\nWith only two more day let* tor\neligible votars, whose names were\nnot on th. municipal voters' Hit laat\n-fear, to get on the list, the number\nof new voters now stands at 80.\nThla la thought to be small oompand with the numbtr eligible. Voter, mar get on the list until Wednuday, Oct, 81.\nCHEESE PRICES\nADVANCE\nMONTRIAL, Oct. 99 (OP)-Cheeee .\nprloea advanced on th. Montreal\nproduce and dairy market today.\nCheese, Mo. I Ontario white lOtt;\nColoreda 10V4.\nButter, NO. lT 10H; aollda SOVt;\nprints 31H.\nEggi frwh A-large ti; A-medlum\n39: A-pullets 33; B. SS, O. SO.\npotatoes staid!*. Quebecs 40; H. B.\nMountains.  45;   P.E.I.  50.\nKGO\n790 k\nOakland _______________\n6:00 Community Forum\n6:30 Argentine Trio\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Every Man's Palace\n7:30 Just Around the Corner\n8:00 Chamber of  Commerce\n8:15 College Daze\n8:30 Neapolitan Echoes\n9:00 Rainbow Harmonies\n9:30 Seymour Simon's Orch.\n10:00 Nobody Home, variety\n10:30 Press-Radio Newa\n10:35 Orch.\n11:00 Ted Fio-Rito's Oreh.\n11:30 Orville Knapp's Orch.\n970 k KJR\nSeattle\n8:00-:15 News Reporter\nBONDS FAIRLY\nSTEADY\nNSW TORK. Oct. 29 (AP)\u2014A\nfairly steady tone prevailed ln today's bond market, but price changes\ngenerally were Inconsequential and\ntrading extremely dull.\nThe foreign department was excep\ntlonally qluet and somewhat mixed,\n^^HECWWSSWW^^'*^\nPressed Chicken\u2014Four or five-\npound fowl cleaned and cut up. one\nlarge onion, one stalk celery cut In\npieces, sprig of parsley, two teaspoons salt, one-fourth teaspoon\npepper, granulated gelatin, stock.\nCover fowl with boiling water. Add\nonion, celery, parsley, salt and pepper. Cover tightly and simmer three\nto four hours or until tender. Let\nchicken stand in stock until cool.\nSeparate chicken from bones and\nseason with additional salt and pepper. Measure stock and allow one\ntablespoon of granulated gelatin for\neach pint of stock. For each tablespoon of gelatin, allow two tablespoons of water. Soften the gelatin\nin the water and dlsolve in boiling\nstock, stirring all the while. Arrange chicken in layers in a loaf\npan, adding enough stock to moisten\neach layer well. Cover and place\nweight On top. Set in cool place un*\ntil firm enough to slice wen.\nDRIES'EM PERFECTLY\nCaeting about for a way to dry\nbaby's rubber panties without sticking or tearing, an ingenious housewife hit on this Idea: Take a small\naluminum pot lid and insert lt in the\npanties, then tie a strinp to the\nring tn the center of the lid. The\npanties can then be hung outside on\na line or inside on a nail or hook.\nThey dry perfectly without wrinkle\nor tear.   \\\n:iiiiimiiiiiij)iiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiii,\nThe Best\nChristmas\nGift\nA Portrait h\nGeo. A. Meeres\nMake App-lntments\nEarly Please\nPHONE   46\n\u25a0.imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiii'imn;**\nTHE BEST VALUES IN THE\nINTERIOR OF B.C.\n_\nI*\nit\nare\nNelson Daily News\nCHRISTMAS CARDS\nChoose from our exclusive lines while our stock is complete. In two\ndozen units only. No two samples slike. Purchased from the leading\nCanadian msnufacturers.\nPRICES FROM $1.75 UP\nSEND FOR OUR SAMPLES\nPHONE 144\nFOR WCAL REPRESENTATIVE\nMmn latlg taa\n(Eommmtal $rutting 8*partmHtt\n *------------------------------\\\nPAOI SIX-\nTHE NIUON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 30. 1931 \u25a0\nSJelamt Sailtj Jleuia\nEstablished April 22. 1902.\n\"Interior of British Columbia's Family Newspaper\"\nAIX THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished  every  morning except  Sunday  by\ntha NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY  LIMITED,\n21S   Baker   Street.   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting all Departments\nMember of the Audit Bureau ot Circulations and\nTba Canadian Press Leased Wire News Service.\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1934.\nWASHINGTON GETS RESULTS IN\nCOMBAT WITH LAWLESS\nThe shooting down of \"Pretty Boy\" Floyd in Ohio\nby a posse directed by Federal officers adds a bad name\nto the list of American gang leaders now put out of action. Floyd in many respects was worse than Dillinger.\nHis record was a bloody one, including numerous murders. Furthermore, the Governor of Oklahoma, Floyd's\nhome state, declared in a public speech that the gangster\nwas hard to catch because he was befriended by county\nsheriffs throughout that state.\nWashington is making material progress in its policy of blotting out the country's criminal leaders. For\nlong it has been apparent that the only way to do this\nwas to act with the Federal power, rising superior to\nlocal authority which in other cases besides that of Floyd,\nbrazenly took sides with the lawless. Recent events must\nhave thrown a scare into outlaw elements which, as all\npolice experience proves, are not hard to scare.\nOPINIONS ON NOISE\nThe campaign in England for the night abatement\nof motor horns is finding ready response, an indication\nthat the Londoner, the Britisher in general ever is willing to co-operate for the general good.\nAccording to the German philosopher Schopenhauer,\nsensitivity to noise is an evidence of intellectual superiority\u2014\"intellectual persons and all in general who have\nmuch 'esprit' cannot endure noise\u2014the quantity of noise\nwhich any one can endure without annoyance is really\nrelated inversely to his mental endowments.\"\nCarlyle in his sojourn in India inveighed against the\nnoise of the great city. He wrote:\n\"That which the world torments me ln most Is the awful confusion of noise. It Is the devil's own Infernal din all the blessed\nday long, confounding God's works and His creatures\u2014a truly\nawful bell-like combination, and worst of all is a railway whistle,\nlike the screech of 10,000 cats, and every cat ot them as big as a\ncathedral.\"\nYet Carlyie lived for the last 47 years of his life\nin London, without any compulsion to dwell there.\nHad Schopenhauer and Carlyle been living in these\ndays they would have learned, as thousands of other\nintellectuals have done, to adjust themselves, as a means\nof self-protection, to the present day rush and roar by\nputting it into subconsciousness, an act which shows a\nwill and mentality not to be disregarded.\nBoth these philosophers no doubt would have held\nthe British minister of transportation in high regard\nand have co-operated in his anti-noise campaign even\nas the \"general\" of London and Great Britain are doing\ntoday.\nTWENTY YEARS AFTER\nShrapnel whioh entered his brain nearly twenty\nyears ago has caused the death of one, James fisher,\nauxiliary postman of Haylane, Ombersley, Worcestershire, England.\nFisher died in Worcester Infirmary and at the inquest it was announced that he enlisted in August, 1914,\nand was wounded soon afterwards. A pathologist said\npieces of shrapnel had produced epileptic fits and the\nverdict went in accordance with the medical evidence.\nThc man was forty years of age. He was destined\nto die of an injury he suffered half his life-time ago.\nThis is to suggest that if there shall be another war, those\nwho arc scarred by it will not last twenty years; they will\nbe scarred one minute and dead the next.\nYet, in spite of what the agonizing years between\n1914 and 1918 should have taught the people of the\nworld, there are those who scoff at disarmament as if\nit, and not devastating war, were the curse of the world.\nWhen will an international public tell those who\ngovern it that it will not permit policies which provoke\ninternational strife?\nINJECTION OF VARICOSE VEINS\nBY JAMES W. BARTON, M.D.\n\" Notwithstanding all that has been\npublished about the injection treat-\nmint of varicose veins th:rc are\nsti 1 many individuals who are unwilling to undergo this simple trcat-\n- ment\nFormerly, when operation was tho\nonly known method, it meant going\nInto hospital, undergoing the usual\nanaesthetic and a stay of three\nweeks in hospital. This consumed\ntime and money, aside from the natural fear of operation. There was\ntherefore some excuse for not having the varicose veins removed.\nToday, however, there is really no\nreason why the great majority of\npeople with varicose veins should\nbe annoyed or disabled by them.\nThe injection method is painless,\nmeans no loss of time from work,\nand the cost Is not much more than\nthe usual amounts paid for visits to\nthe Dhyslclan's office. A half dozen\nvisits is usually sufficient to get\nrid of any varicose veins whether\nthey are on the irj;**. or In the rectum where they are known as piles\nor hemorrhoids.\nAll that the injection method does\nIs to put some substance into the\nveins which irritates and inflames\nthc lining\u2014sodium salicylate, quinine and urethane, and others. The\ninjections are made two or more at\na time, about twice a week. The inner lining of the vein first becomes\ninflamed from the caustic or irritating liquid that is injected, which\ncauses congestion, the slowing up\nof any blood passing through it as\nsome of thc fibrin of the blood becoming deposited on the walls of\nthe vein, and finally the vessel instead of being a tube becomes solid\nlike a piece of cord or string.\nThe natural question to ask Is\nwhat happens to the blood which\nshould pass through these veins\nwhen these veins are destroyed and\nare just hard, solid, fibrous cords.\nNature is so good to us that here as\nin so many other places in the body,\nthe blood passes through other little vessels in the region, and the\ncirculation of the part is thus maintained.\nThere are some eases where the\nInjection treatment is not advisable\u2014old persons in poor health;\nin esses where there is extensive\nswelling of the lower limbs; those\nwho have recently suffered with inflammation of the veins\u2014phlebitis\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nByJ.B.C\nHE MU8T WRITE LIKE J.B.C.\nAlbert S. Osborne, famous handwriting expert, drew a laugh at the\nBruno Hauptmann extradition hearing in New York when, after studying one of the Lindbergh ransom\nnotes, he turned to defence counsel\nwith a puzzled look.\n\"I can't tell,\" said the expert,\n\"whether that letter is marked as\nexhibit 'I' or 'J.' Which is It?\"\nTh   court stenographer took one\nlook and said: \"It is G.'\" \u2022\n\u00ab   \u2022   *\nTHE SCOTS WIN A POINT\nIt's a fast one George Smith, Winnipeg Scottish chief of police, has\npulled on the hold-up fraternity.\nOn suspicion that some enterprising bandits have equipped themselves with a short wave radio to\nlisten in on orders to police prowler cars, use of Gaelic for all squad\ncars is. being adopted. There are\nenough Highlanders on the force to\nmake the plan practical.\nWith each squad car now goes an\nofficer who reads Gaelic as easily\nas English. Local newspapers equipped with short wave radio sets have\nnow put Scot reporters in charge\nof that service. ..e racketeers' are\nhelpless, for they do not number\nCeltic scholars among their gangs.\n\u2022 *   *\nYES, SIR, IT'S A BOY\n\"How did Doc Rose make all his\nmoney?\"\n\"In the stork market\"\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHE WON THE CASE\nA business man, who had to leave\non a journey before the end of a\ncase begun against him by a neighbor, gave orders to his lawyer to\nlet him know the result by telegraph. After several days he got\nthe following telegram:\n\"Right has triumphed.\"\nHe at once telegraphed back:\n\"Appeal immediately.\"\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nIMPORTED STUFF FROM\nFERNIE FRE    PRESS\nEditor\u2014Do you know how to run\na newspaper?\nApplicant\u2014No, sir.\nEditor\u2014I'll try you. You have had\nexperience.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA speaker before a Fernie woman's organization was telling about\nhow careless the men in Persia are\nwith their wives, and said it waa no\nand a donkey hitched up together.\nOne of the women in the audience\ncalled out: 'That's not unusual-\nuncommon sight to see a woman\nyou often see it here, too.\"\n\u2022 . e \u25a0 a\nAccording  to  a  recent survey,\nmarriage is doomed if thc wife is\nthe boss, but according to our own\nprivate survey marriage is doomed\nif she isn't\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nA FIFTH BEST LEAD\nThe unexpected and letting De\nclarer pick his own leads, instead of\nthe expected and helping Declarer\nplay the hand, defeated a sure game\ncontract, by giving South an entirely Incorrect picture of-opposing holdings,\nik-itt\n\u00bb A Q 10 6 5\n\u2666 86\n+ 86\nfit\n\u00bb43    .\n\u2666 A Q 10 4\n+ AKJ62\nBidding went: South, one Club;\nNorth, one Heart; East two Diamonds; South, two No Trumps, expecting to stop opponent's suit three\ntimes; North, three Hearts; South,\nthree No Tmmps.\nThe best general rule for opening\nleads against No Trumps is: Open\npartner's suit, unless your own suit\nis good enough to have bid had you\nsa\u00bb jn partner's place. Had West led\nhis Jack of Diamonds the Declarer\ncould not have failed to win three\ntricks in that suit; taking the single\nfinesse in Hearts he would have won\ntwo tricks, giving him five tricks.\nThe remaining four tricks required\nfor game South could have won\nwithout taking a finesse. That would\nall have been quite within the De*\nclarer's limited ability as a player.\nInstead of leading partners suit\nWest decided ot lead Hearts, as\nSouth must be short of that suit, to\nhave twice declined to play at part*\nner's call. South might even have\ngone game had West led his fourth-\nbest Heart but he led the Deuce, as\nif he held only four cards of that suit.\nSouth took the double finesse, and\nth * Ten lost to East's lone Jack. The\nQueen of Spades was returned, los-\nin\u00ab to South's King.\nExpecting to establish dummy's\nHearts, by giving West one trick in\ntho suit, the Declarer led his last\nHeart Dummy's Queen won. East\nshowed out, by discarding his lowest Diamond. Dummy's Six of Diamonds was led. East played the\nSeven. Declarer's double finesse of\nthe Ten lost to West's lone Jack.\nThe King of Hearts forced dummy's Ace. The Eight of Clubs was\nled. East covered with the Nine. Declarer's Jack lost to West's Queen.\nWest took his two good Hearts, defeating the contract a trick, against\ncards which should have gone game,\njust by rattling the Declarer through\nan unexpected opening lead, losing\nto lone jacks in two Instances, and\nfinding West with five Hearts instead of the four Hearts which the\nDeuce of Hearts' lead Indicated.\nOf course South might have gone\ngai.ii> even with the Heart lead los-\nin td the lone Jack, had he pbyed\nthe hand with more vision, and suspected W _t of having the lone Jack\nof Diamonds.\nINDEPENDENT COURT EXPERT IS\nSUGGESTED INSTEAD OF WITNESS\nTREE 2000 YEARS\nOLD IS-DOWN\nMighty even In Its overthrow,\none ot Yosemite's big trees, estimated to be nearly 2000 years old. lies\nstretched along the ground in Mariposa Grove.\nThe old sequoia, widely known\nas the Stable tree because ot a\ngreat burned-out place in its base in\nwhich horses were stabled in stage\ncoach days, was 269 feet high and\n29 li feet in diameter at its base.\nThe fall Is attributed by park authorities to the great fire scar which\nhad burned out its centre more than\ntwo hundred years ago, greatly\nweakening its hold in the ground.\nA recent windstorm loosened the\ngiant's already weakened foothold\nand two days later, during a period ot absolute calm, it toppled over\nand measured its length on the\nground.\nAlthough It struck with tremendous force, the huge trunk remains\nunshattered for three-quarters of\nits length, breaking off only at the\ntop. Every branch, some of them\nthree feet thick, snapped off close\nto the trunk. A great crater was\nleft where the roots had been.\nCanyons Under the\nSea\nIf some force could remove the\nwaters of the ocean to a depth of\ntwo miles, residents ot Monterey\npeninsula, on the California coast\nand the countless visitors, many of\nthem Canadians, could look out on\nto one of the scenic marvels of the\nworld, aserts Prof. Francis P. Shep-\nard, of the University of Illinois.\nDirectly off Pacific Grove they\ncould'look down a canyon wall to\na floor 7,000 feet beneath their level\nand they could see a 5,000 foot wall\nrising on the farther side. If they\nwere standing at the end of the peninsula, they could see anothtr impressive canyon coming out of the\npresent Carmel Bay, receiving many\ntributaries along its course, to\nwhich it joined the main Monterey\nBay cayon.\nThe residents of La JoUa, near\nSan Diego, would be given a surprise through the appearance of a\ndeep chasm with almost vertical\nwalls, which would be seen extending out from the present day sea\ncliffs north of the Scripps Institution of Ot\/.anography. Gorges such\nas this would become the show\nplaces of the new California coast.\nThere is no evidence that would\nallow the belief that these great\nrock canyons could have been cut\nout ot the sea bottom by the feeble\ncurrents of*the deeps. Neither do\nthey contain the basin depressions\ncut by unusual marine currents in\nsuch places as the Golden Gate\nwhere the tide is accentuated by\nthe narrowness of the entrance and\nthe vast size of the bay. These canyons were more likely produced by\nsome process now observable on\nland.\nTHREE VALLEY TYPE8;\nRIVERS CAUSED CANYONS\nThere are three mtin types of\ndeep land valleys; those excavated\nby the Ice, of which the Yosemite\nValley is a classic example; those\ncut by rivers, of which the Yellowstone Canyon is typical; and finally\nthose due to faulting of blocks of\nthe earth's crust, of which Death\nValley and Owen's Valley in California are splendid illustrations\nThe new surveys seem to leave Uttle doubt but that the great canyons\nof the sea floor were excavated by\nancient rivers at a time when the\nland margins were greatly elevated\nThe submarine canyons are of\nsome practical importance to man.\nThey allow navigators to determine\ndefinite positions at sea during a\nfog. They constitute good fishing\ngrounds because of the rocky\nledges on their sides. Where the\nheads of the canyons come in close\nto the coast the deep water has made\na favorable situation for the build\ning of piers. However, this location\nmay be fraught with difficulties,\nsince the canyon represent a funnel down which the bottom deposits may slide or be swept by storm\nwaves. Such a process has cused a\ndeepening of over twenty feet at\nthe Redondo pier and Just stopped\nshort of wrecking the pier.\nSome spider monkeys have tails\ntwice their body length.        ^^*^\nAUNT HET\n\"The devil ain't so smart. He\ntried to get old Job's goat and\nnever once thought o' givin'\nhim neighbors with night-bark-\nin' degs.\"\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nSCRAPBOOK\nSERVICE\n'Everything that lives, lives not\nalone, nor for itself.\" \u2014 William\nBlade.\na  e' a\nNo man Is born Into this world\nwhose work is not born with blm.\"\n\u25a0Lowell.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n'The right thinker and worker\ndoes his best, and does, the thinking\nfor the ages. No hand that feels not\nhis help, no heart his comfort\"*\u2014\nMary Baker Eddy.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\n'If I hove done thc public any\nservice, it is due to patient thought.\"\n\u25a0Newton.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\n\"Be useful where thou livest that\nthey may both want and wish thy\npleasing presence still.\"\u2014Herbert\nHe never wrought a good day's\nwork who went grumbling about it.\"\nA Proverb.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n\" Tls the well doing that meets\nwith a 'Well done' \"\u2014Jenning.\nThe Nelson Bridge\nLet's build the Nelson bridge again,\nAs we have done before my friend;\nWe'll put the ferry up on shore.\nFor no one will need her any more.\nWe got new government last year,\nAnd they have some money to\nspare.\nWe'll need some cable and some\nscrews.\nBut no men are wanted for the\nWe'll buiid this bridge of real hot\nair\nThe first of Its kind around here,\nWe have bought a golden nail each\nyear\nSo now we have dozens to spare.\nWhen  this  wonderful  bridge  we\nbuild\nOur hearts with Joy will be filled.\nAnd lovers go for a stroll each\nnight\nOn this new bridge in the blue\nmoonlight.\nYouths don't walk round Baker\nstreet\nFor the bridge Is the place to meet.\nWhen the moon is sending, softly,\nbeams,\nDid you wish for romance ln your\ndreams?\nLet's build the Nelson bridge again,\nWhile the \"balony\" Is cheap, my\nfriend,\nAlberta Is full of bulls to me\nAnd the bot air around here is free\n-A. O. N.\nBALANCING A BUDGET\nHamilton Board of Control bad\na meeting with the hospital board\nan**1 decided to allow thc latter body\nto overdraw its acconr.t $14010 so\nIt ecu***! enff the ver** vlthout a deficit We can recall having .taken\na little bookkeeping at school, but\nIt was qidte elementary and did not\ninclude the course whl-h produces\na balanced budget by an overdraft.\n\u2014Stratford Beacon-Herald.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From Nelion Dally Naws of Oct.\n30,1924)>\nBoxing champions officially recognized yesterday by the National\nBoxing association Include: Jack\nDempsey, heavyweight; Mike Mc-\nTlgue, light-heavy; Harry Greb,\nmiddle* Mickey Walker, welter;\nPlnkey Mitchell, Junior welter;\nBenny Leonard, light; \"Kid\" Sullivan, Junior light; Abe Goldstein,\nbantam; Pancho ViUa, flyweight.\n. *   *   *\nDeath toll in the Farron explosion is now eight. They Include\nPeter Verigin, John'Mackie, M.P.P.\nof Grand Forks, Harry Bishop of\nNelson, W. J. Armstrong, Vancouver. Miss Mary Streloeft, Nelson,\nNell Murray, Grand Forks, a Hindu not yet identified, and an unknown, whose body was charred\nbeyond recognition. The coach, after the explosion, burned.\n20 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Dally News of Oct\n30,1914)\nC. W. Appleyard will be ln charge\nof consular work here while W. S.\nRiblet, United States consular, is\non vacation at Los Angeles.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u00ab\nW. A. Cameron, superintendent of\nthe Ottawa mine at Slocan city for\nthe C. M. & S. company is visiting\nNelson.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nA meeting of ratepayers of Hume\nschool district authorized the. achool\nboard to borrow money to erect a\ntwo-roomed building and to purchase additional lots to enlarge the\npresent school site,\ne   *   \u2022\nErnest John Hacking, former Nelson hockey player, was married\nhere to Miss Barbara Cummins,\nsecond daughter of Mr. and Mrs\nN. M. Cummins of Nelson, Oct. 28.\n\"AU considerations are regarded\nas subservient to the paramount one\nof having one independent court expert whose impartiality should in\ntime remove the very general prejudice against the expert witness\nas evolved under the system which\nhas now been modified.\"\nSo is introduced a proposal of\ncourt reform in England by a Legal Correspondent of the London\nSunday Times. A so-called Court\nExpert is the central figure ln the\npropose., change.\nAs an experiment, it is explained,\nthe Lord ChanceUor's department,\non the recommendation of the Rule\nCommittee of the Supreme Court,\nhas made It possible In civil cases\nwithout a jury\u2014though if successful the innovation may well be extended to jury cases and to .ounty\ncourts\u2014for the judge to appoint\nwhat is known as a court expert.\nThia expert will report to the\njudge on all the technical matters\ninvolved, and, if his report is accepted by both sides, much time,\ntrouble, temper, and expense wili\nbe saved.\nEither party may still caU Its\nown expert witnesses, but unless\nthe witness called gives evidence\nwhich materially assists tbe court\nhis fee wiU not be allowed In costs,\nand presumably there will be nothing to prevent the judges from disregarding the parties' witnesses\nand relying on the court experts.\nIt ia generally agreed that the\ncalling ot expert witnesses by both\nsides to an action, which has been\nthe practice for'at least two centuries, gives rise to partisanship.\nJudges nave remarked on this for\nthe last three generations\u2014the, late\nMr. Justice McCardte said bluntly:\n\"An expert witness's evidence depends on the side by which he Is\ncalled.\" In other countries, as well,\nwhere English procedure rules, this\nis openly recognized *iy the reminder which the judge gives in his summing-up that the expert witnesses\nare \"briefed\" by the contending parties.\nTo reduce the number of fees to\nbe paid by litigants is one of the\navowed objects of the Lord ChanceUor's department in selecting tbe\nexpert witness aspect\nIt will be mostly thow expert\nwitnesses whose authority to speak\nis regarded as somewhat dubious\nwho will suffer. The more reputable will be ln demand as court experts, and It may be expedient later\nto form a panel of them, such as\nexists ln France.\nAmong lawyers there la a good\ndeal of uneasiness about this proposal.   Many beUeve lt will be lm-\nFOR PANELS\nKootenay Cottonwood\nIs unexcelled in the\nbeauty of its grain\naa it is unexcelled in\nutility and economy.\nRepeat orders prove\nits popularity.\nDistrict Distributors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\npossible tor a court expert to draw\nup a reliable report unUl he has\nheard what other experts have to\nsay, and that he must U_u to usurp\nan authority which belongs to tho\ncourt alone.\nThe view of the Supreme Court\nRules Committee, who include\neight judges, is, however, that thc\ncalling of several expert witnesses\ndoes not help the Judge to come to\na right decision, as the opinions in\nthe majority ot cases cancel themselves out\nThere Is concern, too, by a cpn-\nsiderable body of professional men\n\u2014it is said that there are a thousand who earn a regular Income by\ngiving expert evidence \u2014 on tbe\nground that there wlU be fewer feea\nto be earned. Not only doctors, but\nengineers, architects, valuers, surveyors, actuaries, and others aro\naffected, and, although the change\nis confined at present to non-jury\ncases, these cases tend to be mora\nnumerous.\n30 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Dally News of Oct\n30, 19-34)\nSld Nolan and George Ferguson\nhave returned from a hunting trip.\n...\nG. O. Buchanan, returning   last\nnight trom East Kootenay, report- I\ned that the Sullivan   smelter   at\nMarysvllle is within two months of J\ncompletion. _W^\n...\nA. H. (Bert) Wallace, who won\nthe Nelson schools' cha plonshlp in\ntrack and field last year won the\nfreshmen's 100-yard dash in annual\nsports of Toronto University where\nhe is now a student.\nCanada leads the nations in tho 1\nshipment of merchandise   to   the I\nUnited States, with Japan running\na close second. ^^^\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nMilk at\nIt's Best\nAa Pacific Milk pours, tba\nfinest, purest milk tbat can\ncome from a can enriches the\ndish that receives It It brings\neconomy to the preparation\not any tood. And aside from\nwhat we personally know It\ncan do, we have letters from\nhundreds of patrons wbo unhesitatingly give it flrat place.\nPacific Milk\n\"100% B.C Owned and Controlled\"\nPlant at Abbotaford\n5!W!S*-i!\u00ab^\nDaring   Riders  Made\nPony Express\nTo maintain the speed of nearly\n250 miles a day, attained by the\nPony Express riders who carrie*'\nmall in the '60s between St. Joseph\nMo., and San Francisco, says the\nNational Geographic Society, ther\ncould be no excess weight carrlet1\nPreference was given to riders Ugh'\nas jockeys whose endurance anc'\nbravery were unquestioned.\nTheir pouches were small, a bundle containing hundreds ot communications often no larger than an\nordinary writing pad. Each letter\nwas written on the thinnest tissue\npaper\u2014and for its transportations\nacross the continent 35 was paid in\nadvance. The large newspapers of\nthe country furnished most of the\nbusiness.\nDANGEROUS RIDE\nTAKEN  BY CODY\nA rider's safety rested largely with\nbis wits. To keep down weight, he\ncarried generally only a revolver\nand a knife. He frequently relied\non his fleet-footed pony to outdistance his pursuers. Usually this\ncould be done, unless, as happened\nsometimes, both rider and horse\nwere pressed into double duty when\nthe rider of the next stretch had\nbeen killed or injured.\n\"Buffalo Bill\" Cody made the\nlongest ride recorded by the Pony\nExpress. He had ridden 76 miles\nover his own run, only to find that\nthe man who should have relieved\nhim had been killed the night before. The station master ur*\u00bbed Cody\nto ride the vacant route. It was un\n85-mile stretch, across dangerous\nterritory, but he did it, making every\nstation on time. With but a moment's rest on reaching the final\npost he took the return pouc and\nsUrted back to his initial station.\nHe made tbe round trip of 322 miles\non scheduled time.\nA week later Indians klUed one\nof the station masters on Cody's\nroute and stole all the horses. Wben\n\"Buffalo Bill\" arrived there was no\nchange of mount, and, pursued by\nredskins most of the way, he hed to\nto ride bis panting horse at ton\nsp\u00bbed 12 miles to the next station.\nOver this route history was both\ncarried and mad* for nearly a year\nand a half, until the telegraph was\nfinally stretched from coast to coast\non Oct. 24. 1861. The Pony Express\nrequired nearly 500 horses, 190 stations and 80 daring riders.\nUnknown Dangers Lurked\nAlong Her Path\nThey were seated in a little out-of-the\nway restaurant. Creenleaf knew little\nof girls as young as Joel who was just\n20. But he did admire the qualities of\nhis pretty secretary. Had he been able\nto forsee the danger that awaited her\nbecause she was one of the few highly\ntrusted feminine employees of the\nBlack Chamber, Creenleaf would never\nhave permitted Joel to go on None\ncould know the pitfalls awaiting those\nwho were identified with the famous\nWashington crypographic bureau during the last war, as told in\nTHE\nBLONDE COUNTESS\nBy HERBERT O. YARDLEY\n(Famous Author of \"The American Black Chamber\")\nBeginning Saturday Next, Nov. 3\nin The Nelson Daily News\nWHAT!\nAbout that furnace of yours, does it\nneed repairing before the cold weather? Get our Expert to look it over\nHeaters at All Prices\nNelson Hardware Co*\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelion, B.C.\n Ulf!miMmtmm.,   n i, n i. i.imiawjpj_ptJ,i n   ^   -\nTheie Hord-Hitting Defence Men, Fleet-Skating Forwards, SWfty Piuot Men, All Are In Harness for the Big league Ice Seaton Opener\nt\\^^t\\\\\\klfr^>_____B     mf___\\\nl3il\nFlnnljan\nPaul Haynes\nOtt Holler\nNormla Hlmet       Lionel\nUP COIS FRISHIC\nRed Htrntr . Sld How.\n .  ,1'   ,   .\nBuihtr Jaekton Jaa Jtrwa\nChlng Johnson Buteh'Kaallng\nWally Kllrta\nHae. Kllrta\nTrack and Field - Fishing - Motor Boating - Boxing - Wrestling - Swimming - Football\nThlt It ont of tht aspects of tht tight bttwun Stanford tophi and frtthltt.\nBails 0$_____I_8\nJfawa\nBaseball - Softball - Tennis - Lacrosse - Rowing - Golf - Lawn Bowling - Rugby, Etc.\nPAGE SEVEN-\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.O-TUMDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER JO, 1934-\n\u25a0 PAGE tlVEN\nDorothy Duggan, af Orttnwloh, Conn, about to teora In national .hoot\nUOYD CROWE AGAIN HEADS\nKIMBERLEY SENIOR HOCKEY\nBy AL DEMAREE\nEven this early in tht season 1\nhave racived hundreds o( letters\ntrom bowlers asking how to overcome t \"back-up\" ball.\nWhen the ball loses speed aa lt\nbegins to near the pins, it naturally turns to either the right or left,\ndepending on what sort ot a turn\nwas given to it by the bowler delivering It. Verv few bowlers throw\na perfectly straight ball. It the ball\napins from left to right tt it what\nia commonly known as a \"back-up\"\nball. If the \"English\" on It is from\nright to lett. it is a \"hook\" ball. The\n\"hook\" ball Is thrown by turning\nthe wrist and hand to the left Just\nas the ball is released. A downward\npull of tho thumb at the same In-\nJtant will accentuate this rotation,\nt is a beautiful ball when under\nOontrol and is the Ideal pin getter\nand does not have to be rolled with\nmore than medium speed.\nAnswer to yesterday's question:\nJohn Walton to Richard Jorjensen\n(Denver) made the longest scoring\ncomplete pass in 1933 of 58 yards.\nToday' question: What player in\n1933 made the longest run back of\na kick-off? Answer tomorrow,\nAl Demaree has prepared an illustrated leaflet called \"Bowling Delivery\" which he will gladly send\nto-any reader requesting lt. Address\nAl Demaree in care of this paper and\nbe Sure to enclose a self-addressed\nstamped envelope.\nLes Pickard Gets\nFine Catch fish\nLes Plckard, who spent Sunday\nI fishing at Procter, returned to Nel-\nI soi, with five fish, including a 18-\nI pound salmon. He reported excellent fishing. His catch included be-\nl aides the 16-pounder. another ont ot\ntour pounds, and three eight-pound\nchar.\nZj\n_-\u00a3_\n[Soup That Makes\nI You Want More\nSoup with us Is net\n\"just soup.\" It is sn \u00abx-\npsrtly prepared dish of\nquality ingredients snd\ndelicacy ef flavor.\nNICK'S\n[GOLDEN GATE\nCAFE\nI IftMiMMMW\nNearly 200 at Annual\nMeeting of the\nDynamiters\nCLUB FINISHES\nWITHOUT DEBT\nFeel Vancouver Entry\nin Kootenay Not\nPractical\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., pet 28. -\nNearly 200 fans attended the annual\nmeeting of the Klmberley Hockey\nclub here. It was a most enthusiastic\ngathering and the keen, yet friendly\nrivalry ttiat existed during the election of the different officers would\nseem to indicate that hockey is in\nfor a food seaaon.\nLloyd Crowe will again head the\nclub this being his fifth season as\npresident. A, good supporting executive waa elected.\nThe financial statement showed\nthat the club lt clear ot debt which,\nas he pointed out. was made possible\nby the strong and able work ot the\nHockey Booster club. The largest\nloss Hem appeared t\u00bb be that suffered during the British Columbia\nplayoff games held at Trail, which\nnetted 8125 for Klmberley's share\nwhile the club was obligated to pay\nthe extra expense of $131.60 for the\ncoet of sending the Vancouver\nQuakers to Kimberley and return\nto Trail on account of a sudden\nthaw in Eait Kootenay.\nThe president in making his report made special reference to the\nwonderful record made by the\nDynamiters in winning the far western championship and of their good\nsportsmanship which was attested\nby the press reports and wirea ot\ncongratulations received. All those\nlocal persons and associations who\nhad helped to boost the boys cama\nlh for their Ihare of thanks.\nThe following officers were\nelected:\nPatroni\u20148. G. Blaylock, W. M,\nArchibald, Hon. H. H. Stevens, Hon.\nF. M. McPherson.\nHonorary president\u2014E. G. Montgomery.\nHonorary vice-president\u2014WlUlam\nLindsay.\nPresident\u2014Lloyd Crowe.\nVice-president\u2014James Douglas.\nSecretary\u2014Art Southwell.\nTreaaurer\u2014Harold Whitmore.\nExecutive members\u2014C. T. Oughtred, Nick McKeniie, George Scott,\nA. Clausen, P. McLeish, J. Mc-\nGowan, J. J. O'Neill, R. Murray.\nIt was decided to ask the intermediate club to allow themselves to\ncome under the wing of the senior\nclub, playen being registered as\nDynamiters and those not making a\nplace on the club to play exhibition\ngames ln a district or city league.\nTwo members of the executive will\nbe delegated to handle these matteri.\nThe appointment of a manager\nwill be left ln the hands of the executive and the delegates to the\nWest Kootenay league meeting will\nbe chosen by that body.\nEvery help will be given the\nJunior Hockey association boyi to\nmake thii as successful a season at\nwas the last one.\nRegarding press reports ot a Vancouver team or teams entering tbe\nWest Kootenay league it was telt\nthot this scheme would not be very\nfeasible on account of the big expense and loss of time by the\nplayers.\nINTERNATIONAL POCK TEAMS MUST\nHAVE TWO ROOKIES AT EVERY GAME\nSHIELDS OF TENNIS\nFAME MAY CO INTO\nMOVING PICTURES\nKIW TORK, Oet. M (AP)-Ften-\nola X. Shields, top-ranking Amtrictn singlet tennis player, announced\ntonight thlt ht It giving teriout\nthought to signing a movie contract\nproffered VI ona of the largt HollyJ\nwood film producing compinlei.\n\"I havtnt signed up ytt,\" Shitidt\n\u2022lid, \"hut t am In the prooett ot\ngoing over tht contracts, if I decide\nto go In tht movlet.\" ht uld, \"I'll\nnot low mr tmtteur itandlng. I'm\nnot going to play tennia in pieturet,\nno thlt Met otn ot that.\"\nPuerto Ricon Not\nin Bantam Series\nMONTREAL, Oct. 29 (CP)-SIxto\nEscobar, Puerto Rlean bantamweight, today wired from his home\nthat his father is dying In Puerto\nRico and he cannot come here to\nmeet Joe Tel Ken on November S,\nthe first card of the world's bantamweight eliminations. Chairman\nFrank Hogan of the Montreal athletic commission, confirmed the Illness through the Puerto Rican commlsaion.\nPromoter Armand Vincent stated\nhs would go ahead with plant for\nthe card, matching either Lou Salica\nof San Francisco of Carlos Ouenin-\ntana of Panan i against Tel Ken.\nCamera Flies\nto Rio Janeiro\nRIO JAN-IRO, Oct. 31) (AP)\u2014\nPrlmo Ctrhert, former world heavyweight champions, arrived today by\nplant en route to Buenos Aires and\na aehtduled South Amtrictn boxing\ntour.\nHe said he hoped to hive mother\nt>htnet to fight Max iter, the man\nwho took bla title trom him.\nCONACHERIS\nIN FINE TRIM\nFORPUCKWAR\nWard Shines With the\nNew Penalty Shot;\nSeibert on Deck\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 29 (CP)*-Mont-\nrcal Maroons and New York Rangera worked skillfully at their training camps here today and after practice Tommy Gorman of Maroons\ni.as elated over the tine showing\nversatile Lionel Conacher made ln\nhis first strenuous play.\nConacher, nationally known athlete and former rearguard for the\nworld's champion Chicago Black\nHawks, entered the Maroon camp\nafter a hard gridiron season in east-\nem Canada lo become the key-man\nof the Maroon defence and led many\noffensive plays,\nRangers devoted their day's training to one workout while Maroons\nSeld ice scrimmage ln the morning\nten played ban and completed\ntheir training with track exercises.\nWARD GOOD ON SHOT\nTommy Gorman tried each player\nat the penalty shot Jimmie ward,\nMaroon first stringer, and amateur\nSammy McManus were good at the\nmost recent National Hockey league\ninnovation.\nMaroons indulged ln a fast skating practice and in scrimmage concentrated on back-checking and defensive work. It was still doubtful\nwhet'\/jr Sammy McManus and Aubrey Webster, last season's Moncton\nHawk wingmen, would turn professional for Tuesday night's encounter with Rangers in the aecond\nexhibition of a three-game seriei.\nHowever, Oorman atated the two\nplayers may be signed tonight.\nSEIBERT ON DECK\nBig Earl Selbert, previously a\nRanger holdout and now signed for\nthe N.H.L. salary limit of $7000, entered camp after the othera had a\nweek'i play behind them. Ho matched speed and skill with his mates in\na brisk workout. Lester Patrick\nchuckled aa he spoke of.Rangers\nonly remaining holdout, Chlng John-\nton, who has given both him and\nNew York officials the slip. Johnson's whereabouts were Unknown\nat tha training season entered its\nsecond week.\nKID LINE FOR RANGERS\nA kid-line appeared for the Rangers ln practice when Lynn Patrick,\namateur center, teamed with Bert\nConnolly and Charlie Mason. This\ntrio showed up well agalnit Bun\nCook, Frank Boucher and Cecil\nDillon.\nIf Patrick decides that Lynn\nshould play amateur hockey this\nseason he will likely appear in a\nNew York circuit. The three Vancouver Lions of Northwestern Pro\nleague, Charlie Maaon, Bryant Hex-\ntail and Clint Smith do not know\nit they will return to tbe coast\nleague or be given a Iryout with\nRangers, although each is doing impressive work.\nFish Bite WeU\noa the Main Uke\nMsy  Not  Hsve More Thsn\nNine Veterans on Lineup,\nIs New Ruling\nThe main lake was the rtndtx-\nvous Sunday for a big gathering of\nNelson nimrods and all seemed to\nhave hit a lucky day. Bill Desjardln,\n\"Scotty\" Marr, Nelion Jackson. Alex\nFleming and \"Herb\" Pitta had a\nfine outing and returned with 12\n\u00abood sited trout for their trouble.\n\"Bob\" Wallace and Donald McDonald landed a 12-pound salmon. \"Les\"\nPickard brought home almost 80\npounds of fish. The day was Ideal\ntor fishing and the smoothness of\nthe lake made It pleasant,\nLONDON, Ont, Oct. 21. (CP)~\nlach club ln tht International Hockey league will be permitted to carry\nonly nine veterans on its roster, tc-\ncordlng to a ruling made at a apeclal meetlnt today ot the league\nheld here. The cl.'.bs mult dress tor\nevery ftmt two men who havt not\nhad experience, while if they carry\na complete rotter of 14 players tht\nremaining thrtt must be players\nwho have not had more lhan three\nyears' professional experience.\nConny Smythe, manager of the\nToronto Msple Leafs ot the National\nHockey league, whose club uses\nSyracuse at a farm, attended tht\nmeeting and protetted againit modifications ot the three-year rule\nadopted at Cleveland lait wetk\nwhen the governor! decided to wipe\nout the original ruling.\nAfter a three-hour conference the\ngovernor! decided to modify the\nrule tnd limit each team to nine\nveterani. They also made it compulsory tor each team to dreu the\nrookiet tor tvtry game.\nManager (Toots) Holway of tht\nLondon Tecumsehs announced he\nhad obtained Gordon Ward, brother\not Jimmy Ward ot the Montreal Maroons, in a trade tor Leo Quinne-\nvillc. Gordon Ward pltyed with Quebec Bull Doga ln the Canadian-\nAmerican league tor the past two\nseasons, and waa credited with 28\nscoring polnta in 1933.\nMickey Roach, manager of the\nButfsiio Bisons, announced that the\nBiions would carry only 13 players.\nThey have 11 in training ctmp now\nand will add two more rookies.\nBRUINS BEAT\nAMERKS START\nTO CUT TEAM\nWorters Sure for the\nGoal Job; Some Go\nto Minors\nOSHAWA, Ont, Oct. 29 (CP)-\nMtnager Joe Slmpaon, Selkirk*,\nMan., contribution to the New York\nAmericans of thl National Hockey\nleague, has itarted the weeding-out\njroceas with his squad of prospects\nn training here.\nFollowlni the first week of practice, Slmpaon announced today that\nRed Doran has been transferred to\nthe Boiton Bruins and three other\nplayers have been sent to International league teams. Hal Picketts of\nlast year's Americans has gone to\nSyracuse of the International league\nand Red Jackaon, another of lait\nyear's iquad, has been sent down to\nNew Haven of the Canndian-American league. Rolan Reeves, who has\nbeen trying out with the Amerks.\nlacks experience and l)ai been sent\nto the Buffalo Bisons of the International league.\nSimpson hai Roy Worteri as a\nsure starter In goal, and figures on\nusing Alex Smith, lait year with\nthe Bruins, Al M rrty, Red Dutton\nand Bill Bridges for defence work.\nHe probably will keep Dave Schrln-\ner, last season with Syracuse.\nThere are plenty of forwards to\nchoose from, with Bob Grade, formerly with the Toronto Maple Leafs,\nas the outstanding newcomer.\nOthers sure to be retained are\nNormie Himes, Rabbit McVeigh from\nKenora, Red Klein, Eddie Burke,'\nArt Chapman, Winnipeg, and Red\nConn.\nPAUL THOMPSON\nSIGNS COTRACT\nCHICAOO, Oct. tt (AP) \u2014 Paul\nThompaon. ot Calgtry. tht ttar left-\nwinger who ltd Chlctgo Bltck Hawks\nin scoring laat season, signed t eontnet today, reducing hookty't Stanley cup holden Hit of holdouts to\ntwo.\nNothisg hat b\u00abn halrd from\nBarn (\"Doc**') -ROtmiie, centre, er\nClirenet (\"Tiffy\") Abel, veteran S>-\nfencemap. tin*** they rtturntd thtlr\ncontricta untigntd.\nEquipoise Will \u2022\nRace Onee More\nPAWTUaUT, R4, Oct. 29 (CP)\n\u2014Equipoise, great six-year-old handicap star of the C. V. Whitney stable, will return to the racing wars\nb;- starting ln a special $3000 added\nsix furlongs sprint here on Wednesday, the Narraganset park management announced today.\n\"Ekky\" has been out of training\nfor wefks sue to a foot injury.\nPUCK BATTLE\nFists Fly at Saint\nJohn; Pusie Has His\nHand in the Fights\nSAINT JOHN,' N.B., Oct 28 (CPl\u2014\nBoston Bruins noted but Montreal\nCanadlens 2-1 here tonight ft the\nflnt ot t four-game exhlbttton series\n\u2014the tint to be conducted in the\nmtritlmes by two teamt of the National Hockey league.\nNels Stewart, slamming Gagnon's\nrebound past wilt Cude in Canadians' cage, put Botton one up early\nln the first session. The second waa\nscoreless. Both teams divided a brace\nln the hectic third frame, Peggy\nO'Nell of Saskatoon and Jollat\ncounting unassisted.\nCanadlens were trying hard to\nbreak Into the scoring column when\ntrouble arose. Nelson Crutchfleld.\nfresh from amateur ranks and now\nthird line center with the Flying\nFrenchmen, was rushing the puck\ndown the boards when checked by\nJohnny Gagnon. playing right wing\non Bruins' second line tonight. Both\nfell and came to blows at they arose.\nThe temporary pugilists had cooled eff when Jean Pusie, Bruins'\ncolorful sub defenceman from the\nPacific coast, revived the flames of\nwar by tangling with Cmtchfield.\nBoth Crutchfleld and Gagnon\ndrew penalties. While they were in\nthe box \"Peggy\" O'Neill mtde it\n2-0 for Bruins but a minute later\nAurel Joliat, Canadiens right winger, saved his squad from a shutout.\n'\"Tiny' Thompson, Calgary, between\nthe Boston goal posts, fended oft\nshot after shot as Canadiens kept\nmost of the play in Bruins' territory\nduring the last period.      v\nThe lineups:\nCanadlens      Position Bruins\nGoal\nCudt  Thompton\nDefence\nCtrton Wilcox\nJtnklnt   Shore\nCenter\nLepine  Barry\nWing\nJollat  Selbert\nLarochelle Clapper\nRefereea\u2014J. H. Drummie and\nJack Keating, Saint John.\nCanadlens subs\u2014Riley, G. Man-\ntha, Lamb, Crutchficld, McGill,\nRaymond, Mondou, La-trance, S.\nMentha. Portland, Savage.\nBruins subs\u2014 Stewart. Beattie,\nGagnon, Sands, Shlll, 'Giroux, G.\nJerwa, O'Neill, J. Jerwa, Puaie.\nSummary:\nFlrtt period\u20141 Bruins, Stewart\n(Gagnon) 3:13.\nPenalties\u2014Lamb.   Stewart.\nSecond period\u2014No score.\nPenalties\u2014McGill, J. Jerwa.\nThird period\u20142 Bruins, O'Neill\n14:03: 3 Canadiens. Joliat 15:10.\nPenaltles-Crutchfield, Gagnon,\nLamb, Siebert.\nStill Silent About\nNew Senator Boss\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 29 (AP).-\nAi President Clark Griffith continues his enigmatic silence as to his\nchoice for the Senator's baseball\nmanager, Washington fans are fairly\ncertain of three facts:\nStanley (Bucky) Harris now has\nthe inside track for the Job; the new\nmanager will not be a playing boss;\nand a shakeup in the Senator lineup Is assured.\nlt IS known that Griffith highly\nregards Harris and that they are\nclose personal friends. Harris has\napplied for the job and his candi-\ndacv has been supported by baseball\ncritics on capital newspapers.\nA Good Idea But\nChief Can't See\nIt inJThat Way\nDUBLIN, Oct. 29 (CP cable). -\nStrange communications are received from all parte of the world by\nthe officials in charge ot the Irish\nhoipital swetpstakei.\nIt lt innounced todty one letter\nreceived by the chief commissioner\nof Free Stale police, wbo superintend! tht actual drawing ot tickets\nfrom the drum by the hospital\nnonet, wis from a group of people\nin Britlih Coljinblt.\nIt tola tht itory of i woman there\nwho had been seriously ill since 1929\nand had been rendered penniless by\nthe Mst c; trettment. Her 14-yetr-\nold ion who has bought her a sweep-\nsttko ticket apparently Intended to\ngive the police commissioner $3000\nif his mother's ticket wat drawn.\nThe official declined lo comment\non the letter.\nBRITISH SOCCER\nLeague Standings\nENGLISH LEAQUE\nFlrtt Division\nP. W. L. D. F. A. P.\nStoke City 12 8 3 1 28 15 17\nAnenal  12 8 2 4 88 18 18\nSunderland 12 8 2 4 21 11 18\nGrimsby Town 12 8 3 S 28 13 18\nDerby County 12 7 4 1 21 14 15\nEverton  12 8 8 3 28 20 18\nMancheiter C. 12 8 4 2 26 20 14\nSheffield Wed 12 8 4 8 22 20 13\nPreston N. E. 12 5 4 . 15 18 13\nBlackburn R.   12 4 4 4 14 17 12\nLiverpool  12 8 5 2 21 27 12\nAston Villa .... 12 8 5 3 28 SI 12\nWett Brom. Al. 13 4 8 8 27 28 11\nTottenham Hot 12 4 8 3 18 19 11\nPortarnouth 12 4 8 3 16 10 11\nWilver'ton W. 12 4 8 2 24 26 10\nBirmingham.... 12 6 7 0 16 24 10\nLeedt United   13 3 5 4 18 28 10\nLeicester City  12 2 6 4 18 19  8\nMiddlesboro .... 12 2 8 4 13 18   8\nChelaea 13 4 6 0 13 24 8\nHuddersfield T. 12 t I 1 16 28  7\ntteond\nBolton Wtnd.   12\nManchester Un. 12\nBlackpool 12\nBrentford  12\nNotts Forest   12\nFulhtm  12\nWest Ham Un. 12\nSheffield Un.   12\nBury 12\nBradford C 12\nBurnley  12\nPort Vale 12\nBamslcy   12\nSwansea Town 12\nNewcattle Un.  12\nBradford 12\nSouthampton .. 12\nOldham Ath... 12\nPlymouth Arg. 12\nNorwich City   12\nHull City 12\nNotts County   12\nDlvltlon\n38 12 20\n29 16 16\n22 17 16\n24 17 15\n24 17 13\n22 18 14\n22 25 14\n25 17 13\n16 19 13\nIB 20 13\n21 16 12\n17 17 12\n20 26 12\n18 1811\n24 28 10\n15 21 10\n12 20 10\n17 27 10\n20 26\n12 18 7\n18 27 7\n12 27 5\nMARY TUDOR FAVORITE FOR\nCAMBIDGESH1RE TOMORROW\nGOLF FACTS\nNOT THEORIES\n\u25a0y ALIX. MORRItON\nThird  Division\nCharlton Ath.   12  8\nCoventry City 12   7\nGright. It H. Al. 12  6\nReading 12   7\nCrystal Palace 12 7\nBristol City .... 12 8\nSwindon Town 12  8\nMillwall 12  6\nNewport Coun. 12 8\nCardlft City.... 13 6\nLuton Town 12 4\nQueens P. R... 12\nBristol Roven 12\nNorthimpton.. 12\nTorquay _ 12\nWatford 12\nClapton Or 12\nAldenhot  12\nDillingham ..... 12 3\nBournemouth.. 12  4\nSouthend Un 13   3\nExeter City .... 12  2\n(Southern)\n2  2 24 15 18\n2 25 10 16\n8 24 11 15\n1 26 13 13\n1 38 19 15\n2 15 15 14\n3 25 21 13\n1 18 19 13\n1 21 25 13\n1 IS 28 13\n4 17 16 12\n4 18 18 12\n4 18 18 12\n6 0 18 20 12\n6 1 23 22 11\n6 2 16 16 10\n8 2 16 19 10\n6 2 13 19 10\n8 3 18 21 9\n7 1 iS 23 9\n8 2 17 29 8\n8 2 12 22 6\nThird Dlvltlon\nHalifax Town 14\nTranmere R 12\nStockport C 13\nDarlington  12\nChester 12\nDoncaster R 12\nWrexham  12\nLincoln COufl. 12\nGateshead 12\nBarrow 12\nMansfield T. 13\nChesterfield .... 12\nRotherham 12\nAcerington St. IS-\nYork Cltv   12\nCrewe Alexan. 12\nCarlisle Un. 12\nHartlepool Un. 12\nNew Brighton   11\nRochdale 12\nWalsih 13\nSouthport Cn. 11\n(Northirn)\n8   2   4 23 14 20\n3 25 11 19\n1 35 20 19\n2*24 15 18\n0 31 14 IS\n4 21 12 16\n4 21 IS 14\n1 24 18 13\n3 23 21 13\n4 15 15 12\n2 19 21 12\n1 17 13 11\n8 29 21 11\n3 17 24 11\n2 15 23 10\n2 23 34 10\n1 13 22   9\n2 18 35 8\n8 11 17 7\n8   8 22   7\n4 10 24 6\n2 13 26   6\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nFlrat Dlvltlon\nSt Johnstone   14 11   1   2 30 12 24\nRangen 13 10 2  134 14 21\nHamilton 14 9   2   3 38 17 21\nHearts   14 8  2  4 29 13 20\nClyde  14 7  2  5 24 21 19\nMotherwell 14 8  3   5 26 17 17\nAberdeen 15 7  5  3 23 24 17\nCeltic  15 6   5   4 26 14 16\nDundee  IS 8   6, 5 20 23 15\nQueen Of South 14 5   8   4 15 17 14\nAirdrieonlant   14 8   8   2 22 27 14\nKilmarnock .... 15 6 8  1 31 30 13\nAlbion Rovers 14 5   7   2 17 24 12\nHibernians ...... 14 4  7  3 19 24 11\nQueens Park    13 4  8.8 18 24 11\nAyr United .... 14 4  SIMM  9\nFalkirk   13 8   8  2212.   8\nPartlck Thistle 13 3   ft 3 14 24   8\nSt. Mlrren  14 t Iff t 10 27  6\nDumferlinc 14 1 11   2 11 34   4\n , s\/w\nSecond Division\nKings Ptrk 12 9  I   1 32 17 19\nSt. Bernards.... 1\" 7  2  8 39 17 17\nThird Lanark   12 7  8   3 81 14 17\nEast Fife 12 8   3   1 32 18 17\nArbroath 12 S  4   0 33 23 16\nStenhousmulr   13 6  4  8 30 25 15\nEait SUrling     13 ft   3 27 27 15\nMorton  13 6   5   2 39 26 14\nDundee Un 11 6   5   1 29 21 18\nLeith Athletic   12 6   5   1 21 22 18\nRalth Rovers.... 12 4   6   2 27 29 10\nDumbarton ...... II 4  6  2 22 33 10\nAlloa J,  II 4  6   1 22 18  9\nBrechinQtv... 12 3   8   3 16 39  9\nForfar Athletic 12 3  7   2 20 32  8\nCowdenbeath    IS 3   8   2 28 39   8\nMontroil  12 2   8  2 28 40   8\nEdinburgh C... 13 2 11   0 18 49  4\nPARIS. Oct. 30 (AP)\u2014Titer Hum-\nery. wtlghlng 136 pounds, tonight\noutpointed Cleto LooatelH, Italian\nlightweight, In a io-round bout. IP-\nratelll tlped the scalea at 131\npounds.\nThi other morning I had to dig\nout at S o'clock to play with a\ncouple ot newspaper men. The grass\nwu heavy with dew and several\nholea were laid out on marsh land. It\nwat decidedly wet under toot\nOne of the men has played golf\nfor 20 years, long enough to know\nthat he thouldirt dng his club-\nheadi along ln wet grass. Hli wood\nclub hapened to be made with Ivory\nlnaertt ln the fleet. When these\nclub-heada dry out he'll wonder\nwhat causes the Inserts to loosen.\nWood and ivory havt different\nreactions to moisture. One expands\nand contracts more than the other,\nhence the loosening ot screws, insert!, etc. To preserve your clubi,\nkeep them dry at all timet.\nWELTERTITLE\nIS ATSTAKE\nWallace-Townsend Go\nat Vancouver on\nNovember 7th\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 29 (CP)-The\nVancouver boxing and wrestling\ncommission today put its \"okay\non the Gordon Wallace-Billy Townaend 15-round bout for the Canadian welterweight boxing title to be\nhere here November 7.\nBoth fighters have gone into rigorous training. George Dent, rugged\nNanalmo welter, worked three fast\nrounds with Townse\"nd today. Harry\nMiller, speedy Nanalmo lightweight,\nwlll be added to Townscnd's training camp this week.\n.Two California battlers are being\nbrought up as sparring mates for\nthe sensational young Wallace who\nttarti the heaviest part ot his training grind tomorrow.\nNewsboy Mllllch, middleweight,\nand Mickey Dodge, lightweight,\nfrom Sacramento, are expected here\ntomorrow.\nIs 10 to 1 Shot; Ago\nKhan1 Feels His Colt\nShould Win\nNEWMARKET, Eng., Oct. 29 (CP\ncable).\u2014One ot tht largest and most\nbattling fields ln the near-century\nof itt existence will run for the\nCambridgeshire ataket, great\nautumn handicap over the mile and\nan eighth distance, at turf head-\nquerteri Wednetday.\nFrance, with six French-breds Including tte favorite Mary Tudor II.\nconlldentally expects to win the big\nftll feature. Rentenmark is another\ndangtroua contender trom across\nthe channel.\nThe Aga Khan, owner ot Bad-\nruddin, expressed the opinion tonight that hit colt would rui. well\ntnd \"with luck\" should win. Tbt\nAmerlctn - bred Mate, which has\ncampaigned all teason with little\nsuccess, should get In tht money,\naccording to Ivor Anthony, handling the rangy hone for A. C.\n(Brother) Bostwlck.\nAll the ownen and trainers in fact\nwere hopetul and the field really\ntetmi very open.\nTonight! call-over showed the\nfollowing odds:\nMary Tudor 10 to 1, Wychwood\nAbbott 100 to 9, Caymanas 100 to 7,\nSpend a Penny 18 to 1, Bondsman,\nllolfatsra and Flamenco 20 to 1,\nBadmddln 22 to 1, Highlander 25\nto 1. Rate. Commander Third, Splri-\ntuelle, X'ket, Light Sussex and\nRentenmark 33 to I, Mlsltor 35 to 1,\nCelestial City, The Blue Boy, Grand\nRounds and Almond Hill 40 to 1;\nLUlum Second 50 to 1; Tobasco and\nGelapas 66 to 1, others 100 to 1.\nSteve Donoghue wlll ride the\nfavorite. The withdrawal of Solitude reduces the field to 37.\nSHIKATJEATEN\nNEW YORK. Oct. 29 (API-Everett Marshall, 218. of La Junta, Colo.,\nthrew Dick Shikal, Germany, 222,\nbtfort a crowd of 7000 th Madison\nSquare Garden tonight after 43\nminutes and 47 seconds ot wrestling.\nHe used a flying tackle and body\nslam.\n\"Kid\" Berg Wins\nBritish Title\nLONDON. Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014Jackie\n(\"Kid\") Berg, the White ChaoH\nwhirlwind, tonight won the lightweight boxing championship of Oreat\nBritain, whtn Harry Mlzler's second\nthrew in the towel at thi enu ot\nthe 10th round of a echeduled ir>-\nrouncl bout. Berg weighed 135 pound]\ntnd MKUer. 1341a.\nSome people are as Important over\nevery little thing at a lien Is over\nlaying an egg.\nBOYS!\nYou'll like our BREECHES.\nBlue cheviot,\nLeather Knee\nBlue cheviot, g| Qt\nTurtle Nick Swetttri, Maroon, Camtl, Brown. _ttA\nEtch   W\nGodfreys' Ltd.\n\"The Home of Grttttr Valuet\"\nOpp. STANDARD CAPE\nAll her\ngood times\nspoiled!\n\u2022Peggy is nearly heartbroken. She still thinks\nthe world of Joe\u2014l>ut lately It't terribly embarrassing to go out with him. Joe it becoming carelett about hla\nappearance\u2014often appean with her In publie with stubble on\nhit face.' Should ahe tell him\u2014or give him up?\nToday no man ean expect women to excuse stubble. For tba\nGillette \"Blue Blade\" it especially processed to shave clean and\ndote without Irritation. Even two shaves a dty, when neceuary, won't irritate tender skin. Try tha Gillette \"Blua\nBlade\" today and tea for younelf.\nWttiiit Qualify *\u00bboaKf vely Guaranteed\nGillette Blue Blades\nNoW 5hr25i'-10'\"50^\n __________________________________\nIH\n'\u25a0\u25a0\" \u25a0\u25a0\"\nPAGE EIGHT-\n\u00ab\n\u25a0THE NELION DAILY NEWI. NELION. l.C\u2014TUEIDAY MORNING, OCTOIER SO. 19S4-\nCMtSIFIED SECTION - WHERE BUYER fcSillER Mill\nMSSMMSMMMSMSM*^\npiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiimuiViiiiiiiTiiiViiiViiiuiiTiiiYiiniiiViiilMiTiiiTg'g\nSOMEONE\nTO LOVE\nby VERNIE CONNELLY\nINSTALMENT TWENTY-IIX\nJune dressed hurriedly so she\ncould get out of her apartment and\nInto the Harta', for the reporters\nwould be at her door lt she refused\nto answer the jangling phone.\nLucy wes not about when Hartley\nadmitted her. Hickory sat by the\nwindow, papera scattered about,\n\"I've seen them,\" she said in answer to their questioning glances.\n\"And I think It's rotten. How did it\nhappen?\"\n\"Sheridan must have notified the\npolice. After all, the Jewels were\nprobably stolen in his house, and he\ncouldn't do anything else,\" Hartley\npointed out.\nThen Mrs. Hart entered thc room\nand Hickory handed her the papers.\nShe scanned the headlines as a waiter came with their breakfast.\nThe phone rang. Hartley answered\nit. and they heard him all but snarl*,\n\"No, Miss Varick is not here\u2014she Is\nout of town\u2014we don't know^when\nshe'll be back.\"\n\"That's telling 'em!\" Hartley\nlaughed. \"Now, suppose we can the\njitters and have an Easter egg. Did\nanybody remember, by any chance,\nthat this Is Easter?\"    '\n\"And I missed the parade,\" walled\nLucy. \"That's why I came to New\nYork! Why did you have to lose\nyour jewels and make everybody\ncross?\"\n\"I suppose I don't count!\" ssld\nJune. \"I guess I'm the one to be\ncross!\"\n\"Well, aren't you?\" Hickory demanded.\n\"Not about losing the necklace,\nI'm sore because I have to have my\nname dragg-d all around town when\nI've never done anything to deserve\nIt.\"\n\"That's what we are mad about,\ntoo. But you aren't entirely blameless. You accepted the sapphires\nfrom Bishop, and remember even\nPhil Sheridan, who I imagine isn't\neasily shocked, thought that was a\npretty big dose.\"\n\"What a lot of conventional bunk!\"\nLucy offered. \"Why wouldn't a man\ngive June jewels lf he could afford\nto, especially when he's in love\nwith her as Bruce is, and expects to\nmarry her?\"\n\"There was nothing wrong about\nIt,\" Hartley agreed. \"But it's pretty\nannoying to have to tell the world.\nNone of us were clever last night,\nor rather this morning. If we had\nbeen, we would have kept the whole\nthing quiet.\"\nThere was a knock on the door,\nand Hartley admitted Bruce. \"Have\nyou had breakfast?\" Hart asked.\n\"No, Td like some coffee If I may\".\nTurning to the little group about\nthe breakfast table, he said, \"Good\nmorning.\" stiffly.\n\"Hello, Bruce.\" June greeted him.\n\"You're mad about the papers, aren't you?\"\n'Tm pretty sorry, dear. How did lt\nhappen? Ti like to hear the whole\nstory.\"\nHartley told him.\n\"I am going to make a statement,\"\nhe 'said. HI say that my sister injured Misi Varick, and when she\nwouldn't accept any damages, we\ngave her the sapphires as a Christmas gift.\"'\n\"That might help a little.\" Hartley\nadmitted. \"It June weren't so dqg-\ngoned pretty, and if you hadn't been\ngoing about together for months.\"\n\"The newspapers will only laugh\nat you\u2014just watch what they'll do\nto a story Ul i that.\" Hickory said.\n\"I think June ought to go home\nwilh me tonight.\"\n\"I think so. too.\" Bruce agreed.\n\"You are flying, aren't you?\"\n\"Bruce! You dont mean it!\" June\ncouldn't believe she had heard\naright\n\"Yes, I do mean it. Temporsrily,\not course. You have been in the\nlimelight so much over Kay, and\nnow this.,.\"\n\"You and Hickory are both crazyl\"\nshe stormed. \"You think it Is bad\nfor me to hava a thing like this\nhappen ln New York? Don't you\nknow it will seem ten times aa bad\nto the tolks at home? You know how\nsmall .towns are, Hickory, even if\nBruce doesn't.\"\n\"If it were anyone but you, June,\nI'd say you were right. But the folks\nat home all love you, and know how\nfine you are.\"\n\"Well, lf I've got any fineness in\nme I'll put it to the test by staying\nright here and going on with my\njob. If you think I am going to\nthrow away three hundred dollars\na week juat because one man gave\nme a string of sapphires and another\nstole them, you're wrong!\"\n\"June ts right.\" Lucy said. \"She'd\nhe foolish to go home, especially\nwith Hickory.\"\nHartley sided with his wife.\nBruce said. \"I am going to make\nPhil answer to me for this publicity.\nI think he is responsible for the story\nthat I gave June the necklace.\nOtherwise, how would the papers\nhave gotten hold of that?\"\nThey were all a little stunned.\n\"It waa my fault, probably,\" June\naaid. \"I told Phil when we went\nback last night, or this momlng,\nand aomeone could easily have overheard.\"\nBruce got up. Tm going to aee\nPhil, anyway. He'll admit It, if he\nis responsible.\"\nHartley aald, \"111 go too.\" and\nHickory went to bring his own hat\nand coat Bishop must not be allowed to complicate matters by having\na row wtth Phil.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nLinder sent for June the following\nday. He was displeased over the\npublicity.\n\"It's a bad thing for you\u2014for the\nhotel,\" he told her. ''And What's\nthis about Sheridan's getting a license to marry you?\"\n\"Is that In the papers, too!\"\n\"Yes\u2014didn't you know it?\"\n_. \"No\u2014it was * joke\u2014his getting\nthe license\u2014he wanted me to marry\nhim Saturday night at the party\u2014\nand of course I wouldn't.\"\n\"It. wouldn't be a bad match,\nwould It? If you were married your\nposition wouldn't be open to question\u2014you could1 keep on here with\nyou singing. ...\"\n\"Do you suppose If 1 were married\nto Phil Sheridan I'd sing in this\nhoteli\" t\n\"You reallae of course, that you\nare in an unfortunate position so far\nas the Between Six and Seven Club\nIs concerned. Down there you are\nthe klndhearted little country girl\nconsoling lonesome folks. YotTve\ndrawn a pretty conventional crowd,\nyou know.\"\n\"I know lt. But I can't help what\nhas happened. I'll go on doing my\nbest, and if lt isn't satisfactory, you\ncan terminate the arrangement\nwhenever you like.\"\n\"Come now, don't get on your\nhigh horse. I guess things will work\nout all right. You have made yourself valuable to us\u2014you know that.\nRun along now and be happy. After\nall. there are worse things than having young millionaires give you\njewels.\"\nJune went away altogether miserable. Upstairs, she flung herself\non the couch, unhappy beyond\nwords. Then the phone rang. It was\nPhil.\n\"I'm downstairs, June\u2014I have the\ncar. Put on your bonnet and rush\nto,my side. I've got to talk with\nyou.\"\nPhil met her ln the lobby, debonair, smiling, nonchalant. Troubles\nfell away, as he tucked her in the\nopen roadster and headed towards\nthe park.\n\"Smile, Darlin'\u2014life's not so bod,\nwhen you have me.\"\n\"It isn't, really,\" ahe said, and\nmeant it.\n\"That's the girl. Now listen, sweetness, I'm darned sorry about everything. Bruce came over to the house\nyesterday, along with your cavalier\nfrom Missouri, and your friend from\nCalifornia, and I thought they were\ngoing to toss me over the terrace.\nBut somehow I managed to Convey\nan impression of sincerity when I\nswore I told no one about Bruce's\ngiving you the sapphires. And that's\nthe truth, absolutely on a gentleman's honor!\"\n\"I believe you, Phil. Newspaper\npeople find out everything.\"\n\"Fine. If you exonerate me, that's\nall I care about Now, don't you\nthink it would be a grand idea if we\ngot married? You needn't be afraid\nto trust me,\" he continued, slowing\nthe speed of the c\u00abr, and turning to\ncatch her eyes. He had dropped his\nwhimsy humor for once, and his\nwords were pregnant with sincerity.\n\"We'd bo happy, June\u2014I swear It.\nAnd I think it would be a smart\nthing if we got married this afternoon.\"\n'Tm too confused to make a decision, Phil. Don't rush me into anything. If you give me time. I might\nchange my mind\u2014I can't tell...\nThis was more hope than she had\never given him before. \"Well, I hope\nyou make It soon*\u2014any hour of the\nday or night\u2014remember, I've got\nthe license. . . .\"\n\"I couldn't very well forget It. I\ncan't think what ever made you\nsuch an idiot as to get a license.\n\"Do you really want to know? I\nwas a little liquored. But drunk or\nsober, it was a good Idea. I think,\nprobably, I formulated the plan In\nmy rational moments, and it sprang\nto the surface and induced tne to\naction when I was not entirely myself. And if you had married me\nSaturday night. I'll wager my canary you would be happy now, instead of in a mess and all confused.\nas you say. The papers gave me a\npretty bad rap for getting turned\ndown after I've got the license, did\nn't they?\"\n\"Yes. I'm sorry.\"\nThat night the dinner club crowd\nhad not diminished. It was larger\nthan usual, in fact. But Its character\nhad subtly changed. The school\nteacher from Mississippi was not\nthere nor the engineer from Dakota.\nShe missed a dozen faces among the\nconservatives.\nBut June resolutely determined\nnot to succumb to the natural sensitiveness she felt. She smiled buoyantly, and moved among the guests\nin her kindly, friendly manner.\nThose whose curiosity had been\nwhetted by newspaper stories and\nhad come to club solely from curiosity were disappointed. June waa a\nlovely young girl in a simple blue\ndress, sweet voiced, gentle mannered.\nHartley, watching her from his\ntable, said to Lucy: \"She is certainly\na thoroughbred, Imagine her taking\nit like this!\"\nBruce came to the club the next\nnight. \"As I am about the lone-\nsomest man in town, I thought this\nwould be a good place for me,\" he\nsaid morosely.\n\"I'm glad you came,\" June said.\n\"Get a table of four, and I'll send\nLucy and Hartley over when they\ncome in. And I may be able to\nsnatch a bite with you later. Try to\neat a good dinner. Bruce\u2014you are\ngetting terribly thin, do you know\nit?\"\nHe smiled Into her earnest eyes.\n\"I'll do my best,\"'he promised.\nJune fought down the emotion he\naroused ln her. But as she looked\nacross the room at him now, hia\nhaggard face struck her with terror.\nHe was going to have a breakdown,\nbe terribly ill. He couldn't go on\nlike this, nor could she for that matter!\nHer mind tore at the problem for\nthe twenty minutes that elapsed\nbefore Lucy and Hartley came in.\nThen she remembered a promije\nHartley had made her.\n(To la Continued)\nYORK. England,(CP)-H. E. Har-\nrowell. secretary of the Merchant\nTaylors' Guild, which dates back\nbeyond 1380 as the Guild of St.\nJohn the Baptist, the patron saint\nof tailors, is Lord Mayor of York.\nLADYSMITH, South Africa! (CP)\n\u2014Wanted, a pied piper. Never in\nthe history of this district has there\nbeen such a plague. Tbe rats are\nunusually bold and scamper brazenly about.\nGREAT1 YARMOUTH, England.\n(CP)\u2014William R. Drane, who died\nhere age**. 76, had uved 118 persons\nfrom drowning. He wss a Gorles-\nton lifeboat man for many years,\nNf Uon SaiUj _fetug\nMember ot Ihe Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONI 144\nPrivate Exohanga connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy   I  Si\nBy carrier, per week      M\nBy carrier, per year,   13.00\nBy mall ln Canada, tn subscribers living outalda regular\ncarrier areas, per month, 60c;\nthree months, $1.80; six months.\n13.00; one year, $6.00.\nUnited \"tales and Oreat Britain, one month. 75c; six months,\nMOO; one year, $7.50.\nForeign countries, t'.her than\nU.S., same aa above plus amy\nextra postage.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiliillliiiiililiiiliiiiiiillliil\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\nlie o lint\nMinimum 2 line*\n2 lines, ance t 31\n8 Unas, onee    -33\n4 linn, onca    M\n2lln..,6tlm.    Xt\n3 Unas. 6 timet  1.32\n4 fines, 6 times ,  1.76\n2 lines, 1 month  2M\nt lines, 1 month   *3\u00bb\n4 Unas, 1 month  ,.,. S.72\nAll above lass 10% for prompt\npayment\nHiiliillllliillllillllllllilllllillilliilit\nAdvertisers who desire may\nhave replies addressed to a box\nat tha Nelaon Daily News and\nforwarded dally to their address. A charge of 10 centa is\nmade for thla service. In this\ncaae add four words (Box \u2014\nDaily News) to the count tor\nthe number ef words.\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelson Dally News endeavors to print only truthful classified advertising and will appreciate having its attention called\nto any advertising uot conforming to the highest standards of\nhonesty.\nOut-of-town subscribers vho\nwish to answer advertisements\nin which only the telephone\nnumber ot the advertiser Is\ngiven, may mail their replies to\nthe Nelson Daily News, and they\nwiU be communicated to the\nadvertiser.\nBIRTHS\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Ads bring\nquick results \u2014 try\none.\nCHISHOLM\u2014To Ur.  and Ura. d\nD. Chlsholm of Klmberier. at Vancouver. Friday, Oot. 36, twin son.,\naeren pounds each.  ^__\nPERSONAL\nUNMAIUtOP: LADIES AMD OEN-\ntlemen nave been Joining The\nHome Club since 1028, exchange\nletters, photos, etc.. with membera\nall ages, everywhere. Many happy\nmarriages. Confidential, reliable.\nWrit, fully enclosing 35c, Boi US.\nVancouver,  Canada. (1573)\nASTTtO-UpOY:    WHAT    DO    YOUR\n?itars decree? Sena dat\u00bb, place and\nlm. of birth with .200 for Special Individual Delineation; or. 1100\nfor General Reading, aharman Old-\nfield. 1189, Newport Ave., Vlctorls.\n , (4606)\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR.\nLltt of wanted Inventions and lull\nformation sent tret, Tba Ramaay\nCompany, world Patent Attorneys.\n373 Bank Street. Ottawa, Canada.\n(43531\nOENTLEKEN. SAW\u00abWr. BUY YOUR\nSanitary requirements by mall.\nStamp brings catalogue. Banl-\nTei Company 708 Dunsmuir etreet.\nVsncouver. B. C- <\u00ab66)\nEcaema Itch Piles Dicers, try Oeo ue'\nChina Remedy at Hudaon*. Bay Co\n(4377)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nBTEEL SHARPENER WANTB position with some reliable company.\n16 yrs. experience. Reply to Bos\n4616   Nelaon   Dally   New..    (4616)\nWORK WANTED BY -YOUNO OIRL.\nApply to Box 797, Pernle, b. c.\n*^^^^^^^^^^^ (45771\nOIRl,  WANTS  WORK,   ANY   KIND.\nPhone 8J0R,      .  (4676)\nRANCHES FOR RENT\nTO RELIABLE PARTY. SMAU.\nranch home about mile west of\nNelson* Good house, tree fuel\nwater piped into houw. .30 per\nmonth. Charles P. ucHardy, Nelton   B. C. 14660)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\nOWNER WILL EXCHANGE APART-\nment house ln Vancouver valued\n\u202214.000 tor business property In\nNelton. M. Beaton, 4293 Welwyn\nSt., Vancouver.  (4602)\nPROCTER AID TO\nHAVE BAZAAR\nPROCilta, B.C., Oct. 29- The\nUnited church Ladlee aid met at\nthe home of Mrs. MacKinnon with\nMrs. D. Mcintosh presiding.\nAfter the business meeting the\nafternoon was spent in sewing tor\nthe tall bazaar which is planned to\nbe held in November. Members\npresent were Mrs. D. Mcintosh, Mrs.\nA. C. Pound, Mrs. A. Batebelor. Mrs.\nJ. Blchan, Mrs. MacKay, Mrs. W.\nMuirhead, Miss O. Muirhead, Mrs.\nT. Mair, Mrs. W. Donaldson, Miss\nJ. C. MacLean, Mrs. O. Johnson.\nMrs. J. Hurst, Mrs. N. McLeod. Miss\nIsa MacKinnon assisted ll) serving\nat the tea hour.\nThe Hallowe'en party which was\nto have been held Fr lay evening\nby the combined groups of the\nProcter and Harrop CG.1.T. has\nbeen postponed until tie first week\nin November. ^^^|\nTwo girls are employed by a\nrubber company 111 Liverpool to\ntest rubber footwear of various\ntypes. They walked 12,000 miles in\nfour years of testing.\n| BUSINESS    OPPORTUNITIES\nWhen you hsve s lot of little\nthings thst you don't need\u2014\nsnd there sre several things\nyou wsnt, it's time to Sell or\nExchsnge them! Just list the\nthings you hsve In s Nelson\nDaily News Clsssified Ad.\nFOR SALE OR\nEXCHANGE\nThe Ad. will do the rest\nIt's easy to.selltrr exchange the Classified Way.\nFor Service. Phone Jean Robertson at\n144\nOut of Town Resders\u2014Prompt Attention Given\nto Mail Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nLargest in the interior\nUSED MORE READ MORE\nFOR RENT\nHOUSES, ETC.\n5   RM.   NBW   BUNGALOW   FULLY\nmodern. Good location. Ph. 777LS.\nFURNISHED     HOUSEKEEPING\nroomt tor rent. Annabl. Block.\n (4261)\nFUR    ROOMS.    STEAM    HEATED\nshower, termi mod. Can. Legion.\n^^\"^ (4383)\nTORN.    OR    UNPURN.    APTB    Bl\nWMk or month. Medial Arte Bldg\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^(4263)\nPOR   RENT\u2014PURNISHID   6-ROOM-\ned bungalow, Nelson Ave. Ph, 4*37(13.\n^^^^^^ H612I\nTWO    ROOM    PURNISHED    SUIT*\nitel.      14386)\nfor rent, _t|rilng Hoi\n3  ROOM  SUITE 613.  PER MONTH\nUnion  Roomt, (41651\nSIX     ROOM     HOUSE,     PURNACE.\ndose In. 705 Stanley St.      (4617)\nPOR    RENT\u20148MALL    UNPURN18H-\nerd house. 524 Latimer St. (4611)\n7-ROOMED HOUSE WITH GARAGE\nPhon. SMB. (4666)\nSIX   ROOM   HOUSE   NEWLY  ___\novated. Pbone *486L.         (4564)\nHOUSE   P<\njphon. 631\nRENT.    CLOSE..IN\n,,_^_^_^_^_\u2014   't\"2\"'\nTERRACE   APTS.   Beautiful  Modern\nFTigldalre equipped sultet.   (4284)\nDOCS\nBEAUTIFUL SAINT BERNARD PUPS.\nreasonable, box 639. Cranbrook. B.C.\n14548)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIt you tlnd a cat or a oof. a\npockatbook, Jewelry or Mr or\nanything els. of value, telephone\nThe Daily News A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou Wa wtll collect trom the\nowner.\nFOR SALE\nUSED COPPER TUB. I BEATTY\nWasher less thsn v, price, with\nnew machine guarantee. Beatty\nFactory Branch. 306 Baker BL.\nPhon. 01. (4621)\nUSED CASH REGISTERS. WI OUAR-\nantee suitability and accuracy.\nWrite National cash Register Co.\n670 Seymour St., Vancouver, B. C.\n-^*^*^*^*^*^~r^ (4618)\nPOR SALE - BARRELS, KEOS\naugar ttclu. liners. McDonald Jam\nCo.,  Ltd. (4366)\nCOMBINATION    OAS    AND    COAL\nrange\u2014R. Wallace, Latimer Street.\n^^^^^^^\"^ 14634)\nROSS    260    RIFLE,    1910    MODEL,\nreasonable for caah. Apply Bos 273.\n\u2022A-----*-----------*-* (4623)\nPWAWtt.   HAY   AND   BREEDING\newes. Apply Boi 4568, Dally News.\n^^^^^^^^**- (4668)\nFOR  BALK  CIRCULATOR  HEATER\ncheap. Pbone 744b. , (4576)\nMISCELLANEOUS\nPhone 106\nFor\u2014\nCOAL AND WOOD\nSAND, GRAVEL,  ROCK\nFURNITURE MOVING\nCRATING, STORING\nFREIGHT HAULING\nGENERAL TRANSFER\nWORK\nETC., ETC.\nWilliams' Transfer\nEarn $5.00 to $35 Weekly\ngrowing mushrooms. Our famoua\n\"Jumtxr spawn prepared under\nDominion patented process.* We\nwill buy your mushrooms. Send\n5c tor complete proposition and\nIllustrated booklet. North American Spawn company, 421 Somerset Bldg., Winnipeg.\n(4387)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nTHIRTY   ROOM   MODERN   HOTEL.\nCut Bank. Montana. Price S1S.OOO,\n66000 cuh. balance to ault. John\nW. Huntaberger, Sunburst. Mont.\n14584)\nMININC PROPERTIES\nSIX 16) CROWN GRANTED CLAIMS.\n18 Inches ore ln open cut, two\nfeet or. in tunnel. 400 uck. ore\nIn sack. Also have several ttooct\nclalmt not crown granted. Seven\nmllet truck road to boat luidlna\n\u00abt Argenta, four mllet truck road\nto nllway. Norman McLeod. Howler, B. C. (43441\nLIVESTOCK* FOR SALE\nCALF\nend of thlt month. Good milker\n668. L. ttablnlaus. P. 0. Boi 1831.\nTrill. B. 0. i\u00ab668)\n\u2022Jersey Ayrshire cow. second\ncalf. Just treth. Pred Hawet. Silver\nKing Road. (4M8)\nMISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE\nHO-MAYDC BREAD\nIMPROVIR\nMakes bread of finer texture and flavor, better\ncolor and quality, from\nthe same quality flour.\nGives larger loaf. Packet\n20c sufficient for 100\nloaves.\nC. It J. JONES, Limited,\nWinnipeg, Man.\n(WIS)\nPIPE  AND  Pl'l'l'INOS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.,\n260   Prior   St.,   Vancouver.   B    C.\n(4532)\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED]\nGOOD CLEAN  RAGS WANTED^.AP-\nDlv   pallv  New;  Otlice.\n,8368)\nBusiness and Professional' Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER. B. P. A. E.\nMunicipal and Commercial Audita\nP. O. Box 1191. Nelson. B   O\n(4268)\nAssayers\nB. W. WIDDOWSON established 1900.\n805 J0t\u00abphme St.. N.laon. B O\n*********************^^^^^     (4289)\nbUNVULfc h. oRIMHOod\n618 Biker St., Nelion. Boi 726\nCustom and control assays, chemical analysis. Representative at\nTrail tor Shippers' Interests. ,4443)\nKOOTENAY   LABORATORIES\nAuayert At Chemist.\n1342 Trtll.\nBOI   1343\nTrail.  B.C.\nMMI)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD.\nRea. estate, insurance, renttli\nAberdeen block. Baker St.   14297)\nIS    YOUR    RESIDENCE    INSURED\nagainst burglary, the eott Is small,\neee T. D, Rosling, 3 Royal Bank.\n(4M8)\nChiropodists\nDr. Mildred slmondt Foot sptcltiitt\n405 P.raw.11  Bldg. Spokane, wash\nChiropractor!\nE. M. WARREN. D. O. BOX 872.\nGood result! Lady attendant by\nappointment, phone 116.       (4261)\nElectrics!\nJ. P.  COATES\u2014Th.  Electrlo  store\nSuppllu and Installation!.\nPhon. 766. t P. O. Box 116\n(4393)\nEngineers snd Surveyors\nA. H   OREEN CO., LTD.   518 WARD\nSt. Phon. 264, Nelson, B.C. (4306)\nMm\nS   PETERS\n.ininj  Engineer\nExamination operation end management  ot  mlnei  and   mineral\nproperties, Rouland, BC\n^^^^^^^^^\u2122^    4307)\nH. D- DAWSOn-IJELSON\nENGINEER  AND  BtfRVEYO\nNEL\nURV\n009 Ward St.\nNelson\n.(4820)\n(?3I\n08)\nBojd   C.   A't'Mk.   Fruitvale.   B.   C.\nUnda, Mineral Clalmt, Waterworki\n\u2022to. Survey.. Plant and Estimates.\n(4309)\nHair Goods\nLadlea'  wigs,  switches,   transformations, gentlemen's wigs and  .ou-\npees,   write   for   tree   Illustrated\ncatalog. Hanson Co., Vancouver.\n(4355)\nFlorists\nBEAUTIFUL MUMS FOR YOUR TEAl\ntabl. or the dinner pirty. Thlt Is I\n^^^^    their ataton,     ^^^^\nNEWON   FLOWER _gIJOPPE.\nPho'he\"233\" of'389R8.\n(4264) |\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES. Phon. I\n342 Cut (lowers potted plants. I\nand floral dealgna.      (4M3) |\nInsurance snd Resl Estste\na   W    DAWSON.   Real   Estate   Insurance   Rentala   Next  Hlpperson i\nHardware. Baker ttreet.        (4296) 1\nC.   D.   BLACKWOOD    Imuran\nevery detcrlptlon. Real Ett Ph 09.1\nI\nH.  t.   Dili.  AUTO  AND  FIRE  JN-\nsurtnea Retl Estate. 508 .ward St. 1\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"\"^^^^ (4301) |\nJ.    E.    ANNABLE.    RSAL   BSTATEf\nrantals, insurance. Annabl. block.:\n^^^^\"^^^\"^       (4803) I\nUF-, FIRE ft AUTOMOBILE UJSUR-1\nance. P. E  Poulln. PliHo, iWJM\nCHAS   F   McHARDY   INSURANCE-1\nReal Ettgt-tT-Phone 136.       '4304)1\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all clasaet of M.tal work Lathe I\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding,]\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene Welding, I\nPhone 593. _^_^^\n334 Vernon street\n14306)*\nMuticsl Tuition\nVIOLIN    AND    THEORY    PUPILS.I\nMaty Heddl.^ Phone 311R2. 142961 \u25a0\nSaih  Factory\nLAWSONS 8A8H FACTORY. HARD-\nwood merchant. 217 Bant ttr.et.\n- (\u00ab10)1\nSecond Hand Stores\nKITCHEN 81NK8, WINDOWS. PlPfill\nand stove boards, cheap. Ml*.]\nBadcllffe's. (43t2),f\nTRY A. CLASSIFIED AD,\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McMsnus\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy\" Westover\n^60  HANB COME tt)\nTUB   tlVOOT -PLACB,\nMP'S.   VAN ASWM-T.\nVJE VAlll-L MAMf\n\u2022*-**J A tSO*M*A THAT]\nVMIUL CAUSE A\nFonoce- FIBST\nvoe most\nS-I-ECT THB\nMATERlALl\nOH, -4AC*\nBttlN-S- OOT\niflTHAr Platinum\ncloth\n\\^g__3t*-ENEia\nTHE GUMPS\nPOOR CINDERELLA\n\u2022to HE* CrONK ANO DOME IT-\nAFTER AL.UTM8SE VIA*S-\n'EMM GUMP, OP AU.\nMSM-ELOPWfrWrTHA\nUITTUE FUSSVPLOSS UKE\nHER-WHILE VIRTUR\n60ES ONREWARDEJ\n\/fl-j\u00bb\n\/   IN THE OLD OAVS, IT USED TO BE THAT N\n* THi WAV TO A MANS HEART WAS THRQWxH\nHI* STOMACH- TODAV IT SEEMS TO BE\nTHROUGH HIS POCKBtStoK-FEED\nHIM ANt> HE FORGETS ^^   ^^\nTOU-8UT5UEHIM\nAMD HE'S TOURS-\nHEAWEN HELP THE\nPOOR WORKING\nGIRL-WHAT\nCHANCE\n, amd to thiwk ukicle bim once told\nIme that a smart wife can makr a\n} man out of anv fool-w*ll it wont\nBE LOKKt BEFORE HE FlklOS OUT THAT M\nK <ilRL LIKE -MILLIE CAN MAKE A FOOL \u2122\n  1 OUT OF ANV MAN-LOWE\nMAV BE BUND, BUT\nYOU'LL SOOU PIMD OUT.\nBIM GUMP- MARRIAGE.\n'   \" \"GREAT EYE\nDOCTOR-\n|ETl* S.!ltO\u00bb:Cefi*i|k!,W!>.\nhr n. a-jejf, 1,\u2014m     ,\n ta\\\nfALL STREET\nPRICES OFF\nVading Smallest in\nNearly a Month;\nSteels Sag\nBy   FBIDMICR   GARDNER\nleoclated rreas Financial writer\nBW TORK. Oot. 39 (AP)-Btooks\nMtad a little further today id\n[face of scattered liquidation but\ndint waa the smallest ln nearly\nSmth. B^^^^^^^^\npier  the  market had  displayed ' way gained a point\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0I\nMarket and Mining News\nfirming tendenclN. traders shied\naway from the share list In late\ndealings as wheat tumbled aharply.\nBteel shares sagged a little with\nother groups, Ths Amerloan iron &\nSteel Institute estimated production\nthis week st 35 per oant of capacity,\nup l.i points from a week ago.\nTurnover decreased to 428,470\naharea.\nMovements of stocks reflected Uttle more than Inertia In speculative\nquarters. Safeway Storea. Stsndsrd\nOil of California and other so-called\nCalifornia stocks picked up additions! gains ss financial interests\ntook heart from latest reports on\npolitical trends In the state. Safe-\nb*\ntt*t)SimmKXJ^m~fmKK^^\nDow Jones Averages\n30 Industrials  92.53 off .33\n20 rails   34.69 off|.29\n20 utilities   19.13 off .06\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nI   Advertising\n*$\u00a3*\/    jfcv the\nMerchant\n.\/To-Dap\nConducted by\nHAROL*\"  S.     -)QAK\nThis article on advertising and march die' is prepared for the merehanta of Neir- \u2022 'Ms ct with\nthe cooperation of The Nelson Daily\nNews.\n'dressing windows\nThe first essential in the dressing of a window\nor an advertisement is an eye-catcher to command\nattention. An advertisement is of little value unless\npeople read it\u2014so a window is ineffective if people\ndo not look into it.\nAttention for your window can be obtained\nin many ways\u2014by background\u2014by lighting\u2014by a\nsingle product\u2014by a grouping of related products\n\u2014or through what is called a catalogue window,\nthat is a window crowded full with many products\nwhich command attention by their varied appeal.\nIt Is my purpose here to mention a few of the\nwindow ideas that the writer has noticed recently.\nThe X-ray window, that is illustrating the unseen but most important parts of the product.\nFor example, a recent window showed a man's coat\nhung up against a background of a contrasting color\nwith white tapes pinned on the garment leading\nto placards in different parts of the window One\nreferred to the cloth as \"all pure wool\", another\n\"pure wool tweed pre-shrunk\", another as hand-\ntailored three button sack,\" still another with a\ntape from the collar \"hair cloth foundation,\" another regarding the lining and so on.\nA furniture dealer used the same idea on a\nchesterfield suite, referring to the frame, the\nsprings, canvas and the covering. Many, many products can be handled in this way, making the window not only a display but an active producer of\nsales.\nSome of'the clothing specialists are using most\neffectively a display of related lines, when displaying a suit of clothes. They make up their window\nwith a background, a rug on the floor, a dressing\ntable or a man's chiffonier and a couple of chairs\nwith a suit thrown across one chair, and carefully\nplaced an overcoat, shoes, tie, gloves, hat and a\ncane, etc. The furniture items can be borrowed\nfrom your neighbor. Similar windows of feminine\ncharacter are equally effective.\nAn effective accessory is made from a sheet\nof beaver board or wall board approximately four by\nsix feet and suitably framed with heavy molding.\nOne side is painted or covered with a black background framed in brown, and on this is pinned or\nfastened small lines such as in the case of a store\nhandling men's furnishings, collars, half a dozen\nties, gloves, handkerchiefs; and for ladies' wear,\ngloves, handkerchiefs, scarfs, etc. In a display of\nthis kind use comparatively few articles so that the\neye is not distracted and the full effect of the\nbackground is secured.\nDouble display. I recently noticed a very ingenious treatment of a window in order to give two\ntypes of articles prominence without one distracting from the other. This was the window of a\nmerchant who handled both men's clothing and\nshoes. The window had glass on the front and on\nthe entrance side. Along the bottom of these two\nsides were placed boards about 12 inches wide and\nmeeting at the corner with a mitred joint. They\nwere raised at the back, so that they showed a\nslight slope on the face.\nThe boards were covered with cloth and on\nthese were placed pairs of shoes with ample space\nbetween the different pairs, the toes toward the\nwindow with a price ticket or the name of the shoe\nused to advantage. The main clothing display was\nin the portion of the window behind these boards.\nMany variations can be used on this schems and as\nthe boards are removable the window can be used\nwith or without them at any time.\nThe essential part of window dressing is to\nhave frequent changes so that not only the products\nin the window but the method of dressing never\nbecomes stale. You keep them guessing as to what\nyou are going to do next.\nNext Week: \"From the Medicine Stendpoint\"\nA P Con \t\nAmal OU \t\nB C Packera\nBeaver Silver\nBradian  \t\nBralome   ....\nBridge Blver\nBid\n.oa\nIBM\n.08 *,.\na.oo\n13.00\nXIV.\nx-Qoii:.:::::..... .jjj\nCariboo Ool\nC * I Corp\nCoaat   Brew\nOold Belt\nHome Oil -\t\nInt Coal\t\nMak Slccar  \t\nMcDougal   Segur\n11.10\n$>\n.30\n.30\n8\nft*\n14\nMcLeod Oil\nMercury Oil \t\nMeridian  \t\nModel Oil   \t\nMoraine Star  \t\nNat   Sliver         .03%\nNicola  -     .17\nOkalta Oils  04<i\nPioneer Oold   11.10\nPremier Gold       1.39\nPremier Border  00'i\nReno Oold        .87\nSally Mines       tl\nSpooner OU         it\nTaylor Bridge       -8\nVanalta 08\nWayside  -      .0714\nCURB\nAlexandria .\nAnaconda   .\nBijvlew\n- C Nickel\nAak\n08 K\n.08\n.08\n3.03\n13.25\n.08\ns\n1.19\nins\n.so\n.88\n.34\n.22\n38\n.18\n.12\n.is\n\u25a004)4\n.1714\n.06\n1180\n1.30\n.00%\nI.0O\n.28\n.08\n.08 V.\nlie Missouri\nlutte I\nto\n.OS\n.08%\n.01\n_______ x -\u2022\nCan Rand \t\nCongress   Gold\nCrows Nest\nDalhousle Mlnet\nDalhousle OUt      38\nDentonia   -      At\nDevenlsh        \u2014\nDictator       .08\nDunwell  lj\nRanchmens        .aa\n.03%\n.62\n.36\n.04%\n.00\n.25\n.07%\n.37\n.48\nT\n.19\n\u2022WA\nPacalta          .05\nBuntblne        9.30\nOlacler Creek\npalrvlew   \t\nFreehold\nOeo copper _.,\nOolconda 3814\nOeo  River    01\nOrandvlew \t\nOrange \t\nOrull Wlhksne\nHalda   Oold\n[edley Amal\nierculea\nHlghwood. Saroet .\n\u2022lome Gold\nIndian\nIndependent*)\nKoot   Belle\n.03\n21\n.06\n.06\n-0\n.03%\n.13%\n.11\njOI\n.01%\n.48\n9.70\n.06\n.19%\n.07\nM\nDO\n.03%\n.23\n.08\n.07\n.23\n.03\noot  Plor\" ^^^^^^^^\nloot King       \u2014\n***\u2014\u25a0\u2014 .01\n41%\n.30\n.11\n.17\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014m      \u25a0*\u25a0\noble Five  - 07%\nLakevlew\nMar Jon .\nMerland\nMill  City\nMinto ..\nMorton   wolaey\nPavilion\n>nd  orellle\nHot Gold    ...\nporter Idaho\nReward\nAl\n.05\n-7%\n.04%\nRoyallte Oil   14.76\nRufue  Argenta\nfl*\n.11\n.01%\nm\nto\n31*\n|\"\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\n.16\nAt\nto\n.06%\n.08\n.06\n16.18\nRuth  Hope\nSalmon Oold\nSUvercreet    ...\nSnowflake\nTaylor wind  \u2014\nDnlted  Empire  U\nUnited Oil         \u2014\nUtica   Silver    _     \u2014\nVldette  _ 76\nVlklnu  Gold   04\nVulcan      12\nWaterloo  oe\nWaverley Tangier ....    .01\nWellington        .01%\n...     White  Bagle   16 \u2014\n\u2014    Whitewater  '   .04%      \u2014\n.03\nii*\n.15\n.06\n.12\nSO\n.06%\nXt\n.01%\nMINE ISSUES\nBUYING DULL\nToronto Price Level\nContinues Down;\nSilvers Sell\nMetal Markets\nTORONTO. Oct. 30 (CP)\u2014The mln-\ning division of the Toronto itock\nexchange had to be i3tlsft\u00abd with a\nfew consolation crumba today aa\nthe general price level continued toward lower levels. Buying waa In\nevidence only ln ipoti.\nIn the allver group the feature\nwu the substantial selling ot Eldorado for a 7-cent decline to 1.85.\nBear Exploration declined 3'_ to\n20 V. and white Eagle closed Vfc\ndown at 15 while Nlplaslng advanced\n14 to 2.74 and Castle 1 to 06.\nBraiorne, pioneer and HoUlnger\ngained IS to as cents each and T***.\nHughes lost 13, Lake Shore B0 and\nMclntyre, 76. San Antonio, Reno and\nCentral Pat eloaed up a few cents,\nrecessions of 4 to 7 cents Included\nGons Lake, Qunnsr Oold, Bobjo\nand Manitoba Eastern.\nVolume exoeeded 500,000 shares.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexandria\nAlgoma .\nAmity ..    .\nir. Edgar will be glad to answer questions in this\n\\solumn, if readers will address their communications\ni core of this paper.  (Confidential replies can be ar-\nanged through the editor.\u2014(Copyright).\nW?5<55^yt^***^M^i!**<*^444<*5*>t**rt555fi5-lit5-5*j5*5*555*55\nBanifleld   ~\t\nBarry  HoUlnger  \t\nBaae Metala \t\nBear liploratlon\t\nBig   Missouri   \t\nBobjo    \t\nBradlan\nBrett Trethewey\t\nBraiorne       ~   \t\nBridge  B  liploratlon\nirownlee\ni.ut can Gold\t\nJunker Hill   \t\nCan Klniland \t\nCan Malartlc \t\nCirlboo Oold Quarta      1.10\nCaatle Trethewey  ~       .65%\nCentral Manitoba\nCentral Patricia ....\nChlbougamou   \t\nClerlcy\nCoast Copper\n.01%\n\u2022\u00b0\u00ab\n01\nJO\n.86\nT\n33\n_\n.38%\n306\n.03%\n13.00\n.33\n.03\n\u25a0ii*\nT\n.37\n...       .071\n\u202203V\n      8.00\nCobalt Copper  _     8.00\nCobalt contact ....\nColumarlo   - \t\nConarlum \t\nCona M & S  \u25a0-\u25a0\nDome.   ..   ... \u2014 .-\nDom Exploration\t\nWdorado  -\t\nFalconbrldge  - -...\u2014\u2022\nGod'a   Lake    -\t\nGranada     ............\nHardrock    _.\t\nHollinger    \t\nHowey     _ \t\nHudson Bay  \t\nmt Nickel - - -\t\nKlrkland Lake  \u2014\nLittle Long Lao \t\nLake   Shore   ..\t\nMcLeod   Cookshutt   \t\nMclntyre  -\nMcVlUle   Grahamme   \t\nMcWattera Gold  \t\nMacaasa    -\nMalroblo -\u2014\nMiple Leaf  \t\nMining Corp \t\nMoffatt Hall \t\nNlplaslng\n.03%\n.33\n156\n139.S0\n88.60\n.08\n1.88\n3.50\n3.06\n.30\n.63\n13.80\n1.30\n11.60\n33.87%\n.61\n6.70\n63.00\n-8%\n43.00\n31\n.40\n3.88\n.03\n.18\n1.40\n.03\n      3\/74\nNoranda    83.60\nPaymaster\npend Orellle ...\npioneer Gold  .\nPremier   Gold\nReno Gold  ...\n.It\n.46\n11.60\n1.35\n.99\nSakoose     ...\nSan Antonio    \t\nSherrltt Oordon ..\nSmelters   Gold' .'.\nSouth  Tlblemont\nStadacone     \t\nSt Anthony\nSudbury Baaln \t\nSylvanlte   ....\t\nTeck Hughee \t\nTreadwell    \u2014\nVentures\nWalte Amulet \t\nWayside   \t\nWhite ligle\nWright Hargreavea .\nOILS\nAcme \u2014.....\nAJax\t\nA P Con\t\nAssociated\t\nB A Oil \t\nBaltae   \t\nOalmont.\nto\n4.60\n.48\n3.66\n31\n\u202203%\n.SO\n.33\nUl\n3.53\n8 85\n\u202235\n.08\n.16\n1.60\nfl\n13.63%\n\u20225?\nand S Corp  \u2014.\nChemical Reeearch .....\nDalhouale OU   ...\t\nHome  OU\nHomestead O and O\nimperial oil\nInter pet<\npete .\nMerland   \t\nNordon   \t\nOU Selections\nOlga\t\nRoyallte   \t\nNUUHTRIALS\nBeatty Bro* A  \u2014\t\nBeauharnols\t\nBell Telephone  ...._.\t\nBraalllan   _ ..........\nBrewers and Distillers  \u2014\nCan Bread ..  \t\nCan  Cement \u2014\u2014, _...-\nCan Car and Foundry\t\nCan indua Alcohol A \t\n\u00a7\u00abn Dredge     \nan Pac Railway \u2014\nCons   Bakaiiee ......\nDistillers   Seagram   \t\nDominion Storea\t\nPord of Canada A  \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\t\nOoodyear Tire - -...-.. _\u201e\nHiram   Walker    33\nImperial   Tobacco   11%\nLoblaw A    17r'\nMassey   Harrla\t\nStandard   Paying    .._ _.      __\nBteel of Canada    89%\n.61\n1.53\n31\ntt\n.11\n18.87%\n38.35\n-0%\n.05\nM*\\\\\n18.00\n.04%\n1$\n.80\n... 3%\n... 6%\n...     614\nz\u00bb\n....   10\n....   13%\n...   13%\n...   31%\n130\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh   Low\nAllegheny       I*\nAllied cnem .... 180'\nAmerican  Can    10,\nAm   For  Pow\nAm Ma Ai  Fdy\nAm Smelt \u201e Re\nAm   Telephone\nAnaconda   \t\nAtchison\t\nAuburn  Motors\nBaldwin ^H\nBait  It  Ohio\nBendlx   Avla\nBeth   Steel\nCan   Pacific\nCerro  Dt Pasco\nChea   _   Ohio\nChrysler  r_-\nComm It South\nCon Oaa N Y\nCorn   Prod\nC Wright Pfd\nDupont       01%\nEastann Kodak ips'-i\nElec Pow It Ll      3%\nBrie   ..     11%\nFord Engllah .. \u2014\nTori of Canada\nFirst Nat stores\nPreeport Teias\nGeneral Electrlo\nGeneral Fooda\nGeneral  Motora\nGold   Dust   \t\nGoodrich    \t\nOranby .. __ .\nart Morth Pfd\nOrt Wst Sugar\nSowe Sound    ..\nudaon  Motora\nIns   Copper    \t\nInter  Nickel\nInter Tel It Tel\nJewel   Tea   \t\nKenn Copper\t\nKresge S S \t\nKroegger to ToU\nMack Truck\nMilwaukee   pfd\nMont Ward      37%\nNash   Motora   .... 14\nNat Dairy Prod     16%\nM   Y   Central      31W\nPac Gaa At Elec   15V\nPackard  Motora     3'i\nPenn R R     33M\nPhillips   pete      14'i\nPure   OU         \u2022\u00bb!\nRadio Corp \t\nRadio Keith Or\nRem   Rand\nRock laland\nSafeway    Stores\nShell union    ...\nS   Cal   Edison\nSouth   Pacific\nStan OU of Cal\nStan OU Of Ind\nStan OU of N j\nBtudebaker   \t\nTeiae  Corp\nTexas  Gulf  Sul\nTlmken Rollers\nUnder   Type   ...\nUnion   Carbide\nUn   Ot)   of   Cal\nUn Aircraft\nUn   Biscuit\nUn Pacific\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBeU. Telephone -... 131\nBraalllan   .     \u2014    12\nB C Power A  \u2022- -    *>\ni C Powers .....     4\nulldlng Product\u00ab   ii\nan Car _e Foundry     6\nan   Cement\nCan  Cement  Pfd\nCan Gen Electric\nan Gypsum \t\n\u00bbn lnd Al A\nCan ind a' B ...\nOPR      \t\nCan Steamers \t\nCockshutt   Plow\nCona M * s\t\nDom Bridge \t\nDom TOtlla\nOen Steel Wires\nHamilton Bridge\nint Nickel\ntassev Harrla \t\nMont  Power  \t\n\"'at Brewing ...\nJM Steel Car  ...\nPowar   com\nShawlnlgan    \t\nSteel of Can .. .\nCURBS\nAss'd  Breweries\n:3tS<m*Stt&m*i&mmm*^^ *fe   Dlit\n47%\n160\n\u00abH\n7\n7\n11'\n3\na*\n81\n33%\n3?$\na*\nB A Oil\t\nCan Vlckera \t\ncan Wineries     .   ..\nDistillers Seagram\nDom Engineer ......\nDominion Tar \t\nDryden Paper\nHome Oil\nimperlsl Oil      .\nImperial Tob Can\nInt Petrol\nMcColl Frontenac\nNoranda   ..   \t\npage Heriey \t\nBANKS\nCanadlenn*   \u2014...\nCommerce\t\nDominion\t\nImperial    \u2014\nMontreal   \t\nNova Scotia\t\nRoyal \t\nToronto  \t\nMISCELLANEOUS\nDom Storei \u00bb\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nFord Can A\n13%\n1\nii*\nft\n13%\n33%\n71%\nll\n75%\n366\n31.\n\u00bb**\nboodyear \u2014  130\nLaura secord     66%\nLob Oroc ,    17%\nLob afo*,^^^\u2014\nWest Can Flour .*.\nWalker Brew\n6\n5%\nINDUSTRIALS AT\nTORONTO SLUMP\nOils, Distillery Stocks, Nickel\nand Ford Close Lower\nNEW YORK, Oct. tt (AP)\u2014copper\nquiet;  electrolytlo apot and future,\nblue eagle 9.00.\nTin ateady; ifiot and nearby and\nfutun 6110.\nIrons quiet, No. 3 f.o.b. eutern\nPennsylvania 19.60, Buffalo 18*0;\nAlabama 1440.\nUad ateady; apot New York 8.70;\neast  St.  Loula SM.\nZinc firm; eaat St. Louli ipot and\nfuture 8 86.\nAluminum 30-2330.\nAntimony,  apot  9.60.\nQuicksilver 7440-77.\nBar allver weaker, % down at 53%.\nLondon cloalng*\u2014Copper, standard\napot \u00a338 13a 6d; future 138 17s ed;\nelectrolytic, spot \u00a383: future \u00a333 6a\nTin. spot \u00a3333 19a ed; future\n338   KM.\nUad, ipot and futun no 13a 6d.\nZinc, spot and futun \u00a313 17s 6d\nBir silver quiet, % lower at 33%d.\nFEWCHANGES\nAT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Oct. 39 iCP)\u2014Lack of\nenthusiasm among traders In Wall\natreet was reflected on tbe Montreal\nstock exchange today which paaaed\nthrough a dull session with only\nfractional changes ln prices.\nInterllsted Issues were ateady or\nslightly higher with Braalllan at\n11%, C. P. R. at 11% and Nickel\nat 33.\nMontreal Power gained % at 93.\nAlcohol and Brewery stoeki were\ndown slightly. Bruck Silk dropped\ntwo points at 13 and Southern Canada Power waa down 1%. Steel of\nCanada advanced ',_ at 39%.\n\u2022PAOI NINE\nWHEATCOLLAPSES THE FULL\nLAWFUL LIMIT AT CHICAGO\nThree-Cent Drop\nin Bar Gold\nMONTREAL, Oct. 39 (CF)-Bar\ngold In London down three centa at\n134.10 an ounoe In Canadian fundi,\n140a 7d in Britlih funda. The fixed\n$35 Washington price amounted to\n834.38 ln Canadian.\nMETALS STRONGER\nON COAST MARKET\nTORONTO, Oct. 28 \u00ab.P).-A soft\nInduitrial share market developed\na definite sag in the tail end of today's session, closing with only 13\ngains against 37 recessions on the\nToronto exchange board.\nOils end distillery stocks along\nwith Nickel, Ford A and BrazlUan\nclosed on the down side. Distillers-\nCorporation-Seagrams fell back\n12%, Walkers common lost a point\nat 23. Nickel held Its ground at 22%\nwhile Ford A slipped back % to 21,\nand Brazilian dropped % lo 11.\nSmelten lost a point. In the oils,\nBA., International Pete, McColl-\nFrontenac and Supertest ordinary\nall finished moderately lower. Su*\nperteit ptd. added a point.\nSILVER REACTS\nAT MONTREAL\nPrices Pay for Too Much Initial Enthusiasm\nMONTREAL, Otf. 29 (CP).\nWhat experts described as a salutary\nlevelling off process took place to\nday in silver futures trading on the\nCanadian commodity exchange.\nOpening bids were off from 30 to 39\npoints apd at the close bids were\ndown 70 to 90 points\nRather too much enthusiasm on\nthe psrt of traders entering upon a\nnew field was blamed for Mon*\ntreal prices getting out of line with\nworld markets.\nTwo May contracts, representing\n20,000 ounces, at 94 cents per ounce,\noff 29 points, represented the entire\nday's business. Saturday 12 con*\ntracts were sold.\nDominion Live Stock\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 27 ,CP) -Receipts: Cattle 3340; calvei 880; hogs\n3133; sheep 888.\nSteers, up to 1060 lbi., 14.00. Helfen, |8.50. Fed cslves, 18.60. Cows.\n81.76. Bulls, 81.50. Stoeker end\nfeeder steers. |3.36. Stock cows and\nhelfen, $1.50. Veal calvei, |4.60.\nHoga: Elect bacon 11.00 per head\npremium; bacon $7.36. Butchen $1.00\nper head discount. Heavy $6.76. Extra\nheavy $8X10 lights and feeders $460\nto $6.75. Bows, $6.00.\nLambe, $5.50. Sheep, $1.50.\nEASTERN SALES\nMONTREAL, Oct. 39 (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or 'more aharea on the Montreal atock  exchange today were:\n100 B C Pow a: 336 lnd Al B; 196\nOrg; 675 Dom Bridge; 935 Nickel:\n662 Mtl power; 365 Nat Brew; 145\nSteel Can.\nTORONTO, Oct. 39 (CP)\u2014Salw of\n100 or more shares on the Toronto\natock exchange, Induitrial aectlon,\ntoday wen:\n905 Brazilian; 375 Can Ind Ale;\n290 C P R Ford; 2355 Int Nlokel;\n240 mn Harris; 1986 H Walkers;\n3345 Dist c Sea.\nLondon Close\nLONDON. Oct. 39 (AP)\u2014Closing:\nBraslllan TTactlon $11%; Canadian\nPacific $12%; International Nickel\n$33%; British American Tobacco 16;\nCentral Mining \u00a319%; Courtaulds\n48a 3d; Dunlop Ruuber 7s ed; Hudson Bay 24s 3d; Imperial Chemical\n35l l%d; Imperial Tobacco 131s 3d;\nMining Trust Ltd. 2s: Rand Mines\n\u00a36%; Rhodeslan Anglo Am. lis;\nRhokana Corp. \u00a34%; Crowna \u00a313;\nSprings (8; East Oeduld \u00a38%: Rio\nTlntoe 131',: Vlckers 10s 1%0.\nBonda\u2014Canadian 4 per cent loan\n1935-68 \u00a3111%; Britii.li 2% per cent\nConsols ttl''; British 3% per cent\nwar lonn \u00a3104%;. British rundlng 4a\n1960-90 \u00a3116.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOtJVSR, Oct. 29 \u2014 Mining\nshares sold oa the Vancouver stock\nexchange today;\nLilted: Beaver S 1800; Bradlan\n3084; Braiorne 48; B R Con 1000;\nB R X 800: Cariboo u$0: Mak Slccar 1600: Meridian 16,800; Nit t\n10,000; Nloola 100; Pioneer 15: Pnm\nO 1000; Reeves 360; Reno 2960; Taylor B HOO; Vanalta 3000; wsyslds\n4900.\nCurb: Atlln pac 1000; B C Nickel\n11.800*. Big Mlaa 60: Congress 100;\nDentonia 1900; Falrvlew 1400; Glacier\nCreek 8000; Oolconda 8000; Orange\n3881; Orull W 300; Koot B 100;\nLakevlew SOOO; Mlnto 4700: Noble\nFive 4700; Pilot 1800; Porter I 8000;\nSUevrcreat 1000; vldette; Viking 1600;\nWaterloo 1000; Waverley 1000; white\nE.-gle  600.\nBradian Cains 25; Brilorne\nPicks Up 50 and\nPioneer 10\nVANCOUVER, Oct 29 (CP). -\nActivity was limited to i few ot the\nmetal shires today on the Vancouver stock exchange with the price\ntrend much stronger.\nBradlan, one of the active Issues,\ngained 29 at 2.00, Braiorne was up 90\nand Pioneer Gold gained 10. United\nEmpire was 2 cents higher in light\ntrading as were Cariboo Gold and\nGrange. Other gold stocks marked\nup gains of a point or less.\nB.C. Nickel and Golconda eased\na cent. Noble Five was up Vt cent\nwhile Porter Idaho lost the same\namount.\nHome Oil was weak and closed at\n90, 20 cents below Saturday's closing asked price while Royallte sold\nup to 19.00 and finished with a net\ngain of 10 at 14.75.\nCalgary Live Stock\nCALOART, Oct. 3t (CP)\u2014Receipts\nover the week-end 1036 cattle, 310\ncalves, 181 hoga and 4503 sheep and\nlambs. On Monday,, nine cattle and\n116 sheep and lambs wen received.\nTha cattle market opened slow\nwith prlcea unchanged. No hoga were\nsold at noon, the market being unsettled. Last flguree selects $7.78,\nbacons $7.35 and butchers $6.75 off\ntrucks.\nCattle: Medium butcher steen\n$3.35, medium to good butoher oows\n$1.35 to $150. oommon to medium\nvwl calvei $1.75 to $3.35. Good\nstoeker steen $2.36.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNBAPOLIS, Oct. 39 (AP) \u2014\nWheat, No. 1 northern 1.07-11; No, 1\nred durum 1.12^-13',; Dec. 1.02;\nMay 99H-\nCorn, No. 9 yiUow 73-79.\nOata, No. g white 63tt-53%,\nFlax, NO. 1  1.80-1.86.\nFlour 10 lowar. Carload lota family\npatents 7.10-30 a barrel In 98-pound\ncotton sacks. Shipments 18,990. Bran\n23.00.\nMoney\nBy  THB  CANADUN  PRESS\nCloalng exchange rates:\nAt Montnal: pound 4.88 15-16;\nU. S. dollar .97 27-83; franc 8.48.\nAt New York: Pound 4.98K: Canadian dollar 1.03 s-16; lrane \u00abJ.9*k.\nAt Parle: Pound 75.13 franc; Canadian dollar 16.48 fr; U. S. dollar\n15.16 fr.\nIn Oold: Pound 131 ld; Canadian\ndollar 60.60 centa; *). 8. dollar 69.33\ncenta.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINIPEO, Oct. 39 iCP) \u2014Futuni\nOpen  High   Low Clou\n74H\n80$\ntOVt\ntoil\nWheat:\nOot\t\nDec\t\n\"tlttr:\noct\t\nDec.\nMay\nBarley:\nOct\t\nDec\t\nMay\nFlax:\nOct.   \t\nDec\t\nMay   \t\nRye:\nOct.    .. .\nDec,\n76 U\n78 *\n81 *\/i\n40\n40\n40 %\nIP\n-ft\n76 li\n70ft\n81H\n40*4\n40 li\nem\nas\n50%\n51'i\n63 i\nSTAVERT GETS\nCI&S.P0ST\nNamed Assistant to\nPresident; to Reside\nin Montreal\nMcFarland Statement\nHas Effect; 'Peg\nPit Lower\nMONTRIAI,, 0*1. 29 (CP) \u2014 B\nStavert haa been appointed assistant\nto the president of Consolidated\nMining and smelting company of\nCanada, effective Nov. l It was announced here todsy.\nMr. Stavert. who Is the son of\nSir WlUlam and Lady stavert of\nMontreal, will continue to live here.\nA native ot Jamaica, he waa educated at St. Andrew's college, Toronto,\nand Mccilll univenlty, Montreal, atad\nserved overseas with the Canadian\nforces. He Is president of British\nMetal corporation (Canada) Ltd.,\npresident of Sterling Mlnea Limited,\ndirector of Mcvittle Grahamme\nMines Limited, and of Veraguaa\nMlnea limited.\nCHICAOO, Oot. 39 (AP)\u2014Wheal\ncoUapaed 2% oenta a bushel maximum hire today largely owing to\nnews from Canada on the atatement of John I. McFarland relative\nto speculation on the Winnipeg grain\nexchange.\nAnnouncement of Mr. McFarland'*\nstand waa accompanied by a general wave of liquidating salea oa\ntha part of holden ot wheat future delivery contract*.\nWheat closed 1 cent to 1% oenta\nabove yesterday's finish, May 9414-H,\ncom tt-% off, May 78%-7\u00ab and\noata H-tt down.\nWINNIPEG   LOWER\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 39 (CP)\u2014Statement of John I. McFarland, genenl\nmanager of the Wheat Pools* Oentral\nBelling agency, urging government\ncontrol of Winnipeg grain exchange\noperations had no effect on prloe\ntrends as wheat futures prlcea cloeed\n% to if, cent lower today.\nLocal futures declined ln sympathy with lower prices at Chicago.\nThe text of Mr. McFarland's statement was not available here until\nafter the close. October finished at\n74%, December 7SVa-H and May\nBOfc-tt \u00bbnts.\nSome export was worked over the\nweek-end. estimates ranged from\n350,000 to 600,000 bushels. Outsldo\nnews, however, contained Uttla of a\nbullish nature. Offerings were scarce\nln the cash-grain division and\nspreads closed unchanged. Coarse\ngrains eased ln sympathy with wheat.\nWOULD SELL HOME OIL'S TURNER\nVALLEY PROPETYTOROYAUTE\nSale Recommended by Directors; Would Receive 20,-\n000 Royalite Shares\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 29 (CP).-\nSale of Home Oil company's Turner\nvalley holdings to the Royallte company for 20,000 shares of Royalite\nstock is recommended by the Home\nOil directors In a notice sent to\nshareholders today, calling a meeting to be held here November 7,\nThe proposed deal would not affect the Home Oil company's 25\nper cent Interest In Home Oil Dis\ntributors.\nIn the proposal made by the\ndirectors, all the Home OU interests\nin Turner valley except the drilling\nequipment would be exchanged for\nthe 20,000 shares ot Royallte and,\nout of these shares, the Home Oil\ncompany would pay back 1867\nshares to meet liabilities ln respect\nto its contracts on Royallte and\nproduction participation so the 20,-\n000 shares would participate ' the\n79 cents a share dividend payable\nto Royalite shareholders on record\nNovember 8.\nThe 20,000 sharei hive a market\nvilue of approximately $290,000.\nMONTREAL SILVER PRICES\nMONTREAL, Oct. 29 (CP) .-Silver futures closed 70\nto 90 points off in extremely dull trading on the Canadian\ncommodity exchange today.  Sales were two contracts.\nmmt   l -  f\n  Dfeen       High\nDecember .: 52.45B\nJanuary  ,         \t\nFebruary  \t\nMarch 63.35B      \t\nApril    m\t\nMay 54.00\nJune  _     H^B\nAugust   ...-         .....~.\nSeptember\t\n\u2022N\u2014Normal; B\u2014Bid; 2 contracts.\nLow\n54.00      54.00\nCloee\n62.00B\n52.15B\n52.50B\n52.90B\n53.20N\n53.50B\n53.80N\n54.10N\n54.40N\n54.70N\n131U \u25a0-\u2022%.%\u25a0 130V. 139\u00abi\n134 134 - .1S1'.J 131U\n'\u2014      138-r,    138       136K\nl<4\nVt'k     of,     83'i      53'1\n_    Wk     64*5     53*4      \u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\nMay        68%      tS\\     67_J      67tt\nCash wheat: No. 1 hard 78%: No.\n1* nor. n%: \u25a0Mo-.-j-nor. 7Ht; No. 3\nror. 89\u00bb4: No. 4 nor. et%] No. 8,\nS9'4- No. \u00ab. 68tt: feed 84%: No. I\ndurum 90%: No. 1 A. R. W. \u00ab6H;\ntrack 7,1V,: screenings |6 per ton.\nExchanges\nMONTBEAL, Oct. 3\u00bb (CP)\u2014British and foreign exchange In relation to tha Canadian dollar was\ncompiled by the Royal Bsnk of\nCanada, olosed today aa follows:\n^^^^^^^m    3844\n SJlM\n lift\nArgentina,   peso\nAustralia, pound \t\nSustrla, schilling \nelglum.   belga   \t\nBrarll. mUrela       ....   ....\nChina. Hong Kong dollan\nCzechoslovakia, crown \t\nDenmark krone -\t\nPrance, frano ..    \t\nOermany, nlchsroark  ....\nOreat Brttain, pound ._r\ngollandl florin   \u2014\nungary.  pengo\t\nIndia, rupee\t\n:taly, lire  \t\njapan, yen .     ..   \u25a0 \u2014\nNew Zealand, pound\t\nNorway, krone \u2014\nPoland,  riotl   \u2014     \u25a0\t\nSouth   Africa,  pound   ....\nSpain, peseta \t\nSwitzerland, franc    ... ..... .. ,\nunited states, dollar, 3 S-33 per cent\ndiscount.\n-385\n. .0719\n. .3972\n. .0401\n: ftS\n.9838\n.    .3940\n.3878\n.    .0887\nam\n3.8811\n: i%\nMill\n.3193\nNORGOLD\nhn now been listed en the Vancouver Stock Exchange\nat\nATLIN PACIFIC\nShareholders are requested to send their Norgold certificates in to the transfer agents, LONDON & WESTERN TRUSTS CO., LTD., 808 West Hastings St.. Vancouver, B.C., to be exchanged, free of charge, for\ncertificates of Atlin Pacific Mining Co., Limited.\nWhile it is requested that the change be made as soon\nas possible, it is officially pointed out that Norgold\ncertificates, are good delivery in trading and will continue to be so until exchanged.\nATLIN PACIFIC MINING CO., LTD.\n1002 Stock  Exchange  Buildin'g,      Vancouver,  B.C\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL - BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nLead-Zinc\u2014Cadmium Bismuth\nELEPHANT Brand\nChemical Fertilizers\nAmmonium Phosphates\u2014Sulphate of Ammon'i\nSuperphosphates\u2014Complete Fertilizers\nProducers and Refiners of\nTADANAC Brand\nElectrolytic\n _\t\nPAGE TEN-\nTHE NELSON DAILY NIWI, NILION. I.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. OCTOIIR 10.1SS4\nHallowe'en\nMASKS and\nFALSE FACES\n5c to 35c\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nMORE ABOUT\nTHE CABINET\n(Contlnutd From Paga Ont)\nIt It suggested that a minister\nwith a long parliamentary experience and administrative ability of\nDr. Manion, should be utilized in a\nlarger Held. His transfer to the trade\nand commerce portfolio vould be\nin line with these suggestions.\nIf there are to be further changes\nin the allotment of portfolios, no\nindication of their nature has been\ngiven. The resignation of Mr. Steveni leaves British Columbia without cabinet representation. If Mr.\nBennett makes an appointment in\nthe near future, the names of Grote\nStirling, Yale, J. A. Fraser, Cariboo.\nend C. H. Dickie, Nanalmo, are\nmentioned as possibilities.\n8TEVEN8' REPLY\nOUT TUE8DAY\nOTTAWA, Oct. 29 (CP)\u2014 The\nstatement of Hon. H. H. Stevens in\nreply to the letter of Premier B. B.\nBennett accepting the 'resignation\nof Mr. Stevens from the portfolio\nof minister of trade and commerce\nand the chairmanship of the price\nspreads and mass buying commlsaion will be issued tomorrow.\nIn that statement, Mr. Stevens\nlaid he would give his full reply\n\"based upon the evidence, completely answering the allegations of\ninaccuracies in the pamphlet on my\nspeech before the study club of\nConservative members.\"\nNATIONAL CALAMITY\nLONDON. Ont., Oct. 29 (CP)\u2014\nRowland Hill Jr., president of the\nNational Shoe Retailers association,\nIn a telegram to Prime Minister R.\nB. Bennett, describes the retirement\nof Hon. H. H. Stevens as chairman\nof the price spreads and mass buying commission as \"nothing short\nof a national calamity.\"\nBefore this association in Toronto\nlast January Mr. Stevens made the\nipeech which led to the institution\nof the mass buying probe.\nSTOP SALE OF STOCK\nIN DISTILLERY FIRM\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 29 (AP)\u2014\nThe United States securities and exchange commission, as an offshoot\nof its campaign against stock swindling, today cracked down upon\nthe allegedly false appraisal of property in connection with the issuing\nof stock.\nAn order was Issued by the commission stopping the sale of the\nttock of the Haddam Distillers company, Moodus, Conn., on the ground\n. that its appraisal, made by Standard\nAppraisal company of New York,\nwas \"Inexcusably careless.\"\nThe distilling company sought to\nregister $250,000 in stock. Registration requires that a company describe a proposed issue fully before\nthe commission.\nExchange Rates\nJOW TORK, Oct. 29 (API\u2014Sterling exehanie easy at M95-*i for\n\u00ab0-day bills, ami at l-t.90% for demand: Canadian dollars; today 3\nl-H per cent premium, Saturday\n2'i per cent premium, week ago 2\nper cent premium. Franc t.59V4\ncents: lire 8.56'i centa; Uruguay\n80.90 centa.\nSmythe's\nU-Need-a Gargle\nAl a Preventive Agilnit\nGerm  Diseases\nPHONE 1\nPrescriptions Our Specialty\n\u25a0SEE'\nVIC GRAVES\nMuter Plumber\nFor Modern Plumbing\nAT MODERATE PRICES\nOpp. City Hill        Phom 815\nREX JARVIS\nElectrical Contractor and\nEngineer\nRepain and Supplies\nFor Service Phont 844\n602 Josephine Strtet\nIN BIG SWEEP\nIs in Addition to 15\nWho Got Horses\nSaturday\nNAMES WITHHELD\nBECAUSE OF LAW\nEight Winners in B.C.;\nEeven Canadians\nWin $500 Each\nDUBLIN. Oct. 29 (CP cable)\u2014The\ndraw in th* Irish Free State hospitals sweepstake on the Cambridgeshire handicap, In which $10,-\n000,000 is available for prize distribution continued today. There\nstill remained about 50 horses, mostly nonstarters, to be drawn, 20\ntickets on each horse; 10 residual\ncash prises of $600 each, and 1500\ncash prises of $500. The draw will\nbe continued tomorrow. The race is\non Wednesday.\nThe authorities persisted in declining to reveal the Identity of Canadians drawing prizes in view of\nCanadian legislation regarding\nsweepstake winners. Only the ticket\nnumbers and the nom-de-plumes, in\nsome cases, were revealed. Fifteen\nCanadians drew horses Saturday.\nFurther Canadian drawers of\nhorses follow:\nTicket AN 19301, on Badruddin.\nSweet Boy, Montreal, BD 07175,\nThe Scribe.\nSnorky. Winnipeg, XA 91109, on\nAspiration.\nBir Five, Montreal, ER 77031,\non Farla.\nSunrise, Albertt, MM 28923, on\nMis Tor.\nOl'\" Soldiers, Toronto, PT 2976,\non Pegomas.\nTicket XS 81927, Ontario, on Grin-\ndleton.\nLambs Tail, Ontario, AA 68581,\non Easton.\nAE 67335, VANCOUVER, ON DIGNITARY.\nSPERO, B.C., ticket ER 71118, and\nticket EC 78079, Ontario, on Rentenmark.\nTicket XW 51367, Ontario, on thc\nBlue Boy.\nTicket BB 80480, Montreal, on\nNorman Herald.\nPope Eye, Toronto, XI 60622, on\nGeneralissimo.\nLITTLE BOY BLUE, VANCOUVER, EM 81645, ON SPEND A\nPENNY\nTICKET AN 18301, BRITISH COLUMBIA, ON BADRUDDIN.\nCONTWENTYFOUR, VANCOUVER, AN 19378, ON SOLITUDE.\nNone of the residual prizes of $600\nwent to Canadians but the following were listed as winners of $500\ncash prizes: G. Miller, Manitoba;\nJohn Kint, Banff; Roadmaker, Canada; Happy Thought, Canada; NANAIMO, VANCOUVER, AND POP-\nTTP   Cfltiflrffl\nSix hundred prizes had been distributed when the draw was adjourned till tomorrow.\nC.P.R. Net Profits\nShowanIncrease\nSeptember and Year to Date\nBetter Than Last Year\nMONTREAL, Oct. 29 (CP).\u2014Net\nprofit! of the Canadian Pacific Railway company for September showed\nan increase of $30,351 over the corresponding month last year. Net\nprofits for the nine months ending\nSeptember 30, 1934 showed an in*\ncrease of $3,698,656 over the same\nperiod for the preceding year.\nGross *t*.rnings for September totalled $12,042,792 as compared with\n$11,173,335 for September 1933 an\nincrease this year of $869,457. Working expenses also Increased, however, amounting to $9,009,212 for\nthe rnonth compared with $8,170,006\ntor the aame month last year, an\nincrease of $839,306.\nCanadian Dollar\nGains 1-16\nNEW TORK, Oct. 29 (CP)\u2014Tbe\nCanadian dollar picked up a amall\ntraction In the foreign exchange\nmarketa today.\nThe Dominion dollar closed at\n9 3-16 per cent premium agatnst 2'i\nSaturday. The pound flnlahed '\u00bb\nlower at t4._0\u00bb._ while the French\nfranc, closing at 6.59% centa, ahowed a loss of .001\/_ of a cent.\nSTONE\nCROCKS\nFROM 2 TO 15 GALLONS\nJUST THE THINC YOU NEED\nFOR PICKLES, ECCS, ETC.\n40* PER GALLON\nLIDS EXTRA\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nSchedule of tho\nInternational Puck\nLeague Changed\nWINDSOR, Ont., Oct 29 (CP).\u2014\nThe revised schedule for the International Ho key league, as Issued\nby President Charlei 5. K'-at shows\nthe following changes: London (not\nCleveland) at Detroit, November 29;\nWindsor at Buffalo, January 11 (not\n121; Syracuse at Cleveland, January\n26 (not 231: Windsor (not London!\nat Detroit January 29: Cleveland at\nWldsor January 30 (previously an\nopen date); Buffalo (not Cleveland)\nat Syracuse and Cleveland (not\nWindsor) at Detroit, February 3;\nCleveland (not Buffalo) at Syracuse\nFebruary 27; Buffalso (not Cleveland) at Syracuse, March 3; Cleveland at Windsor, game March j discarded; Cleveland (not Buffalo) at\nSyracuse March 7.\n'   MORE ABOUT\nAIRACTIVITY\n(Continued From Page One)\n\u25a0aged It waa preparted to set up\nfour ilajit Hearrhllihts as beacon\"\nIf the flight should be resumed\ntoniint.\nWIFE  IS  PLEASED *\nMELBOURNE. Oct. 30 (AP)\u2014Lady\nKlngtford-Smlth, after a 24 hour\nvilli at the telephone, was extremely\nhappy when ahe finally received\nword that her huaband, Blr Charlea,\nhad landed at Honolulu on his transpacific flliht. shortly afterward ehe\nwent to bed.\nNEAR DISASTER\nBy  WILLIAM  H.  EWINO\nAssociated Press Staff Writer\nHONOLULU, Oct. 39 (AP) \u2014 Sir\nCharlea Klngaford-Smlth, daring Australian flyer, sped through seeming\ncertain disaster today to reach Honolulu and complete the aecond leg\nof a projected perilous flight from\nBrisbane, Australia, to California.\nSir charlee and hla navigator, Captain P. o. Taylor, disclosed they\nhad fought torrential equatorial rain\nInto whjch they flew at midnight\non their hop from Suva, Fill Islands.\nThe rain clogged the air apeed\nIndicator on the leading edge of\nthe plane wing, making It Impossible\nto tell whethere the ship waa maintaining sufficient apeed to give It\nheadway. This Instrument's failure\nnearly spelled disaster, sir Charles\naald. He wsa fumbling ln tha cockpit, trying to get the Indicator into\naction, when he accidentally released\nthe retractable landing gear.\nGOES INTO SPIN\nSince the usual compensation for\nthe lowering of the gear had not\nbeen made, the shoe* threw their\nblue and white monoplane Into a\nspin trom which the pilot pulled lt\nonly with  dlflculty.\nSir  Charles  gave  high  pralae to\nNavigator Taylor, who, he said, wai\nright  on  top  of  hla  courae  when\nthey sighted the Island of Molokal.\nPRAISES    NAVIOATOR\n\"Bill actually piloted the plane as\nmuch as I did.\" he aald. \"I want the\npublic to know thla. I ,eem to get\nall the praise. Actually the man who\nshould get It la BUI. He Is the moat\npainstaking and thorough man I've\never flown with.\"\nKlngaford-Smlth said he wu in\nno hurry to leave Hawaii.\nThe first to tly In both directions\nbetween Hawaii and Australia, sir\nCharles brought his monoplane Lady\nSouthern Cross to earth today at\nWheeler field, near here, after a\nflight of 3197 miles ln 25 houn\nfive minutes from Naselal Beach,\nFIJI.\nLP TO THE WEATIIKR\nHe said he probably would take\noft aa soon aa he got a 'fine weather'\nforecast probably within three days\u2014\nfor Oakland or Loi Angeles on the\nlut lap of the flight he atarted\nfrom Brisbane Saturday afternoon,\nOct. 20. Bad weather held him at\nSuva a week.\n\"If we hadn't done lt, aome one\nelse would,\" Sir Charlea grinned as\nhe shook hands with a reception\ncommittee at the field. He added,\nsmilingly. \"It takea the Auatrallans\nto  do  lt.\"\nSir Charles also had a few words\non hts favorite subject of a Transpacific service.\n\"I did the pioneering work along\nthat line when  I made my flight\nfrom   the   American   mainland   to\nAuatralla.\" he aald.\n5000 GREET HIM\n\"The flight we are now making\nconvinces me that the realization\nof Transpacific airplane service wtll\ncome ln tbe not-too-dlstant future.\"\nHe aald he believed Honolulu and\nSuva would be among the stopping\npolnta for such a aervlce.\nAbout 5000 persons greeted the\nairmen at the field. The ceremonies\nthere were brief.\nKlngsford-Smlth'a aeroplane atlll\nhad gasoline for 2'i hours at the\ntime the motor wu stopped at\nWheeler field, although aome doubt\nhad been expressed before the flight\nthat it could be made with only\none fueling,\nSTODARTS COMPLETE RACE\nMELBOURNE. Oct. 30 (Tueaday)\n(CP-Havu).\u2014D. t. and K. O. Stodart, London-to-Melbourne air derby-\nlats, landed their trim aeroplane\nhere today at 12:55 a.m. G.M.T.\n(7:55 p.m.. E.S.T., Monday).\nAa the English cousins completed\nthe long courae ln nine' days a great\ncrowd at the tlnlah-fleld gave them\na spontaneous welcome. lnterut In\nthe race Is far from lagging.\nWhen Squadron \u2022 Leader Malcolm\nMacGregor of New Zealand roared\nacross tha finish line at 7:59 a.m.\nO.M.T. Sunday, tbe fifth flyer to\nfinish, a roaring cannon helped\nawell the noisy greeting tha crowd\ngave him.\nFITZ  HAS  TROUBLE\nCROYDON AIR FIELD. England.\nOct. 29 (AP).\u2014Col. Jamu Fitz-\nmaurlce's sleek monoplane which\ntook off from Lympna aerodrome\nthis morning on a postponed speed\nflight to Auatralla, returning three\nhours later, waa In the hands of\nmechanics here  tonight.\nThey were tackling the engine\ncowling of the huge machine, from\nwhich a bolt had been sheared off\nIn flight.\nNot until the repair! have undergone strenuous testa, Fltzmaurlce\nsaid, wlll the Australian record flight\nbe attempted again.\nFltzmaurlce and his co-pllot, Eric\nBonar, were over Belgium ln their\n\"Irish Swoop\", ln which they had\nhoped to reach Australia ln not\nmore than 65 hours, when their\ntroubles begun.\nLOSE IN RECORD EFFORT\nLONDON, Oct. 30 (Tuesday) (AP).\n\u2014Cathcart Jones and Ken Waller,\nAustralian air-derby flyers, were delayed by motor trouble today u\nthey Attempted to continue from\nAllahabad. India, ln their race\nagalnat time back to England. Tiw\ntook   off   shortly   after   midnight,\nVANCOUVERFEARS\nSCHOOL CLOSING\nAlderman Miller Says  B.  C.\nMust  Advance   Funds;\nOthers Deny Story\nVANCOUVER. Oct. 29 (CP). \u2014\nVancouver schools will have to\nbe closed in December unless the\nBritish Columbia government is pre*:\npared to advance additional funds\nto the city, Aid. O. C. Miller, chairman of :'ie civic finance committee,\ntold the city council today.\nAid. Miller explained that the city\nis unable to provide the $200,000 required to keep schools open for the\nlast month of the year. He said full\nresponsibility for the action must\nrest with the provincial government\nbecause of reductions in Its school\ngrants.\nThe 1931 grant was $732,720, which\nis $33,361 higher than that estimated\nfor this year.\nWILL KEEP OPEN\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 29 (CP).\u2014The\nschools of Vancouver will be kept\nopen despite the fact the civic\nfinance committee has decided they\ncannot be financed during-December without additional grants from\nthe provincial government, H. N.\nMacCorkindale, superintendent of\nschools, stated today. George Cunningham, chairman of the finance\ncommittee of the school board,\nagreed with Mr. MacCorkindale.\nMORE ABOUT\n(Continued From Pag* Ont)\n\"I am a Democrat, but my pa-\ntrlotkm Is stronger tban thc K.-jb-\nborn blindness of party regularity,\"\nNeblett declared, adding. \"Sinclair i\nprogram Is nothing more thin contest of the unemployed against the\nemployed.\"\nGLORIFIED   .DOLE\nSinclair meanwhile launched an attack on Governor Merrlam'a atand\non social credit, -branding it a \"glorified dole,\" and charged that \"thc\nHollywood reporter openly boasted\nthat the moving picture Industry,\ndominated by Will Hays, Loula B.\nMayer. C. C. Pettljohn and Irving\nThalberg, haa smarted & war against\nme and raised funda for my defeat,\"\nA statement that forcible ejection\nof ineligible voters at tbe polls November 6 may be resorted to by Loa\nAngeles authorities waa made by\nWalter k. Tuller, appearing as a\n\"friend of the court,\" aa the atate\nsupreme court began a hearing on a\nwrit sought to prevent disfranchisement of 24,000 Los Angelea registrants.\nONLY   TWO   WAYS   OUT\n\"If tbe court would not purge\nthe rolls peacefully,\" Tuller declared\nIn defense of judge Frank C. Collier's order to the 34.000 to appear\nbefore him to show cauae why tbey\nshould not be declared Ineligible to\nvote, \"only two alternatlvea remain\u2014\nsupine surrender to corruption or\nuse of force at tbe polls.\"\nineligible citizens, he declared,\nmay be kept out ot the polls legally\nby force of arm*.\nChief Justice \u2022William H- Waate\nsaid he would telegraph judge Colter requesting him not to make any\norder IA the voters case prior to the\nsupreme court decision ln the matter, promised by tomorrow.\nSINCLAIR  LAUGHS .\nSinclair supporters have charged\nthat the attempta to remove the\nvoters from the rolls were directed\ntoward Democratic registrants.\nIn asking Sinclair, sponsor of the\nepic (end poverty in California) plan,\nto withdraw, Milen Dempster, Socialist party candidate said, \"your\nsupport would not elect me governor, but It would be a seven league\nstep ln building a powerful workers'\nparty.\"\nSinclair laughd at Dempster's appeal and said he also had received\nreports of new rumors that he would\nwithdraw.\n\"I have a million votes and Mr.\nDempster haa about five thousand,\"\nhe said with a laugh. \"If I withdrew In favor of Dim that would\nmake a Herculean taak of switching a million votes. I'm afraid lt\ncouldn't be done. I think lt would\nbe easier for Mr, Dempster to\nthrow his votes to me,\"\nB. C. Urges Stevens\nBe Kept as Member\nof Royal Commission\nVANCOUVIR, Oct. .\u00bb (CP).\u2014Pres*\nident 3. M Watson of the British\nColumbia branch of the Retail Merchants' association announced today\nha had wired Premier R. B. Bennett\non behalf of the B. C. organization,\nurging that Hon. B. H. Btevens be\nretained on the prloe spreads and\nmass buying commission to finish\nthe work which he voluntarily un\nder took.\nSASKATCHEWAN  IS\nAFTER DROUGHT RELIEF\nREGINA, Oct. 29 (CP)\u2014Premier\nJames G. Gardiner will seek cooperation of the federal government\nIn financing drought area relief.\nAs an alternative the federal government will be asked ta submit a\nplan whereby the administration of\nrelief will become a federal responsibility. This was intimated on\nthe eve of his departure for Ottawa\nto discuss relief financing with Pre*\nmier R. B. Bennett.\nhopeful of maintaining an average\napeed of more than 300 miles an\nhour.\nBut In 10 minutes they were back\nat the Allahabad airport, tbelr motora sputtering.\nMechanics swarmed about the\nplane, but It was believed repalra\nwould require aeveral hours.\nOn the hack-track speed-hop to\nEngland, they boosted their average apeed to 308.8 miles an hour\non the 3310 miles flight from Singapore to Allahabad.\nMADE   301   MILES   PER\nOn the hop from Darwin to Sing\napore tha flyers made a apeed of\n301.7 miles an hour. The two avi*\nators are bringing home photographs\not the air race. They planned on\nthe remainder ot the flight to take\nto tha air by day and aleep at\nnight.\nA delay at Port Darwin wu be*\nlleved to have spoiled tbelr chance\nof heating the time of 70 houra,\n50 minutes and 60 aeconds made\nby.Scott and Black, winners of the\nderby, on their England to Melbourne flight.\nSHAKEUP WILL\nSMASH GIANTS\nTerry Says at Least a\nDozen of Team on\nAuction Block\nNEW ORLEANS, OcL 29 <AP).-\nThe New York Giants are ln for\nsome kind of shakeup, Bill Terry,\ntheir manager, let it be known in an\ninterview here today.\nExcepting Mel Ott, outfielder, and\nCarl Hubbell, ace h rler, Terry\nsaid that at least a dozen Giants are\non the auction block, that he had\n$129,000 to spend for new material,\nand as far aa managing the club\ngoes, he'll be solely responsible.\n\"I'm ready to spend lots of dough\nfor a shortstop,\" he said. \"Not because Travis Jackson needs any\nhelp at short, but because we need\nstrength at third, and Toney' can\nplay a great third base. Besides,\nhe'll last longer there than at\nshort.\" \\\nHe said Hughey Crlta had \"a wonderful year at second and we're\ncounting on him again.\"\n\"As for first base,\" he said, \"I'm\nlooking for my successor. I'm getting\nold\u201436 right now\u2014end I feel 45\nafter every ball game. But until I\nfind somebody I can't beat, I'll be\nthere.\"\nDETROIT NEEDS\nFODRFORWARDS\nTwo Right Wings and Two\nCenter Positions Are\nVacant\nDETROIT, Oct. 29 (CP).\u2014There\nare two right wing and two center\npositions open on the Detroit Red\nWings lineup, 'according to Jack\nAdams, rotund manager ot the motor city National Hockey league\nentry. While expressing satisfaction\nwith his team's display as a unit in\nlast night's city championship series\ngame with Olympics, Adams said\nit was unlikely the team would contain the same personnel at the start\nof the regular schedule two weeks\nhence.\nIt was evident that Adams' biggest problem is replacing Wilf Cude,\nthe young Wlnnipegger who guarded Detroit's nets last season. He is\nnow with Montreal Canadlens. John\nRoss Roach, the Port Perry poultry-\nman who guarded Olympic nets after leaving the Red Wings last year,\nis one aspirant tor the job.\nHunters Back From\nSuccessful Outing\nBennett, Horton and Notman\nBag Ducks; Bull Holds\nUp Horton\nOordon Bennett, Harry Horton. \u00bbnd\n\"Scotty\" Notman returned Sunday\nfrom two wwji'i duck hunting on\nthe Kootenay flate. The Nelun party\nhad a fine outing and managed to\nshoot their ahare, although the ducks\nwere wild. They went up in Gordon\nBennett's launch. Except for an encounter with one of the farmer's\nprize bulla the outing waa without\nexcitement. Harry Horton was aet\nadrift on the land to hunt up the\nducka while the other two membera\nof the party were finding the\n\"grub.\" and was ambushed by a\nbull which kept him from the beach\nOn returning Mr. Notman and Mr.\nBennett cruised up and down the\nlake for almost two houra before\nfinding the marooned third party.\nCan't Decide on a\nDote for the B.N.A\nAmendments Meet\nOTTAWA, Oct. 29 fCP).\u2014Difficulties are being encountered by the\nDominion government ln fixing the\ndat\u00bb for the Dominion-provincial\nconference to deal wltb suggested\namendments to the British North\nAmerica act owing to the fact the\nprovincial governments have widely\ndifferent Ideas as to the most suitable time.\nThe Saskatchewan legislature, for\nInstance, meets In November and a\nNovember conference, while favored\nby other provinces, would not be\nconvenient for Saskatchewan.\nNo change has been made In the\nplans so far aa the actual holding\nof the conference  la concerned.\nAlleged Picket Is\nFacing a Charge\nBURNABY. B. C, Oct. 38 *CP)_\nCharles Bmlth, alleged to have been\na \"ticket\" called out by the Burnaby Workera' association In a atrike\nagainst \"work for relief acrlp or\ntxaes,\" haa been arrested and wlll\nappear ln police court Wednesday\ncharged with Intimidation.\nJoaeph Kafer, relief worker, ldentl*\nfled Bmlth aa a man who, with a\ncompanion, allegedly stopped him\nfrom working br taking away his\ntools.\nGaby Assistant\nto President of\nCanadian Pacific\nMONTREAL, Oct. 29 (CP)-Ap-\npointment of Frederick A. Gaby.\nToronto, as assistant to the president\nof the Canadian Pacific railway in\nMontreal and vice-president and\ngeneral manager of the Seigniory\nClub Community association. Monte*\nhello. Que., was announced here today by E. W. Beatty. K.C. president\nof the C.P.R. and of the Community\nClub association.\nThe appointment becomes effective Thursday.\nAPPOINTMENT CANCELLED\nVICTORIA, Oct. 2D (CP).-Ap*\npointment of Louis Cummings, ot\nChase, B.C., as stipendiary magistrate and magistrate of th small\ndebts court In the county of Yale,\nhas been cancelled by the provincial\ngovernment as from November 1.\nLONDON COLT IS\nSOLD\nLONDON, Oct M (CP cable).-\nSol Green, prominent Aus'ralian\nturfman, today purchased tbe colt\nLo Zingaro, three-year-old classic\ncontender of the past seaaon, from\nJ. A. Dewar tor an unannounced\nfirlce. The colt will be sent to stud\nn Australia. He is by Solario out of\nLove in Idleness, an exceptionally\nwell-bred animal most val \"able for\nstud purposes. The price was said\nto be the largest ever paid from\nAustralia.\nMORE ABOUT\nNAVAL PLAN\n(Contlnutd From Page One)\nthey modify their attitude, there la\npractically no possibility of a compromise.\nA United states spokesman indicated tbe belief that tearing up\nthe Washington treaty of 1923 may\nmean the end of collateral pacts\nwhich now guarantee the open door\nIn China and non-aggression In the\nfar east. The delegation understands\nthat tbe Japanese would seek to\nchange these pacts or end them entirely should naval limitation be\nthrown overboard.\nThe seriousness of the situation\nwas further emphasised ln American quarters where the belief wu\nexpressed that unless the Japanese\nrecede from their position naval\nlimitation will be a thing of the\npast within two years from next\nDecember, the earliest date at which\nthe Washington treaty oould be destroyed.\nW.E.MARS\"*LL\nGUEST SPEAKER\nTells Nelson Rotary\nClub of Detroit\n\u2022 Convention\nFINE DONATION TO\nENGLISH TENNIS\nDATES DECIDED\nLONDON, Oct 29 (AP).-The\nEnglish Lawn Tennis association today announced the dates for its\nthree big events of next summer,\nthe lnterzone and challenge rounds\not Davis cup play and the all-England, or Wimbledon, championships\nAll will be played on the Wimble*\ndon courts.\nDavis cup intentone final\u2014July\n20, 22, 23.\nDavis cup challenge round\u2014July\n27, 29, 30.\nWimbledon championships\u2014June\n24-July \u00ab.\nBOWLING STARTS\nAT THE LEGION\nTaking advantage of the ban on\nplaces of amusement the Canadian\nLegion has completely overhauled\nits alleys and play commenced yes-\nterdav. For the first pprt of the season the Legion will throw the alleys open for anyone wishing to\nplay and no tournament will be arranged by Legion members.\nNelson Hunters\nin Kettle Valley\nAnnual Party Out for Week;\nBell Unable to Make\nthe Trip\nFive Nelson hunters who annually\nspend a week's outing on the West\nBridge flats in search of deer, left\nthe city Sundav. They aro Jack McPhail, \"Bill'' Kline, F. Hobson and\n\"Billy\" Brodie. Jack Bell, who has\nbeen a member of the party tor a\nnumber of years, will not be with\nthe hunters this year. Mr. Bell Is\non the coast and had to wire his\nregrets to. the Nelson  men.  The\ntarty Is scheduled to be back next\naturday.\nNo Change in the\nTension in Siam\nLONDON. Oct. 29 (AP)\u2014The Sia\nmese legislation affirmed tonight\nthat discussions between the king\nand the government at Bangkok\nover a newly promulgated law, to\nwhich the king objects, were still\nproceeding.\nLegislation circles discounted the\npossibility that the king would ab*\ndicate over what was labelled \"a\ntrifling issue.\"\nCOUNTESS Ll'NCHEONS\nWITH THEIR MAJESTIES\nLONDON. Oct. 39 (CP cable!\u2014The\nCountess of Bessborough, wife of\nCanada's governor-general, today had\nluncheon with their majesties.\nNEWS OF THE D*\\Y\nTHE    REAL    REDUCING    DIET-\nBOWL AT C.EI.INAS' ALLEYS. (4\u00bbU)\nThe  Dance  of   the   seaaon\u2014Oyro\nHoedown\u2014Friday, Nov. 2 Tickets 60c\n(4635)\nLset]    Beatty    Wtiltecap    Electric\nwasher. Bargain, rhone 408Y. (4008)\nSpecial meeting of Graduate Nurses\nassociation Wedneaday afternoon 4\np.m. to meet Miss Randall.       (4827)\nTVS FOR  EVERYONE\u2014BOWLING\nAT GELINAS' ALLEYS. (4615)\nMother's, Coburg, French Rye,\nWhole wheat, all for your choice In\nCHOQCBTTE'S BREAD. (4441)\nSee our new shipment of Sunday\nnlte frocks and wool aport dresses\nat the D. C. DRESS SHOP.      (4623)\nFor Rent\u20143 rm. unfurn. suite\nWinter rates, 636. Also turn suites\n\u202230 and up. Kerr  Apta.        (43241\nHallowe'en dance south Slocin,\nWedneaday night. Margaret Graham's\norchestra. (4636)\nPYTHIAN SISTERS HALLOWE'EN\nMASQUERADE WEDNESDAY, OCT.\n.list. EAfil.F HALL. ADMISSION 50c.\nMUSIC BY MELODY MAKERS.\n(4619)\nNOTICE TO BOWLERS\nCanadian   Legion   Bowling   Alleys\nhave been put ln first-class condition for the seasons playing and are\nopen to all comers. Canadian Legion.\n(4605)\nCRIPPLED FUND\nior\nF'ur\nRefund From Trip to\nAinsworth Brings\nSum of $42\nAn account of the Rotary International convention hald last summer In Detroit, was given to the\nNelson Rotary club Monday by\nW. E. Marshall, delegate of the\nTrail Rotary club to tha convention. The program was In charge\nof J, T. Andrews, The address waa\nsimilar to one which Mr. Marahall\nfive to the Trail club recently.\nNB DONATIONS\nThe luncheon waa marked a fine\ndonations to the Crippled Children's\nfund. There waa a refund of 41.58\nto each of the Rotaruns who made\nthe recent trip to Alnsworth with\ntha Coeur d'Alene visitors, and the\nmembers benefiting by the refund\ndecided to give the money, amounting to about 142, to the Crippled\nChildren's fund. It waa gratefully received.\nThe Rotarlans wera Impressed by\nthe Improvement ln one of their\nlittle charges who wa\u00ab brought to\nthe meeting hy Dr. J. Gansner,\nThe Detroit convention waa one\nof the greatest and most successful\nin the history of Rotary, declared\nMr. Marshall, and the knowledge he\nderived trom it was most beneficial.\nOn reaching Detroit, he stated,\nthe delegates found themselves in\nthe center ot a maelstrom of people and activity, but the delegates\nencountered no difficulty as there\nwas a reception committee present\nand it was evident, from the string\not courtesy cars present to serve\nthe Rotarlans in every way possible,\nthat the business interests were\nseeking to make the convention a\nsuccess. S*>ven hundred courtesy\ncars were \\t the service of the Rotarlans the entire time they were\nth\u00abre.\nThe extensive decorations of the\nmain streets and Btore winddws\nwith Rotary emblems signified the\nunanimous desire to make the Ro-1\ntarians feel at home and make their\nstay in Detroit a pleasant and memorable one.\nThe theme of the entire convention, declared Mr. Marshall, centered around \"the new economic\nand social problems of todsy and\ntheir meaning to the business men\nof the world.\"\nShe Gets Bobbing\nand Robbing Mixed\nBELLEVILLE, Ont, Oct 29 (CP).\n\u2014Police were excited today when\nMrs. Albert Hammond, white-haired\nmatron of nearby Stirling, reported\nthat an unidentified dark man with\na foreign accent had robbed her of\n$1.70, and being so enraged at thc\ndiminutive loot that he had cut off\nher hair. She said she had fainted\nwhen the man pressed a pistol\nagainst her back and revived to find\nher hair gone.\nOfficers recovered from their excitement later, however, when Inspector Hamar Gardner of the Ontario police sail1: \"She wanted to get\nher hair bobb'V and her ingenuity\ncaused us a lot of unnecessary trouble. We suspected there was something wrong with her story but we\nhad to be cautious at first.\"\nMrs. Hammond told officers the\nhair-cutting took place during the\nabsence of her husband.\nHoleproof\nHosiery\nSock Styles\nthat quietly say\n\"GOOD TASTE\"\nHere are socks that ra\ntain their smart, fresl\nappearance as long\nyou wear them,\nthat's long! In Autoger\nor plain top stylei. Sill\nana wool, silk or tl\nwool.\n50-f, 75<( fl.00\nEMORY'\u00a7\nLimited\nMEDICINE HAT\nBEATS BIG M\nEarl Mack's American Lei\nAll-Stars Humbled 6-4\nby Royals\nMEDICINE HAT. Alta, Oct\n(CP)\u2014Medicine Hat baseball\nwere proud of their senior ball t\nthe Royals, today as Earl Id\nAmerican league All-Star \u2022\nheaded eastward after a 6 4 di\nhere during the week-end. It\nthe first defeat for the big leau\nduring their tour of western\nada.\nThe Royals, senior Champlor\nAlberta, scored their victory bal\nthe ace pitching ot Wii' Pennini\nCOL. E. PEPLER TC\nBECOME DEPUT\nATTORNEY-GE\nVICTORIA, Oct. 29 (CP)\u2014Cd.\nPepler wlll be promoted at the\nof October to tbe post ot deputy\ntorney general of Britlah Oolua\nsucceeding Oscar c. Bsse, wbo\nbe superannuated, Attorney Otl\nOordon Sloan announced today.\nPepler has been departmental ao\ntor since 1929.\nFive Escape From\nFlaminq Fish Boat\nPORT ANGELES, Oct. 29 (API-\nTaking to a small boat when they\nwere unable to battle the flames\nsuccessfully, the five men aboard\nthe halibut fishing boat Gloria,-of\nKetchikan, escaped today when the\ncraft was burned to the water's\nedge 12 miles northwest of Cape\nFlattery.\nSwitch Thrown\nto Wreck Tre\nSAN LEANDRO. Calif, Oet,\n(AP)\u2014The wrecking of a Wag\nPacific freight train here today\nwhich 50 head of cattle were kl\nor Injured, waa declared by autl\nltles tonight to have been causal\na deliberately thrown ewltch,\nJ.A.C. Laughton, R.\nOPl-OMSTJUSI    OPTICIAN\nSulle 205. Medical Arts Bulldln\nCENUINE REXALL\nSALE\n1\nSALE\nBegins WEDNESDAY and\ncontinues Thursday, Friday,\n Saturday.\t\nHeadquarters for\nHallowe'en Supplies\nCITY DRUG CO.\nPHONE 34\nBOX W\n*\u00bbWJ\u00abKS*\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab*\u00ab\u00ab*5*\u00ab*WS\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb:\n\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\u00ab\u2022\u00bb*\u2022\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab*\n\u00abWW*W*5*\u00ab\nComing\u2014WEDNESDAY ONLY!\nThe Fight of the Centuryl\nMcLARNIN-ROSS\nFIGHT PICTURES\ns\nFEATURE\u2014COMEDY\nJACK HALEY in\n\"HERE CONES THE GROOM**\n*S**\u00bb$****\u00bb**'-K*W**'$S*S*\u00bb\u00ab^\nAll the Laughs of\n\"Convention City\" in\n\"MERRY WIVES OF RENO\"\nLAST\nTIMES\nTODAY\nalio\u2014      A powerful drama of the children of tha earth\n\"AS THE EARTH TURNS**\n*&'*S\u00ab&SSt~*&eiS$!*!m*&lX!m\u00bb!mm^^\nMONDAY AND TUESDAY, NOV. 5 AND 6\u2014\nA STAGE COMEDY TREAT!\nThis theatre being reserved for the Nelson Little\nTheatre's production\n\"GOODBYE AGAIN\"\nRESERVED SEAT PLAN NOW OPEN AT BOX OFFICI\n_\u25a0\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. 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Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1934-10-30 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":"1934-10-30 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":""}]}